06-JuneT a x R a t e I n c r e a s e d t o 5 2 ^
Davie’s Proposed Budget Is ^6,492,098
The proposed 1981-82 Davie County
budget shows a tax increase of 8 cents. If
approved, the tax rate will rise from 44
cents per »100 valuation to 52 cenU.
County commissioners reviewed the
proposed budget Monday during its
regular session. Charles Mashbum,
county m anager stressed that the
budget, which is based on the 52 cent tax
rate, is strictly tentative and can be
changed before adoption. He said that
com m issioners are studying every
possible altem aUve that could lower the
proposed tax rate. The proposed budget
for 1961-82 is ♦6,492,098. U s t year’s
county budget was $5,844,491.
A budget hearing is set for June 15 at
7:00 p.m. in the Davie County Cour
thouse. It is expected that the final
budget, which must be in effect by July
1, wUl be adopted at this time.
In a written statem ent to county
commissioners, Mashbum cited in
flation and an increase in school
County Adopts
Cable TV
Ordinance
D avie County com m issioners of
ficially, adopted a cable television
June 1 meeting.
The ordinance, which is required by
law, is the first step in bringing cable
television to unincorporated D avie
County.
The 21 page ordinance Uita the
“conditions, limitations, restrictions
and requirements” a person or buaineaa
must m eet before a cable televiaion
franchise can be granted by tbe county.
H ie ordinance appUes only to the
unincorporated areas of tbe county. The
Town of Mocksville must have a
separate ordinance to govern cable TV
within d ty limits.
Town attorney H ank VanH oy is
currenUy working on a c«U e tdeviiion
ordinance for Mocksville. It is unknown
at this tim e when the ordinance w ill be
ready for adoption.
Recent interest expreaaed by several
flrn u to establish cable tdeviiioii in
both the town and county prompted
eom m isilonen to Investigate such an
anUoADoe.
U w «nUnance w as designed in d ie
bast interest of local residents. In
essen ce, the ordinance m akes It
unlawful for any person or business to
astabUah a cable tdevlslaa system in
Davie without first m e e ^ s tq ^ tio n s
listed in the ordinance.
Within M months foUowing adoption of
the ordinance, the County wiU publish a
notice seeking ajppUcants for a cable
television franchiw in a newspaper or
m agatin e of gen eral circu lation
t h r o u i^ t tbe United SU tes and in a
newspaper of general circulation in
Davie County.
Any person or business seeking
issuance of a cable television franchise
in Davie County m ust file a written
application, in duplicate with Charles
Maahbura, county m anager.
AU apfjications received wiU be
opened and placed on file in the county
m anager’s office. H ie date applications
are to be opened wiU be set by county
commissioners and advertised.
FoUowing opening of the appUcations,
each WiU be avaUable for pubUc in
spection for 10 days. A caU e tdevision
franchise can only be granted by county
com m iuioners. T h w have the option to
reject any or aU apfulcations that do not
comiriy with regulations contained in the
local ordinance.
A cable television franchise does not
have to service ttte entire county to be
acceptaU e. Commissioners can grant a
franchise which services only a portion
of the county.
Franchises wiU be granted for a ten
year period.
A copy of the cable television or
dinance is on display at Uie county
m anager’s office. Tbe puW c can read
the ordinance during regular business
hours.
Zoning Ordinance
Fee Rates Adopted
A Zoning Ordinance Fee Schedule was
adopted at the Monday, June 1 meeting
of U>e Davie County Board of Com
missioners.
Up untU ttiis time no such fee schedule
was in effect, making Davie the only
county in ttie state wittiout zoning
chargwt
Charles Mashburn, County M anager,
said ttie fees wUl help cover costs in
curred during zoning and rezoning.
A fee of $100 wUl be charged for a
preliminary subdivision plat review and
$25 for a final review. Rezoning wUl cost
the property owner $100, as wiU a zoning
operating funds as reasons for the in
crease.
The statement reads, “ There are
several reasons why a tax increase is
necessary at ttiis time. First and
foremost, total expenditures for schools
has increased about $1,000,000 per year
since 1979. This includes an over $500,000
per year increase to pay for two new
junior high schools. Another voter ap
proved in crease is the additional
$130,000 appropriation for fire and
rescue. Finally, inflation has added
substantially to the cost of operating
county governm ent.”
Mashbum cited the relatively slow
growth in D avie’s tax base during the
current year as another reason man-
dathig a tax increase. He said “ between
1979 and 1960, total property evaluation
increased by $91,000,000. In contrast, the
growtti was less than $10,000,000 bet
ween 1960-81.”
M ashbum added ttiat ttie 8 cent in
crease (18 percent) is still not sufficient
to fund the increase in school ex
penditures. The remainder of needed
funds have i)een appropriated from
surplus and Revenue Sharing to balance
the proposed budget.
Many county department budgets
have been slashed in an attem pt to keep
the county budget in line. The Davie
County Sheriff’s Department requested
$342,040 Irom the county. The proposed
budget how ever, wiU gran t them
$292,823. The Davie County U brary
budget was also reduced by $18,000. The
Library requested $128,537, but wiU
receive only $110,267 if the proposed
budget is adopted.
There has also been a slight reduction
in the school budget. It lias been dropped
from $1,333,500 to $1,270,000.
In his sum m ary statement to county
commissioners, Mashbum said that
Davie County is in sound financial
condition as of June 1, 1961.
“ Sufficient funds are projected or on
hand to m eet both current expenditures
and debt payments during the next
fiscal year,” said M ashbum. “ A tax
increase from 44 cents to 52 cents is
recommended for the 1962 budget year,
llils fs a minimal adjustment con
sidering expenditure increases have
exceeded $1,000,000 per year because of
school construction alone. AnoUier tax
increase for the 1963 fiscal year would
seem likely if Davie County is to
maintain its long standing financial
condition.”
A copy of the proposed county budget
is available for public review in the
county m an ag er’s office. A b rief
description of expenditures and
revenues can be found on ttie public
notice page of ttiis issue.
Davie County’s 44 cent tax rate has
been in effect since 1978. Last year,
Davie had the fifth lowest tax rate in
North Carolina.
(USPS 149-160)DAVIE COUNTY
PX). B ox 525, MocksviUe, N .C. 2 70 2Ì
tlO .0 0 M Y ear in k o tth Carolina
I I S jOO N r Y ear Outside North Carolina
TH U RSD AY, JUNE 4, 1981
36 PAGES • :
Single Copy 25 csati
Walter loveless assumed duties as MocksvUle Postmaster Monday.
His appointment was effecittve May 29. (Photo by Garry Foster)
Mocksville Gets
New Postmaster
W alter Loveless of Clemmons has
been nam ed P ostm aster for the
MocksviUe Post iJffice. His appointment
Com m enting on his appointm ent
Loveless said he “ is looking forward to
serving as postm aster and m eeting fee
County Rejects Purchase Of
Propertjr To Aid Court Facilities
An additional cent tax increase
prompted D avie County Commissioners
to vote agahist punjtase of the old
Masonic building and adjoining lot on
(?ourt Square.
The proposed l96l->2 budget shows a
tax Incraase of < cents, raising the
current rate flrom 44cents to U cents I
$100 vahiatlon. Purduise of the I
would have m eant an additional m cent
Increase.
The county accepted an option to
purchase the property last February
which included a .94 acre lot and the two
story buUding. Tlw property is owned by
Holmes Investment of Salisbury. Sale
price is $97,000.
Charles M ashbum , county m anager
said the decision w as reached after
county com m issioners learn ed its
purchase would m ean an autom atic m
cent tax increase.
M ashburn exp lained there a re n ’t
enough sundus funds in the pnvosed
1961-82 b u ^ et to buy the prcqperty
without increasing taxes to cover its
cost.
Over crowded conditions in the Davie
County courthouse prom pted com
m issioners to exam ine poasibUities of
purchasing the buUding. OrigbiaUy,
commissioners had hoped that in future
years all noii-court rd ated ofdces could
be located In the Masonic building with a
new courtroom constnicted on the third
Qoor of the courthouse.
H olm es Investm ent Com pany of
SaUsbury purchased the buUding in 1973
from MocksvUle M asonic Lodge No. 134.
The two loto invdved in ttie sale were
designated as “ Lots 1 and 2, Letters I
and J ” on the original plat for the Town
of MocksvUle. The two loU w ere bought
from commissioners by Thom as Young
in 1939. He buUt a store on them.
Later, the lots w ere acquired by the
noted Judge and law yer Richmond M.
Pearson. In the 1860’s the lota w ere sold
by Pearson to Braxton BaUey and Dr. J.
T. Bryan.
D a vie In c lu d e d In A tla s
Fo r T h e P ie d m o n t Tria d
An atlas will be prepared for the
Piedmont Triad Urban Region bv
geographers at the University of North
CaroUna at Charlotte.
The urban region includes Surry,
Yadkin, Davie, Davidson, Randol|»,
GuUford, Casw dI, Rockingham , Stokes,
Alam ance, and Forsyth Counties.
The Urban Institute at UNCC has been
awarded a $112,907 contract to prepare
and pubUsh a series of 10 pubUcations on
North Carolina’s urban areas for the
state Division of Economic Develop
ment.
Project directors are Dr. Jam es W.
Clay, director of the Uriian Institute;
Dr. Ah-ed Stuart, chairman of the UNCC
Department of Geography and Earth
Sciences and Dr. Douglas M. Orr, Jr.,
vice chanceUor for research and piibUc
service at UNCC.
The geographers wlU be applying for
successful techniques they used in
pubUshing ttie North CaroUna Atlas, ttie
Metrolina Atlas and the Charlotte Atlas.
They are working on their most am-
bitous project to date, an atlas of the
Soutti.
Tbe publications on tbe Urban Region
w ill provide such inform ation as
geograpUc setting, population, income
and employment pnfU e, avaUabUity of
services, m aU ty of Ufe factors, and tbe
potential for development of the area.
The State of North CaroUna and
agencies in the region wiU m ake
cooperative use of ttie pubUcations to
m arket ttie State’s urban areas aa
prospective locaUona for business and
industrial expansion.
The new atlases are an outgrowth of
ttie broader development of Governor
Jam es B. Hunt Jr.^s balanced growth
program to include the promotion of
urban as well as rural areas.
It was in 1890 Uiat the two lota were
purchased by the MocksvUle Masonic
Lodge No. 134.
In M ay, 1910, ttie contract for buUding
ttie M asonic buUding waa awarded to D.
L. CecU of Lexington. The coat w as to be
between $6,000 and $9,000.
The IwUding w as constructed that
sum m er and on July 6,1910 ttie Bank of
Davie m oved into the buUding. Tbe
bank, now known as Branch Bank and
IVust, has operated here ever since.
Their lease expires in 1 m ore year.
C u rrently, com m issioners a re
studying possibUiUes of locating an
additional courtroom in the County
Office BuUding adjacent to the cour
thouse.
I
Judgement Deferred
In Juvenile Case
Judgment was deferred this week in
the case of George Vincent Fow ler, an
11-year old boy accused of m urder in the
shooting death of his younger brother
M ay 7 hi MocksvUle.
Judge R obert Johnson decided
Tuesday to continue the JuvenUe’s case
until June 30.
Tbe Fowler boy was taken into
custody by MocksvUle poUce the day
after his brother, Roland Van Lindsay
Fowler, died at Baptist Hospital in
Winston-Salem. Roland Fowler, who
had tum ed 11 only a few days before the
shooting, died of a single wound to the
head by a hoUow-point buUet fired from
a .22 caUber rifle.
George Fow ler was held over tbe
weekend wittiout bond in ttie Forsytti
County Youth Center. Ib e boy appeand
in JuvenUe court for a closed hearing on
M ay 11. During ttuit proceeding, Judge
Hubert OUve ruled to release the boy
into the custody of his parents. OUve
overruled the objection of PhU Lohr,
assistant district attorney.
Fow ler’s famUy reU ins ttie services of
Larry F . Habegger, a Winston-Salem
attom ey.
The shooting occu rred Thursday
(continued on page 2)
ance amendment.
Zoning perm iU, for which ttiere has
been no (ee before, wiU be $50 for a
variance perm it. $25 for a special use
permit or an advertising perm it, and $10
for a zoning compliance permit.
The fees are com parable with thoae in
other counties of sim ilar size according
to county zoning officer, Jesse Boyce,
Jrother zoning requests approved
Monday included:
-A request to reione pioperty on tiie
w est side of H ighw ay «4 from
R esiden tial-A griculture to H ighw ay-
Business. Tim; r«iuc»l wtt« made by
PrisciUa S. Dwiggins
-A request to rezone property on the
Northwest side of Main (%urch Road
from Raaidsotial to Heavy-Industrial
made by Orim es E Barnhardt.
' À
J e rse y s g ra zin g in a D a vie County cou n trysid e is a scen e filled w ith seren ity.
These cow s h ow ever, add m ore tkan b eau ty to the coun ty. D aii-yin g is tbe
la rg e st sou rce of agricu ltu re incom e in D avie. See related sto ry on p a g e ID .
(P h oto by R obin F ergu sson )
was effective Friday, M ay 29. peopleof Davie County.”
U iveless replaces Franklin Brown, appointment as a challei
form er MocksviUe postm aster who was
■ transferred to Lexington last December.
Brown is currently serving as post
m aster at the Lexington Post Office.
Loveless has served the past year as
m anager of the Bethabara Poet Offira in
Winston-Salem. Prior to ttiis he served
one year in a sim ilar position at the
Ardmore Post office, also in Winston-
Salem.
Lov^ess began his career as a maU
ca rri» in (Siarlotte, where he worked
for 18 years. He was promoted to a
siqiervisory posiUon in 1973. During the
time period of 1973-1979, he served as
either assistant m anager of m anager hi
9 different Post Offices hi ttie Charlotte
area. He also served 6 months as Officer
in O iarge at ttie Post O ffice hi Khigs
Mountatai.
He views tbe appointment as a challenge due to the vast responsibUities of the Job.
Loveless currently resides in Clem
mons. He commented however, that he
and his fam ily wiU relocate in Davie
County som etime this year.
Edsel Morgan of Greensboro has been
serving as Officer in Charge of the
MocksviUe Post Office since FrankUn
Brown’s transfer to Lexington last
Decem ber.
The five month period aUowed postal
officials tim e to nationaUy advertise the
position and interview applicants. A
total of four m en w ere granted hi-
terviews for the MocksviUe postmaster
position.
Morgan commented that he has en
joyed his work aa interim postmaster.
“ Everyone has m ade m e feel right at
hom e,” he said.
B o a rd 0 1 E d u c a tio n K e e p s
S a m e P u p il A s s ig n m e n ts
The Davie County Board of Education
voted not to change pu|^ assignments
for the com ing school year. Students wiU
continue to attend ttie school located hi
ttie district where they Uve.
AU pupils assigned to grades kin
dergarten through she witU attend the
school nearest them.
As hi the past, pupU assignments fo r ,
North and South Davie wiU also rem ain
ttie sam e. AU pupUs, grades seven
Uirough nhie, whose residence is located
hi the Phiebrook Elem entary School
district, ttie Wm. R. Davie Elem entary
School disbrict (with the exception of
those students who Uve south of Hunting
Credt) wUl attend North D avie Junior
High School. The students whose
residence is located south of Hunting
Creek wUI attend Soutti Davie Junior
High Schod. Also, those students whose
residence is located in ttie Shady Grove
Elem entary Schod district (with the
excepUon of those students who Uve east
of No Creek and on or soutti of Highway
64) wUl attend North Davie Junior High
School.
Those students whose residence is
located east of No O e ek and on or south
of Highway 64 wUI attend South Jr. High
School. AU pupUs assigned to grades
seven I
located
School d istrict, the M ocksville
E lem en tary School and M ocksville
Middle School district (witti ttie ex
cepUon of those students who Uve on or
north of Mahi Church Road and on U. S.
158 from ttie Sain Road north to Dut
chm an’s Creek and Sahi Road east to
Road No. 1642 ami hicluding aU of 1642)
wUI attend South Davie Junior High
School. Those students whose residence
is located on or north of Klain Church
Road and on U. S. 158 from the Sahi
Road nortti to Dutchman’s Creek and
Sahi Road east to Road No. 1642 and
including aU of 1642 wiU attend North
Davie Junior High Schod.
AU pupUs assigned to grades ten
ttirough tw dve and whose residence is
lo ca t^ hi Davie County wiU attend
Davie County High Schod.
PupU assignments w ere made at the
Monday, June 1 meeting ot the Davie
County Board of Education. M embers
attendhig were: Chahm an, Dr. Victor
L; Andrews; Frances Beck; Donald
B in ^ m ; Jam es Jones; V. G. Prim ;
and Luther Potts.
C larification questions should be
directed to the principal of the schod
district in question or to ttie county
board of educaton office. If student
assignment is considered a hardship,
ttie parent or guardian has untU June
30tti to request a change of assignment.
through nine whose residence is
)d hi the Codeem ee Elem entary
Rainfall
RahifaU daring the ffawl week in May measured 1.23 laches and raised the monthly total to 4.4T hiches.
RahifaU for M ay l$6t nteasared
4.61 hiches.
United Way Applications
United Way appUcations are now
being Uken for agencies wishhig to
apply for funds for 1962. AppUcaUon
forms m ay be obtafaied by caUhig
Carmen W alker (996-5555 or 998-48U).
New agencies must have an IRS tax
exempt status.
D a vie ’ s U n e m p lo y m e n t
R a te D ro p s T o 5 .2 %
Fo r M o n th O f A p ril
Davie County's unemployment rate
OiOMied to 5.2 percent for the month of
April acconUng to figures rdeased last
week by ttie Employment Security
Ckmimissian of Norm (Arolina.
This is ttie lowest unemployment rate
for Oavie in almost a year. The rate for
M u ch 5.9 percent ; for February 6.7
percent and 6.8 percent for January.
D avie’s unemployment rate is also
lower than the state average of 6 percent
for April. During ttie month of AprU ESC
reported Uiat 90 percent of the counties
orted a drop in unemployment.
'he national unadjusted unem
ployment rate for AprU was 7.0 percent,
down from 7.7 percent in March.
The drop was attributed to improved
weather and growth of seasonal jobs.
For the fifth consecutive month,
Orange County had ihe lowest unem
ployment rate in the state of 3.0 percent,
dropping from 3.6 percent in March.
Swain County continued to experience
ttie highest rate of unemployment in the
state showing a 17.9 percent rate in
A pril. H ow ever, this represen ts a
sizable declme in unemidoyment from
the March level of 22.6 percent as tbe
actual number of unemployed persona
seeiEing worlc in the county dropped
from 1,110 to 640.
Among the counties experienchig low
rates of joblessness were: AUeghany at
3.6 percent; Alexander, Cabarrus and
Wake at 3.8 percent; and Mecklenburg
at 4.0 percent.
Davie CguBly’s rate is based on a
labor forceW ».930 persons, of which
9,410 were employed and 520 unem
ployed.
Neighboring Davidson County had a
4.d percent uiieiiiploymeiit rate for
April; Rowan had 4.7 percent; IredeU,
5.7 percent; Yadkin, 5.4 percent; and
Forsyth, 5.0 percent.
Overall Crime Rate
In State Is Up
2 DAVH; COUNTY 1ÍNTI-RPRISE RECORD. THURSDAY. JUNIÍ 4, 1981
North Carolina's overall crim e rate is
up in every area and population group of
the state during the first quarter of 1981.
Thl.s is an alarm ing trend that simply
must be reversed.
Statistics compiled by the Police
Information Network (headed by Ed
misten) show that the number of crim es
reported to law enforcement agencies in
North Carolina Increased six percent
during the first three months of 1981
compared to the sam e period in 1980.
Last year this state suffered through
the highest rate of crim e in its history.
It’s despicable to start off a year six
percent worse than the previous one.
(Violent crim es, as a group, were up
one percent statewide. Of these, robbery
increased thirteen percent, murder
dropped nineteen percent, aggravated
assaults were down one percent and the
number of reported rapes remained
unchanged for the period.)
(Property crim es in creased six
percent as a group with larceny leading
at plus seven percent. Burglary was up
six percent and motor vehicle theft
continued to decline at the rate of two
percent as It did in 1980.)
(Arson, a relatively new crim e in the
survey, should a twenty-eight percent
in crease during the com parable
reporting periods of 1981 over 1960)
(Crimes reported from urban areas of
North Carolina increased seven percent
while rural areas reported an overall
increase of three percent. The eight
m ajor metropolitan areas of the state
(over 90,000 population) reported a nine
percent Increase during the first quarter
1981.)
“ I am a strong advocate of reforming
the w ay government spends its money
and a firm believer in making govern
ment sm aller, more efficient and more
responsive to the needs of the people.
Ibere are many ways to do this, but
cutting back on protecting people from
- criminal84 s net i
paroles are revoked at the rate of twelve
percent because of the commission of a
new crim e or a technical violation (such
as the possession of a weapon.)
"Criminal violence is engulfing our
cities, our suburbs and our once
peaceful rural communities. 'There are
many complex reasonings to support
this insidious trend and it will take a
dedicated committment from each law-
abiding citizen In this state to turn It
around.
"W e need to stop glam orizing
crim inals and crim inal activity. We
need to hand out tougher sentences and
m ake them stick. We need to get out the
m essage that crim inals will be captured
and punished and mean it.
"W e need to stop recycling crim e in
North Carolina,” concluded Edmisten.
June Is Daity Month^-----1 County Board Approves Zoning
For Bermuda Run ExpansionJUNE IS D A IR Y MONTH - and throi«hout the Southeast dairy farm famUles
and consumers alike will join together to celebrate the event under Ihe theme
"■nie M agic Of M ilk."
For 45 years, June has been singled out as a month-long salute to the dairy
farm ers of our nation and their Industry, who work eo diligently throughout the
year to provide consumers with an abundant supply of fresh, high-quality milk
and m ilk products.
"Itie M agic Of M ilk" has been selected as this year's theme to help describe
the many contributions of milk and the dairy Industry to our Am erican w ay of
life. Milk and milk product* provide a significant amount of our dally need for
protein, calcium , and m any other essential vlUm lns and m inerals. And they
pro-’ide this nutrition at a cost which has Increased less than other m ajor food
group«. The dairy industry is a m ajor employer and taxpayer in many com-
mumties throughout the Southeast and continues to build and expand to keep
pace with consumer demand for its products.
During June of this year, numerous local and state events will be held in honor
o( the dairy industry. Millions of consumers will see and hear "The M agic Of
M ilk.”
June Dairy Month is a natural time to pause and reflect on the signl/icant
contributions to our health and economy m ade by the dairy farm fam ilies of our
nation. And, June is a natural tim e to say "thanks" for providing our daily
supply of nature’s most nearly perfect food - m ilk.
A l the June 1 meeting of the Davie
County Board of Commissioners a
zoning change that would allow a
planned $75 million expansion of Ber
muda Run was approved.
The board approved the rezoning of
approximately 198 acres bordering N.C.
801 and the Yadkin itiver, (rom single
fam ily residential to high-density
residential use.
The zone changes would expand the
developm ent southw est along the
Forsyth County line and join the 650 acre
tract that makes up the community.
R oger H arris, co-ow ner of the
development, told commissioners that
an additional 21 acres within the Yadkin
River floodplain will be used for four
holes of the planned 9-hole golf coune.
Harris said the plans call for an ad
dition of 600 apartment and con
dominium units. Including a 198 unit
retirement village. -
Harris also said a $25 million con
vention center and classroom complex
is planned for the future.
The retirement village, which will be
the first construction phase, could be
completed within a year after 100
memberships are obtained.
S h e r i f f ' s D e p a r t m e n t
T h e N .C . S e n a te
By Senator Gilbert Lee Boger
Gun Control...Is It the answer to
crim e, or Is the answer strong law en
forcement and tough ju(|}es that meet
out sentences to fit the crim e.
Senate Bill 558 (regarding Regtdation
of the Purchase of Handguns) will be
before the Senate this week. It would
ban the sale of handguns to anyone
convicted of a crim e, other than traffic
violations, and would lim it the sale of
other handguns to one purchase per
month, per persons. The bill would alao
establish for the first time, standard
Ifformatlon that persons who apply for
Davie Students In
Special Olympics
provide
perm its
about
would
county
Attorney General Rufus Edmisten.
“Law enforcement officers are forced
crim inals and hard^pnMse^*iaw en
forcement agencies are pushed into
investigating up to 200 m ore m ajor
crim es per month. They’re doing this in
spite of few, if any, additional officers,
equipment and fund«,” he continued.
“Our jails are so full that the sU te is
now forced to release prisoners early
and I’ve been told hy prison officials that
Social Securitu Office
Needs Address Changes
The MocksviUe poet office realign
ment of routes wiU call for a change of
m ailing address of benefldariei, Mr.
Thom as, m anager of tbe Salisbury
Social Security District Office, says.
This can be done by telephone...the
MocksviUe number 634-3886 ia toU-bree
and TMchea the Salisbury U ^ . To
expedite service on your caU, Thomas
recommends you have your nam e and
social security number exactly as it is
shown on your check. Itisa lio h e lp A ilif
you not« tbe alphabetical letter m the
Une below and to the right of the num
ber. This last information is not needed
from the SSI gold checks.
If you do not wish to phone the office,
you can maU in your new address with
the sam e identifying Information. The
back of the envelope your check comes
in can be used for thU purpose.
fires Reported
D avie County’s volunteer fire
departm ents and rescu e squads
r e s p o n d to the foUowing em ergencies
recently;
Sheffield-C alahan departm ent an-
s w e i^ a false alarm at Georgia Road at
Bear Credc bridge on Tuesday, M ay X.
Advance rescue workers freed a man
pinned in a car on N.C. 801 Wednesday,
M ay 27.
County Line and Center units went to a
traUer fire at the BUly Brown residence
on U.S. 64 Thursday, M ay 28.
Advance responded to a motorcycle
accident on Mocks Church Road on
Friday, M ay 29.
Advance volunteers had little time to
rest Saturday, M ay 30 as they received
caUs of three accidents the sam e n lA t.
At 6:20 p.m. there was an accident on
Underpass Road. Advance volunteers
returnM to Underpass Road at 10:55 to
the scene of another accident. A little
over an hour later at 12:16 a.m ., Sunday
moming, workers were at the scene of a
single car accident on N.C. 801 near the
raUroad tracks.
Juvenile Murder
Case Deferred
(continued from page 1)
morning, May 7 at the home of Thomas
Edward Fowler of 233 Ridgemont Drive
off M illing Road. G eorge F ow ler,
Roland Fowler and a third brother,
Jonathan, had been staying at their
uncle’s home three weeks since moving
from Salisbury.
All three brothers were home when
the shooting occurred. The rifle used in
the slaying belonged to Thomas Fowler,
the uncle, and was propped beside his
bed.
A fter the shooting, G eorge and
Jonathan Fowler ran to the house of
Iheir grandmother, Mrs. Thomas J.
Fowler, who lives twu houses away. She
called an ambulance, whose crew then
notified the police.
M ocksville police and the district
attorn ey's office had sgvere! con
ferences during that day bMHe deciding
to press ciiarges against the M y. At that
puiiit, uu motive had been establisiied in
the case.
Jotmson also ordered a joint review of
the boy's case by Michael Kirkpatrick,
the local juvenile officer and social
services worker.
competed in the North Carolina S ^ ia l
Olympics held this past wedcend at the
U n iversity of N o rth C arolina at
Charlotte.
Ib e Olympians participated in track
and field evenU held at Memorial
Stadium.
I^rticipants were: Scott Fisher, from
South Davie Jr. High, who won a gold
medal in the 50 m eter dash and a bronse
medal in the softball throw.Darlene
Lagle received a silver m edal in the
standing long jum p and cam e in 4th
j^ c e in the softbaU throw. Tina Church,
from Pinebrook Elem entary, earned a
gold m edal in tbe 80 m eter dasb and 4th
^ c e in the softbaU throw. Debbie
Bovender, a student at MocksvUle
Middle, participated in the 50 m eter
dash and the softbaU throw. W ayne
Mock, from MocksvUle Elem entary,
won a bronie m edal in the 50 m eter dash
and placed 4th in tbe softbaU throw. Lisa
Godbey cam e in 4th in the 50 m eter dash
and the standing long jump.
M U ieQ anw r.Recroatioa Director, Ms
wife, Kathy and JiU Am os served as
chaperones for Ше group.
G am er deacribed the weekend events
as the “ beat gam es they’ve ever had.”
H ie 1200 participants from асгом the
state wero treated to a CaroUna
Ughtsning soccer gam e and a dance
and w ere boused in dormitories on the
Charlotte campus.
Local olym pians and their chaperones
retum ed to D avie County Sunday af
ternoon.
ECU Honor Roll
Students earning academ ic honors at
East CaroUna University during the
spring sem ester ropresent 92 of the
state’s 100 counties, 29 states and the
District of Columbta and 16 foreign
countries.
A total of 3,261 ECU studenta eam ed
places on the university’s official honors
lists for the sem ester, compared to 3,107
for the faU sem ester.
Most elite of the honors is aU A ’s.
Those making the Dean’s List have
earned a В plus average with no grade
below C. The Honor RoU includes
students with a В average and no grade
below C.
Students from Davie County earning
academ ic honors include:
Steven C. Grabb, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Douglas C. Grubb of Rt. 1, Advance,
honor roU.
Johnna S w an u Hobson, daughter of
Mr. and M rs. John L. Hobson of Rt. 5,
MocksvUle, honor roU.
Cathy A. Masten, daughter of Mr. and
M rs. C h arles M asten of R t. 2,
MocksvUle, dean’s Ust.
Cornatzer Homemakers
Cjub Has Meeting
H ie Com atzer Homemakers Club met
Tuesday, M ay 26 at the home of Jackie
W inters on C orn atzer Road. The
president, DotUe Potts, called the
meeting to order Aggie Caudle gave the
devotions with her theme on “ Love” and
offered a prayer.
RoU caU and minutes were read by
Lucy Bam ey. E ach m em ber answered
the roU call by naming a flower
alpbabeticaUy.
Ib e club voted to give a tree to be
planted at North Davie Junior High
School and to hold the birthday party at
the Autumn Care Rest Home on August
25th
Highlights of Uie Boston, Mass trip
were discussed by ModeU Munday, Dot
CSiaplin and Blanche Lagle.
Nancy Hartman, County Agent, gave
an Interesting program on "Energy
Savings."
We were happy to have Lena WaU of
Baltim ore (ЛиЬ to visit with us and to
receive WlUle Bess Bennett as a new
member.
Gladys and Bessie Jones told about a
visit to Daniel Boone's Cave recently.
Dot ChapUn gave household hints on
home decorating.
lh e Club adjourned with the club
coUect.
The m eeting for June wlU be at the
home <]< Blanche Lagle on the Turren
tine Road.
Refreshm ents of sandwiches, nuts,
chips, straw berry cake and iced drinks
were served by the hostess.
gun perm its m ust
themselves. Handgun
continue to be issued by
sherrlffe, but the bill would require tha't
the State Department of Crim e Control
and Public Safety keep a centralized
record of aU permits issued In the State.
The Introducer of the BUI said Uiat
passage of his bUI would give North
CaroUna the strongest gun control
leglslaUon of any state.
The Republican delegation in the
General Assem bly announced at a news
conference on Thursday morning, their
program for ttie H i^ w ay problem. BUls
wUI be introduced this week to Im
plement this package caUed “The North
Carolina T axp ayers H ighw ay
P ackage." This package wUI need no
new taxes and the Highway Fund wiU
have all the money it can wisely spend
for^ thejiext two years.
Committee voted out Governor Hiuit’s
tax package by a vote of 14 to 11. We stUl
believe we have a chance of defeating
Uiis unnecessary tax. So, if you ara
opposed to this tax, and know anyone in
Uie Legislature, please get in touch with
them and insist they vote against the
tax.
J-H Ruritan Club
Sponsors Wagon Train
The Jericho-Hardlson Rurltan club is
sponsoring an old fashioned wagon train
on June 6 and June 7, 1981.
The train wUl com mence at the
Jericho-Hardison Ruritan BuUding on
Green HUI Road. Wagonmaster wUl be
CecU Lakey.
M eals wUl be avaUable on Friday
night and Saturday and Sunday m or
nings, beginning at 6:30 a.m.
Entertainm ent wUl be avaUable on
Friday and Saturday nightt in the form
of country music and square dancUig.
1%e public is invited to attend the
nightly eventa, whether they aro part of
Uie wagon train or not.
S a t u ^ y ’s route win be 12 mUes long,
and Sunday's wUl be an 8-mUe trek.
For m ore information caU CecU Lakey
at 634-2594.
E xtra! Read AU Aboot HI has been
selected as the them e for Uie statewide
Itei Sum m er Reading P r o m m . The
Davie County Public U iiraryIs pUnning
to start ita sum m er reading program on
Monday, June 8. H iis ^ be the first
day of r^ stra tio n , and the program Is
scheduledto continue ttirouA July 20.
This program is open to aU girls and
boys in D avie County. FUms and other
special eventa aro planned for each
tm d a y at 7:00 p.m . Everyone who
com pletes tbe sum m er reading program
wttl be eligible for a certiftcate signed by
Governor Hunt and for six $4.00 osoount
coupons to Carowinds ft>r use August 18-
28, 1961. CaU 634-3023 for more In
formation.
HOURS:
Prisoner Hangs
Self In Cell
A ’HiomasviUe m an who w as serving a
five- to seven-year term at the Davie
County prison unit hero was found
hanged in his ceU Saturday night, a
Departm ent of Correction spokesman
said.
Jam es B. N ealy, 46, form erly oi Light
Road in ThomasviUe, had been alone tn
a single cell, said spokesman Stuart
Shadbolt.
N ealy pleaded no contest in July, 1979,
to two counta ot voluntary m anslaughter
in the January, 1979, shooting deaths of
a aren ce "L u cky” K idah of High Point
and Jerry Lee Kennon of the Pleasant
Grove Trailer P ark near ThomasviUe.
n ie men w ere shot at Kennon’s traUer.
Shadbolt said that a guard had seen
Nealy smoking a cigarette in his cd l
Saturday night. About 15 minutes later,
N ealy’s body was found hanged from a
sheet tied to a vent in the ceUing.
exam iner for autopsy.
Car In Wreck On
Underpass Road
An Advance teenager lost control of
her car on the unpaved section of Un
derpass Road and overtum ed Saturday
night. M ay 30, tiie Highway Patrol said.
Beverly Annette McNeU, 16, of Rt. 2,
Advance, was traveling west in a 1976
Chevrolet around 10:55 p.m. when she
lost control on the wet dirt road. The car
ran off ttie left side of ttie road, hit a
bank and overturned.
Miss McNeU and a passenger, Debby
Hugcs, 16, of Rt. 3, Advance were
treated for injuries at ttie scene by ttie
Advance Rescue Squad.
Trooper C.R. ColUns esUmated ttie
dam age to the car at 81,200.
Miss McNeU was charged witti ex
ceeding safe speed.
Vehicles Collide
An Advance man was charged with
driving under the influence after his car
sideswiped a Volkswagen on Yadkin
VaUey Road Sunday, M ay 31.
According to ttie Highway Patrol,
Dannie Keitti MUler, 26, of Rt. 1, Ad
vance w as driving his 1971 M ercury at a
high speed around a curve when he m et
a I960 VoUtswagen driven by Jasper
Bennett Whitfield, 84, of Winston-Salem.
Whitfield puUed over to the right to
avoid a coUislon, but the M ercury struck
ttie car, ttien left ttie scene.
Trooper C.R. CoUins roported ttiat
MUler later retum ed. CoUins esUmated
ttie dam ages at $150 to ttie M ercury and
at $2,000 to ttie VoUuwagen. No serious
injuries were reported.
Rear End Collision
A rear end coUislon w as roported on
Underpass Road Friday night. M ay 29.
According to the Highway Patrol,
WUliam Scott Pratt, 18, of Rt. 2,
M ocksville, w as slow ing his 1971
VoUcswagen to m ake a right tum into a
private driveway. His car was struck
from behind by a 1977 Ponttac, driven by
Keitti Thom as Young, 18, of Qem m ons,
who was luiable to stop in time.
Trooper A.C. Stokes estimated Ow
dam age to the VoUuwagen at $800 and at
$700 to ttie PontUc.
Young was charged witti faUuro to
reduce speed.
Joe N. Boger, Rt. 2, MocksviUe,
reported a vandalism on Tuesday, May
26. The tires were slashed on the right
side of a 1977 GMC van. Dam age was
estimated at $260.
Jane Necessary, of Winston-Salem,
reported the burglary of a newspaper
rack at M ac's Foods at N.C. 801 and U.S.
158 on T hursday, M ay 28. A p
proxim ately $10 was stolen.
Unda Gall Martin, 20, of 268 MUling
Roa<), M ocksville, w as arrested
Tuesday, May 26, and charged witti
passing a worttiless check.
G ary Ray Creason, 30, of 9 Davie
Street, Cooleem ee, w as arrested
Tuesday, May 26, and charged witti
communicating threats and assault.
Clarence Wayne Link, 33, of Rt. 4,
MocksviUe, was arrested Tuesday, May
28, and charged with intimidating a
witness. Link s bond w as set at $15,000.
His trial is scheduled for Monday, June
Motorcyclist And
Rider Injured
A motorcycUst and his rider were
injured when their vehicle fUpped on
Beaucham p Road Friday evening. M ay
29,
According to the Highway Patrol,
David Dean Carter, 25, of Rt. 4 Advance,
lost control of his 1975 Honda m otorcycle
on bumpy pavem ent in a curve. The
vehicle flipped, throwing off Carter and
his rider, Sandra Carter, 26, of Rt. 4,
Advance.
The Carters were taken by ambulance
to Davie County Hospital.
Trooper C.R. CoUins estimated the
dam age to the m otorcycle at $400.
Car Hits Traffic Island
A Winston-Salem woman feU asleep at
ttie wheel of her car whioh struck a
traffic island then overtum ed after
midnight on Sunday, June 1.
According to the Highway Patrol,
Brenda Lee Wright, 18, went to sleep
whUe driving a 1978 Chevrolet on NC 801.
When ttie car entered a curve, it ran off
ttie road on the left and struck a traffic
island. The vehicle ttien swerved back
out into the road and overtum ed,
coming to rest in a sideditch on the right.
M iss Wright w as treated for injuries
at ttie scene.
Trooper A.C. Stokes estim ated ttte
dam age to ttie car at $4,500.
M iss W right w as ch arged w ith
careless and reckless driving.
Driver Flips Truck
An Advance m an fUpped his truck on
Underpass Road Saturday night. M ay
30, ttie Highway Patrol reported.
Eugene Dalton M yers, Jr., 49, was
d rivin g a 1959 International truck
around a curve at a high speed when he
lost control of the truck which over
tumed.
M yers was taken from ttie scene by
anottier vehicle.
Trooper C.R. CoUins estim ated ttie
dam age to ttie track at $250.
M yers w as charged witti reckless
driving and unsafe equipment.
H lt& RunO nN .C .801
Tyrest Gaither, 18, of Harmony, was
arrested Tuesday, May 26 and charged
with breaking and entering and the
larccny of a tape player from Davie
County High School.
Anthony Bailey, of Rt. 7, MocksviUe,
reported dam age to personal property
at Davie High’s parkli^ lot on 'Tuesday,
May 26. Bailey found the paint on his car
door chipped and scraped. Dam age was
esUmated at $75.
Larry Dale Wishon, 20, of Rt. 1, Ad
vance, was arrested Friday, M ay M,
and charged witti assault.
Rolls Car To Avoid
Hitting A Dog
A Davie County woman was not in
jured as she lost control and roUed hor
car to avoid hitting a dog on Com atssr
Road, Wednesday, M ay 27.
According to the Highway Patrol,
Sharon Ann Franck, 19, of Rt. 8,
MocksvUle, attempted to dodge ttie dog,
cut to the left and lost control of her 1V77
Honda. The car ran onto the left
shoulder, up an embankment te a
Monday 12:S0-8:S0 who was unable to Tton in tbne. A hit and run was reported on N.C. 801
Tuesday *:0 0 -8 :» Trooper A.C. Stokes estimated Ow around 1:30 a.m . Saturday, M ay 80, said
Wednesday dam age to ttie VoUawagen at $800 and at Uie Highway Patrol.
H iursday 9:00'8:80 (g pontUc. Ricky Dale M cCrary, 23, of Rt. 4,
Friday 9:00-5:30 Young was charged witti faUure to MocksvUle, was traveling soutti in his
S atu rd ay 9:00-2:00 reduce speed. 1M5 Ford track When he m et an on
coming vehicle crossing the center line.
_ ry t • ^ T A m * M cCrary tried to avoid the coUision,Beverage Statm Need Fast
which did not stop.
I camper»
Witti warm weatHer on ttie horison,
famUy mem bers wUl probably start
drinking more carbonated beverages.
And Uiat could lead to more stains.
Unfortunately when a soft drink stain
Is aUowed to d iy, a veUow stain ttiat is
hard to rem ove could be ttie result, says
Judieth M ock, extension clothing
sp ecialist. N orth C arolina State
University. So sponge ttie stained area
at once with cool water.
Then, when you can, taunder ttie
garment in water ttiat’s as hot as is safe
for ttie fabric. If stain persista, soak in
ttie foUowing manner;
For chlorine bltwclmble fabrics, soak
stained c.rea tor 15 minutes in a solution
ol one tablespoon chlorine bleach to one
quart of water.
For nonbleachable fa b rics, soak
County Line VFD
Auxiliary Meets
The Ladies AuxUiary of the Counly
U ne Volunteer Fire Department held Ita
regular montiily m eeling Tuesday night,
May 26.
The theme of tiie devoUonal period
was "Love is Patience," Mrs. Mark
'Thorne read the scripture; and Mrs. BiU
Cartner led in prayer.
During the business session, Mrs.
Harold Benfield and Mrs. Jack Cartner
presented the se cre ta ry's and
treasurer's report, respectively.
The auxiliary voted to have a
photographer from Parker's Studio to
take ^ olographs at Uie fire department
August 2
^ freshm ents were served to nine
members.
stained area tor 15 minutes in a solution
ot two tablespoons, 3-percent hydrogen
peroxide to one gallon water.
For very persistent stains, soak
stained area ut warm w ater with an
enzym e pre-soak such as Biz or Axion.
Then launder garm ent, foUowing In
structions on tbe care label.
Foster Reunion
H ie Foster Reunion wUl be held
Sunday, June 7th, at Turrentine Baptist
Chur al 12:30 p.m. 'This wUl be Uie first
time the Foster clan has gathered in
several years.
Police
Reports
Т !п З П Я г Я 1 ^ !а Я в ^ в ^ ? Т в а З т м 1
Road, M ocksville, w as arrested
Saturday, May 30. and charged with the
larceny of %200 from Susan Angel of 392
Avon Street.
M ocksville P olice in vestigated
several breaking and enterings last
weekend. The MocksvUle Elem entary
School was broken Into. Stolen were ice
cream , candy and some cash. There was
an attempted break in at the B. C. Brock
BuUdiii«. HoUy Farm s on Depot Street
also reported a break in, but nothing was
reported missing.
M ocksville residents reported to
police the larceny of several bicycle« on
Sunday, May 31. Among ttie victims
were Richard Cook, of 531 Garner
Street; Brenda Jones, of 101 Lakewood
Drive; and Jolmny Frye, of Oak Street.
Trooper C.R. CoUins estim sted the
dam age to M cCrary’s truck at $200. No
raUroad track. H ie vehicle then roUed
and cam e to rest on ita wheels.
Trooper W.D. Grooms estimated Uie
dam age to the car at $1,200.
Loc^ Firms
Presented With
Safety Awards
Assistant N. C. Labor Com nlsslonar
Charles Jeffress prasantad tha labor
departm ent’s annual aw ard for out-
standing safety achlavam ant to 88
businassas at a dinner In ThomasviUa oo
W ednesday, June 3.
At the program , couMOSorad with Um
Ibom asvU la Area Cham bar ot Con-
m erce, Assistant Commiastoiisr M -
tn m honored firm s firom Davidson and
Davie counties.
J effress noted p a rtteu larly tin
achievem ent o( B. * F . M anufacturiiig
C om pany In c., M ocksvill«, wM en
quaUflad for th« dsp«rtm«nt’s safsty
award for ttia 81st oonsaeutlv« y«ar:
Among oth«r r«clpl«nls from Dairt«
County ware:
M onlalgh G arm ent Com pany of
MockavUla, 21st consaeutiv« year.
Blackw elder M anufacturing Compainy
ol MocksvUle, lOtti consacutlva yaar,
MoxvU M anufacturing Company of
MocksviUe, 18th consecutive year.
Carolina Sportawear of MocksvUle,
lOtti consscutive year.
Burlington Industries Inc., Vsrsatach
Plant 0002, of Cooleemee, 6th eon-
secutive year.
Drexel Heritage Furnishings Inc.,
Plant No. 34, of MocksvUle, Jnd con
secutive year.
H anes K n itw esr, D avie C entral
Disfribution Center of Advance and the
Narrow Fabrics Plant of Advance, first
year.
QuaUflrs for the dm artm ant’s I860
award eittier m aintained a perfect
safety ««cord during tti« calendar year
or racorded an occupatlonai injury
Incidence rate at le u t 80 percent below
the statewide rate for their particular
industry.
Tlie awards dlnnsr is scheduled to
begin at 7 p.m. at ttie Woman’s Club, 18
m iM t Drive.
H ie ’FhomssviUe dinner is Uw 2 M ia a
seriee ot 30 labor departm ent safM y
awards presentations scheduled acroas
ttie state this spring. H ie safety In
centive program began in 1946 as a
cooperative effbrt with ttie U. 8.
Departm snt of Labor under the World
War II Manpower Act. Since 1861, the
program h u been administered solely
byth« N. C. Departm ent of Labor.
140-160)
1 2 4 S o u th M ain S treet
. MocksviU«*! N .C .
iN iblishBd eve ry T h u rsd ay b y th e
D A V J E P U B L IS H IN G C O IW A N Y
M O C K S V IL L E
E N T E R P R IS E
1 9 1 6 1 9 5 8
D A V I E
R E C O R D
18 9 9 -19 5 8
C O O L E E M E E
J O U R N A L
19 0 6 1 9 7 1
G o rd o n T o m lin so n ..........................................E d ito rP u h lish e r
B e ck y S n yd er
D irecto r o f A d vertisin g
S eco n d Q a ss lfo e ta g e Paid in M ocksviU e, N .C . 2 70 2 8
S U B S C R IP T IO N R A T E S
110 .0 0 per yeer in North Csrollns; $15.00 per year out of state.
Slnfls Copy 25 cent*
Vottm stter: Send sM rssi changes to Dsvie County Enterprise Record,
P.O .B ox 525, Mocksville, N.C. 2 f0 2 i
DAVII- COUNTY liNTERPRISK RECORD, TIIIIRSTMY, JUNH 4, 1981
^ e f l c
OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8 : 3 0
s u n rm n e R Tin n e .
S Q L 0
It s
I H S
b e R R i e s
Sale Ends Saturday, June 6
j u n i o r s a n d m i s s e s
g e t i n t o
t h e s w i m
a n d s a v e !
У з o ff
regular
prices
Splash In famous brand bikinis or
maillots. Choose from Catalina® Jrs.,
Catalina® for misses, Jantzen® and
morel Each in sleek body-shaping
nylon/spandex. It's the sale you've
been waiting for...so take the-plunge;
buy more than one. Reg. $19 to $36
c o o l, c a r e fre e livin g in
S w e e tb r ia r ’ s e p a r a te s
8 .8 8 ,0 14 .8 8regularly $12 to $18
The first thing you re going to want this sum
mer is casual separates that keep you looking
cool crisp through any weather.
Mouee: tiny floral cap sleeve style with lace
trimming and high band collar. Polyester/cot
ton blend. Blue/yellow, pink/lilac print. Also
available; cap sleeve eyelet Mouse in white or
ecru. Tucked lace front; Iliac, blue, white. Sizes
810 18. reg, $15 ..........................................11.88
Skirts
'U.S8 ’15.8S
h e r e ’s th e s c o o p o n
T .G .I .F . s e p a r a te s
to
inlors, you’re covered for sports
7 /ctivity, casual daytime’ looks or spe-
^ /;ial occasion dressing. Great savings.
W / knit tope with novelty screen prints.
by Polyester/cotton. In sizes S,M,L.
Ij Tube top; white/green, reg. $7 .. .5,88
II Trapunto stitched tank; white, pink, or
^ blue, reg. $10 .................................
Also available; short sleeve T in white,
foo SII ....................................7,88
Cap sleeve T in white, reg. $12 . .8,88
stripe tank, reg. $B.........................5.M
•horte in polyester/cotton pop
lin or sheeting. Drawstring or elastic
waists. Shorts also in polyester/cotton
chambray. Blue or red. Sizes 5 to 13
Shorts, reg. $10 ...................
s a v e n o w o n
s u m m e r ’s e a s y c a r e
fa s h io n fa b r ic s
1.88 yd., regularly 2.99
textured crinkle weavee. Heavier weight that
responds nicely lo your best tailoring techniques.
Veriiatlle pastels, summer white, bright tones.
55% polyester, 45% coiton, 44/45" wide,
woven seersucker. Stripes and popular fancies.
65% polyester, 35% cotlon. Great for shorts,
shirts, blouses, sundresses 44/45" wide.
MEN’S
KNIT SHIRTS
•SSORrCDsniPES
SIZES-S-M-L
B .8 8
2.38.0 5.88
regularly $3 to 7.50
active play clothes for big or
little g irls ...a ll easy-care
a. Shortall: comfortable one piece
style; polyester and cotton plaid seer
sucker. Elasticized waist. Eyelet trim.
•7-14, regularly 7.50.........................5.88
b. Tank top: action stripes. Polyester/
cotton knit. 4-6X, regularly $4, 3.18
Short; polyester/cotton twill. Action
stripes. 4-ex, regularly $3..............2.38
2.78u>4.88
regularly 3.50 to 6.50
active play clothes for big or
little girls; ail easy-care
a. Camisole top; polyester/cotton knit.
Summer prints. 7-14, reg. 4.50.. .3.58
Short; polyester and cotton with action
stripe trim. 7-14, reg. 4.50.............3.58
b. Camisole top; polyester/cotton knit
solid color. 7-14, iteg. 4.50.............3.58
Bugoffl® polyester/cotton twill short;
actkjn skle stripes. 7-14, reg. 3.50,2.78
c. Shortall: polyester and cotton plaid
seersucker; elasticized. Sizes 4-6X,
reg. 6.50 -.........................................4.88
MEN’S SHORTS
ASSORTED COLORS
USUALLY 42 8 .8 8
>reg.$9
our AlWlhurst®
knits for boys
60% cotton for
coolness, 40%
polyester for easy
care. Short-
sleeved good
looks in bright
summer colors.
Boys’sizes 8 to 20.
regularly $9,7-147.18
6.38 regularly $8,4-6X
our Bugoffl one piece swim suits are
bright as summer sunshine
Imaginative color combinations, prints and appli
ques. Quick drying polyester or nylon with spandex
added for good fit. Many styles including halter
string ties, tank types. From our own Bugoffl® col
lection for sun loving young swimmers
breeze inviting infants'; toddlers
sunsuits and play sets
Polyester and cottons wilh pretty details like
precious embroidery, dainty applique trims,
practical overall styling. See Ihem all.
c. girls’ pleated front shift wilh matching panty.
12-24 monlhs, reg. $6 ...........................4.44
d. girls' halter top short set. Embroidery and
applique trim. 2-4 years, reg. $7................S.44
14.88
regularly $18
you pick the court:
w e h a v e the Nike®
canvas action shoe
Nike is the tennis' shoe that
sets the benchmark. This is
the one with the sturdy
canvas upper, padded
topline, comfortable insole
and the distinctive swoosh on
the sides. Men’s and women’s
sizes. And the price is right.
A c tio n / 8 0 s h o e s
...f o r t h e fa m ily
th a t p la y s h a r d
Made to our specifications
with sturdy uppers, cushioned
insoles, long wearing out-
soles. Priced for savings.
a. Canvas tennis shoes.
Women’s, reg. $16 ___12.88
Boys’ 12-6,reg.$14 ...11.88
b. Nylon and suede: Men’s,
reg. $19.............................15.88
c. Canvas Deck Hugger;
Men’s, reg. $17 ........13.88
d. Nylon and suede: women’s
reg. $19.............................15.88
regularly $15 1 1 .8 8
Sweetbrlar® canvas
rope edge espadrllle
Summer's classic in navy,
beige, white or red. Have it in
several colors. Women’s.
regularly $ 11 8 .8 8
Sweetbrlar® canvas
double eyelet tie
Cushioned insole; smart rope
edging. Beige,
Women’s sizes.
1 0 . 8 8 regularly $13
free and easy, cool and comfortable
sandals from our Bugoff!® collection
Destined to be seen on all the girls in town. That’s
because the look is perfect for this summer’s
casual way of life. Leather uppers, padded
insoles, just a hint of a heel. "Shelly” with twin
buckles; “Perch" double strap thong. Sizes 8V2-4 .
1 1 . 8 8
women’s reg. $15
Padded insoles, contoured unit bottoms. Sweet-
briar* for women:
a. Multicolor urethane strap sandal; women's'sizesb. Leather twin buckles. Women’s
c. Classic leather thong. Women’sour ‘L’ltalia’ stripling sandal ...sweet and low
13 .8 8
regularly $18
Perfection with full skirted
light or casual dresses.
Note the hint of a heel, the
flattering cluster of bands
at the vamp, the slim ankle
and heel strap.
4 davii; county i:nti:ri»risk кьгок». thur.simy, ju n h 4. i9«i
W H E N Y O U S H O P H E F F N E R 'S Y O U P
HOT DOG BRAND
F R A N K S
240Z.PKG. ^
VALLEYDALE'S
CHUNK STYLE
B O L O G N A
IHORMEL LIGHT & LEAN
H A M
U.S. CHOICE LEAN TENDER
Ey e o f th e R o u n d
R O A S T ^ 2 8 9
S T E A K ^
EXTRA LEAN ALWAYS TENDER
,C 06E STEAK
$
LB.
U.S. CHOiCI
JUICY FLAVOR
R U M P
9 9 'PKG.
I VIRGINIA BRAND BONELESS
C O O K E D H A M S '
■ a ж a ^HALFWHOLE--------1
1 8 9
1 LB.
1 2 <
HORMEL THIN SLI
Ш Ш
a
У4 SLICED
S M O K E D H A M S ’
W S T A N T M F F E E
940Z.JAR
★ SAVE 10*
A FANTASTIC SAVE A TAPE OFFER
ANSCO
P o c k e t
¡a m e ra
SAVE 44c
JUMI
with this coupon and Purch»« of
O n e $ 1 9 .9 5 o r M o r e F o o d O r d e r
.^NOTt . umit of on* Food Mnut coupon «Mth «cti c
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L A N D ■
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T E N D E R C H U N K D I N N E R S F L A V b ^ r
Dog Food
O l ^ n t
Dog Food
3 6 o z .
P K G .
P R IM E V A R I E T Y
Dog Food
Ш Ш н в в н
36 oz.
S IZ E
Dog Food
38 oz.
S IZ E
C Y C L E 1 D R Y
Dog Food 6 L B . B A G
C Y C L E 2 D R Y
Dog Food 5 L B . B A G
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Dog Food 5 L B . B A G
G A IN E S G R A V Y T R A IN ¿ 6 L B 7
Dog Food_________ BAG
K IB B L E S 'N B IT S
Dog Food
K i B B L f r ’ f l B I T r
Dog Food
k e l l o g g ’s
Special K
6 L B .
S IZ E
20 L B .
S IZ E
1 5 O Z . P K G .
C O M E T L O N G G R A IN
Rice
4 2 o z .
S IZ E
H E IN Z
Tomato Catsup
32 oz.
Q U A R T
B O T T L E
31‘
*1.39
»1.49
*2.05
*2.05
*7.19
*5.99
1.29
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130Z.BA6
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DESSERT TOPPING
D R EA M ! W H IP
50Z.PKG.
$ « 3 3
YOU
SAVE
14'
6 ‘
28<
16‘
16*
24'
24’
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G R K I
a t a »h r s
24‘
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24'
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30'
DAVIE COUNTY FNTHRPRISF, RECORD, THURSDAY. UINi; 4, 1081 5
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ARMOUR’S STAR
V I E N N A S A U S A G E E ^
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ARMOUR’S TASTY
P O T T E D M E A T
_________★ » v c ^ 4 -
M a r g a r in e
:iD
3 9
4 9
BLUE BONNET
A R G A R I N E
1 LB. P K G .
S R E E N B E A N S
303 CANS
★SAVE«
STOKELY’S FINEST _
a w “ 3^ ciur ov★ SAVE 23*
nrO B E l WHOLE
W ITH 1 FILLED
S T A M P PRICE BO O K
O ffe r G o o d O n ly
T h ro u gh
Ju n e 9 , 198 1
Y E L L O W
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STOKELY'S FINEST
P E A R S 303CANS
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THESE PRICES GOOD
ONLY THROUGH MAY 30,1981
STOKELY’S FINEST
m
|303CANS
★ SAVE 22*
CARTON OF 8
DIET PEPSI
MOUNTAIN DEW
P E P S I C O L A S
16 OZ. BOTTLES
BES-PAK 20-30 GALLON SIZE PLi
Economy Tr^sh Bags
SCOTT FAMILY
Napkins 300 COUNT
STOKELY’S FINEST
T R U IT C O C K T A IL
DRY DETERGENT
303CANS
Napkins 140 COUNT
ASSORTED FLAVORS POWDERED
Hi-C Powder Drinks
PET
Coffee Creamer 22 oz. size
T R 5
Mayonnaise QUARTJAR
KRAFT ITALIAN
Dressing
16 OZ.
BOTTLE
DEL MONTE
ORANGE OR LIME
G A T O R A D I
Tomato Catsup 32 oz. size
4601
★ SAVE Id*
HUNT'S
Tomato Catsup 24 6z. size
ZIPLOC REGULAR QUART SIZE
Freezer Bags z o c o u n t
Z IP L O C L A R G E P A L S T IC
Freezer Bags 15 c o u n t
7IP I n r O IIA R T .< l7 P
MAXWELL HOUSE'
IN S T A N T ,C O F F E E
60Z.JÄR ÌÒÒZ.JAR
$2^7 $y9
W ITH 1 FILLED V
S T A M P PRICE BO O K '
O ffe r G o o d O nly
Jun.; 9, 198 1
FRESH FRUIT 5 oz. BOTTLE t r w
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75* 8*
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95* 14'
»1.25 24'
’1.07 26‘
89* 26'
’ 1.07 16'
’ 1.15 20‘
2 0 *
BALL REOULAH CANNING JARS
* SAVE 16'
TMDHI
* SAVE 60*
E L L O W C O R N I G R E r N
SNAPPIN FRESH
Q U A R T S IZ E ^ 3 ® D 0 Z
I B I W B K ¥ K f c fc V W l
S Q U A S H
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DAVII-: COUNTY 1 NT! Rl’KISI- RliCORI), THURSDAY, JUNI- 4, 1981
Man Apprehended After 19-Hour Chase-
Manhunt Involving Local Authorities
What began as a routine check of a
Chevrolp» with two garden tillers in the
trunk at Greasy Com er last Thursday
turned into a high speed chase and a 19-
hour manhunt involving Davie and
Rowan sheriff’s deputies, the highway
patrol and the SBI.
Zeb Rene Harrison, 20, of 7027
Cheshire Road, Charlotte, was ap
prehended at 9:33 a.m ., barefooted and
tangled in briars near the Second Creek
bridge on U.S. 70 in Rowan County.
Deputies had been tipped off 4S minutes
earlier by a fam ily under whose house
Harrison had apparently spent the
night.
A fter his a rrest, H arrison w as
charged with two counts of assault with
a deadly weapon (his car) against
Deputy Bill Overcash and Detective
Mike Smith of the Davie County
Sheriff’s Department. Harrison is also
suspected of stealing the two garden
tillers from the residence of John Carr of
Cleveland.
It was the two tillers hanging out of the
trunk which aroused the susDicions of
Overcash and Smith. The officers
stopped H arrison ’s 1972 Chevrolet
Caprice near Cooleemee at the in
tersection of N.C. 801 and U.S. 601.
Telling the officers he had receipts for
the tillers in his car, Harrison walked
back to his car, jumped in and slammed
the car in reverse towards Smith. The
detective escaped being pinned between
the rear of the Caprice and the driver’s
door of the 1977 Plymouth patrol car.
Harrison sped aw ay down N.C. 801 to
Woodleaf, with Overcash and Smith in
pursuit. The chase continued along
Third Creuk and P feifer roads then
back to N.C. 801 over to U.S. 70.
The officers said they fired ,<«everal
times aiming for a tire on the Caprice.
One shot knocked out the driver’s side
window when the officers thought they
had Harrison blocked in at T h iA Creek
and Pfeifer roads.
Harrison managed to low Smith and
Overcash, but Davie deputy Ricky
Howell picked up the chase again aloni
U.S. 70. At speeds exceeding 100 mL'
along the wet highway. Howell staved on
the bumper of the Caprice while
radioing in that the belts had slipped on
his overheating engine and that lie was
losing power steering.
The car chase ended when the Caprice
swerved off the road through some trees
and got hung up on a bank beside the
residence of W.U. Graham . Harrison
fled on foot througli the woods, but left
his shoes beside Graham ’s bam .
Bloodhounds were called in, and an
SBI airplane reported spotting the
fugutive in the woods. H arrU on
managed to evade the manhunt several
times despite being seen by two children
on Hurley School Road. Authorities
called off the search around 5:30 p.m.
About 5 p.m. Harrison apparently
crawled under the one-story house of
Jam es and Ruth Reynolds who live at
the intersection of Baringer Road and
U.S. 70. ’The fugitive spent the night
there, making a bed out of the house’s
insulation.
M rs. R eynolds said she heard
something bumping under the house, but
thought it was onlv a repairm an the
family had called to fix the heat pump. A
third-shift worker at General Electric,
Mrs. Reynolds sleeps during the day.
She assumed as did her husband and
son who cam e home later that the wind
or the repairm an had left the wooden
door open which leads to the
crawlspace. The Reynoldses had heard
the police were slooking for a fugitive in
the area, but thought nothing of it. Her
husband and son investigated with a
flashlight. Finding nothing, they locked
the door.
Returning from work Friday mor
ning,Mrs. Reynolds again heard the
bumping. At first she thought the
repairm an had returned, but as the
bumping grew louder, Mrs. Reynolds
realized someone was trapped under the
house.
Mrs. Reynolds telephoned her son,
Jam es II, and told him to come home
sheriff’s department when he sae the
broken hinges.
Davie County deputy Bill Overcaah holds the ihotgim from wliicli he
fired a round into Harrison’s car. Overcaah and Detective Mike Smith were the flrst to chase Harrison.
Rowan County Sheriff deputies surround Zeb Harrison as they prepare to
transport him to the county Jail Friday moming. Rowan and Davie authorities spent the better part of Thunday afternoon searching for Harrison, after he led them on a wild car chase.Sheriff George Smith (far right) and his deputies look over Zeb R. Harrison’s car.
DtaaAifdlHadmdikr
M H S C la ss O f 1 9 4 1 To H o ld R e u n io n
Two Graduate From
Dana AngeU Blackwelder and Regina
Ann W hittaker graduated from Davis
H ospital School of N ursing in
StatesvUle.
The graduation exercises were held at
Front Street Baptist in StatesvUle on
Friday evening, M ay 22, 1981, at 8
o’clock. The service concluded with tbe
traditional Nightingale Pledge and the
inspirational lam p Ughting.
Dana is the dauj^ter of Mr. and Mrs.
Verious AnseU of MocksvUle and the
wife of Dale Bhckw elder, also of
MocksvUle. Dana received recognition
for having completed the n u m W of
voluntary hours with tbe Am erican Red
Cross required to receive tlie certificate
and pin.
R ^ in a is Uie daughter of B(r. and
Mrs. Roger W hittaker of Rt. 6,
MocksvUle. She served on the Student
Council and the Student S ervices
Committee.
There Is An Answer
By Norman Vincent Peaie
and RuUi Stafford Peals
SHORT AND BITTER
I feel I im getting more bitter every
day as I get older. I am 55 years old and
going through the menopause. Well, m y
problem is I am only 4 feet, 11 inches tall
and people are constanUy rem arking to
me atMut being short. I am very self-
conscious about m y height and Uiere’s
not a day Uiat I’m not thinking about it
and feeling more bitter about It. I hope
you wUl help me out.
I think all of us in this Ufe Iwve to lake
ourselves as we are: big nose or smaU
nose, big ears or Uttle ears, taU or sbort,
I have had questions Ufce yours from
tall women who are em barrassed by
tbeir height. So, onr suggestion for you b
lhat you make your mlad and spirit so
attractive that people wUI love you. And
they wUI, too. They wUI admire you for
who you are.
You cannot be tnUer physicaUy, but
you can be laU mentaUy and splrituaUy.
Perhaps you wUI find help In our
booklet "Spirit Lifters’’ which U on IU
way lo you. Anyone wishing a free eofy
may write to us at Box SM, PawUng.
N.Y. I2SM.
BIG TROUBLE
I am a young m ale in my earlv
twenties and am very much in love with
a 19 year old girl. For a year we have
been seeing each other in secret only,
due to the constant feuding among our
famUy members. It aU started wiieii my
older sister and her older broUier broke
tfteir engagem ent-which resulted in gun
wounds, legal convictions and itelu’-
taches on both sides of our fam ilies. We
would be in big trouble if our families
found out about us. We’ve considered
going to the other side of the country and
getting married. But we know we
couldn’t come back for a long time, and
ttiat would hurt us and our famiUes. We
feel we are right for each oUier and
shouldn’t be punished for someUiing
they did.
If you both are absolnlely sure Ы yoar
deep and abidtaig love ter each otber
Uien there is only one thing to do.
Together, notify yoar famUies, iovbigly,
but wiUi firmness, (bat yoa do love each
otber and plan someday lo be married.
Let Ihem m ake trouble and fume and
fuss about it bat “ stick 11 oat.”
SOMETHING MIGHT HAPPEN
When m y chUdren were smaU I got
divorced and w as alooe for eight years.
Tlwii I m arried a wonderful man. Now
m y son, 16, and daughter, IS, don’t want
to help out at home. Ib ey say Uiat is my
job, and they lay down and watch TV or
sleep. I do baby-sitting and tt is not easy
to take care of five babies every day. My
daughter is also very jealous. I cannot
even get near m y husband because she
wants to do ttie sam e and says be is as
much hers as lie is mine. Sbe is very
mature in body but thinks like a sm all
chUd. I’m afraid someUiing m i^ t
happen. I hope you can help me.
Your 13 year old daughter needs a
firm hand. And your arrogant and
discourteous son couid do with some
firm treatment also. Talk with your
husband about Ihis whole situation. 'П е
two of you mu»t act a i a team and lake
charge Ы your home.
Richard Dean NoUey, son of M r. and
Mrs. C. H. NoUey, Jr. of Shelby, was
named lo the Dean's List tor Uie spring
sem ester. Mr. NoUey Is a Juakr
m ajoring hi busbiess admhristratto» al
LNC-C. He la ttie grandson of Mr. and
Mrs. Hubert Nolley of Rt. 7, MocksvUle
and M rs. E. P . Ratledge of Woodleaf, N.
C.
Tractor-Pull Is
Held In Rain
H ie NorUi Davie Ruritan a u b tractor
puU was held Friday and Saturday, M ay
29 and 30 despite rainy weaUier.
There were several local winners.
Friday's winners in Uieir respective
classes were; Uie Fork PuUing Team,
which won in the 7 and 9 stock classes;
WUiard Robertson from ReidsvUle in a
Ford 4-wheel drive pickup won in the
Truck class. In the Superstock class
Steve Crutchfield of Liberty won in an
1100 M assey-Fergusson.
Saturday’s winners were: the Red
Mule PuUing Team from Oakboro,
which won in the 4-wbeei drive class.
MarshaU Snider of Richfield won in Uie
Superstock division. The Brinitle Pulling
Team from L e i^ to n won in the
Modified division and Sandy Cline of
MocksvUle won in Uie AnUque class.
Jerry Anderson, president of the
NorUi Davie Ruritan Club, said Uiere
was a UtUe confusion because of the
rain, but coinpeUtion went oii as
scheduled. He extends his appreciaUon
to businesses and fans supporting the
tractor puU sponsored by North Davie
Ruritans.
Proceeds from the event wiU go
tow ards updating the C lark sville
Community Center.
The w ar in Europe w as raging.
Germ an bombers were hitting London.
Although not yet an active participant,
the United States w as getting prepared
tor war. H ie draft was in progress and
each week young men of D avie were
leaving for m UiUry training.
TM s w as the situation when the
BloduvUie H i^ School Class of 1941
graduated. T h is S atu rd ay night
m em bers of this class wiU get togeUier
at the Center Community for what wUl
be Uie 40th anniversary of ttieir
graduation.
U iat year of 1941, the MocksviUe High
Scbool began com mencement exercises
witti the baccalaureate sermon on
Sunday even in g, M ay llth , being
preached by the Rev. J. S. Hiatt of
StatesvUle.
C lass D ay exercises w ere held
Tuesday night. M ay ISth, at which time
Uie senior class presented to Uie pubUc
Uieir cla ss p lay, “ A lm a M ater’s
ChUdren.” The cast of tbe play in
cluded: John Carl Dunn, WUUam Mc
Daniel, E tta M ae Tutterow, Jeff Tut
terow, Lester M artin, BiU Hoots, Sheek
Bowden Jr., Nancy Tutterow, Sadie M ae
AUen, Lois WUson, Dorothy Leagans,
Elsie SmiUi, a a r a Lewis W attins,
Sarah Foster, NeU Livengood, CoUeen
CoUette, M abd Joyce Cain, Blary N<11
Ward. Sarah Foster sang a solo, and an
octette composed of DoroUiy Leagans,
CoUeen CoUette, Sarah Foster, M abd
Joyce Cain, M argaret G rant, M ary
Markland, Gene Smith and George
Mason sang.
M arshals for the class day w ere H eniy
Sbort, M arie Johnson, TUthia Raye
McCuUoug, HoUand Holton and Henry
Cole Tomlinson.
On W ednesday, Dr. Clyde A. Erwin,
State Superintendent of PubUc In
struction, delivered the commencement
address. Diplomas were presented by
R. S. Proctor. County Superintendent of
Schools, to the foUowing m em bers of the
1941 class:
Mabel Joyce Cain (Benton), Helen
W alker (W oosley), M argie W alker
(Buckner), KaUilee Storie (HUton),
A udrey H ow ard (deceased), Inex
WUUams, E lsie M ae W alker (Robert
son), Eleanor CaudeU (D anids), N di
livengood, M ary Lois WUson, M argaret
M cA llister (D aw son), P aulin e M c-
СЗатгоск (Vaughn), Betty Faye James
(Smith), M argaret Grant (deceased),
Sarah W agner (H oUand), M ary
Markland (Eaton), Blanche Whitaker
(Boger), Paul G ray Boger, Clara Lewis
Watkins (Pinyard), Katherine Ferebee
(LoudermiUt), Laura Cartner (HaU),
L au ra Sm ith (W ood), O scar M c-
O am rock, Jeff Tutterow, Sarah Foster,
M ary NeU W ard (W hite), Nancy Tut
terow (T u tterow ), F a y e D w iggias
(B arn ey), W ayne L a k ey, Agnes
Whitaker (Ratiedge), Anna Forrsst
(E va n s), Gordon Stonestreet
(deceased), John Carl Dunn, Jolm
B oyce C ain, Jim I<atham, Coleen
CkiUette, D orothy L eagan s (M arx),
Jam es Beeding, WUUam McDaniel,
E b ie Smith (Black), E tta M ae Tutterow
(Norman), GUbert SofUey, WUUam
“ BUi” Seaford, J. C. Cook, BUI Hooto,
Hebert SmiUi, BUi Fink, WUUam Baker,
WaUace Sparks Ruth BaUey (Foster),
G eorge M ason (d eceased ), Lest#r
Martin Jr., George Kim m «-, EUa M ae
Boger (Capes), Eugene Smith, Clay
Markland (deceased) and Frank Poplin
(deceased).
Paprika
PaprUta is naUve to O n trai America'.
Lemon Tree
The lemon tree is probably native to
Northern India.
The inckiencst o f patting
arou n d c o ld t and flu
germi among fam ily msm-
bsrt are believed to be fewer
with familiet uting dith-
wathsrt. Higher watar tem-.
peraturei and ttrong de
te rg e n ts g e t th e cre d it.
L e t t e r T o E d i t o r 1
If Uiere is someUiing you would Uke to
ask Dr. and Mrs. Peaie, write to them at
Box 500, Pawling, N .Y 1»««
T H E R E 'S AN AN SW ER! is
distributed by FoundaUon for C3u1stian
Uving, PawUng, N.Y. 12S64. AU rights
reserved.
Dear Editor:
NorUi Davie Ruritan Club would Uke
to thank aU of the club members and
wives for tiie many hours of work in
volved in making our recent tractor puU
a success.
We would also Uke to tliank you, the
Davie County Enterprise-Record for
helping us so much with Uie publicity
concerning Uie tractor puU.
We, especiaUy want to tiiank Ute
general pubUc for attending; and tiie
tractor pull for putting wi the show.
Jerry Anderson, president
North Davie Ruritan Club
not, get a trainea first-aider
Keep the injured person ly
ing down — cover to keep
him warm. Dot// move the
injured person unless neces
sary to remove him from
further danger. Moving can
aggravate the injury — it is
better for the untrained per
son to leave the injured
alone.
^UcOMKtD'lUfi
Ilg N .M sIn St.
634-2111
Th u rsd a y Ju n e 4 th
EXOHCUNDS
BEACHWEAR
For Your Fun In The Sun
Swimwear
Sundresses
Shirts
izod Hats
1481 N. Main St.
Beside Davie Realty
Across From Hendricks Furniture
HOURS 9-5 Mon.Sat
U N C -C H S tu d y S h o w s T h a t A s A G ro u p
S o u th e rn e rs A re N o t M o re A n ti> U n io n
DAVin COIINTY KNTr.RPRISr, RUCORD, THURSDAY. (UNi; 4, 1ЧК1
- у<-:
By David WUilamson
The common belief that the South’s
low rate of union membership results in
part from Southerners' traditional
dislike for labor unions Is Inaccurate,
according to a study conducted at the
University of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill.
llie study shows that despite the fact
that only 14 percent of nonagricultural
workers In the South were union
m em bers, com pared to a U.S. average
oi 2S percent, anti-union sentiments
among the general peculation of the
region are no greater than anywhere
else In the country.
Gall Doss, a graduate student in
sociology at UNC-CH, presented her
findings recently at the annual meeting
of the Southern Sociological Society in
Louisville, Ky.
She based her research on two surveys
that pollster LouiE H arris and
Associates conducted in 1975 and 1976.
When combined, the surveys Included
3,184 persons from around the United
States who responded to 23 questions
about attitudes toward trade unions.
“ The South has been shown to be
substantially different from the rest of
ESC Assistance MayBe Available For Employee Training
Employers In Davie County wishing to
train entry-level employees for higher-
paying positions with b etter ad
vancement potential m ay be able to
receive financial assistance through the
E m ploym ent S ecu rity Com m ission
(ESC).
V icki W ard, m an ager of the
M ocksville Job S r v lc e office, explained
that funds are available under the
Com prehensive E m ploym ent and
Training Act (CETA). TiUe II-C to
Lori Livengood Is
Scholarship Winner
Lori Livengood of M ocksville has won
a Prank P . Buck Scholarship at
Catawba College, it was announced
today by Mrs. Barbara Hill, financial
aid officer.
The scholarship is named in mem ory
of Frank P. Buck, a form er Salisburian
and owner of an accounting firm , who
was quite generous In his support of
Catawba College and its programs.
M iss Livengood is the daughter of Mr.
and M rs. Kenneth R. Livengood of Route
1 and is a 1961 graduate of Davie County
High School. She will enter Catawba
this fall as a freshman.
upgrade the skills of persons locked into
low-paying, dead-end jobs.
Funding from CETA m ay last up to 44
weeks, depending on the skill training
being provided. During training, CETA
pays Uie equivalent of 40 percent of the
starting wage for the trained posiUon.
“The program encourages employers
to train entry-level employees who have
been working at less than their full skill
potenUal for at least six months,” Ward
said. “ This enables employers to make
maximum use of their personnel while it
reduces the cost of ti'aining. In this way,
good, stable, reliable workers are
h elp^ to grow and the company
benefits from their development.”
If, as an employer, you have an em
ployee whom you would like to train, or
if you would like more informaUon about
Uie upgrading program, contact the
local Job Service office at Courthouse
Square, Old Jail Building, 634-3315.
Savory Blends
Savory blends weU with other herbs. It
m ay be used alone or in combination
wiUi oUier herbs in stuffings for meat,
fish or poultry; egg dishes; sauces;
soups; m eat loaf and ham burgers;
-Stews; heana;.cabhagR, peas and tomato
the United States In m any w ays,”
(Miss) Doss said. “ Its residents are
m ore violent, m ore religiou s and
overwhelm ingly Protestant, and more
locally oriented than residents of the
rest of Uie country even after stan-
dardizaU on for dem ographic and
economic composition.”
One difference frequently cited is the
South’s low level of union membership,
she said. It’s often assumed that
because Southern legislato rs are
generally recognized as anti-union in
their speeches and voUng records, their
views are shared by the people who
elected them.
“ Further evidence that Southerners
are presumed to harbor anU-union
senUments can be found in a close
reading of alm ost any arUcle about
Southern union organlzaUon efforts,”
she said.
But Doss’ analysis of the Harris poll
responses showed no significant dif
ferences In atUtudes toward unions and
labor leaders in any region of the
country, even after controlling for union
membership.
One staUstically significant difference
she did find, however, was that union
m em bers from the South tend to be
more supportive of labor organizations
and leaders than are union mem bers in
oUier parts of the United States.
"Southern union m em bers are
esp ecia lly en thu siastic,
because they must retain their mem
bership in the face of greater
management resistance or possibly
because Southerners have not been
exposed to their unions long enough to be
critical of them ,” she said.
The explanation for union failures in
the South lies in other factors. Does said.
Among these are that the South has
fewer large ciUes than other regions,
that it is more expensive to organize
sm all shop^ in sm all towns and that 10 of
the nation’s 18 state Right-to Work laws
are in the South.
A rea S tu d e n ts A re C ita d e l G ra d u a te s
C h ris to p h e r Eu g e n e
C o le y
Cadets Christopher Eugene Coley,
Charles Simon Brown, Ralph Plum er
Mulllnax, and Carl Dean White of the
Mocksville area were graduated M ay 16
from The Citadel, Uie M ilitary College of
SouUi Carolina. Each received his
diploma and a congratulatory hand
shake from M aj. Gen. Jam es A.
Grim sley Jr., president of The Citadel.
LCB.
Doris Hepler Wins
leir mem- »
juice.
Honors Scholarship
Doris Hepler of Advance has won an
Academ ic Honors Scholarship to attend
Catawba College this fall. Academ ic
Honors Scholarship winners must rank
in the top quarter of their high school
class and are considered outstanding
students.
Miss Hepler is a 1B81 graduate of
Davie County High School and is the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lonnie G.
Hepler of Route 1.__________________
C h a rle s S im o n B ro w n
Cadets Coley and Brown received
bachelor of science in business ad
ministration degrees. Also receiving a
bachelor of science degree was Cadet
W hite. He m ajored in ph ysical
education.
Cadet Mulllnax received a bachelor of
arts degree. He majored in poliUcal
science.
Cadets Coley and White were com
missioned second lieutenants in the U.S.
Air Force Reserve.
Coley is the nephew of Ms. Linda
Owings, Rt. 1, M ocksville; Brown is Uie
son of Mrs. LucUle A. Brown, 739 Park
Ave., and Mr. S.W. Brown Jr.,
MocksvUle; MuUinax is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. R.P. Mulllnax Jr., 181 Glen
dale Ave., S.C., Concord; and White Is
the son of Mrs. Mildred E . White, Rt. 4,
Advance and the late H arvey M. White.
R alp h P lu m er
M uU inax
D e n t a l H i n t s
In the last article w e
discussed Uie fact that if
cancer of the mouth and
throat is caught early, a high
survival rate can be achieved.
In order to catch cancer of the
mouth and Uu-oat early, a
monthly self examination of
the head and neck region
should be done. This should be
done in a system atic manner
follow ing the guidelines
below.
First, you should look in a
mirror and inspect the skin of
the fa ce, neck and lips.
Lumps, sores, and changes in
■kin color should be obaerved.
P ress ligh tly w ith your
fingers on your cheeks feeling
for lumns or numbness. Feel
By Gary E . PrUlaman DDS
over all of your face in the
sam e manner. Also check the
soft area under your lower
jaw . Then feel up and down
the neck area on the side to
check for any hardened areas.
TUt your head back, and
exam ine the roof of the
mouth, looking for suspicious
lumps, sores or patches. With
your fingers, stretcli the sides
of your mouth back to see the
inside cheek and look for red
ar white spots. Squeeze yoUr
cheeks between your fingers
and feel for any lumps or
areas of tenderness.
Next pull the lower lip down
and look for any possible
sores or color changes. Also
feel for any lumus, and check
Your Drug Company
fèetefrUeneà
Moekivilk. NC. Tti 634-2t4t
Run the “good race ” July 4th
Catch the splrld That’s what m any Independent
P h a im a d sU are doing by prom oting the A n n u al Ju ly
4 th ‘S p ir it o f AnM rica'^ M arathon..ParalIelling the
Pam lk» River, this “early-bird” m n crosses seven b r id ^
between W uM n gton and Belhaven, N C.
Concerned phannaclsts such as ouiselves stand be
hind the race In the interest of “ fun and fitness," but
m ore espedally, to help supply em ergency m edical re
lief where needed through the ausptees of W orid V i
sion International, Inc. , ,
L et’s run the “ g o o d race” (whether by foot or
checkbook) together. H elp o th ers h a v e th e sa m e
ch an ce. D etalia a re a t ou r Prescription C oun ter.
rwtw-fUiKh Dnici, TN WUkMWra 8t.
M«dwvlllt. NC
Tti. 634-214'
Uie upper lip in the sam e
m anner. U sing a han
dkerchief, pull your tongue
out and check the top, bottom
and sides. Lift the tongue to
the roof of your mouth and
look at the floor of the mouth
followed by pressing the floor
of your mouth with your
fingers to note any lumps or
sores.
The three most common
areas for cancerous lesions
are the sides or underside of
tbe tongue, floor of the mouth,
and soft palate at the lack of
thé mouth. Use a good light
and exam ine these areas very
carefully. If anything out of
the ordinary, like a white or
yellow ish w hite leath ery
patch, or a red velvety lesion
with or w ithout w hite
speckling is noted, then your
dentist or m edical doctor
should be consulted im
mediately. Any smaU lesions
in these three high risk areas
should be biopsied if it has
lasted two or m ore weeks.
Fleshy looking buds of tissue,
smaU grooves, deep ulcers
lasting longer than two weeks,
sca ly looking areas and
hardened areas should be
watched for.
Center 4-H
The Center 4-H Club
meeting was called to order
by our President, Everette
Allen. The pledges were led
by KeiUi Lum ley and Steve
Moore. The old and new
business was discussed. Our
program was on Crime. Each
member of the club told
Uiings Uiey knew about Crime
and things to do to prevent
crime.
The m eeting w as then
adjourned.
Reporter-Jeff Severt
IN STA N T
SAVIN GS
OF
ON JFGINSTANT COFFEE ORSABRO97% CAFFEINE FREE INSTANT COFFEE (6, 8, OR100Z. SIZE)
i50* S A V E
i*/%CRFFBNFf№'NSTAMT COf »'*
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50*
ON6,8, OR10 0 Z . J F G
IN S T A N T C O F F E E O R
S A B R O 9 7 % C A F F E I N E
F R E E IN S T A N T C O F F E E
¡5 0 J
137-
S T O R E C O U P O N
I
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-I
Te Tht 6ГМ1Г: JÍÜ Cullee Conipdiiy will leimüurs« )^üu tof the tdce value ut ttii!. coupon plu& 7C for handling it you leceivt: it üii the bdle ot triu specitied product and it upuo it;<jue$t yuu bubiiiit evideiict- thereof ^dtistactoiy tu JfC Coftee Cc>mpatty Coupon iiidy nol be aisigr^ed of tcans tened Cu&totner inu&t pay any bales 1ад. Void where pro tiibited. lated oi ri't,tficted by law Caiiti value 1/20C Cou pon (vill nut bt; tiunored it pfe^eoted thruugh outside agennes. bioketi or ottiers i.lu) are tiot retail distribgloii of oi<r merchaiidi&e or speciiically authorised liy us tu pie^eiit coupon^ tor (eOemption R^ueeiuabic uitly uu lUci charidae indicated Any other use constitutes fraud Гог ledemptioii ol properly received ünd handled coupon, mail tl'JFQ COFFEK CO.P.O. BOX 3151. KNOXVILLE, VENN Э7М1LiMii - UNI cüü^’üü na m c m i Otl9f 01С1ЯЙГ 31.IW1
Presenting A Unique
Shared Security Fund
Overnight Rates Up To 14%
Mocksville Savings
presents a Shared
Security Fund with a
structure so extra-
ordinaiy,wethinkit
will revolutionize the
way individuals and
corporations with
$1,000 to $99,999 in
overnight funds will
invest those dollars.
We call it the Shared
Security Fund, because
you share the ownership
of all. S. Government or
U. S. Government Agency
Security. It is not an actual
savings account. Your invest
ment is not insured by the
Federal Savings and Loan
Insurance Corporation. Your
funds are secured by a security
ofU. S. Government or U. S.
Government Agency Security.
How The Shared Security Fund
Is Structured To Your Advantage
T h e shared S e cu rity F u n d is a “ R ep u rch ase
A g re em e n t” secu red b y a U .S . G o vern m en t or
U .S . G o vern m en t A g e n cy S e cu rity .
M ocksville Savings agrees to repu rch ase th e
agreem en t at th e en d o f th e term , th e d u ra
tio n m ay b e fro m o n e to 8 9 d a ys. A t th at
tim e y o u receive to ta l in terest earned to d ate
d ate plu s th e origin al in vestm en t. A m in i
m um in vestm en t o f $ 1,0 0 0 is req u ired.
Why You Need
Shared Security Funds
M o ck sville Savings w ith
n o p e n a lty to y o u , w ill re
tu rn y o u r to ta l in vestm en t
plu s all in terest earn ed at
a n y tim e w ith in th e 8 9 d a y
term .
T h e in terest rate p er
m itte d a t th e tim e o f y o u r
in vestm en t in th e Shared
S e cu rity F u n d w ill b e paid
fo r 8 9 d ays o r u n til th e
fu n d s are req u ested b y y o u
^ ic h e v e r o ccu rs first.
M ocksville Savings reserves
th e right to raise o r lo w e r
rates o n fu tu re issu es as
d eterm in ed b y fin an cial
m ark et co n d itio n s. F u n d s
sh all b e p a ya b le fro m th e
in stu tio n s gen eral fu n d s
rath er th an fro m fu n d s
raised b y th e sale o f th e
u n d erlyin g U n ited States
S e cu rity.
S a v in g s R a n g e Fu n d E a rn in g !
$ 1,000-2.999.
3,000-9.999
10.000-99.999
current
interest rate
up to 89 days
13.00%
13.50%
14.00%
i a a s k
MOCKSVILLE S»JINGS & LOAN ASSCXTIMION
213 SOUTH MAIN STREET • P. O. BOX 367 • MOCKSVILLE. N С 27028 • (704)634-5936
DAVir. ('(HINTV I NTI RrUISli RliCORD, THURSDAY, ,IUNi: 4, 1ЧК1
A ll Th re a te n in g O r Harassing C alls S h o u ld
Be R eported To C entral Te le p h o n e
Annoying phone ca lls-it seems we've
all received them at one tim e or
another...the indiscrim inate sales pitch,
the unsupcrvised cliild having “ fun"
with the phone, the "sile n t" caller.
All can be aggravating, but when such
calls persist or when they include
threats to you, your fam ily or your
property, they should be reported to
Central Telephone and legal authorities,
according to Ann Sm ith, C en tel’s
assistant customer services m anager in
the Elkin area.
As a regulated telephone company,
Centel is required to provide telephone
service for any legitim ate use. On the
other hand, thoughtless and in
discriminate sales or survey calls, and
malicious harassm ent calls are not
condoned, she said.
If you receive such an annoying call.
Smith noted, keep these points in mind:
(1) Rem em ber, a phone call is Just as
personal as a face-to-face conversation.
Don’t feel obligated to answer questions
you wouldn’t ordinarily answer if they
were asked by a stranger on the street.
(2) Find out who is calling. Ask for the
name of the person or the company
rqiresented.
(3) If you don’t recognize the firm
m aking tbe call, offer to call back after
you’ve checked with the Better Business
Bureau.
(4) If you’re not interested, say so. ^
(5) Remember, it’s your tim e and
Special Exhibit Of
Photography And Quilts
June 7-28 In Winston
Photography by Tad Lowdermilk and
hand-appliqued and pieced quilts
through the courtesy of M ary Goslen
will he on exhibit at F irst Presbyterian
Qiurch Gallery, 300 North Cherry
Street, Winston-Salem, N.C., June 7-28.
Tad is a ph ysician practicin g
em ergen cy m edicine at F orsyth
Memorial Hospital. While a medical
student, Tad developed his art of
photography and now enjoys the dual
profession al statu s of doctor-
photographer. E ach photograph is
accompanied by information and Tad’s
interpretation. His subjects range from
the ocean to the mountains, abstract to
realism , all ren^. '«id from the love of
beauty as seen around us by Tad.
Quilts coordinated by M ary Goslen
and hand-appliqued and pieced by
sisters Lou Etta Butcher and Ruth
Woodring of Mt. A iry; and Bfargaret
Foster of MocksviUe, represent beauty,
patience, and skill. Some of the quilt
designs by M ary Goslen have been
accepted to' the Am erican Folk Museum
in.New York, and they have been pur-
cfaued for private collections. H ie quilts
are used functionally as well as for wall
hangings. The q u ilters h ave been
practicing their craft most o f their lives
and have changed with the times by
expanding their quilt fram e sixes to
include the current “ king and queen.”
Designs by M ary are alw ays unique and
toterestin g, and she is exhibiting
examples of projected quilt patterns.
Lau E tU , Ruth, and M argaret have been
invited to attend the opening reception
to talk to guests about their quilts.A reception for the artisU is June 7,2-4
o’ctock at First Presbyterian Church
Gallery. Gallery hours are »-S Monday-
Friday; 8-12 nom Saturday and Sunday.
Open and free to the public.
yuur phone service. If the caller refuses
to let you go gracefully, hang up.
Su rprisin gly nuisance ca lls often
come fi'uin acquaintances, neighbors or
busines.s associates. Smith added. And a
relatively sm all group, usually com
posed of m isguided youngsters,
frustrated people and the mentally
disturbed, m ake most of these calls.
If you receive anonymous calls or
calls that ask for information you don’t
want to give, here’s what you should do;
(1) Use the phone on your terms, not
those of the caller. Don’t U lk to anyone
unless you want to,
(2) Ask the caller to identify himself
or herself. Don’t give your name. In
stead, ask what number they were
calling,
(3) Instruct children and babysitters
never to talk on the phone to someone
they do not recognize. An innocent
comment like, " I ’m here alone” or
“ Daddy’s away this evening,” could be
an invitation to a would-be burglar or
molestor. Teach them to ask for the
number so someone can call back later.
(4) If the caller rem ains silent, hang
up. Often, these callers want to hear
your reaction, and it Isn’t much fun
listening to a quiet line.
Improper use of the phone for debt
collection is another concern to Centel.
H iis includes retailers or collection
agencies whidt m ake annoying or
threatening phone calls to obtain money
which m ay be owed to them. Smith said.
If you are victimized by this tort of
harassm ent, notify the Centel business
office. Give the nam e of the calling
party, the date and tim e of the call and
explain how the call w as abusive or
harassing, he cautioned.
Calls in the “ threatening” category
include extrem e cases-bom b threats,
threats to life and property, kidnapping,
robbery or bodily injury. Unfortunately,
such calls are som etimes repeated over
“an
Miss Tsnjra Wood, a sM«t «(
PrasbyterlsB Hospital 8ch«ei of N a rsiutal Chariotte, N.C., has кем ssleetad as ■ marskal f«r Ike padmitiM еегашаву to ke koM on FrMay, Jnm ilk. Marskak are solMted ky academic ackievemcat Miss Wood, wko b a l^oskman. Is also editar Ы tke sckool newepeftt шш4 a memker of tke CkrUtiaB FoUowsklp. Ske U tke dangkter of Mr. aad Mrs. Skermaa Wood of MocksvUle.
S h o r t T e r m , H i g h I n t e r e s t
I n v e s t i n g W i t h N o P e n a l t y
F o r E a r l y R e d e m p t i o n .
F i r s t
I n v e s t o r s
A g r e e m e n t
S h o r t T e r m , H ig h
I n t e r e e t I n v e s t in g
Fint InvMton AgrMmtnt it ■
' 'ibpurctuic AfiMratpt” *nd
not an «ctutl м у !!)!! account.
It ia an oblif alien of Fint
Fadcral and it iMckad by U.S,
Governmant Security or l/,S,
Govemmant Aftncy. Security, It
ia not inaurad by tha F8UC,
Firat t'adaral repurchatct the
apeemant at the end of the t^rm,
not to exceed 89 daya,
Firat Inveetoia Agreenienl paya
aimpla interaat (or the abort term
ofuploSBdaya, and you may
redeem your agreement (with
toUl intereat earned to that daU)
at any time, with NO PENALTY
for early redemption.
C o n s id e r t h e
A d v a n t a g e s
• Hi(b InWitM• Ttna(i) uptoHDayt• No PtniKy Aar Early Radtmption
• bpuKhu* Afieeiaaat k backad bv US Covtmmaat Sacurity or US GoMmmant Afancy Sacurity.' • No Sarvica Charic
FIA Ramrcheec Asrcemetal
Minimun ln>»lm«nt Annual EwMd iMereel
$l000-s2900 13.00%
$3000 o r M o re 13.50%
gg«JHRST n»AL SA^»IGS
* %ÌMÌn ОГПгп ‘¿’iO N Cherry StreetHr«m h Offn*»: 4M) M«I1/J44J Kobin Huüd Ku*d/l k) b SUtttfurd Ku«d jmSKc>i.uld«Ruéd/90ûl W«u^hloM«nbue«i ill«' OfTim 216 (itither Kiraei < 1«‘(ппнт>1МП|-<*( 24‘^l LewiêvtlIt CUmmonë Hosd
Wmbiufi b«lem/Mack»viilc/r lent monk Tvlrpbuw (919>7:j3-3(iU4
frighten a fam ily.
If you are unfortunate enough to be the
victim of such a campaign, call your
local law eniurcement agency and
Central Telephone Immediately, Both
will work with you to eliminate the
problem.
Of course, it you receive a series of
annoying calls over a period, call the
Centel business office. The company has
representatives who are trained to help
in such circum stances.
One thing the representative m ay
suggest is that you keep a record of such
calls.
On such a call log, include the date and
time of the call, how long the call lasted,
the description of the caller’s voice,
what type of call it w as-harrassing,
threatening, obscene, and who was
home at the tim e, lliis information
could be helpful in establishing a pattern
that could help both the company and
law enforcement agency identify the
caller.
Central Telephone is an operating unit
of Central Tdephone & Utilities of
Chicago, which operates the nation’s
fifth largest telqihone system with some
two million phones hi 10 states. In North
Carolina, Centel serves m ore than
242,000 telephones in 21 western and
Piedmont counties.
4 ‘ H S p e a k i n g
P a r t i c i p a n t s
Participants in the Davie 4-H Public Speaking Contest are (front row, 1 to r)
Tonya Turner, winner bi the Junior division, Laura Cartner, and Kerri Wilson, lunior division; (back row) Cheryl Woodward, senior division winner; AureUa
Wilson and Teresa Shew, senior division participants. (Photo by Robin Fergusson)
R e p o rt Fro m R a le ig h
By Rep. Betsy Cochrane
4 -H P u b lic S p e a kin g
W inners Are C hosen
We asked for it and we got it in the
House-removing the insurance sur
charge. The House version of the bill
makes the driver with points pay the
higher insurance rates, not the “clean
record” driver. The insurance com-
policyholders with points who are able to
get insurance in the open m arket. Those
include drivers with a speeding ticket or
charged with any moving violation.
D rivers with clean driving records
will receive a reduction, and drivers
with points, who can get insurance
coverage, will have a sharp increase in
rates. Also, the insurance companies
will have a sharp increase in rates. Also,
the insurance companies will have to
pay taxes on their surcharges. This bill
removed the under-writer concq;>t from
driver insurance, because w e w ill not all
be sharing hi the cost of coverage.
1 supported rem oving Uie surcharge
for the clean driving record, but the bill
m ay not get ratified because it is rather |
confusing and m ay not be accqiU ble to l
the Senate. Hopefully, ttie concept can i
be maintained and the language im -|
proved.
Another significant bill passed by the I
House this put wedc was a Paraphernalia I
Law. This bill n u kes it illegal to sell, I
manufacture, use or possess drug I
paraphcnialia-ilem s including scales!
and balances, separation ghis, siften ,
rolling papen , blenders, plastic bags, I
hypodermic syringes and a variety of |
*^fS»ecutors would have to show the I
pipes, papers and other accessories
w ere intended for use with m arijuana or |
other illegal substances.
There is a provision m aking it a felony
for anyone to sell paraphernalia to a
minor who is at least three yearaj
younger than the seller.
The pcrairiiernalia bill com pares to
other existing laws banning equipment [
Wesley Chapel
HomeGoming
H om ecom ing w ill be
Sunday, June 7, at W edev
Cbapel Methodist Church with
Rev. Alvin Pope conducting
the 11 o’clock service.
Picnic lunch wiU be on the
Icwn at 12:30.
AU friends, neighbon and
relatives ore invited to attend.
W o ^ / e o f*
N«ws
The much needed rains
have finally com e and boasted
the m oral of tbe farm ers, as
well as tlw gardeners in our
com m unity. Corn and
soybeans were in dire need Ы
rain and vegetables wera not
doing well. But now things are
much greener and growing.
Tbe cool nights have hin
dered field tomatoes from
growing and maturing. Truck
growers are expecting ripe
tomatoes about the middle of
next week, although some
may find a ripe stray one
before then but not many.
Garland Pope, who has
been real sick in intensive
care at Rowan Memorial
Hospital in Salisbury has
grea tly im proved from
su rgery and is now
recuperating at the home of
his sister and brother-in-law,
Mr. and Mrs. Hoy Correll, at
China Grove.
M r. and M rs, W. M,
Hammath, of Richmond, Va.,
were here over the weekend
visiting bis sister and fam ily,
Mr. and Mrs. N. N. Fleming.
Mrs. Beulah Lyerly, who
fell several weeks agu and
had su rgery in Rowan
Memorial, is improving and is
now recuperating at Rowan
M anor rest center on
Statesville Boulevard.
Mrs. 0. T. (M ary; Nesbit
left Tuesday for Asheville,
wilh Iter daui^ter, Mrs. Mack
Gatewood, who cam e for her
and will spend several montlis
there.
M ie. Joe Price is home and
im proving after having
surgery in Rowan Memorial
Hospital last week.
connected with making moonshine and
counterfeit money and gambling.
As a parent and a legiidator, 1 strongly
support efforts to stop the sale of drugs
to our young people. Tbis bill is not the
total answer to the drug abuse problem,
but it will m ake it very tough on those
~^ught selling, manufautui'hig, ushig oi
possessing drag paraphernalia, which
goes with the drug scene. It will rem ove
a lot of the temptation and glamour
connected with drugs for our young
people.
Cheryl Woodward, 17, and Tonya
Turner, 13, w ere nam ed w inners
Thursday in the Davie County 4-H public
speaking contest.
As winners, the two will compete in the
District Speech Contest scheduled for• High Srhnnl
Tha svarage guitar string hai
a playing Ufa of 40 hours.
Miss Woodward, daughter of and
Mrs. (Jeorge Woodward of Country
Lane, was named winner in the senior
division. Her speech, entitled “ Fun
T im e” , depicted h er personal e x
periences as a baby sitter. She is a
m em ber of the Davie Academ y 4-H club.
Miss Turner, also a m em ber of the
Davie Academ y 4-H Q ub, was Winner in
the Junior speech division. Her speech
included a dram atic presentation of the
poem “ We are Seven.” She is the
daughter of Mr. and M rs. Tomm y
Turner of Country Lane.
As winners, the two girls received a
<50 savings bond. The bonds were
provided through the Davie County
United Way.
Doug Lee, local 4-H extension agent
said the speech contest culminated a
three week public speaking workshop
held in Salisbury.
-HTi
opportunity for local 4-H'ers to gain self
confidence, poise a|id leadership
through public speaking.
Other local 4-H'ers participating in the
contest were Laura Cartner, Aurelia
Wilson, Kerri Wilson and Teresa Shew.
Each girl received a red ribbon for
participation.
Casual Clothes
Comfort is the most important quality
in casual clothes, according to 80 per
cent of the women who answered a
recent opinion poll.
Fosler-Raaeh
Drug Company
WILKESBORO STREET MOCKSVILLE, N.C. MÖNE 634-2141
C U T E X ®POIISH IIMOVil
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D E B R O X ®
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ONE-STEP LAND CAMCRA INCLUDES ONfT'ACK TIME XIRO•UffRCOtOII FILM
31.95
GÜLF CHARCOAL STARTER
'¿2oi.
YOUR
SUNTAN
DOUARTIRS
HAWAIIAN
TROPIC
C U R IT Y ® C U R A D ®
PLASTIC 4 SHIH
■ANBACES
(SO'S + 20 riEE)
1.29
S U N D O W N ®
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3.79
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TAILETS
12'S
K O D A K F IL M
C-II0.24C
2.29
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40 'S
(.15 OFF)
DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, ЗШ Е 4, 1Q8I ')
Tip s On Trouble-Free Dry C lean in g
D ryclean in g can be e f
fective on a wide variety of
garments and fabric* with
little difficulty or potential for
harm. To assure success in
d ryclean in g, the B etter
Business Bureau su ggests
that consumer's follow care
label Inform ation, take
precautions against dam age
and inform the drycleaner of
special cleaning problems or
conditions.
The time to l>egin thinking
about drycleaning a garment
Is when It is being purchased.
The prudent shopper will
avoid fab rics, colors or
decorations that are bound to
ve even the best drycleaner
ifflculty.
There are many natural and
man-made m aterials on the
m arket and some of them can
be difficult to clean. Suede,
for exam ple, has a high in
cidence of color problems and
should only be taken to
cleaners especially equipped
to handle it. Imitation suede
and leather often become stiff
in d ryclean in g and are
generally accepted only at the
owner’s risk.
Some bonded fabrics are
difficult to dryclean. They can
■hrink, pucker, stiffen or
develop adhesive stain. Read
the care labels on garm enU
and, If doubU persist, discuss
them with the drycleaner.
C ertain cloth in g
decorations, like beads and
sequins, m ay not fare well In
the dry-clean in g process.
Most troublesome can be
buttons and trim made of
certain therm oplastics or
polystyrene. Aluiough they
lock rugged, they soften and
melt In Arycleanlng solvenU.
T in best w ay to protect
against spots and stains Is to
send clothes to the cleaner
before they are too soiled.
^ Rem em ber, the l ^ e r a stain
remove.
G o o d p r o f e s s io n a l
drycleaners can take care of
most problems, If they know
what caused the stain and
what the garm ent is m ade of.
If the clothw are not clearly
labeled, mention any special
fibers to the dryclean er.
Acrylic knits for exam ple, are
difficult to Identify and tend to
stretch w ith the heat of
cleaning.
It m ay be worthwhile to
rem ove troublesome buttons
or ornaments. Certainly warn
the clean er about the
presence of glue, plastics or
cardboard stiffners.
Sizing, applied at the time
of manufacture to give a
M o d e rn D a iry in g D e m a n d s S k ille d B u sin e ss P ra c tic e s
garment shape or body, m ay
be removed after several
cleanings. The sam e is true of
water resistant finishes. A
know ledgeable d ryclean er
can restore them upon
request.
Although precautions m ay
have been taken, som e
drycleaning can be disap
pointing. A lw ays check
cleaned clothes when they
are returned. Don’t let them
stay for m onths in the
cleaner’s bag. If there are
problems, check with the
d ryclean er im m ediately.
Many difficulties are still
curable.
The problem m ay be due to
poor garm ent labeling. If so,
take It back to the retailer,
who m ay offer an exchange or
a refund and take the matter
up with the manufacturer.
If the custom er took
adequate care of the garment
and it was properly labeled,
the blam e m ay rest with the
d ryclean er. A reputable
drycleaner will accept It and
attem pt to re ctify the
situation.
In that case, the consumer
Is entitled to recover the value
of the garm ent’s remaining
life exp ectan cy. An In
ternational guide of the in
dustry assign s exp ectan cy
ratings based on cat^ ories of
textile products and the
condition of the garment. The
sam e process is used If the
ryd eaiiw loses a garment.
With consumer care and
cooperation w ith the
drycleaner, problems can be
minimised. Dry-cleaning can
extend the useful life of a
wardrobe and increase the
value of a fam ily’s clothing
dollars.
Sorting It Out
Dr. Donald WJldemann, Phd.,
PROGRAM CONSULATION AND EVALUATION John WhitfIfIdji.S.W.
ADULT SERVICES
toan provkM by •ullction and
I It Out” M Oon- Bducatich
Pragnun of the M-County 1ЬаШ Heidtb Ontar. PImm
•ddr«M your quMtioiii to
"Sortiog it Out,^ Tri-County Mmtal HMlth, Ш Nortt Main Street, Mockivllle,
North CaroUna, 170».
My husband and I have bean married IS years, andI to argue all tbe time now. Would marriage rwinariing hdp usTWhile tliere are ae gaaraatees, the marriage coaaselors at tbe mental health center have had considerable snccess In
beliHag ceaples get aleag better. Hiess coaaselors are skilled ia ftaidtaig problem areas tai a marriage and betotaig coaples solve these pNMeau. Marital difTlcaltios flftaa come from semethiag that neither hasband aer wife
aaderstaad. For example,
coaples who argne over
moaey or la-laws auy ac*
taally be angry at each otber
becaase he or sbe does net get
eaoagb atTectiea. Marriage
coaaselors are aot ceacsmsd with who Is right or wroag, or wbe Is at fault. lastead, tbey
try ta help a coaple aa- derstoad what Is gotag oa betweea them aad tbea deal
with this la a better way.My slitar told me that my mother had a nervous break
down whon I was a child.
What does that mean? Am I
UMy to Inherit this?
The term "nervous break-
dowa" Is used by auay people to refer to mental or
emeUeaal problems. It Is a
vague term, aad does not refer to any particular kind of
diserder. There is no reasoa to
fear that you have fadwrited mental or emotloaal problems
from your mother.
What does my doctor mean when he tells me my medical
problem is caused by nerves?
When your pbyslclaa uses tiM werd "aerves" be means
that there Is some part of your
physical IIIbcss which Is
caused by meatal or emotional problems. Quite
often lllasssss resalt ta part front teasloa which people exportonce. Tension Is the feeUag ef belag keyed-up er "aerveus." This causes maay chaages ta the body. These changes might lavolve heartbeat, blood pressure, dlgostloB, skin reactions or breathing. If a machiae overheats, parts aro likely to break. Ia the same way, if tbe body stays taase and keyed-up for long periods of time, problems can occur in oae place er anoUier. Counselor* at Iho meatal heaitt ceatar knew maay way* to help pmplt witk tf tlOM.
wiil be gtad to hear from you.
I grind my teeth all the time. My dentist recommended that I contact the
mental health center for i training. What is
help]which
Vou don't have to be a
m agician to be a dairy far
m er...but it might heipl
T oday's d airy operation
demands a variety of skilled
business p ractices w hich
would benefit from the talenU
and techniques of a
m agician ...lik e being In
several places at once.
Thanks to Im proved
m ethods and industrial
ingenuity over the past
decade, U. S. dainrmen have
been able to provide the sam e
amount of m ilk, despite far
fewer cows and labor. That’s
pretty m agical!
During the next ten years
there will be a doubling in
m ilk output per mannour
because of even more ef
ficient dairy system s and
m ilking equipm ent, la rg e r
herd sizes, and a high milk
production per cow. Those
developments will help dairy
farm ers m aintain an
adequate supply of high-
quality m ilk to m eet con
sum er demands in the coming
years. At the sam e time,
intensifying competition will
m ake the Intelligent and
skilled busineu practices so
necessary today, even more
essential for remaining ef
ficient in face of changing
consum er lifestyles, and
buying and consum ption
trends.
Today’s successful dairy
requires teamwork and clooe
attention to all phases of the
farm operation. While the
m odern dairym an doesn’t
have to be an expert In all
areas of the operation, he does
need general knowledge of tbe
various professions having a
direct bearing on his business.
He often becom es a
.veterin arian , accountant,
business m anager, weather
forecaster, engineer, and
la ^ e r all rolled into one. He
also needs to be aware of the
many m tnagem ent services
available to him and use them
as needed.
Here are Just a few of the
concerns of tod ay’s
dairvman
' NEED FOR GOOD RECORDS
Business rocorda play an
important rolelnSiesuccoasful
operation of a m odem dairy
farm . Many operators today
participate In computarlsad
business record progranu.
K eeping accu rate d airy
production records providis
the basis for developing and
maintaining a top producing
herd. These records also
provide dairym en with in
formation on items which
affect breeding efficiency,and
cow efficiency.
PLANNING FOR E X
PANSION
The m odern dairym an
seeking to expand his
operation m ust first plan
ahead through projected
cash-flow plans or feasibility
proposals w hich estim ate
construction and operating
costs. Investm ents, labor
needs, etc. (These services
are available through lending
Institutions and u n iversity
extension departmenta.)
Many creditors require a
cash-flow budget as a con
dition for granting a loan for
expansion and wlU Insist that
borrowing be according te a
plan. Accurate data for the
cash-flow statemento is im
portant. Estim ating the cash
flow budget for coming years
rdqulres careful analw ls of
cow num bers, production
potential, acres, crop yield,
ete.PARTNERSHIPS OR FAMILY CORPORATIONS There are many successful
joint ow nerships involving
fathers and sens, brothers and
sisters, or even unrelated
individuals am ong tod ay’s
dairy farm s. There will be
even more in the future.
D airym en contem plating
joint ownerships must make
sure sgreem ents and con
tracts are carefully prepared
to consider the personal
characteristics of the parties
involved, duration of Joint
ow nership, contributions,
m an ag em e n t, fin a n c ia l
settlement and means of ar
bitration.
GOOD LABOR...
A K E Y CONCERN
Dairy herds are expanding
in size, and mechanization Is
becoming an in ten al jM rt of
the modern dairy'farm . 'Ilils
m akes the quality of labor
hired even m ore important to
the d airy m anager. Suc
cessful dairym en have found
that hiring qualified labor
m ore than offsets their added
cost. In the near future, dairy
wage rates and fringe beneflta
in m any areas will approach
those for other industries.
Labor for the actual Job of
milking constitutes over 70
rcent of the total labor
the goal of most dairym en to
further Increase the e f
ficien cy of their m ilking
syntem.
M ILK M ARKETING
AND PROMOTION
The growing influence of
dairy cooperatives has in
volved many milk producers
in the business end of
m arketing and m er
chandising milk and milk
products. In dividual
awareness of the need for
good organization and
management In all aspects of
milk marketing has become
acute.
Active promotion of m ilk, in
particular, has become the
ivolved in dairying, so hirta^l
(juallfiod personnel supports
in v o lv e d ln ^ ^ l^ ^ M jU ^
Starting with the dairyman,
the very Image of how milk is
produced on his dairy is
important. He needs to be
sure his producU are pr(q?eriy
promoted In the m arketplace.
It becomes easy to see that
today’s dairy farm er does
exhibit a touch of m agic in his
business practices. Today’s
dairym an must be a skilled
businessman if he is to remain
in business. But there's no
m agic to 7-day weeks and 14-
hour days, which are often
required to keep pace with a
growing and thriving industry
that seeks to meet the needs of
a public who wanU and enjoys
the excellent nutrition and
good taste of m ilk and milk
products.
Seehowinconspicuous
modern hearing help can be.
I the
Rll-wlthln^he-esr
earing aid ati
!^eéU m e-
D U O
I SERVICE
Jo re
_ . ktvlHs
Call for (ppolntment for FREE H n r^ T*it.
Bitterlei, Mpldi tnd Seivfce for
Hofeedback training?Maay of oar stress reae* Uoas are caased by bodly responses that we aonnalÿ are not aware of. Biofeedback amplifies these reactkas so that wo get aa tastaat replay
ot what our body Is doiu- With thla feedback, you can change year body’s reactiea
to stress. In "Bruxfaim,” or grinding your teeth, muscle
tensions In tbe ]aw are
monitored during tbe biofeedback traiaiag. The
trafaibig helps you leam to
your Jaw muscles retax, h elimbwtes the grindtag
problem.I’ve been drinking a lot
tately and am worried about It. Is there a test for '
whether I have a problem with It’s uafortuaate that tbe pace of our daily life puta so much stress oa us all. Maay people wind up ustag alcohol to retax, and this can become a problem. A number of testa have been developed to help detect potential alcohol problems at aa early stage. To arraage for such a test, call y<imr local mental health center at 8T2-MII.
Mid Yeai^ Surveys
Of N.C. Farmers
N orth C arolina farm ers
Indicated earlier In the yoar
(hat they intended to plant
more com and soybeans and
less tobacco this year and also
sharidy lower Intentions for
raising hogs. A nationwide
su rvey is now underw ay
which WiU update the crop
and Uveatock numbers for
Itei In North CaroUna as weU
as aU other states.
Dan C. Tucker of the North
CaroUna Crop and Uveatock
Reporting Service noted that
trained su rvey w orkers
representing his office wUl be
visiting a cross-secUon of 1600
fa m u acroas the state for
farm Information during tate
May and early June. In ad
dition Tucker said, ISOO hog
and cattle producers wUI be
contacted by maU, telephone,
or personal Interview to
provide Uvestock inventories
and around 10,000 general
crop farm ers wUl be surveyed
by m ail to obtain acres of
crops planted. F arm er
cooperation on Uieee surveys
is vital to developing accurate
estimates, Tucker noted.
North Carolina and U.S.
numbers from these lurveys
will be pubUshed by the
U SD A's Crop R eporting
Board, iw i crop acreage
information wiU be releaaod
on June 2в; crop yields and
production on July 10; hog
and pig numbers on June 2S,
and cattie numbers on July >7.
A gro u p o f g o ld fin ch -
• i it ca lle d a ch arm .
VI 30 SMAIN ST., SALISBU RY IV N. MAIN ST., M O C KSV ILLE
6 3 7 .3 9 6 6 6 3 4 - 3 1 6 '.
^ O N THURS. & SAT. 9 6; FR I 9 9 MON TH U R S & S AT. 9 6; FRI. 9-9
• S A L IS B U R Y • M O C K S V I L L E • W IN S I O N S A L L M • H I G H P O I N I f G R E E N S B O R O • E D E N • L E X I N G T O N
10 ПЛУП; COUNTY I'NTF.RPRISV. RPCORn. TIIimSDAY, .UINI'; -f, 1ЧЯ1
How To Handle A Power
Outage In Your Home
By Sharon Allred Decker
What can you do should a
x)wer outage occur at your
)ome?
First of all, when an outage
occurs, check the fuses and
circu it b reakers In your
home. The outage m ay have
occurred because of a blown
fuse or a circuit breaker
shutting off due to a short
circuit, overloaded circuit or
8 defective part in equipment.
If you find the fuse or circuit
b reaker not to be your
problem, check to see if the
power is off only in your home
or in the whole neighborhood.
See if the neighborhood street
lights are working. If a power
line has fallen, keep a safe
distance and m ake sure
everyone else does too.
Having made theae checks,
call your local power com
pany office. P Ix m numbers
for normal working hours and
after-hours are available in
your local telephone direc
tory. When you call, you can
save time and help reatore
service m ore qu ickly by
givin g your nam e, street
address (com plete with
directions) and phone
number. If you have observed
some condition which m ay
have caused tntem iptioa, let
the power company know. If
I the outage is w ideqm ad, the
telephones m ay be busy, so
call back.
There are a few m easures
to take in preparaUon for a
possible outage. O utages
occur unexpectedly, so it is
best to be prepared.
Keep candles, m atches and
flashlighta in a convenient
location, e asily accessib le
should power go out. It m ay
■lun hw a wise idea to keep a
first aid kit and blanketa in
the sam e location. Y ou r
“em ergency cabinet” can be
valuable to you and your
fam ily.
Be careful with candtee. Be
sure to secure them in holden
and keep them aw ay te m
flam m able articles. Practice
extrem e caution when using
camUea, oil lamps or kerosene
lanterns.
Should power go out, it is
likely you w ill have a supply
of hot w ater stored in tbe
w ater heater. Use this water
wisely because the supply will
run out. H ie amount of hot
w atw stored w ill depend on
the size of your electric water
hester. H ie length of storage
will depend on the energy
efficiency of the heater and
whether w ater pipes are in
sulated.
The questions I most often
receive when outages occur
are concerning foods in
refrlgeratnn» and freeiers. A
fully loaded freezer usually
will stay cold enough to keep
foods frozen fnr 24-411 hmim. tn
a freezer with only half a load,
food m ay not stay frozen for
more than a day.
If normal operation is not
resum ed before the food
thaws, use dry ice to keep the
food cold. If dry ice is put in
the freezer soon after power
goes off, 50 pounds should
keep the temperatures below
freezing for three to four
days. In a cabinet with half a
load or less, it should be
sufficient for two or three
days. Keep the phone number
and address of a source of dry
ice in your "em ergen cy
cabinet" for easy reference.
Work quickly and carefully
when using dry ice. Place it on
thick cardboard or boards on
top of the frozen food or on
sh elves-n o t d irectly on
packages. Be sure the room is
well ventilated when using
dry ice and never touch it with
bare hands.
Occasionally foods m ay be
p a rtially or com pletely
thawed before it is discovered
the freezer has not been
operating. If the fooda have
thawed only partially and still
contain ice crystals, they m ay
be safely refrozen. If foods
are still cold -belo w 40
degrees F .-an d have been
held no longer than one to two
days at refrigerator tem
perature after thawing, they
m ay be safely refrozen, also.
H ow ever, even p artial
thawing m ay reduce quality
of foods, particularly fruits,
vegetahle«_a i '
foods. Refrozen foods should
be used as soon as possible.
Thawed ground m eats or
poultry that have any off odor
or color should not be refrozen
or eaten, lliaw ed ice cream
should be discarded. Once
thawed, fish should not be
refrozen. If the odor or color
of any food is questionable,
don’t take chances.
Do not open the freezer or
refrigerator door while out of
operation except as part of
any food-saving nrocedures.
Power outages do not often
occur. But wbsn they do, for
whatever reason, utilities like
Duke Power are prepared to
return service as qtdckly as
possible with Oie least in
convenience to you.
Alcohol Infonnation Report^
• I P y * -jtfi»fl^»fBD U CA -ltO W CO N BW .TAfrr
ALCOH OLISM IS A
FAM ILY ILLNESS, PA R T I -
Does someone close to you
drink too much?
Do you feel your stomach
tighten Just at tbe thought of
his or her drinking?
WhUe the drinker thinks he
or she is sitting on top of tbe
world, are you worrying about
how to pay the fam ily debts?
WhUe be or she m ay be
taking reckless pcn oosl and
social Ubertias, are you an-
; car accklsots, late
and neighbors’
gossip?
Alcoholism is a fam ily
Uhiess. IU destructive effects
cause proUem s in the lives of
everyone who loves and cares
for its victim s. H ie Ulness
m ay continue from
generation to generation since
chUdien of alcoholics have a
greater chance of becoming a
victim of this disease than do
chUdren whose parents are
free of alcoh(rilsm.
M any m em bers of the
famUy of the alcoholic wait
too kmg lo get help and,
without help, famUies often
devdop patterns of Uving
which sctuaUy encourage the
progress of the Ulnsss. Bach
m em ber of the fam ily
becomes increasingly loody,
isolated and frightened.
The chUdren in the famUy
do not receive the love and
attention they need. The
alcoholic m ay m ake
unreasonable dem ands on
these children. Life becomes
unpredictable-wUl he or she
show up a t fam ily
celebrations? WUl there be
enough money for presents
after Um booze is purchaasd?
WUl Uie alcohoUc em barrass
Uie chUdren's friends? Tbe
illness creates continual
feelings of uneaUness and
fear wiOiiii the famUy.
Many famUies then react to
Uiese crises bi Uie wrong way.
They m ay try to deny tte
problem. Sometimes a spouse
or grown chUd wiU sim ply Join
Uie alcohoUc in his or her
drinking. Others wiU try to
stop the alcohoUc from
drinking by using techniques
which produce guUt or by
throw ing out tbe liquor
supply. Help is avaUable for
famUy members ttirough Al-
Anon. AlcohoUcs Anonymous
w as the first to d eclare
alcoholism a famUy disease-
believin g that the fam ily
needs assistance if Uiere is to
be a su ccessfu l recovery
program for tlie famUy and
ihe alcohuUc. Ttie Al-Anon
program shows Uie spouse,
parent, chUd, or friend how to
separate his or her protdems
from ttiaae of tbe alcohoUc.
WHEN YOU SHOP
WITH US COM
PLETE, OUR
PRICES CAN'T BE
BEATI
C O O I E C m E C
л; и f
fO O O STIMf
S H O P P IR S
(OOUEM H NIC OPEN FRIOfiY NITfS TU 8 30 PM
Wf R£S£RV[ RIGHT TO LIMIT S U PER MARKET
LOWEST MEAT
PRICES IN DAVIE
COUNTY. SHOP WITH
US TODAY AND
PROVE TO YOURSELF
- WE SEU ONLY
U.S.D.A. CHOICE
WESTERN BEEF.
H O LLY FARM S W H O LE
F R Y E R S
PLUMP • JUICY
Ib.
FRESH GROUND 100%
B EEF Miic
SIRIOIN
T IP S T E A K S
SHOULDER
R O A S T
$ 1 2 9
• BONE , , 5 I
-LESS Id . I
T IP R O A S T 1Ь. Ч ”
THIC K JU IC Y C H U C K
R O A S T
B O N E L E S S
MRS. OILES CHICKEN OR HAM
S A L A D S
MRS. OllES PIMENTO
C H EES E
MRS. OILES PIMENTO
C H EES E
FRESH LEAN
S T EW B EEF
7-OZ.
PKG.
7-OZ.
PKG.
12-OZ.
PKG.
T his separation does not
n ecessarily Involve the
person.
If interested in sssistance,
conUct Al-Anon or AkohoUcs
Anonymous or get in td u ^
witti Alcohcdism Services at
Tri-County M ental Health.
(This series is prepared by
BiU W eant, alcoholism
education consultant witti ttie
Tri-County M ental H ealth
Complex, 822 North Main
Street, M ocksville. These
arU des are designed to create
u n d e r s t a n d in g a b o u t
drinking, alcohd abuse, and
alcoholism in our society. If
you hsve a question con
cerning alcohol that you
would Uke answered in a
future cdum n, phone 6S4-
3185.)
The Magic Of Milk
llie U. S. has become a
nstion of gulpers and
snackers. Many people nevw
sit down for a iuU m eal,
grabbing a bite to eat on the
run. Almost S7 percent of sU
Am ericans skip breakfast.
The fsst food industry has
Uossomed as a reault; it is
now one of ttie ttiree largest
re U il industries in our
cou n ty. Fast food Is not
necessarily bad food. Our
friends and neighbors in ttie
dairy industry, during June
Dairy Montti, have reminded
us ttiat one of ttie best “ fast”
foods U a glass of mUk.
Loaded w ith protein and
calcium.
You can drink U straight
down or pour it on cereal. It
needs no preparation. Tliat's
a healUiy reminder as you
rush out the door to start your
day tomorrow.
PAPER
TOWELS
79*
HERSHEY (IN BOTTU)
S Y R U P ’ “BTL.
fEA BAGS’:ioo-cT. '
BOX
MARTHA WHITE YEUOW CORN
M E A L '^ U ho i i l
MARTHA WHITE CORNBREAD
6'/2-0Z.
PKGS.M IX 5
$ 1 0 0
D IN N E R
TENDA BAKE
M IX
KRAFT MACARONI
“ 714-OZ.
BOX
TENDA BAKE CORN MEAL OR
5-LB.
BAG
SOFT N PRETTY BATHROOM
T IS S U E
SPEED STICK
DEODORANT
Q U A U T Y
f i t
F A N C Y Y ELLO W
C O R N
E X TR A FINE
SUGAR
9 9 «
в я п И м
CRANUIATÌD
S e g a r
LUMT I iM
WITII « е л е
fO M own.S A V I N G
WELL-FILLED
EAR
M A R G A R I N E
J U M B O
Moderate fatigue ia not
harmful to you or your
work, paycholugiat« aay, but
extreme fatigue should be
avoided. Experimenti show
it takes three times as long
to rest up from being l criy
tired as from ordinary tired
ness. Short rests, however,
and relaxing with a refresh
ment like a glass of iced tea
can help lieep you up to
par.
FRENCH
FRIES
WHIPPED
TOPPING
OlU t'AbMKJNtU
COBLE ICE-
M IL K
89« IP 49«
■ I ^ w _____(
$ 1 18
T h e 1981 grad u atin g class o f D aw e C o u n ty H igh Sphnnl
323 Davie Seniors Graduate Wednesday
The Davie High class of 1981, com
prised of 323 seniors, was scheduled to
graduate Wednesday, June 3 at 8:00
p.m. in the D avie High football stadium.
Ceremonies were to begin with the
seniors escorted onto the stadium by
CM ef Junior M arshal Randy Link. Other
M arshals include Jan Bingham , Debbie -
Graham , Paula Grlaette, Elisabeth
Foster, Steve Heffner, Lisa Dyson,
Bryan Sprinkle, B arry Carson, Paul
Gardner, and Lisa E d en .. The Davie
High Concert Band will play the
traditional “ Pom p and Circum stance.”
F ran k ie Sm ith, Senior C lass
president, will give the Invocation. The
vocal ensemble will precede her by
singing “ Y e W atchers and Y e Holy
Ones.”
Commencement addresses will be
¡iven by the top 3 seniors. Cindy West,
laughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jerry West is
ranked number 2 in her class. She plans
4 o attend the University of North
Carolina at Chapel Hill. She will speak
on “ As the tassel is moved, so is a
lifetim e.”
Chuck Stone, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Charles A. Stone, plans to attend North
Carolina State University. He is 3rd in
his class and will give his speech on
“The paths are chosen.”
Greg Beck, Validictorian, is the son of
Mr. and Mrs. Claude Beck plans to at
tend the University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill. He will speak on “ Only the
journey rem ains.”
Superintendent Jam es Everidge and
Davie High Principal John NprtoiLWiU
present diplomas to the graduating
S e A i o r C l a s s M o t t o
As the tassel is moved
So is a lifetime;
The paths are chosen
O nly the journey remains.
B A V IB e e u N T v
F e a t u r e l - B J u n e 4 , 1 9 8 1
ONLY THE JOURNEY
REM AINS
By Gregory Beck
"E d u cation is a social
p r o c e s s . . . edu c a t i on is
growth...education is not preparation
for life; education is life itsd f.” Tonight
we each em bark on the Journey of life.
Some of us will continue our education
through schools of higher learning, some
of us will pursue our career goals in
businesses or in the arm ed forces, some
of us will m arry and start a fam ily.
EUich one of us has our own path to
follow. We have no w ay of knowing
exactly which doors of opportunity will
open to us tomorrow, nest week, next
year, or ten years'from now. We must
continue to prepare ourselves no m atter
where the journey ends.
The decisions for our journey have
been made, though often with great
difficulty. With influence from our
fam ily, friends, teachers, knowledge
from school as well as experience, we
have reached this point in our Journey.
We must be careful to avoid the detours
from our chosen paths during our fur
ther journey if we are to succeufully
reach our destination. Everything we
have done will influence the outcome of
our future. There is no returning to
previous times and evente. Instead, we
must turn our faces toward the future
and be found steadfast in our decisions.
When we are prepared for the joum ey-
•when we have the essentials, the means
to travel, the faith in God, others, and
ourselves that the course is right, then
only the journey itself remains.
A l m a M a t e r
To thee, O Davie H igh School
O ur loudest songs w^e raise;
W ith loyal hearts forever true,
W e sing our words of praise.
A nd may the memory linger,
Through m any a com ing year,
O f joys w e’ve had and lessons learned
W ith thee, our school so dear.
A nd when w e’re far asunder
O ur thoughts w ill turn to thee.
W e ’ll live again those former days,
So joyous and carefree.
A nd still w ith hearts united
In chorus strong and clear
W e'll sing again our loudest praise
To thee, our school so dear.
T h e to p 3 sen iors are C in d y W ert, C h u ck S to n e , and G reg H eck
AS THE TASSEL IS MOVED,
SO IS A LIFETIM E
By Cindy West
We, the graduating class of ‘81, are
sharing one of tbe most important
moments in our lives. Many people have
Influenced us and to these people we owe
a great deal. We have experienced
sadness and liappiness during the past
twelve years in school, helping us to
grow and mature.
May our liigh school days be pleasant
to recall, but may each of us find the
days ahead the liappiest of all.
Tomorrow is waiting for dream s to be
dreamed, and goals to t>e reached-
tomorrow is waiting to be ours.
Even though we are concluding a
chapter in our lives tonight, our quest
for education must never cease. As
Abraham Lincoln said, “ I will study and
gel ready, and perhaps m y cliances will
com e.”
As the tassel is moved, so is a lifetime
seniors.
The graduates will sing the Alm a
M ater, then m arch out aa the band plays
the recessional.
The Class of 1981 will be wearing black
caps and gowns with orange and white
tassels. Girls will carry a white rose.
G raduation colors, chosen by the
seniors, are orange and white.
Senior cla ss o fficers w ill be
w o g n ^ . i w are: Frankie Smith-
P residen t, Sn erry H ow ard-V ice
President, Debbie Parrish-Secretary,
and Sarah Minwalla-TTeasurer.
Monday, June 1 was the last day of
school for seniors. Friday, June 5 will be
the last day for all other students.
' Speeches by the top three graduathig
seniors m ay be found in this edition of
the Davie County Enterprise-Record.
1 9 8 1 S e n i o r C l a s s o f f i c e r s
I
President.........................Frankie Denise Sm ith
Vice President..............Sherry Frances How ard1
Secretary .......................D eborah D iana Parrish
Treasurer.....................................Sarah M inw alla
If I could choose a path to follow
tonight, it would be to have the op
portunity to experience another senior
year of high school. The fellowship
among our friends, the commitment to
extra curricular activities, and even the
humdrum regamorole of the classroom
create a passionate yearning to go back
in time. But that, path cannot be taken.
Our lives are not that simple.
We live in a world that is obsessed
with an accelerative thrust for change.
We’ve been adapted to a plug-in society,
relationships have become more tem
porary, and startlin g technological
innovations are propelUng us headlong
inlo the twenty-first century. Teenagers
are faced with m akii^ decisions at an
earlier age than their parents did as
novelties and vices pressure youth into
THE PATHS ARE CHOSEN
By Chuck Stone
various roles.
Tonight we begin to diverge from the
sim ilar role we have trod t h ^ last four
years as Davie High studenta. Although
our roles have been sim ilar, we have all
made individual decisions that shall
lead us in different directions. Whether
we plan to further our education, begin a
family, enter a vocation, enlist in the
arm ed forces, or even go to the beach
tomorrow morning, our journeys into
adulthood will separate us from one
another.
We m ay find some temporary solace
in the belief that we will stay in touch
and that our memories will sustain us.
The harsh reality is that for most of us,
we leave this stadium alone tonight.
Only the wisdom that we have acquired
and the strength of our personal values
will support us in our future endeavors.
1 9 8 1 J u n i o r M a r s h a l l s
Randolph Edward Link, Chief
Laurajan Bingham
Barry Richm ond Carson
Lisa A nn Dyson
Lisa M aria Eden
Elizabeth A nn Foster
Paul Edward Gardner
Debra Lynn Graham
Paula Anne Grisette
Steve Bryan Heffner
Bryan Hagaman Sprinkle
r
21) DAVII': COUNTY TNTi;W ’KISIÍ RirORD, TIIURSDAY. lUNF, 4, 1981
Debbie Sue
Bed
Karla Patrice Johnny
Bonnet Blackweider
Gina Renee
Blackwood
William Norman
Blake
Anita Lynn
Boger
Jerri Renee
Boger Paul F. Boger Teresa Kay
Boger
________
William Thomas
Bohannon
John Marc Cain Thomas Foiter Hotert Lee
Campbell Carter
Martin Craig
Carter
Randall Clay
Carter
Karin Sue Cave Trade Chaffin
■/i * « t ì f ì i
Tema Ann Darrell Chunn
Charles
RegiraiM Edwin Debbie Lynn
Chunn Cleary Connie Clement Linda Clement Lorretta Coates Richard Dean Anthony Earl
Cohen Collins Larry Cope Julia Comatzer 'S ïiîa te ï* TonyCornatier
Richard Lynn
Daywalt
Teresa Lynn
Donahue
James Mitchell Susan EKabeth
Doss Doub
:onda Ann
Draughn Rhonda Driscoll Charles Driver
SENIOR PICTURES NOT AVAILABLE
Lori Angell, Anthony Ray Blower, Christopher Beraard Brown, Gerry Dwayne CashweU, Kimberly Rene’ Cheek, Kenneth MItchei Dixon, Barry Cornelius Et
chison, Anna Elaine Fidds, Tammy Kay Freeman, Martin Van Keeton, David Eugene Moore, Robert Eugene Myers, Steve Guy Naylor, Stephen Lloyd Peoples,
Shannon Darnell Pulliam, Rufus Brown Sanford III, Annette Godbey Sexton, Raymond Lee Sloan, Michael Shane Snilth, Patricia Diane Smith, SjUsan Melanie Smith, Timothy Lamar Smith, Dons ~
Anitra Renee Stedge, April Denise I
^ r l i f ! l l l ^
« ■ H I S l l E P I I O U I M r a
Smith, Timothy Lamar Smith, Donald Eugene Speer, Ralph Edward Sprinkle III,
Anitra Renee Stedge, April Denise Stroud, David Paul ’Taylor, Jeff Wynn ^ ' John Richard Taylor, Barry Grant Whittaker, George Repaid Williams.
Here’s To
Vbu...
Class
0119811
You’ve made the grade...
and now you’re on your way!
With diploma in hand,
you’re on the road to a
successful future.
We hope so! GOOD LUCK GRADS!
*8 1
Grads.
Ikke A
Bow!
Moduvi»e,N.C.
GOOD LUCK!!
You’ve earned it for the super-fine job
you’ve done.
May the years ahead be even better!
D A V IE S U P P L Y C O .
Hwy. 158 E. MOCKSVILLE
PHONE 634-2859
There ore levorol wa/t to
be ture that your chUdren wUI have the furvJi raqukod
for proper educoHon.
WeU gladly exptoin me
vottou* plan«. Help vou up a plan to attain you goal without straining youbodget.
Your Farm Bureau A |^ .
FARM BUREAU INSURANCE SERVICES
as Court Squ«r«-MocktvHto
Phone! 634-6207
SIFfSBISSfiRaS
CONGRATULATIONS
Telephones ringing, h an d shaking, go o d luck
kisses are your tribute today. W h e n all the
excitem ent dies d o w n , think about your
objectives and your future; today is a turning
point in your life.
Yadkin Valley Telephone
M em bership Corporation
YadMnville, N.C.
DAVir, COUNTY HNTI-RPRISI- RIÍCORD, TIIURSIMY. JUNI- -1. !<)81 3n
Tawna Renee
Dulin Deborah Dunn Lita Dunn Floyd Stephen
Durham Susan Earnhardt Todd Sanders
Earnhardt Matt Eledred
à . '-"ä i
Deborah Lynn
Ellis
Z ' Á
Racheal Melinda
Ellis
Eva Marie
Emly
David Wayne
Everhart
Anthony Mark
Faulkner
Edie Cass
Ferebee
K
David Paul
Folmar^.
I Lynn
Foster
Richard Kevin Shirley Levone
Foster Foster
Karen Denise
Freeman
Melissa Joe
Frye
Curtis Alton
Fullbright Larry Cornell Robby Everette
Gaither Ginther
Sherry Elaine
Gian
Christie Lynn
Gobble
Tommy
Gobble
Teresa Lynn
Godbey
Amelia Kay
Goodin
James Douglas
Green
Timmy Hay
Ureen
Stephanie Renee . Winona Lynne
Gregory Gregory
John MaR^
Hancock Anita Jeff Soott Harris
Dorig Ann SammiSTRay
Hepler Hepler^Jr.
John Joseph
Hetlin Buddy Hiatt Mildred Elizabeth Elizabeth Ann Michael Anthony
Hill Hillebrand Holland Howard
Curtis Fletcher
Howard
Sherry Frances
Howard
Tammy C>wi
Hudson
Michael Allan
Hudspaih
^ W i l l i a m
Humphrey
laina
Hutchins
J a i^ Allen , j , ^ William Edwards
ijames Ijames
Gail Frances
Ireland James
T h e D a v ie H ig h
A H A P P Y A N D S A F E J O U R N E Y
T O A S U C C E S S F U L F U T U R E ...C la s s o f 8 1
It’s bound to be one
of excellence
CLASS O F'81
Boger Texaco Service
South Main Striti
Mocksville, N.C.
««««««««««««««««««««««««««««««««««««««««««««««««««««m
t A U U ¿ n ^ â H o t u l í / y . 2 7 0 2 8
4n DAVIK (XIUNTY 1-NTi RI’KISI' Rl-CORD, TUDRSDAY, JUNI- 4, 1981
Sandra Ann
Johnson
Sherri Maria
Johnson
Tammella Lu
Johnson Dana Michelle
Jones Donald Jones Donna Kay
Jones
Sherre Annette
Jones Anita Jordan Melissa Ronald Wayne
Ann Jordan Jordan Bobby Keller
Tamara Luwan Mary Elizabeth
Kimmer Kontos
Shirley A.
Koontz
. 1
WendeTlW. Charles W.
Koontz Kori
ay Leigh
Kyles
Kimberly Beth
Lagle Lrtiiam^"'’® Mark Latham a rS ^ S m
Latta
Frank Bennett
Lawhon
n
Leesa Lawrence Clyde Lawter Robert Greene
Lemke
Barry Junior
Leonard
.V . _______
Darrell Ray
Leonard
Raymond
Lewis
Steve Ray
McBride
rn r
Tim McCraw Jeff D.
McCullough
William Joe^h
Marrs
In the years to come, we know you will do well.,
as long as you do your best! Enjtyl
F U R C H E S
M O T O R C O .
Depot Street Mocksville, N.C.
Sarah Minwalla ■rah Elizabeth
Mock
____________
I .
Johnna Charlene Louis Stanley
O'Neal Ocker
John Edward
Osborne
Edwin Owens
W E L L D O N E .
C la s s o f 'S I
G rad u ation 1« an im p ortan t m ilaito n « , C la ii o f 1 9 8 1 .
Y o u hava b u ilt solid a fo u n d atio n fo r fu tu ra
ach lavam an ts. q O O D L U C K !!!
p. 0. loi fl
Mockwiil«, N.C.
All Etjiuil Oppoitunily Employ«! M/F
W
Myra Lynn
Oxendine
Mark Anthony
Packer
Jlen Lae
Pardon
Lorri Leigh
Llvengood
Tammie Suzanne David Long
Llvengood
linnie Denise
McBride McBride
T o n y a ^ r S e Robert Keith
Mason Eddie Wayne
Masten----Jennnie Mayfield Ranee
Lisa Gladys
Myers
Timothy Lee
Myers
, ____'W _
Lester Dean Ruth Lynne
Myers Neal
Douglas Ray
O'Neal
(c h a m pio n
w w
I L T E R S
D a v i e A u t o P a r t s C o ., I n c .
346 Wilkesboro St.Mocksville, N.C.Phone: 634-2151
DAVIH COUNTY liNTI-Rl’KISI RI CORD, THURSDAY, JUNE 4, ]Q8I ^ 50
’K- '. _
Leslie Parks Deiwrah Diane Lauray Demetress Scott Porcival
Parrish Peebles
Sherrye Porter Lawrence Potts
Lynda Carol
Phelps Jerry Phillips
4 ^ 'Jeffrey K.
Phipps Shannon Pulliam
Scott W.
Pratt
Tony
Prevette
Nena Louise
Pruitt Gene Ray Chris Gray
Reavis
Danny L.
Reavis
Patricia Lynn
Reavis
lila Mae
Reavis Joy Lynn
Rii^ardton
Angela Jean
Riddle
Patricia Jo
Ridenhour
Regina Shaun Susan Michelle
Robertson Rolhrock
Teresa Lynne
Russell
SDODB 0 %
J C l a s a f l t i m
T h e B e s t
T o Y o u !
Here's to the
future. Grads.
We hope It will
be a great
one . . , filled
with success!
KENTUCKY
FRIED
CHICKEN
Mocksville, NX.
Tommy Wayna Benjamin Yoman
Sinniaton Smith Smith I Edward
Smith
Evenda Sue
Smith
Frankie Denise
Smith Linda Kaye
Smith
Lori Denii
Smith
Marvin Kedly
Smith
MOCKSVILLE AUTOMOTIVE
727 South Main st Mocksville, N.C.
^hone 634-2944
T O T H E G R A D S
Good Luck. Succeu, Best Wiibes, And
Cei^tulatioiiB For Your Excellent
Achievemantl
J.P . Green MillingCo,
Depot Street Phona
Modiiwlle. N.C. 634-2126
H&RBLOCK
SlOUxingtonRd. Mocksville, NX.
634-3203
GIFT THE GRADUATE WITH
W A T C H E S ^
We extend our œngratüliNbns '
to ail graduates.. . and we extend
an invitation to their relatives and
friends to see us for ttie biggest
selection of the best «nd most
wanted graduation gifts.
Foster’s Jewelers
Phone 634-2737
North Main Street
Mocksville, N. C.
a
6RADS,yOU'VE REACHED VPUI^
0 THE IW...D0p l M
Fotler-Raaeh
Prag Company
WIUESBOIIOSTDEET MOCKSVIUE, N.C. PHONE (34-2141
GRADLUSJION
1981
HOWARD REALTY &
INSURANCE
315&IUiiiySl
ModmHte, Nf.
PhM. 634-353« U |
Wishing you all the best in all your
future endeavors... Grads! Hope
success is in the offing! Good Luck.
n U S T F E D E R A L SA V IN G S
230 N. Cherry Slreel /130 S. Slrallord Road
2815 Reynolda Road 13001 Wdughiown Slreel /216 Gaither Streel — Mocksville, N.C.
6H DAVII: COLINI Y HNTl'Rl’RlSi: RirORD, TIIliRSDAY. .RINI- 4, l‘)8i
Regina Denise
Snipes
John Wesley Donald Speer
SpGGr, J r.
/Î
4
- » s
Tamrtiy âpülman Paul Keith
Spry
Sharon Denise
Spry
r.il
Kenneth Greg
Stanley
V’
Tracey Lynn
Stapleton
Brian Keith
Steelman Donna Marie
Stokes
Charles Arnold
Stone
Lois K ííT '
trivette
<1
Frances Dee
Stricklin
i 'i - « \ > )
Joe Franklin
Tulbert
Diana Lynn
Sutphin
$
Melodie Ann
Swain
Jerri Lynn
Swanson
Gary Wynn
Taylor
John Wayne
Taylor
I
Rodney Pearce
Tenor
1
James Leroy
T h o m p so n
Ira Wakefield
Trexler
Cynthia Lynn
Tutterow
Ricky Gene
Vaughn
Gregory Eugene
Vest
Debbie Carol
Wagner
amet Hayward
Wall Beth Ward Tern Lee
Waters
$
Kilt Anthony
Watkins Wells
Boyd Nelson
West
Cynthis Sue
West
Jeriy Wayne
____:vvm0l____
William Thomas
Wharton. Jr.Amy Teresa
— W h itr-------
Charles David
Whit«
Jeffrey Clark
White
Kay Frances
White
;iena Vanessa
White '
____ _ *
Tony Dallas Stephen Glenn Reginald Alan Sandra Shigese
WilliaiWilliams
Or«9B Sooft
Wooten
Tmberly Carol
Wyatt Lewis Mitchell
Wyatt
Wood
[)onna Kay
York
Robin Denis
York
MAY WE
PRESCRIBE ALL
iN ArS GOOD m
YOUR SUCCESS
M o c lc s v ille
D is c o u n t D ru g
118 N. Main St. Mocksville, N.C.
Phone 634-2111
-Tr(: . Í
Linda Fiena
Young
Phone e34-(213
You’ve worked
hard these past
years...and now
that you've reached
your goal, we hope
that success con
tinues to be with
you in the years to
come! Keep up the
great work, Grads!
Wiiktw Oak Shopping Centar
Mocktvilte, N.C.
Lori Janli
Y o u n g
Camilla Elizabeth
Zimmerman
Karen Denise
Zimmerman
G R S I)S -(» lf(M in Jim
M Q job well done
GRUDCIfmON
t lw S t a r t o f S o m « t h ln g B ig III
1-40 DISCOUNT
Intersection of 1-40 and 601
Mocksville, N.C.
Phone 634-5316
112 N. Main St.
M sckMllls, ÑC PhoiM •34-S41f
DAVir. COUNTY 1-NTIÌRPRISH RECORD, THURSDAY, JUNK 4, msi 7H
Funds Raised
For Band Fronts
B y Jane Keller
'Hilrteen senior band members at
Davie Higli have been selling candy and
doughnuts since last October to raise
money.
1116 students raised over $1900 and
planned to present 12 stage band fronts
and 2 travel cases to band director
Robert Patillo, last Friday.
However, fronts and cases were not
delivered in tim e to be presented at the
Jazz Ensemble concert last Friday
night, as planned. Band m em bers ex
pect them to be delivered sometime this
weelt.
With the money left over from the
purchase of the fronts and cases the
students plan to present plaques to and
treat Patillo and Assistant Director
Kathy M essick to dinner.
Edwin Owens, spokesman for the
students, nam ed parents Sarah Wood,
Joycc Ann Cover and Velda M yers as
helpful in the fund raising effort.
This is the first tim e a gift of this
magnitude has been presented by band
members. Although they know it’s
“ awfully hard," the band students
would like to see it becom e a tradition.
Seniors cited Patillo as an “ out
stan d in g" band d irector. T h ey
described Kathy M essick’s first year as
assistant director as very good in aiding
students’ p rogress in m usical en
deavors.
Seven of the 13 senior band m em bers
plan to further their education in music.
Tax Returns
Getting an income tax refund from tbe
federal government m ay not be tbe best
financial move, according to Dr. Juatine
R ozier, extension fam ily resou rce
m anagem ent sp ecialist a t North
Carolina State University. After all,
you’re getting your own money back
without any interest income.
B y decreasin g the incom e tax
withheld from your paycheck, you can
have the money all year long to invest.
Y ou r em ployer can tell you
Karla Bean was recently presented In
a dance recital at Keppel AndHorinm al
Catawba College. She performed In tap.
ja ti, and ballet number*. K arla was an
honor student In the Cecchetti Method of
a a sslca l Ballet and received a cer
tificate for Grade Two. She also won a
|1S honor award for her work ta ballet
for the year. Karla stndies under Mrs.
JoAnn Smith of the SaUsbnry School ef
Ballet. K arla Is the danghter of Mr. and
M n . R ay Bean of Woodleaf and grand
daughter of M r. and M rs. Miltard
Harmon of M ocksville.
Clarion
Dedicated To
Robert Patillo
The Clarion dedication was held
Wednesday May 27 in the gym at Davie
High School. This year the senior class
voted to dcdicatc their annual to Band
Director Robert PatiUo.
Inside the yearbook amid pictures of
Mr. Patillo is this m essage: In the word
of Henry David Thoreau......"If a man
does not keep pace with his companions,
perhaps it is because he hears a dif
ferent drumm er. Let him step to the
m usic w hich he h ears, how ever
m easured or far aw ay.”
“ ITiese words could have been written
especiaUy for our teacher of the year.
Our teacher is a friend to all students
...He spends endless hours helping to
keep the nam e of Davie honorable.”
“ Therefore, we the Senior Q ass of
Davie High School are proud to dedicate
the 1961 Clarion to Mr. Robert L.
Patillo.”
Seniors vote yearly to dedicate the
Clarion to a person they feel has sur
passed all required expectation and
contributed greatly to the success of the
school.
R oliert P a tillo re ce iv es th e 1981 C larion from R en ee B ra ck en an d E v a E m ly in d ed ication cerem o n ies
held W edn esday, M a y 27 In tiie D a vie H igh g ym .
B i r t h s
withholding exemptions can
n W ^. -
be
if
in-
Jeffrey Scott Jones son ef Mr. and
Mrs.WUUam (Pee-Wee) Jones of 23
Chapel Drive in Lexington, N.C. was 3
years old M ay 31. Jeff has two brothers
Chris age 11 and M arty age 7. He is the
grandson of Mr. and Mr*. John Frank
Jones of Rt. 3, MocksviUe, and Mr*.
Elisha Forrest of Rt. 2. Advance. J e ff*
mother is the form w Lwih e R eavis.
Mr. and M rs. Lynn D. Keeton of Rt. 2,
Advance, N.C. proudly announce the
birth of their son, Matthew Dean, May
25, 1961 at Davie County Hoapital.
At birth the infant weighed 7 lbs. and
was 19% inches long.
Maternal grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Junior Norman.
Paternal grandparenta are Mr. and
Mrs. Louis Keeton.
The Keetons also have a daughter.
[ ¿ A i ^ u r i d i A b c ^ i t
NEW YO R K VISITORS
Mr. and M rs. H arry D. Atkinson and daughter, Joyce of Buffalo New York,
visited his aunt E ra C. Latham , of Route 2, M ocksville Saturday aftembon, and
Bud WaUace, Frances and Stacy Beck, Susan Wooten, Becky and WiUle WaUace
and sons Weston and Wilson. The AtUnsons toured Old Salem Saturday morning
and attm ded hit 45th High School graduation anniversary of South Fork High
School in Forsyth County, at Bermuda Run, Saturday night.
RETURN S TO TEX AS A FTER VISITING H ERE
Annette Bladnralder has returned to Texas after spending a week a t home
with her parenta and brother, Mr. and M rs. Paul Blackwelder and Jam es.
Annette Is presently employed by North Lake College located in Irving, Texas,
as a Math-Lah Co-ordinator. Annette’s sister’s fam ily of Taylorsville, M r. and
Mrs. Randy Smith and Anna, visited her a few days.
HAS U O N ’S PROGRAM IN STATESVILLE
Lions № rk D anid and Frank Stroud, Jr. attended NorUi IredeU Lkm s Club
m e tin g Ifo n ^ y evening, where BIr. Stroud had c h u y e of tbe program and
qx>ke on, “ U onism .”
M i ’ATH BR HONORED A T BIRTH DAY
W w ^ T e a h w tsrta ln e d hn> fathar, M r. Charlto M cO am rock,
« .•» » > « home OB R t 1. Advance. Preaeat fo^
W s o c c a ^ w e n h t a d J ia w ; M r. and M rs. Leonard Shelton, M r. and Mrs.
MW. Chariie M cO am rock and
M issTraciTeah.M r. M cClam rock’s birthday was M ay M .------------------------
D avid and D ebbie Steele and
daughter, Candi, proudly announce the
birth of a daughter, and sister, Melissa
LuAnn, bom at 1:55 p.m . on Saturday,
M ay 23rd at Forsyth M emorial Hospital,
llie baby weighed 8 lbs. 1 oz. and w as 30
inches in length.”
Maternal grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. W alter R. Bennett Sr. of Rt. 1,
Advance. Great-grandmother is M attie
Bennett of Reynolds Road in LewisviUe.
Paternal grandparenta are Mr. and
Mrs. David L. Steele Sr. of Route 4,
M ocksville, and B etty Steele of
Nahunta, Georgta. Great-grandparenta
are M r. and M rs. C.F. Boger of Route 7,
MocksvUle.
Mr. and M rs. Tom Cook of Atamo
Drive, Winston-Salem, announce tlw
UrUi of their first chUd, a daughter,
bom M ay 20 at F w syth Hospital. She
has been named M cKenzie Lawrence
and weighed 8 lbs. 12 oss. and measured
21 Vk indiies.
Grandparenta are M r. and M rs. Sam
Cook of MocksvUle and M r. and Bfrs.
Delm as M. Patterson of Winston-Salem.
Congrats,
GraduaAes
O fSl!
Enjoy!'
Uiis is your digr to shine, Grads!
The future of our great country
isinyourhand^
We give you our best wishes for
continued good fortune!
Dwiggins
Metal Masters
315 Wilkesboro Street Mocksville.N.C.
Phone 634-2379
WlUow 0«k Shoppinf Center
MONDAV-FRIDAY
8:OOAJ1.-6;OOP.M.
Phone 6Î4-Î322
SATURDAY
8;00A.M.-i:00F.M.
Hardw are Store
Social Security
Please teU m e how to cancel
m y m edical insurance. 1 can
no longer afford to pay the
premiums.
Yon m ay eancei yoar
medical iaswance by (Utag a
w ritten ao tice. Year
protection and yoar oMigatiaa
to pay premiams w ill ¿np at
the end o f the ca iea d ar
«Barter after Uie «aartor ta
which yoar notice is received. It Is si«gestad that yea get ta
High school class rings
are now on sale.
« 6 9 9 5
/IKTQIRVED
^C L A S S RINGS INC
S ila d iu m * ’ c la s s r in g s fro m A r tC a r v e d
a r e m a d e fro m a je w e le r ’s fin e s ta in le s s
m e ta l. S tro n g e r, lig h te r a n d m o re d u r a
b le th a n g o ld , Its b r illia n t lu s te r la s ts
fo r e v e r
C o m e I n w i t h t h i s a d t o
g e t t h e $ 6 9 . 9 5 o f f e r .
D A V IE
J E W E L E R S
135 N. Main St.
Moclaville,N.C.
634-5216
S ix S e n io rs T o R ece ive
C e rtific a te s In C e re m o n y
Six out of Davie County’s 327
graduating seniors will receive cer
tificates in lieu of di|domas ^ rin g
ceremonies Wednesday.
C ertificates are given students
completing high school requirements
but failing or choosing not to take the
required state com petency test.
A. M. Kiser, Davie County director of
students receiving certificates in Ueu Of
diplomas.
He said however, that based on resulta
of the October I960 testing, Davie ranks
above average in the number of studente
passing the exam .
In the Oct(09er testing, 359 D avie High
students took the com petency exam.
Kiser said that 95 percent passed the
rewdinf portion and 92 nerc.ent Deasaii
Thomas Ltadsay (Tommy) Foster,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Foster of
Route 2. MocksviUe. N.C. celebrated his
third birthday with two occasions,
Tuesday, M ay 26. Tuesday monUng he
had a party at Story Hour in Cooleemee
with his Uttie friends, and Tuesday
evening he celebrated at home with his
famUy. Hta aunt made him a Cartoon
birthday cake. Grandparenta are Mr.
and M rs. Bobby Gene Gtass of
Cooleemee, N.C., and Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Foster. Sr. of CaroUna Ave., MocksvUle.
Great grandparenta are M r. and Mrs.
Jam es Horton of SaUsbnry, M rs. L. F.
MUIcr. 8r. of W tasto»«alem aad Mrs.
Tom Foster of Roate 3. M ocksville.
certificates is in line with regional
percen tages and below state p er
centages.
He added that two of the six are
mem bers of the Trainable MentaUy
Handicapped class (TMH) who were not
required to take the com petency test.
Kiser views their graduation as a land
m ark In that they are the first members
in the TMH ctass at Davie High School
ever to com plete graduation
requiremente.
' the m atly
the math portion.
State averages riiow that 92.5 percent
of students in North Carolina taking ttie
October competency test passed Uie
reading portion w ith 84.5 percent
passing math.
Kiser added that any of the students
receivin g certifica tes because of
competency test failure can opt to
retake the exam at anytim e In Uie
future. If they pass ttie competency test,
they will be rewarded a high school
diploma.___________________________
reading or both portions of the com-'
potency test, retook the exam in AprU.
Seven of the ten were seniors.
Kiser added that 6 of the ten studente
took the reading portion with 33 percent
passing the exam . Nine of the ten took
Uie matti portion with 66 percent
passing.
Kiser added that at this time, no data
has yet been compiled on a statewide
basis showing precise percentages of
'g u fm a
l1 3 i« ,í c k
Chlorine bleach, great clean
er that it It, (houW be
avoided for aluiftinum (it
will darken tha wrfaca)
and fo r lin o leu m (it
w ill m ake it b rittle ).
toach with a soctai secarity office if yon are coasidertag canceUatiaB. There may be other optioBS avaUable to yoa. Cancelling yoar medical Insarance is a serious dedsiea as yoa may have ao ftaaaetal protectioa if yon tacarr targe medical expeases and yoa will probably have to pay higher premiams if you ever wish to
M I U S
o i m n
MEN’S
I Z O D
*2 5 .0 0
^ a\ue
KNIT SHIRTS
*17“!í :íí|
l ^ a n d
Lewisville-
Clemmons Rood i
Clemmons, N.C.
MEN’S
V y t S f ^ *
NO FAULT
JEANS
Calvin Klein
i i m
» \9 .5 0
^ a\ue
$
»44.00 (
^ a\u e
2 9 8 8
(i
MISSY
CHINOS
$ Ç 8 8
MEN’S WRANGLER
CUTOFF
DENilM SHORTS
» 11.0 0
‘15.00
Value i
JUNIOR
WRANGLER
CORDUROY
SHORTS
‘13.00
Value
O P E N :
10o .m .t o 8p .m .
M o n . ° th r u S a t.
C L O S E D S U N D A Y
8П - DAVIK COUNTY FNTI-RI’RISi; RF.CORD, TIIURSI)A> . HINIs 4. I9KI
C a r o l i n a R e v i e w
MORE HI(}MWAYS...."Votc no gii tax or drop dead,” taid one aerioui opponent to Qovernor Hunt’i highway
tax plan.'Hiat comment wai made in what wai
deicribed ai a "deluge’
arriving in the General i lait week. The lenator who i
laae in wnai wai e” of «q>poaitlon
I АметЫу mail who received It■ayi he itlll lupporti the govemor'i
package. According to his secretai^, the
mail was running in favor of theproposed tax plan until last v/eek, "when the Congressional aub got into the act.”In spite of growing opposition to the “Good Roads Package,” the plan eMaped the Senate Finance Committee last week for direct action by Uie fidl Senate this week.Hie bill made it out of committee by virtue of several votei by members who don’t necessarily support the legislation."I was obligated only to get it out of committee” said one senator.But one strong Senate proponent of the
bill was feeling confident by week’s end. “(Ml, we might put a couple of small amendments on it, but that’s all,” he said."It depends on who you talk to,” said
another senator who hadn’t made up hii
mind. “I’vehadalotofgoodpeopletolt and I’ve had Just the opposite. It’s a pretty sticky situation,” he said.Either way, some North Carolinians might be able to read the preliminary Senate results on the bill at the same
by Jerry Mobley
time they are reading this report.No matter. The House must also consider the same legislation (com
panion blU)-after waiting to see how the controversial plan fared tn the Senate.
House opponents will have had even
more time to organiie and to measure public opinion against the proposals.After the House establishes its version
of the road plan, then the two bodlbi must get together for concurrence. By the time that happens, then there...well, right now anything can happen.INTEREST RATES....Although it wouldn’t seem possible, the Senate has had time to act on a couple of other controversial bills recently. The ceilinei on virtually all bank loan interest rates were raised last week. Contract loans, second mortgage loans, and consumer installment loans were all Included in the legislation.
Most simporters of the bill said the rates would not rise immediately. One
banker was quoted as saying that the
rates "are not going to be controlled by
legislation but by competition.”
Hie legislation was passed under
protest from some members of the
Senate who felt Lt. Gov. Jimmy Green,
as presiding officer of the Senate, had given favorable rulings on behalf ot the banking lobby.
HAZARDOUS WASTES....The Senate also last week approved leglsIatioD regulating hatardous wastes, including
iow-level radioactive wastes. In the state.Week before last, the bill seemed to be running into stronger than expected opposition as It reached the floor of the Senate. After about two hours of sometimes heated debate, the final vote was postponed ostensibly on behalf of Senator Oonrad Duncan who asked that he be given time to check with constituents back home.Those constituents must have had negative feelings since Senator Duncan came back and voted against the legislation. Apparently, those con
stituents have reason to be negative
since some observers fed that small,
rural districts like Duncan’s ISth will
bear the brunt of haiwrdous waste
dumping lites.Hie legislation is now in the House.
The lovely camellia it named aftar George Joieph Kama!, a miifionary who first brought tha ihrub from the Orient 'to Europe.
T h e D avie R escu e S q u ad u sed it’s n ew H urst e m erg en cy to o l fo r th e first tim e in real life last W edn esd ay
m o rn in g to free th e d river o f th is V o lk sw a g e n . T h e w re ck o ccu re d o n N .C . 8 0 1, so u tli o f A d va n ce .
Late Night Wreck On N.C. 801 Pins Driver In
A Wilkes CJounty man w as pinned
under his car after running off NC 801
and overturning Wednesday, M ay 27,
the Highway Patrol said.
Robert Lee Lankford, 43, of Trap Hill,
was heading north on NC 801 aroimd
12:35 a.m . when he crossed into the
southbound lane. His 197S Volkswagen
ran off the road, struck an embankment,
and rolled on its right side, pinning
Lankford inside.
Rescue workers cut Lankford out of
the vehicle and the man was taken by
am bulance to F orsyth M em orial
Hospital. Trooper A.C. Stokes estimated
the dam age to the car at $2,000.
Charges are still pending in the in
cident.
^ S I N G E R
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SALE
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Scboofhoiise Desk end Chtìr Set In Solid Pine
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ALLBEDROOMJUITES
HAVE BEEN REDUCED FOR
THIS SALE
All Hutches, Tables
t Chairs Reduced
Cheek Modcsvllls
Fumlture'f low,
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24 pieces ol stemware
»59 Additional Bar Stools, ea. »49
Only 5 To Sale
DAVli; COUNTY i;n t i:ri’r isi; r ix'o r d . t h u r s h a y , ju n i 4, i>)m k
Flanked by his parents, Shannon pulllam displays two of several awards he received last Thursday night. Shown here are the Most Dedicated Athlete, and
the Davie High Achievement Award.
At Davie High
A t h l e t e s H o n o r e d
U ieir seasons are finished on the
fields, courts and gym s for this year.
Students, teachers and parents gathered
in Davie County Sdwol's gym last
Ihursday night to honor tiie school’s
athletes and coaches in the annual
athletic awards program .
Shannon P u lllam , D a v ie ’s a ll
con feren ce standout in football,
basketball and track, was the name
most often called as he w as given most
of the sdw ol’s m ajor awards for athletic
endeavor. Pulliam was named Most
Valuable Defensive Bade in football.
Most Valuable Player in baslcetball and
Most Valuable Player in trade. Pulliam
was also honored with the athletic
achievem en t aw ard and the m ost
dedicated athlete of the year.
Pulliam received the Jack Ward
Outstanding Male Athlete of the Year.
Angela Riddle, all-conference in tennis,
basketball and softbaU, w as given the
Outstanding Fem ale Athlete of the Y ear
from W ard, a form er D avie gridiron
coach and associate superintendent of
sdioois.
David Folm ar, varsity player in
footbnll, baseball and basketball, was
honored w ith the Spurgeon Goss
Sportsmanship Award, presented by D.
J. Mando. llie trophy is nam ed after a
form er Davie athlete who was killed
while serving in Vietnam.
David Folmar rMeives the Spurgeon Gom Sportsmanship award from D. J.
Mando. The award is presented yearly In honor of Goss, a Da vie athlete kiUed io Vietnam.
A new trophy w as presented for the
fiist year in honor of Stewart Grindle, a
Davie student killed recently in a
m otorcyde accidoit. Dan Riddle was
named the first recipient as the Most
O utstanding ju n ior v a rsity football
player.
In Men’s track. Coach Berton Barger
awarded Jerry West the M VP in the
ild d events. In girls’ track, Lisa Eden
received M VP in track events and Sarah
Gardner was awarded M VP in field by
Coach Allen Sitterle._________
Sitterle, in his final year as football
coach at D avie thanked his coaching
staff before m aking his presenUtions.
Calling him "one of the finest hitters I
have coached,” Sitterle presented the
Kelly Insurance M VP Aw ard to Curtis
Johnson, who lead the W ar Eagles in
U ckles.
Todd E am iiardt w as named out
standing offensive back. Center Billy
M orris won the outstanding oKensive
lineman award. Randy Carter was
aw arded a s outstanding d efen sive
lineman. Keith Mason w as recogniied
as the m ost improved player.
BiU Peeler, athletic director, nam ed
Sharon Young as tiie M VP on the girls’
iMwketbaU team .
In tennis coached by Robert Lfandry,
U i Packer w as nam ed m ost improved
(continued on page 2-C)
Former Davie High coach ud principal. Jack Ward, presented hia tpecial
awards to Angela Riddle and Sbannoii Pulliam tfala year.
Dan Riddle receives the fta-tt Stewart Grindle trophy from Mr. Grindle.
Barry Whitlock and Dan Riddle received baseball honon from coach David Hunt.
BUI Wharton and Dan Martin were named top wrestlers.
Barry Whitaker and Con Sheltm were top Davie High golfers
w
Jerry West and Shannon Pulllam were top members of the boys №ack
team.
Sharon Young and Shannon Pulllam were named moat valuable basketball players.
Rhonda DriscoU received the Most Valuable Softball player award. Lisa Eden received top honors In volleyball.
2Г DAVII, COUNTY HNTI-RPRISI- RI-CORD, THURSDAY, .TUNF 4, 108)
Money Management
Varsity football playen receiving awardi were: Billy Mam, Randy Carter.
Todd Earnhardt, Curtli Johnion, Shannon Pulliam.
A thletic Aw ards
(continued from page !<})
and IVacy Stapleton woii M VP on Ihe
g irls’ team . Chip B arn hard t, a ll
conference, w as recognised as the M VP
and Scott Humphrey w as the most
improved player fbr the m en's team.
In w restlin g coached by Buddy
Lowery, heavyweight BiU Warren was
named the most improved while Dan
M artin won the M VP award.
Jam es Gadton w as recognised as the
M VP in cross-country by Coach Barger.
In b aseb all. Coach D avid Hunt
honored B arry Whitlock as the M VP.
Dan Riddle was nam ed as the most
im proved playe
Aileen Steelman.
In volleyball, Lisa Eden won the M VP
plaque presented by Doug Fagan. Am y
In golf, the Bob Benson Outstanding
Golfer trophy went to Barry W hiUker, a
conference m edalist. Con Shelton was
named as the most Improved golfer.
Rhonda Driscoll w as singled out for
Uie MVP aw ard from D avie girls’ soft
ball team which finished first in the
„conference with ll-s record under Coach
Tennis honors went this year to Ch^ Barnhardt. Tracey Stapleton, and
Scott Hnmphrey.
James Gadsdn was name
Moat Valuable Cross Country
Rumier. —
Lisa Eden and Sarah Gardner recdved girla track award«.
Correction In Awards Day Story
Varsity cheerleader Amy
Howard received the Most
Valuable Cheerleader Award.
Tbe following errors w ere m ade in tbe
story concerning Davie H i^ Scbool
Awards Day. The story a n ie a n d in the
M ay Ssth issue of the Ealerprise-
Record.
Todd Flanagan, a sophomore, was
erroneously listed as Todd Flem m ing.
Also, M dissa M yers is the second, not
the first, recipient of the Patsy Hicks
Memorial Scholarship. Lisa M yers was
last year’s winner.
The scholarship, funded by the Davie
Music Club, is for continuing education
in piano.
F a r m i n g t o n
Л ouvered dish supper was
llowship Hall
at Farm ington M ethodist
given in the Fello
Church on last Sunday
evening, May 31st honoring
Rev. and Mrs. Alvin Pope.
Rev. Pope will be leaving our
charge soon. Rev Raymond
Surratt will be coming the
first of July as our new pastor.
Mrs. Virginia Beckner, of
Clemmons, N.C. was a recent
visitor of Mr. and Blrs. W. S.
Spillman on M ocksville, Rt. 2.
"R»plac«mant
cost minus
dsprsclatlon?
Or Rsplacamant
Cost? TIM
dlffsrsncs could
bssubstsntisl.”
IJáe Ш 90oa лЫрМог.
MM* fm/.Ti U ttf
Ask about Replacement
Cost Coverage for the
contents of your home
BOBBY KNIGHT
l» 2 ^ ^ M i? n S t .
M ockivllls, N.C.
STATE FARM
Fut ê»é
Нот« OltiM
Им(п«л||*о. UltMti
Mr. and M rs. G. E.OoUetle,
Jr. and sons Will and Jay of
Winston-Salem, were also the
guests of M r. and M rs.
Spillman on Sunday, May
13th.
M iss R osetta C offey of
Berea, Ky. is the house guest
of Mrs. Karlene Cope and
fam ily for the summer.
Mrs. Gail B. Smith entered
Forsyth M emorial Hospital in
W instiin-Salem last w eek.
Lets all rom ember Gall daily
in our prayers. We sincerely
hope she will soon have a very
speedy recovery.
Rev. C E. Crawford, a for
m er pastor of the Farmington
Bsptlst Church is now a
patient in tbe Fran-Ray Rest
Home in M ocksville. Our
-ayers aro with him. We
he will soon be feeling
much better.
Mr. W. W. SpUlman and
wife and his Sunday School
C lass of Farm ington
Methodist Church motored to
Dugspur, Va. on last Sunday,
May 31st, where they were the
guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. T.
Connar at their mountain
cottage In Dugspur.
“ In doubt if an action be tuit,
abitain." Zoroattar
O f all of the Seven Won-
deri o f the ancient worid,
only the three Greet Pyr-
em ldi of Egypt wrvive.
A Realistic Financial Plan Can
Reduce The Anxiety Of Unemployment
Job Is alw ays a
I financial blow, but It
Howell was nam ed the most valuable
cheerleader on the squad under m im
Carolyn Treece.
L.oslng your
psychological and
can also be a time to recoup your
resources and plan for the future. Ac
cording to the North Carolina
Association of CPAs, the first thing to do
when you lose your Job is rearrange your
famUy budget to accomm odate the loss
of Income as well as new expenses you
m ay have in order to find another Job.
Contact your m ortgage holder as weU
as other creditors im mediately so that
you can arrange reduced M ymenta
whUe you are out of work. It you ai«
eligible for unemployment, find out
w lwt your weekly income from this wiU
be and sit down with your fam ily to plan
a new budget for at least a three-month
period. (This is the average length of
time needed to find a new Job.)
Most states will pay unemployment
benefits for sbc months and, according
to the U. S. Department of Labor, the
average benefit ia $101.41 a week.
Prepare a new cash flow chart for the
income you wUl be Ukely to receive hi
addition to your unemployment benefit.
Perhaps you have severance pay which
can be spread out for a Ume; or you can
pick up freelance or part tim e Jobs.
Include your spouse’s Income and any
that your ChUdren can provide.
To prepare a new budget for expenaaa,
don’t forget to include money for
printing and maUhig resum es. You m ay
also be spending money for classified
ads and unemployment agency fees as
weU as transportation to and from Job
interviews. As long as you’re looking for
a Job in the sam e Une of work that you
left, keep records of these and other Job
hunting expenses so you can deduct
them on your federal income tax return,
CPAs say. You can deduct the cost of
traveUng to the union haU to check the
job postings.
In addition to cutUng back on your
usual expenses, you can reduce your
h old ln gyow ^
pay only interest d uA ig the tim e you’re
out of w ork; the p rin c i^ portion can be
added onto later payments. You also
m ay be able to pay less than the usual
monthly amount towards your bank
card and retaU store accounta. When
you get a new Job, CPAs remind you that
your budget wUl have to be adjiuted for
higher than usual m ortgage and credit
card paymenta untU you catch up on
what you owe.
Another important budget item m ay
be the purchase of health and life in
surance poUcles If these benefits were
previously provided by your form er
em idoyer (coverage often extenda for
one month after you leave your Job).
You can convert group health and Ufe
insurance plans to individual coverage,
which is often m ore eiqiensive than
buying new poUclea. It m ay be cheaper
to buy a short-term health insurance
policy that provides coverage for two to
six months and a one-year term life
Insurance policy. A group health in
surance plan m ay be avaUable to you at
low cost through a professional or
fraternal organir.aUon, or you m ay be
eligib le for coverage under your
spouse’s plan.
If you were covered by your previous
em ployer's pension plan, you m ay have
been given your contributions and in
terest earnings when you left the Job.
Even though you m ay be tempted to use
that lump sum for living expenses, it
might be wiser to roll it over into an
Individual Retirement Account. If you
do this within 60 days, you won’t have to
pay taxes on it, and you wUI be
protecting your pension benefits. Should
your next employer have a pension plan
for employees, you can ru l your IRA
account over again-this time into your
new em ployer’s account.
Whether or not your unemployment
benefits are taxed dependa upon what
other income you have during the year
and your tax return filing statua, say
CPAs. Let’s say you and your spouae
have $25,200 in combined salaries and
you receive fSOO in unemployment
benefita. With a Johit return, you sub-
stract $as,ooo from your total hicome of
Lori Annette WaUace, fifth grader al
Morgan Elem enU ry School in Rowan
County, has been accepted tor the
P feiffe r C ollege Sum m er Science
Program tor gifted and talented middle
scbool studenU. The program, designed
as a leam big exj^rlence for risbig sbrth
through nbith grade stadenla, wUI bi-
cliide studies bi m alhem atlcs, cem pnler
science, chem istry, and biology. Sbe is
Ihe daughter of Roger and Ana WaUace
of Route 10. SaU sbwy and grand
daughter of M r. and M rs. W. L. WaUace
of Rente 6, MocksvUle.
$26,000 and pay U x either on some or aU
of the beneflU or half of your toUl in
come over $25,000, whichever ia Isaa. In
this case, $500 worth of benefiU (half the
difference between $26,000 and $25,000)
is Uxed, since it's less than the $800 in
beneflU. The remaining $S00 worth of
benefiU is not Uxed.
M ONEY M ANAGEMENT is a weakly
column on personal finance prepared
and distributed by The North CaroUna
Association of Cerllfled Public Ae-
counUnU.
K atie Elizab eth Collette
Honored At WCU
Katie Elizabeth CoUette, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Leonard CoUette of 1011
YadkinvUle Road, MocksvUle, Ь м been
■ selected as a member of Weatem
CaroUna University’s Western Gold for
the 1901-82 school year.
Western Gold is an organteation of
WCU StudenU who work with the ad
missions office in recruiting high school
seniors and two-year coUege transfer
StudenU. Members coordinate WCU’s
faU open house and participât* in
alum ni and student recruitm en t
meetings, ROTC Day, Hiatory Day,
Spring Telettion, band day, alumni
gatherings and campua tours.
They are nominated by faculty, staff
and acUve m em bers and are selected on
the basis of character, attitude and
knowledge ot the university.
Miss CoUette, a 1972 graduate o( Davie
County High School, U a Junior, dean’s
Ust student m ajoring in social sciences.
Local S tu d en ts On
A SU D ean’s List
A total of 1,1«я undergraudate
students earned spring sem ester
academ ic honors and nave been placed
on the dean’s Ust at Appaladilan State
UWversity.
^ 0 quaUfy for tbe honor, a student
nmst mainUin a 3.25 average on at least
12 sem ester hours of work with no grade
below C.
StudenU from Davie County makbig
the Dean’s Ust were;
V irgin ia Lynn Border, R t. в,
MocksvUle; WUIiam Andrew
of Cooleemee; M aria Amanda
of M ocksville; and Am y
Reidenbach of Advance.
Susan
Clolhbig Expendttores
Annual spending for clothing roae to
$473 per person during tbe first three
quarters of 1900. In 1979, the figure was
$441 per person.
C H I C K E N
B R E A S T F I L E T
S A N D W I C H
Try Our Chicken Breast FUet
S s^ w ich PreparedW ith The & m e
& cret Blend of Eleven_Herbes^d
Spice« as The Colonel’s Original Recipe
Chicken-Garnished With Lettuce and
Dressing On a Sesame Seed Bun.
iT^DEucousM It's n ic e to fe e ls o g o o d a b o u ta m e a l.
K|ntacl^ Fried Chicken
Highway 601 North - Yadkinville Road
M ocksville, N .C.
6 3 4 -2 19 8
I
DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, JUNE 4, 1981 - 3C
Farmington Dragway News
B y BM ky White
G ene Q uick of W alkertow n, NC
captured h ii lecond win in three w eeki
in the Pro Street Diviiion at Ute F ar
mington D ragw ay on Friday night.
Gene, driver of the 427 cubic inch
equipped 1968 "Q u ick M achin e"
Cim aro, took Mike Weatmoreiand of
Oak Ridge, NC Ijy lurpriie as he caught
Mike and p au ed him in only <.76
lecondi on the eighth m ile track.
W eitmoreland’iela p ied tim e in the 1968
"Phillip Holt' ’ Cam aro w a i 7. IS lecondi.
David B oggi of Farm ington took third
place in h ii IMS Pontiac Tempeat and
Buddy Allen of Greeniboro, NC w ai
fburth in h ii 1964 Plymouth.
Haywood Jackion of Winaton-Salem,
NC w ai the numlwr one qualifier in Pro
Street with an E T of 6.970 lecondi on a
6.970 dial-in and you ju it can’t get any
d o ie r than that!
Dennii Swaim of K em envU le, NC,
after having m any problem ! with hii
1968 Ford M uitang took the win in the
Modified Street Diviiion. Dennii ran an
elapaed tim e of eight lecondi flat on an
dght-flat dial-in while David Bates of
Yadkinville, NC picked up lecond place
on a breakout. David puihed h ii Cam aro
ju it a little too hard with an E T of 8.08,
two hundredth! of a lecond too faitt
Terry Andenon of Winiton-Salem w ai
fourth in h ii antique 1989 Plym outh
Fury. ("Pop” puUa M l 1969 Plymouth
race car to the track with another 1969
Plymouth Fury that he drivea a i hii
fam ily cart)
W ayne M yen of Clem m oni, NC took
the win in h ii 1989 Chevrolet Nova with
an E T of 9.94 lecondi in a double
breakout a g a in it Jim Fannin of
Greeniboro, NC. Jim puihed h ii 1973
Plymouth Barracuda too hard in hii try
for the win and went eight hundredth! at
a lecond too fait. Arvil llia tn ai of
Mount Airy, NC took the number three
poiition and R ich ard C alaw ay of
Courtney, NC waa fburth.
On Friday, June 5, the Merritt-
HoUand Welding Supply Co. of Winaton-
Salem , NC w ill ip o n iw it’! lecond
Powder Puff Derby. G atei will open at
p.m . and dim lnattoni will begin at 8:30
p.m. All thoae under the age of aixteen
will be adm itted F R E E at the F ar
mington D ragw ay!
Gray Mcaamrock of MocksviUe won hii firit grudge race Saturday.
L
The Kemeriville baied Quick Machine, with Gene Quick driving.
Pulliam Breaks 2 Records In Jr. Olym pics
A D avie County itudent broke two
record! in the Rowan County Junior
Olympica track and field m eet held
Saturday at Knox Junior High School.
. B arry Pulliam , ot South Davie Junior
U g h , broke the n o high hurdle! record
and 400 interm ediate hurdlei m ark,
while com peting in the intermediate
boya category. He had a tim e of 14.89
. aeoonda in the n o event, and 1:00.08
aeeoada in the 400 m eter event.
Several other recorda alao fell to area
,1
North Rowan Middle Schoid'a Carolm
■nd C a n ^ C h a w lk and the Faith
iT r M i d u b ’a Bobbi Sim a, Jam ea
!.«K,;<wiVBna, John Pealar and Tom m y
I ^ M r t a r e a d i took three blue rlbbooa.
^ r P i u n Monroe of Ariwbora took four
I wom eo’a (17-18)
feweat entrlea
SP*»«-M -' Twenty-two m eet reoorda w ere broken
another waa tied. Fourteen reoorda
.■ ^«are eataUiahed in new eventa.
BUla, Peeler, and Albem arle'a Liuron
: S H a a k e each broke two recorda.
: ^BUia, competing in tbe m idget (11-12)
diviaioa, aether recorda wltti timea
m ^ « t 38.08 in the 200 m etera and 13.4 in the
She alao won the 80 low hurdlea in
eatabliahing a record in a new
event.
Peeler broke m idget boya record!
STwtth timea of 2:34.38 in tbe 800 and
^ | :ie .l2 in tbe 800 and 5:18.13 in the 1800.
■ He alao eaUbliahed a record In tbe 3000
^ !^ ith a tim e of 11:28.38.
Maake, who placed fourth in the 110
high hurdle! in the itate high ichool
m eet on Friday night, aet his record! in
the young m en’! diviiion with timea of
14.S3 in the 110 hurdles and 58.87 in the
400 hunUei.
Chawlk, com peting in the youth (13-
14) girl! diviaion, won tbe long Jump
with a leap of 4.75 m eters, the triple
Jump with a leap of 9.79 and the 100 with
a 12.79 c lo c l^ .
Sima, m idget girla, aet a d iicu i record
with a throw of 22 m etera and wonthe
ahot put with a heave of 6.7S and the
tr ij^ Junq> with a leap of 7.1S.
HopUna, com peting in the bantam (10
a ^ udder) boya, won the long Jump with
a lo a p o f 3.48metara, IfaeOOOwitfaa time
flf 2:87.06 and the 1800 with a 8:87.72
clocking.
Porter ran tbe 1500 in the ihtennedUte
te y sc U a i bi 4:22.98, a county record for
Davie Merchants Baseball Team
Defeats Kings Mountain Sunday
D avie M erchanta d efeated K in gi
Mountain by a acore of 14-5 in a Carolina
Stan M utual L«ague Semi-Pro baaeball
gam e played at Rich Park on Sunday
M ay 31.
A D avie hitting barrage included a 3-
run home run by Jeff Pardue, a aolo ahot
by P erry Ridenhour, a baae load triple
by clean up hitter Craig Brown and two
bit! each by David Bam hardt and Am ny
■26 Teams In Handicap Tournament
1^: Twenty-aix team a participated in the
«4?aanual two-m an handicapped tour-
^'nam ent oo M ay 30-31 at the ^ k o r y Hill
K 0<df Coune. A drawing fbr p«№ era Hendricki
^'took place on Friday evening!. Each
« tea m
over four team ! tied for aecond and third
place. Theae teama ahot a 2 day total o t
122or 22 under M y. Team ! w ere; Jerry
and Phil DeadoM n; G.C.
ed two rounda with each
. .In g out hi! ball with ad-
handicap. Team a beit ball counta
ard tbe two dayi.
Vem on Thompson and BwM y Beck
took a big lead on Saturday by abooting
aeventeen under par or a net 55. Thia
aoore gave them a four atroke lead over
the fleki on Sunday; on Sunday they got
a net 62 or ten under par for a two day
acore of 117. They won by five itrokei
Lankford and Sheek M iller; Tomm y
BOUer and Bill C o u rt; Jim M o on and
C.W. Allen. Several playera poated good
rounda.
F a r m i n g t o n
S o f t b a l l
H ie D avie (Airopractic loftball team
rem ained undefeated and in firat place
in the Farm ington Softball League
through p ity la it week. The lU ndingi
are a i foUowa:
lE A M w L
Winner! Beek and Ibompaon.
Davie Chriopractic
H auler Grocery
B yrd'iG reenhouie
Northweit Dairy
Crown Wood
B onanu Mobile Hom ei
North Davie Junior High Honors Atheltes
With First Annual Awards Banquet
On Friday, M ay 22, 1981, the North
Davie Coaching itaff honored their
athletes and cheerleaders with the first
annual athletic banquet held In the
school cafeteria.
Ttie banquet featured a great buffet
dinner prepared by the athletes' and
cheerleaders' parents. After dinner and
before the presentation of awards,
QMch Sam Beck, Athletic Director, told
the crowd of 370 what a great year it has
l>een for a new school who had blended
in three area schools to form North
Davie Jr. High. Coach Beck told how the
coaching staff determined the Moat
Valuable and Most Improved Awarda.
He said, "through their dedication, their
hard work, but much m ore their love for
one another, made it an enjoyable year
to coadi these young people." Beck,
along with the other coaches, praiied
their team i and what each individual
meant to the Athletic Program .
Coach Beck praiied the attitude and
lu p e r ip o rtim a n ih ip N orth D avie
Athletei, cheerleader!, coachei and the
en tire Itudent body d iip layed
throughout the year. “ It paid off
becauie w e won the only award tte
C onference recogn izea, the Sport-
im anship Award and boy it looki great
in our trophy ca ie ."
The following aw ard! w ere given by
their reapective coachei in that iport:
Varsity Footbaii
Moet Valuable - Ravan Davla
Most Improved - Tony Foater
Girls Softball
Moet Valuable - HoUyUmstead
Moet Improved - Jackie W all
'P a u l C ie n e r Ford 1 0 0 '
S ch e d u le d For Satu rd ay
N ight At Bow m an Gray
llie season’s third long-distance event
for Bowman G ray Stadium ’s Winston.
.............................caener Ford..
W restling
Most Valuable - Tom m y Earnhart
Most Improved - M ark M etier
Varsity Q irli Basketball
I Most Valuable - Angle Browder
Most Improved - Teresa Smith
J.V. Boyi Basketball
Most Valuable - John Talbert
Moet Improved - Jerry Riddle
J.V. Girls Basketball
Most Valuable - Susie O ’Mara
Most Improved - Tam m y Crawford
Girls Volleyball
Most Valuable -
Moat Improved
Boys Track
Most Valuable
Beth Parker
■ Sherry Allen
David KeUer
Most Imrpoved - Johathan Wishon
G irls Track
Moat Valuable - Peggy Hartman
Moet Improved - Sheri Parks
Varsity Cheerleaders
Moet Valuable - Anita Hockaday
Moat Improved - Deree Eaton
J.V. Cheerleaders
Most Valuable - Wendy Craven
Moat Improved - Patrice Lyles
tsm anship Award •M-
E ach 9th grader waa given a "NORTH
DAVIE W ILDCAT ATH LETIC" "T "
Shirt for their tribute by the Coadiing
s u ff.
Special honora w ere given to wreatlera
who won Conference Championihlpa:
Tom m y Earnhart lit place at 132 Iba.
Ravan D avii 2nd place a t 128 Iba.
(^ reyG regory 2ndplaceat 781ba.
Mike D river 3rd p a ce at 145 Iba.
Tim Smith 3rd place at H eavyweight
Rodney Gobble 4th place at 138 Iba.
Billy Seat! 4th place at 167 Iba.
llie y were coached by Ron Kirk.
In B oyi Track, Jam es Hollis tied the
Conference high Jump record at 6 ft.
Johnathan Wishon placed 2nd in the
mile.
In Girls Track, the 440 Relay Team
composed of Peggy Hartman, (^rlena
Allen, Sheri Parks and E rika Lawrence
won the Conference Championship.
Frankie Chaplin set a new record in the
3200 m eter run with a 14.44 tim e in the
girls division.
Boys Varsity Basketball Team tied for
the Conference Championship with a 12-
2 record. Boys J.V. Baaketball Team
won the Conference Championship.
Girls Varsity Basketball Team tied for
second place. Girls J.V . Baaketball
Team was undefeated.
Coach Beck also praised the Booster
a u b for the super support and gifts of
athletic equipment to supplement the
Program . “ Without their support we
could not have m ade it." He alao
thanked in dividuals such as C arl
Jacoba, “ who worked awfully hard for
the weight macMne; Paul Folm or who
helped get the blocking and tackling
aleds; Jim Eaton who plowed the
football fid d to be reseeded; the P.T.A.
who gave aeveral hundred doU an ftar
track equipment, and Mike Holcomb,
Preildent of the Booater Club, who
tirelen ly gave h ii tim e and effort to
m ake tbe Athletic Program better.’’
“ We’re thankful for everyone who
contributed - eipecially our atudenta
who are Juit great!’’
Recreation Softball
TEAM S
A Division
M OCKSVILLE RECREATIO N DEPARTM EN T
1981 M idget GirU Softball COACHES
jumor high ichool boyi. He alao
triumphed with times of 2:09.49 in the
800 and 18:29.03 in the 5000.
Double winners were Randleman’a
Sherry W hitaker and Faith’s Susan
B randon in bantam g irls; F a ith ’s
Jenifer M ills and Andrew Britton in
m idget girls; North Middle’s D arryl
Jackaon in m idget boys; H artadl’a
Angela Garm on in youth girls; Led-
fbrd’i Todd Flynt, Knox’i Bruce Tltm
and FaiOi’i Keokl P ed er In youth boyi;
Knox’i AUiaon R ice and Dana O ocker,
Corriher-Upe Track Club’a Tereaaa
G illlap le and N orthw eat C a b a rru i’
Charlotte Carlaon in interm ediate girli;
the G reater SallidMiry ‘R-ack O ub’a
Richard Gwyn In Intermediate boya;
THnity’a Jennifer Harria in young
w om en; and E a it R ow an ’a P a t
(^rleaton in young men.
Riddle.
Pitcher Rick Brown went the diatance
for D avie on the hot and humid day
allowing only 4 hita, two of which were
home rum .
Davie faces the long ball hitting South-
W eatem Diviiion leading Davidaon Jeti
at Rich Park on Saturday, June 6 and
the Charlotte R oyal! on Sunday, June 7,
alao at Rich Park.
100", ia icheduled Saturday night on the
quarter-mile aiphalt track.
The 100-lap ra ce for N A SC A R
Modified Diviiton c a n w ill be the m ain
event of a “ double-point" m eet that alao
includes ra ce i for Lim ited Sportim an,
Street Stock and “ B lu n d erb u it’’
diviiions. Practice rum are to itart at 6
p.m. Saturday, with Modified qualifytaig
triali at 7:30 and the fin t race at 8:15.
Ralph Brinkley of Lenngton and Billy
Middleton of Germanton, winners of the
y e a r’s two previou s extra-distan ce
races here, are am ong tbe favorites.
Brinkley won the track title laat year for
the fouilh tim e, and regained the lead in
atandings which w ill decide the 1981
crown with a 93-lap victory M ay 23.
Middleton won Uie M ay 2 aeaaon-
opening “ W imton 200" and waa leader
in tbe atandings until M ay 23, when
engine failure during practice rufu left
Mm with a 18th-place finiah in a
borrowed car aa he fell to third poaition
in the atandinga.
Middleton led qualifying triala for laat
week’a event, whicb waa ended by a
thunderstorm after 11 lapa in the fin t of
two icheduled 25-lap Modified racea.
The race had been halted by a third-tum
c n ih when tbe downpour cam e, and
Philip Smith of K em envU le had Uken
the lead hy beating Middleton back to
the aU rt^iniih line in a icram ble of
traffic around the acene of the accident.
Track m anager Joe H aw U m aaki
Middleton and Smith wiU hold the 1-2
poiitlons when that race la reaumed aa
the fin t of two 25-lap Modified eventa hi
a June 13 reicheduling of la it week’i
“ U d ie i Night" obiervance.
A full achedule of racei for lim ited
Sportim an, Street Stock and Blun
derbuit c a n will be included in the June
13 m eet, H aw U m aaid, atong with a
“ Demolition D erby" wrecking conteat
wMch was part of tbe activity m ined out
laat week.
H ie halted Modified race w ai the
lecon d on laat Satu rd ay n igh t’a
ram . The fin t w ai a 20-lap lim ited
race wMch prowiced the
& « t victory of the year for Aubrey
Fiahel of Clem m om .
Hawkini laid rain checka from the
itadium ’i fin t poitponement of the
leaion will be honored at either of the
MXt two QVttlti.
"W e w ere let with NASCAR’i double
point u n ction thia week for the Paul
(^ n er Ford race," he u ld , “ ao we
couldn’t reRrhedulc the lailiea' night
until a week U ter on June 13. We d e c lM
tbe fkireat tMng for the fan i would be to
give them a choice, and let them m e the
rain checki either week they prefer.’'
The funny tione got iti
name from the fact that the
name for the bone running
from the ihouMer to the
elbow li the humerus bone.
W .K. u avie co b ra i
Cooleemee Coola
M ockiville R ockettei
M ocksville Angels
B DivUion
W .R. D avie Bad News
Q xtleem ee IndiaM
MockavUle T ig e n
MocksvUle Sluggen
D ate..................
Thuraday, June 4
Friday, June 5
Monday, June 8
T hunday, June 11
Friday June 12
M onday, June 15
Ibursday, June 18
FYiday, June 19
M onday, June 22
TUeaday, June 23
•m unday, June 25
OdeU Gobble
Barbara
JoeSwiceg(
Fran Brown
and Jane Brown
M arcia Anderaon
Peggy CorreU
M ichael G am er and Keitti Setxer
Taylor Slye
4924582
998-2230
9984718
634-5536
492-7156
284-2782
834-2325
834-8530
Tim e------
6:б(Гр.т.
6:00 p.m .
7:00p.m.
8:00 p.m .
....L ocation
W.R. Davie
MockavUle
MockavUle
MockavUle
R o c k e tte i^Newi
6:00 p.m . MockavUle
8:00p.m.
7:00p.m.
8:00 p.m .
6:00p.m.
8:00p.m.
7:00p.m.
8:00p.m.
8:00 p.m .
8:00p.m.
7:00p.m.
8:00p.m.
6:00p.m.
8:00p.m.
7:00 p.m .
8:00 p.m .
MockivUle
MockivUleMockivUle
W.R. Davie BlockavUle
MockavUle MocksvUle
BlockavUle
MockavUle
BlockivUle
MockavUle
W.R. Davie MockavUle MockavUle MockavUle
6:00p.m. MockavUle
6:00 p.m .
7:00p.m.
8:00p.m.
M o ck n ^ eMockivUleMockivUle
8:00p.m. M ockiviUe
8:00p.m.
7:00p.m.
8:00 p.m .
MockivUleMockavUleMockivUle
Friday, June 26 6;00p.m. MockavUle
Sluggen va. Angda IndiaMva.Cobraa Tigen va.Ooola
Oofaraa va. Coola
Caolava.Rockettea
Tigarava.AngdaIndUnava.ffli«gen
Angela va.Cobraa Rockettea VI. Indiana
Bad Newa va.Opola Tigen va. Sluggen
Indianava. Bad Newa Sluggenva. Coola
RoehettMva.Oobraa Bad Newa va. Angela
Bad News va.l
Tigerava. In' Cobraa va.Ooola Angetava. Rockettea
Cobraa va. Tigen
Rockettea VI. Cobrai
Angela va.Ooola
Ihdiamva. Bad Newa
Tigen va. Sluggen
Cobraa va. Angela Rockettea va.Ooola Bad Newi VI. Tigen
Indianava. Sluggera
9:00 - Beck Broi. (Girls) - Center
W EDNESDAY, JUNE 10:
7:00 - Bordenettei - Cartner'a
8:00 ■ IngenoU-Rand - Farm A
Garden
9:00 - Barber Grocery - Carolina
Efficiency
THURSDAY, JU NE 11:
7:00 - Bordenettea - Sheek'a
8:00 - Law Enforcem ent - Ebnore &
IVivette
9:00 - P earl’i Grocery - Hendrix k
Heffner
FR ID AY, JUNE 12;
7:00 - Carolina E fficiency - Beck Boa.
(Boya)
8;00 - F in t Baptiit - Farm k Garden
9:00 - Center - Beck Broa. (Girla)
»tf*
/ Л
Jean Hanson scored a hole-in-one on May 23 at Hickory HiU.
Center Softball Leaguo Sehadulo
&;bedule for Center SoftbaU League
from W edn eiday, June 3 through
Friday, June 12:
W EDNESDAY, JUNE 3:
7:00 C artn a'’8 - Center
8:00 - Law Enforcem ent - Barber
Grocery
9:00 - Beck Broa. (Boys) • IngenoU-
Raod
IH U RSD AY, JUNE 4;
7:00 - F in t Baptiit - Elm ore *
Trivette
8:00 - Sheek’i - Beck Broi. (GirU)
9:00 - Hendrix * Heffner - Duke
Wooten’i
FR ID AY, JUNE 5:
7:00 - Cartner's ■ Beck Bros. (GirU)
8:00 - IngersoU-Rand - Law En
forcement
9:00 - Farm & Garden - Carolina E f
ficiency
MONDAY, JUNE 8:
7:00 - Boney Shell - Davie Academ y
8:00 - Sbeek’s - Cartner’s
8:00 - Hendrix k Heffner - First
BaptUt
a-UESDAY, JU NE 9:
7:00 ■ Eluuirti k TriveiUi - Barber
Grocery
8:00 - Pearl's Grocery - Beck Broa.
(Boys)
Davie G irls Softball Team
Loses 3rd Round Of State
The Davie High girU softbaU team
was knocked out of the sU te champ-
Uonship tournament Monday afternoon
ainst East Rowan High
East.
I Davie by a socre of 3-1,
in the third round gam e of the aU te 3-A
nnd 4-A championship. Both teama had 6
hits c-ch.
Winona Gregory led Mtting for Davie
as she m ade connection In 2 of 3 times at
uuiisiu|i uNirnamei
In a gam e agalni
School, played at :
East defeated Di
bat. Dena Sechrest had a one for two
mark. Angelea Riddle, Stiarma Dulin,
and Teresa RusseU all had one Mt each.
Tlie Davie team , coached by Aileen
Steelman, ended it's season with a 17-4
overaU m ark and U among tbe top eight
team s in the sU te.
Four team s were knocked out of
cuiiipeliilun Monday and four rem ain In
Uie contest, Including East Rowan and
O iase High School.
TEABIS
G arry’a T e u c o
MockavUle T ig en
M ockiviUe Angels
BlockavUle Foxea
W.R. D avie Unknowna
— D ate..................U m e...........
Thuraday, June 4 7:00p.m.
9:00 p.m .
Friday, June 5 7:00p.m.
8:00 p.m .
Blonday, June 8 9:00p.m.
Hiuraday, June 11 7:00 p.m .
9:00p.m.
Friday, June 12 7:00p.m.
8:00p.m.
Blonday, June 15 9:00 p.m.
‘Hiuroday, June 18 7:00p.m.
9:00p.m.
Friday, June 19 7:00p.m.
8:00p.m.
Blonday, June 22 9:00p.m.
Tueaday, June 23 7:00p.m.
8:00p.m.
Tliursday, June 25 9:00p.m.
Friday, J& ie 26 7:00p.m.
8:00p.m.
Monday, July 6 7:00p.m.
9:00p.m.
niuraday, July 9 7:00p.m.
9:00p.m.
Home team lUted fin t.
Toum am ent wUl foUow in July.
M OCKSVILLE RECREATIO N DEPARTM EN T
1981 Juntor GirU SoftbaU
COACHES
Jack Paige 9984294
8344530
a m a i
634-2325
Home team listed firat
W.R. Davie
MocksvUle
MocksvUle
MockavUle
MocksvUle
W.R. Davie
BlockavUle
MocksvUle
BlocksvUle
MockiviUe
W.R. Davie
BlockavUle
Mocksville
BlocksvUle
BlocksvUle
MocksvUle
BlocksvUle
MocksvUle
BlocksvUle
MocksvUle
Smith Grove
MocksvUle
Smith Grove
MockavUle
Bud Stroud
Ph)W s№ chols
Blichael G am er
DameU Latham
'VM ais—
T ig e n vs. Unknowns
Foxes vs. AngeU
G arry'i Texaco vs. AngeU
Unknowna va. Foxea
T igen vs. AngeU
G arry'i T e u c o v i. Unknown!
Foxea va. Tigeri
T igen VI. G arry'a Texaco
AngeU va. Unknowm
G arry'a T e u c o va. Foxea
Unknown VI. Tigers
AngeU vs. Foxea
AngeU vs. C arry's TfiAMco
Foxes vs. Unknowns
AngeU vs. T igen
Unknowm vs. G arry's Texaco
T igen vs. Foxea
Foxes vs. Angela
G arry'i Texaco va. Tigera
Unknown VI. AngcU
Foxea vs. G arry'i Texaco
Tigera VI. Unknown!
G arry's Texaco vs. AngeU
Unknowns vs. Foxea
M IDGET
A bivUion
Cobras
AngeU
RocketU
CooU
8TAIÿDING8
W
3
2
1
0
В DivUion
T igen
Indians
Sluggera
BaoN ew s
W
1
1
0
0
('OUNTY I'NTI-.RPRISF, RPCORD, TIIURSDAV, UINI ■4^1>Ж1
District Court
The following cases were dlipoted of
during the Tuesday, May 28, session of
district court with Robert W. Johnson,
presiding Judge.
Donald Martin Hendrix, driving under
the Influence of intoxicating liquor, pay
$100.00 and costs, attend alcohol
awareness course at the mental health
complex.
Jamie S. Brown, driving under the
iiinuence, pay $100.00 and court costs,
attend mental health, surrender his
operator’s license.
Rickey Neely, simple assault and
assau lt and b attery, six m onths
suspended three years on payment of
$100.00 and costs.
Ernest G. Young, warrant for simple
assault, voluntary dismissal.
Ernest G. Young, communicating
threats, voluntary dismissal.
Ernest G. Young, breaking and en
tering, voluntary dismissal.
Ernest Gray Voung, assault on of
ficer, voluntary dismissal.
Ernest Young, simple assault and
assau lt and b attery, voluntary
dismissal.
Ernest Young, assault and battery
and simple assault, voluntary dismissal.
Andreas Theodore K azakos, e x
ceeding safe speed, cost.
A n d ie s Theodore Kazakos, driving 67
mph in a 55 mph zone, tlQ-00 and coat.
Bdsel Jam es Mayhue, driving M mph
in a 55 mph ione, $10.00 and coat.
Larry Dale M iller, exceeding safe
speed, costs.
Steven Daniel McCurdy, driving 67
mph in a 55 mph zone, $10.00 and coats.
George Chris Koutsogeorgas, driv
88 mph in a 55 mph zone, $10.00 an
costs.
Teresa Lynn Jolly, driving 66 mph in a
55 mph zone, $10 and costs.
George Lewis, Jr., improper tum
signal, costs.
Powell Watkins GlideweU, III, driving
№ mph in a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs.
Ronald W ayne C hildress, driving
while his license had expired, and ex
ceeding safe speed, $25 and coats.
Rodney Dewitt Lewis, driving 68 mph
in a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs.
Harold FYank Jones. Jr.. driving 60
mph m a 45 mpn zone, $10 and coats.
Ronald Keith George, driving 8> mph
in a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs.
Susan Seale Cable, driving 70 mjrti in a
55 mph zone, $10 and costs.
Phyllis Polk Beal, failing to stop at
duly erected stop sign, iXMts.
Em anuel Porter, driving 70 mph in a
56 mph zone, $10 and coats.
Lloyd Dean Sain, driving 69 mph in a
55 m i^ zone, $10 and coats.
Lee Edward Denton, driving 55 mph in
a 45 mph zone, $5 and coats.
Dwayne Edwin Brome, driving 70
mph in a 55 mph zone, $lOandcoaU.
DM try Shannon Vestal, exceeding
posted speed lim it, costs.
Steven F loyd F oster, im proper
m ufflers, costs.
Donald Frank Alquire, exceeding
posted speed, coats.
Jonathan M. Ketchum, exceeding safe
speed, costs.
Viola Frances F d tz, driving 70 mpb in
a 56 mph tone, $10 and coats.
Jordan Aahley Rubenstdn, driving 70
mph in a 55 mpb zone, $10 and cooti.
Nancy Jervey Kennetfy, driving 69
mph in a 55 mpb zone, $10and costs.
Timothy Marlin Wert, driving 69 mph
in a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs.
Evonne Angle Felts, driving 70 mph in
a 56 mph zone, $10 and costs.
Clyde Herman Cartner, too fast for
conditions, costs.
Joel Matthew Buchanan, driving 6S
mph in a 55 mph zone, $10and costs.
Nancy Pressley Osborne, driving 70
mpb in a 55 mpb zone, $10 and costs.
Valerie Lawson Outen, driving 70 mph
in a 56 mpb zone, $10 and costs.
Derek Vaultz, driving 70 mph in a 55
mph zone, $10 and costs.
Pickett Crouch Stafford,¿driving 70
mpb in a 55 mpb zone, $lOandcosU.
Catherine M. Hart, driving 68 mpb in a
55 mph zone, $10 and costs.
Deborah Diane Barney, driving 70
mpb in a 55 mpb zone, $ 10 a^ costs.
Gregory D. Graflund, driving 70 mpb
in a 55 mph zone, $10 anq costa. ,
Ann Dowell Groce, driving 70 mph in a
55 mph zone, $10 and costs.
Charalam bos Spiros K arageorgos,
driving 70 mph in a 55 mph zone, $10 and
costs.
Ernest G. Young, DUI, 6 months
suspended for, 3 years, $100 and costs,
attend special alcohol course at mental
health clinic.
P erry Qwentlon Sim m ons, not
displayin g current inspection c e r
tificate, costs.
Bruce Sh aver, w orthless checks,
m ake restitution and pay court costs.
T erry Lynn K im m er, operating
vehicle with Improper equipment, costs.
Jack Anthony Stanley, driving 70 mph
in a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs.
Larry Wayne Sharpe, driving 68 mph
in a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs.
Arnold Carl White, driving 69 mph in a
55 mph zone, $10 and costs.
Walter Robert Stearly, driving 70 mph
ir. s 55 mph zone, $10 and costs.
Marlene K. Spink, driving 68 mph in a
55 mph zone, $10 and costs.
Elizabeth Ann Minnch, driving 69 mph
in a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs.
Grady Bratton, too fast for conditions,
costs.
Jam es M iurlce Baldwin, driving 60
mph in a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs.
Robert Carl Gravatt, driving too fast
for conditions, costs.
Leness Williamson Pierce, exceeding
safe speed, costs.
Tony Harris Price, making harassing
telephone calls, 2 years suspended for 5
years, on special conditions.
Howard Fred Carter, Jr., operating
motor vehicle without due caution and
circumspection and at a speed or in a
manner so as to endanger persons and
property, $65.00 and costs.
Dorothy S. McSpadden, driving 70
mph in a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs.
Steven Bryant Quinton, driving 70
mph in a 55 mph zone, $10 and costa.
Ralph Edward Lett, driving 69 mph in
a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs.
Barbara Pearce Cooper, driving 65
mph in a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs.
Norman Elphege Ferron, driving 70
mph in a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs.
Charles Bruce McIntyre, following too
closc for
Thomas William Smoot, driving 65
mph in a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs.
Michael Howard M artin, driving too
fast for conditions, costs.
Henry Locis York, driving 65 mph in a
55 m|rfi zone, $10 and costs.
Frank Holdsclan, driving 69 mph in a
55 m |A zone, $10 and costs.
Joe Lee Coleman, exceeding safe
speed, costs.
Michael Ray Morton, exceeding safe
speed, costs.
Charles Keith Hicks, driving 65 mph in
a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs.
Alien Cuculla Barringer, driving 70
mph in a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs.
Tliomas Glenn Peed, driving 70 mph in
a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs.
Jacquline Sikes Bynum, driving 70
I in a 55 mpb zone, $10 and costs,
r Lee Justiss, driving 70 mph in a
55 mpb zone, $10 and coats.
Thomas Anderson Hobgood, driving 68
I in a S5 mph zone, flO and coats,
t Lee Owen driving 70 mpb in a
55 mpb zone, $10 and coats.
Jam es H. D uckw orth, oj^ ratin g
Jam es H arnd^ ’ R ^ M ^ r d t', non-
supp(»l of child or dffldran, probation
revoked and the sentence to be im
prisoned in the Davie County JaU for a
period of sbc months m ade active.
Lo cal S tu d e n ^ O n
High P o in t’s D ean L ist
tw o area residenU havelbM n named
to the Dean’s LUt at High Point C(dlege
for the spring sem ester. They are Tena
Luann Bam ey, daughter of M r. and
M rs. C alvin B arn ey, R oute S,
MocksviUe; and Joseph Richard Budd,
son Mr. and Mrs. Richard P . Budd,
Route 1, Advance.
To quaUfy for tbe Dean’s List, a
student m ust h ave com pleted 12
sem ester hours of course work with a S.S
grade average out (rf a poosible 4.0.
D O N T LET
THE
W W I N G
FIN G BIS
M S S YOU
BY.vellow pages
Your local telephone directory Yellow Pages advertising will be closing on June 8,1981. so
don t miss out on having your name before those
important potential customers/clients.
Four out of five of your customer/client prospects are already directory users.*
Our professional staff is ready to assist you with
rate quotations and ad layout. Market analysis available, too!
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804-973-3373(Charlottesville. Virginia T
■Chilton Research Services
R e u b e n H . D o n n e l l e y
A u m o K io a Udiui AyBiiis tor m e Ceniial Toleptione Conipm iy
c a m u L m cP H O N i co M M N v
Em p lo ym en t Secu rity
C o m m issio n Law Revised
By N .C. Legislature
During the current session of the N C.
General Assembly, a revision of the
E m ploym ent Secu rity Com m ission
(ESC) law was passed.
In addition to numerous technical
changes, the revision affects eligibUity
for unemployment benefits, the amount
of benefits payable and the duration of
benefits.
One m ajor legislative shift eliminated
the deduction of certain types of pension
incomes from unemployment benefits
payable to eligible claimants. Prior to
this change, all pensions or other
periodic payments t>ased on previous
employment were deducted from the
weekly benefit amount. Effective July 1,
1981, only those payments received
under the Social Security Act, the
Railroad Retirement Act or payments
contributed to by "base period” em
ployers will be deducted. (The “ base
period” is the first four of the last five
calendar quarters prior to the quarter in
which a claim for unemployment in
surance benefits is fUed. UntU the end of
June, the "base period” is calendar year
1980.)
"Under the new legislation, people
who have retired and have been forced
to return to the labor force liecause of
inabUity to live off fixed incomes are not
penalized during new periods of
unem ploym ent for earnings from
previous ca re e rs,” said Preston
Johnson, ESC finance director and
legislative liaison.
The basic earnings requirement for
eligibility to receive unemployment
insurance benefits has also changed.
Effective August 1, an individual must
have eam ed at least six times the North
Carolina average weekly insured wage
during the “ base period” to estabUsh a
valid claim . This figure replaces an
absolute earning niminim of $5№.50 and
wUI be recalculated annuaUy.
Persons filin g claim s for unem
ployment insurance benefits who are
found by the appeals referee must meet
a new appeals requirement. AU persons
must provide a written statem ent of the
grounds for the appeal within the stated
appeal period. If this statement is not
subm itted, the appeal m ay be
dismissed.
Individuals who had been drawing
extended benefit payments in other
states who fUe for these payments in
North CaroUna are also affected by the
revisions. The new legislation Umits the
period for which these pe<q>le can
receive extended benefit payments if
North Carolina is not paying extended
benefits to its reiidenB;
“The new law provides that a person
who m oves to North CaroUna wUl only
be able to draw two weeks of extended
benefits if we have not ‘triggered on’ to
extended benefits in the state,” Johnson
said. “ Extended benefits are designed to
meet the special needs of the jobless
during periods of high unemployment. If
North Carolina is not e q ^ e n c in g U gh
unemployment, these benefits should
not be necessary.”
H ie two-week period of extended
beneflt payments does alkm parsons
moving into the state > reasonable
period in which to find suitable em-
ptoymon t,^ wtfd. "However, flie
d e fln i^ of ‘suitable employment’ for
recipi^ ts of extended benefits has ^
changed,” Johnson sold.
Accm-dhig tp tbe new law, someone
claim ing extended benefits wiU become
disqualified under the foUowing con
ditions: (1) if the commission refers tbe
person to work U deem s tbe individual is
capable of performing; (2) if the pay
WUl be more than the indiW(huil’s ■
weekly benefit amount; (3) if the pay
meets the minimum w age stan d am ;
(4) if the job is offered in writing and is
Ustsd with the commission; and (5) if
the individual refiises the job and cannot
convince the commission that he can get
work in his own M d in a reasonable
shoit period of time.
For more inform atim on the im pact of
these legislative dianges, contact your
local Job Service office.
