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08-August
.-I’' I n d e x . P u b lic R eco rd s 6 W ed d in g s C 2 - C 4 D istric t C ourt 8 C alvin & H obbes C 7 . S u p e rio r C o u rt l O D avie D a telin e C 7 S p o rts B 1 -B 8 O b itu a ries C 9 Weekend Weather: P. Cloudy, D3 Frost Released From Hospital Man Charged W ith Shooting Deputy: Details, P. 7 Masons Planning 109th Picnic Food Needed, Committees Picked: Details, P. i , 6C D A V IE C O U N T Y Г so<t ENTERPRI/EI^ECORD U S P S 149-160 T H U K SIM V , Лик. 3. 1989 36 PA G ES ifwo Hurt By JQI^ects Thrown (From Vehicle A Salute To ‘Mr. Legion’ iBy Mike Barnhardt |p|Wje County Enterprtse-Record ■ Davie residents were in- f j l ^ ’last’week when, objects Iv ^ 'th iD w n at their moving llit o w oflier incidents of ob- i< %eing duown at vehicles |V ^ -a lio rqiort«l, and police ¡believe the cases m connect^, i Oh'July: 25.'PtoflaLi^oln^^ treated for a cut above the eye and released. ; About 10 minutes later, a full jar o f relish was thrown into a vehicle driven on U.S. 158 near O ak G rove Church. Thom as Daniel Rumple, 17, of Route 9, Mocksviile, the driver o f the truck, was taken to the Davie County Hospital where he was treated for a cut to the shoulder and released. I ■Route3j M ( ^ woiild have |tfÉ v é ^ eact'on UiS: |al№U'Üter'bottle of’Gatorade Iwaa'thréwn into the windshield lof'ter vehicle. . : ?S|ie was very luclQf,” said lD q [i^ Matt Dillon of the iDavte Coanty Sheriff s Depm- jmenti “She heard a loud noisei (and closed heir eyes.” Jolies was driving at SS mph Iwhen tte b ^ e hit, shattering jthe windshield oh die driver’s I side tind eiq>loding into the back I M»t, :piUoh said. Jones drove I tiw cu to the side of the road. She was taken to Davié Coun- Ity - Itopital where/she was given the suspects time to dr)ve finm U .S. 64 about two miles east o f M ocksviU e to the U .S. 158 location, D illon said. Bodt incidents occurred bet ween 11 p.m. and midnight. Sgt. Chuck Thanos reported that a ivll relish jar was thrown through an open driver’s sjde w indow 'of Rum ple’s vehicle. The jar iirst struck the rear view rjirror and crashed through the b^ck windshield. ^ The lid to the jar remained in the vehicle, Thanos said. nease See Objects - P. 8 'in the etat* champkmship at Whftevpl I team Friday/aiMlratiirnatoRiQhFarfcSiMu tthaNa- and Monday: 0«Wte;ini^nÍB6ui,< tplayafbr s 1 г....... __ -г,,.! F e e s C r e a t e F e a r O f D u i n i i s Fiiyt in a series- . ^ Kathy p ; Chaffin Oavi«;County Enterprise-Record It was nearing the end o f M a y when John Peeler discovered a truckload o f cotton scraps dumped ^ the Yadkin River boating access area o ff N .C . 801. “ This is typical o f what’s been happening around here,” Peeler said. “ This is just a dum ping ground.” ' Peeler walked to a nearby embankment and pointed to an old couch and chair, which ap peared to have been there for some time. But the pile o f scraps spilling from large, industrial-type trash bags, he said, was one of the more blatant violations o f littering. “ It looks like it came from one o f the factories in M ocksviile,” Peeler said, “ Som ebody ought to be responsible for picking it up, and it ought to be who produced it.” A m y Motley was driving toward her home on Godbey Road last week when she noticed gar bage strewn along the isolated dirt road. It was in plastic bags, she said, but some had torn, and garbage had spilled onto the sides of the road. “ The first place 1 saw it, it was down near the bridge,” she said. “ The second place was where there weren’t any houses. It was at a bend in the road.” M otley reported the garbage to Ihe Davie County Sheriffs Department, which sent a depu ty to investigate. “ I went dow n there with them to show them where it was,” she said. “ W e went through it and got a name, and they went to the people’s house.” W hat apparently happened, Motley heard kter, is that the parents had sent their teen-age son to the landfill with the trash, but he decided not to go to the trouble and dumped it along the way. The sheriffs department gave the fam ily un- Please See Residents — P. 9 Masonic Picnic Next Week ; W X n ?T V news anchor Rick Am m e will be the featured speaker at the 109th annual Masonic Picnic Aug. 10. : The picnic, held by Davie County masons, raises money for the Oxford Orphanage and the Masonic and Eastern Star Home. - ^ will speak at 11:30 a.m. Thursday after performances by the Davie High School band, the Oxford Orphanage Choir, and a Masonic and Eastern Star Home group. A picnic lunch will be spread at 12:15 p.m. ' A weeklong (Aug. 7-11) carnival, featur- ;ing amusement rides and games, will be held ■ k the picnic grounds behind die Brock Center Am m e .off North M ain Street. Rock & roll groups will perfomi on Monday and Tuesday : at 8 p.m., with The Purple Ushers on Aug. 7 and Destination on Aug. 8. On Wednesday, the Tupelo Dance Band will play at 8 p.m. Bluegrass and doggers will perform Thursday, with Farmington Bluegrass taking the stage at 6:30 p.m. and the Freestyle Swingers kicking up iheir heels beginning al 8 p.m. Gospel music by ihe Gospel Redeemed Singers is scheduled for 8 p.m. Friday, Aug. 11. C o o l e e m e e M a y o r a l R a c e H e a t s U p Cooleemee’s mayoral race is gelling a lot o f attention. Tw o challengers filed last week for the seal held by Bill G ales, w ho is se eking re-election. Cooleem ee's two incumbent lown com m issioners also filed for re-election last week, while a third Democrat is seeking election 10 the Mocksviile Town Board of Comm issioners. Jackie M orion, af 9 Rul'fin St., a member ol'lhe Cooleemce Tow n Board, is seeking election to the mayoral post. Morton, 62, said she will resign her town com m issioner position il she is elcclcd mayor. Debbie Spillm an, 36, o f Gladstone Road, also filed last week lor Cooleemee mayor. It is her fir.sl try al a political office. A s of Monday, two residents had filed for the two spots on the Cooleemee Tow n Board which voters will elect on Nov. 7. Incumbent Hayden Beck, 64, of 2 Ford St., and Denny Creason, 56, of 10 M arginal St., seek election to Ihe board. Creason, who unsuccessliilly sought a position on lhc boartl in the last election, was ap pointed to replace M cdlord Foster, who resigned. Cooleem ee elections arc non-partisan. In M ocksviile, Steve W alker bccame the third Democrat to seek a spot on the town board. W alker, 40, o f 118 Kelly Ave., joins fellow Democrats Jaines W all and Roy Cartner in the race Ibr the five com m is- Í. lleck Creason Spilhnan M orton I : sioner seats. Incum bent D .J. “ N ic k ” M ando, a Democrat, is the on ly Mocksviile resident to file for mayor. Please See Election — P. 8 E d it o r ia l P a g e Investment Will Keep Spirit Alive At Rich Park 2-DAVIK COUNTY KNTKKl’KISF. KKCORD. TIIUUSDAY. Aii|i. i. IWJ Dwight Sparks M ocksville native Robert R.idgc returned to visit relatives two weeks ago. He visited a few of the old haunts w hile here. One of them was Rich Park’s baseball field. “ It used to seem like Yankee Stadium ,” he said. Hundreds o f little boys have dreamed big dream s at Rich Park. Dream ed o f sm acking the ball over the 350-foot m arker at center field. Dream ed o f the ninth-inning rally. Dream ed of standing on the mound and m ow ing dow n batters in order. R ich Park still is just as good as Yankee stadium for those kinds o f dreams. The Green M onster grandstand is foreboding. A n d the hillside terraces m ake pretty good bleachers. But R ich Park faces a pleasant problem. It’s too small. C row ds attending the American Legion baseball playoffs keep grow ing beyond the wildest expectations. A n estimated 2,500 people attended one of the recent weekend games. T h is w eek’s state finals m ay top that. The grandstand — not everybody’s favorite accomodation — harkens back to the Great Depression. It has been patched and repaired countless times, and it doesn’t seat m any people. The hillside is full. ■ The crowding has prompted som e dream s that have nothing to do with homeruns and ninth-inning comebacks. Jim Bow les — M r. Baseball for the legion team — looked at the Green Monster: last week and offered his own vision: Tear it dow n and build a new, bigger facility that will handle the crowds. 'Dig.into:the hill and make a first-class grandstand. Baseball b Is re^merging as America’s favorite spon, and attendance will ;'continue to grow, he predicts. ' That will cost plenty. The Mocksville town commissioners . :have already said they are interested in making improvements. They have asked legion officials to submit a proposal. This marks the legion team ’s most successful year. Perhaps that’s noi the^best t ^ ' to g^uge how to make the improvements. How many would attend during a losing season? It’s my guess attendance would still be very good. Mocksville- Davie enjoys the backing of many rabid supporters. They go . to every gaine — even the away games. During the western division playoffs at Stanley — 60 miles away it seemed that David fans bumuinbered Stanley’s. , There was a time when the Masonic Picnic was the only oc cas io n al Khool children could see their friends during sum mer inonthsi.! Legion baseball has changed thati Hundreds of childKR attend. The variety is amazing. Girls, 14 or so, come : In semi-foni^ dreWs, coined and smeared in tnakeup, look- cooi'^]aloof as they stroll past, teenaged boys. Smaller tK^s wrainbie for foul t^ ls, tumbling over each other on the :hill for the rimaway baseball. Adults in their lawnchairs gob ble down hotdogs and swill Cheerwine. And jeer the umpire. ‘ ‘Moclosvme doesn’t realize how lucky it is to have something |' №e that," sud Jim Jojmsen of Clemmons. He comes to many Hof the gaiiie^t He coached some of the West Forsyth bbys in v Little Lekgue. ■ • iii DAVIB C O U N T Y \ ENtERPRI/^ECÖRD U SPS 149-160 124 South Main Street Mocksville, N C 27028 704/634-2120 Published every Thursday by the D A V IE C O U N T Y P U B L IS H IN G CO, Dwight Sparks Mocksvillc Enterprise 1916-1958 Davie Rccord 1899-1958 Editor-Publisher Cooleemee Journal 1901-1971 Sccond Class Postage Paid In Mocksvillc, NC 27028 Subscription Rales Single Copy, 50 ccnts S18.00 |KT year in Nonh Carolina S22,5() per year outside Nortli Carolina POSTMASIHR •Send address chanues to Bavie Counly Enlerprise-Record P.O. Box 523, MocksviUe, NC 27028 Grace Parduc Mocksville David Hege Mocksvillc M ike Garner Mocksviiie “ Sure, I don’t think it’s “ I personally don’t agree “ No, I don’t. I think the right.’ would.” Sidewalk Survey: with it and I hope they woman should have a choice, ing.’ Kitty Atwood Advance .‘ >‘j ‘Yes, that’s just my feel- Let it be an individual deci sion.’ Should The State Ban Abortion? Cartrell Woods Renee Kerr Woodleaf MocksviUe “ Yes, I do. It’s against my “ I ' think that’s an In- princlple.” dividual right.” ' L e t t e r s Tim W ortman .. I Mocksville < . .‘‘Yeh, there’s a lot of young kids running around that shouldn’t be pregnant.” Becky'Brown ^ ; M ‘‘No, I fed Uke < woman’s iniUvldiud \ \ ii ;i { Tlw atmosphere, the attendance, the hotdogs, the players... |.do;mi^^ iBh unusual contribution to what makes Mocksville ¡/special. In contrast, average attendance at the professional •1 Winston-Salem Spirits games is about 500. ;! ;■ How can the stadium be changed without destroying its i; character? The town’s pockets might not be deep enough for >;a full-scale expansion. But cultivating the spirit that has jiideveloped at Rich Park is certainly worth a serious inveslment. T o the editor: \ W ake up parents before it is too late. The proposal for grades^' 10-12 attendance policy before the Davie County School Board could adversely affect your child’s grade point average because o f the following clause: “ C ar trouble will not be accepted as an excused tardy.” I find the above clause unacceptable and ask that it be reword ed to allow the make up of w ork missed or else have it stricken from the proposal. A s it stands, this clause is detrimental to the student’s academic career record becau.se of the following provisions in the current proposal before the board: “ To be countcd present for a class, the student must be in at tendance for at least one-half o f the class period with a lawful reason for the half o f the class that is missed.” “ Law ful (Excused) Absences include: 1. Illness; 2. Death in the imniediale family; 3. Medical or dental appointments; 4. Religious holidays; 5. Local Health Department or State Board o f Health orders isolation (quarantine); 6. Judicial or administrative tribunal-party or witness (court, school hearing); and 7. Absence due to suspension.” “ Unlawful (Unexcused) Absences are: 1. A n y absence, other than absences 1-7 or llio.se not approved by the principal or prin cipal’s designee, will constitute an unexcused absence.” “ Class Credit” : Except for semester or grading period examina tions, major projects and term papers; work missed bccause of an unexcused (unlawful) absence may not be made up for credit. The student with the unexcused absence will receive a grade of zero on work nii.sscd.’’ The.se provisions can be inicrpreted to mean the following: Car trouble is an unexcused tardy and if one-half o f a class is nii.s.sed because o f this unexcused lardy, Ihc unexcu.sed tardy will becoine an unexcused absence. Therefore work misseil because of car trouble will receive a zero, riii.s niusi nol be allowed lo happen. I no longer have a child in this school system so the board’s '•I proposal will not affect my child. Last year my child droy^s'io 'I ^ school almost every day in order to attend school related acti^ties held either before or after school. My child couldn’t have taken the bus because the bus ^hedule is geared only for regular class activities. Not once was my child late to school because of w ; I trouble. . , I realize the board wants our children at school on time'aiid : that this clause seeks to insure their arrival with no excuses of: “ I ran out of gas ....” ,? 1 would have been at the school “ madder than a wet nest of hornets” if my child’s car had broken down and my child’s'^^; diness was unexcused under the current proposal. Most of us hivb had at one time or another some type of car trouble beyond our control (broken timing chain, fail^ master brake cylinder, d ^ battery). As parents, we should let the board know that we don’t want our children’s grades penalized for uncontrollable circumstances^ Carolyn Overcash '' Cooleemee Good Competition Would Keep Food Lion On Toes To the editor: - 1 saw in last week’s paper where Tom Smith, president o f Food Lion, says that food prices are the same in all Food Lion stores.' T o save an argument, let’s say that’s true. M y gripe with Food Lion is there’s never more than two cashiers on Friday or Satur day mornings. I work second shift and like to shop early, get home ami get housework done, and it really upsets me to be fifth or sixth in line. Maybe some good competition will get the store in M ocksville on its toes. Dorothy W . Coble Route 7, Mocksville D/Wii; COUNTY ENTKUl’KISK KliCOUl), TIIUUSDAY, Auj*. 3, 1989-3 Personalities Come Alive On Weekend Softball Trip W hen I agreed to help my brother coach a 15-ycar-okl '.Jjqjj’s softball team, I ihought it would be a breeze. ''■ ' K ly only other coaching cxpcrience was in . Benson, when I coached third and lourtli graders in basketball. Som e of the kid.s didn’t even know you were supposed to dribble the ball. ■But 15-year olds arc diflcrent. They ;dready know how to play ball. ■ >.T he team won the state tournament and ' ■ the-Enlerprise-Record (Thanks, Dwight) : agreed to send the team to Myrtle Beach, ; S.C. for the world tournament. : I went from Gatoradc getter to worried : stiff. 1 had been to M yrtle Beach before. 1 'rehiem bcred being 15. I thought about all '/thè .pressure of being responsible for 17 ^iòyed sons. The fingernail biting began. :':> The boys talked constantly about picking girls. They would go to the beach for a ::YeW hours and come back talking about how many girls jih’ey picked up. I think if they spoke to a girl and she spoke ••back, that was picking her up. ■ There was Bubba “ French F ry ” Coleman. H e sizzled on the field and off. H e was nervous too, and once threw the softball to an opposing team member standing on second Mike Barnhardt base. Bubba laughed. The umpire laughed. The other player .sneered. Bubba laughed some more. Jason “ W e e d" Garwood wasn't a worry. If he got into trouble, w e'd never find out. Real quiet, and smooth. And a real ball player. The legion baseball team may count on him some day. Randy Brewer: He was the only player on the team with more facial hair than me. Tough. Another good ball player. Jason M cCray: A real outfielder. Know s when to have fun and when to be serious. Apparently did well with the girls, too. Brian Jordan: Scares you to death in the outfield. Runs up and then stretches his arm as high as it will go to catch the ball. But il works. Can pick more W oodleaf tomatos in an houc than anyone on the team. A ndy “ Dr. D rew ” Everhardt: Celebrated his birthday with his best defensive game. A powerful batter. Distinguished. Dana Haneline: The fastest runner on the team. A good player with little experience. Keith “ A ir” Koontz: M r. Versatile, he could play any position. H is eyes got big at the Myrtle Beach sights. Robin “ Hot R o b ” Davis: Active, into everything. If anything happens, he knows about it. A n upstart writer. Joey Hare: Lefthander with a sly smile. Listens well. Darren Crotts; W orked hard behind the plate for the team — and on the beach for entertainment. Edw in Robertson: M akes other teams’ batters mad and umpires laugh with constant chatter behind the plate. Proud to bat 1.000 (I-for-1) for the tournament. Toby Kennedy: The big guy on the team, his bat woke up for the world tournament. Myrtle Bcach pizza parlors still haven’t recovered. Andrew Brock: D idn’t get much playing time in, but kept his spirits high. A lw ays smiling. A class act. Jasson Curtiss: A transported Californian who apparently knows how to talk to girls on the beach. He “ picked up” a lot. Jason Allen; Injured and unable to play, but stayed with the leam. Had potential to make us No. I. Josh Barnhardt: The youngest player on the team and the most daring. W asn’t afraid o f anything on the field. George Barnhardt: The head coach. Organized the team. M ade all the telephone calls. Lost sleep and pounds w orry ing about team, but provided!great experience for boys. Jeff Ennis; Assistaht coach' M r. Quiet until the team made mistake after mistake. He straightened them out, got loud. M ik e Barnhardt; Assistant to the assistant coach. Official Gatorade getter and glad to have been a part o f the state champion and national contending team. .! Hope to see you next year, guys. i 6 5 5 New Laws Passed By N.C. General Assembly B y Sen. Betsy L. Cochrane A s of July 20, the General | Assembly bad passed 655 new laws, and 30 r e s o lu t io n s | the same I bills filed t o ^ i o n . new bill I sit» W to that I ^ O M ^ is H EI Highway Trust Fund bill provide over $9 billion over 13>A years. Ipaying for more roads, sets up a growth- based mechanism for revenue for the Highway Fund. It also provides raises for teachers and state employees. All three of those features are good. However, some $335 million would be borrowed from the taxes increased in the bill to pay for Ihe salary increases for state employees. In two years, we will have to come up with the $300-$400 million plus more for continuing the salary increases. What we will have started is call ed deficit spending. Proponents believe future growth will cover this loss. Economists do not an ticipate booming growth, but a slow growth economy like this year. In order to raise the needed revenue, the bill raises the tax on gas by 5'4 cents. It replaces the 2 percent sales tax on vehicles, which has a $300 cap, with a 3 pcrcent vehicle use tax that would have a S I ,000 cap for four years. Then the cap limit would be raised to $1,500. Vehicle title fees would increase from $5 to $35. The sales tax on rental cars would be raised from 2 percent to 8 percent. The $300 limit on the 2 percent state sales tax on boats and aircraft would be rais ed to $1,500. Besides all these fee and tax in creases, another concern with the bill is the constitutionality of speci fying the roads in the law and spell ing out the timetable in the law. Some legal opinions were negative regarding this point. 1 strongly endorsed a new salary schedule for teachers. This two- year pay plan in H E 399 does not provide the recurring money for unfreezing the salary schedule. With all its warts, H E 399 pass ed easily. Vou should be seeing a lot of asphalt poured over the next 13 years, courtesy of North Carolina taxpayers. The Senate has also passed SE 831, the Scrap Tire Disposal Act. Scrap tires are contaminating fields and streams and filling landfills meant for garbage. The bill adds I perccnt to the sales tax on replacement tires. For a $100 set of tires, the tax would be $1.00. The resulting funds will be applied to the disposal of the old tires. It should help maintain the environment better by disposing of one waste product in a letter fashion. Methods of re using the tire material are en couraged in the bill also. The Senate has finally passed the change in the Open Meetings Law. The change in the law adds Ihe Legislature and the Council of State to the bodies that are covered by the statutes on open meetings. This law directs lhat meetings be bpen to the public and that votes be taken publicly. There are specified instances when en elected or appointed body may go into executive session, such as to discuss personnel matters. However, any binding decision as a result of lhat executive session must be made in public. The Senate policy states that the General Assembly will conduct business as all other public bodies. W e were delighted to have Dr. Francis Slate serve as Doctor of the Day. Dr. Slate’s friendly manner was enjoyed by all. A s a Mocksville Town Board member. Dr. Slate has interesting comments on Ihe legislative process. State Highway Package Not Perfect iC heering C am p P o ^ iv e In flu en ce h To Ihe editor: I ' ' i rUm writing to you in reference to the Davie County High School cheering camp. There were negative remarks made about the I ' weeЫong,callф that were disturbing. I was there every minute -pfihe ca^^^a^ must certainly say, we in Davie County are -fortunate to; a program such as this offered to our young girls. ' It ^h ci^ them team spirit, good sportsmanship attitudes, and сш{миШ>п^р,^^п^ mention cheers, chants and dances. .Ite PCHS vanity and junior varsity girls were kind, profes sional and spent a lot of time showing a group of anxious little ^ I s a w o ^ rfu l filled with learning and iiin. are those who will say, “ I spent $25 for my daughter to play red rover.” My reply to that is “If you had been at camp this week, you too would have seen that all the little girls there worked ha^ and learned a lot. All work and no play ..., well you kiraw dK rest of that saying. ' ■I, for one,- am grateful for this great opportunity and I thank c ^ h Young and all the varsity and j.v. cheerleaders for a great '^(^k. My daughter has “24 new best friends.” .H' -V Sherry Roberts ' Ram Cheerleaders coach Fo o d N eeded F o r A n n u a l P icn ic ^olheeditor: •;,;'piese are exciting days as we move toward the 109th Annual Masonic Picnic which is scheduled for Thursday, Aug. 10,1989. yie appreciate all that you have done and continue to do to make >^s event such a tremendous success. .,_^^We need to make this the best year ever. Vou can make this possible by bringing a well-filled basket. People from our area ^ the surrounding area, always speak ofthe abundance and the qii^ity of the food. Please help us to enlist others to bring food this year. It will be of great help to us if you will make a special effort to be situated at your table no later than 12:00 noon. This year we have beautiful blue on white ribbons for our basket con tributors. It is not possible to pay you for all you mean to this event, but we can share this token of our great appreciation for all you mean to us. We are sure that you are aware of the worthy cause for which all this is done. It enables us to help support the Masonic Or phanage at Oxford, North Carolina. This ministry has touched thousands of lives through the years. , If you arc unable to provide a basket of food, a contribution of money will be greatly appreciated. Please join us for the fun, food, and fellowship at this, the 109th Ma.sonic Picnic. Roy Harris Tommy Cornatzer Yoman Smith Co-Chairm en, Dinner, Tables and ' Basket Com m illcc B y Rep. Julia C. Howard The highway j package that ; passed was not ^ perfect and there was strong opposi tion to it, par ticularly in the area o f the ' transfer of funds. It has passed, however, and now we must take what has been given to us and make the best of it. One positive aspect of good roads is that they do promote com merce and new business. New roads as they are built, plus the commerce that will travel over them once they are completed, will create more jobs than all the social or welfare programs combined. We are much beuer off when we provide transportation or other tools for people to develop their in dividual initiatives and ambitions than we are funneling money into programs which pay for doing nothing or support lifestyles that make people less lhan Ihey can be. So while we do have some con sternation with the transfer of funds in the highway package, we do feel good about the positive aspects of Ihe highway package. A s for Ihe increase of taxes in two years, lhal really depends on what we, the public of Norlh Carolina, decide are the needs and which additional programs will be funded wilh the tax increase. There may be some programs already in place as priority items that we may feel are not needed. The bottom line is the lax increase in two years will be determined by the priorities of Ihe elected officials at lhal lime and the general public’s indication of needs and desires. The Appropriation Committees of both chambers are developing Ihe clean-up bill for the Expansion Budget, Tliis is generally ihe last bill to pass dealing wilh appropria tions. It cannot be passed until all funding is in place bccause an ap propriations bill lhal spends money not ycl approved or ratified into law violates our constitution, 'l'hcrelbre, the final appropriations bill will nol pass until all the tax bills have been considered. The tax bills remaining fo be considered are the tax-faimess bill, which may have been considered and passed by the time you read this, and the lottery bill. The tax- fairness bill is the one that tracks North Carolina taxes to federal taxes. You could prepare your federal tax return and pay your North Carolina taxes from that return. It gives a break to people making up to approximately $38,000 a year. Those making over $38,000 would pay an increase in taxes. The increase becomes greater as your income goes up to about $200,000 and then levels off. From the comments around the General Assembly, the uix-faimess bill has a good chance .of passing. Most of the opposition comes from people who say everybody should pay taxes. This is a valid argument but brings up the question of why would those working and paying for all of the social and welfare programs want to require the peo ple they are providing the funds for to pay taxes? It just means they have to pay more into the welfare programs so that the recipients can pay taxes. This is a vicious cycle the tax-faimess bill could help iis break by taking the people making less than $13,000 a year off the tax rolls and not requiring them to file a tax return. ’ A s for the lottery, there are the moral implications as well as the financial ones. I include moral because every debate includes the. moral aspects of gambling. Even if you argue for separation of church and state and want to look at just the financial portion of the lottery, you can go back and. check with the states wlw have had the lotteries the longest and find it is not as attractive № the people who promote lotteries wbiild like for us to think. ^ 1 • -i • • ’ . ;Thank you for your interest. J o i n T h e C r o w d s F o r n t l Z B S 1 0 9 th M o c k s v ille M a s o n ic P ic n ic At Clement Grove (Behind the B.C. Brock Bidg. N. Main Street August 7 Thru 11, 198 Gates Open 6 p.m. Til 12 Each Day The Famed Mocksville Masonic Picnic will be held August 10, 1989 program starts at 10 a.m. With Famed Dinner at 12:30 p.m. Tickets Available At Gate C o m e O n e , -4 G re a t T im e ! 4 __ Rides Furnished By Lee j r = j r = i r = j | = j r = j r = j r ~ 'j----‘I— ^ r = J n = J r = ^ P = J r = J r = ir = J r = J p = J ....I,; '■ 4—DAVIK COUNTV KN I'IÍUI’KISK KIXOUD. TIlUUSDA^'. Лчц. -V 1УЙЧ M a n F o u n d N o t G u i l t y O f D W I , T w o O t h e r C h a r g e s , By Kathy 0. CliiiflMi Davie County Enterprise-Record A Davic County jury tlelihcratcil for I'/j hour.s on July 18 belore fimling a Mocksville man m4 guil- • ■ 'ty of DW I. driving while license Í; revoked and failure to stop at the • ; scenc of an accidcnt. , Melvin Turner Sims. 46, of r; Route I had been chargcd with backing his Chevcttc into another vchicle in the parking lot of Davic ;County Hospital while intoxicated •: on Aug. 5, 1987, and leaving at a high rate of speed. '• Becausc this would have been in •: Ivioliition of a limited driving ; ’ privilege received after being con- ; ’ victed of DW I more than two years prior, Sims was sub.scqucntly chargcd with driving while liccnsc •Í revoked. I; Mary Lou Coley, emergency room supervisor at the hospital, i; was an eyewitness. .* Testifying for the state, Coley j' said she walked to the front door ,,of the hospital at about 7:30 p.m. ;;-;when someone told her something ’i- > a s going on in the parking lot. "1 observed a car being driven •Í ' in a very erratic, haphazard man- ■:;'ner,” she said. -; Coley said she recognized Sims t^iis the driver of the yellow Г ; Chevcttc. “ I knew it was Mr. i ; Sims,” she said. “ I knew he had Í 7 a family member in the hospital. ’ ’ Assistant District Attorney Gene ; 'Morris asked Coley if she had any • v'iioubt that the man she saw driv- irig the car was Sims, iiw i “ None whatsoever,” she said, i ’ l;»' Coley said she saw the Chevette, 'i -Vjvhich wa.s facing straight into what ¡'■'-y/as an angled parking space, pull ‘ . 'in and out of the same space several ;,^;times; ; •;;, Coley said the Chevette “hit the f' rtiother car (a Ford) and then im- F'hiedmtely sped away at a rapid ^ ''’ipeed ” 3 ’?,;;‘He hit (ttie other car) so Imrd 7, thttut moved,” shejsaid. '• с Coley said the Chevette left in ' ». ■ the direction of Hardees. “ I went inside añd told someone to call the poHce,” ste.-said. I ' : ' . »; Coley seW she wrote the license number/pii her hand. ' Coley; said Officer A.B. Hicks of the Mocksville Police Depart- ■ 'i m sntarriy^ at thehospiUiUnless ^ Jhah fiye minutes. She testified that X ;¡)he, tipld him what had happened, 'i;.r.3 nd he left;.. i, . ■^-T^UndeV cross-examination by t ‘jbefense Attoniey Wade Leonard, 'Jf'íEóley said Sims made no indica- ^ :tiqn that he saw her watching him r ^';.!!iñ]the parking space. “It was like , car was in iitral, and he was ^.-iBbpring it,’’ she said, “like he; was . ^ ‘^celerating it and it was not go- •;iiig in the direction he wanted it ,v; ¿ ;^f^sically just a little bump-up I in the parking lot,” Leonard said. ^ '^ ¿um p^iipH’- Coley ' . Jí;rest>onded.í/:>^-;;, , : < - Leonard aáked Coley if she had ' IcMknl at the ^ord to see if it was damaged. " ■ ■ , ; ‘‘There was no. visible damage ’i'to the Ford,” she said. SCoiey said Hicks came by the , hospital again later with Sims in his ^ :pátrol car and asked her if he was V ^ j the man she had seen in the Chevette. Coley said it was, and , J-! Hicks then told her to write up a I,; report of what she had seen, t-; ; Hicks, who now works for the ; ivi'Torsyth County Sheriffs Depart- ! ¡;í;:ment, said he was driving on I V*; Wilkesboro Street when he rcceiv- - Í éd the call to respond to the i Г hospital. When he arrived, Hicks ' Ч said he saw Coley and a couple •: more hospital employees talking in the parking lot. •: After Coley told him what had happened, identified the driver of I . the car as Sims and gave him the ;! license number, Hicks said he ;: glanced at the Ford and observed ;: a small dent in the back. ;• From there, Hicks got in his ;• patrol car and headed toward Hardees, the same direction in which Coley had seen Sims leave. С When he saw no sign of the vchi- ; cle, Hicks, who said he was ; familiar with Sims, drove to his ; residence on Hospital Street ; Uxtension. ; ' Sims was sitting on the froiu t • porch when he arrived. Hicks said. cd on Ihc caiport. Micks said, with Ihc right Iront lender loiichini; :i post. Hicks said he also observed Minic "brown, tioldish color" paint matching Ihe color of the l-oid on the Chevette's back corner bumper. When he approached Sims, Hicks said he lold him he needed to talk with him and asked him to step to the palrol car. "H e slood up and was walking across the yard," Hicks said. "A t Ihat time, 1 noticed his balance was unsteady.” When Sims got in the car, Hicks said he detected a strong odor of alcoholic beverage. “ As 1 began questioning him. he denied having been al the hospital,” he .said. “ He .said he had been home for an hour and hadn't been anywhere.” Hicks said Sim s' speech was slurred. “And he appeared to have some difficulty understanding just exactly what he had done,” he .said. Hicks said he asked Sims if he would ride wilh him to the hospital, and he agreed. When they got there, Hicks said Coley identified Sims as the man she had seen in the parking lot. “That’s him,” he said she .said. “ He was the one driving. There’s no doubt about it.” Hicks arrested Sims and took him to the jail for a Brcathalzycr test, which he refused to take. Based on his experience, M or ris asked Hicks if he thought Sims was appreciably impaired. Yes, Hicks said. Under cross-exam ination, Leonard asked Hicks if his client was cooperative. “ He was very cooperative,” Hicks said. Hicks said Sims stepped up to the machine and told Trooper R.S. Felton of the N.C. Highway Patrol, the officer giving the test, ; that he had been having breathing '■problems. Sims blew into the machine, he said, but it wasn’t enough for an , adequate sample. . Did Sinu say anything after that? ' Leonard asked. ' Hicks said Sims said he was hav ing chest pains. Leonard asked Hicks if Sims ap- p^red to have blown as hard as he could. “ He blew into the machine, but I do not personally feel that it was all he could have done,” he said. “ I,feel like he was basically try ing to beat the test.” Sims didn’t verbally refuse to take the test, Hicks said. Sims would act like he wbs blowing, he .said^: and “ then he would say, ‘That’s all I can do.’ ” ; Sims took the stand Monday afternoon in his own defense. When Leonard began asking him what had happened, Sims said, “You’ll have to speak up. 1 have a hearing problem.” Sims said he was at Ihe hospilal that night, that his daughter was a patient then and he had been to see her. When he got in his car to leave, he said the gears got hung up. “ 1 just let il roll back and forth to gel it unlocked,” he said. When he got home, Sims said he looked under the hood of the car, Ihen went in the house and drank . some whiskey and beer. “ The reason I drank it so fast was me and my wife had been hav ing trouble and I wanted to drink it before she got there.” Sims said he had also taken a Valium that afternoon becausc of a nerve problem. When Hicks arrived at his house and told him what Coley had said, Sims said he told the officer he hadn’t hit a car. When Hicks and Felton asked him to take the breathalyzer, Sims said he told them about the chest pains that he had been having all day. 1-our weeks hilcr. he said he was cliagiiiiscd as having pncmiKinia and emphysema. Doctors also linmd a lunior in his left lung lhal "liirneJ mil to he canccr." he said. Sims said lalcr that the cancer has since spread to his brain. Under cross-exaniinalion. M or ris asked Sims how much he had drunk. Over half a pint of vodka and two beers, Sims answered, "W hat did that beer, vodka, do lo your chest pains?" Morris asked. "N ot too much, it made il a lit tle worse." Sims said. Morris also questioned Sims about his leslimony in District Court that he hail not been lo Ihe hospital. During questioning. Sims admit ted Ihat he was limited lo driving between the hours of 6 a.m. ;md 8 p.m. bccause of a D W I convic tion more than two years before. "But I was not drunk when I was behind the wheel of that car," he added. Sims was the only one to testify for the defense. Testimony in the trial was held the afternoon of Ju ly 17, and closing arguments were heard the following morning. In his argument, Leonard con tended that Sims’ testimony that the gears were hung “ could be a reasonable explanation of what was happening” when Coley saw him in the parking lot. As for her testimony that he backed inlo a vehicic, Leonard .said most people have backed into a vehicle at some time or another. “ We probably noticed or maybe we didn’t,” he said, adding that some people may have noticcd, looked and saw that there was no damage and went on. “I’m going to suggest to you that (Sims) didn't know he hit the car,” he said. Even if he had, when Coley ex amined the car, Leonard said she said she didn't sec any damage. • Leonard said there was no' evidence of Sims failing to stop at the scene of an accident and argued that no one should be convictcd “ based on somebody's guesswork, somebody's assumption.” As for the D W I charge, he said, “ there is no evidence whatsoever that says lhal Mr, Sims was ap preciably impaired when he was driving this car out here in the hospital parking lot.” A s for the breathalyzer, Leonard contended Ihat it was possible his client wasn’t able lo blow hard enough for a sample. Leonard also contended Ihat more than a few minutes could have lapsed between Ihe time the accident occurred and the time Hicks showed up at Sims’ home. Sims said he went home and “chugged down some whiskey and some beers,” he said. “ 1 suggest to you that was after the fact, after he had left the parking lot.” When he was at the hospital, Leonard said Ihe state had submit ted no evidence of anyone having noticed him showing signs of be ing intoxicated. Under his limited driving privilege, Leonard said Sims was wilhin his rights to be driving at 7:30 p.m. If he had been drinking at the time, Leonard said that would have been in violation ofthe permit. But can anybody be sure that he was? he asked the jurors. " I ask you, 'How do you know?' ” he said. "Y o u know he did when he went home.” Morris, in his closing argument, asked the jurors to consider the testimony. “ M rs. Coley didn't have anything to gain by telling you what she said here, she just told you what she saw,” he said. Morris said he could underslaiid if the jurors were sympathetic with Sims because of his illnesses. "I'm sympathetic with the defendant," he said. riic law. Ii(iwc\cr, is lo lic ap- plicd c(|iially. he said. " A lol iif pcoplc are in a syiiipalliclic posi- tidii in Ihis lil'c." As l'or ilic liicalhaly/cr lesi. Morris said. "Il um 'vc gol cnough lircalh lo gel iip and walk aroiind, you can providc enough brealh Ibr llic bicallialyzcr," Morris said Sims had covered hiniscir in his icMimony in cach (ine ol'lhe olTcnscs "if you'll sec whal this man is doing." "H e knew he hit the car." lie said. When Sims Id! the parking lol al a high rate of speed, "all that shows is lhal he knew whal he hatl just done." he said. Morris argued that Sims pro bably knew sonicbody had seen him and was afraid he would lose his limited driving privilege "bccause he was driving wilh alcohol in his system." Morris said Coley's testimony that Sim s’ vehicic was parked straight in an angled space and Hicks' testimony that his car was parked up against the carport post was indication of his intoxication. ‘Why did the oflicer lell you that if it isn't .so?" he asked. - The Chevette, which had a : license number matching the one Coley liail copieil down, was park- IN PAIN? Chiropractic works without drugs or surgery. WHY SUFFER? Call today for consultation 634-2512 D A V IE C H IR O P R A C T IC C L IN IC but wiiKestioro street Mocksville, N.C.I’iml K. OiM. n.c. DAMI'. C'OUN T'i’ KN TKUl’RISK UIX'ORl), TIIUKSDAY, All)-. 3, 1989-5 P l a n n e r s L o o k i n g A t P l a c e m e n t O f M o b i l e H o m e s By Karen Jarvis , ', Davie County Enlerprise-Record Where should matmfaclurcd homes be in Mocksville? “ It’s really a dilemma,’' Zoning Officer Jesse Boyce lold members . o f Ihc Mocksvillc Planning Board . last week. Board members are reviewing a proposal for a maniifaclured hous ing overlay di.strict in Mocksvillc. “The difference between an overlay district and a traditional ; ■ district is lhat permitted uses in an ; overlay would include uses in ; • underlying dislricls,” .said Town ; '• Planner Steve Leary. ; ■ Overlay districts would allow ; class A and class B manufactured ; homes in designated residential i ’ areas, said Leary, r The article Leary introduced to ^: board members July 27 staled the ; ■ purpose “ is to provide for the ;■; development of affordable housing j';;in establi.shed residential zoning ’;i'districts while maintaining the .'•:overall character of those 'districts.” “It’s a new idea,” said Leary. ;-;“lt will take a little thought and ; -;may be something we don’t want :;:to do.” ; ; Only certain areas of Mpcksville :' '.would be considered for use as an '.'^overlay district. - Leary said the board could ap- ii iprove it as an idea but wouldn’t !-:^ve\to create an actual overlay rifdistrict.m ; “We have to draw them on the i vjtiap before they are teal,” he said. ¡'i^“:’niey only exist where we allow ;i; “ We’re not saying tlus is the, - ;>>'ay to go, but it's an altenutiye ;llo the way we’te doing things. ;:jiow-" - /Leary said the intent of the j'r])veTlay district is to.ensure com- J-Jwtibility with existing housing. .:-;j, Boyce and Leaiy agreed, there to optioos for pfople in '^‘(fetermining where th^ can live ;|»ind what they can afford; ,‘.‘I know a lot of pe^e w(^idn't ^'^antnumufacturedlioines in tlwir f.aijirea,” said board inemiiief ‘ iiin 'i %feveridge. “But, we have to be ■[ipractical. It’s coming to a poiiit ‘ Inhere young people can’t afford a ;:W »e.” : :Vena Harris, board chairwoman, * --------J concert^, about \nipbile' piéektoss bliyííig Is homes already in Moeksvillc that crejitc “ a public cj'csori.’." '•\Ve can't make them go away," said Leary. "11'anything happens lo llicm. we don't have lo allow them lo put one hack, '/.on- ing is not contractual." Hoyce told hoard tiiciiiiicr.s liou’ much nianuraetured homes have changed. '■Manufaelured homes are .so well huill and nice now ." he said. "Y o u 'd he aina/ed. We just need "There's a lot of manufaelured on." said Rhea, lo convince the public." homes lhat look better than some Boyce encouraged board Carol A. Khea. a planner with of the stick built homes." she .said, niembcrs lo sludy and think about N.C. i:)epar(tiieiTl ol Nalural " There's nothing wrong wilh the placement of mobile homes, kesoiirces And C'om nuinily trying to find oul what's good "Think aboul it from an overall Devclopinent, agreed with lioyce, about a community and passing il need of Ihe town," he said. trt'vA man chwged with reckless . r^llnving on May 28 was found not rtuilty: in Davie District Court last '.rjveek. ;Ppminick Anthony Dicleiiiente charged after an incident with girlfriend’s mother. Heath pid she was driving ‘j-lidiind her daughter around 9 p.m. -ijbiaiiU.Si 64 toward Davidson I piiunty when a car came up behind ' ^er with its bright lights on. №,i:‘‘He then passed us," she said.. jl^'Then he stopped and waited till ^fiegotby. ‘V* l“He would dim his lights and >4|tighten them,” she said. “I was r^afhiid he was going to hurt us.” jHeath sakl she notified the police r^when she got back home to •iCooleemee. Assistant District Attorney ■:;james Honeycutt asked Heath if .-she could sec that the driver was ; «Diclemente. She first testified she never saw his face then later in her testimony said she did remember ;' ^ing his face when he pa.s.sed her. Heath said she was positive il ;^was Diclemente’s car. She said there was no physical contact bet- ;: ween the cars. ; j . Diclemente, representing '..himself, asked Heath if her ."■daughter had asked him to follow " her that night. Heath denied know- :. ing anything about it. “ Her mother didn’t want me to >date her daughter,” said Diclemente. “ 1 didn’t do any reckless driving.” Diclemente asked Judge Samuel : A. Cathey to dismiss the chargcs • : again.st him. ' T’il allow your iiioiiitii ai iltis ■point and you stay away from • : thcm,” he said. U S D A C h o i c e B O N E L E S S 6 SIRLOIN ^ STEAK Prices in this ad good thru Sunday, August 6, 1989. Cut Halves & Quarters - Red Ripe W A T E R M E L O N S Salmon Steak Or S H A R K S T E A K New Zealand K IW I F R U IT lue Grapes, Red Or White SEEDLESS Swordfish Or H A L IB U T S T E A K Tart T A N G Y L IM E S 8/M E X T R A LO W P R IC E S ...E V E R Y D A Y !!! 2 Liter PEPSI Caffine Free Pepsi 8 9 ^ 2LI№MMnUlnD«w.............................99< 2 Utw Diet Pepil, CiffiM Fr<e Diet Pep<№> 2LI№DI«tMounUlnDeiiii.....................>1" 22 Oz. - Dish Detergent DOVE LIQUID 89« 15 Oz. - Luck’s PORK & BEANS 3/M LUNCHEON M EAT 12 Oz. - Treet Liter Sugar-Free - Reg./Dietj SHASTA COLA 2 Lb. - Frozen Golden Crinkle Cut ORE IDA POTATOES 8 Oz: • Assorted raw UON VOSURT 8 Oz. - Elbow Macaroni/Reg. Or Thin Spaghetti MUELLER’S PASTA 5 Ct. • Big Country BISCUITS I 2/69« H i 10 ct.Peanut Butter ^ R E E S E ’S CUPS 50 Ct. - 8 7/8” STURDYWARE PLATES There is a Food Lion conveniently located near you; H I | | J | J I | | J Squire Boone Plaza Shopping Center Berntuda Quay/Shopping Center Hwy. 8G1 North - Yadkinville Rd. Highway^SS and SOi ¡Monday thru »«iuW ay; s a„x.. MflCkSyliie, N.C. . Advance,‘N.C, . 4 . , Sunday 9 a.m . - i p.m 6—DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE KECORI), THURSDAY, Лик- 3. 19НУ Public Records Land Transfers ■ The following land transfers have been filed with the Davic County Regisler of Deeds. The transaetions arc listed by parties involved, acreage, township and deed .stamp.s purcha.sed with ,$1 rcpre.scnting $1,000. — Shelby Jean Nichols and Samuel G. Nichols lo Robert L. Foster, 2 tracts, Jerusalem. — Robert L. Foster and Polly M. Foster lo Shelby Jean Nichol.s. I tract, Jerusalem. — Bill R. Brown and Martha S. Brown 10 Edgar D. Clement and Brenda B. Clement, I lot, Farm ington. SI 80. — Luther West, Cecil Leagans, trustees of Pino Community Grange 838 to Michael Sprouse, Marie M. Miller. Vernon Dull, Ostine W. West. I’hencitHis C. Williams, trustees of Pino Com munity Cenler and their successors entitled, 1 tract, Farmington, — Garvic C. Brannon and Mary S, Brannon lo Nelson Jones, I traci, Fuilon, S3. — Ollie Siokes lo Richard Dewey Robertson and Ann E. Rolicrlsoti. I iracl. Sliadv Grove. SS. Ciary S. Brinkley, Nancy S, Brinkley, Sherrill K. Brinkley and Susan P. Brinkley lo David Lann- ing, I tract, Clarksville. — Melva Rcavis Culler to Joseph Rcavis Culler, 1 tract, Clarksville. — William Jo.seph McCrary lo Jean S. McCrary. I lot. Jcni.saleni. — Hayden C. Myers and Ethel M, Myers to Richard D. Cohen and Susun M. Cohen, I Iracl, Mocksviile, — Timothy Ray Latham lo John Ray Latham and Libby Darnell D, Latham, 1 tract, Mocksviile. — George O. Jordan. Delores C, Jordan, William K, Jordan, Lin da H. Jordan, Loman D, Jordan and Blanche S. Jordan to Loman D. Jordan and Blanchc S, Jordan, I lot, Jeru.salcm, $16. — Ruby J. Franks lo Grace B. Webb. 1 lot, Mocksviile. — James H. Barnes and Ann R. Barnes lo Richard W. Williams nd Dorothy W. Williams, 1 tract,- Fuilon. S h e riff's D e p a rtm e n t The following reports were made to the Davic Counly Sheriffs Department. — David Daniel Motley of Route 1, Mocksviile, reported Ju ly 25 the larccny of $10.94 in gasoline from Center Mobil Mart. . — Amos Stewart Brown of Route 8, Mocksviile, reponcd Ju ly 26 the breaking and entering of a residence off Wagner Road. ■ — Fred Coleman Barney of Route 4, Mocksviile, reported Ju ly 24 the larceny of a tiller motor. wilh an estimated value of $100, from a residence off U.S. 601 soulh of Mocksviile. — Bonnie Jean Smith of Ad vance reported July 24 Ihe larceny of a go-cart, with an eslimaled value of $250, from a residence off Cedar Grove Church Road. — William Andrew Bowles of Roule 7, Mocksviile, reported Ju ly 27 the breaking, entering and larceny from a vehicle of two stereo speakers and an equalizer, wilh an estimated value of $200. Fires — Deborah Ann Martin of Route I , Advance, reported July 26 the breaking and entering of a residence in Polls Trailer Park. — Randy Lee Jenkins of Slalesvillc reported July 26 the breaking, entering and larccny from a vchicle of a radio, with an estimated value of $350. — Judy Marie Gwyn of Route 6, Mocksviile, reported July 27 a mobile radio was thrown into the windshield of an aulomobile in 601 Norlh Trailer Park, causing an estimated $300 damage. Arrests The following fires were in vestigated by Davie fire depart ments last week. ‘July 26: Jerusalem, 10:39 p.m., fire alarm at Boxwood group home, Cooleemee called for to;kup. irjuly 27: Smith Grove, 4:35 p.m., house fire, Bermuda Run, Advance called for backup. l&'Jily 28: Pork, 8:57 p.m., tiaUer .fifCi Cedar Orove.Church Road; Jenisalem called for backup. July 29: Mocksviile, 4:17 p.m., auto accident, Wilkesboro and Salisbury streets; William R. Davie, transformer fire, 601 North Trailer Park. July 30: Center, 12:59 p.m., fuel spill, Horn’s Truck Stop. July 31: Mocksviile, 12:44 p.m., smoke in Oaks.Apartment, Milling Road. m wav Patrol ' ;Two cars collided in Dogwood Spring Trailer park'July 30 at a.m. ,> According to a report by -m o ^ L .D . ChqipeU ofthe N.C. Hi||iway Patrol, Theresa Fusco , 23, of Route 1, Advance . .: backing from a private dHy^ay onto the trailer park’s ; in^'ro^. Coble failed to see and collided with a car driven by Jane Russell Moore, 47, of Route 1, Advance. Chappell noted on the report Co ble’s sight was partially blocked due to a parked vehicle on the side of the road. Coble was charged with making an unsafe traffic movement. ; Damage to Coble’s 1988 Mit subishi was estimated at $400, and to Moore’s 1976 Foi-d, $200. 'V ER following .patients were ' in the emergency room at 'Davfc County Hospital. The hwpital only releases infor- muioh on patients it considers a ifiMic record because of the nature <tf the injury. C -; Dennis 0. Strain, 21, 12:09 •■in- luly 31, broken hand and bniiies (0 the ribs suftoed in fight, treated^ released. :>!■ — Jane R.' Mooie,'47,1:45 p.m. July 30, neck strain suffered in nitbmobile accident, treated and Kleased. • 7: r-'Rebecca F. Faster, 75,5 p.m. Jiily 29, scrapes and bruises suf fered iit automobile accident, treated and released. — Vincent Matera, 82, 4:49 p.m. July 29, spitial injury suffered in automobile accident, transferred to N.C. Baptist Hospital in Winston-Salem, — Beveriy Fortune, 20, 11:54 p.m. July 25, bruise to the nose suffered in assault, treated and. released. — Thomas D. Rumple, 17, 12:21 a.m. July 26, cut to the shoulder suffered when bottle thrown into vehicle, treated and released. — Paula L. Jones, 20, July 25, cut to the face suffered when bot tle thrown into vehicle, treated and released. ^iiocksville Police : The following incidents were reported to the Mocksviile Police Department. — A clock, with an estimated value of $1,500, was reported stolen July 29 from the lobby at -sDavie County Hospital. — Ralph Greco of Advance reported July 25 the larceny of a 22-fool We.sco boat trailer, wilh an estimated value of $2,075. It was parked off Bailey Slrcci. • Eric Dean Fortune, of Apt, 5 Crestview, was chargcd July 26 - wilh iissatili on a IVmiile_________ — Jo.seph Elchi.son of 410 Morse Sl,, Mocksviile, reported July 26 the larccny of fog lamps, wheels and lircs from a vchicic, wilh a total e.stimated value of $1,700, — Kalhy Diane Ruckcr of Mocksviile reported July 26 the breaking, entering and larceny from a residence on Etchison Street near Mocksviile, — Bill Savannah Pierce of Cooleemee reported July 26 lhal someone broke a fcnce wire al his yard. — Danny L, Orren of Mocksviile reported July 27 so meone broke the glass front of a ga.soline pump at Scotty’s Conve nience Store, Bixby. — Billy Joe Potts of Roule 4, Advance, reported July 24 so meone drove a vehicle onlo a lawn off Foils Road, causing an estimated $150 damage. — Angela Lynn Schuerman of Route 1, Mocksviile, reported Ju ly 25 the larceny of a vehicle, with an estimated value of $13,000, from a residence off Ridge Road. — Polly Hannah Meyers of Roule 1, Moeksville, reported Ju- , ly 22 the burglary of a residence off U.S. 64 in the Center community. — Tammy Lynn Burton of ■ Route 2, Advance reported July 26. • an attempted breaking and enter-;' ing of a residence off Todd Road.' ; — William Carrion Jr. of Route; ' 8, Mocksviile, reported July 25 lug • nuts to tires were partially remoy-:- ed and a gas filler cap to a vehicle;^_ was tampered with while parked at^" Davie High School. • • Jerry Lee Dalton, of Apt. 25, 300 Milling Road, was chargcd wilh assault. The following were arrested by Ihe Davie Counly Sheriff’s Department, — David Bruce Campbell, 31, of Campbell Road, charged July 25 with assault. — Wilbert Ray Lewis, 34, of Route 8, Mocksviile, charged Ju ly 24 with assault on a female; and on July 26 with assault. — Danny Edward Holt, 26, of Route 1, Moeksville, charged Ju ly 27 with larceny of a motor vehicle. — Vincent Christopher Reuwer, 28, of Route 6, Mocksviile, charg ed July 27 wilh assault on a female and injury to personal properly. — David Eric Boger, 18, of Roule 1, Advance, charged July 27 with communicating threats. — Bobby Marion Booe, 37, of Roule 8, Mocksviile, charged Ju ly 25 with assaull. — Robert Thomas Jones, 46, of 133 Ivey Circle, Advance, charg ed July 26 with assault on a female. DR. JAM ES J. M AZUR Foot Specialist - Surgeon • Bunions • Hammertoes • Heel Pain • Ingrown Toenails • Laser Surgery • Routine Foot Care A COST-WISE DOCTOR Accepts assignment - Blue Cross,Medicare and all major Insurances accepted. 322 Mocksviile Av0., Salitbui^ In Salisbury Call In Moekavlll« Call 636-70t5 «34-3000 : Offic* Hours: Monday thru Saturday . and Evenings by appointment : O V E R S TO C K R E A D Y FO R D E LIV E R Y • David Brian Sebastian, 21, of Morganton, was charged with larceny of a firearm. • Two vehicles were involved in a traffic accident at 8:10 a.m. Ju ly 27 at Wilkesboro and Hospital streets. According to a police report, Vickie McDaniel Neal, 36, of Roule 9, Mocksviile, had .slopped her car waiting for other iraffic when it was struck from the rear by a car driven by Mead Randolph Atkinson Jr,, 59, of 501 Salisbury St,, Mocksviile, ■ Daniaue lo Ihe 1989 Jeep tiriveii by Neal was eslimaled al $1,500, lo the 1985 Chevrolet driven by Atkinson, $2,500. 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M a n F a c i n g 6 C h a r g e s In S h o o t i n g D A V IK с о и м л ’ KN'I K R P K ISK Ki;C()KI). rilU K SD A Y, Лия- 3, 1989-7 ~ C L: rA Smith Grove man is fiiciny six cliargcs after sliooting a slicrilT's sergeant with a sluilgun on July 11. ' Frank Frost Jr., 70, ol'Roulo I . Advance, was taken to Broiigliton Hospital for trcalmcnt of a iiient;il condition soon after the incident al liis home off old Rainbow Road. He was rclea.scd from the hospital on July 26. when lie was cliargcd witli three counts of assault willi a lirearni on a law oHicer. one count of assault with a deadly weapon with iiilcnt lo kill, assault with a deadly weapon and resisting arresi. Frost was taken inlo custody Inn a bond was not set pending out come of the evaluation hearing. A date for a court hearing also has not hccn scl. He has since been taken to Dorothea Di.\ Hospital in Raleigh for an evaulalion to see if he is menially conipcteni lo stand trial. l-arly morning July 11. Sgt. Toni CiruWi and Deputy Gordon .Smith of the Davie County Sheriff's Deparlnicnl were answering a domestic disturbance call at the Frost residence. The iwo officers were looking for Frost in the house when he lircd a shotgun at their direction. A pellet slruck Grubb in Ihe side. He was treated al l^ir.sylh Memorial Hdspiial for two days before his release. Frost remained in the house for ahout .40 minutes until a tear gas cannisler was thrown inlo Ihe room in which he was hiding. He then surrendered unarmed. Frosl. who hail a history of men tal problems, was incoherent when he was taken into custody, said Chief Dcpuly Bob I.emmons. L a u n d r o m a t behind the W affle House O pen daily from 7:00 a.m . Read Calvin & Hobbes ... ... e a c h w e e k in t h e E n t e r p r i s e - R e c o r d save 20% and more! donnkenny® separates ladies’ chalHs skirts and sweater sets REG. 39.99 2 9 « ? 9/TOrt s/eeve sweaters In a variety of colors. Pull-on elasllc waist coordinating skirts. 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Proscculing was Janies ;;t Honcycull, assisliinl dislricl attorney. \r '-— Arnold Greg Anderson, driv- '^ing 79 nipli in ¡1 65 nipli zone. ■ reduced by D A lo 74 mph in a 65 mph zone, pay SIO fine and courl • co.sls. •: — Jacqulin Robinson Banknighl, • driving 80 mph in a 65 mph zone, ; reduced by D A to 74 mph in a 65 • mph zone, pay $15 fine and court -cosls; expired driver's licen.se, dismissed. ^ '. — Marjorie Hamilton Billig, - driving 69 mph in a 55 mph zone, reduced by D A to improper equip- ; ment, pay $10 fine and court cosls. ; — Kelly Folds Boger, driving 70 t mph in a 55 mph zone, reduced by D A to 64 mph in a 55 mph zone, pay $10 fine and court costs. — Alan Martin Bowles, reckless ■ driving, driving while liccn.se revoked, sentenced to six months suspended for three years, remain gainfully employed, pay $500 fine and court costs, nol operate a motor vehicle until properly licens ed, perform 75 hours of communi ty service, continue counseling, not • violate any state or federal laws and not commit a similar offense; charges of driving 110 in a 55 mph zone, failure to stop for a blue light and siren, speeding to elude arrest, possession of malt beverage less than 21 years of age and improper lights on rear of vehicle, dismissed. — Sarah Jane Bristow, driving ■ 68 mph in a 55 mph zone, reduc ed by DA to 64 mph in a 55 mph zone, pay $10 fine and court costs. i„— Jessica Leon Butler, driving 77 mph in a 65 mph ztme, reduc- ed by DA to improper equipment, . pey $10 fine and court costs.'. i'. — Roger Allen Call, driving . while license revoked, dismissed. — Caoy Cornelius Carpenter Jr., driving 60 mph in a 45 mph rone, reduced by DA to iihproper equipmeiit, pay court costs. ; John Irvin Cauble, driving 67 mfrfi in a SS mph zone, reduced by DA to exceeding a safe speed, pay $10 fmie and coiirt costs. , Lisa Thompson Cauthen, ^ying 52 mph iii a 35 mph zone, iimiced DA to exceeding a safe ■ s j)^ , prayer for judgment con tinue on payment of court costs. rr'Aaron Tyrone Chaney, driv- ing'while license'revoked, reduc- ■ c>d by DA to driving without a licoik, improper passing, pay $50 fi^.iuid court costs. ■ r f^' Tominy Junior Church, no v ^ le insurance, no headlamps on rmptorcyc plate, ifcjotmced to 30 days suspended for j^o years, pay $50 fine and court ' <^ts. Jerome Coyle, driving ^hile licenM'';revoked, driving ji^ithbut a license, sentenced to 60 days^suspended for two years, pay fine and court costs, not operate a motor Vehicle until pro perly licensed and not commit a similar offense. Michael Walter Crutchfield, deriving 67 mph in a 55 mph zone, ijediiced by DA to exceeding a safe speed, pay $10 fine and court costs. „ — James Rooseveh Cuthbert- spn,'driving while license revok- e , expired registration plate, sentenced to six months suspend- сч1 Гог IWO years, pay S20() fine and cmirl cosls, mil operate a niolor vehicle unlil properly licensed and nol commit a similar olTense. — Charles Gilberi Dallon, disposing of morlaged properly, scnienced lo 60 days suspended for IWO years, make restitution, pay courl COSLS and nol coinniil a similar offense, — Richie Alan Dishman, driv ing 86 mph in a 65 mph zone, reduccd by D A lo 74 mph in a 65 mph zone, pay S25 fine and courl cosls. — Kenneth Shane Duncan, driv ing left of cenler, reduced by D A to unsafe traffic movement, prayer for judgment continued on payment of courl cosls. — Bradley Dean Foster, driving 80 mph in a 65 mph zone, reduc ed by D A to improper equipment, pay $10 fine and courl co.sts. — Douglas Lee Gilliland, driv ing 70 mph in a 55 mph zone, reduced by D A lo improper equip ment, pay courl costs. — Slamey Allen Gobble, harass ing phone calls, prayer for judg ment continued on the condition he not go around, threaten or harass the prosecuting witness. — Donna Taylor Godbey, D W I (Breathalyzer results .18), resisting arrest, sentenced to six months suspended for three years, pay $250 fine and court costs, not com mit a similar offense, nol operate a motor vehicle until properly licensed,' perform 72 hours of com munity service, obtain substance abuse assessment and comply wilh recommendations of assessing agency and reimburse the state for court appointed attorney; reckless driving, transporting alcoholic beverage in passenger area of car, dismissed. — Betty Bitjwn Godwin, driving 70 mph in a 55 mph zone, reduc ed by D A to improper equipment, pay court costs. — Jean Ester Gray, driving 56 mph in a 35 mph zone, reduced by D A to 54 mph in a 35 mph zone, pay $10 fine and court costs. — Am y Winfield Habegger, following too close, dismissed. — Jerry Thomas Helms, im proper passing, reduced by D A to unsafe traffic movement, pay $10 fine and court costs. — Sylvia Hodulik, driving 78 mph in a 55 mph zone, reduced by D A to 70 mph in a 55 mph zone, pay $15 fine and court costs. — Wayne Timothy Ijames, D W I (Refused Breathalyzer tests), sentenced to 24 months in jail, im- inediate work release recommend ed; driving while license per manently revoked, reduced by D A to driving while license revoked, sentenced to 181 days in jail, im mediate work release recommend ed. Notice of appeal filed. — Kelvin Ray Jones, reckless driving, pay $25 fine and court costs. — David Bernard Kelly, D W I (Breathalyzer results . 16), sentenc ed to 24 monlhs suspended for three years, reinain gainfully employed, not operate a motor vehicle until properly licensed, ob tain substance abuse assessment and comply with recommendations of assessing agent, nol commit a similar offense and spend 14 days in jail; driving while licen.se revok ed, reduced by D A to driving without a license, pay $100 fine and court costs. — Robin Birdsong Lusk, driving 52 mpli in a З.“! mph /one. pay SKI Ппе and courl cosls. — Gary Chrislopher Marlin Jr.. driving ()5 mph in a 50 mpli /one. reduced by D A lo exceeding a safe speed, pay SK) fine and courl cosls, — Todd Brian Miller, driving 80 iiipli in a 65 mph zone, reduced by D A lo exceeding a sale speed, pay $15 fine and courl cosls. — lilizabeth Myers, driving 67 mph in a 55 mpli zone, reduced by D A lo improper equipment, pay courl costs. — Robert Andrew Novak, driv ing without a license, dismissed. — Leon Franklin Pennigcr, no vchicle registration, dismissed. — James Daniel PolLs, worthless check, disnii.ssed. — Alfred Dugan Pritchard, driv ing 87 mph in a 65 mph zone, reduccd by D A to 74 mph in a 65 mph zone, pay $25 fine and court costs. — Milton Alexander Rankin, aiding and abetting D W I, dismissed. — Cynthia Whitley Rcavis. driving 59 mph in a 45 mph zone, reduced by D A to 54 mph in a 45 mph zone, pay $10 fine and court cosls; failure lo secure a child under the age of six in a child restraint system, dismissed. — James Glen Redman, driving 69 mph in a 55 mph zone, reduc ed by D A lo improper equipment, pay $50 fine and court costs. — Ronald Charles Reynolds, resisting and obstructing and of ficer, first degree trespassing, sentenced lo 60 days suspended for two years, pay $75 fine and courl costs and not go around Ihe pro secuting witness while drinking. — Scotty Allen Reynolds, reckless driving, reduccd by D A to unsafe traffic movement, pay $10 fine and court costs. — Stephen Gregg Roig, no vehi cle insurance, dismissed. — Michelle Lee Sander, driving 75 mph in a 65 mph zone, reduc ed by D A to exceeding a safe .speed, pay $10 fine and court costs. — Jeffrey Lawrence Scott, assault on a female, sentenced to six months suspended for three years, pay $75 fine and court costs, not threaten, harass or go around the prosecuting witness. — Frances Coone Shannon, no vehicle registration, dismissed. — David Allen Shapiro, driving too fast for conditions, dismissed. — Joseph Gary Shepherd, driv ing 70 mph in a 55 mph zone, reduced by D A to 64 mph in a 55 mph zone, pay $10 fine and court costs. — Christopher Shrewsbury, ex ceeding a safe speed, pay $25 fine and court costs; no vehicle registra tion, dismissd. — George Timothy Smith, driv ing 67 mph in a 55 mph zone, reduced by D A to improper equip ment, pay $10 fine and court costs. — Elizabeth Yvonne Snow, driving 69 mph in a 55 mph zone, reduced by D A lo improper equip ment, pay court cosls. — James David Thomson, DW I (Breathalyzer re.sults . 16), sentenc ed to 60 days suspended for three years, pay SIOO fine and court cosls, surrender driver’s license, not operate a motor vehicle unlil properly licensed, perform 24 liours of communily service, nol comniil a similar olTense. obtain suhslance abuse assessmenl and comply with recomiiicndalions оГ assessing aiiency. given credit for previous assesMiiem. -- Rodney Ciregg Thompson. DW I (lireallialyzer results .19). senienced lo 12 monlhs suspend- eil for ihree years, remain gainfully employed, pay S500 line and courl cosls. surrender driver's licensc, mil operate a niolor vehicle unlil properly licensed, obtain suhslance abuse assessmenl and comply with reeommciulalions of assessing agency, continue Alcoholics Anonymous meetings, nol commit a similar olTense and spend seven days in jail: driving 80 mph in a 55 mph zone, dismissed. — Bridget Shann Thurston, driving while license revoked, reduced by D A lo driving without a license, pay S50 fine and court cosls. — Paul Shore Walker, driving 68 mph in a 55 mph zone, reduc ed by D A lo improper equipment, pay court costs. — Michael Edward Warchol, exceeding a safe speed, dismissed. — Edgar Bernard Welch, driv ing 70 mph in a 55 mph zone, reduced by D A to improper equip ment, pay courl cosls. -G e ra ld Allen West, D W I (Breathalyzer results .14), sentenc ed to 60 days suspended for Ihree years, pay $100 fine and court costs, not operate a motor vehicle until properly licensed, perform 24 hours of community service, obtain substance abuse assessment and comply with recommendations of assessing agency, nol commit a similar offense; failure to drive to the edge of the road upon ap pearance of blue light and siren, dismissed. — John David Whitley, driving 74 mph in a 55 mph zone, pay $15 fine and court costs. — Cindi Beane Wilkerson, driv ing 65 mph in a 50 mph zone, rcduccd by D A to exceeding a safe speed, pay $10 fine and court costs. — Robert George Wilson, driv ing while license revoked, failure to stop for a slop sign, sentenced lo six monlhs suspended for two years, pay $200 fine and court cosls, not operat a motor vehicle until properly licensed and not commit a similar offense. — Oscar Lynn Young, failureto produced a license on request of of ficer, prayer for judgment con tinued on payment of court costs. Failed To Appear The following people failed to appear for their scheduled court trial. — Danny Lee Alexander, driv ing while license revoked, no vehi cle registration. — Anthony Edward Allen, driv ing 69 mph in a 55 mph zone. — Sterling Patrick Anders, failure to reduced speed to avoid an accident. — Randy Andrews, failure to wear a seat belt. — Kellie Leigh Arnold, driving 69 mph in a 55 mph zone. — Melinda Doub Barnes, failure lo secure a child under the age of six in a child restraint system. — Paula L. Blair, driving 88 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Philip V. Borger Jr., driving 85 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Roger Wayne Burrows, driv ing 80 mph in a 65 mpli zone. — James Wayne Caviness. driv ing while license revoked, resist, delay and obslruci an officer, — Daniel L. Conway Jr.. driv ing 80 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Ann Lawler Daugherty, failure to sccurc a child under the age of six in a child rcslrainl .system. — Micliael L. Edwards, ex ceeding a safe speed, failure to wear a seat bell. — Kalhy Laverne Gentry, driv ing 69 mph in a 55 mph zone. — Kimberly Dale Gilliam, driv ing 80 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Yvonne Geanine Green, driv ing 80 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Martha Hanes Harriman, driving 80 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Gregory Burdette Heaster, improper passing. — Edward Ray Hopper Jr., driving 76 in a 65 mph zone. — Michael Gray Keaton, driv ing 65 mph in a 50 mph zone. — Jeffrey Alan Lankford, illegal parking in a fire lane. — Daphna Messier Martinez, failure to secure a child under the age of six in a child restraint .system. — Sherman McVay, worthless check.; — Manuela Ortega Meraz, driv ing without a driver’s license. — Alesia Ann Miller, driving 80 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Cary James Mundy, ex ceeding a safe speed, failure to wear a seat belt. — Ubaldo Bandao Olvera, driv ing without a license. — Ida McCathern Palmer, driv ing 60 mph in a 45 mph zone. — Darrell Keith Peebles, driv ing 79 mph in a 55 mph zone. — Julie Ann Pena, driving 80 mph !in a 65 mph zone, driving without a license. — Cornel Porter, driving 93 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Donald Atcheson Ray, im proper passing. — Sandra Hance Russell, driv ing while license revoked, D W I and transporting a malt beverage in the passenger area of a car. — ; Stanley Gray Sale, driving 47 mph in a 33 mph zone. — David Lewis Sherrell Stevens, D W L — Sherry Jean Smith, driving 78 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Vonda Mac Smith, failure to secure a child under the age of six in a child restraint .system. — John Wendell Stewart, driv ing 76 mph in a 65 mph zone, — Gregory J. Sturm, driving 85 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Turner Devon Swaim, driv ing 65 mph in a 50 mph zone., — Nelson Antonio Wells, driv ing 85 mph in a 65 mph zone, driv ing without a driver’s license. — Mary Plummer West, driving 79 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Francis Norman Wiseman, driving 58 mph in a 45 mph zone.. — Forresi Dcwayn Wright, ex ceeding a safe speed, failure to wear a seat belt. Trials Waived The following people waived their right to a trial and paid their fines early. • — Terry E. Anderson Jr., driv ing without a driver’s license, im proper passing. — Michael Arnell Brown Sr., worthless check. — Gary Marshall Carswell, following too closely, failure to wear a seat belt. — Harry Spencer Davis III, driving 63 mph in a 50 mph zonfe. — Curtis Lee Hundley, driving without a motorcycle license. — John Lee Lattimore, driving 70 mph in a 55 mph zone. — Stanley Brent Lineberrjf, failure to wear a seat belt. ' * — Benjamin Whitehead McKen zie Ш, driving 70 mph in a|SS tiqih'' zone. ' '' — Dennis Roger M onis, enter ing an intersection with a ted light' emitting. — Douglas Clyde Motsinger, failure to wear a seat belt. '■ — Godwin Nonyellum Nsianya, consunming a malt beverage in the passenger area of a'vehicle. — Robeit Shannon Pati5on, imr proper passing. ■ — Patricia Wagoner, failure to wear a seat belt. ■ ' : E lectio n F ilin g E n d s F riday Continued From P. I Republicans seeking a spot on the town board are Abe Howard Jr.,' Dr. F.W. Slate and Brent Ward. Primaries in the partisan Mcwksville races will be Sept. 26,'' if i needed. Mocksville and Cooleemee elections will be Noy;' ' 7. Potential candidates have .until noon on Aug. -4 to file for office ;' in either town. jhey>hould file at 5 > the board of electioiis office in the ^ county courthouse during reguliff: ' business hours. Objects Thrown A t P asting V ehlelito Continued From p. 1 ; The previous night, three reports of objects being thrown at vehicles were made to the sheriffs depart ment — two on U.S. 64 near Tur rentine Church Road and one on U.S. 64 near the National Guard Armory. All were between 10 and 11, p.m. One of the victims gave Deputy Gordon Smith a description of the vehicle.- Audrey , Frank Cline of Wilkesboro said an older model beige vehicle, possibly a Ford Granada, was passing by her car at the armory when she heard a popping noise. An unknown object was throw«|, onto the hood, of Cline’s car. itf bounced onto and broke the car’» windshield. ' t The same night, Donald M w Beaver Jr. of Route 9, Mocksville^ and Ann Carter Hardin o^' Mocksville reported objects wer» thrown at their vehicles near Tise’st Store. I In all of the cases, the objectSr were thrown from passing^ vehicles, Dillon said. f Anyone with any information oiC any of the above incidents is ask-l ed to call Davie Crimestoppers atf 634-1111. Cash rewards ar^ available. | Y O U ’ L L S L E E P B E T T E R K N O W I N G H O W M U C H Y O U S A V E D O N Y O U R A U T O L O A N ! W hen you find the auto you want, First Federal has the Auto Loan you want. W e make ■ il simple. Our Customer Loan Specialist is ready to customize a loan just for you. The right rate and the right terms. And in most cases, you get same day approval. There are a lot of good reasons you may need a loan. At First Federal we are ready to work one on one with you to meet your needs. You come first at First Federal whether it's lending, ; checking or investing. W e are driven. W in sto n -S a le m (six locations) • M o c k s v ille • O lcm nionH • S ta n le y v ille FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS BANK (704) 634-S981 Sieiiiber F S L IC DAVIK COUNTY KNTI'KI’UISK KICCOKI), TIIUKSDAY, Лиц. Д, 1989-9 R e s i d e n t s F e a r I l l e g a l D u m p i n g W i l l B e R e s u l t O f F e e s -.Continued From P. 1 'til the next day lo pick up llic gar bage or be cluirgccl will) lilleriii{;. “ They got il cleaned up," Motley said. There is an ongoing problem of people dumping Irash in the rural community of Davic Acadcniy, ac cording lo Tommy Cartner. ■ That’s why Ihe Davie Academy Rurilan Club was upset lo learn counly commissioners had voted lo start charging user fees at the land fill, located off Turrentine Road. Cartner, representing the club at the commis.sioners’ April 17 meeting, said the fees would en courage even more people lo dump their garbage in rural areas. County residents should be able to use the county landfdl free of chargc, Cartner told commis sioners. “ If it lakes a tax increa.se to support lhat, let’s increase taxes,” he said. M em bers of the Davie Academy Rurilan Club aren’t Ihe only ones worried that the landflll user fees, which went inlo effect Tuesday, will lead to more illegal dumping. Peeler, who lives on N.C. 801 beside the Yadkin River boating access, has the same fear. “ This county is going to be faced with a lot of trash in the rural areas,” he said. . , Commissioner Spurgeon Foster Jr. said he can understand the con cern. “ There’s nothing that disturbs me any more than to go to one of my farms, and wmebody’s dumped a bunch of trash on it,” he said. R.C. Smith, commission chair man, said he doesn’t think illegal dumping will be a major problem. ‘The areas that have the fees in ef fect, they do not have this pro blem,” he said. ■ I Davidson County, which im plemented landfill user fees six ;nwnths ago, hasn’t had a problem, according to Joaquin Martinez, solid waste director for the county. . “ We had one lady, people were dumping.on her back yard,” he said, ••butithat’s about aU.!’; i Buddy Alexander, vice chairman . of the Davie conunissipni said hei does foresee a problem of more people dumping garbage along the highways. “But 1 don’t see how we can prevent it,” he said. ' T b pu^ {Caitner has bwn the on- : ly one to voice the concern public ly, county officials said many of the residients who complained about the user fees were worried about iUegal duihping. ■ - “ When it first started out, the fiees.weietheirniain argument,” ' said C ra g Greer, assistant to County Manager John B a^r. "But as we come cliwcr to the opening date, they've been ,s()ii)ewh:il more coneerned almut dumping on iheir land and on the sides ol' the roads.” Hugh Liirew. who lives on South Main Street in Mocksville, ex pressed his concern the day before the user fees went inlo cITect. Larew said he hadn’t thought much aboul them until talking with Clyde Hcndricks. also of Mocksville. who was afraid charg ing people to use the landfill would lead to illegal dumping in alleys or ravines "like they used to do before we had a dump.” . "H is feeling was, and I .sort of share il,” Larew said, "is that it’s a scrvicc lhat the county ought to provide, and we ought to pay for it with taxes. This user fee may al.so encourage an accumulation around houses if people are hard- pressed, the poorer people.” As a result of these concerns, Greer said county officials have asked the sheriffs department to “ crack the whip” on illegal dumping. “ If you’re caught, we’re going to be studying our ordinances and state law lo find out exactly how harsh of a punishment we can hand out,” he said. According lo state law, anyone caught littering can be fined up to $300. However, pending legislation in the N.C. General Assembly could give law enforcement officers the authority to confiscate the vehicle of anyone caught littering, accor ding to Junior Barbee, Davie County’s landfill director. “ If they go to that measure, and I think they.should, it’s going to eliminate a bunch of that,” he said. Sen. Betsy Cochrane, R-Davie, said several proposed bills have ' been incorporated into one Solid Waste Bill now under study in a House committee. “ I’m not sure the part about Ihc confiscation of Ihe vehicles is still in there,” she said. Amohg the provisions remain ing, however,' are stiffer fines and the addition of two points to the driving record of anyone convicted of littering. ‘ ‘The bill provides that littering convictions w ill not affect automobile insurance points,” Cochrane said. “ But I would suspect if you accumulate a bunch of these, it would be a factor for the insurance company to look at.” Bob Lemmons, chief deputy of the sheriffs department, said he doesn’t think Davie’s new landfill user fees will affect illegal dumping. “ Most people in Davie County are honest." he said. “ I Ihink they'll pay their fee and take it lo the dump. The ones who haven't In the past won't take il to the dump." Commissioner Fo.sler had a similar opinion. "The guy that's going 10 do it illegally, he was do ing it anyway," i:e said. "It's been going on for years." Though the sheriffs department gets a few calls from time to time. Lemmons said illegal dumping hasn't been a maj{»r problem, "Il might be for some individuals who have it dumped on their land," he said. Even when deputies investigate, Lemmons said finding someone's name amid the garbage isn't always grounds for charging them. “ Thai doesn’t really prove it’s Iheir garbage,” he said. “ If we catch .somebody doing it, that’s dif ferent. Thai’s a misdemeanor com mitted in our presence.” Foster said some of the trash strewn along the sides of roads may have blown off trucks. “Of course, it’s supposed to be covered up,” he said. Commissioners voted last year to require all garbage going to the landfill to be properly covered after hearing complaints from area residents about trash blowing off trucks. Peeler said the public could help the littering problem by watching out for people dumping trash and copying down license numbers when they see them. .fohn Peeler examine.s cotton dumped at the Yadkin River boating access area off N .C . 801. Peeler .said he has gone ihrough trash dumped on his properly or al the river boating access area for ad dresses. When he found them. Peeler said he called the people and asked them to pick it up. “Tlicy got it cleaned up,” he said. “ I was never interested in prosecuting anyone. I was just in terested in getting it cleaned up. Maybe it taught them a lesson.” A s for the boating access area. Peeler said it would help if the N.C. Wildlife Resources Commis sion patrolled it more. “ There are a lot of people who use the wildlife access area, for what h’s designed for,” he said, adding however, that more than half go there to drink beer ,and picnic. 1 I “If they’re going to have a facili ty like this,” he said, “they ought to be policing it a little better;’; B e R e a d y T o P a y A t C o u n t y L a n d f i l l ■. L a n d p i Fees VrtWiTyp# ' I. AutofflobllM Charge $1.00/ioad 2 ./UrtonMbilMwlth trailers (|M tthan20fNt lingl« axto, no dual whMis) ' 3. Vans (% ton or lesa) 3.00/load 3.00/load 4. PIckupa (Vt ton or less) 3.00/load r 5. Vana or Pickups with trailera (leu than 10 feet aingleaxiel, no dual wheels S.OO/load ' 6. Trucks, open, 1 ton or more, no dual wheels 7.00/load ; • 7. Compactor (Rear loading, i front loading, roil off container, ; roll off container open top) 1.50 per cubic yard vehicle capacity ; 8. Van, commercial closed 1.00 per linear foot of cargo body ' 9. Trailer, commercial closed Open to 10 ft., no dual wheels tandem axle Open to 20 feet Open to 30 feet Open to 40 feet 1.00 per linear foot , 7.00 per load 20.00 per load 30.00 per load 35.00 per load 10. Trucit, dump, single axle, open non-dump Dump, tandem axle, open non-dump 15.00 per load 20.00 per load By Kathy D. Chaffin Davie County Enlerprise-Record From now on, it’ll cost at least a dollar to dump garbage at the Davic County Landfill. User fees approved by the Davie County Board of Commissioners in April wenl into cITcci 'I'liestl.-iy. They range from $1 for automobiles to $3 for ,vans and pickups to $35 for 40-fool trailers. The county hired Sandy Barber Draughn to collect fees at the en trance to the 60-acre landfill off Turrentine Road. “W e’ll have her a real small fee building and everyone that comes in is going to have to stop and pay their fees,” said Craig Greer,, assistant to County Manager John Barber. Fees are based on the type of vehicle carrying the garbage. Barber had first recommended buying scales to weigh the garbage, but commissioners decided to wait and see how this method works. Greer said commercial garbage haulers such as Davie Sanitation Co., which handles the residential garbage pickup for the coumy, and industries will be billed monthly. “ The reason,” he said, “ is because some of them go out there eight or nine times every day.” The user fees are projected to generate about $70,000 in the 11 months remaining in the 1989-90 fiscal year, Greer said. Commissioner Bert Bahnson said they could bring in as much as $100,000. Still, he said, that's not enough. The cost of operating the land fill is estimated lo cost around $380,000. “ In my opinion, we’re still $280,000 short,” Bahnson said. In fact, he said he would favor raising user fees to generate the rest of Ihe operating cost. “ But I don’t know if you could get away wilh it,” he .said. Since being elected lo the com mission last November, Bahnson has been vocal aboul his belief lhat Davie residents should pay for any direct services Ihey receive from the county. “ Hauling a load of trash to the county dump is a tangi ble benefit thal you ought lo pay I'or," he said. R.C. Smith, chairman of the board, agrees. “ ll’s just like the road tax,” he said. "1 drive a lot and 1 have a car lhat consumes a lot of gas, so I’m iielping to pay for ihem witii gas taxes.” That's iairer. Smith said, lhan raising property laxes so that an elderly person, I'or example, who never ilrives. has to help pay for the upkeep of the higliways. “ If I ’m going to use the highways, let me pay for them,” he said. “ If I’m going to use the landfill, lei me pay for it.” Other commissioners agreed. Commissioner Spurgeon Foster Jr. .said it's not fair to use all tax money to operate the landfill bccausc some [)сор1с <1о1Г1 it.sc il, “ It’s kind of like a water system,” he said. “ You can’t build a water plant and use lax money or proper ty tax because some people are on wells.” Commissioner Busier Cleary compared the landfill to a business. “ It needs to support itself,” he said. Commissioners were unanimous in their April 20 vote to implement user fees at the landfill. This had been considered for some time. In fact, former com missioner Dr. Francis W. Slate recommended implementing user fees before going off the board last fall. User fees were also among several recommendations in a January 1989 report of a landfill study by the Municipal Engineer ing Services Company, which has offices in Garner and Boone. Wayne Sullivan, who helped with the study, said the fees are needed to help pay for complying with Subtitle D regulations being proposed by the Environmental Protection Agency. Beginning in 18 months to two years, Sullivan .said all landfills must meet the new regulations, which include covering the top, bottom and sides with plastic, pip ing out the water, monitoring area groundwater (which Davie already docs) and disposing of methane gas, which is creatcd in the landfill. Jim W oody of M unicipal Engineering estimated U will cost an extra $125,000 to $135,000 per acre to comply with the new regulations. “ We al.so feel,” Sullivan said, “ thal the ‘user’ should pay for the landfill. The larger users would pay the larger prices, and it should be something thal operates within a budget, lliat whatever they make, Ihey spend or whatever they spend, Ihey have to make.” l-venlually, Smith .said he thinks all counties will be implementing user fees. O f the counties surrounding Davic, two alreatly have them in place. Davidson County implemented user fees alxiut six months ago, ac cording to Joaquin Martinez, solid waste director for the county. The fees range from $1 per pickup load lo S7.80 per ton for commercial haulers. Automobiles arc allowed to dump garbage free of charge. The Davidson County Landfill is open only to residents outside the Lexington and Thomasville city limits. Martinez said the county is entering inlo a joint venture wilh the two citics on a new landfill presently iiiulcr eonstruelion. The user Cec.s will remain in ef fect at the new landfill, he said. Forsyth County, which contracts ils landfill service from Ihe city of Winston-Salem, has had user fees i for some time. The Winston-Salem facility charges $8 per ton for regular solid waste, while the Kernersvllle Landfill, also in For syth County, charges $11 per ton. O f the other counties surroun ding Davie, Rowan and Iredell plan to implement user fees soon. Rowan commissioners say they wiii start them as soon as the coun ty’s new landfill , is complete. Though they have not set the fees, commissioners have discussed charging $20 per ton at the land flll and 2 cents per pound at the dumpsters. Iredell County coinmissioners included the projected revenues from landfill user fees in their budget for the 1989-90 fiscal year beginning July 1, but County Manager Joel Mashbum said they probably won’t go into effect un til Oct. 1. “ W e’re in tlfe process now of doing a study to determine as best as possible how much waste we’re actually getting in Ihe landfill, where it’s coming from and etc.,” he said, “ so that we can develop a schedule of fees that will fairly represent the users.” Yadkin Manager Charles Mashburn, former manager of Davie County, said commissioners there are in the preliminary stages of considering landfill user fees. According to a regional study by Hazen and Sawyer, consulting engineers of Raleigh, Forsyth was the only counly in Region 1 lo charge user fees as of June. Other counties in the region include Davie, Stokes, Surry and Yadkin. “ As a result of this situation,” the study says, “ it is quite possi ble thal some of the waste generated in Forsyth Counly is disposed of in adjacent counties. As solid waste costs increase, regional cooperation in establishing lipping fees will be an important strategy in managing the How of .solid waste.” Smith said he believes that user fees will limit ihc garbage going in to Ihe Davie landfill to that generated in this county. ■■People are bringing In garbage from other counties." he said, ■■Wc had a commercial hauler to hrinu in a truckload iil' earliage. Our landfill director was suspicious and went through it and found some garbage with a Clemmons address on it. “ This particular operator was called and they were cautioned about il and hopefully, that stop ped lhat.” The -same thing happened when Üie landfill stoited clwrging íí»^^^^^^ beiits apÍKe foir w tires and $1 № /, ; truck tires. Smith said. • ' “ When we put in a tire slitter a little over a year ago and started charging people to slit them so thât. whenever they’re buried, they;' won’t resurface, we had prapte' with truckloads of tires w W . wouldn’t pay the fees,” he uid. “ They left with the tires. We, feel like they may have come in hèrë from another coiinty and then went back. - k “ If they want to leave and ^ke the tires somewherb else, that is fine,” he said. \‘We would rather not have die tires thtui iiaye ^ ^f№S and have the money for thiiq.*’ B y keeping garbage iiroin counties out. Smith said.conunii- siohers will be extendiiig the life of the landfill. , ' júnior Barbee, la n d ^ director, said about 40 of the landfîU's 60-plus acres have been filled. O f the remaining20 aci^, he said on ly about 15 can I» u ^ for b u ^ r , ing garbage. , 1 Smith said: ‘,‘W e get varying reports of how much life we’ve got left. From my obseryatitm, I w o ^ say we’ve got five to seven y < ^ and maybe longer now that we’ve put in a demolition area.” Í Commissioners recently pur chased a 21-acre tract adjacent to the landfill for the demolition site! It will be used for the d isp o ^ 'of pallets, limbs, brush and other natural materials that don’t have be covered. ’ 1 Bahnson said the county needs.; to do everything it can to extend j the life of the landflll. 1 ; “ It’s just like money in: the; bank,” Bahnson said. “ The; quicker you use it up, the quicker; you’re going to go broke. . ; “ The landfill that Davie Coun-; ty has right now is a real blessing,; and we belter treat it as such or gar-; bage will be a real nuisance to us; one day as it is in other places in; the country right now.” : Smith said the disposal of gar-; bage is a probleni nationwide. “As; a matter of fact, oiir problems are small in comparison wilh other areas,” he said. Next week: How much garlmge ill) Oavie Coiiiiiy residents- )>cnenile? tire the laws gover- niiii; llie disposal of garbiige? lO-DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISK KECORI), TIIUUSDAY, Лиц. 3, 1ЗД9 Superior Court The following cases were dispos ed of in Davie Counly Superior Courl llic week of July 17. •David Lee Dalton, 51. ol Route 7, Mocksville. probation violation; pleaded guilty, conlinuccl on probation. Judge Judson D. DcRanuis Jr. added the following conditions lo his probation; .serve 14 consecutive days in jail; pay $170 by Sept. 15 in addition to amounts previously paid; Not use, possess or control any illegal drug or controlled substance unless it has been prescribed by a physician and is in tlie original con tainer wilh the prescription number affixed to it; submit upon request of any law enforcement officcr or probation officer lo any physical, chemical, blood speciman lest or urinalysis for detection of alcohol or controlled substance and pay cost of such; Submit to at least one lest every 60 days at request of probation o(^ ficer, more if requested; submit to warrantless searches by a probation officer of his person and of his vehicle while he is present for the detection of alcoholic beverages or controlled substances; Defendant is to observe a curfew ' to remain at his residence from the tirrie the sun goes beyond the horizon until sunrise, unless he has the permission of his probation of ficer to leave to attend some educa tional program, attend to Ihe health needs or himself or his immediate family, to attend religious functions or to comply with special condi tions of probation. • Otha Bud McManus, non- compliance; dismissed upon pay ment of fine. 1(1 • James Edward Williams, pro- [>¡1 bation violation; pleaded guilty, ' I'■ continued on probation. T!» foUowing conditions were ‘ Î add^ljlb his probatioii: serve 30 < days^in I^vie County Jail; jpay an additional $2(X)'firie pliis jail fees; submii to monthly testing for àlcc^ol or controlled substance or mòre firequently if directed by pro bation officer; - ^Defendant is to observe a curfew . by ipiMitung at his residence from the jtoe the sun goes beyond the horizon until sunrise unless he is - required to be out to comply with conditions of work, attend to health care or to attend educational and religibus programs. ; ;* Gerald Dean,Benton, DWI, 46, bf Route 8, Salisbury; remand to District Court judgment: serve a^vb jail sentence on three con secutive weekends; pay $400 fine and $40 costs at rate of $100 per iiionth beginning Aug. 4 and $15 ^ r month for supervisory fees. Conditions of his probation are as" follows: surremler driver’s license and not operate a motor, vehicle until relicensed to do so; supply a breath^urìne and/or blood speciman for sui^ysis of the possi ble presence of à prohibited drug or alcohol, when instructed by pro bation officer and pay cost; - Successfully pass the General Education Development Test (CED); and not violate any state or federal laws and remain of good behavior. • Brent Edward Brewer, 17, of Winston-Salem, provisional licensee; remand to District Court judgment: sentenced to 60 days, suspended under unsupervised pro bation for one year, ordered to pay $100 fine, $40 in court costs and $10 in jail fees. Conditions of his probation arc; surrender license and not operate a motor vehicle for 45 days or un til his 18th birthday, whichever is later or until relicensed by the N.C, Division of Motor Vehicles, • Richard Cooley, possession of marijuana, possession of Schedule II cocaine and possession of drug paraphernalia; appeal withdrawn. • Dom inick Anthony Diclimente, 34, of Yadkinville, un safe movement; voluntarily dismissed after conferring with of ficer — insufficient evidence, • Terry Dulin, 18, of Roule 4, Mocksville, two couni.s of break ing and entering and larceny; pleaded guilty to Iwo counts of breaking and entering as part of plea arrangement, cases con solidated for six-year aclive sentence Judge DeRamus said Dulin will lie allinved lo serve as a coniniU- icd youtliliil on'ciuler and rccoiu- ineiuled work release. As a condi tion of parole irgtanleil or from earnings if work release is granted. Diilin will be required lo pay 5129 in court costs; $125 to the clerk of courl'.s olTicc for his court- appointed attorney; $245 restitu tion to Mary Foster Williams of Route 4, Mocksvillc, for items stolen during a break-in at her home; and $40 to Alonzo Arnold of Cooleemee for items taken dur ing a break-in at his home. Also, Dulin was ordered to com plete the General Education Development Test (GED) and have occupational training and ex perience before being considered for parole, • Kenneth Howell, assault and second-degree trespass; appeal withdrawn. • Paul Thomas Hulin, 39, of Clemmons, driving while license revoked and failure to secure child in re.slraint seal: remand to District Court judgment: 181 days active sentence, work release recommended, • John Garfield Laws, 29, of Route 1, Cleveland, assault on a female, second-degree rape and larceny of vehicle; no true bill found on larceny of vehicle, plead ed guilty to two counts of assault on a female as part of a plea ar rangement requested by pro secuting witness Angela Stewart, Laws was sentenced to two years, suspended for five years under supervised probation. He received credit for 11 days in jail prior to senfencing. Conditions of his probation were: pay a $200 fine, court costs and a $35 per month supervisory fee; re|»rt for evaluation by Tri- County Mental Health and par ticipate in all further evaluation, counseling, treatment or educa tional programs recommended as a result of evaluation and comply with all other r^uests of those pro grams until discharged and pay costs; and not harass or threaten Stewart during probationary period. • Shannon Jean M arie Laschiniski, 18, of Route 1, Mocksville, driving too fast for conditions; pleaded responsible, ordered to pay $10 fine and cost of court. Failed To Appear Orders of arrest were issued for the following when they failed to appear for their scheduled court hearing. • Eric Martinez, .ijrobation violation. • Gerald Vernon Tyler, proba tion violation. • Donald Ritchie Barney, D W I and driving while license revoked. Cases Continued ,,The following cases were con tinued until the Oct. 9 session of Superior Court. — Carolyn Eileen Harris, order of forfeiture. — Cynthia Renee Tucker, order of forfeiture. — Gene Aikens, reckless driving. — Charles “June” Anderson, felony larceny. — David Franklin Bares, DW I. — Gary M ichael Barnes, felonious possession of marijuana and possession of marijuana with intent lo sell or deliver. - Michael Hales, abandomnciil and non-support. — Robert L. Brook.s. DWI, — Ernest Lee Cain, two counts of .sale of marijuana and two counts of possession of marijuana with in tent to sell or deliver. — Connie Campbell, damage to personal property. — Scottie Campbell, possession of marijuana. — David Dean Carter, second- degree rape, — Gary Stacey Chaffin, DW I, reckless driving, possession of less Ilian I ounce marijuana, transpor ting alcoholic beverage and posses sion of drug paraphernalia. — Dorothy Sullivan Gaither, second-degree murder, — Ricky Aldene Greer, DW I. — Debbie Gulledge, damage to personal property, — Harry Gulledge, damage lo personal properly, — Janies Stanley Hairslon, traf ficking in cocaine by transporting, trafficking in cocaine by po.ssess- ing and three counts of conspiracy lo traffic in cocaine, (Judge DeRamus denied motion by Lynne Hicks, his court-appointed at torney, for reduction of $100,000 bond.) — W.C. Hairston, possession of a controlled substance with intent lo manufacture, sell or deliver and sale of a controlled substance. — Shelia Hoover Jarrell, DW I. — Edwin T. Johnson Jr., five counts of forgery. — Joe Buck Lawder, DW I. — David E. McDaniel, posses sion of cocaine. — Randy Dean M cDaniel, possession of less than 'Л ounce marijuana and DW I. — Brian Keith Moser, sale of marijuana and possession of mari juana with intent to sell or deliver. — John M ark Newman, felonious possession of marijuana and possession of marijuana with intent to sell or deliver. — Webster Rudolph Newmann, two counts of first-degree sexual offense. — Bobby W, Polts, furnishing a controlled substance to an inmate, — James Wesley Potts, fur nishing a controlled substance to an inmate, — John Charies Rives, DW I, — Dean Shore, breaking and entering and larceny, — Roger Sidden, breaking and entering and larceny. — John Robert Sluser Jr., DW I. — Ronnie Clifton Smith, DW I. — William Alan Taylor, DW I, speeding 83 mph in a 65-mph zone and reckless driving. — Jimm y Lee Thom pson, possession of stolen property. — Cynthia Renee Tucker, four counts of forgery and uttering. — Frankie Horace Wadell, driv ing while license revoked indefinitely. — Christopher Travis Ward, possession of marijuana with intent to sell or deliver and sale of marijuana. — Jamie Richard White, transporting liquor and provisional licensee. 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Hanes Mall, Winston-Salem j. Bei.iwda Quay Shopping Center, Advance, N.C. 9- Oldiown, 3716 Reynolda Road 4,631 Peters Cfeei< Parkway, Winslon-Salem tO. Lewisville, 6499 Shallowioid Rd., Winslon-Saleti 5, Reynolda Manor Shopping Cenier, Winston-Salem ' 1 ■ Stanleyville, Old Highway 52 North 6,3075 Kemersvile Road, Winslon-Salem '2. King, Colony Centre 13.4917 Cognlry Club Rd. Walkertown, Highway 66 Yadkinville, Newton, Taylorsville. Lexington, and Welcome Wlio» Oak Shopping CtnlreJHocksville Bermuda Quay Shopping CenliiAdvaiici I iC "V; ; ll' li/ l r Uli,> 1 I ! •‘ ''I f i: r l-.u fî I ' f ^1 'r-l ) Vi"!; ■ 1 ; 1:лг I- v V DAVIK COÜ.N I V KN I KRI'RISIC KKCOKI), TIIURSIUV, Мщ. 3, 1989—IB Mocksviiie, Wiiiteviiie in State Fináis Stanley Is No Match For Area 3 Champs B y Ronnie Gallagher .Davie Couniy Enterprise-Record M O U N T H O L L Y — Il wa.s supposed to be ’ ;Stanley’s pitching against Mocksville’s hitting but as the Western North Carolina American Legion .baseball finals turned out, Mocksvillc had Ihe hit ting and M ocksville had the pitching. And Stanley had a quick exit from the playoffs, four games to one. W hen M ike Lovelace stifled Stanley Sunday night, 7-2, in a rain-shortened contcst, it gave Post 174 its 36th victory of Ihe season and a berth in the state finals against Whiteville, which begins Thursday in Whiteville. “ This was our goal, our challenge,” said an ecstatic Dale Ijames, who has won his second straight Western championship. “ W e’ve been planning for this all year and the boys are only four wins away from a chance of_a lifetime.” ; . ,That chance could be a berth in the Southeastern Regionals in Baseball City, Fla., a double elimination tournament, which begins A ug. 16. MocksviUe, 36-11-1, is 17-5 in five playoff series, with only Concord winning more than one game. Post 174 struggled to a 4-3 ’ Southern D ivision series title but has had little trouble with North W ilkesboro (3-0), Lexington (3-0), Asheboro (3-1) or Stanley (4-1). : ■- ;“ W e knew getting out o f our division would be our hardest series,” Ijames said. “ At .. Kernersviile last year, we had to beat Eastern ; Randolph 4-3 just to advance. But right now, ' we’re hitting the ball well and we’re four deep iir pitchers so we feel real good.” ll^Game Winner % One o f those pitchers is Lovelace, who became .the team’s first 10-game winner with the fivc- '.run victory. A four-run first against Stanley ace ; i ,See S ta n le y - p. 2B Fans Now Have To Help Legion Opportunity Win Crown M ike L ovelace w/on th e fifth g a m e ag ain st S tan ley an d Is e x p e c te d to start the opener of the North Carolina Legion finals Thursday night iri Whiteville. — Photo by Jim Barringer B y K onnic G allagher Davie County Enterprise-Record F.or most o f the Legion baseball season, the players have been playing for the fans. Now , it’s time for the fans to prove their worth to the players. W hen W hiteville comes to M ocksville for games 3-4-5 at Rich Park, beginning Thursday, Coach Dale Ijames says the fans could make a difference bet ween winning and losing. “ W e need that place pack cd,” he said. “ The kids have done all they can do. It’s time for the fans to take over from the first pitch to the ninth inn ing. The ‘Mountain’ needs to be in rare form .” Ijames was referring to the “ M ocksville Mountain,” the hill on the right field line that is always fttll o f voracious fans. It can be very intimidating at times to opposing teams. M ost have not seen crowds as large and loud as M ocksville. Stanley, which has about 50 regular fans, was awed by the sight last week, according to Ijames. “ Their coach (Darrell Van Dyke) is usually good about get ting on the umpires but even he didn’t scream too loud when he came here,” chuckled Ijames. “ He told me that hill was in- tim idiiling." W anting A Split If M ocksville could split'the Chartered Bus Going To Whiteville American Legion Post 174 has chartered a bus for anyone' wishing to travel to Whiteville for games 1-2 Thursday and Friday. The bus will leave from Willow Oak Shopping Center cach day at 2:30 p.m. and will arrive back in M ocksville' around 3 a.m. There will be a $14 charge for > the round trip and space is < limited. I Tickets can be purchased at' the Enterprise-Record office. ‘ Sec Sara Campbell or calt- 634-2120 or 634-2129. • Here are two directions to Whiteville: • Travel U.Si 64: East > tO; Asheboro and get on U.S. 220^ to Rockingham. Turn left onto U.S. 74. Whiteville is on this highway. • Travel U .S. 52 past' Salisbury to Wadesboro and; turn left on U.S. 74. , '',j The trip is approximately 3'^^' hours. first two games at W hiteville, Ijames would be a very confi- ■ ■ dent man. i “ W e would like to split and then win three at home — and that’s where the fans com e in. It’s tough to play three straight away from home anyway but it’s also tough lo look up on that . Pleaw See FansP. 2B - ■ : II Р е а г W T h i s I s W h a t W e H a v e T o O f f e r ¡ A^lppen letter to Whiteville baseball fans... ] i i i called the W hiteville Cham ber o f Com - Im r c e last week and a s k ^ what people did If o r iu n there. j I ^-i was told they go out o f town. ' i^Sounds like M ocksville to me. ' askied what kind o f people were in I V^iteville and w as “told,'; “ W e have the I W endliest people anywhere.” ^ l for M ocksville. : I : -I figure that any town as friendly as ours Id e K rv e s to be teken care of. Y o u people iM u n d like u s— just good ol’ country [i^ i^ b o rs. ;And certainly your contingent from |\K^iteviUe w ill be wanting something to do lo ve r the weekend, considering you’ll be here I frim Saturday m orning tro u g h M onday I night while our Legion ballteams fight it out Ronnie Gallagher for the state championship. So that’s where I come in. I ’m your sports editor/tour guide for the weekend. Here’s a few options... Family Entertainment: • Ladies and gentlemen, you’ve come to M ocksville on the right weekend. The Masonic Picnic has been going on since Thursday. It wraps up with — get ready — a carnival. Find the M asonic Picnic grounds and you’ll see a ferris wheel, a tilt-a-whirl ... ail the biggies. I think the carnival is sponsored by “ Kinky D ink Rides” or something like that. • D uring the day, visit Lake M ye rs C am pground on U .S. 64. Y o u can swim , boat, ride the water slide, eat, anything you want. It’s a paradise. • M aybe you can visit Lake M ye rs Satur day and our other pool o f water, the famous “ Bullhole” on Sunday — if you can find it. Visit Our Stores • If you’re a checkers fiend, find Farm ington Hardware, where Davie C ounty’s best sit there all day, strategically m oving those little round checkers all over the board. But remember, these old dudes don’t like to lose. • If you like m ilk shakes, find C assidy’s E a s t - W e s t A l l - S t a r s F r o s t P r o v e s H i s P o i n t |;By Ronnie Gallagher : biayie County Enterprise-Record : - W hen the W est’s 17-0 victory was complete last week in the 41st edition of the M cD onald’s ; East-W est all-star football game, Davie County : linebacker Andre Frost came bounding off the field, elated with his performance. 5: ¡And he had a message for anyone who would : listen. i‘l hope this proves it,” he yelled. “ 1 hope this :shows all Ihc coachcs.” ■ Frost was referring to the 1988 all-Central Piedmont Conference football team, an elite squad from which he was snubbed. Frost was Davie’s leading tackier in 1988 with 110 slops and was definitely one of the league’s lop linebackers. But let’s face it. Regardless of how good a player is, he gels lilllc recognilion when his team finishes 3-7, as Davie did. There also aren’t many players from a thrce- viciory leam who make many all-star teams. But [Frost had M ike Carter on his side. Carter, who left Davio for Mooresville mid way through Ihe 1988-89 school year, was on ihc We.st coaching slalT and he knew of Frost’s potential. He got him on the leam and it paid off. Frosl made several tackles on special teams and was in on several more as a linebacker. “ Andre was just caught in a year when the Central Piedmont Conference had some real good linebackers,” Carter said. “ Rum inski and Drye deserved lo be all-conference too, so one of them had lo be left off. “ It doesn’t matter now, though, bccause A n dre came in and played as well anybody here. He proved he could play.” • No one outside of Davie County knew just how good Frost really was as a defensive player, so one can imagine his anonymity once he reported to his fir.st West practice. “ At first, 1 looked al these guys who I’ve read aboul all year and thought, ‘W ow , I’m here wilh these guys.’ I didn’t know if I would fit in. But afler a while, I realized 1 could play wilh all of Ihem. And they were all greai guys.” Frosl was told his role woulil be as a backup linebacker, roiating wilh West 1-or.syih’s Greg Rum inski and Soulh Row an’s Chris Drye. He wasn’t satisfied and made a few fans wilh ilic coaches by signing up loc every special leam. Please See Krost — 1’. 41i Andre Frost vi/aits to get into the East-West All-Star Game. — P hoto by Chris M ackie Store on U .S. 158. T h is store has the best , : chocolate m ilk shakes in the world. ' W ell, at least, in our world, they’re the best. • If you want to go back in time, visit ■ ' ' M artin’s Hardware on Depot Street. / Nostalgia engulfs anyone w ho goes in here.' There’s a rum or the store is closing, so get', ; there this weekend. ‘ , ■ > Landmarks' , , '' ' ''i--' ¡. • Visit Greasy Com er, w hich is near the <, i county’s other town, Cooldemee. H ere,'youi have gas stations and barbecue restaurants. i C an ’t get any greasier than that; ^ i i • V isit the Joppa Cemetery. Y o u can look? ’ at the graves o f Daniel Boone’s parents. ' Davie County claim s Daniel Boone. BuV so ‘‘ ^ does Yadkin, Davidson, W ilkes and just Please,See Gallagher — P. 2B. 't 7 5 S h o w F o r t 1 s t P r a c t i c e Randall W ard saw plenty o f new faces Mort; ; day when Davie County held its opening f(x»t- ball practice o f 1989. ; About 75 new faces. “ W e feel good about the kids w ho did show up,” said W ard, who came over from W est Rowan, where he built the program into a 3-A contender. “ Conditioning is a big part of the first week,” he said. “ W e start w orking on our offensive and defensive packages. M ainly, we w ork on fun damentals.” Asked if Ihe players showed up in good shape. W ard said, “ W e ’re gelling there.” Davie County players have to adjust to another aspect of Ihe new program — morning practices. But there was plenty of enthusiasm Tuesday mor ning when the team hit the field around 8:30 a.m. Davie will practice light until Thursday, when shoulder pads are issued. W ard has several new additions to the coaching staff; • Assistant principal M elvin Fogg is now an assistant coach in charge of the secondary. • David Hunt will coach ihc tight ends and Hankers. • Ladden Lakey, who will also coach the jayvee baskelball team, is the trainer. и i;-;' : ■yX'’.'. ■■'Л' : 'Í-Í' ! 2B-DAV1E COUNTY KNTEUI’RISK KECOKI), TIIUKSDAY', Aiic- .1, 19«!> F a n s continued from P. Ill hill and sec all of those people.” Whiteville .shouldn’t be as awed as other teams who have veiilured into miniscule Rich Park. Il is a town .similar to Mock.sville where Legion baseball is king. “ Little towns get into things like this,” explained Ijamcs. "F o r them, this is the summer. That’s why home field advantage is so im portant.” Whiteville has given its town something to cheer about, coining into Ihe .state championship series 27-8. Coach Lynwood Hedgepeth has had several championship sea.sons in Legion and as coach of the Whiteville High School team that won Ihe 2-A slate title in June. Whiteville is led by centerfielder Byron W ard and fireballing LaGrande Ru.ssell, a righthand pitcher. Ward is batting .393 with five home runs. He has signed a baseball scholarship with the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Russell played with J.C. Hendrix at Campbell Univer sity and although the Bulldogs did not fare well, he threw a no-hitter. He’s 8-1 for Whiteville wilh a .324 average. He too has five homers. ; “ Russell throws in the 80s,” said Ijames. “He’s got good con trol and he’s a little cagier with the college experience.” . The infield is made up of second baseman Tonnny Ward, shorlsiop Mallhew Gore and third baseman Brian Smith. Jasim Jackson is the utility innddcr. Ward, llie cmisin of the other Ward, is hilling .363 wiih one homer. Gore has hll three homers and lias a .24f) average while Smith is one of Ihe lop defensive players in the stale. He is balling .248. Jackson has only a .184 average but is very good defensively. The catcher is John Sherberl, who left the team earilcr but is back to add stability behind plale. He is hilling .232. Calvin Freeman is the righlfielder. He hits. 305 and has four home runs. Helping Russell on the mound is Randy Best, a lefthander, and Richie Blackwell, a righthander. Best has had quite a year. He was 14-1 for Whiteville High School and has a 7-1 record going into the state finals. He is also bat ting .313 with two homers. Blackwell is 2-2 wilh a .297 average. “I’ve gotten a pretty good report on them,” said Ijames. “ I said all along that they’d be in the finals. ” Getting Used to Rich Whiteville plays at Legion Field, a much more spacious ballpark than Rich Park — but that’s nothing new. “ They’ll have to come in here and adjust to our park,” Ijames said. The eastern teams have adjusted for years. Seldom does a weslern team win Ihe stale title. Ijames’ Kernersville leam last year was an o.\ceplioii. ''There's no love lost between east and west,'' Ijames pointed oul. ■'Teams like Snow Hill. Hanilel and Whiteville are always there. "The eastern teams always gel the calls down there loo." Ijames said. “ In Ihe wesl. we’re nol a homer association and the home leam docs nol necccssarily gel Ihe close calls." That's where the fans come in. "W e 're hoping lo gel Ihe fans from all around." he said, “ nol just Davie Counly. We want them from Yadkin, Forsyih, Davidson, Rowan, everywhere. And wc need thal enthusiasm.” Whiteville officials contend Ihal they live in a "baseball town” bul said the high scliool team drew much belter lhan the Legion, although big crowds do pack Legion field. But as Ijames says, “They ain’t seen nothin’ until they come to Mocksville.” The team has been averaging close to 2,500 fans, quite a number for a 3,000-pcrson town. “ And wc’ll need everyone of them,” Ijamcs said. “ This series is for them.” The Legion has allowed studenls from high school seniors down in for free all year but that will changc in the playoffs. Students get in for $1. Regular admission is $3 and senior citizens will be charged $2. Dale Ijames says the fans will have a say In who wins the state Legion title. — Photo by Jim Barringer S t a n le y COntinnMl ilroni p r IB E.L. Clark spelled doom for Post -2 6 6 .:,;'y “It might have'done something : to theni psychologically/* Ijaines said. “We had drilled them pretty good Satiirday (an 18-4 win) and they were really down after the first. They have a lot of confidence in E.L. and he might have given up then." . Mocksville struck swiftly tiehlnd Its two hottest bats, Matt Marion and Michael Shore, who have awoken the offense recently. Mike McDaniel had given Post 174 a 1-0 lead with ai RBI single, : scoring Anslo Fowler.: Marion then ripped a single to left, koring Chad Triplett and McDaniel and Shore sent a high fly to center that just missed going out of the park. It turned out to be a double, scoring Marion for a 4-0 lead. “ They had a veteran pitching staff which had tieaten tough teams like Pineville and Paw Creek,” said Ijames. “They did it with a variety of pitchers and nobody in the playoffs could hit them. But we really swung the bats well, "Shore is carrying the heck out of us. He had two doubles Sunday that a couple of feet more could have been home runs. And Marion has given us a big lift coming back from his injury. W e’re as healthy now as we’ve been all season.” Putting It Away Stanley narrowed the margin to 4-2 before a three-run fifth put the game away. Brocke Walker began the rally with a single and he scorcd on Shore’s blast off the leftfield fence. Scott McDaniel then drilled a iwo- run double for a 7-2 margin. Lovelace, 10-1, had lillle Irou- ble in the fifth, sixth and seventh innings and when lightning and rain forced a delay, the game was called in the eighth after an hour wait. He finished with a five hit ter and struck out nine. “ M ike is regaining some of his strikeout form,” said Ijames. “ He’s been pretty tired lately but threw well Sunday.” McDaniel, Walker and Shore all had two hits for Mocksville while Fow ler, M arion and Scott McDaniel each had one. Notes; • The 6-7-8 hitters (Marion, Mike McDaniel is tagged out at home plate by the Stanley catcher. G a lla g h e r Shore, Scott McDaniel) combined for four doubles. • Suprisingly, Triplett did not pitch in the series. Ijames was war ming him up for the final two inn ings Sunday before the rains came. Triplett is 7-1. • Nate Newsome sat out Sun day’s game so Ijames could ex- periement with his outfield. “ He’ll be back in the lineup,” Ijames said. “ He’s important to our team,” • Mike McDaniel had 11 hits in the five games and Shore had nine. continued from P. IB about every other county. North Carolina, ’Tennessee and Ken tucky all claim him • Our last — and most treasured — landmark can be found at Ihe high school on a lawn mower. He's Bill Peeler, the athletic director of Davie High School. I think he’s been here as long as Daniel Boone’s parents — and we’re dang glad of it. Culinary Delights • If you want the best footlong hot dogs, find Miller’s Restaurant. • If you like gobs of delicious pimento cheese on your cheeseburgers, find C ’s Barbecue. You won’t regret it. • If you want best iced tea in Davie County, find Twin Cedars Golf Course. Hey, you can play a round while you wait for the ballgame. , • If you want the best onion rings in town, find Karyl’s Kozy Corner. • If you want to see the ugliest legs on any waitress, find BJ’s, where the owner, Jim Johnson, walks around in shorts, waiting on tables. Whew, enough said. Maybe that’s why Vernon, Jesse, Buster and all the other regulars always ask for Donna to wait on them. Sorry Jim, bul her legs have yours beat to a pulp. Beat to a pulp is a good way lo de.scribe Jim’s legs. Just kidding. • Is drinking a culinary delight? I gue.ss it all depends on who you talk with. Well, this could get a little confusing. Davie County is dry. But Cooleemee, which is only four miles from Mocksville, is wet. It has the county’s only A B C store. Then, there’s Turkeyfoot, a community that spans Davie, Yadkin and Iredell counties. Iredell is wet. The others aren’t. Sq if you want to drink, it all depends on whose backyard you’re in. Accomodations: • There’s several hotels in Whiteville. In MocksviUe, we have a Comfort Inn. The only problem is, it isn’t built yet. W e do have the, uh. A rk .. Souvenirs • You can go in almost any convenience store or t)ait and tackle shop and find a hat with the words, “ W e’re from Davie County, where we raise ‘maters, ‘taters and hell.” I ’m still wondering how they got all those words on one hat. • Another souvenir you inaÿ want to take home is underwear. W e’re the “ Underwear Capitol of the World,” with Jockey and Hanes both having plants here. Shoot, Whiteville, you may jiist look down your britches right now. and discover that you’re wear ing a part of Mocksville. Places to Stay Away From • Stay away from Bermuda Run. It’s a beautiful development - with lavish homes, a champion ship golf course (where the Crosby Celebrity Golf Touma- ment is held) and plenty of ■ luxury. There’s just one problem.' ■ You can’t get in. Bermuda Run has guards by ^ every entrance. It has a brick, wall surrounding^ the homes. Friendly, huh? _ •. •, ' This is the only of Davie; County that really; isn’t Davte 'v Couiity. In fact;. Benmida Run' I itself claims to be froih Clein^ ' I mons. It never mentions us poor; | old codgers down this'way.' Which is fine wilh us. W e’re still trying to reroute the Yadkin | River so Clenunons can have It/ Clemmons deserves Bermuda : . ■Run- . • Stay away fnam Cletnnu^ If yoii visit Winstoh-Salem^ S you’ll go by ClemmoiB'. Keep I going, there’s iwthing there. . These people aiv lilce. Bermuda Run. 'They think .they’re so smart.r.', ■ ,,V:: Sniait? Well, would you like : to know what they .^ided to^ call .Clenunons when it incorporated? , A village! . Not il town. Not a city. But jii village. , Ginutie a break. • 'I must admit, we’re a loc jil» ' Whiteville in where we go forj fun. Let’s face> it. 'There juU am I anything too exciting aboui^ Mocksville on t^ weekend. Since you’ll be KeK then, maybe you s l^ d just keep up .' your own tradition and go out of town tb Winston-Salent Come to think of it, I think ^ I’ll go with you. • Anslo Fowler rounds the base against Stanley. — Photo by Jim Barringer W h a t T o D o I n W h i t e v t l l i For those Davie County baseball fans traveling to Whiteville Thursday or Friday for the American Legion slate championship series, here’s a few tid bits about Whiteville: • Whiteville, a town of 5,700, is located in Col umbus Counly. It is situated about 50 miles within Wilmington, Fayelieville and Myrtle Beach. Within a 10-mile radius, there are 25,000 inhabitams. • U.S. 701 Bypass and Business is the busiest sec tion of town. There are all of the usual fast food restaurants. • Whiteville is famous for its seafood restaurants, among them, McLam b’s Seafood and Chart’s Seafood. But the restaurant Dale Ijames ntay take his Mocksville team to is named, appropriately enough, Dale’s Seafood. If Ijames can pull off two victories In Whiteville, Post 174 could very well buy il for him. At least, that way, it could keep the same name. • If you don’t want seafood or fast food, there are locally famous restaurants. Mammarita’s is famous for Italian Food. Locaied on Mill Street (off of Maclison, which is actually Main Street), it is run by an Italian family original ly from Italy. It's a big seller in Whiteville, accor ding to Lana White of the Wliilcville Chamber of Commerce. "It’s beautiful inside wiih a rustic .selling," While said. “And the food is delicious.” . , ./• If you’d like good country cooking, find Holiday Restaurant, located at Holiday Motel, where Mocksviile’s team is staying. White said it has the finest home-cooked meals in Whiteville. v '' • If you’re planning on staying overnight, there is the Holiday Motel and a Best Western. • For entertainment, there is 701 Bowling Alley and Cinema Theater, which has two movies shown at once. The theater is locaied on Madison Street. There is also Whiteville City Park, a modern facility with tennis and basketball courts. • For shopping, Whiteville has a Wal-Mart (who doesn’t?), Roses, K-Mart and even a mini-mall in tlie heart of town. White said the middle of towii was famous for its shopping area becausc of the Jewish merchants located downtown. “ Many peo ple from Myrtle Beach come here to buy clothes,” she said. • So, whal aboul alcohol? You can buy beer wilh your meals in most restaurants or brown bag. There are no bars bul there are package stores spread around the Qounty. . • If you feel you can’t find your niche in Whiteville, remember lhat Myrtle Beach is only 50 miles away. See you on the beach. Koiiiiie Gallagher iiÍMocksville Vs. Stanley: Games 2-4 : Starmount products Michael Shore (left) and Brocke Walker helped Mocksville defeat ■ Stanley. _ Photos by Jim Barringer jGame 2 Stanley Pitching Crumbles In 11-7 Defeat Stanley coach Darrell Van Dyke was wondering what happened to his pitching after losing game two of the Western North Carolina American Legion : playoffs to Mocksville, 11-7. • Two of his top pitchers, Mark Bilies and Geoff Rosenbaum, were racked for 11 runs and 13 hits. At .one point. Van Dyke was so frustrated that he threw his cap to the ground. ..and why shouldn’t he be confused? After two '¿ames, his pitchers had struck out 16 but had walk ed 19. , r .Mocksville coach Dale Ijames will tell Van Dyke that maybe his pitchers had just run into an offensive juggernaut. ■ „“ We feel real good about our hitting,” said ijames, jwhose team won the first game, 17-5. “ We have hit .’the cúrve ball real well in our last two series and that • iSinot supposed to be one of our strong points." ■' Mike Lovelace started for Mocksville and allowed two runs in the first Inning. Michael Shorc'.s error ,. on a ball that would’ve been the third oul did noi help. •Shore redemmed himself, somewhat in the fourth when his groundout scored Brocke Walker for a 2-1 deficit. But Mocksville fought back lo tic in the bolloni of the fifth. Facing the eighth and ninlh hitters, Bilies walked Scott McDaniel on four pitches and Lovelace on five. McDaniel later scored on Anslo Fowler’s sacrifice Пу behind second base and Walker added an R BI single to knot the score al three. Mocksville finally put the game away in the sixth with five runs. Shore doubled and waited out a 30-minute rain delay. He promptly stole third and scored on Nate Newsome’s sacrifice fly for a 4-3 lead. Scott McDaniel walked again in four pitches and after Lovelace singled, Chad Triplett socked a three-run homer, his 11th, for a 7-3, advantage. Rosenbaum, touted as Area 4’s top relief artist,' replaced Bilies in the eighth and threw eight straight balls, walking Shore and Newsome. Lovelace, Fowler and McDaniel all followed with R BI hits for an 11-3 margin. Lovclacc did give up four nm.s in llic llnal iwci in nings but Unishcd wilh a 133-pilch victory, .striking out seven. . 3 pay What? Brown Silences Mocksville’s Bats liap^ned? , i \ } ;.Tliat was die question circulating around Mocksville ; after handed Post 174 its first : .loss ìli the Wèstern Noiih Carolina Legion finals, 4-0, ' in game three of the best 4-of-7. ; After thrashing Stanley for 28 runs and 31 hits in : ihe first two games, Bfòwh, a fastballing righthander, V stopp^ Mocksville on only two hits, a leadoff dou- ; : bie by iScott McDaniel in the sixth and a two-out single by Mike McDaniel in the eighth. “We knew Brown was tough,’’ said Mocksville .'«Mch Dale Ijames,. “and that we would have to get I , to him early. We didn’t and he killed us.” ; Brown got the only run he nepded in the sccond. ■Mocksville starter Mike McDaniel walked catcher Jay Barkely but on a good pick-of move, had Barkley in I à rundown. Chad Triplett threw the ball away, allow ing Barkely third base and he scored on E.L. Smith’s »ngle. '^McDaniel .was the hard-luck loser, throwing an eight-hitter and striking out nine in seven innings. .“Brown gave us a shot in the arm,” said Stanley coach Darrell Van Dyke, “but McDaniel pitched a heck of a game for Mocksvillc,” Mocksville could never get anything going after its hits. In the sixth, Scott McDaniel’s double was follow ed by a Triplett popup and Anslo Fowler’s groun dout, Mike McDaniel walked but Brocke Walker’s groundout ended the inning. In the eighth, Matt Webb and Fowler each hit hard shots that were caught before Mike McDaniel singled. Triplett was hit by a pitch but Walker struck out for Ihe third oat. “We didn’t play very sound baseball,” Ijames shrugged. Van Dyke knew Brown was getting tired but wouldn’t remove him. “ Brown got tired by the seventh but had such a psychological edge on Ihe Mocksville hitlers that it really didn’t matter.” Notes: • Brantley Smith saw his first work on the mound in quite a while, throwing the eighth inning. • Mocksville came into Ihe game wilh a team bat ting average of .321 and went 2-for-29 against Brown. ' • The loss was the first for McDaniel, who is now 4-1. DAVII': С ()1'.У1Л I.N I i:ui‘ltlS|-. UIXOUI). im iltsiu v . Лиц. 3. 198!)-3B Game 4 \i Marlon’s Home Run Trot Is Back In 18-4 Win -At .6-4, Denny Key’s appearance is enough to frighten most opposing batters but add an 88-milc- per-hour fastball and that’s too much to overcome. Just ask Stanley Post 266, which lost game four of the best-of-seven Western North Carolina Legion baseball finals 18-4 to Mocksville al Rich Park Salur- . day night before another packcd house. ■ jCey, picking up his sccond victory of ihc .series, yielded only four hils while striking oul 13 and walk ing only two. Key is most effective when holding a lead and his teammates gave him an early advantage with six runs in the firsl inning. Mike McDaniel and Wes Mecham .slarlcd ihings with RBI singles but Ihe big blow was a three-run homer by Mall Marion, who has jusl recovered from a broken wrist. His round-iripper, an opposilc-field shoi, gave Mocksville the 6-0 lead. "M a ll has really pumped us up,” said coach Dale Ijames, "H e ’s a good hiller and wc need lo keep his bat in Ihe lineup. W e’re happy he’s back,” . Stanley closcd lo wilhin 6-3 before McDaniel’s two ^ run single in Ihe Iburlh and Chad Triplell’s ihree-riin ■ blasl in the fifth gave Posl 174 a commaiiiling 12-3 • advantage. ■. “ After we had ihat horreruloiis start, uc ihiuijihl we were gelling the game back under conlrol,’’ said Stanley coach Darrell Van Dyke. "Then, they got going again.” But Mocksville was far from through as il embar- rased Slanley's pitchers Geoff Rosenbaum and Mark Baliles, A two-run double by Stu Holt started a four- run sixth that made Ihe game a laugher, 16-3, RBI doubles by Scoll McDaniel and Naie Newsome added in.sult lo injury in ihe eighth. In going up in the series 3-1, Mocksvillc had 18 hils, Mike McDaniel led Ihe hillers wilh four in six at-bals, Brocke Walker, .Marion, Michael Slioro and Holl all had two hils. Key improved lo 9-2 on ihe season. Rosenbaum was highly-louled belore ihis scries bul has done nolhing againsl Mocksville. In Ihrce inn ings Salurday, he threw ihrcc innings, giving up live hils and four runs. Bililes wasn't any betler, wilh seven runs and eight hils in five innings. Notes: • All 17 players saw aclion in ihe game. • Marion's homer was his I'ourlh. Triplell hil his I2lh. • Branlley Sniilh pilched ihe ninlh inning, giving up IWO hils, Il was his secoml siiaighi appearance on Ihe mound. S h o re , M a rio n O n A T e a r; M c D a n ie l Is ‘Steady E d d ie * You can talk ¡iboiil ihc rc.siirycncc of MichacI Slioic or M all Marion but there has been one constant I'nr the M ocksville Legion leam all season in M ike McDaniel. W hile other averages have gone up ami clown. M cDaniel has been I’osl I74'.s ‘‘.Steady Odtlic." He increased his average to ,442 going inlo the W hilevillc series. liveryone seems to be gelling belter slatistical- ly as the Legion playolTs continue, especially ■Shore and Marion. Shore began the Area 3 playolTs with a .215 balling average. Nine games later, he stands ut .303. He made the biggest move of any player, increasing his totals in every offensive category. M arion came back strong from a wrist injury to hit a Ihree-riin homer in game 4 against Stanley and a two-run double in game 5. H e's hilling .365, Eleven players arc hitting at least ,300, boosting the team average lo .319. M ike Lovelace becamc the team’s first lO-gamc winner with hi.s viclory in the deciding game 5 again.st Stanley. He has 129 strikeouts. Denny Key improved to 9-2 and has 98 K ’s in 89 innings. In another major development. Matt W ebb stole his first base of the season. L E G IO N S T A T IS T IC S (47 Gam es) Players H itting A B Hits A vg. M ike M cDaniel 156 69 .442 Matt M arion •63 23 .365 Nate Newsom e 154 55 ,357 Brocke W alker 161 57 .354 Chad Triplett 154 54 .351 Freddie Transou 113 38 .336 Alex Nail 27 9 .333 Gray Bovender 122 39 .320 M ike Lovelace 60 19 .317 A nslo Fow ler 153 47 .307 Michael Shore 132 40 .303 Brantley Smith 60 17 .283 W es Mecham 91 25 .275 Denny Key 62 15 ,242 Scott M cDaniel 100 23 .230 Stu Holt 41 9 .220 Matt W ebb 13 1 .077 H om e R u n s Triplett 12, W alker 7, M . M cDaniel 5, Shore 4 Mecham 4, M arion 4, Newsom e 3, Fow ler 3, Transou 1, Bovender I, Holt 1, K ey 1, S. M cDaniel I. Triple.s Newsom e 2, Shore 2, Bovender 1, M . M cDanicI 2. Key I. Doubic.s Shore 10, M . M cDaniel 9, W alker 9, Triplett 9, s. M eDaniel 8, M arion 7, Newsom e 7, Mecham 5, Fow ler 5, Bovender 5, Transou 4, Sm ith 3, Lovelace 3, Nail 2, Key I, Holt 1. R B I’s M . M cDaniel 43, Triplett 41, W alker 32, Newsome 30, Fow ler 26. Shore 25, Mecham 24, S. M cDaniel 21, Bovender 17, Transou l'5, M arion 15, Smith 13, Holt II. Lovelace 10, Key 10, Nail 8, W agoner 1. R u n s Scored Triplett 50, M . M cDaniel 41, W alker 37, Newsom e 36, Shore 33, Bovender 29, Fow ler 26, M arion 25, Transou 24, Mecham 20, S. M cDaniel 15, K ey 13, Lovelace 12, Sm ith 11, Holt 11, Nail 8, W ebb 6 . Stolen Bases Newsom e 25, W alker 12, Bovender 10, Shore 10, Triplett 3, Fow ler 2, M . M cD aniel 1, Transou I, M echam 1, Sm ith 1, W ebb I/ Pitching ' i .'' Players IP H its E R E R A : Freddie Transou 3.0 0 0 0.00! Denny Key 89'/3 62 23 2.33’ Chad Triplett 58'/3 59 17 2.64 M ik e Lovelace \3'A 90 38 3.02 Brantley Smith 3 1 '/3 30 13 3.7'?; M ik e M cD aniel 5 3 % 54 23 3.861 Jon W agoner 12'/s 17 9 6.75: A lex Nail 1 8 % 32 20 9.^4: Records Lovelace 10-1, Triplett 7-1, W agoner 1-0, M cD anicI 4-1. Key 9-2, Smith 2-1, Nail 0-1. Saves Lovclacc 3. Triplett 1. M . M cDanicI 1, Smith 1, K e y 1,.W agoner 1. , ‘ Strikeouts' Lovelace 129, Key 98, M cDaniel 69, Triplett 41, Smith 22, W agoner 7, N ail 6 . T b C t e r F lR iHdmiUNUwM G etFREE CHBCKE«WfflONIY*250]NS<MNGS. Al Ceiiinil Carolina lJunk,you don’t havelodoanytliingoiiti'a- gcoiis to get (i'ee clieckinii. We yon (i'ce clieckin}> wi'tli only sS250 in Preminni Sa\'inj;s — luiiulred.s le,ss than other bants, i'ind out iiow yon can tlie bettei' deal on dia'kin|>; c;dl l-8()0-CC15-91.-i9, It's lliat exsy. Central Carolina Bank Your Financial Advantage. MtmbcrFDIC 4B-DAVIE COUnW ENTKRPRISE KIXORD. THUK.SDAV, Aii}-. 3. 1989 East-West All-Stars C e n t r a l P i e d m o n t P r o d u c e s A l l - S t a r L i n e b a c k e r s G R EEN SB O RO - Officiiils iff the McDonald's Easl-West all-star foolball game wanted mure olTcnsc so llicy made a few rule nuidiTica- tions before last Thursday's 41st annual contest. Both teams had to play a basic 50 defense (nve-nian front). There was lo be no stunting or changing defenses. The rules .seemed to be |i aimed at slowing down the linebackers more than any other position. “The offense has a chance lo move the ball now,” said East coach Ted Perry before the game. Obviously, Greg Ruminski, An dre Frost and Chris Drye — all three Central Piedmont Conference linebackers — weren’t listening. The products from Wesl For syth, Davie County and Soulh Rowan were key ingredients in the W csl's 17-0 sluiKiut victory. •'We wanted llie shutinil." said Frost. “ I Ihink all three of us played pretty good and wc wanted people to know there are good foot ball players from the C P C ." Ruminski agreed, slating he w;is just glad lo get on the field and hit .somebody. "W e didn’t hit thal much in praclice so the defense was pumped up when the game started," said the Wake Foresl-bound monster. “The defense was the strength of our team lonighi." Close-Knit Defenders Ruminski, Drye and Frost were inseperable on the sidelines. They rotated the entire game and were often seen talking strategy and celebrating their hits while the of fense was on the field. “W c hung together,” .said Frost. “ Wc wanted lo keep fresh linebackers in Ihe game." Drye said. "1 think we all played prelly well." Ruminski, known as "H oz 11" at Wesl For.syth, played with Ihe same invigorating .style as his favorite pro, "1 wanted to come in and have a good game," .said the 6-2. 230-pound Ruminski. “ I didn't have as many hits as 1 wanted but Ihey were in a passing offense a lot of the lime." Ruininski said the hard, two-a- day practices got the players ready for another fall of football. "The prticlices were hot but they were worth it. I haven’t hil in a long time. Il felt good out there.” Drye finished as one of the West’s leaders with six solo lacklcs. He was the only one of the P a v i e A n d N o r t h H a v e E a s t - W e s t A l l - S t a r T r a d i t i o n '■ floles from the 41 sl annual East- boys and girls basketball and 'football all-star games in ■ Greensboro: • Would You Believe Depart- C ment: O f the eight Central Pied- hiont Conference schools, the two j|‘country” schools, Davie Coun- and North Davidson are the on- - ly members to have put a player in ia ll three all-star contests — boys ^;and girls basketball and football. :• R^nolds leads aU members with ^49 «ll'stars. including 38 in foot- But of tiw n basketball ' v^^yers,':«!! have been boys. ; * Kannapolis is next with 17, with •.the only basketball player being .jXmy Privette in 1983., Davie County is third with 13. ^i^cip a tijig in football were John iGrimes; (1961), Ed Bowles (*62). ^ iiionnie Spry C66), Edgar Osbome ;?‘67), RahdaU Ward ,(‘67), Fred > ; ^ e y C68)'; Allen Barger (’70). : Jacobs (‘84) and Andre Frost , j; Tiw War Eagles have placed two ■|6oys and two girls in the basket- vi>all games. They are James r ‘| i ‘Jingles” Ijames (‘70), Dwayne fdrant (‘77), Jill Amos (‘80) and ^^Angie Browder (‘84). ^ Mike Carter became the second ¿foodMll coai^ fhrni Davie to go to ><he East-West gwne. Jack Ward ^coached the We^ in 1%7, taking >'psbome and Ward with him. There were Wo £tmiliar w past East-West games. ^ ^ In 19S0, a Bill Peeler played in ll l& e game for Salisbury. Does that lum e sound familiar? p South Rowan has placed seven V foolball players, inclu^g Jeff Bar- ^’HnKer in 1983. Barringer is the son ^ F ro st East-West Week of Salisbury Post and Enlerprise- Record photographer Jim Barringer. • Brocke Walker and Chad Triplett weren’t the only athletes that helped put Starmount on the high school map over the past three years. Michelle Groce has done her part. She became the school’s fourth all-star, including Ihe first girl. She didn’t disappoint, scoring . 11 points in the West’s 69-63 loss. But she did score the West's final two points that tied the scorc al 63. Groce is Starmount’s all-time leading scorer wilh 1,376 and averaged 24.2 in her final season. She received a scholarship to Wingate. • The West won the overall ex cellence award this year, taking the football game, 17-0 and the boys basketball game, 93-86. The only loss was in girls basketball. Danyel Parker was this year’s outstanding athlete, scoring 30 in the East win. Reggie Gaines, from nearby West ' Iredell, scored 19 points and grabb ed 10 rebounds for the West boys. Brian Paige of North Rowan also participated. , ■ ' • The Central Piedmont Con ference had no players in either the boys or girls basketball game but did produce five football players for the West. • Only Texas has a larger con tingent of coaches at its all-star week than North Carolina. Last week’s affair saw 4,380 high school coaches show for the N.C. Coaches Association Coaching CPC irio thal hatl also played in Ihe preslegious Shrine IJowl ami was glad lo concenlrale on just defense. ■'In llie Shrine Bowl. I played liolh ways and trying to think about oU'en.se and defense gol a liltle con fusing." Drye. headed for The Citadel, said there wasn’t lhal much dif ference between Ihe talent level in Ihc Shrine Bowl and Easi-West game. “ There’s probably about 35 or 40 other players talented enough to play tonight." he said. Was il a coincidence that all three wore consecutive numbers? Ruminski was 43, Frost 45 and Drye 47. “ Thai’s the way we wanted it,” Frost laughed. “ W e’re from the same conference and we showed what we could do.” Also playing from the CPC were M ike Carter talks strategy with an offensive lineman during the East-W est all-star game. — Photo by C hris Mackie Clinic, breaking the record of 1988, when 4,068 showed. John Bullins was one of those coaches, but now, he is wearing a Morgan ton Freedom logo on his shirt. • West Rowan has put only two players in Easl-Wesl competition and both arc named Dreschler. Paul, a teacher at Davie, played basketball in 1974 and brother David saw action in football in 1978. The younger Dreschler went on lo play for North Carolina and Green Bay in the NFL. • Marty Hemric and Barry Whitlock like the East-West pro gram becausc it has their names in it every year. Guilford buys an advertisement, showcasing current high school coaches who graduated from the Greensboro school. Hemric is a coach at Davie High and Whitlock is at South Davic. • Mocksviile Legion short.slop Gray Bovender has some all-star in his blood. His uncle. Buddy .^Mntlni^ from P. IB i;' “ Anybody could s ip for the ^special teams,” 'he said, “ and I ^ d . I wanted to get on the field as ‘much as possible.” R Frost's name was one of the first I’cdled over the public address ^system. He made the tackle on the f in in g kickoff. ; "Th fact, on five kicks (kickoffs Cand punts) he was in on every -tackle. After watching the defense in the '-first quarter, he played the entire "second period. “ I didn’t get as many hits as 1 wanted because we had a greal defensive line,” Frost said. “ But 1 thought when me or Chris or Ruminski did have a shot, we hit ■hard.” Frost’s best hil came early in the third period with the West leading 10-0. The Easl moved to the West 29, where it faced a third-and-three situation. Frost broke through the line and nailed the runner lo the ground for no gain. Paul Tivnan Ihen missed a field goal. ll was the firsl time of witness ing a true Frost hit for I'nosi ofthe state’s fans and coaches. For the Davie, fans on hand, it was just another in a long line ofniemiirahle Frost plays. Frost is best known for cracking several helmets during his career from thundering hits. The 5-11, 205-pound block of granite had not worked out very much since the end of football season and decided not to play basketball. So the all-star workouts were .something lo get used to. “ 1 wasn’t in very good shape,” he said with a sheepish grin. Frost roomed wilh Kannapolis' Ruben Wells and the two explored Greensboro throughout all-star week. “ We weren't enemies anymore,” Frost said of CPC counterparts Wells and David Wilhelm of Kannapolis, Ruminski and Drye. "There were a lot of ac tivities throughout the w'eek. “ Wc • went to movies and stuff. "A n d we ate real good.” The only downside for Frost was lhal il iippear.s the all-star game was his cunain call on the fixithall field. The East-West program announc ed lhal he would attend Chowan Collegc on a football grant. Not so, corrected Frost. “ I’m not going lo collegc this year,” he said, “I'm going to wait and try to get inlo Greensboro Col lege next year,” Bul wail, Greensboro College doesn't have a football team, “ I know,” Fro.sl sighed. “ This is the last foolbiill game I’ll play.” After watching his performance last week against the state's top players, that's going to be a hard Kannapolis running back Kuben Wells and offensive lineman David Wilhelm. The East threatened only three times, the first coming carly in the third period, driving to the West 29-yard line, where it faccd a Ihird- and-lhrce. But Frost crunched an East runner to the turf for no gain, forcing a field goal try from 44 yards, Paul Tivnan of Northern Durham made the attempt but an illegal procedure forced a 49-yarder, that was wide right, Tivnan also missed a 43-yardcr and AI Ellis' interception wilh under a minute left deep in West territory preserved the shutout, "W ith aboul six minutes left, we started thinking about the shutout,” Drye said, “ W e lold everybody Bovender, played in 1962, • David Rosser, formerly of Davie and currently a player for The Citadel, was probably pleas ed with the play of Soulh Rowan's Chris Drye, They will be team mates next season, • The most colorful all-star name of all-lime: Lefus Tubby, who played in 1980 while representing the mountain school of Swain Counly, • Whatever happened to these former East-West ail-stars: Lex inglon and N.C, Slate's Joe Mcln- to.sh, N.C. State’s Nelson Isley, Watauga and Clemson's Danny Triplett, West Forsyth’s Tyrone Anthony and Herman McKinnie, Reynolds’ Sam Kennedy, Ged Doughton and Kenny Duckett, Starmount and Wake Forest’s Ron nie Grinton, Westem Carolina quarterback Mike Pusey, North Carolina’s Ranzino Smith, Rusty Clark and James Betterson and Duke's Wes Chesson? just lo suck it up and get il. We weren't sure wc had il, though, un til A l's interception at the end.” fhe shutout was the perfect en ding to a perfect week for Rumin ski, who was the seventh Tilan lo perform in the Easi-West game. Mike Culbrclh was the first in 1966 and Herman McKinnie was the mo.st recenl, in 1987. Others from Wesl Forsylh lo perform were Mike Kraft (1967), Norton Barnhill (1972), Tim Salley (1979), Harrison Finklea (1980) and Tyrone Anthony (1980). ; “ I had a lot of fun this week,” said Ruminski, who totaled more Ihan 200 tackles for Wesl in the past two seasons. “ 1 made good friends with everyone.” Along wilh Frost and Drye, he also made a name for linebackers from the Central Piedmont Conference. C a r t e r E n j o y e d C o a c h i n g O f f e n s e i n A l l - S t a r G a m e pill lo swallow for most Davie Counly foolball fans. But if Frost is going oul, he may as well go out as an all-star. A s one of North Carolina’s lop foolball players. “ 1 wouldn’t have traded this week for anything,” Frost said, “ ll was the best experience of my life.” By Ronnie Gallagher Davie Counly Enlerprise-Record G R EE N SB O R O - The first person Mike Carter met on the Jaimeson Stadium turf after his Wesl team had defeated the East 17-0 in the McDonald’s East-West all-star football game was wife, Betty. They had some serious talking to do. “Does the grass need mowing?’’ Carter asked. When told the obvious answer, he cringed. "I'v e got a coaches meeting in the morning — and then. I ’ve got lo go home and mow the grass.” Carter's home turf had gotten a little higher than usual because he hadn't been home in a week. A s a coach for the West team, he had spent an entire week in Greensboro, preparing his troops for the 41st-annu^ summer classic. Trying to figure out where Carter was from and who he coaches was the most asked question. Carter was the only player or coach that had two tull-page adver tisements on the East-West pro gram. On page 70, Ingersoll-Rand congratulated him and Andre Frost. On page 95, Carter and Mooresville's Andy Phillips were congratulated by that high school’s booster club. He was announced as being from Davie County. “When I was chosen as a coach, I was at Davie County,” Carter said. “ Let's just say, tonight. I’m from both.” At Davie, Carter always work ed with the backs but he found himself coaching the offensive line in the all-star game. “ If you’re a head coach, you ought to be able to coach any area,” he said. “ It was no pro blem.” Just ask running backs Robbie Holloway of Maiden, Frank Adams of Gastonia Ashbrook and Ruben Wells of Kannapolis. The line opened gaping holes all night as the Wesl finished wilh 150 yank rushing, one of the highest totals in recent memory. Holloway had 105, 85 in the second half. He had,, a 60-yard scoring run and Adaim ; ■ ran in froni 15 yards. Im i^iately foU qw ing^ g m several offensive linenieii'circlied '! Carter and told him how muc^ Î; appreciated the chance to have hini , 5 as their coach. They all wanted ; tlieir picture taken wilh Ihe Davie County/Mooresville leader. “He was great,'Vsaid26S-pound Charles Sanders of West Charlotte. Of Sanders, Cartersaid, “Wehit it off pretty good. With ,CluirlM •' and the other guys, we had sonw . : talent on thé line. I really enjoyed the entire week.’^ " Carter was one of three ^istaiitt coaches, joining Scott Conner of Asheville Reynolds and Dayki Gut- ; shall of Burlington Cuninungs.: V; Rudy Abrams of East Mecklenbu^ : was the head coach. ; Although Cuter ^d'die o|^en-^ ; sive line, he still k ^ up with An- : > dre Fro«, a Davie County : • linebacker he W№ instrumental in. getting on the team. ; ‘There were a lot of really good to go out and play like.he id u -,.. has,’’C8rtersaid. ‘.‘A fte r; there was no quesUoii he deMnred !; to be here.” , '*’.v ry No sooner had the' game ended l' and the photos had be«i taten with>; his linenien. Carter was thinking^.' of getting back to Mooresville for^: more pressing needs: , ] • There is a hew football teaimj to meet that needs to.be taught the ;: wishbone. • And there is also a yard that needs to be mowed.. i Andre Frost (45) tries to squeeze his way into the play. Frost may have played his final football gam e last week, — Photo by Chris Mackie SATURDAY NIGHT A u g . 5 C sTAmuM Gates open 6 p,m.—First race in s to n iKEsmin. 199W in ston 1 9 9 ^ L a p M o d if ie d S t o c k C a r R a c e i Plus Sportsman, Street Stock and Blunderbust Races! • Winston-Salem’s longest-running and best-attended prolessional sport! C a p № g h t ! I'KKK! Winsion IW N ASCAR cap lo the first 2,.‘>0() adult licket iiuycrs! Il’s the same type and liith 4ualiiy soki lor S.“! al the stadium souvenir sKMv, anil as sliiiwn at righl by the Winsion iy4's lU'femlin!; i.h;mipion Frank Fleming, Spotlsman Seriob Aiimiss^on Aflute, IS and Older — $10 Ag«$ 12-17 --15Ages6-ll -'SI Ctiiidien under 6 FREE with adult escort__________PLfcNTYOFFREEPARKINGI__________I FOR INFORMATION ABOUT STADIUM RACING CALL (919) 723-4267 B U S C Hfv:«P5i>t,enAa«fet it-!)AVI1C COIJN I KN TKKI’KISK RKCOKI), TIIURSOAY. Aur. 3, 1989-SB W a l k e r A w a r d e d ‘ U n k n o w n ’ T r o p h y No sooner had Area 3 commis- - sioner Gaither Keener awarded the Area 3 trophy than he made a special announcement. Brocke ; Walker had won the Sportsmanship award. ' Walker was asked what the • trophy was for and he responded, • “ Ask Coach Ijames.” ■ Ijames wa.s a.skcd and he .said ask president Sonny Kurfees. • Even Kurfees had a hard time • explaining what the trophy was all about. Apparently, the trophy us- • ed to be given and Keener was bringing it back. College Interest Two more Mocksville Legion ; players drew rave reviews from college coaches last week. Michael Shore, on a recent hit ting tear, was looked over closely by Belmont Abbey. /.nslo Fowler was given a tryout by Montreat-Anderson, located near Black Mountain. It is a na tional power in the junior college rianks. “It’s a quality program,” said Ijames. “It’s nationally-ranked. Ansio would do well there. He had a good workout for them.” Marion Is Back Matt Marion is glad to be back : in the lineup for the Mocksville . 'Legion, but don’t be surprised if ■he begs Ijames never to put him in ;■ right field again. • ' ■ Marion saw his first action since . ; the regular season due to a broken .'Wrist in the first game against rSUinley in the Western Champion- ^ 'ship. He topped the ball in the in- V M d but beat the roller out for a hit. The following night, hè saw his i fe t defense as Ijames put him in- y to rightfield in the ninth with an : pi 1-3 lead. Ijames thought there would be no harm in right field. ; iijThat is, until the first three men ;;:hit balls to rightfield. How did Marion do? Well, he’s had better days. . “ Don’t; say, anything about •i'tfial,” lie liiughed.:‘‘ThiB guys sort oMddkled me about it.” ""But ^ were the first to cheer . Marion oti in game foiir when'he was taèck in the lineup at first base. . He .stilled a three-run homer to : help propel Mocksville to an 18-4 win. ' ■ “ ' “I hit his first pitch, a fastball and the guys were glad for me,” Marion said. “My wrist felt pret ty good. It'didn't hurt at all.” ' Thè wrist still has k knot on it, ;however. ■•‘It.’s a calcium buildup,” : Marion explained, “tt will just take Legion Notes tim e." Remember M e? Mike McDaniel s;iw sonic I'aniiliar faccs from tlic past when Stanley met Mock.svillc la.sl week. “ When I was younger, I played in .some leagiie.s around here," McDaniel .said from the Stanley field, locatcd in Mount Holly. " I know their shortstop, Kent Clon- inger and the catcher. Jay Barkley. 1 talked to them and they remembered me.” They’ll remember him even more now. McDaniel led all hitters in the five-game series with 11 and left his former friends with a .442 batting average. Peaking Now Some wondered how Stanley even made il to the Western championship. Entering the playoffs, Stanley stood a paltry 7-9 with a .230 bat ting average. It was averaging three errors per game and was seeded only sixth in the Eastern Division. But give Darrell Van Dyke’s club credit for peaking at the right time. It defeated Newell and Pineville two games to one and then won the Eastern Division ti tle three games to two over Paw Creek. “ Stanley was not supposed to beat Pineville or Paw Creek,” said Ijames. “They were really playing well coming into our series.” “Paw Creek was the better team but we hung together and did the right things to win the series, ’ ’ Van Dyke said, “ After that, I think we thought, ‘If we can beat them, we can beat anybody.’” That was evident when it plastered Chenyville for the Area 4 championship, four games to one. The team ended its season with a 19-17 record. Cherryville To Host . S p e ^ n g of Cherryville, Post 100 will host the Southeastern Regionals next year. It celebrated SO years of Legion baseball this, year and had its most successful season since 1982, going 19-13. It advanced as far as it had since 1981-82, when it won back-to-back titles. Cherryville w ill host the Regionals Aug. 15-191990, which means it gets an automatic bid. Thirteen of 18 players will return for Bobby Dale Reynolds' club. T H E P R O S H O P 7 6 6 -8 8 8 4 (Discount Gk)lf Equipm«nt) “Gef Advice From A Pro” SpMlalPricttOiiall Shirts •1st At Reg. Price •2nd At 10% •3rdAt20<H> Mark Scott, Hogan, Player toeatad ln Market Square — Clammona, N.C. A B C F a m i l y F o o t A n d A n k l e C l i n i c s Robert L. Sprinkle, Jr. DPIi/l Robert L. Sprinkle, III DPlii Are pleased to announce the association of R a l p h S . S p r i n k l e , D P M in th e p r a c tic e o f P o d ia tr ic M e d ic in e , S u r g e r y o f th e F o o t a n d A n k le a n d S p o r ts M e d ic in e 2240 Cloverdale Drive Cloverdale Professional Bidg., Suite 216 ■ (919) 724-1951 17 W. Main Street Thomasville, N.C. 472-7543 144 N. Cherry Street, Suite 4 Kernersviile, N.C. 996-8881 The 'Mocksville M ountain’ was full during Post 174’s series with Stanley. — Photo by Jim Barringer Motorcraft R E F U N D O F F E R O n M o to r C r a ft Tested Tough Plus Batteries 4 0 MONTH AS LOW AS 50 MONTH AS LOW AS REFUND $37M Our Low Price - 9500 Mail-In Refund* I '^1'..Hül Our Low Price «50« Mail-In Réfund^ 60 MONTH AS LOW AS M8*« Our Low Price - $500 Mail-in Refund* TAXES NOT INCLUDED Offer Good June 28-August 31, 1989 DAVIE AUTO PARTS Co. 191 Wilkesboro St. M achine Shop 7 0 4 - 6 3 4 - 2 1 5 5 Mocksviiie, N.C. P arts D ept. 7 0 4 - 6 3 4 - 2 1 5 1 Tire Dept. 7 0 4 - 6 3 4 - 5 1 2 9 6B-DAVIE COUNTY KNTKUl’KISK KKCOKI). ■mURSDAV. Лиц. 3, 1989 M c C u l l o h W i n s -Mocksville's Ray McCiilloli teamed wilh Winsum-Salcm's t-Dave Deese lo win (he Miller's ; Ferry Volunteer Fire Dcpartinenl rishiiig tournament. McCulloh and Deese puckeled :■ $900 for catching 35 pounds, 10 ■ ounces wilh a 10-fish liiiiil. Il was Ihc biggest catch on High Rock Lake this year. McCulloh also finished second in Ihc Tar Heel team tournament on High Rock Lake last week with a catch of 18 pounds, nine ounces, ; winning $845. He jusi mi.s.sed ihe ; first prize of $5,000 by 15'Л ; ounces. McCulloh has had quite a sum- : mer with his fishing. He already has won closc to .$9,000, North Football North Davie Junior High School is one of the few junior highs who have a weight training program and Sam Beck has announced the schedule for August. Weight training programs will be starting Aug. 1, 3, 7, 9, 14, 16, 17 and the 21. On Aug. 15, phyiscals will be given lo all boys and girls warning to play sports next year. Dr. Joel Edwards will charge $8 per physical. He will be at the school •• from 5-7 p.m. .'.Beck said the weight training program is for the kids who don’t have the facilities at home to lift. ■ ‘‘The program is designed for :,oiir kids who want to lift weights ,’in prepapration for this year.” : 'South Physicals . All athletes, boys and girls, who rwish to play sports at South Davie r; Junior High School should be at the ■’.gym Aug, 21 at 5 p,m, for physicals, , Physicds are ^ wd all athletes must haVe one 'before they can practice. A physical is good for the ;Cndre school year. Youth Physicals -^у$!сф and si^ui» for anyone djimrbted in playing in the Davie ?-уЬиЛ Football League should to the National Guard Ar- Aug. 12. The original date Aug. S was changed to Aug. 12. ■ Й A time has not been given yet, call the armory for more 3ifonnation." tH; Anyone wishing to join the 24>avie County ‘Chapter of the ; r^Jniversity of North (¿rolina Rams ;2,^lub should contact Demsie p rim e s. ■A meiiAership is $50 and up and ^tfclps the inember get tickets to •^orth Carolina < athletic events. •iS Grimes can be reached at .39^ (tertie) or 634-5927 ;). His addi«'ss is P.O. Box i,‘MocksviUe, N.C. 27028. A r e a S p o r t s Summer League The Davie County Suinntcr Baskelball League cndctl la.sl week with the Bulls finishing 6-0. Led by Germain Mayfield’s 30.4 average, the Bulls were the only team over .500. Gary Blalock (17.4) and Chad Heiner (11.8) were also factors. In the final game of ihe season. the Bulls got by the Lakers 72-64 as Mayfield scorcd 41 points. Clint Junker had 31 for the lo.sers. The Celtics, 3-3, beat the Pi.slons 79-68 as Charlie Crenshaw and Tony Remegar popped for 27 and 22 points. Matt Vaughters scorcd 28, Shane Duncan 18 and Brian Pitts 11 for the Pistons. High School coach Charlc.s Crenshaw was very pleased with Ihe play of his future leam, Mayfield, Junker and Vaughters will be looked upon as leaders and they came through in the summer camp. Junker scored at a 24.3 clip and Vaughters 22.3. Renegar scored 19.8 per game and Crenshaw 19.0. Softball Any leam wishing lo play in the Mocksville/Davie Parks and Recreation Department’s Co-Ed Softball League this fall should contact Joe Boyette at the office. Boyelle said he is hoping lo have at least 10 teams and said Ihe league will begin in mid-August. Deadline for calling is Aug. 7, You can get in touch with Boyette at work 634-2325 or at home 634-3877. Baseball Meeting The Davie American Baseball Association will hold its year end meeting Aug,' 3 at 7:30 at North Davie Junior High School, Anyone interested in little league baseball In Davie Coumy should attend. For more information, call Steve Smith at 998-0639. Soccer The first Davie County High School soccer practice is schedul ed for Aug. 7 at 3 p.m, at Mocksville Middle School, 'I'he team participated in its first season last year and is joining the Central Piedmont Conference in 1989. There is a 17-match schedule for the War Eagles and first-year coach Jim Lightle, who replaces David Hayes. Players must have their physicals before they can practice. The first match is set Aug, 29 against Wilkes Central at Mocksville Midlde School, PAT’S INTEMORS 766-9166 tVertical Micro Or Mint Blinds •Wauerly Waltcouerings §Coordinated Lambrequins And Draperies §Hardwood Floors And Parquet •Non-skid rug pads Cephis Drive, CIcinnions Behind Dockside A d v a n c e S V ^ e s « O tifo p ra c tic 998-0755 Д Ц - ^ Ц ш с Hwy, 801 at 1-40 " Advance, N.C, Total Family Chiropractic Care •Аз1Игла •Scoliosis •H eadache • Loss Of Sleep •N um bness •N eck And Back Pains Patients Seen the Sam e Day They Call (Open Mon.-Fri. Evening Hours Available) Most Insurance Accepted • Auto/Work Injuries Call In Sports Scores Davie County Enterprise Record 634-2120 Jim Bowles and Dale Ijames show off the Area 3 cham pionship trophy. — Photo by Dwight Sparks T a n g le w o o d R e a d y F o r R J R T o u r n e y Fresh 'N Clean Special »Shampoo •Conditioner •Cologne •Scented Collar / Small/Medium *13°°; Large/XLarge 516°° •Bathing •Flea/Tick Dipping •Hot Oil Treatments •Clips & Cuts Robin W hittington (919) 766<8950 : Associated With Animal Clinic O f Clemmons C L E M M O N S - The RJR Championship is in only ils third year, but already it has bcconie one of the most significant tournaments on the Senior PGA Tour. The $1.5 m illion purse represents more than twice the amount of any other purse on the Senior Tour, and it ranks sccond in all of professional golf. Only the regular PGA Tour’s $2.5 million Nabisco Championships offers a larger reward in one tournament to professional golfers. The Nabisco Championships will be played Oct. 26-29 at Harbour Town Golf Links in Sea Pines Plantation, Hilton Head, S.C. The RJR Championship, to be played Ocl. 4-8 this year, has earn ed praise from Senior PG A Tour professionals as one of the highest- quality tournaments anywhere. That is due in large part to the event’s home — The Champion ship Course at Tanglewood. Players have come lo respect the layout as one of the most difficult, yet most fair, on the Senior PGA Tour. Indeed, only four players have finished below par in the first two years of the tournament. The only player under par in 1988 was champion Walt Zembriski. “ Tanglewood. offers a wonder ful test of gol f, ’ ’ says Senior Tour professional Bruce Crampton. “ It’s a par-70 with oniy two par-5s. That makes it difficult to shoot low scores, and I think it’s an ideal venue for the RJR Cham pionship.” Players have found the Cham pionship Course to be one of the toughest on the Senior PG A Tour, Indeed, of the list of the 40 toughest holes on the circuit last year, five are at Tanglewood. Players may find a different challenge this year on the Cham pionship Course, There has been a complete renovation of the ■ greens, fairways, tees and in termediate rough areas. The pro ject was supervised by the PG A Tour’s agronomy staff and Robert Trent Jones Sr,, the course designer. There is new bent grass on the greens. Each has a new drainage ■sy.slem, built to the U.S. Golf Golf Association’s strict specifications, beneath its surface. The fairways, tees and in termediate rough areas are now covcrcd wilh a 419 hybrid bermuda grass that promotes good lies and excellent wear during extreme heat. One problem for Senior PG A Tour players that hasn't been altered is the number of bunkers on the Championship Course, There are still 111 of them to swallow wayward shots. Despite the Cham pionship Course's difficulty. Senior Tour professionals have raved over the treatment they’ve received during tournament week. Many have said they enjoy the week of the RJR Championship more than any tour nament they’ve played — regular Tour or Senior Tour. "T h is has been the greatest week,’’ Dave Hill said alter his first Senior PG A Tour visit Frame Straightening On Imports and American Made FREE ESrWMnriS V A tY o u r... D a v i e A u t o B o d y 634>4451 133 Wilkesboro St.Mocksvllle, N.Ci HAVE MOVED To B e tte r S erve You! L o a n s for all p u rp o s e s ....... Le t u s h e lp yo u w ith y o u r fin a n cia l n e e d s ... WE ARE NOW LOCATED IN THE Squire Boone Plaza Shopping Center (Next To Food Lion Ж Fleet Financenter Open: Mon. i Fri. 8:30 a.m. lo 6 p.m.; Tues., Wed., Thurs. 6:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Closed Saturday S Sunday Phone 634-3596 •%' -'I Vi:; . lio co iíM ^ i;m i;ki'k isi; k ix'o u d, i iiu ksd ay , auk. 3, iy89—7ii ;<>••■' ‘r-d'-'y Enterprise-Record shortstop Bubba Coleman watches as caught the ball for a force out at second. The runner was second basem an Jason Garwood shows the umpire he called safe. — Photos by Robin Fergusson Ducks On The Pond Enterprise-Record Jr. Softball Team Hurt By Stranded Baserunners At World Tourney ; M Y R T L E BEACH . S.C. - The Davie County Enterprisc-Rccord junior (age 13-15) softball team got 16 hits in the opening round of the world championships here last Fri day night. Their opponents. Rough Nex of Okaihoma City, Okla., managed 14 hits. The Rough Nex, however, won the game 11-2, en route to an undefeated sweep of the double elimination tournament. The Enterprise-Record team bounced back for a 20-12 win against the Shopper’s Guide of Georgia on Saturday afternoon, before bowing out of the tourna ment in il 18-10 decision lo Murk’s Boys ofKunlucky Saturday nighi. Tlie Emerphse’Heconl coacli, George Barnhardt, had mixed feel ings about his team’s performance. “ I was disappointed in our defense but I was impressed with our offense. That's the opposite of the way they've played all year," he said. The team plays in the Mocksville Industrial League, and regularly holds men's teams to less than 10 runs. “ We did not play good defense, and that was the one thing I wasn't worried about. But we hit the ball better than anybody there," Bar nhardt said. The Enterprise-Record made 46 hits in the three games. It’s op ponents made 41. “I was proud of them. I think they represented Oavie County well. “ It’s hard to go into a tourna ment and play perfect ball, and that’s what they would have had to have done.” The first game was the key, Bar nhardt said. “ If we could have gotten through the Oklahoma game, I think we would be the No. l.team." Third baseman Randy Brewer led The Enterprise-Record against the Rough Nex, going 4-for-4 — all singles. Jason Garwood hit three singles, going 3-for-4. Dana Haneline and Toby Ken nedy each went 3-for-3 at the plate, and scored one each of the team’s two runs. Brian Jordan went 2-lbr-3 in cluding a double, the team’s only extra base hit. Also getting hits for the Emcrprise-Record were: Jason M cCray, 2-l'or-4 and Andy Everhardt, l-for-3. The Enterprise-Record stranded 16 base runners, and left the bases loaded three times witluiut scoring. The Davie County team made five errors, compared lo one charg ed against the Rough Nex. Davic County 20, Georgia 12 The Emerprisc-Revord rounded the bases for 20 runs on 23 hits against the Shopper’s Guide of Georgia, making up for a poor defensive eftbrt which included live errors and nine walks. .Shortstop Hubba Coleman went S-l'or-.i at the plale, including a tri ple. Iw o singles, two doubles and two runs scorcd. Other hitters were: Jason McCray, 4-for-5; Joey Hare, 3-for-3; Toby Kennedy, 3-for-3; Randy Brower, 2-for-2 and two walks; Brian Jordan, 2-for-2; Dana Haneline, 3-for-4; Jason Garwood, 2-for-4; Robin Davis, 2-for-4; Dar ren Crotts, 1-for 1; Edwin Robert son, 1-for-l; Andy Everhardt, I-for-4; and Keith Koontz, l-for-4. M a rk ’s Boys W in, 18-10 M a rk ’s Boys of Kentucky knocked the Enlerprise-Record out of the tournament 18-10 Saturday evening, aided by six walks by Davie pitchers and three defensive errors. Mark’s Boys made 16 hits, while llic B i/c riin s t’-R c rtm / scorcd its 10 runs nil 15 hits. 'I'hc boys I'roiii Davic jumped on Kentucky for four runs in the top of the first inning. Bubba Coleman led off with a single, and scored on a triple by Jason Garwood. Gar wood scored on a sacrifice fly by Randy Brewer. With two outs, Andy Everhardt hit a single and scored on a dou ble by Keith Koontz. Toby Ken nedy single in Koontz. M ark’s Boys came back with five runs in the bottom of the first, despite only four hits. Two of their batters walked. M ark’s Boys scored three runs in the second inning, and added four more in the third, while holding the Enlerprise-Record scoreless. Neither team scorcd in the fourth inning. The Enlerprise-Record rallied with four runs in the top of the fifth on hits by Hare, Coleman, McCray, Garwood and Brewer! The team held Mark’s Boys scoreless in the inning, and scored two more in the top of the sixth, led by a Haneline double, and singles by Coleman, McCray; &hd Garwood. ., M ark’s Boys led 12-10 going in to the bottom of the sixth, wheii: they scored six runs to put'the game on ice. '• For the Enterprise-Record, C o l-. eman, Garwood and Kennedy each went 3-for-4 at Ihe plate; while McCray, Everhardt and Koontz cach went 2-for-4. Davis and Koontz pitched for the Davic team. ■ ' NOW OPEN 2448 E. Lewisville — Clemmons Rd. Westwood Village Shopping Center, Clemmons F a s t ! F r e e D e l i v e r y Serving: Buffalo Chicken W ings Pizza Subs Saiads, Clieesecalce & Steal( Fries Speciai 2 IMedium Ciieese Pizzas $ 8 S o Tax Included 1.50 Per Topping Buy 1 Large Pizza, Get A Second Of Equal Value At Price At Clemmons Location Only I For Delivery Minimum Order »5“ Limited Delivery Area 11 a.m. • 12 a.m. Mon.-Thurs. 11 a.m. -1 p.m., Fri. & Sal 1 p.m. -12 p.m., Sunday 766-9700 Now Hiring Cooks & Drivers^ NO CHECKS ACCEPTED 7 6 6 - 9 7 0 0 Juke Box O p e n i n g S o o n ! M id -A u g u f t John’s In Cbnjunction With P i z z a E x p r e s s Serving Beer, Hamburgers, Hot Dogs Bar-B-Que, Subs & Sandwiches Pizza & Buffalo W ings /n Our Dining Room N e x t T o P i z z a E x p r e s s N o w h i r i n g w a i t r e s s e s & c o o k s f l e x i b l e h o u r s & d i s c o u n t m e a l s I 8B—DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, rilUUSDAY, A»!;. 3. i 'y>s I ^ I " V Chad Nichols fires a pitch for Mocksville. M o c k s v i l l e B e a t s C o o l e e m e e S t a r s . You’d expect any series between Cooleemee and Mocksville to be a barnburner and nothing changed last week when two Triple A all- star teams from the towns came together. . Mocksville finally won best 3-of-5 series, three games to two. Mocksville won the first game, 17-14 as Gabe Wilson went 4-for-5 and Shane alien had two hits. Chad Nichols finished wilh four runs scored. Josh Nail had three hits for Cooleemee. Cooleemee bounced back and trounced MocksviUe in game 2 17-6 as Roger Funderburke had two hits, including a fourth inning honie run. Tommy Andrale scored runs. Nichols had two hits for Mocksville. Mocksvillc won game 3. 12-7 as it scorcd six in the fifth, mainly on the strength of four walks nad Nichols’ single. Wilson had two hits for Mocksville and Nail had three for Cooleemee. Despite the pressure of elimina tion, Cooleemee scored 12 runs in a 12-8 victory in game 4. William Page had two hits. The closest game was the last as Mocksville nipped Cooleemee with four runs in the fifth on its way lo a 13-11 victory. Tommy Foster and Wilson led the way with three hils while Allen, Michael Johnson and Jason Robertson all had two. For Cooleemee, Nail, Chappell and Andrale all had two each. The Mocksville Jaycees spon sored the tournament. á. lâh KiMen Powell performs in the butterfly for Hickory Hill. ~ -u ■ — Photo by Ronnie Gallagher G r a n d y 0 i|il||ril C lid ld M e d a l • The, Hiiclmry HiU EeU swim ttm scored 1№ points and finuh- :^.'sixth in the Greater Fors^ ' Swim League championships Saturday :lat W Forest University. V . .; :11te Eels tiroiight home five gold nM^s, 10 silvers and 16 bronze. :-The 13-14 tandem of Adam Orifldy and Brian Tribble con tiniied their impressive string of victories. Tribble won two golds in the SO-yard freestyle and butterf- ':iy!.with Grandy taking stivers in those events; : .■ Grandy took first in the lOO-yard ; individual medley and 100-yard freestyle. Tribble was third and se cond in the events. ; - The only loss was - in the backstroke but Tribble and Gran dy’were 2-3 in that race. : The Eels fifth gold medal was won by Jason Grandy in the 11-12 - boys SO-yard butterfly. He had a silver.in the 100-yard individual medley. \— : ■ Erin Umberger captured four silver medals in 7-8 girls; the. Distance Free, 2S-yard backstroke, freestyle and breaststroke. Callie Bailey took a bronze in 7-8 breeaststroke and Larry Umberger was the only 7-8 boy lo win a medal, coming in third in butterfly. Ryan Powell, 9-10, won a silver in the Distance Freestyle and bronze medals in the individual medley and butterfly. He joined Seth Newman, Eric Kofke and Scott Leverenz to finish third in freestyle relay. Carrie Bri)wn won a bron/.e in The Mocksville Triple A all-stars consist of (Front row, from left): Jerry Wilkie puts everything he has into the swing for Jason Sheets, Jonathan Sechrest, Shane alien, Brian Cassidy, Cooleem ee. David Potts and John Giles. (Second row): Tommy Foster, Michael Johnson, Chad Nichols, Jam ie Clark, G abe Wilson and Jason Robertson. X Tribble Grand) 11-12 Allison Buckner won a bronze in 13-14. The freestyle relay team of Buckner, Stacey Tribble, Gina McClamrock and Cathy Cozart earned a bronze. Other swimmers scoring points were: 7-8 Division: Kri.slen Powell, Kate Lloyd, Catherine Dwiggins, Chris Woolridge, Scolt Henderson and Drew Newman. 9-10 Division; M elissa Woolridge, Beth Campbell, Page Steed, Tonya Grandy and Bradley McNeil. 11-12: Shannon Umberger, Cara Hansen, Eleanor Bailey and Chris Biganho. 13-14: Malt Jones, Cam Kofke, Br>'an McNeil. Jaeksim Hendricks, Shirley Sine and Kristin Leverenz, 15-18: Katherine Earnhardt, Mara Sherden, Tanja Sherden, Patrick Buckner, Scoll Hansen and Brent Campbell. Old Town won the meet with 524 points, followed by Clemnums West, Sherwood, Brookwood, Willow Run, Hickory Hill, F.lks and Forsylh Country Club, M o c k s v ille S p o r t in g G o o d s SCHOOL BAGS N .C , S T A T E N O R T H C A R O L IN A D U K E D H S C O W B O Y S SD JH R E D S K IN S N D ]H H O R N E T S M M S New Shipment State & North Carolina Sweatshirts 2 0 % 0££ AU Regular Priced SHOES Does Not Include Cieated Shoes ALL BASEBALL BATS& GLOVES 25%O ff ONE GROUP 5 t . * 1 0 (Includes Some Gleated: Shoes); Close Out On All Remaining Tennis Racquets T-Shirts , Solid Colors ( $ ir9 5 '5 TH O R -LO SOGKS Regular Price 2 0 %O f f BARGAIN TABLE R e g is te r F o r *5 0 “ G ift C e rtific a te ( W it h A ^5“" P u rc h a se ) Football Shoes 15% o« To DHS - SDJH - NDJH PLAYERS M O C K S V I L L E S P O R T IN G G O O D S 23 Court Square 704-634-3155 Mocksville, N.C. All Sales Final No Returns No Exchanges No Refunds^ DAVIK COUN TY ICjVUCUPKISK KUCOUI). THURSDAV, Aiij-. 3, 1989—1C ' «fi , )i 1Ü .'.Piane Joyner helps Girl Scout campers, from left, D e a n n a Famiano, Crystal McCrary and Nana O rren weave basket at Camp Seven Springs last week A New E xperience Wor Yoim g G irls From D avie I iCAMP SEVEN SPRINGS - Call it a recrnit- mht éffoit for Girl Scouts. A learning experience. ^ confiance booster. JOr you could call it just plain fun. : Ap^ximately 72 girls fifom Davie County leam- id what Girl Scouting was all about at a week-long ;amp near Farmington last week. “ We’re hoping to get a lot of the girls involved Shayla Bethea, 9, displays her T-shirt featuring friends' handprints.The girls gather for a sing-a-long outside the cam p headquarters. — Photos by Robin Fergusson f-2C-DAVIE COUNTY KNTEKI’KISK KKCORO, TIIUUSDAY. Aun. 3. 1989 Social Mrs. Tony Darrell Pruett ... ivas Sherry Elaine Glass Miss Glass Becomes Bride Of Mr. Pruett On July 28 V V- Sherry Elaine Glass of Salisbury 1 and Tony Darrell Pruett were : united in marriage Friday, July 28, I at 7 p.m. at Victory Baptist Cliurch .’■in Cootemee. The Rev. Shelby >;Harbour,,officiated at the double- ■tvring cerembny. The bride, given in marriage by ifcer fattier; Bobby Glass of -Cooleeniee, wore a traditional ’bridal gown of, white satin, design- .' ■ed with a Queen Anne necldine and ;Bishop sleeVes trimmed in Schif- ;fli Iwe, enib'roidery trim, pearis , '«Id i^uins. Her full, flowing skirt 'extend^ jiHQa train. In iher haii^i pearl ^ Jheiadpi^. t titinui^ pearl Uprays aiid'c^st^ine flowers, at- , ta c l^ to; a fingertip veil of im- j ported bridal illusion. I tTHebride’s^ Wanda |Fqstei^: of Kfocksville, served as of hoiMr. Bridesmaids weiv jMyra P ^ t and Sarah Pruett of jSalisbure. Heather Glass, bride's tnieceof C(x>leeinee, was a junior' IbridMmiud. i i Melvin Pruett o f Salisbury was {his soh’s best man. Ushering were ' iRicky class, bride^s brother of vCooleeniee; Barry Pruett, ' 'bndegroom’s brother of Salisbury; Elbaville News By D oris Copé ,jElbavjlle Correspondent y. Homewoiniiig will be held at jtElbaville United Methodist Church tjSunday, Aug, 6. The 11 a.m. ser- ;• vice will be held by the new pastor, ¡the Rev. Kermit Shoaf. There will ¡»be special singing in the afternoon |by the choir., if. The M Y F took a trip to White iU k e . - Let us remember those of our ■community who have lost loved DIANA’S COUNTRY SALON ‘T otal F am ily H a ir C a re ” Senior Citizen Discounts Every Wednesday & Saturday Perm Specials Every Thursday W alk In s W e lc o m e Hwy. 64 W est, Next To Center Grocery Mocksville, N.C. 27028 Phone Salon - 492-5987 Home 492-7879 hawaras Ija m es S p e a k s A t Friends C onference Calvin Ijiimos of Route 8, Mocksvillc. was Ihc bamiuct speaker at the 12tli annual national cont'crencc of The Compassionate Friends, a .support group for bereaved parents, held July 14-16 in Tanipa, Fla. About 1,200 people attended the conference from across the United States and Canada. Ijamcs, whose 27-ycar-old son, Jeff, died of cancer in 1983, is co- founder and currcnt leader of the Yadkin Valley Chapter of The Conipa.s.sionate Friends in Mocksville. He was the coor dinator of tlic North Carolina Stale Conference in 1986 and the North Carolina Regional Conference in 1987. Ijames was appointed a member of Ihe national board of The Com- pa.ssionatc Friends in June 1987 and was a workshop leader al last year's national conference in Tulsa, Okla. ' : Ijamcs, who retired June 30 as supervisor of general services for the portable compressor division of Ingersoll-Rand Co. in Mocksville, was elected last year to the Davic County Board of Education. He and his wife, Vertie, who have two other children, have been asked to hold a workshop on "Death from Long-term Illness” at the 13th national conference of The Compassionate Friends. It is scheduled for next July in Philadelphia. and Bradley.Pruett, bridegroom’s nephew of Salisbury, was a junior usher. Child attendants were; Tommy Foster, bride’s nephew of Mocksville, who was an acolyte; Timmy Foster, bride’s nephew of Mocksville, ring bearer; and Can dy Pruett, bridegroom's daughter of Salisbury, who was flower girl. The bride is the daughter of Mrs. Betty Glass of Salisbury and Bob by Glass of Cooleemee. She is a graduate ofDavie High School and Rowan-Cabarrus Community Col lege wilh an associate degree in business. The bridegroom’s parents are Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Pruetl of Salisbury. He attended North Rowan High School. He is . employed as a plumbing mechanic for Tri-M eck Mechanical in Charlotte. Following a honeymoon at M yr tle Beach, S.C., the couple will make their home in Salisbury. Reception A reception was held in the cou p le 's honor at the church fellowship hall immediately following the wedding ceremony. ones in the past three weeks, those who are sick and those who are still in the hospital. W e are very glad to hear that Mrs. Mary Bailey, wife of John Bailey, is improving. The fellowship class of Elbaville sponsored a cook-out for all the other classes in the church Sunday afternoon. Hot dogs, hamburgers, potato chips, drinks, cuke and ice cream were served. Around & About Ward, Slyc Named Outstanding College Students Emily S. Ward, grandchild of Mrs. Maurine Ward of Mocksville, and James N. Slye, son ofM r. and Mrs. Taylor Slye of Mocksville, have been .selected as a member of Outstanding College Students of America. The selections are based on merit and accomplishment as an American college student. Russell Anderson Receives College Degree Russell Eric Anderson, son of Charies and Dorothy Anderson of Mocksville, was graduated from Greensboro College this spring with a bachelor of science degree in business administration. Governor Appoints Stewart T o Advocacy Council Mrs. Gail Sigmon Stewart, who lives in Lexington and is the daughter of Mrs. Camilla Shaw of Bingham Street, Mocksville, was appointed by Governor Jim Martin to the Governor's Ad vocacy Council on Children and Youth. Stewart is a 1960 graduate of Davie High School and is an employee of DeLapp Personnel in Lexington. The Governor’s Advocacy Council for Children and Youth recommends and reviews programs and provides informa tion to the public about children and youth. Lewis Attends Woodmen O f The W orld Convention Jonell G. Lewis of Route I , Harmony was one of more than 700 delegates, officers and guests who attended the Woodmen of the World Life Insurance Society’s 41st National Convention, July 16-20 in Omaha, Neb. Lewis represented members in the North Carolina Woodmen jurisdiction. Alan Pfau Attends Institute A t U N C -C H Alan Pfau of Advance recently attended the 39th annual Univer sity of North Carolina High School Radio-TV Institute in Chapel Hill. Using facilities and staff of the Department of Radio, TV, Motion Pictures, the institute is an intense one-week workshop in radio and television production, performance and criticism, at tended by high school students from across North Carolina. Pfau is the son of Frank and Barbara Pfau. Four Area Student’s O n Dean’s List Four area students have been named to the dean’s list at High Point College for the spring semester. They are Ronald Jarvis and Michael Oser of Advance and Janet Driver and Linda Jones of Mocksvillc. To qualify fo the dean’s list, a student must complete 12 semester hours and earn a 3.5 grade point average or above on a 4.0 scale. Forrest Receives College Achievement Aw ard Kevin Forrest of Mocksville has received a Catawba Achievement Award lo attend Catawba College for the 1989-90 academic year. The scholar^ihips are awarded to fre.shmen on the basis of academic strength, leadership ability and good citizenship. Forrest is the son of Harvey and Brenda Forrest. STOP D o n ’t G o I n t o T h e ’9 0 ’s U n p r e p a r e d F o r A C a r e e r ! ! S a l i s b u r y B u s i n e s s C o l l e g e Is Ready For You! W hen you study for business at SBC, in just 12-15 m onths you will be ready for many careers. BUSINESS CO LLEGE W E O F F E R ; FLEXIBLE SCHEDULING • JO B PLACEMENT DAY & EVENING PROGRAMS ______ • FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE_?__________ “ Don’t Put Off Untii Tom orrow W hat You Can Begin Todayl” Call 6 3 6 - 4 0 7 1 or Visit the C areer C enter SALISBURY BUSINESS COLLEGE 129 C O R R IH ER AVE., SA LISB U R Y Harris-Campbell M Engagement Announc^ M r. and Mrs. John Gatton Jr. of Route 1, Harmony, an n o in ^ - the engagement of their daughter, Robin Gatton Harris of Route;^;t5 Statesville lo Michael Todd Campbell, son ofM r. and Mrs. WillJaijt? Jerry Campbell of Route I, Harmony. The wedding is planned for Sepl. 9 al Ihe Campbell hom?;^i}h' Harmony. ' i ' - ' The bride-elect is a graduate of North Iredell High School. is employed by 4-C’s Food Service out of Hickory. Campbell attended Davie High School and is employed by TufkeJ;^; Foot Dairy. Y a d k in V a lle y N e w s i B y M rs. Ruby M cBride Yadkin Valley Correspondent Dulcie Hauser was honored on her 92nd birthday on Sunday, Ju ly 30, at the home of Mrs. Dorothy Pegram of Styers Ferry Road, Lewisville. Among those pre.sent were nieces and nephews and their families and a few close friends. Refreshments were served to all. Ausbon Ellis is doing fine after his surgery to remove a tumor in his head. If all goes will, he will be home in a few days.' Ella Ellis is expecting to come home in a few days. She is , at Medical Park Hospital. Jonathon Holtel is at church every Sunday and is countingf^ days until Aug.' 16 so he w W j _ home all the time. 1 Sallie Carter, R ul^ M c B r i^ l '* Virginia Walker visited D o i Hauser on Friday evening. She;S| still able to stay by herself-in-ah I apartment on Brewer: Road in i Clemmons. .. S i Ruby McBnde got<a phone c d ll firom W nley Hauser in Korea.‘He| got there O.K Doc Caudle is doing fine after staying a few days at Davie Coun-. ty Hospital. His daughter, LuciUe Broadway, spent the day withjujn on Tuesday , . ’ ' P a r lo r O n D u ty in P h ilip p in e s A ir Force Airm an. Paula J. Parker, daughter of A.G. and Georgia W. Pvker of Route 6, Ad vance. has arrived for duty in the Philippines. / ; Parker is a materiel storage^^d I ^ distribution specialist with llNC3tti I Supply:Squadron.' ‘ She is a 198S gnduateof I High School. SUMMER^ SPECIAL 'J.Í . '.'.r.r' DAVIE COUNTV KNTKKPUISK RKCOKI), THURSDAY, Auf-. 3, I989-3C King-Hartness Couple Married Aug. 5 Lisa Jane King and Darrin -Ixvcrn Hartncss were unilcci in •marriage on Aug. 5 at tlic Cooleemee Cliurcli of God. The ' Rev. Charle.s Ledford ofncialed the 3 p.m. ceremony. A program of wedding music was presented by Mrs. Donna Williams, pianist, and Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Durham, .soloists. The bride, escorted by her father, wore a full-length gown of white satin designed with an angl ed neckline, wedding band collar, and peek-a-boo sleeves. The Titled bodice was embellished with an Alencon lacc overlay and dipped into an antebellum waistline with a butterfly bow in back. The full skirt extended into a chapel train bordered with lace motifs. The bridal gown was made by Kathryn Alexander of Cooleemee. To complete her ensemble, she wore an ankle-length veil and a .w’reath-style headpiece of white Silk'flowers and pearls. She carried a cascading b0ui|uct of while roses, ligcr lilies and baby’s breath. Miss Kelli Brown was her maid of honor. Serving as bridesmaids were Melinda Frye. Tammy Phelps, Am y O'Neal and Donna Wagoner. Audra Hartne.ss, sister of the groom, was a junior bridesmaid. John H. Hartne.ss Jr, was his son's best man. Ushers were Mark King, brother of the bride; Dennis King, uncle of the bride; and Tim Is.saes, Scott Cribb and Mike Williams, all of Gastonia, Scotty Alexander served as a junior usher and ring bearer, Mi.ss Karla Smith presided al the guest register, Mrs, Judith Lssacs directed the wedding. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jerry W. King of Cooleemee. She is a graduate of Davie High School and has attend ed the University of North Carolina at Charlotte. She will continue her WDik as an liiiglish major al Ap- palaehian Stale University this fall. She is employed by the College of Education at ASU, The groom is a graduate of Ashbrook High School and has at tended UNC-Charloite, He is a North Carolina Teaching Fellow Scholarship recipient and will con tinue has work as an industrial technology major al Appalachian Slate University this fall. He is employed by Dawson Consumer Products. Hartncss is the .son of Mr. and Mrs. John H, Hartncss Jr, of Gastonia, After a honeymoon to Gatlin- burg, Tenn,, the couple will make Iheir home in Boone, Reception Immediately following the ceremony, a reception was held in the church fellowship hall. Assisting in serving were . Jean Chapman, Margaret Gaither, Janice Hartness, and Wanda Smilh, Rehearsal Dinner A rehearsal dinner was held in the church fellowship hall im mediately lollowing rehearsal. The menu consisted of chicken, ham. baked beans, potato salad, slaw, rolls, cake, lea. coffee and soil drinks. Social Kven(s • The couple was honored with a ruppcrware shower on June 23 in Mooresville. The shower was given by her aunts. • M iss King was honored wilh a shower on June 30 at the Cooleemee Church of God. • Kelli Brown and Melinda Frye hosted a lingerie and linen shower on July 16 at Victory BaptisI Church. • The couple was honored wilh a shower on July 20 al the New Hope Church of God. • Aunts of the groom hosted a shower for the bride on Aug. 1 in Mt. Holly. W ise-Broadway Couple To M arry - ''■'Bienda Kay Wise of Mooresville and Arnold Ray Broadway of ‘~MocksviUe will be united iii marriage Aug. 5 at 2 p.m. at the home of the gjrotmi. Wise is employed with Wooten Jewelers of Salisbury. Broadway is employed with Crescent Electric of Mocksville. I Advance News D a v i s - S o w e r s Engagement Announced Mr. and Mrs. Larry S. Davis of Route 8, Mocksviiie, announce the engagement of their daughter, Angela Ann, to Donald Wayne Sowers of Mooresville. The bride-elect attended Davie High School and is employed by Sara Lee Knit Products. Sowers, the son of Thomas Franklin Sowers of Troutman and Ms. Brenda Brown Bullins of Mooresville, is a 1988 graduate of South Iredell High School. He is serving in the U.S. Air Force. The wedding will be Aug. 18, 7 p.m. at Bread of Life Baptist Church in Mocksville. .fy EMh Zlnuncmuii Advanc* CorrMpondtnt • c Thé Rev. and Mrs. . Harian Creech m and son Joseph were honored with a d iw r Sunday nij^t at die Community Building, given by the Adivance Methodist congie^ttion. The young people of Advance iud^Elbaville churches and their cài^lors: enjoyed a weekend o ^ g at White Lake.Twenty-five p ^ e attended. Counselors were Fnûikie and Dian Hackett firom , A^<wice; Juanita Blakley and Kay St^kton from Elvaville. Mr. and Mini. Cokie Jones, Mr. and Mrs. J^K Carter, Dennis and Debbie Livengood and Mary Riddle also spjnt the weekend at White Lake. Mrs. Lelia Cornatzer Gray and d^ÿiter Erin of Winter Haven, ' Flar^ have spent the past 2'/i weeks viÿting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. R.^. Cornatzer, while her hus- baiâ. Jay Gray, was in Norfolk, Vi:;&aman Apprentice Richard Montgomery of the Coast Guard has bMn visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Montgomery for the past 10 days. Seaman Mon tgomery compieled his training at the U.S. Coast Guard Training Center in Cape May, N.J., where he received the highest academic award in his company. The award was presented at the July 21st graduation: Richard left this week, by car, going to Seattle, Wash., where he will board a plane for Kodiak Island, Alaska, for a tour of duty. Kevin Foster is a patient at For syth Hospital where he underwent major surgery last week. Wiley Peebles was re-admitted to Forsyth Hospital last Friday night. Mrs. Vemelle Greene of Chur chland, her sister Mrs, Zenda Lee Hedrick of Lexington and their mother Mrs. Lillian Snider of Beuna Vista Nursing Home in Lex ington were Wednesday afternoon visitors of Mrs. Edith Zimmerman. 'Mrs. Hedrick was accompanied by three granddaughters and three grandsons. They had been to a Shutt reunion at the old Wesley Shutt homeplace here in Advance. Mr. and Mrs. Ross Carter were Sunday afternoon visitors of their sister-in-law, Mrs. Lib Carter. Mrs. Edith Zimmerman was also a visitor. Mrs. Carter has been confined to home several weeks by a severe back injury. She is slow ly improving. Mrs. Stella Vogler was able to attend church Sunday after many weeks absence. Mrs. Ann Jones was a visitor at Methodist church Sunday. She is the mother of Mrs. Tammy Jones. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Seamon of Lake Norman were weekend visitors of her mother, Mrs. Jessie Browder. On Friday Mrs. Seamon and Mrs. Browder visited Mrs. Della Cornatzer. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Markland Mrs. Darrin Levern Hartriess ... was Lisa Jane King Introducing (Doris Ann's ^Corist & gifts ( 7 0 4 ) 5 4 6 - 7 6 0 0 S m T Harmony, N.C. Now Delivering In Mocksvlll* Area FREE Dellvery To Hospitals & Funeral Homes. $2.50 Delivery Charge to Homee A Buelnems In City Umltt Full Service Florist Funerals — Weddings Fresh & S//fr Flowers Balloons For All Occasions We Wire Flowers N o w A o c o u n t e W o l c o n m * Mastercard And Visa H O URS; Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday & Friday 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Thursday And Saturday 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. have returned from a 10-day trip to Yakima, Wash., where they visited his brother, John Markland and family. Mrs. Edith Zimmerman visited Mrs. Della Cornatzer and Betty Cornatzer Friday night. Mrs. Mary Lethia Robertson has been confined to home from hav ing foot surgery. C a d m i C LM u a i 2513 Lewisville-Clemmons Rd. e^ance Clemmons, N.C. 27012 (919) 766-1452 N o w O p e n New Towne Center Clemmons Casiij ¿Hegance IS thC StOrC fO F tO dayS modern woman, comfortable yet classic •Elegant sweaters, leather, fur-trimmed . •Jogging suits in pastels with special detailing- featuring the “Bonnie & Bill” line. •Knit business suits •Transitional clothing in silks and linens Open 10-9:00 Weekdays, Sat. 10-5:00 ¿1 f.| ■ Л :Mlracle-Ear® 'Л Holding It’s Monthly SERVICE CENTER T H U R S D A Y A U G U S T 3 / ^ p p l e P h a r m a c y 129 N. Main St., Mocksville 10:00 a.m. • 4:00 p.m. ©FKKE ELECTRIC HEARING TESTS ©FREE CHECK VI' ALL TYPE HEAKIW, AIDS Miracle-Ear® Center 4310-F E N T ER P R ISE D RIVE W IN STO N -SALEM , N.C. 27106 9 1 9 - 7 5 9 - 2 1 2 1 1 - 8 0 0 - 7 3 6 - 0 1 0 8 R E V ID N . . . « ^ V o F F Any Revlon® Product Coupon Not Valid With Any Other Offer Coupon Good At Foster-Rauch Drug Co. Only Foster«Rauch Drug Co. Phone 6 3 4 -2 1 4 1 W ilkesboro Street Mocksville 4C-I)AVIE COUNTY KNTKKI’KISK RKCOKI). TIIUKSDAY. Лчц. Í. I9«9 Mrs. Paul R. Draughn ... was Sandra D. Barber ¡Couple Married \At Center Arbor ; ' Sandra D. Barber and Paul R. . i Draughn Jr. of Mocksville were ' Ì married-.July 27 at Center I Methodist Church Arbor. The t ftev; Joe Collins officiated the ^ Mndlelight servicc at 8:30 p.m., t which was followed by a reception i^ r'th e arbor i - jrThebnde was given in marriage C o u p le P la n s W e d d in g S f C l^ O Ííí 31 Court Square M ocksyille, NC 634-0158 ^¡îstêT sî^" Florist «-.gy^ts t'mh Пожт - Ш ¡Ы гп Cirnn lianls & (¡arJtm Mloons - Сф - Hdiífií Slufftd Animali Two ixícaíiütis To Sen t* Vou 634-1782S.juirr Vhiu JÜ.W >«<ílít«Míír K.