E lb a v ille C lu b
H as M eeting
The ElbavUle H.umemakers
a u b m et last week at the
E lb a v ille F e llo w s h ip
Building.
The meeting was called to
order by the president,
M ildred M arkland. E igh t
members answered to the roU
caU using Uie name of a
flow er. D eE tte M arkland
collected pennies and a
number of stamps.
M rs. N ancy H artm an,
County Hom e Extension
Agent, spiAe to the group
about window treatment. She
said that a window is Uke a 52
square inch hole in Uie waU
through which heat can be lost
or gained in four ways:
convection, conduction, in-
fUtration and radiaUon. She
showed various window styles
with shades, drapes, etc.
Darrell Murray Featured In
Ingersoll-Rand Publication
M ils Linda Sue Ham. daughter ef Mr.
and M n. Jesse L. Ham of 8lt Salisbary
Street. MocksvUle, N.C. graduated la st'
week from Davis School of Nursing la
SUtesville, N.C. After June 6th, she wUI
be employed by Forsyth Memorial
HospiUI in Winston-Salem, N.C. as a
nurse.
Local Students
Receive Degrees
At Appalachian
D egrees w ere con ferred to 1593
students recently at Appalachian State
U n iversity’s eigh ty-first com
mencement.
Graduate degrees were conferred to
253 students, and 1340 students received
the undergraduate Bachelors degree.
The degrees were awarded by ASU
ChanceUor John Thomas. The com
mencement address was by North
WiUcesboro banker Ben Craig.
Davie County students receiving
degrees included:
D avid Thom as D ize of R t. 2
MocksvUle, BSBA degree in marketing.
M arilyn Roach Bills nf R t- '
DarreU M urray was recenUy featured
in the RAND-O-RAMA, a monUily
publication of the Ingersoll-R and
Company. He is the son ot Mr. and Mrs.
Clyde M urray of Four Com ers. He is
married to the form er Pat Wofford of
Lexington. They have two chUdren and
reside at ComeUus, N.C.
School at UNC-Chariotte, and has
already made plans to take the three
additional courses required of him to
enable him to apply to the Graduate
School for admission. By Uking night
classes, he will be able to earn the M BA
in 3’/^ years.
Ingersoll-R and Com pany has
"b a ck e d ” D arrell's quest for an
education 100 percent. Since he had the
"G .l. BUI” avaUable for his un
dergraduate work, he took advanUge of
Uiat source of funds. Now that he has
used up all of his G .l. time, he will U ke
advanUge of the educaUonal beneflts
offered to employees by the Company.
As a graduate student, I-R wiU pay 100
percent of the tuition fees, and, since he
wUl be a night student for this second
degree, DarreU wUl be back at work in
the Product Engineering department on
a fuU-time basis.
“ It has been kind of rough for the past
№ree years insofar as the famUy is
concem ed,” he admito. “ My son baa
been asking me for the past year
whether I wiU ever get out of school! I
spend an hour or so at night with the
famUy and a few hours each weekend,
but I Uiink the chUdren undersUnd what
I am doing. I have tried to explahi to
them that what I am doing wUl help not :
only m e, but also ttie famUy.”
Woodworking is probably ttie most
active hobby ttiot DarreU has at this
busy time in his life. He has made
several chests, is working on cassette
tape cases, and |dana to buUd ttie fur
niture for his basement. Before he does
ttiat, however, be is going to flnish tbe
basem ent to complement the new pool
table. Tbe chUdren, Todd and Trisha,
have learned to play pool, so ttiese
gam es wUl be о “famUy affair” in the
M urray housdidd.
“ P at keeps teUing m e ttiat I wffl;
probably be gohig to schod ttie rest Ы
m y Ufe because 1 enjoy it. It is a lot ofhard work, but I fed ttiat, if anyone wants to advance hlmsdf. he should try
MA degree in elem enUry educaUoni
early chUdhood.
M argaret Susan Garwood of Rt. 3
MocksvUle, BIA degree in dem enU ry
educaUon, early chUdhood.
E dw ard K evin Goodwin, R t. 3,
MocksvUle, BABA degree in marketing.
Jam es Andrew McIntyre, Rt. 6,
MocksvUle, BA degree in French.
Teresa K ay M yers of Rt. 2 Advance,
BS degree in home economics.
Sandra Satterfield Rogers, Rt. 3
MocksvUle, M A degree in dem entary
education, early chUdhood.
H arold D onald W ood, W andering
Lane, MocksvUle, BSBA degree in
marketing.
D CCC H olds Degree
A w ards Cerem ony
Some 300 graduates recdved degrees
or diplomas Sunday hi commencement
exercises for Davidson County Com
munity College hold ist ttie T. Austin
Finch Auditorium in Tliomas ville.
R ecdving ttie astodate arts degree
from AdvM M w as N ed Ca ^ B j||pster.
received a degree in accounting.
M arsha Ann T ise of M ocksville
recdved a degree hi Tranaportatton
Management.
David Addison O avis of MocksvUle
com pleted graduation requirem ents
prior to M ay 1961 for associate in fine
arts degree.
D arryl G ray M cBride of MocksviUe
com pleted graduation requirem ents
prior to M ay 1961 as a machinist.
Mocks
The pastor. Rev. Alvord
held tbe Sunday evening
prayer service. He read the
scriptures from I Peter 4tb
chapter fhrst 11 verses. He
talked on sharing and love.
Mr. and Bfrs. Spurgeon
Foster, Jr., and boys of Dulin*
were Sunday dinner guests of
Mr. and Mrs. David MUler.,
M r. and M rs. Lonnici
Hughes and Joe spent Sunday
and Monday at the mounUhis.
Je iry Carter rem ains quite
Ul at Forsytti Hospital.
Mr. and M rs. Roger Mock,
Jr. and Chad spent Sunday
witti relatives hi Va.
M r. and M rs. S h errill
Rupard of Lewisville were
(upper guests of Mr. and Mrs.
John Phelps Tuesday.
M rs. K erm it M yers
returned to her home Wed
nesday from Forsyth Hospital
where she had been a patient
for a few days for observatton
and treatment.
"Пм artide hi ttie IngenoU-Randpubllcatten, entttted PROFILE.......DARRBLL MURRAY PLBDOLINGENGINEER.......waa aa fdlows:‘‘I baven’t gottOB much sleep at aU recentty. Fmn Friday untU ‘llninday.I’ve gotten only ao hours of sleep!”DarreU Murray has gotten so Uttle slesa because be is compM^ his Senfer design project as a candidate for die Bacbelw of Enghieering Teduidogy depee at UNC<barlotte. On May 16, be wiU receive not only the BET degm, but also a new pod иЫе, which is bis
wife’s gift to him for a job weU done.DarreU has been at this business of getthig an education at UNC-Cbarlotte
for ttie past ttu«e years. He attended Forsyth Technical school from 1971 to
1973, Mid ttWhUld out Of Schod untU И7В when he enroUed at UNCC.His course load was not an easy one.He took the fUU 15 credit hours each term, averaged between 20 and 30 hours of work at Ingersdl-Rand each week, and spent 3 to 4 hours each night on homework. Darrell was on the Cban- ceUor’s honor Ust eadi semester and is graduating witti a 3.4 groas point average...wbicb means he is definitdy a good student. He has been awarded tbe ASHRAE (AmericanSodety of Heating,Refrigeration, and-Air Coodlttaalng Engineers) “Student of ttie Year” awanl.The Senior design project' DarreU devdqied is a mobile fluid temperature contrd apparatus, which wiU be used in
ttie Instrumentation Lab at UNCC.
There has never before been a mobUe apparatus Uke this one avaUable for schod use. It may posdbly be put into production, which means that a patent wUl have to be secured.ParreU’s studying is not over yet. Now ttut be wUl receive his Bachdor’s dsp«e, be wUl be able to dt fOr the Engineer^-rraiiibig lest in RaMgb.Upon pasdng ttiat teat, he wffl be eligible to dt for ttie exam wUdi wffl Ucense bton as a Profesdonol Engfaieer.“Nwmally you are required to have two years* ejqjerience before you can take ttie ЕГГ test, and then four more years before you can take the Professional Engineer test,” said DarreU, “but I have enough Work experience to quaUfy me as a candidate for _ ___ ___________
^ -i u tb* Revereod Ivan Wm. Ijames ef'These two tests are not going to be .g-te 1 MocksvUle was mewtaig his bay Darrdl>sfinal goal, He haa his ^ ts set ^ I ^ X y al^oon. when ¿Is large
5'7” black snake crawled beneath bis
tractor wheel, and was caoght.
to go badfto schod. There is a lot that you leam in schod and that you see ttiere that you never can ex^enoe anywhere else,” says DarreU.That statement was a real switch from what you usuaUy hear from people who
are extoUing ttie “practicd” work-a-day world as opposed to ttie formal
educational atmosphere. The buth of ttie matter is that both worlds are equaUy hnporUnt, ttiat IngersoU-Rand Company recognizes ttiis, and ttiat they back their employees 100 percent. Daiidl Murray is Uving prod...just ask
on eandng ttie M aster of Business
AdmhUstration deeree in ttie Graduate
$ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $
P A Y I N G C A S H ^ o y g O L D
S O U T H E R N G O L D & S IL V E R E X C H A N G E
W e w ill p q y y o u to p p ric e s fo r A L L
y o u r G O L D a n d S IL V E R v a lu a b le *.
W i B U T
70 million tom of ш сгби
ere produced each year.
S I G N A R T
B u s i n e s s S i ^ n s
C u s ' t o m A u - t o Т а д 5 “
V e h i c l e L e t t e r i n (
P o s + e r L a y o a i
А г + w o r k /
Bill Jordaa-998-2558
W e b u y y o u r G O L D : W a tc h e s , E a r r ln g i,
N e c k la c e i, B ra c e le ts , C h a in s , Lo c k e ts ,
P in s , C o in s,
(A n y th in g m a rk e d 1 0 K ,1 4 K ,1 8 K , 2 2 K , 2 4 K )
WE BUY WEDDING BANDS
WE BUY SILVER 1
SILVER COINS
SILVER DOLLARS KENNEPY HAUVES
1935 and B«for« 1966; 66; 67; 68j 69
iHALVES-gUARTEBS-BLM ES .WAR M ICKIES
1964 and tafor« 1943; 44; 45 only
STERl
Ringi-Charm»-
Bracalets-Coffa*
and Tea Servioai
Spoons-Forks
etc...WE BUY COIN COLLECTIONS
W E O FFER F R E E A P P R A ISA LS WITH NO O BLIGATIO N .
LO CALLY OW NED AND O PER A TED : 70 4-6 3 4-5 6 4 1
W ED .-FRI. 1 0 :3 0 '5 :3 0 - SAT. 10-2
SOUTHERN
GOLD & SILVER EXCHANGE
COURT SQUARF in MOCKSVULE, N.C.
(abuvu Mocksville b p u itm q Goods)
s s $ s $ $ s $ $ $ $ $ s $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ s s s
i r
IMVIH COUNTY KNTERPRISI-: RIXORD, THURSDAY, JIINIÍ 4. I‘)H) 5C
M a g i e D i s c o u n t C o i n s
SPEND YOUR COINS
, ON THIS W EEK’S SPECIALS!
S a la d C u b e s
12 OZ. MT. OLIVE SW EET with tMAQIC CONS
a t h T is s u e
4 RO LL DELTA
B a g C o f f e e
1 LB. J. F. G. -ALL GRINDS wtth 7MAQIC COINS
C h a r c o a l
10 LB. BAG EM BER’S with rMAQIC COINS
B a k e r l t e
42 OZ. SHORTENING with 7MAQIC COINS
F r a n k s
12 OZ. CHAMPION
1 V0U RECEIVE ONE OUR MAQC WSCOUNT• COINS FOR E ACH *5 00 YOU SPEND
m SAVE VOUR MAOK: discount COfNS AND BRI*«Qm * THEM WITH YOU each time you shop
3 RE0CEM T he nEOUiREO NUMBER OF COINS FOR• ONE OF VOUR CHOCE OF MACilC COIN SPECIALS
l O
with 7 MAQIC COINS 2 9
« X 4 9
. V . i _...i......... . ... ...Í...........
PRICES GOOD THRU SATURDAY, JUNE 6,
1981...QUANTITY
RIGHTS RESERVED...
NONE SOLD TO
DEALERS...tm m m
T h a n k Y o u S a l e !
with/MAQIC COINS
A p p le s
3 LB. BAG RED ROM E with 5MAQICCOMS
We*re Going All Out This Week To Show You How Much
W e C a r e !
Because To Usy You Are No. 1 • • • AndWe Have A Store Full Of Savings To Prove It!
T h a n k
T o n
l t*s M a i n t i t B e e a u s e O f T h e M e a t i
June Cheese Fest fe a t u r in g
UACtMlMBatMHn
C h n e k S t e a k ...................u > * Z
R o a s t . . . .
S h m f i M l a r S t e a k
U.8.CholM9onelMs
-• e e • e e Lb
;er Savings!!
■ImrtMBMfl Franks.........*1^*
...............* X * *
*MZ#r
WITH OUR WHOLE CUTS OFU.8. Choice Hoof
- ------------Strip Loin ... Lb^3^
5-7U>.BmI • « •a *Tenderloin. • u>*3
22-20U>.Whal« _______
B * « f R i b ...............
Free!
I Lb Kran ____
Indlvldaal Wrap Ch«M«... *1**
iLbKrafl __ • • • •Clios INTlils X
¥ ^ < S i* M « « n l.« iig li« r n
® l i w s 4 ••••••••••••••• il s w iS S• Os Krafi ________II • T ' - - I
ta«lVMMl Wrap ChMM...
S ^ r t M M a a C lt M M .........................* 1 * *
• MKren CelinoMsMtìorBjT«Vaofc • • • • • • • • • • • • 1
CaídM Mvanstar...............
SOt.Kran Ä Ä Ä Ä
«0« « n V ••••••• A ■ CaloWftppedFfoxenaox.OMvMtyw “ — “
^ C fsk o tfM m ..
^ aOx.OMvMeyw
C liS M M M lR s M
• 1 4 *
• I » *
L m lS iiS h ^ t..............*!•*
s j a «
70i. Mn.QIt's
R a m S a l a d ................
120z.Mra.aHe's
C o l e S l a w ...................
I2OZ. JESSE JONEâ
F r a n k s•I»*
c*«ntm
12-ieLB. va te s WHOLE
3 W a y S a v i n g s » * f o r m w e f o o d i n y o u r b a g !
W—Illy SpeetaisAnO,^
Catsup
QUART BOTTLE DEL MONTE
D e t e r g e n t
COU3 POWER 49OZ20<OFF
P . • • •lOOiUalmlettaatCafff««
M« Shall«.... i i'si^s**
Ct.erahaai Slialla... «s**
iu lS s a a ,.........................S S *
a ^ : ........................> 1**
1201 FIM _
CattasaCkaaaa.
laaCraaa ......WMonnMortohEvttoitallli a . . .
n ä T M e n ^ J
Shedd’s
x - t r a S a v i n g sSpeeiais!!
Dinners
11 OZ. MORTON FROZEN
1LB. QUARTERS
CHICKCN, TURKEY. SAU8 STEAK. MEATLOAF, KAMSâ niANKS
2 U liiortonSMiibvrySiMfc.Turtwy.OrSMfPenM« VMhOntonOrHuitogemOravy
S^V#S#M a iiP P S m aaaaaaaaaaaa S
a Lb Horton FfOMn — —
P r io r i O lilo k o n »
1401 Motion FronnOlasad Daaats...................v V
9Ol MortonFroten »HaaajrBeet..........................09^
• 0< Morton Fro<«n
EveryaayLow Prices
^ M i Shasta
2 LITER BOTTLE ASST FLAVOI
i P o t t e d M e a t
ABk
Cmm Csfffooa •,
eoiMMMiHouMInstant Csfffooa.
ü S iilíiM í ..........S/*>
24 COUNT BOX UPTON
Health &
B o a u t y
A i d s !
Í4 0Z. REQ./UNSC. A/PSPRAV 6CT. REQ 69« PLUS PLATINUMScliicli
3 * ^
18 oz. BOTTLEListermint
F r s s w e e P w t .
W a n ts T o S ajr
I *
HyTM2f*k P taM aoreO i ^
W h i e T a e p i n s .................2 / * l
t0O< 8a«Mt a « o oSavrCroani•••••a**»«« A
P o r k & B e a n s
3 / ^ 1
7 ? »
VAN CAMP S leoz CANS
2«0> LiptonToa Mix.
lOrtiplon -----------
TaaMisw/LaaiaM ....*2 *>
Thanit
You
P o t a t o e s
10 LB. VENT VUE BAG WHITE
Apples Or Oranges
9 /9 9 "
113 SIZE WASHINGTON STATE WINESAP APPLES OR 88 SIZE CALIFORNIA NAVEL ORANGES
6Г DAVII- rOUNTY I'NTIÍRrKISI' RI'í'OKIl, THURSDAY, lUNi; 4, 1081
Carowinds Constructing Man Made River
Carowinds theme park has
announced that it is creating a
»2,75 million man-made river
as part of a t3.2 million ex
pansion program for 1982,
"This is Carowinds’ most
ambitious expansion project
to date,” stated Carowinds
G eneral M anager Dean
Nahrup, "The »2.75 million
price tag nlonp Is more than
we have ever invested in a
single ride including the »2.1
m illion Carolina Cyclone
added for the 1981 season."
N ahrup explained that
guests will ride down the river
in round, eight-passenger
boats that will spin, tip and
splash their way throu^i and
around rapids, w ave lakes,
geysers, canyons, waterfalls
and a cavern,
A trip around the river is
estimated to take 4 minutes,
IB seconds,
"This attraction is unlike
anything else currently at
C a ro w in d s ," con tin u ed
Nahrup, "Guests will be in
free floating boats and will
experience a sensation very
sim ilar to rafting down a
white-water river,”
U nlike the la rge roller
coasters at Carowinds that
have lim ited appeal to
teenagers and young adults,
Nahrup stated that the new
riv er attraction w ill be
equally excitin g to every
m em ber of the fam ily, young
or old.
The river, which winds
through a heavily-wooded 4,6-
acre site in the Plantation
Square area of the park, will
contain over one m illion
gallons of w ater that will be
circu lated by four 250-
horsepower pumps capable of
pumping 8,6 million gallons of
water per hour.
Special effects along the
riv er w ill include five
wavem akers that will create
turbulent whitecap« at two
different lake areas; three
waterfalls, one of which will
subside at the last second to
allow boats to pass through a
cavern; two geysers that will
spray w ater 20 feet into the
air; and a 40-ft. whirlpool.
“ We have set out to create
much m ore than a ride,” said
Nahrup.
“The entrance to the river
area will be strongly themed
aa a plantation town on the
edge of the wilderness to fit
into the Plantation Square
area of the park. Food and
merchandise facilities around
the en tran ce w ill a ll be
to create a river-
_ feeling."
Nahrup stated that special
care is being taken to create
an authentic riv e r a t
mosphere with the new at
traction.AlUxHWh the rivw’s 3,0004t. kmg bed«nriU eooaist of 3,SOO
Cost Of Owning And Operating Car
Has Increased By $425 In Past Year
The Carolina Motor Club
(AAA) reporta that the coat of
owning and operating an
intermediate-sized car has
increased by »425 - or 13
percent - to »3,601 per year
nince this time last year.
This is an increase from 21,2
cents per m ile to 24 cento per
mile.
The motor club’s report is
detailed in a new Am erican
A u to m o b ile A sso cia tio n
pam phlet titled “ Your
Driving Costo’' and is based
on a 1981 Chevrolet, 6-cylinder
(229 cu, in,) Malibu (Hassle 4-
door sedan driven up to 15,000
miles per year and kept for
four years.
In making its calculations,
AAA divides auto expenses
into variable and fixed costa.
The varia b le breakdow n
includes gasoline and oil, 6.27
centa per m ile; maintenance,
1.18 cento; and tires, 0.72
cento. These total 8.17 cento
per m ile and are directly
related to the number of m iles
driven.
F ixed costs include in
su ran ce, »510 per year;
license and registration fees
and taxes, »M; depreciation,
»1,287; and financé charges,
»490. Totaling »2,375 per year,
fixed costo remain the sam e
even if the ca r rem ains
parked in the garage.
The fixed and variable costo
added together provide the
total annual cost of owning
and operating the vehicle. A
motorist driving 15,000 miles
per year would pay »1,226
(15,000 x 8.17 cen ts) in
variable costo and »2,375 in
fixed costo, according to AAA.
The AA A pam phlet on
driving costo also includes a
suggested auto vacation
budget. Two persons should
plan on spending »44 a day for
lodging and »7.50 for gasoline,
oil, etc., for every 100 m iles of
travel with the car averaging
20 miles per gallon. But these
figures can vary con
siderably, AAA says. In sm all
towns or rural locations,
lodging and meal costo might
be 25 percent lower, while in
large m etropolitan areas,
they could be as much as 75
percent higher,
AAA’s report on the cost of
car operation was supplied by
Runzheimer and Company, a
R o c h e s te r , W isc o n sin
management consulting firm
that specializes in measuring
living costo, including tran
sportation.
Single copies of the 1981
edition of "Y o u r D rivin g
Costo” are available from all
Carolina Motor Club offices or
by sending a self-addireased,
stam ped business-sixe en
velope to "Y o u r D riving
C osts” , P u blic R elations
Department. Carolina Motor
Club, P.O . Box 30008,
Charlotte, N orth Carolina
28230.
The Carolina Motor a u b
has 13 branch offices located
in principle ciUes of both
Carolinas and has nearly
197,000 members in the two-
state area.
DIal-A-M arket O ffers Up-To-Date P rice Inform ation
Carowinds theme park ii currenUy coutructlng a $2.75 million river in preparation for tlie 1M2 aeMon. The
entrance to the river area (top) will be themed «s a
plantatloo-era river landing on the edge at the wilder* neiB. An observation deck along the river will provide a
view of guests riding round, etght^waienger boaU through and around rapids, wave-laket, geyaera,
canyons and waterfalls (bottom).
cubic yards of concrete, the
shore line will be a ccen t^ by
over 2,000 tons of rock, with
some single rocks weighing as
much as 30 tons.
Over 550 pine, river birch,
tulip, m aple, weeping willow,
corkscrew willow and willow
oak trees will be planted along
the banks to add authenticity
to tbe river experience.
“ We are also conatructing a
three-tier obeervaUon de«dc
overlooking one of tbe w ater
falls so guesta not wishing to
ride can enfoy the natural
beauty of the location ,” com pleted and* read y for
Nahrup said. testing in October, 1961, but
Development of the river guesto will not be able to ride
began in M ay, 1980 by the down the riv e r until
Ridss Development Group at Carowinds opens for the 1982
Kings Productions, a division season next M arch,
of Carowinds’ parent com- Carowinds will begin ito
pany, T a ft B roadcaatin g, daUy ((XOSED FIUDAYS)
located in Cincinnati, Ohio, operation on June 8. The 73-
Site preparation Ь ш п in acre theme park, now in its
F eb ru ary, 1981, and con-ninth season, ia located 10
strucUon crews are currently m iles south of Charlotte on I-
finishing excavation and 77 at the North Carolina-South
beginning to pour concrete Carolina bm ler.
along tbe river bed.
The river ia exoectad to b«t
S o c i a l
S e c u r i t y
Q & A
M y w ife and I get SSI. Do I
have to tell social security
that our daughter is m oving in
with us?
Y e s, you should notify
social security any tim e there
la a change in yonr household.
I am 64 years old and I
Vacuum Often; Soil Shortens Carpet T^ife
Soil can ahortMi the life of your carpet
by tearing and breaking the carpet
flbera. And combined with particles in
tbeab-.aoilcan form an oily film on the
carpet surface.
You can avd d the dam age cauaed by
soU, and keep your carpet looking like
new, if you faithfully follow theae
suggestions from Linda McCutcheon,
extension house furnishings specialist,
North Carolina State University.
She says to vacuum often, clean spots
and spills im mediately and shampoo
infrequently.
M any m an ufacturera su ggest a
thwough carpet vacuuming once a week
for each m em ber of the fam ily. Thia
means you m ay need to vacuum four
times a week of there are four in your
fam ily.
You m ay wish to vacuum heavily
traveled areas every day, Mra. Mc-
CHitcheon adds.
Spota and spills are (rften hard to
rem ove, even when they’re attacked
im mediately. So contact a professional
fa home metboda
Although hom e sham pooing
techniques a re u su ally adequate,
professional cleaning ia better.
But m ake sure the cleaning reaidue ia
removed after the shampoo. SoU ia
attracted to this surface film and the
carpet will look dirtier even faster.
Footwear
Demand tor footwear slackened in
1980. The only real gainers in sales were
athletic and women’s footwear.
would like to know how much
difference there virlll be in m y
checks if I retire now or if I
wait until next year. How can
1 get this information?
You should contact your
local soctal security office.
The amount of your beneflta
can be estim ated if you
provide Inform ation about
what you’ve earned In the last
2 years and what yon expect
to earn this year.
My w ife’s uncle Just died
and left us a Uttle m oney. Will
our SSI paym ents be af
fected?
W hether or not yonr
paymenta are affected wUI
depend on hew much m oney Is
involved aad on what other
income aad resow ces you
have. Yon should notify your
soctal securtly afflce of yoar
Inheritance so lhat a deter,
jnlnatlon caa be made.
I know I waa not due an SSI
ched( for thia month, but I
received one anyw ay. W hat
shouM I do?
Yon should return tt the
U.S. ly m n r y D ^ a rtm e n ir
Division of Dtobarsement, at
the address shown on the
envelope tt waa delivered in.
Include a note explafadng why
you are returning the check.
Or you m ay take tt to any
soctal security office and get a
receipt.
Fifteen people have be
come President of the U.S.
with a popular vote lets
than 50% of the total cait.
Need instant, up-to-date,
accurate livestock and grain
price information? You can
get it and it is as close as your
telephone. Not only that but
it’s free when you call the
North Carolina Department of
Agriculture’s Dial-A-Market,
toll-free number.
Logging as many as 10,000
calls a month, demand for the
service is virtually double
that as only half the callers
successfully reach a non-busy
line.
“ It looks as if we wiU
somehow have to add at least
another lin e,” com m ented
state A gricu ltu re Com
missioner Jim Graham . “ Of
course that requires money
and appropriations are tight
now but there is no w ay to
m easure the com m erce
generated by the information
provided by Dial-A-Market.”
Updated three times a day
w ith the latest livestock
prices from the Midwest and
North C arolina, livestock
M ercan tile E xchan ge and
grain futures on the (Siicago
Board of Trade, the Dial-A-
M arket service is available 24
hours a day.
Seasonally the service
carries state graded lam b and
wool pools which occur in late
June and early July and
special graded cattle sales in
the spring and fall.
At 10:30 a.m . the system is
programm ed witb trends on
the futures m arket and tbe
midwest hog m arket. At 12:30
p.m. summ aries of N.C. hog
buying m arkets, w eekly
livestock auctions, special
state sponsored livestock
sales and summ aries of mid-
w estern ca ttle and sw ine
prices are added.
Then at 4:30 p.m . in
formation includes settlement
prices of futures m arket,
summ aries of state graded
feeder pig sales, N.C. hog
m arkets, and m idw estern
livestock prices.
Commenting on the service,
Harry Lee Homey of (Carolina
Stock Yards in Siler City said:
“ I use the Dial-a-Market at
least three times a week and
would use it more if I didn’t
have a teletype that receives
m arket news from Kansas
City. It’s a good idea and does
a good job.”
Another advocate of Dtal-a-
M arket is Billy Gay, a Rocky
Mount pork producer, “ I use
Dlal-a-Market every day. In
the morning m y brother or I
and at night I check on feeder
pig prices and futures. If I call
today and find prices aren’t
fight. I’ll wait until later to
sell. The service is the best
thing I’ve found if I can get
the line. A lot of times it takes
a while.”
Spurgeon V. Hyder, m arket
news reporter for the NCa)A
said that demand for the Dial-
a-M arket serv ice is
tremendous. “ We encourage
prices to use the system . If
you have difficulty getting the
line or hear a busy signal,
keep trying and eventually
you’ll get through.”
To get Dial-a-MaiH(et in
formation call toll-free 1-800-
662-7573 located in the m arket
news office of the North
C arolina D epartm ent of
Agriculture in Raleigh.
In addition to D ial-a-
M arket, a seaaonal federal-
state m arket new s office
opened at Faiaon hi May. The
office reporta information on
vegetab le m arketin g aold
through the Faison Auction
M arket and Eaatem North
Carolina including spring
Irish potatoes and cabbage in
the northeastern part o f the
state.
P rice s and m arket in
formation are available M
hours a day by recorder
telephones at both Faiaon and
E lizab eth C ity. Phone
numbers for the m arket are
919-267-9211 (auction m arket)
and 919-2fi7-saai (packing
shed) in F aison . The
Elizabeth City number for
Irish potatoes and cabbage is
919-338-8906.
Hyder added tbat a printed
m arket report is available
twice a week. Persons in
terested in receiving it m ay
contact the M arket News
O ffice, N orth C arolina
irtm ent of Agriculture,
or phone 919-733-
7252.
SERVING DAVIE - IREDELL - UlLKES - YADKIN A ALEXANDER COUmiBS
T C i t M I T E & P E S T C O N T R O L S E R V I C E
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PROPER PEST CONTROL
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MOCKSVIlll
L O O A L L Y -O W K B P ^ ^ ^ PBR A TED• Written CMrfitienal Oaanrntae AvalliUvallable
Statesville
876-4774
Elkin, N.C.
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na« Ouñiep. . milaaQ* not"C4irfinliMM prtcaa Vou pay local taiaa «nd mounting and Marwmg charaaa. Ttrat on froni-whaai dn«« «ghtciaa muat ba iwMcMad front Ю ГМГ at 7,MKi iTula miarwaia For c o rrÿ ^ daUM. taa урцг Dunlop daaiar__________ ___
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7 « 6 - S 4 5 0 7 « « .9 7 8 9 ^
Monday-Friday 7:30 a.m.-C:00 p.m.; Saturday 7:30 a.m.-3;00 p.m.
Except Wed. Close at 12 Noon
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1 F R S W I T H 4Buy 4 galkmsof any one Olympic Profkict, get 1 more free.
FUTITOVER miNT
« у / и р н :OVE7COKT- iWTtri силы Uf . c-ftfs 1*^1 •Km ¡MiTri) • ИАЙГЛК-А»«» -CIALV<4i^i:i>MfcTAl.
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The tough, acrylic latex
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Solid Color ttirin
Oil Penetrates to protect.
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Sale Ends June 30
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M o c k s v i i i e B u i l d e r s S u p p l y
MOCKSVILLE , NC
Hours: 7:00 5:00 |).m Mon Fii
S.'< ■' 30 I? 00 (J m
Phone 6345915 oi 634 5916
-4Г
i
L o u O s b o r n e R e t i r e s
A f t e r 5 0 - Y e a r s A s R N
DA VIH COUNTY UNTl-RPRISI- RECORD, THURSDAY, JLINli 4, 1981 7C
The M ockivUle Woman’o CInb hai
■warded Thom ai Foster Campbell a
ISM Scholarship. He U the son of Mr.
and M rt. Jam ci R. Campbell of Route 3,
M ockivllle, N. C. A deterving itudent
from the Davie County High School, hii
actlvltlei are:
Beta Clnb-1,2,3; Junior Beta a u b
R ep reien tatlve-3; B eta Club Vlce-
Preildent-4; Social Studlei aub-2,3.
Social Chairman, Treasurer-«! National
Honor Soclety-3,4 President; French
Club-2,3; Who’s Who Among Am erican
High School Students; Davie YeU-3,4
E ditor-In-Chief; N ational Forensic
Leagne-4; Junior MarshaU; Governor’s
School at North CaroUna-West 1980;
M orehead N om lnee-ltSO ; G uidance
Committee-4;
Tomm y plans to enter North Carolina
State CoUege hi the fall and m ajor hi
Tammy Allen
On Dean's List
Eighty-five young women, including
at least one local resident, have been
named to the spring sem ester Dean’s
U st at Peace CoUege.
List áre Tam ara (Tam m y) Denise
AUen, daughter of Bfr. and M rs. Charles
WUson AUen of Rt. 2, and SteUa Deane
McCuUough, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Larry McCuUough of Rt. 4. Both
graduated from Peace M ay 16.
To be eligible for the Dean’s List at
Peace a student must maintain a grade-
point average of 3.30 out of a poasible 4.0,
receive passing grades in all subjecta
and carry at least 12 hours of course
woric.
Peace is a Presbyterian junior coUege
for wom en w hich offers associate
dqjrees in Uberal arta, business and
music.
M rs, Louise Kim brough Osborne
retired May 29, 1981 after more than 50
years as a devoted registered nurse.
Known lo her many friends as Lou, she
served in all facets of the nursing
profession.
The daughter of the late Alex M, and
Mamie Horn Kimbroutih, she was
m arried to the late Harry A, Osborne,
who passed away last September.
Mrs. Osborne , the former Louise
K im brough, graduated from City
Memorial Hospital in Winston-Salem in
1930. FoUowing graduation she did
private duly nursing in that city for two
years.
Returning to Mocksville she worked
for the lale Dr. S. A. Harding for 18
months. She and her hust>and then
moved to Shelby where she did private
duly for six years.
In 1936 Iheir only child, Harry Jr., was
born.
Moving back to M ocksville, Mrs.
Osborne worked for Dr. Parker, a
general practioner for a year.
In lO.'iS she becam e associated with
Erwin Mills in Cooleemee as industrial
nurse.She worked in this capacity for 14
years, joining the staff of the Davie
County Hospital in 1989. She becam e
head nurse on Station II on August 5,
1974.
In 1980 she decreased her work to part
time and assumed responsibilities of
em ployee health and out patient
department duties.
Mrs. Osborne was honored at a
reception on M ay 30th given by her
friends at the home of Pat Kett, 292
Magnolia Avenue, in Mocksville.
On her retirem ent day at Davie County Hospital Is M rs. Lou Otbom e, M rs. M ary Bryant and M rs. Ruth Foster
enjoying punch and feUowship together.
Silver Anniversary
Mr. and M rs. J.L. WiUiams of MocksvUle, N.C.
celebrated their 2Stii SUver Wedding Anniversary
daughters, Ann and K ay
Williams honored them with a supper. The couple werr
m arried in Rowan County June 2» 1956.
Miss Dana Jones
Honored At Show^
M iss Dana MicheUe Jones, bride-elect
of George RandaU Foster, was honored
Saturday, M ay 9 with a bridal shower
given by aunts of the prospective
bridegroom.
The shower was held at Dulhi United
Shores-Pennington
Mr. and Mrs.
MocksviUe, N.C.
Richard Shores, Jr. of Route 6,
announce the engagem ent of their
daughter, Debbie Lynn to Timothy U oyd Pennington.
M e th t^ t C huc^ Felliw ehlp HtU. Tbe MissShorertr^ tid en tT itP avteW gh ád ioo l:-----^ "
and even, possibly nutrition? You can
have tb «n aU at a moderate price right
in your own backyard or a nearby picnic
area. B eef for Fattier’s D ay and June
Dairy Month activities remind us that
beef and dairy producta team im to fit
right into carefree summ er m eal plans.
You m ay wish to honor Dad with T-bone
steaks but the budget m ay not aUow that
for aU the famUy.
Fun and nutriUon con be found in
ground beef and especlaUy when con-
bined wiUi dairy producta. Fortunately
ttie nutritive value is approxim ately the
sam e for equal amounto of lean beef
whether from the tender or less tender
cuts.
“ Burgers” are so popular that it
seems unnecessary to talk about them
but how often they have been disap
pointing with theh: dry tastelessneM.
Proper handUng and preparation can
rem edy Uie situation. Friends from the
A m erican D airy A esociatlon h ave
shared some of their favorite ideas with
ttie Tarheel Kitchen home economist.
L«t the fun start with a basic “ buiiger”
mix, (handled gently, of course) along
with toppers to be selected according to
taste plus fresh summer vegetables
cooked on the grUl. Add bread, a
beverage, and homemade freezer ice
cream~and a congenial group of people
to complete the “ in gr^ en ta” for a
•sfili backyard party.
BASIC BURGER MUM IXTURE
1 pound ground beef
le g g
Vt teaspoon salt
teaspoon pepper
In a bowl Ughtly mix beef, egg, salt
and pepper.
HIDDEN GOLD BURGERS
1 recipe Basic Burger Mixture
1 cup (4 o*.) siiredded Cheddar cheese
ShaM beef m ixture into eight thin
pattiA about 4 inches in diameter. Place
V4 cup cheese on each of four patties; top
logettaer; BroU or griU to desired
doneness. Yields 4 servings.
COUNTRY CLUB
CH EESEBURGERS
1 recipe Basic Burger M ixture
4 sUces (4 oz.) Cheddar cheese
4 slices (4 oz.) Swiss cheese
Shape beef m ixture into eight thin
patties about 4 inches indiam eter. BroU
or grill to desiged doneness. Piece
Cheddar cheese sUce» ou four patties
and Swiss cheese slices on other four
patties. For each serving stack one
Swiss burger on top of one Cheddar
burger. Yields 4 servings.
CHEESE-RELISH
2 packages (3oz.) each cream cheese,
softened
V4 cup sweet pickle relish
2 tablespoons prepared mustard
Beat togeUier cheese, relish and
mustard until smooth. Spread on hot
ham burgers. Yield: approxim ately 1
cup.
MUSHROOM-CHEESE
1 can (lOVi oz.) condensed cream of
mushroom soup
1 cup (4 oz.) shredded Cheddar cheese
V4 cup chUi sauce
Blend togettier soup, cheese and chiU
sauce. Spread on hot ham burgers.
Yield: 2 cups.
- PACKET VEGETABLES
Potatoes, thinly sliced
Carrots, cut in strips
Green pepper, cut in strips
Butter
W ater
Cooked bacon bita
For each serving: On double thick
rectangles of aluminum foU, place about
6 potato slices, 6 carrot strips and
several green pepper strips. Add 1
tablespoon butter, 1 tablespoon water
and 1 teaspoon bacon. Fold foU down
onto vegetables in Ught double fold; fold
ends over up close to vegetables. Place
on griU folded side up; cook 20-35
minutes or until vegetables are tender.
refreshm ent table was overlayed with a
pink lace cloth centered with a sUk floral
arrangem en t. C ake sq u ares, nuts,
minto, pickles and punch were served.
Special guesta included M rs. Bobby
Jones, mother of the bride-elect, Mrs.
G eorge F oster, m other of the
prospective groom, BIrs. Annie Jones,
Mrs. RuUi Mabe and M rs. BUI Green,
grandmothers of the couple.
M iss D ana M ichelle Jones,
bride-elect of George RandaU Foster,
was honored Saturday, M ay 16 witti a
shower given by M rs. Terry Burton,
sister of the prospective groom, and
Mrs. Charles PoUc. On her arrival Miss
Jones was presented a corsage of red
rose buds.
The shower was held at Dulin United
Metliodist Church FeUowship HaU. The
refreshment table was overlayed with a
lace cloth and a cut flower arrangem ent
of red roses. O k e squares, par^' m ix,
mints, pickles and punch w ere served.
Each guest presented Miss Jones wiUi
their favorite recipe and grocery items
for the recipe. Special guesta included
Uie couples’ mothers, M rs. Bobby Jones
and Mrs. George Foster and grand-
mottiers, Mrs. Annie Jones and Mrs.
Ruth Mabe.
Piano Recital
The studento of Mrs. M arlene B.
Shamel presented a piano recital on
at the I
Mr. Pennington is a 1975 graduate of Davie High
School.
H ie wedding wiU be held June 27,1981 at 3 p.m. at Oak
Grove United Mettiodist Church of MocksvUle, N.C.
AU friends and relatives are invited . No invitations
wUl be sent.
Y a d k i n
V a l l a y
Sunday, M ay 31
U brary
Davie County
In d ep en d en t T h in kin g
Those taking part in the program of
music were : Jennifer BeUt, JuUe Belk,
Janlyn Foster, Holly Revis, Ross Spry,
Lisa WaU, Robbie Welch and Win Welch.
Following the recital, refreshmenta
were served to those attending.
Saffron
Saffron is widely uaed in French,
Spanish and South Am erican dishes.
The Bible School wUl be
held by Rev. Arnold Commer
August 3 ttirough August 7.
All children are invited to
attend.
Mrs. Carolyn NaU returned
home last week from Forsyth
M em orial H ospital after
having surgery.
Mrs. Geneva WUes and
K eith M ason h ave both
returned home from Baptist
Hospital.
Mr. BiU Hale wUl not be
doing any chalk drawings
through vacation months liut
will begin again in ttie faU.
The church as a whole want
to congratulate the class of
D avie High that w ill be
graduating ttiis week. As they
set their goal in life, we wish
them the best of luck. We
have one young lady from our
church. Miss Debrah Dunn,
who wUl be graduating. As for
me, I say put Christ first in
your life at whatever you do in
ttie years ahead.
Leather bound booki need
ipecial care, itarting when
new. Once a year, ap
ply white petroleum ¡elly.
la n o lin or la d d le lo a p .
Charmotte
Beauty Shop
Cooleemee
Shopping Center
284-2135
Familjf
Hair Caie Center
Ear-Piercing
Shore-Cartner Vows Are Spoken
_ „ « L a.o o jjn . at Rock Springs
Baptist Chundi, Rebecca Shore and David Q irtner were
, ^ t e d hi holy m atrimony. Rev. Grady Tutteniw per
formed the double-ring ceremony.
m e m usic was presented by Jim WUson of Advance,
and soloista , John and Regina Chiuidler of Codeem ee.
Christine Sain, sister of ttie bride w as ttie bride’s
matron of honor. Carolyn Felta and Denise Cartner were
the M desm aids. Coleen Shore, ffster of the bii«ie, was
the flcwei giri.
Lawrence Cartner, father of ttie groom w as the best
man. Rick M cClamrock and Danny Cartner were the
groom ’s ushers.
Douglas Cartner was ttie ring bearer.
Daphane Cartner, sister of the groom, stood at the
register. Brenda Shore, sister of the bride, gave out
scrolls.
Ih e bride was given in m arriage by her father and
mother.
I plan to enroU in
under ttie GI BUI, and
coUege requires ttiat I un
dergo a physical examination.
Can I go to a Veterans Ad
ministration hospital for this
exam ?
No. VA hospitals are not
permitted to perform routine
physical exam iiutioas. Vou
m ay be riven a physical
D e m o c r a t W o m e n
D avie D em ocrat wom en
wUl m eet June llth at 8 p.m.
at The Town HaU.
All Democratic women are
urged to attend this meeting.
B ecau se grazin g cow s
produced more mUk in June,
“ National MUk Montti" was
launched in 1937 to seU more
dairy producta. It has since
become “June Dairy Montti,”
a national celebration to
rem ind consum ers to the
importance of dairy foods in
the famUy diet.
This year’s June Dairy
Month ttieme is “Tbe M agic of
M agic...because mUk's a
good source of calciu m ,
protein, vitam ins, and
minerals.
M agic...because mUk and
dairy producta are kind to
your budget.
And m a g ic ...b e c a u s e
d airyin g as an A m erican
industry is as old as Am erica
itaelf.
We salute our friends and
in dairying, and
the m agic of mUk.
■ i H a p p y
Fortieth
0 ) ¿ € in e
June 5,1981
Authorized and Paid By:Lew Wood
North lA&in St. Moeksville
• • •
_____
IDcivIe Chiropractic^
J ^ e q lth C enjr^r. P .Ä .
1)r. Ram ey FfK em p ¡(fiirector^^
j O ö j g j r t o r o ^Phone:634-2512
examination only to deter-;
mine need for treatment o r
hospitaUsation.
As an eligible veteran, I am:
planning to be buried in a;
national cem etery. I also wisli<‘
to have m y famUy buried'
ttiere. What must I do?
If you are eUgible for burial,;
your spouse and m inor
ChUdren m ay also be buried !■;
a national cemetery. ;
2 5 0 0 B I N G O S H O W !
FRIDAY, JUNE 5
DO O RS O P EN 5:00 E A R LY G A M ES 6:30
R E G U LA R P R O G R A M 7:30
Sponsored by A rm y-N avy Union a nd Ladies' Auxiliary
A rm y-N a vy Union
PLAY MORE FOR LESS!
HEY LOOK! Buy 1 st Deal $12,00 Play Entire Program
2nd Deal $12.00
UNBELIEVABLE LOOK 3rd Deal Only $1.00 Per Person
(N O SPLITTING)
LOCATED OLD ACE HDW. BUILDING
US Highway 70 Between Saliibury & Statsivillt
PR O G R A M INCLUDES!
18 GAMES - * 100® »E..h
1 GAME - ^ 200»»
1 COVERALL *500 0 0 CA LLfO T IL
WON
Come Early For A Good Seat!
C L O S E D S U N D A Y S
IMVli; COUNTY UNTIiRI'RISl' HIX ORI). THURSDAY. JUNb 4, 1981
MRS. LARR Y DUANE MELTON
...was Tina Marie Brown
Brown-Melton Vows Are Spoken
changed into a pink linen suit with whiteMils Tina Marie Brown Iwcame the bride of Larry Duane Melton in a douUe ring ceremony on Sunday, May 31, at 3 p.m. at the First Baptist Church, Cooleemee.Tbe bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Walter L. Brown of Midway Street, Cooleemee, She is a 1V75 graduate of Davie High School and received her associate of science degree from Wingate College and her B.A. in business administration from Catawba College. She is employed with tbe home office of Integon Insurance Corp. in Winston-Salem as c computer output microfilm operator.The groom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Rad Melton of Rt. 6, Mockiville. Mr. Melton is a 1975 graduate of Davie High Scbool and is a certified flight instructor.
Hie Rev. Lee WhiUock ofnciated before a tableau setting of ferns, lighted tapen in seven branched candMbra
and floor baskets of white gladiola, mums, carnations and red roses.
Flowers and latin howi were uied to
mark ipecial pewi.Mill Manba Ajigdl, organist; and Mr. Phil Martin, vccallst, presented the music which included a oiirty minute prenuptial program of classic music with selections by Chopin, Beethoven, and Bach. Mr. Blartin accompanied himsdf on guitar during tbe solos Longer, and The Wedding Song.Hie bride was escorted and given In marriage by her father. Sbe wore a formal len^ gown of «diite over taffeta. Tbe bodice was with a Queen Anne neckline fasMoned with ChutUly lace and seed pearls. Hie kmg lace sleeves ended In lace cuffk. The fuU sUrt was fasbtooed witb a lace peak in tbe fToot. Hie back of tbe gown was designed with six ruBles of organsa
accessories. The couple will be st home on Rt. 3, Mocksville.RECEPTION FoUowing the wedding ceremony, a reception was given by the parents of the bride, Mr. and Mrs. Walter L. Brown at the feUowship haU of tbe church. Mr. and Mn. Delma Veach greeted guests as they entered the haU.Tbe refreshment table was overlayed in white lace holding an arraraement of
«iiite flowers and red roses flanked by
white tapers in three arm sUver can-
delabrai. After tbe four tier wedding cake whicb wai decorated In white witb
r^ roiei wai cut by tbe bride and groom it wai lerved along with red ' punch flowing from a fountain punch
bowl, mints, nuts, and cheese biscuits.
Assisting in serving were: Mrs. Hden McDanld of Rt. 1, Woodleaf, Mrs. Harriet Brown, Cooleemee, and Mrs. Helen Luper of Rt. 1, Advance, aunts of the bride, and Mrs. Sandra Softey, sister of Ute groom.REHEARSAL DINNER Fdlowing tbe rdiearsal on Saturday night Mr. ud Mrs. Rad Melton, parents of tbe groom entertained tbe wedding party at tbeir bnne with a picnic supper. Hie meal consisted of baked hw, turkey, various vegetables, and an assortment of desserts.
5 Д.-: ;• ' :•/1
Mr. And Mrs. James Brady Wimberley
ne marriage of Martha Galas Hagkey and James Bra«y WImkcrley teek
pUce Saturday, AprU tt, la AtUata, Gesrgla where the ee^M* resides. Mrs.
Wimbertey U the daagbter of the Rev. and Mrs. M. T. Gales, fermeriy MocksvUle. Skelsalsetbegraaddaaghter^WittlamF.OwMSsfCeeleemee.
Mr. Wimberley to the sen of the lale Mr. aad Mrs. J. R. Wlmbsriqr ef Mayo.
Florida.
MRS. LYN N M ALO REECE
Arotíiid About
...was Linda Sue HamHam-Reece Vows Are Spoken
Miss Linda Sue Ham, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Jesse Lee Ham of 812 Salisbury Street, MocksvUle, N.C., and Lynn Malo Reece, son of Mr. and Mrs. Gary Leon Reece of Route 3, Dobson, N.C. were married Saturday, May 33, at Calvary
Baptist Church in a 2 o’clock afternoon
ceremony. Officiating were tbe Rev. Jim Gryder and the Rev. Roger
MISCELLANEOUS SHOWER Ttaia Brown, bride-dect of Larry Mdton was honored at a mIsceUaneous bridal shower on Saturday night Blay 9, at the home of Mrs. WlUie Grooms. Hostesses for the occassion were Mrs. WUlle Grooms, Mrs. Roy Sofley, and
Miss MeUssa Sofley.A corsage of spring datoles wm presented to Miss Brown i«on her
W« UC.UU«» W.U.»» «rrival. me dining table ww oywlald
i n S T S e ^ i i r t i w S r f i i t n r c a f l ^ - ^ ^ w W ^length train.Sbe wore a two tiered flnger-tip veU edged in matching lace attacbed to a capelet of lace and seed pearls. She carried a bouquet of small wiiite ear-
natioas, baby’i breadi and red roses.Miss MeUssa Sofley, Rt. 1, Advance, niece of tbe groom served as Jr. Bridesmaid. She wore a gown of Uue sUk designed witb a wide ruffle around the neck and tbe bottom. White baby’s breath was worn in tbe hair and sbe carried long stem red roses.Miss Donna McDanid, o( Rt. l, Woodleaf, cousin of tbe bride was flower girl. Sbe was dressed Identical to the Jr. Bridesmaid and carried a basket of white flowers and red roses.Mr. Rad Mdton served as best man for bis son. Ushering were Buddy McDaniel of Rt. 1, W oo^, and Jr. Usher Jeff McDaniel, also of Woodleaf cousins of ttie bride. Todd Jones, Rt. 6, MocksvUle, cousin of the groom, and
Denny Ycdcely of MocksvUle.For her daughter’s weddli« Mrs. Brown chose a formal gown of light bhie cralpe fashioned with orgama and white seed pearls at ttie waist and neckline. Sbe carried one long stem red rose. Hie
bridegroom’s mother was attired In a formal gown of apricot dssigned witti a
matching jacket. Sbe wore a corsage of white camatibns and baby’s bream.Tbe guest renter wss attended and
programs bandsd out by Mr. and Mrs. Harold Loyd R<dlins, Jr. of Rt. 6, MocksvUle. Mrs. Agnes McDaniel of Salisbury, aunt of ttie bride directed ttie wedding.After ttie ceremony ttie wedding iiarty received feUcltationa in ttie churcn vestibule. For travel Mrs. Melton
arrangement of mixed summer flowersRefreshmenU consisted of dainty ssndwiches, cheese baU, assorted cradiers, wedding cookies, and punch.Th« brides iuoiiier Mrs. Walter Brown, ttie groom’s mottier Mrs. Md Mdton and ttie groom’s grandmotticr Mrs. Mamie Reavis were among uie 40
guest attending.
ilhy Аав Randolph. daa^t*r et M Mrs. Jesspb RanMpb sf Rt aace, gradnated Itrom tho Da?
ret Mr.
4.Advance, padiuted tnm tho Davis Hospital Scheel ef Narstag hi gtatesvUle «■ May 3ttd. She Is a 19П gradaau of the Davie Cewty Шй Мие1. Miss Randolph wiU become a амтЬег ef the stalf of Mm Fersyth Memsrial Hospital hi Wtaisten-lalem.
C IT Y O U T L E T
LOCATED IN J 8i N VARIETY STORE
A program of wedding music was presented by pianist, Reta Moncus; and soloists, Sharon Holyfleld and Larry Moxley.
The bride, given In marriage by ber hrottier-ln-law, Jerty MUler, wore a formal white gown of peau finish organsa, designed witti a modifled empire waist and long puffM sleeves. The mandrin neckUne was appliqued witti laoe motUb and bsr AiU skirt extended into a chapel lengtti train.
ScaUoped chanttUy laoe was used at ttie hemUne. Her heaqiiece was a Juliet cap of rJiantllly-Jace and Jiet^veU-was-of- trench iUusion.
Miss Cathy Ann Randolph of Advance, was maid of honor. Bitdesmalds were
PalricU Lynn Faster and Lisa Trivette of MocksvUle, Renae Reece of Dobeon, Juify Norwood Reece of Tennessee. Jr.
britemaid was Tracey Leigh MUler of MocksvUle.James Reece of Tennessee served his brottier as best man. Ushers were Richie Moxley and Chris Moncus, both of BoonvUle, Joe Johnson of EUdn, Jimmy WUmotti of Dobson and Mark Bowman of TaylorsvUle.Hidly Annette Gryder of MocksvUle was tlo^ girl; and Daniel Moxley of
Tammy Brown
Is Inducted Into
Phi Theta Kappa
~Mlss Tsmmy Faye Brown, a freab- man at Emmanud CoUege, Franklin Sprinp, Georgia, was inducted Into tbe UpsUon Nu Chaptw of Phi Tbeta Kappa on May 14,1981. Tammy is the daughter of Mr. and Bfrs.J. W. Brown of Route 1, MocksviUe.Since its founding in 1918,14ii Ibeta Kappa, which recognises Intdlectual achievement, has been ttie only national honor fraternity for American Junior Affllfgrs MembersblD Is earned by high academic standing and good mo^ raaracter and | quidlties of dttsenshlp i Phi Theta Kappa Is recognised by tbe American Associatton of Community and Junior Colleges. The UpsUon Nu was chartered at in October, 1988.
Sdiool-and a 1979 Navy Cryptologic Technician Seaman Patrlda A. York, daughterCoUege D. and Ma^e F. Martin of Route 8, Box 140, MocksvUle, N.C.Tmv iin Applied duty witti Fleet Air Reconnaissance Squadron One, Naval Air SUtI
I Equipment and Guam,
graduate of Sun^ « ш в ш т в a v w i i A t 'h A v e Ш Г Р П В Д В П К Г РЯ
BoonvUle was ring bearer.KeUy MUler and Christy Lynn Gryder handed out scroUs and programs.The bride is a 1978 graduate of Davie High Scbool and a 1981 graduate ot Davis HoipiUl Scbool of Nursing. Sbe wUl be em^oyed as a nurse at Forsyth Memorial Hospital in Winston-Salem.Hie bridegroom Is a 1977 graduate ot Surry Central High Sdiool; and a 1979 graduate ot WUkea Community CoUege with an associate in AppUed Science degree in Diesel Equipment and Technology, also a graduate of Surnr omimiinity College with a degree in
wdding technology. He is emplwed^ PU»s Electrical Contractors In Mt.
Airy, N.C.After a wedding trip to Myrtle Beach, ttw couple wUl make ttieir home at Rt. 3,
Dobson, Nortti Carolina.RBCBPTJON
Doris WUmotti, Carolyn Holyfidd a^ Mosley bosteda reception for ttie
foUowing ttie ceremony, at ttie B. Brock buUdi^ in MocksvUle.REHEARSAL DINNER
The bridegroom’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Gary Leon Reece, were hosts to a rehearsal dinner, Friday evening, foUowing ttie wedding rdiearsal. Gueste induM ttw wedding party, famUy members and friends.
SURPRISE BIRTHDAY PICNIC An>roximatdy 60 members ot the tamUies of Mrs. C. J. AngeU, Sr. and Mrs. Elma T. Turner honored ttiem witti a surprise birthday picnic at ttieir home on Countiy Lane, MocksvUle on May 31,1981. Mrs. Angdl wUl be 83 years old on June3,1981 and Mrs. Turner’s birthday is June 7,1981.
VIRGINIA VISITORS Mr. and Mrs. J. Brent McCombs and chUdren, Jason, Courtney, Seth and Kerri of Lynchburg, Va. visisted Mrs. McCombs’ parenU, Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Purvis, Sr. They were here especiaUy for ttie 83rd birthday cdebratton ot Mrs. McCombs’ grandmottier, Mrs. C. J. AnseU. Sr. on Blay 31,1981.
WITH NAVAL STATION IN GUAM of Edward reported for
Air SUUon, Agana,D.duty Guam
SPENDS SEVERAL DAYS WITH PARENTS BIr. and BIrs. J. D. Purvis, Jr. and cbUdren Brian and Jennifer of Anderson, S. C. spent a few days last week with Bfr. Purvis’ parents, BIr. and BIrs. J. D. Purvis, Sr. They also attended tbe surprise birthday cdefarationot BIr. Purvis’
grandmother BIrs. C. J. AngsU. ST.
ATTBNDS N.C.~U0N’8 CLUB STATE C(»(VENT10N BIr. and BIrs. Rufus ftrack, Blark Daniel and Frank Stroud, Jr. attsndsd ttie North CaroUna Uon’s Qub SUte Convention in Boone, N. C. ttie past weekend.
-------J0RD/ttMER\®S.AS4»AGE------------------------ -AniU Jordan ot Cooleemee, dauditer of BIr. and BIrs. Robert W. Jordan, served as a Page hi Governor Jim №nt’s оПсее hi Raleigh ducing ttie week of Blay 28-29. Anita is a senior at Davie County High Schod.
MOCKSVILLE UQN’S CLUB PICNIC WHX BE JUNE 4TH Hie MocksvUle Lions aub’s annual pidnc wUl be hdd at Rich Park, Thursday, June 4, at 7 p.m. AU members, thdr wives and Invited guests are invited to attend.
Food For Thought
Over 200 years ago, America won its flrst battle tor taidependence. Today, we continue that fight. The continuing soaring price of oU is a dep^ing reminder of what happens to ttiis country when we aUow oursdvee to become dependent on foreign iroducers for our needs. Our suffering wouM be even greater if we become, as a
nation, serioudy short of food.
Just twenty years ago,
ttiere were almost two mUlion famiUee »«iifcitM cows on
farms throughout ttie United States. Today there are 200,000. Blaiw economists are coacemed tut we may be approacUi« a time of mUk sbortues ttiat could again make us dangerously dependent on foreign producers tor our needs.June Dairy Montti is a natural time to pause and reflect on the significant contributions to our bsaltti and economy made by our nation's dairy farm famUies.
C r o s le y
• 8^>«r«toRtfrlg«faterand
FrMMT T«fnp*f«turt Control»• - SUPER ENERGY
ECOMOMIZER" OMign
• T«xtur«d StMl Doon
CaniU«Mr«d RMrio«rBtor
T*(np*r»d Shtlvn plutTtmperMQlM« вМ1 ov*f C fü^r• Fftctory IngtâlMd ic*
One Of A
Kind Sale
Ice & Water In Door
CNS124HS HW
Cool—n w Slopping Cantar
Coolannw' N.C.
lADIEiSTOPS
$ 5 0 0 &Up
D a v i e R e p u b l i c a n s T o M e e t M o n d a y
attbe Davie County Cour-
ttMUse.Tbe Davie County
night June 8,1981, at 7:30 p.m.aU RimibUcai
d M h i M i
ins are invited to
SUMMER FUN
Peiwnilly Esocrted Vacation Touts
OZARKS (■ OPRV JuM 27 io July 9
- -
T W GOLOEN W EST-June 14 to Juiy IS
trip e f MfMtacuiar contrsitt from th« untlvif m J ira n d U n y o n to tne neon J i. Thlf it ilM w sy fa jé t Csflfofnls.Jni
, eC K y,C olortdoS prln9i,C ii rum in Libiaiy and inucn mors.
N O VA SCO TIA - Juiy 9 to Juiy 2S' orandsurl ,AIk> IncJudet nsrum wick snd Prlnc*
Juiy 18 to Auguit 2 ---------pf.tjoin slE ^ ^ lj
'ortnstlon on other tummsr snd fall trlpt,
w selu ------for detall» snd inf< trom 3 dsyt to 4 «
T H E M O O R E T O U R S , IN C .
Crosley rafrlg«rator/fr*«Mr
ÜuSmt
• Automatic tc»
Makar
• Taxturtd Siaal Door«
• GIHla^ut MMt KMpar• Two QlhM-oul Criap»>8• Ramovabl« Fraasar SftaH
• Two F/aa^a/
Door Shalvas• FourAdjuslablaCantilavar
Shalvas plus Shaif ovar Criapar• Mini Cuba lea Safvica• EKira daap Hairigwraioi
Door Shalvas
• RamovaWa En Buckai• Saparala Ralhearator and f-Vaaxar Tamparatura
Conirois• Bwttar Compartmant in
Door
• Em Sloraga in Door
18 CU. ft . Fresh Avocado
$ 4 4 9
1 5 f t
1 2 ,0 0 0
Chesf Freezer
BTU
Air Conditioner
n o Volt
$ 3 3 9
*339 95
m
ADVANCE APPLIANCE No. 2
Old Hwy (4 ( 901
Mocksville, N.C.Sales And Service 492-7247
DAVIK COUNTY ENTKRPRIS1Ì RHCORD, THURSDAY. JUNK 4, 1981
Boger - Bowie
Mr. and M n . Glenn Boger of Route l, Union Grove are pleased to announce
the engagem m t of tlieir daughter, Katie Boger to Wendell Bowie, ion of M r. and
M n . William Bowie of 3014 Joe Road, SUteaviUe.
M i. Boger ia a 19M graduate of King’s Business CoUege, Charlotte, N.C., and
is presently employed by Larew-Wood-Johnson, Inc. in M ocksville, N.C.
Mr. Bowie is a 1979 graduate of North IredeU Hi|№ and is employed by C ft J
Associates, StatesviUe.
n e couple wiU exchange vows on September 12, iSfll, at 2 p.m. at Union
I United Methodist Church.
M oduvUle, N.C.
Women*8 Aghw
To Meet June 9th
The Winston-Salem Chapter of the
W om en’s A glow F ellow sh ip, (D ay
Chapter) wUl hold iU monthly meeting
o n X ie 9,1981, Tuesday, at ^
YM CA, located on Glade Strejrt and
West End Blvd., at 9:30 a.m . A tim e of
M lowship wUI be ftom 9 a.m . - »:30 a.m.
The w a ite r for this month wiU ^
Diane Daggerhart from Cary, N.C.
Diane is a w ife and m other of th m sons,
aaes 6,10 and IS, but moat of aU she is a
Nm Q «atlon in Christ Jesus. Bom
¡¡lain in 1V71 and baptiied in the Holy
S M t in 197S, her chief goal in № has
Sisn to com e into total union with Jesui
C hrist and th ereb y to p ro d a im
■hulwsss tlirougb Him to othen.
p n ssB tly she m inlsten in the body of
Christ as a teacher of Gad’s Word and is
Hostess CliaiTman for R aleitfi Women s
A glow FeU ow ship. D ian e is past
^ s id e n t ot R aleitfi Aglow.
Thornton - Michael
Mr. and liln . Albert Thornton of Essex Junction, Vermont, announce the
engagem ent of their daughter, Karen Louiae to Craig Michael, son of Mr. and
M n . Bob R. M ichael of Rt. 4, MocksvUle.
M iss Thornton is a 1977 graduate of Catawba CoUege and is presently em
ployed with D avie County Social Services.
Mr. M ichael is a n ad u ate of Davie High School and a 1079 graduate of
Catawba CoUege. H eu presently employed with Crown Wood Products.
— m e wedding it planned for August l, 19«1, at U berty-Unitwi Methodist
Church in M ocksville, N.C.
Center Extension Homemakers Hold Regular Monthly Meeting
Mrs. Douglas Keith Wright
...was Sharon Diane Finney
Finney - Wright Vows Spoken
Center Extension H om em aken met
for their monthly meeting, Tuesday,
M ay 26, at the Center Community
BuUding with M n . Louise Tutterow as
hostess.
M n . M argaret Lowry, president,
presided at the meeting. The devotional
topic by M n . Kathryn Jones was "A
Heart of Love.” Fifteen m em ben an
swered the roU by giving tlw nam e of a
v rin g flower in alphatotical order.
Jones.
attending w as M n . MUdred
Tha firat poitage
w ere ittu e d in
«tampi
1 8 4 7 .
Aagte Cress, daaglitor et M r. aad M n .
Ray Cress et Berm uda Rw i was selected
for her scholastic achievements to
appear in the current isioe of Who's Who
in Am erican High Scheois. ~Sfer~wlU
graduate in June lh>m Davie High
Scheoi where she is a m em ber ot the
Beta Club and is secretary of the
National Honor Society. She has been
accepted at the U nivenity of North
CaroUna at Greensboro where she wiU
enter the FaU sem ester of the B8N
program fdr nnrsei.
M n . Judy Swiccgsod reported on the
Davie County Bxtenaion H om em aken’
trip to Boston, M assadiusatts during the
week of M ay It through M ay >2. Scenic
places visited enroute included
Washington. D.C., Lancaater County,
P en n sylvan ia and N atural B rid ge;I'ennsyr
trirginia.O then making the trip froni
Center ehib w ere lilrsr R uby-O ’N oalr M n . M argaret Lowry and M n . Helen
Chaffin.
M n . RuUi Tutterow, County Cultural
A rts C hairm an represen ted D avie
County at Uie Cultural ArU and
Citizenship Seminar held in Waahington,
D.C., Blay 18 through BU y 22. On
Monday evenimt. the orouo m ak lw tbe
т м т O U H M OU R 8 Е Д и Г С Е 1 1 Г Е 1 М и и .Ш И
nWRGHOICEOFPIKE.
nUR СНОСЕ OF FfflMNESS
S A V E U P
T O ' 1 6 0 “pertet
Salect №• firm, quilttd comfort you prater, ind you'll pay ona
low price for Hi* tiz* you
wint. Etch of th«M quality
mattraMM haa apaulally
tamparad colla for fina •upport and multl-layar
cuihlonlns for daap com
fort. All hava matchino
tonlon bar foundatlona at tha aama aala prica.
Qraat alaaping, graat
cholca. graat aavinga
If you buy nowl
3days onlyl
Thurt.-FrI.-Sat.
Jun« 4-5-6
Sotd m 6*i« Only
tivesiwkely.SealyFostunpedkr
Arrtcrice i No 1 filing i» buill belief to l4»t
k>n§iirl 0t»ien«4i in coop«r«tiun with le«dmg ofihupedic
pennies a for the very best
wtgeom for no mofninti bacUchc ffom tl«tping on « luu-vuii In ttoci (oi imnt«dl«tc delivery
J.T. Sm ith Furniture Co.,!nc.
Turn On Sheffield Road-6 Miles Out Of Mocksville Off Hwy. 64 West
Watch For Signs
Phone: 492-7780
Open Monday-Saturday 9-6 p.m.
F o u r C o r n e r s
Jeffrey Cdtrane of Raleigh
visited Mr. and M n . Robert
Davis Friday afternoon.
M n . MUtfred Hutchens of
High Point, M rs. M abel
Parrish and M n . Johnsle
Shelton attended ttw music
recital Sunday afternoon at
F In t Presbyterian Church
in MocksvUle. Ginger Shelton
performed.
M r.an dM n .W ilU sD avisof
HamptonvUle w e n Sunday
night supper guests of M r. and
M n . Robert Davis.
M n . MUdred Hutchens and
M n . Johnsle Shelton visited
Mr. and M n . C.N. Baity and
№ . and M n . U w ren ce Baity
of Courtney, Sunday.
Mr. and M n . Jack Parrish
df K em enviU e visited M n .
M abel P arrish Saturday
afternoon.
Mr. and M n . Robert D avif
visited Frank Davis Friday
afternoon at Autumn Care.
M rs. T erry Ham m and
Angie, Mr. and M n. Jerry
Potts and children w ere
Sunday dinner guests of Mr.
and M n . CUfford Flem ing
honoring M n . Hamm for her
birthday.
trip to Boeton joined M n . Tutterow for
an evening tour of our Capital City. M n .
Tutterow reported that she had a very
delightful and informative week. She
wUl share information witti us at a later
date.
A report on the District M eeting held
Tuesdsy, M ay 5, at Salem CoUege in
Winston-Salem was given by M n . Ruby
O’Neal. The p ron am “ Foods in the
N est” w as a food dem onstration
utUising the use of Uie food processor
and m icrowave oven. Those attending
fh>m Center in addition to M n . O’l ^
were M n . M argarat Low ty, M n . Judy
Swicegood, M n . Louise Tutterow and
B in . Rutti Tutterow.
County Home Extension Agent, M n .
Nancy Hartman was in charge of Um
Hvgram . Her topic was “ ESQ” (Energy
M vlng QuaUty). She related ttie current
~need~to~conserve~«iergy through~the~
wise use of window treatments. She
dem onstrated the effectiven ess of
various typee of window coverings
against ttie heat generated by the sun.
Included in ttw t)i>es o f window
coverings w ere roman shades, drapes
and window quUts. M n . Hartman
stressed ttie importance of a layered
treatment being much m ore effective
ttian ttie use of a single fabric.
The meettng was concluded with the
club coUect, after which m em ben w e n
directed to the refreshm ent table which
was decorated witti lovely pale pink
peonies grown and arranged by M n .
Tutterow.
VanUta
VanUla is native to Central Am erica
and Mexico.
Tarragon
Tarragon is the disUncUve flavor in
Beam aise sauce.
M iss Sharon D iane Fin n ey and
Douglag Keitti Wright of Shelby, N.C.
were united in m arriage Saturday, M ay
30, in a ttiree o’clock afternoon
ceremony at The First Baptist Church In
sneiDy, N.C. The pastor, t»r. Uene
W atenon officiated.
Wedding music was presented by
organiet Helen Glllcott and soloist Mr,
Ed Minor.
The bride, given in m arriage by her
father, wore a form al gown of white
organza designed with a scaUm ed
portrait neckline, basque and Ы юор
sleeves of m aschel lace. The a-line skirt
and court train of crystal pleats featured
a scaUoped lace hemline. Her mati
mantiUa feU from a pearl emb
camelot cap. She carried a bouquet of
blue white and pink carnations, white
roses and baby’s breatti.
The altar was decorated with spiral
candelebra decorated w ith
arrangem ents of blue and white car
nations and daisies. Tbe cerem ony in
cluded Ughting of the unity candle.
The bride presented her mother and
mother of the groom with a long stemed
red rose at ttie end of ttie ceremony.
M n . Janet Lineberry, Eaat Bend,
sister of the bride w as matron of honor.
B ridesm aids w ere M iss R eb ecca
Finney, MocksviUe, sister of the bride;
Miss Pam ela Lineberry, E ast Bend,
niece of ttie bride; M iss Dawn Morrow,
corsage of white'cam ations.
The bride is ttie daughter of M n .
Virginia Finney of MocksvUle and
R ichard H al Fin n ey of H am pton,
Virginia. She is a m d u a te of Davic
County H igh School and W estern
CaroUna U nivenity, where she received
a degree in business administraUon. She
is employed as assistant m anager of K-
M art in Forest City.
The bridegroom’s mottier is M n.
MUdred Cabaniss of Shelby. His father
was ttie late MerriU Wright. He is a
graduate of Shelby High School and
received d egrees in industrial
m anagem ent and business a d
ministration from Cleveland Technical
CoUege. He is employed as assistant
m anager of K-Mart in Shelby.
After a wedding trip to points of in
terest in Florida ttie couple wUl m ake
ttieir home in Shelby, N.C.
FoUowing ttie wediUng ceremony, a
reception w as given by the bride’s
father in ttie Ladiee Parlor at the
church. The ivory lace covered Ubie
carried the sam e cidor schem e as the
wedding witti ttie S-tter wedding cake
having blue and white flower icing
i witti ttie double white wedding
REH EARSAL P A R TY
The wedding rehearsal on Friday
evening was fdlow ed by a dinner for the
attendanta and ttielr famUies at ttie
fo r m e r ly r fM o c k s ^ e a n d ^ r e s ij^ W ttie couplein AshevUle, N.C. and M n . Linda
Kuzlen, AshevUle. Flower ^ 1 was Miss
JuUa Lineberry, E ast Bend, niece of tbe
bride. Their form al gowns w ere made
aUke witti ttie m aterial featuring ttie
blue and white flower schem e u m in
the altar decoration. Each carried a
smaU bouquet of blue and white daisies
and baby’s breatti.
Wayne Thomas of Rocky Mount, uncle
of the groom served as best man.
U shen were Terry Edwards, Lln-
colnton; Gene Tortenbeny of Shelby;
CarroU Lineberry of East Bend, and
Isaac Lovelace, Jr. of Shelby. They w o n
tuxidos of baby blue m atching that of ttie
bridegroom.
Presiding at the guest register was
M n . Teresa Knapp of Shelby.
The bride’s mother wore a formal
apricot colored gown of polyester knit
wiUi a corsage of white camattons.
The bridegroom’s mother wore a
white and tu^uoise formal gown with a
presented each attendant witti a
SHOWERS
The bride w as honored witti a shower
from ttie employees of ttie K-M art Store
in Forest City.
The employees of K-Mart Store in
Shelby honored ttie bride and groom
witti a shower at ttie ston .
Ladies of H ie F in t BapUst Church in
Shelby gave a ahower in honor of ttie
bride and groom in ttie Ladies Parlor.
Last Day
Of ScÌMol
The last d a jP o T school tor
studenta wUI be Friday. June S,
t u t . E lem en tary schools w ill
dismiss at 1:30 p.m. Junior high
and high schools wiU dismiss at
12:00 noon.
Wm. R. Davie
iiiam H. u a v ie r ir e
rtm ent is sponsoring a
;en |rie supper, Saturday,
13, at the fire depart-
To Hold Supper
W illiam R . D avie F ire
Department
chicken pie
June 13, al
ment. Serving wUI begin at 5
p.m. and continue untU sold
out.
Take out boxes wUl be
available.
Proceeds wUl be used for
ttie buUding fund.
Bake Sale
The Davie High AttdeUc
Booeter a u b wUl hold a Bake
Sale at the two H effner
locations on Friday, June s
beginning at l o’clock p.m.
and Saturday June 6 b^in-
M O T L E Y ' S N U R S E R Y
& H O R T I C U L T U R A L
S E R V I C E
Undscape SpKialiiti and Design Consultants
Kiriope 1 Gal. $2.00 ^ off Fruit Trees
1 Quart Hollys 75'
Azalaes and Hollys Starting at $1.50
LOCATED BESIDE OF HUNTING CREEK ON
QODBEY ROAD OFF HIGHWAY 64.
Now Accepting Mowing Contracts
Call Mon. thru Fri. Evenings 8-10 p.m.
Sales Yard Open Sat 9 to S
PHONE 492-5623
C U T Y O U R M O i J T H L Y P A Y M E N T S
BYABILL
CONSOLIDATION LOANi
Just Think How Great It Will Be To Put All Those Small
Payments Into One Convenient Monthy Payment.
It Means More Money Left Over At
Pay Day - Makes Sense!
LOANS UP TO $26,000
m S O U T H E R N D I S C D U I S J T O D M P R N Y
W Willow Oak Shopping Cantor,
(704) 634-3596
1111 Yadkinvilla Hd.
C H R IS A LLISO N , Branch Prosident
ю г DAVIU ('OU N TY l'N TlíRI’KISi; RIX'ORD, IIUIRSDAN . lUNl- <1. I<)8I
A d v a n c e N e w s
William EUii of PurUand,
Oregon and h li bride-elect
Miss Vickie Parthe alao of
Portland arrived last week to
spend 10 days with hii father
Bill Ellis. W illiam ’s sister
Mrs. Sailie Newell of Boone
spent the w eekend here,
coming especially to meet
Vickie. The EUis’ and Mias
Parthe w ere visitors at
Methodist church Sunday and
for the Fam ily Day dinner.
M embers of the graduating
class of 1926, Shady Grove
School, m et Sunday along
with the Methodist Fam ily
Day celebration. There were
10 m em bers in the graduating
class 55 year* ago. Among
them present for the reunion
were Mrs. Alpha Shermer
Vogler of this community,
Mrs. Arab Com atier Talbert
of Winston-Salem, Bfrs. Kate
T u cker Alm ond of
T h om asville, H enry Lee
C rotts of W inston-Salem .
Robert Lee Seaford and wife
of Fork were also present for
the reunion but were not
m em bers of this class.
Mrs. Bill Zim merm an spent
a few days in South CaroUna
this week visiting her children
and grandchildren Mr. and
Mrs. Jerry Hendrix, Andrea,
M elissa, Am anda and
Meredith. She went especially
to see the new baby Meredith
Jane born M ay 16.
Mr. and Mrs. Jam es O.
B lack of Lexington spent
Saturday afternoon visiting
Mrs. Hazel Shutt and Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Zimmerman, who
are cousins of Mrs. Black.
M rs. Joe B oger and
daughter Jo Ann of F ar
mington visited her mother
Mrs. Recie Sheeto Sunday
afternoon. Also Miss Debbie
H ickm an of T obaccoville
visited Mrs. Sheets.
M rs. Lynda Burton is a
patient at Forsyth Hospital,
Whitaker Care, for treat
ments.
State Senator Gilbert L.
Boger and M rs. Boger were
special guests a t the
M ethodist F am ily D ay
celebration on S u n dty,
coming especially to hear
Mrs. Jo Graham Foster speak
at the worship service. Mrs.
F oster is also a State
Representative in Raleigh.
E ugene P otts has been
readm itted to the D aviu
County H ospital. He wan
h ospitalized for 3 w eeks,
cam e home for a short time
and had to return to hoapital.
Jim Zim merm an of Ad
vance Route 1 was a Wed
nesday morning visitor of his
brother Bill Zimmerman.
T ip s O n B u ying Room A ir C o nd itio n er
D epending on w here a
famUy lives, air conditioning
either can be a luxury or a
near n ecessity. A fter the
decision t o . buy a ir don-
ditioning com es the choice of
a central system v en u s room
units. D epending on the
dwelling, the Better BusincM
: Bureau points out that room
air conditioners can be
economical, but care m ust be
taken in selection.
------Any type Ы air vtiudiliuiier
is designed to deliver cool air,
ddium ldify, circtilate air and
dean it. Some m te n u m ay
perform such added functions
as ventilation and beating.
Room air conditioaen can
be id eal for efficien cy
apartm ents or other slagle
room cooling needs. They can
be moved from room to room
within a home and, when a
fam ily m oves, the air oon-
diticncr can go with them.
In evaluating an air con
ditioner, consider three prim e
factors:
The unit’s cooling
capacity com pared to the
area it w ill serve;
Its E n ergy E fficien cy
Rating (E E R ); andThe cost and complexity Ы installatlaa.
ТЪеге are drawbacks to •
unit that’s too large or too
sm all for its room . An
oven iied unit m ay be m ore
exp ensive than n ecessary,
could cause uncomfartabM
vw latioas in tem perature and
is likely to cool the are* so
quickly that m oisture
rem ains in the air. An un-
d ersin d unit would be a false
econom y, how ever, and
should not be expected to
perform w d l.
An air condltiooer’s cooling
capacity is m easured by the
t number of Britiah Iberm al
UniU (BTUs) of heat it can
rem ove from the air in one
hour. This capacity will be
clearly m arked on the nam e
plate of the unit. Although
some ads will talk ot a unit’s
horsepower or am perages,
these have no rdatioa to
cooling capacity.
There are formulas for
determining the right cooling
capacity for a room. Take the
cubic room measurements to
an air cooditiooer dealer who
A zaleas C an Be
Rooted E a sily
From Ju n e C u ts
A zalea cu ttings can be
rooted a t any tim e ol the year,
but June grow th is p a r
ticularly good, according to
AflriCUlturAl oitfjitftqfi nnr-
ticulturists at North Carolina
State University.
M ost of the popular
varieties of azaleas root
quickly from soft wood or
sem i-hard wood cuttings.
Smith said. Ib e y should be
placed in a m ixture of equal
Darts oi neat and sand.
M ake tthe cuttings about six
inches long, and don’t allow
them to wilt. Keep them
moist.
Rem ove the lower leaves
from the cuttings, leaving
four or five leaves at the
upper tip of the cutting. Make
a slanting, smooth cut across
the base end. Then put the
cutting into the rooting
medium so that the leaves are
П6АГ the ioU Une.
A deep wooden box covered
with glass or burlap m akes a
good rooting bed. A shaded
cold fram e can tie used. Just
be sure that air can circulate
around the cuttings. This is as
important as keeping the
cuttings moist.
Cuttings should root in
about six weeks. They can be
left in place until spring, then
placed in a good grade of soil.
Organic m atter, such as peat
or the top two inches of
decayed leaves from beneath
oak trees, should be worked
into the soU along with well
decayed cow m anure, if it is
iivailable. Keep well watered.
Mulch with m aterials such as
oak leaves, pine straw, peat
or sawdust.
should be able to determine
the appropriate cap acity.
Also, note the number of
openings, window exposures,
type of lightin g and in
sulation, which are factors in
the equation.
The E n ergy E fficien cy
Rating is a m easure of energy
consumption and, therefore, a
gauge of operating cost.
E E R s range up to 11.6. The
higher the number, the more
conditioner with a higher
E E R m ay be worth, in the
long run, a higher Initial
price.
E E R s are a part of the
labeling of all new unita.
When considering the pur
chase of an older unit the
E E R can be calculated by
dividing the cooling capacity
(BTUs^our) by the wattage
(power).
E ase of installation is also
an important factor. Window
units are usually designed for
a minimum of installation
effort, but be sure to read the
m anufacturer’s instructions
and follow them carefUUy.
Before installing any unit,
verifythstthe dectrical wiring
is adequate for operation.
Inadequate w irin g w astes
power, cuts efficiency and is
extrem ely dangerous. Con
sider these iBstallaUon tips:
Use a line not already
kMded wlUi appliances;
M ake sure the outlet is
p roperly grounded. N ever
rem ove the grounding prong
from a thre»iprang outlet;
If possible, install the unit
in a shaded window, but av<M
areas where outaide dust,
odors or pollen will be drawn
into it;
Never block the back of
the unit.
When shopping for a room
air conditioner don’t forget
the importance of a warranty.
Does the w arranty apply to
parts, labor or both? Is it
backed by the dealer as well
as the m anufacturer? Are
there faciUtiea locaUy that
will honor it? Some unlta m ay
have to be shi|med back to the
m anufactura- for repairs.
What is the reputation of the
dealer? Be sure to contact the
Better Business Bureau for a
reUability report. B y choosing
the unit, m anufacturer and
dealer and installing the air
conditioner properly, the
aerwillalÎM)>beasm art consumer I
cool consumer.
^ M ^ W IN G
Good Ideas From
JCPenney
I TIPS T O HELP V O U 1
QuMtion: All the Jacketi
that I make for myielf are
too long. H ow can I ihorten
them?
Aniwer; Hold the pattern
up to you. If it looka too
long, adjust the pattern be
fore cutting your fabric.
This leaaon’a jackeU are
ahorter to many of the new
pattemi may work better
for you.
Queition: What doei it
mean when my pant* wrin
kle at the crotch?
Aniwer; If your panti curve
up at the crotch wiien you
are itanding, they are too
tight. If they creaae down,
they are too long in the
crotch area. They may creaw
up in front and down in
back, or vice-veria. Thii ii
cauied by incorrect crotch
depth, length or curve. You
may find that you need to
adjuit your pattern piece.
Uiing the lengthen/ihorten
line, located ju»t above the
crotch area, m eaiure the
distance neceisary to length
en or ihorten crotch depth,
and draw a line parallel to
the exiiting line. Don't for
get to adjust your cutting
iinei. To change the shape
of the curve, redraw it, ad
ding fullnesi where needed.
Remember: hollowing out a
curve lengthens the crotch;
tilling m a curve shortens
it. Baste the seams and
try on for other minor
adjustmen*s.
WESTWOOD VILLAGE W e r e s e r v e t h e r ig h t
XrtSwLwY CLEMMONS, N.C. TO LIM IT Q UANTITIES
MOCKSVILLE.N.C. 766-9166
634-6213 NO DEALERS PLEASE
THURSDAY - SATURDAY
^DRUGS
S € ß 9 V fC £ • S e L £ C ríO f^ ¿ S :/ l^ / / ¡fffS
7 ож.
Ed a e
S h a v e C re a m
•1
47
(ИЯ 16 ОЖ.
T o m a to a n d
V e g e ta b le
Tomato &
Vegetable
ßgger
N E W
16 oz.
Aerosol
F le a K ille r
$ ^ 2 7
28'f Super
P la y te x
D e o d o ra n t T a m p o n s
> 2 ^ 7
/
No. AS-902
9 ОЖ. SImonIz
P re -S o fte n e d
C a r W a x
Detergent $ ^ 3 7
Resistant 2
Easily Applied In
100's
T y le n o l
Extra Strength Capsules
4 ОЖ.
Cutex
P o lis h
R e m o v e r
6 7 *
12 ОЖ.
A g r e e
Shampoo OR
Cream Rinse
YOUR CHOICE
S187
NO. AS-186N
-----17 ox.----
G r e a s e E a te r
Auto Engine Scour
Foaming Action
S |9 9
1 Pack SX-70 Time-Zero
P o la ro id
C o lo r Film Тшпв-Zi
Polaroici
60's Regular
O n e -A -D a y
V ita m in s
3 5 7
No. 76 2 quart
Ice C re a m F re e ze r
"Mini Freezer"
Hand Operated
P o lle n e x
P u re A i r " 9 9 "
air cleaner
and
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24*’
>Ç99
E v e n -U p
T a n n in g B la n k e t
R a d io
Miniature Portable
No. 7-2500
GE FM/AM
1 3 * ’
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H a w a iia n T ro p ic
Dark Tanning Oil
2 * 9
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V is in e E y e D ro p s
S Piece
A u t o
C le a n -U p K it
s r a N O
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Spray-For-Rellef
of Sunburn Pain
> 2 2 7
A m m e n s
P o w d e r
S177
________;________jy t A s m A iS -w %jr<BtS 111 V S li i W l 1
f= B a b y
M a g ic B a th
S |8 8
P o la ro id 's
O n e S te p
Instant
Camera
•29*«
Giant Bars
Fla -V o r-lc e
Just ^ееже 'em
and Eat 'em
9 9 '
Q Tip s
S w a b s
9 9 «
2.25 oz.
D e s itin O in tm e n t
For Diaper Rash
P o la ro id 's
T h e B u tto n
Instant Camera
S's
A lk a -S e ltz e r
Antacid Tablets
G r ill B ru sh
For Effortless
Cleaning Rust Proof
Steel
Bristles
set of 4
B a m b o o
P a p e r P la te H o ld e rs
4 / . 1 3 7
Box of 2 Raid
R o a c h T ra p s
La w n F u rn itu re S e t
3 piece by Sun Terrace
2 chairs 1 lounge
»27“
pr—----------.Л
ГТНЕ PRESCRIPTION PEOPLE"УЧ '
P H A R M A C Y ^
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O P T IC A L
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Donny Toms explained that on an average, each of his 106 cows produces 6 gallons of milk daily. This computes to $7 dally. High cost of feed, machbiery,
etc. soon eat away most of the proflt.
D a i r y F a r m i n g O n T h e I n c r e a s e I n D a v i e C o u n t y
Dairying is on the increase in Davie
Hnuntv ft IIMIIWUhI
This little Jersey calf is a pretty sight as tt struggles to stand oo spindly
legs. The registered calf however, will grow to contribute greatly to
dairying in Davie County.
Carolina.
During the past year, three people
began local dairy operations with four
other forming partnerships or leasing
local dairy farm s. To date, there are M
grade A dairies and four manufactured
producers in the county. Collectively,
they m ilk approxim ately 4,000 dairy
cows daily.
Bill Mainous, local agriculture ex
tension agent said the amount of income
generated in Davie by dairy farm ers
shows its importance.
Local dairy farm s generate $8 million
annually from the sale of m ilk, dairy
cows and calves.
“This is the largest source of
agriculture income in the county, said
Manious.
Despite the increase in local dairy
farm s, it is still an expensive endeavor.
Gone are the days of the sm all time
operations.
M odem dairy farm ers are business
men well equipped to handle m ajor
decision. Success Is based upon precise
record s of herd m ilk productions,
reproduction, disease control and other
factors.
A i№w №eid in D ayie is th^leasinK.9f .
d aily farm s by owners who no longer
utilize facilities.
Mainous commented that m any young
people wishing to enter dairy farm ing do
not have the capital to invest in land,
equipment and cattle.
He said that an average investment of
$4,000 per cow is needed in a modem
dairy operation. This includes one acre
of land on which to graze the cow, feed,
necessary equipment to m ilk the cow,
and other factors. With an average herd
size of 40 to SO cows, a young farm er
wishing to start his own dairy farm
needs an initial investment of $160,000 to
$200,000.
Leasing dairy farm s, a new trend,
offers young dairym en another option.
They can lease some equipment, bam
facilities and land for substantially less
than buying it.
This frees up more funds for purchase
of dairy cattle, feed and other essentials.
Roy Beaucham p off Highway 158
found the lease proposition ad-
vantsgeous for his dairy operatioa. Ia
T iin a te seventies, Beauchamp' was no
longer able to handle his dairy operation
on his own.
Through the local agricultural ex
tension office, he was able to leam of
potential dairym en interested in leasing
his farm .
Robin and Donny Toms of Virginia,
took over operation of his dairy farm
eleven months ago. They lease his bara,
equipment and 60 acres of land.
The Toms own 106 Holstein cows.
Milking starts at 4:30 a.m . and again at
2:30 p.m. Beaucham p commented that
there have been some minor problems,
b ^ a s a whole, the lease agreem ent has
worked out well in his situation.
Donny Toms is also pleased with the
lease agreement. He said so far, his only
problem is finding enough crop land to
grow grain. He has 100 acres in com , but
needs more.
The Bud Blackwelder farm on High
w ay 601 North is another dairy recently
m ade operational through a lease
agreement.
Just three weeks ago, Ed Ettinger of
Washington, D.C. signed a 7 year lease
with the Blackwelders.
At present, he has a herd of 45
registered Jerseys.
Bttinger commented that the „lease
agreement has allowed him a chance to
start a dairy operation. “ I Just couldn’t
finance a farm of m y own,” he said.
“This way I can lease their faculties and
increase m y herd.”
Dealing with all registered Jerseys,
Ettinger hopes to build his business
through breed stock.
Bill Mainous explained that locally,
over 12 million dollars is invested on
dairy farm s, and over 30 people other
than owners are employed on local dairy
(continued on 3-D)
Ed Ettinger of Washlnicould afford to start h_________, ,
farmer needs an initial Investment of
Ml, D.C. said that a leaie agreement is the only way he own dairy operation. For a privately owned dairy, a
I|4,0f0percow.
June Is Dairy Month
June is D airy Month and local
dairym en are hosthig special activitiM
in observance of the event.
Bill Mainous, county agricultural
extension chairm an said Sunday June 7
has been set aside as “ Dairy D ay” in
Davie County.
Local d aily farm ers will set up
displays from 2 to 4 p.m. June 7 in three
locations hi Davie. Locations include
Foster Rauch Drug parldng lot hosted
by Ervhi Angell; Ellis Center on High
way 601 South hosted by Johnny Allen;
and at M ac’s Food hi Hillsdale hosted by
Wayne Lutz.
The purpose of a local Dairy Day is to
acouaint residents with local dairy
farmers, and th e ___
displays' including baby calves
each of the three locations.
F ree literature concerning the dairy
industry in Davie County and the state
will be distributed. Also, free ice cream
supplied by the Davie D airy Association
will be given to all hi attendance.
Bill Mainous, local extension chah:-
man, will visit all three locations Sunday
to answer questions concerning Dairy
month and the local d ah y industry.
“This is the fhvt time the D airy
Association has held observed D ahy
month in sich a m anner,” said Mainous.
“ We feel the pubUc could benefit greatly
from it, and urge everyone to attend.”
S t o r y b y K a t h y T o m lin s o n
P h o to s b y R o b in F e r g u s s o n
Robin and Donny Toms handle tbeir IM dairy cow operation with ease. They have found their lease operation very agreeable.
Even the modern dairy farmer needs a dog to berd cattle. This pet stands close by to obey his master’s commands.
к
ЛП IMVI1-: rOUNTY l'NTr.RPRISU RRCORD, THURSDAY, JUNK 4, 1981
Green Meadows Reach - Out Evangelism
Special recognition w as
given to the graduates from
various schools at Green
Meadows Church on Sunday
morning: Karen Zimmerman
and Marty Carter of Davie
High, David Grindle of West
Forsyth and Jennifer Cheek of
Salem Academy. They were
each presented a book entitled
'Only the Beginning.’’
The "B ap tist W om en”
M issions group m et on
Monday night at the home of
Mrs. Pearl Matthews.
A “ Backyard Bible School”
sponsored by the Bible Study
group at Green Meadows is
scheduled June 8-12, at the
home of Mrs. Charles Kilby.
A Bible School will be spon
sored by the "B ap tist
Women” at Cedar Forrest in
Farmington.
The Bible Study Group will
have their June meeting at
the lakeside of Mrs. Minnie
Cornatzer on Tuesday, June 9.
Following the study session
will be a picnic lunch and
fishing; weather permitting.
Rev. C. E . Crawford has
been transferred from Davie
County Hospital to the Fran
Ray Rest Home in Mocksville.
M rs. R ichard Sm ith
sustained a badly injured
hand last week while helping
her husband work on the
pump and well. It’s beginning
to look as if Gloria is very
accident prone; first there
was a broken arm than an
injured foot and now the hand.
The first “ Night Under the
Stars” session for the sum
m er at Green Meadows was
held on Sunday night with a
good group attending.
Follow ing the service
everyone enjoyed serveral
pies brought in for a favorite
pie sampling.
Mrs. Sallie Riddle’s con
dition seems to be slightly
improved at this time
The Youth Led Revival at
Green Meadows will be held '
this year June 14-17. This
years youth coming to lead
will be: Dana Warren from
M eredith C ollege, C hristie
Dorman from Wake Forest
College and David Cox from
G ardner W ebb C ollege.
Young people throughout this
area are invited to come and
share in these services.
Fulton M ethodist
To O bserve
1 9 81 H om ecom ing
Fulton U nited M ethodist
Church will observe annual
Homecoming on Sunday, June
7. Special services will begin
with Sunday School at 9:45
a.m.
Morning Worship Service
will be held at 11 a.m . Form er
pastor, Rev. Alvin Latham
will deliver the Homecoming
m essage. R ev. Latham
served as pastor of Fulton
Church from 1959 to 1962.
A m em orial service,
rem em bering those church
mem bers who have died since
last Homecoming w ill be h dd
at tte close of the worship
service. Mr. Taylor Howard,
lay leader at Advance United
Methodist Church and the
church choir w ill provide
special rnimlc.
Fellowship lunch will be
served at 12:30 in the church
fellowship hall. There will be
no afternoon se rv ice this
year.
Rev. Tony Jordan, pastor
invites all m em bers, past
m em bers and visitors to
attend these special services.
Cornatzer News
CAUDELL
LUMBER CO.
1238 Bin^uun Street.
• TIe,N.C.
)NE 624-216У
DAVIE TRACTOR
& IMPLEMENT
CO.
*Ford Faiming-SalM and
Service.
New Holland Equipment
PHONE 634-5969 .
A Com|dete1le|Ndir! «
MARTIN
HARDWARE &
General Mifse. :
Feedf, Dry Goods
Oroceriet, Fertílicer
PHONE 634-2128
EATON
FUNERAL HOME
328 N. Main Street
^ocluviU«, N.C.
PHONE 634-2148
C.A. SEAFORD
LUMBER CO.
Jericho Road
Mocksville, N.C.
PHONE 634-5148
J.P. GREEN
MILLING
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daisy FLOUR
We Сш1ою IHend ^
524 D«|M>t Street
PHONE 634 21^6
Reach Out E van gelism
Team of Jim m y and
M argaret Hinson conducted
Reach Out Revival Services
in the Penn Memorial BapMst
Church of Reidsville, N.C..
April 19-24. The services
began on Sunday morning:
with the Hinson sharing witti
the children and youth from
9:45 to 10:30 a.m. H ie first
revival service w as conducted
at 11:00 a.m ., the sermon was
entitled, “ What Brings Joy on
Earth and in H eaven." There
was 158 present for this
service. The evening service
at 7:30 p.m. was the Sunday
School at night and the ser
mon entitled, “ Reach Out to
Jesus.” Monday evening was
the children’s night and the
Hinsons met with the children
for a hot dog supper and
shared with Sally Sunshine
the muppet. Tuesday evening
was youth night and the
Hinsons m et with the youth
for a pizza supper and then
shared special activities with
them. Revival services these
two evenings at 7:30 p.m. and
the sermons w ere “ What Do
You Give Your Children and
The Tem ptations of
T een agers and Their
P a r e n t s .” W e d n e s d a y
evening w as Fam ily night and
the sermon was “ Friction in
the F am l^ or Harmony In the
H om e.” Thursday evening
w as P ack-a-P ew and th«
serm on w as "T h e T h ree
Comings of Jesus Christ.”
Friday evening was Bring
Your Neighbor Night and the
serm on, "W hat Kind of
Neighbor Are You?” There
w ere decisions to accep t
Jesus Christ and requests for
baptism and church m em
bership. llie pastor Is Rev.
Grady Nowell and the m usic
w as led by Brenda Apjde.
_ .Reach Out R evlva l^ rvlces
were conducted In the Enon
Chapel Baptist Church of
Midway Park, N.C., just off
the Cam p Lejune U .S .^ arin e
Base, near Jacksonville, N.C.
Ih e services began on Sunday
morning, April 26 and con
tinued through F rid ay
evening, May I. The Hinsons
met with the children grades
1-6 and the youth grades 7-12
at 9:45 a.m. and 10:30 a.m .
The morning service was at
11:00 a.m. with over 300
presen t. S ervices w ere
conducted each evening at
7:30 p.m. and special em
phasis were the following:
Children, Youth, Fam ily and
Neighbors Nights, th ere w ere
several accep tin g Jesus
O irist, requesting baptism
and church membership, and
many other decisions to live
and witness for Jesus Christ
in the homes, church and
community. The pastor is
Rev. P au l Odum . W hile
serving In this m inistry the
Hinsons stayed In the Hostess
House of the Marine Base and
were given pass privilege and
a tour of the M lUUry Base.
Ih e base covers som e 20
square m iles and there are
som e 40,000 M arines and -
fam ily m em bers on the base.
B ib le School
At B ear Creek
Vacation Bible School will
be held at Bear Creek Baptist
Church the week of June 15
through June 19, each evening
from 7 o’clock until 9 o’clock.
a a sse s for all ages will be
provided; and a nursery will
be held for those who need It.
IMayonnaise w ai invented
in the 1760’t by France's
D u e d e Rich • li e u .
La Lech e League To M eet M onday
The Comatzer-Dulin Ladles
Auxiliary will m eet at the fire
station on Tuesday, June 9 at
7:30.
Aaron C arter underwent
surpery at Baptist Hospital
last Friday.
Jim "Big-0” Boger is un
dergoing treatment In Davie
Cuuiily Hospital.
Velma Carter had surgery
at Forsyth Hospital last week
and is expected to return
home soon.
Recent visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. George Barney were Mr.
and Mrs. Ray Haneline of
Winston-Salem and George
Lawrence of Cornatzer.
Clara Barney, Ella Smith,
B essie and G lad ys Jones
visited Daniel Boone’s Cave In
Davidson County and visited
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Jacobs In
Cooleemee last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Weldon Allen
spent a weekend recently with
Mr. and Mrs. Jam es Shoaf In
Marlon, S.C.
M embers and their families
of the Cornatzer B aptist
Church choir enjoyed a
cookout at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Danny Day Sunday
afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Jones
spent last weekend with Mr.
and M rs. Charles Nichols In
Rock Hill, S.C.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Frye
visited their ion, Wayne F i ^
in Sm ith G rove Saturday
night. Wayne has been sick
recently.
Harvey Potts was honored
with a cookout Sunday
evening for his birthday at the
home of M r. and M rs. Terry
Potto. Those attending were
his children and gran d
children and his b roth m and
sisters.
D orothy Chaplin, M odell
Mundey, M argaret, Sharon
returned from a bus tour to
Boston, Mass.
A ggie Caudle has been
confined to her home for a few
days with a virus.
Aaron Carter returned to
his home from the hospital
Monday.
Mr. and M rs. Homer Potto,
Sharon, E va and Roy Potto
were Sunday luncheon guesto
of Mrs. Lena W all at her home
on Baltim ore Road.
Cooleemee
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Hayes of
B revard , form erly of
Cooleem ee, ylslted friends
here Sunday. They cam e
e sp ecially to attend the
wedding of Miss lin a Brown.
Mr. and Mrs. L.B. Owen of
Burlington were the Saturday
night guesto with Mr. and
Mrs. BUI White. They spent
Sunday w ith rela tives in
S alisbury before returning
home.
Jam es (Son) Cuthrell
continues to Im prove In
Row an M em orial H ospital
where he has been undergoing
treatment for more than a
week.
M arty K u rfees returned
home Monday from Rowan
M em orial H ospital after
undergoing surgery on M sy
!W.. .V
The Cooleem ee Senior
Citizens will m eet Monday,
June 8, In the fellowship hall
of the First Baptist ChuKh at
10 a.m.
All m em bers are asked to
bring sandwiches.
Chop tom e fruit fIsvored gel
atin Si a garnish to top freth
fruit cup. Givei it a froity
expensive look and taste.
The Lewisville-Clemmons
group of La Leche League will
meet Monday, June 8, 1981 at
9:30 a.m. at 540 Drumheller
Road, Clemmons. The topic
w ill be "N utrition and
Weaning.”
La Leche League is a group
of women interested in en
couraging and helping others
who have an interest in
hrnaiitfppdlng. B abies and
children are welcome, as are
any wom en who are In
terested in leam ing the art of
breasUeedlng.
F or m ore inform ation
contact: Debbie Seato a* 9(8-
4194 or Jennifer Bland at 786-
5808.
D ixon-Shelton
R eunion Ju n e 14
m e annual Dlxon-Shelton
Reunion w ill be held on
Sunday, .June 14, 1981, at
Bonkin L ake, Route 5,
M ocksville, N.C.
Lunch will be served at 1:00
i.m. Come and bring a well
■ basket.
A T T E N T I O N
M E D I C A R E R E C I P I E N T S
(Including Those On Medicar« Because Of Disability)
EFFECTIVE JAN. 1,19 8 1 THE MEDICARE DEDUCTIBLE
m e d i c a r e r e c ip ie n t sMIJST NOW .PAY THE FIRST (204.00 OF THEIR HOSPITAL
uI e t HESEb EN EFITSIN 1081.BILL M ANY OF YO U W ILL I
NOW AVAILABLE
BY M EDICARE) FOR EACH B E N E F lf PERIOD.
P R E -E X IS T IN G C O N D IT IO N S
A R E C O V E R E D IM M E D IA T E L Y !!
FOR FUTHER INFORM ATION SEND IN THIS COUPON
HuiTN iNMMiia/uiocum tm turn w.. i—wioio, n.c vm
N A M E ..A G E .
A D D R E S S ..P H O N E _
I
I C IT Y .ZIP.
_ _*1P BAPTIST CH. Voo*en.
d-Cthhabi Communi^ Building
'<&IURCH « F GOD, Cootoemee, Nxi.I '
tNO CREEK Р К Ш т У П Д Т ПБТ
.Ó A rA b^ Ñ T ÍST
1ал1.?а4п.
GREEN idiix BAran- äfÜRCH Located two mflet off tiw Hkhm y 64. Gwen Hffl R o a d .______^ev^stmjleilgemclc; P««tnr
5.5. ~ 9 :9 ajn.
Wotihip 10:10 a jn.Ew änf 7:00 pjn.Wedneiday 7:00 pja.
MOCKSVILLE WESLEYAN CHURCH
Rev. Bob Soott Hoipltal St., Mockiyflk
5.5. 9:4S ajn.
Wotihip ll:00ajn.
Evening 7:00 pjn.
ADVANCE BAPTIST CHURCH
CEDAR CREEK BAPTIS№ CHURCH
FIRST UNITED METOODIST CHURCH
Rev. George Auman ;5.5. 10:00 ajn.
Wonhlp , 11:00 ijn.
MOCKS UNITED METOODIST CHURCH
YADKIN VALLEY BAPUST CHURCH
CHINQUAPIN GROVE BAPTIST CHURCjH
EDGEWOOD BAPTIS1«CHURCH
SMITH GROVE BAPTIST CHURCH
CORNATZER BAPTIST CHURCH
♦ORK BAPTIST C H U R (^
6 nUei Eait on Hwy. b4 84. ■ 9:4S a.m.Wonhlp 11:00a.m.
Ewning 7:20 pjn.
CORNATZER UNITED M EIH. CHURCH
UNION CHAPEL V. METOODIST CHURCH'
tLBAVILLE U. METOODIST CHURCH
OAK GROVE U. METOODIST CHURCH
CENTER UNITED METHODIST CHURCH '
SALEM UNITED METOODIST CHURCH
UBERTY UNITED METOODIST CHURCH '
ADVANCE UNITED METOODIST CHURCH
№ Ili№ ij№ M U. HETOODlST CHURCH (
HARDISON U. METOODIST CHURCH
TRINITY BAPTIST CHURCH Gene Blackbutn, Putof *Route 4, MocktviUe
5.5. 10:00 ijn.
Woiiliip ll:00i.m.Evening 7:00 p.m.
Wedpeiday 7:00 pjn.
A.M.E. ZION HETOODlST CHURCH
D U U N METOODIST CHURCH
COOLEEMEE U. METOODIST CHURCH i
Rev. Alien Titigml^^
DUTCHMAN CREEK BAPTIST CHURCH'
HOPE BAP'riST TABERNACLENoinuin S. Frye, PiitoiSJS. 9:45 ».m.Wofihip 10:45 «.m.
Evangeliitic 7:30 pjn. ‘Wednexlay 7:30 p.m.
HOLY CROSS LUTHERAN CHURCH
5.5. 9:45 ■.m.Woiihip ll:00«.m.
HE WILL HEAR
"Wliich of you thill have ■ friend,
•nd ihall go unto him at midnight,
■nd tay unto him. Friend, lend me
three loaves." (Luke 11:S)
So your prayer* are not aniwered?
Let me make a uiggeitlon. Read
this paua^ In Luke carefully,
and then In the privacy of youi
-own-foom^-Read it a)^n-see^t. -
See Him who telli it.
Now act It out. At midnight, when
tha houte It ttlll and quiet. Imitate
that man. Knock loudly at God't
door. Call out to Him with the
Intensity of the man who knocked
at hit friend's door. Run the ritk
of naiifhliort or family memliert
tieing ditquleted should your
utterances tie heard.
Read carefully what he did and
uid. Kle needed three loaves to
give his friends. It was not for
himself. It was for others.
What Is your need? Name It-
out loud-name it and keep on
naming It. This is no prayer that
is quietly whispered on carpeted
knees. This Is a frontal attack on
Haavan's Gates.
"Friend, I have need of three
loaves. It is midnight and the food
Is for them. I have suddenly been
surprised by their presence in my
houie. Now I am at tha door of
your housel Friend, I have need
of three loaves and I will not go
away until I get them!"
Knock man I Knock! Cry out,
madamf Cry outi If He IS your
friend. He will hear-and He
wili answer!
-Paul M. Stevens
++++++++++++++++f++
ATTEND CHURCH THIS WEEK +++++++++++++++++++
eco*inllvA am lW ni 1976
• 10 our reedtn. Wa «will j • itiim and pgy §1.00 for M di itom риЫЫмё. to th* c«o of «
ofD obaalim ialM liM n. AddrHi luim u "ao«'i Г1я M kiuM ." е м 121i;, Гол Worth. Т » . 71111
^ N O I^A TTO N A L
^ '^ « ■ lító p jn ;. 6 :3 ^ jn .
| ; ¿ o o p á .
_______________F Ä L C H Ö R a r
OF THE G O O D SHEPHERD Rev. WOUi M. Roienthal, Piiatt
Sermon 9:30 ajn.
5.5. 10:50 ajn.
SEAR CREEK BAPTIST CHURCH
REDLAND PENTECOSTAL HOLINESS
Rev. Paul C. Ledbetter
S£. 10:00 ajn^Wordi^ ll:00ajn.
Lifeliners 6:00 pjn.
EvangeUstic 7:00 pjn.Wedneiday 7:00 pjn.
FARMINGTON METOODIST CHURCH Worship lit Sun. 10 ajn.
3id Sun. 11 ajn.
5.5. lit Sun.ll ajn.
2,3,4 Sunday 10 ajn.
WESLEY CHAPEL METO. CHURCH
Wonhip lit Sun. 11 ajn.
3td Sun. 10 ajn.5.5. > 3rd Sun. 11 ajn.> 1,2,4 Sunday 10 ajn.
Wotihip
Ä d a y
ST. FRANCIS OF ASSISI CHURCH Sat. e v e ^ anticipatory Man • 5 p.m. Sunday MonUwi 10 ajn.
Rectory No. 634-2973
N O R n ^ A IN S T .C H l DonalfflgMman, Miniit
SJ5. ' 10:0
FARMINGTON В ^ Ш Т CHURCH '
Мшп. Woiship /?:Ma*m.’Yo^th Tiaining Uniun 7:0()p.m.
. CHURCH OF CHRIST , Mlniitei
, 10:00 ajn.
Worihlp ‘ S 11:00 a.m.
Evening 7:00 p.m.
Wedneiday 7:30 p.m.
TOE EPISCOPAL CHURCH
Canon C. Nichols, Pastor Fork, N.C. »
Aicedon 10:00 a.m.
WotMp 11:00 a.m.
Wedneiday 7:15 p.m.
LIBERTY WESLEYAN CHURCH .Kenneth Davii, Putor
M(X:KSVILin PENTECOSTAL
Holineu, H. Gariy Yeatti, Miniitei SS. 10.00 a.m.Wotihip 11:00 a.m. "
Evangeliitic 7:00 p.m.Wedneiday 7:30 p.m.
MACEDONIA MORAVIAN CHURCHRev. lohn Kapp, Pastoi
S.S. 10:00 a.m.
WotsMp 11:00 a.m.Youth Fci. 6:30 pjn.
Evening 7:30 p.m.
GREEN MEADOWS BAPTIST CHURCHRev. David E. Robeits
S£. 10:00 a.m.
Woiship 11:00 a.m.B.T.U. 6:30 p.m.
Evening 7:30 pjn.
WedneMlay 7:30 pjn.
Th UNTSVILLE METHODIST CHURCH" Wotihip 2nd Sun. 10 a.m.
4th Sun. 11 a.m.
(s:
rCCEMENT GROVE CHURCH OF GOD I.W. (jamei, Pastoi
5.5. 10:00 ajn.
Woidiip 1:00 p.m.
Evening^''edneiday 8:00 pjn. ‘ i
lEW BETHELÄSSEMBLY OF GOD5.5. 10:00 a.m.
I Motning Worship 11 too a.m.
Evening Wotihip 7:00 p.m. jRotaiy Hut,_Rey. JeiiyCati '
f IJAMES BAPTIST CHURCH 'S.S. 9:45 a.m.Wotihip 11:00 a.m.
JERICHO CHURCH OF CHRIST
Jericho Road-Office 492-5291
(itttdlrig Lowiy, Miniitei____
MOUNT OLIVE METOODIST CHURCH Wotihip 2nd Sun. 11 a.m.
4th Sun. 10 ajn.
5.5. 4th Sun. 11 a jn.1,2, 3 Sundays 10 a.m.
COMMUNITY BAPTIST CHURCH Gladstone Raod
Community Baptist CUditone Road
9:45a.m.11:00 ajn.6:00 p.m.7:30 pjn.
BLAISE BAPTIST CHURCH ' Rev. Jimmy Martin, Paitor
,SS. 9:50 a.m.
IWorAip 11:00 a.m.Evening 7:00 p.m.Wedneiday 7:30 pjn.
•CHESTNUT GROVE U. METOODIST
BAILEY’S CHAPEL U. METOODIST
FULTON UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
BETOEL UNITED METOODIST CHURCH
SMITO GROVE U J№ TOODIST CHURCH
ZION UNITED METOODIST CHURCH
NEW UNION U. METOODIST CHURCH
EATON'S BAPTISTCHURCH
S.S. 10:00 i.m.Wonhip 11:00 ajn.
TtainingU. 7:00 p.m.
TTABERNACLE
15.5.
TVoiihip
;GbSPEL BAPTIST CHURCH'
IRI. 5, Mockiville, N.C. 270285.5. 10 ajn.
Wotihip Setvioe 11 ajn.
Sun. Evening Wotihip 7:00 pjn.
Bible Study Wed. Evening 7:00 pjn.';_Rev. A.E. Gfintrv Pittrr
BIXBY PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
5.5. 10:00 a.m. M otn^ Woiship 11:00 a.m. Evening Wutsiiip 7 (H) pjn.
Ru^tt L. Ciewi, Pallor
10:00 a.m. 11:00 ajn.
J Road5.5. 9:45 ajn.
Wotihip 11:00 ajn.
Evening 7:30 pjn.
Wednesday 7:30 p.m.
JERUSALEM BAPTIST CHURCH ~5.5. 10:00 ajn.
Wotriiip 11:00 ajn.Evening 7:00 pjn.
SHILOH BAPTIST CHURCH
CHURCH OF THE LIVING GOD, BUby
CHURCH OF G OD OF PROPHECY Rev.(!ha'Route 4, —
^E^heaui) 6:
Mom Woiship Sun Night 'Wed. } ^ t
-3392
10 a.m.11 a.m. 7:30 pjn. 7:30^^m.
CONCORD UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
CLARKSVILLE PENTECOSTAL HOLINESS Rev. Albeit Gentle Route 5, Mocicsville SS. 10:00 ajn.Wotihip__ 11:00 ajn.
t'lRST B iU ^S T CHURCH (Zooleemee
,Rev. L. Lae Whitlock, Paitor «.S. 7:30 a.m.Jt 9:45 a.m.Chiidieni Cfauich 11a.m.
Wotihip 11a.m.
Evening 7:30 p.pi. jWadweday_________,7:30 p.». '
FARM&
GARDEN
SERVICE, INC.
961 Yadkinvffle Road
PHONE 634-2017 or
634-5964
FDSTER-RAÜCH
DRUG CO.
’Wilkefboro Street
PHONE 634-2141
F£ R№ ’S
MOBILE HOME
SERVICE
Rt. 5, Box 320-B
ModuviUe.N.C.
^(704)492-5636
JEFFCO
CO., INC.
Roi|te 1, Advance, N.C. .
Our staff and employees
encourage you to attend the
church of your choice.
SHEFFIELD
LUMBER &
PALLET
COMPANY
Route 6, Box 153
Mocksville, N.C.
PHONE 492-5565
COBLE
LIME &
FERTILIZER
SERVICE '
Cooleemee, N.C.ilwy. 801
kiainets Phone ' 2M-4354
lome Phone ( 284-2782
<■f
DAVin COUNTY HNTERPRISF, RRCORD, THURSDAY, JUNH 4, 1481 ^ ЯП
A r e a O b it u a r ie s
J. W. RODW ELL
John William Rodwell, Jr.,
77, of 149 Hemlock St., died at
hts home Sunday.
Graveside services were
conducted at 2 p.m. Tuesday
at Rose Cem etery by the Rev.
Charles Bullock.
Born M arch 3. 1904, in
Davie County, he was the son
of the late Dr. John WUliam
Rodwell and Qullla Em ily
Cain Rodwell. He attended
Mars Hill College and North
Carolina State U n iversity
School of Engineering. He
w as an electrical contractor
and a member of the First
Baptist Church in Mocksville.
■ He is survived by his widow,
M rs. M ary, W ilson Stone
Rodwell of the home; two
sisters, M rs. Louise R.
Meroney and Mrs. Em ily R.
^ rtm e ll, both of MocksviUe;
and two brothers, Jack D.
Rodwell of Holyoke, M ass.,
and John H. Rodwell of Glen
Burnie, Md.
W ILLISE J. SUITER
: Willise J. Suiter, father of
Julius E . Suiter, died in the
V eteran s A dm inistration
Hospital, Hampton, Virginia,
M ay 20, 1981.
M r. Suiter w orked for
Iwcnty-flve years with the
V irginia R ailroad, then
retired from the N orfolk
Naval Shipyard after twenty-
five years of service. He was a
m em ber of F irst B aptist
Church of Burdette, Virginia
and a member of Blooming
Light Lodge 132, Prince Hall
Affiliate, Free and Accepted
Masons.
Including the wife, other
survivors are one sister: Mrs.
M ary S. Bowers, Franklin,
Virginia; two sons: Julius E.
Suiter and Martin E. Suiter,
Chesapeake, Virginia; four
d au gh terr' M rs. V era S.
Beans, Brooklyn, New York;
Mrs. Josephine S. Wright,
Ham pton, V irgin ia; M rs.
M argaret S. Wesley, Virginia,
Beach, Virginia; Mrs. Linda
S u ite r-B a rn e s; N o rfo lk ,
Virginia; ten grandchildren
and a host of relatives and
friends.
The funeral service was
held M ay 24 in N orfolk,
Virginia: Hale Funeral Home
was in charge.
MRS. ETH EL N. CAUDILL
Mrs. Ethel Naylor Caudill,
85, of Route 2, North
Wilkesboro, widow of E arl L.
Caudill, Sr. died Wednesday
M av 27. 1981 at W ilkes
General Hospital.
M rs. Caudill w as born
February 22, 1896 at Smith
Grove to the late M ary Cash
and Frank A. Naylor.
S urviving ere two
daughters, Mrs. Wake (M ary)
Watts of North Wilkesboro
and Mrs. Eleanor Bouchelle
of Rt. 2, North Wilkesboro;
one son, E arl Leonard
Caudill, Jr. of Route 2, North
W ilkesboro; nine gran d
children; 14 great grand
children; one sister, Mrs.
John M. Groce of Route 3,
Mocksville.
Funeral services were held
at the Oak Grove Baptist
Church where she was a
m em ber. B u rial w as in
Mountlawn Memorial Park.
JOHN R. BROADW AY
John Richard Broadway,
43, of Cooleemee, N.C. died
Tuesday m oming at Davie
County Hospital after a long
illness.
Funeral services will be
held at 2 p.m. Thurtday at
Eatons Funeral Home Chapel
with the Rev. J, D. RevU
officiating. Burial will follow
in Liberty United Methodist
Church cem etery.
He was bom in Dnvie
County to Ruby G ales
Broadway and the late John
W. Broadway, March 3, 1938.
He was a m eat cutter for
Cooleemee Super M arket in
Cooleemee.
Survivors include his wife,
the form er Judy C arter
Broadway of the home; a
daughter, Paula Broadway of
the home; 3 sons, Richard
Broadway of Aberdeen, Md.,
Johnny and Gary Broadway
of the home; 1 foster son,
David Bailey Broadway of
Salisbury; his mother bf Rt. 7,
M ocksville; S sisters, Mrs.
P atsy L yerly of R t. 1,
M ocksville; Mrs. Becky West
and Mrs. M ary Bam ey both of
Rt. 4, M ocksville, Mrs. Ethel
Dockery of Wilkesboro, N.C.,
and Mrs. Hazel Waugh of Rt.
1, C larem ont, N .C .; 3
brothers, William Broadway
of Rt. 4, M ocksville, and Billy
and Arnold B roadw ay of
Route 7, MocksviUe.
The fam ily wiU receive
friends at Eaton’s Funeral
Home Chapel W ednesday
evening from 7 p.m . untU 9
p.m.
The Liberty Bell wat сам in
England in 17Б2 for the
P e n n iy lv a n ia StatehouM .
-----------------------------.M m ty e K t__________Etiiager’i registered Jersey*. AtalaoM Blackwelder Ъ a dairy lease agreement.
lirnuuiaadEd]leek over е м of
I Etilager a ad B a d
James Fowler
M ocksville Native On USS Nim itz
At Tim e Of May 26 Jet Crash
Jam es Fowler, a M ocksville native,
was sUnding on the top dcck ot the
aircraft carrier USS Nimitz at ap
proxim ately 11:30 p.m. Tuesday, May
26.
He left the deck just fifteen minutes
before a Marine radar Jamming jet
crashed onboard the ship, killing 14 and
injuring 48.
The incident, which occurred shortly
before midnight Tuesday, left a $100
mUlion path of destmction in its fiery
aftermath.
In a telephone conversation Thursday
with his mother, Mrs. Jam es Fowler, Sr.
of MocksviUe, young Fowler described
the crash as “sounding like tbe ship was
being bombed.
“ I w as on a lower deck when I heard a
big boom ," said Fowler. "W e didn’t
know what was happening. I thought the
ship was being bombed.”
Capt. Jack B atzler, com m anding
officer of the Nimitz, said the Marine
radar Jamming Jet began to land "not In
the right position.”
The plane clipped a helicopter, three
A-7's, went broadside into an F-14 and
flipped over onto the catw alk.
Firefighters aboard ship worked 70 to 80
minutes to extinguish flam es.
A Dentalman, Fowler was one of
m any m edics sununoned to aid in
treating the 48 Injured persons. Fowler
commented that he spent the rest of the
night working with the injured and
preparing others for transport to bum
centers in Texas and Florida.
Fow ler’s famUy in MocksvUle learned
of the crash and the deaths around 9:00
a.m . Wednesday moming.
"I tried to get in touch with Navy
officials to leam if Jam es was a lri^ t,”
said M is. Fowler. There was, of course,
no w ay to get in touch wilh the ship.
"W e spent the day glued by the
television and telephone Just waiting for
some kind of news.”
She added that she caUed the Navy
Recruiter in Salisbury to see if there was
some w ay he could leam if her son was
among the 14 victim s. M rs. Fowler waa
told she would receive official
notification from the N avy if her son was
included among the dead or bijured.
Dental Technician James Fowler of Mocksville was on board the USS
Nimitt during two tragic imt iiistorical moments...First, when 8 helicopters were launched In an attempt to free S3 American hostages in Iran, and again last Tuesday when a Jet crashed onboard leaving 14 dead and 48 injured.
The USS Nimitz arrived Thursday at
its home port in NorfoUt, Virginia
carrying the bodies of those kUled hi the
fiery crash.
Young Fowler caUed home just as
soon as possible after the Nimitz docked*
Mrs. Fowler described the telephone
caU as "something from heaven.”
“ I can’t describe the relief I felt when
Jam es caUed,” said his mother. "He
told m e about leaving the top deck Just
15 minutes before the crash and about
how awful the whole ordeal w as.”
"I was relieved and very happy to
learn that he was alright,” she said.
The USS Nimitz w as expected to be in
dock from Thursday until Saturday
afternoon. ^
After granted a leave, Fowler drove
from Norfolk, Va. to MocksviUe Friday.
It was a short visit. He arrived at his
home at 11:25 p.m . Friday, but was
forced to leave at 2:00 a.m . Saturday
morning in order to m ake it back to the
USS Nimitz on time.
The Nimitz saUed Saturday aftemoon
resumime its training cruise. Though
short, Mrs. Fowler found her son’s
unexpected visit very welcomed.
IronicaUy, it was the sam e thne last
year (June 5, 1980) that Jam es Fowler
' and the USS Nimitz were featured in the
Enterprise-Record. Fowler had just
retum ed home after the ships 144 day
cruise of the Indian Ocean and Arabian
Sea.
It was from the USS Nimitz that 8
helicopters were launched April 34,19S0,
in an attempt to rescue 53 Am erican
hostages in Iran. The rescue mission
was aborted, however, when one of the
helicopters crashed, killing 8 crew
members.
Fowler is scheduled to rem ain aboard
the Nimitz until sometime in Octobw,
1981. At this time, he wUl be stationed at
a Naval base in North CaroUna.
Two North Carolinians were kUled hi
the M ay 26 crash onboard the Nhniti.
They are M arine Capt. Elwood M. Arm
strong, 28, of Havelock; and M arine 1st
Lt. Laurence D. Cragun, 30, Cherry
Point, N.C.
Daiiying
IrD)_____
farm s. Over 1 mUlioa doUars was tai-
vested hi new construction and bn-
provements during 19Ю while m any
businesses w ere discussin g ca p ital
bnprovements.
Mainous commented that dairy far
m ers all over the state w ere caught in a
fhiancial squeeze last year. Ib e cost of
produchig mUk Jumped 18.6 percent, but
miUt prices increased by only 11.2
percent.
“ Local farm ers contribute greatly to
the bicome hi Davie County,” said
Mahuxis. "It is a 24 hour a day Job, but
cne that can provide a stable income of
dahTm en are wiUtaig to give the thne
and effort necessary to m ake it a suc
cess.”
He added that he is very pleased with
local lease operations. “ It can assure
that Davie County conthiued to grow hi
the production of d ab y products,” he
said.
b o a r d ** ****“ *** ** before a radar Jam m in g M arine Jet crashed i
Ths longsst hot ipall on rsoord occurrsd in MarbI* Bar, West Australia, when tha averaga tamparatur* wai 100 dagra«« Fahrenheit or ahova for 162 oontacutiva dayi.
Donna Toms is right at home in the milking parlor. The modem dairy
luilkb approximately 25 lo 30 cows per hour.
1 4 . 7 4 1 %
Tbot% w bafB8№ now paying
on 6-ями|||| Money noffcet ceffificiolK*
That’e our annual interest rate this week on six>month certifi*
cates. The minimum deposit is $10,000 and the rate is subject to
chansre at renewal.
F e d e r a l t e g u la liu n s r e q u ir e a s u b s t a n t ia l Щ Ж 1 Ж Э e
in t e r e s t p e n a lt y fo r e a r ly w it h d r a w a l a n d p r o B f l W J L
h ib it t h e c o m p o u n d in g o f in t e r e s t .
ABSOLUTE
AUCTION
S A T U R D A Y , J U N E 6
lO tO O A JW .
Completa Invantory-FixturM & Partonal Proparty
Of Tha Uta Mr. ROBERT H- KING'S (Stora)
Davia County Hwy, 801 3 Milas Watt Of 1-40
tT^MS s a l e in c l u d e
Com pM a stock of Shelf Itami-Nttlonal Cash Raglitar-
Adtfhig Machina-Stors Scale« 30 Lb.-Old Pine Bench-
Ciedit Card M8chine>Typewritar-Knlfa Caie-2 Q lau
Top Showcaief-Glau Floor Showcaia-Coca Cola Drink
Box- JI.P Coati Thread DUplay Rack- Uarga Milk Bottle
W/ Co'.v-Coca Cola Picnic Box- SM ttett Clock-Stralsht Raxors-Advortiiing Thermomatarf- UrdCan»- BucKet*
and Tubi-Hand Truck- Q 13 Inner Tuba- H aivy D uty Skill Saw-Electric DrIII-Stora Stuff Advertldng-Nall
Keg-Wlndow Fan- 20” Gallxle Fant-RJR Tabacco
Cutter-Catt Iron Pant- Oak Canter Table- Several
Chalrf-Baveled Mirror Drener-Wath Pot-Footed Bath
Tub- Liberty Bell Radlo^Sat) WhKehouse Vinegar
JugtO ld Chefarobe (Nlca)>Nlce Qulltt-Bedipraaat
Il Blankets-Stone Jars-Daep Fryeri-GoMlp BanchOld
ln>ulator«-Snuff GlaHas-EMctrolux Vacuum Cleaner-
Dazey Churn-Whlckar BaAet-D ratier WHh Mlrror-
Croif Cut Saw-M lK. Hand Toolt-Vantty Stools-Baauty
KK-Mltc. Dllhei-M ANY OTHER MISC. ITEMS!!!
IM t or 52 "G ’’ Allli-Chalm eri Tractor WKh CultUatori.
Lett and Right Hand Turning Plowi, Section Drag Harrow,
DIk Harrow, Corn Plantar and Hay Rake. Tractor Ii In Good Condition and Hai Naw Rubber.
SALE CONDUCTED FOR:MRS.ALMA KING
tS IS fliX ffS ilfS S S ffJ S S S B ^
Effective 1 ue»day. J иле 2 thru Monday, June 8.1981.
T
S A L E C O N D U C T E D B Y
J I M S H E E K AuaioN
JIM SHEEK. AUCTIONEER
UC. Il BONDED. NCA L 924
P. O. BQX »03 PH. 634-3611
MOCKSVILLE. N. C. 270^8 •
■OT K SfOaSIIU IN u u or IHIUI« ot U)SSOf ANY TYPE
C e n tral C aro lin a B a n k
Monq^ M arket C ertifícate
im i
R a t e g o o d J u n e 2 t h r o u g h J u n e 8 .
T h i s i s t h e h i g h e s t i n t e r e s t r a t e o f f e r e d b y
a n y b a n k i n N o r t h C a r o l i n a . M i n i m u m d e p o s i t
i s $ 1 0 , 0 0 0 f o r a s i x - m o n t h t e r m . __________
(ХВЗО-Month Certificate of E)cposit
A minimum dqxwil of Jl,(KX) i.s
iet|uiri'd. lan Ix’ aimixnindfd
i|uarH‘ily and lifl in yonr ucrounl, or
paid l)y t lift к al t hu end of eai h ijiiartcr.
Inierfst can even Ix- paid nuMilhly and
tr ansferrtxJ lo your re>;ular CCU с1ич k-
in>;orsavinj;suaouiil. Ка1е^;(хк1 Jiim (ЬгоидН Jnne n j g e i .
1 1 .7 5 ÍA n n iim
Federal regulations ret|uire that ue t har^e an interest ¡x-nally fui eurlv withdrawal
from a Money Markel Q-rtifieate and a 3()-Monlh Orlificate. Ac a)uiits now insured
up to $100.000 by FDIC.
CCRVifell help you find away.
1 J Meinlxrl DlC J
4П DAVIi; COUNTY líNTI- RPRISH RliCORì), THURSIMY, Л INI- 4, М)8|
June Events In North Carolina
There will be alol of hollerin’ in North
Carolina in June as contestants from far
and wide gather in Spivey’s Com er (or
the National Hollerin’ Contest on June 19
and 20.
There w ill be another special
gathering in June too as the people who
built and operated Tweetsie Railroad
wiii be honored at the Tweetaie Railroad
theme park in Blowing Rock on June 27.
June also m arks the opening of ihany
of North Carolina’s outdoor dram as
including “The Lost Colony" in Manteo
on June 12; "Unto These Hills” at
Cherokee on June 15; and "Horn In ’The
West” at Roone June 19, "The Immortal
Showboat” , the story of the U.S.S. North
Carolina, begins June 5 in Wilmington.
June also is a time of flowers with the
Rhododendron Festival at Bakersville
June 17-20. There will be music in the air
too as the Eastern Music Festival begins
in Greensboro June 30 and the Brevard
Music Festival opens June 26 in
Brevard. The annual "Singing on the
Mountain” will be staged June 28 on
Grandfather Mountain at Linville.
Pirates will invade Beaufort June 27
recalling an earlier era when “ Black-
beard” roamed the waters along the
North Carolina coast.
’There will be plenty of festivals across
the state such a n the "G reat River
P ace” on the Dan River In Eden on June
20, Summer Festival in Washington
June 12-22, and the Am erican Dance
Festival begins in Durham June 13 and
continues through July 25.
•arly June Morganton
Foolhills Bluegrass Festival, Burke County
Fairgrounds. Elbert Phillips, Watermill Rd.,
Morganton, N.C. 28655. 704 437-0519.
•arly Juna PInahurtt
N.c. State Trapshoot, PInehurst Gun Club. Michael
Dann, Public Relations, PInehurst Hotel and Country
Club, P.O. Box 4000, PinehursI, N.C. 28374. 919
295-6111.
1-30 Ralaigh
Wake County and Triangle Weavers Guild Exhibition,
N.C. State Univ. Lucie Hunter, Student Center
Gallery, NCSU, P.O. Box 5217, Raleigh, N.C. 27650.
919 737-3503.
1-5 M orahaad City
Big Rock Blue Marlin Tournament, Paul C. Kerwin,
Morehead City Yacht Basin, Drawer A, Morehead
City, N.C. 28557. 919 726-6862.
4-7 Qraanaboro
"Dracula", Community Theatre of Greensboro,
Carolina Theatre. Maynard French, 200 N. Davie St.,
Greensboro, N.C. 27401.
5-6 Mount Airy
10th annual Bluegrass and Old Time Fiddlers Conv.,
West Lebanon St. G.F. Collins, Rt. 2, Box 277, Mt.
Airy, N.C. 27030. 919 789-9413.
5-July 5 Aahavllla
"Othello", Montlord Park Players Shakespeare-ln-
Ihe-Park, Montlord Community. (Friday, Saturday).
Montford Park Players, P.O. Box 2663, Asheville,
N.C. 28802. 704 254-4540.
5-Sapt. 7 Wilmington
“The Immortal Showboat", Sound and Light
Spectacular, USS North Carolina Battleship
Memorial. Outdoor drama on history ol USS N.C. in
World War II. Capl. F.S. Conion, Dir, P.O Bo« 417,
Wilmington, N.C. 28402. 919 762-1829.
6 M ab an a
Tenth Holiday Art Show, Central Carolina Bank &
Trust Co. Etchings, oils, acrylics, pottery,
photography. Myra L. Tate, Central Carolina Bank a
Trust Co., P.O. Box 70, Mebane, N.C. 27302. 919
563-1214.
6 Mantao
Dare Days Festival, waterfront. Art, crafts, music, fish
fry, rides, street dances, parades, old movies.
George J. Spence, Public Info. Office, P.O. Box 1000,
Manteo, N.C. 27954. 919 473-2143, ext. 219.
6 Tarboro
Third annual Tar River Raft Race. Raft race, blue
grass music. Tarboro Area Chamber of Commerce.
123 W. Pitt St., Tarboro, N.C. 27886. 919 823-7241.
6 LoraVallay
Antique Engine Show. Ellenora S. Barker, Box 607.
Love Valley, N.C. 26677. 704 592-7451.
e-July 24 Wlnaton-Salam
Thomas Suonalalnen Ceramics Show, Southeastern
Center for Contemporary Art, 750 Marguerite Dr„
Winston-Salem, N.C. 27106. 919 725-1904.
••O e l . 91 Aahovllla
Mama T’s In the Park, Asheville Recreation Park.
Each Saturday night. Mountaln-style square dancing,
mountain music, exhibition clogging. Mr. & Mrs. Jack TessTer, Rt. 4, Box 242, Asheville, NvGr 28806. 704
252-1989.
•■11 Southarn PInaa
70th Women's Eastern Qolf Association
Championship, Mid Pines Club. Kate Kimball, 225
Valley Rd., Southern Pines, N.C. 28387, 910
692-3289,
10-14 Ralaigh
N.C. Arabian Horse Show, State Fairgrounds.
Barbara Williams, N.C. State Fairgrounds, 1025 Blue
Ridge Blvd., Raleigh, N.C. 27607. 919 733-2145.
12-13 Edan
Bluegrass Fiddlers Convention, Cedar Hill Bluegrass
Park. Homer V. Wood, 239 N. Main St., Edén, N.C.
27288. 919 635-1709.
12-22 Waahlngton
Summer Festival. Outdoor living show, golf
tournament, softball tournament, bicycle ride and
race, road race, Summer Festival Ball, fish fry,
sidewalk sale, boat parade. Blount Modlln,
Washington Jaycees, Bayslde Shore, Chocowlnlty,
N.C. 27817. 919 946-7475.
13 Morganton
Festival on the Square. Arts, crafts. Burke Arts
Council, 115 E. Meeting St., Morganton. N.C. 28655.
704 433-7282.
mId-Juna Winaton-Saiam
Northwest N.C. Junior Livestock Show and Sale,
Dixie Classic Fairgrounds. Winston-Salem Chamber
of Commerce, P.O. Box 1408, Winston-Salem, l>I.C.
27102. 919 725-2361.
13 N a w Barn
sixth annual WAZZ/WRNB Great Trent River Raft
Race. Rafts, canoes, kayaks, arts, crafts. Josh
Humphreys. Box 2684, New Bern, N.C. 28560. 919
637-6144.
13 Lova Vaiiay
Arts and Craft Show. Ellenora S. Barker, Box 607,
Love Valley, N.C. 28677. 704 592-7451.
13-14 Winaton-Salam
Carolina Gun Show. David Blalock, Rt. 1, Linden,
N.C. 28301. 919 897-8185.
13-14 Ralaigh
Raleigh Coin Show, State Fairgrounds. Barbara
Williams, N.C. State Fairgrounds. 1025 Blue Ridge
Blvd., Raleigh, N.C. 27607. 919 733-2145. .
mid-Juna Atlantic Baach
"Living History", Fort Macon. Reenactment Civil War
(reveille to taps by 1st Regiment N.C. Volunteers.)
Fort Macon .State Park, P O Box 127, Atlantic Beach.
N.C. 28512. 919 726-3775.
FOR SALE
52 Acres On
Markland Road
C A L L F O R D E T A IL S
L a ie w -W o « i -J«liiniiii, Inc.
Phone 6 3 4 -6 2 8 1
mid-Juna Saiiabury
Children’s Walking Tour, historic district. Young
people wearing costumes ol 1800's. Anne Williams, '
Dir., Historic Salisbury Foundation, P.O. Box 4621,
Salisbury, N.C. 28144. 704 636-0103.
mid-Juna Danvar
Horse Show, East Lincoln Optimist Bldg. Larry J.
Black, Rt. 2, Box 102, Denver, N.C. 28037. 704
483-5410.
mid-Juna Franklin
Cullowhee Music Festival, Fine Arts Center. Classical t
symphony, pops, operas, ensembles. Bobble ,
Conllno, Rt. 6, Box 810, Franklin, N.C. 28734. 704
524-7951.
mId-Juna Louiaburg
Lions Club Annual Horse Show, Franklin County
Fairgrounds. George T. Bunn, 124 Edgewood Dr.,
Louisburg, N.C. 27549. 919 490-3563.
mId-Juna Hattaraa
Sport Fishing Short Course.
Instructions/demonstration on technique and
equipment for saltwater sport fishing. DIv. ol
Continuing Education, P.O. Box 5125, N.C. State
Univ., Raleigh, N.C. 27650. 919 737-2261.
mid-Juna Southmont
High Rock Lake Days. Fishing tournament, ski show,
water parade. Catherine W. Pitts. Sec., High Rock
Lake Ass'n., Inc., P.O. Box 159, Southmont, N.C.
27351. 704 352-5953.
mid-Juna Spivay’a Cornar
National Hollerin’ Contest. Hollerin’ Run, Ham Holler
In, food, Junior Hollerin’ Contest, Whistlln' Contest,
Conch shell and fox horn blowin’ contests, ladles
callin’ contest, clogging. Ermon Godwin, Pres.,
National Hollerin’ Contest, Box 332, Dunn, N.C.
28334. 919 892-4133.
mid-Juna Blowing Rock
Annual Old Time Railroader’s Day, Tweetsie
Railroad. Honors survivors who built and operated
original Tweetsie. Spencer Robbins, Tweetsie
Railroad, P.O. Box 388, Blowing Rock, N.C. 28605.
704 264-9061.
19-21 Aahavllla
Chapman's Antique Show, Civic Center. Chapman's
Antiques Shows, P.O. Box 70, Bat Cave. N.C. 28710.
.704 625-9261.
19-21 Sylva
Tuckaselgee Classic. Slopltch softball championship
of Western N.C. Rick Bennett, Jackson County
Recreation Dept., 8 Circle Rd., Sylva, N.C. 28779.704
586-6333.
20-21 Ralaigh
13th annual Tarheel Regatta, Lake Wheeler. Power
boat race. Qlenn T. Petty. Chm., Rt. 1, Box 18, Apex,
N.C. 27502. 919 772-4693.
20-21 Wlnaton-Salam
National Model Airplane Championships & Show.
Coliseum, P.O. Box 68, Wlnrton-Salem, N.C. 27102.
919 727-2976.
20-Aug. 1 OulKord Collaga
Eastern Music Featlval. Nightly performance« by
student and profeaalonal orchestras. Donald
Sllberman, Exec. OIr., 200 N. Davie St., Qreensboro;
N.C. 27401. 919 272-2177.
21 Wlnaton-Salam '----------
"Music at Sunset” , Winaton-Salem Symphony
Outdoor Concert, Qraylyn Eatate. Arts Line, 610
Coliseum Dr., Winston-Salem, N.C. 27106. 919
723-1666.
21-Aug. 30 Wilkaaboro
“The Leiiend of Tom Dooley" Outdoor Drama,
Lakeside Amphitheatre. Tuesday through Saturday.
John M. McCann, P.O. Box 24, Wilkesboro. N.C.
28697. 919 973-4506.
22 Wilmington
Monday Night In the Park, Greenfield Amphitheatre.
Musical entertainment. Arts Council, P.O. Box 212,
Wilmington, N.C. 28402. 919 762-4223.
22-28 Ralaigh
Miss North Carolina Beauty Pageant, Memorial
Auditorium. Carol Mann, Raleigh Civic Center
Complex, 500 Fayetteville St. Mall, Raleigh, N.C.
27601. 919 755-6011.
23-25 Wilmington
Annual Reunion of wartime crew, USS North
Carolina Battleship Memorial. Crew guides tours.
Birthday parade. Capt. F.S. Conion, D lr„ P.O. Box
417, Wilmington, N.C. 28402. 919 762-1829.
23-Aug. 29 Flat Rock
Flat Rock Playhouse, the State Theatre of N.C., 65th
season. Summer theatre — Broadway and London
hits. Robroy Farquhar, Flat Rock Playhouse, Box
246, Flat Rock, N.C. 28731. 704 693-0731.
24-27 Ralaigh
Jeff Stewart Antique Show, Crabtree Valley Mall,
4325 Glenwood Ave., Raleigh, N.C. 27612. 919 787-
2517.
26-27 Baaufort
25th Homes Tour of Old Beaufort. Tour restoration
complex, private restored homes, churches, Old
Burying Grounds. Antique show. Lynda H. Doasett,
P.O. Box 1709, Beaufort, N.C. 28516. 919 726-7647.
26-26 Lova Vallay
Frontier Week Rodeo. Ellenora S. Barker, Box 607i
Love Valley, N.C. 28677. 704 592-7451.
26-26 PInahurat
Suzy H. Arey Skeet Shoot, PInehurst Gun Club,
Michael Dann, Public Relations, PInehurst Hotel &
Country Club, P.O. Bo>: 4000, PInehurst, N.C. 28374.
919 295-6111.
26-Aug. 9 Bravard
Brevard Music Center. 50 di erent iJerformances
(symphony, orchestras, cham <er music, band,
recitals, chcral, musical coir dy, opera). Robert D.
Young, Dir. of Public Relalic s, Brevard Music
Center. P.O. Box 392, Brevf . N.C. 28712. 704
884-2011.
К
INTERS
lENTSa
You can help ycur chil
dren keep their good eye-
light by making them aware
of a few iimple safety facta.
Teach them the dangers of
acissorc, stick«, broken glass,
BB guiu, fireworks, bats,
and t>alls, bows and arrows.
I For a free pamphlet on I children’s eye safety, tend a
I stamped, self-addressed,
I uusineu-size envelope to I your state Society to Pre-
1 vent Blindness or to the
I National Society to Prevent
1 Blindness, 79 Madison
Avenue, New Yorli, N.Y.
0016.100
I
V A N 0 Y a
Do I have to m ik ^ j^ m ra
payment on a Veterans Ad
m inistration guaranteed
home loan?
Geocrally speaking, U Ike
loan amount requested does
not exceed the appraised
value of the liome and the
veteran m eets the loan
q u alifyin g conditions, the
lender m ay uot Impose a down
payment on a VA guaranteed
loan.
I am considering taking a
loan on m y National Service
Life Insurance policy. WiH I
receive a sm aller dividend if I
obtain a loan?
No. The dividend* earned
wUl not be affected by the
loan.
Pottery, Sculpture
Exhibition Set
For Winston
An exhibition of pottery by Donna R.
Tem ple of W inston-Salem and a
selection of sculpture by M illard M c
Donald of M ocksville opened on
Saturday evening, M ay 30 from six to
len p.m , The Open House event is part of
the Burke Street Merchants annual open
house celebration. The exhibition will be
on display from 10 to 5 Monday through
Friday and from 10 to 2 on Saturdays
during the month of June at Jesse’s
Fram e Shop and the West End Gallery,
858 West Fourth Street, Winston-Salem.
Donna R, Tem ple holds a Bachelor of
Arts in Psychology from the University
of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, She
studied beginning and advanced pottery
techniques at the Stony Hill Pottery
School in Cliapel Hill where she also
served a six-month work-itudy ap
prenticeship. She furthered her atudles
in pottery production at Montgomery
Technical Institute, Troy, N.C. She and
her husband, David Baynes, designed
and constructed their own wood-buniing
pottery kiln.
Ms. Tem ple has taught arU and crafts
classes for the elderly and children with
the community of East Bend, ■ponsored
by the Yadkin Arts Council, the Town of
East Bend, and a grant from the
National Endowment for the Arte. She
has exhibited widely in the area and has
received several aw ard s and
recognition for her w o it. She produces
functional dinnerware.
MUlard McDonald first exhibited hii
sculpture at West End Gallery several
years ago. Using tin cans, he fashions
in tricate spider w ebs, w ild wood
flowers, and bold wall sculptures, moat
of which are mounted on driftwood.
McDonald, form erly employed by the
Little Theatre of Winston-&dem, sud
denly abandoned a career in the theatre
and becam e a self-tau|^t sculptor ap
plying his knowledge of theatre design to
his new m edia. He has traveled over the
southeastern states exhibitin g and
selling his work in street art and craft
fairs, galleries, and Juried exhibitions.
His spider webs are tuique in both
execution and design. His Jack-in-the-
Pulpit bridges the gap between the fact
it is m ade from the throw-away tin can
and the fantasy of a woodland flower.
Ideal PCA Has New Loan Officer
John Hugh Ervin has been employed
by Ideal Production Credit Association
as Loan Officer at the Farm Credit
Service of M ocksville, according to J,
WUbur Cabe, PCA President. John will
be joining branch m an ager, M ike
Morton, effective June 1, 1981.
E rvin obtained his B achelor of
Science D egree in A griclu tural
Economics at N, C, State University. He
w as a ctive in the A griclu tural
Economics Club, President of Farm
House Fatem lty, Vice President of N, C.
Farm House Associaton, Inc., m em b«'
of the Inter-Fraternity Council, Ford
College Round Table participant, N. C.
State University Chancellor’s Aide, and
recipient of the Gam m a Sigm a Delta
Award.
Ervin grew up on a farm In Iredell
County and Is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Hugh Ervin of Route 8, SUtesvlUe. He
has held sum m er jobs with the N. C.
D epartm ent of A gricu ltu re M arket
News Office and Elanco Products while
attending NCSU.
Cabe indicated that the association is
fortunate In having someone with E r
vin 's a g ricu ltu ral and educational
background to join the staff.
The F arm C redit S ervice of
M ocksville provides service to over SOO
m em bers of Ideal Production Credit
Association and the Federal Land Bank
Association of Winston-Salem with loan
volum e totaling ap p roxim ately $13
mlUlon dollars. The Federal Land Bank
John Hugh Ervin
Association provides long term first
m ortgage real estate loans and the
Production Credit Association provides
short and interm ediate term loans to
farm ers and rural homeowners for
operating and capital purposes.
W o o lw o rth T a b C o rre c tio i
Dynomic Discount
PAGE 8-G.E. Super Radio $M.OO
G.E. Portable Radio $24.00
Pictures Are Revened
PAGE 9-Cqleman 40 QuartJCooler Does
Not Have Tray or Drain ^loiit
FireMI Shoe Skates $15.66
Sias 1 to 5 NOT 1 to 8
i r - r - i n r l - f c l .
BOXWOOD HEAL ESTATE
3 2 3 Salisb uiy Street
M ocksville, N .¿ 2 7 0 2 3 634-S997
As tim e goes on you'll be paying mors and
more tent, so why not buy your home now?
An excaptlonally nice 3 bedroom home, vary
similar to this illustration, can be yours! Single
carport, carpeted living room , spacious kitchen
plus Its energy •fflcient! Wa have 2 homes that
meet these spedflcattons, that will soon be com
pleted. 100% financing to qualified buyer43330 0
Price Looatlon Bedroom Bath Information
29.50 0 ,601 South................................2...........1.... .Fireplace, carport
76/100_____.Farmland Road.........................,3 ... .2 ..........Log home ^ u d ed on 4.48 acret
33,500.... .Fieldcrest No. 2... ?..............3...........1.............Under Construction
33.50 0 Fieldcfest No. 3 .....................3...........1...........EES, Quality Construction
75,000........Carowoods Development... .4... . 2 ...........3 . ( ^ sq.ft. 2 fireplaces
„29,900 .... C ^ |_R o a d ..........................3 ^ ... 2.... 1400sq. ft. BridTHome
37.50 0 Sheffield Park...........................3..........1%... Detached garage/Workshop
S - IS S ..............................................................3..........2..........Spiit-levelon wooded 1.8 acres
• • • EdgewoodCIrde . . ^ ............3... .2%... 2,torv withapx. 2400sg.ft.
' ‘ ■ Street.........................................VA-----Full basement, concrete drive
» 5 ,9 0 0 ... -Rainbow^oad.. . . . . . .3 ..........3.... EXCEPTIONAL home on 3.77 am s
^ .0 0 0 .. . .JW1 North.. ....................4 ..........Sii. .. .,3.200 ^ ft. split-level
^ ,0 0 0 ... West Jefferson ..... 2'... .1>4. .. basenient. wrap-around porch
J2,000.. . . .Railroad Street........................2...........VA-----Remodeled frame house
42,500.-----Liberty Church Rd._.^.. . , . .3..........1... 7.1800 sq^ft. on 1.4 acres
^>900 .... .^idcory Tree...........................3...........2..........New home, heet pump, dishwasher
7 2 .g 00j^ -,Southwood Acres.. . 3 -4 . ■ .3.... Split-level. 26 Kitcheri cabinets
78>S0p. . Qreenwood Lakes.............^ . 3..........2% ... .Like new farm house design
H ' S S ' ' • ■ ■ • • • Swimming Pool. 2.38 acres >33,500..». .Hwy. o4W. ................................ 1%----------gleaming 1100sq.ft. home
28,900------MiilinQ R o ^ ............................3..........VA. .. .freshly painted insicie '
$24.500' • Gladstone Road .....................2 ‘ • V • • Frame and siding home with firepiaa
SALE PENDING
Price
10,800...
m 'o o o. . .
33,500 .
3 3 ,^ ..^ .
53Í500...
Location
■Sanford Avenue-----
№verda1oNo.5.....
.Fieldcrest No. 4____
.Fieldcrest No^l______
.Grey Street..............
Bedroom -Bath
SOLD
Information
.. .3.. .j_^VA— 1,200sq.ft. modular home
... 3____T — .T070 sq. ft. FmHa approvao
■ • 3.........1.... 1050 sq. ft. Contemporary
. .3.........1. ■.. ■ FmHA approved energy efficient
• • 3........2.........Full batement, immediate posteuion
LAND LOTS OTHER
Price Location Information
12.50 0 Hickory Hill No. 2 .........................i^ake lot
9.50C...........................Jericho Road.....................................2 lots
5.00 0 Southwood Acret................... lot
1.500.per acre............601 South...........................................50 acres, tome owner financing
4,500..........................Greenbrier Ettatet..............................lot
2.3. Milimn.................601 South...........*.............................811 acret. prime induttrial
4.000 each.................Florida..............................................4 building lott. Lake Placid
GET ON TNE TOP SEILER LIST, CENTURY 21
DAN CORRELL - 998-2268
TERESA CORRELL - 998-2268
LOUISE DAIGLE " 634-2846
CHARLES EVANS -*284-2637
SHELIA OLIVER - 492-6512
KATHI WALL - 492 7631
DAVIE COUNTY F,NTF.RPRISr, RECORD, TIIURSDAY, 1Ш Е 4, 1981 - 5D
I n v e s t i n g
(By Rciearch Department
of Interstate Securities
Courtesy of Ben T. Browder.)
Current m arket conditions
have incom e oriented in
vestors in a quandary. High
cates of return on short term
savin gs certifica tes and
money-market funds are hard
to resist. At the sam e time,
long term bond y ie l^ and
yields on m any interest
sensitive stocks are at record
or near-record levels.
The problem is whether to
stay short or lock in high rates
for the long term. Many in
vestors who have high current
income as their objective
have opted to invest for the
short term until long term
yields rise above short yields.
There are two problems
with this choice. First, long
term rates avaUable today
m ay not be available again
soon or ever. Second, short
term yields m ay quickly drop
as they have done in the past.
One solution to this problem is
to split bond commitments
one third short term and two
thirds longer term.
Another dilemma for in
come investors is choosing
between stocks and bonds.
The average stock yields Just
under 5 percent compared
with high quality corporate
bond yields in the 13-14 per
cent range. However, many
high dividend paying stocks
yield around 10 percent.
The factors to consider in
selecting stocks vs. bonds are
that bond payments are fixed
w hile y com m on stock
d ivid in d s are not. And,
capiBil appreciation is more
lik ^ from stocks than from
For most income investors,
some combination of stocks
and bonds is appropriate.
Depending on individual
circum stances, a half and half
division is usually recom
mended. When deciding on
your portfolio m ix, keep in
mind that total return (ap
preciation plus yield) should
be the real measure of port
folio performance, not in
come alone.
There are a number of risk
factors in both stocks and
bonds that should be con
sidered in individual cases,
but the following guidelines
apply to all income investors.
Don’t let an “ up and down”
stock m arket or the high
yields available on fixed in
com e pecurities turn yon
away from stocks. In the last
five years, dividends on
stocks outpaced inflation.
Keeping informed should
prevent unpleasant surprises.
Don’t be afraid to m ake
changes in your portfolio
when conditions m andate
them . D iversify your
holdings. In the case of bonds,
bond funds m ay be more
suiUble for you than in
dividual issues.
T ax consideration m ay
mean tax exempt bonds are
better for you than co r
porates. Stick to top rated
bonds in the short to In
termediate m aturity range.
Constant attention to your
portfolio is necessary, since
what is appropriate today
m ay not be tomorrow.
Carolina High School Race Day
Held At Farmington
If you haven’t been to old
Georgetown, then take a walk
with me.
Washington’s Georgetown
section ia a very special place-
-a hybrid of the district’s most
expensive and d esirable
residential section, center of a
throbbing shopping and en-
terUlnlng area, and location
of m any of the Capitol’s m otl
prized historic sights.
Georgetown deserves a few
hours of your time. If you visit
the W adiington, D.C., area,
you can walk, shop and see
historic buildings.
Georgetown probably sums
up the various sights and
feelings of Washington better
than any other section of the
d ty . lU s ia partially due to
her long and colorftil histw y,
which extends back to the
very birth of the Federal
district itself.
In order to enjoy
Georgetown, you must know a
Uttte about how Georgetown
becam e what sbe is to ^ y .
It was a separate port town
in M aryland. The sta te ’s
tobacco w as shipped from
h ere along the Potom ac
River. It later becam e an
nexed to the new Federal
district in 1791. lU s was
sh ortly a fte r G eorge
WaaUogton and bis com-
m lstionera forged the
agreem ent in Qeorgetown’a
Sutlar’a T a vtm that craated
tbe Capitol area. You can still
ie e the site o( tlw tavern at
4nst and Whitehurst Freew ay,
though nothing much else of
interest rem ains at that ad-
S u z a n n e S a y s
The port of Georgetown
continued to thrive in & late
1700s, and early isoos.
G overnm ent notables, a t
tracted to the area for its
charm and bustling activity,
built many beautiful homes to
the North and West of the
actual port. You can see many
of these as you walk along.
The start of the Chesapeake
and Ohio Canal to Cum
berland, M aryland in 1828
promised a m ajor expansion
of the port, but by the time it
was finished in 1890, the
railroad had become King and
George town’s fortunes as a
port declined. But her a|q>eal
as a place to work, live and
have fun did not decline-it
burgeoned. And the canal that
still exists in the town’s heart
is very much a special part of
the unique charm found here
by natives and visitors alike.
Today Georgetown is a
much larger area than the old
port town. The walking tour is
a "M ust See,” point by point
tour of the m ajor sights from
O Street to the Canal and from
G eorgetow n U n iversity to
aoth Street. You should be
able to walk this in a couple of
hours if you don’t m ake
lengthy s t(^ .
You can get a m ap at
Georgetown which is self-
explanatory. It includea the
fin est establishm ents and
deserves both your Interest
and your patronage. And now
le t’s go w alkin g in old
Georgetown.
lU s la the oldeat buUding in
W adiingtaa, dattng badt to
the 1760s and a p erfect
exam p le of th* pre-
RevoluUonary ardittacture-
pertaapa the only one left in
the Capital. Tbe house has a
stron g, Paunylyania^ . Dutch
influence, sin » It waa built by
a G erm an settler and
cabin etm aker, now m ain
tained by the National Park
Service as a public museum.
It gives you an excellent
exam ple of how a middle
class fam ily lived and worked
in the late 18th Century. The
ground floor contam ea
business quarters as well as a
substantial kitchen. There is
also a pleasant garden with
benches in back of the house.
Thomas Lee was a friend of
George Washington, member
of the Continental Congress,
and tw ice G overnor of
M aryland. He lived in a red
brick house at 3001, which was
cofistructed in the 18th
Century, restored with ita
neighbors in 19SS. The house
has become a prime example
of the fruits of the Georgetown
A ct, w hich provides for
restoration and use of old
buildings with a strict ar
chitectural code. Other local
buildings have followed suit,
but 3001 - 3009 m ay be the best
kMklng and most historically
accu rate of a ll the
restorations in the Capital.
Upstairs in two of these
buildings is Jour et Nult
Restaurant--one of
Washington’s most popular
French dining spots.
Here is the post office and
looking like it belongs m ore in
Genoa than in (Jeorgetown,
th is R e n a is sa n c e -sty le
building is one of the only
Italianate-designed stru c
tures in the area.
Senator Kennedy lived in
Georgetown. He and his wife
and Infant daughter,
Caroline, in 1867. H ie next
tim e they m oved w as to the
White House in 1881.
Ih ere is much m ore here In
Georgetown-a very old town
and one that you can’t forget.
Recipea hrom the area':
CHICKEN WITH SW EET
-------------P B P № R
12 ozs. of bondeM , skinleaa
chicken or turkey breast
3 tablespoons soy sauce
3 tablespoons dry sherry or
apple juice
1 la ^ e onion
2 tablespoons m inced
By Becky White
The C arolina Hi! High
School R ace D ay at the
Farmington Dragw ay w as a
big su ccess w ith the
teenagers. Everyone had a
nice tim e with no problems,
and several of the teenagers
that ra ce at Farm ington
regu la rly w ere surprised
when some of their com
petitors that aren’t regulars
took the wins aw ay from
them!
Mike Crump of Winston-
Salem won the 4-cylinder
sUck shift class in his Dodge
Ram truck. Jeff M artin of
YadkinviUe, NC took the win
in the 6-cyllnder stick shift
class in his Camaro. Eddie
Hine of K ern ersville, NC
drove the H ine fa m ily
Camaro to the win in the 6-
cylln d er autom atic cla ss.
E ddie ra ce s regu la rly on
Friday nights and so does his
fath er, G ilbert. E d die
Spillman of M ocksville, NC
won the 8-cylinder sm all
block, 4-barrel, autom atic
class with his Cam aro. Ken
Brown of Advance won the 8-
cylinder sm all block, 4 barrel
autom atic class in a Ford
M averick. Jerry DUdine of
Kernersville, NC won the 8-
cylinder big block, 4 barrel
class In his Chevdle. Jerry is
another one of Farm ington's
regular racers, so is his
father, Alvin. Kendall Adam s
of Winston-Salem won the 8-
cyllnder big block 2 barrel
class in his Nova.
Bob Roberson of Winston-
Salem NC who owns and
<q>crates Roberson Detailing
on the Lewisville-Clemmons
Road was the judge for the
Best Appearing Cars. The
Best Appearing Original Car
award went to Mike Crump of
Winston-Salem for his Dodge
Ram Truck. The Best Ap
pearing Hot Rod Street Car
went to M ake Shamel of
Winston-Salem, N Cfor his Z28
Cam aro. Todd T a ylo r of
Clem m ons, NC another
regu lar Farm ington ra cer
.received the award for the
M ost O rigin al and M ost
Entertaining Idea of the Day.
And you’d almost have to see
it to believe it. Todd was
driving a van and at the end of
each of Todd’s runs he had a
parachute to slow down his
van. Not a drag racin g
parachute, I mean a real life
size parachute parachute! It
took quite a bit of ingenuity
and work to get this thing
operating just right, and he
certainly deserved his trophy.
After the class round w ere
finished, the winners of each
class cam e back to run each
other for the over-all
elim in ator w inner. J e ff
Martin of YadkinviUe, NC
took that win in his 6-cyllnder
Cam aro over MUce Crump of
W inston-Salem . M ike red
lighted. J e ffs trophy w as
sponsored by the guys that
own and operate M cClam rock
A utom otive in M ocksville,
Jack and G ray M cOam rock.
The real h e ig h t s of the
day cam e when the grudge
racin g b egan . Ja ck M c
Clam rock of MocksviUe in hie
“ Stripper” Corvette against
Noman DrouUlard, Jr. of
Winston-Salem, NC in his
“ Black W idow" dragster. A
second grudge race match
w as betw een G ray M-
cClam rock of MocksviUe,
NC in his “ Stripper Ш ”
“ Vega and Benny Proctor of
Winston-Salem in his “ Scat
Pack” Dodge Dart. In three
rounds between Jack and
Norman, Norman cam e up
the virlnner. In two rounds
U S S North C aro lin a O pens 17th Season
D A V IE
R E A L T Y C Q
148rN.MaTn?f.
•4. WE8T- Uadcr eeaetraclioa. 3 B>R hoase, t B., Itreplace, Heat Pamp, C. air, carpart A paved
J r l n . _____________________________
Sln^aT..3BR brick Ьеме-Priced to а{ДЮ.68а.HOLLOW HILL COURT . 4 BR, каме. 1Ц batía ExceUeat ео И М ев. ÍUj$ú.
. ■ в « , ы « .
Highway 8М Bear Cooleemee Í8.M acres aaIT i6 acres permaaeat grass - it acrsa gaodtiaibcr. Call fer appalatm—t
CAMWOOD - BeaaWal I BR, 1Ц baths trhevd кмае
^ heat pomp A garage oa qalel st. Reaseaably priced.
MILUNG ROAD-Beantlfal t story hrkk heme. 4 Br, I baths, t dcas, partial basement with garage. Ш« sq. fl. llvlag space. 4 acres of taa^
lUè HOWARD ST. 3 Br irick home. Central heat A air. ОоаЫе garage. Priced to seU.
COOLEEMEE - Good starter heme. I B-R, a B. Reaseaable price.
SALISBURY ST. Oae ef the meet lovely homes bi Mocksville on 1.1 acres. A meet attractive eMw home with S B-R, 3 B. and Is sarrMUded by
beaatlful trees aad shrubs. Also, a 3 car garage, a
where meat was once smoke cared aad tbe oldUtchen separate from the meta hoase. This a mast U yea are Interested ta a well-preserved older Леш- CaU for aa. appotatment.SOUTHWOOD ACRES - BeaatlfBl wooded buttdbig let. Reaseaable price.JERICHO ROAD - Jast eat of tewa-lH acres weeded let • Ш ft. road ireatage - Coaaty water avaUable.No. 8»l SOUTH ■ 1Ц acres seaed ter Mebtte HomeUlM-par acre.____________________ - ...............
DEPOT ST. -1 Acre^wlaeee let. $4.Ш.
OFF DANIELS RD. 4 acres aad a mobile bomu wUh well A septic teak. Ill.H.ACRE TRACfÌM paved rd. part wooded. Zoaed tor mobile homes.
M l A msi scres-resldeatlal or commercUI-partwooded-itream.__ _______
FARMINGTON AREA oa M l-M acres ol bcattOful Und-
|3»,Mtt.
BOXWOOD А С № в - t wooded lots IH xlN at 11,IM ea
HOWARD SlRÈET-Good tuUdbig lot. IMxlM , quiet
locatloa. _GARWn VALLEY-BeautlMl bldg. lot. City water and sewer. Entrance from Sanford Ave. aad.Gardcn VaUey. FARMINGTON AREA-t acre tracts more. Local ao. toWlastoB - S a l e m .--------------------------------SMALL CORNER LOT at North Muta aad Crewe Sts.
FOR RENTjéU sq. ft. office iMcc
6 3 4 -6 1 V i o r 6 3 4 -6 1 1 2
Home Fkoaes
Eugene Beanett-WlMTtT Sam Howell-«34-MZ4
HeUaad Cbafflu-U4-SiU Grabaia MadUoo-«34-Si7«
Henry Sborc M4-M4«
T
1 large d ove garUc
1 tablespoon vegetable oil
4 red and green peppers
V» cup water
1 tablespoon holsin sauce
Slice chicken on diagonal in
thin slices less than V* inch
wide. M ix the soy and sherry
and m arinate the dilcken in
that m ixture. Chop onion
coarsely, mince ginger and
put garlic UuxHigh ргем. Heat
the oU in a heavy skiUet or
wok. Add onion, garlic, and
ginger and coek over m«Uum
beat about 2 minutes, untU
N orth C arolin a’s in-
temationaUy famous Sound
and Light Spectacular, “ The
Immortal Showboat,” opens
its seventeenth season
Friday, June 5, at the USS
North Carolina B attleship
Memorial in Wilmington. The
outdoor dram a wUl continue
nightly at 9 p.m. through
lAbor D ay, September 7.
The B attlesh ip is open
every d ay of the year.
H ow ever, “ The Im m ortal
Showboat” is a feature of the
summ er months only. The
Spectacular is 70 minutes of
sound and Ught tdling the
story of tbe m ighty super
dreadnought from the tim e of
her k ed laying to the end of
hostUiUes in the Pacific in ___________-________
W artime action is depicted
at such locations as the East
Soloman Sea, Iwo Jim a, and
Okinawa. The performance
indudes sim ulated air and
submarine attacks on the
Battleship and shore bom
bardment by her huge sixteen
inch guns.
O ver 500 ligh ts and
speakers giv e depth and
realism to the story of the USS
North Carolina as she fought
through every m ajor cam-
Special effects i n c i t e a
waterline explosion
simulating a torpedo hit and
the crackling fire bf Uie dose
range anUalrcraft guns.
Admission to the outdoor
dram a is 11.50 for adulta, 75
cents for ChUdren six through
deven and free for those five
and under.
John Mitchell, A tto rn e y -
General under Richard M.
Nixon, w et commander dur
ing W orld W ar II to
then Lt. John F. Kennedy.
between G ray and Benny,
Gray cam e up the v/inner.
TTiis w as the first tim e that
Gray M cClamrock had ever
ran a grudge race!
A trophy was presented to
G ray M cC lam rock of
M ocksville as the group
representative trom Davie
High School for the school
with the m ost students
present at the Carolina Hi!
High School Race. 'Hie trophy
was sponsored by Yours Truly
as reporter for Farmington
Dragw ay and Editor of the
New Quick Times Racing
N ews. If there a re any
students who would like to see
this trophy, it wiU be on
d isplay at M cC lam rock
Automotive on County Road
1641 approxim ately four miles
east of MocksviUe on H i^ -
w ay 158. Go by and see the
trophy and talk to ttie Mc
Clam rock racers.
Ç ^V M erA nts
Invad e Hom es
Davie County homeowners
who see big, black ants
running across their floor
probably have carpenter ants
in their house.
Nancy Hartman, Extension
Home Economist says not aU
big, black ants are carpenter
ants but the ones ttiat invade
houses usuaUy are.
The reason hom eow ners
should be alert to carpenter
ants, Ms. Hartman said, is
because they can dam age
wood as weU as be a nuisance.
U sually, carpen ter ants
build nests in wood that has
begun to decay, such as that
found in the base of a porch
post, around a chimney or
along the edge of a roof.
Therefore, if carpenter ants
are d iscovered, the m ost
important thing to do is to
determine why the wood is
decaying.
Sometimes carpenter anta
are brought into homes
on firewood. But these are not
Ukely to be a problem, Ms.
H artm an says, because
firewood is brought in during
cold weather and ante become
established during w arm
weather.
Sevin, Dursban and Baygon
are ttiree insectiddes that wiU
control ants. The important
ttilng is to locate the nest and
m ake su re it is treated
thoroughly. A dust for-
mutatlon umiaUy wcwks better
than a spray, luid souMtlmea
it Is necessary to drUl hdea
into the wood to get good
coverage.
Ms. Hartman said the Davie
County Extension office has
additional inform ation on
carpen ter ants and other
wood-destroying insects. H ie
office wUl be gU d to share this
information with homeowners
as a part of the Extension
Service’s “ Wood Can Last for
Centuries” program.
Howard Realty &
Insurance Agçùcy, Inc.
S d itb u ry Sfr«et
^SOU'ПIWOOD ACRES - 2 ieveUontemm^^' with extra back lot Incladed. Lower level - 3 bed
inch wide. Add to skUlet, cook
about three minutes and stir
once in a whUe. Push to
side. Add chicken without
marinade and cook until U
kisesita pink color. Add water
marinade and holsin. Reduce
heat and cook a minute or two
untU peppers are crisp.
SPINACH AND SESAM E
sw K n s
W t (10 ozs.) packages fresh
spinach or IH lbs. loose
spinach
2 tablespoons sesam e seeds
Salt If desired
Few drops sesam e oU
W ash spinach, rem ove
tough stems. ToM t sesame
seeds. Steam spinach just
untU Ump in its own Uquid.
Drain thoroughly, {weulng
out excess moisture. Season
wltti salt, if desired. Tom with
sesame oU. Sprinkle with
sesam e seeds.
BACON A EGG SALAD
1 head of leaf lettuce
iL «ggs-------------------------
1 cup sweet RuMian style
dressing
Freshly ground pepper
Break apart lettuce leavM .
Wash them and wrap in a
towel. Place Uie lettuce in Uie
refrigerator until tim e to
serve. Place the eggs in a
sm all saucepan, cover them
with edd water. Place on
medium heat and bring to
boU. BoU for 10 minutes. Take
the pan to the sink, run edd
water in the pan. When the
eggs are cool, remove the
shdls. Fry the bacon over
medium heat untU it is crisp.
At serving time, arrange the
lettuce on salad platM. SUce
an egg on each plate and
crumble one sUce of bacon on
top. Pour a little dreMing on
each salad. If you have a
pepper grinder, put ground
pepper on top.
Happy cookin!
Suunne
!
NEW LISTINGS .
try located on ezceUent wooded lot
..iv.w .T . . ------------ - bedrooms, large den with fireplace,—------------------------- Upper level • 3 bedrooms, nlee kltehea * dlalag, formal Uving room.
onion U soft. Seed peppers • G a ra g e . 172,000.00 -
and cut into strips le u Ulan V4 49.8 ACRES In excellent location north of MocksvUle on Main Chivcli Road. Over
1200 ft. of road frontage. Can be snbdivlded into 10 acre tracts. 1100,000 total • 12100 per acre if siibuvided.SOUTHWOOD ACRES - acre lot • extra^-rf\^C>l jom, 2 bath home located on a
quiet street. BeantlfnUy decor»UcA CQTior immediate occupancy. 9^ percent VA loan assumable, d u
BUSiNESS OPPORTUNITY-InvMt In your own business with very Uttle cash.
LadiM* garmeata on consignment. Central location and contacts already■
esMUshed. Very low overhead with potential unUmited. CONDOMINIUMS-Now ready for occiqianc^ At beautiful Twin Brook Acres. Two-
story exceUent constructkNi. First floor carpeted Uving room. Kitchen with dishwasher, range, dining area. Laundry and storage area. Bath. 2 Bedrooms plus l
bath upstairs. Patio. Economical heat pump. Thermopane windows. Perfect property ownership without tbe upkeep Involved bi single residence. The coming
thing for the future. 139,500.00.
4470... Ridgemont-----UMDER CONTRACT.|28,000.00
i 3230... Jericho Road...........Beautiful split level....................$92,000.00
4420... Park Avenue ....... 3 BedtfpvSJ basement................48,500.00
4410....Garden Valley...........Contemporary.......................77^ 96,000.00
4400.. .Raymond Street. ... 2-3 bedroom..................... 38,500.00
4060.. .North Main Street... Older 2 Story............................... 58,500.00
43W .. .Wilkesboro Street... Stoiy brick................................55,000.00
4340.. .Garden VaUev............under construction................... 125,000.00
4170.. . FiSrway Street.... . . . 3 bedrooms.. . . . . . . . . . ...... 52.W0.00
3780... Avon Street............... 3 bedrooms................................ 43,500.00
4360... Davie Academy...........8 Acres and farmhouse...............90,000.00
M 30... Knghaip Street...........2 bedrooms................................... 16,500.00
3860... Cooleemeee..................4 bedroom Colonial...................73,500.00
.4280.. ..Hickory HiU.............:>ew Contemporary...................$85^500.00
3540....¿arden VaUey...........New Contem|»orary.....................78,000.00
4380....Sanford Avenue.........2 Acres & mobile home............... 32,000.00
4330. . .Westwood....................3 Bedroom.....................................36,000.00
2680....Sanford Road............3 Bedrooms, Acres........................45,000.00
LOTSi Garden VaUey...................$6,800 to $11,000
Woodland................................................$4,500
Woodland, 2.14 acres.............................1 l,0OO
OFFICE - 634 3538
HOME PHONES:
634-3754.634-3229,634-2534,998 3990, 284 2366,
4925198,
iV iW V i
HOMEFINDER
MULTIPLE LISTINO SERVICE
B R A N T L E Y R E A L T Y Л
I N S U R A N C E C O . . I N C
Davie Coui^y^oniy
Winston-Salem's Multiple
Listing Service Realtor
HOMES
FARMINGTON- Cedar Forest Rd. Nice 3 BR, 2 fuU toths, split foyer. Large family room w-firt. Formal
LR. Larpe lot on dead end street. M, Edwards Has 10 ^4 assumable loan.
EDGEWOOD CIHCLE- Nice 3BR, 2 bath. Brick
home. New chain link fence around lot. Huge famUy
room added w-fpl. & wood slove. Formal DR A LR. M. Edwards
GWYN ST. - Save Gas! Walking distance to shopping or hospital. home with carport.
Also paved drive. dome for retired or young couple. M. Edwards. Owner financing 12<<yi int.
SANFORD ROAD - Beautiful 3 BR, 2 bath home, den with fireplace. Full basement, plus attached
garage. 2 Large porches. Nice large lot. Must see to appreciate. M. Edwards Near 1-40 exit.
FARMINGTON • Beautiful 2 story 4 BR home, 2 baths upstairs balcony plus large front porch. Coav.
to 1-40, large lot. M. Edwards SeUer wUl flaance
at 10 percent interest wlUi $6,000.00 down.
BADEN, N.C. - Story & ^ - 3BR Coodombium across from country club, large lot only few btocks
from Baden Lake. 129,900. M. Edwards
736 CHERRY ST. - Nice 2 BR remodeled home. Conv. to shopping & library. Good starter home.
Only 120,500. M. Edwards _
12 Acres with 400 ft. chicken hoiise, in with mobUe home, weU & septic tank. Income with
approximately 925,000 per yeafi^M. Edvrards
JELLING RD. • BeauUful 3 BR, IMi baOi brick
home. Den w-fpl., formal LR. Large comer lot 7%
percent assumable loan. M. Edwards________
WILKESBORO ST. - Beautiful 4 BR home w-t
baths. Formal DR & large ^assed-ln porch. At
tached carport. Chain link fence. Large lot also
faces Meroney Street. M. Edwards . ___
SANFORD AVE. - 3BR, 1 bath, 2-car carpoirt, den w-FrankUn stove, FP, DR A LR. Good V
takeover at |5,000 down assumable at 139,000. FOR RENT WITH OPTION TO BUY - 3 bedroom, brick home w-flreplace, formal llvlag room, m bath. $300.e0 mo. M. Edwards
HOMES WITH ACREAGE
YADKIN COUNTY-Bethel Rd. - 8 Acres * 2 yr. oM.
m story farm house with cedar skUng, fnU basement - custom buUt • also has lake. Par datalla^ M. Edwu^. __ _____
COUNTY LINE ROAD - 3BR, m bath brick home
on 20-acres of land. 169,000.20 more acre« available.
M. Edwards
OPERATING DAIRY FARM - Completely
automatic mUkers ft feeders. 2 new Harvesters Silos, 2 houses, several bams, land ftoced. Ex- cellrat chance to jet In the dab^ boslaess.
RURAL HALL - 72 aci^sw-otream and good ber. Nice farm bouse. Vipry private retreat. B acres
In Forsyth Co. * 20 aores in Stokes Co. FARMINGtON - S ao-M foMod, w^toigo bm, ridbig ring * beautiful Spantoh Brick Rancher, a BR, 2 batts. Den w-fpl. Also large A-frame wltfc
upstairsX7ould boapartment for rentaloHa^aw; M. ~ Edwards _ _ _ .BETHEL RD. 106 acres w-2 large lakes and 4 BR Iiome, 4 baths 2 dens w-^ll Formal Uving ft dlaby
room. Large Bam, 2 chicli . Mostly teaced.
SHEFFIELD - 21.77 acres w-4 BR, 3% baths. Colonial Rancher, partial basement Beautiful den w-Cathedral ceUbig and fpl. Large barn, 2 lakes. M. EdwardsBLAISECHURCHRD. -36.6 acres bordering 1-40,
200 ft. Road fronUge. Could be xoned (or com-
merciai._.CaJl_Scott AngeU. ___
MOCKSVILLE-23.8 Acres w-stream ft beautiful l
yr. old iVt story cedar farm hoase w-faU basemeat.
SkyUght bl Master bedroom ft bath • laad aU feacad w-buUdtaiK 40x200 - can be used for maqy Ihlags - is bringing In nice bicome. Metal bam also lad. Maat
SM to ajipreclate. CaU M. Edwards.
DUKE-WHITAKER RD. H^^atfiSroaa; 1 balh
home with carn»^e(\ lot |14,S00. GaDMartha EdwarUNOt*'
FARMINGTON - Approx. 10% acres. Nice sectloa, part wooded, w-stream. Call today to see this oae.M. Edwards ___________DAVIE ACADEMY Rd. - 3 BR, 2 bath Brick house
on 2 acres. 1700 Sq. Ft. Uving area. Beautifnl lawn ft
hardwood trees. Also Fla. room.
WASHINGTON COUNTY-1707 Acres. Approx. 4
mUUon feet of blackgum. Has smaU Junipor stand and smaU pine stand. Paved St. Rd. running thra property. S. AngeU. 9310,000.LOTS,
DAVIDSON AVE. - 6V4 Acres, HeavUy wooded w- stream. CKy water ft sewer 922,999.00 M. Boards.
CHICKEN FARM ROAD - 2 Iracto; 134 aciws ft 43
acres. Can be subdivided. Mostly wooded, lots of road frontage. 91.000.00 per acre. M. Edwards
COUNTY LINE ROAD - 141 Acres aU fenced w-
woven wire. Plenty of paved road frontage. 997S.09 per acre. M. Edwards
JENNINGS ROAD - 86 acre tract w-large bara aad loU of paved road frontage. 91.600.00 per acre. M.
Edwards
SANFORD AVENUE - Approx. 90 acres w-SMi acre
lake. Nice tract for developer. County water
avaUable. Paved road fronUge. M. Edwards
LAKE NORMAN • Dteed^water front lot oa cove. 910.500. M. Edwards.
CUMBERLAND COUNTY - 260 Acres, 2-acres
cleared, balance in timber. Approx. 900,000 board
ft. of timber. 9635. per acre. S. AngeU SAMPSON COUNTY - Roseboro - 172 acres hog
operation. Capable <tf producing 3500 tM hogspw year. Call Tor delalfai. S. AngeU.
BLADEN COUNTY - 213 Acre hog operatioB. 49 acres open land. Balance in timbel-. CaU for details.
S. AngeU
CALDWELL COUNTY -1325 Acres. 6,398,500 Board ft. of timber.; 9700.00 per acre. S. AngeU
CHERRY HILL ROAO-11% acres. Part wooded, part cleared. 91.500 per acre. CaU Martha Edwards.
DAVIE ACADEMY RD. - 21 acres with spring, part
wooded, part cleared. Make nice SubdiviMM or smaU farm. M. Edwards _________
m OTSKO C U A ILM NOMil"me* ana Intaniiafloii... Ml pMkn*
MataEdHanii.
Mhiisns Ctswr...
W I: B ü Y T O Ü ÎT lE S ^
towâM Ríaom ^
АмгийOanlEáMB*.
A fV L.........« М Я Т
^03 Avon Street
MocksvUle, N.C.EquiU Housng
Opportunlly
PHONE: 634 2Í05'
725-9291
6D DAVII COUNTY i:NTt-RI>RISI- Ri;rORD, THURSDAY, JUNK 4. 1981
Public Notices A SHOPPiR^.
РШ018С
NORTH CAROLINA
DAVIE COUNTY
IN THE GENERAL
CO l'R T OF JUSTICE
Superior Court Division
Before the Clerit
81 SH 17 ^
NOTICE OF SALE
Whlp-O-Wlll Farm s, a North
Carolina general partnership,
Petitioner
vs,
Zeno H. Dixon and wife,
M argaret Dixon and Ann L.
Dixon,
Defendants
Under and by virtue of an
Order of Sàie signed April 22,
1981, by Delores C. Jordan,
Clerk of Superior Court,
D avie County, North
Carolina, the undersigned,
who was by said Order of
Sale, appointed Com
missioner so that the lands
which were described in the
Petition, will on the 8th day of
June, 1981, at 12:00 Noon at
the Courthouse Door of
MocksviUe, North CaroUna,
offer for sale to the highest
bidder for cash, but subject to
confirmation by the O erk ot
Superior Court, a certain
tract or parcel of land lying
and being in Farm ington
Tow nship, D avie County,
North CaroUna, and more
particu larly described as
foUows:
BEGINNING at a point in
the center of N.C. Highway
801; the point of intersection
of the center of said highway
w ith the origin al eastern
McMahan line; thence with
the center of said highway in a
Northwestern direction 10.20
chains to an iron pin;
Southeastern com er of T^act
No. 3; thence w ith the
Southern Une of Tract No. 3,
North 84 deg. West 46.40 chs.
to an iron pin in the original
M cM ahan W estern line,
Southwest com er of Tract No.
3; thence w ith the said
original Western Une, South 5
deg. West 6.70 chs. to an iron
stake, the N orthw estern
com er of Tract No. 5; thence
with the Northem Une of said
Tract No. 5, South 84 deg.
E ast 52.30 chs. to a point in the
<dd Pino Road; thence with
the center of said road, North
3deg. East 1 ch. to the POINT
AND P L A C E O F TH E
BEGINNING, containing 33
acres, more or less, and being
Tract No. 4 of tbe F . R. Mc
Mahan lands, as surveyed and
jrfatted by A. L. Bowles,
Registered Land Surveyor,
August 16, 1958.
TU s property is to be sold
subject to any ad valorem
taxes that are a lien agaim t
the property.
The highest bidder at tbe
sale shaU be required to m ake
гаг c ^ rt-a щ > я n rв ^rve (S)r
percent of the succeiaful bid
pending confirm ation or
rejectim thereof by tbe Court.
This 7tb day of M ay, 1981.
Dennis W. M cNames
Commissioner
5-14 4tnp
NOTICE OF
BUD GET HEARING
The Davie County Board of
Commissioners will hold a
public hearing on Monday,
June IS, 1981 at 7 p.m. on the
proposed budget for Davie
County for Fiscal Y ear 1981-
82. The hearing wiU take place
in the C om m ission er’s
Meeting Room in the Davie
County Courthouse,
MocksviUe, N.C. A copy ot the
budget wUl be on file in the
County M anager’s Office and
will be available for public
inspecUon from 8:30 a.m. to 5
p.m ., M onday through
Friday.
A sum m ary of the entire
btidget is as foUows:
REVENUES
Property Tax »3,256,300
State Taxes 100,000
Local Option Sales T ax 438,650
O ther G en eral Fund
Revenues 500,000
Social Services
Revenue 427,942
Health Departm ent 269,145
Revenue Sharing 284,000
W ater Revenues 527,000
Other 21,000
Fund Balances 623.061
Total Revenues
EX PEN D ITU i
(General Fund)
General Gov. $1,648,031
Agency Contribdtions 479,933
School Board 1,367,968
Debt Service Contrib. 831,538
Social Services
Contrib. 395,291
Health Department
Contrib. 153,799
Revaluation Reserve 15,000
Total General
Fund $4,891,560
Social Service Fund 823,233
Health Department 444^5
Revaluation Fund~ 21,000
Debt Service Fund 1,067,788
Revenue Sharing Fund 299,000
W ater Fund 600,000
W ater Construction
Fund 276.000
$8,422,976
Less Interfund
Transfers 1.930.878
NORTH CAROLINA
DAVIE COUNTY
NOTICE OF SALE
Under and by virtue of the
authority of a Power of At
tom ey, duly recorded in the
Office of the Register of
D eeds for D avie County,
WUUam E . HaU, Attom ey in
F act for Essie H. Scott, widow
and sole beir of F. N. Scott,
Jr., on the 20 day 9f June at
12:00 Noon at tbe Courthouse
in MockavUie, N.C., wiU o«er
for sale to the highest bidder
for cash that certain tract of
land^ lyin g in M ockiville
Township and being set aside
for F . N. Scott, Jr., by virtue
of a special proceeiding; said
proceeding to be found in tbe
Office of tbe Clerk of Superior
Court for Davie County, North
CaroUna, in FUe Number 79-
SO-54 and described more
particularly as foUows:
BEGINNING at a stone, (a
conunon com er for Maggie
Scott Heirs as seen in Deed
Book 42, Page 197, Bryce Beck
as seen in Deed Book 100,
Page 179, and the F. N. Scott
Lands), and running thence
the foUowing courses and
distances: South 82 degs. 30
mins. 55 sec. E ast 747.74 feet;
South 02degs. 56mins. 24 sec.
West 711.15 feet; North 82
degs. 30 min. 55 sec. Weat 750
feet; North 03 degs. 27 mine.
E a st47.65feet; NwU) 03 degs.
27 mins. East 268.58 feet;
Nui Ul 02 dege. Ь6 mins. m sec.
____East 394.75 feet - Jo the
BEGINNING and containing
12.179 acres, more or less, as
surveyed by Grady L. Tut
terow, AprU 24, 1960, and
shown as 'li'act I on the H at of
F. N. Scott Heirs Lands in File
Number 79-SP-54, Office of
Uie Clerk of Superior Court of
D avie County, North
CaroUna.
A good faith deposit of five
(5 percent) percent of the
higiiest bid wiU be required at
the time of the sale.
Sale of Uie tract described
hereinat)ove wiU be subject to
upeet bids wiUiin ten (10) days
after the sale. Sutmequent
sales wiU be advertised and
held in accordance wiUi the
procedure for judicial sales.
This the 21st day of May,
1981.
William E.HaU
Attorney in Fact for
Essie H. Scott
, 5 214tnp
The proposed b u ^ e t in-
cludes exp en d itu res of
$299,000 of General Revenue
Sharing Funds. Persons in
terested in this budget m ay
attend and offer written or
oral com ments concerning
the entire budget and the
relation ship of revenue
sharing to the entire budget.
6-4 Itn
EXECU'iXlH-S NOTICE
NORTH CAROLINA
DAVIE COUNTY
H aving qualified as
Executor of the estate of
Nancy S. Tucker, deceued;
late of D avie County, North
CaroUna, this is to notify aU
_ perum s -.havin g— cU im a—
against said estate to preeent
them to the undersigned on or
before the 28 d ay of
November, 1981, said date
being at least six months from
tbe date of first pubUcation of
this notice, or this notice wUI
be pleaded in bar of their
reco very. A ll persons in
debted to said estate wiU
please m ake im m ediate
payment to tbe undersigned.
This the 28 day of M ay, 1981,
the sam e being tbe first
pubUcation.
Thurman Tucker, executor
of the estate of Nancy S.
Tucker.
B ro c k ftM cClam rock
A ttom eysatLaw
P.O. Box 347
MocksvUle, N.C. 27028
Telephone: 704-634-3518
5-28 4tn
i!,Ai!;uUTKlX‘S NOTICE
NORTH CAROLINA
DAVIE COUNTY
H aving qualified as
Executrix of Ute esU te of
Hannah Atkinson Bown,
deceased, late .of D avie
County, this is to notify aU
persons h aving claim s
against said estate to present
them to the undersigned on or
before the 2 lst day of
November, 1981, or this notice
wUl be pleaded in bar of their
reco very. A ll persons in
debted ,to said estate wUI
p lease m ake im m ediate
payment to the u n '
NORTH CAROLINA
DAVIE COUNTY
IN THE GEN ERAL
COURT OF JUSTICE
District Court Division
File No. 78-CVD-2759
Household Finance Corp.
Plaintiff
vs.
Arthur C. and Rose Spaugh
Defendant
NOTICE OF SALE
OF PERSONAL PRO PER TY
Under and by virtue of an
execuUon issu ^ on FUe No.
78-CVD-2759 by the G erk of
Superior Court of D nvie
County, directed to the un
dersigned Sheriff of Davie
County, in Uie above-entitled
action, the undersigned wUl
on the 1st day of July, 1981, at
12:00 o’clock noon, Davie
County CourUiouse, offer for
sale to the highest bidder for
cash , to sa tisfy said
execuUon, aU right, UUe and
interest which the defendant
now has or at any Ume at or
after the docketing of the
Judgment in said acUon m ay
have had in and to the
foUowing described personal
property, lying and being in
MocksviUe Township, Davie
County, NorUi CaroUna: 1975
M ercury S erial No.
5E38F529615 Blue in Color.
This property is located at
Davie County Courthouse.
This sale is subject to a
Judgment of $1,156.67 plus
cost of sale and any other
outstanding leins.
This Uie 27th day of M ay,
1981.
George Smith
Sheriff of Davie County
B y: Lacy Hayes
Deputy Sheriff
------------ g^2tnp
NORTH CAROLINA
DAVIE COUNTY
NOTICE OF SALE
Under and by virtue of
authority of the W ill of
WiUiam Logan SmiUi, Sr.,
duly probated and recorded in
Uie office of Uie O erk of
Superior Court of D avie
County, North CaroUna, the
u n d e r s i g n e d co-
adm inistrators wiU on the
20th day of June, 1981, at 1:00
p.m ., on the prem ises at Pine
Ridge Road, Davie County,
North CaroUna, offer for sale
to the highest bidder for cash
a certain tract of land lying
and being in Jerusalem
Township, D avie County,
North CaroUna, and more
p a rticu larly described as
foUows:
T R A C T I: BEGINNING at
a stake in the E ast com er of
West Broadway Road and the
Southern m argin of Pine
Ridge Road; thence along the
-S outhern m argin - o f- P iiie -
Ridge Road South 88 degs. 48
min. E ast 162.5 ft. to a stake,
being the com er of Lota 6 and
7; thence South 4 degs. 30 min.
West 175 ft. to a point, the
Southeastem com er of Lot 6
and the Southwestern com er
of Lot 7; Uience in a W esterly
direcUon along Uie Une of Lota
1 through 6 171.9 ft. to a point
in the Eastern m argin of West
Broadway Road, being the
Southwestem com er of Lot 1
and the Northwestem com er
of Lot 145; Uience along tbe
E astern m argin of W est
Broadway Road North 4 degs.
17 min. E ast 175 ft. to the
BEGINNING, being ttiose lots
designated as Lots 1 through 6
on a m ap of the Ira Broadway
property, made by J. D.
JusUce, Surveyor, November
17, 1941, said m ap being
recorded in Map Book 2 at
P age 22, D avie County
R e ^ try .
A good faith deposU of 5
percent of the highest bid wiU
be required at the time of the
sale.
The above tract wiU be sold
subject to upset bids witiiin
ten (10) days after the sale.
Subsequent sales w ill be
advertised and held in ac
cordance with the procedure
for judicial sales.
This tt
NORTH CAROLINA
DAVIE COUNTY
EXECUTOR'S NOTICE
H aving qualified as
Executor of the estate of Avis
O. Hodgson, deceased, late of
D avie County, North
Carolina, this is to notify aU
persons having claim s
against said estate to present
them to the undersigned on or
before the 4th day of
December, 1981, said date
being at least sbc months from
the date of first publlcaUon of
»his notice, or this noUce wUl
be pleaded in bar of their
recovery. A ll persons in
debted to said estate wUI
please m ake im m ediate
payment to the undersigned.
This the 4Ui day of June,
1981, Uie sam e being Uie first
publicaUon date.
Paul L«yman, Executor
of Uie estate of A viso .
Hodgson
Brock St M cClamrock
A ttom eysatLaw
P.O. Box 347
MocksvUle, N.C. 27028
Telephone: 704-634-3518
6-44tnp
EXECU TRIX n o t ic e:
NORTH CAROLINA
DAVIE COUNTY
Having quaUfied as exec-
torix of the estate of Rufus
C3ay AUen, deceased, late of
Davie County, this is to notify
aU persons having claim s
against said estate to present
Uiem to the undersigned on or
before the 12 d ay of
November, 1981 or ttiis noUce
wUl be pleaded in bar of their
recovery. A ll persons in
debted to said estate wUl
please m ake im m ediate
payment to the undersigned.
This the 14th'day of M ay,
1981.
Lois O’NeUl AUen, executor
of Uie estate of Rufus Clay
AUen, deceased.
H 44«t;
ADMINISTRATRIX
NOTICE '
NORTH CAROLINA
DAVIE COUNTY
Having quaUfied as Ad-
ministratrbc of the estate of
Joe Glenn Spry, deceased,
late of Davie County, this is to
notify a ll persons h aving
claim s against said estate to
present them to the un
dersigned on or before the 2lst
day of November, 1981, being
six months from the first day
of publicaUon or ttiis noUce
wUf be pleaded in bar of their
recovery. A ll persona in
debted to said estate wiU
please m ake im m ediate
payment to the undersigned.
This ttie 14th day of M ay,
'1981.
Sh irley S. Spry, Ad-
m hiistrabix of ttie Estate of
Joe Glenn Spry, deceased.
M artin and Van Hoy
Attom eys
Box 606
MocksviUe, N.C. 27028
5-214tnp
EXECUTO R’S NOTICE
NORTH CAROLINA
DAVliE COUNTY
H aving qualified as
Executor of the estate of
D orothy Sim m ons D ulin,
deceased , la te of D avie
County, this is to notify aU
persons h aving claim s
against said estate to present
them to ttie undersigned on or
before the 14 day of November
1981, or ttiis noUce wUl be
pleaded in b ar of their
recovery. A ll persons in
debted to said estate wiU
please m ake im m ediate
payment to the undersigned.
This the 14th day of M ay,
1981.
Henry L. DuUn, executor of
Uie estate of Dorothy ¡Sim
mons Dulin, deceased.
Henry L. Dulin
Rt.4,BoxS6
Advance, N.C. 27006
5-144tp
1981.
ttie 21st day of M ay,
This the 21st day ot M ay,
1981, Florence Stafford Mock,
ExecuU-ix of Uie estate of
Hannah Atkinson Bown
deceased.
5214tp
m mNOTICE
WANTEDTOBUY
UVESTOCi
catti», boti, vaali, òr feadar cattle, I liava an order (or all typai ^tu*
^11) pay i m A M price'for'
your M vetteArflaht on the farm. Psymailt tn
( or cain, wlilcii aver;he farm ,chacfc
'you prater.
i^ROMPt ИСК ijp s e rv ice ;
will buy ona haad or
a whole hard.
Give ma • catllii
i Fred 0 . Ellis
Clvaftock ll AuMfonaaring'
R t. 4 , M oclu viU e, N .C
<534 5 2 2 7 o r 9 9 8 8744;
Ufa4ong ratidant of Day
Olga Lee Smitti Harris
and Ralph L. Smitti
Co-Administrators of the
Estate of WUliam Logan
SmiUi,Sr.
5-214bip
CREDITOR’S NOTICE
H aving qualified as
Executor of the Eatate of
BERTHA JANE LATHAM, a-
k-a MRS. BERTHA JANE
M ARTIN LATH AM and
B E R T H A M ARTIN
LATHAM, Deceased, late of
Davie County, N.C., ttils ia to
noUfy aU persons, firnu and
corporations having claim s
againat aaid Estate, to exhibit
them to the undersigned at the
Law Firm and address below
shown, on or before the 28th
day of November, 1981, or tliis
Notice wiU be pleaded in bar
of Uieir recovery. AU persons
indebted to said Estate wUI
please m ake im m ediate
payment.
This the 27th day of M ay,
1981.
Jam es W. La tliam
Route 2, Box 332 B
MocksvUle, N.C. 27028
George F. PhiUip*, Attorney
Barigett, Caiaway, PhiUip«,
Davis, Stephen«, Peed aud
Brown
200 West FU'st Street
Winston-Salem, N.C. 27101
5-28 4Ui
NOTICE OF
DISSOLUTION
O F W AGNER
PLUM BING AND HEATING
COM PANY
N O TICE IS H E R E B Y
G IV E N that A rticles of
Dissolution of W agner
Plum bing and H eating
Company, a North Carolina
corporaUon, was filed in the
office of ttie Secretary of State
on ttie 22nd day of M ay, 1981,
and Uiat aU creditors of and
claimants agairist the cor
poration a re required to
present their resp ective
claim s and dem ands im
mediately, in writing, to Ibe
corporaUon so that it n u y
proceed to coUect its asaets,
convey and dispose of its
property, pay, satiafy and
discharge iU liabUiUes and
obligations and do aU that is
actuaUy required to Uquidate
its business and affairs.
This the 28Ui day of May,
1981.
WaRner Plumbing and
Heating Co.
C-o J.C . Kim mer
Route 4, Box 80-A
MocksvUle, N.C. 27028
HaU and Vogler,
Attom eys at Law
Attorneys for Wagner
Plum bing k H eating Co.
P.O.Box2»4
MocksvUle, N.C. 27028
Telephone: (704)634-6235
5-»4tnp
NORTH CAROLINA
DAVIE COUNTY
NOTICE
UNDER AND B Y VIRTUE
of a power of sale contained in
a certain deed of trust dated
May 30, 1972, executed by
John Lewis M ayfield and
wife, LuciUe H. M ayfield to
Lester P. M artin, Jr. Trustee,
and recorded in Book 82, page
287, Davie County Registry;
and under and by virtue of the
auUiority vested in the un
dersigned as Trustee and an
order executed by Delores C.
Jordan, a e r k of Superior
C!ourt of Davie County, on the
5tti day of M ay, 1981, Uie
default having been made in
the paym ent of the in
debtedness thereby secured,
the said deed of trust being by
Uie terms thereof subject to
foreclosure and the holder of
the indebtedness thereby
secured having demanded a
foreclosure thereof for tho
purpose of saUsfying said
indebtedness and ttie sam e
h aving been ordered and
approved by said order of
Clerk Ot Superior Court of
D avie County, the un
dersigned D. Duncan
MaysUles, SubsUtute Trustee
wUl offer tor sale at pubUc
aucUon to the highest bidder
for cash at the Courthouae
Door in Davie County, Nortti
Carolina, at 12:00 o’clock
noon, on the 30th day ot June,
1981, ttie land conveyed in said
deed of trust, ttie sam e lying
and b^ing in Davie County,
North CaroUna, and being
described as foUows:
BEGINNING at an iron, M.
B. Clement’s com er; runs
Nortti 86 West 2.24 chains to a
stake in Hudson line; thence
Southeast 3.00 chains to Uie
road; thence E ast with №e
road and Hudson Une 2.24
chains to sn iron, M. B.
Clem en t’s corn er; thence
Nortti 1 W est 2.88 TO THE
BEGINNING containing 6-10
acre, more or less.
FO R B A C K T IT L E see deed
from M ack Reid and wife,
Naomi Reid, to John F.
Jackson and wife, Agnes G.
Jackson, dated September 6,
1967, and recorded in Deed
Book 78, page 216, Register of
Deeds for Davie County of
fice.
A five (5) percent cash
deposit wUl be required. This
property wUl be sold subject
to aU taxes, encumbrances
and Uens of record.
This 22nd day of Bfay, 1981.
D. Duncan MaysUles
SubsUtute Trustee
6-44tn
PUBLIC HEARING
NOTICE
A Public Hearing wiU be
held to discuss R ^ ion I’s
Area Plan for TiUe III Fun
ding under the O lder
Am ericans Act of 1978. The
hearing wiU be held on June 5,
1981, at 1:30 p.m. in the North
west Piedmont CouncU of
G overnm ents Conference
Room , 280 South L iberty
Sb-eet, Winston-Salem, N.C.
Copies are avaUable free of
charge upon request. Contact
the N orthw est Piedm ont
CouncU of Governments 919-
722-9346.
6-4 Itn
EXECUTOR’S NOTICE
NORTH CAROLINA
DAVIE COUNTY
H aving qualified as
Executor ot the estate ot
Grady V. Riddle, deceased,
late of Davie County, this is to
notify all persons having
claim s against said estate to
present them to the un
dersigned on or before the 12
day of November, 1981, or ttiis
notice wiU be pleaded in bar of
their recovery. AU persons
indebted to said estate wUl
please m ake Im m ediate
payment to the
This the 14tti day of
1981.
Vestal G. Riddle, executor
of the estate of Grady V.
Riddle, deceased.
5-14 4ttp
NORTH CAROLINA '
DAVIE COUNTY
EXECUTRIX NOTICE
H aving qualified as
Executrix of Uie estate of
Alvis C. Cheshire, deceased,
iate of Davie County, Uiis is to
notify all persons having
claim s against said estate to
present them to the un
dersigned on or before the
28tti day of November, 1981,
being six months from the
first day of pubUcation or this
notice wUl be pleaded in bar of
Uieir recovery. AU persons
indebted to said esU te wUl
please m ake im m ediate
payment to ttie undersigned.
This the 22nd day of M ay,
1981.
G lad ys H. Cheshire,
Executrix of ttie esU te of
Alvis C. ChesMre, deceased.
M artin and Van Hoy
Attorneys
Box 606
MocksvUle, N.C. 27028
5-28 4tnTips Qn Toys
Helpful Hint* for Fun,
Safety and Economy
NORTH CAROLINA
D A V arCO U N T Y -------------------
EXECUTORS NOTICE
Having qualified as Co-
Executors of the estate of
Hubert R. Eaton, deceased,
late of Davie County, ttiis is to
n otify all persons having
claim s against said estate to
presen t them to the un
dersigned on or before the
27th day of November 1981, or
ttiis notice wUl be pleaded in
bar of their recovery. AU
persons indebted to said
estate wUl please m ake im
mediate payment to the un
dersigned.
ThU ttie 27tti day of M ay,
1981 Betty E . Dwiggins and
John R. Mauney, Jr., Co-
Executors of the estate of
Hubert R. Eaton deceased.
HaU and Vogler
Attom eys at Law
TESTS FOR TOYS
Now that large numbers
of toys are l>eing bought
year-round, parents, friends
and relatives of young peo
ple are increasingly inter
ested in the many measures
taken to make sure toys
sold today are safe.
NOTICE TO CREDI'TORS
NORTH CAROLINA
DAVIE COUNTY
The undersigned, having
heretofore qualified as Ad
m inistratrix of tbe Estate of
Troy B. Ratledge, deceased,
also known as Troy RaUedge
and Troy Byerly RaUedge,
late of Davie County, North
Carolina, hereby notifies aU
parties having claim s against
said estate to present them on
or before the 22nd day of
November, 1981, or this notice
wUl be pleaded in bar of their
recovery.
AU persons indebted to said
estate wUl please m ake im
m ediate payment to the un
dersigned.
This ttie 21st day of M ay,
1981.
ElizabeUi CHick Burns
850 Old Winston Rd.
KernersvUle, N.C.
John G. Wolfe, III
103 E. Main St.
KernursvUle, N.C. 27284
(919) 996-3231
5-214bi
By setting an example for-_-ting an ^
good safety habits and
encouraging children in
the proper use and mainte
nance of toys, adults
help children to mature,
develop confidence and
Ijecome more retpontible.
American-made toys are
considered among the safest
in the world. The U.S. toy
industry has been a leader in
actively encouraging its
members to produce safe
products in accordance with
its comprehensive industry
voluntary safety standard,
known as PS 72-76.
The toy industry uses
more than a hundred sepa
rate testing and design speci
fications to make certain
that normal use and abuse
of toys will not result in a
hazard which might cause
injury. For example, a sim
ple plastic truck intended
for a three-year-old can be
subject to as many as 60
different tests. Among them
are tests for sharp points
and edges, small parts,
wheel-pull resistance, pro
jections and durability..
Wiien it comes to toys,
however, perhaps the best
safety factor is the parent.
Parents should check chil
dren during play and toys
after purchase.
That way you can be sure
your youngster is safe at
play.
STOP Burglars ,
UNITED ALARM COMPANY INVITES YOUl
TO CALL TODAY FOR A '
FREi^EM ONSJRATION
Alaims
HUGE YARD SALE...Friday
and Saturday, June 5 and 6;
also June 12 and l3Ui, Rt. 1,
Advance, across from Gun
Club Road on Hwy. 158.
C ancelled when raining.
SmaU appliances, curtains,
drapes, clothes ot aU siies.
LotsofG O O D
BARGAINS!!!
YARD SALE: Saturday, June
6 ,8 a.m . to 2 p.m. Oak Grove
Methodist Church
Fellowship HaU on Hwy.
158, sponsored by the
Methodist Women.
GARAGE SALE...RAIN OR
SH IN E!!! Vi MUe Soutti of
IntersecUon 1-40 and 801,
Saturday, June 6, from 8
a.m . - 5 p.m. FoUow signs.
B I G GARAGE
SALE...Saturday, June 6,
from 8 a.m . imtU 4 p.m.
Woodland Development, 158
. E ast of M ocksi^ e, Just past
Hendricks Furniture Store.
Lam ps, furniture, pictures,
som e collectib les, nice
clothes, tires, electric train,
toys, and lots of other
things!
5 F A M IL Y Y A R D
SALE...Friday and
Saturday, June 5 & 6, from 8
a.m . untU -? In an old store
yard on highway 801 bet
ween F ork and G reasy
Com er. Rain or shine. Lots
of things to choose from!
GIANT YARD
SALE...Saturday, June 6th,
Corner H w y. 801 and
Redland Road. Plenty of
glassw are and other new
and used items. Watch for
signs.
HUGE Y A R D
SA L E ...H ospital Street
Extension, MocksvUle, N.C.
Saturday, June 6, 8 a.m .
untU ? CanceUed if rainng.
H ousehold a rticles, baby
items, flower pole, infant to
adult clottiing, nice w in ter'
coat, m en’s dress shoes,
H arlequin B ooks, P otty
chair and lots of other
misceUaneous items. Watch
for sign s!!!
SPECIAL SALE...M onday,
June Sth ONLY...10 a.m .
untU 4 p.m . 75 Bidts of
m aterial to choose
from...Only $1.25 per yard,
short lengths only 75 cents
yard, Ladies pants,
s, sUp« on special for
only $2.50. Others $4.50 and
up. Other Bargains. Come
early for BEST SELEC
TIONS. Pour Cw ners Cloth
Shop at White’s Grocery, Rt.
S, MocksvUle, N.C.
6m bipM
4 F A M IL Y Y A R D
SALE...Satur<Uy, June 6,
ONLY, from 9 a.m . untU~?
C hildrens clothing, toys,
handmade quUts and other
items. Lanier Road near
Lake M yers Campground.
Watch for signs.
5 F A M IL Y Y A R D
SALE...Saturday, June 6,
from 8 a.m . - 4 p.m. Fur
niture, rugs, tim , toys,
books, appUances, chUdrens
clothes and m any
misceUaneous items. Hwy.
64 East, at Fork, first brick
house on right, just past the
intersection of 801.
YARD SALE: Sat. June 6,
from 8 a.m . - ? 4W mUes on
601 North on Danner Road.
Cam per for pickup tnick,
cam per sheU k h o u s^ ld
items. Watch for signs.
TWO F A M IL Y Y A R D
S A L E ...Satu rd ay O N LY,
June 6, from 8 a.m. unUl
Oft Hwy. 64, Fork Com
m unity, Cedar G rove
C:iiurch Road. Last house on
left at the home of Mrs. C.M.
Bailey. Tools, clothes, toys,
and various other articles.
Rain or Shine!!!
YA R D S A L E ...S atu rd ay,
June 6th, ONLY...from 8
a.m. until 2 p.m. Hwy. 158
East between Redland and
BaUimore Road. Watch tor
signs! Rain or Shine.
YA R D SA L E ...Satu rd ay,
June 6,8 a.m . - 5 p.m . at The
Pantry, Salisbury Street for
the M uscular D ystrophy
Foundation. If you have any
clothes, cr other items that
you wish to donate for ttiis
cause, please do so by
bringing them to the store.
Anything w ill be ap
preciated.
YARD SALE...Sat. June 6,
from 8 a.m . - 4 p.m .
D epression gla ss, Jars,
botUes, clothes and other
misc. items. Main Church
Road. Look for signs on
Hwy. 158 and Cana Road off
601 N orth. C ancelled if
raining.
Y A R D SA L E ...S atu rd ay,
June6. from 8:30a.m . until -
-? At ttie Rotary Hut in
MocksviUe. Lots of clothing,
household item s, books,
toys, gam es, basketball
backboard and goal, and
good baked items.
M U L T I-F A M IL Y Y A R D
SALE...Saturday, June 6,
from 9 a.m . until 4 p .m .'
Southwood Acres...Tum left
off 601 Soutti next to Hi«^
School, first left, 8th house
on left. Sink, lamps, pic
tures, new and used
clothing, baby clothes,
housewares, books,
luggage, furniture, etc.
BIG Y A R D S A L E : 5
FamUies. Saturday, June 6,
8 a.m . until 4 p.m. A t the
home of Weldon AUen, two
mUes off highway 64 on
Cornatzer Rd. Men and
women’s clothing. M ater
nity clothes size 14,
chUdren’s clotties. Girls S-
6X, Baby items, dressing
table, -carrier-^ nd-1»oy8—
infant wear, toys, bicycles,
lawn mowers and various
household items. Rain date
is June 13.
NO JO K E GOOD Y A R D
SALE...At 373 Soutti Main
Street, M ocksviU e, N .C.
Thurs., Fri., k Sat., June 4,5
& 6, home of Eunice Daniel.
CanceUed if raining. WUl be
held a week later.
MOVING SALE: Friday June
5, 8:30 a.m. - 5 p.m . Also on
Saturday, June 6 ,8:30a.m. -
3:00p.m. Refrigerator, Auto
washer, table & chairs, TV
Rocker, Sofa k Chair, Bunk
Beds, 3 D resser’s, Old
Double Bed, vanity, lawn
mower. Odd and ends. 297
Fulton Street, O aftw ood in
MocksvUle off MUling Road.
Rain or shine.
Y A R D S A L E ...S atu rd ay,
June 6, from 8 a.m. - 6 p.m.
at 723 B oger Street,
MocksvUle. aoth es, cloth,
cutting torches, m asonary
tools, nuts and bolts, 200
sklens of yam at 60 cents a
sklen (unable to get
anym ore), and several toys.
0 SOLAR COOKING
SUN POWER MEANS FUN POWER
Free energy! Right in
your own back yard from a
source that produces more
energy in one second than
mankind has used in one
million years.
For fun in the sun try
cooking with Sun Power.
The Boy Scouts offer plans
for the construction of solar To obtain the kit of four
powered ovens and cookers plans send $1.00 to Boy
which can be buiit from in- Scouu Solar Flans, PO Box
expensive materials found 3U2, Dept. N, Teaheck, New
around the house. Jersey 07666.
Residential and Commercial
Call Day Of Night 634-3770
Convenient Credit Termt
Style Mart Inc.
410 W«t Side Driw lniii|tM,N.C. 27292
Has Im m ed iate O pening For Personnel
In The Follow ing A re a s -
Cu tting ; Exp erienced spreader
and^cutter.
Sew ing; Overlock or serger operators.
Fin ish in g ; inspectors and pressers.
Apply In Person Between 7:30 til 4:00 p.m.
OAVIl-; COUNTY F-NTERPRISn RKCORD, THURSDAY. JUNI- 4, 1481
PUBLIC NOTICE
1 AM NOT responsible for any
debts, other than those
m cde by M E, personally.
Bobby C. Brandon
Rt. 5, Mocksville, N.C.
27028
6-4-3tpB
ANIMALS
FOR SA L E ; AKC Chow Chow
puppies, fem ale, 8 weeks
old, red, 36 Champion Sired,
»175. Phone 919-475-M90.
6-4-4tnB
FO R SALE: Boxer-M ale-ftill
blooded- friendly- good with
children- good markings,
taoo.oo. CaU; 634-5758 and
ask for Pat Dawson.
64-ltpD
F R E E Beautiful Kittens to a
good home. Call Advance-
998-5358.
6-44tnN
FOR SALE; FamUy MUk
Cow. CaU 634-3919.
6-4-ltnC
THOROUGHBRED
T R A IN IN G C E N
T E R .... Saddlery e n tire
stock...» PERCEN T O F F -
Complete selection of horse
ca re products, leath er
goods, gifts, E n ^ h riding
apparel. And quaUty HAY
for sale at $1.40 per bale.
CaU; (919) 9984280.
5-14-4tnTTC
•yrahrliFJ»iUiwik
UNITED ALARM COM PANY
O FFERS you aU the options
for complete security in
case of Are, burglary and
personal em ergency. CaU
today for a F R E E estim ate
for your bome or business.
Phone 634-3770.
4-24 tfnB
B r k k a n d
FIREPLACES, BRICK AND
Stonewock...Extension and
C arpen try w ork done.
F R E E estim ates. R M F
Constructtoo, Inc. Call 9W-
3907.
M O tfa m iF
M A G IC IA N
HELP W ANTED; Reliable
couples in terested in
working in a Davie County
Group Home, full or part-
time.For information, caU;
634-5014 or 634-5801.
5-7-tfnDGH
WANTED: TRACTOR-
TRAILER DRIVER
T R A IN E E S. Im m ediate
openings fuU or part-time.
Approved for the training of
V eterans and N ational
Guards. CaU (919) 996-3221
or w rite : K ern ersville
Truck Driving School, P . O.
Box 385, KernersvUle, N.C.
27284.
S-7-«tnKTD
Positions Available....For 1st
and 2nd shifts for grinden.,
sheet m etal workers and
w elders. A pply a t: The
Austin Company, Hwy. 421,
YadkinvUle, N.C. between 9
a.m . and 2 p.m. or caU:
(919) 468-2851 for an ap
pointment.
64-2tnAC
B A 0 V $ iT T J N Q :
FOH SALE Custom fram es
... any size ... expert work
manship ... over 75 samples
on display ... see at
CAUDELL LUMBER
COM PANY, 1238 Bingham
Street, MocksviUe, Phone
634-2167.
4-24«! tfnC
FOR SALE; Beautiful hand
made quUts, aprons, spread,
placem ats. B arbie doll
clothes for your Christmas
gifts; inexpensive Jewelry,
dolls, Bibles, perfumes, etc.
Trash & Treasures. CaU 634-
2610.
10-30- tfnTT
WILL
sola
BU Y diamonds and
gola. Don’s Music Center.
124 North M ain Street,
MocksvUle, Phone 634-3822.
2-5-81 tfnD
MocksvUle BuUder’s Supply
now has RINSE ’N VAC
carpet steam cleaner. Only
$12.50 a day. Contact
MocksvUle Builders Supply
at 634-5915.
1-10 tfnMBS
W E D D IN G S
FORM ED...
P E R -
N.C. Licensed Day Care; fo r
chUdren 2 years and up.
EnroU a t Kiddie Kampus
P laysch ool. O ffer year-
round program for pre
schoolers. A lso accep t
school-age chUdren, through
12 years. FuU or part-time
ca re w ith m orning kin
dergarten program . 2
snacks and hot lunch daUy.
CaU 634-2266.
4-16 tfnKK
Would Uke to keep chUdren in
m y home. CaU 6344023.
5-a»4foF
I wUl do babysitting in m y
home for first and secoBd
shifts. In Cooleemee area.
CaU; 284-2560.
5-3B-4tnT
Dependable baby sitter in
Smith Grove area. FuU-time
or part-time. 7 a.m . untU 6
p.m . CaU; M rs. Kinder at
998-3935.M-tfhK
CHILD CARE: Experienced
chUd care in m y home, aU
ages accepted, full or part
time, $20.00 w eddy. Located
information caU 384-2742.
Anvtime...Anyplace, by an
ordained
768-0073.
Minister. Phone;
4-2 Ю фТН
m a g ic ! P r o fe s s io n a l
m agician fo r birthday
parties, etc. CaU today for
fees and dates. “ You’U be
p lea sed H !” Phone; 634-
2300. M ark Daniel, 416 P ark
. A ve., M ocksville, N .C.
27028.
<_________ 1-8 tfnD
D IV O R C E
U N CO N TESTED DIVOR-
CE....$60 plus court cost.
C onference room No. 3
HoUday Inn West, Friday,
June 19 from 7:30 - 8:30 p.m.
$75 plus court cost if you
prefer to come to the offlce
located in Clem m ons.
Edward Y . Brewer. Atty.
CaU 919-7664281.
1-31-81 UnB
•4-4tnB
We buy M ortgages, 1st, 2nd,
or 3rd. CaU 6344596.
440-tfnSD
R ew ard: F o r inform ation
leading to recovery for a
stolen International Tractor
with 2 point hitch, and 9Ц
feet yellow Woods Rotary
M ower Shallowford Farm s,
LewisvUle, N.C. CaU (919)
9454046.
5-28-4tnM
F O R S A L E : International
Wheat DriU, $575.00 In Good
Condition. CaU during the
day, 9084502; and evening!,
9184847.
5-28-2tpC
FO R SALE: B.Tft. Hot Point
Freeser....U ke new. Only
$125.00. CaU: 834-2467.
64-tfnJ
FO R SALE: 1888 Sohmer
Piano...Art Case, original
hand carving. Cnnpletely
re-cooditloned with original
ivory keys. M ust see and
h ear to ap p reciate.
-G O L L E G T O R iS - I T E M ,-
CaU: 6344292.
64-2lnS
M O T O R C Y C L E
FO R SALE; 1977 Honda 550,
M otorcycle, low mUeage. In
exceUent condition. CaU:
998-3479.
9-4-2tpH
FOR SALE: 1980 Glasstream
Bassboat, 65 HP M ercury
Motor with power tUt and
trim , M inkota T rollin g
m otor. Low ran ce depth
finder. Drive on Trailer.
$3,850.00. CaU: 284-3710.
6-4-ltpD
Your child may not be
seeing the world properly—
■nd not even know it. To
a young child, blurred or
double vision, even sight
throu^ only one eye, seems
normal. Without any point
of comparison, there’s no
way of knowing that what
he or she sees should be any
C O U L D Y O U U S E A NEXTRA$t100AYEART
You earn at least that much by serving just one weekend
a month and two weeks a year in the Army Reserve. Choose
one of hundreds of skills when you join. We'll send you to
an Army school and pay you to learn your skill. You use that
skill back home with your local Reserve unit. Call your Army
Reserve representative, in the Yellow Pages under “Recruiting."
different.
But your child may tell
you about his or her seeing
difficulties in non-verbd
ways, says the National So
ciety to Prevent Blindness.
Write the Society for
these clues, and check your
youngster's sight with the
Society’s Home Eye Test
for Preschoolers. The test
doesn’t replace a profes
sional eye examination, but
can tip you off to a possible
problem.
For a copy of the Home
Eye Test or other informa
tion, contact your state
Society to Prevent Blindness
or the National Society to
Prevent Blindness, 79
Madison Avenue, New York,
N .Y . 10016.
A R M Y R E S E I M L
B E A L L Y O U C A N B E .
F E R R E E 'S M O B ILE HOM E S E R V IC E
Porchet, Pstlof 11 Additions Complete Repair ^ v lc e ;
Sklrtinf II Re-Levellnfi Door, Wintfffw, & P«flo Awnlngi;
Door* and W lndowi. CHECK OUR PRICESII
7 0 4 ^ 9 2 -5 6 3 6
The navel orange got its
name from tha fact that
the dapretilon it hai at
one and tom awhat re-
•emblei a human naval.
IT PAYS
TO ADVERTISE
IN THE CLASSIFIED
SPOT CASH
FDirCLEAN LATiUQDEUAllTOMOBILES.
irtiniilAKES MODELS AND SIZES NEEDED
B U Y — S E LL — R EN T — T R A D E
D U K E W O O T E N
S A L E ^ N T A L S
NEnTOCmTWIL 634 3215^34-a77
NEW AND USED
OFFICE FURNITURE
^ Safes ii^ Files
^ Fire Proof Files
ROWAN^
I U iN JIjInSt
I Saia>uiy,NX
Let the Profession al
Bookkeeper Walkertown,
N.C. do your bookkeeping,
clerical work at her home
office. She wUI save you
time & money, 12 years
experien ce. F ast, depen
d able, accu rate. Phone
coUect at 919-595-2549, after
4:30 p.m . for an ap
pointment.
5-7-tfnG
FOR FAST AND EFFICTENT
SERVICE; On aU electrical
n ee^ , large or smaU, caU
K arl Osbome, owner of
O SBORN E E L E C T R IC
COM PANY. CaU 634-3398.
230 E a st M aple A ve.,
MocksviUe, N.C.
_______________14 tfn O
InvMtlgitions
i
Private Investigations
WiU be StricUy Confidential,
Lie. No. 320, telephone:
SalUbury (704) 636-7533 or
Kannapolis (704) 9324705.
1-141 tfnL
ABORTION
F R E E P regn an cy testing.
Arcadia Women’s Medical
C linic in W inston-Salem ,
N .C. C all for an ap
pointm ent Collect: (919)
721-1620.
1-141 tfnAWC
CLEANING
C&C CLEAN IN G SER -
V IC ED on’t spend your
Saturdays doing house
cleaning or windows. Just
caU us for an estimate. Also
construction cleaning. C^U
998-5616 or 6344163.
1-2941 tfnC
WUl Do; AU types of (
S ervice or Y ard W ori
AVAILABLE....C1eaniiig
done on a one time basis or
every week. CaU Diana at
9884171.
5-284tnL
FURNITUmr
finished chairs? « s r .of aU
sizes - upholstered swivels,
deacon benches, aU kinds of
used furniture; and a good
supply of NEW name brand
m atresses at a reasonable
pH ce and 3-piece livin g
rboni suite at a bargain. AU
sizes of rockers and chairs.
CaU W.A. EUU at 6344327.
11-30 tfnE
g f lie f lt P le f c U p
FOR W EEKLY GARBAGE
pick-up anywhere in Davie
County... ca ll B E C K
BR O TH ER S G A R B A G E
DISPOSAL SERVICE, 284-
2917 or 284-2812 Cooleemee,
or County M anager’s Office,
MocksvUle 6344513.
6-1241 tfnB
FOR SALE: 1965 Taylor
Mobile Home.. 12 X 60...2
bedroom , 1 bath, un-
derpenning...2 porches...oil
drum and stand. Call 998-
3902 or 998-3291.
4-30-tfnJL
FO R S A L E : 1974 Two
bedroom Commador . MobUe
Home, 12 X 55, washer,
dryer, air conditioner in
GOOD condition. $5,000.
CaU: 998-5787 after 5 p.m.
6-4-tfn
FO R S A L E ; 1981 Two
bedroom Mobile Home, 12 X
56, total electric, fully
furnished, storm windows
and doors. $7,995. Four more
To Choose from. All at a
large discount. Ervin Motor
and MobUe Home Company,
Hwy. 601, H mUe south of
MocksvUle. Phone: (704)
634-3270.
6-4-3tnEM
CLO SE OUT IN NEW
MOBILE
HOMES....Carolina....l4 X
60, 2 bedroom, total electric
and furnished. $10,900.00.
CaU; 634-3270. Hwy. 601 , M,
mile south of MocksviUe.
6-4-3tnEM
FOR SALE; 1978 14 X 70
Sheraton Seville, 2
bedroom s, 2 full baths,
central air, total electric,
storm windows and door,
cornpietely furnished on a '
rented lot. U ke New $18,500
or assume loan. CaU; SheUa
Oliver at 284-2898.
64-ltpO
Buiineu Opportuniti»
If you’re thinking of
SELLING A BUSINE'.SS???
O r B U YIN G A
B U SIN E SS???, C all the
PR O FESSIO N A LS. A ll
information confidential.
CaU Professional Bushiess
Brokers at (919) 765-7121.
3034 Trenw est D rive,
Winston-Salem, N.C. 27103.
________________^26 tf nPB s
R O O M S F O R R E N T
ROOMS f o r ’k e n t !!^ !!^ ^
at Don’s Jewefary and Music
C en ter... 134 N orth M ain
S treet, M ocksville, N .C.
Phone 634-3822.
1-11 tfnD
M uele, T u n in g ^ R a p i M
ilA N O TUNING, R E P /til£ ,
m oving. Specializing in
rebuilding. R egistered
Craftem an w ith Piano
Technicians GuUd. Seaftwd
Piano Service, 178 Crest-
view D rive, M ocksville,
N.C. CaU Jack Seaford at
634-5292.
.9-25 tf nS
PIANO TUNING; Repairing
and RebuUding. 22 years
experience. A ll work
guaranteed. PIANO
TECH NICIAN S GU ILD
CRAFTSMAN. CaU WaUace
Barford at 284-2447.
3-541 tfnB
With
Automatic Washers
Using efficient laundering
techniques can be one of
the most bffective ways to
save energy in the laundry
room, say home economists
from Whirlpool Corporation.
FOR SALE: MUST SE LL !!!
Upright Piano-RriHiUt by
IQutz Piano Company of
Salisbury in 1977. D ark
mahogany finish. CaU; 493-
7129 after 5 p.m. any day.
5-28-3tnC
T rm
Use your washer to capa
city, they advise, but don’t
overload. Clothes must be
able to move and flex freely
during the washing period
for best cleaning and least
fabric damage.
Pre-treating clothes and
tiorting them by color, fab
ric and weight, as well as
separating the “ lint-givers”
from the “lint-receivers” are
important steps to ensure
that clothes come clean the
first time and don't need to
be re washed.
For small loads, be sure
to select the correct water
l^vel so that you don't end
up wasting extra water (and
energy) that’s really not
needed.
The world's largest sup
ply of frsih watsr it
in the Antsrptic ijcscsp.
ari
OFFH _
r r 2 0 N o r th i
Salisbury, N.C.
w e - i
F urn itur», System aj
A rt S ue
a «r «S P E C IA L*
' 1.50 ft. INSTALLED
~SrAM LESS
ALUMINUM GUTTERRuit Free No Leaks
IS yr. Fsctuty Baked-on
Enamel Finish
ALL W ORK GUARANTEED
FREE ESTIMATES
998-8605
Bishoff ^
Aluminum Gutters
pel
l04
FOR SALE: Remodeled nice
home inside and out at
North M ain Street in
Cooleem ee, N.C. 3
bedrooms, 2 full baths, large
living room, kitchen has
built-in oven, drop in range,
dining room or den, utility
and pantry. New oil furnace
with air conditioner and
paved drive. CaU 634-5918
office; and 634-2849 home.
2-5 tfnF
FOR SALE; By owner, 4 year
SpUt Level, 3 bedrooms, 3
baths, heat pump, central
air, 22 X 31 out buUdlng, 3.77
acres. Rainbow Road. CaU
9984246. $80,000.00
440-tfnR
FO R SA LE 1. B eautiful
R em odeled F arm House
near completion, almost 3
acres of land, paved drive,
firep lace and separate
garage. Only $36,000.2. New
3 bedroom Contemporary
Home, IVi baths. Only 5
Tcent down payment with
srest rate financing
availab le for qualified
applicants. CaU: 634-2252.
5-14-tfnS
FOR SALE B Y OWNER: 3
bedroom Brick House, %
Acre lot; fuUy carpeted,
central air, fuU basement;
Double carport; Out
buUding storage shed; 601
North. Priced to seU P.^8T
Assumable loan, n ioh e
(704) 4924679 after 4 p.m.
5-38-tfnS
FO R SA L E ; R ESTO R E D
FAR M HOUSE WITH
ALM OST 3 A C R E S O F
LAND......4 staU horse bam ,
fenced pasture, 4 fireplace
and aU the C3iarm you could
ever ask for! $78,500. Judy
Snyder at Crowder Realty
Company, Winston-Salem,
N.C. Phone (919) 768-1300.
6-44tnCR
UPHOLSTERY
O F F E R IN G YO U TH E
F IN E ST in custom
upholstery...Large selection
of QuaUty F ab ric and
vinyls. F R E E estimate«.
Quick,‘ effectiv e service.
C6U J.T. Smith Furtdture
Co., Inc., 49S-77M. Located
10 mUes w est of MocksviUe
on Sheffield Road. Over 30
years of experience.
-------------------------------l-t-tfaSF -
P A IN T IN G , HOME
REPAIRS. Small or large
jobs. For free estimates caU
Jam es M iller at 998-8340.
12-28 tfnM
SEPTIC TANK CLEANING
S E R V IC E S ...certified to
pump septic tanks-large
truck for fuU time, efficient
service...also rent sanitary
to ile ts ...C a ll 284-4362.
Robert Page, Cooleemee.
1-1 tfnP
CARPENTRY REPAIR ...
Commercial and residen
tial. FR EE Estim ates. CaU
after 5 p.m. 998-6016.
1-1 tfnF
Bob’s P ain ting Ser-
vice..Interlor and Exterior
aU work first class, 30 years
experience, Ш е estimates.
Call 49^7S88.
5-31-tfnS
M ob ile H om e*
f o r R E N T
FOR RENT: 13 X 52 Two
bedroom trailer with
w asher, d ryer and air
condition. $175.00 per
month. Write: c-o S. Mc
Bride, Rt. 4, Box 35, Ad
vance, N.C. 27006. Please
include idione number.
5-38-3tpM
"Clasxlied Adt do more things (cm mot* peopte Ihen any other lofm of edvefiistng '
Auction
AU CTION SE R V IC E S:
Auctions don’t cost they
pay. For any type of auction
sale contact Buck Hanes,
Auctioneer. 919-998-3610.
NCAL 1362.
9-25 tfnH
WE CONDUCT ALL TYPES
OF AUCTION SALES. We
are now contracting sales
for Spring and Summer of
1981. C all Jim Sheek,
Auction & Realty at 998-3350.
NCAL 924.
34 tfnS
TIME TO BEAU’H F Y y 6U B
PROPERTY..."W hite
Pines, digging choice, $5.,
Flowering Shrubs-trees-
grass-Mulching. For
co m p lete la n d sca p in g
services. Monday through
Saturday...9 a.m . - 5 p.m.
CaU 634-2254.
A U C T I O N
We Offer Complate Auction
li.RasI EftatsServIc*
With The Know How And
Experience To Conduct Any
Type Of Auction
S ucceMfuliy
"Serving The Auction
Profession Since 1934'
Thinking
Auction?
T H IN K
Y O R K
N£.A.L. No. 952
704/546-2696
919/766-5500
D A V IE
M O B IL E H O M E R E P A IR S
IF YOUR HOME HAS
* Weak and Rotten Floors
*Cabineti That /Vre Mot Secure
* Windows That Won't Roll Out
* A Roof That Lealu and Rumbles
* Windows and Doors That Leaks
CALL TIM, evening! after 4 p.m.
and weeicends anytime.
634-3334
Don't let the value of your home go down hill.
CALL TODAY ___________
T
FO H B E N T : 2 bedroom -
MobUe Home at Greasy
Corner. D eposit and
references required. Please
caU; 284-2688.
6-4-lt
Lan d F o r S ale
FO R SALE: 2 to 3 acres of
land on Main Church Road;
just off of the Cana Road.
CaU 1403^94-3140 for more
information.
64-3tpD
LOTS FO R SALE....lVi loto in
Lakewood VUlage, partiaUy
wooded, $4,500.00. CaU: 634-
3376.
6-4-ltpS
FOR SA L E ; 1976 Datsun 7-10 4
door sedan, air, new paint,
4-speed. Call 284-2994.
5-21-tfnK
FOR SALE; 1972 Corvette,
Extra nice and loaded; AC,
PS, P B , tilt-telescopic,
power windows, leather, 4-
speed, AM -FM , slick
lacquer paint with reliable
drive-trahi m akes for a
great investm ent.$5,950.
CaU: 634-3747 or 634-3219.
5-28-tfnM
FOR SALE; 1977 GMC 4-
W heel D r iv e ....p o w e r
steering, power brakes, air
condition, low m ileage.
CaU; Scotty Seaford at 634r
5292.
5-38-2tnS,
SURPLUS JE E PS, CARS and
TRUCKS, avaUable. Many
seU under $200.00. CaU 312-
742-1143, Ext. 5239 for in
formation on how to pur
chase.
6-4-4tpPA
FO R S A L E ; 1973 Ford Van V-
8 Automatic, $750.; 1986
Chevrolet truck, % ton,
$495.; 1974 Opel Blanta 3-
d oor,, $1350.; 1973 Old-
sm obAe, $550.; 1970
Volkswagen, $850.; 68 Ford
Torino 3-ikx>r, $395.; and 10
more to choose from a siqwr
good buys! Ervin Motor
Company, Hwy. 601 South,
V> mUe out. Phonei-t704)
634-3270.
6-4-3tnEM
FOR SALE; ’33 Plymouth
Coupe (Hot Rod) 337 Chevy
M otor, AM -FM C assette.
Tilt wheel; 1966 Chevrolet
Impala, pe, pb, AM-FM 337,
3 speed, Must see to ap
preciate; 1960 Ford Ran-
chero, 3 speed in GOOD
condition. CaU; 6344376.
64-ltpS
F O R SA L E ; 1976 Ford
R a n ger...air condition,
power steering, 360 engine,
longbed, EC, $2,895. CaU:
998-4968.
6-4-ltpM
According to a leading
dental professor, the “ dirty
dozen” liat of cavity caiuers
are sugared gum, loUipops,
jelly l>eans, fudge, taffy, rai-
sins, pie.Helly- ^ughni ____
sugar-coated cereals, soft
drinks containing sugar, lie-
orice, marshnullows and
honey.
= — i •/ / ;
------- ^
Fortunately, there
' ways to fight cavities.
Studies by the National In
stitute for Dental Research,
' a government agency, show
' daily use of a fluoride den
tal rinse reduced cavities
3 9 .8 percent over and
' above the effectiveness of
' fluoridated toothpaste, even
in a fluoridated water area.
Proper diet, avoidance of ^
the “ dirty dozen” cavity ^
causers, and regular use of
fluoride dental rinse, such
Colgate’s Fluorigard, cou
pled with a fluoride tooth- ^
paste, help your family pre
vent a significant number
of cavities. With proper
care, your teeth should last
lifetime.
C A itP tT
D r y C le a n in g
a square foot,
iMthroonii $5XlO
Call Anytim e,
7 D sy fa W e ik
MARK JAMES
Rt. S, Box 2 17-A
M ockiville, N.C. 27028
(91») 9 9 & -3 5 4 6
SURPLUS FURNITURE
PARTS, SUPPLIES,
AND SAMPLES
iurga quantities for manu
factures, small shops, or
hobbyiits. Oak, pIna, and maple wood dimension in
sets for tables, upholstery
fabric, brau hardware, screws, sandpaper, glass.
Many other Items including
equipment.
Tanalewpod Furniture
3 Vne^^Mt of 801
c ii^ s s * n a ^ .
910908-^216
ЩИТlivestocli !
i Cov, In c. :
iHiolèMle Meati
ThomiswHeriÌ.(Ll
I Mtx BLIV I ór foo COÌ^:.. alto Bulli, Veaii. \ Feeders, Celvas... WS f>ay Carfi For All Cattla , ^hen Plckad Up. ]
_ »E W lLli _ . Pick up - Kill - Procesi Vour-l,ocker Betf .
]A.LBeck,Jr.
Ut Ì.ThomasviÌb,N.(r,
(Ìt« J7g g-« 0 ÌÌ U I7M -7SS4 i
>hons Aftar «¡OO PJyli,
Esi1yAJl«.(«1D47»^
8D DA vii; c o u n t y KNTI-RPRISI- RHCORO, THURSDAY, JUNI; 4, 1981
A N ew Way To V acatio n : Tim esh arin g
Most people would love a
resort home for vacations, but
can’t afford to buy one they
use only a few weeks a year.
That dilemma has spawned
the concept of vacation
timesharing, a plan which
gives each participant ex
clusive right to occupy a real
estate unit for a specified time
period annually. This idea has
many advantages, says the
Better Bimlness Burenu, but
should be given carefu l
thought before a long-term
commitment Is signed.
The term "tim esharing”
comes from the computer
industry, where many in
dividuals can gain access to
one com pan y’s com puter
bank for a fee. Sim ilarly, the
vacation tim esharer acquires
lim ited a ccess to a
condominium, house or hotel
for a fee.
Real estate timesharing is
less than 10 years old in the
United States, yet last year
over t l billion of tlmeshares
were sold. There are no
federal regulations
sp ecifically coverin g this
industry, but some states
have laws to protect con
sumers. Among them are
resort-oriented states like
California, Florida, Hawaii
and South Carolina. Before
buying, find out what laws
apply in the jurisdiction
where the vacation spot is
located.
There are three basic types
of timesharing transactions;
ow nership, lease and
security.
In the ownership type, the
purchaser legally becomes a
“ tenant in common” with the
other timesliarera. U a person
bought one week of fifty one-
week Intervals In a resort, he
or she would be a one-fiftieth
owner of the estate and would
receive a deed.
A variation on this is ‘In
terval ownership,” where the
buyer has e xclu sive oc
cupancy rights for a specific
time period, but does not
become a “ tenant in com
mon” until after a certain
term of years t«pires.
With either ovmershlp type,
the purchaser m ay resell the
timeshare, rent it, w ill it to
someone or otherwise dispose
of it. The timeshare has the
sam e status of any other
“owned” property.
Note, however, that mw- tgage financing is currently unavailable, except in some
cases through the developer. Personal loans, which are usually more expensive, are the standard means of financing.Under • lease or “right-to-
type,
dition
use’’ tim eshare, the p u r
chaser has no ow nership
interest in the property. The
buyer rents annual occupancy
rights and cannot in
dependently sell or re-rent the
timeshare. The right-to-use
generally exists for a certain
number of years, after which
the timeshare reverts back to
the developer.
This type, which usually
rost* lew than com parable
ow nership tlm eshares, is
more common with resort
hotels.
The third category involves
timeshares sold as lecnrltlet,
where the developer offers the
buyer a lim ited par
tnership in the timeshare
developm ent. L ike any
security, this plan must be
registered, is sold through
brokers and is regulated by
state and federal securities
laws.
The buyer who helped
finance the tim esh are’s
developm ent then gets a
discount on the cost of oc
cupancy privileges. That
occupancy m ay be either of
the other two ty p e s-
ow nership or lease
agreement.
Regardless of the timeshare
rem em ber that in ad-
ition to the purchase price
there w ill be an annual
maintenance fee, which m ay
be several hundred dollars. In
1980, the average timeshare
price was $5,500 for one week,
with some prices reaching
twice tliat amount.
People investing in a
timeshare should be sure that
they want to spend their
vacations each year in the
sam e place. Although there
are exchange program s
cropping up that allow
timeshare owners in different
locations to sw ap with each
other, it m ay be not advisable
to buy into a timeshare plan
with the hope of trading each
ye a r and going to m ore
desirable locations.
Before signing up, visit the
site if at all possible. Ask the
local Better Business Bureau
for a reliability report on the
timeshare developer.
Read the contract, which
can be quite complicated.
Understand fully the nature of
the ownership, if any, snd the
transfer rights. As with aiw
m ajor purchase, it is sd-
visable to consult a lawyer.
M ake sure there are no blanks
left in the contract and that
any oral promises are put in
writing.
W ith these precautions
taken, a tim eshare resort ]dan
can mean years of enjoyable
vacations.
Health Tips
.......Ah Springi! 31w JOflULtO.
roll vp your slaevas, fat out tbe rake snd boe, and start
planning and pruning.
Whether your goal is “Gardener of the Mooth" or simply winning your annual battle
with the crabgrass, tbe North Carolina Medical Society has a few gardening tips to keep tbe average green Uiumb in the garden and not in tbe
doctor’s office.Kmd in miiui that oar- dening is no lasy man’s exercise. It is strenuous work, so take it easy at first and give your muscles a chance to regain tbeir strengtti. Having tbe proper tools will help you get tbe job done in less time and will mean less strain on
your bo(ty. When using power tools, follow safety directions.
Cbeck plugs and connecting wires periodically for loose wiring or dangwous sparks. Make sure all machines are OFF and co<d before servicing
or adding gasoline.Wear gardener’s gloves wben you are working outside. Not only will it mean less
wesr and tear on your hands, but it will also protect you from poisonous plants and insect stings. If you do come in contact with a poisonous
plant, wash tbe area immediately witb soap and water and apply plain calamine lotion or a 0.5 percent hydrocortisone cream to relieve tbe itching and to promote healing of the rash. Call your physician if tbe rash fails to respond to treatment or if it cononues to spresd days after contact with the poisonous plant.Stings from bees, wasps, and yellow-Jackets can mean anything from a mild discomfort to severe reactions necessitating the emergency room. If you get stung, a paste of meat t«n- ' derizw or baking soda and coU water wiU soothe tbe
pain. If you are severely allergic to insect stings, ask your physician about desensltisation shots.Other hazards common to the outdoor gardener are cuts and sbrasions. Simple cuts and scratches from thorn« should be washed off thoroughly with soap and water and an adhesive bandage applied. If you let tbe cut bleed a Tittle first, it will help cleanse tbe wound. Deeper
cuU may require medical
attention.One potential danger of cuts is tetanus, or “lockjsw”. The
tetanus spores, wiilch are found in soil SS well as ir. the dust in your garage and house, can infect you I the UniMt wound, first symptonu of tetanus are
Irritabfllty I
~ n é m u so M
and rasOa
finally becoming so rigid that the facial muscles give a clenched Jaw look (beoce tbe popular nickname).Lodijaw U hard to cure. By Ibe time tbe symptoms appear, tbe disease is weU advanced. Once you become its victim, tbe cure is not certain. Tetanus antitoxin (TAT) is given as an emergency measure against tetanus for thos» who have net bem immunised, but it is not always effective in curing lockjaw. Hie best protection is continued immunisation from shots ot tetanus toxoid. A series of 3 injections fdlowed by a 4th a year Uter and boosters at 4-year intervals thereafter provide the best protection from tetanus.Insecticides can become another problem for tbe ganlMier If be isn’t careful. Most Insects can be destroyed by sprays or powders, but tbe unsuspecting gardener can become a victim too. Most insecticides contain toxic chemicals that are irriuting to the eyes and skin and can
cause nausea if inhaled. Cover bird feeders and baths, dog dishes, fish poods, and
eating surfaces before applying insecticides. Tbe toxins that are harmful to people are harmful to animals as well.Since many insecticides are flammable, it is a wise idea to refrain from smoking while applying sprays and powders to your yard or garden. Keep insecticides stored in a cool, dry place, away from
children’s reach.In case of sn accidmt, follow the emergency procedures found on tbe insecticide container and notity your physician.
GtlfUrtt/TS AirACMtP
A P LA ^U K CAftitVHÙ AIH 0 l» M K r COPC -fO
pioMifii 10/THF P IM T VSHlCti *fD UlAVf OUftV>LAK
Om a Mo«f EARmilifv£L, Tite AR.liV
B M M M f AMP 0PPC«TUMITIES
IN Uuavi^TICS, aitiHAi.
iM TCLM M M Ce am:> ei.icrm ouic^
Oood or
O M M m T i M E s m s
^ HOTPOINT MICROWAVE!
CHEST OR UPRIGHT FREEZERS! BIG CAPACITY
'u Moaei hvib/i
j a « $ 3 7 g !
UPRIGHT SPECIAL!
^ 15.2 Cu. ft. capacity
@ Adjustable tem pera
ture control O 4 Door
shelves @ Durable Tri-
Ion II cabinet liner @
Recessed hand grip @
Magnetic door seal.
CHEST SPECIAL!
S 16.2 Cu. ft. capacity
m Adjustable tem pera
ture control @ Counter
balanced lid with re
cessed handle E3 De
fro s t w a te r d ra in @
Foam case insulation.Model FH16A
i « J3 7 9 9 5
FINE TUNING 2SPttDriM£R CONVENIENT
DEFROST CyCLE
UP
FRONT RECIHt
GUIDE
P Large 1.3 cu. ft. capacity
^ 2 P ow er levels ^ 35
M inute tim er ^ H andsom e
sim ulated w ood grain ca b
inet ® B lack glass front.j u « 2 9 9
FUU COLOR SUIDE I
GOOKIDOK mcwBto
Model RE926Y
95
M i T H E
M I R !
SOLIDLY BUILT,
PRICED TO SELL-OUT!
3 WASH/RINSE TEMPERATURES
HEAVY DUTY TRANSMISSION
SELF-CLEANING FILTER RING
3 WATER LEVEL SELECTIONS
2-SPEED WASHER
B P erm anent Press and K n its/D e lica te s cycles p
R egular cycle fo r Heavy, N orm al, Light Soil, and A c ti
vated S oak B B leach dispe nser B D ryer w ith up to
90 m inute tim e r B P erm anent Press and P oly K nits
cycle B U p-front lint filte r B P orcelain enam el finish
drum .
Washer Model WLW2500A
O U R LOW PRICE
JOIC
*319
PORCELAIN ENAMa ^ FINISH DRUM
Model DLB68S0A
Quality permanenl-
p re s s d ry e r. r ^ ^ A t
A u to m a tic S e n s i-D ry j » J ^ ■ ■ j 3
o r tim e d c y c le fe a tu re .
P o ly k n its c y c le .
NEW LOW PRICE
ON THIS QUALITY HOTPOINT!
WE HAVE THE HOTPOINT BUILT-IN TO REPLACE
YOUR OLD... PLUS A KIT TO DO-IT-YOURSELF!
ENEftGYSAV» DRY CYCLE
CRYSTAL CLEAR' RINSE DISPENSER
SOUNDINSULATED
GREAT HOTPOINT QUALITY-GREAT VALUE!
O 6 C ycle b u ilt-in dishw asher B
C ushio n-co ated upper and low er
racks @ Short W ash-Cycle H Soft
food disposer 0 Porcelain enamel
interior E3 Dual detergent disposer d jU S t
Multi-level wash action. »
Model HDA780
■ H x r lip jt r ifT lr
INFINITE HEAT ROTARY CONTROLS
STAY-UP CALROD» UNITS
REMOVABLE DRAWER^ FOR EASY cleaning!
«
COME SEE THIS VALUE PACKED 30" RANGE!
Easy-to-clean 30" oven-range ■ Surface unit "o n " light
Removable trim rings/pans ■ Lift-off oven door.0 1 ^ ^ _ Model RB525A
»- '’O r
D A N I E L
Furniture and Electric Co., Inc.
P h o n * 6 3 4 -3 9 79 o r 6 3 4 -2 4 9 2
M o c k fv llle , N .C .
S o u th M o in S tro o t
o t th o O v o r h o o d B rid g o
VI
I I your AutJiorized .É
HOTPOINT Dealer For Davie County!
dJÈàkti
1 9 8 1 4 9 8 2 B u d g e t i s 4 , 2 5 3 , 4 7 7
Town Tax Rate Remains 50'
M ocksville residents can expect to pay
the sam e tax rate on property a ' last
y e a i. The rate rem ains at 50 cents per
100 valuation under the town’s proposed
budget of »1,253,477 for 1981-1982.
The M ocksville B oard of Com
missioners will hold a public hearing on
the proposed budget on Monday, June 22
at 7 p.m. at the town hall.
The last rate increase cam e in 1979
when the co.’nmissioners hiked the rate
from 47 cents to the current 50 cents.
Terry Bralley, town administrator,
said, “ M ocksville is in a pretty good
situation. Due to the recent annexation,
w e’ve probably added $10 million to the
tax base.”
Bralley said, “ There is not any great
increase in any one particular area. We
are just maintaining, trying to hold the
line. There is just a m arginal increase In
this year’s budget. From $1,105,000 to
roughly $1,200,000, there's not a whole
lot of difference.”
Bralley admitted that MocksvUle
could face a loss in revenues from the
state in the town’s share of the sales tax
and Powell bill funds. Monies from these
revenue sh arings a re based on
population which declined in MocksviUe,
according to the 1980 U.S. Census. The
town’s population declined from around
;i,500 (o 2,600 in I960. Bralley said the
census did not include the town’s recent
annexations which should add another
400 cili7.ens to the town.
Mocksville made two annexations in
the last year. The first took in a mostly
indu.<!trial area along MiUing Road and
Bethel Church Road. The second added
the residential areas of Ridgemont and
Craftwood.
The proposed budget for the General
Fund breaks down into: administration
alloted $126,117; governing body, $9,600;
planning and zoning, $8,54»; building
and grounds, $78,387; police depart
ment, $169,498; fire, $40,100; street ,
$64,539. Funds from the state’s PoweU
BiU are estimated to add another
$65,000. For sanitation, $67,450 has been
proposed; and $45,155 for the recreation
departm ent. N on-departm ental e x
penses add another $151,055 to the
General Fund.
BraUey explained that the proposed
increase in funds for the poUce depart
ment would add a full-time clerical
position to the staff. Often aU officers on
duty need to be out on patrol or on a call,
leaving the office locked up. With the
addition of a secretary, the office would
always be open during regular business
hours.
The increase in the fire budget would
be to provide a more equitable con-
pensation for M ocksville's ‘ volunteer
firemen. Previously, firemen have been
given their water and sewer service for
free, bul several of the volunteers lived
in areas where the services were
unavailable.
The increase would have the town
picking up the tab on training sessions
for the volunteer firefighters.
The proposed 1981-1982 budget for the
Utility Fund Ullies $324,800. The water
department is allotted $123,390; sewer
department, $112,485; non-departmental
expenses cover $12,810; and debt service
add another $76,115.
BraUey said the increases in water
and sewer are due to the rising costs of
m aintenance needed on the aging
system s. A hefty sum of $25,000 will be
needed to paint inside and outside of the
MocksviUe's elevated water tower.
Other items in the proposed budget
include $83,227 estim aM from revenue
sharing. Monies allotted for land--right-
of-ways add $20,000, and sewer outfaU
calls for $63,227.
BraUey commented, “M ocksville is in
a fairly good position in regards to its
tax structure in the years to come.
W ater and sewer are going to take some
hard looking in a few years.”
(USPS 149-160)
S e r e n i t y
The lake at Hickory HUI Country Club Is ftpparently a good place to get away from it all and Just ait with only your thoughts. Other than an occasional
squirrel, this unidentincd person apparently enjoys th« serenity of just being alone. (Photo by Jim Baifihger)
Local Postal Realignment
Becomes Effective Saturday
Addition of one rural route and one
city route to M ocksville Post Office's
d elivery area becom es effectiv eliv e ry area
Saturday, June 13.
The realignment, the first in 10 years,
brings the total to 8 rural routes and 3
city routes in Davie County.
Brady Leonard, M ocksville Postal
oBlcial, said the realignment is going
sm oothly. No problem s w ith m ail
deUvery are anticipated with Saturday’s
route additions.
L M u rd ooramratad №at all paraons
affected by the diange have received
jM a W noUAeation ^ new add raiiet
the lltodtsviUcrPaat OfHce.
Recent growth promoted the addition
-of -two routes_.lt is.Jfae_first_m ajDr___H eJtM ed some
realignment since 197i; when routes 6
and 7 were added.
“The realignment is weU overdue,”
explained Leonard. “ Due to steady
growth, both residential and business, it
has become necessary to create a new
rural route.”
Leonard explained the addition
requires some realignment of aU rural
routes to keep travel to a minimum and
to provide the most efficient service
possible.
MocksviUe Rural Route 8 is comprised
of areas now serviced by Routes 2 and 5.
Approxomately 416 famUles in these
areas wUl have maU delivery services
transferred to Route 8.
C ustom ers located w est of F a r
mington Road are included in tiie new
rural route. Other areas realigned to
Route 8 include Eatons Church area,
Pino com m unity. Country Lane,
CampbeU Road, Jack Booe Road,
U berty Church Road, HoweU Road,
Ijam es Church Road, and other in the
immediate area.
The new city route transfers 219 boxes
from rural deUvery to city delivery.
Affected areas include those recently
annexedby the Town of M ocksville. The
area is located along BliiUng Road,
encom passing Craftw ood and
Ridgemont DeveUqieratn.
teonard eqdaned that fam ilies in-
chided in the new rural route w ill be
assigned a new route and box numl>er.
m ay be required to
relocate m ailboxes, but tiiis wiU be kept
to an absolute minimum.
Leonard said some famUies located in
the fringe areas of Route 8, m ay be
assigned new box numl>ers.
The 219 fam ilies transferred to city
delivery wiU use street and house
numl>er8 assigned by the Town of
MocksviUe as tiieir maUing address.
Leonard added that the Post Office
apologizes for any inconvenience tiie
address change might cause.
“ I want to stress the Post Office
doesn’t expect people to have ad
dresses on aU incoming maU tay June
13,” said Leonard.
"H o w ever, the P ost O ffice w ill
(continued on page 2)
School Budget Increases
Prisoners Escape
local Confine
A convicted m urderer and another
prisoner escaped last Friday night from
the medium security prison unit on
Prison Cam p Road in M ocksville, and
were n^ported stiUat large at press time
on Tuesday.
Ih e two m ade their escape around
8:15 p.m ., scaling the irison’s 10-foot
fence Just before lockup tim e. One of the
men m ay have been wounded after a
prison guard fired a .12 gauge shotgun at
the prisoners, Sgt. W allace Shields of the
prison unit reported.
Stiieids added that large amounts of
bkwd were seen in the woods where the
priM ners ran after clearing the fence.
At large is Michael M ay, 23, serving a
Ufe sentence. A native of Chicago, May
was convicted in Forsyth Superior Court
on Novem ber 19, 197S, of first degree
murder. M ay was fin t sent to the
Caladonia Prison Farm , described as a
“ close custody” unit, then was tran-
pfcrred to the MocksviUe unit.
Stewart Shadbolt, of the Department
of Corrections in Raleigh, explained that
a convicted m urderer would first enter a
maximum security unit, but m ay be
promoted to medium custody with good
conduct.
The other fugitive is Dwight Gary, 27,
servinK a five-year sentence for
receiving stolen goods. G ary was con
victed in Forsyth Superior Court on
December 1, 1975. He has escaped
previously from a Davidson correctional
unit in M arch, 1U76, and was recaptured
only last m on^. He was sent to No. 4425,
the prison unit in MocksviUe.
May is described as a tdack male, 5-10
and 130 pounds. Gary iii a black male, 5-
8, 130 pounds. May would have to be
considered dangerous, said Shadbolt,
since he is serving a Ufe sentence.
Shadbolt said ttiat correctional of-
flcers, sheriff's departments and the
highway patrol in the area are con
tinuing the search. “ Everybody and his
brother are out looking for them ,’’ he
said.
■Hiere are reports that the two
fugitivps were s«en at a train depot in
Rowan County at 3 a.m. Sunday and
were fired upon by a sheriff’s deputy.
A search for the two men is currently
underw ay in Kowan County, The
escapees were spotted in Salisbury
Sunday.
“The school board submitted a budget
five percent above last year. I caU that a
b are bones b u d get,'' said Jam es
E verid ge, superintendent of D avie
County schools.
The county commissioners are looidng
at the school’s request for $1,333,500 for
current expense in 1961-82. In tiieir June
1 meeting, the commissioners foUowed
the recommendation of Charles Mash
burn, county m anager, and tentatively
agreed to knock the figure back to
$1,270,000, identical to last fiscal year’s
school aiottment.
Mashburn has recommended a tax
rate increase of 8cents from 44 cents per
$100 property valuation to B2 cents. In a
written statem ent to the commissioners,
Masht>um cited the increase in school
operating funds as tlie main reason for
the increase.
M ashbum ’s statem ent read in part,
“There are several reasons why a tax
increase is necessary at tiiis time. First
and foremost, total expenditures for
schools has increased about $1,000,000
per year since 197S. Tiiis includes an
over $500,000 per year increase to pay
for two new junior high sciiools.”
Tiie strain is coming from the prin
cipal and interest due on the $5,500,000
bond approved by county voters for tlw
construction of North and South Davie
junior high schools.
"It’s the county’s debt, but it is for
school purposes,” pointed out Everidge.
“The p ^ e voted approxim ately two to
one for it. It’s twofold. It's costing
$200,000 a year to operate these
programs and buUdings, then over
$500,000 to pay for tile debt.”
This year, several new program s were
added in tiie junior high level including
vocational education, ph ysical
education. miiKir and art.
Thieves Grab
Wedding Bands
At Davie Jewelers
Two men who said they wanted to look
at wedding bands grat>bed tiie case of 75
to 100 rings from Barry M cBride and
fled on foot from tiie Davie Jewelers
shortly before the store’s closing time
last Wednesday, June 3rd.
Value of the wedding bands was
estimated at $5,000, according to Lt. G.
W. Edwards of the MocksvUle Police
Department.
Police are luukiiig lor two black men
and a black fem ale who was seen with
Ihe men as they ran on foot east from tiie
jewelry store located at 134 North Main
Street. The theft occurred at 5:50 p.m.
One of the robbers was described as 5-
fi lo 5-8, 170 pounds, chubby buUd,
medium braided hair aiid with a bright
red T-shirt. His partner was 5-6, sUm
build, 130 pounds, wearing a blue-gray
T-stiirl and a necklace with beads. The
fem ale was described as slightly chubby
wilh gold-capped teeth.
D A V IE C O U N T Y
P.O. Box 525, Mocksville, N.C. 27028
$10.00 Pot Year in North Carolina
$15.00 Per Year Outside North Carolina
raURSDAV, JUNE 11, 1981
36 PAGES
Single Copy 25 cents
Senator Jesse Helms To Speak At 101st
Annual Masonic Picnic August 13th
U.S. Senator Jesse Helms wUl be the
featured spM ker for tbe lOlst Annua)
Masonic n ch ic to be held at Clem m t
Grove in M ocksville on H iursday,
August 13, 1981.
The announcement ct Senator H dm s
■eeeptance w as m ade this w edt by
Lester P.
H ie
“We don’t want to cut back when
we’ve got wat we consider a minimal
program for our youngsters. The Junior
high program was meant to offer a
better program ,” said Everidge.
The only new addition to the
curriculum this year wUI be an ROTC
program, caUing for $12,000 from the
county. The only other new feature wiU
be replacing the guidance counseUor in
the elem entary schools. Tiis position
was moved tU s year into the junior
highs.
In exchange, tbe supplement for the
physical education coordinator of aides
in the elem entary schools wül i>e
sacrificed. Everidge said school prin
cipals would coordinate the aides, and
that they felt the need for the guidance'
counseUnr
The biggest increases in the school
board’s proposed budget ask for an
additional $%,513 over last year for the
operation of the physical plant to cover
(continued on page 2)
Burning Permits
Are Required
Year Around
Did you know that burning permits
are required year round by North
Carolina State law? In D avis County, a
burning perm it is required by any
person, firm or corporation to start any
fire or ignite any m aterial over 100 feet
from an occupied dweUing or in or
within 500 feet of woodland during the
hours starting at midnight and ending at
4 p.m.
If you don’t gel a burning permit, you
aré illegally burning and you can be
given a citation by the North Carolina
Forest Service. Tiiis citatiun wiU result
in a court fine.
Even though you have a permit you
are still responsible for any dam ages
which m ay occur as the result of your
burning. You are also required to adhere
to all anti-pollution rules and regulations
set by the Federal Government.
Burning permits are free of charge
and are effective fur 3 days after being
issued. Burning permits can be obtained
from:
North Carolina Forest Sei . ice. County
Office Building
Lou Lakey, Agricultural extension
Service, County Office Building
P&G Auto Parts, Cooleemee, N.C.
Ed Johnson Grocery, Farmington,
N.C,
Sheffield Grocery, Sheffield
Advance Milling Company, Advance,
N.C.
Carlner’s Texaco, Highway 64 West
und 901 Intersection
Fork Shell Station, Fork, N.C.
Boies Grocery, Highway 501 North
If you have any questions or would like
further inform ation about burning
permits contact the North Carolina
Forest Service in the County Office
Building, lelephone 634-5319.
Martin, Program Chairman.
RepubUcan Senator from North
CaroUna is expected to speak at noon on
picnic day, August 13th.
Jesse Helms is the first North
Carolina Sen ator and the first
Republican ever to win the coveted
Golden Gavel Award and the second
senator in history to have won it twice,
llie Aw ard is given to those senators
who have presided over the United
States Senate one hundred hours or
more in one session.
He puts in seventy to eighty hours of
work each w eek-m uch of it spent on the
Floor of the Senate, as he puts it-
guarding tiie bridge. He has been
present and voting 97 percent of die
tim e-one of the best records in the
Senate. He is first am ong RepubUcan
senators in attendance and number five
among aU 100 m em bers.
He is regarded as one of the top two or
three m em bers of the U.S. Senate in his
knowlei^e and use of parUam enUry
procedure and the rules of the Senate.
He has sponsored or cosponsored over
eighty-five pieces of legislation designed
to aid the farm ers of this country, and
Senator Jesse Helms
because of his chairm anship of the
A gricu ltu re C om m ittee, has p ar
ticipated in tiie writing and enacting of
hundreds of such bills. He has sponsored
or cosponsored m any proposals to end
forced tHising of school . chUdren. On a
number of occasions, he has asked the
Senate to consider reinstating prayer in
our pubUc schools. He has offered
legislation to aid the growth and
sUldUty of the economy. He has
repeated ly attem pted to get his
amendmente, calUng for a balanw d
federal budget, passed- he cam e
within three votes of getting it through
the Senate.
~ g r o ^ * m S a C T uf ted^ con ^ and
U an ouUpoken advocate o f ^ a l
responsibUity and a balanced federal
**!tem «ctices w hathe preaches when it
com es to spending the tax p a y er s
money. He has retum ed to the U.S.
Treasury w ell over a mUlion d dlars ot
the funds aUocated for his officU l use.
He is a much sought after speaker. He
has made over 300 m ajor addresses in
North CaroUna and Uterally hundreds of
other appearances in the State. He has
made more than 150 m ajor speeches in
over 30 states.
He has traveled in eight foreign
countries, including the F ar East,
England and South Am erica-none of
these trips were taken at txxpayer
expense. He paid the arm y for iiis of
ficial trip to the Panam a Canal Zone.
He has never taken a so-caUed junket
at taxpayer expense. When he has fiown
on Air Force One with the President, he
sent his personal check equivalent to the
first-class com m ercial air fare to the
White House in payment for his flight.
’ 150,000 Blaze Hits Anchor Seafood
A noon time fire Friday destroyed tiie
interior of Anchor Seafood Restaurant
on Highway 601 North of MocksvUle.
Lt. Gary Edwards of the MocksvUle
Police Department said dam age is
estimated at $150,000. He would m ake no
comments as to how the fire began,
adding that it is under investigation by
the MocksviUe PoUce Deoartment
the State Bureau of Investigation.
According to reports, the fire began in
Ute main dining area near the cash
register. The entire interior of the
building w as gutted with flam es. Two
windows w ere blown out due to high heat
intensity.
MocksvUle volunteer firem en battled
tli6 blaze for approxim ately 3 hours.
Several men were overcome by heat and
smoke. The fire was first reported at
11:51 a.m . Friday by a neighbor who
saw smoke bUlowing from the buUding.
Anchor Seafood, a Winston-Salem
based chain, opened operations here last
vear.
SB I agent David CampbeU (r) and Lt. Gary Edwards of the MocksvQirFoUcV Department survey Uie damage caused by Uie blase Ust Friday at Anchor
Seaf^ Restaurant on U.S. Wl. The fire Is beUeved to have started near the cashier in the foregrouud. Edwunl» refused Ui vuaiaieiil on lhe vnuve of Uie fire
which is under invesUgation. See other photos on page 2. (Photo by Robin *^"-“u s s o n )________________________1_______■ __________
2 DAVir, COUNT»' IINTI-.RI’HISI' KlЧ'ОКП, TIlliHSD/W H'NI 11. I‘>SI
T w o of the g re a te st even ts o f the season for C ooleem ee jo u n g ste rs Is the closin g of school an d the opening o f the C o oleem ee Sw im m in g P ool. U ie se k id s spen d the first d a y o f th eir su m m er vacation b eatin g the h eat a t
the pool. < Photos by James B arrin ger ______________________________________________________________________________________________________________ ________________________
Sheriff's Department
Eddie R. Wooten, of Rt. 1, Advance,
reported a breaking and entering and
larceny on Tuesday, June 2. A window at
his residence was knocked out. Stolen
were a stereo receiver, turntable and
speakers, cam eras and three guns. The
total value was estimated at ^,200. The
Sheriff’s Department has one suspect in
the case.
Wyllis Eugene Jam es, of Rt. 2,
Mocksville, rei»rted a breaking and
entering óh T íésd ay, Juné 2. T fielron f
door to the residence was kicked in and a
checkbook was taken. The dam age was
estimated at ♦400.
Steve Gray, of Rt. 1, Advance,
reported a burglary at his residence on
Tuesday, June 2. A back window was
pried open. Stolen were a compound bow
and 10 arrows valued at Siso.
An attempted breaking anid entering
into a drink machine was reported at the
W illiam R . D avie volunteer fire
department on Tuesday, June 2. The
suspect(s) tried to pry open the machine
and failed but caused dam ages of $125 to
' the machine.
-»
Donald Smith, of Rt. 3, M ocksville,
- reported a breaking and entering bito
V his home on Tuesday, June 2. A window
: at the back (tf the house waa pried open,
causing $100 dam age. Stolen w as one
~ turquoise ring.
J.W. Boger, of Advance, reported
: several larcenies on Thursday, June 4. A
box w as opened with a key at the Bl-Lo
r in HUlsdale and approxim ately $37 waa
a box at Advance Discount. Robertson’s
store hi Bixby had $7-18 taken.
Glenda E . 'Plner, of R t. 4, Advance,
reported a breaking and entering on
Tuesday, June 2. The suspect jim m ied
the lock, went taito the house and hid hi
the closet untU M rs. Finer cam e hi from
work. When she tried to open the closet,
he held the door, so she ran out of the
house. Found in the bedroom were ropes
tied to aU four bed poets, one pUlow case
roUed up, a spark plug w ire and a ja r of
vaseline. The sherifrs department has
one suqtect in the incident.
A burglary was reported at ttie
Cooleemee Post Office on Monday, June
1. F ive boxes w ere broken hito, causing
$100 dam age. Stolen w as one social
security check.
John P. DuvaU of Bermuda Run
reported a breaking and entering and
larceny at his home on Thursday, M ay
21. A sUding door at the back of the
house w as w ened. Stolen were a spin-
ntaig rod and reel valued at $S0.
Gregory Dwayne Hoover, 19, of 1S07
PondeUa Drive Advance, was arrested
Friday, № y 2>, and charged with
assault on an officer and faUure to stop
for a blue light and siren.
Charles WUUam Kori, 18, of 222
G<dfview Drive, Advance, was arrested
Thursday, June 4, and charged with
breaking and entering and larceny.
WUle J. Gadson, of Rt.
was arrested Friday,
Salisbury Police and charged
larceny in connection witti the M ay 0
ttieft of two power tools from the car of
A.L. MitcheU of Salisbury. The tooU
were valued at $68.
Three D avie County m en w ere
arrested recenUy and charged with
breaking and entering and larceny of a
tape player and speakers at Davie
County High School. Arrested were
Tyrest Gaither, 18, of Harmony, who
was charged wiOi five counts of
breaking and entering and larceny; Cris
B. Brown, 17, of Rt. 3, MocksviUe,
charged with six counts; and Perry Q.
Simmons, 17, of Rt. 3, Advance, charged
with six counts. All three were taken into
custody on I'uesdav. May 26, and their
bonds'were set at $1,000 apiece.
Donald Stewart, 29, of Qiiintan Drive
in Wood Valley, was arrested Saturday,
May 30, and charged with assault.
Todd Swicegood reported a Огеакт«
and entering and larceny in his vehicle
parked at Davie County High School on
Monday, June 1. Stolen were cassette
tapes, a jacket and sunglasses valued at
$68. Dam age to the vehicle was
estimated at $20.
M onte G ray Sm ith, of R t. 6,
MocksviUe, reported vandalism to his
car parked at the Moose Lodge on U.S.
601 on Monday, June i. Dam age was
estimated at $100.
Timothy W. Cranfield, of Rt. 4, Ad
vance, reported vandalism to his car
parked at Davie County High School on
Thursday, M ay 7. The door and hood of
his 1900 Honda were kicked in.
Polled Hereford Field Day
At Whip-O-Will June 19-20
Over 600 polled Hereford breeders are
expected to attend the annual North
Carolina Polled Hereford Field Day
being held this year at Whip-O-WiU
Farm s in Mocksville, June 19-20.
Breeders from North Carolina, South
C arolina, V irgin ia, K entucky, Ten
nessee and Georgia wiU begin arriving
June 19 for what has become one of the
_largest field, day events in a six-state_
area.
This year’s events open with a party
for the juniors at J.D. Shanks’ home in
MocksviUe Friday at 7 p.m. Saturday’s
events begin at 10 a.m . with the junior
heifer show, judging contests for juniors
and adults, an old-fashioned country
lunch, and a computer demonstration.
A Field Day highlight wiU be the
awarding of a Whip-O-Will Farm s
Hurrah heifer calf and bull calf to the
junior and adult for the best judging
abUity in their respective category.
Recent sales for Hurrah heifer and
buU calves ranged from $3,000 to $5,000,
and the Field Day awards should form
the basis of an outstanding herd for
breeders or juniors beginning in the
field.
Junior association m em bers w ill
compete for grand champion, reserve
grand champion and class winners in a
special showing of their I960 heifers.
The grand champion winner wiU
recieve three A.I. C e rtifica te s ■ -
4, MocksvUle,
June 5 by
I with
M onsters lu rk on the sid e of an electron ic g a m e m ach in e w h ile firem en
sea rch through a sm oky door for an y hidden fla m es.
■ Й '.
,1 '
T h e fire w hich sw ept through the A nchor Seafood R estau ran t left an estim ated
$150,000 d am age in its w ak e. V olun teer firem en baU led for th ree hours to ex-
tinquish the blaze.
Hurrah, VictoriouB K47 U81, and Vin
dicator - as well as a trophy and ribbon.
Reserve grand championship brings
two A.I. certificates from Hurrah and
Victorious, trophy and ribbon. Class
winners will recieve one A.I. certificate
and a ribbon.
The com puter dem onstration -
continuous throughout the day - wiU
illu strate the ^ v a n U g e s of the
technology in providing com pete her J
management information - sires, sales,
health, breeding, and production
records.
Dr. Stan Coley of Bur-Cole Ranch in
Grovetown, Ga., wiU judge the junior
heifer show, and the N.C. Cattlem en’s
Association will supply the judges for
the adult and junior judging contest.
Paul Wall, area APHA coordinator, wUl
oversee the events during the show. The
NCPHA is providing the trophies and
ribbons.
Davie To Host
Texas 4 H 'en
The Davie 4-H Program wUl be
hosting 17 4-H m em bers and leaders
from Burleson County, Texas, June 10-
15. The Texas 4-H mem bers and leaders
wiU be staying in the homes of 4-H '
mem bers and leaders in Davie County.
The Texas group wiU arrive at 1:40
p.m. at Uie Douglas Airport in Charlotte
on June 10. On Thursday, the Davie
hosts and guests will enjoy an afternoon
_ a t--
with a chicken-pot luck'supper for the
group at 6:00. On Friday, the group wUl
journey to the Appalachian Mountains in
Ashe, AUeghany, and W atauga Counties
for a scenic and historic tour of that
area, returning with a barbecue pork
supper at Rich Park Shelter No. 2 at 6
p.m. The following afternoon the group
wUl enjoy a pool party and cook-out at
the home of Mr. and M rs. George
Wilson. The rem ainder of their stay wiU
be spent with their host famUies in
whatever capacity the famUies would
like
Davie County 4-H’ers and m em bers
traveled to Burleson County, Texas, last
summer during the Texas heat wave.
The 4-H Exchange Program is a part of
Uie Davie Extension 4-H and Youth
Program . The Exchange enables 4-H
members and leaders to experience
different cultures and lifestyles in other
parU of Uie United States. In addiUon, it
offers 4-H m em bers and leaders to share
knowledges and skills which m ay differ
il) the two states concerning the 4-H
program.
School B udget
(continued from page 1)
electricity, fuel and sciiool supplies.
Fringe benefits for aU employees
would caU for an increase of $38,914.
Everidge commented on the austerity
of the times and help from state and
fed eral governm ent. D avie County
schools wUl lose state funding for five-
and-one-half positions due to a decUne in
enroUment.
“That boils down to five regular
classroonT teachers. The one-half would
be a support posiUon such as an aide or
librarian. We have no idea on Uie federal
funding, but we won’t try to pick the
losses wiUi local funding.”
The county commissioners wiU meet
June 15 at 7:00 p.m. at the Davie County
CourUiouse for a budget hearing. It is
expected that the final budget for the
schools and the county overaU wUl be
adopted at this time.
Postal Route
(continued from page 1)
mainlain an adequate supply of change
of address kits for your convenience.
"W e strongly encourage customers to
notify correspondents, publislters, and
utility companies just as soon as
possible after receivin g new ad
dresses," explained Leonard.
Leonard commented that the addition
uf a rural and city route is viewed as a
positive change.
"Residents should be proud that the
county has experienced such growth
since 1971," said Leonard. “ The change
cun no longer be avoided, and postal
officials ask for citizens' understanding
and cooperation.
A color coded map of 8 rural routes
and 3 city city routes is on display in the
Mocksville Post Office
Postal regualtions require that box
numbers be inscribed on m ail boxes.
The numbers should be at least one inch
high and placed on the side of the box
visible to the maU carrier he ap
proaches. If txjxes are gourped, num-
iiers should be placed on the door. The
MocksviUe Post Office requests that this
ciiange be made prior to June 13.
Fires Reported
D avie C oun ty’s V olunteer F ire
Departm ents responded to the following
em ergency calls recenUy:
Cooleemee firem en exUnguished an
electrical fire at 52 Watt Street on
Monday, June 1.
Smith Grove units responded to a
structure fire at the J.D. Furches
residence on U.S. 158 on Monday, June 1.
Fork and Advance volunteers fought a
house fire at the residence of Boyd Pack
on U.S. 64 E ast on Monday, June 1.
M ocksville rescue workers responded
to an accident on MiUing Road on
Tuesday, June 2.
M ocksville firefighters received a call
at 11 ;51 a.m . Friday, June 5fh to a fire at
Anchor Seafood Restaurant on U.S. 601.
Advance firem en responded to the
report of a lawn mower fire on Mocks
Cliurch Road on Friday, June 5.
Jerusalem Rescue W orkers went to
the scene of an automobile accident on
U.S. 601 South on Friday, June 5.
MocksvUle responded to Uie caU of a
car fire on U.S. 64 W est on Sunday, June
7. Tbe fire w as out when the trucks
arrived.
M ocksville put out a car fire on MiUtaig
Road on Sunday, June 7.
W reck On 1-40
A TaylorsviUe, N.C. man feU asleep
driving on 1-40 and ram m ed the rear «
another car around 3:30 p.m. Saturday,
June 6.
According to die Highway Patrol,
Steve Matthew SherrUI, of Rt. 2,
TaylorsviUe, w as proceeding west, when
he fell asleep. H is car ran onto the
median, ttien crossed back into the road
and struck the rear of a 1978 Toyota
driven by Dtaiah Ram sey Shik, 29, of 19S0
Beach Street, Winaton-Salem.
SherriU left ttie scene after leaving
only his name.
Trooper Jam es M. Newton eatimated
the dam age to the Toyota at $500.
V e h id « K fts ^ a n k —
An Advance woman was hijured when
she fell asleep at Uie wheel of her car
which crashed into a ditchbank on N.C.
801 Friday morning, June 5.
Accordhig to ttie Highway Patrol, Joy
H dlard Seaford, 22, of Rt. 2, Advance,
feU asleep driving a 1977 ToyoU around
6:35 a.m . The car ran off ttie road on ttie
left and struck the ditchbank.
M rs. Seaford was Uken by ambulance
to Davie County Hospital.
Trooper A. C. Stokes estimated the
dam age to ttie car at $1,400. No charges
were fUed in the incident.
Report From Raleigh
June 3rd was a day to rem em ber tor
ttie General Assem bly. The legislature
turned ite back on the people of North
CaroUna on three key issues. It passed
ttie gas tax in ttie Senate, passed the four
year term for legislators in the House,
and defeated the in itiative and
tSenate,-------------
The 3 cents a gallon tax increase
130 to 17 hi the Senate, with aU ten
ans voting against the tax
increase. We do not need m ore money
for DOT; w e need DOT to leam to
m anage money. We aU want good roads,
but we do not have to increase taxes to
have good roads. DOT needs to use its
funds on maintenence and reduce new
construction.
H ie House voted 72 to 42 in favor of
four year term s for legislators, so it now
wUl be on ttie ballot in 1982 as a con
stitutional amendment. I did not support
this bUl because it seem ed very self-
serving tom e. I do not support four year
terms liecause I am wiUing to be ac
countable to the people.
H ie Senate defeated initiative and
D river Charged
A driver was charged with driving
under the influence and driving wittiout
a Ucense after he overturned his car to
avoid another vehicle without taU lights
on Friday, June 5.
According to ttie Highway Patrol,
Donald Christian CorreU, 27, of Rt. 4,
MocksviUe, was m aking a left turn from
U.S. SOI into a private drive in his 1950
Ford. Correll made the turn, but Gerard
Cyril W illiams swerved to the right and
lost control of his 1973 Chrysler because
he failed to see the Ford which displayed
no tail lights.
Trooper J. L. Payne estimated ttie
dam age to the Chrysler at $800.
WUUams was charged with the DUI
and having no operator’s license. CorreU
was charged with having improper
equipment.
By Rep. Betsjr Cochrane
r^endum by a narrow m argin. I
initiative and referendum as a tool for
ttie people to use to address lerioiis
issues to an unresponsive legialature.
One significant act of ttie Hoiiae tids
past week w as to pass a bUl that changei
ttie brackeU for state taxes, reduraig
personal hicome taxes by as much aa U
percenr beginnhig in l »84. This Ы11
would provide a tax cut by adjusting 0 »
U x brackeU . For exam ple, anyone in
ttie $10,000 to $17,000 income bracket
would get a 14 percent to 15 perccnt
reduction. The brackeU have b«Mi
adjusted up $2,000. We have given
several U x exemptions to the elderiy,
and this new legisUtton wiU help the
middle income earner.
It probably has occurred to m any of
you that som e officials need reminding
that our govem m ent was created in
rebelUon against taxation!
Tru ck H its Cow
A track hit a cow on U.S. 64 around
12:20a.m . Friday, June 5. The Highway
Patrol found drop^dngs on the side df tbe
road, but w as unable to find the cow.
Trooper W. D. Grooms reported that
Samuel Craig CUne, 35, of Rt. 1,
MocksviUe, was drivhig a 1900 In
ternational pick up truck when be atriwk
a cow standing in ttie roadway. Dam age
to the truck was estim ated at $500.
Truck H its B rid g e
An Advance man wrecked his truck on
the 1-40 bridge crossing the Yadkin
River on Tuesday, June 2, around 12:45
a.m. ttie Highway Patrol reported.
VhrgU Keith Smitti, 23, of Rt. 1, Ad
vance, was changing lanes due to road
construction ahead when he lost control
of his truck on wet pavem ent and hU ttie
bridge raiUng.
Smith was reported not seriously
injured. Trooper C. R. CoUins estimated
ttie dam age to the 1980 Dodge truck at
$3,000.
No charges were fUed in ttie incident.
D A V IB C O U N T Y
,P5 149-160)
124 Soutii Main Street
Mocluville, N.C.
Published every Thursday by thePublished every Thursday by the
DAVIE PUBLISHING COMPANY
MOCKSVILLE
ENTERPRISE
1916 1958
DAVIERECORD1899-1958
COOLEEMEE
JOURNAL 19061971
Gordon Tomlinson...............................Editor-Pubiislier
Песку Snyder Director of Advertising
Second Qass Postage Paid in Mociisville, N.C. 27028
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
$10.00 psr ysar in Nortti Csroiins; $15.00 ptr yssr out of iU ts.
Sinyl« Copy 25 cents
Hottmsttsr: Ssnd sddrstt chsngs« to Osvis County Entarprii* Rscord,
P.O. Box 525, M ockivills, N.C. 27028
d a v ii; c o u n t y iìnti:ri>kisi r i;c o r d , Th u r s d a y , .iun'i ii, i<),4i
M O C K S V IU E ,
N. C.
G IG A N T IC
JU N E S A L E
S u m m e r V a c t i o n S p e c i a l s — C h e c k F o r S a v i n g s I n E a c h D e p a r t m e n t
___________ 4 P ays O n ly Ju n e 10 - 13
O N E G R O U P
LADIES DRESSES
SPRING AND SUMMER SHIES
Usually *22.00 to *62.00
1 6 .8 8
3 8 JB 8
O N E G R O U P
LADIES KNIT TOPS
ASSORTED STYLES
Driginai Price *6.00 to *9.00
3 . 8 8
5 . 8 8
O N E G R O U P
LADIES SKIRTS
100% POLYESTER
POLYESTER COnON BLENDS
Usually *8.00 to *22.00
5 . 8 8
T 0 1 5 . 8 8
O D D L O T
LADIES SPORTSWEAR
ASSORTED ITEMS BROKEN SIZES
5 0 t o 7 5 % o ff
"PLAYTEX"summerspecials
CROSS YOUR
HEART BRA
O F №
O N E G R O U P
LADIES CANVAS SHOES
ASSORTED STYLES NOT ALL SIZES *
Usually *10.00 to >12.00
•7 “to*9 “
O N E G R O U P
JUNIOR TOPS
KNIT TOPS AND BLOUSES
ASSORTED STYLES Usually *7.00 to *15.00
»5 8 8 %T O 1 1
8 8
O N E G R O U P
JUNIOR DRESSES
ASSORTED STYLES Usually >20.00 to *32.00
* 2 2 * *
“ O Ñ 1 G R O U P
LADIES
SLEEPW EAR
POLYESTER
AND COnON
PINK - BLUE
5.66
T O
8 . 6 6
O N E G R O U P
LADIES SANDALS
$
FLATS AND HEELS
ASSORTED COLORS
Usually *11.00 to *30.00
8 ** »19 **
O N E G R O U P
JUNIOR SLACKS
POLYfSTER AND COHON
ASSORTED COLORS Usually *16.00 to *18.01
•10 *** 14 **
GIRLS WEAR
CAMISOLES
KNIT TOPS
SHORTS
Usually *2 .79 70 *10 .0 0
* 1 ’ ’ *T ® ®■ TO ^
RUGS
ASSORTED PAHERNS AND COLORS
18X27/24 BOUND EDGES
$ ^ 9 7
O n e G r o u p
COSTUME JEW ELRY
RINGS, EARRINGS, BRACELETS
Values to *7.95
C $
TU
O n e G r o u p
STRAW TOTES
CAN BE USED AS HANDBAG
BEACH BAG PLUS OTHER USES
$^ 8 8
TERRY SCUFFS
FOAM CUSHIONED SOLE,
MACHINE WASHABLE,
ASSORTED COLORS
Usually *4,00
4 Days O nly
3 U P
MEN'S SUITS
O N E G R O U P
2 PIECE AND 3 PIECE
SOLIDS-STRIPES-PU\IDS
GREAT BUY
Original Price *75.00 to *130.00 " r
ONE GROUP
M EN'S DRESS SHIRTS
SOLIDS AND FANCIES
Usually *8.00 to *16.00
TO 11 e e
RED CAMEL
WORK CLOTHES
PANTS
SHIRTS
OVERALLS 2 0 %OFF
R e i g n i n g B e a u t y
PANTIES
ACETATE TRICOT WHITE AND COLORS
SIZES 5 TO 10
3 PAIR PKG. Usually *2.59 • *2.89
3 PAIRS $ 1 .9 9
M E N 'S
KNIT SHIRTS
SOLIDS AND STRIPES
GOOD ASSORTMENT
SIZES S-M L-XL Usually *11.00 Id *13.00
^ 8 . 8 8 ^
O N E G R O U P
M EN ’S SLACKS
POLYESTER AND COTTON
ASSORTED COLORS Usually ,*14.00 to *15.00 j
* 1 1 . 8 8
O N E G R O U P
QUILTED PLACEMATS
reversible WITHRUFFU
PERMANENT PRESS • SOIL RELEASE
Usually *3.50
$
MEN’S
TEE SHIRTS
SCREEN PRINTS AND
SOLIDS NOT AU SIZES
Values to *11.00
O D D L O T
M EN'S SLACKS
SOLIDS AND FANCIES
MOSTLY SIZES 30 TO 34
Original Price *12.00 to *23.00
» 3 « ®
SLIGHT CHARGE FOR ALTERATIONS
^ 4 4
BOYS
FOOTBALL JERSEYS
SIZES S-M L
$
SHORT SLEEVE
ASSORTED COLORS
Usually «6.50
4 4 4
O n e G r o u p
CHILDREN’S
CANVAS SHOES
ASSORTED STYLES
Usually *6.00 TO '10.00
$ 4 .8 8
$ 7 .8 8 .V --i'
H A N E S
M E N 'S U N D E R W E A R
T cut D TC CREW AND V-NECK l-dnilflO OfU«ll»3 for’7.99
K N IT B R IE F S Usually} for‘6.69
2 5 % OFF
MEN’S
GYM SHORTS
TRIMMED TWIU
ASSORTED COLORS
SIZES XS S-M L-XL
♦ 3 . 4 4
SMAU GROUP
M EN ’S SHOES
ASSORTED STYLES
BROKEN SIZES
Values to *34.00
3 3 ’/3 %
TO
5 0 %
OFf
ODD LOTBOYS JEANS
NOT AU SIZES
Values to *12.00
•4**TO
$ ^ 8 8
BOYS KNIT SHI RTS »2**
“ TO
^ 8 8
ASSORTED STYLES
Usually *4 to *9 $
■4 IMVII-: ro'JNiY i;n t i;ki’r isI': r i:c o r :x t ii u k s d a y . .iu n i; i i , m)si
o Y o 0 1 0
. с ю о о с о о о с о о о о о о о о о о с х х ю w ith H
L B .
C H U N K S T Y L E T U R K E Y -B E E F
B O L O G N A
f c
LB.
F R E S H L E A N L O I N E N D
P O R K R O A S T
9 9 «
C E N T E R A N D E N D C U T S
V4 SLIC E D
P O R K L O IN
iL E A N M E A T Y
S P A R E r i b :
"Total Shopping" Value
3 1 No Limit Specials
V^(\a ^ ^Vrfluable Trading
C I V M m G S Stamps
^ Discount Piicps
« s s ?
LB.
H C F P N E R 'S P R I U S
T i'.
§
DAYTIME PAMPERS
D isposable D iapers so c o u n t
NEWBORN PAMPERS
D isposable D iapers so c o u n t
TODDIER I^Am I>ERS
D isposable D iapers 12 c o u n t
c 6 n ta o in a
Tom ato S a u ce 15 02. size
CARNATION ASSORTED FLAVORS
Liq u id Slen d er iq o z .s iz e
ASSORTED FLAVORS
7 0Z.PKG.Figurines
SMOKEY MOUNTAIN
Sw eetener leoz. bottle
FRISKIES A LL FLAVORS
14 OZ. CAN
ÒAINES GRAVY TRAIN
DOgFOod 25LB.BAG
SMUCKERS
Straw berry Jam
2 LB. JAR
PURITAN
Vegetable O il 32 o z. b o t tle
SCOTT
Fam ily N apkins soo c o u n t
SCOTT
Fam ily N apkin s c o u n t
FOR BABY
W et O nes
40 COUNT
Discount
Price
‘3.23
’2.69
’ 1.99
35*
39'
*1.49
n.19
2/57
»7.39
»1.89
n.69
7 У
93*
YOU
SAVE
56*
50‘
40*
16*
34*
20*
40*
»1.10
50*
12!
i i '
i i
16*
THESE PRICES GOOD
ONLY THROUGH JUNE 13,1981
У 2 SL IC E D
Ш О к Е О P I C N l i i *
8 9 ’
y f
I I I I
PIZZAS
13 O Z . SIZE P K G .
C H I C K E N B O L O G N A
H
1 2 o z .
P K G .
C H I C K E N F R A N K S
F U N B U D D IE S ,
5 9 «
««ЮСЯАТСО
V A L L E Y D A L C 'S L U N C H M E A T J
H A M A N D C H E E S E O R
B E E F B O L O G N A O R
P IC N IC L O A F
751
.,JA QUALITY
P A P E R Ш Е 1
6 3
JUMBOROLLS
шипгд/.
1 2 O Z .
P K G .
-BMHROOM TISSUE
fl« <*■
i f SA V E 34*
FOR LAUNDRY- LIQUID
^ \ E R A D E T E R G I
$1 1 ^ 3 3 54 OL BOTTLE
C O n O N E LLE
$ 1 0 9
★ SAVE 64*
LIQUID DISH DETERGENT
D E R M A S A G E
4 ROLL PACK
•k SAVE 10*
BATHROOM TISSUE
SOFT
W EAVE
PURE VEGETABLE
Puritan Oil
22 OZ. BOTTLE
2R0LLi
PACK
ir SAVE 38*
LAUNDRY DETERGENT
C O L D P O W EI
KINGSIZE
$
★ SAVE 24*ktOffi CtfANINC POWIR NtViRIN COLD WATfR'
H E F F N E R ’S
A FANTASTIC SAVE A TAPE OFFER
L A N D ,
RIGHT TO RESERVE L
QUANTITIES \
ORKKNS T A M P S
t SAV E 80c
ANSCOPocket ^ Camera г
TEXIZE
PINK FLUFF
O F F O O D
NONE SOLD
DEALERS
TO
E M B E R S
C H A R C O A L
1 0 L B . B A G
89*
W I T H 1 F I L L E D
S T A M P P R I C E B O O K ^
Offer Good Only
Through
June 13,1981
:
DAVii: COUNTY i:n t i:r p r isi; r i t o r d , Th u r s d a y , Ju n e i i , I98i - s
TENDER BAKE SELF RISING
C O R N M E A L
5 LB. BAG
★ SAVE 30*
KRAFTS
1000 ISLAND- CATALINA - CUCUMBER
S A U D D R E S S IN G
- 8 OZ. BOTTLE 6 9 ’
if SAVE 16*
SOUTHERN B iStU IT
I
LOG CABIN
C O U N T R Y K IT C H E N
S Y R U P ______
9 9 «24 OZ. BOTTLE
★ SAVE 50
FRESH KRISPY
RIGHT TO RESERVE
QUANTITIES
THESE PRICES GOOD
ONLY THROUGH JUNE 13,1981
^ S U N S H I N E C R A C K E R S
5 9 "
I
SOF-IBSIIIBFlOURl;
. ewcwD шюсма
S P E C IA L К
C E R E A L
_ 15 01 PKG.
$ | 4 9
★ SAVE 20*
COBLE HOMOGENIZEDSweet
'^ОТГЙСС
tW tE iE
LIGHT ft LIVELY
C O H A G E
C H E E S E
120Z.SIZE
7 9 "
★ SAVE 10*
M ilk
100 BONUS
S & H GREEN STAMPS
NO Coupon Needea
t O M A T O
C A T S U P
3 2 0 Z .B 0 m E
с
DIET OR REGULAR
2 LITER BOTTLES
J.}. A •••.
39
W I T H 1 F I L L E D
S T A M P P R I C E B O O K
Offtr Good Only
Through '*i
June 13,1981
Ы \e R K S M
^ S T A M P S
HEFFNER'S COUPON
WITH THIS COUPON WHEN VOU BUY
SAVEsani^
. DECAFFEINATED
Ж ш ^ COFFEE
m ATJ12S______________
_ и ^ ж 1 CAN ONLY
ONE COUPON PER PURCHASE • OFFER EXPIRES JUNE 13
1_ DEAL NO,___________—
L E H U C E
L A R G E F I R M H E A D S
С
E A C H
.А К и В П К Ш П !
4 9
"Total Shopping' Value
No Limit S
Valuable Ii
Stam ()s
''' oiint P
)ecials
adinj:
i(
H B F f N t R 'S P R I C E S
DlioountPric*
YOL
SAVE
5 OZ. R EFILL CUPS
Star W ars C u p s 100 c o u n t *1.25 24’
GULF CHARCOAL LIGHTER
Charcoal Lighter % g a llo n n.69 40‘
PERK
N o W axn o o rs z z o z .s iz e n.99 20*
R EFILL
G lass P iu s 32 o z. SIZE
99*10*• ■
64 oz.
G lass P lu s Refill b o t t l e *1.59 30*
40 o z.
Pine Pow er Cleaner s iz e
‘2.19 40*
P in e Sol Cleaner 15 o z. size 93*34*
CLEANER
Lysol Spray 120Z.CAN *1.75 24*
LYSOL
Toilet Bow l Cleaner s i f l
69*10*
GIANT SIZE
B rillo P a d s 18 COUNT 69‘30*
REALEAMON
Lem on Ju ice b o t t l e ’1.15 20*
WHITE HOUSE
A pple Ju ice % g a l l o n *1.29 20*
SHASTA
Canned Drinks c a n s '6/’ l”30*
GARNER'S
A pple Jelly
‘ 1.19 30*
CARTO N OF 4
. /OKES
1 LITER BOTTLES
S N A P P I N G F R E S H
R E E N B E A N S
35"PLUS DEPOSIT
SAVE 30c
DAVII COUNTY INTIKI’RISI- RIX’ORO, THiIRSDA'i’, lUNI- II. MWI
M organ K e ith C h a ffin Selected For Pion eer
Class O f N e w School O f Veterinary M e d ic in e
Morgan Keith Chaffin of Mocksviiie is
among the 40 studenbi selecfcd for the
pioneer Class of 1985 of Norlh Carolina
State University's new School of
Veterinary Medicine.
Tlie first classes will convene August
27.
Chaffin, son of Mr. and Mrs. Abner
Morgan Chaffin of Route 1. Box 73-B,
Mocksviiie, is a recent graduate of N.C.
State with a bachelor of science degree
in Fisheries and Wildlife Science. He is a
1977 graduate of Davie County High
School.
He is among 20 men and 20 women
selected from a field of 126 applicants
who completed an admissions process
which Included a standardized entrance
test (the Veterinary Aptitude Test), an
acad em ic perform an ce profile and
Interviews,
On a four-point scale (with four
equaling “ A ") those admitted had an
undergraduate grade point average of
3.54 or a required course grade point
average of 3.60.
A 17-member Admissions Committee
led by Dr. Stephen Crane of the new
school set the selection process. Par
ticipation on the Admissions Committee
involved the North Carolina Veterinary
Medical Association, one person from
within the UNC system at large, a
representative from the NCSU School of
Agriculture and Life Sciences and the
rem ainder from the School of
!V?organ K eith C h a ffin
Veterinary Medicme faculty.
Dean Terrence M. Curtin commented
when the selection scores were totaled
with the test and academ ic performance
scores, the com mittee w as surprised to
find it had selected', wiUiout previous
knowledge, a group com prised of an
equal number of m ales and females.
One minority candidate won admission.
Curtin added, “ We were pleased to
find, (00, that the first class evpn as
small as it Is, represents 21 counties In
the state and that the candidates are
h eavily w eighted tow ards a rural
background. We fee! thi« has potential
Importance for the future in solving
livestock problem s of the ll-billion
animal business in the state.”
According to Curtin, the new School of
Veterinary Medicine Is on schedule with
its building program and a portion of the
complex will be ready for occupancy
this fall. ^ ,
Completed plans for the new school
structures call for 260,000 square feet to
include a teaching hospital, classrooms,
animal w ards, research and teaching
laboratories, a library and an audio
visual area. ITie school will have a
faculty of 84 and is organized into four
departm en tal a reas: A natom y,
Physiological Sciences and Radiology;
M icrobiology, P ath logy and
Parasitology; Food Anim al and Equine
Medicine; and Compauion Animal and
Special Species Medicine.
The school will eventually reach a
student capacity of 288 professional
veterinary medicine students and about
SO graduate students.
By graduation of the first class in 198S,
each' student will have completed 153
sem ester hours of course work, with
predominant emphasis on food animal
training.
C a r o l i n a R e v i e w
b y Jerry M o b ley
G REEN ...Only the charge of im
propriety or perhaps even illegal ac
tivity of the state’s second highest
elected official could push the highway
tax package from first place in the
"mo6t talked about news cat«gory.”
H ie Greensboro D aily News scooped
the state last week revealing that
Lieutenant Governor Jim m y Green was
under SBI investigation concerning an
alleged exchange of money between
Green and convicted bid rigger, WUUam
W. CroweU of FayetteviUe. CroweU,
president of Crowell Constructors, Inc.,
is currently serving a 90-day jail sen-
tance in connection with the free paving
of a Departm ent of Transportation of
ficial’s driveway.
The in vestigation cen ters around
provate testimony that Green allegedly
received $9,600 in free paving work at
one of his Clarkton tobacco warehouses.
Supposedly Green wrote a check for half
of the amount bur received the m oney
beck in cash.
In return, Green w as supposed to
bring m ore paving work to Crowell’s
company.
After the initial story. Green wa*
bealeged by reporters but refused
comment. Initead, G reen’s office isnied
• itktem ent dU ng "no basia whatsoever
for any charge of wrongdoing on m y
p«rt.”
M ore than one G reen supporter
su ggested .fteJSB I_ Jiuîeiâg«tl0 ï_wML
leaked Iv the attom ey general’s oHice.
AcconUnt to them, Attorney General
Rufus Edm isten wanted the story out to
sk>w downoigsnisation efforts by Green
for the 19B4 gubem atiorial race. Ed
misten and Green are but two likely
candidates in that race.
H IGH W AY T A X ...G reen ’s trouble
with a U d rigger was not the shot in the
arm that Hunt supporters were hoping
for on the eve of the Senate vote for a
higher gasoline tax. Still, the Hunt tax
plan - intact ~ passed Senate m uster by
a 2 to 1 m argin.
One opponent of the bill said he could
“ hear the bones toeaking” as the
sponsors, on behalf of Hunt, twisted
arm s to gain passage of the gas tax
legislation.
Meanwhile, opposition w as building in
the House where the plan is now under
consideration. But in the House, the
governor has soliciated some strong
“ arm tw isters" as well.
Hunt spokesman Brent Hackney said
House- iloop- leaders of the plan will
consist “ basically of the entire House
leadership.”
Argum ents continued last week over
the ad cam paigns being produced by
opponents to the gasoline tax plan.
Supporters of the tax suggested that the
Republicans were turning the Hunt
package into a partisan issue.
By week’s end, com parisons were
being m ade of financial contributors to
the ad cam paigns of both the supporters
and opponents of the tax.
OTHER ASPECTS...There were other
aspects to the govem or’s tax [dan taking
shape last wedc.
The govem or has recommended in
addition to a gasoline tax, a mining
severance tax as w ell as a SO percent
increase in alcohol taxes. Strategy
sessions took place recently, and are
presently ongoing, as opponents prepare
to fight the govem or on those taxes.
The continued talk of an additional
d garette tax is also gaining attention.
On plan, to tax the w orld's smiokars
instead of the state’s, has expedally
picked up momentum. The method
would consist of taxing tobacco at the
m anufacturer’s level before it is shipped
out for consumption worldwide. Such a
tax courd" only tik e place If other
tobacco m anufacturing states joined in
the toriff.
H ie current two ^ n ts state sales tax
on cigarettes m ight even be dropped.
RESIGNATION...W ith Howard Lee’s
resignation. Governor Hunt has lost
three cabinet secretaries in the first
year of his second term . A fourth.
S ecretary of A dm inistration Joe
Grim sley, has said recently that he is
also looking for different employment.
Grim sley m ight, however, be offered
Lee’s old post at the Departm ent of
Natural Resources and Community
Development - a poet Grim sley had
w anted before his current
dissatisfaction.
L e e ’s second-in-com m and, Jim
Summers, is also up for the job.
W ayn e L u te , lo ca l d airy farm er, e xp lain s th e im p o rta n ce o f d airyin g to area yo u n gsters.
T h e d isp la y , o n e o f th ree h eld S u n d a y , w as sp o n sored in co n ju n ctio n w ith n ation al
D a iry M on th .
D a iry E x h ib itio n S u n d a y Is S u c c e s s fu l
June is Dairy Month and local
Dairym en hosted special activities in
observance of the event.
Bill Mainous, county agricultural
extension chairm an said Sunday, June 7
was set aside as “ D airy D ay” in Davie
County.
Local dairy farm ers set up displays
from 2 to 4 p.m ., June 7 in three locations
in the county. Those locations were
Foster-Rauch Drug parking lot, hosted
by Ervin Angell; E llis Center on High
way 601 South, hosted by Johnny Alien;
and M ac’s Food in Hillsdale, hosted by
Wavne Lutz.
liie purpose of the local Dairy Day
was to acquaint residents with local
dairy farm ers and the dairy industry.
Special displays, including baby calves.
Tri - Coun^ Ranks Low In Per Patient Cost
My name is M aria Alice Howell. I didn’t
know that a one year old birthday party
could be so much fun. Sunday, M ay 31
was the big day. M y Holly Hobby cake
and H aw aiian Punch and fresh
strawberry ice cream was so good. 1 got
Iota of presenU. Neill and June Griffin
Howell are my parents. My grand
parents were all there too. Robert and
Alice Griffin. Ralph and Ava Howell,
and my wonderfnl adopted grand
mother, M rs. Joste MerrlU. M y aoBt,
BoWbl GrW in, m y coosla Dmurie Browa
and Mr. and M rs. J.W. Brm ra. M r. and^
Mrs.. Don Brown and Gail and Steve
Brown.
^ e n a te R e p o rt " I
L e t t e r s T o E d i t o r
Dear Editor:
I, as one of this year’s graduates, ww;
greatly appalled at the behavior ot
several of the attendants during the
graduation ceremony last week. A little
rainfall m ay excuse som e confuskm, but
there is no justification for the bad
manners and rudeness shown during
such a dignified and important moment
in our lives. I felt as if I were in a three-
ring circus. It is no wonder that young
people today have bad manners, since
the exam ples they have to follow are
equally as rude. One would expect
children to behave in such a demeaning
fashion, but adults should know better. I
honestly have not observed such bad
conduct at any ballgam e, where such
boisterous activity would be expected. I
was humiliated and em barrassed for my
fellow classm ates and their parents. Mr.
Norton and Mr. Everidge remained
level-headed during the whole ordeal,
and I salute them for their patience. I
just hope the rude people that turned the
graduation ceremony into a circus
would learn some manners before at
tending another public gathering.
Thank you,
G r^ B e ck
Koute4
MocksviUe
Beginner’s Sewing
Beginning Sewing wiU be offered this
summer through tiie Davie County
Com m unity School and D avidson
County Community College. The course
wUl start Monday, June ISth and wiU
end August 10th. It will meet from 1:00
p.m. to 3:00 p.m. at the Phipps Fabric
Center in Mocksviiie.
Mrs. Faye Hutchins who has had
years of experience in various forms of
sewing wiU be the course instructor.
Anyone 16 years or older m ay enroll.
The registration fee is »5.00; however,
senior citizens who are 65 years of age or
older are Free.
Since this course will have a limited
enrollment of only 12 students, those
defining to enroll should immeidiately
tel^hone Davidson County Community
College, Davie County Extension, 634-
2885, and pre-register.
Dear Editor:
I would Uke to voice m y opinion
concerning 1981 Davie High graduation.
A fter going through all the expense of
graduation pictures, invitations, cap
and gowns, aU things that go with
graduation; then to be told on Monday,
before graduation on W ednesday that
they would not be graduating. I think
this was a Uttle U te, don’t you?
I sure hope this poUcy is changed
before other students face an ordeal lUte
this next year.
Thank You,
Shirley Lanning
Route 2
MocksviUe, N.C.
D ear Editor;
Ttie D avie County Law Enforcem ent
Association and the AuxiUary wish to
thank each and everyone for their
support and the work that was done by
aU that helped m ake the County Music
Show at the Brock Auditorium, Saturday
night, June 6, 1961, a big success, llie
show featured Hank WiUiams, Sr.’s
origin al D riftin g Cow boys w ith
comedian Jack Ripley. Again m ay we
say thank you for everything. If there
are any comments concerning the show,
please contact us.
Randy Boger, Pres, of Assoc.
Glenn Cornatzer, Vice Pres.
Pat Newton, Pres, of Aux.
Dianne Com atter, Vice Pres.
Uear Editor:
The Cooleemee Senior Citizens would
like to thank the Davie County Sheriff’s
Department for allowing tiie Cooleemee
Senior Citizens to attend the Hank
Williams Show at the Brock BuUding
this past weekend. We really enjoyed
this evening of feUowsiiip. .
EUiel Gibson
Route 4
MocksviUe, N.C. 27028
N ew Hours Are Set At
Cooleem ee Post O ffice
The window service hours of the
Cooleemee Post office are: Monday -
Friday 3:15 a.m, to 12 Noon and IP m
to 4:45 p.m. Closed Saturday. These
hours becam e effective July 1, 1980,
however many local residents are stiU
nut aware of the change, according to
Postm aster Harold Reid,
B y Senator Gilbert Boger
Anto Insurance
A bUl to w adicate aU surcharges on
drivers with clean driving records has
been approved in the North Carolina
House and is now before the Senate. H ie
surcharges currently levied on aU
drivers, are to recover losses of the
Reinsurance FaclUty, a pool formed by
insurance com panies to insure high-risk
drivers. Under State law , the facility
must operate on a non-profit-no-loss
basis.
U nder the new b ill su rch arges
currently being charged aU drivers wUl
have to be re-distributed among drivers
with traffic violations on their records.
H ie bUl also would place a ceiling on
auto insurance rate increases. H ie
ceiling would be tied to the Consumer
Price Index, now averaging about 13
percent a year.
Gun Coatrol
H ie Gun Con trol Bill wUl be before the
Senate on Tuesday, June 9. Senator
Vickery of Orange County introduced on
M ay IS a biU that would regulate the sale
of handguns..
Section 1 states no person who has
been convicted of any crim e in this state
or in any other state in the United States
m ay not obtain a gun permit.
Section 2 says a person cannot buy
more than one pistol during each SOnlay
period. U nder this provision, gun
collectors sim ply could not buy more
than one gun a month.
Sections 3 and 4 Ust what you must put
pn the application and says the
Departm ent of Crim e Control should
deep a perm anent record of the ap-
idication.
Section 5 attempts to describe a
Saturday Night Special such as melting
point which could pervent the sale of
most antique guns.
Redistrlctlng
Redistricting, the thom y subject that
the General Assem bly must deal w ‘h
every ten years is beginning to com e to
the Senate and House Floors. A plan that
would m ake m ajor changes in the 2nd
and 4th Congressional Districts was
reported out of the Senate Committee.
H iis would also put Davidson County in
the 6th District, along with Guilford and
Alamance. The plan would take Yadkin
out of the 8th District, and add Hoke.
M ore serv ices for single-parent
households, a detailed analysis of the
needs of Uie elderly and a study of client
income were recommended to the Tri-
County Mental Health Board June 3rd in
its annual evaluation report.
Dr. Donald G. WUdemann, director of
research and evaluation, presented the
federally and state m andated report,
which showed Tri-County had a per
capita expenditure of $8.11 and ranked
second lowest in the state on costs per
patient seen last year.
M -County serves a total population of
202,696 in Rowan, IredeU and Davie
counties, with 10 to 15 percent of the
population having relatively severe
m ental health problem s, the report said.
“ Single parent famiUes rem ain a
prim ary ‘at risk’ population, both for
m ental health problem s and for alcohol-
substance abuse problem s,” the report
said.
Alconoi abuse rem ains a continuing
{iroblem in the area, the report said.
O rrhosU of the Uver was the fifth
leading cause of death for the 4S-S4 age
group here 6rom 1968 to 1972. “ H ie need
to maihtaiin active alcohôTëaikâtioh and
rehabU itation program s seem s ob
vious,” the report said.
M ental retardation w as another
problem the report mentioned, with
about 6,000 residents in the three
counties needing specialized mental
retardation services.
In a study of the accessibUity of Tri-
County services, the report said the
elderly continued to be underserved in
relation to their number in the
population. About 12 percent of the
population is dderly, yet only 4 percent
were seen by Tri-(i>»mty, according to
ttie report. . .
Data showed that Tri-County had
com p aratively high u sage of iU
faculties by the com munity and had a
highly productive staff, the report said.
Data also showed that the agency
served a higher proportion of middle
income famiUes than does the W estem
R egion in gen eral. W ildem ann
recommended studying thU situatton.
He said lower socio-e<^om ic groups
typicaUy have a greater need for mental
health services than other groups, so
“ any real barriers to accessible sorvices
-fo r-th ese - dlentft,_w»iUd_.be tro d y jM -
fortunate.”
were at each of the three locations.
Free Uterature concerning the dairy
industry in Davie County and the state
w as distributed. Also, free ice cream
supplied by ttie Davie D airy Association
was given to aU in attendance.
BiU Mainous was on hand at aU three
locations to answer questions con
cerning Dairy month and the local dairy
industry.
B ill M ainous exp ressed his a p
préciation to the mUk com panies for
supplying thé ice c i^ m and adding to
Uie success of Davie County D airy Day.
Do You Know?
Island Transplants
The entire populations of the islands in
the Caribbean are transplants, National
Geographic says. ’Three-fourths are at
least parUy descended from African
slaves T h e rest include direct
d escen d an ts o f E uropean
colonists, along with East Indians and
Chinese who were shipped in as in
dentured laborers when slavery was
abolished in ttie 19th century.
Artificial Turf
Most people associate artificial turf
witti footbaU fields, but initiaUy it was
developed for city playgrounds, where
. workmen often have a hard time
keeping gra ss a live and h aaltl^ ,
National Geographic World m agatiae
points out.
T rip to S u a
A trip to the sun a t the speed of a OO-
mph jet airUner would take about 17
years, the National Geographic Society
-sayg.~At-the!
eight minutes.
should have a plan soon. In Senate
redistricting, it seem s certain the 21st
District wiU rem ain as it is with Rowan,
Davidson, and Davie. AU plans that
have serious chances of approval, leave
ttiis district as it is.
B ib le Sch o o l
At G reen H ill
Green HUl Baptist Baptist
Church wUl hold its Vacation
Bible School June 15 Uirough
June 20 from 7:00 untU 9:00
p.m.
Everyone is inviUsd to at
tend. There wUl be classes for
preschoolers tlirough adults.
A nursery will be provided.
A s Financial s p e c i a i i s t in t h e l o c a l m a r k e t f o r
n e a r l y s j x t y y e a r s , M o c k s v i l ‘l e S a v i n g s a n d L o a n
h a s s e e n m u c h c h a n g e . W e h a v e p l a y e d a v i t a l
r o l e in t h e d e v e l o p m e n t o f s a v i n g s p l a n s f o r
fam ilies f o r t h r e e g e n e r a t i o n s . M o r e than any
o t h e r financial i n s t i t u t i o n w e h a v e p r o v i d e d
fu n d s to build h o m e s in D a v i e C o u n t y . T o d a y ,
with a s s e t s in e x c e s s o f ^ 3 2 ,0 0 0 ,0 0 0 , M o c k s v i i i e
S a v i n g s a n d L o a n i s y o u r only locally g o v e r n e d ,
h o m e - t o w n , fam ily financial c e n t e r . A s such,
w e h o ld y o u r b e s t i n t e r e s t s , a s p r i m a r y t o m a k i n g
s e n r i c e s a y a i i a b j e , C o n t e Mocksviiie S a v i n g s
a n d L o a n f o r a f e d e r a l l y i n s u r e d s a v i n g s a c c o u n t
M O C K S V I L L E S & L " J S 'S X “ "
f e d e r a l r e g u l a t i o n s .
O t h e r s e r v i c e s i n
clu d e h o m e l o a n s ,
s e c o n d m o r t g a g e s ,
ch eckin g a c c o u n ts , sm all s a v e r c e r t i f i c a t e s , a n d
s h a r e d s e c u r i t y funds. All t h e s e h a v e b e e n d e
s i g n e d f o r t h e p e o p l e o f Davie County, and w e
happily discu ss and council y o u in e a c h . Y o u
a r e Unique. W e are U nique.
U n i q u e l y R e s p o n s i v e
i n L o c a l F i n a n c e
û f S k
MOCKSVILLE SI>NINGS & LOAN ASSOCIkTION
213 SOUTH MAIN STREET
MOCKSVILLE, N, C, 27028
P, О BOX 367
(704) 634-&936
d a v ii; c o u n t y f.ntkri-risi: r k ’o r d , Th u r s d a y . ,iuni;II. 1481
Money Management
How To Manage The Two ( Or More) Paycheck Pension
How lo get the most from retirement
income poses special problems for two-
paycheck pensioners. Tax rules are
changing, as are Social Security
regulations. The North Carolina
Association of CPAs advises couples
wilh dual pensions lo plan their financial
affairs with great care.
First, let's take a look at the Social
Security changes. An 11.2 percent cost-
of-living adjustment taking affect in
July wil! increase the average monthly
Social Security retirement benefit from
$337 to $374. Beginning next year, the
annual increase may be delayed until
October.
Another change in Social Security will
eliminate one of the inequities between
men and women workers. A woman who
worked for her husband’s unin
corporated business and didn't have her
earnings credited to her Social Security
account, must now have those earnings
credited. This could mean larger
benefits.
It used to be that a widow or widower
who remarried forfeited Social Security
benefits. As a result, many retirees
simply lived together. Now there is no
marriage penalty for recipients of
survivor’s benefits, if you are 60 or older
when you remarry.
If you have other forms of retirement
income to supplement your Social
Security benefits, keep in mind some of
this may be taxable. Because there is no
“withholding” from pensions and self-
employment Income, for example, as
there is with job salaries, you'll have to
budget carefully and plan in advance for
your federal income tax bill, say CPAs.
When you have such income, you have to
make timely payments of estimated tax.
What is taxable income? Social
Security benefits arc not taxed. Money
you withdraw from an Individual
Returement Account (IRA) or Keogh is
fully taxable as ordinary income in the
year you withdraw it. Pensions and
annuities from employer plans are
partly taxable, depending upon how
much you paid in and what earnings
accumulated over the years. If you
receive a lump-sum payment from your
pension plan when you’re older than
59'ii, check with your tax advisor about
Interest and dividends from in
vestments and savings are taxable.
Beginning this year, you can deduct up
to $200 of some interest and dividend
income, or up lo $400 on a joint return. If
you sell any of your collectibles or real
estate, remember the capital gains tax.
Income from rental property is also
taxable.
If you and your spouse are both 65 or
older, you can each earn $5,500 this year
without reducing your Social Security
benefits. (If you earn more, you lose one
dollar in benefits for every two dollars
you make above the earnings limit.)
Retirees who are not yet 65 can earn up
to $4,080 this year before their Social
Security checks are affected. These ^aniing^cenhig^ia^ncreaseh
next few years and then be lifted en
tirely, If you are 72 or older, there is no
reduction in benefits no matter what
your annual earnings. Next year, the
age limit drops down to 70,
The first step in planning your tax bill,
say CPAs, is to list your income as well
as your spouse’s income and compute
what is taxable. Depending upon the
amount of taxable income each of you
has, you may wani to calculate your
income tax on separate returns as well
as jointly. For example, you may save
lax dollars if one of you has unusually
large medical expenses this year.
Because medical expenses must exceed
three percent of your income to be
deductible, you may not reach that
amount on a joint return.
Don’t forget to figure in the special tax
breaks you are entitled to if you are 65 or
older, Vou get an additional exemption,
which, on a joint return, means four
exemptions. This reduces your taxable
income by $4,000, Vou ^uaiiiy for a tax
credit for the elderly at 65. How much, if
any, credit you’ll receive depends upon
total income and filing status. If you’re
calculating your income tax on separate
and joint returns, see which way gives
you Ihe greater credit.
M ON EY M ANAGEM ENT is a weekly
column on personal finance prepared
and distributed by T H E N ORTH
CAROLINA ASSOCIATION OF CER
TIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS.
MOORE & SONS, INC
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OAVII ((H'NTN- I NII KI’RISI- KICOKI), TIIUKSDA'i'. .U'NI II, "'SI
F ourth Annual EventDavie Arts Council Holds Awards Banquet Saturday
Danny Lawrence hands over the president’s gavel to Kathy Church.
Thi> Fourth Annual Davie County Arts
ro iin cil .Awards Banquet was hoW
Saturday night, June 6 at Hickory Hill
Country Club,
The evening began with a social hour
and continued with a buffet dinner.
Approximately 40 people were in at
tendance,
Dannv Lawrence, 1981 President,
opened the awards presentation. He
recognized Louise Daigle, Joyce Beck,
and Roberta Goodwin for their con
tributions to the Arts Council.
Also recognized were Lawrence
Heavis and Bill Foster from the Board of
Davie County Commissioners and
Buster Cleary from the Mocksville Town
Board,
Kathy Church, Festival Chairperson,
received the Festival Award for coor
dinating the Arts Alive Festival,
For his cooperation, help, and service
to the Arts Council, Knox Crowell was
presented the Outstanding Service
Award,
Arts Council Secretary, Frances
Brown was awarded a Certificate of
Appreciation for her service beyond the
call of duty.
The Rookie of the Year Award is
presented to a 1st year board member
who has had an outstanding and active
year. Jeanne Cannady was the recipient
of lhat award.
Miss Louise Stroud received the
highest honor awarded by the Arts
Council; the Presidential Award.
Miss Stroud, a graduate of Salem
College, has taught piano in Davie
County for over 50 years. She currently
serves as pianist-organist at the First
Baptist Church in Mocksville.
Danny Lawrence was presented an
award for his service as president.
The installation of officers followed
the Awards presentation. Sworn in as
1982 officers were Kathy Church -
president, Jeanne Cannady - 1st vice
pre.sident, Annette Ratledge - 2nd vice
president, Janey Sell - recording
secretary, and Frances Brown -
treasurer,
A dance rounded out the night with
entertainment provided by Tony
DiBianca,
Some of the projects the Davie Arts
Council sponsored over the past year
are: a concert series featuring guest
artists, the Arts Alive Festival held each
year on the Town Square, Artist of the
Month presentation, artists visitations
to county schools, the Music Club, and
Ihc Art Guild,
Story by Jane Keller
Photos by Robin Fergusson Miss Louise Stroud, recipient of the Presidential Award and Danny
Lawrence.
Day Camp Offered At Tanglewood Park qq you Know?
The Central YM CA and Tanglewood
Park will offer a ten-week Day Camp
program starting on Monday, June IS.
Tangled " Y ” Day Camp, open to boys
and girls. Kindergarten through sixth
grade, will ofrer activities in swimming,
arts and crafts, singing, overnight trips,
riflery, Indian lore, physical education,
archery, canoeing, nature lore, skits,
roller skating, pony riding, drama and a
devotional period each day.
'Day camp sessions will start on June
15, June 22, June 29, July 6, July 13, July
20, July 27, August 3, August 10 and
August 17. The camp will be co-directed
by Karen Dresser and Chris Glenn. They
will be assisted by well-trained senior
high school and college students who
will serve as senior counselors and
activity leaders.
Interested persons may get additional
information and a registration program
brochure by calling the Central YMCA
at 722-1163.
Case for Crocket
Needles
An eye glass case with a snap closure
is perfect for keeping crochet needles of
different sizes, small sewing scissors
and large-eyed needles together.
Cheesemaking
Cheesemaking in this country evolved
from a local farm industry to a business
with the first cheese factory in 1851 near
Rome, New York.
A U T O P A R T S S T O R E S
S№e o f sales
AUDIOVOX STEREO CASSETTE AM-FM RADIO AND ''SOUND EXPLODER" AMPLIFIERPush stereo power to 40 watts with Exptoder,
BUY BOTH
FOR ONLY
Sug, Ust $33.90 UMITIDQUANTITIIS
CAL CUSTOM WIRE WHEEL COVERSRemovable chrome wire basket for easy cleaning,:13" #5300 M" #5301 .15" #5302
iwHHLCOVII LOCK SIT #5313
1 6 M iM o f 4
m D u s w M
sug, ust $27,00
19.“
UMITIDOUANTITIIS
11-PC. COMBO WRENCH s e i^Drop forged steel,«etrtc 6 mm to i7mmorSAEi/4" to 13/16,"Metric #2522 SAE #2525
YOUR CHOiCi
1 2 ? »
MR. GASKET
9 CHROME AIR CLEANER[}eep dish, highly polished chrome top wing nut, includM ah' fUtar. uses gem replacements. For most 2, 3 and 4-dW. cards. #4342
1 0 .“ «14"CHR0MI 4 7 ■■All CUANIR #4340 1 / .
2-TON
HYDRAULIC
FLOOR JACKDesigned for do lt yourselfersi 5" to 15"Ift range,#649N
59?»LIMITIDOUANTITIIS
TURTLE W A X POLYSHELL
ONE STEP
POLYSEALANTseals car's finish In one easy step.CARQUIST PRICI LISSMAIL IIIA T I 3.00
N IT P R IC i
YOUR
CHOiCR
CAROUEST RAINCHECK POLICY Every CAROUEST special is a bona fide offer If we sell out of an advertised item or faU to receive the merchandise, we wUl issue a •Ralncheck* entltung you to the sale price. Ralnchecks do not apply to Items stated as being In Umlted quantity We reserve rhe right to suDstltute Items of equal or better value In the event that our stocks of advertised specials become depleted
X^HMMV SUTHEBFOKOThitv Tintr utay soo Mmncr « orUbi9 cr\Am<Men
sale prices good at participating n W ( X n
CAROUEST Auro Parrs Stores through June 30.1981 IflH H ln lK A I
Al MOST LOCATIONS k S S jMOCKSVILLE AUTOMOl IVE
757 South Main Street
Mocksville, N.C.
Phone 634-2944
Farmington
News
Rev. Alvin Pope delivered a
fine sermon at Farmingtonl
Methodist Church at the lo|
a.m. worship service on
Sunday,.Junei jOje subjectl
was "the Story of Ufe - the]
water pump.”
Our visitors last Sunday a
the Methodist Church were as
follows: Mrs. Cornelia Brock
Lowe of Augusta, Ga. and{
Mrs. Jimmy Hutchins and son
David of Bennettsville, S.C.
Mrs. HatUe Wood had as
her guests last weekend, Mr.
and Mrs. Woodrow Walls of|
Kernersville, N.C.
Miss Margaret Brock and
Mrs. Carrie Tucker visited
Mrs. Nell Lashley, Miss|
Eloise Ward and her sister
Zella; Rev. C.E. Crawford ofj
the Fran-Ray Rest Home in
Mocksville, N.C. last Sunday
afternoon. Mrs. Lashley
seems to be very feeble now.
We have heard that our
former pastor, the Rev. Fred
C. Shoaf wiU re-enter BaptUt
Hospital in Winston-Salem
again some time this month.
Our prayers and thoughts are
always with those who are
sick or helpless.
News is rather scarce at]
this time. Hope we'll ha
more for next week. Pleai
call in or send all your
items to 998-3349 over
weekend if possible. It woi b^reaU^agpreciat^
Corn Of ze
C A R O U E S T : t h e R i g h t P l a c e t o b u y a u t o p a r t s .
R I G H T P R I C E • R I G H T P A R T S • R I G H T A D V I C E
The annual Potts reunion!
will be held on Sunday, J
14 at the Nathan Potts
homeplace. Lunch will be
served at 1 p.m. All friends
and relatives are invited to
come.
Jim Boger returned to his
home last week from Davie
County Hospital,
Gladys Jones spent the
weekend in Knoxville, Tn, She
went especially to visit her
sister, Carrie Schrum, who is
a patient in the hospital there.
Shirley and Landon Potts
attended a family reunion in
Georgia Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Frye and
family and Mrs, Florence
Starr attended the Allen
reunion at Uich Park Sunday,
Mr, and Mrs, Derek Harpe
of Farmington were Sunday
luncheon guests of Mr, and
Mrs. Homer Potts,
Mr, and Mrs. Joseph
Franck Sr,, visited Mr, and
Mrs. Joe Franck Jr. Tuesday
night.
Mr. and Mrs. Warren Day
and children, Jason and
Jennifer visited Mr, and Mrs,
James Shoaf in Marion, S.C.
last week. While there they
attended the high school
»•raduation of Ryman Shoaf.
"Talk not of wasted affec
tion; affection never was
watted." Longfellow
Danny Lawrence, 1981 president, swears in 1982 Arte CouncU offlcers Frances
Brown, Jeanne Cannady, and Kathy Church.
Davie Particioates In District 4-H Day
Davie County 4-H members are
among hundreds of 4-H’ers from 15
counties in the Northwest District who
will participate in the annual District 4-
H Activity Day competition on June 18 at
Reidsville Senior High School.
The District 4-H Activity Day is being
held to select winners to vie for top
honors during North Carolina 4-H
Congress July 20-23 at North Carolina
State University, according to Ooug
Lee, County 4-H agent. Similar events
are being held at five other locations in
the state.
The 4-H’ers will compete in some 30
events, ranging from archery, cooking
and sewing to landscaping, automotive
skill driving, crop production and
wildlife conservation.
Davie County 4-H’ers who will par
ticipate and their programs are: Biyan
Koontz - Archery (Jr.); Kathy Reilly -
Breads (Sr.); Charlynne Ellis - Dairy
Foods (Sr.); Erin McGee - Egg Cookery
(Sr.); Leslie Powell and Amy Bingham -
Environmental Quality; Ashlyn
Hillebrand - Horse; Liz Hillebrand -
Horse PubUc Speaking (Sr.); Aurelia
Wilson - Oopen Class; Jeff White -
Photography; Dottle Sigmon
Poultry; Tonya Turner - Public
Speaking (Jr.); Cheryl Woodward -
Public Speaking (Sr.); Stacy Walker -
Safety; Leia Welch - Share-the-fun and
the band “Spectnun” ; Jeff Severt,
Robert Martin and Mike Marshall -
DAVir COUNTY líNTlíRPRlSi; Ri:( OKI) ШГК.ЧПЛ', U NI || 1981 <)
A i Cooleemee Cooleemee ElemenUry student Chris Alien accepts the fint annual V.G. Prim
award from principal Vernon Thompson. (Photo by Garry Foiter)Chris Allen Receives First Annual Prim Award
Chris Allen, a sixth grader at
Cooleemee School, was the first
recipient of the V.G. Prim Award at the
school's Awards Day Thursday, June 4.
Oiris, 12, is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
WiUiam AUen of Rt. 4, MocksviUe.
Clara Shore Receives
Juiiiiard Scholarship
(3are Shore, the daughter of the
Reverend and Mrs. J.C. Shore of Route
2, Vadkinsville, N.C., has been awarded
the $4,000 Irving Berlin FeUowship in
Memory of Jerome Kern for the 1981-82
academic season at The JuUliard School
in New 'York CiQr.
Miss Shore, a composition student of
David Diamond at Juiiiiard since
September 1980, is a candidate for the
degree of Doctor of Music. Bom in
Winston-Salem, she is a 1972 graduate of
Forbush High School in East Bend, N.C.
She received a Bachelor of Arts degree
in music from Wake Forest University
in 1976. In 1977 she received a Master of
Music degree in composition from the
University of Colorado at Boulder.
Vernon Thompson, Cooleemee prin
cipal, presented Chris with the plaque
which read “nie V.G. Prim Award,
Cooleemee School, Honoring the Sixth
Grader Who Most Exemplifies the
Ideals of Mr. Prim.”
Thp award was established last year
by the Cooleemee PTA upon the
retirement of Prim who served as the
school principal for 34 years. Chris’
name wiU be inscribed on the award
which wlU hang in the media center.
lliompson said the award is presented
to the outstanding student who exhibits
citizenship, friendUness and high
academics. Chris was among five
students vying for the honor who were
nominated by the students and teachers.
Tliompson presented certificates to
the other nominees Lisa Allen, Christy
Cornatzer, Robin Frye and Joel Evans.
During the Awards Day ceremony,
teachers in each suite presented cer
tificates to students who had made high
achievements or deserved special
praise..
Teachers sponsoring different groups
made presentations to the members.
Teachers makine these presentations
were: Mrs. Belinda Gamer, safety
patrol; Mrs. Patsy Crenshaw, book
exchange club and speUing bee winners;
Mrs. Unda Drye, energy brigade; Mrs.
Freida L«dford, school store; Vernon
Ihompson, PTA certificates; and Mrs.
Dixie Scott, library helpers.
Johnson Ijames was presented with
tlie school’s yearbook which is dedicated
to him.
Sen. Smith Elected To
NCM A Board Of Directors
At the annual convention of the N.C.
Merchants Association held May 16-18,
Senator Paul S. Smith of Salisbury was
elected to the NCM A board of directors
for the coming year.
This association is the principal voice
of retailing in the State of North
Carolina and represents the 120,000
separate reUU outlets from mountains to coast.
Window Valance
To make windows appear taller, add a
valance above the window to
camouflage the real height.
H O M E Р Н О Т Е С Т Ш П
on AWsbug/i House Paints
Now thru Jult 15tli
Sun-Proof* House Paints
Acrylic Latex Flat
Mildew resUtant on paint film for Its own protection. Has built-in acrylic flexibility to weather the weatherl Resists cracking and peeling. Easy application and clean-up.
NOW ONLY Save $4.50 off reg. price
While and ready-mixed colors only.
Custom colors slightly higher.
A c rylic La te x S e m i-G lo ss
Mildew reilatant on paint film for ita own protection. Weather resistant. Dries to a semi-gloss
sheen. Fast drying, recoat in 4 hours. Use on both siding and trim.
Save 14.50 off reg. priceNOW ONLY * 1 3 9 ?
White only.
Custom colors slightly higher.
S u n - P r o o f ^ L i n s e e d O i l T y p e
H o u s e & T r i m P a i n tMildew resistant on paint film for Its own protection.
SAVE ^25
NOW ONLY
16 49
gal.
0« f*gul*r price.
Pittsburgh Pain t^
FUT u n x EXnRKM
HOUSE M IN T
c«l»r$ tlipbtly hiptivr.
Pittsburgh Paints
fXTIRIOt
INTCaiOR ^
/¡¡Bliijikr.
ACRYLIC
LATEX
STAINS
* Â î r
White and puslel colors
only. Accent colors
slightly higher.
itts b u r c h p m n tS
Я аж .
WOOD STAINSMCW. ШПО¥ёО ALKTO-Oli
Н И Е CHOICf It ■ »М«СвМ< - • Кем. , •*,
Durable beouly for ony woed »wrioc«
Wood Stoini b v
\ U iH lb g r g h fe in t»
jn e w fl« « v v о Iwll
" ' ronpe ol weed Ila125?ITO» m ANO ш THf NlWlfl WOOD ITAINi.
CAUDEU LUMBER CO.
162 Sheek St Moclcsville, N .C .
Phone: 634-2167
June Launched
As Dairy Month
In The Year O f'3 7
Because grazing cows
produced more Milk in June,
June Dairy Month was
launched in 1937 to sell more
dairy products. Over the
years, it has become a
national campaign to remhid consumers of the importance
of dairy foods hi the family
diet.
Dairy farmers say their
products are the best
“natural" foods, ready to eat
or use right from the carton.
Modem milking methods may
vary from those used during
the first June Dairy Month 44
years ago, but today tlie finest
milk and dairy products in the
world are at the fingertips of
American consumers.
It is interesting to note that
milk produced per cow in
North Carolina Itas increased
steadily since that first June
Dairy Month.
Cows enrolled in the
production testing program
known as DHIA (Dairy Herd
Improvement Association)
attaint an average milk
output last year of 1,720
gallons (14,795 pounds). That
was more than double the
average production of S35
gallons (7,188) pounds)
recorded 40 years earlier, in
1941.
How’s tiiat for productivity!
The increased production of
today’s cows can be at
tributed to three major fac
tors - improved breeding,
improved feeding, and im
proved management.-----
The modem dairy farmer
pays greater attention to
breeding, makes a greater
effort to maintain his herd in
good health, and feeds his
animals more grain and more 1
high-quality silage.
Wlien we consider tiie fact
that good wlioleiome milk is
priced less tiian soft drinks,
we can appreciate tiie out
standing job that our I
dairymen are doing.
Cliicken Supper
AtW in.RDavie
William R. Davie Fire
Department is sponsoring a
chicken pie supper, Saturday,
June 13, at tile fire depart
ment. Serving will begin at 5
p.m. and continue until sold
out.
Take out boxes will be
avaiiabie.
Proceeds will be used for
the building fund.
“Opinion il ultimately de
termined by the feelings,
■nd not by the intellect."
Herbert Spencer
If milk or cream ipillt on furniture, Mipe it up
quickly. Dairy foodi act
■I mild paint and varniih
ramovar. If tpoti (how,
clean with whit« liquid wax.
Ш Ш Ш
atMILLS'OUTLET
2419 Lew isville - Clemmons Road
Clem m ons, N .C .
M EN 'S
WRANGLER
NO FAULT
JE A N S
'19.50 VAUIE
$
M EN ’SWRAPID TRANSIT FASHIONJEANS
S Ç 8 8
MEN’S w tangfer
JE A N
SH O RTS
Sizes 28-42
S
LONG SLEEVE WOVEN $ 0 8 8
SH IRTS <2100
Valuei
WRANGLER
CORDUROY
SH O RTS
П3.00 $
6 ®®
CHINO
SH O RTS
у е в
JUNIOR
WOVEN
BLO U SES
$ K 8 8
4».M
VkUli 5
lAOIES
WESTERN
BLO U SES
M EN'S
WRANGLER CORDUROY JE A N S $
SELECTED COLORS
STORE
HOURS FOR
THIS SALE
ONLY!
Fri. 10 a.m. to 10 p.m.
Sat 10 i.m.to 8 pjn.
U)DAVII ( (niNTY I Nll Ht’UlSr RI ( OUI), IllUUSliAY. lUNl 11. l'>Hl
Sorting it Out
Dr. Donald WUdem ann, Phd.
PROGRAM CONSULATION AND EVALUATION
John Whitfield M .S .W .
ADULT SERVICES
hnmps, mentally retarded
Individuals live In a homelike
setting. Paid houseparents
oversee the artlvltles of the
four to ten residents when
they are nt home. The
residents are responsible for
normal housekeeping ac
tivities such as keeping their
rooms clean, helping with
meals and cleaning, etc.
Often, a warm family-like
atmosphere develops. During
normal working hour«,
residents usually hold down
Jobs in local industries or in
sheltered workshops.
The residents of these group
homes are carefully screened
before being admitted. They
usually undergo a trial In the
home before they can tiecome
permanent residents. While
residents have a problem in
Musical Instruments “
Answers (o “Sorting It Out”
arc- provided by the Con
sultation and Education
Program of Ihe Tri-County
Menial Health Center. Please
address your questions to
"Sorting It Out,” Tri-County
Mental Health, 622 North
Main Street, Mocksville,
North Carolina, 27028.
A group home for mentally
retarded adults is located
near me. Isn't this dangerous
for people in the neigh
borhood?
Neighborhood group homes
were started because they
were cheaper lo run lhan
state Institulfons. In these
A Few 'Notes’ On
Sales of musical in
struments are booming as an
increasing number of adults,
as well as student band and
orchestra members, are
“ playing around." Price,
quality and service can vary
widely with instruments,
advises the Better Business
Bureau. When considering
such a purchase, know the
instrument, read the sales
contract and opt for a reliable
retailer.
Most of the components of
today’s musical instruments
are mass produced, but there
is usually some delicate hand
work in their assembly. The
finest and most expensive
instruments are truly works
of art.
Price can vary greaily. A
pleasing acoustic guitar from
the Far Bast, for example,
can cost about $125. .A top-
grade, name-brand acoustic
guitar can sell for nearly
12,000.
For the most part, musical
instrument buyers get what
they pay for, but the question
is, “How good an instrument
will be needed?" For a
beginner, the instrument
must be good enough to make
a pleasant sound easily, so as
not to discourage practicing.
It’s unlikely, Uiough, that a
concert-quality instrument is
the place to start.
In addition to quality fac
tors, prices also vary wiUi
geography and the amoimt of
competition in a market.
Expect to pay more In a small
Midwest town with few music
stores than in a major urban
area.
Although some major
retailers sell instruments by
mall, do not order by mail
there is no outlet nearby for
servicing the instrument.
Without proper service, a
bargain can turn into an
expensive piece of clutter in
the closet.
Make the warranty a part of
the buying decision. Find out
what is and what is not
covered. It also may be a good
idea to look for a retailer that
includes a repair service with
the instrument.
Woodwinds used to be made
of wood, but are now often
made of plastic. That fdastic
is susceptible to cracking,
which can make the in
strument anything from
difficult to play to imusable. A
reliable retailer will stand
behind his goods. Make sure
to read any warranty in ad
vance, however.
Manufacturers usually
provide use and maintenance
instructions for their in
struments. Follow these
carefully or the warranty
may be voided. A well-
maintained instrument can
last a lifetime, but remember
that drums, woodwinds,
pianos, acoustic guitars and
basses are vulnerable to
damage from too much or too
little humidity.
Many peo^e who begin
playing an instrument don't
suy with it long. If that’s a
possibility, consider renting
in the early stages of in
struction. Most music stores
rent instruments and many
also offer a rental-purchase
plan. This allows the use of
new instruments for a
specified time period on a
rental basis.
When that time is up, the
renter has the option to apply
a portion of the rental amount
towards purchasing the in
strument or trading up to a
higher grade instnmient.
Inquire about these options
when looking for an in
strument. If renting, read the
afireement carefidly before
signing. To find reliable
music stores, ask friends,
music teachers or the local
school’s band-orchestra in
structor. After locating the
instrument that meets the
quality, price and service
needs, contact the Better
Business Bureau for a
reliability report on any
musical instrument dealer
under consideration.
Many first-time purchasers
of musical instruments know
little about what they're
buying, if possible, bring
along a knowledgeable friend
who can assist in comparison
shopping. Also, trust the
advice of the experienced
music store owner. A good
relationship with ttie retailer
is the first step towards
making beautiful muüic.
much as the average person,
they do nol have obeying the
law. Group home residents
are no more dangerous than
any of your other neighbors.
In fact, Ihe caring and con
cern houseparents usually
ensure lhal Ihese residents
creale less disturbance lhan a
neighbor who may play his
stereo too loudly.
My fourteen year old son
has started to experiment
with drugs. Do you think I
need to bring him in for
counseling?
Current survey’s show lhat
the majority ot teenagers try
alcohol and marijuana at
least once during their
teenage years. Generally, a
single trial Is not a cause for
unnecessary alarm, although
some family educiitioii -on
drugs and theh- long term
effects may be called for. If
however, experimentation
continues over a period of
time, an evaluation by a
trained therapist Is advisable.
Substance abuse usually
starts because of peer
pressure. Educational and
values clarification programs
and family therapy usually
produce the most effective
results in controlling the
abuse.
Dontal
Tips
By Gary E. Prillaman DDS
Just a few years ago,
chewing tobacco and dipping
snuff was not considered to be
a socially acceptable thing to
do. But today with high power
advertising both of these have
become socially accq>table.
Itie tobacco companies are
putting on high power ad
vertising and marketing
techniques to sell their
products, and the public is
responding to the advertising
techniques by chewing
tobacco and dipping snuff in
record numbers. Why does
the public fall for this type of
high power advertising
making it seem like the thing
to do - all the big football and
baseball players chew.
We are going to find that
there will be a higher in
cidence of cancer of the throat
and mouth. If you chew and
drink then this increases your
chance of getting cancer of
the mouth and throat. Do not
let the high power advertising
influence your judgment. It
seems all sports programs on
television are filled with
commercials for tobacco and
drinking. What will our
children think? All their
football, baseball and soccor
heroes either drink or chew
and somehow tbey think the
tobacco or beer makes the
idayer more of a player.
Please try not to be In
fluenced by the high>>wered
advertising and try to teach
your child that not all sports
flgures drink and chew. When
I was in high school we were
told that drinking, smoking
and sports did not go together.
What has happened to the old
ethic and what are we
teaching our children today?
Kappa Club
Has Meeting
Kappa Home Extension
aub met Tuesday, June 2 at
the Davie Academy building
with Hostess, Mary Morrison
reading a poein entitled
“Being Lovea’’. Some of the
members gave reports on
their trips to iSalem College
and Boston.
Louise Beck talked on
“Uooking Your Best in What
You Have to Wear”.
Louise Cartner gave a
report on Cystic Fibrosis. The
club members had an Auction
Sale and they had a good
turnout.
Present for this meeting
were 16 members and two
visitors.
Our next meeting will be
July 7 in the Community
Building with Mrs. Shew. Ail
members are urged to attend.
The fir»t balloon flight
oocurrad in 1782, whan
Jscq u e» anti Jo iap h
Montgclfiar of Annonay,
France, sent up a
unall mtoka filled balloon.
WHEN YOU SHOP
WITH US COMPLETE
~ OUR PRICES
CAN'T BE BEAT.
SHOP WITH YOUR
LO CAL
M E R C H A N T S
cooiccmcc
KlOO SlKir
S H O P P IU S
(OOtftM ff N( OPfN FRIDAY NITES TIL 8 30 PM - ,
Wf PtsERvf RIGHT TO LIMIT S U P E R M A R K E T
LOWEST
MEAT PRICES IN
OAVIE COUNTY PLUS
QUALITYI WE SELL
ON LY U .S .D .A .
CHOICE WESTERN
MEAT.
HO U Y FARMS FRYER
GROUND BEEF ■ BREAST HALVES
1 0 0 %
PURE
4-Lbs.
IkM O R E ID.
$129
V
• PLUMP
• JUICY
$ iit
W H O LE LIP-O N RIBEYE
STEAK
• TENDER
• JUICY
i b .*3.59
ARM O UR STAR
FRANKS
ARMOUR STAR MARKET
STYLE RIBEYE
2-OZ.
P A C K A G E
LEAN
M EATY
y SLICED
BACON
8 9 ‘
S T E A K S *
UP
ON
CHUCK
BONE
LESSR O A S T '
SHOUIDER
R O A S T ” “ *'LESS
WAFER THIN
lb.$ 3 9 9
Ib.$169
Ib.$179
Ib.$189
1 2 T o 1 6 lb s . A V G .
$2 2 »
$ p ?
SIRIOIN TIP
S T E A K S lb.
SIRIOIN TIP
R O A S T lb.
S T E W B E E F lb.
EXTRA lEAN C «
P O R K C H O P S ft. * 1 ”
TENDER CU BE W H O LE BEEF
STEA KS
T E N D E R
L E A N
ì B h ì
TIPS
$189
1/4
SLICED
PORK LOIN
*1.39
THe PEPSI sp ik iT ... CATCH it i
PEPSIS
LA U N D R Y DETERGENT
C LO R O X LIQUID
j L 32-OZ.
O "
$
BOTTLES 2 .3 9
40-0z.
BOX
79
BLEACH
. 9 9 '*
128-Oz.
JUG
PLUSDEPOSIT
CATES PREMIUM
SA LA D C U B E S
16-OZ.
JAR
CHICKEN OF THE SEA . ^ » ,TUNA • OILI U I N A • OR WATER CAN
HUNT'S TOMATO
K ET CH U P
14-02.
BTl.
6999<
49'
CENTER CUT
PO R K C H O P S
WHITE'S
B O L O G N A
WHITE'S
B A C O N
CLEAR
CRISCO OIL
12-OZ.
PKG.
$169Ib. I
$ 1 1 9
9 9 «
Ib.
38-oz. S I 79
BTL. ■
HY TOP PURE C A N E
SUGAR
LIMIT I WITN
S7.SOFOOD gf> M
ORDER I j [ y
-LB. I
A ■
FINEST V EG ETA B LE S H O R T EN IN G
CRISCO
3 -L B . $
C A N 1.99 LIMTI
CAN WITH $7.50
FOOD ORO»
5-LB.
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LETTUCE
YEUOW
ONIONS
D a v i e C o u n t y *s R e t i r i n g T e a c h e r s
Dominic J. Mando24 Years Supporting Education
After 24 year* of teaching in Davie
County Schools, Dominic J. Mando is
retiring.
Originally from Erie, Pennsylvania,
Mr. Mendo was graduated from Lenoir-
Rhyne College in IMO. He Uught in
Rural Hall, thon he and his wife Ethel
came to Mocksville in 1941.
A teaching and coaching job at
Mocksville High School was Mr. Man-
do's first position in Davie County.
In 1944, he taught for 1 month in
'niomasville, then went to work with C.
C. Sanford Sons Company in Mocksville
in the electrical, plumbing, and heating
business.
The company was later made Mando
and Company.
Elected mayor of Mocksville in 1959,
Mr. Mando served the people of
Mocksville for 14 years. He returned to
teaching in 1961 and sold his company in
1987.
In 1968, he was made Assistant
Principal at Davie High, a position he
has held until now. That year he also
took charge of the bus drivers and has
supervised them for the past 13 years.
During his years with the school
system, Mr. Mando coached all sports.
Speaking on athletics at Davie High, he
commented that the “people are in
terested.” Davie County has proved to
be a “supportive public.”
Mr. Mando has taught under Prin
cipals Horton, who gave him his start at
Mocksville High School, Stillwell,
Norton, Ward, and Norton again.
He stressed that the “faculty and
administration make the schools.”
Over the years he has seen changes in
education and the educational system.
He believes education “ moved from a
conservative type to a much more
progressive typ«.”
He pointed out that facilities are
better today and “students have more
and better opportunities.”
Mr. Mando left Erie when he was 18 or
19 years old. He said he “fell in love with
the South and stayed here."
He expressed his sentiments con
cerning this area by saying “Davie
County has been good to me.”
He described the county as one with
"good schools, good churches, and good
people” who are “progressive minded
people who want to see the county
grow.”
While he is “looking forward to
retiring,” he adds “ it’s been a Joy
teaching and working with young
people.”
He tells that one of his Joys has been
seeing students make something of
themselves and knowing “tliat you
might have helped as they grew.”
Mr. Mando insists that he will do
“what he wants to do” now and will
probably do some substitute teaching
iater. ........ _ ...................- ______
After teaching for over two decadefe
Mr. Mando claims to have mixed
emotions about retiring. "Yes, I leave
with a sense of sadness and yet I feel like
this is a good time for me to leave."
Do Not£mep
VuBiNC,
i i ’ L u n c h
Mr. Mando reflecto on hii yean in Davie County.
Mr. Mando chato witii Betoy Heims and Monique Siniceldani
feinís; Esssu?' *• **“
Helen
Everhart
26 Years Of Teaching
Mrs. Helen Everhart, after teaching
in Davie County for 28 years, retired
from the school syitem in February.
She had been teaching 4th and Sth
grades at Cooleemee Elementary
Scbool.
Since her retirement in February,
Mrs. Everhart has been working in the
Tuxedo Shop at Belk’s in Hanet MaU.
She is in the process of learning tbe
BookmobUe route. She wiU N« working
with that branch of the Davie County
Public Library.
Throughout her years as a grade
school teacher she said she “enjoyed the
children and the change in them as they
learned and became aware.”
Mrs. Everhart, who is a native of
Davie County, said she is “looking
forward to doing other things; things
I’ve never had time to do before.”
She finds that “life’s too interesting to
do the same thing all the Ume.”
BAviB eewNTV
Feature I-B June 11,1981
Story by Jane Keller
Photos by Robin Fergusson Mrs. Helen Everiiart. retiring after 2S years of teacliing in Oavie
County.
Carolyn Hartman
36 Years Of Teaching
Miss Carolyn Hartmen retired from
S^ady Grove Elementary School this
year. She has Uught Kindergarten, 1st,
and 2nd year students in Davie and
Davidson Counties for 36 years. Twenty
of those years have been in Davie
County.
She has “always loved ciiildren and
loved to teach.”
Miss Hartman said “the highlight of
teaching comes at the end of each year,
when you think back through the year
and realize how much progress the
children have made. One never ceases
to be amazed at these ac
complishments."
Her plans for the future consist uf
doing some of the things she never had
time to do while teaching.
She adds that it is her “desire that the
schools will continue to meet the
educational needs of every child in Oavie County.”
Miss Carolyn Hartman, retiring after 31 years as a teaclier in Davie and Davidson Counties.
Misstaught.and tliree ef tiie many youngsters siie lias eachers need a lot of Tender Loving Care.
2P OAVil (OUM 'Y t NTI KI’KISI KIX'OKO. THURSDAY, IIINI' II, I‘>Hi
Regina Robbins,
the greased pig
Shannon Spillman, and Sbanda Albea were winners In
chase.
A Total Success
Brownies
Never
Give Up
“Totally a successful day.” That’s the
way Laura Carter, event chairman,
described Brownie Day held Saturday,
June 6, at the Masonic Picnic groun(b.
Approximately 123 Brownies from 11
local troops showed up to participate in
the event despite rainy weather.
The girls ran relays and races from
9:00 to 3:30, Ribbons were awarded for
winners in the three legged race,
wheelbarrow race, balloon relay, egg in
a spoon relay, water bucket fill relay
and softball throw.
The day began with an opening flag
ceremony. There was a parade of flags
from around the world, make by the
girls themselves.
The main event of the day was a
greased pig chase. A pig donated by
Tom Hauser, was chased by dozens of
girls. The winners were Shannon
Spillman, Troop 581; Regina Robbins,
Troop 158; and Shanda Albea, Troop 476.
Shanda Albea won a purple ribbon for
her win in the pig chase between the
three winners.
Jewel Fox, Field Executive for Davie
County, named Marie Crotts, Caroline
Beck, Wanda Barney, and Barbara
Cooper as helpful in the day's event.
Marie Crotts, talking about the
Brownies said “ I think they all enjoyed
it.”
Laura Carter summed it all up by
saying “Brownies never give iq>.”
Troop leaders participate In the waterbucket fill relay.
Photos by Robin Fergusson Story by Jane Keller
oat their all<4ay event with a soog.Girla t n m 11 Davla Cauly Brownie troops chase a ffvased pig.
Cows Are Involved In Many Superstitions county a h council Meets
Tliroiighout recorded history, cows
aad milk have been associated with
nagic and supersitltion. In ancient
Greek and Roman civilizations, cows
were worshiped as a God, and milk was
used in many rituals. For example, 108
girls milking 106 cows at the same time
would brii^ rain. Many of these
superstitions and magical powers at
tributed to cows and milk ramain today.
If you carry a rabbit’s foot for a good
luck charm, watch your step on Friday
the 13th, and'believe accidents happenin
threes, you’ll be interested in the
following cow superstitions.
A couple of superstitions have a tie-in
with holidays. For example, if a dairy
farmer wanted a thriving herd, all he
had to do was steal hay the nifht before
Northwest Junior Livestock
Show Is June 16th And 17th
Prize winning steers and hogs raised
by enterprising 4-H youths in Davie and
six other area counties will be entered in
this year’s Northwest Junior Livestock
Show and Sale scheduled for the Dixie
Classic Fairgrounds in Winston-Salem
on June 16 and 17. Approximately 35
steers and 122 hogs are being prepared
for the annual event.
Last year’s Grand Champion steer
brought $2370 and the Champion In-
vididual hog brought >273. Judging of tbe
livestock will be Tuesday from 1:30 until
Sp.m. The hog show will be at 9 a.m. on
Wednesday and the showing of steers
will begin at 1 o’clock.
Tickets for the big barbecue, held in
conjunction with the Show and Sale, are
available at the Davie County Extension
Office, but will also be sold at the
fairgrounds on Wednesday afternoon.
The program is being sponsored by the
Agri-Business Council of the Greater
Winston-Salem Chamber of Commerce.
Christmas and feed it to his cows.
In the ancient days of England,
mistletoe supposedly possessed all
manner of mystic powers. One of the
superstitions involving the plant had it
that, for a dairy herd to do well, a bunch
of mistletoe must be fed to the first cow
that had a calf after New Year’s Day.
Superstition has a way of dealing with
runaway cows. All a dairyman has to do
to prevent a cow from t a l ^ off is to cut
off a piece of her tail. But, if this
precaution has not been taken, and one
does get lost, th m ’s a way of finding
her.... superstitiously speaking that is.
Catch a daddy longlegs, placing a finger
on one leg. Notice carefully which way
the other leg points. This is the direction
in which the cow can be found.
Daddy lon^egs are not always easy to
come by. This presents no problem. All
you have to do is spit in the palm of your
left hand. Then strike the spittle with a
finger of the right hand. You're sup
pose to be able to find your cow in the
direction in which the spittle jumped
when struck.
In the south, some superstitious folks
had a strange remedy for dealing with a
sick cow that had lost her cud. They
believed a greasy dishcloth should be
supplied as a substitute.
Watch out for chestnut blossoms!
According to superstition, if a cow
should eat the blossoms when they fall,
she will lose her ability to produce milk.
New Englanders have a different ver
sion of the superstition. They believe a
cow wiil lose her ability to produce milk
when chestnuts start to blossom.
Still other superstitious New
Englanders believe a cow will not mourn
the loss of her calf if it is taken out of the
barn backwards. What dairy farmer
wants a homesick cow on his hands? All
he has to do is feed her a bunch of her
own hair and she'll forget her old home.
Then there’s the old superstition of
using cows as weather prophets. Watch
them when they are let out in the
morning. If they lie down immediately,
expect a storm before nightfall.
Even cow manure gets into the
superstition act. Anyone suffering from
sundry aches and pains need only use
manure for a poultice. He’ll soon be
feeling better. And, manure mixed with
mUk is supposed to make a potent
poultice to relieve frostbite.
Save a hair ball that comes from a
cow’s stomach. This is regarded as a
madstone, or charm, by some super
stitious folk. It is said to have the power
to extract venom from poisonous bites.
-4
Charlci (Chuckle) Ebert, ■ Mb grade
student at Pinebrook ElemenUry School
was the recipient of tbe Smith Grove
Ruritan Club's CiUienshlp Award. This
award was preMoted at tbe Awards Day
program held at the school on Ihursday,
June 4th. ChueUe received a IM savbigi
bond and hli name placed on the
citiienship plaque. He is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. Stephen Ebert of Creekwood
' Development, Advance. Hie savhigs
bond was presented lo Chuckle hy Glenn
Howard.
and caose C h frO p rO C tlC
600 Wilktiboro Street
and Chiropractic
M ealtli Center, P .A .
Dr. Ramey F. Kenip (Director)
eet________Mocksville. W.C. Phone:634-2512
Sheffield-Calahan
4-H Club Meets
The Sheffield-Calahaln 4-H
Club held its regular monthly
meeting May 28. We worked
in our flower bed and put in
bedding plants. We then had a
sliort business meeting.
Melissa White, president,
called the meeting to order
and led us in the pledges,
Tony Allen, Secretary-
Trtasurer, called the roll and
read Ihe minutes and Teree
Staler had devotions. Kalhy
Heiiiy and Tricia Heiiiy
served Ihe group refresh
ment and the meeting was
liien adjourned,
Scott Alien
Reporter
American! aat more bananas
than any other fruit — 18
pound I par year for avary
man, woman and child -
and all of it it imported.
The County Council hdd its
regular meeting May 26,1981
in the CountyOnice Building
Auditorium, at 7:30 p.m.
Präsident, Jeff White, caUed
the meeting to order. Mark
Hamrick caUed the roll and
read Ihe minutes of the Blay
Meeting. Kathy RciUy led the
pledges to the American and
4-H flags.
Old business consisted of
the Talent and Fashion Show
held on AprU 23. AU Crime
Old Irotuidet actually had a woodsn hull but oarhed
tho nicfcnamo whsn a cannon shot in tho War of 1812
fell hsrmlesdy off her sido and a sailor it Mid to hava
shouted, "Huzzal Her tides are mado of iron."
Prevention Contest Entries
should be tinned in by June
19. Also, 4-H Camp space is
StiU avaUaMa. Tbo total cost
is $№. New bwloasB was the
discussion of District Activity
Day to be hdd hi Reidsville
June 18. July 21-25 is the week
State 4-H Congress wiU be
held in Ralei^, with the cost
being >40 iHus travel.
Jeff White presented a
program on Photography
IN V EN TO R Y
RED U CTIO N S A LE
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LUM BER C O .Phone> 634-2167
W h e n y o u h a v e 3 r o lls o f
c o lo r p r in t f ilm d e v e lo p e d .
Mal<e sure you’re ready for the fun this
summer! Get this neat combination tote/pillow
that’s reaijy for the action when you are. Just
collect one coupon each time you bring us a
roll of color print film for MasterColor
developing and printing. When you have 3
coupons, bring them to us for redemption. But
hurry! This offer ends 8/31/81.
Available while supply lasU.
MasteiCaior
Film Developing
FOSTER-RAUCH DRUG CO.
WILKESBORO ST.
MOCKSVILLE.N.C.
Teachers Cindy Bennett and Martha Folds with Lisa Anderson and Charles Driver.
Davie Higli Graduates TwoTrainable
Mentally Handicapped Students
By Jane Keller
Among the 323 graduates of the class
of 1981 at Davie High, two were
Trainable Mentally Handicapped
students.
Lisa Anderson, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. C. M. Anderson, and Charles
Driver, son of Mrs. Hazel Shore were tire
first TM H students to graduate from
Davie High.
Ilie 1980-81 school year was the first
year Davie High had T M H classes. In
previous years the younger students
attended Mocksville Elementary School
and the older ones were at Mocksville Middle.
The addition of two Junior High
Schools in the county made it possil%
for the older students to attend Davie
High. That move w t them into an en
vironment of studimts closer to their
own aaes. Ihe nine TM H ’s at the high
school are 13 through 21 years of age.
Federal law requires TM H students to
drop out of the public school system at
the age of 21, thus enabling Usa and
Charles to graduate.
Teachers, Martha Folds and Qndy
Bennett, praised the faculty at Davie.
4hey described the teachers and the
administration as receptive and helpful.
TTiey also expressed special thanks to
Miss Fredrica Murphy, an English
teacher at Davie, for her interest and
encouragement in Usa and Charles’ graduation.
Cindy Bennett, who is not from Davie
County, said she was impressed with the
way area people are concerned.
Two clubs at Davie High have been
particularly supportive of the class.
They are the Junior Civlten Oub and the
Fellowship of Christian Athletes.
'Hirou^out the year these clubs have
L i b r a r y N e w s
’Ihe summer reading program is now
underway and we have many young
"Cub Reporters” and “SUr Reporters”
signed up to participate. ’Thoae who
came Monday night enjoyed two very
ftmny moviea, n e For Coat CIt* and
’Hie Baggs.
N E W BOOKS
FICTION
Banners of SUk, by Rosalind Laker
Ben RetalUck, by E.V. Thompaon.
Bread and Roses, by Richard Gam-
bino
Ibe Cool War, by Frederik Pohl
Dale Love* Sophie to Death, by Robb
Forman
’¡lie Garden of Weapons, by John
Gardner
' Golag for flie Gold, by Em m a Lathen
Inherit tlie Son, by t^w ell Grant
Long Day at Shiloh, by Don Bannister
A Man of DesUny, by Graham
Masterson
Masterstroke, by Marilyn Sharp
Path of the EcUpse, by Chelsea
Yarbro
A Place of Ravens, by Pamela Hill
Ruby Sweetwater and the Rbigo Kid.
by Bart Sheldon
A Sense of Honor, by James Webb
SmaU World by Tabitha King
Tar Balw. bv Tony Morriaon
by Gail Ijames
Interim Director
Unaccompanied Sonata and other
Stories, by Orson Soott Card
Vengeance 1«, by Joe Poyer
]-FI(NON-FICTION
coming, I
Legacy ol Mr. Hall^, by Nigel Calder
A Diary of Prayer, by J. Barrie
Shepherd
The Hearsts: Family and Empire -
llie later Years, by lindsay Chaney and
Michael Cleply ,
Hie Lord God Made Hiem Ail, by
James Herriot
Palm Sunday, by Kurt Vonnegut
Pies and Pastries, by ’Time-Life Books
The Reality of Retirement, by Jules Z.
WUIing
Sue Yonr Boss, by Richard E. Larson
The Suing of America, by Marlene
Adler Marks
Where Did Everybody Go? by Paul
Molloy
Wouldn’t Take Nothbi’ for my Journey
Now, by Jock Lauterer
The Zoo that Never Was, by R.D.
I.«wrence.
HOURS
donated funds to the TM H class.
While interest and support is plentiful
in Davie County through age 21, there is
a lack of opportunities for these young
men and women after they finish high
school.
The county has been a leader in
edication for the trainable through 12th
grade, but there is no continuance.
Davidson, Rowan and other
surrounding counties have workshops
for trainable students. However, there
are waiting lists for enrollment into
these workshops.
Currently, there are 12 TM H students
from Davie attending the Rowan Cojnty
workshop.
At present there is no money for new
workshops. A lack of funds accompanied
by public unawareness contribute to no
new workshops lieing established.
After as much as 15 years of school,
students can regress if they go home and
are not stimulated as they would be in a
classroom setting.
Workshops provide training needed by
the students to function after high
school.
There are two programs. One trains
students in a certain area then sends
them out on the job, such as sorting nuts
and bolU and other such tasks. The
second program involves working at the
workshop and receiving payment for the
work.lib Anderson, Lisa’s mother, stated
that she was "very proud” of Lisa and
graduation was a “dream come true” .
She also stressed the need for more
alternatives and opportunities for Lisa
and other students Uke her.
Energy Use
When trying to cut down on your
energy use, remember tliat only five
Pvt. Lenny Andrews
Is Recruiter Aide
I’rivnte Lenny E. Andrews, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Lewis E. Andrews of
Mocksvillc, is home on a temporary,
spwial assignment as a Hometown
Hpcniiler Aide for the U.S. Army,
As a recruiter aide, Andrews will
circuíale among the young men and
• women of the Asheboro area, tellint^
them of his personal Army experiences
sincp ho enlisted in May I960.
A graduate of Southwestern Randolph
High School, Andrews said, “I enlisted
for overseas travel and for the Army's
educational benefits and training. I’ve
already begun my educational program
and plan to take college courses when I
get to my overseas post.”
Andrews underwent basic training at
Fl Dix, N.,1. and was trained as a signal
security specialist at Ft. Devens, Mass.
Until mid-July when he leaves for his
a.ssignment in Germany, Andrews will
work under the supervision of his former
recruiter, Staff Sergeant Billy G.
Martindale at the Army Recruiting
Station, 1129-1 N. Fayetteville St.
Asheboro.
Home Cleaning
When planning to clean a room "from
top to bottom,” do just that beginning
with the ceiling.
Start by dusting it with a vacuum
brush attachment or a longhandled mop
covered with a clean cloth to remove
loose dirt and dust particles, suggest
extension housing specialists. North
Carolina State University.
Fill one pail with warm water and
detergent and another pail with clean,
warm rinse water. Protect furniture by
covering with a plastic sheet. Then
spread out newspapers to protect the
floor.
With a sudsy cloth or sponge, wash as
much of the ceiling as can be reached
comfortably while standing on a sturdy
ladder. Never overreach! Instead, move
the ladder often.
When one segment of the ceiling is
clean, rinse with a sponge wrung out of
clean rinse water. Avoid leaving marks
between sections of the ceiling.
DAVII ('OUNT'i' I NII.Kl'KI.SI KICOKI). IIII ^K.SI)Л^', .IHNI II. I'),SI ,!Ц
1
Flags For North iy South Davie
The Woodsmen of the World Insurance Company presented North and
South Davie Junior High Schools each with an American Flag during
awards ceremonies last week. Here company representative Mickey
Cartner (I) makes the official presentation to South Principal Kermit
Buckner. (Photo by Garry Foster)
G reen M eadow s
appliances account for the majority of
electricity used In the home: the range
oven, refrigerator, water heater,
Monday
’Tuesday
Wednesday
’Thursday
Friday
Saturday
12:304:30
9:00-5:30
9:00-5:30
9:00-8:30
9:00-5:30
9:00-2:00
! range
air
conditloner”and clothes dryer.
According to Linda McCutcheon,
extension housing specialist at North
Carolina State University, aU the energy
used by your blender, dishwasher,
electric frypan, toaster. Iron, washing
machine, vacuum cleaner, hair dryer,
television sets and electric toothbrush
amounts to less than one-third of the
electricity consumed by your water
Jieater^yer a year’s time.
This Saturday, June 13 at 5
p.m. youth versus adult
softball will l>e played on the
back lawn at Green Meadows.
A covered dish supper at 6:30
followed by a period of In
spiration.
Backyard Bible clubs are
being conducted by the
Baptist women of Green
Meadows each evening this
week at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Bobby Grindle at Cedar
Forest in Farmington. Also
the Bible study group will be
conducting a Bible club at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Kilby in Creekwood.
The Baptist young women
of Green Meadows met on
Tuesday evening at the home
of Mrs. Harold Sheek on
Yadkin Valley Road.
The youth led revival
services will be conducted at
Green Meadows June 14-17 at
7:30 p.m. Emphasis should lie
put on ‘‘Youth Led”. ’These
services are conducted by
young people pre{Mrlng for a
vacation in religion. The
services are for people of all
ages and visitors are
welcome.
Classes In DIscipleshIp for
Youth will be held at Green
Meadows at 10 a.m. June 15-
17. School is out about time to
start wondering, what is there
to do, so young people this will
fill two mornings. Come on
out and bring your friends.
People were very lucky In
this area to just receive a
Uttle wind and rain on
Saturday evening. There was
much damage in areas of
Davidson and Forsyth
County. Also a report that the
Statesville area received a
seven inch rainfall last
Friday.
About the only thing some of
us can do In the garden is just^
watch the morning glories
grow. It’s getting hard to tell
v,’hich is beans and which is
morning glories.
A visit to Margie Hendrix
who was recently in the
hospital finds her some im
proved. Her sister Lillian
Smith who lives with her is not
at aU weU. Bob Hendrix who
recently had serious surgery
was able to be visiting them
on Sunday evening.
Parents Without
Partners To meet
Each Month
Parents Without Partners
general meetings are always
held on the second Monday of
each month at St. John’s
Lutheran Church, North Innes
Street, Salisbury, N.C.
These meetings are geared
for meeting new people,
learning new ideas ani fin
ding new experiences, both
educational and fun.
New members are always
welcome. Anyone Interested
in attending any of these
meetings are asked to con
tact: Kay Wilkins at (704) 634-
3606, after 8 p.m.
‘'Total abstinence is easier than perfect moderation."
St. Augustine
Central Carolina Bank
Мм 1 су Market Certifkate
Ш Ш
Per Annum
R a t e g o o d J u n e 9 t h r o u g h J u n e 1 5
T h i s is t h e h i g h e s t i n t e r e s t r a t e o f f e r e d b y
a n y b a n k i n N o r t h C a r o l i n a . M i n i m u m d e p o s i t
is $ 1 0 , 0 0 0 f o r a s i x - m o n t h t e r m .________________________
C C B 3 0 - M o n t h C e r t i f i c a t e o f D e p o s i t
Annum
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R'c|uirc'(J. liitiTcsl t an Ix- í()m|4)iiiuli4Í
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paid hvchc-ck ul I Ik-end ol i-acli (]iiaiti'i.
InliTc.si can fvi-n Ik- |iaid momlilv and
tianslcra-d lo yi)ur rc^iular (^( :ii i liixk
|пд t)r sax in^.s actoum. Kali' j;cx)d Jiim lliroLigh jimi- I',l9 8 l.
1ччкта1 rc->;ulali()ns ic'i|iiiiv lhal uvi iiai>;i- an inlcrc.st |x-nalh lorcai К wiiiidi.iu.il
licini a Moni'V Maikil t A - r lilit alc and a iO Mdiilli (À-riitiialc. Лччнли.ч ik iu íiim u i J
up Kl S100.ODO by I'DiC.
C C R W ll help you fin d away.
I J .M .n ilxrl 1МГ J
1980 Duke Endownment Grants Total $33.95 Million For The Year Of 1980
C A R O L I N A Т 1И Е C O .
FORGET DAD
ON HU DAV (T^JUNE «I
L A W N -B O Y ®
G A S O L IN E
T R IM M E R
• U.S. built 31 C.C.•nglne
Umtted
O N E Y E A R Parts »Labor
W A R R A N T Y I
Pre-Season Salel ^
S A V E *45.00
Model 1300
“Bump Hood" line release
• Big 16" swotti with .080 monofllomenf cutting line
1 4 4 9 5
S t a r t y o u r m o w i n g s e a s o n
o f f r i g h t w i t h a s p e c i a l p r i c e o n
t h e S o l i d S t a t e L A W N - B O Y .
Long Ufa 8-cyei*
•nglM gives years
of loiw-maintenance
\use.
; \ LAWN-BOY
^ ' AS LOW AS
П 6 9
The 1980 annual report ot
. The Duke Endowment,
released in Charlotte on May
27, describes grante totaling
$33.5 million made during 1980
to hospitals, educatonal in
stitutions and child care In
stitutions in the two
Carolinas, and the rural
United Methodist Church In
North Carolina.
The year-end market value
of assets of the Duke En
dowment exceeded $380
million. This ranks the Duke
Endowment among the ten
largest philanthropic foun
dations in the United States.
Total grants during the year
ranked seventh among the
nation's private foundations.
The 1980 annual report
describes the long-term
relationship of the Duke
Endowment to hospital,
educational, child care and
religious beneficiaries in
North and South Crolina.
Archie K. Davis, chairman
of the trustees, commented on
a number of administrative
changes made during 1980,
including appointmeni of a
new executive director, John
F. Day. He said, "Trustees
have great confidence in this
new management team and
know that their broad ex
perience and dedication to tiie
aims of the Duke Endowment
will serve well those who look
to the Endowment for support
and guidance in the years
ahead.”
Mr. Davis continued, "This
annual report documents the
response of the Duke En
dowment to Ihe evolving
needs of those beneficiaries
selected by Mr. Duke in 1924.”
The report of the treasurer
summarizes each grant made
during 1980. Income to the
trust durinK the year totaled
$37,291,487.
Trustees awarded grants
for several new kinds of
programs In hospitals, in
cluding hospice care, health
promotion, alcoholism
rehabilitation, and oncology
nursing, in addition to more
traditional grantmaklng.
Carolinas hospitals receivea
assistance totaling $15.3
million during 1980.
Four educational in-
stitutions-Duke. Furman and
Johnson C. Smith Universities
and Davidson College-
received $15 million during
SimpUfiadCarbtirMer
for sure starts. Preset
at the factorv, it almost
never needs adjustment.
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Metcalf-Hursey
Mrs. Jacky Graham Hendrix
... was Tamera Sue HodgesHodgeS'Hendrix Exchange Vows
llie marriage of Tamara Sue Hodges and Jacky Graham Hendrix was per
formed at 7 p.m., Saturday, June 6,1981, at Asheboro, N.C. in the flower garden
at the home of her aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs. Worth Womick, Jr. The Rev.
Robert Crews of Bixby Presbyterian Church offlciated.
Tlie bride was graduated from High Point Collie and is employed at Carolina
Circle Mail in Greensboro, the groom also was graduated from High Point
College and is employed in the Accounting firm of Bodenheimer and Myers in
H i ^ Point, N.C.
After a short wedding trip to Virginia Beach, the couple will make their home
in High Point, N.C.
Mrs. Avery Renegar
... was Ann Shinault
Shinault'Renegar Vows Spoken
niiir Bt- ll Saluda, N.C. announce the engagement of
^iill h ^ J ? concentration in Computer Science. She graduatedwith honors cum laude from Weatern. ««■w«
fi of D»vie High School. He attended WeatemCaroUna Univeraity where he obtained a BS in Engineering Technology. He was
M active member of Baptist Studoit Union and held officea of President and pnotograpner.
Sakito*N c "* *• *"
I Around About
SPENDS W E E K E N D IN CHARLOTTE
Ms. Pecóla AUisra and Mildred Brooks spent the weekend in Charlotte, N.C.
aa the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Baxter Smoot and daughter, Salina, and attended
the graduation ot Salina from West Charlotte High School which was held at
Charlotte Coliaeum.
N OW A PATIENT AT AUTUM N CARE NURSING HOM E
Mrs. Alva Crawford of Neely Street entered Autumn Care last week.
GREENSBORO VISITOR
Mrs. LucUle Fulmore of Greensboro, N.C. spent several days last wetk as the
guest ot Mr*. MUdred S. Brooks.
Miss AnhShihault and A ve^ (Buddy)
Renegar were united in marriage,
Saturday, June 6, at 2 p.m. in the af
ternoon at Shagart Town Baptist church
by the Rev. W. R. Brawiey.
A program of wedding music was
provided by Mrs. Gayle Wendt.
The bride, given in marriage by her
father, wore a formal gown of white
sheer organza, designed with a batteau
neckline, was sleeveless and the skirt
had an overlay of rose print over taffeta.
The dress and veil was designed and
made by the bride’s mother.
The bride is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Chester Shinault of YadkinviUe.
She is a 1980 graduate of Forbush High
School in Yadkin county, and is em
ployed by Ba(es Nitewear.
The bridegroom’s parents are Mr. and
Mrs. Mack Renegar of Harmony, N.C.
He attended North Iredell High School
and is employed at Mayberry’s in
Harmony.
Mrs. Mary Adams presided at the
guest register.
Miss Janie Shinault, bride’s sister was
maid of honor. Bridesmaids were Miss
Joyce Renegar and Miss Kathy
Renegar. They wore gowns of pastel
blue.
Child attendants were Jennifer
Renegar, flower girl; and John
Renegar, ring bearer.
The bridegroom’s father was best
man. Ushering were Junior Shinault and
Gary DoweU.
Programs were given out by Stephanie Renegar.
The wedding was directed by Mrs. Jeannie McCollum.
After a wedding trip to the mountains,
the couple wUl reside In Harmony, N.C.
Birth Announcement
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry D. Hendrix of
Lockhart, South Carolhia are the proud
parents of their fourth chUd, a daughter,
Meredith Jane bom May 19 at Mary
Black Hospital In l^artanburg, S.C.
Baby weighed 8 pounds and was 21 In
ches long.
Meredith was welcomed by three
sisters: 7 year old Andrea, 4 year old
Melissa and 2 year oTd Amanda!
Matemal granc^arents are Mr. and
Mrs. WiUiam J. Zimmerman of Ad
vance Paternal grant^arenU are Mr.
and Mrs. Thomas A. Hendrix of Fork.
Tne baby’s maternal great grand
mother Is Mrs. Walter M. Shutt of Ad
vance. Mrs. Hendrix is the former Janie Zimmerman.
Couple Honored With Dinner
fisfi VaniMUKfi fifllvAf* n i A i r ... ^ .Miss Vanessa Salyer and Rick Cohen,
who wUl be married June 20th , were
honored Sunday night, May 3tat, when
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Harris entertained
with a steak and lobster dinner at Joe-
Lyn’s in Wlnston-Salem.
The table was covered with a white
cloth, and centered with Ughted tapers
and a miniature wedding cake baked by
Miss Salyer was presented a corsage
of sUk baby roses upon her arrival, and
the host’s ^ t to the couple was a ci^tal
vase containing an arrangement of sUk flowers.
Other guests for the occasion included
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Salyer and Mr. and
Mrs. Juan Cohen, parenU of the honored couple.
r
Phyllis Swanson
Artist-Of-Month
Hie Davie CoaBty Arts CmmcU artist-
of-the-month for tlie month of Jnne Is
Phyllis Swanson. PhyUls and her famUy
reside In MocksviUe. Mr*. Swanson’s
home Is her ‘studio’ where she can be
fotud most anytime witb a pencU or
brush in her hand. Her main medium Is
watercoior and charcoal pencU. She
says, "Right now I am doing portraits
and I am staying very busy as I have
many requests. I not only do portraits of
people, but their pets also!”
‘‘Mrs. Swanson belongs to the Oavie
Art Guild and she won third piace in tbe
‘‘People'sChoice” art show at the ARTS
ALIVE SINCE ‘75 festival in 1*80. She
has an agent who has sold many of her
palntbigs In Wbiston-Salem,” said a
spokesperson from the Arts CouncU.
Mrs. Swanson is a self-taught artist-
drawing since the age of 4. Her work wlU
be on display untU June SSih, and may
be seen weekdays from »:M - 12:M and
from 1:00 - 5:00 in the Arts CouncU Of
fice. County Office BuUding, Room 303.
‘‘The public is cordiaUy Invited to stop
by during these hours,” said Fran
Brown, Arts Council secretary.
Vacation Bible School At AME Zion
Vacation Bible School is
now In session at MalnevUle
A.M.E. Zion Church. Classes
are each evening fhim 8:30 -
8:30 p.m. until June 12.
AU Interested personp are
Invited to attend.
t r
Around Ani About
ATTENDS REUNION AT LAKE NORM AN
Roy Feezor attended the Stoner reunion at the beach house of Dr. and Mrs. L.
M. Little at Lake Norman, Saturday, June 6. Hie Stoner’s of Lexington carried
Mr. Feezor up to Lake Norman.
CITY OUTLET
LOCATED IN J & N VARIETY STORE
Cooleemee Shopping Center
Cooleemee, N.C.
U D I E S T O P S
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DATE
June 11-12 -13 ,19 8 1
TIME
10 A .M .-8 P.IM.
s u p e r '
pOUAR
LOWES SHOPPING CENTER
Wilkesboro Street
Mocksville, N.C.
86i per sitting. No charge for additional group
subjects.One special per person. Bacl^grounds
may occasiona ly change. Remember, children
must be accompanied by a parent. Satisfaction
always, or your money cheerfully refunded.
'r ■
Latham-Angell
James Latham of Mocksville and Mrs. Joyce Wilson, announce the
engagement of their daughter. Sherry Ann to Max Angell, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Verious Angell of Route 5, Mocksville.
Miss Latham is a graduate of Davie High School and is presently enrolled in
the nursing program at Forsyth Technical Institute.
Mr. Angell is a graduate of Davie High School. He is presently employed with
Farm and Garden Service.
The wedding is planned for August 1,1981, at 2 p.m. at Blaise Baptist Church
in Mocksville, N.C.
Poindexter-Hutchem
Mr. and Mrs. E. Bickett Poindexter of Rt. 2 Yadkinville, announce the
engagement of their daughter, Janet Lynne, to John GUbert Hutchens, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Hutchens of Yadkinville. Miss Poindexter attended P-
feiffer College and it employed by the Davie County Department of Social
Service*. Mr. Hutcheni is a graduate of Wake Forest University and is em
ployed by the Yadkin County School System. A July 2Sth wedding is planned.
Miller-Helton
Mr. and Mrs. Clifton James Miller of Rt. 2, MocksviUe, announce the
engagement of their daughter, Krista Lynn to Jerry Joe Helton, Jr., son of Mr.
and Mrs. Jerry Helton of Hickory.
Miss MiUer is a 1976 graduate of Davie High School; 1990 graduate of Lenoir-
Hhyne College, Hickory, N.C.; AB in Early ChUdhood Education-Reading:
member of Kappa DelU Sorority: Employed as Title I Reading teacher at
Central Jr. High School, TaylorsvUle, N C,
Mr, Helton Is a 1976 graduate of Hickory High School; attended Lenoir-Rhyne
College, Hickory. N C,; member of Tau Капра Epsilon Fraternity; CurrenUy
general manager of Herndon House Furniture in Staunton, Virginia,
nie wedding is planned for August 9 at Farmington United Methodist Church
in Farmington, N,C.
Davie Music Club
To Sponsor Concert
The Davie County Music Club will
present Helen Smith (Mrs, E, Leonidas
Smith), pianist, of Winston-Salem, in
concert at the Davie Counly Public
Library, Thursday evening, June llth,
at 8 o'clock in a program of American
music. Her program will include
numbers by William Albright, Milton
Babbitt, Charles Tomlinson Griffes and
Nathaniel Dett,
The segment on American music for
children will include numbers from a
composition entitled “Birds” omposed
in 1972 by Seymour Bernstein, The
children’s segment will include one of
Mrs. Smith's compositions and Dance
Catastrofique from "9 Pieces for
Children who take Piano and Hate it” by
Al Barr, The Magic Typewriter com
posed by Margaret Goldston in 1981 is
also included in this category. The
program may include a Beethoven
Sovata,
The public is invited to the concert and
the reception immediately following,
Mrs, Smith is a very talented per
former, teacher and composer, $ince
coming to Winston-Salem in 1960, she
has been a faculty member at Salem
College and the N,C, School of the Arts.
She now maintains a studio at her house.
She is well known in the area, having
given recitals in Mocksville on several
occasions.
Mrs. Smith has entered the In
ternational a American Music Com
petitions, sponsored by Carnegie HaU
and the Rockefeller Foundation. Five
judges will judge the preliminaries all
over the world. The finals wiU take place
in Carnegie HaU in September.
The Eastern area U.S. competition
will be held in Kaufmann Concert Hall in
New York City, June 23rd through June
27th, where Mrs. Smith wiU play on June
25th.
Local Women Attend
Symphony Luncheon
Mrs. Kate Reidenbach and daughter,
Miss Amy Reidenbach of Bermuda Run
attended the annual meeting of the N. C.
Symphony Wom en’s Association,
followed by the annual meeting of the N.
C. Symphony Society and the luncheon
held in the Raleigh Qvic Center on
Wednesday, June 3rd. Mrs. Reidenbach
is vice-president of the Davie County
Chapter of the N. C. Syipphony and was
the chapter’s official representative at
this meeting. Mrs. Christine MinwaUa
and Mrs. Nadine Soudah also attended
the meeting.
At the women’s meeting, a new slate
of officers was elected for the coming
year. The retiring president, Mrs.
Marian Bruce, of Greensboro, was
presented a gift for her faithful service
whUe in office.
A very large number of people at
tended the Symphony meeting, where
awards were presented to various
members of the orchestra. Mrs.
Reidenbach reports that a general
feeling of optimism for the future of the
Symphony prevailed throughout the
meeting.
Wonwn*^Aghw
To Meet June 16
Women’s Aglow Fellowship is an
international, interdenominationil
women's Christian organization which
meets monthly in the chapel of Reynolda
Presbyterian Church. This month’s
meeting wiU be held on Tuesday, June
16,1981 at 7:00 p.m. Sharyn Dowd wiU be
the guest speaker at this month’s
meeting.
Sharyn is a Baptist minister who was
ordained at the First Baptist Church of
Winston-Salem in January 1977. Sharyn
received a B.A. Degree at Wake Forest
University in 1969, and a Masters of
Divinity from Southeastern Baptist
nieological Seminary in 1980. Between
1972 and 1978 she served as the Director
of Weekday Ministries at First Baptist
Church. Presently she is in a Ph. D.
program at Emory University in
Atlanta, Georgia studying the New
Testament; specifically, leaming how to
communicate the realities of the New
Testament experience of Jesus Christ in
language that can reach people in
contemporary society. Much of what she
can share concerning her personal life is
an encouragement to mothers whose
college-age or grown children are in
rebelUon against God, or (more often)
“church.”
The public is invited to attend the
Aglow Outreach meetings. Please be
advised that no nursery is provided.
Tips On Freezing
Fruits With Non-
Caloric Sweeteners
You may use a non-caloric sweetener
to freeze aU fruits except peaches and
strawberries. They freeze best with an
artificial syrup.
If using a non-caloric sweetener. Dr.
Nadine Tope, extension food con
servation specialist at North Carolina
State University, suggests adding the
sweetener to water or fruit juice,
following the recommendations on the
package label.
Mix non-caloric sweetener and fruit
well. Pack fruit into container. Seal and
freeze.
Dr. Tope recommends using a no
calorie syrup for peaches and
strawberries.
To make the syrup, add two level
teaspoons of powdered pectin to one
quart cool water. Warm the mixture to
the simmering point, stirring con
stantly, Then cool,
FoUowing package directions, add
ascorbic acid or an ascorbic acid
mixture to the quart of artificial syrup.
At this point, you may sweeten the syrup
with a non-caloric sweetener or leave it
plain.
Slice peaches or strawberries into the
container; cover immediately with the
no-calorie syrup. Leave a half-inch
headspace, Sepl cartons and freeze.
Horseshoe Crab
The American horseshoe crab
Limulus poiyphemus, named after the
one-eyed giant of Greek myth, actually
has nine eyes, National Geographic
says. The ocean bottom-dweller has one
eye on each side of its shell, two in tlie
cenler, and five light-receptive organs
beneath the shell.
PRE -
IN V EN TO R Y S A L E
I 1-40 DISCOUNT
ANY
WESTERN SHIRTS
LadiesLINEN SKIRTS
Kelly Green-White-Navy
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6 3 4 - 5 3 1 6
3AVS 3AVS "3AVS
HOURS:
Monday-Fridays-9
Saturday9-6 Sunday 1-t
3AVS 3 A V S
on 1)Л'П1: COUNTY i:NTi;KrRISI- КГСОКП. TMI'RSOAY, .IUNI- II, I'^l
J .
MRS. RANDY ALAN FOSTER
...was Glenda Dianne MullisMullis-Foster Vows Exchanged
Glenda Dianne Mullis and Randy Alan ----
Foster were united in marriage June 6
during a 6 o’clock candlelight ceremony
at Bethel United Methodist Church.
The ceremony was performed by Rev.
James Marshall Tallent, uncle of the
bride.
The bride, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Jimmy G. Mullis of Route 2, Mocksville,
wore a formal length gown of white
qiana trimmed in venise lace.
Hie dress featured a wedding band
type neckline, fitted lace bodice and
can>ed sleeves of matching lace, llhe A-
line skirt was edged with a row of
narrow lace which extended into a
diapel length train. Hie bride wore a
veil of illusion. Given in marriage by her
father, the bride carried a bouquet of
white roses, carnations and blue mums.
The bridegroom is tbe son of № . and
Mrs. W.L. (Bo) Foster ol Route 3,
MocksviUe. He is a graduate of Davie
County Hi|№ School and is employed at
Eagar B. Furniture Inc. as warehouse
supervisor.
Trade McIntyre of Woodleaf, N.C.
served as child attendant. She wore a
match.
Miss Lisa Myers presented the
wedding music.
After a short wedding trip, the couple
will make their home at Route 3,
Mocksville.
RECEPTION
A reception honoring Miss Mullis and
Mr. Foster was giv6n Friday, June S at 8
p.m. in the Bethel United Methodist
Church Fellowship Hall. The event was
hosted by the prospective bride’s
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jimmy Mullis.
Hie table was accented with a floral
arrangement of blue and white mums. A
three-tiered wedding cake adorned with
traditional wedding bells was served to
tbe many guests. Other refreshments
included nuts, mints and punch.
Serving at the reception were Mrs.
Teresa Godbey, sister of ttie bride; Mrs.
Dorothy Nadine Morgan, her aunt; and
Mrs. Ellen Campbell, aunt of the
bridegroom.
Hie women wore matching sun
dresses of royal blue accented by an off
white Jacket. Hieir corsages were white daisies.
MRS. RONALD EUGENE BLACKWELDER
...was Penny Lu PattersonBlackwelder-Patterson Ceremony
Myers, Fla., Bob Jarrett of Salisbury,
Craig Michaels of MocksviUe, Rick
MiUer of Gaffney, S.C., and Brock
Patterson, brother of the bride, of
Monroe.
Taft Tucker was the ring bearer.
Courtney Tucker served as flower girl.
She was escorted by MatUiew Tucker.
Both are chUdren of Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd
Tucker Sr.
After a wedding trip to the Gulf of
Mexico, the cou|de wiU reside in
Charlotte.
Following ttie 8 p.m. ceremohy the
bride’s parents entertained at a
reception in the Monroe Country Club.
formal length gown of blue polyester
accented witti a white print apron. She
carried a bouquet of Uue and white
mums, imd wore a matching Uue ribbon
in her hair.
Mrs. Jane Jones of Clemmons was
matron of honor. She wore a formal
length light blue gown with matdiing
lace jacket. She carried a white fan
accented with Uue mums.
Bridesmaids were Miss Lynn Foster,
sister of the bridegroom and Miss
Teresa (Albert of Route 3, MocksvUle.
Botti wore Ught blue formal length
gowns with matching lace Jackets. Each
carried a white fan trimmed with Uue
mums.
The bridegroom’s father, B.L. Foster,
served as his son’s best man. Ushers
were David James of Clemmons and
Jeff Foster, brother of tbe bridegroom.
Attending the guest register was Miss
Martha Mullis, sister of the bride. She
wore a blue, formal length gown of light
Uue polyester with a~noral Jacket to
MÍ88 Smith h Honored
Miss Vanessa Smith, bride-elect of
BUly Carter, was honored Friday, May
29 with a bridal shower at the home of
ttie bride’s aunt, Mrs. Lucy Bamey.
Hostesses for the occasion were Mrs.
Judy Bamey, Mrs. Pamela Harpe, Mrs.
Donna Ireland, Mrs. Dena Grubb and
Miss Shanda Smith.
Miss Smitti was presented with a
corsage of household items. A variety of
useful gifts were received from ap
proximately 35 guests.
The guests were served petite cheese
cakes, potato chips and dip, open faced
sandwiches, picldes, nuts, carrot sticics
and piwch.
Special guests attending the shower
were the bride-elect’s mother, Mrs. Ella
Smith; her aunt, Mrs. Lucy Barney and
the groom-elect’s mother, Mrs. Gray
Carter.
Penny Lu Patterson and Ronald
Eugene Blackwelder were married
Saturday at the Central United
Methodist Cliurch of Monroe, by the
Rev. Thad McDonald.
Hie bride is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Frederick Brocton Patterson of
Monroe. She is a 1976 graduate of ttie
Monroe H i ^ School and a I960 graduate
of ttie University of North Carolina,
Chapel HUI. She is employed as internal
auditor for ttie United CaroUna Bank of
Monroe.
Hie bridegroom is Uie son of Mr. and
Mrs. James Lester Blackwelder of
North Wilkesboro. He is a 1974 graduate
of ttie Davie County High School and a
1978 graduate of Catawba CoUege. He is
employed by Food Town Stores, Inc. as
a computer programmer.
The bride, given in marriage by her
fattier, wore a formal length gown of
white sheer organza over taffeta. It
featured a Queen Anne neckline, empire
waist, and long fitted sleeves of French
chantiUy lace. The bodice and skirt were
adorned with French chantUly lace and
seeded with many miniature pearls. The
flowing skirt ended in a cattiedral
length train. Her cathedral length
mantUla veil of white Ulusica was
trimmed witti Frmch diantUly lace and
seeded pearis. She carried a caacade of
white and yeUow sweettieart roses,
gypsophUia and carnations.
Ms. Linda Helms of Monroe was maid
of honor. Bridesmaids were Tereu
Parrish of Sielma, Dean Herring of
Dunn, Luz RoUins of Monroe, Dawn
Patterson of Eden and Patti Peeler of
Monroe.
James Lester Blackwelder, father of
ihe bridegroom, served as best man.
Ushers included Zack Tanner of Ft.
Amy Aleigh Ridenhour celebrated her
SUi birthday on Tuesday, June 9 with a
party at her home. She enjoyed a
Strawberry Shortcake Doll cake made
and decorated by her mommy. Amy
lives on Route 2, Advance. Her parents
are Steve and Sherrie RMenhour. Her
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Lee
Seaford, and Mr. and Mrs. Bud
Ridenhour.
Mr. and Mrs. Johnny Booe of Route 1,
MocksviUe, N.C. |»roudly announce ttie
arrival of their first child, a son, June 1,
1981 at Davie County Hospital.
The baby weighed ’/ lbs. 14 ozs. at birth
and was 21% inches long. He has been
named James Judson.
Maternal grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Tony Cregar and paternal grand
parent is Mrs. Sally Sue Booe.
"To lengthen thy life, leiten thy meali." Ben Franklin
One legend placet the Gar
den of Eden between the
Tigrit and Euphratei Riven
In today's Iraq.
FASHION FABRICS
133 Salisbury St.,
Mocksville, N .C. 27028
Phone 634-5417
OFF2 0 %
c o o '
Just when you need them
at the beginning of summer •
not at the end of the season.
Inquire about sewing
ciasses beginning
M onday, June 15th.
Vacation Bible ScfwolAtJericho
Vacation Bible School ot the
Jericho Church of Christ
begins Monday, June 15 and
continues through Friday,
June 19 with classes
scheduled daUy for aU ages
Uirough adults from 9:30 • 11:15 a.m.
Puppet shows, singing,
crafts, Bible study and
refreshments wiU chaUenge
Uie time and talents of botti
students and teachers as they
center ttieir ttioughts and
activities around the theme,
“My Jesus, I wUl live for
Thee” .
Special afternoon and
evening activities, such as
hikes, picnics, bowling and
water bogging, wiU be open to
Uiose properly enroUed in the
Jericho Church of Christ
vacation Bible school.
For additional informaUon,
and-or transportation, please
caU Uie church office, 492-
7257.
I h OME COOKED FOOI^
Plate Lunches
Friday a n d Saturday Night
F IS H
Salad Bar - Homade Desserts
Ice Cream Parlor
open til 9 Every Nigtit Except Sunday
PRIVATE DINING ROOM
Call for Information 634-3626
MRS. JEFFREY LEE WAGNER
...was Shirley Fran GreeneGreene-Wagner Vows Spoken
Miss Shirley Fran Greene of Linwooa,
North Carolina and Jeffrey Lee Wagner
of Route 4, Mocksville, were united in
marriage Sunday, June 7, at 3 p.m. at
Churchland Baptist Church in
Lexington, N.C. The Rev. PhUip 0)le
and Dr. Paul MiUwood were the of
ficiating ministers.
Mrs. Zeb Barnhardt of Churchland,
organist; and Ricky RusseU of Belmont,
N.C. soloist, presented a program of
wedding music.
The bride, given in marriage by her
father, wore a formal gown of cotton
overlaid with chiffon deigned with a
fitted bodice, an off shoulder effect with
lace ruffles and white ribbon insertion.
Her long chiffon sleeves were cuffed in
lace and the skirt had ruffles at the
hemline. She had a cathedral length
train. She wore a tuUe covered hat
trimmed with lace rcse medaUions and
seed pearls attached to a veU of sUk
Ulusion. This bridal gown was designed
by the bride and made by her mother.
Mrs. Fairye MUls of Churchland was
her sister’s matron of honor.
Bridesmaids were Miss Siaron Myers
and Mrs. Susaii Bourne, both of
Salisbury, Miss Rhonda Rancourt of
Lexington, Miss Lou EUen Rickard of
Churchland and Miss Pat Russ of
Shelby, N.C. They wore long gowns of
blue floral print designed with a v-neck
accented with a sheer ruffle, blue rib
bons and bow tie. The dresses were
sleeveless witti fitted bodices, and they
carried bouquets of yeUow silk roses,
white camations interspersed with blue
nbtions.
Lisa Wagner, bridegroom’s niece, was
flower girl; and Kevin Greene, bride’s
nephew, was ring bearer.
The bridegroom’s father was his best
man. Ushering were Ed and Tony
Wagner of MocksvUle, Worth Greene of
C3iurchland, Mark Shore of Cooleemee
and Rick Wagner, also of MocksvUle.
The bride's parents are Mr. and Mrs.
Kirby W. Greene, Jr. of Route 1, Lin
wood, N.C. She is a 1978 graduate of
West Davidson High School, Tyro, N.C.,
and a 1980 graduate of Rowan Technical
CoUege. She is presentty employed by
Belk Harry of Salisbury.
The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. John H. Wagner of Route 4,
MocksvUle. He is a 1978 graduate of
Davie High School and a 1900 graduate
of Rowan Technical CoUege. He is
employed by Crown Wood Products in
MocksvUle.
After a wedding trip to North Myrtle
Beach, S.C.. the coujue wiU make their
home at Route 1, Linwood, N.C.
CAKE CUTTING
The bride’s cousins, Kenneth and Jean
Greene were hosts to a cake cutting,
Saturday evening, foUowing the couple’s
wedding rehearsal. Invited guests in
cluded the wedding party, family and
close friends.
W EDDIN G BREAKFAST
The bride’s home in Churchland on the
sun deck was the setting Sunday mor
ning for the wedding breakfast. Hostess
was Mrs. Jean Greene.
Breakfast was served at 8:30 a.m.
S h o r t T e r m , H i g h I n t e r e s t
I n v e s t i n g W i t h N o P e n a l t y
F o r E a r l y R e d e m p t i o n .
F i r s t
I n v e s t o r s
A g r e e m e n t
S h o rt T e rm , H ig h
Interest Investing
Fint Invntora A(reem*nt it«
“Rcpurchtte AgfNnwnt" and
not an actuil uviitft account.
It is an obligation of Firet
Federal and it backed by U.S.
Oovernment Security or U.S.
Government Agency Securily. It
is not intuicd by the FSLIC.
First Federal repurchaiesthe
agf!ement at the end of the term,
not to etceed 89 days.
¡nvpKtnm Agreement pays
timple intemt for the thort term
of up to 89 dayt. and you may
redeem ydur agreement (with
total intcrtat tamed to that date)
at any time, with NO PENALTY
for early redemption.
Consider the
Advantages
• High Interest,
• Term iel up io89 l)ay»
• Nn Penelty Inr Hedrmpiion
• KepurchBf^e AirM im-nl i» harked
b vn Siio virn fn en i Seruriiynr
I 'S (iovernment Agency Secuniy.
• ,\n Service rharge
FI* HepurrhaK Agreemrni
Mlniinum InmtmenI
$1000-$2900 1 3 . 0 0 %
$3000 or More 1 3 . 5 0 %
This •bilgalloa is Hot ■ savings aeeauRt er
dc|H»sl( and is nol insured iiy liie Federal
Savings and Loan Insuranee rorporalion.
j^RRST FEDERAL SAONGS
%|«|1пОГГи* J-»iON Therry Street
Hr«m h UffiM 41M) Нипеб М»)1/ U4J Kubin Huid Ku«d/I iUS Sir«tturd KutnJ
Kt-snolda Kutfd/^KJOl Wüughtown Sirevi
o rriift ¿IÍ) (¡either S i refi1 Lcmuwiliv-rirmtuui)» KumJ
in¡*iun ^<lt-nuЛ^и■^^^^vl^le'» IcmniíHí». 1 tlephoi>t> ( У 1 9 1 Т iW>4
IM vit- COUNTY liNTI-RPRISr, RIiCORD, TIIURSDAY, JUNI: II. I<>8I 7H
r^3i?-V?T' V:!.'...' -y
*#
„■«i
% v ll.
Dooletf-Carson
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert B. Oooley of Morganton, N.C. announce the
engagement ot their daughter, Mishelle Elaine to Samuel W. Carson, Jr., son of
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel W. Carson, Sr. of Washington, D.C.
The bride^lect is a graduate of West Caldweli High School and will graduate
from Caldwell CoUege with an Associate in Applied Science Degree in Elec
tronic Data Processing.
The bridegroom is a graduate of The University of Mao^and with a bachelors
degree in aerospace engineering. He is employed by The Department of the
Navy, Naval Air Systems Command in Washington, D.C. He is also employed
by the A ndrews Air Force Bate as a flight instructor.
A wedding is planned for July S, at aement Grove Church of God Mocksville,
N.C.
MRS. MICHAEL PAUL BRALKOWSKI
...was Rhonda Jo Webb
Webb-Bralkowski Vows Spoken
Murray-Carter
The wedding of Miss Rhonda Jo Webb
of Cooleemee, N.C., and Michael (Mike)
Paul Bralkowski of Salisbury, N.C. took
place Sunday, June 7, in a four p.m. ■
ceremony at Good Shepherd Episcopal
Church in Cooleemee, N.C. Officiating
was Father Willis RoMnthal.
A program of wedding music was
presented by Phil Deadmon, organist;
and Mr. and Mrs. John Chandler,
soloists, all of Cooleemee, N.C.
The bride, given in marriage by her
father, wore a formal gown of ivory
<^ana, designed with a high neckline of
sheer «mbtoidery outlined with a wide
TufHe and ber gauntlets were of sheer
embroidery. The watteau train, chapel
length was encircled with silk veidse
lace, and h№ waltz length veil of sUk
illusion, encircled with lace was at
tached to a lace and pearl cap. She
carried 'a bridal b o u ^ t of fresh
summer roses.
Ms. Margaret W . Russell of
Mocksville, N.C. was her sister’s maid
of honor, and another sister, Mrs.
Frances W . Gamer of Lexington, N.C.
was matron of honor.
Best man was the bridegroom it
brother, Paul M. Bralkowski of Beaver,
Pa. Ushers were Ronald W. Webb,
bride’s brother; and John A.
Bralkowski, bridegroom’s brother of
Beaver, Pa.
The bride is a graduate of Davie High
School, a member of Good Shepherd
Episcopal Church, treasurer of
Women’s Auxiliary, Junior Warden, and
is employed by Salisbury-Rowan
Community Service Council, Inc. Her
parenta are Mr. and Ms. William W.
Webb of Cooleemee, N.C.
Ilie bridegroom’s parenta are Mrs.
Paul Bralkowski of Beaver, Pa. and the
late Mr. Bralkowski. He is a graduate of
Carnegie-Mellon University, Pitt
sburgh, Pa. and is employed by
American Grilon, Sumter, S.C.
After a honQTmoon in Charleston,
South Carolina, the couirie will be at
home in Sumter, South Carolina.
RECEPTION
The bride’s parents entertained the
wedding party and guesta with a
reception at Jerusalem Fire Hall, im
mediately following the wedding ceremony.
Jennifer Erin An\pU, dangbter of Mr.
and Mr«. Nat Angeli of Rt. 4, MocksvUle,
celebrated her first bhrthday on Sunday.
May 31. She was oae oa Wednesday,
May 27. Grandpareato are Mr. and Mrs.
Cecil Angell ot MocksviUe and Mr. and
Mrs. Bobble erotta of Lexington. Great
grandparenta are Mrs. Nannie 8«e
AngeU CaU, Mrs. 8nsle Coy MUler both
of MocksvUle; Mrs. aatie Crotta, Mr.
and Mrs. Elwood Yonnta both of
Lexington. Jennlier has a brother. Tad,
who ta • yrs. old. Her mother ta tbe
former Vickie Crotta.
PORTRAITS IN
LIVIN6 COLOR
0-5x7
(0)0x10
16-Wallits
Ingram’s Studio
Will Bs Avaiiabis............
DAYS; Friday - Saturday
OATES. June 12 13
HOURS: 11:0 0 -5 :0 0 P.M .
U à
^ Court Squara, IMocktvHIa
G •P F S F ro d u ciio n
Some Economic Forecasts
(By Research Department
of Interstate Securities
Corporation Courtesy of Ben
T. Browder.)
Economista have been off
base in their forecasta so far
Uiis year. First quarter G N P
rose 8.4 percent, after ad
justment for inflation,
unemployment has plateaued,
and capital spending has
remained strong, all contrary
to their expectations.
IronicaUy, this unexpected
economic strength ta causing
difficulties for the Reagan
admintatration. Opponenta of
the President’s proposed tax
cuta say they wUl be in
flationary if passed when
inflation is cooling and the
economy expanding.
Behind the unexpectedly
strong economy is consumers
who have continued spending
kng after experta believed
they would cut back. Savings
rates have been further
reduced. High interest rates
have not had much of an ef
fect because credit conditions
have been loose enough to
keep the economy moving.
Now, economtata beUeve
the period ot rapid growth in
the economy, which began in
last year’s third quarter, ta
over. They generally expect
stower growth through the
summer, with some pickup in
the fall and winter.
Hie government’s index of
leading economic indictators
rose only 0.4 percent in April,
far less than the March in
crease, signalling slower
future growth. Other signs
also point to a slowing In the
rate of growth. Personal
spending, adjusted for in
flation, remains steady.
Retail sales, excluding autos,
have remained sluggish.
Industrial production has
been flat all year, and
unemployment is on a
I^steau.
Additionally, some of tbe
economic activity of tbe first
quarter may have been
borrowed from (he second
O ld Fashion Gospel Sing at
Smith Grove Community Center
Auditorium
Sat. Night June 13 .19 8 1 - 7:30 Pm -
For Mgdicat Etomfit For Venus Reavi*, Daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wayna Raawis
SIN G ERS: Tha Chrittianslrs Qusrtat, Winfton-Ssism
Ctihwsll Fimlly, RedUnd Ambsuador«, Wlntton-Salam
Events Honor
Miss Dooley
Elaine Dooley of Morganton, N.C.,
July 5 bride-elect of Samuel W. Carson
Jr. of Oxon HiU Maryland will be
honored at the following eventa:
On June 14, the parenta of the bride,
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert E. Dooley and
cousins of the bride are planning a trip
to Carowinds as a final "Get TogeUier”
before the departure of the bride.
On June 21st, a bridal shower will be
given by Ms. Chris Ijmaes in the home of
the Elder I.W. Ijames of Mocksville,
N.C.
Potts Reunion
The annual Potta reunion
will be held on Sunday, June
14 at the Nathan Potts
homeplace.
All friends and relatives are
invited to come.
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond R. Murray of 103 Tilmark Drive, Winston-Salem
announce the engagement of their daughter, Patricia Lorrain to David Burdette
Carter, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Bert Carter of Rt. 2, Advance.
Miss Murray is a graduate of West Forsyth High School and attended Ap-
paladiian State University in Boone. She is employed by Red Lobster.
Mr. Carter is a graduate of Davie High School and ta employed by R. J.
Reynolds.
The wedding ta planned at June 21, 1981, at 3 o’clock at Mocks United
Methodist C%urch in Advance, N.C.
Around »o*" About
M AINERS VISIT OLD H O M E PLACE
Wade Mainer of the Mainer Mountaineer’s String Band and wife Julia, are
visiting at the old Brown home. The Mainers live in Flint, Michigan. Mrs.
Mainer ta the daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Frank Brown of Rt. 7,
Mocksville.
ON DEAN'S U S T
Charlotte E. Funderburk of Mocksville has been named to the Lenoir-Rhyne
(Allege dean’s list. A Lenoir-Rhyne student must compile at least a 3.4
average of a possible 4.0 and must carry a course load of at least 12
semester hours. He also must make no grade lower than a "C ."
DISTRICT U O N S M EETING
The Lion Clubs in Dtatrict 31-D wtU hold their awards night banquet in the
First United West Market Street MethodUt Church in Creensboro, N.C. on
Friday night, June I2tti at 7:00 p.m.
All lions members and their wives are requested to attend.
quarter. Auto sales, for
example, were boosted in the
first quarter by cash rebate
programs. When these
programs ended, sales
slumped again. Additionally,
unusuaUy mild weather kept
c o n s t r u c t io n fro m
plummeting. Unfortunately,
housing ta not Ukely to show
any strength under ttie weight
of high interest rates.
Hiere are positive signs
which seem to indicate that
the economy won’t tumble
sharply. Inventories remain
under sharp control, both at
the retaU and manufactiwing
levd. Inflation is declining
and good supplies nf oil,
stable morigage rates and
adequate food suppUes should
keq> price increases bdow a
10 percent annual rate.
The Reagan admintatration
ta likely to continue fighting
for ita U x cut program,
contending that output and
productivity would be boosted
over the long run. A slowdown
in the economy would help ita
fight; the subsequent
lowering of interest rates
would spur spending on new
plant and equipment to keep
the economy growing in the
future.
In a few months, we will
know if the economtats are
right this time in their
estimâtes of slower growth.
However, one has been quoted
as saying, they could all be
wrong again.
Bible School
At Bear Creek
Vacation Bible School will
be held at Bear Oeek Bapttat
Church the Week of June IS
through June lO, each evening
from 7 p.m. until 9 p.m.
Classes for all ages will be
provided; and a nursery wiU
be held for those who need it.
M O C K S V I I I E , N C
FlIC-SfASttN
C O M T S A U
& UYAWAY EVENT
Why buy last years left over style on sale when you
can have the "Pick" of this seasons newest fashions
ata very special pre-season price.
SELECT NOW ATTHESE GREAT SAVINGS
M ANY EXCITING NEW STYLES
'50 0 DOWN
HOLDS YOUR CHOICE WITH NO PAYM ENTS
UNTIL S EP T.l
BE SURE TO REGISTER
FOR FR EE COAT TO BE
GIVEN AWAY FRIDAY J U L Y 3
8H OAVn; COUNTY I-NTURI’RISU RI-CORD, TIIURSDAY, JUNI-; 11, 1981About Milk
Don't Believe
Everything
You Hear
M ilk has been called an
almost perfect food because
of Ihe array of rm 'rlpnts it
contains. Yet, over the years, a
number of “ superstitions" or
fallacies have risen about
m ilk quality and usefulness.
Here are some of Ihe most
common:
FALLACY: M ilk is fa t
tening.
FACT: No food by itself is
fattening. It is the total
calories absorbed in a day
that makes the difference.
When food Intake must be
curtailed, it is im portant to
keep in your diet such foods as
m ilk lh a t provide generous
amounts of nutrients and
m oderate am ounts of
calories.
FALLACY: Adults do not
need milk.
FACT: Sixteen ounces or
more of milk each day are
recommended for an adult to
furnish the calcium the body
requires. In a d d itio n
two glasses of milk provide
54 perceni of the riboflavin,
more than 30 percent of the
protein, 30 percent of the
niacin equivalents, and 14
percent of the vitamin A daily
requirements for women. It
is possible to get these
nutrients from other foods,
but milk is the best single
source.
FALLACY: Skimmed mUk
(nonfat milk) has little of the
vitamins, protein and
minerals of whole milk.
FACT: Skimmed milk is
Whole milk with biitterfat
removed. Buy skimmed milk
fortified with vitamin A and
you will get the same
nutrients as whole milk, but
less fat. An eight-ounce glass
of whole milk contains 3.5
prrcent or moré milk fat and
averages 160 calories. The
same amount of skimmed
milk has less than half a
percent of fat and averages
about 90 calories.
FALLACY: Milk cannot De
frozen.
FACT: Milk can be frozen
and kept at zero degrees or
less for up to three months.
Freezing does not measurably
change the nutritive value of
milk, but can alter taste and
appearance.
FALLACY: Milk and mllK
products cause constipation.
FACT: No more ao than
other foods. It can appaar to
be true only if you drink milk
and eat dairy products and
exclude other foods from your
diet that give body bulk.
FALLACY: Rapid war
ming (heating) reduces the
nutritional value of milk.
FACT: As long as the milk
is not scalded in the warming
process, no loss of nutritional
value occurs.
FALLACY: PasteurizaUon
is harmful to milk.
FACT: Pasteurization
destroys bacteria that are
present in raw milk without
significantly changing the
flavor or food value.
Pasteurization does reduce
the amount of vitamin C
(ascorbic acid) in milk by
about 20 percent, but milk is a
very minor source of vitamin
C.
FALLACY; Chocolate milk
and chocolate dairy drink are
the same.
FACT: Chocolate milk is
made with whole milk,
chocolate, and sugar that add
flavor and calories (about 306
calories in an ei^t-ounce
glass). Chocolate dairy drink
is made from skimmted niilk
or partially skimmed milk
and the calories are leu (190
calories in an eight-ounce
glass).
FALLACY: AU miU ana
milk products in the grocery
store dairy case are real.
FACT: An increasing
number of milk and milk
products have imitation
counterparts. T o d a y ’s
grovery case contains real as
well as imitation milk,
cheese, butter, ice cream,
sour cream, etc. <)uite often
the imitation product looks
much the same as its real
counterpart, but often offers
less nutrition because it is
usually chemically produced.
Check product labels
carefully to make sure the
products are only high-
quality, real milk and milk
products.
A n infant eal it
kn o w n at in alvsr.
Th* conttruction of Stons-
htng« required an ettimnted
1.5 million hour* of labor.
M urray
S i
I
t x m m r m r if
10 HP 36" Cut
Riding Mower
*844
with OKAND
new itorat locatad in:OPININO SPECIAL PRICES In celebration of our 3
A S H E B O R O , L E X IN G T O N A N D M T . A IR Y
lawnboy 20" Pushmower ‘ 15 9
W
WhiteWestinghouse
All
Whits-
OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o
REGISTER
FOR FREE
COLOR TV
No Purc/ios«
No€»uary
8 HP 3 r Cut
Riding Mower
*687ONLY
Dynimirk 20" Pusliinower ‘ 9 4 “
U E N I M - A I R
A S H E B O R O
625 s. Foyettsville
625-1494
F r e s z s n
O n S a M
SAVE UP
™ »80
L E X I N G T O N
Hw y. 64 Wast
Aerati from Lex.
Shopping Center
243-2471
M T . A I R Y
Mayberry Mall
786-4151
n i f m i r
S A L I S B U R Y O P E N : T H U R S . & F R I ., J U N E 1 1 & 1 2 -9-10
S A T U R D A Y , J U N E 1 3 - 9 - M I D N I G H T
All Jenn-Alr's are
sptcially p ric ed
For This Sale!
, I 5,000 BTU/HR
AVhjrfpOOl Conditioner
O N L Y
$1 6 6
• 115 Volt • Single Speed Fan • Wash
able Filter • Rust-Resistant Cabinet
^^^^WhlteV\festlnghouse 3 QQ0
Air Conditioner
r
• Money-saving Energy Saver Control!
• Power Saving Range On Thermostat!
• Two-way Air Directional Louvers
ONLY
$ 2 9 9
M I C R O W A V E S A L E ! ! !
• Two 99 Min.
Cooking Cycles
• Ten*Level Push
Buttons
• Heot Control
CB LITTON
• 35 Minute Timer
• AutO'def rost
• Oven interior light
fámilySize
Oven
IMagfcChef
ONLY *389 »277
17 Co. Ft.Frost-Free
Refrigerator
• Optional Automatic lea-
maker
• Dual Tamparatura Controli
____________________ ^ 5 4 4
M AGNAVC»(
WM
2 5 " d i a g . C o l e r
C o n i e l e
•AFT and Medionicol tuning
•AMIt. Style
*599 Wilti Cslw Trad«
Whirlpool
W a s h e r ■ • 3 Auto Cycle
Waiher • large Capacity
D r y e r ■ • lint RIfer
• No Hot
Spots
• Even Flow
BOTH ONLY
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2 3 " d i a g . C o le r
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2 1 3 0 S . M A I N S T . , S A L I S B U R Y 157 N . M A I N S T . , M O C K S V I L L E
6 3 7-3 9 6 6 6 3 4 -3 16 5
M O N D A Y t h r u T H U R S D A Y « . S A T . 9 - 6 ; F R I D A Y 9-9 M O N D A Y t h r u T H U R S D A Y & S A T . 9 - 6 ; F R I D A Y 9-9
• SALISBURY • MOCKSVILLE • WINSTON-SALEM • HIGH POINT- GREENS BORO* E D E N *
Front row: Mabel Joyce Cain Benton; Ella M ae Boger Capes; Margie Walker
Buckner; Inez Wllilams; Elsie M ae Walker Robertson; Eleanor Caudell
Daniel; Helen Page Crenshaw. Second Row : Mary Lois WUson; Margaret
McAllister Dawson; Pauline McClamrock Vaughn; Betty Faye Jam es Smith;
Sarah Wagner Holland; Mary Markland Eaton; Blanche Whitaker Boger.
Third Row : Paul Gray Boger; Katherine Ferebee Loudermllk; Laura Cartner
Hall; Sarah Foster; Mary Nell Ward White; Nancy Tutterow Tutterow. Fourth
Row : Wayne Lakey; Agnes Whitaker Ratledge; Ann Forrest Evans; Elsie
Smith Black; John Carl Dunn; Etta M ae Tutterow Norman; John Boyce Cain;
Bill Seaford; Jam es Lathan; J.C. Cook, Jr.; Coleen Collette; Dorothy Leagans
M arx; Bill Hoots; Hebert Smith. Back Row : Gene Smith; Wallace Sparks;
Ruth Bailey Foster, Lester Martin, Jr., George Kimmer.
The Senior Class of ‘41 of Mocksville High School: Front R ow : Glenn O. Boose,
Teacher; Mabel Joyce Cain (Benton) Helen Walker (Woosley) Margie Walker
(Buckner) Kathleen Storie (HUton); Audrey Howard (Deceased); Inei
WUliams; Elsie M ae WaUier (Robertson); Eleanor CaudeU (Daniels); Helen
Page Crenshaw (Teacher) Second Row: NeU Livengood; Mary Lois WUson;
Margaret McAllister (Dawson); PauUne McClamrock (Vaughn); Betty Faye
Jam es (Smith); Margaret Grant (Deceased); Sarah Wagner (HoUand); Mary
Markland (Eaton); Blanche Whitaker (Boger). Third Row : Paul Gray Boger;
Clara Lewis Wagkins (Pinyard); Katherine Ferebee (LoudermUk); Laura
Cartner (H aU ); Laura Smith (Wood); Oscar M caam rock; Jeff Tutterow;
Sarah Foster; Mary NeU Ward (White) Nancy Tutterow (Tutterow); Faye
D W IG G IN S (Barney). Fourth Row: Wayne U k e y ; Agnes Ahltaker
(Ratledge); Anner Forrest (Evans); Gordon Stonestreet (Deceased); John
Carl Dunn; John Boyce Cain; Jim Latham; Coleen Collette; Dorothy Leagans
Marx. Fifth Row : James Beeding; W UUam McDaniel; Elsie Smith (Black);
Etta M ae Tutterow (Norm an); GUbert Sofley; WiUiam “ BUI” Seaford: J.C.
Cook; BIU Hoots; Hebert Smith. Sixth Row: BUI Fink; W U Uam Baker; Wallace
Sparks; Ruth BaUey (Foster); George Mason (Deceased); Lester Marlin, Jr.;
George Kim m er. Others graduathig In 1941 but not pictured are: EUa M ae
Boger (Capes) Eugene Smith; Q a y Markland (Deceased); and Frank PopUn
(Deceased).
Looking Back Over The Ур.ш’я
Mocksville High School Class Of 1941
The Mocksville High School (Hass of
1941 held a reunion last Saturday night
at the Center Ciommunity Building. The
class had S4 members in 1941. Of this
number, 36 attended the 40th year
reunion.
Elsie Smith Black, now of Lewisville,
was president of the class and
valedictwian. Dorothy Leagens Marx
was clan secretary and salutatorian.
(Coordinating plans for the reunion
were Lester P. Martin, Mrs. Nancy
Tutterow and Mrs. Black.
The program got underway with a
welcome ^ Lester Martin. This was
loUowed by the invocation by Hebert
Smith.
Dorothy Leagans Marx caUed the
daas roll. Thoee present responded by
rising and giving a brief account of their
life since 1941. Absentees were answered
by Nancy Tutterow and Elsie Black
from reports they had received.
WilUam Seaford paid honor to
deceased members of the class by
lighting a candle in their memory. Tbese
taicluded: Ckirdon Stonestreet, 1944, Clay
Markland, 1944, and Frank Poplin, 1945,
all casualties of World War II; Cieorge
Mason, 1957; Margaret Grant, 1958;
Edgar Chaffin, 1959; Audrey Howard,
1965.
Teachers present of that era were
recognized and each spoke briefly.
These included: F.N. Shearouse,
I»incipal, now lives in Asheville; J.W.
Davis, agricultural teacher, now of
'nrinity; Evelyn Troxler Stroud, music
teacher and ¿ee club director, now of
Charlotte; Helen Page Crenshaw,
Christine Warren Daniel, Hazel Taylor
Wagner, all of Mocksville.
Letters were read trom other teachers
including G.O. Boose of Hollywood,
Fla.; Miss Stephens of Emporia,
Mississippi; Miss Nancy Mclver of
Sanford, N.C.; Miss Torrence of
Gastonia; Miss LiUard of Elkin and Miss
Jessica McKee of Winston-Salem.
Nancy Tutterow presented a story
involving all of the class members,
depicting each in a role relevant to their
life today.
Mrs. Black presented gifts to John
Boyce Cain of Bitmingham, Alabama
for traveUing the fartherest distance to
attend; Dorothy Leagans Marx for class
member with the most children, 10; and
Betty Faye James Smith, for being the
only great grandmother of the class.
Members of the 1941 class present for
the reunion included: Lilliam Ruth
Foster of Rt. 7 MocksviUe. Husband,
Charlie Foster is deceased. One son; she
is an inspector with the Hanes Cw-
poration.
Ella Mae Boger Capes of 1423 Walnut
St., Greensboro. Her husband is (ЛигИе
T. Capes, a weaver with Cone Mills. Two
children. Three Grandchildren.
Paul Gray Boger, 4533 Wedgewood
Drive. Chariotte, N.C. Wife Dink Davis
Boger. Two chUdren. Salesman for
Revlon.
John Bouce Cain, 2701 Southview
Drive, Birmingham, Alabama. Wife,
Carolyn C. Cain. Four chUdren, one"
grandchild. Retired from General
Electric in 1979 with 32 years of service.
PresenUy is marketing manager for
Mid-SouUi Steel, Inc. of Birmin^am.
Mabel Joyce Cain Benton, 2511
Knights Hill Road, Camden, S.C.
Husband, Don Benton, Executive Vice
President of Builders Transport. Four
ChUdren.
Laura Jane Cartner Hall, P.O. Box
1873 Hickory, N.C., Husband (>eorge W.
HaU Jr. deceased. One daughter, two
^andciiUdren. Employed as secretary
and receptionist b the Accounting Dept
of the Hickory Steel C^o.
Eleanor CaudeU Daniel, 717 Wan-
derii« Lane, MocksvUle, N.C. Husband,
William C. (ВШ) Daniel, manager of
•CaudeU Lumber Co. of MocksviUe. Two
daughters.
Lala Coleen (^ette, 2034 Townsend
Avoiue, Apt. no. 2, (3iarlotte. She is
business manager of the Larry Jay
Chevrolet Co. of Charlotte.
James ayde Cook Jr. of Rt. 1 Ad
vance. Wife, NeUie Sofley Cook. Two
children, two grandchUdren, he is truck
service manager for Modem Chevrolet
Co. of Winston-Salem.
John Carl Dunn, 2201 S. Hawthorne
Rd., Winston-Salem. Wife, Mary Hege
Dunn. Two children, three grand
chUdren. He is a buUding superin
tendent.
Sarah Katherine Ferebee Louder
mUk, 4730 Kitty Hawk Drive, AUanta,
Ga. Husband, Jim LoudermiUi, U in the
dry cleaning business. Two chUdren
three grandchildren.
Sarah Elizabeth Foster, 937 Louisburg
College, Louisburg, N.C.Chairman of
the Fine Arts Department and Professor
of Music of Louisburg CoUege.
Anner Jane Forrest Evans, Rt. 1,
Mocksville. Husband, James Thomas
Evans, is a retired fumiture worker and
farmer. Three children; five grand
chUdren. She is employed as a computer
tester for the Western Electric Com
pany.
WUIiam Hubert Hoots Jr., 3309 Midkiff
Road, Winston-Salem. Wife, Kate R.
Hoots, is Executive Director of Forsyth
Cancer Service. Two chUdren, 3 grand
chUdren. BiU retired in 1979 from the
N.C. National Bank.
Betty Faye James SmiUi, Cooleemee,
N.C. Husband, Lawrence M. Smith is a
weaver in a textUe plant. Two chUdren;
five grandchildren; 2 great-
grandchUdren. She is employed at llie
Davie Discount Drugs of Cooleemee.
George Hubert Kimmer, 408 Ricks
Drive, Winston-Salem. Two chUdren.
Employed at R.J. Reynolds Tobacco
Company.
Wayne Lakey, Rt. 1 MocksvUle. Wife,
Doris Sales Lakey, employed at Won-
derknit. Two children; 2 grandchUdren.
Employed by the Davie Auto Parts
Company of MocksvUle.
James Gray Latham, 1708
Hatherleigh Place, FayettevUle, N.C.
Wife, Dolly Deadmon Latham. Two
ChUdren. Jim is manager of the State
Farm Insurance Company of Fayet-
teviUe.
Dorothy (>>Uette Leagans Marx, Box
362, LaCross, Virginia. Husband,
Richard Marx is a stained glass artisan.
Ten chUdren; 5 grandchUdren.
Marie Leslie Markland Eaton, 723
Park Avenue, MocksvUle. Husband,
Wayne Eaton is a funeral director. Four
children.
Lester P. Martin, Jr., 822 North Main
Street, Mocksville, N.C. Wife Elizabeth
Weaver Martin is a teacher at the
Mocksville Middle School. Two chUdren.
He is District Judge for IredeU, Davie
and DavidMn Counties.
Margaret Evelyn McAUister Dawson,
Rt. 2 Ararat, Va. Husband Luke Frank
Dawson is a die and tool maker. One
daughter, two grandchUdren. She is
employed at a hosiery miU.
Sarah Pauline Mcaamrock Vaughn,
2225 Ashley Road, Charlotte, N.C.
Husband, Lewis Vaughn is with General
Electric, One son, one grandchild.