Í.N.C. 270ih 249-6566 siHi|i|iiiic »Viiiff >f\itnilun. N.C. тч1 Couple Plans Marriage M r. iiiiii Mr.s. U)y.sM,-.s Riildlc (irisclle Jr. ol Hcmuul:i Rim. Ad vance. annimncc the ctijiageincru (if iheir ilaimhler, Paula Anne Grisetlc Ilf Chapel Hill, to Chris Nicholas Chrislakos orW inslon-Salcm , .son of Dr. anil Mrs. Arlluir Chris Chrislakos oC Durham. The weclcling is planned for Dec. 30 al Ihe Greek Orthodox Churcii of the Annuncialion. Win.ston- Salem. The bride-elcci i.s a );riidiiale of Davie High .School and the Univer- silv of North C;nolina-Chapel Hill u ilh a bachelor's dcfircc in jotir- nalisni. She is employed as a regional account representative for Village Advocate. Chrislakos is a graduate o fC .li. .Ionian Senior High School and Duke University with a bachelor's degree in chemlslry. He is a fourth year stndeni at the Hownian Gray School o f Medicine. S e v e n E a rn U N C -C D e g r e e s Seven Davic County residents earned degrec.s from Ihc University of North Carolina at Charlolle in coninienccmcnt cercnionic.s held at the Charlolle Coli.scum on May 13. Advancc residents receiving degrees were: Mallhew 'I'yicr Cau dle of Route 2, a bachelor's degree in chcmistry; Jackie Ann East, a bachelor’s degree in business ad- niini.stration; and Jeffrey Wayne W csl of Bermuda Run. a bachelor’s degree in business adiiiinislralion. Mocksvillc residents receiving degrees were; Jill Christine Brown, a bachelor’s degree in nursing; Dccna Gwyn Canipbcll of Route 3, a bachelor’s degree in busine.ss ad- niinisiration; Sharon T. Janies of Route 7, a bachelor’s degree in nursing; and Kimberly Jane Jones of Route 3, a bachelor’s degree in human services. D C C C O f f e r s N u r s in g C o u r s e by her son, Ryan Barber. Sandra Potts of Mocksville was matron of honor. Jay Daniel, brother of the bride, was best man. After a wedding trip to the motintains, they will live on Route 4, Mocksville. Davidson Counly Community Collcgc will offer a Nursing Assis tant Refresher Course wilh a com petency evaluation for Level 1 Nur sing Aides beginning Aug. 14 in Davie Counly. The course is designed to assist nursing aides in updating their knowledge of personal care and basic nursing skills needed in car ing for the elderly. Participants who satisfactorily complete a writ ten examination and a competen cy examination will be eligible to apply for listing on the Nurse Aide Registry by the North Carolina Board of Nursing. This course will provide persons with the opportunity to update entry-level knowledge as well as leam skills needed for employment in area nursing homes and Four Comers News B y M arie White Four Corners Correspondent M rs. Johnsie Shelton was honored for her birthday Sunday night at K & W Restaurant in Winston-Salem. Those enjoying the occasion were: Mrs. Von Shelton, Ken and Sandra, Dawn Hughes, Mr. and Mrs. Bobby Shelton, Con and Ginger, Ramon- da Saunders and Mrs, Carolyn Foster. Mr. and Mrs. Joe White visited Mr. and Mrs. Waldon Reavis Sun day night. Cietus Ratledge is on the sick list. W e are wishing him a speedy recovery. Mr. and Mrs. William Ratledge, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Carter, Mrs. Tom Whitaker and children, Bill' Baity aid Mr. and Mrs. A.C. Ratledge Jr. visited A.C. Ratledge Sr. during the weekend. Lonnie White was Sunday din ner guest of Mr. and Mrs. Joe While and Mark, N .D . C la s s S c h e d u l e s A v a ila b le ■ Ninth grade students at North Davie Junior High School may pick up class schedules on Friday, Aug. 11, between 8 a.m. and 4 p.m. Eighth graders may receive their .schedules on Monday, Aug, 14. Parents of seventh graders are invited to attend an orientation ses- sion with their son or daughter on Thursday, Aug, 17, from 7-8:30 p.m. Sessions will be held for both parents and students. Seventh grade students may pick up their schedules beginning at 5;30 on Aug. 17. School fees should be paid when schedules are picked up. S .D . S t u d e n t s C a n G e t S c h e d u le s hospitals. D C C C will offer seven courses beginning at Iwo-week intervals and meeting during the afternoon or evening hours. The first class will meet from Aug. 14-24, 25 or 26, depending on which clinical section one is assigned. All courses will meet al Davie County Ho.spitaI. The cost of the course includes $15 registration fee, approximately $25 for the textbook, and $1 for liability insurance. Because enrollment is limited, pre-registration is required. Per sons wishing to pre-register or ob tain more information should call D C C C ’s Davie County Office in Mock.sville, "felephone (704) 634-2885. Students from Soulh Davie Jr. High may pick up schedules Aug. 14-17 and Aug, 21 from 8 a,m.- noon and from 1-3 p,m. Students will be required to pay the $5 inslructional fee. All seventh and eighth graders and ninth Mr. and Mrs. Donald Gray Longworth of Route I , Advance, an nounce the engagement of their daughter, Lori Leigh Longworth, 'to Nickey Dean Strickland, son of Mr. and Mrs, Henry Strickland of Route 3, Mocksville. : The wedding is planned for Sepl. 2 at 2 p.m. at Hope Baptist Taber nacle Church, The bride-elect is a graduate of Davie High School, She was district F F A president. She is employed by Hanes Narrow Fabrics, Strickland is also a graduate of Davie High School and is employed by Hanes Narrow Fabrics, i t e r - u t t off cletitmoni (919)766-PUTT O p e n in g A u g u s t 1 s t! U n iq u e C o n c e p t In M iniature G o lf P it c h & P u tt o ffe rs t h e s im p lic it y of M in ia t u r e G o lf a n d th e c h a lla n g e o f P a r 3 U sin g a pitching w e d ge or a putter on variou s h o le s Bring your friends and watch out for the Water Holes! Located on Lewisville-Ciemmons Rd. (Next To Keymid In Weslwood Village] Justus-Gobble Couple To Marry Mr. and Mrs, Robert E, Justus of 4705 Vickrey Chapel Road, Greensboro, announce the engagemenl of their daughler, Natalie Jane, to Rodney Vc.stal Gobble, son of Mr. and Mrs. Joe V. Gobble of Route I , Mocksvillc. The bride-elect is a graduate of Ragsdale High School in Jameslown and attends G TCC. She is employed by Eli’s Shoe Warehouse in Greensboro. The bridegroom-elect is a graduate of Davie High School. He is employed by Ingersoll-Rand. The couple will be married in a 3 p.m. ceremony on Nov. 19'at Ijames Crossroads Baptist Church. New Arrivals D U R H A M Mr, and Mrs, Ricky Durham of Mocksvillc announce the birth of their first child, a daughler, Sabrina Fay Durham, born Thursday, Ju ly 13, at Forsyth Memorial Hospital in Winston-Salem, The baby weighed 8 lbs. 5 ozs.' and was 21 inchcs in length. Malernal grandparents arc Mr. and Mrs. Palmer Church of Mocksville. Paternal grandmother is Mrs. Laura Durham of Advance. M O O D Y Mr. and Mrs. Donald Moody and Joshua of Route4, Mocksville, announce the birth of a son atid brother, Nathaniel Gray, on Thurs day, July 27, at 6:25 a.m. at Davis Community Hospital in Statesville. The baby weighed 7 lbs. 9V4 ozs. and was 20V4 inches long. Maternal grandparents .ve Mr. ^ and M rs. R oy Sw anson, of Mocksville. . - Paternal grandparent is Mt> < Lessie Moody of Lexington. J C lu b H e a r s A b o u t S r . C h o r u s '^ By I.ib Sain Club Reporter The Duette Foster Christian Citizens Club met July 25 at Oak Grove fellowship hall with 15 members and five visitors present. The Rev. Jack Luther gave the devotions. He spoke on “ The Grand Homecoming In Heaven.” Cards were signed and sent to sick members, Lola Foster, Ruth Baker and JoAnn Martin. Ruth Helderman gave a report on the senior chorus. They prac tice every second and fourth 'ITiurs- ' day at 1 p.m. in the cafcteria in the senior center. L-; The group donated $100 for thei fellowship, hall. Lessie'Voik in troduced Sandy Bowles luid Dianne - Shore froin the Miracle Ear' Center. They showed .fUnis and - told of the probleths of hearing. They will give free home hearing tests to anyone having hearing problems.. ' Jessica Allen, daughter of Dean Allen. sang “As We Gather.,” ' , John Frank Jarvis dismissed widi prayer. BERNINA GLÜB t Monday, Aagast 7tli lOtOO t.m. or 7t00 f лк Meet The Rev‘*1330!’ ; Leurn about oar apcoiÉiii| ÌB«f|M Ctab See the new techniques leamcd al' j Bernina Unlveniiy - hcnUich'' shadow work, etc. phn Mm sewiiit Irklu with the machine ' THE SEW iN Q r o o m !>nMi»nii>ii«iiiiniiiiiK ;M M e«i*i( M«*, Ml — »»« , TN4IM -;BERNIPMTEl graders that elected Physical Education will pay a $5 PE fee. Insurance is available for students if they choose — for sclvool-hours coverage, the cost is $8,75 — for 24-hour coverage, the cost is $45, 3 0 % Off Selected Hair Products 25% OH All Greeting Cards And Gift Wrap tippki pharm acy 1 2 9 N o r t h M a i n S t r e e t M o c k s v i l l e , N . C . 2 7 0 2 8 P H O N E : 6 3 4 - 2 1 1 1 1)Л\ IK COUNTV KMCUrKISI' KliCOKI). TIIVUSIKW, Лиц. .1, I989-5C P in o H istory R o o m P opular A t D a vie Library ' By Mrs. Elma Dull : Pino Correspondent Maj. Jim and Cliincra Lalhain ; spent the weekend of July 14 willi ; his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harmon ; Latham. They eamc to take iheir daughters, Audra and Kendra. : home with them. The girls have : spent several days with their ' grandparents, : Maj. Latham and family will be : living in Newport News, Va. : Mr, and Mrs. John McClannon visited Mrs. Molly Holcomb Satur day at Yadkin Nur.sing Care Center. Mrs. Holcomb is Mrs. MeClannon’s mother. She has had a bad stroke. Mrs. Opal Whitener visited Cecil and Nellie Whitener recently. Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Trivette and Nichlous Rouse attended a family Ice cream and cakc party at the home of Roger Beck and family. Mrs. Virginia Duir spent the weekend in Slalesville with Gene and Brenda Dull. M o n tg o m e r y G e t s C o a s t G u a r d T r a in in g ' • ' • Seaman Apprentice Richard C. Montgomery completed his train- I ' ing with the United States Coast . Guard on July 2L i.' i. Montgomery 'graduated from -’.the traingin ' r center, in Cape : ‘ Mayj N.J. and received the 'highest ^'academic . average ■ in Company ¡c Delta-131. He.-.;,. . was ■ . №igne4 to serve in Kodiak Island, ■ • Alaska bn the Coast Guard Cutter Vocona. .Montgomery is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph A. Montgomery of ■ .:,;Route-2b: Advance., ^ B a r n e s O n D u ty A t F o r t B r a g g •vi'i Army Spec. Claude L. Barnes ‘ has ainved for duty at Fort Bragg. He is a chemical operations 'specialist with- the !8th-Field ' Barnes is the' son of Claude L. 'and Helga E.: Barnes of Mather, r -Pa.- /= ■ ; Thè specialist is a 1983 graduate *. of JefTerson-Mor^ Junior Senior : |High Schotd, Jeflferson, Pa. ; History is only one (if the many interests to be roinul in the library, bul il is an inteiesl tliat expands rapidly. Al an early dale in the lile of the Davie Public Library. Mary Jane Heilman made many eonlribmions 10 the history room, Amoni; the most important of these was a map, hand drawn by J,T, Akiermaii in 1887, A copy ol'lhis map has just become available lo the public. It joins a yrowiim list оГ historic maps in Ihc library collection, copies оГ which may be purchas ed, Some оГ Ihcse are available Irom the library and others t'mm Ihe Davie Counly Historical and Genealogical Society, The Davie Public Library has the Collowing niap.s available Ibr pur chase: Lagle Land Grant Map. S2: and the Hughes Historical Map. ,$2.50. The Lagle I.and Ciranl Map was I'onipileil by Pink Talmi). plo.ssle Marlin aiul Aiulreu- Laglc, It shows all recorcleil original land grams in whal is now present day Davie Counly, T he H ughes M i.siorical Doeumenlatioii Map was the work ol I-reil llugh es. Il reveals pre-1800 inromialion about Ihe eounly Irom the historical and genealogical slantlpoints. The Davie Omnly Historical and Genealogical .Socicly has these maps available Гог purchase: Wilson F, Merrell Map, ,$1.25; and J,r, Alderman Map. S I.25. Prol'essor Wilson F, Merrell drew his map of Davie Counly in 1У28. The.se lour historic map.s range from 1752 — the dale ol' the earliest recorded land grant — to l‘J2S. l-rom these documents one can learn a great deal about the sct- tlcmem of Davic Counly, ils schools, churches and pioneer selllers. When ordering any of these maps by mail, add S1.50 to the purchase pricc for postage and liandling. Orders may be sent to both the Davic Counly Public Library and the Davic Counly Historical Socicly at 371 N. Main St., Mocksvillc, N.C. 27028. ;|ii! My name is Jodiua Sides. My ^'pimntsareMr.andMrs. Blake ^des of Salisbury. I turned one phjuly 12,1989.1cefebratedmy ir ^ birthday, with a cookout on jiily 9th. The party theme was Winnie-the-Pooh. Guesi.s were served hamburgers, hot dogs, potato chips, various fresh fruits and vegetables, Winnic-the-Pooh shaped birthday cake, home made chocolate ice crcuni and lemonade. Some of the guests were: my maternal grand mother, Mrs. Darlene Owings of Mocksville; my maternal great grandmother, Mrs. Roxanna Head of Cooleemee; my uncIc,' Scott Boles of Mocksvillc; my aunt, Mrs. Jamie Williams of Salisbury; my patenml grand parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jim Sides of Salishurj; and other friends ; and relatives. I »-»(dd like to thank everyone for all the nice gifts I received. в с ю ш а н а ■ ■ ■ Q Q D B This Ad Is Good Wednesday, August 2 Thru Tuesday, August 8, 1989 At All Area Ldwes Foods Stores. Quantity Rights Reserved. We Gladly Accept Federal Food Stamps And WIC Coupons. --------- ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY Each ol these Hams Is required lo be readily available lot sale in each Lowoi Foods Store except as specillcally noted. II an advertised Ilem is lempotatMy out of stock, we will oiler you the choice of a comparable item when avauabie refledlnalhA<№iie wylngso^ a Ralncheck to puichase tha advertised ilem al the advertised price wittiln 30 days. Quantity rights are reserved. бС—DAVIE COUNTV ENTERPRISE RECORD. THUKSDAY, Л»к. 3, 1989 1 0 9 th A n n u a l M a s o n ic P ic n ic C o m m itte e s H a ro ld S e a m o n , P a s t M a s t e r C h a ir m a n T a y lo r S ly e , M a st e r, IV lo c k sv ille L o d g e N o. 1 3 4 D e a n A lle n , M a st e r, F a rm in g to n L o d g e N o. 2 6 5 R o d n e y M c D a n ie l, M a s t e r, A d v a n c e L o d g e N o. 7 1 0 i Program — Morning ! Jerry Anderson, Chm. ; H.R. Hendrix Jr. Graham Madison Johnny Marklin George Martin Program — Evening Wade Leonard Jr., Chm. Donald Bingham Demsie Grimes Glenn Howard Gary Potts Cunis ReavIs Joe Langston Advertising Taylor Slye, Chm. Sid Hall Ceril Morris Terry Spillman Grounds Stacy Cornatzer, Chm. Dallas Jones, Chm. Edd Walker, Chm. T.J. Sparks, Asst. Wilbur Spillman, Asst. S.B. Allen Grady Barney Nell Ray Bean Ronald Bean Jr. Robert Blakely James E. Brock Dorman Brown Wayne Carter Jimmy Kelly Tony Moore ' Leroy Parris WaHer Phipps Jr. Oanny Smith Robert Spillman Steve Walker ConceMlon Troy McDaniel, Co-Chm. Larry Campbell, Co-Chm. JainesQcodln Robert Hendricks Q.W. Potts Michael Smith ' Caahlar Clyda QIawock, Chm.. ‘ ChrtaAndaraon JafflaaM.Brock Millon‘Call Oyda Hendricks BrywiSell Jamé* U. Sheek Lawrence Smith : Cdatomlinwn Ron Vogler : Wiring. Jame* Swicegood, Chm. Burrell Lanlar, Chm. SamBefrier John BlackweMer Brent Qobble John Hartman " ; Von McKnlghi Rad Melton . Orphana, Uaaonie and Eastern ' 8tar^Homes; Richard Brock, Chm.Henry S. Anderson Jamaa C. Biyant RonaU Burton ; . RoniddFink : Janiaa A.'Fostsr Jr. AlvlnFoster Kanneth Hólpts ' \ Ed Johnson Haivay, Jonas w.A;klrk OwigM Maahburn O.K.Pope FranclaShora Wade W. Smith BIU Woolen BlUVogler Larry Woods . : Baakst and TaMes Tommy iCorhatzer, Chm. Roy Harris, Chm; Yeoman Smith, Chm. Joe S. Allen Mkihael Barnhardt Lester Beauchamp . Ken Burton Norman Chaffin W.J. Ellis William C. Fáircloth QaorgeH. Frye JohnGsrawod Hall Lae Hagie Sr. H o^r Hendrix Tommy Howard Ramey Kemp C.F. Leach Cecil Leagans Robert Long Chick Miller Bob Minor Mike Minor Randall Minor Walter Minor Billy E. Myers Donnie Ray Myers Ottle Paul Nance Thurman O'Mara F.D. Poindexter James Ratledge C.T. Robertson Loyd Rollins Jr. Fred A. Rich Roby Shore Waverly Shore Charles Talbert Bill Tobin William W. Walker Bill Ward David White Carlos Williams Gate Melver Culler, Chm. Graham Hendrix, Chm. Phillip Seats, Chm. Vic Andrews Hubert Bailey William Bailey D.C. Blakely Edward Boger Gilbert D. Boger William F. Brock Charlie Brown Jr. Sanford Brown Martin Craig Carter Craig Chapman C.C. Craven Charles R. Culler William Reid Davis Arlen DeVito Clifton Edwards Jr. Ray Godbey Melvin Gregory Wade Groce Darrell Harpe George G. Hartman Stephen C. Hege George S. Hendrix Sam Howell Hudson Hoyle Jr. Eugene James Jimmy R. James David Jones I.H. Jones Charlie Latham Charles W. Lashley Fred E. Long Bruce McCrary Frank Markland Lewis E. Neal Clyde Nesler William Poe A.L. Plotl V.G. Prim Lowell ReavIs George F. Rowland VanceRiddle Gilmer Rights Kenneth Rentz Lawrence 8. Robertson James Seaford John Wayne Seats Buford Smith George Smith Joe B. Smith ' R.V. Spry Jr. Van Swicegood Jr. 'Joe Thompson Dave Ward Sam Warden Luther West Daniel Whitaker Charlie Whaley Food J.T. Greene, Chm. Jimmy Lee Myers, Chm. Bobby R.-Tutterow, Chm. Dean Allen Garland Allen C.J. AngelUr. Leroy Bailey Larry Barnes Rommie Barney Early Beauchamp ; George Boger Gilbert Brandon Willie W. Branham Richard Brock . William L. Brock Owlght Campbell - Larry Carlton Rommie Chaffin J.C. Clontz Bobby G. Cook Larry Cook Tommy Cope Robert Cornelius Darrel Craft George D. Craven Jerome Davis Robert Ellis Charles Evans Jr. John Guglielmi Gary Hamilton' John Heiderman Ken Holt James C. Howard Ken Howard Wayne Howard Paul Hutton Steve Hutton Joe Lamb Gurney D. Lanier James G. Latham Robert B. Lemmons Steve Lewis John N. McDaniel Joe Murphy Kermlt Myers James C. Nichols Rickie Phelps James 0. Plott Luther Potts Robert Potts Henry Short David E. Smith Franklin D. Snyder John Spillman Glen Stanley Jimmy Thompson Vernon Thompson Tommy Turner Ed Vogler Sr.. Randall Ward Ronald West P.W. Welborn Dan Whitaker Richard Whitt Jimmy Whittaker Fred E. Willard Frank York Johnny York Relreshments Norman Blake, Chm. Buster Cleary, Chm. Wiley Peebles, Chm. Larry Williard. Chm. Roy Anderson Brady Angell George N. Angell Gene Barneycastle Ronald Bean Sr. J.E. Benbow Doyle Brown Dexter Byerly Ralph Call Wayne J. Cartner Ed Chandler Stanley Childers' Wesley R. Cook Melvin Cox M.C. Deadmon Vernon Dull Elgin Ellis Frank Everhart Gray Everhart John W. Foster Ralph Graley Jerry Hanes Joseph Hart Vance Hartley Jr. Rick Hemmings Elmer Hendrix Wayne Hill Mike Holcomb Tom K. Howard Henry James Raymond Johnson Harvey Jones Keith Jones Jimmy L. Joyner A.M. Kimbrough Jr. John Lowder Calvin L. McClamrock Michael McClamrock Bill Melton Dwight Myers Harry Osborne Jr. James Plott Jr. Bob Powell Harold Rollins Bobby Lee Robertson Danny Smiley Dennis Odell Smith Elbert Smith Norman Smith Sr. Cedric Smoot Carl Solley Bud Spaugh Milton Tutterow Eugene Vogler Richard Vogler Willie White Fred Williard Charles Woodruff Ticket Selling James Gray Hendrix, Chm. Rocky Johnson, Chm. Larry Staley, Chm.Bill Bowen Roy Brown Jr. Danny Chandler Roy Collette Richard Cook William C. Daniel David P. Folmar Ed Goodwin James W. Gregory Bud Hawser E. Gray Hendricks Lawrence Irvin Jim Kelly Sr. Ed Latta Paul LeClair Ron McClamrock Del McCullough D.J. Mando Rober S. Martin John Nicholson Olln Pardue Gene Seats Joe Shamei Dennis Sine Ed Vogler Jr. James Whitehead Duke Wooten Ticket Taking Brad Bullock, Chm. Gene Jones, Chm. Rodney McDaniel, Chm. Edward Beck Robert Beck D.R. Bennet Barney Boger Rufus Brock Bob Callaway Cecil Cartner Scotl Chandler Dave Crews Jerry R. Davis Wayne Eaton Charles Gary Deal Don Foster S.H. Foster Jr. Sanlord Frye Reggie Goss Grimes Hancock Ray Harding Russell Haynes David Hendrix James D. Hendrix Steve Hendrix William A. Hendrix William G. Hendrix Charles Hunter Harold Jennings James Jones Robert A. Jones Gary D. Livengood T.A. Lefler Raymond McClamrock Bill McDaniel Jr. * Bill McDaniel Sr. Bill Merrell Howard Newton Lynn Ray Parrish Ralph Ratledge Cain Reavis Rulus Rich Jr. Charlie Sellers Odell Shore Mike Short James Odell Smith Samuel Stroupe Joe Tucker Ron Zimmerman Greg and Kathy Sawyers with children Elise and Olivia at hospital day care center. ' Company Begins Child Care Program For Employees W IN ST O N -SA L E M - An in door playground, a carpcted niini- amphitheater, a reading/play loft, and a computer banic are just some of the featui\:s at a child care center attended by 2-year-old Olivia and 4-year-old Elise Sawyers of Advance. Located behind Forsyth Memorial Hospital, Today's Child Learning Center is the new child carc facility buili by Carolina Medicorp, Inc. for employees' children like Olivia and Elise. Their parents, Greg and Kathy Sawyers are both registered nurses al Forsyth Memorial Hospital. Opening on July 31, the new ccnter will accommodate up to 300 children from infants through sixth grade (in after-school programs) and operate from 6 a.m.-midnight to accommodate all three shifts. Fifteen years ago, For.syth Cooleem ee Club Plans Cookout The Cooleemee senior citizens met at the First Baptist Church fellowship hall July 24. The president, Virginia Plott, called the meeting to order. Sid Smith led in prayer. The opening song was “Count Your Bless ings.” Chaplain Jim Kimmer gave the devotions, taken from John 15:12-13 on the theme, “ Love Thai W e Should Have For Each Other.” There were 39 members and one visitor present. The minutes and sunshine repoi^ was given. A trip to Cherokee for Aug. 11-12 was discussed. Keith Hilton entertained the group by singing and playing the piano. There will be a cookout at the next meeting which will be held at the Ridcnhour Arbor Aug. 14. Everyone is asked to bring a small gift to give for a bingo prize. The meeiing adjourned with the group singing the club song. Memorial Hospital was the first ho.spital in the slate to open a child care center for em ployees' children. Since its opening, the child care center has occupied one floor of what was previously a nur sing dormitory. Frequently, the center had to adapt to the space available. Bul not anymore. Today’s Child Learning Center is a $1.5 million state-of-the-art center with 17,300 square feet of colorful rooms equipped wilh tables, chairs and toys sized just right for kids. There are three wings off of the “ big room” for the variety of different age children. Outside there are three separate playgrounds, plus a screened-in porch for infants and a covered porch wilh picnic tables. Olivia and Elise think it's fun, Greg and Kathy think it's terrific and C M I thinks an on-site child care is an unbeatable idea. “ For Carolina Medicoф, Inc.,'; having a company-based child care .V ccnter is as much a benefit in recruiting employees as it is ati :' employee benefit. The shortage of ■ nurses, combined with an increase in single-parent families returning ■ to the work-force, makes an on-site - child care center a valuable'' recruiting tool," says C M I Presi-' dent Paul Wiles. Yet another reason for building ' Today’s Child Learning Center is. V to meet employees’ needs in;.^ Carolina Medicorp Inc. ' 'ij l Previously, the child care center'7 was for Forsyth Memorial Hospitd'^ employees only. Now child care will be offered to all employees under the C M I umbrella, which in- '' : eludes two hospitalsi two nursing^ ! homes, a surgery center, a health 'I services laundry and several other i medically-related companies. i Now Ojpeii T o d y ’s T réàisüres ‘ ‘Priceless Treasures That Are Affordable ’ ’ (Stadium Drive — Clemnwns — Behind BBQ Bam — 766-fid9S)';; A u g u s t S p e c ia l. W ill ia m s b u r g B lu e M a i l B a s k e t s Reg. Price >8<x> Special August Price ^6®® Come In A nd See Our Painted “Wooden B ir^day Cards" Monday-Friday 9:30 am to 5.00 pm; Saturday 9:30 am to 2:00 pm .; J U S T O P E N E D ! ! ! S p e c i a l S e l e c t i o n s F u r n i t u r e , A r t s , C r a f t s , A n t i q u e s ' S o m e t h i n g O l d , S o m e t h i n g N e w S o m e t h i n g S p e c i a l F o r Y o u Intersection Hwy; 158 & 801 Telephone: 766-2336 1 0 % D is c o u n t W it h T h is A d Ttlcstiay, IVcJncsilay, Friday 10-7,■ Thiirsilay ftS aturilay 10-5;v t| Hi! M y nainv is .lusliii Edward Pilcher, son »f George and Lisa I’ilchor. I cck'bniU'il niv first bir thday on July 22, 1989, with a Clown cake and ice cream al iiiy lioinv with m any fam ily mcniliers. M y grandmothers are M rs. Lassie M yers and M rs. Frances Pilcher. M y great- grundfulher is M r. Clarence Carter. I received many nice Hifls. Accepting applications from Merchants, Businesses, Community Servicc Organizations and Craftsmen who wish to promote and/or sell their services or products. This 200 exhibition show, to be held in the Benton Convention Center Oct. 6-8 is sponsored by VVSJS Radio and Bclk of Hanes M all Interested applicants may write TR IA D PRODUCTIONS, INC . P.O. Bn,\ 5452 Win.sioii-Salcni, N.C. 27113 or Call (919) 727-0201 D a v i e D a t e l i n e DAVllC COHN TV KNl I.UPKISI' UliCOUl). TIIUKSIMY. Лиц- 3. 1'J«9-7C‘ Meetings Thursday, Aug. 3 Davic Scrlonia Cluli iiiccl.s :il 6:30 p.m. at Western Steer. Diilcli treat. Davic Land Use Ta.sk Forcc will meet at 7 p.m. in tlic grand jury room of the courthouse. Monday, Aug. 7 Davic County commissioners meet at 1 p.m. in their board room in the courthouse. Davic Zoning Board of Adjust ment meets at 7 p.m. in the com m issioners’ room of the courlhouse. Davie school board meets at 7:30 p.m. at the central offices on Cherry Street, Thursday, Aug. 10 Davic I’laiiniiiK Hoard meets at 7 |).m. ill lhc coiiiiiiis.sioiier.s' rooiii ol' llie ciHiilliniise. Ongoing Moeksville Rotary Club meets every Tuesday at 12:15 p,m, at the Rotary Hul, Sali.sbury Slrcci, Mocksvllle Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 4024 meets at the Post Hul oil Sanford Avenue, Moeksville, 7:30 p.m. the .second Tuesday of each month. Veterans welcome. Mocksvillc-Davie Jaycccs meet every first Monday at Western Steer and every third Monday at the Davie County Parks and Kecreation Department on Sanford Avenue. 7 p.m. Alcoholics Anonymoas, and Al- Anon family group meetings for ihose alTectcil by alcoholics, Wcilncsdays, S p.m., B.C. Unick Building lower level. North Main Street, Mocksviile, American Legion Post 174 iiionthly ineeting at the Rotary Hut second Thursday of each iiioiilh al 7 p,m. Veterans welcome. Mocksviile Civitan Club meets al 6:30 p.m. the second and fourth Monday ofcach month at Western Steer. Advancc Memorial Post 8719 Veterans of Foreign Wars and Ladies Auxiliary meets each fourth Tuesday, 7:30 p.m., at the post home in Advance, Am erican Association of Retired Persons, Davic County Chapter, meets second Wednesday of each month at 10:30 a.m. at First United Methodi.st Church fcllow,ship hall. Davic Counly Ui>;lil To Life meets at 7 p.m. on Ihe third Thurs day of each iiionth in Ihc grand Jury 11)11111 o f Ihc cDiiiily courllioii.se. Call ().14-.‘S2.15 or 492-.5723. Cooleemee Mem orial V F W Post 1119 iiicels sccond and fourih Thursdays oC each nuiulli, 7:30 p.m., Cooleemce Town Hall, Davie Theatre Company meets at 7:30 p.m. the third Thursday of each month at the Brock Auditorium. Davic Arts Council meets at 7:30 p.m. fourih Tuesday of each month at the recreation depart ment, Sanford Avenue, Mocksviile. Corinthian Lodge No. 17 A F & A M meets at the lodge, se cond and fourth Fridays, 7:30 p.m, Mocksviile Masonic Lodge No, 134 meets Ihe first and third Tuesdays at 7:30 p,m. at the lodge, Davic Multiple Sclerosis Sup port Group meets third Tuesday of each month, 7:30 p.m., at Davie County Health Department. GMVin MOUIEBSPKCC <ЮВК5Л51Р5»СЕУик5 ^ SaiT, FtAT, а д а ж Е ? iTsTRUE., (ШЧ MMTHR., WCEPIANCTS, S\NKS INTO -ШЕ SyRFfCE АШ ikW'miNs PAsst*«; 81, uvs. UGWT, wu. -RDLC ТОМЛИ) TOE wp lu sp^cb м^ce TWE ЛАНЕТ. UGHT К АСИКШ BtRECrePBi GWk'Iff'l.' Ж К Ш б .Ш ? Mffi StNHNS QF GRMVVI, I DROPPED A PITCHER OF ItmJAOE OH Ж KVÎCUEtA FIC06 W«EW ВШЕЙ. ^ SVMES SUPPED. ^ 40) WW, Ш VJORU) SWWJVDVt BEEU DE5\SNED S> PIEWoNE WDNIT WÆ to E« EAOt QWEft Ю S3WWE. WERE SWlUlD 1 josT BE FratR people «0 WWIANVS Tö BK\U vtm. m т е vicftu) certwmus CU)U>''IE USED A t«*ït. EVEU OISVEIBJTOU OF \TS tSSMSES, П(МЪ FOR.SRE. Extension For more information on any of these events or activities, contact the Davie County Agricultural Ex tension Service office at 634-6297, Thursday, Aug. 3 Baltim orc-Blxby Extension Homemakers will meet for a family picnic. Friday, Aug. 4 Clarksville Homemakers meet at 7:30 p.m, in the Eaton’s Bap tist Church fellowship hall, Saturday, Aug. 5 Cornatzer Homemakers meet at 6 p.m. al Modell Munday’s home for a family picnic. l\/londay, Aug. 7 M o ck sviile Extension Homemakers meet at 1:30 p.m. in the auditorium of the county office building. ' Tuesday, Aug. 8 East Oavie Homemakers meet at 10 a.m. for a club outing. Tuesday, Aug. 15 A dvance Extension Homemakers meet at 1:30 p,m. Center Homemakers meet at 7:30 p,m, at the community building. Recreation The following events are offered by the Mocksvillc-Davie Recrea tion Department, For more infor mation, call 634-2325, Upcoming Events Dance classes starting after Labor Day. Ballet, toe, tap, acrobatics, jazz and baton; after noon and evening classcs for ages 3 and up, including adults. Emily Robertson, instructor. Classes held at Brock Auditorium, Tennis classcs through Aug, 10, Tuesdays and Thursdays at Rich Park and Davie High School, Beginners, 9-10 a,m,; in termediate, 10-11 a,m. Instructor is Kelly Gantt, $16 a session. Private instruction available. Trip to Cherokee, Aug, 11-12, M other’s M<irninf> Out, day carc for pre-schoolers, Thursdays, 9-11:30 a,111,, Firsl Melhodisl Church in Mocksviile, Pre- registration required. Summer Fun Days, an exten sion of the summer playground program, one day per week, 8:30 a,111.-12:30 p.m., as follows: Tuesdays, ShelTield Community Center; Wednesdays, Davie Acadcmy Comnumily Cenler; Thurstlays, Shady Grove School, Ongoing S(iuare dancing and clogging, Free.stylc Swingers, Mondays, 7 p.m., Arnold Broadway's home on Davic Academy Road. Call Broad way at 284-2766 or Nancy or Shor ty Bowles al 998-3105. Open to families, singles, beginners and ex perienced dancers. Morning acrohic.s, classes begin firsl week of each month. Mon days, Wednesdays and Fridays, 9-9:45 a,m,, Firsl United Methodist Church. Sandra Johnson, instructor, $15. Low-impact acrobics, classes begin first day of each month. Mondays and Wednesdays, 5-6 p.m., Mock-svillc Elcmenlary. Kel ly Beilin, instructor. $15. High-impact aerobics, classes begin first week of each month. Tuesdays and Thursdays, 6:30-7:30 p.m,, M ocksviile Elementary, Karen Wishon, in structor, $15, Summer Programs Registration accepted at the Y of fice, Room 211 in the Brock Building, or at the first class only. Day camp registration for children in grades K-7. One-week sessions through Aug. 18. $40 per child. Lake Myers Campground. Swim lessons for ages 3 to adult. Two-week sessions through Aug. 18. $20. Lake Myers. Upcoming field trips: N.C. Zoo, week of Aug. 7. Aquacise, acrobics in water, no sv/imming. M ondays, Wednesdays, Fridays, 6:45-7:30 p.m.. Lake Myers. $15 a month. Karen Penwell, instructor. Miscellaneous Thursday, Aug. 17 W inston-Salvm C h ristian Women’s Club Brunch will hold a "Hometown U S A " brunch at Ber muda Run Country Club from 10 a.m. lo noon. Fee i.s- $7. Rcscrva- lions necc.ssary by Aug. 14. Cajl Roxie Eldridge at 998-5117. Surplus food distribution at the National Guard Armory on U .S ;' 64 East, Anyone interested in; receiving surplus food should apply^' at the Armory, Aug. 26-27 O pen auditions for ‘‘Li_l, Abner,” Aug. 26 from I to 5 p.m., at the Davic Public Library, and Aug. 27 from 2 to 6 p.m. at the; library. Roles for 28 men and 11 females, ages 15 and up, Be^; prepared to sing and dance, Calj' | 634-5018 after 7 p.m. to schedulie-,' another time. Anyone interested in;j working backstage on costumes,0 .sets, etc., is also encouraged to^' sign up at this time. ' 'I'l-. In The School^ Thursday, Aug. 3 Religion ‘C i liV/ И'П YMCA The following events are offerctl by lhc Davie Family >'M CA. For more information, call lhc Y of ficc, M-F, nooii-5 p,m., 634-0345, Saturday, Aug. 5 Blaise Baptist Church will host a concert of contemporary Chris tian music at 7 p.m. Owen Poteat of North Wilkesboro will lead. Church located at the intersection of 1-40 and U.S. 601. Aug 5-6 Edgewood Baptist Church of Cooleemee will celebrate its 50th anniversary beginning at 4 p.m. on Saturday. Evening meal at 5:30 for members and former members. Gospel singing will follow at 7, Sunday worship service will begin at 10:45 a,m. with the Rev, Fred Carlton, former pastor, as guest speaker, A covered dish meal will follow in fellowship building, Sunday, Aug. 6 Homcconiii^ at Turrentine Baptist Church, Luncheon in fellowship hall following worship service. Homecoming at Dulin United Methodist Church, The Rev, Robert Harris will be the guest speaker. Lunch will follow wor ship service, Cooleemee Presbyterian Church will hold a covered dish luncheon in the fellowship hall following the morning worship ser vice in honor of Robert Creason’s birthday and his faithfulness as a Sunday School teacher. Being given by his Sunday School class. Homecoming at Concord United Methodist Church on Cherry Hill Road, Worship service at 11 a,m,; lunch in fellowship hall at noon; singing at 1:30 p,m. Singers will include the church choir. The Tutterow Boys and The Faith Singers from Smilh Grove, Aug. 6-11 Homccoming at Bear Creek Baptist Church with lunch at noon in the arbor. The Rev, Vince Hefner, pastor of the First Baplisi Church in Marshall, will be the guest speaker for worship scrvice on Sunday and for revival services beginning at 7:30 nightly through Friday, Aug. 13-18 ' Keviviil at D ulin United Methodist Church, beginning at 7:.^0 nightly. Ihe Rev. Lee Roy Hum will iic the guest speaker. Spccial singing each night. Pick up information on clas^^ at Forsyth Tech, 7:30 p.m. in the Davie High School cafeteriaj :: Representatives ofthe admissiôns'-l office and college transfer pragraW’'' will be present. For more infonn^^g tion, call guidance counselor Re^.v^ Hobson at 634-3905. "i Thursday, Aug. 17 North Davie Junior High Schopi:': will hold an orientation for new-', students and parents from 7 to 8:30' i p,m. Separate sessions will be held' . \ for parents and students, Seventli‘V! 'grade students may jjick u p clasê*,' schedules and pay fees beginning , at 5:30 p,m. Refreshments wUl.l^,; served. All seventh-grade studentsD and their parents urged to attend.’ : Reunions Sunday, Aug. 13 • i Davie H igh/, HoM'ard family ..reunion at tiw,' ; Smith Grove Ruritan Club. Lunchi*. at 1 ;30 p.m. Bring a picnic ^ k e t.'H Friends welcome. .. . Saturday, Aug. 19 Class of 1939, Mocicsvilte High> School, will hold its'SOth reunion at the Mocksviile Rotary Hut. Saturday, Aug. 26 Class of 1M4, School, will hold its five-year iwiVi’i nion at the Holiday Inn in Cletn-M mons, 7:30 p.m.-12;30 aim. A d-' ' mission: $8 per person. Guesf^^ welcome. M ^ e reservations in adr,,, vance. Make checks payable to, ■ Kim Walker at 2330-K W . Van-^ dalia Drive, Greensboro, N.e-.'^| 27407, For more informatioii, call' j Kim at (919) 294-9683 or Jan , ; lette Hatley at 634-0129. • i!‘ v; Senior Citizens ’ The following events are o ffe rì , for senior citizens in Davie Coun- ' ty in cooperation with the Davie ' County Senior Center, Brock ; Building, Mocksviile, All events ; are at the center unless otherwise , noted. Call 634-0611 for more ; information, '.‘ i Thursday, Aug. 3 V. Nancy Hurtman of the Davie . Agricultunil Extension Servicc will ' speak at noon. ■ ■ Friday, Aug. 4 • Sliupping day. [ ¡\Aonday, Aug. 7 ; Bingo at noon. . • ' Tuesday, Aug. 8 M usic uml simgs by Marie March; Senior ChoriLS performs_ at Davie Village at 2 p.m. OV.— UVWir, 1858 _________S»K\UÍ. UNKRAI.IIlRHinHS 130 years of service 4 Localions Middlobrook Dr. S Main Si iCIemmons Winslon-S.ilem Reynolda Rd. S. Wa.n SI.Winslon-Salem LexingtonDavio Phono No 99B-3‘f2n J.P. GREEN MILLING CO., INC. Makers ot DAISY FLOUH We Custom Blend Depot Street Mpcksvllle, N.C. 27028 Phone 634-2126 MOCKSVILLE BUILDERS SUPPLY •Together We Do It Better" South Main 634-5915 Attend The Church Of Your Choice John N. McDaniel ASons Hwy. 601 S., Mocksvllle 6 34 -3 53 1 FOSTER-RAUCH DRUG CO. WIIMiboro street MocktVIII«, N.C.27028 Phone 634-2141 CAUDELL LUMBER CO. lUSIiMkStrMt ' Mockivlto, N.C. 27088 Phone 634-2167 Johmue M. TiUey Pest Control Service •S tn le n F o ra m ia y m ' ' Uxally Owned k Opentwj •IMdanllal ' ’ •ComnMfclal •hNkMHtal •iMlKutloiwI '*niMctfen Upon fltquMl' M ock^ito Convilements of Department Store Nw thM ën StrMt MockwHI* 31m • 3iu М3 VadkkivUlcRtMd MoetavIH« •344116 MARTIN HARDWARE & GENERAL MDSE. FMdt, DtyOkKxia. OraewlM and FcRlllMr Dtpol StrMt Mocksvlll«, N.C. 27026 Phone 634-2128 THE UN SUN G HERO JACO B'S FIRST BORN CHILD REUBEN, TT-IE SON OF LEAW, eP E W UP WITT-I A KIND DISPO SITION. TO HIM, AND HIM ALONE, THE PRESERVATION OF JO SEPH'S LIFE APPEARS TO HAVE BEEN DUE! WHEN HIS BROTl-IERS PLOTTED TO KILL JOSEPH, BECAUSE OP THEIR JEALOUSy OVER TUB FACT lU A T HE WAS JACOB'S BVORITE SON, REUBEN CAME FORTH AS UIE ELD EST BROTHER, WITH TVIE PROPOSAL TO CAST HIM INTO A PIT, INTENDING TO BRINS HIM BACK TO HIS FATHER LATER WHEN T EM PE R S COOLED. HIS KIND DISPOSITION W AS ASAIN EVIDENT W HEN HE VISITED THE PIT TO PIND JO SE P H SO N E, SOLD INTO SLAVE RY BY MIS BROTHERS WHEN HE W AS A BSEN T FROAA TWE SC E N E, TWE ACCOUNT IN SEN ESIS 3 6 RECALLS HOW R E U B E N .R E N T HIS CLOTHES" AND SAID,"...fW E CHILD IS NOT- AND I, WHITHER SHALL I S O ? '' THE TRAITS THAT ARE REU BEN 'S A R E TH O SE OF A RD EN T AND IMPETUOUS SENEROSITN; NOT CR A FTY AND CRUEL AS THE OTHER BROTVtERS SEEM ED TO BE! TWIS THEN IS THE P R 06E N IT 0R OF THE FUTURE TRIBE O F REUBEN. MARANATHA CHRISTIAN ASSEMBLYHwy. 601 North Mocksville. N.C.Rev. Cunis E. WoodSurtday School 9:45 a.m.MomingWorshlp 10:45 a.m.Evening Worship 7:00 p.m. OREEN MEADOWS BAPTIST CHURCH Hwy. 601, Farmington Yaios WilKerson. pastor Sunday School 10:00 a.m.Worship Service 11.00 a.m.Evening Worship 7:30 p.m.Wednesday Service 7:30 p.m.HOPE BAPTIST TABERNACLE INTCRMirWIMIVfRSALASSEMBLY OF LIGHTHwy. 601 S,(7041 264^322 Or. Jerry L. Cope, minister isi & 3rd Sundays TCHURCH 9:45 a,m. 11;00 n.m. e.oo p.m._____ 7;00p,m,BAPTIST CHURCH 10:00 a.m, ff.-OO a.m. 7:00 p.m. Mark Hart, pastor Sunday Seryices SurKlay School Morning Woiship Evoning Wor&hip Wodneeday Biblo StudyBEAR CREEK BAPTIST-------Boar Croek Church Road North Ol MocfcsviJle Rov. Jerry Cloniger, Jr.Sunday School Mornirtg Worship Wedneaday Bible Study BLAISE BAPTIST CHURCH Highway 601 North al И0 Rev. Qienn Seller», pastor Sunday School Moming Worship Evening Worship Wednesday Service BREAD 0^ UFE BAPTIST CHAPEL Four Comers Community, Hwy. 601 Phil Kitchin, pasiorSunday School . 10:00 a.m.Preaching Service )1;00a.m.CAUHALN FRIENDSHIP BAPTISTCHURCHCalahain RoadRev. Carrol Jordan, pastorSunday School 10:00 a.m.Worship Service 11.00 a.m.Sunday Night Worship 7:00 p.m. а й 5 5 й ?ж .» и я с нHighway 601 South Rt. 7, Box 92, Mocksville Jim Qryder, pastor Sunday School Worship Service Evening Worship Highway 15S East Pastor: David J Id Thursday h Wedriesday 2:30 p.m. 7:30 p.m. 7:30 p.m. 9:45 a.m.11:00 a.m.7:30 p.m. 7:30 p.m. ----------d Jordon ,Sunday School 9:45 a.m.Worship Service 10;4S a.m.Evar>gellstlc 7:30 p.m.Wednesday Senrlce 7:00 p.m.UAMES CROSSROADS BAPTIST CHURCH Konnoth Hyde, pastor Sunday School 0:45 a.m.Worship Sofvico t1;00 a m.Evening Worship 6:00 p.m.Wednesday Service 7;30 p.m.JERUSALEM BAPTIST CHURCH Hwy, 601 SouthSundaySchool 10:00 a.m.Worship Service 11:00 a m.Evening Worship 7:30 p.m.Wednesday Service 7:30 p.m.NO CREEK PRIMITIVE BAPTIST CHURCH No Creek Road off Hwy. 64 SHILOH BAPTIST CHURCH 626 Depot St.. Mocksville Rev. A.O. Walker. Pasior Sunday School 9:45 a.m.Worship Service 11;00 e.m.SMITH GROVE BAPTIST CHURCH Hwy, 158 East TRIMTY BAPTIST CHURCH Rt. 4, Mocksville Darrell Cox, pastor HOLY CROSS LUraERAN CHURCHRev. John A. Johnson, pastor Hwy. OOt Soulh. Mocksvllle Sunday School 9:45 n.rWorship SofvJco Jl.OO a.n METHOOItTA.M.E, ZION METHODIST CHURCH Booelown Street, Mocksville ADVANCE UNITED METHODIST CHURCH Advance, N.C.BAILEY'S CHAPEL UNITED METHODIST Bailey's Chapel Road BETHEL UNtTED METHOOtST CHURCH Bethel Church Road BETHLEHEM UNITEO METHODISTCHURCH Rodland Road otl Hwy. 156 East CENTER UNITEO MeVhODJST CHURCH Sunday School Worship Service Evening Worship WedrtMdav Service СЕВАН СШК BAPTIST Cedar Creek Church Road Dr. W.C. Hey, Pastor 10:00 a.m. 11:00 a.m.7:00 p.m. 7Л0 p.m. Wednesday Service TURRENTINE BAPTIST CHURCHRt. 7. Mocksville Rev. Billy J. Sloop, pastor Sunday School Worship Service Evening Worship i Wednesday Prayer Meeting VICTORY BAPTIST CHURCH Midway St., Cooteemee Shelby Harbour, pasior Sunday School Worship Service 10:00 a.m, 11:00 a.m. 7:00 p.m. 7:00 p.m. Highway 64 West Dr. S.B. Warner. Pastor 1st & 2nd Sunday Church School Worship Service 3rd & ^h Sunday Worship Service Church School 9:45 a.m. 11:00 B.m, 9:45 a.m. tO;45 a.m. 9;45 a.m.11:00 a.m. 6:30 p.m. 7:00 p.m. Woref,.,.____Evening Worship sday AWA2nd & 4th Sunday 1:30 p.m.CHINAQUAPIN QROVE BAPTIST CHUteH Chinaquapln Church Road off Hwy. 601 Rev.rOarrell McConnell COMMUNiry BAPTIST CHURCH Qiadatone RoadSunday School 10:00 a.m,Worthip Service 11:00 a.m.COI^TZER BAPTIST CHURCH Advance, N.C.DAVIE BAPTIST CHURCH Folk, N.C.Sunday School 9:45 a.m.Worship Service 11:00 a.m.Evening Worship 7:00 p.m.Wednesday Service 7:00 p.m.DUTCHMAN CREBC BAPTIST CHURCH Highway 601 off Hwy. 64 . rrON^S BAPTIST CHURCH Sunday School ____Worship Service 11:00 a.m.Wednesday Prayer Service 7:30 p.m. EDQEWOOD BAPTIST C“”"'*“________ TCHURCHHighway 601 Nonh Cooleemee. N.C.Rev. D.C. Sullivan, pastor Sunday School Sunday Worship Sunday Evening Worship__Ine'sday ServiceFARMINGTON BAPTIST CHURCH 10.00 a.m. 11:00 a.m.7:00 p.m. 7:00 p.m. Farmingtort Road Sunday School Worship Service Voum Training Union FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH N. Main Street W. Paul Riggs, pastor Sunday School Morning Worship Evening Worship Church Training Wednesday Qibfe Study FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Marginal Street. Cooleemoo, N C. 10:00 a.m.11:00 a.m.7:00 p.m. 9:4S a.m. 11:00 a.m.7:00 p.m, 6:00 p.m. 7:00 p.m. Sunday S Worship Service Evoning Worship Wednesday Service FORK BAPTiST CHURCH 6 miles east on Hwy. 64 Sunday School Worship Service Evoning Worship GOSPEL BAPTfST CHURCH Rl. 6, Mocksviilo Sunday School Worsfiip Service Evening Worship 9:45 a m, 11.-00 a.m. 7:00 p.m. 7:t5p.m, 9:45 a m. 11:00 a m, 7:20 p.m. 10:00 a m. 1l;0ü a.m, 7;00 p m. 7 00 p m.Wednesday Service GREEN HILL BAPTIST CHURCHCroon Hiil Road Rev'. Graham Wooten, pasior Sunday School 9;45 a m.Worship Service 10:45 a mEvening Worship 7 00 p m,Wednesday Worship 7 00 p m. 10:00 a.m. 11:00 a.m.__________ 6:00 p.m.Wednesday AWANAS 6:45 p.m.Wednesday Pr^er Meeting 7:00 p.m, YADKIN VALLEY BAPTIST CHURCHYadkin Valley Road ST. FRANCIS OpVsSeHÏHURCHHwy. 601 NonhSunday Worship 10:00 a.m. CHUBCH OF CHRffTCORINTH CHURCH OP CHRISTCharlie Hariison, Jr., minister Sunday Worship 11:00 a.m.Evening Worship 7:00 p.m.JERICHO CHURCH OF CHRIST Jell Williams, Minister Sunday Bible Class i D.OO a.m.Worship 11:00 a.m.Worship 6:00 p m.Wednesday Bible SruUy 7:30 p m.CHURCH OF flOD COOLEEMEE CHURCH OP GOD Cooleemee, NC Luther Chambers, pasior Sunday School 10:00 a.m.Morning Worship 11:00 a.m.Evening Worship 6:00 p.m.Wednesday FTH 7:00 p.m.CLEMENT QROVE CHURCH OF GOD Hwy. 64 West I.W. Ijames, pastorSabbath 10:00 a.m.Worship Service t:00 p.m.Evening Woiship 6:00 p.m.Wednesday Service 6 00 p.m.MOCKSVILLE CHURCH OF GOD Dwight Durham, pastor Hwy. 64 EastSunday School 10;00 a.m.Worship Service 11:00 a m.Evening Worship 7:00 p.m.Wednesday Service 7:00 p m. EPItCOPAtCOOLEEMEE EPISCOAL CHURCH OP GOOD SHEPHERDRev. Edwin P. DaileyHoly Eucharist 9:30 a m.FORK EPISCOPAL CHURCH OF THE ASCENSIONRov. Edwin P. OaileyHoly Eucharist 11:45 nmST. CLEMENT'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH Mooiing at Vogler's Chapel Middlebrook Drive, Clemmons Rev, Joan GrimmSunday School to 00 a.m.Woiship & Holy Communion n 00 a.m.INTERDENOMINATIONAL MOCKSVILLE INTERDENOMINATIONAL CHURCHRev. Lindsay Walters, pastor Sunday School Mormng Worship Youth Service Wodnusday Bible Study 10:00 B.m.11:00 a.m. 10:00 & 11:00 a.m. CHESTNUT QROVE METHODIST CHURCHKaihryn W. Tan, pastor 2nd A 4th SundaySunday School 10:00 a.m.Worship Sewice 11:00 a.m.CONCORD UNITEO METHODIST CHURCHCherry Hill RoadRev. John Deyton, minister1st & 3rd SundayWorship Sen/lce 11:00 a.m.Sunday School 10:00 » m2nd & 4th Sunday Worship Sen/ice Sunday School 5th Sunday WorshipAliernato _____COOLEEMEE UNITED METHODIST CHURCH Joseph W. Collins, pastor CORNATZER UNITED METHODIST CHURCH Cornatzer Road DULIN METHODIST CHURCH Advance, N.C.ELBAVILLE UNITEO METHODIST CHURCH Hwy. 601. Advance, N.C.FARMINGTON METHODIST CHURCH1st SundaySundaySchool 11:00 a.m.Worship Sen/ice t0:00 a.m.2nd & 4th SundaySundaySchool 10:00 a.m.3rd SundaySunday School 10:00 a.m.Worship Sen/ice 11:00 a.m.FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH North Main Streel, Mocksville Rev. Don Lloyd, pastor Sunday School 10:00 a.m.Worship Service 11:00 a.m.FULTON UNITED METHODIST CHURCH Hwy. 601 between Fork and Advance Rev. Kermit E. Shoal, pastor 1st & 4th SundaySundaySchool 11:00 a.m.Worship Service 9:45 a.m.2nd. 3rd & Slh SundaySunday School S:45 a.m.Worship Seniico 11:00 a.m.HARDISON UNITED METHODIST CHURCHJericho Church RoadLIBERTY UNITED METHODIST CHURCHGladstone Road1st & 3rd SundaySunday School 11:00 a m.Worship Service 9:45 a.m.2nd & 4ih SundaySundaySchool 9:45 am.Worship Service 11:00 a.m.MAINVILLE A.M.E. ZION METHODIST CHURCHVaughn L. Adams, pastorRt. 6. Box 37, MocksviiloSunday School 9:30 a.m.Worship Service 11:00 a.m.MOCKS UNITEO METHODIST CHURCHAdvance. N C.MT. OLIVE METHODIST CHURCH5. Mocksville 1st, 2nd, & 3rd Sunday Sunday School lO OO a.m.Worship Service tl:00a m.4ih SundaySunday School 1»:00 a m.Worship Service tO 00 a m. NEW UNION UNITED METHODIST CHURCHHaywood B. Hyatl. pastor SundaySchool 10:00 a.m.Worship Sevice 11:00 a.m. 'OAK QROVE UNITED METHODIST CHURCH Hwy. 158 EastSALEM UNITEO METHODIST CHURCHDavie Academy Road Dr. S.B. Warner, Pastor 1st & 2nd SundaysWorship Service 10:00 a.m.Church School 11:00 a.m,3rd & 4th SundaysChurch School 10.00 a.m.Worship Service 11100 n.m.5th SundayChurch Scnoot fO.'OOa.rn.SMITH GROVE UNITEO METHODIST CHURCHHwy. 158 East, Mocksville Rev. Bobby Q. Swalm. pastor 1st & 3rd SundaySunday School 11:00 a.m.Worship Service 10:00 «.m.2nd, 4th & Slh SundaySunday School 10:00 e.m.Worship Senice 11:00 a.m.Wednesday Bible Study 7:00 p.m,UNION CHAPEL METHODIST CHURCHKathryn U. Tart, pastor1st, 3rd, & 5th SundaySunday School 10:00 a.m,Worshb Service 11:00 a.m.WESLEY CHAPEL METHODIST CHURCHAdvance, N.C.1st SundaySundaySchool 11.00a.m,Worship Service 10:00 «.m.2nd, 3rd. & 4th SundaySunday School 10:00 a.m.Worship Service 11:00 a.m.ZION CHAPEL UNITED METHODISTCHURCHRev. Haywood B. Hyatt, pastor PfIISBVTilllANBIXBY PRESBYTERIAN CHURCHFork Church Road al Cornatzer Road R. Shane Owens.pastor Sunday School 9:45 a.m.Worship Service ПЛОа.т.1st ft 3rd Wednesday 'Bible Study 7:30 p.m..СООиЕШ PRESBYTERIAN CHUMH 60 Waiu Street-Cooleemee Kenneth E. PoliocK P^atof Sunday School 0:45 a.m. 'Worship Servlco 11:00 a.m.Wed. • Ргамг ft Bible Study 7:30 p.m. FIRST PMSBYTEMAN CHURCH Leland A Richardson, minister Corner So, Main St. ft Lexington Hwy. ' SundaySchool 1p:M«.m.Momina Worship II.-00 a SECOND PRESBYTERIAN С------458 Pine ...........Sunday S Worship I _____________________H CHURCH458 Pine St.. Ivan W. Lowery, Pastor •'"'ay School 9:30 a.m.... .hip Service 10:30 a.m.2nd ft 4>h Sunday WISUVAMLIBERTY WESLEYAN CHURCH A.C. Clemens, pastor MOCKSVILLE WESUYAN CHURCHHospital Streel. MockS'David Rollins. PastorSunday School 9:45 a.m.Worship 11:00 a.m.Sunday Evening Worship 6:00 p.m.Wednesday Worship 7:00 p.m. MORAVIANMACEDONIA MORAVIAN CHURCHRev. E. Hampton Morgan, Jr., pastor Hwy. 601, FarmingtonSunday School 10:00 a.m.Woiship Service 11.00 a.m.Evening Woiship 7:30 p.m. Church Of Jesua Christ Of Latter Day Saints869 Hardison St., MocksvilleSunday Meeting to 00 a.m. • f2 noon UVINTH DAV AOVINTItTSEVENTH DAY ADVENTISTMilling Road Sid Milis, pastorSabbath School 9:30 a.m.Worship Service 11:00 a.m. PINTICOITAL HOUNMSCLARKSVILLE PENTECOSTALLibeny Church Road nav, Albert GentleSunday School 10.00 a.m.Worship Service 11:00 a.m.MOCKSVILLE PENTECOSTAL HOLINESSMilliling Road David J. Eagle, PastorRov. _ _____Sunday School Worship Service Support The Merchants Who Bring You This Information —Attend The Church Of Your Choice— 10:00 am.------------- 11:00 a.m.Evening Sen/ice 6:00 p.m.NEW CALVARV HOLINESS CHURCH Rt. 7 Turreniine Church Road Mocksvllle, N.C. 27028 Pastor Evangelisl Charleno Lewis REDLAND PENTECOSTAL HOLINESS James Stowe, pastor Sunday School Worship Servlco EvangelisticWodnosday Family Night 10.00 a m. 11 00 a m. 7:00 p m. 7:00 p.m. Eaton Funeral Home 328 North Main Street Mocl<sville, N.C. 27028 Phone 634-2148 DAVIE TRACTOR & IMPLEMENT CO, Ford Farming Sales And Service New Holland EquipmenI Highway 601 South Mocksville, N.C. 27028 Phone 634-5969 When you’re himg^ for a relaxing meal, Hwy. 601 & MO Mocktville, NC Phone 634-0436• w«w«m Staw. Моч -Я- fto'« Ire. C.A. SEAFORD LUMBER CO. Jericho Road Mocksvllle, N.C. 27028 Phone 634-5148 Compliments o f DAVIE COUNTY FARM BUREAU 977 Yadkinville Road Mocksvllle, N.C. 634-6207 SHEFFIELD LUMBER & PALLET CO. ltouM *, iiBX1S* ^ ^ MoekavM«, liC. ar02i . Phone 492-5565 JE FFC O C O ., INC. In the Hillsdale CmmunHy Route 1 Advance, N.C. 27006 Phone 998^193 FULLER WELDING & FABRICATORS HWy.aois P.O. BOXS21 Mockevlli«, N.C. 634-3712 Evelyn Haynes & Lewis & Clark Realtors 634-3831, 768-1662 Or 1-800-451-0218 Ed Fisher PLUMBING SERVICE CodMmM, N.C. 27014 • Expert Rapalrs & New Instaletfon FREE EMImales & Emergency Sereic« 284-2721 PhOno 284-2232 lllnosniS % STEEL Fabricating 122 WllkMboro SI.Mocksvllle, N.C. i?OM 634-2379 C arter Auto R epair ASE Certllied Technicians Campulerized Wheel Balancing DIagnosllc Tune-Ups & A/C Seivlce, Etc. Mocks Church Rd., Advance, N.C. 919.998-S098 Daily Devotion 9:30 to 9:45 a.m. Monday thru Saturday WDSL o b i t u a r i e s DAVIK (■()(М Л KM lvKl'KISK KIX'OKI). IHIIKSDAA', Aug. .1, I989-9C Roy Anderson Carter -• Mr. Roy Anderson Carter, 67. i Rt. 3, Yadkinville, died ¡il liis heme on Wednesday, July 26. ■; Funeral services were held Fri- i; day, July 28, al Liberty Baptist t Church by the Revs. Marvin i Blackburn and E.M. James. Burial ■; was in the church cemetery, i The family rcquest.s thal I memorials be considered for the Cemetery Fund of Liberty Baptist '■ Church, Rt. 6, Box 223, ; Mocksville, N.C. 27028. - Mr. Carter was born on August r 20, 1921, in Davie County to the •' late James Tilden and Lola Mac • Ridenhour Carter and was retired '.with 35 years of service from f Drexel Heritage Furniture Co. He ; was a farmer and a member of •: Liberty Baptist Church, where he ; was active in all phases of the : church work including Chairman ■ of the Board of Deacons, He was ; an active Charter member of Quail ; Unlimited. ‘ He was preceded in death by one *. son, Roy Dwight Carter and one C granddaughter, Sabrina Annette ■ Carter. ‘ Surviving are: his wife, Daisy C Gentle Carter, of the home; two ’ daughters, Phyllis Ivester, Rt. 9, ' Mocksville and Annette Robello, \ Mockville; one son, Timothy G. I; Carter, High Point; seven grand- ! children; four sisters, Annie ’> Moore, Mocksville, Bertha Peters, fG ladys Tysinger and Kaye i Prevette, all of Lexington; four ^'brothers, Bill Carter, Mocksville, I Junior Carter and Lewis Carter, [ both of Advance and Donnie ¡ Carter, Lexington; his stepmother, ¡'Mrs. Velma Carter, Lexington; ¡|6ne stejMister, Helen Hill, Lex- j.^gton; and many nieces and ^^n^ew s. |james D. ‘J.D. ’ Crawford Mr. James Dewey “ J.D.” •iCirawford died oh Tuesday night, TJuly 25, at Forsyth Memorial '.'Hospital after an extended illness. k. He was betier known to his C B i .jifrteiKls a» SilVer'^eelsi'He ■ tiorn on May 2,: 1926, in kCooleemee to the late James H. irrtwfoni and Nellie F. Crawford. (Jle had resided in Winston-Salem ;:for 61 years. He was educated in !tbe public ^schools of Forsyth [Coutty. He.was a veteran of the .United Stales Navy and a former : ¡'employee of Bepco, Inc. *' Surviving are; his wife, Mrs. i'Amita Ai 'Crawfort; two step- udaughters, Mrs. Ethel Jean Giles (and Mrs. Barbara Moore; three '.stepsons, Leon Autery and Blreese ’Autery, all of Winston-Salem and Sylvester Autery,' Tallahassee,'* three sisters, Mrs. Emma C. •:$imms, Mrs. Ruby C. Hinson and :;Ms. Doris Crawfoid; one brother, ^Williani H. Crawford; seven f; r;iiephews; four nieces and a host of >io(her relatives and friends. Funeral services were held at 2 ‘pirn. Saturday, July 29, at ;iQilmore’s Memorial Chapel with 1>r. R.L. Wise Sr. officiating. ^ Birial was in Evergreen IMatthew H. Day I Mr. Matthew Hoover Day, 61, .’of Rt. 2, Ronda, died Monday, Ju- ’,Iy 31, at Baptist Hospital. ;' Funeral services were held '.Wednesday, Aug. 2, at Temple :Hill United Methodist Church by :Dr. John Deason and the Rev. :Arlene Stone. Burial was in the :church cemetery. ' Mr. Day was born on June 19, ^1928, to Preston Lewis and Ada ;Day. He was a member of Tem- 'ple HUI United Methodist Church. : Surviving are his wife, Mrs. •Sarah Lucy Hutchins Day, of the home; one daughter, Mis.s Lisa ;^ay, of the home; two sons, Keith ■¿Day, of the home and Steve Day, Wilkesboro; seven sisters, Mrs. Marie Gibson, Ronda, Mrs. Ruth Bowers, Lewisville, Mrs. Bertha Adams, North Wilkesboro, Mrs. Betty Jo Byrd, Winston-Salem, Mrs. Addie Paschal, Greensboro, Mrs, Doris Taylor, Winston-Salem and Mrs. Peggy Hunter, Charlotte; two brothers, Bobby Day, Mocksville and Stanley Day, W inston-Salem ; and one grandchild. Memorials may be made to the Temple Hill United Melluxlist Church, Rt. 2, Ronda, N.C. 28670.> Marshall H. Grose Mr. Miirshall Henry Grose, 60. 4168 15. Maple Ave.. Mocksville, (lied suddenly Sunday morning, Ju ly 30, at his olTice. Funeral services were at 11 a.m. Tuesday, Aug. 1, at Eaton’s Funeral Chapel by the Rev. Paul Riggs. Burial was in Rose Cemetery. The family requests memorials be made to First Baptist Church of Mocksvillc. Mr. Grose was born in Rich mond County to the late Roy and Della McDuffie Grose. He was a tneinber of First Bapli.st Church. He was owner and operator of P&G Auto Parts. Surviving are his wife, Peggy Rhodes Grose; two daughters, Marsha Alspaugh, Slidell, La. and Edith Potts, Mocksville; two sons, Mike and John M, Grose, both of Mocksville; two brothers. Bob Grose, Salisbury and Dallas Grose, Yadkinville, and five grandchildren. Thomas Jefferson Groce Mr. Thomas Jefferson Groce, 72, of Rt, 2, Hamptonville, died Monday, July 24, at Hoots Memorial Hospital, He was bom in Yadkin County to Noah and Hattie Swaim Groce, He was a member of Swaim’s Bap tist Church and was retired from Duke Power Co, after 33 years of service. . Surviving are: his wife, Priscilla Ashley Groce, of the home; two sisters. M iss Pauline Groce, Hamptonville and Mrs, Jmogene Winters, Advance; and two brothers, Harold and Olin Groce, both of Rt, 3, Hamptonville. Funeral .services were held Thursday, July 27, at Swaim’s Baptist Church by the Revs, Sam my McLamb, Dennis Bell and Vernon Brown, Burial was in the church cemetery. Beatrice C . Salerno Beatrice Call Salerno, 72, of Route 4, Mocksville, died Satur day, July 29, at Davie County Hospital after a period of declin ing h ^ th . A graveside service was held at 10 a.m, Tuesday, Aug. 1, at the National Cemetery of Salisbury, conducted by the Rev. Joe Mack. Memorials may be made to St, Francis Mission, P.O. Box 642, Mocksville, N.C. 27028 Bom Aug. 16,1916, in Suffem, N .Y., Mrs. Salerno was a daughter of the late John and Harriet Jones Call. She was a homemaker. Survivors include: her husband, • Frank Peter Salemo; two daughters, Hazel Kearsing of New York, and Fran Wilkie of Route 4, Mocksville; two sisters. Hazel Gallo of Mocksville and Ellen Frank of Tucson, Ariz.; 10 grand children; and three great grandchildren. Edgar Lee Sides Edgar Lee Sides, 90, of Route 8, Cauble Road. Salisbury, died at 2 p.m. on Sunday, July 30, at his home after being in declining health for a number of years and seriously ill for two years. The funeral was held at 2 p.m. Tuesday, Aug, 1, at Calvary Bap tist Church, conducted by the Rev, Bobby Seagroves, pastor. Burial was in the church cemetery. Memorials may be made to Calvary Baptist Church, Route 8, Box 669, Salisbury, N,C, 28144. Born Oct. 16, 1898, in Davic County, Sides was a son of the late John Henry and Clara Chambers Sides, Educated in the Rowan County schools, he had retired from Cannon Mills Co., Plant 7. He was an avid hunter and fisher man during his early life. He was a member of Calvary Baptist Church. His first wife, Annie Lillian Sides, died in 1962. Survivors include: his second wife, Sadie Mary Rainey, whom he married Oct. 17, 1969; five sons, Robert Lee, James W,, Carl J., John H, and Marvin S. Sides, all of Salisbury; a stepson, Fred Jo.sey of Salisbury; a daughter, Mrs. W .A. (Ann) Zimmerman of Salisbury; 11 grandchildren; two stcp-grandchildren; 1‘) great grandchildren; and three groat-great-grandchiUlren. ,Ioscph M.’ Siigj-s III Infant Joseph "J . " Kussell Suggs III, 5 months. Rt. .1, Ad vance, died unexpectedly at For syth Memorial Hospital on Tues day, July 25. He was horn on February 28. 1989, in Winston-Salem. Surviving arc his mother and fiither, Sidniee Collins and Jixseph Ru.ssell Suggs Jr. of the home and his grandparents, Drs. Joe and Ann Suggs, Asheboro and Mr. Herman L. Collins, Winston-Salem. Funeral services were held Thursday, July 27, at Vogler's Clcinnions Chapel wilh a graveside service at Oaklawn Cemetery in Asheboro with Dr. Harold Fuller officiating. The family requests that memorials be made to Parkway Presbyterian Church, The C hildren’s Nursery, 1000 Yorkshire Rd., Winston-Salem, N,C, 27103. Eric C. Williams Erie Christopher Williams, 18, 3355 Tanglewood Drive, Rock Hill, S.C. died Monday, July 31, Funeral services were held Wednesday, Aug. 2 at First Bap tist Church in Rock Hill by the Rev. Steve Hogg. He was the son of Nathan Eugene Williams and Bonnie Jean Day Williams, both of Rock Hill. Williams was a 1989 graduate of Northwestern High School, a member of First Baptist Church, a member of the spanish club, honor society, fellowship of Christian athletes and was on the staff of the school newspaper. Surviving in addition to his parents include one sister, Emily Elizabeth Williams of the home; his maternal grandmother, Edna S. Day of Blackburg, S.C.; and his paternal grandmother, Mrs. Lovie J. Williams of Mocksville. Memorials may be made to the 1990 FirsI Baplisi '^’oulh Mission Meiiional Fiintl. c/o 2\5 l-asi Main St., Rock Hill, S.C. 29730, W atkins S e rt^ a n s at the international convention included, from left: seated — A.T, and Annl6 CareerNohlgren; and standing — Jeff and Bonnie Ayers and Henry D a vie S e rto m a n s A tte n d In te rn a tio n a l C o n ve n tio n I Members of the Davic Sertoma Club attended the International Ser toma Convention held July 19-22 at the Omni Hotel, Charieston, S,C, The convention was attended by Sertomans from Canada, Mexico and the United States. Attending from the Mocksville Club were A.T. and Annie Lois Grant, Jeff and Bonnie Ayers, Steve and Suzie Nohlgren, and Henry Carter, ' Nohlgren, current chairman of the board and instrumental in for ming the Davie Sertoma Club was named International Sertoman of the Year, Nohlgren, a doctor of biology at Salem College and Wake Forest University, is active in all phases of Sertoma and is in coming governor for the West District of N.C. « International officers and trustee to the Sertoma Foundation w eK elected. Davie Sertoma meets the firat' and third Thursdays, 6:30 p.m. at the Western Steer. Interest^ residents are welcome. For infor mation concerning speech and hearing assistance, contact Bonnie Ayers at 998-8805! Chandler To Be Speaker Girl Completes SPEC Program J e n n ife r W atkins has su c c e ssfu lly completed the S P E C (Southern Pied mont Educa tional Consor tium) program for gifted children at C a ta w b a College. She received a certificate for completing the program. Jennifer will be going to the sixth grade at M ocksville Middle School. She received four honor roll ribbons in the 1988-89 school year, an academic excellence award, and a spelling bee award. She is the daughter of Mrs, Mamie Watkins and the late George Watkins and the grand daughter of Mr, and Mrs, Willie Watkins of Woodleaf and Mrs. Luna Sales of Mocksville. Rev. James Hester Chandler will be the guest speaker at Cornatzer United Methodist Church and Bethel Unued Methodist Church Sunday, Aug. 6. Chandler will preach al the 9:45 a.tii. w o rsliip service al C o i iial/ef and liie 11 a.m. worship service al Bethel, Chandler was ordained into the ministry on June 12 by the Bishop James B. Stockton during the Virginia Annual Conference in Norfolk, Va. Chandler, who attends Wesley Theological Sem inary in Washington, D.C,, will serve at Arlington United Methodist CHurch, where he has served as seminarian associalc paslor for ihe past two >'cars. Ho is a graduaie ofthe Univer sity of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and is the son of Mr, and Mrs. Elliott Chandler of Roxboro, His wife, Lynda Rivers Chandler is the granddaughter of Stella Hendrix of Route 3, Mocksville, D e a n G e ts N a v y C o m m is s io n Navy Ensign Donald C. Dean, son of Judith E. Kane of Route 2, Mocksville, was commissioned upon graduation from the Univer sity of South Carolina in Columbia, Dean received his commission upon completion of the school’s Naval Reserve Officer Training Corps (NRO TC ) Program, During each undergraduate semester. Dean completed naval science courses as well as his ftill academic schedule that led to his bachelor’s degree in science. These courses, combined with annual summer training aboard ships and shore installations, served to prepare him for the duties and responsibilities of a commissioned officer. He is a 1983 graduate of R.J. Reynolds Senior High School in Winston-Salem. J o r d a n P r o m o t e d B y U .S . N a v y Navy Petty Officer 2nd Class Ronald W. Jordan, sonof Davil L, and Linda C. Jordan of 15 Grove St., Cooleemee. has been pro moted to his present rank while ser ving aboard the tank landing ship U SS Sumter, homcported in Nor folk, Va. Jordan is a 1981 graduate of Davie High School. He joined the Navy in February 1985. 'H i! M y nanie is Ryan Hamlltd}! Dunn. I Just turned one y m o|]l July 7, 1989. M y mommy ап|1 - daddy are Greg and Danetlje Dunn of Advance. My grand parents are James and Judy Godbey o f M ocksville апй Hubert and Norma Jean Dunn dr Advance. I . would like to thank my Nanny and Papaw Godbcjr for letting me M icbrate my bU- thday with a cookmrt at thcBr house. We had hot <loci, haai- burgers, a big Midccy Mouae anil Donald Duick cake foT tlw b% people, and I h a d ^ very owb Tweetie B ih l cake. M y.Gram w a ^ papaw Dunn attended tlw party and so did nuuv aunta and uncles, Gousinf, and , fHends. Ib a n k you all for the ' nice presents and love тЛ can ^ you’ve given nw.. • SERVICE FUNERAL DIRECTORS 4 1.0CA T10N .S 722-filO l 120 Soulh M ain Slreel 722-ÍIÜ 6 24.‘'1 RcviH>ld.i Road 131 Years Of Service CREM ATO RY SERVIC E Clemnums, N.C. 766-4715 766-4717 M iJdlcbrcw k D rive C li'm m oiis 246-2.Vi6 405 S. M ain Slreel LexinaUiii Davio County IMume Numlier 998-3428 NETTIE ANNE DEDMAN WAQNER , Oct. 24, 1894 ■ July 15. 1989 Our Molher was a kind, caring and gentle person wilh compassion tor tho sick & down ; *™ShB nure^ergSmolher, grandlalher, her mother and took her lather Into out ; and cared tor him until his death • then gave her bachlor brollier Edd, a room in our tome lor 36 years, nursing him through several ulcer operallons. Always tailhlui to do what «he could 10 help those In need. ____She had lo pul aside her line talent lor an for many years, and turned down an otter from Ihe Hallmark Card Company lo be one of Iheir designers, lot siie caring^^or Ihe sick. Later on. she won ribbons Irom the Forsyth Fair, for her etchings, her oil pain- ""in'Ihe days ol mTearly childhood I would rernember the besgare would ^ j«^n to ; come 10 our home for Mama would give them a plate full of food and then buy theii n ^ e s . 10 help them out, belore they wenl on their way. if any one was unkind lo her she was '’“HeVhusbS'Alberl, shared in these kind deeds, wilh ihe same genUe patience she had^ Her lamily has known Ihe utmost in love and loyalty - and we will strive to follow the fine example she set - (or goodness and love is whal we were taught. • "She was kind, sweel and gemle and was good to all she would meet she took the , lime 10 lalk or lislen and would feed the beggars olf the street.For He always picks Ihe roses for His garden of love in Ihe sky and 1 want lo be just like hor, so we'll meet in the sweet by and by. her llie was not a bed ol roses, for she used it lo serve those m need. To tDo Unto Others" Is whal she pracliced and going "One Step Beyond, Vifas Her Creeo. Nellie Wagner - a precious ¡ewei on earth and in Heaven lei us ail strive lo have he PURE sweetness, kindness and evetiasling love and palience she posessed lo live the REAL Christian way (or a beller. kinder world.I'rom Her FaiitHy.Mrs. ¡kilie HeadJim, Stephen d Vw/nas John H. iVafiuer/.iirhiit', hiura JL Richard._______6-2*llp ю с —D A V IE CO U N TV E N T E R P R ISE R EC O RD , 1И U RSDЛ ^, Лиц. 3, 19«J ADVERTISEMENTADVERTISEMENT The new location in the New Towne Shopping Cen ter has more room for displaying the exquisite collection o f jewelry. ADVERTISEMENT ADVERTISEMENT ADVERTISEMENT Don Pope I Opens New Location; I Jewelry Dynasty Continues You'd have to be a newcom er in town not to recognize Don Pope’s nam e and Its association with fine Jewelry. Don has been bringing Jeweiry values to folKs around here for over 38 years, and m ost of his custom ers have gotten pretty com fortable dealing with him. They're going to be even more com fortable in the new Don's Fine Jewelry store in the New Towne Center In ' Clemmons. It's spacious, it’s modern, and It's full o f the outstanding merchandise that has glVein Dòn the reputation o f having the best buys anywhere^ Clemmons is lucky to have Don’s store in the riìéìghlx>i1i»od, à says that he bé;№ 'retired wlk> wants ' y ò w ^lìh an In high schoor.w savingup.for a class appreciates every ò h e ò fh ff customers. : if yoii,haven't had the pleasure o f meeting Don. or the likeable men and women who work foTchlm, you oug^t to drop by for a ^vlstt^ , . Av^ood*friend of all the employees who Is á' tr ^ u e n t visitor to the store Is John SIzerhore. John Is easily recognized by his w totem attire and boM Jewelry; He's not Just a friendly face, however. He occasionally helps out'jCustomersV >/Even;if you’re not shopping for anything in ' paiticuiar, you're always welcome at Don's Filié Jewelry.: Stop by and have your rings cleaned and inspected. There’s no charge for thesè services. V :The h|st07,jp(,Dòn's career shows why Don is such an expert on jeviielry quality. While h e was stiii irt high school in Winston-Salem, Doh. began woirklrig at Meai”s Jewelers on Liberty Streèt^(According to Dori, a t that tim e all the:city% Jeweiry stores were on U behy Street downtown, between Fourth and Fifth streets. Don and his brother opened up their own store after that, and 11 years ago Don decided to strike out on his own. Those other stores have disappeared for various reasòns;:but Don's Fine Jewelry is still gO ing8tiO ng.,-’.'''‘ - - - Mocksviiie was the'iocatlon of the first store owned solely by Don, and he later ópèiied one ili Clemmons. i'lll '•'^4 i • b f f s bon Pope and his wife Jean have an Impressive selection of the finest Italian gold chains, with a lifetlme guarantee. easy on your budget. T here's a layaway plan (now 's a good tim e to start shopping for a , Christm as surprise) and Don accepts all m ajor credit cards, so when the im pulse hits you, you don’t have to wait to own a beautiful new piece of jewelry. T here's also a financing program available too, and it's quick and easy to apply. Som e of the gift item s are Seiko and Citizen w atches, calculators, elegant cigarette lighters, cultured pearls, pocket w atches and ■ keychains. r If th ere's a special occasion com ing up,: and you'd like to rem em ber som eone with jewelry but don't know thelr taste, a girt i ;: certificate can be the perfect solution. Exchanges and gift-wrapping are also, available. Joe Rogers of Don's Fine Jewelry notés th at ring enhancers and tennis bracelets are popular with women these,days. Jean Pope says that colored stones; ' ; particularly the blue topaz, are in dem ands and pearls are making a com eback for ev^^day ;: w ear. A new line of synthetic pearls by Deltaiil : i f known as the firs t Lady pearis; have just arrived at at Don’s. i High school students shodld visit Don's for ; ' the widest selection of -class rings anywhere; >•: «¡The store has Artcarvetf AND Gold Lapcè ■;/ j rings. Students can select*a ring style (prices ? start at $54.95) and.have à ring ih.just a JÀ .'* few short weeks. Ordering frdrn a salesperson^ a t school can take m onths. * * This wide selection of merchandise %hbuld' please anybody, but Don goes a stfp further. "If you're hot happy.With som ething, briii{(::^:t ^ it back and select M m ething eise. W e;w iint;aiPr“ 'i^ o f our customers to t>e happy." - ^ ' "Our suppliers have agreed to let us haveii i som e really nice merchandise to give àv»àÿ,' V '' says Jean Pope. There will be merchandise giveaways ' through the Grand Oiiening. D on't forget to .;r - register when you visit. Don's Fine Jewelry is located in thé New v Towne Shopping Center in Clemmons. They're open Monday through Friday froiii::9:00 a.'ni.;; ( until 8 :0 0 p.m . and on Saturday until 5:30; ' : Their phone number is 766-8505. Joe Rogers shows ¿âme of the'tastefuiJewelry for the discriminating man. ' 'T he store was moved to its present location in June. During his 38 years, Don has learned that the best deals on jewelry start from the tim e he buys from the manufacturer. Several tim es each year, Don attends jewelry shows In Atlanta and Charlotte. There, Don can see new styles of rings, watches and other jewelry, and compare prices to find bargains to bring home to his customers. Throughout the year, Don buys from major manufacturers, whose sales executives visit his store, so Don's inventory is always new and exciting. But If a customer is particularly choosy, th at's no reason for disappointm ent. Custom - m ade jewelry will delight the hard-to-please person. And Don and his staff can help you dream up an Innovative design. Jack Freem an, the sto re's goldsmith, m akes jewelry repairs quickly, so you w on't have to do without your favorite ring or bracelet for long. For your peace of mind, Don has an elaborate security system , which Includes cam eras and videotape, so that you never have to worry about entrusting your jewelry to him. Custom ers com e first at Don's Fine Jewelry, and to prove that the store has several services that m ake buying jewelry 1.Ч i-JoTl I J r I, I Barbara Bush's fondness for synthetic pearls has Inspired a new line by Deltah, called the First Lady Collection, now available at Don's Fine Jewelry.Your jewelry is repaired by Jack Freeman, the goldsmith at Don's Fine Jewelry. D a vie P eople DAVIK COUN'I'V KNTKKI'RISK KKCORI), TlIURSDAVr Áu«. 3, I989-1D I katy Healy shows Melanie McDowell, 11, how to cheer. were plenty of yoang girls at the cheering camp. I ’V ' ' I'V '" 1 ' I'lf • i t t l e ivie High Cheerleaders Role Models .Hundreds of little eyes followed every move cheerleaders taught the younger ones the techni- Im ^ by Dayie High School varsity and junior var- ques involved in cheerleading; the younger ones Isity cheerieaders last week. dreamed of one day being on the high school squad. Tfw eyes belonged to little girls taking part in Meanwhile, they’ll settle for cheering on their Itiw.squad’s annual cheering camp. While the older little league football teams this fall. t. ,l., J ^ , C: r c ' ,’tl r .. ¡Girls competed in a "jump off" at the cheering camp last Thursday. Davie High School varsity and junior varsity cheerleaders conducted the camp for girls. iGiris at the camp mimmick their oltder counterparts while learning a cheering dance. Girls patiently wait their turn while watching another compete in jump off 2D-DAVIE COUNTY ENTERI’RISK UFXORl), TIIUKSDAY. Лиц. 3. C r a f t G r o u p D o n a t e s P r o c e e d s The Davie Craft Association has donated a portion of proceeds from its Davie Craft Corner to tliree organizations. Sheriff Bill Woolen ycccpled $125 for the D A R E program. Janet Blair accepted S125 on behalf of Hospice, and Barbara Ijame.s with $250 to help mentally handicapped. Davie Craft president Tiny Hen drix made the presentations recently. The Davic Craft Association is a non-profit organization that spon sors the Davic Craft Corner cach November to benefit community projects. Cost Sharing Program Set Signup for cost-sharing under the ; A CP will continue through Aug. 4. Farmers with erosion or conser vation problems can apply for cost- share assistance during the signup period. Fall practices available to Davie County farmers include: esuiblishing and improving perma nent vegetative cover, stripcropp- ing, sod waterways, diversions, winter cover, tree planting and others. ffM O r j H R M M lT .ditsry. МНШ 5SI!£3,S1* IW ioieyFliilli^. Hii Hodhcr pw ty at my Dariene’s house and ^;lwd an M & M cake with my own Utte one to.ptey in. 1 received lots nice (H b from family and ^IH cn di. My grandparents are: rK c U i and Darlene Sheets of .CMocikiivili^ ikibby and Ardella ^ n U ^ o r M o d u v ille : and Ron- ^ n ic u d . C hcrita M yers of Mjramar.fla.i Loonird Roalty 3 4 T o w n 7 0 4 - ÌB Ì3 4 - 3 8 7 5 | jMÎOR IM V K 8 П К Е Г • П ут ю П km стш ся'|тиЕвг ' «Mwr |И|Ш !■ iciiMi» «f гя м М li|. ,U*ei’Ы.'; Migibé ■сш |1|М n. jíoa ÀDVANCB ^ 4 кмммм. w . tJS. Mtft M Uw M N Ira «i| rin * t«S I,N I. COUNTRY C O V E -U n r -^ L - , - “ “ J'H w brMk SdMMl. StMl itnkfant. *M.M. DAVIE S IU E T - anily itnod^ •dlmM.li«rdwmdnoon. HELP w fiH CLOW«: COSTS. m c E BBOtlCEDI •ll.SM. ИЖ Е STREFT j O fTtU N .'-3 B r,Z B A d «ib le wide baac. H nl pump, CA. Ap- ptocn, Sirt. ОЫц 2 oul buUdiiigi. U n e lot. MOBOE HOME LOT ■ 100i215 Lot - Septic (uk uMl weU. РЯ1СЕ lEIWCEOI OWNER WANTS OF FER *7,5П INDUSTRIAL - 4.2 u ru with rallrMd rrontagc. Localtd In MocknUlc. >42,0110 M l N. ZONED HIGHWAY BUSINESS - 100x400 Lot wilh brick Ьшпе. 415,000. IN TOWN - Ccniral Buslims Zon- ini Lot 245 X 200 ■ >24,000 F0RESTLANE-2BK. I » onUrgcWwWUo^T! n.U,n!?.^EUUCED - OWNER ANXIOUS >J3,500, COUNTRY LANE - Large building lol with »pile lanli. >17,000 YADKIN CO. - Older restored bonw wllll acreage, stream. >68,900 601 N. - 4 bedroom, 2 bath home, Uvliiii room, dining room, Basement on a large lol, convenient loeullon. >115,000 X IK IW N IO W N BU.SINKSS I.OT - and Wurehou-ses or building fur small buslnns, l.<ils of |Hissililllllcs. Owner uu.\lous I'KICK KKDt'fCI) Oilier lluniL-s & 1.4111(1 Availiibk- IJllilu U ’diliird 7(l4-6.14-i6SU Cyutblu Agrestii 704-6.M-4I4U Nh^:!) N|.;\V U S I rt l.lSTlM iS T £ r- Ijame.s lloiKlrix Hhiir FO R S A L E 210 E. Maple Avenue *58,950 C a ll f o r d e t a ils o n t h is n ic e h o m e Larew — Wood — Johnson, Inc. 135 S. Salisbury Street, Mocksville 634-6281 J @ OPEN HOUSE 2-5 p.m. Davie County - Bethel Chuch Road Charming 3 bedroom brick hom e on acre lot. Special features include: double car garage, 2 fireplaces with woodstove, huge covered deck and patio, garden spot and shop with grease pit. All for *89,5001 HOWARD REALTY rnS34-3S38 La Directions: 64 E to L on Bethel C h ., to last house on left. R o gU te r For $ 8 0 0 0 Hom oplaca S w e p s ta K e s _______ Home Place Realty, Inc. For All Your Building & Real Estate Needs NEW LISTING ' 18.190 ' OLD GEORGIA ROAO • 62 acres on Old Geogia piraere, ' Road.SetinChrittm8sTreeswitlilak9onpfoper' ;•> < f Л • ty. Qood Itwertnent Pfopeity. tisi.000 t1N,IOO HOMES RiOQERaAO-35 R idgeR o^ house on I, stream on uiet living in this 3 bedroom brickhome. Situatedon 11.41 acres off ot Mill ing Road, this home is very private. A must to see. brick home on well, swimm- : ing polffBlsebam , large deck, burglar alarm im ore. LAND II ,200 OFF DUKE WHIHAKER RO. - 21.25 per acre acres of level land. Sewn in Pines approx. IS years ago. 12,600 OLD GEORGIA RO. - 46.74 acres with per acre road frontage. Possbile larger tract available. Call for more details. :• 15,800 RUFFIN ST. EXT. 3 - building lots wiith each gas lines and water, already perked and PmHa auitable, Call today while Govern ment Money is still available. $50,000 GUN CLUB RD. ADVANCE • 3.78 acres. Beautiful piece of land just perfect to build on. BUSINESS $69,500 N. MAIN STREET MOCKSVILLE - Pric ed below tax value. Building has excellent rental income & positive cash flow. Possi ble owner financing. Cali today. 119 Depot Street, Mocksville B O B SHELTO N, Broker VON SHELTO N. Broker Raym onda Saunders, Sales Barry Whittaker, Sales Frank Payne, Sales Rick Bazaar 634-2252 634-0110 634-1527 634-1439 998-2622 998-9490 R E A L T Y , D AV IE CO U NTY Our Specially/Our Counly & Insurance A gency, Inc. 330 s . Salisbury Street C orner of Hwy. 64 & 601 M ocksville, N.C. O FFIC E H O U RS Mon.-Fri. 9-6 Saturday 9-1 Sunday By AppolntmenI (704) 634-3538 Julia Howard 634-3754 Connie Kowalske 634-6343 Jackie Hall 634-1155 Jane Whitlock 634-5704 M.J. Randall 634-5629 Linda Daughtrey 998-3842 Mike Hendrix 634-0390 C.C. Chapman 634-2534 Diane Foster 634-5692 Jan Hailey 634-0129 (919) 998-6463 *31,900 ♦ Owner finance on this slartci home, 2 BR. 1 bath, comptelely remodel ed, 1 acrc lol. W ' >36,900 • 156 SPRING STREET - 3 bedroom, 1 balh home Icoaled in conve nient location. Good slarler or retirement home at a good price. >43,900 - MORSE STREET -1100 sq. II., BR, Vh balh brick home. Slove, relrigerator, & ceiling Ians slay. >55,900 - 107 META BREEZE LANE.- Cedar sided ranch lealuring 3 BR, t 'h BA, lireplace, paddle Ians, mini blinds, garage, paved drive (Assumable VA Loan). >62,500 • CUTE AND COZY - Cottage wilh Counlry Docor on 5 acres with horse barn plus storage building. Oil lurnace. country kitchen. >79,too - BEST BUY IN TOWNI - 3 bedroom, 2Vi balhs, deck, brick lenced patio, dbl. garage on 1.34 acres + possi ble owner linancing. >33,500 • 3 BR, 1 balh, deck, 2 yr. old oil lurnace, new rool, on Vs acre lot in Eastern Davie Counly. <42,000 - FRESHLY REMODELED - 3 BR, 1 balh collage. Large IronI porch and deck, new rool, gas lurnace, slorage building. >46,000 - Neal 3 BR, bilck home wilh basement, home features hardwood lloors, new carpet and paint. 7,500 -1 '/i year old home in Shady Grove School Dislrict - w/3 BR, 2 balhs, lull bsmt., deck, sky light In bathroom, heart pump and lilt in Ihermopane windows, Greal starter or reliremenl homa. ■65,000 • RITCHIE ROAD - Charming log rancher wilh 3 BR, 2 baths on 2,79 acres. Move In Condition. •10,500 • SANFOBD ROAO • enticing, new decorated, brick ranch convdnlenBy tocaled. Features partially finished base ment, great family area, pool, (»need back jMdjardenjandjnijl •— >W,SOO • BETHa CHURCH ROAO • 3 BR, brick horns on acre bi w/garden spot, huge covered deck, vnrkshop. Pried btkm ap. pwlMd vilml___________________ >19,900 • EictIlMl kKiUon In EmMiii Onit County • Brick ranch w/3 BR, № ballis, lull bsml., dbl. garage, LR, dm siWlsd on 1.5 acres. >100,000 3 bedroom, 1'h balhs. Wilh car. porl on 16 acres. Located on corner ol 158 and Sain Rd.. >139,900 • 3,219 sq. tt. 2 story home w/lull bsml. on 5 wooded acres, screen porch & decit w/scenic view, 4 BR, 3 lull balhs. >M,IOO • E. LAKE DfllVE • QlMt lW storey homa with full basenwnt. Quality constructk>n. Water frontage, convtnlMt kjcatkm. •M,900-8MludMlrMiclitypehomw№l bsmt. on 5 асгм, 4 Ва 2 bitti, 20x40 garage, 34 acres and house tor •12t,900. >130,100 - Your Ortam Honit is wailing, belter than new, yr. old, exquisite decor, hardwood lloors, 3 BR, 2'h balhs, Florida Room, lull bsml. >134,900 - OFF CALAHAN RD. • Rustic A Frame i’h slory wilh lull linished basement, situated on 8 acres, 3 BR, 3 balhs, 2 kilchens, wrap-around deck, hot lub. C O M M E R C I A L P R O P E R T Y >35,500 - New Double WWe with 1,000 sq: It. on 'h acre, home features 2 BR, 2 balhsi all appliances. >42,900 - Lovely brick ranch home, 3 SB, VA bath In rural selling, neulral colors, slorage bidg. >49,900 • BeiuUhiHy mslnlalned honie wilh 3 BR, 1 balh, neutral carpel. Island ItIH cheh, lull basmenl. •57,500 . 3 BR, 1 batti. LR wHh FP ph*-,'. basment, wooded kJl with gsidtn ЦМИ on.’ ,7'acre. >68,900 - MoveHn condWon Lovely 3 BR, Vh bath brick home, on 1.63, remodeled, nice landscape. ' •M,SOO - Ban buy In town. S BR,'2W baths, LR 1 Fn'wHh FP’a, 2 car 'gar;oK beautHu! cornar kx. •/. ., .i, -Л. raatoiiad 1мт hoM W3 Mt, a bilia,'pkic' honabam, iMkbam,2Mr. Dm m . 1 , ' .‘-'-i «М.0001.7 aeraa «М BR. 1Ш hbniK iiorWaR-iSpi«party.XpoMiblaratoniflo good ЬпааЬпиИ lingua , , for«MdlaettmliMlnohuyar<wlthuniqua: taste. Spaca 2400 * sf. Privacy • wood-, back yard w/viaw of pond Ii goH ooursa.t Luxury 500 sf. Master Suita. Oraal Boon- w/vaujledcaijinjisjjj^^ >144,500 - Min|.Horse Ranch w/brick home loaded w/ counlry charm, wood fencing, horse bam, riding ring, plus aalt shop, coiv veniehlly localed- . HWV. 158 -16 pius acres that couid be rezoned lot business. Presently there is a 2 BR. 2 BA, ome tiiat is used as a rental. <100,000.HWY. e01 ■ 2.9 ac гопей tight industial. well & building on properly. Petit approved >35,000.-LOTS & LAND Mocksville • Inome producing warehouse lot sale. Call lor delails <136,500, • BETHEL CHURCH ROAO • 16.7 acres on Bethel Ctoch Hoad /Railroad Sidinj) ; Call for delails. WATER FRONT LQf- M li— K LAKE M9.000 Hobson Road.......1.87 Ac. »7,500 Off Needmore..............on Jericlio Church Rd... Eaton Road...Tol & Gwyn SI......................................................... ‘7,500Hickory Hill...............................................Fairway Lot *9,500Hospital Street Eil...............................................Lot *10,000 Highway 64 East,Hickory Hill..........................................Lake Front Lol *10,000 ..........18.5 Acres ♦ Approx. 300 ll. Rd. Fronlage Partially Wooded Level In Edge ol N. Cooleemee.. Iredell Co.............................................................*29,500. Needmore Rd, Hwy, 158...................N. Coo RENTALS- ...................:.....29 Plus Aerei >3$,000.........................20 Plus Acres <M,006 ..................................8,71 Ac. <75,00» ....................................46 Ac. <73,MO .....................16 Ac, -t House <100,000 ..............................114.5 Ac. <143,000................................................<2,«00 m s SANFORD AVE. - WAREHOUSE SPACE FOR RENT - Features convenient loca tion, iOxD ovfifhead door, lights 800 sq ft. S175 Per Month DAVIK COHN 1Л i:N I KUI’KISK KKCOUI), rnUUSDAY, Aug. 3, 1989— 3D W o m a n F o u n d G u ilty O f P a s s in g S c lio o l B u s ;; By Kalhy D . Churfin Davie Counly Enlerprlse-Hecord I' ' An Advance wonian wlio says U she was al While Liike when it hap- ;; pened was convicted July 20 of 1'. passing a slopped school bus. A five-man, seven-woman jury ;■ deliberated for 30 minutes before finding Elizabeth Myers Myers. ;- 54, of Roule3 guilty ofthe offense. Superior Coun Judge Judson D. :• DeRamus Jr. asked Mrs. Myers, > who had no previous driving of- •!; fehses, if she had anything lo say ;; before being sentenced. .“ I was nol here,” she respoiuied. DeRanuis Jr. sentenced Mrs. Myers to 90 days, suspended for three years under unsupervised probation, and ordered her lo pay a $2(K) line and not violate any traf fic laws. That was the nia.xinnim sentence allowed by law, he told the jury afterward. The trial slarled on the morning of July 19 and ended just before noon the following day. •‘We contend lhat there’s been a mistaken identity," said Defense Attorney Will Martin in bis clos ing argument. Mrs. Myers’ defen.se consisted of testimony by herself, her hus- Stony Brook V i acre lots. County water. Located on Sanford Road, Off 601. Easy Access To 1-40 Or 64 Minutes From Mocksville ( 9 1 ) 9 9 8 - 3 9 0 7 R.M.F. iConstruction Co., Inc. I 115.000 W ATTS STREET - Two bedroom, one balh home Is good loca tion In Cooleemee. Great Investment potential. . tit-90 0 CROSS STREET - Cute 2 bedroom, 1 bath home perfect tor i /oung couple. Just freshly painted Inside and out. Ready for your personal louch to make It home. t24,000 ERWIN STREET - Two bedroom home on dead-end slreel in Cooleemee. Assumable VA mortgage. Great rental property, ta t,M O . W A TT STREET/COOLEEMEE • 2 Bedroom, 1 Bath home with ‘ aluminum siding exterior. Personal property Includes range, washer and dryer. Nice lot In good location, convenient to echoole, churchee and shopping. „ tM ,tOO SANFORD AVE.MOCKSVILLE • 1 or 2 bedroom/1 bath. Good , location. АСГ088 from the Garden Valley Entrance. Qood starter home or InvMtment property. ttl.tO O HWY. M l м о т ^ п ш ^ Ш Ы а м Ш Ь о т е with 3 BR, sun room and s c r e ^ ^ ^ ^ l l T l T ^ ^ H l - C and this could be youi' dream h o H M M M I p iiH H e t a lls . ■ t 34,too OFF DANIEL RO.. 3 BR's, 2 bath modular home on large heavily wooded lot. Extremely well cared for. Large covered back porch > ' offere room for outdoor enjoyment. t3S,tOO No matter how nIc* your apartment lt...R will never be youn... - Get a taste of the country In this 2 bedroom, 1 bath, frame home on Turrentine Church Rd. Please call to see it to day. OWNER IS ANXIOUS TO SELL... tttitO O M/UN ST. COOLEEMEE - Charming home with all the extras you’ve been looking for. Beautiful hardwood floor, vinyl siding, central air, nice deck. Cozy attic bedroom, perfect for teenager or etudy/offlce space. Well maintained, ready for a new owner, f' t t t ,too DAVIE ACADEMV RD. - Enjoy the country living you love In tWaroral t4t.S00 jiw ii етИЕВТ - POM IB LE LOAN ASSUMPTION - On this 6 year old h o in a g | | M | P s i7 M ;«H M t-ln kitchen. Equip ped (or h a n i c a ^ ^ B i l l ] 4 * ^ H K h a l r ramp at front porch. Qreat 1|Р1Р1И1ЯИ1^В?ИИопа111оп. ’ :t4S,000 .OILADSTONE ROAD - Excellent Investment property In private aettingl Three bedrooms and 1 bath, fireplace and wood stove. NEW ROOF. Take advantage ol this bargain todayl . t4t,tOO LAKEWOOD VILLAQE • Nice 3 bedroom/1. bath Brick rancher V : on large k>t, completely remodeled 4 years афо. Features klt- cheh/dlning combo. Modestly priced for the first homebuyers ■ . . budget."' t47,SOO HWV. 04 W. • SUPERB BUY On this 7 year old home featuring 3 BH's, 1 bath. Excellent conditton plus a pretty setting. This one will not last longl Call today for an appointment. : t47,e0O W i a O W J W M ^ M ^ ^ j ^ ^ ^ j g ^ w i t h M l b a s e - Mt.SOO OLADSTONE RD. • This Is the afforable home you've been waiting fori 3 BR's, 2 baths on a wooded 1 acre lot partially fenc ed. Features Include Slone Fireplace w/lnsert. Great locatlonl. ' t4t,9M WHITNEV ROAD-If you've been looking for that nice home with ; 3l)edrooms, spacious country kitchen and full basement In move- ln condltkin but thought It was Impossible lo llnd for under $50,000, then you were wrong. Believe II or nol, here It isl A greal buyl ' tsa.soo SPRINQ STREET-Immaculate 3BR.1V2 balh older home within ^ walking distance ol Elementary School & town. Glassed-In back porch and a partially finished basement with fireplace. All ol this situated on an attractive lol with a walnut tree, pines and flower ing trees. t54,t00 EDISON STREET - Freshly painted Interior and exterior ol this two bedroom brick rancher locaied In town on private streel wilh little traffic. Home offers a formal living room, den, utility room and extra large kilchen/dining combinalion. Great Space For The Pricel . $54,900 64 WEST-Super Nice Rancher. Situated on lovely corner wood ed lol. Extremely well cared lor. Features 3 bedrooms, 1 balh, single carport and large detached garage, ideal starter home, ready lor a new lamily to move in today. band. Hilly Myeii,. and two oliiers. that slie was in While Lake on the morning of April 2 5. 1988. when she is alleged lo have passed a stop ped school bus being driven north on N.C. 801 hy Jean Cornatzer. George l-ranklin Inman, co owner of a supermarket near Wliitc Lake, tcstincd lhat Mrs. Myers w'as in liis slore when llie offen.se is alleged lo have occurred. David Myers, one of the Myers' Ihrec children, testified thal his parents left after churcli on the Sunday before the alleged inciiient on Monday morning to go to White Lake. They had asked him lo look after iheir house while they were gone, he .said. Cornatzer. .Shirley Markland and licr mollier-iti-law. M ildred Markland. and TrooperC.D. Jones of Ihe N.C. Highway Patrol le.slilled for ihe stale. Shirley Markland testilled lhat she recognized Mrs. Myers from her from porch. Mildred Markland. who lives ne,\i lo her. said she Tccognized Billy Myers bul could nol .see who was driving the car. Cornalzer said she didn't recognize the driver, but identified Mrs. M yers in District and Superior Court as llie person slie hac^jceiulrivingjh^^ Seville Ihal passed her hus. Cornatzer. wlio has been a bus driver for 12 years, was Ihe llrsl witness for llie slate. She said she had stopped in froni of Shirley Markland's residence to pick up her two children when the olfcnse occurred. She testified lhat the bus lighls were blinking and Ihal Ihe .slop arm was e.xlended. Cornalzer said she was gelling ready lo open the door when she noticed a car approaching from about 400 feel away. “ Il appeared to me that she was not going to slop for the stop arm.” she .said. Plea,sc Sue Dcfeiulam — P. 4-D Forecast: Warm With Showers Warm temperatures arc forecast for the Piedmonl area for the coming week, accor ding lo the Nalional Wcalher Service. Partly sunny skies arc forecast for Thursday, wilh highs in the upper 80s and lows in the upper 60s. Friday through Sunday, highs should be in the upper 80s to near 90, with lows near 70. Partly cloudy skies are foreca.st for Friday, wilh a chance of showers on Saturday and Sunday. V2 to 1 acre lots - underground utilities, county water — no city taxes On Bethel Church Road Just 1 mile from city limits “ The R ight Place Fo r Your H o m e !” CALL 7 0 4 -6 3 4 -4 1 3 1 6-15-tfnbp Lifestyle Homes & Realty, Inc. OPEN HOUSE 2-4 TWINBROOK SUBDIVISION - Crestview Drive, new construction ¡ust completed' and ready for occupancy. This 1500 sq. ft. country rancher was designed lo give' you a feeling of tremendous spaciousness. Abundant cabinets, walk-ln closets, & garden tub add to the value. :■ Check The W inslon-Salem Journal For $5,000 Prize Enter A l O pen Houm i L i f e s t y l e H O M E S & R E A L T Y , IN C . (704) 6 3 4 -0 3 2 1 8 1 8 S o u th M a in Stre^;t M o c k sv ille , N .C. Office Hours Monciny Fnclny 9 Silt 10 I Sun ? lib nouse ai i H O M E S *138,000 - City Living At It’s Best! • Spacious 1V: story brick and siding home on 1.20 acres with lots of privacy. Features include 4 bedrooms 3 baths, with large Master Bedroom, sitting area, bath and its own deck. Great home for growing family. ssrieoo LIBERTV CHURCH RD. - Large llvlng/dining combinations and an a d d itlo n a yg u iV M b M iftlM llH lii'^^ ^ wonderfully open f e ^ ^ H 3 ? | l i n ^ ^ H < g l e car carport and full base m e rW IW IIi|5«sraB B ^iipB 8 enjoy the beauty of $58,000 HIGHWAY SOI^NOnTH 3 + PARTIALLY WOODED ACRES- A spring & possible lake site with room for small pasture area. Recently remodeled with 3 BR, 1 balh and 1458 SF. Convenient to 1-40. OWNER WILL ASSIST WITH CLOSING COSTS. $58,000 CEMETERY STREET - Lovely story and a half Cape Cod House Is beautifully decorealed in Williamsburg blue and mauye. Three bedrooms and one bath. Must see to appreciate. Just reduced from $59,000. $59,900 RAYMOND STREET - Super nice brick rancor on corner lot. Locaied just medical facilities. Features 3 fireplace and fenc ed rear yard. to make it home. JUST REDUCED! $64,500 DAVIE ACADEMY RD. - Brick rancher, 2 bedroom, 2 balh, large LR w/ FP, DR w/built in china cabinet, full bsmt., carport, circle drive. Rural selling wilh large hardwoods. $69,900 GREAT BUY - 3 bedrooms, 2 balhs. Great room and 18.47 acres make this house Ihe best buy around. Enjoy the swimmng pool and wrap around deck that this properly offers. Countr In lha Country at an allordable pricel $69,900 WILLBOONE ROAD - Nice home on 2.72 acres. Acreage has 650 It. ol road frontage. Home features living room, den, 2 bedrooms, 2 full baths, large country kitchen wilh built in eating bar, dining room, double carport, concrete drive. Also for the . animal lover there's a small barn wilh electricity and water. Ad ditional out buildings and storage oil carport. •70,000 OFF MAIN CHURCH RD. - State Rd. 1466 - Allordable Brick Ran cher with 3 bedrooms, 2 lull balhs, 1860 sq. II. situated on .9 acres with 8 more acres available. Finished playroom in base ment with Va balh and drive-in basement. Call today lor more delails. $70,000 WILKESBORO STREET - GOOD LOCATION — Brick house wilh 4 bedrooms and 2 baths. This 1 Va story house is near shop ping area and schools. Upper level great lor children. $72,000 TWINBROOK SUBDIVISION - Crestview Drive, new construc tion just completed and ready lor occupancy. This 1500 sq. It. country rancher was designed to give you a leeling ol tremen dous spaciousness. Abundant cabinets, walk-in ciosel & garden lub add to Ihe value ol Ibis allordably priced home. $72,000 SANFORD AVENUE - Less than 1 year old, this lovely country home is sited on 2 partially cleared acres. Home lealures greal lloorplan, 3 large Br, 2 BA, and a beautilul view ol dogwoods and redbuds Irom the greatroom. Well cared for and in new condilion! will knock your socks offl Siluated on a beautifully landscaped lot, this contemporary home features 4 bedrooms, 2V2 baths, for mal areas, a comforable den with stone fireplace, and a lovely atrium. Amenities are loo many lo list so call today for a fantastic buyfS79.900 CENTER STREET — COOLEEMEE- Super nico 4 bedroom, 3 bath brick rancher located on approximately 3 acres. Features large master bedroom with sitting area, large country kitchen easy to maintain brick exterior. A great house for the price. Call today for an appointment. : $83,900 TWINBROOK SUBDIVISION — NEW CONSTRUCTION Superb floor plan In this traditional style ranch. Features, 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, greatroom, dining roonfi and breakfatti area. Also double garage. Buy early and decorate'to sült your, personal taste. ' • $84,900 TWINBROOK — NEW CONSTRUCTION - Tradltkinal style 3 BR, 2 BA home features full, drive-in, basement, great floor plan and over 1500 SF of living space. Fireplace In greatroom for cozy, winler evenings, spacius deck for summer entertaining. $89,500 EDGEWOOD SUBDIVISION — MAKE OFFER - Beautifully i wooded corner lot offers much shade to this lovely brick home featuring 3 large bedrooms and 2 full baths upstairs with living room, formal dining, powder room, family room, kitchen and large ‘ utllilyAvorkshop combination downstairs. Cenlral /Ur & Central ^ Vac. ■ ■ $93,900 WANDERING LANE ■ Attractive brick home In one of Mocksviile's | most desireabie neighborhoods. .Interior has been, recently redecorated and Is ready for a new’owner to niove right In; Lots of space with over 2200 square feet. 3 bedrooms, 2 lull baths, formal living and dining rooms, den and uemendous recreatkm room perfect tor your teenager. .Call today for more details. $99,500 EDGEWOOD CIRCLE • This beautlhji home. Offers all the amenities you want. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, central air, large dsn w/flreplace, screened-ln porch, swimming pool landscaped and' fenced. A two car carport plus garage'WOrt<shop: Move4n condition. , i ■ ■ : ■ • $99,500 NORTH MAIN STREET - Lovely older home In. one of Mocksviile's most desireabie kwatlons. Huge tot with beautiful hoardwoods and blooming annuals. Home boasts nearly 3000 square feet Including 4 bedrooms and 2 full baths. Complete with vinyl exterior for low malntenence.; ' ' . $99,500 CROWE STREET — Experience thd pleasure of country living in an In-town loqfWMi3Wi J|.<ltJ ^ ,l ii> n°h*r features3 BR's, 2 full baths, bej lVtMlillf iW iUyWwW 'ERYTHINQS BRAND NEW THROUQHOUTI All this plus with 'A bath situated on 1.75 ac. I OWNER FINANCING AVAIUBLEI $129,900 GARDEN VALLEV ESTATES • ÜNDER CONSTRUCTION Rustic rancher with fir siding and accents of rock give this ex terior a unique look. Corner lot perfectly suited for this full basa ment home wilh great room, large master bedroom suite, eat-ln kitchen, plus formal dining. $138,000 WANDERING LANE - Spacious 1 % story birck and siding home on 1.20 wooded acres with lots of privacy. Features include 4 bedrooms, 3 balhs with large master bedroom, sitting area, bath, and Its own deck. Great home for a growing family. CALL NOW FORDETAILSI $285,000 OFF EATONS CHURCH ROAD • Beautiful log home situated on 76.721 acres bordering Wateshed Lake Home offers 3423 square feet of living space. Includes 5 bedrooms, 3 baths, cozy sun room and full basement. Perfect (or the large family. Owner willing lo divide land, call for details. lus a guest cottage/work shop v c. lot. Beautifully landscaped. / LEI JU S T HEDUCEDI ( ................GARDEN V A LLEY .................. GARDEN VALLEY ESTATES — SECTION IV - Amenities of Ihls new subdivision help property value lo continually increase. All beautiluliy wooded homesiles offering 32 tt. wide curbed streets, cily water & sewer, street lights, underground utilities, and restric tive covenants. SEE NEW PRICE LIST. «2,200 WILL BOONE RD.- Included in this 24.37 acres. Cleared on per acre Iront side, beautiluliy wooded back property wilh stream. •2,300 OFF DEADMON ROAD - 53.5 acres ol rolling larmiand wilh per acre stream and lencing. Only .3 mile oil slale road. •2,900 0A K LA N e|l|ll|M lihldeterin5W a^ee>nl. Great lor Mobile •5,500 Ea EDGEWOOD CIRCLE SUBDIVISION - 2 lols - approximately 162.5x125, in quiet well established neighborhood. Corner lot may lace either slreel $7,000 NICE BUILDING LOT ON PARKER ROAD - jusI oil 64 wesl approximately 1 miles Irom 1-40. Good buyl LOT/LAND S7,000 BOXWOOD ACRES Olf 601 South - over 2 acres wilh 450 leet ol Ironlage. Rolling wooded and wilh reslriclions. Wiil divide into smaller lots. •12,500 HWY. 801 NORTH - 5 acres, heavily wooded, road Ironlage oil Hwy. BOl 321,800 CHERRY H l ^ ^ K 7 | T | T H H v i l y wooded, road •21,000 OFF DULIN ROAD - Greal road Ironlage (636.34 II.) includ ed 6 heavily woodes acres. «32,000 FARMLAND ACRES SUBDIVISIÓN - 6.954 cares in Super nice subdivision, ideal localion lor Ihe lamily looking lor the convenience ol being close to shopping, schools etc. bul also wanting the serentiy of country living. S35,000 FARtiflLAND ACRES - 7.588 acres heavily wooded in cu-de- sac. Locaied in one ol Mocksvill’s most attractive sub-divisions. •68,500 OFF COUNTRY LANE - Over 5 acres wilh 164 II. road Iron lage on Campbell Rd. Completely cleared, public water on Country Lane, zone R-20. Greal location. Rickey R. Bailey Vickie Fleming iames Foeter 634-4420 634-3640 284*2668 \ S e r v i n ^ Y o u W ith P r i d e Mary Hendrlcki СИгГа Hendrix Sandra Johnson 634-3152 Pat Moore 492-5718634-0008 Beth Phifer 278-4622 634-3177 Edie Qrose Potts 634*5613 Franeea Tutterow Kathi C. Wall Peggy Wetton 634-6074 634-1311 634-3898 ' 4D-.IUVIE COUNTY ENTEKIMUSU RKCOKI). TI1UKSI)A\’, Лиц. .1. 19Я9 D e fe n d a n t C la im s S h e W a s In W h ite L a k e , N o t D a v ie Continued From P. 3-1) Cornafzcr said she kepi her eyes on both the car and Kcnce Markland, who was walkiiig toward the road to cross and get on the bus. ' A s the car got closer. Coriialzer said she “ sat down on tlie bus horn.” “ I was hoping that Ihe horn would get lier attention and she would stop," she .said. When tlie car didn’t slow, Cor natzer said she leaned over Ihe win dow, pointed her finger at Ihe driver and shouted, “ Don’t you pass Ihis bus.” ■ “ O f course, she came right on by,” she testified. Assistant District Attorney Gene Morris asked.Cornalzer when she saw the driver. “ As she got closer to me, I could lell it was a woman,” she .said. A s the car passed, Cornatzer said she was able to see the woman driver and the male passenger well cnough to laler identify them. Cornatzer identified the car as a white Cadillac, around a 1983 model, with a temporary tag. hs speed remained constant at 30 to 35 miles per hour the whole time it was in her view, she said. After the car had passed, Cor natzer said she was shook up for a second “ and then went.ahead and ;Iet the child on.’.’ ; ^•,Why was she shook up? Morris asked. “ The fact this little first-grade kid was standing there about 2 feet /rom the road fixing to cross, ’ ’ she said. < ¡When she got to Shady Grove Elementary School, where she ’Works, Comatzer said she wos told ■Shiriqr Markland was on the phone • Waiting to talk with her. ¿]fyii*rctpss-exatnination, Mar- ijtin w i^ ^ had k id in ifr D ito c t Court ; that : the car was » 35 to 40 mph and flien in Superior Court, 30 to 35 mph. ‘ ; “ W ell, that’s. 35,” Cornatzer u id . “I reiiiember having 35 in it.” V Martin also asked her if she , ftMt/fying that the .C ^tniilK that passed her bus was a ;;;{986 inbdel. donYthink I said that,” Cor- > 9 ^ r said.. "A t that particular I wasn’t suie ofthe model. ” SZ'H m Ле, seen the Myers' car : v»|iTO then, Maitin wanted to know. «Ж1 that car, yes sir,’’ she V Martin also questioned Cor- ^natzer ateut her testimony that IjM rs, Myers’ hair was reddish ;^ Ыоп(1е .'.when ;she saw her that ■ : :ì.inòming.'i: " It w u different from what it is :;iipw.'’ stesakl. (Mrs. Myers’ hair llwas w h ite th e trial.) M aitin also questioned Cor- ;i natzer about her testimony that she < ,;lsaw. the driver for 15-20 seconds. Ji “ Actually, it’s all just a split se- ;.xond when it boils down to it,” she' .'.¡iseiii. by How long was it? Maitin wanted <to know.' > ^ 'i“ Between 10 and 15 seconds,” ;J ^ sa id . : ,‘4,-; .’Martin also asked Comatzer f^ o u t her conversation with Shirley v l^ k la n d on the morning of the ^offense. ; “ She was very upset, disturb- ;ed,” Comatzer said. “ Actually, ;; she was crying ... She told me she .-knew who it was, she recognized them.’’ : Did Shiriey Markland say who ' it was? Martin wanted to know. Yes, Cornatzer said. Shirley Markland was the next to testify. She said she was watching for the bus on the morning of April 25, ■ 1988, because it was running a lit- ■ tle late. “ And the kids were runn in g behind, also," she said. Shirley Markland said her then-6-year-old daughter, Renee, was standing in the driveway about 2 feet from the road when she noticed the Cadillac rounding the curve. When Shirley Markland realiz ed the car wasn’t going to .stop for the bus, she said, "1 started ■ screaming for Renee to stand still, not to move.” Shirley M arkland’s son, : Michael, who was 10 at the time, Miad just started down toward the bus when she saw the car. Shirley Marklaml icslil'icci lhal .she walked lo llie edtie of lier inml porch, loeaied 75 lo У0 feel from Ihe road, lo gel a closer look al ihe ear and her ilaiifihler. " I s;iw a woiiiaii drlvliTg and llicii I .saw a man.'' .sjie sitiil of llic ear. " I looked lo cheek Renee and then I looked hack and realized it was Mrs. Myers. " I recognized Mrs. Myer.v and her hu.sband.” Shirley Markland .said the ear was in her view for about 40 seconds, 15 of which the Myers’ were dose cnmigh for her lo recognize. After Ihc car had pa.sscd the bus. Shirley Markland said she watch ed il comimic (lawn Ok road and noticcd that il had a temporary lag on Ihe back. After the incident, Shirley. Markland said she “ fell apart.” Later, she callcd the .school. “ I wanted to know if Mrs. Cornatzer had got to school yet becausc I wanted to know what we could do about this,” she .said. Shirley Markland .said .she lold Cornatzer she recognizcd the driver of the car. “ 1 said, ‘She’s our neighbor,’ ” M arkland testified. “ ‘1 can’t believe she didn’t stop.’ ” Markland said Cornatzer said they needed to report what had happened to either the N.C. Highway Patrol or the Davie County Sheriff’s Department. Morris asked Markland if there was any doubt the person she saw driving the car was Elizabeth Myers. No, she responded. Has her appearance changed since then? he asked. “H^r hair is flatter,” Shirley Markland said. “ It was a lot fuller that day.” Markland said she again saw Mrs. Myers pass her house the next morning at 9:30. “ She was driv ing the same white Cadillac Seville,” she said. During cross-cxaminalicn, Mar tin asked Shirley Markland how fast the Cadillac was going.- “I would say anywhere from 30 to 40 miles at) hour,” she said, “ h just was not speeding.” Maitin also questioned Markland about the view of the road from her house and submitted photographs taken of her home as evidence. “ You’ve got a few cedars and some pines,” he said. Yes, Markland confirmed, but said she could see the road clearly “just about any time of the year. ” M artin also asked Shirley Markland if she had seen Elizabeth and Billy Myers in the Cadillac before April 25, 1988. “ I had seen them pull into the church that Sunday morning (the day before),” she said. “ W e had went out for breakfast.” W as she aware that they had just purchased Ihe car? Martin wanted to know. “ I knew that 1 had not seen it before,” Markland said. When she saw them pulling into church, Markland testified that she .said lo her husband, “ Bill Myere and them got a new Cadillac. Isn’t it pretty?” “ That was the end of the con versation,” she said. W ho was driving? Martin ' wanted to know. Markland said she wasn’t sure. Had she seen other white Cadillac Sevilles in the neighborhood? he asked. No, she said. During re-direct, Morris asked Markland if anything unusual hap pened on the Sunday she .saw the M yers' new Cadillac lhal would make her remember who was driving. No, she .said. Mildred Markland, who live,s between 300 and 400 feel from her daughler-in-law, said she was washing dislies on ihe morning of April 25, 1988, when she heard llie school bus liorn and wem lo ihe froni door. “Just about every mor ning, I walch the eliildrcn gel on tlie bus,” she said. “ That is a habit.” Markland said she saw the while car as soon as she looked out the door and noticed that Ihe bus driver was blowing the horn more than usual. Then, Mildred Markland said, she saw her grandchildren. Renee was standing al ihe road, she said, and Mieliae) w;i.s yard. "I saw Ihis ear comiiif: down llie roail, and il was not slowiiii; u p ." she said. Mildred Markland said she saw the ear for more Ilian a minuie. “ ll's clear." she said. "Г -го т iny from door. I ean see all ihc way up the road. I could sec this man and I could lell lllciv WHS 11 lad} in llie e a r." As the car goi closer, Markland said she recognized the passenger as Hilly Myers, She never saw the driver, she leslined. bccause he “ was breaking my view." Mildred Markland also teslillcd lo seeing Ihe temporary lag on Ihc ear, Morris asked her if she had any doubi lhal Ihe man she saw was Billy Myers, “There’s noque,siion about it." she said. Troopcr C. D. Janes was llie kisl to tc.stiry for the .state. He .said he went to talk with Cornatzer and Shirley Markland after they reported whal had happened lo the Highway Palrol. Jones said Markland told him that she was positive that Mrs. Myers was the driver of the car. However, bccause of a conЛ id in his schedule, Jones .said he wasn’t able to i.s.suc the citation to Mrs. Myers until May 11. When he arrived al her home on People’s Creek Road, located off N.C. 801 about two miles from the Marklands, Jones said the white Cadillac Seville wasn’t there. There was a white Cadillac there, he said, but h was an older model and had a burgundy lop. Under cross-examination, M ar tin .showed Jones a chart showing how many feet a car going 35 and 40 mph would travel per second. A car going 35 mph, he said, would travel 5 1.33 feet per second, while a car going 40 mph would travel 58.67 feet per second. Robin Fergusson, general manager of the Davie County Enterprise Record, was Ihe first witness to testify for the defense. Fergusson, who has been taking photographs for the paper for 13 years, identified the three photographs that Martin had entered into evidence as ones she had laken in April 1989. All three were taken from the road, she said. Under cross-examination, M or ris asked Fergusson if she had stood on Markland’s porch and looked out at the road. No, she said. George Inman testified next, say ing that Mrs. Myers was at his store in Elizabethtown, “ approx imately 180 miles” from Davie County, when he arrived to open up at 7:30 a.m. on April 25, 1988. Inman said he remembered the date because he was upset at himself because he was late and was afraid he had missed a delivery truck scheduled to arrive at 7. When he arrived at his Red and White Supermarket, Inman said Elizabeth and Billy Myers were in the parking lot. Inman, who said he had met them two or three times before, said he went over to iheir car and said, “ M y goodne.ss, did you camp here all night? It’s a lit tle eariy, isn’t it?” ,Inman said he ihen wcnl inside and programmed his computers with the date and time. In a few minutes, he said Mrs. Myers came in and asked if he was open. He said yes, and she began buy ing groceries, according to his testimony. Inman said he found oul about the charge against Mrs. Myers when she came back in the store in May. “ 1 .said, ‘That’s impossible. You were at White Lake and in tliis store al lhal particular lime because I wailed on you,' ” he leslilied, " I said, ‘How can you be З'Л hours lo 4 hours away gelling charged for slopping a school bus when you were in Bhulcn Counly at tliat lime?’ j .said. ‘You mu.si have wings or cither a jet,’ ” Martin asked Inman if he had any doubt Ihat Mrs. Myers was in his store (m die morniim of April 25, 1У88, "N o sir, I have no doubis,” he ,said. An alladavii signed hy Inman was submilled when Ihe ease eamc up In Disiriel Coun. Inman drove Ihe 180-mile Irip lo icslify the first lime the ease was supposed lo have I'cen heard in District Court, but il was postponcU. Under e mss-e.vaminalioj), Ininan said he was co-owner of CitJ Park Shores, whore Ihe Myers' liavc a mobile home. (s Ihe park open in April? Mor- ri.s warned lo know. ll’s not officially open, Inman saiil, bul people wilh mobile homes there ean come and go, " ir s up to ihem," he said. Morris also iiiiestioned Inman about his leslimony that he found oul aboul Ihe charge when Mrs, Myers came back in ))is slore in May, Inman said in the affadavii, Morris .said, lhal Mr.s. Myers call cd him on May 11. Inman said that was true, bul lhal she came in the store a few days afterward. He said he W'asn’i sure of the date because he had no reason lo remember ii. Inman said he remembered ihe 25lh bccause he associated it wilh his being late lo open the store. David Myers, who lives in a mobile home behind his parents’ home, testified that they left Гог While Lake on the afternoon of April 24. “They let me know so that I would watch after the house and make sure no one was mess ing around,” he said. Martin asked Myers if he had seen any more white Cadillac Sevilles in the neighborhood. Yes, David Myers said, adding that he had seen a car like his parents on three or four occasions. Mrs. Myers was the third witness, testifying in her own behalf She said she and her husband went to While Lake on April 24 to fix some pipes that had burst in their mobile home. She also testified to being in Inman’s grocery on the morning of the 25th. How can she remember this? Martin wanted to know. “I keep records on a calendar,” she said. “It’s just out o f force of habit.” Martin later introduced a calen dar taken from Ihe Myor.s’ mobile home in White Lake and a pocket calendar Mrs. Myers carries in her purse as evidence. Both calendars had notations referring to her be ing at White Lake and to buying groceries at Inman’s store when it opened on the date in question. Martin also introduced pocket calendars full of notes dating back several years. Despite an objection by Morris, the judge allowed the old calendars to be submitted as evidence because he said they showed a pattern of keeping records. Under cross-examination, M or ris questioned Mrs. Myers at length about the notations on her calendars. “ Are you sure you made all these entries on the day and time it happened?” he asked, or did she go back and П11 them in after be ing charged. Morris also asked Mrs. Myers if their Cadillac had a temporary tag on it on April 25. “ 1 don’t know because my hus band bought the car,” she said. "N ow whether it had a dealer's tag or a temporary tag, I do not know.” Morris also questioned Mrs. Myers about photographs she had laken of olher white Cadillac Sevilles, which were submitted into evidence. Mrs. Myers said she carricd a camera around with her al the ad vice of her attorney. She said she look one of the photographs at Biscuitville in Clemmons when one of Ihe people that she and her hus band were eating breakfast wilh .said, ‘‘There goes you,” Whal did they mean by that? Morris asked, “ It was Just a joke because 1 had already gotten a lickel lor passing a slopped school bus and noi been at home,” she said, “Someone saw a while Cadillac and said, ‘There goes you.’ ” Billy M j’crs also icsiilletl lhal he and his wife were at White Lake on the date of the alleged offense. He said they drove iheir old Cadillac iii.sicad of Die new one because all his tools were in the trunk of Ihe old one and he kneu' he might need tliem fixing the pipes. Myers also said there were three other while Cadillac Sevilles in Ihe area, one further down People’s Creek Road, one on N.C. KOI above Advance and one in Ber muda Run, Under cro.ss-c.xamination. M or ris c)ueslioncd Myers about the temporary tag, Myers said he didn'l know whal kind of lag Wiis on i)io Cadillac. "The dealer lold me lhal he would pul me a lag on it and lhal is as fur as I know," he .said. Myers said ilic dealer lalcr pul another lag on il when he look il back for repairs. In his closing argument lo the Jury. Martin said, “This isn't a case about whether or not a crime was committed on April 25, 1988. W c have no doubt Ihat a crime was committed." Bul Martin conlendcd ihat the state did not prove that il was Elizabeth Myers who committed it. Martin asked the jury to consider several factors in deciding a ver dit. “ I think the most critical ele ment is the time element,” he said. “ How long do you have to look to identify a person?” Using the chan that he had sub mitted as evidence, Martin figured that Comatzer saw the driver ofthe car for 1 '/2 seconds at the most, not 10 to 15 seconds as she testified. “ And that’s a huge difference,” he said. Martin also referred to Shirley Markland's testimony that she saw the ear clearly after it passed the cedar tree in her front yard. Judg ing by the photographs and the chart, Martin said she probably had 100 feet in which she got a clear view of the car. That would mean she saw it for two second.? at the most. Martin also pointed out that Shiriey Markland testified that she identified the driver from 75 to 90 feet and that Mildred Markland identified the passenger from 90 . feet. “W e contend that’s a long way away,” he said. “ The person who had the best vantage point was Mrs. Comatzer.” Yet, she identified the driver as a woman with reddish-blonde hair. Martin also asked jurors lo con sider the distracting factor. “ It doesn't take much imagination for anyone with children to put your child in that situation, 2 feet from the road,” he said. “ The fact that they were upset is entirely justified.” . It was an emotionally-charged situation. “They were distracted by the child,” he said. “They both testified where the little giri was.” . Martin said Comatzer testified that she kept one eye on the car and one on the child. “O f course, her top priority was the child,” he said. Another factor to consider, Mar tin contended, is, the assuhiption factor. Both Shirley and Mildred Markland remembered seeing EliMbeth and Billy Myers in the white Cadillac Seville at chtirch on the day before the offense. “ That's a distinctive car,” he said. “It's more distinctivé than a pickup truck. Lo and behold, what dn they see the very next morning but a white Cadillac SevilJe com- '• ing down the road. W e contend that they jumped to a conclusion. ” Martin also argued that the testimony of George Inman was very credible despite M orris' at tempts to shake it. Ultimately, Martin said Morris did find an in consistency in the date that Inman said Mrs. Myers told him about the charge. “ That's not the relevant time period, folks,” Martin said. “When wc talk about the relevant lime period, April 25. he was ab- soluiely certain Ihroughoul," As lor Ihe calendars, Martin said, '■ I he D A, I think he as much as said under cross-examination lhal .she made il up," To go back lhal far and fill in notations “ .seems like an awfully elaboraie lie." he .said. The older calendars. Marlin said, attest lo the fact lhal “ Mrs. Myers has a long history of keep ing accurale records about a lot of little Ihings Ihat she docs." In his closing argument, Morris said Martin was invading the reasoning of the Jury by telling them who to believe. “ You decide who lo believe,” he said. Cornatzer and the Marklands didn’t have lo come in the coiir- troom and tell the jurors what they •saw on April 25, 1988. “ The woman’s daughter wasn’t in jured,” he said. “ She could have bccn.‘’ Morris also asked the jurors to look at Elizabeth and Billy Myers for 10 seconds and limed them hy his watch. Afterward, he asked them to consider what they had ob-served. “What did you notice about the • woman, her hair, her size, her ■ glasses?” he asked. “What did you ■ notice aboul the man?” ■ Morris said it doesn't take lo n g • to recognize someone you k h o ^ ' ■ walking down the street. “ Seeing ■ somebody that you recognize да ■ opposed to seeing somebody for • the fir-st time is a little bit dif-<. ■ ferent,” he said. The Marklands were seeing ^ ■ somebody they had known for a ^ long lime when they saw thi^’ ’ M yers', M orris said, Shirley,V^ Markland had lived in the same ' ^ neighborhood as the Myers’ for 17 years, and Mildred Markland ii}i^ 40. 'V ti,;; "D on’t you think if (M ildiW v^ Marklaiid) wanted to lie to you; she w o u ld ^ , •I saw Mrs.;Myera?’ ‘”l |i he asked. / ‘She was very honesf,j5i I argue to you.” • Tsv - Martin ^d n 't mention the terif-5 : • poraiy tag in his closing argument,^ ;! Morris contended, “ because he?,' ; • can't explain that away.” ' How could they have not known* Г' f whether the car had a leropoiaiyl ■ tag on it? Morris asked. "Goodl^.- God, I(wk a what tWs Ы у kqpt upi,-I■ with,” he said of her calendars.^:-; “ Yes, I think they've been dbC'^ tored up,” Morris ¡added. “ That’s», just my opinion. I ’m not suppos-l: ; ed to say thar’^ i -0 Why would she have written on>;' - both calendars on April 2 5 ,1988, “ Pick up groceries when open?’’^;^ he asked; “ How could she pick ир>Д groceria ifthe sto re,^i^’t opeii. V-t' Morris contended that Mrs. ) i Myers had an exi>lanalion for eveiy iJ notation; that he': i]twstianed heri? about. “ (Hei^testiinon^ just sotf^p o f bends like a b iw k tends, and - so does Mr. Iiimon's testimony 1’*^ ' he said. M oitIs also refeired to th ^ ; | testimony o f Shiriey and Mildredi' Markland that, they had seen thei I Myers’ pass their homes again 0№‘ the morning o f April 26. 1988.| "That’s anodier oddsiniatioii,” h^' . said. "How likely is it that they’raiii'i wrong twice?” , ; ; Morris w d Comatzer also iden-i tified Elizabeth Myers as thcC • woman she saw driving the car.: . “ Do you think they’re out there' : trying to wrongly convict someone; : in Ihis counly?” he asked. “ That lady was in Davie County that morning, and she passed that stc^; . ped school bus. That’s what’s! believable.” Man Hangs Self In Business A Mocksville man was found hanged in the warehouse .section of his business Sunday morning. The death ofM .H, Grose, owner of Davie Auto Parts, was ruled a suicide, said a spokesman for the Mocksvillc Police Department. Grose was found jusl afler 11 Corrections The correct name of the daughter of Belly and Andy Melnlyre is Christina Marisol. It was printed as Christina Marisue. We regret ihc error. The Michael Roger lislcd in last week's Davie District Court is not the MichacI Uiigene Boger of Roule 7. Mocksville, a.m. after family members asked Officer C.M . Parks, who was patroling nearby, to help look in the business. Schools Eye Federal Funds The Davie County Schools’ ap:! plication and all related documents: for federal funds under the Educar: tion of the Handicapped Act (Ti-; tie VI, Part B) for 1989-90 i& available for review by request.:: Contact Terry Jones, exceptional children program administrator^: Davie Counly Schools, 220 Cher^. St., Mocksville, or call 634-592K Potts Heads Social Services Board By Kathy D. Chaffin Davie County Enterprise-Record Terry Potts was rc-clcctcd chair man of the Davic County Board of Social Services last wceJc. This will be Potts’ sccond year as chairinan. James Clark, social services director, said Potts, who was just reappointed to his second, three- year term on the board, had given him the impression that he was about ready for someone else lo assume command. • Potts said either way was fine. That’s all it look. Dorothy Graham made a motion lo re-elect Potts, and Buddy Alexander, at his first meeting since being selected to replace Bill Foster as the Davie County Board of Commissioners’ representative on the board, seconded. The motion passed by a unanimous vote. ■, Clark said it was up to the discre tion of the board to elect a vice chairman. “It may be a good idea if: you feel you need some backup,” he said to Potts. Potts said he didn’t miss but one of the monthly meetings last year, . but added that a vice chairman might be helpful. ;;; .“ One out of 12 is a good record,” Graham said. “If he doesn’t have a vice, he’ll come nearer being here.” “ Nominate her,” joked W ill Martin, attorney to the board. Linda. Meadows did just; that, aiid Jo Chwk seconded. : , Graham responded: “If I’d have : known they were going to do that, I,'would have kept quiet.” She was dected by acclamation. Also at the .meeting, Clark carted that the department has five walkie-talkies for use by social workers in llie field. “ It’s primarily a safely con sideration," he said, “but it's also Ihc workers’ means of com municating with the dispatchers, the sheriff's departmeni. We're ahead of a lot of counties in that respect.” Alexander said the walkie-talkies were needed. With them, Clark said the social workers can get help fast if they need il. In other business, Clark reported on the results of a state review of the department’s child support en forcement program. Based on a sampling of cases from July 1 to Dec. 31 of last year, the program was found to be in 100 percent compliance in three of five areas — locating the absent parent, establishing paternity arid establishing support. The program was found to be in 92 percent compliance with collec tion of the child support and 65 percent in enforcement of the child support order. “That was our weak area,” Clark said. O f the 17 cases reviewed for evaluation of enforcement, 11 were found to be properly acted upon, according to a written report by the N.C. Department of Human Resources’ Division of Social Services. In the remaining six, the depart ment was found to have not met the 45-day deadline from the date of default (30 days after payment is due) in beginning enforcement, procedures. Clark said this does not mean the department failed to enforce the order, just that it wasn’t done with the 45-day deadline. Phone: (919) 766-1807 Owners: Larty Cain Pat Cain C A íN D E C Ú R Á TiN G C EN TER , IN C. . N o w O pen In W estw ood Village Pat & Larry Cain Invite You To I V fsItTh e lr N e w Decorating Center . ^Philadelphia & Cabin Craft Carpet ) 1 DuPont Stainmaster & Tracl<less ^'•Ceramic Tile •Wilsonart Countertops «Bali Mini Blinds & Shades •Indoor/Outdoor Carpeting «Armstrong Floor Covering Pat & Latry guarantee installation and satisfaction. ... Their 25 years experience has taught them ' id do things right the first time A n tiq u e s & C o lle ctib les AUCTION Stturday, August 5,1989 At 7:30 p.m. i^Eaity Wooden Carousel Horse • Victorian High Back Rosewood Poster ' Bed (Great) * Rope Bed * Primitives * Glassware * 75 Pc. Blueridge .Set * 32 Mixed Patter Blueridge * Venetlclan Wter Set * Northwood ■Water Set • Watt Pottery * 1955 Autographed Elvis Picture * Elvis ' Record Collection ’ Palrpolnt Sllverplate * Wild Turkey Miniature Col lection * Rotex Advertisement Mirror * Coco Cola Clocks * Beer Adver- 'tlzenients * Coo Coo Clock* Carvings * American & European Pain- 'tlnge * Bronzes * Costume Jewelry * Estate jewelry ‘ 23 Hamilton Jewel ' ‘ Watch * Pre-Columbian Art * Canes * Indian Baskets * Butcher Block ' * Poplar Kitchen Cabinet * MIsston Style Oak Sofa & 2 Matching Chairs Oakm Parlor Table * O M T od s * Quilts * Rare Tobacco Flag Quilt . * Oak High Boy Wardrobe * Owl Dog Irons * And Many More (Items ;Too Numerous To Mentton) LOCATION; Statesville, N.C. ■ T«k* 1-40 E«tt oH of 1-77. Than take •«» 153 (Hwy. M ) off ot MO. Oo WMt on Hwy. 64 oiM-hall mil* paat Bowling Alley to tMillding on Ielt. Watch for sign. Building la liafora Adama Saaford. n m * FMM1 « la 7 jO pjD. We resene the lighi lo add«delele mefMa. Maslicaid I Vim accepted TiI||Ao m 70M72-33S6 5« Buyei'i Prmium Auctioneer Joe Ford NC lie. 4406 lie DAVIK C()IINT\’ KNTKKPRI.Si; KKCORI), TIIUUSDAY, Aur. 3, 1989-50 0 L A S S IF IE D S NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE Dlslricl Court Division 87-SP-71 Lola H. Holden and Husband, Thomas W. Holden, and Luolla Jarrett, Widow, Petitioners VS. Mabel H. Bailoy, el al. Respondonts NOTICE OF RESALE Under and by virtue ol an order ol resale as signed on Ihe 29lh day ol June, 1989, by Iho Honorable Delores C. Jor dan, Clerk ol Superior Court ol Davie County, Norlh Carolina, Ihe undersigned Co-Commissioners will oiler lor resale at public auclion the hereinalter described tracts ot land, on Iho 4th day ol Augusl, 1989, al 12.00 noon al the courthouse door; lhal Ihe resale will be sub{ect lo upset bid and conlirmation as provided by law; lhal said Iracls ol land are par ticularly described as loiiows: Being and lying in Shady Grove Township, Davie County, North Carolina, and being: Tract numbers 1, 3, 5, 7, 8, 10, and 11 of the Cora Hartman Estate as seen on a current survey prepared by Kennelh C. Foster dated December 2), 1988, lo which relerence is hereby made for a more particular description. Said tracts shall be sold separately wilh opening bids being as follows: Tract No, Opening Bid 1 $17,900,00 3 20,000.00 5 21,050.00 7 1,00 8 38,060,00 10 13,700,00 11 , 16,325.00 The resale is subiecl. to 1989 Davie County ad valorem taxes. The successful bidder of bidders will be required to deposit ten (10%) percent of the amount ol the bid the dale of Ihe sale; Ihe sale shall remain open for upset bids for a period of ten (10) days Irom Ihe dale of Ihe filing of the Report of Resale: and, Ihe resale Is sub|ect to conlirmation by the Clerk of Superior Court of Davie Counly and by a judge of the Superior Court of Davie County. This the 30th day of June, 1989. N. LAWRENCE HUDSPETH, III Shore, Hudspeth & Harding P.O. Box 936 Yadkinviile, N,0, 27055 Co-Commlssloner E, EDWARD VOGLER, JR. Hall & Vogler P.O. Drawer 970 liflocksville, N.C. 27028 Co-Commissioner 7-13-4tnp NORTH CAROLINA . DAVIE COUNTY PUBLIC NOTICE There will be a meeting ol the Davie County Zoning Board ol Adjustment on Monday, August 14. 1989, al 7:00 p ,m. In the Commissioner's Room ol Ihe Davie County Courthouse. The lollowing ap plication lor a Special Use Permit has been received by Ihe zoning olllcer and Is scheduled to be heard: Lewis C. Carter has submitted a re quest lor a Special Use Permit to operate a public recreation facility behind his residence located on the east side ol Gun Club Road (SR 1626). This tanning bed facility Is further described as being located on the rear portion of parcel 164 of tax map E-7. A sign will be posted on the above listed location to advertise the public hearing. All parties and Interested citizens are Invited to attend said publto hearing ■ at which time they shall have an oppor tunity to be heard In favor of or In opposi tion to the lorogoing change. Prior lo the public hearing, all persons Interested may obtain any additional Information on this proposal which Is In the possession ot the Davie County Zoning Enforcement Office In the Davie Counly Ollice Building, Mocksviile, N.C. on weekdays between the hours ot 8:30 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. or by telephone at 634-3340. Jesse A. Boyce Jr. Davie County Zoning Olllcer 8-3-2lnp NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY ADMINISTRATRIX NOTICE Having qualified as Administratrix of the estate of Billy Gray Brooks, deceas ed, late of Davie County, Ihis is lo nolily ail persons having claims against said estate to present them to the undersign ed on or belore Ihe 20th day ol January 1990, or this nolice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make Immediale paymenl to the undersigned. This Ihe 20th day ol July, 1989. Betty Spry Brooks, Administralrix ol Iho estate of Billy Gray Brooks, deceased. Belly Spry Brooks, Admr Route 7, Box 347 Mocksviile, N.C. 27028 7-20.4lnp Yard Sales NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE o r RESALE OF REAL PROPERTY Pursu£int lo the aulhorily vested in Lav;roncu Roy Carter, Adminislralor ol the Eslale ol John Wesley Carter, deceased, by an Order dated March 8, 1989, by Ihc Clerk ol Superior Courl ol Dnvie County, and an Order ol Resale daled July 20, 1989, said Adminislralor will oiler lor sale and sell at public auc tion lo the highest bidder lor cash on Fri day, Augusl II, 19B9, at 11:00 a.m. at the Davio Counly Courthouse, tho lollowing described property: TRACT 7: John W. Carter Homeplace Situated in Jerusalem Township, Davie County, North Carolina: BEING Lots No. 9, 10 and 11, 12, 13 and 14 ol the larm known as Ihe George Lelier Farm and owned by A.L. Lelier. and wile, M.E. Leller located aboul live (5) miles Irom Mocksviile and adjoining the section known as Greasy Corner, Nonh Carolina, according lo a plat Ihereol prepared by J.B. Justice C.E. which said plat is recorded In the Ollice of the Regisler ol Deeds of Davie Counly, North Carolina, in Book of Maps No. 30, page 88, also new books Map Book 1, page 95, lo which said plat reference is hereby made lor a more particular description. See also Plat Book 1, Page 95, Davie County Registry. For back title see Deed Book 43 al Page 222 and Book 45 al Page 283, Davie Counly Registry, TRACT 9: Situated in Jerusalem Township, Davie Counly, North Carolina; BEING Lot 35 containing 1.8 acres and being a portion ol Ihe farm known as the George Letter larm and owned by J.C. Charles and wile, Sallie C. Charles, located about 5 miles Soulh of Mocksviile and joining Ihe section known as Greasy Corner, Nonh Carolina, ol which said description is more particularly descrlb- , ed by map by J.D. Justice, C.E. and duly recorded In Register of Deeds Office, Davie Counly. For more complete description refer to Book of Maps 30, page 88, Davie Coun ty Registry, see also Plat Book 1 at Page 95, said Registry. For back title see Deed Book 44 at Page 500, Davie County Registry. Also, another tract or lot described as loiiows: BEGINNING at the comer of 10 and 11. 34 and 35 running Soul.'i 22 deg. East to a Slone, Correll’s corner 485 leet; Ihen Soulh 40 deg. Wesl 131 feet Soulh cor ner Lot 34; then Norlh 10-30 West 545 leet lo corner of Lot No. 9: Ihence North 70-30 East 100 leel lo tho beginning. This being in the subdivision ol Iho A.L. Leller lartn and containing by estlrnoto 1 □cros. See Book 30, page 08, ond Plat Book 1 at Page 95, Davie County Registry.For back title see Deed Book 46 al Page 38, Davie Counly Registry. Said property shall be sold subiecl to all prior liens, encumbrances and taxes ol record, 11 any. Said sale shall remain open for upset bids lor 10 days and in Ihe event ot an upset bid the property will be resold al public auction as by law provid ed. The successlul bidder will be required to pay a 10 percent deposit and said bid shall be subject lo conlirmation. The star ting bids will be as follows: Tract 7; 514,750.00 Tract 9: $ 9,500.00 This 21 sl day ol July, 1989. Lawrence Ray Carter Administrator of John Wesley Carter Estate By Grady L. McClamrock Jr. Attorney lor Estate Brock & McClamrock P.O. Box 347 Mocksviile, N.C. 27028 Telephone; (704) 634-3518 8-3-2tnp NORTH CAROLINA ,DAVIE COUNTY EXECUTOR’S NOTICE Having qualilied as Executor ol the Estate ol Elia B. Tomlin, deceased, late of Davie County, North Carolina, tills Is to notify all persons having claims against said eslale lo present them to the under signed on or belore Ihe 27th day of January, 1990, said date being al least six months from the dale ol lirst publica tion ol this notice, or this nolice will be pleaded in bar ol their recovery. All per sons indebted lo said eslale will please make immediale paymenl lo the undersigned. This the 27th day ol July, 1989, the same being Ihe lirst publlcallon data. George Lyons, Executor of the estate of Ella B. Tomlin, deceased. Brock & McClamrock Attorneys al Law P.O. Box 347 Mocksviile, N.C. 27028 Telephone: (704) 634-3518 7-27-4lnp 601 South, Chruch 01 God 01 Pro phecy. Salurday, Aug. 5, 8 until. Lots of clothing all sizes, toasters, t v., a lillle ol everything. Beauchamptown Road oil Baltimore Road. 1st house on Ielt. Wade Beauchamp residence. Saturday, Aug. 5, 8-4. Living room and dining room lurnilure, lots of other miscellaneous ilems. Rain or shine. Davie Academy Road In front of Jericho Church and follow signs. 2-family yard sale, Salurday, Aug. 5, 7 until. Furniture, clothes, appliances etc.______________________________ DavIe Academy Road: Turn left al Jericho Church ol Christ. 7th brick house on right. Friday, Aug. 4, 4-6; Saturday, Aug. 5, 7-2. Depot Street (581): Across from M & J Market. Saturday only. Cowboy cheerleaders yard sale. Lots of school clolhes (boys & girls) all sizes. Many other ilems. Aug. 5,8 a.m. NO EAR- LY SALES. Rain date Aug. 12. Fairfield Road: Take 601 south, turn right on Fairlield Road, 1 mile on right. Saturday, Aug. 5,8 a.m.- 3 p.m. Cancelled 11 raining. Fos Meadow; oil Redland Road. BigI 10 lamily yard sale Saturday, Aug. 5, 8 until. Lots of everything.________ Gwyn St. (330) Saturday 7-2. Children clolhes all sizes, furniture, dishes. Hwy. 601 3 miles past Wm. R. Davie School. Friday, Aug. 4, 9 until. Lots of bargains. Cross stitch items cheap and lols more. Hwy. 601 north & 1-40; Parking lot Maranlha Christian Assembly, Yard Sale/Car Wash sponsored by New Life For Boys Center. Saturday, Aug. 5,8 a.m. All proceeds go to New Life lor Boys Center._________________ Joe Booe Road off 64. Saturday, Aug. 5, B-1. Little of everything.________ Lakewood Drive (101); 3 family base ment sale Friday and Saturday, Aug. 4 & 5 from 9-4. Household ap pliances, typewriters, lamps, t.v. cooking utensils and much more. Marconi Street (120) Craltwood Dev. Aug. 4th & Sth. Friday 7-5; Sat. 7-1. 634-3995.________________________ Milling Road 2nd house on right from Cornatzer Road. Friday and Saturday 8-4.______________________________ Needmore Hoad: 2 miles up. Signs, Garage sale Friday and Saturday, S until. Clothes, baby to XXL, dishes, pots, little bit ol everything,_______ North Main (866), now until sold. Couch wilh hida-a-way-bed, matching end tables, chair, other pieces. 634-5780.________________________ Pineville Road, Farmington, Red Barn. Saturday 8 until. Furniture, an tiques, sink/cabinet, bath fixtures and odds & ends. Rain date lollowing Saturday, Road 1188 oil Jericho Road, home ol Bruce Anderson. 4 family basement sale Friday and Saturday, Aug. 4 & 5. Items too numerous to mention. Rain or shine.____________________ Turrentine Baptist Church Road; 3-lamily, Saturday, 8 a,m,- untill, Fur- nilure, clothes, pots and pans, wheels and tires, and lots more. , Used Washers & Dryers. Good con- dlllon. Ask for Willie 492-5357. ■ - Watts Street (45); Cooleemee. Mov ing/Yard Sale. Furniture, household items, '73 Ford LTD. $350. Saturday^ one day only. Watts Street (69); Cooleemee. Large back yard sale Aug. 4 & 5, 8-2, Records, clocks, ladder, books, radios, typewriter, small electrical items, adding machine, quilts, etc. Last sell ol year. Large variety of good merchandise._____________________ Wilkesboro St. (397) Big yard sale Fri day and Saturday, 8 until. Rain date following week. Lots of everylhing,- Yadkln Valley Road; 2 family yard sale, Saturday, Aug. 5, 8-2. Variety plus 6 piece full/queen bedroom suite, Kirby vacuum cleaner. CLA SSIFIED DEADLINE TU ESD A Y S AT NOON FREE PUPPIE8...Qolden Retriever and Black Lab mixed. 6 weeks old. 998-3069.__________' . HAPPY JACK FLEA QARD; All metal patented device controls fleas In the home without chemicals or exter minator. Results ovemighti DAVlE FARM SERVICE, 303 WILKESBORO ST,______________________' Labrador Retrelver Puppies; Black, shots and de-wormed, $150, 492-7418. Calvin & HobbM ... in the Enterprisi^Record 125 M OBILE HOM ES at A B S O LU TE A U C TIO N 11 A .M . SA TU RDA Y AUGUST 5 Ш • Exit 74 «Julian Road. fíowénCouníy Fairgrounds MLlôbUDY, N.C. 19SS • 1SS7 • less sterling Zlmnwr Craftsman FiMtwood SkyHm Rádman Maiwion TMwèH Mgadlar •byTuMdan,*ii|Wl IRON HORSE AUCTION COMPANY 109 W . Franklm St • Ruckin);h.im N C 28 3 79 l9 1 4 i9 9 7 224S S U B S C R I B E T o The Enterprise-Record S«Rd $11 To: Enterprise-Record P.O. B ox 525 Mocksviile, N C 27028 D IA L 911 For Emergency Fire, Police And Rescue Assistance MOVE INTO MANAGEMENT AT BISCUITVILLE Now Hiring Shift Leader • Restaurant Experience Prelerred • Shift Leader Duties Include some store opening & closing, crew management, some paper work.• Enjoy belter pay, Great Hours-Never Work Nights!• Good company benefits and opportunity to move upl APPLY TODAY FROIVI 6AM-2PM AT BISCUITVILLE IN CLEMMONS Even Though You’re Far Away We Didn't Forget Your 40th Birthday HAPPY, HAPPY BIRTHDAY MEDFORD! ABSOLUTE AUCTION Entire Household Contents of the Home of Henry Shoaf, Pine Ridge Road, Cooleemee, N.C. Saturday, August 8,1989 At 10:00 a.m. Sharp Concessions On Grounds — Bring Your Lawn Chairs Among the many items to be announced; Duncan Phyfe Cheny Dining Room Suite With China Hutch * Duncan Phyle Cherry Drop Leaf Table • Maple Bedroom Suites * 6E Range * Stalnlass Flatware * Tupperware * Duncan Phyfe Sofa ‘ Books * Linens * Porch Fur niture • Hotpoint Wringer Washer • Console FM Radio/Tape Player * Cheny Occasional And End Tables • Lamps ‘ Small Appliances' Four Poster Cherty , Bedroom Suite ' Baker Corner Shelving * Carnival Glassware * Framed Prints • Gibson Frost-Free Refrigerator • Pottery * Pots And Pans • Dishes • Glassware * RCA Color Console T V Curio Shelves * Cherry Buffet • Space Healers • Kitchen Table/Chairs * Kitchen Storage Cabinet * Suitcase ’ Oc casional Chairs • Any Many, Many More Items Too Numerous To Llstl DIRECTIONS: Follow N.C. Hwy. 801 lo Cooleemee, turn on lo Pine Ridge Rd, approximately 1 mile on right or coming Irom Mocksviile • Follow 601 S. approx imately 6 miles lurn righl on Pins Ridge^______________________________ Get Cash In A Day SeJI The Modern Auction W ay Rain Date Augusl 12, 1989 J. “ Eli” Hartman & Associates, Auctioneer N C A L #4504 R oute 3, B o x 110, A d van ce , N,C. 27006 998-6110/998-5350 B.jitnbp 'i t . Uli— ПА VIE COUNTY ENTKUPRISIC RKCOKI). THURSDAV. Лиц- Д. e i A S S I F I E D S ШЕМЗШ ЮЫЕ E B D H m B L B A partm ent For Rent FOR RENT....1 and 2-bedroom apart- ■ menis, kilchen appliances lurnished , including dishwasher, IVa-baths, washer/dryer conneclions. Central . heat/alr. Prewired (or cable and . -phone. Insulated doors and windows, - ,No-wax kitchen/bath lloors. Pool. . Sunset Apartments, located behind Hendrix Furnilure on highway 158, ■ Mocksville. Phone 704-634-0168. NEW, ENERGY EFFICIENT APART MENTS. 1 & 2 bedrootn and lully fur- ' nished studios. Pool, clubhouse, and basketball court. AMPLE PARKINGUI Waler, sewer, drapes, and kitchen appliances included. Dishwasher, ■ trosMree relrigeralor, washer/dryer • connections and on-site laundry facilities. Heated and cooled wilh heat pumps. Private patio or balcony, quick-recovery water heater, smoke • dector, prewired (or phone and cable ■TV. Manager and maintenance live • on property. 24-hour emergency . mJntenance. Children and small pels welcome. Only a (ow le(t. Don’t miss out — call now (or $50 o(( (irst . month's rent. Northwood Apartments, . 'Milling Road, 634-4141.__________ STUDIO APARTMENT: $250 month; - $250 deposit. References required. ■ Prefer single or gentlemen. 492-7853 or 634-1218. Cottage' at 3. Myrtle. 2 . bedroom, 2 balh, color TV, A/C. $285 ■ weekly or $44 nightly. 704-634-3875, . 634-3650._______________________ "fIsR RENT: North Myrtle Beach, 3-BR, ;'2-BA House. All conveniences, In- . .'eluding swimming pool. Short walk to b«ach, sleeps 8 comfortably. Only a lew weeks open. Call 634-5072. Wiilte Lake: Isiey's Apartments and , Cottages. Discounts Sunday through Thursday. (919) 862-4030. siness Opportunity iBiMlnMeforsaleln . Lot» of room for growth r aggrtMlw тпгмг. Call 634-1456 tor49^вв61nlght•. EMobile Homes For Sale BARNEY The family ol tho late J.C. Barney wishes to ihank the neighbors and Iriends for the food and the many acts of kindness shown lo them diiring the loss of their husband and father. hild Care BY OWNER; Reduced to selil Fork Community. Large A-frame situated on 5.44 acres. Beautilul setting, lull basement. Call 998-8680 or 407-349-9829.___________________ Established Home Daycare has lo openings avialable. References on request. 634-0206. Mocksviiie city limilS.______________________ Mother will babysit in her home. Any shill. Any age. 998-6350. Relerences (urnished. Farm M achinery Farm Gates, 4 ft. to 20 (t. 10 It. $28, 12 (I. $33,5 ft. Bushog $390,6 ft. Box Blade $290, Bale Spear $100. Feeders, corrals, seeder, scrape blade, boom poles. Can deliver. Wright Farm Gates 998-8637. Meadows standard sawmill with bust chain and 292 Ford industrial engine. Two years old. Used one time. $5,500. Days 704-878-9494; nighls 704-634-1438. Furniture 3-drawer dresser, good condition, $40.4-drawer chest of drawers, good condition, $25. Century baby car seat, good condition, $20. Call 998-3503 after 5:30 p.m._________ 4-plece Den set. Good condition, reasonable price. Garden Valley. 634-3321.________________________ Queen size headlioard, (rame, mat tress and box spring, triple dresser, hutch mirror, 5-drawer chest, night stand (Pecan finish). $400 negoitable. 998-5897. 10 Room House with cenlral air. 3 miles Irom Mocksville. S450 per monlh. 634-2605 or 634-3675. 3 Bedroom, V /i bath, lull basement. S400 a month. Call 284-2221 belween 6 & 9 p.m. omes For Sale BY OWNER: Large A-Frame situated on 5.44 acres. Fuli basement in Fork Community, Priced lo sell al $112,000. Call 998-8680 or 407-349-9829.___________________ Carolina E.E. Homes will build lo suit your needs. We build on your land or ours. Many floorplans in slock. Come by today for a free estimate or call (or inlormation. We can also heip you with your remodeling jobs. 704-634-2252.____________________ GOVERNiVlENT HOMES! $1.00 (U- Repalr) Foreclosures, Tax Delinquent Property. Now selling. This area! Call (refundable) 1-518-459-3546 EXT. H5649A (or listings. Law n & Garden ANGELL'S SEEDING SERVICE... New Yards, Re-seeding, light grading and hauling. Brush chipping. RICK ANGELL 634-2730 alter 5:30 p.m. 0 & M SERVICES We provide ali types of lawn service, mowing lawns, trimming shrubbery, cleaning lots. 704-634-5798, FREE ESTIMATES._____________________ COMPLETE LAWN MAINTENANCE Mowing, fertilizing, seeding, aeration, weed and Insect control, and more. CAROLINA LAWN CARE FREE ESTIMATES __________704-634-4737._________ WAYNE'S LAWN MAINTENANCE AND TREE CARE Tree Topping, Trimming, Stump Grinding & Tree Removal 634-4413 - Free Estimates NEW AND USED OFnCE FURNITURE ★ Stefcs ★ FUes Fire Proof Files RnrMOfiletFMmKwf 11« N. Maki M M . SaMwy, N.C. ПюмиМ022 H ealtii ■1 L a n d F o r S a le AB0RTI0N....PreflnancyTe8ting. For an appointment call Arcadia Women's Clinic, Winston Salem col lect, 919 721-1620. DAVIE COUNTY. Moving with the Lee , Ratit? Need acreage? 17.32 acres by owner, house, 416.44 road frontage. $40,000. (919) 785-0107. IW W FW W W B Eljro^^* ^^' - - •AWUMW ,v. -:< * u w e u w • iiu m iM a N c m ‘MOMiwupy/iwfcTHMWia •SECRETARY •EXECUTIVE SECRETAnY ■WORD PROCESSOR HOMS STUDY / flea Twutwo » .Al Ai(: к n Av ( Ml Nl 1 Л . . .-.(t r Л , ! AfJ' 1 ■FINANCIAL AID -JOB PLACEMENT AVAILABIF ASSISTANCE 1 1 II * „ IT ’S A D IR T Y J O B * I > B U T S O M B O D Y H A S T O D O IT ! # WEST V m Y t WINDOWS Ci‘moMiiil«i«lnamidi»llhHf»illoii Woatf4MMICMWood , MtTALMTIOCOVim ^.дкСАЯММТа. ■ СячипОагОшМу* Met Mon You I m. ILIM iM hr М.1,1в1|М Мяаи,И.С.П101 flta ttlM IM M YES! WE DO BUNDS. IS THAT SOMEBODY? Have on Л и т! Cleaned jI |a«t2iid*B№ cilm I BLINDS Higt> Tech Sonic Blind Cieanino I • With This Coupon Only ■ ■ • No Umt! On Number Of Blinds !■ NOT VALiO WITH ANY OTHER DISCOUNTS ■o.*,« r ^ o « - “ WSAI «AIM mm. UHrswnte CItaning Sytt«mYEII DO •>OM"Wlndt Rnlortd To Like “NtW iUMDt — WtfcW TO U FR K ■w.. A, '■-if U.S. CENSUS BUREAU ENUMERATORS # $6.00 PER HOUR 22Va CENTS PER MILE CAR ALLOWANCE Field worlters needed. Tiiis is a temporary position lasting approximately 4 to 6 weelts. The enumerators are responsible for locating specific addresses throughout rural areas and conducting brief interviews. Evening and weel<end worl< availability is desirable ;To Qualify You Must; * Be A U.S. Citizen * * Pass A Written 30 Minute Test * • Be At Least 18 Years Old Or 16 Years Old And ‘ * Meet Employment Conditions Set By State And Local Laws * * Have An Automobile In Good Working Order * * And A Valid Driver's License * Qualified applicants should apply as soon as possible by visiting the following location for testing DAVIE COUNTY PUBLIC LIBRARY 371 North Main Street Mocksville, N.C. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 9 AT 1:00 p.m . Applicants should bring with them 2 forms of identificaiton such as driver’s license, birth certificate, or social security card. Applicants should be prepared to stay ap proximately one and one/half hours ' * * A N E Q U A L O PP O R T U N IT Y /A FFIR IU IA T IV E A C T IO N E M P L O Y E R • * * 60 Acres. fenced pasture land, horses preferred. 919-998.5378. fVlobile Home Lot. 100x215 lot v/lth septic lank and well. Reduced lo $7500, Leonard Realty 704-634-3875 or 634-3650. fflce Space OFFICE SPACE FOR RENT (near post office). Ground floor, good parking, modern conveniences, four offices available. 165 square leel to 200 square leet each. Call 634-2181. Miscellaneous '84 Resort Camper: 28 feet, air con dition, awning, excellent condition. $7,000. 634-3336.________________ FOR SALE: 150 AC, part or ali, Iredell Co. (704)546-2696._______________ FOR SALE: Hickory Hill Country Club membership. Sacrilice. 766-6291. FOR SALE: Ulilily House...12x16. Ex cellent condition. $4,000 new, sell for $3,000. 634-2111.________________ Hexagon Shape PICNIC TABLES wilh attached bench. Custom built with treated lumber. $150.00.998-3822 or 998-3260. Reduce sale and fast with GoBese Tablets and E-Vap "Water Pills". Available al Foster Rauch Drugs. iVlobile Homes For Rent 1 Bedroom in town. 634-0446. Mobile Home For Rent; 2 bedroom. 492-5561.________________________ Ready to move in. Two and three bedroom mobile homes. $70 & $80 weekly. 492-7853 or 634-1218. Rent to own: 2 bedroom 1988 mobile home near Jockey Plant, 601 Soulh, $350 month plus $350 deposit. Private lot. 492-7853 or 634-1218. M & MKtaMh W Onta CbwiQi Гог41Гтп 1010«МММПМ8ММ » Ы1аЬмпг. NC M W '72 Style Cralt 12x60. 2 bedrrom, 1 bath, appliances, A/C, some furnilure included. $5,700 negotiable. Call alter 9 p.m. 998-5709.____________ '78 Conners Mobile Home, 14x70, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, almond garden tub, bar, exlra large windows. IWasler bedroom and balh separate Irom olher bedrooms. Super clean. Ex cellent condition. $8,500. (704)284-2161 or 284-2737. '83 Mobile Home, 14x76,3 bedrooms, 2 balhs, price negotiable. 998-5862 or 634-2411 alter 5 p.m.__________ '87 Gray Oakcove, 14x70, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, furnished. Island kilchen, garden tub, 2 decks, under pinning. Must sell. $15,500. 998-2091.________________________ Before you buy.,.come see us at Oakwood Homes, Troutman. Exit 42 off 1-77. 528-4517.________________ Lee’s Mobile Homes - Volume Horton & Fleetwood Dealer. Rd. 1923,1'Jor- wood NC. Open 7 days. Sizes include hitch, no downpayment with clear deed. 42x60 triple-wide $36,999; 28x70 $28,999; 4 bedroom 28x64 $24,999; 24x52 $17,999; 24x44 $16,999; 14x80 $16,999; Shingle Roof, Wood Siding 14x80 $17,999; 14x70 $12,999; 14x52 $9,999; 2 Styles 28x60 Highland Park $28,999; 24x60 Horton $21,999; Used Homes also available - 704-474-4906 or 1-800-777-8652.__________________ New '89 14x70 3 bedroom, 2 balh, total electric, stove and refrigerator, much more, only $11,900. Paymenls $138 month (or 10 years with down payment of $2,900. 704-634-3270. SAVE MONGYI Come to Oakwood Homes 01 Lexington Up to $3000 discounts! Location Business Loop 1-85 Soulh Behind Waffle House Or Cali 704-249-7041 BARFORD’S PIANO TUNING. Repair ing, rebuilding. Work guaranteed, 919-998-2789. Florida: 20 miles North of Disney World. Mobile home lot wilh water Ironlage on dead end street. Just oil Interstate 4, 12 miles north or Orlan do. income potential. For more inlor- malion 919-874-2241. Great invest ment at $25,000. Mitchell River Fronlage - must see lo appreciate. Surry County Min. Park 4Vi acre tract mostly wooded. Spring stream thru property. 12x12 block building wilh well. Secluded wilh good private drive. Great get-a-way. Lovely building sites. $25,000. Also available: Adjoining OVz acres wooded. Overlooks river, view of mtns, gurgling spring on back side. Beautiful bidg. sites. Must see to ap preciate. Ideal lake site. $2,500 an acre. All or part secluded. Good private drive. Convenient. 4 miles west of 1-77 Exit 93. Cali 919-874-2241 or 366-4143. ' Surry County Mln. Park. House fo r sale 5 miles west o( 1-77 at exit 93. Beauti(ul view of Blue Ridge Mtns. Churches, school, store and (ire dept, nearby. Vi mile from Mitchell River. 3 BR, 1 Vz BA, with aluminum siding nestled in the shade ol large oaks. Easily heated with electric heat. Wood stove optional. Large kitchen with stove, dishwasher, refrigerator, washer & dryer. Oak cabinets, large outbuilding. 6 ft. chaln-link fenced back yard. Must see to appreciate.. Will consider new model mobile home trade-in. $46,000. 919-874-2241. Hess Heating & Air Conditioning 24 Hour Service Sales — Service & Installation Oil Heat Pumpi Gas Or Electric FumacM «19-998-6133 Cali Today FOR SALE 1 9 8 2 C u s t o m C h e v r o le t V a n with 73,000 actual miles. Purchased new and icept under shelter by Calvin Ijames. Looks new...Exceilent condition for $7,500. Call 492-5198 after 8:30 p.m. for appointment to see and drive. J A N - M A R K A Z A L E A S & N U R S I E R Y ANNUAL LARGE SUMMER SALE All Of Our Plants & Azaleas Are Home QrownI WE HAVE BEEN BUSY THE LAST SEVERAL MONTHS PUTTING IN OUR 1990 CROP OF PLANTS & AZALEAS. Thanks to our thousands of customers we have been able lo expand approximately 50% more this summer & Ae are going to continue to grow. We have been installing deep wells with submergible pumps to take care of our growth. Also we have purchased 25 acres next to our nursery so we can expand more as we see (It. Af^D now here are some of our specials (or our summer SALE. Thousands of beautiful Hershey Red Azaleas 6 fer t i l . White Delaware Valley Azaleas (nice & bushy) 4 far $7. Hino Crimson & Hini Degiri & late blooming jumbos, double pink bloom & single white bloom 4 fer •?. We have Crape Myrtles by the thousands, all colors 4 (or tT . Large 3 gallon Regal red Crape (Myrtles, reg. $7.95 now M .t9 4 to 5 (eet tall Beaulilul field grown regal red Crape Myrlles $18 (We dig them while you wait) Chrysanthemums — Thousands & thousands to choose from all colors 4 fer <T Beautiful Pampas Grass, average 3 II. tall, while & pink, 4 for $7 Perennial Hibiscus, mixed colors 4 tor $7 Green & Variegated Lirope, very nice 10 fa r $14.9S. Japanese Evergreens, (base plant for your lawn), thousands to choose (rom. Helleri holly. Compacta holly, Convexa holly. Schillings dwarf yaupon 4 for IT . EXTRA SPECIALS 2 & 3 gallon (fire power) dwarf nandinas, specially priced for this sale only $3.99, ovm 800 te ebsote freai. Over 1000 red Japanese dwaif maples, our tpaclal pilee $1.99.3 gallon azaleas all kinds, very large & well trimmed, reg. $8.95 now $5.99.3 gallon Helleri holly or compactas, reg. S8.95 now $8.99. Large red oleanders rey. $9.99 now $6.99. Eleautiful burning bushes for this fall, reg. $12.95, now only SS.99. We stock trees year round in 5 & 7 gallon conlainers and also 8 & B Ihal can be set in your yard, anytime. One ol our specials on trees, large blooming Bradlord pear, reg. $19.95 now $14.98. We have over 600,000 plants, trees, (lowers and shrubs to choose ftom. Don't forget about our 1 year warranty or 5% discount on all sales. Also, a 10% senior citizens discount. All containerized plants can be set anytime, all season. When you buy 25 azaleas or more, or shrubbery, we will lurnish your 1990 spring fertilizer (slow release analysis 18612) FREE. This fertilizer will not burn or peel your plants. If MOCKSVILLE OAH£j(M£fi/aN I.EGION BASEBALL POST 174 WINS STAJE CHAMPIONSHIP, WE IVIU DONATESIOO TO POST ÍM. GO GET THOIHI. To o u r vendors who work (lea markets and state markets, we now have openings in Winston-Salem. Hillsville, VA., Charlotte, Mooresville and Statesville lor lall selling. We (urnish vendors license (or each seller. THESE SALE PRICES GOOD 10 DAYS ONLY JA N -M ARK AZALEAS & NURSERY (TLC ) Tender Loving Care From M ocksvllle take 601 South to 801. Tu rn left '/a of a mile to Jan-M ark Azaleas & Nursery. 284 -2 7 1 8 Hours: M on.-Sat. 8 am to fi pm ; Closed Sunday__________________________ JAndH Construction ft ^ UiiilscaiilRg, Inc. Welcome, N.C. Septic Tanks liittalled And Repaired Тпм And Stump Retnoval Diy7ll4-731-2B33 MgM 704-731-2061 nvmm И Е Ю И Т А В Е Е DAVn; (ОПМЛ KM KUI'KÍSK KIX'OKI). I IIUKSDAV. Ли«. .1. I989-7D ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT lo ‘ assist wilh Ihe operalion of group , homes lor the mentally retarded. In cludes responsibility for maintenance , ol laciiities, vehicles, purchasing, etc. 1 Mail resume lo ProComm, 100 Roseman Lane, Cleveland, NC 27013.______________________ A TTEN TION FARMERS: Slock Removal 7 days a week. Down and dis-abled Cows and Horses--if dead, call at ONCEI Will NOT pick up OLD • Dead animals. JOHNSON & ALEX- ' ANDER DOG FOOD COMPANY, Rt. ' 2, Harmony. (704) 546-2357 or 546-7453.________________________ , A TTEN TIO N : MOBILE HOME • OWNERS...Summer Special! NO . MONEY DOWN. Complete central air • conditioning installed lor as little as $43.38 monthly. Complete job . $1339,95. For last service call 704-279-6305 anytimel___________ AUTO REMOVER Man will buy junk car batteries and trucks for cash. Will also remove Irash from around your home. Call ■ (704)634-3256.___________________ 6ACKH 0E SERVICE - Septic , Systems, Any Backhoe Work. Miller a> Sons Backhoe Service. aa4-2»26. _____________________ BARFORD'S PIANO RE- " BUILDING....Self players, pump ■ organs. 919-998-27S9.___________ -BAB Contraetorà Salvage ■ Will remove unwanted cars, washing : machines, anything steel at NO CHARGE. 634-1218 or 492-7B53. ' Baker Roofing New » Old Roofs Patchwork r-- FrM EatlmatM 9 1 9 -M S ^ M 720 Yaara Exparlence CftM Servlcaa ' ; •;Concretefinlslilng...walks, driveways, • »atlos. Free Estimates. ; COMPLETE CAR SERVICE ■ Engine Re-bullding, Brakes, Etc. 492-7174 Plumbar,' all repairs. ¿'Raihove ,old sfUrnps and trees from ■-i s' ' storm damage. : ■ .Build Decks and Repairs 634-1218 or 492-7853. FARNHAM ROOFING "W ill Keep A Rool Over Your H ead” Free Estimales...998-4962 'AR typM concrate wortc: I ' i/HaHtt, patkM, driveways I, ;fBEE ESTIMATES CaH 9BB<469. ' ■ ^ ' ' FAMILY FLOORS inM* personally install what we selll" ’ teplnatSOeN Main St.. Mocksville, .H N C . : Or i c|ril us at 634-4411 or V « 3 4 « 9 6 '• FIRST AND SECOND MORTGAGE LOANS Debt Consolidation Home Improvement Loans For Any Worlhwhile Purpose Fast Service Competitive Rales United Companies Financial Corp. 1307 Ashleybrook Center Winslon-Salem, NC 27103 919-659-0123 FLOOR SANDING & FINISHING INTERIOR PAINTING 284-2898 or 284-2190 FOWLER SCHOOL OF MARTIAL ARTS (karate)is now open for business. Classes: Mondays • Frdays, 6:30 p.m. - 8:30 p.m . Mocksviiie Middle School White Building. Inlormation; call 634-3256. GENE’S ROOFING New and Old Rools 20 Years Experience Free Estimales _________704-284-4571___________ HAULING - Sand, Gravel, Dirt, Mulch. Miller a Son Backhoe Service ____________284-2826____________ Heating & Air Conditioning Repairs 24 Hour Service. David Griffin, Quali ty Heating & Cooling. 284-4556 or 284-2959.________________________ House Or Office Cleaning References Available - Reliable Free Estimales __________919-764-3432__________ MASON ELECTRIC...New Installation & Repair. Mobile Home Hook-ups. Service changes. Keith Mason 998-5542._______________________ Osborne Electric Co. No Job too large or small. Unlimited license. Over 20 years experience. Karl Osborne, owner ____________634-3398____________ PAINTING, remodeling, home repairs. Large or small. Free estimates. James Miller 998-8340.____________ RKR VIDEO Video Taping & Editing For All Occasions 7 SAVEMONEYI COMPLETE CAR CARE Brakes, tune-up, spln-wheel balancing Bogar Taxsco Service 634-5924____________ STUM P QRINDINQ - No Yard Damage Millar t Sons Backhoe Service 284-2826 Here Is Your Ticket To Employment GANTT PERSONNEL 190>B North Main Street Mocksville, N.C. 634-4268 Tidy*up Cleaning Scrvicc Weekly, bi-weekly, monthly, ono-time. Free estimates. 204-4^144. W IN DO W S W ELCOM ED Spring & General Housecleaning 1*704-636-7924 Wante FAMILY NEEDS HOME TO RENT: Will take farm house or city. Willing to paper or paint. 492-5140._________ Woman will live*in and care for the sick and elderly 7 days a week. Ex cellent references. Available im mediately. Call after 4 p.m. 704-546-2637. TRO Y'S AUTO SALES THE BEST SELECTION IN STATESVILLE 1123 Shelton Ave. Statesville, NC 704/872*8769 704/878-6262 NO INTEREST E— Z PAYMENT PLAN BUY H ER E-PA Y HERE NO CR ED IT-BAD CREDIT NO PROBLEM WE ALSO BUY USED CARS Vehicles Em ploym ent '76 Lincoln Continental Town Car; 4-door, new tires, wire wheel covers, lully loaded, runs and drives good, looks sharp. $850 or best oiler. Call anytime 492-7889._______________ '78 Dodge Van Tradesman 200; long wheelbase, AM/FM cassette, panel ed and carpet, PB, PS, new tires and paint. $1,150. Also 15'/2 Ii. boat, 50 hp Mercury motor and trailer, depth tinder, good condition. $950 or best oiler. Call anytime 492-7809._______________ '81 Mustang; 4-cylinder, 5-speed, a/c, p/s, T-top. Good condition. 492-7693. '84 Honda XR80 Motorcycle; Ex cellent condition. $425. 998-4632 alter 5 p.m.______________________ Is It true...Jeeps lor $44 Ihrough the Government? Call lor laclsl 1l312l742-1142e)(t. 5229. SALISBURY MOTOR CO. Bulck-Peugeot 700 W. Innes St., Salisbury 704/636-1341 E A R N U P T O $ 2 0 , 0 0 0 Per Year Raising C H IN C H IL L A S For Inlormation write to; (p/ease g/1/в nam e, age and phone num ber) RANCHERS P.O. Box 3666 Oalton, Giorglt 30721 M04) 278-4828 2-cycle Engine Mechanic; 2 years ex perience minimum. Good pay lor the right, qualilied person. Jack's Saw, Clemmons, 919-766-4773.________ $350/Day processing phone ordersi People call you. No experience necessary. Call (relundable) 1-315-733-6063 extension P-1379. ADAP COORDINATOR: Seeking In dividual lo oversee Ihe operation ol an adult developmental activities pro gram serving developmenlally disabl ed adults in Mocksville, NC. Four year degree in human service Held with one year ol prolessional level ex perience working with developmen tal disabled population required. Salary $17,232-$18,028, depending on experience. Send state application and/or resume to Jan Trexler, Per sonnel Ollicer, TrI-County Area Ol lice, 121 W. Council St., Salisbury, NC 28144. EOE. Housekeeper needed in Clemmons home. Mon.-Frl.: 2:30-6:30 p.m. Relerences required. T.G .I.F. 919-769-3011 or Inlormation, TOOL/PLANT MAINTENANCE Local manufacturer has an excellent opportunity for an individual experienced In all phases of tool repair and general plant m aintenance. W e offer an excellent com - pensation program Including a full benefit package. Qualified Individuals should respond to: SKYLINE CORPORATION Cameron Homes Bethel Church Rd P.O. Box 845 Mocksville. N.C. 27028 Equal Opportunity Employer M/F S A L E S R E P R E S E N TA TIV E S N E E D E D FO R FA S T G R O W IN G A U TO D E A LE R S H IP Some Experience Necessary. In Depth Training Program W ill Be Provided By Dealership. Requirements Include 1. Be A Hard Worker-------------- 2. Be Aggressive 3. Have A Desire To Make Top Pay. (The right person can expect to make $gg,000-$50,000 per year.!) 4. Provide A Valid N.C. Drivers License. 5. Some College Preferred BENEFITS INCLUDE: • Guaranteed Salary • Demo Plan • Paid Insurahce • Incentive Bonuses Apply In Person At: 98 New Hwy. 64 W est, Lexington PROFESSIONAL SERVICES Several responsible men and women for part-time janitorial work in Mocksville area. Must be willing to work three-hour periods without smoking. Soliciting mature individuals who are worthy of more than minimum wages. A few individuals with ex perience and integrity will be considered for full-time empolyment. Meet Calvin Ijames for interview 5:00-7:00 p.m. | Friday, August 4th at Mocksville’s Chamber ^ of Commerce Building, 107 North Salisbury Street." SARA LEE KNIT PRODUCTS Sara Lee Knit Products (Hanes) N E E D S F u ll tim e a n d t e m p o ra ry w o r k e rs for o u r d is trib u tio n c e n te r in A d v a n c e a n d C le m m o n s . P o s it io n s w ill b e o n 2 n d a n d 3 rd sh ifts. In c lu d in g p a c k a g e a s s e m b le r s , m a te ria l h a n d le r s a n d o rd e r p ic k e rs. L o n g te rm te m p o ra ry w o r k e rs a re n e e d e d b e t w e e n n o w a n d y e a r e n d . T e m p o r a r y jo b s m a y le a d to full tim e e m p lo y m e n t w ith b e n e fits. W a g e s sta rt at ^5®® p e r h o u r fo r full tim e a n d lo n g te rm te m p o ra ry w o rk e rs. A p p lic a tio n s a c c e p te d W e d n e s d a y a n d T h u r s d a y fro m 8 a.m . to 4 p.m . at th e D istrib u tio n C e n te r o n C o rn a t z e r R d . EOE/MF 7-27.2tnlip ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT lo assist wilh the operalion ol group homes lor the menially retarded. In cludes responsibility for maintenance ol laciiities, vehicles, purchasing, etc. Mail resume to ProComm, 100 Roseman Lane, Cleveland, NC 27013. _________________________PO 14470 AIRLINES NOW HIRING. Flight At- lendents. Travel Agents, Mechanics, Customer Service. Listings. Salaries lo S105K. Entry level positions. Call (1)805-6a7-6000 Exl. A-5720. A TTEN TIO N : EARN MONEY READING BOOKSI $32,000/year in come potential. Detail. 1-602-838-8B85 Exl. Bk3131. CHILDCARE; Need a responsible young adult or older lady In my home to take care ol 2 children, 8:30-6, Tuesday - Friday. Shady Grove district. 919-998-0770 or 766-7174. Ask lor Sharon Bowers. Chevrolet/GEO Dealership seeking GM certllled technician. Must have own set ol tools, standard and metric. Apply in person at Dayton Motors, Inc., Hwy. 421 & 601 South, Yadkinville. GOVERNMENT JO BS $16,040 - $59,230/yr. Now hiring. Call 1-805-687-6000 Exl. R-5720 tor cur rent lederal list. Individual who Is lamlllar with Mocksville/Davie County area to manage Temporary Employment Ser vice ollice. Will be Involved In sales, recruiting and interviewing. Must be sell-motivated and have previous ex perience dealing with people. Send resum e and salary requirements to: ATS, 1365 Westgate CIn. Dr., Suite 2-A, WInston-Salem, NC 27103. MEDICAL RECORDS CLERK: Part time position in Davie County Hospital Medical Records Dept. Can didate will perlorm variety ol clerical and tiling duties relating lo the maintenance ol patient care records. Musi be prolicient typist. Apply to Per sonnel Department, Davie County Hospital (704)634-8100. __________________________PO 5602 Need 3 Experienced Roofers. At least 1 year experience. Contact G.W. Roofing, 103 Norlh Lee Street, Salisbury. 704-633-1610. PROFESSIONAL PAINTERS: 2 posi tions available. Competitive wages. 998-7691, Monday - Friday, 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. Preschool Teachers for 5-year old readiness class. Teaching cerllflfiate and experience prelerred. Resume lo: Preschool, P.O. Box 236, Clem- mons, NC 27012._____________^ RN CASE MANAGER In home care management of elderly and disabled adults In Davie County. ESN re quired. Background In home health and geriatric nursing preferred. Full time salary position. Call Personnel Dept., Davie County Hospital. 704-634-8100. ________________ P.O. Sim Responsible adult needed to milk'SO" cows, 5 to 7 times week. Experience prefened, but not required. 492-5901. Work Own Hours until December with Lloyds Super Party Plan. Free kit, Iree supplies and training. No deliyeiy or collection. Earn extra cash, prizes, gifts and awards. Set your goals and call today for a rewarding career,Wth America’s fastest growing party pl№. , 704-492-7114 Peggy Carlton v 919-998-2052 Andrea Cornatzer, ^ Mac’s Foods l;mLPiWANTED' Full Time Clerk Needed Thursday, Friday, Saturday Nights From 3:00 p.m. to 12 Midnights A d d itio n a l H o u rs A v a ila b le If Wanted S ta rtin g P ay N e g o tia b le Corner 801 & 158 EOE/MF 7VTS Need A Job W i t h Qood Pay And B e n e f f lt i; WENEED YOUIII , • Receptionists/Secretaries • W/P (DW4, Multimate, Wang, WordPerfect) • General Office Clerks • Date Ehtry Clerks • Light industrialA/Varehouse \i Accepting Applicatkms TuM. &TI)urs. At The BC Brock BulMIng, Mockivilie, N.C. 9 to 1 and 2 to 4 PtMM Call Today A le x a n d trt T em p o rary S iiv ic « [• !» ies-TmipJ! Shipping Departnient j i PART TIME We manufacture PREFIT window. TRIM from’i. Ponderosa Pine Mouldings Benefits include two r weeks paid vacation, holidays, group health coverage,; and a retirement program. High school diploma re-1 quired. 7:00 to 12 noon. j Apply In Person : №IM,INC: i Bethel Church Rd., Mocksville, N.C. ^ E O B M F M -itn; -'I Work Wanted For PrograiiL__ Serving Developmental i Disabled AdultsWe specialize in sorting, bulk mailing, simple assembling, packaging, and etc.Let us lielp you cut your cost by doing work for you at lower rates. Contact: New Horizon Enterprises 124 W ilkesboro S treet M ocksville, N.C. 27028 Phone: (704) 634-1805 8D— DAVIE COUNTY ENTEKPKISK KECOKI). THUKSDAV. Лчц. TJS9 Clifford Gets Scholarship Lori Lynn Gifford of 126 M orse St., Mocksville has received the Dr. Phillip B. and Bci.sy D. Scolarship from the University o f North Carolina at — Chapel Hill. Gifford Gifford is a 1989 graduate of Davie High School and will allcnd U N C -C H in the fall majoring in accounting. She is the daughter of Thomas and Christine M arion of Mocksville. Planners To Meet ; There will be a meeting of the Dayie Couniy Planning Board on Thursday, Aug. 10, at 7 p.m. in . the, ¡commissioner’s room of the Davie County Courthouse. : Terry Dedmon has submitted a request to rezone property from Residential-Agricultural R -A to ; Residential-Suburban R-12. This :pr6]^rty is located on the south :side of Deadmon Road (SR 1801) : being approximately . I mile west ;of ;Will Boone Road (SR 1802). property is further described : as being the 18-acte tract shown as S p S w l 88 of tax map K-5. ? jifte planning board will review, ^dimss and make reconunendation . ' On'ji proposal that would amend the •lNa<of die Davie County Zoning •CSlwanoe by adding a Residential- •licsincted (R-R) Zoning District. • ifgPnajor effect of; this jproposal be: to have the option to .^CNile mtrictM aieM withiii ex- ^^Mg KtMehtial ironbig districts all types of manufactured •'hosing units (mobile homes) iyitauld be prohibited. Slgnuil ' ^ P r o i r e s s ; I',C(fflseivation Itesew lT i^ram ( G l^ sip up ‘. is m progress and wiU',continue llira u ^ Aug. 4. ..-Fanners may bid to enter their .b ig l^ erodibje cropland into a :^№vear cootTKt beginning with eilbN the 1989^ or 1990crop year. iW p r o g w ih u authorization to :a c c ^ a c te i^ only through 1990. tlw CRP'iMyt fiumers to stop .griiW iiv orajpi on highly erodible .crofiliuid and begin planting it to pniiniuKnt grass, wiMUf^ filter « ^ / o r tie e i.tb io u^ contracts w illl^ U SD A .. Program signup tMgfin July 17 and ends Aug, 4. In .return for ugning 10-year ipbpt^Kte, fium en receive annual rental paymenu and one-time cost- share assistance; to cover 50 per cent of cost of, establishing the needed pemianent cover. Further details about the pro gram may be obtained from the local C o i^ ASCS, SOS, Exten sion, Division of Fmest Resources, or Soil and Water Conservation District OfRce. Town Changes Garbage Pickup Scfiedule A new schedule for garbage collection for Mocksville residents begins this week. A ll residents who normally have their garbage picked up on Tuesdays will also have the garbage collected on Friday, Aug. 4. Residents normally served by Thursday garbage collec tion will be served Friday on ly of this week, said Town Manager Terry Bralley. Beginning next week, oncc a week curbside garbage col lection service to all Mocksvillc residenis will be on Friday only. WITH APPROVED CREDIT - SALES TAX MUST BE PAID BEFORE DELIVERY 634-5739 125-127 1 North Main Street Mocksville, N.C.F U R N I T U R E & A P P L I A N C E S CONVENIENT CREDIT TERMS! ' P u b lic R eco rd s 8 D istric t C ourt lO S p o rts B l - B l O D avie P eople C l W eddings C 2 - C 6 O bituaries C 9 D avie D ateline D 2 Calvin & H obbes D 3 Animals Poisoned In Advance Pet Owner Wants Some Answers: Details, P. D1 Weekend Weather: Milder, D5 Back To School High School Attendance Policy OKd: Details, P. D1 D A V I E C O U N T Y 5 0 « e n t e r p r i /e A e c o r d USPS 149-160 rH U R S O A Y , Лий. 10, 1 9 8 ^ ^ 36 P A G ES More Vehicles Struck; Teens Arrested . A resident and a counselor at a home for troubled boys have been arrested for throwing ■objMts at moving vehicles in Davie County. • A juvenile was also taken into custody, and police are considering charges against a second juvenile, said Detective Matt Dillon of the Davie County Sheriffs Department. Bobby Michael Spillman, 19, of Junction Cooleemee, and Lawrence Dale Cleaveland, 16, of 70 Whitney St., Mocksvillc, were each charged with two counts of assault with a deadly weapon inflicting serious injury and with eight counts each of attempted assault inflicting serious injury. Dillon said the two confessed to the crimes after a motorist got the license plate number from Spillman’s car last week. “ They said they did so many they can’t Plaiiti marijuana plants con- I ffeiàicdrby the Davie County Depu№ent during an 1 M ^search Monday ancf Tues- |i&y.::;werén*t that many in lf > i^ i if allowed to mature, the |VjìàS;of the plants would have t iàià«d to $1 million, said Dfe^tiVe Jerry Williams. >j^Xonday, with the help of Guard helicopters, of- pulled 228 plants of the pi^Òiiìl sinKtnillia variety of nu^juàna from a wooded dikket near Bixby. ;^Uliam s said if allowed to the plants could be pro- and sold for M.OOO eachi; > plants ranged from 1- to 4 - ^ in height. plants were scattered in fbve plots 20-30 yards apart.. 'Laiter Monday, another crew worldng in northern Davie discovered IS plants growing in a wooded area off Duke Whit- and Sheffield roads. ■ The plants ranged from 4'A- to:8*/4-feet tall, said Sgt. Holt I^w ell. Williams estimated value of thè plants at maturity at $1,500 each. . “ Both of them have been :taken well care of,” Williams said. “ They were back in a wooden area hid. We had to ;walk the ground crew in with ;the chopper. They had cut trees ;down to plant them. They had ’ gone to a whole lot of trouble. ” ■ ■ ■ , \. Please See Marijuana — P. 4 ,G^ileyJMarrs, 1 V^> daughter of Bill and Lynn, Marrs • of MapI*'Street in Mockavllle, gets into the excite- .. ment of the Maaonlc Picnic Monday night. Amuse- ‘ ment rides will continue through Frtday, while the pic- ' nlc dinner is scheduled for noon Thursday at Clement ’ Grove behind the Brock Center, — Photo by Robin Fergusson M asonic, DEU P icn ic A u g . 12 Dr. A.O. Walker will be the guest speaker at (he 105th annual Masonic and Da-. ic Educational Union Picnic Saturday, Aug. 12, al Clement Grove in Mocksville. ■. Walker, paslur of Shiloh Baptist Church in Mocksville, will be a part of a 2:30 p.m. pro gram which al.so features Pleasant Hill Baptist Choir of Houstonviiie, New Shepard Baptist remember them all,” Dillon said. “They said they were out to have fun.” Two serious injuries, a minor injury, and more than a dozen reports of objects being thrown from passing vehicles along U.S. 64 east of Mocksville and on U.S. 158 have been filed in recent weeks. On July 25, Paula L. Jones, 20, of Route 3, Mocksville, received a cut above the eye when she was struck by a full Gatorade bottle thrown at her car while she was traveling on U.S. 64 east of Mocksville. On Aug. 3, Lillian Robertson Matthews, of 156 Whitney Road, Mocksville, was cut by glass afler a chunk of a cement block was thrown into the windshield of a car driven by her husband' along U.S. 158 about a mile east of Mocksville. Please See Teens — P. 4 A Lot Of Trash D a v ie R e s id e n ts G e n e r a t e A n A v e r a g e O f 5 .4 P o u n d s D a ily Second in a sexies. By Kathy D. Chaifm Davie County Enterprise-Record On any given week in Davie County, a million pounds of garbage is dumped at the landfill. Because the landfill has no method of determining the volume of waste coming in, that figure is based on a study in which the incoming garbage was weighed during the week of Aug. 22-27, 1988. Using that as an average, the estimated amount of garbage going into the landfill each year is 54,300,480 million pounds or 27,150.24 tons. That is 5.43 pounds of gar bage generated daily by each Davie resident. The national average is 4 pounds. There are several possible ex planations for Davie’s above- average volume. R.C. Smith, chairman of the Davie County Board of Com missioners, attributed it to peo ple bringing in garbage from outside the county. The week of the study, 43,080 pounds of garbage were determined to have been brought in from other counties. Smith said he thinks Davie’s free service attracted residents from counties which charged. The new user fees which went into effect at thg Davie County Landfill on Aug. 1 should stop that, he said. Craig Greer, assistant to County Manager John Barber, said the volume may be up because the average per capita income of Davie residents is also high. “ 1 think the way we live has a lot to do with it,” he said. People who have more money buy more, Greer explaitied, and people who buy more havi more to throw away. Davie ranks^ 15A of, 100 counties in North Carolina with an average per capita income of $12,945. "The consensus is that most of the residents in our county are either roughly middle class or upper class,” Greer said. “ We don't have too numy isolated areas of poverty to worry alwut.” Wayne Sullivan, however, who helped with the study by the Municipal Eiigineering Ser vices Co., attributed Davie’s high volume of garbage to' industries. • “We did this by weight,” he said, “ and a lot of your in dustries have a lot of bulk mateiials that they dispose of in to the landfill.” Please Turn To P. 6 L a s t Lo ca l C a n d id a te s File Church Choir ol Cooleemee. St. John AME Zion Spiritual ChoirofMocksville, Cellar Grove Bap tist Church Choir ol Barbers ami llie Bumcomb Baptist Church Choir ol Lo.xington. Food, inchuling harbceue and I’lsii, will be sokl I’lcase Sue M asonic — 1». 4 Four Cooleemee residents want to be mayor. Four others want to be on the town board of commissioners. In Mocksville, seven residents want to be on the town board, wliiie only one seeks election as mayor. During the last week of filing for local o ffices, Woody Boger, 45, of 15 Joyner St., joined three о t h e r Cooleemee residents in a race for mayor. The other candidates include Bill Gales, the incumbent, and Jackie Morton and Debbie Spillman. Two Cooleemee residents fil ed for a spot on the town board. They were: Bill Cranfill Jr., 41, of 9 Grove St.; and Howard C. McDaniel, 67, of 53 Davie St. Cranfill and McDaniel will face Denny Creason and Hayden Beck in Nov. 7 elec tions for two seats on the board. In Mocksville, incumbent mayor, D.J. “ Nick” Mando was the only town resident to formally seek the mayor’s posi tion. He is a Democrat. During the last week, John D. Nicholson, 62, of 356 Tot St., filed for one of five positions on the board to be picked by Mocksville voters on Nov. 7. Other Republicans seeking a spot on the board are Abe Howard Jr., Dr. F.W. Slate and Brent Ward. Democrats seeking election to the town board are Steve Walker, James Wall and Roy Cartner. M cDaniel Nicholsim Cranlill Walker "Г" 2-DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPKISK RKCOKI), THURSDAY. Лиц. 10, I‘«9 E d i t o r i a l P a g e M o u n t a in s o r b e a c h e s — p e o p le f in d t h e ir v a c a t io n s The mountains or the bcacli ... where do you spend your vacations? I’ve tried both in the past weei^s. I had always preferred the mountains. Backpacking and cam ping in the national forests. Then Paul was born. Wc had to worry about losing him on a mountain trail, to be raised by a pack of wolves. For infants, the beach provides an almost worry free vaca tion. At low tide, we would park Paul in the middle of the sand, give him a bucket and spade, take off his diaper and let him run naked. Our beach is Ocean Isle. A family beach. Quiet. No nightspots, no hordes of teenagers. We had preferred the off-season when we had the island almost to ourselves. Then Paul started school. Now we have to go in summer and brave the heat. People tell me about the lure of Myrtle Beach — the mecca of sun worshippers. I haven’t been there in 20 years. Myrtle Beach-goers never seem to talk about the ocean or sand or waves. That’s what I want to sec. I prefer God’s creation to boardwalks and highrise motels. I shortchanged my family last year. We went a few days here, a few days there, but we didn’t really get away. Mary told me that wouldn’t happen this summer. I’ve tried to listen. In the process, I’ve learned some things about vacationers. People don’t go to the mountains to see the mountains. They go to shop. We did our duty by taking Paul to see the Indian thief at Cherokee. Cherokee is a gawdy tourist trap, designed to promote the economies of Korea, Hong Kong and/Macao. The only good thing about it is that it leads to the Gréât,Sinok)/.Mountains, the most-visited national park. But the visitors rarely gel out o f their cars. They lake pictures -at ovérlçoks, but they rarely venture beyond the restrooms. At Newfounâ Gap, there must have been 1,000 people in the parking lot. Paul arid I hiked two miles down the Ap- pdachian Trial there. ^The trail offers spectacular views — if aiiyone ventures that far. We saw only a dozen people on our walk, and that’s the most heavily used section of trail in the park. One day, we found the Blue Ridge Parkway almost aban doned; Closer to Asheville, it was more used. We even saw a few picnickers — a conunon sight two decades ago before’ the restaurant industry’s boom. I never liked the beach until I discovered surf fishing. That given ine a new purpose in life. One day, I plan to actually catch a “ real” fish. I’ve been trying for years. I wade far out into t|)e surf to cast my hooks — roped to an optimistic 20-pound test line. Last week, Paul insisted on his turn with the reel. He cast awkwardly, sending the hooks maybe 50 feet. He im mediately caught a nice whiting. Even then he couldn’t dirty his hands with the bloodworm bait. He cast again, and just as quickly caught another. I pulled the reel away from him after that. If they were biting. I wanted to be in the action. I baited again, and cast it deep. Nothing. I managed only a hand-sized spot for the evening. Dwight Sparks DAVia C O U N TY ENTERPRI/^ECORD USPS 149-160 124 South Main Street Mocksville, NC 27028 704/634-2120 Published every Thursday by Ihe DAVIE COUNTY PUBLISHING CO. ___ Dwight Sparks ........................ Ediior-Publisher Robin Fergusson ................. General Manager Mike Barnhardt .................... Managing Editor Kalhy Chaffin ............................... News Editor Ronnie Gallagher ........................ Sports Editor Becky Snyder................. Advertising Director M ocksvillc Davie Cooleemee Enterprise Record Journal 1916-1958 1899-1958 I9 0 I-I9 7 I Second Class Postage Paid In M(x;ksvillc, NC 27028 Subscription Rates Single Copy, 50 cents S18.(K) per year in North Carolina S22.50 per year outside North Carolina POSTMASTEU Send address ch;Mii!es ici Davic Cminiy l-nlcrprisc-Uccuid __________P.O. 525. Mocksvillv. \C 27(US i Melvin Whitlock Lakewood, Mocksville ‘I guess something for the Derrick Nichols Mocksville ‘They need something, Clyde Richardson Court Square, Mocksville “ I would like to see a Dan Eastep M ain Street, Mocksville; I ‘Since I Uke to cycle,tl'J young people. They don’t because everything’s going to grocery store downtown and would like to see some type- have a lot.”W al-M a rt. I guess something more for the youth, anything for them.” a hardware store.”of bicycle store. S i d e w a l k S u r v e y : W h a t B u s in e s s D o e s D o w n to w n N e e d ? ' n - Chad Nichols Mocksville “ Another video store and maybe a skating rink.” James Murphy Mocksville “ Another grocery store.” Tim Latham Mocksville “ A variety of businesses.” Emma Hall Lakewood Motel, Mocksyitk “A grocery store.” . : L e t t e r s To the editor: Been catching up wilh my reading of the back issues of the Enterprisc-Record and came across an articlc under the dateline of July 6th, which read: Board Split On Tax Assessor. It seems that Mr. Darryl Parker’s work as Tax Assessor does not satisfy all of the members of the Davie County Board of Com missioners. And that Darryl’s tenure or continued tour of duty is in doubt; for at least six months. But strange lo say no reasons were given, except Mr. Spurgeon Foster, one of the Commis sioners, did hear "complaints,” but he was not specific as to what he heard. In my long history, 1 have never known a tax assessor, tax col lector nor a tax appraiser to win any popularity contests. Because, simply, the main function of each of these positions is to directly or indirectly extract monies from unwilling victims or rather tax payers. Under such circumstances a listener will not hear favorable sounds about the work performed by Ihe person or persons holding a tax collecting related position. In short, tax collecting breeds complaints. Again in Mr. Parker’s case nothing specific is mentioned in ihe article as to how he was remiss in the performance of his work. Nor were any circumstances mentioned thal caused the Board to put him on probation for six months instead of reappointing him for another term. Yes, Mr. Foster did .say in an oblique way that Darryl’s work was not good. Mysteriously, he (Foster) was not all clear or direct in his statement, but preferred to diverge from a given straight line as indicated by his quoted remarks; <1. ) ; 'J ‘ ‘I’ve heard more complaints o ilin g (the reappointment) dum I did in favor of it. so I feU there was a problem, and he.nee^ ‘ v to be replaced. The best way to solve a problem is to get rid ofit:” ; If Parker committed sins of ommission or commission t ^ ■ Foster should have spelled them out in his remarks ^ hbt.hj^ " his thoughts behind that all inclusive phrase ‘‘complaints.’’ Bc|L-' ter still, Foster-'should have remained mute on the subject M did: the other County Commissioners and not chosen to be qu^M. , Over the years since 1 met Mr. Parker I have found him to,6e: extremely helpful when called upon for assistance. Especially ^ a time when I was trying to uncover a tax program that was w r ^ ped in a mystery. This was back in 1986. When visiting hi^iif- : ftce he always made himself available, was most gracious,.pa tient, cooperative and knowledgeable about the functions oi hjs tax officc. This is all I look for when visiting a county agency,. As I was writing this letter, related thoughts kept gnawing at my fingers. Why, after five years in his position, is Parker.now found “ wanting?” Has he reached his level of incompetency ai\d the condition just discovered? Or is he just persona-non-grata, a problem to be gotten rid ol? Or were the Commissioners lax in performing their respon sibilities and thus created a problem. A personnel problem that will be solved as recommended by one Commissioner by merely getting rid of it. . To sum up the story as presented in the news article put Mr. Darryl Parker in a pillory and set him up to public ridicule. The news ariicle was one-dimentional — let us have the other side. James P. Staveley Bermuda Run Write the Editor P . O . B o x 5 2 5 , M o c k s v i l le , N C 2 7 0 2 8 DAVIIC C()lJ^T^■ IC.N TKKI’UISI', KKCOKI). rUliKSDAV, All«. 10, 1989—3 P a t h W e l l W o r n T o U n c l e R o y ’ s , A u n t A n n i e ’ s H o u s e Chccrw inc and popcorn. Uncic Roy :iml Aiiiil Annie. i:;- Grow ing up in the Oak Grove eomniunity in Davie County, thc.sc two Itokl spccial places in niy nienmry. ; Every Sunday night, my parents woulil ; play the card game. Rook, The Clicerwiiic i and popcorn, along willi Disney and Bonanza on television, kept me out of their : hair. ; Uncle Roy and Aunt Annie knew this. -;An'd every year at Christma.s, they would -;giyè me a six-pack of Cheerwine and a bag ■rôf Pops Rite popcorn. F.orget the race track, the football game, ¿the bicycle. The Chccrwinc and popcorn •;was m y favorite. It was a present I could '.'depend on getting. It was my “ rock” at i^Christnias. ; Uncle Roy and Aunt Annie were my ‘rocks.” I could depend on them. They are ^people anyone in the community or church •could depend on. ; Roy and Annie W illiam s aren’t blood relatives. They Mike Barnhardt never had children of their own. The uncle and aunl teniis are used affectiiinately — not only by our family — but by just about everyone who crosses Iheir path. Bui relatives couldn't be any Kinder llian ihese Iwo. W e rented a house from Uncle Roy anti Aiun Annie when our family moved to Oak Grove in Ihe mid-195()s (1 was born lhat year.). W c still rent from them. There's no need to buy when you've gol landlords like this. Besides, lo buy would probably mean m oving to anoiher neighborhood. Out of the iiuestion. O ur hou.sc was a half mile down Oak Grove Church Road from theirs. But through ihc woods, il was only a lol shorter. A well-worn path slill .separates the two. A unl Annie didn't work a public job during my lifetime. Both my parents worked. W hen us children had a problem al home, like how the heck do you fix the cornbrcad mom told you to fix, we called A unl Annie. She gave expert directions, although it seems my sister never quite figured them out. W hen something went w rong with the hou.se, wc callcd Uncle Roy. He could fix anything. Still can. They had a cabin at a pond. W c loved to visit them llierc. W ay oul in the woods. 1 would try and try lo catch one ol the big bass. Uncle Roy would lake the rod and reel, with Ihe same bail I was using, and from the same position and bring in a bass every time. He would laugh, pul Ihe lish back and hand Ihc pole back lo me. Every Sunday at church. Uncle Roy and Aunt Annie were there. During the week, they saw lhat church affairs and needs were taken care of. Uncle Roy is slill active the church, although Aunl A nnie 's health prevents her from getting out of the house very often. Thai path between our hou.ses is still well worn. There u.sed lo be a plank across a small branch which held up under children's footprints and adult w ork shoes. Now , a small bridge which holds up lawnmowers covers the water. M y father and Uncle Roy, both retired, like to piddle, and ride their lawn tractors to cach others house to work on a motor or build a wood .stove or talk about old times. ' I don’t walk thal palh as much as I used lo, but I should. There arc som e valuable memories at the other end. L e t t e r s Officer Phipps A ‘Cool Dude’ To the editor; Officer Phipps is a cool dude. H e’s smart, nice; he helps us and most of all, he’s there when we need him .” (H e’s also pretty funny.) M r. Phipps came to m y class, everybody thought D A R E just meant to keep kids off drugs. I told him it was drug abuse I something. (I didn’t know the rest.) He told me it was D rug Abuse ‘ Resistance Education. N ow the class, and I, know what D A R E 'meijns. ; ;Phipps had time to laugh and joke, but most of the time serious about the things we talked about. M r. Phipps is officer, not to mention a deputy. I am hoping that W ooteii w ill assign M r. Phipps to be the D A R E officer. j ^ iP h ip p s is the best D A R E officer. Thank you, M r. Phipps, : > ^ ; S h e r iff Wooten. ^ Tom and Daw n W illiam son , Route 2, M ocksville G a s T a x , H i g h w a y B i l l B e c o m e s L a w ■ty Rep. Julia C. Howard Here in North Carolina, the highway bill is now law. The gas lax went into effect Aug. 1 along with the organizational structure and plans being made to build the highways for North Carolina. A lottery bill has been given a favorable report out of the Senate commiHees and should be on the Senate calendar for a vote. The tax-fairness legislation has passed one version in the Senate and one version in the House with a conferee conimillce being ap pointed to try and resolve ihe dif ferences. In the bill, approxinialely one-third of the slate’s taxpayers will pay more taxes while about two-thirds will pay le,ss in taxes. The bill for the state is revenue neulral and was passed af\er a great deal of debate and conferring in an attempt to develop a true tax- fairness program, recognizing there are some people who con sider any tax unfair. However, government must operate and taxes provide the necessary revenue. The House and Senate's plan is to adjourn on Thursday, go home, and return on Monday, giving the conferee committees a chance to meet on Thursday, Friday, Satur day, and Sunday, if necessary, lo resolve the differences on the tax- fairness bill, budget bills, and any other bills pending in the conferee committees. W c hope to come back Monday, reach an agreement and adjourn on Wednesday. M y prognosis is that adjournment will probably be Wednesday, Aug. 16. There are a large number of bills going through this session as we draw to a close. They ..move so quickly, trying to report them in a letter liko this is Virtually impossible. If there is any legislation you have any interest in or want to write about or discuss, you need to do so as soon as possible. At the pace the General Assembly is mov ing, there are bills on tomorrow’s calendar wilh motions made to take them off that calendar and consider them today. Sessions are lasting from 11:00 a.m. until 11:30 p.m. with committee meetings from ’ 8:00-11:00 a.m. Il is limes like these when you 1 find out how well people work together and how diligent they are in their efforts. You also find out what politicians really mean when , they say - what is best' for North Carolina. Hopefully wc will do the right thing. We appreciate yoiirinterest and being a part of North Carolina’s;: legislative process. Mjfprs: Trial Was Unfair S t a t e S e n a t e Is D e b a t in g L o t t e r y B i l l T o the editor:' : ' I wish to express m y thoughts about m y trial, whicK was un fair, because I wasn’t in Davie County on A pril 25, 1988. Í The jury and judge said “ guilty” , but I am not guilty. I was tin. Elizabethtown. I'm sure someone did pass a stopped school i bus on said day . The ones w ho accused me made a mistake. They .M id that tiray.iiadntt seen another white Cadillac like ours, but tiwre are tyyo more in Advance, and I have seen one down 801 ; northbound at the home o f the ones w ho said I did this crime. Information W№ gathered about us because on the weekend rfbilowing this passing o f the bus, someone was seen around our house and the law was called. The next week, m y sons called the law because o f someone being at our house and us gone, and one o f the bus drivers w ho was driving on Peoples Creek Road was asidng 'qiiestipns o f our whereabouts from one o f our grandsons 2»(lití'rodcflÚ ».bu¿', - ‘ I’m mad| and justly so, because I ’ve done nothing to these people to cause to do roe t№ way. But with friends like these, no one' - iweds enemies, b^ause.they are all you need. Elizabeth M . M ye rs ^ Route 3, Advance Excellent ^ T o ^ r ‘ ‘p n behalf o f the Tarheel Triad Girl Scout Council I would like ^tip' t ^ ik you and your reporters, Robin Fergusson and M ike Bam - . 'ii^ t , for their sensitive Aug. 3 feature story of the Outreach Day C ^ p at Cam p Seven Springs. The Davie County Enterprise Recffrd can be counted on to cover stories o f programs serving >^ e youth of the county. In this one issue I counted four full pages jpliis'articles covering stories about young people. / W rsonaliy, I believe the Enterprise Record mirrors the interests ^ c o n c e r n s o f the residents of Davie County. This is intended 'así a'compliment because I think the residents o f this county are unusually caring people, concerned aboul the welfare of each other. , A s a new G irl Scout field executive, 1 recently experienced this 'generosity. W ith the help o f a staff recruited from Davic Coun ty,' I was privileged to direct a camp for children in this county who do not usually have the opportunity to go to camp. Sixty-six children had this positive self-image building experience due to t|ie support o f the Davie County United Way, Department of Social Services, School Health Team, Food Service Personnel of the Hospital, Health Department, Davie "County Service Cenlcr- Y V E D D l and numerous businesses. These agencies and businesses were generous in their contributions o f time, manpower, exper tise, materials and funds. Nine years ago I chose Davic County as my home bccause I sensed the specialness of ils residents. M y cxpcrience this sum mer confirms these feelings. Thank you, Davie County, for car ing, for generosity and for your genuine concern for cach other. 1 look forward to working wilh your volunteers as we provide a program for your children. And, Davie Counly Eiilerprise Record, keep up the good coverage o fo u r youth. They need your uiieniion. Lorclla Brooks Smilh Grove B y Sen. Betsy L. Cochrane The lottery bill is being debated in the Senate. The bill proposes a referendum so the people can vote whether they want the lottery or nol. The proposal is for the fall municipal elections, but we hope to amend it to the general election when more voters go to the polls. This issue should be voted on by as many citizens as possible. If the people vote for louery, then we will have one. But, unders tand that it takes a lot of money for the bureaucracy lhat runs the lot tery. It is selling a chance on something, so it is gambling. 1 do not believe this is a respon sible means of raising revenue lo fund state services. It is an un.slable source of revenue on which lo plan budgets. And, it makes the slale ap pear to endorse a value sysicm that encourages irresponsibility. More poor people buy tickets than any other group, and they can afford lhal the Iea.st. Although the Senate will pro bably pass Ihe lottery, the House will be a harder hurdle for lottery 10 get over. You readers need lo learn aboul the issue, in case there is a referendum on lottery. ¡The U.S. Environmental Protec tion Agency is expected to declare 19 counties of North Carolina "noiiattainment” for ozone this year. The area comprises about 45 perccnl of the state’s population. “ Nonatwinment” means that an area is experiencing air pollution which exceeds the National Am bient Air Quality Standards. In this case, the residents are being expos ed 10 levels of ozone which are unhealthy. Davie and Davidson counties are in the group of 19 counties. Industrial emissions and motor vehicles are the major sources of the compounds which form ozone. The numbers of industrial facilities, like furniture factories,' in our immediate area, and especially the factories and cars in Forsyth County contribute to the air pollution of this region. Ozone at ground level appears as haze and creates problems for those wilh breathing difficulties. At very high altitudes, ozone protects us from the hot ultra-violet rays of Ihe sun. We need to protect ozone in the ouler almosphere but minimize the creation of ozone at ground level. If EPA finds the ozone levels loo high on frequent occasions, it could lead lo .special emission controls on our motor vehicles. Mecklenburg Counly residents are already re quired to have such equipment on their cars and trucks. . , The consolidation and reorgan ization of government agencies relating lo health and the environ ment has finally passed. That pro posal from the governor was in- trouced very early in the session but has traveled a long, rocky road to ratification. The Senate has passed legislation to repeal the intangibles tax on ven ture capital companies. This will encourage the formation of venture capital companies domiciled in North Carolina. This also brings us in line with other states. It sends a message to the business com munity that North Carolina has a good business attitude and climate. The General Assembly has ratified the Stream Watch Bill. Since I was a primary sponsor wilh Sen. Bob Martin, 1 am particular ly pleased that the bill has become law. To become a stream watch group, citizens choose a body of water and agree to do any one of a number of types of projects on its behalf: clean-up and restoration; water quality m onitoring; surveillance of historical and natural attributes; public education; rccreation programs; or establish ment of trails and greenways. B y its action, the:'GeneralS’ Assembly ,has. made , the. :Strcam ' Watch Program an official part of slale government. It gives statutoiy - responsibility for it to the Depart- ;, ment o f Natural'Resources and. Community Development. Putting stream .watch into the statutes provides the legislature’s backing for its goals of education and stewardship. Òhe hundred o n so member groups haVe adopted , waters located throu^out the .state, from mountain strejuns to pied-. mont rivers to coastal estuaries. ‘ A survey in the. 16 spiith(^tern. states indicates North C^arolina r ranks second in the whole region v in the minimum annu^ salary for;, permanent staté . employes — $10,980. Geòrgia ranked first at : $11,994. Arkansas was in 16th' place at $6,968.‘ . ' . This survey data reinforces the i soundness: of North Carolina’s , salary plan for state employees. We are in good shape in our region , now. After July I, our minimum salaiy should be at $11,419 with\; the 4 percent adjustment authoriz ed by the General AjKmbly. When ; you look at the region. North' Carolina is doing a pretty good job for its state employees. LegioTrSummer Exciting To the editor: Thank you for the excellent job your staff at the Enterprise- Record did in eovcring the Mocksville-Duvie Legion baseball team this summer. W c fans looked forward cach week to receiving our copy o f the paper, so lhal we could read about anil enjoy the photographs of our wonderful team. M any volunleers in our county gave unselfishly of their time in support of this leam, and those of us who atlended these games religiously appreciate iheir line el'l'orts. T o Ihc leam and ils coaches we say, •'Congratulations.'' W e were proud lo follow you all the way to the state linals and lo witness both your athletic ability and your good sportsmanship. W c have become very attached to all of you aiitl arc already look ing forward lo nc,\l season. Although you finished this season se cond in the slate, you are first in our hearts. M any thanks lo everyone who made ihis exciting summer such a success. Anila Long M ocksvillc READ ALL ABOUT IT! If it’s important to Davie County, it’s in the Enterprise-Record. From the courthouse to the cornfields, from the football field to the classroom, from the church to the civic clubs ...we cover it all. Have the Enterprise-Record delivered to your mailbox each week. Send S18 in-state, $22.50 out-of-state to; E n te rp rise -R e co rd P.O. B o x 5 2 5 M o c k sv ille , N C 2 7 0 2 8 4-D A V IE COUNTY ENTERPRISl' RECORD, THURSDAY, Лиц. 10. 1989 Marijuana Seized Continued From P. I More of the county was search ed Tuesday wilh lhc liclp of tlirce helicopters, but no more marijuana was found, ^ “ It’s there, but tliey’ve got it scattered pretty well,” Williams said. “W e’ve covered the whole county and then some." The department suspects more marijuana is being grown indoors, he .said. Willlaiiis callcil the scarch a suc- ccss. “ 11 was worth it. Al least wc got ihat much off the slrcel." Allhiiugh no arrests are c.v- peclcd. W illiams said he plans lo contact latidowncrs and Id Iheiii know what is being grown on their properly. Landowners keeping a closer walch on their property could pre vent marijuana from being planted or lead to an arrest, he said. Teens Facing 10 Charges ; Continued From P. 1 On Aug. 4, a Davie woman was ' driving ea.st on U.S. 158 when • another ear began following\her, - Dillon said. - The car passed hers near The - Pines trailer park and an objecl was ’ thrown onto her car. The woman - followed Ihe car, a red Camaro, on ; U.S. 158 to N.C. 801 to Riverview ; Townhouses where she was able to ; copy down a license plate number. ; Another motorist had obtained a : -i^ ia l license plate number, Dillon : -said. The car was registered lo Spillman’s parents. Spillman is a counselor at a home for troubled boys called New Life For Boys, Dillon said, ll is located at 70 Whitney St., and has been open about a month. Cleaveland and the two Juveniles are thejonly youth residents at the home, he said. The two were placed in the Davie County Jail in lieu of an $8,000 bond each, pending a Sept. 28 appearance in Davie District Court. Deputy Jimmy Phipps, Detective Jerry Williams, and Deputies Art Ebright, Janice Howell and Floyd Fawcett unload confiscated marijuana. — Photo by Robin Fergusson ' A i fl | ?s , D r. A .O . W alker iiM a»o iilG , D E II-P ic n ic S a tu rd a y throughout the day. A picnic din- Cjner will be held in the aftemoon. ' i i Amusement rides will operate dur- ing the day and'night. Mion costs for young, black residents of Davie County, and to the Central Orphanage in Oxford. Also appearing Saturday after noon will be Traci Cuth^rtson, M iss Darlc & Lovely 1989-90. iM a n F o u n d G u ilty jirt D W U O tiie r C lia rg eI\ Karca J a r ^ ;..: ‘i'iOavki County Enterprise-Record ^ . \ f l ' X Davie County man charged | v with DW I and driving too fast for >Gonditiom was foiihd guilty Aug. ^^3 in ltevie District Court. S Curtis Van;Dayis plc»ded not '^guilty because Ik believed hisV i|blo6d test, taken at Davie Coun^' i^Hospital, was huiipered by the u k '^ ' t^of rubbing alcohol on his arm ;^beforp blood was taken. R Davis registered a .19 on the ;^blood test. Davis, represented by Attorney n;Tom Keys, was charged after he i’was involved in a single vehicle ac- >.;cident on Farmington Road on Jan. i;; N.C. Highway Patrolman W.D. ^;Groonis investigated the accident. ' < “He said he was over at a i;fnend’s house and had a few ivbeers,” said Grooms. “He was •'mad at himself for driving because J.'jie had been caught before.” ■Z Davis admitted he had been '-prinking and that he was driving ;*when his vehicle went off the road •¡Jnto a creek. ■- " I made it a habit of not drink- r-ing and driving,” said Davis. I^ a vis said he was not concerned ’.'about getting arrested for DW I. . “1 had slopped drinking earlier ;.around 9:30 p.m. and drove home around 11 p.m.,” he said. Davis said when he was in the hospital emergency room the nurse used alcohol to draw the blood from his arm. J.J. McDay, a chemical analyst with the State Bureautof Investiga- ..tion, said there is the possibiltiy / that if ethal alcohol is!used to draw blood it could affect the blood test. Davis said the nurse used isopropyl alcohol but he said he didn’t ktiow the difference between rubbing and isopropyl alcohol when asked by assistant district at torney James Honeycutt. Keys argued to Judge Kimberly T. Harbinson that the .19 was “ tainted.” “ Alcohol was used on the arm and could have contaminated it,” he said. Honeycutt said Keys wa.s speculating on his observations. “ W ho’s trying to put something over on the court,” he said. ■ Davis, who had one previous D W I conviction in the last seven years, was sentenced to 12 months suspended for three years, spend seven days in jail, pay $400 fine and court costs, obtain substance abuse assessment and comply with recommendations of assessing agency, surrender driver’ license and not operate a motor vehicle un til properly licensed. ^ Salon Phone: 492-5987 ^ Home Phone: 492-7879 10% Off B a c k T o S c h o o l P e rm S p e c ia l COUMTRY SALOH A UNISEX SALON Hwy. 6 4 West Diana Edwards Mocksviile, N.C. 27028 Owner/Stylist F o s t e r - R a u c h D r u g C o . Low es Shopping C enter S alisbury Street M ocksviile, N.C. 63 4 -2 1 4 1 -cm, .4?.» «g» DAVIK COUNIS’ I'NTKUI'UISK UKCORD. •nUIRSDAY. Лгц. 10, 1989-5 C o u n ty O p p o s e s T ra n s fe r O f W a te r F ro m Y a d k in B a s in By Kathy p. Chafnn : Davie Counly'Enterprise-Record The Davie County Board ol' ■ Commissioners voted iiniiiiinioiisly Monday to join in yet another legal I battle against the N.C. En- i vironnicntal Management ; Commission. The battle stems from the coin- .' mission’s July 13 issuance of <i cer- tificate approving the diversion of ! water from Lake Jordan iii the :■ Cape Fear Basin to the cities of : Cary and Apex in the Neuse Basin. ■ ; In lieu of the Yadkin-Pec Dec River Basin Commillcc’s plans lo : file a petition with the N.C. Office ;• of Administrative Hearings con- ■Mbsllng the issuance of the cer- ; tificate, Davie commissioners have ;’aii’thorized County Attorney John :;Brock to lake the proper steps lo :;iiipve to permit Davic County to intervene in the proceedings as an ^interested party. A resolution adopted at their meeting Monday afternoon says the certificate "affects Davie County and its citizens in that it could set a precedent for transferring water ;>;from the Yadkin River Basin to ;:;-areas outside its basin.” ::;’v The action was taken after an :;’liour-Iong executive (closed) ,ses- ; j'sion, during which contractual and ¡^•personnel matters were also ¡^'discussed as allowed under Ihe •:'N.C. Open Meetings Law. County Manager John Barber •ijsaid afterward thal he was very •“^concerned about the certificate ■ ’^^low ing the transfer of water from ■i^ne basin to another. ‘ ‘This is just crack in the dike so to speak,” said. , If something-isn't done, Barber I'r^aid the Environmental Manage- '.Jonent Commission’s decision could ’î-jeopardize the Yadkin River Basin ,>:and all the counties and cities it ;v?serves. “It’s so important to all of he stód. : :|î’ Comnüssioners voted last inonth îjto take the necessary legal steps to ' ^particípate as aniiiterested party in ' I^^ prtitipif for judicial review filed •;^ y the oppo^ls of a sewage treat- ■ IJrinenl'iJlarit oti Smith Creek. The five opponent which in- ' ^rçlude Çonùnissioner Ben Bahnson, "''requ^tln'the petition that the court ■JÍeiÜiér review the N.C. Office of ¿íAdministrative Hearing’ dismissal - íío f a petition for a hearing on a per- for the plant or actually revièw : :|>ÿe initial decision to gi-ant ^the '«permit.,; - 'í, ; -iy. Pàtil Wilms, director of the N.C. '.ibivision of Environmental ^;Managemém, is named as the .jtdefendaiit in the suit. : The division issued in January a ^permit allowing the sewage treat- '^ment plant, which will serve the : >?200-acre Hidden Creek subdivision ^/in : Hillsdale, to discharge up to ■¡rZQOfiOO gallons per day. of treated -::*wastewater into Smilh Creek. lioardOf iKdlustments iroMeet There will be a meeling of the ^3avie Counly Zoning Board of : :;rAdjuslmenl on Monday, Aug. 14, ;.at 7 p.m. in the commissioner's <room of the Davie County j-'Gourthouse. Lewis C. Carter has submitted ;.a request for a special use permit ■'Ao operate a public rccreation facili- C:ty behind his residence located on j;;(he east side of Gun Club Road (SR vM626). This tanning bed facility is ;;;fiirther described as being located vion the rear portion of parcel 164 '■;of lax map E-7. A sign will be posted on the '■sibove listed location to advertise - :ihe public hearing. All parties and ’ interested residents are invited to .attend the public hearing al which • ;lime they shall have an opportuni- - ly 10 be heard in favor of or in op position 10 the foregoing change. Prior to the public hearing, all persons interested may obtain any ■ additional informalion on Ihi.s pro- ■ ;posal which is in the possession of ■;:the Davie Counly Zoning llnlbrce- ■ iment Office in llic Davic Counly • Office Building on weekdays bct- . ween 8:30 a.m, and 5 p.m. or by '■ Iclephone al 63.^-33.10. Among llie coiilenlions пПсиЫ public liciillli and .sanilalion pm- oilier siunillcanl ailvcrsc impacls iVuin isim .Ir. slalL’il among oilier lo coiisliuilc a conlesled case and by llic pclilioners. who live liear bleiir. lower llie value of peli- on Ihe siream aiul llie pclilionors. reasons llial any review of Ihe per- eiled a delay in nolori/.ing the peli- .s'lniilli C re e k , is lhal its How is nol lioiiers' properly; impair ami In liis June 9 (.lisniissal of llie mil ileeision should be done in lion as one of Ihe reasons for his sullk-ieiil lo handle lhal imifli damage e.\isling u.ses nl'llie sireaiii: peliloii lor a hearing belore llie ОГ- Superior Courl. dismissal. The petition was filed on wa.slewater and lhal llie diseliaiue cause llie slrcain lo have as ils sole Псе of Adminislralive Hearings. Morrison also ruled lhal ihe peli- l-eb. 22. bul wasn'l notarized un- would Ihrealen biolie life; create a use a wasle channel; and cause Adminslralive-I.aw Judiie l-'red Ci. lion did nol allege facis surilciem lil March .S. H o l l y F a r m s G r a d e A LEG QUARTERS Prices in this ad good thru Sunday, August 13, 1989. Blue Grapes Or Red or W hite SEEDLESS GRAPES , Lb.J u m b o W e s t e r n CANTALOUPES 21-25 Ct. JU M B O SHRinflP Kibun IMITATION CRABMEAT New Zealand KIWI FRUIT 4i«1 Tart TA N G Y LIM ES 8/И E X T R A LO W P R IC E S ...E V E R Y D A Y Ü ! 32 OunceDEL MONTE CATSUP Ш 16 Oz. - Food Lion SQUEEZE MUSTARD 65« 16 Oz. ' Food Lion SOUR CREAM Ш 3 Liter COKE Classic $ ¿ 2 9 2 LKir DM Coke, CF DM Cota.........>1» 3U1W0M Sprit»,......................«1« 3 Liter Sprit«............................Ч» 16 Oz. - Greer APPLE SAUCE 1^5 Oz. Blackeye Peas/Pintos/ Great Northern/Pork & Beans LUCK’S BEANS 16 Oz. Cut Green Beans/14 Oz. French Style Green Beans/15 Oz. Whole Kernel Or Cream Style Corn STOKELY VEGETABlES 2 / 8 9 « 10 Oz. - Chef Boy Ar Dee/ 7.6 Oz. - Jeno’s Assorted FROZEN PIZZAS 11.5 Ог. EP/AD Vacuum Bag Flaked FOLGER’S/MASTER BLEND COFFEE 5 Oz. - 5 Ct. Biscuits BUTTER-ME-NOTS 14 Oz. - Frozen Chocolate/ Lemon/Coconut/Banana BANQUET CREAM PIES There is a Food Lion conveniently located near you: Squire Boone Pfaza Shopping Center Bermuda Quay Shopping Center Hwy. 601 North — Yadkinville Rd. Highway 158 and 801 lyionii^y thru Saturday: 8 a.*n. lo p m Mocksville, NiC. Advance, N.C.^___: p^i^^Sunday 9 a.m. - « p.m. б-DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE KECOKI). TIIURSDAY. Лик- К», I'J«9 Industries Make Garbage Rate Higher In Davie Continued From P. 1 Other counlie.s wilh .small populations and several inilustries tended to be above tlie nalioiiai average in Ihc aniounl of garbage generated, according lo Siilliviin. who helped conduct concurrcnt studies in Yadkin, Surry and Stol<es counties. ' "A s I rccollect. Davie and ^Yadkin were somewhat similar in their weights with Surry being maybe a little higher," he said. “Sloke,s Couniy was real low: they were down less tiian 2 pounds per capita.” Sullivan said he and others con ducting Ihe .sludie.s went back to Surry for an additional two weeks to check that figure, one week to weigh and another lo count trucks. “It was right,” he said, ‘‘That gets back to the industries, I believe, Stokes County has a lot of people. It’s got more people than Davie, but it docs not have the in dustries. Everybody commutes out of Stokes and works someplace else.” ;:;Sullivan said the studies in all •five counties were conducted in • What is the beginning of a national ; siump in the flow of garbage. Ac- ; cording to a national trend, the ; flow picks up in early spring and ; early summer, begins dropping off ; at the end of summer and stays ; ilpwn through December before it ; starts picking up again. ;-:“ You would think December ; would be a heavy month, but Jt!s : nor,’^ISullivan said. O f Ihc l.()-J-l,2 -)0 poiiiKl.s (il'g a r- Iw uc re ccivcil at the D a vic C o u n - ly U n u llill llic week (.l A ii!;. 22-28 o f last y e a r, the M u n ic ip a l lin g ine e rin g Services Co. Icslcd 1.1.10 pounds Ilf il tl) see w hal it eiintained. T h e tested garbage, all o f it residential, w as d ivid e d inlo ihe lo llo w in g categories; • C a rd b o a rd and paper. 3 6 .9 perccnt; • Organics. 23.y perccnl; • Gla.ss, 10.4 percent; • Textiles/rubber, 9.6 percent; • N on -fe rro u s (m elal containing no iro n ), 7 .4 pcreenl; • Aluminum, 6.2 percent; • Plasties, 3.6 percent. The 1 million-plus pounds of garbage received the week of the study was also analyzed to deter mine what area of the couniy it came from and whal type of hauler brought It there. According to the results, the largest amount of garbage — 442,890 pounds — came from the town of Mocksvillc. O f course, this includes the trash from dumpsters al downtown businesses, which Town Manager Terry Bralley said are sometimes used as dumping-off points for residents. “ Sometimes, it’s not waste generated in the lown,” he said. “That’s an old problem.” Areas in which the rest of the garbage was generated were as follows: southwest quadrant of the countjii282,670 pounds; southeast qnadrant of the county, 79,405 piMinils; A d va n ce . .‘i(i.2 S (l pounds; o u l-o r-c iiu n ty . 4 3 .0 8 0 pounds; Northeast i|uadranl o f the eoim - IV. piiiiiu ls: iiD rlhu esI i|uadrant o f the e o u iu y. 3 4 ,3 3 0 p o u n d s ; C o o le e m e e . 2 7 ,0 6 7 0 pounds; u n k n o w n . 3 .9 6 0 pou nd s; and l-a rin in g lo n . 4 7 0 poiinds. Contrael haulers - Davie Sanitation, whicli handles all the county's residential garbage as well as some eoninicrcial, and BTI and Davie Disposal, which handle the other coniniercial accounts — bring in well over half of ihe garbage received by Ihe landfill. The week of the study. 644,775 pounds of garbage was brought in by eoninicrcial haulers. Another 233,350 pounds was brought in by local government, and the remain ing 162,910 pounds by private vehicles. Concern aboul the amount of garbage going into the landtill was one reason Davie County commis sioners decided to start charging user fees. Fees range from $1 for a car to S3 for pickups and vans to $35 for 40-foot trailers. Though the fees were firsl pro jected lo generate between $75,000 and $100,000 a year. County Manager Barber lold commis sioners Monday that he now thinks the fees will bring in $200,000 an nually. That would go a long way toward covering the $380,000 pro jected cost of operating the land fill for the 1989-90 fiscal year which began July 1. The operating cost, however, is expected lo increase due to strict Davie residents produce more garbage per person than the state average. — Photo by Robin Fergusson regulations being proposed by the Environmental Protection Agcncy. Commissioners have taken other steps to prolong the life expectan cy of the landfill, which Smith pro jects to be 10 years. They purchas ed a tire splitter over a year ago to keep tires frotn taking up so much space and purchased an adjacent 21-acre tract last year for a demoli tion site to be used for the disposal of brush, tree limbs and other natural materials But couniy residents could help. Commissioner Ben Bahnson said, by cutting down on the amount of garbage they generate. ‘‘If a person manages their gar bage by recycling their glass and their aluminum, feeding scraps lo their dogs, throwing organic stuff in the woods, they won’t have any trash to speak of,” he said. “ But if somebody wants to fill up four or five trashcans a day, then it’s go ing 10 cosl them.” Like Bahnson, the four other commissioners believe that recycl ing is something the county needs to consider in addressing the issue of solid waste disposal. “ I think the whole country’s go-: ing to have to look at it,” said Commissioner Spurgeon Foster Jr. “ It’s going lo have to come.” Next week: Is recycling the answer? How much recycling is already being done in Davie Coun ty? What are the provisions for recycling in a Solid Waste Bill now being considered in the N.C. General Assembly? iNoise, Odor, Early Morning Greet Sanitation Workers }By Kathy D. Chamn ^Davle County Enterprise-Record j). 2:30 a.m. : The still of the night ;‘i8 fudely interrupted when a Davie -^aiütetion truck pulls out of the j(»mpmy’s parking lot onto Depot . ,^treet in MocksviUe. The truck’s lights cut a path . ijhrough the fog that has settled over town. ^ At the wheel is Mike Livengood, iyiho has worked for the company '.l^rK ve n of the past nine yean>. To iiis right is Tim Whitley, who is ling , his fifth month as a 1 worker,. 1^: 1№ough their workday begins jKxirs before dawn, both are wide iwake, and it's not firom a good Right’s sleep. I Whitley says he didn’t go to bed until 10, and Livengood was upun- inidnight. I “You get used to the hours,” he Mys. ■ They needn't worry about fäll i g asleep. The truck’s loud «noùgh to keep anyone awake. I Everything about ¿garbage truck fe noisy. T!hs gear shift squeaks, ÿie driver’s door tattles and the (-cylinder diesel engine seems to |oar'through the night. I "W e try to be as quiet as we can out here," Livengood says. “We ^ n 't want to wake everyone up, tat sometimes we can’t help it.” 1 It’s not until the truck gets to y.S. 64 that it encounters another yehicle. Livengood stops to let it ^ ss. i “ All right,” Whitley says. Livengood meets another vehi cle or two before turning left on Cornatzer Road, and then there’s tlothing for miles. A distant spotlight illuminates the scenery along the way. The going is slow at 35 to 45 mph, but a garbage truck won’t go much faster. It gives you plenty of time to take in your surroundings and to slow down for two dogs out on a moonlight stroll. “You see all kinds of things out here,” Livengood says. "Y o u see coons. You see a bunch of deer. Sometimes, you see eight lo 10 deer in a herd.” 2:50 a.m.; A sudden burst of light precedes the Sara Lee Knit Products distribution center just ahead on the right. Inside, employees have over five hours lefi in the third shift. It is not until Livengood is a half- mile fromJ'l.C. 801 that the first garbage is loaded onto the truck. Other residences were scheduled for pickup earlier in the week. Two garbage cans sitting by the road signal the first stop. Whitley jumps out to empty them, then steps on back of the truck and holds on as Livengood continues up the road. The truck pulls in at the next stop, a service offered for S2.50 mpre per month than roadside pickup. Reflecting a recent increase to cover the cost of the new landfill user fees, Davie Sanitation offers weekly roadside pickup for $7.50 per month. Pull-in service is $10 monthly. As long as the public is willing to pay for it, Russell Barber, who owns Davie Sanitation wilh his son, Lee, says they don’t mind of fering the pull-in service. “ But u is more costly for us to serve those people than il is for us to serve the roadside people even wilh the dif ference wc collect,” he says. The Advance Post Office is one of the customers wilh pull-in ser vice. Livengood stops the truck and gets out to help Whilley. “ They had it piled up,” he .says as he climbs back in. The next stop is another pull-in, and Livengood has to back out of a long driveway bccause there is no place to turn around. “ These take a lot of time, these pull-ins.” he says. Has he ever wrecked? “ I back ed into a ditch before.” Livengood responds, “ nothing destructive.” The truck, which hisses loudly each time Livengood hits a button activating a built-in compacter, continues stopping along the road to pick up garbage bags and pull ing into driveways lo get others. One customer forgot to put out his garbage. “ If it ain’t out, we can’t get it,” Livengood says to himself. Some residences have only one bag. Others have several. Some are in cans, and some are not. Three is supposed to be the limit. Barber says. But when people call and say they’ll have a little extra, “ we don't worry about it because I know there will be times that they have less,” he says. “ It averages out.” Six bags are piled at the curb in front of a residence on Polls Road, but Livengood says the man who lives there only puts il out oncc every two or three weeks. " I think he’.s some kind of businessman, and he’s not there all the time,” he .says. Just up the road, Livengood backs into a dirt road past several residences to get to one ciisloiiier. He gets out to help Whitley, then climbs back in. “ People think that we’re Samp son and Hercules out there,” he says. At another pull-in stop, a dog lied to an outbuilding runs back and forth the length of its chain while Whitley empties two cans onto the back of the truck. 3:30 a.m.: The fog has lifted, but daylight is still hours away. Livengood has slopped for a roadside pickup when a transfer truck roars past heading soulh. ‘‘Some of them slow down,” he says. “ Some of them don’t.” It’s worse on U.S. 64, where Livengood and Whitley pick up garbage on Mondays. “ Some of those trucks will come up behind you and you wonder if they're go ing to slop or not,” Livengood says. Cars are also sometimes reluc tant to stop. "Som e people give you a good cussing because they have to stop,” he says. “ You’ll find some good people out here, and you’ll find .some that don’t have any sense.” It was just three days earlier that Livengood and Whitley ran into .some drunk teen-agers while pick ing up garbage in Hickory Hill. Livengood says the teens follow ed them in a car, throwing beer cans out the windows at Whilley. "W e had a time wilh them,” he says. "W e finally went to the police station.” Livengood and Whitley found out later that one of the teens had had a parly while his parents were away. "Il was a customer.’’ Livengood says, "1 guess they thought they were going to have a joy ride, but that’s one thing I don’t have lime to contend with is a drunk person. 1 don’t have the patience for it.” At one stop on N.C. 801, trash is scattered in the driveway. One of the bags appears to have been torn, probably by a dog, Livengood says. "Som e people put ammonia on their bags lo keep the dogs out,” he says. More dogs apparently got into trash bags sitting alongside Under pass Road. “ In Bermuda Run, sometimes you’ll find where coons got in them,” Livengood says. "A n d some house.s, you go up to a trash can and a couple of squirrels'stick their heads out.” The garbage truck continues its route, turning up Overlook Drive, Whitehead Drive, Jackson Drive, where the Winston-Salem Journal has already been thrown out. Another customer forgot to leave out his trash, Livengood com ments. "T h is evening, when we get in. he’ll call down there, fuss ing and raising Cain, saying we missed his trash,” he says. “ I've seen it happen so many times.” Some people just forget; “ But some of them may be on vaca tion,” Livengood says. 4:10 a.m.: Livengood reaches for a thermos and gulps down a few swallows of water. He continues to gel out regularly lo help Whitley load the garbage. A little further down the road, a man in a jogging suit passes them with a morning greeting. He’s not the only one out. Up ahead, a blonde cocker spaniel returns to the scene of the crime just afler Whilley has scooped up most of the scattered trash. 4:50 a. m.: Back on 801, a rab- bil scurries alongside the highway in front of the Tar Heel Banana Co. Livengood turns down numerous side roads, but always ends up back here. . . The stops beconie more fréquent in the Raintree housing develop* ment. There, the garbage is ^ C in g ' in neat, matching wliich blend in with the affluent s e t t in g . ' • Livengood watches Whitley in the rear-view mirror before going onto another stop. “ I always kee]> an eye on him to make sure nothing' happens,” he says. “ To me, I'n i responsible for üim. ” ■ . The traffic is picking up by the minute, “That's one reason we get out early,” Livengood says. “ IÎ we got here at 6:30 or 7, we'd get run over.” 5:20a.m.: Livengood arrives at the U.S. 158 intersection and pulls to the far side of the By^Lo park- ing>lot. 'Liveiigood says they'll have \6- waif at thè service station until 7- , a.m., which is the earliest the truci» can go jQto Bermuda Run., у ; He doesn't seem to mindi “ K gives us a'rest before we get ini- there,” Livengood says. ' . ; Whitley climbs inside the track/ and leans against the window. BotK nap on and off for the next hour.. By 7, they're in Bermuda Run,:^ where it takes from 2 to 2 Vi hour& to cover the stops. Then,; ■ Livengood hauls thé load .to th&' landfill to be dumped and returns! to the Davie Sanitation office, on' Depot Street. ; : Anywhere from 10 to 11,'about the time most people are finishing; their second cup of coffee,: Livengood and Whitley are on their:, way home — another day’s worK behind them. • ; Our New Car Loans Wont Wreck\bur Budget. о FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS BANK (704) 634-5981 Equil Opportunity Undtr Mam Olfice 230 N Cherry Slreel Branch Officer 490 Hanes Mall / 3-44 3 Robinhood Road n o S Stratford Road /3815 Reynolda Road 1001 Waughtown Sueet / 6000 Universay Parkway Mocksville Ollice 142 Caiiher Street Clemn^ons Ollice 2^61 LewisviKe-Clemmons Road 919/723-3604 DAVIK COIJN'I V KN TKRIMUSK RliCORI), I HURSOAV, Aiij;. 10, 1989-7 Burning Trasil Banned By Nortii Carolina Law : B y Kathy D. Chafnn Davie Counly Enlerprise-Record l:; /и /Jie hcghming, people burned '■Ihcir garbage. Then, man discovered air pollii- ..tion and realized it nv/.v oflii.i own . making. So law.s were pa.'i.sed, and man iiw.i left to fm d other чго’л to dispose of his waste. . County landjills were created, and people took their trash lo Ire buried. Others fdled gullies on their own land. Over time, some people forgot the laws and went back lo burning garbage. And pollution lived luip- pily ever after. : ;It’s againsl the law to burn trash ;in the state of North Carolina. ;; Bul pcoplc do, according to ■.Hugh Jcrnigan, environmental engineering technician for the Winston-Salem office of the N.C. Department of Natural Resources and Community Development. The punishment varies for those caught violating the law. “ Usual ly for a homeowner, they get a warning the first time,” Jernigan said. ■' After Ihat, a fine may be impos ed. “It can vary from a few hun dred dollars to $5,000,1 think, per violation,” he said. “We’re con stantly looking at stricter enforce ment.” . The problem, Jernigan said, is that the department only has three air quality field people to monitor burning in 14 counties. “So we . don’t run across everything,” he said. In fact,-Jernigan said the depart ment usually hears about illegal ^tning through phone calls from neighbors. ' Л' In investigating a complaint, a field person goes to the residence in question and looks for evidence of illogiil liurnliii;. " If wc see lliat. we lell llicni lliey ejin'l ilo il ¡myniiire." he s;iiil. Diivie Counly Pire Mar.shiil Glen Slanley said llie county ha.s it.s share of illegal Ininiiiig. " I Ihink it's a problem slalewide," he said. Slanley said he believes sonic people aren't aware lhal the only things lhal can he burned legally are leaves, brush or other plant iiialerial.s, and even lhal has lo be done according lo certain specifications. At least one Davie County com missioner didn't realize it was il legal 10 burn paper. “Country peo ple have a burn barrel," he said. Stanley .said: “ 1 think we've got good people in Davie County, and they'll abide by the law if they know what it is.” Counly Manager John Barber said he rarely receives a complaint about someone burning trash. In other counties in which he has been manager, there were complaints, he said, especially when next-door neighbors had clothing on a line. When it was first enacted, the law prohibiting open burning also made it illegal to burn leaves and brush. Barber said. “ That happened when I was in' Davie County before,” he said. “I would say it was 1972 or 1973. You were not allowed to burn anything. "O f course, we had citizens who for years and years had burned their leaves every fall. So there was a very vocal opposition to those rules.” Legislators amended the law during their next session to allow the burning of leaves and shrub bery trimmings. Thè open burning regulation in the Nonh Carolina Adminstrative Code allows the “open burning of leaves, tree branches or yard trim- miQipjkiyille Briefs Town-N^S Volunteers Volunteers are needed. Town Manager Тепу Bralley said he needs people who are win ding to help in the maintenance of the 200 U.S. flags Mocksville displayed on July 4. ' “We need to maintain what we’ve got,” said Bralley. An organized meeting for potential volunteers is planned for •Aug. ■23'at 7 p.m. in Ihe Davie Counly Public Library. ‘We also accept donations,” he said. “We've got $250 now and we need to let folks know we would accept donations." Each flag, including the pole and bracket, costs $9. Bralley said the price was very go^ considering the average retail price is $17. Bralley said he is hoping to receive enough money to buy more flags to diq)lay bn other streets. 'This year tlw flags were displayed on Main Street to Milling Road, on Wilkesboro Street and a section of Salisbury Street. Bralley said he hc^s to display the flags al olher holidays throughout the year. Piedmont Natural Gas Gets OK Start digging. That’s what Mayor D.J. Mando told officials with Piedmont )4atural Gas at MocksvUle’s Town Board meeting Aug. I . ‘We’re tnily excited about serving your area, ” said John Stegall. „ Jeff Gobble, also representing Piedmont, said he doesn’t ex- ..pect any major problems. “This year the line will dead end behind \the town hali, then run a line out to Ingersoll Rand, out to Duke Street and lo the nursing home,” he said. Gobble said after the completion of Ihat project the company .will tun the gas line on through town, up U.S. 601 to Hardees and the hospilal, come back up town to North Main Street to Mill ing Road and Bethel Church Road. Gobble said gas connection to Lee Apparel should come no later .dial the last of October. .. Gobble said residents along the way would be able to be con nected. “If there is a request off the main line, we'll just work up Ihe individual line," he said. Public Meeting Scheduled A public meeiing has been scheduled to discuss the widening of U.S. 601. Byron Brady, with the slate research and planning in Raleigh, will meet Davie County residents on Aug. 30 in the Mocksville Town Hall from 3 p.m. to 7 p.m. Town Manager Terry Bralley said resiUcnls and property owners are urged to come by and offbr their opinions about ihe widen ing. Bralley said people can come in any lime during the four hour period. Cemetery Needs Maintenance Robert Hall told fellow board members al their monthly meelliig Aug. I about his concern of Rose Cemetery on Cemetery Street. Hall said the cemetery looks like a cow pasture. “ I just think we can do a bellerjob lhan lhal where our ccnielcry's concenicd." The grass is mowed once a week and with all the recent rain, said Hall, that's not enough. Board members commended ihelr current mainlenance crew bin agreed they need help. "They have a lot orihiiigs to mow, I realize lhal,” said Town Manager Terry Bralley. Mayor D.J. Mando .suggested allowing c.xira money in the Um n’s budget that would allow extra help during ihc summer. niiiigs originating on the premises оГprivate residences anil Iwrricd on lliose premise.s in areas uliere no public pickup I'aeilities are available." The code stipulates lhal the bur ning take place between S a.m. ami 6 p.m. when there is no ban in ef- Icct and that il not create a nuisance. The open burning rcgiilalion also allows burning I'or land clearing or righl-of-way maintenance in areas other lhan those zoned solely for residential or used primarily for residential purposes provided five conditions are mel. The coiulilions are listed on building permits available through the N.C. Fore.stry Service. Jernigan said the deparlmenl has the authority to forbid an open bur ning if the conditions are not met. That happened recently lo Joe V. Gobble of Sheffield Road. Jernigan said Gobble was pro hibited from burning a pile ofbnish becausc he had poured motor oil on it in violation of one of the con- Old appliances are stored at Davie landfill for shipment to be recycled. dilions and becausc of a question as lo whether Ihe brush pile w'as at lesat 1.000 feel from any dwelling, another condilion in the code. The stale law prohibiting the burning of trash leaves county residents with the legal options of taking il lo Ihe landfill, paying to have il taken there or burying the garbage on their own land. Joe Mando, director of the En- vironmenlal Health Division of the Davie County Health Department, said giirbage must be covered wilh at least two feet of dirt lo be suffi ciently buried. Some people, however, fill gullies on their land with garbage. “ If it's their own garbage and their own land, I don't know that that would be illegal,” said Buck Hall, environmental health. specialist for the division. Occasionally, the deparlmenl receives a complaint about garbage dumps. When that happens. Hall said, “ we go to Ihe site and cither have them remove the garbage and take il lo the landfill or cover it Up in a sanitary manner so Ihe rats arid stuff won’t get in it.” “ W e don't have a whole lot 6f that Ihat goes on,” he said. CAROUHATiRE C L O S I H r t J T S A L E ! SALE ENDS SATURDAY END OF SEASON AND END OF YEAR CLEARANCE! GREAT VALUES IN MOWERS, AIR CONDITIONERS, STEREOS AND MORE! MANY ONE-OF-A-KIND SPECIALS IN STORE! ALL ITEMS LIMITED QUANTITIES! HURRY! 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TI!UHS1),\V. Лик- 10. m ‘> Public Records L a n d T ra n s fe rs The following land translers have been filed with Ihc Davic Coumy Register of Deeds. The transactions are listed by parties involved, acreagc, township and deed stamps purchased with Sl representing $1,000. — Dorothy Williams, Franklin Edward Williams, Alma Williams, Sanders McAllister and Eva Mac McAllister to Richard W. Williams and Dorothy W. Williams. I tract. Fultoji. SS.50. — River Hill at Bermuda Run to Alan T. Sterling and Carol Sterl ing, 1 lol, Farmington. S75. — Matoka Evans to Ronnie K. Barnette and Linda B. Barnette. 2 tracts. — George Daniel Foster and Hazel Foster lo Ronnie Wayne Foster. I tract. Mocksvillc. S20. — Frank Zamoni and Barbara Zamora to Etchison Realty and In vestment. I lot, Mdcksvillc, S29.30. — Earle A. .[ones ami Virginia J. Walton to Randy Bailey Seanion and Karen Green Seamon. 2 tracts. Calahaln. $38. — Roy W. Call Jr. and Jean D. Calilo Claude R. Horn Jr.. 9 lots. Mocksvillc. $115. — Loui.se S. Hartley. Katherine S. Poole, J. Kermit Smith. Laura H. Smith. Norman B. Smith. DiMHthy II. Smith. W. l.awrcncc Siiiil)). liilna Ci. Smith. Helen S, Wrcnn. Charles Wrenn. Robert O. Smith. .Sylvia P. Smitli, William R. Smith. J. Steven Smith. Monica S. Jordan. Joe D. Jordan. Janel M. Smith and Alice E. Smith to Roy W. Call Jr.. 4'/; lols. — Carol M . Dyson. R.C. Dyson. James A. Miller. Brenda Miller and Kip Miller to Jerry F. Swicegood and Judy D. Swicegood. 1 lot. $7. — Morris W. Palmer. Ann W. Palmer to Stephen L. Robertson and Jean Rolicrt.son. 1 tract. Shady Grove. S30. — Linda Sue Green to Daniel A. Prevette and Patsy Sue Prevette, I tract. Clarksville, .$50. — J.D. Shields Sr. and Chaltie L. Shields to J.D. Shields Corpora tion. I tract, Mocksville. — J.D. Shields Inc. to A.G. Rcavis lo D.A. Reavis. 1 tract. Mocksville. $280. — Carolyn Whitaker Duncan to Carolyn Whitaker Duncan and Avery A. Duncan Jr.. 1 traci. Mock.svillc. ; — Sandra G. Burl to William H. SchafTer and Delore.s H. Schaffer, 1 lot, Farmington, $133.50. — Virginia F. Jones to Edmund F. MacDonald and Catherine W. MacDonald, I lot. Farmingtoji, $237. H ig h w a y P a tro l The following traffic accidents were investigated last week in Davie County by the N.C. .Highway Patrol; Truck Strikes Trees . A Georgia man driving a transfer truck Aug. I on U.S. 64 ran off the road and struck several trees. According lo a report by i;:ffrooper D.R. McCoy, Patrick I № rb e n Amrhein, 37, of Augusta J^vas iravellng east on U.S. 64 when i'}ie failed lo see a car slopped in ^;3ront of him waiting to make a left turn. Amrhein applied the brakes lo the truck, .skidded and swerved off the road, striking trees. Damage to Amrheins's 1988 Freighlliner was estimated al $6,500. No charges were filed. Dodge Truck Hits Utility Pole No charges were filed in a single vchicle accident Aug. I al 4:20 a.m. on U.S. 158. According lo a report by Trooper D.R. McCoy, Mona Rae Seoll Rexrode, 35, of Advance was traveling west on U.S. 158 when she ran off the right shoulder of the road and lost control of her truck. Her truck skidded back across the road and struck a utility pole. Re.\- rode said a transfer truck forced her off the road. No charges were filed. Damage to Re.xrode's 1988 Dodge was estimated at $2,100. Driver Flees The Secnc An unknown driver left the scene of an accident on Aug. 2 at 9:50 p.m, on Davie Academy Road. According to a report by Trooper K.B. Steen, the 1985 Pon tiac was traveling north on Davic Academy Road when it ran off Ihe right side of the road and hit a ditch. Damage to the car was estimated at $600. M an Faccs DVVl Chargc A 46-year-old Advance man faces D W I and driving lefi of center charges after a two vehicle accident on N.C. 801 Aug. 3 at 4:10 p.m. According lo a report by Trooper B.L, Crider, Larry Douglas Bailey of Route 3 was traveling southwest on N.C. 801 and entered a righl curve. Bailey crossed Ihc ccnter line and struck a vehicle driven by George Michael Robertson, 25, of Clemmons. Damage lo Robertson's 1982 Ford was estimated at $ 1,200, and to Bailey's 1982 Datsun truck, $750. Truck Overturns In Ditch A 16-year-old Mocksville teen ager was charged wilh failure lo wear a seal bell afler a single vehir cle accident Aug. 5 on Liberty Church Road. Thomas Eugene Clark II of Route 1 was traveling north on Liberty Church Road when he entered a left curve and ran off thè right side of the road, according ló a repon by Trooper L.D. ChapV pell. Clark then skidded out of con'-- trol off the left edge, struck a ditch and overlumed. '■ Damage lo Clark's 1983 Toyota truck was eslimaled al $3,500. ' A i |e s t ^ _ _ S h e riff’s D e p a r tm e n t j!h : V tj ; The following were arrested by tjhc Davie County Sheriff’s I'iliepartment. h '' — Clinton Anthony,Beaver, 20, pof Route 3, Mocksville, charged 3 with breaking; entering and S.'^rcehy. from à motor vehicle, feï j - Duel Edwarà Stnith, 27, of lÎKoute 1, Advance, charged Aug. ■ fidl'wlthfMsauIt. ■. . P Jeflrey Payid Beaver, 27, of i:367 Spring St., Wtbcksville, eharg- ■ Aug. 2 with driving while revoked. V ■ ^ -^ Merriel Eugene Reavis, 57, Route 6, Mpcksville, charged Ëg. 1.with violotiohpf probation; 4 L e o i^ Roy t)ean Holland, j'bf Route 1, Harmony, charg- 'July 28 with larceny. Bw — David Brian Sebastiaii. 21; of Morgutpn, charged July 28 wilh larceny;of à firearm. i| , — Timothy Wayne Harris, 31, 'I of Route 3, Mpcksville, charged I) July . 29 with communicating ;threat8.\V;-^ Thomas Lèe Dyson,; 32, of Route?, MocksviUe j charged Aug. 3 with assault. ' — Ronald Eugene “Pete” Jar vis,'^, of Routé 4f Mocksville, ■ j charged Aug;. 6;'with operating a ' aotoibpat wiÀbut identification. ! : — Rodney Howard Link, 16, of [l 19 Siinset Drive, Mocksville, cl^ ed Aug. 4 with failure to pay for citation. The following incidents were reported to the Davie County Sheriff’s Depanment. — Samuel Edward Hall of Route 2, Advance, reported July 29 the larceny of a battery charger, Weedeater and other items from a residence off N,C, 801 near Bailey’s Chapel Road, — Reynold Erastus Duncan of Route 1, Advance, reported Aug. 3 a license plate was lost or stolen from u tool box off N.C. 801 north of 1-40, i t — Michelle Lynne Holloman of Greensboro reported Aug. 3 the larceny of an estimated $75 worth of jewelry from the pool area of Lake Myers Campground. Fires Davie fire departments respond ed lo the following calls lasl week. July 31; Mocksville, 6:09 p,m., tree fire, 424 Park Avenue; Center, 6:30 p.m., shed fire, U.S. 64 just west of Sheffield Road, Mocksville called for backup. v Aug. l! Fork, 12;29‘p.m., auto accident, U.S. 64. ; A l«. 2: Mocksville, 12:37 p.m., aulo accident. Valley .Drive; Fork, 7:10 p.m., ' smoke reported. Hickory Hill, Cornatzer-Dulin called for backup; Mocksville, ! {'; — Jeffirey Lawrince Scott, 26, .7:33 p,m,, aulo accident. Country , pf;420.Moi>e St., Mocksville, Lane. charged Aug. 6 with failure to ' comply with court order, ; i- — U>nnie Allen Thomas, 23, of Mocksville, charged Aug, 3 with ' manufacturing marijuana and with : breaking, entering and larceny of ■ à motor vehicle. Aug. 6: Mocksville, 10:37 a.m., possible structure fire, Wilke.sboro Street; County Line, 3:44 p.m., fire alarm. Poor Boys Road, Center called for backup; Mocksville, 10:35 p.m., car fire al The Pantry, north. I The following incidents were reported to the Mocksville Police Department last week. — Randy Woolen of Route 1, Harmony reported Aug. 7 the larceny of his 1982 Renault at a value of $600. Woolen recovered his car around 10 p.m. the same day while il was silling on the side of the road on Interstate 40. — Sherry Hewitt of Route 2, Cleveland reported Aug. 4 thal so meone damaged her vehicle while il was in the parking lot of Inger- .soll Rand. • Darrel Andre Cain of 300 Milling Road was arrested Aug. 2 and charged wiih forgery and uttering. Traffie Accidents • A 27-ycar-old Mocksville woman was charged wilh making an unsafe irari'ic movcmenl al'icr a wreck Aug. 2 at 12:37 p.m. iin Valley Drive. According lo a report by Patrolman G.A. Bag.shaw, Robin Latham Seaford of Sunset Terrace Apartments drove her truck through the intersection and collid ed with a truck driven by Samuel Paul Phillips, 61, of Sanford. Damage to Scaford’s 1984 Ford was estimated al $3,500, and to Phillips 1979 G M C , $1,500. • No charges were filed afler a two car accident Aug. 4 on U.S. 601 in front of Caplain Slevens Restaurant. David Lee Black, 31, of Roule 2, Advance was traveling north on U.S. 601 when he failed to see a car stopped ahead of him wailing to make a lefi turn, reported Patrolman R.J. Lapham. Black drove his car into a car driven by Daniel Carl Crolls, 34. of Route 7. Mocksville. Damage to Crotts’ vehicle was estimated at $3,000 and ui Black's 1981 Ponli.ic. $4,51)0. — Priscilla Ann WiUiams of Route 4, Mocksville, reported Aug. 3 the larceny of a bicycle, wilh an eslimaled value of $50, from the yard of a residence off Boxwood Church Road. — Hoyle Kevin Foster of Roule 1, Cleveland, N,C., reported Aug. 3 the breaking, entering and larceny of an estimated $1,500 worth of tools from a work site off Cedar Grove Church Road. — Robert Potts of Route 2, A d vance, reported Aug. 1 vent win dows were broken by a rock or BB gun off Markland Road. — Shane Michael Tuttle of Route 3, Mocksville, reported Aug. 2 the passenger side window of a truck belonging to Morgan Drive Away Inc. was broken behind Horns 76 Garage. — Bonnie Cason Leroy of Roule 2, Advance, reported July 31 damage to a mailbox off Fork Church Road. — Katie Morgan Leonard of 2201 Granada Drive, Advance, reported July 28 a mailbox on La- Quinta Drive was damaged, — William Terry Campbell of Route I, Harmony reported Aug. 2 a mailbox off Doby Road was damaged. — John Communale of Roule 3, Mocksvillc, reported Aug. 1 a mailbox off Merrells Lake Road was damaged. — Linda Boggs Johnston of Roule 3, Yadkinville, reported Aug. 1 her vehicle was damaged in the Mocksville Manufacturing parking lot. — Rhonda E. Myers of Route I , Mocksvillc, reported Aug. 2 the breaking, entering and larceny from a residence off Prison Camp Road of fishing equipment and a Weedeater. — Barbara Dewelt of 622 Spyglass Hill, Bermuda Run, reported Aug. 1 the larceny of seven luncheon knives from the residence. — Grace M cCracken of Winston-Salem reported Aug. I someone passed a counterfeit $50 bill at Food Lion, Bermuda Quay. — Brodie Washington Rudd of 208 Brentwood Drive, Advance, reported Aug. 1 the larceny of a cellular telephone, wilh an estimated value of $ 1,200, from a car parked off Brentwood Drive. — Joann Wyatt Howard of Roule 7, Mocksville, reported Ju ly 31 the burglary of a residence off Deadmon Road. — Jerry Dale Jones of Route 2, Advance, reported July 31 a mailbox was damaged ofif Fork Church Road. — Connie Shoffner Potts of Roule 6, Mocksville, reported Ju ly 31 she received harassing telephone calls. — Deborah Ann Martin of Route 1, Advance, reported July 26 the breaking and entering of a residence in Polls Trailer Park, — Birlie Louise W hile of Cooleemee reported July 28 so meone threw a rock threw a win dow off Oak Street. — Charles Leroy Williams of Route 4, Advance, reported July 28 someone drove a vchicle through a cornfield, causing an estimated $200 damage. — Larry Gilbert Allen of Cooleemee reported July 30 so meone threw rocks at windows and tore screens at First Baptist Church, Cooleemee, — Brenda Joyce Seats of Route 4, Advance, reported July 27 the larceny of property from a residence off Renee Drive. — Eugene Gray Brewer of Roule 8, Mocksville, reported Aug. 4 a box of trash was dumped alongside Angell Road. — Buddy D. Gough of Roule 5, Mocksville, reported Aug. 5 so meone drove a truck onto a yard off U.S. 601 north of Mocksville, causing an estimated $50 damage. — Glorria Turner Gaither of Mock.sville reported Aug. 6 the breaking and entering of a residence in Davis Trailer Park. — Earl Jefferson Hammer of Route 8, Mocksville, reported Aug. 5 a mailbox was damaged off H o s p ita l E R The following patients were ircalcd in Ihe emergency room al Davie Counly llospiial. The hospital only releases inl'or- nialion on patients it considers a public record because ol'ihe natiue of Ihe injury. — Thomas li. Clark II, 16, 11:26 p.m, Aug. 5, scrapes suf fered in an automobile accident, trealeil and released. - Angela .M. .Sleele. 18. 8:16 p.m. AiJt!. 2, broken rihs and bruises to Ihc chcsl sulTercd in an aiiioiM(ihile;icvidenl, transferred to Angell Road. — Howard Paul Kanitz of Route 6, Mocksville, reported Aug, 6 the breaking, entering and larceny of an estimated $131 worth of household goods from a residence in 601 North Trailer Park. — Lawrence Lovell of Route 1, Mocksville, reported Aug, 3 the breaking and enteriiig : of .a residence in Oakland Heights, ^ — Samantha Lynn Peacock Cooleemee reported Aug. 4 thè larcney of an estimated $160 froni the kitchen area of F& F Barbecue} Greasy Comer. ' i North Carolina Baptist Hospital. — Lorclla A. Breedlove. 22, 8:09 p.m. Aug. 2. head injury and interior chest bniisc.s, siilTercd in :m automobile accident, iransfcr- red lo North Carolina Baptist Hospital. — Patrick Annhcin.-It). I p.m. Aug. I. bruises sulTcrcd In an automobile accident, dischargeil on Aug. 2. — Phyllis B. Brown. M i. 7 :50 p.m, July 31. neck strain suffered in an automobile accident, livalcil and releaseil. Mocksville Laundry & Dry GltMM« S erving M ocksvilfe & Davie C o u n ty W ith Quality:. 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IMCre«i(e*A*Space iv'p how it caiiaoikloryou' THE SEWING ROOMNmI to Deck»J(M n«it*urvri I•ISO C«phU DfUl, CUnmena T«a-«20| BERNINA'm C4vr\gjtinfnt aiid fiâliptoiocl lo <10' Ч lb lot M'Mjye itfigbiioi coin(on.ible ÛW all diV ^^>9 Opiioiial (ull si/e cuitMH) nul aikJ iiwlcbing ixilcr DAVIK COUN TV KN I KKl’RISK RKCOUI), THUKSDAY, Ai.«. 10, 1989-9 Fancy Playhouse It started out as a sandbox. Then Stan Riddle decided his children needed shade, then a playhouse. Now, they can play, swing and slide. Stan gets help from son Bill in photo above, while in the photograph below, sisters Katie and Jessica and neighbors LeAnn, Holly and Robin Creason join the fun off Marginal Street in Cooleemee. — P ho to s by Jam e s B arringer Success Stories atDGGC. Henry MIckens Candy Hamlin ■ DAVIDSON COUNTY ■ "m Community College Locatcd halfway between Lexington and Thomasville on Bitshiess Loop 1-85 P. O. Box 1287, Lexington, North Carolina 27293-1287 (704)249-8186 • (919) 475-7181 An Kqual Opportunily Affirnvuivi* Action Institutinn -enry M ickcns earned his high school diplom a. Dennis Snyder com pleted a collcgc transfer program that led to a four- year degree and a teaching career. Candy H am lin learned high-level skills that led lo a management posi tion. Success stories like these—thou sands of them—be gin at Davidson Counly Communily College each year. Start your own suc cess story al DCCC. Contact our Admis sions Office today. M o c k s v ille P la n n e rs E y e S p e c ia l U s e Z o n e O p tio n li.v Kiiruii .larvis Davie County Enterprise-Record Mocksville residents may soon have a new zoning option. Tmvn planning hoard members approved last Thursday night llic addition of special use districts to the town's zoning ordinance. Under Ihc special use re quirements, a special use permit could be i.ssiied in a situation wiien a particular use may be acceptable in a zoning district that does not allow that use. Town Planner Steve Leary said the new addition would allow the town board to aprove a proposal of a specific use with reasonable con ditions lo assure the compatibility of the use with surrounding properties. “ It gives the planning board flexibility we’ve never had before,” he said. Leary said no special use permit would be approved unless the following requirements are made; • The use or development is located, designed, and proposed to he operated so as to maintain or promote the public health, safety and general welfare. • The use or development com plies with all required regulations and standards of the ordinance. • The use or developmenl will nol adversely impact surrounding property. Leary said the permit would be issued only for something the com munity wants or needs. Permits would not be issued until all members of the immediate com munity agree with the petitioners proposal, said Leary. The petitioner has to request a special use permit, said Leary. Approval of the permit could be affected by such things as the ad dition of screening and buffer areas, the timing of the develop ment, the relationship of the pro posed properly to the surrounding property, parking areas driveways, waler and sewer improvements and any other conditions the developer may find to his advantage. ;■ An example Leary previously gave was the building of an agriculture grain and feed store In a residential district that was used by mostly farmers. The current zoning ordinance would nol allow a business to'be placed in that district, but with the addition of special use di.striets, a developer could request a special use permit to build a store in that district. ' Upon its compliance with the community and its nature of business, the permit would pro bably be granted, said Leary.-, Special use zoning is not new fd the area, said Leary. Winston- Salem and Greensboro have used the zoning ordinance for a few years. “ 1 really like Ihis zoning tool,"” said Carol Rhea, a planner wilh the North Carolina Department 'of Natural Resources and Communi ty rJevolpment. “I think it'sgoiiig to be good for the town" ' ' ', GARDEN SHOP Your On* Stop atrdm 1335 W. INNES ST. «3A-4742 STORE Mon. - Sat. 8:30 am -5i30 pm HOURS Wednesday 8:30 am - 1:00 pm Take Care Of Unwanted Weeds and Grass with ROUNDUP I -1 QI. 41% Concentrate ' «Ready To Usa 24 Oz. KlUS WHOS AND aRAMES ROOTt AND ALL 3 Gallon T R O P I C A L F L O O R PLANTSReg. *19«: $ ^ ^ 9 S We Have Plenty Of PINE BARK And PINE NEEDLES Mulching Is the smart way to cpnwive \ moisture and keep the weeds down. MNC NEEDLES $ 4 7 8 3 Cu. Ft. BAO BARK $ 2 7 9 Check Your Landscape Plants! 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Pro.seculing was James Honeycutt, assistant district attorney. — Susan Mullins Baldwin, driv ing 80 mph in a 65 niph zone, reduccd by D A to 74 nipl) in a 65 mph zone, pay .$10 fine and court costs. — Francis Marion Bell III, driv ing 75 mph in a 65 mph zone, reduced by D A to improper equip- menl, pay court cosls. — Bobby M, Booe, assault wilh a deadly weapon, prayer for judg ment continued on condition he not threaten, harass or go around the prosecuting witness. — Kenny Dale Brown, unsafe traffic movement, dismissed. — Michael Gray Byerly, driving 70 mph in a 55 mph zone, reduc ed by D A to improper equipment, pay court costs. — David Bruce Campbell, assault with a deadly weap6n, prayer for judgment continued on condition he not go around, threaten or harass the prosecutin witness. — Rodney Darrell Chunn, failure to return hired property, prayer for judgment continued and ordered to make restitution. — Geoffirey Chase Chitea, driv ing 76 mph in a 65 mph zone, reduced by D A to 74 mph in a 65 mph zone, pay $10 flne and court costs. , • — Eddie Cregar, failure lo return hired property, sentenced to W days suspended for 12 months, make restitution and pay court ,costs. . - —/Eugene Giles Driver, DWI (Btesithalyzer mults .70), driving while license perinanaidy revok- . ed, rediii^ by DA to driving while UcenM revoked , sentenced to four - yeats suspended for five years, pay $2,000 fine and court costs, not operate a motor vehicle until pro- perlyJlicensed and spend 90 days in jail; consuming a malt beverage in the passenger area of a vehicle, dismissed. ■ — Pamela Renea Evans, driving 63 inph in a 50 mph zone, reduc ed by DA to improper equipment,' . pay court costs. ■ -^ Anthony B. Everett, driving 93 mph in a 65 mph zone, reduc ed by DA to careless and reckless driving, sentenced to 30 days suspended for 12 months, pay $50 flne and court costs: — Annette Forney, no vehicle insurance; sentenc^ to' 30 days suspended for 12 months, pay $25 fine and court costs and not operate a motor velucle until properly licensed. ' Donald Forrester, driving 79, mph in a 55 mph zoiw, sentenced to 30 days suspended for 12 months, pay $25 fine and court costs, surrender driver's license and not operate a motor vehicle un til properly licensed. — Richard Willis French, DWI (Breathalyzer results .14), sentenc ed to 60 days suspended to 12 months, pay $100 fine and court costs, surrender driver's license, not operate a motor vehicle until properly licensed, perform 24 houre of community service, attend the alcohol and dmg education traf fic school; driving while license revoked, dismissed. , — Vincent John Gallo, expired registration plate, dismissed. — Shannon Dale Hall, driving 75 mph in a 65 mph zone, reduc ed by DA to improper equipment, pay court costs. — Jean Anderson Heal, failure to wear a seat belt, pay $25 fine and court costs. — Randy Scolt Jarrell, D W I (Breathalyzer result . 11) sentenc ed to 60 days suspended for 12 months, pay $100 fine and court costs, surrender driver’s license, not operate a motor vehicle until properly licensed, perform 24 hours of community service, attend alcohol and drug education traffic school: notice of appeal filed; driv ing 80 mph in a 65 mph zone and consuming a malt beverage in the passenger area of a vehicic, dismissed. — Robert Lee Jarvis, DW I (Breathalyzer results . 17), sentcne- ei) lo fj() days suspended for 12 niDiilhs. pay SlOO tine aiul eimrt costs, surrender driver's license, mil (iperiile и motor vehicle until properly licensed, perlorm 24 iiours oi’eommunity service, attend the alcoliol and dnig education Iraf- lic .school al menial health center, given crcdit lor assessment and ordered to comply with recommen- dalions of assessing agcncy; sim ple pos.session ol' marijuana, scntcnccd to 30 days suspended for 12 months, not commit a similar offense and pay S100 line and court costs; too fast for conditions and failure to stop for the scene of an accident, dismissed. — David Angelo Jones, driving without a licen.sc, no vehicic registration, pay $25 fine and court cosls and not operate a motor vchi cle until properly licensed. — Robert LeeJones Jr., driving 76 mph in a 65 mph zone, reduc ed by D A to exceeding a safe speed, pay $10 fine and court costs. — Timothy Ray Laney, driving 81 mph in a 65 mph zone, reduc ed by D A to improper equipment, pay court costs. — Wilbert Ray Lewis, assault on a female, sentenced to two years suspended for three years, obtain substance assessment and comply wilh recommendations of assessing agency, receive treatment for alcohol probletn, not go around the prosecuting witness, pay $100 fine and court costs; assault on a female, sentenced to two years to run at expiration of previous sentence, make restitution and ordered not to possess any knife or deadly weapon. — Thomas Jennings Matlock, driving 88 mph in a 65 mph zone, sentenced to 30 days suspended for two months, pay $25 fine and court costs, surrender driver's license, not operate a motor vehicle until properly licensed. — Carlton Norris Mclver, driv- _ing 83 mph in a 65 mph zone, reduced by D A to exceeding a safe speed, pay $10 fine and court costs. — Donna Joy Miller, driving 77 mph in a 65 mph zone, reduced by D A to 74 mph in a 65 mph zone, pay $10 fine and court costs. — Rodney Lynn Pittman, driv ing 80 mph in a 55 mph zone, reduced by D A to exceeding a safe speed, pay $25 fine and court costs. — Danny Plowman, assault on a child under age 12, sentenced to two years suspended for five years, not threaten or harrass the pro secuting witness, pay $50 fine and court cosls, not commit a similar offense, not violate any state or federal laws, remain in general good behavior and attend the fami ly violence treatment program. — Christopher Lee Shrewsbury, driving 84 mph in a 65 mph zone, reduced by D A to exceeding a safe speed, pay $10 fine and court costs. — Terry Wayne .Sinilli, ini- pmper repistralion plate, dismissed. — Billy Steverson. improper backing, dismissed, — David William Sireil. expired driver's license, di.sniisseil, — Joseph W illiam Tucker, failure to yield to oncoming traf- Пс, dismissed. — Charles Dennis Turner Jr.. driving 80 mph in a 63 mph zone, reduced by D A to 74 mph in a 65 nipli zone, pay SIO fine and courl costs. — Kenneth Eric Wickslrom, driving too fast for conditions, dismi.s.sed. — Tony Lynn Wilson, two counts of driving while license revoked, rcduced by DA lo driv ing without a liccnse, sentenced to 120 days suspended for two years, pay $100 fine and court costs, not operate a motor vchicle until pro perly licen.sed, not commit a similar offense, not violate any state or federal laws and remain in general good behavior. Failed To Appear The following people failed to appear for their scheduled court appearance. — Dana Gail Barber, driving 79 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Franklin Dale Barbee, driv ing 84 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Marion Bobby Allen Jr., driving 75 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Aaron Anderson, driving 70 mph in a 55 mph zone. — Keith Alan Aten, driving 85 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Steven Michael Barone, driv ing 80 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Julie Johnson Bechter, driv ing 76 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Melinda Ellaine Blodgett, driving 75 mph in a 65 mph zone. — David Wilton Bovender, DW I. — William Richard Boyd, driv ing 80 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Lois Edmondson Bradley, driving 76 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Carl Richard Burlman Jr., failure to wear a seat belt. — Anlhony Harold Cagley, ex ceeding a posted speed. — Allen Bryan Carlton, driving 85 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Christopher Robin Chandler, resisting an officer, possession of drug paraphernalia and simple possession of marijuana. — Pierre Eric Collet, driving 80 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Tracy Leon Gaston, driving 75 mph in a 65 mph zone. — William Keith Gillespie, driv ing 85 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Terry N. Gowey, driving 80 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Louise Victoria Isenhour, driving 75 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Gail Edge Isenton, driving 80 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Michael William Johnson, driving 74 mph in a 50 mph zone. — Kenneth Lynn Jones, driving 80 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Barbara Weaver King, driv- NATIONWIDE MAKES IT e a s y ! In our busy, hurry-up world, the last thing you need Is to write several checks to pay your Insurance policy premiums. Yoijr Nationwide agent can combine all your insurance needs into one sound program. Then, with Natlonwide's One Check Plan, you can take care of all your premiums in one monthly payment. One full coverage insurance program .,. one agent... one check. Keith Hiller J.E.Xell^Jr.Willow Oak Shopping Center 281 N. Main StreetHwy. 601 N. Mocksvilte, N.C. Mocksviile, N.C.Phone (704) 634-6131 Phone (704) 634-2937 NATIONWIDE INSURANCE Nationwide is on your side Nai.on*.ae Mutual insurance Comtjan, . Kali0n*,0e Wulujl Fne i.isu«ance Company NdtiOt««iia« L'le Il'iu/ai'CB Coni(yjr,f . HortJif olt'CV CoiumVu». OHiO ni-irv vi H i.i,u,ji iniviri.k I. C.rncuihr iiiL! 79 niph ill a Iì5 inpli /one, — Dale Anlhony Minor. I'ailuie lo wear :i .seal bell. — Muriel Yvonne I'eed. driviiii; 77 mph in a iiipli /one. — .Ilian Jiise I’ereida, driving wilhoiil a license. — Peggy Ullis I’elers. driving nipli in a S.“! mph zone. — .Icl'l're) Michael Phillips. I'ailuie lo wear a seat hell. — Clirislopher Huhen Ramscur, driving 78 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Andre Pierre Reid, driving without a liccnsc. — Frank Robinson, assault on a female. — Joe F. Rosario, driving 77 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Dwiglit Ashley Scotl Jr., ex pired regislration plate. — John Cornclious Simmons Jr., driving 76 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Linda Huggins Tanner, driv ing 75 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Tina Miciielle Swicegood, improper passing. — Stephen Biggs Thomas, driv ing 85 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Joseph Horvath Tibor, driv ing 78 mph ina 65 mph zone, — George Ztogas, driving 80 mph in a 65 mph zone. Trials Waived The following people waived their righl to a trial and paid their fines early. — Scoti A. Brodeur, driving 80 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Caly Allan Council, driving 80 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Geneva Mitchell Robinson, driving 76 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Darrin James Spivey, driving 85 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Patricia J. Wagoner, wor thless check. — Harold Leon Recce, failure lo wear a seat belt. — David Carlisle Hicks, failure lo wear a seat belt. — Lawrence Hayne Rolhrock, driving 65 mph in a 50 mph zone. - James Nesbit Garner Jr.. railiiie lo dim headlights lor on coming Iral'nc. — Lewis Bryan Correll. I'ailure to wear a seal belt. — Vickie KaDiryn Cline, driv ing 77 mpii in a 65 mph zone. — Earl Arcliic Halford, driving KO mph in a 65 mph zone. — Clayton Edgar Hefl'ncr, driv ing 79 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Albert Levcnslcin, driving 78 mph in !i 65 mph zone. — Willie Malone, driving 75 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Cynthia Marian Wray, driv ing 78 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Melissa Anne Greene, failure to wear a seat belt. — Johnny Darrell Thompson, driving 70 mph in a 55 mph zone. — Jaiifes Ross Worley, illegal passing al an intersection. — John Gunnar Nyboer, driving 80 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Christopher Frank Bachelder, no current vehicle registration. — Peggy Ellis Peter, driving 69 mph in a 55 mph zone.' — Sean Patrick Douglas, driv ing 76 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Caroline Anne Waller, driv ing 75 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Geneva Mitchell Robinson, driving 76 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Mark Harden Mabe, driving 69 mph in a 55 mph zone. — Thomas Joseph Green, driv ing 70 mph in a 55 mph zone. — Donna Marie Pills, driving 76 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Harry Dane Linder, driving 78 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Melissa Smith McEuen, ex ceeding a safe speed. — Jonathan Dana Cochenour, driving 76 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Adam Charies Vesely, driv ing 80 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Darryl Lamonie Covington, driving 80 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Mark Allyn Slackpoole, driv ing 78 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Patrick Dean McCarter, driv ing 75 mph inj’a 65 mph zone. ndiaiali Sii/anne Tail, failure to wear a .seat bell. — Jessye K. Routin, driving 75 mpli in a 65 mph zone. — Jeanclle Lee Snyder, failure lo wear a seal bell. — Steve William Smilh Jr., failure to wear a seal belt. — Larry Patrick Pccle, driving 78 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Nancy Lorene Mills, driving 70 mph in a 55 mph zone. — Jeffrey Winston Mayfield, driving 76 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Barbara Ann Mabe, driving 77 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Joanne Estes White, driving 80 mph in a 65 mph zone. — James Quentin Mooe, driving ’ 65 mph in a 55 mph zone. — James L. Boyd, driving 78 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Johnny Everette Buelin, driv ing too fast for conditions. — Mark Douglas Dillard, ex ceeding the posted speed limit. — David Israel, driving 80 mph ■ in a 65 mph zone. — Anthony K. Ladd, driving 80 mph in a 65 mph zone. — John Frank Scolt, improper . passing. — Lynn Carter Shields, driving 76 mph in a 65 inph zone. — Beatrice Suzanne Stewart, driving 79 mph ina 65 mph zone. — Randy Dewayne Terry, driv ing 78 mph in a 65 mph zone. . . — Frankie James Sangster, driv ing 78 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Carla Marie Graves, failure.. - lo wear a seat beh. — Dreema Lashea Drum, failure ,' to wear a seat belt. ', — Michelle Denise Giay, failure ' ' to wear a seat beU. — Farrell Haycraft, failure to’,; wear a seat belt. — Ronnie Lee Brown, failure to stop at a stop sign. — Marcus Brady Alexander, . failure to yield right of way to e 'f ' stop sign. — William Burgess Church; ex-, v ceeding a safe speed. ' ' Cro¥m\^ Drugs M B ack To School Values! 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THURSDAY, Лиц. 10, I989-1B Mocksville Offense Collapses In Finals Whiteville Needs Only 5 Games To Advance B y Ronnie Giillaslier Davie County Enterprise-Record W hen Ihc American Legion stale champion ship scries with Whiteville began lasl week, M ocksville Legion fans were wondering if the long, drawn-out season would ever end. A flcr Whiteville wrapped up the series in five games, those same fans were wondering why it all had to end so soon. After racing through the playoffs virtually unscathed, M ocksville’s offense collapsed in almost eerie fashion against Eastern champion Whiteville. Despite putting more runners on base in the five-gamc scries, and despite the fact that Whiteville pitchers walked a whopping 46 bat ters in five games, the clutch hit was never to be found for Post 174. “ I just don’t understand it,” said an ex asperated Dale Ijames after M onday night’s 8-4 loss that handed Whiteville the title. “ W hen they had runners on, they hit four or five sacrifice flies. W hen wc had runners on, wc hit into four or five double plays. “ W e threatened and threatened and threaten ed,” he said. “ One hit in any o f those clutch situations could have turned the series around.” Instead, Whiteville was team making all the big plays. If Post 137 needed a sacrifice fly or bunt, a player got it. A stolen base? H e got it. A diving catch? N o problem. Even Linw ood Hedgepeth, W hiteville’s longtime coach, seemed a bit miffed after winn ing his second Legion championship. “ M ocksville could have easily won this series . with a little luck,” he said. “ I don’t know how wc did it." Whiteville will now rcprcscnl North Carolina in Ihc Soulhca.slcrn Regionals in Baseball City. Fla., beginning Aug. 16. a E a rly Lead To force the series back to Whiteville for a sixth game, Mocksville had to win Monday nighl in front of a large crowd at Rich Park. And for one of the few times in the scries, it scorcd first. Gray Bovender, subbing for Chad Triplett at shortstop due to a sore arm. walked to open the first and trolled home on Anslo Fow ler’s home run to ccnter. W ith Denny Key on the mound, two runs seemed to be enough. But the W ake Forest-bound pitcher was not the same man that threw beautifully in a 1-0, second game loss. K ey was pumped beforehand, thinking W hiteville would throw first-game winner LeGrande Russell, a freshman at Campbell University. But when Hedgepeth started lef thander Rising instead. Key lost a little bit o f his emotion. “ Denny was really pumped ¡.t Ihe prospect of pitching against LeGrande,” Ijames said. “ It took a little out o f him when he started R ising.” And another lefthander took something out of Mocksville. “ Lefties have killed us,” Ijames said. “ W e didn’t hit Brow n of Concord or Lee o f Stanly County. They’ve eaten us alive.” It also became apparent to Ijames that the team would not manufacture runs in the scries and the long ball would win for Post 174. “ In every other game, we waited for someone Please Sec Whiteville — P. 2B Michael Shore leaps over a Whiteville player after forcing him out at second. Whiteville won the American Legion state championship in five gam es over Mocksville. — Photo by Jim Barringer For One Long Summer, Walker Was A Part Of Us Walker ‘ I was trying the figure out the best way to descrite the impact Brocke W alker had on M ocksville during the Sum m er o f ‘89. 1 (ipuld list his statistics, his game-winning R B Is and his defensive prowess in centerfield. ' ■ - But when you talk about ;W dker/; it goes beyond ;' any statistic. T h is is an lin e a r old w ho <lraws, people to him. W ithout be- -ihg too corny, he has that type o f magic surrounding ^ him that leaves m any in :awe.. ■ ^ ; : Star quality, I think they call it. / In the eighth inning o f W hiteville’s fifth- g ^ e , 8-4 victory .Monday night that wrap ped up the Am erican Legion state champion- D a v i e :Ü a ç e s :: ; Falcons Scrimmage Saturday A s has been the case over t h ^ / P past few years. West Row an ' w ill face Davie County in the first scrimmage of the season and Randall W ard will be on the field. However, Ihis time, he will be wearing a Davie County l)at and his blue and white has been exchanged for orange and black. But he will still look at both , teams as “ his boys.” W ard, beginning his first 1 season as coach of his alma mater, will face West Saturday night at 7 p.m. in Dijvie C oun ty Stadium. Adm ission is $1. “ There arc two things scrim mages are for,” W ard said. “ One, it lets you see where you are and what you have to work on. Sccond, it let’s you play against .somebody el.sc.” The “ somebody else” is a team W ard helped build inlo a I consistent playoff contender. “ A scrimmage helps you gel a base of offense and defense Please See I'oothall - 1*. 61» R o n n i e G a l l a g h e r ship, one lady perched on top of the “ Mock.sville M ountain” was almost in tears. “ I’m going to m iss that team,” she said. “ Especially Brocke W alker. I like that boy.” She w asn’t alone. W hen the contest had ended, the fans poured down to the rightfield fence to shake hands with W alker and his teammates. It had become a ritual for W alker and “ his” fans. He pickcd up a little baby. H e talked with elderly ladies like each one was his grand mother. He joked around with his newly- found friends. Comm unication is what W alker brought u'iih him to M ocksville ihis siiiiimcr. He won over his teammates and fans alike. He was as . friendly lo five-year old Andrew Dayw alt as he was to 85-year old Jim Bowles. People noticed his smile as readily as his 6-3, 195-pound frame. “ Brocke has one of the best attitudes of any player I ’ve been around,” said coach Dale Ijames. In football. W alker plays quarterback, a highly-visible position. In baseball, he is a centcrfieldcr, another highly-visible position. But amazingly, he was not given his due during his high school years at Starmount. The school was tucked away somewhere in Yadkin County and North Carolina’s major newspapers stayed clear — or either, couldn’t ' find the place. Football coach B.W . Holt us ed to complain that the Ram s never got'any viable coverage until the state playoffs began ' — and even then, il w asn’t what the team deserved. - i :; ' i i' That all changed this sum mer when Ijames and W ake Forest coach George Greer coaxed : W alker into playing his first — and only — : year o f Legion baseball. Suddenly, he was looking up at 2,000 scream ing fans. After playing in Yadkin County, Rich Park was like Yankee Stadium. A nd W alker w ill never, ever forget the experience. “ I really loved every minute o f it,” he said after the season abruptly ended M onday night. “ I ’ve never experienced anything like ' Please See Galli«ber — P. 2B- 4 1 ' '■I.' ! , И.,| ! ::i r.h L ib e rty M e th o d is t W in s C h u rc h T it le M'.'i ‘if»'. ill 111 Davie County football coach Randall Ward talks with senior quarterback Matt Marion dur ing practice Saturday morning. — P h o to by M ike Barnhardt L ib e rty w on the M ocksville/Davie Parks and Recreation Department’s m en's church league championship last week, defeating First M ethodist in the w inner’s bracket game and also in the cham pionship round. Libe rty’s biggest victory came in the winner’s bracket against First Methodist in a come-from-behind, 8-6 victory. After that, Ihe team never look ed back. First Methodist took an ear ly lead with three, first inning runs but Liberty came back for five, three on Jim M ichaels’ home run. Tim m y Steele also aided the cause with two hits. Billy W all ended the game in spectacular fashion by fielding Kenny Hellard’s grounder up the middle, stepping on second and firing to first baseman Ken ny Stone for Ihe double play. Thai win may have been the biggest but the 12-run victory over Victory earlier in the tour nament may have been the sweetest. Victory just nipped Liberty in both the regular season and loumament cham pionships last year. Liberty began the louriiameni with a 10-run victory overTur- ivniine in five innings. Liberty w on ^ the regular season with a 7-1 record. Men, Women Playofrs The m en’s and wom en’s leagues will conclude their tour naments Thursday and Friday at Rich Park. Bameycastle went through the men’s league undefeated at 16-0, nipping Crow n W ood, which finished 14-2. Fuller W elding was 9-7, In g e rso ll-R a n d 8-8, B a rr ' Heating and A ir Conditioning 7-9, M & J Market and A sFab 6-10 and the Enterprise-Record and Smith 3-13. The men’s finals are schedul ed for Friday night. Shore’s and Cornatzers were declared co-champions in the wom en’s league, both going 13-2. The Junior Stars were' 9-6, followed by Crow n W ood (5-10), Jockey (3-12) and Hanes (2-13). The w om en’s finals are scheduled for 8 p.m. Thursday and another game al 9 p.m., if necessary. M e n ’s O pen Crews/Carter won the open league regular season, played at Please See Softball — P. 7B . ''.jr m ■2B-DAVIE COUNTY KNTKUI’KISK KKCOKI), TIIUKSDAV, Ai^. 10. 1УК9 The Only Winner in Wiiiteville Was Rofeertson / _________________ — - - - -- ------- - - --- -----------------«кагл« •■«%«••«#] rl »»tt Î4 ^ Va ^ I Si ЩI .. | ч There was only one thing positive that happened in •r-'Whiteville during the first two days of the Legion state finals and it had nothing to do with Dale Ijanies nr any of his players. Legion Notes Each night, the Whiteville Legion gave away cash. Officials went through the stands for eight innings selling tickets for 25 cents apiece. On the .second night, the cash pot was $226 and David Robertson of Davie County was the lucky recipient. If Robertson tried to pay off the umpires, il didn’l work. Mocksville lost the game, 1-0. Hunting Trip ■ Shorty Taylor didn’t sit with the Mocksville fans during the first game against Whiteville. Instead, ■ he sat with his hunting buddies from Whileville. ‘ ‘Russell LeGrande’s father and uncle have been hunting with me for 48 years, ’ ’ said the 72-year old Taylor. “ His unclc, Elwood, has about 12,000 acres down there and it’s good deer hunting country.” Taylor isn’t alone. Among the Mocksville entourage who has hunted frequently in Whiteville are .Dan and Matt Marion, Gray ’ Laymon and Paul Lagle. ‘ ‘I come down here to hunt about ' five times a year,” said Taylor. : Close Call •: Whiteville rightfielder Calvin , 'Freeman cringed as soon as the ball left Anslo Fowler’s bat in the top ' 'оГ the ninth inning and his team . -winning 1-0. ; • Matt Webb was on first when . - -Fowler sent a long blast to the outer . reaches of centerfteld. .“1 closed my eyes and just / ' started walking t ^ k in,’’ Freeman ; told reporters aftefwar^. “I knew • itw asout.” : But in a g a m of close calls for MocksviUe;\‘this - was just that. 'Cente^elder and North Carolina- bound Byron W ard caught J.. Fowler's idrive. while leaning 5. against the fence some 400 feet ' ,away. It was the second straight batter . that Freeman had watched while I;'holding his breath. The batter ! > before, Chad Triplett sent a drivé *> to left that was caught three feet h fix m the fence. ) ' ‘,‘Г т just glad the wind wasn’t i blowing out,” said Whiteville . coach Unwood Hedgepeth. ^ Homer Umps Before the series ever began with Whiteville, Ijames compared the umpires ftoni the east and west and basicdly came to the conclusion |;,tlut down east/the east got the Despite a 3’/2-hour drive to Whiteville, Mocksville fans still packed its side of the stands. calls. It was amazing how Ijames hit it right on the head. “ In those two games, they tried stealing five times and made it every time,” Ijames said. “We tried twice and were thrown out.” But Ijames was really seething in the sixth inning of the second game, a I-O Whiteville victory. With Brocke Walker on sccond, Marion sent a scorcher down the third base line scoring Walker. But wait, the third base umpire called the ball foul. “ I told him the ball was fair and he knew it. But I also told him I realized he couldn't make the fair call down here,” Ijames said. “ I told the home plate umpire the same thing. He told me he didn’t _sce it.” But once back at Rich Park for game 3, the tide turned. Sudden ly, Mocksville was getting all the calls and Scott McDaniel even tljrew out his first runner of the séries. _ Interested Onlooker One witness on Davie County's side who wasn’t surprised by the powerful pitching performance of Whiteville's LeGrande Russell in the first game. J.C. Hendrix played his freshman season with Russell and _ was his personal pitcher. “If we needed a strike, he threw the curve ball,” Hendrix said.^’He threw a no-hitter against Augusta College. He’s good. He could’ve gone anywhere.” Hendrix did think Mock.sville could win, however. “ I figured if anyone could beat LeGrande, it was Mocksville,” he said. “ They have some great hit ters. But it was just his night, 1 guess.” Power Shortage A s far as Mocksville Legion of ficials are concerned, this is get ting ridiculous. The lights at Rich Park went out during the third game of the state finals series, in what seemed like the umpteenth time in the past few years. ‘ ‘The breakers just get too hot, ” said Legion President Sonny Kurfees. “ And when il docs, wc have to wait for them to cool down, which is usually around 20 minutes.” It was the second time during the playoffs that the lights have halted a game. The same thing happened in the Southern Division champion ship against Concord. “The lights have been going out for eight years,” scoffed Kurfees. “ They have been checked by various electrical companies and they all seem to know the problem. Bul none of them have a solution.” Juggling The Sports Matt Marion should have been tired going into Saturday’s third game with Whiteville. He was — but you’d have never known it. Marion didn’t get much sleep during the state championship series. After the first game at Whiteville, Marion hopped in his' mother’s car and drove back for football practice at Davie High School. “ We got home about 3 a.m.,” Marion said. “ I went to practice then ate a good meal and came back for the game.” He did the same afier the second game, practicing with the War Eagles in the morning and then playing that night. Tired? Forget it. Marion went 2-for-5 with two home runs and four RBIs in Mocksville’s 20-10 victory. Marion went back to practice on his own, mainly bccause he wanted to play in Saturday’s scrimmage with West Rowan. A state rule says a player has to be present at 11 practices before he can play in a scrimmage or game. And despite the importance of the state finals, Marion wants to play football. “ It was my decision,” said the senior quarterback. “I want to play in the scrimmage. I don’t want to miss anything.” Football coach Randall Ward was certainly impressed. “ It shows his character,” the first-year coach said. — Photo by Jim Barringer More Football Marion is just one of several leaders on the Legion team who will see action as a football quarter back this fall; • Brocke Walker will try out as quarterback for Wake Forest. • Chad Triplett will be Star- mount’s signal caller. • Mike Lovelace will return as quarterback for West Forsyth. Beating The Stress Mocksville Legion coach Dale Ijames is usually pretty good at hiding his disappointment after a loss" but even he was distraught after the 1-0, second game loss to Whiteville. So, how did he beat the stress of two straight losses. “I gave lectures,” he said. “ I gave one on the way to the park and one on the way back lo the hotel. That’s how I beat it." M r. Baseball ' Linw ood Hedgepeth, W hiteville's crusty baseball veteran, has made Whiteville into a baseball town. He has several high school and legion champion ships to his credit over the past two decades. Whiteville won a state Legion ti tle in 1975 and most recently, won a state 2-A crown at Whiteville in 1989. He was runnerup in 1977 and 1978. He has five overall, counting two he won at l-A Hallsboro. He has also i;oached two firsl round draft choices ¡in Tommy and Patrick Lennon. ; Hedgepeth has a 205-49 record at Whiteville and the old pro docs things a little different — lUcq " coaching first base instead of third. ' " I have a younger man hclpifig me coach and il's time for himito learn. I've coachcd long enough anti I want him making some dcpi- sions for the future. I won’t he coaching forever.” ; Back In (he Lineup After getting only 10 hits in the first two games, Ijames needed some inspiration from other sources. So he played Matt Webb al sccond base and Gray Bovender al shortstop in the third conte.st. Neither had started for quite! a while but both made the most ¡of the chance. ; The Wehb-Bovender tandem combined for four runs scored and three hits. Bovender was hurt in Àe fifth when a throw to second pop ped him in the lip. He was taken to the hospital where three stiches sewed up his mouth. Bovender was back in the dugout at the end, cheering on jhis teammates. : “ It felt great to play,” he said. “ I hope this won’t keep me out. I ; want to get me a starting ' role back.” Bovender did play in Sunday’s 3-2 loss, knocking in Mocksville’s first run of the game. Road Trips Something both teams had to get used to were the long bus rides and ; staying overnight. “When you haven’t done it; it ; can be tough,” said Ijames. “ No one has traveled before. And'the . boys don’t have M om 's good hoim ; cooking. The first couple of irih- ; ings during a game is the key. Your legs start wearing out first. ” i ;- Ijames said the players also have ; to use their free time wisely. ; “There’s a lot of that,” he said. ,' ‘ ‘The boys can lay around thé foom' C all day thinking about all the things that went wrong thé n i ^ b e f^ . While M ocksviiie‘stayed, in hotel close to Whiteville’s, tegiori Park, Post 137 stayed riowK^e,; near Mocksville. The team, Statesville’s “ I think one of o u rl^ ^ o n iâ ^ ,; had a buddy who : lived: àn Statesville,’’ Hedgepeth sakj.-i^e just go,where we’re told.” Pfaylng Hurt ' -il ' Ijames said after the fifth that if anyone deMrved tlw ; Heart, it was, catcher ■ M cDaniel.^'C-' “ Scott p l a ^ with couiage^i:^ entire series;!! he sud.“ H is v ^ | was hurting and he ccMldn't swing a bat. That’s why we léi S ' (Holt) catch tonight.” Qallagher contlmicd Arom P. IB this. Mocksville has to have the best fans anywhere. The entire ; season was tremendous, from the fans to Coach Ijames.” There was a reason Mocksville took to Walker. Earlier in the year, he was describing himself and his Star- : mount teanunates who had just ¡Joined the Davie County and ¡ West Forsyth players. “ Shoot," he drawled, “ we're just a bunch of 'ol country boys who love to play ball." If there was ever a quote that could get to a Mocksville baseball fan’s heart, it was that one. But, let’s get back to the star quality. . Walker was the type that could be in a deathly slump but come out of it at exactly the ^ right time. When Mocksville was struggl ing in the third game of the Area 3 finals against Asheboro, the team needed someone to ■step forward and take com- mand. Walker hadn’t hit a home ;run in 86 at-bals bui drilled perhaps the longest home run of the season, some 420 feet over the centerfield fence. That hil. m ore than any other, was enough to spark his leammales ■ to the title. Whiteville Brocke Walker becam e Mocksville’s ‘adopted son' during the 1989 Legion season. — Photo by Jim Barringer Down 2-0 to Whiteville in the third game Saturday, the at mosphere in the dugout was at its lowest point of the season. The team needed a shot in the arm. Walker pul that shot over the trees in leflfield for a ihree- run homer, propelling Mocksville lo a 20-10 victory. Bul he has now played his lasl game as a high school athlete. Foothall practice al Wake Forest begins shortly and he goes to school Friday. From here on, his athletics become much more serious, almost businesslike. Walker slowly shul'lled out of Kicli Park lor the final lime as a player Monday night. As much as he had left an impres sion on Ihe county, Ihc county had left quite an impression on him. " I hale 1 missed the first three years of Legion ball," he .said. Believe me, there’s about 2,000 baseball fans who hale it too, Brocke. continued from P. IB to hit the homer," he said, “That’s why 1 started (Wes) Mecham tonight. W e had been living and dying by the long ball.” Unfortunately for Ijames, Fowler’s homer was the only one of the game for Mocksville. Mean while, Whiteville not only hit two homers, it was also manufacturing some offense, scoring single runs in six different innings. “ They did what they had to to w in," Ijames sighed. The Final Lead After Whiteville grabbed a 3-2 lead in the top of the fourth, Mocksville took its final lead of the series in the bottom of the frame. Fowler had the R BI hit in the inning. Whileville wasn’t hitting Key that hard but Hedgepeth ordered every runner who reached first to .steal second. None were thrown out. It helped Post 137 tie the score in the fifth and add two in the seventh, one in the eighth and one in the ninth. Key was finished in the eighth, replaced by Mike Lovelace. Ijames then let Jonathan Wagoner throw the ninth. "W e had home run balls caught at the fence, we had sure doubles hit the bag and go stniight up in the air, we swung at bad pitches ... everything just caught up to us in this series." Ijames said. ‘ ‘The fourth game was the turn ing point. W e had the bases load ed in the eighth with the score tied, their guy throws a ball high and we swing at it for the third strike. We score there and win and the series is tied at 2-2. It could have really made a difference. We win last night and Key would be p u m (^ up tonight to give us the 3-2 series lead. Anything could have happen ed then.” ____J, Even with the defiating, fourth- game loss, Ijames said his team was ready Monday. “ We still had them believing we’d win,” he said. “ Bul we have young kids and there was a lot of pressure. "A nd, of course, were playing a higher quality team.” 1)Л\'И; СОИМЛ I;MKKI*KISK ККСОК», TIIUKSDAY, Лиц. KI, 1989-3B Mocksville Vs. Whiteville: Games 1-4 Ahslo Fowler dives back into first base ahead of the throw. G a m e 1 — Photo by Jim Barringer Mocksville Hitters Are No Match For Russell ; WHITEVILLE — Dale Ijames wouldn’t admit lhat LeGrande Russell was the best pitcher his Mocksville Legion team had faced all year but his players cer tainly did. “ I’d say he was the best,” said leading hitter Mike McDaniel, after Whiteville’s opening 8-2 victory in thè'American Legion state championship series first game. 1 Matt Marion agreed, stating, “I didn't see a fastball all;night. He's got a really good breaking ball. He’s tlw,best pitcher we’ve seen all year.” • 'Russell threw a four-hitter and didn’t allow a hit lintil Chad Triplett’s infield single in the sixth. He jfinished with.a four hitter, striking out 12 and walk ing eight. . 'li.vljàmés didn’t feel his starter, Mike Lovelace, pit- '.chi^ ^dlyi either, giving up nine hits and five eam- ‘‘We just didn’tm the plays for him,” Ijainn snd.‘‘Their team did.’’ Vi:; Whiteville’s first run came on a routine grounder , .|o Triplett at shortstop vvith two outs. He muffed the 1/ ' play, giving Whiteville a secbnd inning, 1^ lead. ' Mocksville could not get the big hits. The team put I Tf*n»ou gets back to the bag in plenty of time. 2 , — Photo by Jim Barringer 174 Suffers ‘Most Disappointing Loss’ G a m e 3 Walker’s Blast Begins 20-10 Win In Game 3 runners on ba.se in all but two innings but double plays killed every rally. .“We hit into double plays instead of moving the runners up,” said Ijames. In the early going, Mocksville’s best chance to score was the third, when Lovelace and Triplett reachcd with no outs. But Anslo Fowler, who went hitless in his first nine at-bats in the .series, grounded into a dou ble play and Marion struck out. Mocksville put Brocke Walker and Marion on in the seventh with no outs, down 4-0, but a fielder’s choice and a double play killed that rally. Finally, with the score 7-0, Post 174 scratched in the eighth. Freddie Transou walked, moved to third on two wild pitches and .scored on a wild pitch. In the ninth. Walker tripled and scored on Shore’s R B I single. But the key was Russell, 9-1, who pitched his freshman season at Campbell. “ Russell is a good kid,” Ijames said. “ He’s a veteran and that college experience really helped him. Experienced pitchers like lhal can toy wilh younger players, throw waste pitchers and play witli them. You learn th.1t kind of thing in collcyc." Iry; AIVHITEVILLE - In what Dale Ijames called the V;-‘roost disappointing game of the year,” Mocksville . iiost a heartbreaking, 1-0 decision to Whiteville in ; game two, falling down 2-0. It also ruined a superb effort by pitcher Denny Key. " ‘‘Key did exactly what he was supposed to,” Ijames said. "We wanted to come out of Whiteville wilh a split and Denny did his part. He just got no help.” ■, In fact, Whiteville starter Warren Miller walked four and watched his teammates make five errors ^ tiehind him. But the defense made the big play every .'[ time it was needed. don’t know how we’re doing it,” sighed '• ’Whiteville coach Linwood Hedgepeth of his 29-8 team. ■ The only run of the game came in the bottom of • the first. Key plucked Randy Best, who went to se- • cond on a wild pitch. LeGrande Russell’s single to right scored him. ■ Whiteville was able to get only five more baserun- ners the entire game again.sl Key. Mocksville had 13, but stranded 10. “ We haven’t gotten a break in this series yet,” , Ijames said. "But the object is lo gel the clutch hits and make the plays. W e’re missing signs and nol ex ecuting. Until we start, we're justa runnerup team.” Ijames was miffed in his team's inability to make good on scoring clianccs in each of the last four innings: • Mocksville appeared ready lo tie the score in the sixth when Brocke Walker doubled. MaU Marion then •■Hiinic .Sweet Hom e" can make a big dilTeronce in Ihe middle nf a slate cliampionship .series. Mocksville came back lo Kich Park Ibr game 3 of Ihe American Legion slate llnals hut alter two inn ings, was still down. 2-0. The leam needed something to wake il up. Hrocke Walker gave il lo Mocksville in the form ol'a 4()0-l'ool. Ihrec-run homer in the third inning. Mocksville never looked back on its way to a resoun ding 20-10 victory. “ Brocke lit a lire under us when we really needed it." .said coach Dale Ijames. “ We started free wheeling it after thal and everybody started hitting.” Immediately following Walker's shot, Malt Marion sent a solo home run lo lefindd for a 4-2 lead. Thai was just Ihe beginning. In Ihe fourth, Mocksville sent 14 men to the plate in a 10-run out burst, surprising fans and teams from both sides. Six hits and two errors helped Mocksville lo the big inning. Triplett just missed a homer off the top of the wall, clearing Ihc bases for a three-run dou ble. Anslo Fowler had a sacrifice fly and Gray Bovender and Walker had RBls. When the dust had cleared. Post 174 led, 14-2. G a m e 4 Mocksville scored three in each of the fifth and sixth innings. In Ihc fifth, Bovendcr's grounder was errored, allowing Iwo runs lo score and another miscue made it. 17-2, Marion swatted a three-run homer in the sixth, scor ing Freddie Transou and Walker for a 20-2 lead. Starting pitcher Mike McDaniel lasted six innings and picked up his fifth victory against one loss. “ The heat was gelling lo McDaniel,” Ijames said. “ He just ran out of gas.” Brantley Smith replaced McDaniel bul had trou ble, walking in three runs and then giving up a two- run single and a two-run double. Mike Lovelace finished up, .striking out five baiters. For the game, Mocksville had 13 hits, including three by Walker and two by Marion. Each had four RBIs and TriplcU three, Randy Best, who sported a 7-1 record comingin; was never effective against Mocksville, He lasted only З'/з innings. All told, Whiteville pitchers walked 10. “ We felt like we hit it hard the last three innings of game 2,” said Ijames. “ W c were ready to break loose. Being home in front of the fans made a big difference also.” Ijames Feels Snakebit After Game 4 Loss It took four games but Dale Ijames has realized thal the American Legion state finals wilh Whiteville has become a game of inches. And his team has come up short each time. For the third time in four games,'Whiteville gave Mocksville every opportunity lo win the ballgame. Bul 2,500 fans were again sent home disappointed and stunned after a 3-2, 10-inning victory Sunday nighl. The win gave Whiteville a 3-1 advantage in the best 4-of-7 series. “ It’s a game of inches and we are an inch short every lime,” Ijames said. But for the third game, Whiteville coach Linwood Hedgepeth threw a lefthander and the result was a shaky victory. This time, Richie Blackwell, sporting only a 2-2 record, stymied Mocksville with 13 strikeouts and overcoming 11 walks. Mocksville pitcher Chad Triplett actually threw a belter game, going nine in nings, lo.ssing a .seven biltcr and walkiiiy only three. But for the third time. Post 174 got no breaks. Whiteville had taken a 2-0 lead into Ihe fourth when * Gray Bovender’s groundout drove home a run;’ It stayed that way unlit the eighth when Mocksville load ed the bases wilh two outs. Triplett sent a liner down the third base line that appeared to be a sure two-base hit. But the ball hit the bag and went straight up in the air. Only one run could score, tying the game. Anslo Fowler then ran Blackwell’s count to 3-2 and with every person in Rich Park standing and scream ing, Fowler swung at a high pitch for strike three. Instead of ball four and the winning run trotting home, it seemed to take the life out of the home team. Neither team scored in the ninth and Triplett entered the tenth having retired 13 straight batters. That ended on the second pilch, as catcher John Sherbert, hit ting only .230, boomed a home run lo win the game. Ijames shrugged when asked aboul the 3-1 deficit. “ We need to win three in a row,” he said, stating the obvious. “ But wc never do anything easy.” sent a rocket down the third base line thal was called foul. Ijames argued bul ihe play stood. Marion did reach on an error and after Mike McDaniel popped up. Key lined a sharp single to left. But Best’s perfect throw to the plate forced Walker lo remain al third and Michael Shore filed out to end the inning. • In the seventh, Freddie Transou singled with one out, was sacrificed to sccond and wenl lo third on a wild pitch. But Chad Triplett and Anslo Fowler each grounded out to third. • In the eighth. Walker and Marion again readied wilh no outs. But McDaniel popped up for the se cond straight time. Key flew out to sccond and pinch hitter Wes Mecham's short fly over shortstop was caught on a diving play by Matthew Gore. "It was the third baseman’s ball but he misplayed it,” marveled Ijames, “ The shortstop didn't even know he had Ihe ball,” • Frustration hit a peak in the ninth. Pinch hitter Mall Webb singled wilh one out and walchcd Chad Triplett's long fiy to left caught three feet from the fence, Anslo Fowler then sent a drive to deep center thal Byron Ward caught leaning up against the fence to end the game. “ That's four innings in a row we should’ve scored,” Ijames moaned. Key doniinatcd the game, striking out 10 and walk ing no one. You have to feel sorry for him ," Ijames said, “ ’fhe guy pitched his heart out." Davie HighfAthleti^-B^ter Club M Q^vm ej^C. Last year your contributions helped to: 1. Buy sweatsuits for the newly formed soccer team : y ,i ' , 2. Buy new weight equipment for the wrestling team, football players and any and all students wanting to work out in the weight room , , ; ■ ; ^ ; 3. Buy all letters and trophies for the eleven sports offe'red at Davie .High4. Sponsor two continental breakfasts honoring the,senior athletes /'5. Sponsor two athletic banquets honoring the participants in ail sports at Davie High School. , B tg g o r C o n fe ren ce , B ig g o r C h a tto n g m s W e n eed y o u r ta len ts, n o t o n ly y o u r m o n eta ry co n trib u tio n s, b u t yourand y o u r f^ / g g g . ■ Please review membership optknis and help us. ' MEMBERSHIP OPTIONS Memlitrsliiu A. General Membership B. War Eagle Club Individual Corporate C. Big "D" Club Individual Corporate D. All-Evcms Alhlclic Pass E. Sladiuill Club $25.00 $100.00 5100.00 $200.00 S125.00 $1,000.00 •lk\auu‘ of prinlitii: dadliiies. memberships must be received by August 25. ri) be iiicludeil iti the football pmgratn. Aity tttemberships receiv ed after the prograitis bave gotte to press Wtl.t. NOT Iv ittcluded. •I*lease note that att) lost aiid'or stolen All-Uvenl Atblclie I'asses W il l. N O r be replaced. Membership in Athlctic Booster Club 1. Membership in Booster Club •2. Name in football program 1. Membership in Booster Club ‘ ^ 2. One season pass for otte person 10 all regular home season . , ; fooibail games ,3. Name in 1989-90 jearbook ”•4. Name in foolball program 1, Membership in Booster Club 2, An all-event athletic pass entitling bearer plus one person (2 people) 10 allcnd all regular season home games of am sport. Docs not ' cover post-season games3, Name in 1989-90 yearbook •4. Name in foolball program Individual Or Corporate1. Membership in Booster Club 2. T»o season passes to all home foolball gantes »ilh Iwo scats in Ihc press bos.3. Two all-event athletic passes as mcmioned above (4 people) 4. Name in 1989-90 yearbook •5. Name in foolball program 1 9 8 9 - 1 9 9 0 M e m b e rs h ip R e g is tr a tio n N A M E _ ADHKiCSS . PH O N E _ M E M B E R S H IP S E I.l'C riO N A M O U N T EN Cl.O Siii) ______ Return I'orin to; P.O. Biix 222 For Mure IntVirmation Call Sherry Foster Al 919-998-8293 O r Sue Callison At 704-492-7380 '4В—DAVIE COÚNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, Лиц. IH, 1989 A verages Tum ble In Fin a ls One scries can damage even the best of bat ting avcragc.s. as M ike M cDanicl will Icll yon. Entci'ing the W hiteville series, he was leading tlic Legion team with a .442 average. Going into the (КИ) game Monday night, he was at .418. Chad Triplett dropped 20 points from his average. Actually, just about every average dropped. Brockc W alker was the team's lop hitler against W hiteville and he fell two points to .352. The biggest improvement camc Irom Matt Wchh, whose aver.'igc shot up from .077 to .167 due to a little playing time. Nate Newsome was one of the most consis tent players, batting .346, leading the team in steals wilh 27 and hovering near the top of several categories. But even he lost 11 points. M oeksville entered the series with 11 men hatting over .300. The team ended with nine. The team batting average slipped 10 points to . 3 0 9 . Denny Key went over the 100-strikeout mark ' Mike McDaniel plays defense (above) nipping this Whiteville runner while scoring on offense (below). — Photos by Jim Barringer L E G IO N S T A T IS T IC S (51 (¡aincs) Players M ike McDaniel Brocke W alker Nate Newsome Freddie Transou Matt M arion Chad Triplett Gray Bovender Alex Nail M ike Lovelace A nslo Fowler M ichacI Shore Brantley Smith W es Mecham Denny Key Slu Holt Scott M cDanicl Matt W ebb Jonathan W agner Home Runs Triplett 12, W alker 8, M arion 6, M . M cDaniel 5, Shore 4 Mecham 4, New som e'3, Fow ler 3, Transou 1, Bovender 1, Holt 1, Key I, S. M cDaniel I. Triples Newsom e 2, Shore 2, M . M cDaniel 2, Bovender 1, W alker 1, Key 1. Doubles W alker 11, Shore 10, M . M cD anicl 10, Triplett 10, S. M cDaniel 8, M arion 7, Newsom e 7, M echam 5, Fow ler 5, Bovender 5, Transou 5, Sm ith 3, Lovelace 3, N ail 2, Key 1, Holt 1. Hittiii}> A B Hit.s A vg. 170 71 .418 176 62 .352 162 56 .346 118 40 .339 80 27 .338 172 57 .331 129 41 .318 29 9 .310 62 19 .306 169 49 .290 142 41 .289: 62 17 .274 94 25 .266 67 16 .239 41 9 .220 105 23 .219 18 3 .167 2 0 .000 RBI’.s Triplett 45, M . M cDaniel 43, W alker 36, Newsom e 30, Fow ler 27, Shore 26, Mecham 24, S. M cDaniel 22, Bovender21, M arion 19, Transou 15, Smith 13, Holt 11, Lovelace 10, Key 10, Nail 8, W ebb I, W agoner 1. R u n s Scorcd Triplett 51, M . M cDanicl 43, W alker 42, Newsom e 39, Shore 34, Bovender 31, M arion 28, Fow ler 26, Transou 26, Mecham 20, S. M cD anicl 18, Key 13, Lovclace 12, Smith 11, Holt 11, Nail 8, W ebb 6. Stolen Bases New som e 27, W alker 12, Shore 12, Bovender 10, Triplett 3, Fow ler 2, M . M cDaniel 1, Transou 1, Mecham 1, Smith 1, W ebb 1. Players Freddie Transou Denny Key Chad Triplett M ik e Lovelace Brantley Smith M ik e M cDaniel Jon W agoner Alex Nail Lovelace 10-2, Key 9-3, Triplett 7-2, McDaniel 5-1, Wagoner 1-0, Smith 2-1, Nail 0-1. Saves Lovelace 3, Triplett 1, M. McDaniel 1, Smith 1, Key 1, Wagoner 1. Strikeouts Lovelace 140, Key 108, McDaniel 76,’ Triplett 43, Smith 23, Wagoner 7, Nail 6. Pitching IP Hits ER ERA 3.0 0 0 0.00 97'/3 67 24 2.23 67 Й 66 20 2.69 124 100 3.18 32‘/3 33 15 4.18 59%58 29 4.37 12'/з 17 9 6.75 18Уз 32 20 9.64 Records iVél<ìh, Sherden Get |lrmy Reserve Award J. Two Davie County High School liudents have been named as reci- .j^pnls'of Ihe 1989 U.S. Army ^ Scholar/Athlete Award. I Welch aiiil Mara Sherden ^eceiv^ the award, presented an- nfially to honor students who have iwn outstanding abilities both in ¡ classroom and in athletics, i A ll recipients were chosen by coaches and school ad- jiinistrators. They received a |ron^ Olympic-style medal on a ' , white airf IX M i n i n g — ^ The bavie Youth Complex Committee will in the North Davie lunior High auditorium Fri- Jay, Aug. l\ a t 7:30 p.m. Anyone interested in working on ^ ramplex from either Am erica V National little league should Attend. i This year’s project is grassing • i^he infield.. . ' ''i Й Ь т » d u b Anyone wishing to join the 3avie County chapter of the Area Sports University of North Carolina Rams Club should contact Demsie Grimes. A membership is $50 and up and helps the member get tickcts for Tar Heel athletic events. Grimes said if the number reaches 20, Tar Heel coachcs and past greats will visit Davie County for programs. For more information, contact Grimes at 919-998-3990 (home) or 704-634-5927 (work). His address is P.O. Box 709, Mocksville, N.C. 27028. Co-ed Softball Any team wishing lo play in the Mocksville/Davie Co-ed Softball League this fall should contact Joe Boyette at the office. ■ Boyette is hoping to field 10 teams for the league, which is scheduled lo begin in mid-to-late August. Boyette can be reached al 634-2325 (work) or 634-3877 (home). SATURDAY NIGHT First Race at 8:15 ( B o w m a n ^ . G ray . ,Wnston-Se/em M unicipal S T A D IU M W in sto nRacmg Senes S T O C K C A RRACING^ Ladies’ Night All female Ians admitted FBEE (no escort required) as guests of Hardee's and WTQR. They’ll also gel free chances on the Hardee’s-WTQR Ford Festiva to be given av^ay a week later. “Madhouse Scramble” Double-Headers for Modified and Sportsman Cars Plus Street Stock and Blunderbust Races B U S C H . D E M O L IT IO N D E R B Y !That wild wrecking contest! 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Also Special on F-150*s & Bronco Reavis Ford-Mercury {We Make It Easy To Drive The Best) * M ocskville 1—40 at 601 N. — Left at Top Of Ram p 9 1 9 - 7 2 2 - 2 3 8 6 D ealer//2416 7 0 4 - 6 3 4 - 2 1 6 1 DAVIK COUN l V |;N-H:KI>KISI': RIXORD. rilUKSDAY, AiiK. 10, 1989_5B Bovender Responds To Ijames’ Calling B y Ronnie Galla!>Iier Davie Counly Enlerprise-Record ; Gray Bovender has joined two teams during liis carccr wlicre he had no idea whal posilion he would play. The first came in lilllc league .'with his fellow 11-12 year olds. : “ I would’ve played anywhere," he .said. “ Bul the conch pul me on shortstop.” Along wilh Freddie Tnmsou and Mike Lovclacc, he helped lead the leam lo Ihc .slalc championship. Shortstop has been his position ■since bill afler Joining this year's Mock.svillc Legion Icam, he was again up in the air. “ I had heard Chad Triplett played shortstop so I was ready lo play anywhere Ihey put inc. I was ready to learn a new position.” : Coach Dale ^ m c s informed Bovender he waWtaying put. And ;when he has gbllcn the opprtunily :io play, he has produced. Going in- ■to Monday nighl’s fifth game wilh .'Whiteville in Ihe American Legion 'slate championship seric.s, he wa.s balling.318 with 21 RBls and five doubic.s as a parl-timc player. • “ I’m a streak hitter,” said Bovender. He was .streaking in the final three games of the state finals. ,Ijame,s put him in during game 3 Just lo shake up Ihe lineup and he ;responded, reaching base twice. ;He had to leave, however, in the ;fifth when a throw split his lip lopen, requiring a couple of stit- .'ehes. But it didn’t slow his com- .'petitive fire. ! “I hope I can play tommorrow, ’ ’ ¡he mumbled through the swelling. ¡“1 want my starting role back.” I He got it and despite the 3-2 loss, !he knocked in the first Mocksvillc [run. j In game five, with Triplett on the ibench with an injury, Bovender ^walked to open the game and then scored on Anslo Fowler’s home jun. “Gray has played well for us,” : jyames said. “ He’ll be a mainstay jw);tJw:team,next-year.!W^ be lookini; for :i lol oul of him ." Bdvcrulci' .seems lo rise In llic oc casion. He hail wanted his uncle. Buddy Hoveiuli.T. lo walch him all season Inn il appeared only a pipe dream. Tlic former liasl-Wesi All- Star and pro baseball player li\’cs in Chariolle. "H e hasn't seen me yet." Bovender said before Ihc Southern Division series wilh Concord. “ 1 guess he’s jusl lazy." No .sooner .said lhan Uncle Bud- ily .showeil for Ihe fourth game and his nephew promptly .stroked his first home run of Ihc season. It’s been lhal kind of successful year for Bovender and his leain- males, who ended Ihe year 37-I5-I. And he’s already telling players like Brett Noe Ihe advan tages of playing for Mocksville’s Legion. " I Ihink more of Ihem will come oul next season,” he said. West Forsylh will be reaping the benefits of having Bovender in 1989-90. A three-sport athlete, he will be a slarter for Denny Zeiters in football and basketball coach Denny Key said he would be a vital part of that team if he decides to play. But Bovender says baseball is his favorite sport. “I’d play year round if I could.” He’s almost accomplished that, having played for West Forsyth from the middle of February through May. He immediately joined Ihe Legion for 51 games, giving him almost 80 for the year. But now that M ocksville’s season is over, he will concentrate on football. He is scheduled to be West’s punter in its opener with Carver. Ironically, his father, Jim, is the head coach of the highly suecessftil Carver team that went undefeated in the Metro Conference last year. Bovender joked, “ M y mom has already said that if the West Forsyth punter is hurt in that first game, then Dad will have to live somewhere else for a couple of weeks.” Stay tuned. ^ound Meeting :Scott McDaniel (from left), t^ike Lovelace and Dale Ijames have 'a serious conversation on the m ound during the first gam e against Whiteville. — Photo by Jim Barringer SUBSCRIBE to the Davie County Enterprise-Record Chad Triplett lays the tag on a Whiteville runner and looks to the umpire for the out call. — Photo by M ike Barnhardt M o c k s v ille S p o r t in g G o o d s S C H O O L B A G S N . c STATE NORTH CAROUNA D U K E C O W B O Y S R E D S K IN S H O R N E T S New Shipment State & North Carolina Sweatshirts A L L B A S E B A L L B A T S & G L O V E S 2 5 % Off Regular Price B A R G A I N T A B L E O N E G R O U P S H O E S ^ 5 r J m (Includes Some Cieated Shoes) ' Close Out On All Remaining Tennis Racquets T - S h i r t s Solid CZolofs $ c 9 5 5 T H O R - L O S O C K S 2 0 %Off F o o t b a l l S h o < s 1 5 % o . To DHS - SDJH - NDJH PLAYERS M O C K S V IL L E S P O R T IN G G O O D S 23 C ourt Square All Sales Final 7 0 4 -6 3 4 -3 1 5 5 No Returns No Exchanges Mocksville, N.C. No Refund» 6B-DAV1E COUNTY KNTKRt’KtSK KICCOKI), TIIUK.SDAV. Aiitf. 10. IWJ H o t F u n In T h e S u m m e r t i m e Football continued from 1’. 1» while working on fuiulaniL-mals.” he cxphiincd. “ I know the boys at Wesl and they’ll be ready. They have a giioil bunch of kids and ihe coaching staff will do an excellent ji'h.” Davic Coaclics Ward thinks he has an excellent staff himself with six veteran assis tant coaches: • Buddy Lowery is the defensive coordinator and defensive line coach. • Marty Hemric coaches the linebackers and defensive ends. • Rex Allen has Ihe offensive line. • Melvin Fogg, who is also the assistant principal, is coaching ihe secondary. • David Hum is returning to the gridiron, coaching tight ends and flankers. • Laddin Lakey, the newest ad dition to the coaching staff, is Ihe athletic trainer. ; Ward, who is coaching the of fensive backs, says he felt comfor table from the start with his assistants. : “ I had coached wilh some of them before',” he said. “ 1 knew most of them anyway.” T«(i-A-I)a.vs After opening the first week wilh jusi niornini; priiclicc>. Davic began iwo-a-day practices this week. ■‘It's been prelty warm." Ward .said. "The efforls and aliiliidos of Ihe kids have hccn good, lliinigli. They've been working hanl and hustling." Ward said Ihc nioniing practices would sec the players going wilh heavy gear from 9-11:25 a.m. A light workout (helmet and shoulder pads) in the afternoon is schedul ed for 4-6:25 p.m. "Two-a-days is a necessity you have lo go through,” Ward said. "Two-a-days have been here forever.” Injurie.s Practice has already produced a few injuries. Jeff Spry tore cartilage in his knee when it gave during agility drills. He is expected lo miss six weeks. Chad Merrell broke a hand hit ting the blocking sled and will be out for 3'/5 weeks. Steven Parker is still recuperating from appendicitis and has been at practice although he hasn’t participated. ■ -'.y- Davie players turned on the sprinkers to cool off in Saturday m orning's heat. Football Players Need Physicals South Davic All athletes, boys or girls, who wish to play sports at South Davie Junior High School, should be at the gym Aug. 21 at 5 p.m. Physicals are $6 and all athletes must have one before they can practice. A physical is good forthe entire year. The South Davie football teams will begin practice the following day on Aug. 22. I>avic Youth League The Davie Youth Football League will be conducting plhysicals for anyone wishing to play on Saturday, Aug. 12 at the National Guard Armory. FJoctors will be present from 8 a.m. until noon. Physicals will be $20 and a child cannot play until he gets a physical and registers. North Davie On Aug. 15, physicals will be - Hitting the blocking sleds Is a common occurrance during preseason football practice. given to all boys and girls wanting; • to play sports during tlie 1989-^ J • school year. Dr. Joel Edwards wiil; charge $8 per physical from 5-7{r;' p.m. riis; There will be four more weighf , training days scheduled for,NoY^;; Davie Junior High School befqij^.';; the football season begins. . j'silii;; North, which is one of the junior highs with a weight training': program, will meet Aug. 14; 16;^: 17and21;,-^!- II ii : M D E A L S , IK A L S ,Ê № A iS ! ^ S ü t S X h o b í LOW FINANCIñíG OR ^ 5 0 0 CASH BACK Rex Allen w atches over his offensive linemen as they go through a drill. Randall Ward shows his players the proper v^ay to take a handoff during practice. — Photos by Mike Barnhardt Wb’« doubled our rebates on Shadcml New get $1500 cash back. LOWnNJUICINGORf; moo casH BACK! *99 B9MOTA Try the tough midsize Dakota tor a sporty leei that's fun to drive. Hit tho back roads with StOOO cash back or $500 cash back on Dakota S. 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SEE YOUñ DODGE DEALER,WMEHE THE NEW SPIRIT shows: T t o BUCHLtVP AHD f>LlASi Om£ SAftir THiNBWsmmr OF DODGE C A R S • T R U C K S * IM P O R T S Your Full Chrysler— Plymouth— Dodge — Dodge Truck Dealer Furches Motor Co., Inc. 147 D epot S treet, M ocskvllle, N.C.704-634-5948 DAVIK COUNTV KN TKUI’KISK KKCOKI), TIIUKSDAY, Aiij-. 10, I989-7BM ■ *—t7» T o u r n a m e n t S o f t b a ll Perry Creason helped lead C&J Construction to the m en’s open league title over Carter/Crews. pgp m akes the catch for the out in B arr's gam e last weel<. — P h o to s b y J im B a rrin g e r Softball continued from P. IB Fqrlc but ran into trouble in ttie tournament, falling to C& J Construction. Crews/Carter raced tlirough the tournament until tlie finals where C&J handed it two straight losses. C&J was only third in the regular season. Bailey’s was second. Co-Ed SoRball There will be 10 teams par ticipating in Ihe recreation depart ment’s Co-Ed Softball League. The league begins Aug. 21 Teams entered include Fuller W elding, Carolina Drilling, Tiny’s, Brannon’s, M& J Market, Joekey I, Jockey II, The Unknowns, Simpson's and (he Enterprise-Record. Keep Up W ith Davie Sports Eacli W eek With A Subscription To the Davie County Enterprise-Record Send check for $18 To:Enterprise-Record P.O. Box 525 Mocksville, NC 27028 ; J«rry Riddle rounds first base and heads for second. Rick Allred puts everything into this swing. The runner appears safe as the defensive player drops the ball. SPECIAL B1JL1ÆT1N FORD OFFERS NEW REBATES SPECIAL RNANCE PUN OR CUSTOMER 12-24 25-36 37-48 4M0 CASH VEHICLE UNE I^OS. . HOS.HOS.MOS.ASSISTANCE •’№"S9THUN0ERBIHD ... "■ ... 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Air. $7497* After Rebate To OMier 1989 LTD Crown Victoria The All New 1989 ThunderbirdS«ur. .»»ЫP & PB Poo»'P S»»H »•«> C)«l-C*l»' 1989 Aerostar XLSMC*АЛО )0 E>W>« AMFUSMf*« С«»ип< fC V w i* . вое, SO. •I.MO • 1,000 ^13,695 lld P tici M6.«SI As Low As SMC*T ешгшч^ »»«к» СУМ.. *-0 »0 AMfM с... .,u»F*cto(v Ottcount 'S riH u iD iK O u nl 't .mFactory >300H 3,995* „ ooA* Alter Rebate To Dealer Ask About Our First Time Buyers- No Credlt- Program Free Tank Of Gas With Each New Vehicle Purchase. 98 NEW HWY. 64 WEST LEXINGTON, N.C. PHONE 243-2731 8B-DAVIE COUNTV ENTKRI’KISK Ri:COKl), TIIUUSDAY. Лиц. Ю. I‘W9 G o N o r t h , Y o u n g M a n Hendrix, Jenkins Spend Summer In New England J.C. Hendrix lias Ibiiiul mil wliat Ihc life of a minor lcii(;iic hii.scl-);!!! player i.s all aboul. The 1988 Davie Counly graiUialc spent the summer in Cortland, N.Y., playing in Ihc Northeastern Collegiate Baseball League. The league is designed for col lege players to gain experience against better competition. Hendrix just completed his freshman season >vith Campbell University and several of his teammates went north went him. “ I had a pretty good time,” said ihc catcher/third bascman/left- Vficlder. “ I lived in a boarding Ihouse with a bunch of the guys.” But this wasn’t like going to the •jbeach with his buddies. There wasn’t much time for anything but ^%playing baseball, f Cortland, sporting the nickname, ; “ Apples,” won the league cham- piiinship with a 2'J-11 rccord. Hen drix played third base lor around 20 games and lel'tneld lor lour. He linished with a baiting average. “ 1 did okay," he said, "but it wasn't gocxl enough lo suit me. I did belter al llic end." Included in liis season was a home run, ‘‘probably Ihe best ball I’ve ever hit." The only problem was, the Held lie hil il on had no fence and he had to leg it out for an inside the park job. ‘‘Playing defense was kind of funny,” he mused. “ I’d make the hard, diving plays at third and wouldn’t make the routine plays. But it helped with my experience." Hendrix didn’t have to worry about heckling fans, either. “ At away games, there may have been two fans in the stands,” he said. “ At home, we may have only 20 or .^0." That's why Hcmlrix gol goose pimples when he traveled lo VVliileville Гог Ihe Legion slate Unals last week. .Seeing llic en thusiasm from Ihe Mocksviile fans gave him a rush. “ ll makes me want lo play here again." he said. “ Playing Legion in Mocksviile was great." Cortland is about Ihc size of Clemmons and is located aboul 30 miles from Syracuse, a city he and the other players frequented. He said he also visited the Baseball Hall of Fame in Coopcrslown." Hendrix was in town to see Campbell teammate LeGrande Russell throw against Mocksviile. He caught him while in college. It is rumored that Russell will not return to the school bccausc of grades. Cape Cod l.cagiie While llic jNorllieaslcrn Col legiate League is more lor the younger collegc players, the more experienced ones are playing in the Cape Cod League. It is sponsored by Major League Haseball. l-ormcr Mocksviile Legion and current Wake Foresl pitcher Bud dy Jenkins is playing in Massachusctls. Wake Forest pit- cliiiig coach L;irry Gallo said il can only help. "T o build a house, you need the tools and Buddy has them,’’ he .said. “ I’m glad to have him back and I'm glad he's playing there. It’s as close as you can get to the minor leagues.” Gallo actually thought Jenkins would be drafted after his junior year. He was 6-1 at one point but had dental problems and couldn’t eat. He lost ."Í0 pounds, down lo I SO and by Ihe end of the season, his fastball was only in the low-SOs. Suddenly, the scouts slayed away. “ Many times, scouts look al the wrong things instead ofthe good." Gallo said. “ Hut by ne.xt year, he'll have his fa.stball back." The Cape Cod League also helps pitchers in that only wooden bats arc used. Aluminum bats carry much further. Jenkins went north for the sum mer, along with Wake Forest team mates Paul Reinisch, Jake Austin, Brian Shabosky, Kevin Jarvis and Warren Sawkiw. “The bc.st collcge kids in the country play in this league,” Gallo said. He should know, having coach ed in the Cape Cod League himself for years before coming to Wake. J.C . Hendrix “ Yeah, you want to know how smart I was?” Gallo asked. “ 1 had a choice of two pitchers. I needed a lefthanded reliever so I took John Franco. The guy I gave up? “ Frank Viola. Smart, huh?” young: Mocksvllle Legion fan seems to be playing games with the photographer. — Photo by Jim Barringer Outdoors Dove Season Announced 'J, ^ / \ ; RALEIGH-The N.C. Wildlife , ^.lleiources ConiM on Aug. 31 4^ the mourning dove and other :t wc^Ieu~inigratory game bird hun ting seawns for 1989-%, '' '¿Thc ; Coniiinission adopted a dove season with a 12-bird iM y bag liini^ The possession > liinit will be 24 birds . Season dates Sept^ 2 through Oct; 7. Nov. :i^l-2SKii^ 16 through Jan. ;«'13. f'The iact^ increases the -tnmber'ofiiuntingdaysby 10 over :>lut year's 60-day season. ;:; sThe season allows for hunting " f ^ hklf an hoiir before sunrise to |:|w ii^. BiologisU report a healthy :;; ;iippula^on of doves this year. ::;i,'nie 1989-90 season will be the ^i'third year that violators of Wildlife migratoiy game bird laws will face stiffer penalties. In 1987, at the re quest of the Wildlife Commission, the N .C. General Assembly adopted legislation that set $150 as the minimum fine for using im proper firearms when hunting migratoiy birds, using live decoys or bait, hunting during closed seasons and exceeding the bag or possession limils. The penalties also call for a mandatory one-year suspension of the violator’s hunting license. The Commission adopted a 70-day season for rails, moorhens IÌ4-C. Man Wins Qualifier Mike Poe of Silver Cily, North ; Carolina, topped a field of 190 ‘ :anglers competing in the Red Man • ;Piedmont Division qualifier held • ''Sunday on Kerr Lake. Poe manag- ••Ы one of the 48 five-fish-Umits ['■weighed in during ihe event. He •:'collected $2,154 for his catch •¡weighing 16 pounds, 14 ounces. A ':'cash purse totalling $8,695 was • ‘divided among top finishers in the • ';event. Poe fished heavy willows and ^.;bulton bushes in Nut Bush Creek • ;using onc-half ounce Klien - 'Weapon jigs. Second place went to ' Riehari^Davis of Aberdeen, North ■ ;Carolina. Davis landed five bass ■ ;weighing 16 pounds, 11 ounces :and collected $1,361. He fished '■ :button bushes up the lake using ' June bug worms. Third place went to Don Forman ■ ;of WilliaiTisburg, Virginia, for five ; bass weighing 15 pounds, 14 : ounces. Forman fished willow . bushes in Nut Bush Creek. He .' caught his fish on grape/pearl .' worms and a modified Smithwick Popper. Third place paid .SSIS. Fishing B anquet H onors Eels Grandy, Buckner The Big Winners Allison Sucker, Adam Grandy and Brian Tribble were the big winners at the annual Hickory Hill Eel swim team banquet July 29. Buckner and Grandy took home the coveted Ron Brown Eel of the Year Award while Tribble was named recipient of the David San ford Award, given to the swimmer wilh the most positive atttitude and best work habits I Other awards' given are as follows: Most Dedicated 10-Under Division: Tonya Gran dy and Jimmy Robinson. 11-Up: Shannon Umberger and Adam Niles. Most Improved: 10-Under: Callie Bailey and Ryan Barnes. 11-Up: Allison Buckner and Adam Grandv. H i c k o r y H ill W i n n e r s and gallinules from Sept. 2 through Nov. 10. A daily bag limit of 15 with a possession limit of 30 birds . was set for moorhens, gallinules, and clapper and king rails. A dai ly bag limit and possession limit of 25 birds was set for sora and Virginia rails. The Commission adopted a 107-day season for common snipe. The season will run from Nov. 14 through Feb. 28. The daily bag limit will be eight birds and the possession will be 16. Also adopted was a 45-day woodcock season to run from Nov. 18 through Jan. 1 with a daily bag limit of three and a possession limit of six birds. Danny Garrett of Hardy, Virginia, placed fourth with five bass weighing 15 pounds, 6 ounces. Garrett fiipped willow bushes in Nut Bush Creek using grape worms. Fourth place paid S513. Fifth place and $457 wcnl to Larry Parker of Lake City, South Carolina. Parker fished shallow willow bushes in Nut Bush Creek using 7-inch plum Hawg Caller worms. Rounding out the top 10 posi tions were: (6) Jeff Coble, Graham, North Carolina, five bass, 14 pounds, 2 ounces, $401; (7) tie, Richard Kellcmeycr, Wilm ington, Delaware, five bass, 14 pounds, 1 ounce, $317, and Gary Wade, Greensboro, North Carolina, five bass, 14 pounds, 1 ounce, S.1I7; (9) D.W. -Suggs, Broadway, North Carolina, five bass, 13 pounds, 8 ounces, S233; and (10) Chris Daniels, Clayton, Norlh Carolina, five bass, 1.1 pounds. 2 ounces. SI32. F o llo w T h e D a v ie C o u n ty F o o tb a ll-T e a m In 1989 The First Game Is Sept. 1 At North Iredell Dan Shanz of Germantown, Maryland, weighed in a 6 pound, 11 ounce bass — the largest of the tournament. Shanz caught his big fish on June bug lizards, fishing a 10-foot drop. He received $1,000, a Browning rod, plus a one-week vacation. At the completion ofthe six Red Man qualifying events, the lop 24 fishermen, determined on a basis of poimds and points, will move on to Regional Classic competition. Tliere they will compete against 96 oilier fishcrnien from four other divisions. The 10 highest finishers from each Regional advance lo the $150,000 Red Man All-American. The winner will receive $100,000. All Red Man lournanicms arc calclr and release events. Operation Bass sponsors for 1989 include: Red Man chewing tobacco. Ranger Boats, Chevrolet trucks. DuPont Power Lines, Evinrude and Johnson outboards, Kvinrudc and Johnson electrics, GNl! batteries, Pennzoil outboard lubricant, Techsonic (llumminbird cloclnmics). Award winners during the Hickory Hill Eel Swim Team Banquet were (Front row, from left): Callie Bailey, Tonya Grandy,'Ryan ’-t Powell and Erin Umberger. (Second row): Jasori Grandy, rie Brown, Shannon Umberger, Adaml3randy, Alll8<m Buckner: - and Adam Niles. High Points In Dual Meet 10-Under: Erin Umberger and Ryan Powell. , 11-Up: Buckner and Grandy. Also recognized were parents Donna Powell, Cathy Kofke and Sue Grandy, volunteer parents who v organized the team’s meets and ■ functions. ' , The coaches were . Karens ' Uniberger, Daniel Cain and Bni|M?;J Bullock. . .-V ' ■ i t e (919)76б-Р1^ТТ| О•чГ '-Т* ■ 'a l t •Itm m a i» ■ U h iiiq 0 :C jo ^ ^ In Miniature Gol^ P it c h & P u tt o f f e r s t h e s im p lic it y o f . T? M in ia t u r e G o lf a n d t h e c h a lla n g e o f P a r 3 U s in g a pitching w e d g e or a putter o n v a rio u s h o le s| ( Bring your friends and watch oiii for the Water Holes! Located on Lewisville-Clemmons Rd. (Next To KeymW In Weshwod Village) ti I 2 5 % OFF ALL FIXTURES IN STOCK Sale Prices Good Thru August 31, 1989 Caudell Lumber Company 162 Sheek Street 634-2167 Mocksviile, N.C DAVIK C()l!N KM KUl’KISK UKCORI), THUKSDAY, Aiij;. 10, I9S9-9B ‘ B o u n c i n g B a c k ' i i i ’ ii; A f te r O v e r c o m i n g K n e e P r o b le m s , E v a n s Is j: H o p i n g F o r T h e B e s t In H e r S e n io r S e a s o n : V • ;By Ronnie GalliiBlicr ;;Oavie Counly Enlerprise-Record ; Debbie Eviins is preparing lor Isenior year at Davie Counly High ;Schoo] willi liigli expeclalions. She :wanls success in volleyball, basket -ball and softball. She warils (o be :all-confcrencc. She wants a college scholar.sbip. Il wasn't alway.s that way. Evans can still renicmber the final days of her sophomore year, especially the volleyball match where the twinge in her right knee gave her a lasting memory — a .memory she ean do without. . “ It was April of my sophomore year,” she was saying, “ and I was playing in a volleyball tournament at Catawba Collegc. I jumped and got off-balanced and the whole leg -'twisted. It felt like my knee snap ped apart. “ It felt funny. But I walked on it that day and it didn’t hurt.” She remembers the next morn ing even more vividly. She awoke to pain and a heavily swollen knee. :Slie couldn’t bend it. ;~\Evans had tom cartilage and : damaged her anterior cruciate liga- 'inent, an injury that has destroyed many athletic careers. .And for Evans, it could have . been a mental disaster not playing. ¡She has starred in volleyball, t basketball and softball in junior and ]wnipr high school. She has won 1 irwquetball tournaments. She was l^ven a quarterback on a little : league football team. was.the first time I’d ever 'h ^ that kind of injury,” Evans ■ ^d . “I couldn't think of not play ing spom. That's all I do.” -Fonunately, the anterior cruciate ^ only ¡partially tom. Had it tore completely, Evans would have been out of action an entire year. As it was, Evans needed only ar throscopic surgery and was rehabilitating It by the first of • August. . ; 1 “I worked out with low wejghts three times a week,” she said, 'and I rode a stationary bike.” rBut the knee still wasn’t strong cnough to allow her lo play volleyball in the fall, llic fir.sl season .she ever missed. Basfcelball praclicc was llic llrst time she tried Ihe knee. "1 was real hesitant about jum ping. And playing defense was toiigli. I was g''ing half .speed and was real cautious.'' In Davie's llrst game of her junior year, Evans went in for an early layup and thought she’d blown her comcback. “ I went up for the shot and twisted it again," she said. "But I didn’t injure il.” Getting over the mental part was the hardest and after the layup at tempt, Evans said she didn’t worry about the knee again. “ It hasn’t stopped me lhal much and really, I never got down about it.” Another obstacle was overcom ing the cumbersome knee brace she had to wear — a Lenox Hill model made famous by Joe Namath. At firsl, it was awkward strapping the large brace around her leg but now, il’s like tying her shoe. “ It cost $750 and it’s personaliz ed,” she grinned, showing where her name was inscribed. “ People thought it would hold me back but it hasn’t stopped me that much.” She eased her way gingerly through basketball season bul by the spring, Evans was back at full- throttle, becom ing an all conference performer in track and softball. She led the softball team in hitting and placed high in the discus during the state 4-A track meet. She is currently preparing for her senior season and should be at full strength again in all sports. She has kept in shape this summer by play ing racquetball. And when she hears talk of her never playing again or reinjuring her knee, she laughs at the critics. “There were people who told me 1 wouldn't be able to play sports again,” Evans said. “I told them they were wrong. I'm want my senior year to be the best. I want to play in college.” visible. Debbie Evans — Photo by Ronnie Gallagher I Don *t Miss The Enterprise-Record Football Edition Coming Thursday Aug. ?1 W earing a tieavy, Lenox Hill knee brace, Debbie Evans iias to stretch her leg extensively before participating in athletics. — Photo by Ronnie Gallagher FINAL VEAR-END C L E A R A N C E We Need To Make Room For New 1990’s Arriving In September THE RON ■M IN Q Cn A M E R IC A eiO lO D A Y S CHEVROLET^ >500 TO >1000 MFG. REBATES OR 2.9% APR T 0 10.9% APR FINANCING AVAILABLE IN LIEU OF REBATES ON ALL CHEVROLET CARS 1909 Cavclivr VL 2*Or. Coup*1969 Cavaliar 4-Dr. 8«dan.................Uitr«ICf-------------•'»*««• 1990 QEO Prizm 4-Dr. SadanUtTMWI-------injt'MfMwing. vaotfeowwr.___-^MW «M'FU lM>M. IMWI U<cw* ’W»0. M»*Tt------ ■AHHV B n ilL V W E ARE A FU LL SERVICE M EDIUM D U TY TR UCK DEALERsee us TODAY for salcs - parts and ssnvtcet •% APK !• 10 • APH KACMIng■ ' »d on lltSAPH tlnMin« , Expect the Best. o e e p . REBATES UP TO *2,000 OR 0.0% APR to 11.9% APR 5 m 0*«/«r For D»tsllt y é Eagle / V f ASLOWAS 1989 EAGIE PREMIER H 2,500 tag not Incijo* AS LOWAS 1989 EAGIE SUMMIT «9,495 ^ 9 8 9 J ^ j C h e ^ ^ x 4 4 Dr.ffomm HIT MICI. __ ..HIM 0 «(•«II S.I. Prie «18,281 WigoMr4x4 4 door, power tM li. lMm*r/eord irlm, H.0 Shockk. front < ftar H.O. traiNng pk«., «Ufa., tiant., Mi*cl iru . raar u«c loch, S.9L V*4 •ngin*. poM r lunroef. «UK. auto. tran».. oil eooMr, eenvntiWM) apa/« U'*. P3M/70R)« raoiala LIST PRICE.......J2I.U8.00VS 0(SC0(/Nr.......•4S$S.OO* MFQ. REBATE....-1.000.00 HURRY FOR BEST SELECTION SAVE LIKE NEVER BEFORE! ON THE SALISBURY CAR DEALING MILE COME OUR WAYl TRADE YOUR r ' O H I E V R O L E T 404 Jaki Aluondei lUd.. SoliibufY. NC PHONE 638*9370 CHAHtOTTl )7MU) • URINQTON »*»-7790 ceMCOnoMAu$t,'M)ti» »» MJ> J e e p Eagle iiöB — DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, Лиц. I». 19«9 Championship Scheduled Oct. 2>8 T o u r n e y P u r s e : $1.5 M illio n F o r P G A ’s T o p S e n io r s the Fans Are Behind You ■ With a mountainfull of Legion fans behind him, Mil<e Lovelace fires a pitch for Mocksville.— P h o to b v J im B a rrin g e r ■j lic sclialiilc Ibr the .$1 iiiillio;i KJK Cli;iiiipii)nship. to lie played llic week of Get. 2-8 al TanglewoiKl near Wlnslon-Saleni, N.C., lias been announced. The imirnaineni will begin with a two-day pio-ani competition on Weilne.sdiiy. Ocl. 4. Ihrough 'riuirsday. Oct. 5. followed by pro fessional competition on Friday, Saturday and Sunday. The iiJR Championship is Ihc richest event on the Senior PGA Tour and the only event witli a pur.se greater than $700,000. The winner will receivc $202,500 from the $1.5 million purse. Only three player.s — Arnold Palmer, Billy Casper and Bruce Cramplon — earned more lhan $200,000 in Iheir best years on the regular PGA Tour. The lournament include,s an RJR Classics competition for players who arc 60 years and older. The RJR Classics compelilion al the Golf RJR Championship pays 5150,000, and the winner will receivc $30.000. This is the third year of the tour nament, which was previously known as the Vantage Championship. Il will be contested over the 6,606-yard, par-70 Championship Course at Tanglewood. The Cham pionship Course has undergone a $1 million renovation projeel, in cluding the complete reconstruc tion of the greens, fairways and lees. All three rounds of the RJR Championship will be televised by ESPN. The defending champion is Walter Zembriski and Ihe defen ding RJR Classics champion is Roberto De Vicenzo. Charlotte Speedway Announces Expansion Program Charlotte Motor Speedway of- Tieials announced a $3.5 million expansion program recenlly that in cludes the addition of. 14 V IP suites outside the track’s first turn. The addition will give Charlotte Motor Speedway 63 luxury suites with 3,993 seats. The speedway’s clubhouse, another enclosed -seating area, seats 3,716. The enclosed seating capacity of 7,709 is greater than any other N A SC A R ' track or National Football League stadium. ■ The new suites are scheduled to be completed in time for the Oct. 7 .Ml Pro Auto Parts 300 and Oct. 8 Fall 500. The expansion will con clude construction in the Grand National Soulh grandstands. Near ly 4,000 seats were added in lhat area in time for M ay’s Coca-Cola 600. “ The V IP suites arc essential to our corporate marketing efforts,” Charlotte Motor Speedway chair man Bruton Smith said. “The revenue generated from the sale of our suites helps keep down the cost of regular grandstand tickets. “ The pressure on enclosed seating of all types is tremendous here. The greatly increased in volvement by not only Fortune 500 Racing companies but smaller regional ones in the Sunbelt area has in- crea.sed dramatically in Winston Cup racing. The majority of these companies want suites for enter taining.” Charlotte Motor Speedway has more suites than any other track on Ihe N A SC A R Winston Cup circuit. The air-conditioned suites feature food services, wet bars, television monitors and reserved parking. They cost $45,000 a year and are sold on three-year lease terms. Humpy Wheeler, Charlotte Motor Speedway’s president and general manager, says luxury suites provide a look at the “ New South.” “ The toughest problem in Winston Cup racing today is the demand for .suites,” he said. "It ’s unbelievable. The people that use them are a real mix. Everybody from an electrical contractor to the guy that sells him the wire. There’s probably more chain store business done in suites in one day than in six months. It’s a great problem to have.” Suites date as far back as 700 B.C. and the birth of Ihe Roman Empire. The Colosseum of the Middle Ages featured suites for the privileged with shielded compart- menls of bronze and strips of giant, luxurious awning. The elite sat in marble scats as gladiators fought to the death. L.G. Dewitt built the first suite for a N A S C A R track in 1967 at North Carolina Motor Sj^edway in Rockingham. He had it built to entertain clients for the trucking company he owns. The Dallas Cowboys ushered in Ihe football suite craze in Texas Stadium’ in 1971. Oil business magnates purchased luxury skyboxes at Texas Stadium to entertain clientele in a first-class manner. The Cowboys have sold 296 suites, more than twice that of most N F L stadiums. Some suites at Texas Stadium; sell for as much as $1.5 million. They include such luxuries as power windows and computers which provide statistics on players'. ; M iam i’s Joe Robbie Stadium, the latest state-of-the-art facility,.' has 215 suites accommodating; , !;] 2,806 people. , . : V ^ DON'T FORGET - BEAT THE NEW TAX INCREASES 'BUY A NEW '89 MODEL BEFORE THE 3 TO 9% 90's INCREASE navAUiicouK - . W A S t 7 M now^>8700«« '••■ И П Т А r : W A S 'iT M iiow^7500«« W C A M A IO Sm rC K . W A S ‘10,100 • n o w ^ 8 9 0 0 « « ••a V A L IilC K .E U M W AS t u o NOW > 8 8 0 0 « * •7 C IllN nY 4 DR. stk. #7*0300 W AS 1(400 NOW »7500” 'M a V A llIt 4 OR. W AS *5*00 NOW 4 8 0 0 » » •u NOVA 4 DR. - . 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Я ONLY^160®‘ ! 1989 aVALIER 2 DR. COUPECASH OR TRADE. *9709** 40 MO. tO.f % $ ^ g ^ l 2 p e rIIEU OF RtlATE ONLY mo. 989 S-10*4,000** CASH OR TRADE. «0 MO. to7 M2.000" TO FINANCE IN LIEU OF REBATE. 'S7 MAZDA 11X7 W AS >12,000 NOW $10,900»» '•6 MONTE CARLO W AS >7200 NOW $6100»» IIGRANDAMrONTIACCK. W AS >8900 NOW $9500»» '85 SPEORUM 4 DR. W AS >4500 NOW $3800»» '87 CELERRIir 4 OR. W AS >8200 NOW $7400»» '87 OLDS REGENCY IRHM.W AS >12,200 N o w $ 1 b 5 0 0 » » '*sF 1989 S-10 EXTENDED CAB 4x4 TAHOETOTAt. PRICE tNClUDES REBATE PIUS BEll « HOWARD'S CHEV. ONirSAVER PAK WAS $17,720 44,000 ALL CARS AND TRUCKS ARE SERVICED AND CHECKED BEFORE DELIVERY, 24 MONTHS, 24,000 MILES WARRANTY AVAILABLE ON MOST CARS & TRUCKS. TAKE THE WORRY OUT OF BUYING A USED CAR OR TRUCK. SHOP THE DEALER THAT TAKES PRIDE IN THEIR PRODUCT BELL & HOWARD. W H Y P A Y M O R E ! '88 JEEP PICKUP One Owner W AS <10,900 NOW $ 9 5 0 0 » » '88 MAZDA 4x4W AS $10,500 NOW $ 9 7 0 0 » » '86 CHEV. </2 TON LONG BED W AS <6500 NOW $ 4 9 0 0 » » '85 S-10 BLAZER W AS <8900 NOW $ 7 5 0 0 » » PLUS TAX. TAG I imt OPEN 8A.M.I TILL 6 P.M. I B e l l & H o w a r d C h e v r o l e t , I n c , D «4l«r No IS It In t c i^ t M v 40 At riig h w A y 21 StAli SvitU-, N С 28677 Phüiw : 7 0 4 / в Я ^ 9 (т ^ . ; К OUT OF TOWN TOLL FREE 1 800-627-6036 ‘ ' THURS., FRI. & SAT. ONLY! n PLYMOUTH VOYAC« W AS M3,M0 n o w $ 1 3 ,2 0 0 » » '16 S-10L0N eüD Auto, a, A ir W AS '«NO NOW $ 5 9 0 0 * » 87C-10SILVERikDOUNei W AS'IfO O M O W $ 7 7 0 0 ” '17 S IO PKKUP A ir Cond. W AS >7100 NOW $ 7 4 0 0 » » '•7F0RDAER0SrARVAN W AS >*500 — NOW $ 8 5 0 0 » » isiTONsosniisHaup 4S4 Eng., »,000 MilM WAS *9100 NOW $ 8 5 0 0 » » '86 Vi TON LONG RED one Owner W AS >8500 NOW $ 7 5 0 0 » » 88 FORD RANGER XLT One Owner, Like New WAS <WN NOW $ 7 9 0 0 » » '86 S-15 CMC 4x4One Owner, Low Miles WAS <1100 NOW $ 8 0 0 0 » » '86 Э/4 TON FORD XLT36,000 Miles W AS <9000 NOW $ 8 5 0 0 » » '87 S-IO BLAZER TAHOEW AS <10,900 HOW $ 1 0 ,2 0 0 » » '86 SPECTRUM 4 DR. Air, P/s, Very Nice WAS >4900 NOW $ 3 8 0 0 » » DAVIK COUN I V KN TKRI’KISK RKCORD, THURSDAV, Aiijj. 10, 1989—1C D a v ie D a v ie M a n R e c a l l s Y e a r s W ith C o u n t r y M u s ic S t a r s 1 Fonty Fontana spent years in California and Nashville worlcing for entertainers.I ^ — Photos by Jam es Barringer l$.v Kjirtn Jnrvi.s Davio Coumy Enterprise-Record His photo iilbiitiis can tell Ihousantls оГ stories. Bill lie can tell more. From Elvis lo Barbara M an di cl I. Fonty Fontana has worked lor lumdrcds of country music entertainers. Fontana, who lives off Fork Church Road, Inas spent 27 years of liis life serving as body guard, road manager, bus driver and public relations manager for a variety pf .stars. “ I've had a good life. I’d still be doing it today if l hadn’t had heart trouble in 19 8 1.” Fontana, 59, was raised in Davie County off U.S. 64. He came back two years ago. His grandfather was a blacksmith and his father was a used car salesman and a service station owner. “ I got tired of working in the fields one day,” he said. “ At age 13 I said I ’m going to California and that's where I went. “ Most kids who run away run into tragedy, but I ran into good fprtune," he said. Fontana's first job was with the rodeo circuit and later learned to I a Г Fbntariia'iBhJoys the peaceful life in rural Davie. “I never settled down to enjoy something like this.” be a prop man in Hollywood. Fontana said he was in the movie Wagon Train and Horse Soldiers •Starring John Wayne. ■'They were just minor parts, but I enjoyed it," he said. “ One day 1 came back driving a Cadillac and my daddy said •Son you better take that man’s car back,’ and I said that m an's me daddy.'' Fontana, w ho has four children, said his life working for the .stars was “ the best.” “ Boy, times have changed,” he said. “ They now have luxury buses, lots more body guards and the band and road crew ride on a separate bus than the star. “ It took away a lot of personal contact with the man you were working for,” he said. “ Entertainers are a close knit family,” he said. “ You know each other's faults and try to help them out.” Fontana said an advantage to working personally with the entertainers was that they always gave gifts. He said he has footlockers full of cigarette lighters, rings, belt buckles and custom made suits and jackets. Fontana said he could nol determine which star was his favorite and said they were all good to work for. “ I liked so many of them,” he said. “I was a bodyguard h r Elvis at Greensboro in the early 70s. He was easy to get along with and never bothered you.” Fontana praised Loretta Lynn's hard work. “ She would play at schoolhousc after schoolhouse,” he said. “ She would go on if she was sick, and say ‘W hen we get to the next town we’ll see if they have a doctor.’ “ She’s the kind of person who would go home and have supper with you and then ask you to have supper with her,” said Fontana. Fontana .said he had an office in Nashville and his services were contracted out to whoever called and need his help. He said he has no regrets about all the traveling he has done in his life but said he wishes he could have traveled more. “ I ’ve been all over the U.S. and Canada,” he said. “ I’ve seen places a lot of people would pay to see.” Fontana said he had also been to Germany, France and London with the stars. Fontana .said .some of his suc cess with the stars could probably be attributed to his unique name. Fontana, whose real last name is Beck, went fishing at Fontana Lake in California. “ I liked that name,” he said. “ It was real uni que.” Fontana said he looked in the California phone books and saw several people had that last name. “ I called them up and asked to speak to Mutt Simpson, ’ ’ he said. “ But of course he wasn’t going to be there, because I didn’t know anybody by that name. “ They wanted to know who was calling and I told them Fon ty Fontana,” he said. “ And they wanted to know were I was from. “ W e just got acquainted and I picked up on that name an d . thought ‘Well, that’s a name they ; could remember,’ ” he said. Fontana said it wasn’t long ui^- ^ till he was well known. Fontana said he travels back to | Nashville frequently but prefers the peacefullness he finds livin g; in Advance with his daughter. ■ “ Nashville grows so fast,” he said. “ Mocksville had not grown as much as 1 thought it was go ing to be. ‘ ‘ Everybody here is still the sam e," he said. “ Nob^^y ever bothers you but they would do everything they could for you. “ M y main concern is taking care of my health,” he’ said.' !“ l’ve lived in a world that’s so . fast that I never would have settl ed down to enjoy something like this. “ I was too detennined to see’ what was at the next school 'j house,” he said. m -.;2 Fonty Fontana has worked as a body guard for som e big nam e country music stars, including Little Jimmy P ickens, Dolly Parton, Hank Williams Jr., Webb Pierce and Elvis Presley. 2C— DAVIE COUNÎ'Y KNTKUI’KISIC UIÎCORI), TI1UKS1)(VY, Лчц. 10. 19S9 Social K in g - H a r t n e s s C o u p l e M a r r i e d Lisa Jane King anil Darrin Lcvcrn Harlncss were united in marriage on Aug. 5 at the Cooleemee Chureli ol' God. The Rev. Charles Ledford officiated the 3 p.m. cereiiiony. A program of wedding music was pre.senled by Mrs. Donna William.s, pianist, and Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Durhatn, .soloi.sts. Tile bride, escorted liy her father, wore a full-lengtli gown of while satin designed with an angl ed neckline, wedding band collar, and peek-a-boo sleeves. The fitted bodice was embellished with an Aleneon lace overlay and dipped into an antebellum waistline with a butterfly bow in back. The full ■skirt extended into a chapel train : bordered with lace motifs. The ■ bridal gown was made by Kaihryn ■ : Alexander of Cooleemee. To complete her ensemble, she . wore an ankle-length veil and a •: wreath-style headpiece of white silk flowers and pearls. She carried a cascading bomiuet of white ro.scs, tiger lilies and biiby'.s breath. Mi.ss Kelli Brown was her maid of honor. Serving as bridesmaids were Melinda Frye, Tammy Phelps, Amy O ’Neal and Donna Wagoner. Audra Harlncss, sister of the groom, was a junior bridesmaid. John H. Hartnc.s.s Jr. was hi.s son’s best man. Ushers were Mark King, brother of the bride; Dennis King, uncle ofthe bride; and Tim Issacs, Scott Cribb and Mike Williams, all of Gastonia. Scotty Alexander served as a junior usher and ring bearer. Miss Karla Smith presided al Ihc guest register. Mrs. Judith Issacs directed the wedding. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jerry W. King of Cooleemee. She is a graduate of Davie High School and has attend ed the University of North Carolina at Charlotte, She will conlinue her work as an I-nglish major at Ap palachian Stale University this fall. She is employed by the College of Education at ASU. The groom is a graduate of Ashbrook High Sciiool and has al- teiuled UNC-Charloile. He is a North Carolina Teaching Fellow Scholarship recipient and will con linue has work as an industrial technology major at Appalachian State University this fall. He is employed by Dawson Consumer Products. Hartness is the son of Mr. and Mrs. John H. Harlne.ss Jr. of Gastonia. After a honeymoon to Gatlin- burg, Tenn., Ihc coupic will make their home in Boone. Reception Immediately following the ceremony, a reception was held in Ihe church fellowship hall. Assisting in serving were Jean Chapman, Margaret Gaither, Janice Hartnes.s, and Wanda Smith. Kehearsiil Dinner A rehearsal dinner was held in the church fellowship hall im mediately following rehearsal. The menu consisted of chicken, ham. baked beans, potato salad, slaw, rolls, cake. tea. coffee and soft drinks. Social Everil.s • The couple was honored with a Tuppcrwiire shower on Jime 23 in Moore.sville. The .shower was given by her aunts. • M iss King was honored with a shower on June 30 at the Cooleemee Church of God. • Kelli Brown and Melinda Frye hosted a lingerie and linen shower on July 16 at Victory Baptist Church. • The couple was honored with a shower on July 20 at the New Hope Church of God. • Aunts of the groom hosted a shower for the bride on Aug. I in Mt. Holly. Mrs. Darrin Levern Hartness ... was Lisa Jane King Gobble-Hunt Couple Wed OnAug. 5 Mrs. Richard John Hunt ... was Tracey Karen Gobble Couple Plans Wedding Mrs. Lynda Burton of Winston- . Salem and Mr.'and Mrs. Ken Bur- . ton of Kemersyille announce the :: engagement of tlieir daughter, Gina, to Dw iel Chalmer Richart, son of Mr. and Mrs. James Richart : o f Mooresville. : The bride-elect is a graduate of Pavie High School and Ap palachian State University. She is employed by Talent Tree Person- ■ nel Services in Charlotte as a client ‘ services representative. Richart is a graduate of Liberty : High School of Bedford, Va., and Appalachian State University. He is employed by Zellweger-Uster in Charlotte as a computer programmer. The wedding is planned for Saturday, Sepl. 2, at 2 p.m. al Burkhead United Methodist Church in Winslon-Salem. M iss Tracey Karen Gobble of Mocksville and Richard John Hum of Wilmington were united in mar riage Aug. 5th al Calahaln Friend ship Baptist Church. The Rev. Car roll Jordan of Statesville and Ihe Rev. Larry Turner of Lakeland, Fla., officiated at the 2 p.m. ceremony. A program of wedding music was presenled by Mrs. Juanita Keaton of Harmony. The bride, escorted by her falher and given in marriage by her parents, wore a white satin gown designed wilh a sweetheart neckline with .short tulip sleeves. Pearl droplets dangled at the bas que waistline which was enhanc ed wilh lace embellished with pearls and .sequins. The full skirt Ihal extended into a demi-cathedral irain featured a front pyramid of lace. Bows and lace motifs adorn ed the train lhat was bordered wiih Schiffli lace. To complete the ensemble, she wore a headpiece which she and her mother designed of tufted illu sion adorned wilh a while silk floral spray and accented with pearls and iridescenls. The floor- length layered veil featured irides cent cascading lilies of the valley. She carried a cascading bouquet of trailing ivy and white daisies ac cented wilh miniature pom-poms, baby’s breath and sireamers of rib bons and pearls. Kellie Gobble of Mock.sville, the bride's sister, was maid of honor. Bridesmaids were Penny Gobble, sisler of the bride, and Carla Tut- lerow of Marietta, Ga. Lawrence Hunt was his son’s best man. Ushers were Larry Hunt, brother of the groom, Allen Wood cock and Tony Azart, all of Wilmington. Miniature brides were Carrie and Stacey Johnson of Harmony. Denise McBride of Mocksville kept the guest register. Programs were distributed by Lisa Tutterow of Kennesaw, Ga. The wedding was directed by Teresa Johnson of Harmony and Wanda Tutterow of Marietta, Ga. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mr.s. Donald G. Gobble. She is a graduate of Davie High School and has a bachelor of science degree in nursing from the Univer sity of North Carolina at W ilm ington. She is employed by Emory University Hospital of Decatur, Ga. The groom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Hunt of W ilm ington. He is a graduate of E.A. Laney High School and will be at tending D e V ry Institute of Technology in Decatur, Ga. Special guests were grand parents, Mrs. Helen Hunt of Wilm ington, Mr. and Mrs. Otis Gobble of Mocksville and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Johnson of Harmony. Following a honeymoon to Freeport in the Bahamas, the cou ple will make their home in Ken nesaw, Ga. Reception Immediately follow ing the ceremony, the bride’s parents entertained with a reception al their home. The guests were greeted by Mr. and Mrs. Johnson A. McBridc Jr. of Mocksville. The cake table featured a ihree- tiercd wedding cake with a scroll design enhanced by fresh daisies, baby’s breath and greenery which was designed and created by Mrs. Debbie Koontz of Mocksville. The floral arrangements of daisies and mixed white flowers accented with baby’s breath and greenery were created by Mrs. Phoebe Sampson of Harmony. Refreshments of mints, nuts, pickle.s, finger sandwiche.s and sparkling punch were served lo the guests by Mrs. Palsy Patti of Mocksville, Mrs. Dot Wilkes of Lexington, Mrs. Linda Johnson of Statesville and Mrs. Lisa Johnson of Harmony. Social Events • A wedding celebration was held on M ay 20 at the bridegroom’s home in Wilmington by his parents, M r. and Mrs. Lawrence Hunt, to include the - special family and friends that would not be able to attend the wedding ceremony. Special giirad were grandparents, Mrs. Helen I Hunt of Wilmington and M r. anil I Mrs. Samuel Graham Jr. of Glad? Г wyne. Pa. • M iss Gobble was honored witq a floating shower on J i ^ 24 at t)M home of her parents, giVen by Mis|' Teresa Johnson, Mrs;, Linda Johnson and Mrs. Lisa Johnson^ • Miss Gobble was h o m i^ v i^ a brunch on July !8 at A e .h p m ’o i her parents, hosted by М п . ^ а Й da McBride, Mrs. Patsy Pattif Mrs. Dot Wilkes, Mrs. B ^ r 4 Gobble and Mrs. Marsha ЬЬЬЬ1е| | • A tea was given in the couple’^ ^ honor by the Rev. and Mrs. Car^ roll Jordan and M r. Mrs/. W .A. Beck on Sunday, July;9, a^. the home of the Rev. and M n ,% Carroll Jordan on Carolina A v o ii^ in Statesville. ; ' ^ • The bridegroom’s p a ri^i^ Mr. and Mrs. LawreiKe Wilmington; e n te iia i^ the'cpi^^ pie and wedding party with a '^ | ner at Reeo’s in Statesville о й August 4 immediately fo llb w i^ the rehearsal. - ; You should hear what you’re missing. The cuatom-m*de Is comlorlable. Inconspicuous, and Ills entirely within your earl ШЧс,- DMont HMring Can CMm 211 N. IM ) SM I, М омМ к, NiC. Mail Wt»>>day FWw 1 Ш ¿a • 1» iwca H o u s c h R e p o r ts F o r N a v y D u ty Navy Petty Officer 3rd Class Willie C. Housch, son of Veramae Housch of Route 4, Mocksville, recently reported for duty aboard the amphibious command siiip USS Mount Whitney, homeported in Norfolk, Va. A 1981 graduate of Davic High School, he joined the Navy in May 1985. By Ethel Jones Mocks Correspondent Mr. and Mrs. Donald Eaton and Eric Eaton spent a few days in the mountains lasl week. Mrs. Helen Myers spent Friday , night with Mr, and Mrs. Richard ' Horn of East Bend. A number of relatives attended a cookout Sunday at Ihe home of Mr. and Mrs. Mike Hyman. Alten- ding were a sisler of Mr.s. Hyman’s, Mrs. Susan Alchley of Georgia; an uncle, Charlie Mock of Wisnlon-Salem; her falher, Frank Mock and others. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Jones of Baltimore, Md.. visited Miss Grace Jones Wednesday evening. « 1 4 OFF WHILE SUPPLY LASTS! Reg. 42.97 YOUTHS 9-13V2 R E V LD N A ny Revlon® Product Coupon Not Valid With Any Other Offer Coupon Good Al Fosler-Raueh Drug Co. Only • Ч.' Reg. 48.97 BOYS 1-3, ЗУг-6 Squire Boone Plaza "C ross Trainer H i" W hite leather Navy & grey trim Hours; Mon.-Sat. 10 a.m.- 9 p.m. Sun. 1 p.m.to 6 p.m. s^“5 iS h o e S h o w Foster*Rauch Drug Co. Phone 6 34 -21 41 Wilkesboro Street____ ____ Mocksville, N.C. : 2C-D AVIE COUNTY KNTKUl’KISIÎ UIXORI), TIIURSDAY, Лчц. 10. I9S9 Social K in g - H a r t n e s s C o u p l e M a r r i e d Lisa Jane King ami Darrin Lcvcrti Harmess were imilcd in marriage on Aug. 5 al tlie Cooleemee Cluircli of God, The Rev. Charles Ledford officiated the 3 p.m. ecremiiny. A program of wedding music was presented by Mrs. Donna Williams, pianist, and Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Durham, soloi.sts. The bride, escorted by her father, wore a full-lenglli gown of white satin designed with an angl ed neckline, wedding band collar, and peek-a-boo sleeves. The fitted bodicc was embellished with an Alencon lace overlay and dipped , into an antebellum waistline with a butterfly bow in back. The full skirt extended into a chapel train bordered wilh lace motifs. The ■ bridal gown was made by Kathryn ■ Alexander of Cooleemee. To complete her ensemble, she :wore an ankle-length veil and a V wreath-style headpiece of white ‘: silk flowers and pearls. She carried a cascadini; binu|uct of white roses, tiger lilies and baby's breath. Miss Kelli Brown was her niaid of honor. Serving as bridesmaids were Melinda Frye, Tammy Phelps, Amy O ’Neal and Donna Wagoner. Audra Harlne.ss, sister of Ihe groom, was a junior bridesmaid. John H. Hartness Jr. was his son's best man. U.shers were Mark King, brother of the bride; Dennis King, uncle of the bride; and Tim Issacs, Scott Cribb and Mike Williams, all of Gastonia. Scotty Alexander served as a junior usher and ring bearer. Miss Karla Smith presided at the guest register. Mrs. Judith Issacs directed the wedding. The bride is Ihe daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jerry W. King of Cooleemee. She is a graduate of Davie High School and has attend ed the University of North Carolina al CharUme. She will conlinue her work as an linglish major at Ap palachian Stale University lliis fall. She is employed by Ihe College of Education at ASU. The groom is a graduate o)’ Ashbrook High School and has at tended UNC-Charlolte. He is a North Carolina Teaching Fellow Scholarship recipient and will con tinue has work as an industrial technology major at Appalachian State University this fall. He is employed by Dawson Consumer Products. Hartness is Ihe son of Mr. and Mrs. John H. Hartness Jr. of Gastonia. Afler a honeymoon to Gatlin burg, Tenn., the couple will make Ihcir home in Boone. Kccuption Immediately following Ihe ceremony, a reception was held in the church fellowship hall. Assisting in serving were Jean Chapman, Margaret Gaither, Janice Hartness, and Wanda Smith. Uchciirsiil Dinner A rehearsal dinner was heid in the cluirch fellowship hall im- iiiedialely following rehearsal. The menu consisted of chicken, ham, baked beans, potato salad, slaw, rolls, cake. tea. coffce and soft drinks. Social Events • The couple was honored wilh a Tupperware shower on June 23 in Mooresville. The shower was given by her aunts. • Miss King was honored with a shower on June 30 at the Cooleemee Church of God. • Kelli Brown and Melinda Frye hosted a lingerie and linen shower on July 16 at Victory Baptist Church. • The couple was honored wilh a shower on July 20 at the New Hope Church of God. • Aunts of the groom hosted a shower for the bride on Aug. 1 in Mt. Holly. Mrs. Darrin Levern Hartness ... was Lisa Jane King Gobble-Hunt Couple Wed On Aug. 5 Mrs. Richard John Hunt ... was Tracey Karen Gobble Couple Plans Wedding Mrs. Lynda Burton of Winston- - Salem and M r. and Mre. Ken Bur- ' ton of Kernersviile announce the 'engagement of their daughter, . Gina, to Dm iel Chalmer Richait, " son of Mr. and Mrs. James Richart : of Maoresville, The bride-elect is a graduate of : Davie High School and A p palachian State University. She is employed by Talent Tree Person- ' nel Services in Charlotte as a client services representative. Richart is a graduate of Liberty High School of Bedford, Va., and Appalachian State University. He Mocks By Ethel Jone.s Mocks Correspondent Mr. and Mrs. Donald Eaton and Eric Eaton spent a few days in the mountains last week. Mrs, Helen Myers spent Friday : night with Mr. and Mrs. Richard - Horn of East Bend. A number of relatives attended a cookout Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Mike Hyman. Atten ding were a sister of Mrs. Hyman’s, Mrs. Susan Atchley of Georgia; an uncle, Charlie Mock of Wisnton-Salem; her father, Frank Mock and others. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Jones of Baltimore, Md., visiled Miss Grace Jones Wednesday evening. is employed by Zcllweger-Uster in Charlotte as a computer programmer. The wedding is planned for Saturday, Sept. 2, at 2 p.m. at Burkhead United Methodist Church in Winston-Salem. Miss Tracey Karen Gobble of Mocksville and Richard John Hunt of Wilmington were united in mar riage Aug. 5th at Calahain Friend ship Baptist Church. The Rev. Car roll Jordan of Statesville and the Rev. Larry Turner of Lakeland, Fla., officiated at the 2 p.m. ceremony. A program of wedding music was presented by Mrs. Juanita Keaton of Harmony. The bride, escorted by her father and given in marriage by her parent.s, wore a while satin gown designed with a sweetheart neckline wilh short tulip sleeves. Pearl droplets dangled at the bas que waistline which was enhanc ed with lace embellished with pearls and sequins. The full skirt that extended into a demi-cathedral train featured a front pyramid of lace. Bows and lace motifs adorn ed the train that was bordered with Sehiffli lace. To complete the ensemble, she wore a headpiece which she and her mother designed of tufted illu sion adorned with a white silk floral spray and accented with pearls and iridescents. The floor- length layered veil featured irides cent cascading lilies of the valley. She carried a cascading bouquet of trailing ivy and white daisies ac cented with miniature pom-poms, baby’s breath and streamers of rib bons and pearls. Kellie Gobble of Mock.sville. the bride’s sister, was maid of honor. Bridesmaids were Penny Gobble, sister of the bride, and Carla Tut- H o u s c h R e p o r ts F o r N a v y D u ty Navy Petty Officer 3rd Class Willie C. Housch, son of Veramae Housch of Route 4, MocksviUe, recently reported for duty aboard the amphibious command .ship USS Reg. 48.97 BOYS 1-3, 3'/г-6 Squire Boone Plaza "C ross Trainer H i" W hite leather Navy & grey trim Hours; Mon.-Sat. 10 a.m.-9 p.m. Sun. 1 p.m.to 6 p.m. terow of Marietta, Ga. Lawrence Hunt was his son’s best man. Ushers were Larry Hunt, brother of the groom, Allen Wood cock and Tony Azart, all of Wilmington. Miniature brides were Carrie and Stacey Johnson of Harmony. Denise McBride of Mocksville kept the guest register. Programs were distributed by Lisa Tutterow of Kennesaw, Ga. The wedding was directed by Teresa Johnson of Harmony and Wanda Tutterow of Marietta, Ga. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Donald G. Gobble. She is a graduate of Davie High School and has a bachelor of science degree in nursing from the Univer sity of North Carolina at W ilm ington. She is employed by Emory University Hospital of Decatur, Ga. The groom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Hunt of W ilm ington. He is a graduate of E,A. Laney High School and will be at tending D e V ry Institute of Technology in Decatur, Ga. Special guests were grand parents, Mrs. Helen Hunt of Wilm ington, Mr. and Mrs. Otis Gobble of Mocksville and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Johnson of Harmony. Following a honeymoon to Freeport in the Bahamas, the cou ple will make their home in Ken nesaw, Ga. Reception Immediately follow ing the ceremony, the bride’s parents entertained with a reception at their home. The guests were greeted by Mr. and Mrs. Johnson A. McBride Jr. of Mocksville. The cake table featured a three tiered wedding cake with a scroll design enhanced by fresh daisies, baby’s breath and greenery which was designed and created by Mrs. Debbie Koontz of Mocksville. The - floral arrangements ofdaisies and mixed white flowers accented with baby’s breath and greenery were created by Mrs. Phoebe Sampson of Harmony. Refreshments of mints, nuts, pickles, linger sandwiches and sparkling punch were served to the guests by Mrs. Patsy Patti of Moeksville, Mrs. Dot Wilkes of Lexington, Mrs. Linda Johnson of Statesville and Mrs. Lisa Johnson of Harmony. Social Events * A wedding celebration was held on M ay 20 at the bridegroom’s home in Wilmington by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Hunt, to include the special family and friends that would not be able to attend the wedding ceremony. Special guesti were grandparents, Mrs. Helen Hunt of Wilmington and M r. and Mrs. Samuel Graham Jr. of Glad* I wyne. Pa. . • Miss Gobble was honored wit^ a floating shower on June 24 at tht home of her parents, given by Mre| Teresa Johnson, M rs; Linda Johnson and Mrs. Lisa J ^ iiM n l l • Miss Gobble was hoiia^, wit a brunch on July 8 at the h o m it her parents, hosted by Mrai' ^ a i da McBride, Mrs. I>atsy':Patti| I Mrs. Dot Wilkes, Mrs. Barbjir^ Gobble and Mrs. Marsha dbbble| • A tea was given in the couple'll honor by the Rev. and Mrs; C ari j roll Jordan: and M n - and Mrs| I W . A. Beck on Suiiday; July ?, aM the home of the Rev. and 'M rsijl Carroll Jordan on CarbUna A v a i^ in Statesville. M i* • 'nie bridegroom’s p a ra ^ M r. and M rs. Lavvnnce' Hunt;'' Wilmington, entertain t h e 'o ^ pie and wedding party with ner at Reeo’s in Statesville I Augiist 4 immediately fpllqwriiijil I the rehearsal. You should hear what you’re missing. The cuatom.mtde S k O m fO D E Is comfortable. Inconspicuous, and Ills enllraty wllhin your earl k tM :’ OdMM HMrtng Cm С и м 2lt N. IMn 8kMt, Носишь, N.C. Ню1 B w 10-ЛО ¿a ■ 11 IW Mount Whitney, homeported in Norfolk, Va. A 1981 graduate of Davie High School, he joined the Navy in May 1985. $ 1 4 OFF WHILE SUPPLY LASTS! Beg. 42.97 YOUTHS 9-13V2 R E V Ю N OFF A ny Revlon® Product Coupon Not Valid With Any Other Offer Coupon Good Al Foster-Rauch Drug Co. Only ЛЕ? •V sgiiShoe Show Foster-Rauch Drug Co. Phone 63 4 -2 1 4 1 Wilkesboro Street___ ____ Mocksville, N.C. DAVIK COI v r v KNTKUPKISK KIXOUD, TIIUUSDAV. Аиц. 10. 1489- Pvt; Theresa A. Bennett has completed basic training at Fort Jackson, S.C. ^ During the training, students teceived instruction in drill and ■ceremonies, weapons, map reading, tactics, military courtesy, Reg:4137 Ladles "Sllmfit II" M E N S 3 9 9 0 Reg. 5 Ш Mens "Multi- Trainer" ?si5iShoe Show : Hours: Mon.-Sat. 10 a.m. to 9 p.m.; Sun. 1 p.m. to 6 p.m. C ouple W ed A ug. 5 In C erem o n y A t W inston C h u rch 0elebrate Anniversary :William H. and Lois Broadway celebrated their 25th wedding an- r.-;;mversary July 22 at the Jerusalem Fire Department with friends and r.-:^farnily. The party was given by their daughters, Twyla Smith, Teresa !^^Bi•badway, Marie Register and Patricia Broadway, all of Mocksville. B e n n e t t C o m p le t e s T r a in in g military justice, first aid, and A r my history and traditions. Bennett is the daughter of Hellen E. Bennett of Route 1, Advance. She is a 1988 graduate of West Forsyth High School. Jiici|Ui;lino Angela Ponce iincl DinuiUl W. Miller Jr.. hi)lli (if WinsUin-Salcm. were united in marriage Saturday, Aug. 5, at 2 p.m. al the First Baptist Church. I'hc Rev. George Bowman of- I'iciated al Ihc double-ring cercmony. The bride was given in marriage by her father, William B. Pence of Clemmons. Miss Barrie Baity of Raleigh was maid of honor. Serving as bridesmaids were Mrs. Terri Black of High Point, Miss Toni Kimel of Winston-Salem, and Miss Lori Reynolds of Greensboro. Donald \V. M iller Sr. of Winston-Salem was his son’s best man. Ushering were: Mark Black of High Point; Jimmy Collins of King; Travis Pence, bride’s brother of Clemmons; and Harold Poole, bride’s uncle of Winston-Salem. Ross Smith, bridegroom ’s nephew of Advance, was a junior usher. M iss Lauren Smilh. bride groom's niece, also of Advancc, was a junior hridesniaid. Tlie bride is a grailualc of Wesi l-or.sylh High .School and ihe University of North Carolina al Greensboro wilh a bachelor's degree in marketing managemenl. Her parents are William H. Pence of Clenmions and Mrs. Pal Garesche' of Memphis. Tenn. The bridegroom is tlie son of Donald W. Miller Sr. of Winslon- Salem and Mrs. Faye Morgan of Clemmons. He is a graduate of Davie High School and is a recor ding artist for Nemesis Records in Greensboro. Following a Florida honeymoon, the couple will make iheir home in Winston-Salem. Rcccption Immediately following the wed ding ceremony, guesls were invited to a reception in Ihe couple’s honor in The Garden Terrace room at the Hyatt Hotel. Mrs. Donald IV. Miller Jr. ... was Jacqueline Angela Pence IN P A IN ? Chiropractic worlds without drugs or surgery. WHY SUFFER? Call today for consultation 63 4 -2512 DAVIE CHIROPRACTIC CLINIC 501 Wilkesboro Street SMocksville, N.C. ^ B e n F r a n k l i n Mocksville, N.C. Open 9 to 9 Monday-Saturday Sunday 1 to e (704) 634-5488 Pencils. 12-count yellow pencils. Don't go back to school without them! Stock up nowl 2 „ n » ® Ladles a Misses Canvas Oxfords. For back-lo-school comlort. Rubber soles. White in sizes 10-4 and ladies 5-10. All-Purpote Potting Soil. 8 Lb. bag contains composing peat moss, perlile. 'and and lime. Sterilized. 7 8 « OMC Floss. 6-stfand embroidery floss. 100% cotton. Your choice of assorted colors. 17 Fiixzy B«Ar. Bears, bears, every* where! Choose panda, brown bear or red & green bear. 15 1 5 ^Kaeh Plastic Canvas In assorted colors IOV2 X 1ЗУ2 inch. Cenmeoal Paint. 2-oz. squeeze ; bottle ol acrylic crall paint Choose : from ■ grrat variety ol colois. ; ' ; 21 r. Ш Master Comblnitlon Padlock Feature Value! MlxeU F low er B ush. 7*bloom bunch. Choose from 6 stylos and assorted decorator colors. Give a new lift lo any room! 49 Crayola Crayons. 24 assorted colors per pack. Be creative* 35 •)8-C aunt..................................I.B7 ■4C— DAVIE COUNTY ENTEKI’RISE RECOUI), TIIUUSDAV, Лиц. H>.Russell-Stiller Couple Speaks Vows The wedding of Karen Denise ■ Russell to Steven Eugene Stiller, both of Mocksville. was held Saturday, Aug. 5, at 7 p.m. at the First United Methodist Church. The Rev. Don Lloyd olTiciated at the double-ring ceremony. A program of wedding music was presented by Mike Hendrix, organist, and the church choir under the direction of Mrs. Letty Smith. The bride, given in marriage by her father, Wayne Russell, wore a bridal gown of white satin featur ing a wedding band neckline, ac- ecnted by a dropped waist-line and long pouff sleeves. Pearl and se quin appliques fashioned the waist and sleeves. Her A-line skirt ex tended intoa calhedral-ienglh train, complete with a bustle. Slie wore a lace covered teardrop cap, ac cented with pearls, attached to a •fingertip veil of sheer illusion. She ■carried a cascade bouquet of white ■roses. Lady Di roses, stephanotis, and baby’s breath with white satin and lace streamers. M iss Glenda Allen of Woodleaf was maid of hcimir. HriileMiiaiils were Miss Diedre IJriggars and Miss Kristy Hilton of Mocksville; and M iss Angela Bess ol Slalesville. Keith Stiller of Mocksville was his brother's besl man. Ushering were; Roger Green of Salisbury: and Mark Russell. Kevin Green and Kip Sales, all of Mocksville. Child attendants were Emily Timmons, llower girl; anil Chris Miller, ring bearer. Mr. and Mrs. Gregg Henderson of Statesville kept the guest regisler. The bride is a graduate of Davie Counly High School and Mitchell Communily College with an associate degree in business com puter programm ing. She is employed by Funder America. Inc. in data processing. Her parents are Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Russell of Route 3, Mocksville. The bridegroom is the son of Mrs. Ann Stiller of Mocksville and Gene Stiller of Salisbury. He is a graduate of Davie County High School and attended East Carolina University. He is employed as store manager for Myers Oil Company. I'ollow ing an unannounced honeyinoon. Ihe couple will make lliL'ir home in M ocksville. Rehearsal Dinner Following the wedding rehear sal Fritlay evening, a rehearsal din ner was held in Ihe church fellowship building. Hosts were Ihe brid eg room 's m other and grandmother. Kcce|)li(iii The bride's parents hosted a reception in the couple's honor in Ihe church fellowship building im mediately following the wedding ccremony. Guests were greeted by Mr. and Mrs. Don Russell of Burlington. Rerreshments servcti consisted of a four-tiered wedding cake top ped with a floral arrangement and a precious nionient bride and bridegroom, barbecue chicken drumettes, ham rolls, assorted finger sandwiches, vegetable tray and dip, decorated mints and sparkling peach punch. Bridal Parlies • Mr. and Mrs. Don Russell of liurlinglon uere hosts lo a hritlal hinelieon Saturday. July S. al their home. • Dll M iy I.V a rioaliny iniscellaneous shower uas hnstcti h.\' grcal-aitnts anti cousins o f (he bride. The shower was held in Slalesville. •Ju ly I. a floating niiscellaneou.s shower was given by Mrs. Shirley Driggars al her home. • On July S. a bridal luneheon was given by Mrs, Don Russell al her home in Burlington. • On July 16. an ice cream par ty and shower was given by aunl. cousins and gramliiiolher of Ihe bride al Ihe home of Mrs. Elizabeth Rus.sell. Ihe bride's graiulinollier. • On July 20. a lingerie shower was given by co-workers al Ihc home of Mrs. Preeyous Sales. • On July 29. a bridesmaids lun cheon was given by Mrs. Mike Carter and Mrs. Jane Beaver. The bride cho.sc this time to give Ihc bridesmaids their gifts. The lun cheon was at Mrs. Mike Carter's home in Mooresville. Y a d k in V a lle y N e w s Coufiie Plans Wedding Mrs. Billie b. Reavis of 205 Dogwood Lane, Mocksville, an nounces the engagement of her daughter, Nancy Elizabeth Reavis, to'Kurt Andrew Musselman, son of Mr. and Mrs. Perce A. Muuelman of Routé 3, MocksvUle. Miss Reavis is also the daughter of the late C. Lawrence Reavis. , The bride-elect is a graduate of Davic High School and Rowan- ^ Cabarrus Community College with an associate degree in medical lecretarial wience. Ste is employed by N.C. Baptist Hpsptial as a i 'fn^cal transicriptionist. Musselman is a graduate of Davie High School and is attending ' Davidson Community College, majoring in engineering. He served two years in. the U.S. Army. He is also a member of the North Canjina National Guard. He is employed as a machinist for Ingersoll- ' Rand, Inc. The wedding is planned for Sept. 16 at 3 p.m. at the First Baptist Church, Mocksville. ANNUAL CLEARANCE SALE 20% Off Selected dresses 20% Off Selected Pantsuits^ By M rs. Ruby M cBrkle Yadkin Valley Correspondent Bible school at Yadkin Valley, Aug. 7-11, is from 6;30-8;30 p.m. A nursery will be provided. Sympathy goes to the family of Mr. Albert Foster, who died Thursday morning. He will be missed by all who knew him. Mr. and Mrs. John.son McBride and Carolyn McBride attended the 50lh anniversary of Otti.s and Audry Gobble at the Ijames Cross Roads Baptist Church last Sunday evening. Mr. and Mrs. John Roy Smith visited Mrs. Patty Hockaday and Ruby M cBride last Sunday evening. M r. and Mrs. Steve Edwards and children of Florence, S.C., visited theirparents. Mr. and Mrs. Johnny McBride last weekend and attended the 50th anniversary par ty for Tammy’s grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Ottis Gobble, at Ijames Baptist Church. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Herron and children visited Ruby McBride last Sunday. Sally Carter visited Catherine Plott on Thursday evening and took her things from the garden. Mrs. Nellie Caudle of Alabama visited Doc Caudle Friday evening. Nellie grew up in this conimunity as a child. She also visited Ruby McBride. Travis Riddle is a patient at Davie County Hospital and had surgery on his leg on Thursday. We all hope this helps his leg to heal up. Hi! My name is Scan Christopher Lee Phillips. I’m the one-year-old son of Jerry and Tracey Phillips. My sissy’s name is Heather Phillips. I had a party at my Mammaw Darlene’s house and had an M &M cake with my own little one to play in. 1 received lots of nice gifts from family and friends. My grandparents are: Keith and Darlene Sheets of Mocksville; Bobby and Ardella Phillips of Mocksville; and Ron nie and Cherita Myers of Miramar, Fla. CAROLINA TIRE T O Y O S T Ö V E 20%\>ff Selected Pants and Tops UNIFORM FASHIONS Professional Career Apparels & Shoes 944 Davie Avenue Statesville, North Carolina 28677 (704) 872-5259 Visa — MasterCard 10% Off All Uniforms Mrs. Steven Eugene Stiller ... was Karen Denise Russell S e a ^ j( / ic l ^ h o tc ÿ k x z p J i^ ^ 31 C o u rt S q u a re M o c k s v llle , NC ' 6 3 4 - 0 1 5 8 I gister’s II : Florist ar»Qyts:'. Fnsh Flowtn - Silk Flowm Grttn Plants & Gcrdtns Balloons - Gfts - Baskels Slufftd Animali ' ' Two Locations To Serve You 634-1782Sgulre Boone Plau 1039 YadUn»Ule Rd. 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Because proper installation means '' youll be getting tlie most efficieni, most comfortable system money cart buy. Tliat's a pow'erhjl statement. But D uke Power can back it up: if within tlie fiiBt year after installation,you're not cornlortablo, Duke Power will install a com parable heating syslom of your choice. T 17 it. W hat have you c o m f „ gottoiose^ 1' ^ • DAVIK СОиМЛ' KNIKKCKISK KKCOKD. TIIUKSDAV, Лик. К), 1У89-5С J a y c e e s V is itin g C h u r c h e s Five Generations Annie Wooten of Route 1, Harmony, Grace Taylor of Route 6, Mocksville, Ricky Taylor of Route 2, Advance and Tonya and Nicole EUenburg of Route 3, Mocksviiie, five .generations of the family gathered recently. S p e e r C o m p le te s U S A F T ra in in g :: Airman 1st Class. Christopher S. r. Speer has ^ graduated from 1; 'Air Force basic training in Lackland Air I -'-Force Base, t; 'Texas, t; ' During the < six weeks of tr^ningtheair- Speer man studied the Air Forcc mission, organization and customs and received spccial training in human relations. In addition, airmen who com plete basic training earn credits toward an associate degree through the community college of (he Air Force. Speer is the son of Mr. and Mrs. John W. Speer Sr. of Route 6, Mocksville. The airman is a 1987 graduate of Davie High School. G rubb Honored With Bachelor Show er The employees of Ellis Auto Aticlion honored Tommy Grubb with a siirprise groom shower on Wedimday night, Aug. 2, after the car auction. Grubb was presented a household gift from the group, then received other gifts for himself. The midnight shower was at tended by approximately 20 of the employees. Guests were served punch, cake squares, and cookies. Fun and laughter were created by the Mickey Mouse theme. Grubb was married on Saturday, Aug. 5, to Sarah Wright. The Mocksvillc-Davic Jiiycccs kic'kcil iilT ils iicH' diiirdi vi.siiiiiiim jtrciiiiam hy allciuling scrviccs ;il Blaise Hapiist Church on July 2.''. The cluii plans (o make I'tuir such visits annually. The jirinip also E llis E a r n s N u r s in g D e g r e e Cindy Leijih Ullis. ilaughter of M r. and M rs. Clinion Ellis of Route I . Advancc. was one of 30 g r a d u a t i n i; students from the nursing pro gram of For sylh Technical Kills Community Collegc to be pinned al a ceremony held on the school campus on Wednesday. Aug. 2. Guest speaker was Paul Wiles, president of Forsylh Memorial Hospilal in Winston-Salem. A reception honoring the students was held following the ceremony. Ellis accepted a position as staff nurse on Eighth Cardiac at Forsyth Memorial Hospilal and will begin her new duties on Sept. 4. O r ie n t a t io n S e t A t M M S Orientation will be held at Mocksville Middle School for ris ing fourth graders and their parents Thursday, Aug. 17, at 7 p.m. in the school cafeteria. A short meeting conducted by principal Bill Campbell, followed by time being spent with the teachers in their room; will take place. Rerrcslimenis wil. . served by the PTO. NOW OPEN 2448 E. Lewisville - Clemmons Rd. Westwood Village Shopping Center. Clemmons Fasti Free Delivery Serving: Buffalo Chicken Wings Pizza Subs • Saiads, Ctieesecaice A Steak Fries Special 2 Medium ; Cheefee Pizzas ^ 8 ® ® Ta* Included 1.50 Per Topping Buy 1 Large Pizza, Get A Second Of Equal Value At Price At Clemnions Location Only For Delivery Minimum Order »5” Limiled Delivery Area Ua.m. • 12 a.m. Mon.-Thurs. 11 a.m. • 1 p.m.. Fri. & Sal. 1 p.m. • 12 p.m., Sunday 7CM700 Now Hiring Cooks ft Drivers^ NO CHECKS ACCEPTED Juke Box Opening Soon! M id -A u g u s t John’s In Cdnjunction With P iz z a E x p re s s Serving Beer, Hamburgers, Hot Dogs Bar-B-Que, Sitbs & Sandwiches Pizza & Buffalo Wings In O u r D in in g R o o m Next T o P izza Express Now hiring waitresses & cooks flexible hours & discount meals visiled llie Clemiiiiiiis ,la\cccs on July IS. Rain once again postponed Ihe Adopl-A-Higlnvay clean-up. The new date is Aug. 14 at 3:.1() p.m. The club is responsililc lor 1-40 belwcen U.S. fi4 aiul U.S. 601. The club lias also agreed lo be responsible for upkeep of the new "Welcome lo Mocksville” sign on U.S. l.-iS, Л book drive lo raise books for Ihe Davie Prison Unit library is scheduled for Aug. 14-21. Don't miss your ebance lo dunk your I'avoriie politician, law en- ГогсешеШ oflicer. or olher local celebrily al Ihc Jaycce dunking booth during Ihis week’s Masonic Picnic. The club nieeis llic first Monday ol'each monlh al Weslern Sleerand Ih e third M onday al the Mocksville-(3avie Recreation Department. Meetings arc at 7 p.m. All persons between the ages of 2 1 and 39 are invited. - Will Martin Robin Bledsoe and Emily Robertson attended Arts School. 2 G o To Arts School Robin Bledsoe and Ginnic Leonard, members of The Dance Company of Mocksville, attended Ihc summer session of ballet at the Norlh Carolina School of the Arts in Winston-Salem. During the five-week session, Ihe girls studied technique, pointe, jazz, and character. Emily Robertson, instructor, at tended the teacher workshop the final week of the session. The company is sponsored by the Davie Parks and Recreation Department and holds classes at the Brock Auditorium during the sehool year for ages 3 through adult. |3 rd A n n iv e rs a ry S a l^ 2 Liter Pepsi ' Hey! My name is Kourtney Denise Cohen. I turned two on July 26.1 celebrated my birthday July 30 with a party at my home. I had a Kermit The Frog cake. I would like to thank everyone for niy nice gifts. My daddy and mommy are Mark and Rachel Cohen of Harmony. My grand parents are M r. and Mrs. Laverne Cohen and Mr. and Mrs. John L. Hill, all of Rt. 9, Mocksville. Home Grown Cantaloupes Va. Mt. Peaches 3 9 * tb. Home Grown Tomatoes Jim’s Fruit Market 634-2016 Highway 601 North Mocksville, N.C.'^ NQ^AYMENTS 'Til 1 9 9 0 ! No payments 'til January on SearsCharge Deferred Payment Man.! Ask for details. Usual finance charges will apply. Kanmora* 14.3 cu. ft. fnulliM •Mgwtilor space saver design measures only 28'wide IlSM onlhtr NOW $540* (AT S94St) Kinmon I9.e cu.ft. fio ilb » m higtialor features Ice maker Was I78S NOW $734.87*т е Monthly*' (JL 59031) lo¥Mtt price ever UO comcorder outfit with tele- and wide- angle lonsos. and zoom mike (a $286.16 va{uol) PLUS case. alF adapters, battery NOW $954.88*$20 Monlhly'* (JL 53744) В A im iko'tlaigetl S  'Ï S i ÿ r '- 'with automatic tabde softener dispenser (JL 28731) *14 Monthly” NOWS414.e7*Wa.$42S e-<ycb, 4^nip(ratw « éy*r (JL 68731) $12 МолШ1у*’ NOW S319.87* (Electric) Was $345 (Gas fxlced higher). К*|нпога*20.6ш. К. fraslbss rtfrigwokir $17Monlhlr’* Wm $834.87 NOW $599.87* Zenith Syitsm 3 stereo color conule TV 25-inch with unified remote NOW $650.21*$19 Monthly" (AT 4940) bilHnUkraWiish dbhwasher..No »y»tem NOW ' 5399.99. S , 154cv.fl!.cliM>hwnr NOW $384.87* (JL193e<) Was $395 16.0 (U. ft. uprlgM tfM nr (JL 29268) Wu$aes N O W Sa4*.87 Eech$12ManttiV* Compact .S4<u.fl. Kenmore« microwave 500 watts, mourn under cabinet, or on wall. 59 van'abte power levels, auto defrost NOW $127*mount hardware not included SlOMomhly** (JL 89214) ____ \ Ken « • M i n e rang. mrtlh fully Mitonwtle event Gas model $15 Monthly (/^T 71981) I' NOW $499.99*. Electric model Vfti $4*5 ь (AT 91881)......;,.......No*»43S‘ О и г м М iäis 7.2-amp moMr,'' dual power; «de* deaniuedon(ATSeiTï) N O W S129.87* ИОМолМу“. canister vac 3.9-peak HP triple filtration deaning system NOW $199,95* 110 Monthly** Was $309.99 Pioneer MO*wo» tfereoromoto œntrol and CD player (JL 95501) $17 N O W $799-89- VHS VCR 27 funcllori romoto. 1- yoar/8*ovont. on screen programming NOW $270.88*$n Monthly** (AT 53324) 4ó'g(anf screen stereo TV Unified remote. Jack pack. Combfilter.(JUKB 54461) N O W $19 99-$42 Monthly“Was $2199.44 SMOur tiorifora . •'!complete se)e<Kon. Wi'W ^ im (eoKjres you want. ! the name broncis you pre^, ’ greot credit plans, rtohon* < wide service, exfencied worronKes end morel * Shipping IncluOod to storo. Unloss stated otherwise, 'Monthly payments on SoarsCharga (or SearsCharge Plus aedii plans lor itoms priced appKancos are white; colors eicra. Eloarlc cjryor requires $699.99 or more). Witn Dofor/od Paymoni purchase, there will tie a finance charge for deferral, cord. period. Itoms readily available as aCverrisod. m s C A T A L O G 125 Oepol SI.I Mocksville. N.C. 2702Í HOME APPLIANCES & E L E C T R O N IC S STO R E Your money'» worth and a whole lot morrl Sotiifadion Guarontard or Your Money ftack STORE HOURS: Mon.-Fri. 9-5:30 STORE PHONE: 704-634-5988Saf. 9-t; Sunday Closed cataiog ORDFiitiNE: K00366 3000 »¿•i^DAVIE CÒUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, Лик- I». I!>«9 C o rn a tz e r N e w s Bv Doltiu Polls Cornatzer Correspondent Mr. atul Ml's. Nd iiiiíiii Siiiilli atul Titrati itnil Margaret Pelts r cL'ontly spent a week widi Mr, and M rs. M ark Sniilli in Massaeluisetls. Mr. anil Mrs, Bob Sparks. Mr. and Mrs, Bill Pulls, Mr, and Mrs, Paul Hiitldit and Shirley Polls spent last weekend in Millón. Va,. and atteniled lltc Carter laiiiily singing lioniecotiiing. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Frye, Mr. ami Mr.s. Brady Barney and Mr. and Mrs, Bill Shoal' spent a few ilays in Pennsylvania last week louring lltc Amish eoiinlry and other places of interest, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Jones aiul Mr. and Mrs. Gray Jones were Sunday luncltcoii gucsi.s of Mr. ami Mrs, Mike Jacobs in Cooleemee, The occasion was lo celcbrale Jcn- iiil'er’s birthday. Mrs. Josephine lillis visited l-!va Potts last Tuesday afternoon. Homer Potts visited Aaron Carter Iasi Siimlay. Lucille Polls and Nannie l.ou Sparks visited Aaron Carler. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Jones, and Margaret Potts last Tuesday, Mr, and Mrs, Butch Wesi and Kristy spent Iasi weekend al M yr tle Heath. S.C, Our comimmity expresses sym pathy U) the family of Roy Carler who died reeenlly. He grew up in the Cornalzer community, Mr. and Mr.s, Marvin Smith and children spent a weekend in Ihe mountains recently, Alan Frye is slowly improving from an injured leg he received in a fall four weeks ago, Bruce Hinkle visited Mr, and Mrs. Homer Polls Friday, R e a v is C o m p le te s A r m y T ra in in g Cook-Spry Engagement Announced Tricia Dale Cook, daughter of Robert Gook and Carol Cook of :Mocksville, and Lewis Edward Spry, son of Lewis Ray Spry and -Judith Spry Borders of Mocksville, will be united in marriage Aug. 1:26 at 2 p.m. at the home of Robert Cook on 809 Salisbury St., :>Iocksville. 