WUIiam M. (BUI) Seaford, Rt. 1
MocksvUle. Wife, Peariine Beck Seaford
is a retired store clerk. BiU is lumber
clerk with the Drexel Heritage Fur
nishings of MocksviUe.
EUie SmiUi Black, 640 LewisvUle-
aemmons Road, LewisviUe. Husl>and,
Bennett Black is a supervisor with the
Westem Electric Co. Four chUdren; two
grandchildren. She has retired from the
Singer Company.
Eugene Smith, North Main Street,
MocksvUle. Wife, Lettie Jean Foster
Smith is a music teacher with the Davie
C!ounty Schools. Four chUdren, C^ne is
employed as a school bus driver and
substitute teacher.
Hebert N. Smith, Rt. 1 Advance. Wife,
Dorothy R. Smith is Federal Reserve
Security ^lecialist of Wachovia Bank,
Winston-Salem. One chUd; two grand-
diUdren. He is witti the Knit Wear
Division of the Hanes Oirporation.
WaUace B. Sparks. Rt. 3 MocksvUle.
Wife, Laura F. Sparks. Two chUdren;
four grandchildren. He is Supt. of
WauUty Control with Piedmont Airlines,
Winston-Salem.
EtU Mae Tutterow Norman, 215
Hillcrest Drive, Goldsboro, N.C.
Husband, James Norman is an
engineer. Two chUdren. She is head
personnel director of Sears in Gold
sboro.
Nancy Elizabeth Tutterow Tutterow,
(continued on page 2-C)
M r. Lester P . Martin greets Mr. F.N . Shearhouie, Principal of
MocksvUle High School In IM l.
Story by Gordon Tomlinson
Photos by Robin Fergusson
BAVIB C O U N T V
Feature 1-C June 11,1981
Teachers attending the Class of ’41 reunion - front row • Mrs. Evelyn-
Troxler StiuuUi uf Ciutrluiie, Mnt. Helen Page Crenshaw of
MocksvUle. Mrs. Hazel Taylor Wagner of MocksviUe, - back row - F .M .
Shearhouse of AshevUie, former Principal of MocksvUle High School.
.Mrs. Christine Warren Daniel of MocksviUe, and J.W . Davis of Trinity.
(
Teachers at MocksvUle High School in 1941 were: 1st row - Nancy Mclver, Vera
M ae Feree, Hazel Taylor, Evelyn Troxler, Helen Page, LuciUe WaUier, Clayton
Brown; 2nd row - Ruth Arnold, Zinnie Anderson, LuciUe H o r n ,.........Kenneth,
Sally Hunter; 3rd row - Bessie Branson, Minnie Barnhardt, Margaret BeU,
Hortensen Bankston, Christine Warren; 4th row - J.W . Davis, C.R. Crenshaw.
Edwin R. Poole, G .O . Poole. Richard Eyer. Not pictured: Jessica McKee.
f
:г DAVIU COUNTY r.NTl'RPRISI-; KIX'ORI). TIUIRSIMY. IUNI-: II, l‘>81
SummerReading
KXTRA! READ ALL ABOUT IT! is
the theme for this summer's reading
program, which began Monday, June B.
Various activities have been planned for
each Monday at 7 p.m., including films,
storytelling and music. Each member
will be required to keep a reading record
during the summer. Those who com
plete the program will be eligible for a
reading certificate signed by Governor
Hunt, discount coupons to Carowinds,
and a coupon for a free Big Deluxe at our
local Hardees.
Pre-schoolers and kindergarten
children will enroll as “Cub Reporters”
and 1st graders and above will enroll as
“Star Reporters” . “ Press Cards” wUl
also be issued to all our young reporters.
Children may sign up anytime during
library hours. The program ends
Monday, July 20.
Little Readers
Mrs. Gall Ijames, Librarian, is giving initructions to children who are signing up for the annual Summer Reading Program sponsored by the
Davie County Public Library. Pictured are; (Bacic row) Wendy Hutchins, Jay Hutchins, Amy Ijames; (Front row) Abby Ijames, Eric
Reeder.
Germs That Glow Aid In Diagnosis Of
Dreaded Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever
By Gary Ward
Germs that glow under ultraviolet
Ught can help doctors in the often dif
ficult dlagnosU of Rocky Mountain
^ t t e d Fever. . ^
Uiey are used in a diagnostic method
developed by Dr. David Walker,
associate professor of pathology, and
coUeagues at the University of North
Carolina at Chapel HUI Schod of
Medldne in 1976.
It has taken a few years for WaUcer’s
method to becmne recognised across the
country, and he believes more Uves
could be saved if more hospitals adopted
the procedure.
“It Just takes time,” Walker said.
“Blore people are writing aU the time to
ask about it.”
Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever is
trammitted through tick Mtes and can
be fatd is mt treated in time.
ttae early symptmns of the fever are
also common to other Ulnesses, from
viral and bacterial fnfectlons to immune
disorders. Precious time may De losi
before a correct diagnosis is made.
Headaches and fever usually are
characteristic of the disease and after
three to five days, a rash breaks out on
the victim. That is when WaUcer’s
method becomes valuable.
A tissue sample is taken from the
patient's rash area and stained with a
special serum. The serum is prepared
from the blood of rabbits innocculated
with Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever.
Ihe Center for Disease Control in
Atlanta produces and suppUes Uie
serum.
LU(e humans, rabbits have a natural
defense against infection. Their blood
produces particles caUed antibodies that
attack and shape themselves around
harmful germs.
To produce the serum, these an
tibodies are separated from the rabbits’
blood and combined with a chemical
that makes them glow under ultraviolet
Ught.
Hie human tissue sample is coated
with the serum and washed to remove
any excess antibodies. If Rocky
Mountain Spotted Fever germs are
present in the sample, the antibodies
wUl cUng to them and glow when ex
posed to the ultraviolet light.
“ If the fever U treated early, there are
essentially no long-term complication,”
WaUcer said. “The mortality rate has
dropped in the past few years.”
The next stc^ in Rocky Mountain
Spotted Fever research is development
of a safe and effective vaccine to
prevent the disease.
The laboratory In which Walker works
has been awarded a contract from the
National Institutes of Health to evaluate
a vaccine in guinea pigs and a grant to
study how the fever germ functions.
Researchers also hope to find a new
testing method that wUo allow even
earUer diagnosis.‘"Hie Ideal test would obtain a sample
more easUy, such as from the blood,”
WaUier said. “ I predict that work wUl
continue to be done towards that goal.”
Center Softball
Center SofthaU League Standings
M EN
W L
FarmftGarden 3 S
Davie Academy 2 6
First Baptist 1 6
DukeWooten 5 2
IngersoU-Rand 0 9
Hendrix & Heffner 2 4
BeckBrothers 3 3
Pearl’s Grocery 2 5
Barl>er's Grocery 5 1
Elmore Iclrivette 6 1
Law Enforcement 5 2
CaroUna Efficiency Homes S 1
Boney’sSheU 7 1
LADIES
W L
Cartner’s 9 1
Sheek’s
Bordenettes
< Beck BroUiers Center
H ic li^ Hill Women’s
Golf Assoc. News
The Hickory Hill Women's Golf
Association competed hi four tour
naments during the month of May.
On May SIh, play was a Mutt and Jeff,
scores on the S and 5 pars, which was on
by PrescUla McCuUough with a SO net.
PrisciUa was outstanding with her first
time ever 93. The foUowhig week a Tin
Whistle (play for points) was a Ue
between EmUy Kemp and Jane Camp
beU, boUi scoring a plus 22 for IB holes.
Happy Gregg carded plus 5 to come in
first for 9 holes. A Best BaU of Twosome
was held on May 19th and Precyoui
Sales and Nancy Shanks placed first
with a 67. The Low-Gross Net Tour
nament played die 26th went to Sherry
Gardner who icored a 93 for Low Gross
and Elma SeU with a 72 for Low Net.
Betty Foster posted the most birdies
for May, Priscilla McCuUough the most
pars and Nancy Shanks won for bogles.
On May 26th, YadkinvUle hosted our
club with their yesriy Invitational.
Precyous Sales held Low gross over the
fidd. Low net went to Shelby Morgan
and Jane CampbeU pasted the fewest
putts, Carol Cosart had the longest drive
of the day. Jane CampbeU and her
partner, Polly Reese, also won first
place at YadkinviUe Member-Guest on
the 2nd of June.
Locally Owned Horse
Wins Division Trial
A horse from the Thoroughbred
Training Center in Farmington, won its
division in the Western North Carolina
Horse Trials held this past weeltend in
Asheville, N.C.
Flirt, a t>ay thoroughbred, is an 8-
year-old mare, and was ridden by
Melissa Daniels of Winston-Salem, The
horse-rider combination won the junior
pre-training event at tiie trials, Melissa
is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Lester J ,
Daniels of Winston-Salem,
Trainmg center director John Mc
Cashin said that the Western N C. trials
is a combined event which includes
Dressage, (Yoss-Country, and Stadium
Jumping events, Ttie show was sanc
tion«^ by Ihe North Carolina Hunter-
Ju^^per AssociaUon.
Jane CampbeU of Rt. 3, MocksvUle,
Hickory HUI, had a hole4n-oae recently
on 87 yard No. 14 of (be Hickory HUI Gdf
Course.
Randy Dean McDaniel, Jr. son of
Roxanne and Randy McDaniel, Sr. of
Mocksville was one year old on June
loth. He celebrated his birthday
Saturday, June 6th with two parties.
Randy thanks everybody for comtaig and
for all the nice gUts. H b grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Seager and Mr.
and Mrs. John McDaniel, Sr. of
MocksvUle. Great grandparenU are Mr.
and Mrs. Leon Seager and Mr. aad Mrs.
Albert Campbell of New York.
Chad Sechrest Has
Tenth Birthday
cniad Sechrest celebrated his iOth
birthday Saturday, June 6, with a cook
out at his home on North Main Street,
MocksviUe. The menu included ham
burgers, hot dogs wiUi aU the trim
mings, birUiday cake, chocolate pie, ice
cream, tea and cold drinks. Lots of litUe
friends and relatives attended. Special
guests were his grandparents Mr. and
Mrs. Junior Sechrest of Rt. 7,
MocksviUe, and great grandmother,
Mrs. Nannie CaU. Chad's sister, Tracy
and brother, Jonathan also enjoyed the
occasion. He Is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Barry Sechrest.
Head-On Collision
A head-on collision was reported on
Cornatzer Road, on Friday, June S, but
there were no injuries.
According to the Highway Patrol,
Barbara Goforth McDaniel, 25, of Rt. 3,
Mocksville, was driving a 1970 Ford
around a curve around 10:40 a.m. when
the car crossed the center Une, and
struck a 1978 Chevrolet driven by Annie
WUliams Myers, 70, of Rt. 2, Advance.
Trooper James M. Newton estimated
the damages at $1,000 to the Ford and at
$1,500 to the Chevrolet.
No charges were fUed in the incident.
MHS Class Of 1941
(continued from page I -C)
Rt, 1 Mocksville, Husband, Clay Tut
terow is stock room clerk for Ingersoll-
Rand Company. Three children. Nancy
is Assistant Register of Deeds for Davie
Ounty,
.Sarah Elizabeth Wagner Holland, D-1
Broadbury Hill, 419 E, Broad Street,
Statesville. Husband John Edwin
Holland is deceased. One son. Sarah is a
nurse.
Mary Neil Ward White, 1200 Queens
Road, Charlotte, Divorced. Three
children. She is a dinner music pianist.
Elsie Mae Walker Robertson. Rt, 1
Advance. Husband, Garland Robertson
is with Western Electric. Three
children, 7 grandchildren.
Margie Ellen Walker, Buckner, 2371*
Dianne Avenue, Winston-Salem.
Husband, Edward Buckner is with the
Western Electric Co. One daughter.
Emma Blanche Whitaker Boger, Rt. 2
MocksviUe. Husband, C.B. Boger is
retired. Two children.
Mary Lois Wilson, Fran Rajr Nursing
Home, Mocks'.ille, Retired as Avon
Sales Lady.
aass members not present included:
William Brady Baker of Mobile,
Alabama; James Randall Seeding, 5738
Robinhood Koad, Winston-Salem,
engineer with Western Electric; Nell
Marie Livengood, 4647 Club Valley
Drive, N.C.,~ AUanta, Ga., a nurse
anesthetist with the Oawford W. Long
Hospital of Emory University; Oscar
McClamrock, Rt, 6 Mocksville, sales
clerk with the MocksviUe Builders
Supply; William H. McDaniel Jr., Rt. 7
Mocksviile: Laura Uene Smith Wood,
Rt. 1 Advance, sales clerk with Arcade
Fashion Shop in Winston-Salem; M-
ary Kathleen Storie Hilton, Rt. 1 Ad
vance; Lloyd Jeff Tutterow, Rt. 1
Mocksville, owner and operator of
service staUons; CHara Lewis Watkins,
665 Peak Drive, Eau GalUe, Fla.; Agnes
Whitaker RaUedge, Rt. 1 MocksvUle;
Lovie Inez Williams, Rt. 3 MocksvUle,
bookkeeper with Indiera MUls, Winston-
Salem.
Disability Benefits For
Arthritis Are Limited
And Not Understood
Major limitations in the government's
disabUity benefits for .arthritis are
poorly understood, causing controversy
and antagonisms that make things
worse for arthriUs sufferers, according
to a report here today.
Three arthritis sp^ialists stressed
Uiat doctors can’t help those severely
afflicted arthritis patiente whose jobs
can’t be saved to qualify for disabiUty
unless they understand the complexities
of the Social Security Act and its
definition of disabiUty.
“ Two problems together have created
a general furor that is solving nothing,”
said Dr. Nortin N. Hadler of the
University of North Carolina. “One is
Uie non-understanding by physicians of
the disabUity regulations, and the other
a lack of knowledge of how to keep their
arUiritis patients working in spite of
Uieir disease.”
Dr. Hadler spoke as chairman of a
seminar for physicians to begin four
days of meetings at Uie Sheraton Hotel
sponsored by the national Arthritis
Foundation.
The topic was Uie “paradox of
disability.” Co-speakers with Dr. Hadler
were Dr. Robert F. Meenan of Boston
University School of Medicine and
Boston City Hospital, who spoke about
arUiritis and disabUity on Uie job; and
Dr. MatUiew H. Liang of Harvard
Medical School and Brigham &
Women's Hospital discussing disabUity
and rehabUltaUon. Hie seminar was one
of six put on by the American
Mias Suianne Seamon, a student at
Presbyterian Hospital School of Nursing
la Charlotte, N.C. was selected as a
marshal for the graduation ceremony
which was held on Friday, June 5.
Marshals are selected by academic
achievement. Miss Seamon who is a
freshman, is the daughter ot Richard
and Ann Seamen of MooresvUIe. She Is
ttie granddaughter of Mrs. B.T. Browder
of Advance and Mrs. Charles F. Seamon
of MocksvUle.
Rheumatism AssociaUon Section of the
Arthritis FoundaUon.
According to Dr. Hadler, arthritis
sufferers who are in fact unable to
function effectively often are denied
disability benefits because they don't
qualify under rules that are in effect
“invalid” .
“The Social SecuUry Act insists on
proof of disease, as Uiough disease was
disability,” he said. “But magnitude of
the disease arthritis does not
necessarily equal disabiUty.
“The Acts’ legal concept of disabUUy
is elegant, l>ut it is of limited iitip to
physicians and their patients virith ar
thritis,” he said.
The docotrs' concern was for all those
people with arthritis-both the
homebound and Uiose in industry-who
are too Ul to work and too weU to be
considered disabled.
IllustraUng the disabiUty paradox,
Dr. Hadler cited field studies that
showed workers with disease in their
hands who could stUl function weU, and
others wiUi almost no detectable hand
disease who nevertheless had hand
incapacities, so that they no longer could
function on their jobs.
“Severe pain, so common with ar-
Uiritis, can be disabling aU by itself,”
Dr. Hadler added, “but you can’t see
pain, you can’t verify U in a lab test or
an x-ray.”
“The Social Security Act's criteria for
disabUity require this kind of tangible
proof, which is seldom a vaUd moasure
of disabUity in arthriUs,” he s ^ . “It
ignores other factors that contribute to
true disabUity, including important
psychological and social factors found hi
Uie individual’s home and place of
work.” ’
Dr. Hadler and the oUier speakers
stated their concern that complaints and
controversy over apparent biequiUes
interfere with a more important aim: to
leam more about factors that help and
or hinder arUiritis vicUms from con
tinuing to work, in order to cut down the
need for insurance benefits.
And they stressed to the physicians in
their audience the importance of a broad
role in dealing with their arthritis
patients.
Dr. Meenan urged physicians to take ]
responsibUity for managing more than j
arthriUs symptoms in theUr paUents.
“Since you as a doctor have some idea of I
Uie probable future course of the disease
in each patient,” be said, “plan ahead j
by looking into his job situation and
suggesting appropriate adjustment of
work tasks and perhaps retraining,
before it is too late and the patient loses
his job.”
The physicians were unanimous in I
[ing a revision of the Social Security
ninistiration's criteria for disabUity i
benefits to make them equitable for {
arUiritis sufferers.
Strawberry PlanU
Strawberry plants can reproduce I
without seeds by sending out long stems I
called runners, llie runners take root
and become new plants, reports
NaUonal Geographic World magazine.
Charles KendaU Turrentine wUI serve
next week as a Page in the North
Carolina House of Representatives. He
was appobited by ttie Speaker ot ttie
House at (be request ot Rep. Asron
Plyler of Union County. He Is ttie son of
Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Turrentine of
Monroe, N.C. and the grandson of IMrs.
Viola Turrentine of Sain Road,
MocksviUe.
THm'S Я FHCT
p / z y s /
, 1N<EITHEB THE GAZELLE NOR
} THE LLAMA HAVE EVER BEEN
> KNOWN TO DRINK WATER.'
\
l.isa Kaye Liuntz, a rlsiug senior al
The Presbyterian Hospital School of
Nursing in Charlotte. N.C., was Inducted
Monday, June l, as student Government
AtiKiirlalion prpsldcnt, She U virr
presidenl ol (he senior class, member of
the prestigious Hooor Society, and an
active member ot (he chrisdan
frliuwiihip. l.isa is (he daugh(er ol Mr.
Mild Mrk. William Brodis Cloud. Sr. ol
Koute 1, Advanee. N,C,
y
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WAY TO &A V E Y0U(^££LF ABAM KKOiL !★ ★ ★ * *
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IT WAS UfeEP TO PAY
SOLPIECi: W H O & E R V E P
IN THE W Ak WITH
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Compounded Doily
BBAfsimeslniMit
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T h a t ’s ri^ht. If y o u act n o w , y o u c a n lock in that rate
o n o u r n e w 2 K '- y e a r in v e s t m e n t c e r t ific a t e .T h e a v aila b le
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T h e m i n i m u m d e p o s it is just $ 5 0 ( ) . F e d e r a l r eg u la tio n s
r e q u ir e a substantial interest p e n a lt y for ea rly w it h d r a w a l .
BB&T
МАМОИ M M IUfiO AND m u e r OOMMNV
DAVII-: COUNTY r.NTi;RPRISF. RF.CORD, THURSDAY, JUNI. 11. 1»81 M '
Farmington Dragway News Davie High Students Talte Fitness Test
By Becky White
Ricky Roof of Greensboro, N.C, won
the Pro Street Division on Friday, June
5, at the Farmington Dragway over a
field of twenty-five cars.
This was only Ricky’s third race and
also only the third race for the 19T7
Chevrolet Vega. The Vega sports a 302
cubic inch engine with a TCI Powerglide
transmission and a 5.3R:l r«>ar gear
Ricky’s 2lst birthday was on June 3 and
said he couldn't ask for a better birthday
present,
Ricky’s only sponsor is the O.B, Roof
Upholstery Co. of Greensboro, N.C,
which is owned by his Dad, who is also a
member of his pit crew. Buddy Allen, a
well-known drag racer from Green
sboro, N.C, and Lester Lunsford of
Burlington, N.C. another familiar
Farmington racer, also help Ricky with
his Vega,
Lonnie Weavil of Kernersville, N.C.
red lighted in his 1969 ‘‘Rat Invasion”
Camaro for an automatic runner-up
position. Jerry Williams of Pfafftown,
N.C. took the number three spot and
Gilbert Hine of Kernersville, N.C. was
fourth. Mike Westmoreland of Oak
Ridge, N.C. was the number one
qualifier in the 1968 “Phillip Holt”
Camaro. His elapsed time was 7.050
seconds on a 7,050 dial in,
Oavid Boggs of Farmington was the
winner in the Modified Street Division in
his 1965 "Boggs Bunch” Pontiac
Tempest. David’s elapsed time was 7,56
seconds for that win over Dennis Swaim
of Kernersville, N.C., last week’s
Modified Street winner. Dennis’ ET in
his 1968 Ford Mustang was 8.02 seconds.
Robert Childress of Winston-Salem,
N.C, took the number three spot in his
1959 Plymouth Fury and Ronald Thomas
took the fourth spot in a 1967 Plymouth,
Jeff Whitt of Lewisville, N.C. won the
Ultra Street Division in his new Monza
with an elapsed time of 12.92 seconds.
Eugene Ross of Pulaski, Va. took the
runner up spot with an E,T, of 10.89
seconds in a Plymouth. Terry Fulk of
Mount Airy, took the number three spot
while Arvil Thomas of Mount Airy, N.C,
- was fourth.
The winner of the “Powder Puff” race
was Tammy Cearly of Greensboro, N.C.
with an E,T, of 10.44 seconds. Tammy
was also last month’s Powder Puff
winner. Margie Hutchins of Julian, N.C.
was the runner up wiUi an ET of 11.80
seconds in her 1964 Corvair. Remember,
that Powder Puff race is run on the first
Friday night in each month and it Is
sponsored by the Merritt-Holland
Welding Supply Company of Winston-
Saiem.
Ronald Thomas of Mount Airy, N.C. is
now in the lead for the 1981 points chase
at the Farmington Dragway, with his
father Arvil Hiomas placed In second
position.
M & J Souvenirs of Kernersville, N.C.
is again sponsoring a “Pro Stock
Giveaway” with more than 175.00 worth
of merchandise going to some lucky
person. What do you have fo do to be
eligible to win all these prizes? On July
25 and 26, the Farmington Dragway will
hold an IHRA Winston Pro Stock World
Title Series Race. Anyone who guesses
the winner of ihe Pro Stock Race and his
low ET will be the winner. Just fill oul
one enlry blank per week at Farmington
Dragway (these can be picked up at the
concession stand) and place il in the box
provided. The winner will be chosen on
July 26. 1981, Rickie Smith of King, N,C,
is the Farmington Pro Stock record
holder with an ET of 5,192, Last year’s
World Title Series winner was Warren
Johnson wilh an ET of 5,28 seconds, Jeff
We«tmore!andoi Kernersville, N,C. was
thP grand prize winner of the “Pro Stock
Giveaway,” Get your chance as soon as
possible.
Racing will continue on Friday nights
al the Farmington Dragway, Gates open
at 4:30 p.m. and eliminations begin at
8:30 p,m. On Sunday July 14, Far
mington will have another one of those
1981 Pro Drag Series $2,000 races. Gates
will .-'pen at 10:00 a.m. and eliminations
will begin at 3:00 pm . All those under
the age of sixteen will be admitted Free
at the Farmington Dragway!!!
Ricky Roof and his Vega won the Pro-Street division.
David Boggs won the modified street division
Over 100 StudenU from physical
education classes at Davie High School
were tested recently as part of the North
Carolina Youth Fitness Test.
Testing areas include set-ups, broad
jump, shuttle run, pull ups (boys),
flexed arm hang (girls), 50-yard dash
and 600-yard run; according to P.E.
leacher Aileen Steeiman.
Steeiman said that sludents reaching
an ao pei'ceiil level in all areas were
classified as achieving a ‘merit level’.
Of the students tested at Davie, only 18
reached the merit level. These were:
Saundra Forrest, James Gadson-
Stephon Peoples, Kim Simpson, Rhonda
Driscoll, Eugenia Stevenson, Wayne
Allen. Cassandra Carter, Karla Danner,
Farmington
Softball
On Thursday, June 4, the two games
originally scheduled for May 28 were
played along with one other game in the
Farmington Youth Softball League. In
the 4:30 game, the killers handed the
Eagles their first defeat of the season by
a score of 9-2. At 5:30 the comets
defeated the supersUrs by a score of 11- 8. The 6:30 game ended with the Eagles
defeating the superstars 15-7.
Games will continue to be played on
Thursday afternoons through June 18
with a double elimination tournament
the week after. All-star teams will be
selected to play in state tournaments
which have been scheduled as follows;
^ ^ y s 9-12 - July 10-12 - Hendersonville,
Boys 13-15 -16-18 - July 23-26 - Eden, N.C.
Standings as of June 8....
W LEagles 3 1
Killers 2 1
Comets 1 2
Superstars i 3
^ Games Scheduled for Thursday, June
4:45 Comets vs Killers
5:30 SupersUrs VS Killers
---------- Comets VSEagles
Lariy Lanier
Accepts Post
With Rec. Dept.
Larry Lanier of Advance, has been
hired by the Mocksville RecreaUon
Department to supervise the summer
recreation program at Rich Park. He is
a 1973 graduate of Catawba College with
a degree in physical educatimi. He has
directed the recreation program at
Wililiam R. Davie School for the past six
years. He is presently a math and
science teacher at North Davie Junior
High School.
Mary Armsworthy, Sharon Gentry, Lori
Green, Clint Shipp, Steven Brown. Susan
DePalm a, Jam es Peoples, Kerry
Tatum, and Justin Phillips.
One Out Of Six Children Are
Underdeveloped, Study Shows
About one ol every »ix school-age
children U physically un
derdeveloped by the standards of
(he President’s Council on
Phiisical Fitness and Sports, said
Dr. Fred Mueller, associate
professor of physical education at
UNC-CH.
"To say that all children are
physically fit is a myth,” MueUer
said. “ One oul of every six kids Is
overweight, weak or un-
coordlnated-or all three. And the
physical fitness of children in
i>eneral has not improved any in
Ihe last 10 years."
(inod physical fitness is a
necessary part of a good self-
concept. It’s no fun for a kid to be
the last one picked when the class
is choosing sides for a game at
recess,” he said.
Mueller said that parents should
emphasize physical activities as
much as other subjects. The ac
tivities should be fun for the
children and should teach basic
skills such as how to run and jump.
"A parent can watch his child,
and see II he tires easily, or doesn’t
have much enthusiasm for his
daily activities, fie can tell if Ihe
child's overweight just by looking
at him. It's Important that these
kids be identified and helped for
their own physical and mental
well-being," Mueller said.
"A balance of all kinds of ac-
tivities-physlcal, mental and
social-ls really Ihe key to having a
healthy child," said Dr. Edward
Shahady, chairman of the
department of family medicine in
the UNC-CH School of Medicine.
- W i '
The Phillies of the William R. Davie Booster Club’s T-Ball League: First row - April Oliphant, Ervin Reavis, Kathy Snow, Mark Revels,
Ginger Weeks, Scott Snow, Jason Ireland. Back row: Coach Lee Shore, Michael Swisher, Brent Boger, Gina Weeks, Dillon Wiles, Jason MUIer.
The Cardinals of the WiUiam R. Davie Booater Club’s T*BaU League:
First row • Jason Stanley, Gary Wayne Bidden, Jamey Anderson,
Edwina Boger and Shane Mauldin. Second row - PhUlip Turk, Matt
Daughtery, Andrea Elmore, Michael Shore. Shirley Shore, Alan An
derson, not pictmred.
Merchants Lose To Charlotte Royals
The Giants of the WiUiam R. Davie Booxter Qub’s T-BaU League; First row • Heath Latham, Cindy Whitaker, Chris Trivette, Karrie Beck,
Terry AUen, Eugenia Pierce. Second row; Shannon Brown, Matthew Draughn, WUlie Elmore, Alton Beal,Robert Potts. Coaches: Mr. and Mrs. David Wayne Beck.
Moeksville Recreation News
The Yankees of the WUUam R. Davie Booster Club’s T-BaU League:
First row - Jason Keaton, Larry Atkins, Tammy Revels, Gary AUen, Eric Sampson, Luke Baity. Back row: Derek Branhatk, Micheic
Hardin, Anthony Rivers, John Rivers, Rebecca Myers. Coaches Mr.
and Mrs. Bob Richardson.
The Mocksville Recreation Depart
ment is sponsoring numerous activities
for area youth.
Programs will begin this month and
run tivough the summer. A Ust of the
varied programs is as foUows:
BASKETBALL CLINIC
The baskethaU cUnic will be held June
' 15-19from 1:00p.m. -3:00p.m. in the B.
C. Brock Gym. Tbe clinic, which offers
; instruction in basic ba^etbaU fun
damentals, is open to both girls and
boys. The clinic wiU feature college
I players and area coaches. There is no
charge for tite clinic.
T-BALL
The Mocksville RecreaUon Depart
ment wUl sponsor a t-baU program
again this year. Regisb-ation will be held
Wednesday, June 17 at 7:00 p.m. in the
B.C. Brock gym. T-baU is open to boys
. and girU ages 5-7.
GIRLS SOFTBALL LEAGUE
‘ ^. Team play for Midget and Junior girls
' in June and July. An AU-Star game is
’ scheduled.
MINIATURE GOLF
Putl-Putt compeUtion for youth wiU be
held in July or August at Lake Hide-a
way. DetaUs wUl be released later.
PING-PONG
The Recreation Department will
sponsor a table tennis tournament July
13-17 at Rich Park.
OPEN GYM PROGRAM
The B. C. Brock gym will be open
Monday through Friday from 9:00 a.m. -
5:00 p.m. for adults and children.
Planned activities are scheduled for the
children.
SWLMMING CLASSES
Swimming will be taught at Lake
Hide-a-way on the following dates: July 6-10, August 3-7. Cost is $5 per session.
Registration is required.
Classes will be taught daUy from 10:00
a.m. - 11:00 a.m. and 11:00 a.m. - 12:00
noon.
TENNIS
Beginners’ Tennis classes will t>e held
July 6-10. Adult classes will be held July
13-17. Classes wUI be held al Rich Park
from 1:30 p.m. - 3:30p.m. No fee wiU be
charged.
A Novice toui iiainent is scheduled fur
August 3, 4, and 5. Also, singles com-
petiUon will be held for those who have
never won a tournament.
SENIOR CITIZENS PICNIC
Fun and games are planned for the
senior citizens picnic. Bingo wUl 'be
featured along with plenty of home
made ice cream. The date and time wiU
be announced later.
CAMPING
A one night camping trip is planned
for Friday, July 10. The event is open to
both boys and girls.
KID'S P ET SHOW
A children’s pet show is scheduled for
Saturday, June 27, at 10:00 a.m. at Rich
Park. Ribbons wUl be awarded for the
largest, smaUest, best dressed, etc.
ARC CAMP
The AssociaUon for Retarded Citizens
in coordination with the MocksvUle
Recreation Department is holding a
camp June 22-26. The group wlU spend
three days swimming at Lake Hide-a
way and two days at Rich Park.
YOUTH COUNCIL
Mocksville-Davle Youth CouncU wiU
continue its activities for youth during
the summer monttis. Youth CouncU
plans include a dance, trip to the In
stitute of Government m Raleigh, and a
fUm fesUval,
For more informaUon and to register
for aU acUviUes and events, caU the
Mocksville RecreaUon Department at
634-2325 and 634-3970.
Softball Benefit
For Venus Reavis
A benefit softbaU tournament wiU be
held June 12, 13, and 14 al Farmington
balifield. All proceeds and donations
from the “Love Tournament” will be
given lo Miss Venus Reavis and family.
Vour support wUl be appreciated.
Davie High Boosters
"nie Davie High AUileUc Booster Club
wUI meet on Monday night. June IS,
iWl, at 7:30 p.m. m Uie High School
Cafeteria. All members are urged to
attend.
20-Lap Stock Event
Set For Bowm an Gray
Ralph Brinkley of Lexington has the
lead wiUi BUly Middleton of Germantop
in second place, in the “Paul Ciener
Ford 100” NASCAR Modified stock car
race which is to be resumed Saturday
night at Bowman Gray Stadium.
The 100-lap event was halted by a
thunderstorm last week after 13 laps. It
was the second straight rainout of
weekly Saturday night racing on the
minicipal stadium’s quarter-mile
asphalt track.
’Two preliminaries were completed.
BUly Duggins of Winston-Salem racked
up his third straight victory in a 20-lap
Street Stock race as Spider Kimel of
Rural HaU finished second for the third
straight Ume.
Steve Plemmons of Winston-Salem
registered his second triumph of tiie
year in a 2»-lap Limited Sportsman
race, the first of two such events which
were scheduled for that division.
Track manager Joe Hawkins said the
second Limited Sportsman race,
another 20-lap Street Stock event and a
15-lap “Blunderbust” race wiU be on
Saturday night’s program with com
pletion of Uie Modified race. The first
race is set for 8:15.
Hawkins also announced that a
"Ladies’ Night” program halted by rain
May 30, and first reset for June 13, now
has been rescheduled for June 20. He
said rain checks from either uf Uie
rainouts will be honored at the next two
evenis.
The circumstances left Middleton
running second in two races at the same
time. He also holds that poeition in a 25-
lap Modified race, the first of two 25-
lappers scheduled May 30, which was
stopped by rain after 11 laps and is to be
completed on the June 20 program.
Philip Smith of Kernersville is the
leader in that race.
Middleton won the pole position for
last Saturday night's race, but second-
starting 8mi№ got the jump at the outset
and led six lap ' before lie was sidelined
by mechanical trouble. Brinkley took
second position from Middleton in Uie
iourtli lap and t)ecame the leader when
Smith (ell out.
Davie Merchants lost 13-10 in a 12
inning basebaU game with the Charlotte
Royals at Rich Park on Sunday, June
7Ui.
Davie carried a 8-4 lead going into the
top of the 9th which was wiped out by a
Charlotte uprising featuring a three nm
homer. Neither team scored again untU
the 12th when Charlotte scored 5 and
Davie 2.
Davie’s hlKlna was led by Brent
Burton with a shigle, double and a home
run. Clean up hitter Craig Brown had a
single and home run. First baseman
David Barnhardt also collected two hits.
Manager E. Barnhardt attributed the
loss to some poqr strategy or not making
the right move at Uie right Ume on his
part.
The next home game for the Mer
chants is on Sunday, June 14th at Rich
Park 3:00 p.m. versus the South IredeU
PhUlies.______________-
H V ë A W N
H i g h w a y 1 5 8 E a s t M o c k s v i l l e , N . C .
From CItmmons tsks 1-40 to tht
Farmington Road Exit, turn Isft
to Hv<y. 1S8,tum right, to iust
Inilds Mocksvllls city limits.
WATCH FOR SIGN!
•22,050 Sq. FL Swimming Area
• Sliding Boards • Diving Boards
• Modern Bath House Facilities
•White Sandy Beach
• Concession Stand
4C - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD. ГИС KSDA .1481
Can Nature
Pollute?
Not As Much
As Man
By Joy Aschenbacn
Warning: Nature may be hazardous to
your health. Sometimes on its own it can
even violate federal pollution standards.
A natural accumulation of mercury
hqs contaminated fish in a Utah lake.
Acidic runoff has left some Appalachian
streams lifeless. Unusually high огопе
levels have been detected in rural air.
But so far there appears to be no
evidence of “killer trees.”
When it comes to polluting the en
vironment, nature has to take second
place behind the combined forces of
man, industry, and the automobile.
Across the country, however, scientists
recently have begun to try to assess
nature's role in the contamination of air,
water, and soil.
■ ‘‘We are looking at things we’ve never
looked at before, partly because of the
continuing problem of carcinogens,”
explained Dr. Clarence Lance, national
research program leader for en
vironmental quality at the Department
of Agriculture.
In trying to sort out the sources of
pollution, man is finding it difficult to
take a measure of nature. Some
scientists believe that nature in cerUin
cases contributes to pollution, but they
still don't know how much.
Alone, they generally agree, nature
does not appear to have done too much
damage so far, except in some isolated
instances. But when the chemicals it
naturally releases combine with what
man puts into the air, for example, the
results under certain circumstances can
be harmful enough to affect living
things.
‘‘Even if the entire country were
covered -with- forest»,
themselves could not produce ozone,"
said Dr. Joseph Bufalini, an en
vironmental sciences research chief
wilh the Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA). “But add emissions
from automobiles or power plants or
herbicides, and then the hydrocarbons
the trees naturally release can act as an
agent to produce the harmful ozone.”
EPA recently authorized a $114,000
research project to study how certain
Kinds of trees contribute to the for
mation of ozone, an irritating form of
oxygen. It is a major component of
smog.
The idea of delving into “natural” or |
“background” poUution-to iind out
wtut contaminants, if any, are already
there-is a long-range and controversial
issue.
“Nature must be taken into con
sideration if we are to know how
hazardous poUutanta are building up in
the United States,” Bufalini «aid.
“.Ttiere lias to be a starting point to
properly assm long-range pollution
tr^ds.”
Induat^ also ha* taken an intereit in
discovering the extent of nature’s own
pollution in an attempt to turn attention
ttway from the industrial contribuUbn.
In. some already heavily polluted
regions, for example, industry officials
have actually calculated the number of
t r ^ that could be cut down to offset the
imtlcipated additional pollution from a
propmed new industrial plant.
, Adn on the campaign trail last year,
Ronald Reagan added fuel to the fire by
pointing out the “polluting” powers of
trees and volcanoes. Within the scien
tific world, there is some disagreement
over whether something that is
naturally present in the environment
can legitimately be labeled a pollutant.
What are some of the possible natural
causes of pollution? In the air,
hydrocarbons, ozone, radiation, and,
particularly in marshland, sulfur
compounds. Some scientists, for
ёхатр1е, are attempting to measure the
amount of ozone that may l>e seeping
down from the stratosphere, where it is
tt necessary shield of the sun’s
ultraviolet rays, into the lower at-
rhosphere, where it is harmful.
: In water, the steady stream of
pediment from natural runoff, metals
Such as mercury and copper, and salt.
Metals and salt are more commonly
found in rivers and ground water in the
West. Along the coast there is natural
seepage of oil from the ocean floor. In
^il, there can l>e deposits of salt and
metals such as lead, cadmium, iron, and
Uranium.
; And there are the more dramatic
Examples: sulfur dioxide spewed into
uie air by volcanic eruptions like Mount
St. Helens; thermal and chemical
contamination from the many forest
(ires that are touched off by lightning;
the well-known haze in the Great Smoky
Mountains that may be caused by the
trees themselves; and the widespread
proliferation of pollen.
Dr. William L. Graf, an associate
professor of geography at Arizona State
University, is investigating what he
calls “a classic case of natural
pollution” : mercury concentrations
contaminated fish in a lake tliat
straddles Utah and Arizona.
Measurements at the bottom of Lake
Powell in the early 1970s revealed levels
that exceeded the EPA «tandarde.
“The natural weathering of hundreds
pf square miles of barren sandstone and
shale in areas upstream from the lake
has sent unusually high concentrations
of the heavy netal down the drain,” Graf
said. With a grant from the National
Geographic Society, he is tracing the
source and movement of the mercury.
“Getaway Specials”
The fare for “getaway specials” to
space-canisters in which scientific
experiments and inventions can t>e put
aboard llie new space shuttie-ranges
from atiout f3,000 tu $10,000 each.
Already more than 300 specials have
been reserved by people as diverse as
Egypt's President Anwar Sadat,
Hollywood writers and directors, cor
poration executives, and student and
civic groups, National Geographic
reports.
M a g i c
D i s c o u n t
C o i n s !
I t ’s M a i n t
O f T h e
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Picnic
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WITH 7 MAGIC COINS
5 LB. BAG DOM INO
9 9
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' lUOtc имои"’ COIH »M a r g a r i n e
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1 LB. QTR. BLUE BONNET
F R E E
1 y> Lb. Vaileydale ^ ^Hot Dogs ___*1**
5 Oz. Vaileydale Cooked OrBBQ Ham . . . 9 9
Fresh Ground
P a t t l e « ............
U.S. ChoiceRib Eye Ste«|k
WITH 7
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M a y o n n a i s e
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QT. JAR J.F .G .
WITH 7 MAGIC COINS
Hlilshire Smoked OrPolisit 8a[
Swift Premium 12 Oz.Franks.
Swift Premium 12 Oz.
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3 W a y S a v in g s
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13 OZ. M AXW ELL H O U SE
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a
WITH 7
MAGIC COINS
Bacon
1 LB. PKG. CHAM PION
WITH 7
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Vf Qalkin FlavorichLight Milk .................................................
8 Oz. Light N Lively ^Froxen Yogurt................2 /8 9
i e Oz. Hytop Canard Qreane,Mustard Qreans Or ^ ^
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l l HUNTill i5 0Z.q HU ^
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30z. Nestea - 1Instant Tei
4 Oz. Nestea Witti LemonInstant Tei
BAKERY-DELIBoiled Ham
Russer
Deli Style lb.
Fresh Baked 16oz.
Italian Bread 2 /n
” Oz. Morion King Size 13 Oz. Downy Flake _______Dinner*............«I** Waffle*........7S*
ilce Cream]
•Л GALLON SEALTEST К
DAVli: COUNTY liNTüRI’RISi; RirORD, THURSDA^ II Nt I‘)H1 - 5C
B e c a u s e
¡ M e a t !
PRIC ES GOOD THRU
SATURDAY, 6 /1 3 /8 1 ...
QUANTITY RIGHTS ARE
RESERVED ..N O N E
SOLD TO D EALERS...
^ T b r i H V ^ M a r t
Dixount Foods
Steak
U.S. CHOICE FULL CUT R O U N D
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U ,S. ChoiceTop Round Roast ........Lb^Z*’
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r o m O s e u r M a y m
isage
12 Oz. O scar Mayer ^ ^Variety Pack.......*1^’
^ ^ _ 8 Oz. O scar Mayer
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U .S. Choice BottomRound Steak .............^ ’
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Hormel 12 Oz. Can Ham,
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icon *^•9 Ham Patties ..........S149
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iato Sauce
a /79*
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c
There's
An Answer
By Norman Vincent Peale
and
Ruth Stafford Peale
ONLY A FAIRY TALE?
A most terrible thing happened to me
several years ago, and like many others
f blamed God for it. Then I decided !
didn't need God, and I lost all my faith.
As time pass^ I truly wanted to
recapture the faith I had lost. But every
time I start going to church something -
bad happens. I swear it’s the truth. The
last straw was when one of our twin
daughters was stillborn. Then my
husband lost his faith, too. Now I'm
afraid to go to church. Afraid of what
will happen next. We want our children
to be raised with faith, but when our
youngest asks questions about God and
heaven I may as well be telling her
about “ Goldilocks and the Three
Bears," I’ve tried praying and walking
in the woods. Do you really know there’s
a God or do you really just hope?
It is really sad to imagine the kind o(
religious training you have had. You are
a sincere person and you want a
rational faith. That kind of faith knows
that God is not retponiible for accidents
or such tragedies as stillborn children.
In fact, the Bible says, "In the world
ye shall have tribulation, but be of good
cheer, I have overcome the world.” That
means that by God’s help you are given
strength and inner peace. Go to a good
pastor in your community and talk with
him. You will find him to be kind and
understanding.
We are sending you our booklet Faith
Builders which Is free to any reader of
this column. Write to us at Box SOO,
Pawling, N.Y. I2S64.
N EW W IFE HAS EVERYTfflNG
I was married to a fine man, but I
didn’t know it till our marriage ended in
a divorce. Now he is remarried and very
happy, but I want him back. Our
married daughters would alao like us
back together. How can I get him back?
Could our girls get him to divorce his
wife so we could get back together as a
family again? I’m very lonely. My
husband gives his wife now everything I
should be getting.
You have no right to break up his
present marriage. The divorce Is a fact.
Your former husband is now married to
another. He should stick to his
marriage.
DEVIL MUSIC?
I attend a school which teaches that
Rock music is devil-possessed, that it
goes against God’s will and that we are
great sinners for listening to it. They say
the recording groups of this music have
the song blessed by the Devil before
recording it. Are what they’re teaching
about Rock music wrong, or am I goini
against God’s will by listening to It?
In m'y book, rock music has a fiendish
quality. It drives me up the wall. But aS
to being devll-possessed, I do not believe
that It is.
Also, I strongly doubt that recording
groups have this (what do you call It-
muslc?) blessed by the devil. If you can
Uke it, I do not think It 1s morally wrong
to listen to it.
If there is something you would like to
ask Dr. and Mrs. Peale, write to them at
Box SOO, Pawling, N.Y. 12S64.
T H E R E ’S AN AN SW E R ! is
distributed by Foundation for Christian
Living, Pawling, N.Y. 12S64.
Selective Service
To Recruit And
Train Volunteers
Selective Service has begun a
program to recruit and train dviUan
volunteers for possible future local
boards throughout the nation. Thia is a
part of the Congreisionally approved
and funded total revitalization of
Selective Service. The boards th«n-
selves would not be eitabliihed unless
Congress dirscted a retum to the draft.
However, pre-selection and training of
board members in peacetime will be
beneficial in several ways:
(1) It will assure that people sdected
wUl be representative of the com
munities they serve.
(2) It will ¿ve Selective Service time,
in the relative calm of peacetime, to
train the board members in Selective
Service policies and procedures. This
will aMure uniform treatment, should
the draft ever be resumed, of individuals
requesting postponements, defermmls
and exemptions.
By law, local board members are
nominated by each state governor and
appointed by the President. To be
eligible for consideration, an individual
must;
-Be a citizen of the United States
between the ages of 18 and 60,
-Not be a member of the armed forces
(including reserve or retired status, but
not excluding veterans of military
service),
-Not already have served as s local
board member for a total of IS or more
years,
-Be willing to participate tn a national
training program; and, if the draft is
ever resumed, be willing to serve
without |wy in msking difficult but
important decisions concerning ap
plications from local residents for
deferment or exemption from the draft.
The law also contemplates that the
make-up of each local board be
representative of the racial and ethnic ,
backgrounds of the registrant
population under ils jurisdiction, A
majw goal of this selection program is
to generate sufficient citizen par
ticipation to ensure such balance. Hie
full national program to be undertaken
over the next few months will bring total
appointments to approximately I0,0(n,
Volunteers for Puerto Hico, the Virgin
Islands, Guam and Trust Territories are
included in this figure.
14 1)Л\'П I:NTI RI’RISI RICOPI). IIIUKSDA'I . л N1- 11,
F a t h e r s O f T h e W o r ld U n i t e - L e t 's H e a r I t F o r D e a r O ld D a d
Kalhor's Da.v-Sunday. .funp Ü1-I« a
time for paying tríbulo lo proud poppas
cvcrywlirrr. "I.et's hear II Kor Dear Old
Dad!" is a llglilhearlpd look al
drdicnicd daddies in Ihe animal
kin)!dnm.
By Madeleine Jacobs
“ It's .1 wise father that knows his own
child ■
-William Shakespears
FATHERS OF THE WORLD.
UNITE!
Enough about motherly love! It’s your
turn to stand up and claim credit for all
the hours you’ve devoted to the care and
feeding of the little ones.
Not just the time and energy you’ve
spent providing food and shelter, but all
those hours invested in midnight bottle
feedings, diaper changings, back-to-
school nights, endless piano and dance
recitals, refereeing at soccer games and
providing unlimited chauffeur service.
It’s enough to make you feel like a
proud papa, especially when you stop
and realize that fatherly love is rather
rare in the animal kingdom, says Dr.
Devra <'■ Kleinnian, a /oologist
at the Smithsonian’s National
Zoological Park in Washington, D.C.
More often than not, she says, the
father shows almost no interest in his
off-spring, other than perhaps defending
a territory against intruders. Even
among paternal types, there is wide
variation in how much fathers invest in
their young, she notes, with male
mammals investing less than birds and
fishes, though more than reptiles and
some amphibians.
Still, there are dedicated daddies
throughout the animal kingdom-from
the beaver to the bush dog, from the
phalarope to the penguin. Here’s a
Father’s Day salute to them.
Top honors for paternal provisioning
must surely go to the Emperor Penguin,
the largest of the penguins, which makes
its home on the inhospitable shelf ice of
Antflrrtirfl Whilp WP in thp Nnrthpm
Hemisphere are enjoying summer, it is
winter in Antarctica and perpetually
dark. Even as you read this, each papa
penguin is standing alone with a single
egg in the dark, bitter cold, abandoned
by his mate after a two-month whirlwind
courtship.
During their late fall fling, the male
and female, apparently occupied with
better things to do, entirely forgo eating
and engage inst^d in an elaborate
series of displays which culminate in
mating. The female lays one egg, then
promptly vanishes off to sea to feast,
leaving her hapless, hungry helpmate
holding the egg.
The male penguin does not build a nest
but holds the egg on his feet, covering it
T o p honors fo r paternal p ro visio n in g go to the Em peror P enguin.of A ntarctica.
Papa Penguin not only incubates the egg by him self but helps raise the chick. Thi.s
Prm i'J Papa i.s show ing o ff his one-m onth-old chick at San D iego's Sea W o rld.
where the firs t Em peror chicks ever born in cap tivity were hatched.
H e’s just a chick o ff the old block! W hat father could resist a face like
this? A one-m onth-old Em peror Penguin at San D iego's Sea W o rld
doesn t stray far from dear old D ad. ^
which partly explain this fatherly
neglect. After all, among mammals,
only the female can "incubate” the egg
Bincc it is fertilized Internally, and only
the mother has the ability-4ind equip
ment-lo nurse the young. This rules out
Iwo roles for male mammals that male
birds anri fishes сип pprform as well as
Iheir female mates.
Bul if you disregard these sex dif
ferences, Kleiman says, male mammals
do have the same potential to care for
the young as females. They can provide
food, shelter, defense, cleaning,
carrying and grooming. They can also
socialize, play and babyset with the
youngsters.
Yet, in an extensive survey carried
out by Kleiman and a colleague. Dr.
James R. Malcolm, on male paternal
investment in mammals, only a few
prize-winning poppas turned up.
One candidate for Father of the Year
is the busy beaver. Not only does the
male beaver build and maintain the
lodge and stock the larder with food for
the winter, but when the babies are
born, he provides food for them, cleans
and carries them, babysets and huddles
with the tykes, all the while maintaining
a constant vigil against predators.
Then there’s unique behavior among
male mammals, the short, squat bush
dog actively participates in raising the
young from the moment of birth, ac
cording to biologist Ingrid Porton, a
student of Kleiman’e who is studying
bush dog behavior at the Zoo's Con-
.servation and Research Center in Front
Royal, Va.
“The father’s role is incredible," an
admiring Porton says. “In one instance,
we saw a male help pull the pup from the
female during birth, and in each of the
births we’ve witnessed, the male pulls
out and consumes much of the af
terbirth.
“As soon as the pups are bom, the
father aids the mother in licking the
pups dry and from then on takes a
nearly equal role in caring for the
young. The mother nurses the infanta for
about-Ш weeks, but during this time the.
with a fold of his bellyskin throughout
the entire incubation period. Since he
does not dare abandon his potential
offspring in order to eat, by the time the
chick hatches some 60 days later, the
male has lost 35 to 45 percent of his
weight during his four-month fast.
If the vacationing momma has not
returned by the time baby hatches,
daddy also caters the first meal for the
chick. The story has a happy ending,
though, since mom eventuaUy returns
and both parents share the brooding and
feeding responsibilities for the next five
months. While much is known about this
extraordinary example of fatherhood,
no one has carried out studies on marital
bliss among the peripatetic penguin.
The usual parental roles are even
more reversed in the red phalarope, a
slim-necked shorebird that breeds on
the Arctic tundra and winters at sea,
south of the equator. The small, subjued-
color males are ardently pursued by the
larger, more gaily dressed females until
the male succumbs to her charms and
builds a nest, usually on a low bank
covered with short grass. The female
duly deposits as many as four eggs, then
takes off for the open tundra, perhaps to
flirt with other males, leaving the would-
be father to incubate the eggs and raise
the chicks on his own. Such unseemly
maternal behavior led ona naturalist to
observe that the female red phalarope is
a “poor mother at best.”
Moving on from feathered fathers to
the watery world of fishes, there are a
number of species in which the male
guards the eggs laid by the female, but
only a few fish can compete with the
curious case of the seahorse, a small,
warm-water creature in which the male
literally gives birth.
The female seahorse dumps her eggs
in a specialized brood pouch located
beneath the male’s tail and swims away-
-forever. At birth, the male contorts his
body and expels the young through the
single opening in the pouch. It’s a labor
of love that keeps the seahorse sire quite
busy--the dwarf seahorse, for example,
breeds nine months of the year and is
capable of giving birth every 10 days to a
whole new batch of fish fry.
Sad to say, such fatherly devotion is
rare among mammals, zoologist
Kleiman points out, but to be perfecUy
fair, there are sound biological reasons
father continues to clean them and
sleeps with the pups, which helps
regulate their temperature and protects
them. It’s a very close-knit family.”
Other model mammal fathers include
the golden lion marmoset, which plays
the predominant role in infant care after
the baby reaches three weeks of age,
and the African wild dog, which not only
provides the majority of child care but is
helped out by related males living in his
pack.
So the next time you’re feeling the
burdens of fatherhood, remember
you’re in good-but limited-company.
Think about thè poor lonely seahorse
and coiwt yourself a lucky pop.
Alcohol Information Report
WLÜÁM F. WEANT, M.S.
ALCOHOLISM EDUCA'nON CONSULTANT"--ï*- - - - . . . -
Milk And Milk Products Are Great Bargains
Alcoholism Is a FamUy
Illness - PartU- Alcohtdism is
an illness that is very
destructive for the alcoholic
who has not stopped drinking.
What is frequently > not
talked about is the idea that
alcoholism is a family illness
which affects all the people
who have frequent contact
with a practicing alcoholic.
When there is a practicing
Bill Yarbrough;Pharmadit “
Can we learn fro m rabbits?
Yes, says Prof. R obert F,
Borgman. He observed that
diets high in fats o f almost
any kind have produced
gallstones in rabbits, and
the stones disappeared when
the animals ate less fat. The
fact that rabbits on a low -
fat diet d id n ’t develop g a ll
stones seems to p o in t a les
son to human beings.
‘1Цос1г«н11г
'QíKWKtt)^
12a N. Main St. 634-2111
"Replacament
coat minua
depreciation?
Or Replacament
Coat? The
difference could
besubatantial."
alcoholic in the family, other
members of the family can
begin to lose self-esteem if
they are blamed, by the
alcoholic, for his or her
drinking.
Financial problems related
to alcoholism can have a
profound effect on the
lifestyle of the alcoholic’s
family.
Fear of what the alcoholic
might or might not do when
drinking can manifest itself in
such psychosomatic illnesses
in family members as
headaches indigestion,
nausea, or shakiness.
Although caused by
psychological fear, these are
real illnesses which
frequently require treatment.
Nonalcoholic family
members may become in
volved in destructive
behaviour similar to that of
the alcoholic; denying and
covering up the misuse of
alcohol, coaxing, extracting
promises, hiding or
destroying liquor, and making
threats. The alcoholic has
been involved in similar
natural reactions; blaming
family members, telling
family members or em
ployers or other relatives to
get off his or her back, hiding
and protecting the alcohol
supply, and making threats.
Increasing isolation, anger,
and depression can become a
way of life both for the non
alcoholic family members as
well as for the alcoholic.
There is help for these
family members through
local champters of Al-Anon, a
national self-help
organization for adults' who
have alcoholics in their
families. Here family
members learn that they are
powerless over the alcoholic
and that they are not the
cause of the problem.
Alcoholism as a family illness
is discussed in detail,
providing hope and strength
for persons who are at
tempting to cope with alccrfiol
abuse in their families.
The only requirement of
membership in Al-Anon is
Uiat a person be a friend or
relative of a person with a
drinking problem. For more
information about Al-Anon
contact Alcholism Services at
Tri-County Mental Health.
Next week’s article will be a
presentation of questions to
help people determine if there
may be a drinking problem in
their family.
(This series is prepared by
Bill Weant, alcoholism
education consultant with the
Tri-County Mental Health
Complex, 622 North Main
Street, Mocksville. These
articles are designed to create
u n d ersta n d in g about
drinking, alcohol abuse, and
alcoholism in our society. If
you have a question con
cerning alcoholism in our
society. If you have a
question concerning alcohol
that you would like answered
in a future column, phone 634-
2195.)
In today’s inflationary
economy, there are still good
food buys - real bargains.
The attached chart shows
what has happened to the
average national retail price
of food purchased for home
use and the majw food groups
(cereal and bakery products;
fruits and vegetables; meat,
poultry, fish and eggs; ancl
dairy products) since 1967
when the U. S. Bureau of
Labor Statistics, began
monitoring and reporting
retail prices in the Consumer
Price Index.
In 1967, al! retail food prices
were started at a base of 100.
Each month since then, the
increase in retail price has
been measured and reported
in the Consumer Price Index
as an addition to the base of
100. So, by looking at the
average for each food group
on a yearly basis, you can see
what has h a p p e d to the
retail price. For example,
food at home at 2S1.6 means
the average national retail
price for all food purchased
for home use increased 151.6
percent since 1967 (1967
equals 100). Here’s what has
happened to the major food
groups (yearly basis 1967-
1980) - fruiU and vegetables
up 148.1 percent; cereal and
bakery products up 146.4
percent; meat, poulta7 , fish
and eggs up 142.3 percent;
and milk and milk products
up 127.5 percent.
Although every food
commodity price has ad
vanced significantly since
1967, mUk and milk products
have increased far less
than the other major food
groups. In relation to other
food pricrs, milk and milk
products (particularly when
you consider the excellent
nutrition and taste milk and
milk products have to offer)
are still a good food buy - a
real bargain.
conitruction
U.S. Capitol Building took
over 150 years to complete.
Business jxoblems?
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GBS C. DORSEY OYER, JR.4781 COM M ERCIAL PLAZA WlNSTON-SALEM^MX:. 27104
919-765-7601
General BusinessServices
илф Ш good пвёцЫмг
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Ask about Replacement
Cost Coverage tor the
conierUs of your home
B O B B Y K N I G H T
634-5908192 North Main St.
Mocksviiia, N.C.
STATE FARM
4П9 Ci»u«l(|r Campiny
Home Oilica
ttioemingten lUinan
Memo For Motorists
The failing car battery is
a frequent fact of life, and
those who use improper
jump-start procedure! face a
serious hazard. Just one
spark can set off an eye-
threatening explosion.
You ran get a jump on
safety when jump-starting a
dead battery if you follow
this advice from the National Society to Prevent
Blindness.
• Put out all cigarettes
and flames.• Make sure cars don't
touch. Turn off ignition.
Add battery water, if
needed.
Don't proceed unless both
batteries are negatively
grounded and of the same voltage.
Clamp one jumper cable
to positive ( + ) pole of dead
battery, then clamp cable’s
other end to jiositive end of
good battery.
At booster battery, con
nect second cablc to nega
tive (—) pole, then clamp
uUier end io siaiied car's
engine block.
Start the booster car, then
the disabled one. Hemove
the cables.
I F R E E W I T H 4Buy 4 gallons off any one Olympic Product, get 1 more f roe.
PUTITOVEf) miNT0ШИР1СOVRCOKT
MAV-NHf íJALVAN:/i;¡) MtTAJ
Semi-lhiiMparmit Stain
Penetrates to give new
wood beauty that's more
than skin deep.
Olympic Ovsrcoat"
The tough, acrylic latex
house paint that really
beats ttie weather.
W M r t h e r S c T M n
Get extra protection
where you need it most with
Olympic Weather Saeen.
Solid Color Stain
Oil Penetrates to protect.
Latex lets you stain over paint.
And both last for yeaiB.
Sale Ends June 30
Specidiiy tiidfküü v:i ÜU oil and $4 00 olf ydlkwis not «iclu.lt-fj if> 1Ыь oHw
M o c k s v i l l e B u ild e r s S u p p ly
MOCKSVILLE , NC
■ J M
Houri: 7 00 5 00 p.m Mon. Fn
Se» ^-30-12:00 p m
Pho ne 6 3 4 5 9 1 5 or 6 3 4 5 9 1 6
Allen Attends Resource
Conservation Workshop
Everette Allen is attending the 1981
Resource Conservation Workshop being
he\d this weelt on the campus of North
Carolina State U niversity in Raleigh.
Sponsors of the workshop are the N ortli
Carolina Association of Soil and Water
C onservation D is tric ts , the N orth
Carolina Chapter of the Soil Con
servation Society of Am erica, and the
North Carolina Soil and W ater Con
servation Commission.
Everette is the son of M r. and Mrs.
E lm er Allen of Route 1, Mocksville, N.C.
He is a hsing senior at Davie County
High School.
Approxim ately lOO students from all
sections of North Carolina w ill spend the
week studying all phases of con
servation. The Resource Conservation
Workshop can effectively further the
Soil and w ater conservation concept by
stim ulating interested young students to
pursue conservation careers, to practice
good conservation measures, or to
become staunch advocates of con
servation.
A c tiv itie s w ill include classroom
studies, tours, supervised recreatior.,
and entertainm ent, and a banquet to
round out the week.
Selection for Everette to attend the
workshop was made by the Supervisors
of the Davie Soil and Water Con
servation District through the
cooperation of the Vo-Ag department at
Davie County High School. All expenses
for Everette to attend the workshop are
paid for by the Davie Soil and Water
conservation District.
Seven Davie Students
RecejyeDegrees
From U N C - Charlotte
Seven Davie County students received
degrees during commencement exer
cises at the University of North Carolina
at Charlotte on May 16.
Dr. E.K. Fretwell Jr., Chancellor of
me UHlVertity ot North CaroUna ai
Charlotte was commencement speaker
as 1751 UNCC students were awarded
graduate and undergraduate degrees.
Davie County students earning
degrees are:
Elsie Enrd Brown, Rt. 1, Box 29B-A,
Mocksville, a B.A. in human develop
ment and learning.
Frankie B. Comelison, Rt. 6, Box 84-A,
Mocksville, a B.A. in hisotry, cum laude.
David L. Elmore, 6068 He^erow Or.,
aemmons, A B.E.T. in engineering
computer technology.
William Frank Henson, Rt. 4, Box 513,
Mocksville, a B.E.T. in engineering
computer technology.
Richard A. Pounds, Rt. 3, Advance, a
B.A. in business.
Leslie G. Pressnell, P.O. Box 612,
Advance, a B.A. in english.
Elizabeth K. Sexton, 36 Cento- St.,
Cooleemee, a B.S.N in nursing.
DAVll- COUNTY I NTl Rl’R'Sl RliCOKI), TIRIRSIMY, .tllNV. П, l')81 7('
J u n io r H ig h s H o ld A w a r d s D a y
Everette Allen
Volunteers Sought
FoLResearch On
Losing Weight
If you're only slightly overweight, you
can learn how to lose the extra pounds
this summer at the Bowman Gray
School of Medicine.
The medical school’s Section on
Medical Psychology will offer a summer
dietary program in July for persons who
are 10 to 20 pounds overweight. While
learning how to lose weight, the par
ticipants will be part of a new medical
rmeBrrh projact on weight loss.-----
“This will be a pilot program,” said
Dr. Margret Straw, assistant professw
of psychology. “We want to evaluate the
effectiveness of a brief educational
program designed to help participants
lose weight and keep it off.”
The sessions, which will be ap
proximately one-hour each, will be held
on four consecutive Saturdays, b^in-
nbig July 11. Charles Ford, a summer
research fellow and medical student
working with Dr. Straw, will direct the
program.
Participants must be 18 years old or
older, and they should have a friend or
famUy member willing to parUcipate in
the program with them.
A fee will be charged to cover the
costs.
To register or receive more in-
formaUon, caU 748-2853.
Your Drug Company
fèêiW^Êtiet
Being lazy doesn’t countl
School’s out Vacation's In. Friends, going their sep
arate ways. Suddenly, time becomes an enemy, or
friend. How, then, should summer-time best be spent by
our wuth?
Helpful tips. Fill the vacuum of idle time with pursuits
you’d want to be doing the rest of your life. Build healthy
relationships. Take stock of your spiritual needs. Read
and utilize your mind. If working, be punctual, polite, in
terested, and honest Set priorities early and manage time effectively.
Finally: We’re your near-by, home-town cen>
ter for summer-time pharniacyneeds — Be^- flcient Use usI ____
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Maduvllb, NC
.T ti. 634-214'
The end of a school year always bring
a day which is devoted almost ex
clusively to the giving out of awards. A
day in which each individual school
h/'nors its own. Last Friday was that day
in Davie County for hnth of the junior
high schools.
Both schools have just completed their
first year of operation so the awards
ceremonies at North and South Davie
were a first also, with the bulk of the
honors going to ninth graders who will
be leaving next year for Davie High
School.
Hie top award at North Davie junior
high is given each year to a ninth grad^
in recognition of academic excellence.
TTie students voted this year to name the
award after North principal Charles J.
Wells. The competition ended in a tie
this year with honors going to Debbie
Nance and Tonya Bowman. Tiieir
academic averages were identical.
Nance is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
James E. Nance of Route 3, Mocksville
and Bowman is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Gray Bowman of Advance, Route
1.
The PTA organization has instituted a
Student of the Year Award and Chris
Jacobs, son of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Jacobs
of Route 3, Mocksville, received the first
one from PTA president Robert Dail.
The North Davie Ruritan Club
presents the annual citizenship award.
Ruritan Jim Eaton gave this year’s
award to Jennifer Hall, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Paul E. Hall of Advance.
The Woodsmen of the World life in
surance сотрмпу honors a student at
both North and South each year with a
history award. Winner at North was
Cindy Speer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
J.W. Speer of Route 4, Mocksville.
Janie Sell, art teacher at North,
presented art awards to Stephanie
Averett, Pam Dewar, Richmond Lyons,
Charles Carter, and Donald Blackwell.
Soil Conservation awards went to
history honors. l.,aura Brock received Kighth graders .eceiving academic Seventh grade academicians are:
the english award and David Winfrey awards are: Shelly Leonard, Tonya Mary Winfrey, Crystal Smith, Suzonne
got top science honors. All of the above Turner, Lee Rollins, Susie McDaniel, ijames, Chris Jones, Audrey Clement
are ninth graders. Robert Jonss. and Monica Depalma. and Beth Edwards.
Nnrfh winners are : Cindy l^eer, Jennifer HaU, Chrlfa r m U U V lf! Jacobs, Debbie Nance, Tonya Bcwman.
TVaey Smith, Amy Bingham, Marlr
White, and Laura Hildebrand.
Champion Speller Emily Markland
received an award from teacher Trina
Jackson.
Rondel Faak and Kelvin Wharton
received Certificates of Merit (rom
principal Wells.
Awards day at South Davie went much
the same way. Naomi Minwalla
received the student of the year honors
from principal Kermit Buckner. She is
the daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Sorab
Minwalla of Mocksville.
Tlie history award at South Davie
went to Lisa Campbell, daughter of Mrs.
Eva CampbeU of MocksvUle.
Instead of honoring one student for
academic excellence, Uie staff at South
honored the top student in each subject.
Dean Davis won the match achievement
award and Juanita Moore received Award winners at SouUi Davie Junior Higli Scliool are: Lisa Campbell, Dean South Davie b g”’ Mlnwalla, Laura Brock, David Winfrey. (Photos
Advance News
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CHRIS ALLISON, Branch President
T
WUliam ElUs of Portiand, six high school graduates by
Oregon, formerly of this the Rev. Alec Alford'prior to
community, had diarge of ttie ttie worship service Sunday.
Sunday night prayer service Graduates were Cammie
at Mettiodlst Church. His Zimmerman, Beth Ward,
topic was The Difference in JuUa Cornatzer, Sandra
Generations. He used James, David Folmar, Kevin
passages of scripture from Foster. Cammie was the only
Proverbs, Psalms, Luke, senior present at churdi.
Deuteronomy and Maladii. Mrs. Georgia Foster, her
WUUam and his finance Miss sister-in-law, Mrs. Gladys
Vickie Parthe wiU return to Davis of Clemmons, Mrs.
PbrUand on Thursday after Davis’ son-in-law and
spending two weeks with his daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Jack
fattier, BUI EUis and his Hauser also of Clemmons
(William’s) brother and spent last Sunday witti Mrs.
sisters. Patsy Jordan in Woodleaf in
Mr. and Mrs. Maurice celebration of Mrs. Jordan’s
SuUivan of Lancaster, Penn- birth^y.
sylvania visited her aunt, Mrs. Harvey Hamrick of
Mrs. Georgia Foster last Chapel HUl spmt ttie weekend
Wednesday. Mrs. Sullivan’s wiUi her mother, Mrs. MozeUe
mother, Mrs. Patsy Jordan of Ratledge. On Sunday Mrs.
Woodleaf was also visiting her RaUedge and Mrs. Hamrick
sUto’. Mrs. Foster. attended the McCulloh
Bibles were presented to ttie reunion at the home of Mrs.
Geraldine McCoUoh Smith in
Redland community. They
were the famUy of the late Mr.
and Mrs. George McColloh,
and of the original 9 chUdren
ttiere were 123 descendants
present for the reunion.
Mrs. Grace Spry celebrated
ber birtttday June 10. During
ttie weekend she was honored
with a cookout at her sons
bomes Bob and Norman Spry
in Sheffield Saturday night
with aU her famUy present.
Sunday Mrs. Spry was
honored with a dinner at the
home of son-in-law and
daughter Mr. and Mrs. Harold
HUey and sons Ronnie and
Steve. Other famUy members
were Mr. and Mrs. Doug Spry
and daughter, Tracy, Mr. and
Mrs. Leroy Ward, Mr. and
Mrs. Bob Spry and son Jef
fery, Mr. and Mrs. Norman
^r y and chUdren Michael
and Tanya.
Mr. and Mrs. M.C. Dead
mon of Mocksville were
Saturday night visitors of Mr.
and Mrs. BiU Zimmerman.
A large crowd attended the
Open House Friday and
Saturday at the “Something
Old AnUques” shop located on
Highway 801 in the old
homeplace of Laura Shutt.
Mrs. Recie Sheets attended
ttie wedding of her great
nephew David Long who
married Sonya Elizabeth
Vance Saturday afternoon in
Morris Chapel United
Methodist Church in
WaUcertown. Mrs. SheeU was
an overnight guest of her
sister, Mrs. Sadie Gross in
Pfafftown Friday night.
Twenty-one Senior Citizens
boarded the Methodist Church
activity bus for a trip to the
zoo in Asiieboro last Thur-
g^y. Bus driver Medford
Shoaf, his daughter, Melany
Shoaf and PoUy BaUey ac
companied the group. It was a
first trip to a zoo for many of
»he Senior Citizens
P u t a jin g le in y o u r £ u n ily ro o m
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N(1'Л\1! (Ol'V n IMIRI'KISI RI (OKI). rill'KSnA'» . Л 'NI II. Г'М
A i r s F a ir In L o v e F o r S n e a k y F ir e f lie s
Beatlt'd trails ot'ii>:li( lepri-scnt tlie IIìkIiI piillis of difl'orent firelly .species, as
they n1lцl1l appear in a time evpnsnre. Tlie drawings are bused on the work of
(Iredy researclier James E. Lloyd of the l'iii>ersity of Florida. Below is the
hIoh liiR silhouette ofa firefly photoRraphed in Soofheast Asia.
Who knows whnt evil lurks in the
I'earls of fjrcflip.s?
After IB years of st\idy, Professor
.¡nmos K. Lloyd of the U niversity of
Florida has a pretly good idea. The
ciiiomologisl has observed more than
KHI s()eeip.s of fireflies-w hich aren't
really flies at all but beetles of the
fam ily Lampyridae. He has learned a lot
aboul what ’s being said when they blink
the chemical lights in their abdomens.
When il comes to winning a mate or a
’Tieal, fireflies can sneak and cheat and
sometimes even kill. In short, Lloyd has
found, those insects w ith the comma-
sized brains are capable of quite com
plicated behavior.
Fireflies often speak in a visual Morse
code, a pattern of flashes that differs by
species and by sex. A male flies around
flashing his message-say, a half-second
flash every six seconds-and looks
toward the ground until he spots a
correctly coded female response. What
fellows may be a “ flash dialogue"
'uefore Ihe lights go out for mating.
Or it may be a trap. Females Tn at
least a dozen species of the genus
P hoturis can m im ic the m ating
responses of other fire fly species and
lure a male to the perches. When he
draws near in hopes ot romance, the
female grabs and devours him.
Some of these “ femmes fatales” have
io|HTtoires nnd can lure at least five
other species, Lloyd says.
Some males oul to woo Ihese
predatory fem ales have deceptive
repertoires of Iheir own, he adds. By
im itating Ihe males of prey species, they
Iry lo attract false signals from their
own Pholuris females.
These male m im ics arc ou! to
reproduce, not to kill, Lloyd believes.
But ho admits it's a mystery how they
avoid being eaten.
O ther fire flie s have th e ir own
varieties of deceit. A male may interject
extra flashes into a nearby m ale’s
pattern to break up a courtship dialogue,
or flash in synchronism w ith him to tripk
a female inlo switching partners. A
male may even m im ic a female to throw
a riva l off the track.
A Florida grasslands firefly, Photinus
collustrans, may show why the com
petition is so intense. This lightning bug
appears about a quarter-hour after
sunset and is active only about 15
minutes a night.
By fo llo w in g these fire flie s and
recording their every move, Lloyd
worked out an average. “ The typical
Photinus collustrans male needs 7.2
nights to find a female and m ate,” he
said. But most females need no more
than six minutes to emerge from their
underground burrows, attract a male,
male, and get back underground.
''.Ml these males are out there hunting
and the females are only out for a
m om ent," he said. “ In fact, the chances
of being answered by a predator are
greater than being answered by their
own fem ale."
Lloyd uses all sorts of equipment lo
unlock secrets of insect communication.
"I have what 1 call a 'fire fly gun’-
except when I travel on airlines,” he
said. The instrument can read flashes of
light and translate them into various
high-pitched whistles for storage on a
tape recorder. Back at the university
laboratory in Gainesville, other in
struments can use the tape to chart
precise images of the flashes.
Thermometers also are im portant
because a fire fly ’s flash tempo goes up
and down with the a ir temperature.
Even a pocket flashlight has its place
in his work. “ You can attract fireflies to
your penlight,” he explained. “ If a
m ale’s flying overhead and you flash the
right code, he’ll come down and land in
your hand.”
To im itate a female firefly, Lloyd
advises holding the penlight point-down
against Ihe ground, “ so the light the
fire fly ’s going to see is what is leaking
out around the edges ”
Lloyd studied fireflies in Thailand last
year on a project supported by the
NiilionnI Geographic Society. The main
large! was Pteroptyx malaccae, a
species thal gathers in large, sym-
chronously flashing groups on trees and
bushes in lowland swamps.
During the study. Llovd saw evidence
of "habitat loss and water-quality
deterioration" thal could hurl fire fly
populalions--a problem thal is in-
lernational, he notes.
Long after some fireflies have died,
their glows keep working for medical
research. Extracts from the lanterns-
which contain the lig h t-e m ittin g
molecule luciferin, among other things-
can be made to glow again when com
bined w ilh the energy-rich molecule
ATP (adenosinetriphosphate), a sub
stance found in every organism. By
m easuring the lig h t produced,
researchers can tell how much ATP is
there.
First, somebody has to get the
fireflies. The Sigma F irefly Scientists
Club, a division of Sigma Chemical Co.
in St. Louis, collected 3,191,400 fireflies
in 1980, according to worker Jerry
Nester.
The firm pays $1 a hundred, with
bonuses for big catches, and helps
collectors in another way, Nester said:
" I t ’s a pretty hard running around in a
field with a glass ja r, so we give them
nets.”
F o lk -W a y s and Folk-Speech
The British love a mystery -
- some to the degree that they
are almost sorry over the
discovery and arrest of the
Yorkshire Ripper, Peter
Sutcliffe.
What a story for repeated
telling his 13-rape-killing8 and
7 attempted murders would
№ETVOUR FRIENDS ДГ THE BANK.
We’d like to thank
these people here in
Mocksviiie for serving
on our local board.
We’re glad to have
them as friends. And
our guess is, you are too.
JOHN M. BAILEY Owner,Bailey Oil Company
DONALD BINGHAM
Co-Owner, Bingham & Parks Lumber Company
JOHN T. BROCK Attomey
WILLIAM LEE DWIGGINS
President, Harmony Sportswear Company, Inc.
CLYDE HENDRICKS Owner, Hendricks Furniture Company
JOHNJOHNSTONE Vice President and City Executive
DR. F.W. SLATE Surgeon
leo \vill:amsRetired
DR. C.W, YOUNG Veterinarian
Board Members Emeriti
C.A. BLACKWELDER R.L. SEAFORD
N O B O D YW O R K S
HARDER FOR
YO U R M O NEY.
D BB&T9»W! KW'W.W»"WWr
have made had he sim ply
disappeared w ithou t ever
being identified.
Compared to Sutcliffe, Jack
the Ripper, the 1888 killer of
prostitutes, was a piker. After
all. Jack could lay claim to
only five or six victims at
most.
The difference lies in the
nefarious operations. Even
though the Yorkshire Rip
per’s effigy will undoubtedly
wind up at Madame
Tussaud’s, it is Jack who will
continue to pique the
imagination of the curious.
What was Jack’s motivation
for instance? Sutcliffe claims
that he heard the voice of God
commissioning him to his
“divine” mission-. Jack's only
public statement - a letter to
a London newspaper - was
that “I am down on whores
and I shan’t quit ripping them
till I do get buckled.”
Then there is the mystery of
the execution method. Sut
cliffe's was random and
senseless, at times employing
a screwdriver. Jack, though
he, too, mutilated his victims,
revealed at least a touch of
surgical training in slashing
his victims and removing
specific organa.
Mystery still surrounds
Jack the Ripper’s approach to
his victims. Where Sutcliffe
proceeded directly by inviting
his victims into his car, then
violently assaulting and
raping, Jack left no clues to
his approach.
There is some speculation
that Jack may have been
Jackie the Rippereas, a
trusted “fellow” prostitute
who aroused no suspicion as
she approached and ac
companied her potential
victims through the London
back streets.
Further speculation is that
she might have been an
abortionist, childless herself
and exacting revenge on those
who would allow their
potential offspring to be
denied existence.
Such a theory, of course,
rung counter to the idea often
advanced that Jack was
actually a member of the
Royal Family, his identity
kept secret by the authroities.
It does, however, provide for
motive, approach, and
method.
The British, however, will
be content to speculate, to
submit their own theories.
They do love a mystery.
(NOTE: Rogers Whitener
is in England, and his next
several columns will examine
British folkways.
Since early times the
English have insisted that the
Scots are too high-spirited.
Now the Scots themselves
have joined the refrain.
Unlike the Eoglish, however,
the Scots are not referring to
their natural exuberance.
Instead they allude to an
excess of bottled spirits.
Scotch, if you please. A nine-
year supply on hand and a
falling market.
Exports to the United States
- the major Scotch market -
fell 22'^ percent last year, and
dismal figures are turning up
in other parts of the world.
production.
Most of the 118 malt
distilleries operating in
Scotland are nn half-time and
are planning extended
summer vacations.
On a smaller scale their
plight parallels that of the
automakers in America. ’The
Scots call it the “greatest
crisis since the thirties.”
Things looked so rosy back
in the seventies when today's
Scotch was being “laid down”
to mature (Scotch must age
for a minimum of three years,
the better grades from six to
twelve.). The United States
market was expected to ex
pand with a nudge from
strategically-placed perio
dical advertising, and
worldwide craving for good
Scottish spirits was an
ticipated. After all,
Americans were already
downing one out of every four
bottles of Scotch produced,
and their tastes were ex
pected to continue influencing
others.
Then the rosy glow began to
pale. Increased tariffs and
other forms of taxes ap
peared. Higher interest
rates began to force both
wholesalers and retailers to
reduce their stocks. Japanese
“Scotch” began to compete,
and, worst of all, tbe younger
set moved toward gin, vodka,
wine and beer.
Except for the expensive
brands, scotch began to
gather dust on the shelves.
But the Scots have not
drowned in their own spirits.
The distillers are now plan
ning a collective strategy to
improve their image and Uieir
sales, beginning with a July
public relations campaign.
I have a suggestion: do a
follow-up advertising cam
paign following the American
blud jeans example.
Picture, if you please, a
color layout of a Scottish
lassie clad only in tartan bra
and panties, with a designer
shot glass worn as an amulet
suspended by a heather-
patterned chain around her
neck.
And then the inscription;
“Aye, laddie. I'll have naught
next to me but a wee bit of
Scotch!”
Readers are invited to send
folk niaterlal to Folk Ways
and Folk Speech, Box 376,
Appalachian State Univer
sity, Boone, N.C. 28608.
'When a fellow »ays, 'It
ain't the money, but the
principle of the thing,' it'*
the money." Kin Hubbard
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BAITY’S READY-TO-
ROLL PRICING POLICY
A L L P R IC E S llia . U D E :
★ M O U N T I N G
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B aity 's Discount T ire
IWITH 9 NORTH CAROLINA LOCATIONS TO SEllVE YQU
Hwy. 601 MocksviUe
S e e M d n a g e r D a r r e l l H q r p e
Phone
634-2365
DAVIICOU N n INIIKI’KISI KKOKI), TIIUKSDAY, JUNi: I 1. I'JHl '>('
District
Court
The following cases were disposed of
during the Monday, June 1, session of
district court with Lester P, Martin,
presiding judge.
David Imes, driving 69 mph in a 55
mph zone, $10 and costs.
Joel M cLelland Wagner, driving 69
m pli in a 55 mph zone, $IOand costs.
W illiam Blaine Nantz, driving 70 mph
in a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs.
A rthur Simonton Lynn, driving 70 mph
in a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs.
Edwin Jerry W illiam s, driving 65 mph
in a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs.
Vincent B. Alig, driving 67 mph in a 55
mph zone, $10 and costs.
M arion Jackson Troutm an, driving 67
mph in a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs.
Audrey Grace Sanders, driving 70
mph in a 55 mph zone, dismissed w ith
leave.
V irginia Chapman Smith, driving
without operator’s license, voluntary
dismissal.
M ary C. Quick, exceeding safe speed,
dismissed with leave.
Lind a C a rte r, w orthless checks,
voluntary dismissal.
A. V. Holmes, driving under the In
fluence, pay a fine of $100, attend DUI
course at mental health clinic, 3 years
suspended sentence, under special
conditions.
B arry Y ork Woosley, reckless driving
after drinking, $250.00 fine, attend D U I
course at mental health clinic.
W illiam Keith W alker, failing to stop
at duly erected stop sign, dismissed.
Floyd Thomas Tilley, Jr., exceeding
safe speed, cost.
Calvin Arnold Robertson, Improper
equipment, cost.
Johnnie Lee Hellard, exceeding safe
speed, $22.00 and cost.
Donald Edward Jones, driving 80 mph
in a 55 mph zone, $25.00 and cost.
Loyde Grant Allen, failing to drive on
right side of highway, dismissed.
Gary Russell Bran, reckless driving,
$30 and cost.
■Rober t Lo H olm w , worth l«wi.chw:li!».| .
TV Commençais Are Big Business In N.C.
Honored By Rescue Squad
George Harris of Route 4, MocksvUI«, <on the left) is being presented a
framed certificate of Appreciation for 20 years of ontotanding and
dedicated service for Uie Davie County Rescue Squad, by Ciiief Marvin
Heiiard. Mr. Harris is married to Flossie Freeman Harris and they
have four children. Mr. Harris Is retired from Ingersoll-Rand Com
pany.
Local Students On Dean's List At N. C. State
30 days suspended 1 year.
W. H. Hines, worthless checks,
dismissed.
Roei Marie Howard, shoplifting, 30
days suspended i year, make
restitution.
Bud Hoffman, indecent exposure to
children, dismissed.
Willie Mae Barnes, shoplifting, 30
days suspended 1 year.
Ervin Eugene Barneyeastle, simple
assault and assault and battery,
dismissed on cost.
North Carolina State U niversity has
honored 1,879 students fo r earning
Dean’s List honors during the spring
semester by m astering courses in the
sciences, technologies, humanities and
arts at the Raleigh campus.
NCSU Chancellor Joab L. Thomas
said the students won their honors by
attaining academic averages of 3.25 or
higher out of a possible 4.0.
Topping the Dean’s List were 296 men
and women who achieved 4.0 records --
straight “ A ’s.”
W eil auJ- wom en from across iS’orth
Carolina and from 38 other states and 11
other countries earned the honors.
In their studies, the honor students
ranged from agronomy to aerospace
engineering and from architecture to
zoology.
The following are the Davie County
Dean’s List students, their fields of
study, parents and addresses;
Robin N. Brock, animal science, Mr.
and Mrs. J.T. Brock; Morgan K.
Chaffin, zoology, Mr. and Mrs. A.M.
Chaffin, Rt. 1; Lee A. Craven, textile
management, Mr. and Mrs. C.C.
Craven; Michael S. Murphy,
mathematics, Mr. and Mrs. J.B.
Murphy, Rt. 6; aarence A. Rupard,
agi'iculturalinstitute, Mr. and Mrs. C.B.
Rupard, Rt. 3; and Gregory R. Sanford,
electrical engineering, Mr. and Mrs.
R.M. Sanford, Rt. 3 Hickory Hill, all
from MocksviUe.
Timothy W . Barnes, agricultural
institute, Mr. and Mrs. C.L. Barnes, Rt.
2; Charles F. Potts, no curriculum, Mrs.
M.E. Potts, Rt. 4; and Walter D. Scott,
mechanical engineering, Mr. and Mrs.
W.E. Scott; all from Advance.
Atlanta: Fun Within Reach
So far, our longeit-
lived president wat John
Adam t, who lived to ba nearly 91 years old.
W ilh Ihe ndvcnl of sum m ertine, the
nation's television screens are jamm ed
lo overflowing w ilh commercials for
beer, soft drinks, fru it Juices, fast foods,
coffee, tea, lawn care implements,
deodorants, soaps-you name il.
You name il, and chances are it wa^
shot in North Carolina.
Tiie North Carolind Film Office, part
of Ihe slate’s Department of Commerce,
estim ates lh a t national television
commercials produced here last year
had a $24 m illion impacl on the state’s
economy.
And 1981 could t)e even better.
Numbered among the commercials
produced at North Carolina locations,
often w ilh the assistance of the Film
O ffice, were three M ountain Dew
sequences - the ones w ilh kids leaping
hand-in-hand from a cliffside into a
sparkling pool, jousting on a log and
tum bling into a cool, bubbling creek, or
roiling a huge makeshift raft-like in-
nertube down a hillside into a lake - and
segments of Milwaukee beer, Sunbeam
bread. Mac Donald’s, Lipton Tea, Five
Alive F ruit Juice, Taster's Choice
Coffee, several deodorants, and a
number of new car commercials.
“ The number of com mercials and
amount of revenue brought into North
Carolina by com mercial production- by
companies from Chicago, New York,
P hilade lphia, Los Angeles, and
elsewhere - I ’m sure would astound
most North Carolinians,” says Film
Office director B ill Arnold.
“ I wouldn’t be afraid to wager that
you cannot go ji full day right now in
front of a television set without seeing
one or two national spots that were done
here,” he adds.
Arnold, whose office was created in
1980 by Governor Jim Hunt to encourage
more motion picture and television
production in the state as a revenue-
generating activity, says that more than
70 nations, TV com m ercials w ere
produced here in 1980 and that the totals
could be higher for 1981.
“ It’s a good source of revenue,” he
says. “ The average com m ercial costs
about $40,000 ~ some quite a bit more -
and when they bring a crew of eight or
ten technicians and models into a
vicinity, stay for three or four days, rent
equipment and props and so forth, they
usually leave the area quite a bit richer
when they leave.”
Further, he points out, those com
m ercials which are done here by local
production companies, such as Jef
ferson Productions of Charlotte, one of
the busier ones, even more of that big
money from out-of-state ad agencies and
product firm s winds up in the North
Carolina economy.
Although the revenue estimates are
not official ~ and accordinff to Arnold
Ihey could be higher than his officc
claims, because many companies are
not w illing to devulge inform ation on
profits - well over $3 m illion was spent
l)y production companies here in 1980
nnd economists generally agree that the
expenditures turn over as much as eight
limes before they slop circiilRling.
“ If you exclude New York and Los
Angeles, North Carolina is probably the
No. 1 location for the production of
television commercials in the country
now,” Arnold says. “ I ’m sure that
would come as a real surprise lo most
North Carolinains, but 1 believe it’s
true.”
The reasons? A very amendable
clim ate throughout most of the year, a
range and variety of terrain that runs
Ihe gamut from the highest mountains in
eastern America to 300 miles of
scacoast, architecture thal goes from
Colonial sallboxes to Ante Bellum
mansions to space-age structures of
glass, steel, and space unmatched
anywhere.All lhal, Arnold says, plus
technical equipment, know-how, and a
good working clim ate spells R-E-L-I-E-
F for crews used to working in the
steam y, overcrow ded, fra n tic c ir
cumstances that exist in the traditional
big city TV com mercial nervecenters.
“ They find they can come here, do
their work in a more relaxed and still
efficient manner, among friendly and
helpful locals who actually enjoy being
part of what they’re doing, do it In places
thal have been attracting thousands nf
vacationers for years, and usually come
in under budget,” he says. “ T hai’s a
hard combination to beat.”
Among the commercials produced
here this year, Arnold says, one of the
most impre'^sive is a series of 30 and 60-
second spots for “ The Associates” , by
the Chicago firm of W ilk & Brichta, Inc.,
starring Joe Garrogiola, which are
airing on ABC and CBS during 13 m ajor
golf tournaments televised nationally.
The events include the U.S. Open, Danny
Thomas Classic, B ritish Open, U.S.
Women’s Open, the Canadian Open,
PGA Championship, and the World
Scries of Golf.
“ Those spots were done in about seven
different North Carolina locals,” Arnold
says,” and the production company was
so impressed w ith the state they’ve
indicated they plan to come back w ilh
olher products.”
The TV com mercial business even
brings in international moneys, he says.
“ We’ve worked for two months w ith a
firm from Toronto, Canada, to arrange
for work perm its and im m igration
requirements to help them shoot an Irish
Spring soap commercial in western
Carolina this month.”
So, next tim e you see B ill Cosby or
P eter G raves or B arb ara Eden
promoting some fam ilia r product on the
TV screen, you m ight pause to reflect
that that fleeting 30M№cond pitch m ight
well be part of a growing industry that
last year contributed almost $1
m illion to North Carolina’s tax coffers.
Cooleemee Students Receive Physical Ability Awards
Thirty-one students from the 5th and
6th grades at Cooleemee received
awards for their physical ability on June
4, 1981.
TTie following received the Youth
Fitness A chievem ent A w ard. This
certificate verified that students scored
above the 50th percentile on all six tests.
Privilege License
Deadline Is July 1st
M r. M. S. G reene, Revenue Officer,
urges taxpayers who are liable for State
privilege license to apply before July 1,
1981. M r. Greene advises that the 1960
census is to be used where the applicable
rate of tax is based upon po|Ailation.
Applications for licenses, togetiier w ith
the co rre ct re m itta n ce , should be
mailed to the North CaroUna Depart
ment of Revenue, Post Office Box 2SOOO,
Raleigh, North Carolin 27640 or sub
m itted to the local North CaroUna
Department of Revenue Office. He also
advises that the penalty for failure to
comply wUl be 5 percent for each
delinquent month, or fraction thereof,
after July 1, 1981.
Students are: Tracy Veach, Joey Deal,
Shea G riffin , Lisa King, Marsha Allen,
Frankie Dobbins, Marsha BaUey, Lisa
Chatmon, Stacy Spry, Tracey Arnold,
Sidney King, Keith Hellard, Melanie
Clark, Tam m y Smoot, Jeff Graves, and
Karen McDaniel.
F ifte e n students received the
Presidential Fitness Aw ard and the
Presidential Patch. This verifies that
they scored above the 85th percentile on
all sbc tests. Students are; M att Hellard,
Starr Vogler, Dana Head. Carole Mc
Daniel, Julie Colem№ , Keith Beck,
Debbie Shaver, Bonnie Hilton, David
Swain, Joel Evans, Angie Stewart, Chris
AUen, Jeanie S ieltcn, Christy Cor
natzer, and Janeen James.
By winning these awards, students
demonstrated that they are good "a ll
around” athletes. Barbara Dwiggins
and Pat Tutterow, P. E. Aide and
Coordinator are hopeful that more wUl
vidn next year.
Uranium Fuel
A pound of enriched uranium fuel
contains nearly 3 mUlion tim es the
energy in a pound of coal, points out
National Geographic’s special energy
With summer months fast
approaching, thoughts are
tuniing to that traditional
American staple, the family
summer vacation.
While current economic
conditions have the average
American family watching its
budget, more and more
people are considering a mini
vacation to the entertainment
hub of the South; fun and
affordable, Atlanta.
CentraUy located and ac
tivity loaded, Atlanta is
rapidly emerging as the mini
vacation capital of the South
with its wide ranging menu of
all around attractions in
cluding everything from the
At anta Braves to everyone’s
perennial favorite. Six Flagç
Over Georgia.
A quick trip to Atlanta can
also take you to Stone
Mountain, Underground
Atlanta. North American
Soccer League action
featuring the Atlanta Chiefs,
the Grand Park Zoo, free
concerts in the parks, and
many other attractions, aU in
the AtlanU Area.
One of the most popular
destinations in the city’s
environs is Six Flags Over
Georgia. Only 15 minutes
from downtown Atlanta, Six
Flags is an annual fun mecca
for miUions and its more than
100 thrUI rides, shows and
activities remain un-
paraUeled in the South.
T h e m oney- saving
"Destination Atlanta”
program further reduces the
hassle of planning and
arranging an Atlanta jaunt by
putting together what is
probably the jost complete
and inexpensive travel-
entertainment package in the
country today.
“ Destination Atlanta”
offers complete family
vacation plans with savings
ranging up to an incredible 40
percent; including Six Flags
tickets, tickets to the Atlanta
Braves, coupons to some of
AUanU’s finest resUurants
and attractions, and lodging
at premium hotels such as
Marriott Interstate North,
Colony Square, Sheraton
Atlanta and the world’s tallest
hotel, the Peachtree Plaza.
Price for a one-day - one-
night package for two begins
as low as $S5.0S (plus tax).
Add a mere $33 to that figure
and two people can stay two
days and two nights for a
fraction of what it would
normaUy cost. CaU toU free
for reservations at l-MO-282-
0456 (in Georgia) and 1-800-
241-0802 (outside Georgia).
A mini-vacation makes
sense at any time.
S O U T H E R N G O L D & S I L V E R E X C H A N G E
W e ¥ ^ l p a y y o u t o p p r i c M f o r A L L
y o u r G O L D a n d S I L V E R v a l u a b l e s .
T h a t p r o b a b l y (d o e s n ’t m e a n m u c h t o J o h n .
B u t it (d o e s n ’t rea lly h a v e to .
N o t , a t least, u n t il h e ’s a little older.
R i g h t n o w , w e ’r e h e l p i n g h is (da(d set u p a
c o U e g e fim (d . A n d p l a n
fo r t h o s e u n e x p e c t e d
p r o b l e m s t h a t p o p
in t o e v e r y f a m i l y ’s life.
W e ’r e h e r e b e c a u s e J o h n ’s p a r e n t s a n d
a lot o f o t h e r p e o p l e a r o u n d N o r t h C a r o l i n a
like w h a t w e ’re d o i n g fo r t h e m .
“ Y o u ’re w h y w e ’re h e r e ,” A n d t h a t ’s
a fa c t t h a t w il l b e ju s t a s i m p o r t a n t w h e n
J o h n ’s g r o w n u p a s it is to(day.
W E B U Y C L A S S R IN G S
W e b u y y o u r G O L D : W a t c h e s , E a r r i n g s ,
N e c k l a c e s , B r a c e l e t s , C h a i n s , L o c k e t s ,
P i n s , C o i n s ,
( A n y t h i n g m a r k e d 1 0 K ,1 4 K ,1 8 K , 2 2 K , 2 4 K )
WE BUY WEDDING BANDS
I W E B U Y S I L V E R I
SILVER COINS
SILVER PQLLARS 1935 and Before STERLINGKENNEPY HALVES 1965; 66; 67; 68; 69
_________________ WAR NICKLES
1964 and before 1943; 44; 45 only
WE BUY COIN CQLLECTIOMS
W E O FFE R F R E E A P P R A IS A LS W IIH N O O B U G A T IO N .
LO C A LLY O W N ED A N D O P ER A T ED : 704-634-5641
Ringt-Charms- Bracelets-Coffee and Tea Services Spoont-Forki etc...
W ED .-FR I. 10 :3 0 -5 :3 0 - SAT. 1 0 -2SOUTHERN GOLD & SILVER EXCHANGE
COURT SQUARE in MOCKSVILLE, N.C.
(abovn Mocksville Sporting Goods)
«^Ssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssss
T
ПЛ\'1Г (ЧШ М У INITKl’KISI- RICORII. TIIUKSDAY. .ИINI И. Г'Н1IOCSolar Energy
My snaron Allred Decker
There is a lot of discussion
these days about solar
energy. In an effort to cut
energy costs, m ore
Americans are searching for
ways to utilize many forms of
renewable energy sources.
Solar energy is just one of
these sources.
When we talk about solar
energy it is im portant to
understand there are two
types of solar systems. If you
are considering solar energy
usage for your home, you
need to understand the types
so you w ill know which one
m ight be most practical for
the needs of you and your
fam ily.
A passive solar system
w orks w ith the n a tu ra l
surroundings. It ge nera lly
does not require moving parts
but it does require that a
portion of your house have
southern exposure to the sun,
w ith a m in im u m o f ob
struction from hills, trees or
buildings.
An active solar system
requires equipment. It may
include collectors, duct
dampers, piping, wiring and
thermal storage areas. At
present, the most feasible
active solar system appears
to be water heating. Active
solar water heating systems
can be Installed in both new
and existing homes.
Some active solar space
heating systems are being
used. However, because of the
cost involved, each home and
situation must be considered
on an individual basis to
determine solar energy
possibilities.
It seems that passive
systems are best applied
when building a new home to
help provide a portion of the
homes’ heating needs. There
are three basic types of
passive systems, which can
be used individually or in
combination, depending on
the type of home you are
building and on personal
preferences. All three types
require careful design so they
do not increase the summer
air conditioning load.
A direct gain system is one
of the types. Sunlight enters
the liVing space through a
south facing glass area such
as a large window or a sliding
glass door. This system can
often be used in existing
homes.
If you stop to think about it
you may have south facing
glass area In your home,
already, that can be utilized
for solar heating.
The second type of passive
solar system involves a
trombe wall. A trombe wall is
a vertical masonry wall with
a glassed area in front. The
sun’s rays are absorbed by
the wall, converted to heat,
then transferred to the U vi^
space, by conduction and
radiation.
The third passive solar
system includet an attached
henhouse or sunspace. An
enclosed space wltti south
facing vertical glass coUecU
and stores heat from Ihe sun.
llie heat is then transferred
by convection (natural air
movement) into the con
ditioned area of the home.
Oianges in the angle of the
sun from season to season
must be considered when
planning a passive solar
system. Overhangs must be
dnigned to ensure that low-
angle winter sun gets into the
house, while high-angle
summer sun is blocked to
prevent the home from
overheating.
As the U.S. seeks national
energy independence, many
new designs for heating and
cooling and energy saving are
being experimented with and
utilized. On occasion, in this
column, we will take a look at
some of these posslUlities.
Eye On Safety
Few American* realize it,
but each year over 5,000
eye injuries are caused by
mishaps in the yard and
garden. Pruning a bush can
send flying clippings into
the eye. A lawn mower can
hurl a stone into your eye
or someone else’s. Chemi
cals in pesticides, herb
icides and fertilizers can
severely burn your eyes.
Here, from the National
Society to Prevent Blind
ness, are some precautions
vou can take:
• Read thoroughly all
package labels and instruc
tion sheets that go with
gardening tools and chem
icals.
• Keep others away when
you’re mowing the lawn.
• Wear goggles or safety
glasses when you're doing
yard work.For more information,
toiitaci your btatt .Sucicty
to Prevent Blindness or the
National Society to Prevent
Blindness, 79 Madison
Avenue, New York, N.V.
IUU16.
WILLOW OAK CENTER WESTWOOD VILLAGEYADKINVILLE RD. CLE^''MONS N С ■"OCKSVILLE, N.C. 766-9156 634 6213
»«MMâClUtiCki
DRUGS
SÆAfv/c^ • seL£CT/os^¿S!A^ÚS
W E R E SE R VE T H E RIGHT
T O LIMIT Q U A N T IT IE S
N O D E A L E R S PLEASE
THURSDAY - SATURDAY
C o r D 2 pak
Duracell
С 110-12 exp.
C126-12exp
C135-12exp
Kodak Color
Print Film
Cards
for Dad
30 qt.
Ice Chest
Great For % Ш
The Races 1
Men’s
W rist
W atclies
your choice $159
12's
8mg.
Teidrin
allergy relief
medicine
24's
25%
our regular price
off
box of 50
Swisher Sweets
Cigars
67
There’s nothing like
a H allm ark Father’s
Day card to m ake
him feel special on
Sunday, June 21.
(§) 1980 Halin^ark Card& inc
destroy foot odor!
Super Tuff
Odor
Eaters
Our Reg. Price’2.18
67
H e « ’.
Tronolane
[^Suppositories
20’s
$ 4 4 7
No. 1230
ID'S
6fL
Folding
Rule
$199
Our Reg. Price
*2.37
loz.
Lanacone
creme for
itching and burning
Our Reg. Price
’1.94
$ 149
^O Z .
ynecort
feminine creme
medication
$199
No. 1250W
Son of a Gun
H air Dryer
by Clairol
Our Reg. Price’21.97
No. 7-2650
GE-FM/AM
Portabie
Radio
with two-way power
$1 8 ® ®
ЗРак
Rolaids
Antacid Tablets
(chewable)
reg.orwintergreen
Tangerine or Lime
TsoT
Mennen
Speed Sticic
anti-persp. deodorant
47
No. 2729
llpiece
raised panel
No. 567
2- Liter
Jug
keep it cold!
with wide mouth cap
$ 199
speedsSok
— ДЕХ.
Our
Reg. Price
’15.99
No.1876
6"-150 mm
$23**
Our Reg.
Adjustable
Wrench ■5.29
$
---
Tlor№Ctoj.J O irrrecto i
T h ».....Wom an*
Our Reg. Price’1.29
9 9 «
160Z.
Wella Balsom
Conditioner
$169
I^ H E P R ESC R IP TIO N P EO P LkQ v ' ;
^ -------P H A R M A C Y Ш
No. G12S0
V inyl
Hose
И "х Ш
S
N 0.4443
5 Piece
GulfUte
Charcoal
Starter
32oz.
С
M L *. *СНАЯС0А1STARTifl
Cricket
Lig liter
^STARTERill 99'
5 for $2.00 Leu $2.00 Refund _____From Gillette
Your Final Cost U
Screw driver
Pouch Set
With Wooden Handles
Our Reg. Price’4.99 $
702.
Johnsons
Baby
Shampoo
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Wc biwüoit Vill.iijf
('U'.mrions
/ЬЪ '.H ‘jü
Colony Ce dll'I
К mcj
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JU I Al lull.i A v
7 1 4 “)
Old Hwy 52 N
StHnleyville
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Hw> bb
WalKl-ilov.i
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Pert
Shampoof'i ^
I2ol
Rosem ilk;
Lotion
$ 187
Soccer may be a team sport, but many times the action comes down to one on one, as shown here.About 75 local youngsters withstcMxl 9 0 degree heat to bat
tle heads and feet on the field at South Davie junior high.
Soccer League
Youngsters In Uavie County are
learning to use their heads as well as
thelrfeet in a sport new to the area-
soccer.
About 75 children participated inatcial
season during May, sponsored by the
Mocksville Recreation Department.
Mike Gamer described the games
“We have had pretty good crowds and
the kids are enjoying it,” said Gamer.
“In the fall we are coming back with a
more organized season.”
The May season involved six teams,
two for children aged 54 years old and
four squads for youngsters 8-U years
old. The games were modified into two
IS minute halves. Next fall, standard SO
minute halves will be used.
The ball is put in the middle of he field
and the kids just go at it in most of the
games, but Gamer says he's surprised
at how many of the children are picking
up the soccer skills such as “heading” a
ball.
“How are they going to know what to
do, all the parents fretted," Gamer said.
His response was don’t worry, the kids
will figure out what to do.
“We wanted to give the kids a taste of
soccer and get them excited and talking
to their friends about the fall season,”
Garner said.
The fall season may be arranged so
that youngstera may participate In
football as well as soccer. The sport
popular throughout the world may soon
find enough footing in Davie County for
the schools to add it to their athletics as
many schools in surrounding counties
have done.
For now, soccer games in Davie may
wind up in ties, usually o-o, admitted
Gamer, although a high-scoring 4-1
game was played a few weekends ago.
But soon Davie County’s kids may be
learning to kick a ball as well as hitting a
baseball or throwing a football.
C t
Coach Janet Barbour briefs team members prior to the game. Barbour, who recently moved here from Virginia, says she has been coaching soccer for about 7 years.
A duster of players converges and one of (hem makes contact with the hall, with his head.Heads are just as unportant as feet in soccer, as any player will attest to.
Nick Slogick explain« strategy tu the buyii (and girls) on hi» team.
eiAVIB e O U N T V
Feature 1-D June II, 1981
Story by G. Dale Neal ■ Photos by Garry Foster
:i) 1)Л\'П ('(ШЖЛ' I NTl UrUISI; KICOKI), TIIUR.SOAY. JUNI' II, 1>)81
O b i t u a r i e s Social Security
HENRY JUNIOR MYERS
Henry Junior Myers, 60, of
Sheffield Drive, Mocksville,
died nl Dnvie County Hospital
Saturday morning.
The funeral was conducted
at 2:30 p.m. Monday nt New
Hope Baptist Tabernacle by
the Rev. Norman Frye, the
Rev. Harold Tuttle, and the
Rev. David Barney. Burial
was in the church cemetery.
M r. Myers was born Sep
tember 14, 1920, in Davidson
County to Frank and Annie
Bell Cox Myers. He had spent
most of his life in Davie
County and was w ith Hanes
Corporation for 27 years.
He was a m em ber of New
Hope Baptist Tabernacle and
is survived by his wife, Mrs.
Gladys Myers Myers of the
hom e; three daughters,
F reida M ac R obdins of
M ocksville, Kathey Raynee
M yers and T rin a Lynn
Joyner, both of the home; four
sons, James Henry, Herman
Eugene, and Bobby Gray
Myers, a ll of M ocksville, and
Charles Franklin M yers of
New Hope; eight g ra n d
children.
MRS. M IN N IE JOHNSON
M rs. M innie B. Johnson, 94,
of G reenhaven N ursing
Center died there Saturday.
Funeral was held Tuesday
a t H anes-Lineberry N orth
E lm Street Funeral Home
w ith the Hev. Charles H.
Reckard officiating. Burial
was in Green H ill Cemetery.
She was a na tive of
Rockingham County, member
of F irst Presbyterian Church
and life member of Eastern
Star.
Surviving are daughters.
Miss Edna L. Patterson of
Greensboro, M rs. Rebecca P.
Burton Ferrineton of P faff-
lown; son, C D. Patterson of
W ilm ingto n; sister, M rs.
E M . Frye of Greensboro;
brother, W E. Anderson of
R eid sville ; seven grand
ch ild re n ; 15 g re a t
grandchildren.
Four Corner
News
M r. and Mrs. Robert Davis
and Mrs. Ina Mae Collette
attended the hom ecom ing
Sunday at Wesley Chapel
United Methodist Church.
M r. M ark Desnors of Fort
Lauderdale, Florida and M r.
Danny Desnors of Mocksville
visite d th e ir grandparents
M r. and Mrs. Robert Davis
during the weekend.
L. S. Shelton J r. was
Monday night supper guests
of M r. and Mrs. C lifford
Fleming.
Mrs. Von Shelton and Mrs.
.lohnsie Shelton visited M r.
and Mrs. Clarence Baity, M r.
and Mrs. C. N. Baity Sunday
afternoon.
M r. and Mrs. Tom Mock
and children were supper
guests of M r. and Mrs. Zeno
Adams.
Hom ecom ing At
Pleasant View
P leasant V iew B aptist
C hurch w ill observe
homecoming Sunday, June 14.
Lunch w ill be served at the
County Line F ire Department
im m e d ia te ly fo llo w in g
morning worship service.
Revival w ill begin Monday,
June 15, and services w ill be
held each evening at 7:30.
Guest speaker w ill be the Rev.
Bobby Russell.
The public is invited to
¡ M i
1 have been ge tting
disability checks nearly 5
years and would tell you right
away if my condition im
proves or If I work (I wish this
were the case). I don’t see
why m y case has to be
reviewed?
Congress passed a law that
w ill rp q u irr every diaabled
bonellclary who does not have
a condition considered per
manent (o be reviewed al
least once every 3 years, if
your condition has not Im
proved since you started
receiving benefits, chances
are your paym ents w ill
continue.
I’m on M edicare and I
would like to get a second
opinion on surgery that m y
doctor has recom m ended.
How can I find out whom I
should go to?
There are a number ot
things you can do. You can
ask your own do ctor to
recommend someone, or you
can contact your local
medical society. In addition,
you can get a booklet,
“ T h in kin g about having
surgery .... think about get
ting a second opinion” at any
social security office.
I don’t know if I w ill go back
to school this fall. It depends
on how much money I make
this sum mer. On the form I
received from social security
recently, I indicated that I
would return to school, and I
understand that m y social
security checks w ill continue
through the sum mer. What
happens if I don’t?
If you don’t go back to
school, the payments you
received during the summer
w ill be an overpaym ent, and
you’ll owe the Government
money. If you are not sure you
w ill return to school, you
should let social se cu rity
know »0 your checks can be
stopped, ir you do decide to
return to Hchool, you can
receive back payments for the
summer months.
My two sons w ill be working
a.» waiters at a summer
resort. They know that they
must report their tips for
social se cu rity purposes.
What can they do to find out
how their tips w ill help them
gain social security protec
tion?
Vou m ight call the social
security office for a booklet
called "F o r your future." It
was w ritten especially for
young people Just starting to
work and tells about how
social security protects young
workers.
W hy doesn’t M edicare
cover homemaker services?
Medicare Is lim ited by law
to the services which are
necessary for the diagnosis
and treatm ent of an illness or
injury. ’This excludes general,
custodial care.
Home Sale Has Big Effect On Community
The sale of an Cxistins home local flovernm cnt, w hich rrrini<mtB nf h nm a oolar hnniP.ciAlPRi'OniiMWU'nT munr
Cooleemee
Granville Spry is
recuperating in Rowan
Memorial Hospital where he
had surgery Monday.
Rob Hampton is a patient in
Davie Hospital with a broken
hip which resulted from a
recent fall at his home.
Sam Carter of North Myrtle
Beach continues to undergo
treatment in Grand Strand
General Hospital, Myrtle
Beach where he has been a
patient for the past week. He
is in Room 331. He is formerly
of Cooleemee.
Lawrence Miller remains
seriously ill in the Coronary
Care Unit of Rowan Memorial
Hospital where he has been a
patient for the past several
-days-;---------------—
The .sale of an existing
has m any far-re aching
economic effects on a com
m unity - far more than most
people would imagine, states
Ihe Davie Counly Board of
Realtors.
For instance, before a sale,
owners spend an average of
$500 to $1,000 to get the home
ready for sale. A l the tim e of
Ihe sale expenditures of
between $2,500 and $3,500 per
home arc generally made.
D uring the firs t year of
ownership, the proud new
owner w ill probably spend
from $2,000 to $2,500.
Therefore, for every 100
existing homes sold, a
com m unity reaps fro m
$500,000 to $700,000 in
economic benefits. And these
figures do not include the
earnings of re a l estate
practitioners and mortgage
lenders.
P rior to a sale, homeowners
generally try to prepare their
home so that prospective
buyers w ill see it in the best
possible light. Many home
improvem ent and clean-up
jobs are finished in the hope of
attracting and expediting a
sale. M ajor recipients of this
spending activity (estimated
at between $500 to $1,000)
include painters; hardware
and building supply stores;
carpenters, roofing, plum bing
and electrical contractors;
rug and drapery cleaners;
and appliance repair firm s.
Firm s that benefit from the
$2,500 to $3,500 spent at the
tim e of the sale include
m oving com panies, re al
estate ap praise rs; te rm ite
inspectors; s tru c tu ra l in
spection firm s; surveyors;
property insurance and title
iiisuram'.(if.ompanii!«; and Ihif-
governm cnt, w hich
benefit from fees and taxes
paid. Expenditures at the
tim e of the sale generally
average 3 to 5 percent of the
selling price of the home,
according to the Economics
and Research Division of the
N ational A ssociation of
Realtors.
In addition, there is a strong
line between buying a home
and the subsequent, above-
average purchase of goods
and service. In the 12 months
follow in g a transaction,
homebuyers outspend long
term hom eowners by a
substantial m a rg in . These
after-sale expenditures -
$2,000 to $2,500 - range from
m ajor capital improvements
and the purchase of fu r
nishings to sm all household
and yard items.
The im pact of home sales on
a com m unity is even more
staggering when con
sideration is given to the
subsequent rounds of spen
ding which occur when the
Ellenbure
Reunion Sunday
The annual E lle n b u rg
Reunion w ill be held Sunday,
Juni; 14, at the Ridenhour
Arbor on Center Street E xt.,
Cooleemee at 1 p.m. A ll
descendants and friends of the
late Joe Ellenburg are invited
to attend.
Bible School
Vacation Bible School at
Davie B aptist Tabernacle w ill
be held June 15, through June
19, each evening from 7 until
9. This w ill be for ages one
through adults.
The public il)' invited to
recipients of home sales
spending (i.e. m overs,
painters, roofers) take their
increased earnings and spend
them on a wide range of goods
and services. Although d if
ficult to pinpoint, the National
Association of R ealtors
estimates that such spending
toials an additional $I to $1.5
million.
Adding it all up, the sale of
100 existing homes can
generate nearly $1.5 to $2
m illion in new business for
merchants, service men and
women and the country’s
economy. Taking this into
consideration, it's easy to
understand why an existing
Cooleemee
Senior Citizens
The Cooleemee Senior
Citizens held their regular
meeting Monday with 37
persons in attendance, in
cluding three visitors; Sid
Smith, Bill Waller and Jerry
Morris.
At the conclusion of the
business, Sid Smith en
tertained the club with his
jokes.
The club will hold their next
scheduled meeting Monday,
June 22, at 3 p.m, at the
Ridenhour Arbor. ’The oc
casion will be a fish fry,
chicken stew and Bingo party
and all persons having bir
thdays in June will be
honored. Everyone is asked to
bring one dollar, a bowl and
spoon.
Refreshments were served
following the adjournment.
"A man hai not «een a
thing who hai not felt it."
________Henry Piwid Thorfau—
home sales wmixnicni must oe
considered when evaluating a
c o m m u n ity ’s eco nom ic
health.
M ini-Retreat
The Seventh Annual United
M ethodist W om en’s M in i
Retreat, was held June 1, at
L ib e rty U nited M ethodist
Church, with 145 attending.
The Retreat began in the
F ellow ship H all w ith a
covered dish supper. The
tables were decorated by the
Liberty U.M.W., with loaves
of bread and ivy. H ie in
vocation was given by Sue
C^ve.
A fter the meal, everyone
moved to the Sanctuary for
the p rogra m , title d “ The
Bread of Life .” ’The physical
bread was presented by F irkt
Church U.M.W .; the spiritual
bread was presented by
Salem U.M.W. Rev. P hilip
Cole, assisted by D r. Wilson
Nesbitt and Rev. Alec Alvord,
adm Snisterefl w ojy v.oni-
munion at the close of the
program. As each woman
came forw ard to receive the
Communion Elements, she
also received a sm all loaf of
bread. As they broke this
bread at home, they were to
be rem inded of the sacrificial
giving of Christ Jesus for
everyone.
Special m usic was
presented throug hou t the
program by the Bethlehem,
Salem , and F irs t C hurch
women. P ianist was Lettie
S m ith, U shers w ere the
F a rm in g to n and C enter
U.M.W.
A Love O ffering for the
Chapels fo r the M e n ta lly
Handicapped was received in
the aiftátiht ¿f m / A I. '------------
CAUDELL
LUMBER CO.
1238 Bingham Street.
Mocksville, N .C .
P H O N E 624-2167
DAVIE TRACTOR
& IMPLEMENT
CO.
' Ford Farming-Sales and
Service.
N ew HoUand Equipment
P H O N E 634-5969 ^
A Complete Repair ■
MARTIN
HARDWARE &
General Mifse.
Feeds, Dry Goods
Groceries, Fertilizer
P H O N E 6 3 4 2128
EATON
FUNERALHOME
328 N . Main Street
.MocksviUe, N .C.
P H O N E 634-2148
aA. SEAFORD
LUMBER CO.
Jericho Road
MocksvUle, N .C.
PHONi-: 634-5148
J.P. GREEN
MILLING
CO., INC.
D A IS Y F L O U K
We CustoiH Bteud
524 Depot Stieei
P H O N E 6 3 4 2 1 2 6
CALAHALN FRIENDSHIP BAPTIST CH. Rev. Graham Wooten, Pastor5.5. 4:00 a.m.Wor»hip 10;00a.m.Shefneld-Calahaln Community Building
•iSHURCH OF GOD, Cooleemee, N.C.
NO^CREEK PRIMrriVETlAfTIST CB.-
SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST
Miming5.5. 9:30 a.m.Worship 11:00 a.m.
GREEN HILL BAPTIST CHURCH
Located two milei o ff the Highway
64. Green Hill Road.
1 ^ . SXeve Hedgecock, Paitor
S 5 .' 9:30a.ni.
Worihlp 10:30 a.m.Evening 7:00 p.m.
Wedneiday 7:00 p.m.
MOCKSVILLE WESLEYAN CHURCH
Rev. Bob Scott
Hospital St., Mocksville
5.5. 9:45 a.m.
Worship 11:00 a.m.
Evening 7:00 p.m.
ADVANCE BAPTIST CHURCH
CEDAR CREEK BAPTIST CHURCH
FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
Rev. George Auman5.5. 10:00 a.m.
Worship _ 11:00 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
5.5. 9:45 a.m.
Worship 11:00 a.m.
Evening 7:20 p.m.
CORNATZER UNITED METH. CHURCH
UNION CHAPEL U. METHODIST CHURCH
ELBAVILLE U. METHODIST CHURCH
OAK GROVE U. METHODIST CHURCH
CENTER UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
SALEM UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
LIBERTY UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
ADVANCE UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
6ETHL%HEM U. METHODIST CHURCH
HARDISON U. METHODIST CHURCH
TRINITY BAPTIST CHURCH
Gene Blackburn, Pastor '
Roule 4, MocksviUe
5.5. 10:00 a.m.
Worship 11:00 a.m.livening yXUp.iii.
Wednesday 7:00 p.m.
A.M.E. ZION METHODIST CHURCH
DULIN METHODIST CHURCH
COOLEEMEE U. METHODIST CHURCH
Rev. Alton Fitzgrrald
DUTCHMAN CREEK BAPTIST CHURCH ’
llü l'l, UAPi ISl 1 ABtRNACLK Nornmn S. I'lye, Fasti>r
5.5. 9:45 a.m
Wursliip lU:45a.ni.
livant^vlislic 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday 7:30 p.m.
HOLY CROSS LUrHERAN CHURCII
S S. 9:45 a.m.
Wuisliip ll:üüa.in.
C ALVAPvY BAPTIST CHURCHJim Grydei, Pastor
Rt. 4, Mocksville, Hwy. 6Ü1 S.5.5. 10:60A.M .WofsJup 11:00 A.M.Evening 7:00P.M.Wediiesday 7:00 pjbl.
1 AKMINfi ION ItAPl lST CHURCH '5.5. 10:00 a.m.Murn. Wurship ll:U 0a.tii.Yuutii'Iraining Uniun 7:00p.m.
WHAT IS WORSHIP?
What is worship? Is it entering a dignified room set aside for religious services? Is it going through
a set order of scripture readings and prayers in unison with others?
Jesus said, " . . . the Son of man came not to be ministered unto, but to minister." We worship when
we imitate Him. He served-He ministered. Sitting silently, speaking softly and singing sweetly may be
the very opposite of true worship.
To the woman at the well Jesus said, " ... True worshippers shall worship the Father in spirit and
in truth." When that invisible, immortal part of you-your soul-meets the invisible, immortal God,
that is worship, and that alone ... in spirit, and in truth!-Paul M. Stevens
ATTEND CHURCH THIS WEEK
■^■f + ■^ + + + + + ■^-^ + + + + + + +
OComnunHv AdvMWni 1976
ТЫ» column btlonp «0 our rMdtra. W« will Mctpt рг1п1«Ы« iMrra »nd piy f 1.00 for «geh it*m publi»h«d. In ttw сш о* quoutlont, th* rtsm« ofth*iuthor«ndt»wthlc«id|>ublit)ior oltfwboeÉ myiibepm. AòdrMittms to "God’s Fivt Minuta," to« 12167. Pori Worth, T*k. 7l11t
MOCKSVILLEINTERDENOMINATIONALCHURCH
S.S. 9:45 a.m.Mornitie Worship ll:00a.ni.
Radio nogram 1:00 p.m. WDSL Youth Service 6:30 p.m.Mid Wk. Bible Stud;' by Mrs. Knox Johnston 7:00 p.m. Pastor - Rev. Lindsay Walters
TURRENTINE BAPTIST CHURCH Rt. 7, Mocksville, Rev. Judge Johnson5.5. 9:45 afm. ilorrdng Worship 11:00 p.m.Evening Worship ,7:00p.m .Wed. Prayer Mtg. 7:00 p.m.
COOLEEMEE EPISCOPAL CHURCH
OF THE GOOD SHEPHERD Rev. Willi» M. Rosenthal, Priest
Sermon 9:30 a.m.
5.5. 10:50 a.m.
BEAR CREEK BAPTIST CHURCH
REDLAND PENTECOSTAL HOLINESS
Rev. Paul C. Ledbetter
S5. 10:00 a.m.
Worship 11:00 a.m.
Lifeliners 6:00 p.m.
Evangelistic 7:00p.m.
Wednesday 7:00 p.m.
FARMINGTON METHODIST CHURCH Worship 1st Sun. 10 a.m.
3rd Sun. 11 a.m.
5.5. 1st S un.ll a.m.
2, 3,4 Sunday 10 a.m.
WESLEY CHAPEL METH. CHURCH
Worship 1st Sun. 11 a.m.
3rd Sun. 10 a.m.5.5. • 3rd Sun. 11 a.m.
1, 2,4 Sunday 10 a.m.
ThltlMture it pubfithad in the interett of ■ batter community, and ii made pottiMe by these tpontort who balieve in building chirKter.
ST. FRANCIS OF ASSISI CHURCH
Sat. evening anticipatory Mass - 5 o.m. Simday Morniog lOa.m*.
Rectory No. 634-2973
NORTH Ma in s t. c h u r c h o f c h r is t
Donald Ftccman, Minister
5.5. -■ 10:00 a.m.
Worship II :00 a.m.
Evening 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday 7:30 p.m.
t h e ep isc o pa l c h u r c h
Canon C. Nichols, Pastor Fork, N C.
Ascesion 10:00 a.m.
Worship 11:00 a.m.
Wednesday 7:15 p.m.
LIBERTY WESLEYAN CHURCH
Kenneth Davis, Pastor
MOCKSVILLI- PENTECOSTAL Holiness, H. Carry Yeatts, Minister
5.5. 10:00 a.m.Worship 11:00 a.m.
Evangelislit- 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday 7:30 p.m.
MACEDONIA MORAVIAN CHURCH
Rev. John Kapp, Paslor
5.5. 10:00-d.m.Woisliip 11:00 a.m.
Youth I-Vi. 6:30 p.m.
Evening 7:30 p.m.
GRI I N MI ADOWS BAPTIST CHURCH
Rev. David E. Robeils5.5. iO:OUa.in.
Wotsliip 11:00 a.m.
b.T.U. 6:30 p.m.l-venint; 7:30 p.1(1.
Wednesday 7:30 p.m.
IIUNTSVILLI: Mi:THODIST CHURCH Worsliip 2nd Sun. 10 a.m.
4lh Sun. 11 a.m.
•CLEMENT GROVE CHURCH OF GOD
I.W. Ijames, Pastor
5.5. 10:00 a.m.
V'orship 1:00 p.m. Evening
Wednesday 8:00 p.m.
View b e t h e l as s e m b ly o r g o d5.5. 10:00 a.m.
Morning Worship 11:00 a .m.
Evening Worship 7:00 p.m.Rotary Hut, Rev. Jerry Carr
IJAMES b a p t is t CHURCH
5.5. 9:45 a.m.
Warship 11:00 a.m.
JERICHO CHURCH Ol CHRIST
Jericho Road-Office 492-5291
iHarding Lowry, Minister
MOUNT OLIVE METHODIST CHURCH Worship 2nd Sun. 11 a.m.
4th Sun. 10 a.m.
5.5. 4th Sun. 11 a.m.
1,2,3 Sundays 10 a.m.
COMMUNITY BAPTIST CHURCH
Gladstone Raod
'Community Baptist
Giiidstone Ruad
•S. 10:00 a.m.
Woiüiip 11:00 a.m.f
GOSPEL BAPTIST CHURCH
Rl. 5, MocksvUle, N.C. 27028
5.5. 10 a.m.
Woiship Service 11a.m.
Sun. Evening Woisliip 7:00 p.m.
Uibk Sludy Wed. Evening 7:00 p.m.
Rev. A.E. Gentry, Pasioi
BIXBY PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
5.5. 10:00 a.n,.
Morning Worship i 1:00 a.m.
Evening Wotsiiip 7:00 p.m.
P.obeil L. Crews, Paslor
IJAMES CROSS RDS. BAPTIST CHURCH Corner of Ijames Church Rd. & Sheffield Rd. Jimmy Hinson, Interim Pastor5.5. 9:45 a.m.Worship 11:00 a.m.Evening 6:00 p.m.Wednesday 7:30 p.m.
BLAISE BAPTIST CHURCH' Rev. Jimmy Martin, Pastor
V S.S. 9:50 a.m.
Worship 11:00 a.m.
Evening 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday 7:30 p.m.
CHESTNUT GROVE U. METHODIST
BAILEY’S CHAPEL U. METHODIST
FULTON UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
BETHEL UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
SMITH GROVE U.METHODIST CHURCII
ZION UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
NEW UNION U. METHODIST CHURCH
EATON’S BAPTIST CHURCH
5.5. 10:00 a.m.
Worship 11:00 a.m.
Training U. 7:00 p.m.
DAViE BAPTIST TABERNACLE Fork Bixby Road
5.5. 9:45 a.m.
Worship 11:00 a.m.
Evening 7:30p.m.
Wednesday 7:30 p.m.
JERUSALEM BAPTIST CHURCH
5.5. 10:00 a.m.
Worship 11:00 u.m.
Evening 7:00 p.m.
SHI1.0H BAPl 1ST CHURCII
CHURCH Of- IHE LIVING GOD, Bixby
CHURCH Ol- GOD OF PliOPHI-rY Rev. Cliaries King Route 4, Mocksville (Epheaus) 634-33925.5. 10 a.m.Morn Worsliip 11 a.m.Sun.Niglit 7:30pm ,Wed. Nigh' 7:30 p.m.
CONCORD UNITED Ml THODIST CHURCH
CLARKSVII.Ll PENTECOSTAL HOLINI SS Rev. Albert Genlle
Route 5, MocksvUle
S.S. 10:00 a.in.
Worsliip 11:00 a.m.
FIRST BAFriST CHURCH
CooleemeeRev. L . L « Wiiiilock, Paslor
5.5. 7:30 a.m. ii<J:45 a.m
ChUdrens Church 11a.m.
Worship 11a.m.Evening 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday 7:30 p.m.
FARM&
GARDEN
SERVICE, INC.
961 YadkinviUe Road
P H O N E 634-2017 or
634-5964
FOSTER-RAUCH
DRUG CO.
Wilkesboro Street
P H O N E 634-2141
FERREE’S
MOBILE HOME
SERVICE
Rt. 5, Box 320-B
MocksviUe, N .C.
'(7 0 4 ) 492-5636
JEFFCO
CO., INa
Route 1, Advance, N .C .
Our staff and employees
encourage you to attend the
church of your choice.
SHEFFIELD
LUMBER &
PALLET
COMPANY
Route 6, Box 153
MocksviUe, N .r .
P H O N E 492-5565
COBLE
LIME&
FERTILIZER
SERVICE
Cuoleeiuee, N.C.ÍÍwy. Í1Ü1
liueinetis Fiioiie 284-4354
Hon e Phone 284-2782
student Evangelism Team At Green Meadows Church
A
\ á à i
David Cox
Dana Warren
Christie Norman
Green Meadows Baptist
Church will host a student
evangelism team from the
Baptist SUte Convention of
North Carolina beginning
Friday, .June 12, through
Ibursday, June 18. The team
will be (reaent to share in
■pedal activittes with youth,
a series of revival services,
and special disciplineship
training for the youth of
Green Meadows. Members of
the team are David Cox, a
student at Gardner-Webb
College from Danville,
Virginia, Dana Warren, a
student at Meredith College
from Edisto Beach, South
Cartdina, and Christie Dor
man of Wake Forest
University from Raleigh,
North Carolina. Ibese three
young people are part of a
grolф Ы nine college students
working throughout North
Cardina to lead the churches
in similar activities.
On Saturday, June 13,
beghmlng at 5 p.m. there will
be a Youth-Adult SoftbaU
Game at the diurch followed
by a fellowship meal and a
time of inspiration. Then
Sunday morning, Sunday
night and Monday throu^
Wednesday evenings, the
team will lead the church in a
special series of revival
services featuring tbe youth
choir and the special gifts of
the team. Monday through
Wednesday mornings, there
will be special classes for the
youth in developing their
Christian lives and com
mitments at 10 a.m. daily.
David Cox, the preacher for
the team has been very active
in Focus Teams, weekend
revival teams from Gardner-
Webb College, which have
traveled in several southern
states. He has also led
weekend revival meetings
and retreats in several North
Carolina churches. During the
summer of 1980, David served
as youth director at Calvary
Baptist Church in Salisbury.
Dana Warren, music
director and soloist for the
team is a rising senior at
Meredith College in Raleigh.
Her desire is to be a church
O E T A M O i r - T I M E
j o t n u r n n
1 0 U R S C H D U L I .
Army Reserve duty takes
jusi one weekend a montt» and
two weeks eacli year, so you can
start to leam a skill and earn
an income during high school,
if you qualify. During the sum
mer. you train at an Army post.
Earn over $ 1.100 your first
year The Aririy Reserve is good
preparation for college or a
full-time job Call your Army
Reserve represenutive. in the
Yellow Pages under "Recruiting'.
music director, and she has
already directed music for
one church. She has studied
piano for over ten years and
has al.so studied voice. Dana
has been a soloist and
m em ber of the M eredith
Chorale. She has also served
as a counselor at Camp
Mundn Vista near Asheboro.
C hristie Dorman is a rising
senior at W ake Forest
U niversity where she majors
in mathem atics. At Wake she
is involved w ith the Baptist
Student Union, the Christian
Activities Council, and has
served across the state on Lay
Renewal Teams. She has
studied piano for nine years,
has had voice training, and
has served for five years as a
re g u la r accom panist. Her
involvem ent w ith local
churches has kept her w ilh an
up-to-date perspective on
much needed m inistry in local
congregations.
Everyone in the area is
inviled to share in these
im p o rta n t m in is trie s . F o r
further inform ation, please
call 998-3022.
JMVIl. (Ol M N I M l Kl'Ki.s: KirORI). TIH'RSD.A'i’. II'M i: Г1Ч1 .11)
Special Criminal Justice Program
A GOAL Orientation Session for
prospcflivc (’rim inni .Justice students
w ill be cnnducled by Gardner-Webb
(^)lk'gr personnel on Thursday, June 11,
ill 7:(M) p.m. in Riech Auditorium ,
Davidson Counly Community College.
M aterials and inform ation w ill be
shared.
All iiidiviiluuls who have or arc
com pleling an A.A. or A.A.S. Degree or
who have oomnleletl Iwo years of rolloee
in a senior college in C rim inal Justice
are encouraged lo attend the meeting.
For more inform alion, contact the
Dean of Continuing Kducation and
Summer School, Gardner-Webb College,
Hoiling Springs, North Carolina 28017,
telephone (704 ) 4,14-2.361, or M r. Mike
Seuberling, Chairman. C rim inal Justice
Program , Davidson County Community
College, Le xin glon . N orih C arolina
272i»2. lelephone (704 ) 249-81B6.
Sharrie Campbell
f u i m ; attf/n //ft .¡ггнгу ///ifjfr/',
o n r / fm i/ y nn<itt
CAROLINA
TIRE CO.
10 DAY
T IR E S A U E
Sale Ends Sat. June 20th
Л R E S ! T I R E S !
;Stacks and stacks of
tires with pricetags
that are sure to please
your pocketbook!
P f k e d l ò G ^
P Œ Y S T E E L
Ш £
$ 3 9 ”
SaveBigOn New Car
Steel Belled Radial
Whitewalls
BR7813 or P185/80RI3Plus $L94 or $L97 KLT.
BR78-13F1TS SOMEMODELS OF:Skyhawk Capri SunblrdSkylark Bobcat Pho«nixCitation Starfire AstreOmni Omega DatsunColt Horizon MazdaPinto Arrow Op«lMustanc] Champ Toyota
Custom Polysteel Radial...
The Tire That Keeps Its Feet
Even In The Rain
■ Gas-saving radial-ply construction• Sure-footed wet traction tread
• Sirength and penetration resistance of double steel cord belts
• The smooth ride, resilience, and durabilitv of polyester cord body
• Wide rain-channeling tread grooves for resistance to hydroplaning
With recappable old tire
Big Savings On These Whiteuxill Sizes Too!
Power Streak-^
Drive it With Confidence!
f 2 6
A78-13 WhIUwill plus $1.54 FET.
• The strength and resilience of polyester cord• All-around traction with a road-gripping tread• The performance dependability of bias-ply construction i• No annoying tire thump, even when first staining out
H u n y ...B u ¡) N ow l
Everything O n First
C o m e, First Served
Basis.
SIZE REGULARPRICE WHITEWALL SALE PRICE PlusFET
B78xl3 $37.80 $28.00*$1.65
E78x'14 $44.00 $32.75* $1.79
F78xl4 $46.25 $34.50*$2.19
G78xl4 $47.75 $35.50* $2.34
G78xl5 $49.25 $36.50* $2.42
H78xl5 $51.50 $38.50* $2.64
Other Sizes Sale Priced, Too!
Use Your “Charge it”
Power to Save on
Tires for Your
Car or Light
Truck!
* And useable
old tire
Sale Prices
End Sat.
N ig h t June 20th
Front-End A lignm ent
and FREE Tire Rotation
irunt wheel drive and Chevette«» e»lfd.
• Inspect ancJ rotatu ¿ill fouf lirus • Set casloi, catnbtsf. and too-in ti proper aligninont • Inbpeci suspen Sion and sluenng sy&turns • Mos U.S cafs. some imports
I Addition«!endit nctditi‘
s o verh iu l r.eeded 'W h««l Lyltnder^
И peeded Wloit
U S c«f^, mo&t Datsun, Toy
o l*. vtv*H yar«uii(. se ivic « oMen
n«edcd «nd. when rtcu irc d , ltd Le letum m enaed <or e h i( le 0p er« ti0''
2-W HEEL FRONT DISCInstall new front brake pads and grease seals • Resurface front rotors• Repack front vvheel bearings • 'Inspect calipers and hydraulic system, add fluid. (Does not includo roar wheels). oA —
4-W HEEL DRUM Inslall new brake linmg. all 4 wheelsl• New front grease seals • Resurfacel drums • Repack front bearings • *ln-| spec! Itydraulic system
HCLFS INSURE aUiCK STMTS
flectrunic engine, chargintt, and stattin« ^y^tems analy&is • Install new pomtb, plugs, condeniter, rotor Set dwell «itid timing • Adju&t carDuietor • Includes Oatsun, Toyota. VW, and light ;rucli& ^
iniludefc lisicO paas dnd labor • ^ no extra chctfge fur ail conditioneo '3 ii'ss frjf electronic ignition
ENGINE
TUNE-UP$ ^ |S 8
4-cyl
3 W A Y S T O C H A R G E .
O U R I N S T A N T C R E D I T P L A N
M A S T E R C H A R G E - V I S A
T
^ C a r o l i n a T i r e
V A n i r i ^ W I I I В
' 6-cy tt-cyl
9 6 2 Y A D K I N V I L L E R O A D
M \ O C K S V I L L E ^ N .C .
P H O N E 6 3 4 - 6 1 T 5
40 DAN'II СОиМЛ' INIIKI'RISI KUORI) IIII KSDA'l H'M 11. ГЖ1
Annual Methodist Conference In Session At Lake Juna Luska This Week
Clay Phelps, (R) nine-year-old son of Mr. and Mri. Tom Piielpi and iiii
cousin, ten-year-old Bobby Davis who is visiting from Kannapolis, iove exploring the woods near Clay’s home on Route 3, Moclisviiifc. Tiiis
huge tree is actuuiiy three trees which have grown together and ioolts as if another three trees have grown from the branches. (Photo by Jim
Barringer)
Reach-Out Evangelism
Jim m y and M a rgaret
Hinson of Reach Gut
Evangelism M inistries, Inc.
conducted a Reach Out
R e v iv a l P r e - r e v iv a l
Preparation Meeting in the
C alvary B aptisI Church,
Salisbury, N. C., on Saturday
evening. May 2. Some thirty
church leaders including the
Pastor, Rev. J. A. Richard
son, Jr. met at 7:30 p.m.
E vangelist Jim m y Hinson
shared inform ation regarding
Prayer, P ublicity, Visitation,
Music, Special Nights and
F're-reviva! fellowships for
children, youth and adults.
This meeting was held in
preparation for the Reach Out
Ki'vival lo l>e conducted in the
('liur|h , May 17 24-81.
Reach Out Revival services
w ere conducted in the
West view Baptist Church of
Shelby, N.C., May 3-7. Ser
vices began on Sunday
morning with the Hinsons
meeting w ith children grades
•-fi at 9:45 a.m. and then the
youth grades 7-12 at 10:30
a.m. The first revival service
al 11:00 a.m. 228 present for
Sunday School and more for
the revival service. Sunday
evening was the Sunday
School at N ight. Monday
evening the children came at
6:00 p.m. for hot dogs and
fellowship with the Hinsons
and Sally Sunshine the
muppel. Tuesday evening was
Youth N iglii and they met
w ilh the liinsons ai C:UU p.m.
fo r pizza supper and
fellow sh ip sharing lim e .
W ednesday evening was
Fam ily Night w itii covered
dish supper and fellowship
tim e beginning at 6:00 p.m.
Thursday evening Neighbor
Night and high attendance.
The average attendance for
the services was 222. There
w ere four people m aking
decisions to accept Jesus
Christ, requesting baptism
and church membership, and
many other decisions during
the revival to live and witness
for Jesus Christ in their
homes, church and com-
m utiity. The pastor is Rev.
Jerry King, and Uie m inister
of music is Eddie Rackley.
O F JOBS
With our unemployment rale around seven percent
now, many Americans con
sider il a good job that a
iiuniher of good jobs are
available that would not be
otherwise, if not for our
gooci-' if distant—neighbor:
Australia.
i
------Long a friend to
the country uf A u ttra lii ii
non doing something that
may contributi) to putting
an end to tome o f our
unemployment p ro b le m i.
"T h e U nited M ethodist
C hurch ca rrie s w ith in its
heritage a social a c tiv is t
role.”
That slalem ent from one of
the resolutions prepared by
Divisions of Ihe Board of
Church and Society sets the
(one for tough issues which
w ill face the 2,000 voting
m em bers of the W estern
North Carolina Conference.
The Annual Conference w ill
be held here June 10-14, with
V A N e w s
T am a woman veteran
receiving G I B ill education
I m arry, can I
husband as a
fo r ad d itio n a l
benefits. If
claim m y
dependent
benefits?
Yes. You can receive ad
ditional benefits for a spouse.
Who is eligible for veterans
mortgage life insurance from
the Veterans Adm inistration?
This insurance Is restricted
to those service connected
disabled veterans who have
received grants from the VA
(or the purchsM of spectally
adapted wheelchair housing.
Can I use m y G I B ill
education benefits to attend
school in a foreign country?
The Veterans Ad
ministration will provide
education benefits to eligible
veterans who attend approved
schools in foreign countries.
Contact the nearest VA
regional office for further
information.
Is there an expiration date
on m y Veterans A d
m in is tra tio n home loan
benefit?
No. Loan entitlement is no
longer subject to an ex
piration date.
W ill I have to pay if I am
hospitalized by the Veterans
Administration?
There Is no charge for
services provided to veterani
who are eligible for
hospitalization by the VA.
Bishop L. Scott Allen of
Charlotte, presiding.
Issues which w ill be before
Ihe men and women,
representing 277,000 United
M ethodists in 1,175 local
congregations, for approval
w ill include:
A continued support of
E R A ; a stand against
legislation making il illegal to
term inate a pregnancy; a call
for U, S. withdrawal from El
Salvador; a mobilization call
against the Reagan A d
m in is tra tio n budget cuts
a ffe c tin g ‘ ‘lo w -in co m e
people” ; a continued fight
against world hunger; sup
port oi legislation for better
prisons in North C arolina;
and a study of drug and
chemical abuse.
The 2,000 voting members,
hailing from the 44 Piedmont
and western counties of Ihe
state, w ill also be wrestling
with several internal Con
ference matters, including:
The way in which petitions
w ill be handled starting next
year - by Legislative Com
m ittees or Conference
Agencies; what method w ill
be used to im plem ent the new
$1.B m illion pension program ;
a call for support of the new
Ethnic M inority Local Church
national missional prio rity;
and plans for the "^ 'o c la im
The W ord” evangelism
followup of 1982.
The C onference budget
being p r o p o ^ for 1982 w ill
reach a new high - $7,422,000
for item s w ithin the Con
ference O utreach Budget,
plus the estimated $1.8 m illion
to be apportioned to local
churches for the new pension
program , or a total of more
than $9.2 m illion.
The meeting w ill begin with
a service of Holy Communion
at 9:45 a.m. on June 10 in
Stuart Auditorium . That night
attention lo a variety of needs
and accomplishments within
and without the Conference.
Other spccial services w ill
Include the service of or
dination for deacons and
elders Friday night, June 12,
the Mem orial .service the
morning of June 13, and the
Conference Sunilay Worship
Service, starling at 10 a.m.
.Iiinr- 14. during whieh Bishop
Allen w ill preach.
Dr. Zan W. Holmes, Jr., of
Dallas, Tex., w ill be the
Conference Preacher, and Dr.
S. Jame.son Jones of Durham
w ill lead Ihe Bible Study
Hour.
The appointment of 1,000
clergy lo local congregations,
and to special assignments
such as missions work, ad-
m lni.slralive positions, college
and university work, and
olher posts, w ill lake place
Saturday and Sunday, with
Bishop Allen presiding.
Each year aboul 200 of the
clergy receive new ap
pointments under the United
M eiliodihl system of
itinerancy.
Visitors and members of
clergy and laity fam ilies w ill
swell the population of this
Southeastern Ju risd ictio n
religious assem bly to an
additional 3,000 persons.
Ih» report -of the—Diatriet-
Superintendents, to be given
by the Rev. James W. Ferree,
superintendent of the
Gastonia District, will call
ABSOLUTE
A U C T IO N
Sat. lun e 1 3 ,1 9 8 1 10 :0 0 A .M .
PersonaJ Property O f Charles Cruishank
LOCATION: Near Corner Of Redland Road On
Highway 158 In Davie County, Approx. 10 Miles East Of Mocksville,N.C. Watch For Signs!!
450 Honda Motorcycle-Shovsl and Ax'..$-Outdoor
Griiis-ePound Wood Splltter-Two-Ton Come-A-Long- Rocklno Chair-Tool Boxes-Blsck Walnut Boards- Old Lamps-l Round Table And 4 Chairs (Handmade)-
Record Player (Lots of Recordsl-Lots of 8-Track- Tapes-Antlquts Stove Parts-1 Large Refrigsrator- Freezer (Philco)-Pots,Pans,DislMS-Electric Fry ^ni-
2 Power Saws - Mcculloch’s-Clock Radlos-Couch And Chairs-2Leather ChSirs-Small Desk And Chair- (NICE)CoffeeTable And 2 end Tables-Wood Hsater- Vanltj^ with Mirror-Old Books- 8-Track Plavsr And
2 Speakers-t Pine Chest of Drawers (TALL) -2 Other Chest of Drawers- Odd Chairs- Sheets, Pillowcases, And Curtains-Toasters-Small TV- Hillside Plow-Tools-Old Pictures-Silverware- M ANY OTHER ITEMS NOT MENTIONED
NOTE: A 75-PIECE KN!FE COLLECTION WILL WILL BE OFFERED UPON CONFIRMATION.
Sale Conducted For C H A R L E S C R U I S H A N K
A i i c t l o n * « n
B I U S E A T S
Route Б, Box 82-A Mocktvrfle, NC 27028
Phone: (919) 9»М21_7
N .C.A .L. No. 630
Ortuofy,
J i i Z l
BOXWOOD REAL ESTATE
323 Salisbury Street
Mocksville, N .C . 27028 634-5997
Attractive 1,700 sq.ft. contemporary offica in
town Features 2 private offices, sales office,
reception area, 2 baths, kitchen, plus a distinc-
tk>n all its' own! Completely wall papered
and carpeted, custom drapes, heat pump, ■
professionally landscaped, paved parking,
high traffic area. $79,50Q.
Price
29.500..
76.400..
33.500..33.500..
75.000.^
29,900.
37^00..
49.900..
Ю,500..
53Ъ00.. $85,900.
87.000..
$35,000.
32.000. ■
42.500 .
46.900..
72.500..
79.500...
8 6 .0 0 0 ...
33.500...
28.900..
$24.500'
$28.900..
$54.000..
Price
34.000...
33,500 ..
33.500....
Location Bedroom Beth Information
. .601 South..................2......1......Fireplace, carport
. .Farmland Road.............3... .2 ......Log home secluded on 4.48 acres
. .Fieldcrest No. 2.............3......1.......Under Construction. ■ Fieldcrest No. 3 ......... 3.....1......EES. Quality Construction
.. Carowoods Development.... 4... . 2.....3,000+sq.ft., 2 fireplaces
.. Daniel Road...............3 .... 2 .... J400 sq. ft. Brick Home
. .Sheffield Park...............3..
■ Fosthall Drive..............3..
. Edgewood Circle...........3^
. .Garner Street................%.
•Rainbow Road..............3..
.. .VA----Detached garage/workshop
■ .2.....Split-levelon wooded 1.8 acres
• - ■ -2 story with apx. 2400 sg. ft.
.. VA----Full basement, concrete drive
• - 3.... EXCEPTIONAL home on 3.77 acres
.. .Ml North..................4.....3Vi.....3.200 s^.ft. split-level
.. West Jefferson .. ......^ -----basement, wrap-around porch
.. .Railroad Street..............2......VA----Remodeled frame house
. .Lih^ Church Rd. i ......... 1.. . . .1800 sq. ft. on 1.4 acres
• ............3......2.....New home, heat pump, dishwasher
•. Southwood Acres ... .. 3 - 4 ... 3 -----SpliHevel, 26 Kitchen cabinets
. .Greenwood Lakes..........3... „ 2%___Like new farm house design
• ^......■ • • Swimming Pool, 2.38 acres.. Hwy. 64VV......... .......3.....V A ... .gleaming 1100 sq.ft. home
■ Milling jRoad. ...............3.....VA... .freshly pamted inside
• Gladstone Road 2 •>••• • -prame and siding home with fireplaa
. Center ^reet................2......1.^,. A 'doll' house with ideal privacy.
.. Howardtown Road........3.......2.....Brick home w/1,200 sq. ft. detached garage
SALE PENDING
Location
Rivwdale No. 5. .Fieldcrest No. 4.
.Fieldcrest No. 1.
Bedroom -oath
SOLD
Information
-----3___ 1.....1070 sq. ft^FmHa approved
----3......1----- 1050 sq. ft. Contemporary
... 3.....1.....FmHA approved energy efficient
LAND LOTS OTHER
Price Location Information
12.50 0 Hickory Hill No. 2 ..............iake lot
9.50.................0 Jericho Road................2 lots
5.00 0 Southwood Acres...............
1.500 per acra......801 South.........................50 acres, some own«r financing
4.50 0 Greenbrier Estates................ lot No. 33
2.3. Million..........601 South........................811 acres, prime industrial
4.000 each..........Florida...........................4 building lots, Lake Placid
$79.500............Mocksville................... 1700 sq.ft. office building....
GET ON THE TOP SELLER LIST, CENTURY 21
DAN CORRELL - 998-2268
TERESA CORRELL - 998-2268
LOUISE DAIGLE - 634 2846
CHARLES EVANS - 284 2537
SHELIA OLIVER - 492-5512
KATHI WALL - 492-7631
d a v ii: (OU N n-i:nti-kim<isi ki с o k d . m iiik sd a y iuni ii I'un 5П
F o lk lif e F e s t iv a l C a r r ie s O n T r a d it io n s
T lir Smithsonian's Folkllfp restival,
hrld this .vpnr in late June and early July
w ill bring hundreds of singers, dancers,
craftsworliers and coolis from all over
the rountry to Washington, D.C., to
shore with thousands of visitors those
traditions that give this country its great
variety. "F o liillfe Festival Carries on
American Traditions" describes what
It's all about.
By Kathryn Lindeman
Pied-Piper style, the line of dancing,
clapping spectators trails behind the
trombone and trumpet sounds of the
Dixieland band as it wends its way along
the crowded grounds. The smell of
bread, fresh from the oven, is spreading
through the air and, across the way,
workmen raise the ridgepole of a
traditional Finnish-style souna.
The scene is the Smithsonian’s annual
Festival of American Follclife, now in its
15th year. A highlight of summertime in
Washington, D.C., the festival aims to
help keep American customs and folk
ways alive, giving thousands of visitors
a chance to learn who and what give this
country its great variety.
Held this year for 10 days, June 24-28
and July 1-5, the outdoor festival on the
grounds of the Washington Monument
will bring together hundreds of singers,
dancers, craftsworkers and cooks from
all over the country and, if the past is
any guide, their activities will remind
onlooking old-timers how things used to
be and give the younger generations an
idea of what “tradition” is all about.
Last year, an urban teenager wat
ching a country woman from the South
put up preserves came to understand at
last why her grandmother’s peach jam
always tasted so special, so different
from the store-bought kind.
A man from the country learned that it
was his father’s building techniques
which made his childhood home cooler
in the summer than a neighbor’s house.
And he plunged back into the past as
carpenters built a house on tbe National
Mall much like the one of his childhood
memories.
Prbd'ucm^ suen a feiitlvul
the achievement of the Smithsonian’s
Office of Folklife Programs in
cooperation with the National Park
Service, is more than simply “putting on
a show,” Folklife Programs Director
Ralph Rinzler says. Each fesUval
presentation is researched thoroughly
by staff folklorists and contract field-
workers who bring back to Washington,
from cities and towns across the land,
taped interviews, recorded music
performances, photographs and theli
own summary reports.
To Rinzler and others, the Folklife
Festival is a way to “mediate between
objects in museum cases and the con
temporary use of the objects.” Visitors
can go into the Museum of American
History and see a bowl or pitcher much
like the one that a potter from North
Carolina is forming on his revolving
wheel just outside on the MaU. “It shows
the living dynamics of culture, and the
experience Uves on and on.”
Then, too, the Smithsonian is a con-
servation-oriented institution, and this
interest extends to preservation of
human cultural practices. Such a
festival not only gives the audience an
appreciation of traditions different from
their own but also provides the per
formers with recognition and evidence
of respect for their traditional arts.
Participants are chosen by a very
careful process to assure that the best
available examples of traditional
methods are featured. The participants
are not professional entertainers or
trained actors. Many of them are
modest country people, and they are
Smithsonian News Service Photo
It doesn't take long to get intt) the swing of things at the Smithsonian’s Festival of American Folklife in
Washington, D.C. At a past festival, visitors joincci gail)' dressed native Yugoslavians in traditional
tamburashi dancing.
Blacksmith Michael Snyder of Wymer, W . Va.,
demonstrated smithy skills at the Smithsonian’s
Folklife Festival.
Earl Gilmore of Clinchco, Va., entertained with
gospel music at a past Smithsonian Folklife
Festival.
Realtors
To Pause
For Pledge
Thousands oi KeaUnrs
across Ihe counlry wil! Join
I’resident Reagan on June 14
in pledging allcgiance to the
flag in the second annual Flag
Day observance known as
“Pause for the Pledge.”
The National Association of
Realtors, the nation’s largest
trade association, is co
sponsoring the national event
as part of its Make America
Better program. Realtors will
pause at 4:00 p.m. Eastern
Daylight Time on June 14 to
reaffirm their support of the
nation.
“We (Realtors) believe that
citizens everywhere welcome
an opportunity to demon
strate their faith in their
nation and their gratitude for
the privileges they enjoy as
Americans with this ob
servance,” said John H.
Wood, Realtor President.
“ This simple act of
dedication will also be a
demonstration of our unity to
our neighbors abroad,” he
added.
The pledge will originate at
Fort McHenry in Baltimore,
which inspired Francis Scott
Key to write the Star
Spangled Banner during the
war of 1812. This year marks
the SOth anniversary of its
adoption as the national
anthem.
The Star Spangled Banner
Flag House in Baltimore
sponsored the first “Pause for
the Pletlge” last year.
The Maryland Association
of Realtors and the Baltimore
Board of Realtors have been
working hand-in-hand with
other local groups to spread
the word across the country
and to encourage pcr-
ticipation in the observance.
In addition to Pr
Reagan, Maryland Senators
Charles McMathias and Paul
Sarbanes, U.S. Represen
tative Barbara Mikulski and
Parrin Mitchell and Maryland
Governor Harry Hughes will
participate in the observance.
Westinghouse Broadcasting
Company through it’s satellite
network will carry the Fort
McHenry “ Pause for the
Pledge” ceremonies on all of
its stations. Other stations
will be allowed to pick up this
coverage without charge.
The National Association of
Realtors represents more
than 700,000 individual
members involved in all
phases of the real estate in
dustry.
often amazed that crowds watch at
tentively as they demonstrate how to do
something they’ve done since childhood,
something they did not leam in school
but "grew up knowing how to do.”
Although many of the people who take
part in the festival may not realize it at
first, they are being asked to share their
skiUs because they are part of a par
ticular kind of group. FoUc culture is the
culture of subgroups in society, and aU
Americans belong to such groups. The
groups may be occupational, religious,
racial or ethnic, but in each case, the
group’s existence depends on certain
^adi'tions which are passed on through
this common background, interest or
activity by means of jokes, songs and
stories.
’The Smithsonian’s FoUtlife Festival is
a showcase for different kinds of groups
with common bonds. Visitors to the Mall
may see firefighters, coal miners or
sleeping-car porters; native Americans
from the Northeast, the Great Lakes or
the Southern Plains; German-,
Japanese-or Caribbean-Americans, and
potters, doUmakers and cooks from the
South.
“When we invite people to take part in
the festival,” Rinzler says, “we try to
reach a balance in music, dance and
craft traditions.”
In planning the festival, the foUdorists
first get together for brainstorming
sessions. “We always come out of these
meetings with more ideas than we are
able to use in one festival,” Rinzler says.
“We scrutinize a mass of poMibilities;
‘Is this the year to use our fieldwork on
the Finnish Laskiainen festival in
Minnesota? Or shoidd we elaborate on
last year’s presentation of Vietnamese
music, crafts and food? Or should we do
both?’ ” (For the 1980 festival planners,
the answer was “both.” )
D A V I E
R E A L T Y C Q
1 4 8 1 N . M a i n S t .
64 WEST-UndercoBstmcllaa, SB-RlMOM, IB ,,
llreplace. Heat Pump, C. air, carport * paved
drive.
G W Y N gT. ■ 3im brick home - Priced to m U «32.0M.
HOLLOW HILL COURT - 4 BR, bawe. IH baths.
E i c ^ w t condition.
dlA F T W O O b - S BR, m B • Elect, heat, flrq>Uee.
Priced to Mtl at
Highway SCI near Cooleemee It.M acres and? room
honse - • acres permanent grass - 10 acres good
timber. Call for appointment
CAROWOOD - BeautUui 3 BR, 2 ^ baths tri-level bome
wi№ heat pump t garage on quiet st. Reasonably priced.
M IL U N G ROAD-Beautlfnl t story brick bome. 4 Br, 3
baths, 2 dens, partial basement with garage. 2380 sq. tt.
living space. 4 acres of land.
IOITDOWARD ST. 3 BR brick home. Central heat li air.
Double garage. Priced lo sell.
C O OLEEM EE - Good starter home. 2 B-R, a B.
Reasonable price.
SALISBURY ST. One of tbe most lovriy bomes In
MockivUle on 3.1 acres. A most attractive older
home witb S B-R, 3 B. and Is surrounded by
beautiful trees and shrubs. Also, a 3 car garage, a
room where meat was once smoke cured aad the old
kitchen separate from the main boiase. This a must
If you are Interested In a weU-preserved older
home. Call (or an appointment.
SOUTHWOOD ACRES - BeantKul wooded buUdbg
lot. Reasonable price.
NEAR SHEFFIELD-3 B.R. brick bome, 1 bath,
carport on 1.04 acres. 124,(00.00.
No. 801 SOUTH - 2H acres «wed for MobUe Home
I22S0 per acre.
DEPOT ST. - 1 Acre business lot. II,(M.
OFF DANIELS RD. 4 acres and a mobUe bome witb
well it septic lank. 111,000.
I ACRE TRACTTon paved rd. part wooded. Zoned (or
mobUe bomes.
Ml It 801-S7 acres-resldentlal or commerclal-part
wooded-«tream.
FARMINGTON AREA on 801-18 acres o( beautllul land- tSS.IMW.
BOXW OOD AtKES • 2 wooded lots 12SiM0 at |1,*M ea
HOW ARD SntEET-Good buUdlng lot. 100x140, quiet
localioD.GARDEN VALLEY-BeautUul bldg. lot. aty water and
sewer. Entrance Irom Sanford Ave. and Garden VaUey.
FARM INGTON AREA-S acre tracts more. Local no. to
Winston-Salem.
SMALL CORNER LOT at North Main and Crowe SU.
6 3 4 - 6 1 1 1 o r 6 3 4 - 6 1 1 2
Home Phuuc»
Eugene BenoeU-W>8-4727 Sam iiuwell-<i34-5424
HoUand I'halliii-tiSl 5itl6 Graham Madl»on-«S4-5176
Henry Shore «34-S84e
r V -
A S C S N e w s
Crop Reports needed
All producers of wheat,
barley, corn and grain
sorghum must fUe an ac
curate and timely report by
June 15. Producers reporting
their crop wUl be eligible to
earn low yield payments
should a disaster occur.
With the forecast of a dry
summer ahead, aU farmers
should make a special effort
to report their crops.
Remember - Crops must be
reported by June 15.
FaUure to file an accurate
or timely report will mean
loss of program benefits.
1981 Disaster Program
Wheat, barley, com and
grain sorghum producers are
eligible for low yield
payments if affected by a
disaster. Producers must
notify the ASCS Office to
report low yields before any
crop is harvested or
destroyed, unless the crop is
harvested for grain. Cro|>s not
harvested for grain must be
appraised by ASCS before it is
harvested. Producers har
vesting grain wiU have IS
days after harvest to file a
disaster.
If a crop is harvested for
grain, the production must be
substaintiated by acceptable
production evidence, such as
commercial receipts or sales
receipts. Scale tickets or
weight slips must be sup
ported by other evidence,
such as sales documents
showing disposition.
Each farm's production
must be kept separate.
Farmers suffering a low yield
bhuuld contact the ASCS
Office before harvesting to
m ake sure program
regulations are being
followed.
EQUIL WUSIItC.
lib i l i V'"
Howard Realty &
Insurance A g e n c y , In c .
315 SalishMry Street Ш
NEW LIS’nNGS
M O R S E S T R E E T - 3 Bedroom brick rancher. Carport. Ali electric. Lot 100 x
200. Good condition. 134.000.00. ... j49.8 A C R E S in excellent location north of MockivUle on Main Church Road. Over
1200 ft. of road frontage. Can l>e subdivided into 10 acre tracti. $100.000 total -
fZlOO per acre if lubuvided. ,
I B U SIN E SS OPPORTUNITY- lnveit in your own buiineai with very Uttle caib.
Ladle«’ garments on consignment. Central location and wntacts already!
established. Very low overhead with profit jwtentlal unlimited.
CONDOM INIUM S- Now ready for occupancy at beautiful Twin Brook Acres. Two-
I ' story excellent constructioii. First floor carpeted living room. Kitchen with dish
washer, range, dining area. Laundry and storage area. Bath. 2 Bedrooms plus
bath upstairs. Patio. Economical heat pump. Thermopane windows. Perfect
property ownership without the upkeep involved in single residence. The coming
thing for Ihe future. $39,500.00.
R ID G E M O N T • 4 Bedroom brick rancher. Ail electric. Carport. Good
financing. 127,500.00.
4 2 5 0 ...' Spring Street.............. 2 Bedroom...................................... 23,000.00
4470... Ridgemont .... U N D E R C O N T R A C T .^ .................... 2B,000.00
3230.... Jericho Koad ..............Beautiful split level........................$92,000.00
4 4 2 0 ... Park Avenue ................3 BediOOC0 basement.....................48,500.00
4410....Garden Valley..............Contemporary........................................96,000.00
4400..-.Raym uiid Street----2 3 bedroom.......................................38,500.00
4060.. .North Main Street. . . Older 2 Story ..................................... 58,500.00
2 Story brick.......................................55,000.00
.under construction......................125^00.00
. 3 bedrooms..........................................52,900.00
. 3 bedrooms....................................... 43,500.00
. . . 90,000.00
■ .16,5 0 0 .0 0
Texat wai named af
ter an Indian word
meaning '‘fr ie n d «."
4 3 9 0 .. . Wilkesboro Street.
4340. . .Garden Valley. . ..
4170. . . Fairway Street... .
3780. .. Avon Street..........
4 360. . . Davie Academ y ............8 Acres and farmhouse. .
4 030. .. Bingham Street............2 bedrooms. . .
3860. . . Cooleemeee.................4 bedroom Colotiial----
4 2 8 0 .. . Hickory HiU.................New Contemporary---
3 5 4 0 .. .Garden Valley............New Contem|Mjrary. . . .
4 380. . .Sanford Avenue..........2 Acrrt« & mobile home.
43.40. . .Weelwood......................3 Bedroom..........................
2680. . .Sanford Road.............3 liedrooms, Acres............
4 0 0 0 .. . Southwood Acres. . . 5-6Bedroom Contemporary_____72,000.00
L O T S : Garden Valley......................$6,800 to $11,000
Woodland....................................................14,500
Woodland, 2.14 acres................................11,000
O F F IC E - 63 4 3538
H O M E P H O N E S :
6 34 3754. 6 34 3229, 6.Ч4 2534. 9 98 3990, 284 2366,
• 73,500.00
$85,600.00
• 78,000.00
32.000.00
• 36.000.00
. 45,000.00
492 5198,
HOMEFINDER
M U L T I P L E L I S T I N G S E R V I C E
BRANTLEY REALTY &
INSURANCE COo. INC
D a v i e C o u n t y T o n l y
W l n s t o n * S o l e m '* M u l t i p l e
L i l t i n g S e r v i c e R e a l t o r
H O M E S
F H A or V A financing avaUable on these six lovely
N E W , 3 Bedroom homes...Located on a dead end
street. Some have basements, and fireplaces. Pi-lce
ranges from >34,000 to 138.200. M . Edwards
FA RM INGTON - Cedar Forest Rd. Nice 3 BR, 2 full
baths, spilt foyer. Large family room w-fpl. Formal
LR . Larpp lot on dead end street. M . Edwards
Has 10 assumable loan.
E D G E W O O D CIRCLE- Nice 3BR, 2 bath, Brick
home. New chain link fence around lot. Huge family
room added w-fpl. & wood stove. Formal D R & LR
M . Edwards .
G W Y N ST. - Save Gas! WaMring distance to shop
ping or hoapital. V e i ^ i ^ C ^ ^ R home with carport.
Also paved drive. i^t5 n o m e for •‘eflred or young
couple. M . Edwards. Owner financing 12 •/. hit.
S A N F O R D R O A D - Beautiful 3 B R , 2 bath home,
den with fireplace. Full basement, plus atUched
garage. 2 Large porches. Nice large lot. Must see to
appreciate. M . Ekiwards Near 1-40 exit.
D A V IE A C A D E M Y R D . - Beautiful Colonial Brick
Rancher, formal living room & dining room. Den
with flrcplace and' attached garage. Garden space.
Assumable 90 percent loan. 158,000 M . Edwards
736 C H E R R Y ST. - Nice 2 B R remodeled home.
Conv. to shopping & Ubrary. Good starter home.
Only 120,500. M . Edwards
12 Acres wtth 400 ft. chicken house, in operalTon
with mobUe home, well & septic Unk. Income with
approximately 125,000 per year. M . Edwards
M IL L IN G R D . - BeauUful 3 BR. m bath brick
home. Den w-fpl.. formal LR . Large comer lot. 1 %
percent assumable loan. M . Edwards
W IL K E S B O R O ST. - Beautiful 4 B R home w-2
baths. Formal D R & large glassed-in porch. At
tached carport. Chain Unk fence. Large lot also
faces Meroney Street. M . Edwards___________
■ SANFORD A V E . - 3BH, 1 bath, 'icar carport, den
w-Franklin stove, F P . D R & L R . Good loan
takeover at |5,000 down assumable at $39,000. M .
FOR RENT WITH O P U O N TO BUY - 3 bedroom,
brick home w-(lreplace, formal llvbtg room, 1Ц
bath. $300.00 mo. M. Edwards
Davie Academy Rd. tSg.OQO^
B A D E N , N.C. - Stoi7 & Si - 3B R Condomlnum
across from country club, large lot only few blocks
from Baden Lake. $29,900. M . Edwards
H O M E S W IT H A C R E A G E
C O U N T Y L IN E R O A D - 3BR, 1 % batti bricli home
on 20-acKS of land. $69,000.20 more acres avaUable.
M . Edwards
O P E R A T I N G D A I R Y F A R M - Completely
automatic miUters & feeders. 2 new Harvesters
Silos, 2 houses, several bam s, land fenced. E x
cellent chance to get in the dairy business.
R U R A L H A L L - 72 aeries w-stream and good tim
ber. Nice farm house. Vifry private retreat. 52 acres
in Forsyth Co. it 20 aoTM in Stokes Co.
F A R M IN G ’rO N - 5 acres fenced, w-Iarge bam ,
riding ring ft beautiful Spanish Brick Rancher. 3
B R , 2 baths. Den w-fpi. Also large A-frame with
upstairs Could be apartment for rental or in-law. M .
Edwards
B E T H E L R D . 108 acres w-2 large lakes and 4 B R
home, 4 baths 2 dens w-tol. Formal Uving ft dining
room. Large Bara, 2 chicken houses. MoaUy fenced.
S H E F F IE L D - 21.77 acres w-4 B R , 3 ^ baths,
Ctrionial Rancher, partial basement Beautiful den
w-Cathedral ceUing and fpl. Large barn, 2 lakes. M .
Edwards , . .B L A IS E C H U R C H R D . - 36.6 acres bordering 1-40,
200 ft. Road frontage. Could be loned for com
mercial. CaU Scott AngeU.
MOCKSVlLLE-23.8 Acres w-stream ft beautiful 1
yr. old m story cedar farm house w-fuU basement.
SkyUght in Master bedroom ft bath - land aU fenced
w-building 40x200 - can be used for m any things • is
bringing in nice income. Metal bara also iaci. Must
see to appreciate. CaU M . Edwards.
F A R M IN G T O N - Approx. 10% acres. Nice secUtw,
part wooded, w-stream. CaU today to see this one.
M . Edwards
D A V IE A C A D E M Y R D . - 3 B R , 2 bath Brick house
on 2 acres. 1700 Sq. Ft. Uving area. Beautiful lawn ft
hardwood trees. Aiso Fla. room*
YADKIN COUNTY-BeUiel Rd. - 8 Acres ft 2 yr. old,
Hk <tory farm house with cedar sldliig. AiU basement - custom buUt • also has lake. For details caU M . Edwards.
A C R E A G E
W A S H IN G ’TON COUNTY-1707 Acres. Approx. 4
miiUon feet of blackgum. Has small Junior stand
and smaU pine stand. Paved St. Rd. running thra
property. S. Angeli. $310^000.
D A V ID S O N A V E . - 6V4 Acres, HeavUy wooded w-
stream. City watar ft sewer $ a ,900.00 M . Edwards.
C H IC K E N F A R M R O A D - 2 tracts; 134 acres ft 43
acres. Can be subdivided. Mostly wooded, lots of
road frontage. $1,000.00 per acre. M . Edwards
C O U N T Y L IN E R O A D - 141 Acres aU fenced w-
woven whre. Plenty of paved road frontage. $875.00
per acre. M . Edwards
JE N N IN G S R O A D • 86 acre tract w-large bara and
lots of paved road frontage. $1,600.00 per acre. M .
A w a r d s
L A K E N O R M A N - Deeded water front lot on cove.
$10,500. M . Edwards.
C U M B E R L A N D C O U N T Y - 260 Acres, 2-acres
cleared, balance in timber. Approx. 900,000 board
ft. of timber. $635. per acre. S. AngeU
S A M P S O N C O U N T Y - Roseboro - 172 acres hog
operation. Capable of produchig 3500 top hogs per
year. Call for details. S. Angell.
B L A D E N C 0 1 ;N T Y - 213 Acre hog operation. 40
acres open land. Balance in timber. Call for detaUs.
S. Angell
C A L D W E L L C O U N T Y -1325 Acres. 6,398,500 Board
ft. of timber. $700.00 per acre. S. AngeU
C H E R R Y H IL L R O A D - im acres. Part wooded,
part cleared. $1.500 per acre. Call Martha Edwards.
D A V IE A C A D E M Y R D . - 21 acres with spring, part
wooded, part cleared. Make nice SubdivislM or
sm aHJarm . M ^Edw ards
j i u U I F O I O T S K O C » A t IOC NOailS11 CoSlor Pile* and IntomwMMi... en padMg*...I >uHdyouro»;,ll,I»inrtt
BUY EQ U ITIES
....ВМаИ RdiDM^....8ЭШ51
Мм«впвСгамг 717-5053 SgoO Anpl.........вМЭТЯ
-И м мM I S
i)03 Avon Street
МосквуШе, N.C.
/n|w/*nc«
OmdEdMnli..
<Ètbqiiiil lluusint; Opportunity
PHONE: 634 2105
725-9291
№ tIAVIl COUNTY I.NTI-RPRISI'. UI-,(4)RD, TiniKSDAY, .UINl- 11. 1481
Public Notices A SHOPKIt^
PARADISE
NORTH CAROLINA
DAVIE COUNTV
NOTICE OF SALE
Under and by virtue of the
authority of a Power of At
torney, duly recorded in the
Office of the Register of
Deeds for Davie County,
William E. Hall, Attorney in
Fact for Essie H . Scott, widow
and sole heir of F. N. Scott,
Jr., on the 20 day of June at
12:00 Noon at the Courthouse
in MocksviUe, N.C., will offer
for sale to the highest bidder
for cash that certain tract of
land lying in Mocksville
Township and being set aside
for F. N. Scott, Jr., by virtue
of a special proceeiding; said
proceeding to be found in the
Office of the Clerk of Superior
Court for Davie County, North
Carolina, in File Number 79-
SO-54 and described more
particularly as follows:
BEGINNING at a stone, (a
common corner for Maggie
Scott Heirs as seen in Deed
Book 42, Page 197, Bryce Beck
as seen in Deed Book 100,
Page 179, and the F, N. Scott
Lands), and running thence
the following courses and
distances: South 82 degs. 30
mins. 55 sec. East 747.74 feet;
South 02 degs. 58 mins. 24 sec.
West 711.15 feet; North 82
degs. 30 min. 55 sec. West 750
feet; North 03 degs. 27 mins.
East 47.65 feet; North 03 degs.
27 mins. East 268.58 feet;
North 02 degs. 56 mins. 24 .sec.
East 394.75 feet to the
BEGINNING and containing
12.179 acres, more or less, as
surveyed by Grady L. Tut
terow, April 24, 1980, and
shown as Tract I on the Hat of
F. N. Scott Heirs Lands in File
Number 79-SP-54, Office of
the Clerk of Superior Court of
Davie County, North
Carolina.
A good faith deposit of five
(5 percent) percent of the
highest bid will be required at
the time of the sale.
Sale of the tract described
hereinabove wlU be subject to
upset bids within ten (10) days
after the sale. Subsequent
sales will be advertised and
held in accordance with the
procedure for judicial sales.
This the 2lst day of May,
1981.
WUUamE.HaU
Attorney in Fact for
Essie H. Scott
5-214tnp
.NORTH CA RO U N A
DAVIE COUNTV
EXECUTRIX NOTICE
Having qualified a«
Executrix of the estate of
Alvi* C. Cheriiire, deceiMd,
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
28th day of November, 1981,
being six months from the
first day of publication or thia
notice will be pleaded in bar of
their recovery. AU persons
indebted to said estate will
please make immediate
payment to the undersigned.
This the 22nd day of May,
1981.
Gladys H. Cheshire,
Executrix of the estate of
Alvis C. Cheshire, deceased.
Martin and Van Hoy
Attomeys
Boxeoe
MocksviUe, N.C. 27028
S-284tn
NORTH CAROLINA
: DAVIE COUNTV
EXECUTORS NOTICE
Having qualified as Co-
Executors of the estate of
Hubert R. Eaton, 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
27th day of November 1981, or
this notice wUl be pleaded in
bar of their recovery. AU
persons indebted to said
estate wUI please make im
mediate payment to tbe un
dersigned.
This the 27th day of May,
1981 Betty E. Dwiggins and
John R. Mauney, Jr., Co-
Executors of the estate of
Hubert R. Eaton deceased.
HaU and Vogler
Attorneys at Law
EXECUTOK S NOTICE
NORTH CAROLINA
DAVIE COUNTY
Having qualified as
Executor of the estate of
Nancy S. Tucker, deceased,
late of Davie County, North
Carolina, this is to notify aU
persons having claims
against said estate to present
them to the undersigned on or
before the 28 day of
November, 1981, said date
being at least six months from
the date of first publication of
this notice, or tiiis notice wiU
be pleaded in bar of their
recovery. All persons in
debted to said estate wiU
please make immediate
payment to the undersigned.
This the 28 day of May, 1981,
the same being tiie first
publication.
Thurman Tucker, executor
of the estate of Nancy S.
Tueicer
Brock & McClamrock
.'.ttorneys at Law
P.O.Box S47
Muciisvilie, N.C. 27028
Telephone: 7(И^-3518
NORTH CAROLINA
DAVIE COUNTY
NOTICE OF SALE
Under and by virtue of
authority of the Will of
William Lugan Smith, Sr.,
duly probated and recorded in
the office of the Clerk of
Superior Court of Davie
County, North Carolina, the
undersigned co-
administrators will on the
20th day of June, 1981, at 1:00
p.m., on the premises at Pine
Ridge Road, Davie County,
North Carolina, offer for sale
to the highest bidder for cash
a certain tract of land lying
and being in Jerusalem
Township, Davie County,
North Carolina, and more
particularly described as
follows:
TRACT I: BEGINNING at
a stake in the East corner of
West Broadway Road and the
Southern margin of Pine
Ridge Road; thence along the
Southern margin of Pine
Hidge Hoad South 88 degs. 48
min. East 162.5 ft. to a stake,
being the corner of Lots 6 and
7: thence South 4 degs. 30 min.
West 175 ft. to a point, the
Southeastern corner of Lot 6
and the Southwestern comer
of Lot 7; thence in a Westerly
direction along the line of Lots
1 through 6 171.9 ft. to a point
in the Eastern margin of West
Broadway Road, being the
Southwestern comer of Lot 1
and the Northwestem comer
of Lot 145; thence along the
Eastern margin of West
Broadway Road North 4 degs.
17 min. East 175 ft. to the
BEGINNING, being those loU
designated as Lots 1 through 6
on a map of the Ira Broadway
property, made by J. D.
Justice, Surveyor, November
17, 1941, said map being
recorded in Map Book 2 at
Page 22, Davie County
Registry.
A good faith deposit of 5
percent of the highest bid wiU
be required at the time of the
sale.
The above tract wiU be sold
subject to upset bids within
ten (10) days after the sale.
Subsequent sales will be
advertised and held in ac
cordance with the procedure
for judicial sales.
This the 21st day of May,
1981.
Olga Lee Smith Harris
and Ralph L. Smith
Co-Administrators of the
Estate of WUUam Logan
Smith, Sr.
5-214tnp
CREDITOR’S NOTICE
Having qualified as
Executor of the Estate of
BERTHA JANE LATHAM, a-
k-a MRS. BERTHA JANE
M AR TIN LA TH A M and
BERTHA MARTIN
LATHAM, Deceased, late of
Davie County, N.C., this is to
notify aU persons, firms and
corporations having claims
against said Estate, to exhibit
them to the undersigned at the
Law Firm and adciess below
shown, on or before the 28th
day of November, 1981, or this
Notice wiU bi! pleaded in bar
of their recovery. AU parsons
indebted to said Estate wUl
please make immediate
payment.
This the 27th day of May,
1961.
James W. Latham
Route 2, Box 332 B
MocksvUle, N.C. 27028
George F. PhUUps, Attorney
Badgett, CaUway, PhUUps,
Davis, Stephens, Peed and Brown
200 West First Street
Winston-Salem, N.C. 27101
5-28 4tn
5-28 4tn
NORTH CAROLINA
DAVIE COUNTY
EXECUTRIX NOTICE
Having qualified as
Executor of the estate of
Edward Albert Deadmon,
deceased, late of Davie
County, this is to notify aU
persons having claims
against said estate to present
them to the undersigned on or
before the llth day of
December, 1961, or this notice
will be pleaded in bar of their
recovery. AU persons in
debted to said estate wiU
please make immediate
payment to the undersigned.
This the llth day of June,
1981.
Eva T. Deadmon, Rt. 7, Box
159A, MocksviUe, N.C. 27028,
Executor of the estate of
Edward Albert Deadmon,
deceased.
8-U4tn
i!.At!.cUTKlX‘S NOTICE
NORTH CAROLINA
DAVIE COUNTY
Having qualified as
Executrix of the estate of
Hannah Atkinson Bown,
deceased, late of Davie
County, lliiti is tu notify all
persons having claims
against said estate to present
them to the undersigned on or
before the 21st day of
November, 1981, or tWs notice
will be pleaded in bar of their
recovery. Al) persons in
debted to said estate wiU
please make immediate
payment to the undersigned.
This the ;!isl day of May,
m i, Florence Stafford Mock,
Executrix of the estate of
Hannah Atliinson Bown
deceased.
521 4tp
NORTH CAROLINA
DAVIE COUNTV
IN THE GENERAL
COURT OF JUSTICE
District Court Division
File No. 78-CVD-2759
Household Finance Corp.
Plaintiff
vs.
Arthur C. and Rose Spaiigb
Defendant
NOTICE OF SALE
OF PERSONAL PROPERTY
Under and by virtue of an
execution issu^ on File No.
78-CVD-2759 by the Clerk of
Superior Court of Davie
County, directed to the un
dersigned Sheriff of Davie
County, in the above-entitled
action, the undersigned wiU
on the 1st day of July, 1981, at
12:00 o’clock noon, Davie
County Courthouse, offer for
sale to the highest bidder for
cash, to satisfy said
execution, aU right, tiUe and
interest which the defendant
now has or at any time at or
after the docketing of the
Judgment in said action may
liave had in and to the
following described personal
property, lying and being in
MocksviUe Township, Davie
County, North Carolina: 1975
Mercury Serial No.
5E38F529615 Blue in Color.
This property is located at
Davie County Courthouse.
This sale is subject to a
Judgment of $1,156.67 plus
cost of sale and any other
outstanding leins.
This the 27Ui day of May,
1981.
George Smith
Sheriff of Davie County
By: Lacy Hayes
Deoutj’Sheriff
6-4 2tnp
NOTICE OF
DISSOLUTION
OF W AGN ER
PLUMBING AND HEATING
COMPANY
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y
GIV EN that Articles of
Dissolution of Wagner
Plumbing and Heating
Company, a North Carolina
corporation, was fUed in the
office of the Secretary of State
on the 22nd day of May, 1961,
and that aU creditors of and
claimants against the cor
poration are required to
present their respective
claims and demands im
mediately, in writing, to the
corporation so that It may
proceed to coUect its assets,
convey and dispose of its
property, pay, satisfy and
discharge ito UabUities and
obligations and do aU Uiat is
actuaUy required to Uquidate
its business and affairs.
This the 28th day of May,
1981.
Wagner Plumbing and
Heating Co.
C-oJ.C.Kimmer
Route4,Box80-A
MocksvUle, N.C. 27028
HaU and Vogler,
Attorneys at Law
Attorneys for Wagner
Plumbing & Heating Co.
P.O. Box 294
MocksvUle, N.C. 27028
Telephone; (704)634-6235
5-28 4tnp
NORTH CAROLINA
DAVIE COUNTY
EXECUTOR S NOTICE
Having qualified as
Executor of the estate of Avis
O. Hodgson, deceased, late of
Davie County, North
Carolina, Uiis is to notify all
persons having claims
against said estate to present
(hem to the undersigned on or
before the 4th day of
December, 1981, said date
being at least six months from
Uie date of first publicaUon of
Uiis notice, or Ihis notice wiU
be pleaded in bar of their
recovery. All persons in
debted to said estate wUI
please make immediate
payment to the undersigned.
This the 4th day of June,
1981, Uie M m e being the first
publication date.
Paul Layman, Executor
of the estate of Aviso.Hodgson
Brock & McClamrock
Attomeys at Law
P.O. Box 347
Mocksville, N.C. 27028
Telephone: 704^-3518
6-44tnp
ADMINISTRATRIX
NOTICE
NORTH CAROLINA
DAVIE COUNTY
Having qualified as Ad
ministratrix of the estate of
Joe Glenn Spry, 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 21st
day of November, 1961, being
six months from the first day
of publication or this notice
will be pleaded in bar of their
recovery. All persons in
debted to said estate wilt
please make immediate
payment to the undersigned.
This the 14th day of May,
1981.
Shirley S. Spry, Ad
ministratrix of the Estate of
Joe Glenn Spry, deceased.
Martin and Van Hoy
Attomeys
Box 606
MocksvUle, N.C. 27028
5-214tnp
NORTH CAROLINA
DAVIE COUNTY
ADMINISTRATRIX NOTICE
Having qualified as Ad
ministratrix of the Estate of
Nebraska Vercy Jones, Sr.
deceased, late of Davie
County, this is to notify aU
persons having claims
against said estate to present
them to the imdersigned on or
before tbe llth day of
December, 1961, being six
months from tbe first day of
pubUcation or this notice wUl
be pleaded in bar of their
recovery. All persons in
debted to said esUte wiU
please make immediate
payment to the undersignM.
This tbe 8th day of June,
1961.
Ida C. Jones, Ad
ministratrix of the Estate of
Nebraska Vercy Jones, Sr.,
deceased.
Martin and Van Hoy
Attorneys
Box 606
MocksviUe, N.C. 27028
6-11 4tn
GUKXQUZi
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Taking this quiz may help you clear up tome fact*
and faliaciei about cancer. '
1. Scientiits recognize
approximately how
many varieties of cancer?
(a) 10(b) 50 (c)200?
3. According to the
National Canner Insti
tute, the age-adjusted
mortality rate from can
cer is (a) increasing (b)
decreasing (c) remaining
the same?
2. People can reduce
their risk of developing
cancer by: (a) eating a
balanced, luw-fat, high-
fiber diet, (b) drinking
otJy moderate amounts
of alcohol, (c) smoking
less, or (d) ¿1 of these?
4. According tlic
World Health Organiza
tion, what percentage of
cancer comes from occu
pational sources? (a) 15
to 20 pticent (b) 10 to
15 percent (c) one to five
percent?
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NORTH CAROLINA
DAVIE COUNTY
NOTICE
UNDER AND BY VIRTUE
of a power of sale contained in
a certain deed of trust dated
May 30, 1972, executed by
John Lewis Mayfield and
wife, Lucille H. Mayfield to
Lester P. Martin, Jr. Trustee,
and recorded in Book 82, page
287, Davie County Registry;
and under and by virtue of the
authority vested in the un
dersigned as Trustee and an
order executed by Delores C.
Jordan, Clerk of Superior
Court of Davie County, on Uie
Bth day of May, 1981, Uie
default having been made in
the payment of the in
debtedness thereby secured,
the said deed of trust l>eing by
the terms thereof subject to
foreclosure and the holder of
the indebtedness thereby
secured having demanded a
foreclosure Uiereof for Uie
purpose of satisfying said
indebtedness and Uie same
having been ordered and
approved by said order of
aerk of Superior Court of
Davie County, the un
dersigned D. Duncan
MaysUles, SubsUtute Trustee
wUI offer for sale at public
auction to Uie highest bidder
for cash at the CourUiouse
Door in Davie County, North
Carolina, at 12:00 o’clock
noon, on the 30th day of June,
1981, the land conveyed in said
deed of trust, the same lying
and being in Davie County,
North Carolina, and being
described as foUows:
BEGINNING at an iron, M.
B. Clement’s comer; runs
North 86 West 2.24 chains to a
stake in Hudson Une; thence
Southeast 3.00 chains to the
road; Uience East with the
road and Hi'dson line 2.24
chains to an iron, M. B.
Clement’s corner; thence
NorUi 1 West 2.88 TO THE
BEGINNING contahiing 6-10
acre, more or less.
FOR BACK TITLE see deed
from Mack Reid and wife,
Naomi Reid, to John F.
Jackson and wife, Agnes G.
Jackson, dated September 6,
1967, and recorded in Deed
Book 78, page 216, Register of
Deeds for Davie County of
fice.
A five (5) percent cash
deposit wUl be required. This
property wUl be sold subject
to aU taxes, encumbrances
and liens of record.
This 22nd day of May, 1961.
D. Duncan MaysUles
Substitute Trustee
6-4 4tn
Helpful Hint! On Using
Protective Chemicalt Safely
You -Savvy on Spills?
Used with care and com
mon sense, protective chem
ical products can be a key
to beautiful lawns and gar
dens. Here, from the safety
experts at Ortho, the coun
try’s leading manufacturer
of home garden chemicals,
are some safety tips in case
of spiUs.
• Should you spill any
chemical, set up a barrier to
keep children and pets away.
You don’t want chemicals
being tracked into the house.
• Ventilate the area of a
spill by opening doors and
windows, or setting up a fan.
Chemical fumes may catch
fire, so don’t store them
around pilot lights.
• Begin cleaning up a
spill as soon as you can to
minimize health exposure
and possible problems with
stains and odors.
• When cleaning up,
wear rubber gloves and avoid
breathing in vapors.• Sweep spilled solids
into a plastic bag.
• Spilled liquids should
first be soaked up with an
absorbent material such as
Kitty Litter or paper towels
and then placed in a plastic bag, sealed and put into a
trasli can.
• Scrub wood, cement
or tile surface with a water
solution of strong household
detergent.
Additional information on the safe use of garden
chemicals is available on a free poster. Send a postcard
to: Booklet Distributors of
America, 201 E. 42nd St.,
New York, N.Y. 10017.
H i'lo i t' 1 )l 1 i | ) t ‘))O S ll
1 u sed l(j sp i iiil
.1 lol III tim i-
t to
i ii \ .S(n i.i] S f i i i i K \
1 11.-. к
I onlv I ЧЧ
VVllOll I
waiilii) 1 1
PUBLIC HEARING
Budget Hearing
Advertisement
The proposed budget for the
Town of Mock.svillp has been
presented to the Town Board
of Commissioners and is
available for public inspection
in the Town Hall from 8 a.m. -
5 p.m. weekdays.
There will be a public
hearing on July 7, 1981, at 7:00
p.m., at the Town Hall,
Citizens are invited to make
written or oral comments.
Budget Summary
Revenues
Property tax $550,000.
State Taxes 125,000.
Powell Bill 40,000.
Other General Fund
Revenues 130,450.
Water & Sewer Fund
Revenues 324,800.
Revenue Sharing 83,227.
Total Revenue $1,253,477.
Expenditures by Depart
ments
Governing Body 9,600.
AdmmistraUon 126,117.
Planning & Zoning 8,549.
Building & Grounds 78,387.
Police 169,498.
Fire 40,100.
Street 84,539.
PoweU BiU 65,000.
Sanitation 67,450.
Recreation 45,155.
Non-Departmental-
General 151,065.
Operations-Sewer 112,485.
OperaUons-Water 123,390.
Non-Departmental-
UUlity 12,810.
BondDebtness 76,115.
Revenue Sharing 83,227.
Total Expenditures 11,253,477.
6-11 Itnp
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
NORTH CAROLINA
DAVIE COUNTY
The undersigned, having
heretofore qualified as Ad
ministratrix of the Estate of
Troy B. Ratledge, deceased,
also known as Troy RaUedge
and Troy Byerly RaUedge,
late of Davie County, North
Carolina, hereby notifies aU
parUes having claims against
said estate to present them on
or before the 22nd day of
Novemlier, 1981, or this notice
wUl be pleaded in bar of their
recovery.
AU persons indebted to said
estate wiU please make im
mediate payment to the un
dersigned.
This the 21st day of May,
1981.
Elizabeth Click Bums
850 Old Winston Rd.
KemersviUe, N.C.
John G. Wolfe, in
103S.MabiSt.
KemersviUe, N.C. 27264
(919)996-3231
5-214tn
THEf^ncj/yov
Many people have won
dered how some of the sym
bols we see every day came
to identify a product or a service we use every day.
THEN: The stag, the
identifying symbol of The
Hartford Insurance Group,
first appeared in the 17th
century, on the official seal
of Hertford (pronounced
“Hartford”). England. The
town seal showed a hart, or
stag, fording a stream. When
residents of Hertford mi
grated to America and
helped found Hartford, Con
necticut, they not only
brought the name for the
new settlement, they also
adopted the stag se.al. Con
necticut's oldest insurance'
operation. The Hartford In
surance Group, took the
stag as its corporate symbol
in the 1860s.
NOW: Now the stag has
been brought to life. The
Hartford's decision to work
with a live stag in television
commercials set it apart
from other insurance ad
vertisers. In 1975, The Hartford's live stag won the
“Patsy” award presented by
the American Humane So
ciety for the “ Best Perfor
mance by an Animal” in
a movie, television show
or commercial. During the continuous growth of The
Hartford, the stag has be
come known and respected
by more and more insurance
buyers as a symbol of
strength and protection.
Roman loldie ri were sometimes paid in lalt. (The
word salary darivet from the Latin sal, maaning salt).
I w
BIO Y A R D SA LE: 9
families...Saturday, June 13
from 9 a.m. untU? and
Sunday, June 14, from 11:00
a.m. until? Take 64 West out
of Mocksville, go past
Center Fire Department
and the sale will be at the
first house on the right after
passing Sheffield Road.
Items; Mens, womens,
teens and childrens
clothing, jeans in lots of
sizes, shoes, pocketbooks,
lots of books, toys, car seat,
radio, records, tapes,
jewelry, pictures, household
items, and many more
things to numerous to list.
Rain date will be June 20
and 21.
YARD SALE; Saturday, June
13,9 a.m. until-. At 64 West,
PoweU Road, 7th house on
right. T.V.'s, school desks,
golf clubs, wheels, roU bar,
baby items, etc.
12 FAM ILY YARD SALE:
Saturday, June 13, from 8
a.m. unUl...at Bear Creek
FamUy Campground. Take
Hwy. 64 West to first road
past Center Church (PoweU
Road) and turn left; then
turn left tieside 3rd house on
left. Watch for signs.
YARD SALE: ParenU Staff
of Mocksville Child
Development Center are
sponsoring a yard
sale,Saturday Jtme 13, 9:00
a.m. - 3:00 p.m. At Brock
Cafeteria or Children’s
Playground.
Y A R D SA LE : Sheffield
Grocery Store- Sheffield,
Sat. June 13 from 9 a.m.
untU 5 p.m. Items; Avon
Bottles, fireplace screen
and grate, clothes, toys,
sofa, high chair, household
items and more.
BIG Y AR D SALE: Saturday,
June 13 from 7 a.m. - 3:30
p.m. at 372 Duke Street,
MocksviUe. Crochet items,
baby clothes & items,
womens clothes (16-20 (,
household articles.
BIG SPR IN G C LEAN IN G
SALE; Thursday, Friday
and Saturday, June li-13
from 9 a.m. until?
Everything must go. Lots of
good items. On Hwy. 158
turn on Howardtown Road, 2
miles then turn left on new
part of Howardtown Road,
4Ui trailer on right. Held the
following week if raining.
FIRST TIME YARD SALE;
Several families. Hospital
Street Extension. Saturday,
June 13, 7;.T0 a.m. until
Green frame house. Infant
to adult clothing, household
articles, baby items,
Harliquin Books, Potty
chair, baby rocker. Buck the
Horse, men's dress shoes,
nice winter coat, flower
pole, wet bar, drapes,
spreads, glasses, jeans in all
sizes. Brownie outfits, Avon
jewelry and products.
Watch forsigns! -
4 FAMILY YARD SALE;
Ruffing Street, Cooleemee.
Beginning at 9 a.m. Rain
date- June 20. SmaU ap
pliances, furniture, lamps,
clocks, utensils, books,
linens, clothes, etc.
Y A R D SALE...June 12 &
13....Friday - 9 a.m. til 5
p.m. and Sat. 9 a.m. -2 p.m.
Beauchamp Road off of
Baltimore Road. Avon
botUes, clothes-different
sizes, baby stroUer, swing,
clothes, and other stuff.
Miscellaneous items. Watch
for signs'. Rain or shine.
2 F A M IL Y Y A R D
SALE...Sat.June 13 from 8
a.m. - 4 p.m. Hwy. 801 1
miles south of the raUroad
tracks in Advance. GirlsZO“
bicycle, lots of
glassware...some old,
clothing aU sizes, many
household items, toys, etc.
Rain or shine,
5 F A M IL Y Y A R D
S A L E ___Friday and
Saturday, June 12 & 13, from
9 a.m. untU 4 p.m. 1 mUe on
MiUing Road. Watch for’
signs. Rain or shine.
4 FAMILY YARD SALE: Sat.
June 13, starting at 8 a.m.
....5 mUes east of MocksviUe
on Highway 64 at Union 76
station.
T H R E E F A M IL Y Y A R D
SALE: Friday and Satur
day, June 12 & 13,8 a.m. - 6
p.m. Take Redland Road off
158 or 801 to Fox Meadow,
4Ui houae on Uie left. Rain or shine.
YARD SA LE: Friday, June 12
from 9 a.m. - S p.m. beside of
Davie Auto Parts on
Wilkesboro Street. Scout
Leader equipment, scout
clothes, dance outfit,
camper, family clothing,
couch and swivle rocker,
vacumn cleaner.
The world'i first traffic lignal wat initalled outdde
the Britiih Houwi of Parliament, London, in 1868,
decades before the automobile was Invanted.
Irrprove
\5urLot
Is there room for a little imprtn ement
around your lot?
Like landscaping in the front yard? A
big pool in the back? Maybe another
bedroom if you have a lot of “little ones”?
Whatever your home needs, United
States Savings Ronds can make
improvement a lot easier. All you have to
do is join the Payroll Savings Plan. 'I'hat
vva> , a little piece of each pa> check is set
aside to buy Bonds. Automatically.
In a little while, you'll have a lot uf
Bonds piled up. And that means a lot
of savings.
So join the Payroll Savings Plan. Buy
United States Savings Bonds.
And d<* t: little for yttur lot.
Take ,. stock
in ^ ^ ^ e rica .
Tha first stata to «ntar the
Union aftar tha original
13 was Verm ont in 1791.
DAVir, COUNTY l'NTHRPRISIÍ RI-CORO, THURSDAY, lUNH 11, 1981 ^ 7!)
PUBLIC NOTICE
I AM NOT responsible for any
debts, other than those
made by ME, personally.
Bobby C. Brandon
Rt.5, Mocksville.N.C.
27028
6-4-3tpB
A r 'IM A L S
FOR SALE: AKC Chow Chow
puppies, female, 8 weeks
old, red. 36 Champion Sired,
$175. Phone 919-475-8490.6-4-4tnB
FOB SALE: Chinese Pugs,
AKC 1 male, 1 female. De
wormed. Call: 634-2938 at
anytime.
6-ll-ltpH
FOR SALE: Riding Jackete
100 percent polyester , fully
lined. Sizes 8-14. Blue,
brown, Green $17.50
THOROUGHBRED
TRAINING CENTERS 996-
5820.
6-ll-3tnTTC
CARD OF THANKS
IN LOVING M EM OR Y
ON FATHER’S DAY
(Dave Lovelace)
A million times we’ve needed
you.
A million times we’ve cried.
If Love alone could have
saved you
You never would have died
In life we loved each other;
in death we love you still
In our hearts you hold a
place no one else can ever
fill. It broke our hearts to
lose you, but you did not go
alone;
For part of us went with you,
the day that God took you
Home.
Mr. and Mrs. George Riddle
PHELPS
We would Uke to thank our
friends, neighbors, and
famUy for their kind deeds
due to our son Rickie Phelp«
and his wife Barbara being
injured in a motorcycle
accident at Myrtle Beach on
May Sth.
Thank you,
John A and JatUe Phelp«
Ilout6 4,
MocksviUe, N.c. 37038
FOR SALE B Y OW N E R : 5
room brick house on 2 lots
including remodeled kit
chen, 2 bedro(Hns, bath with
ceramic tUe, spacious Uving
room-dining room com
bination with fireplace, den
or third bedroom newly
carpeted. Property includes
frontage on 2 streets, fen
ced-in yard, garden plot,
utiUty buUding. House in
cludes draperies in den,
bedrooms, and Uving room,
air conditioner, bi^case-
storage unit in den, attic
storage. Exterior wood
covered in vinyl siding and
aluminum trim. ExceUent
location. 618 Wilkesboro
Street. CaU 634-5478 or 634-
3259 after 6 p.m.
6-11-tfnF
DIVORCE
U N C ON TESTE D D IV O R
CE....$60 plus court cost.
Conference room No. 3
Holiday Inn West, Friday,
June 19 from 7:30 - 8:30 p.m.
$75 plus court coat if you
prefer to come to the offlce
located in Clemmons.
Edward Y. Brewer. Atty.
CaU 919-766-8281.
1-31-81 tfnB
MAGICIAN
MAGICIAN...Children love
m agic! Professional
magician for birthday
parties, etc. CaU today for
fees and dates. “You’U be
pleased!!!” Phone: 634-
2200. Mark Daniel, 416 Park
Ave., Mocksville, N.C.
27028., _____________1-8 tfnD
Bftdc wid Stonewwyfc
FIREPLACES. BRICK AND
Stonework...Extension and
Carpentry work done.
F R E E estimates. R M F
Constru'^tion, Inc. CaU 998-
3907.
1-10 tfnRMF
W A N T E D : TR A C T O R -
T R A I L E R D R I V E R
TR AIN EES. Immediate
openings full or part-time.
Approved for the training of
Veterans and National
Guards. Call (919) 996-3221
or write: Kernersville
Truck Driving School, P. 0.
Box 385, Kernersville, N.C.
27284.
5-7-8tnKTD
Positions Available.. .For »st
and 2nd shifte for grindere ,
sheet metal workers and
welders. Apply at: The
Austin Company, Hwy. 421,
Yadkinville, N.C. between 9
a.m. and 2 p.m. or call:
(919 ) 468-2851 for~im ap
pointment.
6-4-2tnAC
PART-TIME H E L P W A N
T E D ....F o r weekends
only....Saturday and Sunday
from 10 a.m. until 7 p.m. for
short order cook. Call:
Roger Ketner at 998-8746, or
apply in person. Hickory*
HUl Golf and Country Club,
Rt. 3, MocksvUle.
6-11-tfnHHC
W A N T A N E W SPRING
W ARDROBE? You can eam
great $9$ seUing Avon. CaU
coUect 919-679-2907 or 919479-
8234 or write Peggy Long,
Rt. 3. Box 57. YadklnvUle,
N.C. 27055.
6-11-ltnL
SU M M ER DOLDRUM S GOT
YOU DOWN? Get up with
Avon, Great $$$, great
people. CaU coUect 919-679-
2907 or 919-679-8234 or write
Peggy Long. Rt. 3, Box 57,
YadkinvUle, N.C. 27055
e-ll-ltnL
AVON OFFERS LOW-COST
G R O U P IN SU RA NCE:
Whiel you eam high $$$. CaU
collect 919-679- 2907, or
write to Peggy Long, Rt. 3.
Box 57. YadkinvUle. N.C.
270S5.
6-11-ltnL
BABYSITTING.
N.c. Licensed Day Care: For
ChUdren 2 yean and up.
Enr(dl at Kiddie Kampus
Playschool. Offer year-
round program for pre
schoolers. Also accept school-age children, through
12 years. FuU or part-time
care with morning kin
dergarten program. 2
snacks and hot huich daUy.
CaU 634-2266.
4-16 tfnKK
Would Ш е to keep chUdren in
my home. CaU 634-5023.
S-284fnP
I wiU do babysitting in my
home for first and second
shifts. In Cooleemee area.
CaU: 284-2S69.
5-28-4tnT
CHILD CARE: Experienced
chUd care in my home, aU
ages accepted, fuU or part
time, $20.00 weekly. Located
on Davie Academy Road,
(Junction Road). For more
information call 284-2742.
6-4-4tnB
Need someone to babysit an
infant and do light
housekeeping in my
home.CaU: 998-880S.
6-ll-2tnA
D A V C A R E F O R Y OU R
CHILDREN...7 a.m. - 6 p.m.
FuU-time or by the hour.
Highway 1S8 across from
Smith Grove Community
Center., excellent care.
CaU: 998-3935.
6-n-tfnK
Burglw & Fif Alftm
UNITED ALARM COMPANY
OFFERS you all the options
for complete security in
case of fire, burglary and
personal emergency. CaU
today for a FliEE estimate
for your bome or buaiiieu».
Phone 634-3770.
4-24 tfnB
IT PAYS
TO ADVERTISE
IN THE CLASSIFIED
FER R EE^S M O B ILE H O M E S ER V IC E
Porchw, Patlof ll Additionc; Complete Rtpair Strvic«;
Skirting & R*-L«v«llnt; Door, Window, Ь Patio Awnings;
Door*and Win^tvs. СНЕСИ OUR PRICES!!
7 0 4 ^ 9 2 - 5 6 3 6
SP O T C A SH
FORCLEAN liTrRTODeL AUTOMOBILES.
AaMAKES MODELS AND SIZES NEEDED
B U Y — S E L L — R E N T — T R A D E
A NAME YOU KNOW AND TRUST
D U K E W O O T E N
S A L E S - R E N T A L S
NEXT TO CITY HAU. 634 3215 -634 2277
FOR SALE Custom frames
... any size ... expert work
manship ... over 75 samples
on display ... see at
C A U D E L L L U M B E R
COMPANY, 1238 Bingham
Street, Mocksville, Phone
634-2167.
4-24-81 tfnC
FOR SALE: Beautiful hand-
n>ade quilts, aprons, spread,
placemats, Barbie doll
clothes for your Christmas
gifts; inexpensive Jewelry,
~ dolls, Bibles, perfumes, etc.
Trash 4 Treasures. Call 634-
2610.
10-30- tfnTT
WILL BUY diamonds and
gold. Don’s Music Center.
124 North Main Street,
MocksviUe, Phone 634-3822.
2-5-81 tfnD
Mocksville Builder’s Supply
now has RINSE ’N VAC
carpet steam cleaner. Only
$12.50 a day. Contact
MocksviUe BuUders Supply
at 634-5915.
1-10 tfnMBS
We buy Mortgages, 1st, 2nd,
or 3rd. Call 634-3596.
4-30-tfnSD
Reward: For information
leading to recovery for a
stolen International Tractor
with 2 point hitch, and 9V^
feet yeUow Woods Rotary
Muwer Shallowford Farms,
LewisvUle, N.C. CaU (919)
9459046.
5-28^tnM
FOR SALE: 8.5 ft. Hot Point
Freezer....Like new. Only
$125.00. Call: 634-2467.
64-tfnJ
FOR SALE: 1895 Sohmer
Piano...Art Case, original
hand carving. Completely
re-conditioned wiUt original
Ivory keys. Must see and
hear to appreciate.
C O L L E C T O R 'S IT E M .
CaU; 634-5292.
G-4-2tnS
BUY...SELL...OR
TRADE....Or Repairs for
Lawn Mowers and TiUers.
CaU 492-5633 at anytime.
6-11-tfnG
FOR SALE; SoUd
Bedroom Suite, 2 twin
and dresser with mirror,
exceUent condition, $6W.00.
Sofa and chair in good
condition, $600.00. CaU 998-
8009.
6-ll-3tnT
BroyhiU Bedroom with Queen
Bedding. Sale Price-
$550....$200 off on floor
sample brand new BroyhiU
walnut fumiture- dresser
twin-mirrors, 5 drawer
chest. Queen headboard
with Queen mattress and
foundation. Easy paymenU
arranged - free delivery.
Ask for “Queen BroyhUl” at
StatesviUe Salvage & New
Fumiture - across from the
Post Office or caU 872-6576 -
StatesviUe, N.C.
6-1 -2tnSSP
Let the Professional
Bookkeeper Walkertown,
N.C. do your bookkeeping,
clerical work at her home
office. She will save you
time & money, 12 years
experience. Fast, depen
dable, accurate. Phone
collect at 919-595-2549, after
4:30 p.m. for an ap
pointment.5-7-tfnG
WANTED
ATTH E PANTRY...Sali«bury
Street. MocksvUle....There
wUl be a DUNKIN BOOTH,
baked goods and refresh
ments for sale. AU proceed
will go to Muscular
Dystrophy. Saturday, June
13, O N L Y ! Come on Out and
Help the Cause!
Mobile Homa$
for rent
F O R R E N T : 2 bedroom
Mobile Home at Greasy
Corner. Deposit and
references required. Please
caU: 284-2688.
FOR FAST AND EFFICIENT
SERVICE: On aU electrical
needs, large or small, call
Karl Osborne, owner of
O SB OR N E ELECTRIC
COMPANY. CaU 634-3398.
230 East Maple Ave.,
Mocksville, N.C.
lnva$tigatlons
Private Investigations
Will be StricUy ConfidenUal,
Lie. No. 320, / telephone:
Salisbury (704 ) 636-7533 or
Kannapolis (704) 932-5705.
I-1-81 tfnL
ABORTION
F R E E Pregnancy testing.
Arcadia Women’s Medical
Clinic in Winston-Salem,
N.C. Call for an ap
pointment Collect: (919)
721-1620.
1-1-81 tfnAWC
CLEANING
C&C CLEAN IN G SER-
VICEDon’t spend your
Saturdays doing house
cleaning or windows. Just
call us for an estimate. Also
construction cleaning. CaU
998-5616 or 634-3163.
1-29-81 tfnC
WiU Do: All types of Cleaning
Service or Yard Work
AVAILABLE....aeaning
done on a one time basis or
every week. CaU Diana at
996-3171.
5-28-StnL
FURNITURE
FOR SALE: aU types un
finished chairs, stools of aU
sizes - upholstered swivels,
deacon benches, aU kinds of
used furniture; and a good
supply of N E W name brand
matresses at a reasonable
price and 3-piece living
room suits at a bargain. All
sizes of rockers and chairs.
CaU W.A. ElUs at 634-S227.
II-20 tfnE
Garbag» Pick Up
FOR W E E K L Y GARBAGE
pick-up anywhere in Davie
County... call B EC K
B R O TH E R S G A R B A G E
DISPOSAL SERVICE, 284-
2917 or 284-2812 Cooleemee,
cr County Manager's Office,
MocksviUe 634-5513.
6-12-81 tfnB
MOTORCYCLE
FOR SALE: lOT Honda
Motorcycle, low mUeage. In
exceUent condition. CaU:
998-3479.
6-4-2tpH
FOR SA LE: I960 Yamaha, SX
850 special, |a,300 lUte new,
6,6000 mUes. CaU 996-2319.
6-ll-2tnS
FOR SALE: 1980 Yamaha YZ
125, excellent condition.
Recent piaton-ring change,
polished parts, metzler
tires. WiU take best offier.
CaU Ken at 634-2972.
6-ll-ltpS
I"CUii6i<>td Ads do mor« Ihmgb fo< mo>* people ih«n any oU<k> lorm o< advtrlismg
4>
Style Mart Inc.
410 West Side Drive Lexington,N,C- 27292
Has Im m ediate Opening For Personnel
In lh e Fo H o w in g A re a s-
Cutting; Experienced spreader
and cutter.
Sewing; Overlock or serger operators.
Finishing; Inspectors and pressers.
Apply In Person Between 7:30 til 4:00 p.m.
NEW AND USED
OFFICE FURNITUPE
^ Safes ^ Files
^ Fire Proof Files
ROW AN
lO FFIC E FU R N ITU R E
PHONE 636 8022
118 N.Main St.
Salisbuiy, N.C.
Earless
O FFIC E S U P P U E S
"120 North Church St!
iSalisbury, N.C.
Phone 6 3 6 2341
Office Supplies,
Furniture, Syaiems
Art S i^Jie s
FOR SALE: 1965 Taylor
Mobile Home . 12 X 60...2
bedroom, 1 bath, un-
derpenning...2 porches...oil
drum and stand. CaU 998-
3902 or 998-3291.
4-30-tfnJL
FO R SA LE : 1974 Two
bedroom Commador MobUe
Home, 12 X 55, washer,
dryer, air conditioner in
G O O D condition. $5,000.
Call: 998-5787 after 5 p.m.
6-4-tfn
FO R SA LE : 1981 Two
bedroom MobUe Home, 12 X
56, total electric, fully
furnished, storm windows
and doors. $7,995. Four more
To Choose from. All at a
large discount. Ervin Motor
and MobUe Home Company,
Hwy. 601, 'k mile south of
MocksviUe. Phone: (704)
634-3270.
6-4-3tnEM
CLOSE O U T IN N E W
MOBILE
HOMES....Carolina....14 X
60, 2 bedroom, total electric
and furnished. $10,900.00.
Call: 634-3270. Hvvy. 601 , hi
mile south of MocksvUle.
6-4-3tnEM
FOR SALE: 1978 14 X 70
Sheraton Seville. 2
bedrooms, 2, full baths,
central air, total electric,
storm windows and door,
completely furnished on a
rented lot. Like new, $18,500
or assume loan. C^U Sheila
Oliver at 284-2898.
6-11-ltpO
Butinen Opportunities
If you’re thinking of
SELLING A BUSiNElSS???
Or B U Y IN G A
BUSINESS???, CaU the
PROFESSIONALS. All
information confidential.
CaU Professional Business
Brokers at (919) 765-7121.
3034 Trenwest Drive,
Winston-Salem, N.C. 27103.
2-26 tfnPB
ROOMS FOR RENT
ROOMS FO R RENT...Apply
at Don’s Jewelry and Music
Center...124 North Main
Street, Mocksville, N.C.
Phone 634-3822.
1-11 tfnD
Music, Tuning ft RapaWf
Pi a n o t u n i n g , r e p a i r !»,
moving. Specializing in
rebuilding. Registered
Craftsman with Piano
Technicians Guild. Seaford
Piano Service, 178 Crest-
view Drive, Mocksville,
N.C. CaU Jack Seaford at
634-5292.
9-25 tfnS
PIANO TUNING: Repairing
and RebuUding. 22 years
experience. All work
guaranteed. P IA N O
TECHNICIANS G U ILD
CRAFTSMAN. CaU WaUace
Barford at 284-2447.
3-S-81 tfnB
FOR SALE: MUST SELL!!!
Upright Piano ~ RebuUt by
Klutz Piano Company
Salisbury in 1977. Dark
mahogany finish. $250.00.
CaU: 492-7129 after 5 p.m.
any day.