'i The bride-elect is a graduate of Davie High School. She is employed .;at; Food Lion in Mocksville. [The bridegroom-elect is a graduate of Davie High School. He is '^employed at Hanes in Bixby. Arm y Nalional Guard Pvt. Carl R. Rcavis Jr. has completed train ing al Ihe U.S. Arm y Infanlry School, Fori Henning, Ga. During the course, students received training which qualified them as lighl-wcapons infanlrymen and as indireci-fire crcwmcn in a rifle or mortar squad. S u m m e r S h o e s C l e a r a n c e S a l e L a d ie s & M e n ’s A rriv a ls ■A ■'DELANEY ' ' ’ :,Virgina Border and Ronald iVlwiey announce the birth of a : doighttf; /ohanna Catherine, on July 10 in HUo, Hawaii, li Jhe baby Weighed 6 lbs. 4% oz. ■ a^^was 18K inches long. ‘'.Materhal grandparents are' (^tfierine Border of Mocksville aad^the. late Harold Border, t Pater^ grmlparents are Anna Delaney of Rome, N.Y., and the late Thomas Delaney. Maternal great-grandmother is Mrs. O.J. Fikes of Utika, N.Y. W H IT E H E A R T Judy and Ken Whiteheart and Jennifer announce the birth of a son and brother, James Allen “Jay,” on Friday, July 28. The baby weighed 6 lbs. 13 oz. and was 20*4 inches long. 30%O ff Regular Price vOne Rack O f Ladies ^Summer Shoes At 5 0 % O f f New Fall Shoes Arriving Daily! The Cobbler Shop, Inc. Squire Boone Plaza (Next To Wal-Mart) (704) 634-4162 The Sofa You’ll Love To Own! Berkline, the Specialist in Motion Furniture, present their dual-recliner sofa Available in Contemporary, Traditional, or Early American styles, these sofas offer a lifetime warranty on wooden frames, springs and mechanisms. C o m e I n T o d a y A n d P u r c h a s e Q u a l i t y F u r n i t u r e M a d e T o L a s t A L i f e t i m e ! i/:; |lv-in-room l i l t L C R E S T ü m i t u r e Qver 25 Brand Names Available 2560 s. Stratford Rd. _ ^ (Beside Jim Weavil Appliance) 7 6 5 -9 0 7 7 ^ Mon,-Snt, 9-3; ^Fri, 'til ft; Free Closed Wed Dellvery A r o u n d & A b o u t Harris Niinied Oiit,staiulin): College Student Steven C, Harris lias heen named to the Oulslanding Collcgc Students of Anierica, Harris was selected based on his outstan ding merit and accomplisluncnl as an American college sludcm, Harris is the son of Mr, and Mrs. Ronnie S. Harris of Pataskala, Ohio and the grand.son of Mr, and Mr.s. D,A, Harris of Mocksville. Hollis Receives Bachelor’s Degree Fnini W C U James Efrem Hollis of Uoulc 6. Mocksville was graduated Aug. 4 from Western Carolina Univer.sity during summer comnicncc- menl excerciscs. Hollis rcccivcd a bachelor's degree in industrial distribution. LdCiil Doclor Atteiid,s I'aniily Ph.v.sicians Weekend George D, Kimberly, M .D. of Mocksville attended the Summer Family Physicians Weekend. July 28-30 al the Sheraton Resort and Conference Centcr in Allantic Beach, N.C. The event, .spon sored by the North Carolina Academy of Family Physcians, drew over 100 family physcians from North Carolina and .several sur rounding stales. Participants gained the opportunity to earn 11 hours of conlinuing medical education credit. Discu.ssions centered around the theme “ Hazards and Diseases Affecting All Americans In Their Workplace." Instruction included weapons qualifications, tactics, patrolling, land mine warfare, field com m unications and combat operations. Reavis is the son of Carl R. and Connie B. Reavis of Route 6, Mock.sville, lÉŒr B'baatm aster SUPPtlU ( 4435 66946 rNCREDIBlÈ . B A R G A IN S ^ 1 5 9 0 20 " 3-Speed Fan Wide box cabinet with computer designed high velocity blade. Feo* lures 3 speeds wilh lubricated beqrina and almond grille, blade ond dork brown oppoinlments. 4cai>— - n o m O A K wHtiesumiESlAST / 3.5- \ \87760/ 2.51b. Royal Oak Light This convenient charcool is eosy to use. Great for home or camping. Requires no lighter (tuid. simply light the bog. ' W ' INSCC!,KPflUli» CUTTER / 536<55.33 \e WHAEsumKS UST \84953.B6973/ Insect Repellent Don't be wiihoul the best in insecl repellents. Culler protects Ihe ouldoorsman ogoinst mosquitoes, block (lies, gnols, ch ig ^ s ond more, longer ond stronger proleclion. Your choice of regular or evergrmn scent. ^ WHM sumKS lAST ■ \X77»I X - , 18" T o o ! B a x Duroble all purpose sloroge box W tures removoble troy, heovy duty latch , with padlock eye and handle. Red enamel finish. Mode In USA. In S to re P ro je c t V id e o P r o g r a m Helpful hints for even tlie m osC reluctant . "D o It Y o u rso lfo rt" This w e ek 's video: Fences And Gates Come watch Dean and Peggy iielp you to gain a thorough understanding of your fence and gate projects, whether done by yourself or g professional______ Come into ACE Today W e C a r r y E v e r y t h i n g Y o u N e e d I " Y o u r O n e - S t o p P r o j e c t C e n t e r " Coming Soon To The ACE Store near you Don't miss these future proiect videos R o o f i n g D r y w a l l D e c k s E l e c t r i c a l F i n i s h C a r p e n t r y E x t e r i o r P a i n t i n g K i t c h e n s A n d B a t h s Berm ndn iionter fdv.nc., Н С. 998-1987 NEW HOURS: Mon.-S.t. 8-7 Sunday 1-6 (O nly 5 M in ute s From C lem m ons) DAVIK COUNTS KNTKRI’UISK RKCORD. I IIIIUSDAV. Ati|>. 10, 1989—7C -THE OLD FAVORITE S p e c i a l F i n a n c i n g O r S p é c i a l D i s c o u n t s 42-hp Ford 3910 ' R e v T m U p >• Heidi Hinl<s watches friends, from left, Jam es Bulthuis, i:michael Trivette, Christina Emerson and Bobby Emerson ilb a v ille N e w s _________ ^ ■■ » !■ — 1» I. ■ I— I I Doris Cope >£lbavllle Correspondent ■“lÍMr. and Mrs, K.O. Minor of 'Winston-Salem visited Mr. and |3i!rs. Austin Cope Friday pAemoon. ¡iP'Tlie V F W Post 8719, Advance Indies Auxiliary attended tlie '^strict Meeting and luncheon in ;|i|ount Airy Sunday, Aug. 6. Mary Bailey has returned Jwme from the hospital but is still jK k. Ijst’á coittinue to remember hw in our prayers and with get well ixrds. Her address is 103 Bermer iSt;, Lexington, N.C. ^ s n e Elbaville United Methodist № m e n held their regularmonthly' n ^ n g Monday night, Aug. 7, at ^ 3 0 in the fellowship hall with Mrs. Elaine Smith in charge of the program and Mrs. Mabel Howard as hostess. There were several people who attended the homecoming at Elbaville Sunday, Aug. 6. The V F W and the Ladies Aux iliary of Post 8719, Advance serv ed hot dogs, hamburgers, cakes and pies and drinks Saturday at the household content sale of Mr. Henry Shoaf, Pine Ridge Road, Cooleemee. Mr. and Mrs. Jimmy Blakley and children, Heather and Bran don, arc spending a few days at Myrtle Beach, S.C. MrTahd Mrs. Jerry Stockton and son Alex are enjoying a few days at Myrtle Beach, S.C. T h in k in g o f a n e w P a r e e i ^ ? A C a r e e r G lia n g e ? ? ? M a k e M itc h e ll C o m m u n ity C o lle g e y o u r fir s t m o v e ! :',:The staff of Mitchell Community College Is ready to help Hyou plan for your future. c Mitchell gives you the opportunity to develop life skills, occupational skills, vocational programs, offers college 'transfer courses and a large selection of continuing -education classes. Classes are available both day and evening. Financial aid, job placement and career counseling ser- • vices are available at Mitchell. For More Information Call Todayl FALL REGISTRATION M oore^llle C anipus A ugust 2 1 ...5 p.m .-7 p.m. Statesville C am pus Vocational Building A ugust 30 and 31 9 a.m .-l p.m .; 5 p.m .-7 p.m. Mitchell Community College 878-3200 Statesville 663-1923 Mooresville AN EQUAL O PPO R TUN ITY CO LLEGE as they race their cycles in Rich Park. — Photo by Jam es Barringer S e r t o m a n s H e a r A b o u t C o n v e n t i o n The Davie Sertoma Club held its bi-monthly meeting at the Western Steer Thursday, Aug. 3, at 6:30 p.m. The meeting was called to order by president, Bonnie Ayers. The pledge was led by Ben Williamson, followed by Jim McBride with the invocation. Highlights of the international convention held recently in Charleston, S.C., were presented during a slide presentation by member, Steve Nohlgren. Ayers thanked everyone for the successful hand-quilled quill pro ject. The drawing was held July 15. Doris Church of Mocksville was the winner. Proceeds from the pro ject were put into the sponsorship account. The club was invited to Camp Sertoma 4-H Camp in Stokes Counly Thursday, Aug. 10, where 100 speech and hearing impaired campers are having a talent show and dance lo celebrate iheir week of camp and thank the Sertoma Clubs of North Carolina for spon soring them. Anyone interested in attending should conlacl Ayers or Ruth Hockaday. Our most popular mid-sized model is ideal for loading and 7- chore work. Plus it has the power and weight for field work, .. • Hefty 192-cu in. 3-cylinder diesel engine • Excellent fuel efficiency ' • Optional low-profile cab-work in real comfort • Optional front-wheel drive cuts tillage time by up to i 20 percent ■ - • Easy-to-read instrument panel • 8x4 H-pattern synchromesh, optional • Up to four, 4-position remote valves .: r • Planetary drive, sealed disc brakes, independent PTO and power-assist steering Is your tractor built as well as a Ford? Davie Tractor And implement Co., inc. Rt. 4, Box 9 Mocksville, N.C. 27028 Telephone 704-634-5969 ct/ T H E V\yQ RLD’S B IG G E S T TO Y S T O R E T h e re ’s a toys « c/s n e a r y o u ! • WINSTON-SALEM 3200 S ilas C reek Parkw ay iac.oss i.o,,. H.ines m.i M] MONDAY - SATURDAY 9:30 AM - 9:30 PM; SUNDAY 1:00 PM - 6:00 PM ----------------------------------4------------------------------------------------------------- -----------:-------------------- C H AR G E IT! VISA MASTERCARD AMERICAN EXPRESS DISCOVER »C—UAVlh CuÜM Y ЬГ\ i bKl'KiM’. кглд;к 1/, i п и 1\л1#/\ i . гмщ. 1858 sKKMti: FlINWI.tHKFilOIW 130 years of scrvice Д Localions Middlebrook Dr. S. Main St. .Clemmons Wmston-Salom Reynolda RcJ. M B S. Mam Si Winslon-Satom LexingtonОду/с Phone No 99B-3-i?.B J.P. GREEN MILLING CO., INC. Makers of DAISY FLOUR We Custom Blend Depot Street Mpcksville, N.C. 2702B Phone 634-2126 MOCKSVILLE BUILDERS SUPPLY "Together We Do II Belter" Soulh Main 634-5915 V Anend The Church Of Your Choice John N. McDaniel & Sons Hwy. 601 S., Moclnvllle 634-3531 FOSTER-RAUCH DRUG CO. Wilkesboro Street MoctoVllle, N.C. 27028 Phone 634-2141 CAUDELL LUMBER CO. 162 «hMk Slraét. Modnvite, N.C. 2709S Phono 634-2167 Johnnie M. Tilley Control Service •SmkmFoeOmgeYm- . 1лсЫ1у OwMd » OpwaM ' •ЯМИММШ «CommereM •tadMlfW ' •bMtttutloml ■»WPiettofi Цроп n»(jueffr N o b ili« : 634-5600 Coir^ments of Department Store North IM n StrMt Mockavillii; У-тЩш Зкт • Я м MavidMnviitoitoiid ;!■I- M A R T IN H A R D W A R E & G E N E R A L M D S E . f M t , O iyO oode, , CtoocMlM and Fwtlllzer Depot aiTM t Moetevffio, N.C. 2702e Phone 634-2128 A W O M A N O F U N D E R S T A N D I N G — B E A U T I F U L A B I G A I L ! ABIGAIL WAS THE WIFE OP NABAL, A WEAL-TWV OWNER OF SHEEP AND SCATS IN CARMEL. IF NABAL WAS A CHURLISH AND EVIL MAN, THEN ABIGAIL WAS THE COA^PLETE OPPOSITE, BEINS KNOWN FOR HER BEAUTY OF FACE AND INTELLIGENCE. WHEN DAVID'S NNEN WERE TURNED DOWN BY NABAL, OVER A SIMPLE REQUEST FOR FOOD FOR HIS TROOPS, IT WAS ABISAIL WHO PLACATED DAVID'S ANSER AND THUS SAVED NABAL'S LIFE, WHEN NABAL DIED, SHORTLV THEREAFTER, ABI6AIL BECAME ONE OF DAVID'S WIVES. AFTER THE AMALE- KITES CAPTURED ZIKLA6, THEV TOOK ABISAIL CAPTIVE, WHILE DAVID AND HIS MEN W ERE O U T C A M P A IG N IN G IN TVIE W ILDEi?NES5. BUT SHE WAS SPEED)W RESCUED BV DAVID W HEN HE ROUTED THE AM ALEKITES. ABIGAIL BORE ONE SO N TO CAVID AND NAMED HIM CHILEAB (2 SAMUEL 3 :3 ). IN THESE ANCIEm" TIMES,TOE OMLV PLACE OF HONOR A WOMAN CAN HOLD IS AS A AWt'S WIFE— TO BE UNMARRIED OR A M DO W PLACES A WOMAN IN A tOWLV STATE OF LIFE;TKUS DAVID'S ACT OF TAKING ABIGAIL AS HIS WIFE IS AVERY KIND AND REWARDIN6 DEEQ ALL OF WHICH IS RECORDED IN I SAMUEL-. CHAR 25 SAVE 1VJIS FOR VOUR SUNDAY SCHOOL SCRAPBOOK AtttMKV or MDMARANATHA CHRISTIAN ASSEMBLYHwy. 601 North \MochsviHe, N.C.Rev. Curtis E. WoodSurKiay Schod 9:45 a.m.. Momlr>g Worship 10:4S a.m.Evening Wonhip . 7:00 p.m. ■AmtT WVANCE lAPTIST CHURCH Hi^ay 801 Mark Hart. paMor ' Sunday ServtCMSurKiay School Momlng Worship Evening Worehlj) 0:45 a.fti. 11:00 a.m. 6:00 p.m. 7:00 p.iTi.bear’m ^ek'daptÌs^ churchBear Creek Church Road Nonh Of Mocksviiie 10:00 a.m. 11:00 a.m. 7:00 p.m. Rov. Jerry Ckinlgor. Jr. Sunday ^hool Morning Worship Highway 601 North al MO Rev. Glenn Seller«, pastor Sunday School Momlng Worship £venli»Q Worahip Wadiies^ UiÍ baF^ST CHAPEL 9:45 a.m. 11.00 e.m. 7;30 p.m. 7:30 p.m. >ur Comer« Community, Hwy. 601 mil Kitchln, pastor Sunday School 10:00 a.m.Preaching Service 11.00 a.m.CALAHAlN PRIENOSMP BAPTIST CHURCH Calahain Road Rev. Carrol Jordan, pastor Sunday School Worship Service Sunday Night Worship Highway 601 South Rt. 7. Воя 92. Mocksviiie Jim Qryd»r, pastor Sunday School Worship Service Evening Worship 10:00 a.m. 11.00 a.m. 7:00 p.m. 7:00 p.m. Wednesday Service . CtOARCRtEKUPTIST'*C«dar Creek Church Road >.W.C.K - 10:00 a.m. 11:00 a.m.7.-00 p.m. 7:00 p.m. 2nd & 4th Sunday 1:30 p.m.CMNAQUAPtN OmVC SAPTIST CHURCH.Chinaguapin Church Road oH Hwy. 601 Aev.TOwrall McConnellCOMMUNITY BAPTiST CHURCH Gladstone RoKly School 10:00 a.m..m Service 11:00 a.m.UtT^BAPTItT CHURCH___cei N.C.DAVII BAPTIST CHURCH Fork, N.C.Sunday School 9:45 a.m.Worship Service 11:00 a.m.Evening Worship 7:00 p.m.Wednesday Service 7:00_p.m.OUTCHHAM CRCEK BAPTIST CHURM Highway 601 off Hw/. 64 baton's baptist CHURCH Worship Service 11:00 a.m.Wedrresday Prayer Service 7:30 p.m.eoaewooD baptist churchHighway 601 North Cooleemee. N.C.Rev. D.C. Sullivan, pastor Sunday School 10:00 a.m. ‘Sunday Worship } 1:00 a m.Sunday Evening Worship 7:00 p.m. Wednesday Service 7:00 p.m.FARMINOTON BAPTIST CHURCHFarmington RoadSunday School Worsriip S Youth TiaiService lainina Union FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH N. Main Street W. Paul Riggs, pastor Sunday School Morning Worship Evenffig Worship Church Training Wednesday Bible Study FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH MaiQinai Street. Cooleemoe, N.C. Rov. Lar^ G. Allen 10:00 a.m. 11:00 a.m. 7:00 p,m. 9:4S a.m. 11:00 a.m.7.00 p m.6.00 p.m. 7:00 p.m. rry G. All-----, SchoolWoiship Service Evening Worship Wednesday Service FORK BAPTIST CHURCH 6 miles east on Hwy. 64 Sunday School Wofship Service Evening Worship GOSPEL BAPTkST CHURCH Rt. 6, Mocksville Sunday School Wo/ship Service Evening Worship Wednesday Service CREEN HILL BAPTIST CHURCH Greon Hill Road Rev, Graham Wooten, pastor Sunday School WorstJip Service Evonirig Worship Wednesday Worship 9:45 a.m. 11:00 a.m. 7:00 p,m. 7:t5 p.m. 9:45 a m, 1J:00 am. 7:20 p m, 10:00 a m. 11:00 e,m, 7:00 p.m, 7:00 p.m. GREEN MEADOWS BAPTIST CHURCHHwy. 801. FarmingtonYates Wilkerson, pastorSunday School tO.OO a.m.Worship Seroice 11:00 a.m.,Evening Worship 7:30 p.m.Wednesday Service 7:30 p.m.HOPE BAPTIST TABERNACLEHighway 158 EastPastor: David JordonSur>day School 8:45 a.m.Worship Service 10:45 a.m.Evangelistic 7:30 p.m.Wed/wsday Service 7:00 p.m.IJAMES CROSSROADS BAPTIST CHURCH Kenneth Hyde, pastor Sunday S^ool 9:45 a.m.Worship Service 11:00 a.m.Evening Worship 0:00 p m.Wednesday Service 7:30 p.m.JERUSALEM BAPTIST CHURCH Hwy, eOJ SouthSunday School 10:00 a,m.Worship Service 11:00 a m.Evening Worship 7:30 p.m.Wednesday Service 7:30 p.m.NO CREEK PRIMITIVE BAPTIST CHURCHNo Creek Road olf Hwy. 64SHILOH BAPTIST CHURCH6га Depot St.. MocksviUeRev. A.O. Walker, PastorSunday School 9:45 a.m.Worship Service 11:00 a m.SMITH OROVE BAPTIST CHliRCHHwy. ise EastTRINITV BAPTIST CHURCHRt. 4. MocksviiieDarrell Co*, pastorSunday School 10:00 a.m.Worship Service 11:00 a.m.Evening Worship 7:00 p.m.Wednesday Service 7:00 p.m.TURRENTINE BAPTIST CHURCH Rt. 7. Mocksviiie Rev. Billy J. Sloop, pastor Sunday School 9:45 a.m.Worship Servtee 11:00 a.m.Evening Worship 8:30 p.m.Wednesday Prwer Meetirig 7:00 p.m. VICTORY BAPTIST CHURCH Midway SI.. Cooleemee Shelby HatlMur, pastor SurKiay School 10;00a.m.Worship Senrice 11.00 a.m.Evening Worship 6:00 p.m.Wednesday AWANAS 6:45 p.m.Wednesday Ргмег Meeting 7:00 p.m. YADKIN VALLEV BAPTIST CHURCH Yadkin Valley RoadCATHoue 8T. FRANCIS OF ASSISI CHURCH Hwy. 601 NorthSunday Worship 10,00 a m. CHURCH OP CMIISTCORINTH CHURCH OF CHRISTCharlie Harrison. Jr., minister Sunday Worship 11:00 a.m.Evening Worship 7:00 p.m,JERICHO CHURCH OF CHRIST Jett Williams. Minislor Sunday Bible Class 10:00 a m.Worship 11:00 a,m,Worship 6:00 p.m.Wednesday Bible Study 7:30 p m.CNIJOM OF OOD COOLEEMEE CHURCH OF GOD Cooieemee, NC Luther Chambers, pastor Sunday School 10 00 a.m.MorrWng Worship Я:00а,т.Evening Worship 6:00 p.m.Wednesday FTH 7:00 p.m.CLEMENT GROVE CHURCH OF GOD Hwy. 64 West l.W. Ilemos, peslorSabbath 10.00 a.m.Worship Service 1:00 p.m.Evening Worship 8:00 p.m.Wednesday Service 0:00 p.m.MOCKSVILLE CHURCH OF GOD Dwight Durham, pastor Hwy. 64 EastSunday School 10:00 a.m,Worship Service tt:00 am.Evening Worship 7:00 p.m.Wednesday Service 7:00 p.m.IPIICOPAL COOLEEMEE EPISCOPAL CHURCH OF GOOD SHEPHERD Rev. Edwin P. BaileyHoly Euchflst 9:30 a mFORK EPISCOPAL CHURCH OF THE ASCENSION Rev. Edwin P. DaileyHolyEuchiist 11:15 a m,ST. CLEMENT'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH Mooting at Vogler's Chapel Middlebrook Drive, Clemmons Rov, Joan GtimmSunday Schooi 10 00 a.m.Worship & Holy Communion 1100 a.m. INTEIIPAITH/IMIVIIISALASSEMBLY OF LIGHT Hwy. 601 S.(7041 Г------ NEW UNION UNITED METHODIST CHURCHHaywood 6. Hyatt, paatofSunday Sch(^ 10:00 a.m.Worship Sevice t1:00a.m.10:00 a.m Jerry L. Co; 1st A 3rd SuncA 2nd Thursday 4th Wednesday 2:30 p.m. 7:30 p.m. 7:30 p.m. MOLV CROSS LUTHERAN CHURCHRev. John A. Johrisoo, pastor Hwy. 601 South, Mocksville Sunday Schooi 9:45 a.m.Worship Service tl:00 a.m. METHODISTA.M.E. ZION METHODIST CHURCH Booetown Street. Mocksviiie ADVANCE UNITED METHODIST CHURCH Advance. N.C.BAILEY’S CHAPEL UNITED METHODISTBailey's Chapel RoadBETHEL U№TED METHODIST CHURCHBethel Church RoadBETHLEHEM UNITED METHODISTCHURCHRedland Road oft Hwy. 158 EastCENTER UNITED METHODIST CHURCHHighway 64 WestOr. S.B. Warner, Pastor1st & 2nd SundayChurch School — 10:00 a.m. 11:00 a.m. 10:00 a 11:00 a.m. CHURCHRev. LindstÌV. Lindsey Walters, pastor Sunday School Youlh с___Wednesday Bible Sludy Worship Senice 3rd & 4th Sunday Worship Service Church School CHESTNUT GROVE METHODIST CHURCH Kaihryn W. Tart, pastor 2nd & 4lh SundaySunday School 10:00 a.m.Worship Service 11:00 a.m.CONCORD UNITED METHODIST CHURCHCherry Hill RoadRev. John Deyton, minister1st a 3rd SundayWorship Service I1;00a.m.Sunday School ir)-nn a m2nd & 4th Sunday Worship Service Sunday School Slh Sunday WorshipAlternate ____....COOLEEMEE UNITED METHODIST Joseph W. Collins, pastorCORNATZER UNITED METHODISTCHURCHCornatzer RoadDULIN METHODIST CHURCHAdvance. N C.ELBAVILLE UNITED METHODIST CHURCH Hwy. 801, Advance. N C.FARMINGTON METHODIST CHURCHIs! SundaySunday School it:00 a.m.Worship Service 10:00 a.m.2nd & 4th SundaySunday School 10:00 a m.3rd SundaySunday School 10:00 a.m.Worship Sor/ice 11:00 a.m.FIRST UNtTED METHODIST CHURCH North Mam Slreel. Mocksviiie Rev. Don Lloyd, pastor Sunday School 10:00 a.m.Worship Service 11:00 a.m.FULTON UNITED METHODIST CHURCH Hwy. 801 between Fork and Advmce Rev. Kermii E. Shoal, pastor 1st 4 4th SundaySunday School 11:00 a.m.Worship Service 9:45 a.m.2nd. 3rd & 5th SundaySunday School 9:45 a.m.Worship Service 11:00 a m.HARDISON UNITED METHODIST CHURCHJericho Church RoadLIBERTY UNITED METHODIST CHURCHGladstone Road1st & 3rd SundaySunday School 11:00 a m.Worship Service 9:45 a m2nd & 4ih SundaySunday School 9:45 a m.Wofship Service } };D0 a mMAINVILLE A.M.E. 2iON METHODIST CHURCHVaughn L. Adams, pastorRt. 6, Bo( 37. MocksviibSunday School 9.30 a m.Worship Service 11:00 a mMOCKS UNITED METHODIST CHURCHAdvance. NC,MT, OLIVE METHODIST CHURCH sRt 5, Mocksville1st, 2nU. & 3rd SundaySunday School lO OO a m.Woistiip Service H:00 a.m.4th SundaySunday Sciiool 11:00 a m.Worship Soniice 10 00 a m. OAK GROVE UNITED METHODISTCHURCHHwy. 158 EastSALEM UNITED METHODIST CHURCH Oavie Academy Road Dr. S.B. Warner, Pastor 1st & 2nd SundaysWorship Service 10:00 a.m.Church School -11:00 a.m.3rd ft 4lh SundaysChurch School t0.00 a.m.Worship Service 11:00 a.m.5th SundayChurch School 10:00 a.m.SMITH GROVE UNITED METHODIST CHURCHHwy. 158 East. Mocksviiie Rev. Bobby G. Swaim, paslor 1st & 3rd SundaySunday School 11:00 a.m.Worship Service 10:00 a.m.2nd. 4th & 5ih SundaySunday School 10:00 a.m.Worship Service 11:00 a.m.Wednesday Bible Study 7:00 p.m.UNION CHAPEL METriODtST CHURCHKathryn U. Tart, pastor1st, 3rd, & 5lh SundaySunday School 10:00 a.m.Worship Senice 11:00 a.m.WESLEY CHAPEL METHODIST CHURCHAdvance. r^.C.1st SundaySunday School 11:00 a.m.Worship Service 10:00 a.m.2nd, 3rd, & 4th Sunday Sundoy School 10:00 a.m.Worship Service 11:00 a.m.ZION CHAPEL UNITED METHODIST CHURCH .. -Rev. Haywood B. Hyatt, pastor PttlMYTUIANBIXBY PRESBYTERIAN CHURCHFork Church Road at Cornatzer Road R. Shane Owens.pastor Sunday School • 9:45 a.m.Worship Senrice ' 11:00 a.m.1st & 3rd WednesdayBible Study 7:30 p.m.COOLEEMEE PRESBYTERIAN CHUr64. 60 Walts SUeet-Cooleemee Kenneth E. Pollock, Pastor Sunday School 9:45 a.m.Worship Senrlce 11:00 a.m.Wed. • Pra^r & Bible Sludy 7:30 p.m. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Leiand A Richardson, minister Corner So. Main St. & LeKington Hwy. Sunday School 10:00 a.m.Morning Worship 11:00 a.m.SECOND PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 456 Pine St., Ivan W. Lcwery, Paslor Sunday School 9:30 a.m.Worship Service 10:30 a.m.2nd & 4th Sunday WISUYANLIBERTY WESLEYAN CHURCHA.C. Clemens, pastor MOCKSVILLE WESLEYAN CHURCHHospital Street. Mocksville David Roiilns, PaslorSunday School 9:45 a.m.Worship 11:00 a.m.Sunday Evening Worship 6:00 p.m.Wednesday Worship 7:00 p.m. MOBAVUNMACEDONIA MORAVIAN CHURCHRev. E. Hampton Morgan. Jr.. pastor Hwy. 801, Farmington Sunday School 10,00 a.m.Worship Service 11:00 a.m.Evening Worship 7:30 p.m. Church Of Jesus CMst Of Latter Dey Saints869 Hardison St., MocksviiieSunday Meeting 10 00 a m. • 12 noon SIVENTM DAY AOVINTIITSEVENTH DAY ADVENTISTMilling Road Sid №Hs. pastorSabbath School 9:30 a m.Worship Service 11:00 a m, PENTECOSTAL MOLINEifCLARKSVILLE PENTECOSTAL Sunday School 10 00 a,m.Worship Service 11:00 a m.MOCKSVILLE PENTECOSTAL HOLINESS , MillingRoad Rev. David J. Eagle. Pastor Sunday School 10:00 am.Worship Service tt;00a m.Evening Service 6:00 p.m,NEW CALVARY HOLINESS CHURCH Rt 7 Turrentme Church Road Mocksville, N C. 2702U бЗОрп 7 00 pn 9:45 am, 10:45 am, 7 00 p m. 7:00 p m. Support The Merchants Who Bring You This Information —Attend The Church Of Your Choice— James Stowe, pastor Sunday School Worship Service Evange)ist>cWodf'osday Family Night 10:00 a m, 11:00 a m.7:00 pm, 7:00 p.m. E a t o n F u n e r a l H o m e 328 North r^ain Street Mocksville, N.C. 27028 Phone 634-2148 DAVIE TRACTOR & IMPLEMENT CO, Ford Farming Sales And Service New Holland Equipment Highway 601 South Mocksville. N.C. 27020 Phone 634-5969 When yotire ht;ng'y for a relaxing meal. Hv^. 601 & MO Mocksville. NC Phone 634-0436• tM4 We««l StM> ■ Uem 'n' roo'i Ire C.A. SEAFORD LUMBER CO. Jericho Road Mockavllle, N.C. 27028 Phone 634-5148 Compliments o f DAVIE COUNTY FARM BUREAU977 Yadkinville Road Mocksville, N .C . 634-6207 S H E F F IE L D L U M B E R & P A L L E T C O . Rout* e. Box 1S3 Moctnvill*, №C. 2702t Phone 492-5565 JEFFC O C O ., INC. In the Hillsdale (^munity Route 1 Advance, N.C. 27006 Phone 998-8193 F U L L E R W E L D IN G & F A B R IC A T O R S Hwy. SOI S P.O. Box §21 Mockwille. N.C. 634-3712 ^ E v e l y n H a y n e s & L e w i s & C l a r k R e a l t o r s 634-3831, 768-1662 Or 1-800451-0218 E d F i s h e r P L U M B IN G S E R V IC E Cooleemee, N.C. 27014 Expert Repalra a New Installation FREE Estimatea a Emergency Service 284-2721 Phone 284-2232 DlmsGiNS % S T E E l. FA B R IC A T IN G 122 Wilkesboro St, Mocksville, N,C, 27028 634-J379 C arter Auto R epair ASE Ceitilied Teclinlclans Computerized Wheel Balancing Olagnosiic Tun^Ups & A/C Service, Etc. Mocks Church Rd., Advance, N,C. 919-998.S098 Daily Devotion 9:30 to 9:45 a.m. iVIonday thru Saturday WDSL DAVI!', COLIN I Y ICN I KRl-UISH UI'.COKI), rillIUSDAY, Aiij;. К), 1989-9C O b i t u a r i e s James H. ‘Cotton’ Call Mr. James “ CoUon” Harrison Call. 73, of Rl. 5. FaiilkL-nhi:rry Rd., King, died Sunday. Aug. ft. at Forsylh Hospital. He was born June 9, 1916, in North Wilkesboro to David and ’ Mary Maslen Call, He was a member of Elon BaplisI Cluirch, He was owner and operator of Call’s Garage, former crew chief for the late Billy Myers Racing Team. Surviving arc: his wife, Mrs. Lena Bodford Call, of the home; two daughters. Miss Diane Call, Winslon-Salem and Mrs. Shewnee Hagan, Lewisville; two sons, James E. Call, Oldtown and David “ Pete” Call, Winslon-Salem; two sisters, Mrs. Martha Tuck and M rs, Julia M yers, both of Winston-Salem; six grandchildren; one great-grandchild; one step- . daughter, Mrs. Peggy Warner, Winston-Salem; three stepsons, Robert Gentry, Winston-Salem, David Gentry, Kernersville and Jesse Gentry, Farmington and six slepgrandchildren. Funeral services were lo be held Wednesday, Aug. 9, al Hayworth- Miller Silas Creek Chapel by the ;Rev. James Chatham. Burial was ■in Oaklawn Cemnelery, . Mrs. Pearl G. Campbell i Mrs, Pearl Isla Gilmore Camp- ibell, 93, of 9612 Glenn Rd„ 'Lewisville, died Saturday nighl, 'Aug. S, at Forsyth Hospital. >: She was bom in Boonville to the Jlate Mrs. Mary Puryear Gilmore 'imd the late John* Gilmore. She ■moved to the Lewisville communi- 'ly at a very early age. She attend- the Yadkin County public ‘khools and was a graduate of 'Baiber Scotia Collège in Concord, , She taught school for many years jin the Chinquapin and Cedar Creek 'nei^borhoods ih Davie County Double Springs community in ■ÿorsyth County, She later married ;the late Alder Campbell of iMocksville. She was a member of |Potlble. Springs A.M .E. Zion iChurch for a long time and the last • ÿew years she attended Glenn tChkpel A.M.E. Zion Church in ItewisvUle. I Survivors include one daughter, JMrs. Anna C. Shore, of the home; tpne son, James Henry Campbell, ; IMocMille; 13 grandchildren; 19 -vgreat-grandchildren; one son-in- ; flaw, Thomas P. Shore, of the llionie: two daughters-in-law, Mrs. • : tConnie Yoiing Campbell, Advance Mrs. Loretta МсМШ^т Camp- i¡bell, MocksviUe; one sister-in-law, i.Mn. M ^ e Gilmore, Winston- ijSaleih; five nieces; four nephews jjiiid other relatives and friends. •; i Funeral services were to be held ; 3 p.m. Wednesday, Aug. 9, at ¡Glenn Chapel A.M.E. Zion V HChiiifch by the Rev. Ashby H. . rchatnpagne. Burial was to follow {ill l^ b le Springs A.M.E. Zion ; I Church cemetery. ; i; Iii lieu of flowers, Ihe family re- \quesl8 memorials be made lo Glenn IChapel A.M.E. Zion Church ijSuildipg Fund. >WUma M. Craver J; Mrs. Wilma Myers Craver, 68, ■ ;3761 Harper Rd., Clemmons, died ■late Thuirsday night, Aug. 3, at ■Forsyth Memorial Hospilal. She •had been in declining health for ^sometime. She was a native of Lexington ;where she was born on November ; 11, 1920, to Silas and Annie Jar vis Myers. She was a member of i Hanes Baptist Church for forty years and taught Sunday school for many years. She was retired from P.H. Hanes Knitting Co. Surviving are: her husband, Frank Payne Craver, of the home; one daughter, Rita Craver Ken nedy, Wallburg; one son, John Bunyan Craver, Clemmons; two grandchildren; two sisters, Emma Allen and Leona McCulloh, both of Advance; two brothers, Rufus Myers, Winslon-Salem and Busier Myers, Harmony and several nieces and nephews. Funeral services were held Sun day, Aug. 6, at Hayworth-Miller Silas Creek Chapel wilh Dr, J.B, Parker Jr. and Pastor David Jor dan officialing. Burial was in Clemmons First Baptist Church cemetery. Memorials may be made to Hope Baptist Tabernacle Piano Fiiiid, P.G, Box 217, Mocksvillc, N.C. 27028. Mrs. Cornelia M. Crews Mrs. C'iiniL-li:i Muck Crows. 79. (if Kuule Advancc. dice! al her hiinic Miinday nKirning, /\im. 7. after a brief Illness. A native iif Davic Ciiimly, .slic was a inemhcr of Pinev Grove United Mclhodisl Church. Surviving are: her husband, Mr, Harvey S. Crews of Knollwood Hall Nursing Home in Winslon- .Salem: two daiighlers, Mrs. Mary Alice Crews Peebles and Mrs, Ida C. Alby. both of Advance: one sister, Mrs, Edith Mock Smoot of Mocksville; five grandchildren; six great-grandchildren; two greal- grcal-gnindchildren; two sislers-in- law, Mrs, Bessie C, Hairston of Advance and Mrs, Ethel C, Ellerbee of Jamaica, N,Y,; and one brother-in-law. Ernest G, Peebles of Advancc, Funeral services will be held Fri day, Aug, 11, at 4 p,m, at Piney Grove United Methodist Church with the Rev, Amelia Beverly of ficiating, Burial will follow in the church cemetery. The family will receive friends at the funeral home Thursday even ing, Aug, 10, from 8-9 p.m. The body will be taken from Morrison- Studevent Funeral Home in Mocksville to the church on Fri day at noon to lie in state until the .service hour. Sanford R. Davis Sanford Reid Davis, 79, of 642 N. Sixth St., Albemarie, died on Wednesday, Aug. 2, at Stanly Memorial Hospital. , The funeral was held at 11 a.m. Friday, Aug. 4, at Hartsell Funeral Home, Lefler Memorial Chapel, Albemarle, conducted by the Rev. Harold McDonald. Buriat was in Rose Cemetery in Mocksville. Bom on Aug. 20, 1909, in Davie County, Davis was a son of the late W illiam McLean and Sophia Angell Davis. The retired owner and operator of San’s Inc., he was a member of First Baptist Church. Survivors include: his wife, Pauline M ills Davi.s; two daughters, Sandra Sloop of Raleigh and Miriam Davis of Newton; a stepdaughter, Marlene Mayners of New l.ondon; two stepsons, Jerry Dennis of Concord and Charlie Dennis of New Jersey; two grand children; seven Slepgrandchildren; and two stepgreat-grandchildren. Albert S. Foster .Mr. Albert Sanford Foster, 71, Rt. 1, Advance, died Thursday morning, Aug. 3, at Forsyth Memorial Hospital. Funeral services were held at 4 p.m. Saturday, Aug. S, at Bethlehem United Methodist Church by the Revs. Robert Peurifoy aiid Donald Funderburke. Burial was in the church cemetery. Mr. Foster was bom'on July 10, 1918, in Davie County to the late Marion Sanford and Bessie Smith Foster and was a painter and decorator. He was a member of the Bethlehem United Methodist Church. Surviving are his wife, Lorene Ransom Foster, of the home; one daughter, Frances Foster Dunn, Advance; one son, Bruce Foster, Advance; two grandchildren; two great-grandchildren; one sister, Rhea Potts, Advance; and one brother, Hege Foster, Advance. Etioiiis F. IJanies I'llniiis I'Oslcr Ijanics. 71, of lf)9 Williams Si,, Mocksvillc, died at 10:20 a.m, on Thursday. Aug. al her lioinc aflcr an illness of several days. The funeral was held al 3 p.m. ■Sunday, Aug, f), al Sccond Presbylcrian Chuich, conduclcd hy Ihe Rev, Ivan W, Lowery, paslor. Burial was in die church ccniclcry. Born on Jan, 15. 191«, in Davie Counly, Mrs, Ijames was a daughler of Ihe late John Avery and Lula Van Eaton Foster, She was a graduate of Davic County Schools, Prior lo her death she had been employed in the home of Mr, and Mrs, Roy Harris, Sali.sbury Street, for 39 years. She was a member of the Second ■ Presbylcrian Church, Ihe senior choir, was a trustee, and a member of the Presbyterian Women’s Club. Survivors include: a son, John “ Johnny” Ijames of the home; a stepdaughter, Evelyn Caine of Queens, N.Y.; two brothens, Robert Fo.ster of Mocksville and Francis B. Eaton of Winslon- Salem; and one grandchild. Raymond Zeno Thomas Mr. Raymond Zeno Thomas, Detroit, Mich., died Tuestlay, Aug, I, at his home. He was a native of Forsylh County and was a retired employee of Arrow Trucking Park, Surviving arc: one daughter, Mrs, Dorothy Thomas, Detroit, Mich,; one son, Mr, Raymond Ed ward Thomas, Detroit, Mich,; four sisters, Mrs, Carrie Shore and Mrs, Edith Cox, both of Winslon- Salem, Mrs, Louise Spease, Tobaccoville and Mrs, Nellie Foster, Mocksville; two brothers, Mr. Harry Thomas, Norfolk, Va. and Robert Thomas, Detroit, Mich.; and several nieces and nephews. Funeral services were held at 2 p.m. Tuesday, Aug, 8. at Bethlehem A,M ,E, Zion Church where Rev. Roberl Bailey of- ficialcd w'ilh inlcnneni in I'orsyili Memorial Park. Alvin L. Morrison Mr. Alvin L, Morrison of Route 4, Statesville, died Satureday, Aug, 5, in Iredell Memorial Hospital after a brief illness. He was born in Iredell County to the late John Preston and Rena Clark Morrison, and was a member of Scotts Chapel United Methodist Church in State.sville, He was a member of the Statesville Masonic Lodge and Malissa Chapter No. 8 Order of Eastern Star. He was retired from Winston Mutual Life Insurance Company where he was a Life Underwriter, His wife, Mrs, Mary N, M or rison preceded him in death in 1981. Surviving are: four brothers, John T, Morrison, Alonzo W, Morrison, and Ro.scar Morrison, all of Slalesville, and Osc:ir C. Morrison (Sciiioi Partner of M orrison-Studevent Funeral Home). Funeral services were to be held at 3 p.m, Wednesday, Aug, 9, at Mt. Pleasant A.M .E. Zion Church in Statesville, with the Rev. Vance Hunt officiating. Burial was to follow in Iredell M em orial Gardens. Mittie Shuler Millie Foster Shuler, 99, former ly of Route 3, Mocksville, died on Wednesday, Aug. 2, at Autumn Care Convalescent Cenier. The funeral was held al 2 p.m. Saturday, Aug, 5, at Eaton’s Funeral Home Chapel, conducted by the Rev. Gordon Joyner. Burial was in Fork Baptist Church cemetery. Memorials may be made to the cemetery or building fund of Fork Baptist Church, Route 3, Mocksville, N.C, 27028, Bom on Aug, 30, 1889, in Davie County, Mrs, Shuler was a daughter of the late Robert and Sarah Caudell Foster, A homemaker, she was the oldest liv ing member of Fork Baptist Church, She was known for her help to the sick and needy. Her husband, Devid Owen Shuler, died on May 29, 1984, Survivors include three daughters, Lucille Daniels of Route 7, Mocksville, Doris Foster of Greensboro and Helen Hcmpnil of Lexington; two sons, Luther Owen Shuler of Mocksvillc and Thomas Garland Shuler of Winston-Salem; a brother, Willard Foster of Route 4, Mocksville; nine grandchildren; 11 great-grandchildren; and five great-greal-grandchildren. ‘Hartlrock’ Wilkerson Hugh “ llardrock" 'I'homas Wilkerson, .‘i9. of Koulc 3, New Highway M Wcsl, Lcxiiiglon, dial Monilay, Aug. 7. in Forsylh Memorial Hospilal following a ninc-iiionth illness. l-'uncral services were lo he held Wednesday. Aug, 9. al Vogler's Piednionl Chapel, conducled by Ihe Kcv, Myers Tilley, Burial was lo follow in Foresi Hill Memorial Park, Born Ocl. 4, 1929, in Rowan Counly, Wilkerson was a ,son of the lale Charlie Lee and Ollie Lowe Dorselt W ilkerson, He was employed wilh Carolina Panel Co, Survivors include: his wife, Sue Myers V/ilker,son; a son. Hugh T, Wilkerson Jr. of Ihe home; two daughters, Janel Wilkerson of the home and Susan Everhart of Lex ington; three brothers, Charlie, Robert “ Bobby” and Ronnie Wilker.son, all of Salisbury; two sisters, Helen Lomax and Brenda Heilman, both of Lexington; and three half sisters, Madge Hess and Mrs, Roy Hess, both of Salisbury, and Mary Walls of Cooleemee, Kiser To Speak At Fork Church On Sunday, Aug. 13, the Rev. A.M , Kiser Sr, will deliver the homecoming message at Fork Bap tist Church. Sunday School will begin at 9:45 and the worship service at 10:45 a.m, Kiser is a native of Gaston Coun ty, graduate of Tyron High School, Furman University and The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in Louisville, Ky, He was ordained at Shady Grove Bap tist on July 17, 1938, and served as pastor of various churches prior to moving to Fork to serve from Jan, 1, 1953-June 30, 1961, In October of 1972 he retired from active ministry after 34 years and moved In Gaston Counly. where he is a member of Shady Grove Baptist Church. He served as supply pastor and minister to the senior citizens at Shady Grove for two years and continues to serve as supply pastor. The Rev, and Mrs. Kiser have a son, A.M , Jr., who resides in Mocksville, The Rev. Gordon L. Joyner, paslor, welcomes Kiser and all former members to the homecom ing. Dinner on the grounds will be al noon. S k e t c h F o r T h e T o w n Laura R, Tibbets presented a framed sketch of the town : hall to the town board last week. Mayor Nick Mando ac- . cepts the drawing, ^ H e lp A v a ila b le O f T e r m in a lly By Kathy n. Chaffin Davie County Enterprise-Record For the terminally ill and their families, help is a phone call away 24 hours a day. But for the nurses with Hospice of Davie County, lhal means work ing many evenings and weekends, according to Janet Blair, executive director of the program, “ There are frequent emergen cies, situations where the patient becomes worse and the family doesn’t know what to do,” Blair said in a memo distributed to the Davie County Board of Commis sioners Monday, “ A Hospice nurse carries a pager at all times, making herself available both even ings and weekends to respond lo the patient’s needs, answer a ques tion or make a home visit,” Nurses receive numerous calls every weekend, Blair told Ihe com missioners, “ We go out at least every other weekend,” she said. “The nurses have been doing a good job of il, but they’re getting a little discouraged,” Blair was at the commissioners’ meeting to ask them to consider do- D u k e P o w e r P r o v id in g F a n s F o r L o c a l S r . C it iz e n s Duke Power Co, has donated ■SlOO for fans for .senior cili/ens in Davic Cimnly. Rulh Helderman, direclorof ihe Davie Counly Senior Cenier, us ed the money lo purchase six fans for senior cilizens. Those sclecleil lo receive the fans ■•either did nol have any air con- dilioning and ilidn'l have fans or else, wliai ihey had was very in- F o r F a m ilie s : III P a t ie n t s ; ing what surrounding counties have been doing for years — paying Hospice nurses a stipend for weekends on call. * The Hospice board of directors is in favor of weekend stipends, bu( Blair said they wouldn’t vote to paÿ them without commissioners’ approval, d In the memo, Blair proposed et^ couraging nurses’ dedication “ by offering them a $50 stipend wheti they give up a weekend to be oil call for Hospice.” ;3 Hospices in Yadkin, Iredell and Davidson counties and Winslotil- Salem pay weekend stipends of $60 to $80, . Because nurses rotate being on call, only one stipend would h* paid per weekend. This woula amount to $200 a month : at^ $2,400 a year. ^ “The money is already available in the program,” Blair said. j| Jim Stockert, finance officer ftjr the county, said the stipend woul^ be included in the nurses’ salaries since they are county ( Commissioners ap request by a unanimous vote. Immanuel Christian Scliool 1505 Lewi.sville-Clemmon.s Rd. ; N o w E n r o l l i i i g I K - 8 t h D a y C a r e A v a i l a b l e E n r o l l T o d a y ! 7 6 6 - 4 2 2 6 / Î N ew Union S ets H om ecom ing Homecoming and revival will be at New Union Methodist Church beginning Aug. 13. Dr, Ellsworth Nothstine, a former pastor, will bring Ihe message at the II a,m. service. Following the morning service, lunch will be in the fellowship hall. The revival will begin at 7 p,m. Sunday with the Rev. A.B. Weaver from Christ-Boulevard United Methodist in Statesville. Weaver, born in Jefferson, received his bachelor's degree from Phiffer College, He has pastored churches at Antioch- Traphill, Richfield-New Mt, Tabor, Sales, Welsey Heights-St, Timothy in Lexington and at Spruce Pines before his appoint ment at Statesville in 1984, The services Monday through Thursday nights will be at 7:30 with Weaver and special singing each night. The paslor is the Rev, Haywood Hvatl, Phone: 284-2689 492-5917 V A C A T I O N B I B L E S C H O O L adequate,” she said, "T hey’re all on a •low-income, very limited budget,” Helderman said the couniy’s senior cilizens can always use more fans, "I'd like to think thal ncM year. Duke Power will be generous again,” she .said. "But for this summer. I’m very pleased lo have these six lo give lo needy folks." SERVICE FUNERAL DIRECTORS 4 L O C A TIO N S 7” -i>IOI 120 Soulh M ain Sirocl 722-6111(1 2‘).s[ R cvm ilJ.1 K oaJ 131 Years Of Service CREM ATO RY SERVIC E Ck'inmons, N.C. 766-4715 766-4717 Middlcbrnok Drive Clemmons 246-2366 ■405 S. Main Street Lcxingion Davie t'diiiily Phone Nuiiilier 9!)8-.Я428 IOC—DAVIE COUNTY ENTERI'KISK KECOKI), rHURSDAV, Aiij*. II), 1УХ9 A d v a n c e N e w s By Edith Zininicrnuiii Advance Correspondent Mr. and Mrs. Charles Miirkhmd Jr. and son Charlie have rcliirncd from an extended 5-week trip across country to the We.sl Coasl. They visited friends and relatives along (he way and the national parks of the West and Midwest. In Si. Louis, Mo., they loured the Gateway Arch and on into Soulh Dakota where they saw the Badlands and Mt. Rusinnore. In Wyoming they loured Yellowstone National Park, Devil’s Tower and Grand Teton. D riving into Washington they visited an uncle, John Markland, and family for two days. While there they went to Mt. Rainier and Ml. St. Helens. From there they went into Oregon and a tour of Crater Lake National Park. Driving into California they saw Lassen Volcanic Park, visited San Francisco, Oakland and the Bay Bridge and saw a ballgame in Oakland. Yosemite National Park and Sequoia Park wilh the Red wood forests were loured enroute to Los Angeles. There they visited Marty Pasquale for two days. Mr. Pasquale is a former neighbor of the Marklands in Advance. While in L.A. they toured Universal Studios and oUier points of interest. In Nevada they loured Las Z i c k m u n d T a k e s U S A F C o u r s e Airman 1st Class Gerard M . Zickmund Jr. has graduated from the U.S. A ir Force aircraft maintenance course at Sheppard A ir Force Base, Texas. ■ ; During the course, students were taught aircraft maintenance firn- dàméntals to repair and service • .¿Me-, and two-engine jet aircraft. ¡..Maintenance management and 'docuihentation was also taught to : assess aihraft readiness capability. , ,,equates of the course eanted ; 'jcre^ti towarà an asciate degree ' ilhraugfa the Community College of the Air Force._. ' Zickmund is the son of Mr. and ,Mré. Gerard Zickmund of Route 3, Mocksville. The airman is a 1985 graduate of Dayie High School. b a v ie 4-Hers A t S ta te Congress Four-H’ers from across North .. Carolina gathered in Raleigh for Staie 4-H Congress the week of Ju ly, 17-21. Davie County was • «iJresented by several ymilh at this annual event. :. Iòdi Walker, daughter of Mr. \ Md Mr» Sam Walker of Route 2, \ Advance, and Edwina Boger, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Boger of Route 6, Mocksville, represented the county tidegates. Edwina B(^er served as Ihe flag bearer for Davie County • in Monday night's opening aissembly. . Stale demonstration contests tak ing place on Tuesday, July 18, involved three Davie 4-H'ers. Ed- wina Boger was in the beef char- grill area. Beef char-grill requires Ihe 4-H’er to safely start the grill, cook the meat properly and then gave a final display. Julie Allen, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. S.B. Allen of Route 1, Mocksville, was the district representative in the junior egg cookery presentation. The egg cookery presentation involves the 4-H’er cooking the egg in a nutri tional manner and telling about nutritional value of the finished product. Wendy Fisher, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Fisher of Route 4, Advance, was named stale ninner-up in Ihe junior sewing con test, The sewing presenialion allows 4-H ’ers to display iheir knowledge in an area of sewing. Jodi Walker was the Davie County representative to State 4-H Council and was the voting delegate for Ihe couniy in Ihe Slale 4-H Officer Eleciions, “ The delegation from Davie County is a source of pride for our 4-H program,” said Jeff While. 4-H agent, “AH of our participant.s excelled in every activity in whicli they look pan.” For more infonnation on the 4-H program in Davie County, call the office at 634-6297. Vegas. In Utah tlie Marklands visiled Sail Lake Cily. Zion Na tional Park and Ilrycc Canyon. Grand Canyon and Mesa Verde I’ai k in Ari/iina were oC Inleresl. Al.so l-oiir Corners, tiic point where four slates, Arizona. Utah, Colorado and New Mexico, join. In Colorado they visiled a friend. George Clinard, and faniils' for two days in Colorado Springs. Wliiie there they visited Pike's Peak and Rocky Mountain Park. The re- inainder nl'ilie irip wa.s .speni driv- inj; the southern roiile home tliroiigh Texas. Louisiana. Mississippi, Alahania and Georgia. Mr. and Mr.s. Qiiiiic)’ Coriialzer and Mr. and Mrs. Dick Vogler have returned from a l.^-day trip to Alaska on the Wade l-'iilk Tours. They Hew lo Seallle, Wash,, and hoarded a cruise ship inlo Alaska. They also traveled by Motorcoaeh and Luxury Rail Car llinuigh Ihe 'I’ukon Territory and over Ihe en- lire .siate of Alaska. Miss Gina Hurton. Iiride-elecl of Daniel Richarl. was honored with a iiiiscellaiieoiis slxnver Siinday atìernoon al ihe eoniouinily huilding wilh a large crowd atlen- ding. Iter inolher, Mrs. Lynda Vogler Hiirlon ol' Winslon-.Salein ConvalescenI Center was alile lo aUeiui. Synipathy is expressed to Mrs. Lorene Siinnions in ihe death ol' lier t'allier. .lohn Vanlloy. who died ill r.lkin lasl week. Mr. and Mrs. .lininiy Townsen, son and daughter, and two grand- eliildren of Jacksonville. Fla., are visiting his mother. Mrs. Hill 1-oster. The Townsen lamily were among llie visilerrs al Mellindisi church Sunday. Sympathy is expressed lo Mrs. Rhea Polls in ihe death of her hrolher. Allierl Fo.sier. who died lasl week. Mrs. Fdilh Zimmernian and Mrs. Reeie Sheets visited Mrs. Clara Baily in Davie Village Relirement Home Friday night. Mrs. Stella Vogler had the misfortune lo break her loc in an accident at her home last week. Mr. and Mrs. Edd Myers drove to Avon Park. Fla., lasl week to take their granddaughters, Madeline and Jessica Myers, home. The girls had spent Ihc past three weeks visiting their grandparents. и ш а ш а н в■■■aoaoBtS D ia iiH -TWs Ad Is Good Wednesday, August 9 Thru Tuesday, August 15, 1989 At All Area Lowes Foods Stores. Quaiftlty Rights Reserved. We Gladly Accept Federal Food Stamps And WIC Coupons. Moores Potato Chips ô ô S r LË5S AT LQWË5! - ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY EaciTof those Items Is required to be readily available tor sale In each Lowes Foods Store except as apeclllcally noted. If an advertised Item Is tempoiarUy out ol stock, we will oiler you the choice of a comparable Hem when available lellectmg the same savings or a Ralncheck to purchase Ihe advertised Item at the advertised price within 30 days. Quantity rights are reserved. In sid e F ro n t Ratledge Road Or Not? DAVIK COUN TY KN I ICRI'KISK UKCOUI), TIIUKSIMV, Aug. 10, 1989-ID By Kathj I). Chiilliii Davie County Enlerprise-Record A hearing will be held Monday. Aug. 21, on whether to rename Ralph Ratledge Road. Shirley Barron reqiiesteil the hearing — .set for 7 p.m. in the Davie County Board of Comniis- sioners’ room in the courthou.se — on behalf of the Center Fire .Department. One end of Ralph Ratledge Road, fornierly known as Chaffin Road, is in the Center Tire district, while the other is in William R. Davie’s district. • Barron and her husband, Steve, Center fire chicf and president of the .Davie County Firemen’s Association, first appeared before comipissioners on June 19, asking them: to changc Ihe name becausc there: is another Ratledge Road in the Cenler district. “ What we’re trying to do,” Mrs.; Barron told commissioners Monday, “ is eliminate the confu sion Ihat occurs when there are two road hames that are the same when therft is an emergency call.” : ' That was the reason behind the ciininiissiiini;rs' approval earlier this >carof UH changes in counly road names. Not only were there several roads with Ihe same name, .some road names sounded alike, some didn't have names and some were called one Ihing on one end and another on Ihc other. This made following directions difficult for lire departments and the Emergen cy Medical Service. Before the recent changes, Ralph Ratledge Road (Slate Road 1312) had already been changed to Chaf fin Road lo avoid duplications. In March, however, the Cenler fire deparlmenl proposed renaming il Gallimore Road bccausc there is a Chaffin Street in Mocksviile. Bul at a March public hearing, commissioners agreed lo change it back 10 Ralph Ratledge Road ul Ihc request of David banning, who lives in one of 26 residences on the road. The Barrons later surveyed residences lo find oul which name they preferred. O f Ihe 26, Mrs. Barron said al the June meeting, 30 pcrcent preferred Gallimore Road, 19 percent preferred Ralph Ratledge Koad, 3 percent prefer red Chaftni Road and 46 percent didn't respond. Residents had only to check Ihcir preference on a scU'-aiklicssed. stamped card and put il in their mailbox to respond. Commissioners postponed a decision on their request al thal meeting after County Attoincy John Brock said he would have to chcck and .see if a changc could be made without a public hearing. Brock later ruled ihat a public hearing would be required, but commissioners postponed at their July 20 meeting a decision on whether to hold one. Commissioner Spurgeon Foster Jr. made Monday's motion to set Ihe hearing for Ihe commissioners’ next meeting on Aug. 21. Vice Chairm an Buddy Alexander seconded, and the motion passed by a 4-1 votj. Commissioner Busier Cleary opposed. Cleary said afterward that he voted against the motion because he had received calls from several longtime residents of the road who don’t want the name changed. pHS Attendance Policy OKd - Davie board of education members approved Monday night anew attendance policy for Davie High, School. : •’ The policy was proposed at last m onà’s meeting. . • Bràrd member Calvin Ijames was concerned about the statement in the policy that said “ no car trou- Hle will .be accepted as an excused itecehoe.” ‘tGan it be belter staled as may not be accepted as an excused .abscence,” he said. : : A u i ^ t Superintendent Dwight Ja c kin said he did not think that was it good idea. " I don’t think you want lo get in the situation where you excuse some and not the other,” he said. “The problem comes wilh this being used as a child is late for school,” he said. “ It becomes a snowball kind of thing. It gives a child a chance to be tardy three limes before anything happens.” Board member Luther Potts said he likes the policy wilh one excep tion: giving points lo students who achieve perfect attendance. “Thai’s what they’re .supposed to do', go to school,” said Polts. Principal Robert Landry said he also did not like that addition. Lan dry said it could prove damaging lo the lop three students in their class if one bccomes .sick and is forced lo be absent. “ Sometimes it comes down to a percentage of points lhal separates one student from another,” he said. Jackson said: “ Every person on thal committe probably has a pari they could do without, but they agree they can live wilh il. "K id s do need positive rein- forcenienl,” ho said. •‘They need a pat on the back to say that’s good" for those kids that make an effort lo gel there every day.” Pet Poisoning Advance Man A D V A N C E - Jeff Bly found “ Bear” along the roadside a cou ple of years ago. The large, part Shepherd part Samoyan dog needed food and at tention. Bly gave him both. Last week, Bly came home from work and found Bear on the porch. “ He was shaking, drooling real bad and just passed out on the porch.” The dog had been poisoned. And the veterinarian told Bly he recently had treated several animals from the Advance area which had been poisioned. “ The vet lold me llicre tiiid been a rash of poisonings lately.’' Bly, who lives off Taylor Road, already knew Ihat. Two cats had been poisoned lo death in years past. A neighbor’s dog had been shot lo death. He’s thankful Bear recovered, after two days at the vet’s and a $70 bill. Bly doesn’t know whether the poisonings are accidental or inten tional. Either way, he wants Ihem slopped. “ We keep a close eye on our animals. Our animals stay on a leash, in the yard. I’m a responsi ble pet owner. “ The vet says there’s animals being poisoned in Davie County every day. The police say since there’s no leash law, they can’t do anything. “ We need a leash law in Davie Counly. There’s sick people out there who don’t like animals,” Bly said. “It could be accidental, bait traps for rodents. W e have bait traps but they’re where the animals can’t get to Ihem.” Bly isn’t going to get rid of his animals. “They’re family. They’re personable, loving, wouldn’t hurt nothing.” But when they get sick, animals are al a disadvantage. “ It’s worse Ihan wilh children > ~ii! because ihey can’t tell you what’s ;i' wrong,” Bly said. “ You've got : ahimals'thatareWt'inischievi6us;;.^K'. Ihat are friendly ... and it’s just , terrible.” ' i ' ’ Pivle High Lunches To Be Prepared At South Davie By Karen Jarvis Davie County Enterprise-Record r Students at Davie High School will ito longer see cafeteria workers cooking lunches next year. . David School Board members I approved Monday night a satellite food program that will allow lun ches at Davie High to be prepared and transferred from South Davie I Jцnior High School. ' Judy Sell, school food services I director, said the purpose of the change was to decrease labor cost, cut investment cost in equipment by eliminating Ihe need of duplicate equipment in two locations, lower necessary inventory amounts and overall produce a more cost effi cient food service program. “We’re going to try to make this a successful project as much as possible,” said Sell. “W e’re not going to change what was offered to them before. The quality of the food will not change.” A cargo van will be used to transfer the food from school to school. Sell said the reason for the changc was due lo Ihe financial silualion Ihe school food services had been experiencing. “ It was a choice of increasing Ihe prices of lunches or finding anolher solution,” she said. “This will be an effort lo keep Ihe lunch prices down and an attempt lo break even at the end of Ihe year. ’ ’ Sell attributed the monetary loss in the school food system to the low percent of high school students who eat lunch. “ The number of kids who eat lunch is 3 0 perccnt,” she said. “ Il should be 60 perccnt for the high school.” Sell said all other school systems in the county are serving 65-67 per cent of students. She said she could not give a definite answer for why the number was so low, bul did suggesl sludenis had less time to eat lunch. “ W e’ll find out in time whether I’m right or not,” .she said. High School Principal Robert Landry said he has been in school systems where they have had 15 minutes to ¿ht lunch. “ The fact is they just like to bring bag lun ches.” South Davie will cater 300 to 350 meals a day. After preparation at South Davie, five of the 10 cafétéria employees will go to the high school to serve the meals. Sell said some oh-site prepara tion, such as pizza and french fries, will be cooked at the high school. No jobs will be lost when the new program is installed, said Sell. ‘ ‘They were all able to be located in other schools in the county,” she 2 H u r t W h c f n C a r C r a s h e s I N e a r T o w n A 22-year-old M ocksviile i woman faces D W I and exceeding I a safe speed chifrges afler a single vehicle accident Aug. 2 at 7:30 p.m. on Country Lane. Loretta Ann Breedlove of Route 7-and a passenger in her car, Angie Michelle Sleele, 18, also of Rome 7 were injured in the accident. Breedlove was treated al North Carolina Baptist Hospital for a I ' head injury and bruises lo the chest and was discharged Aug. 5. Steele was also treated al N C BH for broken ribs and bruises lo ihe chest and was discharged Aug. 6. According lo a report by N.C. I'Highw ay Patrol Trooper B.L. 1 Crider, Breedlove was driving the car traveling west on Country Lane when she ran off the right side of I the road and lost control. I Breedlove Ihen veered left and iraveled back lo ihe righl side of the road where her vehicle struck [a utiliy pole. Damage lo Breedlove’s 1988 THyundai was estimated at $7,500. ' Ш f т W itnesses and rescue workers help with victims and patrolman with details of wreck. Photo by Dwight Sparks. said. “ No one even lost any- hours.” Other school systems nearby, in-;' eluding Statesville City Schools;' which satellites five of their eight ' schools from one kitchen, and,' Mount Airy schools, all have sue-:: cessful satellite programs, said' Sell. If the percentage bf students who eat lunches at the high school in creases to the average percentile, Sell said a second look at the satellite program may have to be . made. ' 6 0 1 H e a r i n g i i T o B e A u g . 3 d j v R A L E IG H - The N.C. Depart-: - ment of Transportation will hold a : v., public meeting Wednesday, Aug. : ■ ■ ’. 30, on a proposal to improve U.S. ; ■: 601 from 1-40 to U.S. 64 in Davie V ; County. ■ ''; The meeting will be held from • :. 3-7 p.m. in the council chambers ' ■' • of the town hall in Mocksviile. Construction has been schedul- . ed in Ihe Transportation Improve- . ■ ment Program (TIP), N C D O T ’s ■■ planning document for highway . ; projecls, to widen ihe existing two- lane road to five lanes wilh curb and gutters in Fiscal Year 1996. The public is invited lo attend the informal meeting, ask questions, make comments or recommenda tions and submit material atroul the proposed project. D O T officials are asking interested citizens to ineel wilh them on a one-to-one basis. This will give the department a better opportunity lo understand citizens’ allitudes aboul the propos al project. Olhcr written material may be submitted to J.M. Greenhill, Manager of Planning anti Re.search, N.C. Deparlmenl of . : Transportation. P.O. Box 25201, . ■ Raleigh, N.C. 27611. , , .2D-DAVIE COUNTY ENTKUl’RISK KECORl). TIIUUSDAY, Лиц. 10. 1984 Davie Dateline Meetings : Thursday, Aug. 10 Davie Pliinnini! IJosircI meets at • 7 p.m. in Ihe ciimmissiimcrs' room • in the courthouse. ; Monday, Aug. 14 Cooleemee Л В С Hoard meets ’ at 6:45 p.m. in the store; • Cooleemee Town Board meets at • 7:30 p.m. at Town Hall. Davie Zoning Board of Adjust- ; ment meets at 7 p.m. in the com m issioners’ room in the courthouse. Thursday, Aug. 17 Davie Growth Management Task Force meets at 7 p.m. in the grand juiy room in the courthouse. . Mortday, Aug. 21 -: Davie commissioners meet at 7 ; p.m. in their board room in the ; courthouse. [ Tuesday, Aug. 22 Davie Republican Party Ex- ;.ecutlve CommiKee meets at 7:30 ; p.m. in the courthouse. Republican ; candidates who filed for a seat on ; the Mocksville Town Board have special invitation. This is an open .• meeting, and all Republicans are ■invited. ^Ongoing -: Mocksville Rotary Club meets ; .eveiy Tuesday at 12:15 p.m. at the i- Rotary Hut, Salisbury Street, p- Mocksviiie Veterans of Foreign rW ars Post 4024 meets at the Post ;,Hut on Sanford Avenue, ' Mocksville, 7:30 p.m. the second Tuesday of each month. Veterans welcome. < Mocksvillc-Davie jaycees meet eveiy first Monday at Western : Steer and every third Monday at the Davie Coiinty Parks and Recreation ISefwrtment on Sanford' Arvenue. 7 p.m. ^.^AlcohqUcs Anonymaus, and Al- Anon family group meetings for those , affected by alcoholics, Wednesdays^ 8 p.m., B.C. Brock .. Biiilding lower level. North Main Street, Mocksville. / T American^ Leghm Post 174 ' monthly nieeting at the;Roiary Hut / second Thurs<toy of each month at i 7 p.m. Veterans welcome. . M o c k ^ U e CiviCon Club meets at 6:30 p.m. the second and fourth Monday of each month at Western ■■•■Steer.''■ Advance Memorial Post 8719 Veterans of . Foreign Wars and lid iM Auxiliary meets each fourth iT u ^ y , 7:30 p.m., at the post ,^'^Koine in Advance. American Association of ..;'R^ired Perrons, Davie County Tciiapter, t n ^ second Wednesday .¡'_of each month at 10:30 a.m. at .'•First United Methodist Church -fellowship hall. Davjte County Rigiit T o Life , t meets at 7 p.m; on the third Thurs- vV.day of each month in the giand jury , ‘ room of Ihe county courthouse. i.-Call 634-5235 or 492-5723. Cooleemee Memorial V F W <';;'Post 1119 meets second and fourth ’^.Thursdays of each month, 7:30 .'V-p.m., Cooleemee Town Hall. , i ‘ Davie Theatre Company meets • j^t 7:30p.m. Ihe third Thursday of each month at the Brock i'Auditorium. Davie Arts Council meets at ^ ■ 7:30 p.m. fourth Tuesday of each ; ' month at the recreation depart- V ment, Sanford Avenue, .t Mocksville. Ci>rhitlilaii l.oduf No. 17 A Fi'iA M lucL'ts ¡II the loilgc, se- cimcl and loiinh I'liilays. 7;3l) p.m. iMocksvilli' Masonic I.oiljie No. 1.14 iMCols ihc first anil lliiril Tuesdays at 7;.'iO p.m, al the lodge. Davie Multiple Sclerosis Sup port GriHip meets Ihirii Tuesday of cach month. T'JO p.m.. al Davie Cmimy Health Dcpiirlinenl. Extension For more information on any of these events or aclivities, eontaet the Davie County Agricultural E.x- lension Service office at 634-6297. Tuesday, Aug. 15 A dvance Extension Homemakers meet at 1:30 p.m. Center Homemakers meet at 7:30 p.m. at the community building. Monday, Aug. 21 Kappa Homemakers meet at 6:30 p.m. at Ihe communily building for family picnic. Wednesday, Aug. 23 P in o - F a r m in g t o n Homemakers meet at 1 p.m. at Carolyn Boger’s residence. Thursday, Aug. 24 Cana Homemakers meet at 7 p.m. at the community building for PO W workday. 4-H County Council meets at 7 p.m. in the auditorium of the coun ty office building. A ll club presidents and county council representatives should attend. All other 4-Hers invited. Monday, Aug. 28 4-H Teen Leaders will meet at 5 p.m. in the auditorium of the county office building. Alt youths in grades 7 and up are invited to attend. Recreation The following events are offered by the Mocksville-Davie Recrea tion Department. For more infor mation, call 634-2325. Upcoming Events Dance classes starting after Labor Day. Ballet, ^_^toe, tap, acrobatics, jazz and baton; after noon and evening classes for ages 3 and up, including adults. Emily Robertson, instructor. Classes held at Brock Auditorium. Trip to Cherokee, Aug. 11-12. Mother’s M orning Out, day care for pre-schoolers, Thursdays, 9-11:30 a.m.. First Methodist Church in Mocksville. Pre- registration required. Aquaerobics, exercise program for adults, low-impact, for swim mers and nonswimmers, $2 a ses sion, Mondays and Thursdays, 7-8 p.m. at Cooleemee pool. YMCA The following events are offered by the Davie Family Y M C A . For more information, call the Y,of fice, M-F, noon-5 p.m., 634-0345. Ongoing Square dancing and clogging. Freestyle Swingers, Monday.s, 7 p.m., Arnold Broadway’s home on Davie Academy Road. Call Broad way at 284-2765 or Nancy or Shor ty Bowles at 998-3105. Open lo families, singles, tieginners and ex perienced dancers. % PAT’S INTERIORS 766-9166 9 Vertical Micro Or Mini Blinds 9 Waverly W allcoverings ^Coordinated Lambrequins And Draperies •Hardtuood Floors And Parquet •N on-skid rug pads C e p h is D r iv e , C ie m iu o iis lie h iiu i D o c iis id e Mornin); aerobics, classcs hcgin first uw k o f oacli moiilh. Mon days. Wcilncsilays ami l-'riilays. 'J-y:-).*! a .m .. firs t U iiilcd M etliodisi C hurch. Sam ira Johnson, inslruclor. .SI.“). LoH-impacI aerobics, classcs hcgin first day of cach imiiilh. Mondays ami Wcdiiestlays. 5-fi p.m.. Mocksvillc Ulcmcniaiy. Kel ly Bcllin. in.structor. SI5. Hijjli-impi’*^* aerobic.s. classcs begin first week of each month. Tuesdays and TIuirsdays. 6:30-7:30 p.m., M ocksville Elementary. Karen Wishon, in structor. $15. Summer Programs Registration accepted at Ihe Y of fice, Room 211 in the Brock Building, or at the first class only. Day camp registration for children in grades K-7. One-week sessions through Aug. 18. S40 per child. Lake Myers Campground. Swim lessons for ages 3 to adult. Two-week sessions ihrough Aug. 18. S20. Lake Myers. A(|uacise, aerobics in water, no swim m ing. Mondays, Wedne.sdays, Fridays, 6:45-7:30 p.m.. Lake Myers. $15 a month. Karen Penwell, instructor. Religion Aug. 13-18 R e vival at D u lin United Methodist Church, beginning at 7:30 nightly. The Rev. Lee Roy Hunt will be the guest speaker. Special singing cach night. Cedar Creek Baptist will hold revival services beginning at 7:30 nightly. Guest speaker will be the Rev. J.R, Som uels of Winston-Salem. Aug. 13-19 Ijames Baptist Church will hold its homecoming on Sunday and revival beginning at 7:30 nightly. The Rev. Yales Brooks of New London will be ihe visiling speaker. Aug. 14-20 Maranatha Christian Assembly will hold Vacation Bible School beginning at 7 nightly. The church is located at the intersection of U.S. 601 North and 1-40. For more in formation, call 284-2689 or 492-5917. Sunday, Aug. 20 Fulton United Methodist will celebrate the centennial of its dedication. Bishop L. Bevell Jones 111 of the Western North Carolina Conference will speak at the 11 a.m. worship service, A fellowship lunch will follow at 12:30 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 27 , Bethlehem United Methodist Church w ill celebratc its homecoming. Speaker for the 11 a.m. worship scrvice will be the Rev. Julian Aldridge, new superintendent for the Lexington District. A covered dish meal and singing-on-thc-grounds will follow In llic aUcrmioii. Cluirch is localcil on Rctlland Kiiad liclwccn N.C. Sdl am! U.S. [.“iS in Advancc. Ongoing Kvilhiiul I’cnlecoslal iColiness Church "Satiirday Nighl Sing" every sccoml Saturday at 7. U.S. I.^.S anil Ballimorc Koad. Bin^o, Mocksvillc Roiary Hul, sponsored hy Saini r-'rancis of Assisi Cluirch. cach Friday. 7-10 p.m. SlOO jackpol. Diiclle Kostcr Christian Seniors Club meets fourlli Tue.sday of each inonlh al Oak Grove MelhodisI Church. 10 a.m. Senior Citizens The following events arc offered for senior citizens in Davie Coun ly in cooperation with the Davie Counly Senior Center. Brock Building, Mocksvillc, All events are at Ihc ccntcr unless otherwise noted. Call 634-0611 for more information, Aug. 10-11 Shopping days, Monday, Aug. 14 Dr. Shelton will be al the center , from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.;Denture program al noon. Tuesday, Aug. 15 Music and songs by Louise Stroud. Wednesday, Aug. 16 Bobbi M c M illa n of the Southeastern Eye Clinic will pre sent program. Aug. 17-18 Shopping days; Friday is also Blood Pressure Day. Monday, Aug. 21 Judy Bates will speak on health. Tuesday, Aug. 22 Party for those with August birthdays. Wednesday, Aug. 23 Show and Tell D.iy. Aug. 24-25 Shopping days. Ongoing R S V P Sew ing Bee on Thursdays, 9 a.m.-l p.m. Miscellaneous Aug. 14-21 Jaycee l)ook drive. Inmates at the Davie Correctional Center need books. Collection boxes at the Davie Public Library in Mocksville and the branch library at Cooleemee. For more information, call W ill Martin at 634-2171. Wednesday, Aug. 16 W inston-Salem C h ristia n Women’s Club. Wesl, will meet at 11:15 a.m. for a “Back to the Classroom” fashion show and lun cheon at Bermuda Run Country Club. The speaker will be Nancy , IT O N L Y T A K E S A M IN U T E T O * • M A K E S O M E O N E FEEL « S P E C IA L W H E N Y O U . . . < Give a one-of-a-kind greeting personalized with * your special someone's name and other ® ¡nformationuniquetothem,uniquetothe • occasion... and uniquely created by ^0 ® Hallmark and you! ^ ^ # ® Printed while you wait! _ _ • • . • . Scoll of Advancc. for rcscrva- lions. call Ruby C. Leagans al yyS-3598 hy noon Aug. 14. Thursday, Aug. 17 W inston-.Salcm Chri.stian Women's Club Brunch will hold a '•Hoinclown U S A " brunch al Ber muda Run Country Club from 10 a.m. to noon. Fee is $7. Reserva tions ncccssnry by Aug. 14. Call Roxie Eldridge at 998-5117. Surplus food distribution at Ihc National Guard Armory on U.S. 64 East. Anyone interested in receiving surplus food .should apply al the Armory. Aug. 26-27 Open auditions for “ Lil Abner,” Aug. 26 from 1 to 5 p.m. at the Davie Public Library, and Aug. 27 from 2 lo 6 p.m. at the library. Roles for 28 men and 11 females, ages 15 and up. Be prepared to sing and dance. Call 634-5018 afler 7 p.m. to schedule another lime. Anyone interested in working backstage on costumes, sets, ctc., is also encouraged to sign up at this time. In The Schools Thursday, Aug. 17 North Davie Junior High School will hold an orientation for new students and parents from 7 to 8:30 p.m. Separate sessions will be held for parents and students. Seventh- grade students may pick up class schedules and pay fees beginning at 5:30 p.m. Refreshments will be served. All scvcnih-grade students am! Iheir parents urged lo attend. Reunions Sunday, Aug. 13 Howard fumil}' reunion at the Smith Grove Rurilan Club. Lunch al 1:30 p.m. Bring a picnic basket. Friends welcome. Saturday, Aug. 19 Class of 1939, Mocksvillc High School, will hold its SOth reuniofi at Ihe Mocksville Roiary Hut. Sunday, Aug. 20 Kiger and Adam s family reiif nion in Ihe Oak Grove MelhodisI Church fellowship hall. Lunch begins at I p.m. Bring a picmC lunch. Friends invited. • Saturday, Aug. 26 i?: Class of 1984, Davie Hi^li School, will hold its five-yearreUf nion at the Holiday Inn in Clemf mons, 7:30 p.m.-12:30 a.m. Adf mission; $8 per person. Guests welcome. Make reservations in ad vance. Make checks payable tq Kim Walker at 2330-K W. VaiiT dalia Drive, Greensboro, NcC; 27407. For more information,, call Kim at (919) 294-9683 or Jan Cpli lette Hatley at 634-0129. ; Saturday, Sept. 23 - . Class of 1969, Davie Hi^lj School, will hold its 30-year reu-; ■ nion. For more information, coni tact Tim Allen, 377 Country L?Aei M ocksville, N .C . 27028; 634-3151. C h u r c h G e t s N a v y T r a i n i n g Navy Seaman Recruit Leslie E. Church, a 1988 graduate ofDavie High School, has completed recruit training at Recruit Training Com mand, Great Lakes, III. During Church’s eight-week , training cycle, he studied general military subjects designed to prepare him for further academic and on-the-job training in one of the Navy’s 85 basic fields., i - 5!. C h u rch 's studies included ; seamanship, - close order ' Naval history and firMàid. nel who complete this course c^in- struction are eligible for th {^ hours of college credit In P h y si^ Education and Hygiene. >’ ri He joined the Navy in Jammy, 1989. ■ Housch R eports For N àvy D u ty Navy Seaman Willie C. Housch, son of Vera M . Housch of Route 4, Mocksville,,recently reported for duty wilh Commander, 2nd' Fleet, Norfolk, Va; ■ ■ ^ i; A 1980 graduate of Davie H | | ^ t School, Im joined the Navy in lilay,'' I 1985. ‘ - . D a v i e J o b l e s s R a t e 4 . 3 % Davie County’s unemployment rate rose slightly from M ay tq June. The county's 'June unemploy ment rate was 4.3 percent, up slightly from 4.0 percent in May. The 4.3 percent is also higher than the 3.7 percent unemployment rate in June of 1988. The county with the highest unemployment rate in Juné o f i year, was TViwH at 16.6'percent,:. Dare had the lowest with:. I'.4, percent. Statewide, 81 of 100 countiM:. had rates at qr below 3 pacei|li;‘ which is what analysts with thes; Employment Seciirity Ccaunlssi«nV regard as a near hill-empt<qnne|il situation. ■‘j 7 Read Calvin Л НоЫм» ... X ; •;. ... each week in the Enterprise-Record^ ■ # f -||лИ!«и1лЬ C19S9 HaUmarV Cordt, Inc Katharine’s •HALLMARK SHOP Salisburx Mall. Salisbury. N.C. 28144 |7(U) 6.Í7-228Ü C a s J a egance 2513 I.ewisville-Cleinmons Rd. Clcnimims. N.C. 27012 (919) 766-1452 Now Open New Towne Center Clemmons C a U iJ Ú ega,ice ¡S t llC S tO F C fO F t o d a y S i modern woman, comfortable yet ciasslci •Eiegnnl svvcalcrs. leather, fur-trimmed ; •Jogging suits in pastels with special detailing. ; •L i/ Claihorne j •.lnhii Bull knit line > •David Dart washahle and reversible silks •'i'ransiiional clulhing in silks and linens j (Open l()-‘);()() Weekdays. .Sat. 10-3:00 i DAVIi; COl'N I ^' KN TICKI’UISK UKCOKI). -mURSDAV. All«. 10, 1989-3D •(00 VCUCW KW tA№S SUOW NORTH N5. UP S3JW AS DOWN? I n m eo TO s t i f f TUW TROE OR HOT. NOT MUCH. WRCD№^S 0\DH'tSUR'JWE THE TR\P SOkJW FROtA THE TOP OF THE TREE. ___- lET Mt tCHOW VWEH'fCMGET ^ NEW OtE. M-( StlEW\Sr Boac SMS nor TD GET 0\SWJW61D m ^ÍWK>R^R'^, SETBACVS. INE BEE^^ WINWNG. '(OU yaw'fi HwaiRtNG PM is? m m Its K BIS (TOI Kcr.' HK(BE NVTER HE VWS US TO BED, PAD DoNS SOME >l<E\RO COSTUWt AH® GOES OOT FIGHTING CR\tAE! MWBE TH\5 WHOlfOMI’ SWFF IS JWST hStOiEV \OEW\r<.' \ MWBt THE MMOR CMIS 0№ CM A SKRET «0T UKE VMEUBJER WE OTSS TROMBVE.' MWBtOros ^ MASVCED SUPERHERO.' IF THATS TRUE HE SHOOLO DRWE A COOLER CAR 1 <HOW., CUES DOESHT ENEN HWE A CASSETTE DEC.<. WEIiES TUE STEQOSWRkS cMiFRDHT.' ■mEREs 'we ,NMUWkV. HlStOW NUSEOlA.' M0RA'<.’ __________- ITS CEFtTAiNVH beek A «WUE SIHCE У^E■^(E BEEU WERE, HASN'T IT? kTTHE ' MVISEUWS RKWEST, XES. OH. 0\0 TtSMiWfittfs few THESE? OF CDUSÍSE MOT.wm.' Tti*mwsM«B CWE MlUaoRS OFSEAaS u<rea.' LOOK, TRX NCSTTCi EMBARRASS ME ytUEK VIE €0 IHS\OE,OK? ««< Ate WE o a t« HERE \r HE MREAm wftWSEjraw- THIWG? HkH(V, IlL B E T ^V ítS PO W U R.'IF NVtoHE HBBEO TOOpEMkCMiOFOUKE, TUEI‘0 JUST PUT H\M O '® \TMOWrHlM OH w e HEM.' HEE WEE, IIL BET TUES WED OUT BECAMSt -WE-S ( m s n \ UHDERSTMiO EACH m m ! TWE( pymB%.y COKK.H) yUKE DIFF.' : Hi^HA Hfc.' C»M t BW S0№ W >HG? -mEOKQOrSIHÓSWRQaWS. !0»«KWe. («COS, OtNOStUR T-SHUR5, OIMOSMt. № 5№ .. S p lis h , S p la s h Christy Riddle shows her diving form and then em erges from the Cooleemee Pool shaking the water from her hair on a hot day recently. — Photos by James Barringer èXoì- ' ><'■ OH.THATS RIGHT. CAL'JIH, NO BHWS PKWE THl^Tll^iE, /.^teWEWBER? M o c k s v ille B o a rd O K s C a b le F r a n c h is e T r a n s f o r ..All. \M ^U.,■mlGЦ,^«E( VIERE UH0C1UBTHA.X TH£ mUACLE OF PtEH\STCClC EJJQLV)T\OH..^ By Karen Jarvis Davie County Enlerprise-Record Mocksville residents will be get ting a new cable television company. M ocksville Tow n Board members approved on Aug. 1 the cable franchise transfer of Mocksville Cable Company to Friendship Cable o f North Carolina. Frienship, which was awarded a franchise for Davie County last month, will take over the franchise for the remaining amount of time. The franchise, awarded in 1982 to Summit Cable and then to Mocksville Cable, is for 15 years. Friendship is the third cable com pany to hold the franchise. There are eight years left on the franchise. Friend.ship has asked town board members to award a new franchise which would allow the company to have a full 15 years on the contract. According to Town Manager Terry Bralley the town has to have public hearings, to be held at the next two regular meetings. ' Eddie Ruff, general manager of Friendship, said he is excited about the transfer and his company needs the extra years to plan efficiently for customer needs. Ruff said seven years would not be long enough for them to make expensive and necessary changes within the company. “ During subscriber notification I intend to include a survey to determine those needs," he said. Ruff said his company does not intend to arbitrarily raise the rates. “It’s a facts of life that things go up," he said. “ The cost of pro gramming, einployee raises arid the cost to power our equipment.!’ Ruff said the transfer would be a benefit to the whole community. “W e’ve opened up an office in town and we’re really committed to the county and the lown,” 'he.; said. .. The office is at Avon and Gwyp streets. Ruff said residents will bie - able to make payments at the of fice but its main pufpose is for con tactWith technical services. “W e aire trying to gear up to a customer service standpoint,”- said ’ Ruff. F ir s t L in e C e n t u r y R e p r o d u c t io n s In v ite s Y o u T o A n O P E N H O U S E a t o u r n e w p l a n t i n t h e East Bend Industrial Park Hwy. 67, East Bend, N. C. A u g u st 13, 1 9 8 9 2 to 4 p .m . ABC Family Foot And Ankle Clinic Robert L. Sprinkle, Jr, DPM R pberLL. Sprinkle, III, DPM Are please to announce the association of R a l p h S . S p r i n k l e , D P M in the practice of Podiatric Medicine Surgery of the Foot and Ankle and Sports IViedicine 2240 Cloverdale Drive Cloverdale Professional Bidg., Suite 216 W inston-Salem, N.C. (919) 724-1951 NOW 40% OFF The mosl exciting and voisalile cuslom window lastiion ever Combines llie bo.nuly ol labile wilh Iho look ol blinds. Available in sheer or opaque "loxluies" in a bioad miay ol colois. Also wilh eneigy-saving melalized backing 17 W. Main Slreet Thom asvillo, N.C. 472-75*13 1<14 N. Cherry Street, Suite 4 Kernersviile. N.C. 996-8881 For The Month Of August Free Privatine Backing In W hite Only- Phono: (919) 766-1907 ' Owners: larry Cain Pat Cain CAIN DECORATING CENTER. , 1 *4D— DAVIE COUNTY KNTKUiMlISK UKCOUl). 'mUKSDAV, И». I9K9 Monkey Business y.fCi'iir-ye. ■f-'Pi.'ii»'' аЗл'?Гё Г'- • iM a n d y (l-r) and her sister Kim berly C arter give their stuffed an im a ls Su ki and B ear a ride 'o n the sw in g s at R ich Park. . . „ •;; — Plioto by James Barringer f r a ile r p i c k e r s |il M a il ^Thie bavie County tax assessors ^ice mail^. out mobile, home (l^km to be'displayed in the win- 4pws’of< mobile homes in Davie i^ n t y . - r^The tax; office will soon begin w ing on mobile hcMne owners that ^ ; hot, have‘: the 1989, sticker ^ p h y ^ rto list for the jproper ^es and peiii^ties. ¿5Failure~tou3ist -for taxes con- «¿lutes a misdemeanor punishable ^.a;firie up to $S00 and up to 6 months in prison. ,;|Th|;tax office asks those who If ve property listed and received Mckers to place them in a promi- i^ t place that inay be seen from tl^ neatest street so that a call at Iheir home'will not be necessary. h''' jt iM a n i R e a lty i 34 Town Square 7 d 4 - 6 3 4 - 3 8 7 5 r a . DAVIE STREET - VaymmU im Am nat M tkb anrljr 1« ______Ш » wM dMtaf «Mb. VCHUKCH S n S E T - CÜwaini Î oMtr knw In practa of rcnodrt- »Jag. U rfc М.'Мц|Ьс puKbaatd . aad панмкШ« coarMtd m you ADVANCE • 4 buianat, oa IJS acm al Uk ■abcUniHc price or Ч1,М(. COUNTRY COVE - L a r» 7 >.«il Ы »M l 3 P iliin E A 9 ^ 'ь о о к с а ю . iV V im B n m - BMcmtBl. Мшу Exlm . rUMbnok School. SouU .48,5«. DUKE STREET - 01Л~г ratocabk honit, 2 -é r t i О >r potcnilal •12,eeo. S W 'T* ' OFF M l N. - Э Br, 2 BA double wide Ьоам. Heat pump, CA. Ap- pUanco, SM. IM , 2 out buUdinis. u r r Ы. m w o . MOBILE HOME LOT - 100x215 Lol - Septic Unk ind weU. PRICE REDUCED! OWNER WANTS OF FER <7,500 INDUSTRUL • 4.2 wres with railrmd rronliie. Located In МосквуШе. *42.000 «01 N. ZONED IIIGHWAV BUSINESS - 100x400 Lot Hiih brick borne. >115,000. IN TOWN - Central busint^ Zon ing Lot 245 X 200 - *24,000 FOREST LANE-2 BV, I BA hume on large lot wj^QiJD i.Ntw Fur nace, pluml ^ and new riKif, flreplace. REDUCED — OWNER ANXIOUS »33,500. COUNTRY LANE • Larse buiJdln« lot wilh septic tank. «17,000 YADKIN CO. - Older restored home with acreage, stream. »68,Ш 601 N. • 4 bedr(H>m, 2 hath liume, living пмт, diiiin(> rutim, Huseinciil on a 1ап(с Uil. conveiiiviit ItKUliim. 415.00U DOWNTOWN HUSINKSS 1ЛП - and Warehouses or huiUihi» Гог ' small business. U>ts of |M>ssibili(ies. Owner au!ki()us ГККТ-: KKi)uci:i) $2(i,(X)o. Oilier Homes & 1лш1 A>ail»bk* ' Undu lA'onurd 7(>4>()34-.Vi5U : Cymhia Anresto 704-634-4140 NEEIiNi:w I.ISl i S r - F O R S A L E 2 1 0 E . M a p le A v e n u e «58,950 Call for details on this nice home L a r e w — W o o d — J o h n s o n , In c ., 135 s. Salisbury Street, Mocksville 634-6281 C E EH [ome Place Realty, Inc. For All Your Building & Real Estate Needs $2,100 per acre t13».900 N E W L IS T IN G OLD GEORGIA ROAD • 62 acres on Old Geogia Road. Set in Christmas Trees with lake on proper ty, Good Inveslment Property. H O M E S RI06E ROAO - 35 acr§jMG(33l house on d, stream on ,— ^.Jfial value. . -......D. - Quiet living in this 3 bedroom • brick honfie. Situated on 11.41 acres off of Mill ing Road, this home is very private. A must to see. PINEBROOK DRIVE ADVAiJCI^ Ittdroom brick home on 4 Many ^ I in back, lesian well, swimm- & more. I bam, large deck, burglar alarm L A N D $1.200 per acre $2,600 per acre $5,800 - each $50,000 $69,500 OFF OUKE WHITTAKER RU. - 21.25 acres of level land. Sewn in Pines approx. 15 years ago. OLD GE0№IA RD. • 46.74 acres with road frontage. Possbiie larger tract available. Call for more details. RUFFIN ST. EXT. 3 ■ building lots wilh gas lines and water, already perked and FmHa auitable, Call today while Govern ment Money is still available. GUN CLUB RD. ADVANCE ■ 3.78 acres. Beautiful piece of land just perfect to build on. B U S IN E S S N. MAIN STREET MOCKSVILLE ■ Pric ed below tax value. Building has excellent rental income & positive cash flow. Possi ble owner financing. Call today. 119 Depot Street, Mocksville B O B SH ELTO N, Broker 634-2252VO N SHELTO N. Broker 634-0110 Raym onda Saunders, Sales 634-1527 Barry Whittaker, Sales 634-1439 Frank Payne, Sales 998-2622Rick Bazaar 998-9490 D AV IE COUNTV Our Specialty/Our County t = i & Insurance Agency,Inc. 330 s. Salisbury Street Corner of Hwy. 64 & 601 Mocksville, N.C. O FFIC E H O U RS Mon.-Fri. 9-6 Saturday 9-1 Sunday By Appointment Julia Howard Connio Kowalske Jackio Hall Jane Whitlock M.J. Randall Undo Daughtrey Mike Hendrix C.C. Chapman Diane Foster Jan Hatley i 634-3754 634-6343 634-1155 634-5704 634-5629 998-3842 634-0390 634-2534 634-5692 634-0129 ( 7 0 4 ) 6 3 4 - 3 5 3 8 ( 9 1 9 ) 9 9 8 - 6 4 6 3 $20,000 - INVESTORS DREAM bedroom, 1 bath. Harwood lloor. »31,900 - Owner finance on ihis starter iiome. 2 BR. 1 bath, completely remodel ed, 1 acre lot. »35,500 • New Double Wide with 1,000 sq. It. on Vi acre, home features 2 BR, 2 baths, all appliances. »33,500 - 3 BR, 1 bath, deck. 2 yr. old oil furnace, new roof, on acre lot in Eastern Oavie County. »42,000 - OFF SHER^IELD RD."-15rear Buy • 1560 Sq. Ft. mobile home on 1 acre. Great master suite with garden tub. 3 bedroom & 2 baths. Like new. plus furniture. »43,900 • MORSE STREET • 1100 sq. ft., 3 BR. V/i bath brick home. Stove, refrigerator. & ceiling fans stay. I »57,500-1V4yearoldhomejnShadyGrove School District • w/3 BR. 2 baths, full bsmt., deck, sky light in balhroom. heart pump and tilt in thermopane windows. Great starter or •65,000 • RITCHIE ROAO. Charming log I rancher with 3 BR. 2 baths on 2.79 acres. Move In Condition. •79,900 • 6EST BUV IN TOWNI bedroom, baths, deck,' brick fenced patio, dbl. garage on *1.34 acres + possi ble owner financing. »89,500 • BETHEL CHURCH ROAD • 3 BR, brick home on acre lot w/garden spot,Vuge covered deck, workshop. Priced below ap* I praised value! »89,900 • Excellent location In Eittim Davie County • Brick ranch w^3 BR, Vft baitis. lull bsmt.. dbl. garage. LR. den situated on 1.5 acres. •36,900 - QUAINT COTTAGE - In excellent condilion, 2 bedroom, kilchen w/dining area, large outbuilding wired for workshop. Perfect starter or investment property. »42,000 - FRESHLY REMODELED - 3 BR, 1 batti cottage. Large front porcti and deck, new roof, gas furnace, storage building, •46,000 - Neat 3 BR, brici( tiome with basement, tiome features tiardwood floors, new carpet and paini. • 57,^. 3 BR, 1 bath, LR with FP plus basment, wooded lol with garden space on .7 acre. •67,000 - TUCKED AWAY IN THE CITY • wilh all the appeal of country living. This 3 bedroom homo feature living room wilh lirepiace, Lg. den. hardwood floors, manicured lawn. Call todayl •10,500 • SANFORD ROAD ■ enticing, new decorated, brick ranch convenlanlly located. Features partially finished base ment, great family area, pool, lenced back yard, garden and (ruil Irees. •36,900 - 156 SPRING STREET - 3 bedroora, 1 bath home icoated in conve nient location. Good slarter or retiremeni home at a good price. •42,900 - Lovely brlcii ranch home, 3 BR, 1K bath In rural selling, neutral colors, storage bldg. I . I maintained home49,MO - BM with 3 BR, 1 bath, neiilral carpel, Island kit chen, full basment. i <<2,SOO>CUTEANOCOZY-Caaag*w№ Country Decor on 6 acres with hors* bam plus, storage building. Oil furnace, country kitchen. •69,100 - M0V»4n condMon Lovily 3 BR, 1’Л bath brick' hoint on 1.63 «crei,, reflwdeled, nice landscapo.. 44,600 -.Bo« bliir kl (own, S BR, 2W balhs, LR a FR with FP’a, 2 c«r gar. on beautiful comer lot. . - , . - , •69,900 - E. LAKE DRIVE • Great VA storey home with lull basement. Quality construction. Water frontage, convenient location. M9.900 • » IWieod a e m tilcm k, restated turn hous* w/3 BR, 2 bilht, piiit Iwnebam.mlibiffl.Zstor.HofMtjavM't | Dreim. , •69,900 - SKludtd ranch type home w/full bsmt. on 5 acres, 4 BR, 2 bath, 20x40 garage. 34 acres and house for *129,900. •100,000 3 bedroom, Vh baths. Wilh car port on 16acres, Located on corner ol 158 and Sain Rd.. •136,900 - Your Dream Home is wailing, belter than new, yr. old, exquisite decor, hardwood floors, 3 BR. 214 baths. Florida Room, full bsmt. >139.900 - 3,219 sq. II. 2slory home wflull bsmt on 5 wooded acres, screen porch & decl< w/scenic view. 4 BR. 3 tull baths. >134.900 • OFF CALAHAN RD. ■ Rustic A Frame Vh story with full finished base ment, situated on 8 acres. 3 BR, 3 balhs, 2 kitchens, wrap-around deck, hot tub. -LOTS & LAND- WATER FRONT LOT - HIGH ROCK LAKE 49,000 Hotison Road............................................................. HospilSi sil«t ¿it..........................................................L”iHickV Hill ........................................1-ak' f'“"' 1-“' ‘IMOO18 5 Acres • Appro«. 300 It. Rd. Frontage Partially Wooded Level in Edge ol N. Cooleemee, tredellCo...... ....................................................................'2S'5<4>- Needmore Rd. Oil Needmore.............Off Jericho Church Rd.. Eaton Road................ Higtiway 64 East... Hwy. 158... •99,000 1.7 acres w/4 BR. 1 bath home, possible rezoning for Ihis R-15 property, A good Investmenll EDI >137,400-Unlque f lor the discriminating buyar - wilh unique taste . Space 2400 + sf. Privacy - wood back yard w/view ol pond & goll course. Luxury 500 sf. Master Suite. Great Room w/vaulled ceiling & skylights. >144,500 - Mini-Horse Ranch w/brick home loaded w/ country charm, wood fencing, horse barn, riding ring, plus craft shop, con veniently located. ...29 Plus Acres >35,000 ...20 Plus Acres >60,000 ..8.71 Ac. >75,000...4S Ac. >73,600........................16 Ac. t House >100,000................................114.5 Ac. >143,000..............................................>2,800 DAVIlí COliNTV ICNTHKPRISK UKCOKI), THURSDAY, Лиц. 10, 1989-SD Judge: Keep Horses Off Property Or Face Jail ' Keep your horses olT your neighbors property. Judye Kinilier- ly T . Harbinson lold a Da\ ic Coun ty woman last week in Davie Djstriet Court. Kay Canipbell, eliarged willi permitting licr live.stoek to run al large, was given a prayer for judg ment and ordered to pay court costs. Frank Short, who owns 88 acres next lo Campbell, charged her on June 9 after he I'oimd her horses in his oat fields. Short said Ihe horses had been in his fields before. “ Thai was the crowning touch,” he said. “ They were tramping ankle deep." Short said he has asked her previously to make sure her animals don't conic on his property. "She heard i( about as many as 100 times.” he said. Campbell, representing herself, asked Short how much damage Ihe hor.ses did to his property. "Il's worth a hell of a Iol more Ihan I’m asking from yo u." he .said. Campbell said her animals have not been on Short’s land since June 9 when she fixed a barbed wire fence. Harbinson warned Campbell she was to make sure her animals stayed on her land and Ihat if she didn’t she could be brought back to court and be sentenced. C rim e s to p p e rs : D C H L a rc e n y The Mocksville Police Depart ment is investigating the larceny of a wall clock from the lobby of Davie County Hospital on July 29. bavie Crimestoppers will pay up tO;$ 1,000 for information resulting in'thc arrest of the person or per sons responsible for the above crime. Davie Crimestoppers will also pay cash rewards for information on any crime in Davie County which results in arrest. If you have any information, call Davie Crimestoppers at 634-1 111. All information will be held in confidence. You do not have to reveal your identity. $15,000 WATTS STREET - Two bedroom, one bath home Is good loca tion In Cooleemee. Great Investment potential. 118.900 CROSS STREET - Cute 2 bedroom, 1 bath home perfect for ’ young couple. Just freshly painted Inside and out. Ready for your personal touch to make it home. 828.900 WATT STREET/COOLEEMEE - 2 Bedroom, 1 Bath home with aluminum siding exterior. Personal property includes range, washer and dryer. Nice lot In good location, convenient to schools, churches and shopping. ia« ,9 0 0 SANFORD AVE./MOCKSVILLE • 1or 2 bedroom/1 bath. Good ‘ location. Across from the Garden Valley Entrance. Good starter ' home or Investment property. 831.900 H W y.JM I 834.900 W d Iw IeL R d!^3 BR's, 2 tath mod ™ar tame on large heavily wooded lot. Extremely well cared for. Large covered back porch offers room for outdoor enjoyment. 835.900 No m atter how nice yo ur apartm en t l«...lt will n ev er be your*.;. • Get a taste of the country in this 2 bedroom, 1 bath, frame home on Turrentine Church Rd. Please call to see It to day. OWNER IS ANXIOUS TO SELL...839.900 MAIN ST. COOLEEMEE - Charming home with all the extras . you've been looking for. Beautiful hardwood floor, vinyl siding, central air, nice deck. Cozy attic bedroom, perfect for teenager or study/office space. Well maintained, ready for a new owner. 839,900. DAVIE ACADEMY RD. — Enjoy the country living you love In living Ihls home has to offer.845,000 OLADSTONE ROAD - Excellent Investment property In private settingl Three bedrooms and 1 bath, fireplace and wood stove. NEW ROOF. Take advantage of this bai - Lte to the easy 845,900 LAKEWOOD V ILLA G E-Nice abedro In todayl ______________ bath Brick rancher on large tot, completely remodeled 4 years ago. Features kit- chen/dlnlng combo. Modestly priced for the first homebuyers budget. 847.500 HWV. 64 W . - SUPERB BUY On this 7 year old home featuring , 3 BR's, 1 bath. Excellent condition plus a pretty setting, This one will not last longl Call today for an appointment. 847.500 WILLOW RUN • New listing features 3 BR, 1 BA with full base ment on 1 acre tot. Convenient location. Owner will consider lease or lease/option. 848.500 GLADSTONE RD. • This Is the afforable home you've been w^ting tori 3 lot partially fenc ed. Features InliiBW ilMwiWflMNnim sert. Great locatlonl. 849.900 WHITNEY ROAD • It you've been looking for that nice home with 3 b^rooms, spacious country kitchen and full basement in move- ln condition but thought it was impossible to find for under $50,000, then you were wrong. Believe it or not, here it Isl A great buyl 853.500 SPRING STREET - Immaculate 3 BR, 1 'li bath older home within walking dlstancM|UilaB||laiMS^^ Glassed-in back porch and a p a H ^ U lliK K U IiliU lit h fireplace. All of this situated on an attractive lot with a walnut tree, pines and flower ing trees. 854,800 EDISON STREET - Freshly painted interior and exterior of this two bedroom brick rancher located in town on private street with little traffic. Home olfers a formal living room, den, utility room and extra large kitchen/dining combination. Great Space For The Price! 854.900 64 W EST - Super Nice Rancher. Silualed on lovely corner wood ed lot: Extremely well cared lor. Features 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, single carport and large detached garage. Ideal starter home, ready lor a new family to move in today. $55,900 POWELL ROAD - MOVE RIGHT IN AND RELAX - because this 3 bedroom, 1 bath home has a new kitchen, new carpel, and II Is In Immaculate condition. REcentiy landscaped - Call today for MORE DETAILS. $58,000 HIGHWAY 601 NORTH 3 + PARTIALLY WOODED ACRES - A spring & possible lake site wilh room lor small pasture area. Recently remodeled wilh 3 BR, 1 bath and 1458 SF. Convenient to MO. OWNER WILL ASSIST WITH CLOSING COSTS. C lo u d y S kies F o rec as t Cmtlcr tliiin MDrnial tcniperiiturcs are liirccasl ihroiigh Siimlay, acccirding tl) Ihc Natiimal Wcalhcr Scrvicc. Friday Ihrmigh Sunday, high tcnipcraiurcs sIu h iIcI be in ilie miil-80s witli lows in llic W)s. Skies will lie cloudy with a chance <if scattered al'icrnmm and cveniim sliinvcr.s aiul ihundcisluiwoi.s. Ihc riiiccaMci's said. On Wcdnc.sday, highs in tlie mid-7(ls were Ibrccasl, witii a 20 percent chance of showers. Highs on 'riiursday were c.xpcctcd lo reach lo the upper 70s, with a -40 percent chance of sliowcrs. A total of.T.44 inches orrainl'all was recorded in Davie Couniy in July, reported Mocksville weallicr walchers C.1-. and Kallierine Meroney. The figure compares lo 3.48 inches during July of 1988. In 1989. the couniy lias e.\pericnccd 37.04 inches of rainfall. I7 .S iiiclies higher Ihan during the 19.24 inchcs recorded during Ihe same period of 1988. JUST OPENED!!! Special S elections F i i r n i l i i r e , A r t s , C r a f t s , A n t i q u e s S o m e t h i n g O k l , S o m e t h i n g N e w S o m e t h i n g S p e c i a l F o r Y o u lnfcisec(i(in l lvvy. I.SiS & 801 Telephone: 998-2366 1 0 % D is c o u n t W it h T h is A d VVi'ilnc'iil.iv, Prill,IV 10-7: Tinirsil.iv & Snliird.iv lO-.i Va to 1 acre lots - underground utilities, county water — no city taxes On Bethel Church Road Just 1 mile from city limits “ The Right Place For Your Home!" CALL 7 0 4 -6 3 4 -4 1 3 1 6-15-tlnbp ^ Stony Brook V i a c r e l o t s . C o u n t y w a t e r . L o c a t e d o n S a n f o r d R o a d , O f f 6 0 1 . E a s y A c c e s s T o 1 - 4 0 O r 6 4 M i n u t e s F r o m M o c k s v i l l e (919) 998-3907 R.M.F. Construction Co., Inc. L i f e s t y l e H O M E S & REALTY. INC. 7041 6 3 4 -0 3 2 1 8 1 8 S o u t h M a in Street M o c k s v i U e , N .C . " Office Hours M onday - Fridny 9 - 7 Sat 10 - 4; Sun 2 • 4 HOMES ★ F E A T U R E O F T H E WEEK ★ *70,000 • O FF MAIN CHURCH RD. - State Rd. 1466 - Affordable brick rancher 2ilh 3 bedrooms. 2 full baths, 1860 sq. ft. situated on .9 acre with 8 more acres available. Finished playroom In basement with Уг bath and a drive-in garage. Call today for more details. $58,900 $58,000 $59,900 $64,500 $69,900 $69,900 •70,000 $70,000 $72,000 $72,000 $79,900 HOWARD STREET - Neat 3 t>edrooni brick rancher In town on nice quiet street. Features double garage and large workshop/utility area. Also nice sun porch with broken tile floor ing and roll out glass windows. GREAT BUYI CEMETERY STREET - Lovely story and a half Cape Cod House is beautifully decoreated in Wiliiainsburg biue and mauve. Three bedrooms and one bath. Must see to appreciate. Just reduced from $59,000. RAYMOND STREET - Super nice brick rancer on corner lot. Located just medical facilities. Features 3 fireplace and fenc ed rear yard. Just waiting tor youTspecianouch to make It home. JUST REDUCEDIOAVIE ACADEMY RD. - Brick rancher, 2 bedroorii, 2 bath, large LR w/ FP, DR w/bullt in china cabinet, full bsmt., carport, circle drive. Rural setting with large hardwoods.GREAT BUY - 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, Great room and 18.47 acres make this house the best buy around. Enjoy the swimmng pool and wrap around deck Ihat this property offers. Countr in the Country at an affordable pricel WILLBOONE ROAD - Nice home on 2.72 acres. Acreage has 650 ft. of road frontage. Home features living room, den, 2 bedrooms, 2 full baths, large country kitchen with built In eating ’ bar, dining room, double carport, concrete drive. Also for the animal lover there's a small barn wilh electricity and water. Ad ditional out buildings and storage oil carport. OFF MAIN CHURCH RD. - State Rd. 1466 - Affordable Brick Ran cher with 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, 1860 sq. It. situated on .9 acres with 8 more acres available. Finished playroom In base ment with Vz bath and drive-in basement. Cali today lor more details. WILKESBORO STREET - GOOD LOCATION - Brick house wilh 4 bedrooms and 2 baths. This 1 Vz story house is near shop ping area and schools. Upper level great for children. TWINBROOK SUBDIVISION - Crestview Drive, new construc tion just completed and ready for occupancy. This 1500 sq. ft. country rancher was designed to give you a feeling of tremen dous spaciousness. Abundant cabinets, walk-in closet & garden tub add lo the value of this affordabiy priced home. SANFORD AVENUE - Less than 1 year old, this lovely country home is sited on 2 partially cleared acres. Home leatures great lioorplan, 3 large Br, 2 BA, and a beautilul view ol dogwoods and redbuds Irom the greatroom. Well cared for and In new condition! GROVE STREET - COOLEEMEE - THIS house at THIS price will knock your socks olll Situated on a beautiluiiy landscaped s, 2Vz baths, for- $83,900 TWINBROOK SUBDIVISION — NEW CONSTRUCTION • Superb fioor plan in this traditional style ranch. Features, 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, great room, dining room and breakfast area. Also double garage. Buy early and decorate to suit your personal taste. $84,900 TWINBROOK — NEW CONSTRUCTION - Traditional style 3 BR, 2 BA tiome features lull, drive-in, basement, great fioor plan and over ISOO SF ol living space. Fireplace in greatroom,for sozy, winter evenings, sjjaclus deck for summer entertaining. $89,500 EDGEWOOD SUBDIVISION — MAKE OFFER • Beautifully wooded corner lot offers much shade to this lovely brick home - featuring 3 large bedrooms and 2 full baths upstairs wlihJivIng room, formal dining, powder room, family room, kitchen and large utility/workshop combination downstairs. Central Air & Central Vac. - " $93,900 WANDERING LANE - Attractive brick home In one of Mocksvllle^s most deslreable neighborhoods. Interior has been recently redecorated and Is ready for a new owner to move right In. Lots of space with over 2200 square feet. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, formal living and dining rooms, den and tremendous recreation room perfect for your teenager. Call today for more details. $99,500 EDGEWOOD CIRCLE • This beautiful home olfers all the amenities you want. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, central air, large den w/flreplace, screened-ln porch, swimming pool landscaped and fenced. A two car carport plus garage workshop. Move-ln condition. ■ . $99,500 NORTH MAIN STREET - Lovely , older home In one. ol Mocksville's most deslreable locations. Huge lot with beautiful hoardwoods and blooming annuals. Home boasts nearly 3000 square feet Including 4 bedrooms and 2 lull baths. CompleM with vinyl exterior for low maintenence.$99,500 CROW E STREET — Experience the pleasure of country living In an in-town location. This lovely stone rancher features 3 B R 's, 2 full baths, beautiful hardwood ttoors, EVERYTHINQS BRAND NEW THROUGHOUTI All this plus a guest cottage/work shop wilh Vz bath situated on 1.75 ac. lot. Beautiluiiy landscaped. ‘ OWNER FINANCING AVAIUBLEI JUST REDUCEDI$102,500 HWV. 64 EA ST-ImmacualteS Roomyl This 5 bedroom 2 ’/^ bath brick home offers modern living In a quality built older hom e. Features include hardwood floors, two fireplaces and a w rap around front porch. Shady lot In a location convenient to town. Call today to see this excellent property. $122,900 GARDEN VALLEY ESTATES - A REAL EVE CATCHER! • Rock work is key feature to this new construction. Complete just In time for that before school move. Lovely IVi story design on com- . pletely wooded lot offers informal living with oustanding features and terrilic storage space. CALL TODAYI $129,900 GARDEN VALLEY ESTATES • UNDER CONSTRUCTION - Rustic rancher with fir siding and accents of rock give this ex terior a unique look. Corner lot perfectly suited for this full base ment home with great room, large master bedroom suite, eat-in kitchen, plus formal dining. $138,000 WANDERING LANE - Spacious 1 Vz story birck and siding home on 1.20 wooded acres with lots of privacy. Features include 4 bedrooms, 3 baths with large master bedroom, sitting area, bath, and its own deck. Great home for a growing family. CALL NOW FOR DETAILSI $285,000 OFF EATONS CHURCH ROAD - Beautiful log home situated on 76.721 acres bordering Wateshed Lake Home offers 3423 square feet of living space. Includes 5 bedrooms, 3 baths, cozy sun room and lull basement. Perlect for the large family. Owner willing to divide land, call for details. lot, this contemporary home features 4 bedrooms, mai areas, a comforable den wilh stone fireplace, and a lovely atrium. Amenities are loo many lo list so call today lor a lanlaslic buyl $79,900 CENTER STREET — COOLEEMEE- Super nice 4 bedroom, 3 bath brick rancher located on approximaleiy 3 acres. Features large master bedroom wilh silling area, large country kitchen, easy to maintain bricl< exterior. A great houso lor Ihe price. Call today lor an appointment. ................GARDEN V A LLEY.................. GARDEN VALLEY ESTATES — SECTION IV - Amenities of this new subdivision help property value to continually Increase. All beautiluiiy wooded homesites ollering 32 ft. wide curbed streets, cily water & sewer, street lights, underground utilities, and restric tive covenants. SEE NEW PRICE LIST. ’2,200 WILL BOONE RD.- included in this 24.37 acres. Cleared on per acre front side, beautifully wooded back properly wilh stream. •2,300 OFF DEADMON ROAD - 53.5 acres ol rolling farmland wilh per acre stream and fencing. Only 3 mile oil state road. .2,900 Great for «5,500 Ea EDGEWOOD CIRCLE SUBUtVISIuW - ilols - approximately 162.5x125, in quiet well established neigliborhood. Corner lot may lace either street $7,000 NICE BUILDING LOT ON PARKER ROAD - just oil 64 west ____________approximately 1 miles Irom 1-40. Good buy! RIokdy R. Balloy 634-4420 Vickie Fleming 634-3640 Jam99 Foster 284-268B LOT/LAND 5 acres, heavily wooded, road frontage ЩШШТеаПоасПгоп1ад( ily wooded, road «12,500 HWY. 801 NORTH off Hv;y. 001. S21.800 CHERRY H IL M H frontage, cree ^ ^ H *21,000 OFF DULIN ffuA ^^^reai roau Ironiage (636.34 ft.) includ ed 6 heavily woodes acres. S23.807 CHERRY HILL ROAD • 6.8 wooded acres wilh 230 feel of road frontage. Perfect for building your dream home. ^Servinfi You With Pride'’ Mary Hendrieks 634<3162 Pat Moore 49Chrlt HendrU 634-0008 . ^ ^Sandra JohiiMii 634 3J77 »32,000 FARMLAND ACRES SUBDIVISION - 6.954 cares in Super nice subdivision, ideal location lor Ihe family looking for the convenience ol being close to shopping, schools etc. but also wanting Ihe serentiy ol country living. $35,000 FARMLAND ACRES • 7.588 acres heavily wooded In cu-de- sac. Located in one ol Mocksvill’s most attractive sub-divisions. 508,500 OFF COUNTRY LANE - Over 5 acres wilh 164 ft. road fron tage on Campbell Rd. Compleleiy cleared, public water on Country Lane, zone R-20. Great location. Franc« TuttarQW 634-6074 KathI С .144Л Г* 634-1311 Peggy W atun 634-3698 6D-DAVIE COUNTY líNTKKI’KISK Ki;CO«l). TIIIJKSDAÌ , Aiif;. IO. lySH County BriefsDavie Gets Tornado Damage Help Davic County luis rcccivcd S7.S23 Iruiii llic 1-cJcnil Hniciycii- cy Miinügcnienl Agcncy Ki liclp «'ith chiiiwgcs iiicuncd 1)V tlic Miiy 5 tornados and tliundcrstornis. The money will be divided a.s (ollow.s: pcr.sonncl co.st.s Id covcr salaries, SI .813; administration co.sts lor supplies and plane ren tal; S3,009; Davie County Rescue Squad. S402; Davie Comity Departmenl of Social .Services, .$I2S; .Smith Grove Volunteer l-ire Department. $1,478; Comity Line departmenl, S323; William K. Davic department, S407; Cornat/.cr-Dulin. S.“!«; Emergency Medical Service, SlOl; and the county water department, SIOO. Craig Greer, assistant to Counly Manager John Barber, told the Davic County Board oí Commissioners Monday thal Ihc money will be distributed al a meeting next week. County Considers Offering Reward Commis.sioner Bu.ster Cleary .says the counly ought lo consider offering a $2,000 reward for information leading lo the arrest of those responsible for throwing objects at moving vehicles on U.S. 64 on July 25. Two Davic residents were injured by the objects. “ It could have killed somebody,” said Commissioner Spurgeon Foster Jr. County Attorney John Brock said he didn’t know of any law that would prevent the county from posting a reward, but said he would check on it. Linda Whitaker, clerk to Ihe board, said she had heard that the sheriffs department had charged the people responsible. (See story, page 1.) “ Let’s give the sheriffs department two grand,” said Com missioner Bert Bahnson. Money Donated For Baseball Team The Davie County Board of Commissioners voted Monday after noon (o contribute up to $150 toward an appreciation dinner be ing planned for the Mocksville-Davie American Legion baseball team. The team lost Monday night in the fifth game of the American Legion state finals. Dale Ijames of Kernersviile is the coach. Thornton Named To Senior Board A l Thornton has been appointed to the Davie County Senior Center Advisory Board. Thornton was appointed by commissioners Monday to replace .Grace Shurley,. who is moving out of the county. County Manager John Brock said Thornton is active in several county senior citizen clubs and is presently serving as the pianist for the Senior Center Chorus. - ÍEMS Policy Change Approved 7i From now ohi'Davie residents needing trqsportation to or from any hospitd in North Caroliná can call on their home county’s Emergency' Medical Service. ■ That was the change in the E M S standard operating policy ap proved by commissioners Monday. A^ amended, the standard operating policy would allow a unit to transport a Davie resident in a non-emergency situation as long as there are two other units on duty in the county. If they are not available, the E M S would call on the Davie County Rescue Squad for assistance or contact a private carrier for the famiy. 1 Commission Chairman R.C. Smith explained the proposed change for the board. “W e had several instances,” he said, “ and I feel like it’s just proper that we take care of the people in Davie Counly.” The policy 'would not allow the E M S to travel out of the state in transporting or picking,up Davie residents. ■ .“ I think you have to draw the line somewhere,” Smith said. “ I don’t think anybody would object to that because it’s giving pretty broad coverage.” a . Laundromat iMhInd the Waffle House Open daily from 7:00 a.m. Now Open Today’s Treasures Fork Fire Chief Gene Jones with new tanker/pumper truck purchased for volunteer fire department. — Photo by Robin Fergusson Fori( Firemen Get New Truck F O R K — The volunteer fire department here has a “ nice and pretty” new fire truck. But that’s not important. The $110,000 truck has an ad ditional $28,000 worth of firefighting equipment. That's important, said Fire Chief Gene Jones. Being able lo get more water to a fire quickly is important. Being able lo save more property is important. Getting closer to lowering fire insurance rates for residents of the fire district is important. The new truck will serve as a tanker and pumper. “ It can be us ed two different ways. W e need that because wc don’t have many fire hydrants down this way,” Jones said. “ W e’re wanting to get our in surance rating dropped and this is going to help,” he said. “W e’ve got more water rolling to the fire scene now.” It is the first major truck pur chase since 1975, and was paid for by county tax funds and donations through fund-raising barbecues and..; other events, Jone said. The 24 fireman at Fork will now.; work toward the purchase of. a. ' four-wheel drive brush truck ' which would help in case of fire j n , ’ the remote areas served by Ihe * department, Jones said. “Andl there’s a lot of places a four-wheel, ' drive can’t get to.” , : Advance Company Buys Radio Station NewMarket Media Corporation of Advance has entered into an agreement to purchase the assets of radio stations W N O E A M and F M in New Orleans, La., from the James A. Noe family. The $7.25 million sale is subject to approval by the Federal Com munications Commission. W N O E-A M is a 50,000 watt sta tion at 1060 K H Z and W N O E -FM is 100,000 watts on 101.1 M H Z . Both stations feature country for mats. NewMarket Media is co-owned by Stephen L. Robertson and Peter M. Schulte. NewMarket owns and operates radio stations K X X Y A M and F M in Oklahoma City, Okla.; W REC - A M and W E G R -F M in Memphis,' ' Tenn. and W SJS-AM and W T Q R -'' F M in Greensboro/W instonrr?; Salem. The company moved to Saleni.'’' Center, N.C. 801 and Yadkin* ' Valley Road, in February of 1989.i ‘ C A M ' C w h o i ^e mm m m C L U B A olvidonof Wal-Mart sto rtt,iiK . "Priceless Treasures Thai Are Affordable” (Stadium Drive — Clemmons — Behind BBQ Barn — 766-66‘).‘i) August Special Williamsburg Blue Mail Baskets Roy. Price 'K“" S p e c i a l A u g u s t P r i c e ® 6 ® ® 'The Winner Of The $25«« Gift Cerifícate Is Jill Truitt Monday-Friday 9:30 am lo 5:00 pm; Saturday 9:30 am to 2;00 pm I _ Dr. Susan S. Sykes .O S >oí¡ÍS 5icfamtlf Hwy. 801 a t 1-40 A d v an ce, N .C . Total Family Chiropractic Care •Asthm a •Scoliosis •H eadache •Loss Of Sleep •N um bness • Neck And Back Pains Patients Seen the Same Day Tliey Call (Open Mon.-Fri. Evening Hours Avnilable) Most Insurance A ccepted • Auto/Work Inliiries ATTENTION BUSIN&S OWNERS/MANAGBIS ANDFARMBiS Save more money than ever before as a member of SAM’S WHOLESALE CLUB® A R e p r e s e n t a t iv e o f S A M ’S w iio i e s a ie c i u b ® w ill b e a t t l i e W A L -M A R T D IS C O U N T S T O R E Squire Boone Plaza Shopping Center Yadklnvllle Road, Mocksville, N.C. Friday, August 11-11 a.m. to 7 p.m. Saturday, August 12 -10 a.m. to 5 p.m. To Apply for a Business Membersh^ Bring your business or tax license for identification purposes (plus tax exempt certificate if you will be purchasing merchandise for resale). The first Business Membership card Is $25 annually; but you may purchase up to four additional cards at $10 each. All merchandise is national brand-name direct from the factory S A M 'S W H O L E S A L E C L U B ® 9 3 0 H a n e s M all B lvd. & S o u th S tratfo rd R o ad W in sto n -S alem , N .C. i u ^ ^ .iy DAVIIC COUNTS’ KNTI'KI’KISK UIX’OKI), THUR.SDAY, Ли«. 10, 1989-7D PUBLIC NOllÊES P o ts O f P o t Sheriff's Department Detectives IVIatt Dilion and Jerry Wiiiiams recently confiscated these pots containing 14 marijuana plants from a wooded area off Yadkin Valley Road. — Photo by Dwight Sparks Bullard Honored By Scouts O n Sunday staff, board members, friends, and co- ' workers of the Tarheel Triad Giri Scout CouncU met at Camp Seven Springs in Farmington to honor Norman R. Bullard, retiring council property manager. After a dinner celebration, the grbUp moved to one of the trails . bn the campsite, where Bullard was shown the new “ Norman Bullard Nature Preserve.” ■ In making the presentation of the naming of the preserve, Chris Frye, ranger o f Camp Seven : ^ ^ g s , said “ for 17 years Norm , to-go ne above and beyond the ■ c ^ l'o f duty to see that the Girl Scout properties have been main- iiloofepnOT^ we ^qf Norm ’s ,^ork and concern with the ( . It is only fitting that ebepermanently af- tOced here. ” v 'f^ u lia rd began work with the Scout October .lijn . H i will retire fr<rm the O ilincil in October 1989. During his 17 years Mr. Bullard super vised the construction of two olympic-sized swimming pools, eight camp troop shelters, 24 troop cabins, 64 bath houses several new roads, an office building, parking lots, several bams and maintenance buildings. He supervised rangers of all G irl Scout properties and facilities including a fleet of trucks, buses, tractors and other vehicles. Bullard is the son of Mrs. W .H. Bullard of Jonestown Road, Clemmons. He, his wife Nita and daughter Gayla live at Rt. 4, Advance. Nprman Bullard (center) was honored by the Girl Scouts at.Catnp Seven Springs last weekend. Shown also are I to r: Nita Bullard, Gayla Bullard and ranger Chris Frye. #avie Schools W ail On Of Education Pién KEtavie Schools Superintendent E^iSteed said he is still waiting for word on'funds from the state fi^tUhe financing of the Basic Education Plan. . :':Stee(l said the General Assembly slliiuld make a final monetary deci- sipfl in the next week. ^h e House of Representatives a^d.the Senate compromised on a st^jewide figure of $69 million to b<^warded to school systems. :i*’It limits what we’ll be able to dqc’’ he said. “ I will say we are closer on track than what it was last year.” Steed said over the next three years, employees under the basic education plan will rcceive an average six percent raise. “ It is not six percent across the board,” he said. “ It will range from zero percent for some and 13 to 14 percent to others. “ W e’re more or less waiting to see what we’re going to get from Raleigh,” said Steed. ___ • Board members agreed to temi the North Cooleemee school building as surplus. The board will offer the property to the county commissioners for them to use as they see fit. ' • Luther Polls was nominaled by fellow board members to seek one of four vacancies on the North Carolina School Board Association. • Jerry Swicegood was elected to serve as vice president of the district school board for the up coming year. ,» PARE Program Gets $3,000 #rom ABC Store Profits :;Close to $3,000 in revenues fm'in the Cooleemee A BC store has been appropriated to the D A R E (Drug and Alcohol Resistance Edilcation) program in the Davie. County Schools. •Davie commissioners approved ihelapproprialion Monday in accor dance with the slate statute ■stijiulaling that a certain percentage of the revenues be used for alcohol and substance abuse programs. ;Tlie D A R E program is coor dinated by the Davie County I SherilTs Department. Deputy Jim- I my Phipps serves as the D A R E oFficer. •■’That’s a good program.” said Com m ission Chairman R.C. Smilh. “They’re doing a good job.” Also at Monday’s meeting, com missioners voled unanimously lo amend the three cable television franchises held by Friendship Cable of Norlh Carolina so they would all expire at the same lime. Under the proposed ameiulnienl, the franchises would expire on June 1,2002. The amendments must be ap proved by a second vole before go ing inio elTeel. In oilier business, coiiimissioiici s approved several purchase orilers and invoices. The purchase orders covered u personal computer and printer Гог the counly finance office, a cash register and slool for the landfill iiiul a surveillance camera for llie jail. Invoices approved for payment included one for$102,19.‘i submit ted by Brown Steel Contractors Inc. for work on Ihe elevated water tank al the l.ee distribulion cenler on U.S. 601 Soulh and one for S3,l%.yO siibmilled by Ramsay Associates for archileclural work on the courthouse expansion and aiUlilion aiul ihe counly ad- iiiiniMraiivo IniiMing being con- Mrucied across llie slrcel. NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY CREDITOns NOTICE Having qualified as Exncutof ol lhc Will and Eslale ol ElizabolM Holmes Benton, deceased, lalo ol 2107 Bermuda Village, Advance, Davie Counly, North Carolina, this is lo nolily all persons, lirms, corpora tions and olhors having claims against Ihe Estate ol said deceased lo exhibil Ihem 10 tho undersigned's allorneys al Suile 500, Two Piedmont Plaza, 2000 West First SIreel, Winslon-Salom, N,C. 27104, on or belore Ihe I5lh day o( February, 1990, or Ihis nolice will be pled in bar ol Iheir recovery. All persons indebled lo said Eslale will please malte immediale paymenl. This Ihe 3rd day ol August, 19B9, William Grady Benlon, c/o Suilo 500, Two Piedmonl Plaza, 2000 Wesl Firsl SIreel, Winslon-Salem, N.C. 27104, Ex ecutor ol Ihe Eslale ol Elizabelh Holmes Benlon, deceased. Edward E. Raymer Jr. Allman Spry Humphreys Leggell & Howinglon, P.A. Suile 500, Two Piedmonl Plaza 2000 Wesl Firsl SIreel Winston-Salem. N.C. 27104 Tel: (919) 722-2300 8-10-4lnp NORTH CAROUNA DAVIE COUNTY EXECUTOR’S NOTICE Having qualilied as Execulor of the Eslale of Ella B. Tomlin, deceased, Iale ol Davie County, Norlh Carolina, IMs is lo nolily all persons having claims agalnsl said eslale to present ihem lo the under signed on or belore the 271h day ol January. 1990, said dale being al least six months from Ihe dale ol lirsl publica- lion ol Ihls nolice. or this nolice will be pleaded in bar ol Ihair recovery. All per sons Indebted lo said eslale will please make Immediale paymenl lo Ihe undersigned. This Ihe 27lh day of July, 1989, the same being the lirst publlcallon dale. George Lyons, Execulor ol Ihe eslale oi Ella B. Tomlin, deceased. Brock & McClamrocIi Allorneys al Law P.O. Box 347 Mocksviile, N.C. 27028 Telephone: (704) 634-3518 7-27-4lnp NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY ADiVIINISTRATRIX NOTICE Having qualilied as Administratrix ol ■ Ihe eslale ol Billy Gray Brooks, deceas ed, iale ot Davie Counly, this Is to notify all persons having claims against said estate lo present Iham lo the undersign ed on or belore the 20th day ol January 1990. or this nolice will be pleaded in bar ol Iheir recovery. All persons indebted lo said eslale will please make immediate paymenl lo the undersigned. This Ihe 201h day ol July, 1989. Belly Spry Brooks, Administralrix ol the estate ol Billy Gray Brooks, deceased. Belly Spry Brooks, Admr Roule 7, Box 347 Mocksvllle, N.C. 27028 7-20-41np NORTH CAROUNA DAVIE COUNTY EXECUTRIX’S NOTICE Having qualified as Executrix of Ihe estate of Magdeline Carter Whitaker, deceased. Iale ol Davie Counly, North Carolina, this is lo notify ail persons hav ing claims against said estate to present Ihem lo the undersigned on or before the 10th day of February, 1990, or this nolice will be pleaded In bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make Immediate payment to the undersigned. This the 10lh day of August, 1989. Joyce W. Rabon, Route 3, Box 597, Mocksviile, N.C. 27028, Executrix of the estate of Magdeline Carter Whitaker, deceased. 8-10-4tnp NORTH CAROLINA DAViE COUNTY EXECUTOR'S NOTICE Having qualilied as Executor of ihe estate of Vera Godwin Hall, deceased, late ol Davie County, North Carolina, this is to notify ail persons having claims against .said eslale lo present them lo Ihe undersigned on or belore Ihe 10th day of February, 1990, being six months from Ihe lirst day ol publication, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of Iheir recovery. All persons Indebted to said eslale will please make immediale paymenl lo Ihe undersigned. This the 2nd day of August, 1989. Robert B. Hall, Box 816, Mocksvllle, N.C. 27028, Execulor ol Ihe eslale of Vera Godwin Hall, deceased. Marlin and Van Hoy, Attorneys Drawer 1068 Mocksvllle, N.C. 27028 8-10-4lnp NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY EXECUTRIX’S NOTICE Having qualilied as Executrix ol Ihe eslale ol John W, Hackney, deceased, Iale ol Davie Counly, North Carolina, this is lo nolily all persons having claims against said eslale to present Ihem lo Ihe undersigned on or belore Ihe lOlh day of February, 1990, or this nolice will be pleaded in bar ol Iheir recovery. Ail per sons indebled lo said estate will please make immediate paymenl lo Ihe undersigned. This Ihe lOlh day ol August, 1989, Jeannine F. Hackney, Box M. 114 Riverbend Drive, Advance, N.C. 27006. Executrix ol Ihe eslale ol John W. Hackney, deceased. 8-10-4Inp NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY PUBLIC NOTICE The Davie County Board ol Commis sioners will hold a public hearing on Mon day, Augusl 21,1989, al 7:00 p.m. in Ihe Courtroom ol the Davie Counly Cour thouse lo consider the renaming ol SR 1312 (Ralph Ratledge Road). The re quested name is Gallimore Road. All in terested cilizens are invited lo attend and provide commenis and ask questions. R.C. Smilh, Chairman Davie County Commissioners 8-10-llnp NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE Superior Court Division Beloro the Clerk 89-SP-82 In The Matter Ol The Foreclosure Sale 01 The Properly ol Dull D. Peebles and Wile, Ruth C, Peebles, Deed ol Trust Book 125, Pago 309 NOTICE OF SALE WHEREAS, Dull D. Peebles and wile, Ruth C. Peebles, did on the 29lh day ol November. 1983, execute a Deed of Trust conveying certain properties hereinafler described lo the undersigned Truslee, which Deed ol Trust was recorded in Book 125, Page 309, Ollice ol ihe Register of Deeds of Davie County on the 29lh day ol November. 1989; and WHEREAS, default having been made under the terms of said Deed of Trust; NOW THEREFORE, under and by vir tue of the power ol sale contained in said Deed ol Trust, and pursuant to Findings of the Cferk ol Superior Court ol Davie Counly daled the 1st day ol Augusl, 1989, and in compliance wilh the provisions of N,C.G.S. Section 45-21.16A, et seq., the undersigned Truslee will on Tuesday, August 22,1989, at 12:00 o’clock noon at the Davie County Courthouse door in Mocksviile, North Carolina, offer for sale the foilowing described parcel of reai pro perly located in Fuilon Township, Davie County, North Carolina: FIRST TRACT: BEGINNING al the point in the centerline of the 60 fool right of way of N.C. 801 as indicated by a railroad spike in the centerline; thence South 86" 15' 17" Easl 30.53 feet to a placed iron pin located in Ihe eastern righl of way line of N.C. 801; and thence pro ceeding South 86“ 15' 17" East 204.43 feello a placed Iron pin; thence Soulh 86° 15' 17" Easl 240.04 feel lo an iron pin; thence Soulh 03" 02' 53" Wesl 188.41 feel lo an iron pin; North 86" 57' 17" West 405.87 feet lo a placed iron pin located in the eastern right of way line of N.C. 801; thence North 86i> 57' 17" Wesl 30.53 feel lo a spike located in the cenler line of the 60 foot right of way of N.C. 801; thence North 8“ 11' 12" Wesl 198.00 teel 10 the railroad spike in the centerline of the 60 fool right of way of N.C. 801, the point and place of beginning. The same being and consisting of the 2.00 acres of property of Duff D. Peebles, lying in Fuilon Township, Davie County, North Carolina, as shown by a survey prepared by Grady L. Tutterow on June 30,1983. Reference Is made to Deed Book 120, Page 209, Davie Counly Registry. SECOND TRACT: BEGINNING al a point said point being South 86" 15' 17" Easl 234,96 feel from point in the centerline of the 60 tool righl of way of N,C. 801 as indicated by a railroad spike; thence from said point of beginning North 03" 44' 43" East 293.70 feet to an iron slake: running Ihence South 86" 15' 17” East 1103.86 leel lo an iron stake (said stoke being the northeast corner ol the Within described tract); running thence South 06" 00' West 474.92 feet to an iron slake; running thence North 86" 11' 29" West 207.17 feel to an Iron stake; runn ing thence North 86" 57' 17" West 635.73 feet lo an iron stake; running thence North 03" 02' 43" West 188.41 feet to an iron slake; running thence North 86" IS’ 17” Wesl 240.04 feot to an Iron slake be ing the point and place of beginning. The same consisting of 10.976 acres of pro perty of Duff D. Peebles, lying In Fulton Township, Davie Counly, North Carolina, as shown by a sureey prepared by Grady L. Tutterow on June 30,1983. See also Deeds recorded In Book 49, Page 39 and Book 120, Page 209, Davie County Register ol Deeds office; There Is located on Ihis property a wooden frame house with three bedrooms and one bathroom at Route 2, Box 442, Advance, Davie Counly, North Carolina. > TERMS OF SALE; Cash upon confir- : mation of the Court. The highest bidder will be required to deposit ten (10) per- . cent of the first $1,000.00 bid and five (5) percent ol such amount bid in excau of $1,000.00. CONDITIONS OF SALE: The sale will be made sublect lo 1989 Davie County ad valorem taxes and any prior taxes and liens. This 1st day of August, 1989. P.O. Stoner Jr., Truslee P.O. Box 457 38 Vance Circle Lexington, N.C. 27292 Telephone: (704) 246-5104 8-10-2lnp NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING There will be a meeting of the Mocksviile Zoning Board of Ad]ustment on Tuesday, August 22, 1989, at 7:00 p.m. In Ihe Mocksviile Town Hall. The public is invited lo attend. Business is scheduled lo be conducted as loiiows: A. Call to order. B. Review minutes. C. T&L Associates, Inc., represented by Grady L. McClamrock, Jr., has submitted a request for a Conditional Use Permit under Article V, Section 7.2 ol the Mocksviile Zoning Ordinance. This pro perly is located al 578 Wilkesboro Street in Mocksviile, N.C. This properly further described as tieing Parcel B-8 of lax map 1-4-11. D. New or oid business. E. Adjournment. 8-10-2lnp NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY EXECUTRIX'S NOTICE Having qualilied as Executrix of the estate ol G.W. Polls, deceased, iale ol Davie Counly, North Carolina, this is lo nolily all persons having claims against said estate to present them lo the under signed on or belore Ihe 10th day of February, 1990, or this nolice will be pleaded in bar ol their recovery. All per sons indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment lo the undersigned. This the 10lh day ol Augusl, 1989. Belly B. Polts, P.O. Box 88, Advance, N.C. 27006, Executrix of Iho eslale ol G.W. Holts, deceased. 8-lQ.41np NORTH CAROUNA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE OF RESALE OF REAL PROPERTY Pursuanl lo Ihe aulhorily vesled in Lawrence Ray Carter, Administrator ol Ihe Estate ol John Wesley Carter, deceased, by an Order daled March 8. 19B9, by Ihe Clerk ol Superior Court ol Davie Counly, and an Order ol Resale dated July 20,1989, said Administrator will oiler lor sale and sell at public auc lion lo the highest bidder lor cash on Fri day, Augusl 11,1989. al 11:00 a,m. al Ihe , Davie Counly Courthouse, the following described properly: TRACT 7: John W. Carter Homeplace Situated in JerusalemTownship, Davie , County, North Carolina: BEING Lots No. 9, 10 and 11, 12,13 and 14 ol the larm known as the George, Leller Farm and owned by A.L. Lelier,: and wile. M.E. Lelier located about live (5) miles from Mocksviile and adjoining ■ the section known as Greasy Corner, Nonh Carolina, according to a plat thereof prepared by J,B. Justice C.E. which said plat is recorded in the Olfice of the; Register of Deeds of Davie Counly, North: Carolina, in Book ol Maps No. 30, page! 88, also new books Map Book 1, page 95, j lo which said plat reference Is hereby, made lor a more particular description.; See also Plat Book 1, Page 95, Davie. County Registry. For back title see Deed Book 43 at' Page 222 and Book 45 at Page 283,; Davie County Registry, TRACT 9: ! Situated in Jerusalem Township, Davie'. Counly, North Carolina; BEING Lot 35 containing 1,8 acres and ’ being a portion of the farm known as Ihe George Lefier farm and owned by J.C. J Charies and wile, Sallie C. Charies, i located about 5 miles Soulh of Mocksviile j and joining Ihe section known as Greasy: Corner, Nonh Carolina, of which said] description is more particularly describ-: ed by map by J.D. Justice, C.E. and duly j recorded in Regisler of Deeds Office,; Davie Counly. ' For more complete description refer to i Book of Maps 30, page 88, Davie Coun-; ty Registry, see also Plat Book 1 al Pago. 95, said Registry. ; For back title see Deed Book 44 at. Page 500, Davie County Registry. ' Also, another tract or lot described as; follows: BEGff^NfNG at the comer of 10 and 11, • 34 and 35 running Soulh 22 deg. East to I a Slone, Correll’s corner 485 feel; then; South 40 deg. West 131 leet Soulh cor-, ner Lot 34; then North 10-30 West 545 ■ feet lo corner ol Lot No. 9; thence North i 70-30 East too feel to Ihe beginning. This; being in the subdivision ot the A.L. Lefier ; farm and containing by estimate 1 ”/ioo i acres. See Book 30, page 88, and Plat i Book 1 at Page 95, Davie County; Registry. ;For back title see Deed Book 46 at: Page 38, Davie County Registry. ; Said property shall be sold subject to \ . all prior liens, encumbrances and of record, if any. Said sale shall remain J open for upset bids for 10 days and In the, event of an upset bid the property will be ■) resold al public auction as by law provid- < ed. The successful bkkler will be required; 10 pay a 10 percent deposit and said bid • shall be subject lo conflrTnallon. The star-, ting bids will be as follov«: ' Tract 7: $14,750.00 : ) Tract 9: $ 9,500.00 ' This21stdayof July, 1989. { Lawrence Ray Carter ■ Administrator of John Wesleys Carter Estate { By Qrady L. McCfamrock Jr. ; Attorney for Estate ^ Brock & IWcClamrocKV I P.O.Box347r Mocksvllle, N.C. 27028" Telephone; (704) 634-3518 ■ ' • 8-3-2tn(r'v, NORTH CAROLiNA ' DAVIE COUNTY < PUBLIC NOTICE ' ; There «rill be a meeting ot the Davie Counly Zoning Board of Adiuttment on : (Monday. August 14,1S89, at 7:00 p .m.. • In the Commiaskinar'a Room ofthe Davie ; ; County Courthouse. The fottowtng ap- ' piicatton for a Special Uaa Permit haa;^ - been received by the zoning officer and Is scheduled to be heard; .'. r Lewis C. Carter haa submitted a re- quest for a Spaclat Use Permit to operate a pubfic recreation facility, behind hi« i residence kx^ted on the east side of Gun Club Road (SR 1626). Thia tanning bed : t facility Is further described as being ^ located on Ihe rear portion of parcel 164 : ' of tax map E-7. { A sign will be posted on the atxwe ^ listed location lo advertise the public. > hearing. All parties and interested cilizens ; are invited to attend said public hearing . at which time they shall have an oppor- ] lunlty 10 be heard in favor of or in opposi- • tion to Ihe foregoins change. Prior lo the ; public hearing, all persons inleresled may • obtain any additional Information on this ; proposal which Is In the possession of the • Davie Counly Zoning Enforcement Office ; in the Davie County Office Building, : Mocksviile, N.C. on weekdays between ; the hours of 8:30 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. or ■. by telephone at 634-3340. . : Jesse A. Boyce Jr. Davla County Zoning Officer . 8-3-21np ■ 5 NORTH CAROLINA ’ DAVIE COUNTY ; NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION Having qualilied as Administratrix of , the eslale ol Eugene Samuel Bowman, ■ deceased, late ol Davie Counly, North ; Carolina, this is to nolily all persons, lirms - and corporations having claims against ; said eslale lo present them, duly verilied, ■ to the undersigned, care ol William J. ) Waggoner. Allorney. 2500 Two Firsl • Union Cenler. Charlotte. N.C. 28282, on ; orbeloreihe 10th day of February, 1990, • or Ihis nolice will be pleaded in bar of Iheir } recovery. All persons Indebted lo said \ eslale will please make immediale sellie- ^ menl wilh the undersigned. ^ This Ihe 1st day ol Augusl. 1989. ; Rulh H. Bowman. Administratrix ol Ihe - estate ol Eugene Samuel Bowman, T deceased. 8-io-4inp : I t : 'SD -D AV IE COUNTY F,М ICRl’KISIO UICCOHI). I IH!U.SI)AV. Aiir. 10, 19HV Ш Ш Ш Я Б Ш Е БВОЖТДВСБ 109 Leslie Cl,, Advance, NC, Creekwood Dev. Aug. 12, 8-12. Children’s clothes (inlant -4T), baby equipment, toys, mens and ladies • clothing, lurniture, housewares, tools. 2 lamilies. Saturday, Aug. 12,8-3.916 ■ Hardison Street. Numerous items. 2 (amlly. 849 Milling Road, Saturday, . Aug. 12,8-4. Lots ol cralts and stull. . 39 & 41 Davie St,, Cooleemee, Baby clothes through adults. Furniture and other household furnishings, garden tools.__________________ . 3 families. Saturday, 7 am until. Glassware, lurniture, clothes, and lots ol miscellaneous. 601 North at Boles Grocery,_________________ 3 lamily basement sale at 101 Lakewood Drive at Park Avenue, Mocksville, Friday and Saturday, Aug, 11 & 12 Irom 9 to 4. Household ; appliances, typewriters, lamps, T,V„ '; cooking utensils and much more, - 4 families. Saturday, Aug, 12, 8-2, Hwy, 801,1 '/4 miles north ol MO, 3rd house on left from Macedonia Mora- . vian Church. Lawn mower, bicycles, .'children and adult clothing, . bridesmaid dresses and llower girl dress, baseball cards (superstars and ■ rookies), and many other Hems. ' 5 families. Fri. & Sat. at home ol . Margaret Potts. 64 East, watch lor ^. signs. Lots ol children's clothes -: plus other Items too numerous to mention._______________________ ' 5 families. Fri, & Sat,, 8-4, Redland road. New 26 Inch bike, D,P. litness ■ 2000 exercise sel, baby car seats. anks Greenwood Lakes, corner Whitehead Drive and Overlook. Saliirday 8-12. Many items. Cancelled il raining. Hwy. 801 South, I mile from inlersec- tion with Hwy. 168, Riverview Apts., Multi-tenant yard sale, Saulrday, Aug, 12, 8-3.__________________________ Jericho Road, 1 mile past radio sta- tion. Socks, lots of junk. SignsI Just moved. Everything must go. Saturday, August 12, 9 am - 3 pm, 241 Gwyn Street, Mocksville. Mocksville - o il side street between Sears and The Phone Place in gravel parking lot. Saturday 8-4, Sunday 10-2, Everything priced to sell. Price Is right. 4 lamily yard sale. Aug. 11, 8 am until. Aug. 12, 8 am - 12 noon. Fork Church Road, Sth house on lelt Irom Bixby, Housewares, crib sheets, baby clothes, toys, drapes, bedspreads, ladies and mens clothes, shoes,__________________ Remodeling sale. 142 Meroney St. Signs. Saturday, 8-3._____________ Saturday, 8-1, Joyner Street, Cooleemee. Signs. Lots ol clothes. Saturday 8 until 537 Salisbury St. Moving sale "no reasonable offer refused". Lots of everything. Saturday. Tons ol toys, baby & maternity clothes, appliances, etc. Lanier Road oil 64 west just past Lake Myers entrance.___________ Trumpet, double bed, rockers, stove, trunk, piano bench, bassenet and other goodies. Sat., Aug. 12, 8 until. 415 Tol Slreei.___________________ Used Washers & Dryers. Good con dition, Ask lor Willie 492-5357. Y a r d S a l e S i g n s ttlv* DIractlons To Your Sale 25« Each A v a ila b le A t T h e D a v i e - C o u n t y E n t e r p r i s e R e c o r d m iLYQ Ur.Q il9ttilfr№ w U ^ I g a i i t l c A u e t i o n S a l e 1 0 M a t 1 0 :0 0 a.m . A d v a n c e , N .C . O i i y 'ri l lltrch^ ^ SaleMi* o ftlib typt tn our arta. Ws ca Ñ N e w T o Bring in Y o u r , N e w « U a M i M o fch a n d lse T o T h is Sa le i. . (O oafari W W eom e) ' nefc-up loada, c a r loada, traller loada \ A f > . mnr Á Lotd - M I A Lo»d__________ ¡ • S i S S í W M K Í l l c a a E m k i m n t o . r^'Oofitoet V 2 2L Í ‘ ‘ ^ N a r t m a n , A u c t f o n a e r ^ *• « l ü í A í í S S v i #4804 í • 1 M W « 1 1 M 9 6 -5 3 5 0 t-10-tinbp A U C T I O N S A L E Antiques, Household Goods And Personal Property Saturday, August 12 At 10:00 a.m. D IRECTIO N S: Fronii Corporation Parkway (Near Hechingers) take Buchanan St, South, turn right on Anne Ave, left on Cle ment St, House on corner of Clennent and Belvedere Ct. Nice old oak S, roll top desk * small nice Ivoe seat * old Queen Anne chairs * two old clocks * old wash bowl and pitcher * old violin and wooden case ‘ nice old stage coach trunk ' early Salem wooden measure * four old wash pots ‘ oak old jugs ’ linens * prayer bench * pictures and frames ‘ oil lamps ‘ books * hutch dresser * depression glass ■ old child's rocker * old cof fee grinder • primitive items * Old Salem chairs * nice claw fooled organ stool ‘ Victorian table ’ walnut candle stand ‘ miniature oil lamp ■ two drawer table desk ■ nice oak medicine cabinet * doll bed • old brass pans • scales ' miniature chest * old sleigh bells * couch * bed ’ bar stools * table and chairs ‘ chest of drawers • household items ' old hat rack ’ end table • file cabinet ‘ what-not stands • old glassware • stuffed chairs • kitchen utensils, • * • Many Other Items To Sell Not Listed ‘ ‘ , A u c i t o n e e r , F r a n k M o c k Rt. 2, Box 379, E ast Bend, N.C. Phone (919) 699-3426 NCAL #21 FREE DOG...loving home. Pari Lab. Female. Loves kids, needs big yard and plenty of love. 998*5202. FREE KITTENS. 99^-9J95. FREE PUPPIES...io a good home. 634-5829._________________ Ferrets - 3 males, 1 female. S35 each. 996-6477._______________________ HAPPY JACK FLEA CARD; All metal , patented device controls (leas in the home without chemicals or exter minator. Results overnight! DAVIE FARM SERVICE. 303 WILKESBORO ST.______________________________ Labrador Retreivcr Puppies: Black, shots and de-wormed. S150. 492-7418. CLASSIFIED DEADLINE TUESDAYS AT NOON FOR RENT,...1 and 2-bedroom apart ments, kitchen appliances lurnished including dishwasher, T/j-balhs, washer/dryer connections. Central heat/air. Prewired for cable and phone. Insulated doors and windows. No-wax kilchen/balh floors. Pool. Sunset Apartments, located behind Hendrix Furniture on highway 158, Mocksville. Phone 704-634-0168. NEW, ENERGY EFFICIENT APART MENTS. 1 & 2 bedroom and fully fur nished studios. Pool, clubhouse, and basketball courl. AMPLE PARKINGIll W/ater, sewer, drapes, and kitchen appliances included. Dishwasher, frost-free refrigerator, washer/dryer connections and on-site laundry facilities. Heated and cooled with heat pumps. Private patio or balcony, quick-recovery water heater, smoke dector, prewired for phone and cable TV, Manager and maintenance live on property, 24-hour emergency maintenance. Children and small pets welcome. Only a few lelt. Don't miss out — call now for $50 off first . month’s rent. Northwood Apartments, Milling Road, 634-4141,__________ STUDIO APARTMENT: $250 month; $250 deposit. References required. Prefer single or gentlemen. 492-7853 or 634-1218. Beach Cottage al S. Myrtle. 2 bedroom, 2 bath, color TV, A/C. S285 weekly or S44 nightly. 704-634-3875, 634-3650. FOR RENT: North Myrtle Beach, 3-BR, 2-BA House. All conveniences, in cluding swimming pool. Short walk to beach, sleeps 8 comlortably. Only a lew weeks open. Cali 634-5072. White Lake; Isley’s Apartments and Cottages. Discounts Sunday through Thursday. (919) 862-4030. Business Opportunit Hotest small business in years, we have a unique business opportunity where we’ve helped 1000s ol people become linanoialiy independent in their spare time. 1-800-255-5725. MORTGAGE LOANS; Million to lend, regardless ol credit, 48 hr. approval service. Bill consolidation home im provement, 2nd mortgage, relinanc- ing, 1st purchase. If you have equity in your home, we can give you a loan. l-aOO-759-MONY.______________ Small Profitable Business lor sale in Mocksviiie. Lots ol room for growth for aggressive owner. Call 634-1456 days or 492-5651 nights. Cards of Thanks CARTER The family ol the late Roy Anderson Carter would like to thank Ihe many friends who showed their love and concern during our time of sorrow. Cards, llowers, food and memorials made his memory and the many prayers lor the family were most ap preciated. May God bless each of you. The family of Roy Anderson Carter GROSE We wish to sincerely thank all our friends for all the many kindnesses and expressions of love and support shown us during the recent loss ol our dear loved one, i The lamily ol M.H. Grose WAGNER W e wish to extend our sincere thanks to all our neighbors and Iriends for all the loods, llowers, visits, phone calls, cards and prayers during the recent loss ol our loved one. Words cannot express how much your loving sup port and thoughtfulness have meant to us during this period ol deep per sonal sorrow. The lamily ol Odell Wagner hild Care BY OWNER; Reduced to selll Fork Community. Large A-lrame situated on 5.44 acres. Beautiful setting, full basement. Call 998-8680 or 407-349-9829.____________________ Mother will babysit in her home. Any shilt. Any age. 998-6350. Relerences furnished. Hess Heating & Air Conditioning 24 Hour Service Sales — Service & Installation Oil Heat Pumps Gas Or Electric Furnaces 9 1 9 -9 9 8 -6 1 3 3 Call Today' 7-37-ttnMp TralntobaaPra «8CCRCTARY : •EXCCUTIve SECRCTARY •W ORDPROCeSSOR НОМБ STUDY / ЙЕ8. TRMNINQ .FINANCIAL AID -JOD PLACEMENT AVAILABl.E ASSISTANCF 1 -8 0 0 -3 2 7 -7 7 2 8THE HART SCHOOL M ille r B u ild in g & R e m o d e lin g C o . Replacement Windows West “Vinyl”,"Classic Thermal" & Reynolds "Renovation" Available in while, tan & bronze. Tilts for easy cleaning pavld MllleF Almnlnum Awnlntf« P urport & Patio C o v r« Custom m ade and installed to fit! All work fully guaranteed Free Estimates / Refrences Available Compare Our Quality & Price Belore You Buy M. David Millar Rt, 3, Box 200 Advance, N,C. 27006 _________Phone: (919) 998-2140 _______»-lO ifaN i* r A u ciion Starting At 10:00 a.m. Saturday A u g . 1 2 L e w i s v i l l e F u r n i t u r e Furniture to be sold for some price ,.7 7 Clocks Elkin - ,JonL-,sville Exit #82 gnd Tabic .Joiic.svillL‘, N.C. 28642 Day Beds Phone:(919) 835-7001 Recli/iers Uo.\ Springs Л Mattress Hutch Л BulTct Living Roimi Suites Officc I'urniturc Bcclrmini Suites T .V . Stands Lewisville Furniture Liquidation Jonesville, N.C.Hwy. 67 IIK’mJv SKNcill IWIIJCJ Col. Danny Lewis плиm: 177) N C A L 124 SS.S-TOOl Furniture Bedroom suite for sale, $50. Double dresser, chest of drawers and bed. Exercise machine, $60 (value at $200). Two bedsteads $10 each. Cali 998-5570 after 5 p.m,____________ Couch & Chair $75, Some baby fur- niture, 998-8925,_________________ Hardrock Maple Oropleal table, 4 chairs, Relinished. 634-2097 alter 6 p.m. Health omes For Rènt Beautiful, small 1 bedroom air con ditioned cottage on US 64, Fork. Too small lor children. No pels. $250 monlh. 998-5210 or 1-877-3433. omes For Sale 3 bedroom, 2 bath house. 280 Gwyn Street, Mocksville. Air conditioned, carport, basement, lenced backyard. Well located. 998-5210or 1-877-3433. 4,22 acres, large deck, 3 bedrooms, $49,900. Call 998-6169 after 5 p.rh,', BY OWNER: Large A-Frame situated on 5.44 acres. Full basement In Fork Community. Priced lo sell at $112,000. Call 998-8680 or 407-349-9829.____________________ Carolina E.E. Homes will build to suit your needs. We build on your land or ours. Many floorplans in stock. Cóme by today for a free estimate or call lor information. We can also help you with your remodeling jobs, 704-634-2252._________________ GOVERNMENT HOMESI $1,00 (U- Repair) Foreclosures, Tax Delinquent Properly, Now selling. This areal Call (refundable) 1-518-459-3546 EXT. H5649A for listings. L an d F o r L e a s e Pastureland tor rent to horses lor $25 monlh for each horse. 99B-S37B,. ; ABORTION„„Pregnancy Testing. For an appointment call Arcadia Women's Clinic, Winston Salem col- lect, 919 721-1620._______________ AL-ANON for those affected by alcoholism or problem drinking. B.C. Brock Bidg., lower level, Wednesdays 8 p.m. Call 634-2195 for further Information, NEW AND USED OFFICE FURNITURE ★ Safes ★ ^iles ★ Fife Ftoof Filte Rowan Offlca Funiitira 118 N, Miln Stmt, Salisbury, N,C. Phone 636-8022 ForTiioseWho ; liarry Milton 'Merow:: Has Hit The Big 40 Г И Ю И М Ч В Ц П 1 & MNfaiOto IM t CaMQr Л г4/ Utn i o i o w m i i m m M m i ■ T W Saturday, August 26, 1989 - 10:00 a.m. 1 0 8 ± A e re a In D a y ie C o u n t y ' S u b -d iv id e d in tra c ta - 5 -4 0 a e re a , ^ O n ly M in u te a F r o m W ln a t o n -S a le m l DIRECTIONS: From Intersection 1-40 & Hwy, 801, lollow 801 North 8 m iles lo О м а R oad i (SR1411), Turn lelt on C an a R oad an d go 1'A m iles to land on right. From Intersection of ■: Hwy 421 i Hwy, 601 follow Hwy, 601 south approxim ately 7 m iles lo Hwy, 801. Turn M : on Hwy. 801 and go tow ards Farm ington 3 m iles to C an a R oad. Turn right on C an a R oad (S R I4 tt) and go 1Й m iles ló s a le on right. _ • This line property Is located only m inutes from W INSTON-SAl^M , C LEM M O N S,; LEWISVILLE, MOCKSVILLE, FARMINGTON, T his Is your ch an ce lo own land in th e coun try n ear the cityl The land is being surveyed an d divided inlo acreag e Iracis, You will h ave th e opportunity al th e auciion lo buy part or alii It will be ollered in tracts lirst, an d Ihen in com binations, or a s a whole. Being just across the road from the T horoughbred Training C enter an d the D eerview Jersey Farm , it would b e ideal lor h orses or cattle, A long, paved road Ironlage m akes it even Ideal for developm ent. H ere, you'll have Ihe chan ce lo buy an a c rea g e Iracl lor the home In th e country you've b een dream ing about! D on'l m iss this big DAVIE COUNTY LAND AUCTION! A uctioneers will b e on site Sunday, A ugust 20 from 2;00 p.m. 10 4:00 p.m . to give out m aps and answ er questions. O r you m ay w ant lo cail Ihe auciion com pany at 1-800-442-7906 lor detaiis. S ale will b e held rain or shine. Auciion lent will be on property il w eather is rainy! TERMS; lO ii dow n at th e au ction , b ala n ce n ol lo ex ce ed 30 d ays. F or M ore D etails C all T he A uctio neers: By.. R O G E R S . REALTY S AUCTION CÜ Highaiy lOI.MMUUy. H. C. NC Lkanii f«a» - V* Ucaau #1 (9 1 9 ) 7 8 9 > 2 9 2 S o r 7 8 6 -8 3 2 6 1-800-442-7906 B-103tp DAMI'. СОиМЛ r.NTKUl’IUSK KKCORD, TIIUKSDAY, Лиц. К), 1989-9D e i i A S S I F I E D S ШЕХВЕШШ Ш Ш Г Т К В Ш Land For Sale OAVIE COUNTY. Moving with the Lee ■ Plant? Need acreage? 17.32 acres by ovimer, house, 416.44 road frontage. $40,000. (919) 785-0107. • Mobile Home Lot. 100x215 lot with septic tank and well. Reduced to • $7500. Leonard Realty 704-634-3875 or 634-3650. Lawn & Garden ANGELL’S SEEDING SERVICE... New Yards, Re-seeding, iight grading and hauiing. Brush chipping. RICK ANGELL 634-2730 after 5:30 p.m. С & M SERVICES We provide ail types ot lawn service, mowing lawns, (rimming shrubbery, . cieaning lots. 704-634-5798, FREE • ESTIMATES.____________________ COMPLETE LAWN MAINTENANCE Mowing, ferliiizing, seeding, aeration, weed and Insect control, and more. CAROUNA LAWN CARE FREE ESTIMATES . _________704-634-4737.__________ WAYNE’S LAWN MAINTENANCE AND TREE CARE Tree Topping, Trimming, Stump Grinding & Tree Removal ' 634-4413 - Free Estimates ; '14 R sso rt C am par: 28 feet, air con- ' dltlon, awning, excellent condition. $7,000. 634-3336.________________ : 'U (28 Ft.) Franklin 5th wheel. Price ' (.OW for quick sale. 704-492-5597 or ; 704^63-7881.____________________ : ÌFOR SALE: 150 AC, part or all. Iredell ; : Co. (704)546-2696. ÌFÒR SALE: 15H' Campar, sleeps 6. ■ Ì600 watt generator, truck camper : tpvar 492-5727. . I FOR SALE: ’77 Oor* 2 hona trailer ? :>(CC).‘2gant)amares,1 saddle&bri- ■I-'dia. 996-5325. attar 5 p.m.i FOR SALE: Hickory Hill Country Club . memtiershlp. Sacrltlce. 766-6291. - Hexagon Shape PICNIC TABLES with -'attached banch.’Custom-bullt with ,traaMlumb*r.$150.00.998-3822or -,.,99M 2eo, Employment I aat* and fast with GoBese • ^ Tablato ami E-Vap “Water Pills’’^. AvallabI* at Foster Rauch Drugs. .4 WANTED: Generous loving lammilles • to share their home with a European .>£or Japanese high school exchange ::atudant tor 8W90 school year. Call : AISE 1-800-SI^NG. '492-5561 R ant: ¿ iMdrooffl. '78 Conners Mobile Home, 14x70, 3 bedrooms, 2 balhs, almond garden tub, bar, extra large windows. Master bedroom and balh separate trom other bedrooms. Super clean. Ex cellent condilion. S8,500. (704)284-2161 or 284-2737._______ '83 Mobile Home, 14x76,3 bedrooms, 2 baths, price negotiatjle. 998-5862 or 634-2411 alter 5 p.m._________ '85 Fllntstone Mobile Home. 3 bedroom, 2 baths, partially furnished, C/A. 704-278-2859. No down pay- ment, assume payments._________ '87 Gray Oakcove, 14x70, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, furnished. Island kitchen, garden tub, 2 decks, under pinning. Must sell. $15,500. 998-2091.________________________ Before you buy...come see us at Oakwood Homes, Troutman. Exit 42 off 1-77. 528-4517._______________ Lee's Mobile Homes - Volume Horton & Fleetwood Dealer. Rd. 1923, Nor wood NC. Open 7 days. Sizes include hitch, no downpayment with clear deed. 42x60 triple-wide $36,999; 28x70 $28,999; 4 bedroom 28x64 $24,999; 24x52 $17,999; 24x44 $16,999; 14x80 $16,999; Shingle Rool, Wood Siding 14x80 $17,999; 14x70 $12,999; 14x52 $9,999; 2 Styles 28x60 Highland Park $28,999; 24x60 Horton $21,999; Used Homes also available - 704-474-4906 or 1-S00-777-8652.__________________ New '89 14x70 3 bedroom, 2 bath, . total electric, stove and refrigerator, much more, only $11,900. Payments $138 month for 10 years with down payment of $2,900. 704-634-3270. SAVE MONEYI Come to Oakwood Homes Of Lexington Up 10 $3000 discounlsl Location Business Loop 1-85 Soulh Behind Waffle House Or Call 704-249-7041 S elect m odela; Only $495 down pay ment. Available AAA Homes, Exit 42 off 1-77, Troutman, NC. 704-528-9833. Used 60x12 mobile home. Excellent for storage use. $1,000 cash and you pickup. AAA Homes, Exit 42 off 1-77, Troutman, WC. 704-528-9833. PIA N O L E SSO N S beginning In September. Call 998-5570 after 5 ^ p.m. Monday - Friday.____________ BARFORD’S PIANO TUNING. Repair ing, rebuilding. Work guaranteed. 919-998-2789. O f f ic e S p a c e OFFICE SPACE FOR RENT (near post office). Ground floor, good parking, modern conveniences, four offices available. 165 square feet to 200 square feet each. Call 634-2181. ANDERSON W ALL PAPER HAiVGERS 492-7777 or 492-5159 A TTEN TIO N FARMERS: Stock Removal 7 days a week. Dovjn and dis-abled Cows and Horses-il dead, call at ONCE! Will NOT pick up OLD Dead animals. JOHNSON & ALEX ANDER DOG FOOD COMPANY, Rt. 2. Harmony. (704) 546-2357 or 546-7453.________________________ A TTEN TIO N : MOBILE HOME OWNERS...Summer Special! NO MONEY DOWN. Complete central air conditioning installed for as little as $43.38 monthly. Complete job $1339,95. For fast service call 704-279-6305 anytime!___________ BACKHOE SERVICE - Septic Systems, Any Backhoe Work. Miller & Sons Backhoe Service. 284-2826._______________________ BARFORD’S PIANO RE BUILDING....Self players, pump organs. 919-998-2789.____________ B & B Contractors Salvage Will remove unwanted cars, washing machines, anything steel at NO CHARGE. 634-1218 or 492-7853. Baker Roofing New & Old Roofs Patchwork Free Estimates 919-998-6399 20 Years Experience C & M Services Concrete finishlng...waiks, driveways, patios. Free Estimates. 704-634-5798.____________________ COMPLETE CAR SERVICE Engine Re-building, Brakes, Etc. ____________492-7174____________ Carpenter, Plumber, all repairs. Remove old stumps and trees from storm damage. Build Decks and Repairs 634-1218 or 492-7853. All types concrete work: walks, patios, driveways FREE ESTIMATES. Call 998-6469. FAMILY FLOORS "We personally install what wo solll” Stop in at 806 N. Main St., Mocksville, NC. Or call us at 634-4411 or 634-0596.________________________ FARNHAM ROOFING ‘■Will Keep A Roof Over Your Head" Free Esllmales...998^962 FIRST AND SECOND MORTGAGE LOANS Debt Consolidation Home Improvement Loans For Any Worthwhile Purpose Fast Service Competitive Rates United Companies Financial Corp. 1307 Ashleybrook Center Winston-Salem, NC 27103 919-659-0123 10 mov« In. Two and three ;ibadroom moblla homaa. $70 & $80 : waakly. 492-78M or 634-1218. • : RwM teewn: 2 badraom 1988 mobile '.'J homanaarJockayPlant,601 South. '. • ;O 50 month plua $350 deposit. Privata kN. 492-7853 or 634-1218. • * A banUon land ow nara. lOCKHnancIng ; avaNabla. Financing available on well, . aapUe, underpinning. AAA Homes, ; Exit 42 . oH 1-77, Troutman, NC ; 7 0 4 -Ù 8 -^ . R e a l E s t a t e L and F or S ala By O w nar: 13 choice acres Including 2 acre lake, 'h In timber, 'A open, Ashe County. Must see to appreciate. 919-877-2587. M o u n tain M ini F arm /S u m m er R etreat. 3 BR house, approx. 18.4 acres, pond, pasture, timbered. $65,000 ERA Blue Ridge Mtn. Real- ty, Jefferson. 1-800-533-ERA1. W orld w ide selection of vacation pro perties. Receive $2 on all inqulriesi Call Resorts Resale today. 1-800^26-7844 NATL 1-800-1847 in Fla. or 1-305-771-6296. Oiipr'Fitonds ’, ‘ 11 I can twr casM you in conducting an AUCTION SALE . . Think You ■A ; Jhn ‘‘Eli’’ Hartman I NCAL #4504 REMEMBER - WE SELL: ^ M«cMn«fy * Businesses * Estates * Heavy Equipmenl *.RmI Estate! • Registered * & Grade l.ivestock ■AUCTION, TODAY’S MARKETING ADVANTAGE" (9 1 9 ) 9 9 8 -6 1 1 0 (919)998-5350 S h i p p i n g D e p a r t m e n t FULL T IM E W e m a n u fa c tu re P R E F IT w in d o w TRIIVI from P o n d e ro sa P ine M o u ld in gs, Benefits include two w e e ks paid vacation, holidays, group health coverage, a n d a retirem ent program . H igh sch o o l diplom a required. A p p ly In P e rso n Ir ia n ^. Bethel Church Rd., Mocksville, N.C. EOE/MF B.w,n $ 2 0 , 0 0 0 Per Year Raising C H IN C H ILLA S For information write to: [please give name, age ~ and phone nuntbet) • RANCHERS " P.O. Box 3566 ó Dalton, Georgia 30721 ñ (4041 278-4828 " House Or Office Cleaning Rofcronces Available - Reliable Free Estimates 919-764-3432 MASON ELECTRIC...New Installation & Repair. Mobile Home Hook-ups. Service changes. Keith Mason 9 9 8 - 5 5 4 2 ._________________ Osborne Electric Co. No job too large or small. Unlimited license. Over 20 years experience. Karl Osborne, owner 634-3398____________ PAINTING, remodeling, home repairs. Large or small. Free estimates. James Miller 998-8340.____________ RKR VIDEO Video Taping & Editing ________For All Occasions________ SAVE MONEYI COMPLETE CAR CARE Brakes, tune-up, spin-wheel balancing Boger Texaco Service ____________634-5924____________ STUM P GRINDING - No Yard Damage Miller & Sons Backhoe Service ____________284-2826____________ TIdy-up Cleaning Service Weekly, bi-weekly, monthly, one-time. Free estimates. 284-4444.________ WINDOWS WELCOMED Spring & General Housecleaning 1-704-636-7924 Vehicles ’61 Volkswagen Dune Buggy. Call 492-5467.________________________ ’72 Caprice Chevrolet...good condi- tion. $400. 998-4332._____________ '73 Dodge Polara, 8 cyi., 400 cu. in. engine, new water pump, 2 new recap tires, body in good condition, 97,000 actual miles, 2 cylinders have no compression, mechanic can fix up. Price $300 or best offer. 704-492-7239.____________________ '76 Buick Sentra. Good road condl- tlon. $800. 634-5187.___________ '84 H onda A ccord, 2 door hatchback, A/C, AM/FM stereo, low milage, one owner, excellent condition. After 6 p.m. call 998-4897._____________ '86 Pontiac 6000, AM/FM cassette, automatic. Under a corporate scheduled maintenance program. Ex- cellenl condition. $4600. 998-0751. ATTENTION - GOVERNMENT SEIZ ED VEHICLES Irom $100. Fords, Mercedes, Corvettes, Chevys. Surplus Buyers Guide. 1-602-838-8885 EXT. A3131. Is it true...Jeeps for $44 through the Government? Call for factsi 113121742-1142 ext. 5229. SALISBURY MOTOR CO. Buick-Peugeot 700 W. Innes St., Salisbury 704/636-1341 FLOOR SANDING & FINISHING INTERIOR PAINTING 284-2898 or 284-2190 .GENE'S ROOFING New and Oid Roofs 20 Years Experience Free Estimates _________704-284-4571___________ HAULING • Sand, Gravel, Dirt, Mulch. Miller & Son Backhoe Service ____________284-2826____________ Heating & Air Conditioning Repairs 24 Hour Service. David Grillin, Quali ty Heating & Cooling, 284-4556 or 284-2959. TROY’S AUTO SALES THE BEST SELECTION IN STATESVILLE 1123 Shelton Ava. Statesville, NC 704/872-8769 704/878-6262 NO INTEREST E -Z PAYMENT PLAN BUY H ER E-P A Y HERE NO CR ED IT-BAD CREDIT NO PROBLEM F u l l & P a r t T i m é H e l p N e e d e d Day and night shift must be able to work on weekends. Apply in person to manager at H a r d e e s Hwy. 601 North & Wilkesboro Street Mocksville,N.C. EOE/MF 2-cycle Engine Mechanic: 2 years ex perience minimum. Good pay for the right, qualified person. Jack's Saw, Clemmons, 919-766-4773. 330,000 PLUS Outstanding opportunity lor someone in the Mocksville area wanting a career in professional sales. We train. Must be able to start work immediate ly. Call between 1 & 5:30 p.m. 919-766-9104. ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT to assist with the operation ol group homes for the mentally retarded. In cludes responsibility for maintenance of facilities, vehicles, purchasing, etc. Mail resume to ProComm, 100 Roseman Lane, Cleveland, NC 27013. _________________________PO 14470 AIRLINES NOW HIRING. Flight At tendants, Travei Agents, Mechanics, Customer Seniice. Listings. Salaries lo $105K. Entry level positions. Call (1)805-687-6000 Ext. A-5720. A TTEN TIO N : EARN MONEY READING BOOKSI $32,000/year in come potential. Detail. 1-602-838-8885 Ext. Bk3131. ATTENTION - HIRINGI Government jobs - your area. Many Immediate opeings without waiting list or test. $17,840-$69,485. Call 1-602-838-8885. Ext. R3131. BE ON T.V. many needed for commer cials. Now hiring all ages. For casting info, call 615-779-7111 Ext. T-533. Chevrolet/GEO Dealership seeking GM certified technician. Must have own set ol tools, standard and metric. Apply in person at Dayton Motors, Inc., Hwy. 421 & 601 South, Yadkinville. _______________ Construction workers needed at ths Lee Jean Plant. Call 704-873-0273, Foxcrolt Temporaries. DRIVERS: A.T.S. of N.C. Now hiring experienced OTR flatbed, dry van tractor-traiier drivers. Excellent pay and benelits package. Earnings in cluding incentives 26.5 cents per mile. Call 1-800-451-0313.________ EXPERIENCED REPORTER and photographer needed immediately by Tho Smithfield Herald. Send resume and clips to Wingate Lassiter, Editor, Box 1417, Smithfield, NC 27577. Earn money at home stuffing envelopes. Send a self addressed, stamped envelope to: SEMA, Box 1179, Dallas, GA 30132._________ Experienced presser and counter per son needed. Immediate openings. Good salary and benefits. Apply Her man’s Cleaners, Mocksville, 634-1444.________________________ Full time personal cara attendante at a rest home needed. No experience required - will train. Apply In person at Meadowbrook Terrace, 6010 Market Square Court, Clemmons, from 9-5.________ : GOVERNMENT JO BS $16,040 - $59,230/yr. Now hiring. Call 1-805-687-6000 Ext. R-5720 for cur- rent federal list.__________________ HOM EW ORKERS UR GENTLY NEEDEOI Earn $340 PLUS, per week assembl ing our products from home. 24 hour recorded message reveals FREE DETAILS. 704-532-6870 Ext. 682. Individual who is lamiliar with Mocksville/Davie County area lo manage Temporary Employment Ser vice office. Witt be involved in sales, recruiting and interviewing. Must be sell-motivated and have previous ex perience dealing with people. Send resume and salary requirements to: ATS, 1365 Westgate Ctn, Dr., Suite 2-A, Winston-Salem, NC 27103. Infant Care Needed. Daycare giver to watch 6 month old at our home on Tues. & Thurs. Experienced, loving, non-smoking woman need only app- ly. Call 634-1506 between 7 & 8 p.m. Need full and part-time cashier. Flex ible hours, person with friendly and outgoing personality, apply at Shoe Show. Need someone lo care for 9 year old belore and alter school in Mocksville Elementary area. 634-4241.______ OTR DRIVERS. 12 months ex perience, 23 years of age required. Hornady Truck Line: Start 23-26 cents per mile. Excellent benefits. Conventlonals/Cabovers, home regularly. 1-800-343-7989.________ RN CASE MANAGER In home care management of elderly and disabled adults In Davie County. BSN re quired. Background In home health and geriatric nursing preferred. Full time salary position. Call Persortiiel Dept., Davie County Hospital. 704-634-8100. __________________ P.O. 5569 SPORTS WRITER on two-person staff daily newspaper. Some desk work. Lots of opportunity. Send resume to Sports Writer, Daily Independent, P.O. Box 147, Kannapolis, NC 28082. School Custodian. 6 hours per deii, 12 p.m. til 6 p.m. Full benefits. Ex perience preferred. Call Shady Go\2e School at 998-4719. : THE BUCK STOPS HERE ; » MILLIS TRANSFER, INC. ; * We are currently seeking experienced OTR truck drivers. If you want to work for the best and most conscientious carrier and get paid an average' 61 $30,000 year and all the benefits CALL US 1-800-937-0880 М -Я 9-4; TRACTOR TRAILER DRIVERS: Ex-, perlenced drivers can eam up tq;4D cents per mile and be home-on w e e k e n d s: Excellent benadta package Including major medled. Call National Freight 1-600-258«Йе. TRUCK DRIVERS - A major truckUad carrier needs experienced drivra and graduates ol approved triicDt- driver training schools. If you hav<m ; experience, we. can help arrange training. Must be 21, with a good dnit- Ing record and work history. C № pany paid physical/drug screen. CmI 919-844-9604 Or 1-800-553-9443, Dept. D O . . . : • You can qualify for a career aa a . registered NURSINa ASSM TANT, Emptoyers pay good aalairiea--|(^. em pk>!^ who m listed in tha Stata Board of Nursing M trte Aide K egtary:' Beginning August 14,' DavldaoA " County Community College will «Mar ; saveral two-imk nursing aatlatliM coursaa In Davia County. Fbr moi* № ■ formatton, c jl OCCC’a Mockavm* o(- fic« at 704434-2885. An Equal Op- portunlty Afflrmatlva ' Action. Institution. • - MOVE INTO MANAGEMENT AT BISCUITVILLE Now Hiring Shift Ijeader • Restaurant Exptrlenc* Prtfarrad • Shift Leader Dutlas Include som» «tor* opanlngai closing, crew management, some paper wotfc. • Enjoy better pay. Great Hours-Never Work Nlghtal • Good company benefits and opportunity to move upl APPLY TODAY FROM 6AM-2PM AT BISCUITVILLE IN CLEMMONS When You Go Out Looking For A Job, L E T U S D O T H E L O O K I N G ! Gantt Personnel,Inc. 6 3 4 -G A N T 190-B North Main Street Mocksville, N.C. lOD— DAVIE COIINTY ENTERPRISK KICCOKI), I'HUKSDAY. Лиц. task Force Forms 83 Ideas For Managing Growth By Kathy D. Chamn Davie County Enterprise-Record ■ The Davie Counly Growth Management Task Force wallpapered the walls of the grand jury room last Thursday night. Son of. When the meeling was over, 14 poster-size pieccs of paper contain ing 83 ideas for managing growth in Davie County were taped on three of the four walls. David Long of the N.C. Natural Resources and Com m unily Development’s Division of Com munity Assistance, appointed as a consultant to the task force, jotted down the ideas with a magic marker as part of what is called the “ nominal group process.” In beginning the process, Long gave the 10 of the 13 task force members at the meeting (Jerry Anderson, Ray Earnhardt and Jim Wall were absent) 10 minutes to jot down answers to the question; “ What should be done to manage growth in Davie County?” The task force, which also in cludes Zoning Enforcement Officcr Jesse Boyce and Commissioner Bert Bahnson as ex officio members, was asked at its July 20 meeting to consider the question in preparation for last Thursday’s meeting. When members had finished writing, Long began at one end of the table asking members to give one idea at a time. One of the rules of the nominal group process was that no one was allowed to com ment on any of the ideas until eveiyone was through. ..^.The reason, Long explained, is ..rtiat one person may have one idea * v&t-everybody else likes. “But ^ i t (Bahnson) over there may liàve a completely opposite answer, 4rid he might be a little bit hésitant siasay^ what his idea is then," he _ "So we don’t W№t to really V about any pûÙcüW response point. The whole point,of I» everybody’s equal.” ; . phase of the nominal ,!^:ifcHip process is to vote on the top but bëcause it.was almost 9 ’ i^m j^hen the task force had put off until its next meeting 17, ; St^Prajg Greer, assistant tp Coun- '^M anager Barber, said he ^^w^d get the ideas' typed up and ; : ;^il(ed to task force members so >^y,would have time to study them ];$(^bre,then. CnMember Elizabeth Martin ask- why the task force didn’t vote r/wZall the ideas. “ They’re all tgodd,’’ she said. “They’re all :':?i;png responded: ‘‘We have to 1 -liUTOw it dowii and narrow down ;:thè:ÎDCU».‘Vy:;';, . ; TTie 83 ideas aid the task force nienibers who made them are as ^follows: , , ’ ; • Cash-flowanalysisintocoun- iÔ^^.Tyier; V -> Um infrastructure to manage •growth - Ted Hill: . • Put teeth into development regulations so they can be erifbrc- -ed — Martin; ;• Manufactured housing sites with design standards and aesthetic standards — Marcia Perriman; .• Study different locations for growth in thfr county — Wee Brock; • Correct weaknesses listed in the Davie Future’s report — Bates; .• Distribute growth evenly throughout county — Jackie Morton: • Coordinate growth develop ment with transportation policies — Roy Potts; • Develop edifying and creative ; regulations to meet goals — Boyce; • Set subdivision standards so ; they can be developed where there : are neccssary services and facilities (.soils, etc.) — Bahnson; • Lim it shopping center ■development to prevent over- ' : building — Ostine West; • Examine existing zoning regulations — Dr. Bill Steed; • Control industry. Whal type du we want? Selectively recruit lo avoid dangerous ones — Tyler; • U.se fees and properly taxes lo inllucnec desirable growth — Hill; • P U D s (planned unit developments such as Bermuda Í Run). Consider niixcd-usc dcvL'lopnienls — Perriman; • Bxamine inobilc hoiiiL' pulitics — Briick; • Entourage recycling and cii- vironnienlal proleclion — Bales; • Consider traffic cimgeslion Morion: • Operate county In a businesslike manner — Polls: • Manage growth so as lo liinil taxes and not overburden services — Boyce; • Increase subdivision lol sizes in areas without water and sewer — Bahnson; • Preserve water and air resources — Wesl; • Examine need for industrial parks for future growth — Sleed; • Maintain rural quality of life — Tyler; • Upgrade and expand education syslem and coordinate il willi growth in counly — Perriman; • Examine homes for fire .safe ly — Brock; • Limit growth to capacity of school system — Bales; • Retain consumer dollars in counly — Morton; • Make uses in zoning or dinances more specific (are too broad) — Potts; • Get public input into goals and olijcclivos. Develop survey — Biiycc. Polls: • Limit packiigc sewer plants <in crecks and slceanis — Bahnson: • Preserve agricultural base — Wesl; • H.vaniino lieallh service.s available incminly. Retain hospital — Sleed. Marlin; • Conlrol private and loxie waste dumps and junkyards — Tyler; • Use regulations lo inlluence desirable growth — Hill: • Before any stale action is laken, gel local input — Perriman; • Project lax income for future growth. Prepare cosl-benefil analysis — Brock; • Gel aulhorily to override stale standards to make them more strict (referendum) — Bales; • Control actjuisilion of land by foreigners — Morton; • Feasibility/legal study of use of welfare manpower for public purposes — Polls; • Make commitment lo manage growth — Boyce: • Enact a “ resolution of stan dard” (for example, x number of sludenis per classroom ) — Balinson; • Identify and develop a local leadership base (young and old) — West; • Kncourage view iil eduLaliim av an invesliiieni .Slceil; • Make new develcipmeni jiay its own way — Tyler; • Kespecl native people's allach- niem lo the land. Consider heritage I'aeliir — Perriman; • Conserve wildlil'e resources — Broek; • Discourage (through tax incen tives) iniporialion of sludge inlo Davie Counly — Bales; • Examine need for nursing/rest homes — Morton; • Become f:nniliar wilh counly cliaraelerislics in order lo formulaic reasonable hmd-use planning — B(iyce: • Control fasl-food establishments and prevent fasl- food strips — West; • Encourage energy eineiency — Tyler; • Help old folks stay in iheir own homes — Martin; • Develop own water plant and adamantly oppose inler-basin transfer of water — Perriman; • Develop low-cost bikeways, walking paths, etc. Parks and recreation — Tyler, Steed; • Protect Yadkin River. En courage multi-county approach — Martin, Bales; • Need condos oulside of Ber muda Run wilh varying price r.inges and design slaiulards — Perriman; • Encourage disaster planning for major disasters — Bales; • Upgrade water quality classificalions lo protect water — Bahnson; • Analyze low-cost housing op tions — Tyler; • Encourage tough crime prevention ihrough various means — Martin: • Enact countywide billboard or dinance now before problem arises — Perriman; • Limit home occupations. Con sider appearance, noise, etc. — Tyler, Martin; • Do needs asse.ssment for liighways — Perriman; • Set noise guidelines for ex isting roads — Perriman; • Encourage variety of com merce, including retail and service businesses as well as traditional in dustry — Perriman; • Encourage in- dusirial/business/medieal parks — Perriman; • Encourage a mall in county lo retain dollars — Perriman; • Retain workers in counly — Perriman; • Target rccruilmeni of higher- wage companies to spread Ihe wealth. Discourage low-wage companies — Perriman; • Recruit business actively. Don’t wail for them lo come lo us — Perriman; • Have a more active Cliamber of Commerce to assist local businesses with growth and expan sion efforts — Perriman; • Proinoie tourism as an in dustry — Perriman; • Encourage regional approach to economic development — Perriman; • Stricter erosion and air pollu tion control regulations — Perriman; • Provide sewerage in high- growth areas — Perriman; • User fees — Perriman; • Update lax maps — Perriman; • Involve planning board more in zoning decisions — Perriman; • Sile-plan review for developments — Perriman; • Encourage consideration of feelings and values in zoning deci sions — Perriman; • Encourage development of small industries so as to retain dollars — Tyler; • Revitalize downtown Mocksville — Tyler. C o o l e e m e e Galaxy Food Center L o c a t e d O n H i g h w a y 8 0 1 , C o o l e e m e e , N o r t h C a r o l i n a . 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C l o u d y , D 5 W ed d in g s C 2 - C 6 O b itu a ries C 9 D avie D a telin e D 2 Calvin 6l H obbes D 3 DWI On A Bicycle M o ck sville M an F a c in g C h a rg e s: D e tails, P . D 1 115 mph Chase To Clemmons Stolen C ar R am s Patrol V e h icle : D etails, P. D 1 5 0 0D A V I E C O U N T V e n t e r p r i /e A e c o r d TH U R SD A Y , Лиц. 17, Ш ‘) \----1 (4^ 40 PA G ES USPS 149-160 Study: Residents Favor New Hospital By Karen Jarvis Davie County Enterprise-Record Davie County needs to build a new hospital. TTiat’s the recommendation of the hospital advisory committee trying to determine the future medical needs of Davie County residents. Committee members, comprised o f town, county and medical officials, announced their recommendation last week after results o f a survey con ducted by the marketing department at Davie County Hospital. The committee also recommended the new hospital be built al Farm ington Road and 1-40 — despite survey results that said 40.6 pcrcent of residents favored the current site for the new hospital location. O nly 22.6 percent said they would favor the Farm ington Road and 1-40 site, just under the 25.2 percent who said they favored the site at 1-40 and U.S. 601. According to the survey, 46.2 per cent of residents said they would sup port a bond referendum to pay for a new hospital, 28.2 percent said they would not, and 25.6 percent were unsure. Hospital administrator C hris D u x said the new location would help the hospital better compete with surroun ding hospitals and would be ideal when considering the future growth of the county. Please See New Building — P. 4 Town Fears High Rates Gboleemee Opposes Plans ffpri^ater Plant . ; COOLEEMEE - Town posiiigitii(i|cbtinty’s; plans to buUdia iiew watier plant on the ,* Yadidn River / in northern - V '- :' Mayor Bill G|des asked for the resolution “ since it could vdouble rates for citi^ns in our :end of the county . ” , ‘-They had an option to buy water ftom, Winston-Salem, ’ ’ Gales s^d. * ‘If they build a new plant, sotnebody's going to have to pay for it — and they '»¿that’s ping to be the water i-lOales said the new water is being built to benefit : 'residents in northern and intern Davie. -;;':Hayden Beck made the mo- tipii to adopt the resolution. strongly against any in- :creasies in o»ur water or sewer Kites," he said, i Cooleenjee residents are also ^ryed by a county , sewer . systeiri, sewer rates are charged by Ae gallon, 75 per cent of the amount of water used. “What I’ve heard from coun- ty. (Miinmissioners is the rates will double. I think we owe it to our citizens to do anything we caii,” said board member Den- :riy Creason. T w o H á n d s N o t E n o u g h ÍÍ-T Tvyio hands w eren’t enough to keep up with two children for Celie Martin at the M asonic Picnic last Thursday. The Mocksviiie woman had to use her feet to help keep up with Elizabeth, 1, and Mary White, 3. For a story and m ore Pic nic photographs, please turn to page 1-C. — Photo by Robin Fergusson Mnity Stressed At Picnic ■ Behold how good and how pleasant it is, for brethren to dwell together in unity. " Matthew 133: 1. By Mike Barnhardt Davie County Enterprise-Record Dr. A.O. Walker didn’t come to Clement Grove to preach to area residents at the. M asonic and D E U Picnic Saturday. “ 1 know the difference bet ween a sermon and an ad dress,” said Ihe minister of Shilo h Baptist C hurch in Mocksville. His spccch began — anti end ed — as an address. At the end, he apologized for the sermon in the middle. The several hundred area residents in the audience let W alker know ihey didn’l mind. “ W c will have a better world in which to live when people learn 10 live togeher in unity,” W alker .said. “ The United Nations will be belter prepared lo promote peace when its members learn to live together in unity. W ars will cease. "T h e U nited States o f America willHie stronger and be atile tl) live up to its name, when its people learn to live together in unity.” W alker lold the story of the father who gave his son a siiek, and had him break it. The son did so without dilTicully. The lather then gave the son a bun- tlle of slicks, which he cinikl nol break. “ There is power and strength in unity. You can do anything ir you combine yoiu' forces logeiher ... and gel help from G od,” W alker said. “ God will help you dl) anything. ■'If wc stand together, work logeiher and pul God (Irsi, we L a w E n c o u ra g e s R e c y c lin g ; B a n s C e rta in M a te ria ls By Kathy D. Chaffin - Davie Counly Enterprise-Rocord Third in a series. A solid waste bill passed by the N.C. General Assembly last week encourages recycling and bans certain non-degradable products. “One of the things that it does is set goals on how much solid waste should be reduced during certain time frames,” said Rep. Julia Howard (R-Davie), “The goal is to recycle 25 percent of the state’s total solid waste by Jan. 1, 1993, and 50 percent of the total by Jan. 1, 2000.” Sen. Betsy Cochrane (R- Davie) said ths reduction is targeted for 3V4 years away “ to give the counties time for lear ning about recycling methods and figuring out alternative disposal methods.” ‘The state would' help ‘with'"' this,” she said. , . . Counties, in cooperation with' municipalities, would be rer.; quired to start recycling pro*; grams separating such reusable, materials as plastics, metals and- paper. Davie County Manager John: Barber, though he said he. wasn’t familiar with ^1 the pro- ^ visions of the bill; said county < officials would be working with; local industries and other land-. fill users to try to reduce the; amount of gaitoge. “Recycling; is a very iniportmt part of ; that,” he said, R.C. Smith, chairman of the;: bayie County Board of Cora-: missioners, said he hopes to' visit counties ^ municipalities i with recycling programs. . Please See New — P. 8' School Opens Tuesday It’s back to school for Davie children. The firsl day of school is Tuesday, Aug. 22. Students will be in school a full day. A ll elementary and middle schools begin at 8:35 a.m. and end at 3 p.m. Davie H igh School begins at 8:25 a.m. and ends at 2:52 p.m. South Davie Junior High students must report to classes at'8; 10 a.m. and will leave at 3:<)1 p.m. North Davie Junior High students will begin at 8:10 a.m. and end at 3:18 p.m. School bus routes: page 6-D. can do anything. “ If we’re going to succeed in this life, we’re going to have to live together, w ork together, play logether, w orsh ip togeiher,” he said. “ There’s only one heaven and one hell. If you don’t get togeiher here, you’re not going to heaven. “ See the goodness, the pleasantness and the sirengih there is in unity,” W alker said. Saturday’s picnic, which also featured music by choirs from I’leas.; See M asonic - I*. 4 il; Dr. A.O. Walker talks with B.T. Williams. — Photo by Robin Fergusspn •2— DAVIE COUNTY KNTKRI'UISH KKCOKD. ■|■|lllKSI)Л^■. Лиц. 17, I9S4 E d i t o r i a l P a g e H i g h w a y W a v e s : C o u n t F i n g e r s T o G e t M e a n i n g Y o u 're driving down the iiigiiway. A car approaches in the opposiic lane. The driver throws up his hatid. Y ou wave back. W ho was lhal? I don’t usually know. But with som e help from a culture expert, I have come lo understand the unspoken messages exchanged in those quick waves on the highw ay. It’s in the fingers. Complete strangers on the highway will wave. They throw up one finger, usually. A one-finger wave is the ex change for people who don’t know each other. Sort of a “ Have a nice day” type of greeting. Something you would do for anyone. No commitment. No relationship. Just be ing social. A two-finger wave is for people you know. They throw two fingers. You throw two. These are casual acquain tances. An “ I-know-your-name” relationship. . The number of fingers used in the wave reflects the . status of the relationship. Four fingers for your neighbor. For someone you work with. Five fingers are reserved for someone you know very well. A relative. A buddy. The ultimate is 10 fingers. That’s some wave. It’s for your mom. . Former Sheriff George Smith waves to everyone he meets on the highway. Some even joked that while sheriff he had a fìnger taped to his steering wheel so he wouldn’t miss anyone. No chance of upsetting a voter. Waving in traffic is important to some people. They get mad if you don’t wave. ! Not too longiHgo, a woman stoiined into the newspaper office and accused me of ^in g a snob. “ I waved at you you didn4 wave back. You had уоцг nose in the air,” -she said, “ Ldidn’t see you,” I replied, weakly. I searched for • another- excuse. “ I don’t wave at women. Besides, what do you drive. ” : I wave-at her now. Not just one fìnger, either. V There’s a class consciousness about traffic waves. I ’ve noticed; b ^ u se Г drive several different types of vehicles from time to time. Big truck drivers wjive only at other big truck drivers. Never at car drivers. Car drivers wave V;,at others of theit kind. And nobody waves at vans. ★ ★ ★ ' It must be tough being a farmer this summer. Nothing to talk about. Farmers’ conversations usually deal with one subject -r the bad weather. This summer, there hasn’t been any bad weather.' No drought like recent summers. It ;has rained with great frequency — spaced pleasantly for „ the crops. Just wfen it started to get too hot, a cool front •Г , Com in the field is tall and green. Everyone’s got an : ;abundance of hay. It’s pne of those seasons when the 1 weather has been near perfect. There’s just one hitch. When the farmers all harvest :their bumper crops, the grain prices will fall from the - abundance. That will bè soinething to talk about. - I — Dwight Sparks DAVIB C O U N T Y B N TE R P IU /^E C O R D USPS 149-160 124 South Main Street Mocksville, NC 27028 704/634-2120 Publi.shcd every Thursday by the DAVIE COUNTY PUBLISHING CO. Dwight Spurks ..., Robin Fergusson . M ike Barnhardt .. Kathy Chaffin .... Ronnie Gallagher Becky Snyder ..... Mocksvillc Enterprise 1916-1958 ...... Editor-Publisher .... General Manager ..... Managing Editor .......... News Editor ......... Sports Editor Advertising Director Davie Record 1899-1958 Cooleemee Journal 1901-1971 Sccond Class Postage Paid In Mocksvillc, NC 27028 Subscription Rates Single Copy, .“iO cents SI S.00 per year in North Carolina S22..‘iO per year omside Norlh Carolina POSTMASri-.H Send address clianges lo Davic County Biucrprise-Recoril P.O. Box 52.*), Mocksvilk'. NC 2702S Kelly Archer Mocksville Karen Kaiser Brad Dyer Daniel Cain j Advance Mocksville Mocksville , , ‘No, we’re .starting junior “ ¡Vo, the summer has not “ I ’m ready to go back. “ I can’t wait to get back.i, high and we’re worried been long enough.” I’m ready for the football I ’m tired of working ewh games at Carolina.” day.”about it.” Sidewalk Survey: A r e Y o u R e a d y F o r S c h o o l T o S t a r t ? Brad McNeil Mocksville “ Yeh, I want to work again.” M itzi Carter Advance “ Not really. The summer seems shorter the older I get.” ; Erin Kaiser Advance “ Yes, becai^ I like Mhooj,” 'Л-'Advance. ‘‘N 0 , b i^ u s e Id o n : t i to change classes at high.” B e r m u d a R u n A P a r t O f D a v i e I To the editor: This letter is written in response to Ronnie Gallagher’s column on Aug. 3 in which he is, once again, making digs at the residents of Bermuda Run. M y amusement.at the rest o f the article quickly faded when I read the ending paragraphs about Bermuda Run and Clemmons. M y family has lived in Bermuda Run for the past eight years,. and during that time we have faced the negativism by some Davie County residents becausc of the community in which we live. M y children attend the Davie County schools, M r. Gallagher, not For syth County, although 1 do believe we should have the freedom of choice, just as .sonic For.syth County residents choose to send their children to our schools. M y husband and I are vigorous sup porters of (and volunteers in) the school system, as well as many extra-curricular activities, including Little League softball, tlw Davie Youth Football League, and other activities m wHich oqr-; children are involved. We have made many friends through these'' programs, as well as through our church, which is also located in Davie County. Happily, not all residents here harbor the same negative attitude as the one Mr. Gallagher expresses: As soon as everyone accepts the fact that Bermuda Run is apart of Davie County, then'anetid can come to this prejudice. S If Mr. Gallagher would make an effort to become friends with the Bermuda Run residents, he would find that getting throijgh our security gates is no problem. Judy McDowell Bermuda Run S tr o n g S e n s e O f C o m m u n ity I n D a v ie T o Ihe editor; Davie Cotinty people have a siroiig .seii.se o f coinim m ily pride as evidenced by recent participation in a questionnaire to gauge local opinion regarding the Ciitiire o f Davie County Hospital. Alm ost 500 Davic residents respomled by completing and retur ning the survey. The valiuiiiie inlormation generated by this pro cess will assist the Davic Cinim y Hospital Board o f Trustees in mapping a future for the hospital wiiicli will guarantee quick ac- ce.ss to quality healtli care for generations to L-onie. Davie County Hospital is an important part ofthe community. It was heart w anning to read the responses from residents who in the questionnaire’s margins or on separate sheets, heralded the importance of maintaining a modern, state-of-the-art ht)spital in Davie. The people's desire for tidditional physicians and specialists in Davie as significantly expressed by returned questionnaires, is undeniable. The Davie County Hospital Board o f Trustees, as the facility’s governing body, will do its best to make this and other needs expressed by local residents a reality. A s Chairm an of Ihc Haspiial Board of Trustees, I .speak on behalf of the entire nine member board, when expressing gratitude for the many local residents who took time to share their views wilh us. Y o u r opinions are very important, because it is you, the people o f Davie, for which the hospital was founded to serve. The Board o f Trustees pledge to continue the important com munication link between itself and local people through a series of community meetings. The Board is iiulebted lo the 13 member panel o f physicians, county and municipal leaders, and hospital administration, who devoted three monlhs lo the assessment o f public opinion regar ding continuance of local hospital services. The Hospilal Advisory Committee’s task was complex, and recommendations made by the committee will help Trustees shape the future of health care in Davie. Again, thank you for caring — Thank you for sharing. 1 am proud to lie a part of a coniiiuinity so rich in pride and concern for tlic I'utlllV. Troy W infrey, Chairm an Davie Counly Hospital Board of Trustees DAVli: COliN TV KN I'KKI'UISI'. KKCOKI). l ilUKSIUV. Лиц. 17. L a n d f i l l F e e s M a y C a u s e U n s i g h t l y I l l e g a l D u m p i n g There’s :i small nioimtain (if trash in Virginia Ik-aL-ii. Va. '. • '.They made a park oiil оГ il. Called i( M o iim Tnishiiiore. It was an iiinovalive way lo dispose of garbage. The mound of trash was covcretl. G rass grows on il. Л skaleboard ramp goes down the side. A good idea. Davie County doesn’t have innovative thinking when it comes to disposing ol irash. Sure, we have a .sanitary landfill. And county commi.ssioner.s had the loresighi lo purchase more space Гог the landfill. But at the same lime, the commissioners decidcd to charge fees lo anyone who dunip.s trash at the landnil. They said the people who use it should be the ones who pay for it. Mike Barnhardt That’s ridiculous, bccausc wc already pay for it. W c pay taxes. On top of that, some of us pay a garbage collection company to come to our house, pick up our garbage and take it to the landfill. Others take it on the back of a pickup truck. There’s no other way to legally dispose of your irash. You can’t dump il in a gulley behind the house. You caii’l hum il. Industries have larger amounts of garbage, hut they also pay more in la.xes. The tear of many Davie residents is lliat the new rule will cau.se ira.sh to be dispo.sed of illegally. M ainly, dumped along the roadsides. There have already been reports of garbage being dumped in ditches, and the rule only went into effcct Aug. I . The comm issioners recently changcd the names of several roads in the couniy. For some of ihc remote backroads. they could have cho.sen "B usied Hefty Lane.” “ Scattered Trash Street” or even “ Garbage Road.” A song could be made o f the last one, going with the tune of “ Tobacco Road.” It could go like this: “ I was born, in a ira.shy lown. Everywhere I went, the people pul me down. Il was bad, man don’t you know, to grow up on Garbage Road.” It’s an exaggeration, but landowners shotildn’r b e ’ ' re.sponsible for cleaning up someone elsc’s garbage from Iheir properly. Afler they do that. 1 guess they'll have to . pay tile couniy lo dump il. They'll reporl it lo the sheriff's deparlment, creating extra w ork for them. Then they'll need more deputies. That’ll co.si more money. M aybe Ihe county could charge crimc victims to have the law inve.siigale the crimc. That way, the sheriff's department would pay for itself. W hy, all o f a sudden, arc the taxes not enough to pay for the landfill? There arc new environmental regulations which will cosl a lot of money; bul there have always been costly regulations. Let's hope ihc com m issioners aren’t raising rates for county services lo pay for ill-planned improvements to the water system. It’s like they got as much bond money as they could (The first vote failed, so they asked for another - vole for Ic.ss money.), and then decided to raise rates for other services to make up the difference. Bul they kept their promise not to raise taxes to help pay for the bonds. Thanks, guys. L a s t - M i n u t e B i l l s L a c k P u b l i c i t y ; B u t H a v e B i g I m p a c t By Rep. Julia C. Howard Som e bills being con sidered in the last days that may receive lit tle publicity but could have long-range im- pacts are: Senate Bill • r ill makes a i,;statemcnt of ; Isolid waste policy for the state of Slorth Carolina. A s passed in the ■: House, it sets a priority on manag ing solid waste with the preference ’.:bemg in descending order: ' Waste volume reduction; „ Recycling and reuse; . Corrtposting; . ’ ^.Incineration and using the heat to produce energy; Incineration to reduce the volume of waste; and Disposal landfills. The goal is to reduce the total waste stream by 25 percent by Jan. 1, 1993, and 50 percent by Jan. 1, 2000. Reduction is to come from recycling or reduction through bet ter management. The far-reaching effects of this legislation are that we are simply running out of land fill areas. The Department of Human Resources will have the responsibility for developing this plan and the authority to implement a plan. • Senate Bill 1177 adjusts court fees by increasing all fees $10. This is an effort to have court fees cover all the costs of our judicial system. • Senate Bill 699 puts a tax on marijuana, cocaine, and other con trolled substances. This bill in no way altenipls to legalize controll ed sub.slanccs but gives the stale another method of taxing or at taching the assets of people who deal in drugs. The tax will be $3.50 per gram of marijuana, $200 per gram for controlled substances sold by weight, and $400 per ten dosage units of substances sold by dosage units. Anyone not paying the tax can be convicted of a Class I felony with a maximum of five years im prisonment and an additional penalty of 100 percent of the taxes due. • Senate Bill 913 increases the cost of vanity plates by $10. This means anyone wishing to have their name or other identifying message on Iheir license plate will pay an additional $10 beginning in Oc tober, 1989. The additional $10 will be used by the Recreation and National Heritage Trust Fund for parks and preservation of our natural environmenl. • Senate Bill 1184 will authorize two counties to join together to set up a regional .sports authority and impose a tax to support these sports authorities after a referendum. Although the public does vote on the tax or bonds to be issued, there is a real problem with the regional sports authority being able to operate with tax dollars. Do we really want the government getting involved in sports activities? The intentions behind the legisla tion are good in that it is an attempt to bring national sports teams to North Carolina. While a lot of residents want national sports teams, do we want tax dollars to fund bringing them here or should it work through the free enterprise system? Most people want national sports if it can be on a profitable basis. If the government is getting in volved in it, it generally means it cannot be done on a profitable basis because tax dollars will be needed to pay for it. The fact Ihat the authority has taxing capabilities is a good indica tion that some people are willing to impose a tax lo bring a national sports team to their area. • House Bill 1028 would change North Carolina’s appropriations of electoral votes in presidential elec tions. Under our current system, the winner of the presidential cam paign gets 100 percent of North Carolina’s 13 electoral votes. If this bill passes, the electoral votes will be allocated by districts with the two at-large votes going with the majority of the state votes. One argument is that breaking down Nonh Carolina’s electoral votes will weaken North Carolina’s position in the presidential political process. The other argument is that the breakdown will strengthen North Carolina’s political process. It appears equitable to break the votes down by Congressional district, giving the votes in each district to the candidate who gets . the majority in that district; The current system of “ winner take all” seems to be working and iio one has presented an argument to date to show that it is not working. If it’s not broke, what are we fixing? • Thank you for your time and in terest. I hope you have a good week. B u d g e t P r o c e s s O p e n s U p I n S t a t e G e n e r a l A s s e m b l y ; 1 ^ Sen. Betsy Cochrane l^ k s t o t h e • 'President Pro ; ■ Tern ' io f' the Senate. I was . pneV'of, -itwo; , Republicans on 'the Í2:tn¿inber Senate* Con- 'ferees Conunit- .tee'for the ext pension ^ g e t i, A s fate would have it, 1 am the ,first female Republican to be a „.budget conferee, AVe n»t with the I *iS H o ^ budget conferees all day ^ <Fn^y, aU day Satur^y, and for newly tw p ^ n ls of Sunday. It was both an exluusting and an ex- hilerating expenencé to be involy- :' ed at that level of negotiations on the state budget. ' ‘We agreed on $1.8 billion for the 'two-year budget, with much of that going to education. ' In niy nine years in the General - Assembly, this has been the most open budget process I have seen. The budget has almost no pork bar rel in it and was arrived at in large part by setting priorities on spending. Teachers have a new 30-step pay sca|e and a six percent average salary increase for this biennium (more experienced teachers may get more of an increase; newer teachers may get less).' State employees get a four per cent salary increase with two per cent for merit. The Basic Education Plan gets $69.2 million, which is a small reduction. State libraries get $500,000 for grants. Vocational • Education will get $4 million for equipment purchases. There will be IS additional Highway Patrolmen each year of . the biennium. There will be more D A R E agents and additional SBI. State parks get over $1.1 million in maintenance money and over $600,000 in one-time money, plus $S million for land acquisition. The Agriculture Cost Share Pro- Picnic Lunch A Success T o the editor; O n behalf of the Basket Committee of the Annual Masonic Pic nic, and all o f the M asons of Davie County, wc wish to express ■ our sincere appreciation for your splendid cooperation in help ing to make our picnic dinner a success. Were it not for people like you who arc willing to sacrifice to help others, wc would not be able to carry out ihesc worllnvhile projects. W c hope that the satisfaction of knowing you played an important part in extending help to those less fortunate will partly compensate for your time and effort spent in preparing the food. For those of you who were not able to prepare a basket, bul gave a cash donation, we express our appreciation. These dona tion's will be added lo Ihe proceeds from llic sale of tickcis and the total sent to Oxford Orphanage. If the children at the orphanage could talk wilh each of you, we know they would certainly join with us in .saying "T h a n k s.” Tom m y Cornatzer J.R. Harris Yom an Smith Co-Chairm en, Dinner. Tables and Haskoi Comuiilti.'c m yth Annual .Masonic I’icnic ' i ' gram will be able to go statewide with its $I million appropriation. Solid waste and groundwater pro jects fared well as this General Assembly gets more and more con scious of environmental needs. Our affluetice and throw-away attitudes are burying us in garbage that has the potential of con taminating our water table. We have addressed both, including a new loan fund for counties needing landfills. The expansion budget allocates $13 million tq Medicaid pregnant women and infants, $600,000 to child mental health, and $3.9 million to child protective services. Human needs fared well in this biennial budget. Obviously, there are .some ques tionable items, like $2 million for N.C. State’s basketball arena and $250,000 for a Thelonious Monk Jazz Center. But there are no local pet project pork barrel items. The 20 percent tuition increase for the university system amounts to $74 to $100 for a school year. The student is still paying less than 25 percent of the actual cost of the education to the State. The Short Session in June can fine-tune any item in the two-year budget. The Senate and House have con curred on a retirement tax equaliza tion plan. This was necessary lo respond to a court decision that said we could not exempt stale employees from the tax and tax federal employees. They have lo be treated ihe same. The new proposal allows an exemption from slale taxes on the firsl $4,000 for slale and federal retirees and a $2,000 exemption for retirees of private plans. For those with boats, the Senate has passed a bill that places one- .sixth of 1 percent of the new gas lax increase in the Wilillife Fund. That could mean $102,000 this year. These funds build boat ramps and access areas for boats to the water. The Senate is considering a solid waste bill that would forbid used motor oil to be placed in landfills afler Ocl. 1, 1990. It would ban beveraiie containers opened by a ilewchable ring or lab afler Jan. I , l‘J91. It outlaws lead acid batteries and large appliances, such as refrigerators and washing machines, in landfills after Jan. 1, 1991. Battery retailers who.sell lead acid batteries would be re quired to accept trade-ins. This bill forbids plastic con tainers after July 1, 1991, that do not have a molded plastic label identifying Ihe resin from which it is made. Local governments would be required lo initiate recycling, programs that separate reusable material. Polystyrenevfoam for food containers would be outlaw ed unless it is recyclable. Get FkEE (]нвж№\Шн 0№У^250]ы Swings. At Ccnttul Carolina Bank,you tion'i have to do ;inything otitnt- ¡iL'otts to Kft ft'ce dicckiiig. Wc ¡>i\e yoti li'ce checking with only S2S0 in I’reniiiini Saving.s — hiimli'etls less than other bank-s. I'inil out how you can gel the belter ileal on checking; call l-80()-CC15-91.i9. U’s th;it eiusy. Central darolinaBank a Y o u r F in a n c ia l A c K ’a n ta g e . MembtrFDlC 4— DAVIE COUNTY KNTKUI’KISK KI'X’OUI). TIIUKSDAV. Лиц. 17. 19НУ Crowd listens to music at Masonic, DEU Picnic Saturday.With IVIarie March singing lead and playing piano, members of St. John AME Zion Choir perform at picnic. — Photos by Robin Fergusson M a so n ic, D EU P ic n ic R a ise s Fu n d s For O rp lia n s , S tu d e n ts Continued From P. 1 area cliurclics, raised money to help pay education co.sts for Davie students and for the Central C hildren’s Home of North Carolina in Oxford. The I05lh annual event was sponsored by Corinthian Lodge No. 17 of the Masons, and the Davie Educational Union (DEU), B.T. Williams isn't older than dirt, as picnic emcee Julius Suiter jokingly claims. Bul he has been actively involved in more than half of the picnics. “ There’s a certain part of the N ew B u ild in g R ecom m ended Continued From P. 1 -It would also be ideal for the hospital’s physician recruitment ef fort considering the number of pro- s^ctive patients in the area, he said. ' “ It will give us the option to try and attract patients from the other end of the county we’ve been los ing for the past 15 years,” he said. ¿•‘‘And if they (doctors) move five miles up the road, their patients will probably still come to them,” hie.said. “ We need to give doctors some advantage to attracting pa- ‘ ttents and the oi№ most important .thipg is convenience.” . |Ho8pital Board ofTrustees will npw have to make ^ a; decision wheth^,tq comply with :tte c^m- rUttee's teconmen^tion or hot. l'“If we don’t do something to in crease the market share of the ti^ical commujiity !uk1 hospital, at'Mme point in time it will not be ffoancially feasible to keep this in- s^ution open,” Dux said. jMembers of the advisory com- n^kte i include; hospiul board of tiiistees members, cHairman Troy >yinfrey and M ike Hinshaw; itpresentatives o f ; hospital ad- n^ttation, Chris Dux and Rose Elenfield; county commissioners R.C. Sinith and Buddy Alexander; ; Mw luyUle Town Board inembers Hoy H. Caitiier a M Robert B. Hall S|^:;:vCooleeii)i;ie Town Board irinnbers Jackie Morton and Den- . n)t';Crewn; and medical staff members, Dr. F r ^ i n Tolbert, Dr; Bob Foster' and Dr. Per Montero-Pearson'. j Eleven members were ptesent at Ihe conunittee’s meeting last week with a vote of 9-2 in favor of a new hospital with the two voting for t^va tio n of the present building. ' ¡Dux did not return telephone C|№ Monday in an effort to receive a;vC0unt o f how committee iqembers voted. ;'Although the committee recom mended to build a new facility, the hospital survey' received no clear majority whether to build or renovate. A total of 49 percent vdted to renovate the current building, 44.1 percent ’ voted to biiild a new hospital and 6.9 per cent were unsure. :“ If they’d known the cost of the project, it may have influenced their response,” said Hudson Hoyle, hospital board of trustee member. Dux said the cost to renovate the hospital would be 15 percent as much as building a new hospital. The survey, sent to 2,831 registered voters, was based on the answers of the 433 Davic Counly residents who returned them. Every fifth name on the voter registration list was sent a survey. Kathy Tomlinson, community relations coordinator for the hospital, said the deadline for retur ning the survey was Aug. 3 in order for the staff to present the results to the advisory committee. Tomlinson said surveys are con tinuing to be returned and Ihe answers will be addcd-lo the cur rent results. So far, she said, no change in Ihe results has heen made with the additions. Survey Results Based on the findings hospital of ficials were faced with the fact that 55.9 percent of Davie residents say that the current building does not meet future needs for the county. O f those results, from ages 18 to 30, 61.1 percent said the hospital docs not meet future needs. For respondents age 65 and older only 45.2 percent of respondents said the hospital would nol meet future needs. “Their (young) future’s longer than ours so maybe that has something to do with it,” Hoyle .said. , ;A total of 85 percent of survey respondents felt that Davie Coun- i ty Hospit^ needs more doctors and 'specialists. ^ ' An OB/G YN doctor was first priority with 61.9 percenl, a ipediatrician was second with 51.3 '^rceht, surgeons were third wilh 45.3 percenl, family physicians were fourth with 44.3 percenl and internal medicine wilh 38.3 pcrcent. “There’s a clear majority saying we need more doctors and a clear majority saying they would use these new doctors,” said Dux. “ The number one thing in North Carolina that people are hospitalized for is pregnancy and childbirth.” Davie County Hospital has no OB/GYN specialist. Dux said there is nol enough business in this area for two O B/GYN doctors and one doctor will not come here lo serve as the only OB/GYN doctor and be on call 24 hours a day. “ To be a viable, self sustaining, economically sound health care provider for this counly we have to grow ,” said Dux. “ The P h o n y S a l e s m a n I n D a v i e The SB I and Davic Counly Sheriffs Department are looking for a phony salesman. The salesman was in Davie County last week trying to sell lightning rods, said Chief Deputy Bob Lemmons. The man reportedly was in the Harmony area early last week and in Advance late in the week. The white man is about 25 years old, 5-8 tall with black hair and a moustache. Drug Charges Filed A Route 6, Mocksville man is facing four drug charges alter sell ing marijuana to an undercover SBI agent. Kenneth Rosevelt Dewalt, 27, of 601 Nonh Trailer Park, was charg ed Aug. 10 wilh felony ciuniis of possession of marijuana with inient to sell or deliver and selling a con trolled substance, and wilh misde meanor simple possession of mari juana, possession oFclnig parapher nalia and Iwo counts of resisting arrest. Deleclive Jerry Williams ol' the picnic that is an inslitution," Suiter said. "The institution we have now is Mr. B.T. Williams.” Williams, head ofthe DEU , was on the stage, despite being recent ly confined to a wheelchair. “The Lord put me here for some good work, 1 hope,” Williams said. “This picnic has done great work. hospital’s growth is not stagnate and it will nol be the same next year as last year. “There is a strong need and a de mand for additional physicians in this counly, and we need lo do somelhing lo bring them here,” said Dux. “ If we want lo compete wilH surrounding areas what we have to do is differentiate from Iheth. What differentiates us now is a '^T-year-old facility. “W e’re different all right, but in a negative way,” he said. Dux said all the surrounding facillies are between seven and eighl years old. Dux said if the board of trustees voted to build a liew hospital it would not be an 81 bed facility as the current one is. “We would probably build a small hospital in terms of Ihe number of beds, but build il where it can be expanded,” said Dux. “ The focus would 1«: more on out patient surgery services.” Dux said if the decision was made to build a new hospital the current hospital building would nol be abandoned. Dux said the building belongs lo the county which would be able to use il as they see fit or il could be used lo finance other needs. Dux said the counly could sell the building to a finance company and let them use il as for a nursing home.! “W e’ve got a long way lo go,” said Dux. “ We need to have a clear majority of the txxird, a clear majority of the medical staff and a clear majority of the people before we go ahead wilh it. “The hospital has served the county;well for 37 years, but il can’t for 37 more like this.” “ We have made a lot of con tributions to students who have gone oul in the world and done good — doctors, lawyers, teachers. W e’re glad to have been a part of that,” Williams said. Frances Eaton, Davie native and district deputy of the Grand Master ■of the state Masonic Lodge, praised the efforts of the Davie Masons and D EU members. “You are doing a wonderful job. It takes the foresight of individuals in the Masonic Lodge and D E U to think of helping those who are less fortunate than we are,” Eaton said. “ Your efforts are telling these young boys, these young girls, that, someone cares.” He gives out a business card which reads “ Granite’s Lighting Protection,” said Detective Matt Dillon.; He was driving a black Chevrolet pickup truck with a camper on back in Davie la.sl week. Dillon said the man also pretends to sell landscaping and driveway services and insurance. He asks for money up front and provides little or no service. Lem mons said. Davic County SherilTs Depart ment said when he and Lt. Holt Howell tried to apprehend Dewalt to .serve warrants for selling a small bag of marijuana to an undercover SBI agent, Dewalt ficd on fool. While running, Dewalt threw a small bag of marijuana from his pocket into bushes, Williams said. He was captured in a nearby field. Dewall was placed in the IJavie Coumy Jail in lieu оГ a $6,000 IxiikI. pending a Sept. 7 appearance in Davie District Court. АШ/АШЕ DrugCegter SEA BREEZE Юча. AfMrtadFonreiln 2.69 MURINE' Ey* Drops. 1/2KU. 1.99 MURINE PIjUS Ey> Oop«. Vi-oz. 2.09 S C H O O L -№ 1 S IA T E D S A D V A L U E S ^ TYLENOL* 1 ж 6.19 I 1 ---------г.. 1 VASELINE INTENSIVE CARE* HvidandN al Formdâ Lotton 5 1/2-oz. y W W B f Ш 1.55 GILLETTE 10 ♦ 2 Fis# y -------1Sïsr 3 ' GoodNtwi №53 Qood Nmrt Plus E Sm laaZTl 2.49 THERES AN ADVALUE DRUGCENTER CIjOSE TO YOU. F o s t e r - R a u c h D r u g C o . Lc topping Center Wii, osboro Street Mocksvllle, N.C. 634-2141 DAVII'. COUNTY KNTKUI’RISK KKIOKI). TIU'USDAV, Лиц. 17. 1 8 - A c r e R e z o n i n g S o u g h t F o r D u p l e x A p a r t m e n t s By Kathy D. СМиГПп Davie County Enterprise-Record Citing the need for more rentui ^.property in southern Davie Coun- i'ty, Terry Dedmon lias petitioned for tlie rczoning of 18 acres on Deadmon Road for duplex apartments. “ We think that with the coming of the Lee plant and the coming of the .shopping center there, that eml of the county is going to grow," Dedmon told the Davie County Planning Board last Thursday night. ^ The board voted 3-0 to recom mend approval of Dedmon's re quest to rezone the property from R-A (residential-agrlcullural) lo R-I2 (residential-suburban), but bccause it lakes four of its seven members to comprise a quorum, the recommendation will nol be final until it is approved at a meeting where a quorum is present. Dedmon, who plans- to build the duplexes with Dennis Grubb of Grtibb Builders Inc., proposes building eight units. Each of the 16 apartments would contain two bedrooms. ^‘'Each apartment will have its own drive,” he said. “ Each apart- râçnt will have its own septic tank.” I Because each duplex would be oir lots in excess of one acre, Ded- rñpñ said there would be space behind each apartment for a ^rden. , Z jñ'addition, he plans to plant white pines between the duplexes tô;give the tenants more privacy. ‘iSimply because people live in appnments is no sign they want to Í l¿;stacked on top of one another,” ; he; said. . i Dedmon said he and Grubb, who ;> 'was also at the meeting, plan to ! hbia the rënt at a reasonable rate , =,tô jceép young people from moy- !-4ng''out of the county to livfc. , ¡ílWe’re not pi-oposing to buHd |4i''aby)hingitike is over in thé ] j, у|цке ai^iiW ith the housing arid • •, ïbednKMi MÍÜ he ШЙ h’;t¿Mave the duplexes paid off when ■ lltey retire. “ And we’ll have some 'í i&eóine.through the apartments,” h^Àüd. ^‘We intend to look after i tbeüi. íW e'will not rent through i¿ J ;arid Л1г1ш I Development) or I ojfcr agencies. \Ve’re going to go . aH t ourselves.” L cd of whal the exterior ol' lla' duplexes wimid be made. Dedmon said the exterior wmikl be vinyl, bul added lliat cach one would be stiek-built. Board member Clyde .Sludeveiil said it is importanl to keep rental pf<p(7erly l<i(rkiiii; Dedmon said they plan to hire Muncoiic Id iiiiiw Ihe lawns ami lhal garbage pickup would be con- Iraclcd through Davie .Sanilalion of Mocksville, Polls made the motion to recimi- Commissioners have the final- Though Oscar Lalhain. one of mend approval of Ihe rczoning, say in all rezoning requests. The- Ihe adjoining landowners, asked conlingenl upon Ihe approval of a role of ihe planning board is lo hear- ,sonie queslions aboul the rezoning quorum, lo the Davie County Ihe reque.st along wilh any opposi- request. neither he nor anyone else Board of Coinmissioners. Kenneth tion and make a recommendation opposed il, Harpe seconded. to the commissioners. F i i n i i e r s M a y Ü M A C P. r. ; ■ . 'Signup for cost-sharing under the \ ACl* is in progress and will con- ; tHtue through Sept. 15. •'Farmeré with erosion or conser- vMion problems can apply for cost- : shtinng assistance during the signup period. ,'lKall practices available to Davie County Farmers include: establish- ; ingi and improving permanent vegetative cover, stripcropping, ' so^'waterways, diversions, winter coyer, tree planting and others, r Further details about the pro- i gh|ih may be obtained from the lôçâl county ASCS office. M a n R o b b e d At G u n p o i n t M R e s t A r e a A California man reported he wa.s'robbed at gunpoint in the we.st- bound rest area of 1-40 in Davie County on Aug. 9. Joseph Wonnackott of Sun Valley, Calif., told the Davie County Sherifrs Department he was asleep in his truck when so meone knocked on the window at 8:10 p.m. A man, de.scribed as between ages 35 and 40, with sandy hair, curly and bushy sideburns, pointed a .38 pistol at Wonnackott and de’njanded money, he told police. Tiie suspect escaped wilh belonging to Wonnackoii. A beige I'oril LT D lell soon alter ilial, Wonnackott said. USDA Choice Beef LONDON BROIL AND TOP ROUND ROAST Prices in tliis ad good thru Sunday, August 20, 1989. Blue Grapes/Red Or W hite S E E D L E S S G R A P E S J u m b o S iz e C a n ta lo u p e s. 8 9 aú p es.............. Each .99 Russet Baking POTATOES Shark Or Salmon S TE A K S « 3 » « u Halibut Or Swordfish S TE A K S $ 4 * ® L b 32 Ounce H U N T ’S K E TC H U P 12/12 Oz. Cans P E P S I Cafflne Free Pepsi $ 2 ^ 5 12/1201. Cm ItamUin Dew...................'2»12/12 Ot Cans Diet Pepsi, Calline Fire Did Pepii<2'> 12/12 OiCiiii Diet Mountaiii Os*..............'3'i • 36 Ounce T R E N D D ETER G EN T/ 99 E X T R A LO W P R IC E S ...E V E R Y D A Y Ü ! 16 Oz. - Assorted PFEIFFER DRESSINGS 46 Oz. - Mt. Olive KOSHER DILLS 8 Oz. - Assorted Light N' Lively 100 YOGURT 46 Oz. - Juicy Red IHAWAHAN PUNCH 100 Ct. - White Facial PAGE TISSUE 9.5 Oz. - Reg./Bran Biscuits BUTTER-ME-NOTS 46 Oz. - Fruit Punch/Lemon-Llme Orange/Lemonade 10K DRINK 10 Oz. - Frozen Assorted BUDGET GOURMET 6 Oz. Frozen - Double Chocolate CRYSTAL LK H T BARS 9.75 Oz. - Old El Paso TACO DINNER 11 Oz. - Oat Bran EGQO WAFFLES SS Squire Boone Pfaza Shopping Center Hwy. 6Q1 North - Yadkinville Rd. MoíHsviire, N,C. . There is a Food Lion convenientl.y located near you: Bermuda Quay/Shopping Center Ш ru u u LION H ighw ay-158 and 8 0 ],, .;. . ^Monday thru Satufday: 8 a ^ . - lo p Advance,- e p.m_. 6 -D A V IE COUNTY ENTEKPRISK RECOUD, THURSDAY, Лпц. 17, 1989 Public Records Sheriff’s Department The following inciilciils were reported lo lhc Davie Coiiiuy Sheriff’s Deparlmenl. — Gilbert Ray James <if Rome 3, Moeksville, reported Aug. 12 a mailbox off Cedar Grove Clnireh Road wa.s damaged by a pa.ssing vehicic. — Lawrcnec Lovell of Roule I , Moeksville, reported an allempled breaking and entering Aug. 11 at a residence in Ihe Oakland Heights .sulHlivisidii. — John Obic Wiisiin of Route 7. Moeksville. reported Aug. 11 eggs were llirown onto a pickup truck parked off ’rurrenline Road. — Uiiy T. I'unk of 216 River bend Drive. Advance, reported Aug. 13 an object was thrown through the window of a residence in Bermuda Run. — Marqiiita Danielle Golbrth of Roule 1, Moeksville, reported Aug. 14 Ihc windshield of a vehi- cle parked <m N.C. ,S()I near Tarheel Banana Co. was lirokcn. — June B. Bradshaw of Union Grove reported Aug, I 1 a man standing alongside N.C. yOl near U.S. 64 exp<ised himself while she was driving by. — Bruce Ridenhour of Salisbury reported Aug. 11 the breaking, entering and larceny of a bag of grass seed, wilh an estimated value of $50, from a N.C. Department of Transportation Iruck parked off Vogler Road in Advance. -- Marlin Kdbin.son of Advancc reported Aug. 10 someone entered Davie .Soil and Water Conservation property off liaton’s Cliurch Road and opened a riser on a lake, allow ing water to drain. — Lisa Michelle Jacobs of Cooleemee reported Aug. 7 the breaking, enlcring and larceny of a gold chain with opal, wilh an estimated value of S I50, from a residence off N.C. 801. — William H. Lagle of Route 7, Mocksviile. reported Aug. 10 so meone damaged a mailbox off Gladstone Road. — Major Ray Lester of Route 2, Advancc. reported Aug. 10 a mailbox in the Green Briar subdivi sion off Fork-Bixby Road was damaged. — Lawrence Edward Mabe of Route 9, Mocksviile, reported Aug. 7 S635 wa.s lost or .stolen al Motley’s Mobile 64 al Cenler. — Cheryl Diana Zayac of A d vance reported Aug. 9 the larccny of a dog from 2021 LaQuinta Drive. — Robin Lynn Bracken of Route I, Harmony reported Aug. 10 the larceny of an e.stimated SI4 from ¡1 vehicle parked off Counly Line Road. • Joseph Edward Henry Cregar, 19, of Roule 9, Moeksville, was arrested Aug. 11 for larceny. : • Janice Graham Gaither, 29, of Roule I , Mocksviile, was arrested Aug. 7 for a probation violation. Land Transfers The following land transfers have been filed wilh the Davie Counly Register of Deeds. The transactions are list by par ties involved, acreage, township and deed stamps purchased with $I representing $1,000. — Paul B. Willard and Glenda Willard to Michael Keith James, 1 tract, $39.50. — Virgil Sparks and Margaret H. Sparks to Harold Lavern Anderson Jr. and Susan Clayton Anderson, 1 tract, Farmington, $20.50. — Harold Lavem Anderson Jr. and Susan Clayton Andenson to Virgil Sparks and Margaret H. Sparks, 1 tract, Farmington. : ; — Morris W. Palmer and Ann W. Palmer lo Jack F. M cCoy and Deborah G. McCoy, 1 lot, Farm ington, $85. — Craig Carter Builder Inc. lo Kennelh R. Budd and Janie R. Budd, 1 tract, Farmington, S287.50. — V ST Inc. lo Thomas F. Cor natzer and Shirley B. Cornatzer, I lot, Mocksviile, $75. — Robert James Landry and Susan H. Landry lo Donnie S. Mangrum and Kaylea J. Mangrum, I lot, Mocksviile, $58.50. — Trustees for Comatzer United Methodist Church and Cornatzer United Methodist Church Cemetery Fund to Lewis L. Koontz, 3 lots, Mocksviile, $18. — Roy L. Potts and Diane H. Polts to Christopher M. Lynn and M. Elizabeth Lynn, 2 Iracls. Far mington, S44. — Esther Draughn lo Wanda D. Shore, 2 lots, Mocksviile. — David Linwood Harris and Norma J. Harris to Dennis B. Whitley and Beverly P. Whitley, I tract, Jerusalem, $65. — River Hill at Bermuda Run lo Samuel P. Boger and Sherry J. Boger, 2 tracts, Farmington, $45. — John W. Machtolff and Don na J. Machtolff to William V. Gayheart and June E. Gayhearl, 1 lot, $83. — Pat.sy N. Poe to Henry Anderson Spry and Linda F. Spry, I tract, Farmington, $72. — James H. Dunham Jr. and Eleanor A. Dunham to Charles W. Lawlion and Mary Lewis Lawhon, 1 lot. Farmington, $185. — V ST Inc. lo Nekson Orlanda Howard and Melissa Hodges Howard, 1 lot, Mocksviile, $78. — L.H. Bcck and Margaret R. Beck to Mack Whilakerand Sheila D. Whitaker, I lot, Jerusalem, $6. — Holland W . Sm ilh and William Wade Smith by their at torney in fact C. Lamar Seats to George Thomas Brown, I tract, Moeksville. — Kathy Blake Johnson Collier to Jack Edwin Collier, I lot, Jerusalem. — Frankie C. Payne and Nancy J. Payne lo James E. Everidge and Georgia C. Everidge, 1 lot, $120. — James E. Everidge and Georgia C. Everidge to Frankie C. Payne and Nancy J. Payne, I tract, Moeksville, $120. — Gary Dean Doub and Lanita G. Doub to Jack Doub and Ramonia H. Doub, 1 tract, Fulton, $2. — Kennelh F. Hoots and lla F. Hoots to Donald G. Smith and Kendra P. Smith, I tract, Shady Grove. — Lucy A. Hanagan and Richard E. Hanagan to C. V. Shortl and Ann E. Shortl, 1 lot, $147.50. — Clifton H. Stack and Mabel V. Stack to Gary D. Forbes and Joan H. Forbes, I tract, MocksviUe, $85. — Margaret F. Caudell to J. Paul Leagrans and Mary L. Leagans, 2 lots, Mocksviile, $83. — William K. Click, M. O. Click and Jane Click lo T. Carroll Foster, Mary Waters Foster and Elizabeth F. Taylor, 1 tract' Mock.sville, $36. - O l a Peebles to Walter ,H. Taylor, Oneida C. Taylor, Michael R. Taylor and Kelley L. Taylor, I tract. Shady Grove, $10. - - — Mary A. McDaniel to Paul Brown and Nora Brown, 1 tract, Calahaln. — M a ry Lou Koontz arid' Wilburn B. Koontz to Robert D. Everhart and Dorothy S. Everhart, 1 tract, Fulton, $13. . ' — Brady L. Angell by his at torney in fact Richard Angell to Richard D. Cohen and Susan M. Cohen, 1 tract, Mocksviile, $4.50. ' ffighwiy_Patro^ The following traffic accidents were investigated last week in D«vie County by the N.C. Hif^way Patrol: Car Hib Stop Sign A 29-year-old Mocksviile man failed:to stop for and hit a stop sign on Fork-Bixby Road Aug. 7 at 8:45 a.m. , ' According to a report by Trooper C.D. Jones, Steven James Judd of Route 2 was driving a car south on Fork-Bixby Road out of a thaip right curve, lost control ai^ drove off the right shoulder of the road.'Iudd's car went into a broad slide and struck a stop sign, i No charges were filed. ; Damage to Juckl’s 1988 Pontiac was estimated at $500. Cbevy Van Rear Ends Buick A 1989 Chevrolet van rear end- eda 1987 Buick on U.S. 601 Aug. 8 at 12:30 p.m. • According to a report by Trooper Jones, Levis Jeffrey Johason, 29. ofCharloiie had slop ped his Buick in the loft lane of travel on U.S. 601. Simon Roosevelt Johnson Jr., 22, of Greensboro failed to see Johnson’s stopped car and struck it in the rear. Johnson was charged wilh failure to reduce speed to avoid a collision. Damage to Simon Johnson’s 1989 Chevrolet was estimated at $1,000, and to Levis Johnson’s car, $2,600. Truck Strikes Ditch An unknown driver failed to stop his truck for a stop sign at U.S. 601 and N.C. 801 and ran it into a ditch on Aug. 11 at 5:30 a.m. The 1983 Dodge truck Iraveled west on N.C. 801 and failed to stop for a slop sign, according to a report hy Trooper K.B. Sleen. The truck ran off the road straight ahead and struck a ditchbank. Steen reported the vehicle was abandoned and the keys were left in the ignition. Damage to the truck were estimated at $2,500. Winston-Salem M a n Charged A Winston-Salem man was charged with exceeding a safe speed and failure to stop for a stop sign after a single vehicle accident Aug. 12 at 2:30 a.m. According to a report by Building Permits Trooper Steen, Michael Gerard Campbell of Relna Drive was traveling west on Overlook Drive and failed to stop for a slop sign alN .C. 801. Campbell’s car went off the roadway straight ahead and struck a ditchbank. Damage lo Campbell’s 1977 Honda was estimated at $600. Mcrcedez Hits Fcnce Po.st A Mocksviile woman lost con trol of her car on Main Church Road Aug. 12 and drove her 1985 Mercedez into a fence post. Donna Todd Miller, 27, of Route 6, was traveling south on Main Church Road when she lost control of her car in a curve, ac cording to a report by Trooper K.B. Steen. Miller ran off Ihe road way on the right and struck a fence I post. Steen charged Miller with driv ing too fast for conditions. Damage to Miller’s car was estimated al $800. Man Faces Three Charges A 34-year-old Mocksviile man was charged wilh D W I, failure to stop for a stop sign and driving without a driver’s license after a single vehicle accident Aug. 13 at 6 a.m. According to a report by Trooper Steen, Larry Donnie Dulin of Foster Street was driving a car south on Farmington Road when he failed to stop for a stop sign at U.S. 158. Dulin went off the roadway straight ahead and struck a ditchbank. Steen noted on his report Dulin had failed to comply with restric tions on his driver’s license. Damage to Dulin’s 1987 Subaru was estimated at $600. : j Lexington Man Charged A 20-year-oId man was charged wilh exceeding a safe speed after . a two vehicle accident Aug. l3 at' 12:20 p.m. ‘ ' According to a report by Steen, ! Carl Eugene Ginn of Holt Street! was traveling east on U.S. 64 wlieii^ he failed to see a car driven by Bob ^ Cook Miller, 75, of'Wanderihg- Lane, Mocksviile entering U.S. 64 from state toad 1185. Ginn applied ; ' his brakes but was uiuble to avoid ‘ a collision; Damage to Miller’s 1987 Dodge was estimated at $1,000, and-td' Ginn’s 1976 Ford, $500. ' ; Thè following building permits were issu^ in Davie County last inonlh. ; The permits áre listed by owner and/or contractor, location, type of building and fee, with $1.50 representing $1,000 and a $10 minimum fee. — Leonard L. McAffee Sr., U.S. 64,288 square-foot bedroom addition to existing structure, $17.28. ' - D.K. Whitaker, U.S. 158 at Foster Dairy Road, 28- by 32-foot detached garage, $13.44. Steven C. Livengood, U.S. 601 south of Mocksviile, garage at tached to existing dwelling, $13.50. — Michael L. Dwiggins, Davie Academy Road, 16- by 18-foot bedroom addition to dwelling, $19.44. — Roger Dale Naylor, Bracken Road, 16- by 20-foot addition to dwelling, $19.20. — Denise Shore, lot 77 al Craft- wood, 957 square-foot single fami ly dwelling, $57.42. — Shady Grove Elementary School, Cornatzer Road, 6,100 square foot addition lo existing Fires Davie fire departments respond ed to the following calls last week. Aug. 10: County-Line, 2:05 a.m., brush pile fire, N.C. 901 and U.S. 64. Aug. 11: Farmington, 10:51 a.m., auto accident, Farmington Road ai Papa Joe’s Campground. Aug. 14: Fork, 9:25 a.m., auto accident, N.C. 801, Advance call ed for backup: Mocksviile, 12:24 p.m., truck tires on fire. Main and Depot streets. school, $345. — Richard D. Cohen, Main Church Road, 1720 square foot single family dwelling, 24- by 24-foot attached garage, $124.74. — River Hill Limited Partner ship, lot 19 at Bermuda Run, 3,000 square foot single family dwelling, $202.50. — Eddie Miller, Fairfield Road, 24- by 30-foot private garage, $10.80. — E.W . Prevette Jr., Old Georgia Road, 14- by 28-lbol brcezeway wilh a 28- by 28-foot carport, $10. — JohnT. Mays, 41 Watt St., Cooleemee, 24- by 30-fool private detached garage, $10.80. — John Esposito, lot 47 Hidden Creek, 1,810 square foot single family dwelling, S122.18. — Osborne Phillips 66, Cooleemee Shopping Center, in- sialling underground uas tanks, S50. — Belvin R. Evans, lot 2, Hid den Creek, 2,400 square foot single family dwelling, 22- by 24-foot attached garage, $173.88. — Ralph Davis, Fork-Bixby Road, 2,150 square foot single family dwelling, $145.13. — Charles Pierce, U.S. 64 west of Mocksviile, 288 square foot ad dition lo mobile home, $17.25. — Otis Hedrick, Duke Whit taker Road, 1,456 square foot single family dwelling, $87.36. — Dennis Howell, U.S. 64,26- by 28-fool private detached garage, $10.92. — Gray Slater, Yadkin Valley Road, 1,970 square fool single family dwelling, $132.98. — Tommy N. Barney, Slate Road 1697, 16-by 32-foot private swimming pool. $11.25. — H.C. Tomlinson, 257 Duke St., Mocksviile. 24- by 32-foot private detached garage, $11.52. — John Lanier, N.C. 801 across from Fulton United Methodist Church, 30- by 30-foot storage building, $10. — Timothy Pennington, Sain Road, 16- by 36-foot private swim ming pool, $10.20. — Fast Track Convenience Store, U.S. 601, three 10,000 gallon underground gas tanks, $60. - C . H . McMahan, 110 Ber muda Drive, Bermuda Run, 18- by 38-foot private swimming pool, $20.20. — Joe Carr Harpe, N.C. 801, Farmington, 10- by 24-foot addi tion to dwelling, $14.40. — Dusty Triplett, N.C. 801 west of 1-40, 1,700 square foot single family dwelling, $114.75. — Dewey E. Cook, W alt Wilson Road, 18- by 35-foot private swimming pool, $10. — Hamilton Court Construction Co., Unh 16 in Hamilton Court, 2,100 square foot single family^: dwelling. $126. -''f; ;! — Hamilton Court Coiistnic^' f I Co., unit 15 in Hamilton Court> ' 1,900 square foot single family '' dwelling, $114. — William White, Farmingtoii'- Road, 1,724 square foot sin^e - family dwelling, with a l6-'by'' 16-foot attached carport, $116.37.' ' — N.C. Dalton, U.S. 64 east of Mocksviile, 2,000 square foot un-. finished shop, $30. ■. — Larry McDaniel, Craft wood Development, 1,340 square foot'- single family dwelling with a 280 square foot carport, $84.60. . ■ * — Gary Swan, Peoples Creek. Road, 2,520 square foot single family dwelling, 24- by 24-foot garage, $183.06. — B.G. Hare, Goldman.Road off Deadmon Road, 1,300 square. foot single family dwelling, 14-by. 26-foot attached carport,- $87.75..’ Emergency Room M o c k s v iile P o lic e The following patients were treated in the emergency room at Davic Counly Ho.spital. The hospital only releases infor mation on patients it considers a public record because of the nature of the injury. — Julian D. Gaither, 24, 7:21 a.m, Aug. 13, bruise to the forearm suffered in auto accidcnl, treated and released. - Darrell A. Cain. 33. 7:14 a.m. Aug. 13, cui to ihe face .suf- fered in auto accidcnl, treated and released. — Jerry L. Sidden, 24, 6:21 p.m. Aug. 11, mild concussion suffered in aulo aecidem. treated and released. — Julia P. Howell, 21, 3:49 p.m. Aug. 8, brui.se lo the face suf fered in auto accident, treated and released. — David L. Dallon Jr., 26, 2:55 a.m. Aug. 8, cut lo the should suf fered in light. The following reports were made lo the Mocksviile Police Dcparl- ineni last week. — Susan Malhena of 2139 Granada Drive. Advance, reported Aug. 9 lhal her car parked in lhc Wal-Mart parking lot had been damaged by a hit and run driver. — Donald William Carrick of 398 Morse Si. reported Aug. 9 ihe larceny of a lawnmower from his carport, ll was recovered the followini: day on Whitney Street. • Leah R, Clement, 2 1. of Nor- thwood Aparlmenis No. 401, was arrested Aug. 11 for two counts of writing a worthless cheek. She is scheduled lo face the charges Aug. 31 in Davie District Court. • No charges were filed after a two-vehicle accident at Salisbury and South Main streets Aug. 8 al 3:15 p.m. According to a report by Patrolman C.M . Parks, Julia Pal sy Howell, 22, of Route 1, Ad- vancc, had stopped her car to yield for oncoming traffic when it was struck in the rear by a car driven by Henry Vance Kyles Jr., 48, of Salisbury. Damage lo the 1988 Ford driven by Howell was estimated al S I,ООО, lo the 1988 Oldsmobile driven by Kyles, S I,500. • A tractor-trailer knocked a utility pole in half at North Main and Gailher streets Aug. 8 al 1:23 p.m. Patrolman Parks reported that Grover W. Kalzmarek, 36, of Morristown, Ind., was making a left turn from Main Street onto: Gaither Street when the trailer por-1 lion of the truck struck the uliiity; pole, breaking it in half. . ; No charges were filed. ;; The truck was not damaged. : Damage to the utility pole was-, eslimaled at $2,000. > ; DAVIK COUN I Y KNTICRI’UISK UKCOKI), l lllJUSnAY. Auk. H. 1989-7 C o z y C o rn e r John Lewis Miiier and J.P. Allison pass the time at what they call Cozy Corner, a bench ori Depot Street in Mocl<sville. Both men are retired. ■ — Photo by Jam es Barringer Tanning Salon Gets Nod B y Kathy D. Cham n Davie County Enterprise-Record . tDavie County is getting a new tanning salon. The Davie Counly Zoning Board I ■ .of Adjustment, after hearing no op- . position at a IS-minute hearing ^^iftgiday.night, voted unanimous- Jy to grant a special-use permit to • -Lewis Cl; Carter to operate the fadlity txhind his home on Gun Club Road. Carter said he originally buih the facility as a woodworking shop. ;.‘fi|f^,W(jfe'W8med a tanning bed,” : ^ a good '4n)"ai^,,bought:twp.jV^^ : Carter said it wasn’t until he got . a i^ntit.for a septic tank that Zon ing,. Enfoiwment Officer Jesse raized that he wanted to q^n tlie facility to the public and tpld him he would need a special- I', ■ T. A n g c i l l O n ¿ t a t e i t o a r i l ' iRALEIGH — Gov. Jim Martin to appointed Don G. Angell to ^rve on the Economic Develop- Board.. - {^geli fills the position vacated by^tlie de^A of Kent Cow^, who had served on the Economic ppyelopment Board for four years. i\"l am.pleased that someone of Mr,., Angell’s qualifications has agreed to serve on behalf of the citizens of our state,’ ’ said Gover nor. Martin. "His knowledge and abilities in business are valuable ass№ for our state’s programs of economic development. ’ ’ ■’'Angell received his bachelor’s degree in business at Campbell University. ' He is the chairman of Angell Care, Inc., a health care organiza- tioii affiliated with nursing homes, personal care, and retirement centers. He has been in this field for the past 22 years. : Angell and his wife, Vera Dix on, reside in Advance. ' ■ The Economic Development Board's 25 members oversee the business recruitment, small business assistance, travel and tourism, and other economic development activities of the North Carolina Department of Com merce. The group advises Gover nor Martin and state Commerce Secretary Jimies T. Broyhill on economic development policy. use permit to do it. Carter was accompanied at the meeting by his wife, Carol, and their son, Todd. Boyce said he had received one call from a lady who was concern ed that it might lead to more com mercial development along Gun Club Road. But the special-use per mit, Boyce said he told her, would limit the use of the site specifical ly to a tanning bed facility. Board member Edwin Welch Jr. asked Carter how many customers he anticipated in a day’s time. “ W e’re hoping for 10 a day,” he said. Jack Jerome asked whether the majority of the business would be during the day or at night. “ The business is more or less at night,” Carter said. “ It’s from 5 o’clock in the evenings when the women got off work until about 10.” Terry Dedmon asked Carter if he had any plans lo expand the two- bed facility. Carter said he had built three stalls and would buy another bed if he had enough business. Chairman Vernon Dull asked if Carter’s neighbors were aware of his plans to add another bed. “ I’m sure they are,” Carter said. “ About all of them have been in and looked at the beds.” Welch,made the motion to grant the special-use permit on the con dition that the maximum future use of the salon not exceed three beds. If at any time the facility is used for anything other than tanning beds, Welch included a provision in his motion whereby the permit would become void. Dcdnion seconded tho motion. • Also al Ihc nicetiny, board jiienibcrs discussed the way re quests for special-use permits or rezonings are advertised. Hearings on requests are an nounced on signs put up at the site in question, in public notices and articles in the Davie County Enter prise Record, on W D S L and in let ters to adjoining property owners. Welch suggested putting a big Z on the signs to draw more atten tion to them. This is done to an nounce zoning hearings in other counties. “Tome, that is a real catcher,” Welch said. "Anybody passing knows when they see that that there is a zoning issue.” ! § i s t e r ^ i r ^ Florist ««Qiifts Fmh floHifl - Si'H Howtn Vmrn ¡Hants & Ganlim dloons - Gifis - BailfU Animals 'I’wii L ocalio ns T u S erv e \ ’ou 634-I7WKijuirv HiMin« 11u/u lu.tv Vuilkiiiullr k<l. •Mwlt»«;.-. ,S.r, 2702JJ 24‘j-6566 Our Graduates Say It Best... 1989 Graduate Mitchell Community College Executive Secretary Call Now At 8 ^ 3 2 0 0 For Further Information m Mitchell Community college assisted me in furthering my education, it was closer to my home than other col leges... the Instructors were helpful and caring and the people were friendly. ...Crystal Dawn Wallace daughter of Mr. & Mrs. John T. Wallace Choose from a wide selection of courses that includes 23 programs of study... “Put Your Future First” IH52 \Vi»t llniad St. .Slalesville, N.C. 28677 B O. MO 0 RE & SONS, INC. downtown Mocksville ; Court Square O PEN: Mon.-Sat. 9;00 ’til 6:00 Friday Nights 'til 8:00 Over 40 Timely Sale PricetJ Items! & i ' ¡' -, IP P i-% men’s Levi’s® prewashed cotton denim jeans Sizes 29-42 REG. 25.99 1 9 8 8 F a l l R e g i s t r a t i o n A u g u s t 3 0 & 3 1 I am to 1 pm and 5 pm to 7 pm Both Days In Vocational Building AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY COLLEGE Men's Levi's^ all-cotton prewashed denim jeans teature five- pocket straight leg styling. L e v i ' S turtleneck shirts for boys Boys’ sizes 8-20 Boys'kxtgaleeva turtlenecksttlrtaIn a wldesatìiiitlonotctìon. Nike® leather shoes for the entire family! Men’s Hi-tops REG. 44.95 3 6 » » Ladles' 2 9 » »REG. 39.9 Men's Oxfords REG. 41.95 3 3 » » Children’s Hi-tops Q Q 8 8 REG. 36.95 ^ W Children's Oxfords REG. 33.95 & 37.95 28 « ® Men s stzos 6V2’ 13. Children's sizes 8 ’/z'6. Ladles' sizes SVi^lO. • 8— DAVIE COUNTV ENTICKI’KISK UKCORD. ГllllRSI)Л^', Лиц. 17. 1У89 D a v ie H a s A c c e s s T o S e v e r a l R e c y c lin g C e n t e r s By Kathy D. Chafrin Davie County Enlerprise-Record You can sell aluminuin c:ins fur 38 cents a pound at Icilcwilcl Paper Corp., one of several recycling centers within a 30-niinute drive from Mocksvillc. Soft drink cans, with tlie excep tion of sonic Pepsi products, arc made of aluminum. So arc beer cans. The market price for aluminum cans remains fairly steady, accor ding lo Ernestine Glover, .spokesman for Idlewild, which is located at 1701 Vargravc St. in Winston-Salem. So does the price of gla.ss. “ In fact, glass has been the same ever since I’ve been here,” Glover said, “ and I’ve been here six years.” Idlewild purchases glass pro ducts such as bellies and containers for 2 cents a pound. They must, however, be separated by color. Tlic market price lor ciirtlboaril is down. Idlewoiid pays SI per hundred pounds, down con siderably from Ihc S2.75 going price IWO years :igo. ” ll's been a dollar I guess I'or six or seven months, maybe longer than that." Glover said. Computer paper, however, is a hot item. Idlewild pays S4 per hun dred pounds Ibr it. •‘Il’s just more of a high-grade paper.” Glover said. The recycling center used to buy newspapers, but stopped accepting them on July 13 after the bottom fell out of the iiiarket. “There's no value to the paper now,” she said. Idlewild was paying $ I per hun dred pounds of newspapers this lime last year, but the price drop ped to a quarter per hundred pounds three or four monlhs ago. Glover said the center will pro bably resum e accepting newspapers if the miirkcl price rises. Because many people saved them for recycling. Glover said the total volume coming inlo Idlewild has dropped. When the niarkel price was higher, civic and religious organizations ortenlimcs held paper drives to collect newspapers to sell to recycling centers. The Unitcil Mctiiodisl Women of Union Chapel Melhodisi Church, locatcd on U.S. 601 .south of Mocksvillc, began collecting glass, aluminum cans and newspapers Iwo years ago. Proceeds from sales to recycling centers were donated to Ihe Brenner Children’s Hospital in Winston-Salem. “ We dccided Ihat would be a small way wc could help save space in our landnil and also pro vide funds for !i very worthy “W e decided that would be a sm all w ay w e could help save sp ace in our landfill and also provide funds for a very w orth c a u se .” — Vada Beck, Union Chapel UMW Group donates proceeds from recycling cause." said Vada Beck, vicc prcsiilent. "W e delivered several truckloads lo Winston-Salem because we did not know of any recycling procedures in Davie County. "W e would like lo see this con sidered in our county." Davic has no recycling centers. Area centers and the materials they accept arc as follows: • Brenner Iron and Metal Co., 3415 Glenn Ave.. Winston-Salem — ferrous (containing iron) and non-ferrous metals; • Eaton Recycling, 1501 Lo mond St., Winslon-Salcm — glass; • Gordon Iron and Metal Co., Statesville — ferrous and non- ferrous metals; • Morrison’s Recycling, 123 S. South Bridge St., Elkin — newspapers, computer printout, IB M cards, non-ferrous metals, glass, rubber inner tubes; • Mount Airy Iron and Metal Co., 733 N. South St., Mount Airy — ferrous and non-ferrous metals, glass; • Owens-Brockway Glass, Old Route 52 South, Winston-Salem — color-sorted glass; • Paper Slock Dealers, Winslon- Salem — newspaper, computer printout, high-grade paper; • The Recycling Station, 1639 Silas Creek Parkway, Winston- Salem — newspaper, glass, aluminum cans; • Reynolds Aluminum Recycl ing Co., several locations (call 1-800-228-2525) — aluminum cans; • Yarbrough Oil Scrvice, 1405 Chickasha Drive, Pfafflown — us ed motor and hydraulic oil; • Z iglar Alum inum /G lass Recycling Center, 3121 Starlight Drive, W inslon-Salem '— newspapers, glass, aluminuni,. copper. N e w S ta te L a w E n c o u ra g e s R e s id e n ts T o R e c y c le M o re Continued From P. 1 Unfortunately, there is not a lol of effort going inlo recycling in North Carolina, according to Wayne Sullivan of Municipal Engineering Services Co. The company, which has ofllces in Garner and Boone, has conducted Iwdflll studies in several counties, including Davie. 'The city of Cary is an exception. \ ; Sullivan said officials there ‘ recently implemented a pilot pro- g rra in which residents separate aluminum cans, glass and paper for : curbside pickup. . |,.’The new solid waste bill also re quires counties to grind shrubbery ' ^nd tree trimmings into compost fof agricultural use. Itif the Jan. 1. 1993, goal for /. reducing the - state's volume; of > ; Waite is not met, the;.biU.cUls for bail' on 'plasttc^;:bags :and ‘ ^tote am cU ^ aiid plates to go in to effect that year. '^tBarHer said he looks for some of ^bse products to be eliminated . ijyw ay as consumers l^ o m e more concerned about the environment. “They are going to make il necessary for our fasl-food places and other commercial-type businesses to use products that will either break down or enhance our environment rather than be detrimental to it,” he said. Also included in the bill, signed inlo law Saturday, is an Oct. 1, 1991, ban on such non-degradable products as chlorofluorocarbon containers. These include the plastic sandwich containers used by some fast-food restaurants. Phones containing the group of compounds will also be banned. Cochrane said one reason for the ban is the suspicion that chlorofluorocarbon is harming the earth’s ozone layer. Also banned as of Jan. 1, 1991, are plastic shopping bags that can not be recycled. ‘ ‘Many types of plastic bags cur rently used by retail stores can be exempted,” Cochrane said, “ because they can be recycled. More and more stores have started doing that.” Food Lion Stores Inc., for e.x- ample, is using photodcgradable plaslic bags in some slores lo see how customers like them, accor ding 10 Mike Mozingo, corporate communications director. Paper bags, however, are still being us ed at the Food Lion stores in Mocksville and Hillsdale. The bill also bans, after July I , 1991, any plastic containers that do not have a label identifying the type of plaslic resin of which il is made. Howard said bags must be recyclable or degradable within 12 monlhs. “ That was a change because the original House bill re quired that they must do the same in 120 days,” she said. Beginning on Jan. 1 of next year, the sale of containers connected by plastic rings, which are non- degradable, will also be banned. The bill also addresses the disposal of tires ¡md imposes ;t I pcrcent fee, also effective Jan. I, on the sale of new tires lo cover ihe cost. “ That 1 percent will be distributed back to the counties on a per capita basis to assist the coun ties in disposal,” Howard .said. “ This fee does not apply lo recaps or leased lires.” Cochrane said the 1 percent lire fee is projected to generate $4 million per year. The bill al-so prohibits landfills from disposing of whole scrap lires effective Jan. 1, 1991. Tires going into the Davie County Landfill are already being cut to keep them from holding air and rising lo the surface. The Davie Counly Board of Commissioners voted 1 'h years ago lo buy a lire slitter and charge county residents 50 cents apiece for disposing of car tires and $1 each for truck tires. The fee cut down on tires coming in from oul of the county. Smith said. Another provision of the new bill calls for the N.C. Department of MiiiiKtn Rcsoiirccs to develop a state comprehensive solid waste nianagcmcnl program by Jan. I, 1991. Cochrane said the program, for example, might direct the N.C. Department of Transportation to use recycled lires for road surfac ing and recycled plastic for guard rails. The bill also requires the Depart ment of Human Resources lo establish a stale solid waste management policy to “ promote methods of solid waste manage ment that are alternatives to disposal in landfills” and “ assist units of local government wilh solid waste management.” Disposal in landfills is last on a list of preferred'waste mangement methods specified in the bill. The others, in their order of preference, are: waste volume réduction at source; recycling and reuse; com posting; incineration with energy production; and incineration for volume reduction. The bill would also require each of Ihc stale’s 100 counties lo develop a solid waste management program and submit it to the Department of Human Resources for approval. County plans must be updated every two years. Also addressed is the disposal of motor oil and large electrical ap pliances such as refrigerators.: : Beginning Oct. 1, 1990, landfills' - will be prohibited from accepting' : used motor oil. Some recycling’ centers accept it for reuse. Some centers also accept elecr- > trical appliances, which will be: . banned in landfills as of Jan. 1, '. 1991. The Davie landfill accepts large appliances, but requires haulers to- put them in a separate pile,so thtt a private resident can lo ^ them fiw.. sale at an area recycliiig center.; Junior Barbee, landfill'directori; said this saves the county m on^) because it le n ^e n s the life o f the! landfill. Next week: industries and businesses have recycling programs in placé ? What. options are available lo counly of ficials as Ihey prepare to initiate O' recycling program? How can you help? ■ v "''-* RED HOT PRICES! RED HOT PRICES! RED HOT PRICES! RED HOT PRICES! 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ZEN IT H 27” Diagonal SY ST EM MUST SBB OUR SPECIAL PRICE ,pREm ium sTEi«o PLUS 9 Ч t;.\TKA MONTHS OK LAllOH 1‘HOTUCTION Льк U;, I'tn t^irlnib P O L I C Y Remote Control Color T V • SF2789W •M'fS Stereo Sound Sysicm •Heceiver/Monilor •new Vanguard Chassis wilh Comb Filter •Anil) cbannc) vSearcIi •On-Screen Menu Displays •Sleep Timer •Advanced Color Scniry • Digital Audio Procesjiing •Contemporary styling ON SA LE SF27a9W RED HOT PRICES!Mocksville Furniture & Appliance Downtown IVIocksvllle, N.C. 6 3 4 -5 8 1 2 6 3 4 -2 2 5 0 SPECIALLY PRICED RED HOT PRICES! M a k i n g A L i v i n g S h r e d d i n g P a p e r Advance Woman Provides Service, And Recycles I)A\'IK C(K ,\T\ ESTKIil’UISE KIX OIW. TUL KSI)A\-, All«. 17, l'JH'J-9 By Kalhy I). Chaffin Davie Counly Enlerprise-Record You could call her llic Fawn Hall of Davic Coumy. V icki Webb of Route 2, Mocksville, rnakc.s a living shred ding papers. For high-security clients, Mrs. Webb offers a mobile service, whereby she drives a truck equip ped with a shredder to the business or company and parks it on the premises. There, she shreds documents in the presence of a company official. , “W e have a lot of big clients in !Winston-Salem, Greensboro, High Point and Davie County,” she says. ' Mrs. Webb says the truck, which 'advertises the service under the 'liame of Secure Data Inc., attracts a lot of attention. Papers are stacked, and clients pay by the foot. The mobile shred- : 'der can go through about 7 feet, which equals 150 lo 200 pounds, in an hour. ^ ,“A jot of people passing by stop and make little comments,” Mrs. Webb says. “They peek in the ; door ahd ask me if I’ve been to Washington lately. There’s always :a wisecracker in the ' 1.. Payrolls, financial statements and customer orders containing .credit card numbers are examples .of doicumnts a company might rWUtt shtec^^ {lia ise s.- “ A .kM also, want Jeyeryrtiiig done ori-site because of iieo^lö’s' lax records,” she Mys. ‘ For clieiJts requirmg less securi- Webb picl» up a load of hpa|>er(in'a larger tr^^ and hauls ':R toi her business headquarters on :U S. 158 in Hillsdale. “ A lot of icustomers have enou^ volume in. here in itiw id o ^ ',’’ she says, i* ' ^ U K Data is located in the isanie building as Webb Heating ':and A ir Conditioning, owned by "»Vicki!* husband, Wayne. ,l ThcK, a large shredder has the ';capacity u> gii through ;i'A tons of- t p i ^ per hoiir. The machine also : ; p ^ it |ntol;300-pound b^es for' ‘sM p p i^ to paper m ills.' M rs; .W ä4i has; operated the pnpbile shiedding< service' since jl986.'^ But iintil two months ago, .jShe stuffed the shredded paper in :piastic bags and sold it to area ptecycling centers. ! After buying the laiger shredder, -Mrs. Webb says she began selling .'the bales directly to paper mills at higher profit. In preparing it for shredding, Mrs. Webb divides the paper ac cording to ils quality. High-grade papers, such as computer printouts and ledger paper, bring in more money. Other office papers such as personnel files arc considered medium grade. When she accumulates 20 tons of one kind, Mrs. Webb calls a paper mill lo come pick il up. The price varys depending on Ihe lime of year. “The paper market just goes up and down so drastical ly," she says. Mrs. Webb shares her profit with her clients. She pays com panies $2.50 per hundred pounds for high-grade paper and $ 1.50 per hundred pounds for medium grade. ‘‘It’s good for them, and it’s good for us,” she says. Mrs. Webb doesn’t accept card board, magazines or newspapers because there's not a market for them. The revenue generated by recycling them is not enough to cover transportation costs. Secure Data is a full-time business, operating from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. five days a week. Mrs. Webb has two full-time employees and several part-time workers who come in when the paper volume is high. James Plott, for example, a retired truck driver for R.J, Reynolds Tobacco Co., helps pick up loads. “He’s good al backing into tight spaces,” Mrs. Webb says. It was through her earlier work at a C P A firm that IVIrs. Webb saw the need for a shredding service. The cost of operating an office shredder, she says, was expensive conisideriiig an employee was lied up for hours shredding two to three papers at a time. - It didn’t take long for clients to . sign up once Mrs. Webb began of fering the service on-site. Since then, the business has grown by leaps and bounds. "W e ’re just now really getting going good,” she says. Last week. Secure Data shredded 40 tons of paper. Mrs^ Wd)b plans to advertise Ihe business so that small companies or individuals may bring by paper to be shredded. - She is also working with Dwight Jackson, associate superintendent of the Davie County Schools, on the possibility of starting a recycl ing program in the schools. . ' “By starting at Ihe elementary schools,” Mrs. Webb says, “ we hope that maybe we can have kids more tuned into recycling by the lime they gel in high school. We're starting them out young.” Vicki Webb: “A lot of people passing by mat<e little com ments. They peek in the back door and ask me if I’ve been to Washington lately. There’s always a wisecracker in the bunch. — Photos by James Barringer' Paper is shredded and packed into 1,300-pound bales for sale to paper mills. The profit is shared with the clients. Mrs. Webb’s son, George (left), and Jeff Bailey operate shredder at Secure Data.The large shredder can go through IV2 tons of paper in an hour. 10—DAVIE COUNTY KNÌTKIMUSK KKCOKI), rilllKSDAV, Лиц. 17, l'JS9 District Court The following courl cases were disposed of during Davie Dislrici Courl on Aug. 10. Presiding was Judge William Ijames. Proseculing was James Honcycutl, ¡i.ssi.stiinl district attorney. — Kenneth Allen Ashley, driv ing 69 mph in a 55 mph zone, reduced by D A to exceeding a safe speed, pay $10 (Inc and courl costs. — Sarah Smith Bailey, driving 70 mph in a 55 mpli zone, reduc ed by D A to 64 mph in a 55 mpli zone, pay $10 fine and court co.sts. — Steven Michael Gerber, driv ing 75 mph in a 65 mph zone, pay $10 fine and courl co.sts; driving without a license, dismissed. — Leroy Hill, possession of less Ihan one ounce of marijuana, possession of drug paraphernalia, dismissed. — Melissa Hall Ijames, driving 85 mph in a 65 mph zone, reduc ed by D A lo exceeding a safe speed, prayer for judgment con tinued on payment of court costs. — Forrest James Hurley, driv ing 76 mph in a 65 mph zone, reduced by D A to 74 mph in a 65 mph zone, pay $10 fine and court costs. — Anthony Scott Kilby, driving without a license, pay $10 fine and court costs. — Russell Wilson Lyday, driv ing 60 mph in a 45 mph zone, reduced by D A to 54 mph in a 45 mph zone, pay $10 fine and court costs. . Robert Carl Nichols, failure tb.stop at a stop sign, prayer for ' jidgment continued on payment of court costs. . — Cynthia Anna Reavis, driving while license, revoked, pay $300 fine ^ cbuft costs; no vehicle in- tiuance,; drivingw M le ‘ Ucen^ .«moiud, dismisMd. :J-^'^vidIBryan lUenon, driving 76 mph ill 65 mph‘ zone, reduced by DA to 74 ihph.' in a 65 mph zone, pay $10 fine and court costs. ; •— J^h;<5aither Robinson, im- proptsr risin g,'r^iice d by D A to , Unsafe traffic movement, pay $10 fijif and court costs. Robert Sluser Jr., driv ing 59 mph in a 45 m ph' zone, reduced by D A to improper equip- : ttient; pay $10 fine ahd coun costs. : Faiinie Tate Smith, driving 81 ; - n ^ in a 65 mph zone; reduced by DA to 74 mph in a 65 mph zone, pay s is fiiie and court costs. , : Karen Tallent Spaugh, failure ID redjice speed to avoid a collision, : ~ Dawn Christine Strider, driv- ir^; 63 mph in a 50 mph zone, reduced by D A to improper equip- nwnt.'pay court costs. : ~ Mark Edward Tuck, driving . 70 mph in a 55 mph irane, reduc ed by DA to imptroper equipment, pay court costs. : Judy Ellis Wolfe, driving 78 m ^ in a 65 mph rane, reduced by : D A to improper equipment, pay court cosu. •-e Ralph Bowman, driving 79 mph in a 65 mph zone, reduced by D A to exceeding a safe speed, pay $10 fine and court costs. : Glennis Doyle, driving 75 mjph in a 65 mph zone, prayer for judgment continued on payment of court costs. ■: — Roben Jones, assault on a female, dimissed. — Danny Alexander, driving while license revoked, reduced by D A to driving without a license, prayer for judgment continued on payment of court costs; no vehiclc registration, dismissed. ; Frank Lee Smith, driving 68 mph in a 55 mph zone, reduccd by D A to improper equipment, pay court costs. — Martha Herriman, exceeding a safe speed, prayer for judgment continued on paymenl of court costs. — Tracey Arnold, driving 69 mph in a 55 mph zone, reduced by D A to 64 mph in a 55 mph zone, pay $10 fine and courl costs. — Sandra Luwacki, driving 78 mph in a 65 mph zone, reduced by D A 10 74 mph In a 65 mph, failure to stop al a slop sign, reduced by D A 10 unsafe iraffic movement, pay $20 fine and courl costs. — jpiarencc Leonard, driving 75 mph in a 65 mph zone, reduccd by D A to improper equipment, pay court costs. Kiiik'd To Appear The Idllowin^ pciiplc failed to iippo.'ir lor Ihcir .scIil'iIuIl’iI court date. — Keilh Lenionl Allen, driving 79 mpli in a 65 mph /one. — William Eugene Andrews, driving 75 mph in a 65 inpli zone. — Robert Lee Baughn, driving 75 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Mack Shawn Bröckelt, failure lo wear a seal bell, failure lo pul a child under ihe age of six in a child restraint system, driving 75 mph in a 55 mph zone. — Enimctt Mansfield Edwards, driving without a license. — Patrick Kendall Filzgerald, expired regislralion piale, failure to apply for a duplicate license within 60 days. — Janies Francis Grady, driving 60 mph in a 45 mph zone. — William Laporte Hutchins, failure lo wear a seat bell. — Jacqueline Denise Jefferies, failure to wear a seat bell. . — Jeffrey Mark Kurash, failure to stop at a stop sign. — Michael Terrence Leon iLaschiwski, failure to have a passenger wear a safely helmet. — MichacI Steven Leonard, driving 78 mph in a 55 mph zone. — Brian Clark Moore, driving 76 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Wanda Lois Patterson, driv ing 60 mph in a 45 mph zone. — Danny Keith Plowman, failure to wear a seat belt. — Arthur Alan Shaver, driving 70 mph in a 55 mph zone. — Virginia Melissa Smith, driv ing 60 mph in a 45 mph zone. — Gregory J. Sturm, driving 85 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Curtis Bennett Terry, driving 77 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Arthur Francis Welch, failure to wear a seat belt. — Maria Arrvilda Whitehead, driving 58 mph in a 45 mph zone, failure to secure a child under the age of six in a child restraint system. — Michael Edward Willard, driving 47 mph in a 35 mph zone. —^ Kathy Davis Wrighl, failure to wear a seat belt. Trials W aived The following people waived their right to a trial and paid their fines early. — McDuffie Allen Britt Jr., no vehicle insurance. — Richard Neil Cartner, failure to wear a seat belt. — Charles Laurence Cooper, driving 50 mph in a 35 mph zone. — Paul Wayne Correll, failure to wear a seat belt. — Terrie Simerson Couch, failure to secure a child under Ihe age of six in a child restraint system. — Martha Crockelt Dick, driv- iii|j 7(1 mpli in :i (O mph xonc. — Ucbliic Sliingcr lJulin. lailiirc lo wear a seal hell. — Sherry Jean McHridc. I'ailurc lo wear a scat hell. Grcgorv Hryaiii Miller, raihire lo wear a seal hell. — Vickie Sue Peoples, driving 77 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Gregory Lee Rutherford, driving 77 mph in a 65 mpli zone. — Audra Rasmussen Taddeuc- ci, failure to wear a seal hell. — Michael Earl Woodard, driv ing 70 mph in a 55 mph zone. — Brenda Loui.sc We.slTield. driving 80 mph in a 65 mph zone. — John Albert Hannigan. driv ing 75 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Robbie Willis Cook, driving 80 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Danelle Marie Brow'n, driv ing 76 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Phillip Dudley Allen, failure lo wear a seat belt. — Troy Thomas Adams, driving 80 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Joseph Vincent Low, failure to wear a seat bell. — Christopher Edmund James, failure to wear a seal bell. — Edith Potts Julian, driving 70 mph in a 55 mph zone. — Susan Ruth Barber, driving 80 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Phillip Nolan Gillikin. driv ing 78 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Patrick Thomas Grady, driv ing 69 mph in a 55 mph zone. — Jackie David Williains, driv ing 69 mph in a 55 mph zone. — Edward Ray Hopper Jr., driving 76 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Gary Steven Palmer, driving 80 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Gregory Bryan Strader, failure to wear a seat bell, ex ceeding a safe speed. — Dore’I Margeurite Harper, failure lo wear a seat belt. — George Lemuel Scotl, failure to wear a seat bell. — John Reid Suggs, driving 57 mph in a 45 mph zone. — Wayue Gene Bunker, noi having a head light on while driv ing a motorcycle. — Dwighi Ashley Scott, failure lo wear a seal belt. — Sandra Jean Caryk, driving 59 mph in a 45 mph zone. — David Rosco Cope, failure lo wear a seat bell, failure lo reduce speed lo avoid a collision. — Lee Coleman Schilbe, driving 85 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Chester Lamonle Chunn, ex pired registration plate. — James Laurence Davis, no vehicle registration. — Ann Elizabeth Parker, no vehisle registration. — Gary Michael Yales, driving without a license. — Robert Donald McMahan, expired vehicle regislralion. 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Mocksville. Willoiv Oak inopping Centre' 1- 3»' A'Wiiia Avenue, Winston-Salem 2 Clfmmons, Westwood Village Shopping Center 8- Hanes Mall, Winston-Salem J Oil ,vjda Quay Shopping Center, Advance, N.C. 9. OWIoivn, 3716 Reynolda Road 4.631 Peters Ctecli Parkway, Winslon-Salem Lewisville, 6499 Shallowford Rd., Winston-Sale n ’ 5. Reynolda Manor Shopping Center, Winston-Salem It. Stanleyville, Old Highway 52 North WowOi* ShoppingCenliejtoeiivill* . 6.3075 Kernersviile Road, Winslon-Salem 12- King, Colony Centre B»n' ids Ouay Shorpris CtnictAil,i,w.' 13^ 4917 Country Club Rd. Walkertown, Highway 66 Yadkinv-'le N»wtin, Taylorsville. Lexington, and Wflcome D/WIK COUNTY KNTKUI’KISK RKCORI), THURSDAY, Лиц. 17, 1989-IB W a r d F i t t i n g P ie c e s T o T iie P u z z le A t D a v ie Pavie County head football coach Randall Ward (right) discusses strategy with defensive coordinator Buddy -Lowery during the War Eagles’ scrimmage with West Rowan Saturday night. Davie travels to North Davidson Friday for a 7:30 p.m. scrimmage. — Photo by M ike Barnhardt Wins Two State Titles f-M O O R E S V IL L E - The jTCksyille/Davie Parks and Recreation -Apartm ent softteail . teams gave. Davie ] T (^ n ty two state championships last week, fttiie Junioriuid Midget girls each took top ; | lt y/as the thjird state championship this I l S u n u ^ r ^ The-Junior boys | v^^;ttM !istate softball title last tnonth. out o f four ^ j fOT tiieir title while the Midgets had I > iS ¿asier tiinc. There were only two (earns touniameiit and the Midgets won two |fis|^ g h t in the best 2:of-3. : J:This is the second straight year the tM idgets 'have won the state crown. Last' l-iri!"' ^________ year, the Junior team placcci .sccond. Stevenson Leads Jrs. Robin Stevenson shouldn’t have even been playing in the sixth inning of Mocksville’s final game o f the Junior girls state playoffs in Mooresville last week. An inning earlier she had collapsed from hyperventilation. But after being revived, Stevenson came back in the sixth, booming a home run over the 215-sign and beginning the rally that led the local team to the state championship. Mocksville entered the .sixth inning against the Mooresville Cubs trailing 11-4 but it scored three in the sixth and five more in-the seventh to. take the victory. “ After getting within 11-7,1 told them going into the seventh just to settle down and hit tlie softball," said coach Tiny Livengood. ‘‘They were being too anxious at the plate.” After Stevenson started the momentum in the sixth, the Abshers ended it in the seventh. Tracie Absher hit the sacrifice fly to tie the game at 11 and Angie Absher’s bases-loaded single drove home the winn ing run. Mocksvillc won three of four games ih the state tournam ent, beating the Mooresville Shakers 19-4 and Henderson County 11-6 before losing to the Cubs 8-6. Mocksville then defeated the Cubs in the finals. Please See Titles — P. 6B By Ronnie Gallagher Davie Counly Enlerprise-Record After watching his team bat tle West Rowan in the first fool- ball scrimmage of the season Saturday, Davie Counly coach Randall Ward explained whal it was like rounding his squad in to playing shape. “ To build a house,” he said, “ you need a good foundation.” So, how much of Davie County’s house is built? “ W e’re getting there,” he .said. “ Little by little, we’re fit ting the parts of the puzzle logethcr.” The scrimmage was filled with ironies for W ard, who came over from West Rowan this season. In years past, it was West who was throwing and pit ching the football while Davie was the wishbone team. This year, Davie was throwing and West was running the wishbone under new coach Ron Raper. “ That was a little different getting used to,” Ward said. “ It was definitely a unique situa tion.” Ward and his staff will get the opportunity to learn even more about the W ar Eagles Friday night when they travel to North David.son for a 7:30 p.m . scrimmage. 50-50 Offen.se Davie County football fans saw the W ar Eagles run the ball 22 times but also watched them go to the air 18 in the varsity’s 40-play series. That’s about 18 times more than they’re used to. “ W e wanted to go 50-50 with the running and passing,” W ard said. “ And while we were not totally pleased, we didn’t see anything that couldn’t be fix ed.” W ard expected a few mistakes, considering the var sity and jayvee teams are lear ning a new system. N o t e b o o k “ Y o u ’ll make mistakes, especially when the other' team’s defense is changing,” he said. “ But our mistakes were all hustling mistakes and we can , live with that. The boys are still learning.” Matt Marion, Brent W all and Patrick Murphy were used as quarterbacks and W ard said a ll' did fine. The same thing w ent.- for Randy Brewer and Jason H orne, who directed the jayvees. “ O ur quarterbacks threw, well and our backs ran the ball hard,” he said. Beyond the actual execution. W ard said he was very pleased ^' with the attitude ofhis players. There are 39 on the varsity and 28 on jayvee. “ Attitude is one of the most important things for our football, team. Our boys are eager to learn. Basically, we think, anytime you go out, you need • to execute as well as you can. If the boys do that, we can’t find fault with them .” Another unique situation w ill' occur Friday when D a v ie ,, travels to North Davidson for itfr ,, second scrimmage. The Black Knights are a longtime rival and . conference foe o f Davie’s but have dropped to 3-A and the two schools w ill not play dur- ,, ing the regular season. i ,i ' • W ard said there would not be | any drastic changes from th e’,,; first scrimmage. V; “ W e hope we can advance: along from last week and put a;* i. little more offense into theirs package. W e’re always looking? for improvemeiit. ” • ^ ^ H ello Again';^ : W ard didii’t seeiii too vous in his debut in front ofthe - V; home fans but that was p ro l^ lyy ! due to playing West Rowan; Please See Motebook - Р.<Ш / ICrowriing The Champions fuller t t a c k ' ' ' i Fuller Welding and IngersoU- tòind played a game of momen- tiim Monday night in the finals o f the Mocksville/Davie Parks and Recreation men’s league tournament. ::-Uhderdog Ingersoll-Rand needed to win two straight games over Fuller to win the double-elimination tournament. For 11 o f the 14 innings played, it held the tipper hand, winning the first game 10-3 and leading Fuller in Óie deciding contest, 3-1 aftei; four. But when Fuller finally did take the momentum, it never let go, scoring four runs in each of the fifth and sixth innings, pro pelling it to the title. Struggling Going inlo Ihe fifth inning of the second title game Monday, Fuller was obviously struggling with its offense. It had scored 9nly one run since the tiiird in ning of the first game. M ark Jones had broken the seyen-inning drought in the fourth with an RBI single, scor ing Eric Southern. R h o n d a Sm ith elud e s the catcher’s tag and sc o re s for S h o re s in its victory over G row n W ood. S h o re s then lost the tournam ent cha m p io nship to C ornatzer’s. _ photo by Ronnie Gallagher The niomenluni carried over into a Ibur-run fifili. Scotty Seaford singled and when Brent Gobble's ball was hobbled, it opened the lloodgales. Ron and Russ Whitlock and Southern had RBls and suddenly. Fuller led 5-3. Afler holding l-R , Fuller erupled I'or four more in the si,\th. Singles by Mitchell Green and Seaford, along with an er ror on Jones’ ball, loaded the bases. Gobble's double then scored two and two sacrifice (lies brought home the addi tional runs. Southern led the way with three hits while Russ W hillock, Seaford and Gobble all had two, Arnie Harpe and M ike Rhoda each had two for l-R. I-R W ins I'kase See Men — P. 7H Cornatzer ^ Woinéii’s:':^: c№ani|iioii § Are there two more eveh; ', w om en’s softball team si ^ anywhere than Comatzer’s atid Shores? , Marcel Cornatzer says м and : > it’s hard to argue. Thé tw o. ', fought through six games this season in the Mocksville/Davie ■ ' Parks and Recreation Depart ment women’s league, three o f which came in the tournament. . ^ But Cornatzer’s may have had its best outing of the season last . week in the final game o f the double-elim ination a ffa ir, ; . defeating Shores 12-6 and cap- ' turing the tournam ent ■ championship. Cornatzer’s had already toss ed Shores into the loser’s ’ bracket with an earlier 8-4 vic tory. Shores bounced back and had to beat Cornatzer’s twice to claim the title. It did just that in the first game of the champion ship, winning 8-5 before losing the final. “ Wc were just fired up in tjiat .. last game,” Cornatzer M id. “ No one could have touched us in that last one.” Please See Women — P. 7B ^ -'^1 ,1 r Г 2П— DAVIK COUNTY KNTKRI'KISK KliCOKI). I IIUKSDAN , Лиц. 17. I 'm Í ‘ V 2 7 P la y e rs H e lp e d L e g io n F in is h S e a so n A t 3 7 -1 5 -1 The American Legion Ixiscball season is over in M ocksville bul nol helore 27 players con tributed to the 37-15-1 .season. Early in tiie year, while Starmoinit and Davic Counly were in the high school slate phiyolTs. Coach Dale Ijames received help from some unlikely sources . ntnnely jayvee baseball teams from Davie, West Forsyth, Starmount and For bush. A ll 27 arc listed in the llnal stati.stics. Names like JelT.Spry, .loiialhan Pickell. Chris Shore and Tony Renegar have all resurfaced in the luial slats. In fact, there is an unfamiliar name near the top ofthe final batting leaders. Greg Mar.shall. who Ijames will be counting on heavily next season, balled only five times but hil .4Ш before leaving for the Big League team, where he made Ihe dislricl all-slar team. Me joined M ike M cDaniel in the .400 club. L E G IO N S T A T IS T IC S (Final Statistics) (53 Gam es) Hitting Players A B H its A vg. M ike McDaniel 171 71 .415 G reg Marshall 5 2 .400 Nate Newsom e 165 57 .345 Brocke W alker 180 62 .344 Freddie Transou 118 40 .339 Matt M arion 85 28 ,329 Chad Triplett 173 57 ,329 Gray Bovender 132 42 ,326 Alex Nail 29 9 ,310 M ik e Lovelace 62 19 ,306 A nslo Fow ler 174 51 ,293 Michael Shore 142 41 ,289 Jeff Spry 7 2 Brantley Smith 62 17 W es Mecham 97 26 Stu Holt 43 10 : Denny Key 70 16 Scott M cDaniel 106 23 Brian Pitts 6 2 :Matt W ebb 18 3 Ryan Edwards 14 2 Tony Renegar 8 0 Jon Pickett 5 0 Jeff Brow n 4 0 Jonathan W agner 2 0 Richard Bow les 2 0 C hris Shore , • 0 H om e R u n s -vNewsome 3, Traiuou li Bovender 1, Holt 1, ‘»Key 1, S. McDaniel 1, Marshall l. T rib e s Newsom e 2, Shore 2, M , M cDaniel 2, Bovender 1, W alker 1, k e y 1, Doubles W alker 11, Shore 10, M , M cDaniel 10, Triplett 10, S.- M cDaniel 8, M arion 7, , Newsom e 7, M echam 5, Fow ler 5, Bovender r^iiTransou Si Smith 3, Lovelace 3, N ail 2, Holt : '2 , i Triplett 45, M . M cDaniel 43, W alker 36, Fowler 30, New.some 30, Shore 26, Mecham 24, S. M cDaniel 22. Bovender 22, M arion 19, Tran.sou 15, Sm ilh 13. Holt II, Lovelace 10, Key 10, Nail 8, Edwards 2, W ebb 1, W agoner 1, Mar.shall I, Spry I. R u n s Scored Triplett 51, M . M cDaniel 43, W alker 42, New.some 40, Shore 34, Bovendcr 32, M arion 28, Fow ler 27, Transou 26, Mccham 20, S. McDaniel 18, Key 13, Holt 12, Lovelace 12, Smith 11, W ebb 8, Nail 8, Spry 3, Pickett 2, Brow n 1, C. Shore I, Marshall I. Stolen Bases New som e 28, W alker 12, Shore 12, Bovender 11, Triplett 3, Fow ler 2, Spry 2, M . M cDaniel I , Transou I , Mccham 1, Smith .286 W ebb 1, Pitts 1, Edw ards 1, C.Shore 1. ,274 Pitching ,268 Players IP Hits E R E R A ,233 Freddie Transou 3.0 0 0 0.00 ,229 Brian Pitts .О'/з 0 0 .ООО ,217 Denny Key 104 77 29 2.51 ,200 Chad Triplett 6 7 '/з 66 20 2.69 .167 M ik e Lovclacc 125 100 44 3.18 .143 Brantley Smith 3 2 ‘/з 33 15 4.18 .000 M ik e M cDaniel 59Уз 58 29 4.37 .000 Tony Renegar 15% 16 8 4.60 .000 Jon W agoner 13>/з 19 10 6.92 .000 Alex Nail 1 8 V 3 32 20 9.64 .000 Jon Pickett .5'/з 12 7 11.81 .000 Richard Bow les ,3'А 6 5 13.50 G reg M arshall .6 % 19 14 18.90 , M . C hris Shore .1,0 4 3 27.00 im 4,Jeff Spry ,1,0 3 3 27.00 K e y 1. R B I’s Records \ Lovelace 10-2, K ey 9-4, Triplett 7-2, M cD aniel 5-1, Sm ith 2-1, W agoner 1-0, Renegar 1-1, M arshall 1-2, Nail 0-1, Bow les 0-1. Saves Lovelace 3, Triplett 1, M . McDaniel 1, Smilh 1, Key 1, W agoner 1. Strikeouts Lovelace 141, Key 115, M cDaniel 76, Triplett 43, Smith 23, W agoner 8, Renegar 8, Nail 6, M arshall 6, Bow les 2, Pickett 1, ■ k i Dale Ijames w as not only a coach but a teacher as well for his Mocksville Legion players. — Photo by Jim Barringer After Two Days, Ijames Was Missing Baseball Two days after the Mocksville Legion ba.seball team's season was complete, coach Dale Ijame.s thought he'd unwind a bit. So he went to watch a baseball game. “ I went to Greensboro to watch the Palomino World Series,” Ijames was saying, “ 1 never forget about baseball, 1 miss it already,” He was hoping his players were as well. “ It’s been two days," he reasoned. “ Hopefully, they're missing it too.” That's hard to imagine, especially after a rigorous 53-game schedule, the most games of any Legion team in North Carolina, But that’s the way Ijfimes wanted il. He wanted a schedule as hard-nosed and demanding as he is. “ When we first told the kids we were going to play 50 games or better, they all thought it was great. But they didn’t have a clue what it was like. Now, they do and we’re hoping to play four or five more next season.” And he’ll begin preparing his team right now for 1990 so the same deficiencies won’t halt Mocksville’s bid for a state championship. Whileville took advantage of every one in winn ing Ihc American Legion state crown, four games lo one. “ W e’ll put together an offseason package for the boys to work on,” he said. “ W e couldn't hit and run, we couldn’t bunt, we didn’t move run ners up,,. W e won with the power gaine, the home runs. In the final,s, we were two to three V inches or one hit away from winning the series,” Ronnie Gallagher M oving U p? It wouldn’t surprise many if Ijames left highv .' school coaching for the college ranks'or even the professional minor leagues soon. He has made the contacts, he knows the right people and he is a '' teacher of fundamentals.' , i Currently at Glenn High School m , Kernersviile, he is beginning his I7th year of,.‘, teaching and coaching and yes, he does coach;? ¡. another sport, sort of; ’ '-'•<■ - .-j “ I coach cross country but I try to do it for № y baseball players,” he said. It's a g o ^ way for- them to stay in shape,” ^ Ijames didn’t rule out the move up to college or minor leagues. “That’s in the future,” said the 37-year old • health and P,E. teacher. “I’ve got three more ■ years to get my retirement so I ’m going-ifor ‘ that.” Ijames has a definite plan on what path^high^^ - Please See Gailagher - P 8B |llames Hurts While »«tching Whiteville , \ Ijames is in.Florida wat- ;*;{xhing Whiteville npresent North ‘j'Carbliha in the' Southeastern Regionds., " :j* And he can’t stsmd it. ■*: , “ It will hurt to see them play, ’ ’ IjainessaidfoUWingWhiteville's four games to one American . state championship over |i%l«sciavilte.'':'v J I;7i:i‘IPenon«lly, I thought we’d do t ^ r . We hit the ball more con- witently in the big parks and our g pitching is deeper, I ? ': “ I think LieGrande Russell will ih t e fiiw bm. I don’t know if their £ other pitches can hold their own,” College-Bound {; Severa^l Legion players are ex- ‘ ’« i^ t e d to play college athletics; '■ •Brocke Walker t o reported to ijW ake Forest, where he is on a football scholarship. He said he ¿d o e sn ’t yet know if he will be V'r^shirted, i-; , “ It all depends on who’s hurt and stuff like that,” Walker said, i; “ I’ve been throwing a lot in the r, morning. I’ll just go in and work hard. ” I; • Walker will join Denny Key, P who has a baseball scholarship to Wake Forc-st as well, 1; ■ It seems the two have always taken the same path. In little ; • league, the two used to have some ’, terrific baules in Yadkin County :; leagues, • Mike McDaniel is headed to • ; UNC-Asheville on a ba.seball scholarship. ■•V • Anslo Fowler is still trying lo j . get inu) a small college. Ijames said ; • he look the SA T last week. “ W e’ll get him in Montreat- Anderson or Gartlner-Webh,” V' Ijanies said. L e g i o n N o t e s • Naté Newsome is expected to play at East Carolina University, He has talked with the coaches but doesn’t know yet if there will be any financial help. If there isn’t, he will walk on, i • Wes Mecham could play at Appalachian State, He and Ijames have talked with the coaches about playing as a walk-on. Although a 1989 graduate of Davie High, Mecham still has a year of Legion , eligibility left. Good Nucleus Ijames likes the players he has reluming and thinks there is a good nucleus from which to start next year’s squad, “ Chad Triplett, Matt Marion and Alex Nail — that’s a good start,” Ijames .said, “And we have mosl of the West boys back. ‘ ‘People don’t realize how young we really were this year,” he .said. “We had a lot of young guys, some who can play two more seasons. But the younger ones got some ex perience, at least. “ We’ll sit down and evaluate all the boys coming back and what they did well and whal they did wrong.” Mocksville will still be young. Outside of Marion and Alex Nail, Davie’s players will be off of the jayvee team. “ 1 thought Tony Renegar dill a good job pitching early in the season and Brian Piits is a goixi hit ler,” he said. Plenty O f Pitching Renegar may be an iinpimaiil ad dition to the team, considering the Please See Lvgiiiu — 1’, .111 The Sofa You’ll Love To Own! B erkline, the Specialist in M otion Furniturei present th eir dual-recliner sofa ^ i Available in Contemporary, Traditional, or Early American styles, th ^ sofas offer a lifetime warranty on wooden frames, springs and mechanisms!' ‘ Come In Today And Purchase Quality Furniture Made To Last A Lifetime!. \ ■. ' ^1' Jil p11! I 'P' livr-in-room O v e r 2 5 B r a n d N a m e s A v a i l a b l e H l t L C R E S T ^ u r n itu r e 2560 S, Stratford Rd, (Beside Jim Wenvil Appliance) 7 6 5 - 9 0 7 7 Moii.-Snt. 9--Ì; Fri. 'til f.;U w ; , ^ F r e e D e l i v e r y DAVIK COUNTY KNTKKI’RISK KKCOKI). riUJKSDAV,; •Legion ■ ; continued from P. 2B ' • first priority for Ijiimcs ;irul ; Mocksvillc next season is pilchini!. ’ Post 174 lost Denny Key ¡niti Mike McDaniel but retains Mike Lovelacc and Triplett. Ijames also sees Jonathan Wagoner and Alex ;;Nail takin«; their turns on the ’ ■ mound. He thinks Grej; Marshall, who - inade the district all-.star team in Big League, can help. ^ ; “ We may get some pitchers - ; from Forbush and Slarmoimt too.” : he said. • ; Forbu.sh had no players on this - ; year's Legion but Ijames said next :;year would be a different .story. ‘ ; "W e may gel one or two pit- ■ ;chers from there,” he .said. ; : But the biggest pitching surprise ; may be outfielder Freddie Transou. ’••On the last day of the regular • •. season, Ijames summoned Tran.sou, • : to the mound atid he threw well for • three innings, finishing as Ihe team's top E R A man at 0.00. “ Freddie has a loose arm and he has the temperament to be a pit cher,” Ijames said. “He slays calm and doesn't get rattled.” Remembering USSSA Few softball fans are aware that Ijames was one of the first to bring USSSA softball to Davie County. “ When I started, there was one classification, going for the same goal,” he said. “Then, they started having different classifications and I figured if you couldn’t challenge for the best, why play. That's when I got out.” Longtime softball fans in the county say they remember Ijames in that sport just like they do now in baseball — very intense. Bad Rap Key somehow obtained a bad rap from scouts and college coaches as . a pitcher who could throw hard — '.but couldn't pitch. , That’s why Wake Forest coaches George Greer and Larry Gallo, along with Ijames, are having the last laugh. They think Wake Forest got a steal. N.C. State head baseball coach ■, Ray Tanner may feel that way now. He was on hand for the se cond game of the state champion- |ihip;series in Whiteville and was :yery impressed with Key during a . 1-0 loss. ' ; ' Afterwards, he approached ijátnes and asked, "Is this the same ^ibeimy Key I heard couldn’t do : Cimything Init throw hard?” ; ; ' “I think he i^ ized Key vias go- ‘5j:ing to be quite a pitcher in col- ilege,” said Ijames. “Wake got a . V ^ / I ; ‘ jjji; Some were wondering how ;^yames could have left '№plett and : ; t^McDuiiel out of the sta ^ g lineup the fii№ game. !^?Bolh >vere hurting. I I^ VMcDiniel had tom tendons in r i ^ Kand,” Ijwties said. "It (ougK for him to swing a bat. ‘ ; ;>Jie never ootnplained and tried to we knewiic was hurting. l*'.^e did what he could do but it may : the whoie Winter to get it back decent shape.’’, . / ^ $Jh e iMtdihand showed in his hit- : He entered thè series hitting ; and five games later, had :rdròpped to under .420. ' ' Triplett had a sore arm after pit- . a brilliant 10 innings in game ■V ’>foUr. ;; ^r.'^Gray Bovender played the last :^|itiwo games with a swollen lip. He Vwas hit with the ball in game 3. :'-'L‘!He played with an unreal lip,” f>ljames said, “but he gave it all he ;';Kad. ' Ansio and Scott McDaniel were ; - also injured during the series, ” he :;-said. ;'-Big Losses : ; ! Mocksville lost only six players : -but they were huge losses; Mike : ; McDaniel, Brocke Walker, Nate Newsome, Denny Key, Ansio : ; Fowler and Matt Webb. Consider; • The six combined for 164 of : • the team’s 432 runs scored. I;: • The six combined for an ; • average of .300. The leam average : ; was .308. : ; • The six combined for 21 of the : ; team's 52 homers. ; ; • The six combined for 150 of : ; the team's 370 RBIs ; ; • The six combined for 34 of the ; ; team's 95 doubles. ; ; • The six combined for six of the ; ; team's nine triples. • The six combined for 260 of the team's 580 hits. ; • The six even conihincd for 44 • of the team’s 78 stok-n Ixises, Auto.. A ir, P.S., e re s t Car 1 9 8 7 M A Z D A R X 7 One Owner. Like New, Low MllesrMust See SAVE MOOOS * 10,900°° wuSwiBROoifiSBFA u te .« A ir Very Nice Car. Auto., Air, P.S.. P.W. 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Me also knows how good ihcy can he lliis year in ihe Soulh Pied- nionl ConlerciKe. “Their jayvee leam wcnl 8-2 lasl year so the juniors arc good. Bul ihey have some seniors iiaek who'll do well. The coaching slalT will do a good job." Wesl has qualified for the slate playoffs in cach of the last two years. Morning I’raclicc;.s The morning practices arc over and the team will now begin work ing oul from 3:30-6 p.m. But Ward said there are benefits from prac ticing in the early hours. “ I’ve always liked morning practices,” he said. “ ll’s always worked well in the pasl, Il is cool and the boys can get used to the heal gradually as the day warms up. The boys seemed lo like il,” Injuries There are four players still nur sing aches and pains in an attempt lo rejoin Iheir leammalcs on the practice field: • Steven Parker is recovering from appendicitis. The light end is expected to rejoin the leam Aug, 21, • Runningback Robin Campbell was in an automobile accident rccenlly and may have some plastic surgery done. His slalus is unccrlain. • Chad Morrell broke a hand during Ihc llrsl week bul Ihc cast; is off and he is hack on the play ing field, although nol 100 percent,- • Brian Crotts is nursing a shoulder injury. Ticket Sales Athletic director Bill Peeler has^ announced the lickel prices for Iht foolball games in 1989. ’ Tickets will be S3 pre-sale and' 54 at the gate. There will be a SI admi.s.sion to' the Friday night scrimmage at’. North Davidson. The War Eagles’ first game at'- North Iredell Sept. I will start at- 7:30 p,m, , Coaching Changes One Davie coach is taking on a: new sport and another is coming; back, Angie Browder is taking over the; volleyball program from Matt; Wilson, who coached only one; year but led the team to the state; playoffs, Davie lost to North For-; syth in the first round, Browder; will still coach Ihe girls varsity; basketball team, Shelby Nichols left her girls ten-; nis job last year to Steve Hurleyi; But Hurley left school after only; one year and Nichols is returning.; She doesn’t have her tennis courts; ready, however. They are being; resurfaced this week, ; , E n te rp rise -R e co rd F o o tb a ll E d ifio n C o m i n g l h u i s d a y ! n a a 1989 Davi* Football Schedule Sept. 1 — at N orth Iredell Sept. 8 — at Statesville Sept. 15 — A N S O N C O U N T Y Sept. 22 ^ at Parkland Sept. 2 9 — G . D U D L E Y O ct. 6 ^ M T . T A B O R O ct. 13 — at R eynolds O ct. 20 — W E S T F O R S Y T H O ct. 27 — at South R ow an N ov. 3 -■ G . 6 R IM SJLEY Highway 158, 2 Miles ^ Ffóm'Mw)(|vUte DoveftQuaUShcUtJ ......." '1 • 8 8 1 S c J ^ » 1 8 « (3 Weeks Only) ^ B o w s * S i r A ^ G a w G t l M r r SATURDAY NIGHT S r r iK P m si W i n s t o nR a c in g Sent-•• S TO C K CA RRACING G o o d u ’s SEASON-ENDING ISO-LAP MODIFIED RACE ^ Plus Sportsman, Slreel Stock & BlunderbusI Races The Hardeo's-V^TQR alr-condllloned 1989 Ford Festiva will be given away at this event, by drawing from chances given 10 lemale guests at Ladies' Night events this year. Matt Reznicek (56) zeroes in on a West Rowan runner In Saturday’s scrim m age.Spoflsm an Series Adiiiibston Adults, 18 and oldur — $ 10 Agos 12 -17 — $5 Acjos 6 -11 — SI Children undor 6 FREE wilh aduli escori ________________PLENTY OF FREE PARKING________________ FOR INFORMATION ABOUT STADIUM RACING CALL (9t9) 723-4267 BUSCH. DAVIE COUNTY KNTKRPKISK RKCOR!), THURSDAY, Aiij;. 17, 1989-5B » f J K A -.:..1 DAVIE AUTO PARTS O v e r 1 M illio n P a rts In S to cic 6 E T x A * 1 0 oe< ► This Bonus Refund Must Be Clipped Out And Sent With Regular Refund Offer R E F U N D F R O M M O T O R C R A F T Motorcraft B O N U S ''R E F U N D ”O FFE R ! iBONUS "REFUND" OFFERi Motoicraft YO U GET A * 1 0 ° ° REFUlVD O n M o t o r c r a ft TESTED TOUCH B A T T E R I E S r MOTORCRAFT BONUS REFUND OFFER ■ $5 00 Relund on Moioftran T«l«d Tough phjs BallBfy. To inert w your -I r«furKltoSiOOOctipoutan(iaiiachihitc«nilcatetoth«MotorcranR«lun(j'. I .Our sal« price - - coupon «»»fciWe in t/wsaye.Sut>iec(fotwinipnrMcf on tf»Mo(ofcraft fl#- ! Mall-m Refund” ’ ! ! ' ’ ’ ! ! ' . ' ! ! ! ' . * " ! ' . ! ' ” -500 * coupon. Ihjfehmrmrttb*mrt#b«tw«nt/tl«9 and w m «. ah J B o n u iM a u -m iie fu n a !.! . . ! ! ! , . ! ! ! “ — - Your Final C oti After Refunds -»I:» I I I'i 7 r* 4 0 M o n th A s L o w A s ^27.69 8 3 7 . 6 9 O u r L o w P r i c e 4 T a x — 5 . 0 0 M a i l - I n R e f u n d — 5 . 0 0 B o n u s R e f u n d F r o m M o t o r c r a f t ” I 5 0 M o n th A s L o w A s ^33.29 - • • '-'ii I 8 4 3 . 2 9 O u r L o w P H c e ; + iT | — 5 . 0 0 M a i l - I n , R i e f u n c l ? ' I ^ — $ . 0 0 B o n u s R e f u n d ' I 14 IF r o m M o t o r c r a f t 6 0 M o n th A s L o w A s ^38.89 M 8 . 8 9 O u r L o w P r i c e T a x 5 . 0 0 M a i l - I n R e f u n d ^ ^ — 5 . 0 0 B o n u s R e f u n d F r o m M o t o r c r a f t : ■ (PRICES DO NOT INCLUDE TAX) O f f e r G o o d A u g u s t 1 6 T h r u A ii g u s t 3 1 , 1 9 8 9 M otorcian E X C E E D S T H E N E E D Clip & Save Newspaper Coupon For Bonus MaiMn Refund Änd Ask For Regular MaiMn Refund At Time of Purchase DAViE AUTO PARTS Co. 1 9 1 W i i i c e s b o r o S t . M a c h i n e S h o p 704-634-2155 P a r t s D e p t . 704-634-2151 T i r e D e p t . 704-634-5129 M o c l c s v i l l e i N . C . fiii_i)AViK COUNTY i-NTKUi’Kisi: ur.c:oui). TIIUKSDAV. Лиц. 17. I9S‘) Titles continued from P. 115 ; "Il was a iDlal (cam cllbn." said Livcngcuxl. In the opcnin;: 19-4 vÍL-uiiy. Mocksvillc slarlcil strong, scoring five in the first. Kim McClcllaml .scored four runs in llic game aiul Stevenson three. ■Kalina Wagner hil Iwo home runs and scorcd lour times in the victory over Henderson County. Again, the team got olí to a ijuick siarl. .scoring three in the first. The Cubs jumped out to a 7-1 advantage in Mocksville's only IÓ.SS. Chri.sty Cook. Stevenson. Wagner and McClelhind led a tlircc-run rally in llic Iburlh lo ciil the margin to 7-4. Wagner and McClelland had hits to score one in the .sixth and Tracic Abshcr’s RBI in the seventh brought home the final run. In the championship game, Alicia Hayes, Michellc Trivetle. Cook and Tracy Robbins all had imponani hils in the sevenlli lo help tlie comcback. The all-star team was made up of players from Tiny’s, Stars, Royalcltes and William R. Davie. ■ ‘‘W c had a good bunch of girls," said Livengood. “ Hitting was our .strength.” Midgets Sweep '.Johnny Williard and Kenny Slone coached the Midgets to vic- tóries over the Mooresville Stars, 17-11 and 9-2. :in the first game, Mocksville fell bèhind 5-2 afler one inning. But an eight-run sccond put the game L e a g u e B e g i n s ■ Ijoe Boyette has released the first • week of play in the Mocksville/Davie Parks and Recreation Department’s co-ed so'ftballTeague: / A r e a S p o r t s , . Monday, Aug. 21 7 p.m. — Bad News Bulls vs. Tiny's. 8.— Jockey 2 vs. Floyd’s 9 — Hazèi's Grew vs. Fuller •; Wednesday, Aug. 23 .7 — Unknowns‘ vs. Crown : . ' 8 vs. ; Enterprise-Record M 9 — Tiny’s vs. Jockey 2 : Î Thursday, Aug. 24 : 7 — Floyd’s vs. Bulls 8 — Enterprise-Record vs. Unknowns '.' 9 — Jockey I vs. Blasters. Velleybair Practice ^ New yolteyball coac^ . Angie,' Browder has announced that the first practice will be TTiursday from ‘'3 :^ 5 ;30 p.m. in the gym. Í All girls wanting to participate heéd to hiring their physicals with théine' Mocksville’s Midget softball team won its second straight state recreation championship last укеек. Players are (Front row, from left): Jonette Williard, April House, Christy Heiner, W endy Boger and Tina Bailey. (Second row): Elizabeth Green, Beth Wall, Tracie Sechrest, Janelle McClam rock and Stephanie Jam es. (Third row); Coach Johnny Williard, Tera Johnson, Holly Snider, Denise Beck, Am anda Sigm on and Coach Kenny Stone. (Not pictured): Anna Wall. away. Janelle McClamrock, Denise Beck, Jonette Williard, Beth Wall and Tracic Sechrest all had con- .sccutive .singles before Holly Snider’s double cleared the bases. Stephanie James knocked in Ihe final runs of Ihc inning with a single. Scchrest, Snider and James singled in a three-run fourth and three errors, along with singles by Williard and Snider brought home four more in the fifth. 0 II was Mocksville who got off to the good start in tlie second game with IWO runs. Scchrest walked, ' followed by singles by Snider, James and Sigmon. Five singles in the third, in cluding April Hou.se’s big hit, scorcd four more. Beth Wall, Amanda Sigmon and Snider had the big hits in a three-run fourth. Players making up the state cham pion Junior girls softball team are: (Front row, from left): Am an da Swisher, Kim McClelland, Katina W agner and Alicia Hayes. (Second row): tyiichelle Trivette,. Robin Stevenson, Tracy Robbins, Am ber Livengood, Jam ie Livengood and Christy Cook. (Third., row): Coaches Tiny Livengood and Lynn Vogler. (Not pictured): Angie and Tracie Absher. — Photo by Ronnie Gallagher' ProWrettlIng All-star championship wrestling returns to the Brock Gym Satur day, Sept. 2 at 8 p.m.' Advance tickets are $6 and can be purchas ed at F& F Barbecuc. Children under five arc admitted free. The main event is a tag team match between the Tokyo Bullets and Magnum B.A. and Man Mountain Link. Link is a former titleholder in Ihc N W A and A W A and is Ihe current IW A World Brass Knuckles cham pion. He is also the star of the new hit video cassette, "Madm an Maniacs and Lunatics.’’ Joining Link is a special attrac tion just for the kids as Batman faces The Midnight Rider. Also on the card, the Young Stallion mecis Don Valentine, Mr. Wrestling 2 wrestlers the Super Rocker, plus many others. An autograph and photo session with Ihe wrestlers will be held prior to the matches. T i c k e t s All tickets lo Davie County foot ball games this season will be S.^ presale and $4 at the gate. For more infornialion on ticket packages through the hoosieis dub. call Ihe high school. D o o r s e t I I E n tr y L o c k s e ta n d D e a d lo c kOne key convenience lor opening both locks. Single cylinder r throw deadbolt. Fourlceys Included. Polished brass finish. l»690T/’3 S E R M S i U R i 2 5 ' 16/3 T r o u b le L ig h t Durable, metal grounded lamp guard with hook. #S4455/S691 S B R W S H W . * P r o fe s s io n a l Q u a lity 2 " X 6 0 - W . D u c t t a p e Heavy-duty, silver laminated cloth with extra-strong adhesive. Seals ail air duels. Many other uses. #SSR600 . 4 6 " J I*«*» J Aqua-Une’TWo- H a n d le W a s h e r le s s L a v a to r y F a u c e t Chrome-piated washerless laucel with acrylic handles. For 4" centers. Liletime mlr. warranty against drips and leaks.#TC8100 Lavatory Faucat with Pop-Up 1 -L b ^B o xo tN a U » American-made nails lealm centerad haads. uniform pointa and clean shanka: 2'/.', 3‘, or 3»* tong.:. #81003,4,37,05 S o n T o ile t S e a t Fits regular bowl. Vinyl covered foam with dial-on* hinge for easy installafion. Assorted colors. #13D-000.23.34.71.76. 515,162 $ ß B 9 SERW lO m R. H a c k s a w AmBrican-made quality irame adjusts to accept 10' or 12' blade. Shock-resistant, rusl-iesistant Irame, «SSR5 $^99 S E m n S 'm R .Latex Caulk Economical white caulk cleans easily with water. Dries quickly; can be painted 10 minutes after application, 10 oz. 6 9 7-7V4" C a rb id e - T ip p e d B la d e General purpose 16-tooth blade for. particle boards, heavy-duty framing, rough-cutting plywood, chipboard, composition board. #27150 $ ^ 9 9 T o ile t T a n k B a llc o c k Stops shut-oll leaks. Non-corrosive stainless steel control components. Easy installation. #200A $ Q 2 9 Individual deaieis mjy liimi quantities. Individual dea'«i& ma/ not stoci a)i items. Some stores may lesliict ileins lo casti and cairy terms only. V H a rd w a re L u m b e r H o m e C entersSEmnSmR We Can H elp CAUDELL SERVISTAR LUMBER COMPANY 162 Sheek Street, M OCKSVILLE ’,?лУ»а »A 1)ЛУ1К COUN ГУ KNTICItPRISK RIX'ORI), TIIUKHDAV, Лиц. 17, 19«9-7В Çoftball Women continued from P. Ul Long Wait Afler defcaling Shores and the Junior Stars, 7-6, Cornalzer’s had to sit and wait lo sec who its op ponent would be. Shores defeated Crown Wood to make the final. Cornatzer's appeared on the way to ending the toumanienl early, go ing into the lop of the .seventli, leading 5-3. But Shores prolonged the scries by scoring five for the 8-5 win. Donna Whillock, Tina Dull, Wanda Foster, Kathy Carter and Linda Polls all crossed the plate in the seventh. i'T w o errors cost us the ballgame,” Cornatzer said. "W e led all the way until the seventh. 1 just loid the girls lo pul lhal game behind us.” Her players apparently listened, blistering the softball for six runs in the first inning of the final game. Lora Smith reached on an error and sciircd on Donna W'esl's home run. Joni Parks and liuHy Ikvk had iriple.s ¡1) the inning and .Samantha Simpson added a double. Vanessa Carter also had a hit. Dollic SifiniDn .scored on Jane Whitlock's hil in the liotloni ofthe first for Shores but three Cornatzer runs in Ihc .second ballooned the score to 8-1. Smilh scored again ahead of a home run. this one by Parks. A Janice Jackson triple and Carler’s single broughl home another. Dull scorcd a run in the .second but Cornatzer's put the e,xclania- lion point on the victory in the third with four more. Dana Zimmer man, Simpson, Cornatzer and Wesl all had singles and Parks boomed a double. Beck, Caner, Jackson and Parks all had three hits In Ihc game while West added two. “Except for lhat last game, wc were exactly even,” said Cor natzer. “ For some reason, we just got liol in lhat game. Hul usually, whoever iiiakcs Ihc errors is the team that's ¡;oiiig lo lose. The oilier leam lakes advantages of the mistakes.'' Cornatzer was also proud lhat her team has come so far in two years. ■'Shores has been together longer than us.'' she said. “ We were prclly good Iasi year bul wc added Bufl'y, Lora and Samantha and il made us lhal much sinmgcr." Nole.s: • Cornalzer's and Shores tied during the regular season with a 13-2 record. • Rocky Cope and Robbie Jackson also helped Cornatzer coach Ihc leam. • II seemed the toughest game of the tournament for Cornalzer's was ils win over Ihe Jr. Slars. “That team really improved as the season went along,” Cornatzer said. • In the winner’s bracket game wilh Shores, West had two hits and scored three runs. Linda Potts m akes the big stretch to nip a Crown Wood runner at first base. — Photo by Ronnie Gallagher Bailey’s Tony Seaford leads a team m ate hom e during an earlier gam e at Fork. Tracy Dyson Is all concentrastion as the pitch com es toward the plate. — Photo by Ronnie Gallagher - i- f - Photo by Jim Barringer M e n ^iconUniwd from P. IB /'(Fuller had taken a 1-0 lead in the I ; tbp bf the first in the first game on I Ghril Anderson’s RBI single. But I ilngenoU-Rand came back for five iiin it» half . -V , Billy Widl, John McDaniel and ||№l.Myers had singles. After an Sndlfa aid Richard Pierce add- Fuller pulled to within 5-3 and :;it suyed that Way until the fifth ^when McDaniel scored.;' V:^erioll-Rand broke the game IV dpen with a fi>ur>hin sixthi Rhoda 3 and Davkl McCray had singles a^ 'after an error, Widl blasted a tri ple ^'ihat got by the outfielders. Haipe imd Phil Myers also had hits • in t^ inning. • Fuller finished third in the regular season at 9-7 while I-R was fourth at 8-8. • Barneycastle was the favorite but fell into the loser’s bracket. It was scheduled to meet 1-R in the loser’s bracket championship Mon day but most of the team was on vacation and it forfeited. • Harpe was the league’s leading hitter, coming into the tournament with 26 hits in his last 30 at-bats. • Chris Hendrix hit a home run over the fence in the first game but under league rules, it was nothing more than a long out. Home runs are not allowed in league play. • In the first game, I-R was led by Wall, McDaniel, Myers, Pierce and McCray, all with two hits. Southern was the only Fuller player with two. P l t e b & P u M (Located On Lewisville-Clemmons Rd Next To Keymid In Westwood Village) (918) 766-PUTT U n i q u e C o n c e p t I n M i n a t u r e G o l f O p e n in g F rid a y , A u g u s t 1 8 th (Weather Permitting) F r e e Ic e C r e a m C o n e s T o T h e F i r s t 5 0 0 G o l f e r s C o m p l i m e n t s O f M c D o n a l d s In C l e m m o n s O w ners Jim Anton And S teve M oyer 8 B - D A V IE COUNTY líNTKRI’KISIÍ KKCOHI), THUK.SDAV, Л ик. 17. 1 ^ 4 ÍG a lla g h e r fxontinucd from P. 2H ? school alhlclcs should lake. : “ I think lhc firsl Iwo years, ihey oughi lo play -..everything. Bul the last two, ihcy ouglil lo siari specializing.” He points lo Wesl For.syih junior pitcher Mike i Lovelacc, who began llirowing basehall in carly ¡^February, wcnl right through ihe Legion sea.son ".-and iniinediately kept working his strong left arm > a s quarterback of the Tilan team, r *' “ M ikc’.s still young," Ijame.s .said, "bm I e.\- ‘.■pcct him lo specialize next year. “Specializing will help Chad Triplett loo. C^When he comes to us next summer, he will have ’ just graduated and he won't have lo think aboul ;-foolball or basketball. He’ll be thinking haschall : all the way.” •’.Club Rccord . : In Ijames’ first year, he and his Mock.sville ;.team shattered the club record by winning 37 : games, lo.sing 15 and tying one. The previous ■ mark was .set in 1987 when Barry Whitlock’s team went 27-20 and won the Southern Division. “ It’s surprising lhal we did .so well in our first year,” Ijames .said. “Our athletic ability carried us through many of the games.” He said the Legion would be a 12-month-a-year job. _. “ W e’ll visit the boys during football sea.son, ; ;find oul who’s in school and figure oul the ; enrollment numbers we need. We were successful ■ and hopefully, thal will bring even more players voul.” V Mocksviile may have surprised a few people in vthe Southern Division this season but Ijames ; knows it will never be the same. ; “ The teams knew we were good but they ; didn’t know how good. Now they do and I want * those teams to know that every year, VMocksville's going to be pretty darn good,” he said. "But they'll he more pressure next year. I'.vcrybody will he shooting Гог us every game." The .Southern Division is dilTcrcnl I'rom other leagues, also. "D ow n easl. there are ahoul three or lour teams lhal always dominate." Ijames pointed oul. " The Haiulcls. Whilei illes. and .Snow Hills are always there. Ooklshoro mighl slip in there and Wilson has some talent hul it's usually the same ones." The Northern Division is limiled also. "There are four good teams and Ihe other lour aren't any good." he said. "In Area 4. there's mil a dominating Icam, Bessemer Cily should be good next year, along wilh Cherryville. "But in the Southern Division, you heller come lo play every night or you're going lo get beat. Any of tho.se teams can w in." And that's why Ijames pushed anil pushed and pushed his players, striving for excellence. Fans, players and even Southern Division coaches knew before the season of Ijames' reputation, and after seeing il firsl-hand, some were shacked with his gung-ho attitude. Bul he is just preparing them for life afler high school, when you’re not a prinima donna anymore. Once in college, coaches are much laugher Ihan even Ijames. The players seems to recognize this. Almost every player said they learned more this season under him than they ever had. Ijames handed oul constructive criticism, not negative crilicisiii. “ He was a tremendous coach,” said Brocke Walker. “ The only reason I played was Dale Ijames,” said Denny Key. Ijames appreciates the compliments bul he’s here to do a job. “ I want to help bring Mocksviile the best Legion team in the stale every year,” Ijames said. “ I’m not in it for a popularity contest.” Legion C hefs Mocksvllle Post 174 had its own chefs Saturday when the Legion ballplayers and their parents were honored with a barbecue at Rich Park. However, Betty Jo Laym on seem s a bit miffed over the way Gift Basham and Gray Laym on are preparing the food. Basham and Laym on said the meat w as "the best groundhog in Davie County.’’ — Photo by Milce Barnhardt ¿ S te p h e n s P e r fo r m s In N a tio n a ls I Harold Stephens said he wasn’t going to the World Senior Games in Eugene Oregon, although he did qualify. “ I ’m not in that class of athlete,” said the 66-year old runner. But he did participate in the Na- tioi^ Senior Games in St. Louis, Mo. .'lune 24 and placed in the SiOQO^meter i^ w a lk . Stephens was a busy man in the nationals. He ran in the 200, 400, 800, 1,500, 5,000 and 10,000-meler runs during his five- day slay in St. Louis. “ The runners were really good,” said Stephens. “ It’s nice to see 70 and 80-year old men run ning and participating.” His fifth place fmish in the race- waik amazed him because, “I never practice lhal event.” Stephens also placed ninth in the 10,000 meters, finishing in 48 minutes. Keep Up With Davie Sports Eacit Week W i t h A S u b s c r i p t i o n T o t h e D a v i e C o u n t y E n t e r p r i s e - R e c o r d Send check for $18 To:Enterprise-Record P.O. Box 525 Mocksviile, NC 27028 Vinyl! Vinyl! Vinyl! O v e r s t o c k O n V i n y l F l o o r i n g s F r o m ; To •la*» A Yard O u t s t a n d i n g v a l u e s o n e q u a l i t y f l o o r i n g 7 - N a m e B r a n d s C'|'|'''pSips Flooring Co. Located On Kinnamon Rd. Near The 1-40 Overi»ss ( 9 1 9 ) 7 6 6 - 2 3 6 6 O u r P r i c e s W i n F l o o r Y o u ! Optic Sliop ш ш ш Single Vision Lenses Bifocal Straight Top 25’s Or 28’s » 1 4 » » ♦38” (Up to a 4.00 diopter sphere power and a 2.00 diopter cylinder power) Frame not over a 54mn) eye size ' = ' Choose Benetton or other fashion designer frames This offer good for orders placed August 16th thru August 26th, 1989 Ж « Jt И "Tv-* A B C F a m ily F o o t A n d A n k le C lin ic Robert L. Sprinkle, Jr, DPM Robert L. Spripkle, III, DPM Are please to announce the association of Ralph S. Sprinkle, DPM In the practice of Podiatric Medicine Surgery of the Foot and Ankle and Sports .Medicine 2240 Cloverdale Drive Cloverdale Professional Bidg., Suite 216 Winston-Salem, N.C. (919) 724-1951 17 W. IMaIn Street Thomasville, N.C. 472-7543 144 N. Cherry Street, Suite 4 Kemersville, N.C. 996-8881 We feature.... All no line bifocals Ultra-violet 400 Protection Scratch Resistant Coatings Hi-index Plastic or Polycarbon Lenses All Gradient and Fashion Tints Photogrey Lenses Reflection Free Lenses E y e w e a r f o r t h e E n t i r e F a m i i y •FRAME & LENS GUARANTEE Crown Unconditionally Guarantees Your New Prescription Lenses and Frames For One full Year From Date Of Purchase. I 1.-4, Optical Frames By Now available at All Crown Optic Shop Locations In Crown Drug Stores At Bermuda Quay Shopping Center Advance, NC 998-0431 Mon., Tues., Tburs. ft Fridoy 10-6 p.m.Wed. & Sat. 10-1 p.m. Willow Oak Shopping Center Mocksviile, NC 704-634-6216 Thun. A Friday 10-6 p.m. Hanes Mall Winston-Salem, NC 768-9322Mon.-Ffl. 10-8:30 p.m. S(l. 10-e p.m. DAVIK COUNTY KN I ICKI'KISK UIXOKl), 'mUUSDAY, Лиц. 17, 1989-9И School Lunch Price Policy Announced 'The Diivic Coumy Board nf diliicalinn has atinounccil its policy for free and rcdiiccd-pricc meals for children unable lo pay the full price of meals served under the Na tional School Lunch, iiml School Breakfast Programs, Each school and the central of fice has a copy of the policy, which niay be reviewed by any inlereslcd party, : Children froni families whose in come i.s at or below the levels ,slu)wn arc elijiiblc for free or l^educed-price meals. Application forms are being sent lb all homes wilh a lelter to parents or guardians. To apply for free or . reduccd-price meals, households should fill out the application and return it to the .school. Additional copies arc available at the prin cipal's office in each school. For the school officials lo deter mine eligibility, households receiv ing food stamps or A FD C must list .the child’s name, their food stamp or A F D C case number and the .signature and name of an adult household member. Households .not receiving food stamps or Hmisvliold ■Size I -» 4 ,S f) 7 8 For each additional household member add: .S 7. 1(1 13 15, 1« 21 2.'^, 20. u:ir 774 .42(- .07S ,730 ,382 ,034 ,686 ,33S 1 ui-;ic Month Week U K D IIC K I) IM d C K Mollili \Vi'ol¡ S 648 SISO .SII,063 S ')22 S 213 '2,652 .S64 I ,()У0 1,311 1 „“¡зг 1.7.S3 1.474 2,iy.S '221 2,‘i2 303 3.S4 40,‘i 4.-^6 507 14.S37 18,611 22,385 26.1.59 29,933 33,707 .37,481 1,237 1,55 I 1,866 2,180 2,495 2.809 3,124 286 358 431 504 576 649 721 '51 '3,774 '315 '73 A F D C must list: names of all household members; social securi ty mimbers of all adult hmi,sehold members or a staiement source of the income received by cach household member; and the signature of an adult hou.sehold member certifying that the infor mation provided is correct. Applications may be submitted at any time during the year. Households that list a food stamp or A F D C case number must report when the hou.sehold no longer receives these benefits. Other households approved for bencnts arc required lo reporl increases in household income of over S50 per month or $600 per year and decreases in household size. Also, if a household member becomes unemployed or if the household size increases the household should contact the school. Such changes make the children of the household eligible for benefits if the household’s in- CI4I1L’ I'all.s jl (ir below Ihc k-\els .shown ahnvc. Under the priivislon of the Ггсс and rcd(iceil-|iiice policy Tammj' .Stromkii will review applicalions and detcrniiiic eliglhllity. If a parent or ¡¡uardian is dissatisfied wilh Ihc rulini; of llie olTicial, he may wish lo discuss the decision wilh the delcriiiiiiing ofllcial on an inlormal basis. If the parent wishes to make a formal appeal, he may make a re quest either orally or in writing to: Dwight Jack.son. 220 Cherry St., Mocksville, 634-5921, for a hear ing lo appeal the decision. The policy conlaiii.s an outline of Ihc hearing procedure. In ccrtain cases foster children are also eligible for these benefits. If a hou,sehold has fo.sier children living with Ihcm and wishes lo app ly for such meals for them, the household .should .so advise Ihc school on Ihc application. The infomialion provided by the household is confidential and will be used only for purpo.ses of deter mining eligibility and verifying data. K i d s & C a n t a l o u p e s Justin Latham, 5, and Heather Boger, 2, pose with a 19' lb. cantaloupe grown by their grandfather, Hoover Boger, off Ben Anderson Road, S c h o o l L u n c h M e n u s The Davie County school menus for the week of August 22-25 are as follows: T U E SD A Y , AUG, 22 Breakfast: Cereal with toast or egg, ham and cheese on toast ('/i sandwich), choice of juice and milk. W E D N E SD A Y , AUG . 23 ( Breakfast; Cereal with toast or grilled cheese sandwich, choice of ■juice and milk. •THURSDAY, AUG . 24 Breakfast: Cereal with toast or blueterry muffin (2), choice of jiiice and milk; ■ PR ID A Y ^jA U q . 25 |ÌBrèakfÌaÌÌCerea! w toast or sausage biscuit, ciioice of juice and milk. GRADES K-6 T U E S D A Y , AUG . 22 Lunch: Turkey Rider with Italian dressing or Sloppy Joe, can taloupe, potato rounds, buttered com, applesauce and milk. Bonus; Slaw - shredded lettuce and tomato, W E D N E SD A Y , AUG . 23 Lunch: Hamburger combo on rye, baked beans, fruit cup, potato salad, fried com and milk, № nus: Lettuce, tomato and pickle, T H U R SD A Y , AUG . 24 Lunch: Chicken salad with crackers on lettuce, taco with shredded cheese, fresh vegetables and dip, chilled watermelon, bak ed potato with butter, chilled peaches and milk. Bonus: Shredd ed lettuce and tomato. FR ID A Y , AUG, 25 Lunch: Ham with macaroni and chee.se or pizza, tossed salad, can taloupe, pineapple tidbits, green beans, roll and milk. G R A D E S 7-12 T U E SD A Y , AUG . 22 Lunch: Turkey Rider with Italian dressing. Sloppy Joe, can taloupe, potato rounds, buttered com, applesauce and milk. Bonus: Slaw - shredded lettuce and tomato, W E D N E SD A Y , AUG , 23 Lunch: Spaghetti or combo on rye, succatash, fruit cup, potato salad, French bread and milk. Bonus: Lettuce, tomato and pickle, T H U R SD A Y , AUG , 24 Lunch: Chicken salad with crackers on lettuce, taco with shredded cheese, fresh vegetables and dip, chilled watermelon, bak ed potato with butter and chilled peaches. Bonus: Shredded leltuce and loiiiaio. F R ID A Y , AUG , 25 2448 E. Lewisville - Clemmons Rd. Westwood Village Shopping Center, Clemmons Fast! Free Delivery S e r v i n g : . <. B u f f a l o C h i c k e n W i n g s P i z z a S u b s . S a l a d s , C h e e s e c a k e A S t e a k F r i e s ^ 'S p e c ia l 2 M e d i u m * v p - . 'X 3 h e e s e P i z z a s ■ ■ ■ ^ 8 ® ® Tix Includ ‘ 1 . 5 0 P e r T o p p in g B u y 1 L a r g e P iz z a , G e t A S e c o n d O f E q u a l V a lu e A t % P r ic e > At Clemmons Location Only I Fdr Delivery Minimum Order »5« Limited Delivery Area 11 a.m. • 12 a.m. Mon.-Thurs. : :11 a.rn; -1 p.m., Fri. & Sal. i p.m. -12 p.m., Sunday 766-9700 Now Hiring Cooks & Drivers^ NO CHECKS ACCEPTED J u k e B o x 7 6 6 - 9 7 0 0 O p e n in g S o o n ! M id -A u g u s t John’s I n C o n j u n c t i o n W i t h P iz z a E x p re s s S e r v i n g B e e r , H a m b u r g e r s , H o t D o g s B a r - B - Q u e , S u b s & S a n d w i c h e s P i z z a & B u f f a l o W i n g s In O u r D in in g R o o m N e x t T o P izza E x p r e s s N o w h i r i n g w a i t r e s s e s & c o o k s f l e x i b l e h o u r s & d i s c o u n t m e a l s Lunch; Ham with macaroni and cheese, tuna salad, tossed salad, cantaloupe, pineapple tidbits, green beans, roll and milk. S H A D Y G R O V E O N L Y T U E SD A Y , AUG , 22 Lunch: Sloppy Joe, cantaloupe, corn and milk. Bonus: Slaw, W E D N E SD A Y , AUG, 23 Lunch: Hamburger, baked beans, fruit cup and milk. Bonus: Lettuce, tomato and pickle, T H U R SD A Y , AUG , 23 Lunch: Taco wilh shredded cheese, baked potato, watermelon and milk. Bonus: Shredded lettuce and tomato, F R ID A Y , AUG . 24 Lunch: Ham and clieesc sand wich, pineapple tidbits, green beans and milk. Bonus: Lettuce and tomato. [ш ана. THE PERFECT COMBINATION OF PRICE. POWER AND PERFORMANCE. • PaMi1ul21,2cctwo-cycleenglne • Pro-Flre"EI«dronlc Ignition lor easy starts • Centrifugal ctiitch for qutek starting aniJ easy operation • New Heavy Duty Echomatic'* dual line head • Converts easily lor blade use with optional kit • Accepts optional culthator or underwater cutting attachments • Lightweight-under 10 Its, M o cksville A u to m o tive 884 S. Main St., Mocksville, N.C. (At the overhead bridge)704-634-2944 D a v ie H ig h f A t h le t ic - B ^ s t e r C lu b M o b k s v i" - Last year your contributions helped to:, , ; ^ ‘ 1. Buy sweatsuits for the newly formed soccer team i ' 2. Buy new weight equipment for the wrestling team, football players and - a n y a n d a l l students ,wanting to work out in the weight room i 3. Buy all letters and trophies for the eleven sports offered at Oavie High'; 4. Sponsor two continental breakfasts honoring the senior athletes 5. Sponsor two athletic banquets honoring the participants In all':8ports at: - : Davie High School. ^ B t g g o r C o n f e r e n c e , B i g g o r C h m l l m n g m s ^ ' We need your talents, not only your oMmetiujcohtrilHMais, but y o u r M d y o u r fg g g g . Please review membei^hip options and help ns. Merolitrshli) A, Otncriil Membership B. H’ar ragie Club Individuai Corporale C. Big "D " Club Individuai Corporale D. All-Events Aihlelie Pass E. SlaJium Club MEMBERSHIP OPTIONS noiurtion SI0,00 525.00 5100.00 5100.00 5200.00 5125,00 51,000.00 xrship in Atblclic Booster Club 1, Membership m Booster Club •2, Name in football program ' Ik’cause itf priming deadlines, nicmtierships niusl be received by August 25. III included in the ftHUhall luugrani. Any nienilK'rships receiv ed alter the programs h.i\e gone lo press NVll.l. \0T lie included. 'J'lease jlnte lhal any lost and'or sloleil All-livenl Alhletie Passes Wil l. N01' Ik- replaced. J ' 1,1. Membership m Booster Club - ' 2. One season pass forone person lo all regular home season foolball games ■ vi.).; / ■.. 3. Name in 1989-90 yearbook . »4, Name.ln foolball program . ■ . ■ • , 1. Membership m Booster Club 2. An all-event aihlelie pass cnlilling bearer plus one person (2 people) 10 aliend all regular season home games of щй sport. Does not, ' , cover post-season games ' 3. Name in 1989-90 yarbook *4. Name in foolball program Individual Or Corporale 1. Membership in Bcxisler Club 2. Tuo season paise.i I» all liome foolball games wilh two seals in ihc press box. 3. Ttto all-event aihlelie passes as meniloned above (4 people) 4. Name in 1989-90 yearbook •5. Name in to|ball program 19 8 9 - 1 9 9 0 M e m b e rsh ip R e g is tr a tio n N A M E _ ,\i)i)ui:ss 14IONE _ M K M U E U S llll’ SI'.I.EC nO N A M O U N T E N C I.O SK » ______ Ketiirii form lo; P.O. Bo.x 222 For More Inlorinatioii CaU Sherry Ko-ster At 919-998-8293 O r Sut- Callison At 704-492-7380 “Vttrltb :'/■ ilO B -P A V lE COUNTV KNTKKI’KISK UKCOIU). I IIU R S P A V ^jV »;^^ INGERSOLL-flAND. E m p l o y e e s c o n g r a t u l a t e M o c k s v i l l e - D a v i e ’ s A m e r i c a n L e g i ó n P o s t 1 7 4 o n a t e r r i f i c s e a s o n I ^ r i - l i ' Brocke Walker Nate Newsome Denny Key Matt Webb Ansio Fowler Freddie Transou IN G E R S O L L -R A N D ® C O N S T R U C T IO N E Q U IP M E N T M o ck sville , N .C . ^eoe/m^h DAVIK COUNTY KN’rKKPRISK Ui:Ci)RI). THURSDAY, Au«. 17, I989-IC ‘S S ' • Jerry Anderson, Rick Amme, Rodney McDaniel, Dean Allen and Bill Wooten talk before picnic speech last Thursday. Members of the Masonic & Eastern Star Home and others listen to the speaker at the annual Masonic Picnic last Thursday in Mocksville. — Photos by Robin Fergusson Am m e: Im p o rtan t To U .S Rick Am me has met many of the men who spoke at Masonic Picnics in years past. The W X Il T V - 12 news anchor inter viewed them as part of his job. Am m e was the speaker at the 109th an nual picnic lasl Thursday in Clement Grove in Mocksvillc. Although news often seems negative, it is the job of the press to keep a watch on government, Am me said. “ W e all do a better job when wc know somebody is looking over our shoulders. The people who wrote the Constitution knew full well what they were doing. “ Reporters have to be unaccountabic to powerful people so they can question powerful people without being afraid. “ Thomas Jefferson said that if he could choose between government and news- . ;/■ papers, he would choose newspapers,” ; - Arnme said. The picnic, sponsored by Masonic ^ : Lodges in Davie County, raises money for ■ the Oxford Orphanage and the Masonic and Eastern Star home for the elderly in Greensboro. ‘ u GVi^ «fpawkwr Rick Aniiifi^ leaves podium for lunch. Clyde Hendricks chats with U.S. Cong. Bill Hefner IE E Kara McDaniel, 5, Hundreds of hungry picnic-goers line up for the lunch part of the annual Masonic Picnic held last week in Clement Grove in Mocksville. ' \ - i 2C-DAV1E COUNTY KNTEUI'RISK KKCOUI), THURSDAY, Лиц. 17. 1989 Social S n o w - S h o r e C o u p l e M a r r i e d The wedding of Kalhy Ann Snow to Varnic Trent Shore was held at 2 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 12. at Sandy Springs Baptist Church, Yadkinvilie. The Rev. Paul Simp son was the officiating minister al the double-ring ccremony. A program of wedding music was presented by Shawn Wooten of Yadkinvilie and Karen Current of Yadkinvilie. The wedding was directed by Catherine Anthony. The bride was given in marriage by her mother and father, and was escorted by her father, Eldon T. Snow. She wore a formal gown of organza, which featured a scooped neckline, fitted bodice and puff ruffled sleeves. Unique detailing was with sequins, pearl beads and Chantilly lace. Her full skirt was flounced with ruffles and cascad- cd around with a cathedral-length train. To complete the ensemble, she chose a spray-style headpiecc of flowers, sequins and fingertip veil of muUitiers of pencil-edged bridal illusion. She carried a cascadc of silk pink and white roses, beads and greenery. Mrs. Melinda Hoots, sister of the bride of Yadkinvilie, was matron of honor. The bridegroom's father, Bob by Shore of Mock.svillc, was besl man. Ushers were Scolt Snow of Yadkinvilie, brother of the bride; Scott Shore of Yadkinvilie, brother of the bridegroom; Chris Watkins and Kenny Shore of Yadkinvilie. Bird seed bags were given out by Chris Snow, brother of the bride. Jan Shore, sister-in-law of the bridegroom, presided at the guest register. Angela Snow, the bride’s niece, passed out wedding bulletins. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Eldon Snow of Route 3, Yadkinvilie. She attends Davie High School and is employed al Jockey International, Inc. of Mocksville. The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Bobby Sliiiro of Route 5, Mocksville. He is a I9S9 graduate of Forbush High School and is employed at Lowe’s Foods in Yadkinvilie. After a honeymoon to Ihe moun tains, the couplc will reside in Yadkinvilie. Rcccplion Immediately following tho ceremony, Mr. and Mrs. Eldon Snow, Ihe bride’s parents, hosted a reception in the fellowship hall of Sandy Springs Baptist Church. Guests were greeted by Mr. and Mr.s. Charles Haynes of Yadkin- ville, aunt and unclc of the bride. Goodbyes were said by Mr. and Mrs. Junior Haynes of Yadkin- ville, also aunt and unclc of the bride. Mrs. June Snow, sister-in-law of the bride of Yadkinvilie, M iss Col een Shore of Moeksviile, Miss Kri.slie Spillman of Yadkinvilie, and M iss Felicia Willard of Mocksville assisted in serving. The refreshment table was set up in Ihe bride's colors with pink roses. The three-tiered wedding cake was set atop a water fountain with two white laccti st:iircases leading down each side ofthe cake and adorned with pink roses with a bride and groom on top. After Kehciirsal On Friday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Bobby Shore, parents ofthe bridegroom entertained with refreshments in Ihe fellowship hall of Sandy Springs Baptist Church. This consisted of the groom's cakc, peanuts, minis and punch. Those attending were parents of the bridal couple and the wedding party. Bridal Shower On July 22 a fioating bridal shower was given to Kathy Snow, bride-elect of Trent Shore al Ihe Lone Hickory Fire Department. The shower was given by Mrs. Melinda Hoots, Mrs. June Snow, Mrs. Jan Shore, Mrs. Barbara Haynes, Mrs. Alma Haynes and Mrs. Bett Spillman. 11'" Mrs. Varnie Trent Shore ... was Kathy Anri SnowSanford-Frye Couple Wed On Aug. 12 ■•lì ic l'i »TWi.v j f f 4 - •ó# ' í ' ' ' 1 .' \ i .r¡\ -ïiV.. ''‘i % u. i *■Í 'y ' r ?i S < V ) ífe ib*, Mrs; David Ferlln Frye ... was Qreta Marie Sanford Miss Hemrick, -Mr. Babb Snored Witti Barbecue ■1 Carla Marie Hemric and Jeffery .Lane Babb were honored with an :outdoor barbecue Saturday even ting, Ai^. S, at the home of Carla's . m ^er and stepfather, Carol and ^nnett Potts, Peoples Creek Jload, Advance. ; The barbecue was held for all of Itheir wedding party and guests. The couple will be married Sept. 16 at Pine«)ale Christian Church in IWinston-Salem. ^ Thirty guests were served ■barbecue, baked chicken with all ■the trimmings, and homemade ■peach and strawberry ice cream. •Several games were played and -prizes were given to the honored couple. •, Among the guests were: Harold ;and Delores Babb, Jeffs parents ■from Edenton; Diane Babb, Jeffs •sister and her guest Richard Berry, both from Raleigh; Pam Babb, Jeffs sister from Greensboro; :Mark and Becky Hemric, Carla's brother and his wife from Cary; Am y Phillips with guest Danny Freeman, both from Elkin; Lisa Kesler from Greensboro; Randy and Sherry Gabard of Clemmons; Margie and Jeff Pennell, Andy and Jenny Schott, Troy and Kathy Mundun, Jason and Theresa Morgan, Carla's godparents, all from Winston-Salem; Robei t and Donna Graves of Pfafftown; Phil ! y and Patty 'Ypungerman of Charlotte and John and Mary Bark of Matthews. There was also a bridal shower given for Carla at the home of Theresa Morgan in Winston-Salem given by “ Kate” Potts of Mocksville, Pal Tilly and Iva Lee Phillips of Elkin, Dot Mooney of Dobson and Theresa Morgan. Majiy gifts were given with 60 people attending. The wedding of Greta Marie Sanford of Lexington and David Ferlin Frye of Winslon-Salem was held at Mt. Carmel United Methodist Church, Winslon-Salem on Saturday , Aug. 12, al 7 p.m. The ceremony was conducted by the Rev. Steve Kerhoulas. The program of wedding music was presented by Beverly Myers, organist, and soloist, Peggy Sid- den, both of Winston-Salem. The bride Is the daughter of Doris D. Jobe of Le.vington and William J. Sanford of Peachtree City, Ga. The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. James D. Frye of Winston-Salem. Given In marriage by her brother, William K. Sanford, the bride wore a formal white gown with a sweetheart neckline em phasized by a bodice accented wilh lace, sequiiis and pearls. The short puffed sleeves were decorated with flowers. The full skirt was accented with a large bow and cascaded around with a cathedral-length train. To complete the ensemble, Ihe bride wore a crown-style head piece of white lace trimmed in peart beads. The veil was also edg ed in pearls. The bride carried a cascading bouquet of white tulips, white roses, and stephanotis, accented with pearis throughout the bouquet. The flowers and church were ar ranged by the bridegroom’s uncle, Wayne Harp, of Mocksville. Pamela Epperly of Chris- tiansburg, Va., was maid of honor. Bridesmaids were Tina Fultz of Kenbridge, Va.; Melanie Stamus of Roanoke, Va.; Robin Weaver of Galax, Va.; and Mary Sidden of Winston-Salem. James Frye of Winston-Salem, Mocksville Laundry & Dry Cleaners S e n in g M ocksville & Davie C o u n ty W ith Q uality C leaning & Laundry Fo r O ver "4 0 Years" Let our experience and reputation for quality, price and service work for you! Expert Alterations Repairs Same Day Service Wash & Dry Fold Moth Proofing Storage Bags Fire And Smoke Damage Draperies Blankels Suedes Leathers Furs Napkins Formals Comforters Tablecloths Wedding Gowns Expert Shirt Laundry Phone or drop by and ask about our “In Tovjn Delivery Service" "W E REALLY DO APPRECIATE YOUR BUSINESS Our Location Since 1947 143 Depot Street, Mocksville, N.C. 27028 634-5130 Open Mon.-Fri, 7-5:30; Sat. 8-12:30 a a a a s M father of the groom, was the best man. Groomsmen were Jesse Ftye of Raleigh, Morgan Smilh of Raleigh, Kenny Sutton of Dunn, Chris Sidden of Winslon-Salem and M arty Clinard of Winston-Salem. The child attendants were Elizabeth Sidden, a junior bridesmaid; cousins of the bride, Denise Walls and Amanda Bishop, flower girls; and Lucas Walls, the ring bearer, also a cousin of the bride. Terri Goode of Greensboro kepi the guest register, and the pro grams were distributed by Deidra Dean of Ransom, Ky. JThe wedding was directed by M rs. Beverly M ille r of Winslon-Salem. The bride is a graduate of Rad ford University of Radford, Va., where she was involved in the Physical Education Major's Club. She was voted president and most outstanding senior in 1988. The bride is employed with the Cily of Winston-Salem in the Workforce Development Department as an eligibility specialist. The bridegroom is a graduate of Western Carolina University where he majored in computer informa tion systems. He was a member and president of Phi Kappa Alpha Fraternity from which he receiv-, ed several awards. He is employed at Century Data System in Greensboro as a systems analyst. Special guests were grand parents, Mr. and Mrs. Donald Dean, Mr. and Mrs. William San ford, Mr. and Mrs. Rob Harp, and Mrs. Mae Frye. Olher special guests were Donna Bishop and Terri Walls, bride's aunts, who were honorary bridesmaids. Fpllowing a honeymoon to the Bahamas, the couple will make their home at 4570 Paula Drive, Winston-Salem.Reception A reception following the ceremony was held at the Holiday Inn in Clemmons. , The cake table featured a three- tiered traditional white wedding cake set atop a water fountam with staircases leadmg from each■sЦ^ ^ of the fountain to two sateiUie/> cakes. Thecake wasadomed'^^ ^ pink roses and a special s ia ir^ V‘ with a miniature bride and groo^' topping the cake. ' ! Refreshments o f. leaf>shiq^v: mints, nuts, finger sandwich^; | ■ swedish meatballs, vegetable Mfjr V j and other items were served.'rf.ij '' The tables were covered in white tablecloths with white nbbons adfi ; candlcs. ' Entertainment was provided;by’ a D.J., who played a variety';of l] music.Rehearsal Dhuicr The bridal couple was honoied > | with a reh^sal dinner FridiyH evening, Aug. 11, at the Ho^^y| I Inn,' Clemens.. Ho8t8^‘Were:'^|: bridegroom’s parents, M r., f Mrs.: Uames Frye ].^ofi Winston-Salem. The menil'consisted of baked| | ham. roast beef, potatoes, greed^’ beans, salads, fruit cobbler; ^ ^ • chocolate groom's cake: ■ S U M M E R C LE A R A N C E M I S All Reductions am (torn OrighkriracM «triptd Golf Shlrit by ManhaHan - lodlM'Wbolrieh Shorts — Entir« stock of sdld color T-Shirts — All remaining Cdwnbla Shorts for men and tadlM. . Lodles’Wootrleh Blouses and Slacks - Men^ Koble T-Shirls - All Summer Knit fops — Large selection of Men's Sport Shirts — Ladles’ Intentions 1WIH Shorts — Men's Woolrlch Sport Shirts Ladies' intentions Madras Shorts and Blouses — Woolrlch Ladies’ ^ Sweaters — Men's Arrow Sport Shirts ^ Ail Men's and Ladies' Summer ^ Slacks — Entire slock ol Ladies’ Summer Skirls 1-40 at C leitim ons E x it • C lem m ons 7 6 6 -8 7 8 2 M a rk e t O ne F ifty (B eside T J b D eli) K e rn e rs v iile • 9 9 3 -0 8 8 2 C \ [ p r t h eBay TUADING^COMPANi DAVIK c o liv i V KNTKKIMUSK KKCOKI). TIU KSDAV. Лчц. 17. 1WJ-.1C M i s s S t a n g , M r . H u m p h r e y U n i t e d I n M a r r i a g e A u g . 1 2 Mrs. Gregory Scott Humphrey ... was Cynthia Lee Stang Keller-Gibson Couple To W ed !;; ‘ Mr. and Mrs. Clay Boyd Keller of Route 1, Union Grove, announce . *the engagement of their daughter, Jody Kay Keller, lo William Robert |:rl ;.Gtbs6h II of Wilmington, son of Mr. and Mrs. William R. Gibson .^.';of;Greensboro. r ; • The wedding is planned for Oct. IS at Centenary United Methodist ,'; t Chiirch in Winston-Salem. I > ■ i ’ ; The bride-elect is a graduate of North Iredell High School and Ap- |:.r ;;|Mlachian State University, Boone, with a bachelor’s degree in in- I ;> : • formation systems and management. She graduated with honors. She I employed by Internal Revenue Service, Winston-Salem.I !: •; • Gibson is a graduate of Northwest Guilford High School and A S U , I V ‘ ^ “ degree in biology with minor in chemistry and manage- !>ment. He is employed by Ansco & Associates, Wilmington. Bermuda Run Garden Club pears Program On Arranging Cynlhiii Leo .Slang imil Gregory Scoli lUimplia-y were iinilcil in iiiarriiige .Salui'ilay. Aug. 12. al llie Main I’o.sl Ciiapcl al Fori Bragg, Chaplain Wilhui' Parker ol- lieialeil al ihe 4 p.m. eancllelighl ceremony. The imily eaiiille was ii.seil as a pari of ihe service. A program of wetUling music was presenled by Donna Fowler, organisi, and Paula Young, soloisl. The couple presented long- sleiiimeil while roses I'roin the bride's boiiqiiel lo their niolhcrs us Ihe bride approaehcd the chapel aliar. The bride, given in marriage hy her I'amily and escorleil by her brolher, Mark Stang of Faycl- levillc, wore a floor-lcnglh gown of while satin. The nilcd bodice, wilh ils pouff and filled sleeves, was lavishly embroidered wilh iridcsccnl beads and featured a balcau neckline acecnlcd wilh tear drop crystals. The full skirl wilh ils beaded applique medallion ex tended to a full cathedral train. In her hair, she wore a bandeau of se quins, pearls and flowers attached lo a veil of niulli-tiers of pencil- edgcd bridal illusion. She carried a ca.scade bouquet of white roses and stephanotis. M iss Cheri Slang of Raleigh, .sister of the bride, was maid of ;. Mrs. Louise Bahson presenled a ; flower arranging program for the ;riiembers of Ihe Bermuda Run ^Garden Club at their meeiing on ;Aug. 2 at the Bermuda Run Coun- ;fry Club. :: Club niemlTcrs provided flowers, •greenery and containers which ' Mrs. Bahson used lo make six centerpieces of roses, a large ; basket of summer flowers, two 1 oriental displays and a basket of greenery with a handle woven of cut vines. A drawing was held al the end ot Ihe meeiing wilh winners lak- honor, IJridcMiiaicIs were Mrs, liarbara Pallon of Asheville. Miss Frances Jacobs of Chariolle. Mrs, Stephanie Slang of Fayelleville. M iss Sudie M cCausland of Winslon-Salem, and Mrs, Michelle Diaz of Heidellnirg. Germany. Carl Humphrey of Mocksville was his son's besl man. Ushering were: Dean Humphrey of Moeks- ville. brolher of ihe groom; Sieve Slang of Fayelleville. brolher of Ihc bride: Sam Odom of Pfafl'iown: Sterling Koonce of Raleigh; and Chris Holden of Winslon-Salem. Susan Ruppe kept the gue,st register. Mrs. Wilbur Parker was the wedding director. Th bride is the daughter of Mrs. Patricia Slang of 2601 Colgate Drive, Fayelleville, and the laic Colonel Arthur Carl Slang III. She i.s a graduate of Reid Ross Senior High School in Fayelleville and Salem College, where she receiv ed a bachelor's degree in psychology and sociology. The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Humphrey of Hickory Hill, Mocksville. He is a graduate of Davie High School and Ihe University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, where he received a bachelor’s degree in economics and industrial relations. In May of 1989, he graduated from Wake I'liresl Univeisiiy School ol' Law. receiving a Juris Doclor degree. He will join Ihe law firm of Oglelree. Deakins. Nash. Snioak. and Sicwart in Greenville. S,C. Following a honeymoon lo Sl. Croix in the Virgin Islands, the couple will be al home al 660 Hallon Road, Apartmenl 8J, Greenville, S.C. Al'tcr-Reheiirsnl Dinner Immediately after the wedding rehearsal Friday evening, a dinner was held al Dc La Fayette Restaurant in Fayetteville, Hosts were Ihe groom's parenls. The menu consisted of chicken marquis, panuiies Anna, steamed vegetables, and salad. Individual lablcs were covered with royal blue cloths and centered wilh arrangcmenls of roses grown by James A. Foster Jr. of Mock.sville. The groom's cakc was a creation containing sterling silver charms for the wedding party and topped with fresh roses. The groom chose ihis occasion to present his gifts to his best man and ushers. Reception • The bride’.s mother hosted a reception in the couple’s honor in Ihc Hodge Room of the Fort Bragg Officers’ Club immediately follow- iiig llie wedding ceremony. The couple arrived al the recep tion in a horse-drawn carriage wilh a fringed top. 'I'he buffet inekidcd roast beef, ham. shrimp, oysters, smoked salmon, stuffed mushrooms, devil ed eggs and a variety of salads. Champagne toasts were made to the couple by the groom's father and the bride’s brother. Music was provided by “ Studio,” a local band. Bridal Parties • A dinner party was given May 12 al the home of Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Hall in Mock.sville. Hosts were Mr. and Mrs. Hall, Mr. and Mrs. James Evcridge, Mr. and Mrs. Dan Marion, and Mrs. Sue Short. • On June 17, Mr. and Mrs. James A. Foster Jr. were hosts at a buffet dinner at their home in Mocksville. • On July 30, Mrs. Mark Stang was hostess for a kitchen shower at her home at Gates Four, Fayetteville. • On Aug. 11, a bridesmaids’ luncheon was given by Mrs. William Parker in the Sink Room of the Fort Bragg Officers’ Club. The bride chose this time to pre sent gifts to her attendants. Y a d k in V a lie v N e w s By M rs. Ruby M cBride Yadkin Valley Correspondent Jonathon Hottel will be able to stay home all the time after Aug. 16. He is recovering from an ac cident on N.C. 801 last September. He is one happy little boy, and we all are happy: for him. Ausbon Ellis was able to return home on Thursday after being ad mitted back to Forsyth Memorial Hospital after developing a blood clol in his leg last Tuc.sday. Gray Caudle, Lois Long and Lisa Reed and a friend look a vaca tion al Pirate Land Campground at Myrlle Beach, S.C., Iasi week. They came home on Friday. Fate Caudle took his father. Doc Caudle, Jack and J.C . Caudle to Shatley Springs for a meal on Tuesday. Lorena West, Mr. and Mrs. Larry Parker and family, and Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Ward and boys went to the Garrison reunion on Sunday at the home bf J. Frank Garrison of East Bend. Sallie Carter and Ruby McBride took a trip to the mountains Sun day evening. Ruby Walker had cake and homemade ice crcamn for her mother-in-law, Virginia Walker's birthday Sunday evening. Mrs. Rc,\ Carter’s mother, Mrs. Regan, had surgery on Sunday al Forsylh Memorial Hospital. She had been sick for several days. A birthday supper was enjoyed at the home of Harvey Pilcher Sun day night. Those attending were children Reggie and family, Con nie arid her family, Charlie Pilcher and wife, Becky and Toots and Hazel Riddle. East Davie Senior Citizen’s Club met Aug, 14 at Bethlehem church with 50 seniors present. A groiip from Mineral Springs’ senior club provided entertained which was en joyed by all. A large table of fo<^ and fellowship followed tiré program. IN PAIN? Chiropractic works without drugs or surgery. WHY SUFFER? Call today for consultation 634-2512 DAVIE CHIROPRACTIC CLINIC 501 W ilkesboro Street Mocksville, N.C.Paul K. Cudd, D.C. RcGbbk MENS LADIES CHILDRENS I ing home the arrangcmenls. During the business meeting, final plans were di.scus.sed for a irip 10 New Bern on Oct. 10 and 11. Club members will lour the Tryon Palace historic complex and the colonial gardens where 37 varieties of ehrysanlhenuims will be in bloom. Guests at Ihe meeiing were Joy Duncan and Hazel Gaddis. Hostesses w'cre Carol Quinn, Edith Hunter and Ernestine Hartman. T'he club will hold ils anniver sary hmclieoii al the Sept. 6 meciinii. 9 7 9 6 Reg. 3739 GIRLS 0 7 9 68%-12 Ж "PrirKesaJr." GIRLS A q 9 b Ladles "Adiva Litas" Ladles “Princess" Reg. 37.99 Reg. 44.99 Ladies "Freestyle" Reg. 48.99 Ladles "РгвеяШ Hl-Top" Rag. 56.99 Mens "Ex-0-Ш 500 Hi-Top" Mens "BB4600" Reg. 66.99 Reg. 56.99 Mens "Pressure Hl-Top" Reg. 66.99 Boys8'/i-1Z "BB4600" Reg. 44.99 ^ Л 9 6 g irls в ’/г-12 r > r r 0 6 / % — f Q e BOYS 8'/i-12 2 7 «eg- 34.99 ^ r % Q R BOYS 8H-12 2 o "Jr. Fitness" Reg. Boys 12'/i-6. "BB4600" Girls 12V2-4. 45.99 O O "Fitness Classic" Reg. Boys 12V2-6. 39.99 . "Microlit Plus" Reg. 04CIA ‘ Boys 12Уг-6. 41.99 O l Show 4C-D A V IE COUNTY ENTKKI’RISIC UKCOKI). THURSDAV. Лчд- 17, 1989 M o c k s N e w s Ну M rs. lillicl .lotics Mocks Correspondent Mr. :ind Mrs. David Miller and cliiUlrcii Sara aiul Alan atlciulcd a hirtlulay party l-riday evening Cor M iss Jessica Barnhardt оГ Winslon-Salem. Mr. and Mrs. Riiger Mock Sr.. Mr. and Mrs. Toin Moek and cliildrcti Jcnic. l’aiii. and Crysial spent lasl week al llie eoast lìshing. Mrs. Clarence Canipliell <il' riiiiniasville visited Miss Oraee .lones r'riday. The eonmuniily wislies li) exterid synipathy 111 Mrs. Hniiiia Alien in thè ilealli ol'lier sisler. Mrs. Wilma C'raver. iil' flenimiins. M ES P lans O rientation Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Ray Broadway ... she was Brenda Kay Wise W i s e - B r o a d w a y C o u p l e M a r r i e d I n A u g . 5 C e r e m o n y Monday. Aug. 21. parent- stiulenl "liaek to.sclioiil night" will he at Mocksville Elementary School I'rom 6-7:30 p.m. Parents and sludents are invited to meet Ihc tcachcr and assislanl. pay lees. 1111 oiil papers and see the classroom. Insurance is optional, but Ihc nccessary fornis will be available. The regular school insurance is SS.,50 and 2-)-hour coverage is S43. The school lee is S3. Lunch prices are Ihc same as last year. .SI. 15 per day or 40 cents per ilay lor reduced price lunch. Breakfasl is olTcrcd al Mocksvillc Blenientary at a charge of 75 cents for regular price or 30 cents for reduced price. Children’s Theater Worf<shop To Be H eld In Davie County ; Brenda Kay Wise of Mooresville ajid Arnold Ray Broadway of Rouie 7, Mocksville, were united in marriage Saturday, Aug. 5, at the bridegroom’s home. The Rev. Bill Creason offlciated at the 2 p.m. ceremony. [ The bride was given in marriage t>y her faliier, Melvin Simpson, i fttsy Lee Lyerly of Mocksville was ;maid of honor. Serving as bridesmaids were Sharon Miller, bnilegroom's daughter of Cleveland and Susan Thomason of M ock»villeii.l.i';;;./;^’ \:;;; : i JiMwc Thoniason of Mocksville was best iihM. Ushering were the bitide’s stms, William Wise, Scott ■ \yise' and Chris Wist, all- of Concord. Brandi Thomason of Mocksville was flower girl. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Simpson of Route 7, Concord. She is a graduate of Mount Pleasant High School and attended Mitchell College. She is employed as office manager for Wooten’s Jewelers in Salisbury. The bridegroom is the son of Mrs. Ruby Broadway of Route 7, Mocksville. He attended Davie High School and is employed by Crescent Electric Company. Following a North Carolina mountain honeymoon, the couple will make their home on Route 7, Mocksville. “ Dabs of Drama,” Ihc c h ild r e n 's th eatre workshop of the Davie Theatre Com pany, will begin Sept. 5. Classes will be held after Salyer school every Tuesday throughout the school year at the B.C. Brock Auditorium. The workshop is open to all children ages 8-12. Teaching the workshop will be Kim Salyer, a Mocksville native currently majoring in drama at the University of North Carolina al Greensboro. Salyer has appeared in several productions of Greensboro’s Livestock Players, including this season’s “ George M ” and “ Grease,” as well as many studio productions at UNC-G. She has directed several children’s programs, incloding a previous “ Dabs of Drama” at Mocksville Elementary School that 6 re a s o ifs w h y n o b o d y o u ts e lls iS oars in flho a p p lia n c e b u s in e s s fsAM FACnO N '! BRANDS YOU NATIONWIDE NO PAYMENTS CONVENIENT GREAT ¡OUARAKTEED CANTRUST SERVICE TIL 1990« DELIVERY LOW PRICES В A m e rica '* beat «N islilN f « ii4 4 ry lii( «ystoM i CQMCordif dioroncttl м « « * ) г м М и •и м в т Im , Iritphoio tnd «М* wgl« t«n, н о т in t o ( ( I 2 t e . 1 l vM u«), С П * , t á itw n •ndbMMy... .LIfflllMiquantHiM NOW $954.88* lieMCNÎM.Y'r W ntSMM • B if *»рч Н у lOtytIcwwtb« Atnerica'i largeit ииЫе capacity Automatie fabric toftener dispenser NOW $414.17*I14M0MTHLV" Wast42S (X 26731) Shuts oil when > dothes are diy ‘ (Gas model 1S£LUoMed remote, Jack Pack, CofflbFlllw (JL 55461) Wat «2179.44 ÑOW$1999* Eunko wkk.trock uptight vat.6.5 amp motor 8-posllion Dial-a-Nap height setting (JL 30665) N O W $164.97* »10 MONTHLY Po« UnldngiorakibWlop cobrtV? Wo have many models, IndudlnB brand names, with the features you want at great low prices 4.SHPdvol povnrwc (JN 26452) Was $379.95 NOW $259.96* »11 MONTHLY • RCA VHS VCR Unltied remote (53304) $10 MONTHLY" Was $316.22 N O W $299.97* • Pwneer 110-watt stereo rack systom with CD player, remote, dual cassette, high speed dub (95501) $17M0NTHLV N O W $799.89* Ktnmora d«luxt rang»with fully automatic oven Gas model (AT 71981) NOW $499.99* Electric niodol NOW $435 Was »465 (AT 91881) ^ К т м « г * n o s n i U ra M g a ra t a M aO.4 <«. H. raMganstor. Meat pan. Nice'n Fresh pan. Adjustable caniilever shelves. (JN 68151). 117 MONTHLY" N O W $ 5 9 9 . 8 T ^ Was $634.87 $17 MONTHLY" • 14 CU. ft frostless refrigerator (JL 60401).........NOW $424.87* K«nmor» bu]b*in diihwaiher With 3-level-wash, 4-cycIes. Was $320.67 N O W $299.87* $11 MONTHLY-(JN 16465} Kenmor« .56-<u. ft. microwava Mount undor cabinol or on wall. 99 variable power levels. Aulo defrost NOW $127* (JL 89214) $10 MONTHLY” !?_V“ L q”*®“ Olhtfwiso, appnanco# are white; colof» eii/a. Eloa/ic dryer requires con). Item ate loadJy avaiiM e as advtmeed. e d«aib: on delorrM paymam purchase«, iheie will bo a imance cha/fle lor deietral period. Monthly paymenii are •ho«m (romSearaCharge and SeafsCha/ge P lU S audit plant. Actual payments dopond on eieiing account balance. Ш Ш Ш Ш H O M E A P P L IA N C E S ( a ialo g e l e c t r o n c s s t o r e Your m o n ./» worlii and a w hol. lot mor.1 Saliifaction C uaranle.a or Your M on.y Back S’O« '’HONE: 704.634-5988wocmnlle, M.c. 27028 Sat. 9-1; Sunday Closed CATAIOG ORDERUNE; t 800364 3000 culminated in a production of “ The Velveteen Rabbit.” “ If the children ever have a chance to participate in drama pro grams later in lift, 1 want them all lo emerge from this workshop with a positive theatrical experience,” Salyer said. “ We would like to do two or three shows depending on the number of participants. “ Kids have always been a big part of whal we’re about,” said Davie Theatre Company producer Mel Jones. “ It’s great to see a theater program in the schools now. “ Children’s theatre teaches con fidence, teamwork, discipline, and poise. We want to offer our resources and technical help to the school programs and maybe try a joint production,” he said. For registration information on “ Dabs of Drama,” call 634-2325. The Davie Theatre Company is sponsored by the Mocksville-Davie Recreation Dept, and the Davie County Arts Council; Partial fun ding is provided by the United Way. ■ д а ; Jones-N ehrenz Couple To Marry Gray and Carla Jones of Westwood Drive in Tyro announce the ;J.*. engagement of their daughter, Monna Dale Jones of Cary, to.Kai,^;;« Nehrenz of Anderson, S.C. They plan a 7 p.m. ceremony at Tyro United Methodist C hurch?• on Sept. 16. I M iss Jones is a 1982 graduate of West Davidson High School . a 1986 graduate of Appalachian State University . She is office supw;?«!;“. visor in the radiology department at'Rex Hospital in Rialeigh. 'Misi|%^ ' Jones is thegraniddaughterof Joe and Bessie Jones of Cornatzer DavieCounty. Nehrenz is a 1976 graduate of Mainland Scnior.Higb'School'in»!'j >, j Daytona Beach, Fla., and a 1980 graduate of Florida State Univer sity. He is manager trainee at a lumber company in Ai^rispn S.C.'- ' ; C E B T f E L W h e r e p e o p le c o n n e c t. B E S T P LA C E FO R m O N lè ii YOUR PHONE COMnUIY. S h o u ld y o u b u y o r re irt e q u ip m e n t ? ll'a in e d C E N T E t p e r s o n n e l w ill h e lp y o u c h o o s e o p tio n s P t io n e s e r v ic e , e q u ip m e n t . . . e v e n m e in t e r 1)Л\'1Ь: СОЬ'МЛ’ r.N TKKl’KISi; ККСОШ). I IHJRSDA^-. Лчц. 17. 1989-5С ÍP in o N e w s By M rs. Kliiiii Dull Pino Correspondent ; Prt’aeliing scrvicc will be con- ducled by the Rev. Bob Buriiclte Sunday, Aug. 20. al 10 a.m. and church schnol al 11 a.m, ;Mr.s. Virginia Dull. Mrs. Jphnsic Shellon and Mrs. lilnia Dull of this communily were in Ihe group of 20 lhal enjoyed lunch Aug. 6 al Slalesvillc wilh Mr. and Mrs. Gene Dull and Dylan. Gene and his son, Dylan, of Los Angeles, Calif., were celebraling liioir birthdays logethcr. M rs. Rhodessia Garris of Shalolle and Mr. and Mrs. Jack Maslen spenl the weekend recenl- ly wilh Mr. and Mrs. Charles Maslen. Sympathy goes out lo ihe Tom Horlon family. Mrs. Horton’s father died last week in Indiana. : Mrs. Jim Lalham and daughters, Áüclra and Kendra, of Virginia spent last weekend wilh Mr. and Mrs. Harmon Lalham. Adam and Emily Hill were honored with a cookout al Ihcir home Saturday, Aug. 13, for Iheir birthday. They were 12. They were glad lo see their Grandma Dull who just arrived in time for the party from Oklahoma City lo spend ihe week. Mr. and Mrs. Hub Dill :iiul Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Cravcr and children have rcun ncd hninc aller a vacation lo I'inerald Isle Iasi week. Ucccnl guesis al the hoinc of Mr. and Mrs. Hob Hills were his molher, Mrs. Bllis. Mr. and Mrs. Hill Ray and Amy Lllis iiC Virginia. Mr. and Mrs, Harnion Lalham visiled his bri'lher. lilincr Lalliarn, ,Sunday, Mr, Lalham recenlly had his leg aiii[nilalcd ami is impi'iiving. Mr, and Mrs. Wayne Dull and suns. Juslin and Rhyne. Mr. and Mrs. Iiiid<ly Williams and Adam and Lmily Hill wenl lo l-ayellevillc r-riday and aimc liiinie Siinday to allcnd Ihe wedding of Dejuna HiidgsDn and Knberl Reeves, Mrs, Ciilene Dull, aunl of ihc bride, direcled Ihe wedding. Colene Dull relumed lo iJklaluima C'ily .Simd.iy evciriny. Mr. and Mrs. 1 lariiliKiuernlerl (if ,San Anionid, Tevas, and Mis. lilizabelh W esl I'oriney of M a iy' illc, Tciiii,, arrived tin l-ri- day, Aug, 4, lor a visil wilh Mr, and Mis, Riil.'inil Wesl, Mr, and Mrs. l.ulher Wesl and Mr. and Mrs, Lonnie Wesl. The Guernieils and Mrs. Forlney left on Wednes day. Aug, for iheir respeclive lionies. On Iheir way lo Norlh Caiiiliiia. llie (iiiernlcils also visited M rs. Virginia W esl ■Slcelnian. who now resides in AlUinl!!. Ga. On .Salurd.iy nighl. Aug. .“5. Mr. and Mrs, Roland Wesl and Henry Wesl enlerlained the West family wilh dinner. Those attending were Mr. ;ind Mrs, Harold Guernterl. Mrs. l-.li/alieth Fortney. Mr. and Mrs. Luther West. Mr. Lonnie West, Mr. and Mrs. Lonnie Wc.st Jr. and Ihcir daiiglilcrs. Sarah and Rcbecca. Mrs. Sandra Carter and her daughter. Mr.s. Cimly Poll.s and her son. Davie Lee, Mr. Kevin King, Mrs. Lois Dee,se, Mrs. Kalhy Spangler and daughter, Sal ly. and Iwo friends of Kernersvillc. Mrs. Frances Tutterow and children. Jason and Elizabelh of Mocksville and Mr. Boyd Nelson Wesl. i . . Jennifer Tuttle -liZ' . ' i ^ r m e r R e s i d e n t r l^ jo w M o d e l i n g > former Davie County resident h(u been sele^ed by Channel 36 as , ; ope of the Outstanding Child ^Models in CImrlotte, > , j;^,-;Jeni>ifer,.Tuttle,; who lived in f l^ vie until she was 11, appeared the teleyisipn station on May 1|^18, showing the pros and cons IpfitMing a model. I -jMiss Tuttle, who is 14, has also a^|^eiu«d in Kveral klvettisernents , a ^ posters. She >yas featured most ; i^ently in 'the June issue of Teen MUgazine. {: > M iss Tuttle, a daughter of Dian- nicSmith Tuttle White and the late ; B ^ce Tuttle, lives on Lake Nor- nian, with her mother and step- fa^er, Stan White. She is the granddaugher of Louise Smith > Pierce of Route 2, Mocksvillc, and lh( late Fred Smith. Boger Earns diim Tutterow Scholarship ,A 1989 Davie High School graduate has been named recipient of a Jim Tiillerow Scholarship. Scoll Boger, soil of Sharon and.Ken Bogcr of ;i36 Wander ing; Lane, M o c k sv ille , will receive the S750 award. He plans to allcnd the Universi ty of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. The scholarship, first given in 1978, was established in honor of former Davie High leaeher Jim Tullerow. who died in l‘)77. ^ SCHOOL ай£ЛЬ A V I N G S 12 Oz. P a c k C ham pion C h a m p i o n S l i c e d B a c o n ____________________ COST LESS AT LO W ES li^ SUPER BEST valu : Mm U S D A Choice B one le ss 7o p R o u n d S te a k Or VALUB^““^ COST LESS AT LOWES! i h a r m i n a t h T i s s u e COST LESS AT LOWES! 12 Ct. Pet Fu d ge O r Cream L b . I c e C r e a m B a r s COST LESS AT LOWES! B Q IIIIS IilllQ ■ ■ ■ Q D Q Bщ а щ н и T b is A d Is Good W edxiesday, A ugust 16 T h ru Tuesda;^ A ugust 88, 19 8 9 A t AU A re a L ow es ro o d s S to res. Q uantity B ig h ts R e se rv e d . W e O lad ly A ccep t Fe4«ral Food Stam ps A nd WXO Ooupona. AD VBBTISBD ITBfia PO UOY Baoh of-tliMe Item« la required to ba readily available for sale In ea<^ XiOWM roods Store esoept aa epeolfioally noted. U an advertised Item la temponvUy out of ■took, we will otter you the oholoe ot a comparabla item wiien available reflecting the same savings or a a^oheck to purohase tha aftvertised item at the advertised prloe within 30 days.purohase the QuantUarrl|bt 6C— DAVIE COUNTY ENTKRI'RISK RKCORI). THURSDAY, Aii«. 17. 1989 ; Mr. and Mrs. Michael H. Livengood ... she was Tammy \N. Abernathy W l a r r i a g e V o w s S p o k e n A u g . 1 2 ■ G R A N IT E Q U A R R Y - Tam my W. Abernathy and Michael H. Livengood, both of Granite Quarry, were married Aug. 12 at the home bf the bride. • The Rev. William Rose, uncle of À e bride, officiated at the outdoor j p.m. ceremony, which was follow ^ by the reception under the sliade trees. \ ¿ The bride’s son, David Aber- (ùAy, gave her away 'and carried ^ rings. ^Daughter o f Mrs. Irene Wood- firard of Lincolnlon and the late Kenneth K. Woodward, the bride graduated from Lincolnton High School and the American Academy of Hairstyling in Gastonia. She is employed with New Image Hair Care in Salisbury. The bridegroom is the son of Mrs. Claudette Smitherman of Cooleemee and Price McEwen of Salisbury. He graduated from Davie H igh School and is employed by Desco, Inc. After a wedding trip to the Poconos in Pennsylvania, Ihe cou ple will live in Granite Quarry. Fow Comers News JlyjM arieW W te ‘ Four Camera Correspondent r,; We extend our sincere sympathy ÍÓ the family of Cietus Ratledge, who died recently. He was a Hfelong resident of this ebmmunity. ' ' . I Christopher Shore was honored fi>r his biitli^y at his home recent ly.’ Attending were his mother, Mrs. Denise Shore, grandparents iylr. and Mrs. L.S. Shelton Jr., M r. and Mrs. Grady Beck, Mr. iind Mrs. Joe White and Mark, great-grandmother Mrs. Annie ' w-V”, ^ Center News By (Amy Motley Cerrter Correspondent !>iMrs, Pearline Seaford has retiiraed home from Forsyth Meinorial Hospital after hip : ^ g e ry , which resulted from an accidental fall. i^Mis. Ruth Gamer is a patient at A ^ s t Hospilal. She had foot surgery. i^Mr. Pete Nash is a patient at For- s ^ Meniorial Hospital. He is ’ uiiklergoiiig extensive testing to A r o u n d & A b o u t Art'll .Slinlfnls Attend U N C -C II Inslilutc Miirnic lillis (if Ailvmicc iinil Jel'fF. Hssic (if Kmile ,‘i. Mocksville reccnlly alleruled Ihe 3‘Jlli iinmial Universily ol' Niirlh Carcilina Hij;h Sclmol Kailio-'I'V liisiiiule in Chapel Hill. Using I'acililies anil slalTofllie Deparlnicnl of Radii). T V anti Miiliiin PicUires. Ihe inslltiile is an inlensc one-weck worksliup in railio anil lelevi- siiin piiiiluclion. peiibrniance anil crilieism. allendeil by high scliiinl suiilenis I'roiii acriiss llie slale. l-ssic is the sim iif Mr. and Mrs. Janies lissie Jr. lillis is llie daughter ol' Mr. and Mrs. James Mondell Ellis. Dyson Klectcd President of Associiitiim Frieda Dyson has been elected president of llie Davie County Association of I'ducalional Office Personnel. Oilier officers elected on Aug. 8 were I'ran Parker, viec-presidonl; and Joyce V/liilaker, sccretary/lrea.surer. Könnt/, Gruduates From Farriery Sehnol In Virginia V/endell Wilson Kooniz has reccnlly coniplcled and was gradualcd from the Eastern School of Farriery in Martinsville, Virginia. The suniiner course covers all phases of horseshoe making including cu.stoiii, corrcclivc, hot and cold .shoeing procedures. Barbecue, Fair Contest Set Sept. 8 - 9 At Center Jones, Mr. and Mrs. Dana Triplett, Ericka and Payton and Mrs. Bet tie Fleming. Mr. and Mrs. Von Shelton and Mrs. Johnsie Shelton were Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Gene Dull in Statesville. Mrs. Johnsie Shelton, Mrs. Evelyn Boger and Mrs. Von Shelton visited Mrs. Mildred Hut chens in High Point Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Grady Beck at tended a cookout Saturday night honoring Mrs. W ill Beck for her birthday. The 1989 Center Fair will be held on Saturday, Sept. 9, al the Ccnler Community Building. This annual I'vent is sponsored by the Center Com m unity Development Association and the Center Volunteer Fire Department. The fair is held in conjunction with the annual fall sale of barbccuc. Barbecue pork will be sold all day on Sept. 8 and 9. Entries for the fair will be ac cepted on Friday, Sept. 8 from 5-9 p.m. and on Saturday, Sept. 9 from 7:30-9:30 a.m. This is a county fair and all entries should be made or produced by a resident of Davie County. Booklets lhat explain all the fair departments and entry categories are now available on a first come, first served basis. Fair books can be picked up at the register of deeds office in the courthou.se or in the N e w A rriv a ls Agricultural Extension Service of ficc in the County Officc Building, or books can be obtained from members of tho Center Community Development Association. Prizes for fair winners will in clude ribbons and cash, provided - by donations from various businesses, industries, and in dividuals interested in maintaining a county fair. Members of the 1989 Center Fair Committee are Mrs. Steve Evans, Mrs. Bob Lyerly, Mrs. Duke Tutterow, Mrs. Mickel Barnette, Mrs. Clay Tutterow, Mrs. Earl Smith, Mrs. Carlos Williams, Mrs. Steve Vestal, Mrs. Bill O ’Neal, Mrs. George Evans, Mrs. Norman Forrest and Mrs. Robert Duchemin. Members of the committee may be contacted for more information regarding fair entries. determine his illness. Mr. Eddie Beal is a patient at Dayie County Hospital. He under went surgery last week. Thomas Lee Ridenhour Jr. of Mobile, Ala., spent the weekend with his mother, Mrs. Martha Ridenhour, who is recovering from her second bout wilh surgery. He also visited with his grandmother, Mrs. Grace Ridenhour and his great-aunt, Mrs. Eva Walker, both residents of Davie Village. G R U BB Mark, Melanie and Amelia Grubb, of Advance, announce the birth of a son and brother, Bradly Steven, on Aug. 8. The baby weighed 7 lbs. 6 ozs. and was 22 inches long. Maternal grandparents are S.B. and Lillian Sidden of Route 2, Advance. Paternal grandparents are Carl Grubb of Route 4, Mocksvillc and Lib Grubb of Cooleemee. Paternal great-grandparents are Lucille Cook of Route 4, Mocksville, and Clifton and Edilh Grubb of Mocksville. M E A D O W S Wendy an^ Brian Meadows an nounce the birth of a son, Robert James Meadows, on Monday, Aug. 7. The baby weighed 6 lbs. 5 ozs. and was 20 inches long. Maternal grandparents are Patricia M. O ’Neal of Mocksville, and Ray O ’Neal Jr. of Lexington. Paternal grandparenls are Judy Meadows of Burlington and James 2 S tate Fire Auxiliary Officers Two Mock.svillc women have been elected as olficials for the N.C. Slale Firenian's Associations Ladies Auxiliary. Debra M. .Stanley of.‘i33 North Main .St. was elected president of the slale auxiliary al ils annual nieeting recently in Fayetteville. Gail Kelly of Wandering Lane was elected secretary of the auxiliary. "Vv'e're in our 25th year of scr vice." said Stanley. “ W e’re try ing to gel more members. W e’re going to be sending out two newsletters lo try and gel more sup port." During the annual meeting Stanley presented County-Line Volunteer Fire Department with Stanley Kelly (he “ Most Helpful Auxiliary Award.” Stanley said if anyone is iii-; terestcd in the auxiliary they should contact her at home. : ; Stephanie Howell Crowned^ N.C. Tarheel Little Miss A Route 3, Mocksville, girl is tho now N.C. Tarheel Little Miss. Stephanie Renee Howell, 8, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Mark Howell, earned the crown during a pageant July 20-22 in Winston-Salem. She won sleep wear, western wear and beauty competitions, and was first-runner up in talent com petition. For talent, she tap danc ed and sang, “It’s Not Where You Start, It’s Where You Finish.” With the crown, she will appear at the Dixie Classic Fair in W inston-Salem and in area parades.Stephanie Howell Homemakers Tour Museum Darrell Meadows of Mocksvillc. Maternal great-grandmolher is Helen S. McDaniel of Mocksville. Paternal great-grandmothers are Gladys Smith and Ora Brammer, both of Beckly, W.Va. W A L S E R Mr. and Mrs. Danny Walser and Daniel of Route 2, Advance, pn- nounce the birth of a daughter and sister, Amanda Danelle, on Mon day, July 31, at 9:32 a.m. at For sylh M em orial Hospital in Winston-Salem. The baby weighed 6 lbs. 13 ozs. and was 2 1 Vi inches in length. Maternal grandparents are Mr. ahii Mrs. Buddy Richardson of Mocksviiie. Paternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Hubbart Walser of Advance. Maternal great-grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Richard son of Mocksville. By Lois Stephens Club Reporter The East Davie Extension Homemakers Club met Aug. 8 for its annual outing with a tour of the M useum of Early Southern Decorative Arts in Old Salem. This is the only museum solely dedicated to researching the regional decorative arts of the early South. Composed of 15 period rooms and four galleries, the col lections include furniture, pain tings, textiles, ceramics, silver and other metalwares made and used in Maryland, Virginia, the C aibliii^l; I Georgia, Kentucky and T e h n o s e ^ l f«)m the early 1600s throu^ l82^.t; P After the tour, the groiq) o f niteS members and three guests hidS lunch at Old Salem Tavern/ During the afternoon, the. clUb3:1 members toured the Gamer Fooibw! plant in Winston-Salem. They sawt' grape jelly being inade ^ lean^^,’ ed of the many other products prp^;; I dueed by this family-owned andrj operated business. i.vi'; The September meeting will be>^ I at the home of Minnie Comatzeir:'d Elbaville New s i | By Doris Cope Elbaville Correspondent Mr. and Mrs. David and Susan Cope of Chattanooga, Tenn., spent a few days in Advance and Mocksville visiting relatives. Among those were Austin and Doris Cope. David is a nephew of Austin Cope. Mrs. Grace Smoot is a patient at Forsyth Hospital. She is the grand mother of Joan Blakley. Mr. Roy Allen is a patient at Forsyth Hospital. He is on the critical list. Let's remember him in our prayers and with get well cards. The Methodist Men held their annual breakfast at Elbaville Augl; 13. While eating, R.J. Markland; was taken sick and had to be cqf-;, ried home. Let’s remember him iñ; our prayers.. There will be a special service: at Fulton United Methodist Chur^:.' Sunday, Aug. 20. It is their ISOth;: centennial anniversaiy; The Bishop::; from Charlotte will be the güe ú¿ speaker. , - Mrs. Dot Carter enteitainedtbiel Extension Homemakers Club Advance at her home with'a cal»c> and ice cieam paity Tuesday n i ^ Several members were present They all enjoyed silting around tlie pond in Dot’s back yard. :3 STATESVILLE MEDICAL GROUP, PA announces the association of Byron E. Dunaw ay, M .D . Diplomate Of American Board Of Orthopaedic Surgery S p e c i a l i z i n g In B o n e A n d J o i n t S u r g e r y ______ Arthroscopy, Fractures, Joint Replacement, Sports Medicine Medical School: Emory University School Of Medicine 1976-1980 Orthopaedic Residency: Emory University Affiliated Hospitals 1980-1985 Orthopaedic Surgeon: United States Air Force; Kirtland Air Force Base and New Mexico Regional Federal Medical Center 1985-1989. N E W P A T I E N T S W E L C O M E __________(704) 878-2011________ i t CAROIOLOOY/INTERNAL MEDICINE C.K . Lai. M.D. ENOOCRIHOLOGY, METABOLISM & DIABETES Richard A. Dickey, M.D.. F.A.C.P. INTERNAL MEDICINE N. M aivllle L«w ls. M.D. C hsriei S . Stinson, M.D. GASTROENTEROLOGY Nell M. K atsm an. M.D. Digestive & Liver D iseases OBSTETRtCS A GVNECOLOGY Richard A. Boyd.. M.D. F.A.C.O.G Edwin M. Fulghum Jr .. M.D.. F.A.C.O.G. Arthur S . Haiberts. M.D., F.A.C.O.G. OPHTHALMOLOGY Slanley F. SlIwlnsM Jr .. M.D.. F.A.A.O . PEDJATRtC & ADOLESCENT MEDICINE Ralph L. Benttey. M.D.. F.A.A P. D. Durham Lew is, M.D., P. A.A.P. Margaret J . Willhlde. M.D. F.A.A.p. GENERAL SURGERY Bruce Hortig, M.D. G aiy T. Robinson. M.D. Lanier Ogtiurn, M.O. (Retired) ORTHOPAEDIC SURGERY Byron Edword Dunaway. M.D. Arthroscopy. Joint Replacem ent & Sports Medicine UROLOGYRoberi 8. Graiewski, M.O., F.A .C.S. Tink A. Joh nson 111, M.D. i f 17 - k 27 i f 27 i t 27 ★ 27 i t 17 i t 27 i t 27 27 i t 27 i t 17 i t B a y lin D a n c e S t u d io s , It ic . I'm Registered Are You? Ryaniic McD.iniel Training Area Dancers — For 27 Years — E N R O L L N O W Tap — BaiieL— Acrobatics — Jazz Pre-Scliool Classes From Age 2 "Mini-Bopper" Jazz Classes New! 6 And 7 Year. Olds Judy Baylin D i r e c t o r C r a v e r B u ild in g C le m m o n s , N . C . 725-8301 70 Count THEME BOOK T w o P o c k e t F o l d e r s I)A\'II. fO l'M KNTIOKI’KISK Ui;COKI), rillIKSI)A\-. All)-. 17. I9X9-7C W A L - M A R T ® ; ■ ALWAYS THE LOW PRICE on THE BRANDS YOU TRUST. ALW AYSr NO VENDORS PLEASE M IN I B L IN D S WAUMARTSUPPORTS PM H w RM rnM iun h tà tku tH tim ikë Forlnfonnation caU1-80D-2SB-2766 2 L i t e r P E P S I D i e t 8 8 ^ THIRaMBUBNCHBR 4-16 Oz. Pkg. For y . I store Location; Squire Boone Plaza Store Hours: Monday - Saturday 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Thursday, Friday & Saturday Yadkinviile Rd., Mocksviile, N.C. Sunday 12:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. SALE DATES: August 17, 18 & 19 Only I'^ury advuMi&ud iiuni m stock Muaxvui. <1 to an, onlore^Hun reason, an advs^isod itern is not ava>lablu for purct^asd. Wal-Mart will issuu a Rain Criuc^ or' fUQuust. tor trie rnercnandisa to bt> purcnasod al thct sale puce v suit you a 'luiii dl H (ornpatatiiu rojjcdO" >n pnco We reserve the right to limit quantities Limlalions void m Nuvi Metico « с — D A V IK C O U M V i:Ní i:í<rKi.sK к с сч ж п , iiiu k m m k д»д. п . v m I 1968 ^ "яки(1: |U>rKAI.W HHinRS 130 years of scrvicc 4 Locations Middtobrook Dr. S. Main St »Clemmons Winston-Snlom Reynoida Rd, Н Й П S М;ьм Sl- Winslon-Salem Lo*ington Davio Phonp No 99(i 3-i2fí J.P. GREEN MILLING CO., INC. Makers ot DAISY FLOUR We Custom Blend Depot Street Mpcksvllle. N.C. 27028 Phone 634-2126 MOCKSVILLE BUILDERS SUPPLY "Together W e Do II Better" Soutli Main 6 3 4 - 5 9 1 5 Attend TH< Church Of Your Choice John N. McDaniel & Sons Hwy. 601 S., Mockevllle 634-3531 F O S T E R - R A U C H D R U G C O . Wllkeiboro Street mioekmllle, N.C. 27028 P h o n e 6 3 4 - 2 1 4 1 C A U D E L L L U M B E R C O . 162 ShMk StrMt ModcvMl*. N,C. 270йвл^::^'л P h o n e « 3 4 - 2 1 6 7 Johniiie M. Tilley Pest Control Service For Over 2в Умп' LocélyOwiMdtOperUwl •ЯмИммШ , •ComiMtelal •ImiMirial •iMWutloMl V ’кирвсвоп Opon ntquetl' Mocinvlllt 634-5600 Complements of D e p f r t m e n t S t o r e North Мёп Street Moctavillé 3im.* 3iu «SiMtli N 2 VwüdnvHto iioM ИоскмПМ _______ M4411S M A R ^ N H A R D W A R E & G E N E R A L M D S E . Feedi, Dry Oooda, Oraceitet and FeiUllnr OepoiSUeet MoeinvMIo, N.C. 27021 P h o n e 6 3 4 - 2 1 2 8 A M A N C A L L E D " B E L O V E D " ONE OF THE MEANINGS OP TVIE NAME DAVID IS "BELOVED/' THE SON Of= JESSE WAS TUB SECOND KINS OF ISRAEL. WE WAS H-IE VOUNSE5T OF EISHT BROTHERS (I SAMUEL 16H0M1,-17; 12-W ) MANV OF THE SOOD TRA ITS IN DAVID'S CHARACTER W ERE, NO DOUBT, INFLUENCED BY HIS MOTHER, WHO WAS KNOWN FOR HER GODLINESS. SOME O F THE PSALM S TMAT DAVID W ROTE W ERE IN REMEMBRANCE OF HIS A^TVIER'5 DEVOUT N ESS, CP5ALMS 86:)6,-H 6:16) DAVID'S ANCESTRAL HISTORY WAS PICTURESQUE AND INSPIRIN6 ALTHOUSH, AT TIMES TAINTED BY SINFUL ACTS. (GEN.37 :2 6 -2 7 ,3 8 ) IN PEPJ50N, DAVID WAS BUDDY AND BEAUTIFUL TO LOOK UPON AND AS THE Y 0UNSE5T SON, HE W AS CHARS6D WITH THE DUTY AND CARE OF HIS FATHER'S SHEEP. HIS DISPLAY OF COURASE IN THIS OCCUPATION, BY SLAYING BOTW A LION AND A BEAR WHICH ATTACKED THE FLOCKS, POINTED UP HIS SREAT BRAVERY. HE WAS ALSO PO SSESSED OF MUSICAL SIFTS OF THE HISHE5T ORDER AND HE PLAYED SKILLFULLY ON THE LYRE AND W AS VERY ADEPT AT COM POSIN S PSA LM S. THESE NATURAL 6 IF T 5 WOULD CERTAINLY STAND HIM IN GOOD ST E A D WHEN DESTINY BROUGHT HIM TO THE THRONE OF ISRAEL! SAVE THß FOB YOUR SUNDAY SCHOOL SCRAPBOOK. м*пмАтн*га!я»т1м! MSEMBI.Y Hwy. 601 Nortt) Mocksvlll«, N.C. R ev. Curtis E . Wood Sundiy School Morning Worship Evtning Worship 9:45 a.m. 10:45 am . 7:00 p.m. GREEN MEADOWS BAPTIST CHURCH Hwy, 801. FarmingtonYates Wiikorson, pastor Sur>day School t0:00 a.m.Worship Service 11:0 0 a m. tNTflirAITH/UNtVCIIfAt. A SSEM BLY OF U aH THwy. 601 S .(704>2’ ■■ NEW UNION UNITED METHODIST CHURCH g Worship 7:30 p,m. ■ A m ST C H U A C H 9:45 a.m. 11:00 a m. 6:00 p.m. 7:00 p.m. r CHURCH 10:00 a.m. n ;0 0 a.m. 7:00 p.m. 1 е т . ?Mark Hsrt. pastor Sunday Servlcss Sunday School Morning Worship Evening Worship W ednesday Bible £BEAR CREEK BAF . .. . _________Bear Crook Chuich Road North OIMocKsviMo Rov. Jo tn Clonlgor, Jr. Sunday School Morning Worship W ednesday Bible Study B U tS E BAPTIST CHURCH Highway 601 North at MO Rev. Qtenn Sellers, pastor Sunday School 9:45 a.m. Morning Worship U :00a.m .Everting Worship 7:30 p.m.W ednesday SerH ce 7:30 p.m.M E A D OP UPC BAPTIST CHAPEL Four Com ers Community, Hwy. 801 Phil Kitchln, pastorSunday School 10:00 a.m. Preaching Service 11:0 0 a,m.CALAHALN FRIENDSHIP BAPTIST CHURCH Calahaln Road Rev. Carrol Jordan, pastor Sunday School Worship Service Sunday Night Worship Highway 601 South Rl. 7. Воя 92, Mocksviile Jim Qryder. pastor Sunday School W orsh^ Service Evening Worship 10:00 a,m. tl.-OO a.m. 7:00 p.m. 7:00 p.m. 10:00 a.m. n.'OO a.m. 7:00 p.m. 7:00 p.m.W ednesday Service CfO A fI CREEK SA PTItT Cedar Creek Church Road Dr. W.C. Hay, PastorSundaySchool 10:00 a.m.Worship Service2nd A 4th Sunday 1:30 p.m.CMMiAQUAPtN OROVE BAPTIST CHURCH .Chinaquapin Church Road ofl Hwy. 601 Rev.. Oarrelt McConnell COMMUNITY BAPTIST CHURCH QiwMone RoadSunday School 10:00 a.m. W orshb Service 11:0 0 a,m. --------•F___ CHURCH OAVIE S A P fiS T CHURCHFork. N.C. Sunday School Worship Service Evening Worship W e d n ^ a y Service DUTCHMAN CREEK BAPTIST CHI Highway 601 oH Hwy. 64 W O N % BAPTIST CHURCH Eaton’s Church Road Rev. David Qilbresth Sunday School 10:00 a.m.Worship Service 11:0 0 a,m. W ednesday Prayer Servico 7:30 p.m. EDGEWOOD BAPTIST CHURCH Highway 601 Nonh Cooleemee. N.C. nev. D.C. SuWvan, pasiot Sunday School Sunday Worship 9:45 a.m. 11:00 a.m. 7:00 p.m. 7:00 p.m. HURÑ4 10:00 a,m. 11:00 a.m. 7:00 p.m. 7:00 p.m. ............................................. CHURCHFarmington Road Sunday School Wo/shfp Son'ice Youlh Training Union FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH N. Main Streei W. Paul Riggs, pastor Sunday School Morning Worship Evening Worship Church Training Wodnosday Bible Study FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Margtnal Slroet, Cooleomeo, N C.Rev. Larry G. Allen Sunday School Worship Sorvico Evening Worship 10:00 a.m. ll;DO a.m. 7:00 p.m. 9:45 a.m.11:00 a.m,7:00 p.m.6:00 p.m.7 00 p.m. FORK BAPTIST CHURCH 6 milos east on Hwy. 64 Sunday School Worship Service Evoning Worship GO SPEL B A PrlST CHURCH Rt. 6. Mocksvillo Sunday School Worship Sorvice Evoning Worship 9:45 n,m. 11:00 a.m. 7:00 p m. 7 :15 p.m. 9:45 a.m. 11:0 0 a m. 7:20 p m. Wodnosday Service GREEN HILL BAPTIST CHURCHGioon Hiil Road Rov, Graham Woolen, pastor Sunday School Worship Sorvico Evoning Worship W ednesday Wotship 10 00 am. 11:00 am. 7:00 p.m. 7:00 pm . W ednesday Service 7:30 p.m.HOPE BAPTIST TABERNACLE Highway 15 8 East Pastor: David Jordon Sunday School 9:45 a.m.Worship Service 10:45 a.m. Evangelistic 7:30 p.m.W ednesday Service 7:00 p.m.U A U ES CROSSROADS BAPTIST CHURCH Kenneth Hydo. pastorSunday School 9:45 a.m. Worship Sorvlco 1 V.OO a.m.Evoninq Worship 6:00 p mWoi/ficstfiiv' Sflfvicu 7 3D p.m.JEHUSAUEM OAPTiST CHUnCH Hwy. 601 SoutliSunday School tO:OOa.m. Worship Servico 11:0 0 a.m.Evening Wotship 7:30 p.m. W ednesday Service 7:30 p.m.NO CREEK PRIMITIVE BAPTIST CHURCH No Creek Road oti Hwy. 64 SHILOH BAPTIST CHURCH 628 Depot St.. Mocksviile Rov. A.O. Walker, Pastor SundaySchool 9:45 a.m.Worship Service tV.OO a.m. SMITH GROVE B A PftST CHURCH Hwy. 158 East TRINITV BAPTIST CHURCHRt. 4, Mocksviile Darrell Cox, pastor Sunday School t0:00 a.m.Worship Servico 11:0 0 a.m. Evening Worship 7:00 p.m.Wodnosday Servico 7:00 p.m. TURRENTINE BAPTIST CHURCHRt. 7. Mocksvillo Rev. Billy J . Sloop, paslorSunday School 9:4S a,m. Worshi|3 Servico i i:00 a.m.Evening Worship 6:30 p m,W ednesday Prayer Mealing 7:00 p.m. VICTORY BAPTIST CHUffCHMidway St., Cooleomoo Shelby Harbour, pa&torSunday School 10:00 a.m. Worship S en lce 11:00 a.m.Evening Worship 6:00 p .m .' W ednesday AWANAS 6:45 p.m.W ednesday Prayer Meeting 7:00 p.m, . YADKIN VALLEY BAPTIST CHURCH Yadkin Valley Road MTM OUC S T . FRANCIS OF A SSISI CHURCH Hwy. 601 North Sunday Worship 10:00 a.m. CNUIICH OPCM IIST CORINTH CHURCH OF CHRISTChailio Harrison, Jr., minister Sunday Worship 11:0 0 a.m.Evoning Worship 7:00 p m. JERICH O CHURCH OF CHRIST JqU Williams, Minisler Sunday Bibio Class 10:00 a.m.Worship 11:0 0 a.m. Worship 6:00 p.m.W ednesday Bible Sludy 7 30 p nt. CNMCM o r eOD COOLEEMEE CHURCH OF GODCooleemee, NC Luiher Chambers, paslorSunday School 10:00 a m. Morning Worship 11:0 0 a.m.Evening Worship 6:00 p.m. W ednesday FTH 7:00 p.m.CLEMENT GROVE CHURCH OF GOD Hwy. 64 WestLW. Ijames, pastorSabbath W:00 a m. Wotship Sorvice 1:00 p.m.Evening Worship 8:00 p.m. Wodnosday Sorvice 6:00 p.m.MOCKSVILLE CHURCH OF GOD Dwight Durham, pastor Hwy. 64 East Sunday School tO OO a.m.Worship Sorvice 1 i.oo a m.Evoning Worship 7:00 p.m. Wednesday Sorvico 7:00 p m. EPISCOPAL COOLEEMEE EPISCOPAL CHURCH OF GOOD SHEPHERD Rov. Edwin P. Dailoy Holy Euchrisi 9 30 amFORK EPISCOPAL CHURCH OF THE ASCENSIONRov-. Edwin P. Dailoy Holy Euchrisi lt:i5 a .m . ST. CLEMENT S EPISCOPAL CHURCH Mooting at Voglor's Chapol Middlebrook Diivo. Clvtfttnons Ruv. Joan GrimmSunday School to 00 a m. Worship & Holy Canmunion tt:00a.(n . INTfNDENOMINATIONAL MOCKSVILLE INTERDENOMINATIONAL CHURCHRov. Lindsay Waltots, pastor Sunday School 9 45 a m Morning Worship I i 00 a rii Voutt» Sotvico 6 30 p tnWudnusday l3it>1o Study 7 00 p m Í7041 264.4322 Dr. Jotry L. Cope, minister1st A 3rd Sundays2nd Thursday 4ih Wednesday 10:00 a.m. 1};00a.m. M ETHODIST 2;30 p,m. 7:30 p.m. 7:30 p.m. Ltm iU IA NHOLY CRO SS LUTHERAN CHURCHR ev. John A. Johnson, paslor Hwy. 601 South. Mocksvillo SundaySchool 9:45 a.m.W orship Service ii:0 0 a.m . METHODIST A.M .E. ZION METHODIST CHURCH Boootown Stroot. Mocksvillo ADVANCE UNITED METHODIST CHURCH Advance, N C. BAILEY’S CHAPEL UNITED METHODISTBailey’s Chapel Road BETHEL UNiTEO METHODIST CHUflCHBethel Chuich Road BETHLEHEM UNITED METHODISTCHURCHRedland Road oil Hwy. 158 East CENTER UNITED METHODIST CHURCHHighway 64 West Dr. S.B . Warner, Paslor}st Л 2nd Sunday Church School 9:45 a.m.Worship Servico 11:0 0 a.m. 3rd & 4th SundayWorship Sorvice 9:45 a.m. Church School , 10:45 a.m.5th SundayChurch School 9:45 a.m. CHESTNUT OROVE METHODIST CHUflCHKathryn W. Tan, pastor “ dÄ4- “ • Sunday ______ Worship Sevice OAK GRO V E UNITED CHURCH Hwy. 156 East SALEM UNITED METHODIST CHURCH Davie Academy Road Dr. S.B . Warner, Paslor 1st & 2nd Sundays Worehip Service - 10:00 a.m.Church School 11:0 0 a.m.3rd & 4th Sundays Church School 10.00 a.m.Worship Sorvico ll:0 0 a .m .Sth SundayChurch School 10:00 a.m. SMITH GRO VE UNITED METHODIST CHURCHHwy. >50 East. Mocksvillo Rov. Dotiby 0 . Swaim. pastor 1st & 3rd SundaySundaySchool 11:0 0 a.m.Worship Sorvice 10:00 a.m. 2nd, 4(h A Sth Sunday 10:00 a.m. 11:00 a.m. 2nd A 4ih Sunday Sunday School Worship Service CONCORD UNITED METHODIST CHURCH Cherry Hill Road Rev. John Deyton, minister 18 1A 3rd Sunday Worship Soroice ii:0 0 a.m.Sunday School 10:00 a.m.2nd A 4th Sunday Wotship Sorvice 10:00 a.m. SundaySchool ll.0 0 a,m .Sth Sunday Worship Altornato 10:00 A 11:0 0 a.m. c o o l e e m e e u n it e d METHODISTCHURCH Joseph W. Collins, pastor CORNATZER UNITED METHODiSTCHURCHCornatzer Road DULIN METHODIST CHURCHAdvance. N.C. ELBAVILLE UNITED METHOOIST CHURCH Hwy. 8 0 1. Advance. N.C. FARMINGTON METHODIST CHURCH1st SundaySundaySchool 11:0 0 a.m. Worship Service t0:00 a.m.2nd & 4fh Sunday Sunday School |0:00 a.m.3rd Sunday Sunday School lO OO a.m.Worship Sorvice 11:0 0 a m. FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH Notih Mam Stroot. Moeksville Rov. Don Lloyd, pastor Sunday School J0:00 a.m.Worship Sorvico 11:0 0 a m, FULTON UNITED METHOOIST CHURCH Hwy. BOI botwoon Fork and Advance Rev. Kormit E. Shoal, pastor Isl & 4th SundaySundaySchool 11:0 0 a.m. Wotship Sorvice 9:45 a m2nd, 3rd & Sth Sunday Sunday School 9:45 a.m. Wotship Sotvico 11:00 a.m HARDISON UNITED METHODIST CHURCHJeticho Church Road L1DERTY UNITED METHODIST CHURCHGladstono Road 1st A 3rd SundaySundaySchool 1 1:00 a.m.Wotship Servico 9:45 a.m. 2nd A 4ih SundaySunday Schoni 9 45 a m. Wotship Sotvico , 11:0 0 am . MA^NVILLE A.M .E, ZION METHODIST Vaughn L. Adams, paslor Rt. G. Box 37, MocksviileSunday School 9:30 a.m. Worship Sorvico 1 1 :00 a mMOCKS UNITED METHODIST CHURCHAdvanco, N С MT. OLIVE METHODIST CHURCHni 5. Mocksvillo t!>t, 2nd. A 3td SundaySunday Scfiool JO.OO a.m. Wotship Sotvico 11:0 0 a m4lh Sunday Sunday School f 100 a mWorship Sorvicu to 00 a m W ednesday Bible Study 7:00 p.m. UNION CHAPEL METHODIST CHURCH Kaihryn U. Tarl, pastor 1st, 3rd, & 5th Sunday Sunday School 10:00 a.m. Worshlo Service 1 1 '00 a mW ESLEY CHAPEL METHODIST CHURCH Advance. N.C. 1st Sunday SundaySchool 11:0 0 a.m.Worship Service 10:00 a.m.2nd, 3rd, A 4th Sunday Sunday School 10:00 a .m .. Worship Service 11:0 0 a.m.ZION CH A PEL UNITED M ETHODIST CHURCHR ev. Haywood B. Hyatt, paslor P B t M m S IA N BIXBY PRESBYTERIAN CHURCHFork Church Road at Cornatier Road R. Shane Owens,pastor Sunday School 9:4S a.m.Worship Service 1 1 :00 a.m. 1st A 3rd Wednesday C O O LEEt& E P R IS a y T in U N c m n & T ' 60 Watts Street-Cooieemee Kenneth E. Pollock, Pastor Sunday School 9:45 a.m.Worship Service 11:0 0 a.m. -' W ed .. Prayer A Bible Study 7 M p.m. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Leland A Richardson, minister Corner So, Main S l. A Lexington Hwy. Sunday School 10.00 a m.Morning Worship 11:0 0 a.m. SECOND PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 458 Pine St.. Ivan W. Lowery. Pastor SundaySchool 9:30 a.m.Worship Service 10:30 a.m. 2nd A 4ih Sunday W ISU V A NLIBERTY W ESLEYAN CHURCHA.C. Clem ens, paslor MOCKSVILLE W ESLEYAN CHURCHHospitai Streei. Mocksviile Oavid Rollins, Pastor Sunday School 9:45 a.m.Worship 11.00 a.m.Sunday Evening Worship 6:00 p.m. W ednesday Worship 7:00 p.m. MOBAVUNMACEDONIA MORAVIAN CHURCH Rev. E. Hampton Morgan, Jr., paslor Hwy. 601, Farmington Sunday School 10:00 a.m. Worship Service ii;0 0 a .m . Evoning Worship 7:30 p.m. 9 45 am . 10:45 a m. 7 00 p m. 7:00 pm . Support 'Ihe Merchants Who Bring You This Information —Attend The Church Of Your Choice— Church 0 1 Je su s Christ 0 1 Latter Day SaUits 669 Hardison St., MocksviileSunday Moellng 10:00 a.m. • 12 noon SEViNTN DAV AOVtNTliTSEVENTH DAY ADVENTISTMilling Road Sid Ki^lls.pastorSabbath School 9:30 a.m. Worship Sorvico u :0 0 a .m . PCNTICOSTAL MOLINIIS CLARKSVILLE PENTECOSTALLiberty Church Road Rev. Albuil GeniloSunday School 10:00 a.m. Worship Sorvico 1 1 :00 a.m.MOCKSVILLE PENTECOSTAL HOLINESS Milling RoadRov. David J . Eagle, Pastor Sunday School 10:00 a.m.Wotship Sorvice 11:00 a.m.Evening Sorvice 6:00 p.m. NEW CALVARY HOLINESS CHURCH Rt. 7 Tutrenlina Church Road Mocksvillo. N C. 27028 Pastor Evangolist Chationo Lewis REDLAND PENTECOSTAL HOLINESS Jam os Stowo. pastorSunday School 10:00 a.m. Worship Sorvico 1 1 :00 a.m,EvangoUstic 7:00 p.m. Wodnosday Family Nighi 7:00 p.m. E a t o n F u n e r a l H o m e 328 North Main Street Mocksvllle, N.C. 27028 Phone 634-2148 DAVIE TRACTOR & IMPLEMENT CO Ford Farming Sales And Service New Holland Equipment Highway 601 Soulh Mocksviile, N.C. 27020 Phone 634-5969 ' When you're hungry for n relaxing meal. H w y. 6 0 1 & M O M o c k sv llle , N C P h o n o 6 34 *0 4 36• tM4 WeM am $iee> • Mom n' Pee'« M C .A. SEAFORD LUMBER CO. Jericho Road Mocksvllle, N.C. 27028 P h o n e 6 3 4 - 5 1 4 8 Compliments o f O A V I E C O U N T Y F A R M B U R E A U 977 Yadkinviile Road Mockavm. N.C. 634-6207 S H E F F IE L D L U M B E R & P A L L E T C O . ' - Koute e, ВОЖ tes ModnvMe, N.C. 2T0M : ; Phone 492-5565 il JEFFCO CO., INC. In the Hillsdale Community Route 1 Advance, N.C. 27006 Phone 998-8193 F U L L E R W E L D IN G & F A B R I C A T O R Hwy. 601 8 P.O. Box 821 Mockwllie. N.C. 6 3 4 ^ 7 1 2 Evelyn Haynes & Lewis Rectors 634-3831, 768-1662 Or 1-800451-0218 E d F i s h e r P L U M B IN G S E R V IC E Cooleemee. N.C. 27014 Expert RepiJrt a New IniteleUon . FREE EfttralM & Emergency Seivlc* 284-2721 Phone 284-2232 DttlGGlNS tL ) Р Ч ® ! Щ 5 STEEL FABRICATING 122 WilkciboroSL Mocksviile, N.C. 2702S 634-2379 C arte r A uto R ep air ASECertlliedTwlmlclans Computerized Wheel Balancing Diagnostic Tun^Ups 8> AJC Setvlce, Etc. Mocks Church Rd„ Advance, N.C. _________919-998-5098_________ Daily Devotion 9:30 to 9:45 a.m. Monday thru Saturday WDSL 1)Л\'1К C()l!^■|Л■ |;N1I;UI’UISK UI-.COKI). 'mllUSI)Л^■. Лик. п . 1989-9C obituaries A d v a n c e N e w s Luther Brown IFuncral scrvicos I'or Lmlier : Brown, of Row.in Mills Roiiil. : Salisbury were held riuirsclay. ■: Aug. Wat Ihc Coolcciiiee Chiircli ;of God, conducted by (he Rev. . Luther Chambers and the Rev. ' : DennLs Page. Burial was in Rowan ■: Memorial Park. ;! IBrown, 85, apparently drowned ; at the home of a .son, Roy Brown. ; ini Staley, afler he fainted and fell from a fishing boat inlo a pond. . .Born in Davie County on June ■; 12, 1904, Brown was a son of the ■ late Clint and Dessie Templeton .Brown. Retired from Cone Mills, '.he was a member of Cooleemee ■■.Church of God, where he was a : former Sunday school .superinten- :dent and had served on the church .'council. He was an avid fisherman. His first wife, Mary Spry .'Brown, died in 1974. A son, David ■:Brown, and a daughter, Lucille ^;Holland, also preceded him in ;death. ;; Survivors include his second i;wife, Gertha Royal Brown; one ; ;other son. Gene Brown of Spencer; :three half sisters, Sallie Spillman .;of'Cooleemee,|Roger Gibson of ■;Albemarle and Bessie Brown of 'iDanville, Va.; a half brother, Zen- ,;nie Brown of Route 4, Mocksville; |;1S grandchildren and 15 ¡great-grandchildren. .:Dprothea G. Cartner : i; Mrs. Dorothea Girts Cartner, :^9Í formerly of Mocksville, died .St 8 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 5, at the i J>resbyterian Home in Oil City, Pa. uShe was a patient there since April |2,il986. 1; M rs;C a rtn e r was born in .'rritusville July 14, 1910, the ^daughter of the late Harry L. Sr. :i ; u d 'H ^ l, Turner Girts. She was ¡¿Isi; igraiiiate of Titiisville High i ’iSchóol, class of 1928, and a i:gr|duate o f the Emergency '.'Hospital School of Nursing, :Washington, D.C., in 1935. She ¡ jmployed'there until her mar- : i tp'HVClay'Foster in Juh^ jÌ9?9,' Mr. Foster died in February She was later married to -W tofim M; Cartner Oct. 6,1956, : |in>Noitth Carolina. Mr. Cartner i 'jiied iri October of 1974. Mrsi Cartfwr imved to Pleasant- i.V|^iUe;'io Novem^r of 1977. She v; i^u'eniploy^ as ¿ parttime nurse ; ¡^iSùinset. Manor and^i the ■;i-PÌMbylerian Home in Titusville. i-She attended the Pleasahtville Free i'Meihodist Church. She was a ; ; i^member of ; the Fleasantville ; ¡Roman’s Club, the Fleasantville i^ ^ p r Citizens and the Titusville -iilqivitk Gray;Lady voluntoers.. ^iiiSurvivpis inchidei a stepson, C a i^ of Newlahd; ; à stefh !^Ughtó, Mn. Laura Cartner Lutz '^flHickory; a brother, the Rev. fOirts of Titiisville; 'Mvenid at^grandchildren; and ;^yehil nieces and nephews. iBesides ' her pm nts and her '■^w bahds, two brothers died ^ v io u sly . - i Funeral services were held Tues- ^ y ; Aug. 8, with the Rev. Harry 'rX. Girts officiatihg. Interment was ';in'<Jeriisalem Comers Cemetery. ,^m ia M. Edwards ■; Donna Marie Edwards, 28,137 X o lu m b in e D r., Apt. 406, NWinston-Salem, died Tuesday, /Aùg. 8,1989 al Forsyth Memorial Hospital. : Edwards was bom on Dec. 29, :1960 in Winston-Salem to James J H .. and Hazel Powell Edwards. :SKe attended Pine Chapel Mora- :vian Church and was a member of .the of the H.O.W. Club. She at- .'tended the Children’s Center for :the Physically Handicapped and :graduated from the Forsyth Couniy .School System. She was a member ;of the Abilities Unlimited Club. : Survivors are: her father, James :H; Edwards and stepmother, Janice .W. Edwards, Winston-Salem; one sister, Judy E. Brock, Advance; one brother, Tim Edwards, 'Winslon-Salem; two slep-brothers, Bobby Brown, Winslon-Salem and Johnny Brown, Mocksville; and one slep-sisler, Anne Cartner, Mocksville. ; Funeral services were lield Fri day, Aug. 11 al Voglers's Main Slreel Chapel by Rev. Tim Byer- ly. Burial was in the Woodland Cemetery.« K .stlie r C . D u lin lisllicr ClKipliii Dulin, H7. ol'.'iOf) CollDii Grove Rd,, Ixvxington died Aug, 10 al her home. Funeral services were schedul ed for 2 p,m, Wednesday. Aug, 16 at Cedar Grove Bapti.sl Church in Diivie Couniy. conducled by llie Rev. Kelley O.P, Goodwin, pasior. Burial was .scheduled for Ihe chureh cemetery. .James O. Foster James Odell Foster, 74. of 122 Dunham Ave., Salisbury, died at 10:45 p.m. on Friday, Aug. II, 1989, al the V A Medical Center. He had been in declining heallh for the pasl year. The funeral was held al 2:30 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 13, al Southside Baptist Church, con ducted by the Rev. Jim Vickrey, pastor. Burial was in Rowan Memorial Park. Memorials may be made to Southside Baptisi Church, 517 Morian Park Road, Salisbury, N.C. 28144. Born April 1, 1915, in Davie County, he was a son of the late Clinton and Jennie T^lle Swink Foster. He retired from Cone Mills after 46 years and also worked wilh Pinkerton Security al the Buck Steam Plant. A member of Southside Baptist 'Church, he was a deacon and former Sunday School superinten dent. A U.S. Arm y World War II veteran, he was a member of the V F W Hudson-Miller-Tatum Post. Survivors include; his wife, Pearl Honeycutt Foster; a brother, Charles Foster of Salisbury; and a number of nieces and nephews. Beulah P. McDaniels Beulah Peacock McDaniels, 80, of Route 1, Mocksville died Mon day, Aug. 14 at Forsylh Memorial Hospital after a brief illness. Funeral services were held Wednesday, Aug. 16 al II a.m, at Westmoreland Chapel. Burial was in Salem United Church Cemetery in Statesville. Survivors include: one son, Rayford McDaniels of Route 8, M ocksville; one daughter, Margaret Helen Lehman of the home; one brother, Robert Peacock of Salisbury; and two grandchildren. . R e v iv a l A u g . 2 0 -2 7 A t C h u rc h Cooleemee Presbyterian Church will be conducting revival services Sunday, Aug. 20-27. Special singing will be featured each night and a nursery will be provided. The following speakers are scheduled lo speak at the church. • Sunday, Aug. 20, II a.m.. Rev. Russell Chrisco, pastor al Cedar Falls Baptist Church, Asheboro; 7:30 p.m. service. Rev. D.L. Wilson, pastor at Sovereign Grace Baptist Church, Winston-Salem. • Monday, Aug. 21,7:30 p.m., Rev. Glenn Sellers, pasior at Blaise Baptist Church, Mockvillc. • Tuesday, Aug. 22,7:30 p.m.. Rev. Elmer Sellers, former pasior of Jerusalem Baptisi Church. • Wedne.sday, Aug. 23, 7:30 p.m., Douglas Pollock, deacon at Grace Presbyterian Church in Deptford, New Jersey. • Thursday, Aug. 24, 7:30 p.m.. Rev. Dr. David Henry, pastor al Unity Presbyterian Chureh, Woodleaf. • Friday, Aug. 25, 7:30 p.m.. Rev. Kenneth Pollock, pasior at Cooleemee Presbyterian Church. • Saturday, Aug. 26,7:30 p.m.. Rev. Russell Chrisco, pastor al Cedar Falls Baptist Church, Asheboro. •Sunday, Aug. 27, II a.m.. Rev. Art Moll, pasior at Olivet Baptist Chureh, Bellwood, Penn sylvania; night ser\’ices. 7:30 p.m.. Rev. li, Kciiiiclh Grubb, pastoral Biicklmrn liihU' f'luiri.'li. Alloona, I’cnnsvlvania. V ,Iiike Иапе.ч Wnlker Jake llano Walker. Mi. оГ418 Wilkesboro .St.. Mocksville died Tuesday. Aug. 15 at Davie Coun ty Hospital after being in declin ing health. Funeral .services were schedul ed I'or TIuir.vday. Aug. 17 at Eaton's Funeral Home Chapel by Ihc Rev. Paul Riggs. Burial was scheduled I'or Rowan Memorial Park. Memorials may he made to ihe First Baptist Church. North Main Street, Mock.sville. N.C, 27028 or to Hospice of Davie County. P.O. Box 665. Mocksville. N.C. 27028. Born July 23, 1923 in Davie County, Walker was Ihe .son of the lale Frank H. and Maye Seaford Walker. He was a veteran of World War 11 and was retired from Inger soll Rand. Survivors include: his wife, Mary Sales Walker of the home; one daughter, Kariiss Virtue of Salisbury; two sister:;, Lucillc Daniel of Mock.svillc and Belly Daniel of Moorc.svillc; five brothers. Bill, Pete, J.P., Bailey and Kenny W alker, all of Mocksville; two grandchildren and one step granddaughter. B e t h e l P l a n s H o m e c o m i n g The Rev. Jack Luther j w ill be the | guest speaker at hom ecom ing I .services Sunday al Bethel | Church. L u th e r, former pastor] of the church, has also served as pasior of C o rn a t z e r Church. Ho is now at Gays Chapel in Rowan County, Following Ihe morning worship servicc, a luncheon will be served in the church fellowship hall, J e r u s a l e m S e t s H o m e c o m i n g Homecoming will be observed at Jerusalem Baptist Church, U.S. 601 north of Salisbury on Sunday with the Rev. Jack R. Johnson of Mocksville as guest speaker al the 11 a.m. service. Johnson is originally from Mocksville. He attended Davie County schools. In 1958 he sur rendered to preach and attended Fmitland Baptist Bible Institute, graduating in 1962. Johnson was ordained at Jerusalem Baptist Church. Johnson pastorcd churches in Morganton, Maiden, and Concord with the last church being Bear Creek near Mocksville. He also was interim pastor in Harmony and at Jerusalem Baptist Church. He is now retired and a member of Jerusalem Baptist Church. He is married to Jerusalem’s Lyndell Cable Johnson. They are the parents of three daughters: San dra Campbell, and Paincla Johnson Johnson, Concord; and Tiena Miller, Salisbury. A covered dish dinner will be served immediately afler the ser vice. There will be gospel singing al 1:30 p.m. The Rev. Ron Honcycutl is pasior. Luther liy l^dilli /.imnKTiiian Advance Correspondent The Rev. and Mrs. Norvcll Gross ami cliililrcii Hriiin. Chrisly aiul l.cc Ann of Danvers. Mass., were Wcdni’sday liinclicon guests ol Ills auiil. Mrs. Rccic .Sheets. The Rev. ami Mrs. Gro.ss were accom panied by his imilher. Mrs. Sadie Ciross of Pfairtown. Mr. and Mrs. Chris Farley and children Brian. Christopher. Denise and John of Adington. Va.. spent a few days lasl week wilh her niolhcr, Mrs. Edith Zinimernian. They were en route to Florida for vacation, Meli.ssa. Amanda and Meredith Hendrix also visited their grandmother. Mrs, Zinmierman., during the Farley’s visit, Mr, and Mrs, Quincy Cornatzer Fulton Church Celebrating Anniversary Fulton United Methodist Church will celebrate Ihc IOOth anniversary of the dedication of their old church on Sunday, Aug, 20, Sunday school will be held at 9:45 a.m., followed by worship service at 11 a.m. The Rev. L. Bevell Jones III, Bishop of the. Western North Carolina Conference of the United Methodist Chureh, will deliver the centennial sermon. Also participating in the service will be District Superintendent, the Rev. Julian Aldridge of Lexington and the Rev. Kermit Shoaf, pastor of the church. Steve Leary, president of Historic Davie, Inc. will speak on the restoration progress of the structure. Following the centennial service, a fellowship meal will be served in the fellowship hall. For dessert, birthday cakc will be .served by the United Methodist Women. This scrvicc concludcs one year of celchralions lo commemorate the construction of the Fulton M .E. Church, Soulh. Fulton Church was organized in 1800 as Hebron Church. The se cond church at Fulton, .named Fulton M .E. Church, South, was dedicated the third Sunday in August by the Rev. J.H. Cordon of Raleigh. The brick structure combined Gothic and Italiante style architec ture, typical of the Victorian era. The structure was used until 1969 when vacated for a larger structure. G r a n t R e c e i v e d R A L E IG H — N.C. Department of Commerce, Secretary James T. Broyhill, announced Aug. 10 that Yadkin Valley Economic Develop ment District, Inc. has received an additional $104,100 from the Energy Division to weatherize homes of low income, elderly and handicapped residents. 31 Court Square M ocksville, NC 634-0158 Consignment Shop O p en in g August 21, 1 0 : 0 0 a . m . A t H w y . 6 01 A n d 801 •’G re a s y C o r n e r ” S a m e B u ild in g A s A u c t io n H o u se New And Used Merchandise Clothes ★ Toys ★ Whal Nots ★ Shoes Accepting Merchandise By Appointment Only Call Tri-C ounty A uction And Consignm ent Shop 704-284-4604 O r 910-998-4059 - Hom e - A sk For M iirlha spi.^111 ilio wcL'kond at the hcach. Mr. anil Mrs. Chris Jones were honored wilh a stork shower Sun day afternoon at Ihc home of Mrs. Kiia Vogler. Mr. and Mrs. M.C. Deadmon of Mocksville were Thursilay aftei- noon visitors of Mrs. Edith Zim merman and the Farley family. Miss Ana Williams <if Clem mons was a Thursday morning visitor of Mrs. Janie Hendrix and girls. She also visited Edith Zim merman and Adrian Farley. Mercdilh Hendrix was a Thurs day overnight guest of Callie Bailey. Mrs. Nancy Zimmeniian accom panied her cousins, Mr. and Mrs. John Frank Holder, to the moun tains Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Bailey and children Eleanor. Gallic and Taylor s(icnl Ihe weekend at Cherry Grove Heach. S.C. Mrs. Edith Zimmerman and granddaughters Meli.ssa. Amanda and Meredith attended a stork shower for Mrs. Karen Zimmer man Dickens Sunday al'ternoon in the Valley Oaks Development, Yadkin Valley Road. Later they at tended Mrs. Sue Jones’ stork shower. Mrs. Janie Hendrix .spent the weekend in Hico, W.Va., on'a white water rafting trip wilh a' group of friends. ^ Mr. and Mrs. Steve Walker at tended a birthday celebration Sun day afternoon for his grandmother, Mrs. Virginia Walker, in the Yadkin Valley community. Gateway singers (l-r) are Rachel Ellis, Johnny Cashwell, Glen-^< da Holbrook, L a rry H olbrook and Sandy Everhart. v Gospel Sing Is Saturday The Gateway singing group will present a gospel jubilee Saturday at the Farmington Community Ccnter from 3 to 10 p.m. The program , entitled “ Homecoming ‘89,” will include performances by tbe Gateway singers, the Shuffler Family, Alleii, Ham and Family, the Cashwelfe and the McNeils. v ✓ Admission is free. A love offer ing will be taken. Bring your law'n chairs. Clemmons First Baptist Church Preschool ; A L o vin g Christian Atm osphere W here Learning Is Fun * Hwy. 158 — Clemmons Road I Registering Now ^ I Mother’s Morniiig Oiit t •3 Year Olds k; ^ •4 Year Olds (3 or 5 Days Available); Phone 766-6486 # R e g i s t e r N o w Davie Dancé Academy August 21, 22, 23 & 24, 1989 6:30 to 7:3(^ p.m.. Phone 998-8315 IOC— DAVIE COUNTV KNTKKI’RISK Kl'COKI), TlltlKSDAV. Aun- 17. I9S9 Our BIGGEST Sale of the Year! 1 2 H O U R S O N L Y ! 