6-ll-ltnC
P IA N O IN
STORAGE...Beautiful
Spinet- Console stored
locally. Reported Uke new.
responsible party can take
on low payment balance.
Write before we send truck.
Joplin Piano. P .O . Box 3064.
Rome Ga. 30161.
6-ll-ltpJ
^ * * S P E C I A L * * ^
* 1 . 5 0 f t . INSTALLED
SEAMLESS
ALUM INUM GUTTERRuit Free No Leaki
15 yr. Factory Baked-on
Eiumel Finith
ALL WORK GUARANTEED
FREE ESTIMATES
9 9 8 4 6 0 5
Bishoff
Aluminum Gutters
__________Mockiv
FOR SALE: Remodeled nice
home inside and out at
North Main Street in
Cooleemee, N.C. 3
bedrooms, 2 full baths, large
living room, kitchen has
built-in oven, drop in range,
dining room or den, utility
and pantry, New oil ifurnace
with air conditioner and
paved drive. Call 634-5918
officc; and 634-2849 home,
2-5 tfnF
FOR SALE: By owner, 4 year
Split Level, 3 bedrooms, 3
baths, heat pump, central
air, 22 X 31 out building, 3.77
acres. Rainbow Road. CaU
998-3246. $80,000.00
4-30-tfnR
FO R SA LE 1. Beautiful
Remodeled Farm House
near completion, almost 3
acres of land, paved drive,
fireplace and separate
garage. Only $36,000.2. New
3 bedroom Contemporary
Home, iMt baths. Only 5
percent down payment with
low interest rate financing
available for qualified
applicants. CaU: 634-2252.5-14-tfnS
FOR SALE BY OW N E R : 3
be^oom Brick House,. ^4
Acre lot; fuUy carpeted,
central air, fuU basement;
Double carport; Out
buUding storage shed; 601
NorUi, Priced toseU FAST
7‘/i Assumable loan. Phone
(704) 492-5679 after 4 p.m.
5-28-tfnS
F O R SA LE: R E ST O R E D
F A R M H O U SE W ITH
ALM O ST 3 ACRES OF
LAND....4 staU horse bam,
fenced pasture, 4 fireplace
and aU the Charm you could
ever ask for! $78,500. Judy
Snyder at Crowder Realty
Company, Winston-Salem,
N.C. Phone (919) 768-1200.
6-4-4tnCR
FOR SALY B Y OW N ER: 3
bedroom brick rancher,
fenced yard, paved drive,
storm windows, newly
decorated, exceUent con
dition, assumable loan at 8
percent priced to seU, at:
625 Cherry Street, Moc-
skvUle, N.C. CaU634-se07 for
an appointment.
Auction
AUCTION SERVICES:
Auctions don’t cost they
pay. For any type of auction
sale contact Buck Hanes,
Auctioneer. 919-998-3610.
NCAL 1362.
9-25 tfnH
W E CONDUCT ALL TYPES
OF AUCTION SALES. We
are now contracting sales
for Spring and Summer of
1981. Call Jim Sheek,
AucUon & Realty at 998-3350.
NCAL 924.
3-5 tfnS
AUCTION
W i Offer Complets Auction
«..Rm I Estate Strvica
Wtth Tha Know How And
Experianca To Conduct Any
Type Of Auction
Succatsfully
"Serving The Auction
Profession Since 1 93 4'
T h i n k i n g
A u c f l o n ?
T I 4 I N K
YORK
N.C.A.L.NO 952
704/546-2696
919/766-6500
D A V I E
M O B I L E H O M E R E P A I R S
IF YOUR HOME HAS
* Weak and Rotten Floors
*Cabinett That /^e Mot Secure
* Windows That Won't Roll Out
* A Roof That Leaks and Rumbles
* Windows and Doors That Leaks
CALL TIM, evenings after 4 p.m.
and weekends anytime.
634-3334
Don't let the value of your home go down hill.
CALL TODAY
PAINTING, HOME
REPAIRS, Small or large
jobs. For free estimates call
James Miller at 998-8340.
12-28 tfnM
SEPTIC TANK CLEANING
SERVICES...certified to
pump septic tanks-large
truck for full lime, efficient
service...also rent sanitary
toilets...Call 284-4362,
Robert Page, Cooleemee.
1-1 tfnP
Bob's Painting Ser
vice..Interior and Exterior
aU work first class, 30 years
experience, free estimates.
CaU 492-7588.
5-21-tfnS
CARPENTRY-f -f Porches,
Sun Decks, Patio«, Roofing,
Additions, Remodeling.
Fence Work, Also concrete
Driveways and sidewalks.
Reasonable prices. FR EE
Estimates. Call anytime
and ask for : Charlie. 990-
6016.6-11-tfnF
S T E V E N S O N S H O M E
REPAIRS and aU types of
maintenance work, paint
houses and roofs, carpenter
work of all types at
rea so n a b le prices.
Discounts to Senior Citizens.
Business phone: 634-5012
and Home; 634-5571.
6-11-ltpS
Land For Sele
FOR SALE: 2 to 3 acres of
land on Main Church Road;
just off of the Cana Road.
CaU 1-803-494-2140 for more
information.
6-4-2tpD
UPHOLSTERY
6-ii-S4>H
HOUSE FOR SALE: Grove
Street. Cooleemee. 2 BR.
large utiUty room, attic
storage, carport, furnace &
wood heat, storm windows,
siding . new roof, water
pipes & water heater.CaU
284-2726.
6-11-ltpC
O F F E R IN G Y O U TH E
FIN EST in custom
upholstery...Large selection
of Quality Fabric and
vinyls. FR EE estimates.
Quick, effective service.
Can J.T. Smith Fumiture
Co., Inc., 492-7780. Located
10 miles west of Mocksviile
on Sheffield Road. Over 30
. years of experience.
1-1 tfnSF
HOMES FOR RENT
W A I ^d': House to rent...-
Mature responsible female
desires small house to rent,
reasonable price, has no
chUdren. CaU before 6 p.m.
at 998-5280 and after 6 p.m.
765-4341.
6-11-ltnT
FOR SALE: 1972 Corvette,
Extra nice and loaded; AC,
PS, PB, tilt-telescopic,
power windows, leather, 4-
speed, AM-FM, slick
lacquer paint with reliable
drive-train makes for a
great investment.$5,950.
Call: 634-3747 or 634-2219.
5-28-tfnM
SURPLUS JEEPS, CARS and
TRUCKS, avaUable. Many
sell under $200.00. Call 312-
742-1143, Ext. 5229 for in
formation on how to pur
chase.
6^-4tpPA
FOR SA LE: 1972 Ford Van V-
8 Automatic, $750.; 1966
Chevrolet truck, % ton,
$495.; 1974 Opel Manta 2-
door, $1250.; 1972 Old
smobile, $550.; 1970
Volkswagen, $850.; 68 Ford
Torino 2-door, $395.; and 10
more to choose from a super
good buys! Ervin Motor
Company, Hwy. 601 South,
'/ii mUe out. Phone: (704)
634-3270.
6-4-2tnEM
FOR SALE: 1978 Lincoln
Continental, Cartier
designer series. Beige,
loaded and in excellent
condition. CaU: 634-5316.
6-11-tfnS
F O R SA LE : 1969 Dodge
Pickup....225...6 cylinder.
Straight drive. Cali (919)
463-5344 after 6 p.m.
6-11-tfnH
F O R SA LE : 1979 Toyota
Lovona 4-door Liftback. One
owner, air condition,
powerbrakes, power
steering, 5-speed, AM-FM
with stereo cassette. Low
mileage, extra clean. CaU:
634-5981 or 634-5818 after 6
p.m.
6-ll-2tpH
FOR SALE: 1972 CheveUe
Malibu...2 door, vinyl top.
AM-FM, 8-track, automatic,
$850.00. CaU: 634-2826.
6-ll-2tnW
FOR SALE: 1973 Camaro,
new paint, good condition.
CaU 492-S7S4 after 5 p.m.
e-ll-ltnA
SU R PLU S JE E P S. CARS.
, and TR U C KS available.
Many seU under $300.00.CaU
312-742-1143. Ext. 5229 for
information on how to
purchase.
6-11-ltpPA
FOR SALE: 1949 Red BeUy
Ford Tractor in Good
condition. $1350.00. Call:
I
T O M L I N S O N 'S
G A M E R O O M
^ Pool Tables
i t Pin Ball
O p e n N i g h t l y
Bear Creek Road
Phone 492-5685
6-ll-tfnB
FO R SA LE : 1977 Shasta
Travel TraUer, 29‘, 7“ , self-
contained, and 1973 Chevy
Cheyenne P.V. Truck with
tow package, $6500.00. CaU
634-3275.
6-ll-2tpW
FOR SALE: Camper Cover
for iongbed pick-up. Leer
fil>erglass model, 2 yre. old,
exceUent condition. $275.00.
CaU 634-2662 after 5 p.m.
6-ll-2tnH
TH E O A K S
2 6 8 M i l l i n g R o a d
Private Patio, and all modern convenieces,
at a very affordable price.
704-634-3185
day or or night
C A R P E T
D r y C l e o n i n g
14^ a square foot,
bathrooms $S.OO
Call Anytima,7 Days a Waak
MARK JAMES
Rt.5,Box 217-A
Mocksvllla, N.C. 27028
(919) 9 9 8 - 3 5 4 6
SURPLUS FURNITURE
PARTS, SUPPLIES,
AND SAMPLES
Larga quantitlat for manufacturas, tniall shops.or hobbyists. Oak. pine, and mapla wood dImansion in sats for tablas, upholstary fabric, brass hirdwara, scraws, sandpaper, glass. Many othar itams including
aquipniant.
Tanglewood Furniture
Co..lnc.3 MUes West uf 801 PO Box 814 Clemmons,N.C.
910-998-^216
.stocl .
WANTED
livestock
Bec1( Livestock
^ Co., Inc. ,
tVholesale Meats
Thomasvilie/N.C.
iimu. BUY I or 100 cows' f... also Bulls, Veals, 1 Faadan, Calvas... Wa
Pay Cash Kor All Cattia Whan Picked Up.
WE WILL
Pick up - Kill - Process Your Lockar Baaf .
,A.LBech,Jr.
Kt. 1, Thomasville, N.C.J
Call Collact Anytima WInston-Salam
(919) 78S-900B or 788-7524
Phona After 6:00 P.M.
Eai1yAM.(9l9)476«8K
«D DAVII COUNTY I'NTI RI’RISl- RICORD, Till IRSDAY, Il INI 11, 1>Ж1
News Tips From
Governor’s Office
GOODBYE, CLASSROOM;
H E LLO , S U M M E R JOB-
Some l25colleRe students will
exchange the classroom for
an office this summer as they
participate in the annual
summer internship program
in state government. The
students will report to work
June 8 in different state
departments to work in fields
as varied as marine biology,
landscape architecture and
business. Most of the 10-week
assignments are based in the
state’s capital city but a few
are located outside of
Raleigh. To find out more
about the internship program
and those students from your
area participating, call Mary
Jo Cashion, Department of
Administration, (919) 733-
4391.
Y O U N G B R A V E S AN D
M A ID E N S TO G A T H E R -
Himdreds of Indian youth
from across the state are
expected to attend the second
annual Indian Youth Unity
Conference at Pembroke
State University, June U-13,
Hie conference will bring
together young people from
the state’s five tribes and
three Indian urban
organizations and give them
the opportunity to share
cultural experience in Indian
pride and heritage and to
develop leadership. The
conference is being coor
dinated by the N.C. Com
mission of Indian Affairs in
the N.C. Department of Ad
ministration. Teresa Chavis
at the commission has the
••'aeUlls. üall her at (ftlft) liä-
s m .
one person has trouble, the
whole family reacts-mostly
in negative or overprotective
ways. Alcoholism and drug
treatment programs are now
working to involve families.
Research shows that family
involvement greatly in
creases the chances of a
person learning to live a drug-
free life successfully. For
more information contact
Linda Miller, Human
Resources' Public Affairs
Office. (919) 733-4471.
C Y C L IS T S ARE
PREPARING FOR TRIP--
Tlie N.C. Bicycle Touring
Society's "Seven- Day
Weekend" will be held June
20-27. Participants will tour
through Eastern North
Carolina from New Bern to
Ocracoke Island to Nags Head
and back to New Bern. For
further Information, contact
Rick Edwards with NCDOT's
Bicycle Program, at (919) 733-
2804 in Raleigh.
BEACON TO REPORT ON
WEATHER-A radio beacon
which is currently being in
stalled on Ocracoke Island
will serve both aviators and
boaters who are traveling the
Outer Banks area. The
computerized equipment will
broadcast weather conditions,
updating its information
every 10 seconds. NCDOT’s
Division of Aviation is in
stalling the beacon in con
junction with the U.S. Coast
Guard. For more details,
contact Ben Scheutz, Division
of. AwiaUnn, at (aim 7Sa-,2491
“HARD HAT” WOMEN-
Women across North Carolina
are now employed in many of
the skilled trades Jobs
traditionally held by men.
Work Options for Women, a
program of the N.C. Council
on the Status of Women, is
providing training for women
in nontradltional sklUs as well
as services for employers.
Lillian Lee can give you in-
f(H*mation on the program and
spedfict on tbeie working
women in your area. Call her
at (919) 733-6581.
FRAUD DECREASING-
County social services
departments reported a
decrease in the amount of
money Involved In luipected
fraud cases under the Aid to
Families with Dependent
Children (AFDC) program
during 1980. Report« made to
the Divif ion of ^ l a l Servicea
in the N.C. Department of
Human Reaources show that
1788,585 wai involved in
suspected fraud during the
year, compared to 1933,308 the
previous year. For further
information, contact Kay
Fields (919) 733-7831.
VOLUNTEERISM-Hie
current economic situation ia
forcing job cuts in both
government and private in-
duatry. Uiis means a tighter
job market for laid-off
workers, graduating college
students and other young
people looking for summer
employment. There are
alternatives, though, like
volunteering. Volunteer work
offers a variety of benefits, as
wdl as potential job op
portunities. For more in
formation about volunteer
opportunitiea and benefits,
contact Nan Smith with the
Department of Human
Reaources’ Office of Volun
teer Services. (919) 733-4502.
T E E N A G E R S A N D
DRINKING: WHAT'S NEW?-
•Did you know that alcohol is
the number one drug choice
among teenagers today?
During the 1940s and 50a, 53
percent of all high school
students had some drinking
experience. Today 90 percent
drink, seem to be drinking in
greater amounts, and begin at
an earlier age. In North
Carolina more than twice as
many teens between 12 and 17
years drink than smoke pot.
For more information contact
your local mental health or
alcohol information center or
Unda MUler, Department of
Human Resources’ Public
Affairs Office. (919) 733-4471.
FAMILY TREATMENT-
Alcoholism and drug abuse
are family problems. When
in Raleigh.
“ E X T R A ! R E A D A LL
A B O U T ! ’’- The State
Library’s statewide summer
reading program beginning
now at North Carolina’s
public libraries is featuring a
newspaper theme. The
program will make all
preschoolers "cub reporters”
while their school age
brothers and sisters will
become “star reporters” as
they read non-fiction
throughout the vacation
months-4uid even write some
themselves. Program s,
games and other attractions
are planned at local libraries.
After completing
requirements, participants
will receive certificates
signed by Gov. Jim Hunt,
serving as “edltor-in4;hlef."
For details, contact Diana
Young, State Library, (919)
733-3570 or Peggy Howe, (919)
733-5722.
THEATRE U N D E R THE
STARS-niat's a great way to
enjoy good drama in the
summer In North Carolina,
where outdoor dramas took
root more than 40 years ago
and continue to flourish. Most
people are familiar with the
Big Three-“The Lost Colony”
on Roanoke Island, “Unto
■niese HiUs” in Cherokee and
“Horn in the West” in Boone-
but there are others, too, each
telling in story, song and
dance part of the rich history
of North Carolina. Most
seasons start the end of June
and run into August. For
details, call the Theatre Arta
Section, N.C. Department of
Cultural Resources in
Raleigh, (919) 733-2111.
P R IS O N M IN IS T R Y - i
What's it like to minister to
the moat dangerous criminals |
in North Carolina? You can
ask the N.C. Department of
Correction's Chaplain of the
Year, Julian P. Moorman,
who has been chaplain at
Ontral Prison the last nine
years. Contact him at <919)
828-2361.
namt vinagar cornai
..w... vin aigre, French for
"tour wine" which i( what
vinagar ii, or wai originally.
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D AN IEL
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c o u rte o u s D e p e n d a b le p h o n e 6 3 4 - 3 9 7 5 O r 6 3 4 - 2 4 9 2
S o u t h M a i n S t r e e t
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j HOTPOINT Dealer For Davie County!
I I
Budget Is $6^492,ПЯН
C o u n t y T a x R a t e I s 5 0 *
Davie County commissioners set the
1981-82 tax rate at SO cents per $100
valuation Monday. This is a six cent
Increase over the current 44 cent rate,
but 2 cents less than previously an
ticipated.
At its June 1 meeting, commissioners
learned that a tax rate ot 52 cents would
be necessary for the 1S81-82 flscal year.
The lncre*»e Is a result of inflation,
increase in school operating funds, and a
4-cent appropriation to local fire and
rescue departments.
However, after meeting 30 minutes in
executive session Monday night,
commissioners voted to lower the tax
rate by 2 cents, llie reduction stems
from anticipated revenue from tobacco
stored in the county by R. J. Reynold’s
Tobacco Company.
“Wu have trimmed the budget and
we’re to a « cents proposed tax increase
from 12 cents voted in,” said chairman
BiU Foster, referring to the school bonds
and fire and rescue tax. County com
missioners gave unanimous approval to
the $6,492,098 budget immediately
following the statement.
R. J. Reynolds has contested taxes on
export tobacco stored In Davie, Forsyth
and Stokes counties for the past three
years. Tlie N.C. Court of Appeals,
however, upheld a 14-month old decision
by the state Property Tax commission
that the tobacco ia indeed, taxable.
Reynolds has until June 22-20 days
after the ruling to ask for a review.
Charles Mashburn, county manager,
said, however, there is strong indication
that RJR will not appeal the decision.
Acting on this information, com
missioners approved a change in the
county’s tax base firom 1646 million to
1636 million. This means an additional
$140,000 in actual tax revenue and a 2-
cent cut in the proposed tax rate.
Also, RJR is expected to pay $374,000
in back taxes on export tobacco stored in
Davie County.
Charles Mashburn said, however, that
this is not figured Into this year’s
budget. “We have to look to this year
and the year after,” said Mashburn.
“The $374,000 is a one-shot deal. It won’t
be coming In every year.”
Bill Foster, commission chairman
said that the board Is actuaUy trying to
compensate for 12 cents on the tax rate
not present in the 1981-82 budget. WhUe
the county’s interest from bonds and
surplus budget in 1979 and 1980 paid for
the initial years’ costs of the county’s
tvro Junior highs, the county is now faced
with paying debt so-vlce on the voter
approved school bonds. This is com
parable to 10 cents on the county tax
rate, Foster said.
"W e knew a lot of people wouldn’t
remember the school bonds,” Foster
said.
Davie voters approved $5.5 million in
bonds for the North D*v!e and South
Davie Junior Highs built last year.
Foster added that before the May fire
Ux vote, departments received about 2
cents on the county tax rate. Because
departments will now receive 4 cents,
that accounts for the other 2 cents
commissioners hed to allow for in this
year’s budget.
Mashburn said the general fund ac
tually wUl be less In 1981-82 than the
current fiscal year ending June 30.
Overall, the 1981-82 fiscal budget
represents an 18-percent increase.
Previously, Mashburn said total
expenses for schools had increased
more than $1 million since 1979.
Operating expenses for the two new
junior highs are $500,000 a year.
"Utilities have been the biggest cost,”
Commissioner Glenn Howara said.
Mashburn also blamed a reUtlvely
slow growth -less than $10 miUlon-ln the
county’s U x base In 1900-81 when
compared to other years.
Between 1979 and I960, property
valuation In Davie rose by $91 miUlon.
Several departments’ requests were
cut In the approved budget-the sdiools,
from $1,333,500 to $1,270,000; the
sheriff’s department, from $342,040 to
$292,823; and the Davie Library, irom
$128,537 to $110,267.
M a yB a c k T a x e s F r o m R J R
E n a b le C o u n t y T o P u r c h a s e L o t
Anticipated revenue of $374,000 In
bade Uxes from R.J. Reynolds Tobacco
Company may allow county com
missioners to purchase the Masonic
Building and lot on Court Square.
Earlier this month, commissioners
voted to let IU option on the building
expire because iU purchase could mean
an automatic IH cent U x hike. Pur
chase of the building and lot Is $97,000.
The recent ruling of the N.C. Court of
Appeals that R.J.R. Tobacco Company
must pay taxes on export tobacco stored
in Davie, Forsyth and Stokes counties
could mean enough revenue to purchase
the building.
R.J. Reynolds has contested taxes on
tobacco stored here for the last three
UHT Milk Will Aid Davie
A new Innovatloo in milk will soon be
on the market. Hii> new product is
Grade A U HT pasteurized milk.
Tlie oMtauriutiai method is called
ultra hlfli temperature (UHT). Grade A
milk is Seated to KO degrees Fannheit
for a léw MCfoBdt and then cooled
quickly to 70 degree*.
The milk Is handled without bacterial
contaminatian and put into herOMtteaUy
Mtled containen, whicfa are made from
Jayers ot plastic-coated aluminum foil
and paper.
Protectsdlrom light and air in theae
packages, the milk can be stored
without refrigeration far more than 3
months at normal room temperature.
On May 4, 19S1, M rym en, Inc., a
dairy company, announced plans to
build a new facility in the southeast to
produce the UHT pasteurized milk. It
should be avaUable to consumers by
1982.
It Is not designed to replace fluid mUk
in the market, but to supplement it. It
expands the market for dairy farmers
and owners.
Tfiere are several advantages, some
of which are guaranteed quality, it’s an
energy saver, can be stored without
refrigeration, easy to store, Mckage is
environmentally sound and
daUe, and it’s ideal for vending
available to more people, in more places
fnd more convenientty.
BUI Mainous, county agricultural
extension agent, said that ap
proximately half of the county’s dairy
farmers are mambsrs of Dairymen, Inc.
Part of the mUk ttiey supply to
Dairymen, Inc. wUl be uaed in the
production of this new milk product.
is new product can make mUk
FFA Dairy Judging
Team In State Contest
n e Davie Ceaaty CkaRter of
Future Farmers of America wlU
be gotag to theSUte Dairy Jadgtaig.
Contest in Raleigh, N.C. June IT. U
and 19.
Team members are James
Foster, John WUson, Greg Eldred
and Everett AUaa who la repUcIng
Daniiy Reavis. Reavis Is unable to
attend as he U reconperatlng trom
recent surgery.
If the team places first In tbe
sUte competition they wiU go to
Kansas City, Mo. to compete In the
national contest. Hiey wUl be
accompanied by their adviser
Mark CorrUier, Agricultare
teacher at Davie High Scbeol.
years. However, the N.C. Court of Ap
peals ruled earUer this montti that ttie
product is indeed taxable. R.J. Reynolds
has until June 22 to appeal the decision.
Some reports indicate that the cor
poration wUl not appeal the decision.
Learning of ttie anticipated revenue,
commissioners agreed to reconsider the
Ion during executive session Monday
jht.
Charles Mashburn, county manager
said, 'Some of the commissioners felt we
should reconsider possibUities of pur
chasing the buUding.”
“The option does not expire until July
22. Perhaps something can be worked
out by ttien,” he said.
The coun^ initially accepted an op-
(continued on page 2)
Three Sought In jewelry Store Robbery
Local law enforcement officials are
searching for 2 black malea and one
black female in connection witti the June
3rd robbery of Davie Jewelers.
Shortly before the store’s closing Ume
at 5:50 p.m., the two men walked In and
asked to see wedding bands. They
grabbed 75-100 bands and headed east on
foot, Joined by ttie female, who had been
waiting ouUide.
Composite drawings dqiict the thieves
as a black male In his late teens, S’S” -
5’4”, 130-135 lbs., smaU slender buUd,
wearing a print shirt witti gray or ydlow
colors, a gold color choker-type
necklace wltti imIUtton pearls among a
(continued on page 2)
Anclior Seafood Owner Charged Witli Arson
Lazaris. co-owner ot Anchor
Seafood, was arrested Friday, June 12
and charged with arson in a fire which
swept ttirough the MocksvUle based
Restaurant June S. He was arrested at
his residence in Clemmons.
Laiarls, 27, owned Anchor Seafood
Restaurant Jointty with Paul Chrysson
of Winston-Salem. He is currentty in ttie
Davie County JaU under $150,000 bond.
Court appearance has been set for
Monday, June 29.
Lt. Gary Edwards of ttw MocksvUle
Police Department said tbe fire broke
Uy be
indicates ttiat the fire, which gutted the
resUurant’s interior, originated near
ttie cash register. He confirmed tliat
conUiners of flammable liquid were
found at the scene.
Edwards refused to Identify tlie
flammable Uquid found at the scene
pending an official report by the SUte
Bureau ot Investigation. Damage is
estimated at $150,000. The buUding was
unoccupied at ttie ttme ot the fire.
Lazaris, a native of Greece, has been
In ttiis country for about eight years,
said Edwards. He Is not a U. S. citizen
and has no prior criminal record.
Anchor Seafood ResUurant, formerly
Aunt Helen’s Cafeteria, was purchased
by Lazaris and Chrysson In August, iMo
from Albert and Helen DeSimone. Sale
price was $175,000. The resUurant Is
located on U. S. 601 north of MocksvUle,
and is part of a Winston-Salem based
chain.
Edwards said investigation Into tbe
blaze is continuing. No ottier charges or
arrests are anticipated at this Ume. he
added.
Arson Charged
George Lazaris was arrested Friday and charged with arsun In connection with
a June S fire at Anchor Seafood ResUurant. Officer Gregg Bagshaw and
MocksviUe Police Lt. Gary Edwards are shown In the background. (Photo by
Robin Fergusson).
Lillies
Michelle Smiley, II, daughter of M r. and Mra. R u s e ! Smiley and little ate-yenr-
oid Dana Potts, daughter ot M r. and M n . Lather Potta are n it as radiant as the
bright orange D ay llllies they are a d m M a f. The giria live on Route 3,
MocksvUle. (Photo by Jim Barringer)
(USPS 149-160)DAVIE C O U N T Y
P.O. Box 525, MocksviUe, N.C. 2702»
32 PAGES
$10.00 Pw Year in North Carolina
$15.00 Per Year Outside North Carolina.■THURSDAY, JUNE 18, 1981 S i n ^ Copy 25 emts
___• - ~--:
C o u n t y A s k e d T o O u t la w T r a p s
Members of the Davie County Animal
Protection Society asked commissioners
Monday to consider outlawing steel-
jawed animal traps in areas outoide a 15-
foot perimeter of creeks and waterways.
“W e’d lUce to get rid of steel traps on
dry land,” said Earl Hammer, Animal
Protection Society member. “Hie only
animal legal to trap are around water.
Hammer Spoke on behalf of 8 APS
members present at the meeting.
In reading an opUiing statement for'
ttie group, BUI Ferebee said the world
has outgiwn barbaric acts such as
wife-beating and lyncMng hi the streeU.
He said valuable bunthig dogs and
raccoons have suffered excnidattng
pain and torture from the steel traps
when box traps could have been used as
effectively.
“We have no quarrel with the trap
per,” Ferebee sdd. He added ftat the
trap on his leg,”
Hammer i '
box-type traps, whidi tbe membera
brought along to show commisaionan,
allowed the trapped animals to go
unharmed and roeased to anottier area
nV rgiwCPIlg pUrpOtM«
“It works extremely wdl,” Hammer
said of ttie box trap. “Yet,tfyoucatdia
pet, you don’t hann him
Hammer said foxes and dogs were
caught In ttieateel traps away tnm
waterways numerous times in the last
year.
a cat ttiat was dragghig around a
Pete Dwiggins
Pete Dwiggins Is
New Fire Chief
After approximately 25 years as Are
chief tor ttie MocksviUe Volunteer Fire
Department, Andrew Lagle Is resigning.
Pete Dwiggins, who is 2nd In com
mand, wUl assume ttie duties of Are
chief in July.
Second command under Dw iggins wiU
be Abe Howard, Jr.
There wiU be about 25 firemen serving
on the force under the new chief.
As chief administrator, Dwiggins wiU
oversee the fire department, hold
trabiing session and confer with ttie
town on budgetary matters concerning
the fire department.
Head Start Program
.. Head start Director Jo Ann anew
announced ttiat appUcatlMS are
now being taken for the FY ‘U
Head Start Program to begfai oa
September 1. 1981.
..Head Start is a pre^hoel ehUd
development program servta« low-
hicome chUdren ages M , teelndlag
children with handicaps, and
provides comprehensive servlcas
hi the areas of Health (msdleal,
dental, and nntrltlon), Edneatlen,
Parent Involvement, Social 8«r-
voces. Mental Health, and Han
dicap Services.
.. Ihe Program, funded by DHHS's
Administration for Children,
Youth, and FamUles, Is ad-
mbristered iocaUy by ttie Yadkki
Valley Economic Development
Olttrlct, Inc. The local anti*
poverty Is antldpathig Federal
fundhig of approximately $W9,M1.
..In addition to the hifoimtlon
required on the application,
parents must provide verlflcaUoa
of toUl family faieeme, proof at
bh^h. ttie chUd’s immnnisatlMi
record, and documentation ot
(amily size.
..To apply. Uterested persons
should contact Uie Community
Action Program ofiiee hi ttie
County, or caU 3*7-7111 U Been-
vUie, N.C.
Bob King Chevrolet, Inc.
Closes Out Local Operation
Bob Kins Chevrolet located on Hiey didn’t lUie the idea of an outsideiBob King Chevrolet located on
WUIiesttoro Street officiaiiy closed iU
doors Wednesday, June 10.
The business, formerly known as
Pennington Chevrolet, was purchased
by Bob King in September, itWO from O.
K. Pope and Jack Pennington. Sale price
was not disclosed, but King commented
that lie had a toUi investment of
$250,000.
King purchased the Chevrolet
dealership and leased the building from
Jack Pennington.
Pennington said thet he “assumed”
General Motors would locate anoth e
person to Uke over the local dealerF'.ip.
"I can’t see them leaving Davie County
without a Chevrolet dealership," he
said. “General Motors wants lo seU
cars.”
King officially shut down the
operation last Wednesday. New cars on
the premises were sold to various
dealers. King commented that a portion
of the used car inventory was sold. The
rest was transferred to his Mazda
dealership in Winston-Salem.
King, commenting on the close of the
iocai Cnevroiet dealership said, local
businessmen viewed me as an outsider.
Hiey didn’t lUie the idea of an outaider
coming to this town and making money.
He added that it was a bad buaineaa
venture from the sUrt.
King leases a portion of the MockavUle
based building to Joe Frittx, who
operates a body siiop. Khig said that to
his knowledge, Frittz pUns to conthiue
operations.
King added ttiat anyone with a
Chevrolet car can take it to any
C^hevroiet dealership for servicing and
parts. At present, the closest are
Yadkinville and Winston-Salem based
firms.
The business has operated as Pen
nington Chevrolet Company since 1938.
The business was named after W. M.
Pennington of Winston-Salem, owner at
that time.
FoUowing Uie deatti of W. M. Pen
nington in 19S2, the business was
reorganized as Pennington Ctjevroiet
Co., Inc. 0. K. Pope served a* general
manager and president, and Jack
Pennington as secretary aiid treasurer.
The corporation was dissolved when
King purchased the dealership last
September.
Hammer said, alio referred to tbe ban on any trapping of foxes.“Ther’s no reaaon to aet a steel trap out in the middle of a field,” Hammer said. “Ibat’s vrtiera a fox goes, and that’s where a dog goes.”He said Forcytti bans steel completdy. Ms group would Uke
trapa allowed onfy 15 foet or doaer to atreama, he addad. Hammer admitted Davie County haa a muakrat problem.Anottier APS HMmber aaid the game warden, who covwa ttme counties in- dudtaig Davie, cannot adequatdy enforce ttw random placement in fields of steel trapa.Hie groi9 preaented a proposed county ordinance agahiBt ttie steel traps on dry land sets to the commissioners
tor their review. Hammer said Sen. Gilbert Boger, R-Davie, would be wUUng to work on a sUte law after ttie
county acto on tt.In otiier buaineaa, commissimiers approved applying for $i06,a00 in sUte Clean Water Bond money, or 25 percent of an estimated $425,000 cost In refurbishing the BuU Hde dam at the Rowan- Davie Coun^ line.Much of the cost would go towarda conatructing a coffer dam to hold back ttie^tti YadUn River whUe new gatea would be placed in the dam, according to ttie county’a enghieers, Moore, Gurdner and Associates ot Asheboro.“The contractor wUl have to fight this river,” enghieer Ray Spahihour aaid.The gates are needed to create an adequate flow ot water ttwough ttw raceway to dean out accumulated debris, Spainhour said.AppUcaUon fonttie grant money ia due
June 30.In a reUted matter, commissioners approved contnicthig a fence on ttie road leading to the dam at ttie request of
an adjobilng propoty owner.“I fed Uke this could be ttie cheapeat way for us to go,” Water superintendent Danny Smitti aaid, referring to a smaU dispute Uie county has been having with ttie man over ttie raod. Davie County does have a blanket easement agreement tor right ot ways to ttie dam.Smitti said ttie county had been uahig ttie same dead-end drive into the dam tor about 20 years before the man
complained.In ottier business Monday, com
missioners;Approved authorization of Center Volunteer Fire Departmnet to respond to tires hi ttie 1-40 and 601 North area. Included hi the area is Blaise Baptist Church, Horn’s Country Kitchen and ottier. Unitl ttie action Monday ttie area fell hito no ofticaU fire district.Appointed David Hendrix as Ux rvisor; Pauline Wagoner as Ux ctor; Carol Cook as deputy Ux coUector; and RIU Vogler as county accountant. AU were appobited for two
year terms.The next regularly scheduled meethig of the Davie County Board of Commissioner is Monday, July 6.
Veterans Eligible .
For Grave Markers
Many veterans are buried in the various cemeteries in Davie County without a United States (Government memorial grave marker com- memoraiing their service to their country.All deceased veterans are eligible who received an honorable discharge; even avU War veterans. This includes both war time and peace time service. There is no time Umit for submitting an application.Applicants must submit proof of
(continued on page 2)
I
DAVII СОГМЛ I NTI KPKISI. Kl (OKI), THUKSDAY. .lUNIi IS. 1*)8I
Two Killed In Wreck Saturday On US 601
Л l4-> ear-old girl and a 5в-уеагч)М
woman were killed Saturday afternoon
in a two car accident on US 601,3Vi miles
soiith of Mocksville. TTie accident oc
curred during a thunderstorm about 6
p.m.
i Donna Sue Cover, 14, of CroM Street In
I) Cooleemee and Louise Key Cleaveland,
j 56, of Rt. 7, Mocksville, were killed in-
stnni ly In the crash.
These were the fourth and fifth high
way fatalities in Davie County this year.
State Highway Patrolman A. C. Stokee
said that Miss Cover was a passenger in
a car driven by her mother, Joyce F.
Cover. Mrs. Cover was driving south on
US 601 during a heavy thunderstorm
when she ran into a puddle and lost
control of the car, which slid sideways
into the path of a second car.
Mrs. aeaveland was a passenger in
the second car, which was driven by Ray
Roberson, 77, of Rt. 1, Mocksville. Mrs.
Geaveland’s daughter, Audry Lynn
Qeaveland, 14, was also a passenger in
the Roberson car.
Roberson and Miss С leaveland were
treated at the Davie County Hospital
and were reported in stable condition
early this week.
Mrs. Cover was initially treated at the
Davie County Hospital and then was
transferred to Forsyth Memorial
Hospital. She was also listed in stable
condition early this week.
Two other passengers in Mrs. Cover’s
car, her son John Edward Cover, 9, and
iI
Donna Sue Cover
d neighbor, Brian Lee Linville, 8, of Rt.
4, Mocksville, were also treated at the
Davie County Hoepltal.
DONNA SUE COVER
The funeral for Donna Sue Cover, 14,
of Cooleemee was conducted TUMday
afternoon at the First Baptist Church of
Cooleemee. The Rev. Lee Whitlock
officiated. Burial was in the Legion
Memorir.! lark Cemetery.
She was bom in Davie County to David
Allen and Joyce Ann Fields Cover. She
was an eighth grade student at ihe South
Davie Jr. High School where she was a
member of the school band and the FlagCorps.
She was p member of the First Baptist
Church of Cooleemee.
Survivors include her mother of
Cooleemee; two brothers, Donald
Eugene and John Edward Cover, both of
the home; her maternal grandmother,
Mrs. Susie Fields of Cooleemee; her
paternal grandmother, Mrs. Betty
Cover of Erick, Oklahoma.
MRS. LOUISE CLEVELAND
The funeral for Mrs. Cleveland was
conducted Tuesday at the chapel of
Morrison-Studevent Funeral Home by
Bishop W.O.K. Gray. Burial was in the
Salisbury National Cemetery on Wed
nesday at 10:30 a.m.
She was born Dec. 12, 1924, in Anson
County. S.C.
Survivors include three daughters,
Miss Audry Lynn Cleveland of the home,
Mrs. Annie L. Arnold and Miss Diane B.
Cleveland, both of Mocksville :
Four sons, Michael T. and Ricky
Cleveland, both of the home, Henry
Cleveland of Woodleaf and Gordon
Cleveland of Mocksville; three brothers,
William Kemp of Mocksville, Joseph
Kemp of Pendleton, S.C. and Garfield
Kemp of Clemson, S.C.; and one sister,
Mrs. Betty Clement of Mocksville.
A guardraU on Intentate 40 speared this lt«3 Chevrolet after the driver fell asleep last Saturtay nlÀt. The car traveled over 30 feet ia this
" • » " h «
Sleeping Driver Crashes Guardrail
Two people'were riding in this Chrysler, which hit the Ford station wagon in the side. Louise Cleveland, a passenger in the Chrysler, was killed in the accident.
A sleeping driver crashed into the
guard rail on 1-40 west around 12:45 a.m.
Saturday, June 13, the Highway Patrol
said.
Charlie Stevie Dulin, 26, of Rolling
Hills Lane, Rt. 7, MocksviUe, feU asleep
at the wheel of his 1963 Chevrolet. The
car ran off the right and hit the end of a
Of Local Chevrolef
Agency Dates Back To 1926
Rescue workers labor to free Donna Cover from the wreckage of the station
wagon in which she was a passenger late Saturday evening. Miss Cover and another woman were killed in the wreck, which occurred on a rainsUck US Ml,
Just north of Davie Crossroads.
Veterans Eligible
For Grave Markers
(continued from page 1)
service. This proof could be a copy
discharge, a Form DD214 or any cer
tified document from a State Archives
office. The application requires the
signature of the applicant, the signature
of the consignee (person to receive the
marker) and the signature of an official
of the cemetery or a church trmtee
where tiie marker is to be placed. The
markers are engraved and shipped free
of charge to tbe consignee. The ap
plicant must bear the cost of having the
marker placed at the veterans grave
site.
The markers may be ordered in grey
granite, white marble or bronze metal.
Ihe stone markers are shipped by
freight and the bronze marker is sent by mail.
The markers may be used as head
marker or foot marker. If both markers
are already provided, the marker may
be placed flush with the head stone.
The applicant may be the next of kin
or any interested person. See your
veterans service officer, R. Duke
Tutterow, in Room 201 of the Davie
County Office Building any morning
except Wednesday or any Tuesday
afternoon. M r. Tutterow will be glad to
be of service.
Please call for an appointment it>efore
ooming to the office. The office phone
number is 634-2010.
Driver Charged
A M ocksville man was raarged w ith
reckless d riv in g a fte r ru nning o ff
Glad.slone Hoad on Thursday, June 11
around 10:30 p m.
According to Die Highway Patrol,
Barry Oean Jones, 20, of 400 Wilkesboro
Street, was driving his 1970 Ford about
70 mph when he lost control m a curve.
'Ihe car hit several mailboxes and
culverts
'lYooper C. K. CoUins estimated the
damage lo the car a l $300.
I
I Sheriff's Department
Ted 0 . HiU, of Winston-Salem,
reported the larceny of a generator from
the Sagan Lake Form, Advance on
Thursday, June 4. The generator was
valued at $«00.
Nancy Doub, of Rt. 2, Advance,
reported a larceny on Saturday, June 6.
Ihe door to her trailer was left open.
Stolen were a necklace, bracelet and
earrings valued at $600.
A Winston-SBlem Journal paper rack
was reported stolen at the Bermuda
Run post office on Monday, June 8. The
rack, newspapers and lock were valued
at $122.
Lynn Joyner, of Rt. 1, Mocksville,
reported a larceny on Monday, June 8.
Radiators were ripped out of a 1968
Chevrolet Impala and a 1965 Plymouth
Fury. Also mining was one battery. Hie
estimated value was $135.
Damage to property was reported at
the residence ol Jerry Lawder, of Rt. 7,
Mocksville on Saturday, June 6. A blue
June 10 and charged with simple
■ult.
Chevrolet pick-up truck ran through the
yard, causing $175 damage to grass and
rose bushes.
Bobby G. Gobble, 32, of Rt. 1, Ad
vance, was arrested Monday, June 8,
and ctiarged with trespass.
A vehicle ran through two yards on
Ruffin Street in Cooleemee sometime
Saturday night, June 6. Helen Benson
Walker reported $150 in damages.
Jackie Morton also reported $150
damage.
Norma Reese, of Rt. 2, Advance,
reported a breaking and entering on
I'uesday, June tt. A sliduig door in the
back of the house was found forced open.
Timothy Theodore Scott, 21, of
Cooleemee, was arrested Wednesday.
Brenda Head, who uves on N.C. 801,
reported a prowler around 12:40 a.m.
Thursday, June ll. She reported that
someone tried to force open the front
and back door. The would-be intruder
also had a flashlight, shining it through
the windows.
VandalUm to a phone booth at the rest
area on 1-40 east was reported last
weekend. Damage caused by a beer
bottle was estimated at s;«00.
Tim Young, of Rt. 2, Advance,
reported a burglary on Thursday, June
11. The door to the back of the trailer
was pried open. Stolen were a shotgun,
rings, and cash, valued at $425.
Drink bottles worth $24 were stolen
from the parking l>'t of Fishel Store, Rt.
2, Advance. Ralph Montgomery stated
that he observed a blue Volkswagen stop
at the store. A white male walked over
tbe the bottles and carried some back to
the car. Montgomery said he followed
the car to the Li’l General store in
Clemmons, but did not get the license
number.
George William Doolittle III, 31, of
Salisbury, was arrested at 12:30 a.m.
Saturday, June 13 on U.S. 64. He was
charged with driving under the in
fluence and having no driver’s license.
Cleo Strain, of 52 Watt Slieet,
Cooleemee, reported the larceny of a
bicycle on Saturday, June 13.
Abraham Scott reported damage to
property on Saturday, June 13. Someone
threw a full beer bottle against the rear
window of Scott’s 64 Mercury parked
beside U S 158 near B and W Trading
Post. The rear window was shattered
and the front windshield was cracked
wtien ttie twttle went through the car.
Damage was estimated at $350.
Bob King’s Chevrolet, Inc. ceased
operation in Mocksville as of last
Wednesday, June 10th. See Separate
Story.
Announcement of the purchase of
Pennington Chevrolet Company by Bob
King was made last September. The
grand opening for the agency was held
in October.
The first reference to a Chevrolet
agency for Davie County was a news
item in the MocksvUle Enterprise in
June 1926.
“J. Reed Edwards and H.R. Martin of
Ronda opened a general repair shop in
the aement building which was recently
occupied by the MocksviUe Motor
Company and are prepared to give you
the best of service in repair work.
“This company has tbe agency for Oie
Chevrolet cars and parts for this
territory.
“ This business is under tbe
management of Edwards who will move
his famUy here next week and wUl oc
cupy ttie Mo-Do-No<te Lodge.”
This business operated from June 1928
to October 1926 as Uie Davie Chevrolet
Company. It was located in tbe triangle
site made by Avon and Wilkesboro
Streets in front of the present FOX
Store.
MARTIN CHEVROLET CO., INC.
In Ute October 14, 1926 issue of Uie
MocksvUle Enterprise appeared the
announcement Uuit “Martin Chevrolet
Company, Inc. has taken over tbe stock,
parts and fixtures oi Uie Davie
Chevrolet Company and invite you to
caU in and inspect our place under new
management. Ex-Sheriff George F.
Winecoff, who is weU known in Davie
County and surrounding counties is now
connected with the company and wiU be
pleased to have his old friends caU on
him at any time.
On October 25,1927, H.R. Martin was
fataUy injured in an auto accident near
Nortti Wilkesboro. He died at age 30.
TOMLINSON CHEVROLET CO.
In Uie April 19, 1928 issue of ttie
MocksvUle Enterprise appeared the
foUowing announcement:
“A.R. Tomlinson and son, C.H., have
secured ttie Chevrolet Agency for Davie
County, succeeding the Martin
Chevrolet Company, Inc., and are now '
ready to seU you one of the ‘bigger and
better Chevrolets.’ ”
“Mr. Tomlinson has had much ex
perience with the automobUe business in
Uiis city, and his expereince wUl enable
him to give you Uie very best of sales
and service obtainable anywhere.’’
FULGHUM CHEVROLET
In June of 1934 it became the Fulghum
Chevrolet Company, being so announced
by the foUowing news item;
J.H. Fulghum of Mountain Park has
moved to our town and is living in the
Neely House on North Main Street. Mr.
Fulghum has opened the Chevrolet
Company formerly known as Tomlinson
Chevrolet Company, and wUl cerate
under the name of Fulghum Chevrolet
Company.
“Mr. Fulghum and his salesmen, A.R.
Tomlinson, J. Livingston WUliams and
G.F. Winecoff hivite you to see ttie new
1934 Chevrolets.
“C. H.Tomlinson has charge of Uie
service department and invites aU
automibile owners to bring their
automobUe troubles and leave them
with him."
HOM E CHEVROLET COMPANY
Six months later the agency, stiU
located in the same original spot,
became the Home Chevrolet Company.
At the time of the change over in
January 1935, F.B. Trivette was office
manager for Fulghum Chevrolet. Mr.
Fulghum, an ordained minister, served
for many years as pastor of Uie First I
Baptist Church of MocksvUle.
iiome Chevrolet was formed in
January 4,1935, with Thomas A. Stone in
charge. (Stone had formerly been
associated with Sanford Motor Co.)
During the next two years a new
buildina was erected by W.W. Smith
next to the Sinclair Service Station. The
agency moved into Uiis site early in 1938,
holding Uie grand opening event in
February of that year.
On May 8, 1938, Stone died of self-
infUcted wounds at his home on North
Main Street, Within two months Uie
Chevrolet Agency was operating under
new management with the Home
Chevrolet Company issuing the
foUowing announcement;
“ Home Chevrolet Company an
nounced ttiat it has sold stock, mer-
! and equipment. However, we
I have used cars, notes and accounts.
G.L. (Lee) Craven wUl continue in
charge of ttie used cars. Headquarters
wUl be at ttie Sinclair Service StaUon
(grated by J.W. RodweU.
PENNINGTON CHEVROLET CO.
On July 1, 1938, W.M . Pennington of
Winston-Salem and W.W. Smitti of
MocksvUle purchased the Home
Chevrolet Company.' The aimouncement
was made that it would operate under
Uie name of Pennington Chevrolet
Company with BiU Pennington serving
as general manager. The service
department was under Uie supervision
of George Evans Jr. James F.
Stonestreet was offlce manager and had
charge of the parts department.
Witti ttie outtireak of World War H,
BiU Pennington closed the automobUe
business to serve witti the Department
of Defense TransportaUon witti offices
in Winston-Salem. Following the
cessaUon of the war, he returned to
MocksviUe, re-opened the Chevrolist
agency, and soon expanded it into larger
and more modem quarters on the
northeast side of WUkesboro Street, the
present location.
PENNINGTON CHEVROLET CO.
FoUowing ttie deatti of W.M . Pen
nington in July 1952, the business was
reorganized as Pennington Chevrolet
Company Inc., witti O.K. Pope as
president and general manager, and
Jack Pennington as secretary and
treasurer.
On July 10, 1900 a notice of the
dissoluUon of the Pennington Chevrolet
Company Inc. was pubUshed. This was
foUowed in early August witti the pur
chase of the stock of the corporation by
Bob King of Winston-Salem.
Spinning Tops
Spinning tops is a popular sport in
Malaysia. The wood-and-metal tope are
so heavy-close to 18 pounds-ttiat most
people don’t take up the pastime untU
Uiey are about 16, NaUonal Geographic
World magazine reports.
Liechtenstein
Thirty^ive years ago Liechtenstein
was poor and agrarian, but today it is
the most intensively industrialized
nation on earth and one of the most
Sought For
Local Robbeiy
fconiinucd from page 1)
gold design, very dark skin tone, close
cut kinky hair, very narrow face and
head (head comes to a peak in back),
clean shaven, size eight ring finger,
dark slacks witti white stitching.
guard raU. The car traveUed along ttie
raU for approximately 33 feet.
DuUn was treated at ttie scene for minor injuries.
Trooper C. R. CoUins esUmated Uie
damage to Uie car at $1,500. No charges were fUed in the incident.Tlie second male is described as in his
early 20’s, 5’8”, 150-165 lbs., black hair
cut medium length on top and combed
ik on sides, hair on aides wavey and
shoulder length in back, clean' shsven,
no glasses, medium muscular buUd,
wearing a red tee shirt, nylmi footbaU-
type jersey, short sleeves with the name
“NASTY” on Uie back, across tiie
shoulders and a number (unknown)
below the name, ttie letter “N ” in Nasty
was partiaUy rubbed away, blue je
light or yeUow skin tone.
The female is described as in her M ’s
5’l0”-5’li”, 175 lbs, short afro hair cut,
large build, roUs of fat around midrUf,
wide face witti large nose and lips, dark
complected, gold tooth on upper ¿de'of
front teeth.
Anyone having information on ttiase
three or their whereabouts should
contact Uie MocksvUle Police Depart
ment.
RJR Taxes
(continued from page 1)
tion on the buUding last February which
includes a .94 acre lot and a two-story
buUding. The buUding and lot are owned
by Holmes Investment Company of
Salisbury. The firm purchased the
^ d i n g in 1973 from Masonic L o ^e No.
Overcrowded conditions in tiie Davie
County Courthouse prompted com
missioners to examine possibUities of
purchasing the buUding. Originally,
commissioners had hoped to relocate aU
non-court related offices into the
buUding witti a new courtroom buUt on
Uie third floor of the courthouse.
At present, commissioners are ex
ploring possibilities of locatin
courtroom in the County Office BuUd
adjacent to Uie Courthouse.
Ouldoor Furniture
The first furniture for the outdoors
was made of wrought iron. It was
speciaUy made for wealUiy families
wiUi expensive lawns and formal gar
dens.
il>S 149-160) ^
124 South Main Street
Mocluvjlle, N .C.
PubUshed every Thursday by thePublished every Inursday by the
D A V I E P U B L IS H IN G C O M P A N Y
M O C K S V IL L E
E N T E R P R IS E
1 916 1958
D A V I E
R E C O R D
1899-1958
C O O L E E M E E
J O U R N A L
1 9 0 6 1 9 7 1
Cordon Tom liiuon..................................Eklitor-Pubiislier
Becky Snyder
Director OI Advertising
Second Class Postage Paid in Moclisville, N .C . 2 7 0 2 8
S U B S C R IP T IO N R A T E S
lilOXlO p«r yMr in North Ctrolins; $tS.00 per ynsr out of itat*.
Single Copy 25 cent«
•'o(tm«$t*r; Send sddreu ctisngM to Dsvie County Enterprii* Rtcord,
P.O. Box 525, Mockivills, N.C. 27028
DAVII-: (X1UNTY ENTI-RPRISL RI-XORI), THURSDAY, JUNI: 18, !481 3
ф М W H I T E
S A L ETHRU JU N E 2 7 th
N O W IN P R O G R ES S
BRIGHT IDEAS FOR LIVING
A BOUNTY OF SAVINGS BEGINS TOMORROW
Let “Wild Rose” sheets from Springmaid“
made with Kodeir bloom in your home
A traditional floral print on ricepaper background. Per
manent press muslin of 65% Kodel* polyester/35% cot
ton. Flat or fitted sheets
versatile “Pinafore” solids
from Springmaid,* made with Koder
. Twin, rea. 5.99 Ч . 4 7 EACH
full sheets, flat or fitted, ’ 5 .9 7 EACH
Std. cases, pair, reg. 5.99 ’ 4 .4 7 PAIR
save 25^ on Burlin^on
“Britannica” stripes
Stretch your budget with pastel or deep tones that
coordinate with many patterns. Or create your own
look with percales of 65% Kodel* polyester/35%
ton. Flat or fitted sheets. Twin, reg. 7 .9 9 ............. *5.97
Queen, reg. 12.99, I ^ ^ il *9^67^
Std. cases, pair, reg. 6.99 ..........................................*5 17 pr.
>7.47
EACH
h .
/ / ^ ' ■ \ ,
s a v e on a
total look for
yo u r bedroom :
“Flo ral C h a rm ”
m ad e w ith Fortrel*
From State Pride® pastel floral sprays
on bright white bring the freshness
full sheets, flat or fitted,
regularly 9.99
twin bedspread
regularly $35
Earth-tone stripes sparked with aqua for the modern
bedroom. Quilted bedspread is polyester filled,
machine washable and permanent press. Full, reg.
$43,32.25; ' Matching insu
lated draperies, 50 x 84", reg. $22, 16.50
State Pride mattress pad
10.47 twin fitted, reg. 13.99
This durable mattress pad features Kodel/cot- ton cover and Dacron 88 filling.
..................... 11.97
..................... 17.17
.....................20.97
Full fitted, reg. 15.99 ..
Queen fitted, reg. 22.99 King fitted, veg. 27.99 .
SHEETS AND BEDDING
Bleached Muslin
BEDSHEETS
POLYESTER AND COnON
’ 2 .9 7 „С Н
TWINS
Usually M.99
FULLS
Usually *5.99
QUEENS
Usually *8.49
'«aiyi.ss
STANDARD PILLOWCASES j o Q 7
k .n g № «e s 1 "
Usua lv »5.99 O .J / РАШ
^ 3 .9 7 EACH
’ 5 .9 7 ea ch
7 . 9 7 ea ch
Charles Towne I
BED SHEETS
POLYESTERANO COTTON MUSLIN
FLORAL PRINT
BEIGE-GOLD BLUE
TWINS
Usually’4.99
FULLS
’ 3 .9 7
Ч . 9 7
EACH
Usually’6.99 EACH
QUEENS jQ
UsuallyUO.99 *8.9/ EACH
STANDARD PILLOWCASES
Usually’4.99 pair 3.97
PAIR
SAVE 25%
BLANKETS
STATE PRIDE THERMAL M ? 0 0
Usually’ 16.00
LOOM WOVEN COnON BLANKET
Usually’ 18.00 5 ^ 3 5 0
STATE PRIDE ACRYLIC
Usually’9.00 Q Q
SHEET BWNKET
Usually’8.00 ^ 6 .0 0
Carmen
BED SHEETS
POLYESTER COnON MUSLIN
ROSE PRINT ON BEIGE GROUND
TWINS ^ 3 .9 7
Usually’4.99
FULL M 0 7
Usually’6.99
QUEEN
Usually’ 10.99
STANDARD PILLOWCASES
UsuaTIy*4.99 pair j . “ / PAIR
EACH
EACH
’ 8 .9 7 EACH
Laura
BED SHEETS
POLYESTER ANECOnON MUSLIN
FLORAL PRINT
TWINS
Usually’ 5.99 * 4 .4 7 EACH
Usually>6.99 *4.97 each
Usually‘ 11.99 * 9 .9 7 EACH
STANDARDPIllOW CASES
Usually’5.99 pair * 4 .4 7 PAIR
FULL
QUEENS
BED PILLOWS
STATE PRIDE CARESS
DUPONT DACRON II
STANDARD O A
Usually’6.99
QUEEN f r A-1
Usually’8.99 D -^ /
KING 5 Q
Usually’ 1D.99 " o .^ 4
FOAM LATEX PILl6wS
2 5 %O FF
ot spnng Into your home. 50% Celan-
ese Fortrel* polyesfer/50% cotton.
Easy-care. Permanent press.
Bedspread: quilted, polyester filled
top, with yards and yards of ruffles.
Twin, regularly $35 ......................26.25
Full, regularly $ 4 0 .............................$30
Queen, rpyularly $48 ......................$36
Sheets: flat or fitted
Twin, regularly 4.99
Full, regularly 6.99 .
’ 2 .9 7
’ 3 .9 7
Standard cases, regularly 4.99 • • / Q 7
'Fortrel* is a trademark ol Fiber industries. Inc f c ■ %/ #
“ O l d S a l e m ” r u f f l e d
p r i s c i l l a s n a t u r a l s
a ll y e a r ‘r o u n d
’ 1 3 .5 0
BO X 84 ", teg. $18
Curtains with tie backs feature the popular
colonial muslin look Machine washable
50% poiyes)er/50% rayon. Perm press. By
State Pride.
t r e m e n d o u s s a v i n g s o n
“ G i b r a l t a r ” d r a p e r i e s
f r o m B u r l i n g t o n
14.25
50 X 63". reg $19
Elegan! lone on-ione. nubby textured
draperies. Foani insulated and machine
washable. Colors iriclude willow, nuggei
oyster, burlap.
S15 40.S0
50 X 84 ". reg S?0
100 X 04 ", reg $Ь4
p i c t u r e p r i n t
d e c o r a t o r p i l l o w s
7.88C f o r
reg. $5 each
intriguing selection of assorted pillows featuring
true-to-life prints. Face faoric of 100% cotton or
cotton chintz. Polyester-cotton back. Polyester-
tuam fill By Alagold.
“ I n d e p e n d e n c e " t o w e l
e n s e m b l e f r o m t h e
R o y a l F a m i l y ® c o l l e c t i o n
5.17
bath towel reg $7
Colorful best selling terry selection by Can
non® IS 100% cotton
Hand towel, reg 4 50
Wash cloth, reg $2
Э.27
1.47
4 DAVII- COUNTY I-NTIiRl’KISli RIX'ORI), TIIURSIMY, JUNH 18 1081
Mocksviiie Builders Supply
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SOUTH M AIN STREET
Hours: 7:00 5:00 P.M. Mon. Fti.
Salutdqy 7:3012:00 P.M.
PHONE 634 5915 ot 634 5916
M OCKSVILLE, N .C .
O v e r 9 0 0 Builder M a r t s
^4^
DAVÎF COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, JUNE 18, 1981 - 5
Carolina Review
by Jerry Mobley
M ORE HIGHWAY TAX ....Bits and
pieces of how Governor Hunt was able to
push througti his ‘Xkxxl Roads ftckage”
in the Senate week-before-last are
beginning to trickle out. Depanding on
one’s viewpoint, the governor either
played excellent hardball politics, or. In
the words of one observer, his actions
“bordered on the unethical."
At any rate, the political pressures
and problems were considerably more
than the seemingly easy 30-17 Senate
vote revealed. According to some
a^mantly confidential sources, the
arm-twisting and dealing went beyond
anything seen In the legislature for 30
years - certainly far beyond anything
practiced by Governor Hunt.
It seems obvious now that the
governor’s plan was in serious trouble in
the Senate Finance Committee from the
very beginning. In spite of what sup
porters have said, the “yes” vote» did
not initially exist until a number of “one-
on-one” conferences took place on the
eve of the second day of committee
hearings.
At least three senators voted the bill
out of committee, under extreme
pressure from the governor, with the
understanding that serious changes
could be considered on the Senate floor.
But once a semblance of momentum for
ttie bill was established, the pressures
were intensified.
Several senators faced the dilemma of
supporting the plan or being painted into
the Republican comer.
In instances where pressure wasn't
enough, reports are that some senators
were given promises of future road work
In their districts.
Unconfirmed reports suggest there
may even have been instances of threat*
to cancel currently approved road
projects. I
Hunt spokesman Brent Hackney says
that is a matter of interpretation.
“There was a lot of talk about pecding
road projects - without new money
there wouldn.’t be any new protects. Now
nor's Intricate and finely turned political
organization.
In the final analysis, the only public
hint of what had occuired was the af
termath of the Senate vote. Twelve
senators called on the President of the
Senate to allow them to “explain their
vote” for the record. Another doien or
more had already "spoken to the bill” on
the Senate floor.
The luck the governor was having on
such a controversial package of
als was too good to last - hard-proposali
ball pollt1 politics or not.
TA X REBATE....Apparently the
governor’s plan won’t escape unscathed.
The suppos^ I22.S0 gasoline tax rebate
was one of the main objections to
members of the Senate Finance Com
mittee. Some pictured it as a
bureaucratic entanglement; for the sole
purpose of enticing the voters, but tt was
the brainchild of Senate leader Ken
Royal. The Hunt forces adopted the
rebate not Just because they liked It so
much but rather to keep someone else
from adopting the idea and to get
Royal’s support in the Senate fight.
Now, with new information revealing
the average rebate would amount to less
than $5.00, the rebate has tumUed from
the House version of the Hunt package.
Dropidng the rebate allowi some
lowerlnig of the proposed gasoline tax.
llie real winners, however, might be the
special interests concerned with the
proposed 50 percent increase In the
alcohol tax and those affected by a
proposed mining serverance tax-
proposals contained in separate
legislation.
Besides allowing a little more money
to play with, dropping the rebate <
the door to further change - some
momentum of the jdan had not all
previously.
Kail Lee Osborne
M o r n e Receives Top
Electrical Ucensioc
Karl Lee Osborne, owner, and
operator of Osborne Electric Company
of MocksvUle, received word last wedi
that he had passed the examination for
the “ Unlimited” classification of
electrical licensing. He kad previously
held license no. L-6S4S.
This classification is the highest
possible license in electrical con
tracting, and required an 8-hour
e-umination in Raleigh, N.C. by the
State Board of Examiners of Electrical
Contractors.
Mr. Osborne has been in the electrical
trade tor the past 14 years, and has
operated Osborne Electric Co. of
Mocksviiie since May 1977.
He is a member of First United
Methodist Church, a Viet Nam Veteran,
and a member of the MocksviUe
Volunteer Fire Department, and Home
BuiiJers Association.
He resides at 230 East Maple Avenue,
with his wife, Joanne, and 4H year old
daughter.
if somebody interpreted that to mean
either play ball with us or we aren’t
going to build your roada, tben they
intenireted it wrong,” Hackney said.
In a number of cases, senators were
beaiesed to sunnort the nl»ti by
pditically active voters from their (the
senators) respective districts. We now
know, and the governor makes no effbrt
to conceal the fact, tbat those caUers
were directly connected to Om gover-
Report Frojn Raleigh
ly Rep. Betoy Cochrane
There is a side to this gas tax Issue
that is receiving almost no comment,
and that is, “Where are the increased
revenues g<ring to be spent?”
The Department of Transportation
operates on an annual budget of a«ne
$460 million. The proposed higher
gasoline tax would increase this fund by
appraxiinately $300 mUlion a year.
Officials have led us to beUeve thia tax
increase that woukl flow into the high
way fund wiU pay for maintaining our
roads-paying for asphalt, steel, and
concrete. In reality, only a amaU pitrtioa
winds up as part of our road system.
Most of the mooqr wiU be qient for
1 and their fringe benefits, and
equipment, office space, coosultanta,
ètc. The DOT Public rdations staff,
which was 11 members, haa a budget
this year Ы $335,000. SUtlattcs indicate
that M cents of every highway dollar
goes for persoond and administrative
services.
One Justification used in favor of tbe
gas tax has been that those who use the
highways should bear the burden (or the
I . 1.
Jaae CrlmiSer, daaghtcr of the Rev.
аЫ1 Mrs. Hanrey Y. Orlodagw. it- •< m. 4, MocksvUle. has graduated magaa eaos laade with a bachelor’s degree hi -asychelegy Arem Mars НШ Collage. ’While at eoUege she was a meaiker Ы Ihe Caaceit Band, the BaUey Mentals
doggers, Alph* Chi aad Iti Beta
j Matlsaal Haaor floclellee, the ChrMtan ' Staieat Mevemcat, aad was seleelad fsr l*'Who’s Who hi Aaiericaa CoUeges and ¡ Valverstties.” She was also the Mt iHeaiecoatlag qaeea. A 1IT7 gradaate ef ^Nertheastera High Bcheol, BHsaheth
City, N.C., she plaas to attead the Ualversity of North CaroUaa at Chapsl
НШ to get her master’s degree hi social
Broken Anti-sw ay Bar
C a u sM C a rTod ve rtu rn
A broken sway bar caused a Davie
Cbunty womanlaiose control of her car
«U ch overturned tn a field off Au(h«y
MarriU Road on Saturday, June 3, the
IDAway Patrol reported.
miiabeth Johnson, 36, ot Rt. 3,
MocksviUe was driving a 1963 Chevrolet
fouUi when she entered a curve. Mrs.
Johnson said that as she entered the
curve, she heard a “pop” underneath
Mm car. She loat control ol tbe vehicle
iMiicb ran off the road on the right, then
came back on the road and ran off the
W t wher* the car overturned ia a field.
Joyce AdaleiBn Ranisue
is Awarded Doctor
(M Optom etnf Degree
Joyce Adaleen Ramsue, of Route 1,
Qeveland, North Carolina, was
awarded the Doctor of C^itometry
degree at the Dlinois CoUege ct Op-
tan«try’s 138th commencement Mav 31.
She is Uie daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Davie Ramsue of Qeveland, North
CaroUna.
Before enroUing at the niiimi« CoUsge
of Optometry, Dr. Ramsue attended
West Rowan Hi|^ School In Mt. UUa and completed pr»«ptometric studies at the University of North CaroUna.
The OUnois CoUege of Optometry, die
profusion’s oldest and one of its laiwett
educational institutions, had a
graduating class of 138 students in 1981.
Ihere are now approximately 7 JOO ICO Ahimiil.
Rep. Robert Whittaker, a U.S.
oongreisman from the Sth District of
Kanaas and a 1963 graduate of the
nunoia CoUege of Optometry, spoke at
the college’s commencement exerdaes.
During her four years of profesaional
study at ICO, Dr. Ramsue was a
member of the American Optometrlc
Student Association, Contact Lens
Sodety, CouncU on Ethics, and was
elected to the Tomb and Key Honorary
Sodety. Dr. Ramsue also served as the
Preddent of Uie National Optometric
Student Association and was given a
•ervioe award by the AasodaUon.
maintenance and construction of
bigbways. WeU, the largest d ^ e
or the state highway system is the state
itself, with many thousands of vehicles
on the road every day.
With the highway situaUon stUl in
mind, the House passed a bUl this past
week making bid rigging a fdony; The
bUl wiU pertain to aU. governmental
agendes, state and local, who entw into
pubUc contracts for construction or
repair or for procurement of goods or
services. It will cover not only highway
construction, but also local government
. construction pf scbods and Ubrariea. A
violatton of Uie statute wUl be a fdooy-a
ten year fdony wiOi a three year
presumed sentence. The bUl further
that the Court may impoae a
! up to $100,000 on an hidlvldual and
up to $1,000,000 on a convicted cor-
poraUon. Further, the Judge can provide
that for a period of three yebi, no
convicted person wUl be eligiNe to enter
into a contract with a governmental
agency. Alao, the contractor’s Uoendng
board can be directed to suspend the
convicted contractor’s Ucense nr up to
three years.
It U a tough bUl, but bid rigging in Uw
Hi(Away Department has cost this state
bilUons of tax doUars. We can save
many doUars by conducting busineas in
an honeat manner.
Instead of taicreased taxes, I bdieve
we may need a constituttonal amend';
ment limiting state govemment^qien-
ding. State government seems te fed
there ii no bottom, to the weU where
money is concerned.
Bfany of you haw been writhig con
cerning a gun control bUl in the Senate.
That bUl was voted down by the Senate
this past week. This action effectivdy
kiUed tbe bUl this sesdon.
Trooper Л. C. ttakaa reported that he
found Uie iwiy bàr on the right froat
appeared to have broke prior to the
Dr. Ram I to retm to North
•eddsnt. Stokes estimated the damage
to Uie car at $400.
CaroUna to practice optometry.
Dr. Ramsue was awarded the Chicago
Central City Optomstric Society Award
at the ICO Spring Honors Assembly.
ayde Olasscock was honored at the
Graad Chapter Order of Uie Eastem
Star, which coBveaedtaAshevUle, N.C.
last week. He was elected te serve ss
.DUtrirt Deputy Graad Patron hr the
nUi DUtrict ot North CarolbM. At>
teadhig thè session frem MocksvUle
, with Mr. Glasscock ware Mr. aad Mrs.
CecU Cartrnr, Mr*, ayde Gtasseock aad
Mrs. Ruth Joaes.
o«*
►
Over $3,000,000 ii ipent annually, in th« U.S.A., in an effort to gain raliaf from haadachai. Oftan a* not, iviiaf com« in tha form of temporary tymptom removal by tha uie of drugi. What it not commonly
known, it iliat up to 76% of all headache! can lie
related to ipinal miialignmant liubluxation).
Of courts, there are ^ther cautet for headache, tuch as constipation, dietdiy factuit, eye protilems, tinut involvement, poiture, etc., but it ttandt to reason, that a thorough tpinal examination ihould certainly^ be contidered If headachat partin.
If inisaiignment it detected, chiropractic adjuitment can give diug free relief, not |M(t temporary
____
V
Dog Pickup
' m c o i e k
с MOORE 8..SONS, INC
'^ I^ SU N D A Y
work shirts and matching
pants are sale priced
Polyasl^r and cotton work mates in colors ol navy,
groon and khaki Pants aro lull cut and shirts come in
ihort or long sliovos.
. 12.99
еазуч:аге dress shirts by
Arrow
Chsioao Irom traditional and button down collar ш1у1аш.
SItaa I4’h to 17Vi thon ileevt.
= £ . ' " . « « . 1 2 . 0 0 ; s ; r ; " « , . i 5 . o o
¡ s r . ,« « » 1 3 .0 0 1 6 .0 0
impressive selections
from Haggar slacks
Handiomaly tailored slacks ol 100^
polyester. Styles include t>ell loop, D-ring end Expandometic. Sizes 29
Belt loop 1 9 .0 0
D-ring 2 3 .0 0
Expando matic 2 5 .0 0
Anyone widiing tiie pickup oTa*
Ig by ■
*hould notify
I pickup
the county dog warden
the Sheriff’*
Department
Also, anyone wishing to adopt a
dog should also go tturougb ttie
county Sheriff’s DepartmoQt.
Lone Hickory
Plans For July 4th
bone Hickory community
wiU observe July 4, witti a fuU
day of activities.
A parade wUl start ttilngs
off at 9 a.m. Otticr activities
wUl include: softball,
basebsU, tennis, horMshoe,
dunking machine, arm
wrestling, grsasy pol«t *ack
race* and lot* more.
Food wiU ba avaUabte for
serving all day; and ai-
tendance prltes wiU be drawn
at intervals during the day.
The public is mvited to
attend and participate.
save Lip to $55.12
on 3-piece
vested suits for Dad
7 4 * 8
ragular 110.00 to 130.00
Hêndëomêly têllor^d »uils In aa«/ cere
blenda of textured ffolyeater. Solida end
petterne in eliea Зв to 48, reg. end ЭГ lo 46,
long.
QconvmM
m e n ’s l e a t h e r d e c k o x f o r d s
Leather uppers in brown or ten Sires 7 lo 12.
26.95
Converse athletic oxfords
Suede and Sylon uppers, aiue with while and beige
wilh navy. Sites 7 lo 12 19.99
6 da v ii; roUNT»' iîntiîrpuisi; RHCORD, TIIURSHAY, .IllNr. 1«.
The work is finished and the sign is hi place. Shaffir discusses the project with
the two people responsible for its construction, Pete Dwiggfais (left) and Gib
Jones (right.)
Gate At South Fork
F i r s t O f M a n y C h a n g e s
by Kathy Tomlinson
The entrance gate to South Forlc is
simple but effective.
Its massive size is somewhat
camouflaged by the many sprawling
acres of grass land in its baclcground.
The gate however, with the words South
Fork Ranch etched in brass, stands as a
symbol of the growing business. The
ranch is destined to brcome one of the
best and most famous cattle operations
in the country.
South Fork, the former Latham Moose
estate in Davie County, consists of 2,000
acres of rolling pasture land. It was
purchased by Nat Shaffir, a Greensboro
businessman in June 1980. During
Shaffir’s brief possession of tbe farm, he
has converted it into a massive and
impressive operation. The ranch,
specializing in Black Angus cattle, is
becoming synonymous with quality and
prestige.
The entrance gate is Just the fhvt of
many additions to the ranch. The 10,500
sq. ft. home nestled neatly behind a
circle drive, is under total rennovation.
Also, a show bam complete with
authentic theatre seats is under con
struction. The n ^ entrance gate is the
first of many changes to come.
The gate, which is 14 ft. 6 inches hi
height and over 30 feet hi width, was
designed by Pat Plexico of High Potot.
Pgte Dffiiggms. owngr ^f Dwlffiln’s----Hr nddpd that Nat Shaffier, owner ot
David Dwiggins sands the tremendous horseshoe before the entrance
gate is assembled. The horse shoe goes at the top of the gate and measures 6 ft. by 6 ft. (Photos by Robin Fergusson)
Metal Masters in Mocksville, and his son
David, constructed the entire sign. The
brasswork, comprised of the ranch’s
name and silhouette of a bulls head,
were the only parts of the gate not done
by the local firm.
Dwiggins described the gate as "tne
largest project ever undertaken by his
firm.” Work began on the sign last
January. It was assembled at South
Fork last Friday, June 12, almost six
jnonths later to the day.
The gate is contracted from structural
tubing and steel. The sign is not ornate,
but designed with just enough detail to
be truly effective. It was assembled
Friday with the use of a crane. The 10,00
pound master piece assembled as easily
as pieces of a puzzle.
Dwiggins commented tliat 800 man
hours went into its construction.
“We iiave never constructed anytliing
as large as the gate to South Fork,” said
Dwiggins. “Tiie entire process was very
chailenghig and exciting.”
My son David and I watched as the
pieces were cut and welded together,”
explahied Dwiggins. It soon became a
challenge to do the job the best that it
could possible be dtme.”
South Fork, was very pleased with the
end results, making the entire process
even more rewarding.
The brass work, displaying the ran
ch’s name and a silhouette of a bull’s
head was done by Gib Jones, owner of
Gib Jones Gallery II in Madison. He
explained that all of the brasswork is
constructed of V4 inch brass. The name
and bull’s head were etclied and
oxidized for contrast.
Jones did all of the brass work frmn his
Madison based business. The peices
were later inserted onto the gate at
Dwiggins Metal Masters hi Mocksville.
While under construction, the gate
became quite a conservation piece.
Dwiggins commented that many people
s t o p ^ by daily to view the massive
sign. It looks an appropriate size when
nestled securely at the entrance of South
Fork. But those watchhig its con
struction at the local shop got a feel of its
tremendous dhnensions. W h » com-
(dete, the gate filled one entire comer
Dwiggins fh-m located on Wilkesboro
Street. ____
Shaffh described the entranced gate
as "perfect..just perfect.” The entrance
gate is the first of many changes to
come.
David Dwiggins and father, Pete Dwlgglna look over blueprints of the massive entrance gate. Hie firm has 800 man hours Id Its constractlOB.
Advance News
Tips On
Camping
Cozy Up To A Campfire
And Hssrty Outdoor M m I
One of the pleasures of
camping— besides enjoying
the out-of-doors —is great
food after a day on thetrail.
Take a minimum of pots
and pans, but be sure they
are sturdy, lightweight and
compact.
Plan meals around canned
convenience foods — canned Chunky Soups, canned fruits
and vegetables. Combining
these skillfully will save
time and make campsite
cooking easier.
A crane was necessary to assemble the 10,000 pound sign. Worken aecurc the final piece.
i* w 0 » S A U
JU N E 18,19,20
Cokie Jones attended the
annual Western N.C. Con
ference at Lake Junaluska
last week as a delegate from
Methodist Church. Ac
companying him to the
Conference were his mother
Mrs. Gladys Jones, Mrs.
Vogie Marsh, Mrs. Georgia
Foster and Mrs. Riiea Potts.
While there they met the new
pastor and his wife, the Rev.
and Mrs. Marion Fulp, who
will be coming to the Ad-
vance-Mocks Charge, and
they entertained them with a
dinner one day.
Mr. and Mrs. Wade Black
welder of Statesville spent
Suiiday afternoon visiting Mr.
and Mrs. Bill Zimmerman,
and were also supper guests.
Mr. and Mrs. “ Jack”-.
Vogler celebrated their
Golden Wedding Anniversary
Sunday afternoon at the home
of llieir son-in-law and
daughter Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Moir of Walkertown. Among
the guests at the reception
were Mr. and Mrs. Votjier's
brothers and sisters, friends
and neighlwrs.
Dave Markland, a teacher
in High Point, and his girl
friend Miss Gina Shuford of
Asheville were weekend
visitors of his parents Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Markland. They
attended Methodist Church.
Charlie Cornatzer un
derwent eye surgery for
cataracts at Medical Park
Hospital last week. He is
recuperating satisfactorily
and was able to come home
Monday.
Our community expresses
sympatliy to Mrs. Jennie Walt
Cornatzer and her family in
the death of her step-daughter
Mrs. Evelyn Cornatzer White
who died at her home in
Knoxvillp, Tenn. last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Seamon and daughter Martlia
of Lake Norman were
weekend visitors uf her
mother Mrs. Jessie Bruwder.
They were among the visitors
at Methodist church Sunday.
The family uf the late Mr.
and Mrs. Tom Robertson held
Iheir reunion last Sunday at
the community building with
a large crowd present. Mrs.
Clara Baity was given special
recognition as being the oldest
person there.
C I T Y O U T L E T
LOCATED IN J & N VARIETY STORE
Cooleemee Shopping Center
Cooleemee, N.C.
LADIES TOPS
* 5 ® ® * u p
THfCONCCKTMTIOMTnN; f» AU rum AIMIALS
CALF MANNA
* ’ IO *’
A ^ n a tio n PRODUCT
f Quality Feeds For Dixie
OLALER FOR
MIDSTATE MILLS, INC.
Regular 5.25
B IG MSWEET TREET
I0°o PROTEIN HORSE FEED
S ^ 9 8
SQ LB. BAG i v .
— C A S H & C A R R Y O N L Y —
A d v a n c e M illi n g C o .
Hwy. 801, South of 158 & 1-40
Advance, N .C .
P H O N E 998-4656
6 IMVII' rOVINTY FNTIiRPRISU КНСОНП, THURSDAY, .lUNl'- !«■
The work is finished and the sign Is in place. Shafflr dlscuases the project witt
the two people responsible for its construction« Pete Dwlgglns (left) and Gib
Jones (right.)
Gate At South Fork
F i r s t O f M a n y C h a n g e s
by Kathy Tomlinson
David Dwiggins sands the tremendous horseshoe before the entrance
gate is assembled. The horse shoe goes at the top of the gate and
measures 6 ft. by 6 ft. (Photos by Robin Fergusson)
Tne entrance gate to
simple but effective.
Its massive size is somewhat
camouflaged by the many sprawling
acres of grass land in its background.
The gate however, with the words South
Fork Ranch etched in brass, stands as a
symbol of the growing business. The
ranch is destined to Ъссэтс one of the
best and most famous cattle operations
in the coimtry.
South Fork, the former Latham Mooee
estate in Davie County, consisU of 2,000
acres of roUing pasture land. It was
purchaied by Nat Shaffir, a (^reensbwo
businessman in June 1980. During
Shaffir’s brief possession of the farm, he
has converted it into a massive and
impressive operation. The ranch,
specializing in Black Angus cattle, is
becoming synonymous witti quality and
prestige.
The entrance gate is just the first of
many additions to the ranch. The 10,S00
sq. ft. home nestted neatty behind a
circle drive, is under total rennovatian.
Also, a show bam complete with
authentic theatre seats is under con
struction. The new entrance gate is the
first of many changes to come.
The gate, which is 14 ft. в inches in
height and over 30 feet in widUi, was
designed by Pat Plexico of High Point.
Metal Masters in Mocksville, and his son
David, constructed the entire sign. The
bras.work, comprised of the ranch’s
name and silhouette of a bulls head,
were the only parts of the gate not done
by the local firm.
Dwiggins described the gate as “tiie
largest project ever undertaken by his
firm.” Work began on the sign last
January. It was assembled at South
Fork last Friday, June 12, almost six
jnonttis later to ttie day.
The gate is contracted from structural
tubing and steel. The sign is not ornate,
but designed witti just enough deUil to
be truly effective. It was assembled
Friday with the use of a crane. The 10,00
pound master piece assembled as easily
as pieces of a puzzle.
Dwiggins commented that 800 man
hours went into its constructton.
"W e have never constructed anything
M large as ttie gate to Soutti Fork,” said
s. “The entire process was very
llenging and excitii^.”
My son David and I watched as the
pieces were cut and welded together,”
explained Dwiggins. It soon became a
challenge to do the job the best that it
could possible be done.”
r, owner of
South Fork, was very pleased with the
end results, making the entire process
even more rewarding.
The brass work, displaying the ran
ch’s name and a silhouette of a bull’s
head was done by Gib Jones, owner of
Gib Jones Gallery II in Madison. He
explained that all of the brasswork ia
constructed of Va inch brass, llie name
and bull’s head were etched and
oxidized for contrast.
Jones did all of the brass work from his
Madison based business. The pèices
were later inserted onto the gate at
Dwiggins Metal Masters in Modnyille.
While under construction, the gate
became quite a conservation Jdece.
Dwiggins commented that many pec^de
stopped by daily to view the massive
sign. It looks an appropriate site When
nestted securely at the entrance of South
Fork. But those watching its con
struction at the local shop got a feel of its
tremendous dimensions. When com-
I one entire comer of
firm located on Wilkesb«»«
street. _____
Shaffir described the entrancci gate
as ‘‘perfect..just perfect.” The entrance
gate is the first of many changes to
come.
A crane was necessary to assemble the 10,000 pound sign. Workers aecure the final piece.
«ей »* SAIE
JUNE 18,19,20
Advance News
Cokie Jones attended the
annual Western N.C. Con
ference at Lake Junaluska
last week as a delegate from
Methodist Church. Ac
companying him to the
Conference were his moUier
Mrs. Gladys Jones, Mrs.
Vogie Marsh, Mrs. Georgia
Foster and Mrs. Rhea Potts.
While there they met the new
pastor and his wife, the Rev.
and Mrs. Marion Pulp, who
will be coming to the Ad-
vance-Mocks Charge, and
Ihey entertained them with a
dinner one day.
Mr. and Mrs. Wade Black
welder of Statesville spent
Sunday afternoon visiting Mr.
and Mrs. Bill Zimmerman,
and were also supper guests.
Mr. and Mrs. '•Jack''-,
Vogler celebrated their
Golden Wedding Anniversary
Sunday afternoon at the home
of their son-in-law and
daughter Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Moir of Walkertown. Amoni;
(he guests al the reception
were Mr. and Mrs Vogier's
brothers and sisters, friends
and neighbors.
Dave Markland, a teacher
in High Point, and his girl
friend Miss Gina Shuford of
Asheville were weekend
visitors of his parents Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Markland. They
attended Methodist Church.
Charlie Cornatzer un
derwent eye surgery for
cataracts at Medical Park
Hospital last week. He is
recuperating satisfactorily
and was able to come home
Monday.
Our community expresses
sympathy to Mrs. Jennie Walt
Cornatzer and her family in
the death of her step-daughter
Mrs Evelyn Cornatzer White
who died at her home in
Knoxviilp, Tenn. last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Seamon and daughter Martha
of Lake Norman were
weekend visitors of her
mother Mrs. Jessie Browder.
They were among tite visitors
at Methodist churi-h Sunday.
The fam ily of the late M r.
und Mrs. Tom Robertson held
their reunion last Sunday at
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DAVIIi COUNTY HNTI'RI’RISr, RI-CORl), THURSDAY, JUNi; IH. P'.KI
D a v ie C o u n t y P la y s
H o s t T o T e x a s 4 - H ’ e r s
By Kathy TomlinwHi
Davie County is very similar to
Burleson County Texas...or so thought
14 4-H exchange students visiting here
last week.
One Texan summed it up by saying
“you have a few more trees here, but
other than that, it’s about the same."
llie group seemed rather surprised to
have traveled so (ar to visit a spot so
closely related to their native Texas
home.
The 4-H interstate exchange program
is a national project geared towards
enabling 4-H’ers to experience different
cultures and lifestyles.
Last summer, Davie 4-H’ers traveled
to Burleson County, Texas for a one
week stay. The same group hosted the
Texas 4-H’ers during their stay here
June 10-15.
The visiting group was comprised of
14 4-H members and 3 adult leaders
from the Burleson County, Texas area.
Adult leaders commented that students
had worked the entire year to raise
enough money for air fare to North
Carolina.
David Reue, Burleson County
Agriculture Extension Chairman said,
“our 4-H’ers sold candy, sponsored bake
sales and every other possible project to
raise the needed $3,000 tn air fare.
He added that the group was suc
cessful in Its ventures, ending up with a
few dollars to spare.
Local 4-H members and leaders rolled
out the red carpet for their guests, filling
the week with various activities.
A tour of the North Carolina Moun
tains was held Friday with the group
vUltlng Ashe, Alleghany and Watauga
Counties. The day culminated with a
barbecue picnic at Rich Park.
A day at Lake Myers family camp
grounds delighted the visitors Thursday.
Ttie group fought the hot, humid
weather with lots of dips In the .pool,
rides on the water slide, and leisurely
peddleboat rides. The group was treated
to a pot-luck Buppo- by local 4-H’ers.
A cookout and pool party was held
Saturday at the h(»ne of Mr. and Mrs.
George Wilson. The party was open to
all 4-H exchange members and host
famUles.
All the visiting Texans agreed that
Davie County is indeed very similar to
Uielr own Burleson County. Even though
temperatures may soar higher in Texas,
North Carolina’s humidity makes the
weather feel about the same.
Davie 4-H’ers visiting Texas last year
during the heat wave commented that
the 108 degrees weather in Texas feels
no hotter than our current muggy M
degrees.
Also, the Texans noted that there is
very little difference in the people of
Davie and Burleson Counties. Both
North Carolinians and Texans are noted
for their warm hospitality and slow,
somewhat southern drawl.
4-H adult leaders from Texas used the
week to examine differences in 4-H
programs. Lydia Faust, 4-H leader from
Texas said “Club projects in general
differ.”
Davie 4-H’ers concentrate on horse
projects, which is a part of 4-H that
Burleson County 4-H’ers never touch
on,” she said. Mrs. Faust added that
Davie 4-H’ers seem to go into greater
depth in project work and project books.
“In Texas, 4-H’ers cover a lot of topics
briefly, whereas Davie 4-H’ers seem to
cover few very thoroughly."
Local host fnmilips septned ripHghted
with the experience. Janice Severt, local
4-H adult leader said, “it has been ex
citing, challenging...an experience
we’ve looked forward to for a yenr.”
She summed it up by saying, "it has
been great.”
Burleson County, Texas is located
approximntely 100 miles north of
Houston ^unty population is 12,000 or
less than half of Davie’s current 25,000
population.
David Reue, Burleson County ex
tension chairman noted that Davie crops
are at least one month behind those in
Texas.
“We have already harvested our
gardens and various fruits including
peaches,” he said. Also our corn is past
the roasting ear stage.”
He added that like Davie County,
Burleson County has 9 4-H clubs. He said
that as of this time, it is undecided if the
Texas 4-H’ers will participate In an
exchange next year.
“It has been great experience,” he
said. “It’s fun to share similarities and
differences.”
Lydia Faust and Betty Schoenemaniii adiilt leaders with the Texas 4-H Group Adult Leaders difference« in 4-H programs with Davie adult leader
Marit Hamricii (left) Davie 4-H’er stayed with Darryl Slovaceli when
the Davie, group visited Texas last year. Darryl stayed with Marit during last weeii’s visit to Davie County. He c'ted very few differences
in the two areas.
Hamricii, Jeff White, Elaine Koonti, (adult bader)
Visiting 4-H'ers from Texas are (front row, I to r) Weldon Coker, Sandra, fclwneinann, Cheryl Coker, Agnes Budnik, Marla Bundick, (2nd row) RandyThe Vmtors Se^sta, Jan SchoeneiAaiii'., Teresa Macik, Edward Budnik,Teresa Kluge, (3rdrow) Betty ^oenemann (adult leader) David Reue, MUton Kluge, James Faust, Darryl 81 Ackek, and Lydia Faust (adult leader ).
N.(. Youth Seminar On Law & Government Open To Students, July 26-31
At* you a high school student who
want* to learn more about government
and Ifw'f Do you want to develop your
own ludership skills?
ItilNorth Carolina Youth Seminar on
L«w,Readership and Government w<u>
pleniid with you in mind.
eighth annual seminar is
schedOed for July 26-31 at the N.C.
Instit^e of Giovernment in (%apel Hill.
Seminir speaiiers will include Jane
'Smitl^atterson, deputy secretary, N.C.
Deparaent of Acbninistration , and
Rich ikxson, special assistant to the
govan» 00 juvenile affairs . Other
participants will include additional state
officials and local government
represenatives, legislators, members
of the press, professors and attorneys.
All students who will be in grade 10,11,
or 12 next fall are eligible to aUend.
Enrollment is limited to the first 125
students to register.
“The seminar is designed to develop
the leadership skills of youth," ac
cording to Jim Slaughter of Kannapolis,
chair of the State Youth Council, a co
sponsor of the seminar. "Participants
should be interested in contributing and
in learninK and, in turn, sharing their
kiiuwledge with others," he said.
The $59 registration fee includes
lodging for five nights in a dormitory
(double occupancy). the Sunday evening
banquet, Thursday evening picnic and
rive lunches.Registration forms are available by
writing N.C. Youtii Involvement Office,
Suite 115, Howard Building, 112 W. Lane
S! . Raleigh, N C. 27611. Registration
deadline is Wednesday. July 8. llie
seminar is sponsored by the stale Youth
Council, a component of the N.C.
Department of Administration ‘s Youth
Involvement Office, and the N.C. In
stitute of Government.
S U P E R P R I C E D . . . S U P E R V A L U E
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K DAVli: COUNTY I'NTURPRISU RIÍCORD, THURSDAY, JUNIÍ IK, l‘>8l
F O K H T H E B S n / U r
120Z.PKG.
JESSE JONES
BOLOGNA
80Z.PKG.
JESSE JONES PURE P ^ R K
SAUSAGE
« H O V iH O ® $
VALLEYDAirS DRY CUlUb
BACgN $ 1 0 9
1 2 0 Z .P K G .
HOLLY FARM'S CHICKEN
FRANKS
120Z.PKG.
T H A T D A D
U.S. Ch 6|CE lea n TENDER
S RLOIN STEAK
$
LB.
h o lly FARM'S FRYING
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tHIGHS o o «
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h i i i i i k M U d
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ASSORTED COLORS FACIAL TISSUE
KLEENEX
100Z.PKG.1
DULANEY
• BRUSSEL SPROUTS • TINY LIMAS
BROCCOLI SPEAI
2
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lTEAJBAGSlOOCOONT
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I 1 No Liniil Specials
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WHITE HOUSE 26 OZ.
Chunk Apple Sauce size
FOLGER'S FLAKED
Coffee 260Z.CAN
high point
Instant Coffee 4 OZ. JAR
WISHBONE ITALIAN -1000 ISLAND - BELL PE PER
Dressings 8 OZ.BOTTLE
ASSORTED COLORS FAMILY
Kleenex 2so count
NEW FREEDOM
Any Day Pads 30 count
KOTEX
Maxi Pads 12 COUNT
‘1.89
99*
50‘
40‘
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KRAFTS DELUXE
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June 20, 1981 .
^ WITH 1 PILLED
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Through
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A FANTASTIC SAVE A TA PE O FFE R
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59?.
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No Limit Specials
Valuable Tradinjr
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KOTEXMaxi Pads so count *2.69 56*
NEW FREEDOM
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SWEETHEART9” Plastic Plate 24 count 69*6 *
SWEETHEART9” Plastic 48 COUNT ’1.43 16‘
SWEETHEART 5 OZ.Refill Cold Cups so count 57«6 *
SWEETHEART 9 OZ. SIZE
, Vivid Cold Cups 24 count 49‘8 *
SWEETHEART 14 OZ. SIZE Cold Cups 24 COUNT 63*1 0 *
SWEETHEART 9 02. PLASTICVividColdCups 8 0 COUNT ’1.29 2 0 *
5 OZ. REFILL CUPSStar Wars Cups 100 count ’1.25 24‘
GetaF№EBGKof L ic K in s
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from any f “ n (X R 0 P A T O R 6 iP 5 /T O C B jT tm iirA T f “ “
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I ,nuO Iv Uj tLüUi'st OHfi .Kxxi in DSA AJ’()., and fl’O •uvr** ;*f. Of oÜk'iwim' All;*.', f I- ..v cb (’.;i
I Ijiiiit itii« |i<;r IdJiiily Ihi» limsi úliouii oiiy ^<jui iL'quyai hi ir^JioJutioiib unll nul b«.' aLCt.'pI«;d Pi'j»( iil puilIum.- ^’al; L „ utlici KaUtoii Puiii>d |U(Jiiu< bI lio iii>l üt.alify Do iiul sldjik'. yluk- ol UiiK' |>kh)ÍI>1 li> ifintu .ilo HiiUuiii I'uimd C'-jinpdii^
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ONLY THROUGH JUNE 20,1981
10 DAVIi: (-(MINTY líNThRPRISi; RIX'ORD, THURSDAY, JUNIÍ 18, 148i
W h ita k e r-R e n e g a r V ow s A re Spoken
/■ n f } : ^
A double ring ceremony on Sunday, at
Sandy Springs Baptist Church, united in
marriage Miss Elizabeth Jean Whitaker
of Mocksville and Richard Paul
Renegar of Harmony.
Music for the 2 p.m, ceremony was
presented by Mrs. Garner Smith,
organist, and W. T. Adams III, soloist.
Mrs. Ralph Wasler attended the
register and distributed the wedding
bulletins
Tho vows were solemnized by Rev.
Paul S. Simpson.
The bride is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Hubert Lee Whitaker of Route 5,
Mocksville. A graduate of Davie High
School , she is employed by Hanes
Knitwear of Advance.
Mr. and Mrs. Otis Renegar of Route 2,
Harmony are parents of the
bridegroom. He graduated from North
Iredell High School, attended Wilkes
Community College, and is now self-
employed as a farmer.
The bride, given in marriage by her
father, wore a formal gown of white
schiffli embroidered English net
designed with a Queen Anne neckline
and sheer sleeves. The empire bodice
had an overlay of re-embroidered
Alencon lace embellished with seed
pearls. The skirt, which formed a
chapel-length train, was edged with
scalloped embroidery trim and she
added a doMble, waltz-length veil of silk.
illusion, encircled with narrow white
satin, enhanced with seed pearls and
Alencon lace motifs secured to a lace
covered cap. Her bouquet consisted of
silk roses, rosebuds, forget-me-nots,
fresh greenery and gypsophila.
Miss Darlene Whitaker of MocksviUe,
was her sister’s maid of honor. She wore
an apricot silk chiffon gown featuring a
pinch pleated skirt and a lace over
blouse. She carried a nose gay of silk
apricot roses and daisies with fresh
greenery and gypsophila. Gypsophila
was also pinned in her hair.
Bridesmaids were Mrs, Larry
Draughn and Miss Shelia Brown of
MocksvUle with Mrs. Ralph Renegar of
Harmony, Miss Holly Adams of Car
thage and Shannon Lewin of High Point
were the junior attendants. AU wore
dresses like the one selected for the
honor attendant and carried ait identical
nosegay.
Anthony Whitaker and Sean Lewin
were ringbearers and W. T. Adams, Jr.
attended as acolyte.
Otis Renegar was his son’s best man.
Groomsmen were Ralph Renegar and
MUce York of Harmony and David Lee
Cook of MocksvUle.
The bride’s mother wore a apricot
fwmal gown with a pleated bodice and
knee-length sleeveless matching jacket.
Mrs. Renegar was«ttired in a floor-
length mosa green sUk shantung drew
designed vritti a ruffle neckUne and
gathered waistline. Orchids, to match
their dresses complemented their
costumes.
RECEPl’ION
FoUowing the ceremony, the bride’s
parents were hoats for tbe reception in
the church feUowship haU. Guesta were
greeted by Mr. and Blrs. Richard Lewin
and Mrs.Wayne Adams.
The refreshment table waa covered
with white lace and an arrangement of
Peach roses waa at the center. The four
tiered wedding cake wiw decorated with
fresh white roaesand peach gypaophUa,
greenery.
Peach punch and other party fooda
were served with the pastry. Mias
Nancy Whitaker, Miaa Luara CranfiU,
Mrs. David Cook and M n . Fred Wooten
presided at the table.
Goodbyes were said to Richard L e «^.
REHEARSAL DINNER
On Saturday evening, Mr. and M n .
Otis Renegar were hoata at their home
for the rehearsal dinner.
Approximately 100 guests attended
the 7:30 p.m. pig picking when barbecue
pork, baked beans and other dishes were
served with iced tea.
Individual banana spUta completed
the menu. The invocation was given by
Rev. Paul S. Simpson.
The honored coivde chose tbe occasion
to present gifts to their attendanta.
After a honeymoon to North Myrtle
Beach, S.C. and Nags Head, N.C. Mr.
and Mrs. Renegar wiil be at home at
Route 2, Harmony.
i < i
r
Rachel Kinlaw, extension food specialist,
NorUi CaroUna State University.
Add fruit to tossed green or vegetable
salads, citrus sections to spinach salad,
or pineapple chunks to ctdeslaw.
Consider changing the shape of a
salad, too. Shape a potato salad into a
ring mold, or arrange a tossed salad in '
layers.
... , • ^4 ..
MRS. RICHARD PAUL RENEGAR
...was Elizabeth Jean Whitaker
Being Firm Can Be A Help To Discipline
Being firm is often overloiriced as a
discipline method becauae it’s so simple.
But when parenta clearly and firmly
demand that a chUd do something, he
usuaUy does it.
This method works for any age chUd
and almoat any problem, observes Dr.
Frances Wagner, extension human
development specialist at North
CaroUna State University. However, she
adds, discipUne must be used with
diacretion.
“Pick carefuUy the behavior you want
changed. Make sure it’s important to
you, because it’s hard work to foUow
through,” she saya. “You need to repeat
your demand untU your chUd doea it;
then he knows you mean business."
But using fiimneas aU the time w m ’t
work; you’U have a discouraged chUd on
your hands. Decide what is moat im
portant. Firmness on impwtant issues
WiU bring results.
“If you mean what you say and foUow
through to make sure it’s carried out,
you’U see bdwvioral change,” the
specialist beUeves.
Salad Change
With a Uttle imagination and in
ventiveness, you can create a
masteroiece.
Salads aUow you to try unfamUiar and
exciting ingredients in new ways, adda
Do You Know?
Iowa
Though it is known aa a farm state,
Iowa has industries that produce three
times Uie doUar volume of ita farms.
National Geographic says. Of the
nation’s top SOO corporations, 135
maintain plants in Iowa. Many are
farm-related, making agricultural
implements and proceaaing food.
EUesmere Island
Canada’s eaatem EUeamere Island
has been frequented by peoiriea of tbe
arctic for m<»« than 4,000 years. Links
of chain maU and other Norse artifacts
found there suggest Uiat early VUdng
voyages ranged SOO mUea farther north
than previously thought, National
Geographic rep<^.
N O T I C E
TO THE G EN ER A L PU B U C
We are staffed and equipped to provide responsible
professional repair service on all types of motor
vehicles. We offer complete auto repairing service
by trained mechanics.«
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Phone 634-2 T61
Highway 601 North Mocksville, N.C,
Bible School
Vacation Bible School wUl
be held at Gospel Baptist
Church Monday, June 22,
Uvough Friday, June 26, from
7 p.m. untU 9 p.m. each
evening.
There wiU be classes for aU
ages.
The church is located 4
mUes norUi of MockavUle,
first dirt passed Cana Road.
A buswUl be running; and
the public is invited to attend.
F o u r C o rn o rs
A large crowd attended the
Shelton-Dixon reunion at
Bonkin Lake, June 14th. The
youngest present was the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Richie, 13 months old.
The oldest present was Mrs.
HatUe DuU, 91 years old. Door
prizes were won by TUlman
DuU and Von Shelton.
Todd Murray is spending a
few days this week with his
grandparents Mr. and Mrs.
Clyde Murray.
Mr. and Mrs. Grady Beck,
Mr. and Mrs. L. S. Shelton,
Jr., Denise Shelton and Erica
Triplett have returned home
after spending several days
last week in Myrtle Beach.
..Regina Suzette CampbeU graduated
from King’s College, Charlotte. North
Carolina at Uie spring Commencement
Exercises, receiving a diploma in
Executive Secretarial Science. The
commencement exercises for 147
students was held at St. John’s Baptist
Church in Charlotte. North Carolina.
..WhUe enrolled at King’s Coiiege.
Regina was named to the Dean’s List
wiUi a cumulative grade point average
of 3.«7 out of a possible 4.0. This was Uie
principal academic achievement
making her eligible for Eariy Release
before Uie scheduled graduatloa date,
which was advantageous In Job
placement purposes.
..Upon receiving her diploma In
Executive Secretarial Science, Regina
furthered her educatkn in the Legal
Specialisation program at King’s
College. On June 12, IMl, she received a
Certificate of RecognUloii for suc
cessfully completing saM course.
. .Regina, a l»80 p-aduate ot Davie High
School, is the daughter ot Harold and
Sharrie Campbell of Country EsUtes,
MocksviUe. North Carolina.
Mrs. Frances Kay McClamrock Beam
Named Executive V-F At Fran-Ray
Mrs. Frances Kay McClamrock Beam
was named the First Executive Vice-
President oi Tran-Ray Rest Home Inc.
in its sixteenth year of operation by her
President Edward Francis Killen last
week.
Mrs, Kay Beam started working for
Fran-Ray the first week in February,
She displayed her talents from Uie
beginning so her co-worker laid
responsiWlities upon her he kne\v he
could depend upon to be carried out.
She had previously worked as a
secretary recepUonist for four doctors
at Maplewood Urological Associates in
Winston for two years. She aisc worked
as a secretary for Holly Farms for two
years. Prior to that she had worked for
seven years for Dr. B. L. Richards as a
Nurse’s Assistant.
Her educaUon consisted of two years
of nurse’s training at ForsyUi Memorial
Hospital School of Nursing after com
pleting her formal educaUon in Uie
Davie County Schools. Kay Beam was a
member of Uie NaUonal Honor Society
and the Health Careers Club during
Uiese earlier days of school. She also
served as a candy striper for two years
at the Davie County Hospital.
On week-ends she is associated with
the Oak Grove Methodist Church as
Coordinator Children Ministries, She is
always interested in learning more aa
she takes further training wiUi Uie reat
home association. Francis KiUen says,
“he appreciates people who are wUling
to leam to better themselves to make
themselves more useful to their feUow
friends. They are more valuable to our
ofganization," he further stated.
Frances Kay Beam is the wife of Roy
Beam who is employed by Ingersol
Rand Co., mottier of two boys, Marty
and Michael for «^om she has made at
Frances McOamrock Beam
least 90 percent of their wearing appard
as weU as her own. She enjoys as'«
hobby using Hydracal and alio
preparing special dishes in ttie cuUnaiy
art.
Kay keeps busy trying to keep up wMi
her associate Francis KUlen in hia il|le
Uiie interests which she has also ahown a
definite interest aa weU. She has fitted
right into the whole famUy at Fran-Ray
with employeea and residents.
South Davie Junior High Honor Roll
Th«r«'i mors to th* tsrm
"flyina off th* handU” than
voti might think. Ih * phraw
tmplisi th* kind of troubis
that woukl rsMlt il an ax-
hsad flaw off itt handis.
South Davie Junior High Honor RoU is
as follows;
7Ui Grade A
Honor Roll
Audrey Clement
Laquita Clement
Suzonne Ijames
Chris Jones
Charles Robertson
Honor RoU
Holly Andrews
Greg Barnette
BeUi Edwarda
Sonya Foster
Cynthia Green
Lori Head
Tracy Head
Anjanette HUI
Sheila Hiidde
Amy Jackaon
PhiUip JarreU
Melissa Marklin
Betti MarUnez
Jean Nichols
Wendy O ’Neal
Michael Roae
Costal Smitti
Michelle Stayer
Melanie Walker
Carol WiUdnson
Donna WUion
Mary Winfrey
8tti Grade A
Honor faolT~
Valerie AngeU
Susan HoweU
Karen James
Robert Jones
Darren Lapist
Susie McDaniel
Denise Whitehead
Honor Roll
Jimmie 6ue Barney
Daphne Cartner
Paul Cordova
Donna Cover
Leslie Daniel
Monica DePalma
John Dunn
Suzanne Evans
Jeff Gaittiw
Térrica Henson
Kim Jones
Shelly Leonard
Karen MUler
Rodney Nail
Breena Oliver
Carla PresneU
Lee Rollim
Beverly Rose
Debbie Safley
K. Michelle Shore
Sandy Stroud
Tonya Turner
Kelly Vogler
Toñita WiUiams
9Ui Grade A
Honor Roll
Laura Brock
Tammy Cornatzer
Naomi Minwalla
Juanita Moore
Kim WaUcer
Trad Youngberg
RusselíAña
Sheila Anderson
Donna Bean
JiU Brown
Clay CampbeU
Dean Davis
JUI Driver
Kim Earnhardt_________________AngeUa Frye ^
Beth Gardner
Barbara Nayder
Tommy Plott
Janella Potts
David Winfrey
Eunice Young
Grilled Tuikey
If your famUy enjoys turkey cooked on
an outdoor covered griU, try theae
suggestions from Rachel Kinlaw, ex
tension food specialiat, North CaroUna
SUte University.
For a hickory-smoked flavor, qwiokle
a half cup of dampened hickory chips
over ^ coalsduring the laat half hour
cooking.
Or, for a bit of flair, brush the ttnt^y
with a favorite barbMue sauce during
ttie last half hour of cotricing. TUa wiU
give the turkey added flavor and gkm.
N E W
Try Our Chicken Breast FUet
Sandwich Prepared With The Same
Secret Blend of Eleven Herbs and
Spices as The Colonel’s Orifdnal Recipe
Chicken-^iarnished With Lettuce and
Dressing On a Sesame Seed Bun.
IT’S DELICIOUS!!
lUfeDoChickBn
a á t t
BUY1
Ifsnicetofeel so good about a meal.
f^ntoclgr Fried Cliicken
Highway 601 Nortii - Yadkinwlle Road
MKksville, N.C.
6 3 4 -2 1 9 8
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F R E E
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riLITSAirmnCR !
With this coupon you can I
buy une Chicken Sandwich ■
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second one I'RtE. Liinii |
I one coupon pel customer
( Tliis coupon good only at Kentucky
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0 1 IE R E X P lR iS J U N li2 1 .iy «l. I
^ Kgntttcky Fried Chioktn. j
I
DAVli; COUNTY liNTIiRl’RISl' Rt'COÍÍD. THURSDAY, JUNli 18, 1981 11
Mrs. James Charles Richardson
... was Pamela Denise Spillman
Spillman-Richardson Vows
Pamela Deniae Spillman and Jamea
Cliariaa Richardaon were united in
marriage Sunday, June 14, 1981, in a
caajleUi^t ceremony at Sknith Grove
United Methodist Church. The Rev. Jim
Oryder officiated at the 4:00 p.m.
douMe-ring ceremony.
. Tbe b im ia the daughter of Mr. and
' Mrs. Ruftia Ray Spillman of Route 7,
H o t ^ U le .
Hie groom is tbe son of Mr. and Mrs.
J. N. Richardson, Jr. of Route 2,
ZMicksvilie.
Tbe wa«lding music was presented by
j4frs. Maxine Boger, organist, and Miss
^lusan Thompson, vocalist. The wedding
directed by Mrs. Ruth Hockaday.
«■the church was decorated with
C'arrangemenU of roses, glads, and
^^wenery; green palms, and an array id
«aandles.
llbe bride was escorted ly her father.
'Her gown was made of white Quiana
;;polyester and venice lace with a Queen
•Anne neckline, long Uriiop sleeves, and
Ja full skirt extended into a chapel length
'train. Her hea(toiece was a Juliet cap cf
vmice lace and babyaeed pearls with a
.walking length veil of illusion with
bridal lace appliques. She carried a
, liouquet of southern style nosegay roses
centered with a Georgana ordiid.
J. N. Richardson served as his son’s
test man. Ushers were Kent Ward,
cousin of the groom; Roger Blackwelder
.and George Hendrix, uncles of the
bride; and Scott Hendrix, cousin of the
:bride. Roger Blackwelder and Scott
Hendrix served as Acolytes.
Mrs. Vickie Blackwelder served as
Her niece’s matron of honor. She wore a
floor length dreu of blue Quiana with a
lace overlay and wore a iwtdiing
picture hat with satin ribbon. She
carried a bouquet of silk summer
flowers with white streamers.
Bridesmaids were Wanda Ward, cousin
flfthegroom; Marie Hendrix, aunt of the
bride; Sheila Walker, and Us# WaUcr.
Ibey wore blue dresses identical to the
honor attendant and carried silk
bouquets of miniature roses and sum
mer flowers. Ihe bridesmaids wore
baby’s breath in their hair.
: Mrs. Shirley Brooks, aunt of the bride,
served at the guest regUter.
. Hie bride’s mother wore a formal
aeafoam green gown with a long Uce
Jacket. The groom’s mother wore a ton
floor length gown of floral backgeound.
Bv Miss E. York Kiker
There are frequent Wsitors to the N.C.
Depnrtmpnt of Agriculture test kitchcn
for It is a close neighbor of other of
fices. Comments are favorable If the
aromas are tantalizing, but there are
negative reactions also. While the
Tarheel Kitchen home economist was
working on recipes featuring cottage
cheese, one Interested co-worker
commented that she was not a “fan” of
that kind of cheese. Other people
grimace when milk and buttermilk are
mentioned. Complaints are made about
food costs. '
Evidently these people do not know
“nie Magic of Milk” , which is the theme
for the June Dairy Month observance
this month. Unfortunately cottage
cheese has too often been served as a
sad little white glob on top of a slice of
canned fruit and wilted lettuce. Milk
may be served carelessly.
What would people eat if there were no
dairy products? Milk does seem like
magic for it Is one of the original “fast”
foods. Milk re-appears as cheese, Ixit-
termllk, and numerous other forms of
dairy products. All of them are versatile
and magic ingredients in food
preparation. With a little “sleight of
hand” skillfull preparation and tender
loving care, dairy products are tran
sformed into taste treats. Best of all
perhaps is that these high-quality foods
are easily available , thanks to dairy
farmers and processors.
As you rush out the door to stort the
day. remember a glass of milk is one of
the best “fast” foods you can select.
When time permits, turn magician with
recipes adapted from commerical
companies and the dairy industry.
IMPOSSIBLE
BACON PIE
12 slices bacon, crisply fried and
crumbled
1 cup shredded natural .Swiss
serving. 8 servings.
SLEN DER B LENDER
DRESSING
1 cup cottage cheese, creamed or dry
curd
'/<! cup buttermilk
2 tablespoons vinegar
Whirl all Ingredients In blender until
smooth. Yields about I'A cups.
V/irlatlons: To 'A cup dressing add;
THOUSAND ISLAND: 2 tablespoons
catsup, 1 tablespoon sweet pickle relish,
1 teaspoon minced oniot., salt and
pepper to taste.
OTHERS: Dressing adapts well to
blue cheese, onion or other flavors.Serve
over crisp summer vegetobles.
CHICKEN HAWAIIAN
1 cup cottoge cheese
2 tablespoon milk
2 cups diced cooked chicken
M cup chopped celery
V* cup chopped plmlento
2 teaspoons lemon juice
Vi teaspoon salt
6 slices chilled pineapple, fresh or
canned in unsweetened juice
Bent cottage cheese until fairly
smooth. Add milk. Fold In chicken,
celery, pimiento, lemon juice and salt.
Chill. To serve: Place a plnea^le slice
on lettuce leaf and top with Vi cup
chicken salad. 150 calories per serving.
Yields 6 servings.
TWO-TONED TOM ATO ASPIC
3 cups tomato juice
V* cup chopped celery
Vi cup sliced onion
2 lemon slices
1 small bay leaf
1 teaspoon salt
Va teaspoon pepper
- 2 envelopes unflavored gelatin
V* cup vinegar
Two-thirds cup tomato juice
1 cup cottage cheese
The Joe G. SlatesHonored With Surprise Buffet
Each wore a silk orchid corsage.After a wedding trip' to Gatlenburg, Tennessee, the coiq>le will make their home at Route 3. Mocksville.RECEPTIdN Immediately following the ceremony.
guesU were entertofaied at a recqition in ttie church hut.
The refreshment table was covered witti a white cloth witti a white lace
overlay and a floor length lace sUrt.
llie centerpiece was an arrangement of roses. glMU. and greenery. It waa
flanked on either side by silver candle holders with blue tapers.
Hie four-tiered wedding cake waa
decorated wi№ yeUow. pink, and blue miniature flowers and was tapped wiUi three satin covered bells on a tall pedestel.
Hie guests were served wedding cake, fiancy minto, nuts, and lime punch, ■nioae assisting in serving were Mrs. I^rnn Bennett, Miss Shelley Nichols, and Miss Gracie McDaniel.
REHEARSAL PARTY Following the rehearsal on Saturday
evening, the wedding party enjoyed a
rehearsal party at ttie Smltti Grove United Mettiodiat Church Hut.
Hie refreahment table waa covered with a white cloth wltti a white lace overlay and floor lengtti lace aUrt. The centerpiece was an arrangement of summer flowers flanked on eittier side by silver candle holders and blue tapera.Hie guests were served mints, nuts, sausage balla. cake squares, mixed
vegeteUes with sour cream dip, and pink punch.
Hie bride and groom chose this time to present gitts to their attendants.
Cheddar Cheese (about 4 oz.)
One-third cup chopped onion
2 cups milk
1 cup commercial biscuit baking mix
4 eggs
Va teaspoon salt
Ml teaspoon pepper
Heat oven at 400 degrees. Lightly
grease quiche or pie plate, 10 X IVi in
ches. Sprinkle bacon, cheese and onion
in pie plate. Beat remaining ingredients
until smooth. IS seconds in blender on
high speed or 1 minute with hand beater.
Pour into baking dish. Bake until golden
brown and knife inserted halfway
between center and edge comes out
clean. 35 to 40 minutes. Let stend S
minuted before cutting. Refrigerate any
remaining pie. Yields 6«ervings.
LAZY LASAGNE
CSieese Paste Sauce:
1 can (4 oz.) mushroom stems and
peices
1 package (1V& oz.) Itolian style
spaghetti sauce mix
1 can (8 oz.) tomato suace
2 tablespoons butter
2 cups (8 oz.) shredded Mozzarella
cheese
Lasagne and Filling:
8 ounces broad lasagne noodles
2 cups cottage cheese, drained
2 eggs, slightty beaten
Vii cup dried parsley flakes
Vl teaspoon salt
V< teaspoon pepper
2 tablespoons grated Parmesan
cheese
For cheese pasta sauce, drain
mushrooms, reserving liquid. Add
enough water to reserved liquid to make
1 cup. Combine spaghettt sauce mix and
tomato sauce. Sttr in 1 cup mushroom
liquid and butter. Heat and simmer 15 to
20 minutes. Add mushrooms; sttr in
cheese just until melted.
For lasagne, cook lasagne noodles
according to package directions; drain.
For filling combine cottage cheese, -
eggs, parsley, salt and pepper. Line a
buttered 2-quart baking dish with a
layer of noodlea; spread 1 cup filling over
noodles and then 1 cup pasta sauce.
Repeat twice ending with pasta sauce.
Sprinkle with Parmesan cheese and
bake in preheated 375 degrees oven 20 to
30 minuted. Let stand 10 minuted before
1 tablespoons iineiy chopped celery
1 tablespoon chives
In saucepan, combine tomato juice,
celery, onion, lemon slices, bay leaf, salt
and pepper. Bring to boiling point; let
simmer 10 minutes; strain. Sprinkle
gelatin over vinegar and tomato juice;
stir to soften; add to hot mixture and stir
until dissolved. Pour one-half of mixture
into 5-cup mold; refrigerate until Arm.
In blender mix together cottage cheese,
celery and chives until smooth. Add to
remaining gelatin mixture and pour
over first layer in mold; refrigerate
until firm. Yields B servings.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe G. Slate of Carolina
Avenue, Mocksville, N.C. were honored
Sunday, June 14, with a surprise buKet
dinner at the home of their son and
daughter-in-law. Or. and Mrs. Francis
Slate, in celebration of ttieir 30th wed
ding anniversary. Co-hosts were their
grandchildren, Kenneth Slate and Moria
Slate.
As the guests arrived they were in
vited to the living room, where they
were served tomato juice cocktail.
A long banquet table was set up in the
den, which was covered with a white
cloth and centered with an arrangement
of fresh summer flowers flanked by
lighted blue tapers in silver holders.
Place cards marked the places for the
twenty-five friends and relatives at
tending.
Important events seem to occur every
30 years for Mr. Slate. When he was 30
years old, he married Jensina Hansen.
They lived in South Africa for 30 years..
where he was in mission service. Their
sons. Dr. Francis W. Slate of Mocksville
and Dr. William G. Slate of Wilmington,
Delaware were bom there. Because of
Jensina’s poor healtti, they returned to
the states, where she died soon af
terwards.
Freida. also a missionary served in
India for a number of years. After Mr.
Joe met her. he asked her to come to
New. York, where he was transportation
agent for the Seventh Day Adventist
Overseas operation. She resigned her
job in Modesto, and became his
secretary. Their friendship, which
began when they shared a hymn book at
a church convention, led to a wedding a
year later.
Other than celebrating a SOth wedding
anniversary, Mr. Slate will have his
92nd birthday July 9. He was bom in
St(dces county, ttie oldest of 11 children.
Gardening is a hobby for both Mr. and
Mrs. Slate. At ttieir home at 117 Carolina
Avenue, their well kept vegetable and
flower garden shows the tender loving
care It receives. Another shared hiterest
and a part of ttieir family is a poodle
named Gigi and Impie, a Siamese cat.
National Piano GuUd Auditions
Twenty-five students of Patrick Hicks,
local pianist and teacher, participated
last montti hi ttie 1981 National Piano
Guild' auditions at Wake Forest
University in Winston-Salem.
Lena James, Midielle Honeycutt,
Robert Hicks and Riddick Weber won
International Certificates; Donna
Carrick, Angela Davis. Carolina Hanes,
Aimee Hooven, David Hopkins, Amy
Ijames, Brennan James, Suzanne
Mazat, Debbie Miller, Kelly Ramsey,
Klmberlelsh Ramsey, Wayne Smith,
Robbie Steward, David Weber and Scott
Whitaker received National honors;
Amber Branham, Shawna Hawk,
Walther Hawk, Robbie Honwcutt and
Brian Mazat were awarded District
Certificates; Derek Branham won a
Local Certificate.
More than one hundred thousand
piano students throughout the fifty
states participate each spring hi the
Guild auditions, each presenting a
memorized program of one to twenty
Dtano compositions.
■ ^
FATHER’S M Y
TABU OF GIFTS
2 0 %®«
Uün. CloKd
Tue».-Fri.-10:00-5:30 p.m.
Sm.-10:00-2:00p.ni.
M Men’s Decorative Boxes
For Cuff Links and
Other Small Items
¥ Nautical Items
For The Guy Who Loves The Sea
¥ Brass and Por^lain Ducks
• 6 to «36
¥ Brass Sail Boats
( 3 $ i z e s ) t 9 ^ | 7
T O
*26
U T ^ o r t h iM a i n S tre e t íM o c k s v ille , C
Bible School At
Green Meadows
Vacation Bible School will
tie conducted at the Green
Meadows Baptist Church
located nn Highway 801
between 1-40 and Farmington
beginning Monday, Juiie 22nd,
Ihrough Friday, June 26th,
from 6r45 p.m. to 9:00.
Learning experiences will be
provided for all ages from
three through adults. Director
for Ihis year’s school will be
Mrs. Janice Boyer with
leaders from the niembership
of Ihe Green Meadows Baptist
fellowship.
Oil Saturday, June 20, at
5:00 p.m. there will be a
special Bible School
preregistration, hot dog
cookout, and t-shiri giveaway
for Ihube planning to attend.
This will provide the kickoff
fur Ihe week of activities.
Persons Ihroughoul Ihe East
Uavie Community are in
viled. F o r fu rtlie r iii-
funnatiuii, call the church
office, 998-3U22.
Som a lay that a gar-
m «nt worn iniida out
will bring good luck.
Health Lecture
Samuel
Jacobson, counselor and therapist, will
speak on “ Relaxation and the
Management of Stress with Chronic
Illness” at the meeting of the Winston-
Salem Area Lupus Chapter this coming
Sunday, June 14, 2:30 p.m. in the Ac
tivity Building of Highland Presbyterian
Church, 2933 Cloverdale Ave.
Consumer-Product Refund
The number of households par
ticipating in consumer-product r ^ n d
offers has doubled in the past three
F o s le r - R a a e h
D r a g C o m p a n y
WILKESBORO STREET MOCKSVILLE.N.C. PHONE 634-7141
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12 DAVli; COUNTY bNTKRPRlSE RECORD, THURSDAY, JUNK 18, 1981
Pack - Hobson
MRS. MICHAEL RAY SMITH...was Alisa Carol CappsCapps-Smith Vows Exchanged
Miss Alisa Carol Capps, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Capps of
MocltsvHle. N.C. and MichBal -Вду,
Smith, son of Mr. aad Mrs. Stanly Smith
of Advance, N.C. were married in a 7
p.m. doulde ring ceremony, Friday,
June 12 at Corinth Church of Christ with
Bro. Raymond Climer from Spar
tanburg, S.C. officiating.
A recording by Capp^a Chorus was
used by Abilene Christian College.
Church decorations included
arrangements of yellow roses and
daisies, lighted candelabras, candle
arrangements in each window. Candles
with globes and greenery were used on
the pews. An arch with arrangements of
yellow roses, daisies and greenery.
Hie bride given in marriage 1^ h«r
fatter, wore a gown of white organsa
designed wi№ a sweetheart necidine
Witt sheer bishop sleeves slightly raised
waistline, tiered skirt with lace trim
attached chapel length train. Headpiece
Witt nylon netting lace trim matched
gown. Finger tip length. Sbe cairied a
bouquet of- yellow roses, daisies and ImiJm breatt.
Tbe brides best friend was maid of
honor. Miss Shelley Nichols of
Blocksvllle, N.C. She wore a Coimal
gown of mint green taffMa overiaid with
organza scoop neckline, three tiered
skirt. She carried a bouquet of yellow
roses, daisies, babfes’ breatt witt mint
green streamers. Sbe wore a white bat
Witt yellow tt»es and mint green
streamers. Ibe bridegroom’s sisters
were bridemaids. Miss Donna S ^ t t and
M iu Dianna Smitt. They wore formal
gowns of ydlow taffets overlaid wltt
organza. They carried a bouquet of
yellow roses, daisies and babies’ breath-
witt yellow streamers. Ibeir hats were
white witir yellow roses sind ydlow
streamers.
Tbe ftower girls were M iu Jennifier
and Miss Stephanie Hodges of Woodleaf,
N.C. Ibeir dresses were dotted swiss
yellow and mint green. They carried
each a basket of rose pedals. Ibe
ringbearer was Scott Forrest of
MocksviUe, N.C.
Stanley Smitt of Advance, N.C. tte
groom's father was best man. Ushers
were Mari( Smitt and Mr. H.L. DorseU ct Advance N.C.
Miss Pam ItoUlman of Mocksville kept
tte guest rei^ter.
For her daughter’s wedding Mrs.
Capps wore a formal mint green c<dored
gown. Witt a corsage of double white
orchids.
Hie bride attends Davie High School.
Tbe bridegroom is a 19S1 graduate of
Davie High School and is employed witt
Hanes ConsoUdated Co. in Advance,
N.C.
After a wedding trip to Carowinds, tte
couple wiU make tteir home in Advance,
N.C.
RECEPTION
FoUowing tte wedding ceremony, a
-recepUon-was-gi^en by tte pateute of~
tte bride, Mr. and BIrs. Robert Cap|is.
Tliose serving were Blrs. Margie
Weddington and Mrs. Carol Capps.
REHEARSAL PARTY
A rehearsal party was held on
Thursday June ll, given by the brides
parenU, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Capps in
tteir home.
They served ham biscuit balls,
sausage balls, chips and dip, pickles,
mints, dieese, crackers, party franks,
cake and pundi.
Mr. and Mrs. Boyd Pack of Route 2, Advance, announce tte engagement of
tteir daughter, Beverly to Rex Hobson, son of Mr. and Mrs. CharUe Cline
Hobson of Route 1, YadkinviUe.
Miss Pack is a graduate of Davie High Schod. She received her B.A. from tte
University of Nortt Carolina at Chapel HUl and her M.A. from Appaladiian
State University. She ia presently teaching at Shady Grove ElemenUry School
in Advance.
Mr. Hobson graduate from Forbush High School. He received his B.S. from
Western Candina University and wUl be receiving his M.A. in Guidance and
CounseUng from Appalachian SUte Univeristy in July.
Tbe wedding wUl be held July X , 1981 at 2:00 p.m. at Calvary BapUst Church in Winston-Salem.
AU friends and relatives are invited. No invitations wiU be sent.
Sutphin - Daniel
Mr. and Blrs. Jimmy Ray Carter of Route 7, BfocksviUe, N.C. announce tte
engagement otttdr daughter, Diana Lynn Sutphin, to James Jay Danlsl, son of
BIr . and Mrs. James Jerry Daniel of Route 4, MocksvUle.
Tbe bride-elect is a IN I graduate cf Davie High School.
Bfr. Daniel is a 1979 graduate of Davie High Schod.
Tbe wedding is ptonned for Saturday, Jidy U , at I'urrentine Baptist Church.
AU friends and relatives are invited to attend.
-
Mindy Nleele Hmris celebrated her
second Mrthday, Satvday, June U . She
Is the dai«hter of Robert and Marty
Hovts of Iron SUtlon. Grandparents
are IMr. and Mrs. B. M. Hovis of Iron
Slatlan; and Mr. and Mrs. O. Autrey
Merrtf of MocksvUle. Great grand-
pam Js are Mrs. Bertha Smifli and Mr.
and Mrs. George E. MerreU, also of
MocksvUle.
WiUiam Clontz Jr.
Given Surprise Party
WiUiam aontz, Jr. son of Blr. and
Mrs. W. B. Clontz, Sr. of Rt. 1, Advance,
N.C. was honored Friday, June 12 on his
IStt birthday witt a surprise birthday party at his home.
Sixteen friends of hU attended and
were served hot dogs witt aU tte
trimmings. poUto chips, birthday cake,
B l ^ Ydk> and lemonade.
After a game of foottaU, the group
went to Winston-Salem to U y "Putt
putt golf.”
He received lots of nic^ ¿uu.
Cornatzer News
By MUs E. York KUur
From hundreds of recipes submitted
by Nortt CaroUnians, flve were selected
to participate in tte N.C. Chicken
Cooking Contest Cook-Off held in
Greensboro recently at tte Four
Seasons BlaU. Now it is on to Ocean City
Blaryland, tte latter part of July for
Blrs. Anne Burnette of Rocky Blount,
N.C., to represent North Carolina at tte
National Coddng Contest.
Anne, witt responsibUities as a social
and feeding a husband and
_ son, won first place in tte tontest
witt her Jade Tree Chicken recipe. Her
prize was a convection oven and an
expense-paid trip to the National Con
test where she wUl compete for tte top
prise of 110,000. As might be expected of
a professional person and a homemaker,
the recipe was reUtively easy to
ncepare in a short lengtt ot time whUe
being colorAil and modest in cost.
Blrs. Rutt Bond, BurUngton, pUoed
second witt Great Bangkok Chicken.
Tbe runners-up were Blrs. Pat Dazis,
Charlotte, with her “ Taco Cheese
Chicken;” Blrs. Betty Smitt, Asheboro,
wltt “Lemon Chicken DeUght;” and
Blrs. Lee Yahnker, Goldsboro, witt
“Pizza Chidden.” The hishly quaUfied
pand of Judges ddiberated seriously
and discussed each dish thtnoughly
befbre making a final decision. Judges
are expected to Uke their dudes
seriously, but tte entries were aU so
ouUttoidiiig that it was difiicult to agree
on only one winner.
Tbe recipes were indicative of the vast
variety of ways to serve chicken at
tractively with appealing flavors.
Recipes caU for broUer-fryers but
methods of preparation indude far more
ttan broiling or frying.
Norte CaroUnian fkrmers produced
402 miUion head of broUdrs in 19M to
rank foi!rth natlonaUy in production.
Angie Crone, N. C. Department of
Agriculture Food Publicist, N. C.
Chicken Cooking Contest Chairman,
tdls us that^he contest is a salute to tte
industry, but also it is a
’ that broUers are a good buy,
easUy available, and versatUe. Tbe
winning chicken redpes wlU be im
portant addlttons to otter favorite onss.
JADE TR EE CHICKEN
3 half breasU of broUer-fryer chicken,
boned, skinned, cut in bite«ize pieces
V* cup soy sauce, divided
V« cup cooking oU, divided
2 teaspoons comsUrch, divided
4 teaspoon garUc powder
Vi teaspoon sugar
V« teaspoon salt
V4 teaspoon ground red pepper
be inserted in chick« iritt ease. Return
ve^UUestofrypan. InsmaU boid.mix
together remaining 3 tableq>oons soy
sauce, remaining 1 teaspoon conatarch,
sherry and water. Pour over chicken
and vegeUbles. Reduce heat and
simmer, uncovered, 3 minutes. Serve
over hot cooked rice. Blakes 4 servinn:
Elizabeth I of England owned 3.000 gown*.
2 ciqM frash broccou flowereU
1 cup sUced cdery
1 onion, cut in 8 wedges
2 Ublespoons dry sherry
Vt cup cold water
In large bowl, make marinade by
mixing togetter 2 Ublespoons of tte soy
sauce, I Ublespoon of tte oil, l teaspoon
of the comsUrch, garUc powder, sugar,
salt, and red pepper; stir. Add chicken,
turning to coat. Cover and marinate hi
refrigerator 20 minutes. In trypan, ptace
remaiidng 3 Ublespoons oU and heat to
medium temperature. Add broccoli,
cdery and onion; stir fry about 6
minutes or until tender-criq>. Remove
vegeUbles and set aside. In same
frypan, place chicken and stir fry about
5 minutes or untU opaque and fork can
MOCKSVIUE, NC
m-SEASON CaftTiALI
&UYAWAY EVENT
Why buy last jiears left over on sale when jlou
can have the "Pick” of this seasons newest fashions^
ataveiy special preieason price.
SELECT NOW AT THESE GREAT SAVINGS
MANY EXCITING NEW STYLES
AnnGctrdnerHonorei
Bliss Ann Gardner, July bride^ect of I Neal Foster, was honored Satuid>y> June 6, witt a redpe and pantry show», at the home of Blrs. James Everidge on Halander Drive. Co-hostesses wero Blrs. David PopUn, Blrs. R. F. Kemp and Blrs. Daisy CoKouge.
Tbe honoree was presented witt a redpe box and a huge wicker bosket fUled witt shower gifto.Special guesto attending were the
bridal mothers, Blrs. Clyde Gardner and I Blrs. Eugene Foster.
Bliss Gardner was again honored witt a misceUaneous shower at Bethel United Bfethodist church fellowship buUding, Saturday, Jime is. Hostesses were Blrs. Ifitiie Foster, Sandra Sofley and NsUie Sknltt. »'Upon arrival, she was presented a corsage of daisy and baby mums.
Bible School is being held at
Cornatzer Baptist Church
nightly from 7 to 9 this week.
AU children are invited to
attend.
Raymond PotU of NorfoU,
Va. was a Saturday night
guest of Leopa and Betty
Bowens.
Weekend Rueste of Mr. and
Blrs. Homer Potts were BIr.
and Blrs. Paul PotU of Nor-
fdk, Va.
Saturday night guest of BIr.
and Blrs. Jimmy Dillon were
BIr. and Blrs. Eddie Townsend
of NorfoUi, Va.
‘The csutioui Midom err."Confuciui
S IG N M T
Business Si^ns
Сиз^-от Aufo Ta^s
Vehicle Lelfering
Poster L a y o u T
Ar+work/
Bill Jordan-998-2558
D O N 'T S p e n d
H O U R S
In T h e S u n !
It O n ly T a k e s
M IN U T E S
a t T H E A ^ s «
G e t T h e M o st |
Gorgeous Tan You've
Ever D r ea m e d Of In
Our N e w
TANNING BOOTH
Open Mon. Sot. From 9:00a.m. lo 6-On p.m
No appointment necessaiy, but ptefeired
T H E A 'S B E /IU T Y S H O P
i04 Gwyn Street Mocksville N.C
634 2511
’ 5
0 0 d o w n
HOLDS YOUR CHOICE WITN NO PAYMENTS
UNTIL SEPT.l
BE SURE TO REGISTER
FOR FREE COAT TO BE
GIVEN AWAY FRIDAY, JULY 3
DAVII-: COUNTY UNTHRPRlSi: RI-CORD, THURSDAY, JUNI-: IK, nsi
MRS. TIMOTHY BRENT BURTNER...was Sharon Kaye Cook
MRS. LARRY WAYNE CARTNER...was Marvie Carole LovetteLovette-Cartner Vows Spoken
■ - Burtner-Cook Vows Spoken
M iu Sharon Kaye Cook and Timothy
' Brent Burtner, of Greensboro, spolte
' ' their vows of marriage in a 4 o’clock
" afternoon ceremony on Sunday June
14th at the First Baptist Church of
Kernersville.
I ' The bride is the daughter of Rev. and
I Mrs. L. Clay Cook, Sr. of 711 Lakedale
" Road, Colfax. The groom is the son of
•^ William H. Burtner of 810 Idlewood
Drive, Greensboro and Mrs. Susanne H.
' Burtner of Bxton, Pennsylvania.
- The bride’s father. Rev. L. Clay Cook,
Sr., escorted his daughter to the altar
and gave her in marriage, as well as
-‘ officiated at thé double ring ceremony.
■^'Prior to the wedding a prelude of
traditional wedding music was provided
O'’by the organist, Wesley O ’Brien. Joanne
WUte, the soloist, sang "Evergreen”,
-f “ï^r AU We Know” , “The Wedding
Prayer” , and she sang “W e’ve Only Just
^ BMun” for the recessional,
pw * T m diurch was decorated with a
VediUng Arch adorned with ivy, Uue
white »ring flowers and baby’s
__________. The baclvround was enhanced
iSS^wtth an arch candleabra, two seven
^branch candeleabras, and palms. Hie
Bench was covered in white
, edged in chantilly lace and graced
Kwith tbe unity Wedding Candle.
Ibe bride wore a formal gown of
, rgansa designed with an empire
SiVaistline, a Queen Anne neckline and
jrHong Juliet sleeves. The neckline and
^ w a U t were edged in silk Venice lace.
¡^Tlie full sUrt of organxa was encircled
(S^with Venice lace and swept to a full
*^'Chapel train. The fingertip veil of
■««’ illusion was encircled with Venice lace
imd was attadied to a Juliet cap of lace.
'^ S b e wore a pearl necklace that was worn
the bride’s mother on her wedding
""^day, which was a wedding gift from the
bride’s father to the bride’s mother. Her
_j:>>uquet featured white silk roses, lillies
the vallw, blue baby’s breath and was
r^^hlighted with seed pearls. The entire
was edged in white lace, with
white satin streamers tied in
'^ove Imots and lillies of the valley.
The bride chose her sister. Miss Cyndi
'«Cook of Colfax, as her maid of honor.
‘^'She wore a gown of ice blue lace
»designed with a scooped ruffle neckline,
[l^and accordian pleated skirt with a blue
f»Jribbon sash tied in a bow in the front of
tbe gown. She carried a silk nosegay of
f<-btue flowers, baby’s breath and lillies of
lÜÜtfae valley, edged in white lace with
; ^ fh>wing blue satin and lace ribbons,
«k. matting her dreu. Bridesmaids were
^""Mrs. Lori McDonald of Summerfield,
\ . and M in Valerie Daniel of Wilmington.
ï7.Junk>r bridesmaid was Miss Cindy
IS - Burtner, sister of the groom. They wore
gowns identical to the maid of honor,
I '“ and carried silk nosegays of white and
shades of blue flowers tied with Uue
Ilf.: satin streamers matching their gowns.
All the attendants wore baby’s breath in
Z their hair.
4 : The groom chose his father, William
H. Burtner, as his best man. Ushers
•Iwere Lemuel Cook, Jr. of Colfax,
P ' brother of the bride; Richard Burtner of
Lancaster, S.C., brother of the groom;
'•'Mike McDonald of Summerfield, and
' David Heller of Greensboro. William
^ Henry Burtner, Jr., brother of the 7., groom, was Junior usher.
« The mother of the bride attended the
“ : wedding in a formal gown of ice blue
qiana with a matching chiffon cape
featuring band smocking centered with
seed pearls. She carried a matching
V ' clutch bag decorated with a matching
"f. ’ arrangement of silk flowers.
'f<- The groom's mother wore a formal
gown of dusty rose qiana. She also
» carried a matching clutch bagV decorated with a matching arrangement
^ of silk flowers.
L The bride’s maternal grandmother
~ wore a formal gown of soft pink knit with
matching long, sheer sleeves. She also
wore a silk white carnation corsage.
Presiding at the guest register was
Mrs. Michdle Justice of Greensboro,
friend of the bride. The wedding was co
directed by the bride's aunt and uncle,
Mr. and Mrs. George Jordan of
Cooleemee, N.C.
Immediately following the ceremony
the couple received in the vestibule of
the church, after which a reception,
hosted by the bride’s parents was held in
the church fellowship hall.
The bride chose a powder blue dress
with white accessories for h6i wedding
trip to Hilton Head Island. Upon their
retum, the couple will be making fiidr
home in Greensboro.
ABOOT THE COUPLE
The new bride is a graduate of Nor
thwest Guilford Senior High School of
Greensboro and is employed as an
executive secretary with North Carolina
National Bank erf Greensboro. The
is a graduate of Page High
of Greensboro and Guilford
Technical Institute where he received
his degree in Electronic Data
Processing. He is employed as a
Systems Representative II by Sperry-
Univac of Greensboro.
REHEARSAL DINNER
Saturday, June IS, a semi-formal
dinner was given honoring bride-elect,
Sharon Cook, and Groom-dect, Tim
Burtner, by the groom’s father. The
dinner took place in the Banquet room at
the Holiday Inn-Airport, Greensboro.
The immediate family and wedding
party attended the celebration and
enjoyed the delicious meal. The menu
consisted of roast beef, baked poUto,
, broccolijossedsalad, rolls, tea or coffee,
and orange sherbet for dessert.
CAKE-CUTTING
Immediately following the wedding
rehearsal of Sharon Cook and Tim
Burtner, Saturday evening, June IS, a
cake cutting was held in their honor at
the feUowship building of the church.
Hosting the occasion was tlie bride-
dect’s grandfather, Henry Cook and her
uncle and aunt, lilr. and Mrs. George
Jordan, aU of Cooleemee, N.C.
The refreshment table was covered
with a blue cloth with a white lace
overlay and centered with an
arrangement of fresh summer flowers
in a sUver bowl, flanked by lighted blue
tapers in silver hoido's. At one end of ttie
table was a three tiered wedding cake
baked and decorated by Mrs. Jordan
and № s. Joe Brown. Blue silk flowers
were used in decoration and the cake
was topped with a miniature bride and
groom. At the other end of the table was
a punch bowl fiUed with golden bridal
punch, served by the groom’s mother,
Mrs. Susanne H. Burtner. The wedding
cake was served by Mrs. Lori McDonald
and the bride’s sist«- Miss Cyndi Cook.
Other refreshments included were
sausage balls, decorated homemade
mints, and mixed nuts.
Invited guests were; the wedding
party, family, out of town guests and
close friends.
The bride and groom chose this time
to present their gifts.
BRIDESMAID’S LUNCHEON
Saturday, June 13, at 11;30 a.m., a
very informal luncheon was given by the
bride’s sister and maid of honor, C^ndi
Cook.
The tables were covered in linen
cloths and centered with arrangemenU
of spring flowers. The menu consisted of
a salad plate which included chicken
salad, macaroni salad, sliced tomatoes,
deviled eggs, carrot strips, and pickles,
with blueberry tarts for dessert.
Guests included the bride’s at
tendants, the bride’s mother, the
groom’s mother, and a few friends of the
bride.
The wedding of Marvie Carole Lovette
of Saiisbury, N.C.,-and“Larry-W«yne-
Cartner of Route 1, MocksvUle, N.C. was
held Sunday, June 14, at 4 p.m. at the
John Calvin Presbyterian Church in
Salisbury. Officiating at the double ring
ceremony were Dr. Lucy Rose and the
Rev. J.C. Huneycutt, Jr.
A program of wedding music was
{»«sented by Stanley Scheer and Marvin
Burke.
Miss Wanda Suttle of Green Cove
Springs, Florida was maid of honor.
Bridesmaids were Miss Stephanie
aierriU of Concord, Miss Sharon Pickett
of Spencer, Mrs. Debbie Pinyan and
№ss Betty Brooke of China Grove and
Mrs. Karen Pinyan of Salisbury.
Best man was PhUip Pasaanante of
West Babylon, New York.
Ushers were Mark Byrd of lincolnton,
BUI Duncan of Greensboro, and Stephen
Lovette (rf Salisbury.
ChUd attendants were Jane Poston,
Mary Kirkman and Jamie Cartner.
The bride is a graduate of East Rowan
Hitfi School; and a 1981 graduate of
Tanya Wood h
Honored At Hospital
School O f Nursing
Tanya Danette Wood of Route 3,
Mocksville, served as marshal at
graduation ceremonies for the
Presbyterian Hospital School of Nursing
June S.
Marshals are selected on the basis of
scholastic achievement. Six rising
juniors and six rising seniors were
chosen for the honor.
In ceremonies hdd at Charlotte’s
Queens CoUege, SS student nurses were
graduated, bringing to 2,461 the number
who have been graduated since the
sdiool opened in 1903.
The Presbyterian HospiUI School of
Nursing offers a 33-month diploma
program where students receive con
current cUnical and classroom ex
perience. The largest diploma school of
nursing in the CaroUnas, it is afflUated
witti Charlotte’s Queens CoUege and is
fuUy accredited ttie Nortii Carolina
Board of Nursing and the National
League for Nursing.
Miss Wood is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Wiley Wood of MocksvUle, A rising
Junior at ttie school, she is a member of
the Christian feUowship organisatton.
Hunt-Smith
Mrs. Norene P. Hunt of 170S N. Holden
Rd., Greensboro and Mr. Griw S. Hunt
of 2906 Oakland Ave., Greensboro an
nounce the engagement of their
dau^ter Linda Lorraine to Danny
FrankUn Smith of WUson, N.C. He is ttie
son of Mr. and Mrs. Kennetti E. Smitti of
Rt. 2 MocksvUle.
Miss Hunt attended B.L. Smitti High
School in Greensboro and CampbeU
University. She currentty is a nursing
major at Atlantic Christtan CoUege and
is employed by Wesley Long Hospital in
Greensboro.
Mr. Smith attended Davie County
High School and graduated cum laude
from CampbeU University. He is em-
Cardi -
ky Mount.
The wedding is planned for August 23,
«1 at ttie First Baptist Church
pk>yed by Carolina Office Equipment of
Rocky Mo
IWl
in Greensboro.
I Chapd
A Coffee Spa
Ik :
" ^ ^ T S Ô t l ï
Sharrie Campbell
,‘ß 'tofn: W a n t / « /AÀoa/,
,
u n t i lißucduttnon
Soaking in 13 tons of steamy, soggy
ground coffee is billed as “an antidote
for almost anything” at a iiealth spa
outside Tokyo, the National Neograptiic
reports. Tiie 140 F. temperature in the
pooi-size percolators is barely tolerable
to patrons buried up to their chins in
coffee.
Bible School At Farmington
And Wesley Chapel
Farmington and Wesley
Chapel United Methodist
Churches are planning
Vacation Church School June
15-19 iroin 9:00 to 11:30 each
morning. All youth Ui the area
a.e invited to Join them at
Farmington.
F r i d a y a n d S a t u r d a yAll Houia Plantt and Kanging Batkati
S l i B G r a a n h o u « «
n H w y.iseia«t 990^220
Pfeiffer CoUege with a degree in music
education and voice. She wiH-be em
ployed by the Florence County, South
Carolina Schools. Her parente are Mr.
and Mrs. Marvin Lovette of Rt. 13,
Salisbury, N.C.
The bridegroom’s parente are Mr. and
Mrs. Kermit Cartner of Rt. 1,
Mocksville, and his grandmother is Mrs.
Cordie Cartner, also of Route 1. He is a
1076 graduate of Davie High School and
a 1961 graduate of Pfeiffer CoUege with
a degree in music education and voice.
He wiU be employed as Director of
Music at Lake aty MeUiodist Church in
Lake City, S.C. Botti ttie bride and
bridegroom were members of the
Symi^nic Choir, Concert Choir and
Chamber Singers whUe at Pfeiffw
CoUege. He also served as chob:
manager for ttie organization and was
residence director for Plyler Dormitory.
She was vice president of the House
OouncU and served on the Student
Government Assodation.
After a wedding trip to WUUamsburg,
Virginia, ttie couple wUl make ttiehr
home at 501 Taylor Street, U k e City,
South CaroUna.RECEPTION
The bride's parente hosted a recqitlon
(dr the wedding party and gueste im-
mediatdy foUowing Uie wedding, in ttie
feUowship haU of the church.
York- Cornatzer
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Martin of Route 3, MocksvUle announce the engagement of
their daughter, Kena DameU York to Tony Comateer, son of Mr. and Mrs. Toby
A. Cornatzer of Route 3, MocksvrUle.
Miss York is a student at Davie High School.
Mr. Cornatzer is a 1981 graduate of Davie High Schod and is employed at
Broad Street Texaco.
The wedding wiU be hdd Sunday, June 28, 1981 at 2 p.m. at Fulton United
Mdhodist Churdi in' Advance, N.C. * ----------
AU friends and relatives are invited. No invitations wUI be sent.
Bridal Shower
Honors Miss Smith
On June 6, a bridal shower was given
for Vanessa Smitti, June 21 bride-dect of
BiUy Carter at ttie home of Mr. and Mrs.
Gray Carter, bridegroom’s parente.
Hostesses for ttie occasion were Sandy
Cope, Karen Carter, and Ann Hardin,
bridegroom’s sisters.
On arrival Miss Smitti was presented
a corsage of housdidd items. A varidy
of pantiV and misceUaneous gifte were
received.
Approximatdy 2S gueste were served
cake squares, nute, swed pickles,
sausage baUs, beU-diaped sandwidies,
and punch.
Special gueste attending ttie shower
were Mrs. Ella Smitti, bride’s mother,
Mrs. Lucy Bamey, bride’s aunt, Mrs.
Gray Carter, bridegroom’s mottier,
Mrs. Qiti BaUey and Mrs. Edna
Everhart, bridegroom’s grandmottiers.
“Esch dsy is a littls life."Arthur Schopenhauer
Cory Seott Robertson was fow years
dd Monday, Jane 8. He Is the sea of Mr.
andMrs.KeueUi E. Robertson of Roate
2. Advance. His fran^areBte are Mr.
aad Mrs. C. CUff PhUUps of Lexington
and Mr. aad Mrs. Robert W . Robertson
of Advance. Cory’s mother is tbe former
SheUa PhUltes.
¡4 IMVII- COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, JUNE IS, 1981
aay Campbell puts the Ппа1 tonchea on
a giant tiger paw.
n-r) Barry Cartner, Juanita Mooro, Robert Hiltoni Ctay Campbell, and Ms. Ramona Rhyne.
South Davie Jr. Higli
Scliaol Paints Tiger Paws
Scute Davie Jr. High Bwinew dub visiting athletic t e ^ s that they are
members finished the 198M1 school entering “tiger country”.
^ a r with an unusiul ^Je c t. Glmt Business club members are enroUed
tiger paws w m ^ n t e d to tlw di^e ¡n the ninth grade business classes at
David Cockman admires a natshed tiger ?*„ "* «thletlc parking lot. The South Davie, Ms, Ramona Rhyne is the
paw at South Davie. orange tiger paws will warn all business teacher and club sponsor.
Many Previous Recipients To Face Loss Of
Food Stamps If Not Actively Seeking Work
Many food stamp recipients
previously required only to register with
Job Service now will face loss of food
stamps if they do not actively look for
work, acconUng to the Employment
Security Commission (ESC).
XiylgraQóñ whl(A béüune elficffve
June 1, I9ai, could require up to one-
fourth of the approximately <01,000 food
stamp recipients in North Carolina to
conduct active Job seardi or lose their
bmeflts. Approximately SS percentof all
food stamp recfpinta have tradittonaUy
been required by the Division of SocÚ
Services to register with Job Service aa
a condition of receiving food stamps. In
an effort to limit food stampa to the truly
needy, a portion of tfaoae who regiater
with Job Service muat now in
dependently look for work or have their
beiieflts cut. “The real advantage of this
program ia that thoae who are eager to
work will receive additional assistance,
«idle those irtw are disinpHned to work
will be more readily identified and
penaliied,” said Janice B. Brown,
BSC’a food stamp coordinator.
“All food stamp ree^enU referred to
Job Service for work registration wUl be
evaluated fbr Job readiness,” she sakL
“Thoae fudged raa^ir for work will be
required to devdop and follow a Job
search program for up to eight weeks
each year. If they do not re^Mter with
us, or if they do not meet the Koala of
their Job search plan, food stamps to
their entire household may be Jeopar-
dlied.
Brown explained that Job search is a
totally new requirement, and the
penalties for non-compliance are severe
andalMohite. “ Itiaatremely im pm anv
that people now receiving food stamps
realiie the strictness of these
regulattons,” ahe said. “ If they do not
register with us and, if required, con
duct an independent Job search, their
household oould lose fbod stampa for two
monOu.”
Brown explained that many people
who receive food stampa will not be
affected by tUs change. “Many fted
stamp redpienta are not requbred to
register M tt Job Sendee because they
are under M years of age or over M ,”
she saM. “ Others are not referred to us
becauae they have permanent
disabilities or permanent employment
barriers.”
Among those registering witt Job
Service, some automatically will be
exempt from the Job search
requirement because they live too far
totm~potentiBl employers or because
they are migrant seasonal farmworkers
away from their home base. Of the
remaining registrants, only those
Ju^ed ready and able for work will be
required to begin Job seardi. Job Ser
vice will refer tfaoae people not im-
mediatdy ready for employment' to
training and other sujmrnve services,
If later Judged Jo^ready, ttiey will then
be required to look for work. Brown
said.
Summer School At South
Davie Jr. High
Straight "A ” Ust
AtDavieHigh
Davie High Sdwol’s straight “A” Uat for the fourth quarter Is as foUows: nth Grade: Barney Joe Booie, Elizabeth Ann Foster, Randolph Edward Link, Janice Elaine Pen
12th Grade: Unda Bam ea,-----
Lyon aeary, Allen Crawford, Ronda
Draughn, Mark Faulkner, Doris Ann
Hepler, Sherry Francea Howard, Dana
MlchoUe Jones, Doitfas Ray O'Neal,
Shdia Reavia, Patricia Diane Staiith,
Suaan Melania Smith, and C M r West
* Miss Aagda J. Strader wffl celebrate
her Mh birthday. Wednesday. И
home. She Is the daaghter of Ma. ^
Strader of MocksvUle! aad W .O.
Strader. Jr. of RafOa, N.C. She has one
brother, 1М4>
The final day for registering tw
summer school at South Davie Jr. High
School is Friday, June 1». :
Claasea are hdd from 8:30 ajn, until
12:30 pjn.
Classes offered are aclence,
mathematics, history, and language
arts-English. The coet is $7S.
Classes will condude on Wednesday,
July 22. Registration forms are
available in tbe schod office.
Annual Douthit Family
Reunion Is Held
The annual Douthit family reunion
was held at BfiUer Park In Winston-
Salem, Saturday, June 14.
Attending ft'om Davie County were
Mrs. Era Latham and Mrs. Francea
Beck. Traveling the longeât distance to
attend were Lyle and Edith Douthit
Miller of Amarillo, Texas; and Davis
and Ruth Douthit of Cdombua, Ohio.
BIrs. Ruth Douthit Hudspeth Is
chairman of the group; and secretary is
Martha Furches Mlzell,
A picnte lunch was eqjoyed by all.
IN V EN TO R Y
RED UCTIO N SA LE
O N
Pra Hwig AlMiiiniiai
StMnrfScww Poor»
М(Ш SELF-STORING
BRONZE AND BROWN
COLORS 1 1/4” ТШСК 32x80*36x80
REGULAR » 3 7 ,0 0.«,75.95
BINNINGS SELF^RING AN(H>IZED ALUMINUM
FINISH 1 1/4” THICK
32x80&36x80
REGULAR » 9 9 ,9 5
NOW *85.95
MOSS 1-LTTE WHITE AND BRONZE COLORS
I l/4”1fflCK 32x80A36x80
WHITE REGULAR »79 9 5- ‘67.95
BRONZE REGULAR ’83.00
NOW 70.95
OUR STOCK ONIV SUBJECTTO гаю* SALES
NOSPECMLOIIDEIIS«rSAL£PINCE
CA U D ELL
LU M BER C O .
P h o n « 6 3 4 - a i6 y
tnvBstlng
(By Reaearcfa Department
of Interstate Securities
Courtesy of Ben T. Browder.)
One feature of tbe in
vestment scene over (he last
several quarters baa been
divestitures, also known as
“ asset redeployment” and
“ R e stru ctu rid g ". By
whatever term, it simi
meana getting rid of a
operation or selling an
operation which no tonger fits
In with strategic plans.
The disposal of an unwanted
operation haa favorable
implications for investors.
Investors have reacted
favorably to asset disposal
announcements In a number
of cases, including OA F,
Warner Lambert, Rub
bermaid, and Continental
Group.
There are a number of
reasons for the recent in
creases in divestitures. More
companies recognize that
Increases in sales volume are
unacceptable unless ac
companied by increased
profit.
Strategic planninB is
reshaping many butineates.
Emphasis will be placed on
those parta of a company
which are deariy competitive
either in product, technology,
or geography. Operations
which do not fit well In the
strati^ plan, or which have
a poor return, are candidates
to be divested.
Units of a business which
are not doing wdl consume u
more than proportionate
share ol corporate time,
energy, and cash. In addition
to depressing earnings.
Elimination of sucii units can
provide resources lo pk>w
back into profitable
hmtnfM Mf
Higher interest e^cpense is
forcing companies to lake u
harder look at current
operations. In tbe past three
years, tiie return on in
vestment required lo recover
the cost of capital and beat
Inflation has risen sharply.
With long term funda now
coating 15 percent or more,
few companiea are willing to
pay that price in a problem
area if funds can be profitably
employed in a more
promiaing area.
Some companies are selling
operations which are fun
damentally aound but which
will require large amounts of
cash to grow in the future. An
excellent example of this was
the sale Rlchardson-Vlcks
of Its ethical pharmaceutical
buainess. Richardson could
not sufficiently fund Its
research budget to remain
competitive with other
companies over the long
term.
Some companiea have been
able to sell unwanted
divisions to oL*iers, and the
buyers might be companies
whose product lines would be
strengthened by the purchase.
The disposal of an operation
can be prompted by many
things but the Investment
Implications are usually
positive, A <krag on earnings
can be removed, and any
proceeds realized trom tbe
sale can be plowed back into
remaining operations, thus
enhancing future profits and
stock prices.
Gospel Sing At
Stewart’s Lake
There will be a Gospel
Singing Saturday Juae 20,
beginning at 7 p.m, at
Stewart’s Lake.
Featured groups will be the
Glory Road Singers and the
Redeemed IVio,
Stewart’s Lake U about S
miles east of Mocksviiie off 64
on the No Creek Road.
Hie public Is invited to
attend.
First Father's Day Was Celebrated In 1910
When Dad added tlie kitchen apron to
hlB working togs, he stepped up his
status within his Immediate famUy,
This is the opinion of Dr, Lester P,
Wyman, a Clevdand therapist who
works with familiea in helping them
solve domestic problems.
The modem father Is more human,
more approachable and Is someone you
care about, he said.
Dr, Wyman, who has a dodorate in
social work, said there mc,y not be
universal approval of Dad’s new role,
however.
Some may feel Dad has lost status
since he no longer is the authoritarian
figure in the home that once was con
sidered the ideal.
But there’s value to the family in the
modem father’s role. He’s a more equal
member of the family and not so aloof to
his offspring, ’This hdps the mother to
supply the emotional and physical
contact that enables a child to mature.
’This change Is reflected in the child
too. Dr. Wyman said. Father is no longer
a remote flgire in his life. He is known
more intimately and the child knows the
father’a wanta and desires more readily.
Dad’s increased status in the home is
reflected in a growing popularity of
cdebrating Father's Day, Jime 31,
according to Jamea M. Semon, an
assistant vice president at American
Greetings Corporation of Cleveland.
About 100 million Father’a Day
greeting cards will be purchaaed by
Americans this year, Semon estimated.
And they are becoming more popular.
A few years ago, three Mother’s Day
cards were sold for each one honoring
Pop. Now one Father’a Day card is sold
for each one-and-a-half cards b oA to
mothers.
’The first Father’s Day was odebrated
in 1910.
Its observance was an Idea of Mrs. J.
Bruce Dodd of Spokane, Washington.
She had been attending a Mother’s Day
church service a year before and began
thinking of her fkther, whose wife had
died at an early age, leaving him five
boys and one ^ 1 to bring up alone.
She asked a local minister's
association to set aside her father's
-birthday -^“Juiie B, ItiO ~ u Uw first
Father's Day. It was cdebrated that
year, however, two weeks later.
The third Sunday In June has since
become the accepted Father's Dry by a
reaoluUon ot Congress.
For an amateur, Mrs. Dodd waa quite
a promoter. She called on Spokane
merchants to arrange window onilays
of gifts for father.
Today Father's Day greeting cards,
sent with or without gifts, reflect Dad's
changing role In the family, according to
American Greetings' Semon,
Years ago, for example. Dad was
always referred to as the family
"breadwinner,” Tfiat's not the cast
today. Since more than SS percent of
U,S, families have dual Incomes, the old
gag about Dad being the one who bringi
home the ba'con no longer applies.
Sociologists have yet to grant
scholarly status to greeting cards as a
measuK of popular attitudes,' But the
people at American Greetinga claim
they write measagea that express what
people fed and a bimdle of money is
spent on rasearch to find out what people
will buy.
Semon said about OS percent of the
carda this year carry traditional
messages like “ Father .. a word that
meana many different things ... care,
kindness,underatanding... and love," or
one aaying aimply, “Ibe greatest father
in the worid ...Happy Father’s Day.”
The other 35 percent of the cards are
humorous onea. ТЪеу feature a cartoon -
characterized fkther or husband, In-
d u ^ the popular Ziggy designs.
: The humorous cards tend to be m we
sdfKleprecating today, like the one that
says, “Bdng a father ia like eating a
pistachio. You have to shell out a lot for
one little nut - that’s me.”
These cards also have toned down the
effusive complimenta of earUer yeara
and are more realiatle in outlook.
A humorous card that alao coidd be
considered traditional ia one that'a been
popular through the yeara. It aaka,
“What to know how much I love you.
Dad?” As the card la opened, mer-
chanlcal arms Jump out. They are at
tached to the *avHng of a email boy who
is extending his 'arms aa fkr aa he can.
Semon auo has noticed changes in
Father'a Day carda given by irivea. Dad
is no logg^rtoiysd M one who avoids
toaka around the bouae or. the humming
“Dagwood” figure of early tdevlsion
These cards now are lightly sei
timental. The short conversadm! '
prose talks of how nice it Is to have Dad
around the house, and how much Mother
Ukes to lean on him for support.
Card designs show an Increased use of
photography with farm scenes and floral
as the moet popular. In contrast to chess
pieces, cars and other traditionally
‘‘masculine” design motifs.
The company's 19S1 line Includes
about 470 diherent Father's Day cards,
'Diere also are plaques, certificates,
buttons and mirrors, with many in
cluding the inscription "World’s
Greatest Dad,”
Specialty cards hi the American
Greetings line also Indude cards for
brother, unde, grandpa, son and son-in-
law, and others who have been like a
Dad through the years.
Shanks To Show Polled
Herfords In National Show
J, D. and Kimberly Shanks, [
Mocksville, N.C., will be among some
372 exhibitors from 29 states and Canada
showing Polled Hereford heifers at the
Mh National Jur.lor Polled Hereford
Heifer Show in HuteUnson, Kan., July
19-24.
A near-record 623 heifers have been
entered in this event that has come to be
recognised aa the largest youth event of
ita Und in the world.
Beaides the ahow on July 22-24, other
special activitiaa planned Indude a
youth leaderahip forum, a Polled I
Hereford Judging conteat, en
tertainment by country mualc atar, Ed I
Bruce, “Polled Hereford Bdef Bowl,"
picnics and a “Wild West Show."
Nationally-known cattle authbritieal
Judging the ahow will be Or. Ike Eller,
VltfintaTech; EdKallanoffof Kal-Kota
PoUed Hereforda. Stede, N.C,; and
Gene WIeae of Wieae and Sou
Hereforda, Mandng, Iowa. Tom Patton,
former Polled Hereford “Herdsman of
the Year,” will aelect the top Jtmkir and
senior divisloo showmen. Patton is
herdsman for Split Butte Ranch,
Rupert, Idaho. I
Some 97,500 will be offered in prise
monay for the » classes of heifers.
I'
HOCKSVIU£,II.C.
F A T H E R ' S
D A Y
S P E C I A L S
P N IG R O U PMEN'S SUITS
2 PIECE AND 3 PIECE
SOLIOSSTRIPES.PUIOS
GREAT BUY
Orliiiial PriM *75.00 to ’130.00
^ 4 9 8 8
TO
$ 7 9 8 8
O D D L O TMEN’S SLACKS
NOT ALL SIZES
ValuK to'23.00
*3 .8 8 ..
*1 0 . 8 8
O N E G R O U P
MEN'S
DRESS
SHIRTS
SOLIDS-FANCIES
Usually >8.00 *16.00
*6 . 8 8
*1 1 . 8 8
O D D L O TMEN’S SHOES
BROKEN SIZES
33V3% ™
5 0 % OFF
MEN’S KNIT SHIRTS
SOLIDS STRIPES
POLYESTER AND COnON
Usually 41.00 '13.00
* 8 . 8 8
DAVTU COIINIY F.NTERPRKSE RECORD. THURSDAY. ЛЖЕ 18. 1981 15
Tri - County Mental Health Approves$22 Million Budget
Jeff Foster and Jerome HendrixReceive God & Country Awards
Two local boy scouU received the God
and Country Award Sunday, June 7,
1961.
Jeffrey M. Foster of Troop 503 was
present^ his award by Rev. Jack
Luther at Bethel United Methodist
Church. Jeff Is the son nf Mr. and Mrs.
William Lee Foster of Rt. 3, Mocksville.
Jerome E. Hendrix, also of Troop 503
was presented his award by Rev. Jack
Luther at Cornatzer United Methodist
Church. Jerome is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. MonUcello E. Hendrix of Rt. 2
Advance.
The God and Country Award is
presented for the study of the Church
and it’s operations. It also includes
study öf the contents of the Bible. Each
boy works with the pastor and the
church, learning what Christians
believe about God at work and how to
express their faith in daily life.
Tri-County Mentil Health board
membci, last week approved a $2.2
million budget for 1981-82.
The budget, down slightly from this
>ear, includes $128,000 in federal fUnds
from a grant issued to help the com
munity deRl with the decriminalization
of public drunkenness, as well as
$141,000 more in federal funds for
vocational workshop in Rowan and
Ii«dell and other programs.
In presenting the budget. Director
I^arry Parrish said he had no indication
of what to expect in federal funds, and
was very concerned about federal funds
being available for the operation of the
new detoxification center in Statesville.
Board members discussed collecting
larger fees to make the detox center
self-suffident. In its first five months of
operation, the center collected $1,595 in
fees, which was considered good since
some people were only required to pay
$25. Fees are based on a sliding scale,
w'*' '.lehts paying as much as they are
able to pay.
Parrish noted that the move to
decriminalize intoxication-so that
drunks could no longer be thrown in Jail,
but needed to be treated in detox centers
instead-was followed by a movement to
cut Uxes, leaving mental helath centers
between a rnck and a hard place.
No one appeared at the board’s 7 p.m.
budget hearing on June 3rd and the
budget was approved by a unanimous
vote.
The new budget totals $2,220,562, over
half of which will be spent for Tri-County
operations In Rowan County alone.
Rowan is the home of the agency
headquarters, as well as three group
homes for the mentally retarded (one
yet to be built); Stepping Stone, a home
for emotionally disturbed teenage girls;
a vocational workshop; a sheltered
workshop; a developmental preschool
for the mentally retarded; and an
enrichment center for the severely
retarded (now handled mostly by county
schools and the Association for
ReUrded Citizens).
’Hie budget, down .005 percent from
$2,221,961 for the current year, includes
no new programs except $30,000 for the
group home for mentally retarded
adults to be built on Mitchell Avenue in
Salisbury.
llie 82 Tri-County employees in
Rowan, Devie and Iredell counties will
get a 5 percent raise, and $10,375 is set
aside for merit increases later in the
year. Salaries total $1,360,745, including
$63,549 each for the clinical director and
one psychiatrist, $37,235 for the director
clerical salaries In the $10,033 to $11,496
range.
Other sources of revenue besides the
federal government are $1,128,380 in
state funds and $822,345 in funds from
the three counties. In addition to local
ABC funds, county funds include an
anticipated $63,728 directly from Rowan
(bounty Conr.missioners, though they
have already cut that to $60,693. Iredell
has been asked for $78,038 and Davie for
$30,064.
’Hie board approved a pay plan, ad
ding an eighth step, and a revised fee
plan that raised several fees.
The new fee policy raises tbe
minimum fee from $1 to $2, and raises
the maximum iee from $40 to $45 for
consultation with a psychiatrist .^nd
from $38 to $40 for consultation witii a
therapist. The price of Initial evaluation
and examination goes up $5, to $50 or $45
(depending on type of professional
providing the service).
Other new fees are preschool, up 20
percent; Halfway House, from $45 to
$50; detox fee, $200; partial
hospitalization transportation up from
50 cents to $1 per day; biofeedback. $ ^
or $45; Stepping Stone, $25 a day rather
than a monthly charge.
lYie board also agreed to compensate
board members $10 a meeting for
committee meetings, other special
meetings and trips to headquarters or
other facilities.
Food stamp Eligibility Limits To Rise July 1
Special Speech Therapy Program To Be Offéred June Î9-July 31
Straw Is Worth Money After Drought Harms Local Farmlands
With the dry weather that has
pi^ailed during much of 1980, straw is
worth money. Many farmers in Davie
County have been leaving straw from
small grain harvest in the fields so ftey
can plant soybeans in the residue.
Erosion control is an added factor.
“'Wise use of residue can njake a real
difference in soil moisture; it retains the
moisture that is avalUble to get the
soybeans started,” says District Con-
jMrvationist Rusty Lyday.He added: “Approximately »percent
more moisture is available for the plant
to take up when you emidoy no-tilling in
straw residue, when compared to
moisture with conventiona] tillage.”
MoUture is a key factor in double
cropphig. ’The newer no-tUlate planters
are heavy, and can do an effective
planting job in much thicker residue
than those in use just a few years ago.
Pwptir use of straw makes five Im
portant contributions:
-Retains soil moisture
-Improved tilth
-FertiUzer value
-Increas<ed organic matter
-EHectiw erorion control Some farm operators incorporate
straw or other residue into tbe s«M, but
in a summer this can be a poor
t^hni»iue since turning the soil tends to
dry it out. With adequate rainfall, this
can be useful. If its dry, pUnt soybeans
the same day you disk and get the most
benefit out of soil moisture.
“But anybody harvesting small grain
should be conscious that his-her straw
can be money,” the District Con
servationist concluded. “And we need to
get full value fron» everything on the
farm.”
Vehicles Collide Head-On
A Davie County woman was diarged
with driving left of center after her car
sideswiped one vehicle and ran h^d-on
intoanother on U. S. 601 Friday, June 12.
According to the Highway Patrol,
Dawn Elizabeth Funderburk, 19, ot Rt.
3, MocksviUe, was driving north on U.S.
601 when her 1975 ’Toyota crossed the
center line. The car sideswiped a 1979
Plymouth driven by Willie Kester WUds,
27, of Rt. 1, Woodleaf, then hit head on a
1978 Oldsitiobtle driven by Wade
Franklin NaU, 73, Ы Rt. 7, MocksvUle.
Miss Funderburk and NaU were taken
by ambulance to Davie County Hospital.
Trooper James M. Newton estiniated
the damages at $2,000 to the ToyoU, at
$5,000 to the Olds and at $900 to the
Plymouth.
Diane Meader is a speech and
language pathologist for the Winston-
Salem-Forsyth County Schools. She is a
member cf the American Speech and
Hearing Association, the North Carolina
Speech, Hearing and Language
Association and SH A R P , a local
professional groiq>.
’This summer Ms. Meader wiU be
directing a speech and language therapy
program for students from pre-school
age through high school. This would be
an excellent opportunity for junior high
and high school students with speech
difficulties to begin a therapy program.
The program wUI be held at the
Burkhead United Methodist Church, just
off Silas Creek Parkway between
Country Club and Robinhood Exits,
from June 2S through July 31, from 9:00- 1:00, Mondays through Fridays. Fees
for the five week program wiU be based
on therapy sessions scheduled either two
or three times a wedc for individual cr
therapy. Language groups are
i formed fw two to four chUdren per
group and wiU l>e based or, one hour
sessions, two or three times per week.
However, if there is an interest, a two
iMur language session wiU be planned.
Therapy wiU be avaUatde for aU types
of disorders such as articulation,
language, stuttering, voice and hearing
impaired. ’The program is directed
mainly at the student who is presently in
)a school speedi therapy program. Bis.
Meader emphasises the need for a
continuation of therapy through the
summer months in order to prevent
regression which so often occurs.
Just In Tim e For Dad's D ay.
N e w iShlpment Off Berkllne
Rock-A-Lounger and
W alla w ay Recllners
•50 to MOO Savings
ake up to
aSealy
sturepedic
merning
H n SM
• • •
A ntw mMtrsn ii 1 long tsrm
invMtmtnt. TnM't wtiyitpiyi
to buy th* b«t. Orditwy
mattrsMican Ion lh*ir
flrmtMH ovtr t>M yMrt.'With Pottur«p*d(e, tht (irmnoN *•»'» buHt-bi ЮК* In. OMignsd In AHHMTMion with
iMdingarthopadlCiurownt lor
firm Kipcort. "No morning
biek-sch« from ilttping on ■
too-foft mtttrMi."
S A V E 4 5 0 ^ - * 2 0 0 ^ P E R S E T
3 /3 Mattress
Com binationsIn Early
American •89**
Co»«« - ^
tMCIAL ran THIS WIIK-
Regular 4 /6 Size
Mattress Com bination
• I l 9 « s
SET
2 n t c e .Early American ,3 5 , . .
Living Room Suites
bciiutiful llerculun« and Nvloiii In Stock to Cho»*e Kniiii!!:
Y O U R H E .\ D g U A R T E R S F O R L I V I N G K O O .V l .
B E D R O O M , A N D D I N I N G R O O M F U R N I T U R K
Offering You The Finett 1» Cuttam Made Furniture And
Vphokteru Work Done In Our Plant At Reanonable Price»
Larf^e Selection Of Fabric» And Vinuh Tu Chuunf Frum. See Vu Fur Alt Your Need»
J.T. Smith Furniture Co.,Inc.
urn On Sheffield Road-6 Miles Out Of Mocksville Off Hwy. 64 West
W a t c h F o r S i g n s
Phone: 492-7780
Open Monday-Saturday 9-6 p.m.
T
Cooleem ee
New s
Mrsfjean Nesbit Drendel o
Reno, Nevada returned home
Friday after spending a wedt
visiting here with her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Nesbit.
Gene Milholen is
recuperating nicely in
Pascack VaUey Hosj^tal in
Westwood, New Jersey after
undergoing surgery last
week. Formerly of
Cooleemee, the Milholen« are
now residing in Emerson,
New Jersey. He is expected to
return home over the
weekend.
Sam Carter returned to his
iiome on North Myrtle Beach
Friday after two weeks ot
treatment in Grand Strand
General Hospital, Myrtle
Beach. He is m w h improved.
Lawrence Miller is much
improved in Rowan Memorial
Hospital. He has been moved
from the Coronary Care Unit
into a room.
Swimming lessons wiU be
held at the Cooleemee Pool,
beginning Monday, June 22
and continue for two weeks.
Classes wiU be held Monday,
Tuesday and Friday at 10
a.m. and on Thursday at 12
noon. ’Hie pool is closed
Wednesdays. ’The only charge
is the regular admlulon to the
pool.
All interested persons
should register this week at
ttie pool.
The Cooleemee Senior
Ci'izens will hold their
reguit-r meeting with a
Chicken Stew, Fish Fry and
Bingo Party Monday, June 22,
at ttie Ridenhour Arbor on
Center Street Ext. at 3 p.m.
Everyone is asked to bring
a bowl, spoon and one dollar.
The Piano students of
Regina Chandler were in
recital Saturday evening,
June 6, at the Davie County
Public Library in MocksviUe.
’The foUowing students per
formed: Wanda ’Turner of
Woodleaf; Amy Angell,
Elizabeth Crenshaw, Kristen
Setzer, and Gayla HoUar of
MocksvUle; Johnny Cover,
Tori Benson, ’Tracy Veach,
Joanna Dyson, David Beck,
Courtney Deadmon, Jamie
Scott, Angie Queen, AUcia
Parker, Lisa Beck, Donna
Keeves, Scarlot Beck, Kevin
Blackwood, Julie Revis and
Christy Revis all of
C^ieemee.
I Veterans Corner |
I am a woman veteran
receiving G1 BUi education
benefits. If I marry, can I
claim my husband as a
dependent for edditionai
benefits?
Ye*. Vou сад receive ad-
ditiooai lienefits for a spouse.
Valuable tlierapy time is lost for ttie
student when he or she must relearn
what has not been maintained during ttie
summer vacation. Continuation of
therapy is essential to the remediation
process.
Food stamp income eUgibUity limits
wUl rise reflecting increases in tiie cost
of Uving, by approximately 13 percent
for the period beginning July 1,
AssistantSecretaryof Agriculture Mary
C. Jarratt has announced.
The 1977 Food Stamp Act requires ttie
Department of Agriculture to adjust
incomc eligibiUty standards annuaUy to
reflect increases in the cost of Uvbig.
’Ihe Office of Management and Budget’s
poverty guideUne is used as the sUn-
dard for food stamp income Umits. The
maximum net income Ihnits a famUy of
four must meet to quaUfy for fbod
sUmps wUl rise from $621 to $706 per
monm. After aUowable deductions are
taken, the maximum gross income for a
famUy 01 four without elderly persons
wUI rise from $1,026 to $1,131 per month.
From July 1 through June 30,1982, ttie
maximum net monttily income for Oie
continental United States, Guam,
Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands for
households of various sizes wiU be: One
person household - $360; Two person
household - $475; Three person
household - $590; Four person household
-$705; Five person household ■ $820; Six
person household - $935; Seven person
household - $1050; Eight Mrson
household - $1165; For each additional
member over eight, add $115 per month.
’The new income eligibility Umits
listed here as weU as those for Alaska
and HawaU appeared in the May 32
Federal Register.
Ms. Meader wiU include, in addiUon to
the therapy sessions, pre and post
evaluation testing, initial and final
conferences with parents and a final
report to be sent to the chUd’s school.
N.C. 'Clean Up Litter' Campaign Shows Successful Results In 81
Ms. Meader is also seeking funding in
ttie form of scholarships for ttiosie
students who may not otherwise be able
to financially take advantage of this
ttierapy program. Any groups, such as
service organizations, P.T.A.’s, chur
ches, schools, etc. who may wish to
. sponsor a chUd are encouraged to
conUct Ms. Meader. Parents and others
desiring further informatioo may caU
during the days or evenhigs at 998-5423.
An evaluation of the
North Carolina Department of Tran
sportation’s (N CDO T) concentrated
effort to clean up roadside Utter this
spring shows successful results, ac
cording to a r e p ^ presented at the June
Board of Transportation me(^ng here.
’Ihe report revealed that during a
week in April approximately 300 NCDOT
maintenance crews, with the help of 191
outside organizations and an estimated
3500 citizens, taicluding Governor Jim
Hunt, picked up Utter along highways
across the state.
As a result of the effort some 3,900
truckloads or 13,200 cubic yards of Utter .
Fires Reported
Davie County’s volunteer fire
departments and rescue squads
responded to the foUowing mergency
calls recently;
Cooleemee firemen answered the call
of a structure Ore on Duke Street on
’Tuesday, June 9.
MocksviUe department responded to a
fire alarm at Davie County HospiUI on
Wednesday, June 10.
MocksvUle volunteers fought a house
fire onMunmford Drive on Friday, June
Staiith Grove rescue workers went to
ttie scene of an accident at 1-40 and N.C.
801 on Saturday, June 13.
Jerusalem rescue workers were
dispatched to the scene of a double
fataUty car wreck on U.S. 601 near
Greasy Comer at 6:11 p.m. Satwday,
June 13.
Jeruaalem was caUed to tbe scene o(
another accident on U.S. aoi at 8:0B p.m.
Saturday, June 13.
Center and County Line unit«
responded to a fire along side of 1-40 on
Saturday, June 13.
WUUain R. Davie volunteer« went to
ttie scene of a car aocideitt at U.S. 601
and N.C. 801 at 4:24 a.m. Sunday, June
14.
MocksviUe firemen put out a car fire
at the B and W Trading Post on U.S. 158
on Sunday, June 14.
were picked up from 7,340 mUes of state
highway. This represents an increase of
nearly 16 percent in cleaned road
mUeage over that accompUshed in the
clean up Utter campaign this put faU.
’The number of outaide organizations
participating iiicrased by I22^rcent
over those who were involved in t^e
previous faU campaign. Hie increase
was due largely to ttie participation of
about 100 youth groups responding to
Governor Hunt’s proclamation of
“ Youth Involvement Day.” Hunt
proclaimed AprU 11 “ Youth In
volvement Day” in connection with the
clean up effort held AprU 13-17.
State Secretary of Transportation
Tom Bradshaw eiqilalned, “We are very
pleased with the overwhelmingly suc
cessful results of our spring pick up
litter campaign. We are most ap
preciative of the organizations ^ c h
helped us, especiaUy the youth groups,
and are convinced their cooperation
greatly contributed io the success of our
“In view of declining revenues tor our
highway program Utter clean up cannot
be given a top priority for routine
, maintenance; therefore, our
cooperative program has allowed us to
provide a bijfim level of service than
would be feasible wittiout substanttaUy
increasing the department’s annud
cost for Utter control,*’ he aaid.
NCDOT spends approximatdy $2
miUion annuaUy on roadside Utter
control statewide.
F I V E
G O O D
R E A S O N S
F o r F ir s t A c c o u n t C h e c k in g a t F ir s t F e d e r a l
1 . C h e c k i n g w i t h i n t e r e s t *
2 . O n l y $ 3 0 0 m i n i m u m b a l a n c e * *
3 . F r e e P a y - b y - P k « ? '^ ' « s e r v i c e
. 4 . R e a d y C o s h — F i r s t F e d e r a i ' s c a s h
o v e r d r a f t p r o t e c t i o n
5 . D i r e c t d e p o s i t o f c h e c k s - g o v e r n m e n t
a n d p a y r o l l
Good reasons make good sense why v'- - oiilo ci .oose First Account Checking
with FREE Pay-by-Phone» service.
Together, they make one account . ur>a chr. k "*>gl»ter and a simple con-
iidated statement. When you maintain a $300 balance there are no service charges.
MHd your unused balance earns interest for you Instead of lying idie and unproductive.
H R S T F B X R A L S A V IN G S
Main Office: 230 N. Cherry street Branch Ottleea: 400 Hanes Mall/3443 Robin Hood Road/130 8. Stratford Road 2615 Reynolda Road/3001 Waughtown Street
Mocksville Office: 215 Qalther Street Clenimene Office; 2421 Lewisville-Ciemmons Road
Winston-Salem/Mocksville/Clenimons Telephone (910) 723-3604
*11 your baianea fall* b«ioK thar« wtu ba a $3.00 ««rvlc« charg*. ’*6'/.% par annum, compoundwi daily and paid monthly.
16 DAVir, СОимГС ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, ,IUNI IK, b);<lHigh Country Attractions Welcome Summer
Warm summer days and
cool nights signal the arrival
of summer In the mountalM.
Popular High Country travel
attractions have taken their
cue from the weather and
have opened their doors for
another exciting summer
season. Many of the at
tractions have improvements
to report.
This summer the
"Carolina’s Original Theme
Park", TweeUle Railroad wUl
celebrate Its 25th season as a
family attraction and the
lOOth anniversary of the
original Tweetsle, the
Eastern Tennessee and
Western North Carolina
Railroad. Governor Hunt has
proclaimed June 20-27 as
Tweetsie Week and the an
nual Old Time Railroader's
Day, June 27th, will feature
performances by Arthur
Smith.
Boone’s outdoor
drama,“Horn In the West”
will celebrate its 30th bir
thday this season with a newly
written script by Kermit
Hunter. America’s third
oldest outdoor drama, “The
Horn” depicts the struggle of
Daniel Boone and toher H i ^
Country frontiersraeii to settle
the mountains and win
freedom from the British.
Besides the colorful
pageantry of the drama itself,
a “Log Village and Liviiy
Museum” will open this
season when "Horn in the
We st” starts its June 19th to ^
August ISth season. The
museum will consist of three
typical late 18th century dw
ellings furnished In an
tiques. Costumed guides will
described the uses of the
antique items.
Another important addition
for antique lovers has been
added at Mystery Hill. A new
building and other additions
nowhouseMystery HiU’s 8,000
item “Lifestyles Museum” of
Blue Ridge antiques. A craft
shop and art gallery will
feature craft demonstrations
throughout the summer.
At Grandfather Mountain, a
new cuh habitat has been
added to (he mountain’s
famous habitat for deer.
Bear and Cougar. Hang
Gliding eJdilbitions daily and
the mile high swinging Bridge
continue to excite visitors.
Tlie spectacular view from
North Carolina’s first travel
attraction, Tlie Blowing Rock
is as awe-inspiring as ever
and Linville Caverns con
tinues to give visitors a
glimpse of North Carolina’s
only cavern attraction. At
Beech Mountain, North
Carolina’s highest in
corporated town, the Grass
Skiing season is underway.
For inforamtion on hours of
operation and rates at these
other High Country at
tractions, pleaae call North
Carolina H l ^ Country Host at
the TOLL F R E E numbers
listed below. Use these
dumbera between 9 am and 5
pm seven days a week for
answera to all your High
Country travel questions. Ask
for our fkree, full color Area
Guide.
Solar Heating Possibilities
By Sharon Allred Decker
4-wrote -last -week Sbout-
solar energy and passive
solar energy in particular.
Many of our homes poueaa
the potential for taking ad
vantage of passive solar
heating possibUities.
Can you remember a cold
winter aftemo<m , sitting in a
sunny spot in your living
room? You were
taking advantage of the
warmth of the sun and a
“direct gain” form of passive
solar heating .
The sun’s rays are very
warming in cold months. But
what about the summer
months when temperatur«
are warmer and you don't
necesaarily want to fed ad-^
ditional heat for the sun? And
perhaps moat of all, you don’t
want to increase the need for
air conditioning becauae of
the beaming suâight flltaring
in tfarogh'ttie glass areas of
your home.
Wtndow awnlnga or
overiiangs poiitianod to taka
advantage of (be wlntnr mn
and to block aummer tun help
control heat again. Some
cfaooae to uae reflective fiam
to reduce the heat from the
lun’t rays penetrating into
the houae.
Window treatmenti become
a very important part of
managing a direct gain tolar
system for your home. Witti
the advent of increasing in
terest in solar energy, several
studies have been made on the
use of varioui wtndow
treatmenta. Alto, new window
shade detignt have been
developed for better window
management and decorative
beauty as well.
A recent study conducted at
North Carolina State
University compares three
types of window treatmenta
for reducing solar gain. Hie
three types were window
shades (standard light
colores, ' opaque, vinyl-
covered cloth), draperies and
Venetian blinds.
The sun’s raya pau ttirough
tranaparent glats, strike an
object-whether it be ttie floor,
furniture, carpet- and are
converted to heat buildup, ttie
greater the need for air
conditioning to keep ttie house
cool.
Thus, the three types of
window treatments were
compared on the basis of iww
much each application
could reduce ttie coat of ah:
conditioning required to offset
solar heat buildup.
The study results were
based on data for 17 United
Statea’ cities. It wat deter
mined that for a typical home
with average orientation and
200 square feet of unshaded
glass are, the total seasonal
CMf for W OThdiUbfflng to
offset solar heat gain was
$166.
The study concluded that
window shades could reduce
the cost of air conditioning
required to offset solar heat
buUdup from about $166 to $66-
- a $100 savings for the cooling
season.
When draperiea were used
as window treatments,
average air condiUoning costs
were reduced from $166 to $96
- a $68 tavlngt.Venetian bllndt reduced ttie
average coat from $166 to $114
- a $52 aavingt for ttie teaton.
Tlieee aavingt would vary,
of court«, with location,
temperature differenoea and
locw utility ratea. However, I
ttiink tbe itudy clearly thowt
ttiat window treatmenU can
make a difference in ttie
cooling qeedt of w ur home.
In contlderlBg me typet of
window thadet available, keep In mind ttiat light colora
do not abaorb ttie tun’t rayt.
park colora create beat from
aoUr rayt.
Opaque, rather than
tranaparent m aterial,
redueea aolar penetratk» into
ttie interior and vinyl turfaeat
deflect the tun’t rayt,
bouncing them back and
reducing heat buildup. Tbete
tame principlea apply to
draperiea , u well.
To tave energy by utlng
window thadtt, the Wtndow
Shade Newt Bureau tuggettt
following thete two
guiddlnflt:
1. Pull window thadea down
to tbe tiUt during ttie tunny
parta of tbe day, particularly
cn tbe toutti and weat tidet of
ttie houte where tbe tun’t
rayt are ttrongett.
2. In tbe late evening or
early morning , when ttie tun
is not shining brightly, raise
thadea to permit cool air to
flow througbthe houte.
Tbe tame guiddinet will
apply to uting draperiet or
Venetian bllndt.
Ths longest netkinal anthem I* that of Qreece. It conteini 168 vsrtei.
Salt-frs* diet? Seewn un- talted butter with minced ehivst, garlic, leeki, parsley, whatever your tssts.
Father's Day **pomp and.. /
For trivia fant, uMch cam« first? Father’s, or
Mother s Day? You guessed it — Mother's Day. h's for
this predte reason wc even cclebrate Fathcr’t Day -
thiat having put Mom first, poor ol’ Dad wouldn’t feel left
out!
In the noble words oi Sanator Margaret Chase Sniith,
“Let’s honor both porentt, or detltt from honoring
either." Fifteen ywan later, in 1972, Pretident Nixon
signed Congressional approval correctlrM the “moet
grievous Insult imadnable” — oversight of our honor-
2U>le and worthy fi-mcr».
So, be ll reaulved; Honor Dad with the ..
ceremonv’' he rlchlv He- -Hfrve«!
■ШШ
-к
MMkavUb. NC
___ T .l 634Ü14’
WHEN YOU SHOP
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DAVIE COUNTY PLUS
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L«rry contemplati* a muilcal icore.
The art of conducting is in gestures and movements.
Larry Cartner Conductor
Larry Cartner’s interest In music
began at an early age when his grand
mother bought a Sears and Roebuck
guitar for him. She showed him 3 chords
and he took it from there.
Larry is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Kermit Cartner of thtf Davie Academy
area.
As he grew up, Larry was musically
influenced by both sides of his family.
They instilled in him a great love for
music. Although they had no formal
musical training, music was very much
a part of their uves.
As a member of the First Methodist
Church in Mocksville, Larry sang in the
choir for many years.
His junior year at Davie High School
he became involved in the vocal en
semble, led by Mrs. Letty Smith.
At the time, Mrs. Smith didn’t have an
accompanist, so Larry directed the
group while she played piano.
Also offered at Davie was a music
theory class taught by former band
director Bill Winkler and present
director Robert Patillo.
Larry professes a deep “interest and
love” for theory and believes this is
where be learned the foundations of
music.
He had had no oiano or voice training
and credits Mrs. Smith for giving him
"encouragement und literature”, thus
increasing his interest and involvement
with music.
After graduating from Davie High in
1976, Larry began work at Heffner’s
Land of Food. Deciding to go to college,
Larry left his position at Heffner’s and
enrolled at Catawba College in
Salisbury.
WhUe at Catawba Larry studied under
Lonnie Bond, a music professor there.
When Bond accepted a position
elsewhere Larry studied under David
Ot. Ot accepted a job as piano ivofessor
at Pfeiffer College, so Larry followed
him to Pfeiffer.
At Pfeiffer, Larry was on the honor
roll for 3 years. He received a Who’s
Who scholarship, a scholarship from the
Friends of Music, the E. J. Fletcher
scholarship, two scholarships from the
music department at Pfeiffer, and one
from the college, all of which show his
determination to master music.
He has a degree in Music Education
and a teacher's certificate from Pfeiffer
College.
Conducting became Larry’s interest
his junior year of college. He has since
then had S semesters of conducting
training.
Larry’s definition of a conductor is
"the fellow who gets the blame if it (the
performance) goes wrong.” He says a
conductor is graded everytime a group
performs.”
A good conductor is one who "makes
the music come alive.” He stimulates
the players to perform to the best of
their abilities and brings life to the
music.
A conductor’s "rapport with the
players” is also very important. He
should be able to make the group do
exactly as he wishes.
Larry describes the relationship
between performers, conductors and tlw
audience as "very intense.” The job of
the conductor is composed of "per
spiration and inspiration.”
The performance of a singer of int-
trumentaiist relies largely on the per
sonalities of the audience and the con
ductor and how the two relate.
As a conductor, Larry sees his role as
dimensional; as that of “an educator, a
leader, a disciplinarian, an artist, and a
listener.”
^rry is very interested in the
Baroque-Classical period, which con
sists of such composers as Handel and
Bach.
Larry points out that "500 years ago
the Church was responsible for music
education.” Music was contained within
the church. There were no other means
of music education.
With that thought in mind, Larry has
been very involved with church music.
For the past 2'/i years he has been choir
director at John Calvin Methodist
(continued on page 2-B)
Larry Cartner and Letty Smith dlicuM music; a iiey part of botli of tlieir iivei.
Marvic and Larry liiare a moment at tlie piano.
BAviB eeuNTv
Feature l-B June 18,1981
Story by Jane Keller Photoa by Robin Fergusson
l^arry demonstrates some of the finer points of conducting,
i V
The Job of a conductor is muiti-faceted.Larry in Ui role as conductor.
:n DAVII COUNTY INTi:RI>RISI-; RI-rOKI), 'IIURSnAY, lUNI'; lii, I'lr.l
Larry Cartner
(conliruicd Irdiii page 1-B)
Church in Salisbury,
* He has accepted the position of
Dircclor of Music and Educational
- C oordinalor al Lake City Methodist
( hurch in Lake City, South Carolina.
.\ftcr his marriage to Marvie Lovette,
of Salisbury, he and his wife will leave to
l)ogin their life in South Carolina.
Marvie will be a music teacher in the
public school system in Lake City. She
; majored in voice at Pfeiffer. She and
I^rry attended at the same time.
Larry traveled all over the United
Stales on tour with the Pfeiffer Concert
Choir. He was involved with the
Chamber and Symphonic Choirs and
.served as manager of the choral
organization.
Eventually, Larry hopes to earn his
Master's degree and teach at the college
level.
As a college teacher, Larry says he
has a chance to teach students to ap
preciate perfection, because "con
ductors won’t accept mediocrity."
For all the work, effort and love Larry
has put into his music, Letty Smith calls
him “very deserving" of all his ac
complishments.
She says he has “the most natural
talent of any student I’ve ever had." And
in the wor<te of his first musical mentor
his future should be "very bright, very
bright, indeed."
Cartner instructs a chorus with the simple move of a hand.
Chlamydia More Commmon
Than Gonorrhea Or Syphilis
In The United States
Mr. and Mrs. Kermit Cartner, an early influence on Larry’s musical
interest.
Since 1881
Tweetsie Railroad
Her shrill sounds still echo through the
valleys ot the Blue Ridge Mountains.
Smoke and cinders still belch from her
stack as she winds her way along
through rhododendron covered hillsides.'
Just as she did 100 years earlier,
Tweetae creates quite a bit of excitement
for young and old alike.
It was in 1881 that the East Tennessee
and Western North Carolina Railroad
began operations, running from J<dinson
City, Tennessee, to Cranberry, North
CaroUna. It was not until 1916 that in
creasing economic demands for the
railroad caused its extension to Boone.
■Hie railroad became known almost
fh>m the beginning as Tweetsie because
of the shriD tweet, tweet, tweet of its
whistle. Its regular run passed through
such places as Sycamore Shoals, Pardee
Point, Roan Mountain, Linville,
Watauge feint, Montwuma and OiuUs
M U . Aad It was known tat the frien
dliness and InformaUty that marked the
operation of the line.
It is said that a family who wanted to
iricnic on Roan Mountain could ride the
train there on the morning run and
return to the trackside late in the day to
find the train waiting to pick up the
family for the trip back home.
Also it was not uncommon for people
along the line to have the train’s
engineer or conductor pick up a bag of
flour or sack of feed during his daily trip
and drop it off on bis next run by the
person’s house.
In her prime, Tweetsie was the
primary means of getting such products
as lumber, coal, gravel and agricultural
products out of the mountains and on to
other points. But she also carried people
to and from the area.
When the little narrow-gauge' first
rolled into Boone, Mayor Shull of nearby
Banner Elk told the large of area
residents who had gathered to see the
train, “I remember ^ n the only way
to get to Booae was to be bom here.”
Getting to Boone is much easier today
but the history of ttie Tweetsie Railroad
continues to be cdorful and is still
provides plenty of excitement for its
passengers as it puffs along on its three-
mile run around Roundhouse Mountain.
As one of tlie old-timers from the
original railroad line said, the train has
been “fancied” up a little but the
Tweetsie personality “ don’t never
change.”
Each year these old-timers who built
and operated the line in the early I900’s
return each summer for a “railroad
famUy” reunion and celebration at the
TweeUie Railroad theme oark. This
Excitement
year that event is scheduled fw June 27
with the entire week having been
proclaimed “ Tweetsie Week” by
Governor Jim Hunt.
There’s no doubt ttiat a lot of old
stories will be told and retold by some of
the old-timers at that reunion about
Tweetsie’s history. And most fitting too
since this is Tweetsie’s 100th year as a
railroad. She marks another milestone
ttiis year too. It’s her 2Sth year as one of
North Carolina’s leading tourist at
tractions.
Vehicles In Head-On Collision r
A Davie man blacked out behind the
wheel of his car which collided head-on
with another vehicle on U. S. 601 on
Saturday, June 13.
According to the Highway Patrol,
Jack Rayford Johnson, SI, of Rt. 4,
Mocksville, was attempting to make a
left turn. Johnson blacked out and his
1960 Toyota swerved into the path of a
1974 Cadillac driven by David N. Reavis,
Jr., 53, of Cooleemee.
Both men were taken by ambulance to
Davie County Hospital.
Ttoopwr 0. R. Collina eatlmatMl ttie
damages at «7,000 to the Toyota aad at
«1,800 to the Ca<MUac.
Johnson was charged witb driving on
ttie wrong side of the road.
’Dental Hints
By Janet Frye
Chlamydia-it’s the most widespread
and most mysterious of all venereal
diseases.
Tiiere are more than 3 million cases of
Chlamydia in the United States each
year, making it more common than
gonorrhea or syphilis, said Dr. Priscilla
Wyrick of the University of North
Carolina at Chapel Hill, who has studied
Chlamydia for seven years. But one of
the worst things is that most people may
not even know they have it.
“It’s a serious problem and a lot of
people out there, including physicians,
don’t know about it," she said. "It’s
particularly a problem in young people
20 to 35, and usually among the hi^er
socio-economic status groups."
Although Chlamydia is not life-
threatening for adults, it can result in
sterility in both males and females, and
complications for newborns can be quite
severe, Wyrick said. Research suggests
that there is increased risk of fetal or
newborn deaths for Chlamydia-infected
pregnant women.
Althou^ Chlamydia has been around
for thousands of years, it wasn’t isolated
until World War II, said Wyrick,
associate professor of bacteriology. It
was thought to be a virus instead of a
bacterium until the mid-1960s and was
not widdy publicised in the medical
literature until ttie l«70s. Wyrick’s U one
of only a half dozen biology labs in the
country studying Chlamydia at present.
One of the greatest problems with
Chlamydia, she said, is that there may
be no visible symptoms, and even when
symptoms are evident, the disease is
difficult for a doctor to diagnose. For
that reason, many people do not know
they have the disease.
“Studies of some 2,000 patients in
obstetrics clinics have found that, on the
average, 13 to 20 percent of the pregnant
women who came for prenatal checkups
had Chlamydiir and didn’t ItMw Tl,’’^'
Wyrick said
“People know about gonorrhea and
syphilis, and that’s what people always
think of as sexually transmitted disease.
But there’s a host of organisms that can
cause VD, including Chlamydia and
Herpes.”
She pointed out ttiat ttiat there’s a 55
percent chance that a woman who has
Chlamydia will give it to a male partner
and approximately a 65 pereent chance
ttiat a man will give it to a female
partner.
When symptoms are visible, they
often resemble a mild form of
gonorrhea. I^mptoms often include
pain, a wattei^ dscharge and burning
on urination. But unlike syphilis and
la which can be confirmed by a
test or a stained smear of ttie
discharge. Chlamydia is difficult to
diagnose. It can only be isolated on a
tissue culture, a procedure using
mammalian cells. Not many
laboratories can perform tbe test, and
wiiSBltis snratld»!«, It may coat as much
as «65 at some labs. Wyrick said. N. C.
Memorial, Duke Medical Center and ttie
state laboratory in Raleigh are three
idaces the test is available in North
Carolina.
“Right now," she added, “for the most
part, Chlamydia is diagnosed by ex-
clusiun. Thb (luctur rules out everylliing
else, so he may not have to resort to a
culture to diagnose it."
Once Chlamydia is diagnosed, it is
easy to treat, she said. A minimum of 10
days to two weeks on tetracycline will,
in most cases, kill the Chlamydia
bacteria, as well as gonorrhea or
syphilis. “Cohipliance is the biggest
problem. Some pepple stop taking the
antibiotic after four or five days when
Uiey begin to feel better. But Chlamydia
bacteria are slow-growing and it takes
longer to kill them all.”
If left untreated. Chlamydia may lead
to pelvic inflammatory disease or in
fection of the cervix or fallopian tubes in
women and disease of the prostate gland
or epididymis in men. "These are very
serious diseases and can lead to
sterility,” she said. “But one of the more
serious problems about the disease is
ttie risk to the newborn because ttie
mother may not realize she has
Chlamydia.
There is some research that suggests
that Chlamydia may lead to
miscarriage, low birthweight and
premature birth, as well as increased
risk of fetal and newborn deaths.
There is a 67 percent chance that a
child who passes ttirough ttie birth canal
infected with Chlamydia will devdop an
eye disease or a type of pneumonia, she
said. Either of theae conditions can be
serious and may not show up until a few
weeks after birth.
“SUte law requires newborns receive
silver nitrate eye drops for gonorrhea
and syphiUs,” Wyrick said, “But ttiese
are not effective on Chlamydia. Usually
the child and mother must be treated
with erythromycin since tetracycline
cannot be given to pregnant women or
young children.”
But evim witti treathimt, somettmes
the disease persists, so follow-up
treatment may be necessary.
“We can’t always eradicate it and we
are not sure why,” said Wyrick, who
currently is examining reasons
Chlamydia might sometimes be
resistant to treatment. “I think there
may be a time in its growth cycle when
the organism is in a form that is not
susceptible to erythromycin or
tetracycline. Unfortunately, this means
some pe(q;>le who have been treated may
still be carrying and spreading ttie
disease without realizhig it.
"More researdi is needed but many
potential scientists reject this field
bectuse of the poor funding situation.”
The only hope for fightii« the spread
of Chlamy.................................
informa ti
a less expensive (
<#86686, 8h6 Sftid.
Wyrick’s research Is funded through
ttie NaUonal Institutes of Allergy and
Infectious Diseases of the National,
Instltutea o( Healfli.
Garlic Flavor
A quick way to give b a r b ie fare a
garlic flavor is to toss garlic ctoves on
the coals while meat grills.
jmy nope lor ngniuig uie spreaa
mydia is ttirough providing more
stion to the public and devdophig
Bxpensive diagnostic test for ttie
By Gary E. Prillaman DDS
If oral cancer is detected
early, it can be treated con
servatively. 'Ihis is why a
thorough self examination of
the mouth, throat, head and
neck should be performed
monthly. Once mouth or
throat cancer has
metastasized to the lymph
nodes, extensive, often
disfiguring treatment must be
performed, combined with
strong chemotherapy and
radiation therapy.
In my five years in private
practice, I have seen one case
which had metastasized. This
was a seventy year old white
male who had a large mass on
the inside of his cheek. He was
first treated witti radiation
therapy, ttien chemottierapy.
This didn't help, so part of the
jaw bon^ and tissue under the
ear was removed. Hie man
required a flap to cover the
place where the jaw was
removed for cosmetics. Ihe
man eventually died because
all the cancerous tissue
couldn’t be removed. Anottier
case I say was caught much
earlier by ttie patient. The
man discovered a lump under
his jaw bone which didn’t go
away. He was first treated for
an infection by a medical
doctor. When this didn’t cause
ttie lump to go away, a biopsy
waa made of the area. Klie
area proved to be cancerous.
Uiis man had to have surgery
to remove the cancerous
lesion, but the doctors fed
that all the cancerous tissue
was removed. This man
wound up with a tracheal tub
for several weeks, and could
not speak plainlv for about 2
months after ttie operaUon,
but he should be able to
resume an ahnost normal
routine after about 6 months
recovery time. He will still
have to undergo rydiaUon
therapy, but low dosages will
probably be involved, and
chemotherapy probably won’t
be necessary.
This snows that it is best to
find facial, mouth and ttiroat
cancers early. If ttiese lesions
had been caught earlier, very
consd^aUve therapy could
have been instituted. In ttie
last article, I told how to
examine yourself for facial,
mouth and throat cancer.
Please perform a monthly
check for any signs so you can
have ttiese areas checked
while still small and very
conservative treatment can
be performed.
Green Meadows
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From Out of the South Came..
B I^ C a n L ^ S D
From morning ’til night
220 Gait'ier Street, Mockivills
r SAVE 4 9 «tonChicken Snack
2 pieces pius a biscuit
REG . $ 1 .4 9
VOID AFTER JUNE 24. 1981
$1 . 0 0
BURGER BISCUIT
2 For $ 1 . 0 0
VOID AFTER JUNE 24. 1081
Saturday 5-7 p.m. is pre-
registration day for Bible
School at Green Meadows.
Activities include a hot dog
cookout and t-shirt give away.
Classes begin on Monday at
6:45 to 9 p.m. for all ages.
Hie youth team consisting
of Dana Warren, Christie
Dorman and David Cox are
doing a great job at Green
Meadows this week, the girls
with ttie music and singing
and David with the messages
each service.
Mr. and Mrs. Dale
Thoinpsun and daughters of
I^s Cruces, New Mexico are
visiting her mother, Mrs.
Grace Parrish on Rainbow
Road. Visiting also from
Edison, N.J. are her son,
Ronald Parrish, his wife and
son.
Mrs. Larry Childs was
notified on Monday morning
of ttie death of her mother in
Atlanta, Georgia. Mr. and
Mrs. Childs left on Monday for
Atlanta.
Jeannie Nester is spending
the week with her grand
parents the Joe Langstons.
llie Green Meadows Bible
Study group held their June
meeting at the lake and picnic
area guests of Mrs. Minnie
Cornatzer on Baltimore Road.
Mrs. Eva Rice of Parkland
BapUst Church was the guest
teacher, following the
meeting everyone enjoyed a
picnic lunch. Then several
members enjoyed a couple
hours fishing. There was a lot
of talk and offers to Jo Cheek
to accept the largest one to
have mounted for her game
goom, however she politely
declined, honors for the
largest catch going to
Frances Boyer.
Mrs. Ruby McKnight
visited her brother Gurney
Smith on the weekend.
Most of the children of ttie
late R.A. Foster gathered on
Sunday at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Alvin Foster to
enjoy a lunctieon together.
Special guests were Mr. and
Mrs. Everette Smith of
Homestead Fla. Mrs. Nannie
Dunn, Mrs. Vada Itiddle and
Mrs. Evola Sheek, Mrs. Sheek
was celebrating her 86th
brithday. Several other
relatives and friends also
shared the lunch and af
ternoon with them.
Miss Sailie Riddle remains
a patient at the Winston-
Salem Convalescent Center.
Her condition remains verv
poor and litUe or no im'-
provement.
Rev. C.E. Crawford is now
making his home at
Mocksville’s Fran Ray Rest
Home. His condition has
improved enough to be able to
go for rides and visito witti his family.
Sympathy is extended to
Mrs. Lynn Parrish on
Rainbow Road whose father,
Mr. Raymond Fletcher
passed away last Thursday.
Also our thoughts are witti
Mr. and Mrs. Kennetti Cheek
whose sister in law died on
FViday following a lengthy
illness.
1 3 .6 0 6 %
Thfltit who! B 8 № n ( y paying
That’s our annual interest rate this week on six*month certifi*
cates, llie minimum deposit is $10,000 and the rate is subject to
ch ai^ at renewal, ____
Federal regulations require a substantial
interestpenalty for early withdrawal and pro U J D J D w A
hibit the oompoun^ng of interest. assfsji!fss8ia 3!w .s a ^
Effective - Tuesday. June 16 thru Monday. June 22,1981
W P U - W M
H i g h w a y 1 5 8 E a s t M o c k s v l l l a , N . C .
O P E N F O R
T H E S U M M E
From CIsmmons take 1-40 to the
fsrmlngton Rosd Exit, turn Isft
to Hwy. 158, turn right, to lust
Inside Mocfcsvills city llmttt.
WATCH FOR SIGN!
HOURS: Monday thru Saturday 10:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. Sunday 1 to 6 p.m.
DAVIIÍ COUNTY líNTtRPRISI- RliCORO. THURSDAY, JUNU IK. 1981 ЗВ
Farmington Dragway News
By Becky White
Gene Quick of Walkertown, NC took
the number one qualifying position at
the Farmington Dragway on Friday
night.
His qualifying time in the 1968 “Quick
Machine" Camaro was 6.749 seconds on
a 6.450 dial, but in the final eliminator,
be was plagued with problems and took
the second place position with an BT of
9.22 seconds.
Ricky Roof of Greensboro, NC, who
won his first career race a week ago at
Farmington made it two in a row with a
winning elapsed time of 7.07 seconds.
This was only Ricky’s fourth career race
and only the fourth race on the 1*77
Chevrolet.
Randy Burnette of Winston-Salem,
NC, the new owner of the ‘‘PHrtln’ with •
Disaster” 1974 Vega took the number
three position and Dale Andrews of
Hudson, NC was fourth.
Dale and his brother, Ralph are
featured in the June, 1981 issue of the
Quick Times Racing News, which is now
available at Parks and Sons Insulation
in Mocksville and at Lucky’s Speed Shop
in Cooleemee.
Dennis Swaim, of Kernersville, NC,
has for the past three weeks, been
alternating between winning and taking
second place in the Modified Street
Division. On May 29, he was the winner,
on June 5, he took second place. On
Friday night, he captured that win again
in his 1968 Mustang Cobra with an BT of
8.019 seconds. Ronald Thomas of Mount
Airy, NC took second place in a 1967
Plymouth with an ET ot 8.267 seconds.
Dennis won that one by only two
thousandths of a second. David Boggs of
Farmington took the third place win and
AUan Winters of Kernersville, NC was
fourth.
In the Ultra Street Division Wayne
Myers of aenunons, NC took the win in
Tennis Tourney At
Hickory №1! Completed
The Hickory HiU championship
doubles tennis tournament was com
pleted last Sunday.
Winners in the mixed doubles event
were Grady Day and Jan Stapleton.
Uiey defeated Tracey Stapleton and
Chip Barnhardt 7-6, 6-4.
Ladies doubles winners were Gene
Rauch and Jan Stapleton. The Rauch-
Stapleton team defeated Venita
Dwiggins and Helen Gantt 6-4, 64.
In tbe men’s division Grady Day and
Randy Atkinson beat Oren Heffner and
Charles Crenshaw 6-4, <4.
his 1970 Nova with an ET of 9.82.
Wayne’s oldest son, Richie, is now
learning to race, he made a few time
trials on Friday evening. Donald
Thomas of Mount Airy, NC too the
runner up spot with an ET of 11.18
seconds. Ron Oha of Winston-Salem was
third and Don Nelson of Greensboro, NC
was fourth.
On July 25 and 26, the Farmington
Dragway will hold an IHRA ■ Winston
Pro Stock World TiUe Series. And, again
this year, as last year, M 4 J Souvenirs
of Kernersville, NC is sponsoring a “Pro
Stock Giveaway” .
What do you have to do to be eligible
for $75.00 worth of merchandise? Just
pick up a copy of the Farmington
Dragway Newsletter at the concession
stand, write down who you think will win
Hickory Hill Swimmers Win Opener
the Pro Stocii race on July 26, and their
low elapsed 'ime and turn your ballot
back in at the concession stand.
You may receive all of these itpms: a
Winston Igloo Cooler, a Winston cushion,
a Winston cap, patch, and mug, a
Farmington Dragway T-shirt, 6 quarts
uf Valvoline Oil, one Aceuratc Image
Car Tag and two of their beautiful
decals. Get you "guess” in early, and
you can put one in every week.
In the meantime, racing will continue
at the Farmington Dragway every
Friday night. Gates will open at 4:30
p.m., qualifying begins at 8:00 p.m. and
eliminations will begin at 8:30 p.m.
Remember, all those under the age of
sixteen will get in FR EE at the Far
mington Dragway!!!
'/Tie Hickory Hill Swim Team started
their 1981 season with an impressive
366>,^ to 300',^ win over Sherwood of
Winston-Salem last Thursday night at
the local pools.
Thirty-five of Coach Ken Slate’s
ninety swimmers earned blue ribbons
through either the relay team or in
dividual effort in the back stroke, breast
stroke, butterfly and free style.
The next meet will be Thursday, June
I8th, at the Elks Club in Winston-Salem.
Blue Ribbon winners were:
Age 8 and under: Wendy Tuck, Lisa
Shaw, Tanha Sheridan, Tiffany
Fleming, Carol Roach. Clint Junker,
Charlie Crenshaw, Scott Callison and
Chipper Leonard.
Ages 9 and 10: Jeanna Johnson, Kathy
.J...^f A ^ • ’ "i 1
! I ■ Ш
RMINQ-TOND R A G W A V .
Hickory Hill Holds Best Ball Tourney
Fourteen teams (4 man) participated
in the onenlay Selective Shot Tour
nament at Hickory HiU Country aub on
Sunday, June Mth.
The team of Lester Coiart, Joe
Whitlock, Tommy Brooks and Paul
Hutton had a one stroke edge over two
teams and won with a 61 or 11 under par.
Bob Vandivers team and the team of
Jerry Shore finished at 10 under and
were tied for second and third place.
’Ihe next tournament is a parent-child
tournament on June 27-28th. Members
that are interested should sign up in the
club house before the 26th of June.