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This suite features a rich, long-wearing Antron nylon cover. • NO HOLD O R D E R S O R LAY-AW AYS • UM ITED QUANTITIES • ALL S A L E S FINAL • FIR ST COM E, FIR ST SER V ED *389 H eavy D ut) W asher • Single Speed Washer ' Regular. Perm, Press W u h Cyles iratlng Lint Filter __ __rFuirW i on Perma Tub Re________ 25-Year Fu Varraniy T .V . C a rt * 2 9 ” V Ic e C h e s t L a rg e W in g b a c i( C h a ir W H I L E T H E Y L A S T ! B ra s s & G la s s E ta g e re ^ 9 9 ^ * W a te r B e d C o m p le te • 1 9 9 » « B o o i( C a s e * 3 3 * a 3 P c . B ra s s & G la s s T a b le s » 1 6 9 » » E n te rta in m e n t C e n te r » 8 8 * * U t i l i t ^ i r ^ $ 3 3 9 » W ooden Bar Stools • Factory seconds^ •Padded seats Assorted o lo » & Styles 6 3 4 -5 7 3 9 125-127 North Main Street M ocksville, N.C. SPECIAL ^ i n a e r Jar Lam ps Front DAVIIC COUNTY EN'IKRI’RISK RKCORI), THURSDAY, Auk. П , 1989-lD Clemmons Man Charged After High-Speed Chase This department of transportation dump trucl< narrowly missed trees off Farmington Road. C a r, D u m p T r u c k C o llid e A Mocksville teen-ager was charged Aug., 11 with driving left of center after his Pontiac Grand Am crossed the center line and col lided with a dump truck carrying a load of boulders. According to a report by N.C. , : Highway. Patrol Trooper K.B. Sti*n, David Joseph Engle Jr., 19, ' O^ Route 2, was charged after the ' he was driving crossed the cmter line at 11:05 a.m. bn Far- (raiigton Road in front of Papa I ; j^ 's Campground, j i : ii^gle’s car collided with a N.C. ||]C^pat№ent of Transportation ■**'“ ^k':canyiiig boulders from the „ ¡ ^ Materials quarry nearby. Lee Sidden, 24, of Route ll'ii^oicksville, was driving the car on my side and get over,’’.Sidden said. ‘‘I bcinl an explosion and I tried •ti^iet'over. 1 kept,trying to get it I'-MCVPed. All I could see was that ■mai^tree.” . - - il^igle's car ran off the roadway ■to>tbe4eft, struck a tree and was -pMingled m ab ai)^ wire fence. A CleniiiiDUs nnm is in ihe Davie Counly Jail willunit privilege of honcl al'lcr leading police on a 115 mph chase from Davie Coumy lo Clemmons early Sunday morning. JclTrey Adam Flood, 21, of Soulliwe.sl Acres Apt, 4, faccs more lhan 10 chargcs afler the In cident which began at 12:30 a.m. Sunday. Trooper B.L. Crider of the N.C. Highway Patrol said he noticed a 1966 Mercury Come! being driven erratically on N.C. 801 near Yadkin Valley Road, "H e was bobbing, real jerky driving,” Crider said, “ I activaled my blue light and he took off.” Flood drove the car on N.C. 801 to 1-40, where Trooper D.R, M cCoy was waiting and the two troopers attempted a running road block, Crider said, “ He went sideways onto 1-40,” Flood ran into the 1-40 median sideways and the troopers thought he was going to wreck, Crider said. Flood regained control of the vehiclc and drove lo Clemmons al 115 mph. Flood drove onto Ihc Lewisville- Clemmons Road exit and Ihe car spun around, when he accelerated inlo Ihe front of Trooper M cCoy’s car, Crider .said. The car driven by Flood was fac ing the on ramp back lo 1-40, and he headed lhat way, crossed the median and headed east in Ihc weslbound lane. Flood parked the car in front of a Fonsylh trooper’s car and fled on foot back across 1-40, Crider said. A tracking dog from Ihe Davie County Sherifrs Department was used lo help apprehend Flood, who was captured in the Rose’s park ing lol in Clemmons, The car driven by Flood had been reported stolen about mid night, and the sheriffs department was taking that report when the chase began. Flood told the troopers he tried lo elude police because there was an outstanding warrant in Surry Counly for driving while license revoked, Crider said. Members of the sheriffs depart- mcnl served that warrant on Flood, and also charged him wilh larceny , of a motor vchicle. ;!' The highway patrol charged the i ; man wilh driving 115 mph in a 65; ; ■ mph zone, failure lo stop for blue. ’ ■ light and siren, speeding to elude;; - arrest, felony possession of a stolen; ’ car, hit and run driving, assault on; i a law officer wilh a deadly weapon,; f and driving while license revoked,; ; “He had been drinking,'but there wasn’t enough to charge him,” ; Crider said. He is wanted by the state depart ment of corrections for probation; violation, ' The 1966 Mercury Flood was' driving had been restored, in cluding a new engine, Crider said. DanMge to the car was estimated at $1,000, to the highway patrol car, $2,000. ■ C o o le e m e e G e ttin g t o u ^ h Trooper K.B. Steen inspects car,, while DOT’S Van Swicegood talks to driver, David Joseph Engle Jr, — Photos by Robin Fergusson The truck driven by Sidden ran reported, off the right side of the road into Steen estimated damages to a ditch, turned up on its left side Engle’s 1987 Pontiac at $4,000, between a grove of trees, Steen and to the 1986 Ford, $20,000, |:: ;Tmn-agers in this car escaped serious injury after it collided with a dump truck on Farm- ] ;•'.Ington Road on Aug. 11. By Mike Barnhardt Davie County Enlerprise-Record C O O L E E M E E - No more Mr, Nice Guy. Cooleemee’s ordinance enforce ment officer is going lo gel tough. Calvin Koontz, who serves in the position in Cooleemee and other northwestern Norlh Carolina towns, is beefing up enforcemenl of Cooleemee’s ordinance pro hibiting overgrown lots and dilipidated buildings. “ I’m going to quit playing nice guy and from day one send them a notice of hearing,” Koontz said, “ It’s just as fair. We do nol have to write them a nice letter like I’ve been doing.” That hearing will allow the pro perty owner to discuss wilh Koontz problems with the house or lot before legal action is taken. Koontz has sent letters to three property owners in Cooleemee, two with overgrown lots and one who owns a dilapidated house, said town clerk, Shirley Jacobs. After the hearing, the property owners will have a maximum of 90 days to fix the property, Koontz said. Koontz plans to inspect the pro perties in question soon, and send letters to the property owners ad vising them of a hearing date, • The board again delayed action on adopting an ordinance pro hibiting abandoned and junk vehicles. Still in question are who will conduct grievance hearings, whether lowing fees should be in cluded in the ordinance, and whether vehicles could be con sidered a nuisance because of acslhelic reason.s. Mayor Bill Gales asked commis sioners Jackie Morion and Denny Creason to work out details of Ihe ordinance. • The Iward approved plans to add street lights in Cooleemee, at an estimated monthly cost of $600, Streets to receive lights: School, Ruffin, Westview, Holt, Midway, Grove Extension, and Center Ex tension, and Junction and Gladstone roads. Additional lights will be added on other streets, and new lights are being considered for N.C. 801, Gales said, • Town resident Woody Boger told commissioners the drug pro blem is greater in Cooleemee than many people realize, Boger, a candidate for mayor, said he learned of the probleni when he opened a gariie room. “ There’s a drug pipeline going through Cooleemee shooting out across the county,” he said. “Your community is bad whether you realize it or not.” Board members said they recognize the problem, but don’t know solutions. “ How the world do you stop it?” Denny Creason asked. “ Do you have any-sugges tions?” Morton asked Boger. *Boger didn’t have a solution. “ It’s worse than I ever thought it was,” he said. • The board hasn’t dispur^wl $802 it received from A B C profits for alcohol rehabilitation and education, but said it wants to keep it in the community. “ I ’d like to see us use it on a local setting,” * r , Gales said, • Board members adopted resolution asldng to be exempt^;, from spending its share of the state t r '/¿-cent sales tax for virater and sewer systems, since the town ' doesn’t operate either system, Z; • A contract for legal services *; wilh Martin & Van Hoy AttorM ys^; was approved, with an annuai*re-t?' tainer of $1,200, • Gales said the state department' ^ of transportation itt coming w ^ k s * : will repair N ^ n and Center streets; jv making them 6-8 inches wider. ; ? ? • M a rk Phelps said the i:; Cooleemee Fire ; Department recently tested pumps on both . trucks, part of requirements befb^- asking the state for a lower ;№ surahce rating. ■ ' " ■'/ The departnient also cleaned ttie parking lot at Cooleemee. Sho|)|)K.ik I ing Center. There are 22; fireiheii on ittie-|*i : roster, and four sets of firefight^ '" gear for firemenweie recently pt№ :chased,'Fhelp^ said.ii'v>:v Gales told PheljM the file depart: ment would have to file a le q u M to receive the $2,000 in the t o ^ budget for the file dqMitiiieM, then document how it was • Police Chief Tony Hartle said > ; that in July, the department answered 26 calls. M an C harge d W ith D W I O n B ike A Mocksville man was charged with D W I last Friday after the bicycle he was riding collided with a car on Salisbury Street. James Calvin Mayfield, 36, of 378 Hemlock St., was riding the bicycle soulh on Salisbury Street when he lost control of the bike, crossed the center yellow line and struck the side of a car driven by Nelson Lee Turrentine, 24, of A; Route 6, Mocksville, reported'' Mocksville Police Patrolman Т.Н.;?; Blackwelder. Mayfield, who registered .23 o n ii Breathalyzer tests, was chargedi] with D W I and driving left of;! center. ‘ The accident occurired at 9:2 p.m. Peggy Harrison Juggles Home, Community Work Peggy Harrison describes her life as “a Juggling act.” She balances the demands of be ing a wife, mother, business woman, and civic leader, Peggy’s personality is coupled wilh an in sight into the ever-changing worlds of polillcs and business. One of her main concerns is thal the people of rural America not lose sight of the fact lhat there are many positive as|x:cts of iheir lifeslyle and cullure which are worlhy of preservalion, “ People in rural areas place a ^ high value on consideration of other peoples’ feelings, fairness, honesty, and imegrily. These same trails should perhaps be adopted by those oulside of our region as a means of coping wilh an increas ingly competitive and stressful world,” she said. •‘It’s ncccssary lo occasionally slow down and appreciate life. In the long run, il contributes to pro ductivity, I appreciate someone who is excited about whal he or she is doing,” Although Harrison is a relative newcomer lo Davie County, her rools run deep in the Yadkin River valley. She grew up in the Vienna communily of western Forsylh Counly in a Moravian family which Iraccs ils lineage back lo the arrival of ihe first Moravians In Wachovia more than 235 years ago, Harrison came lo the Advance area of Davie Counly in 1982 shortly ai'ier she and Jeff Harrison were married. He was Presidcnl of B&H Supply Company, Inc, uiilil ihree years ago when he enlered Ihe Wake Forcsl Universily School of Law, He gradualed in May and has recenlly taken Ihe Norlh Carolina Bar IHxam, They have a son, Treni, 2. anti daughter, Brill, 7 months. Harrison began her first business, a beauiy salon in 1‘U‘iise See Adviuico — I’. 1)10 Harrison: ‘People in rural areas place high value on consideration of other peoples’ feelings.' - j . . . ;2 D -IM V IE COUNTY ICNTKKMRiSK К И OKI), TIU'KSIM V. Лис- 17, I‘)SM ilDavie Dateline Meetings : Thursday, Aug. 17 ' Davic Sertoma Cliib meets al ;.6:30 p.m. al Western Steer. ;‘Visitor.s welcome. Davic Gnrntli Maiiayoim'nl ; -Taslc Force meets at 7 p.m. in tlie ; grand jury room in tiie courtliotisc. : ■- Davic Democrat Party meets at i: 7:30 p.m. al Western Steer. All in- ; tcre.slcd cilizen.s invited lo attend. '■{Monday, Aug. 21 Davic coiiimissioner.s meet at 7 ' p.m. in llieir board room in liie - courthouse. ; Tuesday, Aug. 22 . Davie Republican Party Ex ecutive Committee meets at 7:30 p.m. in the courthouse. Republican candidates who filed for a seat on the Mocksvillc Town Board have a spccial invitation. This is an open . . meeting, and all Republicans arc invited. Thursday, Aug. 24 ■ Davie Public Library Board of Trustees meets at 7 p.m. in the library's multi-purpose room. Ongoing , -- Mocksville Rotary Club ineets ' every Tuesday at 12; 15 p.m. at the ' Rotary Hut, Salisbury Street. MocksviUe Veterans of Foreign ]. Wars Post 4024 meets at the Post .Hut on Sanford Avenue, : Mocksville, 7:30 p.m. the second ■; Tuesday of each month. Veterans 'Welcome. MocksvUlc-Davle Jaycees meet ; every ; first Monday at Western ; Steer aind every third Monday at ; the < Davie County Parks and 1 Recreation Depaitment on Sanford Avenue. 7 p.m. ’ AkoM ta ABO^ymoug, md Al- < '.;'Anon fiunily group lioMtings for .rVthose : affected by alcoholics, - Wednesdays; 8 p.m., B.C. Brock < .Building lower level. North Main Street,VMocksville. Americaii Lcgfon; Post 174 ratoMlily liie^^ the Rotary Hut !' HC<^.Thun^y' of e^h month at ' ¿ ,7.p.in. vyelerans welcome. !MocksvUle Civitan Club meets 6:30 p.m. the second and fourth •-Monday of each month at Western . ^^teer. ¿J ;Advaiice Memorial Post 8719 SVetet^ of Foreign Wars and ;^litdies Ai^liaiy meets each fourth .;tuesday, 7:30 p.m., at the post .'Home in M v a ^ . |r^:Amerlcan Auoclation of 'Ifaetired lysohsi Davie County ::iCbapler, meets second Wednesday each nkmth atvl0;30 a.m. at :P|nt UnitMl Metiiodist Church 'feUowshiD hall: : ii"'.Davie County Right To Life Inieetsat7^.m, on Ihe third Thurs- tl^y. of each in c^ in the grand jury '¡noni df the county <»urthouse. :?dl 634-5235 or 492-5723. Coolcciikc Memorial VFW / vPbst 1119 meets second and fourth i^Thursdiys of each month, 7:30 Cooleemee Town Hall. ''rDavIe Theatre Company meets at 7:30 p.m. the third Thursday of each month at the Brock ‘ Auditorium. Davie Arts Council meets at . 7:30 p.m. fourth Tuesday of each month at the recreation depart ment, Sanford Avenue, •Mocksville. Corinthian Lodge No. 17 '. A F & A M meets at the lodge, sc- ; cond and fourth Fridays, 7:30 p.m. Mociisville Masonic Lodge No. 1.14 meets the lirsi ;nul ihinl Tucsilays al 1:M) p.m. ;il ihi; IckIi^c. Davie Multiple .Sclenwls ,Sii|)- port Group meels ihiril I'ucMlay ol each nionih. 7:.W p.m.. al Davie Counly Health Departmcnl. Extension For more information on any ol these events or activities, contact the Davic County Agricultural Ex tension Scrvice office at 634-6297. Monday, Aug. 21 Kappa Hdiiicniakcrs meet al 6:30 p.m. at the community building for family picnic. Wednesday, Aug. 23 P in o -F a rm in g to n Homemakers meet at I p.m. al Carolyn Boger’s re.sidence. Thursday, Aug. 24 Cana Homemakers meet at 7 p.m. at the community building for POW workday. 4-H County Council meets al 7 p.m. in the auditorium of the coun ty office building. All club presidents and counly council representatives should attend. All other 4-Hers invited. Monday, Aug. 28 4-H Teen Leaders will meet at 5 p.m. in the auditorium of the county office building. Ail youths in grades 7 and up are invited to attend. Recreation The following events are offered by the Mocksville-Davie Recrea tion Department. For more infor mation, call 634-2325. Upcoming Events Dance classes starting after Libor bay. Ballet, toe, tap, acrobatics, jazz arid baton; after noon and evening classes for ages 3 and up, including adults. Emily Robertson, instructor. Classes held at Brock Auditorium. Mather’s Morning Out, day care for pre-schoolers, Thursdays, 911:30 a.m., First Methodist Church in Mocksville. Pre- registration required. Aquaeroblcs, exercise program for adults, low-impact, for swim mers and npnswimmers, $2 a ses sion, Mondays and Thursdays, 7-8 p.m. at Cooleemee pool. ruL'siiiiys anil 'Mill rstlays. p.m.. Mncksvi'llc lilcmcntary. Karen Wishon. iri- slruclor. .SI.S. Summer Programs Registration acccplcci al the V of- fice. Room 211 in the Brock Building, or al the lir.sl cla.ss only. A(|iiacise, iierohies in water, no swim m ing. Mondays. Wednesdays. Fridays. 6:4.‘i-7;3() p.m.. Lake Myers. SI.“! a month. Karen Pcnweli, iiistruclor. YMCA P A T’S INTERIORS 1: 766-9166 •Vertical Micro ' Or Mini Blinds §Waverly Wallcouerings •Coordinated Lambrequins And Draperies •Harduiood Floors And Parquet §Non-skid rug pads Cephis Drive, Clemmuii.s Behind Dockside Religion sponsored hy Saim l-rancis of Assisi Chinch, each l-rklay. 7-10 p.m. SIDO jackpol. Duelle Kosler Christian Seniors Cliih iiiocis loiirlh Гисч1ау of each miinlh al Oak Cmovc Methodist Cliiirch. Id a.m. In The Schools Reunions The following events are offered by the Davie Family YMCA. For more information, call the Y of ficc, M-F, noon-5 p.m., 634-0345. Ongoing Square dancing and clogging. Freestyle Swingers, Mondays, 7 p.m., Arnold Broadway’s home on Davie Academy Road. Call Broad way at 284-2766 or Nancy or Shor ty Bowles at 998-3105. Open to families, singles, beginners and ex perienced dancers. Morning aerobks, classes begin first week of each month. Mon days, Wednesdays and Fridays, 9-9:45 a.m.. First United Methodist Church, Sandra Johnson, instructor. $15. Low-Impact aerobics, classes begin first day of each month. Mondays and Wednesdays, 5-6 p.m., Mock-sville Elementaiy. Kel ly Beilin, instructor. $15. High-impact acrobics, classes begin first week of each month. Saturday, Aug. 19 Gateway gospel group will pre sent “ Homecoming ‘8 9 " al the Farmington Community Ccnter. 3-10 p.m. Other gospel groups will perform. Free admission. Bring lawn chairs. Sunday, Aug. 20 Fulton United Methodist will celebrate the centennial of its dedication. Bishop L. Bevell Jones III of the Western North Carolina Conference will speak at the 11 a.m. worship .service. A,fellowship lunch will follow al 12:30 p.m. Family Day al Davie Baptist Church. A Family Bible will be presented lo the family with the most members present. Church is located seven miles cast of Mocksville on Fork Church Road, off U.S. 64. Bethel Church will celebrate homecoming. The Rev. Jack Luther, former pastor, will be the speaker. Lunch will follow in the fellowship hall. Aug. 20-25 Eatons Baptist Church will celebrate homecoming Sunday. The Rev. Walter Howell, former pastor, will deliver the 11 a.m. ■ message. A covered dish luncheon will follow in the fellowship hall. Revival services will begin on Monday and continue al 7:30 niglitly through Friday. The Rev. Dr. Thomas Bland, professor at Southeastern Seminary, will be the speaker. Aug. 20-27 : Cooleemee Presbyterian Church will hold revival services beginning at 11 a.m. Sunday, when the Rev. Russell Crisco, pastor of ■ Cedar Falls Baptist Church in Asheboro, will be the guest speaker. Nightly services, which begin at 7:30, will feature different speakers. Special singing. Nursery provided. Sunday, Aug. 27 Bethlehem United Methodist Church w ill celebrate its homecoming. Speaker for the 11 a.m. worship service will be the Rey. Julian Aldridge, new superintendent for the Lexington District. A covered dish meal and singing-on-the-grounds will follow in the afternoon. Church is located on Redland Road between N.C. 801 and U.S. 158 in Advance. Church School Rally Day at M ocksvillc United Methodist Church. Sept. 17-20 Revival ut Mocksvillc United Methodist Church. Ongoing Redland Pentecostal Holiness Church “ Saturday Niglit Sing” every sccond Saturday al-7—U tS— 158 and Baltimore Road, lliiigo, Mocksville Rotary Hut, Senior Citizens The Ibllowing evenis arc offered for senior cili/ens in Davie Coun ly in cooperation with ihc Davie County Senior Centcr, Brock Building. Mocksville. All events are al the center unless otherwise noted. Call 6.34-0611 for more information. Aug. 17-18 Shopping days; Friday is also Blood Pressure Day. Monday, Aug. 21 ,Iudy Bates will speak on health. Tuesday, Aug. 22 Party for those wilh August birthdays. Wednesday, Aug. 23 Show and Tell Day. Aug. 24-25 Shopping days. Ongoing RSVP Sewing Bee on Thursdays. 9 a.m.-l p.m. Miscellaneous Thursday, Aug. 17 Winston-Salem Christian Women's Club Brunch will hold a “ Hometown U S A ” brunch at Ber muda Run Country Club from 10 a.m. to noon. Fee is $7. Reserva tions necessary by Aug. 14. Call Roxie Eldridge at 998-5117. Surplus food distribution at the National Guard Arm ory on U.S. '6 4 F.asl. Anyone interested in rccei\'ing surplus (botl slioiilcl apply at the Armory. Sunday, Aug. 20 American Legion Post 174 will hold its annual picnic al 1 p.m. at‘ Rich Park, Shelter No. 5. All members and their families are in vited, along with any veterans. Through Aug. 21 Jaycee book drive. Inmates at the Davie Correctional Center need books. Collection boxes at the Davie Public Library in Mocksville and the branch library in Cooleemee. For more information, call W ill Martin at 634-2171. Thursday, Aug. 24 American Red Cross blood drive al the Mocksville Rotary Hut from 3 to 7 p.m. Sponsored by the Mocksville Lions Club. Aug. 26-27 Open auditions for “ L il Abner,” Aug. 26 from 1 to 5 p.m. at the Davie Public Library, and Aug. 27 from 2 to 6 p.m. at the library. Roles for 28 men and 11 females, ages 15 and up. Be prepared lo sing and dance. Call 634-5018 afler 7 p.m. lo schedule another lime. Anyone interested in working backstage on costumes, sets, etc., is also encouraged to sign up at this lime. Ongoing Veterans Service Office has -new Jioiirs; Monday-Tuesday, 8 a.m.-5 p.m.; and Wednesday, 8 a.m.-noon. Thursday, Aug. 17 North Davic Junior High Scliool « ill hold an orientation for new sliidciits and parents from 7 lo 8:30 p.m. Separate sessions will be lield for parents and studenls. Sevcnlh- grade students may pick up class schedules and pay fees beginning at 3:30 p.m. Refreshmcnls will be served. All seventh-grade students and tlieir parents urged lo attend. Monday, Aug. 21 Itack-to-School Night at Mocksvillc Elementary, 6-7:30 p.m. Parents and studenls invited lo meet teachers, see classrooms, fill out forms and pay fees. Car pooling is cncouragcd as parking space is limited. Pinebrook Elementary will hold an open house for students and parents beginning at 7 p.m. Studenls will be able lo find out tcachcr assignments and pay fees. Now Open Today’s Treasures ‘ 'Pricele.ts Treasures Th a i A rc A ffo rd a b le ” (Stadium Drive — Clcniniuns — Behind BBQ Barn — 766-6695) August Spccial Williamsburg Blue Mail Baskets Keg. I’ricc '8“’ Special August Price ^6°° Come In And See Our New Suppiy Of Unpainted Resin' Monday-Friday 9:30 am to 5:00 pm; Saturday 9:30 am io 2:00 pm Saturday, Aug. 19 Class of 1939. Mocksvillc High School, will hold its 50th reunion al Ihe Mocksville Rotary Hul. ; Sunday, Aug. 20 Kiger and Adam s family reu nion in the Oak Grove Methodist Church fellowship hall. Lunch begins at 1 p.m. Bring a picnic lunch. Friends invited. ; Saturday, Aug. 26 Class of 1984, Davie High School, will hold its five-year reo- nion at the Holiday Inn in Cleixi- mons, 7:30 p.m.-I2:30 a.m. Ad mission: $8 per person. Guesjs welcome. Make reservations in ad vance. ; Sunday, Aug. 27 ^ ^ W illiam s family reunion at the Jerusalem Fire Department at,il p.m. Bring picnic basket and tea. County Planners To Meet There will be a meeting of the Davic Counly Planning Board on Thursday, Aug. 31, at 7 p.m. in the commissioner’s room of the Davie County Courthouse. Robert C. Ginther submitted a request to rezone property from Residential R-20 lo Industrial (I-l-S) Special Use Zoning. This 2.11 acre tract lies diagonally across from Tise’s Store at U.S. 64 and Turrentine Road (SR 1605). The property is further describ ed as being a western most portion of parcel 94 of tax map J-6. Gin ther wishes to establish a garage door warehouse and distribution center. J.M. and Gary Bowden have resubmitted a request to rezone property from Residential R-20 to Highway Business H-B. This seven acre tract lies on the wesl side of N.C. 801 approx imately one tenth mile south of CL N.C. 158. The property is also ■ described as being parcels 2,2.01 i -! 3 ,4 and 5 of tax map D-8-8 Block-' A. ■ . • Bennie D. Boger submitted a . quest to rczone property from Residential R-20. to Industrial 1-4.; This 6.6 acre tract lies betw^itidl^ v end of Boger Road (SR 1348) aitd; 1-40. It is shown as a southern'mcM ;. portion of parcel 10 of DaviS| County tax map E-6. ’ ^ Щ. The planning b o ^ vyill reviwiyHr discuss arid m^e ireciimnie^^ on a proposal that would 'aipend the text of the Davie CouQt^ ^Zbning Ordinkice by adding a Itesid^itid; Restricted (R-R) 5toriir* piitort^ The major elTect 'of this prppc^ would be have the, option^ create restricted ,ar^s within/ей- ^ isting residential zoning districts where all types of manufactured housing units (mobile homes) would be prohibited. •mmons Laundromat behind the W affle House Open dally from 7:00 a.m . Summer Save On Closeouts, Special Purchases + Trade-Ins | J U S T L d O K i4 i? l V TRADE-INS .rl'N O m ;, •14 Kt. White GoM Vi Cant Diamond ' •Gold Princess Ring With 3 Diamondi...................... •White Gold Filllgree Ring With 3 Sapphirw.!................* 4 0 ' •Goid Fashion Ring...Dlamond Cut..................................*B O CLOSEOUTS now i5 •Heart Shape Ring With Diamond Reg. >150 Sale HNM. • •Fashion Free Form Ring W/ Diamond Reg. *299 Sale •Ladies 3 Diamond Wedding Band Reg. »150 Sale W * * 4 # ‘ •Filllgree Style Shrimp Ring Reg. »180 Sale *9» OVERSTOCKS NOW!: •Dainty Onyx Rings With Diamond...................................* 5 0 * •Beautiful Diamond Filligree Ring......................................* 7 0 ■; • 18” 14 Kt. Herringbone Chains.....................................*1 S 0 : • 18" 14 Kt. Fre.shwater Pearl Necklaces................... SPECIAL PURCHASES NOW!-THIS WEEK :• I Carat Diamond Tennis Bracelets..14 Kt....................* 8 0 0 \ • I Carat Dianiuiid Cluster Rings......................................* 4 0 0 ' • 'A Carat Diamund Clu.ster Rings....................................* 3 0 0 ’- ( W tS iDIAMONI W a l-M a rt L o cation O nly! ЛП Salts I'iual 634-3747 No Himif Orders No l.a\a\>ays Hurry, Quanitics Limited _________Sniiire Binine l‘la»u Next To Wal-Mart; 10-6 Daily 4 < IM V /K C O U N ’I'V I;N I I:K I'K ISK KICCOKD, TIIU K S IM V , Лиц. 17. I9 8 9 -3 D t t : Even the Jolly Green Giant would be impressed by Homer P. Hayes’ corn. Many of the stalks top 16 feet. Hayes, who lives on Richie Road, says he cut one and measured it from top to bottom. The result: an astounding 16 feet 7 inches tall. “This is the tallest I’ve ever seen anybody have corn,” he says. "I guess all that rain helped out a lot." Corn is not the only thing prospering in Hayes’ garden. They’re certainly not as tall;- but his tomatoes, sweet potatoes and cucumbers would make any farmer proud. — Photos by James Barringer With the H&R BLOCK- Income Tax Course ■ Benefit from the seemingly ever-changing tax laws! ■ Learn how to prepare your own tax return with confidence! ■ Help others prepare their tax returns. Willow Oaks Shopping Center P.O. Box 373 704-634-3203 ■ ■ Ш Ш Ш Ш C o tu a ci our n u a tu st otiicu. ШШ ШШ Please send me (гее inlormation about your tax preparation course. N am e____________________________________________________________________ Address. City_____State . Z ip . J a c k s o n 's C a fe te r ia W e A lw a y s M a k e It S p e c ia l F o r Y o u Let us treat you to a nice home cooked meaL With our daily specials there's always something for everyone's taste. F e a tu rin g : Our Famous Roast Beef, Steamed Cabbage, Plus Many Other Fresh Vegetables, Fresh Baked Rolls & Pies, A Variety Of Salads, And Your Favorite Desserts A Nice Place To Meet Your Friends Hours: Mon.-Sat. 11-2:15 & 4:30-8:00; Sunday 11-2:30 R e a d C a lv in ft H o b b e s ... ... e a c h w e e k i n t h e E n t e r p r i s e - R e c o r d , A u c tio n S a le Saturday, August 26, 1989 At 10:00 a.m. A N T I Q U E S Located in Davie County N.C. of* Hlghiway 601 on Deadmon Road approximately 2 miles south of Mocksville. 98% of items are antiques. Some are over 200 years old. Handmade Slieets & Pillo« Cases - Old Blue Jars — Wringer Typo Washing Machine - Old Ice Box — 2 Wash Pots — Several Old Skillets — Old Wood Turpentine Bo» — Old Bottles — Wood Picture Frame- Round Cake Pans (over SOOyearsold)— CldUamp - Butter Molds - Milk Crocks - Churn - Old Coca-Cola Sign - Antique Cream And Sugar Bowl — Carnival Glass - 40 Piece Sot 01 Dishes — New Hot Water Heater (never used) — Colfeo Grinder - Old Cotlon Planter - 2 Boxes 01 Old Patterns - Old Cheese Box - Many Old Locks - Wooden Square (very old) — Wooden Drag Harrow - Horse Bonnets - Dog Irons - Old Postage Stamps - Horse Collars - Well Buckets And Others - Yard Chairs - Antique Fruil Bowl With Gold Trim - Straw Tick - Feed Sacks (white & printed) — Old Almanacs (some dating in 1800's) — Iron Bed & Railings — Big Jars — Seallesi Milk Clock - Flal Scales - Many Hems Not Usted. — Sale Conducted For Annie McCullough — By: Ellis Auction Company 704-284-4080 Office — 919-998-8744 Home Fred 0. Ellis, Aucltoneer NCAL 343 No salo is too large to manipulate • none to small to appreciate! CALL FOR ANY AUCTION NEEDS OVER 30 YEARS EXPERIENCE Focxl and Dnnks On I ho Grounds No Responsible For Accidents • \ 41)— DAVIE COUNTV KNTKKI’KISI': KKCOKI). rmiHSI)A\'. Лик- п . 1Ч8Ч Post Office Joining In Celebration A commcnuirativc sumip cclcbraling Ihc 200lh anniversary of North Carolina's statchooil will be issued Aiij;. 22 in Faycllcvillc. the site of the 1789 Convenlion which formally crealcd Norili Carolina as our nation’s 12lh slate. .On Aug. 23, posi offices • throughout the slate will hold second-day ceremonies honoring North Carolina's statehood. Ceremonies at the Mocksville Town Hall will begin at noon with the mayor. Other activities throughout the day will include a special window for selling stamps jind olher retail items. A spccial postal cancellation will also be available at Ihe post office. The post office will also carry retail items featuring (he slamp design. : For more information, contact Waller Loveless, Mocksville Po.stmaster, 634-2011. . The stamp itself features delicate white bracts of the dogwood. North Carolina’s state flower, spotlighted against a rich black background. : The stamp was created by Bob Timberlake, a North Carolina native and one of the South’s most accomplished and honored painters. ■ ;The slatehood stamp is the se cond of three issues lo be dedicated ¡»the Tarheel State this year. Two Aitierica the Beautiful post cards The Seashore, issued June 17 in Cape Halteras, and The Woodlands, lo be issued Aug. 26 liir Cherokee — complete the 1989 North Carolina philatelic lour. n;Twenty years before settlers tithed Jameslown and more than SB.years before pilgrims landed at E^mputh Rock, the first English éUmpIs M colonization in America iCere;Vestablislied on Roanoke I^and in present-day North Carolina. The settlement included life Lmt Colony .whose founders, Itcludihg Virginia Diiire, llie first Siglish. child bom in the New ■liorld, mysteriously disappeared Uilweeii 1588 and 1590. . ¡^Although North Carolina was liext to last in voting for union, it Ujkl bwh Ihe first colony to official- l)i call for independence firom England in; 1776.'Early votes cast ’ i|lf the del»té for Constitutional lÁ fii^óií failed, typical of North C^roliha's proud heritage of ijMlependence. ILéonard R ealty 34 Town Square 7 0 4 - в 3 4 - 3 8 7 5 г а ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ iO iA L T O D^DAVB ВПВЕТ - rtyiM M км Она im м Ikb aiwly rraodcM ~ц TM iCHimCH STREET.- CkwaUi« ;«мнг ¡MUH Ja rm t« оГ гатмМ- ¡4 . L«B> M . Mtybc рнгскип!you ^ADVANCE - 4 i II Ш ИШ , м 1.35 МП* at Um ’тЫМпаЬк prkt of •S9,tt0. I nonet,Мшу Ежит. Flatbcmk School. SmU •П.5М. MIKE STREET - OIrf-r пХопЫе potiniw ^OFF M l N. - Э Br. 2 BA double *%vlde home. Heal purop* CA. Ap*< pUanccs, Sat. Diib, 2 out buUdings. ^ ^Urec Id. *39,900. MOBILE HOME LOT • 100x215 '.U l - Septic lank and well. PRICE > REDUCED! OWNER WANTS 0F> :FER *7,500 ;INDl}STRUL • 4.2 «.res with {railroad fronlage. Located In -MocksvUle. *42,000 ;<01 N. ZONED HIGHWAY ' BUSINESS - 100x400 Ш uHh brick '.home. *115,000. •IN TOWN • Central Business Z«n- ^Ing Lot 245 X 200 . »24.000 ■ FOREST LANE • 2 BW, I HA homv ion large lot New Fur« ' nace, plunil and new roof, ’fireplace. КЕСШСЫ! - OWNER ;a n x io u s *33.500, •COUNTRY LANE • Ыгцк building; ;iot with septic tank. *17,000 •YADKIN CO. • Older restored ; home with асгеице, stream. *68,900 601 N. - 4 l>edr(Hmi, 2 buth home, Jivini; nxMi), dinlnji пмяп, Кач-mtjii un a iurtie lut. convenient ttK-ulion. :*115,000 DOWNTOWN lllJSINb:sS LOT - and Wuri'bouses or liuildiiii; for ■&mal) bu.si(ie.v4. of (N>4s{bilit{cs. Owner uiixious •I’KK'r. ui:i)i4 14) S2o.om>. . (Whir llunus Л AuiihMi- ! Liiiilii l.i'tinurd 7(U*()34-.V)5U X'ynthb Afirestd m :i:i) m an i is i NKW I.ISTINt’.S ï = r - ^ Stony Brook V 2 a c r e l o t s . C o u n t y w a t e r . L o c a t e d o n S a n f o r d R o a d , O f f 6 0 1 . E a s y A c c e s s T o 1 - 4 0 O r 6 4 M i n u t e s F r o m M o c k s v i l l e ( 9 1 9 ) 9 9 8 - 3 9 0 7 R . M . F . C o n s t r u c t i o n C o . , I n c . 7-20-TFN Vz to 1 acre lots - underground utilities, county water — no city taxes On Bethel Church Road Just 1 mile from city limits “The Right Place For Your Home!” CALL 7 0 4 - 6 3 4 ~ 4 13 1 eis.unbp FOR SALE 210 E. Maple Avenue *58,950 Call for details on this nice liome Larew — W ood — Johnson, Inc. 135 s. Salisbury Street, Mocksville «34.6281 H o m e P la c e R e a lt y , I n c . ^ For All Your Building & Real Eataté Nééds NEW LI8TINQ $2,100 OLD GEORGIA ROAD- 62 acres on Old Geogia pvracre Road. Set in Christmas Trees with lake on proper- ■ • ty. Good Investment Property. , $139,900 HOMES RIDGE ROAD • 35 acr^teao^iA house on Ridge stream on DUUN wT^Quiet living in this 3 twdroom brick home. Situated on 11.41 acres off of Mill ing Road, this home is very private. A must IHNEBROOK DRIVE ADVANCE^droombrick home onback. Many ejH^[j£iigfnesian well, swimm ing polWwiebam, large deck, burglar alarm &more.. LAND , $1,200 OFF DUKE WHITTAKER RD. - 21.25 per acre acres of leveliand. Sewn in Pines approx. 15 years ago. ■$2,600 OLD GEORGIA RD. - 46.74 acres with per acre road frontage. Possbile larger tract available. Cali for more details. • $5,800 RUFFIN ST. EXT. 3 • building lots with each gas lines and water, already perked and ™На auitable, Call today while Government Money is still available. $50,000 GUN CLUB RO. ADVANCE - 3,78 acres. Beautiful piece of land just perfect to build on. BUSINESS $69,500 N. MAIN STREET MOCKSVILLE ■ Pric ed below tax value. Building has excellent rental income & positive cash flow. Possi ble owner financing. Call today. 119 Depot Street, MocksvUle BOB SHELTON, Broker VON SHELTON, Broker Raymonda Saunders, Sales Barry W hittaker, Sales Frank Payne, Sales Rick Bazaar 634-2252 634-0110 634-1527 634-1439 998-2622 998-9490 HOWARD REALTl D AVIE COU NTYI Our Specially/Our County & Insurance A gen cy,In c. 330 s. Salisbury Street Corner of Hwy. 64 & 601 Mocksville, N.C. OFFICE HOURS Mon.-Fri, 9-6 Saturday 9-1 Sunday By Appointment (704) 634-3538 Julia Howard 634-3754 Connio Kowalske 634*6343 Jackie Halt 634-1155 Jane Whitlock 634*5704 M .J. Randall 634-5629 Linda Daughtrey 998*3642 Mike Hendrix 634-0390 C.C. Chapman 634-2534 Diane Foster 634-5692 Jan Hatley 634-0129 (919) 998-6463 «20.000 • INVESTORS DREAM bedroom.-1 bath. Harwood floor. »33,500 - 3 BR, 1 balh, deck, 2 yr. old oi) furnace, new roof, on V? acre lol In Eastern Davie County. «42,000 - OFF SHEFFIELD Buy * 1560 Sq. Ft. mobile home on 1 acre. Great master suile with garden tub. 3 bedroom & 2 baths. Like new. plus furniture. ______ <46,000 > Neat 3 BR. brick home wilh basement, home (eatures hardwood floors, new carpet and paint. •57,500 • 1 year old home in Shady Grove School District - w/3 BR, 2 baths, full bsmt., deck, sky light In bathroom, heart pump and in thermopane windows. Great starter or home •67,000 • TUCKED AWAY IN THE CiTV • with all the appeal of country living. This 3 bedroom home feature living room wilh lireplace, Lg. den, hardwood floors, manicured lawn. Call todayl_____________ •80,500 • SANFORD ROAD • enticing, new decorated, brick ranch conveniently located. Features partially finished base ment. great family area, pool, fenced back yard, garden and fruit trees. •31,900 • Owner finance on this starter tiome, 2 BR. 1 balti, completely remodel ed, t acre lol, - - . - ^ ___________ •36,900 • QUAINT COTTAGE - in excellent condition. 2 bedroom, Wichen w/dining area, large outbuilding wired for workstiop. Perfect starter or inveslment property. '42,000 - RECENTLY REMODELED 3 BFI, t balh cottage. l.atge from porcti and deck, new tool, gas furnace, storage building. *49,900 - Buutlfully maintained Itome wilh 3 BR, 1 balh, neulral carpel, island kit chen, full basment. >«2,500 ■ CUTE AND COZY - Cottage with Counlry Decor on 5 acres with horse barn plus storage building. Oil furnace, country: kitchen. •69,900 ■ Mov(.in condition Lovely 3 BR, Vh balh brick home on 1,63 acres, remodeled, nice landscape. 44,500 • B«tt buy in town, 5 BR, ZVi baths, LR S FR with FP’s, 2 cai gar, on beautiful corner lot. •89,900 - WANDERING LANE - 3 bedroom, 2 bath home In lovely area. Large LR/DR comb., eat-in-kit, den, family rm.. double garage. •69,900 - Secluded ranch type home w/lull bsmt. on 5 acres, 4 BR, 2 balh, 20x40 garage, 34 acres and house for >129,900. REDUCED! >137,400 • Unique Property for the discriminating buyer - wilh unique lasle . Space 2400 t si. Privacy ■ wood back yard w/view ol pond & golf course. l.uxury 500 si. (Jlaster Suite. Great Room w/vau|ie^eilin^^skyt^hl^^^^^^^ •>9,900 • E, LAKE DiUVE • Great Vh storey home with full basement. Quality construction. Water frontage, convenient location. •99,000 1,7 acres w/4 BR, 1 bath home, possible rezoning lor this R-15 property, A good Investment! •139,900 • 3,219 sq, ft, 2 slory home w/full bsml. on 5 wooded acres, screen porch & deck w/scenic view, 4 BR, 3 full baths. •35,500 - New Double Wide wilh 1,000 sq. ft. on '/2 acre, home features 2 BR, 2 balhs, all appliances. •36,900 - 156 SPRING STREET - 3 bedroom, 1 bath home Icoated In conve nient location. Good starter or retirement home at a good price. •43,900 - MORSE STREET • 1100 sq. it., BB, ivi balh brick home. Stove, refrigerator, 8, ceiling fans stay. •57,500 ■ 3 m , 1 bMh, LR with FP piM basment, wooded tot wHhgtrdtn^to» on , ,7 acre. •65,000 - RrrCME ROAD ■ Charming tog rancher vuith 3 ВП, 2 bath» on 2.79 fs m . Move'InCondition.' ‘ •79,900 - BEST W y •» TOWNI . 3 bedroom, Vti bathi, deci<: brtek tanctd patio; dbi, garage on 1,34 acres -f poMl- bie owner iinanclng. ••9,500 • ВЕТНа с н и м я ROAO • 3 ВЯ, brick hcnw on кге tol w/girden spot, huga covered d*d(, worttshop, Pitotd bdow tp. pf»ln < valuti I I . tM,900 • 20 l«nM d w em w/ctaek, I restored farm houa* w/3 BR, 2 b «h(,piui | horse bam, mail bam, 2 Mar. К Dream. , r.HoTMtmr’a •134,900 • OFF CALAHAN M>. ■ Rustic A Frame \'/t story with full rmished base ment, situated on 6 acres, 3 BR, 3 baths, 2 kitchens, wrap-around deck, hot tub. •144,500 ■ Mini-Horse Ranch w/brick home loaded w/ country charm, wood fencing, horse barn, riding ring, plus craft shop, con veniently located. -4:0M M ERCIAL P R O P ER TY- HWY. 158 • 16 plus acres lhal could be rezoned for business, Presemly there IS a 2 BR. 2 BA, ome lhat is used as a rental, MOO,ООО.HWY. 801 • 2,9 ac. zoned lighi industial, v.eil & building on properly. Pcfk ap proved. *35.000. MOCKSVILLE • Incoine producing warehouse for sale. Call (or delails *136,500. BETHEL CHURCH ROAO • t6.7 acres on Beihel Churcfi Road (Railroad Siding} Call for delails. Hobson Road..................................1.87 Ac. *7,500 Tot & Gwyn S t.................................................*7,500 Hickory Hill...............................Fairway Lot »9,500 Hospital Street Ext...............................Lot *10,000 Hickory Hill.......................Lake Front Lot *10,000 18.5 Acres - Approx. 300 It. Rd. Frontage Par tially W ooded Level In Edge of Iredell Co.*29,900. -LOTS & LAND-Otf Needmore..................29 Pius Acres >35,000 Off Jericho Church Rd„20 Pius Acres •60,000 Eaton Road...................................8,71 Ac, •75,000 Highway 64 East............................46 Ac. •73,600 Hwy. 156.....................16 Ac. * H out* ^100,000 N. Cooleem ee.........................114,5 Ac. •143,000 Needmore Rd....................................................*2,600 4D -IM VIE COUNTY KNTF.KPKISI'; KICCOUl). ’тИК.ЧПЛУ. Лчц. 17, l'J89 Post Office Joining in Ceiebration A commemorative slamp celebrating llie 200lli anniversary of Nortli Carolina's slaleliiioil will be Issued Aug. 22 in Fayetteville, the site of the 1789 Convention which formally created North Carolina as our nation's 12lh stale. .On Aug, 23, post offices .throughout Ihe state will hold sccond-day ceremonies honoring North Carolina's statehood. Ceremonies at the Mocksville Town Hall will begin at noon with Ihe mayor. Other aelivities throughout Ihc day will inelnde a .special window for selling stamps and other retail items. A special postal cancellation will also be available at the post office. The post office will also carry retail items featuring the stamp design. ■ For more information, contact Walter Loveless, Moeksviile Poslmaster, 634-2011. • The stamp itself features delicate white bracts of ihc dogwood. North Carolina's state flower, spotlighted ágainst a rich black background. ^ The stamp was created by Bob Timberlake, a North Carolina native and one of the South's most áccom plishcd and honored painters. t ;The statehood stamp is the se cond of Ihree issues to be dedicated i'trthe Tarheel Slate this year. Two /^therica the Beautiful post cards The Seashore, issued June 17 in Cape Halteras, and The Woodlands, to be issued Aug, 26 iifr Cherokee — complete the 1989 North Carolina philatelic tour. -•Twenty years before settlers iS^hed Jamestown and more than 3B.yeárs iKfore pilgrims landed at VfyttKuth Rock, the first English at colonimtion in America . ¿eire.iestábtished on Roanoke SAand in present-day North à ro lin a . The Kttlement included ífe LÁst Cólóiiy, whose founders, iÍKlüíliñg Virginia Dàire, the first child born in the New !Ülorld, mysteriously disappeared »J«w e «i 1588;and 1590. , :^AIthough North Carolina was liext to last in voting for union, it liad been the first colony.to official- l)j cair'for-independence from Cli^and in'l776.'Early votes cast ' i^‘'tiw debke for Constitutional h^ficaÚóií fáilíd, typical of North Ç^rolina’s proud heritage of ipdepei^nce. iio n á rd R éálty 34 Town Square 7 0 ^ в 3 4 - 3 8 7 5 Г П ______________________iBtAlTOe,DAVIE 81ШЕТ - rajtmnU Ita IkiB nlM «■ Ikb anrijr rO M *M - - CHUKCH s T t m - ciMnrii« •M v h M ii la pracca of гашмЫ- h « . 1 ж к M . М цЬе pwctaMd M h ia m you ^ Stony Brook a c r e l o t s . C o u n t y w a t e r . L o c a t e d o n S a n f o r d R o a d , O f f 6 0 1 . E a s y A c c e s s T o 1 - 4 0 O r 6 4 M i n u t e s F r o m M o c k s v i l l e ( 9 1 9 ) 9 9 8 - 3 9 0 7 R . M . F . C o n s t r u c t i o n C o . , I n c . 7-20-TFN ADVANCE • 4 к м ям М , I J 5 ic r a at Ike ■ rtrilm b lt i r in or ОД .MS. COUNTItY COVE - Ui*> Г и Ч П я м огче. ■HcawM. М ш у E H m . PtaKbtaok School. SauU a m h w m n l. ««.SW . .D V KE STREET - OM-r rotorabk . ^коюе, 1 " e o L O ' M « “«* ■П2.Ю. S U * - ‘.OFF «01 N. • Э Hr, 2 BA double > ld r home. Heat pump, CA. Ap> ipHMKCt, Sftl. D U i.2 oiitbu U (U iigs.^. > U r|ck4. «».«OO. % ^ ^MOBILE HOM E LOT - 100x215 : Lot • Seplk tank and well. PRICE rREOtCEDf OWNER WANTSOF- ^FER ^»500 ;lNDUSrRJAL - 4.2 acrcs with ^railroad fronlage. Located In •MocluvlUc. «42.000 ^601 N. ZON ED H IG H W A Y • BUSINESS • 100x400 Ш wUh brick Ihonitf. *115,000. MN TOWN - Cenlral Business Zun- >ing Lot 24S X 200 - «24,000 • I'OREST LANE - 2 BV. 1 BA home iOn large lot i. New Fur- ’nace, pluml ^ and new пюГ, fireplace. REDUCED - OWNER /ANXIOUS »33,500. •COUNTRY LANE - Large building 'lot wilh septic tank. П7.000 •YADKIN CO. - Older restored ;home with acreage, stream. *68,900 601 N. - 4 bedroom, 2 hulb home, ' living riMim, dining пмнп, Hasemeni on a large lot. conveiiieiii loculimi, ;Ч15,000 DOWNTOWN BUSINESS LOT • and Wurehiiusvs or building Гог 'smull businm . Lots of iMisslbiUlies. Osswr anxious 1‘KICK К ГтЧ 'К !) $20,(НИ». . (Vliii Ibmus X Umd .\>:iilul>lc : Lii..lu l.iim uia 7(ц-634-3б5;и Cvnlhia Agrcslo 7(M.634-4I4() Ni:i:i) M W I is i NKW I.ISTINI’.S tSr V2 to 1 acre lots - underground utilities, county water — no city taxes On Bethel Church Road Just 1 mile from city limits “ The Right Place For Your Home!’’ CALL 7 0 4 - 6 3 4 - 4 1 3 1 6-15-tlnbp FOR SALE 210 E. Maple Avenue *58,950 Call for details on this nice home Larew — W ood — Johnson, Inc. 135 s. Salisbury street, Mocksville 634-6281 CEEH o m e P la c e R e a lt y , In c . For All Your Building & Real Estate Needs NEW LISTING 12,100' ’ OLD GEORGIA ROAO-62 acres on Old Geogia psracre , Road,S6tinCtiristmasTreeswithlal(eonproper- ty. Qood Investment Property. naeioob 11^,NO HOMES khouseon d, stream on I V3iU6 ^ living in this 3 bedroom brick Koine. Situated on 11.41 acres off of Mill ing Rrad, this home is very private. A must to see.' PINEBROOK DRIVE ЮЩЁЫШгоот brick hoine bnback. Many|j||03S№fanesian well, swimm ing pol^fflebarn, large deck, burglar alarm &moriB.. LAND $1,200 OFF DUKE WHITTAKER RD. - 21.25 per acre acres of leveiland. Sewn in Pines approx. 15 years ago. ■ $2,600 OLD GEORGIA RD. ■ 46.74 acres with per acre road frontage. Possbile larger tract available. Call for more details.' $5,800 RUFFIN ST. EXT. 3 • building lots with each gas lines and water, already perked and FmHa auitable, Call today while Govern ment Money is still available. $50,000 GUN CLUB RD. ADVANCE • 3.78 acres. Beautiful piece of land just perfect to build on. BUSINESS $69,500 N. MAIN STREET MOCKSVILLE - Pric ed below tax value. Building has excellent rental income & posilive cash flow. Possible owner financing. Call today. 119 Depot Street, iVlocl<sviile BOB SHELTON, Broker VON SHELTON, Broker Raymonda Saunders, Sales Barry Wiiittaker, Sales Frank Payne, Sales Rick Bazaar 634-2252 634-0110 634-1527 634-1439 998-2622 998-9490 —Ц (Ш У Д Щ Ц [ Д [ У ) |[ iHiiii & Insurance Agency, Inc. D AV IE COUNTYOur Specially/Our County 330 s. Salisbury Street Corner of Hwy. 64 & 601 Mocksville, N.C. OFFICE HOURS Mon.-Fri. 9-6 Saturday 9-1 Sunday By Appointment (704) 634-3538 Ju(ia Howard Connie Kowalske Jackie Hall Jane Whitlock M.J. Randall Linda Daughtrey Mike Hendrix C.C. Chapman Diane Foster Jan Hatley (919) 998-6463 634-3754 634-6343 634-1155 634-5704 634-5629 998-3842 634-0390 634-2534 634-5692 634-0129 «20,000 • INVESTORS DREAM • 2 bedroom. 1 balh. Harwood floor. »33,500 • 3 BR, 1 bath, deck, 2 yr. old oil furnace, new root, on Vz acre lot in Eastern Davie County. «42,000 - OFF SHEFFIELD RQ. '-'Gieir Buy • 1560 Sq. Ft. mobile home on 1 acre. Great master suite with garden tub. 3 bedroom & 2 baths. Like new, plus furniture. ___________________ >46,000 - Ngat 3 BR, brick home with basement, home (eatures hardwood floors, new carpet and paint. •57,500 - I ’/iyearold home in Shady Grove School District • w/3 BR. 2 baths, full bsmt., deck, sky light in bathroom, heart pump and 'till in Ihermopane windows. Great slarter or rfilirement home.________________________ •67,000 - TUCKED AWAY IN THE CITY ■ with all the appeal of country living. This 3 bedroom home feature living room with fireplace. Lg. den, hardwood floors, manicured lawn. Call toi •60,500 • SANFORD ROAD - enticing, new decorated, brick ranch conveniently located. Features partially finished base ment, great family area, pool, fenced back yard, garden and fruit trees._____________ •89,900 • WANDERING LANE • 3 bedroom, 2 bath home In lovely area. Large LR/DR comb., eat-in-kit, den, family rm., double garage. *31,900 ♦ Owner finance on Ihis slarter home. 2 BR, 1 bath, completely remodel ed. 1 acre lot. «35,500 * New Double WUe wilh 1,000 sq. tt. on Уз acre, home features 2 BH, 2 baths, all appliances. »36,900 • QUAINT COTTAGE • in excellent condition. 2 bedroom, kitchen w/dining area, large outbuilding wired for workshop. Perfect starter or investment property. <36,900 • 156 SPRING STREET ~ 3 bedroom, 1 bath home Icoated In conve nient location. Qood starter or retirement home at a good price. ■42,000 ■ RECENTLY REMODELED-3 BR, 1 balh collage. Large front porch and deck, new roof, gas furnace, storage building. >43,900 - MOnSE STREET -1100 sq. It., 3 BR, V/z bath brick home. Sieve, refrigeralor, & ceiling fans slay. Ж >49,900 - Beautifully maintained home with 3 BR, 1 bath, neutral carpet, Island kit chen, full basment. •S7.500 ■ 3 ВЯ, 1 bMh, LR M FP pkw tiasroeflt, woodtd kit wtlli gvdan 1р и е on, : I .7 acre. , •<2,500 - CUTE AND COZY • Cottage wilh Country Decor on 5 acres wilh horse barn ilus storage building. Oil lurnace, country; (itchen. •65,000 • RITCWE ROAO • Clwmino log randier with 3 BR, 2 battit ол 2.79 M M . Move'fn Conditfon. ' ‘ •69,900 • Movt-ln condWon Lovely 3 BR, 1'A bath brick homo on 1.63 acrea, remodeled, nice landscape. •79.900 - В И Т BUY IH ТОНИ«:. 3 bedroom, 2W battis, deck, brick tanctd palici dbl. garage on 1.34 acres -f poMi-, ble owner tinanclng- •M,500 - Bett buy In town, 5 BR, 2K balhs, LH S FR wilh FP’s, 2 car gar. on beautiful corner loL •м.мо>ветнаснмкннодо-звя. brtok home on tere tot w/gwden ipot, huge covered deck, «югкаАор. Pttoed below ць »n leed vtliHl •19,900 ■ E. UU(E DRIVE - Great IVi slorey horns with full basement. Ouallly construction. Water frontage, convenient locatkin. П . IM,M0 . 20 tMCid. MfM wtoeek, I restored fami houM wf3 BR, 2 btfw, phis horse bem, mlh bini, Z Mor. I ' Dream. , r.HowLonr's •89,900 • Secluded ranch type home w/lull bsml. on 5 acres, 4 BR, 2 balh, 20x40 garage, 34 acres and house lor »129,900. REDUCED! >137,400 ■ Unique Properly for the discriminating buyer • with unique taste . Space 2400 + sf. Privacy - wood back yard w/view of pond & golf course. Luxury 500 sf. Master Suite. Great Room ^/vau|le^cei|in^^skylighl^^^^^^^ >99,000 1.7 acres w/4 BR, 1 bath home, possible rezonlng for Ihis R-15 property, A good investmentl •134,900 ■ OFF CALAHAN RO, • Rustic A Frame VA story wilh full finlihed b«se- ment, situated on 8 acrM, 3 BR, 3 baths, 2 kilchens, wraparound deck, hot tub. •139,900 - 3,219 sq. ft. 2 story home w/full bsmt. on 5 wooded acres, screen porch & deck w/scenic view, 4 BR, 3 full baliis. •144,500 ■ Mini-Horse Ranch w/brkd( home loaded w/ country chami, wood fencing, horse barn, riding ting, plus craft shop, con veniently located. 4:0M M ER CIA L PR O PER TY- HWV. 15B -16 plus acres Ihal could t>e rezoned lot tiusiness. Presenlly there IS a 2 BR. 2 BA, omc Ihal is used as a lenlal. >100,000. HWY. SOI • 2.9 ac. joned light industial. iiell S building on properly. Perk ap proved ^35,000. MOCKSVILLE • Income producing warehouse lor sale. Call lor details >138,500. BETHEL CHURCH ROAO ■ 16.7 acres on Bethel Church Road (Railroad Siding) Call (or details. Hobson Road..................................1.67 Ac. >7,500 Tol & Gv7yn St.................................................>7,500 Hickory Hill...............................Fairway Lot S9,500 Hospital Street Ext...............................Lot >10,000 Hickory Hill......................Lake Front Lot >10,000 18.5 Acres • Approx. 300 (I. Rd. Fronlage Par tially W ooded Level in Edge ol Iredell Co.>29,900. -LOTS & LAND-O fl Needm ore..................29 Plus Acres >35,000 O II Jericho Church Rd..20 Plus Acres *60,000 Eaton Road...................................8.71 Ac. *75,000 Highway 64 East............................46 Ac. <73,600 Hwy. 158.....................16 Ac. + HOUM >100,000 N. Cooleem ee.........................114.5 Ac. '143,000 Needmore Rd....................................................*2,M O DAVIK COUNTY ENTERI'KISK RIXORI), THURSDAY, Aug. 17, I989-SD County Divides Tornado Relief Money The $7,823 Ihat Davic Counly received to liclp pay for claniagcs incurred by the M ay 5 thunderstorms and tornados was divided among county departnients and rescue agencies Monday. The money was di.slrilmlcd al 9:45 a.M). in ihc courlriuun ol'lhe Davie County Courthoii.se. "W o were real happy lo pass around the nominal rcim- liiirsenicnls lhal uc icc'clval." said Craig Cjrccr. assislanl lo Davie County Manager Jolin Barber, •'Wc ilidn'l really expecl to gel anylliitig <1111 ol' il. and wc weren’l working bccause wc would gel aiiylhing out ol' it. Il was all a real spirit or volunlccrisin." 'I hc money was awarded by llic I'cdcral linicrgcncy Manageiiicnt Association lo go toward Ihe cslimalcd S I2 million daiii;igc in Ihe comity. FmHA Meeting Aug. 30 To Focus On Programs . A meeting will be held at 3 p.m. Wednesday. Aug. 30, to di.scuss eontraeting opportunities with Farmers Home Adniini.stration. FiiiHA frequently has contrac tual requirements for various ser vices throughout Davic County and North Carolina. Contracts award ed support FniH A's Farmer Pro grams and its Rural Mousing Program. The meeting will be in the Agricultural E.Klcnsion Auditorium in tlie County Ofllee Building al 180 S. Main St.. Mocksville. M inority and wonien-owned Шо BEST too, IHC.V- у Realtors Д И Й ( 9 1 9 ) 7 6 1 - 8 1 4 6 RESIDENTiAL Horse Farm - Farm house on 7 acres with barn, pond, riding rinl<, and other out buildings. $105,900 Ridge Road • 3 bedroom all brick home, full basement on 6 lovely acres $87,000. COMMERCIAL Service Station/Convenience Store -1-40 & Hwy. 64. Call for details. Priced at $69,900. M L S Call David Motley — 492-5623 $15,000 W ATTS STREET - Two bedroom, one bath home Is good loca tion In Cooleemee. Qreat Investment potential. $1t,900 CROSS STREET - Cute 2 bedroom, 1 bath home perfect for .young couple. Just freshly painted Inside and out. Ready for your personal touch to m ake It home. $30,000 W ATT STREET/COOLEEMEE • 2 Bedroom, 1 Bath home with aluminum siding exterior. Personal property includes range, washer and dryer. Nice lot in good location, convenient to schools, churches and shopping.. «20,000 SANFORO AVE./MOCKSVILLE -1 or 2 bedroom/1 bath. Good location, /toross from the Garden Valley Entrance. Qood starter home or Investment propei <-Coiinven ihom e with 3 BR, sun i this could be«31,900 HWY. 6011: room andf _____ «34,000 O T o 5S5|ELRO.-'3 BR’s, 2 bath modular home on li _ wooded lot. Extremely well cared for. Large covered back r offers room for outdoor enjoyment. «35,000 TURRENTINE CHURCH ROAD-If your have wanted an affor dable home. You can enjoy country living In this 2 bedroom, 1 bath home. Please call to see today. Owner says MAKE ME AN OFFER. «30,000 CHERRY HILL ROAD - Acreage with very nice mobile home. 2 bedrooms and 2 fuli baths featuring a garden tub and central hair. 3.74 acres of land with some In fescue and excellent road frontage. 60 Bradford pear trees and new pinoaks on the land. \ Moer, tiller and greenhouse remain with property. «39,900 MAIN 8T. COOLEEMEE • Charming home with all the extras you've been kMking for. Beautiful hardwood lioor, vinyl siding, central air, nice deck. Cozy attic bedroom, perfect for teenager or study/office space. Weil maintained, ready for a new owner. «M .900 DAVIE ACADEMY RD. - Enjoy the countiy living you k)ve In ■ thU rural 2—I B i n m a a B I B I W i roomy coiintry kitchen a it^ n B o B m S d C n W lin Q P E H n n n ite to the easy living this home has to offer. , «45,000 OLAOSTONE ROAD - Excellent investment property in private .settingl Three bedrooms and 1 bath, lirepiace and wood stove. NEW ROOF. Take advantage of this «45,900 LAKEWOOD VILLAGE - Nice 3 In todayl 1 bath Bricli rancher businesses are encouragcd to par ticipate in Fm llA 's Coiiiracling Program I'or required scrviccs. Areas for which Fm HA has recurring need.s are: A. Repairs lo Single Family Dwellings. B. Lawn Maintenance (Re.sidenlial) C. Real listale Brokers. D. Trustee Agent. Additional inrDrmation regarding the meeiing may be obtained by conlaeling: George L. Pless Jr.. county supervisor, P.O. Box 928, 300 S. Main Sl.. Mocksville, 634-.‘if)8l. Showers Are Possible For Upcoming Weekend Partly cloudy skies and warm icmpcratiircs arc forecast for the upcoming week and weekend, according lo ihe National Weather Scrvice. The I'orccaslcrs predict lhal Thursday through Saturday, high lemperalurcs W'ill lie in Ihe niid-80s with lows in the mid-60s. Skies will be partly cloudy with a chance oi' afternoon show'ers and tiuniderslunvers. On Wednesday, a 40 percenl chancc of showers was I'lirccast, with liigii lemperalurcs in the niid-80s. on large tot, completely renwdeled 4 years ago. Features kit chen/dining combo. Modestly priced for the first homebuyers budget. «47,500 HWY. 64 W. - SUPERB BUY On this 7 year old home featuring . 3 BR's, 1 bath. Excellent conditton plus a pretty setting. This one will not last longl Call today for an appointment. «47,500 WUJ.OW RUN • New listing features 3 BR, 1 </2 BA with full base ment on 1 acre tot. Convenient kx^tlon. Owner will consider lease .or lease/option. «4«,500 Q LAIW TgwE PP. . This is th« «Hnrahl« home you've been waiting fori 3 ^ U |U ||g y jg g H g ||H ^ n | acre lot partially fenced. Features Include stoiiSTlrepiHcewrnsert. Great locationl. «49,900 WHITNEY ROAD • If you've been looking for Ihat nice home with 3 bedrooiira, spacious countiy kitchen and full basement in move- in conditkin but thought it was impossible to find for under ^ ,0 0 0 , then you were wrong. Believe it or not, here it isl A great «53,500 SPRINa STREET - Immaculate 3 BR, 1 '/2 bath older homo within walking d is ta n fiM U ta M iiflM d ia M porch and a p |y y ;] 3 a j{ i] j|l|i|g § w it h fireplace. Ail of this situated on an attractive lot with a walnut tree, pines and llower- ing trees. «54,800 EDISON STREET - Freshly painted interior and exterior of this two b e d ro o n ||||||||r;jiH ita |p ^ ^ on private street with little traffic. den, utility room and extra Great Space For ThePrice! S54,900 84 WEST - Super Nice Rancher. Situated on lovely corner wood ed lot. Extremely well cared lor. Features 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, single carport and large detached garage. Ideal slarter home, ready for a new lamily lo move in today. $55,900 POWELL ROAD - MOVE RIGHT IN AND RELAX - because this 3 bedroom, 1 bath home has a new kitchen, new carpet, and it Is In immaculate condilion. REcenliy landscaped - Call todav for fVIORE DETAILS. B o ger Real E sta te 9 9 8 - 8 3 3 4 247 Acres Pudding Ridge Road 3600 ft. house built 1876 32 Acres Howell Road 1800 ft. brick rancii house. 1 0 stall horse barn, will divide. Large Mobile Home Lots 601 2 m iles North of 1-40 Restricted lots near 801 and i«40n7.2«,p AUCTION ANTIQUES, COLLECTIBLES, FURNITURE HOUSEHOLD GOODS, ETC. Saturday, August 19, 1989 At 7:30 p.m. 1820 Cir. American Sideboard. Super Victorian Marble Top Dreser & Washs- land , Antique Oak Candy Display Case, Victorian Bed, Oak Dresser, Painted Oak Bed, Old Two-Drawer Tool Box, Rare Omega Pocket Watch In Sterling, 17 Jewel Elgin Pocket Walch, Small Ladies Pendant Watch, Pewter Spooner Set, Paper mache Lile Size Girl, Beautiful Art Nouvoux Lamp With Clock, Pair- point Lamp, Sterling Christmas Ornaments, Seilling Salt Spoons & Thimbles, Black Americana, Bronze, 1939 German Dagger With Scabbard, Napoleonic- Protrait In Ivory Frame, Colliers WWI Photo Book, Ornate Cast Iron Lawn Fur niture, Hosier Kitchen Cabinet, Cider Press, American & European paintings, Coo Coo Clock, Estate Jewelry, Glassware & Pottery, Advertlzements, & Many More Items Too Numerous To Mention. ••• Plus Consignment From The Late Bessie ostwalt Estate ••• LOCATION: STATESVILLE, N.C. -Take MO East of 1-77. Then take Exit 153 (Hwy. 64) ofl ol 1-40. Go West on Hwy. 64 one-hail mile past Bowling Alley to Building on lelt. Watch for sign, building is before Adams Seafood. Preview From 6:00 to 7:30 p. We Reserve The Right To Add Or Delete Merchandise Mastercard & Visa Accepted Consignments Being Accepted For This & Future Auctions Telephone 704-872-3356 5% Buyer's Premium Auctioneer Joe Ford NC Lie. 4406 L ife s ty le HOMES & REALTY, INC. 704, 6 3 4 -0 3 2 1 8 1 8 S o u th M ain S tre e t M o c k s v i l l e , N .C . O ffic c H o u rs M o iid a y • F rid n y 9 7 S al 10 ■ 4. S un 2 4 HOMES *58,900 • HOWARD STREET - Here's your chance to buy an affor- dabie home ans stop paying rent todayl This neat 3 bedroom rancher has all the extras yuou’ve been looking for, hardwood floors, ceramic lile bath, double garage, large attic storage area, large utility room, paved drive, sun porch with broken tile flooring, new furnace. With interest rates down in the single digits, you may be surprised at how «58,000 HIGHWAY 601 NORTH 3 + PARTIALLY WOODED ACRES - A spring & possible lake site with room for small pasture area. R e c e n tly remodeled with 3 BR, 1 bath and 1458 SF. Convenient to 1-40. OWNER W ILL ASSIST WITH CLOSING COSTS. «58,900 HOWARD STREET - Neat 3 bedroom brick rancher in town on nice quiet street. Features double garage and large workshop/utility area. Also nice sun porch with broken tile floor ing and roll out glass windows. GREAT BUYI «59,900 RAYMOND STREET • Super nice brick rancer on corner lot. Located j u s ^ A i ^ | it e | | k | ia | | | | | M medical facilities. Features 3 fireplace and fenc ed rear у а г ( Я ^ Л ш 1Ч т а Т В в ^ ^ И Я )и с Ь to make it home. JUST REDUCED! «64,500 DAVIE ACADEMY RD. - Brick rancher, 2 bedroom, 2 bath, large LR w/ FP, DR w/bullt In china cabinet, lull bsmt., carport, circle drive. Rural settina with large hardwoods. «65,000 WILKESBORO STREET - GOOD LOCATION - Brick house with 4 bedrooms and 2 baths. This 1 Vi story house is near shop ping area and schools. Upper level great for children. «89,900 GREAT BUY • 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, Great room and 18.47 acres make this house the best buy around. Enjoy the swimmng pool and wrap around deck that this property offers. Countr in the Country at an allordable price! «69,900 WILLBOONE ROAD - Nice home on 2.72 acres. Acreage has 650 ft. of road frontage. Home features living room, den, 2 bedrooms, 2 fuli balhs. large country kitchen with built in eating bar, dining room, double carport, concrete drive. Also for the animal lover there's a small barn with electricity and water. Ad ditional out buildings and storage oil carport. »70,000 OFF MAIN CHURCH RD. - State Rd. 1466 - Allordable Brick Ran cher with 3 bedrooms, 2 lull baths, 1860 sq. It. situated on .9 acres with 8 more acres available. Finished playroom In base ment with V2 bath and drive-in basement. Cali today lor more details. $72,000 TWINBROOK SUBDIVISION - Crestview Drive, new construc tion just completed and ready lor occupancy. This 1500 sq. It. country rancher was designed to give you a feeling ol tremendous spaciousness. Abundant cabinets, walk-in closet & garden tub add to the value ol this aliordably priced home. $72,000 SANFORD AVENUE - Less lhan 1 year old, this lovely country home Is sited on 2 partially cleared acres. Home leatures great lloorplan, 3 large Br, 2 BA, and a beaulilul view of dogwoods and redbuds Irom the greatroom. Well cared lor and In new condition!$79,900 GROVE STREET — COOLEEMEE - THIS house at THIS price will knock your socks oil! Situated on г beautilully landscaped lot, this contemporary home leatures 4 bedrooms, Z 'h baths, for mal areas, a comlorable den wilh stone lirepiace, and a lovely atrium. Amenities are too many to list so call today lor a lanlasllc buyl _______ $79,900 CENTER STREET — COOLEEMEE- Super nice 4 bedroom, 3 bath brick rancher located on approximately 3 acres. Features large master bedroom with sitting area, large country kitchen, easy 10 maintain brick exterior. A great house for the price. Call today for an appointment. 583.900 TWINBROOK SUBDIVISION — NEW CONSTRUCTION - Superb lloor plan in this traditional style ranch. Features, 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, great room, dining room and breakfast area. Also double garage. Buy eariy and decorate to suit your personal taste.554.900 TW INBROOK,^^Eja^QUSIBliCllQ^Jraditional style 3 BR, 2 BA home t e ^ ^ ^ F y T T M T ^ ^ ^ B great floor plan and over 1500 greatroom for cozy winter evenings^paciusdeck tor summer entertaining. «89,500 EDGEWOOD SUBDIVISION - MAKE OFFER - BeauUfuliy; wooded corner lot offers much shade to this lovely brick home featuring 3 large bedrooms and 2 full baths upstairs with living. room, formal dining, powder room, family room, kitchen and large utility/workshop combination downstairs. Central Air 8i Central Vac. ■ ; ■ «99,500 EDGEWOOD CIRGLE - This beautiful home offers all the amenities you want. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, central air, large den' w/firepiace, screened-ln porch, swimming pool landscaped and ' fenced. A two car carport plus garage workshop. Move-in condition. «99,500 NORTH MAIN STREET - Lovely older home in one of Mocksville's most desireable locations. Huge lot with beautitul hoardwoods and blooming annuals. Home boasts nearly 3000 square feet Including 4 bedrooms and 2 full baths. Complete with vinyl exterior for tow malntenence. : . «99,500 CROWE STREET — Experience the pleasure of country living' in an in-town |ас|уд^;:Ы|4 ш|1ы | а ш features 3 BR's,' 2 full baths, b ^ ^ ^ ^ j l l ^ H E R Y T H I N Q S BRAND NEW T H R O u B H K A i H I ^ V b s t cottage/work shop with 'h bath situated on 1.75 ac. lot. Beautifully landscaped. OWNER FINANCING AVAILABLEIJUST REDUCEDI «110,000 JERICHO ROAD - This 1<Л story tradittonal home offer 4 bedrooms, 3 full baths. Large linished area in basement com plete with a second kitchen, huge den with fireplace and lots of stroreage. FornitJ living and dining rooms upstairs. Gorgeos 4 ± acre lot with lots of trees and natural spring. 24x36 building with concrete floor and 220 wiring. Located In one of rural Davie County's most attractive areas. «122,000 Q AR I^N VALLEY ES TA TE S -A REAL EYE CATCHERI-Rock . work is key feature to this new constructkin. Complete just in time for that belore school itKwe. Lovely V A story design on com pletely wooded lot offers infonnal living with oustanding features and terrific storage space. CALL TODAYI «129,900 GARDEN VALLEY ESTATES - UNDER CONSTRUCTION - Rustic rancher with fir siding and accents of rock give this ex terior a unique look. Corner lot perfectly suited for this full base ment home with great room, large master bedroom suite, eat-ln kitchen, plus formal dining. $138,000 WANDERING LANE - Spacious 1 </2 story birck and siding home on 1.20 wooded acres with lots of privacy. Features include 4 tiedrooms, 3 baths with large master bedroom, sitting area, bath, and its own deck. Great home for a growing family. CALL NOW FOR DETAILSI $285,000 OFF EATONS CHURCH ROAD - Beautiful log home situated on 76.721 acres bordering Wateshed Lake Home offers 3423 square feet ol living space. Includes 5 bedrooms, 3 baths, cozy sun room and full basement. Perfect for the large family. Owner willing to divide land, call for details. ................GARDEN V A LLE Y.................. GARDEN VALLEY ESTATES - SECTION IV - Amenities of this new subdivision help property value to continually Increase. All beautilully wooded homesites ollering 32 ft. wide curbed streets, city water & sewer, street lights, underground utilities, and restric tive covenants. SEE NEW PRICE LIST. »2,200 W ILL BOONE RD.- Included in this 24.37 acres. Cleared on per acre Iront side, beautilully wooded back property with stream. »2,300 OFF DEADMON ROAD - 53.5 acres ol rolling larmland with per acre stream and lencing. Only 3 mile oil stale road. »2,900 Great lor 55,500 Ea EDGEWOOD CIRCLE SUBDIVISION - lols - approximately 162.5x125, in quiel well established neighborhood. Corner lot may lace either street LOT/LAND S7,000 NICE BUILDING LOT ON PARKER ROAD - just oil 64 west »12,500 approximately 1 miles Irom 1-40. Good buy! HWY. 801 NORTH - 5 acres, heavily wooded, road frontage kiy wooded, roadoil Hwy. 801. 521,000 CHERRY H ILI Ironlage, cre J_________________________ »21,000 OFF DULIN R o H ^ ^ re a n o a c I Ironiaye (636.34 11.) includ ed 6 heavily woodes acres. SOLD »32,000 FARMLAND ACRES SUBDIVISION - 6.954 cares in Super nice subdivision, ideal location lor the lamily looking lor the convenience ol being close to shopping, schools etc. but also wanting the serenliy ol country living. S35,000 FARMLAND ACRES - 7.588 acres heavily wooded in cu-de- sac. Located in one ol Mocksville's most attractive sub-divisions. »58,500 OFF COUNTRY LANE - Over 5 acres with 164 It. road Iron- tage on Campbell Rd. Completely cleared, public water on Country Lane, zone R-20. Great location. Rickey R. Sdiley 634-4420 Vickie FleminK 634-3640 James Foster 264-2686 'Serving You With Pride" Mary Hendricks Cttris Hendrix Sandra Johnson 634-3182634-0008 634-3177 Frances Tutterow Kathi C. Wall Peggy Watson 634-5074 634-1311 634-3698 6 I)-I)A V IIC C O U N T V K M r.IU ’K IS K l<Kf O R !) . I IH -K S D A V . A »« . 17 . 1>W9 D a v ie B u s R o u te s F o r 1 9 8 9 -9 0 S c h o o l Y e a r L is te d 'Cooleemee School Orilcr itf sUulciil pk k-iip Null Iv 11" l.'lhms. nils No. 22 Driver: Susan Thiniui‘.on Buslc;tvcssduH)l.jiiH.’simS(M tm 1.1 inik-s lo Greasy Corncr. liirns riiiiii on (>01. ¡jocv 4.2 miles to No. i!<v- 2.0 miles on Ik’cklow i> Ko.nl. i>' I Ifiisfon Ikck Roaif. goes 1 mite, (urns artmrul ami K‘iMCc> 1 mile Irn-k lo No. IH26. luriis lert.ptes 1,2 miles fo Oicrryliill K<). No. mrns ri.ehi Hntl goes 1.4 miles t») home of Don.iUl Smith ofi Hwrlly KiJ. iJ«20). inrns ;troinul atnl relniees baek lo 1KI‘). Uirns lell anil goes inile.slo )«22(Poini Kil.). pK'.s miles on Point Ril.. tiirrjs aroiinil anil retraces hack to 1819. ttinis left ami goes .4 mile to 1824 (»o\- woihI Church Ril.). turns right anil goes 1.3 miles, turns aroutul ami retraces li;jck lo 1819. giHis across, giK's .8 mile to 601. turns left on 601. giK's 1 ntile lo South Yailkin River, turns around at river bridge landing, retnices 601 and goes 3.5 miles to IKK) (Riverdale Kd.), g(K*s 1.2 miles, furns arouml. reiractvs 1.2 miles baek lo 601. turns left and gi>es 1.8 mifes lo 1«27 (Pleasant Aero Drive). ItJrn.s right and gcHis 1.1 miles to 601. turns right ~im l goc.s .6 nuJe lo }niersccliOirof'60l“ >nd— 801. Greasy Corner, turns Icfl and goes 1.4 milc.s to school. ArcjLS .scrveil: IJecklown Rd.. Houston Beck Rd., Hartley Rd.. Cherry Hill Rd.. Poinl Rd., Boxwood Church Rd., Highway 601, Rlvcr- dalc Rd., and Pleasant Acre Dr. Bus No. 24 Driver: Sharon Nail Trip A: Bus (caves school, curns left out of parking lot onto Marginal Si., turns left on lo 801, gocj* 1.3 milc.s (o infersection of 801 and 601 (Greasy Corner), turns rtghl on 601 and goe.s 1.4 miles and lums left on Bccklown Rd. No. 1826, goes 1.3 miles and lurns left onlo Cherry Hill Rd.. goc.s 1 mile and turns right onto 801, goes 1.7 miles and turns left Into the parking tot of Dutchman Creek Church und turns around und goc.<« right onlo 80|, Goes .5 mile (o 1832, turns left and goes .3 .mile, turns around und rclraces .3 mile to 801, turns left Oh 801 und goes .8 mile to - Deadmon'Rd., turns right on Deadmon Rd., follows Deadmon Rd. for 1.8 miles lo 1803, turns right and goc.s .8 mile, (urns around anti 'retraces back .8 mile to Deadmon Rd., turns •. right and goes 1.2 ntil&s to intersection of 1802 and 1801, lums left on 1802, Will Boone Rd., and goes 1.8 miJe.s to 1807, turns right and goes 1.9 mites to 601, turns left on 601 for, h i miles to Intersection of 801 and 601 (Greasy Comer), turns left on 801, goes .6 . mile and turns right onlo 1839, goes .1 mite, turns len, goes. 1 mite and turns left and goes . I mile left onto 80!; goes .7.mile to Greasy Comer. Goes siniight on 801 for 1.4 miles and turns right onto Marginal St. and goes) t mile to school.' Areas served: Becktown Rd., Cherry Hill Rd.« Highway 8 0 1 Dwight Wooten Rd. No. 1832^ Deadmon Rd., Hurbert Carter Rd. No. 1803. Will Boone Rd., Fairfield Rd. No. 1W7. and RoMl No. 1839 (Oakdale Acres). ^Driver:' Brenda Broadway C rH p A'i Bus leaves school on Marginal St. ' goes to 801, turns onto Midway St.' and' .Tniile to Grove St., goes .2 mile uO'OUgh Grove Si. ohlo'Cchler St.. goos'.4 rtfile, turns left on Jack Eudy Rd. No. 1103. titf-ns left and follows 1103 for 2.0 mifus to turns left on 601 and goes 2.0 miles to . £j(67. Holiday Acres, turns left and goes .3 ^ itrile,.turns around and retraces .3 mile back (»601. ttirnis left and goes .5 mile (o intersec- ttte of 601 and 801 (Greasy Comer), turns 1 ^ and goes .5 mile to Edgewood Circle , (Jl32). ’and circles .9 mile back to 801, turns Iffft and goes t mile to school. Bus leaves school on 1116 and goes 3;3 tnlles on Davie Academy Rd. to 1174 . (^illihan Development), turns left and circles •Jmile back to 1116, lums right and goes 2.9 ipiles to Marginal St. In Cooleemee, turns left oq'1121 (Gladstone Rd.), goes 1.4 miles to (174 (Gebe Rd.), turns right and goes .8 mile, ta m around and retraces .8 mile to 1121, (Vps left and goes .6 mite on 1121 (o 1123 (L e { ^ Hut), turns left and goes .5 mile, turns . tfixind ^ retraces .5 mite back to l!21,' . t m left and goes >9 mite to 1122 (Clark Rd.), turns right and goes .3 mile, turns around and i|tnices .3 mile back to 1121, turns right and ■. goes .3 mile to 1116 at Marginal St./ in Cooleemee, turns left and goes .4 mile to achool. ^Areu served: First Load: Grove Si., Mid way St.. Jack Eudy Rd., Pine Ridge Rd., Qojiday Acres and.Edgewood Circle. Second biwd: Spillman Development, Legion Hut Kd.. Clark or Branch Rd. and Gebe Rd. B W N 0.4S . ‘ Driver: Bessie Wilson >TW pA: Bus leaves school on Marginal Si., turru right and goe.s .4 mile to 1121 (Gladstone Rd.), lurns right and goes 1.6 miles lo 1136 (Elanie) Rd.), turns left and goes .4 mite to 1182, turns right and goes .6 mile, lums around and retraces .6 mile, tums left on 1136 (Daniel Rd.), and goes .4 mile to Gladstone ' Rd. (1121), tums left and follows 1121 for 1.1 mites 10 1134 al Liberty Methodist CHurch, turns right and goes .3 mile ihrough 1133, tums around and goes .3 mile to 601, tums right and goes .7 mile to 1132 (Miclwel’s Rd.), tums right und goes I.l mites to 801, tums right and goes .3 mile to 1130 in Nortlj Cooleemee, tums right and goes 1.2 niilcs tlitmiL’h li :s . 11:-» .111,1 11 Mi l>,uk In Hill at •Sjiillnt.ifi '' I Sl:tli"ii. iiinis iiL'lil .iiul i.’(Vs .S link’ li> Trip M: MiJslr.nL s vh.H)) i.ji Mai^niul St.. ,-t >11 Ik' !•< 11.! 1. tuiiis I iglit ami liillitu s ) IJ 1 Inr ,',2 rnilc'^ to (>ni. ,2 mile, itiins loll <'ii 11.':^. .2 iiiik- tn ll.Vi (D.iiiii-l KvI. 1. tiinis k-li atui lines 1.7 inik-s in 1 |‘».i. 111!II-. } mile. luMis .iU'iiiul aiul eccs J mill- lo I l.i(>. lurns loll .iiul g«>cs 1,7 inik's tn 11.^.‘>. UiMis k'ti. giK’s .S mik’ to (idi. Iiiriis iighi atul goes .7 nii!e to Cioll Course Ril. (ISlKij. uiins lell aiul goes .4 mile, imkes circle al Ci(>ll Course, goes .4 mile hack to (>(M. turns left atuf ei>os 1.4 miles (o iiUersec- litin ol 6IU anil SOI. tinns righi aiul gives 1.6 miles fl* scli<*iil. Areas served: Mrsl Load: Highway (>01. M.ir^inal .St.. GliKi.slone Ril.. l.ibeny CliurcJj Rd.. Durham or Mielniel Rd.. Wairst.. Cen imi Ave. :iiul Jerusalem Ave. .Second Load: Daniel Rd. No. 11.16. Spillman C'ireleor Loop Rd.. No, 601 (Re-Nu Cleaner lo Liberty Cliureh Rd.) and Clolf Course Rd. Pinebrook Eiem. Itiifi .N'(1. 1« Driver: Merlie Allen Creekwood I .ml It. ---- Sccond Load: Rainbow Rd. (1441. 1444. 1469). Speaks Rd. (1440). Hilton Rd. (t445). Littlejohn Dr. (1484), Fairway Rd. (t4f>0), Redland Rd. Htis No. 21 Driver: Calhy Carter Yadkin Valley Rd. (1452), Valley Oaks. Griffin Rd. (1453), 1471), Hendrix Rd. (1454), Peaceful Valley Rd. (1472), NC 801 from Yadkin Valley Rd, (north entrance) to Spillman Rcl., McKnight Rd. (1456), Haywood Dr.. Pincbrook Dr. from school to Farmington Rd.. Bogcr Rd. (1438). Bus No. 29 Driver; Gwyn Rhynchardl Farmington Rd. from Pinebrook Dr. lo Yadkin County tine, Spillman Rd. (1458), NC 801 from Spillman Rd. to Wyo Rd. (1430), Cedar Forcsl Estates, Wyo Rd., Dance Hall Rd. (1429), Pinevillc Rd. (1431), Ukeview Ave. (1470), 1485. . Bus No. 32 Driver: Georgia Smith Davie Gardens, Creekwood 111, Woodtec, Cope Rd. (1450). NC 801 from t-IO to Yadkin Valley Rd. (north end), Gordon Dr. (1448), Riddle Circle (1449), Springdale. K(ivNo.40 Driver: Lou Smith NC 801 from Wyo Rd. to Ponderosa Rd., Ponderosa Rd. (1442), Essie Rd. (1423), Howell Rd. (1419). Pino Rd. (1428), Cana Rd. (1411), West Rd. (1427), Pudding RIdgc Rd. (1435), Cedar Creek Church Rd. (1434), • Farmington Rd. from t-40 to Pudding Ridge Rd. Bus No. 57 Driver: Larry Barnhardt US 158 from Smith Creek to Pincbrook Dr., Armswonhy Rd. (1653), Gun Club Rd. (1626), Baltimore Rd. (1630), Junior Beauchamp Rd. (1632), Laird Rd. (1634), Country Cove. . BtisNo. 59 Driver: Olga Gajcwski Milling Rd. (1600) from Buffalo Creek to Duichman’s Creek, Hendrix Rd. (1636), Dulin and Howardiown Rds. (16.15. 1637. 16.1S). US l.SS from Pinebrook Dr. lo OM Faniiinglon Rd., Old Farminglon Rd. ( 1473). Foster Dairy Rd. (1639), Pinebrook Dr. from school to 158. Shady Grove School Bus No. 2 Driver: Renee Hunter Witt pick up students in Bermuda Run and on Highway 158 from the Yadkin River to the intersection of Hwys. iS8and801. Bus No. 14 Driver; Donna Burton Will pick up .students on Mixks Church Rd. and on Beauchamp Rd. It will pick up sludenis bn Ballimorc Rd. from Beauchamp Rd. to Cornatzer Rd. Will pick up studenls on Markland Rd., on Peoples Creek Rd., Rd. 1646, Marchmont Plantation, Rd. 1647, Underpass Rd. to Jones Nursery. Bailey Rd. and Vogler Rd. Bus No. 16 Driver: Danny Cornatzer Will pick up students in Hidden Creek, ail of Greenwood Lukes und Westridge and Potts Rd. Bus No. 25 Driver; Safidra Smith Will pick up studenls on Fork Church Rd. and students in Ihe Grcenbriar Farms. It will pick up students on Bailey's Chapel Rd. and Ihc dirt part of Williams Rd. At the end of Fork Church Rd., il will turn right and pick up sludenis on Highway 64 and Joe Rd. Il wilt pick up students on Cedar Grove Church Rd.. Rd. 1808, Rd. 1836, und on Hwy. 64 east of Fork Church to the Ballfield, Bus No. 33 Driver: Brenda Norntan Will pick up .students on Cornatzer Rd., on Howardtown Rii., on Milling Rd. l>etwecn Cornat/.er Rd. und Dulin Rd.. ihose on Rd. 1614 and Rd. 1713, and on Chestnut Trail. Will pick up in Hickory Hill It and on Williants Rd. between Cornatzer Rd. and Fork Church Rd., and Indian Hills off Fork Church Rd. Bus No. .Vi l)ii\cr Tetes.i Tc.ieiie NS'tll pick up stiiilcnis oil Kil. I(i2.^ auit ir;i\el In ll\i\, Kill. ll uill pick iJ|>on lliglnsa) SUI lioin Í624 lo llu\. 15S aiul get all siiuleiiis on Kil. l(>2.''. suiilents in llie Rainiiee De\dopine lit. on Kil. KifiO atul at «isctvii-u Inuiiluiiises. It uill pick upon llii’hua> 1>S tioin tlic inleiscctinn of H «y' wesl to Kil. 1451. Siiulcnis nn M\i> S(l| I mm ( ’orna(/cr Kil. sittJlli (o .\Jarklaml R»l. ¿»u) those on Rils, |(»5l atul 162D. li will ttieii gel sludeni'« in \VixHlv;})lev i‘H Mivks ('hutch i<»l. Bus No. 60 Driver; Jean Coin.it/er Will pick up siiiilenis on M\v\. Sdl sonili ol ()4. It will pick up sUiilenis on Ri\ervieu Rd.. boster Ril. IHL^. aiul the Cooleemee Plantation Rd. Il svili retrace anil pick up on Hwv. HOI Irom llwy. (»4. including stuiletils oiriiHld Rd., Baik-y Church Rd. atul Old Mill Rd. Mocksville Middle Mocksville Elementary Bus No. 4 Highway M to Center, No. 1.^05. SfieflieM Park. Sheffield Rd.. W . No. 1.107. Powell kil.. baek fo Cenfci. .Mocksvillc l;Jenientary School. Mocksville Middle School. B«s So. H No. 1808 (Joe Rd.). No. 1810. Hwy. 64 tiwi.No. 1609. No. 160K.Ni). K.07. Hickory' Hill t^evelopment. No. 1605. Bclhcl Church Rd.. No. lf)04.1-ast Uke Dr.. Crestview Dr.. Sunny Dell Lane, No. 1604. Hwy. 64. MiKksville niemeniary Schixil and Mock-sville Middle School. Bus No. 49 Davie Academy Rd.. No. 1142, Jericho Rd.. Buck Seaford Rd., No. 1137. No. 1138. Duke Si., Salisbury St., Southw«Hxl Acrcs, 601 Soulh. South Main St., Mi>cksvillc Efemcntary School and M<icksvillc Middle SchiH)!. Bus No. 55 Highway 64, Deer Run, No. 1605 (Turrcn- line Church Rd.), Deadmon Rd., Walt Wilson Rd., Deadmon Rd., Lakewood Motel. Spillman Lake Rd. Development, 601 North. Eaton Rd., 601 Norlh, Mocksville Elemen tary' School and Mock.svllle Middle School. Bus Nt). 102 Mocksvillc Middle SchoiM, Campbell Rd., Familand Rd.. Country Lane, No. 1345, No. 1303, No. 13(M, Highway 601, Sanford Rd., Hwy. 601, Sunset Apts, off Hwy. 158, MES and MMS. Bus No. 114 Hwy. 158 from North Main Si. lo Main Church Rd,, turn left and travel to intersec' tion with Cana Rd., turn right, travel to Wood ward Rd., turn right, travel lo Angel Rd., backtrack id WiM>dward. turn right on Mur- chinson Rd., Hwy. 158, McClamrock Rd., Sain Rd., Hwy . 158. MES and MMS. Bus No. 105 Driver: Shiriey Richardson Godbey Rd., Davie Academy Rd., Pralher Rd.. Poor Boy Rd., Jones Rd., Green Hill to Sanford Avc/Counly Home Rd., Soulh Davie. Dr., Duke St. Extension. Bus No. 106 Driver: Joyce Cregar Hwy. 901, 64 West from 901 to Iredell County line, development near Cartner’.s. Midway Caiiipgioiiiul Ril.. Kiilgc/l-nster Ud.. Wils.Mi Ud.. Uiddle Ril., Mr. Henry Rd.. Jericho Rd., Hardison St., Salisbur>’ St. from South Davie to traffic light ut intersection with 64 East. Bus No. 112 Pine St., Bailey St., Lexington Rd./64 from Depot lo traffic light. Mill St., Boger St., Salisbury St. from Bogcr to the cur\e. Church St., Wandering Lane,. Garner St., Soíley Ave., Hospital St., Valley Rd., Tot St., Avon St., Raymond St., Gwyn St., Church Si. Ex tension, Park Ave., Poplar St., Spring St. Bus No. 113 First Load; Milling Rd. Apts. (Oaks and Glenn), Bethel Church Rd., Ridgemont Development, Montview Dr. Second Load: Milling Rd., Fulton St., Marconi, Whitney Rd., Morse St., Rolling Hills Lane, Meta Breeze, Creekside, back on Milling Rd. to Phillips Farm and turn around. Bus No. 115 601 from Country Lane, 64 Weiit to Grecnhill Rd., McAllister Rd., Sanford Ave., Garden Valley, Sanford Ave. to intersection. W illiam R. Davie Bus Nu. II Driver: Coleen Gaither Leaves hojne of driver and travels west on Hwy. 64 for .2 mile, turns right on 901, tnivcU .4 mile to No. 1338 (Counly Line Rd.), tums right on No. 1338 and travels 1.6 miles, lurns left on No. 1336 (Doby Rd.), travels .5 mile 10 Iredell County line, retraces .5 mile, lurns left on No. 1338 and travels 1.8 miles to No. 1335, turns left for .5 mile, retnices, turns left on No. 1306 and travels .9 niile, lurns right and travels .7 mile, turns left on No. 1306 and travels .9 mile, turn.« righi and travels .7 mile No. 1306, turns left on No. 1306 and travels, 1 mile, tums left and travels 1.0 mile lo No. 1313, turns right and travels 3.2 miles, turns left on 64 and travels .3 mile, lums left on No. 1307 (Lanier Rd.) and travels 1.5 miles, giK's ihrough intersection at Ijames Church Rd. and travels 2.4 miles on No. 1307, lums left on 601, travels .5 mile to Main (.'imrch I'.M . liiriis Mglit. uirtis aroinul. icii.icc'' lo()Ul. iiiitis tigtu and ti.i\els I.U uiilc. iiMiis Ielt nil Nn I iOS (Muipli) kd.). ti.nels .4 niile. Uitii' iuoniul atul icti.iees mile, turns Mglil on Nn. I.t5() (Soulli Slieot) aiul lta\els mile, lui iis .it on ml and retraces 4 mile to ()(!(. Inins tetl nii 6(M and iravcls 2.2 miles in school. Hits Vt. ') I lii\i I S.iu.ii i |)>'on I.c.nts school .j/kI Ij.nels soijtli on Jhvy. ('01 loi .2 mile, mills light »mto No. 1414. travels. 1 mile, turns lielit on Liberty Church Uil.. travels 1.0 inde. Uiriis tell on Hear Creek Kd.. tiavels 1.7 miles, turns righl on Durad Kc.iM> Kd.. travels \.y miles, lurtis left on Lilviiv Cliuicli U.l . Havels 2.5 miles, turns tight on litsi diri rnad. turns aroniid. travels back to Ollie Harkey Rd. .2 tnile, turns righl. travels .S mile to Road No. 1.125. lurns right, turns aroutul driveway on left, retraces travel .S mile to Ollie Harkey Kd.. travels I mile, lurns ariunul 111 drive, retrace ..1 mile, lurns rigltf (tn Hen AttdciMiii Rtl,. tra\cls J.7 miles, turns lell on Shotliier Rd.. travels .4 mile, mrn.s around, retrace .4 mile lo Hen Ander son Rd.. travels .K mile, lurns right on Bear Creek Kd.. ir;tvels 2 miles, turns left on Turkey F(U)t Rd.. travels 1.2 miles to Dyson Rd.. turns left, travels 1 mile, lurns left <ni Duke Whitaker Kd.. travels 1.2 miles, turns " aroutul at Cemetery, travels 2.3 miles, turns left iMi Sheffield Rd.. travels 1 mile, turns left on Ratledge Rd.. travels 1.6 miles, turns around driveway on right, retracc 1.1 miles, turns left (HI Sheffield Kd., travels 1.3 miles, turns left on Ijames Church Rd.. travels 1.1 miles, turns left on Wagner Rd.. travels 1.8 miles, turns righf on Lilwrty Church Rd.. travels .1 mile, turns left on No. 14L4, travels . I rnllc, furns left on 601. tnivel.s .2 mile lo school. Bus No. 61 t^rlver: Freda Stanley Leaves schwl. iravcls South 601 1.4 miles to Bracken Rd.. turns left, travels .2 mile, tums around retraces to 601, lums left, travels .8 mile to Danner Rd., turns left, travels 2.5 miles back to 601, tums left, travels 1.8 mites to Main Church Ext., tums left, travels .5 mile to Cana Rd., lurns left, travels 3.1 miles to Angel Rd., lurns right, travefs3.2 miles, tums around ul din road on left, retraces to Cana Rd., crosses over Cana Rd. to Angel Rd., iravcls 2.8 miles to 601, lums right, travels .5 mile {(»Richie Rd.» turns righl, travels 1.5 miles to Enton Church Rd., lurns left, travels 2.2 miles to 601. turns right, iravel.s 1 mile to Fosthall Dr., turns left, travels .3 mile to Jack Booe Rd.. turns left, travels 1.2 miles to Liberty Church Rd., turns left, travels 2.5 miles to Old 80, travels .2 mile to Rock Hole Rd., lurns left, travels 4.0 mites lo end of road, lurns around, retraces to Old 80, turns left, travels .8 mile lo Pete Elmore Rd., tums right, travels .7 mile to end of road, turns around, retraces lo Old 80, lums right, travels 1 mite to 601, lurns right, travels 1.8 miles to school. Bus No. 58 Driver; Rebekah Yountz Leaves school, travels north on 601 for 4.1 miles, turns right on Flake Baity Rd. (1421), iravcls'1.4 miles, lums around, retraces cross Hwy. 601 onlo Shore Dr. (1344), iravcls 1.5 miles around to 601, turns left on North 601, iravcls .4 mile, turns right on South 801.travels .6 mile, turns left on Fmir Corners (1425). reliaccs .5 mile, lurns lell on No. 1424. travels .4 mite to Hwy. SOI. turns righl on North 801, travels 1.0 mile baek to Hwy. 601, turns right on North 601, travels 1.2 miles, turns left on Chicken House Rd. (1329), travels .3 mile to Marginal St., lurns righl, travels .2 mile, turns around, retraces, turn.s right on Chicken House Rd.. lurns righl on No. 1329, travels 1.3 miles to Chinquapin (1328), turns left, travels 2.0 miles, turns around, travels back on Chinquapin 2.3 miles lo Bell Branch Rd. (1327), tums left, travels .6 mile to Liberty Church Rd. (1002), turns left, travels .3 mile to Lat Whitaker Rd. (1342), turns righl, travels .1 mile, turns around, retraces .8 mile back to Liberty Church Rd., turns right, Iravcls 4.6 miles lo Eari Beck Rd. (1341), turns left, travels 1.6 miles, tums around, retraces back to Liberty Church Rd., turns left, travels .2 mile lo Angel Rd. (1414), turns left, iravcls .2'mile to Hwy. 601, lurns left on North 601, travels .2 «llie baek lo school. North Davie Jr. High (No route changes have been made since the end of last school year.) Bus No. 15 Driver: David Frye Will pick up on WiHKlburn Dr., Forest Dr., Creekwood Dr., Brentw'ood Dr., Charlotte Place, and Leslie Court, back on 801 to 158, lo Redland Rd., to Rainbow Rd., fo Speaks Rd.. to 158. Bus No. 23 Driver: Jumes Horne Will pick up on Richie Rd., up 601 to Old 80, to Royal Hole Rd., to Liberty Church Rd., to Bear Creek Rd., lo 1343, lo Lil>erty Church Rd., lo Angel Rd. Bus No. 30 Driver: Frank York Will pick upon Wyo Rd., Including Dance Hall Rd., 10 Pinevillc Rd., to Famiington Rd.. to Spillman t^d.. lo 801, to Farmington in cluding Cedar Forest, fo Lakcview' Rd., to Gilbert Boger Rd., to Pinebrook Dr. Bus No. 42 Diiver; Kennv A/tnon \S ill pick up on V'oL’Ict fill, (n loucf I Jndcr- pass Kil., IO l ire Dcpl. Ave.. lo SOI North to (ireeiivvoihl Lakes Dcvelopftjcni. loXDJ. to Uaintree. lo Hidden Creek. Ittis .Nii. 4.1 Driver; Katen Harbin Will pick iipnpper Redland Kd.. including llclioii Kd. and Little John D i.. all ol Gor don I)i.. Spriiigilak- Dr.. WiMHllee Develop ment. and b.iek lo KOI. Bus No. 56 Driver: Clyde SealsW'ill pick up at shelters and side roads in nermuda Run. Bus Nn. 62 Driver; Ann McCarlhy W’ill pickup on Yadkin Valley Rd., in cluding roads Nos. 14.55, 14.54, 1453 and 1471. Valley Oaks Development, to 801. to Clavbon Dr.. to Crcvkwoixl 111 and on up KOI. Bus No. 109 Driier; Rlck> Hendri.'i Will pick up Polls Rd., 10 KOI. lo MiKks Church Rd.. including W»)od Valley (Old La Quinta) Development, to Cornatzer Rd.. in cluding Campbell Rd.. to Baltimore Rd., lo 158. Bus No. 103 Driver: T.G. Hosier Hwy. 801 from Fork \o Advance, lo Peo ple’s Creek Road. 1648. Zimmerman Rd., lo 801. to Cornatzer Rd.. to Baltimore Rd.. to Be;iuchamp Rd. (1632). Bus No. 38 Driver: Tammy Wilson Will pick up W'llliams Rd.. lo Cornatzer Rd.. iiicliiding Chc.sinuf Hill.s. to Milling Rd., lo Dulin Rd. South Davie Jr. High Bus No. 104 Driver: Shiriey Grant Hardison Si.. Ridge Rd., Wilson Rd., Mid way Campground, 1199, development (irailer park), back to Davie Academy, Godbey Rd. (2'/^ inile.s), 1156, 1155, Poor Boy’s Rd.. 1146, Green Hill Rd., Sanford Ave., Garden Valley. Bii.s Ni>. 108 Driver: Ann Grant 601 S. Pine Ridge Rd., Midway St., buck 801 N. to Hickory Stl, Marginal Si., Davie Academy to Jericho Rd. Bus No. 116 Driver: Pat Rennix 801 S. to Cotileemec, Edgewotxl Circle, Michaels' Rd., Jerusalem Ave.. Back St., Cemetery St., Midway St.; Grove St., Center St., Main St., Marginal St., Watt St., Joyner St., Cross St., Duke St., Yadkin St., Wall St. Bus Nu. 101 Driver; Odessa Ijamcs 64 East, Fork area, Hendrix Rd., all of Joe Rd.. 1807, 1808, Barnes Rd.. 1809. Cedar Grove Church Rd.. 1811,1810, Audrey Mer rill Rd., 1608, Merrill Rd., 1609, all of Hickory Hill Development, Bethel Church, Milling Rd., Pele Foster Rd., all of Twin Brook Acrcs. Bus No. 120 Driver: Dennis McCarlhy Hardison St., Salisbury St., U.S. 64 E., Turrentine Rd., Turrentine Church Rd., Deadmon Rd., 1803, 801-Rlver'iew Rd., I8I3. Foster Rd.. Willbooiic Rd.. Walt Wilson Kd.. (>()l Soulh Main St. Bus No. 11 i Driver: Donna Ireland McCullough Rd., 1135, all of Daniel Rd., CariClememRd. 1136, Gladstone Rd. 1121, West View (part of Davie Academy), Branch Rd./Duck Pond Rd. 1122, Legion Hut Rd. 1123, Daniel Rd. South 1179, Libetiy Church Rd. 1133, Lakewood Village (1165, 1166, 1168. 1169), SouthwMxl Acrcs Development. Bus No. 107 Driver: George Barnhardt Cherry Hilt Rd., Bccktown Rd., Houston Beck Rd., 1820, 1821, Poim Rd., Boxwood Church, 1829,601 S. to river bridge, River- view. Pleasant Acrcs Dr., Holiday Acrcs, 601 N. hetu’cen Grc;is)' Corncr and IX^admon Rd. k“ ■ I I I I I I I I I I Davie High/North Davie': Bus No. 12 : ' Drivei: l.onaine Johnson. 6.14-0.148 U ill pick up all students on Fork/Bi,\by Rd. (till 11 and din pan ol Williams Rd, (1610). . Mntorcvcle Rd. il6l.1). Bogcr Rd. (I6|5)i and Grcenbriar Farms, Bailey's Chapel Rd. • /1617), Markland Rd. (1618). Cornal/erRd. . (1616) from the intersection of Milling Rd,’ '( IMX)) to Norlh Davie. Bus No. 117 Driver: Angela t.awrence. 6.14-57.54 Will pick up ali sludenis on Children'«} Home Rd. (1329), Chinquapin Rd. (1328). . Bell Branch Rd. (1327). Liberty Church Rd. (|(X)2). Ollie Harkey Rd. (1324), Reavis Rd. (1326). t-al WhilakerRd.(1342). 601, 80i; • Fotir Corners Rd. (1425), Courtney Rd. . (1424). Ponderosa Ril. (1422), Salem Acres Development. 801, Cedar Creek (1434) io North Davie. Bus No. 19 Driver; Jack Taylor. 998-3641 ' Will pick up all students al Rlvervicw ' j Townhou.se Apl-s.. 801, Mock Church Rd. ' (1623). Ikaucbamp Rd. (1621). Oak Bluff Rd... (1626), 158. Armswonhy Rd. (1633), Coun« , try. Cove Devetopmeni to North Davic, Bus No. 118 Driver: Donna Lawrence, 634*1994 Will pick up on Pino Rd. (1428), Wesl Rd. (1427). Howell Rd. (1419), Essick R d ..- (1423). Baity Rd.. Circle Dr., 601. Jack Booc . Rd., Eaton's Church Rd.. Cana Rd., Pudding. Ridge Rd. , . Bus No. 119 Driver: Elizabeth Mock. 492-4152 Will pick upon Edward Rd., County Line,. * Sheffield Rd., 1313, Ratledge Rd., Detour, Rd.. Ijames. Main Church, Cana Rd,,f McClamrock Rd. Itus No. 17 Driver: \ Will pick up on Turkcyfoot Rd., Bear. ' ; | Creek, Shoffner Rd., Ben Anderson, Duke Whittaker Rd:, Calahaln Rd., 601, Till Du» Rd.. Murphy Rd., Woodward Rd. m : ► Davia High/South Davia; Bus No. 6 ' Driver: Ronnie Riddle, 492-7231 . : Will pick up all students from Greenhill iw.-' ‘■- (1116). Hwy. 64. Sheffield Rd. (1306), Shef-,: - I field Park Development, H ^^. 64, Sanford . Rd. (1301), 1351,601, Mutnfotd Dr.; Gamef. St., Sofiey Ave., GwynSt., AvonSt., Rayr * mond St., Hospital St., Ridgcvicw Dr., Valley. Rd. to Soulh Davie. : , Bus No. 110 ' ^ Driver: Pam Harris Will pick up a(i students on Cfement ■ Cemetery Rd. (1800), 601, Main St., 158, Main Church Rd. (1406). Caiu Rd.; (1408);- Allen Rd. (1304), Country Lane (1461).''.*: Farmland Acres.' 158. W oddloiid^velo^ ment, Hickoiy St., Main St., SpHi^ St;; Oik*'- St. to South Duvic. ' ' > Bus No. 7 •.'v 'V - Driver; Jimmy Carter, 634-3762 ■; ••• • Will pick up all stu^nts on Campbell Rd.'^ (1400), Milling Rd. (1600), Glenn :Apls.;a^ Craftwood Development, Ridgeinont ^ ; I Development, Bethel Church Rd. (l601),~-:>'; I Hwy. 64, Mill Si. to South Davie. . - ^ ,L Bus No. 53 ■ , • ■ ••• / i’ -; Driver: Will piek up alLsiudents on Hwy. 901 from County Line (1338) to Hwy. 901 fromCounty Line (1338) to Hwy. 601 Wesl, Hwy. 64 from- Canner’s Store to Fred Lanier Rd. (1307) to"* Sheffield Rd. (1306), Sheffield Park Dev,, . Parker Rd. (1305) to Powell Rd. (1151), Godbey Rd. (1150). Hwy. 64 to Valley iULi . l to South Davie. High school stu^nts will r e > J l main on bus. ; ' . Bus No. 3, ' “ Driver: • • ' Will pick up all students at the Oukes Apu.;. ' • I Milling Rd. (1660), Craftwood Dev., Sain*-*:* Rd. (1643), 158.SunsetTerniceApU..Sunsd*' ‘.> Dr...Main St. to South Oavie. High school - I ' students will remain on bus. • • ? DAR’S LANDSCAPING Professional Lawn Plugging FREE ESTIMATES (704) 492-5623 Or (919) 788-5001 1 0 % O f f W i t h A d C lip A.nd Save — I I I I I ■■ J.v I. I i; i:v ■ Salon Phone: 492-5987 Home Phone; 492-7879 10% Off Back To School Perm Special COUMTRY SALOM A U N IS E X S A L O N ^Hwy. 64 West Diana Edwards Mocksville, N.C. 27028 Owner/Stylist llimiRELÑV" W h e n i t c o m e s t o s e r v i c e s * . F i r s t F e d e r a l l e a d s t h e w a y * • Checking AccountB • Savings and Investments • Tax Deferred Accounts • Home Improvement Loans • 24-Hour Teller — member of Relay®*" Network • Discount Brokerage Services • Mortgage Loans • Consumer Loans . • Second Mortgages First Federal leads the way with quality services and personal attention. Come by the office nearest you and learn how our services can help with your financial needs. ©FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS BANK Main Cmico: 230 North Cheny 8tr*«t BrinchOmce*: W H im .M » lV M 4 3 ^ ln h o o d ^ /l3 0 ^ th S tr a tf^ d R ^ ^2815 Re>-nolda Road/3001 WauihiovimStrm MockivUlc Office: 1 « Gtix^r Scrwf aemmon* Office: 2561 Lrwuvill^-Clfmmcwu RoidStanley^lle Offke: 6000 UrUver»lry Piikwiy (704) 634-5981 P U B L I C N O T I C E S DAVIK COUN TY KNTKRI’RISK UIÍCORI). THURSDAY, Апц. 17, I989-7D ' e i A S S l F I E D g NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTYEXECUTRIX’S NOTICE Having qualilied as Executrix ol Ihe esiale ol John W. Hackney, d e ce a se d . laleol Davie County, North Carolina, this Is lo notily all persons having claims against said estate to present Ihem lo the undersigned on or belore Ihe 10th day ol February, 1990, or this notice wiil be pleaded in bar ol Iheir recovery. Ail per sons indebted lo said estate w/ill please make immediate payment lo the undersigned. This Ihe 10th d a y o l August. 1989. Jeannine F. Hackney. Box M, 114 Riverbend Drive, Advance, N.C. 27006, Executrix ol the esiale ol John W, Hackney, deceased. 8-10-4tnp NORTH CAROUNA DAVIE COUNTYEXECUTRIX'S NOTICE Having q u a lilie d as Executrix ol Ihe estate ol Adam Odell Wagner, deceased, lale ol Davio Couniy, Nonh Carolina, this is to notily all persons having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned on or belore the 17th day ol February, 1990, or this notice will be pleaded in bar ol their recovery. All per sons indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned. This Ihe 17th day ol August, 1989. Madolyn H. Wagner, 1259 Yadkinville Road, Mocksville, N.C. 27028, Executrix o! Ihe estate ol Adam Odell Wagner, deceased.8-17-4lnp NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTYEXECUTRIX’S NOTICE Having qualified as Executrix of Ihe estate of Magdellne Carter Whitaker, deceased, late of Davie County, Nortfi Carolina, this Is lo notify all persons hav ing claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned on or before the 10th day of February, 1990, or this nollce will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will p le a s e make immediate payment to the undersigned. This the 10th day of August, 1989. Joyce W. Rabon, Route 3, Box 597, I Mocksvllle. N.C. 27028, Executrix of the •state of Magdellne Carter Whitaker, deceased, 8-10-4tnp I NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTYEXECUTRIX’S NOTICE : Having qualified as Executrix of the I vwtate of Q.W. Potts, deceased, late of IkOavia County, North Carolina, this Is to I inoUly all pwions having claims against j Mtata to preiant them to the under- I on or before Ihe 10th day of r'Fabniaiy, 1990, or this notice will be piMdcd in bar of their recovery. All per sons Indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment to the This'th* 10th day of August, 1989, Batty B. Potta, P.O. Box sa, Advance, N.C. 27006, Executrix of the estate of Q.W. Potts, dweased.8-10-4tnp NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING There will be a meoling ol Ihe Mocksville Zoning Board ol Ad)iislmont on Tuesday. August 22. 1989. at 7:00 p.m. in the Mocksviilo Town Hall. Tho public is invited lo attend. Business is scheduled to bo conducted as lollows; A. Call to order. B. Review minutes.C. T8L Associates. Inc., reprosenled by Grady L. McClamrock, Jr., has submitled a request lor a Conditional Use Permit u n d e r A rtic le V, Section 7.2 ol the Mocksville Zoning Ordinance. This pro perly is located at 578 Wilkesboro Street in Mocksville, N.C. This property lurther described as being Parcel B-8 ol tax map 1-4-11.D. New or old business. E. Adjournmenl.8-10-2tnp NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY EXECUTRIX'S NOTICE Having qualilied as Executrix ol the Estate of M.H. Grose, deceased, late of Davie County, North Carolina, this is to notily all persons having claims against said esiale lo present Ihem lo Ihe under signed on or belore the 17th day ol February, 1990, being six months Irom the first day of publication, or this notice will be pleaded In bar of Iheir recovery. All persons Indebted to said estate will please make Immediate paymenl to the undersigned. This the 8th day ol August, 1989. Peggy R. Grose, 168 East Maple Avenue, Mocksvllle, North Carolina 27028, Executrix ol the estate of M,H. Grose, deceased.Martin and Van Hoy, Attorneys Drawer 1068 Mocksville, N,C. 27028 10-17-4tnp NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE Superior Court Division Before the Clerk 89*SP*82 In The Matter Of The Foreclosure Sale Of The Property of Duff D. Peebles and Wife. Ruth C. Peebles, Deed of Trust Book 125, Page 309 NOTICE OF SALEWHEREAS, Duff D. Peebles and wife, Ruth C. Peebles, did on the 29th day of November, 1983. execute a Deed of Trust conveying certain properties hereinafter described to the undersigned Trustee, which Deed of Trust was recorded in Book 125, Page 309. Office of the Register of Deeds of Davie County on the 29th day of November. 1989; andWHEREAS, default having been made under Ihe terms of said Deed of Trust;NOW THEREFORE, under and by vir tue of the power of sate contained In said Deed of Trust, and pursuant to Findings of the Clerk of Superior Court of Davie County dated the 1st day of August, 1989, and In compliance with the provisions of N.C.G.S. Section 45-21.ISA, et seq., the undersigned Trustee will on Tuesday. August 22, 1989, at 12:00 o'clock noon . at the Davie County Courthouse door In Mocksvllle, North Carolina, offer for sale O niH CAROLINA DAVIECOUNTY■ LEGAL NOTICE . In accordance with the "Rules For Twln-Trailer Truck Access Routes" adopted by the N.C. Board of Transportalior), notice Is hereby given tha! an application has b«Hl A M with Ihe N.C. Department ot Transportation lor the following twin-trailer Inick (Mionabl* access route<s) to trucking termlnal(s): Aaalicallon Terminal Location start End No. Firm County (City) Routes Point Point oaa Lee Co. . US 601 601 Bypass Hwy. 70 601 . DavleCounty 601 601 Bypass Terminal SR 1410 158 601 1*40 SR 1410 158 158 601 Terminal ‘‘601 1-40 Terminal 088 ': Jockey Inter- Cooleemee natkHial, Inc. : 601 Bypass 70 601 601 601 Bypass SR 1134 SR 1134 601 SR 1125 SR1125 SR1134 Terminal 601 Bypass 70 601 601 601 Bypass 801 601 .601 SR 1116 SR 1116 801 SR1125 SR1125 SR1116 Terminal j 801 SR1116 SR 1125 70 801 SR 1116 SR 1116 SR1125 Terminal ... SR 1410 158 601SR 1134 SR 1125 MO SR 1410 158 601 SR 1134 156 601 SR 1134 SR 1125 Terminal SR 1410 158 601 801 SR 1t16 SR 1125 t-40 SR 1410 158 601 601SR 1116 158 601 SR 1134 SR 1116 SR 1125 Termlnal_ Í eoi SR 1116 SR 1125 70 801 SR 1116 SR 1116 SR 1125 Terminal 1 801 SR 1134 SR 1125 1-40 601SR 1134 SR 1134 SR 1125 Terminal 801 SR 1116 SR 1125 1-40 801 SR 1116 SR 1116 SR 1125 Terminal 1 09Q IngersQl Rand Mocksvllle 601 Bypass 70 601 601 601 Bypass SR 1140 SR 1140 601 Terminal SR 1410 158 601SR 1140 1-40 SR 1410 158 601 158 601 SR 1140 Terminal 601 SR 1140 1-40 601 SR 1140 Terminal 1 -Written public comments wilt be considered tor the record. I lonwarded to; J.lvt. Lynch. P.E . Stale Tratlic Engineer, P.O I Box 25201, Raleigh, N.C. 27611. 1 8-17-2tnp Iho lollowing doscfibcd pnrcol ol real pro perty locntcd in Fullon Township. Dnvio Couniy, NorK) Cnrolinn: f-inST TRACT BEGINNING nt the point in Ihu contorline of Iho 60 loot right of v/ny of N.C, 601 ns indicated by a railroad spike in tho contorline; thenco South 06° 15' 17" East 30,53 foot lo a placed iron pin localod in the eastern right of way line of N C, 801; and thenco pro ceeding South 86® 15' 17" East 204.43 feet to a placed iron pin; thence South 86° 15' 17" East 240.04 feet to an iron pin; thence South 03° 02' 53" West 188,41 leet to an iron pin; North 86° 57' 17" West 405.87 feet to a pfaced iron pin iocafed in the eastern right of way line of N.C. 801; thenco North 86» 57' 17" West 30.53 feet to a spike located in Ihe center line ol the 60 fool right of way of N.C. 801; thence North 8o 11' 12" West 198.00 feet to the railroad spike in the centerline of the 60 fool right of way of N.C. 801. the point and place of beginning. The same being and consisting ot the 2.00 acres of property of Duff D. Peebles, lying in Fulton Township. Davie County, North Carolina, as shown by a survey prepared by Grady L. Tutterow on June 30,1983. Reference is made lo Deed Book 120, Page 209, Davie County Registry. SECOND TRACT: BEGINNING al a point said point being South 86° 15' 17" East 234.96 feet from point In the centerline of the 60 foot right of way of N.C. 801 as Indicated by a railroad spike; thence from said point of beginning North 030 44» 43" East 293.70 feet to an iron stake; running thence South 86» 15' 17" East 1103.88 feet to an Iron stake (said stake being tho northeast corner of the within described trad); running Ihence South 06» 00' West 474.92 feet to an iron stake; running thence North 86® 11' 29" West 207.17 leet tu an Iron stake; runn ing thence North 86® 57' 17" West 635.73 feet to an iron stake; running thence North 030 02' 43" West 188.41 feet to an iron stake; running thence North 86® 15' 17" West 240.04 feet to an Iron stake be ing the point and place of beginning. The same consisting o f 10.976 acres of pro perty of Duff D. Peebles, lying in Fulton Township, Davie County, North Carolina, as shown by a survey prepared by Grady L. Tutterow on June 30. 1983. See also Deeds recorded in Book 49, Page 39 and Book 120, Page 209, Davie County Register of Deeds office. There is located on this property a wooden frame house wilh three bedrooms and one bathroom at Route 2, Box 442, Advance, Davie County, North Carolina.TERMS OF SALE: Cash upon confir mation of the Court. The highest bidder will be required to deposit ten (10) per cent of the first $1,000.00 bid and five (5) percent of such amount bid in excess of $1,000.00. CONDITIONS OF SALE: The sale wiil be made subject to 1989 Davie County ad valorem taxes and any prior laxes and liens.This 1st day of August. 1989. P.G. Stoner Jr., Trustee P.O. Box 457 38 Vance Circle Lexington, N.C. 27292 Telephone: (704) 246-5104 8-10-2tnp NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTYEXECUTOR’S NOTICE Having qualified as Executor of the Esiale of Elia B. Tomlin, deceased, lale of Davie County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to present Ihem lo Ihe undersigned on or before the 27th day of January, 1990, said dale being at least six months from the dale of firsl publica tion of this notice, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All per* so n s indebted to said estate will please make Immediate payment lo the undersigned. This the 27th day of July, 1989, Ihe same being Ihe first publication date. George Lyons, Executor ol the esiale of Ella B. Tomlin, deceased. Brock & McClamrock Attorneys at Law P.O. Box 347 Mocksvllle, N.C. 2702Q Telephone: (704) 634-3518 7-27-4tnp NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTYCREDITORS NOTICt Having qualifiod as Executor of ttio Will and Estate of Elizabott; Holmos Benton, cieceasod. Into of 2 W 7 Bermuda Village. Advance. Dnvie County. North Carolina, this is to notify all persons, firms, corpora* lions and olhor.s having claims against the Estate of said docoased to exhibit them to the undersigned's attorneys at Suite 500, Two Piedmont Plaza. 2000 West First Street. Winston-Salem. N.C. 27104, on or before the 15th day of February. 1990, or this notice will be plod in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said Estate will please make immediate paymenl. This Ihe 3rd day of August, 1989. William Grady Benton, c/o Suite 500, Two Piedmont Plaza, 2000 West Firsl Street, Winston-Salem. N.C. 27104, Ex ecutor of the Estate of Elizabeth Holmes Benton, deceased. Edward E. Raymer Jr. Allman Spry Humphreys Leggett & Howinglon, P.A. Suite 500, Two Piedmonl Plaza 2 0 0 0 West Firsl Street Winslon-Salem, N.C. 27104 Tel: (919) 722-2300 8-10-4lnp NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTYNOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION Having qualified as Administratrix of the esiale of Eugene Samuel Bowman, deceased, late of Davie Couniy, North Carolina, this is lo notify alt persons, firms and corporations having claims against said estate to present them, duly verified, to the undersigned, care of William J. Waggoner, Attorney, 2500 Two First Union Center. Charlotte. N.C. 28282. on or before the 10th day of February, 1990, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons Indebted lo said estate will please make immediate settle ment with the undersigned. This the 1st day of August, 1989. Ruth H. Bowman, Administratrix of the esiale of Eugene Samuel Bowman, deceased. 8-10-4lnp NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY EXECUTOR'S NOTICE Having qualified as Executor of the estate of Vera Godwin Hail, deceased, late of Davie County, North Carolina, this is to notify ail persons having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned on or before the 10th day of February, 1990, being six months from the first day of publication, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons Indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned. This the 2nd day of August. 1989. Robert B. Hall. Box 816, Mocksviiie. N.C. 27028, Executor of Ihe estate of Vera Godwin Hall, deceased.Martin and Van Hoy, Attorneys Drawer 1068 Mocksville, N.C. 27028 8-10-4tnp Classifieds Sell Call 634-2129 Oh No! Look Who Hit The Big 3*0h! Love M o th e r & Sister 7 Ñ D -A U C T I0 N . Saturday, August 26, 1989 - 10:00 a.m. 108 ± Acres In Davie County Sub-divided in tracts - 5-40 acres Only Minutes From Winston-Salem! DIRECTIONS; From intersection MO & Hwy. 801, lollow 801 North 8 miles to Cana Road (SRI4t 1). Turn left on Cana Road and go V/г tniles lo land on right. From Intersection ol Hvfy 421 & Hwy. 601 lollow Hwy. 601 south approximalely 7 miles to Hwy. 801. Turn lelt on Hwy. 801 and go towards Farmington 3 miles to Cana Road. Turn right on Cana Road (SRt4t1) and go 1Уг miles lo sate on right. This line properly is located only minules Irom WINSTON-SALEM, CLEMMONS, LEWISVILLE, MOCKSVILLE, FARMINGTON. This is your chance lo own land In Ihe coun try near Ihe cityl Tha land is being surveyed and divided inlo acreage tracts. You will have Ihe opportunily al the auction to buy part or all! It will be ollered in tracts lirst, and then in combinations, or as a whole. Being just across the road Irom Ihe Thoroughbred Training Center and the Deerview Jersey Farm, it would be ideal lor horses or cattle. A long, paved road Ironiage makes it even ideal lot development. Here, you’ll have the chance (o buy an acreage tract for the home in the country you've been dreaming aboul! Don't miss this big OAVIE COUNTY LAND AUCTION! Auctioneers will be on site Sunday, August 20 Irom 2;00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m. to give out maps and answer questions. Or you may want to call the auction company at 1-800-442-7906 lor details. Sate will be held rain or shine. Aucilon lent will be on property if weather is rainy! TERMS: 10% down al the auction, balance not to exceed 30 days. For More Details Call The Auctioneers: By.. 100 H ollow Hill Court, RidgGmont. Mocksviilo. First houso on lelt. v;atch lor signs. Friday August 18th.8unitl. 131 Crestview oil Hwy. 64 behind A r m o ry . Twin Brook Acres. Saturday, B a.m. - 3 p.m . Good prices. Radios, tables, toys, sewing m achine. Mucti m o re . 176 Pine Street. Saturday, Aug. 19tti. '1-800x16.5 truck tires, 2 gas cam p stoves, 2 Ians, screenhouse, dinette set and more. Rain date 26th. 1st Time Y a rd Sale Saturday, 8 a.m. -12. Children, adult clothes, all sizes. Shoes, curtains, toys, household items, furniture, much more. Hwy. 64 east to Fork Baptist Church. Turn lelt. Watch for signs.____________________________ 601,1 mile north of 1-40, Union Chapel Methodist Church. Sat., Aug, 26, 8 a.m. -12. Miscellaneous yard & bake sale. Including office equipment. August 19th - 158 lo Country Lane - turn left - turn right Farmland Road - Bth house on right. Boys girls, adult clothes, bedspreads ceiling fan, stereo, TV, much more.__________ Autum n Care will be sponsoring a yard sale on Saturday, August 19th at 8 a.m. Large variety of items. Items sold cheapi BIG YARD & MOVING SALE: Friday, Saturday, Sunday, Everything must go. Behind Firsl Union Bank, Ad vance. Signs. Bailey's Chapel Road off 801 or Fork Church Rd. Fri. 8-12, Aug. 18. Sat. 8 until, Aug. 19. Clothes, toys, D.P. exercise machine, VCR, furniture, tools, fishing stuff, kitchen stuff, much, much more. Spillman's Lakes, Sat. Aug. 19, 8 until._____________________________ Used Washers & Dryers. Good con dition. Ask lor W illie 492-5357. Baltim ore Road (Bixby area): 3 family yard sale, Sat. August 19. 8 a.m. til Z p.m. Children & adult clothes, glassware, furniture, and misc. items. Cancel 11 raining. Cornatzer Road near Jones Store. Home of Mary Lois Jones. 3-lamilies, Friday & Saturday. 8 a.m. until. Signs. Country Lane. 2-familes. 17 years ac cumulation. Sal. Aug. 19, 8 a.m. un til. Lots of good quafity clothes, household items. H w y . 158. 3rd house west of Pinebrook Drive, Smith Grove, ap prox. 1 mile east ol Farmington Road. Thursday, Aug. 17lh, 8 a.m.- 6 p.m. Friday, Aug. 18lh, 8 a.m.- 7 p.m. Car port sale, rain or shine. 4-families. In fant clothing. Boys clothing size 5-14. Nine van seals, crystal, household Items. Hwy. 158 near Smith Grove United Methodist Church. Sat. Atjg. 19,8-6. 2 families. Furniture, boy's and girls clothes, variety of articles. Leslie Court, Creekwood Develop ment. Saturday 8-12. 4 families. Fireplace screen, furniture. Sears. range, children and adult clothing, housewares, more._______________ Milling Road, 2nd drive after crossing, bridge. 2 family, Fri. & Sat. 8-5.: Children, adult clothing. Almost new ■ baby items, swing, walker, etc. Stuff*, ed animal toys. Oak Grove Church Rd., take Hwy. 158 east of Mocksvllle 3 miles, turn right. Sat. Aug. 18,8-2. Dresser, glassware, toys, lots ot baby Items (toys, clothes;' crib sheets, towels, blankets, etc.) . Girls & ladles clothing. Wheel, louvers'' (Escort or Lynx). Cancelled H raining. " 219 Magnolia Ava. Saturday 8 u n itl.' Pre-teen clothes, appliances, more.' ‘ 344 Spring Street, Friday 8 untH. .. Yard Sale Signs Oiv* Dir«etioM To Your S a l o 2 5 ^ Each Available At The Davie-County Enterprise Record AUCTION Saturday, August 19, 1989 At 10 a.m . _____________For Roy Church______________ LOCATION: Iredell County, from Harmony, N.C., take Hwy. 90t W est to 1-77, then 1-77 South th Tomlin Mill Rd. #1890, then left 200 yds to sale._________________ " File Cabjnets (metal & wood) * Folding metal Chairs * Antique Cash Register * Oak Chairs (small, med., large) * School Desk (aii types) * Wood work Benches * Shop Tables W/Wooden Vise * Drafting Tabies * Piano * Chaik Boards * Bock Cases * Desks & Tables * Plastic Stack Chairs (all sizes) * Typewriters, Copiers, Projectors, Recorders * Coal Stove, Heaters * Jenn-AIr Drop-In Stove Top * Sears Refrigerator (frost free) * Exercise Slice * 3 Lawnmowers * Skill Saws * Router * Carpenter Tools * Hand Tools *** Many Other Items /Rest Rooms *** Mr. Church Is retired from tht WinMoibSaltm School ’ system and over th* years ha haa fllM hla mothar'a larga bam to the brim. Now ho must clean It out and wo will soli it all at auction. York Auction A Harmony, N.C. NCAL #952 Since 1935 R ealty 704-346-2696. R O G E R S REALTY Б AUCTION Ca '■ Y O U R A U C T IO N C O N N E C IIO N " Hlsh«iy M l •М мш игу. Ц С. NC Ucsnii IU& - VA Ucinu П (919) 769-2926 or 786-8326 1^800-442-7906 B-10.3IP A U C T I O N S A L E 10:00 a.m. Saturday, August 26, 1989 Personal Property of Mrs. Hattie S. Tutterow __^RouteJJGreen_Hili_Rdj]^Mock^^ DIRECTIONS: From 1-40 Exit #168 Hwy. 64 East to Mocksville, approx. Vio mile to Green Hill Rd. Turn right to sale. Watch for auction signs. — ^ ITEMS FOR SALE i Large Sliver Certificate $1 * Cedar Blanket Chest * Spool Bed - Twin Size * Several Nice Quilts * Depression Glass * Rocking Chairs * China Doll * Homer Laughlin China-Eggshell Georgian -L^ears-ColdspoLErostless Refrigerator/Freezer * Hotpoint HD W asher * Several Tables * RCA Coiortrak w/Remote Control * Pictures, Frames ' Floor Lamps * Pewter * Linens, Dollies * Lantern * Large Trunk * McCoy Pottery * Silverstone Stereo Compatible ‘ TDC Siide Projector & Screen * Sewing Notions * Olivetti Underwood Typewriter * Wheelbarrow * Dining Room Table w/6 Chairs * Breakfront China Cabinet * Sideboard * Cast Iron Doorstop * Occupied Japan * Sofa * Coffee Tabies * Stone Crook " Sears Kenmore Electric Range * Wm. Rogers Flatware ‘ Hotpoint HD Dryer * Loveseat * Dresser * Sewing Machine ‘ Lamps ' Marbles ' Pots, Pans, Dishes • Milk Can * Smoke Stand * Emeison Radio ‘ Records • Luggage * Craft Items * Hand Tools • Yard & Garden Tools * Other Miscellaneous items, NOTE: Mrs. Tulterrow has given up housekeeping, and we have been commissioned to sell her personal property at public auction. SALE CONDUCTED FOR: Robert Evans, P.O.A. Jim S H E E K ^^ AUCTION & REALTY CO. NCAL 924 BONDED NCRL 40238 Hwy. 158 P.O. Box 903, n/locksvllle, N.C. 27028' r Ph. (919) 99S-33S0NOr RESPONSIBLE IN CASE OF iNJURY OR LOSS O f ANY TYPE в-17-2(пЬр ■ 8 0 -IM VIE COUNTV KNTKKi-KIS)-: UKCOKI). JlirUM IA\ . Дни. 17. IW ) e L A S S I F l E D исувигизЕтгардавя'аввтэеаегаяявяяввш т ш е г ш в ш Salisbury Street & corner Boger St., home ol Charlie McClamrock, Fri. 8 Sal. 8-5. Fishing rods & reels, llowers. clothes, shoes, drapes, lots more. Come see. Cancelled il raining. Duke Whittaker Road oil 601.3 lami ly yard sale Fri, & Sal,, 8 unitl. C hildren's, baby and women’s clolhes. love seat, bikes, a little bit ol . everything. Come by and see. II rain ing Ihe lollowing weekend. Follow signs. Memorial A TRIBUTE TO MY DAD Roy Anderson Carter Aug. 20, 1921 - July 26, 1989 My dad was a good man, the best man I’ve ever know. He lived a simple lilo, unencumbered by material things, he loved his lamily, he loved his church and he loved his work, he'd rather work than play any day. He was a man of love, a man ol integrity, a man ol wisdom, a man ol principles. He knew n o malice. He believed in truth. . He trusted everyone. He treated all -* as equals. One's wealth, one's social I status, one's skin dolor mattered not ; lo my dad. When a person set fool on ' his property that person was treated .' like all others, with kindness, with ; honesy, and with hospitality. He ; never met a stranger, just new ac- ;■ qualntances. He never asked for % anything, bul he always gave freely, •; He never said an unkind work about anyone. It he couldn’t find something V good to say, he said nothing at all, ' That was a principle he lived by. He ; was not a man of great wealth, nor ' high social standing, nor of much t education. But he loved life, he lov- * ed people, and he loved GOD's ' creatures. He had the patience of a ^ saint with children, but little patience ; with'him self. He was never proud, • boastful, or ant>gant; but he was kind, '-tiutnble and unlmposlng,“ No" was ' not In his vocabulary, his response was always, “I'll be there as soon as I c«n.” He was never a politician, nor a statesman, nor even a great spealwr, but, he touched more lives In more small w i^ than most ot us I'wW ever knegine. HI* Mtkxis weren’t ahMyepopulw wHh hiefimlly. but he dkt what he b e U «^ was the right to doi‘ He wa* a good father, a good prdvider, and a good rate model ' > ' torhlsehHdrena'ndgrandchlldreh.A I ' friend once asked my wHe how she I felt about, her father-in-law. She ■ replied, “ My children will only have • the oppotunlty of ever knowing one C grandfather on this earth. I could ; aearcN': the world over and there > wouU be no one I'd want more for the C' Jo6 than the grandaddy they already :• have." He taught us humility, a sense . of Wndnees; and how to work (he ^ believad in hard work). He taught us ; ■ that a person's worth was determin- < ed hot by what he had, but by what ■he did with what he had. He taught ' '-uathatapersonwaiinottobejudg- < ,ed (nor paid) by the color of his skin, but by. how hard he worked. He taught us never to treat anyone or ; a n tin g unfairly, but to do unto them ; as we would want them to do unto us. , Daddy will be remembered for how he lived, and how he taught us to livs; ' Simple, sinoere, reverent, respectful, truthful, tnistful,. kiving and hard working. . . Titinothy G, Carter J ’ Î A m m n is 'i: : ATnit tTHJ. fkc ' ^ AfMr 12 year of service Rernval of dead, down cows & horses Call Mink Farm Stttesville 7044l73-2072 ■aauttM. iuil blooded Hemalayan cat, •75. Qrey a white. Oniy to a good home. 996-5208. Cooker Spaniels, 1-5 years old, , blacks, bulfs and party colors. $100 ; negoltabie. 998-6909 after 4 p.m. 00a...ioving home. Part Lab. Female. Loves kids, needs big yard ■and plenty of love. 998-S202. F W E KITTEN8...996-9195. F M E KITTEN8...998-2623. t ' Wi p r i ’d .я1Мф9<д|011 CIstnkig InMfts Woodstovts & Ftrepiaces Stffior Citizens Discounts Миб: (704) 284-4476 nimais FREE KITTENS and 2 cats. 492-5176. HAPPY JACK FLEA CARD: All metal patented d e v ic e c o n tro ls llc a s in Ihe liome vvitiiout cliemicais or exter minator. Results overnight! DAVIE FARM SERVICE, 303 WILKESBORO ST. ______________________ Labrador Retrelver Puppies: Black, shots and de-worm ed. S150. 492-7418. Apartment For Rent FOR RENT....1 and 2-bedroom apart ments, kitchen appliances lurnished including dishwasher, IVa-baths, washer/dryer connections. Central heat/air. Prewired for cabio and phone, insulated doors and windows. No-wax kitchen/bath lloors. Pool, Sunset Apartments, located behind Hendrix Furniture on highway 158, MocksvillB. Phone 704-634-0168. NEW, ENERGY EFFICIENT APART MENTS. 1 & 2 bedroom and luliy lur nished studios. Pool, clubhouse, and basketball court. AMPLE PARKINGIII Water, sewer, drapes, and kitchen appliances included. Dishwasher, Irost-free relrlgerator, washer/dryer connections and on-site laundry facilities. Heated and cooled with heat pumps. Private patio or balcony, quick-recovery water heater, smoke dector, prewired lor phone and cable TV. Manager and maintenance live on property. 24-hour emergency maintenance. Children and small pels welcome. Only a few left. Don't miss oul — call n o w fo r $50 oil first month's rent. Northwood Apartments, Milling Road, 634-4141,__________ STUDIO APARTMENT: $250 month; $250 deposit. References required. Prefer single or gentlemen. 492-7853 or 634-1218. Business Opportunity CASH FROM CARPET CLEANING! Eitcluslve territory. Full training. Low franchise le s brings financial freedom. Free Informallon. JJim Fiammm, PO Box 36, Rexberg, ID 83440. 208-356-4515. Ovrn ywir m m apofting goods store. Large sporting goods chain in terested in coming to Mocksvllle. Looking for owner/operator. Call 919-454-5757, ask for Wanda Lucas. REDUCED from $89,900 to $69,900. Hwy. business, 1.62 acres, 175 ft. front plus 5 room brick bidg. Call Evelyn Haynes 634-3831 or 919-768-1662, Lewis & C lark Realtors. ___________________ Small Profitable Business for sale In Mocksviile. Lots of room for growth for aggressive owner. Call 634-1456 days or 492-5651 nights,_________ Video Rental Business. Want In - but afraid? Don't be, we have everything you need. W e have approximately 40,000 movies, Quaranteed - No money lost. 6Q/ linancing. Call 1-800-635-6811. Child Care Before A after school child care posi tions available at all Davie County elementary schools. Applicalions ac cepted at Davie Famiiy YMCA Mon.- Fri. noon to 5 p.m. Call 634-0345 for more Inlormation. ___________ iChlM care In home on Yadkin Valley Road. Need little girl to play with another little girl. Call after 5 p.m. 998-4948.________________________ DIANE'S REGISTERED DAY CARE on Cornatzer Road has openings for all ages In her home. Hot meals, lots of TLC. $35,00 per week. Call 998-7429 anytime.________________ Experienced, loving mother will care lor your child in my home. Healthy, happy environment. Near Hickory Hiil Development. Call 998-9490 for appointment._____________________ Mother will babysit In her home. Any shift. Any age, 998-6350, References furnished. Hess Heating & Air Conditioning 2 4 Hour Service Sales — Service & Installation Oil Heat Pumps Gas Or Electric Furnaces 9 1 9 - 9 9 8 - 6 1 3 3 Call Today Beach Collage rTl S. Myrtle 2 bedroom. 2 bnth, color TV, A/C. S285 weekly or $44 nightly. 704-634-3B75. 634-3650. W hite Lake: Isloy’s Apiutments and Collages. Discounls Sunday through Thursday, (919) 862-4030. Furniture 1 oval shaped pecan dining room table, 2 extra leaves lor expanding, 6 matching cliairs, S75: Upright Ireezer (21 cu, ft.) like new, S150. Call 634-3433,_____________ ____ Dining Room Table, 6 chairs. Solid oak. S250. 634-3489._____________ Sofa & Chair with ottoman, $250; Maple collee & ond tables, S150; 2 walnut bar stools, S50, 492-5182. Health ABORT(ON....Pregnancy Testing. For an appointm ent call Arcadia Women's Clinic, Winston Salem col lect. 919 721-1620. Homes For Rent Beautiful, sm all 1 bedroom , air con ditioned cottage of US 64 Fork. Too small for children. No pets. $250 month. 998-5210 or 1-877-3433, Homes For Sale 178 Poplar Street, 10 room older home, lots ol charm on desirable lot ol Mocksville’s North Main Street, 4 bedrooms, 2 newly renovated baths, w onderlul new kitchen, large mohogany panelled living room. New wiring, plumbing. Landscaped yard approx, 1 acre, including over 70 box woods, Will Martin, 634-0881 (home); 634-2171 (work),__________________ 4.22 acres, large deck. 3 bedrooms. $49,900. Call 998-6169 aller 5 p.m.. BY OWNER IN MOCKSVILLE: Coun try Lane. 3 BR, 2 Balhs, Double arage, 1 acre wooded lot. 2 year old. Excellent condilion. 634-0109, BY OWNER: Large A-Frame situated on 5,44 acres. Full basement In Fork Com m unity, Priced to sell at $112,000. Call 998-8680 or 407-349-9829,____________________ BY OWNER: North of Greasy Corner on sot. Brick rancher, 3-BR, 2'/; BA, den, lormal LR. DR, 2-FP, kit,, large utility room, carport, basement, par tially finished, 20x40 pool. 1.1 acres, $103,700,998-2050, il no answer call 998-7553,________________________ Carolina E,E, Homes will build lo suit your needs. We build on your land or ours. Many lloorplans In slock. Come by today for a free estimate or call for Information. We can also help you w ith your rem odeling jobs, 704-634-2252,____________________, GOVERNMENT HOMESI $1,00 (U- Repalr) Foreclosures, Tax Delinquent Property, Now selling. This areal Call (refundable) 1-518-459-3546 EXT, H5649A lor listings. Land For Lease Pastureiand for rent to horses $25 per monlh per horse, 998-5378, Land For Sale DAVIE COUNTY. Moving with the Lee Plant? Need acreage? 17,32 acres by owner, house, 416,44 road frontage, $40,000, (919) 785-0107, Lawn & Garden ANGELL'S SEEDING SERVICE... New Yards, Re-seeding, light grading and hauling. Brush chipping, RICK ANGELL 634-2730 aller 5:30 p,m, COMPLETE LAWN MAINTENANCE Mowing, fertilizing, seeding, aeration, weed and insect control, and more, CAROUNA LAWN CARE FREE ESTIMATES 704-634-4737. > ^ , T x f>RORMIBQAS,MC. MocksvllU And Davit Сошиу For 41 Ytars 1010 Wttt IntiM SUMI I; •SECRETARY EXECtrriVE SECRETARY " •WORD PROCESSOR HOME STUDY / R ES. TftAININQ •FINANCIAL AID .JO B PLACEMENT AVAILABLE ASSISTANCE 1-800-327-7728THE HART SCHOOL • ot A.C.T.Coip.Nall Рогт'рако PL. C & M SERVICES Wg provide all types ol lawn sorvice. rnowmg Inwns, trimming shrubbery, cleaning lots. 704-634-5798. FREE ESTIMÂTES. W AYNE'S LAWN MAINTENANCE AND TREE CARE Tree Topping. Trim m ing. Slump Grinding S Tree Removal 634-4413 - Free Estimates M K Z i l l g i l D i r a M FOUND: Large male dog. Smith Grove area. 998-5682. FOUND: Small dog, female, long blond hair. Has red collar, 492-7883. LOST: $5.00 (Dollar) Gold Piece Necklace in or near M oore’s, REWARD! 492-7720,_____________ LOST: Key at BB&T parking lot downtown, II found call 634-5433. Miscellaneous '84 Resort Camper: 28 leet, air con dition, awning, excellent condilion, $7,000, 634-3336._______________ ANYONE CAN APPLYI Guaranteed Visa/MC, US Charge, Even with bad credit. No one relus- ed. Call 213-925-9906 ext, U2269. CAMPER FOR SALE: 19 ft. self con- lained. Sleeps 6. $1500, 634-3489, FOR SALE: 150 AC, pari or all, Iredell Co, (704)546-2696._______________ FOR SALE; 18 hp, Dynamark riding lawn m ower. Good condition. 634-2838.________________________ Hexagon Shape PICNIC TABLES with attached bench. Custom built with treated lumber. $150.00.998-3822 or 998-3260. Mobile Homes For Rent Ready to move in. Two and three bedroom mobile homes. $70 & $80 weekly. 492-7853 or 634-1218, Rent to own: 2 bedroom 1988 m o b ile home near Jockey Plant, 601 Soulh, $350 month plus $350 deposit. Private lot. 492-7853 or 634-1218. Mobile Homes For Sale Attention landowners. lOVflnancing available. Rnancing available on w e ll, septic, underpinning. AAA Homes, Exit 42 o il 1-77, Troutman, NC 704-528-9833,____________________ '60 mobile home, 10x60, $2,200. 998-8909 after 4 p.m.___________ '72 Styiecraft 12x60. 2 bedroom, 1 bath, new A/C, some furniture. E.C, $5,200 (neg.) 998-5709 Call after 9 p,m, '78 Conners Mobile Home, 14x70,3 bedrooms, 2 baths, almond garden tub, bar, extra large windows. Master bedroom and bath separate from oiher bedrooms. Super clean. Ex cellent condition. $8,500. (704)284-2161 or 284-2737. '80 Conner... 14x70. Central air. $8,000. 998-5456.________________ '83 Mobile Home, 14x76,3 bedrooms, 2 balhs, price negotiable. 998-5862 or 634-2411 aller 5 p.m. Before you buy...come see us at Oakwood Homes, Troutman. Exit 42 off 1-77. 528-4517.________________ Lee's Mobile Homes - Volume Horton & Fleetwood Dealer. Rd, 1923, Nor wood NC, Open 7 days. Sizes Include hitch, no downpayment with clear deed. 42x60 triple-wide $36,999; 28x70 $28,999; 4 bedroom 28x64 $24,999; 24x52 $17,999; 24x44 $16,999; 14x80 $16,999; Shingle Rool, Wood Siding 14x80 $17,999; 14x70 $12,999; 14x52 $9,999; 2 Styles 28x60 Highland Park $28,999; 24x60 Horton $21,999; Used Homes also available - 704-474-4906 or 1-800-777-8652, CLASSIFIED DEADLINE TUESDAYS AT NOON TRAIN FOR CAREERS IN •AIRLINES ■CRUISE LINES •TRAVEL AGENCIES HOME STUDY / R ES. TRAINING •FINANCIAL AID •JO B PLACEMENT AVAILABLE ASSISTANCE 1-800-327-7728 A.C.T. TRAVEL SCHOOL Nan Pompano Beh FU 'W ith the H » R B L O C K Income Tax Course Benefit from the seem ingly ever-changing tax laws! Learn how to prepare your own tax return with confitdence! Help others prepare their lax returns. Willow Oaks Shopping Center P,0. Box 373 704-634-3203 ■ m Coniact our nuaiust otiicu MM ■ Please send me Iree inlormation aboul your la« preparalion course I Name______________________ I Addiess ____________________ '87 G ray O akcove, 14x70, 2 bedrooms, 2 balhs, lurnished. island kitchen, garden tub, 2 decks, under pinning. Must sell. $15,500, 998-2091. SAVE MONEYI Com c to O akw ood Hom es Of Lexington Up to $3000 discounts! Location Business Loop 1-85 Soulh Behind Wattle House Or Call 704-249-7041 SPACE OF A DOUBLEWIDE. PRICE OF A SINGLEWIDE. 1990 3-BR w/glamour bath and lurnishings, yours lor less Ihan $275/mo. Call Gina collect al 919-661-1668. Scloct models. Only $495 down pay menl. Available AAA Homes, Exit 42 olf 1-77, Troutman, NC, 704-528-9833, Used 60x12 mobile home. Excellent for storage use. $1,000 cash and you pickup. AAA Homes, Exit 42 olf 1-77, Troulman, NC, 704-528-9833, IVIusic PIANO LESSONS: beginning In September. Call 998-5570, Violet Cain, alter 5 p.m, Monday - Friday, BARFORD'S PIANO TUNING, Repair ing, rebuilding. Work guaranteed, 919-998-2789, Notice I w ill not, absolutely not, be responsi ble for any debts other than those made by me personally, Ronald McKnight Rl, 5, Box 150 Mocksvllle, NC Office Space OFFICE SPACE FOR RENT (near post olfice). Ground floor, good parking, modern conveniences, lour offices available. 165 square feet to 200 square feet each. Call 634-2181. Service ANDERSON W A LL PAPER HANGERS 492-7777 or 492-5159 ATTENTIO N FARM ERS: Stocit Removal 7 days a week. Down and dis-abled Cows and Horses-if dead, call at ONCEI Will NOT pick up OLD Dead animals, JOHNSON & ALEX ANDER DOG FOOD COMPANY, Rt, 2, Harmony, (704) 546-2357 or 546-7453,________________________ ATTEN TIO N ; M O BILE HOME OW NERS-.Sum m er Special! NO MONEY DOWN, Complete central air conditioning Installed for as little as $43,38 m onthly. C om plete job $1339.95, For fast service call 704-279-6305 anytimel____________ BACKHOE SERVICE • Septic Systems, Any Backhoe Work. Miller Sons Backhoe Service. 284-2628. ______________ BAR FO R D 'S PIAN O R E -. BUILDINQ ....Self players, pump organs, 919-998-2789, B & B Contractore Salvage W ill remove unwanted cars, washing machines, anything steel at NO CHARGE, 634-1218 or 492-7853, NEW AND USED OFFICE FURNITURE i( Safes ^-k Files ★ Fire Proof Files Rowan Offic« FHrnKHra 118 N. Miln stmt, Sillibury, N.C. Phone 636-8022 Baker Roofing New & Old Roofs Patchwork Free Estimates 919-998-6399 20 Years Experience C & M Services Concrete linishing,.,walks, driveways, patios. Free Estim ates, 704-634-5798, COMPLETE CAR SERVICE Engine Re-building, Brakes, Etc. _____________492-7174_____________ Carpenter, Plum ber, all repairs. Remove old slumps and Irees Iro m storm damage. Build Decks and Repairs 634-1218 or 492-7853, Complete Mobile Home Service Tote, set-up, septic tank, drain fills, grading 634-1218 or 492-7853 All types concrete work: ; walks, patios, driveways FREE ESTIMATES, Call 998-6469. FAMILY FLOORS "W e personally install what we sell!" Stop In at 806 N. Main St., Mocksvllle, NC. Or call us at 634-4411 or 634-0596.______________________^ FARNHAM ROOFING "W ill Keep A Roof Over Your Head" Free Esllmales...998-4962 FIRST AND SECOND MORTGAGE LOANS Debt Consolidation Home Improvement Loans For Any Worthwhile Purpose Fast Service Competitive Rates ' - ' United Companies Financial Corp. 1307 Ashleybrook Center ' Winslon-Salem, NC 27103 919-659^)123 FLOOR SANDING « FINMHIIMI INTERIOR PAINTHM > 284-2898 or 284-2190 - ■!. GENE'S ROOFINO New and Old Roofs 20 Years Experience Free Estimates . , , 704-284-4571__________ HAULING - Sand^ GraviM, Dirt; M u lch .| Miller ft Son Bm Mi m ,S*rvlM I ae4-as2«'^v^;A-; - -'V ■' Heating & A fr Conditioning Repairs 24 Hour Service. David Griffin, Quali ty Healing & Cooling. 284-4556 dr 284-2959. House Or Office CtoM tng' References Available - ReiiaMa ' :: . :. Free E8timatas^¿.-■■..^-...Uí!^; 918-764-3432. ■ ■ ^ : I MASON ELECTR№.;.N«iV Instaila^* Si Repair. Mobile Home'Hook-upia; ' Service changes. Keith Mason 998-5542. Osborn* Electric Co. No job too large or small.'Unlimited ; ...... license; -. ; ■; - , Over 20 years experiei^. . Karl O abom , owner _________ 634-339« ' PAINTING, remodeling, home rapaii*. Large or smalL Free estimate*.vi James Miller 9 9 6 -8 ^ . - . i < has th« follwiiig positions avallabi» COOK Full-Tims Excellent salary and benefits plus weekend dlff. Apply (n PersonHwy. 158 Clemmons, N.C. 27012 766-9158 EOE — Professional Land Surveyors — Large Tract Divisions Computer Mapping Certified Appraisals ^ Topographic Surveys Prompt & Courteous Service H o lla r A nd A s s o c ia te s , P .A . 104 N. Jackson Street | Yadkinviile, N.C. 27055 | (919) 679-8033 5 Member: N.C. Society Of Surveyors • Am ericsn C on g rtss On Survsyli>g t Mspplng City_ I stale _ j^Ptione. . Zip- M llle r B u ild in g & R e m o d e lin g C o . R e p la c e m e n t W in d o w s West "Vinyl","Classic Thermar & Reynolds "Renovation" Available in white, tan & bronze. Tilts (or easy cleaning pavid Mille7 A l u m i n u m A w n i n t f « spec'»' •VO“/'Oi' C a r p o r t & P a t i o C o v e r s Custom m ade and installed to fit! All work fully guaranteed Free E stim ates / R efrences A vailable Compare Our Quality & Price Before You Buy M. David Miller Rt, 3, Box 200 Advance, N,C, 27006 ___________Phone: (919) 998-2140 DAVIK СОНМ У ICN I KKI-UISI'; UKCOUl). riIUK.SDAY. Лиц. 17, I989-9D CUE Service ^т^ ; ^ р | р г я а в в я н Н И = П 7 Г а С Т ] Г | Ы Л а а 1 Н И М iTT^|\W M Employment RAINBOW SERVICE Paris, Deodorizer Service. 99B-5B90.____________________ RKR VIDEO Video Taping 8 Editing For Aii Occasions Call ATTENTION - GOVERNMENT SEIZ ED VEHICLES Irom SIOO. Fords, M ercedes. C orvettes, Chevys. Surplus Buyers G uide. 1-602-838-8885 EXT. A3131. SAVE MONEYI COMPLETE CAR CARE Brakes, lune-up, spin-wheel balancing Boger Texaco Service ____________634-5924____________ STUM P GRINDING - No Yard Damage , M iller & Sons Backhoe Service __________ 284-2826____________ TIdy-up Cleaning Service Weekly, bi-weekiy, monthly, one-time. Free estimates. 284-4444.________ WINDOWS WELCOMED Spring & General Houseclaanlng 1.704-636.7924 Vehicles '61 Volkswagen Dune Buggy. Call 492-5467.________________________ .'82 Ford Eseort...parts or whole car. ■ 634-4306.________________________ 'B4 Honda Accord, 2 door hatchback, A/C, AM/FM stereo, low milage, one owner, excellent condition. After 6 ' p.m. call 998-4697._______________ .187 Chevrolet Celebrity, 4-door, one - owner, gray w/maroon Interior. AM/FM stereo radio, power steering, power brakes, cruise control, locked wheel covers. $6,995. Kay FI. • Williams 998-7534 alter 6 p.m. '87 Oodgt Caravan SE: EC, power windows & door locks, cruise control, tilt, rool rack, 62,416 hwy. miles. $9,980. 996-7477 after S p.m. BUV dOVERNMENT seized and surplus vehicles from $100. Fords, ‘ ChevyvCon/ettes, etc., In your area. For Inlb call 602«2-10S1 ext. A2269. SALISBURV MOTOR CO. > Bulck-Peugaot > 700 W. Innas St.. Salisbury 704«a6-1341 TROY'S AUTO SALES THE BEST SELECTION iN STATESVILLE 1123 Shelton Ave. Statesville, NC 704/872-8769 704/878-6262 NO INTEREST E -Z PAYMENT PLAN BUY HERE-PAY HERE NO CREDIT— BAD CREDIT NO PROBLEM WE ALSO BUY USED CARS Em ploym ent 2-cycle Engine Mechanic: 2 years ex perience minimum. Good pay lor the right, qualified person. Jack’s Saw, Clemmons, 919-766-4773.________ ACCOUNTING TECHNICIAN III; This Is an advanced position which re quires a variety of accounting clerical functions. Responsible for maintenance of complex general ac counting books requiring segregation of monies and expenditures involving a combination ol State and Federal funds. Gathering, selecting and com piling of statistical data meaningful to management. Maintains an accurate Inventory system. The maintenance of State personnel requirements for positions within the agency. Coor dinates purchasing ol office supplies and equipment. Prepares required documents for all agency purchases. Helps prepare annual budget, mon thly and annual financial reports, and the monthly payroll. (Accounts and reports are subject to audit by Slate and Local Auditors.) Supervises Record Clerk IV. KNOWLEDGE AND SKILLS REQUIREMENTS: Con- M l Л Part Til tIanlMs•01 North A WMcMboro StrMt MoctaviH«.N.C. ЕОЕЛУ№ Need A Job? Talk over your job qualifications with the staff at Q A N T T P I R S O N N E L , I N C . Let us help you take the worry out of job hunting Qantt Personnel, Inc. . 190-B N. Main Mocksville, N.C. •34-426S siderabie knowledge ol bookkeepinq principles and praclices. esiablishud governmental and deparlmontai budgeting, and computer hardware and sollware. Ability to: understand, interpret, and apply laws and regula tions governing Ihe m a in te n a n c e o l linancial records, as well as, person nel regulations. Supervise and in struct work ol others. Plan and ex ecute work ellectively. Deal tactlully and communicate with other agen cies and co-workers. MINIMUM QUALIFICATION: Graduation Irom high school including or sup plemented by basic courses In book keeping or accounting and lour year experience in bookkeeping or ac counting clerical work in an accoun ting oflice: or an equivalent combina tion ol education and experience. (Graduation Irom a lour year college or university with a major in business administration may be substituted lor the required experience; or a two year degree In business administration or accounting Irom a community college or technical school may be substituted for the three ol Ihe four years experience or completion ol a one year course In bookkeeping and accounting may be substituted lor two years ol the required experience.) SPECIAL CONDITIONS: Work re quires a valid North Carolina driver's license, use ol personal car, may re quire attendance at evening and out- of-town meetings (some overnight). SELECTION PROCESS: Structured interviews and relerence checks with top candidates. APPLICATION PRO CESS: Send resume or state applica tion lo: Caroidine Winebarger, interim Health Director, Davie County Health Departm ent, P.O. Box 665, Mocksviiie, NC 27028. Equal Oppor tunity Employer. ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT lo assist with the operation of group homes for Ihe mentally retarded. In cludes responsibility for maintenance of facilities, vehicles, purchasing, etc. Mall resume to ProComm, 100 Roseman Lane, Cleveland, NC 27013. PO 14470 AIRLINES NOW HIRING. Flight Al- tendenls. Travei Agents. Mechanics, CiistomGr Scrvice. Listings. Salaries lo S105K. Entry level positions. Call (1)805-687-6000 Ext. A-5720. ATTENTION - HIRINGI Governmenl jobs - your area. Many immediate opeings without wailing list or test. S17,8')0-S69,485. Call 1-602-836-8885. Ext. R3I31. ATTENTION NURSES AIDS ORDERLIES & OTHER CARING PEOPLE Your skills and experience are need ed al ProCommI However, il you are a caring person with no prior ex perience.and. have a desire lo work in such a rewarding lield, we will train you. ProComm, a private provider ol group home care lor the mentally retarded, with homes, in Davie, Rowan and Iredell counties, current ly has lull and part time openings lor direct care positions on all shills. ' Benetits could include: Competitive salaries, paid vacations, and sick leave, medial and lile insurance and 10 paid holidays. Cali 704-278-9681 to obtain employment application. BABYSITTER lor 4 year old in Cooleemee area Irom 8-5, Mon.-Fri. Relerences required. 998-7452. Construction w orkers needed at the Lee Jean Plant. Call 704-873-0273, Foxcrolt Temporaries. EARN $7.75 HR. We need assistance in evaluating and responding to daily work reports sub mitted by our agents throughout the state. No experience necessary: paid to complete training. Work at home. For information send seil-addressed, stamped envelope, 9'/i inches long to : AWGA, Dept. E, Box 49204, Atlan- ta, GA 30359.____________________ EARN MONEY typing at home. $30,000/year incom e potential. Details, 1-800-687-6000 Ext. B-5720. supervisor W A R E H O U S E S U P E R V IS O R S The Loe Com pany Is accopting applicants for the Initial super visory staff of Its new automated distribution center in Mocksville, North Carolina. Supervisory expe rience a plus. Interested applicants should send a resum e of w ork experience, including salary his< lory, to: lee THE LEE APPAREL COMPANY, INC. P.O. Box ITS. Dtp!. H Moektvill«, NC 8702mM7t Equal Opportunity Em ployer PROFESSIONAL SERVICES Several responsible men and women for part-time janitorial work in Mocksville area. Must be willing to work three-liour periods without smoking. Soliciting mature Individuals who are worthy of more than minimum wages. A few individuals with ex perience and integrity will be considered for full-time employment. Meet Calvin Ijames for interview 5:15-7:15 p.m. ^ Friday, August 25 At Mocksviile’s Chamber Or g Commerce Building, 107 North Salisbury Street. 2 SSO.OM Per Year Raising CHINCHILLAS For inrorm ition write to: (P/MIO0/VO ntmt, «0« é n tip h o fíé n u m b tr) RANCHERSP.O. Box 3566 Dtlton. Gtorgii 30721 (404) 2784828 H e l p W a n t e d N o w h ir in g p a r t - t im e & fu ll-tim e p o s itio n s a v a i l a b l e a s Dell Clerks or Cashiers. H o u r s F le x ib le A t P r e m iu m P a y A ls o h irin g fu ll-tim e O ffice Assistant A p p l y A t L o w e ' s F o o d s C l e m m o n s O r L e w i s v il l e Earn m oney at hom e stullin g envelopes. Send a sell addressed, stamped envelope to; SEMA. Box 1179, Dallas, GA 30132. Experienced pressor and counter per son needed. Immediate openings. Good salary and benelits. Apply Her m an's C leaners, M ocksviiie, 63<)-1444. Full & Part-tim e positions available at WAL-MART, Mocksviiie. Accepting applications Mon.-Sat., 9 a.m.- 9 p.m. Interviews on Tuesdays. Full tim e personal care attendants at a rest home needed. No experience required - wiil train. Apply in person at Meadowbrook Terrace, 6010 Market~Square-eourt,—Ciemmonsr- Irom 9-5. GOVERNMENT JOBS $16,040 - $59,230/yr. Now hiring. Call 1-805-687-6000 Ext. R-5720 lor cur rent lederal list. Immediate opening lor a body-shop man. Relerences a must. 998-8797. Ask lor Keilh. Infant Care Needed. Daycare giver to watch 6 month oid at our home on Tues. & Thurs. Experienced, loving, non-smoking woman need only app ly. Cali 634-1506 between? & 8 p.m. Need someone to care lor 9 year old belore and alter school in Mocksviiie Elementary area. 634-4241. You can qualily lor a career a s'a registered NURSING ASSISTANT. Employers pay good salaries for employees who are listed in the State Board ol Nursing N u rse A iile R e g b lrf. Beginning August 14, Davidson County Community College will ofler — several-two-weak-nursing-assistant- courses In Davie County. For more in formation, call DCCC's Mocksville ol- lice at 704-634.2885. An Equal Op portunity A ffirm ative Action Institution. P.O, 6732 Opening August 28th Alexander’s Temporary Service 301 Salisbury Street (Located B ehind Post OfTicc) Accepting Applications For ■ Assembly/Pkg. Warehouse Production ' Order Pullers Secretaries, Word Processors, Clericals.i7.atnbp S a ra L e e K n it P ro d u c ts Farmington Plant Now hiring S e w i n g M a c h i n e O p e r a t o r s 1 s t a n d 2 n d s h i f t s $ 6 . 3 2 / H o u r l y E x c e l l e n t B e n e f i t P a c k a g e A p p l y A t Employment Security Commission:: B.C^ Brock Bidg 622 North Main Street Mocksville, N.C. EOE/Atflrmatlve Action Employar . The O a ks a l F o rsyth, a n e w lo n g -te rm c a re n u rs in g fa cility, oH eta q u tllllfd ' In d ivid u a ls a lo n g -te rm ra la tlo n sh lp . O u r m o d e m fa c ility a n d o p e n co u rtya rd s o ffe r a n a tm o sp h e re th a t Is s e c o n d to n o n e In o u r Ind u stry. We are currently recruiting for: L ic e n s e d P r a c tic a l M u tw t All Shifts; Monday-Friday, Baylor Weekends New Salary Plan—with increase after 90 days Sign-On Bonus Generous Shill Dilisrenlial C e r tifie d N u rse A s s is ta n ts All Shills New Salary Plan—wilh increase alter 90 days Generous Shilt and Weekend Differentials We oiler on-site Child Care Center, compelitive saiary, medical and dental benelits, sign-on bonus, liberal vacation and holiday, relocation assistance, and much morellf this challenge Is for you, call collect at (919) 768-2211. Ask for Linda Jones, Judy Mann or Lyn Smith. ... "'Com e in te rm e w iv ith us, a n d see iv h a t else w e hove io s a y '’... lOD-DAVIE COUNTY líNI'KUI’RISK KIÍCOUI), im iUSDAY, Ann. 17, 1989 A d v a n c e W o m a n W a n ts T o H e lp P re s e rv e D a v ie L ife Continued From P. 1)1 Winsloii-Salcm. in 1974 during the depths of a major recession, and enjoyed nine prosperous years In this business. She now assists with work periodically at Bitll. B&M (which stands (Vir "barhcrs and hairdressers” ) is the largest privately-owned wholesaler of barber and beauty supplies in the Southeast. Founded in 1950 by JelTs falher. W .P. "R e d ” Harrison, the business has expanded steadily from its origin as a one-man opera tion and currently employs 33 salesmen wilh headquarters in Winston-Salem and warehouses in Charlotte, Roanoke, and Norfolk, Va. -------Jcffco, Inc., a spin-off from B&H, manufactures and assembles barber and beauty equipment (such as barber chairs and salon fur niture) from its 95,000 square foot facility located near N.C. 801 and U.S. 158 in Advancc. The couple works as a team to coordinate trade shows for B&H and has assisted with office ad ministration. Jeff plans to use his law degree as a tool for managing the Harrison family’s numerous properties in Davie County and throughout North Carolina and Virginia. The same positive business climate lhat attracted Jeffco to Davie County in 1965 has also pro- - van attractive to many other businesses, industries, and residents who have chosen Davie ^ 'County as their homes. ^iThe fact that many businesses : fuid industries in the area have recently been experiencing labor shortages is indicative of the boom - .that has taken place in the county • - in'recent years. . , Harrison cites Mveral factors . i^hich have led to the rapid growth .pf, the county: ^ low iinionization, , l^ ity of life, wiwlesome raral at- ^.tnosphete. excellmt schpot system, ’ ‘ \ picturesque IwdMape, and a positive atútudÍB oh the part of the county’s leaders. ■■ ■ ?-, As an example of the civic pride which abounds in Davic County, .' Harrison described the inspiration :vv..that :she felt when sh^, along with • 'many. other , area- residents, '•'v. Siscovered the endless avenue of • : American flags along Main Street "'.Sn Mocksville during the week of ■July Fourth. 3 "It was breathtaking. It gave me ? ^foose bumps.” , ’ * Harrison offered several obser- M b C S h o w s B ig In c re a se : COOLEEMEE - The ABC Store here is the second fastest . .{rowiiig in thè slate. ' Going -into its second year of operation, the store experienced a 23,62 percent increase in sales in June of 1989, ABC board chairman Bob Amos told fellow board liiembers Monday night, t Only Camden County experienc ed a higher percentage increase in sales, he said. The total state in crease was 3,9 percent. ; • Board members authorized manager Jim Helmstetler to negotiate a maintenance contract for computer equipment, expected ^ to be approximately $1,500. ; • A B C profits distributed to the county went to the D A R E (Drug Abuse Resistance Education) pro gram in the Davie schools, Amos said. • Helmstetler said special orders " (or Christmas are being taken, and the'storev^ill begin point-of-sale advertising, signs in the store, in October. Jim Beam 1984 white Corvette decanters have been ordered, he said. Completes Basic • Army Reserve Private Donald G. Brown has completed basic training at Fort Leonard Wood, Mo. • During the training, students received instruction in drill and ceremonies, weapons, map reading, tactics, military courtesy, military ju.siice, finsi aid, and A r my history and traditions. Brown is the son of Kathryn S. Lemons and Morris H. Brown of 403 Whitney Road, Mocksville. vations conccrning growth issues in Davic Cminly. ■•Grinvlh I'or ¿;rinviirs sake is unwise. Init growth pressure is in- evitalilc. and therclbrc we nnisl plan in order to promiile reasonable growth. One of the major cluiilengcs I'acini; ihe counly will be to preserve its unique i|ualily of life while not completely ‘closing the draw bridge' lo new development. “ Davie Counly is forlunale to be able to bargain from a position of strength when it comes to hammer ing out growth policies, such as those lhat are currently being developed by Ihe County's Land U.SC Planning Task Force. The fact that ‘we have what they want' is a major factor in this issue. If the county wanted lo be a major economic boom area, it probably could be. The question is, ‘Do wc want to be?’ “The preservation of the coun ty’s quality of life is taken very seriously by people in this area. If an industry looks at Davie Coun ty, wc also look back at them. Wc should not pull up the drawbridge — we all know that growth is go ing to come. Wc just want to shape it to the best interests of the county. “ If we arc able to look back in 20 years and say that our economy has grown, while al Ihe same lime we have prolccled Ihc c<iiiniy's quality of life, then we will have accomplished whal we have set oul lo do. Il would he boncllcial lo be able to retain more shopping dollars in the counly. as well as lo reduce comnniling trips Ibr our workers to outlying areas, but we should accept growth on our own terms." .she .said. She emphasizes two spceillc growth issues with which the coun ty must soon come to grips. The first is infrastructure, or public services and lacililic.s. ‘‘There is apprehension among area residents lhat, if a sewer .system were constructed, wc would be bombarded wilh growth. The longer wc put off this problem, the more il will intensify.'' .she said, citing the septic system pro blems in the county. “A sewer system must be built to cope with growth pressures in the northeastern section of the county. Such a facility would be benoncial to the community — it would encourage development of needed facilities, such as a restaurant or recreational facilities, which are needed to support the population and to give young peo ple an outlet for their leisure lime.” The appearance of the communi- ty is also a major concern, ■‘The counly should emphasi/,e ciualily rather llian c|uanlily. and wc lunv stand at a decision point on issues such as billboard control along major highways." she said. "Tlie quaintncss and picturesc|ue landscape of Davie County, along with the warmth and friendliness of Ihe people, were major factors in our decision lo locate here. We need lo pre.serve our natural assets as well as some of the reminders of the past, such as our older rural churches and farmhouses. "The Yadkin River is tied clo.se- ly lo the identity of the county, and we must protect the River, both as a source of drinking water and as a recreational resource," she said. Harrison's interest in civic af fairs is also refiected in her in volvement in local politics as well as the Davic Futures project. She serves as vice chairman of the Davie County Republican Party and helped organize the Piedmont Republican Womens’ Club several years ago. Harrison hopes to become more active in politics as her children grow older. On the Davie Futures project, a long-range planning program organized in 1987, Harrison has served as a member of Ihe steer ing commiltee and education task force as well as publicity chairperson. ■She describes Futures as "...a great benefit to Ihe county and to me personally. W c gained representation from a broad cross- section of the counly. and Davie I'utures helped pull us together through a common bond. We all w;mt whal is best for Davie County. ‘‘The recommendations contain ed in Ihe Futures report are very practical and can be accomplished. “ Our most immediate task will be to appoint an implementation comniittcc — a .small group dedicated to overseeing progress on tho project. Perhaps wc could erect a ‘progress chart’ in a visi ble area within the new county of fice building to serve as a constant reminder to Ihe public both of what we have accomplished and what re mains to be done in order to im plement the plan.” Harrison feels strongly that Futures will succeed only if the residents of the county remain ac tively involved. As part of her efforts to ensure that residents have a continuing voice in the plan, she has coor dinated a drop-in, day-long meeting to be sponsored by Davie Futures on Thursday, Sept. 28, from 9 a.m.-4 p.m. at Bermuda Village. At this meeting, local civic and busine.ss leaders will meet with the Davie Futures steering commit tee to discuss new directions for the project. “ The Futures projcct will not die as long as it remains alive in our people." Harrison acknowledges that rela- tion.ships between newcomers and natives are an issue. “ Because so much of the development within the northeastern section of the county is heavily-oriented toward Winston-Salem, it is too easy to become isolated from the mainstream of the counly. “ But, we should not become too complacent with this situation. We .should actively promote unity and a sense of community spirit in all parts of the county, perhaps by en couraging the creation of a, volunteer force that would serve as; a central link among all people in; the county. Volunteerism is being; stressed nationally as a means of.; bringing people together in a spirit; of common purpose. Perhaps; Davie Futures should include as a; recommendation ‘the creation of a clearinghou.se of volunteerism.’ ” 77iis is the first in a series of ar- ; tides provided by the Davie Futures project. Cooleem ee G a l a x y F o o d C e n t e r Located On Highway 801, Cooleemee, North Carolina. Phone 284-2514 We reserve the right to limit quantities and limit sales to vendors. This ad is effective week of August 14 - August 19, 1989 We welcome W IC Vouchers and Federal Food Stamps ‘ ^ Always Fresh Produce T h e F r e s h e s t M eats T h e F r e s h e s t M ea ts High In Fiber And Potaulum Dixie Dew« Del Monte Bananas Lbs.Z l * l 5 Pound Peek Or More Fresh Ground Beef High In Vitimin C And Fiber! Dixie Dew’> Califofflla R«d PlHini........................ib .7 9 ^ High In Vltimln C Anti Vltimln Al Dixie Dew« Extra Larft H<h m Qrown TomatMiLb.59^ High In Iron And Vitamin Al Dixie Dew« Extra Large CucHmbar*. ■■■■■■■■■■I E a 4 / « 1 High In FIberl Dixie Dew» Fraih Muihroomt. 8 Oz. Pkg.9 9 « 8iitclwi'sBe«tUS0AClK)ic«BM( Boneless Shoulder Roast..........Lb, * 2 ^ * Butcher’s Best« USDA Choit» Beef Boneless Shoulder Steak...........ub.*2** All Sizes Fresh Ground Chuck....................ib .^ l« « Hormel Uttle Siulers Unk Sausagei20z. Pkg.*l Butcher's BMt* USDAChoki«BMfBoM|Mt Top Sirloin Steak '% eoaeesteeii,Lb.$ 3 T t Holly Farms USDA Grade A Boneless Chicken Breast.. HotOrMlldHobes Whole Hog Sausage........is oz. Rdi * 1 * * Valleydale Hot Dogs........................24 Oz. Pkg,^l** BetterValu Franks Or Bologaai.i..i.M.m.....jt2 Oz, Pkg.39^ G ro cery S p e c ia ls Maxwel H ousei I () f I I I \ Regular, Elec/Perc, Or ADC Maxwell House Coffee 13 Ounce Bag $ ^ 8 G ro cery S p e c ia ls t, Pastil, Or Prints , Angíé fttft' Bath4 Roll PMk 8 8 , $ 1 8 9 S0< Oft Ubeil Wlsk Liquid Dstergent......32 oz. Bti.^ Assorted Colors _ _ ^ Lux Bath Soap....................3 Bar P a c l( 8 9 ^ For Your ljundry Rinso Laundry Detergent...3s oz. boxS S ^ F ro zen S p e c ia ls Regular Or Light Kraft Mayonnaise...............32 oz. Jar^l** Catalina, 1000 Island, French, Italian, Or Ranch Kraft Salad Dressing........J 6 oz. 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That's What You'll Find At Galaxy I n d e x P u b lic R e c o rd s 6 D is tr ic t C o u rt 9 S p o rts B l- B lO W e d d in g s C 2 -C 6 O b itu a rie s C 9 S c h o o l N e w s D l , D 3 D a v ie D a te lin e D 2 C a lv in & . H o b b e s D 3 C le m s o n F o o tb a ll P ro b e NCAA Questions Form er DHS Star: Details, P. B1 W eekend W eather: W arm , D5 C o a c h in g A c a d e m ic s '^ ш т р т й т т т ш Ё Ш ш ш т т ш т ш ш т ш ш т т т ш т м ш ё т ^ ш т ш New Teaching Method At Davie High: Details, P. D1 D A V I E C O U N T V 5 0 « ENTERPRI/E|#ECGRD ..one, T H U R S IU Y , Лик. 24, 1989^— 40 PA G ESUSPS 149-160 H o u s e D e s tro y e d B y F ir e Volunteer fireman push a car away from a burn- house off Mock Church Road Aug. 17. The ;i?3house, owned by Robert Spaugh, was unoccupied and usecj for storage. Aithough no cause has been determined, arson is not suspected, said Advance Fire Chief Ricky Hockaday. — Photo by Robin Fergusson M a n In C o n te m p t A f te r F ig h tin g O ffic e rs in C o u rt By Karen Jarvis Davie County Enterprise-Record A 19-year-old Mocksville man was found in contempt of court last week after he started a fight with three law enforcement officers and two probation orficcrs dur ing D a v ic D i s t r i c t Court. M arshall James Edward Mar.shall was^ in court for charges of com municating threats against his former girlfriend, Tonya Anderson. Judge Kimberly T. Harbinson had found Marshall guilty, and had sentenced him to 60 days suspended for two years, pay $S0 fine and court costs and ordered not to go around the prosecuting witness. Marshall, who has been con victed of indecent exposure and .-■Cl larceny, told Judge Harbinson: “ It don’t matter what you say. I’m filing a notice of appeal.” Harbinson ordered Marshall to be placed under $5,000 secured bond. Marshall гш around the defendent’s table when Deputy Larry Meadows attempted to take him into custody. “ Don’t you touch me man,” said Marshall as he ran for the back door. Marshall cursed at the of- -ficers who were trying to place- handcuffs on him. M arshall was sentenced to 30 days in jaiT'foF'flife'^’W “ ■ charge. He does not.„ have privilege of bond. Charges are pending for Mar shall’s actions during court. Marshall is also scheduled to appear in Davie District Court Sept. 7 on three'charges of assault on an оШсег, one count of resisting arrest { ^ failure to disperse after a riot that occur; red May 13 at the Glen Apartments. Hillih R Road Will Keep Its ^ 3 « ^ D* Chaflln Ij^iity Enterprite-Record r^ p h Ratledge Road will keep its Iniaine. The Davie County Board of Com- I missioners yoted unanimously Mon- I day^night to leave the name like it is I after 10 of 14 people at a hearing in dicated by a show of hands that was 1 what they wanted; Eight of those spoke at the emotionally-charged hearing, in cluding the daughter of the late Ralph Ratledge. Shirley and Steve Barron, represen ting the Center Fire Department, ask ed commissioners in June to change the name to avoid confusion with another Ratledge Road in the Center district. One end of Ralph Ratledge Road, formerly known as Chaffin Road, is in the Center district, while the other is in William R. Davie’s district. Barron, Center’s fire chief and president o f the D avie County Firemen’s Association, read a letter in support of changing the name. The letter said in part; “ W e are con cerned that duplicate names will cause possible loss of life and property damage.” It was signed by Barron; Johnny Frye, director of the Davic County Emergency Medical Service; Glen Stanley, county fire marshal; Kenny Mason, chief of the William R. Davie Fire Department; Tom Cook, chief of the Davie County Rescue Squad; and S.T. Dunn, director of the county communications department. The Barrons spoke in favor of changing the name along with Everette Glasscock, a Center firemen, and Nancy Allen, a 33-year resident of the dirt road. Allen cited an incident in which a school bus accident on the road was called in as being on Ratledge Road. “ Human nature teing what it is, ycm shorten it,” she,said. As a result of the confusion. Alien said it took emergency perwnnel more than an hour to arrive at the scene. In the meantime, she said, thCsChildien were upset, and many used her phone to call their parents. Please See Still Ralph - P. 4 IRecycling Helps Industries By Kathy D. Chaffin Davie County Enterprise-Record L a st in a series. The new user fees at the Davie County Land fill may prompt more people to look at recycl ing as a means of disposing o f garbage. The fees, which went into effect Aug. 1, range from $1 for automobiles to $35 for trucks with I 40-foot trailers. For industries and businesses generating a lot of garbage, it won’t take long to accumulate a hefty bill. But for those with recycling programs, the user fees mean even more savings. Wonderknit and Food Lion are examples of local companies which compact and bale card- [ board for sale to recycling centers. Food Lion, the chain of grocery stores head- I quartered in Salisbury, niakes $4 million a year recycling carclboaid. “With a net profit of $12 million, $4 million from recycling cardboard is a fairly significant amount.” — Mike Mozingo Food Lion spokesman "W e’re using recycling not only to protcct the environment, but also to help lower food bills,” said Mike Mozingo, Food Lion’s cor|xirate com munications manager. "W ith a net profit last year of $112 million, $4 million from recycling cardboard is a fairly significani amount.” Crown Wood Products also recycles by burn ing scrap wood in the boilers which heat and cool the plant. Davie Auto Pans is participating in an ex perimental recycling program in preparation for starting its own, and Ingcrsoll-Rand has studied recycling. "The reason that we gol into it was because of the revenue it was going to generate,” said Denny Cartner. assembly operations supervisor al Ingersoll. The 1988 study, conducted by an employee in volvement team, found recycling to be profitable. Shortly afterward, however, the bottom fell out of the cardboard market. (Recycling centers now pay in the range of $1 per hundred pounds for cardboard. This is down considerably from the earlier going price of S2.75 per hundred pounds.) "A l the time of the study,” Cartner said, “ they were not charging us to dump in the land- 1111, so we’ve really done nothing about it. I think il’s time now that we do something.” As part ofthe study, members ofthe employee involvement team visited recycling operations at Wonderknit and Food Lion. IMease Sec Local Companies — I’. « Food Lion Asst. Mgr. Doug Whitaker loads boxes into compactor at Mocksviiie store. — Photo by Jam es Barringer Editorial Page T r a g e d y S t r i k e s , B u t D o g S u r v i v e s T a n g l e W i t h C a r 2-D A V IE COUNTV ENTHKI’KKSK KIXOKI), TIIUUSDAY. Лиц. 24, 1ЧКЧ It sounded like a higli-pitchcd scream, and my heart stopped. 1 bolted for the door, knowing what had happened. A neighbor came running across the lawn. ~Y our-puppy-S -becn_hit.Il_________________________ Dwight Sparks “ H ow bad i.s it?” : Over the years, I ’ve been to countless wrecks. Sometimes ■;j’ve even known the victims. But it was always somebody else. :This one had come home. v‘ There must have been 20 people crowding around. A car was .’stopped in the road. And at the edge of the pavement lay Paul’s :puppy. Alive. But motionless. Frozen in pain. •' It had been his yelps of pain that I had heard. A young man, his face showing as much agony as the puppy’s, had been driving the car. There was no way to avoid it. The pup py darted into the street, heedless of anything but children on the other side. W ham . “ I read about your dog in the paper last w eek,” the driver said. “ W e breed col lies.” The neighbors were wonderful. One car ried the puppy to my truck. Another volunteered to ride with me to the vet. Several people on their evening walks had seen the accident. “Do you let him run iiFree?” one of them asked. The question hit like a dagger in •the chest. ' I ; Mary tells me rin top recWess — refusing to anticipate ; ' ;danger..I tell her she’s a iir, Keep htini on'the leash, she. had Mid; Uuriei^iMieds^'a little freedom, I had said. :.' 'Ste'’and Paul had goheUo tlie beach, leaving me with Sam- had had a marvelous time. I had skipped church when pur morning iviilk took (wo hour.s. It h;icl rained Monclny. and ;t. wcnt home irom work in the evening to find him an.\ious lo , : out of pen. n ■ him in the carport and read the afternoon while it rained. It finally stopped. The clouds cleared. ;; ^ould walk. Just let me step inside for a minute ... iStay right ¿ere, bioy. : >is^n.x-ray'found a broken pelvis. It could haye been much iSfwrse; The car’s bumper had knocked him clear of the wheels. Charles;Williams gave him a good prognosis. Dogs heal r tiiw humans. They can surviye tremendous blows. They ; ; ^ e Wood swdrling around their bones. There was nothing y i^do 'but iceep the puppy comfortable, and still. • ;::iTiie most difficult task was telling Mary. She and Paul call- ii^'home to jrelate the joys of the beach. I listened for a mo- :itneht before|breaking the t№ws^ I phrased it poorly. ::f,|iever;teU^ dog, but.he’s going to riglit.'^Instca^,’ reverse thb sentence: “ Thb dog’s going •}oibeal|; right, buthe was J it by a car.” iiv I ’he tears ctune so quickly Mary couldn’t hear the prognosis, her fiht |log, as well ; :S; |lic hexV a little boy came to see me. “It was my fault,” . ; -^¡Isaid. “ Samson was running after me.” ; •;i ; Jldpe, I told him. It was my fault. I was supposed to be wat- ' .;ch^g him. I let him loosed •p ll’he recovery has been amazing. Three weeks later, Sam- : ' ^ ’s eager to resume the walks and chase the cat. W e’re still 'treating him gingerly. He favors one leg. :c :A n d I ’ve learned a lesson at his expense. D A V IB C O U N T Y BNTERPRI/^ECORD USPS 149-160 124 South Main Sued Mocksville, NC 27028 704/634-2120 Published every Thursday by ihe D A VIE C O UNTY PUBLISHING CO. Dwight Sparks ........................ EUitor-Publlsher Mocksville Davie Cooleemee Enterprise Record Journal 1916-1958 1899-1958 1901-1971 Sccond Class Piislaijc Paid In Miicksvillc. N C 27028 Subscription Rates Single Copy, 50 ccnls SIS .00 per year in Norlh Carolina S22..S0 per year outside North Carolina POSIMA.STl-K Send address changes to Davie Countv limerprisc-Rccord P.O. Dov .‘525. Mocksvillc. NC 2702S Bfcky Hill Mocksville “ Yes, bccause he took poor people’s money. Older people watch tho.se shows and they’re .just susceptiV>le to those type of things.” Sidewalk Survey: Janice Mull Statesville “ Yes, I think he did wrong. He has done a disscrvicc to the people.” Jenny Mando Mocksville “ Yes, anybody that would take money and be in the church busine.ss deserves to go to jail.” Michael Spillman W illiam R. Davie “ Yes, because he embezzl ed a bunch of money. But I don’t think he will go to jail.” S h o u ld J im B a k k e r G o T o J a il? Tony Taylor Mocksville “Yeh, I think he should go to jail because stealing from the house of God is wrong.” Karen Anderson Mocksville “If he’s found guilty he definitely needs to serve time.” Joanna Babbit : Route 9, Mocksville “Yeh, because if he broke the law I think he should go tojafl.” V ’» W S Nancte Brown . ' Mocksville ‘^Yes, I think so because he did things he shouldn’t have.” L e t t e r s C o u rts C re a tin g A th e is tic S ta te R e lig io n To the editor: I wish to thank Tlw Davie County Em erprise-Record for prin ting the truth. It seems that the tabloids up north won’t touch the stuff. I ’m talking about the letters I have written. Maybe only in the South do they have newspapers such as yours with the courage to print Ihe truth. W hat I wish to write about today is the so-called separation of Church and State. It seems the government has made a fine art o f separating any Judeo-Chrislian religion from having anything to do with having any say in the government and then convincing us that it is our right. The U.S. Constitution says nothing like that. What it says is “ Congress shall make no law regarding the establishment of religion.” What I’m trying to say is that they have an established state religion, and one that is completely atheistic. This religlon^'^; is called psychology. Now this religion called psychology has itSÀ'i own gods. These are called the Id, the Ego, and the Super-EgoV^ to name a few. Super-Ego, iiow there’s one for you. Let’s ali.g^ ; on our knees and worship. When the courts have something to accuse you of, who do they? send you to to see if you’re competent or to rehabilitate you; tojf a Catholic priest? To a protestant minister? To a Jewish Rabbi?jJ No. They send you to a Psychologist or Psychiatrist. ' They have created a totally state run and operated atheistic > religion while trying to outlaw any religion that deals With tell;.; ing the truth about the real God. Thank you. • John E. Kelley Jr. ■ Route 8, Mocksville . C o o le e m e e P r a c tic in g G e s ta p o T a c tic s To the editor: The time is the 1930s. The country is Germany. The place is any house in any lown. There is a knock at ihe door. The people open the door. It is a man with SS emblems on his collar. He walks in the house unin vited. He looks around the living room. He looks at Ihe bedroom, all over Ihe hoii.se. Al'ier he is done, he tells the people that he does not like whal he sees, and the house has lo be Fi.xed. The house has lo be painted, the ceiling tiles need repairing, and the trash needs lo be laken out more often. As lie turns to leave, he tells them if tiiey do not fi.x it, he w ill be back, and he w ill not be alone. Bul wait a minuie. This is America. Thai cannoi happen here (or can il?). This is ihe land of ihe free, where a man's home is his castle, and his right lo privacy is protected. On Monday night, Aug. 14, 1 allcnded ihe lown meeiing in Cooleemee. 1 listened to M r. Calvin Koonlz, who ihe ciiy coun cil has hired as ordinance enforcement olTicer. (No More M r. Nice Guy) I listened closely to whal he had to say. He said he is uoini: 10 inspect the houses and lell you what has to he done lo llie house and yaril and gi\'e you so many days to do il. If you do not do il, you w ill have lo go to a hearing and explain to him why. I asked him: What if the owner does not have Ihe money to fix it? He said they would have to find it. He said he has Ihe right to go in any house Ihat he wants, and if the owner svon’t let him, he will get a warrant and go in any way. The city council sal there and did not disagree. Now, I cannoi speak for the rest ofthe residents of Cooleemee, but as for me, I w ill tell you now, M r. Koontz, if you come on my property, you had better bring a warrant and the police, and anyone else you can find. Because 1 know of no law lhal gives any man that kind of power. If a law does, then it should be change cd. Now. When the residents of Cooleemee votcd'lo incorporate, I doi not think they wanted a city council, or a stranger, to dictate .to them what ihey ciiii or cannoi do. The residents o f Cooleemee had beiler wake up and smell the roses anti see what is going on. Council woman Morton asked me if I had a solution to the drug problem. The federal government does not have one. Woody H. Boger : Cooleemee • ■ D A V IK ( (» ('М Л ' i:\Ti:iii4iisE к т о и п . t iu ir s d a v . a»k. 24, i m - з I t ’ s H a r d T o B e C a l m W h i l e D o d g i n g T h u n d e r s t o r m s Airplanes buzzed by I'roni the Icll. llicn Irom tlic right. A thunderstorm provided turbulencc — sciidini: my stomach to my - feet. It was niy first airplane ride. A friend asked if 1 wanted to go to the lly-in at Denton. Sure. I said. He had a small airplane parked in a pastine. He asked how much I weighed. I wondered why , • he asked. Then I looked al the small engine on the plane, and at the pine trees at the end of the pasture. I kept my mouth shut and climbed I aboard, trying to look calm. W c flew lo Denton. A fly-in is where hundreds fly their airplanes to a certain airport--------------------- for shows. M i k e There was one problem. M y buddy’s plane g g j-n h a r d t c'lmn rnrHn froiltli^nrv ilS ihcdidn’t have the same radio frequency as the „controj towerjit^ the airport. He told me lo help him look for other planes. “ There’s one : to the right,” I said, .still trying to sound calm. W e veered left. : “ There’s one over there.” W e veered back righl. W e landed • - after there were no olher planes taking off or landing. The ground sure felt good under my feel. Soon, il was lime lo go home. “ Looks like thunderstorms,” my friend said. He was debating whether to leave or wait. Planes like his were known to fly into thunderstorms and comc out in m illions of picccs. Me said. M y attcmpls at appearing calm had failed. He was toying with me, now. Some of Ihe olher pilots said the same thing. Uh-oh. M y friend decided we would leave. Fly around the tlumdcrstonii. he said. W e did. But you’d be amazed at the winds on the fringes of a thunderstorm. O ur airplane moved up and down. M y stomach was either at m y head or al iny feet, never in Ihe middle. I’ve had other experiences on airplanes since then, but none were as enjoyable. A night on a C-130 during “ Press D a y " al Fort Bragg was next. A C-130 is a huge military aircraft used to transport troops and equipmeni. It can liy nearly straight up, and even has reverse for backing up on the ground. But there was one problem. No windows. Never fly on an airplane wilh no window.s. Next came nights on commercial airlines. The first was scary. 1 gol separated on board from my nying companion. There was this big, hairy ugly Italian sitting next to me. If l hadn’t thought he would gel the wrong idea, I would have asked him to hold my hand. The night attendant gave instructions on how to .save your.solf when the plane cra.shes into the ocean. W e weren't going over the ocean. O ur night was from Raleigh lo New Jcr.scy. Tell me how lo bounce off a tobacco field or a street, I thought. Forget the ocean. M y ears w ouldn’t adjust to the altitude. I chewed gum. I burped. I yawned. Still, nothing but ringing in my ears. The big. ugly hairy Italian talked to me, but I didn’t understand him. I sort of shook my head like I knew what he was talking about. There have been other flights. I hate clouds. I hate (lying at iiiglil. I want lo sit next to the window, look out and sec the ground. It doesn't matter if houses are the size of a pencil speck, as long as 1 know the ground is there. I'm going on vacation next week, a night night from Greensboro to Mobile. Ala. Alone. A commercial night. I've already checked. Delta only has three D C-IO s. The odds are in niy favor. If only my buddy wilh the small airplane was available, I ’d feel much safer. At least 1 would know and could trust the pilot. Let’s see. I’ve gained about 20 pounds since the flight to Denton. And those pine trees have grown a few feet, loo. Better stick with Delta. % Salon Phone: 492-5987 ^ 0 ' Home Phone: 492-7879 10% Off Back To School Perm Special COUMTRY SALOM A UNISEX SALONHwy. 64 West Diana Edwards Mocksville. N.C. 27028 Owner/Stylist Burning Permits Available At ^overal Sites ■ *,;Buming permits are required ^year round by North Carolina slate law. in Davie County, a burning pcr- ^ nut is required by any person, firm ib r corporation to start any fire or ii;ignite any material over 100 feet ;ifrom an occupied dwelling or in or .'.’within 500 feet of woodland dur- '/'ing^the hours starting at midnight :-iand ending' at 4 p.m. If you don’t get a burning per- ': ■ mitj you are illegally burning and . •you may be given a citation by the ;'JNorth Carolina Forest Service. PSyen though, you have a permit, I iy w are still responsible for any l^damages which may occur as the • result of your burning. r.;. Also at ,ccrtain times, burning ■ ‘ •ipentUCs'iufe to bazar-'; dous fire conditions or air pollu-• tion episodes and all burning^js.,, ^ banned'iegahJlMFof distance Irom' ' woods or the time of day or night. ; ^You aie also required to adhere to ' ;;all anU-poUution roles and regula- v^t^ons set^'f'by , 'the. federal . ,,V n'^Buining permits.i are free of (Charge and are effwrtiye for three f?jdays after being issued. , Burning peiinits cim be obtain ed firom: ' North Carolina Forest Service, „• |Coumy Office Building; , r Lib l^imeri Davie Soil & Water I ;4jG0BNivaiian District, Coun^ Of- 1, ¡floe Building; ' Andy’s E)uon&Oroceiy, U.S. ! US8 and Redland Road; vioEd Johnson Grocery, Faimington; : *' .Cartner’s Service Center. U.S. 64 ^ N.0.901; ?|,Boles Grocery, U.S. 601 north of;Mocki)ville; lifiMyance Discount, Advance;. ^ipU Couhtiy Store No. 2 (David- lon County), U.S. 64; and iSl^ce Station, CooJeemee Town . ,Hall, Cooleemee. > ;if you have any questions or ..w^d like further information .about burning permits, contact the N.C.' Forest Service in the Coun- V Office Building, 634-5319. NOVA SCOTIA NEWENGUND ; Octobar 8-22 - E n |o y n a t u r e 's r ic h c o lo r o s w o v ie w f h e lo v e ly f o il f o li a g e . T h « r e w ill b e .f r e q u e n t t t o p t In o r d e r to t a k e p h o t o g r a p h s o f t h e s p l e n d o r . H ig h lig h ts o f to u r w ilt b e : N e w Y o r k •'C ity • N e w H o v e n ( Y a l e U n iv e r s it y ) • M a in e C o o s t lln e ( o n e o f t h e m o s t b e a u t ifu l c o a s t lin e s ) • P r in c e E d w a r d I s la n d ( F e r r y to C o p e B r e to n ) • N o v a S c o flo • H a lif a x • Y a r m o o fh (B lu e N o s e F e r r y ) • P o g g / 's Co v d. l a n d o f E v o n g e lin e • A c a d ia n N o - • tlo n o l P o r k • B o s t o n • S t u b r ld g e • H a r t fo r d , C o n n . • A m is h C o u n t r y • S h e n a n d o a h V a l le y . Fackag0 tnclud»i: E x t e n s iv e s i g h t - s o o in g • E n tr a n c e f e e t o a t t r a c t i o n s • H o r i z o n s U n lim ite d D e l u x e M o to r C o a c h * • A c c o m m o d o t io n s , d o u b le o c * c u p a n c y • L o b s t e r D in n e r • A m is h L u n ch • T a x o n d b a g g a g e . ¡Alexander а т т ю т л Phone (704) 872-3606 1-800-342-6515 Pricet Gpod^l Selected Femlly Dollar Stores ^HU^SIbTtiWiyeflkend^OuanlllleelJmUed S of^JÍJ^- ^p Selei To Dealer*. 196 Wilkesboro S t r e e t ' 1 ^ 4 i 7 Moekavllle, N.C. 5 H o u r s : M o „ . - W e d . 9 ^ i p i e & | ^ ^ Saturday 9 am to 7 pm^ 4-DAVlE COUNTY KNTEKPRISK UKCOUl), •mUKSDAV. Лиц. 24. I9S9 Teen Charged After Wreck Two women were iiijiiroil in ;i two car accidcnt Aug. 18 on U.S. 64 in which a l6-ycar-ii[d driver was charged with improper passing. Pamela Stulls Brown, 43. of Oakwood Drive, Statesville was treated and rolea.sed from North Carolina Baptist Hospital for a spinal .strain and nniltiple bruises. A passenger in Brown’s car, Edith Slutts, 72, of Asheboro was treated and released for bruises at Davic County Hospital According to a report by Trooper D.R. McCoy, Joseph Luis Granados Jr.. of llartli.son Sirccl. Mocksville was traveling west on U.S. M near Hendri.x Barbecue when he allenipted to pass several vehicles ill a no passing zone. Granados failed t(i see lhat ahead of him Iraffic had slowed because Brown was attempting a left turn. The two cars collided. Granados lold Trooper McCoy he was late for an appointment and was trying lo get around the slower traffic. Damage to Brow n's 1986 Oidsmobiie was estimated at S6,500, and to Granados's 1973 Chevrolet, $1,000. Still Ralph Ratledge Continued From P. 1 “The accident was not real serious,” Alien said, “ but had it been, 1 don’t know what would have happened.” ', - Pat Gobble said she had fiill con fidence that firefighters could dif ferentiate between Ralph Ratledge aiid Ratledge roads. ■ “ Our road is not Ratledge Road,*’ she said. "Our road is the Old Ralph Ratledge Road, and it’s b>Mn that for over 200 years.” ,l<It started out as a wagon trail in tlw horse and buggy days, said G^ce Beck, daughter of the road’s nainesake. ;3lt was only when her father donated the land to the state that this road was ofBcially named after him. “Some call this tradition, but licall it history,” she said. . '¡Mrs, Beck said emergency agen cies ought to be able to distin^ish betw m the two roads by numbers. R al^ lUtledg^ Road is State R <^ (SR) 1312, .while Ratl^ge Road is SR 1142. Please Içave it as Ralph lUtledge Roaii;” Mrs. Beck said. ' ! 'Joe .Tommie Chaffin and Frwces Beck also opposed, changing the name. .. ■ ' "Chaffin; a: member of the William K. Davie Fire Depart ment, said firefighters were fimiliar with Ralph Ratledge and Ratledge roads and wouldn’t con- fiÏK tlwm on calls. ,;Mrs. Barron said that was pro- bibly true, but that wme of the employees ;'of the Emergency Medical Service were from out of thé county ^ could be easily con f i é by tlw similarity in names. 'i“ We have to think of the whole c ^ ty and noC jt^ a lew people,” .. slie^said;;;V.v,;v, : Frances BMlij'said she had lived od,.Ralph Railage Road for 42 years. “It’s a well-traveled road,” slie said. “ It’s well-kept, and we fM l like as manÿ people as live on it liow and prefer it to be called Ralph Ratledge Road, we would like to see that happen.” v>:plas№0ck said Frances Beck's cem ents were an example of the confusion over road names. “ She dbes not live on the Ralph Ratledge Road,” he said. “ She lives on "Wagner Road, which is (SR) 1310.” The reason for the 148 name changes approved by commis sioners earlier this year was to With the H&R BLOC№ Income Tax Course ■ Benefit from the seemingly ever-changing tax laws! ■ Learn how to prepare your own tax return with confidence! ■ Help others prepare their tax returns. Willow Oaks Shopping Center P.O. Box 373 704-634-3203 ■ ■ C a n fa c t our r-ra ro sl otUco. w m H U M Please send me Iree information about your tax preparation course. Name___________________________________________________ Address _ I I I C ily _ 1 ^ Phone _ eliminate confusion and ensure faster response time in emergen cies, Glasscock said. Though tlie residents at the hear ing said they have always known the road as the Ralph Ratledge Road, it was actually changcd to Chaffin Road four years ago. That was the name of the road on tax maps and at a sign posted previous ly at its intersection with Sheffield Road. Chaffin Road was proposed to be changed to Gallimore Road along with the other changes submitted to commissioners in March. The proposed changes were the result of a yearlong effort by coun ty officials and volunteer fire departments to eliminate duplica tions and names lhat sounded alike. Before, for example, there was a Jim Spry Road and a Jim Frye Road, which could have been con fusing to emergency agencies responding to calls. Some roads didn’t even have names, and some were called one thing on one end and another on the other. i Commissioners approved the new names, which will be posted on road signs to be put up throughout the counly, with a few revisions. One of those changed Chaffin Road back to Ralph Ratledge Road instead of the pro posed Gallimore Road. Commissioners approved the change at the truest of David Lan ning, who lives in one of 26 residences on the road. The Barrons later surveyed residences to find out which name was preferred. O f the 54 percent responding, Mrs. Barron said more : preferred Gallimore Road than anything else. Residents had only to check their preference on a card, self- addressed and stamped by Barron, and put it in the mail to respond. Вштоп said at the hearing that 77 percent of those responding said they could live wilh the Gallimore name. Allen said a branch on the road has been called Gallimore for years. Glasscock said he could unders tand the concern raised by residents about the Ralph Ratledge name be ing historical. "But our history is recorded,” he said. “We have to look at the future.” Joseph Luis Granados Jr. (third from right) watches as Trooper D.R.McCoy investigates wrecl<. — Photo by Robin Fergusson ШШШр! й й Г DATAMARK N O T E B O O K F I L L E R P A P E R 8 9 « PORTFOLIOS 2-Pocket or 3-Prong Your Choice MEAD 8 ”х 10У2” WIRELESS 80 CT. NEATBOOK 8 9 « D A T A C O M 1 2 0 - C t . 3 - S U B J E C T THEME NOTEBOOK = Tuesday August 29, 1989 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. («s» Charge) F o s t e r - R a u c h D r u g State-Zip.I J Lowes Shopping Center Wilkesboro Street Mocksville, N.C. 634-2141 Teen Charged After Wreck 4 -D A V IE COUNTY KNTHKPRISli KKCOKI). TIIUKSDAY. Лик. 24. 1989 Two women were injurod in a two car accidcm Aug. 18 on U.S. 64 in which a I6-ycar-old driver was charged with improper passing. Pamela Slulls Brown, 43. of Oakwood Drive, Stalesviiie was ircalcd and released from North Carolina Bapti.st Ho.spital for a spinal .strain and multiple bruises. A passenger in Brown’s ear, Edith Stutts, 72, of Asheboro was treated and released for bruises at Davie County Hospital According to a report by Trooper D.R. McCoy, Joseph Luis Gramulds Jr.. ol' Hiirdlson .Streel. Mocksville was traveling west on U.S. 64 near Hemlri.x Uiirbecue when he attempted lo pass several vehiclc.s in 11 no pa.ssing zone. Granados failed to see that ahead of hitn traffic had slowed because Brown was attempting a left turn. The two cars collided. Granados told Trooper McCoy he was late for an appointment and was trying lo get around the slower traffic. Damage to Brow n's 1986 Oldsmobile was estimated at $6,.“i00, and to Granados’s 1973 Chevrolet, $1,000. Still Ralph Ratledge Continued From P. 1 “ The accident was not real serious,” Allen said, “ but had it been, I don’t know what would have happened.” ' Pat Gobble said she had full con fidence that firefighters could dif ferentiate between Ralph Ratledge and Ratledge roads. ;_“ Cur road is not Ratledge Rpad,” she said. "Our road is the Old Ralph Ratledge Road, and it’s bwn that for over 200 years.” "'It started out as a wagon trail in tbe horse and buggy days, said cSrace Beck, daughter of the road’s Minesake. ; ' ,5lt was only when tier father donated the land to the state that the road was officially named after him. “ Some call №s tradition, but I. call it history,'* she said. ^Mrs:Beck said en»rgehcy agen c y ought to te able to d is ^ ^ s h betw«m thetwb laàds by mimbeis. R ilp U ^ ed g e Róad is State Road (SR) 1312, while Radedge Road is S R 1I42.' . “ Please leave it as Ralph Ratledge Road,” Mrs. Beck said. ; jo e Tommie Chaffin and Frances Brck also opposed changing the name. . •. . -JChaffin,^^^ a' member of the WiUiam R. Davie Fire Depart- v njent, said firefighters were ■ familiar with Ralph Ratledge and làtiedge roads and wouldn’t con- fìue them on calls. •- jMrs. Barron said that was pro bably true, but that some of the employees of the Emergency Miedical Service were from out of thè county and could be easily con- ' by the similarity in names. .^ “We have to think of the whole c ^ ty and not just a few people, ' ' she said; ■Prances Becl(said she had lived oiì.iRalph Ratl^ge Rpad for 42 years. “It’s a well-lravisled road, ’ ’ slw said. “It’s well-kept, and we feel like as many pmple as live on it now and prefer it to be called itiilph Ratledge Road, we would like to see that happen.” ■jGlasscock said Frances Beck’s t^m ents were an example of the confusion over road names. “She dbes not live on the Ralph Ratledge Road,’’ he said. “ She lives on Wagner Road, which is (SR) 1310.” The reason for the 148 name changes approved by commis sioners earlier this year was to eliminate confusion and ensure faster response time in emergen cies, Glasscock said. Though the residents at the hear ing said they have always known the road as the Ralph Ratledge Road, it was actually changcd to Chaffin Road four years ago. That was the name of the road on tax maps and at a sign postcd'previous- ly at its intersection with Sheffield Road. Chaffin Road was proposed to be changed to Gallimore Road along with the other changes submitted to commissioners in March. The proposed changes were the result of a yearlong effort by coun ty officials and volunteer fire departments to eliminate duplica tions and names that sounded alike. Before, for example, there was a Jim Spry Road and a Jim Frye Road, which could have been con fusing to emergency agencies responding to calls. Some roads didn’t even have names, and some were called one thing on one end and ¡inolhcr on the other. Com m issioner.s approved the new names, which will be posted on road signs to be put up throughout the county, with a few revisions. One of those changed Chaffin Road back to Ralph Ratledge Road instead of the pro posed Gallimore Road. Commissioners approved the changc at the request of David tan ning, who lives in one of 26 residences on the road. The Bartons later surveyed residences to find out which name was preferred. O f the 54 percent responding, Mrs. Barron said more preferred Gallimore Road than anything else. Residents had only lo check their preference on a card, self- addressed and stamped by Barron, and put it in the mail to respond. auTon said at the hearing that 77 percent of those responding said they could live with the Gallimore name. Allen said a branch on the road has been called Gallimore for years. Glasscock said he could unders tand the concern raised by residents about the Ralph Ratledge name be ing historical. “ But our history is recorded,” he said. “ We have to look at the future.” 'with the №R BLOCK I I I L Income Tax Course ■ Benefit from the seemingly ever-changing tax laws! ■ Learn how to prepare your own tax return with confidence! ■ Help others prepare their tax returns. Willow Oaks Shopping Center P.O. Box 373 704-634-3203 M l ■ ■ ■ ■ Contact our riarost office. H B H a ■ ■ M i Please send me Iree inlormalion about your lax preparation course. N a m e __________________________________________________________ Address. City____Slale -Zip. Joseph Luis Granados Jr. (third from right) watches as Trooper D.R. McCoy investigates wreck. _________________________________________________ — Photo by Robin Fergusson Phone, I I I J и » 'ê . D A T A M A R K N O T E B O O K F I L L E R P A P E R SwHtct PORTFOLIOS 2-Pocket or 3-Prong Your Choice DATA СОМ 5 SUBJECT T H E M E N O T E B O O K MEAD 8” x10V2” WIRELESS 80 СТ. NEATBOOK 89 t Each D A T A C O M 1 2 0 - C t . 3 - S U B J E C T THEME NOTEBOOK Tuesday August 29, 1989 10 a.m. to 6 p.m; (»5»® Charge) F o s t e r - R a u c h D r u g C o Lowes Shopping Center Wilkesboro Street Mocksville, N.C. 634-2141 DAVIK COUN TY KNTKKI'KISK KKCOKI), TIIUKSDAY, Лчц. 24, 1989-5 Men Who Claim Harassment Found Guilty In Court Bj' Karen Jarvis bavie County Enterprise-Record : Two men who said two ofllccrs with the Davie County Sherri IT's Department acted irrationally dur- inga routine investigation ol thcir vehicle were found guilty to various charges last week in Davie District Court. , David Lee Black, driver of a :i98l Pontiac, was found guilty of making an unsafe traffic niovc- ment. A charge of failure to stop for a blue light was dismissed. : A pa.ssenger in Black’s car. Brian Keith Pegram of King, was foimd guilty of possession of less than '/4 ounce of marijuana, posses sion of drug paraphernalia and car rying a concealed weapon. ■ Black, of Advance, was stopped bn Fork-Bixby Roail April 30 after Deputy John Agee saw Black run off the side of the road where he and Sgt. Tom Grubb were in vestigating an accident. I “ I got into my vehicle and went after Black to see if he wa.s a D W I,” said Agee. Sgt. Grubb said the car was Auspicious because he saw the ^passenger of the car slumped down jri the seat and the driver was not driving smoothly, i; vAgee said he tried to stop the car i:just after Black had turned onto ¡3^rk-Bixby Road from Cornatzer atoad by using his flashing lights.. ■"~:“Black illegally passed the vehi- :t]e in front of him,” said Agee, b^gee said he followed Black for 'about a mile before he turned into ;S; private drive he later found out ;.wiis Black’s residence. Black said he saw a Honda car ;in:front of him pull off the side of She road and thought the officer Svas stopping it. “ I had no other rcjloice but to go around it,” he :said. Çi'.BIack said when he saw Agee •ïoJloWing him wilh the blue light he saw no safe place to pull over ;«! he went to his driveway which ;fie said was about two-fifths of a ï'y ù d g e /Kimbcrlÿ T. Harbinson ^iCanted Black’s attorney Tammy , ^ ¿m in g ’s motion for dismissal on ■ jife chargé of faiitire to stop for a ;6Iue light because general statutes ÿÔ4Utré tliat the siren be turned on V audible. Agee did not have the I ?jren on. ;''ï:prubb said he-followed Agee 5 ^ arrived at the scene a few later and went lo check the ;^seiiger, Pegram. : i î f l reached in to get some iden- : ffi^cation frotn him,” said Grubb. ; ;^ih the iniddle of the scat was a ; :>feck jacket. I placed my hand on > jacket to brace myself and felt (d№ outline of a weapon in the 'jacket.*’; V ;;^:Grubb said he pulled the jacket ;wt of the car and found a .25 xûiber Colt automatic pistol and a f is t ic bag containing marijuana ^ând some rolling papers. ^ r^^'Ghibb said he asked Black if they oniU l .scarcli llic rcM ol the car ami ho said yes. lie said Ulack roruscil 1(1 allow tlicin lo scarch Ihc Irim k. ■•They asked me if lliey could searchllieear." said Black. "A nd at lhal lime I didn'l care because they had already searched it. ■‘They were very helliuerenl." lie saiil. ■■They lold me lo sluii up several times, Cirubli already had ihe l.D. helure he stuck his hand in there. " I saw onicer Grulib siiek liis light in ihe car and Hip ihe niaga/'ines oH ilie lop of ihc iaeket and stari palling the jackcl." said Ulack. "They did whal 1 consider harassing me for 1 'k hours." orilercd nol lo have in his po.sscs- Hlaek was lined $U) and ordered ‘'"У controlled substance and lo pay courl costs. obtain suh.slancc ahu.se asse.ssnicnt Pegram was senlenced to 12 and comply wilh recommendations inonlhs suspended for Ihrcc years. of assessing agency. He filed'a pay Sl.'iO Inie and eiiurl cosls. notice of appeal. I>ut For •'Police are still looking for a flim flam artist who took advantage of at (cast iwo Davie residents in re cent weeks. :: The man, driving a black pickup tftick with a camper, improperly itistailed lightning rods on two homes in the Redland-Road/N.C. 801 area, according to the Davic County Sheriffs Department. The man uses the name Thomas A. Granite, and has business cards with the company name Granite’s Lighting Protection. He gives out a, telephone number for a legitimate business which he is not affiliated with, said Detective Jerry Williams. ;; The man is also wanted by the SBI, Williams said. ;.The sheriff’s department is ask ing anyone who sees Ihe man to contact the sheriffs department or cail Davie Crimestoppers at 634-1111. Holly Farm s Grade A W H O L E F R Y E R S Grade A Self-Basting 10-14 Lbs. Avg. TURKEYS OR BAKING HENS EXTRA LOW PRICES...EVERYDAYÜ! 