Billy Lewis was runner-up in Sunday’s race.Several Local Students Are In Junior Olympics
Several area students participated in
the sectional Athletics Congress Junior
Olympics track and field competition at
Myers Park lUgh School and Alexander
Graham Junior High School, Satur
day, June 13 in Charlotte.
Barry Pulliam won the 110 high
hurdles in 15.4 and the triple jump with a
leap of 13.53 meters in young men’s
competition.
’Third places in intermediate boys
went to Rodney Boulware in the 800 in
2:04.7 and Steve Moxely with a time of
18:56 in the 5000.
Eric Hargrove placed 4th in the in
termediate boy’s triple Jump and long
jump. Also idadng 4th were Norris
Hudson in the intermediate boys 400 in
53.9 and George Reavis in the young
men’s 5000 in 18:19.3.
Barbara Latta, a Davie High
graduate from MocksviUe had seconds
in the young women’s 800 in 2:44.5 and 1500 in 6:10.1.
Mixed doubles winners at Hickory Hill are : Grady Day and Jan
Stapleton. Tracey Stapleton and Ch^ Barnhardt were mnnen up.
Mocksville Recreation News
The MocksviUe Recreation Depart
ment is sponsoring various activlti« tor
area youth ages kindergarten to 15 years
(dd. Tbe events hdd at Rich Park,
Monday - Friday, 8:30 to 12:30, are
beaded by Larry Lanier, director, JUl
Amos, assistant, and Tammy AUen,
assistant.
Programs which run June 15-26 and
July 6-31 are as foUows:
THAT'S INCREDIBLE W E E K
Blagic, unusual and zany track and
fidd events wUl be featured June 15-19.
JOIN TH E CIRCUS W E E K
Carnival activities are planned and
“WlUle the aow n" wUl be performing
Friday, June 26th at 10:00 a.m. at Rich
Park. The circus festivities are
scheduled for June 22-26.
CO W BOY AN D INDIAN W E E K
Activities include Indian arts and
crafts, a coftume contest, Indian dan
cing, tee-pees and a camp-out for the
wedi of July 6-10.
B E A STAR W E E K
Kids wUl be directing and making
their own movie as drama and movies
wUl be featured July 13-17.
’TWILIGHT ZONE W E E K
A look into tbe future with evenU
centered around space and the future
wlU be featured July 20-24.
THOSE AMAZING ANIMALS
W E E K
The week of July 27-31 wiU be centered
around nature and animals and wUl
include hUdng on Rich Park’s nature
traUs.
Some special attractions for the
summer I
4th
rae special attractions for the
Ladles doubles winners are Gene Rauch and Jan Stapleton. Runners up summer playground are also planned. A are Venita Dwiggins and Helen Gantt. _4th of July "Celebration of In-
Second "Pro Drag” Is Held At Farmington
e” held at Rich Park. Utere
1 be games in a carnival style, soft-
baU, and fireworks.
A possible field trip to Asheboro Zoo,
Tanglewood or Dan Nichtds Park is
planned.
An Indian dance performed by Lonnie
McCuUough during Cowboy and Indian
.wedc wlU also featured. __
F a r m i n g t o n
S o f t b a l l
’Hie sUndings going into the last week
of play for tbe Farmington Youth Soft-
baU League are:
W ....L
Eagles 3 1
Comets 2 2
KUlers 2 3
Superstars 2 3
Results of games, Ttiursday, June 11
are: Superstars defeated Eagles 9-2;
Comets defeated KiUers 11-7.
Hie third game wUl b^gin in the
bottom of the Sth inning with the ^ l e s
leading 9-8 with one man out, and one
man on third. This game was called due
to time limit and wUl be played in its
entirety beginning at 5:00 Thursday,
June 18.
Other games scheduled for June 18
are;
5:30 Comets vs. Superstars
6:30 KUlers vs. Eagles.
A double elimination tournament
involving aU teams wUl be idayed the
week of June 22-2«.
Earnhardt, Molile Jackson, Beth Mash
burn and Mara Sheridan.
Ages 11 and 12: Jennifer Sherrill,
Anne Johnstone, Sara Odum, Amy
Jackson, Bruce Bullock, and Sherry
Morgan.
Ages 13 and 14: Daniel Cain, Bruce
Bullock, Scott Kollins, Meade Atkinson,
Tracy Southern and LaRhonda Ketner.
Ages 15 to 18: Kim Ward, Charlotte
Junker, Tracy Kollins, Misty Oontz,
Chris Johnson, Joe Frank, Bobby
Overcash and Abe Howard.
Winners ot the one day best baU tournament: Tommy Brooks, Lester Cozart, Joe Whitlock and Paul Hutton.
Tied for second and third: Jerry Shore, Garland Myers, Buddy Beck
and Hubert Boger.
I for second and third: Bob Vandiver, Arnie Harpe, Danny Smith. C. W. Ahlstrom is not pictured.
Six Women’s Softball Teams In hrmington Benefit Tournament
. Six women’s softbaU teams par
ticipated in the Venus Reavis Love
Tournament held June 12-14 at Far
mington baU field.
Cartner’s placed first, Whitehouse
Agency was in second place, and
F e a r ’s BuUders came in third in the
three day round robin event.
Hie sponsoring organization, Far
mington Community Association, would
lUte to thank aU participating teams and
volunteers who kept score, announced, .
maintained the field, and worked in the
concession stand for their co-opo'atlve
efforts to make the tournament a suc
cess.
A special thanks is offered to those
individuals, groups, and businesses who
made various donations which made the
event even more successful. AU
[»■oceeds were given to Venus Reavis to
help with her medical expenses.
Davie County Stan Musial Baseball Team
LosesTo Soutli Iredell, To Host At Park
Davie’s eatiy in the Carolina Stan
Musial semi-pro basebaU league lost 94
to ttie SouUi IredeU PhUUes in 13 innings
in Uie Sunday game played at Rich
Park.
Davie led 6-3 at oni jint but was
unable to hold the leao.
Clean up hitter Craig Brown continued
his torrid hitting with a triple, double
and a single. Gerry Ridenhour had a
long homerun and a single. Designated
hitter Rick Brown was on base four
Umes with two singles and two walks.
The MerchanU play at home both
Saturday June 20 against South Rowan
and on Sunday June 21 they meet the
Lincolnton Royals.
Game time is 3 p.m. AU area fans are
invited to come out and enjoy the
national pastUme at the local level.
The second “Pro Drag Series Race” of
1981 was held at Uie Farmington
Dragway on Sunday, and the com
petition of aU three classes was as in
tense as Uie 96 degree heat.
Lonnie WeavU of KemersvUle, NC
was Uie proud winner of 12,000 in the Pro
Süreet Division as he took on Uw
HUlsvUle, Va. based 1967 “MounUin
Magic” Corvette of BUly Lewis and
Doiuiie Haynes. WeavU’s elapsed time
in his 1968 ‘.‘Rat Invasion” Camaro was
6.73 seconds. He’s been close to Uie win
on several occasions this year, but this
one was the first.
BiUy wasn’t as disappointed with his
runner-up spot as many people would
have been. He said Uie car had finaUy
sUrted running lUie he wanted it to.
Billy’s elapsed time was 6.89 seconds.
MU№ McGuire of Winston-Salem Uiuk
Uie number Uu«e spot in the 1968 "Good
Vibrations” Camaro and Gary Hager of
Narrows, Va. placed fourUi in his 1909
PlymouUi Barracuda.
David Boggs of Farmington took he
win in Uie Modified SUeet Division in his
1965 Pontiac Tempe&t, which is by the
way, equipped with à Chevrolet engine,
transmission, and rear gear. David’s
elapsed time for Uie wm was 7.60
S. David had to be the most
driver with the most con-
lay. К
an extra $100 for Uie Uiree closest ET
cards of the race. They were 7.671
seconds, 7.671 seconds, and 7.672
seconds. A lot of racers wish they could
have Umes that close, it makes for
winning.
Ray WiUiams was anoUier one of those
racers who was glad for Uieir second
place win. Ray has a new race car this
year and has had a few problems, but
Uie heat must have agreed with Uie 1968
Camaro on Sunday. His elapsed time
was 7.58 seconds. RusseU ^ w m a n of
Germanton, NC was third in his 1964
Chevy II Wagon and Dennis Swaim of
KernersvUle, NC wss fourUi in his 1968
Cobra MusUiig.
Don Nelson of Greensboro, NC took
Uie win in Uie Ultra Street Divisiui in his
1966 Ford wiUi an ET of 10.38 seconds,
whUe Ron Oha of Winston-Salem, NC
took Uie runner up spot wiUi an E T of
11.24 in his Camaro. Ricky Coleman of
Dobson, NC was third and Sue Street-
man oi Clemmons, NC was fourth.
Don Smith Leads Winston Racing Standings At Bowman Gray Stadium, Ladies Night This Week
Ueimis Swuni has taken the Modified Street win twice in June. ^
Don Smith has taken the lead in the
Winston Racing Series standings at
Bowman Gray Stadium, where
NASCAR stock car racers wUl vie
Saturday night in a “Ladies Night”
program that includes a “DemoliUon
Derby” wrecking contest.
Winston-Salem resident Smith moved
to Uie top in Uie featured ModUied
Division by finishing fourth last
Saturday night in the “Paul Ciener Ford
100” -a 100-lap race won by Don “Satch”
Worley of Rocky Mounty, Va.
The outcome dropped Ralph Brinkley
uf Lexington from first place to third in
Uie ranlungs, which clecide a season
championship that Brinkley won last
year for the fourth time. Smith, 1979
champion, has a seven-point lead in the
rankings over Paul Radford of Ferrum,
Va. -a two-timechamp who wasninner-
up in last week’s race.
A double-header for Modified cars wiU
be featured Saturday night in a “Indies
Night” observance postponed from May
30, when Uie first of two 2S-lap Modified
races was halted by rain after 11 laps.
Philip Smith of KernersviUe has the lead
fur Saturday night's resumpUon with the
12Ui lap.
Also on the program are two 20-lap
Limited Sportsman races, a 20-lap
SU«et Stock event and a 15-lapper te
the “Blunderbust” division’s novlie
drivers in old models “luxury” cars.
The DemoliUon Derby, in wliich drivers
use old cars and the object is to crash
into opponents and disable their cars
(Uie last one stUl able to move is the
winner), W Ü I be last on the program.
Stadium gates wUl open to the pubUc,
and pracUce runs wiU begin, at 6 p.m.
The first race i» scheduled for 8: IS.
Track manager Joe Hawkins said free
admission of female fans (no escort is
required) is expected U> bring a near-
capartiy crowd to the 17,000-seat
municipal stadium.
Jimmy Johnson of Walkertown has a
ISixnnt lead over Bobby Colvard of 131úii
in standings of the Limited Sportsman
Division, where Junior Reeves of
KernersvUie won a 20-lap race last
week. Reeves became the seveiiUi
different winner in nine Limited
Sportsman races liere this season.
Spider Kimel of Rural HaU, runner-up
lo BUly Duggins of Winston-Salem in a
20-lap Street Stock race for the fourth
strai^t time, has a 40-point lead in
standings over DuggUis- who was absent
from the season’s ftavt two events won
by Kimel. Tiiose standings are subject to
Kimel's appeal to sancUoning N A ^ A R
of a decision which disaUowed Kimel's
June 6 protest of Duggin’s car.
Dale Ward of Winston-Salem
remained on top of Blunderbust
rankings, although his four-race win
ning streak was ended by Ricky Gregg
in a 15-lap race. Ward has a 34-point lead
over Ciregg, a resident of Davidson
County’s Midway community.
Aftociating bursaucratt
with "red tape" go«( back
to the Hvsntaanth csntury,
whsn official document«
wsr* first lied with
tape of a rsddith hue.
4П - DAVIU COUNTY F.NTHKPRISIi RirORI). TIIURSDAY. JUNI- 18, 1481
Six From Davie Are Arrested In Forsyth 9**«SWi«!W5
Six from Davie County were among 12
arrested early last Saturday morning In
Forsyth County and charged with illegal
gambling at the Twin Lakes Fishing
aub on Styers Ferry Road.
The undercover vice and narcotic unit
of the Forsyth County Sheriff's
Department made the arrests around 3
a.m.
According to warrants, ^>ohnny
Harrison Mason, 41, of Mocks\ille was
charged with keeping a house of gam
bling at the fishing club and providing
drinks to the participants. The Forsyth
County Sheriff* Department had
received complaints about this club in
the past. Mason was also charged with
felony possession of more than 100
Qualuude tableU and gambling.
Also charged with gambling in con
nection with a poker game were Jerry
W. Harris, 31, of Mocksville, who was
also charged with possession of
marijuana; Otis L. Adams, 32, ol
Mocksville; Calvin Eugene Frye, 30, of
Mocksville; Clement David Jones, 43, of
Mocksville. Dickey L. Parnell of Davie
Car Wrecks In Fog
A Yadkinville woman wrecked her car
at the intersection of N. C. 801 and U. S.
601 in an early morning fog Sunday,
June 14, the Highway Patrol said.
Dianne Stanly Miller, 33, of Rt. 2,
Yadkinville, failed to see a stop sign at
the intersection around 4:00 a.m. due to
fog. She braked her 1972 Mercury and
skidded into the stop sign on a trafflc
island. The car continued across the
road, hitting two more traffic sighs and a
ditch.
Trooper W. D. Grooms estimated the
damage to the car at $450.
Mrs. Miller was charged with failure
to stop at a stop sign, driving too fast for
conditions, and having no driver’s
license.
R ep o rf From Raleigh
By Senator Gilbert Boger
The main topics around the
Legislature this week continue to be
Uxes and bid rigging. In the unfolding
scandal involving the Highway
Dq>artment, It seems now that Lt.
Governor Jimmy Green could have been
involved. At a news conference this
week Green said, “I wish to confirm
that I have not violated any law in any
manner according to my belief, and I
have not done anything wrong or im
proper” . Green has not, however,
denied that he received the free paving
work. Wilbur E. Dees, former vice
preaident of Crowell Construction, Inc.
of FayettevlUe, claims CroweU did
about 19,800 worth of paving and sent
Green the bill for half the amount. He
said that Green paid by check and that
Crowell later returned the money in
cash to Green. EarUer this year CroweU
Conttruction was Involved in a case in
which a SUte employee was fired for
furnishing bid estimates to Crowell and
had received a drive way paving job in
return. In that case, the construction
company claimed that it made an extra
$162,000 dollars on one project by having
the Department of Transportation’s
(»iginal estimates.
The Governor’s tax bill into serious
opposition in the House Finance Comm-
mittee on Friday morning by a vote of
28-25.
The Governor seems now to believe
that the Department of Transportation
needs reorganizing. At a news con
ference this week, he stated that after he
appointed a new Secretary of Tran
sportation that he (the secretary) would
have the authority to replace top people
in the Department. Appointments for
the Board of Transportation expire in
July, and the (]k)vemor says most of the
Board will be replaced.
The Gun Control Bill was killed in the
Senate this wedc. The bill was rewritten,
amended and changed, but it was killed
by a vote of 32-15 with all ten
Republicans and 22 Democrats
agreeing that making it tough on
honest people never stops crooks and
murderers.
OVER 4,200.00 WORTH OF
VALUABLE COUPONS -
YOURS FOR ONLY 49.95
IN Y O U R LO C A L M ERC H ANTS
G IFT CERTIFICATE B O O K .
MANY OF THE LOCAL MERCHANTS HERE IN THE MOCKSVILLE
AREA ARE SPONSORING A GIFT CERTIFICATE BOOK TO SAVE
YOU HUNDREDS OF DOLLARS AND TO PROMOTE THEIR
BUSINESS.
THE COUPON BELOW PLUS HUNDREDS OF DOLLARS MORE IN
COUPONS COULD BE YOURS.
THESE ARE THE SAME BOOKS THAT WERE PROMOTED BY
OUR LOCAL RADIO STATION WDSL.
THE SUPPLY IS LIMITED - SO YOU MUST ACT IMMEDIATELY
TO BE ASSURED OF GETTING YOURS.
TO GET YOURS - JUST CLIP THE COUPON BELOW AND FILL IN
THE INFORMATION ALONG WITH YOUR CHECK OR MONEY
ORDER TO SUNLIGHT ADVERTISING FOR $19.95
I SEND TO: Sunlight Advmiising
! P.O. Box 5
I Mocksville, M.C. 27028
I
I Ptaate Print
! Name.......................................I
I Addr»tt......................................
! City..................................State..Zip.
NOTE: C.O.D. IS ACCEPTABLE. JUST PRINT THE LETTERS
"C.O.D." ON THE COUPON ALONG WITH THE OTHER INFOR
MATION AND MAIL TODAY. HOWEVER, SENDING CHECK
OR MONEY ORDER WILL SAVE EACH CUSTOMER C.O.D.
CHARGES. ^
YOU MAY ALSO ORDER BY CALLING ONE OF THE FOLLOWING
NUMBERS FROM 9:00 A.M. to 9:00 P.M.. 634-3344 or 634-3425.
PLEASE REMEMBER - THE SUPPLY OF THESE VALUABLE
BOOKS IS LIMITED, SO TO BE ASSURED OF GETTING YOURS
- ORDER NOW. MONEY REFUNDED IF WE ARE SOLD OUT.
ORDER TODAY AND HAVE
FUN SPENDING YOUR GIFT
CERTIFICATES.
THEY MAKE GREAT GIFTS!
Monay-iaving tip. Save
•yrup from cannsd fruiti
(itore in fraezer). Whan you
have »nough, thickan with
cornitarch and u m at top
ping for pancakai, wafflai.
Jenny Lynn Smith Receives Degree In Flute Performance
County, age 44, was charged with
op .rating a game of chance.
Others charged were Gary P. Hen
derson, 26, of 1523 Old Town Road,
Winston-Salem; Bruce Raymond
Bames, 51, of Charlotte; Kenneth T.
Watson of 4770 Cariton Drive, Winston-
Salem; Joe E. Simpson, 35, of 1816
Turfwood Drive, Pfafftown; Warren K.
Williard, 27, of 3729 Thomasville Road,
Winston-Salem.
Several of the charges were repor
tedly lodged by SBI Agents T. E. Sturgill
and T. S. Johnson.
A spokesman for the Forsyth County
Jail said Saturday the men were
released from custody after posting
varying bonds or signing written
promises to appear in court. Probable-
cause court hearings have been
scheduled for July 1.
Vehicle Overturns
Distracted by a stopped car, a Davie
County teenager ran his car off the road
and overturned Friday, June 12, the
Highway Patrol said.
Monty Gray Smith, 16, of Rt. 6,
Mocksville, was traveling south on
Green Grass Road in a 1968 Opel. As he
entered a curve. Smith was distracted
by a car stopped on the left shoulder. His
car ran off the road on the right, and the
teenager lost control, steering too
quickly back on the road.
The vehicle ran off the left, struck an
embankment and overturned.
A passenger, Lisa Marie Dewar, 17, of
Rt. 8, Mocksville, was taken by am
bulance to Davie County Hospital.
Trooper A. C. Stokee estimated the
damage to the car at $450. No charges
were filed in the accident.
Coffee Consuming
Finland is the champion per capita
coffee4:onsuming countiy in the world,
gulping down about five cups a day for
every man, woman, and child. But the
United States, which averages less than
half that amount per person, buys more
coffee than anyone else, purchasing
some 1.2 million tons in 1979, National
Geographic says.
Redland Club
Has Meeting
Hie Redland Extension
Homemakers met at 7:30 p.m.
on June 9 at ttie Bethleh«n
United Methodist Church.
President, Ivy Jo Smith
presided.
The members sang the
“Song of Peace” foUowed by
devotions by Geraldine
Pilcher. Fourteen members
then answered roll call by
naming their favorite fruit.
The May minutes were read
and approved followed by the
treasurer’s report.
Catherine Sofley reported
that she took the $% donation
to the Nnth Davie Junior
H i ^ School for the tree we
a^iaedto buy for ttte grounds.
The Redland Club will
hostesss the Area meeting on
July 16 at 2:00 p.m. Nellie
Cook, Berma Foster, Betty
Sprinkle and Ivy Jo Smith
volunteered to make and
serve refreshments.
Mitzi Foster announced that
the program for the July
meeting will be a demon
stration of machine em
broidery by Karen Williard.
She showed the club some
pieces she had experimented
with. Also, at the July
meeting a vote wiil be taken
on having an August meeting
or postponing until Sep
tember.
Betty Sprinkle reported sbe
had received little help in the
way of guidelines and
literature for starting a
sewing class. It was decided
to check within the church for
interest and plan 6ч>т ttiat.
Ivy Jo Smith announced a
County Council Meeting
scheduled for July SO at tbe
County Office Building.
'Mtzi Foster gave a book
report on “I Came To Love
You Late” .
Catherine Sofley and
Geraldine Pilcher shared a
few of their experiences while
they were in Boston with other
area homemakers.
Members then repeated the
Club Collect after which the
meeting was turned over to
Berma Foster for the
program. She began with a
presentation of "Look Your
Best in What You Wear” . She
told how things such as
proportion, em phasis,
balance, rhythm, harmony,
color, shape, lines, fabric
designs, texture and hand
should be considered when
choosing and constructing a
garment.
Next came the program on
heritage. Berma had written
a play emitted “Neighbors
Come to Visit” and was about
people in ttie Redland Com
munity in ttie mid I880’s.
Participating were Berma
Foster, Mitzi Foster, Helen
McDaniel, Doris Leonard and
Gaylene Cook.
Refreshments were served
by Catherine Sofley and
Geraldine Pilcher.
Eugenia (Jenny) Lynn Smith
graduated with highest distinction,
receiving her Bachelor of Music Degree
in flute performance at Northwestern
University, Evanston, Illinois, on June
13, 1981.
Jenny is the daughter of Sylvia Stroud
Smith of Route 1, Advance, North
Orolina, and of Lt. Col. Jerry Julian
Smith of Seattle, Washington. Her
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Wade B.
Stroud of Route 1, Harmony, and Mrs.
Cieorge C. Smith, Route 4, Statesville.
In high sr'hool in Hampton, Virginia,
Jenny's flute teacher was Mary Ann Coe
Archer, now of the Metropolitan Opera,
New York. While at Northwestern she
studied witt! Walfrid Kujala of the
Chicago Symphony. She played for
Jean-Pierre Rampal, the premier
French flutist and probably the most
famous flute player in the world, at a
master class last summer at Ravinia,
summer home of the Chicago Sym
phony.
At the School of Music at Nor
thwestern the emphasis is on public
performance. Jenny gave a recital each
year since she was a sophomore. Also,
she gave a guest performance for the
Candlelight Music Series of the Hamp
ton Baptist Church in Hampton,
Virginia, in the Fall of 1979. At'Nor-
Щ
jenny Smith
thwestem she has performed in ttie
symphonic Band, Wind Symphony,
Repertory Orchestra, and the Nor-
ttiwestem Symphony Orchestra.
In addition to her twentieth century
flute playing, she plays renaissance
flute, sings, plays rum hom, and
recorder for the Collegium Mwicum, a
group which plays for renaissance
weddings and madrigal dinners in the
Evanston-Chicago area.
She was selected for the honorary
musical society Pi Kappa Lamda and
served on two Norttiwestera School of
Music advisory committees.
To help finance her college education
Jenny has worked at such summer ^bs
as summer aide at the Veterans Ad
ministration, Hampton, Virginia;
bilingual reservation agent (French and
English) for Howard Johnson’s National
Reservation Sales Center in Oklahoma
City, Oklahoma; secretary for llie
Learning Exchange of Evanston,
Illinois, and during the school year for
Fannie May Candy Store, Evanston.
Also, she received the General Joseph
Lafeton Whitney Scholarship and a
partial scholarship from ttie Women’s
Aid Association of Evanston, Illinois.
Before ^oing on to eam her masters in
flute performance, Jenny plans to Uke a
year to work and do free lance per
forming. She has accepted a position as
Marketing AasisUnt in the Special
Markets Division of the Pensions
Department of Washington National
Insurance Corporation in Evanston,
Illinois.
Hoalth Tips
What does your doctor think
of sun tanning?
He's against it. .
If you should ask your
doctor whether there is any
health value to sun tanning,
he would have to answer
“No” . If you asked him
whether sun tanning might
hurt you, he would have to
reply “yes.”
Sunning, overdone, can
cause severe bum. Sunning,
done modestly, can produce a
golden tan that gives an
illusion of health and well
being. But that golden tan
often leads to premature
aging and wrinkling of the
skin, to premature “ age
spots” on the hands and neck,
and skin cancer.
So, once again, the North
Carolina Medical Society
advises Americans
everywhere against sun-
tanning.
But, your doctor also is well
aware that millions of
Americans will ignore this
advice this summer. They
wilt flock to the swimming
pools and beaches through the
warm months to bask in the
sun. They will stretch out on
the grass in the backyard, or
on ttie roof terrace, or in tbe
nearest park.
If you insist on getting a tan
this summer despite medical advice to the contrary, here’s
how to do it without burning.
On the first day of simning,
allow IS minutes on each side.
The second day 30 minutes.
The third day 25 to 30 minutes.
By ttie ttiird day ttie skin
should begin to brown.
Thereafter proceed at the best
pace for your own skin to tan
without burning. At the first
sign of redness, get out of the
sun.
It isn’t easy to confine sun
time to only half an hour on
first day at the vacation
resort. But you can’t stretch it
very much. If you try to
double the exposuie time tir
hurry the tan, you’ll burn.
And then return from
vacation with a peeling skin
instead of a tan.
Time of exposure also
should be adjusted to time of
day. The sun’s rays are
hottest between 10 a.m. and 2
p.m. After 5 p.m. you aren’t
likely to bum much.
There are creams and
lotions that screen some of the
rays and reduce danger of
burning. But if ttie cream
should screen all rays, there
would be no tanning. You can
still bum ttirough creams if
you stay out long enough.
Also, water in the pool or
perspiration washes away
much of the cream in a short
time.
Tanning removes most of
ttie natural oils from the
surface of tlie skin and many
sunbathers find it helpfid to
use a cream or oil to relieve
dryness.
Enjoy the outdoor life of the
summer months. Don’t
overdo ttie suntanning.
Aceording to folklore, if you dream of sating white grapsi, it meant that it will »urely rain the next day.Don’t SUFFEI
BACK PAIN...HEADACHES...
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C arolina Tire
Phone 63461 IS G O O D ^ Y E A R
963 Yadkinville Road
Mocktvill*. N.C. 27028
IMVH: COUNTY nNTl:Kl'Kl.sh IU:( OKI). TMUHSDAY, JUN!' 1,4. I'ifii 5[j
CHUNK LIGHT TUN
W ITH 7
M AG IC C O IN S
12 0Z.0SCAR MAYER
WITH?
M AGIC C O IN S
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22 LB. AVERAGE
W ITH 5
MAGIC C O IN S
P R IC ES IN THIS AD A R E
G O O D T H R O U G H SAT.
JU N E 20,1981...
N O N E SOLDTO
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Q U A N T IT Y r i g h t s A R E
RESERVED...
Wf r,l ADI Y
RfDffM YOUR
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Discount Fó(HÌs
Treat Dad To A Juicvi
Choice Steak '
T - B o n e
U.S. C H O IC E
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$ ^ 8 9
’ Lb. Whole Л Л IK àRibeyes ... • Lb
20-24 Lb. Whole a ^ « .aStrip Loin .Lb *3^^
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U.S. Choice ^ Л Л Л U.S. Choice Г Г Г Ч 1 ПRib Eye Stealc •. • • • Lb ^4 Porterliouse Steak LbU.S. Choice
FreshMinute Steak ^ МЛЛ U.S. Choice A Л лшкN.Y. Strip Steak... Lb*d^^• • • • Lb.
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g O T T ^
5 5 ^ ^ ^ r g a r in «
1 LB. OTRS.SHEDD’S SPREAD20 Lb. Hunters Special a ADos Food.... *2^^
12 Oz.Flavorlch Cottagedieese* • • • • • •
lOOz.CamatloaLiquidSlender.....3 /*I ______ _______________
1 e Oz. Van Camps 0^ 160z.HelnzPork n* Beans.......3/^1 BBQ Sauce............09
1 Lb. Krispy Saitlne / ift« 17 Oz. Lucl<s aCrackers............. 2/^X Pinto Beans..........39
FOR
Ketchup
24 o z. BOTTLE HUNTS
BAKERY-DELi
Va.Bdced
HamKitchen Frmh Lb* 2 ”
Cole Slaw Lb.59’
Fried Chiciien
1 5 9
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B r o c c o l i
69*G A R D EN
F R E S H
P e a c h e s
LA R G E 2 ’/4 INCH
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S q u a s h
G A R D EN FR ES H
Y E LL O W39
^ c tto « » C o rn
GARDEN FRESH
9 9 9
EARS ^ ^
rv, -.4J
(ili DAVII COUNT'»' I NTI Kl’KISi: KI-COKH. TIIUKSDAY. .IUNI-; 18. 1ЧК1
In n o v a t iv e F u r n it u r e : A B e t t e r W a y
It is nfirn takrn for grantpd. but likp
oursplvos, much of the furniture we live
wilh iln.v-lo-day has quite a history.
"In iio va tivr Furniture: Л Better W ay"
ioolts at the design and technological
changes in household furnishings during
Ihr past 200 years.
By David M. MaxfieW
Chances are you're reading this in a
favorite easy chair. Or maybe you’re
silling on a new m odularunit, heirloom
ro cker, old W indsor, w ingback or
director's chair.
Have you thought much about that
chair -who “ invented” it, what sort of
history il has':’ And what about your
other furniture? How did that sofa-bed,
highchair, chaise lounge and tilt-top
table “ arrive” at your house?
Though many people probably reserve
their adm iration and curiosity for the
inventors of such gadgetry as electronic
calculators and video equipment, there
ja re also creativeJndu
equipmeni
.viduals^u
venlion of Ihe age,” innovation seems to
(K’cur in chairs more often then in other
forms of furniture, the exhibit's curator,
David Hanks, says. “ The chair,” he
explains, "always has been a challenge
for designers, though it is something
everyone uses.” Peter Danko agrees:
"They are the hardest things to design."
If Ihc task if difficult, the aim for most
designers always has been the same,
reconciling com fort w ith the manners
and whims of each generation’s own
lasle. Changes in clothing styles, for
example, often influence the shape of
Ihe chairs we sit on, design critic Russell
Lynes notes in an introduction to the
e x h ib it’s extensively researched
catalog. "A lady in a bustle in a sling
chair is as unthinkable," he writes, “ as
a man in a frock coat in deslgner-
arch ite ct E ero S aarinen’s ‘w om b’
chair.”
In 1957, Saarinen him self wrote about
the large, com fortable chair he had
designed a decade earlier to fit modem
work devising and refining the
household objects that directly affect
our day-to-day convenience and com-
i fort.
Meet one of them-Peter Danko of
Alexandria, Va., the 32-year-old
designer of an innovative plywood chair
molded from a single sheet of laminated
wood under 16 tons of pressure.
Designed in 1976, the museum-quality
chair is simplicity iUelf, the product of
' this craftsman’s inquiring mind, an
inspired moment and a dash of luck.
“I wanted to design a chair that was
ultra-functional, good-looking and also
inexpensive,” Danko said recently at his
studio. “But I had no idea what I was
doing; I was never aware of the history
of furniture design.”
The creator of limited-edition
sculptural furniture, Danko felt that
both his own work and the production
process he observed at factories was too
timc4:onsuining, a result of laborious
assemblage steps. “Why should it take
so long? ” he thought.___________________
One evening, Danko sat at a neigh-
borhood bar downing a beer and toying
-aroui.J wiUi a У-ЪЯУ»Ш11Ц <aru, IfeiiilHvg'
it back and forth. “The idea-the single
piece chair-just came to me,” he
recalled.
He approached several manufac
turers, but they were skeptical, con-
venced that wood would split as the
molding pressure was applied. Danko
tumed to the Museum of Modem Art in
New York City. The museum quickly
accepted the chair for its design study
collection, then put him in contact with a
receptive manufacturer, who is putting
the chair into mass production.
Along with dozens of other household
objects, many of them chairs that
revolve, rock, fold up, stack and inflate,
Danko’s work also has found its way into
a Smithsonian Institution Traveling
Extiibition Service show entitled “In
novative F4imiture in America.”
The exhibit focuses on the
technological changes in furniture
design and (u-oduction during the 19th
and 20th centurues in terms of
materials, comfort, portability, multiple
uae and fabricatioii technique*. Danko’s
chair, as It turns out, is the descendant
of a pioneer bentwood model so modem
in аи>еагапсе that the two look like
contemporaries.
Many of the innavative furniture
pieces in the show, which first appeared
at the Cooper-Hewitt Museum, the
Smithsonian’s national museum of
design in New York aty, are
with the U.S. Patent Office in
with the long-held American tradition
recotnized by the Constitution that
citizens should be rewarded and
protected for new ideas and ways of
doing things.
Though patents have been awarded
over the years for all sorts of things,
including a 19th4:entary sofa-bathtub
advertised as the “common sense in-
ietly al— lifestyles^“ Peòple sit-differently -today
than in the Victorian era,” he said.
"They want to sit lower and they want to
slouch.”
Comfort, a major priority today, was
given little thought until the 1800s. The
ubiquitous easy chair, for example,
hardly existed Iwfore the Victorian Age,
primarily because the most important
invention until that time relating to
comfort-the spiraled or coiled inner
spring-was not introduced until 1828.
The rocking chair, an American in
vention, has also offered its owners a
comfortable seat, along with something
else. “The chairs,” Lynes says, “had an
obvious appeal to Americans, a restless
people who found it difficult to sit still, a
people for whom mobility was part and
parcel of freedom-and still is."
(President Kennedy, a rocker devotee,
once recalled a line about the rocker:
“It gives you a sense of motion without
any sense of danger.” )
Technological advances in the 19lh
century also opened the way for catalogs
of new furniture designed to serve nnl
one but several purposes. Designers
created tables that expanded, chairs
that lui'nM into llSfUy steps'and, more
bizarrely, beds concealed in piano
backs. One such convertible-a cliild’s
highchair~was ingenious and amusing,
but to Lynes “perhaps the most hideous
example of the furniture type." It could
be contorted into a folding table, rocker,
or incredibly, a baby carriage.
Even in its day, №e convertible fur
niture trend got to be a bit “excessive,”
Hanks notes, and such items as the
piano-bed became objects of ridicule.
’ITie craze for many of the cross-breeds
eventually receded, but the multi-use
design concept, he points out, seems
here to stay, appearing now in the form
of elaborate home entertainment cen
ters and kitchen “islands” that serve as
both work and storage units.
Portable furniture found new
customers in the^ 19th century as
Americans began to travel and move
more often and needed light, durable
and inexpensive chairs. The portability
concept perhaps has reached its final
stage with the invention of the
“wearable” chair. It ia strapped to the
legs and is always ready for instant
sitting, albeit with dubious comfort at
times in between.
The development of new materials for
furniture in recent decades has stret
ched the imaginations and alternatives
open to furniture designers. Besides
wood, metal and a few other traditional
materials, today’s home furnishings
often as not are fashioned from rattan,
paper, tubular steel, cardboard and
plastic, the last a material whose
boundaries only now are being explored.
(FcH- sheer fantasy, though, ^ ctair
aficionado might pick out a chair made
of animal homs which was popular in
hunting lodges and trophy rooms a
century ago.)
What’s new and innovative in
Jack Shanks Is Awarded
Degree From Ferrum
Jack Shanks, son of Dr. and Mrs. Jack
F. Shanks of Mocksville, N.C., has been
awarded an associate degree from
Ferrum College.
The degrea was presented by Ferrum
College President Joseph T. Hart during
May commencement ceremonies. At
torney General of Virginia J. Marshall
Coleman presented the commencement
address. During the program Bernard
R. Simmons of Richiands, founder of S
and S Corporation in southwest Virginia,
was awarded an honorary doctor of
humanities degree.
A total of 263 two-year associate
degrees and 83 four-year baccalaureate
degrees in the senior college in human
services were conferred, for a total of
346 degrees awarded.
Ferrum College is a co-educational
United Methodiot related institution.
More than 1,300 resident students, were
enrolled during the 1980-81 academic
year. Ferrum’s 7M-acre campus is
located southwest of Roanoke, Virginia,
in the foothills of the Blue Ridge
Mountains.
Jeff Lynn Cornatzer On
Honors List At Chowan
Jeff Lynn Comatzer of Mocksville, is
one of 91 students named to the Honors
List for academic achievement №ring
the spring semester at Chowan College.
The students earned the honor by
achieving a B average with no grade
lower than a C. Jeff is the son of Mr. &
Mrs. W.E. Comatzer and a graduate of
Davie County High School.
Chowan is a Baptist, two-year
coeducational college. Chowan offers
opportunities in 11 professional fields:
business, English, fine arts (music,
dance, drama, art), graphic arts,
photography, health and physical
education, languages, mathematics^
religion and philosophy, science, and
social science. Chowan’s graduates
transfer to many colleges and univer-
^ities-after completion of these liberal
arts programs.
Chowan alM offers career education
programs including commercial art.
NewFurnitureCreations
American furniture today? Very little,
say curator Hanks and critic Lynes.
“Just dead in recent years,” craftsman
Danko adds. And Hanks says “it is the
consensus that U.S. technological and
Innovative furniture is as traditionaily American as apple pie. Working on a new creation in Ids Alexandria, Va., studio, designer Peter Danko
examines a piece ot plywood Just molded under intense pressure. This same technique was used in the design and fabrication of the chair at
top left, molded from a single piece of plywood-an innovation that won
a place in New York City’s Museum of Modem Art and a spot in a new
Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service show. The chair’s
bentwood technique and clean design make it a direct descendant of the
one pictured immediately below it-l73 years older. Because of their special materials, the rustic rocking chair (center) fabricated from
green willow branches and the horn chair were all the rage in the late
1800s.
concerned with cosmetic changes.Q C StilC tiC in X lO V A tlO Il 10 u ll8 iie lQ 18 O R til0 ^ T
te . I- « ™ « ™
niture manufacturers now are too “ proiiis.
secretarial science, photography,
printing technology, newswriting-
advertising, and merchandising
management. These lead to em
ployment after graduation.
Joseph Howard Rupard
Receives BS Degree
Joseph Howard Rupard, a biology and
biochemistry major from Mockiville,
was awarded the bachelor of science
degree from David Lipscomb College
during commencement exercises June
6.
Lipscomb President' Willard Collins
conferred degrees on more than 260
seniors during the 6:30 p.m. ceremonies.
Dr. (Hifton L. Ganus, President of
Harding University at Searcy,
Arkansas, was the commencement
speaker.
Rupard is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
James Kluttz, P.O. Box 70S, Mockiville.
David Lipscomb College is a four year
liberal arts institution affiliated with the
churches of Christ.
Ronald O.Riggan
Receives Commission
Ronald O. Riggan, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Riggan of Route S, Mocksville,
N.C., has been commiMioned a second
lieutenant throug the Air Force ROTC
program, and earned a bachelor’s
degree at North Carolina State
University, at Raleigh.
Riggan will be assigned at Vance Air
Force Base, Okla. He is a 1977 graduate
of Davie High School, Mocksville.
Nothing can ba burned
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•SEE USFOR>
it NEW TIRES ★ BRAKE WORK • FRONT END ALIGNMENT it
AIR CONDITIONING it K!OH SPEED BAL^.NCING ★ TIRE TRUING
MOCKSVIUE , NC
H L j
Hours: 7:00 5 00 (J,m. Mon. Fri.
Sj * ’ 30 12 00 p.m.
Phone 6345915 oi 634 5916
Tire And
AutomotiveC L E M M O N S
Lewisvllle'Clemmons R d ., Clemmons
7 6 6 - 5 4 5 0 7 6 6 - 9 7 8 9
Monday-Friday 7:30 a.m .-6:00 p.m.; Saturday 7:30 a.m .-3:00 p.m.
Except W ed. Close at 12 Noon
)
Fireworks Can Be Fun • But Dangerous
Every Fourth of July,
children ask the same old
questions, and parents
grapple for some new an
swers and reasons why
lireworks are off limits to
youngsters.
"You’re spoiling our fun.
What harm can a firecracker
do anyway?”
“When you were a kid, you
did everything you wanted.
What’s wrong with fireworks?
Why can't i nave fun like you
did?”
Before surrendering to their
pleas, you might want to
explore some evidence of why
fireworks can be dangerous:
-It was May, 1976, in a New
Jersey high school. A
prankster had tossed an illegal
hreworks device into a glass
cabinet in a corridor. Seconds
later, two teenage girls
passed within three feet of the
cabinet, bs the device ex
ploded. One girl died when
glass cut her jugular vein.
-Having fun was the reason
two boys gave for setting off a
firecracker in a tree stump in
Walnut Creek, California, in
June, 1979. When firemen
finally put their hoses away,
two persons were hospitalized
and three homes gutted;
damage was put at $330,000.
-In the aftermath of new
year’s celebrations in
January, 1980, some children
on the island of Kauai,
Hawaii, gathered pieces of
firecrackers and put them in a
small glass bottle. One lighted
the powder. A three-year-old
girl died and six companions
were hospitalized for injuries
from the explosion.
Bystanders are often in
nocent victims of explosions.
Last July 4, an iB-year-oId
Bremen, Indiana, man died
fh>m a fireworks accident ...a
four-year-old East St. Louis,
ni., boy was killed when a
roman candle misfired in a
home fireworks’ celebration
... ana on tne prMeoin^ aay, a
Montana man died when a
mortar shell eiqiloded.
Many thousands of
fireworks’ displays on In
dependence Day are
uneventful except for the
festive holiday spirit that
results from “ the bombs
. bursting in air.” Cities, towns
and villages acrots the nation
stage №e displays because
residents are less inclined to
set off their own firewwks
after having their fill of the
public celebration.
In spite of this, untold
Americans risk life and limb
every year in an efftot to
create their own explosive
devicea. On July 3 ,1V7B three
peraons died when homemade
fireworks exploded in the
basement of a West
Phlladel)|>hia, Pa., home;
three exploaions ripped
through the structure. A few
days later, a l6-year-oId
Texas youth died when his
homemade firecracker ex
ploded.
• What is being done to
;; combat these fireworks
< rdated injtnries and deaths?
Working cooperatively,
: agencies at the local, state
. and federal level are en-
: forcing prevailing laws
■ governing the sale of illegal
' fireworks and stepping up
: inspections of contraband
- fireworks exported to the U.S.
or manufactured
domestically by unlicensed
firms.0 Some states have closed
their boMen to fireworlu of
: any kind. Fifteen sUtes have
' banned everything except the
o|»used in toy cap pistols; 14
. states allow caps and
sparklers, but prohibit
everything else. The
remaining 21 states have
differing laws, but they
essentially ban all fireworks
except those which meet the
requirements of the federal
govemment.
At the national level, three
Washington agencies are
committed to reducing in
juries from fireworks ac
cidents.
-Hie Bureau of Alcohol,
Tobacco and Firearms in the
U.S. Department of the
Treasury has Jurisdiction
over the licensing of com
panies engaged in the
production of explosives,
including fir e w o r k s .
Regulations cover all aspects
of manufacture, security,
personnel safety and storage.
“ The U.S. Department of
Transportation regulates
interstate transport of
firew o rk s, including
packaging, marking, labeling
and placarding.
-The U.S. Consumer
Product Safety Commission
regulates those fireworks that
may be sold to consumers,
including chemicals that may
not be used, physical
specifications, p<>rformaitce
requiremenU and labeling.
Consumer protection
against dangerous fireworks
became a federal respon
sibility in 1966 when Congress
enacted the Child Protection
Act. With that law, the so-
called “ blockbuster”
fireworks were declared
Uiega). Cherry bombs, M-W
salutes and the giant
firecracker» containing more
than two grains of explosive
puvtiier were banned.
In t m , w>№ii Uie CPSC wab
establishtid, fireworks safety
became a priority. Three
years later, fiieworks safety
was strengthened further. In
December 1976 tlie agency
ruled that firecrackers sold to
consumerti could contain no
mar* than SO milligrams of
llv« powder; prior to
that time, fircrrackcrs cniiia
contain as much as 133
milligrnms, almost 160 per
cent more explosive powder.
With the the clamp down,
fireworks-related accidents at
first declined significantly,
but are now on the rise, CPSC
says.
During the last year bef e
Ihe 1976 law took effect there
were about 11,000 injuries
from fireworks. The figure
declined to 8,2UU in 197V when
the new regulation took effect,
and to 7,100 in 1978, but it rose
to 8,100 in 1979 and to 9,424 last
year.
Product abuse appears to
be the most frequent cause for
fireworks injuries. C PSC ’s
study in 1979 showed that over
60 per cent of the injuries
from legal or illegal fireworks
were due to product misuse,
not product malfunction.
Furthermore, the malfunc
tioning fireworks were, for
the most part, banned
fireworks under the federal
law. In those cases where
m alfunctioning legal
fireworks were involved in
accidents, the injuries were
minor and did not often
require hospitalization.
For July 4,1961, the federal
iaw permits only the sale of
Gass C firecrackers which
contain no more than 50
milligrams of explosive
powder. Some state laws are
more stringent. Among the
other Class C fireworks
permitted by federal law are
fountains, roman candles,
wheels, California candles,
spike and handle cylindrical
fountains, sparklers, toy
smoke devices, helicopter-
type rockets, party poppers
and illuminating torches.
State regulations vary, but
here is the summary of
prevailing laws;
-All Class C fireworks are
aUowed in Alaska, Arkansas,
Louisiana, Mississippi,“Mtgronn,' “Soutn-'pgimrB:''
Tennessee, Hawaii and
Nevada.
-Some Class C fireworks as
specified by the state
authority are permitted in
C a lifo rn ia, K a n s a s ,
Nebraska, New Mexico,
Washington, the District of
Columbia, Idaho, Montana,
North Dakota, Oklahoma,
South Carolina, Texas and
Wyoming.
-Sparklers and-or snakes
only are allowed in Alabama,
Colorado, Florida, Indiana,
Iowa, Kentucky, Maine,
M aryland, M ichigan,
Oregon, Pennsylvania,
Utah, Virginia and Wisconsin.
-Some states ban all Class
C fireworks, including
spariders. These sUte* are
Arizona, Connecticut,
Delaware, Georgia, Illinois,
Massachusetts, MinnesoU,
New Hampthire,New Jersey,
New York, North Carolina,
Ohio, Rhode Island, Vermont
and West V^ginia.
metrms
a & iS K F r .
Some bosiei don’t have
to w orry a i much theie days
about spelling mistakes in
their letters—they can get
their secretary a machine
that can spot many common
typing errors. O f course, it ’s
not your ordinary type w rit
er. I t ’s a new, low-cost desk
top text processing system,
the D isplayw riter-
The spelling verification
aid is triggered by the opera
to r’s command. The system
analyzes the root structure
o f each typed word, com
pares it to the 60,000 o r so
English words in its “ elec
tronic dictionary” at a rate
o f alx>ut 10 seconds a page,
and then highlights .any un
matched word on a televi
sion-like screen.
The Dispiaywriter, devel
oped by IBM, offers ad
vanced performance at an
attractive price. The opera
tor can autom atically in
dent text, justify margins,
underscore, and store a doc
ument and recall it fo r re
view and revision. Letters
and other documents pre
pared on it can be transm it
ted over ordinary telephone
lin e s — w ith in an o ffic e
b u ild in g o r across the
country.
In addition to checking
spelling, the Dispiaywriter
can help w ith arithm etic.
The system uses a math veri
fication aid for this purpose,
when documents containing
numerical inform ation are
being produced.
"A p ril il love's spring."
William Shskeipeare
Lamon juica and gratad
rind a d dad to b e r
ry piei gives them
a
piai gives them
"barry" good faite.
DAVir- COUNTY F.NTKRPRISF. RHCORD, THURSDAY. JIINH 18. 19KI
TO WILLOW OAK CEN TER WESTWOOD VILLAGET O L IM IT Q 'J A N T IT IE S
N O D E A L E R S P L E A S E
YADKINVILLE RD. ’"OCKSVILLE.N.C.
634-6213
CLEMMONS, N.C.
766-9156
■THURSDAY - SATURDAY
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P H A R M A C Y
Open 365 Days A Year
O P T IC A L
To Ihe ronsum«r: Polaroid wMl
•end you $5 00 lot purchasing thr««
p«ckt ot TtnM-Ztro, 8X'70, Typ« 100. or
Type m Mm beginning April 12.1901 tfvough
July 4.1961 Just cornpiele this coupon «nd
return It to Polaroid $ five Doll»t film OMer, Posi
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your datMl sates rec«pl <or a copy) and the colored end panels from your Polaroid film boies (either
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W c s l w ü ü d VtMüyt*
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su ’WM СОИМЛ' INTIRrKISl RI ('ORO, TIIUU.SnAV. lUNI- l,H. I<»KI
D i s t r i c t C o u r t
Tht' f'' ''.lg ras'.'s were disposed of
diirintT fill Mcn''ay, June 8 session of
disiric ; r'lir, witli the Honorable Lester
P .M . .Il udge presiJing.
.:o!ii\ MIchiiel Hill, damage to
I'rr'pi'i :y, larceny of an auto, damage to
properly.
,)ohii Mk'hael Hill, damage to
properl; eigtii counts, iniveny of auto,
senl('n-’'.'j ¡1' 6 months ruspended for 3
yc.'ir:;, plated on supervised probation
for oiip year, surrender operator’s
licen<^i’, make restiti.fion for all
damaprs.
John!>v '.Villiams, damage to property
- eight counts, sentence < lO 6 months
suspenrifd for 3 years placed on
supervjsL-ti probation for one year, pay
court '’ I ;s, surrender operator’s license 1. ' ' :’'ontlis, make restitution for all
daiiijpps.
Matthew Evans Branham. R counts of
damayii 1« property, sentenced to 6
months sufwiided for three years.
/! iced on supervised prubnion for one
year, surrender operator’s license for 6
month.';, mf.ke restitution for all
^diirifages
Terrence Edward Percival, DUI, pay
$100 and costs, surrender operator’s
license and attend DUI course at mental
health.
Steven Gray Shores, DUI, $100 and
cost, surrender operator’s license, at
tend DUI course at menta! health.
Verry Demoiid Struile driving 69 mph
in a 55 mph zone, $14 and costs.
Bryant Steven Thomas, driving 78
mph in a 55 mph zone and reckless
driving after drinking, pay $123 and
costs, attend DUI course at mental
health.
Kim Ellis Williams, exceeding safe
speed, $15 and costs.
Brenda Lee Wright, exceeding sare
speed, costs, attend DUI course at
mental health.
Daniel L. Crews, driving 68 mph in a
55 mph zone, $10 and costs.
Lucille M. Sipes, worthless checks,
make restitution and pay court costs.
Kenneth Prewitt Duncan, driving 65
mph in a 55 mph zone, $5 and costs.
Richard Alton Stancil, driving 70 mph
in a 55 mph zone, $15 and costs.
fiilmpr Hubert McClamrock, tailur*
mph zone, $15 nnd cosis,
Phillip L. Bean, driving 6Я mph in a ;>5
mph 7.0П0, $10 and costs.
Arlhur tiherrl!! Baxter, failure li.
reduce speed to avoid an accident, cost;..
Hex Alan Carter, driving 67 lapii in a
55 mph zone, $10 and costs.
Lawrence Norval Clark, driving 70
mph in a .55 mph zone, $15 and costs.
Mary Nancy Funderburk, exceeding a
saie speed, costs.
Halliegue James, driving 70 mph in a
55 mph zone, $15 and costs.
Beverly Annette McNeil, exceedibr' г
safe speed, costs.
Gary T. Martin, driving 70 mph in x 55
mph zone, $15 and costs.
Fred Hollar Price, driving 70 mph in a
55 mph zone, $15 and costs.
Kathy Dawn Ray, driving 65 mph in ы
55 mph zone, $5 and costs.
Julis Middleton Yoder, Jr., driving 65
mph in a 55 mph zone, $5 and costs.
Kenneth Alan Whitw.'/rth, driving iiS
mph in a 55 mph zone, $5 and costs.
Douglas Howard Thatcher, driving 70
_ rophinaR? mph zone, $15 and costs.
Majid Reza Karimi Tafreshi, driving
65 mph in a 55 mph zone, $5 and costs.
Clarence Love Solomon, exceeding a
safe speed, costs.
Vicki Cronan Sanvas, failure to stop at
a duly erected stop sign, costs.
Erie Riggan Dyer, improper passing,
costs
Harry Kennelii Whitner, driving 69
mph in a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs.
Joseph R. Hadden, driving 79 mph in a
55 mph zone, $35 and costs.
William R. Fulton, driving 70 mph in a
55 mph zone, $15 and costs.
John D. Caldwell, driving 68 mph in a
55 mph zone, $10 and costs.
Stephen Edward Young, driving 69
mph in a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs.
Abraham Kelty, driving mph in a 55
mph zone, $15 and costs.
Albert Louis Williams, failure to make
safe movement, costs.
Timothy Ray Vest, exceeding the
posted speed, costs
James Lamarr Kearns, failure to stop
at a stop light,
Kenneth Kyle Br .iwn, exceeding the
posted speed, co:
to decrease speed to avoid an accident,
costs.
Utty U. Prapuolenis, driving 70 mph in
a 55 mph zone, $15 and costs.
Stanley Ray Pruitt, driving 70 mph in
a 55 mph zone, $15 and costs.
Lawrence Sigurd Peterson, driving 66
mph in a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs.
Jeffrey Scott Hanes, failure to stop at
a duly erected stop sign, costs.
Sandra Diaz Hatcher, driving 70 mph
in a 55 mph zone, $15 and costs.
Michael Alan Bullock, driving 70 mph
in a 55 mph zone, $15 and costs.
Michael Robert Tallent, failure to
make safe movement, costs.
John Thomas Tucker, driving 67 mph
in a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs.
Susan Lynn Walsh, driving 70 mph in a
55 mph zone, $15 and costs.
John Pifat Gregory, driving 69 mph in
a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs.
Willie Martin Peek, exceeding the
posted speed, costs.
Daniel j. Liff, driving 68 mph in a 55
mph zone, $10 and cost*.
Grady Brown, expired'registration,
costs.
James A. Bartley, exceeding a safe
speed, costs.
Carolyn Sue Combs, driving 69 midi In
a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs.
Anthony Arthur Crabtree, driving 70
mph in a 55 mph zone, $15 and costs.
Anna N. Christenberry, driving 70
mph in a 55 mph zone, $15 and costs.
Robert Watson Foster, driving 65 mph
in a 55 mph zone, $5 and costs.
Anne Hill Gardner, driving 70 mph in a
55 mph zone, $15 and costs.
Roy B. Hughes, driving 70 mph in a 55
mph zone, $15 and costs.
Edward Rudyard Kipling, driving 65
mph in a 55 mph zone, $5 and costs.
Marilyn S. McCrew, driving 65 mph in
67William Erne.it ¡'». ’son, driving
mph in a 55 mph ?.or:', ?10 and costs.
Robert MangU'ii, driving 70 mph in a
55 mph zone, $1. «nt? costs.
Thomas Clifton 3r; n, driving 68 mph
in a 55 mph zone, 510 and costs.
Joseph Marvin Bethea, driving 70 mph
in a 55 mph zone, $15 and costs.
Hobert Michael Baxter, driving 70
mph in a 55 mph zo..e, $15 and costs.
Charlotte Dyrth '¡'rawford, driving 67
mph in a 55 mph $10 and costs.
Clifford Walter i,. Uon, driving 66 mph
in a 55 mph zone, $iO and costs.
Paul Edward Horton, failure to report
an accident,costi.
Allen Gray v\. itin. driving 66 mph in
a 55 mph zoc?, C costs.
Debra Hampio.’. Cobb, driving 70 mph
in a 55 mph zone, $15 and costs.
Beverly Yvoni.e Crockett, exceeding a
safe speed, coetb.
Keith Thomr; Young, failure to
reduce speed to an accident, costs.
Michael W»y.>^ Seamon, improper
registration, costs.
Michael Dean Shaver, driving 70 mph
in a 55 mph zone, $15 and costs.
Archllles Cyril LeFevre, driving 70
mph in a 55 mph zone, $15 and costs.
Robert Gordrn Hofmann, Jr., driving
68 mph in a 55 inph zone, $10 and costs.
Richard Everett Johnson, driving 70
mph in a 55 mph z?nc, $15. and costs.
Lindsey Rb, T.ond Gunter, DUI,
sentenced tc t .lonths suspended for 3
years, pay $ii>j and costs, placed on
supervised probation for one year,
voluntarily cJi.imit himself for
alcoholism treatment at Black Mountain
or some other facility for an extended
period of time, veceive counseling
deemed necesiary by probation officer,
attend DUI ;ours? at mental health.
__________________________________ Mark Ellia, communicating threats,
a-'55Hasph^oner^aiihco8ti^---^ djsmtssedriailurfc of prosecuting wit-
rharles W. McQuire, driving 70 mph
ill a 55 mph zone, dismissed with leave.
Rickie L. Harrah, driving 70 mph in a
."S mph zone, dismissed with leave.
Virginia C. Gray, driving 60 mph in a
ÍÚ mph zone, dismissed with leave.
Bert uawrence Davis, driving 68 mph
in a 55 mph zone, dismissed with leave.
Dwayne Irvin Burger, driving 60 mph
in n 55 mph zone, dismissed with leave.
M arice Courlroaiiolx;, assault with a
deadly wflapon, rtls'.nisccd.
Chris Reavis, reckless driving,
dismissed.
Chris HeavB, reckless driving after
i-inkitig, $100 and costs, attend DUI
course al mental health.
(.•hris Reavis, carrying a concealed
weapon, dismissed.
Cliarlie A. Wishon, worthless checks,
six months suspended for 3 years, make
-j-stitution and pay court costs.
Cnariie A. Wishoit, worthless checks,
uix months suspended for 3 years, make
i.,<jtitutlon and pay ccart costs.
Charlie A. Wishon, worthless checks,
'Н!- nionths susppnd^ for 3 years, make
restitULÍon and pay court costs.
Charlie A. Wishon, worthless checks,
six months suspended ior 3 years, make
restitution and pay court costs.
Charlife A. Wishon, worthless checks,
12 mciths i-rjspended for 3 years, make
rcstitut;on and ray court costs.
Chjriie Л. Wishen, worthless checks,
six months suspended fur 3 years, make
restitution and pay court costs.
Charlie A. Wishon, worthless checks,
sentenced to 6 months suspended for 3
years, make restitution and pay court
costs.
Earl Dwayne Whitaker, driving while
license revoked, judgement absolute
rendered against bondsman.
Stanle’’ Booker Cody, simple assault
and assault and battery, dismissed on
condition he not assault prosecuting
witness.
Monty Smith, breaking and entering,
dismissed.
John Artis Gaskins, driving 74 mph in
a 55 mph zone, $19 and costs.
Larry David Blankenbeckle, driving
67 mph on a 55 mph zone, $12 and costs.
Kevin Patrick King, driving while
rnidoT" influeHcc ■of- intoxitating liquor, ■
$100 and costs.
Steven Charles Hughes, exceeding
safe speed, costs.
Terry Lynn Kimmer, driving 55 mph
in a 35 mph zone, $20 w d costs.
Herman Dozier Miller, reckless
driving after drinking, pay $200 and
costs, attend DUI course at mental
health.
Gumey Clyde Melton, driving while
license revoked, $200 and costs.
David Eugene McDaniel, driving 69
mph in a 4S mph zone, $24 ándeoste.
Richard Franklin McNeil, Jr., d.iving
without due caution, not guilty.
Richard Franklin McNeU, driving 70
mph in a 55 mph zone, DUI, pay $115 and
costs, attend DUI course at mental
health.Not Her
Barbara Carol Martin, driving 65 mph
in a 55 mph zone, $5 and costs.
Lillian H. Stone, driving 69 mph in a 55
mph zone, $10 and costs.
Jeffrey Dean Braun, driving 68 mph in
a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs.
Bruce Keith Birchett, driving 69 mph
in a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs.
Xarifa L. Bean, drivins 70 mph in a 55
ness to appear.
James H. Yager, driving 69 mph in a
55 mph zone, disr.-'.issod with leave.
Charlotte Anne Perkins, driving 70
mph in a 55 mph zone, dismissed with
1(BSV0
Wiliiam M. McFarlan, driving 70 mph
in a 55 mph znne, dismissed with leave.
linda Carter, worthless check, in
June nth issue, is NOT Linda S. Carter
of Route 2, Advance, N.C.
Local Students On
Eton Dean’s List
Three local students have been named
to the Dean’s List at Elon College. They
are; Joy EUzabeth Brownlow, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Brownlow of
Advance, Evelyn Lola Hatley, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Howard Hatley of
MocksviUe, and Stephen F. Shucken-
brock, son of Mr. and Mrs. Shucken-
brock of Advance.
A total of 390 students earned places
on the academic dean’s Ust for the
spring semester. Thai Ust includes those
students who made no grade below a
“B ” in aU course work during tbe term.
Barker Reunitnr
The Barker family reunion
will be held Saturday, June 20,
at 1 o’clock at the Tanglewood
Barn Theater.
AU family members and
friends are invited to attend
and bring with them a well-
fUled picnic basket.
Ruritan Wagon Train On Weekend Trek
TTie Jericho-Hflrr’ison Ru.-i:au Ciub
had a Wagon Train on the weekend of
June 5 through June7. There was a good
turnout, with a total of 35 wagons and 75
horseback riders.
On Saturday morning the club served
pan cakes, sausage and eggs. For lunch
Saturday, the club delivered ham
burgers and hotdogs to the wagon train
rnuti* Saturday’s supper was ham,
potato salad, green beans and com,
pintoes, slaw and onions, homemade
biscuits and tea. For breakfast on
Sunday old fashioned gravy, sausage
and eggs and homemade biscuits were
served. Pimento cheese and chicken
salad samdwiches were fixed for Sun
day dinner.
On Friday night Clyde and Jo Lakey
and band provided music for square
dancing. On Saturday night, Betty Long
and band played. Wade and JuUa
Mainue from Michigan also entertained
on Saturday night.
The members of the Jericho-Hardlson
Ruritan aub wish to thank aU who
liarticlpated lnn)Bking1hls a succMsful
project.
Honor Roll For Year At North Davie
The “A ” honor roll for the year at
North Davie Jr. High consists of
students who averaged an “A ” in all
subjects for the school year, llie “B”
honor roll includes whose yearly
average in aU subjects includes only
“A”s and “B ”s.
7th G R A D E
A Honor Roll: Jane Beeson, Amy
Bingham, Tody Boone, Tim Bowles,
Wendi Craven, Dawn Dyson, Lee
Elmore, Carey Gregory, Vance Helms,
Gina Hendrix, Amy Hinshaw, and Mike
Holcomb.
Also, Koula Kroustalis, Emily
Markland, Karen Mills, Tony Murphy,
Jeff Potts, Sam Prysiaznluk, Donna
Shook, Tracy Smith, Charlene Spann,
Suzanne Stovall, AUlson Winstead, and
Mike York.
— R Honor RoUi Angie AftdMS. Oherry
Barker, Rita Barnes, Linda
Bodenhamer, Gayla Bullard, Michael
Cassidy, Tonya Church, Rhonda Doss,
Debra EUis, Monica Harris, Angie
Hendricks, and Christine Johnson.
Also, Edie Johnson, Tammy Joyner,
Amy Keaton, ’Trad Lees, Tim Lemke,
Jennifer Luper, Brian Martin, Sherry
Myers, 'Hm Nester, Roland Nifong,
Malinda Powers, and Aquanette
Puryear.
Also, Andy Rtavis, Gena Rob-^^ 'tson,
Andrea Smith, Stephanie Smith, Jen
nifer Stewart, Kathy Tall.'cit, Kendra
Welch, Jenny Whitaker, Susan White,
and Patrick Williard.
8tl. OiHADE
A Honor Roll: Becky AUen, Sue
Bennett, Bruce Brannsn, Deena
Campbell, Ty Caudle, Kim Drewry,
Uura Hildebrand, Mitzi Hobson, Ron
Jarvis, Hang Langley, Tia Matthews,
Cara Beth Parker, Tracy turker.
Tommy Redding, R.^nda Salmons,
Molly Ward, and Wendy Wooten.
B Honor Roll: Kim AUen, SaUy
Burnette, Kris Cornatzer, Tammy
Crawford, Robin Dail, Traci Dorsett,
Michael Driver, Jackie East, Darrin
Eaton, John Folmar, Karyn Foster, and
Deborah Glasscock.
Also, Ti'uuuy Gobble, L«n uoshom.
Smith.
Also. David Söderström, Patricia
Steelman, Monique Studevent, Tony
Tatum. '■ :}'.'3le Termotto, David
Wharton, ...niinj Whitaker, Mark
White, Steve White, and Mike WiUiams.
3th G R A DE
A Honor Koll: Sherry AUen, Dana
Boger, Tonya Bcwman, Mandy Foster,
lieisa Hepier, Anita Hockaday, Debbie
Naiw.0 Holly Olmsted, Regina Smith,
Teresa Smith, Cindy Speer, Janet
Stewart, and Leia Welch.
B Honor Roll: Tracy Atkins, Angie
Browder, John Bullins, Mona Campb^,
Frankie Chaplin, Joey CUne, Lonnie
Cockerham, Phillip Colbert, Deree
Eaton, Diane Everhart, Mike FairchUd,
and Kelly Folds.
Also, Kellie Gobble, JJly Grisette,
Cynthia Hardin, David Hendrix, Tonya
Hiatt, Vance Holdsclaw, Kim Howard,
Amanda Keeton, Spiro Kroustalis, Tim
Latham, Annette McGuire, and Gret-
chen Manno.
Also, Windy Markland, Corey Marion,
Melissa Matthews, Tina MiUer, MicheUe
Morgan, Ann Marie Noakes, Suzie
O'Mara, Kim Patton, Kim Potte, Denise
Prescott, Kevin Smith, and Patricia
jBiuilftii' mu;'-tnw Jacobs, MeToar
Johnson, Lynette Keuper, Teresa M-
cEwen, Krista Matthews, Cammle
Paige, and Marlene Peebles.
Also, Janet Perrell, Leslee Powell,
Melissa Smiley, Darlene Spry, James
Studevent, and Kim Ward.
Palish on
Leather
Avoid using furniture polish, oU, wax,
or varnish on leather. They may contain
solvents that wiU make '»ather sticky.
Y a d k i n
V a l l e y
The King Reunion wUl be
held at the home of Ted King
Sunday June 28. Everyone is
invited to bring a weU-fUled
oasket and enjoy dinner and a
good time together.
Mrs. Mary Carter is a
patient at Forsyth Memorial
Hospital for tesla. She wUl be
coming home In a few ^y s .
Mrs. Helen Butner was
entered at Forsyth Memorial
Hospital last week and had
surgery. She is getting along fine.
Mr. and Mrs. Everett Smith
of Homestead, Fla. are
visiting friends and relatives
in N.C.
Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Foster
had a '*ir..'cr on Sunday and
had with them aU of Alvin’s
brothers and sisters and their
families. They were Taylor,
“ Wardv—Jim7~Btgnchel“”an i
Wilma. They all enjoyed
being together and are the
children of the late Mr. and
Mrs. Rom Foster of Yadkin
VaUey Road.
Mr. and Mrs. Stormy Carter
spent the weekend at their
Mountain Camp ground
Lindsidc, West Va.
ш ш р т т ш ш
on House Paints
Now thru JuMSth
S u n - P r o o f - House Paints
Acrylic tatex Flat
Mildew resistant on paint film lor Itn own pro-
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P in o N ew s
The Rev. Alvin Pope wiU
deliver his last sermon at
Wesley Chapel Church
Sunday at 10 a.m. The new
Pastor, Rev. Raymond
Surratt wiU be here the first
Sunday in July.
The national musics and
songs were used at church
school Sunday in observance
of NaUonal Flag Day. We ask
God to Bless America. We
should all live a decent and
'HEALTH! '-»
Bill Yarbrough,Pharmacist ^
In till- use uf hair iprays, de-
(jdorant aiul nasal bprays
and instciicides, be careful to
avoid contad wiih the eyes.
Al llie use of aerosol sprays
has increased, so has the
num ber of eye injuries re
poned lo doctors. I he lii^l
peed pariirles leaxiiij.; the
no/¿le can he imbedded in
tht eye, causinj! serious irri
tation.
%ùckwi\le
la e w .M iin St.
6 3 4 -z m
clean Ufe to be wortliy of such
a beautiful land and the
blessings we receive.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob DUI and
Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Dull
attended the conference at
Loke Junaluska. Mr. Hermon
McMahan of Frienf^e Ноше;
Mrs. Sadie Shelton and Mrs.
Opal Latham of near Ker-
nersvUle, members of Wesl^
Chapel Church whu were
unable to ai:end ihe
homecoming June were
visited Sunday by DeWiUa
Smith, Elma Dull, Marilee
Latham and Marlene and
Vickie Lynn Trivette.
Mrs, Stella White of
Autumn Care was able to
spend the weekend at home.
Mrs. Vemoii MiUer has been
spending some timr with her
granddaughter, Mrj. PhiUip
Briscoe and son whUe her
husband who is in the Navy
was on a voyage. Mr. MiUer
went to Virginia Beach
Saturday to brinrf Mrc. MiUer
home Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs Mike Pen
dleton and sons aiid Mr. and
Mrs. Gene DuU wci-e Sunday
dinner guests of M :. snd Mrs.
L.M. Dull.
Mrs. Hoy Dixon ¡.¿iBn't been
feeling as well ti»i last few
days.
A large group attcnied the
Dixon-Shelton reunion Sunday
at Bonkin Lake.
If anyone has anything to be
put in the Pino News please
call 998-3229.
"U iikuiiy, the 'luQiest deed
w il! die " Pindar
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D A I R Y
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White and ready-mixed colors only.
Custom cc.'ors sligfitiy nigher.
THE FA R M CREDIT SERVICE O F
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PRODUCERS O F D A V IE C O U N TY
3 9 0 S a l i s b u r y s t r e e t
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John H. Ervin, Loan Officer
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.im colors slightly higher.
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CAUOELI. ijmER CO.
162 Sheek Sf «r’.ocksville«N.C.
DAVII CO'.'MY I NTI'KI’KISI', KI CORD, Tl II IRSDA'i’, M'N'I I.S. I'iSI ')|!
lAKE MYERS
FAMILY eAMPGROUNP
N O W O P E N D A IL Y
F o r Y o u r S u m m e r E n jo y m e n t .
W it h O u r R e g u la r a n d N E W A t t r a c t i o n s
F o r Y o u r P l e a s u r e a n d F u n .
TIVITIES
iK 6,000 sq.ft. outdoor skating ring
i f Recreation Hall with live
Saturday night entertainment
K courts
^ lack bar
I
GATE FEE
50‘
Weekdays
’1.50
Saturday ■ Sunday
and Holidays
HOURS WEATHER PERMITTING
Pool -10 a.m. - 8 p.m. daily
Golf course-Skating
Bumper boats - Water Boggan
Open anytime with
1 2 or more people participating
10В d a v ii; c o u n t y RNTERPRISI- r e c o r d . THURSDAY, JUNE 18. 1981
A r e a O b i t u a r i e s
EV E LY N C. WHITE
Mrs. Evelyn White^ 67, of^
№ioxvllle, Tenn., and a for
mer native of Dtivie County,
died Tuesday, June 9, in
Tennessee at the home of a
daughter.
Funeral services were helA
Thursday, June 11, at Rose
Mortuary Chapel in Knox
ville, Tenn. Burial was in
Highland Memorial
Cemetary.
Survivors include a
daughter, Mrs. Sandra Perry;
S grandsons, Billy Bobt^,
Patrick and Steve, all of the
home; Jenny Walt Cornatzer
of Advance; 6 sisters, Helen
Snipes and Betty Shore of
Winston-Salem, Mildred
Carter, Ruby Potts and Jean
livengood of Advance, N.C.,
and Jane Sanders of Fort
Worth, Texas; 4 brothers,
'niurman, Seabon and Connie
CsFnatzer, all of Advance,
and Joe Cornatzer of Winston-
Salem.
REV. CHARLES S YOUNG
Funeral services for the
Rev. Charles Samuel Young,
Jr. 58, of Route 16, Lexington
were conducted Wednesday at
Piedmont Funeral Home in
Lexington by the Rev. D. W.
Digh and the Rev. Billy Sink.
Burial was in Center Hill
Baptist Church Cemetery. He
had been in declining health
for nine years.
The Rev. Young was a
former pastor of North
Cooleemee Baptist Church
(now Edgewood) in
Cooleemee. He was presently
serving as minister of
Fellowship Baptist Church of
Lexington.
Bom November 12, 1922, in
Guilford County, he was the
son of the late Charles Samuel
and Willie Hogan Young. He
attended Wingate College,
Piedmont Bible College and
FfuiUand Bible College.
He received his license to
preach in 1946 and was or
dained in 1947.
In addition to serving in
Cooleemee and Lexington,
Rev. Young also served as
minister at Mountain View,
Floyd, Summerfield, Neuse,
Union Grove and Center Hill
Baptist Churches.
He served in the U.S. Army
in World War II and was a
member of V FW Post 3074. He
was district circulation
manager for the Winston-
Salem Journal and Sentinel
for 20 years.
Survivors include his wife,
Helen Vanderford Young; two
sons, Charles Samuel Young
III and Larry Dean Young,
both of the home; one
daughter, Tracy Camilla
Young of the home; two
brothers, the Rev. E. D.
Young of Greensboro and the
Rev. V. A. Young of
Lexington._____________________
PANSY B. KOONTZ
Mrs. Pansy Baity Koontz,
83, formerly of Route 2, died
at the Davie County HospiUI
late Monday night.
The funeral will be at 2 p.m.
Thursday in Eaton’s Funeral
Home Chapel conducted by
the Rev. George Auman and
the Rev. Haywood Hyatt.
Burial will follow in Rose
Cemetery.
The family will be at the
funeral home on Wednesday
night from 7 to 9 o’clock.
Born July 23,1897, in Davie
County. Mrs. Koontz was a
dd'jghter of the late John
Wesley and Lela Leach Baity.
She was a member of Oak
Grove United Methodist
Church and had been a
resident of the Autumn Care
Convalescent Center for one
year.
Survivors include two sons,
W. B. Koonti, Rt. 3, and
Frank Koontz, Rl. 2, both of
Mocksville; two sisters, Mrs.
Mary Elizabeth West of Rt. 1,
Advance and Mrs Clara Mae
Foster of Route 3, Mocksville;
two grandchildren; and four
great-grandchildren.
ROBERT L E e'h AM PTON
Robert Lee Hampton, 82, of
10 Joyner St., died at Davie
County Hos|rital in Mocksville
on Friday afternoon.
. The funeral was held
Saturday in Eaton’s Funeral
Home Chapel in MocksvUle
conducted by the Rev. J. D.
Revis and the Rev. Bill
Creason. Burial was in
Legion Memorial Park
Cemetery.
Born Aug. IS, 1898, in
Rowan County, Mr. Hampton
was a son of the late John and .
Ruby Sturby Hampton. He
was a retired employee of
Burlington Mills.
Survivors include his wife.
Gladys Canter Hampnm; two
daughters, Mrs. Joyce
^illman and Mrs. Dianne
Barber, both of Cooleemee;
four sons, Robert Lee Jr.,
Jimmy, Johnny and Kenney
Hampton, all of Cooleemee.
Two stepdaughters, Mrs.
Dorothy Vansant of Granite
Quarry and Mrs. Betty Jane
Campbell of Mt. Airy; 11
grandchildren; and six great
grandchildren.
MRS. ANNIE FOSTER
Mrs. Annie Foster Foster,
84, of Lexington Road, died at
Brian Center of Nursing Care
in Lexington on June 9th.
Graveside rites were held
Thursday in Liberty United
Methodist Church cemetery
conducted by the Rev.
Charles Bullock.
Bom Jan. 6, 1897 in Davie
County, Mrs. Foster was a
daughter of the Ute ^o m as
Penry and Margaret Foster
Foster. Her husband, Hugh S.
Foster, preceded her in death.
Survivors include a number
of nieces and nqihews.
S o c ia l Se cu rity
Q&A
Since I will continue
working full-time for high
wages past 65, I am not now
eligible for monthly social
security checks. Does this
mean that I can’t have
Medicare either until I stop
working?
Vour right to hospital and
medical insurance under
Medicare is not affected by
your earnings. You can sign
up for this protection at any
social security office.
Reach-Out Evangelism
Reach Out Evangelism
team, Jimmy and M.irgaret
Hinson conducted a Reach
Out Revival in the Powells
Point Baptist Church, Powells
Point, N.C., May 10-15. The
services began on Sunday
morning. May 10. The Hinsons
met with grades 1-« at 9:45
a.m. and the grades 7-12 at
10:30 a.m. The first revival
service was at 11 a.m., a
special recognition of
mothers, since this was
Mother’s Day. The sermon
was entitled "Some Women
Who Worshipped the Lord
Jesus Christ.” Some 200 at
tending the moming service.
The evening service began at
7:30 p.m. and the emphasis
was on the children. The
sermon was entitled "Are You
a Child of God?” On Monday
evening the Hinsons met with
th^children, grades 1-6 and
shared with the muppet, Sally
Sunshine at 6:30 p.m. The
sermon for the Monday
evening service was entitled
“Reach Out To Jesus.”
Tuesday evening was bring
your neighbor ni^t and the
sermon was entitled “What
Kind of Neighbor Are You?”
Wednesday evening was
FamUy Night and a covered
dish supper was shared
beginning at 6 p.m., the
sermon was entitled “A Voice
Prom Heaven, Simon Peter.”
Thursday evening the
sermon was entitled "The
Three Comings of Jesus
Christ.’-’ Friday evening the
sermon was entitled “Two
Lives to Live.” There were
decisions to accept Jesus
Christ as Savior and Lord,
requesting baptism and
church membership, and
other decisions to live for
Christ in the home, church
and community. The pastor is
Rev. Herbert Heminvwav.
and Minister of Music is
William Dowdy.
Reach Out Revival services
were conducted in the
Calvary Baptist Church,
Salisbury, May 17-24. The
pastor is Rev. J.A. Richard
son, Jr. The ministry began
on Sunday morning with the
Hinsons meeting with the
children at 9:45 a.m. nnd the
youth at 10:30 a.m. At 11 a.m.
the first service of revival was
conducted and the sermon
was entitled “What Brings
Joy On Earth and In
Heaven?”
Services were conducted
each evening at 7:30 p.m. and
the special nights included
Sunday School at night.
Children’s night. Youth night.
Neighbor night. Family night,
Ladies night and Men’s Night.
Tlie services concluded on
Sunday morning. May 24 and
the sermon was entitled “Too Late!”
Six people made decisions
for Christ and Church
membership, during the
week.
Alcoh ol In fo rm atio n R ep ort
R v 1W lLLI^_F.W Ê A N T ,M ;S.' ■У * .ALCOHOLISM EDlJCATiON œSSULTANT
In the heat of competi
tion, iport* enthuBiasti may
lose light of eye safety. Tlie
racquet sports—tennis, rac-
quetbali, badminton,
squash—account for many
of the 36,000 sports and
recreational eye injuries in a
year.
ALCOH OLISM IS A
FAMILY ILLNESS - PART
III - Alcoholism is a family
iUness, and alcoholism is
characterized by the inability
to drink within or according to
one's own intention. The
illness has profoundly
destructive effects not only on
the immediate victims, tmt on
their families as well.
If you are concerned about
someone in your family
having a drinking problem,
answering the following
questions may help you to
seek assistance.
1. Do you lose sleep because
of someone’s drinking?
2. Do many of your
thoughts revolve around the
drinking situations and
problems resulting tiecause of
that person’s drinking?
3. . Do you try tn cnntrol the
drinking by' asking for
promises to stop drinking?
4. Do you make threats?
5. Do you have increasingly
negative attitudes toward tbe
person?
6.. Do you mark, hide, or
empty bottles of liquor or
medication?
7. Do you ttiink that
everything would be okay if
the drinking situation
changed?
8. Do you feel alone,
rejected, fearful, angry,
guilty, exhausted?
9. Are you feeling an in
creasing dislike of yourself?10. Do you find your mooda
fluctuating as a direct result
of the drinking?
11. Do you try to deny or
conceal the drinking
situation?
12..Do you cover for and
protect the person?
13. Do you feel reenonslble
and guilty for the drinking
behavior?
14. Are you beginning to
withdraw or have you with
drawn from friends and
outside activities?
15. Have you taken over
responsibilities that used tp be
handled by the other person?
16. Are financial problems
increasing because of thé
drinking? ^
17. Do you find yourself
trying to justify your feelings
and behavior in reaction to
the drinking behavior?
18. Do you have any new
physical symptoms such as
headaches, Indigestion,
nausea, shakiness?
19. Do you feel defeated and
hopeless?
20. Is your sexual
relationship negatively af
fected by the drinking
situation?
21. If there are children in
the home, are they showii^
any stress and behavior
changes that could be related
to the drinking situation?
Hiree or more “yes” an
swers mean there may be a
drinking problem and in
dicate that if you are ex
periencing these problems
you should seek help.
(This series is prepared by
BUI Weant, alcoholism
education consultant with the
Tri-County Mental Health
Complex, 622 Nwth Main
Street, MocksvUle. These
articles are designed to create
understanding about
drinking, alcohol abuse, and
alcoholism In our society. If
you have a question con
cerning alcohol that you
would lUce answered in à
future column, phone 6i4i-
2195.)
CAUDELL
LUMBER CO.
1238 Bin^am l^treet.
Mocksville, N.C.
P H O ^ E 624-216'r
DAVIE TRACTOR
& IMPLEMENT
CO-
Ford Fanning-Salet and
Service.
New Holland Equipment
PHONE 634-5969 ^
A Complete Repair i
MARTIN
HARDWARE &
General Mcfee.
Feeda, Dry Gooda
Groceriea, Ferlilixer
PHONE 634-2128
EATON
FUNERAL HOME
328 N. Main Street
.MocksviUe, N.C.
PHONE 634-2148
aA. SEAFORD
LUMBER CO.
Jericho Roed
MocksviUe, N.C.
PHONE 634-5148
J.P. GREEN
MILLING
CO., INC
daisy FLOUR
We Ciistdm Mend '
' 524 Depot Street
PHONE 6342126
CALAHAIN FRIENDSHIP BAPTIST CH. Rev. Gtaham Woolen. Putot
Woiihip 10:00 a.m.Sheffield-Calahaln Community BuUding
<ShURCH o f GOD, Cooleemee, NC.
’TiocRiEk p ^ m y E jB X y n s T dfc.'
SEVENTH DAY AÖVENTIST iU Mazat, ftitoi
& i S i i
GREEN HILL BAraST CHURCH Located two mBet off the Midway64, t o m HOI R o a d .___Rev. Steve Hedgecock, nrtor
5.5. 9; JO ajn.
Wotihip 10:30 a jn.Evening 7:00 p.m.Wedneiday 7:00 pjn.
MOCKSVILLE WESLEYAN CHURCH 'Rev. Bob Scott HdipitalSt..Mod»vi]le
SJS. 9:45 ajn.Wonhip 11:00 ajn.Evening 7:00 pjn.
ADVANCE BAPTIST CHURCH
CEDAR CREEK BAPTIST CHURCH
HRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH Rev. George Auman5.5. 10:00 a.m.Woiihip , 11:00 ajn.
MOCKS UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
YADKIN VALLEY BAPTIST CHURCH
ailNQUAPIN GROVE BAPTIST CHURCH
EDGEWOOD BAPTIST CHURCH
SMITH GROVE BAPTIST CftURCH
CORNATZER BAPTIST CHURCH
FORK BAPTIST CHURCH
6ffiUeiEaitonHwy.645.5. 9:4S a.m.Wocihip 11:00 a.m.Evening 7:20 p.m.
CORNATZER UNITED METH. CHURCH
UNION CHAPEL U. METHODIST CHURCH
BLBAVILLE U. METHODIST CHURCH
¿AK GROVE U. METHODIST CHURCH
CENTER UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
SALEM UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
LIBERTY UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
ADVANCE UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
VETHftHEM U. METHODIST CHURCH "
HARDISON U. METHODIST CHURCH
TRINITY BAPTIST CHURCH Gene Blackburn, Paitoi '
Route 4, MocliiviUe5.5. 10:00 a.m.
Woiihip 11:00 a.m.Evening 7:00 p.m.
Wedneiday 7:00 pjn.
A.M.E. ZION METHODIST CHURCH
DULIN METHODIST CHURCH
COOLEEMEE U. METHODIST CHURCH
Rev. Alton Fitzgeiald
DUTCHMAN CREEK BAPTIST CHURCH'
HOPE BAPTIST TAB*ERNACLE ‘ ' Noimim S. Frye, Paitoi
5.5. 9:45 a.m.
Worsliip 10:45 a.in.
Evangeliilic 7:30 p.m.J Wedneiday 7:30 p.m.
HOLY CROSS LUTHFRAN CHURCH5.5. 9:45 a.m.' Worihip 11:00 a.m.
THE STOPS AS WELL AS THE
STEPS OF THE RIQHTEOUS
PERSON ARE ORDERED
BY THE LORD
My friend had bam stricken
witb a serious ilinaM. Wheni callad on him ha was daaply-a---a-eMpofiotni.
**1 have triad to saive God faithfully through all tha yaan, and there is yatsomuehtode. Idon'tmlnd suffering phytlcailv, ona must expect mat from a frail human body. Butoh how I rsgrst having to lay down my tools and retire to a bad in these critical days in
world history."
Hb anguish was raai, and hi*
claims to faithfulnaM vii«re known
to all to be true. Togatharwe read the t39th ftatm-"Thou knowait whan I ilt down м well
sawtian I rise up..."
‘Triend," I laid, "It's simple.
It4 rigtit hare in the Scripture.
The stoiis as wall as the steps
of ttie righteous msn are ordered
by the Lord. Truit Him to know
«mat it best for you. He never
-Paul M. Stevens
* + + * + * + + + * + ■»■***■»■ +
ATTEND CHURCH THIS WEEK
♦+♦♦♦+++♦++++♦+♦+
I^R № N OM IN ATION AL
9:45 a.m. Morning Wonhip 11:00 a.m.Radio Rognm 1:00 p.m. W S L Youth %ivioe 6:30 p.m.Mid Wk. Bible Study by Mn. Knox Johniton 7:00 p.m. Paitor - Rev. Lindiay Walten
5.5.Morning Worihip ____ r —•
'S
COOLEEMEE EPISCOPAL CHURCH
OF THE GOOD SHEPHERD
Rev. W lllli M. Roienthal, Priest
Sermon 9:30 ajn.
5.5. 10:50 ajn.
BEAR CREEK BAPTIST CHURCH
REDLAND PENTECOSTAL HOLINESS
Rev. Paul C. Ledbetter
SJS. 10:00 a.m.
Wonhip 11:00 ajn.
Lifelinen 6:00 p.m.
Evangelistic 7:00 p.m.Wednesday 7:00 p.m.
FARMINGTON METHODIST CHURCH
Woiship 1st Sun. 10 ajii.
3rd Sun. 11a.m.
5.5. 1st S un.ll ajn.
2, 3,4 Sunday 10 ajn.
WESLEY CHAPEL METH. CHURCH
Woiship 1st Sun. 11 ajn.
3rd Sun. 10 a.m.
5.5. • 3rd Sun. 11 a.m.
1,2,4 Sunday 10 ajn.
JAMES (Corner of ,________________Jimmy Hinson, Interim Pastor
5.5. 9:45 a.m.Worihip 11:00 ajn.Evening 6:00 p.m.Wednesday 7:30 p.m.
BLAISE BAPTIST CHURCH' Rev. Jimmy Martin, Pastoi
5.5. 9:50 a.m.
Worihip 11:00 a.m.
Evening 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday 7:30 p.m.
•CHESTNUT GROVE U. METHODIST
BAILEY’S CHAPEL U. METHODIST
FULTON UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
BETHEL UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
SMITH GROVE U.METHODIST CHURCH
ZION UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
NEW UNION U. METHODIST CHURCH
EATON’S BAPTIST>CHURCH
5.5. 10:00 ajn.
Worsliip 11:00 a.m.
Training U. 7:00 p.m.
^ W E IÄ P T IS T ta b e ^ a c l e'* ^ “ * ^
Foric Bixby Road
5.5. 9:45 a.m.
Worship ll;00a.m .
Evening 7:30 p.m.
Wedneiday 7:30 p.m.
JERUSALEM BAPTIST CHURCH ■■
5.5. 10:00 ajn.
Worihip 11:00 a.m.
Evening 7:00 p.m.
' SHILOH BAITISI CHURCH
CHURCH OF THE LIVING GOD, BUby
CHURCH OF COD OF PROPHECY Rev. Charles King Route 4, Moclisvllle (Epheaus) 634-33925.5. 10 a.m.Morn Worship 11a.m.Sun. N i^il 7:30 p.m.Wed. Nfeht 7:30p.m.
TONCORD UNITl'D MITIIOIIISTCHURCH
CLARKSVILLE PfNTECOSTAL HOLINESS Rev. Albert Gentle
Route 5, Mocksvilie
5.5. 10:00 a.m.
'I'onhip 11:00 a.m.
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
Cooleemee.Kev. L. Lee Whitlock, Pastor
S.S. 7:30 a.n>.& 9:45 a.m.
Childreru Church 11 a.m.
Worship 11 a.m.
Evening 7:30 p.m.
Uedneiday_________7:30 p.m.__________
1:00 p.m.
3 dROSS RDS. BAPTIST CHURCH of Ijames Church Rd. Л Sheffield Rd.
Tliiileatun is pirirtiiiind in Ла intarast of a battar community, and if mada potiibla
liy tiiaw iponton wlio ballava in buHdini eharactar.
ST. FRANCIS OF ASSISI CHURCH Sat. eve^g anticipatory Masi - 5 p.m.Sun^y Momleg 10 a.m'
Rectory NÓ. 634-2973
Ж « ^ 'г,р1~lt. 4, Modcsvi
;Y BAPTIST CHURCH’astor
S.S. Wotihip Evening Wednoulsy
..M.
'M.
1ST CllURCirF ARMINGTON BAPTIS'S.S. 10:00 a.m.Morn. Worship 11:00 a.m.Yoijth TtaiiiinË Union 7:00 p.m.
NORTH kAIN ST. CHURCH OF CHRIST Donald Fiaeman, Miniiter
5.5. - - 10:00 a.m,Worship 11:00 ajn.
Evening 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday 7:30 p.m.
THE EPISCOPAL CHURCH Canon C. Nichols, Paitoi Fork, N.C.Aiceiion 10:00 a jn.
Wordilp 11:00 a.m.
W^neiday 7:15 p.m.
LIBERTY WESLEYAN CHURCH Kenneth Davli, Paitoi
MOCKSVILLE PENTECOSTAL Holineu. H. Gaiiy Yeatts, Minister
5.5. 10:00 a.m.Woiship 11:00 a.m.
Evangelistic 7:00 p.m.Wednesday 7:30 p.m. t
MACEDONIA MORAVIAN CHURCH
Rev. John Kapp, Pastor5.5. 10:00 a.m.
WotsMp 11:00 a.m.Youth Fel. 6:3Up.m.Evening 7:30 p.m.
GUEEN MEADOWS BAPTIST CHURCH
Kev. Oavid E. Roberts
5.5. 10:00 a.m.
WorslUp 11:00 a.m.B.T.U. 6:30 p.m.
Evening 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday 7:30 p.m.
HUNTSVILLE METHODIST CHURCH
Worship 2nd Sun. 10 a.m.
4th Sun. 11 a.m.
fCLEMENT GROVE CHURCH OF GOD I.W. Uames, Pastor
5.5. 10:00 ajn.
V'ordiip 1:00 p.m.
Evening'Wednesday 8:00 p.m.
NEW BETHEL ASSEMBLY OF GOD
5.5. 10:00 a.m.Morning Worship 11:00 a.m.
Evening Worship 7:00 p.m.
I Rotary Hut. Rev. Jerry Carr
, UAMES BAPTIST CHURCH5.5. 9:45 a.m.Wonhip 11:00 a.m.
JERICHO CHURCH OF CHRIST
Jericho Road-Office 492-5291
(Harding Lowry, Miniiter
MOUNT OLIVE METHODIST CHURCH
Worship 2nd Sun. 11 a.m.4th Sun. 10 a.m.5.5. 4th Sun. 11 a.m.
1, 2, 3 Sundays 10 a.m.
COMMUNITY BAPTIST CHURCH
.Gladstone Raod
Community Baptist 'Gladstone Road
IIS.S. 10:00 a.m.
(Woiship 11:00 ajn.
GOSPEL BAPTIST CHURCH
Rt.5, Mocksville. N.C. 270285.5. 10 a.m.
.Worship Seivice 11a.m.
iSun. Evening Woiship 7:00 p.m.
Bible Study Wed. Evening 7:00 p.m. Rev. A.E. Gentry. Ptstoi
BIXBY PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH5.5. 10:00 a.m.
Morning Worship 11:00 a.m.
Evening Worship 7:00 p.m.Robert L. Clews, Pastor
FARM&
GARDEN
SERVICE, INC.
961 YadkinviUe Road
PHONE 634-2017 or
634-5964
FOSTER-RAUCH
DRUG CO.
W3keeboro Street
PHONE 634-2141
FERREE’S
MOBILE HOME
SERVICE
Rt. 5, Box 320-B
MocksviUe, N.C.
'(704) 492-5636
JEFFCO
CO., INC.
Route 1, Advance, N.C.
Our staff and employees
encoiu-age you to attend tlie
church of your choice.
SHEFFIELD
LUMBER &
PALLET
COMPANY
Route 6, Box 153
MocksviUe, N.C.
PHONE 492-5565
COBLE
LIME&
FERTILIZER
SERVICE
Cooleemee, N.C. Hwy. BOI
Businesii l*iiune 284 4354
Hume Pilone 284-2782
DAVli; COIINTY i;n t i;W’Kisi-: k ic o k i), t iiu k s im y , juni-: ix, i>)si iib
William Reynolds Lybrook Humbard Headlines This Year's Singing On The Mountain
W illiam Reynolds Lybrook, 69, died
June 9th at llie Baptist Hospital aftffr a
lengthy illness. The funeral was held
Thursday afternoon at his home. Tall
Trees Farm , Clemmons, N.C. Burial
was in the Salem Cemetery.
He was born in Forsyth County to
D avid Johnson and China P iper
Lybrook. His lather had several farms,
one of which was located in Davie.
He attended public schools in Davie
County and Winston-Salem, and the
McCallie School in Chattanooga, Tenn.,
before going to Duke University where
hereceivedan A.B. Degree in 1934 and a
law degree in 1937.
During W orld W ar II he was in the
Arm y, entering as a private and leaving
as a commissioned officer. He acquired
his 285 acre farm , near Clemmons sooh
after returning from the service. Much
of his spare tim e was devoted to the
farm and its cattle and horses.
In 1940 he joined the R,J. Reynolds
Tobacco Company as an associate
counsel after being in private law
practice in W instonSalem, In 1976 he
retired from RJR-as vice president and
secretary.
He was a grandnephew of W illiam N.
Reynolds and his brother, founder of the
tobacco Company.
As executor of W illiam N. Reynolds
w ill, Lybrook took a substantial role in
establishing and developing Tanglewood
Park during the 1950s and 1960s on the
grounds of the estate that Reynolds and
his wife, Kate Bltlngs Reynolds, owned
West of Clemmons.
In 1976 he strongly opposed the
decision to sell the park to Forsyth
County.
His public service touched many
areas, but one of his special Interests
was education. In 1966 he was appointed
by Governor Dan K. Moore to the State
Board of Education.
He was a member of the American
Bar Association, the Forsyth Country
Club and the Reynolda Presbyterian
Church.
He was a board member of the Z.
S m ith Reynolds Foundation, an
nization w ith a long record of
ilanthroplc contributions. This was
the foundation th a t provided the
financial support that brought Wake
Forest CoUege to Winston-Salem from
the town of Wake Forest,
Bill Lybrook
He was also a trustee of a trust
established by William N, and Kate
Bitting Reynolds, and much of this trust
was used for education and health
purposes.
His services Included work as a
trustee of the Edgar Tufts Memorial
Association, which had the respon
sibility for getting funds to support an
orphanage and coUege at Banner EUc.
He was also a member of the board of
visitors of the Bowman Gray School of
Medicine and a board member of
Summit Schopl.
He is listed In Who’s Who In America.
He was married In 1947 to Jean
Ferrell, who survives.
Also surviving are his mother, of
Winston-Salem; two daughters, Jean
Lybrook Turner and Nancy Lybrook
Warburton of Clemmons; two sons,
William Reynolds Lybrook Jr. and
Edward David Lybrook of aemmons;
two sisters, Mrs. G. Edwin SpltzmlUer
and Mrs. Herbert F. Wyeth of Winston-
Salem; and a brother, David Johnson
Lybrook of Advance.
The 57th annual "Singing on the
M ountain" which takes place Sunday.
June 28, at Grandfather Mountain w ill
feature in te rn a tio n a lly known
evangelist Hex Humbard as its guest
speaker. The 13-member H um bard
fam ily w ill also be on hand to entertain
Ihe large crowd expected for the event.
The Singing gets underway around
9-.30 a.m. w ith traditional favorites at
Grandfather Mountain. Top names are
the A rthur Smith and George Hamilton
IV groups, the Sego Brothers and
Naomi, The Living Stones, Chuck M iller
F a m ily, and the Skyland Gospel
Singers. A n>".y group. The Rock City
Boys fro m C hattanooga, is also
scheduled to appear as well as several
other fine groups.
From noon till 2 p.m. the form al part
of the program takes place w ith TV
personality A rthur Smith serving as
Music Master, upholding a tradition at
the Singing for over 30 years, A rthur
Smith and his brother Ralph w ill per
form w ilh their Crossroads Quartet and
w ill feature a special appearance by the
Grand Old Opry’s George Hamilton IV,
the ‘‘Iiite n ia tio m il A m bassador of
Country M usic,” who has recently
returned from a tour of Europe.
A fte r Rev. H um bard gives the
message, the guest gospel groups w ill
Rex Humbard
again perform till the Singing concludes
around 4 p.m.
Humbard, 61 and an Arkansas native,
is known for his live for the common
man. He has been in the m inistry for 48
years and is te le visio n ’s pioneer
evangelist.,
He began his TV m inistry 30 years ago
in Akron, OH, with $65 to his name and a
vision for a new way to reach miiiions.
Today his dreams have become a reality
as his message is beamed across the
world on 620 television stations and in
six foreign languages, including Russian
and Chinese. Humbard says more
people arc reached through his weekly
TV show than were alive when Christ
was on earth.
Humhard's ministry Is based ai the
interdenom inational C athedral of
Tomorrow in Akron but he spends much
of his tim e preaching all over the world.
In Brazil the popular m inister filled the
w orld 's largest stadium , seating
capacity 170,000 and had traffic backed
up for miles with disappoint(4l persons
who could nol even get close to the
stadium. This w ill be his first visit to
Grandfather Mountain.
The 1981 Singing with Rex Humbard
and his fam ily promises to add another
great chapter to the rich history and
tradition of the "Singing on the Moun
tain” , the largest event of its kind in the
Southeast, —
Robert Hartley and Joe Lee Hartley,
sons of the founder of the Singing, which
began in 1924 as the Hartley Fam ily
Reunion, are co-chairmen of the event.
There is no admission charge to attend
the Singing,
Telephone Equipment Available To Aid Hearing Impaired
For most, the telephone Is a valuable
communications tool. But for the
hearing Impaired, It has been only a
reminder of their Isolation from the
hearing world.
Today, more than a century after
Alexander Graham Bell’s Invention,
telephone equipment <s available that
permits hearing-impaired Individuals to
communicate readily with friends and
associates.
Mr. BeU, you recall, was orlglnaUy a
teacher of the deaf who directed his
attention to invention In hopes of
creating a device to help deaf people.
Ironically, his Invention until recently
only served the hearing population.
Thanks to micro-technology, however,
small teletype machines are a reality
and are being made available for pur
chase by Central Telephone Company
and a few other vendors. TechnlcaUy,
the units are known as Telecom
munications Devices for the Deaf, or
TDDs.
About the size of a smaU adding
machine and weighing about five
pounds, the battery-powered devlce-the
Communlcator-is completely portable
and adaptable to any conventional
telephone.
"W e at Centel see the Introduction of
portable teletype equipment such as the
Communicator as a major factor In
Integrating the hearing-impaired Into
society,” said Jodie Ervin, assistant
manager of customer services.
“This equipment Is Invaluable In the
event of an emergency, but we also
expect It wlU open up doors for deaf
people seeking jobs. Until now, many
have been turned down because they
couldn’t use the telephone.
“ Several larger companies have
already Installed teletype equipment In
offices and mail-order centers,” Ervin
continued. “We’re also seeing this
equipment Introduced to medical
on itresi
Sorting It Out
Dr. Donald WUdemann, Phd.
PROGRAM CONSULATION AN D EVALUATION
John WhitrteldM-S.W.
A O ^ T S E R V IC E SI recently had some severe our pamphlet -diest palm, and was afraid It management which you may
■wa* a heart atUck. My famUy №d helpfnl.
iphyslclan made some tests. Others can obtain the itresi
-'Re eoncluded that my heart management pamphlet by >ai okay, and that I had had a sending SO cents lo cover
stress reaction. What can I do postage and handling to: •to prevent future attacks? Sorting it Out, IVi'ConBty
. It’s tragie that many people Mental Health Centw, IM yHt preMatarely becaate they Oontt Street, StatesvlUe, N.C. ^ver lean htm to coatrrt XM7i. stress. More than twenty My husband says he hears ^Illnesses have been linked to voices teUing him to vacuum ¿stress. off the roof. Can you help?I Taking tranqnUixers would When an adult hears wovMe only a temporary imaginary voices, you should ¡MutioB. Uiey are also habit be conccmed. Usually, the
Warning Issued On Substandard Water Systems
]fsrmhig if used too long. The Uoeal mental health center ;|btters ' several better •sMutioas. Yon could try oar 'workshop hi stress management. This would Ueach you physical and Rental methods to control ^•tress. Some people prefer not 3o be involved in a group. For •these people, biofeedback or ^^ychotherapy are the best imethods to leam to control .«tress. In biofeedback ^training, people leam how to ■sense and modUy your body’s Intemai state. Psychotherapy :wouid work oa thoughts that «ause your stress reaction. Any one, or a coatinuation of jUiese methods would be useful lor the long-term control of your stress. I am encloshig
person has changed bi ^eral ways before he hears the voices. Often his work lias begun to go poorly. UsuaUy he also has become unable to have normal feelings toward famUy members and firiends. Most often, these are symptoms are schitophrenia. With newer drugs, these symptoms can often be rapWy can- trolled with nohospitalization. Dailypsy-
chiatrists at our local mental health center suc
cessfully treat people with
symptoms like your
husbands. Medications are usuaUy used hi this treatment. In most cases, people
Uke your husband are able to help their jobs during treatment.
Owners and operators of
substandard water systems
who continuaUy refuse to
comply with the N.C.
Drinking Water Act are
finding themselves Involved
in court action.
The department of Human
Resources’ Division of Health
Services is responsible for
ensuring that public water
supplies are safe and
adMjuate.
According to Charles
Rundgren. head of the
state’s Water Supply Branch,
substandard pubUc water supplies increase tbe
posslblUty of contamination of
the water and could constitute
a potential danger to the
health of water consumers.
“Whenever we find water
systems lhat are sub
standard, we try very hard to
work with the owners and
operators to obtain voluntary
compUance. Most of them are
cooperative. Sometimes,
however, we are forced to
take stronger me-
easures when the owners
and operaters continally
refuse to comply with
requirements of the law,”
said Rundgren.
“We were recenUy forced to
do just that with the owners
and operators of water
systems in Cabarrus and
Rowan Coimtles. They con
tinually refused to comply
with the Drlnkhig Water Act
even though we tried to work
with them over an extended
period of time , so we took
clvU action against them bi
Superior Court of Cabarrus
County,” said Rundgren.
The court issued default
judgments against the
owners-operators of water
systems serving tbe foUowing
communities in Cabarrus and
Rowan Counties; Walnut HUls
Subdivision, Timber Ridge
Subdivision, . The Colony
Subdivision, Elmwood Sub
division, Southwood Park
Subdivision, Kentwood
Subdivision, located In
Cabarrus County, owned by
GUe MuUis; and MarshaU
Park Subdivision, located In
Rowan County, owned by GUe
MuUU.
The court ordered the
defendants In the cases to
afcorrect a number
deflclences including:
1. Submitting plans and
specifications for Department
of Human Resources ap
proval;
2. Improving weU and water
system construction;
3.InstalUng faclUües for
continuous disinfection;
4 Monitoring (sampUng) for
bacteriological, radiological
and inorganic chemical
contaminante;
5. Giving public notice to
costomers of faUure to
comply with the N.C. Drinking Water Act;
6. Allowing no further
service connections.
Violations of this order by
Uie defendants wiU subject
them to comtempt
proceedings by the court.
For more . information,
contact Charles Rundgren at
91»-733-2321.
'T h e bM t lauce it the world
il hunger." Cervantes
facilities, government offices and
educational Institutions across the
nation.”
To make a call on the Communicator,
the telephone receiver is placed Into a
coupler on top of the machine. The In
dividual then dials the number of
another unit and begins the two-way
typed “conversation.”
“Thfc words are typed on a keyboard
similar to that of a typewriter,” Ervin
explained, “The words appear across an
electronic readout display. At the same
Ume, the words are transmitted through
Uie telephone by tonal beeps and appear
on large green letters on the readout at
the other end of the Une.”
A smaU light on the Communicator
tells the caller of activity on the other
unit. Slow flashes Indicate the other
phone is ringing; fast flashes indicate a
busy signal.
Special relay devices hooked up to
ordinary household lamps teU the deaf
person when the phone Is “ringing.”
To avoid rates which penalize hearing-
impaired persons, the North Carolina
UtlUtles Commission last year ordered
the state’s telephone companies to ¿ve
users of TDDs a SO nercent discount on
daytime toll calls wlUiln Uie state. This
action was taken primarily because it
takes longer to transmit a message via
teletype than by voice.
Cost of the Communicator Is about
$660. A printer, which produces hard
copies of the typed conversations, sells
ftM- about $790. BoUi devices, as well as
an answering system, carrying case and
other accessories, are avaUable now
Uirough any Centel business office.
All of ttte equipment is tax deducUble
If used In a business. In addition,
' equipment purchased by Uie hearing-
impaired for personal use is tax
deductible as a medical expense in
many cases, Ervin pointed out.
As a response to needs of the hearing-
impaired, amplified phones have been
available from Centel and other com
panies for many years. These phones
have special volume controls to aid
those with hearing loss.
Central Telephone Is an operating unit
of Central Telephone & Utilities of
Chicago, which operates Uie nation’s
fifth largest telephone system with some
two miUion phones In 10 states.
• . .
AUTO PA RTS STO RES
SS$SS$$SSS$SS$$$$i$SSS$S$$$$$$$S$$$$
P A Y I N G C A S H f o t G O L D
r
S O U T H E R N G O L D & S I L V E R E X C H A N G E
W e w i l l p a y y o u t o p p r i c e i f o r A L L
y o u r G O L D a n d S I L V E R v a l u a b l e s .
REAR ENGINE RIDING MOWERS
Afiont roar-onglno rldng mowori aro doslgnad and bul» (or poiformarwol
Look at (hose standard looturoi... Aiiont
Custom Cut nnowar dock systom,
hoavy-duly tramo and axia, single lover culling heigtit odjustmont, six
speeds locward. one rovers«,
soparal« biak« and dutch p«dals.
And all Arlent Rkling Mow«rs
accept an oplksrvil R«ar Grass Boog«t to make your mowing job
• v « n OOSlOfl
No man«r how you cut it.. ,an Arl«ns
(Nding Mow«( Is ttw answ«r to youi kiwn
cor« n««dsl
FREEELECTRIC START KIT
■ r f f 'T i U K S S r ." '
THIS IS A LIMITED TIME OFFER,
WHILE QUANTITIES LAST, SO HURRY!!>99« y/^LUE
MARTIN
EQUIPMENT AND SERVICE
• M D«i)ot St. MoGfciyiii«, N.C. в м - г м г
W E B U Y C L A S S R IN G S
W e b u y y o u r G O L D : W a t c h e s , E a r r i n g s ,
N e c k l a c e s , B r a c e l e t s , C h a i n s , L o c k e t s ,
P i n s , C o i n s ,
( A n y t h i n g m a r k e d 1 6 K , 1 4 K , 1 8 K , 2 2 K , 2 4 K 1
WE BUY V/EDDING BANDS
I W E B U Y S I L V E R |
SILVER COINS
STERLINq
Rings-Charmi- Bracelets-Coffee and Tea Services Spoons-Forks etc...
KENNEPY HAUViS-1935 and ore 1965; 66; 67; 68; 69
I HALVES-QUARTERS-DIMES WAR NICKLES
1964 and before 1943; 44; 45 only
WE BUY COIN COLLECTIONS
WE OFFER F R E E APPRAISALS WITH NO OBLIGATION.
LOCALLY OWNED AND OPERATED: 704-634-5641
WED.-FRL 10:30 • 5:30 - SAT. 10 • 2SOUTHERN GOLD & SILVER EXCHANGE
C O U R T S Q U A R E in M O C K S V I L L E , N . C .
(above Mocksville Sportinq Goods)
|SSSSSSSSSS$S$$S$SS$SSSSSS$$$SS$$SSSS
Ш Е O F S A L E S
AUDIOVOX STEREO CASSETTE AM-FM RADIO AND
"SOUND EXPLODER" AMPLIFIERPush stereo power to 40 watts with Exploder.
BUY BOTH
FOR O N LY
Suo. USt $55,90 UMITIDOUANTiTIIS
CAL CUSTOM
WIRE WHEEL COVERSRemovable chrome wire basket for easy cleaning,1S" #5500
14" #5501 15" #5502
W M m c o v nLOCK SIT #5515
’ ^ l e V f M o r a
OÑlDUSraM
Sug. USt $27.00
19*LIMITIDOUANTmfS
DIGITAL ELECTRIC CLOCKsoNd stateetectronlcs. mBattery operated. ■Adhesive back. "#520N
17” ‘
J
l o c t it £®
R EAR VIEWMIRROR
ADHESIVEBonds mirror to glass where other glues fall. #11067
M C n n
1 ?
2-TON HYDRAULIC
FLO O R JACKDesigned for dolt yourselfersi 5" to 15"•ft range.#649N
LIMIT»
QUANTITIIS
ZEM CO
7 FUNCTION
CRUISE CONTROLMonitors speed twice per sec. to save gas. Fingertip adjustment to traffic changes. #ZT-ii
Sug, Ust $99.95
77“UMITI0 9U A N m iM
CAROUEST RAINCHECK POLICY Every CAROUEST special is a bona fide offer. If we se» out of an advertised Item or fan to receive the merchandise, we will issue a •Ralncheck* entitling you to the sale price Ralnchecks do not apply to Items stated as being in
limited quantity we reserve the right to substitute items of equal or better value In the event
- sciathat our stocks of advertised specials become depleted.
A .JONNNV KUTHftFOtOTtwM Time tndv MW wwirwr « Mtiorwl Driving OumtMon
(
Sale prices good at participating
CAROUEST Auto Parts Stores through June 50,1981
MOCKSVILLE AUTOMOTIVE
757 South Main Street
Mocksville, N.C.
Phone 634 2944
C A R O U E S T : t h e R i g h t P l a c e t o b u y a u t o p a r t s .
RIGHT PRICE • RIGHT PARTS • RIGHT ADVICE
I
I2H DAVIIÍ COUNTS' CNTERPRISn RHCORD. THURSDAY, JUNI; IK, 1ЧН1
Folk-Ways
Folk-Speech S u z a n n e S a y s
Someone came up wilh the
idea of calling 1981 the Year of
the Scot.
A canny bit of thinking. This
way it can include all
scheduled events and be
further enhanced by seren
dipitous affairs along the way.
Calendar events include all
manner of Scottish hap
penings: An International
Robert Burns Supper in
Glasgow, an International
Gathering of the Clans in
Edinburgh, an International
St. Andrews Day Dinner at St.
Andrews, plus military
tatoos, curling competitions.
Highland Games, whisky and
haggis tastings, and sundry
other activities in both the
Unterlands and the major
cities.
So far the serendipitous has
included a football (soccer)
victory over “ the auld
emeny” (England) in their
annual rivalry, plus a good
conduct accolade for not
demolishing London before
and after the football war.
This needs a bit of ex
planation. The Eiiglish, in
general, have continued to
look on the Scot« over the
years as little removed from
the Piets of Roman oc
cupation days. Thus when the
English and Scot soccer
teams prepared to meet for
the 99th time in their ancient
rivalry, English Football
Association officials (sup
posedly basing their decisions
on past experiences) denied
the sale of tickets to anyone
north of Carlisle to fu ^er
discourage Scottish fans, they
managed to have public
transportation services
curtailed as well.
To official dismay, football
tickets poured across the
border into Scotland from
friends, clubs, and other
sympathize». Scot fans came
into London in all manner of
vehicle«. Seventy thousand
strong, they took over all but
twenty thousand Wembly
seats, out-bcAiaving and out
playing their adversaries.
Hje Year of the Scot, in
deed! .
What the year means to the
average Scotsman is yet to be
determined.
If he is a shopkeeper he
appreciates the increased
tourist trade brought in by the
clan gatherings and other
traditional activities. On the
other hand, he may hide his
smirk as the 300-pound tartan-
clad clansman from Min
neapolis waddles by.
He may be concerned that a
Scot stereotype is being
created, mych as the Ap
palachian Mountaineer was
created in America over the
years.
At least one definite position
exists; continued interest will
bring about more and more
serious research, and more of
the reai ScoUman and his
country will be revealed.
Meantime there's no harm
in playing games. At least not
in the Year of the Scot.
Readers are invited to send
folk materials to Rogers
Whitener, Folk-Ways and
Folk-Speecb, Box 376,
palachian SUte University,
Boone, NC 28606.
Places to go In West
Virginia State Park....
Blackwater Falls ■ Plunging
from a height of flve stories,
the famous falls of the Black
water River pose a spec
tacular sight for both first
ame visitors and devout fans
of Blackwater Falls State
Park. The park itself is
dominated by the deep
boulder-strewn gorge through
which the river flows. A
natural stone and wood lodge
is perched on the forested rim
of the canyon. Spring wild
flowers, multi-colored fall
forests, and deep winter
snows make Blackwater a
popular year-round tourist
attraction - 1688 acres - 25
deluxe cabins - 55 lodge
rooms, 65 tent and trailer
campsites. Large restaurant
with private banquet ronm,
snack _bar^ and_ grocery
nearby, golf course at C^nan
Valley (10 mi.), swimming,
rental row boats and paddle
boats, fishing, horseback play
ground, hiking trails,
naturalist, sled run or
beginners ski area, souvenir
and gift shop.
Pete Tutterow of Route 1, Mockiville, N.C. la thown
here checking his caatalopea. If nothing happens,
Pete is expecting a bumper crop oT cantalopes
this year.
Around About
CELEBRATES GOLDEN W EDDIN G
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Vogler ot Advance, iriio will be married SO years on June
IB, celebrated their Golden Wedttng Anniversary on Sunday, June 14, at the
home of their daughter and son^law, Mr. and Mrs. J. William Moir of
Walkertown. Sixty guests attended the oelefaratlon.
VISITS RELATIVES AT EA SIV R N STAR H O M E
Chariie Potts, grandson of Mr. and Mrs. Haines Yates drove than to
Greensboro, N.C. recatly to visit an unde and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Charles,
Lasley. Mr. Lasley is in the hosdtal of the Eastern Star Home and has been
since last October. Haines would Uke fbr those who know the Lasleys to visit
them whenever they can.
Quick Test May Reveal Need To See Orthodonist
quickGive yourself this
facial exam:
~ Do you have a long,
narrow face?
- Does a lot of tooth and
gum surface show when you
smile?
~ Do you have trouble
closing your Ups even when
your upper and lower teeth
are together?
~ Is your lower Jaw either
too prominent or Insufficient?
If you answered "yes” to
one or more of these
questions, you may need to
see an orthodontist.
Abnormal Jaw growth can
cause those (adal conditions.
■) Frequently, an orthodontist
wOl team up with an oral
surgeon to correct the
problem.
This has brought a lot of
hope to adult patients. Today,
about 20 percent of or
thodontic patienU are adults.
InitiaUy, the orthodontist
and oral surgeon confer to
develop a treatment plani
~
lieneraUy, the orthodontist
WiU align and coordinate the
upper and lower teeOi first.
Then, the surgeon will
correctly position the Jaws.
After that, the orthodontist
completes tooth and Jaw
alignment to achieve the best
bone and dental relationship.
With good dental hygiene,
this can lead to long-term
dental health and a vastly
improved appearance.
C e n tra l C a io lm a B a n k
M o n e y M a rk e t C a t if k a t e
13.60k
Rate good June 16 through June 2 2 .
This is the highest interest rate offered by
any bank in N o rth Carolina. M inim um deposit
is $10,000 for a six-month term.
CCB 30*MonthCertíficate of Deposit
%
A minimum dqx)sitof JI,(XX) is
i(4iuÌR-d. Init a-si can lx‘ a)mix)uniic4l
i]iiai Icily and Idl in your account or
paid l-y I hec k al liu'i-nd of t-acli qiiam-r.
InkTfst I an i vi n Ik' paid monlhly and
iranslc-i R-d to your re^uiar СХ:И t iuxk-
in^; or savin^^s aaount. Kale^;(X)d Jimi
1 1 7 S ^
l() ihrou^îh Juni' 29 , 1981.
I'ldt lai if^iilaiiuiis ii'(|uirc- (hal wc‘(.har)<e an inlm-sl jx'nally for early wiifidrawai
from a Money Market Ortificate and a 3() Month Q'rtificale. At c'oiiMls now insured
iipl.>Sl()().0()()ln I'DKJ.
C C R V tè ll help you fin d away.1 J Meinlxri nK; J
Babcock - The serene, yet
rugged beauty of Babcock Is
marked by a fast flowing
mountain trout stream,
replete with water falls in a
canyon strewn with massive
boulders. Located on this
stream is a new and in
teresting attraction, Glade
Creek Grist Mill. This
operating mill, constructed of
parts from various old mills
throughout the state, offers
freshly ground commeal and
buckwheat flour for park
guests.
A 19-acre lake for boating
and fishing and a swimming
pool round out the activities at
Babcock. Its mountainous
vistas and its accessibility to
the more urban ar<«s of the
state make it an ideal spot for
a relaxing vacation.
Recipes from the area:
BANANA BREAD
3 ripe bananas
Vi cup sugar
2 eggs
2 cups flour
1 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon soda
H cup broken nut meats
2 tablespoons cold water
Crush bananas with silver
fork. Add beaten eggs. Sift
flour, salt, and soda together.
Add sugar, then other
ingredients. Turn into
greased loaf pan and bake 1
hour in a slow sven 32S
degreef P.
GARLIC POTATOES
6 servings of cooked white
potatoes
V4 cup butter
1 clove finely minced garlic
2 teaspoons paprika
Salt and pepper
V4 cup olive oil
SmaU amount of cream
Simmer garUc and
seasoning for a few minutes in
the butter. Add olive oil. Beat
this and cream into mashed
potatoes.
SW EET POTATOES WITH
APPLES
6 large apples (tart)
5 medium sweet potatoes
'k cup butter
1 cup sugar
1 cup hot water
Boil potatoes, and cut In
thick slices. Core apples and
slice thiclclv. Place a Invpr nf potatoes in (»king dish, dot
with butter, sprinkle with
sugar. Then add a layer of
apples. Continue pJtemating
potatoes, apples, butter and
sugar tUl all are used. Pour
cup of hot water over all, and
bake in 375 degree oven half
an hour or until apples are
done.
e a s y CHOCOLATE CAKE
2 cups brown sugar
cup crisco
2 eggs
H cup milk
Vi cup water
1 teaspoon vaniUa
2 cups flour
2 teaspoons soda
Vi cup cocoa
Cream together brown
sugar and crisco. Add eggs,
mUk, water and vanUIa. Then
add flour, baking soda, and
cocoa and bake at 3S0 degrees
for 35 minutes.
STRAW BERRY CAKE 1 package white cake mix
1 three-oz. pkg. strawberry
gelatin
2 tablespoons flour
4 eggs
Vi cup water ^4 cup cooking oU
Vi box (lu oz.) frozen
strawberries
Frosting;
Vi cup butter
Vi box (10 oz.) frozen
strawberries
1 box powdered sugar
2 teaspoons vaniUa
Mix aU ingredients except
• • • •
strawDerries with mixer for 2
minutes. Add strawberries
and mix for one minute more.
Bake in two 8 or »-inch layer
cake pans, which have been
greased and floured, at 3S0
f^grees for 35 to 40 minutes.
Cool 10 minutes and frost.
Frosting: Mix all ingredients
together until sniocth. Frost
cake.
Happy cookin'.
Suzanne
Woodleaf News
NATIONAL
Ф а й ® !
After being so dry for quite
sometime, the little com
munity has had its share of
rain during the past few
weeks which has refreshed
the farms. Crops, especially
com is looking good and
soybeans are now coming up;
field tomatoes are doing weU
and with plenty of sunshine
will begin to ripen.
Mrs. EzeUe Moore and Mrs.
Ethel Benson have returned
to their home after spending a
week at Manteo and other
places on the Outer Banks.
Mrs. Lula Goodman is a
patient and improving in
Rowan Memorial Hospital
where she has been for atiout
two weeki).
Mrs. Glenn Koontz is
spending some time with her
son and family, Joe Koontz, in
Kingsport, Tenn.
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Wetmore
and sons, Eddy, Jeffrey and
Wesley, spent the past
weekend In Asheville with her
mother.
Jeff Gibbons is now at home
and improving after having
surgery in Rowan Memorial
Hospital.
The average robin require« aliout seventy wormi a day.
SERWNG DAVIE • IREDELL - WILKES - YADKIN ft ALEXANDER COUNTIES
TEftMITE & PEST CONTROL SERVICE
rr TAKES MOD^EQU№^ ^ “ - • RESIDENTIAt
CHEMICAL KNOWLEDGE
RELUBLE SERVICE PEOPLE
TOPERFORM
PROPER PEST CONTROL ^
. ,I«00ALLY OWNED * OPERATED• Anwul Bwsewal Sarrfce • Written CMidiliaMal Gaataatee• iBSveettsB Vpe* Be«aest uaaianiee
• Pewsnal Attsntlen On Kmy Jeb
• COMMERCIAL
• INDUSTRIAL
' INSTITUTIONAL
AraUabia
• A d e q a a ^ bsars« Wor Гвиг PraleetienMOCKSVIllI
634-5600
Mmie M. niby PM Cmrtrol Senrioe
Statesville
876-4774
Elkin, NX.
835-1861
YAOKINVILLS RD.
ffTAlBLICBWMtOT PWr I
Bill Kouse • Senrice Technician M 0 C K 8 V I t X K N .C
Do you receive mommy
disabiUty checks from social
security? If so, you can e]q;>ect
to have your claim reviewed
at least once every 3 years
unless you have a severe
condition considered per
manent, according to Robert
C. Thomas, social security
district manager in SaUsbury.
Until recently, disabiUty
claims were reexamined only
in a limited number of cir
cumstances, Thomas said.
For example, a review
usually was made if a
beneficiary reported a return
to work or If he or she had a
condition considered very
likely to improve. To a large
extent, social security relied
on voluntary reports fnmi
beneficiaries about medical
improvement or work ac
tivity. While a majority did
report, some did not. Recent
studies have shown that there
are some people on the
disabUity roUs who ne longer
meet aU reauirements for
benefits, Thomas said.
Hie Social Security Ad
ministration has started a
large-scale effort to make
sure that only eligible in
dividuals continue to receive
disabUity checks. This major
initiative is consistent with
the goal to improve Uie ad
ministration of the disabUity
insurance program, he added.
Hie increased reviews also
give SSA a headstart in
complying with a provision of
Public Law 96-265 Uiat goes
into effect in January 1962.
This provision requires that
aU social security disabUity
cases be examined at least
once every 3 years except
when the disabiUty is per
manent, Thomas said.
In part, the new law
recognizes that many ad
vances in medical science and
rehabilitation techniques
have been made over the
nearly quarter of a century
that social security has paid
disability checks. Many
people who had little hope for
recovery from a serious
accident or iUness in 1957,
when disability payments
were first made, would today
have a better chance of
returning to gainful work.
Legislation over the past
decade (such as the
RehabiliUUon Act of 1973)
has also tielped by reducing
physical and attitudinal
barriers and enabling more
disabled people to gain fuller
paiticipatlon in all aspects of
community life. This year
during International Year of
Disabled Persons, a sub
stantial public and private
effort is underway to further
this progress, he added.
In addiUon, 1980 changes in
the social security law make
it easier for disabled
beneficiaries to test their
abiUty lo work by reducing
the risk of losing benefits. For
example, Thomas said, even
Uiough monthly benefits may
stup following a trial work
period, those payments can be
started again quickly it a
person is StiU disabled and is
forced by his or her condition
to stop working again within a
year. Also Medicare
protection can continue for up
to 3 years after a disabled
person stops getting benefiU
due tu work. More In-
formatMn about these and
other improvements are
available at any social
security office, he said.
О п М к «
BOXWOOD REAL ESTATE
323 Salisbuni Street
М о с М е , N .a 27028 834-5997
Attractive 1,700 sq.ft. contemporsry office In town FosturH 2 private offioss, cslet office,
recaption area, 2 baths, kitchen, plus a dlstlnc- tton all its' own! Completely wall papered and carpeted, custom drapes, heat pump, > professionally landscaped, paved parking, high traffic area. $79,500.
Price Location Bedroom Bath information
29^00.....601 South...................2......1......Fireplace, cerport
76,400.....Farmland Road.............?... . 2......Log home ^uded on 4.48 acres
33.500.... .Fieidcrett No. 2... Г........3......1.......Under Construction33.50 0 Fieldcreit No. 3 ............3......1......EES, Quality Construction
76,000....Carowoods bevelopment... .4... . 2......3.(K)Qf sq.ft.. 2 fireplaces
29.900 .. ^. Ctonjel Road ...............3.... 2 .... 1400tq.ft. Bride Home
37.50 0 Sheffield Parle...............3......VA__Detached garageMoriuhop
48.90 0 F^hall Drive...............3......2----.^lit-levelon wooded 1.8 acre«
.. • Edgewood Circle ^......3----2%... Д »tory with apx. 2400 sg. ft.
63£0b----.Gamer Street................%.....VA----FuU baiement, concrete drive
j№5,900----Rainbow Road.------ ----3------3----EXCEPTIOISf AL home on 3.77 acres
87.000.... .601 North................. • 4 .^ ^^... ..3^00^,ft. spiit-level
$35,000... West Jefferson .. ..... 2....... .basement, wrap-around porch
32.000-----. Reilroad Street.........2......Ш ----Remodeled frame house
42.500.... .Liberty Church Rd..........3......1.....1800 sq^ft. on 1.4 acres
46.900.... Hi«*ory Tree...............3......2.....New home, heat pump, dishwasher
72.50 0 Southwood Acres ........ 3 - 4 .. .^
79.50 0 .Greenwood Leices.. !.......3..... 2!4..
86,000.....Davie Academy Road...... T.... .1%..
^,500.. ;.. Hwy. 64W. . :. .-гггг...... з....i%..
Split-level, 26 Kitchen cebinets
. .Like new farm house design
■ • Swimming Pool, 2.38 acres
■gleaming 1100 sq.ft. home28,900----Mining Road.................3.....VA___freshly painted inside
$ 2 4 ^ '
$28,900.
Gledstone Roed
Center Street................2......1.
$54,000----Howardtown Road.........3.......2.
SALE PENDING
Frame andjiding home with fireplaa
A 'doll' house with ideal privacy.
Brick home w/1,200 sq. ft. detached {
SOLD
Price Locetion Bedroom -Beth Infewmetion
34,000___RMerdala No. 5..............3.... 1......1070 sq. f^FmHa approved
^,500 __Fieldcrest No. 4.............1* • • • -J----1]^ *Я- ft. Contemporary
33,500.....FieMcrest No. 1..............3......1.....FmHA approved energy efficient
LAND L O T S O T H E R
LocatkmPrice
1 2 , ^ . Л . .
9,500............
5.00 0
1.500 per acre...
4.50 0
2.3. Million.....
4.000 each..........Florida...
$79,500............Mocksville
Information
Hick^ Hill No. 2 ..............lake iot
Jericho Road.....................2 lots
Southwood Acres.......... ‘«’’’•f I?!
601 South.......................SO acres, some ownw financing
Greenbrier Estates................tot No. 33
601 South.......................911 acres, prime industrial
..................4 building lots. Lake Placid
............ 1700 sq.ft. office building....
GET ON THE TOP SEllER LIST, CENTURY 21
DAN CORRELL - 998-2268
TERESA CORRELL - 998-2268
LOUISE DAIGLE - 634-2846
CHARLES EVANS 284 2537
SHELIA OLIVER - 492-5512
KATHI WALL - 492 7631
¡MVir, COUNTY UNTI'Rl’RlSi; RIírORl), THURSDAY. .lUNIÍ 18. 1981
H O M E B U Y E R
»■•гtr;*
il
CLINIC
By William J. McAulifli..
Eatcutivt Vin Prtiidant
Amtrican Land Titit Aiiociition
HIDDEN CLAIM
Most hazards of land title
affectini! home ownership
will be disclosed through
searching public records be
fore completion of a real
estate transaction. But it
should be remembered that
some title problems cannot
be uncovered in time for
curative action in advanco
of purchase, regardless of
the records or the expertise
of those involved in the title
evidencing process.
In a south-
^ eastern state,
^ hom e buyers
were surprised
V f l when a neigh-
bor filed a
claim in court
McAuliffe contending he
held an easement permitting
use of their property as a
roadway for reaching his
real estate. Although there
was no evidence of an ease
ment in the public records,
the neighbor claimed this
right by prescription—mean
ing continuous prior use of
the property for a road over
an extended period of time.
After a court battle, the
buyers obtained an injunc
tion preventing the neighbor
and others from using their
land as a road. In addition,
they incurred substantial at
torney fees and costs.
Since the buyers were pro
tected by owner’s title in
surance, ' the title. company
paid for these expenses to
avert financial loss for its
insured.
Besides payment for de
fending against an attack on
title as insured, owner’s title
insurance will either clear
up title problems or pay
viilid claims.Free information on pro
tecting home ownership
may be obtained by writing
American Land Title Associ
ation, Box 666, Washington,
D.C. 20044.
'Truth it within ourseWei."Robert Browning
Some IVays To Save Water By Tlie Gallon
How much v,rater dons
your washing machinc use
. . . your dishwasher . .. your
morning shower?
Hard as il is to believe,
a washing machine can use
up to 60 gallons, the dish
washer H , and n nhnwer 1 2
Now that we realize the
-alue of water, everyone
need? to know how much of
this precious liquid their var
ious appliances use. Here Is
some helpful information
from a new Water Saver’s
Guide by Wet Ones* moist
towelettes:
i r
Watch out for Johnsongniss this ■eason. Sclentisti at U8DA*i Southern
Weed Science Laboratory, StonevUle, MS predict more johnson^n than ever In soybean fields. The grassy pest spreads by seed and un
derground rhlsomes that can grow a foot per month In tilled soils.
Johnsongrass May
Double From 1980 Levels
Farmers and weed scien
tists alike have been battling
this perennial weed for years
with only moderate success.
But 1961 may be the worst
year on record, if most weed
seeds left in the soil this year
germinate. In Mississippi,
Louisiana and Arkansas,
fields with serious john
songrass populations may
have doubled, because of last
season’s summer-long
drought, warns C.D. M c
Whorter, Southern Weed
Science Laboratory (USDA),
Stoneville, Ms. He claims dry
weather hurt herbicide ac
tivity. McWhorter checks
over 100,000 acres in these
states annually for john
songrass. In 1980, 60-«3 per
cent of MidSouth soybean
bieids he monitored suffered
some losses.
Although in Mississi{q>i the
grassy weed is generally
accepted as a statewide pest,
he adds, it’s heaviest in the
northern counties and inside
river bottoms.
McWhorter wouldn’t get an
arRument from one
Mississippi farmer. Ham
Bishop, a Minter City soybean
FO R SA LE
. 52 Acres On
’Maikland Road
C A L L F O R D E T A I L S
L a r e w " W o o d ‘ Johnson, Inc.
Phone 634-6281
D A V IE
R E A L T Y C O
1481 N . M ain St.
• 4. WEST - Under coastractlM. S B-R hoase, ( B., HrepUce, Heat Paaap, C. air, carport * paveddrive. Й4,ма____________________
4WYN fr. - UR brick Iiome-Priced t^seU
HOLLOW HILL COURT - « BR. holiie. 1% batlw. EaceUeat c09ditte._IM.SM.ал м ^объ - S BR, 1Ц в - Elect, heat. Ilreplaee. Med t* sril at Ш.988.Highway 891 aear Ceoieemee 19.94 acres aaC7 гмш hease - • acres permaacat grass - 19 acres goad tiasber. Calljer apfolatmeat
CAROWOOD - BeaalifHl 3 BR. 2Ц balhs IrMevel home heal pamp* garage eaqalet St. Reaseaably prfeMl. MILUNO ROAO-BeantUal t story brick heme. 4 Br. I balhs, г deas, partUI basemcat with garage. Ш9 sq. ft. Ilvlag space. 4 acres ef lai^.
1919 HOWARD ST. 3 BR brick home. Central heat * air.
Doable garage. Priced to sdì.
COOLEEMEE - Good starter heme. X B-R, a B. Reaseaable price.
8ALI8BÙRY ST. Oae ef Ihe lovllest homes la MocksviUe oa 3.1 acres. A hUterlc elder home with i B-R, 3 B. aad Is sanroaaded by beaatlfal trees aad shrubs. Also, a 3 car garage, a room where meat was once smoke cared aad the old kttcbea separate from the mala house. Hils a must if yea are laterestod la a well-preserved elder коле. CaU tor aa appolatmeat.SOUTHWOOD ACRES - BeaatUai wooded baUdhig
totj. Reaseaable price.
NEAR 8HEFFIELD-3 B.R. brick home. I bath,
carport on 1.94 acres. 134,999.99.
No. 891 SOUTH - 3»i acres seaed for MobUe Home I22M per acre.
DEPOT ST. • 1 Acre basfaiese let. 14.199.
OFF DANIELS RD. 4 acres aad a mobile home with
well * seatle taak. 111,999.f ACRE TRACiToa paved rd. part wooded. Zeapd tar
mobUe hemee.
991 Jr 8kl-S7 acres-TMldeatlal or commerclal-|iart
wooded-atream. ^ .
FARMÌNGTON AREA oo Ml-M acres of beautiful laad- 139,999.
ÌH>XWUOU ACKEti • г wooded Utt 125x299 at tl.9S9 ea
HOWARD lerfREET-Good buUdbig lot. 199x149, quiet
IqcsIIoOjGARDEN VALLEV-BeaytUul bldg. lot. «ty water aad fewer. Entrance from Sanford Ave. aad Garden VaUey. FARMINGTON AREA-S acre tracts more. Local no. lo
WiaiUm-Salam. _ —____-_________SMALL CORNER LOT at North Mala aad Crowe Su.
NEAR MOCKSVILLE - i acret wooded - paved
road; couoly water. /
6 3 Ф 6 1 1 1 o r 6 3 4 - 6 1 1 2
Home Phoaee
Eageae Веввеи-999-4727 Sam Howell-«34-M24 HoUaad Cbaf(lii-«34-SIU Graham MadlioB-934-ilI9 Henry 8bore 934-Ш9
grower usuaUy finds thick
iohnsongrass stands on half
his 600 soybean acres each
season, despite repeated
dinitroaniline (Treflan,
F*rowl) treatments. For the
past two years (one season
under an experimental use
permit), Bishop has been
spraying 3M’s Vistar Her
bicide to catch johnsongrass
escapes. Under good moisture
conditions, he rates Vistar
Herbicide control at 8040
percent.
In Missouri, the seven-
county Bootheel section has
the state’s highest levels of
johnsongrass, with some
infested counties along the
Missouri river. These low-
lying, poorly drained river
bottoms are ideal for weed
proliferation. In addition,
flooding every 7 or 8 years re
infects land where john
songrass might have been
controlled. According to Dr.
Harold Kerry, Extension
weed control specialist,
University of Missouri,
Colombia some 50,000 acres
suffer serious yield reduc
tions, primarily in
southeastern counties; other
johnsongrass problems in the
state are spotty. That
represents a fair portion of
state soybean and only one-
fourth of the farmers there
are doing something about it,
he obaerves.
Persistent johnsongrass is a
headache in Tennessee, but
pretty much limited to the
West and Middle two-thirds of
the state, fact, Johnsongrass levela in com almoat
put state farmers out ot
business before Eradicane
came along, recalls Wayne
Flinchiun, Extension soybean
specialist at U T’s Jackson
experiment station.
“Right now moat growers
are using double rates of
dinitroanilines and coming
back with postemergence
herbicides,” adds Flinchum.
There’s one thing they aren’t
doing, however, he says.
"They aren’t using a total
m anagement concept,”
Flinchum points out;” by that
I mean usisig the correct
tillage method, like cutting
up johnsonÿ-ass rhizonea.”
Flinchum estimates that
johnsongrass, left untreated,
n m ° n c M O M ^
T H E N ; 1931. The Great
Depression held most of the
nation in the grip of deapair,
but on an unused baseball
diamond next to the Victor
Adding Machine Company,
Dick Valentin spread a little
cheer when he began to
coach a boys’ baseball team.
Victor's president, Robert
Buehler, determined to en
courage the youths’ camara
derie and high spirits, formed
the Paul Revere League.
can cause 40 to SO percent
soybean losses.
Kentucky’s johnsongrass
prospers in its wëstern
counties, but has been
pushing into the state’s
central river bottoms. Out of a
total soybean crop of half
million acres, nearly forty
percent of affected, making it
the state’s number one weed
•'nemy.
"W e’ve done tests with
postemergence herbicides on
johnsongrass, says Bill Witt,
University of Kentucky weed
control specialist,” and found
that with no control yields
dropped from 35 to 20 bushels,
a 43 percent reduction. On
some fields johnsongrass
simply takes over. It can
become a total loss situation.”
He says the most control
methods call for a 2x Treflan
application on a three-year
basis and spot salvage
treatments with Roundup.
“Also, we now have an
earlier post-spray with Vistar
Herbicide,” Witt adds. The
3M herbicide is an over-the-
top treatment before John
songrass is headed out.
In the Southeast, john
songrass lossea are scattered.
For North and South Carolina,
the perennial
located
coastal plains
In South Carolina, it’s
believed to hurt soybean
production on 75,000
with reductions
25 to SO percent
figure than North
Odier Atlantic coast states,
lUw Virginia and literyland,
with less than a half-million
soybean acres apiece, report
up to 15 percent of their total
crop injured.
Increasingly, as pre-plant
appUcdUons fail for a variety
of reasons (weather, poor
incwporation), more farmers
ere relying on postemergence
herbicides for grass
breakthroughs, say weed
scientists.
• The bathroom gobbles
up some 75% of water in
the household. To conserve,
install a flow restrictor (costs
next to nothing) in the
shower head, and place a
brick in the toilet tank lo
displace some water.
• A faucct half open de
livers more than a gallon a
minute. Shaving with run
ning water can account for
15 gallons: brushing teeth,
more than seven. To cul
down, fill the basin or a cup
with water, and never leave
(ho water running.
• Keep a container of
moist towelettes near every
sink, and wash your hands
with them instead of water.
Y o u’ll save more than a gal
lon each time.
• To use the least water
in your washing machine,
run it only when full; the
more clothes, the less water.
If your machine has a medi
um or low water cycle, use
it when possible.
The Water Saver’s Guide,
full of helpful hints about
how to conserve, has charm
ing illustrations by famed
cartoonist Roy Doty. For a
free copy just send a post
card with your name and
address to Wet Ones, Box
454. New York, N.Y. 10163.
ишшоииш
nudai weed pest is
primarily in the
ilains and Piedmont.
Preiident Rsagan'i New Program To Produce More U.S. Oil
Did you know that it
costs e v e ry man, woman
and child in ^he United
States an average of $405 a
year for foreign oil imports?
That is each citizen’s share
of a total $90 billion our na
tion now pays for enough
foreign oil to ensure Ameri
ca’s economic survival.
The U.S. imports approxi
mately 40 percent of all the
oil it uses— and its energy
needs are ^ w in g .
Producing more energy
in our own country will re
duce the power of foreign
suppliers to impose higher
energy prices.
Therefore, every Ameri
can has a share in President
Reagan’s new five-year pro
gram to step up the search
for domestic oil and gas in
America’s offshore waters.
Some energy analysts be
lieve that more oil and nat
ural gas could be found in
Am erica in future years "VroiVumlrade a»ocUt\on
ute to the nation’s energy
supplies.
“ T h e Governm ent ex-
peciled,” Watt said, “ envi
ronmental protection to be
achieved through sound
planning and operating prac
tices— not through closing
of geographic areas to leasing
(of federal lands by oil com
panies) and development (of
petroleum resources).”
Watt says the confidence
of Congress in establishing
the Act was not misplaced,
since “ offshore oil and gas
activities have had an excel
lent environmental record.”
The Western OU and Gas
Association (W O O A ), the
than in ail the past — much
of it in offshore areas.
I ranging from
nt - a h i | ^
orth Candína.
N O W : 1981. That club
has evolved into the Neigh
borhood Boys Club. Slill
next door to Victor Business
Products, the club has been
a hub of activity and fun for
some 10,000 boys, and is
this year celebrating its 50th
anniversary. It is still sup-
p o rte^w ith the help of
Victo^Ptoo. That company
pays the club’s staff salaries,
it donates its parking loi for
the club’s annual fund-rais
ing carnival, it advertises in
(he annual community direc
tory of club members and
its employees contribuU
time and energy to the club.
for the seven western states
of Alaska, Arizona, Califor-
' Energy Secretary James „¡g, Hawaii, Nevada, Oregon
Edwards says: “ The Presi- and Washington, says that
dent believes that we can with some adjustments in
restore our capabilities to the rate of environmental
produce enough energy do- action and with concerted
mestically, so that we are effort« to remove delays im-
not vulnerable to unreason- posed by the government,
able price increases or polit- considerably more domestic
leal blackmali by major oii energy could be produced, producing countries or their Am erica will gain a
cartels.” stronger dollar, improved
Interior Secretary James balance o f p ay m en ts,
Watt says: “ The OCS (Outer strength to inhibit political
Continental Shelf) Lands blackmail from abrdad and
Act pUces on the Federal niore security against dis-
Govemment an affirmative ruption of our vital oil
responsibility to obtain for »upplies.
the public the benefiU of oil As individuals, Americans
and ga* resources located will gain more goods and
offshore. The law intend* services, more secure jobs,
that all areas with oU and {less inflation and higher
gas potential will contrib- wages and salaries.
Howard Realty &
Insurance A g e n c y, In c .ШSalis|tary Street
new listings
HICKORY HILL - 3-bedroom contemporary now under cdnabnicUon. Great
room, separate dining, 2 taths, patio, storage, fireplace. |S8,IN.M_
NAYLOR STREET - 2 bedrooin home to remodel. tlO.TM.M.
MORSE STREET- 3 Bedroom bi^krancher. Carport. AU electric. Lot 100 j t 200« GMd coodltiMi. S34.6M.60.• 49.8 ACRES In excellent location north of MocksvUle on Main Church Road. Over 1 12M ft. of road frontage. Can be sabdivlded Into It acre tracte. I1M.M0 total -
|2i00 per acre if subdlvidod.
BUSINESS OPPORTUNiTY-Inveit In your own business with very Uttle cash.
Ladies* garment! on consignment. Central location and contacts already established. Very low overhead with profit potential unlimited. CONDOMINIUMS-Now reaiy for occupancy at beautifnl Twin Brook Acres. Two-
story exceUent constractloii. First floor carpeted Uving room. KItehen with dishwater. range, dining area. Laundry and storage area. Bath. 2 Bedrooms plus
bath upstairs. Patio. Economical heat pump. Tliermivane windows. Perfect property ownerahlp without the upkeep involved in single residence. The coming
thing for the future, t39.500.00.
RIDGEMONT - 4 Bedroom brick rancher. AU electric. Carport. Good Hnancing. 127,500.00.
4250.. Street........ 2^room ...................... 23,000.00 '
4470... Ridgemont-----UNDER CONTRACT.^ .......... 28,000.00
^230... Jericho Road........Beautiful split level..............$92,000.00
4420... Park Avenue.........3 BedtfOCD basement............48,500.00
4410....Garden VaUey........Contemporary...................... 96,000.00
4400.._.Raymond Street___2-3 bedroom.......................38,500.00 ,
4060....North Main Street... Older 2 Story......................58,500.00
4390... Wilkesboro Street... 2 Stoi^ brick.......................55,000.00
4340....Garden Valley.........under conatrHction ............. 125,000.00 '
4170.. . Fairway Street........3 bedrooms..........................52,900.00
3780... Avon Street....... 3 bedrooms....................... 43,500.00
4360. .. Davie Academy........8 Acres and farmhouse...
4030... BinjAan' Street........2 bedroortu...............
3860. . ■ Co^eemeee............4 bedroom Colonial......
4280... Hickory HiU.......... New Contemporary.......
3540....Garden VaUey........New Contemporary
4380.. .Sanford Avenue----
.Westwood...........
. .Sanford Koad......
,. Southwood Acres. .
LO'TS: Garden Valley.
Woodland.....
4330..
2680.
4000.
. 90,000.00
16,500.00
■ 73,.‘>00.00
$85,500.00
• 78,000.00
32.000.00
■ 36,000.00
45.000.00
2 Acres & mobile home...
. 3 Bedroom...................
. 3 Bedrooms, Acres........
5-6Bedroom Contemporary 72,000.00
. 1 6 , 8 0 0 ^ 111,000
.................14,500
Leonardo De Vinci was left-
handad and he often wrote
backwardi. To read soma of
hit note» you need a miiror.
Woodland, 2.14 acres....................11,000
OFFICK - 634 3538
HOME PHONES:
634 3754,634 3229,634 2534,998 3990, 284 2366,
4925198,
H O M EFIN D ER
M U LT IP LE LIS T IN G S ER V IC E
BRANTLEY REALTY &
INSURANCE COoa INC.
D ö v le C o u iS y '» o n ly ^
W in sto n -S a le m 's M u ltip le
Listin g Se rvice R e a lto r
HOMESfinancing avaUable on these six lovely
NEW, 3 Bedroom homes...Located on a dead end
street. Some have basemenU, and fireplaces. Price ranges from 134,000 to 138.200. M. Edwards
FARMINGirON- Cedar Forest Rd. Nice 3 BR, 2 hill roths, split foyer. Large family room w-fpl. Formal LR. Laree lot on dead end street. M. Edwards
Has 10 ^4 assumable loan.
EDGEWOOD CIRCLE- Nice 3BR, 2 bath. Brick
home, New chain link fence around lot. Huge famUv
rMm added w-fpl, & wood stove. Formal DR & Ul.M. Edwards ___GWYN ST. - Save Gas! WaUjlng distance to shop
ping or hospital. VervÄvlC^'^* home with carport. Also paved drive, i^tv'iome for retired or ywng
couple. M. Edwards. Ow ner financing 12 V. mt.
SANFORD ROAD - Beauttful 3 BR, 2 bath home,
den with fireplace. Full basement, plus attached
garage. 2 Large porches. Nice large lot, Must see to appreciate. M. Edwards Near 1-40 exit.
DAVIE ACADEMY RD. - Beautiful Colonial Brick
Rancher, formal Uving room & dlntaig room. Den
with fireplace and attached garage. Garden space.
Assumable 90 percent loan. 158,000 M. Edwards
736 CHERRY St. - Nice 2 BR remodeled home.
Conv. to shopping & library. Good starter home.
Only 120,500. M. Edwards
12 Acres with 400 ft. chicken house. In opera»n
with mobUe home, weU ft septic tank. Income with
ajppro^mately 125,000 per year. M. Edwards
MILLING RD. - Beautifnl 3 BR, 1% bath brick
home. Den w-fpl., formal LR. Large <;orner lot. 7^
percrat assumable loan. M. Edwards _
WILKESBORO ST. - Beautifnl 4 BR home w-2
baths. Formal DR ft large glassed-in porch. At
tached carport. Chain Unk fence. Large lot also
faces Meroney Street. M. Edward
SANFORD AVE. - 3BR, 1 bath, 2<ar carport, den
w-Franklin stove, FP, DR ft LR. Good loan takeover at 15,000 down assumable at |3I,000. M.
FOR RENT WITH OP-HON TO BUY • S bedrooai.
brick home w-flreplace, formal llvlag room, 1% bath. 1399.99 mo. M. Edwards
Davie Academy Rd. |58t|go^
BADEN, N.C. - Story Ü % - 3BR Coodominum
across from country club, large lot only few blocks
from Baden Lake. 129.900. M. Edwards
HOMES WIIll ACREAGE
COUNTY LINE ROAD • a»R, 1% bath brick home on 20-acres of land. M9,000.29 more acres avitUable.
M. Edwards
OPERATING DAIRY FARM - Completely automatic milken ft feedera. 2 new Harvesten
SUos, 2 houses, several baras. land fenced. Excellent chance to get In the dah^ business.
RURaL HALL - 72 acriM'w-stnam and good timber. Nice farm house. Vory private retraat. 52 acres
In Forsyth Co. ft 20 aores in Stokes Co.
FARMINGTON - 5 aci-M fenced, w-large bara. riding ring ft beautiftal Spanish Crick Rancher. 3 BR, 2 batts. Den w-fpl. Also large A-frame with
upstairs Could be apartment for rental or fai'4aw. M.
EdwardsBETHEL RD. 106 acres w-2 large lakes and 4 BR
home, «baths 2 dens w-lpl. Formal Uving ft dinbig room. Large Bara. 2 chicken houses. MosUy fenced.
SHEFFIELD - 21.77 acres w-4 BR. 3% baths. Colonial Rancher, partial basement Beautiful den
w-Cathedral ceUbig and fpl. Large bara, 2 lakes. M.Edwards . . __BLAISE CHURCH RD. - 36.6 acres bordering 1-40,
200 ft. Road frontage. Could be loned for com
mercial. CaU Scott AngeU. .......
MOCKSVILLE-23.8 Acres w-«traam ft beautifnl 1 yr. (rid story cedar farm house w-fuU basement.
SkyUght bl Master bedroom ft bath • land aU fenced
w-buildtaig 40x290 - can be used for many thbigs - Is bringbig bl nice faicome. Metal barn also tawl. Must
see to apprecbite. CaU M. Edwards. _____FARMINGTON - Approx. 10% acres. Nice SMtk«.
part wooded, w-stream. CaU today to see this one.
M. Edwards _DAV№ ACADEMY RD. - 3 BR, 2 bath Brick house
on 2 acres. 1700 Sq. Ft. Uvbig area. Beautiful lawn ft
hardwood frees. Jllso Fla. room.
YADKIN COUNTY-Bethel Rd. - 8 Acres ft 2 yr. old, \y» story farm house with cedar siding, Adi
basement • custom buUt - also has lake. For details
caU M. Edwards.
ACREAGE
lyASHINGTON COUNTY-I707 Acres. Approx. 4 mlUlon feet of Uackgum. Has smaU Junij^ stand
and smaU pine stand. Paved St. Rd. running thra property. S. Angell. $310.900.
DAVIDSON AVE. - 6V4 Acres, Heavily wo^od w- im. City wator ft sewer t22.999.99 M. Edwards.
;KEN farm road - 2 tracU; 134 acres ft 43streaiCHICKEN
acres. Can be subdivided. Mostly wooded, lots of road frontage. |1.000.00 per acre. M. Edwards
COUNTY LINE ROAD • 141 Acres aU fenced w-
woven wire. Plenty of paved road frontage. 9875.99
per acre. M. Edwards
JENNINGS ROAD - 86 acre tract w-large bara and lota of paved road frontage. $1,699.99 per acre. M.
EdwardsLAKE NORMAN - Deeded water front lot on cove.
$19,500. M. Edwards.
CUMBERLAND COUNTY - 260 Acres. 2-acres
cleared, batance bi timber. Apprax. 9N,999 board
ft. of timber. $635. per acre. 8. AngeU
TY -SAMPSON COUNI acre.Roseboro - 172 acres bog
operation. Capable of producbig 3599 top hogs per
CaU for detaUs. S. AngeU.year.
BLADEN COUNTY 213 Acre bog operai
acres open land. Balance In timber. CaU for detaUs
S. Angell
CALDWELL COUNTY -1325 Acres. 6,398,599 Boa
ft. of timber. $790.00 per acre. S. AngeU
CHERRY HILL ROAD-llH acres. Part wooded,
part cleared. $1.500 per acre. CaU Martha Edwards.
OAVIE ACADEMY RD. - 21 acres with spring, part wooded, part cleared. Make nice Subdivision or smaU farm. M. Edwards
i
«WFOROTSKOCttAllOCIIOIiiS
We buy Foi^i'iESNMaEdMrii.........BMIW (Ш Оит..
NWsmOmsr.......717-5953 Звон Aipl...
/riMfMC«
Om dEdM M h....:eU M
.А Ш б Г
IM37É
503 Avon Street
Mocksville, N.C.bqual Huu&ing
Oppurt unity
PHONE: 634 2105
725-9291
I-tu DAVII- COUNTY KNTHRPRISK RHCORD, THURSDAY, JUNl- 18, 1481
P u b lic N o tic e s
PUBLIC HEARING
Budget Hearing
Advertisement
In last week’s edition of tho
Mocksville Enterprise the
Budget Hearing for the Town
of Mocksville was printed
wrong. Instead of July 7,1681,
it should have been June 22,
1981.
The proposed budget (or the
Town of Mocksville has been
presented to the Town Board
of Commissioners and is
available for public inspection
in the Town Hall from 8 a.m. -
5 p.m. weekdays.
There will be a public
hearing on June22. iMl, at 7:00
p.m., at the Town Hall.
Citizens are invited to make
written or oral comments.
Budget Summary
Revenues
Property U x $550,000.
State Taxes 125,000.
Powell BiU 40,000.
Other General Fund
Revenues 130,450.
Water k Sewer Fund
Revenues 324,800.
Revenue Sharing 83,227.
Total Revenue $1.83.477.
Expenditures by Depart
ments
Governing Body 9,600.
Administration 126,117.
Planning & Zoning 8,549.
Building & Grounds 78,387.
Police 169,498.
Fire 40,100.
Street 84,539.
PoweU BIU 65,000.
Sanitation . 67,450.
Recreation 45,155.
Non-Departmental-
General 151,055.
Operations-Sewer 112,485.
Operations-Water 123,390.
Non-Departmental-
UUUty 12,810.
BondDebtneM 76,115.
Revenue Sharing 83,227.
'nrtal Expeodituret $l,253,4n.
6-11 Itnp
ADMINISTRATOR c.t4l.
NOTICE
NORTH CA R O U N A
DAVIE COUNTY
Having quaUfied aa Ad-
mlnlBtrator c.t.a. of the eaUte
of John WUUam RodweU,
deceased, late of Davie
County, North CaroUna, thla
to to notify aU penona havtaig
claims agalnat said estate to
present them' fo'.tbe un
dersigned on or *before Uie
IBth day ot December, 1961,
aaid date b«jng at least six
months from the date of first
publicatlan of this notice, or
this notice wUl be jdeaded In
bar of their recovery. AU
peraeaa indebted to said
estate please make im
mediate iMyMot to the un
dersigned. ^
This the 18th day of June,
1981, the same being the first
pubUcatlon date.
Otis M. Hendrix, Ad
ministrator c.t.a., of tbe
estate of John WiUiam
RodweU.
Brock k McCIamrock
Attorneys at Law
P.O. Box 347
MocksvUle, N.C. 27028
Telephone: 704434-3518
•-184tnp
CREDITOR’S NOTICE
Having qualified as
Executor of tbe Estate of
BERTHA JANE LATHAM, a-
k a BIRS. BERTHA JANE
M ARTIN LA TH A M and
BERTHA MARTIN
LATHAM, Deceased, late of
Davie County, N.C., Uiis is to
notify aU persons, firms and
corporations having claims
against said Estate, to exhlUt
them to the undersigned at the
Law Firm and addreu below
shown, on or before tbe aath
day of Novembo*, 1981, or Uiis
Notice WiU be pleaded In bar
of their recovery. AU persons
indebted to said Eatate wUl
please make immediate
payment.
This Uie 27Ui day of May,
1981.
James W.LaUiam
Route 2. Box 332 B
MocksvUle, N.C. 27028
George F. PhUUps, Attomey
Badgett, CaUway, PhUUps,
Davis, Stephens, Peed and
Brown
200 West First Str«et
Winston-Salem, N.C. 27101
S-2B4tn
NOTICE OF
DISSOLUTION
OF W AGNER
PLUMBING AND HEATING
COMPANY
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y
G IV EN that Articles of
Dissolution of Wagner
Plumbing and Heating
Company, a North CaroUna
corporation, was fOed in the
office of the Secretary of State
on Die 22nd day of May, 1981,
and that aU creditors of and
claimants against the cor
poration are required to
present their respective
claims and demands im
mediately, in writing, to the
corporation so that it may
proceed to coUect its assets,
convey and dispose of its
property, pay, satisfy and
discharge its liabUitles and
obligations and do aU Uiat is
actuaUy required to Uquldate
its business and affairs.
This Uie 28th day of May,
1981.
Wagner Plumbing and
Heating Co.
C-o J.C. Kimmer
Route4,Box80-A
MocksvUle, N.C. 27028
HaU and Vogler,
Attorneys at Law
Attorneys tar Wagner
Plumbing k Heating Co.
P.O. Box 294
MocksvUle, N.C. 27028
Telephone: (704)634-6235
5-28 4tnp
NORTH CAROLINA
DAVIE COtm TY
E X E C U T O R NOTICE
Having quiOified as Co-
Executors of Uie estate oi
Hubert R. Eaton, 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
27Ui day of November 1981, or
Uiis notice wUl be pleaded ih
bar of their recovery. AU
persons indebted to said
estate will please make im
mediate payment to the un-
This the 27th day of Blay,
1981 Betty E. Dwiggins and
John R. Mauney, Jr., Co-
Executors of the estate of
Hubert R. Eaton deceased.
HaU and Vogler
Attorneys at Law
PUBLIC NOTICE
The Cana Extension
Homemakers have met
several times and discussed
ways in which the Cana
Community BuUding could be
restored to its original state
after being gutted by fire in
May 1900.
ReaUdng the tremendous
cost to restore, the Cana
Homemakers desire the
support of anyone who is
interested in tbe restoration of
this historical site. If you
desire to support in this en
deavor, whether by a hdplng
hand, doaaUoaa, materials;
or be any means; please
contact one of the foUowlng:
M n . Edwin Boger
Mrs. Lloyd Brown
Mrs. Stanley Smith
The Cana Homemakos
6-18 Itnp
NORTH CAROLINA
DAVIB COXJNTV
EXECUTOR'S NOTICE
Having qualified as
Executor of Uie esUte of Avis
O. Hodgson, deceased, late of
Davie County, North
Carolina, this ia to notify aU
persons having claims
against said estate to present
Uiem to Uie undMgned on or
before the 4th day of
December, 1961, said date
being at least six months from
Uieute of first publication at
Uiis notice, or ttUs notice wUl
be pleaded in bar of their
recovery. All persons in
debted to said estate wUl
please make Immediate
payment to Uie undersigned.
This Ute 4Ui day of June,
1981, Uie same being Uie first
date.
Paul Layman, Executor
of Uie estate of Aviso.
Hodgson
Brock ft McClamrack
Attorneys at Law
P.O. Box 347
MocksvUle, N.C. 270»
Telephone: 704434-3618
M4tnp
W oolw orth G ifts For Dad Tab
Cffoctlve 6 /17/8 1 thru 6/21/81
Advertised Items Temporaily Are Ai Follows:
•A 12 ft. X 3 ft. ColeooPool*A Four Pteos Redwood Stained Patio Group* A Wall Mount Hose Reel* AM/FM Headphone Radio *A 6 Piece Floral Group *A Webbed Chair For $6.97* A No. 5400 Musical LCD Watch RAIN CHECKS WILL BE ISSUED
Prestone II Coolant RetMte Should Read:
Recieve By Mail $2.00 When You Buy 2 Jub*.
Your Final Cost it $6.58
A 6 ft^Redwood Stained Picnic Set Has Wrong
Description.
Should Be A 6ft. Picnic Table With 2 Benches.
NOTICE OF SALE
NORTH CAROLINA
DAVIE COUNTV
Under and by virtue of the
power of sale contained in a
certain deed of trust executed
by Donnie J. Ratledge and
wife, Linda Diane Bates
Ratledge, to Grady L. Mc
CIamrock, Jr. Substitute
Trustee, dated the 15 day of
November, 1978, and recorded
in Book 107, page 41, in the
Office of the Register of
Deeds for Davie County,
North Carolina, default
having been made in the
payment of the indebtedness
thereby secured and the said
deed of trust being by Uie
terms thereof subject to
foreclosure, and the holder of
the Indebtedness thereby
sccured having demanded a
foreclosure thereof for the
purpose of satisfying said
indebtedness, and the Clerk of
Uie Court granting permission
for the foreclosure, ttie un
dersigned trustee WiU offer
for sale at public auction to
the hipest bidder for cash at
the Courthouse door in
Mocksville, North Carolina,
at 12:00 noon, on Uie 3 day of
July, 1981, the land as im
proved, conveyed in said deed
of trust, Uie same lying and
being in ClarksvUle Town
ship, Davie County, North
CaroUna, and being more
particularly described as
foUows:
BEGINNING at a point, an
iron stake in the South edge of
ritfit of way of Ratiedge-
aeary Road, being the North
west comer of the within
tract, said beginning being
located South 80 degrees.
West 214 feet and SouUi 68
degs. West 3.50 chs. of a point,
an iron in SouUi edge of said
road, being Uie Northeast
comer of a certain tract
described in a deed dated May
2, 1964, from Lela RaUedge
Graves et al to Duke RaUedge
and wife, Eva H. RaUedge,
runs thence SouUi 11 degs.
West 9Vi chs., more or less, to
a point in South line of said
tract conveyed to Frances R.
Peoples’ thence witii said
Peoples tract North 11 degs.
East 9^4 chs., more or less, to
a point an iron in South edge
of said road South 80 degs.
West 90 feet to Uie BEGIN
NING, and being Lot No. 5 in
the division of the property of
Duke Ratledge et ux among
their chUifren.
BEGINNING at a point, an
iron stake in the SouUi edge of
ri^t of way of Ratiedge-
Cleary Road, being Uie North
west comer of the within
tract, said point of beginning
bel^ located Soutti 68 degs.
West 85 feet of a point, an iron
in the South edge of said road,
the Northeastmost comer of
that certain tract or parcel of
real property described in a
deed dated May 2, 1964, from
LeU RaUedge Graves st al to
Duke Ratledge and wife, Eva
H. Ratledge, runs thence
South 11 degs. West 11V4 chs.,
more or less, to a point in the
original South Une of said
tract. Brooks’ line; less,
Uience with said Brooks’ Une
2H chs., more or less, tu a
point, an iron. Brooks’ comer
in Wagner estate Une; thence
with Wagner estate line North
2 degs. East 2.85 chs. to a
point, an iron and South 88
dep. East 5.40 chs. to a point
in branch; Uience wiUi said
branch in a Northerly
direction 60 Unks to a point,
corner of Tract no. 2, ttience
wiUi said Tract no. 2 North 88
degs. West 6.61 dis. to a point,
an iron in Uie South edge of
said Ratledge-Qeary Road
the said Northeast comer of
said tract above designated;
Uience witti said road South 68
degs. West 85 feet to the
BEGINNING AN D BEING
Lot no. 1 in the division of the
property of Duke RaUedge et
ux among their children.
Included in this sale are any
improvementa on the subject
tract, including a 1969
Commodore mobile home.
Serial Number 602C032, North
Carolina title number
20969817.
SU BJECT, however, to
taxes for the year (s) 1971
through 1980, and any other
prior encumbrances of
recuni.
Five percent (5 percent) of
the amount of the highest bid
must be deposited with the
Trustee pending con
firmation of the sale.
Dated this 2 day of June,
1981.
Grady L. Mcaamrock, Jr.,
Substitute Trustee
Brock & McCIamrock
P.O. Box 347
MocksviUe, N.C. 27028
Telephone: 704-634-3518
6-18 2til
NORTH CAROLINA
DAVIE COUNTY
NOTICE
U N DER AN D BY VIRTUE
of a power of sale contained in
a certain deed of trust dated
May 30, 1972, executed by
John Lewis Mayfield and
wife, LucUle H. Mayfield to
Lester P. Martin, Jr. Trustee,
and recorded in Book 82, page
287, Davie County Re^try;
and under and by virtue of the
auUiority vested in the un
dersigned as Trustee and an
order executed by Delores C.
Jordan, Clerk of Superior
Court of Davie County, on the
5th day of May, 1961, the
default having been made in
the payment of the in
debtedness thereby secured,
ttie said deed of trust being by
the terms thereof subject to
foreclosure and the holder of
the indebtedness thereby
secured having demanded a
foreclosure thereof for the
purpose of satisfying said
indebtedness and the same
having been ordered and
approved by said order of
Clerk of Superior Court of
Davie County, the un
dersigned D. Duncan
MaysUIes, Substitute Trustee
wUl offer for sale at pubUc
auction to the highest Udder
for cash at Uie Courthouse
Door in Davie County, North
Carolina, at 12:00 o’clock
noon, on the 30th day of June,
1961, the land omveyed in said
deed of trust, Uie same lying
and being in Davie County,
North CaroUna, and being
described as foUows:
BEGINNING at an iron, M.
B. aement’s comer; runs
NorUi 86 West 2.24 chains to a
stake in Hudson Une; thence
Southeast 3.00 chains to the
road; thence East with the
road and Hudson Une 2.M
chains to an iron, M . B.
Clement’s corner; tbence
North 1 West 2.88 TO TH E
BEGINNING containing 6-10
acre, more at len.
FO R BACK TITLE see deed
firom Black Reid and wife,
Naomi Reid, to John F.
Jackson and wife, Agnes G.
Jackson, dated Sqitember 6,
1967, and recorded in Deed
Book 78, page 216, Register of
Deeds for Davie County of
fice.
A five (5) percent caah
deposit WÜ1 be required. This
property will be sold subject
to aU taxes, encumbrances
and liens of record.
This 2&id day of May, 1961.
D. Duncan BlaysUles
Substitute t ^ t e e
M 4tn
NOTICE
NORTH C A R O U N A
DAVIE COUNTY
T A K E N OTIC E that a
public hearing wiU be held on
the 7th day of July, 1961 at
7:te o’clock p.m. at the Town
HaU concerning aU matters
contained in a preUminary
resolution to instaU a Une on
Bulling Rd. West pursuant to
Article 10, Chapter 160A of Uie
General Statues, which
resolution was unanimously
adopted on Uie 22nd day of
Blay, 1961 by the Town Board
at Commissioners for the
Town of MocksviUe.
Catherine C. CoUins
Town Clerk
6-182tnp
EXKCU'lt>K S NOTICE
NORTH CAROLINA
DAVIE COUNTY
Having qualified as
Executor of the estate of
Nancy S. Tucker, deceased,
late of Davie County, North
Carolina, thl3 is to notify aU
persons having claims
against said estate to present
them to the undersigned on or
before the 28 day of
November, 1981, said date
being at least sbc months from
ttie date of first publication of
ttiis notice, or this notice wiU
be pleaded in bar of their
recovery. All persons in
debted to said estate wiU
please make immediate
payment to Uie undersigned.
This the 28 day of May, 1961,
ttie same being the first
publication.
Thurman Tucker, executor
of the estate of Nancy S.
Tucker.
Brock ft McCIamrock
Attorneys at Law
P.O. Box 347
ModtsvUle, N.C. 27028
Telephone: 704-634-3518
. 5-28 4tn NOTICET
NORTH CAROLINA
DAVIE COUNTY
T A K E N OTIC E that a
public hearing wiU be held on
the 7th day of July, 1961 at
8:15 o’clock p.m. at the Town
HaU concemlng aU matters
contained in a preliminary
resolution to instaU a Une on
Valley №nd and Ridgeview Dr.
pursuant to Article 10,
Chapter 160A of the General
Statutes, which resolution
was unanimously adopted on
the 22nd day of May, 1981 by
the Town Board of Com
missioners of the Town of
MocksvUle.
Catherine C. CoUins
Tovm Clerk
6-18 2tnp
NORTH CAROLINA
DAVIE COUNTY
EXEC U TRIX NOTICE
Having qualified as
Executor of the estate of
Edward Albert Deadmon,
deceased, late of Davie
County, this is to notify aU
persons having claims
against said estate to present
Uiem to the undersigned on ar
before the 11th day of
December, 1981, or this notice
WiU be pleaded in bar of Uieir
recovery. All peraons in
debted to said estate wUl
please make immediate
payment to the undenlgned.
This the Uth day of June,
1981.
. Eva T. Deadmon, Rt. 7, Box
159A, MocksvUle, N.C. 27028,
Executor of the estate of
Edward Albert Deadmon,
deceased.
6-U4tn
MieiHMSME
Saturday, June 20,1981 10:00 A.M.
PERSONAL PROPERTY OF VIRGINIA HARDIN
LOCATION: FROM MOCKSVILLE GO 601 N.TO CANA ROAD. TURN RIGHT ON CANA ROAD. SALE IS AT CANA CASH GROCERY.
4 Piece Dinning Room Suite-Drop Leaf Table- Mapl« Chest-Maple Drawer Woth Mirror-Re- frigarator- Reel-To-Reel Tape Reoorder-Corner Cabinet-Riding Mower(7 HP)-A/C Generator(12HP) 2 Air Conditionars-Bicyclei-Chain Saw-Chain Sharpner-275 Gal. Oil Tank & Stand4>dar Wardrobt Washer Л Dryer-Ranue 3 Gai Cook Stovei-Adding Machine -Cash Regitter-Drink Machines-Digital
Clock Radio( AM/FM)-Movie Camera-Silverware Carpet Runners-Sharpner For Lawn Mower Blade-Vinyl Tile( Approx. 260 Sq. Ft.)- MANY MORE ITEMS NOT MENTIONED.
SALE CONDUCTED BY:
AUCTIONEER-Bill Seats
Rt.5BoiSZA Mocksville, N.C. 27028
PHONE: 998 3217 NCAL No. 530
NORTH CAROLINA
DAVIE COUNTY
ADMINISTRATRIX NOTICE
Having qualified as Ad-
ministrstrix of the Estate of
Nebraska Vercy Jones, Sr.
deceased, late of Davie
County, this is to notify aU
persons having claims
against said estate to present
them to the undersigned on or
before the 11th day of
December, 1961, being six
months from the first day of
publication or this notice wiU
be pleaded In bar of their
recovery. All persons in
debted to said estate wUl
please make immediate
payment to Uie undersigned.
nils the 8th day of June,
1981.
Ida C. Jones, Ad
ministratrix of ttie Estate of
Nebraska Vercy Jones, Sr.,
deceased.
Martin and Van Hoy
Attorneys
Box 606
MocksviUe, N.C. 27028
6-114bi
NORTH CAROLINA
DAVIE COUNTY
EXECUTRIX NOTICE
Having qualified as
Executrix of Uie estate of
Alvis C. Cheshire, 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 befo^ the
28tti day of November, 1981,
being six months from the
first day of pubUcation or this
notice WiU be pleaded in bar of
their recovery. AU persons
indebted to said estate wiU
please make immediate
payment to Uie undersigned.
This the 22nd day of Blay,
1981.
Gladys H. Cheshire,
Executrix of the estate of
Alvis C. Cheshire, deceased.
Martin and Van Hoy
Attorneys
Box606
MocksvUle, N.C. 27028
5-28 4ta
COUNTY OF DAVIE
Advertisement for Bids
The County of Davie wiU
open bids pursuant to General
Statute 143-129 on, July 7,1981
at 1:00 p.m. in the Com
missioner’s Meeting Room for
the purpose of letting a
contract to purchase the
following designated
equipment:
One (1) Economy Pick-up
Seven (7) foot bed
Engine: 2.3
Automatic Transmission
Bids may be submitted to
the County Manager’s OfDce
prior to the onening of bids.
Durther specificaUoos for tbe
equipment are available
Monday Uirough Friday in Uie
County Bfanager’s Office of
the Courthouse frrnn 6:30a.m.
until 5:00 pjn.
The Co'tnty of Davie
reserves the right to reject or
refuse any and all bid
^iropoaals.
_____ 6-18 Itnp
A SHOPPER*». PARAOiSE
AUCTION SALE
10:00 a.m. Saturdigr, June 27,1981
Personal Property Of
MRS. ALVA CRAWFORD
604 Nealy Street, Mocksville (Off Depot St.)
ITEMS FOR SALE INCLUDE
Hot Point Rsfrlgarstor-(2) 3 pc. Bedroom SuKs-Smsll 9 Drawar Dafk-End Tsblst-Msuzlns Racfc-Couch-
Candls StlektOM Pictures ft f^mas-Stona Jim ft Crack Clothes Pin Buckat-Dspreulon Qlass-Presiad Glau-lran Psn^oti ft Pans-FlstwaraOval Braided Rug- 2 CM
Chalrs-Wood Ironlna Board^OM Cook Books-Carnlval Vass-Gray Ksttis-Ewctric Hastsrs-Towns New Speller Drop Leaf Tabia-f4) Cana Bottom Chalrs-Wovan Basket • Blade ft White T.V.-Upholftarad Chalr-Coffsa Table- f2) Small Lamp Tablet-Book Caia ft Bookt-Ooughbosrd
ft Rolling Pin-Serving Trayt-Food ChoDiMr-Eiumei jSf,*, * Bowl'»- China-SmallCablnetainusual)'(pin Karotane Can- Hand Tools-Bud Vatas- Throw Rugs-
Oval Picture Frames- Llnans-Electric Lamps-Wrlngar Type Washer-MANY OT H ER MISC. ITEMS^TERMS: Cash or Approved Chock
SALE CONDUCTED FOR
MRS. CLARA S. CRAWFORD
(Power Of Attorney)
SA LE CO NDUCTED BY
JIM S H E E K
A U C T IO N
JIM SHEEK. AUCTIONf:ERU C. il BONDED, N C A L S24
P. O. BOX 803 PH. 634-3611
MOCKSYILLE, N. C. 27028
lOT RfSPONSWU IJL1MSC (g IN JURT OR LOSS OF «NT TYPEiiiffiili
A U C T I O N S A U
Friday, June 19,1981 7:30 p.m.
Miw. Tooli-Fsrm Equ.-Autometiva & Office Equ.-Antiqust
UNION C R O V E USED M ACHINERY CO..INC.
LOCATION: At Union Grow Uisd Madiinery Co.
Located on NC-90M,000 Ft. Wsst of 1-77 & NC-IC1
IntSrMCtion. SEE PARTIAL LIST BELOW
1966 Chevy Impala 307 V-8 angine-1971 OatMin pickup
IS77 Int'i Scout S4S angina-automatic (excallent) 4 wheal
drlva- I 36' itorsga van—I 30’ open top traller-fingla axel
C Allii Chalmers w/mowar ft CuHivatorr- FarguMn Indus
trial dleial w/front end loader ft bucket- I 3 Point hookup tingle diik—I Row cuMivator—Carry-allr-Logglng chains--
Boom Polet- Top Llnkt^^rsw Bart-New Toolt-varlety—
1 Pallet jack- -Box BIsde-Tillsge Tool»-I Burner Hastai-
2 Bint ot Automatic accettorlei(ioM at kit)- I small window
air conditlonar-Wood taw-3 point hootup(utad)- 1971 Stngl* axel Chavy road tractor 236 Detroit (10 Speed)-
1968 Chevy tandem log truck V-6 motor CMC (5'*'4 trant.)
1 tandam axal utility trailer- 1 Chavy van (tool truck)—
6 cyi. motor good tirat (ntads wlndihield)- 2 ft 4 Drawer
File cabinatf-varlaty Office detkt (variety wood ft metal
Office Chalrt-I Walnut Organ Milk Cant-Pot Bellied
wath pot--Old Dretier-Coal Lantern-OW Bottlet(many)
Vinegar Jugt (% pint to gillontl-Glatt top Jarr-Buttar
Mold-OW Yoke-Crocfct-Jugt-OM Ice taw ft hookt.
AN D M ANV ITEMS TO NUM EROUS TO MENTION
Cath or Good Check - - Coffee and Cakat Available
Daalert Bring Tax Numbart - - Rain or Shine
UNION AUCTION COMPANY
L iiu in se N n •?247
fO Box 185 Union Giove.N.C. 2b689
704-539-5468 Albcil Vail Huy NC A L No. 2090
Vanct Gteiioiy
Claybourn B. Lumloid N T A L No. 2032
5 F A M IL Y Y A R D
SALE...Fri. June 19,12 noon
- 5 p.m. and Sat., June 20, 8
a.m. until? At Uie home of
Carl Frye, 1 mUe off Hwy. 64
on Cornatzer Road. Infants
and childrens clothing, baby
accessories, adult cloUiing,
toys magazines, curtains,
bicycles, 2 seater bicycle,
exercise eqidpment, lawn
mowers and various
household Items.
YARD SA LE: Proceeds to go
toward community projecta.
Sponsored by Civitan Club
of Mocksville. Saturday,
June 27, 9 a.m. - 3 p.m. in
parking lot by Foster-Rauch
Drug Store. Donations
appreciated. Receipta given
in accordance with pubUc
law 501. C for tax purjxises.
CaU 634-5865 (Darryl Ed
wards) during the day or
492-5630 (Carol Mischler)
after five and we vill
arrange to pick up.
6-18-2tpCC
C O M M U N I T Y y X r D
SALE....At Smith Grove
Community Center next to
SmiUi Grove Fire Dept.,
Saturday, June 20, from 9
a.m. until? CanceUed in
case of rain. CÜothlng for
men, womenor chUdren, aU
ages and sizes. Furniture,
Antiques, glassware (some
Depression glass), other
goodies - some new, some
old. Several famUles par
ticipating.
2 F A M IL Y Y A R D
SALE...JSaturday ONLY,
June 20, from 9 a.m. until 5
p.m. Ciountry Lane Road.
Watch for signs. Guns,
Bicycles, TraU BUie, garden
tiUer, gas stove and tank,
Avon bottles and LOTS
M ORE!!!
Y A R D SALE; Saturday, June
20, from 9 a.m. untU 3 p.m..
Rain or shine!!! Home of
Alan BaUy on 801 near
Spillman Road. Clothes,
books, record iriayers, tape
recorder, hair dryer, cloUi
and BIUCH M ORE!
OOBafUNITY'YARD SALE:
FamUles involved wiU be:
Archie Jones, Gwen AngeU
and CharUe AngeU at Uie
home of Ruth Jones,
direcUy in front of Kentucky
Fried Chicken raetaurant.
Motorcycle, a good selection
of materials and many,
many oUier itema. Satav-
day, June 20, 8:30 a.m. - ?
YA R D SALG; Hickory HUI,
Satiirday, June 20, from 9
a.m. untU 5 p.m. Watch for
signs. Leather Heritage
card taUe, Harlequin books.
Air Hockey game and many
other bargains. Follow
orange s i ^ . Rain date wiU
be Saturday ,June 27tb.
3 F A M IL Y Y A R D
SALE....Sat., June 20,9 ajn.
-4p.m. 601 South across the
road from Trinity Baptist
Church, Donnie Correll
residence. OU circidator,
baby crib, car seat, toys,
men’s steel toe shoes, adult
and chUdrens clothes and
M A N Y miscellaneous
items. Rain or shine!
Due to rain last Saturday,
anoUier Y A R D SALE wUl be
held Saturday, June 20,
from 8 a.m. until?, at 601
North , 4 mUes to Danner
Road, Take a left and watch
for signs. Everything Priced
to go! Furniture, toys,-
clothes and tools.
T H R E E F A M IL Y Y A R D
SALE...Saturday, June 20, 7
a.m. untU 5 p.m. on Dead
mon Road. Watch for signs.
Sears electric sewing
machine, reversible window
fan and many other
numerous iteiss.
Campers Flea Market at
Midway Campground I-M
and U.S 64 at Davie- IredeU
county'line. Bring your
campers and seU from your
site table. Third weekend of
every month from May
Uirough October. CaU 546-
7615 for reservations or
informaUon.6-18-tfnMC
F O U R F A M IL Y Y A R D
SALE...Friday, June 19,
from 8a.m. until 3 p.m. Five
miles east^of MocksvUle on
Hwy. 158 across tram Myers
Exxon. AU sizes in cloUies,
books, dishes, household
items, golf cart,gaslantem
and misc. Rain date wUl be
Fri. June 26.
7----F A M IL Y Y A R D
SALE...Saturday, June 20,
from 8 a.m. untU-? CSotties,
recliners, bedroom fur
niture, high chair, toys,
baked gooda and many,
many other items. 5 mUes
E^ast of MocksviUe on High
way 64. Watch for'signs.
C O U R T N E Y A N T IQ U E
f l e a BlARKET..J:very
Third Sunday in Each
monUi. Located beside of
Courtney School, Yadkin
County. Next AnUque Flea
Bfarket wUl be Sunday, June
21. Phone: (919) 463-2521 or
463-5529.
Y A R D S A L E ....S a t u r
day,June 20, from 9 a.m.
until 2 p.m. at Uie Brock
BuUding Oifeterta. Spon
sored by parenta and statf of
Mockr^ e Day Care.
2 F A M IL Y Y A R D
SALE...Saturday, June 20Ui
O N L Y . From 7:30 a.m .,
until? CanceUed if raining,
wUl be hdd a week later.
LOTS O F G O O D
BARGAINS! CloUiee and
houadiold items. Hinkle’s
TraUer Park, toA trallw on
Uie left.
BIG Y A R D SALE...Saturday,
June 20, Sa.m. -5p.m. at the
home al Mra. Etta
EUls..fii'st house on left on
Redland Road fhim High
way 1S8. Cancelled If
fUlning.
3 F A M IL Y Y A R D
SALE....'niursday, Friday
and Saturday, June 18, 19
and 20* from 8:30 a.m.
until? At the comer of North
Main Street and Park
Avenue. Watch for signs.
YARD SALE ONWHXIABfS
DIRT ROAD.. Jriday, June
19 and Satiirday, June 20,
from ,8 a.m. until 6 pjn.
Camper, ti-aUer, stereo and
T V. Much more!!!.
Phone: 996-5166.
BIG BIG- Y A R D
SALE....Saturday Only,
June 20, from 6 a.m. until ?
All kinds of items
....lawnmowers, fishing
items, household
M U C H M O R E !
601 South across from 601
Drive-In theatre, Moc-
kMvUle,N.C._____________
GIGA NTIC y a r d
SALE...Lota of cloUies in
large sizes.,..household
items and numerous
miscellanous items. On
Angdl Road, 9-10 mUes out
onthe left. Satiirday, June
20, O N L Y !!! 8:30 a.m.
until? __________________
H U G E F A M IL Y YA R D
SALE...Friday , and
Saturday, June 19 ft 20, from
8:30 a.m. - 6 p.m. on Fri.,
and 8:30 a.m. - 12 noon on
Sat. Things accumlated for
years, antiques, bed
spreads, quUta, dolls, etc.
Over 400 items at 25 and 50
cents. Also ham biscuiU.
620 Wilkesboro Sti-eet.
ABSOLUTE esta te
AUCTION
38 ten F«m W/ House, 6«in t Ptnonal Pnpwtir
Sat. lune 27,1981 10:00 a.m.
iSTATE OF THE LATE MISS AVES HODGSOl
PERSONAL PROPERTY
Blanket Chest-Walnut Corner Cupboard-Buttar Chum- Buttar MoldOak Dretter-Wath Pot-Matal Beds^ood Stove-PrlmHlve Tabla-7 Head Cattle-Elactric StoM and Retrlgantor (Both Last Than Ona Year OUj-Rlwr Type Wadier-Varkiut Garden Toolt-Varlous KltclMn Utan«llf-MANV OTHER ITEMS TO O NUM EROUS
TO MENTION. REAL ESTATE
To Be Sold At 12 O'Clocfc Sharp
36 Acrat WKh Houta Which WoukI Ba Excellent Fgr^Rywva^n^srn-Shad^ewly Fenced Pafture-Straam-
TERMS; 15% Down toOISale-BalMce
Within 30 Days
LOCATION: From Mocksville Taka 64 Approx. 3 Miles West Toward Harmony,Right On SR 2128 Just Bafore Clarksbury Church. Sale Approx. 1 1/2 Miles. WATCH FOR SIGNS.
— L..I .....iialelonauctedBy
T E R R Y I R E L A N D NCAL No. 295
Rtl Box 156
Olin, N.C. 28660
539-5498
873-2211
3
t í
DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY. JUNt IK, 1981 ~ 15B
t t
PUBLIC NOTICE
I AM NOT responsible for »ny
debts, other than those
made by ME, personally.
Bobby C. Brandon
Rt. 5, Moch wllle, N.C.
27028
6^-3tpB
I WILL NOT be responsible
for any debts , other than
those made by me per
sonally.
Bruce Clinard Isaac
Bt.I, Mocksville, NC
27028
6-18-ltpI
EMPLOYMENT MISCELLANEOUS Mobile Homes For Sate HOMES FOR SALE. Repairs A PMntliif
ANIMALS
FX)R SALE; AKC Chow Chow
puppies, female, 8 weeks
old, red, 36 Champion Sired,
«175. Phone 9IM7S-8490.
6-4^tnB
FOR SALE; Riding Jackets
100 percent polyester , fully
lined. Sizes 8-14. Blue,
brown. Green $17.50
THOROUGHBRED
TRAINING CENTERS 996-
5820.
6-ll-3tnTTC
CARD OF THANKS
BROADW AY
The family of the late John
Broadway would like to
express their sincere ap
preciation to everyone *yt
the numerous cards,
flowers, food and gifts of
kindness during John’s
extended illness and death.
They are especially grateful
for your prayers.A special
thanks to Dr. Minwalla and
Dr. Slate, the nurses and
staff of Davie Hospital for
the kindness and con
sideration shown Jolm and
the family during tbe time
he was hosiritalized. May
God Mess each of you in a
rand family
Junction. Rd.Cooleemee
~ HAMPTON
Hie family of the late Rob
. Hampton of Cooleemee
would like to expreu tbeir
appreciation to their friends
and neighbors for all the
food, flowars and many Uad
. expKHions of sympathy
during their recent
bereavement. They also
wish to express their thanks
to the Rev. J.D. Revis, Tlie
. Rev. Bill Creason and the
doctors and entire staff at
. Oavie Hospital.
Family of the late
Rob Hampton- Coolaemee
QfflM gi PIdl U p
• FOR M EE K LY GARBAGE*“
pick-up anywhere in Davie
County... . call B E C K
BR O TH E R S G A R B A G E
DISPOSAL SERVICE, 284-
2917 or 284-2812 Cooleemee,
or County Blanager’s Office,
ModuviUe 634-551S.
WANTED: TRACTOR-
TRAILEH DRIVER
TR AIN EES. Immediate
openings full or part-time.
Approved for the training of
Veterans and National
Guards. Call (919) 996-3221
or write: Kernersville
Truck Driving School, P. 0.
Bcr. 385, Kernersville, N.C.
27284.
5-7-8tnKTD
FEM ALE HELP W AN TED;
Part-time Maid for help
to Keep Hickory Hills
and Country club clean. CaU
Roger Ketner at 996-8746.
6-18-tfnK
H E L P W A N T E D ; Home
Sewing. 100 people in this
area to do sewing in their
home. Good income. All
ages accepted. Free in
formation, write CSC, Arts
and Craft Dept., 200 N. Main
Street, Corbin, Kentucky,
40701.
6-18-3tpCS
W ANT A RAISE? Earn great
$$f selling Avon where you
work. CaU coUect 919-679-
2907 or 919-679-8234 or write
Peggy Long, Rt. 3, Box 57,
YadkinvUle, N.C. 27055.
в-18-ltnL
BABY SITTING
N.C. Licensed Day Care: For
children 2 years and up.
EnroU at Kiddie Kampus
Playschool. Offer year-
round program fw pre
schoolers. Also accept
school-age ChUdren, through
12 years. Full or part-time
care with morning kin
dergarten program. 2
snacks and hot hinch daUy.
CaU 634-2266.
4-16 tfnKK
Would Uke to keep chUdren in
my home. CaU 634-6013.
5-2>-tftiP
I wffl do babysitting in my
home fw first and second
shifts. In Cooleemee area.
CaU: 284-2569.
5-2MtnT
CHILD CARE; Experienced
chUd care in my liome, aU
ages accepted, fuU or part
time, 120.00 weddy. Located
on Davie Academy Road,
(Junction Road). For more
information caU 284-2742.
64^tnB
Need someone to babysit an
infant and do light
housekeeping in my
home.CaU; 996-8806.
6-ll-2tnA
D A Y C A R E F O R Y O U R
CHILDREN...7 a.m. - 6 p.m.
FuU-time or by Uie hour.
Highway 158 across from
Smith Grove Community
Center., excellent care.
CaU; 998-3935.------------6-ll-tfnK~-
FOR SALE Custom frames
... any size ... expert work
manship ... over 75 samples
on display ... see at
C A U D E L L L U M B E R
COMPANV, 1238 Bingham
Street, MocksviUe, Phone
634-2167.
4-24-81 tfnC
FOR SALE: BeauUful hand
made quilts, aprons, spread,
placemats. Barbie doll
clothes for your Christmas
gifts; inexpensive jewelry,
dolls, Bibles, perfumes, etc.
Trash & Treasures. CaU 634-
2610.
10-30- tfnTT
WILL BUY diamonds and
gold. Don’s Music Center.
124 North Main Street,
MocksviUe, Phone 634-3822.
2-5-81 tfnD
MocksviUe BuUder’s Supply
now has RINSE ’N VAC
cai^iet steam cleaner. Only
$12.50 a day. Contact
MocksvUle BuUders Supply
at 634-5915. '
1-10 tfnMBS
We buy Mortgages, 1st, 2nd,
or 3rd. CaU 634-3596.
4-30-tfnSD
Reward: For information
leading to recovery for a
stolen International Tractor
with 2 point hitch, and 9H
feet yeUow Woods Rotary
Mower Shallowfcml Farms,
UwisvUie, N.C. CaU (919)
9454046.
5-284tnM
FOR SALE: 8.5 ft. Hot Point
Freezer....Like new. Only
«125.00. CaU: 634-2467.
6-4-tfnJ
Let the P rofessional
Bookkeeper WaUcertown,
N.C. do your bookkeeping,
clerical work at her home
office. She will save you
time & money, 12 years
experience. Fast, depen
dable, accurate. Phone
coUect at 919-595-2549, after
4:30 p.m. for an ap
pointment.
5-7-tfnG
FOR SALE; 1965 Taylor
Mobile Home..12 X 60...2
bedroom, 1 bath, un-
derpenning...2 porches...nU
drum and stand. CaU 998-
3902 or 998-3291.
4-30-tfnJL
FOR FAST AND EFFICIENT
SERVICE; OnaU electrical
needs, large or smaU, caU
Karl Osborne, owner of
OSBORNE ELEC TR IC
COMPANY. CaU 634-3398.
230 East Maple Ave.,
Mocksville, N.C.
1-8 tfnO
Invertigrtioni .
Private Investigatioas
WiU be strictly ConfidenUal,
Lie. No. 320, telephone:
SalUbury (704) 636-7533 or
KannapoUs (704) 932-5705.
1-1-81 tfnL
ABORTION
F R E E Pregnancy testing.
Arcadia Women’s Medical
Clinic in Winston-Salem,
N.C. Call for an ap
pointment Collect: (919)
721-1620.
1-1-81 IfnAWC
CLEANING
t
S i s t e r K a t h e r i n e tel.
Faith Healer and Adviser 873-9189
Mirlcle Healer
ONE QUESTION FREE BY PHONE
Mvloe on health, lovw. marriage, buiinen, etc. Private oonsultationi She quaranteet to remove
Ead kick and evil influence«. A visit to hor will be
of Immenie value to you. Result* quarantMd.
Opw dally and Sun. 9 a.m.-9 p.m..
SALISBURY ROAD* STATESVILLE
1 Mile E«t of City Limits. Look for Signs.
FERREf’S MOBILE HOME SERVICE
Porchti, Pstkii i> AddKloni; Complete Rspair Service!
Skirting Ii Rs-Lsvsllng; Door, Window, !■ Patio Awnings;
Door* and Windows. CHECK OU R PRICES!!
704-492-5636
BUY...SELL...OR
TRADE....Or Repairs for
Lawn Mowers and TiUers.
. CaU 492-5633 at anytime.
__________6-11-tfnG
FOR SALE; SoUd Cherry
Bedroom Suite, 2 twin beds
and dresser with mirror,
exceUent condition, 1600.00.
Sofa and chair in good
condition, «600.00. CaU 996-
8009.
6-ll-3(nT
FOR SALE; Sylvania color
T.V. ft Rotary antenna,
exceUent reception, U H F
feature - «300.00; Vinyl Sofa
and vicyl roeUng chair,
needs covering - «80.00;
Seigler oil stove with
thermostat contrd - «75.00;
21 inch G .E . portable T .V .,
blackand white - «50.00. CaU
284-2958 anytime.
6-18-2tnB
FOR SALE; Sears Air Con
ditioner, 18,000 BTU. In
G O O D condition. «175.00.
CaU; 492-5124.
6-18-ltpA
FOR SALE; 1973 Impala, 1968
CadUlac, 1967 Ford Wagon,
__GJE^J¥asheiLJVJilrlpool
Dryer, Hot Point DiVer,
Westinghouse R^rigerator,
B ft W T.V., 1200 Hunt Street
Near Caudell Lumber
Company.
6-18-l^W
FOR SALE; 275 gaUm oU
drum and 84,000 Armstrong
furnace. CaU 2B4-2922.
6-18-ltpA
FOR SALE: Hotpoint Por
table dishwasher, gold tone.
In exceUent condition. «75.00
firm. caU; Karen Cook at
634-3830.
DIVORCE
C&C CLEAN IN G SER-
VICEDon’t spend your
Saturdays doing house
cleaning or windows. Just
caU us for an estimate. Also
construcUon cleaning. CaU
998-5616 or 634-3163.
___________________1-2^81 tfnC
FURNITURE
^ ’OR 'SAEE: alT ^pes un- '
finished chairs, stoob of aU
Sizes - upholstered swivels,
deacon benches, aU kinds of
used furniture; and ft good
supply of N EW name brand
matresses at a reasonable
price and 3-piece living
room suits at a bargain. AU
sizes of rockers and chairs.
CaU W.A. EUis at 634-5227.
11-20 tfnE
JUST IN TIME POR DAD'S
DAY! New shipment of
BerkUne Rodc.a4oungers
and WaUaway RecUners.
«50 to «100 savings. J.T.
Smith FurnitureInc.Ph<m:
■ 492-7780. Located on Shef
field Road in Davie County.
______________________6-18-ltnS
MOTORCYCLE
FOR SALE; 1980 Yamaha, SX
850 special, «2,300 lUie new,6.6000 mUes. CaU 998-2319.
6-ll-2tnS
FO R SA LE ; 197<. Two
bedroom Commador MobUe
Home, 12 X 55, washer,
dryer, air conditioner in
G O O D condition. «5,000.
CaU: 998-5787 after 5 p.m.
6^-tfn
F O R SA LE : 1981 Two
bedroom MobUe Home, 12 X
56, total electric, fully
furnished, storm windows
and doors. «7,995. Four more
To Choose from. AU at a
large discount. Ervin Motor
and MobUe Home Company,
Hwy. 601, mUe south of
MocksvUle. Phone; (704)
634-3270.
64-3tnEM
CLOSE OU T IN N E W
M OBILE
HOMES....Carolina....l4 X
60,2 bedroom, total electric
and furnished. «10,900.00.
CaU: 634-3270. Hwy. 601 , V4
mile south of MocksviUe.
6-4-3tnEM
FOR SALE; 1973 Madison
MobUe Home, 3 bedrooms,
1V& baths, new carpet,
washer and dryer, central
air. In exceUent conditiou.
CaU; 996^526 after 5 p.m.
6-18^fnS
ROOMS FOR RENT
ROOMS FOR RENr.'Apply
at Don’s Jewelry and Music
Center...124 North Main
Street, Mocksville, N.C.
Phone 634-3822.
1-11 tfnD
Musje. Tming ft Rt|aM«
PIANO TUNING, REPAiRo,
moving. Specializing in
rebuilding. Registered
Craftsman with Piano
Technicians GuUd. Seafonl
Piano Service, 178 Crestr
view Drive, Mocksville,
N.C. CaU Jack Seaford at
634-5292.
9-2S tfnS
PIANO TUNING: Repairing
and Rebvilding. 22 years
experience. All work
guaranteed. P IA N O
TECHNICIANS G U ILD
CRAFTSMAN. CaU WaUace
Barford at 284-2447.
3-5-81 tfnB
^iness^^pportunitiei—
Beauty Salon located in
shopping center 15 mUes
from MocksvUle, equipment
and Inventory appraised at
«23,000, asking price «22,500.
CaU P.B.B. at 765-7121.
6-18-ltnT
If you’re thinking of
SELLING A BUSINESS???
Or BU YING A
. BUSINESS???, Call the
PROFESSIONALS. All
information confidential.
CaU Professional Businew
Brokers at (919) 765-7121.
3034 Trenwest Drive,
Winston^lem, N.C. 27103.
2-26 tfnPB .
Auctton
AUCTION SERVICES;
Auctions don’t cost they
pay. For any type of auction
sale contact Buck Hanes,
Auctioneer. 919-998-3610.
NCAL 1362.
9-25 tfnH
W E CONDUCT A U . TYPES
OF AUCTION SALES. We
are now contracting sales
for Spring and Summer of
1981. Call Jim Sheek,
AucUon ft Realty at 998-3350.
NCAL 924.
34 tfnS
U N C O N TESTE D D IV O R
CE....«60 plus court coat.
Conference room No. 3
THE O A K S
268 M illin g Road
Private Patio, and all modern convenieces,
at a very affordable price.
704-634-3185
day or or night i S i
June 19 from 7:30 - 8:30 p.m.
«75 plus court coat if you
prefer to come to tiie office
located in Clemmons.
Edward Y. Brewer. Atty.
CaU 919-766-8281.
1-31-81 tfnB
u ^ ^ y n e n c a .
S f VEHICLE BARGMNS
Jeeps, Cars, TrucksAvailable thru government agencies in your i
under $200. Call 602-941-8014 Ext. 5806 fc
how to purchase.
$$
ir«a. h|^y *«|| for
ir information on
SPO T C A SH
FOirCLEAN mTEHODEL AUTOMOBILES.
AaHAKES MODELS AND SIZES NEEDED
B U Y — S E L L — R E N T — T R A D E
A NAME YOU KNOW AND TRUST
D U K E W O O T E N
S A L E S - R E N T A L S
NEXT TO CITY HAU. 634 3215 - 634-2277,
NEW AND USED
OFFICE FURNITURE
it Safes it Fites
^ Fire Proof Files
ROWAN
OFFICE FURNITURE
PHONE 636^022
118 N. Main St.
Salisbury, N.C.
Burglar a Fil» Any
UNITED ALARM COMPANY
OFFERS you aU Uie options
for complete security in
case of fire, burglary and
personal emergency. CaU
today for a FREE estimate
for your home or business.
Phene 634-3770.
4-24 tfnB
• * ' S P E C I A L * •
INSTALLED
TEAM LESS
ALUMINUM GUTTER
Ruit Free No Leal»
IS yi. Factory Baiced-on
Enamel Finiih
ALL WORK GUARANTEED
FREE ESTIMATES
998-8605
Bishoff
Aluminum Gutters
AUCTION
I Wa Offer Complete Auction
ft. Real Estate Service
I With Ths Know Hew And
Exparlanoa To Conduct Any
Type Of Auction
SucMssfully
“Serving The Auction
jlVofesBion Since 1934"
Th inking
A u c tio n ?
T H I N K
YORK
N.C.A.L.NO. 952
704/546-2696
919/766-6600saBBBBB
FOR SALE: Remodeled nice
home inside and out at
North Main Street in
Cooleemee, N.C. 3
bedrooms, 2 full baths, large
living room, kitchen has
built-in oven, drop in range,
dining room or den, utility
and pantry. New oil furnace
with air conditioner and
paved drive. Call 634-5918
office; and 634-2849 home.
2-5 tfnF
FOR SA LE: By owner, 4 year
SpUt Level, 3 bedrooms, 3
baths, heat pump, central
air, 22 X 31 out building, 3.77
acres. Rainbow Road. CaU
«98-3246.S80,000.00
4-SO-tftoR
F O R SA LE 1. Beautifuf
Remodeled Farm House
near completion, almost 3
acres of land, paved drive,
fireplace and separate
garage. Only «36,000.2. New
3 bedroom Contemporary
Home, m baths. Only 5
nt down payment with
¡ow interest rate financing
available for qualified
appUcants. CaU: 634-2252.
5-14-tfnS
FOR SALE BY O W N E R ; 3
bedroom Brick Houae, %
Acre lot; fuUy carpeted,
central air, full baaement;
Double carport; Out
building storage shed; 601
North, Priced toseU FAST
7Vi Assumable loan. Phone
(704) 492-5679 after 4 p.m.
5-2MfnS
F O R SA LE; R E S T O R E D
F A R M H O U SE W IT H
ALM O ST 3 AC RES O F
LA ND....4 staU horse bam,
fenced pasture, 4 firq;»lace
and aU the C h am you could
ever ask for! «78,500.
Snyder at Crowder Realty
Company, Winston-Salem,
N.C. Phone (919) 768-1300.
6+4tnCR
FO R SALY B Y O W N E R : S
bedroom brick rancher,
fenced yard, paved drive,
storm windows, newly
decwated, exceUent con
dition, assumable loan at 8
percent priced to seU, at:
625 Chciry Street, Moc-
skvUle, N.C. CaU6S44e07 for
an appointment.
б-И-ШрН
FO R SALE BV O W N E R ; 5
room brick house on 2 lots
including remodeled kit
chen, 2 bedrooms, bath with
ceramic ttie, цмс1аиа living
room-dining room com-
binatloQ with nrqdace, den
or third bedromn aewly
carpeted. Property includes
frontage on 2 streets, fen
ced-in yard, garden (dot,
utUity building. Houae in
cludes draperies in den,
bedrooms and Uving room,
air conditioner, bookcase-
stiMrage unit in den, attic
storage. Exterior w o ^
covered in vinyl siding and
— aluminum trim. Mortgage^-
balance assumable. E x
cellent location. 618
WUkesboro Street. CaU 634-
5478 or 634-3259.
6-18-tfnF
HOUSE FOR SALE; Grove
Street, Cooleemee, 2 BR,
large utUity room, attic
storage, carport, furnace ft
wood heat, storm windows,
siding, new roof, water
pipeaft water heater. CaU
284-2726.
6-18-ltnC
HOMES FOR RENT
FOR RENT; 3 bedrooms,
expando living room, m
baths. References required,
moral tenants only. Bet
ween Mocksville and
Winston-Salem.
Reasonable. CaU 284-2964 in
the evenings. .
6-18-tfnN
C A R P n
D r y C l e a n i n g
I4tf a square foot,
bathrooms $5.00
Call Anytime,7 Days a Week
MARK JAMES
Rt.S,Box2l7-A
Mocksville, N.C.2702S
(9.9) 998-3546
karle's ,
OFFICE SUPPLIESi
>120 North Chur^k St: iSalisbury, N.C.
JIhone 536 2341Office Supplies,
Furniture, Systems
Art Supplies
JEFF HEAPP
D A V I E
M O B I L E H O M E R E P A I R S
IF YOUR HOME HAS
* Weak and Rotten Floor*
‘Cabinet* That Are Not Secure
* Windows That Won't Roll Out
* A Roof That Leaks and Rumbles
* Windows and Doors That Leaks
CALL TIM, evenings after 4 p.m.
and weekends anytime.
634-3334
Don't let the value of your home 90 down hill.
CALL TODAY
PAINTING, HOME
REPAIRS, SmaU or large
jobs. For free estimates call
James Miller at 9984340.
12-28 tfnM
SEPTIC TANK CLEANING
SERVICES...certified, to
pump septic tanks-la'rge
truck for full time, efficient
service...also rent sanitary
toilets...Call 284-4362.
Robert Page, Code*^ nee.
1-1 tfnP
Bob’s Painting Ser-
vice..Interior and Exterior
aU work first class, SO years
experience, tne estimates.
Call 49^7S88.
5-21-tfnS
CARPENTRY-1- -(-Porches,
Sun Decks, Patios, Itoofing,
•Additions, Remodeling,
Fence Work, Also concrete
Driveways and sidewalks.
Reasonable prices. FR EE
Estimates, Call anytime
and ask for ; Charlie. 9B8-
6016.
6-11-tfnF
Mobile Homee
FOR RENT
F O R R E N T ; 2 bedroom
traUer, 10 mUes east of
MocksvUle on Highway 158.
No nets, wUl accqit chUdren
under 2. Can 99MS84.
MS^fnR
Land For Sale
FOR SALE; 10 acres of
Land....located in ttie Davie
Academy community. CaU;
492-7451.
6-18-tfnC
UPHOLSTERY
O F F E R IN G Y O U T H E
F IN EST in custom!;
upholatery...Large selecUon
of Quality Fabric and
vinyls. FR EE esttmates.
Quick,' effective service.
CaU J.T. Smith Fumitur«
Co., Inc., 492-7780. Located
10 mUes west of MocksvUle
on Sheffidd Road. Over 30
years of experience.
____________________ H tfnSF
■ r k l c e n d iiD i w w ^
HR EPLAC ES, BRICK AN D
Stonew«t...Extenslon and
Carpentry work done.
F R E E esUmates. R M F
Construction, Inc. CaU 99B-
3907.
^ 1-10 tfnRMF
Vehictes & Misc.
FOR SALE; 197E Lincoln
Continental, Cartier
designer series. Beige,
loaded and i.i excellent
condition. CaU: 6.^-5316.
6-ii-tfnS
!‘'0 R SA LE: 1969 Dodge
Pickup....225...6 cylinder.
Straight drive. Call (919)
483-5344 after 6 p.m.
6-11-tfnH
MAGICIAN
MAGICIAN...Chiklren love
m agic! Professional
magician for birthday
parties, etc. CaU today for
fees and dates. “You’U be
pleased!!!” Phone: 634-
OOTHarii Daniel, 416 Park
Ave., Mocksville, N.C.
27028.
1-« tfnD
FO R Sa L E ; 1979 Toyota
Lovona 4-door Liftback. One
owner, air condition,
powerbrakes, power
steering, 5rspeed, AM-FM
with biereo cassette. Low
mUeage, extra clean. CaU:
634-5981 or 634-5818 after 6
p.m.
6-H-2tpH
FOR SALE; 1972 CheveUe
Malibu...2 door, vinyl top,
AM-FM, 8-track, automatic,
«850.00. CaU: 634-2826.
6-li-2tnW
FOR SALE: 1972 Corvette,
extra nice and loaded; AC,
PS, PB , tiU-telescopic
power windows, leather, 4-
speed, AM-FM , slick
lacquer paint wiUi reUable
drive-train makes for a
great investment. «5,950.
CaU 634-3747 or 634-5193.
5-2S4fnM
FOR SALE; 1900 Citation, 4
cyl., 4 speed, AC, PS, PB,
dark blue with camd in
terior, over «1500. in objecte.
LUie new, «6,100. CaU; 6S4-
3546, Ext. 376 or 634-2517.
6-18-2tnD
FOR SALE; MAZDA 1976 RX-
4, Green, AC, PS, PB, AM-
FM , 5 speed, excellent
condition. Must sell.
«2,400.00. CaU: 634-5234.
6-18-ltnH
FOR SALE: ’73 Honda 750
Custom, «1,000.00; 14 ft.
Glaspar Boat, 35 H P
Johnson Motor with bvUer,
«500.00; and 25 Massey
Fergusson DlesU Tractor, 3
point hitch, «2,000.00. CaU
Gary Bailey at (704) 27B-
2401
6-mi|>B
FOR SALE; YAM AHA 1980
650 Special, Red sport
windshield, excellent
showroom condiUon, 60 plus
M PG, 2900 mUes, «2,000.00.
CaU- 634-5234.
6-18-ltnH
FOR SALE: 1949 Red BeUy
Ford Tractor in Good
condiUon. «1350.00. Call:
634-5543, after 5 p.m.
6-11-tfnB
F O R SA LE ; 1977 Shasta
Travel TraUer, 29‘, 7“, self-
contained, and 1973 Chevy
Cheyenne P.V. Truck with
tow package, «6500.00. CaU
634-3275.
___________W t 2 W K _
IT PAYS
TO /VDVERTISE
IN THE CLASSIFIED
FOR SALE: Camper Cover
for longbed pick-un. Leer
fiberglass model, 2 yrs. old,
exceUent condiUon. «275.00.
CaU 634-2622 after 5 p.m.
6-ll-2tnHI"ClftUi>«d Ads do more things lof
'ПОГ* p»op<t lhan лпу othr lofm ol •dvtMittna"
Style Mart Inc.
410 West Side Drive Lexington,N.C. 27292
Has Immediate Opening For Personnel
In The Following Areas-
Cutting; Experienced spreader
and cutter.
Sewing; Overiock or serger operators.
Finishing; Inspectors and pressers.
Apply In Person Between 7:30 til 4:00 p.m.
NOTICE
WANTED TD BUY
L I V E ^ I T
Baaf cattle, ho«i, vaals, or fMder cattle, liiave an order for all type* of ^ttle
'Will pay maricet nrica for' your llvesto«i(, rMt on the farm. Paymsnt In chack or cash, which tvtr you prefer.
<Ì>RÒMPt PICK UP SERVICE
I wlll buy ona head or
a whole hard.
Qlve me a calllll
FndO. Ellis
C ivM tock II AuctlonM rIng
Ht. 4, Mockaville, N.C7
^34 5227 or 998-8744
Ufa.4ong ràsidant of Davia
Livestock
BeckLivesto^
Co., Inc.
JNholesale Meats
J1iòm^ilie,'^N.C.
liWLL BUV Ì or 100 COWS . also Bulls, Vaals, Taadtrs, Cilvai... Wa
¡Pay Cash For All Cattle Whan Picked Up.
WE WILLi
Pick up • kill • Process Your Locker BMf .
jA.L Beck, Jr.
1Tt.l, Thomasville. N.C.,
Call CoUect^Ahytlme' WInstsn Salini
(9l9>7U-«00« or 7U-7924 ,
Ptione After 6:00 P.M.
Eai1yAJM.(»l9)47e«89S
T
16В D A V I U C O U N T Y K N T F.R PR ISE R K C O R D . T H U R S D A Y . JU Nl 1Я. I'WlFarm Market SummaryI
(Farm MarkPt Summary
Week of June 8-12, 1981.
Federal-State Market News
Service North Carolina Department of Agriculture
OiviRioii of Marketinft.)------
A total of n,3ie feeder (rigs
were sold on 13 State graded
sales during week of June B,
according to the Market News
Service of the North Carolina
Department of Agriculture.
Prices were mostly 50 cents to
$4 lower per hundred pounds.
US 1-2 pigs weighing 40-S0
pounds averaged tS3.63 per
hundred pounds with No. 3s
$70.83 ; 50-60 pound l-2s
averaged$75.40, No. 3s $63.07;
60-70 pound l-2s $65.52, No. 3s
$57.81; 70-80 pound l-2s $57.30
per hundred pounds with No.
3s $55.37.
At weekly livestock auc
tions held within tlie state the
week of June 8, prices for
slaughter cows were irregular
and feeder calves were steady to $3 lower. Utility and
Commercial cows brought $36.50 to $47.50; Good slaughter steers above 800
pounds $52. to $60.50; slaughter calves 350-5S0 with
good grade were $48 to $59 per hundred. Medium frame
Number One muscle steers
400-500 pounds brought $54 to $63 per hundred pounds and
same grade heifers 400-500
pounds sold $46 to $54. Beef
type feeder cows with
average flesh sold mostly
$38.50 to $44. Baby calves
under 3 weeks of age brought
$45 to $125 per head. Market
hogs brought mostly $47 to $50
per hundred weight and 300-
600 pound sows $36.60 to
'Music At Sunset'
$44.60.