16 Ог. - Phillip’s PORK & BEANS 2 .Л 9 * 50 Ct. - 8 7/8” STURDYWARE PLATES 12 Oz. - Mt. Olive SWEET RELISH I I 89* ^ 10 Oz. - Texas Pete CHILI 8 Oz. - Sealtest SOUR CREAM 10 Oz. - Frozen NIbblers Corn/ Nibblers Cream Corn/Cut Broccoli & Cheese/Rice-Broccoli-Cheese GREEN GIANT VEGETABLES 16 Oz. - Shedd's Squeeze COUNTRY CROCK 9.5 Oz. • Butter-Me-Nots BISCUITS Gallon - Spring/Distilled FOOD LION WATER Squire Boone РГага Shopping Center Hwy. 601 North - Yadkinville Rd. . Mficksville, N.C. There is a Food Lion convenientiy located near you: Bermuda Quay Shopping Center H ighw ay-lSS and 8 0 1 Advance, N.C. M onday thru S atufday: 8 алп Sunday 9 a.m . - 6 p. о — U A V I b C O U M Y l',IN I b U l ’ K lh lv K h C U K l ) . I 1 I U K S I » / \ V , Л и ц . .¡4 . iv n v P u b l i c R e c o r d s M a r r ia g e s The following nave hcen isstiecl marriage licenses hy tlie Davie Coutily Register ol' IJeeils. — David Kenneth Blttckwooil. 29, of 308 Trimble Ave., Cary, and Shirley Angela Cornatzer, 29, of Route 2, Advance. — Mitchell Ada.n Ltinsford, 24, of Advancc, and Cry.stal Gayle Hcllard, 17, of Advancc, — Charles Franklin Withers poon, 57, of 2219 Silas Creek Parkway, Winston-Salem, and Marclcan W , Thompson, 50, of- 2219 Silas Creek Parkway, WinsKin-Saletn, — - Larry William Dniper, 18, of Oakwood, III., and Kimberly Claire Jacob.sen, 17, of 2213 Grenada Drive, Advancc. — Dennis Daniel Ebright Jr., 21, of Rome 7, Вол 504-B Mocksvillc, and Teresa Powe Blackburn, 22, of Route 7. Box 503-4, Mocksville. — David Neil Jarvis, 23, of Rome 2 1, Lexington, and Angela Browder, 23, of Advance. _D\yighUJugciic Davis, 22, of Rotite 6. Mocksville, and Hrenda Christitie Potts, 17, of Roule 2. (liirniony. — Kip Mitchell Miller. 29, of 818 Yadkinville Road, Mocksville, and Carol Deni.se Parrish, 23, of Route 9. Mocksvillc, — Richard Burton PoindcMer, 37, of Advance, and Linda Sain Turner, 38, of Mocksville. — Tony Darrell Pruett, 23, of 2255 Woodleaf Road, Salisbury, and Sherry Elaine Glass, 26. of 2255 Woodleaf Road, Salisbtiry. — Harold Loyd Rollins Jr., 33, of Route S. Mocksville. and Mar tha Howard Moser. -tO. of Route 3. Advancc. — Patil Randolph Draughn Jr.. 35, of Mocksville, attd Sandra Jean Barber, 31, of Route 4, Mocksvillc. — Barry Wayne Lackey. 37, of Yadkinville, and Sandra Elizabeth Collins, 36, of Yadkinville. — Clutch Randall Brown, 24, of Cooleemee, and Bontiie Lynn Hilton. 20, of Cooleemee. — Thomas Baxter Grubb, 42. of Route 2, Advance, and Sarah Ann Wright. 2fi. of Roule 2. Advance. — Kenneth Gray Draughn. 29. of Route 4. Mocksvillc. and Ciircne April Lofty. 28. of Route 4, Mocksville. — Darrin Levern Harlness, 20, of 4909 Mapleercst Drive, Gastonia, and Lisa Jane King, 19, of 2 Joyner St., Cooleemee. — Arnold Ray Broadway. 43, of Rotite 7, Mocksvillc, and Brenda Kay Wise, 38, of Route 10, Mooresville. — Steven Eugene Stiller, 24, of Route 9, Mocksvillc, and Karen Denise Russell, 21, of Roule 3, Mocksville. — Carl Lee Smith Jr.. 25, of Rouic 4, East Bend, and Melinda Colleen Ball, 23, of Mocksville. — Richard John Hunt, 19, of Wilmington, and Tracey Karen Gobble, 22, of Roule I, Mocksvillc. — William Lee Waller, 24, of 518 Church Sl, Extension, Mocksville, and Donna Lee Phillips, 25, of5l8 Church Sl, Ex tension, Mocksvillc, L a n d T r a n s fe r s The following land transfers have been filed with the Davie Counly Regislcr of Deed.s. The transactions are listed by parties involved, acreage, township and deed stamps purchased with $1 representing $1,000. — Walter E. Orrell and Lueillc Foster Orrell to Waller D. Orrell, 3 tracts, Shady Grove. — Jerry E, Call, Lucy Jeruza Call, Frederick D. Call and Kaya June Call lo Douglas S. Gregory and Inez D. Gregory, I tract, Jerusalem, $6. — Charlie Wallace Cope and Virginia Boger Cope to Ronny Dale Phelps and Vickie Cope Phelps, 3 tracts, Fulton, $10, — Maurice R, Shelor and Cathleen W, Shelor to Martin E. Gla.sgo and Patricia A, Glasgo, I lol, Farmington, S85. — Eugene Bennett, Willie Be.ss Bennett, Delbert E. Bennett, Mar tha H. Bennett, Bradley F. Bennett, Karen T. Bennett to Gary Ray Schamback and Susan H. Scham- back, I tract. Shady Grove, $27.50. — Roy R. Denton, Mary E. Denton to Roy R. Denton, Mary E. Denton, Mark S. Demon and Janet S. Denton, 3 tracts, Jerusalem. — Hazel S. Foster to Mitchell Foster, 4 tracts, Jerusalem. — Lifestyle Homes and Realty 10 Neal Parks Gheek and Sharon E. Cheek, 1 lol, Mocksville, $82. — Christopher Mark Angell, Nina C. Angell and Phillip Mar tin Angell to Tilden G. Angell, I tract, Mocksville, SI6. — Johnny Ray Slike to Paul R. Justus and Pamelia H. Justus, 1 tract. Shady Grove, $110. — Hazel Hanes Perrell to Jerry C. Randolph, Anita W. Randolph and Gregory S. Randolph, 1 tract, Jeru.salem, $10. — Janice D. Shaffer to Bob L. Cornish, I lot, Farmington, $90. — Charlie L. Howell and Em ma L. Howell to Cynthia Louise Lyons, 1 tract, Clarksville. — Charlie L. Howell and Em ma L. Howell lo Angela Cecelia Lyons, Clarksville. — James J. Daniel, Jean W, Daniel, John A. Spillman and Patricia Spillman lo Jay Knight and Cynthia B. Knight, 1 traçt, Jerusalem, $11.50. S h e r if f ’s D e p a r tm e n t The following incidents were reported to the Davie County Sheriffs Department. — Robin White Favre of Route 8,' Mocksville^ and Connie Regina . Altman of Johnsonville, S.C., reported Aug^ 15 someone broke into, a home off Ijames Church R p ^ and assaulted them. Favre reported jewelry was stolen: Both were trrated and released from Davie County. Hospital. — Am os Stewart Brown of A r re s ts Route 8, Mocksville, reported . Aug. IS the breaking, entering and larceny of ,$8 from a residence off Wagner Road, — Becky Peeler of Route 7, Mocksville, reported Aug,; 17 the larceny of plastic letters, with an . estimated vdue of $75, from a sign atU,S. 64and N,C. 801, — Kenneth Lee Booe of Route 4, Advance, reported Aug, 17 the larceny of an estimated $1,000 worth of jewelry and silver from / The following were arrested by the Davie County Sheriff’s Department. U ;— Debra Jones Vestal, 30, of Route 8, Mocksville, charged Aug. 17 with writing a worthless check, — Thomas Hall Neely, 47, of Route 7, Mocksville, charged Aug, 17 with five counts violation of Employment Security Commission laws. — H e ^ rt Eugene Pulliam, 27, of Route 4, Mocksville, charged Aug. 16 with assault on a female. On Aug. 19, he was charged with, second-degree trespassing. — Jean Burkhart Sharpe, 43, of Route 1, Mocksville, charged Aug. 18 with failure to comply with sup port order. — Phillip Todd Stroud, 20, of Route 1, Harmony, charged Aug. 19 with felony breaking and entering. — Danie' Mathew Turley, 20, of Route 3, Yadkinville, chargcd Aug. 19 with two counts of writing a worthless check. F ire s 1 pavie fire departments respond ed to the following cdls last week. Aug. 16: Center, 11:44 p.m,, extinguish controlled burning, Lanier Road; Mocksville, 1:53 p.m., brush fire, Dillard residence, Campbell Road; Mocksville, 3:43 p.m., brush fire rekindled, Camp bell Road: Fork, 4:32 p.m., truck fire, Riverview Road; County- Line, 5:33 p.m., car fire, 1-40 east bound lane.' Aug. 17: Farmingtdn, 10:09 a.m., auto accident, Farmington Road; Advance, 11:09 a.m., house fire. M o ck Church Road, Cornatzer-Dulin and Smith Grove called for backup; Mocksville, 1:12 p.m., vehicle fire, Grubb Building parking lol; Smith Grove, 5:56 p.m., auto accident, 1-40 west bound lane at N.C. 801 exit; Mocksville, 6:04 p.m., tree fire, Bethel Church Road. Aug. 18: Smith Grove, 12:30 a.m., auto accident, 1-40 near Yadkin River bridge; Fork, 2:49 p.m., auto accident, U.S. 64 near Hendrix Barbeque; Center, 6:35 p.m., grass fire,. 1-40. Aug. 19: Cooleemee, 2:58 a.m., structure fire, N.C. 801, Jerusalem callcd for backup, s p it a lE R The following patients were treated in ihc emergency room at Davie , Counly Hospilal. The hospital only releases infor mation on patients it considers a , public record because of the nature of the injury. — Rachel W. Carter, 48, 11:23 a.m. Aug. 19, spinal injury suf fered in auto accidcnt, transferred lo Forsylh Memorial Hospilal. — Samuel A. Bailey, 19, 4:44 p.m. Aug. 18, bruises and scrapes suffered in auto accidenl, treated and rclea.sed. — Pamela S. Brown, 43, 3:47 p.m. Aug. IS, spinal injury, I* bruises suffered in auti) accident, transferred to N .C. Baptist Ho.spilal in Win.ston-Salem. — Edith F. Stulls. 72, 3:41) p.m. a residence off Claybon Drive. — Nicky Dean Strickland of Route 3, Mocksville, reported Aug. 16 mailboxes off Milling Road were damaged. — Creola G. Rogers of Route 1, Mocksville, reported Aug. 16 the larceny of fishing equipment, a gasoline can, and a Weedeater, with a total estimated value of $308, from a residence off Shef field Road. — Bessie Marie Johnson of Route 9, Mocksville, reported Aug. 17 the breaking and entering of BJ’s Country Foods, U.S. 158. — Mark E. McKenzie of Róute 3, Advance, reported Aug. 15 the breaking, entering and larceny from a residence off Lybrook Road. — Ruth Hockaday of Route 3, Advance reported Aug. 14 damage to a mailbox off Hillcrest Drive. — Lawrence Lovell of Route I, Mocksville, reported Aug. 19 the breaking and entering of a residence in the Oakland Heights subdivision off Davie Academy Road. — Robert Boyles of Winston- Salem reported Aug. 18 someone drove away without paying for $5 worth of gasoline at By-Lo, Hillsdale. — Wanda Booe of Route 7, Mocksville, reported Aug. 19 a drink machine at Crossroads Grocery, Turrentine Road and U.S. 64, was damaged: — Paula Alene Durham of Mocksville reported Aug. 19 an at tempted breaking and entering of a residence at U.S. 601 and Dead mon Road. ; — Chrisiine Stone of Route -3, Mocksville, reported on Aug. 12, a mailbox was damaged off Cedar Grove Church Road. — William H. Parker of Route 8, Mocksville, reported Aug, 18 the larceny of cash and jewelry from a residence off Pearsoii Street, Mocksville. | / M ocksville Police A Mocksville man was arrested early Sunday morning after he was caught inside a home he had broken into. Eugene March, 42, was charg ed with first-degree burglary and felony larceny by the Mocksville Police Department after he was found in a residence at 308 Avon St. at 2:43 a.m. Sunday, said Detective Wayne Stoneman. • Terry Flint Smoot, 30, of 319 Pine St., Mocksville, was charg ed Aug. 17 whh being drunk and disruptive. • William R. Gales Jr. of 190 Milling Road told Mocksville police on Aug. 16 someone stole a 27-inch purple Fuji bicycle, with an estimated value of $250, from his carport. • A Roule 9, Mocksville girl was charged with making an unsafe traffic movement after a wreck Aug. 14 at 4:22 p.m. on Wilkesboro Street. Christie Renee Miller, 16, was driving a car south on Wilkesboro Street and failed to stop before hit ting a car driven by Harry Craig Booe, 16, of Route 8, Mocksville, according to a report by Mocksville Patrolman K.L. Hunter. Booe had stopped his car waiting on oncom ing traffic before making a left turn, the report said. Damage to the 1976 Toyota driven by Miller was estimated at $1,000, lo the 1978 Ford driven by Booe, $400. • No charges were filed'after a wreck in the Northwood Apart ments parking lot at 12:38 a.ih. Aug. 20. According to a report by Patrolman J.V. Parsell, Kimberiy Renee Bracken, 21, of 702 Nor- thridge Court, backed from a ^ K - ; ing space into a parked car, own ed by Lisa McDaniel McLellahd, ■' 27, of Route 3, Mocksville. ^ ' No charges were filed.’ Damage to the parked car, a 1987 Dodge, was estimated at $500. The 1985 pickup truck driven by Bracken was not damaged. ' [jg h w a v P a tr o l The following traffic accidents were investigated in Davie Coun ty last week by the North Carolina Highway Patrol. Charges Pending In W reck Charges are pending against the driver of a tractor trailer who left the scene of an accidcnt Aug. 11 at 12:35 p.m. on 1-40. According to a report by Trooper L.D. Chappell, Jimmie Sue Wickerson, 23, of Forest C i ty was traveling east on 1-40 in the passing lane when a traclor trailer in the right lane altemplcd lo change lanes. The traclor trailer struck Wickerson’.s car and skidd ed oul of conlrol into the median, the report said. Damage to Wickcrson’s 1979 Pontiac was estimated at $225. Mocksville M an Charged A Mocksville man was charged with failure to wear a seat belt after a single vehicle accident Aug. 15 on Duke Whittaker Road. John Cain Stephens, 41, of Roule I , was traveling northeast on Duke Whittaker Road at 8:40 p.m., according to a report by Trooper C.D. Jones. Stephens entered a sharp left curve, ran off the right shoulder of the road and struck a utility pole. Jones estimated damage to Stephen’s 1974 Dodge at $300. 'rceii-Ager Faces Two Charges A Mocksville Icen-ager was charged wilh exceeding a safe speed and displaying an expired in spection sticker after a two car ac cident Aug. 17 at 4:10 p.m. on Deadmon Road. According to a report by Trooper L.D. Chappell, Tony Gray Booe, 17, of Route 7 was traveling west on Deadmon Road at excessive speed on a rain slick road. Booe skidded out of control, crossed the center line and sideswiped a car driven by Steven Wayne Tilley, 19, of Route 3, Advance. Damage to T ille y’s 1987 Chevrolet was estimated al $ 1,800, and lo Booe’s 1984 Chevrolet, $350. Damage to a private yard owned by E.M . James of Route 7 was eslimaled at $25. Ford Truck And Car Cqllidf; A 1986 Ford truck pulled into the path of and collided with a 19M , Ford car on Farmington Road Au^.’ 17 at 10:10 a.m. According to a report by Chap pell, John Raymond Brendell Jr., 61, of Boone was traveling north on Farmington Road near N o r^ Davie Junior High School when He attempted a left turn . Brendell fail-' ed to see and drove his truck into the path of a car driven by John Wesley Boger, 66, of Route 2, Advance. Brendell was charged with mak ing an unsafe traffic movement. Damage to Boger’s car was estimated at $2,000, and to “ Brendell’s-truck,-$ 1,800______:__ Aug. 18, bruises suffered in auto accident, Irealcd and released. — John ' Wesley Boger, 66, 11:30 a.m. Aug. 17, neck strain suffered in auto accidenl, irealcd and released. — Herbert A. Pulliam, 27, 12:14 a.m. Aug. 17, shoulder in jury during arrest, treated and relea.sed. — Connie R. Altman, 29, 6:55 a,m, Aug. 15, cut to lip suffered in assault, irealcd and released, — Robin While Favre, 20,6:50 a.m. Aug. 15, bruises and scrapes suffered in assault, irealcd and released. — Randy Lynne Baker. 30, 10:15 a.m. Aug. 14, broken rih suffered in truck accidcnt, admit- Icd. discharged Aug. 17. P is to l P e r m its The following applied for a pistol pemiit from the Davie Coun ly Sheriirs Department. — Martin Emory Keeton, 44, of Advancc. — R o p r Dale Sain, 31, of Mocksville. — Thelma M yers, 56, of Mocksville. — Anthony R. Allison, 24, of Mock.sville. — Michael Norman Rose, 21, of Mocksville. — Janies Le Van Drum, 25, of Mocksville. — Richard Lee Younts, 48, of Advance. — Richard Craig Yokeley, 44, of Mocksville. — Kurt Andrew Musselman, 22, of Mocksville (two permii.s). — Danny M. Voylcs, 39, of Hillsdale (two pctinils). — William E. Lambert III. 27. of Mocksvillc. — Polly H. Myers. 43. of Mocksville. — William Kenneth I'nisi. 27. of Mocksville. — Julia Campbell, 29. of Mocksville. — Thomas Campbell. 36. of Mocksville. — John C. Coniunale, 38, of — Willard Theodore Hayes Jr., Fork. 42, of Mocksville. — Paul Berkeley, 35, of — Keith B. Hege, 43, of Mocksville. Mocksville. — James O. Marrs Jr., 22,.of — Shari P. Shermer, 30, of Cooleemee. Mocksville. — Ginger Coekerham, 27, of — Anlhony Ross Lcftwich, 21, Mocksville. of Farmington. - Ronald D. Boger, 35, of — Joseph Christopher Culler, Mocksville. 24. o f M ocksville . Read Calvin & Hobbes ... ... e a c h w e e k In the Enterprise-Record Sheriff’s Deputy Pal Chandler and a Smith Grove fireman lool< at wrecked truck on 1-40. — Photo by Robin Fergusson G re e n s b o ro T e e n In ju re d . A Greensboro teen-ager was in jured in a single veliicic accident on 1-40 Aug. 18 at 12:30 a.m. Mark Preston Carroll, 19, a passenger in a 1987 Chevrolet .Blazer driven Shawn ^Michael Stephenson, also I9j and of Greensboro, was treated and released from Forsylh Memorial Hospital. According to a report by Trooper C.D. Jones, Stephenson was traveling east on M O in the left lane of travel when he ran off the left shoulder of the road into the grass median. Slephenson's car .struck a ditch, overturned and came to rest upright in tlic left lane of travel in the west bound lane. No charges were filed. Damage to Stephenson’s car was estimated at $3,100. In c re a s e S u b d iv is io n L o t S iz e s , Ta s lc F o rc e S a y s By Kathy D. Cham n Davie County Enterprise-Record I Increasing subdivision lot sizes in 'areas without water and sewer ' is-what the Davie County Growth 'Management Task Force considers the best way to manage growth. ; ‘At least, that was the idea that : grt the most points when task force V : 11^ last Thursday night 'i : prt the top seven of 83 suggestions rdised at their previous meeting. ■ M'.The other six, in their order of -•■preference, were: " • Limit package sewer plants in Î : creeks and streams; ÏÇiji!.» Use fees and property taxes to ' J. mfluence desirable growth; • Maintain rural quality oflife; Examine existing zoning ; ;^ u Ia t io n s; , Set subdivision standards so be developed where there ’f, iiedessaiy services and facilities ; (soils, etc.); ■ : : > Usé infirastru^^ to manage /V"gròwth;:';.r " ' because a suggestion didn’t ■ n ^ thc;top seven doesn’t mean ; ' it won’t te a pan'of the task forrè’s . ': ^tudy ohTihanaging growth, said i& yid lih g , p for the ÇoninHinity Assistance Division of , the N.C.; Department of Natural Resoiirces ^and Com m unity Developmeiit.and a consultant to task fprce.l vMem tier Rotmie Bates said; “ I think once you examine the top Kveh, that’ll probably take care of ihe other JO or 80 or how many wiè’ye got.” ,*:Long and two task force inçmberé, Marshall Tyler and . ; № grouped the 83 suggestions into categories prior to thé meeting and distributed copies to,the others. •' Davie County Commissioner ]№it Bahnson — who suggested the task force in conjunction with a nine-month moratorium on new subdivisions in the Farmington and Shady Grove townships, the two fastest growing areas in the coun ty — pointed out that four of the five top suggestions deal with water and sewer. Long agreed that water and sewer appeared to be emerging as a . central theme for managing _ growth. “ Water and sewer is " something you're really thinking about and have got to deal with,” he said. Task force members will have to decide tangible ways of achieving some of the suggestions. Long said, such as maintaining the rural quality of life. “ You’ve got to bring it down to the level where it’s something that can he done,” he said. Zoning Enforcement Officer Jesse Boyce, who serves as an ex officio member of the (ask force, said members also need to consider whether the counly has the autluiri- ty to implenicm some of ilie suggestions. The No. 2 suggestion, for exam ple, calls for limiting package sewer plants in creeks and streams. However, permits for these plants are issued by the N.C. Division of Environmental Management. The county . is presently par ticipating in a lawsuit against the division for issuing a permit for a sewage treatment plant in Hillsdale to dicharge up to 200,000 gallons per day of treated wastewater into Smith Creek. The plant would serve the Hidden Creek subdivision. Bahnson said the county could regulate sewage treatment plants by specificying in its zoning or dinances areas in which they would not be allowed. "1 don’t know that this has ever been tried before,” Long said. Even if the county can’t do that, he said the task force shouldn’t give up. “ You can impact state govern ment,” Long said. “ You have a •strong representative here. You have a representative with some clout in Raleigh. Lobby.” Also at the meeting. Long distributed charts of growth projec tions for population and school enrollment. If the county’s population con tinues to grow at the present rate. Long said the 24,599 residents recorded during the 1980 census would rise to 43,183 by 2010. “ Do you think Davie County can stand an 85 percent growth rate over the next 25 years?” he asked task force members. “ That’s a lot of people. It will have a major im pact.” In answer to a question by Ted Hill, Long said the projections take into account a lot of factors such as birth rates and tend to be fairly accurate. In Davie, Long said the pro jected increase would be due primarily to people migrating into the county from Forsyth. According lo Ihe projections, whiles would account for most of the increase. Long said most of them would be in the upper- to middle-income ranges, particularly in the eastern part of the county. Davie’s median age is also ex pected to rise during llie next 21 years, from 31.7 in the 1980 cen- .sus lo a projected 38.7 in 2010. Long said this is probably due lo more people moving lo Davie to retire. The Bermuda Village Reliremenl Center, lor example, increased the county’s older population considerably. Because of the older median age and the end of the baby boom, the county’s school enrollment is on ly expected to increase by 3.1 per cent over the next 10 years. That concerned task force member and Davie Schools Superintendent Dr. Bill Steed. “ We can ruin ourselves very quickly if we're nol careful,” he said. Because stale appropriations to school systems are based on the number of students, Steed said the system could lose money and subsequently, personnel, if enroll ment drops. An increasing enrollment doesn’t ensure a quality system. Bates said. In fact, he said students might leam more if classes were smaller. Steed said the system has $14 million in fixed assets in property and buildings. “ W e're still going to have to maintain those buildings regardless of how many kids are there,” he said. In other words. Long joined in, “ if enrollment dropped 30 percent, 1 doubt expenses would drop 30 percent. It’s not an elastic thing.” Steed responded: “Either we have more students or we pick up more of the burden locally.” Bates said that could be done. “ W e’ve got to recuit something in here that will put money into education,” he said, “ not only to make it better, but to cut down on the number of students per teacher ... rather than creating more students for the teachers to look after.” Also al the two-hour meeting. Long informally polled task force members about the rate of growth that they would like to see over the next 10 years. “ How does 30 per cent hit you over the next 10 years?” he asked. Bahnson responded: "Like a knife in Ihc back.” Bates suggested having no growth for 10 years, during whicii time Ihc coiuily could prepare itself to handle more people. Whal about 5 percent over 10 year.s? Long wanted lo know. Task force members seemed agreeable to lhal. “ Personally, I think .somewhere in the neighborhood of 3 to 5 per cent,” said Marshall Tyler. "The percentage doesn't bother me as much as the quality." The task force will meet again on Sepl. 14. CL L a u n d ro m a t behind the W affle House Open daily from 7:00 a.m . '1 DAVIK Г()ll^T^■ KNTI'UI’UI.SI' KI-COKD, THUR.SDAY. Aug. 24, 1989-7 B. C. M 0 0 R E & SONS, INC owntown Mocksville Court Square OPEN: Mon.-Sat. 9:00 'til 6TO0 Friday Nights 'til 8:00 Storewlde Savings! Look For The RED DOT And Save An Additional 25% OFF Already Saie Priced Merchahdisel • ‘ I.- ' -.1 I save up to 60®/® & iV iO R E TH U R S D A Y , FR ID A Y & S A TU R D A Y O N LY! it '8_DAVIE c o u n ty KN'I KKÍ’KtSK KKCOKI). I IIUKSDAV . Лик- 24. IW J Local Companies Recycling Continued From P. 1 At Womlerknil. carclhoarcl is conipaclcii inlo SOO-pcniml hales. When the company gels 30 hales, a paper dealer in Salisbury sends a truck to pick them up. “ The only thing that costs us is our banding and labor," said Booker Wilkinson, maintenance supervisor at Wonderknit. "That's cheaper than it would be if we sent it to the landfill. 1 don't know what we save, but it’s a pretty good sav ings.” Wonderknit has been recycling its cardboard boxes, which are us ed to ship materials into the plant, for about 10 years, Wilkinson said. Food Lion started out in cinerating its cardboard when there were just a few stores, Mozingo said, “ which actually cost money to do.” . “Then they wised up and started recycling,” he said. Each store has a baling machine which crushes cardboard into tight bales and wraps a wire band around them. Bales are packed into empty trailers parked at the stores, along with wooden pallets and milk car bons. When a trailer is full, a truck .bringing in groceries will hook up to it and leave the one to be unload- eil behind. Once the yioccries are imlirntled. llie Irailer is iiseil Гог sliiriiiy hales. l-ull Iciilcrs ai'c lakeii lo the Food l.ion (listrihiition center in .Salisbury, wheie cardboard bales are unloaded (into rail cars inside wareliiniscs. l-'roin there, they go directly to a recycling ccnter. " I think a lot of companies pni- hably do the same thing we do." Mozingo .said. "It's jiisl lhal wc were among the llrst to tell customers aboul il." I'ood Lion promotes its recycl ing program as a means of offer ing lower food prices. The succcss of it and other recycling programs, however, is dictated by the market price. When Ingersoll-Rand conducted its recycling study last year, the price of cardboard was still up, and the employee involvement team projected an annual savings of $10,000 to $15,000 per year. That was from both incoine and cost avoidance, Cartner said, “ meaning if we're going to have to pay for dumping and we come up with recycling so we don’t have to do it, that’s a cost avoidance.” As part of the study, however, Cartner said team members asked two Davie County commissioners if they expected the county to start charging user fees at the landfill. "T h e ir reeling was that lnj;ersoll-Kand was paving enough lo the eounly in taxes lhat we sliimldn't he charged lo dump in llie laniHlll." hesaid. "Thai's pret ty much whal our |iosilion was." Those Iwo comniissioners. however, went off the board lasl November, and llie pre.senl board voled unanimously in April lo im- plenienl (he fees. Because the fees are based on loads ami nol weiglil. Cannersaid industries wilh bulky garbage such a.s cardboiird will acliiallv' he pay ing more than whal they would in olher counties. For.sylh, for in stance, charges on the basis of weight. For Davic Aulo Parts, which averaged hauling a truckload a day to the landrdl, the user fees would have added up fast, according to Bill Cozart. shipping and receiv ing foreman. In fact, the fees were a factor in the company’s decision to go ahead and start a recycling program. “ W e’d been considering it,” Cozart said. Davie Auto Parts is giving its surplus cardboard to another com pany with a recycling operation in place to deierniine how much it will generate. “ W e’ve just got to get an estimate on the amount of cardboard we do or don'l use." he said. Co/arl said Davie Aulo Parts on ly plans lo recycle 1.“) percent of ils cardboard. The olher S.'S percent is already being reu.sed. "W e ship the boxes right back." he said. Kepresenlalives of olher Davie Couiuy companies said they may also consider recycling programs in Ihe future. Joe Stein, general manager of Skyline, said that would be a con sideration. "That's one of the things we would really have to think aboul," he said. Skyline has wood and metal waste lhal could be recycled. A spokesman for Sara Lee Knit Products, which has a distribution ccnter and two plants in Davie, said he was sure Ihe company would consider recycling in the future. Davie officials .said il would help pre.serve landfill space if more in dustries would recycle. “ Each day now, we’re hearing more and more e.xaniples of recycl ing, which really makes our hearts glad," .said Counly Manager John Barber. “ I trust that that’s going to continue to happen.” County officials plan to practice what Ihey preach. Barber said he is looking into the possibility of recycling paper generated by county departments. Food Lion’s Todd McDaniel loads compacted cardboard ^ onto truck for trip to recycling center. — Photo by Jam es Barringer.; Recycling At Home Will Help Save Landfill Space By ^ Ih y D. ChafTin bavfe County Enterprise-Record Recycling begins at home. “ Each person can contribute,” said Craig Greer, assistant to Davie . County Manager Jphn Barber. “If I families would use cloth diapers in- stead of disposables, wax paper in- |ste«d of plutlc wrap or glass soft idrink instMd of plastic inter t«^M;r;then great strides icould be made.” i 1 - V ■ - ^. '1 As more people realize the im portance of recycling to protecting the environment and saving land fill': space,: Barber said manufac- tureirs will respond by developing *iiioie reusable products. 3 ^ A recent outcry over disposable ^¿iapers, for exw ple, has at least u'two.majormanufacturei-s working on degradable disposables. Disposable diapers have come under fire not only because they cannot be recycled, but because they’re also a potential disease carrier, “ I can easily see where substances like diapers that have a life of hundreds of thousands of years will nol be allowed in our country’s landfills,” Greer said. American babies go through 18 billion dispo.sable diapers a year. Sixteen billion oflhn.se end up in landfills. Polystyrene foam products such as Styrofoam cups and plates, and the chlorofluorocarbon containers used by some fast-food restaurants are examples of other non- degradable materials that take up space in landfills. . “That’s just something that never di.sappears,” said Davie County Com m issioner Bert Bahnson, “ It’s just an unsightly nuisance.” Some non-degradable products are hazardous to the environment. Chlorofluorocarbon, for example, which will be banned in North Carolina as of Oct. 1, 1991, is suspected of harming the earth’s ozone layer, according to Sen. Bet sy Cochrane (R-Davie), T lu u ’s one o f the pro visions o f a solid w aste b ill passed hy the N .C , flo iie iiil AsM-mhly on A u g . 12. Il also Lalls Гог a hati on polystyrene products beginning in 1993 if the state hasn’t reduced its solid waste by 25 percent. Bahnson said Davie might want to follow the example of other counties in the United States and ban polystyrene products even sooner. “ It wouldn’t hurt my feel ings to never see another one as long as 1 live,” he said, adding that fast-food restaurants could just as easily wrap hamburgers in wax paper. The county could also encourage local businesses to use recyclable and/or degradable plastic bags before the July 1, 1991, deadline set in the solid waste bill. Some, such as Food Lion, are already using photodegradable bags. C om m issioner Spurgeon Foster said Ihe irc ilil tow arti ticgradablc plastic L'oultl Itc a hoosl Ib r local corn grow ers such as him self. “ There’s a byproduct of corn that’s being used in the plastic in dustry, and it’s biodegradable,” he said. “ They're also going to be able to make milk jugs out of it.” Foster said this will save land fill space and reduce the national surplus of corn. “It helps two pro blems.” While Davie’s new user fees may serve as an incentive for some people to recycle, it would still be on a strictly volunteer basis. Some areas have taken a more direct approach. “ Over in Europe, everybody recycles,” Greer said. “ W e’re in a real mind-set here that if you don’t want something anymore; throw it away.” “ Everything is so package-v oriented now,” said R.C. Smith, : chairman of the Davie commission. “ W e bring so many packages in ; that we throw aw ay." , Greer said it will take the cooperation of manufacturers and In California, for example, state residents are allowed to dispose of a certain number of bottles and cans in,'their local landfilkfrM of^ ^ charge. recycling hccorncs a'wajTo' “ B ill w h e n ycm p a ss ytiv ir lin u i. y o u h a v e ti> p a y lik e 10 c c n ts o n a bottle,” said Lee Barber, who operates Davie Sanitation in Mocksyille with his father, Russell. “ They’re really trying to en courage recycling, and that's a good thing.” Some countries are way ahead of " W e are b u ry in g ourselves underneath a mountain ofour ow n, prbage,” he said. “The odd thing is that we seem perfectly willing’, to do SO. i “ Any change in our situatioi^r must begin with a change'of at-;, titude on the p ^ of each and every',.'' the United States in recycling. _^rsonJn-this nation; :Solicl Waste Planner Considered For Area Countieé iBy Kithy D. Cbaffin iDtvi* County Enteфrise•Rвcord ; A solid waste planner could be ihired as early as January to study recycling potential for Davie iuid four'other counties. , Hiring a planner is one of the recoiiunendations of Hazen and :Sawyer, a Raleigh engineering firm'contracted by . the Northwest ’ Piedmont Council of Governments .(COG) to do a solid waste study of Jlhe five counties in Region 1. ■• The study was funded through a ,$60,000 grant from the Ap- tjalachian Regional Council. The grant was matched by the five inuntieis — Davie, Forsytli, Stokes, Surry and Yadkin — with their shares based on population. 'iT h e study compared and con- iiasted results of earlier landfill studies in the individual counties, ;also funded by the grant, and ■ ! evaluated“them based~on-their- I potential for recycling activities, ■ “They basically looked for areas Uhat we should cooperate in,” .said ■Michele Treadwell, C O G ’s com munity economic development director. “ (Recycling) seemed to be the most feasible area for all five counties to work together in.” (COG, based in Winslon-Salem, offers planning and professional services to countics and tnunicipalities in Region 1.) "W e are investigating funding possibilities for the initial six- niomh period for the solid waste planner,” Treadwell said. “ If we can obtain a gram, we would like to have someone on board by Jan. 1, 1990.” • After six months, the counties would evaluate the position and decide whether to appropriate funds to continue il. , The regional solid waste planner , would have a wide range of respon- ' sibilities, Treadwell said. “ First of all, they’re going to have to get in and get to know the I folks in the counties,” she said. “ They’re going to be responsible for anything from public education to long-range planning, evaluation of tipping fees and ordinances and other areas where the counties can cooperate, but primarily recycl ing.” Treadwell said the planner would receive guidance from the COG executive board and a Solid Waste Advisory Board established in con junction with the landfill studies. R.C. Smith, chairman of the Davie County Board of Commis sioners, and Mocksville Mayor Nick Mando represent the county on C O G ’s executive board, Man do serves as chairman. Craig Greer, assistant to Davic really have no choice, and we feel that this program will help with meeting these legislative re quirements because we can provide technical assistance. “ W e’re just at the point where we’ve seen the need (for recycl ing), and we’re trying to be pro active as opposed to reactive in terms of long-range planning.” The solid waste planner would , use the Hazen and Sawyer study in studying recycling options available lo the five counties. A June 1989 draft of the study concludes lhal there are a variety of recycling activities lhat could be implemented at the regional level "to complement and enhance Ihe feasibiliiy of implementing recycl ing throughout Region 1.” “The extent to which such ac tivities can be successfully im plemented,” it says, "is limited “ If the primary objective of establishing a recycling program in Region I is to reduce the amount of waste being landfilled,” it says, "w ood waste recovery appears to be the single most effective pro gram component which could realistically be implemented.” The -study proposes establishing cither a central facility to which wood waste could be transported for processing or acquiring mobile equipment to rotate from site to site within the region. “ Since the city of Win.ston- Salem's existing yard waste pro cessing facility is operating at capacity and the city is consider ing relocating it, there appears to be an opportunity for regional cooperation on such a project,” il says. (2) Disposal site salvaging. The study ranks this recycling option second because il would nolprimarily by the level of commil- Counly— Manager-'John—Barber;— ment-and-funding-reeeived-as-op*— bc-diffictiltTrrimplcmenl;~' represents the county on the new posed to materials market limita- Region 1 counties not already tions and technical constraints.” Due to the rural naliirc of Ihc region, Ihc sludy says the cost of transporting reu.sablc products lo local recycling cenlers nuisi be considered. This coulil limit the economic feasibility of some recycling activities. Several recycling options are prioritized in Ihe drali ofthc sludy. ■•Material types that were dilTicult to recover, had low value, and/or compriseil only a small pereenlage of Ihe wasic slrcani were gix cn low priority." it says. The priorities were as follows: (1) Recovery and shredding of wood and yanl waste such as tree and shrubbery trimmings. The study says this was given the liighesl priority due lo the high ton nage of w ood waste in the region. advisory board. Treadwell said the solid waste planner would look al ways the counties in Region ! can meet the provisions of the state solid waste legislation signed into law Aug. 12. According to the bill, counties will be required to start recycling programs separating such reusable materials as paper, plastics and metal. Yard waste such as shrub bery and tree irimniings must be ground into compost for agricultural use. The countics also lace new, cost ly landfill regulations being pro posed by the linvironmenlal Pro tection Agency. "S o you're looking at hoih lederai and slale legislalion dial's forcing eounlies lo gel on ihe band wagon." Treailwell said. ••Tliev recovering scrap metal are urged by the sludy to consider doing so. Large metal appliances taken to the Davie County landfill are presently being unloaded onto a separate pile for a private citizen to sell to recycling centers. Direc tor Junior Barbee said this saves the counly money by prolonging the life of the landfill, "Sorting metal by grade will enhance the market value and in crease product marketability," the sludy says. " If adcqiiale ijiianlily can be accumulated, on-siie rcmovid and purchase ofien can be arranged.” Bids could be obtained lo iilcn- tify a buyer for all scrap metal recovered from linullills in ihe region. The stud)' recommends lhal Winston-Salem consider removing corrugated containers for recycl ing, but says that it is unlikely the other landfills in the region receive enough to make such an operation worthwhile. ^ “ With regard to plastics,, all landfill operators should investigate the types, and quantities of in dustrial scrap plastic being landfill ed to determine if recovery oppor tunities exist,” it says. (3) Establishment of mobile buy back centers. The study says these could be operated in cooperation with one or more area recycling cenlers which buy a wide variety of reusable materials. One approach would be to sta tion two trucks or trailers at dif ferent locations on a scheduled basis. For example, they might be stationed in Yadkinville and Mocksville on the first and third weekends. In some areas, such as Burke Counly, non-profit organizations sponsor a trailer for a weekend. "Instead of selling them, citizens donate their materials and the pro ceeds are given to the non-profit organization sponsoring the center at that time,” the study says. Mobile buy-back equipment costs range from around S 14,000 for a new divided, rear-dumping truck to $55,000 for a truck with a divided bed. (4) Drop-off centers. Drop-olT centers could be located al landfill sites, selected olher di.spo.sal sites, .shopping cenlers and/or churches, the study .says. "Transporalion ciisls are of more concern than capilal costs in assessing the economics of drop- olT ccnler operations," il .says. “ Ideally, an adequate number of^ centers should be established to, make good use of hauling equip ment.” • (5) Curbside collection. ' The study says this is usually on ly cost-effective in urban areas; ' (6) Centralized processing. , ¡'_ “ Processing of the materials cd-'' lected is needed to ensure quality control,” it says. “ Fuiihennore,;' consolidation of materials for ship ment of truckload quantities will result in greater market flexibility; and higher revenues." V; The study does not recomme^ ^ collecting high-grade paper and’/ other recyclable materials from businesses and industries in the region. “ Such activities are very labor- intensive during planning and im plementation phases,” it says!, “ Alternative strategies include! establishing a promotional and.' educational program to encourage i business and industry involvement in recycling and banning the' disposal of selected materials from the landfills when acceptable markets for the banned materials are available.” A comprehensive regional recycling progtam, according to the sludy, might include all six recycling options. It would cost- several million dollars to imple ment, but would reduce the amount of waste going inlo the landfills by 30 percent or greater. However, the study says a regional program consisting of mobile buy-back centers, drop-off centers, disposal site salvaging and a part-time coordinator could be operated for less than S250,000.: The projecleil reiluction rate would- be about 4 perccnl. ОЛУМС с о и м л KN I ICUPUISK, HKCOKI), rilUKSDAY, Лиц. 24, 1989-9 D a v i e D i s t r i c t C o u r t The following cinirt ciiscs were disposed of during Davio Dislricl Court on Aug. 17. . Presiding was Judge Kimberly T. Harbinson. Pro.secuting was James Honeycutt, assistant district attorney. — Sterling Patrick Anders, un safe traffic movement, SIO line and court costs; failure to reduce speed to avoid an accident, dismissed. — Richard Bartlett Anderson, driving 70 mph in a 55 mph zone, reduccd by D A to 64 mph in a 55 mph zone. — Carmen Montque Arici, driv- ■ ing 78 mph in a 65 mph zone, pay $25 fine and court costs; driving ■ without a license, dlsmis.sed. — Bobby Carson Barnes, giving false information lo an officer, ■ driving without a license, driving ' 78 mph in a 65 mph zone, .sentonc- ■ ed to six months suspended for two - years, pay $50 fine and court costs, • riot commit a similar offense, not • :operate a motor vchicle unle.ss pro- - perly licensed and surrender ' idriver’s license, - — Clinton Anthony Beaver, no vehicic insurance, dismissed. — Davie E. Boger, com municating threats, dismissed. — Steven M ilo Bolston, driving 93 mph in a 65 mph zone, reduc ed by D A to 74 mph in a 65 mph zone, pay $50 fine and court costs. — Richard Middleton Bowles, driving 67 mph in a 55 mph zone, reduced by D A to exceeding a safe speed, pay $10 fine and court costs. ,. — Phyllis Juanita Brown, driv- iiig 77 mph in a 65 mph zone, reduc^ by D A to 74 mph in a 65 mph zone, pay $10 fine and court costs. — William Carrion Jr., driving without a license, driving without a motorcycle helmetj no vehicle 'n^S^ori, pay $50 fine and court 'costs.' ;. — Patricia Ann Caverly, driving ; 8() mph in a 65 mph zone, pay $ 10 and court costs. , : ’ David John, Chrisloparo, driving 76 mph in a 65 mph zone, reduciMl by DA to improper equip ment, pay court costs. . — Leah' R. Clement, three -counts of worthless checks, sentenced to 90 days suspended for 12 months, make restitution, pay ’ costs, not commit a similar ' ; offense, not violate any state or fedendlaws and remain of general good behavior. — William Loyal Clement Sr., ' DWI (Breatl^yzer results .13), senten^ to 60 days in jail. ■ — Kim Elise Deines; abandon ment and nbn-suppoit of a child, idismiBsed.: ' . > ' — Diane Jones EUenburg, driv ing 70 mph in a S3 mph zone, reduced by DA to improper equip ment, pay couh costs. Linda Nettles Giegory, DWI (Refused Breathalyzer test), driv ing while license revoked, reduc ed by DA to driving without á license, sentenced to two years suspended for five years, given . credit for 28 days of inpatient treat- ^ mem for alcohol, pay $750 fine and COM hosts, not operate a motor vehicle until properly licensed and given credit for substance abuse assessment and ordered to comp ly widi recommendations of assess ing agency. Everett William Gwynn, assault, dismissed. — Paul Ray Harbin, no vehicle insurance, pay $25 fine and court costs ami mil o|icnilc ii moliir vehi cle U'illlOlll ()П1(70Г in.siii-.'Mico. — Trevor IJe:ni llellanl, no motorcyelc license, dismissed. — Kathryn Blair Jones, driving 77 mph in a fi5 mph /one. reduc ed by D A lo exceeding a safe speed, pay $10 fine and court costs. — Shane Parrish Killiam, driv ing while liccnsc revoked, sentenc ed to 12 months suspended fortwo years, pay S2(K) fine and court costs, not commit a similar offense, not violate any state or federal laws and remain of general good behavior. — Ronald Vance Lipc, no vehi cle registration, dismissed. — Wendy Leigh Louia, driving while license revoked, driving 64 mph in a 45 mph zone, sentenced to 12 months suspended for two years, pay $250 fine and court costs, not operate a motor vehicic until properly licensed, not com mit a similar offense, not violate any state or federal laws and re main of general good behavior. — Kelly Roxanne Lunsford, driving 77 mph in a 65 mph zone, reduced by D A to improper equip ment, pay court costs. — Carl Brian Lusk, driving 60 mph in a 45 mph zone, reduced by D A to exceeding a safe speed, pay $10 fine and court costs. — Carol Jean Merrill, driving 87 mph in a 65 mph zone, pay $10 fine and court costs, surrender driver’s license and not operate a motor vehicle until properly licensed. — Franklin Lamont Oneal, driv ing left of center, dismissed. — Lindsey Alvin Patterson, driving 68 mph in a 55 mph zone, pay $10 fine and court costs. Appealed. — Kenneth Ray Payne, driving 77 mph in a 65 mph zone, reduc ed by D A to improper equipment, pay court costs. — Ralph Raymond Phillips, communicating threats and assault, dismissed. — Kevin Dwayne Plate, driving 76 mph in a 65 mph zone, reduc ed by D A to improper equipment, pay court costs. — Barry Gene Rivers, driving while licensc revoked, reduced by D A to driving without a license, sentenced to 30 days suspended for 12 months, pay $25 fine and court costs and not operate a motor vehi cle until properly licensed. — Joseph Scott Robertson, misdemeanor possession of more than Vi ounce of marijuana, but less than 1 'A ounces, obtain substance abuse assessment and comply with recommendations of assessing agency, perform 24 hours of community service, pay $100 fine and court costs, not com mit a similar offense, not violate any state or federal laws and re main of general good behavior, — Stephen Gregg Roig, no vehi cle registration, dismissed. — Rose Marie Runion, driving 76 mph in a 55 mph zone, reduc ed by D A to 70 mph in a 55 mph zone, prayer for judgment con tinued on payment of court costs. — Michael Neil Setzer, driving 80 mph in a 65 mph zone, reduc ed by D A to improper equipment, pay court costs. — James David Shore, improper passing, reduccd by D A to unsafe traffic movement, prayer for judg ment continued on payment of court costs. ~ John .loseph Short, ilrivin g w hile liccnsc revoked, scnlcnced lo 181 ilays in ja il suspended for tw o years, pay $2(10 line and court costs and not operate a m otor vehi cle until properly licensed. — Bob Lee S m ith , co n i- nuinicating threats, dism issed. — liilccn Hall Spence, driving 79 mph in a 65 mph zone, reduc ed by D A to 74 mph in 65 mph zone, pay $10 fine and court costs. — Jason 'rhoiiias Stewart, driv ing too fast for conditions, reduc cd by D A to improper equipment, pay court costs. — Ronald Eugene Talley, driv ing 70 mph in a 55 mph zone, reduccd by D A to improper equip ment, pay court costs. — Mark Williams, probation violation, active scntcncc put in ef fect, immediate work release recommended, receive substance abuse treatment in prison. Appealed. — Sherri Lynn Wolfe, D W I (Breathalyzer results .14), sentenc ed to 60 days suspended for 12 months, pay $100 fine and court costs, surrender driver’s license, not operate a motor vehicle until properly licensed, perform 24 hours of community service, given credit for substance abuse assess ment and ordered to comply with recommendations of assessing agency, attend alcohol and drug education traffic school at mental health center; possession of drug paraphernalia, possession of mari juana, dismis.sed. — M arcus W orth, assault, dismissed. — Ernest Gray Young, wor thless check, sentenced to 30 days suspended for 12 months, make restitution and pay court costs; driving without a license, sentenc ed to six months suspended for two years, pay $25 fine and court costs, and not operate a motor vehicle un til properly licen.scd. — Kathryn Wall, driving 60 mph in a 45 mph zone, reduced by D A to 54 mph in a 45 mph zone, pay SIC fine and court co.sts. Failed To Appear The following people failed to appear for their scheduled court date. — Anthony Edward Allen, driv ing 69 mph in a 55 mph zone. — Debra Jo Andrew, driving 75 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Tonya D. Brannock, wor thless check. — Johnny Michael Byrge, driv ing 77 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Lori Wiser Byeriy, failure to wear a seat belt. — Gregory Jehu Callaway, driv ing 77 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Michael Franklin Canupp, D W L — Kathy Ann Cohen, driving 69 mph in a 55 mph zone. — Robert Lee Cooper, driving 80 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Ronal Oneil Corey, driving 87 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Charles Justin Comatzer, im proper passing. — Cynthia D. Dalton, three counts of worthless checks. — Ann Lawter Daugherty, failure to secure a child under the age of six in a child restraint system. — Jerry Dula, driving 78 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Tonuny Lee Dunnivant, driv ing whhout a license. — Michael L. Edwards, ex- cceding a sale speed, la iliirc lo w ear a seat hell. — M ichacI Cicne lilkin s. driving ill) niph in a 4.^ niph /one. — Ahmed Moham m ed 121- Sayao. unsafe traffic movement. — Kenneth 1-ugene lEvans, driv ing 78 mph in a (j.“! mph /one. — Nellie T. 1-ostcr, worhtless check. — Tele.sta Antionctte Gantt, failure to stop for a stop sign. — Kathy Lavcrne Gentry, driv ing 6‘J mph in a 55 mph /one. — Roger Lee Gibson, no vehi cle registration. — Gregory Burdette Heaster, improper passing. — Robert Dennis Henderson, driving 89 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Belinda Link Hobson, ex pired regi.stration. — Connie B. Hoots, worthless chcck. — Wallace Neill Hoover, driv ing 69 mph in a 55 mph zone. — Robert Dean Hrenchir, driv ing 79 mph in a 65 mph zone. — David A. Huddle, worthless check. — Parish Levone Kilgore, driv ing without a license, driving 76 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Cindy Lou Kirkpatrick, driv ing 86 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Jeffrey Alan Lankford, illegal parking in a fire lane. — Evard Leticia, driving 80 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Lori Ann Mann, driving 78 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Peggy Martin, failure to return rental property. — Daphna Messier Martinez, failure to have a child under the age of six in a child restraint system. — Joe H. Massengill, driving 80 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Mónita Vincent Mercer, driv ing 85 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Robert Dixon Mitchell Jr., driving 77 mph in a 65 mph zone, displaying an expired registration. — Gary Lynn Moore, failure to wear a scat bell. — C ary James M u iid y , ex ceeding a safe speed, lailu re to wear a seat belt. — Gregory W ayne Myers, failure to reduce speed to avoid a collision. — Benjamin Charles Ncniec, driving 75 mph in a 65 mph /one. — Vincent John Niedoniys. driving 80 mph in a 65 mph /one. — Ida McCatliern Palmer, driv ing 60 mph in a 45 mph zone. — Corey Parks, larceny and possession of stolen goods. — Sharon Cranfill Bailey Par.scll, driving without a license. — Julie Ann Pena, driving 80 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Jimmy Douglas Perkins Jr., allowing a person to drive without a licen.se. — Maria Regina Price, driving without a license. — Dianne Sherrill Rowell, driv ing 76 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Ronald Lomant Simmons, driving without a license, failure to reduced speed to avoid a collision. — Wilbert Eari Smallwood Jr., improper equipment. — Patricia Gregory Smith, no vehicle registration or insurance. — Cynthia Lynn Stevens, driv ing 78 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Martha Smith Stevenson, driving 80 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Mark Glenn Thompson, driv ing 80 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Mary Plummer West, driving 79 mph in a 65 mph zone. — James Ray Williams, no vehi cle registration. — Billy MichacI York, DW I. Trials Waived The following people waived their right to a trial and paid their fines cariy. — Rhonda Lee Bullard, driving 80 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Kenneth Gray Carter, driving 70 mph in a 55 mph zone. — Alfred Paul Crowder, failure to slop for a slop sign. — Robert William Dalton, driv ing 80 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Byron Peter Falkiewicz, driv ing 80 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Christopher MichacI Grady, driving 64 mph in a 50 mph zone. — Allison Marie Grissom, driv ing 80 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Rorie Lamar Holt, driving 60 mph in a 45 mph zone. — Tomme Jo Isbell, driving 80 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Sidney Wayne Ivcstcr, driv ing left of center. — Alan Boch King, displaying an expired registration. — Cathy Michelle Laughter, driving 80 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Donna Goins Ledbetter, driv ing 80 mph in a 65 mph zone. — William Perkins Martin Jr;, driving 78 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Wilson Isiah Andre Mon tgomery, driving without a license. — Robindra Persad, driving 79 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Mitchell Scott Triyette, failure to reduce speed to avoid Wn accident. — Patricia J. Wagoner, wor thless check. ■’ — Bennett Paul Williamson, displaying an expired vehicle' registration. ’ — James Edward Fouse Jr.,' driving without a license. — Deborah Gail Goad, driving 76 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Michael J. Bugeski, improper passing. — Nancy Alene Ellis, failure to secure a child under the age of sik years old in a child restiaint system. — Charles Henry Smith IIL e x-' ceeding a safe speed. V ' IN PAIN? Chiropractic works without drugs or surgery. WHY SUFFER? Call today for consultation ________6 3 4 - 2 5 1 2 ________ DAVIE CHIROPRACTIC CLINIC SOI Wilkesboro Street Mocksville, N.C.Paul K. Cudd; D. C. STATESVILLE MEDICAL GROUP, PA a n n o u n c e s t h e a s s o c ia t io n o f Byron E. Dunaway, . M.D^ Diplomate Of American Board Of Qrthopaedlc Surgerj^ S p e c i a l i z i n g In B o n e A n d J o i n t S u r g e r y Arthroscopy, Fracture*, Joint Replacement, Sports Medicine Medical School: Emory University School Of Medicine 1976-1980 Orthopaedic Residency: Emory University Affiliate< Hospitals 1980-1985 Orthopaedic Surgeon: United States Air Force; Kirtland Air Force Base and New Mexico Regional Federal Medical Center 1985-1989. N E W P A T I E N T S W E L C O M E ____________f704) 878-2011 CARDIOLOGY/INTERNAL MEDICINE O.K. Lai. M.D. ENDOCRINOLOGY, METABOLISM & DIABETES Richard A. Dickey. M.D.. F.A.C.P. INTERNAL MEDICINE N. Maxvllle Lew is, M.D. C harles S . Stinson, M.D. GASTROENTEROLOGY Nell M. K aiim sn . M.D. D igestive & Liver D iseases OBSTETRICS ft QVNECOLOOY R ichtrd A . B oyd., M.O. F.A.C.O.O Edwin M. Fulohum Jr ., H.D., F A .C .0 .0 . Artlwr 8 . H w befts, M.D., F.A.C.O.Q . OPHTHALMOLOQY Stanley F. Sliwintid Jr ., M.D.. F.A.A.O . PEDIATRIC ft ADOLESCENT MEDICINE Ralph L. Bentley, M.O., F.A .A .P. 0 . Durham Lewi», H.D., F A .A .P . M argerel J . W lllhkl*. M.D. F .A A .P . OENERAL 8URQEIIY B ru M Hwrie. M.O. G ary T. йоЫ пеол, M.D. v U n ie r O gbum , M.D. (Rttked) ORTHO f АЕОЮ tUnO ERV •y ro n Edward O u n n riy. M.D. A ithreecppy, Jo in t A eplseem eol ft Bpoft« Medicine M O LO QV Rototrt • . Ora^ew^d, M.D., F .A C .t. Tink A. Johnaon III, M.P. S O M E L O A N S W O R K H A R D E R T H A N O T H E R S I f y o u 'r e lik e m o s t p e o p le , th e e q u ity in y o u r h o m e is y o u r s in g le la r g e s t a s s e t. W o u ld n 't y o u lik e to u s e y o u r e q u ity fo r o th e r th in g s s u c h a s H O M E IM P R O V E M E N T S , C O L L E G E T U IT IO N , IN V E S T M E N T S , O R D E B T C O N S O L ID A T IO N ? F ir s t F e d e r a l’s n e w s e r v ic e -F ir s tL in e - le ts y o u d o j u s t th a t. C a ll o r c o m e b y a n y F ir s t F e d e ra l O ffic e f u l l d e ta ils o n h o w y o u c a n s t a r t e n jo y in g F ir s tL in e . F IR S T F E D E R A L S A V IN G S B A N K Main огам:2Э0 North Ctwnyetot. _______2015 Reynold! Road/3001 WÛi^town 5tim Mqckivtlle Qffic*: М2 Gâüher StreetBranch Oftke*: W Hane* Roblnhood Roed/130 South Smtford Roed/«kfvtlle Offîcc: М2 Gaither Scmt Clemmotu Office: 2561 Lewüville-Clemnion» Road Stanleyville Office: 60ÛD Unlvmlty Pirkway (704) 634-5981 i l > Л ‘'"«-I lO^DAVIÈ'COUNTY KNTEKl'KISIO KIXOKU, 111иКМ»Л», А»!!- ¿ч. P \ C o u n ty B rie fs . 'p b m m i s s i o n e r s O K A p p o i n t m e n t s G loria M allhcw s lias been reappoiiUed (o ihc N orllnvcsl C liilcl Developm ent C ouncil. The D avie C ounty Boan! ol'C iininiissinners voted unaninunisly M onday night to reappoint M atthews on the reconiTnenclalion oC Susan Law , program director. The council oversees program s for children w ith developm ental disabilities. Cotninissioncr.s also made three appoiiilment.s lo the Region I A g ing A dvisory C ouncil. The appointeccs and the length o f their terms are as follow s; Ruth Jones, one year: M argaret C all, (w o years: and A rlene Spear, three yctirs. The council addresses aging issues in D avie and the four other counlie.s in Region I — Forsylh. Slokes, S urry and Y adkin. N e x t M e e t i n g T o B e S e p t . 1 1 D avie com m issioners voted M onday night lo postpone Iheir next regular m eeting bccause it falls on Ihe Labor D ay holiday. C om m issioner Bert Bahnson suggested holding the m eeting on Sept. 11, the follow ing M onday afternoon, but tw o commi.ssioners, Buster C leary and Buddy A lexander, are planning to attend a con ference in W ashington, D .C ., then. T - Bahnson said he w ouldn't-be ablc-to attend, buLsaid,to.go_.ahead and schedule it fo r then if it was convenient fo r the others. “ D o n ’t t r y to pull any tricks w hile I ’m gone,’ ’ he joked. : The m eeting w ill be held on the I Ith at I p.m . C om m issioners norm ally meet on the first M onday afternoon at I and the third M on day night at 7. X e r o x C o n v i n c e s C o m m i s s i o n e r s ; “I’m convinced,’’ said Commi.ssioner Spurgeon Foster Jr. 10 minutes into a presentation Monday night by two Xerox salesmen. • . The tw o requested a chance lo m ake a presentation even though th e ir bid was the sixth highest o f seven subm itted fo r tw o copiers being purchased by the county. ■; Xerox, however, offered a three-year warranty as opposed to the 90-day warrant offered by Panasonic, the low bidder. This brings the total cost of ownership down, one of the salesman said. • : Comrnissioners voted unanimously to purchase the copiers from Xerox. Copiers are needed by the Department of Social Services, Emergency Medical Service and Ihe Board of Elections Office. . One of Ihe offices is expected to receive a copier used previous ly by the Agricultural Extension Service. New Telephone System Gets Nod ^A telephone system for the new Davie County administration . ’JbilJIding will be purchased from Central Telephone Co.. n^.The company, which provides telephone service to the town of _ , 'Mpcksville, submitted a bid of $16,200. This was the lowest of i ?Myen bilb received on Aug. 8. ' I’The system, will also serve certain county departments in the old K rcouhty office building. Construction Bills Coming In ,. ^^Bilb for worit on the new county administration building and cour- .i' :.tm>use expansion and renovation continue to come in. r; Commissioners voted unanimously Mond.-iy night to pay (lie following invoices for work on the administration building; $97,739 submitted by Creseni Construction; $3,420 by Webb Heating and ■ ^■'Conditioning; $8,746 by Southeastern Mechanical Contractors; ^$20,609 by Hinson Electrical Contractors. fla w in g invoices submitted forworkonthe courthouse were apmoved: $44,865 by Hendrix & Corriher Construction; $2,470 * ' 'Dy Graham’s Piping; $116,730 by Comfort Contractors; and '$21,28^ by J.H.f Bowman Electric Co. ,j|ix Purctiase Orders Approved '>;A1so at Monday’s me^ng, commissioners approved six purchase orders fo> county departments. t^;They were:'’$199.23 for a message bawd al the B.C. Brock jwilding; $1,376.94 to equip two new vehicles purchased by the i^ r if f s department; $11,932 for a new disk drive for the data pro- !C№iiig department; $2,300 for four new portable radios for the cwnter and sewer department (the old radios will be used at the land- 4U); $138 for a weed eater and $1,680 for a riding lawn mower for the Emergency Medical Service; and $1,692 for a riding lawn m w e r for use at public buildings. !-';.The orders were approved by,unanimous votes. ^a ta u g a Land Declared Surplus ‘. -Davie commissioners also voted Monday to declare an acre o f land it owns in Watauga County as surplus propeny. ^This must be done before the property can be .sold, according to C(№ ty Attorney John Brock, i; ;The one-acre lot was donated lo Ihe county by William F. Ellis, who reiiuesled that the proceeds firom any sale go to the Davie Public Library. ¡Commissioners, however, agreed to a suggestion by Bert Bahnson that they look at the land before selling il. :Craig Greer, assistant lo Couniy Manager John Barber, said he had written adjoining landowners lo see if they were interested in the property, which has power lines running across it. The only bid submitted was for $900, he said. Brock said he had lo go to Wilkes Couniy and would go by and see the.property. Barber said he would like to go, loo. Mocksville Laundry & Dry Cleaners Serving M ockavllle & Davie C ou n ty With Q uality Cleaning & Laundry For O ver ‘‘40 Years” . Let our experience and reputation for quality, price and service work for you! L e t U s C l e a n Y o u r Suedes & Leathers We Clean & Box For Storage We’re Wedding Gowns "The Good Ones” ¡.Phone or drop by and ask about our “ In Tow n D elivery S ervice" “ WE REALLY DO APPRECIATE YOUR BUSINESS O u r L o c a tio n S in c e 7947 143 Depot Streel, M ocksville, N.C. 27028 634-5130 Open M on.-Fri. 7-5:30; Sat. 8-12:30 ~ « a g a » o o o e > o o e > o e > a c : SERVICE, SEIECTION & SAVINCS FROM THE PRESCRIPTION P E O P lT Bagged Snack Size Candy Bars Almond Joy, Mounds Kit Kal, 5fh Avenue R eeses Prices Good 23, 24, 25 & 26, 1989 Only FO U R C01.0R8I 5 Pack S H A R R #EL233 8 Digit Handheld Calculator Ж 10 Pack Black Or Blue Ink 99* Faber Castell Onyx___ 4 Pack Roller Ball Pens Black Or Blue $J79 Mead Super Shades Filler Paper 100 Count, Four Super Colors rrtod «С?- Mead Suject Book 40 Count 3 P„99* S Portfolios Mead 5 S u b je c t .^Spiral N o te b o o k s Wide Margin 180 Count | College Ruled 150 Coun /Vfeiybelline SHIMG fR€€‘^ IH I C l t A I SK IN C 0 » M i1lC •Liquid Mal<e-Up Or Oil Control Powder * 2 ^ ^ •Coiorsolt For Lips Or Mascara $177 •Colortough For Nails Or Eye Shadow*!*® *011 Control Cover Stick ♦ I® * *011 Control Blush 8 % ” F ry P a n $ 2 9 9 #W3569 FRSTÌ S t a c k in g S to r a g e C r a te s $299 #2963 N r a t ‘N T id y B u c k e t $299 $][19 , \ : #49/337 Or 49/338 Ingrahant L ig h te d C lo c k s $ 4 9 9 #SA-98 F r a n k lin S p e llin g A c e $49” «2214 T o a s te r C o o l t o u c h I: '■ $ 1 3 9 7 I p 111 и IIII imini Color Enlargements (from your negatives) 5x7 8x10 $ 1 1 9 $ '| S 9 No UmJt Available from 110,126, 35mm & disc color print negatives Thru August 31,1989 C ro w n D ru g s O ffe rs 2 G re a t P h o to P ro c e s s in g O p tio n s , Choose a second set of standard size prints FREE everyday or Ciioose Pro 35 Professional quality 4” prints returned in a tiandy mini album T y lo n o l A lle r g y S in u s M e d ic a t io n 24 Caplets »3*9 #3150 3 ^ Q t. R e m o v a b le C ro c k P o t $1997 whotif.^ Your frien d had w h a t seems to b e th e sanie illness and she offers you som e leftover m edication th a t w orked w ell fo r her? Q Q | | f TA K E IT 1, MotksvillE. Willow Oak Shopping CenliC 301 Aicadia Avenue, Winslon-Salem 2. Clemmons, Westwood Village Shopping Center 8- Hanes Mall, Winslon-Salem Z. oejr.iLida Quay Shopping Center, Advance, N.C. 9. Oldtown, 3716 Reynolda Road 4.63t Peters Cteek Parkway, Winston-Salem Ю- Lewisville, 6Ш Shallowford fld„ Winston-Sale i 5. Reynolda Manor Shopping Center, Winston-Salem '' • Stanlevville, Old Highway 52 Nonh 6.3075 Kernersviile Road, Winslon-Salem '2- Colony Centre 13.4917 Country Club Rd, Walkertown, Highway 66 Yadkinville, Newton, Taylorsville, Lenington, anH '.Vr.come iss'.iSMMsaais Willow Oak Shopping CentteMocksvi e B^m^uda Quay S^cppl 5 Ccntft M-.hik \ V 1 , i - 'l Sports DAVIK COUNTY KN TKRI'UISI'; UKCOIU), TIIUKSDAY, Лчк. 24, 1989-lB J a c o b s Q u e s tio n e d B y T h e N C A A B y Ronnie Giilliigher Davie Counly Enleprise-Record A s far as D oug Jacobs was conccrncti, it was something straigiu oul of a movie script. A small room, almost- cubiclc-sizc. A dim light. One man asking questions. Another answering them. Mocksville’s Jacobs was the one d o ing the answering. Jacobs, a defensive lineman for tho Universi ty of Mississippi, was call ed in by the National C o l legiate Athletic Association recently to talk about alleged recruiting violations at Clem son University, the Atlantic Coast C on ference powerhouse. The Tigers actively Tciifuitcd the 6-9, 275-pound Jacobs while he was. playing for Davie County High School. He graduated there in 1986 and signed a football grant with South Carolina. N C A A investigators have contacted hun dreds o f college players around the coun try in search of some answers. And Jacobs Jacobs said he was amazed al how much the N C A A knew. "T h e y told me things that I wondered lunv they know ," Jacobs said in a telephone interview last week from the Ole M iss cam pus in Oxford. I was surprised at how much they knew.” If Clemson i.s found guilty of im proprieties, it will be the second time this decade that the Tigers have been pul on pro bation. One year after winning the national championship, Clem son was found guilty of 150 violations during a period stretching from 1978-1982 and given a two-year pro bation by the N C A A and a three-year stint by the A C C . After probation, a school can clear its name by slaying clean for five years, which Clem son has. If found guilty this time, the Tigers could still get the “ death penalty,” another term for suspension. “ It looks like the death penalty,” said Jacobs, who wouldn’t elaborate further. G lad T o Leave Jacobs said he is glad to be out o f South Carolina. He has now been involved — if only remotely — with scandals at both ma jor universities, Clem son and the Univer sity of .Soulh Carolina. During his redshirt I'rcshman season al South Carolina, steroids were in rampant use, which led to an Investigalion by Spoils llliislnitnl imd llie N C A A . Jacobs said he did nol use steroids but added in an inter view with the Eiuerprise-Rcconl last year thal he knew they were ihere and being us ed. He said he didn’t like the atmosphere in Columbia, S.C. and transferred after his freshman sea.son to Mississippi. “ 1 feel Ibrlunale to have left the state,” he said. Now , the Clemson probe has brought in vestigators his way. “ They called me in and I missed prac tice that day,” he said. “ They asked me questions for about 3'/2 hours. I went in there about 4 p.m. and didn’t come out until around 7:30. “ It was weird,” he said. “ They asked me everything. One o f the questions was, ‘Did they ever buy you a ham burger?’” The investigation didn’t become heated until an Aug. 16 report by an Atlanta newspaper that the N C A A was in vestigating Clem son’s football program for Please See N C A A — P. 3B 1989 F o o tb a ll E d itio n C om ing N e x t W e e k There will be juniors in Ihe slarting lineup for the Davie Counly foolball learn in 1989. Whal did you say? Davic Counly will not run the wishbone in 1989. Say whal? Players will go both ways. C ’mon, is that really true? Yes, it will all be true when Davic travels to North Iredell Sept. 1 for the opening game of the season. But there will be other Davie County football questions needing to be answered. For instance: • Jusl how far is it to Greensboro? And do players from Greensboro Grimsley and Greensboro Dudley even know where Davie County is? • What is the favorite food of Ted Budd, Danny Rumple and Clint Junker? • Who was the best player for the powerful 1937 Mocksville football team? ' • Do you remember 1966 East-West all-slar Ron Spry? • Does South Davie have a new coach and North Davie a new field house? • What little league team will win this year’s Davic Youth, title? • W ho are the top players in the C r c and state? The answers — and much more — will be in the : Enlerprise-Record Football Edition, coming next week. Don’t miss it. If Y o u W a n t G o o d M o ra le In S c h o o l, P ro m o te S p o rts >School started Tuesday. H igh school seniors are always-optimistic about school during the first two weeks and sports is usually the reason. N o one has played a single down, or kicked a single goal or hit a single tennis ball but every coach sw m s to think “ we can vyin the conference championship if we play up to our poten- That’s what a senior wants to hear. A !№nipr wants to go out a winner and in late I he always feels like he will. '"rl thoiight that in m y senior year. Then we wient out and had the first losing football ieason in the schbol’s history. t e i U was d^ressing.: M orale was low at school, bccause onr sports' teams — which ■ always bring the students closer together — were faltering. \ irSo n w people seem to think 1 put too much Kem phasis on the importance o f sports in a ^school: In fact, I'lo ve to listen t o ^ s e craggy ol* teachers w ho doii’t like s^ rts. Ronnie G allagher Academ ics are the only thing, they tell me. Sports w on’t bring students together. Sports is not important. But tcacher, whal about those 4,000 people paying $3 a head to watch D avic Counly play football? I ’m sorry but I ’ve never oncc seen 4,000 people line up and pay $3 to watch H i-IQ . A good sports program gives students good morale.' G ood morale gives students good at titudes. G ood attitude adds up to good w ork habits. And with good w ork habits, you have the type o f students you need for a successful school. • W hich brings us to the two-hour classes. Now , wait a minute, I not going to cut down the new policy. Heck, we haven’t even tried it yet. But if Robert Landry’s idea is as good as IS S (in-school suspension), then we’ll have no problems. You see, I think IS S is the greatest thing ever invented for the student. Before ISS, school policy was sort of stupid, Here’s an example. W hen I was in . high school (Hm m m , when was that?) there was no ISS. 1 had a friend who used to lay out of school and do you know what the principal did when he caught him ? He kicked him out. Is that stupid punishment or what? It’s tike the principal was saying, “ W ell, if he w on’t come, we w on’t let him. That will show him w ho’s boss,” So, IS S was needed. W ho knows, the two- hour classes may — and probably will- — be liar To ^ W a it " By Ronnie Gallagher Davie County Enterprise-Record W hile others play, Davie County will wait. ' : A s always, the W ar Eagle ; football team w ill begin its I :;si№on a week after most o f its ::nvds. M ost of North Carolina’s I ¡.'whools begin Friday night but .IMuKlall W ard’s troops w on't go [ .into battle until Sept. 1 when they travel to North Iredell, This Friday, W ard and his 'staff w ill watch North take on I StaiTOOunt and it’s possible he’ll J' ktiow more Starmount players, I considering several Rams, in cluding quarterback C had Triplett, played Legion baseball all summer for M ocksville’s I ";team, : ‘ W ard said he didn’t par ticularly like the open date dur ing the first week. The W ar Eagles scrim m aged N orth Davidson last Friday and now have a two-week layoff, : ‘ ‘There’s pros and cons with the first week off bul personal ly, I ’d just as soon play,” he said Saturday morning. “ It docs give you another week to prepare, though, “ What I’d like to do is play the nonconference games and llicn have a week off before the first conference game, Thai way, you could scout the team you’re playing,” Behind good blocking, quarterback Matt Marion prepares to throw downfield to a receiver during Davie’s scrimmage with North Davidson Friday, _ p^oto by Robin Fergusson Knights O ff Schedule W ard w on’t have to worry about scouting North Davidson, The former conference foe lias moved down to 3-A and will play in the 2-A/3-A Central Carolina Conference. For the first time in 22 years, Ihe two neighbors won’t pla)’ tliiring Ihc regular sea.son, Davie seemed lo play better in ihc sccond scrimmage than it did againsi West Rowan, accor ding 10 Ward, "W e improved from llie first week,” he said, "and although we’re siill nol where we waiit to be, our e.xecuiion was bel ter,” Especially in the passing game. Led by M an M arion and Gary Blalock, ihc W ar Eagles scored early in ihe scriniiiiage, Blalock and Brenl W all also led a success. A s far as the classes succeeding,.! agree with our own M ik e Barnhardt. In an earlier' column, he said the two hour classes aren’t ^ half as important as the teacher. If the .> students like the teacher, then the classes w ill ‘ work. ' It will be a big change but no student real- " ly likes change or understands change. Why';' do school officials always try to make school so dang complicated and confusing? I figu re ' they do it to get the student ready for the real world, where nothing m akes sense. '. < Fo r instance, I could never understand the - ' purpose of spelling bees, undoubtedly the ■ most demeaning part o f the school year. It’s an elementary school student’s introduction to ’ public humiliation. W h o ’s idea was it to stand everyone up against the wall in front o f the room ? 'W hen ' you m iss a word, you have to sit dow n in Please See Gallagher — P. 3B F e re b e e R e tire s : SayS Farewell To Baseball By Ronnie Gallagher Davie .County Enterpriee-Record 'Jofr-Ferebee hasn’t lived , in , , ; M ocksville for 47 ^ e a r ir b u f- r r everytime he drives his car, he - ■ has a piece o f Davic County with him. In the form o f his license ; ; plate. ', C A N A -N C . “ M y father (Joseph) and W es C ollette ca rrie d the m ail together and m y tather car- , ried the Cana route,” Ferebee ' said. “ W hen the personalized license plates came out, I decid- _ ed I needed something with • '■[. Cana on it,” ; ; The 70-year old Ferebee sat ; • in his Misenheimer home Satur- ; day and talked about his storied •, coaching career in baseball, a j sport he retired from two weeks : ■ ago. He gave up his spot on the Row an County Legion team ' after 30-plus years. He had ,1 already retired from Pfeiffer :• College and both teams, along with his high school coaching ' . days, had brought him over 1,400 victories. But after talking to Ferebee, ,. • one wonders why he did retire. This man seems ready to hit the ,: field again at a m om ent’s \ a revamped secondary with in- icrceplions. Blalock’s went for a louchdown. Bill Davic appeared lo lose a little o f that early edge, som elhing W ard says the leani Please .See I'lMilball — P. 215 iiolice. Please Sec I’erebce — P. 3B 1 2B-DAVIE COUNTY KNTKRl’RISl-; RKCORD. THURSDAY, An«. 24, I'№9 Brad Foster finds plenty of running room up the middle for Davie against North Davidson.Reggie Sales (41) and Britt Osborne (66) rush in on North David; son quarterback Jason Mills. H u t - H u t ’ Davie Prepares For First Gam e Of 1989; With Scrimmage Against North Davidson • Gary Blalock scored touchdowns on offense and defense for Davie. Patrick Murphy Is chased out of the pocket by two North defenders. continued from P. IB ^ i needs to work on. ; - ; v “When we came oiit for the ie- Davle players gather around Randall Ward for instructions. tensity wasn’t what it should ve I been. Wc learned we need to play I all four quarters to win. The game | is physical and mental.” Ward was also pleased that his I two scrinunages with .West Row^ and North Davidson has giyen jiis) team differentlooksV: v ; Jy v “It’s good to see two differeiiy philosophies,” he said. “It reallyl helps you preparel : • * V “West was more nin-oriehléd I and North was more wide open with its attack. North will help us get ready for North Iredell. TTifcy ; throw thè football.” Notes: 'V.A. • Richard Staley missed ^ scrimmage due to a kidney infiK- tion. Ward said he wouki probably miss this week’s practice!^’ | • Ward was pleased with his defensive effort. Matt Vaughteifs | anchored a defense that shut off: North’s running game. í • As expec^, Reggie Sáln lud some good runs, but w did'O«-’ main Mayfield, a btuketball stw-' turned running back. • North Davidson is as big as |ls been in years, boasting one sophomore, Michael Billings, w ^ stands 6-6, 340 pounds. • The jayvee team will actually open the football season Thursday, Aug. 31 meeting North Iredell at home. - Chris Gregory (24) finds little running room against the North Davidson jayvee team.A horde of North Davidson and Davie County players leap into the pile to find the football. DAVII') С ()1;м л KNTKKI’KISI': KIXOKD, rmiKSDAV, Auk. 24, 198!»—3B Joe Ferebee Says... Joe Fcrebcc claims lo Iw from llic old school when il cimics lo btischoU. He sal down rcccnily wiih ihc Hnlcrin isc-KcamI ond answered qiicsliims on his ¡¡hitosphy aiul hcliefs: • 1. E-R: Who « ¡IS ymir I'livorito hitler ¡iiul pllchcr of nil lliiti''.' Fcrchee: “ W IiIkuiI a ilmibt, TccI Williniiis and Bob Peller. ‘T v c met Williams. I-vcrytime y<ni talk to him. ho can toll ymi something you didn't know abont liitling. He could probably go oul righl now and get some hits in ihc majors. Rogers Hornsby was a good one too, but no one will be as good as Williams. “Bob Feller was the best. I’ve known him for years. Remember the newspaper called 'Grit?' When Feller was 15 years old, Ihe paper was elaiming he would be one of the best. When he came lo Ihc majors iii hi.s first game, you can bet every batter knew who he was. He missed some of his best year.s by going into Ihe ser vicc. He could’ve won al least 25 games each of those years so he been one ofthe top winners ever. You have lo remember, he was pitching in the major leagues while he was still Legion age. He always works with Legion World Series and I’ve talked lo him there quite often.” 2. E-R: W ho was the best baseball player ever to come nut of Davie County? Fcrebcc: "There’s been some real good ones come oul of Cooleemee, like Grimes Parker, for instance. But one of the best was Baxter Jordan, known as ‘Buck’ Jordan. He played back in the 30’s wilh all the greats. He played for the greatest manager in National League history (John MeGraw of the New York Giants), the greatest pitcher of all-time (Waller Johnson al Newark), the greatest righthanded hitter of all-time (Rogers Hornsby) and the greatest defensive cenlerfielder (Tris Speaker). “Baxter was also the only player to ever pinch hit for Babe Ruth, when they played for the Boston Braves. He was a good hitter and missed winning the batting title one year on the last day of the season. He’s living in Salisbury now,” 3. E-R: Why did Cooleemee have so many good pro prospects? Ferebee: “All colton mill towns had a lol of good ba.seball players, not just Cooleemee. Landis, Mooresville, everybody played baseball in the old days. There wasn’t anything else to do. Cooleemee used to have some great teams in the old North State League.” 4. E-R: W hy didn’t you ever coach in the professional ranks? Ferebee: “ I had several chances but it was liecause of my fami ly mostly. We liked where we lived and didn’t want to move. If I started coaching in the minor leagues, there’s no telling where they might have sent me. I might have ended up somewhere in Idaho, you never know.” 5. E-R: How did you feel each time you’d bring your Legion team into Rich Park? . Ferebee: “I always felt a little nostalgia. I didn’t play here, it : wasn't built yet back then. It's a classic park and it could be bet- ' ter. It needs work. They need to move home plate back, for one thing. It reminds me of the park at Eastern Randolph. With a lit tle work, both could really be beautiful parks.” 6. E-R: Colleges, including Pfeiffer, where you coached, all began using aluminum bats. Do you like them? Ferebee: I’m from the old school and it look me a long time to start using aluminum bats fulltime. I've never liked aluminum but it’s used now because of money. On a cold day, you might bi'eak 12 wooden bals in one game."1 don’t know if I believe that aluminum bats carry the ball fur ther. 1 do know if you hit the ball on the handle with a wooden bat, it’s not going anywhere and the bat might break. But with ; aluminum, you may hit it on the fists and it goes over the infielder’s ^be^.for a hit.” " 7. E-R: Do you like the designated hitter rule? ;Ferebee: ‘‘I’ve never liked it. I think it takes a little away from thè game, if you’re goiiig to have a hitter.for the pitcher, why not have a designated hitter for the shortstop? They usually can't hit either and are being paid mostly for defense. ’ ’ ' ; 8. E-R: Can North Carolina baseball teamscompetenatkmally in American Legkm baseball? ' Ferebee: “Sure they can. You never where a team might come from to win the while thing: It’s like that basketball team, Milan, in l9S4 that won the Indiana state championship. Chemistry means a lot. In Legidii baseball^ if you have good pitching, you can win natioiially. I.had в (XMiple of teams that with a few breaks could’ve goné.fatther thw it did.” 9. E-R: Arc ^orcsdoiial players tmlay better thaii the old Ferebee: “I iton’t think the talent is as good as it was in the 20s, 30s aitd 40s..The reason is the number of teams. Back then, there were only 16 teams and you had to be very good to make it. Nowadays, with so many teams (28), average players ¡we making big salaries: Someone batting .250 may be making $1 million. Bob Feller was given $1,000 to sign." 10. E-R: Why did you retire when you obviously still love ' the game? Ferebee:“ ! had been meaning to retire several times. I was going to retire after we won the state championship in 1984 but a lot of people wanted to me coach a couple more years. I also wanted to quit after 1987. But again I was asked to continue. We haven’t had a lot of talent the last couple of years. No pitching. So since my family had been on me to retire I did. I’ll stilt follow baseball, though.” N C A A : continued from P. IB ; what it callcd, “ possible major : recruiting violations.” Jacobs said he had read where : Michael Carr, a quarterback, had : allegedly been given a $20,000 . ; 1988 Toyota Supra. Investigators ! thought it suspicious since the Amite, La. product came front a family of 14 children. Carr has since left Clemson but now plans to return. “ I don't know anything aboul that excepl whal I've read in the paper," Jacobs .said. Jacobs said the investigator who mot with him said he had no choice but to answer the questions. .. ‘‘1 was told that if 1 didn't lell the truth and it was found out, I could lose my eligibility here." he said. "1 didn’t want that. 1 Uild him Baseball ......... M E R U N N E R S U P K i Й1уе %8 1970 1979 1 9 8 0 P H A M P IO N S £ü ¿m p i o n s Joe Ferebee had a long and storied career as the Rowan Legion baseball coach. He also coached Bill Peeler at Salisbury High F e r e b e e School and coached at Pfeiffer College. For his career, he has won over 1,400 games and coached in over 2,000. — Photo by Jim Barringer I'd tell him anything 1 knew.” Asked what was discussed, Jacobs said, “I don't think 1 should really talk anymore about il." One rumor had coaches from other areas ofthe country going to the N C A A wilh concern aboul Clemson's recruiting. The Tigers have been successful recently out side of its natural geographical region. Historically, the loam has recruited the North Carolina- Georgia area bul has been gelling players from all over Ihe nation, especially from the southwest and northeast. Last year's recruiting class was 27 strong, representing 13 slates. “ 1 hale il for Clemson," Jacobs said. ‘‘1 have some IVionds there. I hope everything turns oul okay for Ihom." continued from P. IB “ I put my heart and soul into coaching those young m en," Ferebee said. That's evident just by sitting with Ferebee for a few hours. He brings out old bats, both wood and aluminum. He explains the ar. of holding it, of swinging it. He demonstrates the proper stance. It was as if he could have laced up the spikes and sent a few shots to the gap in right center. “ I'll probably go watch the Legion next summer,” he said. “ But it's going to be tough not be ing out there. It will be my first summer not playing or coaching since about 1934.” Oldtimcrs Rcnicnibcr While growing up in Mocksvillc, Ferebee was quite a ba.scball player but oldtimcrs remember his skills in foolball and basketball as being equal. “ We didn't have state playoffs then,” he said. “ So the regular season was everything. And there was no Legion, so I played on the community team.” He played three sports at Catawba College, graduating in 1942 and went into the Navy for four years. He- finally became a full-time baseball coach in 1949. And listen to the statistics. In high school, he was 77-32. In col lege at Pfeiffer, he stood 667-330. His Legion teams went 694-339, bringing his career totals to 1,438-701. That’s a lot of baseball. “ But I never got burned out or tired of it," he said. In fact, he took on as many duties as he could. Besides being coach at Pfeiffer, he was also a scout for the Pittsburgh Pirates. He coached Legion baseball from 1949-57 when he took the Pfeiffer job. His only break from Legion baseball came from 1957-67. But in 1967, he was of fered a one-year deal by Rowan County. A one-year deal that lasted 22. One 40-win season, ten 20-win seasons and eight 30-win seasons later, Ferebee has left the game behind. Fundamentalist Ferebee was never one lo shy away from the fuiulamontals, regardless of who he was around. G a lla g h e r Joe Ferebee has personal ties to many former major league players. Here, he holds up one pf his autographed bats, showcasing names like Pete Rose and Ted Williams. — Photo by Ronnie Qallaghar Pfeiffer used to play exhibitions with the Philadelphia Phillies. One day, all-star centerfielder Garry Maddox approached Ferebee. “ He asked me how to get out of his slump,” Ferebee smiled. “ Sometimes, even the pros need to go back to the basics. I believe in fundamentals. You win by doing the little things.” He pointed 10 Phillie pitcher John Denny, a strapping 6-4, righthander. He watched Denny bat and noticed lhat he held it at the end instead of choking up. "The reason pitchers can’t hit is because of the way they hold the bat. As big as Denny was, all he had lo do was choke up and lake a nice easy swing while extending his arms. But they all seem lo want to swing hard. I can’t believe the hilling instructors don’t work with them on that." His professional connections are far and wide but he admits the game has changed. “ 1 don’l like artificial gra.ss," he .said. "A n d I don’l like the domed stadiums. Places like Fenway Park and Wrigley Field, now tlial’s baseball. “When I was growing up, I knew every player on every team in the major leagues,” he said. “I loved the Gashouse Gang in St. Louis. I thought Walter Johnson was a great pitcher.” And Ferebee also had aspirations of making it there himself one day . But he was injured in the-Navy, thus making his mark iii coaching. ‘il knew to be happy. I’d pro bably have to be involved in baseball,” he said. “Coaching became the way for me to do it.” Impressive Stats His Pfeiffer teams won 10 "Carolinas Conference titles. It won five NAIA district championships. The Falcons made it to the 1% 2 national finals. In fact, just because of Ferebee, Pfeiffer may have had the most well-known NAIA baseball team in the nation, whether it won or lost. Almost every baseball afficionado knew Ferebee. His Legion teams were even more reknown. Rowan won four slate titles in four different dccades and were runnerup four other limes. His 41-5 record in 1971 is lops in Southern Division history. Rpwaii led the state in attendaiice . many years. ‘ ' “Saiisbtiry has always been, a . good Legion baseball .town,” ' Ferebee said. His I9M team went fiutherlhin - any other, winning the . Southeastein Regionals and nuk- iiig the World Series. “ You don’t forget much,”: he said^ looking over a lapftil of photo albums. “I could write a booki^^ ' He'll have the time now to write or simply relax at home. In fact, Saturday flight, he and wife Melba,- traveled to Salisbury to hear some Big Band music from the 1930's and40’s. A time when Joe Ferebee was in his prime, when spoits were played for love, not money. And perhaps, when the bat^ struck up “In the Mood” or “Moonlight Serenade,” Fereb^ leaned back and breathe a sigh of contentment. He has a loving, sup porting family. He has his health. And he has the memories. “I’ll say il again,” he mused, pointing to his CANA-NC license plate. “You never forget tKe memories.” • continued from P. lit from of all your friends. It's as if you’re holding up a sign lo Ihe entire class, slating, "I'm a moron. I'm a moron. I swear I Ihoiiglil cal had Iwo I’s ." Actually, sludeiils who attend rural schools like Davie Counly, West l-orsyih and North David son are lucky. Rural .sellings are a lol more low key lhan say, our conl'erence rivals in Winslon-Salem and Greensboro. Some of tliosc schools are downright mean. There’s a rumor ihal in some, the school newspaper has its own obituary column. Ill one cily school, there’s the story of the teacher who lold a sludenl, "Prove the law of gravity." He picked her up and threw her out the window. That was a joke. This isn’t. Every senior in Davie County should be overjoyed to bo star ting Ihe school year, ll’s one of the lasl limes in iheir lives that they can actually go out and ha\'c some fun wiih no stress or pressure. One day, when Ihey’re old like me, ihoy will have forgol- len whal a square root is, they still won’t understand Ihe i- belbro-e rule and won’t even be able lo spell "participle." Hul lei Davie win a football or basketball or baseball cham pionship. riicy'll remember that. - Administrative inventions like ISS and two-hour classcs may - come and go but sports will slay forever. Unfortunately, some bosses ' try to make a person's job just like school. The other day, 1 had car trouble and was laic for work. Dwight gave me a zero. He wouldn't let me make up the work. Whal ilo you expect? His mother’s a teacher; 4B-DAV1E COUNTY ENTEKPRISK RKCOKI), TIIURSOAV. Aii)-. 24. IW9 — Photos by Ronnie Gallagher ,-Matt Jones shows off his kicking form. I^ o c c e r T e a m P la y s IS ta r m o u n t S a tu r d a y S ■ ' ilightle Looking For Defense iFrom The Offensive Players ■•ZjThe Davie County soccer leain ‘‘had a surprise Monday when Jini .'^lilghtle conducted practice. rt^Som e were going to become 'j'ttefensive players, pr fiillbacks. ; “ W e’ve got too many offensive ¿Ipilayers,” he said o f the : jftidfielders. he also thinks, having too ;’£)any midfielders may work to his 'tidvantage. ife»; “A midfielder is like a quàrter- S^ck in football or à point guard . basketball or a catcher in “ìiiasebàlliexplainedXightle. ‘‘It '$:tiili^ a speciai'to of athlete to a^Jlay d«t so they ought to be' able :l;|lj<'adai)t to fullback as well.’’; need to make some quick ÌJécisipn8;;Dayie will open a , p.m. scrimmage Saturday at ■ 'Vadkin County Park again.st •».■Starmount. “The i parks and recreation ^iepa^ent there is having a clinic •JuMidiit wanted to showcasè a cou- -tjlè òf high school teams,” Ligh- •^ e said. “It’s tipt going to be like S Krimmage; either. We’re play- ÌÌ^g i» full g ^ ..” . , 2; i ; Hie park is locati in Yadkin- ftville. Go down éOl to Yadkinviile ■^ind turn right at the firat stop light èfeside Shoe Show. The park is on Stiwtroad. if', As Lightle tries to sort out his «iplayets to thè proper positions, two Mother sports are begining at the ’^high .school. Angie Jarvis has £ volleyball and Shelby Nichols has ^ .p’girts tenhis:V' ' Hard Practiccs Brant Yandell was asked if Ligh tle was easier on the team in prac tice than last year’s coach David Hayes. “ No way,” Yandell said. “ W e’ve been running a lot.” Lightle just laughed. “ Yes. we have been running a lot.” Hayes was brought in last year to begin the program and worked mainly on fundamentals. The team was not in a conference and played mainly jayvee squads and other first-year soccer teams. Learning fundamentals were more important than being in running shape. That will change in 1989. Davie will compete in the Central Pied mont Conference and face state powers like Greensboro Grim.sfey, Rcyiuild.s, M uuiH I'iih or :iiul West Forsyth. “ W e’re going lo be in shape,” Lightle said. Lightle took over for Hayes and has experience in coaching youth leagues in Kemersville. He also has many of the players back from last year in Yandell, Brett Speas, Sean Garnett. Matt Jones and others. But he still has no seniors. Last year's team was made up of underclassmen. “ Next year, we can call it a veteran team, maybe,” Lighlle said. Davie opens the season Tuesday, Aug. 29 at home against Wilkes Central. The game will be played at Mocksviile Middle School. Soccer team lines up and waits for Instructions from coach Jim Lightle (right). Get an “A ” with our school J C X E M E N T H U N T IN G S U P P L Y 2 MUes East From Mocksviile 7 0 4 ^ 5 7 3 8 Star Shot $13«» (3 Weeks Only) L;Bows «S19 And Up Concord 12Guage ^ 7 4 * ^ 20 Boxes XX 75 H?«» Doz. Game Getter < Commodore 128D COMPUTER 128K RAM, high speed 1571 disk drive, detachable keyboard. 40/80 color outpul. Mead Products ' TRAPPER KEEPERS In lots of different styles. Holds paper, graphs, charts, more. A B C Fam ily Foot A nd Ankle Clinic Robert L. Sprinkle, Jr, DPM Robert L. Sprinkle, III, DPM Are please to announce the association of Ralph S. Sprinkle, DPM In the practice of Podiatric Medicine Surgery of the Foot and Ankle and Sports Medicine 2240 Cloverdale Drive Cloverdale Professional Bidg., Suite 216 Winston-Salem, N.C. (919) 724-1951 T H E W O R L D ’S B I G G E S T T O Y S T O R E ! 17 W. Main Street Thomasville, N.C. 472-7543 144 N. Cherry Street, Suite 4 Kemersville, N.C. 996-8881 Th e re ^s a ^ o y s n u s n e a r y o u ! • W IN S TO N -S A LE M 3200 Silas Creek Parkway (Across imm Hinus Mam MONDAY - SATURDAY 9:30 AM - 9:30 PM; SUNDAY 1:00 PM - 6:00 PM CHARGE IT! VISA MASTERCARD AMERICANcxpncss DISCOVER I 1 Л Л > 1 1 . K l '. l W K I > , J I I U Í 4 .> I J / M , /»U K * W r e s tlin g C o m in g T o B r o c it L i n k , M a g n u m T . A . T o p s S e p t . 2 C a r d All-sliir championship wreslling returns to the Brock Gym Satur day, Sept. 2 at 8 p.m. Advance tickets arc S6 and can be purchas ed at r& F Barbecue. Cliildren under five are admitted Tree. A r e a S p o r t s The main event is a lag team match between the Tokyo Bullets ------and— Magnum—TtA —and- Man- Mounlain Link. Link is a former titleholdcr in the N W A and A W A and is the current IW A World Brass Knuckles cham pion. He is also Ihe star of the new hit video cassette, “ Madman Maniacs and Lunatics.” Joining Link is a special attrac tion just for the kids as Batman ■ faces The Midnight Rider. ■ Also on the card, the Young • Stallion meets Don Valentine, Mr. . Wrestling 2 wrestlers the Super Rocker, plus many others. An autograph and photo session with the wrestlers will be held prior lo Ihe matches. : Hoie-in*One David “ Duke” Jordan, along with Lyle Conover, recorded holes-in-one on Aug. 6. Jordan made his shot at Cedar • Rock Country Club in Lenoir. He ■ used a nine-iron lo record the hole- in-one on the par Ihree, 146-yard hole. He was playing in the Carolinas Golf Association louma- : >mem, representing Twin Cedars j ’Golf Course. Playing wilh Jordan •’■^were Robert Hendrix, D on j ' jMarldin and Mark Jordan. : ; Í >; Conover made his hole-in-one at ■ ' ■;Twin Cedars on the par three, ; 164-yard hole with a three-iron. He •: :was playing wilh Mary Conover ‘ ;and Phyllis lyichols. ............ Fall Soccer The Mocksville/Davie Parks and Recreation Department will be ; holding registration for fall soccer youth leagues next week. On Monday, Aug. 28, registra- ' tion is scheduled from 6-7 p.m. and on Tuesday, Atig. 29, from 6:30-7:30 p.m. for children in kindergarten through sixth grade. There will be a $S fee, which ;buys the shirt and registration is held at the perks and recreation of fice on Sanford Avenue. Leagues are set to start in nud to late ■September. Co-Id SelMdHi« The following is this week's : Mocksville/Davie Parks and : Recreation DqMitment co-ed soft- : bill league schedule for this week: Thanday, Aug. 24 7 p.m. — Floyd’s vs. Bulls. . 8p.m.-Enterprise-Recordvs. : Unknowns. . 9 p.m. — Jockey I vs. Blasters. Monday, Aug. 28 .7 p.m. — Jockey I vs. Crown : Wood. ;8 p.m. — Tiny’s vs. Hazel’s. 9 p.m. — Blasters vs. Jockey II. Wednesday, Aug. 30 ; . 7 p.m. — Jockey II vs. Bulls. 8 p.m. — Jockey 1 vs. ; Unknowns. 9 p.m. — Floyd's vs. Hazel's. For more information, call the : recreation department at 634-2325. : Tickets All tickets to Davie County foot- • ball games this season will be $3 presale and $4 at the gate. For more information on ticket ; packages through the boosters ; club, call the high school. Farmington Dragway There is action at the Farmington Dragway each Sunday for street classes and cruisers. Practice begins at 9 a.m. and time trials start at 12 noon. TAKE THE WORRY OUT OF BUYING ft Ш Е Р Ш Р О Щ Т К и С К W ITH Correction Tammy Revels was left olT the list of players making up the Mocksville Junior .softball team that won the state title recently in Mooresville. B E L L & »W A R D C H E V R O LE T B U D G E T CARS & TR U tk s^ low Priced Cars & Trucks to Fit any budget. A . L 0 W A j , , Q Q t o * 3 9 0 0 ______ BELL & HOWARD CHEVROLET HOMfe OF HAHD- PICKED PRE-OWNED VEHICLES, w* take prkle In , our pre<owned cars « trucks. Plsplayintenhr.Hie iMsf & wholesaline Wie re»K к M O 24 ООО M I L E S W A R R A N T Y A V A I L A B L E O N M O S T V L H I C % ^523SCL * ' 19N PO RO R A N C R X L T Long bad, low m lie t, one /n tr. Sae th lt truckl S7900 P A Y M E N T . 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P A Y M E N T B A SED ON 4« MO. $2900, CASH OR T R A D E . 13.9% A P R . *2 4 6 * * mo". "T m ^e l e b r Ìt y ^ ^rT Burgundy, low m iles, like new. Save money w ith th is autom obile. U900. P A Y M E N T B A SE D ON 4< MO. 13.?«» A P R . SI900 CASH OR T R A D E . * 1 3 7 0 1 P E R M O . Auto, A ir, AAA/FM C a u . LOW M iles. One ow ner. M ust seel $10,900 P A Y M E N T B A S E D ON 17900. CASH OR T R A D E . 44 MO. 13.9% A P R . *2 1 9 * * «a B e ll S¿ H o w a r d C h e v rc d e t, In c . D e a l e r N o 2 5 « ’ In te rs ta te 4 0 л1 H ig h w a y 21 • S tA tesville, N.C. 2 86 77 - Phone : 7 0 4 /8 7 3 -9 0 9 4 OPiN a III 6 & lAitH Bt AKKOiNiMkNi TOLL FRpl 1-800-627-6036 «B-DAVIE COUNTY KNTICRI’RISIC RIÎCOKD. 'mUKSDAV. Au«. 24. I9S9 A d v a n c e P la ye rs W in H a r d y , N o w e l l , B r y a n t L e a d A c a d i a ■ Three Advancc players helped the Acadia Grill women’s softball team out of Winslon-Salcni win ihc U SSSA Class C state tournament Saturday in Gastonia. S o f t b a l l ------TVIckic Hardy, Vicci NowdI and Piim Bryani of Route 1, Advancc, led Acadia through the loser’s bracket and defeated the Predatons iri two straight for the title, 8-7 and i;o. ;Xhe final game of the tourney was tension-packed with Acadia loading Ihc bases three times without scoring. Finally, in the bot tom of the seventh. Hardy scored the only run of the game to give siransor Lawrence Cooper and his the title. ;;:Hardy, an outflclder, was the tournament's M ost Valuable № yer, while first baseman Bryant ^on the Golden Glove Award. Nowell is the team’s second Usetnan. j;Acadia played eight games in the ^mament, winning four on Satur- ^ y . But it lost to the Predators, out ^Durfaam, 6-2 and was thrown in- ^ the loser’s bracket. i;To gain a rematch with the mdators, Acadia had to defeat -№ & H Sporting 'Goods out of iibtesville; which it did with ¿other 1-0 victory. , ?:The toumameht proved to be a Measure of i^enge ftv Acadia. In MOrliier toiinuiinents, HG&H and life •Predators have I beateii^^ .^inston-Sidein team.j Acadia has Ib^stied s e cM in the Western j(t%ioiiais and in the NSA state in ^arion. The leani was third in the titigular season league, played ul Ihc № dar Base in Forsylh County, , -.CAcadia is now gearing up for the ^,tJSSSA World Tournament in ! jifeereburg, Va.. Sept. 1-4. Last Acadia was 13th in the World '■^mament. ' ;CSu1er-Crev»s Seventh ji'A fter finishing seventh last week .rfi^Gastonia in the NSA state tour- ■nunent, Carter/Grews men’s soft- ;biU team will play in the Class C :^Mional Rcgioiuils this weekend in ' fO w nville, S.C. — North Carolina, jj^ th Carolina and Virginia — will :^ v id e the teams. ^ ^ t e D m r id S e ^ \ l‘vC&J Constructioii will play in • ' NSA Class O World Series in . I^ a n ta over the Labor Day ;]^kend^ ■ - ^ &>ftbaU . Compiex 5‘SWhen Carter/Crews plays in the p S A CIass C World Series in Jpiariotte over Labor Day, the la y e rs will see what has been call- SiM one of the finest softball com- “j^exes in the nation.: ^u^The complex, located behind 'Ifomets Stadium off Ty vola Road ■ Jbfs five fields completed back to >.nck and formed in a circle. Each jffeld has a lighted scoreboard. <*■* ' ' ' ^'j:nn the middle is a five-story ''^^plex, which contains an air- ';mnditioned restaurant on the top ^fbor, storage areas, an area to ^[ddge the parks and recreation ^^partment and a floor only for the ^fcorekeepers. ;’.';Each dugout will have running - Water and a telephone so managers “Can call to the pressbox with any ■ lineup changes. Players will also •have dressing rooms. ■ ; Xarter/Crews will be one of i almosl 125 teams that will play for : the title in Chiirlolle and Rock Hill, S.C. ' But Ihe complex may over shadow the teams. “ It would be worth going down there just |o see Ilie complcx,” said N SA official Ronnie Smith of Mocksville. “They say they have Ihe room to build five more fields.” m - i Ш- Call In Sports Scores 634-2120 _ u b e , O i l C h a n g e A n d F i l t e r К Я 1 ® $ 1 2 » » • Includes up to five quarts oil There were plenty of close calls during the final week of recreation softball action at Rich Park last week. — Photos by Jim Barringer 2448 E. Lewisville - Clemmons Rd. Westwood Village Shopping Center, Clemmons Fast! 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I « F i x k a k s in a l l t y p e s o f f a u c e t s i * R e p h c e b r o k e n s c r e e n s a n d w i n o w p a n e s i * R e p d r h o l e s in d r y w a l l , p l a s t e r a n d w a l l c o v e r i n g • R e p d r v i n y l f l o o r s a n d c e r a m i c t ile . <ome Into ACE Today W e C o r r y E v e r y t h i n g Y o u N e e d " Y c u r O n e - S t o p P r o j e c t C e n t e r " ' C o m i n i S o o r P r o T h e АС^Ё S t o r e n e a r y o u D o n 'i m i s s t h e s e f u t u r e p r o j e c t v i d e o s R o o f i n g D r y w o l l D e c k s E l e c t r i c a l F i n i s h C a r p e n t r y E x t e r i o r P a i n t i n g K i t c h e n s A n d B a t h s Bemuda Quay Shopping Center NEW HOURS; Mon.-Sat. S*7 Sunday 1-6 (Only SVIinutes From Clemmons) Advan; N.C. 998-1987 ■ S i ® - '' DAVIK COUN TV I:N I KUI’UISI', KKCOKI). rilUI(SI)A\’. Лиц. 24, I989-711 2 Liter Bottle Pepsi Products Reg. 89' Pack Reg. 4.47 Girls 5 pk. Wundles. B riefs or bikinis in nylon or cotton. S izes 2-12 Each — Reg. Choose from Trapper Keepers, Data Centers, Pencil Pouch Organizers, Flappers and much more. Each Rag. 12.97 Matal stacking chairs.' Features vinyl seat and steel frame witli baked bn enamel finish. Fully assembled. Reg. 49« Each . Winchester Dove/Quall shotgun shells. Available In 12,16 and 20 guage, 25 count box. Sale a For *7**. Off Reg. Price Selection Of Men’s And Boys Summer Clearance Clothing Off Reg. Price New Towne Center 2501 Lewlsville'Clemmons Rd. Clemmons . 9-9 Daily 1-6 p.m. Sunday i n ; 8B-DAVIE COUNTY ENTIÎUl’IUSIC UKCOKI), TIIUKSDAV, Лиц. 24, 1У8‘> D id P e e le r M is s T iiir d A f t e r H it t in g H o m e R u n ? Davic Counly athletic dircclor Bill Peeler doesn’l like lo bra^ loo much about his athletic prowess in high school. Many may not oven realize he reprcsenled Salisbury in the 1950 East-West Game as an of fensive lineman. Mocksville native Joe l-creheo, who recently retired Irom his Rowan Legion baseball post, ■ coached Peeler while al Salisbury and said Ihc stocky catcher was a good one. Bui Ferebee also said the play he'd always remember was a Peeler home run. A home run lhal didn’t count. • “ Peeler was a good guard in ■ football, but he was my catcher ■ too," Ferebee said. “ In 1948, we were playing where the rightfield fence was way back. Peeler hit a drive lhat had to have gone 450 Teet. But Peeler had lo run il oul. When he gol back lo the dugoul, the other team appealed thal he ■ ^.ijiissed third base. He was called Ciul. :“ He came running up lo me and •T.^id, ‘I didn'l miss third base, did I:;- “ I really didn’t know. Back Ihen, there was a stupid rule that coachcs had to coach from the • J dugout, not the field. I didn’t see it. > “But you can ask Peeler today and he'll still rerucmher thal play. Ami he'll .still in.si.sl Ilf louL'licil third." Whilovillc won two consccutivc games before dropping two straight in Ihc American Legion Southeaslern Regional Hasehall 'roinnamenl in liascball City, l-'la. lasl week. Linwood Hedgepeth's team defeated South Brunswick, N.J. in Ihe opening game. 11-6 behind the pitching of LcGrandc Russell, who struck oiu I.T. Whiteville followed that with an 8-6 victory over Miami, Fla. But Posi 1.17 dropped ils lasl two games, 10-6 over Puerto Rico, 10-6 and Sarasota, Fla. 7-4. Whiteville fmi.shed the season 34-10, thus giving Mocksville the most wins of any American Legion team in North Carolina in 1989. Dale Ijames’ club finiiihed 37-15-1. Different Turnout.s Davic soccer coach Jim Lighllc was hoping to gel al least 15 players out for Ihe team in 1989, quite a contrast to Reynolds. “Would you believe they had 70 come out for soccer," Lightle marveled. “That’s more than Ihe football team." Lightle was asked what Dayie, N o t e b o o k now in ils sccomi season of soccer, would have lo do lo gel such a large turnout. "W c have lo start teaching them Ihc game al ahoiii age four." he said. " I coached youth leagues in Kernersville and they'd have ahoul 250 kids wanting lo play." Vuii Dyke Retires When American Legion fans remember Darrell Van Dyke's lasl three years as coach ol Stanley 266, they'll bring up two points. • Stanley won Ihc Area 4 cham pionship three years in a row. • Stanley lost the Western North Carolina championship three years in a row. Van Dyke, the East Gaston High School coach, resigned last week as Legion coach. He was 105-81 in six seasons and his teams were always competitive. Stanley was the only team lo ever cop three straight Area 4 tides. His team was beaten oul of the Western playoffs this season by Mocksville. It was obviously becoming frustrating to Van Dyke to facc Dale Ijames. He lost two straight Western lilies in a row to Mocksville's coach, one when Ijanics was in Kerner.sville in I98K. He will remain as coach of Easl ( laslon. Klvaliy Knds In l’)(i7. North Davidson and Davio Coiimy played Iheir llrsl game, wilh North winning 21-14. For 22 years, the two hauled in Ihe Norih Piedmont and Central Plednuml Conferences as 3-A and 4-A neighbors and rivals. That all ends this year. Athletic directors Peeler and I'cte Jones tried lo gel each on ihe schedule hut conllicts prohibited it. “ 1 r we had ; "d , ’ ’ J ones said during the IWO u ■’ .scrimmage last week, "1 think Davie would have heen forced to play something like three or four games in a row away from home, ll was like lhal for us, loo.” Both said they’d work in the future lo gel the schools back together. For now, they’ll have lo be satisfied with scrimmages. North has held the upper hand in the rivalry, winning 14 of Ihe 22 games. The War Eagles never tuadc any noise againsi the Black Knights until swilching to the wishbone under Mike Carter in 1981. Davie has won five of the eight, meetings since. “ Wc could never .stop lhat wishbone,'' Jones laughed. Iliiseball Fever Hasehall season wim'i begin for anoiher eight months but in Davie Counly. it's a sport you never forgel. Ihunks lo David Hum 's three-lime conference champion and Dale Ijames’ Legion leatu. Davie junior Tony Renegar, who passed up playing football this year, was watching his buddies play in Ihe North Davidson .scrim mage last week. " I can't wail for baseball," he said. Renegar has a reason. The lanky, 6-2 pitcher threw for Ihe jayvce team lasl spring but saw a little action wilh Ijames Legion club early in Ihe season while Davic and Starmount were perfor ming in the state playoffs, “ You can't compare it," he said. “ You could throw it by the jayvee tcaiTis but Legion was lough." West Forsyth's Mike Lovelace, anoiher junior, was echoing the same sentiments about baseball. The lefthander went straight from Legion ba.soball to football. He is a quarterback. At a recent Legion cookout, he was asked how he liked football practice. " I wish baseball season would Stan," he .said. Bulls Ueturns North Davidson coach Bill Bulls saw his dad. Bob, come lo Welcome lasl week to watch the scrinuuage wilh Davie Counly. But North Davidson wasn’t Ihc only reason he was there. Butts probably knew as many people on Ihe Davic Counly side of the field. Butt.s coached at Davie in the late 50's and early 60'.s. It was a rough lim e," he reminisced. “Consolidation had just come in and we were having some trouble with people from all over the county going to the same school." Butts, who coached Joe Whitlock, among others, said he finally told al! of his seniors one year not to even come oul for the team. “ I decided to start over from scratch," he said. “ The first year, we went 1-19. V “ But things got belter. The year after 1 left, the team won the con ference championship.” Butts is now teaching at West Davidson and Extended Day School. He is planning on retiring this year. iN ic h o ls , J a rv is C o a c h in g F a ll G irls S p o r ts ' Shelby Nichols and Angie Jar- ¡¡vis are coaching the two fall girls ;^ports for Davie County High ¡School but both came to the posi- iiion down different paths, i Nichols is coming back to the tennis team after a year hiatus ^while Jarvis (formerly Browder, , was married this summer) gave (up.track to take volleyball. .,:NIcIioIs Returns f ^ichols led Dayie to one of its tennis seasotis mer iii 1987 •decided to step down last year, giv- Way to Steve Hurley. » iBut Hurl^ lasted only one year 'atibayie md-Nichbls is batck. - “ I enjoy tenn is," she .said, “ and i^th'at’s part of it. Bui I’ve always 'had a good group of girls to work with and this year should be no ex ception." Nichols held her first meeting with the returning players last week and 12 showed. Working for one of the six spots are Kris Freshwater, Kim Wen- nerberg, Am y Fergusson, Tiffany Fleming, Debbie Brown, Holly and Shannon Covington, Tanja Sherden, Jeanie Markland, Am y Duncan, Cathy Sherrill and Don na McDaniel. “ W e’re hoping to get more out after school begins,” Nichols said. There probably won’t be but two spaces open. Freshwater, Wen- ncrberg. Fergusson and Flem ing were all starters lasl year. N ichols lost on ly Donna H ildebrand and Mara Sherden to graduation. In fact. Freshwater is the only senior this year and has been nam ed captain. Nichols is also hoping to have somewhere to practice. The courts have been resurfaced and she was told two would be ready Io play by Thursday. Davie has two scrimmages wilh North Iredell and then leaps straight into conference play Sepl. 5. “ W e've got some new teams in Greensboro Grim sley and Dudley,” Nichols said. ‘‘Being ci ty schools, they should be good in tennis. But we feel like we're go- itig (() he godJ (o t i ." J;irvis 'r¡ikos C)vt*r ivitirffoWl Meetings Scheduled RALHGH-TheN.C.WUdlife ;^Resources Commission has «scheduled'special statewide public Imeetings for Aug. 21-23 on water- ifowl regulations for the 1989-90 ^season. t Wildlife biologists will conduct ith« hearings in each of the state’s 'nine wildlife districts on Aug. 21, r22 and 23.'The hearings are held . yeair before the Wildlife Com- ' ^misston adopts w^rfowl regula- Itioiu to gather public conunents. {•bout sMsons oijd bag liinits.^ Wildlife Davie sportsmen can attend a meeting at the Yadkin County Courthouse Aug. 23 at 7:30 p.m. Each year, die Commission sets waterfowl seasons and bag limits within the framework provided to states by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Last year, severe drought forced the Service to put tighter restrictions on waterfowl hunters in.the Atlantic Flyway by reduc- S e ip d c h e c k f o r $ a T o :Enterprise-Record P.O. Box 525 Mocksville, NC 27028 s i Ju n ker & Son F eed M ill, In c . ^ 101 Salisbury Street (704) 634-2377 Mocksville, N.C. 27028 Feather Lite Trailers Of Iowa Inc. ■Фм POWER FENCE ГИ))»' WORTH DOING IT RIGHT!! Gallagher/Snell Power Fences are alternatives to traditional barbed and net wire fences at lower cost. s s ¿ a Ko«w «MOoa W r a n q l e r JEAN S FOR M EN & LADIES Wrangler Cowboy Cut Jeans. The official jeans of the PROA. Riveted at points of strain, slightly tapered to fit easily over boots Black denim Wrangler shirt lOOVo cotton Mfith pearlized snaps “ B rushpopper" Made of soft (yet heavyweight) pre-washed 100Vo cotton twill, they’re water repellent and wind resistant. Try Our Hom e Brand Of Feeds I I Our Make 9% Horse 14% Horse Shell Corn Crack Corn Salt Bag & Block Big "M” Rabbit Big “M" Calf Starter Big "M " Laying Pellets Big "M" Starter & Grower Grumbles Big "M" Pig Starter — Animal Healtti Supplies— Dog Food - Rat Bait - Fly Bait - Solo-Jec-7 For Dogs The volleyball program is see ing ils third coach in three years as Jarvis takes over for Matt Wilson. Jarvis, who was an all- conference volleyball player at Davie in 1983, says she’ll have to brush up on the game. " Il wasn't as advanced when I played," she said. Davie has been to the state playoffs for the past three seasons but lost a good group of three-year starters. When Jarvis called her first meeting, only 10 showed up, including last year’s starter Stephanie Ebert. Debbie Evans, who missed last year due lo a knee injury, is back also for her senior year. “ I'rn hoping to carry 14,” she said. “ More will come out after school starts.” Jarvis sais she sees no real pro blems ’ with taking over the program. ‘‘When I played, we were always one of Ihe top two or three teams and it's been that way since I've come back to teach. Jarvis said she expects West For syth to be strong but ‘‘we’ve got a few good players too. ”Shelby Nichols ing Ihe duck season from 40 to 30 days, reducing the daily bag limit from four to three ducks and by cuuing the half-hour daily hunting time before sunrise. Because of severe drought con ditions in the northwestern United States and central Canadian prairies where ducks breed, seasons and bag limits were cut severely in all flyways. The Fish and Wildlife Service is scheduled to release its guidelines for waterfowl hunting in August. I I W orld Keep Up W itli Davie Sports Eacli Weelc W i t h A 'S u b s c r i p t i o n t o t h e D a v i e C o u n t y E n t e r p r i s e - R e c o r d Saturday Septem ber! 7:30 p.m. Sunday September)^ 3:00 p.m. Cl K e n T r e a a w a y S h o w s a t L A K E M Y E R S C a m p i n g R e s o r t On U.S. 64 5 Miles West Of Mocksville S)1 DAVIK COI N ! ' KN TI'-UI’KISK UKCORI). rilURSDAV. Лид. 24, 1989-^91» R a c in g First W in o f Season M i l l e r W i n s S a t u r d a y N i g h t ’s L i m i t e d S p o r t s m a n R a c e A t B o w m a n G r a y ; F i n i s h e s F o u r t h Mocksvillc's Mike Miller won hi.s first Limileil Sportsniim race of the .scii.son Siiliirilay night but .still fell one placc in the final points standings. Miller join ed Tom m y Hicks as fir.st- tinie winners, each taking the 20-lap Sportsman races. Ricky Miller Gregg, who has led the Coors Series standings all year, finished sixth and 13th to beat .second place Hill Wilder for the championship by nine points, 2l.‘)-20f). Miller hatl been planted in third place most of the season but finish ed fourth wilh IW points. Third placc went to Mark Knoll, who had 197. Miller had his most successful season racing at Bowman Gray, starting 17 races and finishing in llic lop five seven timc.s. He had 12 top 10 finishes and won SI ,660, sixth in that category. The Sportsman division produc ed the most winners (10) than any other division. Gregg and Knott B o w m a n G r a y had three wins apiece. Other Whiners Philip Smith, Barry I-dwards and Dean Ward joined Gregg as 1У8У champions of Bowman Gray Stadium stock car racing. Smith, of Kemersville. took his .second straight Winston Racing Series crown for the featured N A SC A R Modified Division by leading all the way Saturday in the Goody’s 150 — the main event of the final night of the 4 1 si season al llie stadium . Smilh finished with a .“ifi-poinl bulge in the standings over eight- time winner Ralph Brinkley of Lexington, whose involvement in a first-lap tangle dropped him two laps off Ihe pace and left him eighth in the race's final order. Johnny Johnson ofWinslon-Salcni was se cond and Mt. A iry's Frank Flem ing was third. lidwards, of King, took the Frceman-McCreary Scries title by finishing ninlh in the Street Stock Division. Dwighi Moser won his first race Saturday. A fourth place fini.sh by Todd Hunt left him only six points behind the championship lolal. He could have won wilh a se cond placc finish. The closest margin for a title was in the swan song for the quartcr- milc a.sphall track’.s Blunderbust Division. Ward, of Winston- Salem, finished sixth in the 15-Iap race Saturday and preserved the championship by a four-point margin over Pinnacle's William Newman — who finished fifth Saturday. Had he finished fourth, he would have been the champ. Jeff Garrison of the Arcadia community in northern Davidson County, registered a third straight victory in that race — the stadium’s last in the 14-ycar old division for novice drivers in the old model “ luxury” cars. It is to be replac ed next year by a new division for four-cylinder compact sedans.' The biggest winner Saturday night was a fan, Diane Brown of Southmont. In a drawing from chances given lo female guests at Uidie.s Night during the season, she won an air-conditioned 1989 Ford Festiva in a giveaway sponsored by Hardee’s restaurants and radio sta tion W TQ R of Winston-Salem. Seven Races At Concord ,' Concord Motor Speedway will host seven more weeks of racing, including the Sept. 15-16 and Oct. 6-7 “ Big 10” Series runs before closing the weekly programs in Oc- . tober. The final two events will be ;. the daytime “ Big 10” features I: Nov. 4-5 and after a two-week r b'reak, Nov. 25-26. ] ; Concord ; ; “ Phillip Morris U SA Employee ■; Night” for employees and family meiiibers of the Cabarriis County Tiiianufacturing center, is Sept. 9. ' » With 1.690 employees, the com- ' pany is one ofthe county’s largest Г employers. The special event is one • ^ of several planned during the re- Q irainder of the season involving ; ‘ Ib ^ ^ u sin e sK s: у . { JJiThe following race car drivers ’are leading their points standings at Concord; , • Jack Sprague is leading Fred- i i^ Q u e iy infte liate Model Sport- - sm an,'402-328. He has already rwon $24,995. S lo tK e ts 'w in races Craig : ^ and Brian, each took a furst place Citt last week’s Tanglewood BMX I'flices. Racing in the, 10-year old^ ^ b D^innen clau;'; Craig: edged . u,Steven. Menninger for v tlie top ' -spot. I'Inrthe. llryear old division, r p Brian claimed first by outdistan- Winnien of the day’s other <b>egijmn ‘rm s included: (4-5 >)«arcM) Christopher BanK : ’’ and CaseyMatthews-second, :• !(»ix-year old) Nathan Gopp-first Jared Shutt-second, (seven- old). Amick Hom-first and 'Jonathan Clendenon-second, <eight-year old) Michael Hansen- '¿№stand Nicholas Dawson- .»k^hd, (nine-year old) Brandon i&ntely-first and Will Vemon- ’ tiwcohd, (12-year old) Aaron v^pawson-first and Chris ::-Whitaker-second, (13-year old) :>Benji Willis-first and Terry —-':puncan-second, (14-year old) Jamie Kiser-flrst and Brad '"Francis-second, ct In the novice races, Ben Wood j;^ k first in the seven-year old class and was followed by Joseph j . Brooks. j; Other novice winners were: ' •.(13-year old) Clay McCue-first j ;and Joe Best-second, (eight-year ■old) Zachary Adams-first and ;:Jeremy Sink-second, (15 and vover) Junior Phillips-first and ; Travis Whitt-second. In the only novice/expert race held, Daniel Burnell and Michael Matthews finished first and se- : cond respectively in the lO-ycar ;;old division. ; David Howell won the day’s ;.only expert race by defeating ; Justin Jerman in the eight and •: nine-year old class. C A R O L I N A T I R E 3 Days Only! Sale Ends Saturday! Y a rd S a le ! END OF SEASON AND END OF MODEL YEAR CLEARANCE! HURRY FOR BEST SELECTION! MANY ONE-OF-A-KIND SPECIALS! Roam A lp C om llilonepg* т м ш и ш ш ш а ш м ОЫлллтй ЛШ ЛтштЫШш Ю г С Ш Ш т п п ш й к М 10,000 вти AS LOW AS Е и г Ш УНеииии* M M W C It f f f M í/ S f t c M S a t ì m o e п Ш п Im m tB ry l EXAMPLES: IMODEL1428 UPRIGHT WITH 6 PC. TOOL KIT. 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C A R O U N A Л R E Store Hours: M f 7 30 6 00 PM SAT 7 30 5 00 PM Division of Brad Ragan, Inc.. _______ 9 6 2 YADKINVIILE RO. MOCKSVILLE, N.C. 634-6115 ■■ We do our own financing! Uplo : S2S00. Ho money down. 90 atyt uiM , as cash! Or, terms up to 36 moaHa. : - Applicalions processed locally with minim»l • ‘ delay. See store lor delails. ;iO B -D A V IE COUNTY ENTHUPRISK UlXOKl). THURSDAV, AiiB- 24. 1989 DAVIE PARTS O v e r 1 M illio n P a rts In S to c ic № ^ * » i ^ E F U N ^ R 0 ir M 0 T 0 R C B )tf^ 7^A^' A A; TMt Bonus Rtfund Must Be Clipped Out And Sent With Regular Refund Offer iBONUS "REFUND” OFFERi Motorcraft YO U GET A « 1 0 ° ° REFU N D o n M o t o r c r a ft TESTED TOUCH BATTERIES r MOTORCRAFT BONUS REFUND OFFER =■ « 00 Btluno on UMati»« TMtM Tootll Plus amKy. lo Hximt KW ■,„atev lou^uriusamier/. iOWM»»WUf ■fel«fidtoSi0 00dipwlarwjajtachihiicwtiric#ietoth9MoiOftr*ftfWufidOur sal# Price.................................................. I iv*lab|« in Jh* »ore. Subjwt 10 tefms prinl«d on tftt MotorerHf R#. 5 ■ Rtfudd...............................-3.00 !»onu« MUMti Refund......................................-$5.00 I ¿So/iT »«ttfY »fund Hn <^wtiiw, | M «fa m Ih M «■ M MlYour Final Cost After Refunds •____________________________________I 4 0 M o n th As Low As <27.69 «37.69 O ur Low Price Ta x — 5.00 Mail-In Refund ' f 5.00 Bonus Refund : V i < f From Motorcraift K 5 0 M o n th As Low As <33.29 M 3.29 O ur Low Price -i- Ta x 5.00 Mail-in Refund — 5.00 Bonus Refund From ^Motorcraft ^1.„ .Offer Good August 16 Thru August 31, 1989 M o n th As Low As <38.89 «46.89 O ur Low PHce -i- Ta x — 5.00 Maii-in Refund •» 5.00 ^ h u s Refund I From Motorcraft (PRICES DO NOT INCLUDE TAX) E X C E E D S T H E N E E D Clip & Save Newspaper . Coupon For Bonus MalHn Refund And Ask For Regular Mail-In Refund At Time of Purchase I DAVIE AUTO PARTS Co. 191 Wilkesboro St. M achine Shop 7 0 4 -6 34 -21 5 5 Parts Dept. 7 04 -6 3 4 -2 1 5 1 Tire Dept. 7 0 4 -6 3 4 -51 2 9 Moclcsville, K.C. DAVIK COUNTV ENTKRI’RISK UKCORD, TIlUKSDAY, Aiik- 24, I989^ld feature F ly in g ? Y o u M a y B e S it t in g O n P a r t O f M o c k s v ille I Employes at Southeastern Sewing Services, which rhake I airplane seat covers and fire retardant covers, pride themselves on quality. • Photos by James Barringer By Karen Jarvis Davie County Enlerprise-Record They pride themselves on quality, not quantity. Southeastern Sewing Services Inc., which makes airplane seal covers and fire retardant covers which go inside the seat, has been in business for three years. “ W c provide seats for a ma jority of major airlines,” said co owners Donnie Keller and Jerry Swicegood. Keller said there is not a lot of competition. “ There is some, but no one in this immediate area.” Keller said every seat cover is unique. “ There are at least 200 dif ferent kinds of patterns for .seats,” he said. “ M ost airlines will send the material they want made.” Keller said the material is first outlined with the pattern, then the cutter cuts the material. “ There’s no such thing as a standard seat,” he said. The material then goes to one of three sewing operators who put an overlocking edge on it that keeps it from raveling. Assembly work is next. “ Each operator has different things they do,” said Keller. “ One will put in Velcro and one will do something else.” Swicegood said there is a big need for fire blocking covers in the airplane business. “ After the D C-10 crash they claimed a lot survived because of the fire retardant seat,” he said. Keller, who has 15 years ex perience, said in 1985 the federal goverment passed a regulation re quiring all airplane seats be made fire retardant. “ There was a need for federal regulation,” hesaid. “ Afterthe plane crash in 1985 a lot of peo ple were trapped and their deaths were attributed to fiimes given off by the seats.” Southeastern Sewing Services, located behind the Mocksville- Davie Chamber of Commerce, is a Sub-S Corporation that started out with three employees. It has 34 now. “ W e have a potential growth of 50,” said Swicegood. “ There is no production and its hourly work. “ W e like to consider our in dustry a step more in sewing ex pertise than regular sewing plants,” he said. Keller said the quality of the people is exceptional. “ Our growth is due to quality of the work we do and goes back to the quality of the people,” he said. J Cojownera Donnie KeiWr and Jerry Swicegood discuss plans for the company Employee Bob Lyerly prepares to cut material for airplane seats Material lines the floors al Southeastern Sewing Services. Lorraine Seamon and Darnell Latham examine the finished product If 2C-UAVIIi COUNTV UN I HKl’KISK KKCOKI), I IIUKSDAV. Лиц. 24. IVSV Social Mrs. Christopher Taylor Evans ...was Melissa Lynn Hendrix H endrix-Evans Couple M arried A ug. 19 Mclissii l,ynn Hciulrix orRinilc 2. Mocksville. beciiine the bi iile of Christopher Tiiylor IJvrins orUoiile 2, Mocksville. on Sutiirilay. Aug. I'J. at Oak Grove United Methodist Church. The Rev. Donald Funder burk olTiciated at Ihe 2 p.m. ceremony. A program of wedding music was presented by Bill Rainey, organist, and Marly Nichols, soloist. The bride was given in marriage hy her lather, Robert Hendri.x. She wore a fornial-lenglh gown ol'Chantilly lace over bridal satin, featuring a wedding band neckline and a ruffled Chanlilly lace sleeve edged in satin ribbon. The basque waistline was ac cented by a dropped cummerbund of satin with a skirl of cascading ruffles flowing into a chapel-length train. To complete the ensemble, .she chose a floral headpiece of silk flowers with a pouffed fingertip veil of white bridal illusion. She carried a boiuiuel of roses, carna tions. baby's breath and greenery. Maid of honor was Miss Jennifer Allen, cousin of the bride. Bridesmaid was Debbie fivans. sister of Ihc groom. Miss Jessica Allen of Mocksville. cousin of Ihe bride, was llower girl. The groom’s father, Richard Evans of Advancc, .served as best man. Groomsmen were Dean Allen of Mocksville, coii.sin of Ihc bride; and James Harris of Winston-Salem, cousin of ihc groom. Acolytes were Johnny Hendrix of Mocksvillc, uncle of ihe bride, and Bobby Goins of Mocksville, cousin of Ihe bride. Ring bearer was Jason Atkins of Winslon-Salem, cousin of ihe groom. M iss Julie Dillon of Salisbury, cousin of Ihe bride, altended Ihe guesl regislcr. W edding program s were dislribuled by Miss Jennifer Camp bell of Mocksville, cousin of Ihe bride. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hendrix of Route 2. Mocksville. She attended Davic High School. She is employed by Sara Lee Knit Products in Advancc. The groom is the son of Mrs. M ary Evans o f Roule 2, Mocksville and Richard Evans of Roule I, Advance. He is a graduate of Davie High School. He is employed by the North Carolina Department of Transporlalion. Following a wedding trip to Asheville, ihe couple will make Ihcir home on Roule 2, Mocksville. The wedding was direcled by Mrs. Rulh Hockaday. Rcccption Immedialely following the ceremony, a wedding reception was held in the fellowship hall. Guesls were greeted by Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie Allen, cousins of the bride. Refreshmenls of wedding cake, finger sandwiches, fruit. and vegetable trays, nuts and punch were served by Mrs. Doris Goins, Mrs. Peggy Dillon, Mrs. Linda Harris and Mrs. Martha Procter. Rehearsal Dinner On Friday, Aug. 18, the groomis parents hosted a rehearsal dinner in the fellowship hall. The wedding party and guests were served baked ham, potato salad, green beans and corn, .slaw, hot rolls, cake, pie and tea., TJie bride and groom chose this time, to present gifts to their bridesmaids and groomsmen. Shower ; ■: On Sunday, July 30, the bridis was honored at a miscellaneous bridal shower at Oak Grove United Methodist Church fellowship hall. , Approximately 75 attended. ; „t;| Couple Is M arried A t B rea d O f Life C hurch On A ug. 18 • ' Frltesche-Trexler {Erjiga^!^ent Announced Mr! and Mn. R ( ^ Fntesche of Rockwell announce the engage ment of their daughter, Katherine Paula, to Ira W. Trexler, son of Mr. ^^M rs.'EkM y E. Trexler of Mocksville. The bride^lectI is a'>graduate of Bayport-Blue Pt. High School, N.Y., and is a graduate of Alfred University, N.Y. She is employed at Rockwell Farms Greenhouse. . The bridegroom-elect is a graduate of Davie High School and Pied mont Aerospace Institute. He is employed as a draftsman at Power Curbers Inc. ) The wedding is planned for October at North Main Baptist Church : in Salisbury. Angela Ann Davis and Donald Wayne Sowers were united in mar riage Friday, Aug. 18, at Bread of Life Baptist Church in Mocksvillc with the Rev. Phil Kitchin of ficiating the double-ring ccremony. A program of wedding music was presented by M iss Cindy Whitaker of Mocksville. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Larry Davis of Route 8, Mocksvillc. She attended Davic H igh .School and is em ployed by Sara Lee K nit Produets. The brid e's grandparenls are M r. and Mrs. Ted Davis of Advancc, Mrs. Inez Troutman of Mocksville and the late Lester Troutman. The groom is the son of Thomas F. Sowers of Troutman and Ms. Brenda Bullins of Mooresville. He is a 1988 graduate of South Iredell High School and is serving in the U.S. Air Force. The groom’s grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Baxter Brown of Troutman, Mrs. Mildred Sowers of Statesville and the late Johnny Sowers. The bride, given in marriage by her parents and cscortcd by her father, wore a floor-lengih gown of white satin. The fitted bodice and sleeves were embroidered with flowers and pearls. She carried a lace-trimmed bouquet of pink and white roses, carnations and tiger lilies. Mrs. Janice Cobb of Salisbury, cousin of the bride, was her matron of honor. Bridesmaids were Mrs. Teresa Nance, M iss Shannon Davis, both cousins of the bride; and Miss Melissa Bullins, sister of the groom. Miss Pam Keaton of Mocksville was train bearer and M iss Brandi Reavis was flower girl. Baxter Brown, grandfather of the groom, was best man. Ushers were Steve, Chris and Ken Davis, brothers of the bride; along with Preston Neely, cousin of the bride. Nathan Reavis of Mocksville was ring bearer. Mrs. Faye Keaton kept the guest register. Mrs. Kay Keaton was w cdtling director. R eception A rc cc p tio n I'ollow ’in g ihc ccremony featured a threc-tiercd white wedding cake with pink roses. Refreshments of mints, nuts, pickles, chips and punch were also served. Bridal Party The bride was given a household bridal shower by her grandmother, Mrs. Irene Davis on Aug. 11. After a honeymoon in the moun tains, the couple will make their home in Abelinc, Texas. .Squire Boone Plaza i ^ i i S h o e S h o w _ G irls & Ladies Hours: Mon-Sal, 10 • 9; Sun. 1 ■ 6 p.m. Mrs. Donald Wayne Sowers ... was Angela Ann Davis S u c c e s s S t o r i e s b e g i n a t D C C C . Henry Mlckmi Candy Hamlin D A V ID S O N C O U N T Y C o m m u n ity C o lle ge Locatcd halfway Iwtwccii Lc.xiuj’tun ami Thomasville oil lliisiiii'ss Loop 1-S5 P. O . B o x 1287, L e x in g to n , N o rlh C n ro lin a 27293-1287 (7 0 4 )2 4 9 -8 1 8 6 • (9 19)475 -71 81 An Eqvjfll Opportunily Ailinn.nivi* Aciion Instituiion ■ e n iy M ic k e n s e a rn e d h is h ig h s c h o o l d ip lo m a , D e n n is S n y d e r com p le te d a c o lle g e t ra n s fe r p r o g ra m that led to a four* year degree a n d a t e a c h in g career. C a n d y H a m lin le a rn e d h ig h -le v e l s k ills that le d to a m a n a ge m e n t p o s i tion. Success stories like these—thou sands of them—be gin at Davidson County Community College each year. Start your own suc cess story al DCCC. Contact our Admis sions Office today. DAVIl' COI N ГУ KN TIOUI’KIHK KIClOm), I IIUUSDAN . Auk. 24, 1989-3C Cline-Burks M Couple To Marry : j Mr. and Mrs. Gary W. Cline of Route 1, Mocksville, announce •' -. Ihe engagement of their daughter, Stephanie Kristine Cline, to Paul O -' Adrian Burks, son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Burks of Shumaker Drive, C-.Statesville. i ; ^'-- v 'M iss Cline is a 1986 graduate of Davie High School and is employed Jockey Int. of Cooleemee in the Quality Control Department. Burks I - a 1984 graduate of North Iredell High School. He served four years the U.S. Marine Corps and is employed by the Iredell County ,S5-Siherifrs Dept, ; :i;~-"--The wedding is planned for Sept. 23 at the First Baptist Church Mocksville at 6'p.m. ~ i Mrs. Benny Gorc(on Walsh ... was Donna Gail Ader C o u p le S p e a k s V o w s A u g . 1 9 ; Donna Gail Ader and Benny Gordon Walsh were married on Aug. 19 at 9 p.m. by the Rev. Bill Nicholson of Hiddenite. The wedding was held in the bride's mother’s back yard. The yard was lined with {lowers and trees. As the music began, the bride and her groom began their new life down a pathway designed wilh Tahiti torches. This path led them to a bamboo gazebo where the minister was wailiTig to perform the ceremony. Beside the minister was the bride's son. William Paul Center To Sell Barbecue Piirk harlicciie will be sold all day on Friday. Sept, 8 and on Saturday, Sept. 9 al Ihc Cenler Conimunity Building as part of the Annual Cenler Fair and Barbecue. The Cenler Coinmuiiiiy Building Is Incaled west of Mocksvillo on U.S. f)4 at 1-40. Barbecue will be available begin ning al 10 a.m. on Friday and Saturday. Orders will be accepted for .sandwiches, trays, take-out meal boxes, hot dogs, french fries, hush puppies and soft drinks. Fair books arc available at the Regi.ster of Deeds office in the Davie Counly Courthouse or in the Agricultural Extension Service of fice in the County Office Building and al.so from members of llie Cenler Comnuiniiy Developmenl Association. Prizes lor fair enlrics will be ribbons am! cash that has been conlribiiletl by local in- duslries, businesses and inilividuals who are inleresled in a local fair. Exhibition space will be available for non-profil organiza tions. There will he a SIO fee charged for those exhibilors whose purpose is lo make a profit. The Cenler Fair and Barbecue is sponsored by the Center Volunleer Fire Departmenl and Ihe Center Conimunity Development As.socia- lion. All proceeds go lo these organizations to be used for com munity iniprovement projects. B ro c k s G a th e r F o r Fa m ily R e u n io n The descendants of Nathaniel Brock gathered in a reunion Aug. 19-20. Relatives attended from 11 states; North and South Carolina, Virginia, Georgia, Tennessee, Mississippi, Texas, Pennsylvania, Connecticut and Minnesota. Others from as far away as Washington state, California and Arizona sent their regrets. A total of 104 people attended the banquet at the Clemmons Holi day Inn Saturday evening while the children watched E.T. and até pizza. Marjorie Scholtes of Charlotte, granddaughter of James Nathaniel Brock, was recognized as the senior guest present. She celebrated her lOOth birthday Aug. 1. Walter Brock, 91, drove from White Oak, Texas, to attend with his wife Mary. A lso in attendance were Margaret Brock, 89. and Sue Brock, 84, wife of J. Hugh Brock, ‘Tfc n)avie ‘Dance íícadmy The Studio of Performing Students Of All Farmington Road, Mocksville & Advance Registration August 28, 29 & 30, 1989 6:00 p.m. - 7:30 p.m. • A c t , S i n g A n d D a n c e • • T a p • B a l l e t • • J a z z • M o d e l i n g • • B e a u t y P a g e a n t s • Learn How To Audition Special Tiny Tot Worl( Ages A Special Welcome To Shelly Plou, To Our Dance Facility Call (919) 998-8315 Or (919) 998-3473 Ader, 5. Paul was wailing lo pre sent the bride and groom wilh their wedding rings. The bride's home is in Advance where the wcilding look place. 'file groom, .son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Walsh of Clemimms, is living in Dobson. Following the honeymoon in ihe Pocono Mountains, Pa., the new couple will make iheir home in Dobson. Reception A reception was held in Ihe cou ple's honor follow ing llie wedding. B.J. Graham, Professional Photography Hi. 4, IÎ0.4 2.ï/\ (H ivy. SOI) Ailv.iiH4'. N.C, nULuj S,..aJl.l ^‘iii yin,I n.,U j IU „,h X Our s u ., Or U„,r Jl,... ЛКо, Raeive A Complimentary M.ike-Ovcr Uy .\ I’rniessiim.il Mary K,iy licauly Consullanl Honic; (919) 998-7674 Studio: (919) 765-4625 both of Farmington. Each family group was introduced and explain ed their relationship to Nathaniel. More than 150 attended the special Brock church service at the Farmington Methodist Church. The service was conducted by John Brock of Stamford, Conn., assisted by Pasior Bob Burnett, Bill Brock (reader), Margaret Jo Brock (soloist), and Gene James (pianist). Ushers were Danny Allen, Frank Brock, Joe Brock and Neil Brock. After the service a covcred dish meal was served on the grounds. M iss Norma Furches, 88, great- granddaughter of William Britton Brock, attended the service. Mementos including pictures, letters, documents and even a coat of arms were displayed at both the banquet and church service. The pictures in particular generated many discussions about relation ships of those in attendance. Infor mation about the various family groups was exchanged. G r e e n e - D a w s o n W e d d in g J a n . 6 Mr. and Mrs. Bobby G. Greene of Route 7, Mocksville, announce; the engagement of their daughter, Lisa DiAnne, to Roy Dennisv Dawson, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Roy D. Dawson of Pfafftown. " M iss Greene is a graduate of Salisbury Business College and works for Sports Marketing Enterprises, Inc. in Winston-Salem. Dawson is a graduate of Forsyth Technical College and also works; for Sports Marketing Enterprises, Inc. in Winston-Salem. The wedding will be Jan. 6, 1990, at the Tanglewood Club House- Ballroom in Clemmons. . ! s iS s m A U G U S T . l E W E L R Y C L E A R A N C E ,UP mm IM Л Х / TO 7 5 %O f f SUM M ER B LO W O U T _______I •Sappiiire Anniversary;Ring;..14 Kt. VcBMrl (special Order That Wasn’t Picked Up) BELOW CX)ST^1 Sapphires wrap completely! around ring-stxe 6 •Pinl( Ruby & Diamond Ring...lO Kt. 12 Diamonds & 4 Rubies...Unusual. •Diamond Faslilon Ring In “V” Design M50 Retail.................................................................................' MORE, TOO MANY TO LIST - 5 Man’s -if Compare At •lSa-*200 3: iStyle8-Tii^:Cyo^ D ia m o n d E a rrin g s «9" ------------------- i W O T I I I I I $ 9 9 Ruby & Diamond! Q u a lity C o nce pt’s E a rrin g s ®3®® O ff W itli Tills Ad Tiiru August (ijoo Off Retail Pricc/Concepts Only) i .--i ашп D IA M O N , Next To W’jil-Marl 6.Ч-.П47 S'l.iin- И.....к- [’|.|/,1 m fdáá Xìl.D CAl.l.tlRY Downtown 634-5216 Main .SirM Neil 111 AfipK- I’hannacy -4 C -D A V IE COUNTY ENTEIU'RISK KKCOKI). TIIUKSDAV, Лиц. 24. m <) i C lin e -M o s e r W e d d in g S e p t. 3 0 Mr. and Mrs. Thomas E. Cline of Route 4. Advance, announce . Ihe engagement of Ihcir daughler, LeAnn Annette Cline, to Bobby Dale Moser, son of Bobby L. Moser and Jeanette W. Moser of : Winston-Salem. The wedding is planned for Sept. 30 al Belhlehem United Methodist Church in Advance. ‘ The brlde-elcct is a 1986 graduate of Davie High School. She i.s : employed by American General Finance as the Senior SCR, : Winston-Salem. Moser is a 1984 graduate of Parkland High School. He is employed . by Advance Stores Company as the assistant manager, Winslon-Salem. Sell Celebrates 92nd ¡■Jasper N. Sell of New ^ndon, Wise., celebrated his 92rid birthday Saturday, Aug. 12, with his brodters, Biyan ^11 and J.C. (Bud) Sell, and sister, ;;Mrs. > Velma Grant, iimd about 40 , ,^(eUtivesi at the home of Mr. wd -Bryan^’Sell on Noi^ Main Street, Mocksville. It had been 34 years since he had been back to Davie County. He commented on the many changes in Davie since his departure many years ago. As a young man, he settled in Wisconsin, and has made his home there all his life. He returned home after a week’s visit here. Sell left Davie County joining his brother, C.W. “ Red” Sell, a pro fessional clown, who was at that time with Spark’s Circus showing in Salisbury. C o u p le P la n s S e p t. 2 3 W e d d in g Melanie Diana Hellard, daughter of Johnnie Lee Hellard of Route 7, Mocksville and Marian L. Hall of Winston-Salem, and James Lewis Harris Jr., -son of James and Dot Harris of 3 18 Spring St., Mocksvillc announce their engagement. The wedding is planned for Sept. 23 at Turrentine Baptist Church, Mocksville at 2 p.m. The bride-elect is a 1985 graduate of Davie High School and is employed at Crown Wood Products. Her fiance is a 1983 Davie High School graduate and is employed at Crown Wood Products. Curry-Mason Couple To Marry Sandra Kay Curry of Winston-Salem and Robert Keith Mason of ? Route 3, Mocksville will be married Oct. 14 at Becks Baptist Church';' in Winston-Salem. ■ ' The bride-elect is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Paul F. Curry of Winston-Salem. She is a graduate of North Forsyth High School aiid, Í Forsyth Technical College. She is employed by Office W orks Coiri-; ; pu.ter Center in Winston-Salem. Her fiance is a graduate of Davie High School and Forsyth Technic^ College. He is self-employed as a licensed electrician for Mason Electric ^ in Mocksville. V - • BARGAINS! Read the classified ads in the Enterprise-Record. S E A R S ...A B R A N D -N A M E S T O M iU K E N E V E R B E FO R E ! INowj^'II fiiy bijj names like Kenmore, Hoover, Pioneer, RCA 1 "" ^ our catalogs and stores ^ \mmtm :s ¡NCW ¡VtaM S (й.атимп1) « w lìifin U A A . dKlr<cdty«f - NOW с $319.87*^ WMt34S I RCA coMole color TV. 26 inch. Features MTS STEREO and unified remote. (JL 48131) N O W $5 9 9 . 8 9 ’ (X 11101) lajndrypiir. M O W W W •.!ì!!!“.Ì?rNOW52«*- V a c u u m c l e a n e r s (WllilWVlO Í : 4A|MrilHP(JL2a4S0) .l<CW$Mt4S* • Kkranor* HMW-duty ciut upright «к. I Ñ^iléf-ts- Ì • Hoovtr ООЛУМШ* upright vact I 1М«1ро1М (М вЛатрпю1ог.; With itmtard vinyl tug (XM 7S0).............................$99.W1N№ <I*IUM ouw-lilirie Ing (F3»751)...................1П9Л1- ■toauMN 30.6 M . fl. fratHcM rofrlforalM’ MMt pan, пк» Vi (reth pan. Adjustable •M v e t. W u 1634.87 $17 Monthly- N O W $5 9 9 . 8 7 * (JNeeiSl) lo(malwmod«l(79lSl) 14 cu. ft. frMtlwi nfr)|««tar SUdt^tadiuttabl* ahetvei.(JL 60401) 114 Monthly"..................lNraW$4J4.e7* I*4U. ft. uiHiahl frMUr. M iM t M n . (X 29268) W u$38S »«M onthly"...................tsraw 5349.87* Sm m iM t аз-си. ft. d iM l h M W . Escluiiv* Food Care Monitor(X 19548) Was »505 ___ »l4Montt!ly"....................NOW $434.99* Zmhh "SytlMi 3" STHIO (wimI* (aior IV.26 inch with unified remote (AT 4940) ......................NOW $650.21* 46-lmh glant-Kraen, MTS STOIIOIVwilh doors. Jack pact«. Comb tiller. Universal remote control» cable, most VCRs, ; (JUKB54461).....................N0W $I999* ; Pioneer l 2S-vralt slerao lyitem.^ CD player; remote.{JL 95501).... iXI las-vratt slerao syilem.CD player; remote. : (JL9305).........................NOW $599.85' Owloweshptked 100-walt »lerso syttem. Dual cassette. S-band equalizer, (AT 92943)......................NOW $40643* ......NOW $799.89* I t e m s b e l o w can b e y o u r s f o r a s little a s $ 1 0 to $20 MONTHLY** cu. It.* Ito n m o ra m lcro w g v * «v a n . '11 poum settinga.Tumtalile (or even oooli- lng.(X8942S) NOW $159.87* 1.3 cu. ft. K anm o r* m k ro w a v * with Aocuwive Plus stirrer fan and turntable... our best cooWng system (AT 89245)..........................NOW $240* Kanmor* daluxa rangas. fully outofflaHc ovans. Electronic range control.Gas model (AT 719*1).....................NOW 5499.99* Electric model (AT 91881) Was »465...........................NOW 5435* Ullra-Wath bulIMn : dlihwaihar.; No system : cleans belterl . 3-levels, 5 cycles ■ (X 16785) NOW $399.99 3-level built-in dishwasher. Pots 'n pans cyde (JN 16485) Was $320.87 NOW $297.87* 'S h y in g Indudod to ttoia. Unlees stated otherwise, appiiances aie wtiite; colors eitra. Eleciric dryor requifM cord. Items are raadiy avaltobte as adver* tisod. **0n Seal (Charge D«lerred Payment Plan. AsKlor detaili; on delerted payment purchases, theie will bo a lir^nce charQe lor deleiial poiiod. Monthly payrnonts aia shoAn liom SearsChaige (or SeaisChaige PLUS ciedll plan lor items $699.99 or more). Actual pay ments depend on existing account balance. Amarica's b«st-sall!ng camcordar outfit. 3'lux to shoot In light as low as canalelight. (JL 53744) • exzoom lens plus telephoto lens and zoom mike (a $286.18 valuel)• Extras includehardshell case, adapters and battery NOW $954.88* oiMNnriEs RCA camcorder Fl .6 lens with 6x power zoom (F 53769) ..........NOW $999.99* VHS VCR with MTS stereoOn screen programming.^^^f.^B ovDnt_ timor. (JL 53472).. VHS VCR On-scroon programfning.l-i limer.lAl 533?/.)..........N( ear, 8 oven: )W $270.88* т м т H O M E a i > p l i a n c e s CAIAIOG e le c t r o n ic s s t o r e Ybyr mone/* worth and a wbtìU Iol moni SatUfactlon Guaranteed or Yoor Money Bacie 125 Depot St. STORE HOURS; Mon.-Fri. 9-5;30 5Т0ИЕ PHONE: 704-634-5988 Mocksville, N.C. 27028 Sal. 9-1: Sunday Closed CArAloGOROtRUNE; i BOO 36Ó 3000 Ben Franklin Better qualify for less! Mocksville, N.C. Open 9 to 9 Monday-Saturday Sunday 1 to 6 ( 7 0 4 ) 6 ^ ^ Prices Good Thra Aug. 29 - Feature Valuel Rad Haart WIntuk* Yam. ClKxne from a rainbow ol colors. 3W-oz. solida, 3-oz. ontlves, 2Vt-3-oz. shadad. 18 'DiiPortC«tM«k 9 7 ^ Orali Print Fabrlaa. 44/45-ln., widlh. 100% ooMon or polir/oolon caHcoa and floral*. Pra-cU (Mhion • . ». :Y<i: Reg. •Ill To»1»» Only Beautiful Parakeets Young Trainable birds 8 . 8 8 . Finches 3.99 Ea. SPECIAL! Free Blocking!! On Needlework With Purchase Of Custom Frame W e P a c k A n d B y U.R .S. S H I|9 Cotton Jersey Gloves. 8-oz. Knit wrists. Brown. Men's, ladies' and boy's sizes. 12 97«i GRUMBACHER Hyplair Acrylic Artist Paints Reg. Price And Stretch Canvas All Sizes 20% SlaeUng Craiaa. Sioraga craiaa Idaal tor tionia or ottica. Almond:, finish or iwadgawood Ыиа. 2 .9 7 KItcfian Towafs. 1Sx25-fn. fringed printed velour. 100% cotton. Your choice ol assorted patterns. I7 9 7 Í DAVIK COUNTY KNTKKI'KISK KKCORD. ITIUKSDAY, Aui-. 24, 1989-SC Com m unity College Is Offering C la sse s t o D avie R esid en ts '■ Davidson Coumy Community ■College will offer Ihc following ¡continuing education clysscs in ¡Davie Counly beginning Sept. 5. ¡6 and 8. ¡ A registration fee will be col- ;lected at the first class niceting. ; Persons 65 or older may enroll free :of charge. ;' To pre-register or obtain addi- , ¡tional infomtation, call Ihc Conti- ■hulng Education Office al (704) 634-2885. Decorativv Paiiitin(> will pro- ;vide instruction in working with acrylic paint and preparing an ob ject to be painted. No freehand work is required since patterns are traced onto objects which arc be ing painted. Participants will also make a color chart and review col- lors. (Tuesdays beginning Sepl. 5, 9 a.m.-noon [Section 201], Brock Center, 220 Cherry St., ■Mocksville; 6:30-9:30 p.m. [Sec tion 202], William R. Davie Elementary School, 14 se.ssions, S30 fee)Instrument Private Pilot Ground Scliool provides the classroom training designed to assist the student-pilot or pilot with the necessary aeronautical knowledge to prepare for the FAA Instrument Pilot written test. Per sons will benefit from this course more if they have completed the Private Pilot Ground School class. (Ttiesdays and Thursdays beginn ing Sept. 5, 6:30-9 p.m.; North Davie Jr. High School, Farmington Road, Mocksville; 16 sessions, $15 fee) Lap Quilting will familiarize participants with a process that combines small fabric pieces to fdm individual blocks or squares which can then be quilted and join ed to form a quilt or adapted to i make items such as pillows, place 'iiiits, tote bags, or wall hangings. '-This process eliminates the need :Yor quilting frames, thereby mak- iing, the process less cumbersome {tuid confining than traditional ''qiiilting. (Tuesdays beginning •|Sept. 5, 9 a.m.-noon; Brock Center, Mock.sville; 14 se.ssions, , Embroidery' wiU' tcacH . ^Tticipants how to punch em- •Vroidery to make decorative . pillows, pictures, tote bags, hand- r)wgs, and clothing. This type of l^te^ework is fun, easy to ieam, J goes faster than other forms of V^jM^ework. Acrylic yam and I f^ ia l needles will be available for ¡^rehase at the first class session. Woman Has iOOth B ’Day V ? Annie L. Alexander celebrated Ш )iItlкlay Saturday, Aug. lome of her son. Buddy , on Center Street in I Jipooleemee. ' ~^Also attending were Buddy's [wife; Chick, and their son, Mike; ■his brother, Roy, and his wife. ^Margaret; and his sister-in-law, tQot Pierce, and her husband, ilteymond. ^.'¡ Mrs. Alexander, a resident of umn Care of Mocksville, was (Tuesdays beginning Sept. 5. 1-3 p.m.. Brock Centcr, Mdcksvillc. ()-У p.m.. 13 sessions. $25 Гее; Tuesdays beginning Scpl. .“i. О-У p.m.; .Siiulli Davie .Ir. High Scliool. Mocksvillc. 4 .sessions. •S13 Ice) Ceriiniics ¡ind 14'Ciin I'iuiirines will provide instriiction in Ihe pro per tcclmiques for cleaning and preparing greenware for firing, r'arlicipanls will learn hmv to paini and add individual detail work to Cinislied projects. Each participant will have the oppnrlunity lo com plete several figurines and ceramic items. (Wednesdays lieginning Sepl. 6. 8:30-11:30 a.m.. Brock Center. Mocksville; 14 sessions. S3I) fee) Private Pilot Cround SchnnI is ilesigncd lo Ctilllll the ret|iiircincms I'or ground .school ccrlillealion I’or actual beliind-the-whccl llight training. The .“iO-liour instruction includes preparation for the l-AA Private Pilot cxaniination, li is designed to train the suideni in a safe and cfllcient manner, In.stnic- lldti Inlcgraic.s acatlcniic scipporl materials with practical ¡light lessons, (M ondays and Wednesdays beginning Sept, 6, (r.M)-') p,in,: North Davie Jr, High School, 20 sessions. $1.5 tee) Beginning Typing will provide participants experience in using the Ij pcwriler kcyhuaril. Topics lo he covered will include fiunrcs and ,specjal characters, skillful proof reading. correct forms of spacing, puncluation. syllabication, and sentence siriiclurc. Students will also learn how to placc business letters on a page and how to center titles. (Mondays and Wednesdays beginning Sepl. 6. 6-8 p.m., Davie High School. 22 ,sc,ssions, $15 fee) \\'ondcnrving will focus on the basic woodworking technii|ues us ing primarily Ihe tools everyone has around the home. Even begin ners with little or no experience in woodworking can learn to use power tools safely and more effec tively, Through brief lectures, demon,slralions, and extensive hands-on practice, participants will build conndencc and skill in mak ing their choice in wooden items. Pre-cut blocks of wood will be available at this class, (Fridays beginning Sept, 8. 8:30-11:30 a,m,, Brock Center, Mock.sville; 13 .se.ssions, S30 fee) Hnarried to the late C.W. ¿tie'xander. M«f>an Renee Benge, daughter of Kenny and Kalhy Benge, celebrated her first birthday un June 29, 1989, with a party at Showbiz Pizza Palace in North Myrtle Beach, S.C. Approx imately 20 guests enjoyed pi/zu, birthday cake and ice cream. Special guests were her grand parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Smith of Advance. Megan receiv ed many nice gifts from her friends and family. ■-л' у ш а ш Е Ш в This A A Is Oood W ednesilay, A ugust 83 T hru Tuesda:^ A ugust 89, 1989 ,A t A ll A rea Iiow es Foods Stores. Q u an tity R ig h ts R eserved. W e G lad ly A ccept Federal Food Stam ps A n d W IC Coupons. ASVBRTISED IT E M P O U C Y Each of these itenu 1« required to be readily available for sale in each ZiOwes Vooda Store except as spedfleally noted. If an advertised item la temporarily out of stook, we will offer you the choice of a comparable Item when available refleetlng the same savings or a Balncheck toSurohase the advertised item at the advertised price wrlthln 30 days, uanti^ rights are reserved. бС-D A V IE C O U N TY KN TKKl’KISK lUX'OKI), HHJKSDAY. Лик. 24. 1УК9 C o rn a tz e r N e w s Ity Dollic I’dlls Cornatzer Correspondent Aiming the bus load that travel ed lo Chci'okco with Mike Garner were Diittie anil Sharon Potts. Lena Wall. Uramlon Harpe. Mr. anti Mrs, l-iigene Heiinett. Cynthia .Summers anil ehililren. Nicholas anil l-rickii. Kathleen Potts ami Ruth Barney. On Friilay alterniuiii alter arrival, a guide gave the grinip a tour of the Reservation ami traveled several miles on Ihe Blue Ridge Parkway. Then they (iiurcil C e n te r N e w s an Indian village and later was treated lo a seal'ooil hiilTel wilh entertainment ol' an Indian dance show al diisk. 'I'hey alle/ided the outdoor drama. "U nto These H ills." On Saturilay iiioriiing Ihey toured the musetnn and Qualla arts ami cral'ts shop. George Boger visited his sister. Kuth Garner, who is a palicnl al Baptist Hospital where she had surgery on her I’ool. liva Potts and Lena Wall visiled Pearl Frye Sunday alicrnoon. Belcher-Kett Engagement Announced Mrs. William Boyd Belcher announces the engagement of her daughter, Dena Christy of Mount Pleasant, S.C., to Bryan Ernest Kett of Greensboro, formerly of Mount Pleasant. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Glenn Kelt of Mocksville. She is a graduate of Marlboro Academy in Bennettsville, S.C., and the Medical University of Soulh Carolina in Charleston, S.C., with a bachelor’s degree in nursing. He is a graduate of Davie High School in Mocksville and the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill with degrees in economics and industrial relations. \The wedding is planned for Nov. 18 in First United Methodist Church in Bennettsville, S.C. By Am y Mollcy Center Correspondent The community welcomes Mrs. Ruth Tutterow back home after her absence due to medical problems. She has been greatly missed and we’re sure she's glad lo be home. Pearline Seaford is back in For syth Memorial Hospital after be ing home for several days. We wish her a speedy recovery. Mrs. Ailene Dwiggins is in Davie Hospital. James Henry and Catherine Jones visited with Hattie Tutterow at (he N.C. Lutheran Home in Albemarle on Sunday afternoon. Mrs. Tutterow is a former Center resident. The Homemakers Club mel for supper ill Rafters in Mooresville last Tuesday nighl. Seventeen meiiibcrs were on hand for Ihc Ladies Night Out. John and Polly Seaford had a thoroughly entertaining time on Iheir recent vacation. They traveled 10 Nashville, Tenn. They visited Ihe home of the stars and sailed aboard the General Jackson. They also spent two fun-niled days al Dollywood in Pigeon Forge. We heard rumors of a picture of John and Dolly Parton. If anyone secs him be sure to ask him about it. The Godbey Road is closed in certain sections to all e.xccpt local traffic. Kemps Celebrate 50th ii Emily and Ramey F. Kemp celebrated their 50th wedding annivef-; sary Aug. 4 with a family dinner. ' The lio.st.s were their children, Iheir spouses and their grandchildreii:;. Ramey F. and Julia Kemp Jr. and their children, Ramey F. Kem'p> III, Michael, Brian and Melys.sa of Raleigh, and Gregg D, and - Carnielia Kemp of Chapel Hill. :.K: Kemp is a senii-retircd Mocksville chiropractor. Mrs. Kemp is Cv retired chiropractic receptionist. T H E W O R L D ’S B IG G E S T T O Y S T O R E ! Ш о с к з N e w s ll By Etbel jones r^.Mocks Corres|Mndent I. You are asked to be in prayer ^ (regarding- the upcoming revival ' scheduled for Sept. 17-20. As the ; ■ time draws nearer, your prayer.s for : - this special time in the life of our church aré requested. £,‘4 Homecoming is set for Sunday, J;'Sept. 24i Your pastor will be i; preaching for both the revival as well as A e homecoming. Mark -your calendars and let’s make every effort to be in attendance hen that most important lime ;; coiiies. ■ i 'i Joe Hughes celebrated his 12th ^^birthday Wednesday. Mr. and •: Mrs. Mike Hynian, Bryan Carter Michael Danner were his '^'^juests'at.Emerald Point.- ^5 Mrs. John ráetps spent Thurs- t day .with her .father, Sherrill Jlupaid, who is a patient in Forsyth ‘>^6spital after suffering á hean ','wittack.. ; \ M iss Sara Miller was confined to her home a few days last week with strep throat. . ; Mrs. Helen Myers spent last Mond.ny with Mr. and Mrs. Donald Myers of Salislniry. The United Methodist Women held their August meeting Monday evening in the church basement. Mrs. Helen Myers gave the pro gram on the “Ten Command ments.” S pci^o ^ ( ( \^ fio to ^ >iap Jvi 3 1 с ourt Square Moi-ksville. NC Ì 634-0158 The Selby collection offers you the best of everything... fabulous style, fashionable colors and superb comfort... all in a size and width to fit you perfectly. So whether your needs are dress, tailored, casual or sport...the choice is Selbyl FREE SHOE BAG! This sturdy 10-pair shoe bag, over a $30 value, is yours FREE when you purchase any pair of regular price Selby shoes. Good at participating retailers and while supplies last. THE COBBLER SHOP Squire Boone Plaza Hwy. 601 Mocksvillc, N.C. DAVIK Г()1'М Л' KNTI-.KI’UISK UKCOKI), IIIUUSDAV. Ли«. 24, 1УНУ-/и GRAND OPENING N e w T o w n e C e n t e r 1-40 To Clemmons Exit. Then South On Lewisville-Ciemmons Rd. " V \ J O I N T H E F E S T I V I T I E S S A T U R D A Y A U G U S T 2 6 , 1 9 8 9 ^ 1 1 : 3 0 a . m , t o 2 : 3 0 p . m . Refreshments — Prizes — Clowns — Balloons A t la s t, a n a r r a y o f s h o p p i n g c o n v e n i e n c e in t h e h e a r t o f C l e m m o n s ! N E V V T O V \ ^ N E C E N T E R w i t h m a j o r t e n a n t s o f R O S E ’S , L O W E ’S F O O D , A N D R E V C O p r o m i s e , t o b e t h e g r e a t c e n t e r y o u h a v e lo n g a w a i t e d . J o in u s t h is S a t u r d a y , a s w e c e l e b r a t e o u r G r a n d O p e n i n g . A ll t h e m e r c h a n t s w ill b e w a i t i n g t o s e r v e y o u . W h i l e h e r e , e n j o y r e f r e s h m e n t s , m u s i c , a n d d r a w i n g s f o r p r i z e s . B e t h ’ s H a l l m a r k (Next To Low e’s Foods) w •Register to win 20" Garfield Plusli Doll at 5:00 on August 26tli »Free stamp with purchase of each Andrew Brownsword Collection of English Cards •Fishbowl Drawings With Each Purchase 7 6 6 - 6 5 6 7 K & S N e w s & B o o ks C o u p o n (Next To Revco) s m O f f P aperbacks ^ 1 ® ® O f f H ard b a cks Good Through September New Towne Shopping Center, Clemmons Kerners Village shopping Center, Kernersville Centre Stage, Walkertown ' ' Parkway Plaza, Winston-Salem ■ V. Sherwood Plaza, Winston-Salem 1 on Hanes MaU Blvd., Winston-Salem YOGURT & TREAT SHOPPES Premium Ice Cream Fresh Baked Cookies Yogurt & Ice Cream Drinks And Specialties 766-6886 O p e n i n g S o o n ! T h e B e a u ty S h o p Total Fam ily H air Care A ppointm ents O r Drop-Ins Come Walk Tlirough Our Sli(ip Anti Meet Dorthy Hcyle - Our Manager --------------------------— — ¡■mil mг nun!!■■ ■! C l a s s i c O l d i e s Come Hear 93 Mix O n A u g u s t 2 6 t h A t The New Towne Center Grand Opening DJ’s Providing Music All Day! 9 3 M IX Classic OWics D is tin c tiv e C lo th in g F o r i n f a n t s t o P r e t e e n s L ines a s S e e n in: • B loom lngdales • Lord & Taylor • S aks Fitth Avenue ______________________* Unusual — ,^ - T /ie C ib tfiin g PaCace 2 5 % Г Ш -A С Ы Ы п п ’л B ou t/qu e “ U JiL I N ew T o w ne S h o p p in g C e n te r •2527 L ew isville'C tem m ons R d ., C le m m o n s ^ 766Ю 4П a d u a i c ^ ie ^ a n c e Burst A Balloon For Savings 5-25% Discoimt Join Us For Our r a n d O p e n in g A u g u s t 2 6 t h (919) 766-1452 Live Modeling In The Window Clothing Specialist For The Tall (8-22) Atid The Full Figured (14-37) Lady (Located Near Clothing Palace And The Lotus Pond) S r o E W A L K S A V IN G S Stop by for tremendous savings on “Sidewalk Items) all day, Saturday August 26th Mastercard, Visa, Discover, American Express G R A N D O P E N I N G R e e i s t r a t l o n F o r m N E W T O W N E C E N T E R Lewisville-Ciemmons Road, Clemmons 27012 Register on Saturday, Aug. 26,1989 wilh the NEW TOWNE CENTER merchants to be eligible lor the drawing of prizes’. Winners to be an nounced Aug. 26. You need nol be present lo win. No Purchase Neccessary. •Over *10,000 of prlxe> to be given awayl; Includti Patio Fur* niture, Shopping Spree, And Jewelry Compllmenti Of Don't Flat Jewelry. Free B a llo o n s F o r First 500 K id s ADDRESS PHONE _ — UrtVIEi Г 1858 SKKMIK lUNfRAt. (JiKfX10R5 130 years of scrvice 4 Locations Middlobriiok D r S Main S!, •Clemmons Winston-Salom ReynoWa Rd. S Mam SI. Winsion-Salem Lexmgion Davio Phono Na 99f13-)38________ J.P. GREEN MILLING CO., INC. Makers o( DAISY FLOUR We Custom Blend Depot Street Mpckevllle, N.C. 27028 Phone 634-2126 "'ME WAS A M IGHTY HUNTER BEFORE TH E LORD!'' NIMROD WAS A SON OP KUSH AND A GRANDSON OF WAM, ONE OF TOE -mREE SO N S OP NOAM. THE EVENTS OF HIS LIFE ARE RECORDED IN A SINGLE PASSAGE (SE N .10:SFP) WHICH, FROM THE CONCISENESS O F ITS LAN6UASE, LEAVES CONSIDERABLE UNCERT AINTY ABOUT HIS REIGN. ALL THAT W E KNOW OF NIMROD IS THAT HE VvAS ■'A M ISHTY HUNTER BEFORE THE LORD" AND A POTENT MONARCH, THE BESINNINSS OF W HOSE ORIGINAL KINGDOM EMBRACED BABEL, ERECH, ACCAD AND CALNEH, CITIES IN THE LAND OF 5HINAR. HE WAS SOMEWHAT OF A CONQEROR BECAUSE HIS KINGDOM KEPT ADVAN CING IN TERRITORY UNTIL IT MAD PROGRESSED INTO ASSYRIA, WHERE ME IS SAID TO HAVE FOUNDED TUB GREAT CITY OF NINEVEH) ANY OF HIS FUR1WER ACHIEVEMENTS ARE LOST IN TWE ANNALS OF TIM E, BUT W E STILL SPEA K OF A SKILLFUL HUNTER A S BEING A ''N IM R O D ''-SM A L L GLORY FOR ONE WHO WAS A ''MIGHTY EM PERO R MOCKSVILLE BUILDERS SUPPLY "Together We Do It Better" South Main 634-5915 Attend The Church 01 Your Choice John N. McDaniel & Sons Hwy. 801 S., mocksville 634-3531 FOSTER-RAUCH DRUG CO. W UkM boro StrM t Moetawlll*, N.C. 27 0» Phone 634-2141 CAUDELL LUMBER CO. 162 ShMk StrMt / Mociwvn«,N.C. ~ Phone 634-2167 Johnnie M. Tilley Pest Control Service •St г О т г в У м п ' Looellir Owned « Opartted •НмИммШ «ComnMieM •IndialiM . •liwtituUomI •ImpeeVon Upon R0i¡uésf MQStaVlII« . 634-SeOO Complements of Department Store North Miln StiMt MoctavNW S]Ui • SiujSiMty м а VadUnvUl* RMd ' ’ ИоекмМа ' ^______ M M 1 1B . SAVE THIS FOR YOUR SUNDAY SCHOOL SCRAPBOOK AMCMKYPrcOOMARANATHA CHRISTIAN ASSEM BLYHwy. 601 North Mocksville.'N.C. Rev. Curtis E. Wood ' Sunday School 9:4S am . Morning W onhip .10:4 5 a.m.' SvM ino Worship 7;00 p.m. ■ A m s TI ^ V j^ ^ B A P T iS T CHURCH M*rtc Hart, pasfof ,-Sunday SeryicM ' ' . Sunday Sehool 9:4S am .fytornino Worship 11:0 0 a.m.Evening Worship 6:00 p.m. W adnMday Bible Study 7:00 p.m.. — BEAR C I ^ K BAPTIST CHURCH Bear Croek Church Road North Of Mocksviilo flov. juiry Clonijai Sunday School f OREEN MEADOWS BAPTIST CHURCHHwy. 601. FarmingtonV ales W;)keraoo, pastor Sunday School 10:00 a.m. Worship Seniice tl:0 0 a .m .Evening Worship 7:30 p.m. Mornino Worship Wodnosday Dibio Sludv BLAISE BAPTIST CHURCH 10 00 il ri11 0(1 .1ft 7:00 p.fT Highway 60J NoiJrt al MO Rev. Glonn Sollors. pastor Sunday School Morning Worship Evening WorshipService 9:45 a.m. |};00 a.m. 7:30 p.m. 7:30 p.m. U FE BAPTIST CHAPEL_____ " Four Com ers Community, Hwy. 601 Phit Kitchln, pastor Sunday School Pioachlng Senrice - \HALN -------- 10:00 a.m._____ 11:00 a.m. FRIENDSHIP BAPTIST 10.00 a.m. 11:00 a.m. 7:00 p.m. 7:00 p.m. 10:00 e.m. 11:00 a.m. 7:00 p.m. 7:00 p.m. MARTIN HARDWARE & GENERAL MDSE. Fm * . OryOood«, OroMriMMMlFMlillnr DcpoiaitMt , МосктШ«, N.C. 27021 Phone 634-2128 CALAHAl CHURCHCatahain Road Rev. Carrol Jordan, pastor Sunday School Worship Service . r'^BWllrcitURCH Highway 601 South Rt. 7. BOK 92. Mocksville Jim Qryder. pastor Sunday School Worship Service Evening Worship W ednesday Service CCOAR C R K K BAPTIST Cedar Creek Church Road Ш О О .М . Worship Service ,2nd & 4th Sunday ^ 1:30 p.m. с н т д OUAPW OROVE BAPTIST CHURCH Chlnaquapin Church Road oil Hwy. 601 R evToarrell McConnell COMMUNITY BAPTIST CHURCH Qladstone BoedSunday Sehool 10:00 a.m. Worship Senrice 11:0 0 a.m.CORN ^TZER BAPTIST CHURCH Advance. N.C. DAVIE В А РЛ8Т CHURCH Fork. N.C. , Sunday School 9:45 a.m.Worship Seriilce 11:0 0 a.m. Evening Worship 7:00 p.m.Wednesday Service 7:00 p.m. О и ТС Н М М С М С Х BAPTIST CHURCH I ay 601 oft Hwy. 64 b a p t is t CHURCH . 8 Church Road David Qilbreath - .a y School 10:00 a.m.Worship Service 11:0 0 a.m. W ednesday Prayer Service 7:30 p.m. EO GEW odo BAPTIST CHURCH ' Highway 601 North Coohemee. N.C.Rev. D.C. Sullivan, pastor Sunday School 10:00 a.m. Sunday Worship 11.0 0 a.m.Sunday Evening Worship 7:00 p.m.W ednesday Service 7:00 p.m. FARMINGTON BAPTIST CHURCH i/W( WTWVHighway 60 u frO N ^SBEaton's Chi Rev. D avl' Sunday S W orship: Farmington Road Sunday School Worship Semico Youlh Training Union R R S T BAPTIST CHURCH N. Main Street W. Paul Riggs, pastor Sunday School Morning Worship Evening WorshipChurch Training Wednesday Bible Study FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH 10:00 a.m. 11:00 a m. 7:00 p.m. 9:45 am . 11:00 a.m. 7:00 p.m. 6:00 p.m. 7:00 p.m. Marginal Street. Cooleemee. N C. Sunday i _____ Worship Service Wednesday Service FORK BAPTIST CHURCH 6 miles east on Hwy. 64 Sunday School Worship Service Evening Worship GOSPEL BAPTIST CHURCH r^t. e. Mocksville Sunday School Worship Service Evening Worship Wednesc" “GREEN I_______Groen Hilt Road Rov. Graham Wooton, pastor Sunday School Worship Service Evening Worship Wodnosday Worship 9:45 a.m. tt;00 a.m. 7:00 p.m. 7 :15 p.m, 9 45 a.m. 11:00 a.m. 7:20 p.m. 10:00 a.m. 11:00 a m. 7:00 p.m. 7:00 pm , 9:4S a.m. 10:45 a m. 7:0Q p.m, 7:00 p.m) _______TJST TABERNACLEHighway 158 East Pastor; David Jordon Sunday School 9:45 a.m.Worship Service 10:45 a.m. EvengeliaHc 7:30 p.m.W ednesday Service 7:00 p.m. IJAM ES CROSSROADS BAPTIST CHURCH Kenneth Hyde, pastor Sunday School 9:45 a.m.Worship Serv.ice 11:0 0 o,m. Evening Worship 6:00 p.m.Wprtf>osdav Sprvico 7-Я0 p mjen u sA L E f.t B rtP T isr с и а п с я Илу со? ;io„ihSiifuliiy Scrii>ot tO.Oi) a tnWofsrii|) Sofvicu 11 00 n mEvoning Worship 7 riO p m W odoosdav Sorvico 7:30 p.m.NO CREEK PRIMITIVE BAPTIST CHURCH NO Creek Road oti Hwy. 64 . SHILOH BAPTIST CHURCH626 Depot St.. Mocksville Rev. A.O. Welker. PasiorSunday School 9:45 a.m. Worship Service 11:00 a.m. SMITH GROVE BAPTIST CHURCHHwy. 1S8 EastTRINITY BAPTIST CHURCH Rt. 4, Mocksville Darrell Cox, pastorSunday School 10:00 a.m. Worship Service 11:0 0 a.m. Evening Worship 7:00 p.m.W ednesday Sen/lce 7:00 p.m. ' TURRENTINE BAPTIST CHURCH Rl. 7. Mocksville Rev. Billy J. Sloop, pastor Sunday Sehool 9:45 a.m. Worship Sorvico 11:0 0 a,m.Evening Worship 6:30 p.m.W ednesday Prayer Meeting 7:00 p.m. VICTORY BAPTIST CHURCH Midway St., Cooleemee Shelby Harbour, pastor Sunday School 10:00 a.m.Worship Service 11:00 a m. Evening Worship 6:00 p,m.W ednesday AVVANAS 6:45 p.m. W ednesday Prayer Meeting 7:00 p.m. YADKIN VALLEY BAPTIST CHURCH Yadkin Vaney Road CATHQUC ST . FRANCIS OF A SSISI CHURCH Hwy. 601 NorthSunday Worship 10:00 a.m. CHURCH OP CHRISTCORINTH CHURCH OF CHRISTChaillo Harrison, jr .. minister Sunday Worship 1 1:00 a.m.Evening Worship 7:00 p.m. JERICHO CHURCH OF CHRIST Je lf Williams, Minister Sunday Bible Class 10:00 a m. Worship 1t:0 0 a mWorship 6:00 p.m. W ednesday Bible Study 7:30 p m. CNMICN OP QOO COOLEEMEE CHURCH OF GOD Cooleemee, NC Luther Chambers, pasior Sunday School 10:00 a.m.Morning Worship } J ;00 a. m. Evening Worship 6:00 p.m.W ednesday FTH 7:00 p.m.CLEMENT OROVE CHURCH OF GOD Hv^. 64 West I.W. »iamee, pastor Sabbath 10:00 a.m.Worship Service 1:00 p.m. Evening Worship B;00 p.m.Wednesday Service 6:00 p.m.MOCKSVILLE CHURCH OF GOD Dwight Durham, pasior Hwy. 64 East Sunday School 10:00 a.m.Worship Service 11:00 am . Evening Worship 7:00 p.m.W ednesday Sen/ice 7:00 p.m. EPISCOPAL COOLEEMEE EPISCOPAL CHURCH OF GOOD SHEPHERD Rev. Edwin P. Dailey Holy Euchrisi 9:30 a mFORK EPISCOPAL CHURCH OF THE ASCENSION Rov. Edwin P. Bailey HoiyEuchrist 11:15 am . ST . CLEMENT S EPISCOPAL CHURCH Meeiing at Vogler's Chapel Middlebrook Drive, Clemmons Rev. Joan Grimm Sunday School tO 00 a.m.Worship & Holy Communion 11:00 a.m. INTERDENOMINATIONAL MOCKSVILLE INTERDENOMINATIONAL CHURCHRov. Lindsay Walters, pasior Sunday School 9:45 a m.Mofning Worship 11:00 am . Youth Sorvico G 30 p m.Wodnosday Q<bte Study 7:00 p.m. INTItPAITH /UNIVilltALA SSEM BLY OF LIGHTB601 S. 284*4322 arry L. Cope, minister isl S 3rd Sundays 2:30 p.m.2nd Thursday 7:30 p.m. fsy 7:30 p.m. LUTNmANHOLV CRO SS LUTHERAN CHURCH ‘ Rev. John A. Johnson, pastor Hwy. 601 South. Mocksville.Sunday School 9:45 . m w orship Service ii:0 0 I'm . METHODISTA.I.I.E. ZION METHODIST CHUHCH(iOOM.liV!! Sl'l'Ml. MOCK'.Villi'ADVANCE UrJITED METHODIST CHURCH Aüv.iui;»,'. n COAILEY-S CHAPEL UNITED METHODIST BailQy's Chapel Road BETH EL UNITED METHODIST CHURCH Bethel Church Road BETHLEHEM UNITED METHODIST Redland Road oil Hwy. 156 EastCENTER UNITED MCTHODIST CHURCH Highway 64 WestDr. S.B . Warner. Pasior I5i a 2nd SundayChurch School 9:45 a.m. Worship Service 11:0 0 a.m.3rd & 4th Sunday Warship Service 9:45 a.m.Church School 10:45 am . 5th Sund Church £CHESTNUT OROVE METHODIST CHURCH Kailihryn W. Tart, pastor Í & 4ih Sunday2n dÄ . . . . Sunday School 10:00 a.m.Worship Service 1 1 :00 a.m. CONCORD UNrrEO METHODIST CHURCHCherry Hill Road Rey. John Deyion, ministerI8t & 3rd Sunday Worship Service 11:0 0 a.m.Sunday School • 10:00 am .2nd & 4ih Sunday Worship Service 10:00 a.m.Sunday School 11:0 0 a.m. 5th Sunday WorshipAllernate 10:00 A 11:0 0 am . COOLEEMEE UNITED METHODIST CHURCH Joseph W. Collins, pasior CP.RNATZER UNITED METHODIST CHURCHCornatzer ICornawer RoadDULIN METHODIST CHURCHAdvance, N.C. ELBAVILLE UNITED METHODIST CHURCH Hwy. 8 01, Advonco. N.C.FARMINGTON METHODIST CHURCH1st Sunday Sunday School 11:00 a,m. Worship Service 10:00 am .2nd & 4ih Sunday Sunday School 10:00 a.m.3rd Sunday Sunday School 10:00 a.m. Worship Service 11:00 a.m.FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH North Main Siroei. Mocksville Rev. Don Lloyd, pastor Sunday School 10:00 am .Worship Service ii:0 0 a.m. FULTON UNITED METHODIST CHURCH Hwy. SOI boiween Fork and Advance Rev, Kermil E. Shoal, pasior isl & 4ih Sunday Sunday School 11:00 a.m.Worship Service 9:45 a.m. 2nd. 3rd & 5lh SundaySunday School 9:45 am . Worship Service 110 0 a mHARDISON UNITED METHODIST CHURCHJencho Church Road LIBERTY UNITED METHODIST CHURCHGladstone Road tst & 3rd SundaySunday School 11:00 am .Worship Service 9:45 a m. 2nd & 4ih Sunday Sunday School 9:45 a.m.Worship Service 1 1 :00 a m. MAINVILLE A.M .E. ZION METHODIST CHURCHVaughn L. Adams, pasior Rl. 6. Bo* 37, Mocksviilo Sunday School 9:30 o.m.Worship Service 1 1 00 a mMOCKS UNITED METHODIST CHt^RCHAdvanco. N.C. MT. OLIVE METHODIST CHURCHRl. 5. Mocksville Isi. 2nd. & 3rd Sunday Sunday School to 00 a.m.Worship Service ii;0 0 o m.4lh Sunday Sunday School l i:00 a.m.Worship Sorvico to 00 a m NEW UNION UNfTEO METHOttST CHURCHHaywood B. Hyatt, pasiorSunday School . 10:00 a.m. Worship Sevice 11:00 a,m. O AK GRO V E UNITED METHODISTCHURCHHwy. 158 East SALEM UNITED METHODIST CHURCHDavie Aeademy Road Dr. S .B . Warner. Pastor Isl & ¿n a Sundays Worship Senrtee 10:00 am .■ Church School 11:00 a .m ..3rd & 4th Sundays ' Church School- 10:00 am .Worship Service 11:0 0 a.m. 5ih SundayChurch School 10:00 am .SMITH OROVE UNITED METHODIST -CH U RCH-----**Hwy MochsviII«n»>v G BwaiiTi. imsturint ft jrij Sun.ii.ySuiirtii)' ScliooJ n.OO a mWotsnip Sorvic« 10 00 n nv2nd. -itti & 5th Sunday Sunday School 10:00 a.m.Worship Service 11:0 0 a.m. . W ednesday Bible Study 7:00 p.m.UNION CHAPEL METHODIST CHURCH Kathryn U. Tart, pasior 1st. 3rd. S Sth Sunday Sunday School 10:00 a.m. %r£№ E.«ETH00,8T'cr.ji^' Advance. N.C. tst Sunday Sunday School 1 V.OO am .Worship Service 10:00 a.m.2nd, 3rd, & 4th Sunday Sunday School 10:00 a.m.Worship Service 11:0 0 a.m. ZION CH A PEL UNITED M ETHO DIST CHURCHRev. Haywood B. Hyall, pastor M fS B Y T tR fA NBIXBY PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Fork Church Road at Cornalier Road R. Shane Owens.pasior Sunday School 9:45 am . Worship Service 11:0 0 a.m.lat & 3rd W ednesday C O O lS ^ E PRESBYTERtAN CHUrS T ' 60 Watts Streel-Cooteemee Kenneth E. Pollock, Pasior Sunday School 9:45 am . Worship Service 11:0 0 a.m.Wed. • Prayer & Bible Study 7:30 p.m. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Leland A Richardson, minister Corner So. Main St. & Lexington Hviry. Sunday School . 10:00 am . Morning Worship 11:0 0 a.m . ,>SECOND PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH , 458 Pine St., Ivan W. Lowery, Pastor ' Sunday School « ;,9:30 a.m.Worship Service ^^-10:30 am . 2nd & 4th Sunday WggtgfMMLIBERTV W ESLEYAN CHURCH A.C. Clemen*, pastor M O CKSVILU w iM Y A N CHURCH Hospital SUeet, Mocksville David Rollins, Pastor . Sunday School 9:45 am .Worship 11:0 0 a.m.Sunday Evening Worship 6:00 p.m. W ednesday Worship 7:00 p.m. MOBAVIAN MACEDONIA MORAVIAN CHURCH Rev. E. Hampton Morgan. Jr.. pasior Hwy. 8 01. Farmington Sunday School 10:00 a.m. Worship Senrice 11:0 0 am . Evening Worship 7:30 p.m. Church Of Jesu a Christ Of Lattef Day SaintaB69 Hardison St.. MocksvilleSunday Meeiing 10 00 a.m. • 12 noon SEVINTM BAY AOVINTISTSEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST Milling Road Sid Mills, pasiorSabbaih School 9:30 a.m. Worship Sen/ice 11:0 0 a.m. PtN TICO ITAL H O LINIfSCLARKSVILLE PENTECOSTAL Liberty Church Road Rdv. Albert Gentle Sunday School Worship Service 10:00 a m. 11:00 a.m. Support The Merchants Who Bring You This Information —Attend The Church Of Your Choice— Worship Service n.wo a.m.MOCKSVILLE PENTECOSTAL HOLINESS Milling Road Rev. David J, Eagle, Pastor Sunday School JO.OO am .Worship Service 11:0 0 a.m.Evening Service 6:00 p.m. NEW CALVARY HOLINESS CHURCH Rt 7 Turreniino Church Road Mocksville. N C . 27028 Pasior Evanqelisl Charlene Lewis REDLAND PENTECOSTAL HOLINESSJam es Stowe, pasior ____ Sunday School 10:00 a.m.Worship Service 1 J 00 a.m. Evangelistic r.OO p.m.Wednesday Family Night 7:00 p.m. Eaton Funeral Home 328 North Main Street Mocksville, N.C. 27028 Phone 634-2148 DAVIE TRACTOR & IMPLEMENT CO, Ford Inarming Sales And Service New Holland Equipment Higtiway 601 South Mocksville, N.C. 27028 Phone 634-5969 When youre hi;ngry for a relaxing meat. H w y. 6 0 1 a M O M o c k sv ilte , N C P h o n e 6 3 4 -0 4 36 C.A. SEAFORD LUMBER CO. Jericho Roed Moek«vllle, N.C. 27028 Phone 634-5148 Complimenis of DAVIE COUNTY FARM-BUREAU 977 Yadkinville Romt Uockivflle, N .C. 634^207 SHEFFIELD LUMBER & PALLET CO. Rout* e, Box 1S3 Moetovflto, N.C. 2702t Phone 492-5565 jffFw'SB.TiÑc!’ In the Hillsdale Community Route 1 Advance, N.C. 27006 Phone 998-8193 FULLER WELDING & FABRICATORS Hwy. 6 0 1S P.O. Box 821 Mockavllte, N.C. 634-3712 Evelyn Haynes & Lewis & Clark Realtors 634-3831, 768-1662 Or 1-800-451-0218 Ed Fisher PLUMBING SERVICE CoolMniM.N.C. 27014 . Expert R e ^rt & ttow Initilatlon FREE EMIcnatH a Emergancy Service 284-2721 Phone 284-2232 .JIIIIGEOlS STEEL FABRICATING 122Wllkesl»roSI. Mocksvffle, M.C. 27028 634-2379 W e > m (k O L Carter Auto Repair ASE Certified Technicians Computeflzed Wheel Balancing Diagnostic Tune-Ups & A/C Service, Etc. Mocks Church Rd., Advance, N.C. 919-998-5088 Daily Devotion 9:30 to 9:45 a.m. Monday thru Saturday WDSL DAVIK С ()1!М Л’ KN'I KKI’RISK KliCOKI), riU'KSDAV, Aiij;,. 24, 1989-5C O b i t u a r Î G S N e w S w e e ts , F lo ra l S h o p O p e n s _______ i-kii'iM i I.*. ll,.. I ~ Æ ' .. ...—■ wv ■-r-.t Roy Garland Allen Sr. Mr. Roy Garland Allen Sr.. 67, of Rl. 4, Mocksviile, died early Thursday afternoon, Aug. 17. at Forsyth Mctnorlal Hospital after being in declining health. Funeral services were held •:Saturday, Aug. 19. at Eaton’s • Funeral Home Chapel by the Revs. Kermit Shoaf and Robert Creason. Burial wa.s in Legion Memorial Park wilh Military Graveside Rites by the 11th District Memorial Honor Guard. ■ The family rcque.sts that memorials be made to Brenners .Children’s Ho.spital in memory of Denise Potts. 300 S. Hawthorne :Rd., Winston-Salem, N.C. 27103. Mr. Allen was born on March ;13, 1922, in Davie County. He was .the son of the late Joseph and Mary ;Winters Allen, was retired from. :Fiber Industries, and was a veteran ;of World War II. He was a member of Cornatzer United ;Methodist Church. ; Surviving are; his wife, Margie ' Williams Allen, of the home; one r.’daughter. Penny Lagle, Rt. 7, .Moeksville; two sons, Roy :Garland Allen Jr., Advance and ;Gary Lee Allen, Mocksviile; six Isisters, Edna McClary, Rockwell, Margaret Beck, Lexington, Hazel :Estep, Salisbury, Dorothy ‘.Honeycutt, Hamptonville, Marie :Shoaf, Advance and Nellie ■Cooper, Winston-Salem; five ! brothers, Paul and George Hathan :Allen, both of Mocksviile, James ;AIIen, Gastonia, the Rev. Daniel VAllen, Icard and Jerry Allen, Salisbury; and six grandchildren. fMildred L. Dowse i: Mrs. Mildred Hettie Livengood 'pòwse, 86, of 230-A Melrose St., ‘;Winston-Salem,' died at Forsyth Ijiwpital ^turday, Aug. 19. ji Funeral services were at 1 p.m. < fjTiièsday, Aug. 22, at Vogler’s 'M ain Street Chapel by Dr. Bennett W. Gerardy. Burial was in - ìForestlawn Cemetery in -, fO r^sboro.' V Mrs. Dowse was born July 5, 1903, in Reidsvillc to J.W. and 'Rosa Shropshire Livengood. She ¡was the fbnner owner and operator ' ;'pf Mademoiselle Beauty Salon. She „was a.member of First Christian ;Church. 'j Surviving are: two sisters, Mrs. 'J.D. (Chattie) Shields, Bermuda Run bd Mrs. Edna Bugher, New ;brive, Winston-Salem.'1 ijLeland J. Eldreth Sr. Mr. Leland Jimmy Eldreth Sr., >68, of Rt. S, Mocksviile, died at [6 I.m. Ibuniday, Aug. 17, at For- 'syth Memorial Hospital. : He was bòni in Ashe County to ' i^Charles and Eiila Osborne Eldreth. He was a veteran of World War II ;bnd wu a member of the Local ' (Teamsters No. 391. He was a '.retired truck drivei: from Pilot ;Freight Carriers. Surviving are: two sons, Leland 'JimnQT EUndi Jr. of Pfidftown and 'ji^ y H arris of Wintori-Salem; .two, dwghters, Merrilyn Harrison, ipainesville, Ga., and Patricia Har- ! -гЦоп, Winston-Salem; one sister, ^Lbrene.^dreth, Mocksviile; one brother, Allen Eldreth, Rt. S, . iyadkinville; 13 grandchildren and ':' ;||1^ great-grandchildren. ' Funeral services were held at 3 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 19, at Mackie-Gentry Funeral Home Cha^ by the Rev. Robert Darnell. Burial was in Yadkinviile Memorial Gardens. i‘Bud” Hoffman Jr. ; Miles L. “ B ud" Hoffman Jr., 70, of 2 Midway St., Cooleemee, died on Thursday, Aug. 17, at the Salisbury V A Medical Center after being in declining health for 10 years and seriously ill for three weeks. A graveside service was held at 11 a.m. Monday, Aug. 21, in the U .S. National Cemetery in Salisbury, conducted by the Rev. Larry Allen, paslor of the First Baptist Church of Cooleemee. Memorials may be made to the Cooleemce American Legion Post, Cooleemee, N.C. 27014. Born on April 24, 1919, in Davie County, Hoffman was a .son of the late Miles L. and Nancy Ann Parker Hoffman. A former employee of Duke Power Co.. he was rL 'lirc d Iro m M iiH'.s M anu fa i;liiriiig . He attended the Tirsl Bapti.st Cluirch Ilf Cooleemce. was a member of the Ci)oleeince American Legion Post, and was a U.S. Army Air Force veteran of World War 11. Survivors includc; a sister, Mary l£dna H. Templeton of Thomasville; a brother, Paul R. Hoffman of Cooleemee; and a number of nieccs and nephews. Arthur Myers Arthur Myers, 61, of Route I, New London, died at 7:30 p.m. on Wednesday, Aug. 16, at Stanly Memorial Hospital. He had been in declining health for several months. The funeral was held at 3 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 19, at Stanly Memorial Chapel, conducted by the Rev. Frederick Schuszler. Burial was in New London cemetery. Masonic graveside rites were conducted by Blackmere Lodge Number 127 A F and A M of Mount Gilead. Bom on April 23, 1928, in Stan ly County, he was a son of Goldie Finkelstein Myers of New London and the late Lawrcnce Myers. A graduate of North Carolina Stale University, he was an industrial engineer for Allison Manufactur ing Co. He was the former direc tor o f manufacturing for W onderknit Scoreboard of Mocksviile and Galax, Va. A mason, he was a member of Blackmere Lodge 127 A F and A M of Mount Gilead. He was also a U.S. Arm y veteran, having serv ed in the Korean Conflict, Survivors include: his wife, Joan Hinson Myers; a son, Charles Myers of Durham; and a grandson. Shearlie N. Myers Mr. Sheariie Nelson Myers, 87, of Rt. 2, Bailey’s Chapel Rd., Ad vance, died Tuesday, Aug, 15, at Knollwood Hall after being in declining health of four years and seriously ill for the past eight moiulis. He was a native of Davic Coun ty, bom to the late Jim P. and Betty Peacock Myers. He was a member of Davie Tabernacle Church and spent most of his life in Davie County where he retired as a farmer. He was preceded in death by his wife, Mattie Sheets Myers. Surviving are; two sons, Samuel P. Myers, Advance and Lonnie J. Myers, Sdisbury; one sister, Mrs. Martha Tucker, Winston-Salem; six grandchildren; 18 great grandchildren; and one great-great-grandchild. Graveside services were held Friday, Aug. 18, in Oaklawn Memorial Gardens by the Rev. Jerry Bracken. Supp«r Aug. 26 The M ount O live United Methodist Church Choir will spon sor a supper for the senior cilizens of the church and the W yo Com munity on Saturday, Aug. 26, at 6 p.m. in the church fellowship hall. Following the meal, the choir will present a special program. The church is located in the Wyo Community of Yadkin County. The Rev. Bob Burdett is pastor. SM IT H GUOVl- - It's Ihe sweclcsl lillle shop around. riim's wiml Lynn .SliiiKiull and Frankie Rcavis want area rcsidenls lo think of their new store. Ly-Rca Creations. Located across from lhc com munity center here, the shop olTers made-to-order desserts and lloral creations. Rcavis cooks cakes and pies anti other goodies, while Shinault handles floral arrangements. They're teaching each other. A grand opening is planned for 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Saturday. Aug. 26. “ W e’d been talking aboul il for 2'A years.” Rcavis .said. "W e ’ve been talking about Ihis .store for quite a while.” W hen Ihe store became available, they latched" onto it. They hope to attract the same traf fic they could in Hillsdale, where rent is higher. “ I've always had a fantasy of a little shop, doing something 1 like to do rather Ihan something 1 have to do,” Shinault said. Lynn Shinault and Frankie Reavis have opened Ly-Rea Creations across Grove community center. from the Smith A d v a n c e N e w s By Edith Zimmerman Advance Correspondent Sixteen people from the Methodist church attended the Layman’s Conference at Lake Junaluska last weekend. Mrs. Stella Clinard was pleasant ly surprised last week by a visit from an old friend she hadn’t seen in years. Mrs. Myrtle Adams of W inston-Salem , whom M rs. Clinard met in 1929 while the two of them taught school in Stokes County, Mrs. Adams’ daughter, Mrs. Maxine Robertson and her daughter Mrs. Cathy Ward and P icn ic H eld By Club The Cornatzer Homemakers Club met Salurday, Aug. 5, ut Mrs. Modell Munday’s home for their annual picnic. A short business session was held. Plans were discussed for a trip in October to tour the Biltmore House in Asheville. The club plans to have a craft exposition booth at the Dixie Classic Fair (date pending). Nine members and two visitors attended the picnic supper that was spread in Mrs. Munday’s basement recreation room. Church To Honor Pianist M iss Louise Stroud will be honored in the morning worship \ service at First Baptist Church Sun day morning, Aug. 27. She is retiring after serving as church pianist for 61 years. She also served as assistant organist during that time. Stroud taught piano for many years. She has touched many lives through her music. Mrs. Ward’s son Wesley Ward, all of Winston-Salem, visited Mrs. Clinard Thursday afternoon and did a lot of reminiscing. Mr. and Mrs. Joel Kimball and children Christopher and Emily of Laurinburg spent the weekend with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Naylor Vogler. Christopher and Emily had spent the previous week with their grandparents. The Kimballs were among the visitors at Methodist church Sunday. Wiley Peebles is al home from Forsyth Hospital and slowly improving. Club Has Cookout The Cooleemee Senior Citizens Club met Aug. 14 at Ridenhour Arbor for a cookout. The meeting was called to order by the president, Virginia Plott. Paul W agner opened with prayer. The group .sang "Leaning On The Everlasting Arm s." Devotions were given by Noah Plott, taken from Luke 6:27, "Love Your Enemies." Virginia Plott read several poems. Frances Smilh and Nancy Cape recilcd a poem. The group played bingo. There were 37 members present. Afler singing the club song, hot dogs and hamburgers with all the trimmings were served. The next meeting will be at the fellowship hall at the First Baptist Church. Everyone is askctl lo bring a covered dish on .Лиц. 28. Call once. And for all. For all your insurance needs: Keith Hiller Willow Oak Shopping Center Hwy. 601 N. Mocksviile, N.C. Phone (704) 634-6131 J.E. Kelly Jr.281 N. Main SIreel Mocksviile. N.C. Phone (704) 634-2937 N A TIO N W ID E IN S U R A N C E N a tio n w id e is o n y o u r s id e N ationw ide M utual Insurance Co. N ationw ide M utual Fire Insurance Co. N ationw ide Lile Insurance Co. Hom e O llice: C olum bus, O hio NjiionwKlu* IS a lodorai servicu mark ol Naiionwido Mutual Insurance Cornpany Mrs. Wilma Phelps, Mrs. Helen Myers and Mrs. Edith Zimmerman visited Mr. and Mrs. Wiley Williams last Sunday night. Mrs. Edith Zimmerman and granddaughters, Melissa, Amanda and Meredith Hendrix, were Sun day afternoon visitors of Mr. and Mrs, Delbert Bennett and daughters, Christy and Ashley, on Dulin Road. They enjoyed a homemade ice cream party while watching home videos ofthe Ben nett family snow skiing in Oregon, Colorado, West Virginia and the North Carolina mountains, as well as a beach vacation.' Mrs. Pauline Sidden has reWm- ed home from Forsyth Hospital where she underwent surgery. Mrs. Sallie Barney remains in' IC U at Forsyth Hospital after many/ weeks of hospitalization. ' 'v 'S Ivey Ciontz Gets Salem Scholarship Helderman Gets Basic Arm y Private John R, Helder man has completed his basic train ing at Fort Jackson, S.C. Helderman is the 17-year-oid son of Ruth C. Helderman of Dulin Road and John A. Helderman Jr. of Maple Road in Mocksviile. He will return home to complete his senior year at Davie High School where he will be taking the Ap palachian State U niversity’s freshman college courses. Helder man will also be a memt>er of the High 1-Q team for Davie High. While in training, Helderman was awarded an expert medal in M 16 shooting and an expert medal in granade drill. He served with Company A of the . 108th PRO T R A IN Unit in Platoon 3. Ivey Ciontz of Route 1, Ad vancc, has been selected as a recipient of the Benjamin C. Dunford Scholarship at Salem College. The Dunford Scholarsh ips are in the ! TT" amount o f Ciontz $2,500 per year renewable annual ly for four years for a total of $10,000 and is given to a music scholar. ^ ^ She also received a $3,000 merit ,< scholarship. - - - ' l i Ciontz auditioned for Barbara Lisler-Sink, Dean of the School of Music at Salem College. She sang an Italian song, “Car M io Ban*-J . and “ Cabaret.” ■ Her chorale teachers were>Lel|; ty Jean Smith, Davie High Sclibor|i': and Jeanne Anderson, North Daviij's Junipr High. ' . She is the daughter, of Mr. andir Mrs. W;B. Clonu Sr. and is ji' 1989 graduate of Davie Higlv., School.. Im m a n u e l C h r is tia n S c h o o l 1505 Lewisville-Clenunbns Rd. Now Enrollihg k-8th Day Care Available E n r o l l T o d a y ! 7 6 6 -4 2 2 6 SERVICE funeral directors 4 LOCATIONS 722-6101 120 Siiulli Main Siroei 722-610f) 245 i Kcvndliia Road 131 Years Of Service C R EM A TO R Y SER VICE Clemnimis, N.C. 7fi()-4715 7664717 Middlebrook Drive Clemmons 246-2366 405 S. Main Street Lexinglon Davie Cminty Phone Number ‘J98-.1428 ioc—DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPKISK RECORD, THURSDAY, Auk- 24, 1989 sat»» WAL-MART® A L W A Y S T H E L O W P R I C E O N T H E B R A N D S Y O U T R U S T . ALWAYS.” NO VENDORS PLEASE ( \rA I store Location: Squire Boone Plaza Store Hours: Monday - Saturday 9 a.m . to 9 p.m . n A T c o . Thursday, Friday & Saturday Yadkinville Rd., M ocksville, N.C. Sunday 12:30 p.m . lo 5:30 p.m . U A l b b . August 2 4 , 2 5 & 2 6 Only I WiHliHT’S <DVEBTISED UEnCHANDiSE POLICV-ll ,s ou; rnieniiDo lo Mvo o.wy idysniseo .lorn .n slock Ho.o.m il Jue lo any urio.eseen teason. an a0v«ni58d ilBm it rot availibls loi putcnasB. Wal Man will issuo a Ram Ct.sck on loquosl. lor Iti» merchanoise 10 be puicnand u me sail ptlce wh.nav«r ivailablt. a « ' sail you a simiiuf item al a comparabi» reduction m price We reserve the ngm to fimil quandties. Umitafvons vo«i m Mo^ico Jbavie Schools DAVIIC COUN I Y KN I KRI’UISK KlXOUl), I’llUKSDAY, Aii(>. 24, 1989-lD School Buses On The Road; Learn What Lights Mean By Karen Jarvis Davie County Enterprise-Record Those big yellow school buses are on the road again. With the start of school Tuesday people need to be extra carcful when out on the road, said assis tant superintendent of Davie schools, Dwiglit Jackson. A total of 62 buses carrying more than .1.000 children will be on the streets this school year. Jackson said it’s importanl for drivers to understand the new lighting system on the buses. Stop when bus red lights come on, Richardson says. The buses have an eight light system with two yellow Hashing lights on front and back and two red flashing lights on front and back. “ About 300 feet before the in tended stop, the driver will turn on Ihc yellow lights," he .said. “ It’s kind of a warning that the bus is getting ready to slop. “ When the red lights .start Hashing is when the drivers should stop,” he said. Bus driver Shirley Richardson said he hopes drivers can unders tand that you don’t have to stop when the yellow lights are Hashing. “ When we prepare to stop we pul! the yellow lights on,” he said, “ It’s only when we stop and open the door that the red light.s come on and the stop sign conies out. “ That’s when the traffic should stop,” he said. Jackson said it was "kind of like a judgment eall.” He said the best thing for drivers to do was slow down when they sec the yellow lights. Jackson said the the county’s bus drivers have a safe driving record. “ As far as the number of ac- New lights on school buses are confusing to many motorists, says Shirley Richardson. — Photos by James Barringer cidcnts we’ve had, it’s been pret ty good,” he said. “ W e have had a few bump ups and minor ac cidents, but as a result of someone else.” Jackson acknowledged the bus Brogdon (left) helps administrator Ei^e Strlder and history teacher Ken Boger with colored tiles used to learn algebra. The three were participating in Davie High workshop for teachers last week. Photos by Robin Fergusson To Coach Ifpoaches’ To Teach Davie High Students TlMre’s a sign at Davie High School that says, “ Welcome Academic Coaches.” it's a sign o f things to come, a new philosophy of teaching being encouraged by the principal, Robert Landry. “ I ’m trying to get them into a differem style of teaching,” Lan dry said as a group o f teachers were being trained in the coaching method last week. accident last school year when a school bus overturned, but said it was the first time he could ever remember a bus overturning in the county. All school bus drivers have to be nt least 18 years old. There are five or six drivers in the county who.are 18, he said. “ W e always encourage drivers to make it better,” said Jackson, “ One accident is one too many,” School Menus i- i-i ROTC instructor Sgt. Carl Lawrence puts teachers through drills. Other teachers who had been on an intensive training session in Chapel Hill over the summer were conducting Ihe elas.ses. In coaching, teachers show students how to do the work, rather than just lecturing, Landry said. “ You talk to them (students), but you guide them through a set of questions. The students learn from cach other. “ This step is more important,” Landry said, "Vou can see it.” Students learn better when they can see what they are doing, rather than being tolil what they should know, he .said. Meanwhile, Foyell Brogdon was coaching fellow teachcrs Ihrough some algebra problems. English teachers, home economics teachers, history teachcrs used col ored tiles to reach answers to the problems. “ This is fun algebra,” Brogdon said. "Anybody can do it if you’re coached,” Landry said, "W e can reduce dropouts with this.” The new method has alreaily in creased morale among teachers, Landry said. The Davie County school menus for the week of August 28-31 are as follows; M O N D A Y , A U G . 