Com prices were slightly
higher and soybeans sharply
lower through Thursday, June 11, compared to the same
-period of the previous week
No. 2 yellow shelled com
ranged mostly $3.45 to $3.70 In
the Eastem part of the state
and $3.47 to $3.73 in the
Piedmont. No. 1 yellow
soybeans ranged mostly $7.20
to $7.53 in the East and M.90 to
$7.14 In the Piedmont; No. 2
red winter wheat mostly $3.40
to$3.55; No. 2 red oats $1.75 to
$2.10. New crop prices quoted
for harvest delivery com $3.23
to $3.50, soyt>eans $7.00 to
$7.23, Wheat $3.34 to «i.5S, oats
$1.65 to $2.07.
Egg prices were lower on
all sizes compared to those of
the previous week. Supplies
were adequate to fully
adequate. Demand was moderate. The North Carolina weighted average price
quoted on Juno 11 for small lot Mies of cartoned grade A.
eggs delivered to stores was 70.07 cents per dozen for
large, Medium 60.10 and
Smalls 48.58.
Northeastern FOB shipping
points - Cabbsgn -1% bushel
crates, medium green cab
bage brought mostly $2.50 to
$3; Irish Potatoes, US ones,
site A, washed 100 pound
sacks $14 and 50 pound sacks
$7.25.
Market hogs at daily cash
buying stations about the
state $1.50 to $2.50 higher this
week and ranged mostly $49 to
$51 per hundred pounds. Sows
900-600 pounds ranged $31.50 to $42.
The broiler-fryer market Is
higher for next week’s trading. Supplies are light toSeries Begins Sunday K?T;.“r«,“cS:L“
1». WUiM«..S.l.n. Sym- '•
phony’s 1981 Music At Sunset
series will open Sunday, June
|il and continue for three
successive Sunday evenings
through July 12.Long a tradition for the
Winston-Salem community,
these outdoor concerts
feature the Symphony and guest artists at the Arts Council’s Rudolph Concert
Shell at the Graylyn estate, lliey have become one of the
summer’s most popular
family entertainment evmts.
lliis year’s concerts will
begin at 7:00 p.m., H hour
earlier than last year. Gates
at Graylyn will opan at 6:00
for picnickers. The three
Graylyn gates, on Reynolda
Rd., Coliseum Drive, and
Robinhood Road, wiU be open
andpoUce will be sUtioned at
esch to direct tratfic.
The June 31 concert,
“Tuneful Twosomes”, will feature musical pairs. Ih- duded on the program are the
"Romeo and Juliet Fantasy”, "Thunder and Ughtning Polka’’, Vivaldi’s Coaeerto
for Two Trumpets with Deborah Koch and Barry
Bauguess as soloists. Popular
Winston-Salem singers Beverly Everingham and Bill
Beck will join the orchestra
for duets from Porgy and
Be«* and Camdot.
“Cartoons and Comte-
strips” is the theme for the June 28 concert and musical
selections will include a
_Sjturday morning-cartoon-
medly. Snow White Fantasy,
the theme from the Pink
Pantho-, and the William Tdl
Overturn (Lone Ranger
theme).
Hie July 5, Independence
Day week-end propam will
be “The Good Old Days” with
the Auctioniers Barbershop
Chorus of Winston-Sslem. In
addition to the barbershop
singing, the program will
include the 1812 Overturn of
Tchalkowsky, Sousa mar
ches, an Irving Berlin medley
and music of Scott Joplin. Hie
traditional Children’s Parade
with “MlM Uberty” wUl be a
special highlight of this
program.
The Music at Sunset seas n
will end on July 12 w Jl
“Exotic East”. Music fr m
South PacUlc, Teahouse ot Jie
August Moon snd King and I
will be featured.
Season tickets for Music at
Sunset are on sale now at the'
Symphony oifice, 610
Coliseum Drive. Family
tickets are priced at $25,
adults at $12, and students and
senior citizens at $10. Tickets
will also b« sold at the gate for
individual concerts.
49.96 cents per pound fbr less
than truckloads pidced up at
processing plants during the
week of June 15. This week 9.1
million birds were processed
in North Carolina with an
average live bird weight of 4.01 pounds per bird on June
10.
Heavy type hens were
steady this past week. Si^h plies were moderate and
demand moderate. Heavy
type hen prices 10 cents per
pound at the farm with buyers
iMding.
At the Faison Produce
Auction a light supply of
beans and peppers were on
offar this week with moderate
offerings of squash and
cucumbers. Sales this week
with 85 perccnt or better, five-
ninths iMishel crates of yellow
brought mostly $3 to $3.70;
succhini mostly $3.96 to $4.35;
cueiimbers-bushel baskets
and l-one«inths bushel crates mostly 95 to l6.ao;
SUNBATHING AND COLD SORES
There it no season for
cold lores and fever blisters.
Sunbathing, or even the
stress of work or travel may
contribute to an episode in
June, July or August, too.
A dermatologist, Jerome
Tuggests that
anyone suscep
tible to cold
sores stay out
______________of the sun as
much as possible. In an in
terview with tJie skin special
ist, he recommended that
when this is not possible,
a sunwreening preparation
in the form of a lipstick be
used.
To heip relieve some of
the symptoms of cold sores
and resulting fever blisters.
Dr. Litt said there are medi
cations such as Campho-
Phenique and Blislex. There
is also a new -medication
called Resolve developed es
pecially for co!d sores,
which is especidly recom
mended for use at the first
sign of a lesion develuping.
Dr. Litt said that patients
have reported very favora
bly on the new medication.
In his book Your Skin &
How T o Live In It, Dr. Litt
writes that in addition to
sun exposure, colds and up
per respiratory infections,
cold sores can be triggered
by emotional tensions,
foods such as chocolate,
nuts and seafood, and In
rare instances, menstruation.
“Raplacament coft minu*
dspraclatlon?
Or Raplaccmant
Cost? Th*
diffaranc* couid
bfl aubatantial.”
Ask aboul Replacement
CosI Coiwrage lor the
contents ol your home
BOBIY KNIGHTC34«908I «2 North Main St.
Moclttville.N.C.
Uk0ê9ooàntehbof
8 të t9 F é /m ts Ih 0 fe
STATE FARM
fu% «л| U m itè ni
H«n«omc«
Carolina Street Scene Set For September 12 & 13
September 12 and 13 w ill
tigain see the downtow n
streets of W inston-Salem
massed w ilh a rtis ts , p e r
form ers and fun seekers.
Daniel F. McKeithan. Jr.,
Chairman of the Board of Jos.
S chlitz. B rew ing Com pany,
inform ed local officials today
that, for " aixth year, Sclililz
would again be co-sponsoring,
with The A rts Council, one of
the largest events in North
C arolina, C arolina S trcet-
scene.
Streetscene is an arts
potpourri featuring national
and statew ide p e rfo rm e rs,
artists and craftsmen, with a
variety of foods aitrf-beei. The
e n terta inm en t fo rm a t w ill
include a program of singers,
dancers and m usicians
presented on five stages, with
a rtis ts and cra ftsm en
displaying their works along
the downtown streets.
"Hundreds of thousands of
people in communities across
the country have enjoyed
these festivals presented by
the Jos. S chlitz B rew ing
0)m pany," McKeithan SHid:
“ In these fe stiva ls the
Company has found an ideal
expression for quality and
enjoym ent Wp are p a r
ticularly fond of Carolina
Streetscene because it
enables thousands and
thousands of home folks and
visitors lo enjoy themselves in
an atmosphere of festivity.'
M ilton Rhodes, D irector of
Tlie A rts Council, exprnsseri
his ple.nsure w ilh M r.
McKcilliiin’s announcem ent
and added that, "Streetscene
has now become an in
stitu tio n . draw ing visito rs
from all over Noi tii Carolina
and the .surrounding states.
Streetscene is very im portant
to downtown revitalization,
gives the merchants a great
boost, and ail in all, has a
te rrific economic im pact on
the c ity ," He also indicated
tha.t_there would be some new
innovations this year in the
art and craft exhibits and a
c h ild re n ’s area. A n
nouncements regarding these
w ill be released in 'he near
future.
Last y e a r’s Streetscene
featured the E arl Scruggs
Revue, the Jessy D ixon
Singers, Tracy Nelson, Mongo
S antam aria and popular
North Carolina artists. The
nation»! ■-stars -for- - the 1981
C arolina Streetscene and
auditions fo r local en
tertainers w ill be annour;i’';d
at a later date.
The state beverage of Massa
chusetts is cranbeiry juice.
M i C R O W A V E S A L E ! ! !
2130 6 . M A IN S T ., S A L I S B U R Y 157 N . M A IN S T ., M O C K S V I L L E
6 3 7 -3 9 6 6 6 3 4 -3 1 6 5
M O N D A Y t h r u T H U R S D A Y « . S A T . 9-6; F R I D A Y 9-9 M O N D A Y th r u T H U R S D A Y & S A T . 9-6; F R I D A Y 9-9
• S A L I S B U R Y • M O C K S < > ’ I L L E • W I N S T O N - S A L E M • H I G H P O I N T » G R e E N S B O R O * E D E N *
Board Of Elee ons The Davie Coimty Board of' lection officers v'c" die upc
in at the county courthouse .ist weeii. Shown :ii ove be;
Court Delores Jordan are F
C. Gregory-secretary. (P>
D a v i e T ) C o l l e c t ' 3 7 4 , 0 0 0
I n B a c i i T a x e s F r ) m
R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co 'Jl not
contest a court decision whl. allows
Davie County to collect an f. mated
$>74,000 in back taxes on tobac ,wied
here.
Hie company decided last . ok to abide by a. ruling of tlw N.C. ' >it ofAppeals that tobacco stc formanufacture and export is no' .empt
fhxn local property taxes. R ^ . !-?duntil June 22 to malu an ap, ' but
decided to drop appeals in «le,
Forsyth, and Stokes counties, w, the11-Year-Old ToFaceMurit r ^Charges Tuesc ay
- — - - the option to buy. Ht' . option expira on
July ti, and MaaMi -a wqimaad hapr that something mt Im wurked out by
then. The two stor Masonk BuikUag
and .94 acre lot ct' be used to rdieve
overcrowding in ir Davie County
company will owe more i 'la $1.5 million
plus interest for Uxes !■ '.»79, 1900 and
1961.
Davie County Man ger Charles
Mashbum included the contested tax
revenue in his comma' J budget to the
county commisioners v <o were able to
shave 2 centn off a r >poMd tax rate
incretise of 8 cents. yHi. ,be anticipated
revenue from Reyr (ds, the com
misioners adopted a ' > cents per $100 valuation rate, up 6 ;:C3nts from last
year’s rate.
The back Uxes enable thecommisioners to pur dse the Masonic
Building and lot on ; turt Square. Hie
priceofthebuikUng.' 1 the lot is $97,000
whicb earlier wo’i!i have meant an automatic IH ceri -ax hike hi the
Ihouse.
T «ynold»
PTt yjrty U;
fi.-., lid here
icipated revenue,
;ied to reconudsr
jld1г.г
ge».in
■Ч
Vincmt Fowler, an 11 yei
boy accuaed of murder in tbe sho 4iath of hU younger brother Ma,v scheduled to appear before .
Robert W. Johnson Tuesday, Jui^
' Judge Johnson deferred ^dgem*
the case June 2 during a closed he-
in Davie County.
Hie Fowler boy was Uken
custody May 8 by Mocksville poUce
day after his brother Roland Van
say Fowler, died at Baptist Hoepii
Wbistan-Salem. Roland Fowler,-
had turned 11 only a few days befoi '
shooting, died at of a single would t
bead by a hollow-point bullet fired;
a .22 caliber rifle.
George Fowler was held over ^
weekend without bond in the Cot i Youth Center. The boy made his t court appearance May 11. During rt
closed proceeding. Judge Hubert . Olive ruled to release the boy into custody oi his parents.
Fowlers famUy retains the service: .
Larry F. Habegger, a Winston-Sai
attorney.
The shooting occured Thursc
moming. May 7 at the home of Thor
Edward Fowler of 233 Ridgemont Dr.
off Milling George Fowi^ ,
Roland Fowler and a third broths .
Jonathan, had been sUying at Ui<
uncle’s home three weeks since movi,.
from Salisbury.
All three brotliers were bome whi
the shooting occured. The rifle iiwd
the slaying tielonged to Thomas Fowl«;
the uncle, and was propped beside h
bed.
After the shooting, George an
Jonatiian Fowler ran to the house i
their grandmother, Mrs. Thomas
Fowleri who lives two hoiises away. Sh
called tn a;nuaiantc, whose crew thei'
notified the police.
MocksviUe poUce and Uie distric
attomeys office had several conference!,
during that day before deciding to preso
charges against the boy. At that p'‘-* iio motive had been esUbliiihed in th case.
Judge Johnson also order'sd a Joint review of Uie boy'» case by Michael
Kiricpatricli, the local juvenile officer and social services worker.
ha« conicited paying
!s on its expert tobacco
T the paRt three yean. A
c-j.r pany gp i.esman uid lait week that
v.vr the issui II. vhe court aecuiaii .vLion
o:r.ceraed e 197P appeal but which had
:n-;ilicatloni for uight other appeals,
ft; .Ж in De> e. Uiree In Stokes and two oiimn in Fl syth.ibe comr ny argued the appHuRlion if a sUI law which s*vh that
'j»i'icultura products Uke tobacco h<tM
i'ji shipm« t to foreign countries are
er^empt frc -i local property Uxes.
'.'Ъс N.C Court of Appeals upheld
sr,<j‘.ker la which says lhat products
•K .il for p aceaking and manufacture
be t <ed at 60 percent of Uiilr
'-i-.'.tn.
ihe cc npany spokesman said
K.n'';ioida .ecided not to contest the
r jifig in 0 der to five county officials
onmaidwHwaffsctafbaek t >r<« oh tt lir bodgsts for next
v^tir. Hr kll. the ix<n>pany hopes the
•ЧсШоп <1 the throe counties wUl help
i-educe U rateb.
Rebecca Smit.
vance, reported a
on Monday, Jur
her traUer in D:
P«rk. Several i
noUilng was f<>-
FranUe Me
MocksvUle, re
$200 class rin>
School during } on Wednesday
Sh ;ríffs Depfiitment
as A Bysy '/Veek
,___ . . . . Enrin Daniels repor3eam, of Rt. 1, .'?i?
"-aaking andenterirg i. Someone enter>;d
wood l^rings ItaU'.r
were moved, ■»'t ; luiuing.
.(Oh, 17, of Rt. V,
ed the larceny o? a
t Davie County Hign
sical Education cii us
lay 20.
D a v i e H o s p i t a l E r
T c B e S t a f f e d O n
P h y s i c i a n s F r i m
Larry E. Bo
reported vant’
Tuesday, Jur
smashed aga:
(l>mage
Howard Sto
arrested Tuer
with writhic
>, Rt. 6, Mock^v-Ue,
^m to his mailb'A on
.0. A drink bfi^.de
t the box caused «50
ton, of Cooleemee. .vas
"/, June 16, and Gh**^3d .vorthleu check.
Admlnlslrator John H Frank of the
r>av;.'^- Counly Hospital arnour.cod today L'^al the h>-. ‘'IS Emergenr P-.nr-i
wi 'i' “^'...fec ’’vxirisr.i from th.-
Family Fractice rei..^ ry program al
N.C. Baptist Hospital on ijcak hours on
weekends.
Emergency Rwm '.o.wage by the
np' J. .oicians wi'- '-nin Aturday '
i).iii. to r "idav d sup"^', .
,).m. to ^ ay I a.m . n.ng aie
weekend of July 4th at th<! earliest.Mr. r.-ank staled . 'Tfiese are the
peak hours of activity in the Emergency Room Several things wij; be ac-
cnmplishcd bv utiliztne these
physii .Tn', Firr,t,
<a>rvp^ li'ehly trt if.
willl)" oil the Ho«pil.i
Will .c ^iii.T.cdia'
covpp.
local physicians w!‘
■xavy weekend won
Staff, Truntee» and I
important decisiO't v
both pcM^ and do<
Th' ' .-r . .:-vi:jcf ■
,i ih<- liC'i ,*'•
Ihe I’llirnl .;il be
chars< :ily // Iho I
will pa; tbf
aho'if 'h< f rrf n:
Palient.s V ' •• asV
» e r g e n c y R o o m
W e e k e n d s B y
! < i | ) t i s t H o s p i t a l
s^vice charge* al time of service,
accordipg to Mr Frank
Mr Frank also stated that Dr. Frank
Moyer will be the coordinator for the
program PresetiUy, Dr. Moyer is on a
Fellowi';,n at N C Baptist Hospital Dr.
Mov-' If « native of Akron. Ohio. He
reccivr-* d.» medical degree from
Bowmi. jray School of Medlcin«? ir,
rti- *'• f" 'y "^pleted a • I >'i artice at N.C
i- ■ .!,l HuSpiK
j n’lp («V Will be
irians who
’mif г f :hje
a\'í»яЫр and
■A'*:;rn^jn .m*
re‘. ¿
-d T
ailf* . »Я1*
о
•■..yr.ti
f 1'
p-»r^‘
■!al. . ivrn
• f'hfl ■ ii kJC
raí
to r •- »Ki*
In ad'^'iior,
phyticínn» *
¡.«»kpnd СЛ'
*.ii( ror.iinije ... -
Kmeriiefn'.-
I» er. eight other. ■ n Ine schedidc for
' »-al physic) ins
:a . and bac^ut. lir.;
+iy.>-tc.ie
ming year were sworn
g insUlled by Clerk of
nk VanHoy-cha>r; .i«n, Boo Ler T. Williams, and H.
to by Garry Fos!-.DAVtile
loO)
$10. (X) Pci Ycai In Norih Catollna
Pii Ycai Oiiltidc Nurih CsKtlina
Tax Rate To Remain At 50"
il’Ni 2'-. I9KI Kt Copy 2S c;nH
T o w n A p p r o u i ' s B u d g F i t
reported that a 1933
truck t vned by Johnny Koiter was
damagt i Tuesday night, June 16. A rock wastiir wn through the front windshield
and Ull headlights were damaged. The
damag s were estimated at l.'MW.
Jeft ey Mark Smith, of Rt. 1.
Mocki /liie, reported damage to a
mal't. X and omamenUi post worth $150 on W< inesday, June 17.
J.W Turner, of Rt. 1. Harmony, was
arref ed Wrjdnesday, June 17. and
chaii sd with passing a worthiesa check.
(ccntinued on page 2)
The Mocksville Town Board
unanimously approved ^ л I96l-K2 b-udgel
of ti,2S3,477 during a specliil budget
hearing Monday night.
Commiaaioners also voted to tuMp Uie
town Ux rate al SO oenU |ier $100 valuation The rate has been In effect
aiacc 1979 when commissioner* ap^ • Uirec ceM MIm from «7 lo И
cenu.
The budget goes into effect July I.
Terry BraUey. twon admiiiilatrator.
said, "Mockiiviile U in a pretty good situation. Due to the recant anittxaikon.
we’ve probably added $10 million to the
Ux base.”
Bralley bald, "There is not any great
increase in any one particular area We
are just mainUining, trying lo hold tiie
line. There i> just a marginal increaae in
this year's budget. From $l.loe,OOC to
roughly $1,2000,000. tlwre's nol a wnnle
lot of difference."
Bralley Nlmillcd could face ■: l«b m
state in thi' 'OM’i B khi i
and Powdl N11
revenue sh«"ngi< popuialioii will .'ll at-c!
accordlr,g lo ■.№ I9MD
lawn's popula.ion di
3.*M» Ul i.MO n 19W' oauuadtd ta>i Include
l«r<n«xalinns vrhlch :
400 citlssrui to thr t<iv
Ixa MocksviUe
. 1* frani the •Á i!>r MÚe* tax
: > from ttieae
.«sed on
3 MocksvUle
' vtsaus. Tbe
' ЛП1 around
.< aatd Itoe. i I ’H '» ПМИЙif ■,■¿4 another
on pain
kick«l
Strol or '
1,secreury.
open duni«
i call, leavliig Ihe office
i^iih Ihe addiTtion of a
■ uftice would always be ^eguUr business hows.
MocfcavU.'e iiadc
Ihe Ust year .iie ii: »
industrial aiet. almif
Bethel Church Hoad
thereeldential
Q-aflwood
The budget
breaks dow aUoted $126.1.'
planning anri
and ground!
meni, $1вв,4П
$•4.539. Fund:
■ . .Jtloas In
. 1 mostly
'lliiI.:' -toud and
^ added
■letos 1 Kid; « "■ool and
I >r i;i
..I'O
, gOVf; '
in
firt
'.xjm t
Firewcrfcs
A llrewarks «aplay wUl be lieM
again this year e« Jaly 4 al Rich
Park.The (UspUy wlU begin at dask.
'nsere la м charge fer adaalaaiea.
BUI are est/nui i
$16,000. Kor caiMtsfiu..
adopted; and !.5.15S
department. .Non-o
penses add r. i.>th(i
Genere! Fuiéi'
Bralley ex^'iiiiied It. .
finds for the i o>ice def
a iulMime cirrical pu .
Often all offici}!' jn li".
lil ni-:^
. .d ini
, O i .'I .41
P)|:
Hat'
.I «• t ■
I'fc
^ u
>K4.U5
! Funds
I rat ion
.$».•00:
'luiidlng
(trpart-
«rJvS.
\ Powell
aI .rJier
■vts beer
^reaUon
al ex-
\o the
' use in
b//!l add
•v. ita ff
?
Tbe tnu 'Л m the fire budgtt wiU
povii'e n>k. e equiUble companaatlon
.or ** 'r4s lUe's volUBleer firemen. Prev« i'v fleemen have bean given
llir.;.... . ' «rd sewar sarvioe for free,
bul*<'>i. >'Jie vduntaers Uved In the
atv » *1 ire the .'»••vices were
unavi .Ul'
The Inc. atv hcs the town picUiig up
Ihe tau iraining scsskms for the volunleci vflghters.
ТЬеШ » budget tor the UtUity Fund
tallies $'"^ .aoo. The water department is
aUotted i?).3M); sewer dciiartment,
t.l2,4K:, .r i4iepartmenUl expenses
cover ; 8'0; and debt srvice adJ
anothfl .1.4S.
BralL. № id the increased in waler
and *ew( si-e due to the risiag cosu o* luttiiu-ii uvr needed on the aging
syrteuiR A heft sun of $25,000 wiU be
niped'41, pcinl inaide and outaide of the
Моск' ■ ,t elevated water tower.
Charlie i
reported a b
The front <>
open. Stoler
riJigs worth
Carlos Ec
burglary i.
Wednesde
Uirough il.
1972 Dodge
band ra£r
items. The
V ,¡¡30.
Roger £'
of three Exxon in t' June 17 ll.
$175.
ird, of Rt. 2, Advance,
’lary on Tuesday Ju:-<e le.
to his traUer wa* pried
ere guns and tturae cle^ s '80.
«rd Williams repoiled a
his service sUti(>n on
une 17. Entry made
ten whidow. Stolen va« e
ick, shotgun, tools, ^•tiгl>.1
air compressor an^ ..ther
•al value was esthnaiii at
■ii I'.a reported the l<>r.:eny
:tteries from Sr<i)i!.T.an’s ■ih Cooleemee on I'iswlay,
stolen items were valued at
Lazaris Relea ed )n Bail
Wanted As II! щг Alien
George Ьв/апз, arrested ard charged
with aij jn Ik:.i ‘ "riciay in ' oimection
with a Juiie S fire at Anchor Seafood
Restaurant in MocksvUle, was released
on bail Monday after hi» bond was reduced from $150,000 to $35,000.District Court Judge Huoert E. Olive
reduced the bond Friday, June 19 after a
hearing in ThomasviUe. The original $150,000 bond was based on estimsted
damages the resUurant luffered in the
noon time blaze.
i.azaris, 27 and co-owner of Anchor
Seafood, was arrested June 12 at hie
home in Clemmons. He r<imained in the
Davie County Jail until released on bond
Monday.Li. Gary Edwards of 'be MocksviUe
Poiicc Dcpartinciit iiiid UiMl Uie fire,
which gutted the re^Uurant's interior,
originated .>ear tie cash register. He
confirmed tha' conUirers of flammable
Uouid were found at th<: scene.Edwards refused to identify the
liquid [>enc'iing an official
-eport the SUte Bureau of lestlgi
I.it' tnaUveof Greece has been In
'tils t y for approximately eight
ears, reported Uiat the Im
ilgri: ; oifice ill AUanta, Georgiu I
irre in Uie process of issuing
!tain -n Lazaris and has classifle’ m a illegal alien.
Rec show that Lazaris has br '¡«1 m two prior occasions, once .' '2 e ;.gain in 1978.
' :r iKRiood ResUurant, forme v
‘ tn's Cafeteria, was purchai'.)
1 Lr . s and Paul Chrysson in Augi' i-O ' ,1 Albert and Helen DeUimo .
f s e was $175,000. The resUur t1 If d on U.S. 601 no.-th .'I
^ > ‘.d, and is part of a Wimt .i-
S ri, .aisPii chain.
>s saiif invesUgaUon into :bl I r.*T:uing. No other charge»-irbl e anticipated at this timt; cB(
Oil e
'*1,-Mb<
h '
U\w.
.b'ms in Uie budget include
sti.-nated from revenue sharing.
»Uotted for land-right-of-ways
ООО. and sewer outfaU csUs fcr
•y commented, “MocksviUe is in
good posiUon in regards to its
ucture in the year* to come,
ind sewer are going to Uke some
''King lu a lew years."
th.
res
asl
гe^
m I
m '
. .
Ч
i Hom em akers
;k To Restore
:al B uilding
e Cana Extension
iQukers are tryhig to restore
h'.storical Cana Community
liiig. The origtaai buildhig was
C by fire in May IMO.
to the tremendous cost of
V ation, the homemakers are
[ ■! the support of individuals In
.^ding the site.
/one interested hi this project
> lend support by donatious,
^ials, or a helphig hand.>r- more information contact
Edwin Boger, Mrs. Lloyd
A. or Mrs. Stanley Smith.
' see the Public Notice on Page
of this edition of the Davie-
>iy Enterprise Record.
Mocksville "s New Postmaster Takes Ocx
Walt>ir Loveless, Mocksvllie’ii
new pustmaiiter, was iwom into
'ils office Frlduy, June IB.
■ Hilbert Siieehan, Sectional Ci-nira! Managei' at Ihe Greeu-
vboru Sectional Cenl«r, officially
appointed Mr. Loveless as Post- iiiastrr of Mocksville.
Oil iiand fur Ihe ceremony was
:v.<r#. Loveless and daughter,
Kiiieii Ainu preseni were former
■sjuiiriiotiH s DhU, riolJiuu^ier and
I:.; Muyor R.C’. Smith
v.ds also in allendunce...Loveless Said he was "happy to
be over hLre” and he Iv "looking
lorward to workliiii with people
here' In Mocksville and In DavIe
County"! whom he described as
"real nice people.”
Loveless replares Tranlilln
Hruwn, formti' Mocksville Post
master, whu Is currently serving
as postmaster in Lexington. He
Irunsferred last December.
H.fiirc Irantiferrlng ly
Mi.ck!tville, 1><.у;!«11|,
manager al l.‘it Bii. • I
Officc In Wlnslim-!;': I
also bcrved Ir a r.
(losUlon al Ihe Ardin. ^ '
rice In Winston-.‘.alei tTlie l^velesc InaAi
resides In Clei.'-.iiiuni.
Prior to U->\.>',ess :.¡
in May, Edsel Mur^ .i '
O fficer In Charge oV il • i
PoHl О'Иге.
ВГ.: ^
;ie ll .
nagsrlul
Pont {•'
preeei4,
alnlmcii ’
erved
оскя'. :
) :a l M otorcyclist
jire d in A ccid en t
. 'ooal motorcyclist wi -• injured in a:--
••dent when he swerv ed to avoia :
;:ing out o;; Cumfi’oell .it 'ii'icl
■ ,5 p.m. Sunday, June 21, thu Uigiiway
iii-ol said.
Cliarles Melvin Clemenl, 38, of Rt. •>.,
MocksviUe, was traveling north on
C^-mpbell Road, when he yv/e/visd h .i
ii.>,lorcycle to avoid a car baciang out of
;■ driveway. Clement lost control on the
l.'i'Hssv shoulder, and Uie 1H80 Kawasaki
«erturneii.
Clement was taken by ambulance to
■‘Hvie County Hospital.
'lYooper C.R. Collins estimated the
muiic lo ¡¡le motorcycle nt $1,000. No
/iurt;<.-;i were filed in the accident.
B.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. will not
contest a court decision which aUows
DaWe County to collect an estimated
$374,000 in back Uxes on tobacco stored here.
The company decided last week to
abide by a. ruling of the N.C. Court of
Appeals that tobacco stored for manufacture and export Is not exempt ftom local property taxes. Reynolds had
until Jut!9 22 to make an appeal but
decided to drop appeals in Davie,
Forsyth, and Stokes counties, where tte11-Year-Old To Face MurderCharges Tuesday te com^ssloner^gree^o
company will owe more than 91.5 million
plus Interest for taxes in 1979, i960 and
1981.
Davie County Manager Charles
Mashbum included the contested tax
revenue in his command budget to the
county commisioners who were able to
shave 2 cents off a proposed tax rate
increase of 8 cents. With tbe anticipated
revenue from Reynolds, the com- mlslcners adored a 50 cents per tlOO
valuation rate, up 6 cents from last
year’s rate.
Hie back taxes may enable the
commisioners to purchase the Masonic
Building and lot on Court Sijuare. Tlie priceof the building and the lot is 997,000
which earlier would have meant an
automatic iVi cent tax hike in the
budget.
qaatie Vincent Fowler, an u year old
boy accused of murder in the shooting
dsath of his younger brother May T, is scheduled to appear before Judge
Robert W. Johnson Tuesday, June 30.
Judge Johnson deferred juc^ement in
the case June 2 during a closed hearing
in Davie County.
Hie Fowler boy was taken into
custody May 8 by Mocksville police, one
day after his brother Roland Van Lind
say Fowler, died at Baptist HospiUl in
Winston-Salem. Roland Fowler, who
had turned ll only a few days before the
shooting, died at of a single would to the
head by a hollow-point bullet fired from
a .22 caliber rifle.
George Fowler was held over the
weekend without bond in the County Youth Center. The boy made his first court appearance May 11. During the
closed proceeding. Judge Hubert E.
(Nive ruled to release the boy into the custody of his parents.
Fowlers family retains the services of
Larry F. Habegger, a Winston-Salem
attorney.
The shooting occured Thursday
mmiing. May 7 at the home of Thomas
Edward Fowler of 233 Ridgemont Drive
off Milling Road. George Fowler,
Roland Fowler and a third brother,
Jonathan, had been staying at their
uncle's home three weeks since moving
from Salisbury.
All three brothers were home when
the shooting occured. The rifle used in
the slaying belonged to Thomas Fowler,
the uncle, and was propped beside his
bed.
After the shooting, George and
Jonathan Fowler ran to the house of
Iheir grandmother, Mrs. Thomas J.
Fowler, who lives two houses away. She
called an ambulance, whose crew then
notified the police.
Mocksville police and the district
attorneys offlce had several conferences
during that day before deciding to press
charges against the boy. At that point,
no motive had been established in the c«s<*.
Judge Johncon also ordered a joint
revir*' of Uie boy’s case by Michael
Kirkpatrlc!:, ihe lotal juvenile officer
and social services worker.
reconsider
the option to buy. niat option explrca on July si, and Maakbmi axpraaaad hi
that something may be worked out
then. The two story Blasonic Building
and .94 acre lot could be used to relieve
overcrowding in the Davie County
Courthouse.
Reynolds has contested paying
property taxes on its export tobacco stored here for the past three years. A
company spokesman said last week that
was the issue in the court decision which concerned a 1979 appeal but which had
impUcations for eight other appeals,
three in Davie, three in Stokes and two others in Forsyth.
The company argued the application
of a state law which says that
agricultural products like tobacco held
for shipment to foreign countries are
exempt from local property taxes.
llie N.C. Court of Appeals u|riteld
another law which says that products
held for processing and manufacture
must be taxed at 60 percent of their value.
The company spokesman said Reynolds decided not ta contest the
nding In order to give county offlclals
mac« t№a to eoBsidir Hirvflect ot back taxes im thiir propoaad budgets tor nest year. H« aala the company hopes the dedslcr. '■> the three counties will help
reduce ,ix rates.
Sheriff’s Department
Has A Busy Week
.... „____... . .J Svin DanleU reporRebecca Smith Beam, of Rt. 1, Ad
vance, reported a breaking and entering
on Monday, June I. Someone entered
her traUer in Dogwood Springs Trailer
Park. Several items were moved, but
nothing was found mluing.
Frankie McCuUoh, 17, of Rt. 7,
Mocksville, reported the larceny of a
9200 class ring at Davie County High
School during Physical Education class on Wednesday, May 20.
Larry E. Boles, of Rt. 6, Mocksville,
reported vandalism to his mailbox on Tuesday, June 1«. A drink bottle
smashed against the box caused 950
damage.
Howard Stockton, of Cooleemee, was
arrested Tuesday, June 16, and charged
with writing a worthless check.
Charlie Cllnard, of Rt. 2, Advance,
reported a burglary on Tuesday June 16.
The front door to his trailer was pried
open. Stolen were guns and three class
rings worth 9760.
Carlos Edward WUUams reported a
¡¡“*■*■«7 at his service station on Wednesday, June 17. Entry was made
through a broken window. Stolen were a
1972 Dodge truck, shotgun, tooU, citiien
band radios, air compressor and other
i^ s. The total value was estimated at 95,530.
Roger Spillman reported the larceny
of three batteries from Spillman’s
Exxon in North Cooleemee on Tuesday,
June 17. The stolen items were valued at 4175.
reported that a 1933
truck owned by Johnny Foster was
damaged Tuesday night, June 16. A rock
was thrown through the front windshield
and the headllghta were damaged. The
damages were estimated at 9300.
Jeffrey Mark Smith, of Rt. 1,
Mocksville, reported damage to a
mailbox and ornamental post worth 9lS0
on Wednesday, Juno 17.
J.W. Turner, of Rt. 1, Harmony, was
arrested Wednesday, June 17, and
charged with passing a worthleaa check.
(continued on page 2)
D a v i e H o s p i t a l E m e r g e n c y R o o m
T o B e S t a f f e d O n W e e k e n d s B y
P i i y s i c i a n s F r o m B a p t i s t H o s p i t a l
Administrator John H. Frank of the
Davie County Hospital announced today
Emergency Room \^I be staffed by physicians from the
F^amUy Practice residency program at
N.C. Baptist Hospital on peak hours on weekends.
Emergency Room coverage by the
new physicians will be from Saturday, 1
p.m. to Sunday I a.m. and Sunday, I
p.m. to Monday, i a.m. beginning the
weekend of July 4th at the earliest.
Rfr. Frank stated , “These are the
^ak hours of acUvity in the Emergency
Room. Several things will be ac
complished bv utllizina these
physicians. First, our patients will be
served by highly trained physicians who will be on the hospital premises and thus
will be Immediately available and
second, this coverage will mean our local piiysicians will be relieved of a
heavy weekend work load. The Medical
Staff, Trustees and I all feel that this
important decision will be of benefit to
both patient and doctor.”
The hospital will charge a professional
fee for the new physicians, therefore,
the patient vrill be responsible for the
charge only to the hospital, who in turn
will pay the doctors. The charges will be
about the same as local physicians.
Patienta will be asked to pay for the
service charges at time of service,
according to Mr. Frank.
Mr. Frank also stated that Dr. Prank
Moyer will be the coordinator for the
program. Presently, Dr. Moyer is on a
FeUowship at N.C. Baptist Hospital. Dr.
Moyer is a native of Akron, Ohio. He
received his medical degree from
Bowman Gray School of Medicine in
1978 and he recently completed a
residency in FamUy Practice at N.C.
Baptist Hospital.In addition to Dr. Moyer, eltfit other,
physicians wUl be on the schedule for
weekend coverage. Local physicians wUl continue to take caU and backup the
Emergency Room physicians.
J r>t J**® Davie County Board of Election officers for the upcoming year were swornJDOara Of Elections i? “»e county courthouse last week. Shown above being Installed by Clerk of
Court Delores Jordan are Hank VanHoy-«hairman, Booker T. WUUams, and H.
C. Gregory-secretary. (Photo by Garry Foster)
D a v i e T o C o l l e c t ^ 3 7 4 , 0 0 0
I n B a c k T a x e s F r o m R J R
D A V IE C O U N T Y
P.O. Box 525, MocksviUe, N.C. 27028
$10.00 Per Year In North CaroUna
$15.00 Per Year Outside North Carolina
(USPS 149-160)
32 PAGES
THURSDAY, JUNE 25, 1981 Single Copy 25 cents
T a x R a t e T o R e m a i n A t 5 0^
T o w n A p p r o v e s B u d g e t
The Mocksville Town Board inanimously approved Its 1961-82 budget of 91,253,477 during a special budget hearing Monday ni^t.
Commisskiners also voted to keep the
town tax rate at 50 cents per 9100
valuation. The rate has been in effect
since 1979 when commissioners ap- pra««d a thrM cent hUw fmm 47 to 80 cento.
The budget goea into effect July 1.
Terry Braliey, twon administrator,
said, 'MocksviUe is in a pretty good
situation. Due to the recent annexation,
we’ve probably added 910 mUUon to the tax base.”
Braliey said, “There is not any great
Increase In any one particular area. We
are Just maintaining, trying to hold the Une. ’Hiere is Just a marginal increase in this year’s budget. From 91,106.000 to
roughly 91,2000,000, there’s not a whole lot <A difference.”
Fireworks
A Hrewerks «splay wUi be beli agaU Ihto year «■ j«|y 4 al Rich Park.
n e dlsflay wiU begin at dask.
nsre is no ehnrge far adasissiaa.
Braliey admitted that MocksvUle could face a loss in revenues from the
state in the town’s share of the sales tax
and Powdl UU funds. Monies from these
revenue sharings are based on
population which declined in BlocksvUle
according to the i960 U.S. Census. The
town’s poputation decU ed firom around
3,500 to 2,600 in 1980. BraU«y said the census did not indude the town’s recant
annexations which «hould add another 400 citizens to the town.
Mocksville made two annexations in
the last year, llie flrst took in a moatly
industrial area along MiUing Road and
Bethel Church Road. Tlie second added
theresldential areas of Ridgemont and
Craftwood.
’The budget for Uie General Funds
breaks down into; Administration
aUoted 9126,117; governing body, 99,600;
planning and zoning, 98,549; buUdlng
and grounds, 978,387; poUce depart
ment, 9169,498; firo, 940,100; streist,
«M,599. Funds from the state’s Powdl BUI are estbnated to add another
965,000. Fnr sanitation, 967,450 has been adopted; and 945,155 for the rocreation department. Non-departmental ex
penses add another 9151,055 to the
General Fund.
BraUey explained that Uie Incnase In
finds for the poUce department wUl add
a full-time clerical posttlon to the staff.
Often aU officers on duty need to be out
on patrol or on a caU, leaving the office
locked up. With the additlan of «
secretary, the office would always (w
open during regular business hours.
t azaris Released On Bail;
Wanted As Illegal Allen
George Lazaris, arrested and charged with arson last Friday in connection
wilh a June 5 fire at Anchor Seafood
Restaurant in MocksvUle, was released
on bail Monday after his bond was
reduced from tlSO.OOO to 135,000.
District Coiut Judge Hubert E. Olive
reduced the bond Friday, June 19 after a
hearing in ThomasvillL. The original
lis^.oou t>ond was based on estimated
damages the restaurant suffered in the noon time blaze.
Lazaris, 27 and co-owner of Anchor
^afuod, was arre&ted June 12 at his home in Clemmons. Hii remained in the Uavie County Jail until released on bond Monday.Lt. Uary Edwards of the Mocksville Police Departmfcni said that the fire,
which gutted the resUuraiit's interior, ori»i>-'U ' p.Lar tlie cash register, lie
cor'iri"*‘d that containers < f flammable
iU|uld were found at the scene.
Edwards refused to identify the
liquid pending an official
report by the State Bureau of In
vestigation.
Lazaris, a native of Greece has been in
this country for approximately eight
yeais. It is reported Uiat the Im
migrations office in AUanta, Georgia is
currenUy in the process of issuing e
detainer on Lazaris and has classified him as an illegal alien.Records show that Lazaris has been
deported on two prior occasions, once in 1872 and again in 1978.
Anchor Seafood Restaurant, formerly
Aunt Helen's Cafeteria, was purchased by Lazaris and Paul Chrysson in August, IWW from Albert and Helen DeSimone.
Sale price was $175,000. The restaurant is located on U.S. 601 north of
Mocksville, and is part of a Winswn- Salem based chain.
Edwards sai(f i.ivesligation into Uie blaze is continuing. No other charges or
arresU art anticipated at this time, he added
Mockaville^s New Postmaster Takes Oath
WaUer Loveless, MocksvUle’s new postmaster, was swera lale his office Friday, Jane It.
..Robert Bbeebaa, Beclieaal
Cestral Manager al Ihe Greaa- sboro Sectivaal Canter, olHctaUy
appointed Mr. Loveless as Pesl-
roaster of MocksviUe.
On hand (or thr cereasMiy was
Mrs. Loveless aad daagbler,
Karen. Also present were foraiar
postmasters Daisy HolUieiisar and
Roy Cartiuir. Mayor R.C. Bultb
was also in attendance.
. .Loveless said he was "happy to
be over here” and he is "looking
forward to vKOTkuig wiUi people
here'ia MocksvUi* «nd in Davie
Coiialy”: whom he described as "real nice people."
Loveless replaces Franklin
Hrown, former MocksviUe Postmaster. who is cwrently serving
as postmaster in Uxington. He
was transferred last December.
Before trKiisferrlng lo
MocksvUle, Loveless served as
manager at Uie Bethabars Post
Office In Whiston-Salem. He has
also served in a managerial
position at the Ardmore Post Of
fice in WhistoB-Saieu.
Tbe Loveless famUy, al present,
resides in Clemmons.
Prior to Loveless' appointment
in May. Edsel Morgan served as
Officer in ^'harge of Uie MocksvUle
Post Office.
The Increase Ш the fire budgat wiU
provide more eqiUtable compenaaUon
for Modnville’s volunteer firemen.
Prevkmaly, fireman have been given their waler and sewer aerviee for free,
but several of Uie voltinteera Uved in the areas wher«! the services were
unavaUable.
The increase has the town picking up
the tab on training sessions for the
volunteer firefighters.
The 1981-82 budget for Uie UUUty Fund talUes 9324,800. Tbe water department is aUotted 9123,390; sewer department,
9112,485; non4lepartmental expenses cover 912,810; and debt srvlce add
another 976,115.
Braliey said Uie Increased to water
and sewer are due to the rising coato of
maintenance needed on tbe aging
systems. A heft sun of 925,000 wUl be
needed to paint inside and outoide of the
Mocksville elevated water tower.
Other Items In Uie budget Include
983,227 estimated from revenue sharing, tionies aUotted for land-ric^t-of-ways
add 920,000, and sewer outfaU caUs for
983,227.
BraUey commented, “MocksvUle Is in
a fairly good poaiUon in regards to Ito
tax structure in ttie years to come.
Water and sewer are going to take some
hard looking In a few years.”
Cana H om em akeis
Seek To Restore
Local B u ild in g
..The Cana Extenilon
Homemakers are trying to rettore
Uie historical Cana Comnmnity
Building. ’The original building waa
gutted by fire In May ItW.
..Due to the tremendous coat of
restoration, the homemakers are
asking the support of Individuals In
rebuUdIng the site.. .Anyone Interested in thto project
may lend support by donatlona,
materials, or a lielping hand.
..For more Information contact
Mrs. Edwin Boger, Mrs. Uoyd
Brown, or Mrs. Stanley Smith.
Also see Uie Public Notice on Page
14-B of this edition of the Davle-
County Enterprise Record.
Local M otorcyclist
In jured In A c cid e n t
A local motorcyclist was injured in an
accident when he swerved to avoid a car
backing out on CampbeU Road around
3:15 p.m. Sibiday, June 21, Uie Highway
Patrol said.
Charles Melvin Oement, 38, of Rt. 4,
MocksviUe, was traveling north on
CampbeU Road, when be swerved his
motorcycle to avoid a car backing out of
a driveway. Clement lost control on tbe
grassy shoulder, and the i960 Kawasaki
overturned.
Clement was taken by ambulance to
Davie County Hospilal
Trooper C.R. Collins estimated the
damage to the motorcycle at 91,000. No
charges were fUed in the accidmt.
D /W II {■OUNI'i' I NTI Kl'KISI K I C O K O , T IU 'R S n A Y , .lUNI
|4SI
Davie Youth Wins Top
Honors In Livestock Judging
The Gathering
Storm
Driver Is Charged
The Yadkin Valley Hounds Horse show was held at the Thoroughbred Training
Center in Farmington Saturday, and the events did not quite get completed
before a thunderstorm blew up out of the west. Here a lone rider makM the
circuit through the jumps under gathering storm clouds. (Photo by Garry
Foster) ------- ------------------
A Yadkinville man ran off Ollie
Harkey Road through a yard, fields and
a garden, then illegally parked his car
back on the road and left the scene
Monday, June 15, the Highway Patrol
said.
William Frank Gamer, 2», of Rt. 4,
Yadkinville, ran off the road in a curve
on the right around 11:30 p.m. The 1968
Chevrolet first struck a mailbox, then
continued on through a field, a garden, a
front yard, and back through a field.
Gamer attempted to jump the car
over a ditch back onto the roadway, but
disabled the vehicle. Gamer then left
the car parked in the road with no lights
on, and fled the scene.
Trooper A.C. Stokes estimated the
damage to the car at $450.
Gamer was charged with reckless
driving, leaving the scene of an accident
and improper parking.
Rear-End CollisionA mmor rear end collision was
reported on U.S. 601 Monday, June 15, the Highway Patrol said.
James Fredrick Cothren, 1«, of Rt. 5,
MocksvUle, had stopped his 1977
Qievrolet in the road and was attempting a left turn into a private driveway.
Robert Allen Holmes, 31, of Rt. 5,
Mocksville, was driving a 1970
Volkswagen and faUed to see the stopped car ahead, llie VoUuwageu struck the rear of Cothren’s vehicle.Trooper James M. Newton estimated
the damage to each car at $150.Hohnes was charged with failure to reduce speed in the accident.
The DavIe County 4-H Livestock
Judging Team participated In the
Northwest Junior L,ivestock Show
Judging (>)n!est last week in Winston-
Salem. Mike Elliott of Route 4,
Mocksville won higli individual honors
in the contest with a score of 348 out of a
possible 450. The Senior Team composed
of EllioU, Mark Hamrick of Route 3,
Mocksville; and Everette Allen of Route
6, Mocksville placed third behind teems
of Surry and Stokes Counties.
The Davie County Junior 4-H Livestock Judging Team composed of
Brent and Todd Bames of Route 2, Advance; and Tricia Reilly of Route 1, Mocksville placed third in the Junior
Methodist M ake Ministerial
Changes k D avie County
The annual Western North Carolina
United Methodist Conference held last
week at Lake Junaluska, N.C. made
more than 200 ministerial changes for
the 1981-82 church year. This an
nouncement was made by Bishop L.
Scott Alien of Charlotte.The following changes in the
Thomasville District for Davie County
are as fdlows: Advance-Mocks Chur
ches, Rev. J. Marion Fulk, Sr.; Dulin-
Smith Grove, the Rev. Joseph E. Green;
Farmington, Rev. Raymond Surratt;
Mocksville Circuit, Rev. Rex L. Gibfas;
Union Chapel and Chestnut Grove, Rev.
John W. Fowler.
The Rev. W. W. Blanton, a former pastor 6T“Mb^sVil1e—Ftrst-Unit^d“
Methodist will move to Thomasville, and
pastor West End United Methodist
Church.
Division behind Iredell and Watauga
Counties.
The Northwest Junior Livestock Show Judging Contest was the last in a series
of preliminary events prior to State wide
competition. Both Davie Senior and Junior 4-H Livestock Judging Teams
wii: be participating in the North Carolina State 4-H Livestock Judging Contest in Raleigh, North Carolina, on
July 20.
Davie Youth Participate In
Junior Livestock Show
Brent Barnes, so» of Mr. and Mrs. Coy
Bames of Route 2, Advance, exhibited
the Reserve Champion Pen of 3 in the
Northwest Junior Livestock Show Swine
Competition at the Dixie' Classic
Fairgrounds in Winston-Saiem on June 16. The reserve champion pen of 3 was purchased by FCX for .85 per pound. Brent received a rosette and plaque in addition to premium money.
In other swinc competition, Todd Barnes, Brent’s brother, was crowned
Junior Showmanship Champion for his
skill in swine showmanship.Brent
Barnes placed third in Junior
Showmanship and got a ribbon and $ia
premium.
In the performance Index Com
petition, Tricia Reilly of Route 1,
Mocksville took fourth place and a $10
premium. The performance index
compettion is based on the average daily
Wade Biddix
Wade Biddix Is Student
Trainee With Local
Conservation Service
Wade Biddix, a rising senior at Berea I
College in Kentucky, is serving aa a
Student Trainee with the Soil Con-1 servation Service.
Biddix has been in Davie County for
two weeks and will be here until the end j
of August. He currently resides in
Church Street In Mocksville.
Last year Wade served as a Student I
the show and sale.
Davie 4-H’ers Are Winners
In District Activity Day
Davie 4-H members a n d leaders were Blue aw ard; Joe TlUbei
Hi! My name is Josh Hilton, and I had
my 4th birthday May 14th. We
celebrated with a Tony the Tiger party at my home. Eight of my little friends,
my brother Justin, Goushi MystI Barber,
Mommy and Daddy, and my grand
parents came and brought me many
nice gifts. My parents-aceJCelth and
CrysUl Hilton ot Rt. 3 MocksviUe.
Maternal grandparenU are Mr. and
Mrs. H.8. (Pete) Stewart of Rt. 3, Mockavllle. Paternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. James R. HUton of Rt. 4,
Mockavllle.
Ain't I sweet! My name Is Justin
Hilton and I was 2 years old the I6th day
of June. My brother. Josh and cousbi,
MystI Barber, my Uncles Robert and
Ronnie and Aunts Bonnie and Brenda
and my grandparents gave me a party.
We all had chocolate cake and Ice
cream. I got lot of real nice presents My
parents are Keith and Ci^stal Hlltoe-a(-
Rt. 3 Mocksville. Maternal grand
parents are Mr. and Mrs. H.S. Stewart of Rt. 3, MocksvUle. Paternal grand
parents are Mr. and Mrs. James R.
Hilton of Rt. 4, MocksvUle.
Car Overturns On Will Boone Rd.
Sheriff's
Department
(continued from page 1)
Garl Draughon of Rt. 3, Mocksville,
reported a burglary on Thursday, June
18. Entry was made through a back
window where the screen was ripped
out. Stolen were jewelry valued at
$1,000, a television worth a mantle
clock worth $250, a $65 pocket calculator
and $25 worth of frozen meat.
_ Scott Pratt, of Rt. 2, Mocksviile,
reported a larceny on Tuesday, June 16.
Pratt said he left his 1971 Volkswagen at
James Myers Exxon storage lot when he
went tothe beach on June 5. When he
returned, he found tliat his stereo
equipment valued at $154 was stolen
from his car.
Mary Bamey, 37, of the Hinkle Trailer Park , Rt. 4, Mocksville, was arrested Saturday, June 20, and charged with
assault. According to the Sheriff’s
Department, Mrs. Barney allegedly fired a .410 gauge shotgun at Baxter
Gregory. She was released on a written promise to appear in court on July 20.
Marty Lanning, of Rt. 3, Mocksville,
reported a attempted breaking and
entering on Saturday, June 20. Lanning
told the Sheriff’s deputies that he heard
a noise outside his bedroom window.
When he investigated, he found the screen had been cut. Officers searched
the area, but found nothing.
Roger W. Parrish of Kt. 4, Mocksville, rejwrted the larceny of a 1973 beige
Buick La Sabre on Saturday, June 20. ■nie car valued at $500 was last seen at
the residence of James Ilames of Rt. 7.
Dale Harrison Carter , 42, of 2023 La
Quinta Drive, Advance, was arrested
Sunday, June 21, and charged with
assault and battery.
Bobby Gene Allen, 30, of Rt. 5,
Mocksville, was arrested Sunday, June 21 andcharKed with assault and battery.
Stamey Gobble of Woodvalley, Rt. 2, Mocksviile, reported a burglary on
Saturday, June 20. Entry was made
Ihrough a door where the glass was
removed. Stolen were four guns valued
at $300 $.350 and pocket change.
J. 0 . Smith of Underpass Road,
reported vandalism on Sunday, June 21.
Glabs was broken in'a side window and
in a door. Damage was estimated at $225,
Eleanor I. Brown of Davidson Trailer
P ark, R t. 2, M o cksville , reported
vandalism to her automobile on Mon-
June 22. Yellow paint was poured
over her 1980 Chevrolet Monza. Damage
was estimated at »441. Tlie Sheriff’s
Department has one su.^pect in the case.
Mrs. R.B. Cook, of Ht. ¡, Advance,
reported the larceny of a $65 ladies
watch from tier home on Wednesday,
June,17.
A Davie County man overturned his
car after losing control in a sharp curve
of Will Boone Road on Thursday, June 16.
Accordmg to the Highway Patrol,
Danny Gray Peacock, 23 of Deadmon
Road, Rt. 7, MocksviUe, entered a sharp
—left curveat-an excessive speedrHis4971
Ford slid off the road on the right and
flipped in a field.
Peacock was not seriously injured.
IVooper A.C. Stokes estimated the
damage to the car at $475.Peacock was charged with driving too
fast for conditions and improper
registration.
Davie 4-H members and leaders were
represented very weU at the Northwest
District 4-H Activity Day held June 18 at
Reidsville Senior High School. Twelve 4-
H members participated in eleven
different 4-H demonstrations and ac
tivities among some thirty-four.
llie following 4-H members from
Davie were named District Winners in
their respective demonstration
categories; Dottle Sigmon-Poultry,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Sigmon;
Erin McGee-Senior E g g Cookery,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. BUI Foster;
Charlynne EUis - Senior Dairy Foods,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charlie EUis;
Kathy ReiUy-Senior Breads, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Jim RelUy; and Tonya
Turner-Junior Public Speaking,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Tommy
Turner. These 4-H members will -represent Davie and the Northwest District in SUte Competition July 21 in
Raleigh during North Carolina 4-H Congress. Also, Leia Welch, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. James Welch; end
Catherine and Ellie Johnson, dau^ters
of Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Johnson were named District Winners for their participation in the Talent-Share-llie-Fun Activity. Leia presented her own
choreography of Uie Charleston and
Catherine and Ellie sang a duet of Do-
Re-Me and “Edelweiss”.
OUier Davie 4-H’ers participating
included: Ashlyn Hillebrand-Horse-
first runner-up; Je ff White- Photography-Blue aw ard; Cheryle
Woodword-Senior Public Speaking-
Ibert-Automotive
Skill Driving-Blue Award; Liz
Hillebrand-Senlor Horse Public
Speaking-Red Award; and Leslee
Powell and Amy Bingham-
Environmental Quality-Red award.
In addition, Mrs. Eleanor (Jeep)
Wilson was recognized as one of four
recipiente of the. Northwest District
Volunteer Leader Award sponsored by Uie North CaroUna 4-H Honor Qub. Mrs.
WUson was recognized for her out
standing volunteer work with the Davie
4-H Program during 1980. She Is one of
the volunteer leaders with the
Trailblazers 4-H Club and Chairman of
the Davie 4-H and Youth Advisory
Committee.
Others attending included Mrs. Louise
Cartner, Mrs. Jenny Turner, Mrs. CecU
Sigmon, Mr. and Mrs. James Welch, Mr.
Eddie Johnson, Mrs. Lettie Smith, Mrs. Pat ReUly, Mrs. Jennifer ToweU, THcla ReUly, Kendra Welch, Beth Parker; and Doug Itee and Nancy Hartman, 4-H
agents.
Local Students On
U N C ’ CH Dean's Ust
The foUowing students from Davie
County luive been named to the 1961
Spring Semester Dean’s List at the
University of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill.To make the dean’s Ust a student must
earn a 3.2 grade average on the 4.0 scale (A-4, B-3, etc.) while taking 15 or more letter grade hours of credit, or a 3.5
average while taking at least 12 letter
grade hours (with no grade below a C)
From MocksvUle: Roy Wilson
CoUette, III, Park Avenue, MocksviUe;
and Nora Jane Reavis «tf Rt. 6,
MocksviUe.
From Advance: Phillip Edward
Bolton of Rt. 3; Barbara Helen Dancy,
Bermuda Run; Mark Stephen Eldridge,
Bermuda Run; Katherine Mae Brlsette,
Bermuda
Rodgers.
Run; and Grayson Knox
Boy Scouts
Clean Sidewalks
D o Yo u Know ?
You may have notice hams, side by
side In the meat case, labeled butt and
shank halves and butt and shank por
tions or ends.Here’s the difference. When a ham has
been cut in half and the center slices removed, Uie remaining pieces must be labeled portion or end, says Rachel KinUw, extension food speclaUst, North
Carolina SUte University.If the center sUces are stiU on the
ham, the hams may be labeled halves.Thé butt portion contains a Uttle
higher proportion of lean meat to fat and
skin than the shank portion, but it is more difficult to carve, the speclaUst
adds.
BurasviUe, in Yancey Coimty.
Under the supervision of District]
Conservationist Rusty Lyday, Wade’s
study consists of training in various soil
and water conservation practices and district activities. He wiU train in agricultural waste management,
conservation cropping syste^is and tUlage.
llie use of surveying and engineering I
equipment wiU be Included in Wade’s | months In Davie County. He will alsoj
gain administrative and engineering!
experience on the Dutchman Creek | Watershed Project.
Ed w a rd s R e s ig n s As
S p e cia l D e p u ty
W.N. (BUI) Edwards, Special D^uty I
with the Davie County Sheriff’sT
Department, resigned from the position effective June 22.
In a letter to Sheriff George Smith
dated June 22, Edwards announced his I
resignation. The letter reads as foUows: |
Sheriff George Smith
Davie County JaU
MocksviUe, N.C.
Sheriff Smith:
After much thought of my con-|
versations with you and Chief Deputy!
Ricky Howell during the past few weeks,I
in regards to Mr. Reavis and Mrs.*
Stanley, I feel that If I had not done ^
I did I would have'been In violatkm G.S. 14-230.
Since we do not seem to be able toi agree on this General Statute I fed it is]
best for me to resign as a fecial Deputy I with your department. IMs resignation / is effective as of the above date.
For the past two years and three
months I’ve enjoyed being associated'
with some fine officers and hope that
they will Continue to do a flne Job.
With regards,
W.N. (BUI) Edwards
Fires R e p o rte d
Davie County’s volunteer fire]
departments and rescue «quads!
responded to the foUowing emergency caUs recenUy:
MocksvUle units were dispatched to
Autumn Care on Friday, June 10 wlien
lightening reportedly ran through the buUding.
MocksviUe volunteers put out a kit
chen fire at the Taylor residence on
Maple Avenue on Friday, June 19.
Smith Grove C . i «rtment responded to
a car fire on N.C. 801 near Hobson Farm Service on FHday, June 19.
Jerusalem rescue workers were at the
scene of a car wreck on Deadmon Road on Sunday, June 21.
Center firemen were sent to Horn’s
Truck Stop at U.S. 601 and 1-40 on
Monday, June 22 to extinguish a burning truck.
If curtains or draperies
are Mibjectsd to hot lu n ,
it may be better to vacuum often intt«ad o f washing
or deaninp. Sun may weaken fabric which w ill dis
integrate upon cle a n in g .
IW'"
°0 > "‘
O'/
,00«« 'о-'«""""
600 Wilkesboro Street
This group of Boy ScouU from Troop 525 was asked to clean Mocksville
sidewalks as a scout project. The Town provided cleining equipment and
Mayor R. C. Smith treated the boys to refreshments. HereTaylor Slye, Junior
Downs, Leslie Church, Jimmy Slye and other troop members are hard at work
sweeping the sidewalks. The boys, led by Jimmy Roberson, scout master and
Tommy Chaffin are trying to raise money for camp.
V e t e r a n s
C o r n e r
If my disabiUty claim is
reviewed, wiU I have to pay
for any medical reports that
ate required?
No. The Social Security Adminiitratlon will pay a
reiioaable charge for
medical reports tt need» and
reqiuitu.
Although I turned IB Uiis
winter, 1 still get social
security benefits because I
am a full-time student. I wiU
not be going lo school over the
summer but will start college
in the fall. WiU niy benefits
slop for the summer?
Since you were a full-time
»tudenl Uii» year and plan to
be a fuil-time student nest
year, social security will
coniider you a full-tlnie ttudeni SI long as you are out
oi icbool no losiner Uian 4
calendar roonttns. Beaefits will be paid as long at you
meet sU otlier riMiuiremrnts.
Davie Chiropractic
Health Center, P .A.
Dr. Ramey F. Kemp (Director)
Mocksville.N.C.Phone:6.34-2512
C O U N T Y
iPS 149-160)
124 South Main Street
MocksviUe, N.C.
Publiihed every Thursday by the
DAVIE PUBLISHING COMPANY
M OCKSVILLE
ENTERPRISE
1916-1958
Gordon Tomlinson
DAVIE
RECORD
1899 1958
CO O LEEM EE
JOURNAL
1906 1971
Editor-Piihlislier
Bec^y Snyder
Director OI Advertising
Second Class Postage Paid in Mocksville, N.C. 27028
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
^10.00 per yMr in North Carolinai $15.00 par year out of state.
Single Copy 25 cents
.'oitmaster: Sand address changes to Davie County Enterprise Record,
P.O. Box 525, Mocksville, N.C. 27028
DA Vir. C O U N T Y H N T H R P R IS U R F .C O R D , T H U R S D A Y , JUNli ?.8, 1981
Celebrate 25th Anniversary On Cruise
Mr. and Mn. Del McCullough of MockavlUe. N.C. celebrated their 25th
wedding annlverMry, Tueaday, Juné 9, on a cruise ship to the Virgin
iBtands aboard the SS Norway. It waa a gala affair, since the ship was
celebrating its flrst year at sea. Upon their return home; the couple’s
children, Grey, Teresa and Jeff presented them with a silver tray.
Carolina Revlow
by Jerry Mobley
WHO’S RIGHT?...In Raleigh, In
surance Commissioner John Ingram is
not a perennial favorite of tbe powers
that be. At one time or another, the
Ccmunisaioner has alienated Just about ^ in town - including a lot of I that have worked for him.
Consequently, as Ingram receives his periodic Judicial a ^ legidatlve set
backs, pec-.i) generally sit back and Mjoy a good diuckle. Moat people
aasiune that Ingram is responsible for
whatever problems he might have -
which is true in more than a few in
stances.
Last week, however, at least a few
fair-minded individuals might have felt
the deck was being stacked just a little
too high against even Ingram.
Senator Carolyn Mathis, D-
Mecklenburg, Uie chairman of the
Senate Insurance Committee, told
John Vance Seaford
John Vance Seaford
Gets Flight Wings
Warrant Officer John Vance Seaford
has successfully completed the Rotary
Wing Aviator Course at Fort Rucker,
Alabama. Graduating in the top per
centage of his class, he was awarded the
Army aviator flight wings and promoted
to WO-1.
He is the son of the late Johnny
Seaford of MocksviUe and the grandson
of Mrs. C.A. Seaford and the late Mr.
Seaford of the Jericho Road.
His mother, Mrs. Janie Seaford
Summers of Statesville, and his wife, the
former Sharon Goodman of Statesville,
attended the swearing-in ceremohies
and pinned Seaford with his wings and
WO-l-bars.
A l«74 graduate of South Iredell High School, Seaford joined the Army in
September 1975. Upon completion of basic and infantry training, Seaford was assigned to the said Airborne Dividion
at Ft. Bragg. During his assignment at
Ft. Bragg Seaford had the opportunity to undergo various types of training.
Among some of the military schools he
attended were: Airborne sciiool, Air
Assault school, Basic Non-
Commiggioned Officers Academy,
Primary Non-Commissioned Officers
Academy, Sniper’s School, Law En
forcement St'hool, Dragon Weapon
System School, Nuclear Biological
Chemical School, Jungle Warfare
training at Ft. Sherman.
Some of the medals Seaford has
received are the Army Commendation
Medal with firsi Oak Leaf cluster, Good
Conduct Medai, Parachutist Badge, Air
Assault Badge, and Expert Field
Medical Badge.Sesford and his wife will be rztorning
to Ft. Bragg where ha will be reassigned
with the sand Airborne Dividion.
Ingram that "(he) and none of his staff
would be allowed to speak” to the In
surance Committee until he apologized
for “misstatements” he had made the
day before.Mathis was simposedly angry that
Ingram had griped at a news conference
over the amount of lead time she had
allowed in scheduling a public hearing on Saiate BiU B69.SB S6S, according to the Com
missioner’s office, would gut (wevious
legislation that eliminated age and sex
discrimination.
Ingram had called the amount of lead
time (either one work day or two -
dependhig on who you believe) given by
Mathis “no time at all.” He suggested
that those oppostaig SB 563 would not be
able to get to Ralc^ to be heard at the
hearing.Hie commissioner had also been
complahiing that a Senate Insurance
Sub-committee was dragghig its feet on
HB 7. Hie Insurance Commissioner’s
office says HB 7 was designed to eliminate insurance industry sur
charges on safe drivers - an amount
reportedly as high as $45 million.
Both SB 563 and HB 7 are considered
money bills to the insurance hidustry.
The insurance industry apparently
wants SB 563 as law, but not HB 7 which
has ah-eady passed the House by a 96 to 7
vote.
No matter who was right or wrong in .
what appears to be a rather petty
argument, the state’s only elected in
surance spokesman was forbidden to
speak concerning important multi
million dollar insurance issues - by an
angered state senator.Observers were left wondering why.
One observation suggests that
members of the committee are “in the
industry’s pocket” and Ingram’s
statements were coming a “little too
close to home.”One fairly objective senator offered
that there is “concern by some of the
Senate leadership that John Ingram might run for governor and .... they
don’t want to give him those kinds of
money bills to campaign with.”NEW LAW....A last minute “road
block” cropped up last week hi the path
of Governor Hunt’s “Good Roads
Package.”After a relatively easy, though amended, passage through the N.C.
House, the bill was blocked from Senate concurrence at the last possible minute.
Hie amended version which was held up
did not include the gasoline tax rebate
and amounted to a quarter of a penny
less than the initial three cents per
gallon.
Apparently the last minute dealy was
partially a result of Senator Kenneth
Royal’s disposition. One source said
Royal was peeved that members of the
House had let the Ux rebate fall by the
wayside. Hie rebate was Royal’s in
vention.
Hie bill, with or without the rebate,
will i)ecome law this week.
On Chancellor’s List
Hiree Davie (^unty residents are
among the University of North Carolina at Charlotte students making
the Chancellor’s list for the 1981 Spring
Semester.
To qualify for the Chancellor's List, a
student must maintain a "B” average
with no grade lower than a “C.”
Elizabeth K. Sexton, of 36 Onter St.,
Cooleemee, completed the semester
with a straight "A" average.
Others making the Chancellor's list
are:
Frankie B. Comelison, Rt. 6, Box 84-A,
Mocksviiie, a senior.
Linda Leigh Sushereba, Rt. 7, Box 47,
Mocksviiie, a senior.
W H I T E
S A L E
S a l e E n d s
S a t u r d a y J u n e 2 7 t h
BRIGHT IDEAS FOR UVING
Let “WiW Rose” sheets from Springmaid;
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Twin, rea. 5.99.........
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’ 4 . 4 7 „CH
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std. cases, pair, reg. 5.99 ' 4 . 4 7 PAIR
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B E D S H E E T S
POLYESTERAND COTTON MUSLIN
FLORAL PRINT
BEIGE GOLD-BLUE
TWINS
Usually'4.99 ^ 3 .9 7 EACH
fuu-S U Q 7 rsruUsually’6.99 EACH
QUEENS JO 0 7
Usually’10.99 0 . 9 / EACH
STANDARD PILLOWCASES
Usually*4.99 pair ’ 3 . 9 /
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STANDARD PILLOWCASES
UsuaTly’4.99 pair O . j / PAIR
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POLYESTER ANE COnON MUSLIN
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STANDARD PILLOW CASES
Usually*5.99 pair ’ 4 .4 7 PAIR
S a v e o n a
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From State Pride® pastel floral sprays
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Twin, regularly $35 .......................26.25
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Sheets : flat or fitted 50 Q 7
Twin, regularly 4.99 .........................
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• B e d s p r e a d s
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O F F
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Curtains with tie backs feature the popular colonial muslin look Machine washable. 50“/» polyesler/50% rayon. Perm press. By
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R o y a l F a m ily * c o lle c tio n
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Colorlul best selling terry selection by Can
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Hand towel, reg 4 50 Wash cloth, reg. S2
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p ic tu r e p rin t
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Intriguing selection of assorted pillows featuring true-to-life prints. Face fabric ol 100% cotton or
cotton chintz Polyester-colton back. Polvoster-
jo a m fill By Alagold
S t a t e P r id e m a t t r e s s p a d
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Over 40 Compete
Rain Hampers Local Horse
Show At McCashin Farm
Dark cinuds, accompanied by the roar
of thunder echoed the threat of rain.Sudden showers dampened both
horses and riders assembled for the Yadkin Valley Hounds Horse Show.
The show was held Saturday, June 20
at the Thoroughbred Training Center in
Farmington, run by John McCashin.
The ‘all hunter' event attracted 40-50
entrants eager to prove their mounts
suitable for the hunt field.
Judged by Joan Boyce, of Greensboro,
winners were awarded ribbons for their
performance.
Yadkin Valley Hounds is a hunt club
with kennels located in Cleveland, North
Carolina. The club has 25 hounds and
hunts over 8000 acres.
Equitation categories judged riders on
form and ability to handle the horse on
Story by Jane Keller
the flat and ac: j ^ co>' ae of jumps.
Performancv! judged horses
and ponies for form over the jumps.
Jane Lewis, a rising 7th grader at
South Davie Jr. High, from the Davie
Academy Community, was one of the
several area riders entering the show.
Jane Lewis who has been showing for
4 years, shows with L.B. (LitUe
Brother), a, Tanglewood Farms Horse.L.B. , Jane and their combined
equestrian talents placed 1st in flve categories and walked away with a
champion ship in the Childrens Hunter aass.
As storm clouds rolled over, rain
poured onto the ring below. Each
carefully lead their prized animals to
dry trailers, only to head to the practice
ring and prepare for the next show.
Photos by Garry Foster
Jumping An entry in Saturday’s liorse show follows through with his Jump, shortly before
rains cleared the ring of horses and riders.
Letters To The Editor
Dear Editor:
There are two young men in Davie County who have given beyond the call
of duty on responsibility of their time, efforts, knowledge, and patience to a group of boys and girls in our county and
we want to say “Thank You” and let
other citizens know about these two
young men. They are Ronnie Thompson,
Agricultural Extension Agent, and
Douglas Lee, Assistant Extension Agent
- 4-H. 'Hiese two men have spent much
time and many hours coaching and
preparing the Junior and Senior 4-H
Livestock Judging teams from Davie
County for competition in the various
livestock judging contest. Some may
feel that this is Just part of their duty
connected with the Extension service.
However, as stated above Ronnie and
Doug Lee have gone far beyond the call
of duty. It is men with devotion such as this that many times has the correct
word or encouragement when a youngster needs it most.
For their patience, guidance, and
devotion to our son and all the young
people of Davie County whose lives they
have touched, we as adults and parents
say ‘"niank You.”
Sue and Hugh J. EUiott
Rt. 4, Box 246
MocksvUle, N.C.
Dear Editor:
I refer to the June 18, 1981 edition of
‘Hie Davie County Enterprise Record --
specifically the article entitled “County Asked to Outlaw Traps”.
God help us if the County Commissioners act on an ordinance outlawing steel traps proposed by BUI
Ferebee and a few A.P.S. members.This is Uke sheep herders against
cattle ranchers in the West. The man running foxes with dogs don’t want traps
in the field.
Next, the non-smoker won’t want the
smoker to be allowed in a buUding
simply because he doesn't like smoke.
Then the drunk will want the others oil
the road when he is out driving. Tbe
Gays wUl want everybody to have their
sex desires. Where wiU these or
dinances end? Once they are on the
book, they are hard to get off.
I beUeve the commissioners should
look at the people pushing an ordinance
to see what their motive is. Do they obey
the preb ^nt laws, or do they like to make
restrictions for others while they do not
want their own activities curtailed? Do
the do-gooders use the same name when
writing to protect the animals as they
use when ignoring the laws now
existing?
There is a dog lease ordinance in
MocksviUe now and a friend of mine walking in dog mess all the time on his
property and he doesn't have a dog.
Some of these ordinances should be enforced before we put more on the
books.
Sincerely yours,
GeneL. McLaughlin
Rt.l,Box428
MocksviUe. N.C.
Dear Editor:
Hie Staff of Autumn Care would like to
take this opportunity to thank the
MocksviUe Fire Department for their
quick response to our call on Friday, June 19.
llie town of MocksviUe is fortunate to
h a v ^ ^ g o u ^ M e d U c a te d m e i^ h ^ r«
always willing to help in time of need.
Sincerely,
Nettie D. Groce
Administration and Staff of
Autumn Care
Dear Editor;
We would like to say thank you to
Jimmy Robertson and the group of Boy &outs who worked aU day Saturday
improving the appearance of WUkesboro Street. Tliey endured very
hot weather and a thunderstorm to clear
sidewalks and edge lawns, and we are grateful.
AvUon and Doris Frye
Achill Island
Nineteenth-century farmers on Ireland’s AchiU Island i-efused to pay rent to a land agent named Boycott,
giving birth to the term for such acts of
defiance. National Gec«raphic reports.
Report From Raleigh
By Rep. Betsy Cochrane
Jane Lewis, of the Davie Academy area, and earned five 1st place rib
bons and a championship in various Jumping classes.
In a 70 to 48 imte, the Governor’s Good
, Roads Package passed the House.
Twenty-four Democrats joined the t-
wenty-four Republicans in opposing the
gas tax package. I voted against the tax
package because I could not in good
conscience vote more taxes for my
constituents when I had no assurance
those funds would be weU spent. I
believe DOT must improve its money
management and organization before
we take hard earned dollars from our
citizens to make the miUions for high
way use.
One new project your tax dollars may
provide wUl be S&H Green Stamps for
rewarding DOT workers for good
driving on the job. It is an incentive
program for DOT employees in the field
to reduce accidents and injuries and financial losses. The pUot project wlU
cost an estimated $30,000 in green
stamps, and would have a potential savings of about $50,000 if the numter of
accidents and injuries were reduced to zero. This seems like a fairly good idea at quick glance, but why not give jobs to
careful conscientious drivers in the first
place?
The House passed a Nonidentifying
Adoption Information biU this past
week. Upon reaching 21 years of age, an
adoptee may get certain pertinent
biological information from the adoption
agency-physical characteristics of
natural parents, any health problems,
ages of parents at natural child’s birth,
religion, etc. This biU is now in the
Senate.
My Appropriations Committee passed
and now the House is considering
authorization for a new license plate for
North Carolina. It is really attractive.
Tliere is a pale blue Wright Brothers bi
plane in the upper background and pale
blue sea oats at the bottom. Red letters
are used for “First in Flight” at the top
of the plate, and “North Carolina” at the
bottom. The identifying number for your
vehicle is in dark blue across the center
of the plate. It is unique for our state.
The House passed its re-districting
proposal this past week. Davie and
Davidson Counties are stiU the 30th
District and entitled to three
representatives.
V A N e w s
What is the maximum
amount I can borrow on a
Veterans Administration guaranteed home loan?
Hiere is no legal maximum. Hie VA will guarantee 60
percent of the loan or $27,500, whichever is less. Hie total
amount of the loan is deter
mined by the policy ot your
lending institution and by
your ability lo repay the loan.
If a veteran was phycically
or mentally disabled during
the period of his cligibUity, he
may apply for an extension by
submitting medical evidence
for consideration.
When are dividends paid on
participating National Ser
vice Life Insurance policies?
Dividends are normally
paid on the anniversary date
of the Insurance policy.
F o s t e r - R a u e h
D rn o C o m p a n y
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“ M ocksville, N .C .
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From Out of the South Came...
i
B I ^ C U I T L ^ W
From morning ’til night
220 Gaither Street, Mocki.'ille ^
B L T on a BISCUIT
2 For $ 1.00
H a w a iin
T ro p ic
Your Suntan
Headquarters
VOID AFTSR JULY 1, 1981
SA U SA G E GRAVY BISCUIT
2 For $ 1.00
VOID AFTER JULY 1, IMI
l l S u n g la sse s
Foster Grant
Signature
C hildren's Sunglasses
W ilto n
S u p p lie s %
2 0 % off
eveiything
Som e U p
5 0 % off
. Vf
a
♦ ’(
4 - H 'e r s L e a r n T o P r o d u c e
A n d T o P r e s e r v e F o o d
DA Vit: r O U N - n ' E N T K R P R IS i; R K C O R D , T H U R S D A Y . JlW li 28, 1981 5
Growing vegetables In
volves more than Just plan
ting the seeds and watching
the plants grow. Aside from
rolitinc chores like weeding,
watering and fighting bugs,
tliere are other matters to
deal with, including thinning,
transplanting and deciding
what to do with all the goodies
once they start ripening.
4-H members in gardeiiing,
entomology and food
preservation projects con
ducted by the Cooperative
Extension Service, combine
study with actual hands-on
experiences. Good planning precedes planting in the
garden and is essential to
achieving overall satisfying
results. The national 4-H
gardening program, sup
ported by the Ortho Consumer
Products Division, Chevron
Chemical Company, en
courages members to submit
soil samples for analysis,
learn insect and weed control
methods, mulch and
irrigation techniques,
seedbed preparation and seed
4-H'ers improve
SliillsOf
Communications
Communications-related
skills learned in the national
4-H photography and public
speaking programs often lead
to jobs, careers and com
munity service.
With learn-by-doing ac
tivities, 4-H members are
encouraged to pursue their
interests beyond the scope of
these programs and use skills
to involve themselves in
entrepreneur activities.
Charlie Dawson Jr., a 17-
yearK)ld high t^ool senior
from Jefferson, Ga., started
out with an instamatic
camera, primarily recording
family scenes. He has since
perfected his craft, and now is
in demand for his elaborate
Blide-tape presentations.
“Photography has been fun,
exciting and a way to express
myself,” Dawson said. “My 4-
H photography project earned
for me jobs at two local
newspapers. Ifieile would not
have been possible if the
newspapers had not bMome
aware of my ability through 4-
’H.**
Dawson, a national winner
in the 4-H photography
program, supported by
E&utman Kodak Company,
Mded that theae expc»*iences
'^»«bably will lead to a
career in journalism or
, :^Ucs.”
' Ukewlae, i9-year-old Angela Streater of Bluffton, Ind., used her public spealdng
skills to land a job with a local radio station. Although she
experienced some difficulty
...at first - when she realized
r ' how large an audience would
I, hear her, she soon became
f“ known as “The Voice of Wells I •• County.” Streater, a national
winner in the public speaking
program, supported by Union Oil Company of California, is ;;a freshman at Indiana
University at Bloomington,
where she is majoring in - public relations.
These two young people are
''representative of many en-
" teiprising 4-H’ers who turn an
; interesting 4-H project into a
.. business venture. In addition
; to working on radio and
■ television stations,
, newspapers, and having
, public speaking engagements
^ before church, civic, school
^'and p ro fe s s io n a l
organizations, these young
: people are involved in many
other communications-
related pursuits.
After several years in the
1 photography program, Beth
Harrelson, a 19-year-old
Bowling Green (Ohio) State
University sophomore,
opened her own portrait
studio, while 17-year-old Paula Webber has been in
volved in leadership training for younger 4-H’ers. Another
youth, 17-year-old Joel Finnell
of Cleveland, Tenn., has tackled a project of
photographing all ISO chur
ches in his county. He plans to
put together a book on each
church’s history.
Incentives to excel in their
photography and public
speaking programs are
provided by Kodak and Union
Oil through National 4-H
Council. These incentives
include four medals of honor
to county winners in each
program and a trip to
National 4-H Congress in
Chicago, ¡11., Nov. 30-Dec. 3.
At that event, six national
winners selected by the
Cooperative Exten»ion
Service, in each program, will
receive «1.000 scholarships.
Kodak also sponsors a
recognition pi'ugram for
, volunteer 4-H photography
leaders and a National 4-H
Photo Exhibition for 200
young photographers during
National 4-H Congress. After
Congress, the photo exhibit
can be seen on display in various sthtes.
Additionally, Union Oil and
Kodak have supported tiie
development of com
munications skill oriented
educational aids. For in
formation about these 4-H programs and the op
portunities foi recognition in
public speaking and
photography contact your
county extension office.
selection and planting.
Extension specialists say tilling the soil will help reduce the number of overwintering
insects by exposing them to an unfavorable climate, as well as to birds and other predators. Tilling also helps
to control weeds that steal
valuable moisture and
nutrients and serve as hosts
for insects and diseases.
The national 4-H en
tomology program, supported
by Mobay Chemical Cor
poration, Agricultural
Chemicals Division, teaches
4-H members to recognize garden pests and learn
methods of erradicating in
sects that are harmful to f ruits and vegetables. Be sure
to use insect and disease
controls as directed by the state and federal agencies.A bountiful garden offers
several alternatives for use of crops. Aside from enjoying fresh vegetables, members in the national 4-H food preservation program, sponsored by Kerr Glbss
Manufacturing Company,
lengthen enjoyment of their
crops through canning,
freezing and drying.
They offer these guidelines:
Preserve only what you
can use within a single year.
While the food will remain
safe to eat after that, quality
may deteriorate.
Use only fresh-picked produce in prime condition -
neither too green or too ripe.
Label and date each
container, taking care to use
the oldest items first.
4-H members in gardening
and food preservation
programs enjoy first-hand the
special fresh, out-of-the-
garden flavor of their home
grown fruits and vegetables.
Further, they can save
money, earn money by selling
their crops at roadside stands,
and help meet special dietary
needs and family preferences all year long.
Incentives and recognition
for participants are provided by Mobay, Ortho and Kerr
Glass. Medals of honor are
awarded to four members in each program, from each
county. In the food preser
vation program, one member from each state earns an
expense-paid trip to the 60th
National 4-H Congress in
Oiicago, ni., Nov. 30-Dec. 3.
In the gardening and en
tomology programs, one 4- H’er from each state earns a «75 U.S. Savings Bond, and 18 sectional winners in gardening and 16 in entomology
are eligible for trips to
Congress. During Congress,
national winners in each program are recognized and
receive «1,000 scholarships.
All awards are arranged by
National 4-H Council.
More information on the 4-H
IH-ograms can be obtained
from county extension offices.
D e n f o /
Tips
By Gary E. Prillaman DDS
Did you know that dentists
can piaint teeth? Crooked,
malposed or discolored teeth
can now be made to look
better by painting the teeth. Dentistry has progressed a long way in the realm of white
fillings. The early white
fillings discolored quickly,
shrunk in the mouth and
generaUy had to be replaced
after two-three years. Today
modern white fillings do not
discolor readily, and last five-
seven years in the mouth. In
the future we will have white
Tillings which will not discolor
at all. At present, such fillings
are avaUable, but studies show they shrink too much in
the mouth, causing leakage around the edge of the fUling
and subsequent decay.Hie white fUlings we have
today are caUed composite
resins. In about ftS percent of
Uie cases, the fUlings can
match the color of the teeth so
closely one can’t teU where
the tooth stops and the fiUing
starts when the person leaves
the dentist’s office. Today
looks are very important, and
crooked teeUi can detract
from a person’s appearance,
and affect the person’s social,
business and personal life.
Malposed teeth can be made
to appear straight to other
people. Discolored teeth can
be made to look like normal white teeth.
Müdem composite resins
are very reliable, dependable
fUlings and can function weU
over a long period time, lliese
fUlings can be painted on teeth to reshape or remove
discolorations and lestore a
person’s natural youthful smile. If your teeth are in this
•shape ask your dentist about correcting it at your next
visit.
Americani drink over a billion
pounds u f coffa« per year.
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HOTPOINT M ICROW AVE!
jo s t
Model FH16A
|95
I I O t l p L C r L r i j t r
BIG 13.6 CU. FT A t A L I H L E PRICE!
a
_ Cycle defrost which
I defrosts the fresh foe '
Icompartment automai-
lically @ 2 Produce crlsp-
|ers ^ Portable egg rack
2 Easy-ReleaseTM Ice
Itrays B Freezer door
shelf I
switch.
Energy-Saver
Model CTA14CA
S A V E
i i s i
FINE TUNING
2 SPEE0 TIMER
UP
FRONTRECIPE
GUIDE
P Large 1,3 cu. ft, capacity M 2 Power levels @ 35
Minute timer ^ Handsome
simulated wood grain cab
inet ^ Black glass front.j » ’ 2 9 9
FULL COLOR BUIDE t COOKBOOK INCLOOED
Model RE926Y
95
3 WASH/RINSE TEMPERATURES
HEAVY DUTY
TRANSMISSION
SELF-CLEANING
FILTER RING
3 WATER LEVEL SELECTIONS
m
Model DLB6850A
Quality permanent-
press dryor.
Automatic Sensi-Dry
or timed cycle feature.
Poly knits cycle.
AUTOMATICSENSIORV'“
PORCELAIN ENAMEL FINISH DRUM
NEW LOW PRICE
ON THIS QUAUTY HOTPOINT!
from Daniel... BUY NOW
for the REALLY HOT DAYS
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9700 BTU HOTPOINT
SPECIALLY PRICEDI
B 9700 BTU ■ 12 Amps, 115 Volts ■ 3 Speeds B Energy-Saver option ■ Vent control H Ouick-Mount panels
Model KC710A
jost
’ 2 5 9 “
INFINITE HUT ROTARY CONTlOlS
STAY-UP CALROO* UNITS
RtMovABieoMweft FOR EASY CLEANING
COME SEE THIS VALUE PACKED 30'RANGE!
B Easy-to-clean 30" oven-range B Surface unit "on" light
B Removable trim rings/pans B Lift-off oven door
^ 2 8 9 ^
HOTPOINT
PORTA-COOLi AIR CONDITIONER
SPECIALLY PRICED!
B 5000 BTU B 7,5 Annps , 115 Volts B 2 Speeds S Energy-Saver B Vent control B Handle B Ouick-Mount B WoQd grain look.
D A N I E L
F u rn itu re and E le c tric C o ., in c.
f r e e d e l i v e w „
C O U . . . O U S D.pw'i*'' Phone 634-3975 o r634-2492
South M ain Street
la ^ e O v e r h e a d Bridge Moclcsville, N .C .
Your Authorized
HOTPOINT Dealer For Davie County!
■ j a i l I t i i ■ I
D A V I U C O U N T Y VNri-RRRISI- R U C O R O , T I I U R S I M Y , .UINI- 2S ■
Some Davie Farmers Are
Changing Tillage Practices
.Я - w - ’ -- -
Henry Walker, a farmer from the Davie Academy area looks over com
that he has planted in small grain residue.
In recent years some double crop
farmers in Davie County have made
changes in their tillage practices.
Conventional tillage methods call for
burying all crop residue after harvest,
so there are no remains of the crop on
top of the soil when the next crop Is planted.
The trend towards Conservation
tillage or no-tillage is taking a strong
hold among small grain farmers in the
area.
This practice leaves a significant
amount of the crop residue on the soil
surface at planting time, llie field is neither plowed or disked.
After the harvest of the small grain, which may be wheat, barley, or the like,
the farmer sprays a weed control chemical onto the field, then plants his
com or soybeans. Anything can be
planted, but most area farmers stick to
com and fioybeans. Hiey may produce 2
crops in one year from the same field.
Hie increased interest in no-tillage is
contributed to many factors.
First of all it is a time and labor saver.
Hie cost and time Is cut in half; a
savings of SO percent in hours and work.
Equipment use and fuel savings are cut about 80 percent. Conventional
tillage methods use around 7Vi gallons of fuel to plant and harvest per acre. '
The no-tillage practice bums only
about IV4 gallons per acre.
Average crops yeilds may be in
creased 10-15 percent.
There are many benefits to using the residue.
The straw holds water in the ground;
keepln« 25 percent more moisture in the
soil for the plant to use.There is less evaporation. According
to Rusty Lyday, District Soi! Conservationist, "the more water you can
keep in the groui.d this time of year, the
better crop you get.”llie residue serves basically as a mulch, therefore, it keeps the soil temperature down. For example: if the outside temperature is 94 degrees, the
soil surface temperature can reach 130 degrees. Under the mulch the soil remains at № degrees.Hie straw on top of the soil also reduces soil loss. It proves effective in erosion control, reducing soil loss up to
Я0 percent.
Lyday pointed out that there are two
critical elements in exercising no-
tillage.
The farmer has to make sure he gets
the seed into the ground through the
residue.
Adequate weed control Is also a must.
If the weeds are not controlled “all these
benefits go down the drain” and the
farmer is left with a “useless field of
nothing” says the conservationist.
Henry Walker, a farmer in the Davie
Academy area, utilizes no-tillage
methods.
With 192 acres of com, 192 acres of
small grain, and 150 acres of soybeans.
Walker produces 3 crops in 2 years.
He sells part of his crop and feeds out
the rest to his cattle.
All of the work is done by himself, his
wife, and his three children.
Time is crucial where planting is
concerned and the Walkers say they
don’t have time for conventional tillage.
Walker, stated that the labor and time
saving no-tillage is the “only way I can
get it done.”Walker has a $250 an acre Investment
in com production. Chemicals, seed and fertilizer run approximately $125 an
acre.Ekjuipment can run from $13,000 for a
6-row planter to $70,000 for a combine.Farming often requires more money than farmers make from their crops.
According to Walker, “if you get 3-4
percent back, you better feel lucky.”
No-tillage practices are helping
farmers cut back in costs. With inflation
on the increase every year, money
saving farming developments are
welcomed by farmers.
They can save “10-15 percent, maybe
20 percent, if you count wear and tear on
equipment” says Walker.
Conservation tillage is soil con
servation. Hie land is used wisely and makes money for the farmers .They
capitalize on moisture retained in the
soil because of the residue.
Hiis ever growing practice of no
tillage increases farmers yields and
profits, while conserving precious
natural resources.
Rusty Lyday. District Soil Conservationist and Wade Biddix, Student Trainee,
examine soybeans planted in tlie residue, which serves as a type of mulch.
Here soybeans grow in the remains of a small grain crop. The straw on
top of the soil retains moisture and reduces soil loss.
P h o t o s b y R o b i n F e r g u s s o n S t o r y b y J a n e K e l l e r
Terry B. Smith With Naval Fighter Squadron
Navy Senior Chief Aviation
Machinists's Mate Terry B. Smith, son
of Gilbert L. and Flora Smith of Route 5,
MocksviUe, N.C., has returned fipom a
deployment to the Mediterranean Sea.
He is a member of Fighter Squadron
32, based at the Oceana Naval Air
Station, Virginia Beach, Va.
During Uie seven and one-half month cruise, his squadron was embarked aboard the aircraft carrier USS John F.
Kennedy. They participated in several
major NATO and joint service exercises designed to test aUied naval warfare techniques and proficiency in simulated
air, surface and submarine warfare
environments. More than 27,000 flight
hours and 11,000 carrier arrested lan-
■ dings were recorded by Uie Air Wing
during the deployment with no major
injuries or aircraft accidents. Port calls
were made in Spain, France, Italy, Egypt, Greece and Israel.
His squadron flies ttie F-14 “Tomcat” I jet aircraft, an aU-weather fighter I
capable of air intercept as well as[
tactical bombing to provide close air| support for ground troops.
Rollins Reunion
The 27th Annual Rollins
reunion wiU be held Sunday,
June 28, 1981, at the Center
Community BuUding.
AU relatives and friends are
invited to come and bring a
weU fUled basket. Lunch will
be served at 1:00 p.m. Bring
drinks, ice, cupa, plates, and
forks wUl be fkimished.
T o A l l T h e P e o p l e
O f D a v i e C o u n t y
✓
I Would Like To Invite You To Our Dealership. If You Need
Service In Any Way, Please Call Or Come By For An Appointment.
We Look Forward To Serving Your Future Transportation Needs.
Sincerely,
J e r r y
Highway 421 & 601 Yadkinvilie,N.C.
PHONE
Yad. 919-679-8881
W.S. 919-722-6502
y n c h
Гл
il
CHEVROLET Г/
►и«
Mocksville Builders Supply
SOUTH IVIAIN STREET NK)CKSViLLE
Come In And See Our
D O O - D A D S
Everything For The Handyman!
Rockwell
O r b it a l
F in is h in g
S A N D E R
M o d e l 5 05
•1 0 ,0 0 0 O r b it s P e r M in u t e
• F l u s h S a n d in g O n 3 S id e s
• 2 .3 A m p M o t o r
i v r
B U I L D E R S
S A W
M odel 5 74
•5 8 0 0 R P M • 12 A m p
*4 6 .9 5
» F u ll 1 0 ” C a p a c i t y O v e r B e d A n d 36
C a p a c i t y B e t w e e n C e n t e r s F o r L o n g P i e c e s
>4 S p e e d s F o r A V a r i e t y O f O p e r a t io n s
F e a t u r e s B i g 3V 4” D e p t h O f
C u t A t 9 0 ° A n d M / 8 ” A t 4 5 °
R i p s 2 4 ” R ig h t O r L e f t O f B la d e
M o d e l 34-695
/Гш MOCKSVILLE BUILDERS SUPPLY
SOUTH MAIN STREET
H o u rs ; 7 :0 0 5 :0 0 P .M . M o n . k i .
S a tu rd a y 7 :3 0 1 2 :0 0 P .M .
PH O N E 63 4 59 15 or 63 4 5916
MOCKSVILLE, N.C.
■ ■
^ O v e r 9 0 0 B u ild e r M a r t s J
№
S l)A\'II (■(n’M ^■ ( N T I K I ’RI.SI K IC O K I). Till IKSI)^^■, .U)N1-: .'H. n x i
y-merood
$$$RMi SilM IU r-U VF H>OD
u.^. ch'ótre lea n TENDÍI^
SANDWICH BUDDIE
BOLOGNA OR
FU N B U D D IE f r a n k s
PKG.
GWALTNEY CHICKEN FRANKS,
GREAT DOGS
12 0Z.PKG.
SMITHFIELD CRISP FRViN^
BACON ^ ^
LB.
CHOCK ROAST
LS.
U.S. CHOICE FINE FOR THE GRiLL
CHUCK STEAK
^ p iM i6 tts s $ 4 j 9 9
LB. I
LEAN TENDER CUBED
STEAK
$
I
OS^RM AYER REGULAR OR BEEF
T O ,
OSCAR MAYER
• r e b l a r * BEEF • THICK
á
. B O L D G N A
^ « « 4 9
120Z.PKG. ■
OSCAR MAYER ,, _
LEAN NIASTY BEEF /. ¡m
BACON
STRIPS
$ 1 4 9
I PKG.
LIQUID HAND SOAP
SOFT SOAP
9 1 4 9
I LEAN TENDER BONELESS
STEW BEEF
J V
EXTRA LEAN B_ONELESS
'SHOULDER STEl
$02
M ilk
COBLE HOMOGENIZED
qA S w e e t
PURE VEGETABLE
38 OZ. SIZE
E 3 ^ R A
S & H G r e e n S t a m p s
w ith this Coupon and Purchase o f
One S19.95 or More Food Order
N011: U m it O f o n « F ood Bonus C oup on w itn each
BIG 16% OZ. SIZE
★ SAVE 56*
100BUNUS
S ll H GREEN STAMPS
N O c o u p o n w e e d e o
MMOVESTDniirSHOj^T
★ SAVE 50*
A FANTASTIC 1
SAVE A TAPE OFFE R
"Total S h o p p in g ” V a lu e
3 1 No-’X m iita Íjp p f iai')
V,,HOable Iradinp
c|\\|\t^GS M i^fp p s
\ D 'V co u n t P iK t‘s
12 «
ir SAVE 20*
THESE PRICES GOOD
ONLY THROUGH JUNE 27,1981
ANSCO
» c k c
C a m e r a
NOW ONLY
P o c k e t * 8 WITH
0RS14.Q9,
1 H E F F N E R 'S P R I C e S
Oitcount
PrtCB Y O U f
S A V E
DISPOSABLE DIAPERS
N^Overnight Pampers 1 2 co u n t ’ 1 .7 9 30*
* PURINA HI-PRO "FLAVORS"
Dog Food 5 LB. BAG n .9 9 34*
PURINA HI-PHO "FLAVORS"
DogFood 25LBrBAG *6 .9 9 ’ 1 .3 0
PURINA HI-PRO S LB. BONUS PACK
DogFood 30 LB. BAG ’ 7 .2 9 60*
D HERO ADULT
1 D O G F O O D 25LB.BAG $
1 ★SAVEU.OO
ALPO
DogFood ’ 1 .7 3 16 *
ALPO BEEF
DogFood 25 LB. BAG ’ 5 .9 9 ’ 1.6 0
WISKER LICKINS A LL FLAVORS
Cat Food 1 2 0 2 . SIZE 7 1 *2 0 *
PURINA ORIGINAL
Cat Chow 1 0 LB. BAG ^ 4 9
60*
PURINA TENDER VITTLEC
- . _ . ALL FLAVORS
Cat Food 18OZ.SIZE ’ 1 .0 9
2 4 '
ORTEGA 10 COUNT
Taco Shells 4 0 2 . size 6 3 ‘1 0 *
ORTEGA MILD
Taco Sauce ®59‘2 0 *
A LL FLAVORS 6 OZ.SIZE
Glade Solid Room Deodorant 59‘1 0 *
PURE
C L O R O X
BLEACH
V l GALLON
5 «
WiTH 1 FILLED
STAMP PRICE BOOK
Offer Good Only
Through
June 27,1981
ai(
"«GPOOV
DAVII- ( 'O U N T Y l-NTI'.Kl’RlSi; K IX ’O R l), T H U K S D A N ’, JliNI 's. |'(8i
üi/ingsUDomTsi
M m c k s ;
A
f e o « »
MugLLElfT gLfe6
M A C A R O N I
20OZ.BOX
■k SAVE 18*
(RAFT^S
V E L V E E T A C H E E S E
1 LB.PKG. 5 ^ 6 9
★ SAVE40‘ IliPTON’SBRISKnAVOR
T E A B A G S i100 COUNT
A
1 n/T,t/foi/Sfi
w*îî.
99
/■'<35S i -
WHITE HOUSE
A P P L E S A U C E
9
'V,
303 CANS
★ SAVE 29*
ORANGE-GRAPEPUNCH TROPICANO
D R I N K S
$
t l l
L A N D
RIGHT TO RESERVE
QUANTITIES
O F F O O D
10 CO U N T
CAN S
• SA V E 40c
là % •" r*V
^ M AXW ELL HOUSE
I N S T A N TCOFFEE
IOOZ. JAR
5 0 0 Q
S T A M P .P R IC E BO O K
10 oz. BOTTLE
ir SAVE 45*
DUNCAN HINES CHOCOLATE CHIP
C O O K I E M I X
18 oz. SIZE
★ SAVE 70*
.SAUER’S PURE
V A N I L L A E X T R A C T
'Ml
NONE SOLD TO
DEALERS
THESE PRICES GOOD
ONLY THROUGH JUNE 27,1981
7ig77¡
FRISKIE’S
JRKEYi
6Ì6LET
30Z. BOTTLE
it SAVE 40*
- SAUER’S PURE
wRmmQI^J pQQQ
DvnraraN d S g f o o d
6^0Z.CANS
B L A C K P E P P E R
★ SAVE 20*
“ Total S h o p p in g " V a lu e
3 ^ l-No Lin':| Specials
V ^ |\l 2 Valuable Tiadim
c|VM\UO^ stamp
’ ''' -o im i P in e '’
★ SAVE 39*
GHTYl
H g P F N E R 'S P R IC E S
DMoeuirt YOU
SAVE
HEINZ
Tomato Catsup 3 2 o z. size
HEINZ
Bar Be Que Sauce i b o z .s ize
Heinz 5 7 Sauce 10 o z . s iz e
STOKE LY'S CUT
Green Beans
STOKELY'S
Shelli Beans
STOKELY'S
Spinach
303 CANS
S03 CANS
303 CANS
STOKELY'S
Peas & Carrots 303 CANS
STOKELY'S FRENCH
Green Beans 3 0 3 ca n s
June
PARKAY
5 RY DETERGENT
S O L D
KINGSIZE
★ SAVE /0*
biSH DETERGENT
y [ 22 OZ. SIZE
★ SAVE 34*
M a r g a r in e
1 LB . PKG
i f
w
WITH 1 FILLED
S T A M P PRICE BO O K
June ? 7 ; 1981
STOKELY'S
Fruit Cocktail 303 CAN
STOKELY'S
Pear Halves 303 CANS
KELLOGG'S
Raisin-Rice-Rye Cereal pkg.
KELLOGG'S
Raisin Bran Cereal
BORDEN'S
Cremora Creamer ie o z. j a r
HEINZ FOR STEAKS
^A-1 Sauce ^sizi
99*
6 7 '
4 0 '
38*
’ 1.3 9
ii'
4 T
51*
5 1*
4 1 '
65*
69'
’ 1 .1 5
*1 .3 9
18 '
15!
1 0 ’
6 *
10 *
1 0 *
6 ‘
1 2 '
1 4 '
30*
16 ’
(>
WESTERN RED OR GOLDEN
A P P L E S
3 9 *
L B .^
SWEET SOUTH CAROLINA RED
P L U M S
c
LB.
FRESH SOUTH CAROLINA la r g e SIZE WESTERN
LB.
C A N T A L O U P E S
0 0 «
J r EACH
2 LITER BOTTLE
S H A S T A
D R IN K S
2 9 *
WITH 1 FILLED
STAMP PRrCE KOOK
Offer <-ood Only
T h ro is j'i
June ‘¿7,1918
CARTON OF 8
C O K E S
16 O Z , BOTTLES
S9
PLU S
BO TTLE D EPO SIT
IO D A V II' (’()11Ы7Л' l-NTrRI’RISI- К Г Г(1К П T IIU U S D A Y . lUNI :К, 1'Ж1
Lions
Install
New
Officers
On Thunday, June IB, the MocksviUe
Lions Club held it's annual Installation
Banquet. Outgoing president Rufus
Brock vailed on Lion C. Frank Stroud,
Jr. to introduce special guests Mr. and
Mrs. Harry Havvas and Mr. and Mrs.
Bill Parrish.
Mr. Parrish, a past District Governor
from Greensboro, acted as the installing
officer. He urged the Mocksville Lions to
continue their efforts in being one of the
most active clubs in District 31-D.
Dr. RonaM Gantt, president of the Mocksville Lions aub, receives the
gavel from Bill Parrish, past District Governor firoin Greensboro, at
the annual Installation Banquet, Thursday, June 18.
N e w O ffic e rs
L-ii Dr. Ronald B. Gantt-Pres., Johnny Walker>Treas., BUI Seabrook-
Stecretary, Joe White-lst V. P.. BiU Fender-Dlrector, Milton Aun»n-2nd
V. P., Pete Dwiggin>-TaO Twister, Paul Davldaon-3rd V. P., Marc
Danlel-Director, Paul York-Lion Tamer. Other Directors not pictured- Dr. George Kimberly and Buiter Cleary. '
ш ю р ш а т ш п
on fîteburgft House i*aints
Now thru July 15th
S u n - P r o o f * H o u s e P a i n t s
Acrylic Latex Flat
Mildew resistant on paint film for Its own pro
tection. Has built-in acrylic flexibility to weather Ihe weatherl Resists cracking and peeling. Easy application and clean-up.
NOW ONLY *1 з г
Save $4.50
off reg. price
White and ready-rnixed colors only Custom colors slightly higher.
Acrylic Latex Semi-Gloss
Mildew resistant on paint film for Ils own pro
tection. Weather resistant. Dries to a semi-gloss
sheen, fast drying, recoat in 4 hours. Use on both siding and trim.
Save S 4.50
off reg. priceNOWONÌ.Y
» 1 3 S »
White only.Custom colors slightly higher.
S d f i- P f o o f ® L in s e e d O il T y p e
H o u s e & T r im P a in t
Mildew resistant on paint film
for Its own proleciion.
SA V E
gal.
NOW ONLY
* 1 6
49
gal.
off regular price.
P ittsburgh Paint ^
FUT LATEX EXnRIOR
HOUSE PAINT
[Pittsburgh PaintsiIXTIIIOIIINTIRIOI
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STAINS
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(ien, »eop ond
wotar iUoA'Up Ж
While and pustel colors only. Accent colors slightly higher.
’iTTSBURGH PaintsRaz.
fTAINf
IMMOVfOА Ш й -Oìl
И н Е CHOICE IE УОиЯ»
• «MMCoMf • Mmi«
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STOr IN ANO SEC THf NEW REI WOOD ITAINS1 2 ÍJ
CAUDELL LUMBER CO.
162SheekSt M ocksville, N .C .
Phone: 634-2167
My closest friend is taking
her eight-year4>ld son to your
clinic for therapy. She has
talked to me about the
problems she has been
having. One thing that really
worried her was that he
threatened to commit suicide.
Do young children ever
commit suicide?
One ol tbe tragedlet of our
modem world is that suicide
among young chUdren seems
to be on tbe increase. There
are probably a number ot
reasons for this. Newscasts,
movies and television ia-
troduce the idea of suicide at a
much earlier age than in
previous years. Very young children are unaware of tbe
finality ot death. Children also see a television character
killed on one program, only to
reappear completely normal
thrlty minutes later. The widespread reporting ot
murders, war-related deaths,
and accidental deaths may further depersoaaliie death
and make suicide more permissible. Under certabi conditions, knowledgeable adults also are promoting the Idea that suicide is a reasonable alternative. If we add the modem day pressttre
to achieve, pressures from parents, schools, brothers,
sisters and playmates that children often encounter, the reasons for younger children
committing suicide become
more clear. Any threat of suicide should be treated
seriously. Your h-iend was
correct In talking to a
therapist.
I turned 65 in November and
sUrted getting social security at that time. Although I sold my farm last September, I
just received over (8,000 for
the sale of some crops that have been in storage. Will my
social security be affected?Because you have not
performed any services since you started getting 'toclal
security, the money you
received for tbe sale of the crop will not reduce Ibe
amount of your monthly
benefits under the annual earnings test. In fact, when
the money Is added lo your
earaiugs record, your benefits may even Increase. You
should report Ihis income to
social security even though your benefits will not be affected.
I am getting ready to apply for social security retirement benefits. I know that adults disabled since childhood can
receive benefits. How old can
they be and still qualify for
benefits? My 38-year old daugh.er has been disabled since age U.There Is no age limit In
these cases. To qualify for
social security benellts on
yuur record, your daughter's disability must have begun before she was 22 and she
must be unmarried. If your wife takes care ol your disabled daugbier, she may also br eligible lor benellls
even II your wile is under tt.
M o n e y M a n a g e m e n t
Consider All Costs Before Deciding
Where To Spend Retirement Years
Where are you going to live when you
retire? Will you stay where you are now, sell your home end move to more
economical housing in the same locality,
or move out of the area? The choice you make will affect all aspects of your
retirement, so consider each carefully,
says the North Carolina Association of CPAs.
Look at home ownership in a different
light, because your housing needs in
retirement will change. Your house may
be too big for you and your spouse, now
the children are gone. An older home
usually costs more to maintain, and
property taxes, utilities and insurance coverage grow more costly. If you are
on a fixed income, ask yourself, can you afford the home you have?
A home is a sound investment, especially with the mortgage paid. But your money is tied up in the property
and not available to you until you And a
buyer. If you need more income during
retirement, it may make sense to sell
the house and invest the profits. (After
55, up to $100,000 of profit may be exempt from capital gains tax.) Of
course, not everyone sells their homes- in 1977, about 82 percent of people 65 and older were homeowners.
On^ way to reduce the costs of staying
in your present home is to “share” it.
Rental income can help you meet rising
real estate taxes and maintenance coats.
If you're undecided about selling your
home, think about renting it out for
awhile and moving somewhere else. Any
mortgage interest, property taxes,
utilities and maintenance costs you pay
while the house is rented are deductible
on your federal income tax return.
Oieck with your tax advisor before
Rhododendron Is At
Peak On Parkway
The annual color spectacular of the
Rhododendron is now reaching peak
bloom at the higher elevations of the
northwest mountains. The softball size
Uossoms of the Catawba Rhododeodron
are nearing full bloom along the Blue
Ridge Parkway, on Beech Mountain and
across the highest peaks of Grandfather Mountain.
Nearby, atop 6300 foot Roan Mountain,
the next ten days will mark the blooming
of the world’s largest natural
Rhododendron gardens across the
mountain’s meadow-covered crest.
Legend has it that the massive bloom of
red and pink flowers is the result of a
great Indian battle won by the Catawba
tribe. Hence the name, Catawba
Rhododendron.
A U.S. Forest Service road reaches
the Roan Rhododendron gardens and
trails lead through the gardens. One is paved for wheelchairs.
A free, full color High Country Area Guide gives directions to the gardens
and other areas in the northwest
mountaina where the Rhododendron
bloom. Call the TOLL FREE numbera
below for an Area Guide or information
on the North Carolina Hi^ Country of
Boone, Blowing Rock, Banner
Beech Mountain and Linville.
doing this, to ensure that you’ll still be
able to take advantage of the capital
gain exclusion, should you later decide to sell.
If you sell your home, you can move
into a smaller residence or you can rent
an apartment. Renting eliminates worries about upkeep, and is generally
I«8 expensive than home ownership,
but you can't control your coste. When
rents increase, you have little choice but
to pay, unless you're willing to move
again. If the building converts to a co-op
or condominium, will you have to buy in order tp stay there?
Many people dream of moving away
to a new environment when they retire. Itefore making this big decision, use this
checklist, whether you're moving across the country or across the state.
-Do you want to live amidst city bustle or rural calm? If you want a
parcel of land for growing vegetables,
you have different requirements than the culture maven.
-How many other retirees are living there? You'll make friends with your
Ijeers, but you may also want to live
near people of other age group«.
— ^at type of climate do you prefer? Find out the temperature ranges and the
amount of rainfall (and snowfaU) for
each season. Visit the area you're in
terested in at various times of the year.
In 1978, 45 percent of persons 65 and
older lived in seven states; California,
Florida, New York, Illinois, Ohio,
Pennsylvania and Texas. States with a
growing 65-and-older population include
Nevada, Arizona, Hawaii, and New
Mexico.
-What type of housing is availoble and
what does it cost? What is the local
property tax rate? In some locations,
senior citizens' property is taxed at a
lower rate. How much would it cost to
rent a house or an apartment? If you've
always wanted to build your own home,
find out about the cost of land and
building materials and what contractors
charge.
-What is the cost of living for the area
you're considering? Price, for food, clothing, transportation, housing, utilities, medical and ent.jrttiinment
vary from one region of the country to
another. Don't forget to check the sales
and income taxes. Contact the local
Chamber of Commerce for recent
figures, and inquire how rapidly the cost
of living is going up. Find out if you can
pay less for some things &s a senior
citizen, such as lower bus fares or movie
tickets.
MONEY MANAGEMENT a weekly
column on personal finance prepared
and distributed by THE NORTH
CAROLINA ASSOCIATION OF CER-
■nFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS.
Swimming Pool For Handicapped Is Being Constructed
By Bob Calms
This summer a number of han
dicapped people in Ralcdgh will be
getting a lift which will help them get
back into the swim of things.
A mechanical pool lift, designed by
Armand V. CkMke of North Qirolina
State University’s School of Desi^, is
being constructed for the YWCA p^ on
Oberlin Road.
The platform lift, capable of carrying
two people, will hdp handicapped
swimmers in and out of the water.'"niere are a great number of han
dicapped people who can swdm or could
leam to swim who can’t negotiate pool
ladders and a lift would solve this
problem,” says Marion Johnson, facility
director for the Raleigh YWCA.
In 1978 commercial pool lifts were
large and cumbersome affairs with
wenches and canvas seats, so the YWCA
called on Cooke and the NCSU School of
Design to create a lift that would suit its
specific needs.
Since that time Cooke has invested
hundreds of hours on the project but
before the flrst drawings were made some important Interviews were con
ducted.
“Once I’d assessed the indoor facUity and was convinced that a workable lift
oould be built, I began talking to han
dicapped people to leam more about
their spedflc needs,” Oooke said.
Support from International Business
Machines (IBM), the Pilot aub - a
women’s civic organization, Grace
Lutheran Church and other donors got
the project off tbe ground.
“We wanted the lift and platform to be
as functional as possible without being
conspicuous,” Cooke noted. "The idea
was to come up with a design for
something that would get people in and
out of the water witti as little fanfare as possible.”
Hie finislied project, which will be
completed late ttiis summer, wiil be a
platform made of stainless steei witti an
adjustable seat to facilitate both left and
ri^it^anded people.
When it’s not in use, the platform can
be folded up and stored. A system of
cables and belts under the apron of the
pool draws power from a small motor
and operates the lift.
Three remote controls located in
strategic spots (in and out of the pool)
make it possible for swimmers to call
the platform for entrances and exits.
The lift is a good candidate for a
patent and according to Cooke will be
more than just a mechanical success.
“The exciting thing is ttiat it will work
for a wide range of handicapped people,
from tiMse with painful arthritic con
ditions to people who are paralyzed and
in a wheel chair,” Cooke said.
According to Cooke, one of the han
dicapped people who consulted with him on the design has been giving him a call
every week or so this summer.
“Tbe man hasn’t been swimming for quite a few years now and he’s getting a little anxious,” Cooke said.
DIseouat Apparel Stores More people are shopping at discount
apparel stores. Last year about 41 percent of the women and SO percent of
ttie men inten^ewed by a poll taken had patronized discount clothing stores.
MAINTAIN STOPPINO DISTANCE
BRAKE SERVKE-YOUR ОЮКЕ
4-WCaiMUM:lnsta«
new brake lining, all A
iKtieeis'Newfionlg
AMikmal pats and services e>ua il neeiled.
2-WHEEL FRONT nSC: Inslall new liont
brake pads and grease inlieeis'New Irani giet
seals • Resurface honi seals • Resmlace drums
rotors • Repack frontOR* Repack Ironl wheel
wheel bearings • Inspect bearings • Inspect hvAau-
callpers «Id hMauUc sys- lie system • Add fluid &
te^n • Add fluid S toad load test car • Most U.S.
test car (Does nol Inckide cars, some Imports,
tear wheels).
PROLONG TIRE UFE, BOOST MPO
№ O N T -EN D /Ш б М К М Г
• s
Pa/ts and additional services etlia il needed
• Inspect all four tires • Cor
rect air pressure • Set front
wheel camber, caster, and toe
to proper alignnieni • Inspect
suspension and steering sys
tems • U.S. cats and imports
with adjustable suspenskms
Includes front-wheel drive.
Chevettes. trucks, ana cats
laquittng MaePtwson Stiut
correctkm extra
C a r o lin a T ir e
Phone 634-6115
963 VadklnvMIe Road
Mocktvllle, Г4.С. 27028
G O O D l^ EA R
M RS. KEITH LYNN REAVIS...was Cynthia Lynn Whitley
Whitley - Reavis Vows Are Spoken
Hie wedding of Miss Cynthia Leigh
Whitley, daughter of Mr.and Mrs. Rufus
B. Whitley of 17 Duke Street, Cooleemee,
N.C.; and Kellh Lynn Reavis, son of Mr.
and Mrs. 'Hiomas R. Ellis of Rt. 1,
Woodleaf, N.C. was performed Satur
day, June 20, at 2 p.m. at the First
Baptist Oiurch in Cooleemee, N.C.
Officiating was the Rev. Gene Black
burn of Trinity Baptist Church,
Mocksville.
A program of wedding music was
presented by Debbie Blackburn, pianist; and Maurice and Debbie Balck-
bum, soloists.
llie bride, given in marriage by her
father, wore a white gown of silk
wganza designed with a Queen Anne
neckline and long lace slim deeves. Her
empire bodice had an overlay of silk
Venise lace embellished with seed
pearls. Hie chapel length watteau train
was enhanced with narrow lace at the
hemline. Her double veil of white silk
illusion was encircled with Venise lace and attached to a lace and pearl covered
cap. She carried a nosegay bouquet of
ionia roses, peaches and cream car
nations, yellow and white daisies,- enhanced with baby's breath.Cindy Holder of Lewisville, N.C. was
maid of honor. Bridesmaids wwe Donna
Sbetd of Cooleemee, N.C. ; Peggy
Hatley of MocksviUe, and Judy
Ridenhour of Cleveland. Ibeir gowns
were of apricot qiana knit in sun dress
styling with a silk chiffon capelet that
had a garland of silk flowers at the
shoulder. Uiey carried long stemmed
peaches and cream camatimis with
baby’s breath.
Child attendants were ring bearer,
Matthew Reavis, bridegroom’s nephew,
and Chlnera Whitley, who was a junior
bridesmaid.
Hie bridegroom’s father was his son’s best man. Ushers were Lairy and
Randy Reavis of Woodleaf, N.C. , brldqpvom’s brothers ¡andBill Straughn of Salisbury, NX!.
The bride is a 1076 honor Braduate of
Davie High School; and a 1981 graduate
of UNC-CH with a BA degree In
psychology. She attended Lenoir-Rhyne
College for two years before tran
sferring to UNC-CH.The bridegroom attended West Rowan
High School; and is employed by Carter
Electric Company in Salisbury. He is a
Specialist 4 (Corporal) in the U.S. Army
Reserve.
After a undisclosed wedding trip, the couple will be at home in Woodleaf, N.C.
RECEPTION
The bride’s aunt, Mrs. Virginia Casey,
hosted a reception for the wedding party
and guests in the church fellowship hall,
immediately following the ceremony.
Pat Gregory is
Mitchell Graduate
Pat Gregory of Route 7, Mocksville
recently graduated from Mitchell
College in Statesville with an associate
degree in criminal Justice.
While at Mitchell, Pat was a member
of the honor society, Art Club, Phi Kappa Tau, co-editor ot the yearbook,
"The Circle” in 1979, and secretary for
the criminal justice association for two
years. She will be attending Gardner
Webb College in September.
She has also completed a course on
“Handgun Use I>V>r Hie atisen”, which
was sponsored by Investigation Security
Inc. in Statesville.
Hie course was Uught by S.K. Mo(Hre,
president; and assisted by Larry Hilton
and Carol Ward, a member of the N.C.
State Highway Patrol.
Hiis course consisted of el^t hours of
classroom study and four hours on the
firing range.
Pat is the wife of Don Gregory and she
has one son, Gene Hay, a recent
graduate of Davie High School.
D A V l F C O U N T Y F N T K R I’RISI-; R K C O R D , T H U R S D A Y , JU N I: 2 5, 1481 - II
Honored On 75th Birthday
Mrs. Mae Click of WUkesboro Street was honored on her 75th birthday Sunday
with a reception at the MocksvUle United MeUiodist Church FeUowship Hall.
Approximately 130 persons called during the appointed hours of 3 p.m. to 5
p.m. TTie reception was hosted by her daughter Jane Click of Winston-Salem;
her son Bill aick of Concord; his wife Marinelle, and son Mark; and LucyUe
Chambers of Winston-Saleni.The table was covered with a delicate lace cloth accented by a centerpiece of
fresh summer flowers. Two single, silver candelabras with Ughted tapers
completed the setting. Guests were served refreshments of cake, nuts, mints
and punch.
Mrs. CUck is the wife of Uie late Fletcher aick.
60th Anniversary
Clean Wall Coverings With Special Dough
Washing without water is the key to cleaning some of Uie new styUsh waU
coverings. Grass cloUi, paper-surfaced
waU coverings and suede-Uke waU coverings should not be washed, says Linda McCutcheon, extension housing
specialist at North Carolina State University.
Instead she recommends a
homemade, cooked dough. "It’s
especiaUy good for removing sticky
finger marks and general soUlng around
Ught switches,” Uie speclaUst points out.
•110 make the cleaner, combine 1V4
cups water and 2^ tablespoons
household ammonia. Stir In 2 cups aU-
purpose flour and 4 teaspoons baking
soda. Place in ttie top of a double boiler
set over water. Cook over low heat for
about iMt hours, sttrring occasionaUy.
“Hie mixture is a type of flour paste
so it WiU be stickier than bread dough,”
Mrs. McCutcheon says.
Remove the pan from the beat; cover
and let cool at least four hours. Knead
the cooled dough as you would bread
dough.
To use the dough, puU off smaU bits and rub over non-washable surfaces. Work the dirty parts of Uie dough back into the center. Store dough in an air
tight container at room temperature. It
wUl keep for several months.
Singapore
The mini-size nation of Singapore
boasts Uie second-highest Uving stan
dard in the Far East, after Japan,
National Geographic reports. The
former British colony became fuUy
independent in 1965.
Y a d k in
V a l l o Y
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^ rly American
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FURNITURE & APPLIANCE INC.
Downtown, Mocksville
634-5812
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BedromSuit. PINE BEDROOM SUlfE
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2Chelr«&B«nch;
only’ ^ ’ ’^
A reminder to Uie men of
the church to not forget the
basebaU game at Washington
Park on Saturday.
Hie King Reunion wiU be at
Uie home of Ted King. He
lives down behind the church.
Bring a picnic luitch and Join
the faniiiy Sunday, June 28.
Mrs. Mary Carter returned
home last week from the
Forsyth Memorial Hospital.
Mrs. Helen Butner returned
home last week after having
surgery at Forsyth Memorial.
She has a Uttte problem we
hope wiU soon be o.k.
Mrs. Ruby Walker and
Cattiy, Mrs. Virginia Walker and Mrs. SalUe Carter en
joyed a bus tour up in Virginia
Friday through Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Mc
Bride visited a nephew and
family, Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Smith and son Todd near
Lexington on Sunday.
A beautiful arrangement of
flowers Were placed in the
church on Sunday for memory
of Mr. Rob King by hU
chUdren and grandchildren.
Another beautiful
arrangement of flowers were
in the church in honor of aU
faUiers by the church and aU
men were given a live red
rose pinned on.
Mr. Charlie Bowles
received a gift for being the
oldest father of the church
present on Sunday morning.
DCHSClms
Of ^71 Reunion
Davie County High Sch^i
class of 1971 wiU hold its tenth
year class reunion, Saturday,
August 15, at Rich Park from
11 a.m. untU 2 p.m.A covered dish luncheon
wUl be served; and a social at *
Hickory Hills Country Club is ,
plann<;d for that everting from
7:30 untU!
For more information caU:
(704) 634-2622 or 634-32S4.
Mr. and Mrs. Enoch C. Jarvis of Route 2. MockavUle, N.C. celebrated
their 60th wedding anniversary Sunday, June 14, with a reception at
their home. Hosts were the couple’s six children: Mr. and Mn. Letter
C. Jarvis of Covington, Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Thomas T. Jarvit, and Mr.
aand Mrs. Paul F. Jarvis of Winston-Salem; Mr. and Mn. James E.
Jarvis of Burlington, N.C.; and Mr. and Mrs. David Z. Jarvis of Far
mington and Mr. and Mrs. Lester F. Blackwelder cf Mocksville. tlie
couple have 23 grandchildren and 15 great grandchildren. One child,
CamUla Jarvis Allen is deceased.
I Around About
FAMILY AT HOME FOR FATHER’S DAY
Vistlng their father, Prentice CampbeU and Mrs. Campbdl for Father’s Day
Sunday were: Jtan CampbeU, Michael CampbeU and Anne CampbeU of
StatesviUe; and Mr.and Mrs. BiUCampbeUBrent Campbdl and Beth Campbdl
of Hudson, N. C.
RECEIVES CERTIFICATES OF APPRECIATION
Frank Stroud, Jr. a long time lion and active, received two letters of Appreciation recenUy, one at the Lions State Convention hdd in Boone, N. C. the
weekend of May 29, 30 and 31, and another at a recent local meeting. This commemorates his wonderful work with ttie White Cane plroiect.
SPENDS LONG WEEKEND AT MYRTLE BEACH
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon TomUnson, Mrs. Viola TomUnson, Mr. and Blrs. Chudt
Tomlinson and daughter, Ke Ann, Ms. Beverly Andrews and son i^idy, and Miss Gina Alford spent ttie past weekend at Myrtte Beach, S. C. WhUe tture, Mrs. Viola TonUlnaoa had a sUght heart attack and was admitted to Grand Strand HospiUl, Myrtle Beach, S. C. MB77. Her condition is good, but she wUl remain a
patient there imtU next week.
OBSERVES 40ttl WEDDING ANNIVERSARY
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Myers of Advance, N. C. were honored Sunday, June 21, with a cook out at ttie home of their son-in-law and daughter, №. and Mrs. Rommie
Barney in Advance, in cdefaratlon of ttidr 40th wedding anniversary. Hie oc
casion also served as a Fattier’s Day outing. Homemade Ice cream and an
niversary cake was served with the main courses. Guests faiduded their other
chUdren and famiUes, BIr. and Blrs. Dale Myers and Bis. Blarica Goshom. Out
of town visitors who spent a week with the honored coiqile were Thelma and Joe
Ttappa of Los Angdes, CaUfomia, and BlUdred and Claude Shelby of Alexan
dria, Va.
sewupafabnc
5 0 %
I O FF
SELECT GROUP Of
Cotton Knits,
Woven Cotton
Blends and Others
la rg e it clam s in
w orld weigh
to SOO p o u n d i.
l;^3 S.Al ISBUKY STREET
Phune 634-5417
F A S H I O N
C E N T E R
Ri rotîl), T H II U S D A Y , .UINI- Z». I‘’ 8I
MRS. BRIAN TEDDY MONK...was Sandra Kay Chamberlain
C h a m b e r l a i r i ' M o n k V o w s S p o k e n
MRS. GRADY MICHAEL THOMPSON
...was Janet Lynn Cranford
MRS. WILLIAM RAY CARTER
...was Vanessa Reman Smith
_ i,ynn K^raniora ^ ^ m ^7 1 1
C r a n f a r d - T h o m p s o n V o w s
Miss Sandra Kay Chamberlain and
Brian Teddy Monlc were united in
marriage Saturday at 3:00 p.m. at
Sandy Springs Baptist Church. Rev.
Jimmy Martin officiated.The bride is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Wayne Chamberlain of Rt. 3,
Yadkinvilie. She is a 1»81 graduate of
Forbush High School. She is the grand
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wilson
Latham of Rt. 2, MocksviUe.
llie groom is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Ted Monk of Rt. 3, flast Bend. He is a
1980 graduate of Forbush High School.
. He attended Brevard CoUege and N.C.
¡A r t G a lle r y O r ig in a ls
- Sets Summer Event
[ Art GaUery OriginBli, 120 Reynolda 'VUlage, Winiton-Salem, announces the
^openii« of “SUMMER”, their special
;event for the season, an entirely new
«how featuring paintings by exhibiting
^gaUery memters. There wiU be ap-
jproximately 100 new works by gaUery
«rtists depicting their individual in-
Iterpretation of the show’s theme.
The event wiU open with a rec^tion
from 2 to S p.m. at the Gallery.
Regular gaUery hours are Monday
through Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
and on Sunday from 2 to S p.m. for
openings only.
Blowing Rock Art
Show Is June 27
The first Blowing Rock Art Show for
the summer wiU be held on June 27
beginning at 10 a.m. in the Municipal
Park, Main Street in Blowing Rock. The
exhibit wiU be from 10 a.m. untU S p.m.
A wide varietj’ of quality art and
Crafts wiU be exhibited and the 125 ar
tists and craftsmen wUl be from North
CaroUna, South Carolina, Tennessee and
Virginia.
- Exhibitors must be screened in ad
vance and spaces are assigned prior to
the show. This is the ISth summer these
popular art and crafts exhibits have
been held.
Here ia no admission charge and the
public is invited. Mrs. Edith F. Carter of
Ferguson, N.C. is the Art Director and
Coordinator. The other shows scheduled
(or the summer are on July 18, August 8
and 22.
State University. He is now owner and
operator of American Window Cleaning
Company of Winston-Salem.
A program of wedding music was
presented by Davey Fleming, pianoist-
organist. Pam Livengood, soloist.
Given in marrige by her father, the
bride wore a gown of white organza with
sheer front and back yolks trimmed with
lace, a lace neckline, and an empire
waistline. The skirt extended into a
chapel train which ended with lace and a
ruffle. Hie hat was trimmed in pearls
and lace with a nylon netting bustle in
the back extending to the waistUne. It
was made by the brides mother. The
brides bouquet was fiUed with multi
color daisies and roses.Sherry Latham of Rt. 2, MocksviUe
was the maid of honor. She wore a pink
voUe dress with shoulder straps and a
front and back ruffled neckUne, with a
raised waistUne and a ribbon-Ue belt.
Hie skirt was flared with flounced hem and a bustled back.
Bridesmaids were Lynne Cham
berlain, sister of the bride; Kim
and Sharon Monk, sisters of the groom;
Jo Reavis of YadkinviUe and Dana
Anderson of MocksvUle. They wore
rainbow colors identical to the maid of
honor and carried a long stem carnation
to match the color of their dress.
Ted Monk was his son’s best man.
Ushers were Darren Chamberlain,
brother of the bride, Rodney Matthews,
Stan Poindexter, and Mark Poindexter
aU of East Bend. Richard Renegar of
YadkinvUle.
Mrs. LuAnn Chewning and Miss Julia
Heffner resided at the register.
A reception was held after the wed
ding in the church feUowship haU. A
rainbow color scheme was presented.
Mr. and Mrs. Bobby Renegar greeted the guest. Serving was Mrs. Laura
Chamberlain, Mrs. Judy Latham, Mrs. Doris Renegar and Mrs. Betty Mc- Croskey.
After a trip to Gatlinburg, Tennessee,
the couple wUl live in Rt.3, East Bend.
Monkeyi
Not aU monkeys Uve in hot steamy
places. Snow monkeys make №eir
homes about as far north as any
monkeys in the world-in the mountains
of Japan. Over thousands of years, they
have developed longer fur and different
habits to adapt to the colder climate,
National Geographic World magazine
says.
Miss Janet Lynn Cranford of Rt. 1,
Woodleaf, N.C., and Grady Michael
Thompson also of Woodleaf, N.C. were
married Sunday, June 21, at 4 p.m. at
South River United Metho^t Church in
Woodleaf, N.C. The Rev. S.T. Jones
officiated at the double ring ceremony.
Mrs. ReniU York Smith provided music for the occasion.
Hie bride's faUier, Bobby G. Cran
ford, gave her hand in marriage.
Mrs. Pam Cranford Reavis of
MocksviUe was matron of honor.
Bridesmaids were Miss Marcia York
and Miss Gina York, both of Woodleaf.
Hie bridegroom's father, Frank W.
Hiompson was best man. Ushering were
Larry Cranford, bride's brother, of Woodleaf; and Steve Reavis of
MocksvUle. An honorary usher was
Mark Hiompson, bridegroom’s brother, also of Woodleaf.
Hie bride is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Bobby G. Cranford of Woodleaf.
She is a 1A74 honor graduate of West
Rowan High School; graduated cum
laude from CaUwba CoUege in 1978 with
a liachelor’s degree in mathematics. She
teaches mathematics at Davie High School.
Hie bridegroom's parents are Mr. and Mrs. Frank W. Thompson of Route 1,
Woodleaf, N.C. He is a graduate of West
Rowan High School and Rowan
Technical CoUege. He is employed by
Fiber Industries.
After a honeymoon to the mountains,
the couple wiU be at home in Woodleaf.
B ir t h s
MARTI LINK
■
Perm s’ 18 .0 0
Haircuts and
Blow Drvs *6 .0 0
Call M arti
For An Appointment at 634-2318Margaret's Beauty Shop
924 Yadkinvilie Road
Mocksville.N.C.
Jennifer Elisabeth DnU. daughter of
Gerry and Lynda DuU of 637 SaUsbury
Street, celebrated her third birthday.
June 12. She shares the same birthday
as her father. Refreshments served
consisted of a birthday cake decorated
with a frog, potato chips, raisins, and
Mountain Dew. Decorations and games were carried out with the frog theme,
and enjoyed by JUUan AngeU, Terra
Johnson, Carrie Renegar, EUiabeth
Rosser, Stephenle Kennedy and AUlson
Buckner. Jennifer Is the granddaughter of Henry and Sis Sanders of Route 5
MocksviUe and the late Wade and Mabel Dull.
Davie Academy 4-H Club Meets
BuUding Friday, July 3, at
Mr. and Mrs. David Kent Knight of Rt.
2, Harmony, N.C. proudly announce the
Urth ot their first chUd a daughter. Juné
15, 1981 at Davie County Hospital. The
baby has been named Debra Lee.
At Urth, she weighed 6 lbs. Va os. and
was 19 inches long.
Maternal gran(^arents are Mr. and
Mrs. Ray H. O’Neal.
Paternal grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. MUlard Bobby Knight.
Mr. and Mrs. James M. Jones of 942
Hardison St., MocksviUe, N.C. announce
the birth of their son, James Michad,
June 8, 1981 at Davie County Hos^tal.
At birth the infant boy weighed 8 lbs.
and was 21 inches long.
Mrs. Jones is the former Lynne
WUson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Clint
WUson.
Paternal grandfather is Mr. Walter F.
Jones of St. Petersburg, Florida.
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Gene HoweU of
Route 2, Advance, N.C. announce the
birth of their first chUd, a daughter,
Stephanie Lynn, bom Wednesday, June
17 at 6:25 a.m. at Forsyth Memorial
Hospital in Winston-Salem.
Hie baby weighed 7 lbs. 12 ozs.
Maternal grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Bo Potts of Rt. 2, Advance, N.C.Paternal grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Holt HoweU or Rt. 1, Advance, N.C.Great grandparents are Soloman Potte of Advance, Mr. and Mrs. EUis
Foster of Winston-Salem, Batry HoweU
of Rt.l, Advance, N.C. and Mr. and Mrs.
Wade Hutchens of MocksvUle.
“Nothing thowf a msn't
character more than what hs laughi at." Qosths
Miss Vanessa Remon Smith became
the bride of WiUiam Ray Carter on
Sunday, June 21 at 4 o’clock at Cornatzer
Baptist Church. Rev. Elmer Day per
formed the double ring ceremony.
Hie bride is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Norman Talmadge Smith of Route
3, MocksviUe. She is a 1975 graduate of
Davie High School and a 1979 graduate
of Catawba CoUege in SaUsbury, North
CaroUna. She is a teacher at South Davie
Junior High School.
Hie bridegroom, son, of Mr. and Mrs. Morrison Gray Carter of Route 2, Ad
vance, is a 1976 graduate of Davie High School. He is self-employed.Mrs. George Bowman, soloist, and
Mr. MUce Hendrix, organist, presented a
program of wedding music. IMrector of
the wedding was Mrs. Hichad Barney.
Miss Shanda Smith of Winston-Salem was her sister’s maid of honor. Her gown was baby blue with floral
and a matching sheer cape,
bridesmaids were Miss Taran Smith,
sister of Uie bride; Miss Karen Carter,
sister of the bridegroom; and Mrs.
Derek Harpe. Their dresses were
identical to that of ttie maid of honor.
Each carried a white siUc carnation
tipped in blue vrith greenery.
Hie ushers were Dwayne Smith,
brottier of the bride; Gregory Carter,
brottier of the bridegroom; Tommy
Cope, brother-in-law of the bridegroom;
and Michael Barney.
Shawn Smith, cousin of Uie bride, served as ringbearer. Becky Cope, niece
of the bridegroom was the flowergirl.
Presiding at the guest renter was Mrs. Tommy Cope, sister of ttie
bridegroom. Brad Lagle, cousin of ttie
bride, presented the scrolls.
Hie bridal gown was designed and
made by the bride’s aunt, Mrs. Brady
Bam^. The formal white gown was of
white slipper satin witti Venise lace. The
bridal gown was designed with princess
seaming, a high round neckUne, and
contained a stand-up collar trimmed
with lace. The long beU shaped sleeves
of Venise lace gattiered to bow-tripped
cuffs. The gown was completed with a
belt 01 sUpper satin.
Hie chapel lengtti train of Venise lace
was secured to a lace Pearl cap. It was
edged with scallops.
The bride carried a white Bible with a
satin cover trimmed in lace. A bouquet
of white silk carnations surrounded by
blue pixie forget-me-nots, greenery, and
white ribbon streamers topped the
Bible.
Upon their return from a wedding trip
to the mountains, the couple wiU reside
in their new home on Route 3. MocksviUe.
CAKE-CUTTINGOn Saturday. June 20, Mr. and Mrs.
Brady Barney entertained the wedding
party and their famUies with a cake
cutting foUowing the rehearsal.
The table was covered witti a white
lace cloth and centered witti a sUk
arrangement of daisies, blue azeleas,
md orange pixies sunounded with
babies breath and greenergy. A three-
ttered wedding cake was decorated with
white sugar bells. Refershments con
sisted of peanuts, mints and green punch.
Serving were Mrs. Donna Ireland,
Mrs. Patsy Crenshaw, and Mrs. Ann Hardin.
The couple dioM ttils time to pi«Mnt gifts to their attendants.
Golden Age Club
Meets At Rotary
The Golden Age Qub met June 17 at
the Rotary Hut with 17 members
present.
Hie meeting opened with “Come Hiou
Almighty King.” “Look for the
Beautiful” was sung by Mrs. Ruth Jones. She also gave the devotions. The
subject was “Hie Joy of FeUowship and
Service.” She said, “we are workers togettier, with God. United We Stand -
divided we faU. Hie Years are swiftly passing by, so we S«iior Citizens diould
pray more and do our mission work by
helping others. Let every minute
count.”
Ruth Richardson represented the
Sheriff’s Department with a very good
talk on “Crime Prevention”. She gave
each a crime prevention manual that
every person should read. It has alot of
suggestions that everyone should foUow,
especiaUy older citizens.
AU members are asked to attend the
July Ut meeting and bring a covered
dish of food and eat together instead of
going out for lunch.After the dosing song and prayer,
coffee and cookies were served.
Chameleons
Light, warmth, and moisture may
cause a chamdeon to change color.
National Geographic World magazine
says. So does the lizard’s mood. A
distrubed chameleon may turn dark or
show a pattern of bars on its skin.
Hie Davie Academy 4-H
Club held their monthly
meeting on June 8, 1981.
Theresa Shew called the
meeting to order and led our
pledges. J. B. Turner caUed
the roll. We had seventeen
members present with one
visitor and three leaders.
Hie club members voted to
have a clean-up day at the
Davie Academy Community
5:00 p.m. District ActivUy
Day, 4-H Camp, and Club
Picnic wan discussed.Mrs. Alice Barnette gave a
program on physical fitness.
All members participated
in the exercises done to
records.Mrs. HoUy AngeU served
refreshmente and the meeting
was adjourned.
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9 am-1 pm Saturday Nights By Appointmant
Mocks
The United Methodist
women met in the basement
at the church Monday, June 15
for their June meeting. The
vice-president presided over
the meeting. Mrs. Jean
Phelps gave the program
using prayer for the subject.
Mrs. Jean Bingham served
refreshments.
Mrs. Helen Johnson |
recently spent some time with
hei- sister in South Carolina. ii
Mrs. Wilma Allen of
Virginia spent two weeks with Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Allen.
Mr. and Mrs. Tim Bar
nhardt of Greensboro visited Mr. and Mrs. David Miller on
June 13th.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe White of Winston-Salem visited Willie
and Clyde Jones on Sunday,
June 14.
CITY OUTLET
LOCATED IN J & N V A R IETY STORE
Cooleemee Shopping Center
Cooleemee, N.C.
A l l C i t y O u t l e t
M e r c h a n d is e
20 %
R eg . P ric e
A L L SALES FIN A L
In Latin, "hutpes" it
th« lingle word meaning both hoit and gueit.
D /W ii: C O U N n i:n t i ;r v i?is i- r i í c o r d , t i i u k s d a y . j u n i -; л8, i>)ki i.
MRS. RICHARD DEAN COHEN
...was Vanessa Lynne Salyer
S a l y e r - C o h e n V o w s A r e S p o k e n
Miss Vanessa Lynne Salyer, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. James A. Salyer of Rt.l,
MocksviUe, and Mr. Richard Dean
Cohen, son of Mr. and Mrs. Juan W.
Cohen of Rt. 1, Advance, were united in
marriage June 20, 1981. A candlelight ceremony was held at Oak Grove United
Methodist Church in Mocksville. The
Reverend Luther Crady officiated.The alter was decorated with green palms. One fan candle centered the alter, flanked by two spiral shaped tiers. Sunburst yellow candles provided the light for the ceremony. Mrs. Ruth
Hockaday directed the wedding. A
program of wedding music was
provided by Philip A. Deadmon.
Hie bride, given in marriage by her
father, wore a floor-length gown of sheer
white organza, lined with acetate taf
feta. The dress was designed with' e sweetheart neckline and sheer bishop sleeves. The waist was slightly raised, highlighted by a lace trim. Hie lace trim also garnished the bottom of the dress in three tiers. Attached was a chapel- length train of flowing organza and lace. She chose a simple catdet headpiece
with waist4ength illusion.
Miss Pamda K. Watson of Salisbury
was maid of honor. Miss Kimberly D.
Salyer, sister of the bride, and Miss
Melissa D. Cohen , sister of the groom,
were bridesmaids. Miss Tiffhey Paige
Harris was flower girl. Each attendant
wore a full-length gown of soft yellow
organza, lined in acetate taffeta. The
dresses had a ruffle front and back
neckline with capped sleeves and bow
trim, llie skirts were flared with
flounced hem. Each attendant carried
white silk roses with yellow and wliite streamers. Tlie flower girl carried a basket filled with loose silk petals and greenny. Each giri wore a small spray of baby’s breath in her hair.
Juan W. Cohen served as his son’s best
man. Ushers were Mark L. Cohen and
Harold Speer, both of Mockaville. Steven
Chad Lanier was ringbearer. The best
man, father of the bride, and ushers
wore gray tuxedos with tails. Tlie
ringbearer wore a gray tuxedo.
The mother of the bride chose a full-
length gown of silk qiana in a soft baby
Uue.She wore a silk orchid that matched
her gown.
The mother of the groom chose a soft
peach full-length gown of sheer organza.
A silk orchid was also chosen for her.
Both mothers were presented with a
long-stemmed silk rose at the close of
the ceremony.
Mrs. Sherry Stanley of Winston-Salem
kept the register. Miss Donna Ivester of
MocksviUe provided the programs and
greeted guests.
Tlie bride is a 1979 graduate of Davie
High School and a 1980 graduate of
Salisbury Business CoUege. She is
employed with Moore Business Forms
of Winston-Salem. The groom is a 1981
Doub-Jones
Susan E. Doub and Andrew C. Jones would like to announce their engagement to be married.
Susan is the daughter of Nancy and Arliss R. Doub. She is a 1981 graduate of
Davie County Hifii School.
Andy is the son of Mrs. Sarah Jones and the late Wade Jones. He is presently
self-employed.
The wedding is set for July 25,1981 at Bear Creek Baptist Church. Invitations
will be sent, all friends and relatives are welcome.
graduate of Davie High School and plans
to attend Forsyth Technical Institute in
the fall. He is employed with C.A. Street
and Sons of Advance.
After a wedding trip to Myrtle Beach,
South Carolina, the couple wUl make
their home in Winston-Salem.RECEPTIONImmediately following the ceremony, the bride’s parents entertained the
wedding guests in the feUowship haU
with a reception.
Tlie bride’s table was covered in
yellow overlaid with white lace. The
centerpiece was a silk arrangement of
yellow and white roses, gardenias,
madonna lUies and entwined with
Iwker’s fern. Two silver candelabrum
with yeUow candlesticks flanked the
center arrangement. Reception was
arranged by Ruth Hockaday.
The three-tiered wedding cake was
decorated with yellow roses and
minature flowers, and topped with
a minature bride and groom. Refresh
ments consisted of punch, pimento
cheese and chicken salad sandwiches, nuts mints. Debby Harris and Daphne
Weeks served the guests.
REHEARSAL DINNER
On Friday night, June 19, foUowing the
rehearsal, the groom’s parents en
tertained the wedding party with a
dinner in the church feUowship haU.
The tables were covered with pink and
blue cloths. YeUow caiidles graced the
center of each table. Tlie menu consisted
of ham, potato salad, devUed eggs,
green beans & com, pickles, rolls and
banana pudding.
The couple chose this occasion to
présent gifts to their attendants. Ruth
Hockaday catered the rdiearsal dinner.
SHOWER
On May 16th, at the WUUam R. Davie
Fire Department, the bride was again honored with a shower given by Mrs. Daphne Weeks and Mrs. Nancy White, aunts of the groom. Upon arrival, the hostesses presented a corsage to the bride, as weU as to the mother of the
bride and groom. Party games were
played, and refreshments were Mrved
to approximately twenty-five guests.
The bridé received many useful gifts.
‘Z ip ’ In Your Zippers
A Uttle extra care wiU keep the “zip”
in your zippers.
Make sure zippers are closed before
washing or drycleaning a garment,
adviseà Judieth Mock, extension
clothing specialist at North Carolina
State University.
When pressing, keep the zipper closed
and bring the iron Just to the edge.
Never place a hot iron on plastic-track
zippers.
Use a commercial zipper lubricant or
a bar of soap to lubricate zippers that
sUck.
Arouiid About
CHILDREN HERE FOR A MONTH’S VISIT
Mrs. John A. Hielps and children, John and Jennifer arrived June 20th from
Vancouver Washington for a month’s visit with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank
H. Short, Sr. and other relatives. Mrs. Phelps is the former AdeUne Short.Mrs. Andy AtweU and son, Seth from Vancouver, Washington arrived June 19th in CharlottesvUle Virginia for a six weeks visit with Mr. and Mrs. J.A. AtweU and Mr. and Mrs. Frank H. Short on Route 7, MocksviUe. Andy AtweU
wiU join Mrs. AtweU within two weeks for the extended visit. Mrs. AtweU is the
former Patsy Short.
OLD CLASS MATE IS VISITOR The Rev. W. M. Howard of Chapel HiU, N.C. and a fellow class mate of the 1925 graduating class of ModcsvUle High School spent Wednesday afternoon with Frank Stroud, Jr. at his home on Maple Avenue.
ATTENDS VAROR DAY IN WINSTON-SALEM
Mr. and BIrs. Frank Stroud, Jr. of Maple Ave., MocksvUle, attended the
Veterans Administration Regional Offlce Retirees Day Winston-Salem, Tliursday, June 18.
MRS. DAVID BURNETTE CARTER
...was Patricia Lorrain Murray
M u r r a y ‘ C a r t e r V o w s E x c h a n g e d
The wedding of Patricia Lorrain
Murray and David Burnette Carter look
place Sunday, June 21, in a three o'clock
ceremony at Mocks United Methodist
Church in Advance. Officiating
ministers were the Rev. Alvord and the Rev. Jordan.
Tlie bride is the daughter of Major and Mrs. Raymond R. Murray of 103
Tilmark Drive, Winston-Salem. She is a
graduate of West Forsyth High School;
and attended Appalachian State
University in Boone, N.C.
The bridegroom’s parents are Mrs.
and Mrs. WiUiam Bert Carter of Route 2,
Advance, N.C. He is a graduate of Davie
High School; and is employed by R.J.
Reynolds.
A program of wedding music was
presented by Sylvia S. Smith.
Sharon Diane Murray of Winston-
Salem, was her sister’s maid of honor.
Bridesmaids were Jean Wiggs. hride’s
sister, of Cary, N.C. ; and Teresa Love
of Winston-Salem.
William Bert Carter was his son’s best
man. Ushers were Dennis Lee Carter
and Jeff Carter , brothers of the
bridegroom, of Advance, NC.
Acolyte was Raymond R. Murray , Jr.
Child attendants were Lori M. Carter of
Advance; Tonya Sosh of Kokomo, In
diana, Kenny Stroud and Brad Stroud of
Advance.The couple wUl make their home at
Route 2, Advance, N.C. after Thur
sday ,June 25.RECEPTION
Immediately foUowing the wedding ceremony, a reception was held in their honor at the church social haU. Hosts were the bride’s parents. Major and
Mrs. Murray.
Crystal and Neal Harris ot 645
Lexington Road celebrated their bir
thdays Saturday, June 13th with a party
at Burger King in Winston. Neal was в
years old June 10th and Crystal was 3
years old on June ZOth. Those attending
were Lisa, Sherri, and PhylUs Camp-
beii, Wesley Frevette, Casey and Linda
McDaniel, Joshua and Sharon Tutterow,
Melanie Hellard and Lori Young. After
the children played games they were
served hamburgers, french fries. Cokes,
milkshakes, and “Mr. Burger King
Birthday Cake.’’ Crystal and Neal are
the children of Ms. Lola Harris of
Lexington Road and Garry Harris of
Route 2, Mocksville.
FamUles and Refund Offers
Families with annual incomes of
>15,000 to $25,000 are the most frequent
participants in consumer-product refund offer schemes.
St. MathewsHomecoming Sunday
Homecoming will be ob
served Sunday, June 28, at St. Matthew’s Lutheran Church,
located on the Davie
Academy Road, at 1 p.m.
lliis is an annual event and the public is invited to attend and bring with them a weU filled basket.
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The skin eventually loses elasticity, develops brown
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304 Gwyn Street - Mocksville, N.C.
634-2511
MOCKSVILLE. NC V A C A T I O N
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One GroupChildren’s Canvas Shoes
Assorted Styles Not all Sizes Usually *6 to *12
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Ladies Knit Tops
Sizes S-M-L Assorted Styles Usually *6 to‘9
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14 DAVII (d U N l A ’ 1'NTI:RI>RIS1 R I C O R D . T llU R SD A V , JUN! ’ 5 l‘'Hl
A r e a W o m e n A t t e n d A n n u a l
M e t h o d i s t W o m e n ^ s C o n f e r e n c e
“God’s Pftmises” was the theme for
the Eighth Annual Meeting o( United
Methodist Women of the Western North
Carolina Conference held in Stuart
Auditorium at Lake Junaluska, June 19-
21, and hosted by the Thomasville
District of which Davie County is a part.
Registration opened at 2:00 p.m. in the
Harrell Center. Total registration for
the meeting was 1,165.
The Call to Annual Meeting and
Welcome was given by Ronda Robbins,
Conference President at 4:00 p.m. on
Friday afternoon followed by a Com
munion Service under the direction of
Dr. Julian and Rev. Fran Lindsey. Dr.
Lindsey used as the topic for his
meditation ‘"nie Unseen Rainbow”.
Rev. G. Howard Allred of Memorial
United Methodist Church, Thomasville
presented the Homily for each service
using as his themes: “Promises For
Eternal Life", "Promises of
Deliverance from Temptations”,
“Promise of Jesus to be with us in the
nitty-gritty of life”. Rev. Allred’s
Sunday morning sermon topic was “Equipping Us for Discipleship”.
Prior to the opening of each session
Ubba Herbert and Thomas Moore led the group in singing.
Friday evenings program topic was
“World Development - A Christian Challenge” and closed with two late
shows, “Because This Is Where They
Uve” and “Cults: Choice or Coercion”.A business session was held on
Saturday morning beginning at 9:00
a.m. at which time the representatives
of the Thomasville District were
presented. Ruth Hill, retiring District
President gave her welcome and Sybil
Myers, District President introduced
the pages and ushers. Mrs. Myers led a
skit on team-work. Conference officers
were elected, and reports given on
Scholarships and Women’s Concerns,
lifting up TV awareness. Membership
Chairperson reported 568 new members
of UMW this past year. The School of Christian Mission, to be held at Pfeiffer
College, August 6-9 was lifted up, and the Spiritual Enrichment retreats for
September 11-12, and September 12-13.
E№e Miller reported on the Assembly, April 29 - May 2, 1982, Philadelphia, theme; “Christ, Our Hope - The Jour
ney, Our Life”. The morning session closed as Jane Jasperse memorialized
deceased United Methodist Women in a beautiful service in which she stated that God honors every consecrated
woman.
Following a luncheon honoring retired
missionaries and deaconesses of
Brooks-Howell Home and other persons
in missions, the afternoon was given to
missionary emphasis. The Rev. Ed
Hackney and Faye Hackney shared
sometliing of their lives for the past 22
years as they have served in India.
Barbara Davis, Conference Treasurer,
led the service for receiving the Love
Offering. This offering has been
designated for "Africa; Church Growth
and Development’’, and was received
symbolically for Africa by Lorena Kelly,
a former missionary to Africa. Too date
the offering totals $15,896.09.
At the Saturday Evening session
Ronda Robbins presented her
President’s Report using “’Hie Pot of
Gold”, Local Units, Districts, and Conference as her theme. This was
followed by the “Junaluska Singers” under the direction of Dr. Glenn Draper.
Hie meeting was adjourned following
the Sunday morning Worship Service and Installation of Conference Officers
and the Confirmation of District Presidents.
Serving as Pages from Davie County
were; Sue Cave, Head Page, Margaret
Shew, Vada Beck, and Dott Whitaker.
Assisting with registration were. Ivy Jo
Smith, Doris Miller, Rachel Carter, Jo
Bowens, Alva Howard, Dot McDaniel,
and Helen Yokely.
B i r t h
Mr. and Mrs. Larry W. Lanier and
Chad of Rt. 1, Advance proudly an
nounce the birth of a son and brother,
Gregory Ryan on Friday, June 19 at
Forsyth Memorial Hospital. At Urth,
Greg weighed 8 lb. 10 oz. and was 21^«
inches long.
Maternal grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. George T. Dull of Advance.
Paternal grandparents are Mrs.
Grace Lanier of MocksviUe and the
late J.E. Lanier.
Local Students On
Mars Hill Dean’s List
Robert R. Chapman, «Hociate dean
for academic affairs, has announced
that 347 Mara Hill College students have
been named to the tprUig term Dean’s
List at the Baptist-related coU^e.
StudenU from Davie County named to
the Dean's List are as follows;
Barbara Jane Criminger, Psychology.
Jane is the daughter of Rev. Harvey Y.
Qiminger, Jr. of Mocksville.
Betsy L. Criminger, Business Administration (General) Betsy is the
daughter of Rev. Harvey Y. Criminger, Jr. of Mocksville.
Wow! My name is David Comatser
■nd my second birthday has come and
gone and I’m not a baby anymore. Hie
big day was June 13th but we celebrated on Sunday afternoon at tbe home of my
parents Terry and Andrea Comatser.
My mom made and decorated me •
puppy dog cake and served it with Ice
cream (one of my favorite foods) plus
other party goodies.
My great-grandparents are Glenn and
Sallie Comatser, Mrs. Benlah Brlngle
and Mrs. Ossie Spry. Mr grandparents are James and Ann Comatter and Mrs.
Mary Carter.Attending my party were my parents, grandparents, Jerry Comatser, Lib
Comatser, Roy Nance and Martha Piper.I received many fun and useful gifts.
Two Juveniles Arrested
Two Juveniles were arrested this week and charged with 23 counts of breaking
and entering and larceny, said Lt. Gary
Edwards of the MocksvUle Police Department.
The burglaries occurred at MocksvUle
Elementary School, MocksviUe Middle
School and the B.C. Brock Center over a
period of six months, added Edwar<ta.
Around About
James H. Frye observed his 49tti birthday Sunday, with a dinner at hishome
on the Yadkin VaUey Road of Advance. Among thoae atUttdiug this special event were his mother, Fannie Frye; Mr. and Mrs. Naylor Vogler of Advance,Mr. and Mrs. Dewey WUie of LewisvUle, Mr. and Mrs. Joel Kimball and
CSiristopher of North WUkesboro and Hubert Turner of MocksvUle. Host for ttiis occasion were James’ wife, SteUa and daughter, Jennifer.
CELEBRATES OCCASIONS WtTH COOK-OUT
Mr. and Mrs. Paul CarterandfimUy of Virginia Beach, Va., and Alton Carter
were among the guests Sunday at ttie CharUe McClamrock home on SaUsbury
Street, MocksvUle, where a cook-out was held to celebrate Father’s Day and
Mrs. Jean Shelton’s birthday. Other gueaU included; Mn. Shelton, Mr. Shelton
and famUy, Mr. and Mrs. Woody Bates and daughters, and Mr. and Mrs. Wayne
’Teth.
ON DEAN'S LIST
Sherry Ann AngeU, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ervin J. AngeU of Route 1,
MocksviUe, has been named to ttie Dean's List at Meredith CoUege for the *
Spring semester.
B i l l y R i n t z I s O r d a i n e d A s E l d e r
D u r i n g M e t h o d i s t C o n f e r e n c e
John WiUiam Rintz, son of Mrs. Hilda Rintz of Garner Street, MocksvUle, was
ordained an elder during the annual
session of the Western North Carolina Conference of the United Methodist
Oiurch, held at Lake Junaluska.
TTie ordination took place on Friday, June 12. Rintz was also received into fidl
connection as a member of the con
ference.
Present for the ordination service
from MocksviUe were Mrs. Rintz, Mr. and Mrs. C.iarles Dunn, Ginny Dunn, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Cartner, Mr. and Mrs.
Worth Hendricks, and Rev. and Mrs. George Auman. Present from the
niomasville area were Mr. and Mrs. Randy Lucas, Mrs. Hazel Bumgardner, Mrs. Alice Sprinkle, Mrs. Suzanne
Davis, and Mrs. and Mrs. Clayton Briles.
ITie ordination sermon was preached by Bishop Paul Hardin, Jr., Bishops L.
Scott AUen and Nolan Harmon also participated.
Rev. GUbert MUIer, formerly pastor of First Methodist Church, MoclnviUe,
and Thomasville District Superin
tendent .lulian A. Lindsey assisted in Rev. Rintz’ ordination.
•V -. Rintz is married to Uie former
Vicki Foster, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. Roy Foster of Advance. The Rintz’
now live in Randolph County, where he
is minister of the Tabernacle Charge.
John TVUlpam Rints
Library News by Gail Ijames
Interim Director
Mr. and Mrs. Marsha]] Anthony
M a y f i e l d ’ A n t h o n y V o w s S p o k e n
Miss Jeannie Mayfield and MarshaU
Anthony were married Saturday, June
6, 1981 at 3:00 p.m. at ShUoh Baptist
Church, with the Rev. Howard Parker,
Jr. officiating. Selections of wedding music were presented by Mrs. Magalene
Gaither of MocksvUle.
llie bride is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. James Mayfield of MocksviUe and
a 1981 graduate .of Davie County High
School. Miss Oieryl L. Barker, cousin of
the bride, served as maid of honor.
llie bridegroom is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. William Turner Anthony of
LewisvUle, N.C. A 1978 graduate of West
Forsyth High School, he is presently attending Forsyth Technical Institute. He is employed with AMP Inc. Clem
mons, N.C. Melvin Anthony served as his brother’s best man.
The wedding arrangements were
handled and directed by Miss Cheryl L.
Barker.
RECEPTION A reception was held in ttie feUowship
hall immediately foUovring the wedding.
Miss Frances CampbeU kept ttie guest register. Refreshments consisted of a
three-tiered cake decorated with daisies, lime punch, nuts, and mints.
Serving were Mrs. AnneU Barker and
Miss LUlie Johnson.
liie couple xviU make their home in '
LewisvUle, N.C.
REHEARSAL DINNER
On Friday evening, June 5th, Mr. and
Kevin Breqt Cope was five years old
Tuesday. June 2trd. He celebrated Ms Urtbday with a party at Us home on Saturday. Friends helping him celebrate were Brad Butner, aint Boggs, Jonathan Sparks, Sondra Cope and Mamie Ellis. Kevin Is the son of Kent and Llbl^r Cope of Route 4, Ad
vance. Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Butner. Sr. and Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Cope, both of Route 4, Advance.
Wilkins Drug Store
G o i n g O u t O f B u s i n e s s S a l e ,starting Friday, June 26th, Everything Goes At Half Price
Except No Tobacco Products On SaleThis Is Our Way Of Saying
^ ^ T h a n k Y o u * *For Past Years Of Patronage
Mr. and Mrs. Zeno Adams
and family attended the
Adam’s Reunion at ttie home of Mr. and Mrs. John Adams
Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Von Shelton
and family Mr. and Mrs.
Bobby Shelton and family;
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Andersqp
and Kara; Mrs. Mabel
Parrish were supper guests
for Father’s Day with Mr. and
IMrs. Joe Shelton.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe White and
Mark visited Mr. and Mrs.
W.A. White Sunday afternoon.Mr. and Mrs. Paul Carter,
Tammy and Chrissy of Virginia Beach visited Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Shelton
during the weekend.
Mr. and Mrs. Grady Beck
and Greg visited Mr. and Mrs.
Wili Beck Sunday.
The fathers were honored
Sunday at Courtney Baptist
Oiurch. The oldest fatiier was
Mr. Ray T. Moore who was 85,
the youngest father was Bob
Hancock.
Mr. Douglas Ratledge is on
the sick list.
Mrs. William Turner Anthony of
LewisvUle held a rehearsal (Unner
honoring their son, Marshall Anthony
and his bride-elect, Miss Jeannie
Mayfield of MocksviUe. Approximately
32 guests attended.
The couple chose this time to welcome
members of the wedding party and
famUy to their new home-to-be.
Mocksville Jaycettes
Hold Meeting
The regular monthly meeting of the
MocksviUe Jaycettes was held Thur
sday, June 18 at the Davie County
Courthouse. Two new members, EmUy
Buchanan and CaUiy Gamer, were unstaUed during the meeting.
The Jaycettes wiU be seUing raffle
tickets during the next montti. Winner
will receive $100.00 worth of groceries
from Heffners Land of Food. Drawing
wUl be hdd on July 16. Tickets are $1.00
each.
Hie annual July outing wUl be held at
Ri^ Park on July 16. This wiU be a
covered dish supper. Elizabeth Vogler
and Marcia Alspaugh wUl oversee
pi^rations for the outing.
an icehe Jaycettes wiU be hav
cream booth at tbe anmial Picnic. Donna Tesh wUl be in charge of
this event.
After refreshments, the meeting was adjourned.
There is stiU time to sign up for the
“Extra! Read AU About It” Summer
Reading Program at the Davie County
Public Library. The program con
tinues ttirough July 20 and a lot of
special treats are in store for all
members.
NEW BOOKS
YOUNG ADULT FICTION;
The Amazing Miss Laura, by HUaColman.
Tbe Birthday Murderer, by Jay
Bennett.
ChUd of the Owl, by Laurence Yep.
Dear BUI, Remember Me? by Norma
Mazer.
Find A Stranger, Say Goodbye, by
Lois Lowry.
Get A Little Lost. TIa. by PhyUis A.
Wood.
The Girl Who Had No Name, by Bemiece Rabe.
Golden Bees of TidamI, by Frank Bonham.
The Haunting of KUdoran Abbey, by Eve Bunting.
Hey. That’s My Soul You’re Stomping
On, by Barbara Corcoran.
I GotU Be Free, by Ruth HaUmap.
The Lionhearted. by Harriet M.
Savitz.
Mystery of the Emerald Buddha, byBetty Cavanna.
Ruffles and Drums, by Betty Cavanna.
Runaway Voyage, by Betty Cavanna.
Smoke Jumpers, by Brent FUson.
Summer of my German Solder, by
Bette Greene.That Was Then, This Is Now. by S. E. Hinton.
Transport 7.41-R. by T. Degena.Very Far Away From Anywhere Else, by Urusula Le Guin.
Where’s Jim Now, by Blanca Bradbury.
WIU Hie Real Monday Please Stand
Up, by Pamela Reynolds.
WUIIam, by Irene Hunt.The Year The Dream« Came Back, by Anita Feagles.
JWIOR FICTION;
Alone hi Wolf HoUow, by Dana
Brookins.
And You Give Me a Pain, Elaine, by Stdla Pevsner.
The Atrocious Two, by Shelia Greenwald.
Between Friends, by Sheila Garrigue.
Call Me Moose, by MoUy Cone.
Climbing to the Sun, by Jeffrey CarroU. '
Devllhom, by Frank Bonham.
Great GUly Hopkins, by Kattierine
Paterson.
I’m Deborah Sampson: A Soldier In
the War of the Revolution, by Patricia
aapp.
Journey Home, by Yoshiko Uchida.
Make A No Sound, by Barbara Cor
coran.
TTie Missing Person League, by Frank Bonham.
Rico’s Cat, by Dana Brookins.
Something to Shout About, by Patricia Beatty.
Hie Summer Reading Program film
for Monday, June 29, is “The Shot
Heard Round ttie Worid.” We also
plan to have a special musical program.
Story-time films for Tuesday, June 30,
U;00 a.m. are “Dragon Stew" and “Sand Castle.”
LIBRARY HOURS Monday 12;30 - 8;30 TuoMlay 9:00 - 6:30
Wednesday 9:00 - S;30
Hiursday 9:00 - 8:30 Friday 9:00 - 5:30
Saturday 9:00 - 2:00
D A V Ii: ( ' O U N n IN T I RPKISI K I ( O K I ) , T IIU KSD A '» . K 'N I ,\S. I'),SI
Social Security
Questions And Answers
"Horn In The West” Enters 30th Consecutive Season
M y father retired last year
at age 65. He rarely drank
tiefore he retired but now I am
beginning to w o rry . Can
someone over 65 become nn
over 65 become an alcoholic?
U n fo rtu n a te ly . m any
companies do not offer any
sp e c ia l p re -re tire m e n t
program s fo r th e ir em
ployees. As a result, after
retirem ent the stresses of
reduced Incom e, excess
unplanned tim e and Ihe vastly
Increased tim e spent with a
spouse often canse m ajor
adjustment problems. Some
people find alcohol a con
venient means for handling
this stress. The danger In
using alcohol as a tranqum ier
Is th a t dependence m ay
develop. Surprisingly, alcohol
addiction can occur at any
age so you r concern is
justified. If the problem I* In
its early stages, your father
probably could benefit from
enrolling In one of the stress
m a n a g e m e n t w orksh ops
periodically offered by the
local n; iital health center. If
there is regular excessive
drinking, then w orking with a
therapist would be more ef
fective. I'd suggest that you
call your local mental health
center lo discuss Ihe problem
In more detail.
Cana News
On June 18, 1981 the Cana
Homemakers Club met at the
home of Mrs. Minnie Pope, on
the Angel Road.
Our president, Mrs. Smith
presided and gave the
devotion choosing a reading
from the fifth chapter of
Matthew, beginning with the
3rd verse (the BeaUtudes)
and continuing through the
I2th verse - “Blessed are the
poor in spirit...” taken from
the well known sermon on the
Mount. Mrs. Cecil Leagans
offered a prayer foUowing the
reading of the Scriptures.
Mrs. Edwin Boger lead the
work committee reports by
giving a very interesting
discussion of an interview
given recently by Dr. Wm.
Friday, on the importance of
training the handicapped to
prepare them to become
active in the main stream of
work activities and enable
them to make a co
ntribution in their com-
municaties and society in
general. It will increase their
productivity and create a
feeling of satisfaction of being
useful and independent.1981 has been designated by
President Reagan on the
National level, and by
Governor Hunt on the State level, as the “International
Year of the Handicapped."
They should be treated as
functional citizens and helped
to overcome their fears and
be able to cope with life in the main stream of sodeW. As
homemakers we should re-'ognize the handicapped in
our community and make a special effort to make a
contribution to tbeir needs.
Our health needs were
discussed by Mra. Minnie
Pope, and her comments
centered on high blood pressure. Treatment for thia
can reduce heart attacks and
strokes. “Dr. Robert I. Levy,
director of the National
Heart, and Blood Institute,
wito sponsored the five year
study of 11,000 Americans
says “Systematic, effective
treatment of mild high Mood
pressure may reduce
premature deaths by 20
percent.” The systematic
approach does not necessarily
require medication; often
weight control and such
dietary measures as reducing
salt intake can successfully
lower elevated blood
pressure.
Adds Dr. Levy; "To the
millions of Amoicans who
have high blood pressure, this study says: Get on treatment
and sUy on treatment. It will
mean a much longer life.” For safety, Mrs. Cecil
Leagans gave some valuable advice on prevention of ac
cidents in tbe home, yard and
on the farm. 1. Never go alone
to the woods to cut wood with
chain saw, and be prmared to
handle emergencies tut may
occur. 2. toys and other
items off steps and stairways.
3. Keep children away from
farm machinery. 4. Always
watch carefully for snakes
and ticks.
Mrs. Stanley Smith used a
familiar quote to introduce
her remarks on saving » lergy
- “If you can’t stand the heat
get out of the kitchen.” Since
the range is the greatest heat
producer in the kitchen, so the
less you use it the cooler your
kitchen will be. By reducing
the heat in the kitchen, you
can lessen the need for ad
ditional cooling. Toasters,
ovens, etc. are being
produced with sufficient in
sulation to prevent a great
deal of heat loss in ttie room.
Preparaing larger quantities
of food in the cooler early
moming hours and freezing it for later use is another
alternative. Use recipes tliat
require short cooking time,
and prepare entire meals in
the oven. Duke Power
Company’s demand for
electricity peaks in the
summer monthi, June to
September, from 1 p.m. to 7
p.m. Help to keep costs and
rates down.
Mrs. Herman Brewer was
program leader and her topic
was “Look Vour Best in What
You Wear.” Iliis was most
interesting. She discussed
important factors to bring
about the results to be gained
by studying your figure,
needs, type, personality,
colors best suited and fabrics.
A combination of these will
produce a desirable wardr
obe. Fabric designs, texture
and hang are important
factors in the selection of
materials. Proportions, balance, lines and color are
MOST important if a finished
garment is to t>e a source of
pleasure to the wearer. Mrs. Brewer emphasized her
remarks by pictures of well
chosen patterns,-which were
passed around for closer
inspection.
Mrs. James Essie and Mrs.
Edwin Boger reported on
their recent Homemakers
Tour to Washington, D.C. and
Boston, Mass. It was a very
interesting trip, with a night
time tour to many places of
interest in the District of
Columbia and two days of
sight seeing in the Boston
area, the “Hub” of New
England culture.
On the return trip they
enjoyed the unique Penn
sylvania Dutch Country, and
the beautiful Shenandoah
Valley in Virginia. They
shared their colorful picture
record of the trip with members of the club.
The hostess served
delightful refreshments of
potato chips, chocolate
covered cookies, slices of
pound cake topped with
strawberries and whipped
cream, and fruit punch.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert S.
Shaw and daughters, Karen
and Tammy, of Chatham,
N.J. are spending part of their
vacation with Mrs. Shaw’s mother, Mrs. Minnie Pope.
They plan to visit Mr. Shaw’s
relatives in the FayettviUe
area before returning to New
Jersey.
Mrs. Everett (Lola) Et
chison entered Baptist
Hospital on June 21st for
physical therapy treatments.
She will be there several days.
Mrs. Mary Nikas, Director of the Jay Hambridge Foundation, in Rabun Gap,
Ga. was a recent guest of
Annie Laurie Etchison.
Pin o New s
The Rev. Alvin B. P<^
delivered a good Father’s Day
sermon Sunday using
scripture from Proverbs,
Genesis and Matthew. He said
it takes Father and Mother to
make a team and train up a
child in the way he should go.
We are not glad to loose the
Popes, they are so nice and
friendly. But we are looking
forward to working with our
new pastor who will deliver
his first message at Pino July
S.
Kinza T. Bare of Rt. 8 died
Friday morning at a Hospital
in Forsyth Co.
Mr. and Mrs. O’Brien Dixon
and Bob Dill were recent
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Dixon.
Luther Dull was honored
with a Father’s Day dinner at
the home of Blr. and Mrs.
Dean Dull in High Point
Sunday.
Stella White spent the
weekend at home with her husband. She is much better.
Miss Nellie Reavis visited her grandmother.Mrs. Nora
Reavis at a Rest Home in
Yadkinville Sunday.
Taking a Cool Look
If the coat of cooling
your home has become a
burning issue, here are com
forting ideas.
If you don't need central
air conditioning, consider
using individual window or
through-the-wal) units in
rooms that need cooling
from time to time.
When outdoor temperatura
il 78 dagreei or lower,
an open window is at good
at an air conditioner —
and much ieit expeniivei
Install a whole-huuse
ventilating fail in your at
tic or in an upstairs window
to cool the house when it’s
cool outside—even if you
have central air conditioning
It pays to use the fan
ralher than air conditioning when the outside tempera
ture is below 82 degrees. When windows in the house
are open, the fan pulls cool air through the entire house and exhausts warm air
through the attic.
Horn in the West, a colorful, rugged
story of the westward movement in
America w ill come to life for the 30th
consecutive season here beginning June
19.
1981 is a three-way anniversary for the
show. W hile the Horn, the nation’s third
oldest outdoor dram a, is celebrating 30
years of continuous production, two
members of the cast also m ark their
30th year of service to the show. They
are Glenn Causey of Arlington, Virginia,
and Charles Elledge of Dallas, N.C.
Glenn Causey began his tenure w ith
the Horn as the show’s square dance
caller and later played the Reverend
Samuel Doaks. Causey captured the
Boone role during the fourth year of the
show and has held it ever since. His
booming voice and six-foot-four-inch
stature fit the popular but not accurate
conception of the famous Indian fighter
and backwoodsman. Causey, in the off
season, serves us guidance counselor in
the Arlington, V irginia, school system.
Unlike most public school employees,
Causey does not know w hat a summer
vacation, is, since for Ihe past 30 seasons
he has driven some 470 m iles and 200
years back into the pages of history to
play the im m ortal Daniel Boone.
Probably the best-loved character in
the Horn is that of the rugged, jovial
Baptist m inister Isaiah Sims. The
lovable Preacher Sims has been por
trayed for the past 27 seasons by Charles
Blledge. The H orn’s author, K erm it
Hunter, created the role w ith Elledge in
mind. Before assuming the role of Sims,
Elledge spent two seasons as settler
leader Amos Howard and one miserable
season as Daniel Boone. Says six-foot-
five, 250 pound Elledge of that
memorable stint as Boone, “ It took a
form -fitted corset and two stage hands
to prepare me fo r the nightly or
deals....” During his 30 summers in
Boone, a lot has happened to Charlie.
Once he was bitten by a black widow
spider, and during another season, he
underwent painful surgery. Finally, in
1977, the day before rehearsals b ^a n ,
his doctor discovered throat cancer.
But, as they say, the show must go on,
and Elledge has done just that for the
past 30 years.
The opening night festivities w ill be
higiilighted by a “ home-cooked m eal”
on the grounds which w ill begin at 6 p.m.
The meal is being sponsored by the
Kiwanis Club of Boone and w ill be
catered by the renowned D an'l Boone
Inn. D inner tickets are $5 for adults and
$3 fo r children and may be purchased in
advance or a t meal Ume at the Horn.
Charles Elledge sums up quite well
the philosophy of the actors and ac
tresses and other folks who have been
w ith the Horn for thess 30 years. "When
you start assessing the work of those
who tiave been in the show, it’s hard to
find anyone who didn't have the show’s
interests at heart ... and who wasn’t
proud of the part he had to play in it.”
Mounfflin folks and old Dan’l him self
were and are like that.
The exciting outdoor sage unveils
nightly except Monday at 8:,TO p,m.,
June 19 through August 15 in the
beautiful Daniel Bonne Amphitheatre,
seating 1,700, Reserved seats are front
center and cost $6; all other seats are $5.
Children’s tickets are ha lf price. Special
rates are available for senior citizens,
m ilitary, ?amps, and groups of more
than 10. W rite Hont, Box 295, Boone,
N.C. 28607 or call 704-264-2120 for
reservations or information.
D O l l A R D A Y S
m i
P I L E U P S A V I N G S F O R V O U . . . '
J& N
riety
AT
SA LE D A Y S - Ju n e 2 4 th th ru J u ly 4 th
A LL SA LES Fj|^ A L-Th e se P ric e s G ood O N LY
iru J u ly 4 th , 1 9 8 1 .
Ice Chest
RC(.I9'
Heavyweight
Plastic Buckets
4 Gallon Reg. Price *4.00•3.00
Freezer Cups
QuartSin6F« * ^ .9 0
Pint Size 6 For ^ I . 2 0
One Group
Floral Bed Sheets
Value To $
’8.00 3.00
Sprajr Pain t
12 3/4 OZ. Size
Regular >2.37 *2 . 0 0
W ater Hose
50 Feet
*3.00
Dish Clothes
$
3For 1 . 0 0
Wash Clothes
$
3For 1 . 0 0
Bath Towels
Values to’3.50
*2 . 0 0
Pain t Brush Rollers
(2 to pack)
77
Shick Safety Razors
1 . 0 0
f
2fw
Envelopes
6 3/4 inch-50 Count
$
2 Packs 1 . 0 0
Cedar Storage Chest
Reg. ’1.79
*1 . 0 0
40 Weight
Quaker State
M otor O il
7 0 ^ « ' »
Foam C ups
18 Count 14 oz. size
$
2*gr1 . 0 0
u tility M ats
R«J.75‘
$
Now 3 For 1 . 0 0
Reinforced
Plastic Hose
SOFttI
*6 . 0 0
Childrens
Coloring Books
,1 1 . 0 0
Ice Cooler
>«(.'4.25
3.00
kose M ilk
Skin Lotion
1 . 2 0 each
Murine
Eye Drops
*1.75 each
2 for
¿1 Incli Western
Bandanas
*1.25
Ladies
Values to
1X00
Denim Dungaree
*14.00 '//
Cutex
Polish Rem over
3 oz. Bottle
$
2 for 1 . 0 0
Big Surfers
Reg.’6.50
*5.00
[Cooleemee ______
Shopping Center
Mii'M
i6 ~ D A V i r C O U N T ' liNTr.RPRISC R E C O R D , T H U R S D A Y , JUNIÍ 28 l‘)M
Suzanne S o ys
New Orleans is a beautiful
old city filled with historic homes. We had the privilege
of touring the residence, The
Gallier House. It was built in
1SS7 and no other house Is
more fascinating nor restored
more accurately and lovely
than Gallier House. The
elegant French quarter house
and its furnishings are
reflections of the taste and
lifestyle of this talented young
architect and his family.
Gallier house also reflects the
style of an unforgetable era in
New Orleans' history - the
Mid-Nineteenth Century -
when cotton, sugar cane, and
a rich mixture of colorful
diaracters made this city one
of the most vibrant in the
world.
Today, GalUer House has
been painstakingly restored
In architectural detail and
furnishing to recreate the
period in which the young
GalUer family was in
residence. Though research,
Including contemporary
sources, such as books,
diaries, newspapers,
magaslnes, letters, Inventories, legal documents
and other materials have
provided the primary in-
fonnatlon used In accurately reatoring the house, the ex
pertise of highly qualified
architects, builders, ar
chaeologists, Interior
designers, historians, artists
and landscape designers, has
made the Gallier House
project a remarkable
example of historic
restoration. Gallier bouse has
been designated a national
historic landmark by the
Department of the Interior,
and U has been accredited by
the American Association, of
Museums.Hie courtyard is colorful
and fragrant and duplicates
as closely as possible the one
Gallier family enjoyed.
A beautiful Corinthian
column screen separates the
ornate double parlors.
The Cypreu cistern was
discovered on a plantation
near Edgard, Louisiana. It
matches very closely tbe
cistern the Galliers had
behind thdr kitchen. The Gallier table was handsomely
set. Fine crystal and china added elegance to the midday eating ritual.Hangings in the master
bedroom were copied from a catalogue of the 1851 crystal
palace espoaition.
Four aervants were an
intagral part of tbe Gallier
houaehold. Their slmplely
furnished rooms wwe up- atstra in the back wing ovariooUng tbe courtyard.
Rac^ee mm tbe area;HOT SLAW 1 qt. shredded cabbage
1 tes«poon aalt
S table^Mons sugar
S tablaqtoons vinegar
% cim water 3 tabieqMons butter
% teaspoon mustard Vt cup sour cream
Melt butter in sauce pan
and add shredded cabbage.
Stir until butter is well mixed
timugh the cabbage. Add
water and salt and cover
titfbtly. Cook fbr 10 minutes
and then add sugar, vinegar
and mustard. Simmer
another minute and then add
tbe sour cream.
COOKED CELERY WITH
SOUR CREAM2 cups diced cdery1 teaspoon salt2 tableqxMna sugar
IVi - 3 tableqxwns vinegar 2 tablespoons flour legg1 cup water
V* ctq> sour cream
Cut celery in one-inch pieces, the outaide stems may be used. Cook celcry in salt water until tender and almost
dry.
Make a dressing with the egg, flour, sugar, vitiegar and
water.
Bring dreuing to a boll when it thickens and add the
sour cream. Pour dressing
over the celery and serve at
0QC6.
OLD FASHIONED TAFFV 1 cup molasses 1 C19 sugar1 cim thin cream2 twlespoons butter 1 teaspoon soda1 cup finely chopped nuts
Combine molaases, sugar
and cream and bring to boil.
Cook until it forms a firm ball
when dropped in cold water
2S2 degrees F. Remove from
heat and add butter and soda.
Add chopped nuts. Stir well.
Four onto buttered olatea and
coo! until It can be cut into
small squar' 3 about one-third
inch in diameter. 1^18 taffy is
not pulled.
CHOCOLATE FUDGE 2 cups sugar 2 tablespoons com syrup ^4 cup milk 2 squares chocolate 2 tablespoons butter 1 teaspoon vanilla1 cup chopped nutsCook sugar, syrup and milk
and chocolate together until it
forms a soft ball when dropped in cold water (238
decrees F.).
Remove from heat and add butter. Cool until you can hold your hand on the bottom of tbe
pan, 112 degrees. Add vaniUa and nuts and beat until
creamy. Pour Info buttered
pan 4 by 8 inches. Mark Into squares and cool. ThU is a
creamy, moist and delicious
fudge.BAKED HAM2 slices ham ’V* to 1 inch
thick
4 tablespoons brown sugar 1 teaspoon dry musta^-*
Milk to cover
Cut slices of meat Uirough
center of cured ham. Place In
a large skillet or dutch oven.
Rub with dry mustard and
cover with brown sugar. Add
enough milk to barely cover
ham. Bake at S2S degrees for 1
to IV4 hours. Milk should be
absorbed.
This is delicious!
Happy cookin!Suzanne
Center Extension
Homemakers Hold
Dinner Meeting
Center Extension
Homemakers met on June 16 at the Center Community
Building for a dinner meeting. Each member brought a salad along with the recipe which is to be comldned into a booklet for distribution to club members. Hostesses for the occasion were Mrs. Ruby
O’Neal and Mrs. Judy
Swicegood. Hie buffet table was overlayed with a wite linen cloth with a center
arrangement of silk daisies in a blue porcelain container.
Tlie buffet of tasty salads
gave one the illusion of being
in a salad bar at a gourmet
restaurant. Grace was offered
by Mrs, Swicegood.
Following the meal, Mrs.
Kathrjin Jones led in a
devotional with ,scripture
from Psalms 18:49 and a *
meditation on the importance
of taking time for the little
things in our daUy activities which often are of great value
to othm. She conduded with
the poem "Take Time For the
little Things.”
Hie buslneas seaaioa waa conducted by president, Mrs. Margaret Lowry. Roll call
was answered by members naming their favorite fruit. A
motion was made and ap
proved to conduct a raffle on
the quilt made earlier In the
year. A committee was ap
pointed to work iq> this event.
In lieu of a program, further
prqwration was made toward
the presentation of our dub
heritage scheduled for early
fall.
lite area meeting will be on
July 14 at the County Office
Building. Door prize was won
by Carolyn Lyerly.
Je r u r '2m Watch
To Meet July 21
Jerusalem Fire Depart
ment Community Watch will
have a meeting on Tuesday,
July 21, at 7:30 p m. at the Ff-e Dept.
me purpose of thi* meetii«
will be to dect officers for the
upteming year. A.q»kesman
for the watch program said,
the July attendance and in
terest will determine whether
or not we will be able to
continue our watch program.
He urged pe#>ple to come out
and suppc the program. The
spokesman added, that if our
July meeting is succ^ful, on
Aug. 18, Lt. Bradley of
Salisbury, will be with us and
educate us on crime
prevention.
C O O IE C fflE C
------1 " I ^
irfcTillP ' fOOUfMfl Nf OPEN FRIDAY NITfS ril 8 30 PM c ii« r «mPESfRvfPiGHT TO IIMIT SUPER MARKET
LOWEST MEAT PRICES IN DAVIE COUNTY. CHECK
OUR PRICES WITH OTHER
STORES AND SEE THE DIFFERENCE.
. WE SELL ONLY
U.S.D.A. CHOICE
WESTERN BEEF
$1 29
H O L LY FA R M S
M IX E D
INSTANT
CO FFiE IS
0 0 v liiMii I ^S/ ‘,0 FOOD Æ» r(Jkl)EK
lO-OZ.
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7 9 ' 59
Whip-O-Will hands drive some Herefords toward the ring for the junior judging contest Saturday at the N.C. Polled Hereford Association's
field day. Whip-O-Wfll Farm in Farmington was host for the annual event.
Fie ld D a y A tW -O -W
Sucanne Wiseman od Newland, N.C. fluffs up the tail o f a
priEed Hereford. These animals are as clean as most people.
Over 600 polled Hereford breeders
from eight states joined in the festivities
at the annual North Carolina Polled
Hereford Field Friday and
Saturday.
This year WhipO-Will Farms, owned by John and Joyce Shields and Roger
and Myme Harris hosted the two day event.
Breeders from North C«rolina, South
Carolina, Virginia, '»Sit Virginia,
Kentucky, Tennessee, Georgia and
Pennsylvania were on hand for one of
the largest field day events in a six-state
area.
Jody Johnson, editor«wner of the
national magazine. The Polled Hereford
Hub based in Bowling Green, Kentucky
described the field day as an “op-
porlunity for people intheburiness to get together and to get to know each other.”
This get-together of Hereford bred- ders began Friday, June 19, with a party
for junior polled Hereford Association
members at the home of. Dr. J.D.
Shanks, president ofthe Polled Hereford
Association.
Saturday the events picked up with a
junior show, beginning at 10 a m.
Boys and Kiris ages 8-18 showed and
judged heifers they have raised and
groomed especially for show.
Jody Johnson believes the junior
shows held at Whip-O-Will and across
the nation are "promoting the good of
young people and encouraging their
participation.”
Judges from Norhh Carolina State
University advised the Juniors on
gronming and showing techniques.
Kim Kuba, 11 years old, from Broad
Ri<’ , Virginia received a first place
ribbon for her heifer 'Wipple.’ She has
been allowing for two years and said "I
want to because most of my family has
shown.”
TO prepare their cows for show, the juniors first wash, then dry them. Tlien
(continued on 2-B)
AU of the W.O.W. staff had on brown and white gin^am shirts
Saturday, and the farm’s dog. Pepper, was not about to be left
out. He observed events from the shade of a building.
BAviB eeuN Tv
V N I
Feature 1-B June 25,1981
Story by Jane Keller - Photos by Garry Foster
Junior showmen parade their animals around the ring as spectators watch. A crowd of over 600 people
turned out ifor the field day.
John D. Shields, Jr. explains
thé* proceedings to a group
of onlookers.
Some would-be judges hand in their guesses during the
judging competition.
Computers have nuw come to the cattle business. Here C.K. Miller(right) deuioastrateg how his coui-
^puter can Iieep u|i witli herd« and breeds. ^ ^
Kim Shanks of Davie County leads her sonietinies not so cooperative hereford around tlie show ring.
1 ^ ^
MIINT^' I N M Kl’RISI Kí i 'OR I). Г И ЧК Я П Л ^', Л INI-
1980 C o n ce n tra tio n s U n u su a l
These three young cattle showmen take a hreak from readying their animals Saturday at the annual N.C.
Polled Hereford Reid Day held at Whip-O-Will Farm in northern Davie County.
Field Day At Whip-O-Will
(continued from 1-B)
the heifers are dressed and their tails are fluffed up.
Debra Richardson of Crozet, Virginia
said "the fashion now is to fluff up their tails.”
The heifers shown were judged on
height, length, strength of head, neck
color, and lines of back legs.
Nancy Wolfe, of the Wolfe Group, Inc.
in Winston-Salem commented that “it’s
really an art; showing those cattle.”
The young people take great pride in
their work and watch with anticipation
as their carefully groomed animals
parade before thier judges.
One of the highlights oftheday was the
awarding of a Whip-O-Will Farms
Hurrah heifer calf and bull calf, priced
at $S,000each, to the junior and adult for
the best judging ability in their respective category.
Hie adult judging contest was a tie
between Ted and Glenda Jones , who
happen to be married to each other. Tiie
couple from Bladenboro, N.C. won a
. Hurrah bull calf.
Greg Anderson of Old Fort, N.C. was awarded a Hurrah heifer calf in the
junior judging contest.
Junior Association members vied for
grand champion, reserve grand champion and class winners.
Tlie grand champion winner, Trudy
Jones of Blairsville, Ga., received three
A.I. (artificial insemination) cer
tificates, a trophy and a ribbon.
Reserve grand champion, J.D. Shanks
of Mocksville won two A.I. Certificates, a trophy and a ribbon.
There were 6 class winners. Each
were awarded an A.I. certificate and a ribbon.
The North Carolina PoUettes raised
$1250 in their day long sale and auction.
Offered was everything from cookbooks to tote bags.
The winner of the $300 North Carolina .
PoUettes Scholarship was J.D. Shanks of Mocksville.
Away from the cows and the contest
was a computer demonstration.
Demonstrations ran throughout the day
and explained computerized herd management.Tlie computer on display was the actual system used by Whip-O-WiU
Farms, which has been in use there for 6 monthc.
C.E. Miller of Miller Systems Cor-
poration in Dry Fork, Virginia explained
the computer as a “very comprehensive
system” that stores and recalls in
formation on sires, sales, health
records, breeding and production
records.
MUler described the “micro-system”
as one that “gives the breeder a
capability he’s never had before.”
This technological advancement
provides breeders with “total herd
Management” at the touch of a button.
As an added attraction of the day a new Miss N.C. Polled Hereford was crowned. Jeanette Plemmons of Can
dler, N.C. received that title.Kim Shanks of Mocksville was named
Princess and Kim Rhyne of Charlotte was crowned Queen Runner-Up.
John Shields, co-owner of the farm
said that plans have beien in the making for the field day. which he described as
“probably the largest Polled Hereford
field day held in North Carolina,” since January.
Invitations were sent tu 7,500 polled
Hereford breeders in the six-state area.
To accomadate the field day Whip-O-
Will moved their cattle around and built
a show ring for the heifer judging.
Sheild commented that “we always
try to keep this farm in ^ape”, so Whip-
O-Will was ready for the largest area
field day held, to date.
T a r H e e l K i t c h e n
2 whole broiler-fryer chicken breasts,
halved
2 tablespoons cooking oil
1 can (4 oz.) muskrooms, drained,
liquid reserved
^4 cup raw rice
1 tablespoon instant minced onion
1 tablespoon margarine
2 teaspoons chicken-flavor instant
bouillonVi teaspoon garlic salt, divided
V4 teaspoon pepper
1 can (IS oz.) tomato sauce
1 teaspoon oregano leaves
8 ounces grated Mozzarella cheese
In frypan, place oil and heat to
medium temperature. Add chicken and
cook, turning, about 10 minutes or until
brown on all sides. Place reserved
mushroom liquid in a 2-cup measuring
cup; add water to make 2 cups liquid. In
large shallow baking pan, mix together
measured mushroom liquid, mushrooms, rice, onion, margarine,
bouillon, V4 teaspoon of the garlic salt
and pepper. Place chicken, skiii-side up, in single layer, over rice mixture.
Sprinkle with remaining V« teaspoon
garlic salt. In small bowl, mix tomato sauce and oregano; pour over chicken. Cover and bake in 350 degree F. oven 45
minutes or until fork can be inserted in
chicken with ease. Uncover and sprinkle
cheese over chicken and rice. Retum to
oven and bake 15 minutu longer or until
cheese is melted and bubbly. Makes 4
servings.rtHospice Discussed For Rotary
The hospice program was discussed
for members of the MockaviUa Rotary Club at their meeting, Tuesday.
George W. Bowman HI, Director of
hospital ministries for the N. C. Baptist HoapiUl, deflned “hospice” as “A program of care for patients who are
dying, for terminal patients and their
families.” It is a home care program as
long as medically advisable.
Mr. Bowman told the Rotarians that
the program is dependent on volunteers. The program was brought over here
from England Ten years ago there were
but three hospice programs in the
United States and today there are more
than 400 such programs. The first
program in North Carolina was
established in 1976 at Chapel HiU.
To date, the program at the program
in Forsyth has served 43 patients and
their famiUes. At the present theGrowiit Stocks Coming Back
(My Research Department of Interstate Securities
Courtesy of Ben T. Browder Jr.)
Growth stocks have come
back into vogue in the past
several months and have
outperformed the general
market by a good margin.
Prospects are improving for
above average market per
formance over the in
termediate term, so a closer
look seems to be in order.
Although growth stocks can
vary from a solid blue chip to
an emerging growth com
pany, they do have charac
teristics in common. Ear
nings growth should be
sustained at a rate faster than
the overall economy and
competing companies.-
Ideally, a growth company
should have a growing ¿are
of a market which is also
growing faster than the economy.
A high rate of profitabUity
can come about through
technological skUls, dominant
market share, or shared
monopoly. ^ Most growth
companies reinvest earnings
in the business, so dividends
are low. Retum on equity is
generaUy very high, and the
typical growth company is not
particularly labor or capital
intensive.
Renewed interest in the
larger growth stocks stems from their high pnrninffs—
E ^TO. 1Ш lei ice Lwrbed wire, lend ill piuduc tion. insuranct;. lâix^r Ils thtílanguíMje oíídiTniiig Aiidiítiu'vt jot lo speuk it to succeedWe b|H!dk yi>ui
Idiiguaye We make short terni loans (<^t equipment purchases, operating expenses - you name it. u-hatever ytiu need ior yout iannmy operition We r‘’larmei fAvned .jtiH fanner controlled
We knowwfirtt you’re up ayaidstCall or come by tfxlay
FARMINGspoken here
FARMING
spoken here.
309 S alisb u ry S tre e t . , ^
M ockfvllle.N .C .
634-2159 « n g C
John H. Ervin Loan Officer
Michael R. Motion, Assistant Vice-Fiesident
visitUity at a time when the
outlook for many cyclical
companies is uncertain
because of high interest rates
and a sluggish economy.
In addition growth stocks price-earnings multiples are low by historical standards.
For the S&P growth stock
index, the p-e multiple is at
only a 50 percent premium to
that of the S4P 500, con
siderably smaUer than just
five years ago.
This smaU premium is a
result of the change in
relative market valuations
which have taken place in the
last eight years. In the early
70s, many of the larger
growth stocks faUed to meet
overly optimistic earnings
projections in an environment
of rising inflation and energy
shortages. Tlie passage of
ERISA in 1974 and the sub
sequent popularity of portfolio
indexing also worked against
growth stocks.In more recent years, in
stitutional investors have
tended to emphasize asset
plays (land, energy) because
of rising inflation.
Hiere are a numt>er of
factors in favor of growth
stocks at thi* current time.
Many investors have turned
to high-yielding securities
such as money market fuiida
in an attempt to beat inflation.
As inlerest rates decline, returns on growth stocks will
become more attractive.More conservative
economic policien should help
all slocks, but higii pe, low
yield stocks may benefit more than most. Tnis type oi stock lends to perform be: * when investor confidence is
improving. In an economic
environment that permits
real growth, slock buyers .(r<- Inclined >■) be optimistic about
future earnings levels. And
this makes investors wiUing
to pay a higher p-e multiple
premium (or potential capital
|9precialion.
Great appetizer: blend grated sharp Cheddar, cream
cheeie, bleu cheeie and brandy with dry mustard, hot pepper sauce and wor-
cestersliire. Let it stand a week or more in refrigerator to improve flavors.
UNC - CH Marine Biologist Says Fewer
Sharks Likely Mi The Coast This Year
By David Williamson
It's unlikely that this summer will see
a repeat of last year’s high number of
sharks in the waters around Bogue Banks and Shackleford Island, said one
of the nation’s top shark experts.
And even if it does, added Dr. Frank J.
Schwartz, the odds of being bitten or
killed by a shark are almost too small to mention.
A person stands a far greater risk of
choking on a fish bone, being struck by
lightning or dying in a boating accidoit.
Schwartz, professor of zoology at the
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill’s Institute of Marine Sciences, said
the many-fold increase in the population
of sharks cff Bogue Banks last year resulted from a combination of factors that occur only irregularly.
“First we had an extreme heat wave
in July that raised water temperatures
at the coast above 85 degrees,” he said.
‘Then there were months of prevaUing
southwest winds that pushed this super
heated water against Shackleford and
Bogue Banks while the hook of Cape
Lookout kept it from being carried up
the coast.”
Apparently, he said, the high tem
peratures drove many of the fish in the
area to seek deeper, cooler water. For
two or three days, the sharks gathered
in record numbers looking for food and
then swam away when they were unsuccessful in finding it.
In the meantime, the towns of Atlantic Beach, Pine KnoU Shores, Indian Beach
and Emerald Isle prohibited swimming after Schwartz advised the N.C. Division
•of Marine Fisheries to issue a shark
alert.
Unlike the fictitious town in the buok
“Jaws,” which fought to keep its beaches
open even after several deaths, Sch
wartz said the N.C. towns were eager to
cooperate with the state tourist board to prevent a [»ssible tragedy.
"In every case, business was better in
those towns.' becauL'k so many people came to the coast in hopes of seeing a shark,” he »aid. “Shark trinkets and T-
shirts sold like hot cakes.”
Tlie single group that resisted the ban
were surfers who had been planning a
national competition at Atlantic Beach,
the scientist said. This postponed their
meet when he convinced them that the
danger was real.
Only four shark attacks have been
authenticated in North Carolina since 1935, including one last summer at
Ocean Isle. More have been reported, but Schwartz said that after in
vestigation, those turned out to be bites from bluefish or barracuda.“Tlie one thing I worry about on the
water la not animals, but people in boats,” he said. “They’U go roaring
right by you with a six or eight-foot bow
wave and not consider that their wake
might swamp you.
“I was on an eight-ton, 40-foot stem
trawlw once that was almost turned
over by a big wake.”
Among sea creatures, he said,
perhaps the greatest hazard comes from
the Portuguese man-of-war, a colorful
ballonlike creature that floats on the
surface while trailing long stinging
tentacles beraath it. A swimmer who
accidentally touches one can wind up in
the hospital.
Schwartz said persons who see a shark near them in the water should swim or move away from it as calmly as
possible. Thrashing around may attract the flsh which is sensitive to vibrations in the water.
And since sharks can detect a minute
amount of blood and follow it to its source like a hunting dog tracking
game, it’s also wise to stay out of deeper water when you have a cut.
Tlie UNC-CH zoologist, author of
“Sharks of North Carolina and Adjacent
Waters,” has been studying shark
behavior and development for more
Uian 25 years. Twice a month, from
April through November, he sets out a
three-mile-long Une of batted hooks near
the Beaufort Inlet to determine changes
in shark population and migration
patterns.
He said that some 36 of the vrarld’s approximately 400 species of sharks
inhabit the coastal waters of North Carolina, including four kinds of
hammerhead, the shortfln mako, the whale shark, the sand tiger, Uie chain
dogfish and even the great white shark of “Jaws” fame.
Many Uve in water less than 50 feet deep.
Contrary to what many people
believe, he said, sharks are com-
merciaUy valuable and can make a
tasty meal if properly prepared. In
formal polls taken at the coast Indicate
their flavor resembles pork chops or
chicken.Wise Window Treatment Can Reduce Home Heating Needs Tliis Winter
program is serving 13 patienU with 46
family members.
"To date aU care has been free.
However, we are now having to adopt a
fee schedule,” said Mr. Bovnnan. The
program depends on referrals from
physicians.
Mr. Bowman poihtM'out that North CaroUna was the first state in the nation
to have a state hospice organization.
“Our units only aaihorize to operate In
Forsyth County. We provide service and
are on call 24 hours a day, every day,”
said the speaker.
“I will bie wiUing to meet with anyone
in Davie County interested in forming
such a hospice program and we wiU aid
you in every way possible,” said Mr.
Bowman.
Dr. Henry Sprinkle had charge of the program and introduced the speaker.
President BiU paniel presided.
By Sharon Allred Decker
Last week we discussed the
use of window treatments in
preventing solar gain into
your house. It is a fact that
wise window management -
planned use of shades,
drapes, awnings or a variety
of other shading products -
can reduce heat build-up in
your home and, thus, reduce
the need for air conditioning.
It is also a fact that wise
window management can
reduce heating needs In the
winter by better insulating
these areas and reducing heat
loss.
When choosing window treatments for your home, consider their energy saving
potential. Remember that Ught colors do not absorb the sun’s rays but dark colors create heat from solar rays.
Opaque materials, rather
than transparent ones, reduce
solar penetration. Vinyl
surfaces deflect the sun’t
rays, bouncing back and
reducing heat build-up.
Venetian bUnds are one
alternative for reducing heat
gain inside the home during
hot summer days. However,
because of their loose fitting
nature, they are not very
effective insulators from cold
outside temperatures.
Window shades are an
excellent choice for
preventing solar gain in ttie
summer and can also be a
wise choice for keeping
heated air inside the house in
the winter. When considering
energy efficiency, a tight-
fitted shade is the wisest
choice for keeping heated air
inside the house in the' winter.
When considering energy
efficiency, a tight-fitting
shade la the wisest choice:
This can be achieved wiU\
careful attention paid to in
stallation.
With the rising interest in
energy efficiency, a variety ol
types of shades are now
avaUable on the market. Most
of these can also be made by
hand with a bit of creativity.
The advantage is that you can
custom make them for your home.
QuUted shades offer energy
ny is
dlted
savings, decorative appeal and privacy. One compan;
marketing a five-layer qull
shade for apparent insulation
purposes. These shades can be made to fit inside the
window frame or even to
attach with Velcro strips along the window’s edge.
Insulated shutters witti an
insulated core are very
simUar to insulated doors
currently on the market.
Their effectiveness depends
on the type of Insulating
material used in the shutters
and a tight-fitting InstaUatlon. When comparing these to
shutters with moveable louvers, they offer greater
insulation values iwt do not
offer tbe flexibUlty in Ughtli«.
Neither do they allow for ttie
direct gain usage of winter
sun for heating purposes.When considering draperies, the prime considerations should be fit and
relationship to heating vents.
Draperies should not only
shade the sun in the summer
months, but restrict heat flow
through windows in the winter
heating season. Tills can be
accompUshed by instalUng
draperies inside of ttie win
dow frame; instaUing two
draperies, one Inside the
frame and one outside; or one that is tightly sealed arouml
the window.
Insulated draperies may
offer energy savings. Cor
nices are a wise choice to help
form a barrier so heat may
not escape ttirough ttie top of
any drapery, insulated or
uninsulated.
When instaUing draperies,
be careful not to cover heating
registers. If full-lengtti cur
tains are desired, the use of tto^Mcks in conjunctian with
shades can be used or ttie
shorter
very at-
appllcatlon of
draperies can be
tractive.
Air deflectors for registers
and vents can direct airflow out and away from draperies.
These possibilities are numerous. Some people are choosing to utUlze seldom
used outside shutters for
weatherizing purposes.
(Xhers are instaUing outside
awnings, positioned to take
advantage of warmth from
Uie sun, yet capable of
blocking out hot summer sun.
Energy saving window
treatments need not be
unattractive. They can be
attractive and effective.
When making your home
more energy efficient, con
sider window treatments to be
an imporUnt part of your
faergy aavlng plan. You cm be creaUve with your diotc««
and save energy, too.Freezers Save Energy And Money
F reezers o ffe r h o m e
makers many way* to trim
food costs. This hardworking
appUance lets them take ad
vantage o f special food iiales
p rice s and q u a n tity p u r
chases as weU as freezing
and storing seasonal fruits
and vegetables from the
garden.
According to home .eco
nomists from W hirlpooIC or-
poration, a freezer should
be selected to fit the size
and needs o f your ind’vidual
fam ily. Chesi ireezers are
generaUy more economical
than uprights to operate be
cause they let less cold air
escape when opened. On the
other hand, they do take up
m o re flo o r space th a n
upright models. Many home
makers prefer the upright
freezer’s added convenience
in storing, rotating and re
m o vin g fo o d ite m s. In
either case, if the chest or
upright model is manual, it
must be defrosted at fre
quent intervals. Ice build-up
acts as an insulator, inhibi
ting efficient operation and
increasing energy costs. For
tunately, for those families
whose schedules do not per
m it tim e for frequent freezer
a v a ila b le . C h o o sin g th e
freezer th a t’s right fo r you
and your lifestyle can help
you get the most from yoitr
energy doUar.
S o c i a l
S e c u r i t y
My' brottier is suffering
from kichey fkllure and ia
very 111. May I file an ap-
:atlon for Medicare forpUcati
him?
If yonr brother b too Ш to
transact bnsliiess, yon er
som eone else assam ing
respcasllillity fo r his affairs
e ffic ie n t n o -fro s t models his liehalf.
Don’t SUFFE
BACK PAIN...HEADACHES...
m n DOWN YOUR LEGS...
SHOULDER PAINS...
NECK. LEG, HIP PAIN...
DIZZINESS... SPASMS...
BLURRED VISION...
SHORT BREATHING...
NUMBNESS IN YOUR HANDS, ELBOWS...
These pains are your 1 3 danger signals!...
SPtNAL
. NOW...Get Y o u rC O p p CONTOUR
Doctor's Examination ■ ■ !■ ■ ■ ■ ANALVSIS
VOU OET • oom»MM n«MnaMn «sr 0w (MnMMD Msfi'!<■*••• •*
VOUaiTslfMsalMl exam aiMtl ■HStyiK Mr »•««««'VOU O il Ol swoMrt MSU la MMnulM a IM MM k* Mas* M
Don’t eutfet even one mota day wondering If you can
be relieved by professional, careful chiropractic care...
lot your FREE appointment, call today...
7 6 6 - 7 3 0 3 E E .
‘THE Johnson Clinic2421 Lewisville-Ctemmons Rb..
Clemmons, N.C. 27012
Tciiciiil Bld^.
M you can b« heip«d. we ll tile your insurarKe tof you
--------- -------------r" —..... *
Central Carolina Bank
Money Market Certificate
Й Ж
R a t e g o c x l J u n e 2 3 th r o u g h J u n e 2 9
T h i s is th e h ig h e s t in te r e s t ra te o ffe re d b y
a n y b a n k in N o r t h C a r o lin a . M in im u m d e p o sit
is $ 1 0 ,0 0 0 fo r a s ix - m o n th te rm .
C C B 3 0 'M o n th C e rtific a te o f D e p o s it
Ш 5
Л niiniimim dqxi.sil ot S1,(HX) i.s
ri4|iiirfd. IntcTL-st can Ix-a)m|x)uiidc-tl
сцшг11'г1у and Ic-fl in your acanint. or
paiij 1’yiliti.kal liifcndol i-aclu|uarlfr.
InliMfSl can I'vcn Ix' )v.iid mom lily and
transfenx\l to your rt‘>;ijlai СС^И c iicx k-
in^;or.savin^;.saccount. Katcj’cxxl Jum lo through June 2‘J,1981.
%
PerAnnum
I'VJeral regulations ni|uire that we charge an inlerest |vnalty tor early withdiawul
fnHii a Money Market Certificate and a 30Montji Certilicate. AuDunts now iiisiirt i!
uptc)SI()().()6oi)y R)K:CCR Wll help you find away.1 J M .inkiiD u:/
DAVII-; C O U N T Y I NTIÍRPRISI K IC O K I), T IIU R S D A Y . Jl/NH 25 >‘>81
Farmington Dragway News
FARM INGTON DRAGWAY
By Becky White
Ray W illiam s of Yadkinville, NC took
his first win of 1981 in the Modified
Street Division at the Farm ington
Dragway on Friday night.
Ray's race car, a 1968 Camaro,
sponsored by Taylor’s Transfer in
Lewisville, NC is still in the “ new”
stages, that is, he hasn’t even had a
chance to get the paint on it. Ray s
winning E T was 7.61 seconds over David
Bates of R ural H all, NC. These two guys
are close friends and close racing
associates. D avid’s runner up E T was
8.09 seconds. M ike Conrad of Winston-
Salem, NC was third and T erry An
derson of Winston-Salem was fourth.
A rthur B ryant ot KemersviUe, NC
took wins in two different divisions on
Friday night in two different cars. He
won the Pro Street Division in his 1968
"Psycho” Ford Mustang w ith an E T of
7.02 seconds.
Dale Andrews of Hudson, NC took the
runner up position in Pro w ith an E T of
7.34 seconds in his 1969 Plym outh
Barracuda, the "M opar M agic.” G ilbert
Hine of Kernersville, NC was third and
Gene Quick of W alkertown, NC was
fourth.
W ilton Thompson of Greeniboro, NC
was the number one qualifier in Pro in
his Camaro with an elapsed tim e of 7.266
seconds on a dial in of 7.260 seconds.
A rthur B ryant’s second win came ii\
the U ltra S treet D ivision. A rth u r
B ryant’s second win came in the U ltra
Street Division. A rthur drove his fam ily
car, a 1972 Ford M averick to the win
with an E T of 10.51 seconds, over Jim
Fannin's 10.25 ET in his Greensboro, NC
based B arracuda . M ike Fousts of
Winston-Salem, NC was third and
Tommy Burrows of King, NC was
fourth.
Friday night racing continues at the
F a rm ing ton D ragw ay w ith gates
opening a t 4:30 p.m ., q u a lify in g
beginning at 8:00 p.m. and elim inations
getting under way at 8:30 p.m.
A ll those under the age of sixteen w ill
be adm itted F R E E !!!
Come early and pick up a copy of the
Farm ington Dragway Newsletter at the
concession stand and get in on the “ Pro
Stock Giveaway” by M 4 J Souvenir«
of Kernersville, NC.
If you can predict the winner of the
July 25 and 26 Pro Stock W orld TiUe
Series Race and his low elapsed tim e
(one entry per week) you w ill win a
grand total of $75.00 in merchandise.
David Bates took the runner up gpot in Modified Street on Friday.Demolition Derby At Bowman Gray Saturday
Pinebrook Tee
Ball Champs
The braves team is the champion of the Pinebrooit T-ball league this
year. The team pictured above is (front row); Cam Kofke, Bryan
Taylor, Jamie Lanier, Zeb Sharpe, Corby Brooks, lliomas Johnson.
Bacic row; Brad VanHoy, Adam Grandy, Robbie Blaise, Wayne Jordan,
Bradiey Chapman, Dale Priiiaman, Tony Jordan-coach. Not pictured -
Ronnie Beauchamp, coach.
Winners Of Wachovia Cup Awards In
High School Athletics Are Announced
Winners of the second annual
Wachovia Cup awards for excellence in
North Carolina high school athletics are
Chapel Hill in 4-A, Durham Jordan in 3-
A, Bandys High in Catawba in 2-A, and llidway High in Dunn in 1-A.
Santas, Jordan and Chapel HiU were
all Wachovia Cup winners last year.
Princeton High in Johnston County won
in the 1-A race last year.The Wachovia Cup award, sponsored «fty Wachovia Banic and Trust Company
and the North Carolina High School Athletic Association (NCHSAA),
recognises schoids which have the best
overall iaterscholastlc sports programs
in North Carolina. Winners are deter
mined by a point system bmd on
pnrformance in state championship
«venU and tbe number of sanctioned
I in which the schools participate.
boys basketball and girls and boys cross
country. Chapel Hill also came in second
in the state in soccer, fourth in boys
swimming, fifth in girls swimming, and
reached the quarterfinals in girls volleyball.
South Mecklenburg, with 362^ points,
also had teams in all 17 sports. South
Mecklenburg finished first in the state in
boys tennis, second in girls tennis and
girls cross country, third in golf, tted for
fifthin boys track, and advanced to the
semifinals in baseball and soccer.
With a total of ^ points, Durham Jordan was again the Wachovia Cup
winner in the 3-A race. Jordan finished
first in boys basketball, second in ^Is swinuning, third in giris cross country, and fifth in boys swimming. Jordan’s nearest competitor. Waiter Williams in
Burlington, had 202V^ points. Williams
finished first In football and golf, and
tied for fifth in wrestling.
Each school is awarded five points for
participation in a sanctioned sport, and
points in the competition are awarded to
the top eight teams in state cham
pionships. Fifty points are awarded for a
team championship, 45 to the runner-up,
40 for third, 35 for fourth, 30 for fifth, 25
for sixth, 20 for seventh and 15 for
dghth.
In playoff events, such as basketball,
soccer and football, SO points are given
to the champion, 45 to the runner-up, 40
for third place, 35 for fburth place and 30
to teams which lose in the quarterfinals
round. If there is no third place con
solation game, 35 points are awarded to
teams which lose in the semifinals.
It will be “ditto” on ttie Bowman Gray Stadium stock car racing scene
Saturday night, witti a “Ladies’ Night”
and a “Demolition Derby” added at
traction for the second straight week.
Tlte schedule will be returning to
normal course after last Satin4iay
night’3 make-up of an event postponed
from May 30 because of rain. “I’m not
concerned about having the same
program two weeks in a row in this
case,” said track manager Joe Hawicins. “’Ilie fans sure turned out last,
and they saw some great racing."
A crowd estimated at 14,000 saw Philip
Smith of Kernersville and Don Smith of
Winston-Salem get their first victories of
ttie year in the featured NASCAR
Modified Division. Philip Smith reigned
after the 12tti-lap resumption in the first
of two 25-lap races interrupted by rain
May 30, after he took the lead from pole
winner Billy Middleton of Germanton in
ttie lltti lap.
Except for different names, thesecond race was a similar story. Tony Rigney of
Mount Airy got the pole position, in an “inversion” of the opening race’s front finishers, and led the first 11 laps. Don
Smith led ttie rest of the way, remaining
on top of Winston Racing Series stan
dings which decide a track cham
pionship he won in 1979.
Don Smitti has a 10-point lead in ttie
rankings over Paul Radford of Ferrum,
Va., a two-time champ. Ralph BrinkJey Ы Lexington, who won the crown last
year fw the fourth time, is third and 15
points off the top.
Jimmy Johnson of Walkertown and
Billy Kimel of Winston-Salem won 20-lap
Limited Sportsman races, Johnson remaining on top of standings witti a 29-
point margin over Bobby Colvard of
Jim Sapp ended a four-race winning streak by fellow Winston-Salem resident Billy Duggins with victory in a 20-lap Street Stock race. Spider Kimel of Rural
Hall, who failed to finish for the first
time tills year, stayed on top of stan
dings - 22 points ahead of Duggins.
Dale Ward of Winston-Salem
reg stered his fiftti Blunderbust triumph
in six 1981 events and boosted his lead in standings to a 42-point bulge over
Davidson County resident Ricky Gregg.
KdU> White of Winston-Salem won ttie “Demolition Deriy.”
A special 40-lap race is scheduled
Saturday night for Limited Sportsman
cars. The Modified Division wiU vie in
another “Madhouse Scramble” double-
header - two 2S-lap races, witti an “in
verted” lineup putting faster cars back
in the pack for the start of ttie second race.
Center Softball
W EDNESDAY, JUNÉ 24:
7:00 Center - C artner’s
8:00 E lm ore & Trivette - Carolina
Efficiency
9:00 Duke Wooten’s - F arm & Gjtrden
THURSDAY, JU N E 25:
7:00 Hendrix & Heffner - Davie
Academy
8:00 Bordenettes - Center
9:00 Law Enforcement - Boney Shell
FR ID A Y , JU N E 26:
7:00 Center - Sheek’s
8:00 Carolina E fficiency - H endrix &
Heffner
9:00 Duke Wooten’s - E lm ore &
TWvette
MONDAY, JU N E 29:
7:00 Farm & Garden - Barber
8:00 Бопеу Shell - Farm it Garden
9.00 Carolina Eff. - Davie Acade:
I points are assigned to all sports
and competttion by girls and boys.
“Through Wachovia Cup con
we want to give the schools i
incentive to offer a toUl qiorts program,
and not concentrate on one or two
sports,” said Simon Terrdl, executive
dhrector of the NCHSAA. “We are ha
to see the Waclwvia Cup award
accepted among high school coaches,
athletes and fans.”
Hie cloaest race this year was in (he 2-
A claMification. Bandys accumulated
140 points and edged its two nearest
competitors - Souttiwest Onslow in
Jacksonville and Sylva-Webster in Sylva
- which tied witti 135 points each.Brandys finished first in the state in
girls basketball, and placed second in boys basketball. Southwest Onslow
advanced to the semifinals in boys basketball and football, and reached the quarterfinals hi ghrls basketball. Sylva*
Webster finished first in the state in
football in 2-A competition, and ad
vanced to tbe semifinals in baseball.
Sylva-Webster participated in 10 qxrts,
and Bandys and Southwest onsiow each
fidded teams in nine sports.
Ln 1-A, Midway had 155 points and beat
its nearest competitor, Maxton, by 45
points. Midway won the state championship in iMseball, advanced to the semifinals in boys basketball, and
reached the quarterfinals round in
football and girls basketball. Maxton, with 110 points, reached the semifinals
in football and advanced to the quar
terfinals in baseball and boys basket
ball.
Chapel Hill recaptured the 4-A
Wachovia Cup witti 415 points. Chapel
Hill fielded teams in all of the 17 sanc
tioned sports, for a total of 85 par
ticipation points. Chapel Hill won state
championships in four sports; girls and
Gojf Classic Benefits Camp Easter
Hie Mid Pines Resort in Southern
Pines is bolding a Ladies Golf Classic to benefit Camp Easter-in-ttie-Pines, a
residential camping facility for the
physically handicapped owned and
operated by ttie North Carolina Easter
Seal Society. The Golf Classic will be
held July 17-19 and is open to all women
golfers witti a certified USGA handicap
The tax deducttbie entry fee of $40.00
will cover greens fees for Friday,
Saturday and Sunday, a golf cart for
Saturday and Sunday, prizes, and a
cocktail party. Lodging is available at
the Mid Pines Resort.
Camp Easter provides camping ex
periences to hundreds of physically
Hickory H ill Sw im
Team Suffers L i ^
IM W a r l i i h rtitfg
Team 339H - 328V& in an exciting, down- to-the-wire battle in Winston-Salem
Tliursday night.
aint Junker led ttie list of Coach Ken Slate’s swimmers with four first place
finishes. He was foUowed by Charlie
Crenshaw, Chipper Leonard, Thad
Bullock, and Joe Frank with tiiree first
places each.
Hickory Hill Swim Team, as part of
the Greater Forsyth County Swim
League, will participate in nine meets
during its 1981 season. ’The last meet will
be followed by two days of time trials at
which League Swimmers wiil be
selected to participate in the cham
pionship meet in Winston-Salem.
The next meet will be Thursday, June
25 when Hickory Hill hosts Old Town.
handicapped diildren and adults each
year. Ramps and paved walkways are
provided to make all activities
wheelchair acceksible, including
swimming, boating, fishing, arts and crafts, and horseback riding.
For more information, contact the
Easter Seal Society toll-free at 1-800-662- 7119.
Form er Davie High
G olfer, Ronald W ebb
W ins Tournam ents
Former Davie High golf star Ronald Webb, of Cooleemee, won two tour
naments recently in the Hickory area.
'Hiis past weekend, Webb won ttie
>a County Open tourney held at~
Rock Barn Golf Club near Hickory. The
two round tournament was played on
Saturday and Sunday. Webb posted
scores of 73 and 68 to win the cham
pionship. About 75 Catawba residents
played in the event.
On June 13 and 14 Webb won the Cedar
Rock Country Club member-guest
tournament, played at Cedar Rock
Country Club in Lenoir. Webb’s partner
for the event was EMc Modiling, of
Lenoir. Moehling is a member of the
N.C. State University golf team. They
posted scores of 68,68, and 57 to take the
win.
Webb is a rising senior at Gardner Webb CoUege.
, N o v y b
. SHII plenty o f room
a t H ie lop»
I n Ihe Navy. Ihe dream to
overt-Diiie ihe challenge
o f Ihe sicy L'Dnies roarinj*
home al M ach Iwo-plus.
As a Naval p llo l t>r flig h i
i/{ficci, you're in the d rive r’s
seal lo i)ig adveniure. chal
lenge and pure excitem ent.
Naval aviation is your
o p portunity lo add wings
lo your college degree.
If you have the qualities
o f leadership and the
capacity fo r responsibility,
why nol pul flight ill your
fu tu re .'
1ч)г m ore in fo im a lio n ,
call toll-free ЖХ)-К41-8(ХХ).
(in (Jeorgia, h(K)-342-5855.)
iMnromciM
0 1 Т Я
8:00 Elmore & Trivette - Beck Bros.
9:00 Cartner’s - Sheeks
TUESDAY, JUNE 30:
7:00 Boney Shell - Hendrix & Heffner
8:00 Pearl’s Grocery - Barber
Grocery
9:00 Center - Bordenettes
WEDNESDAY, JULY 1:
7:00 Cartner’s - Bordenette’s
8:00 Beck Bros. - First Baptist 9:00 Davie Academy - Law En
forcement
THURSDAY, JULY 2:
7:00 CaroUna Efficiency - First Baptist
8:00 Hendrix & Heffner - IngersoU-
Rand
9:00 Center - Beck Bros.
FRIDAY, JULY 3:
7:00 Sheek’s - Bordenettes
N E W
Try Our Chicken^reast Filet
Sjndwich Prepared WithJTlie &me
Secret Blend of Eleven Herbs and
Spices as The Coionei^s Original Recipe
Chicken'^arnished With Lettuce and
Dressing On a Sesame Seed Bun.
IT’S DELICIOUS!!
W s D o G h ic k e n
I w Û L
Kgntadiy Fried
Chicken.
Highway 601 North - Yadkinville Road
Mocksville, N.C. 634-2198
4 li 1)Л\'11 C o n N 'n I N I IK I'K IS I K I 'C O K n , T I U I R S I M Y . .lUNI' .’ S. Ì48I
W o r l d S p e a k s I n M a n y T o n g u e s , B u t M i n o r L a n g u a g e s A r e D y i n g
Hy Susan Loth
The native Ala.skans who speak fluent
Eyak all three of them - don’t use il
much these days. Only Anna Nelson
H arry, Sophie Borodkin, and M arie
Jones survive; the youngest is in her 60s.
U iey're a hundred miles apart or more,
and even phone visits are rare.
Like some endangered species, the
Eyak tongue is nearly extinct, one of a
host of languages in deelinc “ Ten of
Alaska’, T ' l i . ,iiuefe:s are no longer
spoken h lildren,” says Michaol K.
Krauss 01 the Alaska Native Language
Center at the U niversity of Alaska at
Fairbanks.
Tlie children speak English, the
language em phasized in schools,
beamed into living rooms through
television and radio shows, and spoken
by the parents at home.
Across the Bering Strait, Russian is
drowning out the faintest of the Soviet
Union’s 130 languages. In Africa, tribal
tungues are feeling the pressure of
English, French, Arabic, and Swahili.
In the United Kingdon and Ireland, the
speakers of Welsh and of Irish and Scottish Gaelic grow fewer with each passing generation. ’Two other Celtic tongues are in worse shape. The last
native speaker ot Cornish died in Cornwall 204 yaars ago. Manx remained in
wide use on the Isle of Man until the late
1800s, but its last native speaker died in
1974.
Although some people commend this
trend as a progressive step toward
better communications, others decry it
as a tragic loss of cultures.
But without argument, the number of
the world’s spoken languages is getting
smaller.
Today’s total is still impressive,
^bough linguists disagree on exact
numbers. .Most counts range from 3,000
to above 5,000, depending on how many
are classifie.i as separate languages or
as dialects of the same language."Four thousand is a fairly good
estimate,” says Kenneth Katzner, a
specialist in Soviet affairs and author of
"The Languages of the World.”
"One thousand different languages
are spoken in Africa,” he says.
"American Indian languages, most of
them in South America, account for at
least another 1,000. And some 700
languages are spoken on the island of
New Guinea”-an area north of
Australia about the size of Texas and
Louisiana combined.
Another few hundred languages are
spoken by Australia’s 50,000 aborigines,
Katzner reports.
In the galaxy of the world’s languages,
however, a few superstars shine
brightest. At least two-thirds of the
planet’s 4.5 billion people know one of
the top dozen; Mandarin Chinese,
English, Spanish, Russian, Hindi,
Bengali, Portuguese, Arabic, Japanese,
German, Indonesian, and French.
Anch.checnipad
Acajackenaci
^G1. 22 Л
nd de son ami
rege bat bizi z
.1 ha'I
•j;a ye cue!
О debbiti
entáo de si
Servicio« su republic
lyajhe’óta pende
LANGUAGES: A WORLD SAMPLER
1. Eskimo
2. Tlingit
3. French
4. English
5. Cherokee
6. Papago
7. NahuatI
8. Quechua
9. Portuguese
10. Aymara
11. Guarani
12. Spanish
13. Hottentot
14. Swahili
15. Fulani
16. Amharic
17. Arabie
18. Hebrew
19. Armenian
20. Greek
21. Basque
22. Irish (Gaelic)
23. German
24. Uppish
25. Russian
26. Punjabi
27. Chinese
28. Nakhi
20. Japanese
30. Khmer
31. Hindi
32. Indonesian
33. Buginese
34. Javanese
35. English
source: "the lanquages of the world" (harper & ROW)31981 NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC SOCIETY
The dozens o f phrases mapped above are a sm all fraction o f although the total is declining. The numbers locale some o f
the thousands o f languages spoken in the w orld today— the areas w here the various tongues are heard.
Although Mandarin Chinese boasts 800
million speakers, English, with more
than 400 million, is the more
widespread. Already it’s the in
ternational language of aviation. And it
appears to be on its way to becoming the
universal tongue, Katzner asserts.
"It’s a snowballing affect for English-
it Just keeps gathering size and force as
it goes along,” he says, "llie more
people who speak it, the more people
who don’t speak it realize they should
speak it, and it just keeps building and
building like a snowball.
"I am reasonably certain,” he
presets, “that within some number of
generations, most of the world will be
speaking English.”
fn isolated areas not so long ago, the
residents of one valley might speak a
language different from that of the next
valley without any problems. The valley
formed the limits of their world.
Growing urbanization and advances in
technology, however, have given a new
meaning to “neighborhood.” In hours a
person can journey across countries or
oceans; in seconds, a television show
can be beamed half a world away.
In the process, Archie Bunker and
company are doing their part as English
teachers. Says Irene Reed of the Alaska
Native language Center: “Television is
seen as a real threat to the languages
here. It’s being brought by satellite into
all the villages, and people get glued to
their TV sets. All of the communication
is in English.”
Ms. Reed’s colleague Krauss calls TV
“cultural nerve gas” in a linguistic
battle that has moved “from the
schoolroom to the living room.” Yet,
with different programming, he says,
television could become a tool that
promotes native languages.
The half-mlUion speakers of Welsh
also recognize the power of the tube,
according to Edward Millward, senior
lecturer in Welsh at the University
College of Wales at Aberystwyth.
"Television, with education, is one of
the two most potent influences on
younger people,” he says. “This is why
there was a great battle in Wales
recently, and a battle which has been
won up to a point. We are to have the
fourth television channel in Wales as a
Welsh-medium channel.”
The decade-old controversy did
resemble a battle at times, when ac
tivists of the Welsh Language Society
sabotaged television transmitters. The
uproar peaked last year, when the
Conservative government in London
changed its mind on a campaign
promise to create the channel.
Gwynfor Evans-leader of the Welsh
Nationalist Party, Plaid Cymru-
threatened to fast to death, and
thousands of viewers vowed not to renew their required television licenses in
protest, Millward said. London releited.
That victory aside, only about one in
five Welshmen can speak Welsh today.
At the beginning of the century it was
one in two. “Il’s true lhat the Welsh
language tends lo be the language of
older people,” Millward admits. "But
this, loo, is changing. One of the most
hopeful things in Wales today is the
number of young people who are leai -
ning the language. Not just students
now: There’s been an enormous
awakening In the field of teaching Welsh
lo adults.“The Israeli example has been a great
inspiration lo us.”
The comeback of Hebrew is unrivaled
in modem times. For nearly 1,700 years
it was unspoken in everyday life,
although il lived on as a written
language central to Jewish faith and
culture. In the 1880s an immigrant to
Palestine named Eliezer Ben-Yehudah
began speaking Hebrew to his family
and pushing for revival of the language.
Today it is the major language of Israel,
spoken by 3 million people and for many
the mother tongue.For its return, the ancient Semitic
language needed updating. Ben-
Y^udah alone created thousands of
words, often building on the roots of
words found in the Bible.Words could sprout anywhere, evef at the airport. Reporters once cornered
Moshe Sharett, Israel’s first foreign
minister, as he was leaving for an in
ternational conference. Asked the meeting’s purpose, he began to answer
“procedural,” then stopped. "We ought
to have a Hebrew word for that,” he
said, and promplty invented one:
“nohal.”Another ancient language is Basque,
which survived decades of oppression
during the regime of Generalissima Francisco Franco and today ranks as an
official regional language in three
Spanish Basque provinces.
■Hie tongue that Basques once were
forbidden to speak in public now is used
in provincial government, schools, and
even on bilingual bank forms. “When
the banking system starts to feel the
need to be bilingual along with the
government, you’re really starting to
establish a firm) fouodation for the
language,” says William A. Douglass of
the University of Nevada’s Basque
Studies Program.“It’s not just a lot of people who would
find it nice to sit around coffeehouses
and speak to each other in Basque bul
have to be functional in Spanish the rest
of the day.”
In Wales, Millward favors a stronger
bilingual policy-the cultural may
depend on it. “The Welsh culture until
fairly recently has lendtd to be the
culture of the word,” he says. “The
literature, the poetry In particular-
there’s a glorious unbrolcen poetic tradition back to the sixth century in Wales-that's the glory of Wales, that
unbroken poetic tradition.
“Almost all the culture has been
wrapped up in the Welsh language. This
Is why we see It ns a dreadful tragedy
lhal the language Is retreating. It Is a
social, spiritual, literary tragedy. It
makes us the poorer.”
Welsh may be retreating, but it’s in
robust shape compared with most native
languages of Alaska. Even the most- used, Central ' Yuplk, has only an
estimated 14.000 speakers. Krauss of the
Alaska Native Language Center has
predicted that by the middle of the next century, only five of the state’s 20 native
languages may still be spoken.
In the meantime, the language center
is working to document those languages
to help keep them allve-or just to get
them in writing before it’s too late. With
the support of the National Science
Foundation and the National En
dowment for the Humanities, dic
tionaries for 10 language« are being
compiled, and funds for an llth are being sought.
Bilingual programs are being developed. Even If a native language is
taught to children who no longer speak it
at home, Krauss has explained, "It will
at least give the children an idea of what
their ancestral language was like, a
sense that they know some of it...that it
is still around. ’This knowledge will also
enable them in a very real way to
continue much of their culture actively
in songs and ceremonials.”
In languages, as in food, Krauss
mulls, variety adds spice. “What if all
the restaurants in the world bad to
become McDonald’s? I’m not saying
there’s anything wrong with Mc
Donalds. What if they all became Four
Seasons? Wouldn't you like to be able to
eat Chinese food still?
“We’re tolerant of other people’s cuisines, I think, but not of their
languages.”
Cedar Creek News
Girl Scouts Are Registering For Summer Camp
Hie Tarheel Traid Girl Scout Council 1981. other pioneering skiUs.The Tarheel Traid Girl Scout Council
is now accepting registrations for its
Seven Springs Day Camp, July 6-lOth. Hie camp will be open daily from 9.00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m. i'he registration
deadline has been extended to June 28,
Local Students On
K C C Dean's Ust
Some 336 studente made tbe spring quarter Dean’s List at Davidson County
Community College.Of the 336 students achieving the
honor, 64 earned a perfect 4.0 average.
Uiose making the honor roll from
Davie County are:Robert Lane of 334 N. Main Street,
Modcsville (4.0).Eva Richardson of Route 3 Milling
Road, Mocksville. ________ _______~ 'DBvia^arnRardro? Rt. 3, Box 88,
Advance, N.C.Neal Foster of Route 1, Advance, N.C.
Transportatjan to the camp which is
located on Pineville Road in Far
mington, N.C., must be provided by
parents.
The Camp Director Ms. Beverly Neal, promises an exciting program for ^Is
6-17 in the out-of-doors, which will include crafts, nature study, outdoor skills, songs, and games for all age
levds and will feature basic canoeing for junior and cad^te age levels. AU age level campers will be able to participate
in one overnight to give the girls an opportunity to leam outdoor cooking and
Shirley Scott Is On
Dean's List At A & T
Shirley E. ScotL.oLJVIock8ville has
b^n named tothe Dean’s List at North
Carolina A&T University for the Spring
1961 semester.
other pioneering skills.
Girl Scouts will have the opportunity
to work on badge requirements: All girls will have lots of fun and leam many new
things.
Cost of the camp is tlS.OO for
regiatered scouts and tlS.OO for non-
scouts.
Additional information, camp applications and a camp folder may be
obtained by calling the Tarheel Traid
Girl Scout Council office between 9:00 a.m. -5:00 p.m. weekdays or the toll free
W.A.T.S. Une 1-800-672-2148.
Active Volcanoes
Some 300 active volcanoes ring the
Pacific Ocean from Chile to Alaslta, to
Japan, and New Zealand, National
Geographic says. Most land volcanoes erupt along the edges of the immense
plates which make up the Earth’s
fragmented crust.
Sunday was a beauUful hot day; however, a good Sunday
school reported and a very
very spiritual worship ser
vice. The devitionals were
conducted by Bros. James
Horn and Odell Eaton. The
pastor Dr. Hay brought the
message which we all enjoyed
very much. Now, vacation
days are here, our prayers go
out to our Father in heaven
for the safety of everyone.
Well, next Sunday is Father’s
Day and I pray that every father will be remembered with a lot of love and affection of which they deserve so
mOch. So Happy Father’s Day
to all fathers.
’The Yadkin and Davie
Sunday school convention will
convene at the Pleasant Hill
Baptist Church Saturday,
June 20th in Houstonville,
N.C. Bro. Hubert West,
President, Rev. W. E.
Howard, host pastor.
Mrs. William Eaton, Jean,
Darrin, and Odell Eaton all
attended the wedding of
Jerome McKnight, Jr. and
Mary Joe Morrison, Satur
day, June 13th at 6 p.m. at St.
Homes M. E. Zion Church in
Winston-Salem. N.C. Jerome
McKnight is tbe grandson of
Mrs. Nora Eaton and son of
Queen Eaton McKnight.
Several from here were
happy to attend the senior
graduating class of the
Governor Morhead School in
Ralei^ last Sunday, June 7th
of which Kenneth Eaton was
one of the graduates. We
thank the Lord for all ot them - 24 in all.
The children are planning a
short program Sunday the 20th after Sunday school. Please come and enjoy it with
us. Miss Martha Nell Setter Is
at the home of her sister, Mrs.
Lucy Tatum.
Our prayers go out to all the
Shutins every where in
nursings. Mrs. Panzy Koontz,
Mrs. Alva Q-awford, and
Avery Foster and others the Lord knows them all by name.
We were glad to have sister Harrette Ridimond to wor
ship with us Sunday and also
the two Lawrence boys. We
sure hope they will come back
again real soon.
Callers at the home of Mrs.
Nora Eaton to visit Darren
recently were Tony Tatum,
June, Transou, Von, Paula,
and Lana Transou.
Nr.6WntED<B«.Dr/
Carolina Tire Co.
962 Yaikínvílle Road
Mocteville.N.C.g3^ ^ jj 5
WHEfti TiReSAfElY iSMOlAUGNiMGMffireR
Health Tips
Ever have a stomach ache?
Sure. Everybody gets an
abdominal pain once in a
while.
There are hundreds of
causes of abdominal pain.
Some are quite serious and
require immediate medical
care. If symptoms are severe,
seek medical attention
promptly. For stomach ache,
never give nn enema,
laxative, medication, food, or
liquids (including water)
without a doctor’s order. It
might make the problem
worse or cause a com
plication.
Appendicitis is an ab
dominal pain that presents a
surgical emergency. The
appendix becomes inflamed
and infected and must be
removed. Pain ot appendicitis
usually starts around the
navel and later moves to the
lower right part of the abdomen. Pain is not always
severe. There may be fever,
nausea and vomiting, diarrhea, constipation, ten-
dcroess in the abdomen. Self diagnosis of appendicitis is
impossible, llie doctor’s care is required, and~ delay in
getting medical attention may
cause the inflamed appendix to rupture.
Of course, most stomach
pains are not appendicitis. Mostly it’s over eating, or
eating heavy, rich, hard-to-
digest foods. Or gulping
chunks ot food without proper chewing.
Almost all children ex
perience stomach ache at
some time. Usually it is not'
serious, if it lasts less than an
hour and there are ho other
symptoms, such as fever,
cough, headache, vomiting or
diarrhea. If the pain lasts
longer than an hour, or if the
abdomen is tender to touch or feels rigid, seek medical help
promptly.
Do not give the child
la x atives, enem as,
medication, food or liquids.
Abdominal pain in infants can
be very serious and requires
medical attention. If the child
has diarrhea, is vomiting or
has an abdominal swelling, an
acute emergency nwjr exist.
N o rm a n R o c k w e ll used
d iap ers fo r p a in t rags.
"Replacement
cost minuw
depreciation?
Or Replacement
Cost? The
difference could
be substantial.”
Ufi» ё yood ttmtghOot.
StM i9 F a /m iM thm r0
Ask about Replacameni Cost Coverage lor the contents ol your home
BO BBY KN IG H T
634-5908192 N orth Main St.
M ocktviUt, N.C.
STATE FARM
f .114ine Catuèily Св1П(>«пу
HemtOIIjcf
*»ввяипу»0Р W:ncn
Bill Yart>rou(^;Phannacist
M o st o f us d o n ’t d rin k
enough w ater. E veryone
"needs at least tw o quarts
o f water a day, m ore on
w arm er days, to function
norm ally” , says D r. Chas
G len K ing, Associate D i
rector, C olum bia U niversity
institute o f N u tritio n a l Sci-
cnces. "Less water than that
may cause dehydration, re
sulting in fatigui;, headaches
sullenness, and in extreme
cases, collapse.”
'piMOUKtD'lUp
liaN.Mtin St.
634-2111
I F R S W IT H 4
B u y 4 gallons o f a n y on e O lym pic P io d u c f, g e t I m ore fre e .
Semi-TWinwparent Stain
Penetrates to give new
wood beauty that's more
than skin deep.
Olympic Ovarooat«
The tough, acrylic latex
house paint that leally
beats the weather
Waat t if ScPMfiT
Get extra protection Solid Color Stain
Oil Penetrates to protect.where you need it most with Latex lets you stain over paint.
Olympic Weather Screen, And both last ftr years.
Sale En d s Ju n e 30
Specially nmrkttd $ J ÜÜ oif and 14 00 oil galtons /ю1 inrlu(l«-<1 in itnj, of»«
Mocksville Builders Supply
^ MOCKSVIUE, NC
, B Ü _ N « Í
H fluts: 7:00 5 ;00 p.m. Mon Fri.
S. * ^ 30 Ц 00 p m
Phone: 634591 5 or 634 5916
Transportation Keys Industrial Growth
D A V II' C O U N T Y i:NTl:RrK!Si: R K O K I ) . T H U R S O A Y , .lUNi: 28, 1981 SH
By M ary N. Yionoulls
Transportation syslcms for
moving m aterials, eq\iipment
or workers are tlie keys to any
Industrial growth, says Dr.
Paul D. Crlbbins of Norlh
Carolina State U niversity’s
civil engineering faculty.
The NCSU transportation
engineering professor is in
volved these days In a study
analyzing the transportation
facilities needed to support
coal export term inals and
other m ajor energy-related
projects slated for develop
m ent in N orth C a ro lin a ’s
coastal zone.
These include oil refineries,
peat processing and peat-
ifired plants, and outer con
tinental shelf ore and gas
exploration support bases.
"W e are now witnessing
industrial growth in this area
as a result of the increasing
coal shipments to Europe
from the state p o rt in
Morehead C ity," said Crlb-
bins.
“ W ith one coal company
now operating an export
facility in N orth Carolina,
about four companies already
planning to operate more in
the state, and other coal '
companies considering North
Carolina plants, we see a
burgeoning growth in the
transportation-exportation
activities of this state in the
next few years that we need to
prepare fo r," he said.
Cribbins is a member of an
interdisciplinary team con
ducting the two-phase
research study through the
U niversity of N orth Carolina
Institute for Transportation
R esearch and E ducation
(IT R E ). The project is funded
by the Coastal E nergy Im pact
Program adm inistered by the
O ffice o f Coastal
Management of the North
Taxpayers Filing
For Reconciliation
Granted Extension
Taxpayers filing the
reconciliation of Windfall
Profit Tax deposits have been
granted an extension to get
the infwmation together, the
Intemal Revenue Service has
announced.
The earliest due date for filing the reconciliation is now
August 31, 1981.
The 1RS said that instructions for the quarterly
Form 8047, "WindfaU Profit Tax,” currently requires taxpayers who have taken the
net Income limitation into account when making tax
deposits to attach an annual
rKoncillation to that form
when it is filed for the first
quarter beginning after the and tt their income tax year. Due to taxpayers having ^blents gathering the needed information to
compute the net income
limitation, the initial annual reconciliation will not be
required to be attached to
Form 6047 filed for the second quarter.
The extension to August 31,
1981, i^ for this year only; filing in future years will be
required as originally scheduled.
Methoprene Proves
Powerful Weapon
Against Fleas
"^et owners have a powerful
new weapon in their perennial
fight against fleas, according
to a U.S. Department of
C arolina n e p n rlm c n t of
N atu ral Resources and
Community Development,
D r. E dw in W, H auser,
IT R E deputy d ire cto r, is
m anager of the ove rall
project nnd chairm an of its
advisory committee.
Heading the eight-member
research team are Cribbins
and Dr, Paul D. Tschetter,
associate professor of
sociology at East Carolina
University.
In the first phase of the
study, the research team
id e n tifie d and docum ented
transportation facilities that
would be required by existing
and new industry.
“ We not only developed
energy-use scenarios, but also
a method for assessing the
various social, econom ic,
fiscal, recreational and in-
viro n m e n ta l im pacts th a t
could result from proposed
p ro je cts,” pointed out
Cribbins.
These im pacts, he con
tinued, are being defined and
evaluated in the cu rre n t
phase of the study.
The research team is
concentrating its efforts at
this tim e in m onitoring outer
continental shelf ore and gas
exploration and coal export
activities.
“ We believe the results of
our research w ill help state
and local planners in
analyzing the benefits and
costs of various modes of
transportation," said C rib
bins.
These modes include ra il,
highway, water, pipeline and
air, he added.
The transportation study
w ill be completed by the end
of 1982. The research team
believes th a t an analysis
sim ilar to this effort can be
applied to other regions of
N ortli Carolina.
Health lips On Water
Eight are great! Eight cups of water are what you need
every day. Water is the medium for virtually all the
body’s chemistry. It’s used by your body constantly, whethe" you’re working hard or just relaxing.
Agriculture scientist.
M ethoprene, an insect
grow th re g u la to r tha t
prevents the com plete
development of the im m ature
forms of the fieae, is now
available to pet owners or
anyone w ith flea problems.
W illiam F. Cham berlain, an
entom ologist w ith USOA’s
Science and Education Ad
m inistration, said that ap-
proval of methoprene for use
by home owners has come
after 7 years of development
aqd research.
"C ontrol of the common dog
and cat flea is one of the most
difficu lt home pest control
problem s,” said Chamberlain
who is located at the U.S.
Livestock Insects Laboratory
here.
Methoprene is a very safe
m aterial because it has ex
tre m e ly low to x ic ity to
m am m als and has been
shown in experim ents to
control fleas at the almost
unim aginably low dosage of
one part per billion.
The insects grow th
regulator, which has already
proven extrem ely effective
against other insect pests
such as the horn and face flies
of cattle, w ill give continuous
protection against fleas for up
to 75 days after a single ap
plication.
Flea control is a m ajor pest
control problem throughout
the country. The im m ature
fleas can persist a long tim e
even after a person no longer
hax a pet. However, these
im m a tu re fleas w ill not
develop into adults if the
f «indoor area has been treated
with methoprene.
The com m ercial product is
ROW svaüable only «« a room
fogger. However by the end of
1U81, several com m ercia l
companies expect to have the
product available as a spray
and a shampoo, ilie y also
expect to combine the growth
re g u la tin g ingredie nt wJth
substances thal k ill adult
Oms already present.
A R E
i S R E 4 T
Water is basic to balanced
nutrition. It helps in your digestive process to break ur soften, and transport food particles from your mouth through your intes
tines. Then your body’s blood'(which ■■ approximately 90% water) circulates
nutrients throughout your body.
According to the American Bottled Water Association, water controls body
temperature through perspi
ration. Each day your skin loses moisture equal to
about two cups of water even if you work in a sedentary job. Greater water intake is important during illness as it helps regulate
body temperature and control fever.
----Fot—r free “8 is great!"postei telling ai}out the val
ues of water, write the American Bottled Water As
sociation, 1010 Vermont Avenue, Washington, O.C.
20005.
TIPS TO HELP YOU
Can you imagine an adhesive that will mend every
thing from Grandma’s antique china to the peeling
trim on the car?
Cracked knobs on the TV, broken furniture or
appliances can be easily
fixed, too. A colorless, transparent bonding adhesive does the job quickly, needs no clamping and works on
just about every material except such porous items as paper or wood.
Called PERMABOND® super glue, it comes from the
International Adhesives Corporation, suppliers of a full
line of adhesives and sealants for the home.
That company also makes a product designed for the
whole family. It’s called KUN-TAK® adhesive. It's non-toxic, reusable, and
dots lots of things. If youngsters like to decorate walls
with posters, pictures and what-not, they can use it
instead of tacks or tape. I’arents will find it helpful
for sealing drafts in windows
and (l(jors. ll will even clean typewriter keys!
Poui brandy over wani!-
la ice cream and sprin
kle with coarse ground
coffee. It's delicious!
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT
TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
NO DEALERS PLEASE
WILLOW OAK CENTER
YADKINVILLE RD.
'"OCKSVILLE.N.C.
'634 6213
WESTWOOD VILLAGE
CLEIVMONS, N.C.
766 9156
■THURSDAY - SATURDAY
^DRUGS uiiSActuocaiCàWO ITIIIW
P C S
Nice 'N Easy
Hair Color
Lotion
Reg. Price *3 «
NOW
6 0
Flintstone
Regular
Vitamins
Reg. Price
$329
NOW
$ 2 ^ 7
1 Roll
Bounty
Paper
Towels
8 3 «
Glad Bags
30 Sm .
G a rb a g e
9 9 «
15 Ig.
K itch en
80
•andw ich
67^
70 S h eets
Wet Ones
M oist T o w e le tte s
$ | 2 7
7 o z.
Rhubicort
Anti-Itch Cream
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12 OZ.
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4 R oils
16 oz.
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or
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(ostom y)
Any Cane
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CANES Variety
ol alylea
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^ Mall
Ccniplele selection In
select woods oi tubular
aluminum.
2 0 %
off reg . price
Hwy (lb
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Webt^dte Shoppintj (
I I AVI iJivbvn M
ли D A V I! ( O I l N n ' I N I I K I ’KISI K l i d K D , II IH K S h A V . IHNI .’ "i 1'Ж|
There's An Answer
THKHK'S AN ANSWKR!
By Norman Vincent Peale
andRuth Stafford Peale
Kirl you are. And (hey, and you, are so
»mart In havinK auch ideaii and Rtan-
dardn.
How bright Ih It to let Hbme character,
who only wonts a sex experience, use
you? I could give you one sad story after
another of girls who fell for such a
"line" only to be dropped afterward.
Probably the best men can be met In
church. Just be happy and lots of fun,
and pray for the rl^ht man to come
along, lie will. You can count on It.
TROUBLE AHEAD
Our son, a senior at college, has a
girlfriend who is hard-working and
respectable but, try as we may, our
family cannot seem to make friends
with her. When she visits in our home
during their breaks from college she
stays pretty much to herself, even exercising (she's a dance major) during our mealtime. She seldom smiles and is
so argumentative. Our son has changed
from a confident, enthusiastic young man to a nervous, suspicious and
complaining person. Should we be
honest with our son and express our
fears about this relationship or remain
silent and pray? I don’t want to invade
his privacy and cause Ul feelings, yet we see trouble ahead.
Yes, of course, you should speak to
your son. The girl acts very odd, to say
the least. Since she seems to have an
adverse effect on the boy. you have a
right to be concerned.
WIFE HAS TANTRUMS
My problem is my wife. Her jealousy
is nerve-wracking. In my business I
come in contact with a lot of people,
females among them. Numerous fights
arc a result of this, and it is deeply
hurting the both of us. She always has
these tantrums about incidents which
arc weeks old. She means very much to
me, and I hate to see this happening to
her. Please help me. My business, my
life, are near shambles.
Jealousy usually rises out of feelings
of Insecurity. Do you give your wife
cause to feel that she Is the most Im
portant person In the world io you? Do
you compliment her often, show pride bt
her accomplishments and appreciation
for all she does? Try to remember how
you courted her and again be as at
tentive as you once were. Include her In
your life as much ai possible. Chances
are she'll no longer feel threatened by
your business associations.
We ore sending you our booklet "Help
Yourself With God's Help" which ts free
to any reader. Write to us at Box SOO, Pawling, N.Y. I2S64.
YOUNG BUT FEELS OLD
I am a lonely, unmarried 24 year old
female. I was raised with the view that
sex should be reserved for marriage.
But most guys these days go for Uie swinging type. Guys call but once they
find out where my head is that’s the end.
Iliey never accept me for who I am. 1
feel so old when I'm young. I’m always
depressed. I feel people might get the'If there is something you would like to ask Dr. and Mrs. Peale, write to them atwrong idea about me and think 1 don’tlike men. 1 really do want to marry and Box 500, Pawling, N.Y. 12584.
have children and have asked God to THERE'S AN ANSWER! 'is
send me a special companion. Please distributed by Foundation for Christianhelp me. Living, Pawling, N.Y. 12564. All rights
We get letters Irom men asking the reserved,
same question. They want the type of
Husbands Need Increased
Awareness Of New Career
Patterns Open To Wives
"There Is an increasing proportion of
marriages where, at the time ot
marriage, the woman accepts the
traditional, sex-typed bargain but
reJecU it laler on. And for Ihe flrtl time
in history the masiei of women have the
potential to bargain with men on a
relatively equal fooling." - Dr. John
Scanzoni, professor. Department of Child Developmenl and Family Relations, UNC-G.
By Selby Bateman
After 12 years as a housewife and mother, Martha suggested to her
husband, Bill, that she’d like to finish
her college degree.“But wfaat about the house and the
cltildren?" he responded. “1 need you
here and the children need a mother at
home.”“I won’t be gone all day, Bill. I thought you might help me do it by picking up a couple of the housdiold chores.”Bill shook his head. “We just can’t do
that now and I don’t want to discuss it any further.”
For many couples like Martha and Bill, career and educational op
portunities for women are bringing new challenges and problems to traditional marriage structures.Those structures are often based on the idea that the man is the occupationally active half of a couple while the woman is chiefly involved with
helping rear the children, supporting the husband’s work and making the home
attractive.
‘‘There is an increasing proportion of
marriages where, at the time of
marriage, the woman accepts the
traditional, sex-typed bargain but
rejects it later on,” said family relations
specialist Dr. John Scanzoni of the----be—used-flextHy—depefiamg
University of North Carolina at
Greensboro.
“And for the first time in history the
masses of women have the potential to
bargain with men on a relatively equal footing,” he added.
As women become more aware of
their opportunities, Scanzoni feels that a
similar awareness must be developed
among men who may still cling to a view
of marriage in which is clearly sub- .
servient in decision-making, career
development and related areas.
“Social changes of this magnitude Md
significance do not occur overnight and
they do not come, unfortunately a great
deal of pain,” Scanzoni noted.
But despite the pain, Scanzoni feels
that the changes can help to maintain
Ihe luve, affection and warmth that are
at the heart of good marriages.
An associate editor of TTie Journal of
Marriage and Family since lft7S,
Scanzoni is the author of eight books in
Ihe field of marriage and family
relations. He recently co-authored, with
sociologist Dr. Maximiliane Szinovacz
of Florida State University, a 307-page
book published by Sage Publications,
Inc. entitled "Family Decision-Making:
A Developmental Sex Role Model.”
Also, the second edition of the 67B-page
textbook, “Men, Women and Change:
A Sociology of Marriage and the Family," was published earlier this
year by McGraw-Hill Book Co. The
book was co-authored by Letha Dawson Scanzoni, his spouse, and Scanzoni
himself.
Ttie UNC-G professor suggested that
there are methods men and women,
including wives, counselors, family
therapists, and others, can use to help
husbands go beyond traditional family
rules. Scanzoni outlined three strategies
which, when made a part of a couple's
fuundation of mutual love and trust, can help in Ihe process:
-Ttie Altruistic strategy: Try to show
that certain aspects of the traditional
male family role should be changed
clianged because it is fair and just for
the woman and the family.
For example, Martha could try to
convince Bill that it is only fair for her to
be allowed to better herself and make
herself a better spouse and mother
through further education.
-'I'he self-interest strategy: In other
on the
situation and the needs of the family
-Think of negotiating, or bargaining,
as a series of stages through which you
want to move as amicably as possible.
-Define in your mind what it is you
want and the steps to which you will go
to achieve that.
-Be open to the creative elements
involved in the give and take of
bargaining. Your spouse may present a new element you had not consitiered that
will be a workable solution.
-Build trust in your negotiations by
being open and honest throughout the
bargaining process.
-Remember that the best negotiations is based on working toward maximum
joint profit for the couple, not individual
profit.
“Negotiation has certain creative
elements,” Scanzoni said. “Vou may go in wanting X, y and z, but your partner makes certain suggestions you hadn’t
even thought about. That sounds good to
you, so you’re willing to settle for that.
You have to be open for whatever
creative responses either of you can
make as a result of stimulating each
other.
“It's like heating chemicals up in a
crucible. Vou really don’t know what’s
going to come out until you do it,” he
added. “And flexibility, of course, is
very critical.”
Scanzoni is convinced that relation
ships between men and women will
continue toward more egalitarian roles,
although he admits the process will not
be a simple one,
"Boundaries will be less and less
clear. There won’t be any firm
parameters to who does what and
when," he said. "Virtually everything
will be up for grabs, or at least up for
orderly decision-malung.
"1 think that's healthy. But it’s cer
tainly much more difficult and much
more painful. This total openness of
decision-making may be cumbersome,
but it certainly is far superior to what
has preceded it."
Oecaffelnaled Coffee
When they make coffee at home, 16
percent of all coffee-drinkers use
decaffeinated brands. In restauranU
though, only 6 percent ask for cafeeine-
free coffee.
)
T h e r e ' s S o m e t h i n g F o r E v e r y b o d y I n
W a s h i n g t o n ' s O F F B e a t M u s e u m s
words, there are many aspects involved
in modifying traditional male family
roles that directly or indirectly benefit
the man.
As an example, Martha might explain
to Bill that by finishing her college
degree she will be able to bring in a
second income to the home, help more
effectively with the maintenance of the
family budget and with family
decisions, or become a more effective
wife and mother.
Scanzoni is quick to point out that the
strategies will change depending on the
situation and the people involved. The
importance lies in the flexibility,
creativity and honesty shown
throughout the process.-Negotiation and conflict: When the
first two appeals fail to prodiKe a
consensus about the problem,
bargaining between the husband and
wife becomes crucial.As Scanzoni puts it: “Negotiation is a
process of give and take- in other
words, concessions and compromises in
exchange for benefits- so t|iat the
parties concerned end up with
something, but not everything they originally wanted.”
By foUowing the tliree strategies in a
flexible manner, Scanzoni believes that
the traditional male family role can be
modified for the good of the enthre
family. “Men are more likely to go along
with these innovative patterns, not only
when they become convinced that they
could stand to benefit, but also when men
see it is best for women If these changes
take place,” he said.
The marriage and family specialist
offered the following tips to make the
strategies work more smoothly:
- Remember that the three strategies
are not mutually exclusive, but should
В,- Donald J. Frederick Brush up on your Shakespeare, get a
glimp.se of Woodrow Wilson's home life nfler he left office, or turn the kids loose in a museum where almost anything
goc.4.
Those .-чге some of the many options
availablo to those who seek out the
lesser-known attractions in Washington,DC.
Many people feel lhat "all the world’s
a stage" on Capitol Hill, but the bard
really has the last say two blocks away
at Ihe Folger Shakespeare Library,
where the inscription under a sculpture
facing Ihc Capitol reads, “I/>rd what
fools Ihese mortals be!”
Shakespeare’s characters come to life
during performances on the stage of the Elizabethan-style theater inside the
Folger. Changing exhibits that feature everything from rare books and
manuscriots to costumes worn by
famous Shakespearean actors fill the other public area of the building, a 30- foot-high oak-paneled Tudor Hall
bedecked with heraldic banners.Behind the scenes, scholars endlessly
peruse the Folger’s collection of 250,000
books and manuscripts in a reading
room that resembles a setting in a
Gothic novel. The 79 copies of the 1623
First Folio edition of “Mr. William
Shakespeare's Comedies, Histories &
Tragedies” are the glory of the
collection.
It’s just a two-block walk from the
quiet world of the scholar to the mystical
world of spirit masks, fetishes, and
exotic headdresses in the Museum of
African Art.
Adults see shapes, forms, and colors
that influenced such giants of con
temporary art as Picasso, Matisse, and
Modigliani. Children take a different
approach. “Mommy, I think I saw them
in Star Wars," said a Uttle girl after viewing two of the fanciful figures on
display.
At least 500 of the collection’s 9,000
objects usually are on display in the
three town houses that compose the
public section of the museum. Vividly
portraying the social and religious
heritage of Black Africa, the sculptures
and carvings transmit messages that
evoke strong emotions among many
viewers.
“It makes me even happier to be alive
and to be of African descent,” said one
visitor after seeing the collection.
Few things in town make kids happier
than Ihe Capital Children's Museum. Housed in an unlikely setting, a former
convent near Union Station, the museum is a “hands-on" place that encourages
youngsters to learn by doing.
Perhaps the most fun for small
children is the “city room” where they
can dress up in costumes and act out
situations in urban life. “Get out of the
way or I’ll leave you behind,” com
mands the freckled 6-year-old behind
the wheel of a mock-up Metro bus. Meanwhile, a little girl in a fireman’s hat emerges from a subterranean tunnel.
lined with pipes and levels a fire hoee at
a grownup passerby. “Too bad it doesn’t
work,” she says wistfully.
But behind almost evenrthing the kids
do in the museum, there’s a leaming
experience.
For instance, they can do broad jumps
on a mat measured in meters, learn how
to make tortillas in the Mexican exhibit,
or send a message on a teletype machine
to a friend in another room.
The hush mantling the Phillips
CoUection~the first gallery of modem
art in the United States-seems even
more pronounced after the spontaneous
uproar in the Children's Museum. The
Phillips, at least on weekdays, is the
kind of retreat where a visitor can settle
into an easy chair or sofa and read
poetry, even doze off, surrounded by
paintings that made art history.
Housed in a handsome three-etory red
brick mansion linked to a modem wing,
the collection overflows with riches;
masterpieces by Cezanne, Van Gogh.
-Dogao;—Buiiinmli Monet, Hi
WOOOKOW
WILSON
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- «ÍIIXIM ■ COLLECTION 0
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Interested in grand mansions, fine rugs, a place where the
kids can blow o ff steam? Visitors w ho stray off the beaten
tourist track in W ashington, D .C ,, can fin d intim ate
museums that appeal to a w ide range o f interests and age
groups. Some have unusual visiting hours or are closed on
certain days, so it’s best to check in advance.
ilite lived in Washington a century later
than to visit the Larz Anderson House,
now owned and administered by the
Society of the Cincinnati, whose
members are male descendants of
colonial officers who served in the
Revolutionary War.
The 50-room mansion was finished in
1905 for the independently wealthy
career diplomat Larz Anderson, and it
appears pretty much as it did during its
heyday.___ ______
With its chandeliered grand ballroom,
sweeping marble staircases, and an
tique tapestries, it’s Washington's best try at re-creating a scaled-down Ver
sailles. Despite all this opulence, the
house retains a kind of lived-in intimacy,
as if the Andersons were in anottier
room planning their next dinner party
for the King of Belgium.There's so much intimacy to the
Woodrow Wilson House that many
visitors leave with tea>s in their eyes.
Wilson was the only president to take up
residence in the capital after leaving]
office and his house on quiet, tree-1
shaded S Street is filled with touching J
mementos and persbriiirfumishings.
Mrs. WUson aptly described their redl brick, Georgian style residmce as “ani
unpretentious, comfortable, dignified house fitted to the needs of a gen-1
tlemen.”
Baity's Discount Tire
Homer, Dove, Marin, and O’Keeffe.
One work has come to symbolize the
Phillips Collection more than any other,
Pierre Auguste Renoir’s “The Ltmcheon
of the Boating Party,” a warm, robust
masterpiece that radiates an iimocent joy of life from a bygone age. The painting and 74 others from the
collection will begin an 18-month tour in June that will take them to museums In San Francisco, Dallas, Minneapolis, and
Atlanta.
The city's bygone years are elegantly
represented in a number of historic
houses, some seldom visited even by
Washington residents. Near the White
House, the “Octagon”-it's actually a
six-sided building-supposedly hosts a resident ghost. The guides who take
visitors on tours of the place downplay
the haunt and highlight the history and furnishings.
Completed in 1800 for Col. John
Taylor, a wealthy Virginia landowner,
the odd-shaped brick house served jor a
time as President James Madison’s
presidential mansion, after he was burned out of the President’s House by
the British during the War of 1812.
The Treaty of Ghent ending the war
was signed by Madison in the Octagon,
and the desk on which it was signea in
1815 still is there, as are many other furnishings from the period.There's no better way to see hov/ the
Center4-N
Club Meets
The Center 4-H Club held Its
regular monthly meeting
June 4, 1981. The meeting was
called to order by Everette
•Mien, our President. The
pledges wore led by Christie
Eldridge and Renee Holcomb. Devotions were rea'd by Julie
Severt.
Old and New Business was discussed. Mrs. Ruth Tutterow did a portion of the
program on Parliamentary
Procedure. Julie Severt did a
demonstration on Tree
Identification.Refreshments were served and the meeting was ad
journed.
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634 2365
HIGHWAY 601 SOUTH
MOCKSVILLE, N.C.
SEE THE MANAGER - DARRELL HARPE
634 2365
d a v i i; c o u n t y I n t i RPRISI-: RIX O K D , T llliR S D A Y , lUNI IS IDXI 71)
^ iio n y A r e X ln n c e r n e Â
T r a p s I n O p e n F i e l d s
Earl Hammer, member of the Davie County Animal Protection Society
urges trappers to use the cage type trap that does not harm pets that
may wonder into them. A dog or cat could be easily released.
The sled straps lay shut on the picnic
table, caked with dirt and a few telltale
animals hairs. Earl Hammer pushed the
jaws of one trap open, while Bil Ferebee
set the trigger. A tap with a piece of oak,
a good inch thick, and the steel jaws
snapped shut in a cloud of dust, biting a
deep groove into the heavv wood.
Hammf’r grimaced, "Imagine what
that would do to the leg of one of my
beagles.”
These men are concerned about these
traps being set in Davie County, traps
which hold no discrimination between
racoons or legal game and valuable
hunting dogs or household pets. Last week, they and other members of the
county’s Animal Protection Society
asked commissioners to adopt an or
dinance outlawing steel-jawed animal
traps in areas outside a 15-foot
perimeter of creeks and waterways.
"One thing we want to stress we are
not trying to do away with trapping, said
Hammer. “We’d like to get rid of
Hammer, John McCashin and Joe Ferebee are crusading to rid the county of
steel Jaw traps on dry land.
trapping on dry land”
Hammer pointed out that the animals
legal to trap-mink, muskrat and rac
coon-live near the water. A trap in the
middle of the field usually means a
trapper is trying to catch fox, which is
illegal under North Carolina’s current
three year moratorium on fox4rapping.
TTie traps recommended for mink,
muskrat and raccoon are size .00, big
enough to hold a game animal, but not
large enought to mangle a dog’s leg. The
traps Hammer and F'erebee were
demonstrating were marked I'/fe, found
around Davie County on dry land. A
German Shepherd belonging to John
McCashin found a trap recently, and
brought it home to his master~on his
leg.
Hammer explained that the larger
traps are set out in fields in patterns
designed to catch as many of the
animal’s legs as possible. The game is drawn to the straps by a sprinkled scent.
“And any scent that will attract a fox
will attract a dog,” said Hammer.
Many trappers follow illegal prac
tices besides trapping foxes, accor^ng
to Ferebee. He figures 90 percent of the
trapping is done without permission
from landowners and that half of aU traps set do not carry the required
name, address, phone number and
trapping license number.
The traps are not regularly attended,
at least once every 24 hours by state law,
since APS members contend that
trappers put out strings of hun^eds of
traps across the county. Animals who
are trapped often suffer greatly for as
many as two or three days.
A trained coon hound whose value can
run up to $5,000, can with one wrong step
find itself in a trap and minus a few toes,
reduced to a worthless hound, said Ferebee.
“The northern sUtes which would
have the most trapping have outlawed
steel traps. Forsyth County has banned
all steel trapping. Iredell and Rowan
counties are working on eliminating
trapping. There are alternatives,” said
Hammer.
He pointed to a live animal trap, a
wire box which does not harm an
animal, maybe only make him a little
angry at being confined. Ferebee added
that any cats or dogs could be released.
At around $50 for the trap, the trapper
could reclaim his investment with two or
three raccoon pelts.
For now the APS is hoping the county
commissioners would adopt the or
dinance banning dry land trapping.
“Coon hunters would still run some risk
of losing their dogs to traps along
creeks,” said John McCashin, “but it would eliminate some of the problem.”
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Money Management
How To IHanage Your
Retirement Nest Egg
How will you manage your retirement
nest egg when you retire? To make your
money last, you have to find ways to
keep it working for you, and at the same
time, consider the tax implications of
your financial decisions, says the North
Carolina Association of CPAs.
Cash you don’t need immcdiati ly
should be earning maximum interest. A
savings account is a safe parking piace
for some money, but retireesshouUlthlnk
about investing in the money market or
bonds or in stocks of companies that
yield solid dividends over a long period
of time. You want your investments to
produce a regular income. Don’t be
afraid to shift from one form of in
vestment to another to take advantage
of mnve attractive interef.t rates.
You may have contributed to a thrift
plan with your employer while you were
working. A thrift plan is like a savings
account; you don't have to close it out
when you retire, and it continues to eam
interest. Tliat money can be taken as a lump-sum, or you can make with
drawals as needed.If you have a large sum of money in an
Individual Retirement Account (IRA) or
thrift plan, how much do you withdraw?
Take a look at your monthly income.
This can include Social Security
benefits, income from investments, and
perhaps your spouse’s pension check. If
your monthly budget is $1,500, and you
have an Income of $1,200 from combined
sources, you could withdraw $300 from
your IRA each month.
There are two ways to handle a lump
sum payment from your employer’s
pension plan. You could roll it over into
an IRA within 60 days of receiving it and
not pay any tax on the money until you start making withdrawals. How much
tax you’d pay each year would depend upon the amount you took out of the IRA
and what tax bracket that and other income sources put you in. If you expect
your annual retirement income to be
$15,000, your yearly tax bill might be about $1,200, CPAs say.
Another option with a lump-sum
pension payment is to pay tax once on
the entire amount. For example, if your
lump-sum of $125,000 qualifies for ten-
year averaging, you might pay a
relatively small one-time tax. By in
vesting ail or part of the large amount
remaining, you'll pay tax on dividends
and interest. As you may be able to
deduct up to $400 of dividends nnd in
terest.As you may be able to deduct up
to $400 of dividends and interest on a
joint return (up to $200 on an individual
return), you may still save tax dollars in
the long run this way.
Uaving your money in an IRA and
investments and “paying" yourself a
certain amount each month means
you’ve created your own “annuity.”
TTiis gives you the flexibility of increasing your withdrawals if necessary.
You can buy an annuity from an in
surance company, or convert your life
insurance policy into one. You, and perhaps your spouse, will receive a set
amount for as long as you live. How
much you get depends upon your age
and what you paid for the annuity, and
payments don’t increase with inflation.
You can get extra money for in
vestments by cashing in your life in
surance policy or reducing your
coverage. Cash in your policy only if
your other resources could support your
spose should something happen to you.
If you have more insurance than you
need to protect your spouse, reduce your
coverage and cash in the remainder.
Another source of cash is your home.
As long as you’re at least 55 years old
when you sell, and you’ve lived in the
home for three of the past five years, as
much as $100,000 of profit from the sale is exempt from capital gains tax, CPAs
say. You can only use this exclusion once, so be sure you won’t be buying another residence.
If you bought U. S. retirement bonds,
cash them between age 59Mi (the earliest
they can be redeemed) and 70^4, when
they stop earning interest. The proceetb
of each bond are taxable as ordinary income in the year you cash it.
“I am still learning."
M otto o f Michelangelo
Safe July 4th Holiday Urged
Approximately 15 people could lose
their lives on North CaroUna streets and
highways over the upcoming July 4th
holiday weekend, the N.C. State Motor
Club has estimated.
The state will count its toll over a 78-
hr. period from в p.m. Friday, July 3,
until midnight, Monday, July в. Last
year 19 fatalities and 856 injuries were
reported for a similar period.
The N.C. State Motor Club believes
that fatalities this year will be less than
usual. “We are optimistic for several
reasons”, John G. Frazier, III,
President of the statewide motor club
said. “The energy crisis has resulted in lees traffic and lower speeds, that of
course cuts down on the potential.”
Preliminary figures indicate a decline in the number of persons killed on North
Carolina highways so far this year. To
date there have been 576 traffic deaths
compared to 615 for the same time last
year. Fatalities over the Easter and
Memorial holiday weekends were cut in
abnost half compэred to last year. “We
congratulate the people of North
Carolina for their spirit of cooperation in
keeping our highways safe, and the
State Highway Patrol for their efforts to
promote safety and enforce traffic
laws.” Frazier stated.
Exceeding safe speed is still the No. 1
driver violation contributing to death,
while driving under the influence of
alcohol or drugs continues to be No. 2. If
we are to continue to see fatilities
decrease, motorists must be more cautious of the need for safety while
driving on the streets and highways of
our state.
Summer months are the most
dangerous months. Vacation is more dangerous than business or normal .everyday driving. Unfamiliar roads,
fatigue and the tendency to celebrate before reaching the vacation spot contribute. Frazier urged motorists to
continue to use safety precautions in an effort to cut down on highway accidents,
stay on your guard while driving, and
don’t relax until you reach your destination.
Leaks W aste W ater
Leaky plumbing fixtures waste millions of gallons of good water in
North Carolina cach year. '
A leak as small as one-sixteenth inch
in diameter, which will produce a very
fine stream of water, can waste almost
1,000 gallons of water in a 24 hour period,
point out extension agricultural
engineering specialists at North Carolina State University.
A ‘/в-inch leak will waste 3,000 gallons uf water in a 24-hour period. A pinhole leak, one that oozes a drop per second, will waste 170 gallons a day.
Leaky commodes are a frequent cause
of wasted water. The commode that runs all the time may waste 50V gallons
of water a day.
Unfortunately, not all leaky com
modes are noisy. Some of them have
flapper valves that let water seep by
them without making noise.
One simple test to see if the flapper
valve on a commode is snug is to add a
few drops of food coloring lo the water in
Ihe commode tank. If the coloring
trickles into the bowl the commode has a
leaky valve.
CLINE HOME CENTER
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su Il/W I! (■(lUNT'i I NTI Kl'RISi K IC O K I). II H IK S D A Y , lUNI': 28. I‘)81
District
Court
The following ca.ses were disposed of
during the Monday, .lune 15 session of
district court w ith Judge Lester P.
M artin, Jr., presiding judge.
Arthur James Garvin, DUI, and
driving 83 mph in a l>5 mph zone, pay
$127 and costs, attend DUI course at
mental health.
Brian Hudson Driggaes, exceeding
safe speed, $14 and costs.
Muhammad Ashraf Bhatti, improper
equipment, costs.
Jeremiah Arnold, reckless driving
after drinking, pay $200 and costs, at
tend DUI course at mental health.
Charges of driving 66 mph in a 55 mph
zone were dismissed.
Lushion Wayne Baynes, driving too
fast for conditions, costs.
W.C. Hairston, DUI, $100 and costs,
attend DUI course at mental health.
Alice Marie L. Jamison, improper
equipment, $10 and costs.Eugene Dalton Myers, reckless
driving, not guilty; improper equipment, costs.
Robert William Poole, riding a
motorcycle without proper head gear, dismissed on costs.Sandra Sanders Price, improper equipment, costs.
Ruby Styers Smith, DUI, $100 and
costs, attend DUI course at mental
health; no operator's license, voluntary
dismissal.
Malinda Sue Wright, exceeding safe
speed, costs.
Johnny Cicero Waller, no insurance
and improper equi|Hnent.
Irvin Hamilton Thomas safe movement violation, $25 and costs.
Barry Michael Wilson, assault on a
female, sentenced to 30 days.
Barry Michael Wilson, domestic criminal trespass, sentenced to six
months suspended for one year, pay
court costs.
Larry Dale Wishon, assault, sen
tenced to 30 days suspended for one
year, pay court costs.
George A.L. Brock, worthless checks,
make restitution and pay court cozts,
Dennis Garrielson, assault by pointing
a gun, restitution made, prosecuting
witness does not desire further
prosecution.
Steven Gray Shores, DUI, voluntary
dismissal.
Ricky Lee Spillman, driving left of
center, voluntary dismissal.
George Allen Kinchen, driving 70 mph
in a SS mph zone, dismissed with leave.
Bianca Rene Ruf, driving 68 mph in a|]
55 mph zone, dismissed with leave. ^
John Langdon Harris, driving 70 mphi
in a 55 mph zone, dismissed with leave. |
Jill Delene Ellis, driving 69 mph in a 55,
mph zonel dismissed with leave.
Evei'ett Hubert Dole, driving 68 mph in a 55 mph zone, dismissed with leave.Patrick E. Collidge, driving 68 mph in
a 55 mph zone, voluntary dismissal.
Lost Legislators Sought
Where are they? What are they doing?
“THEY” are lost legislates - men
who have served North Carolina in the
General Assembly whose whereabouts
are unknown, and help is needed to find
them.
The state division of Archives and
History is preparing a biographical
directory of the General Assembly from
colonial times to the present. The first volume will contain sketches on
legislators who served from 1929 to 1981, a total of 1,900 individuals.
Among these are a few that the
researchers so far have been unable to
trace since their service in the General
Assembly, according to Dr. Thornton W.
Mitchell, state archivist.
"Some of these probably moved out of state and died, or are living somewhere
unknown to us. Perhaps a few of them are still residing in North Carolina,” he said.
The n
with information on the fate of any of these former legislators, or any
biographical information on any North
Carolina legislator who served prior to 1929 to ^ re this material.
Anyone with information concerning
the legislators listed below is asked to
contact Stephen E. MassengiU, project
director. Biographical Directory of the
General Assembly of North Carolina,
Archives and Records Section,
Department of Cultural Resources, 109
E. Jones St., Raleigh, 27611; or
telephone 733-3952.
WiUiam P. Warden, Alleghany Co.
Henry Lee WiUiamson, Bladen Co
Monroe Jefferson May, Clay Co.
David Henry WiUis, Craven Co.
Claude Judson Gray, Gates Co.
Joseph Tracy Moore, GuUford
Walter James Norwood, Halifax
John Thomas BaUey, Haywood
Francis Sampson Wetmur, Henderson
Co.
Ira Plemmons, Madison Co.
J. Wilson Alexander, Mecklenburg Co.
WiUiam F. SchoU.
Tipton S. Greene, MitcheU Co.
John Samuel Moore, Pitt Co.
WiUiam Edward Lynch, Robeson Co.
Clarence Edward Alcock, Rutherford
Co.
Amos Ralph Beam.
J. MarshaU Lee, Sampson Co.
Albert Rufus Phillips, Stokes Co,
Samuel Adelaide Alexander, Union
Co.
\ O u r M a g i c D i s c o u n t
C o i n P r o g r a m I s
¡ D r a w i n g T o A d o s e
(a s o f S A T U R D A Y , JU N E 2 7, W E W ILL N O LO N G E R B E GIVING M AGIC
D IS C O U N T C O IN S IN W IN S TO N -S A LEM , K ER N E R S V ILLE , KING,
YA D K IN V ILLE, JO N E S V IL LE , M O C K S V ILLE. C LEM M O N S , M T. AIRY,
LEX IN G T O N , T H O M A S V ILLE, O R ELK IN . H O W EV ER , Y O U W ILL S TILL
B E A B LE T O R E D E E M Y O U R M AGIC C O IN S FO R O U R W E E K LY
S P EC IA LS T H R O U G H S A T U R D A Y , J U L Y 1 1 , 1981. D O N ’T D ELA Y !
lV -
1 TtitcVieoilVecttr"
i c T o w e l
fin*!**
BIG ROLL HI-DRI
M»OIC DISCOUNT
W ITH 7
M AGIC C O IN S
You’ll Be WhenYl
^reen«Be*i
F a b
.49 OZ. BOX (20* OFF LABEL)
I
IC DISCOUNT
COIN A
V t.
IV ITH /
M AGIC C O IN S
W/f/f/
TSofnlfrr
M i l k
SMAL
JhlteBin/
H y T o #
16 Oz. HyTop Whole —Potatoes........3 / 1
i n o m r n y .................3 / * l
8 Oz. HyTop Tomato ^Sawce..............
6 Oz. HyTop Tomato aPaste • •. 3 / 1
H y T o p
15 0z. HyTop 0^ .Pintos ••••••• ^y/
15 0z. HyTopGr. Northerns 3>
15 Oz. HyTop Kidney ^ <Beans..............3/
17 Oz. HyTop WKCorn ••••••••
16.5 0Z. HyTop CutGr. Beans ........s/|
16 0z. HyTop WholeBeets ............
160z.HyTop MixedVegetables.. 2/
>7^
Va GALLON DAIRY CHARM
ICOMCOUMT
COIN
"H yZlop
fRfSH SHCLLiO
Vanito SMce
STYU COLC
m e t 6 on
W ITH 7
^ M A G IC C O IN S S t o e l c Ü B w ü l avori
C o f f e e
J 3 OZ. BAG FOLGER’S FLAKED
S a t i s f a c t i o n
K DISCOUNT
COIN f.
W ITH 7
M AGIC C O IN S
1 9
^Wv/ersary S t e a k
ICPncOUNT COIM ^M a y o n n a i s e
)UART JAR KRAFT (25* OFF LABEi
W ITH 7
^ M AG IC C O IN S
M»OIC OliCOUNT
COIN
V i
F r a n k s
12 0Z. PACK CHAMPION
W ITH 7
^ A G I C C O IN S
MAOIC DISCOUNT
COIN .O n io n s
3 LB. BAG YELLOW
Ulyinpic gold medals aren't
all gold. They're mo.'tly silver cuateu wilh six giairis of fine gold, and they're worth about $110.
W ITH 5
M AG IC C O IN S
U.S. CHOICE FULL CUT ROUND BONE-IN
8 8 ^
12 Oz. Champion P&P, Salami, Or ^ 7 Oz. Mrs Gile's»nchueac..................9 9 Chicken Salad ..
1^ . Gunnoe ^ ^Porle Sausage..............
1 '/> Lb. Gunnoe ^ ^Pork Sausage..............
1 Lb. Valleydale — — ^ ^Big Buddies..................9 9
12 Oz. Valleydale Sandwich BuddiesBologna.........................7 9
12 Oz. Holly FarmsFranks...........................^
12 Oz. Oscar Mayer Breakfast Strips A « « ALean & Tasty .............. *1**^
12 Oz. Oscar MayerVariety Pack ..............*1.”
A u d O n O u r G i
P e a c l t e i
2’/ 4 IN. & UP S.C. freestone!
f u l l 38 LB . B O X
I p e a c l f t c s l
• 8 ’ *LBS.
DAVII-: C O IIN T V I'NTI.RI’RISI RI-CORI), TII^IR.SDЛ^■. .ItlNi: 28, 1ЧК1 чн
d a n c i n g I n T h e A i s l e s
> u S e e T h e S a v i n g s ! !
Del Monte
15'/} Oz. DelMonte WK/CS
15'/. 07 DelMonte Cut
Green Beans ..........2/
15’/a Oz. DelMonte French-Style
Golden C o rn ..........2/89^
8 9 ^
Green Beans ...........2/89^
8 Oz. DelMonte Buffet ^
WK/CS C o r n ..............
8 Oz. DelMonte Buffet ^ _
Sweet Peas..................3/ X
8 Oz. DelMonte Buffet ^ ^
Spinach........................3/ X
15’/2 0 z. DelMonte
Sli./Ctiunk/Cr.
Pineapple.. 5 9 «Greeif
Giant
15’/i Oz. Del Monte
Fruit
C o c k ta il... 6 9 ^
m GttenOW 17 Oz. Green Giant WK/CS
Cut Corn ...........
)Greeii Beani
16 Oz. Green Giant Kitchen Sli.,French, Or Reg.
¡leans. 2//9
12 Oz. Green Giant Com
N iblet ...........3 7
15 Oz. Bush Mixed
Beans 3/
15 Oz, Bush Navy ^
Beans............3/ X
15 Oz, Bush Chop, Turnip Greens,
Greens w/Turnips, Mustard Greens,
Mixed Greens, Or ^ ^
Chop. Kale.. 3/^X
16 Oz, Bush White Or Golden ^ ^
H om iny .... 3/ X
16 Oz, Bush Chopped
Collards... . 3/ X
15 Oz. Bush ^ ^
Blackeyes . • 3/ X
and thesT
Favorites
15 ’/2 Oz. Greer Std.
Tom atoes... 3 / X
1 6 Oz. Van Camp's ^ ^
Pork/Beans. 3 / X
17 Oz. Luck’s ^ ^
Pintos ..........3 9
15'/.Oz.Argo
Green Peas .3 / X
15 '/ 7 Oz. Greer ^ ^
A|j»ple9aiice. 3 / X
15 0z. TwinPet
DogFood ...s/ X
6 V, Oz. Friskies Buffet ^ ^
Cat Food.... 3 / ^ X
г х ш к а г Ё Г о е к е т ^ Т К е S a v i n ^ í
■ u a r a n t e e O n M e a U ^ ! T ^ W a y S a v i n g s
^ arg arin él
1 LB. QTRS. BLUE BONNET
U . S . C h o i c e B e e f
U.S. Choice Top
Round S te a k .............ib*2
, U.S. Choice Top
^ Round Roast...............
' U .s. Choice Bottom ^ ^
Round S te a k .............
U.S. Choice Chuck jk»
Cubed Steak ..............
Mrs. Gile's
0 9 Siireddi
' ^ B o t t o m
R o a s t
lOOz. Carnation I ii^u'd------------—J oz. d’ UTT-/wncaf-----------------------—I
! Slender........3/ X Potted Meat 4 /^X I
22 Oz. 20* Off Palmolive 2 Oz. Flavorich Cottage m
D U h Liquid 9 9 Cheese ........69^
R o u n d
U.S. CHOICE BEEF
$ 1 9 9
Ham burger
SSiu n s
OR HOT DO 3
ROIJ-S '^ PAC,r
TAS,3 9
F ru it
Cobblers
PET RITZ
26 OZ.
l e n F r e s h P r o d u c e !
5 Lb Bag New
W hite Potatoes...............9 9
6 9 *
Garden
Fresh B roccoli................
Garden Fresh
Pickle Cukes. .........
8 Oz. Pack Garden
Fresh Mushrooms ........../ V
Garden Fresh
Cherry Tomatoes .... p<nt09
8 Oz. HyTop Whipped BOz. Breyer's
To p p in g ... . 2 /” Yogurt ... 2 /8 9
2Pk. HyTopPie 6 Pack Sealtest
S h e lls ..........2/ X Polar Bars..
32 Oz.HyTop Crinkle 49 Oz. 20* Off Feb
Fries .............8 9 Detergent.. ®X*’
2 Lb. Swanson Fried a 5 Oz, Palmolive ^
Chicken ... Bath Soap .. 4 5
10 Lb. Kingsford Galion-50* Off ^ a
Charcoal... *Z*’ Crisco 011*5 * p .
# f c
B a k e t y - D e l i
Fried Chicken
8 Pieces, 1 Lb.
Slaw 6 Rolls
Russer
P&P Loaf
Fresh Baked
Oatmeal 1 2 /
Cookies
Hot Lunch
• | * 9
lb. ■
t | 4 9
I ]|98
June PIjte Stickers To Expire Soon
Is your car registration due to expire June 30? If you tx).ii?hl a new car or
registered your car from July 1 - Dec. 31,
1980, then you are among those who need
to renew their liceriss j-iales withm the next two weeks.
Only about 70,500 (if Uie nearly 388,700
renewal applications mailed by the
North Carilina Dtpaitment of Tran
sportation’s Motor Vehicles Division
have t>een processed to date.
Motor vehicles Commissioner Elbert
L. Peters Jr. noted that both mailir and
over the counter sales for June license
plate renewals have been slow.
"We are encouraging our citizens who
need to renew their license plates in
June to go to the г -st license plate
sales office as soon poso.ble to get
their tags and stickers,” ¡.aid.
Tags and stickers for the June 1982
renewals have been on sale since mid-
May, when renewal notices were mailed
to those owners whose stickers expire in
June 1981.
Driving 9 vehicle without a current valid registration is a misdemeanor in
North Carolina, punishable by a fine up
to $100 or imprisonment up to 60 days, or both,
A brochure that is included with the
license plate renewal card shows the
correct placement of the validation
sticker on the license plate,
A license plate th a t has a
“1981 year” sticker on it should either be
cleaned off so that the new sticker can
be placed directly on top of it, or peeled
off and replaced by the new sticker, llie
sticker on the left side showing the
month is permanent.
Peters said the renewal fee for cars is
$16. He added that motorists who are
renewing registration on their vdilcles should make sure that their correct address is shown on the front of the
renewal card and that they fill out the
insurance information and sign the back of the cari’.
Old Salem Torchlight
Parade Set For July 4th
The 16th annual re-enactmeijt of a 1783
torchlight procession will be iield in Old
Salem at 9 p.m. on July 4.
The special program sponsored by
Old Salem, Inc., is bas'd on the written
records of ' ‘a of solemn
thanksgiving,” which was observed b,^
the Moravians ;л the little town of Salein
on July 4,1783 - the first year of peace
following the American Revolution. To
close their allnlay ol)servance, the
people of Saiem gath^rired on the town
square, ana, carrying torches and
lanterns, walked in procession through
the streets, singii>g hymns as they
walked.Approximately 180 глеп, women and
children - all in early Moravian dress - will participate in the re-enactment, which will take place on the exact spot of
the 1783 procession, narration and
special lighting have been added, but
otherwise the prograv.? will follow the
form of the observance luit years ago. A
Moravian band will ¡И£^у traditional
diorales, and a choir, under the
direction of Paul W. Peterson, will sing
anthems. ’The processi;>n around Salem
Square will be led by Clark Thompson in
the role oi minister. John M. Smith will
play the part of the night watchman.
’Ihe program will be directed by Bill
Trotman, who wrote and narrated the
text for the re-enactmont.
Ibe restored Ьи11и'г.цг in Old Salem
will be open from 9:30 a.m. to 7 p.m. on
July 4, and there will be a number of
craft demonstrations tn open ■>.reas of
the historic district.
Nominations Open For
Extension Service Director
__Hearings are scheduled July 2 anc!_____
July 14 for persons wishing to nominate
someone for director of the North
Carolina Agriculmral Extension Ser
vice.
The current dlreccni. Dr. T. C.
Blalock, plans to rr*'".. Deo. 31 after 30
years of work with t*i i^Ixtension Ser
vice.Both hearings will Ivgin at & a.m. In
Room 232 of N.C. St,.i« University’s
McKimmon Center The hearings ha-ч ,:-.i set by the
nine-member comm it Ufi :.5tablished by the dean of the S.;hocl o! Agriculture and
Life Sciences, Dr. J. E. Legates, for the purpose of screening nominations for
the position.
Persons wishing to арре^л- before the
committee should contact the office of
the chairman. Dr. F. J. Hn 'sler. Weaver Laboratories, N.C. St«te University,
Raleigli, 27650. The rr:lt;phone number is
(919) 737-2694.
The director of the Extension Service,
a statewide educational agency, also
serves as associate dear, oi the School cf
Agriculture and Life ¿citrices at NCSU.
Enrollment Completed For
Summer Term kilR
Enrollment is no'V' r'':-.!«’,ete for the
first of two undergradua ^ and graduate summer terms at Lcxioi; • Rhyne College, and officials report u total registration
of more than 530 aduiu The total is slightly .I'buve last sum
mer's enrollment for the first
siunmer terms.Both the undergradtmte term, which
began June 8, and the graduate term,
which started a week latei, will continue
through July 10. Second terms will gpen
on July 13 with tlie «rarluate session
slated to close on Auc:i:;£ and the un
dergraduate on Augubt :
Lenoir-Rhyne also has ‘ ummer sports
camps in operation and various other
bpecial programs BlaieU for coming
weeks. They wi: 4 rau.-^ tliwi 500
addilional studem . 'tiy youngsters,
to the Hickory caii.pu
ion пл\'п: C O U N n ’ iiNii'Ki'Risi' Ri;( ()Ki). lllli|<sl)л^, iUNi :s i'*ki
A r e a O b i t u a r i e s
R each-O u t Evangelism
DR. PAUI HI'NDRICKS
Dr. Paul Hendric!;n ot Kings Mountnin, N.C. died unexpectedly al his summer home at Pauleys Island, South
Carolina, Tue.sday morning.Dr. Hendricks wus born in
Davie county to the late Grover and Benulah Hendricks, January 14. 1913.
Survivors include his wife,
Helen Crosland Henuricks of
the home; 1 daughter, Dr.
Sarah Sinai of Winston-Salem,
.‘4.0. ; cne son. Dr. Paul
Hendrick.s, Jr, of Kings
Mountain, N.C.; 2 sisters,
Mrs. Roy Collette and Mrs.
Graham Madison of
Mocksville, N.C.; 1 brother.
Gray Hendricks also of
Mocksville; and five grand
children.
Funeral arrangements are
incomplete as this paper goes
to press.
JOHN FRANK ORRELL
John Frank Orrell, 73, of
Route 2, Advance, N.C. died
Tuesday morning at his home.
Funeral services wilt be
held Thursday at 2 p.m. at
Advancc United Methodist
Church with the Rev. John
Frank Frye, the Rev. Alex
Alvord and the Rev. Marion
Fulp officiating. Burial will follow in the church cemetery.
The body will be placed in the church thirty minutes prior to the service.
Mr. Orrell was bom in Davie County May 28, 1908 to
the late James Gregory and
Leila Barney Orrell. He was a
retired farmer and associated
wltli ASCS for over 25 years,
serving as chairman and vice
chairman. He was a member
of Advance United Methodist
niurch.
Survivors include his wife, Maybelle Markland Orrell of the home; 2 daughters,
Jeanette Cornatzer of Rt. 3, Advance, and Lynn Owens of
, Rt.7, Southmont, N.C.; 1 son,
Billy Frank Orrell .;f Rt, 2, Advance; 2sisters, Mrs. Della
Essex of Rt. 3, Advance, N.C
and Miss Aimie Mae Orrell ’
201 Sunset Drive in Wins* Salem; and 5 grandchildren
The family will "C( 've
friends Weftnesday е'ч'"" й
from 7 until 9 at ¿atons
Funeral Home Chapel.
Memorials may be made to
■Advance United Methodist
Church cemetery fund.
CLYDE C. SEAMON
Clyde Chalmer Seamon, 70,
of Route 2, died Saturday
afternoon in Davie Coui*‘v Hospital.
The funeral was held
Monday, 4 p.m. at Ealfh’s
Funeral Home Chapel. Of
ficiating at the service were
Mr. Don Freeman and Mr.
Lewis Savage. Burial wa^
in Jericho Church of Chrisl cemetery.
Bom in Davie County May
13,1905, he was the son of the late James Monroe and
Tabitha Driver Seamon. He
was a former employee of
Burlington Mills and was
retired from self-employment
as a tree surgeon. He was a
member of the North Main
Street Church of Christ. His
first wife was the late Mar;
Jane Hendrix Seamon.
Survivors include his second wife, Mrs. Pauline
Green Smoot Seamon, two daughter, Mrs. Hayden Anderson of Route 8, Mocksville
nd Mrs. Marollne Benson of
(1.)nn Grove; three sons.
Milliard M. Seamon of New
Hern, Wayne Seamon of
Route 2, and Cecil Seamon of Route 8, both of Mocksville;
two sisters, Mrs. Faitie
Bowles of Route 7,and Mrs. Beatrice Hendrix of Route 3,
both of Mocksville; 11
grandchildren and seven "reat-grandchildren.
MRS. ANNIE MAE
HANELINE PAGE Mrs. Annie Mae Haneline Page, 65, of 208 Eastside
Drive, Statesville, died
Thursday, June 18 at 4 p.m. at Iredell Meinorial Hospital after a lengthy illness.
Mrs. Page was bom in Davie County to the late
George W. and Fannie Bell
Reynolds Haneline.
Surviving are one daughter,
Mrs. Ray Wooten of
Statesville; four brothers,
ayde and Johnny Haneline of
Statesville, Bailey Haneline of
Harmony and Phillip
Haneline of KemersviUe; two
sisters, Mrs. Geneva Beam
and Mrs. Frances Beomon,
both of Winston-Salem.
JOHN CHARLES CORNATZER
John Charles Cornatzer, Sr., 77, of 337 E. Devonshire
Drive, Winston-Salem, died Saturday night after declining health of several years.
The funeral was conducted at 12:30 p.m. Tuesday at
Vogler’s Main Street Chapel
by the Rev. Ernest Parks.
Burial was in Forsyth Mamorial Park.
Mr. Cornatier was boro
January 4, 1Я04, in Davie
Counly lo George and Maggie
Ch.arles Cornatzer. He had
spent most of his life in
Winston-Salem and retired m
March of I960 as a fireman
with Ihe city of Winslon-
Salem.His first wife, Margaret Dorse Cornalzer preceded
him in death.
Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Nancy Holloway Cornatzer of the home; three sons, John C.
Jr., Gid George, and Joe Van Cornatzer, all of Winston-
Salem; two daughters, Mrs.
Ralph Ware of Winston-Salem
and Mrs. Irene Mayberry of
Greensboro; 11 grand
children ; three greatgrand
children; two sislers, Mrs.
Nannie Sue Markland of
Winston-Salem and Mrs.
Hagar Barney of Advance;
two brothers, Chester Cor
natzer of Winston-Salem and
Hesea Cornatzer of
Jacksonville, Fla.
MRS. MAE SWEARINGEN
Mrs. Mae Baker
Swearingen, 57, formerly of
Mocksville, died June 19 in
Fort Lauderdale, Florida,
after a long illness.
She was bom in Davie
County, June 5, 1924, the
daughter of the late Bessie
Baker Stewart, and had
resided in Fort Lauderdale
Florida since 1970.
The funeral was conducted
at Eaton’s Funeral Chupel
Tuesday, June 23, at 11 a.m.
by the Rev. George Auman.
Burial followed in Chestnut
Grove United Methodist Churclrcemetery.Mrs. Swearingen is survived by aark C. Conley II of
Fort Lauderdale, Fla.; three daughters, Mrs. Linda Sanders of Atlanta, Georgia, Mrs. Brenda Ciaccio of St. Croix, Virgin Islands, and Mrs.
Glenda Meetze of Columbia,
Soulh Carolina; three grandchildren and two sisters, Mrs. ~toi!y Whitaker
of Tatnpa, I .orida and Mrs.
Susie Hopkins of Salisbury, North Carolina.
KINZA THOMAS BARE Kinza Thomas Bare, of Rl. 8, Mocksville, formerly of
Ashe County, died Friday moming at Forsyth Memorial
Hospital in Winston-Salem.Funeral services were held al 2 p.m. Sunday at Badger
Funeral HomeChapel.
Surviving are his wife, Mrs.
Fannie Mae Handy Bare; one
daughter, Theresa Akers of
Mocksville; four sons, Bobby Bare of Glendale Springs,
Keith Bare of Mooresville,
Mike Bare of King, and
Donald Bare of aemmone;
two sisters, Mrs. Gussie
Howell and Mrs.Elsie Greene
both of Grumpier; four
grandchildren, and a number
ot nieces and nephews.
MRS. NOTIE JONES
Funeral services for Mrs.
Notie Jones, 88, of Route 3,
Mocksville, N.C. were held
Monday, June 22, at 2 p.m. in Dulins United Methodist
Church by the Rev. Lee Duke and the Rev. ВШ Shoaf. Burial followed in the Jones family cemetery.
Mrs. Jones died Friday
evening at Autumn Care
Nursing Home.
She was bom September 7,
1892 , in Davie County,
daughter of the late 'Пютав
L. and Julie Summers Jones.
She was a member of Dulin’s
United Methodist Church.
She is survived by two
grandchildren; one great grandchild and a number of
nieces and nephews.
MOWAKD LINUSCV TRUITT
The death of Howard L'ndsey Pruitt, 65, of Rt. 1
Advance has been ruled a suicid'!, Pruitt died Sunday
night of a shotgun blast to the head, Dr. Francis Slate,
medical examiner, ruled.Pruitt was found in his
home after neighbors heard a gunshot about 8:45 p.m.
The funeral was conducted
Wednesday al 2 p m al Ihe
Eaton’s Funeral Home Chapel
Church by the Rev. Paul
Ledbetter and the Rev. A.C.
Waller. Burial followed in the church cemetery.
Mr. Pruitt was bora in Caswell County to the late
Thomas and Pearl Perkins Pruitt. He was a retired
employee of Heritage Furniture Company.
His wife, the former Ruth
Ann Lovelace, died in 1979.
Surviving are two
daughters, Mrs. Marie
Southard of Greensboro and
Mary B. York of Bakersfield,
'Calif.; one son, David Pruitt
of Rt. 10, Reidsville; 10
grandchildren; three great
grandchildren; one sister,
Mrs. Elsie Turner of Reid
sville; two brothers, Thomas
Pruitt of Wentworth and
Woodkow Pruitt of Reidsville.
Sunmer Weather
Demands More VKater
Water loss is greater during hot Weather because your body perspires more
than usual in an effort to keep cool. Maintaining a
proper water balance will help regulate your body’s temperature and prevent overheating.
Roach Oul Evangelism
Team of Jimmy and
Margaret Hinson conducted a
Reach Out Revival In the
Woodville Baplist Church,
Beaufort, N.C., beginning on
Monday evening. May 25 and
continuing through Sunday
moming. May 31. ’The sermon
for Monday evening was
entitled "Whal Brings Joy on
Earth and in Heaven?”
Tuesday evening the Hinsons
met with the children grades
1-6 and shared with the muppet, Sally Sunshine. The sermon for the evening was
entilled "Are You A Child of God?” Wednesday evening
Ihe Hinsons mel wilh the
youlh grades 7-12 and shared
some special activities with
this group. Tlie sermon on
Wednesday evening was
“The Temptations of
Teenagers and Their
Parents.” Thursday evening
was Bring Your Neighbor and
the sermon, “What Kind of Neighbor are You? ”
Friday evening the sermon was entitled “Two Lives To
Live.” Saturday evening was Family Night, and the sermon
entitled “Friction in the
Family or Harmony in the
Home.” The final service was
on Sunday morning at 11:00
a.m., and the sermon was “A
Voice From Heaven, Simon
Peter.” TTie Sunday morning
Bible Study enrollment was 66
and there were 66 present for
the service, and Bible study.
Tlie pastor is Rev. Gene
Alexander, former pastor of
the Harmony Baptist Church of Harmony, N.C. Tliere were
two people making decisions
for Jesus Christ, Baptism and one person transferring
Oiurch Membership.
The Hinsons served in the Ijames Cross Roads Baptist
Church. MocksvUle, during
the lime of January through
May, Evangelist Hinson
served as the Interim Pastor
and Margaret Hinson shared
.special ministries with the
children. During the months
of June, July and August the
Hinsons will he serving in the
Jewel Baptist Church, High
Point, N,C, in addition lo their
ministries of Evangelism. Evangleist Hinson will be serving as Ihc Interim Pastor,
he served this church as full
lime pastor and evangelist from 1965 lo 1971.
MEPAYVOU TO LEARN MEDICAL TECHNOLOGY.
In the Army Rfservo, we’ll
p:iy you to Iciirn to be n modicnl
technician You ^ct excellent
trniniHK nt an Army school.
When yon return home, you
use lhat training in your hnral
Army Reserve unit, just one
weekend a month and twti
weeks a year. Earn over $ 1.100
a year to start. Call yt)ur Army
Reserve representative, in the
Yeliiw Pages under“Recrulting.
д н м г п я н п .BEAUVOUCMBE.
C A U D E LL
I.U M B ER C O .
1238 Bingham Street.
Mockeviile, N.C.
PHONE 624-2167
D A V IE TR A C TO R
& IM P L E M E N T
C O .
' Ford Farming-SaleB and
Service.
New Holland Equipment
PHONE 634-5969
A Complete Repair
M A R TIN
H A R D W A R E &
G eneral M c ^ .
! Feeds, Dry Goods
Groceries, Fertilizer
-PHONt----
EA T O N
F U N E R A L H O M E
328 N. Main Street
.Mocksville, N.C.
PHONE 6342148
a A . S EA FO R D
LU M B E R C O .
Jericho Road
Mockiville, N.C.
PHONE 634-5148
J .P . G R E E N
M ILLIN G
C O ., IN C .
DAISY FLOUR
We CustorM Blend
524 Depot Street
PHONE 634 2126
CALAHALN FRIENDSHIP BAPTIST CH. Rev. Graham Woorten. Pastor
5.5. 9:00 8.ra.
Worship : 0:00 a.m.
Sheffieid-Calahaln Community BuUding
<?HURCH OF GOD, Cooleemee, N.C.
■yiO CREEK P W M l-riV E T ij^S l CIl.
SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST Al Mazat, Pastoi MUling Road5.5. 9:30 a.m.Wonhip 11 lOO a.m.
GREEN HILL BAPTIST CHURCH
Located two miles off the Highway
64, Green HiU Road.
Rev. Seve Hedgecock, Pastor
S5. ' 9:30 a.m.
Worship 10:30 a.m.
Evening 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday 7:00 p.m.
MOCKSVILLE WESLEYAN CHURCH
Rev. Bob Scott
Hospital St., MocksviUe
5.5. 9:45 a.m.
Worship 11:00 a.m.
Evening 7:00 p.m.
ADVANCE BAPTIST CHURCH
CEDAR CREEK BAPTIST CHURCH
FIRST UNITED METHODISTjCHURCH Rev. George Auman
5.5. 10:00 a.m.
Worship _ 11:00 a.m.
MOCKS UNITED ME’raODIST CHURCH
YADKIN VALLEY BAPTIST CHURCH
CHINQUAPIN GROVE BAPTIST CHURCH
lAPTIST CHUR€H----------------
r
SMITH GROVE BAPTIST CHURtll
CORNATZER BAPTIST CHURCH
FORK BAPTIST CHURCH
6 miles East on Hwy. 645.5. 9:45 a.m.
Worship 11:00 a.m.Evening 7:20 p.m.
CORNATZER UNITED METH. CIIURCH
UNION CHAPEL JU. METHODIST CHURCH
■ELBAVILLE U. METHODIST CH .JRCH
OAK GROVE U. METHODIST ClIUKCH
CEN’TER UNITED ME’THODIST CIIURCH
SALEM UNITEDME’iHODISrCIIliRCH
LIBER’TY UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
ADVANCE UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
•№THL%HEM U. METHODIST CHURCH '
HARDISON U. METHODISI CHURCH
TRINITY BAPTIST CHURCH
Gene Blackburn, Pastor '
Roule 4, MocksvUle
5.5. 10:00 a.m,
W frhip 11:00 a.m.
Evening 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday 7:00 p.m.
A.M.E. ZION METHODIST CHURCH
DULIN MEFHODIST CHURCH
COOLEEMEE U. METHODIST CHURCH ,H«v. Alton Fitzgeiuld
DUTCHMAN CRlii:K BAP IIS I CHU'tCH ’
HOPi; HAPTISI TABERNACLi;
Norman S. I'rye, Pastor
5.5. 9:45 a.in.
Worship lU:45a,in,Evangelistic 7:30 p,in,
Wednesday 7:30 p,m.
HOLY ( ROSS LUTHI RAN CHURi H
5.5. 9:45 a in.
Worsliip 11:00 a m,
CALVARY BAPTIST CHURCIÎJim Gryder, PastorRt. 4, MocksvUle, Hwy. 601 S.
5.5. 1Q:OOA.M.Worship 11:00 A.M.
Evening 7:00 P.M.7.00
DIDACHE (The Teaching of tlie Twelve)
The early Christians, in a close observance of the ministry of Christ by all those who served Him, l&i’ *or
our benefit from the earliest post-apostolic times, a writing called the Didache (which means the *;'B-ning
of the twelve). It gives us a picture of the social conditions as well as the economic conditions of th.
times in which the early church met.
Listen to its explicit and quaint regulations concerning those who would represent themselves as apostles:
"Let every apostle that cometh to you be received as the Lord. But he stwll not remain (longer than; one
day and If need be, another (day) also; but if he lemains three (days) he is a falsi prophe^nd wni ; the
apostle departed, let him take nothing except bread (enough) until he reaches lodging (night quaners).
But if he ask for monev he Is a false prophet-let everyone that comes in the name of the Lord be re“*iived,
and then proving him ye sffbll know him; for ye shall have understanding right and left. If inCee- who
comes is a wayfarer help him as much as you can for he shall not remain with you longer than twc . »
three days unless there is a necessity. If he wishes to setde among you, being a craftsman, let hirr v,ork in order to eat. But if he has no handicraft, provide according lo your understanding so that no Cr* :tiari among you shall live idle among you. And if he will not act thus, he is a ChrHt-lrafficker. Beware nt such.
+ + + + + + + + .I-+ + + + + + + + + +
ATTEND CHURCH THIS WEEK ++++++++++++++++++
-Paul M. Stevens
MOCKSVILLEiSJS?^F^OMINATIONALCHURCH
S^. 9.'4S a.m.Morniii« Worship 11:00 a.riL Radio nogram 1:00 p.m. TOSL Youth Service 6:30 p.m.Mid Wk. Bible Study by Mrs. Knox Johnston 7:00 pjn. Pastor - Rev. Lbidsay Walters
TURRENTINE BAPTISTCHURCH Rt. 7, ModcsviUe, Rev. Judge Johnson .S. 9:45 afm.loriUng Worihip 11:00 p.m.UE ^ n g W o rs^ . 7:00 pVm.Wed. Prayer Mtg. '7:00 p.m.
COOLEEMEE EPISCOPAL CHURCH
OF ■raE GOOD SHEPHERD
Rev. WiUta M. Rosenthal. Priest
Sermon 9:30 a.m.
5.5. 10:50 ajn.
BEAR CREEK BAPTIST CHURCH
REDLAND PENTECOSTAL HOLINESS
Rev. Paul C. Ledbetter
5.5. 10:00 a.m.
Worship 11:00 a.m.
Lifeliners 6:00 p.m.
EvangeUstic 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday 7:00 p.m.
FARMINGTON METHODIST CHURCH
Worship 1st Sun. 10 a.m.
3rd Sun. 11 a.m.
SJS. 1st S un.ll a.m.
2, 3, i Sunday 10 ajn.
WESLEY CHAPEL METH. CHURCH
Worship 1st Sun. 11 a.m.
3rd Sun. 10 a.m.
5.5. • 3rd Sun. 11 a.m.
' 1, 2,4 Sunday 10 a.m.
^ C o m m u n ity Ad»»rti;4i.Q >976
Tbi. colum n M u n g i lo our r ..d .n , W . » ill . « . p i p rln lilil. И.1Ж » id Р.У »1.00 for « Л ll.m ри Ы Ы ж !. in I*;« w ’
o llh ..u lh o » .n d lh .lill.« K l(.u U ir fi.to tih .b o o » m M itb .s iM n ,A d < lr M .it.m .to " O o i)'iF lM M in u l« , « о » U I 5 J . fo riW o ilh . 1 .^ » I I »
Thitleature ii publithed in the intarest of ■ better ccmmunity, and it made possible by these sponsors who believe in building character.
Wednesday
1 AKMINGTON BAPTIi:^ i liU l'i llS.S. 10:00 a.m.Muiii, Woiship 11 00 a.m.
Youth Traiiiing Union 7:00 p.i;i
ST. FRANCIS OF ASSISI CHURCH Sal. evening anticiputory Mass - 5 p.m.
Sunday Momiu;; 10 a.m.
Rectory No. 634-2973
NORTH Ma in s t. c h u r c h o f chrisit
Donald Freeman, Minister
5.5. -■ 10:00 a.m.
Worship 11:00a.m.
Evening 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday 7:30 p.m.
THE EPISCOP,.!. CHURCH
Canon C. Nichols, Pastor Fork, N.C.
Ascesion 10:00 a.m.
Worship 11:00 a.m.
Wednesday 7:15 p.m.
LIBERTY WESLEYAN CHURCH
Kenneth Davis, Pastor
MOCKSVILLE PENTECOSTAL
Holiness, M. Oarry Yeatls, Minister
5.5. 10:00 a.m.
Worship 11:00 a.m.
Evangelist ii; 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday 7:30 p.m.
MACEDONIA MORAVIAN CHURCH Rev. Jolin Kapp, Pastor
5.5. 10:00 a.m.
Worship 11:00 a.m.Youtli I el. 6:30 p.m.
livening 7:30 p.m.
GRl l N m ead o w s bA FllS I c h u r c h
Rev. David E. Rotwris
5.5. 10:00 a.in.Worship 11:00 a 111.
B.T.U. 6:30 p.m.
Evening 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday 7:30 p.m.
HUNTSVILLE METHODIST CHURCH
Wolsllip 2nd Sun 10 a Ml
4th Sun. 11 a m.
fCLEMENT GROVE CHURCH OF GOD
I.W. Ijames, Pastor
5.5. 10:00 a.m. Worship 1:00 p.m.
Evening
^Wednesday 8:00 p.m.
NEW BETHEL ASSEMBLY OF GOD
5.5. 10:00 a.m.
Morning Worship 11:00 a.m.
Evening Worship 7:00 p.m.
Rotary Hut, Rev Jerry Carr
IJAMES BAPTIST CHURCH5.5. 9:45 a.m.
Worship 11:00 a.m.
JERICI D f’WURCH OF CHRIST
Jericho Road-Office 492-5291
,Harding Lowry, Minister
MOUNT OLIVE METHODIST CH URCH
Worship 2nd Sun. 11 a.m.
4th Sun. 10 a.m.
S.!>. 4th Sun. 11 a.in.
1,2, 3 Sundays 10 a.m.
COMMUNITY BAPriSTCHURCH
.Gladstone Raod
Community Baptist
'Gladstone Road
S.S.
orship
10:00 a.m.
11:00 a.m.
GOSPEL BAPTiST CHURCH
Rt.5,Moi;ksvUlt N.C. 270285.5, 10a,m,
.Worsliip Service tia.m .
:Sun. Evening Worsliip 7:00 p.m.
Bible Study Wed. Evening 7:00 p.m.
Rev. A.E. Gentry, Pastor
UIXBY PRESBYTERIAN < '"'Г Н
5.5. 10:C M oiiii:. worship i i "I'vening Worsliip 7:j,
Kotwrl L. Cicws, Pasloi
5.5. ' 9:45 ä.m.Worship 11:00 a.m.Evening 6:00 p.m.
Wednesday 7:30 p.m.
BLAISE BAPTIST CHUllCH
■ Rev. Jimmy Martin,Pastor /
5.5. 9:50 a.m.
Worship 11:00 a.m.
Evening 7:00 p.m.Wednesday 7:30 p.m.
CHESTNUT GROVE U. METHODIST
BAILEY’S CHAPEL U. METHODIST
FULTON UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
BETHEL UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
SMITH GROVE U.METHODIST CHURCH
ZION UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
NEW UNION U. MEIHOJIST CHURCH
EA1X)N’S BAPTISTCHURCH
5.5. 10:00 a.m.
Worship 11:00 a.m.
Training U. 7:00 p ,111.
U a VIE BAPTIST TABERNACLE Fork Bixby Road
5.5. 9:45 a.m.
Worship 11:00 a.m.
Evening 7:30p.m.
Wednesday 7:30 p.m.
JERUSALEM BAPTISTCHURCH
SS. 10:00 a4n.
Worship 11:00 a.m.
Evening 7:00 p.m.
SHILOH BAPTISTCHURCH
CHURCH OF THE LIVING GOD, Bixby
CHURCH Ol GOD OF PROPHECY Rev. Charles King Route 4, Mooksvule (Epheaus) 634-3392
5.5. 10 a,m.
Morn Worsliip 11 a,m.Sun, Night 7:30 p.m,\Ved,N!^U 7:30 p.m.
CONCORD UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
CLARKSVILLE PENTECOSl AL HOLINESS Rev. Albert Gentle
Route 5, MocksvUle
5.5. 10:00 a.m.
Worship ll:00a.m
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
CooleemeeRev. L.l-cc
S,S, 7:30a,m, 4 9:45 a,ni.
Childrens Church 11 a.in.
Worship lla ,m .
Evening 7 30 p in,
Wednesday 7:30 p,ni.
FA R M &
G A R D EN
S E R V IC E , IN C .
961 Yadkinville Road
PHONE 634-2017 or
634-5964
FO S T ER -R A U C H
D R U G C O .
Wilkesboro Street
PHONE 6342141
JE FF C O
C O ., IN C .
Route 1, Advance, N.C.
Our staff and employees
encourage you to attend the
church of your choice.
S H E F F IE L D
LU M B E R &
P A L L E T
C O M P A N Y
Route 6, Box 153
Mocksville, N.r.
PHONE 492 5565
C O B LE
L IM E &
F E R T IU Z E R
S E R V IC E
It^uoleeiiiee, N.C.Tiny. tIOi
Bukirit;»» Ptiuae 284-43,'i4
Home Phone 284-2782
DAVII- C O IIN T V I N T I'K I’KI.SI K IC O K I), TIIIJR.SIMV, .IVNH , /ОД1 IIU
Chuck Boxes Ideal For Storage Of Food
For overnight bikepncking,
or camping trips, picnics or
tailgatcrs. nn insulnled lx)x or
container is necessary for
safe storage and tra n
sportation of food.
Young people in the
national 4-H food con
servation and safety
program , conducted by the
C o o p e ra tive E xte n sio n
Service and sponsored by
Reynolds Metals Company,
have learned lo make their
own insulated boxes for such
purposes. The “ chuck box” ,
they say, keeps hot foods hot
and cold foods cold.
M aterials mieded to make a
chuck box a re : two cardboard
cartons or boxes w ith covers (
a small one which fits inside
the large one); newspapers;
strin g; alum inum fo il; and ice
box or frozen gei (for cold
foods).
Directions:
-Place one inch of
newspapers in bottom of
larger box
-Place the sm aller box in
the larger one and stuff
crumpled newspapers tightly
between the boxes.
-Small box should have solid
cover attached to one edge
-Tie several layers of
newspaper (approxim ately V4
inch) over the cover of the
inside box, then wrap cover
w ith foU
-Une the bottom and sides
of the inside box w ith foil,
shiny side down to reflect cold
into the box
-Place frozen containers of
ice or tubes of liquid ice in
chuck box to keep food chilled
-The ouUide of the box may
be finished w ith a flat w all or
water base paint, contact
paper, oil cloth or plast<c
cloth.
When planning for picnics
or overnight trips, choose
foods which keep well for long
periods of tim e. Take special
care when ha ndling and
storing perishable foods. 4-H
members suggest that cold
foods be thoroughly chilled
prior to going into the box,
and hot foods thoroughly
heated before transporting to
the site. If this is not possible,
they should be thoroughly
cooled a fte r cooking and
served cold or reheated at
picnic site for serving hot.
With just a Uttle extra care
your family and friends can enjoy nutritious and at
tractive dishes such as foiled- griUed vegetables and banana
yum, both favorites of 4-H’ers
in the Program. (See recipes
below).FoU-GriUed Vegetables
1 package frozen or fresh
vegetables Salt and pepper
Margarine or butter
Individual portion* can be arranged on small squares of
foU. Add salt and pepper; dot
with butter or margarine; and
seal in aluminum foil. At
picnic site, place on grate
over fire or directly over
coals. Cook 15 to m minutes,
turning occasionailly with
tongs.For family portions, place a
Mock of frozen vegetables or
adequate amount of fresh
vegetables on large square of
with 11 pal of niai'garine or
b u tle r; seal, using a
drugstore w rnp. To hpal,
placc package on g rill or
directly on hot coals. Ciook 20
(o 30 minutes, turning oc
casionally with tongs.
B-xnana Yum
Cul off ends of unpeeled
banana. Slice down center
and sp rin kle w ith brow n
sugar. Wrap in foil. Bake on
poals alwut six minutes on
each side. Peel foil back and
serve hot. Marshmallows or
pieces of chocolate may be
substituted for the brown
sugar.
P lanning menus and
preparing foods for camping
trips, hikes, picnics or road
(rips are included in the food
conservation and safety
program .To encourage 4-H
m e m b e rs ’ c r e a tiv ity ,
Reynolds Metals offers in
centives and recognition
arranged through National 4-
H Council. Medals of honor
are awarded to four members
in each county; one 4-H’er
from each state earns an
expense-paid trip to the 60th
N ationa 4-H Congress in
Chicago, П1., Nov. 30- Dec. 3
and six outstanding 4-H
m em bers, recognized at
C onfess as national winners,
receive $1,000 scholarships.
Boys and girls, nine to 19,
can leam more about this and
other 4-H programs by con
tacting their county extenison
office.
Folk- Ways And Folk Speech
By Rogers Whitener
Cooleemee News
i
El Capitan, guardian of
the entrance to Vosemite Valley, is the largest visible
granite rock in the world. It
shoots 3700 feet up from the floor of the valley.
Before coming to England I
was under Ihe impression thal
the punk movement was a
thing of the past.
No so. Representatives of
various ages - either through
misguided fashion or through
continued protest - s till
operate under this caption.
There are the older punks
(now sim p ly term ed
“ rockers” ) who wear E lvis T-
sh irts and black leather
jackets who are m ost
fre que ntly seen in pubs
featuring E lvis records on the
juke or E lvis numbers played
by request by the house piano
player.
The rockers are generally a
subdued lot, content to sip
tlieir pint of bitter and oc
casionally jo in in singing
fe stivitie s as the evening
spirits heighten.
Younger versions of the
rockers - p rim arily males -
roam the streets, p rim arily in
the West End, clad in surplus-
style clothing, rum pled and
dirty. Their haircutis border
on the crew style, only slightly
longer and often soaked in
grease. TTiey cause a sense of
anxiety in those who pass
them on the sidewalks.
Less m enacing are the
remnants of the punk fashion
group. H ere the fem ales
outnumber the males and
certainly outshine them for
the most part.
Often the hair is dyed a
shocking pink, fuchsia, or
other b rillia n t color. Oc
casionally it is bleached and
then portions dyed in violent
shades.
Facial make-up vies w ith
the h a ir fo r color, w ith
startling shades of lipstick
and cheek rouge h e a vily
applied.
Blouses are in lu rid pat
terns, frequently topped by
leather vests. Colored leather
Farm Market Summaiy
F a rm M a rke t S um m ary
Week of June 15-19, 1981
Federal-State M arket News
Service N orth C arolina
Department of A griculture
Division of M arketing.)
C>)rn prices were steady to 5
cents higher and soybeans
irregular through Thursday,
June 18, compared to the
same period of the previous
week, according to the
M arket News Service of the
N orth CaroUna Department of
Agriculture: No. 2 yeUow
shelled com ranged m ostly
$3.48 to $3.70 in the Eastem
P art of the state and $3.47 to
$3.78 in the Piedmont. No. 1
yellow soybeans ranged
mosUy $7.10 to $7.56 in the
East and $6.97 to $7.36 in the
Piedmont; No. 2 red virinter
wheat mosUy $3.33 to $3.47,
No. 2 red oate $1.6S to $2.179'«.
New Crop prices quoted, for
harvest delivery com $3.33 to
$3.S3, soybeans $7.11 to $7.31.
In Eastern North CaroUna
_ the pepper harvest is in-
f<ir. Add slat and"pep^; top creasing with cucumbers,
D A V I E
R E A L T Y C O
1481 N. M ain St.
FOR RENT - И5 sq. ft. office or reUtt space.
64. WEST - Under conitruction, 3 B-R honse, 2 B.,
tlreplace, Heat Pump, C. air, carport * paved
drive. $44.00«_____ ________________
^ Y N ST.. 3BR brick teme - Prlc^ $U.6M.
HOLLOW HILL COURT • 4 BR, 1ю1ме. Щ batte.
EicMcnt eondttion. $11,M*.
CRAnnVOOD - 3 BR, 1% В . Elect, heat, flrepUee. Priced to sell Ai tti.Mi
Highway 801 near CooTeemee it.M acres and? roem
boose - 6 acres permanent grass - M acres good
timber. CaU for appointment
CAROWOOD - Beautiful 3 BR. 2V4 baths tri-level home
wjth heat pump * garage on quiet st. Reasonably priced.
MILLING ROAD-Beautlful 2 story brick home. 4 Br, 3 baths. 2 dens, partial basement with garage. 2380 sq. ft.
living space. 4 acres of land.
1010 HOWARD ST. 3 BR brick home. Central heat ft ah-.
Double garage. Priced to sell.
COOLEEMEE - Good starter home. 2 B-R, a B.
Reasonable prio«.
SALISBURY ST. One ot the lovllest homes In
MocksvUle on 3.1 acre*. A historic older home with 5 B-R, 3 B. and is surrounded by
beautUul trees and shrubs. Also, a 3 car garage, a room where meat was once smohe cured and tbe old
kitchen separate from the main home. This a must
If you are Interested hi a well-preserved older home. CaU for an appointment.
SOUTHWOOD ACRES - BeautUul wooded bnUdlag
lot. Reasonable price.
NEAR SHEFFIELD-3 B.R. brick home, 1 bath,
carport on 1.04 acre*. 124,000.00.
No. 801 SOUTH - 2Ц acres s««ed for MobUe Home
$22S0 per acre.
DEPOT ST. -1 Acre business lot. $4,tN.
OFF DANIELS RD. 4 acres and a mobUe iiOme with
well к septic tank. Ill,ООО.
( ACRE TRACTS on paved rd. part wooded. Zcnad for mobUe homes.
•01 il 801-57 acres-residenUal or commercial-part wooded-stream.
FARMINGTON ARKA on 801* ,cre* of bMutlful land-
fM.ON.
BOXWOOD ACHES - 2 wooded lots 12»x200 at $1,8M ea
HOWARD SriREET-Good building lot. 100x140, quiet
location.
garden VALLEY-BeautUul bidg. lot. City water and
«ewer. Entrance from Sanford Ave. and Garden VaUey.
FARMINGTON AREA-5 b< ^ tract* more. I«cal no. to
Winston-Salem.SMALL CORNER LOT at North Main and Crowe HU.
NEAR MOCKSVILLE - 5 acre* woe-ted - paved
road; county water.
б 3 4 ^ 1 1 1 о г 6 д 4 - Ы 1^
Home Phone*
Eugene Benaett-IHNl-4727 Sam Howeli-«34-&4Z4
Holland Cbaffin-«34-5l8e Giahaiu Madison-«34-S17t
Henry Shore в34-584(
beans and squash declining.
Cucumber volume was heavy
on Monday w ith about 100
loads, but w ith the extrem ely
high temperatures at m id
w eek, volum e dropped
sharply. A t the Faison auction
m arket on June 18 large beU
pepper brought $0 to $10.90
per cra te , cucum bers 85
percent US ones, farm pack,
medium m ostly $7 to $9.20.
Cabbage and blue berry
harbest is about over w ith low
cabbage (trices at $2.75 per
crate. W hite potatoes, US
ones, sixe A were quoted at $12
to $13 per hundred on June 18
w ith a good volume available
Uiis and next week.
A total of 10,495 feeder pigs
were sold on 14 state graded
sales during week of June 15.
Prices were 50 cents higher on
weights of 40-50 pounds w ith
the balance of pigs ranging
mosUy 75 cents to $4lower. US
1-2 pigs weighing 4 ( ^ pounds
averaged $84.12 per hundred
pounds w ith No. 3s $68.96; 50-
60 pound l-2s averaged $72.83,
No. 3s $59.14; 60-70 pound l-2s
$62.73, No. as $54.00; 70-80
pound l-2s $56.49 per hundred
pounds w ith No. 3s $49.00.
At weekly livestock auc
tions held w ithin the state the
week of June 15, prices for
slaughter cows were $2 to $3
h i^ e r wiUi feeder steers $1
h igh er and feeder h e ife r
prices irregular. UtUity and
C om m ercial cows brought
$39.50 to $49.50; Good
slaughter steers above 800
pounds $54 to $59.50. Good
grade slaughter calves 350-550
pounds $53 to $61.50 per
hundred. M edium fra m e
Number One muscle steers
400-500 pounds brought $55 to
$64 per hundred pounds and
same grade heifers 400-500
pounds sold $45.50 to $56. Baby
calves under 3 weeks of age
brought $40 to $100 per head.
M arket hogs brought m ostly
$48 to $50.25 per hundred
weight and 300-600 pound sows
$37.50 to $46.90.
The broiler-fryer m arket is
steady fo r next w eek’s
tra d in g . Supplies are
moderate. Demand is good.
The N orth C arolina dock
weighted average price is
49.85 cents per pound for less
than truckloads picked up at
processing plants during the
week of June 22. This week 8.5
m iliion birds were processed
in NorUi Carolina wiUi an
average live bird weight of
3.94 pounds per bird on June
17.
Heavy type hens were
steady Uiis past week. Sup
plies were light to adequate
and demand moderate. Heavy
type hen prices 10 cents per
pound at the farm with buyers
loading and too few to report
prices fo r delivered to
processing plants.
Egg prices were lower on
all sizes compared to those of
the previous week. Supplies
were adequate. Demand was
moderate. The North Carolina
w eighted average price
quoted on June 18 for smaU lot
sales of cartoned grade A
eggs delivered to stores was
68.»] cnets per dozen for
larg e, m edium 57.31 and
smalls 48.34.
M arket iio^K at daily cash
buying stations about the
state sold $1.00 to $1.50 higher
this week and ranged mostly
$30. tu $52.5U per hundred
pounds. So vs 300-600 pound«
rauKed $38 to $44.
pants and either boots or
spiked-boel slippers complete
the outfit.
Males often sport zoot suits
with zippered pants or metal-
hcavy black leather jackets
and pegged black trousers,
plus heavy boots.
Mowhswk hair styles are
frequently seen among the
males, usually bleached or
dyed a gari sh color.
An apparent spin-off from
the punks are the so-called
Bread locks. Members of Uiis
group bathe infrequently und
never wash their hair, which
is frequently plaited and often
matted beyond control.
A new clothing fad now
threatens to replace punk
styles - the pirate m otif.
Black pirate hats are in, as
are white pirate blouses worn
w ith brass-buttoned captains’
coats. Black leotards end in
pirate boots which fold over at
Uie tops between ankle and
knee or else extend above the
knee in the style of New York
whore boots.
M ake-up and je w e lry
remain exotic: sometimes a
gold ring or other jew elry in
the nose, plus huge gold-
colored rings dangling from
the ears.
H eavy stage m ake-up
completes the pirate picture.
Sometimes it is a heavy white
streak stretching from one
cheek across the bridge of the
nose to the oUier cheek.
At other tim es the subject -
from chin up - m ay look like
an American Indian in full
w ar paint.
And we stiU call the English
conservative!
Readers are invited to send
folk m aterials to FoUt Ways
and Folk-Speech, Box 376,
A ppalachian S tate U n iv e r
sity, Boone, N.C. 28603.
Top D aily
Herds U s te d
The top 5 herds in Davie
County for the month of May
is as foUows;
Sparks and MUler, 56 cows,
52.7 average mUk, 3.5 test and
1.86 average butterfat.
C.W. Phillips and Son, 90
cows, 45.0 m ilk, 3.7 test and
1.68 aaerage butterfat.
Fred F. Bahnson, Jr., 66
cows, 50.7 m ilk, 3.2 test, and
1.62 butterfat.
Wayne Lutz, 70 cows, 35.1
miUc, 4.6 test and 1.62 but
terfat.
MUce Gaither, 57 cows, 46.8
miUc, 3.2 test and 1.49 but
terfat.
Sundav visitors with Mr.
and M rs. G rady Spry inoliirieii
their children and fam ilies:
M r, and Mrs, Aaron Spry and
children of Hiddenite, Doyle
Spry, Toby and Louise of
Raleigh, M r. and Mrs. WorUi
Hendrix of Mocksviiie, Mr.
and M rs. Fred Pierce and M r.
and M rs. Grady Spry, Jr.
Sam C arter was released
from Grand Strand General
Hospital in M yrtle Beach
Sunday afternoon after being
re-adm itted for an additional
week of treatm ent. He is
im proving.
Lawrence M iller remains
seriously ill in Rowan
M em orial Hospital.
Gene M llholen of Emerson,
New Jersey, fo rm e rly of
C oolem ee, is recuperating at
his home after undergoing
surgery m ore than a week
ago. He continues to improve.
Ray M cBride Is undergoing
tre a tm e n t In Rowan
M em orial Hospital where he
has been a patient for the past
week.
M rs. Claude Boger has been
undergoing tre a tm e n t and
observation in Rowan
M em orial Hospital for the
past week. She Is Improving.
G ranville Spry continues to
undergo treatm ent In Rowan
H ospital w here he had
surgery two weeks ago.
M rs. Mae Brlndle remains
quite Ul In Davie Hospital.
M r. and M rs. Wolfgang
A dolph of Tallahassee,
F lo rid a re turn ed home
Saturday after spending the
week here w ith her parents.
The Rev. and M rs. WUlis
R osenthal. T his was a
fa re w ä ll v is it before the
Adolphs wUl be m oving to
West G«-many in August.
Mrs. Adolph (form erly Dr.
W lnnlfred Rosenthal Adolph)
has accepted a three year
appointment to teach at the
U niversity of Saarbrücken.
M rs. E thel CampbeU of
Tucson, Arizona is spending
some tim e visiUng here here
w ith her sister, M rs. Carolyn
White.
M r, and Mrs. W illiam Gales
of Ruffin Street spent last
week attending the 14th Trade
Show o f P urchasing
Management Association of
N orth C aro lina, South
Carolina, and V irginia at
M yrtle Beach, S.C.
SENIOR CITIZENS
The Cooleemee Senior
Citizens held their regular
meeting w ith a Fish Fry,
C hicken Stew and Bingo
P arty Monday at 3 p.m. at Uie
Ridenhour Arbor on Center
Street Ext, There were 38
members and one visitor,
M rs. E th e l CampbeU of
Tucson, Arizona, attending.
Two new members were also
welcomed into the club. They
are M r. and Mrs. V. J. M-
CAtera.
A ll members having b ir
thdays during themonth of
June were honored in song.
The Bingo winners also were
awarded prizes.
VA News
M y husband died In 1975. At
Uie tim e of his death I did not
want the headstone or m arker
provided by the Veterans
AdminlstraUon, but I heard
recently that the VA pays an
amount tow ard the purchase
of a headstone. Am I entlUed
to this benefit?
No. The law providing for
this benefit was not passed
untU late 1978. The deceased
must have been buried after
the law took effect in order for
the survivor to be eligible tor
reimbursement.
Can a veteran get an ex
tension o f his 10-year
delim iting date for education
benefits from the Veterans
Adm inistration?
Our word "panic" comes
from the mischievous Greek God Pan, who was believed to delight in frightening
travelers.
The oldest known murals on man-ma^a walls have been
found in southern Turkey. They date back to 5500 B.C.
H o w a rd R e a lty &
Insurance A g e n c y , In c .
(QUtt musiM.31S Salutwry SUeet
NEW LISTINGS
HICKORY HILL - 3-bedroom contemporary now tinder construction. Great
room, leparate dining, 2 baths, patio, storage, fireplace. tS8.MO.00
NAYLOR STREET > 2 bedroom home to remodel. $10,750.00. j
S i 'S S I S L ’ E S S i“ ''' *" ^ ■“ »
49.8 ACRES in exceUent location north orMociuviUe on Main Church Road. Over
12b0 ft. of road frontage. Can be subdivided bito 10 acre tracts. $100,000 total •
$2100 per acre if subdivided.BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY-Invest in your own business with very little cash.
Ladies’ garments on consignment. Central iocatlsia and contacts already
established. Very low overhead with profit potential unlimited. CONDOMINIUMS-Now ready for occupancy at beautiful Twin Brooli Acres. Two-
story excellent constructioii. First floor carpeted living room. Kitchen with dish
washer, range, dining area. Laimdry and storage area. Bath. 2 Bedrooms plus
bath upstairs. Patio. Economical heat pump. Thermopane windows. Perfect*
property ownership without the uplceep involved in single residence. The coming
thing for the future. $39,500,00.
CRAFTWOOD- 3 bedroom biTcK rancher. All electric. Good condition. (
Excellent loan. $34,000.00.
4520.. .Ridgemont......................3 Bedroom........................................$27,500.00
4250...' Spring Street.............. 2 Bedroom...................................... 23,000.00 *
4470... Ridgemont----U^'DER CONTRACT.^......................... 28,000.00
3230.... Jericho Road..............Beautiful split level........................$92,000.00 ,
4410.. .Garden VaUey.. . .
4400.. .Raymond Streel..
4060.. .North Main Street.
4390. - .Wilkesboro Street.
4340... Garden VaUey. ...
4170.. . Fairway Street... .
3780... Avon Street.............
4360. . . Davie Academy.. .
4030. .. Bin|i;han> Street. . .
3860. ■ . Cooleemeee...........
4280.... Hickory HUl...........
• • • 3 BedtgOttJ basement ........ 48,500.00
, . . Contemporary............................ . . 96,000.00
.. Older 2 Story............................... . . 58,500.00
.. 2Storyhrick................................ . . 55,0(}0.00
. .. under construction.................. 125,000.00
. .. 3 bedrooms................................ . . 43,500.00
.. . .8 Acre* and farmhouse........... . 90,000.00
. . .2 bedrooms..................................16,500.00
.. . .4 bedroom Colonial.................. . 73,.500.00
. . . New Contemporary................$85,500.00
. . New Contemporary. -------. ■ • 78,000.00
. . . 2 Ai res & mobile home. . . ... . 32,000.00
. . .3 Bedroom...................................----36,000.00
. ■ 3 Bedrooms, Acres.................... . . 45,000.00
, . . 5-6Bedroom Contemporary .. . 72,000.00
4380. . .Sanford Avenue. .4330. . .Westwood.............
2680. . .Sanford Kodd.. .
4000. . . Southwood Acres. _____
LOTS: Carden Valley....................1б,800 to $11,000
Woodland..........................................................$4,500
Woodland, 2.14 acre*...................................11,000
OFFICE - 634 3538
HOME PHONES:
634 :1754. 634 3229. 634 2534, 998 3990, 284 2366,
492 5198,
»»■■%%■* «У »...........
H O M EFIN D ER
MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE
BRANTLEY REALTY &
INSURANCE CO.. IN C
D avie C o u n ty T w ly
W inston-Salem 'f M ultiple
LIttIng Service Realtor
HOMESРИА or VA financing available on these six lovely
NEW, 3 Bedroom homes...Located on a dead end
street. Some have basemente, and fireplaces. Price
ranges from $34,000 to $38.200. M. Edwards
FARMINGTON- Cedar Forest Rd. Nice 3 BR, 2 full
baths, split foyer. Large family room w-fpl. Formal
LR. Larp*! lot on dead end street. M. Edwards Has 10 =V4 assumable loan.
EDGEWOOD CIRCLE- Nice 3BR, 2 bath, Bricii
home, New chain link fence around lot. Huge family
rirom added w-fpl. & wood stove. Formal DR & LR. M. Edwards
GWYN ST. - Save Gas! WaUjing distance to shop
ping or hospital. Vervj{\C^4K home with carport.
Also paved drive. nome for retired or vMng couple. M. Edwards. OwneiJInancing 12-»/. Uit.
SANFORD ROAD - Beautiful 3 BR, 2 bath home,
den with fireplace. Full basement, plus attached
garage. 2 Large porches. Nice large lot. Must see to
appreciate. M. EMwards Near I-W exit.
DAVIE ACADEMY RD. - Beauttful Colonial Brick
Rancher, formal living room Л dining room. Den
with flreplace and attached garage. Garden space.
Assumable 90 percent loan. $58,000 M. Edwards
736 CHERRY St. - Nice 2 BR remodeled home.
Conv. to shopping & library. Good starter home.
Only $20,500. M. Edwards _
12 Acres with 400 ft. chicken house, in operatton
with mobile home, well & septic Unk. Incoine with
approximately $25,000 per year. M. Edwards
MILLING RD. - Beautiful 3 BR, IH bath brick
home. Den w-fpl., formal LR. Large comer lot. 7H
percent assumable loan. № Edwards
WILKESBORO ST. • Beautiful 4 BR home w-2
baths. Formal DR & large glassed-hi porch. At
Uched carport. Chain Ihik fence. Large lot also
faces Meroney Street. M. Edwar^
SANFORD AVE. - 3BR, 1 bath, 2-car carport, den
w-Franidln stove, FP, DR & LR. Good кмп
Ukeover at $5,000 down assumable at $30,000. M.
FOR RENT WITH OPTION TO BUY - 3 bedroom,
brick home w-fb-eplace, formal llvfaig room, 1Ц
bath. $300.00 mo. M. Edwards
Davie Academy Rd. $58,090,
BADEN, N.C. - Story & H - 3BR Condomlnum
across from coimtry club, large lot only few blocks
from Baden Lake. $29,900. M. Edwards
HOMES WITH ACREAGE
COUNTY LINE ROAD - 3BR, IH bath brick home
on 20-acres of land. $<9,000.20 more acres .> ailable.
M. Edwards
OPERATING DAIRY FARM • Completely
automatic milkers .& feeders. 2 new Harvesters
Silos, 2 houses, several bams, land fenced. Ex
cellent chance to get in the lUiry business.
RURAL HALL - 72 acres w-stream and good tim
ber. Nice farm house. Very private retreat. 52 acres
in Forsyth Co. & 20 acres in Stokes Co.
FARMINGTON - 5 acires fenced, w-larg:e bara.
ridfaig ring & beautiful Spanish Brick Rancher. 3
BR, 2 baths. Den w-fpl. Also large A-frame with
upstairs Could be apartment for renUl or hi-law. M.
Edwards' _____
BETHEL RD. 106 acres w-2 large lakes and 4 BR
home, 4 baths 2 dens w-^l. Formal Uving * diniitf
room. Large Bara, 2 chicken houses. Moatly fenced.
SHEFFIELD - 21.77 acres w-4 BR. 3H baths.
ColonUI Rancher, partial basement Beautiful den
w-Cathedral ceUhig and fpl. Large barn, 2 lakes. M. Edwards
BLAISE CHURCH RD. - 36.6 acres bordering 1-40,
200 ft. Road fronUge. Could be xoned for com
mercial. CaU Scott AngeU.
MOCKSVILLE-23.8 Acres w-stream A beautiful I
yr. old IH story cedar farm house w>fuU basement.
SkyUght in Master bedroom It bath • land aU fenced
.w-buiidhig 40x200 - can be used for many things • is
brlngbig bl nice income. Metal bara also incl. Must
see to appreciate. CaU M. Edwards. _____
FARMINGTON - Approx. lOH acres. Nice sectinn,
part wooded, w-stream. CaU today to see this one.
M. Edwards
DAVIE ACADEMY RD. - 3 BR, 2 bath Brick house
on 2 acres. 1700 Sq. Ft. Uring area. Beautiful lawn ft
hardwood trees. Also Fla. room.
YADKIN COUNTY-Bettiel Rd. • 8 Acres A 2 yr. old.
IH story farm house witb cedar siding, full
basement • custom buUt • also has Uke. For detalla
caU M. Edwards.
ACREAGE
WASHINGTON COUNTY-1707 Acres. Approx. 4
mUUon feet of blackgum. Has small Juniper sUnd
and smaU pine stand- Paved St. Rd. running thru
property. S. AngeU. '$310^000.
DAVIDSON AVE. - 6V4 Acres. HeavUy wooded w-
stream. City water & sewer $22.600.00 M. Edwards.
CHICKEN FARM ROAD - 2 to-acts; 134 acres * 43
acres. Can be subdivided. Mostly wooded, ioU of
road frontage. $1,000.00 per-acre. M. Edwards
COUNTY LINE ROAD - 141 Acres aU fenced w-
woven wire. Plenty of paved road fronUge. $875.00
per acre. M. Edwards
JENNINGS ROAD - 86 acre tract w-Iarge barn and
lots of paved road frontage. $1,600.00 per acre. M.
Edwnrds
LAKE NORMAN - Deeded water front lot on cove.
$10,500. M. Edwards.
CUMBERLAND COUNTY - 260 Acres, 2-acres
cleared, balance in timber. Approx. 900,000 board
ft. of timber. $635. per acre. S. AngeU
SAMPSON COUNTY - Roseboro - 172 acres bog
operation. Capable of producing 3500 top hogs per
year. CaU for deUlls. S. AngeU.
BLADEN COUNTY - 213 Acre hog operation. 40
acres open land. Balance In timber. CaU for details.
S. Angell
CALDWELL COUNTY -1325 Acres. 6,308,500 Board
ft. of timber. $700.00 per acre. S. AngeU
CHERRY HILL ROAD-llH acres. Part wooded,
part cleared. $1,500 per acre. CaU Martha Edwards.
DAVIE ACADEMY RD. - 21 acres with spring, part
wooded, part cleared. Make nice Subdivision <
smaU fann. M. Edwards or
IFM OT$KO CUAI IOC NOMI$frie» I . ОЛ packag*.
We BiJY EQ UltlES
........Ю Ш ik b O w .......ÄM16J
fIMsnaCnwr.......717-5953 SboO АпдЛ.........вМЗ?Я
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DшпiEdмпk....!бММ1M I S
i)03 Avon Street
MocksvUle, N.C.Llqual Housing
Opjiorl urily
PHONE: 634 2105
7259291
1?,П D A V II C O i i N n ' I NTI Kl’RISi К Г С О К П , IT IH R S IM V , .lUNI JS l‘)HI
S u z a n n e S a y s • • • •
Adventures you will never
forget!The Enchanted Forest Is
filled with exciting places to
visit and familiar aursery
rhvme characters to see.
Watch the thn?e pigs build
their house of bricks and th
wart the Big Bad Wolf and
stop and pet the rabbits at the
Caster Bunny's house. Listen
to Willie the Whale laugh as
you tickle him under the chin,
and visit Goldilocks and the
Three Bears in their beautiful
little house.You will love the many
rides and the playground, as
well as the delicious pnacks
served by the merry men in
Robinhoods Bam. Gift shops
at both entrances are filled
with special .-emcmbrances of
a delightful day.There are tame deer, goats,
bunnies, ducks and a lamb
that you can pet. A large free picnic area and plenty of free
parking space available.
The Ginger Bread house -
You will be tempted to nibble
snme nf thp "Icing" from
Hansel and Gretel’s house as
y^.u visit.
Ten cup -ide - See how the
adventurous Alice in Won
derland becomes ensnarled in
her many fabulous ad
ventures deep underground.
Visit this subterranean
Fairyland when riding the tea
cup to the Mad Hatter’s tea
party and into the court of the
Queen of Hearts.
Cinderella Castle - Nothing
make believe about this
castle. Travel by pumpkin
coach to a castle gate and
roam the passages and
turrets where animated
displays of this magical story
unfold before your eyes.
There are many other
exciting things here to do.
Little Toot and the Raft Ride -
Antique car ride - Mother
Goose ride - Story Land of
Fairy tales. Circus in Central Park. This is Maryland’s
major tourist attraction. The
original enchanted Forest. For over 20 years, its relaxing
entertaining and eduoational.
Children and adults love it,
Indian Recipes:
BAKED CORN
Corn on the cob can be
baked Indian fashion very
easily. Break off the silk
tassels and twist Uie shucks or
husks tightly around that end.
Dig a shallow hole in the
ground and build a good
hardwood fire in the hole.
When the fire has burned
down, rake out the coals and
put the com in the hole. Cover
■Aith ashes and heap the live
coals on top. Cooking time
depends on the freshness of
the ear.APACHE PUMPKIN
First boil the pieces of pumpkin until they are soft
enough to mash up. Now add
salt to taste and 2 or 3
tablespoons of ground-up
sunflower seed (If cut, use
commeal.) for each cup of
pumpkin, or you can cut the
pumpkin into thin slices and
fry it in grease until soft.
Happy cookin.
Suzanne
Will Wheat Storage Pay?
By T. E. NichoU, Jr.
Indications are that, once again, American fanners are in the proceu of
harvesting a record winter wheat crop. Within the next few weeks, an estii" <<ted
56.8 million acres of wheat will he harvested with an expected average yield of
35.5 bushels per acre, lliat will produce a record 2.01 billion bushels , up 6
percent from last year's bumper crop of 1.89 billion bushels.
As a result oi the large crop coming to market, cash prices in many of the soft
red winter wheat areas have been depressed. In some of the southern states,
particularly North Carolina, South CaroUna and Georgia, wheat prices have
dropped below the price of com.
Prompted by the unusually wide basis of 75 cents or more per bushel, farmers 9re considering storing their wheat instead of selling it at harvest. (The basis is
the difference between the cash market price offered at the local elevator and
the nearby (July) futures contract price.)
Storage appears to be the best marketing strategy when tbe elevator is of
fering only ^.25-3.40 per bushel for your wheat. But before you make a decision
to hold for later sale, you need to do some figuring to determine if it will be
profitable. Some of the infoimation that is needed includes :
1) Current market price of wheat,
2) Number of months you wish to store,
3) Expected price increase in months ahead, and
4) Cost of storage.
Holding wheat for later sale will not be profitable unless the returns from
storage are greater than the cbst.
One way of looking at this is to figure a breakeven price- the price that is
needed sometime in the future that will cover all storage costs and make you as
well off as if you had sold the grain at harvest and either paid off the note that
you owed or invested the money in a certificate of deposit. A convenient formula
for determining breakeven price is as follows: Breakeven price equals Market
price + (%st of storing. The formula for figuring the cost of storage is as
follows:
Cost of storage = Market p rice x
(Interest rate + Shrinkage +
Physical storage cost) x N i^ e r o f months storage
where market p rice = $3.25, in terest rate =
15%/year, shrinkag'i = 2%/year,
physical storage cost = 36^/year or
11% of market p rice and the storage
period is 3 months from June 15 - August 15.
Cost of storage = 3.25 x (15% + 2% + 11%) x ^
= 3.25 X (28%) X i
= .91 X i
= .2275 or 23i/bushel.
Breakeven price = Market p rice + Cost of storage
= $3.25 + .23
>= $3.48.
Holding grain in storage until Ute August or early September appears to be a
good marketing strategy this year based on current cash market* prices and
expected prices (September futures). September wheat futures is currently
priced at $4.24 per bushel. Adjusting for basis, the local market price in central
North Carolina markets would be about $8.89 ($4.24 - .35) in September. Thit
price would exceed the breakeven price and yield a return to management and
risk of 41 cents ($3.96 - 3.48) per bushel. However, this margin is not guaranteed.
In order to protect this profit margin, it would be necessary to hedge the wheat
in storage by selling a September futures contract equal to the number of
bushels in storage. Placing the wheat in storage unhedged could be quite ricky
with such a large crop coming to market in two consecutive years. The returns
to storage from July - September in North Carolina for the past nine years has
averaged about 22 cents per bushel (see table below). However, in three years
out of the nine ( 1976-1979) you would have incurred a loss from holding wheat
unpriced from July to September.
Wheat Monthly Average Prices Paid Nortli Carolina Farmers
Crop Year Ju ly Sept.Nov.Jan.March May
1972-73 2,30
DoUare Per Bushel
2.42 2,44 2.63 2.70 2.87
1973-74 2.30 4.00 4.00 4.50 4.65 3.73
1974-75 3.36 3.54 3.69 3.57 3.12 2.99
1975-76 2.77 3.15 3.06 2,96 3.20 2.98
1976-77 3.15 2.56 2.50 2.50 2.52 2.50
1977-7Й,2.15 2.13 2.10 2.51 2.62 2.66
1978-79 3.02 2.96
3.49 3.58 3.63 3.66
1979-30 3.90 4.00
3.90 4.08 4.10 3.80
1980 - 81 3.92 4.15 4.44 4.59 4.06 3.75
9 yr. avg.2.99 3.21 3.29 3.44 3.41 3.22
Avg. spread
from July .22 .30 .45 .42 .23
_ T -K- -.....
Ti'o Tlcv. and Mrs. Alec
Alvorrj and family, Karen ,
Lex and Varanita. were
honored with a Going Away
Fellowship Supper Sunday
night by the church
congregation at the com
munity building. Taylor
Howard presented Rev.
Alv(:rd with a check from
the congregation and Diane
Everhart gavi; Mr. and Mrs.
■Alvord gifts from the Youth
Group prior to the supper. Hie Alvord’s moved to Wilkesboro
on Tuesday. We wish them
well in their new ministry.
A large number were
present at Methodist church
Sunday for Rev. Alvord's last
sei mon and for Father's Day.
Following worship service
gifts were given to the oldest
father, Arthur Shutt- 85; the
youngest father, Danny
diani^ler- 27; and father with
most children present was
Thurmond O'Mara with 3 children. Ben Browder also had 3 children attending
church with him.
Mr<. Adrian Farl^ and. children, Brian, Christopher and Denise of Arlington,
Virginia arrived early
Wednesday morning to spend
the /i;mainder of the week
through Sunday with her
pareni.8 Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Zimmerman. She also visited
her grandmother Mrs. Hazel
Shutt, and Mrs. J.B. Ingram
in Clemmons, Mrs. Patsy Crenshaw in MocksviUe and
Mrs. Polly BaUey on Advance Roui« 1. The Farley boys
remained with their grandparents for a additional 3
weeks. Their dad, Chris , is in
Penr sylvania for a few weeks
on a business trip.
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Hendrix
and children Andrea, Melissa,
D rivin g Tip s To
Save Energy
A n d M oney
With the arrival of this
summer'« vacation season,
energy ifficient driving is once again an important part of getting, away for less.
While (gasoline suppUes are
expected to be adequate through the summer driving
season, prices are up over last
year. According to the
Caroline. Motor Club, the
average price of gas May 20th
was up 19 cents over the same
Ume in 1980.
However, many drivers
could be it üiat price increase
simply by driving more ef-
fíciently. Surveys show that a
careful driver can get up to 30
percent better gas mileage than an average driver simply by foUowing a few
simple rules:- Plan trips. City driving
takes about twice as mud) gas as expressway driving. For
long trips, use a route that will
take advantage of better
expressway mUeage.~ Avoid uniniiH'oved roads.
Gravel roads or others with loose or rough surfaces can cause between 10 and 30
percent fuel economy loss.~ Don't overfUl your gas tank.
- Use with the proper oc
tane ruling.
- T/-y to refiU only when
down tr a quarter of a tank or
less. The extra weight of a fuU
gas tank puUs down gasoUne
mileeije.
- Ó rive at a steady
moderat<! speed. Most cars
get about 20 percent better
gas \Tiileage at 55 miles per
hour ihiin at 70.Avoid unnecessary
braking. It takes more gas to
accelerate than to maintain a
steady speed. By watching
traffic ahead, a careful driver
can avoid braking and save
the energy it would take to
accelerate back to cruising
speed.
~ In cars with manual shift,
run through lower gears
gently and quickly and use the
more efficient upper gears to
pickupypeed.
~ .\void idling foi long periods of time. 'The average
Amei'ican car uses one cup of gas t v cry six minutes when idling and it takes less gaspline to restart the average car than to idle it for more than a minute.-- Keep the engine tuned. A tune upevery 10,000 miles is# good '.'(lie of thumb.
- Kt;t':p front wheels aligned and bi ;ikes properly adjusted.- Kec;i lires inflated. Under
inflate¿ tires can reduce
mMeage by 5 percent.
- (’ombine short trips. Hie
aven'i^e car bums 20 percent
mor«' t'ule when its engine is
cold, so trips of less than five
miles can be very costly in
terms nf gas mUeage.
It alt I pays to keep fuel
econoiiij in mind when buying
a new :ar. Most new car
dealers can provide a copy of I>e Ei^A’s booklet 1881 Gai
Guide.
Fuúl L-conomy is ususally
associ.ited with lighter cars,
smali engines, and manual
transir.issions. Options like air cunditioning and power steer;'i:.^ ubually mean lower fuel u’onomy.
For more information on
diividg to save energy and
moiiey, contact the state
Eneii')' Division and ask for
the ii'cc booklet Sixteen Stepa
io Conserve F'nergy on North
<'aroüna Highways. The
l)iv .sion’s toil-free number is
Advance N ews
Amandn яп(1 Meredith of
Lockhart, South Carolina spent the weekend with their
parents ths Bill Zimmerman’s and Mr. and Mrs. Tom Hendrix of Fork. Andrea and Melissa will be visiting
their grandparents and their Farley cousins for 2 weeks.Mr. and Mrs. George
Poindexter of Orlando
Florida; their daughter Mrs.
Wanda Cota and daughter
Coran and Raena of Tucson,
ArizonB nrrived Thursday to
spend a few days with their
mother and grandmother
Mrs. Matt Poindexter. On
Saturday afternoon Mr. and
Mrs. Oscar Poindexter, their
sons Richard and Gordon
Poindexter, Mr. and Mrs.
Leonard Jones and Arthur Shutt visited George and Ruth
Richardson and Mrs. Matt
Poindexter.
The Home-Makers СЛиЬ met
last Wednesday at the home of
Mrs. Ruby Markland.
Devotions were given by Mrs.
Alpha Vogler. The president
Mrs. Alma Shermer had
charge of the program en
titled “Look Your Best in
What You Wear". A discussion OP dress color that
one Ukes and what looks best was very interesting. Songs
during program were “Carry
Me Back to Old Virginia” and “Swannee River". Nine
members answered the roU
call with their favorite fruit.
Mrs. Markland served
delicious refreshments.
Mrs. Sue Garwood of
Melborne, Florida is visitii^
Mrs. Mae Markland this
week. They were Monday
visitors of Mrs. Matt Poin
dexter, Mrs. Lucille Cor
natzer and Mrs. Ethel Pat
terson. Next week Mrs.
Garwood wil) spend some
time with Mrs. DeEtte
Markland.
Our community expresses
deenest svmoathv to the
family of John Orreil. He
died Ht his home TiiesdHy
morning.
Mr. and Mrs. Jake Nifong of
Winston-Salem were Sunday
visitors of her mother Mrs.
Georgia Foster.
Sympathy is expressed to
the family of John (Carles
Comatzer who died in MMn-
stoii-Salom Saturday night.
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene West
and children Kevin and Emily
were Sunday afternoon
visitors of her grandmother Mrs. Hazel Shutt. They also
visited Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Zimmerman and Mrs. Adrian
Farley.
Miss Edith Baiiey of Miami,
Fla., is spending a few weeks
with her parents and brother '
Mr. and Mrs. Alan Bailey and
Todd.
Several from our com
munity enjoyed a weeks
vacation at Myrtle Beach last
week. They were Mr. and
Mrs, Frank Everhart and
family, Mr. and Mrs. R. D.
Cornatzer and daughter , Mr.
and Mrs. Ronnie Barney and
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Cokie
Jones and family, Mr. and
Mrs. Dick Vogler and family.
Tliese couples went as a group
for their annui.1 beach
vacation.
Social
Security
What if my disability
checks ere stopped following
a review. What appeal rights do I have?
You can request recon
sideration of all the facts in
your case. This must be done
ill writing at any social
security office within 80 days
after you receive the notlcc
that benefits will end.
The average homemaker walks ten miles a day
around the house doing chores. She or he walks
four miles and spends 25 hours a year making beds.
SERVING DAVIE - IREDELL - WILKES- YADKIN « ALEXANDER COUNTIES
T E l^ tM IT E & P E S T C O N T R O L S E R V I C E
• RESIDENTIALIT TAKES MODERN EQUIP
A
CHEMICAL KNOWLEDGE COMMERCIAL
INDUSTRLiLREUABLE SERVICE PEOPLE
TOPERFORM 'X X ' A
PROPER PEST CONTROL
LOCALLY OWNKD A OPERATED• Annoal lUnawal 8«t1m • Written Conditioaal Gaanwtw
• IiwpMtimi Upon Raqiert .
• Persmal Altentieii Ob Etmt Job • "pietwSee“*^ ^
MOCKSVILLE Statesviile
876-4774
Eli(in,N.C.
835-18616 3 4 - 5 6 0 0
Jo liM ie M . Tilley fe $ t C ortrol Serrice
»YEARS EXPERIENCE
YAOKINYILLB RD.
gTATEUCBNgEITt PWt "]
Bill Kouse - Seivlce Technician MOCKSVILUt N. с
O n l U K
iin
BOXWOOD REAL ESTATE
323 Salisbury Street
Mocksville, N.C. 27028 634-5997
Attractive 1,700 fq.tt. contamporary offica In town Faaturas 2 private offlcas, salat offica,
recaption araa, 2 baths, kitchen, plus a dlstlnc-
tton all Its’ owni Complataly wall papared and carpeted, custom drapes, haat pump, ’ professionally landscaped, pavad parking,
high traffic area. $79,500.
Price
29.500..
76.400..
33.500..
33.500..
75.000U
29,900.
37.500..
49.900..
69.500..
53.500..
^5,900.
'87.000..
$35,000.
32.000..
42.500 .
46.900..
72.500 .,
79.500..
86.000.
33,500...
28,900..
$24,500 '
$28,900.
^ ,0 0 0 .
Price
34.000.
33,500
33.500..
Location Bedroom Bath Information
.. .601 South......................................2.............1............Fireplace, carport
.. .Farmland Road...........................3.., .2..............Log home secluded on 4.48 acres
.. .Fieldcren No. 2 . ...................3...........1...............Under Construction
. . . Fieldcrest No. 3 .........................3. . 1.............EES, Quali^ Construction
Carowoods Development... .4... . 2 .....3,0d<H sq.ft.. 2 fireplaces
• • Daniel Jo a d ...............................3 .... 2 .... 1400sq .ft. Brick Home
.. .Sheffield Park...............................3............1%-----Detached garage/workshop
.. • Fmthall Oriye..............................3..............2............^lit-levelon wooded 1.8 acres
.. Edgewood Circle ...................3-----2%... 2 story with apx. 2400 sg. ft.
.. .Garner Street.................................%............1%----Full basement, concrete drive
■ Rainbow Road...................... . .3 ............3.... EXCEPTIONAL home on 3.77 acres
• • -601 North.....................................4............3%..........3,200 sq.ft. split-level
.. West Jefferson .. • ..............2^”
.. .Railroad Street..............
:i%.
.2.........1%..
basement, wrap-around porch
. Remodeled frame house
■ ■ -Libarty Church Rd..................... 3...1... i^iSOO sq^ft. on 1.4 acres
■. ..Hickory Tree...............................3.............2............New home, heat pump, dishwasher
■ ■ Southwood Acrm ....... 3-4.^ .3...........Splitjevel. 26 Kitchen cabmets
_^^Gj;eenwood Lakes......................3..... 2%_____Uke new farm house design
.. Dwe Academy Road-----: .J .------VA-----Swimming Pool, 2.38 acres
. 'Hwy. 64Vy.......................................3^— 1J4-----gleaming 1100sq.ft. home
. ■ Milling Road................................3...........VA_____freshly painted inside '
• Gladstone Road........................j ■ -Frame and siding home with fireplaa
. Center Street................................2.............1 ^ .. A 'doll' house with ideal privacy.
.. Howardtown Road..................3...............2..........Brick home w/1,200 sq. ft. detached gar
SALE PENDING
Location Bedroom -Bath
SOLD
Information
Riverdale No. 5.............................3----- 1..1070 sq. ft. FmHa approved
.Fieldcrest No. 4 ...........................3 .. . 1_____T050 sq. ft. Contemporary
.Fieldcrest No. 1......................... 3.V .. .1...........FmHA approved energy efficient
LAND LOTS OTHER
Price Location Information
12.50 0 Hickory Hill No. 2 .......................iake iot
9.50................................0 Jericho Road..................................2 lots
5.00 0 Southwood Acres................................ romer lot
1.500 per acre..............601 South...................................................50 acres, soma owner financing
4.50 0 Greenbrier Estates...................................lot No. 33
2.3. Million....................601 South.................................... .........811 acres, prime industrial
4.000 each....................Florida........................................................4 building lots, Lake Placid
$79,500........................Mocksville........................................ 1700 sq.ft. office building....
GET ON THE TOP SELLER LIST, CENTURY 21
DAN CORRELL - 998 2268
TERESA CORRELL - 998-2263
LOUISE DAIGLE - 634 2846
CHARLES EVANS - 284 2537
SHELIA OLIVER - 492-5fj12
KATHI WALL - 492 7631
D A V II ( O U N I Y I NTI Kl’RISI U l C O K D , I I I U R S D A V , .IU''' 25 l')8l
Dick Nail and Marshall Southern, of Micro Images, are shown amidst some of their equipment.
M i c r o f i l m I s N o t S p y S t u f f A n y m o r e
Dick Nail grins when he recalls one
response to Davie County’s latest
business venture into modern
technology.The UtUe boy’s mother was only trying
to satisfy her curiosity when she asked
Nail what new business was opening in
the offices oo Mocksville’s main square.
"MicrofUm,” NaU tried to explain.
At that, the lltde boy’s eyes grew
wide, his mouth dropped open, and he
whispered. “Spies?”I is bji^no means "James
Bond espionage" business for Nail and
his partner Marshall Southern. Opened
on April 1, Micro Images offers to take
the accumulated flies and documents of
local business and convert them into
rolls of microfilm or sheets of
microfiche.
“Minification is a good word for what
we do,” said Nail. "We are con
centrating on records. When a business
has a storage capacity overrun, we can
take those records and put them into a
permanent record which will last In-
deflnitely. Everybody wants to rid
themselves of the paper.”
Nail sees the possibilities for
microfilming the records of industry,
banks, hospitals and newspapers. One of
his first customers is the Davie County
Enterprise-Record.
Over the years, the Enterprise has
accumulated thousands of pages of
newsprint, boimd in bulky awkward
books. Staff members and others in
terested in locating a past issue or ar
ticle have to wade through the books.
Newsprint, like all paper, tends to
yellow and become fragile with the years.
After Micro Images flnishes with the
past issues of the Enterprise, each book,
which measures about two feet by one
and-a-half feet and a hefty two inches
thick, will be reduced to a lightweight
roll of film which can be held in the palm of a hand.
Nail says that anyone, even reporters
notwiously inept in mechanics, would be
able to hook the roll up to the viewing
machinc, actually a converted x-ray
machine, and wind an entire year of the
Enterprise by hand in a few minutes.,
Microfilming tbe old newspaper has been a slow task for Nail and Southern, given the sice of the pages. They also
admit that since they have lived in Davie County for so many years, they
catch themselves sometimes reading
the old papers instead of filming them.
NaU hopes that the public library
would be interested in obtaining a copy
of the Enterprise microfilms for the
historical interest to county residents.
Other businesses will be interested in
reducing giant filing cabinets to mere
shoeboxes. Depending on the
documents. Micro Images can film as
many as S0,000 documents per day. A
low average would be 4,000 a day.
Nail ex^ained that the operation is
flexible enough to allow in-house filming for indispensible materials or for
securitv reasons.
Microfilming is actually a simple
process. The possibilities for its use
have existed since the development of
photography. "Microfilm has been
prominent for the past 25 years,” said
Nail. “It has been used extensively in
the past five years.”
According to specifications from the U.S. Bureau of Standards, properly shot
and developed microfilm should be
archiveable. Nail says archiveable may
mean a life of 25 years, SO years or
perhaps indefinitely. Since microfilm hasn’t been around that long, no one
knows for sure.
The day microfilm rq>laces manila
folders is here, said Nail. “Business is
definitdy UUng its current InformaUon and packing it irr a small format.”
Nail holds up a roll of microfilm which is imaged with the pages of the Enterprise-Record. The negative
image on this roll will later be transfered to a positive.
I'liis ('»iivi'rtcd \-ray r<!ad*M will lt<‘ iiKfii at iii«* i''iii<‘r|iii8e-H(‘<‘ord to retrieve tiie iniL-rufiliited
material. The iHsuei« «if ilie paiit 60 yeais will fill sli^litly uver uiie dueeii rolls uf filiii.
Uick Nail denioikstrates the process used to iiiicrofiliii large articles, 'llie camera just basically ‘takes a picture
picture.' of the dociiiiieiit!
Photos by Gaay Foster Story by G. Dale Neal
I-41) D A V II ( O U N IV I NTI RI’KISI-; KI-COKI), T IU I R S D A Y . JUNI-; 2'^, l'»»l
Public Notices A S H O P P E R 'S .
P A R ft O IS E
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING BEB'ORE THE BOARD
OF TOWN COMMISSIONERS
FOR THE FOLLOWING
PROPOSED ZONING
AMENDMENTS
NOTICE If HEREBY
GIVEN, pursuant to the
requirements of Chapter
I60A, Article 19, Section 160-A-
364 of the General Statutes of
North Carolina and pursuant
to Article 7, Section 2 of the
Mocksville Zoning Ordinance,
thnt the Town Board of
Commissioners will hold a
public hearing at the Town
Hall, Mocksvillc, N.C. at 7:15
p.m. on Tuesday, July 7, "981.
The following zoning
proposals are scheduled to be
heard:(a) R.J. Campbell
submitted a request to rezone
property located on the Northeast side of the Campbell Road from Residential
(R-20) to Residential Mobile Home (R-M). This property is further described as being
Parcel C-6 of Tax Map I-5-I.(b) Caroline Energy
Efficient Homes submitted a
request to rezone property
located on the East side of Tot
Street from Residential (R-
15) to Residential (R-6). This
property Is further described
as being Parcels B-23, B-24,
and B-25, of Tax Map 1-4-14.
(c) The Mocksville
Planning Board submitted a
request to add Section 5 to
Article VII of the Mocksville
Zoning Ordinance as follows:Section S. Schedule uf Fees
Fees shall be submitted at
the times of application for zoning compliance to the
Town Clerk at rates as follows:
Subdivision Reviews(1) Preliminary Plat Review $100
(2) Final PlatReview $ 25.00
Rezonlng Fee
(1) Property $100.00
Zoning Ordinance Amend
ment $100.00
Variance Permit $ 50.00
Special Use Permit $25.00
Advertising Sign Per
mit $ 25.00
Zoning Compliance Per
mit $ 10.00 Fees to cover the cost of
advertising as required by
this ordinance are not in
cluded.Signs will be posted on each
of the above listed locations to
advertise tbe 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 heard In favor
of or in <q>po«ition to the
foregoing proposed changes.
Prior to the hearing, all
persons interested may obtain
any additional Information on
these proposals which are in
the possession of the
Mocksville Zoning En
forcement Officer by
inquiring at my office in the
Courthouse, Mocksville, N.C.
weekdays between the hours
of 8:30 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. or
by telephone at 634-3340.
Jesse A. Boyce,
Zoning & Planning
6-252119
NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTYEXECUTRIX NOTICE
Having qualified as Executor of the estate of Edward Albert Deadmon,
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 llth day of December, 1981, 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 llth day of June, 1981.
Eva T. Deadmon, Rt. 7, Box
150A, MocksvUle, N.C. 27028,
Executor of the estate of
Edward Albert Deadmon,
deceased.
6-114tn
NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY
NOTICE UNDER AND BY VIRTUE of a power of sale contained In
a certain deed of trust dated
May 30, 1972, executed by
John Lewis Mayfield and
wife, Lucille H. Mayfield to
Lester P. Martin, Jr. Trustee,
and recorded in Book 82, page
287. Davie County Registry;
and under and by virtue of the
authority vested in the un
dersigned as Trustee and an
order executed by Delores C.
Jordan, Clerk of Superior
Court of Davie County, on the
Sth day of May, 1981, the
defaull having been made In
the payment of the In
debtedness thereby secured,
the said deed of trust being by
the terms thereof subject to
foreclosure and the ho der
the indebtedness thereby
secured having demanded a
foreclosure thereof for the
purpose of satisfying said
indebtedness and tfie same
having been ordered and
approved by said order of Clerk of Superior Court of
Davie County, the undersigned D. Duncan
Maysilles, Substlhite Trustee wlll offer for sale at public
auction to the highest bidder
for cash at the Courthouse
Door In Davie County, North
Carolina, at 12:00 o’clock
noon, on the 30th day of June,
1981, the land conveyed in said
deed of trust, the same lying
and being In Davie County,
North Carolina, and Nsliig
described as follows:
BEGINNING at an Iron, M.
B. aement’s comer; runs
North 86 West 2.24 chains to a
stake in Hudson line; thence
Southeast 3.00 chains to the
road; thence East with the road and Hudson line 2.24
chains to an Iron, M. B. Clement’s corner; thence North 1 West 2.88 TO THE
BEGINNING containing 6-10 acre, more or less.
FOR BACK TITLE see deed
from Mack Reid and wife,
Naomi Reid, to John F.
Jackson and wife, Agnes G.
Jackson, dated S^tember 6,
1967, and recorded in Deed
Book 78, page 216, Regiito- of
Deeds for Davie County of
fice.
A five (5) percent cash
deposit will be required. This property will be Md subject
to all taxes, encumbrances and liens of record.
This 2%d day of May, 1981.
D. Duncan MaysUles
Substitute Trustee M4tn
NOTlCtf
NORTH CAROLINA
DAVIE COUNTY
TAKE NOTICE that a
public hearing will be held on
the 7th day of July, 1981 at
8:1S o’clock p.m. at the Town
Hall concerning all matters
contained In a prdiminary
resolution to install a line on
Valley Ibnd and Ridgeview Dr. pursuant to Article 10,
Chapter 160A of the General
Statutes, which resolution
was unanimously adopted on the 22nd day of May, 1981 ^
the Town Board of Com
missioners of the Town of MocksviUe.
Catherine C. CoUins Town Clerk
6-18 2tnpNOTICE
NORTH CAROLINA
DAVIE COUNTY
TAKE NOTICE that a public hearing wiU be held on
the 7th day of July, 1981 at 7:30 o'clock p.m. at the Town HaU concerning aU matters contained In a preliminary
resolution to InstaU a Une on
MlUing Rd. West pursuant to
Article 10, Chapter 160A of Uie
General SUtues, which
resolution was unanimously
adopted on tiie 22nd day ot
May, 1981 by the Town Board
of Commissioners for tiie
Town of MocksviUe.
Catherine C.CoUlns Town aerk
6-18 2tnp
ABSOLUTE ESTATE
AUCTION
38 Acre Farm W/ House, Bams ft Personal Piopeity
Sat. June 2 7,19 8 1 10:00 a.m.
ESTATE OF THE LATE MISS AVES HODGSOl^
PERSONAL PROPERTYCornsr Cupboird-Buttar Chum- |utt«r Mold-Oak DrtiMr-Wsih Pot-MtUI Badt-Wood Stovy-^imltlve Tible-7 HMd Csttls-Elsctric Stovt and Refrlgsritor (Both L№ Than On* Yaar Old)-Rltig«r 7^*** G««*»" Tooli-Varloui KitchinOTHER ITEMS TQO NUMEROUS
TO MENTION. RE/ILestate
To Be Sold At 12 O’clock Sharp 38 Acr«s With HouM Which Would Bt Exctlltnt
r052”FMt"RoVd" Fr^ ffir'‘' '•••“‘«•StrMm
TERMS: 15% Down Dav Of Sale-Balance
Within 3D Days
LOCATION: From Mocktville Take 64 West
To 901 West Toward Harmony App. 3 ^*ilel
Right On SR 2128 iuft Before Clarksbury
Church . Sale App. 1 1/2 Mile*. Watch Foi
Auction Arrows.
Sale conducted By
TERRY IR ELA N D NCAL No. 295
Rt.l Box 156 539-5498
Olin, N.C. 28660____________873-2281
NOTICE OF SALE NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY
Under and by virtue of the power of sale contained In a ccrtain deed of trust executed by Donnie J. Ratledge and
wife, Linda Diane Bates
Ratledge, to Grhdy L. McClamrock, Jr. Substitute
Trustee, dated the 15 day of
November, 1978, and recorded
in Book 107, page 41, In the
Office of the Register of
Deeds for Davie County,
North Carolina, default
having been made In the
payment of the Indebtedness
thereby secured and the said
deed of trust * .>lng by the
terms thereof subject to
foreclosure, and the holder of
the Indebtedness thereby
secured having demanded a
foreclosure thereof for the
purpose of satisfying said
indebtedness, and the Clerk of
the Court granting permission
for the foreclosure, the un
dersigned trustee wUl offer
for sale at public auction to
the highest bidder for cash at
the Courthouse door In
Mocksville, North Carolina,
at 12:00 noon, on the 3 day of
July, 1981, the land as Im
proved, conveyed In said deed
of trust, the same lying and
being In Clarksv:Ue Town
ship, Davie County, North
CaroUna, and being more
particularly described as
foUows:BEGINNING at a point, an
iron stake in the Soutii edge of
right of way of Ratiedge-
Cleary Road, being the North
west comer of the within
tract, said beginning belnr/
located South 80 degrees.
West 214 feet and SouUi 68
degs. West 3.50 chs. of a point,
an Iron In South edge of said
road, being the Northeast comer of a certain tract
described in a deed dated May 2, 1964, from Lela Ratiedge
Graves et al to Duke Ratiedge
and wife, Eva H. RaUedge, runs thence South 11 degs.
West 9Vi chs., more or less, to
a point in South Une of said
tract conveyed to Frances R.
Peoples' thence with said
Peoples tract North 11 degs.
East 9% chs., more or less, to a point an iron in South edge
of said road South 80 degs.
West 90 feet to tiie BEGIN
NING, and being Lot No. 5 In
the division of the property of
Duke Ratledge et ux among
their children.
BEGINNING at a point, an
iron stake in the South edge of
right of way of RaUedge-
Qeary Road, being the North
west comer of the within
tract, said point of begbining
being located Soutii 68 degs.
West 85 feet of a point, an iron
In the Soutii edge of said road,
the Northeastmoat comer of
that certain tract or parcel of
real property described in a deed dated May 2,1964, from
Lela Ratiedge Graves et al to Duke Ratledge and wife, Eva H. Ratledge, runs thence
South 11 degs. West 11V4 chs.,
more or less, to a ptdnt in tiie
original Soutii line of said
tract. Brooks’ line; less,
thence with said Brooks’ line
2Vi chs., more or less, to a
point, an iron. Brooks’ comer
in Wagner estate line; thence
wltii Wagner estate Une North
2 degs. East 2.85 chs. to a
point, an iron and South 88
degs. East 5.40 chs. to a point In branch; thence with said branch in a Northerly
direction 60 links to a point, comer of Tract no. 2, thence
with said Tract no. 2 North 88
degs. West 6.61 chs. to a point,
an iron In the South edge of
said Ratiedge-Cleary Road
ttie said Northeast comer of
said tract above designated;
ttience wltti said road South 68
West 85 feet to the
iGINNING AND BEING
Lot no. 1 in the division of the
property of Duke Ratiedge et
ux among thehr chUdren.
Included in this sale are any
Improvements on the subject
tract, including a 1969
Commodore mobUe home.
Serial Number 602C032, North
Carolina title number
20969817.
SUBJECT, however, to
taxes for the year'<s) 1971
through I960, and any other
prior encumbrances of
record.
Five percent (5 percent) of
ttie amount of the highest bid
must be deposited with ttie
Trustee pending con
firmation of the sale.
Dated this 2 day of June,
1981.
Grady L. McClamrock, Jr., Subiidtute Trustee Brock & McClamrock P.O. Box 347
MocksviUe, N.C. 27028 Telephone: 704-634-3518
6-182tn
"I am wealthy in nty friandi." Shakaipaar«
NEW AND USED
OFFICE FURNITURE
^ Safes ^ Files
^ Fire Proof Files
ROWAN
O ffice FURNiTURti
PHONE 636-8022
118 N.Main St.
Salisbuiy, N.C.
T
NORTH CAROLINA
DAVIE COUNTY ADMINISTRATRIX NOTICE
Having qualified as Administratrix of the Estate of Nebraska Vercy Jones, Sr.
deceased, late of Davie
County, this is to notify aU persons having claims
against said estate to present
them to the undersigned on or
befort the llth day of
December, 1981, being six
months from the first day of
xibllcaUon or this notice wlU X pleaded in bar <»f their
recovery. All persons in
debted to said estate will
please make Immediate
payment to the undersigned.
This the 8th day of June,
1981.
Ida C. Jones, Ad
ministratrix of the Estate of
Nebraska Vercy Jones, Sr.,
deceased.
Martin and Van Hoy
Attomeys
Box606
MocksviUe, N.C. 27028
6-114tn
PUBLIC NOTICE
The Cana Extension
Homemakers have met
several times and discussed
ways in which the Cana
Community Building could be
restored to Its original state
after being gutted by fire In
May 1980.
ReaUzlng the tremendous
cost to restore, the Cana
Homemakers desire the
support of anyone who Is Interested in the restoration of
this historical site. If you desire to suppor*. in this en
deavor, whether by a helping
hand, donations, materials;
or be any means; please
contact one of the foUowing:
Mrs. Edwin Boger
Mrs. Lloyd Brown
Mrs. Stanley Smith
The Cana Homemakers
6-18 Itnp
PUBLIC NOTICE Notice is hereby given that
policies, procedures, reports and other Information
relative to the education of
handicapped chUdren in
Davie County for the 1980-81
school year wUl be avaUable
for review and comment on
Tuesday, June 30, 1981 bet
ween the hours of 1-4 p.m. at
the Davie County Board of
Education Administrative
Office on Cherry Street.
Specific documents for review
and comment wUl be local
special education poUcies and
procedures, projected use of
state funds for exceptional
children, and the foUowing
proJecU: Titie VI, Part B,
P.L. 91-230 ad amended by
P.L. 94-142; ESEA, Title I,
P.L. 89-313; and tiie Early
ChUdhood Incentive Grant.
ADMINISTRATOR c.t.a.
NOTICE
NORTH CAROLINA
DAVIE COUNTY
Having qualified as Ad
ministrator c.t.a. of the estate of John WUllam RodweU,
deceased, late of Davie
County, North Carolina, this is to notify‘all persons having
claims against said estate to
present them to' the un
dersigned on or before the
18th day of December, 1981,
said date being at least six
months from tlie date of first
publication of this notice, or
this notice wlll be pleaded lii
bar of their recovery. AU
persons Indebted to said
estate wjlU please make Im
mediate paynvent to the un
dersigned.
This the 18th day of June,
1981, tiie same being tiie fh-st
publication date.
Otis M. Hendrix, Ad
ministrator c.t.a., of the
estate of John William
RodweU.
Brock & McClamrock
Attorneys at Law
P.O. Box 347
MocksviUe, N.C. 27028
Telephone: 704-634-3518
6-18 4tnp
NORTH CAROLINA
DAVIE COUNTY
ADMINISTRATRIX
NOTICE
Having qualified as Ad
ministratrix of tiie Estate of
I«ulse K. Cleveland,
deceased, late of Davie
County, this Is to notify aU
persons having claims
against said estate to present
them to the undersigned on or
before the 25th day of
December, 1981, being six
montiis from tiie first day of publication or this notice wiU
be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons in
debted to said estate wlU
please make Immediate
payments to the undersigned.
This 22nd day of June, 1981.
Dorothy R. Graham, Ad
ministratrix of tiie Estate of
Louise K. Cleveland, deceased.
6-25 4tnp
LIVE
Bluegrass
Music
FRIDAY NIGHT - 9 P.M,
at
Tomlinson's
Gam e Room
Bur Creek Road
Admission $2.00 Undar 10 years FREE
Under New Management
Mobi
trave
Center
1-40 and 64 at Center
6 AM-10 PM 492-5793
S g jJ ^
Woolworth Summer SIzzler
Tab Correction
PAGE 6- Free Oustbuster or 3/8 inch Drill When
You Buy A Portable Work Center For
$77-Available Through Black and
Decker-Not At Time Of Purchaie.
Item* Not Available Due To Extreme Shortage
Are: 12' Pool-Attic Fan-And Ceiling Fan.
Rain Check* Will Be Given For Later Delivery.
AUCTION SALE
10:00 a.m . Saturday, lune 2 7,19 8 1
Per*onal property Of
MRS. ALVA CRAWFORD
604 Neely Street, Mock*ville (Off Depot St.)
ITEMS FOR SALE INCLUDE Hot Point R«frlg«rator-(2) 3 pc. Bedroom Suits-Small 9 Drawer Oesk-End Ttblts-Maaazlne Rack-Couch- Candía Stlcfcs4>ld Pictures <■ rramas-Stona Jug !■ Crock Clothes Pin Bucket'Daprasslon Glass-Prassed Glass-Iron Pans-Pots ll Pans-FlatwaraOval Braided Rug- 2 Old Chalrs-Wood Ironing Board-Old Cook BooksH^arnlval Vase-Gray Kettle-Electric Heaters-Townt New Speller Drop L.eaf Tabla-(4) Cane Bottom Chairs-Wovtn uiiktt Black (. WhKe T.V .-Upholstered Chtir-Coffee Table- (2) Small Ljmp Tables-Book Case t Bookt-Doughboard <1 Rolling Pin- Serving Trays-Food Choonnr-Fnamd Potk ll Pant-Old Bowls- China-SmailCabinetfUnusual)- (Oll) Kerosene Can- Hand Tools-Bud Vatas- Throw Rugs- Oval Picture Frames- Linens-Electrlc Lampi-Wringer Type Washar-MANV OTHER MISC ITEMS.
TERMS: Cash or Approved Check
SALE CONDUCTED FOR
MRS. CLARA S. CRAWFORD
(Power Of Attorney)
S A L E C O N D U C T ED B Y
JIM S H E E K
('•'"S3»» A U C T IO NJIMSHEKK. AUCTJONEER
u c . tl BONDED. NCA 1. 924
P. O. BOX »03 PH. 634-3611
MOCKbVll.LK. N. C, 2702Bj|oi«sro*siiu^ ^
COUNTY OF DAVIE Advertisement for Bids
The County of Davie will
open bids pursuant to General
Statute 143-12» on, July 7, 1981
at 1:00 p.m. In the Com-
miBsioner's Meeting Room for
the purpose of letting a
contract to purchase the
following designated
equipment:
One (I) Economy Pick-up
Seven (7) foot bed
Etigine: 2.3
Automatic Transmission Bids may be submitted to
tile County Manager's Office
prior to the opening of bids. Durther specifications for the
equipment are available
Monday through Friday in the
County Manager's Office of
the Courthouse from 8:30 a.m. untU 5:00 p.m.
The County of Davie reserves the right to reject or
refuse any and all bid
proposals.
6-18 Itiip
NORTH CAROLINA
DAVIE COUNTYEXECUTOR'S NOTICE
Having qualified as
Executor of the estate of Avis
O. Hodgson, deceased, late of
Davie County, North
Carolina, this is to notify aU
persons having claims
against said estate to present
them to the undersigned on or
before the 4th day of
December, 1981, said date,
being at least six months from
the date of first pubUcation of
tills notice, or this notice wUI
be pleaded in bar of their
recovery. All persons in
debted to said estate wUl
please make immediate
payment to the undersigned.
'This the 4th day of June,
1981, the same being tiie first
publication date.
Paul Layman, Executor
of the estate of Avis O.Hodgson
Brock & McClamrock
Attomeys at Law
P.O. Box 347
MocksvUle, N.C. 27028
Telephone: 704-634-SS18
6-«4tnp
Do you collect picture
post cards as a hobby? If you do, you’re , a daltiotogist.
2 FAMILY YARD
SALE...Fri. & Sat., June 26
& 27, and Sun. June 28, from
9 a.m. until dark. At 564
Lexington Road,
Mocksville, N.C. Watch for
signs! Crafts, household
Items and children’s clothes
YARD SALE: Saturday, June
27,8a.m. till 4 p.m. Various
Items, lots of girls clothes, 1
mi^e down Sain Road off 158.
Cancelled if raining.
GIGANTIC 3 FAiJILY YARD
SALE: Cooleemee, 45 Duke
Street, Saturday, June 27, 9
a.m. - 3 p.m. Clothes (girls
size 8 & 10, ladles & men),
dishes, pictures, paperback
books, golf clubs, 2 golf
bags, tennis rackets,
camping equipment,
bicycles, two stone Jars,
lawnmowers, donlads of aU
description, magazines,
metal fence post & wire, old
sinks, toys, dolls, curtains,
and matching bed spread,
and much much more!
CanceUed if raining.
YARD SALE; Saturday, June
27 from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. 1130
YadklnviUe Road in front of
The Pantiy, large size men
and women clothes, shoes,
pocket books, dishes,
household items, and many
other items. CanceUed if
raining.
4 FAMILY YARD SALE;
ChUdren’s clothes, boys and
girls, baby clotii3s, womens
clothes, 2 end tables, lamp,
set of bunk beds, mattress
not included, baby’s play
pen, children’s toys, winter
coats, make-up mirror,
shoes and lots of odds and
ends. At 340 Duke Street in
MocksvUle, Saturday only from 7 a.m. - 3 p.m. Can-
ceUed if raining.
5 FAMILY YARD SALE:
Saturday, June 27, 9 a.m.
untU 4 p.m. 615 Cherry
Street. Men’s , Women’s,
children’s clothes, shoes,
house hold items,
numerouus other items.
CanceUed If raining.
GARAGE S.ALE: Rain or
shine!!! Saturday, June 27,
9 a.m. - 4 p.m. Childrens
clothes, ride and play toys,
books, furniture, fire
screens, refrigerator, etc.
Take Underpass Road off H-
wy. 801, thsn first tum on
right and look for signs.
FIRST TIME YARD
SALE....At the home of
Larry Anderson on Walt
Wlison Road. Tum off 601
onto Deadmon Road, go Vi mile, turn right on Walt
Wilson Road, third house on
left. Baby bed. Monogram OU heater, chllds smaU
table, child’s wooden chairs,
Avon Botties, 2 sheets of metal 48" wide, Inch tiilck
and 10' long and MUCH
MORE! Saturday, June 27,
ONLY, 8 a.m. - 3 p.m.
2 FAMILY YARD
SALE....Satiu-day, June 27,
ONLY , 9 a.m. until -? A lot
of great bargains. Country
Lane Road. Watch for signs.
CanceUed if raining.
YARD SALE....Big 6
family.....Friday afternoon
and Saturday morning, June 26 & 27. Sofa, chairs,
sewing machine, bicycles,
Jeans, clothes, toys, old dishes, curtains, what-nots.
Lot of good buys and
BARGAINS! Take 64 West to Sheffield Road, go I'A
miles. Watch for signs. Fri.
5 p.m. - 8p.m.. Sat., 8 a.m. -
12 noon. At the home of
MUton Tutterow.
PARKING LOT AND WAREHOUSE
SALE....Surplus, wood
working tools, equipment, supplies, solid oak maple,
and pine kiln dried wood to
build your own tables,
chairs and other fiiralture.
Also glass, fabric, carvings,
sample patterns and otiier
items. Fri., June 26,12 noon
- 7 p.m. and Sat. June 27, 9
a.m. - 3 p.m. Tanglewood
Fura. Co., Inc. Hwy. 158, 3
mUes west of 801 near Smitii
Grove. (919) 998-2216).
Compounded Itaily
a b o u t B B & T i m e s h n e i it
c e r tifk a te b th e r a le y o u (o n g e t
n o M b lh e g r e a t t h in g IS lh a t y o u c o n h e e p
t h a t r a te Ib r tn e n e x t 2 v iy e a r s .
That’s right. If you act now^, you can lock in that rate
on our new 2 V2 -year investment certificate.The available
rate changes each month, so hurry. Once you’ve bought your
certificate, your rate is fixed for the full term.
The minimum deposit is just $500. Federal regulations
require a substantial interest penalty for early withdrawal.
BB& T
— N O TICE —
Effe c tive -Ju ly 1,1981
D r. Francis W . Siate will
be practicing surgery as a solo
pract It loner, at his present
location on Hospital Street.
His new telephone num ber
w ill be 634-6121.
IM V lli r O l IN T Y r.NTllRPRiSr R T T O R P , T IU I R S D A Y . .IIINt:
I WILL NOT be responsible
for any debts olher than my
own.
iRoy C. Beauchamp, Jr.
Rt. 1, Advance, N.C.
27006
ANIMALS
FOR SALE: AKC Chow Chow
puppies, female, 8 weeks
old, red, 36 Champion Sired,
$175. Phone 919-475-8490.
6-4-4tnB
FOR SALE: Riding Jackete
100 percent polyester , fully
lined. Sizes 8-14. Blue,
brown, Green $17.50
THOROUGHBRED
TRAINING CENTERS 998-
5820.
6-ll-3tnTTC
FOR SALE: Female Poodle 9 weeks old AKC Registered.
CaU 998-6061 after 4:30.
6-25 ItnpK
LOST: a tan Chihuaha with
Forsyth County tags, lost in
the Center area. A reward is
offered. If found call 492-
7646.
6-25 ItnpA
FREE BEAUTIFUL; Long
and short hair kittens
dewormed, litter trained,
good disposition for good
home. Call 998-5358.
6-25 ItnN
CARD OF THANKS
CARD OF THANKS Doug and Dale Wall would
like to express their deepest appreciation to everyone
who said a prayer, sent a
card, or gave an en
couraging word during
Lisa’s stay in the hospitel.
Illnesses are much easier to
cope with when there are
firiends such as you! Thanks
a lot for everything. lisa is
now back home; and is
doing just great!!!
6-25 ItpW
CLEVELAND
The family of the late
Louise Kemp Cleveland
would like to express their
sincere appreciation to everyone for tbe cards, flowers, food and gifts of
kindness during the un
timely deatti of our loved one. May God bless each of you in a very special way.
Family of the late Louise Kemp Qeveland
fr-2Sl^
LY GARBAGE «There in Davie County... call BECK
BROTHERS GARBAGE
DISPOSAL SERVICE, 284- 2917 or 284-2812 Cooleemee,
or County Manager's Office,
Mocksville 634-5513.6-12-«! tfnB
T a k e ®
. s t o c k X s i /
i n ^ ^ ^ e r ic a .
WANTED: TRACTOR-
T R A ILER DRIVER
TRAINEES. Immediate
openings full or part-time.
Approved for the training of
Veterans and National
Guards. Call (919) 996-3221
or write: Kernersville
Truck Driving School, P. O.
Box 385, Kernersville, N.C.
27284.
5-7-8tnKTD
HELP WANTED: Home Sewing. 100 people in this
area to do sewing in their home. Good income. All
ages accepted. Free in
formation, write CSC, Arts
and Craft Dept., 200 N. Main
Street, Corbin, Kentucky,
40701.e-18-3tpCS
Information on Alaskian and
Overseas Employment.
Great Income. Call: (602)
941-8014, Dept. 5806. Phone
call refundable.6-25 4tp
HELP WANTED: To be production workers, In
terest Micro Film Company
located in Winston-Salem
now hiring on 2nd shift for
camera operators. In
terested women and men
apply in person at Decodex
1105 Fair Child Drive week
days 9 a.m. -4 p.m., receive
$3.45 per hour while
training.
6-25 ItnK
NO EXPERIENCE
NECESSARY; Just a
friendly personality. Call
us, we’re Avon. Call collect
919-679-2907 or 91&<79-8234
or write Peggy Long, Rt. 3,
Box 57, Yadkinville, N.C.
27055,6-25 ItpL
Will hire High School or
CoUege students for the summer. Direct Sales, good
income caU Saturday only 9
a.m. - 3 p.m. 634-5515.6-25 2tpT
HELP WANTED; Someone to
run Jobe and do lead car
pentry work. CaU (919) 294-
6070.6-252tnpD
Butlneu Opportunitiw
If you’re thinking of
SELLING A BUSINESS??? Or BUYING A
BUSINESS???, Call the
PROFESSIONALS. All information confidential.
CaU Professional Business
Brokers at (919) 765-7121.
3034 Trenwest Drive,
Winston-Salem, N.C. 27103.
2-26 tfnPB
DIVORCE
UNCONTESTED DIVOR-
CE....$60 plus court cost. Conference room No. 3
HoUday Inn West, F^day,
June 19 from 7:30-8:30 p.m. $75 plus court cost if you
prefer to come to the offlce
located in' Clemmons.
Edward Y. Brewer. Atty.
CaU 919-7664281.1-31-81 tfnB
FOH SALE Custom frames
any size ,,, expert workmanship ... over 75 samples
on display ... see at
CAUDELL LUMBER COMPANY, 1238 Bingham
Street, Mocksville, Phone
6,'}4-2167.
4-24 fll tfnC
FOR SALE: BeauUful hand
made quilts, aprons, spread,
placemats, Barbie doll
clothes for your Christmas
gifts; inexpensive jewelry,
dolls, Bibles, perfumes, etc.
Trash 4 Treasures. CaU 634-
2610.
10-30- tfnTT
WILL BUY diamonds and
gold. Don’s Music Center.
124 North Main Street,
Mocksville, Phone 634-3822.
2-5-81 tfnD
Mocksville Builder’s Supply
now has RINSE ’N VAC
carpet steam cleaner. Only
$12.50 a day. Contact
MocksvUle Builders Supply
at 634-5915.
1-10 tfnMBS
We buy Mortgages, 1st, 2nd, or 3rd. CaU 634-3596.
4-30-tfnSD
BUY...SELL...OR
TRADE....Or Repairs for
Lawn Mowers and TUlers.
CaU 492-5633 at anytime.
6-11-tfnG
FOR SALE: SoUd Cherry
Bedrcom Suite, 2 twin beds
and dresser with mirror,
excellent condition, $600.00.
Sofa and chair in good
condition, $600.00. Call 998-
8003.
6-ll-3tnT
FOR SALE: Sylvania color
T.V. & Rotary antenna,
exceUent reception, UHF
feature - $350.00; Vinyl Sofa
and vinyl rocking chair,
needs covering - $50.00;
Seigler oil stove with
thermostat control - $75.00; 21 inch G. E. portable T.V.,
black and white - $50.00. CaU
284-2958 anytime.
6-18-2tnB
FOR SALE; 15 Ft. Crosby
Freezer. In Excellent
Condition. Please CaU; 998-
3294.
6-25 ItpP
FOR SALE: Finest, Multl-Ply
' stainless steel, 20 piece
“Waterless” Cookware.
Compare at $600-$700.
Limited offer. Only $395.00.
Finance terms avaUable.
CaU 634-3395.
6-25 ItpJ
BABY SITTING.
N.C. Licensed Day Care: For
chUdren 2 years and up.
EnroU at Kiddie Kampus
Playschool. Offer year-
round program for pre
schoolers. Also accept
school-age chUdren, through
12 years. FuU or part-time
care with morning kin
dergarten program. 2
snacks and hot lunch daUy.
CaU 634-2266.
4-16 tfnKK
Would like to keep chUdren in
ri Sister Katherine t e l.
^ B Faith Healer and Adviser 873-9189 .(j MiricleKealer
ONE QUESTION FREE BY PHONE
Advice on health, lov«. marriage, bu$ineu, etc.
Private oon$ultation$ She quarantee$ to remove
bad luck and evil influence$. A vi$it to her will be
of immen$a value to you. Re$u!t$ quarantaed.
Open daily and Sun. 9 a.m.- 9 p.m..
SALISBURY ROAD' STATESVILLE
1 Mile Ea$t of City Limit$. Look for Sign$.
my home. CaU 634-5023.
S-28-tfnP
CHILD CARE; Experienced
chUd care in my home, aU
ages accepted, fuU or part
time, $20.00 weekly. Located
on Davie Academy Road,
(Junction Road). For more
information caU 284-2742.
6-4-4tnB
DAV CARE FOR VOUR
CHILDREN...? a.m. - 6 p.m.
FuU-time or by the hour.
Highway 158 across from
Smith Grove Community
THE O A KS
268 M illin g Road
Private Patio, and all modern convenieces,
at a very affordable price.
7 0 4 - 6 3 4 - 3 1 8 5
day or or night
Center., excellent care.
CaU: 998-393b.
. 6-11-tfnK
Brick and 8lonwiiw>rfc
FIREPLACES, BRICK AND
Stonework...Extension and
Carpentry work done.
FREE estimates. RMF
Construction, Inc. Call 908-
3907.1-10 tfnRMF1 Claiiiimd AOi OO itio't u-ifiy!. loi 1 1 'nuie |>eupie lhan uirie' 1 1 fi>rrnuliid>ert.&ifiu I
$$ VEHICLE BARGAINS $$
Jeeps, Cars, Trucks
Available thru government agencies In your area. Many tell for
under $200. Call 602-941-8014 Ext. 5806 for information on
how to purchase.
SPO T C A SH
FOR CLEAN LATEMODEL AUTOMOBILES.
AU MAKES MODELS AND SIZES NEEDED
B U Y—SELL—RENT—TRADE
A NAME YOU KNOW AND TRUST
D U K EW O O T EN
SALES-RENTALS
NIXTTOClTyHALl. 634 3215-634 2277
‘ * «SPECi AL^ * ’* 1.50 ft. INSTALLED SEAMLESS ALUMINUM GUTTER
Ruat Fiee No L«»ki
!5 yr. l aclory Baked on
Enaiiii’l I'iniiih
ALL WORK GUARANTEED
FREE ESTIMATES
998-8605
Bishoff
Aluminum Gutters
Mocksville
Lei the Professional Hookkecpcr Walkertown, N.C, do your bookkeeping,
clerical work at her home
office. She will save you time & money, 12 years
experience. Fast, dependable, accurate. Phone
collect at 919-595-2549, after
4:30 p.m, for an ap
pointment,
5-7-tfnG
FOR FAST AND EFFICIENT
SERVICE: On all electrical
needs, large or smaU, caU
Karl Osborne, owner of
OSBORNE ELECTRIC
COMPANY. Call 634-3398.
230 East Maple Ave.,
Mocksville, N.C,1-8 tfnO
lnve$tigation$
Private Investigations
Will be stricUy Confidential,
Lie, No. 320, telephone:
Salisbury (704) 636-7533 or Kannapolis (704) 932-5705.I-1-81 IfnL
ABORTIOM
FREE Pregnancy testing.
Arcadia Women’s Medical Clinic in Winston-Salem,
N.C, Call for an ap
pointment Collect: (919)
721-1620,
1-1-81 tfnAWC
CLEANING
C&C CLEANING SER-
VICEDon’t spend your
Saturdays doing house
cleaning or windows. Just
call us for an estimate. Also
construction cleaning. CaU
998-5616 or 634-3163.
1-29-81 tfnC
FURNITURE
FOR SALE: aU types un-
flnished chairs, stools of aU sizes - upholstered swivels, deacon benches, aU kinds of
used furniture; and a good supply of NEW name brand matresses at a reasonable
price and 3-piece living room suits at a tiargain. AU
sizes of rockers and chairs.
CaU W.A. Ellis at 634-5227.
II-20 tfnE
BROYHILL bedroom with Queen Bedding. Sale Price - $550...$2Q0 off on floor
sample brand new BrojiiiU wahiut furniture - dresser twin-mirrors, 5 drawer
chest. Queen Headboard witti Queen mattress and
foundation. Easy payments
arranged - Free delivery.
Ask for “Queen BroyhUl” at
StatesvUle Salvage & New
Furniture - across P.O. or
caU 872-6576 - StatesvUle, N.C.
6-25 ItnpSSF
SAVE $200 BroyhUl Bedroom -
Floor sample price $575. AU
new maple BroyhUl TOple
dresser; Hutch shelf
mirror, 5-drawer chest
poster and footboard - Easy
payment plan - ask for
“Floor Sample” at
Statesville Salvage & New
Furniture. Directly across
Post Office or caU 872-6576 -
StatesvUle, N.C.
6-2S2tnSSF
Burglar & Fir*
UNITED ALARM COMPANY
OFFERS you aU the options for complete security in
case of fire, burglary and
personal emergency. CaU
today for a FREE estimate
for your home or business.
Phone (»4-3770.
4-24 tfnB
UPHOLSTERY
OFFERING YÒU THE
FINEST in custom
upholstery...Large selection
of Quality Fabric and
vinyls. FREE estimates.
Quick, effective service.
CaU J.T. Smith Furaiture
Co., Inc., 492-7780. Located
10 miles west of MocksvUle
on Sheffield Road. Over 30
years of experience.
- I I. . m a s r ,
MAGICIAN
MAGICIAN...Children love
magic! 'Professional magician for birthday parties, etc. CaU today for
fees and dates. “You’U be
pleased ! ! ! ” Phone : 634- 2200. Mark Daniel, 416 Park
Ave., Mocksville, N.C.
27028.
_l-i! tffp.Earle’s
OFFICE SUPPLIES
ri20 North Chur^b St.
iSaiitbu^, N.C.
^Bione 636 2341 Office Supplies,
Furniture, Systems
Art Supplies
FOR SALE: 1965 Taylor
Mobile Home..12 X 60 ..2
bedroom, 1 bath, un-
derpenning...2 porches...oil
drum and stand. CaU 998-
3902 or 998-3291.4-30-tfnJL
FOR SALE; 1973 Madison Mobile Home, 3 bedrooms, I'/z baths, new carpet,
washer and dryer, central
air. In excellent condition.
CaU: 998-3526 after 5 p.m.
6-18-tfnS
Mobile Hornet
FOR RENT
FOR RENT: 2 bedroom
traUer, 10 miles east of
MocksvUle on Highway 158.
No pets, wUl accept chUdren
under 2. CaU 998-4584.
6-18-tfnR
MOBILE HOME FOR RENT:
3 bedrooms, expando living
room, 1V4 baths. References
required, moral tenants
only. Between Mocksville &
Winston-Salem.
Reasonable. Call 284-2964,
evenings.
_____________________6-25 tfnM
ROOMS FOR RENT
ROOMS FOR RENT.^Apply
at Don’s Jewelry and Music
Center...124 North Main
Street, Mocksville, N.C.
Phone 634-3822.
1-11 tfnD
Mu$ic. Tuning ft RapaW*
PIANO TUNING, REPaiRo,
moving. Specializing in
rebuilding. Registered
Craftsman with Piano
Technicians Guild. Seaford
Piano Service, 178 Crest-
view Drive, Mocksville,
N.C. CaU Jack Seaford at
634-5292.9-25 tfnS
PIANO TUNING: Repairing
and Rebuilding. 22 years
experience. All work
guaranteed. PIANO TECHNICIANS GUILD CRAFTSMAN. CaU WaUace
Barfoni at 284-2447.
3-541 tfnB
v a c a t io n p r o p I r t y
FOR RENT
FOR RENT: MYRTLE
BEACH CON-
DOMINIUM...New, sleeps 6, Cable T.V., Pool, Jacuzzi,
and ALL conveniences. Call
(704) 637-3276.
___________________6-254tnpM
Auction
AUCTION SERVICES:
Auctions don’t cost they
pay. For any type of auction
sale contact Buck Hanes,
Auctioneer. 919-998-3610.
NCAL 1362.
9-25 tfnH
WE CONDUCT ALL TYPES
OF AUCTION SALES. We
are now contracting sales
for Spring and Summer of
1981. Call Jim Shsek,
Auction & Realty at 998-3350. NCAL 924.
3-5 tfnS
AUCTION
W* Offtr Complat* Auctton
Ii.RmI Estate Strvlct
With Tht Know How And
Exptrltnct To Conduct Any
Typt Of Auction
Succttsfully
"Serving The Auction
Profession Since 1934
Thinking
A u ctio n ?
TH IN K
YORH
♦ C llL t'<
N.C.A.L.NO. 952
704/546-2696
^ ^ ¿19/76e«500^
I'OR SAI.E: Remodeled nice home inside and out at
North Main Street in
Cooleemee, N.C. 3
bedrooms, 2 full baths, large living room, kitchen has built-in oven, drop in range,
dining room or den, utility and pantry. New oil furnace
with air conditioner and
paved drive. CaU 634-5918 office; and 634-2849 home.
2-5 tfnF
FOR SALE 1. Beautiful
Remodeled Farm House
near completion, almost 3
acres of land, paved drive,
fireplace and separate
garage. Only $36,000. 2. New
3 bedroom Contemporary
Home, IMi baths. Only 5
percent down payment with
low interest rate financing
available for qualified
applicants. CaU: 634-2252.
5-14-tfnS
FOR SALE BY OWNER; 3
bedroom Brick House, % Acre lot; fully carpeted,
central air, fuU basement;
Double carport; Out buUding storage shed; 601
North, Priced toseU FAST
7Mi Assumable loan. Phone
(704) 492-5679 after 4 p.m.
5-28-tfnS
FOR SALE: RESTORED
FARM HOUSE WITH
ALMOST 3 ACRES OF
LAND....4 staU horse bam,
fenced pasture, 4 fireplace
and aU the Charm you could
ever ask for! $78,500. Judy
Snyder at Oowder Realty
Company, yrinston-Salem,
N.C. Phone (919) 768-1200.
6-4-4tnCR
FOR SALE BY OWNER: 3
bedroom brick rancher,
fenced yard, paved drive,
storm windows, newly
decorated, exceUent con
dition, assumable loan at 8
percent priced to seU, at:
625 Cherry Street, Moc-
skviUe, N.C. CaU634-5607 for
an appointment.
6-U-54>H
FOR SALE BY OWNER: 5
room brick house on 2 lots
including remodeled kitchen, 2 bedrooms, bath wiUi ceramic ti'.e, spacious Uving
room-dining room com
bination wiUi fireplace, den or third bedroom newly
carpeted. Property includes frontage on 2 streets, fenced-in yard, garden plot,
utiUty buUding. House includes draperies In den, bedrooms and Uving room,
air conditioner, bookcase- storage unit in den, attic
storage. Exterior wood
covered in vinyl siding and
aluminum trim. Moi^age
balance assumable. Ex
cellent location. 618
WiUcesboro Street. CaU 634-
5478 or 634-3259.
6-18-tfnF
FOR SALE: 7 room nice
redwood home located Hwy. 64 near Davle-Iredell County Une, 3 bedrooms, 2V4
baths and 2,250 square feet. $45,000. Call; 634-5200.
6-25tfnV
HOUSE FOR SALE: 1 acre,
full basement, heat pump, 2
baths, 3 t>edroomE, carport,
2 fireplaces, large garden,
dishwasher, range, assumable loan 9 percent, $40,000. CaU (704) 492-5636.
6-25 ItnS
WANTED
WANTED: To rent a house or
mobile home in MocksviUe.
CaU 634-2822.
6-25 2tnN
ITPAYS
TO ADVERTISE
IN THE CLASSIFIED
CARPET
D ry Cleaning
14^« (quart foot,
bathroom! $5.00
Call Anytlmt,7 Days a Wttk
MARK JAMES
Rt.S,Box2l7-A
Mocksvillt, N.C. 27028
(9.9)998-3546
D A V IE
M O B ILE H O M E REPAIRS
IF YOUR HOME HAS
* Weak and Rotten Floors
*Cabinett That Are Mot Secure
* Windows That Won't Roll Out
* A Roof That Leaks and Rumbles
* Windows and Doort That Leaks
CALL TIM, evenings after 4 p.m.
and weekends anytime.634-3334
Don't let the value of your home go down hill.
CALL TODAY
PAINTING, HOME REPAIRS, Small or large jobs. For free estimates call James Miller at 998-8340.
12-28 tfnM
SEPTIC TANK CLEANING
SERVICES...certified to
pump septic tanks-large
truck for full time, efficient
service...also rent sanitary
toilets...Call 284-4362.
Robert Page, Cooleemee.
1-1 tfnP
Bob’s Painting Ser-
vice..Interior and Exterior
all work first class, 30 years
experience, free estimates. CaU 492-7588.
5-21-tfnS
CARPENTRY-f -l-Porches,
Sun Decks, Patios, Roofing,
Additions, Remodeling,
Fence Work, Also concrete
Driveways and sidewalks.
Reasonable prices. FREE
Estimates. Call anytime
and ask for : Charlie. 998-
6016.6-11-tfnF
Land For Sale
FOR SALE: 10 acres of
Land....located in the Davie
Academy community. CaU:
492-7451.6-18-tfnC
FOR SALE: 1978 Lincoln Continental, Cartier
designer series. Beige, loaded and in excellent condition. Call: 6.34-5316.
6-11-tfnS
FOR SALE: 1980 Citation, 4 cyl., 4 speed, AC, PS, PB,
dark blue with camel in
terior, over $1500. in objects.
Like new, $6,100. Call: 634-
3546, Ext. 376 or 634-2517.
6-18-2tnD
FOR SALE: 1949 Red Belly
Ford Tractor in Good
condition. $1350.00. Call- 634-5543, after 5 p.m.
6-U-tfnB
SURPLUS JEEPS, CARS
and TRUCKS, available.
Many sell under $200.00.
Call 312-742-1143, Ext. 5229
for information on how to
purchase.
6-25 ItpPA
FOR SALE: 197? 27’ Holiday
Rambler Travel Trailer, all
extras. Call 492-5264 after 5:30 p.m.
6-25 ItpR
FOR SALE: 1967 Dodge 2 ton
truck, Durham front end
loader with log forks, lewis
wrench and blade. Call (704) 492-5515.
6-25 tfnD
Farmington
The Farmington Com
munity Assn. sponsored a
“Love Tournament,’’ at the
Farmington BaU Field on
June 12th throughout the 14th.
A variety of food was sold at
this time. The proceeds were
very good. All proceeds were
given to help finance the
hospital expenses of Miss
Venus Reavis. Venus is the young daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Wayne Reavis of Far
mington.
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Webb
and son have purchased the J.
H. Montgomery home place.
They have recenUy moved
into the home. We are very happy to welcome them to our
community. We truly hope
thqr wUl enjoy living here.Vacation Bible School
began at Farmington
Methodist Church on last
Monday, June 15th. It con
tinued throughout the week.
Uiey gave a program last
Sunday the 21st, previous to
the 11 a.m. worship service.
Ttie program was very in
teresting and inspiring to
everywie.
Rev. Alvin Pope delivered
his last sermon at the
Methodist (]hurch on Sunday,
June 21st. His subject was
“Father’s Day Sermon.” The scripture lesson was Proverbs 22:1-6. Rev. Raymond Surratt
wUl be moving into the parsonage on Tuesday, June
23rd. He WiU hold his first service at U>e Farmington
Methodist Church on Sunday,
July 5th at 10 a.m. We all give a very hearty welcome to our new pastor. We hope he wiU enjoy living here in the
Farmington vUlage.
Mrs. Nell H. Lashley,
formerly of Fran-Ray rest home in MocksviUe is now a patient at the Forsyth
Memorial Hospital in Winr ston-Salem. She entered Forsyth Hospital on Tuesday,
June 17th. At this writing her condition was not too good.Rev. Fred C. Shoaf who had open heart surgery on June
18th at the BapUst Hospital in Winston-Salem, N.C. is progressing real nicely at Uiis
time. We hope he wiU continue
to improve. Our prayers are ever with him.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Lashley and daughter Mary
Spent last week at Myrtle Beach, S.C. They drove to the beach on Monday, June 15th and returned home on last
Friday the 19th.
Mr, Bobby Wood of Florida is now spending a few weeks
with his mother, Mrs. Hattie Wood and other members of his family here.
Mrs. Captolia Pilcher and
Mrs. Joanne Pilcher of Huntsville, alwi Mrs. DeUa
Lee Collette of Winston-Salem
were visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
W. ^^pillm^j^cMie^^ast
week. .
Miss Connie Harding left
last Sunday June the 21st for
Charlotte where she will be
enroute from there to Brazil
as an exchange student for
about 2 months. Connie is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H.
Ray Harding of Farmington.Miss Ruth Hartman of Columbia, S.C. spent last
weekend wiUi her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. John Hartman
Cornatzer
CORNATZER NEWS
W.H. “Bill” Jones un
derwent surgery at Baptist
Hospital Tuesday.
Magdeline Whittaker
recently spent a week with
her son. Bob Whittaker and
famUy in Davidson County.
Her grandson, Darwin, ac
companied her home to spend
a few days.
Lucille Potts has been
confined to her home for the
past two weeks because of iUness.
Our community extends sympathy to the famUy of Uie
late Notie Jones.,
Mr. and Mrs. Gray Jones
and children were Sunday
luncheon guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Joe Jones.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Frye and
chUdren and grandchildren
enjoyed lunch at Wink’s Fish
Camp Sunday to celebrate
FaUier’s Day.
Saturday night dinner
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Homer
Potts were Mr. and Mrs.
George Bowman of Rich
mond, Va. and Mr. and Mrs.
Derek Harpe of Farmington.
i i u m r
Livestock
Becklivestodl
^ Co., Inc. ;'
Ifholeuje Meats
thomasville,N.C.:
iwiu. BUV I or Too cows' f... also Bulls, Vtals, Fttdtrs, Clives... We Pay Cash For All Cattle Whan PIcktd Up.
WE WILL
Pick up ■ Kill - Process Your<Locktr Bttf ,
A.L Beck, Jr.
Ut. 1, Thomasville, N.CJ
Call Collect Anytimt Wlnston-Saltm
(919) 788-9008 or 788-7524
Phone After 6:00 P.M.,
t£ar1y AM. (919) 47&689S
Style Mart Inc*
410 West Side Drive Lexington,N.C. 27292
Has Immediate Opening For Personnel
In TheFollowinR Areas—
Cutting; Experienced spreader
and cutter.
Sewing; Overlock or serger operators.
Finishing; Inspectors and pressers.
Apply In Person Between 7:30 til 4:00 p.m.
I6B D A V IU C O U N T Y UNTtlRPRISK R K C 'O R D , T H U R S D A Y , J U N T 28, 1481
FFA Teenagers Carrying Out Projects To Aid Community Developmment
More than 1,500 small and rural
communitiefl will receive millions of
dollars in community development aid
this year, not from such traditional
sources as governmint, but from
teenagers.
The teenagers, members of the Future
Farmers of America, carry out projects ranging from reforestation to improving
emergency medical transportation as
part of the FFA's Building Our
American Communities program
(BOAC), sponsored nationally by R, J.
Keynolds Industries, Inc,
Teenagers in a community near
Daytona Beach, Fla., for example, have discovered a way to stop sand erosion that thi-eatened a local beach and could
have deiitroyed a nearby highway.In Kayenta, Aril., FFA members are
returning hillsides scarred by coal strip-
mining operations to their natural state. In Elma, Wash,, where nearly half the
work force Is employed In the state’s
forestry industry, about 200 teenagers are reforesting more chan 1,200 acres of
timberland.
Affiliated with the U,S, Department of
Agriculture, FFA programs such as
BOAC are carried out in high schools
through vocational agricultgro in
struction. BOAC works to improve the
quality of life in small and rural com
munities while building youlh leader
ship, In 10 years, FFA members have
undertaken more than 7,000 BOAC
projects,
“Farming today rarely offers the
Independent lifestyle it once did,” notes
Tea Amick, the FFA’s BOAC program
specialist, "Today’s farmer is an
agribusinessman who must work in a
complex environment with shrinking
resources to be successful-or even to
survive,"
"One of the benefits of BOAC is that
future farmers develop skills tc protect
agriculture interests," he says.
“•niere is a concern today with losing
land once used for agriculture, ' adds
Dr, Richard M. Thomas, professor of
community development and higher
education at Southern Illinois University at Carbondale.
Although agriculture is the nation's
largest industry, the USDA reports that
up to one million acres of farmland is
lost each year to urban and other uses.
"Urbanization isn't ull bad," Thomas
acknowledges, “but some of the bad
aspects, such as pollution and
congestion, are cropping up in formerly unspoiled places."
BOAC also tackles the problem of diminishing resources available for rural communities as they experience
growing pains. 1 or the first time since
1820, rural and i mall communities are
growing at a faster r.ite than the
nation's cities, tccording to the recent U,S, Census,
Assisted by ci rporate sponsor R, J, Reynolds Industries, Inc,, a company
with substantial interest in agrlcu ture through Its R. J, Reynolds tobacco and
Del Monte foods (ompanies, BOAC gives
attention to runl America in a way never done before.
Alcohol Inform ation R e p o rt
B y :AlCQ^LÍSií^ÜCA«^^
ANTABUSE - Antabuse Is
a plU which causes a person to
become violently ill when he takes a drink of alcohol. A prescription item, Antabuse
wM first used in the treatment of alcoholism in Den
mark in 1947.
When used in low dosage, Vi
to 1 tablet each day, reactions
due to aftershave lotion or
alcohol fumes are rare.
However, if you drink on this
lower doMge you will still
have a strong physical
reaction.
Antabuse works by in
terfering with the way your
bo4y handlei alcohol after the
alcohol gets Into your system.
It stops the breakdown of
alcohol at an intermediate
stage, causing the Antabuse-
alcohol reaction.
Antabuse reacts unfailingly
with alcohol and usually within 5 to 15 minutes after
alcohol ia swallowed.
Typically, the eyes redden,
the face flushes sharply while pulse and respiratory rates
increase. Later there may be
‘nausea, vomiting, shortening
of breath, low blood pressure
due to shock, and paleness,
which may last from one to
several hours.
The symptoms and signs
vary in direct proportion to
the amount of Antabuse in th:
bo<ty. The duration of the
reaction varies from 30 to 60
minutes to several hours in
the more severe cases, or as
long as there Is aloohcd in thehlo^.
Drowsineu follows, with
complete recovery after
sleep. Even after prolonged
reactions, no lasting effects are usually noted.Your physician is best
quallfled to determine the safety ol your taking Antabuse. It is not recommended
for individuals suffering from heart disease, serious mental
lUnMS, pregnancy, diabetes
A3va^gea of Antabuse
include: 1. Its elTects persist
fur at least five days after the
last tablet is taken. This eliminates drinking on im-
S. Antabuse is inex-
ive. A year’s supply costs
ess than a few bottles of hard liquor. 3. Antabuse can be started within 12 hours of the
last drink. This allows you to regain the protection of An
tabuse early after a "slip’’. 4.
It Is not addicting, Antabuse
must never be given to a
person who is drunk or
without his full knowledge.
It Is Important for you to
avoid alcohol even In
medicines. Any time your
doctor prescribes a liquid
medicine for you, remind him
that you are on Ar.tabuse.
When you have your
prescription filled, also tell
the pharmacist you must not
have any medicine containing
alcohol. It is important for
you not to drink from a punch
bowl and not to take drinks
when you don’t know their
contents.
If you should have an An-
tabuse-Alcohol reaction. It
would be appropriate for you
to call a doctor or go to a
hoq>ltal emergency room.
For additional information
about Antabuse, contact
Alcoholism Services at Tri-
County Mental Health.
(This series is prepared by
Bill Weant, alcoholism
education consultant with the
Tri-County Mental Health
Complex, 622 North Main
Street, Mocksville. These
articles are designed to create
understanding about
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.)
HOME
M/IPE
Make your own htrb v№-
•gar by adding outdated or waak-flavorad harbt
to ordinary eMer vinegar.
W h e n y o u h a v e 3 r o lls o f
c o lo r p r in t f ilm d e v e lo p e d .
Make sure you're ready for the fun this
summer! Get this neat combination tote/pillow
that’s ready for the action when you are. Just
collect one coupon each time you bring us a
roll of color print film for MasterCoIor
developing and printing. When you have 3
coupons, bring tfiem to us for redemption. But
hurry! This offer ends 8/31/81.
AvvlUbW w hlU tupply 1a«U.
Ü a s t e É O o t e
Film Develofiing
FOSTER-RAUCH DRUG CO.
WU KESBORO sr.
MOCKSVILLE.N.C.
Murray a y n a m a r f t
10 H P 3 6 " C u t
R id in g M o w e r
«844
Headlight», tlxtric Start
Lawnboy 20" Pushmowef MS9
W
WhIteWestinghouse
щ] All
I White-
Ul locationt petlUlpef» with ORANO OKNINO SnOAL MICIS in celebration of our 3 I now tioro* locotod In:
___________ASHEBORO, LEXIN GTON A N D M T. AIRY
. Jl
OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
REGISTER
FOR FREE
COLOR TV
No PwrcfiaM
Neceffory
nHP36"CMf
Riding Mower
’ ‘ 8 7 7ONLY W # #
with Headligh it and Electric Start
Dynmiirli 20” >u$hnow(r » » 4 "
" " ^ E r a i M - A I R
Bl
A S H EB O R O
Ì7S S. Faytltivill*
625-1494
Frauen
OnSoM
SAVE UP
" ^80
LEX IN G TO N
Hwy. 64 Watt
Acrof« from Uk.
Shopping СопГог 243-2471
/ИТ. A IR Y
Mayberry Mall
786-4151
V .
All Jenn-Air's ore
specliilly prictd
For T his Sole!
• 115 Volt • Single Speed Fan • Wash-
abt* Filter « Rust-Resistant Cabine*^
5 ,0 00 B T U /H R
A ir C o n d itio n e r
<«
ONLY 4 6 6
4iMira/M — H S T —
rjMm/ss
MM m/m $37*
1Ю Ш — H ____
W hlteV\fesllnghouse 3 Q Q Q g T U / H R
Air Condlitioner
•Money-saving Enerjy Saver Confroil
• Pov/er Saving Ran(ie On Thermostat]
• Two-way Air Direct! anal Louvers
ONLf *299
MICROWAVE SALE! i
ONLY
• Two 99 Min.
Cool(ing Cycles
• Ten-Level Push
Buttons
• Heat Control
*389
irC u .F f.
Frost-Free
R efrigerator
■ Optional Automatic Ic«-
maker
• Dual Tamperatur* Controls
‘544 WM
M A S N A )0 (
2 5 " d i a g . C o l o r
C o n s o l e
• AFT and Mtchonicol tuning• Mtdit. Stylo*599With 0*1« Trod*
CB LITTO N
• 35 Minute Timer
• Auto-defrost
• Oven interior light ,
*277
Whirlpool
W a s h o r - • 3 Auto Cycl*
Washtf • lorgt Copocit)r
Dry«r * • Lint Filtor,
• No Hot
Spots• 6van Flow
BOTH ONLY
Т й Ш Щ
23" diag. Color
C o n so le
• 100% Solid siotf • Powtr Stnlry Voltog**487 £
Ш LIT T O N
M o a l - l n - O n o
• 2 AAicrowav* Enargy Stir-
rart For Mor* Even Cooking
• Leti You Cook Many Com-
plet* Maoli At One*
*399
19'diag. Color
P o rtable
• In-l ne Black Matrix
• Auto Fina Tuning
19" diag. Color Portable
• Touch Pod Color • Coblt
Riody • Auto Fino Turing
• Wolnut Oroin Ooblnot» 4 4 9
ALL VIDEO RECORDERS ON SALE!!!
Video'
Director
• Spaad Saarch and Stop Action
•Э Оау Pratft • Waakand Sat
Ahaii t of Tima
• Oparota Vour Own TV Chonnal
• Built-in Timar ONLY
ОI
Ш
ÜBL
419
502
Spookor
• Low ffoqutncy
loud »pooitor, 8"
diog.
• High irtqutnc)^
loud tpaokor, 3"
dia.
• 10 80 wotti con*
tinuout tino wo.vo
ptr chonnol
Bota Cord
Video
Recorder
*595
S c o tc h T 1 2 0
B lank Tap e
*16.88
Manufacturer's suggested
retail $24.95
• Built-in Elactronic Digital
Ciock/timar that itarti at tha
timai you lalact.
Ю Л
Se le cta
v isio n
‘68S
CS1257
Turntable
• Fully Automatic
• Vario-balt driva
• Singja-play/
multi-ploy
*144
D u a l
2130 S. MAIN ST., SALISBURY 157 N. MAIN ST., MOCKSVILLE
637-3966 634 3165
MONDAY thru THURSDAY & SAT. 9-6; FRIDAY 9-9 MONDAY thru THURSDAY & SAT. 9-6;| FRIDAY 9-9
r SALISBURY . M OCKSVILLE • WJNSTON-SALEM • HIGH POINT • GREEN SBORO • EDEN
I i