28 Breakfast; Cereal with toast or pancakes with butter and syrup (2 pancakes), choice of juice and milk. TU E S D A Y , A U G , 29 Breakfast; Cereal wilh toast or scrambled egg, slice bacon, toast, choice o f juice and milk. WEDNESDAY, AUG. 30 Brcukfasl: Cereal wilh loasl or cheese toast (1 slice), choice of juice and milk, TH U R S D A Y , A U G , 31 Breakfast: Cereal with toast or Williamsburg muffins (2), choice o f juice and milk, G R A D ES K -6 M O N D A Y , A U G . 28 ' Lunch: Hot dog with chili and onions, chicken nuggets with sweet and sour sauce, chilled watermelon, french fries, buttered corn, chilled peaches, hot roll and m ilk. Bonus: Slaw, TU E SD A Y, A U G , 29 Lunch: Ham and cheese on whole wheat, beef-a-roni, mixed vegetables, baked potato with but ter, chilled applesauce, green beans, roll and m ilk. Bonus: Let tuce and tomato, W E D N E S D A Y , A U G , 30 Lunch: Hamburger, tossed salad, cantaloupe, french fries, broccoli with cheese sauce, fresh bread and m ilk. Bonus: Lettuce, tomato and pickles. TH U R SD A Y , A U G . 31 Lunch: Bologna and cheese on white bread, country style steak with rice, green beans, buttered Math Mentor potatoes, fresh gra^s^pple crisp, biscuit and milk. ' G R A D ES 7-12 M O N D A Y , A U G . 28 Lunch: Hot dog with chili and onions, chicken nuggets wilh sweet and sour , sauce, chilled watermelon, french fries, buttered com, chilled peaches, hot rolls and m ilk. Bonus: Slaw. T U E S D A Y , A U G . 29 Lunch: Ham and cheese, on whole wheat, bcef-a-rorii, mixed vegetables, baked potato with but ter, chilled applesauce, green beans, roll and m ilk. Bonus: Let tuce, tomato and pickle, W E D N ES D A Y , AU G , 3$ < Lunch; Barbecue i^ tb a lls , quiche, tossed s^ad, cwtajpupe, cream ^ potatoes, ^roccoli with cheese sauce, roll and m ilk. : TH U R SD A Y , A U G . 31/ : ' ? Lunch; Bologna afuTchpese on white bread, country ^ e sti»k with rice, green beans, buttered potatoes, firesh gtfapes, apple c i^ , biscuit and m ilk. . i S H A D Y G R O V E O N L Y M O N D A Y , A U G . 28 Lunch: Chicken nugget with sweet and sour sauce, corn, watermelon, rolls and m ilk. ' TU E S D A Y , A U G . 29 Lunch: Hot dog.'peaches, bak ed beans and m ilk. Bonus: ^ t - tuce, tomato and pickle. W E D N E S D A Y , A U G . 30 Lunch: Hamburger, creamed potatoes, cantaloupe and milk. Bonus: Lettuce, tomato and pkkle. TH U R S D A Y , A U G . 31 Lunch: Bologna and cheese sandwich, green beans, fresh grapes and milk. i- i i * ' i New South Davie Junior High School teacher Kim Beauchamp makes last-minute preparations for students Monday. — Photo by Jam es Barringer 2D-DAVIE COUNTY liNTKUI-UISK KKCORI), TIIIJKSDAY, Лиц. 24, l'«9 Davie Dateline Meetings Thursday, Aug. 24 Davic Public I.ibriiry Bnanl ni Trustees niecls at 7 p.m. in tlie library’s multi-purpose room. Coolccmuc Town Hoard will hold a special meeting at 7 p.m. to discuss voting in the municipal election this fall, ■Monday, Aug. 28 Woodiiifii of (lie World. Lodge 323, meets at 7:30 p.m. in the Davie Academy Community Building. Wednesday, Aug. 30 N.C. transportation depart ment will accept public comments on proposed U.S. 601 bypass changcs between 3 and 7 p.m. at the Mocksville Town Hall. Thursday, Aug. 31 ■ County prccinct oWcers will be sworn in at 7:30 p.m. in the cour troom of the courthouse. Ongoing Mucksvillc Rotary Club meets every Tuesday at 12:15 p.m. at the •Rotary Hut, Salisbury Street. Moeksviile Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 4024 meets at the Post Hut on Sanford Avenue, IVlock.syille, 7;3D p.m. the second Tuésday of each month. Veterans ;; .welcome. . Mocksville-Davie Jaycees meet ,;.eyery first Monday at Western Steer and every third Monday at 1 the Davie County Parks and j' Recreation Depanment on Sanford J.Àvenue. 7 p.m. Y Alcoholks Anonymous, and Al- . rArion family^group meetings for .-those affected by alcoholics, ; ; V Wednesdays, 8 p.m., B.C. Brock pBuilding lower level. North Main ^Street, Mocksville. ''A m erican L ^ o n Post 174 ; i ~~monthly iiieeting at the Rotary Hut ' ssicond Thursday of each month at 7 p.m. Veterans wclcome. . [ Mocksville Civitan Club meets : ‘‘M 6:30 p.m. the second and fourth ■ Monday of each month at Western l^Steer: - Advanc« Memorial Post 8719 f;-Veterans of Foreign Wars and I Ladies Auxiliary meets each fourth ;i Tuesday, 7:30 p.m., at the post |'5 ; Ijl Home in Advance. : ii 1 ; American ; Association of , ;'! Retiiïd Persons, Davie County, I i' ■: - I:; Chapter, mi^ts second Wednesday ; of each month at 10:30 a.m. at Fiirst United Methodist Church ¿fellowship hall. Y Dàvle County Right To Life ; meets at 7 p.m. on the third Thurs- V ; day of each month in the grand juiy : > room of the county courthouse. : : , -I; Call 634-5235 or 492-5723; p Cooleemee Memorial VFW ; r... i: ; Post 1119 meets second and fourth I { ; j: Thursdays of each month, 7:30 I V i; p.m., Cooleemee Town Hall. Davie Theatre Company meets :: at 7:30p.m. the third Thursday of :: each month at the Brock Auditorium. Davie Arts Council meets at ' 7:30 p.m. fourth Tuesday of each •v;'; month al (iic iccrcatidii ilL'parl- tiicnl. .Saiiroril A vciuie. Min.-ksvillc. Ciirliithiiiii I.o(l(;e No. 17 AI'iV;AM meets al the Iculge, se cond and I'ourlh Friilays. 7:30 p.m. Moeksviile Masimie Lodge No. 134 meets tlie tlrsl and third Tuesdays at 7:30 p.m. al the lixige. Davie iMultlple Sclerosis Sup port Group meets third Tuesday of each monlh, 7:30 p.m.. at Davie County Health Department. Extension For more inlormation on any of lhe.se events or activities, contact the Davie County Agricultural Ex tension Service office ut 634-6297. Thursday, Aug. 24 Cana Homemakers meet at 7 p.m. at the community building for POW workday. 4-H County Council meets at 7 p.m. in the auditorium of the coun ty office building. All club presidents and county council representatives should attend. All other 4-Hcr.s invited. Thursday, Aug. 24 Cana Extension Homemakers meet for a program of work day. Monday, Aug. 28 4-H Teen Leaders will meet at 5 p.m. in the auditorium of the county office building. All youths in grades 7 and up are invited to attend. Tuesday, Aug. 29 Leader training for extension homemakers at 10 a.m. in the county office building. Speaker will be Reba Elliott. Her schedul ed topic is, “Staying Well: Your Responsibility.” Thursday, Sept. 14 Davie-Yadkln feeder calf grading demonstration at 6 p.m. at ■Whip-O-Will Farms. Call by Sept. 11 if planning to attend. Tuesday, Sept. 19 Pesticide seminar for commer cial pesticide license holders in the county office building at 7 p.m. For more information, contact Ronnie Thompson, director of the extension service. Recreation The following events are offered by the Mocksville-Davie Recrea tion Department. For more infor mation, call 634-2325. Saturday, Aug. 26 Wrestling clinic at South Davie Junior High, 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Bob Guzzo, head coach at N.C. State University in Raleigh, will be Ihe instructor. Cost is $10 per person. Advance registration requii^. Call for more information. Upcoming Events Children’s theater workshop will begin Sept. 5. Classes will be held on Tuesdays after school throughout school year at the B.C. Brock Auditorium. Workshop is open Id cliililrt'ii ai;c.s.S-l2. Call to register. Dance classes slarlin;; alter l.aliiir Day. Ballet, toe. lap. acrobatics, ja// and billon; alier- noon and evening classcs for ayes 3 and up. including ailulls. Fmily Robertson, instructor. Classcs held al Brock Auditorium. Dog obedience cla.sses. Sept. 11. 13, 15. 18. 20 and 22. Co.st is .$20 for choice of four of six available sessions and training leash and col lar. 7-8 p.m. Brock Gym. Call lo register. Guitar lessons starting in September. Call for more information. Gymnastics ela.sses slarting in September. Call for more information. Mother’s Morning Out, day care for pre-schoolers. Registration is as follows: Mocksville. Wednes day, Aug. 30, 9:30-11:30 a.m.; Cooleemee, Wednesday, Aug. 30, 9-II a.m.; and Chestnut Grove, Thursday, Aug. 24 and 31, 9-11:30 a.m. Program .schedule is: Mocksville, First Baptist Church, Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays; Cooleemee, Victory Bap tist Church, Wednesdays; and Chestnul Grove United Methodist Church on U.S. 601 North, Thursdays. YMCA The following events are offered by the Davie Family YMCA. For more information, call the Y of fice, M-F, noon-5 p.m., 634-0345. Ongoing Square dancing and clogging. Freestyle Swingers, Mondays, 7 p.m., Arnold Broadway’s home on Davie Academy Road. Call Broad way at 284-2766 or Nancy or Shor ty Bowles at 998-3105. Open to families, singles, beginners and ex perienced dancers. Morning aerobics, classes begin first week of each month. Mon days, Wednesdays and Fridays, 9-9:45 a.m .. First United Methodist Church, Sandra Johnson, instructor. 515. Low-impact aerobics, classes begin first day of each month. Mondays and Wednesdays, 5-6 p.m., Mock.sville Elementary. Kel ly Beilin, instructor. $15. High-impact aerobics, classes begin first week of each month. Tuesdays and Thursdays, 6:30-7:30 p.m., Mocksville Elementary. Karen Wishon, in structor. $15. Relieion 30% Off Selected Hair Products All Occasion Cards & Gift Wrap Off tîppliz: pharmacy 1 2 9 N. M ain S t. M oclcsville, N.C. P hone 6 3 4 -2 1 1 1 C'litircli .Scliool Rally Day al Mocksville Unilcil Methodist Cliurcli. Liberty United Methodist Church will liold homecoming ser vices beginning with morning wor ship ;il II. Luncheon will follow at 12:30 p.m.. and an al'lernoon singing al 1:30. Friends, relatives. acc|iiainlances and neighbors invited, Tiirreiiliiie llapti.st Church will hold its fourth night singing at 7 p.m. The Assurance Trio of Greensboro will perform. Wednesday, Aug. 30 Saint Francis of Assisi Church will hold inquiry sessions for adults interested in learning about the Catholic Church and its traditions. Classes begin at 7:45 p.m. at the church. For more information, call 634-2973. Ongoing Redland Pentecostal Holiness Church ‘‘Saturday Night Sing” every second Saturday at 7. U.S. 158 and Baltimore Road. Bingo, Mocksville Rotary Hut, sponsored by Saint Francis of Assisi Church, cach Friday, 7-10 p.m. $100 jackpot. Duette Foster Christian Seniors Club meets fourth Tuesday of each month at Oak Grove Methodist Church, 10 a.m. Sunday mass at the Saint Fran cis of Assisi Church will be held weekly at 10:30 a.m. Senior Citizens The following events are offered for senior citizens in Davie Coun ty in cooperation with the Davie County Senior Center, Brock Building, Mocksville. All events are at the center unless otherwise noted. Call 634-0611 for more information. Aug. 24-25 Shopping days. Ongoing RSVP Sewing Bee on Thursdays, 9 a.m.-l p.m. Miscellaneous Thursday, Aug. 24 Aiiierlcan Red Cro.ss blood drive at the Mock.sville Rotary Hut i'roni 3 lo 7 p.m. Sponsored by the Mocksville Lions Club. Aug. 26-27 Open auditions for “ Lil Abner,” Aug. 26 from 1 to 5 p.m. at Ihc Davie Public Library, and Aug. 27 from 2 to 6 p.m. at the library. Roles for 28 men and 11 females, ages 15 and up. Be prepared to sing and dance. Call 634-5018 after 7 p.m. to .schedule another time. Anyone interested in working backstage on costumes, sets, etc., is also encouraged to sign up at Ihis time. Monday, Sept. 4 Cooleemee ABC store closed for Labor Day holiday. Friday, Sept. 22 Republican Party luau at 6 p.m. at Bermuda Run Country Club. Lt. Gov, Jim Gardner will speak at 6:30. Tickets may be ob tained from party officers and precinct chairmen. For more infor mation, call Peggy Harrison at 998-4266. Veterans Service GfTice has new hours: Monday-Tuesday, 8 a.m.-5 p.m.; and Wednesday, 8 a.m.-noon. In The Schools Thursday, Aug. 24 North Davie Booster Club meets at 6 p.m. Shady Grove PTO Executive Council meets at 7 p.m. Monday, Aug. 28 Sluuly Gn>vc l* rO meeis al 7 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 31 South Davie Junior High PTSA will hold open house at 7 p.m. Friday, Sept. 1 Schools closed for teacher workday. Monday, Sept. 4 Schools closed for Labor Day holiday. Sept. 5-11 Registration for Davidson County Community College classcs. Thursday, Sept. 7 Mocksville Middle PTO will hold open house at 7:30 p.m. Band Booster Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the band room. Reunions Saturday, Aug. 26 Class of 1984, Davie High School, will hold its five-year reu- . nion at the Holiday Inn in Clem mons, 7:30 p.m.-12:30 a.m. Ad-, mission: $8 per person. Cu№.ts welcome. Make reservations in vance. Make checks payable'^ to Kim Walker at 2330-K W. Van- / ; dalia Drive, Greensboro, N.C.'i'i 27407. For more information, cidi ^ Kim at (919) 294-9683 or Jan Col lette Hatley at 634-0129^ . Sunday, Aug. 27 Williams family reunion at'tbe Jerusalem Fire Department at 1 ;■ p.m. Bring picnic basket and tea. > Saturday, Sept 23 - Class of 1969, Davie High School, will hold its 20-year reu- .; nion. For more information, con-> tact Tim Allen, 377 Country Lani,- .- Mocksville, N.C. 27028; V 634-3151. ^ F lo ris t Bûâoons^QfiS’^BaUit . , T>v(i Locations To Serve You 634-1782Suulre Boon« 1039 YMlkln«HW Kd, MocksrUk. N.C.27ttl MMStf, ; ^ Sunday, Aug. 27 Bethlehem United Methodist Church will celebrate its homecoming. Speaker for the 11 a.m. worship service will be the Rev. Julian Aldridge, new superintendent for the Lexington District. A covered dish meal and singing-on-the-grounds will follow in the afternoon. Church is located on Redland Road belween N.C. 801 and U.S. 158 in Advancc. L A R E W - W O O D - J O H N S O N with the association of Mickey, Oraban;; has expanded it’s profesalonal services to Include the following: BUSINESS Employee Benefit Plans Key Employee Benefits Deferred Compensation Plans Salary Continuation Plans Retirement/Pension Plans Business Overhead Insurance PERSONAL Life Insurance Pre/Post Retirement Planning\- IRA’s/Keoflh’s/TSA’s Disability Income Insurance Estate Planning Personal Financial Planning Please call me at 634-6281 for information on these services and :fflon ★ 27 ★ 27 ★ 27 ★ 27 -it 27 ★ 27 ir 27 -k 17 ir 17 it 27 .★ 27 ★ : in Dance Studios^ Inc* T r a i n i n g A r e a D a n c e r s , . ' — F o r 2 7 Y e a r s — ^ ^ > ENROLL NOW Tap — Ballet — Acrobatics — Jazz Pre-School Classes From Age 2 I'm Registered Are You? Ky.iiim' NUn.inicl "Mini-Bopper" Jazz Classes New! 6 And 7 Year Olds Judy Baylin D i r e c t o r C ra v er B uilding C lem m o n s, N .C . 725-8301 "'ài aiNm ш HumwGB\RD ZIPS viiw A two yihir •' (kOHOlGU SMML, U£ WTS CWT -mE-MEKOCWS ЕНЕЙЙЧ. Ib HOMER, H\S WNGS BEW UOHOK.OS OT AMES EfCH SECDtAO.' \ I ONtf VJW STORIES IVW OSME U\<3HIS REcomEHteo, ARE T\1EB.E Am lAWOMOW QUOTES OK WE W Sr o^«eт? AHEM."ONC.t UPON A ШЧ. WERE Wtô \ N01S1 Ш WHO STARTED GWH6 TO BED w\man A STOR(." ÍÍT^ HAS mis sm.BEEK MADE INTO A M04lt? CXiULI) VIE BE VIATCHIU6 TMlSOtA v)iOEO?^ TWEBÉS NOTHIUG UVE ^ QOOD SHEER TD ОВД УР CDWERSATWH. HC3WS MINE U»VC, ? THAHVCS. WTH TU»5 SHEER, I HOfETD BEAU UK0EARABLE burden W m SaclAU OCCASIOH. ~v TMAT w a GWt4C») A REAL HEAD STARV OH BE\№ A TEEt^AGtR. ------------ 7 1 mow.' ns LIKE GEmUS SEJEH BORA \ 4E№S.' ■ii ' TOO LATE.' 1 MADE AHOTHER (tOMEBUH. (РАНТ PANT) I'M Qumms IF WE DOUT STOP U5\№ THIS TENUIS BAU,. 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MUSTARD RADISH TURNIP GREEN - SPINACH, LEAF LETTUCE - Help Us Make Room For Our FALL NURSERY STOCK Assorted 1 Gal., 2 Gal.. & 3 Gal. * Hollies <t Junipers • Aialeas • • Ctspe Myrtles t Pyracanlbes » « Dwarf Abellas » Rtiedodendrons » IVIIX AND M A TCH Tfie More You Buy $ 0 ® ® The Cfieaper Ttiey DAVIK t:OUN I V KM KKI'KI.SK UKCORI), TIIUILSDAV, Л1Щ. 24, I989-3D D a v i e S c h o o l s 1 9 8 9 -9 0 C a l e n d a r Teacher workday, student holiday Labor Day Holiday Teacher workdays, student holidays Teacher workday, student holiday Thanksgiving holiday Christm as holiday Martin Luther King’s Birthday holiday T eacher workday, student holiday T eacher workday, student holiday Teacher workday, student holiday Easter Holiday, Spring vacation Last day of school for students Events, dates may be adjusted if school days Friday, Sept. 1 Monday, Sept. 4 Thursday-Friday, Oct. 26-27 Friday, Nov. 10 Thursday-Friday, Nov. 23-24 Thursday, Dec. 21-Tuesday, Jan. 2 Monday, Jan. 15 Monday, Jan. 22 Friday, Feb. 23 Monday, March 26 Friday, April 13-Friday, April 20 Tuesday, June 5 are m issed because of Inclement w eather. Planners Want To Extend SUP Mocksvillc Planning Board members agreed Aug. 15 to extend the time limit on proposed special use permits from six months to 12 nionth.s. The proposed plan only allow ed builders to obtain a building per mit wilh .six month.s after they were granted a special use permit. After the six months the permit would be revoked. If revoked, Ihe town board may choose to reexamine the property to determine whether or not the property should be rezoned. Board member Jim Everidge ex pressed his concern over the short time limit at a recent meeting. It takes more than six months to get some of the architecture work done, he said. A special use permit is a new zoning tool the planners are con sidering. It would allow the town board to allow a specific use in a zoned area which the zone docs not allow. Board members also suggested a change in the special use district regulations. The addition states that an appli cant for a special use district zon ing shall submit a site plan to the Project Review Committee for final approval only after the special use district rezoning has been ap proved and after a special use per mit has been issued. Town Planner Steve Leary said the change reflects the possibility that conditions attached to the special use permit may affect the site plan. Woman Found Guilty Of DWI, Speeding A woman who said she was in a hurry to get to the bathroom was found guilty of DWI and driving 80 mph in a 65 mph zone last week in Davie District Court. Linda Collins of Mounty Airy was stopped by Trooper D.R. McCoy of the N.C. Highway Patrol Feb. 21 on 1-40 during heavy fog and rain. “I saw a blue Thunderbird weaving in and out of traffic pass ing ears,” said McCoy. “As foggy and rainy as it was it was unusual for .someone driving like that.” McCoy slopped Collins near the Farmington exit. •‘When I stopped her she kepi slating ‘It’s my fault and I've really messed up now,’ ” he said. McCoy said Collins was crying hysterically. “She told me she had to tell me something,” he said. “She said she had an accident and had urinated on herself.” Collins said the reason she did not stop at the rest area she had just passed was because she was afraid of the people there. Collins said she drank three glasses of wine at a restaurant in Winston-Salem, but said the reason she could not perform the sobrie ty tests well was due to her disabilities she suffered in an earlier auto accident when she was hit by a drunk driver. McCoy said Collins, who never spoke atraui her injuries, registered a . 11 on the Breathalyzer test. “I had mentioned several tjmes that I had disabilities before and during coordination tests,”' she said. “ I did mess up on the finger to nose test because I wear contacts and I’d been crying and in a smokey place. ■ , “He was real nice to me Ihai night and I was siitprised our stories weren’t the same,” she ’ said. Collins has a previous DWI charge and a reckless driving charge. Judge Kimberly T. Harbinson sentenced Collins to 12 months, suspended for three years, spend seven days in jail, pay $450 fme and court costs, surrender driver’s < license, not operate a motor vehi cle until properly licensed and ob tain substance abuse assessment and comply with recommendations o f assessing agency. Collins filed a notice of appeal; v m m I UVEjm: W WIT/ \ \ I I DtflfTMUNilOW G e t BbEE C hecking W ih O m y *250In S w ics. At CcMiliTil Curolina B;ink,y()ii don’t have to do anything outra geous to get free checking. We give you free checking witli only S250 in I'reniiuin Sa\ings — hundreds less than other banks. I'iiul out how you can get the better deal on checking; call l-cS0()-C;CB-91.i9. It's thal eiLsy. C e n tra l C a ro lin a B a n k Y o u r F in a n c ia l A ch'antagc. Mcmhcf FOlC “4D—DAVIE COUNTV KNTEKl’UlSK KIX’OKI). TIIUUSDAV, Лиц. 24. I'JH'J R o c k S p rin g H o m e c o m in g Is A u g . 2 7 On Sunday. Aug. 27, KoL'k Spring Baptist Church in I larniiiny will be cclcbratiny honiccuniiiig. At tlic 11 a.m. worship servicc. the Rev. Jack Hamilton will be bringing the message. There will be lunch alter the worship service and that afternoon there will be a singing. Bringing the music will be Charles Storey, the director of Ihc church music department for Ihe North Carolina Baptist Slate Convention in Cary, Ihc D iscip le s from Slalcsville and The Inter.state Gospel Ministries made up of Dwiglil L, Henderson from Ronda. and Jakic Keasling from Mo.shcim, Tenn, • Revival services will begin that llight and continue through Sepl, 2 starling each night al 7:30, ; The Rev, Paul Moore, pa.stor of New Hope Baptist Church, will be bringing the message each evening. The Rev. Clive Bell is pastor. 5 Earn Degrees Five area residents received degrees from Appalachian State University lhi.s summer. •¡Graduates include: Patricia Davis Crenshaw of Mocksville, education specialist degree; Melvin Wi Fogg of Mocksville, education specialist degree; Sandra Weeks Fogg of Mocksville, education specialist degree; Larry Wayne Lanier of Advance, education specialist degree; and Martin L. McKinney of Mocksville, bachelor dtgree in technology. Assurance The Assurance Trio of .jpreensboro will be guests at ijhe fourth Sunday sing at ■Turrentine Baptist Church at rt p.m. From left, Wanda )^ullard. Lynn Brady and Lin- jflaHlll. imuv* Léonard Realty »«Town Square 704-634-387Sra DAVIE STREET - Fkj^ncMii le» thu ПМ M Ihb newly ranodckd bom. Hdp with ски1п| cnti. •n.soo. CHIIRCH STREET - Chirmin« older luuse In proc№ o t remodel ing. L*t(e lot. M«ybe purtbascd ■ad remodeling completed as you dnlre. ADVANCE - ___price COUNTRY COV E - Urge wooded lot wilh 3 bedmom« 2 balbhome. Rock flreiCO\.D у bookcases. LoM or Кшепкп!. Many E<tnu. Hnebrook School. Small developroenl. >88,то. DUKE STREET - ;r rcstorable home, 2 e Q \,W >Г potenlUl •11,000. MOBILE HOME Ш Т - I00«2IS Lol • Septic lank and well. PRICE REDUCED! OWNf* WANTS OF- FER *7,500 IMIUSTKIAL - 4.2 acres with ruUroiid frontuuv. Loculvd in Mocksville. М2,ООО 601 N. ZONED HIGHWAY BUSINESS - 100x4001лЛ wilh hrivk hume. 415,000. IN TOWN - Cvntral business Zon- in« l^)t 245 X 20Ü . U4,IKH) FOREST l.ANK - 2 Mi* | ИД home on lurjit* l«l* cO V -® nuce, plui. Ч.ь, und nc>> гооГ, lircplacf. KKDUCKl) - OWNUIl ANXIOUS M3.5WJ.COUNTRY l.ANK • l.ar«e huildin^ lul with septic tunli. M7,00U IIOWNTOWN lil'SIMiSS 1ДП - und Wari'houses or huildin^; for Lob of iMissihililirs.Owner an4imis I’RICK KI-IH’CKI) $20.(Hm., Other Homes Л Uind Available IJnda lAtmard 704 (i34-.Vi50 ■ Cvnlhia Лцгып 7t)4.634 4140 М:К1)МЛ\ I ISl NKui.imxiis Stony Brook a c r e l o t s . C o u n t y w a t e r . L o c a t e d o n S a n f o r d R o a d , O f f 6 0 1 . E a s y A c c e s s T o 1 - 4 0 O r 6 4 M i n u t e s F r o m M o c k s v i l l e (919) 998-3907 R.M .F. Construction C o., Inc. 7.0n.TFH V2 to 1 a c re lo ts - u n d e rg r o u n d u tilitie s, c o u n ty w a te r — n o c ity ta x e s On Bethel C hurch Road Ju st 1 mile from city limits “The Right Place For Your Hortte!” CALL 7 0 4 -6 3 4 -4 1 5 0 6>15-tfnbp FOR SALE 210 E. Maple Avenue * 5 8 ,9 5 0 Call for details on this nice home Larew — Wood — Johnson, Inc. 135 S. Salisbury Street, Mocksville 6 3 4 -6 2 8 1 Place Realty, Inc. For All Your Building L jiIu L O _ & Real Estate Needs $2,100 NEW LISTING OLD GEORGIA ROAD • 62 acres on Old Geogia Road: Set in CliristmasTrees with lake on proper ty. Good Investment Property. $136,000 $139,900 HOMES Chouse on d, stream on , I value. DULIN RD. - Quiet living in this 3 t>edroom brick home. Situated on 11.41 acres off of Mill ing Road, this home is very private. A must to see. PINEBROOK DRIVE ADVANOE^droom brick homeon4M i»|J0JM «!nnn back, Many ejgi^PSO Tig^^ian well, swimm ing pol^R le^m , large deck, burglar alarm &more. $1,200 per acre $2,600 per acre $5,800 each $50,000 LAND OFF DUKE WHITTAKER RD. - 21.25 acres of level land. Sewn In Pines approx. 15 years aao. OLD GEORGIA RD. • 46.74 acres with road frontage. Possbile larger tract available. Call for more details, RUFFIN ST. EXT. 3 • building lots with las lines and water, already perked and ’mHa auitable, Call today while Govern ment l\/loney Is still available, GUN CLUB RD. ADVANCE ■ 3,78 acres. Beautiful piece of land just perfect to build on. Pi BUSINESS S69,500 N. IlflAIN STREET MOCKSVILLE ■ Pric ed below lax value. Building has excellent rental income & positive cash flow. Possi ble owner financing. Call today. 119 Depot Street, Mocksville BOB SHELTON, Broker 634-2252 VON SHELTON, Broker 634-0110 Raymonda Saunders, Sales 634-1527 Barry Whittaker, Sales 634-1439 Frank Payne, Sales 998-2622 Rick Bazaar 998-9490 HOWARD REALTl DAVIE COUNTY I Our Specialty/Our County & In su ra n c e A gency, Inc. 330 s . Salisbury Street C orner of Hwy. 64 & 601 M ocksville, N.C. OFFICE HOURS Mon.-Frl. 9-6 Saturday 9-1 Sunday By Appointment Julia Howard Connie Kowalske Jackic Hat! Jane Whitlock M.J. Randall Linda Daughtrey Mike Hendrix C.C. Chapman Diane Foster Jan Hntic (704)634-3538 (919)998-6463 г Щ 634*3754 634-6343 634-1155 634-5704 634-5629 gge-3842 634*0390 634-2534 634-5692 634 0129 M L S \ *20,000 • INVESTORS DREAM - 2 bedroom, 1 bath. Har.vood floor. «33,500 - 3 BR, 1 bath, deck, 2 yr. old oil furnace, new rool, on V? acre lot in Eastern Davie Counly. *42,000 - OFF SHEmELO BD.-TGrêâT Buy • 1560 Sq. Ft. mobile home op 1 acre. Greal master suite wilh garden lub, 3 bedroom & 2 baths. Like new. plus furniture. _________;______ •43,900 - MORSE STREET - 1100 sq, «„ 3 BR, VA balh brick home. Slove relrigeralof. & ceiling Ians slay. IVz year old home in ^ady Grove School Dislricl • w/3 6R, 2 balKs. full bsml., deck, sky light In bathroom,-heatpump and {ill in {hcrmopiino windows. Gront^tn^r or rpliromont honm. •67,000 ■ TUCKED AWAY IN THE CITY - with all tho apeal ol country living. Ths 3 bedroom home features living room wilh lireplace, Lg, den, hardwood floors, manicured lawn. Call •79,900 - BEST BUY IN TOWNI - 3 bedroom, S’A baths, deck, brick fenced patio, dbl, garage on 1,34 acres + possi' ble owner financing. •89,900 • WANDERING LANE - 3 bedroom, 2 bath home in lovely area. Large LfVDR comb., eat-in-kit, den, famiiy rm„ double garage. ‘31,900 • Owner finance on this starler home, 2 BR, 1 bath, completely remodel ed, 1 acre lol. »36,900 - QUAINT COTTAGE - in exceiient condition. 2 bedroom, kitchen w/dining area, large outbuilding wired for workshop. Perfect starter or investment property. •42,000 • RECENTLY REMODELED' 3 BR, 1 bath cottage. Large Iront porch and deck, new roof, gas furnace, storage building. •46,000 • Nnl 3 BR, brick home with basemenl, homa features hardwood floors, new carpel and paint. •62,500 • CUTE AND COZY - Cottage with Country Decor on 5 acres with horse barn plus Storage building: Oil furnace, country’kitchen. •69,900-Movt-lncondition Lovely 3 BR. Vh bath brick home on 1,63 acres, remodeled, nice landscape. •60,500 - SANFORD ROAD • enticing, new decorated, brick ranch conveniently located. Features partially finished base- ment, great famiiy area, pool, fenced back yard, garden and fruil irMs, •89,900 ■ Secluded ranch lype home w/luii bsmt. on 5 acres, 4 BR, 2 balh, 20x40 garage, 34 acres and house lor >129,900. REDUCEDl >I3?,400 - Unique Properly lor Ihe dlscriminallng buyer • wilh unique tasto . Space 2400 + sl. Privacy - wood back yard w/view ol pond & goll course. Luxury 500 sl. Master Suite. Great Room w/vaulle^eilm^^kyligW^ •89,900 - E. LAKE DRIVE • Great Vh story home with full basement, Qualily con struction, Water Ironlage, convenient location. •99,000 1,7 acres w/4 BR, 1 bath home, possible rezoning for this R-15 property, A good investmenti •35,500 • New Double Wkle with 1,000 sq. ft. on Й acre, home features 2 BR, 2 baths, all appliances. •36,900 • 156 SPRING STREET - 3 bedroom, 1 balh home located in conve- niont location. Good starter or retirement home at a good price. M2,900 - Lovely brick ranch home, 3 BR, Vh balh in rural selling, neutral colors, storage bidg,' •57,500 - 3 BR, 1 batll, LR with FP plu* ' basement, wooded tot wDh gantm spac*: on,7 acre. •65,000 - НГТСЖЕ ROAD ■ Chamiing log : ranclw-wilh.3 BB, 2 lialha.onZ79.Mre8>¿ Move In Condilion. •71,000 - Excellwit malntainwl 2 BR, 2 balh brick home ideal tor retirament, Lova- • ly screened porch, lg, utility rm„ bsmt. Iota ol storage, carport, & nica yard. All conva^ nlenftv locaied. . ■ •19,500-ВЕТНа сними IKMD.SBR, brick home on aov loi M^ganMn ipol, (tug* : covered d ^ , workshop. Mead batow .. nalaadvahal <n,900 - 20 FMicad Acraa • w/craak,: restored farm house w/3 BR, 2 baths, plus horse bam, miik bam. Horse Lover's ; Dream. •1J4,«00. OFF CALAHAH RD. - Rustk! A Frame m story with full finished base ment, siluated on 8 acres, 3 BR, 3 baths,, 2 kilchens, wraparound deck, hot tub. •139,900 • 3,219 sq, tt, 2 story home w/lull bsmt. on 5 wooded acres, screen porch & deck w/scenic view, 4 BR, 3 lull balhs. •144,500 - Mini-Horse Ranch w/brk;k homo loaded w/ coumry charm, wood fencing, horse barn, riding ring, plus cralt shop, con- venienliy located.________ 4Ï0MIVIERCIAL PROPERTY- HWY. 158 • 16 plus acres that could te rezoned lof business. Presently ihete ts a 2 BR, 2 BA, ome tfiat is used as a rental. ‘100,000. HWY. 801 • 2.9 ac. zoned light industial. vsell & building on property. Perk ap proved, *35,000. MOCKSVILLE - Income producing warehouse for sale. Call fadelails *132,500. BETHEL CHURCH flOAO • 16.7 acres on Belhel Church Road (Railroad Siding) Call for details. Off Jericho Ciiurch Rd..20 Plus Acres ^60,000 Eaton Road................................8.71 Ac. 875,000 Highway 64 East.........................46 Ac. «73,600 Hwy. 158...................16 Ac. + House «100,000 Corner Of 8а1п/ГЛ1Шпд49.85 Ac. Lots of Rd. Ftg. house & poultry houses «115,000 N. Cooleemee......................114.5 Ac. «143,000 Needmore Rd...............................................«2,800 -LOTS & LAND Hobson Road..............................A®- *7,500 Tot & Gwyn Sl............................................»7,500 Hickory Hill............................Fairway Lot »9,500 Hospital Street Ext............................Lol »10,000 Hickory Hill....................Lake Front Lot »10,000 18.5 Acres • Approx, 300 It, Rd, Frontage Par tially Wooded Level In Edge ot Iredell Co.»29,900. Olf Needmore................29 Plus Acres »35,000 DAVIK COUNTY KN'I'IÍRPRISK RKCOUI), TIIUKSDAV, Ли}-. 24, 1989-SI) M o to r M o u th Dr. James Kern of San Antonio, Texas, gives a motiva tional speech to Davie school personnel Monday morning at Soth Davie Jr. High School.— Photo by James Barringer HOMES & REALTY, INC. (704)6340321 I - I $15,000 WATTS STR EET-Tw o bedroom, one bath home is good loca tion in Cooleemee. Great investment potential.$18,900 CROSS STREET - Cute 2 bedroom, 1 bath home perfect for young couple. Juet freshly painted inside and out. Ready for your personal touch to make It home.128,« М WATT STREET/COOLEEMEE ■ 2 Bedroom, 1 Bath hom e with aluminum siding exterior. Personal property Includes range, washer and dryer. Nice lot in good location, convenient to schools, churches and shopping. $29,900 SANFORD AVE./MOCKSVILLE - lo r 2 bedroom/1 bath. Good location. Across from the Garden Vailey Entrance. Good starter home or investment property. ^ * room ISM HLnd ttils could be your dream houso. Call today tor more details.S34,90D OFF DANIEL RD. - 3 BR's, 2 bath modular home on large heavily wooded lot. Extremely well cared lor. Large covered back porch offers room for outdoor enjoyment.$35,900 TURRENTINE CHURCH ROAD - If your have wanted an affor dable home. You can enjoy country living in this 2 bedroom, 1 bath home. Please call to see today. Owner says MAKE ME AN OFFER.$39,000 CHERRY HILL ROAD - Acreage with very nice mobile home. 2 bedrooms and 2 full baths featuring a garden tub and central air. 3.74 acres of land with some in fescue and excellent road frontage. 60 Bradford pear trees and new pinoaks on the land. Moer, tiller and greenhouse remain with property.$39,900 MAIN ST. COOLEEMEE - Charming home with all the extras you've been looking for. Beautiful hardwood floor, vinyl siding, central air, nice deck. Cozy attic bedroom, perfect for teenager ' or ° iivi^lihls h ( ^ h as to offer. ^ ® ^ $45,000 QLAOSTONE ROAD - Excellent Investment property In private settlngf Three bedrooms and 1 bath, fireplace and wood stove. NEW noOF. Take advantage of this bargain todayl : $48,900 LAKEWOOD VILLAGE - Nice 3 bedroom/1 bath Brick rancher on large tot, completety remodeled 4 years ago. Features kit- chen/dlnlng combo. Modestly priced for the first homebuyers budget. $47,500 HWY. 84 W . - SUPERB BUY On this 7 year old home featuring 3 BR’s, 1 bath. Excellent condition plus a pretty setting. This one I will not last longl Call today for an appointment. $47,800 WILLOW RUN ■ New lisUng features 3 BR, 1 </2 BA with full base ment on 1 acre lot. Convenient kxsatksn. Owner will consider lease or lease/wtion.848,500 OLADSTONE RD. - This Is the afforable home you've been waiting fori 3 Bfl | B | H J ,l j a Д Е т П :^ Щ РаШаИу fenc- ed. Features 1пЛ|И'Ш1Р*РЯяр1я**ЯН1вг1. Great location!.$49,900 WHtTNEY ROAD • II you've been looking for that nice home wilh 3 bedrooms, spacious country kitchen and full basement in move- ln conditkin but thought it was impossible to find for under $50,000, then you were wrong. Believe it or not, here it Isl A great buyl$53,500 SPRING STREET - Immaculate 3 BR. 1 bath older home within walking distagc|AUlBBumUe^Gt|aa^ back porch and a (■ Щ 9 2 Ш 3 1 1 !1 !1 Ш 1 & Н Н Н с е . All of this situated on an attractive lot with a walnut tree, pines and flower ing trees. $54,800 EDISON STREET • Freshly painted interior and exterior ol this two bedroom Ь | В ^ В Г 9 ^ 1 т Н Н М private street with little traffic. den, utility room and extra largeЯ !ЯШ Ш 1т^Щ ВгШ ш ТОгеа1 Space For The Pricel $54,900 e4W E S T -S u | ed lot. Extrem single carport ________________ ready lor a new family to move In today. $55,900 POWELL ROAD - MOVE RIGHT IN AND RELAX - because this 3 bedroom, 1 bath home has a new kitchen, new carpet, and it is in immaculate condition. Recently landscaped - Call today for MORE DETAILS. $58,000 HIGHWAY 601 NORTH 3 + PARTIALLY WOODED ACRES- A spring & possible lake site with room (or small pasture area. Recently remodeled with 3 BR, 1 bath and 1458 SF. Convenient to 1-40. OWNER WILL ASSIST WITH CLOSING COSTS, HOMES f ★ ÉATURE ЭР THE (WEEK I ★ '•65,000 - DRASTICALLY REDUCED. - MAKE OFFER! - . WILKESBORO STREET, MOCKSVILLE - This Và story brick house ihas over 2000 sq. ft. Features 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, den with wood i paneling and built-in bookshelves, formal dining room, living room; [ kitchen with built-in eating bar, glassed-in porch, storage room, at- I tached carport and detached double carport. Convenient to schools ; and shopping. Owner is anxious to sell. Call todayl This could be the ‘ best deal in town.. SOLD QiiiiaicH nn lovely corner wood- bedrooms, 1 bath, ¡Ideal starter home, $58,900 HOWARD STREET - Neat 3 bedroom brick rancher in town on nice quiet street. Features double garage and large workshop/utility area. Also nice sun porch with broken tile floor ing and roll out glass windows. GREAT BUYI $64,500 DAVIE ACADEMY RD. - Brick rancher, 2 bedroom, 2 bath, large LR w/ FP, DR w/bullt In china cabinet, full bsmt., carport, circle drive. Rural setting with large hardwoods. $65,900 WILKESBORO STREET - GOOD LOCATION - Brick house with 4 bedrooms and 2 baths. This 1 </2 story house Is near shop ping area and schools. Upper level great for children. $69,900 GREAT BUY - 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, Great room and 18.47 acres make this house the best buy around. Enjoy the swimmng pool and wrap around deck that this property offers. Country In the Country at an affordable pricel $69,900 WILLBOONE HOAD - Nice home on 2.72 acres. Acreage has 650 It. ol road Irontage. Home features living room, den, 2 bedrooms, 2 full baths, large country kitchen with built In eating bar, dining room, double carport, concrete drive. Also for the animal lover there's a small barn with electricity and water. Ad ditional out buildings and storage oil carport. »70,000 OFF MAIN CHURCH RD. - Stale Rd. 1466 - Affordable Brick Ran cher with 3 Ьа^|чг,ч JR<j&sq. ft. situated on .9 acres wilh 8 r ^ im f lw w a iMBli‘.^>iI ^ ] d playroom In base ment wilh Vl bath and drive-in basement. Call today for more details. *72,000 TWINBROOK SUBDIVISION - Crestview Drive, new construc tion just completed and ready for occupancy. This 1500 sq. It. country rancher was designed to give you a feeling ol tremen dous spaciousness. Abundant cabinets, walk-in closet & garden tub add to the value ol this allordably priced home. 572,000 SANFORD AVENUE - Less than 1 year old, this lovely country home is sited on 2 partially cleared acres. Home features great lioorplan, 3 large Br, 2 BA, and a beautiful view ol dogwoods and redbuds Irom Ihe greatroom. Well cared lor and In new conditioni 576.500 WILKESBORO STREET - Excellent location for possible com mercial use. Brick veneer, 4 bedroom, 2 bath, kitchen, dining, living room w/FP, screened porch, 2 carports. GOOD INVESTMENT. 576.500 WILKESBORO STREET — Excellent location lor possible com mercial us. Brick veneer. 4 bedroom, 2 bath, new remodeled kit chen, living room, den. GOOD INVESTMENT, Warm Temperatures, On Tap For Weekend Warm toinpcratiirc.s arc I'lirccast for the Piedmont area for the iiixoniln;; wcokciui. accnrdinj; lo ihe Naticmal Weather Servicc. Under partly cloudy skies Friday through Sunday, high leiii|ieralures should be near 90. with lows near 70. There will lie a chance of afternooji and evening .showers and thundershowers. On Thursday, the forecasters predicted highs in the upper SOs wilh a 40 percent chance of sliowers and thundershowers. Boger Real Estate 9 9 8 - 8 3 3 4 247 Acres Pudding Ridge Road 3600 ft. house built 1876 32 Acres Howell Road 1800 ft. brick ranch house. 10 stall horse barn, will divide. Large Mobile Home Lots 601 2 miles North of 1-40 Restricted lots near 801 and l«40 »1T-«bp 8 1 8 S o u th M ain S tr e e t M o c k s v illc , N .C . OH icr Hours M onday Fridny 9 7 Sal 10 ‘1 Sun ? 4 *79,900 GROVE STREET - COOLEEMEE - THIS house at THIS price: will knock your socks off I Situated on a beautifully landscaped ' lot, this contemporary home features 4 bedrooms, 2V4 baths, for mal areas, a comforable den with stone fireplace, and a lovely atrium. Amenities are too many to list so call today for a fantastic buyl *79,900 CENTER STREET - COOLEEMEE- Super nice 4 bedroom, 3 bath brick rancher located on approximately 3 acres. Features;; large master bedroom with sitting area, large country kitchen,, easy to maintain brick exterior. A great house for the price. Call - today for an appointment. . . *83,900 TWINBROOK SUBDIVISION — NEW CONSTRUCTION - Superb floor plan In this traditional style ranch. Features, 3 bedrooms, 2 lull baths, great room, dining room and breakfast area. Also double garage. Buy eariy and decorate lo suit your personal taste. *84,900 TWINBROOK — NEW CONSTRUCTION - Traditional style 3 BR, 2 BA home features full, drive-ln, basement, great floor plan and over 1500 SF of living space. Fireplace In greatroom for cozy winter evenings, spacius deck for. summer entertaining. , *89,500 EDGEWOOD SUBDIVISION - MAKE OFFER - Beautifully wooded corner lot offers much shade to this lovely brick honie' featuring 3 laroeiii.-in^ ¡м ш к -и л^м ж а upstairs with living - room, fomiial diniiigTpowdOTraoiTUaiTiiiyroom, kitchen and large utility/workshop combination downstairs. Central Air & Central *99,500 EDGEWOOD CIRCLE - This beautiful home offers all the amenities you want. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, central air, large den. w/flreplace, screened-ln porch, swimming pool landscaped and. fenced. A two car carport plus garage workshop. Move-ln condition. . • ■ $99,500 NORTH MAIN STREET - Lovely older, home In on* Of Mocksvllle's most deslreable locatkms. Huge lot with beautiful: hoardwoods and blooming annuals. Home boasts neatly 3000 square feet Including 4 bedrooms and 2 full baths; ComplMwHh' vinyl exterior for low maintenence. . ;i .■ $102,500 HWY. 84 EAST • Immaculate & Roomyl This S bedroom 2V!i bath ‘ brick home offers modern living In a quialty: built oMw hont«.: Features include hardwood floors, two flre^acea and a'wrap- around front porch. Shady kjt In locatkin convenlnet to town. CaH today to see this excellent property. $110,000 JERICHO ROAD - This 1</i atory ti^aditional home oKw 4 bedrooms, 3 full baths. Large finished area In basement com- plete with a second kitchen, huge den with fireplace ahd lota ol stroreage. Formal living and dining rooms upswrs. Qoigeo« 4 ± acre lot with lots ot trees ahd natural springr 24x38 building with concrete floor and 220 wiring. Located in oi)e of rural Davie - County's most attractive areas. , • . ■ $122,900 OARDEN VALLEY ESTATES - A REAL EVE CATCHERt • Rock work is key feature to this new constructton. Complete jiist In time for that before school move. Lovely 1 story'design on com pletely wooded lot offers infomial living with oustanding features and terrific storage space. CALL TODAYI $129,900 GARDEN VALLEY ESTATES • UNDER CONSTRUCTION - Rustic rancher with fir siding and accents of. rock give this ex terior a unique look. Corner lot perfectly suited for this full base ment home with great room, large master bedroom suite, eat-in kitchen, plus formal dining. $138,000 WANDERING LANE • Spacious 1 'A story birck and siding home on 1.20 w ooded acres with lots ol privacy. Features include 4 bedrooms, 3 baths with large master bedroom, sitting area, bath, and its own deck. Great home for a growing family. CALL NOW FOR DETAILSI *285,000 OFF EATONS CHURCH ROAD • Beautiful log home situated on 76.721 acres bordering Wateshed Lake Home offers 3423 square feet of living space, includes 5 bedrooms, 3 baths, cozy sun room and full basement. Perfect for the large family. Owner willing to divide land, call for details. ................GARDEN VALLEY •••• • GARDEN VALLEY ESTATES — SECTION IV • Amenities of this new subdivision help property value to continually increase. All beautifully wooded homesites offering 32 ft. wide curbed streets, cily water & sewer, street lights, underground utilities, and restric tive covenants. SEE NEW PRICE LIST. •2,200 WILL BOONE RD.- Included in this 24.37 acres. Cleared on per acre front side, beautifully wooded back property with stream, •2,300 OFF DEADMON ROAD - 53.5 acres ol rolling larmland wilh per acre stream and fencing.' Only ,3 mile oif slale road, •5,500 Ea EDGEWOOD CIRCLE SUBDIVISION - 2 lots - approximately 162.5x125, in quiel well established neigjiborhood. Corner LOT/LAND lot may lace either street *7,000 NICE BUI----------- approximfl ■ just oil 64 west Rickair Ц..Ballay VIckla naming JsmM.f oM*r, «12,500 HWY. 801 NORTH - 5 acres, heavily wooded, road Ironiage off Hwy. 801. «21,000 OFF DULIN ROAD • Great road frontage (636.34 It.) includ ed 6 heavily woodes acres. «32,000 FARMLAND ACRES SUBDIVISION • 6.954 cares in Super nice subdivision, ideal location for the family looking for Ihe convenience of tieing close to shopping, schools etc. but also wanting the serentiy of country living. 'S ervififi VVf7/j Pride *35,000 FARMLAND ACRES - 7.588 acres heavily wooded In cu-de- sac. Located in one ol Mocksvill's most attractive sub-divisions, »68,500 OFF COUNTRY LANE - Over 5 acres wilh 164 It. road fron tage on Campbell Rd. Completely cleared, public water on Country Lane, гопе R-20. Great location. S98,900 OFF HWY. 158 - 30.92 acres (enced and cross fenced with large barn and other outbuildings. Also 2 ponds on property. Ideal building spot lor the outdoor lover. 634-442 634 364 2в4-26С Mery Hendrlcfcc Chrlt Hendrix Sendra Johnson 634-31S2634-0008 634-3177 Frances Tutterow Kathi C. Wall Peggy Walton 634-5074 634-1311 634-3698 6D-DAVIE COUNTY ENTEKI’KIStC KECOKI). IIIUKSDAV, Aiif>. 24, 1989 . "I was aboard the first flight when the first jet was delivered from Boeing Co. to Pan Am in New York.” — Jim Etchison EMC Gets Tornado Help Crosccnt niectric Mcmbersliip Ciirporalion (l-.MC) has rcceiveil a partial payiiicnl Irom Ihe l-'ctlcral Disaster Assislanee Proyram to reimburse the co-op's expense of repairing their system in Davie Counly due to storm damage. Tlic damage occurred Ihe weekend ol' May 5-6 when a ma jor slorm I'ront passed tlirough Ihis area, causing downed power lines, trees on lines, damaged traiislormers and broken poles. The meniber-owned eleclric co op, which has dislrici offices in Cornelius, Slatesville, Taylorsville and Mocksville, sustained damages throughout its entire system. However, Davie Counly was especially hard hil, wilh their Mocksvillc dislrici suffering exten sive damage. It cost Ihe co-op $159,000 lo repair the damages lo the Mocksville district. Under the Robert T. Stafford Disaster Relief and Emergency Assislance Act, several counties were declared eligible for federal and stale a.ssislance, wilh Davie Counly being one of them. Afler a field check inspection by federal and state disaster leam in spectors J.D. Coffman and Worth Kerr, it was determined that the co op could file a claim for $74,209 as a non-profit organization. A cheek for $57,787, or 75 per cent of Ihe original claim, was recently presented lo Ihe co-op's Mocksvillc dislrici manager, Wayne Russell, at Ihc Davie Coui^- ly limergency Managemem Office.. Jim Etchison flew the first commercial air flight across the Atlantic Ocean. — Photo by Chris teckieFrequent Flyer bavie Native Has Career With Airline By Ann Sheek Special To The Enterprise-Record '■ Jim Etchisoni of Lake Cliff Drive, Clemmons, was so in spired in 1927 with Charles Lind- tergh’s solo flight across the Attatic that he became a pioneer to air traveL ; Wfien Lindbergh made that flight in 1927 Etchison was a o n ag er growing up in Davie County. He graduated from Mocksville High in 1930 and was 4uccessfiil in getting his pilot’s Ucense two years later. ; Etchison, now 77, went on to ichieve several ‘firsts’ in his pioneer path of air travel — first (iominercial flight across the mid- Atlantic; first commercial flight from New York lo Bermuda; first commerical flight from New York to Ireland and first com- terical jet flight from New York ^ io.Paris. r, “When I finished pUot’s school it was during the depression and diere was not much need for p lo ts,” said Etchison. “Being mechanically inclined, I entered aviation mechanic school in I^ennsylvania.” }; After completing the school he vyent to work for Pennsylvania Airlines as a mechanic. By 1933 (•resident Roosevelt cancelled all U.S. mail collects after the ^ re ssio n and had the Army oury die mail, ^Etcbton then .switched jobs • Hid went to Glenn L. Martin Airplaiie Company in Middle River, Maryland building a^lanes for the Army to fly the qiail. '".By the spring of 1934 Penn- ^Ivania Airlines was reawarded quail contracts and Etchison was ^dled back to work for this com- liany in Cleveland, Ohio. “About 1935 Pan Am Airlines 1 ^ their first commercial flight iji a seaplane across the Pacific,” related Etchison. “I wasn’t in volved, and was just a young sprout then, but 1 figured this was the beginning of a pioneering era in air travel and I wanted to be a part of it.” By 1936 Pan Am hired Et chison as a mechanic. “ At that time the company had not yet conquered the Atlantic Ocean because of the distances between landing spots and the hazardous weather. These factors required an airplane with longer range than any built to that point.” Etchison said in 1935 Pan Am had contracted with Boeing Airplane Company to build a seaplane with an adequate range and carrying capacity. “This was to be the Yankee Clipper, which would be u.sed for Ihe first com mercial night from New York to Bermuda and from N. Y. to Ireland and England.” ' By the time Etchison joined Pan Am he was chosen with other . crew members to assemble a flight to cross the ocean. The first commercial flight was to Bermuda from New York and Etchison was a crew member in 1937. “ Later that summer survey flights were made across the ocean from New York, but without passengers,” said Et chison. “ These flights were to gather information for flight in the Yankee Clipper, which was being built by Boeing, and delivered in 1939. Charles A. Lindbergh and his wife Anne did all the exploratory work for Pan Am during the early 1930s. Etchison said Lindbergh chose Foynes, Ireland as the best landing spot on the North Atlan tic crossing. “I was on that flight from Seat tle to New York when we took delivery of the Yankee Clipper seaplane,” Etchison recalled. On May 20, 1939 Ihe Yankee Clipper and crew, including Et chison, flew on the first commer cial flight across the mId-Atlanlic from New York; Azore Islands; Lisbon, Portugal; Marseilles, France and into Southhampton, England. “ All these places had landing ports.” Remrning from that flight the crew began preparations for the North Atlantic flight on June 28. On this historic 13-hour flight a 15-member crew manned ihe Yankee Clipper, which left New York, went to Canada, New foundland (refueling there), to Foynes, Ireland and on to Southhampton, England. Etchison, a flight engineer, was on this night, where he helped manage the machinery, fuel and aircondllionlng. He and his wife Dahlgren went back on the 25ih anniversary flight in 1964 and for the recent SOth anniversary flight earlier this summer. He said on ly one other crew member is living. “ On that first flight we had government dignitaries. Pan Am World Airways officials and the mall,” stated Etchison. “We had 15 crew members and two service stewards, and worked four-hour shifts on the long flight,” said Etchison. “ Now technology has advanced so much that on overseas flights there are 16 service persons and two flight crew members.” The long-time enginee says “ Eveiything moved so fas’ji my 36-year career with Pat Am. When the war (World 11) came propeller planes arrlvl and airports built. Seaplanes we loo restrictive in their use.” ; “ Following that came t jet age. I was aboard the first Jght when the first jet was deliired from Boeing Co. to Pan Ai in New York,” said Etchison. Pan Am led in development ofong range aircraft. I workei in management for much ofmy career with that company,but always maintained my flight ew status.” In 1958 Etchison had he privilege of making the firsjet— nighl from New York to P;i.s. Then in 1983 he and his \l'e Dahlgren made the 25lh anni’.r- sary celebration flight of at original jet trip. Etchison retired from ie airlines In 1972 and retund south to North Carolina, settlg in Clemmons. For awhile e taught management trainlg courses at Forsyth TechnKl College. Since 1980 he has run ts Carolina Air Academy In Airy, which is a branch ofhis st Jim Jr.’s Academies of Fligfj There he Is fixed base operator[ the Surty County airport at helps operate an internation’ flight school. AND CRAFT TABLE YOU'VE BEEN LOOKING FOR, PLUS A VERY FITIING OFFER! Get tills great layout mat FREE witli your new Create-A-Space''' Table CfOlor ----------------CiiMte A S|XK(* doni siopU'Oitf' liiisIvjuiiliil iliifj’.'lffpiiveol iiiniiiviiplus jMiviMV tlSCSdSVOUt illUJtjlUJllDn I'w it ai'VlMtxiVJU 001x1 CreatC'A'Spacc how It can sv-oik iot • foVJ'oiiUo 72 »‘Î0 lo jcionvjiljie nxw o\vi\g>iiii‘cnictali r'OK'cl t tjvK' lü<10 \ lb In« MoijijC • kicjl k'tqln lo» comlütt.iblo uv all ibvioiKj• Upiioi'jt lull «ue CUtlllH) IIMl iIikI nwlcl'lin} fuk’t PAT’S INTERIORS 766-9166 § Vertical Micro Or Mini Blinds §Waverly Wallcoverings •Coordinated Lambrequins And Draperies •Hardtuood Floors And Parquet •Non-skid rug pads C e p h is D riv e , C le m m o h s B e h in d D o c k sid e . AUDITIONS For . . ■ . Davie Theater Coiniianÿ Production Of L I’I A b n o r Sat., August 26 ~ 1 to 5 p.m. .Sun. ,_Aug^27 rr. 2iaO„tQjl.:P.mâ D avie C o u n ty P u b lic L ibrary Pianist Provided Performance Dates; . ‘ Novemt)er 9, 10, 11 < and November 17, 18, 19 - , * For alternate audition times call 634-2325; Or 634-5018 After 7 p.m. Sponsored By Davie Arts Council And Mocksville Davie Recreation Department^ Herman’s Cleaners “ Best Shirts From Starch To Finish” Monday-Friday 6:30 - 6:00 Saturday 8:00 -12.00 •Tailoring •Sizing •Waterproofing •Leather Cleaning •Same Day Service THE SEW ING ROOM, •ISO C«phU Dfl««,7f-9t0$ BERNINA'£) A ny SI 0 .0 0 Dry C lea n in g O rd e r H i I W ith T h is C o u p o n 0 Shirts with any ?10.°° Dry Cleaning Order. 922 Yadkinville Road, Mocksville, NC Phone: 634-1444 P U B L I C N O T I C E 1)Л\’ПС C O I N T'S i;,Vl i;m>KI.SK HICCOKD, j IIUUSIM 'S’, Л пк. 24, 1 9 8 9 -7 » ~ 0 LA S S IF1 E D S NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTYEXECUTRIX'S NOTICE Having qualified as Executrix ol tho estate o( John W. Hacknoy. deceased, late ol Davie County, North Carolina, this Is lo nolily all persons having claims against said estate to present them to tlie undersigned on or belore Ihe 10th day ol February, 1990, or this notice will be pleaded In bar ol their recovery. All per sons indebted to said estate viiil please make immediale payment to the undersigned. This the 10th day ol August, 1989. Jeannine F, Hackney. Box M, 114 Riverbend Drive, Advance, N.C. 27006, Executrix ol the estate ol John W. Hackney, deceased. 8-10-4tnp NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY EXECUTOR’S NOTICE Having qualilied as Executor of the estate of Vera Godwin Hail, deceased, late ol Davie County, North Carolina, this Is lo notify ail persons having claims against said estate (o present Ihem lo Ihe undersigned on or before the 10th day of February, 1990, being six months from the lirst day of publication, or this notice will be pleaded In bar of Iheir recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make Immediate payment lo the undersigned. This the 2nd day of August. 1989. Roben B. H^i, Box 816, Mocksvllle. N7C. ¡27028; Executor ot the estate of Vera Godwin Hail, deceased. Martin and Van Hoy, Attorneys Drawer 1068 Mocksviile. N.C. 27028 8-10-4lnp NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY EXECUTRIX’S NOTICE ■ Having qualified as Executrix ol the estate of Magdeline Carter Whitaker, deceased, late of Davie Counly, North Carolina, Ihis Is to notify all persons hav ing claims against said estate to present Ihem lo Ihe undersigned on or before the 10th day of February, 1990, or this notice' will be pleaded In bar ol Iheir recovery. Ail persons Indebted to said estate will please make Immediate payment lo the This the 10th day of August, 1989. : Joyce W, Rabon, Route 3, Box 597, . Mocksvllle, N.C. 27028, Executrix of the estate of Magdsllne Carter Whitaker, deceased. ■ ; 8-10-4tnp NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY EXECUTRIX'S NOTICE ^Having qualilied as Executrix ol the estate ol Q.W. Potts, deceased, late ol : Davle.County, North Carolina, this Is to notlly.all persons having claims against ‘ Vtaki cisMte to present them to the under- ; signad on or belore the 10th day ol February, 1990, or this notice will be pleaded In bar of their recovery. All per- sons.(ndebled to said estate will please 'make immediate payment to the undersigned.This the 10th day ol August, 10B9. Belly B. Potts, P,0. Box 88, Advanco, N.C. 27006, Executrix ol the eatate ol Q.W. Potts, deceased. 8-10-4tnp NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE District Court Division 87-SP-71 Lola H. Holden and husband, Thomas W. Holden, and Luolla Jarrett, widow. Petitioners VS. Mabel H. Bailoy. el al.Respondents NOTICE OF RESALE Under and by virtue ol an order ol resale as signed on the 16th day ol August, 1989, by Ihe Clerk ot Superior Court ol Davie Counly, North Carolina, the undersigned Co-Commissioners will offer for resale al public auction the hereinafter described tracts of land, on the 1 St day ol September, 1989, at 12:00 noon at the courthouse door; that the resale will be sub|ecl to upset bid and confirmation as provided by law; that said tracts ol land are particularly described as follows: Being and lying In Shady Grove Township, Davie County, North Carolina and being: Tract numbers 10 and 11 of the Cora Harlman Estate as seen on a current survey prepared by Kenneth L. Foster, R.L.S., dated December 21,1988, to which reference Is hereby made for a more particular description. Said tracts shall be sold separately with opening bids being as loiiows: Tract No. Opening Bid 10 $14,855.00 11 17,191.25 The resale Is sublect to 1989 Davie County ad valorem taxes. The successful bidder ol bidders will be required to deposit ten (10) percent ol the amount ol the bid the date of the sale; the sale shall remain open tor upset bids tor a period ol ten (10) days Irom Ihe date of the til ing of the Report ol Resale: and the resale Is subject to confirmation by the Clerk ol Superior Court of Davie County and by a judge of the Superior Coun ol Davie County. This 16th day ol August, 1989, N. LAWRENCE HUDSPETH ill Shore, Hudspeth & Harding P.O. Box 936 Yadkinviile, N.C. 27055 Co-Commissioner E. EDWARD VOGLER, JR. Halls Vogler P.O. Drawer 970 Mocksviile, N.C. 27028 Co-Commissioner 8-24-2lnpNORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY EXECUTRIX’S NOTICE Having qualified as Executrix of the estate ol Adam Odell Wagner, deceased, late ol Oavie Counly, Nonh Carolina, this Is to notify all persons having claims against said estate lo present them to the undersigned on or belore the 17th day of February, 1990, or this notice will be pleaded In bar of their recovery. All per sons indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned. Tills the 17lh day ol August, 1989, Madolyn H. Wagner, 1259 Yadkinviile Road, Mocksviile, N.C. 27028, Executrix ol the estate ol Adam Odell Wagner, deceased, 8-17-4tnp NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY i LEGAL NOTICE . In acco^nce with the "Rules For Twln-Traller Truck Access Routes” adopted by t)te N.C. Board of Transportation, notice Is hereby given that an application has bewi filed with Ihe N.C. Department ol Transportation lor the lollowing twin-traiier truck reasonable access route(s) to trucking terminal(s): No.oee Terminal Location Firm County (City) Routes Lee Co. ' US 801 ' Oavie County Start End Point Point 601 Bypass Hwy. 70 601 601 601 Bypass Terminal SR 1410 158 601 601 1-40 SR 1410 158 1-40 158 601 Terminal Terminal oee Jockey Inter- Cooleemee national, Inc.' 601 Bypass 70 601 601 601 Bypass SR 1134 SR 1134 601 SR 1125 SR 1125 SR 1134 Terminal 601 Bypass 70 601 601 801 . SR 1116 SR 1125 801 SR 1116 SR 1125 SR 1410 158 601 SR 1134 SR 1125 SR 1410 158 601 801 SR 1116 SR 1125 601 Bypass 801 601 801 SR 1116 70 801 SR 1116 1-40 SR 1410 158 601 SR 1134 1-40 SR 1410 158 601 801 SR 1116 SR 1116 SR 1125 Terminal SR 1116 SR 1125 Terminal 158 601 SR 1134 SR 1125 Terminal 158 601 SR 1134 SR 1116 SR 1125 Terminal 090 Ingetsol Rand Mocksviile 801 70 SR1116 SR 1116 801 SR1125 SR1125 SR 1116 Terminal 801 1-40 SR1134 SR 1134 601 SR 1125 SR1125 SR 1134 Terminal 801 1-40 SR1116 SR 1116 801 SR1125 SR 1125 SR 1116 Terminal 601 Bypass 70 601 601 601 Bypass SR 1140 SR 1140 601 Terminal SR 1410 158 601 SR 1140 601 SR 1140 1-40 SR 1410 158 601 1-40 601 158 601 SR 1Ы0 Terminal SR 1140 Terminal Written public comments will be considered for the record. Commenis may be lorwarded to: J.M. Lynch. P.E., Stale Trallic Engineer, P.O Box 25201, Raleigh, N.C. 27611. ____________ B-t7.2tnp NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY EXECUiniX'S NOTICE Having qualilicil as Exoculnx ol Ihe Estate ol M H. Grose, doconsed. lalo ol Davio County. North Carolina, Itiis is to nolily ail persons having claims against said estate to present Ihem to tho under signed on or before tho 17th day ol February, 1990, being six months Irom the lirst day ol publication, or this notice win bo pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned. This Ihe 81h day ol August. 1989. Peggy R. Grose. 168 East Maple Avenue, Mocksviile, North Carolina 27028, Executrix of the estate of M.H. Grose, deceased. Martin and Van Hoy, Attorneys Drawer 1068 Mocksviile, N.C. 27028 В-17-4ШР NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTYNOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION Having qualilied as Administratrix ol the estate of Eugene Samuel Bowman, deceased, late of Davie County, North Carolina, this is to nolily all persons, lirms and corporations having claims against said estate lo present Ihem, duly verified, to the undersigned, care ol William J. Waggoner, Allorney, 2500 Two First Union Center, Charlotte, N.C. 28282, on or before the lOlh day of February, 1990, or this nolice will be pleaded in bar ol their recovery. All persons indebted lo said estate will please make immediate settle ment wilh Ihe undersigned. This the 1st day of August, 1989. Ruth H. Bowman, Administratrix ol the estate of Eugene Samuel Bowman, deceased. 8-10-41ПР NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY TAKE NOTICE That a hearing will be held at 7:00 p.m. al the Mocksviile Town Hall on September 4, 1989. The purpose Is for discussion on the extension ol our cable T.V, franchise. Friendship Cable has purchased the franchise Irom Mocksviile Cable, Inc., and now wishes lo extend the time that Is re maining on the franchise. Catherine Collins Town Clerk 8-24-1 tnp NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVE NOTICE Having qualified as Personal Representative ol the Estate ol Robert 6. Davis, deceased, late of Davie County, North Carolina, this Is to notify all persons having claims against said eslale lo pre sent them to the undersigned on or before the 24th day of February 1990, being six months from the first day of publication, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recove^. All persons indebted to said estate'Vitt please make Immedlato pay ment to the undersigned. This tho 22nd day ol August 1989. Anna Ruth Davis, 184 Duke Street, Mocksviile, N,C. 27028, Personal Representative of the estate ol Robert G. Davis, deceased. Marlin and Van Hoy, Attorneys Drawer 1068 Mocksviile, N.C. 27028 8-24;4tnp NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY EXECUTOR'S NOTICE il.iving qilnhliL'd ,ts Exociitur ol the Est.ilu ol Roy AndoTSon Carter, decoas- od, lalo ol Dnvio Counly, North Carolina, this IS lo nolily all persons having claims against said ostalo lo present them lo tho undersigned on or before tho 24th day ol February 1990. being six months Irom Ihe lirsl day ot publication or this nolice will bo pleaded in bar ol their recovery. All persons indebted lo said estate will please make immediate payment lo Ihe undersigned. This the 4ih day ol August 1989. Timothy Grey Carter. 1113 Maplev/ood Avonuo. High Point. N.C. 27260, Ex ecutor ol Ihe estate ol Roy Anderson Carter, deceased. Martin and Van Hoy. Allorneys Drawer 1068 Mocksviile, N.C. 27028' 8-24-4tnp NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY CREDITORS NOTICE Having qualilied as Executor ol Ihe Will and Estate of Elizabeth Holmes Benlon, deceased, Iale ol 2107 Bermuda Village, Advance, Davie County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons, firms, corpora tions and others having claims against Ihs Eslale ol said deceased lo exhibil them to the undersigned's attorneys at Suite 500, Two Piedmont Plaza, 2000 West First SIreel, Winston-Salem, N.C, 27104, on or belore the 15th day of February, 1990, or this notice will be pled In bar ol their recovery. All persons Indebted to said Estate will please make immediale payment. This the 3rd day ol August, 1989. William Grady Benton, c/o Suite 500, Two Piedmont Plaza, 2000 West First Street, Winston-Salem, N.C. 27104, Ex ecutor of the Estate of Elizabeth Holmes Benton, deceased. Edward E. Raymer Jr. Allman Spry Humphreys Leggett & Howington, P.A. Suite 500, Two Piedmont Plaza 2000 West First Street Winston-Salem, N.C. 27104 Tel: (919) 722-2300 8-10-4tnpNORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY CO-EXECUTOR’S NOTICE Having qualified as Co-Executors of the Estate of Clelus H. Ratledge, deceased, late of Davie Counly, North Carolina, this Is lo notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them lo the undersigned on or before the 24th day of February 1990, being six months from the first day of publication, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons Indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned. This the 18lh day of August 1989. Ben F. Powell. Route 1, Box 72-5, Mocksviile, N.C. 27028 and Ronnie Powell, Route 1, Box 82-B, Mocksviile, N.C. 27028. Co-Executors ol tho estate ot Clelus H. Ratledge. deceased.Martin and Van Hoy. Attorneys Drawer 1068 Mocksvllle. N.C. 27028 8-24-4tnp CLASSIFIED DEADLINE TUESDAYS AT NOON Oh Lordy - Mike Millet* Has Turned 40! “ Happy Birthday” to Mike Miller Of Country Lane, Mocksviile And Sales Manager Of Reavis Ford Mercury Also “ Congratulations” on your win at Boman Gray Stadium August 19th ‘Dedicated To Pete Miller” Love, Family And Friends A U C T IO N S A L E 10:00 a.m. Saturday, August 26, 1989 Personal Property of Mrs. Hattie S. Tutterow Route 1 (Green Hill Rd.) Mocksviile, N.C. DIRECTIONS: From 1-40 Exit #168 Hwy. 64 East to Mocksviile, approx. y,o mile to Green Hill RiJ. Turn right to sale. Watch for auction signs. ITEMS FOR SALE — Large Silver Certificate $1 * Cedar Blanket Chest * Spool Bed -Twin Size * Several Nice Quilts ‘ Depression Glass * Rocking Chairs * China Doll * Homer Laughlln China-Eggshell Georgian ‘ Sears Coldspot Frostless Refrigerator/Freezer * Hotpoint HD Washer • Several Tables ■ RCA ColorTrak w/Remote Control • Pictures, Frames * Floor Lamps * Pewter * Linens, Dollies ' Lantern • Large Trunk * McCoy Pottery ' Silverstone Stereo Compatible ‘ TDC Slide Projector & Screen ' Sewing Notions • Olivetti Undervi/ood Typewriter • Wheelbarrow • Dining Room Table w/6 Chairs • Breakfront China Cabinet ’ Sideboard * Cast Iron Doorstop • Occupied Japan ‘ Sofa * Coffee Tables * Stone Crock • Sears Kenmore Electric Range • Wm. Rogers Flatware ■ Hotpoint HD Dryer * Loveseat ’ Dresser ‘ Sewing Machine • Lamps • Marbles ‘ Pots, Pans, Dishes ‘ Milk Can * Smoke Stand * Emerson Radio ‘ Records ' Luggage * Craft Items ‘ Hand Tools ■ Yard & Garden Tools ' Other Miscellaneous Items. NOTE: Mrs. Tulterrow has given up housekeeping, and we have been commissioned to sell her personal property at public auction. SALE CONDUCTED FOR: Robert Evans. P.O.A. .... J i m S H E E K ^ ^ AUCTION & REALTY CO. NCAL 924 BONDED NCRL 40238 Hwy. 158 P.O. Box 903, Mocksviile, N.C. 27028' Ph. (9 1 9 ) 9 9 8 -3 3 5 0 Rsln ' Ш Е Ш Yard Sales 448 Park Ave. Saturday, 9 a.m. until. Watorbed, nev; recliner and much more. 601: 1 mile norlh ol 1-40. Union Chapel Melhodisl Church. Sal., Aug. 26, 8 a.m. till 12. Miscellaneous yard & bake sale, including office equipment. 801 & 158 Intersection, go 3 miles south on 801, turn lirst road on the right past Tarheel Banana Company, 3rd house on right. Signs, Saturday 8 a.m. till 5 p.m. Children, adult clothing, winter and summer. Shoes, stereos, speakers, car tires, dolls, stuffed animals, and much more. Rain or shine. Crossroad Deadmon Rd. & Turren tine Road. 1 mile off 601. Signs. Saturday, 7 unitl. Ail sizes clothing, appliances, lurnilure, lots more. Davie Academy Road: 2 miles from Cooleemee. 4-families. Sat. Aug. 26, 7 a.m. until. What-nots, costume jewelry, china cabinet. Cannonball solid maple bedroom suite. Clothes sizes 6-9-10; 18-20 ladies. Rain or shine. Gun Club Road off 158. SaL Aug. 26, 8 till 3. Living room suile, end tables, rabbit coat, children’s clothing, ton central air conditioner, other items. Hwy. 601 3 miles south ol Mocksviile at the home ol Bam Correll. Sal. Aug. 26,7 until. 4-families Irom Lexington. Oak Grove Church Rd, oil 158. Satur day, 7 unitl. Lots of baby clothes, miscellaneous. Pine Ridge Road. Saturday, 8-3. I'/z miles on Pine Ridge Road. Watch lor signs. New Avon, adult clothes, shoes, many misc. items.________ Pleasant Acre Drive oil 601 past Greasy Corner. Sat. Aug. 26, 7:30' a.m. to 2 p.m. Infant and toddler clothes, men and women’s clothes, Inlanl toys, 32" Iront storm door,' odds and ends. Rainbow Road off 158 east ot IVIocksville. 2nd house on left after you cross 1-40. Fri. Aug. 26th, Sat. Aug. 26. Household items, lots ol baby and children’s clothing, much, much, more. Rain or shine, Redland Road, Fri. & Sat. Glassware, dolls, bicycles, rocker, etc. SUPER BACK TO SCHOOL SALE Aug. 25 & 26, 8 a.m, until. From Mocksviile lurn left off Jericho Road to Davie Academy Road. 4th house on right. Kids clothes, size 2-14. Pigme Goats, 1980 Chev. Citation, $350.____________________________ Used Washers a Dryers. Good coti' ^ dition. Ask lor Willie 492-5357, МОГ RESPONSIBLE ÍN CASE OF INJUHV OR tOSS OF ANIT TYPE 8-17-2tnbp Yard Sale Signs Give Directions To Your Sale 25^ Each Available At The Davie-County Enterprise Record USED UNIFORM SHOP Opened At 136 N. Salisbury Street Mocksviile, N.C. (Next To Plantation Antiques) 1 P a n ts .....................................................................................> 2 ® ® S h irts .................................................................................. C o v e ra lls, J a c k e ts , B ib O v e ra lls , W h ite P a n ts , • L a d ie s S h irts A n d P a n ts Open Mon.- Wed. & Fri. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. ; Tues, & Thurs. 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. " ■ Phone 704-634-4893 Auction Sale Saturday, August 26, 1989 At 10:00 a.m. , A N T I Q U E S L o cated In D avie C o u n ty N .C . o ft H ighw ay 601 o n D ead m o n R o a d .. ap p ro x im ately 2 ih llM M u th o f M ockavllie. ------------------------------PA RTIA L LISTiN Q , 9 8 % o f item s a re a n tiq u e a . S o m e a re o v e r 2 0 0 y e a ra o ld . ; Handmade Sheets & Pillow Cases - Old Blue Jars — Wringer Type Washing Machine' - Old Ice Box - 2 Wash Pols - Several CM Skilleti — 0И Weod Tuipentin# Box — • Old Bottles— Wood Picture Frame — Round Cake P m (over 200 years old)— Old Lamp . - Butter Molds - Milk Crocks - Chum - Ohl Coca<^ Sign — Anllqu§ Cream And Sugar Bowl - Carnival Glass - 40 Piece Set 01 Dishes - New Hot Walet Heater (never: used) — Coffee Grinder— Old Cotton Planter—2 Boxes 01 Ohl Ptttifra — Ok) Ctieeie : Bo* - Many Oid Locks - Wooden Square (very dd) - Wooden Drag Harrow - Horse, Bonnets - Dog Irons - Old Postage Stamps - Horse Cotors - Well Bucket* And Others ,. - yard Chairs - Antique Fruit Bowl With Odd Trim - Straw Tk* - Feed Sack* (white • S printed) - Old Almanact (some dating In ISOO’i) - Iron Bed » lulling* - Big Jar* - : Seaitesl Milk Clock - Flat Scales - Many Item* Not Ustid. SaleCondi№ledftr/liin<e~'-By.. E llis A u c tio n C o m p a n y 704-284-4080 Office — 919-998-8744 Home Fred 0. Ellle, Avcttoneer NCAL 34S No sale is loo large to manipulate - none to small to appreclatel CALL FOR ANY AUCTION NEEDS OVER 30 YEARS EXPERIENCE * Food and Drinks On The Grounds No Responsible For Accident* ; 108 ± Acres In Davie County Sub-divided in tracts - 5-40 acres Only Minutes From Winston-Salem! DIRECTIONS: From Intersection 1-40 & H«vy. 801, follow 601 North 8 miles to Cana Road!' (SR1411). Turn left on Cana Road and go Vh miles lo land on righl. From intersection ol Hwy 421 & Hwy. 601 follow Hwy. 601 soulh approximately 7 miles to Hwy. 801. Turn left on Hwy. 801 and go towards Farmington 3 miles to Cana Road. Turn right on Cana Road > (SRl411)andgo1'AmilestosaleonrigW. ;■ This line property is located only minutes Irom WINSTON-SALEM, CLEMMONS, LEWISVILLE, MOCKSVILLE, FARMINGTON, This is your chance to own land in the coun try near Ihe cilyl The land is being sun/eyed and divided into acreage tracts, Vou will have the oppoitunity .- at the auction to buy part or all! II will be ollered in Iracls lirsl, and then in combinations, , or as a whole. Being just across the road Irom the Thoroughbred Training Center and the Deetview Jersey ' Farm, it would be ideal lor horses or cattle, A long, paved road frontage makes it even ideal • lot development. Here, you’ll have llie chance lo buy an acreage tract for Ihe home In Ihe country you've been dreaming abouti Don'l miss Ihis big DAVIE COUNTY LAND AUCTION! Auctioneers will be on site Sunday, August 20 Irom 2:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m. to give out maps and answer questions. Or you may want to call the auclion company al 1-800-442-7906 for details. Sale will be held rain or shine. Aucilon lent will be on property il weather is rainy! TERMS; 10« down al the auction, balance not to exceed 30 days. For More Details Cail The Auctioneers: By.. ROGERS REALTY Б AUCTION ca '•У О Ш A U C T IO N C O N N E C T IO N " Higii.ir U I. mum Un, щ. с. HCUCMItJUS-MUwMn (919) 789-2926 or 786-8326 1-800-442-7906Í-10-3IP ■ Sn—DAVIE COUNTY KN IKUrUISK UIXOKD. THllUSDAV, 24. 1989 Ф S EU m TA B LB Animals ATTN: STILL FREE Ader 12 year of service Remval ol dead, down cows & horses Call Mink Farm Slalesville __________704-873-2072__________ HAPPY JACK FLEA CARD; All melal patented device controls lleas in the • . home without chemicals or exter minator. Results overnight! DAVIE FARM SERVICE, 303 W/ILKESBORO , , ST\_____________________________ POODLE PUPPIES...$75. 998-8645 after 4 p.m. FOR RENT....1 and 2-bedroom apart ments, kitchen appliances furnished including dishwasher, IVz-baths, washer/dryer connections. Central heal/air. Prewired lor cable and phone. Insulated doors and windows. No-wax kilchen/bath floors. Pool. Sunset Apartments, located behind Hendrix Furniture on highway 158, . Mocksville. Phone 704-634-0168. NEW, ENERGY EFFICIENT APART MENTS. 1 & 2 bedroom and fully fur- '. nlshed studios. Pool, clubhouse, and . basketball court. AMPLE PARKINGIll .' Water, sower, drapes, and kitchen appliances included. Dishwasher, frosl-iree refrigerator, washer/dryer . connections and on-site laundry ‘ facilities. Heated and cooled wilh heat ''pumps. Private patio or balcony, quick-recovery water heater, smoke dector, prewired for phone and cable -■•■TV. Manager and maintenance live .. on property. 24-hour emergency • ' ttialntonance. Children and small . - peta welcome. Only a few lelt. Don’t ... (nlsa out — call now for $50 off first , month'a rent. Northwood Apartments, .Milling Road. 634-4141.__________ '.STUDIO APARTMENT: $250 montli;' $250 deposit. Referencas required. Prefer single or gentlemen. 492-7853 or 834-1218. A u c t io n s Tw o oommMrcM eomptoxM near O e m Iil0 (between Wilmington and Myrtlfl). 6 cHlce/shops. 70 mlnl- ttorag* units. Sept. 2, 10 am. -WRAY,license 1332. Century 21, .’•Sunset ■ Reaity. (919)579-4005. 1-a0(M81-2102. Bcach Property Beaeh Cottage at S. Myrtle. 2 . bedroom. 2 bath, color TV. A/C. $285 . weeldy or $44 nightly. 704-634-3875. ,..^34-3650. - W M l« Lake: Isley's Apartments and .r Cottages. DIscoums Sunday through .-..Thureday. (919) 862-4030. BLisiness Opportunity Quality Snack Vending TURNKEY BUSINESS .•'All. cash. Compwy established ac- count», pn', no selling. Earn healthy monthly income. Interest free expan- iioh after startup. $12,550 Invest- ment. Ca* 24 hours, l-aoo-729-9876. NEW AND UWD om ci RNINITURf '.;*;SareS' Files ★ FlK Proof FUes Шлаштт ЛШ Ёлл ■■!■■■■■ V iirw готшют« i l l n: IMA ttfMl. Silibury. N.C. C M «n*w «ММЪ iW DM* OMQi НГ41ГШШ М10««МкМ»1ПМ M D 1 4 4 O O ilM U M I №I'm th th e H»H BLOCK ' Incom e T u C ourse Benefit from the seem ingly ever-changing tax laws! Learn how to prepare your own tax return with confidence I Help others prepare their tax returns. Willow Oaks Shopping Cenier P.O. Box 373 704-634-3203 ■ ■ ■ Contact Our neaitt&l oHice Please send me free information about your (ax preparation course. Name.__________________ I Address._________________ ' City________________ Own your own sporting goods store. Large sporting goods chain in terested in coming to Mocksville. Looking for owner/operator. Call 919-454-5757. ask tor Wanda Lucas. REDUCED Irom S89.900 to S69.900. Hwy. business, 1.62 acres, 175 ft. front plus 5 room brick bidg. Call Evelyn Haynes 634-3831 or 919-760*1662, Lewis & Clark Realtors._____________________ Small Profitable Business for sale in Mocksviiie. Lots of room for growth for aggressive owner. Call 634-1456 days or 492-5651 nights. Cards of Thanks CREWS The lamilies of the late Cornelia Mock Crews would like lo thank each one lor their kind deeds and thoughtluiness during her death. A special thanks for food, flowers, calls, visits and prayers. May God bless you. Alby, Peebles, Smoot. Mock & Crews Families IJAMES We wish to extend our sincere thanks to all our neighbors and friends for aii the food', flowers, visits, phone calls, cards and prayers during the recent loss of our loved one, Etiouis Foster Ijames. Words cannot express how much your loving support and thoughtfulness have meant to us dur ing this period ol deep personal sorrow. Bob & Betty Johnny Burton & Martha C h ild C a r e Child care In home on Yadkin Valley Road. Need little girl to play with another little girl. Call after 5 p.m. 998-4948.________________________ DIANE'S REGISTERED DAY CARE on Cornatzer Road has openings for all ages in her home. Hot meals, lots of TLC. $35.00 per week. Call 998-7429 anytime._______________ E au b lish ad H om e D aycare 6 wks.-5 yra ; b e fo re and after school. Preschool teaching Mocksville loca- tlon, ref, aval. 634-0206. Experienced, loving mother will care for your child in my home. Healthy, happy environment. Near Hickory Hill Development. Cali 998-9490 lor appointment._____________________ M other will baby sit In her home. Any shift. Any age. 998-6350. References furnished. Farm Gates, Corral Panneis. Feeders. Headgates. Scoop Pans. Bushogs, Scraper Blades. Rock Rake. Post Hole Diggers and more. Wright Farm Gales. 998-3637. We cloliver. Furniture: Dorm Refrigerator. Very good condi tion. 998-8906. Fully restored antique bed. 5 It. head board, 4 It. loolboard. Side wood rails, brass rollers. $400. Cail Peggy at 492-7114. HotPoInt Refrigerator. Model CTF-210,20.8 cubic It. Exceiienl con dition, S150.1 Soans Washer, Model 20650, good condition, S50. 634-2129. _ Sold Oak dark dinning room table wilh 6 ladder back chair, $125,634-3852. ABORTION....PregnancyTesting, For an appointment call Arcadia Women's Clinic, Winston Salem col lect, 919 721-1620. Homes For Rent Beautiful, small 1 bedroom, air con ditioned cottage oil US 64 Fork. Too small for children. No pets. $250 month. 998-5210 or 1-877-3433. RENT OR SALE: 2 or 3 bedroom home. Newly remodeled. $300 Flent/Sale $28,500. LEONARD REALTY. 704-634-3875, 634-3650. 178 Poplar Street. 10 room older home, lots of charm on desirable lot off Mocksville’s North Main Streel. 4 bedrooms, 2 newly renovated baths, wonderful new kitchen, large mahogany panelled living room. New wiring, plumbing. Landscaped yard approx. 1 acre, Including over 70 box woods. Will Martin, 634-0881 (home); 634-2171 (work)._________________ 3-BR. 1V!i-BA, brick house w/den; separate kitchen, dining room and living room; central heat and air, newly painted and carpeted. Call 704-834-5750.___________________ 4.22 acres, large deck. 3 bedrooms. $49.900. Call 998-6169 after 5 p.m.. BY OWNER: Davie County (Creekwood Deveiopmmonl), 304 Brentwood Drive. Rancher, largo lamily room w/rock lireplace, level wooded lot, 3 bedrooms, large master bedroom w/waik-in closets, deck off ot master bedroom and family room, carport. $84,900. Day 852-7719, evening 998-5779. — Professional Land,Surveyors — La rge Tra c t Divisions Cohnputer M apping Certified Appraisals To p o g ra p h ic Surveys Prom pt & Courteous Service Hollar And A ssociates, P.A. 104 N. Jackson Street Yadkinville, N.C. 27055 (919) 679-8033n N.C. 8eci«ty 01 Sutv»yor* • Amvrican Conflr—» On Sun/eylng * M«pplng M ill« r B u ild in g à R e m o d o lln g CÒ. Replacement Windows West "Vinyl"."Classic Thermal" & Reynolds "Renovation" Available In white, Ian & bronze. Tills for easy cleaning oavldH ^ter AlMinlnum Awnings Carport & Patio Covers Custom m ade and installed to fit! All work fully guaranteed Free Estimates / Refrences Available Compare Our Quality & Price Before You Buy M. David Mllltr Rt. 3, Box 200 Advance, N.C. 27006 ^^^^^^¿honoM 919^98^140_ — I — I^Phone ---------------------J-Zip. AUCTION ANTIQUES, COLLECTIBLES, FURNITURE HOUSEHOLD GOODS, ETC. Saturday, August 19, 1989 At 7:30 p.m. 1820 Cir. American Sideboard, Super Victorian Marble Top Dreser & Washs- land , Antique Oak Candy Display Case, Victorian Bed, Oak Dresser. Painted Oak Bod, Old Two-Drawer Tool Box, Rare Omega Pocket Watch In Sterling, 17 Jewel Elgin Pocket Watch. Small Ladies Pendant Watch, Pewter Spooner Set, Paper mache Life Size Girl, Beautiful Art f^ouvoux Lamp Wilh Clock. Pair- point Lamp. Sterling Christmas Ornaments, Sertling Salt Spoons & Thimbles, Black Americana, Bronze, 1939 German Dagger Wilh Scabbard. Napoleonic Protrait In Ivory Frame, Colliers WWI Photo Book, Ornate Cast Iron Lawn Fur niture. Hosier Kitchen Cabinet. Cider Press. American & European paintings, Coo Coo Clock. Estate Jewelry, Glassware & Pottery, Advertlzements. & Many More Items Too Numerous To Mention. • * • Plus Consignment From The Late Bessie ostwalt Estate * * ‘ LOCATION: STATESVILLE. N.C. -Take 1-40 East of 1-77. Then take Exit 153 (Hwy. 64) ofl of 1-40. Go West on Hwy. 64 ono-hai( mile past Bowling Alley to Building on left. Watch for sign, building Is before Adams Seoiood. Preview From 6:00 to 7:30 p. We Reserve The Right To Add Or Delete Merchandise Mastercard & Visa Accepted Consignments Being Accepted For This & Future Auctions Telephone 704-872-3356 Buyer’s Pfemmm Auctioneer Joe Ford NC Lie. 4406 gP H Q m e S ïF o r s a ie i BY OWNER: North of Greasy Corner on 801. Brick rancher, 3-BR. 2Vz BA, den, formal LR. DR. 2-FP, kit., large utility room, carport, basement, par tially finished. 20x40 pool. 1.1 acres. S103.700. 998-2050, if no answer call 998-75M^_____________ Carolina E.E. Homes will build to suit your needs. We build on your fand or ours. Many floorplans in stock. Come by today for a free estimate or call for information. We can also help you with your remodeling jobs. 704-634-2252. ________________ GOVERNMENT HOMES! SI.00 (U- Repair) Foreclosures. Tax Delinquent Property. Now selling. This area! Call (refundable) 1-518-459-3546 EXT. H5649A for listings. Land For Lease Pastureland for rent to horses $25 per month per horse. 998*5378. Land For Sale DAVIE COUNTY. Moving with the Lee Plant? Need acreage? 17.32 acres by owner, house, 416,44 road frontage. $40,000, (919) 785-0107, Mountain wooded lot with good view, near Blue Ridge Parkway. Pool, ten nis, central water. Single family house resort, $4500. Terms. 919-449-4852. Lawn & Garden г ш ; ! 1 д ; н 'и ^ 1 Я Л ] Н '. ч WAYNE’S LAWN MAINTENANCE AND THEE CARE Tree Topping, Trimming, Stump Grinding & Tree Removal 634-4413 - Free Estimates ANGELL'S SEEDING SERVICE... New Yards, Re-seeding, light grading and hauling. Brush chipping. RICK ANGELL 634-2730 alter 5:30 p.m. C & M SERVICES We provide all types ol lawn service, mowing lawns, trimming shrubbery, cleaning lots, 704-634-5798, FREE ESTIMATES,_____________________ COMPLETE LAWN MAINTENANCE Mowing, fertilizing, seeding, aeration, weed and insect control, and more. CAROLINA LAWN CARE FREE ESTIMATES 704-634-4737. Miscellaneous '84 Resort Camper: 28 leet, air con dition, awning, excellent condition. $7,000. 634-3336.________________ ANYONE CAN APPLYI Guaranteed Visa/MC, US Charge. Even with bad credit. No one refus- ed. Call 213-925-9906 exI. U2269. FOR SALE: 150 AC, part or all. Iredell Co. (704)546-2696. FOR SALE: 1-Coronla Oil Stove. 9-1000 burning, $25.1-4 foot step lad- der. $15. 634-5187.______________ KAYAK SWIMMING POOLS No daily upkeep and maintenance? Hard to believe? No - Its the Kayak Award Winning Pool special prices NOW on new pools, or make an of fer on factory reconditioned models. Call toll free 1-800-446-5443 NOWI PLANTS FOR SALE: Cabbage. Cauliflower. Broccoli, Collards, Brussel Sprouts. Also Flowering Cab bage and Kale. Mrs. Ford Olxon, South Adams Street, Yadkinville. 919-679-8957. Ready to move In. Two and three bedroom mobile homes, $70 & $80 weekly, 492-7853 or 634-1218, Rent to own: 2 bedroom 1988 mobile home near Jockey Plant, 601 South. $350 month plus $350 deposit. Private lot. 492-7653 or 634-1218. Total electric, air condition. 2 bedrooms, lurnished. Large wooded lot. 1 child. No pets. "See to ap preciate!" 998-5334. M o b ile H o m e s F o r Sale Attention land owners. lOQ/flnancIng available. Financing available on well, septic, underpinning. AAA Homes, Exit 42 olf 1-77, Troutman, NC 704-528-9833, ’72 Stylecrsft 12x60. 2 bedroom, 1 bath, new A/C, some furniture. E.C. $5,200 (neg.) 998-5709 Call after 9 p.m._____________________. ’78 Conners Mobile Home, 14x70, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, almond garden tub, bar, extra large windows. Master bedroom and bath separate from other bedrooms. Super clean. Ex cellent condition. $8,500. (704)284-2161 or 284-2737. '80 Conner...14x70. Central air. $8,000. 998-5456._______________ ’83 Mobile Home, 14x76,3 bedrooms. 2 baths, price negotiable. 998-5862 or 634-2411 after 5 p.m. / ; . '86 Skyline 14x70. RC rate, highelfi- clency heat pump, extras. 998-4655. '87 Gray Oakcove, 14x70, 2 ■ bedrooms. 2 baths, fumlshed. Island kitchen, garden tub. 2 decks, under pinning. Must sell. $15,500. 998-2091. Trkin to b« A PrelMBlorwt •ЗЕСЯБТАЯГ EXECUTIVE SECRETARY •WORD PROCESSOR HOME STUDY / RE& TFUINiNQ • FINANCIAL AID -JOB PLACEMENT AVAILABLE ASSIST ANCK 1-800-327-7728TH6H»mecHooi N.n‘h%.°l&%'L№.FL М1Ш НЛПт»ЁЁЁ» sales In the Mocskvllie Area. Potential of $50.000 -fforacaieeroriwitedpsr-' son that wants to work in sales. Pait time sales people have the polentiti of' $300 lo S500 per week. No ехрвЛ^ ■ necessaty. Fuli training for hew repfesentatives. Call №. LN. SUtr, Jr; - lor petsonal inteniew... Wlnslaiv«alsm (919) 7604280. . ' m iM : •FINANCIAL AID • JOB Pi AC[ МГ N t AVAILAHI ^ AS'>IS1 AN( i 1-800-Э27-7728^ fcoyjAVB. ectgoi^ Hess Heating & Air Conditioning 24 Hour Service Sales — Service & Installation Oil Heat Pumps Gas Or Electric Furnaces 919.998-6133 S P E C U L A T O R S BUSINESSMEN thfVÈS^k Saturday, August 26,11 a.in. Land • New Hwy. 421 90 Acres in 31 Tracts Ranging from 1.5 acres to 10 acres 3,000 feet paved road frontage Homesites - Mini-Farms Wooded Lots - Commercial Sites Plan Now To Attend L o cated 2 m iles w e st o f Y adkinville o n new H w y. 42 1 a n d B eth el C hurch R oad O w ner fin an cin g —.3 0 % dow n, b a la n ce 4 y e a rs 12% * Owner Financing Available * Watch for more details! Sale Conducted by: Groce Aaer,ch3. inc. T/A GROCE A U C TIO N & R E A L TY a ilU S GROCl':O rr/C F :(9/9)679fiS J6H O M C :(9I9)í6H-46í I l',O liO \2 6/0.5 S O U JH M C H S O N SV1EET MCAL 1710 VAOK/rVH/J.H, N.C. 27055 MCRL SSSSS DAVtt'; COtl.MA KNIKKl'inSK KKCOKI). rmiK.SIMV, Лиц. 24, 1989-91) Mobile Homes For Sale Lee’s Mobile Homos - Volume Horton . & Fleetwood Dealer. Rd. 1923. Nor wood NC. Open 7 days. Sizes include liilch, no downpayment wilh clear deed. 42x60 triple-wide 336,999; 28x70 $28,999; 4 bedroom 28x64 $24,999; 24x52 $17,999; 24x44 $16,999; 14x80 $16,999; Shingle Roof, Wood Siding 14x80 $17,999; 14x70 $12,999; 14x52 $9,999; 2 Styles 28x60 Highland Park $28,999; 24x60 Horton $21,999; Used Homes also available • 704-474-4906 or . 1.800-777-8652._________________ Oakwood Homes Of Lexington, NC No Paymenls Till October Up To $1,000 CASH REBATE _________Call 1-249-7041_________ Select models. Only $495 down pay ment. Available AAA Homes, Exit 42 off 1-77, Troutman, NC. 704-523-9833. ervice M u s ic BAND PERCUSSION KIT for sale. 634-03B3.________________________ PIANO LESSO N S beginning In September, Advance area, Jimmy Wilson, 998-2732.________________ BARFORD’S PIANO TUNING. Repair ing, rebuilding. Work guaranteed. 919-998-2789. N o tic e A t of S-9-B91 will not be responsible for any debts other than those made by me personally. Tammy P. Hellard Rt. 9, Box 331 _________________Mocksville, N0 I will not, absolutely not, be responsi- ‘ ble for any debts other than those made by me personally. , Ronald McKnight ' , Rt. 5, Box 150 , Mocksvllle, NC O ffice S p a c e ; .OFFICE SPACE FOR RENT (near post • J office). Ground floor, good parking, ': modem conveniences, four offices •' avallabi«. 165 squaro feet to 200 > aquar» f«et iaach'. Call 634-2181. S e rv ic e .'ANDERSON WALL PA PER HANGERS 493-7777 or 492-5159 ;AT.TENTION- FA RM ERS:' S lock ■ V Removal 7 days a week. Down and ■. dls-abled Cows and Horses-ll dead, : call at ONCEI Will NOT pick up OLD : > Dead anim als. JOHNSON & ALEX- : >' ANDER DOQ FOOD COMPANY, Rt.- I 2. Harmony. (704) 546-2357 or . ^ >5467453: ■ IsÀ C K H Ò E . SERV ICE - S eptic . : i S y ^ s , À17 Backhoe Work. Miller C Son* B a c k h ò é S e rv ic e . ^IA R F O R D 'S PIANO RE- '> iM IL b lN O ....S e lf players, pum p -.¿fbrgani. 91»996-2789. BORING MACHINE OPERATOR : Baker Furniture, Mocksville, N.C. is seeking an expeHianced boring machine operator. Pr^efer several years experience, especially on ! hiprizorital ix>ring maciiine. Competitive pay . and benefits package with excellent work i environment! ^ Apply At: Baker Furniture Milling Road, Mocksvllle, N.C. (704)634-2183 E/O/EM/F/H H4-«n I F I E D S Ш Е Ц Щ Е Ю Е Д М Е SBOEECABUB Ш П Ш П Ш Ш Н ШШЕШШШШШШ B & B Contractors Salvage Will remove unwanted cars, washing machines, anything steel at NO CHARGE. 634-1218 or 492-7853. Baker Roofing New & Old Roofs Patchwork Free Estimates 919-998-6399 20 Years Experience C & M Services Concrete linishing...walks, driveways, palios. Free Estimates. 704-634-5798.____________________ COMPLETE CAR SERVICE Engine Re-building, Brakes, Etc. ____________492-7174____________ Carpenter, Plumber, all repairs. Remove old stumps and trees from storm damage. Build Decks and Repairs 634-1218 or 492-7853. Complete Mobile Home Service Tote, set-up, septic tank, drain fills, grading 634-1218 or 492-7853 FAMILY FLOORS "We personally install what we selH" Stop In at 806 N. Main St., Mocksville, NC. Or call us al 634-4411 or 634-0596. FARNHAM ROOFING “Will Keep A Roof Over Your Head" Free Estlmates...998-4962 FIRST AND SECOND MORTGAGE LOANS Debt Consolidation Home Improvement Loans For Any Worthwhile Purpose Fast Service Competitive Rates U nited C om panlet Financial C orp. 1307 Ashleybrook Center Winston-Salem, NO 27103 919-659-0123 . FLOOR SANDINQ & FINISHING INTERIOR PAINTING 284-2898 or 284-2190 GENE'S ROOFING . New and Old Roofs 20 Years Experience Free Estimates _________704-284-4571___________ HAULING - Sand, Gravel, Dirt, Mulch. Milter & Son Backhoe Service ____________284-2826____________ Heating & Air Conditioning Repairs 24 Hour Service. David Griffin, Quali ty Heating & Cooling. 284-4556 or .284-2959._______________________ H ouse O r O fllce C leaning ; References Available - Reliable Free Estimates . ' ^__________919-764-3432 ' MASON ELECTRIC...New Installation & Repair. Mobile Home Hook-ups. Service changes. Keith Mason 998-5542. Osborne Electric Co. No job loo largo or smnll. Unlimited licGnse. Over 20 years experience. Karl Osborne, owner 634-3398 PAINTING, remodeling, home repairs. Large or small. Free estimates. James Milter 998-8340. RAINBOW SERVICE Parts, Deodorizer Service. Call 998-5890.________________________ RKR VIDEO Video Taping & Editing For All Occasions SAVE MONEY! COMPLETE CAR CARE Brakes, tune-up, spin-wheel balancing Boger Texaco Service ____________634-5924____________ STUMP GRINDING - No Yard Damage Miller & Sons Backhoe Service ____________284-2826____________ TIdy-up Cleaning Service Weekly, bi-weekly, monthly, one-time. Free estimates. 284-4444.________ WINDOWS WELCOMED Spring & General Housedeaning _________1-704-636-7924_________ Will do cleaning by the day or week. Call after 5 p.m. Mae Wolford 284-2859. Travel A ug. 26: Country Adventure, Hickory, meal and entertainment, $25. Oct. 13-15: Nashville, TN. Grand Ole Opry. Opryland. Dinner cruise on General Jackson. Nashville Palace. Tour of stars homes. 2 nights motel. Transportation. Dbl. $239 each or Tpl. $219. Quad $209. Helen Bailey 998-4338 or 998-4078. '70 Cadillac Deville: 4-door, lully load ed. New tires and battery. Looks and drives good. Dual exhaust. Needs carburator. $550. Call anytime 492-7889. ___ ___ '76 Toyota Celica G T: 2-door, 5-speed, power brakes, AM /FM cassette. $550. Call anytime 492-7889.________________________ •80 Chev. Citation: 2-door, V-6, 4-speed, PS, RB, Air, Tilt, new tires. Sell parts of whole car cheap. Call anytime 492-7889.________________ '80 Toyota Celica ST, red with black interior, A/T, AM/FM stereo, good condition. $1400 negoitable. Even ings only 284-4289. '87 Dodge Caravan SE: EC, power windows & door locks, cruise control, tilt, roof rack, 62,416 hwy. miles. $9,350. 998-7477 alter 5 p.m. ATTENTION - GOVERNMENT SEIZ ED VEHICLES from $100. Fords. Mercedes, Corvettes, Chevys. Surplus Buyers Guide. 1-602-838-8885 EXT. A3131. BUY GOVERNMENT seized and surplus vehicles from $100. Fords, Chevys, Con/ettes, etc., in your area. For info call 602-842-1051 ext. A2269. SALISBURY MOTOR CO. Bulck-Peugeot 700 W. Innes St., Salisbury 704/636-1341 V e h ic le s '86 Pontiac 6000, blue, 4-door, AM/FM cassette, automatic, cruise, air. Com pany maintenance. 998-0751. TROY'S AUTO SALES THE BEST SELECTION IN STATESVILLE 1123 S helton Ave. Statesville, NC 704/872-8769 704/878-6262 NO INTEREST E - Z PAYMENT PLAN BUY H E R E -PA Y HERE NO CRED IT-BA D CREDIT NO PROBLEM WE ALSO BUY USED CARS -Hut Of Mocksville We Are Now Hiring For Ail Sllifts Competitive Starting Rates Excellent hourly rates for those who can prove their skills. Full or part-time with flexible scheduling available Apply at the Mocksville Pliza Hut or call Mark Fowler at 634-1906 to schedule an appointment. EOE/MF Opening August 28th Alexander’s Temporary Service 301 S a lisb u ry S tre e t (Located Behind Post Orflce) Accepting Applications For Assembly/Pkg. Wareliouse Production Order Pullers I Secretaries, Word Processors, Clerical * 704-634-4904 919-768-TEMP ■Classifieds Sell CaU 634-2129 EARN UP TO $20,000 PeWear Raising CHINCHILLAS For Information write to: (pfeass g/ve name, age and phone number) RANCHERS P.O. Box 3566 Dalton, Georaia 30721 14041 278-4828 Help W anted N o w h i r i n g p a r t - t i m e & f u l l - t i m e p o s i t i o n s a v a i l a b l e a s D e l i C l e r k s o r C a s h i e r s . H o u r s F l e x i b l e A t P r e m i u m P a y A l s o h i r i n g f u l l - t i m e O f f i c e A s s i s t a n t A p p l y A t Lowe's Foods C le m m o n s O r L e w is v ille 2-cycle Engine Mechanic; 2 years ex perience minimum. Good pay lor the right, qualilied person. Jack's Saw, Clemmons. 919-766-4773. ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT to assist with the operation ol group homes (or Ihe menially retarded. In cludes responsibility for maintenance ol facilities, vehicles, purchasing, etc. Mail resume lo ProComm, 100 Roseman Lane, Cleveland, NC 27013. _________________________PO 14470 AIRLINES NOW HIRING. Flight At- tendents. Travel Agents, Mechanics, Customer Service. Listings. Salaries lo $105K. Entry level positions. Call (1)805-687-6000 Ext. A-5720. A TTE N TIO N ; EARN MONEY READING BOOKSI $32,000/year In come potential. Details. (1)602-838-8885 Ext. Bk3131. ATTENTION NURSES AIDS ORDERLIES 8i OTHER CARING PEOPLE Your skills and experience are need ed at ProComm! However, if you are a caring person with no prior ex perience and have a desire to work In such a rewarding field, we will train you. ProComm, a private provider of group home care for the mentally retarded, with homes, in Davie, Rowan and Iredell counties, current ly has full and part time openings for direct care positions on all shifts. Benefits could Include: Competitive salaries, paid vacations, and sick leave, medial and life Insurance and 10 paid holidays. Call 704-278-9681 to obtain employment application. O TR DRIVERS: 12 months ex perience, 23 years of age required. Hornady Truck Line. Start 23-26 cents per mile. Excellent benefits, conventionals/cabovers, home regularly, 1-800-343-7989. BUSINESS OFFICER I Top fiscal operations and management level position In health care agency. Position reports to the Chief Ex ecutive Officer with responsibilities for; budgeting; accounting; purchas ing; data processing; Internal audits; investments; payroll and benefits management; accounts receivable and payable; insurance coverage and the fiscal aspects of program development. Entry-level salary; $27,302-$31,540, depending on ex perience, plus good benefits, pension plans and working conditions. Re quires four-year degree in business, accounting, public or hospital ad ministration plus four years ex perience In mental health, health care or related manage- ment/buslness/plannlng respon sibilities. Send state application and resume to Jan Trexler, Personnel Of ficer, Tri-County Mental Health Area Office, 121W. Council St., Salisbury, N0 28144. EOE. Deadline for accep ting applications; September 1,1989. Before & after school child care posi tions available at all Davie County elementary schools. Applications ac cepted at Davie Family YMCA Mon.- Fri. noon lo 5 p.m. Call 634-0345 for more information. B.J.’s Country Food needs kitchen help now. Apply in person. 998-7290. COME JOIN THE FRIENDLY BUNCH - We have 5 openings in the area lor energetic, outgoing people who want to be their own bosses, make their own hours and meet new people. Our toys and gifts sell themselves with Iheir high quality and wide variety. No Investment, no collecting, no delivery. Don’t miss out on this fantastic oppor tunity. Call for free informalion. ' EARN MONEY typing at home. $30,000/year income potential. Details, 1 ■800-687-6000 Ext. B-5720. Earn money at home stuffing envelopes. Send a self addresrad, stamped envelope to; SEMA, Bqx 1179, Dallas, GA 30132. 1 Full Л Part-tim e positions available at WAL-MART, Mocksvllle. Accepting , applications Mon.-Sat., 9 a.m.- 9 p.m. Interviews on Tuesdays. GOVERNMENT JO B S $16,040 - $59,230/yr. Now hiring. Call 1-805-e87;.6000 Ext. R-5720 for cur- , rent federal list.__________________ INFANT CARE NEEDED. Daycare giver to watch 6 month old at hour home oh Tues. & Thurs. 8;30 till 6 p.m. E'xperienced, loving, non smoking woman need only apply. Call 63j4-1506 between 7 & 8 p.m. N eed tq m e o n e to care for 9 year old before and after school in Mocksville Elementary area. 634-4241. PERSONNEL COORDINATOR Fast! Paced Office Clerical Aptitude vj- : Good Communications Skills' A People Person “ Professional Appearance selfstarter Petsonnei Experience A Plus ■ / G riffin T em porariee C a in -637-2876 F or A ppointm ent SHEET METAL HELPER; Full tltpe. Valid N.C. Drivers License. If-lh- terested, call Barr Heating & Air Cm - ditioning. 998-4601._________. . - Sitter for elderly woman and infant in my home. Non-smoker, Christian,- references. 998-3601. W anted (o r career insurance sales, 3 years training program, fire, casual- . ty and life. First year potential ■ $25,000. Must live or rek)cate-io Davie County. Call G eorge MclMyn 704434-S750 or send resum e to P.O: Box 796, Mocksville NC 27028.' PROFESSIONAL SERVICES Several responsible men an<^ women for part-timQ., janitorial work in Mocksville area. Must be willing to'i work three-hour periods without snnoking. Soliciting mature individuals who are worthy of more than minimum wages. A few individuals with ex perience and integrity will be considered for full-time employment. Meet Calvin Ijames for Inten^lew 5:15>7:15 p.mi i Friday, August 25 At Mocksville’s Chamber Or | Commerce Building, 107 North Salisbury StiMt, 9 Sara Lee Knit Products Farmington Plant Now hiring Sewing Machine Operators1st and 2nd shifts $6.32/HourlyExcellent Benefit Package Apply At Employment Security Commission B.C. Brock Bidg 622 North Main Street Mocksville, N.C. EOE/Affirmative Action Employer - -rj lOD-DAVIE CODNTy ENTKRI’RISK RKCOItl). THURSDAY, Aiij-. 24. 1989 I ^I ] I к ifi ■Ш st Ù I." г ' ' I'-ill - n- r:f<- 1 4 K G O L P All Nusset Jeweify $ 1 495 per gram All Rope Jevvebry 1н»да-. iUl HerrifielMMie Jewdfy Thursday, Fri & Saturday Onl . ........... . . и ........ "■ ■■ t V *р с ж f p n u n A I 'i'r lit s s iX '-* " '< '■" GuBMasMteed Lo w e st P n c c s A n in m h e w e l • - X O W IM lOvCHIO I A M O I I D e , O O L D — ■ ^ A T C m D S I ENTRY BLANK JUST FILL OUT COUPON BELOW WITH YOUR NAME, ADDRESS AND PHONE NUMBER...THEN DEPOSIT COUPON IN THE DRAWING BOX. NAME ADDRESS CITY STATE 7IP PHONE Coupon It void whoravar lix td , rtflulaK d or prohlblltd by law. DIAMONDS Buy Direct From Our New York Representative At Our Cost Plus 10% ,0 0 0 , 0 0 0 d '5V, -i-: '€ f l% Up to 5 carats available O P E N A DON*S CHARGE AOCXXJNT TODAY! New Towne Shopping Center Lewisville-Clemmons Rd. ( N e x t t o R o s e s ) 766-8505 Mon.'Fri., 9 a.m.>9 p.m. Saturday, 9 a.m.-5:30 p.m. I Vli. Index Public Records 8, 9 School News 89 District Court 12 Obituaries B11 Davie Dateline 13 Football Contest D4-D5 Weddings B2-B7 Calvin & Hobbes 012 W e e k e n d W e a t h e r : H o t , D 8 Football Fever New Coaches, New League And More: Section C Fatal Wreck Near Lexington Advance Man Pinned Under Car: Details, P. 6 5 0 «D A V IE C O U N T Y EN TER PR I/Eb#ECO R D TIIUKSDAY, Л11Ц.31, 1 9 8 у \-----1 PAGES USPS 149-160 Man Dies In Car Crash .Members of Center Fire Department inspect overturned car at Lal<e Myers entrance Sunday morning. 7 — Photos by Robin Fergusson Car Soars Over 25-Foot Drop A 29-year-old Mocksville man was killed early Sunday inoming when hie. lost control of his car and struck a tree. ' V iohn Frank Scott of Route 4 was driving his car at an estimated 75 mph on U.S. 64 when he lost control near the entrance of Lake Myers Campground, according to a report by N.C. Highway Patrol Trooper W.D. Grooms. : Scott was thrown from his 1976 Chrysler after the car went do^wn a 25 foot embankment and struck a tree. The report said speed and alcohol were factors in the wreck. Two passengers in the car, including Scott’s brother, were also injured. Stephen Lamont Scott, 21, of420 Morse St., Mocksville, was treated and released from Davic County Hospital for multiple cuts and braises. Fort Velencia Brown, 34, of 300 Milling Road was treated and released from Davie County Hospital for cuts on the hands and knees. Grooms estimated the car was traveling 75 mph when Scott lost control.EMS, Rescue Squad and fire personnel assist victim of Wireck in which Mocksviiie man was killed. Judge Sends Cocaine Trial To Superior Court By Karen Jarvis Oavie County Enterprise-Record Probable cause was found last week in Davie District Court against a Mocksville woman and a New York man on several cocaine charges. Teresa Ijames Morrison, 28, will face charges in Superior Court of maintaining a dwelling for controlled substances and possession of cocaine with in-; tent to sell or deliver. NathanieP: Marc Warner, 19, will face a; charge of possession of cocaine -; with intent to sell or deliver.':"-: Both were arrested after raid by members of Davie County’s Sheriffs Departmentzj at Morrison’s, house on U.S; i: 158 across from Oak GroveJ- - PlMM See 2 Facing — Pi 4>’. Man WrecRi After 3-Mile A Mocksville man who had been fighting with his pregnant wife led police on a 3'yi-mile chase Aug. 21 before wrecking the car into a creek bank. Chad Hausa Peterson, 21, of Rolling Hills Lane, later told police he panicked when Davie Sheriffs Department Deputy Chris Lynn activated his blue light. Lynn and other officers were, responding to Peterson’s home on a domestic disturbance. “I saw the defendant backing out of the driveway at an ex tremely high rate of speed. I could see red places on his face,” Lynn said. Peterson’s mother motioned for Lynn to follow her son, the officer said. “ 1 watched him ran through a stop sign at Rolling Hills Lane and Milling Road.” Peterson drove his car away from Mocksville. “ He stopped the vchicle twice in the road try ing to get it turned around,” Lynn said. Peterson’s third attempt at turning the car around succeed ed. “ He was coming right at me,” Lynn said. “ I pulled off the road and let him go. He got in front of me and disap- ;' peared.” Lynn returned to Rolling/; Hills Lane without seeing son, and officers there Peterson hadn't made it back . ' that far. ■ When Lynn backtracked, he found Peterson’s car wreelced at;: Elisha Creek oh Milling Road. Peterson rah irom the car and - Detective Jerry WiUiams gave :; chase on foot. / \ Lyim charge Perso n with.:; f^ure to stop for biw light and siren, careless awl reckless'• driving, failure to s ^ for stop; sign and leaving the scene of an . - accident. N.C. Highway Patrol . .Trooper L.D. Chappell estimated Peterson was driving the car at 70 mph when he lost control in a sharp curve. The 1989 Subaru driven by . Peterson had just been purchas- ' ed and still had temporary - license tags, Lynn said. The red marks on Peterson’s : face were cuts and scratches suffered in the fight with his wife, Lynn said. The wife, Rachel L. Peter son, 19, was treated at Davie County Hospital for braises and scrapes she suffered in the fight. Turf’s Neighbors Upset With County By Kalhy D, Chaffin Davie County Enterprise-Record Neighbors o f T u rf Equipment say they aren’t happy with restrictions put on the company’s upcoming expansion by the D avic County Board o f Commissioners. ; “ W e got shafted again,” said Fred M cC loud to Sid Hall after coiiiiiiis- sioners voted on proposed restrictions atlheirA u g. 21 nieeiing. “ Let’sg o ,” Hall said afterward Ihal he believ ed commissioners ignored the restric tions proposed by residents near the company’s operation on U .S . 601 north o f M ocksville. “ If wc got any restrictions, I don’t know it,” he said. Commissioners agreed to consider restrictions proposed by neighbors and T u rf officials after voting 3-0 (Busier Cleary and Spurgeon Foster Jr. were absent) at a M ay 30 meeiing to grant a rezoning request ailow ing the expansion. T u rf Equipm em ’s request was for a 9.5-acre tract on U .S . 601 at Bracken Road to be rczoned from highway business to industrial spccial use zoning. T u rf, which has been at the site since September 1987, assembles — through welding and bolting — parts for com niercial landscaping equip ment. Under the new zoning, the com pany would be allowed to manufacture the equipm enl. Hall said he could have accepted the commissioners’ decision to rezone the property “ if they put the restrictions on like they said they were going to d o .” H all, M cC loud and about 28 other area homeowners opposing the rezon ing were represented al the M ay 30 hearing by W inslon-Salem allorney Jeanne Scolt. T u rf was represenied at ibai heal ing and the one last w eek by- M ocksville attorney H ank V an H o y.- H all said Scott wasn’t present last ; week because Chainnan R .C . Sm ith - said at the M ay meeting that com m is-- sioners would decide on the restric-; tions without hearing from either party : again. “ A ll we want is thè suggestions,' and that’s it,” Smith said on M ay 30. ; Please See Residents — P.- 4 • E d ito ria l Page Great Expectations Await Coaches As Season Begins 2-DAVIE COUNTY KNTKRPKISK KKCOKI), rilllUSDA^', Aii|-.31, 1«J«9 The team’s unbeaten. Never been scorcd on. The hopc.s are high. It’s a new season. Il begins this way every i'all belore the first football gaine. Oplimi,sts dream of an undefeated season. Pessimists figure it’s just another year. ' The experts don’t give a hopeful forecast for Davie County High. But who knows? That will be decided week by week, beginning Friday night. Davie’s football fortunes haven’t been the stuff of dreams. But af least we don’t have the problems of Con way High School in Conway, S.C. Conway High, a foot ball power, played Sumter County last week. Sumter i}adn’t won a game since 1987. But it beat Conway 34-6. ^nway had been counting on a bid for the state championship. Something has happened to upset that. Thirty members of the team boycotted the game — protesting the coach’s selection of a quarterback. They sat in the stands cheering Sumter. The coach’s record in live years is 51-18. But wüat does he know? ..Coaches seem to be lightning rods for criticism win or ~irhat can’t be too comforting for new Davie coach Ran dall Ward. If Davie goes undefeated this year, everyone would be disappointed with a 7-3 record the following season. Few coaches can keep pace with expectations. Ask Jim Valvano. The N.C. State basketball coach is going through the wringer. His offense: his staff . manipulated rules to keep key players eligible. Had the players been disqualified, N.C. State’s fortunes would have been jeopardized. Valvano, of course, has been highly suc cessful on the court. He brought an NCAA championship to the college under remairkable circumstances. He is one of the bright stars in the college coaching ranks. Now, .sonic' are ready to kick him out for nof nursing his players onto thé dean’s list. .Coile^es'still'pretend their athletes are scholars. Many tiiri6s they'can’t read without moving their lips. But they can play ball with wild abandon. .Winning gaiiies means more money for the colleges. And colleges like money. College basketball players are under intense pressure to excel on the court — not in the crai^'sroom. Their on-court heroics bring the college fame and.money, butÎ the player has to live in relative poverty. There’s no time to study. Only practice and travel. Tfiere’s one thing Jim Valvano could do to upset N.C. . State officials even more. He could lose games. If he were a loser., he would be dismissed regardless of any academic problems by the. players. ... That’s a coach’s life. High school football coaches’ |reputations are cin the line every Friday night in the fall. {They depend on^the skills of teenaged boys. Nervous. Not pld enough to shave. How would you'like for your career to^pehd oh th^ accuracy of a 16-year-old quarterback facing a swarming attack of linemen? ; That’s a coach’s life. Good luck. Coach Ward. I ; ' • ■ ’ — Dwight Sparks > DAVIB COUNTY B N TE R P R I/^E C O R D USPS 149-160 124 South Main Street Mocksville, NC 27028 704/634-2120 Published every Tliursday by the DAVIE COUNTY PUBLISHING CO. Dwight Sparks .... Robin Fergusson . Mike Barnhardt .., Kathy Chaffin .... Ronnie Gallagher Becky Snyder ..... ..... Editor-Publisher .... General Manager ..... Managing Editor ........... News Editor .......... Sports Editor Advertising Director Mocksville Enterprise 1916-1958 Davie Record 1899-1958 Cuolccnivc Journal 1901-1971 Sccond Class Po.slagc Paid In Mocksville, NC 27028 Subscriplion Rates Single Copy, .“iO cents •SIS.00 per year in Norlli Carolina S22..S0 per year oulside North Carolina I’OSTMASll-R Send address changes to Davie Coumy l-.ntcrprise-Rccord P.O. Box 32.“;. Mocksvillc. NC 2702K Mark Marshall Route 2, Mocksvillc “ No. He said he was going to stay there until he got things right so I think that’s what he should do, and I don’t like State.” Elmer Van Eaton Mocksville “ I can’t really say yes or no. I haven’t been keeping abreast of it. I know there was some controversy.” Ann Wishon Route 5, Mocksville “ If he’s guilty of keeping them on the team when their grades weren’t high enough, I think, yes, he should resign.” Chris Johnson Mocksville ‘‘No. I think he’s done an outstanding job with the university, and he’s been ;a dynamite coach. 1 agree witli them as far as his not being athletic director.” Sidewalk Survey: Should Jim Valvano Resign As Coach? Chuck Wishon Route 5, Mocksville “ Yes, because he didn’t have any right to talk about the players the way he did.” Scott Ireland Route 6, Mocksville “ No. I don’t think he should. He’s a good coach.” Travis Hedrick Mocksville ‘Yes. I think he should.’’ , Jeff, Plott Route 4j Mocksville • “If he’s' found guilty^-1 think he should. I'm a Carolina fan mywir.” Letters Which God Was That? r :'f' To the editor: In last week’s paper, John E. Kelley Jr. stated that the courts and state outlaw religion that tells the truth about the real God. What God does he mean? Is it Oral Roberts’ God who told him to collect $8 million or he would die. Or is it Jim Baker’s God who inspired him to fleece the flock? Is it Swaggart’s God who inspired him to commit adultery ? Is it the black priest’s black God in Washington D.C.? Or is il the good and loving God who lets babies and children die of suffering, diseases and afflictions. Maybe il is the many Gods the Indians worshipped when the good Christians ran them off their land, put them on reservations and said there is but one God of this country. When it all boils down, it is only a theory, one man’s theory that there is a God. I am glad as a child I saw that there was evolution. J saw polly wogs turn into bullfrogs and a beautiful butterfly evolvefrom a caterpillar. , ■ With a church on almost every comer, Sunday school, Wednes day night Bible study, revivals and now condoms in the college. North Carolina should be proud. What would Jesus say if he was alive? Lewis Ocker 176 Pine St., Mocksville Is Justice Fair In Mocksville? To the editor: This leticr is in rclbrencc to the article in the Aug. 17 paper about the man lhal was chargcd wilh DWI on a bicycle when he hil a car. The car was driven by an olT-duiy member of the law enforcement community. My car was hil by a man on a Moped (this is a motorized vehi clc — unlike a bicycle — yet the owners are nol required lo carry insurance on them). The driver ofthe Moped left the scene of the accident and refused to slop for me. I went directly to the Mocksvillc Policc Deparlmenl and reported tiie incident, giving them a full description ofthe Moped and the driver. By the time they responded, Ihc driver ofthe Moped had reachcd his home. After fiiKling the Moped and owner, the police refused to charge him with hit and run or any other kind of violation, even though the paint on my car matched that of Ihe Moped in question., 1 was advised that my only recourse was to take the Moped driver to court myself in order to try and recover the $200 in damages done to my car. In court the Moped driver admitted to being in the place the accident occurred, but denied being involved in the accident. The ease was thrown out of court due to lack of evidence. The question this brings to my mind, afler reading the article about the DWI on a bicycle is: Must you be a member of the law enforcemehl conununity to get fair j ustice in this town? Mark Folds Mocksville Write the Editor P.O. Box 525, Mocksville, N0 27028 IMVli; COIJN I V EN TICKI’KISK Ul'COUI). TIIUKSDAV, Лпк.31, 1989-3 Carolina’s Dirt Backroads Are W orth Saving You don’t see no hitchhikerx. no scnii inirks or hikers ... .. .. over them hackronds, o f niy home. — Oziirk Mounfiiin Diimlcvil.s If the governor o f North Carolina ha.s his w ay, wc w on’t be singing thiil song around here any more. He wants to do away witli our backroads. Pave every dirt or gravel road in the state. : Some roads would be better o ff if left dirt. Less traffic. Less litter. Less pollution. Less harm ful runoff into our waters. M any miles o f my first 10 years driving w ere spent on dirt roads. There's not a single one in Davie County 1 haven’t traveled. I ’ve been stuck in the mud near Four Corners. I ’ve been stuck in a ditch near Cedar C reek. I ’ve been stuck with a dead --------------------------- battery near Pino. I met M orry Joe Campbell at Yadkin V alley. He jum ped from the woods in front o f our car with a shotgun. Told us w e weren’t who he was looking for and went on. A year later he killed'tw o policemen. I ’ve found some good fishing holes o ff dirt roads. Mike Barnhardt Thcic's some mighty friendly people on dirt roads too. Friendly, o f course, if you don't raise loo much dust driving through. Pave these roads and it'll changc the communities. M ore people w ill move in. There w on’t be as many woods and Tields to look at. Just yards and driveways. Kabbit H oller Road is a fitting name for Ihe dirt path which goes from Yadkin Valley (o Spilliiiaii roads. Pave it and the name w ill need changing to something without a rabbit, becausc Ihc rabbits w ill go somewhere el.se. I moved to Benson when I gol out o f college. It was great. Lois o f dirt roads. I spent .Sundays traveling the dirt roads, looking al the scenery. Fanulies siuing on the porch, curiously looking at the strange vehicle on their road, but offering a friendly wave just the same. Field after Held o f sweet potatoes, tobacco and soybeans. An occasional stream or swamp, usually with a bicycle parked at the wooden bridge support. Look closely and you could find a young boy casting a fishing pole. Progress is Fine, but not at the expense o f all our rural communities. There’s nothing wrong with being rural. Paving all dirt roads is a step in tho wrong direction. Upgrade the heavily traveled rt)ads. Let our rural areas re main rural. T ru c k ’I'riil'llc G etting W orse A nd W orse A ll of the progress in Davie County is clogging our roads- wilh transfer trucks. Roads which weren't meant to handle truck traffic. And it's going lo get worse. Lee Jeans is opening up a distribution center on U .S . 601 • near Davie High School. Jockey already opened a distribution ccnter at Davie Academ y and N olley road.s. Clean indu.stries, sure, but a lot o f trucks go in and out o f j these places. Both companies plan to use tw in-trailers — those transfer trucks that carry two trailers behind them. There's no direction a truck can go from Jockey without ■ having a difficult — and dangerous — turn. Tw in trailers would be even more dangerous. Lee Jeans' trucks are going to have to go on U .S . 601. M any w ill go right through M ocksvillc. Anyone who has seen the difficulty regular trucks having making the turns at. U .S. 601 and U .S . 158 and at U .S . 601 and Salisbury Street can imagine what il w ill be like when a tw in-trailer makes the turn. ' ,• And you thought traffic was already a problem in M ocksville. - Letters Cooleemee Residents Want Healthy Living Conditions T o the editor: In reply to M r. W oody H . Boger’s letter, (Cooleem ee Practic ing Gestapo Tactics). M r. Boger, the residents o f Cooleemee are awake, have smell ed the roses and made request that the town government take ac tion.on property owners who create health hazards for their neighbors. (M ost o f these property owners do not live in Ccioleemee, but own rental houses, and could care less about the : neighbors o f these houses and the Tow n o f Cooleem ee.) M r. Boger’s letter would lead residents to believe M r. Koontz ;would enter any home at any tim e unannounced. This is far from the truth. 5 M r. KoonU has made several inspections o f our town, and found On A In The i È â r î y ■To the editor: I found your article on M r. Jiiii Etchison’s exj)eriences w ith aviation in the early days to faie extrem ely interesting. D uring his ràiploÿm ent at Glen L . M artin A ircraft C o ., I was in high school . and spent m y summers next to the plant at M iddle R iver, M d . M r. M artin was a fine gentleman. I don’t believe he ever m ar- ' ried, blit i w ell rem em ber his mother bringing him to w ork each m om ing in their black limousine. H e also was a sports enthusiast and once hired m y niece, an outstanding fast-pitch softball pit cher, to m Crosse and Blackw ell C o ., just to pitch for the com - patiy:team . W ie n M r. Etchison left Glen L . M artin in 1934, he missed a very interesting event. A t that tim e, the M artin Company was building the first trans-Pacific seaplane, named “ The China C lip per.” It was finished and ready for flight in 193S. The test pilot who came to the M artin plant to fly The China Clipper was Charles Lindberg. It was to be an eventftil day.. The G len L . M artin C o. was located at the head o f a narrow creek called b a rk Head C reek, which led into M iddle R iver pro- per.'Undberg was to take the China Clipper from the M artin ramp, ^ dow n D ark Head Creek into M iddle R iver, turn east and at- : .tain a s p ^ around ninety miles an hour for take-off. ■ those days, the banks o f D ark Head Creek and M id d le R ivcr were lined w ith little sununer homes, called “ shores,” each w ith its little wooden pier and a wooden bathroom (outhouse) located near the water. M y cousin and I had been told by m y aunt that company was coming Saturday and w e were to go dow n to . the river and catch a couple o f bushels o f hard crabs to steam. This was just a routine thing to do in those days when the rivers w ere clean and the forests were green, so we decided to go over to the plant to see M r. Lindberg in the morning; then go crabb ing in the afternoon. . Right after lunch, m y cousin Bob and I got out our scow (a • rectangular boat), rigged the trot line with salt eels and proceed- to fill our quota o f tw o bushels o f hard crabs. Around one p ’cteck we heard thé engines on The China Clipper start to warm up and be adjusted by the engineers. Around one-thirty M r. Lind berg went aboard the plane and ran the engines up and down. By this tim e, m y cousin and I, who had nothing on but our bathing suits and bare feet, were getting concerned about the plane and started to bring our gear into Ihe boat when Lindberg started The China Clipper down the creek. W e could see the wake building behind him and knew we were in trouble. As he passed, our boat was swamped and we were standing barefooted in two bushels o f pinching hard crabs. Needless to say, we abandoned ship on the double. W hat was funny about the event, was watching The China Clipper go down the creek, with this hugh wave riding the banks behind it and outhouses falling into the river like dominos. The M artin Co. o f course apologized and paid lo have all the outhouses moved to higher ground for future (lights. I never got to see Lindberg again and 1 often wondered if he was looking in the rear view m irror laughing on that firsl lesi fiight at the sight o f those outhouses falling in ihe river. W iUiam A . G ilford Printing Post 140 2.107-A Brown's Bridge Road Gaine.sville. Ga. .10.501 a few houses that do not com ply with ordinances enacted by the town government covering dilapidated, run-down conditions with obnoxious weeds and grass creating health hazards to their neighbors. H e has written letters to these property owners on several occasions requesting they take action. A large percentage o f these owners have been cooperative and have taken action to im prove the conditions o f their property. M r. Koontz’ remarks to the town council at the Aug. 14 meeting were m aking reference only to the rem aining homes that the pro perty owners w ill not reply or com ply with the ordinance. He feels it is tim e to get tough with these property owners and en force the ordinance placed in effect to protect our tow n’s residents from health hazards (large rats, snakes, rodents). The town council has employed M r. Koontz for this purpose, and support his a c -. tions to perform his duties. ' ■ W hen the residents o f Cooleem ee voted to incorporate, th ty wanted a city council that would,take actions to protect the rights o f all residents to live in an environm ent that would not create a health hazard. v-'- O ur residents want a tow n w ith good living condhions fon everyone, and this is the goal o f our tow n council to create a bet~ ter environm ent that protects the rights o f everyone, not jiist a few who have no interest or concern for their neighbors o r quc town. ; . W illiam (B ill) R . Gales ’ M ayo r o f Cooleemee To the editor: M y first response to W oody Boger's letter in last w eek’s Enter prise was that it did not deserve a response, but after giving con-' sideration to the fact that you had painted such a dram atic picture o f a condition that affects only a few rental homes in Cooleem ee, I felt you did not know the situation as it really exists. A re you aware o f the fact that in every case I have heard discuss ed, the owners lived out o f town and rented houses in Cooleemee? A re you aware o f thè fact also that C alvin was talking about conditions that created a health hazard, not only to the occupant but to the com m unity as well? W e are not talking about houses that look bad. W e are talking about houses that are unsafe to liye in or next to. I think I speak for most residents in Cooleemee when I say I am proud o f our little town and yes, I do want it clean and free Letter Misleading T o the editor: The town o f Cooleemee is a member o f a regional type ordinance code enforcement program administered by the Northwest Pied- ' mont Council o f Governments. M r. C alvin Koontz is the officer employed by area m unicipalities which pay his salary on a pro rata basis. H is job is to make periodic visits to participating cities to check resident adherence to adopted , ordinances such as ex posed garbage, trash, noxious weeds, m inim um housing code. North Carolina statutes and city ordinances are established to protect the welfare o f its people. Homes w ith problems such as sagging roofs, porches, steps, are held to be dangerous and unlawful. A house within the Cooleemee city lim its has been abandoned for years — much o f the structure has fallen lo the ground. Neighbors are unhappy with the unsightly dilapidation, weeds, rats, snakes, mosquitoes. M r. Koontz has issued several notices to the owner lo no avail. A t our lown board meeting on Aug. 14, M r. Koontz discussed such problems and the fact that some recipients arc not heeding his notices. “ Therefore," he staled, “ no more M r. Nice G u y!” In further conversation M r. Koontz stated it m ight become necessary lo inspect inside some dwellings and, in dire cases, to do so against the w ill o f the owners. He staled, however, that he would be required to obtain a court order. Action against the owner o f an abandoned dwelling and one that is a health hazard is warranted and a court order, which is not simply “ picked up,” is the final .solution lo maintaining de cent, healthful, and clean neighborhoods. It was this type situa tion to which M r. Koontz referred. N o person has the authority to impinge upon the privacy and freedom of another, yet, no one has the right to endanger the health and livelihood o f his neighbors. If he refuses, he should face the penalties o f law. M r. W oody Boger is an aspiring Cooleemee mayor. Statements in his Id le r lo iho editor o f last w eek’s Eniei/ni.w-Record are misleading and taken out o f context. I ’m sorry if M r. Boger has frightened any o f our people with his incredible tactic. Jackie M orion Cooleemee lown commissioner o f rats, snakes, roaches and such that fester in garbage and fUth-j E rw in M ills did not allow that and neither should C ity CoijncilV I noticed that your name w ill be on the ballot for mayor this Novem ber, i f elected, I hope you w ill w ork for the m ajority of ' Cooleem ee residents, not a sm all m inority o f property owners- (most who live outside our town lim its) who could care less about the houses they collect rent from each month. : . • O ur m ayor, as w ell as council, has done an outstanding jo b an^ .v we are lucky he is w illing to serve another four years, but in th?- event you should get elected, I am sure you w ill get a r^ „ education. ' ' ' ^ In the event you are not elected, you can always w rite drama', as you seem to have a flair for the dramatic. Denny Creason i , ; ' V C ity Councilm an, Cooleem ee : ~ USED UNIFORM SHOP Opened At 136 N. Salisbury Street^' Mocksville, N.C.' (Next To Plantation Antiques) Pants.................................................................................«2 ** Shirts......................................................................... . . . . . . I " Coveralls, Jackets, Bib Overalls, White Pants, Ladies Shirts And Pants Open Mon.- Wed. & Fri. 9 a.m .'tq 5 p.m. Tues. & Thurs. 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Phone 704-634-4893 With the H»R BLOCK Income Tax Course Benefit from the seemingly ever-changing tax laws! Learn how to prepare your own tax return with confidence! Help others prepare their tax returns. 1 Enroll today! Classes start. 9 -11-8 9 ----For More Information CALL N O WMocksville, NC 704-634-3203 2 Facing Cocaine Cliarges Going To Superior Court 4—DAVIE COUNTY ENTERI’KISE UECOKD. TIIUKSDAV. Aii|-.3I. 1Ч8У Citntinucd Frotn P. 1 United IVIcthiidist Church on June ;3b. I Florence Irene Fowler, 16, was •also arrested in the raid and eharg- ; ed with possession of cocaine with j intent to sell or deliver. Fowler, iwho was a witness for the state. J will not face her charge until Scpl. 128 in Davie District Court, i Detective Jerry Williams said of- l ficials seized 48 plastic vials of co- 'caine in the living room under the -couch-, a picture frame containing •a white residue and a razor blade vin Morrison's bedroom. Willianvs • said he also found a purse in Mor- 'ri.son’s room containing 191 cmp- *ty vials. f Williams said the house had been funder investigation sincc Nnvcinber lySS. "We had set up a cocaine huy ihcn,” he said. "It was made in the I'roni yaril at that time and all the phone calls were made lo that residence.” Williams said investigations were being made because he had been giveiT information lhal they were bringing crack and cocaine from New York. Fowler, who lives wilh Mor rison. .said Warner had just arriv ed by bus to visit Morrison on that day. Fowler said when the police officers arrived. Warner stuffed the bags of cocaine he had in his pockets under the sofa. “ He was running from the liv ing room to the kitchen, from the kitchcn to the living room.” she .said. Fowler said about four people came to the house after Warner ar rived. “ They were coming to gel wlial Nathaniel brought down here.” she said. “Teresa let the people in and Teresa and Nathaniel went lo the bedroom wilh them." Fowler, who said she stayed in the living room with her child dur ing the transactions, said she didn't see whiit went on in the bedroom but did see S20 to S30 change hands after Nathaniel gave drugs to a person. Fowler said she did not see any drugs in Ihe house before Warner arrived. Warner and Morrison were also found guilly guilty of charges of possession of drug paraphernalia and were sentenced to 181 days in jail each. Both filed a notice of appeal. [Residents Upset Witli Laci< l>f Restrictions On industry I' 'Continued From P. 1 '¡'We’ve heard all wc want lo rl'Van Hoy, however, spoke again i^last week’s' hearing, Scott had notified that the matter 'wpuld' come up then. ;l|ltesli;ictioris approved by com- tMssioners were as follows: . :|pùffer; Comply with re tirements of county zoning or- l^Èance, and in addition, extend t^fer (to 1» comprised of trees) tqi the side of the rezoned proper- ■l^ong Bracken Road as spwified tjjflhe ordinance except in the area ’•Cientryways, |;ilde delivery: Side delivery off : ^^ken Road restricted to daylight Hazardous waste: No dumping jjir storage of hazardous waste or “ tlubstances on rezoned property, liazardous waste or substances I or stored on ^d premises ■ previous' owners shall be . Compì/with all federal, i and local laws and regulations respect to etivironmental stan- ^lardy’, hazardous waste and sewer Meatìnent on rezoned property. I^i^ide stora^; AU outside Ifbnge area should be adequately k ^ n ^ and fenc^. Moise abatement: Comply with 'itf ÒSHA noise level requirements. ^Limits on testing: There shall be 'ifa oiitside testing of equipment bet- the hours ofj p.m. and 8 .iitmh.; ' 'v -.f ■ . restrictions: The deed of ijWveyance from the present owner > the. rezoned propei^ shall incor- tlie special conditions set 1 above by refeiehce or by in- ; the same in ^ deed itMlf, 1 special conditicms to ran with ! land so long as the zoning re- i|ains as rézon^.ui^ the special lise .provisionsw<.of, the zoning /finance'.'-': I Tuif ofliciais have said they plan » purchase the rezoned property J.D. Shields. / • I “If the restrictions imposed were ^vere, then your client would not / the property, is that correct? ' ’ sioner Bert Bahnson ask- i i ed Van Hoy. Van Hoy, who was accompanied at the meeting by Randy Myers, vicc president of operations for Turf Equipment, said company of ficials hoped they wouldn’t be put in a situation where the property was rezoned to allow the expansion and "then have it taken away by the restrictions.” “ Some of the things that could mess it up, if we couldn’t have the third shift,” he said. Restrictions proposed by neighboring homeowners, but eliminated by commissioners after hearing from Van Hoy, included limits on manufacturing, access and parking. . The proposed limit on manufac turing woidd eliminate a third shift, which Van Hoy said coiild interfere with the expansion plans. The propo.seil limit on access would have prohibited delivery from Bracken Road, the dirt road on which many of the opposing homeowners live, while the limit on parking would have restricted parking to the western end of the rezoned area. Bahnson, who made the motion to impose the approved restric tions, said he didn’t think trucks coming into Turf from Bracken Road would create the dust pro blem that homeowners fear. “1 don't think a truck will get going that fast for 100 feet (the distance from U.S. 601 to the company),” he said. “Somewhere along the line, we have to compromise.” V. Myers said 75 percent of the traf fic coming into Turf would enter from the U.S. 601 access. Van Hoy said what does use the Bracken Road access could turn out to be beneficial to residents of the road. “It may be a factor that would enable the road to be paved by the stale at some point,” he said. Roads used by industries are ranked higher on state paving priority lists. As for parking, Bahnson said Turf would already be required to comply with the county's parking ordinance. "I think we're getting into a can of worms by adding other stuff.” he said. At one point during the discus sion, Bahnson said he understood residents’ concerns about having an industry in the neighborhood. “The thing should have never ijcen rezoned years ago, but it was,” he said, “so that’s what we have to work with.” The property on which Turf is locatcd was rezoned for highway business in 1977 to accommodate a John Deere dealership. Van Hoy argued at the May 30 hearing that the special use in dustrial zoning being requested by Turf would restrict the property to a use more desirable than certain highway business uses. Under a feed and .seed dealer ship, which is allowed under highway business, for example. Van Hoy said there would be odors, noise and traffic. Van Hoy said his clients chose to restrict the use with special use zoning "to negate or eliminate the fears that may be associated with general in dustrial use zoning.” The special use zoning limits the property’s use to a manufacturing operation for parts for commercial landscaping equipment. If the tract was sold, it couldn’t be used for any other puфose unless commis sioners rezoned it again. Scott said then that commis sioners should work with Turf in locating another site more ap propriate for industrial use. “To put this in the middle of a residen tial neighborhood simply can’t be tolerated,” she said. Gary Partridge, president of Turf, has said the expansion would increase the company’s employees from 12 lo 20, depending on the season, to about 35. Long-range plans call for up to 100 employees. A new building proposed for the first phase of the expansion is estimated to cost around $180,000. It will be used for parts storage and a painting operation. Construction in Phase II is estimated lo cost $250,000. how to chop your monthly payments down to size When you’re looking al a lot of monthly payments and too little money left over eaeh month — CALL US! Let us chop your monthly payments down to one "Fasy on the Budget” Payment with a debt consolidation loan. FleetFinancenter S T A T E S V IL L E M E D IC A L G R O U P , P A a n n o u n c e s th e a s s o c ia tio n of B y ro n E . D u n a w a y , M .D . Diplomate Of American Board Of Orthopaedic Surgery Specializing In Bone And Joint Surgery A rthroscopy, F ractures, Joint R eplacem ent, S ports M edicine M edical School: Emory University School Of Medicine 1976-1980 O rthopaedic R esidency: Emory University Affiliated Hospitals 1980-1985 O rthopaedic S urgeon: United States Air Force; Kirtland Air Force B ase and New Mexico Regional Federal Medical Center 1985-1989. NEW PATIENTS WELCOME (704) 878-2011 CAROIOLOCy/INTEflNAL MEDICINE C.K. Lai. M.D.ENOOCRlMOLOGY, METABOLISM & DIABETESRichard A. 0/ckcy. M.O.. F.A.C.P. INTERNAL MEDICINEN. Mflxvllle Lewis. M.D. Charles S. Sllnson, M.D. GASTROENTEROLOGYNell M. Kassmort. M.D. Digestive & Liver Diseases OBSTETRICS & OVNECOLOOŸ Richard A. Boyd., M.D. F.A.C.O.G Edwin M. Fulghum Jr.. M.O., F.A.C.O.G. Arthur S. Horberls. M.D.. F.A.C.O.G. OPHTHALMOLOGYStanley F. Sllwlnski Jr., M.O., F.A.A.O. PEDIATRIC & ADOLESCENT MEDICINE Ralph L. Bentley, M.D., F.A.A.P.0. Durham Lewis, M.D., F.A.A.P. Margaret J. Wlllhlde, M.D. F.A.A.P. GENERAL SURGERY Bruce Karris. M.D.Gary T. Robinson, M.D.Unler Ogburn, M.D. (Retired) . OnjHOPAEDtC SUflCERY Byron Edward Dunaway, M.D. Arthroscopy, Joint Rtplaeamant A Sporta Mtdlcint .UROLOGYRobert a. Gra|ew*ki, M.D., F.A.C.8. Tink A. Johnson III. M.D. ADVALUE DrugCeçter TUCKS 1H HARD Щ raoi 1Ш WORKING ■Щ 1■ advaluesI Sx? ;i021 Yadkinville Rd.! Mocksville, N.C.Phone 704-634-3596 Squire Boone Shopping Center THERE’S AN ADVALUE DRUGCENTER CLOSE TO YOU. Foster-Rauch Drug Co. Low es S hopping C enter W ilkesboro S treet Mocksville, N.C. 634-2141 ПЛУПС COUN'l'Y KN'I KRl’RISK UIX'OKI), TIIUUSDAY, Лиц.З!, 1989-S Physician Recruitment Top Priority For Hospital By Karen Jarvis ■ Davie County Enterprise-Record Physician rccruitmcnl is still llie top priority Гог members of the Davic County Hospital Board of Trustees. Last month, the board approv ed a contract with a recruiting firm, Harris, Kovac and Alderman to recruit an OB/GYN (obstetri- cian/gynocologist) doctor to Ihe hospital. ; Members of the firm visited the hospital and the community recent ly and will report back on the feasibility of conducting a suc cessful search, said Hospital Ad ministrator Chris Dux. ; Dux said he is concerned about the excessive workload for one OB/GYN at the hospital and hopes to recruit two. “They (firm) think there’s enough volume here to get two OB/GYNs,” said Dux. Dux said the hospital is also in need of an additional surgeon, but is nol sure if there is enough volume here for two surgeons. ■ r Dr. Francis W. Slate retired last •month leaving Dr. Per Montero as •the only full-time surgeon in the •county. : “I think the county would like to see two surgeons,” said trustee ■Bud Hauser. ; Dux urged trustee members to think about Dr. Montero before ijiaking a final decision on hiring Л second surgeon. ;; “It may adversely impact him,” '^d Dux. “He’s afraid a second '^geon will not pull in the market share from the outside.” Dux said Montero is concerned about losing some of his patients to another surgeon if more clientele is not gathered. J; Dr. Bob Foster, family prac- Црпег, disagreed, if “Suppose I said don’t bring any фоге family practioners in because it’s going to hurt my business,” Mid Foster. “Would you listen to 1СЮ no action 'Ijlesidents of Davie County can jiuticipM^ tbon on Oct. 7 sponsored by the l^pital. V.Mt will be a joint effort with the (t>^ of Mocksville help the Uiüted ^J'lt’s a feirly inajor function,” ' • ^ Suni^ Services Director Dan ' bisNoyere: “It’s still in the plan- lir e H ydrants B eing C hecked •i^Leave those silver fire hydrants i|lt n i^ your ffiK is ' wwking to läwcT insurance rates. ?Davie Fire Marshal Glen Stanley ^ fire departments in the (^ ty Ue attempting to lower in- ^ М1ПЮМ;Г8^ for residents. |The di^utinents are attempting Ю a split rating from the state, Which means homes within r,000 feet of a fire hydrant will receive ß lower rating than other homes iri the dislricl. .vThe split rating will help while tbib departments attempt to lower ^ngs in the entire districts, Stanley wd. 't Vlt’s an in-depth process to get re-rated, Stanley said. ‘ ‘A lot of the departments decided to go ahead ^ go for the split rating. ” " To get the split rating, each fire hydrant must be tested. The hydrant is painted silver, with different colors on the caps depending on the rate water can be obtained from the hydrant. "We need to let the people know we’re painting them. By re painting them, they’re messing up whälf^e’re trying to do,” Stanley said. ‘ M e e t i n g I s S e p t . 5 A story in last week's edition of the Davie County Enterprise , Record reported incorraniy that the next Davie County Board of Com missioners meeting had been rescheduled for Monday, Sepl. 11. ■ The meeiing was resclR-duied for I p.m. Tuesday, Sepl. 5, bccause the regular first Monday meeting date fell on ihe Labor Day holiday. We regrel the error. ning stages and inl'ornialion can be obtained througli Ihc liospital." Public Ediicatiiin I’hmni'd A counly-wide education plan is under way lo inforni rosidenis aboul the hospital's plans for lulure ¡¡rowlh. M arkelini: DirecUir Kathy Tomlinson said the eduealion pro- jccl is lo lielp Davie residents understand the results of the hospital's recent survey on I'ulure hospital expansion. Tonilinson said she waius lo schedule meetings wilh all clubs and civic groups to explain the survey. She said she is developing a fact sheet and a brochure wilh "a very simple question and answer fot- m al." - "It will contain about 20 of what I pcrceivc as Ihe most asked ques tions," she said. U S D A C h o ic e B e e f B O N E L E S S R IB E Y E O R NEW YORK STRIP STEAK Prices In this ad good Monday, Aug. 28 thru Sunday, Sept. 3 , 19N . O R u s l\ 0 1 W h I G Yellow Onions. . . 3 Lb. Bag 1 -29 i/lO LB. BAG POTATOES THE 99 Holly Farms Grade A CHICKEN LEG QUARTERS 'Lb. California PEACHES/ PLUMS OR NECTARINES Grapes/ Red Or White «FFMESS Oeliciws Raspberries pint 1.59 Coca Cola Classic $275 12 • 12 Oz. Cam DM M mSprite............................. E X T R A L O W P R I C E S ...E V E R Y D A Y ! ! ! 10 Ot. - Strawberry/Blackberry/Blueberry/ Red Raspberry/Orange Marmalade/Grape/ SMUCKER'S SIMPLY FRUIT FRUIT Food Lion 8 Oz. - Plain/Ripple POTATO CHIPS 11 Oz. - Sunmald With Raisins CINNAMON ROLLS Potato Chips <\ (■ ■ 'v4 vL ' ->A Cherry/Grape/ Tropical Punch KOOLAID KOGLERS 8 Oz. - Elbow .Macaroni/ Spaghetti/Thin Spaghetti MUEUER’Ü PASTA11 22 Oz. - Lemon/Lime Dish PALMOLIVE DETERGENT 7.5 Oz. - Country Style P IL L S B U R Y B IS C U IT S MuBllBrii.elbows 112 Oz. - Arm & Hammer DETERGENT 3 Lb. Tub - Spread Margarine PARKAY Shop at Food Uèn . lor these •Raspberries •Spaghetti Squash •Bean Sprouts •Alfalfa Sprouts •Red/Yellow Peppers •Tef« •Roma Tomatoes Squire Boone Pfaza Sliopping Center Hwy. 601 Nortli - Yadltinvllle Rd. Moclcsville, N.C. There is a Food Lion conveniently located near you: Bermuda Quay Shopping Center Highway 158 and 801 Advance, N.C. ruuu L __________________ tVlonday thru Satui'day: 8 Sunday 9 a.m . - fl -DAVIE COUNTY liNTKKl’UISii KI'X:()KI), THURSDAY, AiiK-M, I9S‘J The Mocksville Post Office helped celebrate the 200th an niversary of North Carolina adopting the, U.S. Constitution. Postal employees Wanda James and Jacl( Koontz driMS in costumes of the era, wKiie Ramey Kemp modelsT- shirt \with replica; of stamp. At rl||hti: Postmiaister Walter Lov*le8s (Hont) presents Bob ,Timb*rlak«l:autbj3raphed MamNvtO ’Mbcltsville Mayor • D.J. Mando.~ Photo* by Mike Barnhardt I;. /■ ite iMMtern Roiiiid Up At Bia OAK tiANCH Labor Day Weekend Ropina _ Saturday, September 2,10 a.m. Books open at 8:30 a.m. ** $300 ADDED ** J a S p o n M n d By Feather Lite Of The East Coast Monda^ September 4,1 Books open at 11:30 a.m ** $500 ADDED ** Cow CreekRinch0H9rtng Reg. Brangus 35 Bulls • 100 Females Oct. 9 Sell Both Days: (20*0 Per Person Entry Fee 3 Head Progressive 7 Entries Per Person Maximum *100 Fast Time 1st Go If Over 50 Teams «50 Fast Time For Team 70 Yrs. & Older *50 Fast Time For Team 32 Yrs. & Younger (»50 Fast Times Paid To Non-Finalist Teams-Donated By Big Oak Ranch) H We Hava A Total 01175 Teams For Both Days, There Will Be A Rope-Off On Monday For Any Monty Winning Teams For A Mexican Steer-2 Head Average. * ** »20 Entry For 2 Head Ladles Break-Away Roping * * * »50 Added If Over 10 Enlries ' * * * ** (No Professional Rodeo Ropers Allowed In This Event) Poay Ridai For Chlldran Uader12 Oata Prix« - »50 Qlft Cartlficate From Tha Barn Loft Waatarn Store, High Point Team Roping • Barrel Racing Roping & Riding Lessons BIG OAK RANCH Mocksville, N.C. Office (919) 998-3716 Tim Smith — Owner (919) 998-8075 Admission »1“» Children Under 12 Free Advance Man Dies In Wrecic in Davidson County Aug. 23 An Atlviince iiiiin dial in a wrcck ill Diividson County Weilncsdiiy, Aug. 23. Roy Dale Roberlson, 39, was a passenger in a Volkswagen which collided with a Ryder truck on N.C. 150. The driver of the truck, Nathan Chris Bell, 30, of Linwood, was charged by N.C. Highway Patrol Trooper H.C. Crou.se with death by vehicle and failure to yield right of way. Robertson was pinned under the car after it overturned. Robertson’s father, Robert Wade Robertson, 60, of Advancc, was driving the car. His brother, Michael Wade Robertson, 40, was a passenger. Both were taken to Lexington Memorial Hospital for treatment of injuries. Speeder Gets Suspended Sentence A man charged with driving 97 mph in a 65 mph zone was given a suspended sentence last week in Davie District Court. Christopher James LaSpaluto was sentenced to 30 days suspend ed for 12 months, ordered to pay $50 fine and court co.sts, and not operate a motor vehicle until pro perly licensed. N.C. Highway Patrolman K.B. Steen stopped LaSpaluto May 21 about 8 p.m. on 1-40. “He just didn’t seem to think this was a criminal offense,” said Steen. “ He said he hadn’t killed anybody and he wasn’t drinking. “He didn’t understand he had to share the highway instead of go ing at that rate of speed. He didn’t understand the gravity of the situa tion.” LaSpafuto said he had been driv ing a long time and wasn’t paying attention to his speed. LaSpaluto has several reckless driving of fenses on his record, said Steen. LaSpaluto asked Judge Kimberly T. Harbinson if he could have limited driving privileges. “I don’t think you’ll be entitled to any driving privileges,” said Harbinson. i f Junker & Son Feed Mill, inc. ^ 101 Salisbury Street (704) 634-2377 Mocksville, N.C. 27028 Feather Lite Trailers Of Iowa Inc; Tht rOWei FENCE PMfUr WORTH DOING IT RIGHT!! Gallagher/Snell Power Fences are alternatives to traditional barbed and net wire fences at lower cost. H JEANS FOR MEN & LADIES\ W rangler Cowboy Cut Je a m . Th* official Jeans of th e PRCA. RIvatad at poinU of Mrain, slightly tapeied to fit aaally over boots Black denim W rangler shirt 100H cotton with pesrllzed sn ap s " B ru sh p o p p a r" M ada o f ao ft (yat^ haavyw elght) pra-w ashad 100H cotton twIH, th ey 're w ater repellent and wind raalstant. Try Our Home Brand Of Feeds Our Make 9% Horse 14% Horse Shell Corn Crack Corn Salt Bag & Block Big "M" Rabbit f ' Big "M” Calf Starter • Big "M” Loying Pellets;' . .. Big ,‘‘M" Starter & Grower CrurriblM Blg-"M” Pig Starter , ’ • ‘ ‘ — Animal HéaKh Supplies— , D o g F o o d - f la tB a i^ f j^ J h ^ Ш DAVIK COUNTV KNTKKl’UISK RKl.OKI). HlUI<>il)/\V, ЛПЦ..М, ivsy-/ ■ SUPER SAVINGS ON M EN’S PANTS men’s putter style and Higgins® casual pants Labor Day Sale PrIcedI goo men’s Moore’s label pants Dacron/cotton REQ. TO 21.99 1200 Haggar® & Higgins® summer pants ffiaUliR TO 35.00 1500 S A V I N G S O F 5 0 % T O 7 5 “/o I N T H E L A D I E S & G I R L S D E P T . I entire stock! ladies’ summer sportswear REG. TO 15.00____________REQ. 16.00 TO 25.00_______________8 ®® REQ. 26.00 TO 34.00. REQ. 50.00 TO 89.00_ 120»50®®REQ. 35.00 TO 49.00_15®® Bed Sheets Slightly Irregular J97 Йиде Assorted Colors Regular 599$394 TREMENDOUS SALE GROUP! BEDROOM ENSEMBLES matching bedspnads curtains and shams girls’ & infants’ sportswear & dresses REQ. TO 5.99___________ 2 ® ® REQ. 6.00 TO 8.99. REQ. 9.00 TO 10.99_ REQ. 15.99 TO 19.99_ 4 0 0 8 0 0 REQ. 11.99 TO 14.99_ 25 %OFF REGULAR PRICE S tiic t tmm tiM d tco n to f atyles Including Bridgeport, Shallmar, Interlude, ОоиЫф RuHIt Mnd Georgetown. ¡Double Rullle Shown) SAVINGS TO 50% FOR BOYS AND MEN! boys* swimsuits, shorts and tanic tops REG. 11.99 TO 14.99________0 0 0 ______^300 men’s shorts & swimsuits. men’s knit shirts, reg. to 19.99_ .SAVE 50®/o _SAVE 50®/o SPECIAL SHOE SAVINGS FOR UDIES & TEENS ladies’ & teen’s sandals 888 VALUES TO 18.991 IBrohen Sizes) teen’s little heels & flats 788 VALUES TO 16.991 (Broken Sizes) ladies’ summer dress shoes VALUES TO 17.99! (Broken Sizes) I) '8—DAVIE COUNTY ENTKRPRISE UECOKI), TIIUKSIMY, AiiK-ll. I‘JS9 Public Records íLand Transfers The following liincl transfers shave been filed with the Davie CCounty Register of Deeds. The Iransaetions are listed by ¡»parties involved, acreage, township Cand deed stamps purchased with SI ¡"i;epresenting $1,000. ? ' — C.G. Fo.\ l umber Co. to •;.‘James W. Phelps, 1 lot, Jerusalem. • — Jackson M. Branum Jr. and f.Darlene M. Branum to William O. ■;Arnold and Pattie E. Arnold. I lot, J:$86.50. y - — Raymond J. Markland, Ruth S, Markland. Clyde Hendricks, and Helen Hendricks to David H, Cozart and Rosemary G. Cozart, 1 lot, Mocksviile, $8. — Jeffrey S. Williams and Doris S. Williams lo John R. Williams and Sadie A. Williams, I tract, Jerusalem. SI8. — Paul G. Boger, Eunice D. Boger to William Robert Webber and Jeanette Coulson Webber, 1 tract, Mocksviile, $52. — Terry B. Prillaman and Kri.sty L. Prillaman to Warren W. Kerlin Jr. and Virginia M. Kerlin. I lot. ,S1W. — Deborah P. Redmon lo Helen Cline Gantt. 1 lot. l-armington. SI 13. — Francis J. Armstrong Jr. and Ronda D. Armstrong to Thomas R. Worley and Louis Worley, 1 lot, Shady Grove, S80, — Bennie D. Boger to William L. Kyle, I tract, Farmington, $192,50. — Eugene F. Potts, Carolyn G. Potts to Thomas Francis McCabe, I lot, Calahaln, S7. — Eugene F. Polls. Carolyn G. Polls to Thomas Francis McCabe, I lot. Calahaln, SSI. — Michael E. Whicker. Vickie H. Whicker to Patrick W. Sim mons. I lot. Farmington, S72. — Carol C. White, Charles F. White to Carol C. White. 1 iracl. Farm inton, — Larry L. Jones lo Michael E. Whicker and Vickie H. Whicker, I lot, Farmington. .$85. — Geraldine A. Watkins to Bar bara A. Bosey. 5 tracts. Jerusalem, — Ruby Wilson Piper to — Lester Bailey and Nora M. Bailey lo Larry Gene Prevette and Terry Denney Prcvelte, I lot, Jerusalem, $25. — Roy H. Simmons and Vicki L. Simmons to Anlhony E. Welch and Debra C. Welch, I lot. Shady Michael C. McMillan II and Mar tha P. McMillan, 4 tracts, Jerusalem. — James T. Robinson, Sandra D. Robinson to Horace Bell and Evelyn M. Bell, 1 tract, Mocksviile, $79.50. Grove, $61. — Cecil L. Angell and Edna M. Angell to Larry W. Hamilton and Linda Angell Hamilton, 1 tract, Jerusalem. — Richard C. Short, Cindy B. Short to Robert A. Jones and Tamara Jones Jones, I lot, Farm ington, $164.50. — Robert A. Jones and Tamara Jones Jones to Richard C. Short and Cindy B, Short, 1 tract, Far mington, $115, j^eriffs Department ' - The following reports were made ail the Davie County Sheriffs department, ' ; — Louise M, West of Route 4, .■^dvance, reported Aug, 23 the ■iit-ceny of a gun and knife from a St'sidence off Baltimore Road, Sharon Annette Hiatt of Mount Airy reported Aug. 20 an & sault and larceny from a ySsidence off Cemetery Street, Pooleemee. James Odell Clement of Duck J5»nd Road, Cooleemee, reported 23 the larceny of a chainsaw, jijth an estimated value of $700, ^ m a shed behind his house. Lester F. Boger of Viocksville reported Aug. 22 the ill breaking, entering and larceny from a vchicle off U,S. 601 just south of Mocksviile. — Brian Keith Schuerman of Route I, Mocksviile, reported Aug. 21 the breaking, entering and larceny of stereo equipment and other items from a vehicle parked off U.S. 601 just south of Mocksviile. — Charles Justin Cornatzer of Route 3, Advance, reported Aug. 22 gunshots were fired at the Williams Manufacturing loading dock off N.C. 801. — James W, Rose of Mocksviile reported Aug. 21 the breaking, entering and larceny of a rod and reel and tools, with a total estimated value of S80, from a vchicle parking at Sunset Apartments. — W.D. Parks of Clemmons reported Aug. 16 that gales, wilh an estimated value of $200, were stolen from his property off West Road. — Robert C. Evans of Roule 1, Mocksviile, reported Aug. 24 the breaking, entering and larceny of an estimated $100 worth of jewelry from a residence off Green Hill Road. — Jack Belton Thomas Jr. of Route 4, Advance, reported Aug. 25 the breaking and entering of a vehicle in the Woodlee Development. — Michael Royal Holcomb of Route 3, Advance, reported Aug. 28 the breaking, entering and larceny from a vehicle of a radar detector and cassette tapes, with a total estimated value of $500. The vehicle was parked at Oakwood and Brookdalc drives in Green wood Lakes. — James David Barker of Route 6, Mocksviile, reported Aug. 26 the breaking, entering and larceny of cash, knives and cassette tapes from a mobile home off Turkeyfoot Road. — Robert Christopher Pfaff of Winston-Salem reported Aug. 25 the an attempted breaking and entering al the Bermuda Run swim ming pool. Tim Collins of Clemmons reported Aug. 27 the breaking, entering and larceny of $700 from the Bermuda Run Golf Shop. — Bhupenbra Rambhai Patel of Route 1, Salisbury reported Aug. 24 tires on his vehicle in the Jockey parking lot were cut. — Lonnie Gene Miller Jr. of Route 5, Moeksville, reported Aug. 25 the breaking, entering and larceny of an estimated $800 in cash and merchandise from a residence off N.C. 801 near Fork. — Patricia Harris Knox of Salisbury reported Aug. 25 a win dow screen and storm door screen were cut to a residence off Düke Street, Cooleemee. — William R. Nunn of430 Fair way Drive, Bermuda Run, reported Aug. 25 golf clubs, with an estimated value of $972, were stolen from his patio. — Billy Ray Wall of Route 7, Mocksviile, reported Aug. 25 damage to a mailbox at Communié Baptist Church, Gladstone Road. — John Moore of Route 7, Mocksviile, reported Aug. 25 mailboxes off Gladstone Road were damaged, — Glenn Elton Sellers 'of Mocksviile reported Aug. 24 thé larceny of a bus from Blaise Bap-' tist Church, U.S. 601 and 1-40. JHospital Emerizencv Room r^The following patients were tfealed in the emergency room at Davie County Hospital. I The hospital only releases information oh patients it considers a iwMjc lediM because of the nature of the injury. I - Mark W. Phelps, 30, 12:48 ¡a.m; Aug. 28, cut to eye and nose ¡suffered in fight, treated and feleased." — Fort V. Brown, 34,1 ;4I a.m. Aug. 27, cut to hand and knee suf fered in auto accident, treated and released. -Jo h n F. Scott Jr., 29, 1:11 a.m. Aug. 27, dead on arrival because of head injuries suffered in auto accident, — Steven L. Scott, 21, 1:15 a.m. Aug. 27, bruises and cut suf fered in auto accident, treated and released. — Karen B, Willanl, 12:12 a,m. Aug. 27, spinal bruise suffered in auto accident, treated and released. — Leslie G. Tucker, 15, 12.01 a.m. Aug. 27, multiple injuries suffered in aulo accident, transfer red to N,C. Baplisi Hospital in Winston-Salem. — Bremon D. Hilton Jr., 16, 11:56 p.m. Aug. 26, bruises suf fered in auto accident, treated and released. — Beverly M. Pilcher, 6, 7:40 p.m. Aug. 26, cut to the scalp suf fered in auto accident, treated and released. — Beverly B. Pilchcr, 25, 7:35 p,m. Aug. 26, bruises lo the face suffered in auto accident, treated •and released. — Marie D, Crotts, 42, 5:25 p.m. Aug. 24, bruise to the head suffered in auto accident, treated and released. — Anita Marie Crotts, 12,5:25 p.m. Aug. 24, muscle strain suf fered in auto accident, treated and released. — Della T. Jones, 55, 5:29 p.m. Aug. 24, bruise to the face suffered in auto accident, treated and released. — Angela G. Loweiy, 23, 7:33 p.m. Aug. 22, muscle strain suf fered in auto accident, treated and. released. ■ — Chad H. Petetsoa, 21,4p.m;^ Aug. 21, bniises and muscle stnias suffej^Jhauto aMide^^^^ and’relcased. * ' ' .r.i — Rachel L. Peterson, 19, I; 19 p.m. Aug. 21, bruises and scrapes suffered in fight, treated and released. ■ Civil Lawsuits I' The foUowii^ civil lawsuits have ibeen'ffled with the Davie County Clerk of Court. — Martha Jo Chapman vs. !cUude Kelly Chapman, absolute Idivorce. — Euro-Drawer Inc. vs. Home Pnxiuctii and Biltmore Products, tequeat for judgment, $4,482.83. J ^ Ronald A. Steiger vs. James Harris, chto for compensatory aiid punitive damages as result of ^assault. ' '— Nina Toney Rowhuui vs. I Stacy Gray Plowmu, absolute ; divorce. r — Hilda Grose Duncan vs. [Robeit Wayne Duncan, divorce •firom bed and board, alimony, child jjcustody) child support. : — Sharon H. Bowers vs. Ran dy Bowers, child custody, child support, divorce from bed and board. — Shores Appliance Service vs. Paul Inman, request for recovery, $133.17. — Phoebe Moore vs. H. James Moore and Scott D, Moore, order .that defendants not dispose of plaintiffs property. Roger L. Gordon vs. Susan H. Gordon, divorce, order that defen dant pay remaining lease payments. — Brenda S. Connell vs. Kevin D. Thompson, auto accident claim, in excess of . $10,000 for special and compensatory damages. — Peggy R, Ebright vs. Freddie Cave; $8,000 compensatory damages, in excess $10,000 special I Mocksviile Police j Three people were arrested by jthe Mocksviile Police Depaitment last week. ; — Alan Howard Selren, 36, of ;Cana Road, was charged on Aug. ;25 wilh driving while license ¡revoked, possession of marijuana land carrying a concealed weapon. ; — Terry Flint Smoot, 30, of 319 .'Pine St., Mocksviile, was charg- !ed Aug, 25 with tr<espassing and 'carrying a concealed weapon. ; — Stacy Ray Lane, 29, of 328 ■Avon St., Mocksviile, was charg ed Aug. 27 with larccny of 'gasoline. ' • A breaking and entering was reported at 2:3? a.m, Aug. 28 al Floyd’s Grocery, Norlh Main Street and Campbell Road. • Scaffolding, with an estimated value of $549 and belonging to Gallimore Exteriors Inc. of Lex ington, was reported stolen from the Lee Jeans construction site on Aug. 24. • A Route 7, Mocksviile woman was charged with failure to yield right of way after a wreck al Salisbur)' and South Main streets al 4:42 a,m. Aug. 24. Marie Danato Crotts, 42, was driving a car from Salisbury Streei onto Main Streei when it struck a car driven on Main Street by Della Trimiar Jones, 55, of Route 4, Mocksviile, reported Mocksviile Police Patrolman K,L. Hunter, Both drivers and passenger in ihe Crotis car, Anita Marie Crotts, 12, were taken to Davie Counly Hospital where they were treated for injuries and released. Damage lo the 1984 Lincoln driven by Jones was eslimaled at $1,200, lo the 1989 Hyundai driven by Crotts, $1,800. • No charges were filed after a wreck on Lexington Road last week. According lo a report by Hunter, Dora Boles Campbell, 24, of 421 Mor.sc St., Mock.sville, drove her car from the right lane to the left lurn lane causing il lo .strike a car driven by Sopheak Srcy, 18, of Rome 9, Mocksviile. No charges were filed. Damage lo Ihe 1972 Ford driven by Campbell was estimated al SI50, 10 lhc 1987.Ford driven by Srey, $450. damages, in excess $10,000 punitive damages. — Arvala Kinder vs. Gilbert Robinson, Creative Dining Food System Inc., Cutown. and John Doe Corp, claim as result of fall in restaurant, in excess of $10,000 for injuries, — David L. Barnes and Alan Barnes vs, Daniel H, Brown, re quest for judgment, $200,000. — J.P. Green Milling Co. Inc. vs. Larry F. Habegger, request for judgment, $3,147.42. — J.P. Green Milling Co. Inc. vs. Linda Miller, request for judg ment, $1,773.02. — BB&T vs. C.R. Anderson Lumber Co. Inc., possession of secured properly, request that ■ receiver be appointed to lake property. — Dwighi H. Cleary and Sally A. Cleary vs, Tammy Johnson Cleary and Patrick Harding Cleary, child custody, — Jack L, Newman and Palsy R, Newman vs, Larry Umberger and Umberger Construction Co,, request for recovery, also vs. Cabinet Marketplace Inc, and YCM Inc., in excess of $10,000 for breach of warranties for com pensatory, incidental and conse quential damages; also vs. Rodney E. Wilson and Wilson Healing & Air Conditioning, in excess of $10,000 for unfair and deceptive trade practices, — Donald Bingham and W,D. Parks Jr. doing business and Bingham & Parks Co. vs. Lawrence Greet and David Greer doing business as G&G Gun Club, request for judgment, $5,264,03. — Ronald G. Bates and Melvin W. Bates vs. Puckett Enterprises Inc., request for judgment, in ex- ce.ss of $10,000 for incidental and consequential damages as result of breach of conlract and warranty. — Lory McBride Walker vs. Johnny Lee Crocker, paternity, child support. — Patricia Dianne Benfield vs. Harold E. Hedrick, child support. — Gary Wilson Chappell vs. Paulette Myers Chappell, absolute Arrests The following were arrested by Ihe Davie Counly Sheriff’s Deparlmenl. — James Luke Jumper, 23, of Roule 1, Robbinsville, eharged Aug. 24 wilh being drunk and disruptive, — Millard Franklin Greer, 72, of 337 Hospital St., Mocksviile, charged Aug. 24 wilh as.saull with a deadly weapon. — James Edward Marshall, 19, of Roule 1, Moeksville, eharged Aug. 24 wilh obsirucliiig and delaying an officer, assaull and comnninicaling ihreyis. — Timmy Ray Greene, 26, of 704 Norlhwood Aparlmenis, Mocksviile, charged Aug. 20 with assault on a female and with unauthorized use of a conveyance. — Gina Marie Howell, 22, of 268 Milling Road Apt. 1, divorce. — Stewart Jerome Beamer vs. Kim Beamer, absolute divorce. — Security Pacific Executive Profession Services vs. Leon L. Dyson, request for judgment, $2,822.26. — Fred A . Smith vs. Melissa M illaway Smith, absolute divorce. — B & H Supply Co. Inc. vs. Amage Cosmetics Inc., request for judgment, $23,580.31. — Linda Calvert Morgan vs. Ronald Lee Morgan, absolute divorce. — Linda Mamz Mercier vs. A r thur M ilton Mercier, absolute divorce, resumption o f maiden name. — E. Edward Vogler Jr. vs. John Farmer and Betty Farmer, re quest for recovery, $401.81. — Carolyn G. Hall Potts vs. Timmy L. Hall, child custody, child support. — S.W . Brown & Son Inc. vs. John Farmer and Betty Farmer do ing business as Community Cup board, request for recovery. Fires Mocksviile, charged Aug. 20 with a.ssauli and communicating threats. — Larry D. Dillard, 37, of Roule 6, Mocksviile, charged Aug, 20 wilh assault. — John Nathaniel Nichols, 19, of Route 2, Advance, chargcd Aug. 22 with a probation violation, — Leah Rochelle “Shelly” Cle ment, 21, of Norlhwood Apart- menls No. 408, Mcoksville, charg ed Aug. 23 wilh failure to pay costs. — Aaron Lip.scomb, 26, of Roule 4, MiK'ksville, chargcd Aug, 23 wilh as.sault. — Tirena Elaine Anderson, 25, of 398 Pine St., Mock.sville, charg ed Aug, 22 with assaull. — Vickie Ann Buchanan, .'51, of Roule 6, Mocksviile, chargcd Aug, 27 wilh failure to return rented properly. Davie fire departments respond ed to the following calls last week. Aug. 22: County Line, 3:20 p.m., vchicle smoking in 1-40 median. Aug. 23: Mocksviile, 6:32 a.m., smoke inve.stigation, 812 Garner St.; Fork, 7:44 p.m., standby for emergency landing of air care due to weather. Aug. 24: Smilh Grove, 5:52 a.m., fuel spillage, Mac’s Foods; Smith Grove, 5:41 p.m., aulo ac cident, N.C. 801 at Bert Bahnson Drive. Aug. 25: William R. Davie, aulo accident, 601 North Trailer Park, Aug, 26: William R. Davie, 7;02 p.m., auto accident, U.S, 601 and N.C. 801. Aug. 27:Ccnter, 12:.30 a.m., aulo accident, cnlrancc of Lake Myers. $1,146.10. — Gerald Gray Booe vs. Wan-^ da Tise Booe, absolute divorce.' ' — Davie County Department of' Social Services on behalf of Julia : . Carol Robertson vs. Jerry Lawrence Willis, paternity, child. support. ‘ , — Cathy Jo Snyder Hampton ysV Robert Lee ham^n Jr., аЪмЯи1е divorce. ' V 1 ' , ,— Alicia Lynn №keir; Grinies . H. Parker Jr. and Frances Logan Parker vs; Craig Steven Jphnson','' child custody, child inip^rt. — Shores Appliance Service Vs'.' P.D. FaUs and Wanda Parrish, re; quest for judgment, $29.62. — Federal Assurance Corp. vs. Lewis Mason and Linda Mas«»,;: request for judgment, $1,863.60. — Sonic Trucking & Sales Inc.; vs. Lewis Mason and Linda'.; Mason, request for recovery,^ $782. :— Paul M. Spillman vs.: American Homes of Mocksviile; Inc., request for recovery, $5,000; compensatory damages for failure; to properly assemble and install mobile home; in excess of $5,000 for breach of contract and warranty. — William Leslie Steele Sr. vs., Michael A. Brady, request for, judgment, $280. — Euro-Drawer Inc. vs.; Newmark Cabinet Inc., request for judgment, $4,776,90. — Edward L. Wilkinson and Vicki H. Wilkinson vs. Jeffrey: Scoll James, auto accident claim, damages in excess of $10,000; punitive damages in excess of $10,000. — Jennifer Brooks vs. Jerry Sleven Brooks, voluntary child, support agreement. — Vicky Phillips McCurdy vs.' Sleven Daniel McCurdy, voluntary; child support agreement.— Cathy Craig vs. Larry Gregory Butcher, paternity, volun tary child support agreement. . •; 1)Л\'11, с о и м л ’ KNTi:i{I’klSK UI;C0KI). 'mUltSDAY, Лнц.31, 19S9-9 Highway Patrol .■ .The following traffic iicciüenls were investigated last week in Davie County by the N.C. Highway Patrol. Dccr Hits Hyiiiuliii A deer ran into Ihe patli of a 1987 Hyundai at 1:20 a.m. Aug. 20 on Farmington Road. Rodney Lee Leonard, 22. of Mocksville was driving the car south on Farmington Road in a .sharp left curve when a deer ran in front of the car, according to a report by Trooper C.D. Jone.s. Leonard ran off the left shoulder of the road and struck a fence and post. Damage to Leonard's car was estimated al $2,800 and to a fence and po.sl owned by Charles Pilchcr of Route 2, Mocksville, $80. Driver Leaves Scene Charges are pending after a trac tor trailer left the scene of an acci dent Aug. 22 on U.S. 64 approx imately 1.8 miles east of Mocksville. According to a report by Trooper L.D. Chappell, Franklin Kenneih Renlz, 66, Roulc 3, Mocksville was traveling west on U.S. 64. Chappell reported the driver of a tractor trailer, travel ing east on U.S. 64 saw stopped traffic ahead stopped for a vehicle making a left turn. The truck skidd ed out of control and crossed the center line and sideswiped Rentz's vehicle. •. Damage to Rentz’s 1978 Ford was estimated at $1,000. Mpcksville Teen Charged A 16-year-old Mocksville youth was charged with failure to reduce speed to avoid a collfsion after a two car accident Aug. 22 at 7:50 a.m. on Farmington Road. According to a report by I'rooper K.B. Steen, Mary Jo Smith of Route 5 was traveling snuth on Faimington Road and fail ed to see a car in front of her slop ped waiting to make a left turn. Smith’s car skidded into the rear of a car driven by Sheri Ann iM ^n.v 18, of Sleepy Hollow Road, Mocksville. .'Damage to: Mason’s '"1982 Toyoiai was estimated at $800, and to Smith’s 1975 Dodge, $400. Cadillac Änd Truck Collide A 1985 Cadillac and a. 1974 Toyota truck collided Aug. 23 at 7i25 p.ni. on U.S;'64. According to a report by Trooper B.L.^Crider, both vehicles were traveling southeast on U.S. 64 when Harrell Powell III, 16, of Bermuda Run, attempted to pass a buck driven by Arnold Howard Till^, 40, of Route 11, Statesville. During the pass Tilley attempted to change lanes, colliding with the tide of Powell’s CadiUae. I No charges were filed. ’ Damage to Poweirs car was ' estimated at $1,200 and to Tilley's truck, $150. ■ ' V tj . Teen Charged After Wreck A 17-year-<dd Advance teen was charged with failure to reduce .speed to avoid a colli.simi alter the truck he was driving ciilliclL'd with (lie rear ol'ii ear Лп{!. 23 on I’ud- ding Ridge Road, Christopher TiHld lillis of llillerest drive was Iravelini! we.st on I’udiling Kidge Road, according to a report by ’I'rooper Crider. Kllis failed to sec a car in front of him making a right turn and collided wilh llie ¡I'iir, driven by John David Furches, 67. of Route 2. Mocksvillc. Mim Backs Truck Inlo Car A Winslon-Salem man who said he passed the road he wanted to turn off on, backcd his truck up and collided with a car behind him Aug. 23 at 4 p.m. on Bear Creek Church Road. According to a report by Trooper K.B. Steen, Gregory Jay Stevenson, 24, was backing up so he could turn into the road he pass ed. Stevenson backcd his truck inlo a car driven by Kathy Payne Pegram, 37, of State Road. Stevenson was charged wilh making an unsafe traffic movement. Mocksvillc Woman Faces Charge A Mocksville woman faces an improper backing charge after an accident on U.S. 601 Aug. 23. Penny Dillard Campbell, 29, of Route 4, was stopped in the north boundlaneof U.S. 601 due to traf fic congestion, at Davie High School, according to a report by Trooper C.D. Jones, In order for a school bus to make a left turn in front of her, Campbell began to back up and hit the front of a truck driven by John Mark Hancock, 25, of Route 7, Mocksville. Two Oldsmoblles Collide Two Oldsniobiles were involv ed in an accident Aug. 25 at 3:30 p.m. on U.S. 601. According to a report by Trooper L.D. Chappell, Edith Brown Rummage, 73, of Route 6, Mocksville was traveling soulh on U.S. 601 and was making a left turn when her car collided wilh a car driven north by Andrea Michele Elmore, 16, of Route 8, Mocksville. Rummage was charged with fail ing to see before turning. Car Skids Out Of Control Loose gravel was apparently the cause of a single vehicle accident Aug. 25 at 6:40 a.m. on Ridge Road. Mary Tayler Waller, 46, of Route 7, Mocksviiie was traveling east on Ridge Road out of a sharp left ein ve. according to a reporl by Trooper Jones. Due to loose gravel, the ear's tires lost traction and caused ihe rear tires to spin around. The car ran off the right shoulder and .struck a dilcli. Damage lo the l‘J8S Pontiac was c.slinialed al S500. No charges were filed. Two Teeii-a;;ers liijiirecl Two Davie Couniy Iccii-agers were injured in a single car acci- dcnt Aug. 26 al 11:20 p.m. on Milling Road. Brcnum Dane Hilton Jr.. 16. of Morse Street, Mocksville was treated for brui.scs and released from Davie County Hospital. His passenger, Leslie Gray Tucker, 15. of Roulc 1, Advancc was treated and released from North Cai'olina Bapiisl Ho.spilal. According to a report by Trooper B.L. Crider, Hilton was traveling southwest on Milling Road when he ran off the roadway and lost control. Hilton’s vehicle swerved lo the left, then right, where it struck a ditchbank and a mailbox and overturned. Hilton was charged with ex ceeding a safe speed. Damage lo Hilton’s 1987 Hon da was estimated at $8,800. Car Skids Out Of Control A Mocksvillc woman was in jured after she lost control of her car during heavy rain on Aug. 26 at 9:30 p.m. on Jericho Road. Karen Baity Willard, 31, of Route 6, was treated and released from Davie County Hospital for bruises. Willard lost control of her car in heavy rain, ran onto the left shoulder, spun around and struck an embankment with ils front, ac cording lo a report by Trooper W.D. Grooms. Damage to Willard’s 1989 Pon tiac was estimated at $3,000. No charges were filed. Truck’s Brakes Fail A Mocksville man said the brakes failed on his 1979 Ford truck, which had struck the rear of a Ford car Aug. 26 on N.C. SOI. According to a reporl by Trooper Grooms, John Edward Kelley Jr., 43, of Roulc 8, was traveling at U.S. 601 and N.C. 801 when he said his brakes failed and slruck a car in the rear driven by Beverly Bechtel Pilcher, 25, of Route 9, Mocksville. Pilcher was treated and releas ed from Davie County Hospital for bruises. Kelley was charged with failure lo reduce speed to avoid a collision. 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Phon* 634-2111 ... t Jf m m é ' ¿ i i í Thisistoatiii^that isttCmíónGmmtínCuStmnr , , , ; Pofirrii/instalifämapwfxHyinsuktU'homcltniApnirik ,-V., У ’ Ipu wi^stntk,t¥enkeatinim TiÍKígrenddel^iüt, plmeé nh с т щ М ’Я о п т е г , ' ■ / DMfeRwtr^ thatiiämwftht Ы усагтЛщ ’ Г ^ " ¡т Ш Ш оп m / 0 u r C o n ñ ^ t I ^ A M Í ^ , m i m cmfprtabUfyJiüßwl hmm) The Ccm6rt ЕЫг1Ъикг TUflitnaie ewv tKnta rtsolvt thatámn'' fht. Ajidnve Ш « Ш л т .у т ,а п ш < » т п т М с ,1 М и 1 \» ¥ с г /и Ш install a compambU htating sysmn of ym cfwicef ^ A s n/äfi amagnment,Usm w n íU o IL th td a d i^ttís ЬшЫ Л/Штдайз/ tíua accompmuts tíús cerium . Ona yotñt m d them,паеß d a e r ^ th a tM m U i» i^ a s t h c ß U ( i m a u a s j / m v m l » m n V i t C i»r^rtJ\A achinc. ■ DisMct:J\Aatuu)er~/ Destgm ResiämtiiU fLepreuntatàiii^ W hat Н ауеЪ и С о 1Ъ Lose? DUKE POWER Call ¿I Duke Pi iv.'cr Marki 'linqCon.siillanl 10-DAVIE COUNTY ENTEIU’RISK UKCOIU), TIIUKSDAV. Ai¡({.3). 19«'^ Child Abuse Programs Get Funds ■ By Kathy D. Cluiffin Davie County Enlerprise-Record Davie County's share of $3 million in additional money ap proved by the N.C. General Assembly for Child Protective Ser vices is expected to be around $15,000. ■ “ Hopefully, we’ll be able to secure enough money to go along with it to employ an additional pro tective services worker for the county,” said James Clark, direc tor of the Davie County Depart ment of Social Services. “There is enough work to justify it.” The $3 million appropriation was in response to an $11.8 million request by the N.C. Association of County Directors of Social • Services. : “ 1 don’t feel it’s adequate,” Clark said. “I think the full amount ishould have been appropriated statewide.” ■ Clark told the Davie County Board of Social Services of the ap propriation at a meeting last week. "I think the legislature has made some commitment to review the re quest again the next time they meet, which is positive,” he said. The $11.8 million was requested .to cover the growing number of ,child abuse and neglect cases be ing reported statewide. : Sen. Betsy Cochrane (R-Davie) said the $3 million was a signifi cant amount of the $18 million the legislature had to use on expanding liuman services programs. “But that’s really too small and Sye know it,” she said. “We would ijave very much liked to have given ijiore.” Cochrane said the issue of child protection must be addressed. “In first place, we’ve got more ‘ ^^dren ^ t have got to be dealt :j|^thV’ she said. "There’s also no ]^e^on but that we have got more «buw,Mses being reported than we J?«!'*».”, report must be investigated to determine its legitimacy. “All |if;tbt checking lakes time,” ’ Pocfiranei»jd/“Mo8joit|jetime; 5ii8.4buse.’V ' ШЪшйу, r^orts of child Eglect have increased 4 Dutrng tbeiiscal year beginning 1987,;a^'ending June 30, il9e8^ there were 81 reports of families with child abuse and neglM, according to Karen Smith, s^aocial work supervisor for the : These involved 149 children. } The cases were investigated, and , ,of those, 40 ie|Mrts of abuse in ' fainilies were substantial^ or . ..found to be true. These involved ,■73 children. , f Reports of child abuse and . ii^lecl rose to 139 fiunilies involv ing 208 children in (lie (i.sciil year beginning July 1, 1988. and ending this pa.st Jiine 30. Of tho.se. 53 report.s Ilf abuse in families were substanliiitecl. These invcilved 7G children. Increasing caseloads in Child I’rolective Services and other .social services programs have led to high turnover rales in dcparliiienls •• throughout Ihe slate, Clark told board members. Turnover in the Davie depart ment has averaged about 20 per cent over the past three years, which Clark said was above the 10 pcrcent acceptable rate for a healthy organization. “ But we learned today it’s pretty good in relation to what some county staffs arc experiencing.” he said. Clark and board members Jo Cheek and Dorothy Graham at tended a social services workshop earlier in the day. One department, Caswell Coun ty, Clark said he believed it was, reported more than 100 percent turnover in three years. “That was primarily due to the fact that their salaries weren’t competitive in their market area,” he said. Reading from a brochure entitl ed, “ Caseworker Turnover: A Crisis in Child Welfare,” Clark reviewed the problems that arise from high turnover. • It takes time and money to train new caseworkers before they can assume a caseload. • Professional workers typical ly need two years, before they ac quire the skills to do their job effectively. Clark said the National Child Welfare Resource Centcr for Management and Administration, which published the brochure, figures it takes about two years for new employees to acquire the necessary sidlls to assume a full workload. “I don’t think it takes quite that long,” he said, “at least here in North Carolina, it doesn’t.” • It takes as long as three to six months to fill vacancies wliicli leaves cases uncovered or multiplies the caseloads of the re maining workers. “We are able to recruit and employ people a littje bit faster than the norm,” Clark said.• High turnover rates contribute to increased stress and poor morale of the remaining workers which in turn leads to more turnover. As the experienced workers begin to bum out, Clark said, they go on to other jobs and the depart ment is left with a staff of inex perienced workers. “ What’s wrong with that is you've got . children out there that need to be protected and inexperienced workers can’t help them,” he said. Clark said the de|>artment has Man Convicted For Speeding tays Truck Not That Fast ; The driver of a tractor trailer told jiidge Kimberly T. Harbinson last week in Davie District Cout there 'ivas no way he could luve been iiiriving 66 mph in a 55 mph zone. < “There’s no way to get my uuck iip to that speed in that short of 'distance,” said Keith Ivan Chandler. j'N.C. Highway Patrolman K.B. ; ^ n said he stopped Chandler Ju ly 14 on N.C. 801 near Farmington. held workshop.s lo help ciHploycc.s deal wilh siress. “ They help a lil- llc bil." he said, “ 1 think anyliiiie you can give any allcnlion lo reduc ing the stre.ss on your staff, there’s some benefit." • Also al the meeting, Clark reported on the surplus food di.slribulion held Aug. 17 at the Na- ’ tional Guard Armory. "I thought we had a good response," he said. “ Wc did nol return any food to the warehouse on this occasion." There was a low turnout at the last distribution three months ago, and food had to be returned to a regional warehouse. Clark .said .some social services departments in North Carolina have opted to get out of the pro gram, which is aimed at reducing the national surplus of ccilain foods by giving il lo needy families. Bul as long as people in Davie Counly pick up Ihe food, he said the deparlmenl will continue coor dinating Ihe distribution. Chairman Terry Potts said: “ I don't see why you would want to get out of it myself unless no one wants the stuff.” Clark said participation did drop witcn Ihe .supply of cheese ran out last year and new products were added, bul it soon picked back up. "Apparently, people arc liking the products,” he said. The program could be improv ed, Clark said, if larger quantities could be di.stributed. particularly lo families wilh several children. "Give them enough that it's going 10 do .some good," he said. ■ — — — — — — _ Mocksville Laundry & Dry Cleaners Serving Mocksville & Davie County With Quality Cleaning & Laundry For Over “40 Years” Let our experience and reputation for quality, price and service work for you! Let Us Prove To You That We Do The Best Shirts |n Town!We’re “ The Good Ones" Phone or drop by and ask about our "In Town Delivery Service" “ W E REALLY DO APPRECIATE YOUR BUSINESS O u r L o c a tio n S in ce 1947 143 Depot Street, Mocksville, N.C. 27028 634-5130 Open Mon.-Fri. 7-5:30; Sat. 8-12:30 “He was refiising to even accept the citation,” said Steen. “He refused to sign it. “He kept saying the only reason I stopped him was because he was a black man,” said Steen. “I had him come back and talk to me for a while.” Judge Harbinson found Chandler guilty of a lesser charge, driving 64 mph in a 55 mph zone, and ordered him to pay $10 fine and court costs. 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Gas Can F R E E - F R E E - F R E E with Purchase Of Any New Tractor In Stock eOOD ONLY THRU LABOR DAY 36” Aerator Our Last Sale — For 1989 Models Save From «300®® to $1200. Prices Have Already Increased On 1990 Models. W« Onfy Have (23) Units In Stock. Good Selection. This Sale Goes Through Monday Evening At 7 p.m. Remember: We Are A Full Service Wheel Horse Dealer: We Have Complete In-House Service, Parts, Parts & Parts, To Serve You. Our 15 Years Experience Can Make A Real Difference. Wheel Horse Power Works For You. S Wheel Hoise 'On Approved Credit S a l e s , P a r t s A n d C o m p l e t e S e r v i c e M c D a n i e l & S o n s , I n c . 601-S. Mocksville, N.C. 634-3531 12—DAVIE COUNTY KNTHKPKISIC KI'XOUD, TIIUUSDAY, Л«ц.31, 1989 District Court инвяяиявшшгп The following court cases were disposed of during Duvie Di.slrici Court on Aug. 24. Presiding was Judge Kimberly T. Harbinson. Prosecuting was Bill Causey, assistant district attorney. — Meade Randolph Atkinson Jr., failure to reduce speed lo avoid an accident, dismissed. — David Eric Boger, exceeding a safe .speed, reduccd by DA to im proper equipment, failure to wear a seal bell, pay $25 fine and courl costs. — Suryakantam Lakkaratu Chalis, driving 76 mph in a 55 mph zone, reduced by DA to exceeding asafc.speed, paySlOfineandcourt costs. — Jennifer Lynnetl Chunn, failure to wear a seat belt, follow ing too close, pay $25 Tine and court costs. — William Lee Comer, ex ceeding a safe speed, reduced by . DA to 54 mph in a 45 mph zone, •.'pay $10 fine and courl costs. : — Ronald Lee Courtright, driv- ing while license revoked, sentenc- : ed to 30 days suspended for 12 : months, pay $50 fine and court costs and not operate a motor vehi- I cle until properly licensed. ; — Brian Nelson Cupp, driving • 69 mph in a 55 mph zone, reduc- I ed by DA to 64 mph in a 55 mph ; zone, pay $10 fine and court costs. ; — James Lawrence Davis, no ; vehicle insurance, sentenced to 30 ; days suspended for 12 months, pay : $25 fine and court costs and not ; operate a motor vehicle until pro- ; perly insured, Í — John David, Day, driving 83 Í mph in a 65 mph zone, reduced by ^ DAtoexceiedingasafespeed.pay SIO fine and court costs. . i —jJeffrey Small Dickerson, : <lrivliig76’niph ilia 65 mph zone, ’ r lecluced by DA to exceeding a safe ''Speed, pay $10 fine and court ‘2 — Melissa Deree Eaton, failure J;i0'wrar a seat belt, dismissed. ’ii — Mark Fetalivero Galloway, S without a license, prayer for t continued on payment of ¡ coste. , , — Steven Roy Gragg, driving 76 liiqdi in a 65 mph zone, reduced by фА to improper equipment, pay l^urt coste.— James Craig Hill, DWI Í №mithalyzer result: 10), sentenced 12o days suspended for 2 years, l^y $200 fine arid court costs, sur- • )|piidér drivers license and not Jarate a motor vehicle until pro-.. '! ijlierly licensed, perform 48 hours itf community service, given credit' |'|>r voluntary assessment and ^arde^ to oon^y with recorhmen- ^^ons of assessing agency; con- Viumihg a malt beverage in ipessenger area of a vehicle, driv- Í tag 88 mph in a 55 mph zone and S'improper, passing, dismissed. — Rodney Gene Johnson, im- g, reduced by DA to s liioveniem, pay $25 fine aiid coste; DWI in a commercial <vehicle, dismissed. <%-Carnell Jones Jr., DWI ^.i$ieathaly2«r results .20), sentenc- ¿•d to 60 days suspended for 12 fmonths, pay $100 fine and court J^sts, surrender driver’s license v'fnd not operate a motor vehicle un- properly licensed, perform 24 ( teurs of cotranuniiy service, given V ^redit for voluntary assessment and V iprdered to comply with recommen- 'dations of assessing agency. — Patsy Carter Kiger, driving - left of center, reduced by DA to ^improper equipment, pay courl ; costs. ■,i — Thomas Howard Lentz, driv- •;ing 69 mph in a 55 mph гопе. ■; reduced by DA to exceeding a safe •: speed, pay $10 fine and court •: costs. — Michael Charles Lyons, driv- ;ing 67 mph in a 55 mph zone, ; reduced by DA to improper equip- : ment, pay court costs. — Vincent J, Malera, failure to reduce speed to avoid an accident, dismissed. ; — James Ray Paris, driving 70 -’mph in a45 iiiph zone, reduced by DA to 60 mph in a 45 mph zone, failing to drive to the side of the -road upon seeing a blue light and •siren, sentenced to 60 days suspended for 12 mniillis. pay S50 fine,.(ind courl costs, not commit ;i similar olTensc aiul remain in general good liehavior. — Barbara Richardson Reavis, driving 60 mph in a 45 mph zone, reduccd by DA lo improper equip ment, pay courl costs. — Isaac Preston Rccd, DWI (Breathalyzer results . 15). sentenc ed to 60 days suspended for 12 months, pay SlOO fine and court costs, nol operate a motor vchicic until properly licensed, perform 24 hours of community service, reim burse the state for court appointed attorney, given credit for voluntary assessment and ordered to comp ly with recommendations of assess ing agency. — Frank Robinson, assault on a female, dismissed. — Maher Saei, driving 55 mph in a 35 mph zone, pay $10 fine and court costs. — Barbara Stephanie Seats, driving 66 mph in a 55 mph zone, reduced by DA lo 64 mph in a 55 mph zone, pay $10 fine and court costs. — Judy Bailey Sherrill, driving 70 mph in a 55 mph zone, reduc ed by DA to improper equipment, pay court costs. — Denise Shelton Shore, driv ing 68 mph in a 55 mph zone, reduced by DA to improper equip ment, pay court costs. — Kimberly R. Shore, driving 66 mph in a 55 mph zone, reduc ed by DA to 64 mph in a 55 mph zone, pay $10 fine and court costs. — Ronald Howard St. Link, im proper equipment, pay court costs. — Linda Hinkle Teague, driving 67 mph in a 55 mph zone, reduc ed by DA to improper equipment, pay court costs. — Salvatore P. Ternullo, driv ing 92 mph in a 65 mph zone, sentenced to 30 days suspended for 12 months, pay $50 fine and court costs and not commit a similar offense. — Henry R. Thompson, fishing without a license, prayer for judg ment continued on payment of court costs. — Glen H. Wendt, driving 80 mph in a 65 mph zone, reduced by DA to exceeding a safe speed, pay $10 fine and court costs. — William Kelly Whitt, driving 88 mph in a 65 mph zone, reduc ed by DA to exceeding a safe speed, pay $10 fine and court costs. — Lawrence George Williams Jr., failure to stop at a stop sign, r^uced by DA to improper equip ment, pay court costs. ■ — Dennis Cooper, driving 70 mph in a 55 mph zone, reduced by DA to improper equipment, pay court costs. Failed To Appear The following people failed to appear for their scheduled court date. — Keith Alan Aten, driving 85 mph in a 65 mph zone. — William Richard Boyd, driv ing 80 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Christopher Robin Chandler, driving without a license, no vehi cle registration. — Walt H. Cheely Jr., driving while license revoked. — David Andrew Clement, failure to wear a seat belt. — Wayne Allen Cline, improper passing. — Tracy Eugene Conyers, driv ing 79 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Ronald Lee Courtright. driv ing while license revoked, sentenc ed to 30 days suspended for 12 months, pay $50 fine and court costs, not operate a motor vehicle until properly licensed. — Brian Nelson Cupp, driving 69 mph in a 55 mph zone, reduc ed by DA to 64 mph in a 55 mph zone. — Billy Wayne Draughn Jr. non-support of a child. — Thomas Lee Dyson, driving without a licensc. ■ — Robert Franklin Foster, failure to wear a seat belt. — Tommy Joe Fritts, driving 70 mph in a 55 mph zone, driving while liccnse revoked. — Terry N. Gowey. driving HO mph in a 65 mph zone. — Claude Aron Greene Jr., DWI, consuming a mall beverage in the passenger area of a vehicle. — Leroy Hairston. drj\'ii!g while license revoked. — Pamela Fox Hodge, no vehi cle registration. — Hugh Donald Hodges, im proper passing. — Ralph E. Luman. driving 79 mph in a 63 mph zone. — Harold Gene Lyon, posses sion of stoic properly. — Jerry Lee McClinc. driving 84 mph in a 65 mph zone, no vehi cle insurance. — Charles Wilburn Minchew, driving 79 mph in a 65 mpli zone. — Mary Garza Rojas, driving without a license. — Dceddra Wilson Scott, unsafe traffic movement. — Dwight Ashley Scotl Jr.. ex pired license plate. — William Keith Smith, im proper passing. — Richard Michael Stricbich, fishing without a license. — James Ira Williams, driving 79 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Steven C. Williams, driving 85 tnph in a 65 mph zone. — Gail Edge Benton, driving 80 mph in a 65 mph zone. Trials Waived The following people waived their right to a trial and paid their fines early. — Nancy Alene Ellis, failure to secure a child under 6-years-old in a child restraint system. — Kathy Johnson Collier, failure to secure a child under 6-years-old in a child restraint system. — Harian Longstreet Creech II, driving 68 mph in a 55 mph zone. — Marilyn Sartain Miller, failure to secure a child under 6-years-old in a child restraint system. — Larry William Jones, failure to secure a child under 6-years-old in a child restraint system. — Mary Frances Wilson, failure to .stop at a stop sign. — Roalyn Rivers Evans, ilriving 66 mph in a 55 mph zone. — Cynthia Denise Gwyn, im proper equipment. , — Henry Allen Sidden, without a 96 hour permit when using a dealer tag. — Sherry Bell Miller, driving 80 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Calvin Eugene Harrison, im proper passing. — Malinda Harding Williams, driving 68 mph in a 55 mph zone. — Randy Joe Hutton, improper passing. — Scotty Allen Reynolds, im proper equipment. — Amos Tyrone Tucker, driv ing 77 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Keith Edward Summer, driv ing 68 mph in a 55 mph zone. — Ralf W. Jandt, driving 77 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Sarah Bunn Langley, failure to have a passenger under 16-years-old in a car wear a scat belt. — Britt Dwight Sammons, failure to wear a seat belt. — Robert Joseph Pugh, driving 80 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Iona Winters Disher, unsafe traffic movement. — Starlet Dawn Souther, driv ing 76 mph in a 65 mph zone, failure lo wear a seal belt. — Sylvia Malarei, driving 76 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Donna Richclle Carter, driv ing 70 mph in a 55 mph zone. — Sheree Kay Myers, failure lo wear a seal belt. — Kelvin Mitchell Stroble, driv ing 80 mph in a 65 mph zone. — John Kenneth Hunt, driving 75 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Darian Phil Correll, failure to wear a seat belt. — Lesa Ann Carpenter, ex ceeding a safe speed. — Mabel Carpenter, worthless check. — Rosalyn Rivers Evans, driv ing 66 mph in a 55 mph zone. — John David Hodges, no vehi cle registration. — Sherry Boll Miller, driving 80 mph in a 65 mph zone. — Dixie Tuggle Miller, driving 66 niph in a 55 mph zone. — Richard Lewis Springer Jr.. imptoper passing. — MeUxly Anthony Stafford, no vehicle registration. — James Harrison Teague, no vehicle registialion. Drugs Prices Good August 30, 31, Septem ber 1 & 2, 1989 Only •SERVICE, SELECTION & SA\llNG5 FROM THE PRESCRIPTION РНШ ' J I Crown Drugs offers 2 great Photo Processing Options C hoo se a second set of standard size prints F R E E everyday O r Choo se Pro 35 Professional quality 4 " prints returned in a handy m ini album 100%Rdief 6 0 % & i v i n g $ If you’re feeling under the weathei; here’s some sunny news. Our generic brand medicines get you a whole lot better for a whole lot less. Up to 60% less. When vou care enouQh to send the very best! 1. Mocksviiie, Willow Gall Shopping Centre' 7.301 Arcadia Avenue, Wlnslon-Saiem1 Ciemmons, Westwood Village Shopping Center 8- Hanes Mail, Winslon-Salem 3. Beiniuda Quay Sliopping Cenier, Advance, N.C. 9. Oldiown, 3716 Reynolda Road _ 4.631 Peters Creek Parkway, Winston'Salem 10. Lewisville, 6499 Stiailowlord Rd., Winslon'So. 5. Reynolda Manor Shopping Center, Winston-Salem 11 - Stanleyville, Old Highway 52 North Oak Shopping Cenire>locki*i'ie 6.3075 Kernersville Road, Winston-Salem King. Colony Centre o™«y S'-“-.-: • ,13.4917 Country Club Rd. Walkertown, Highway 66 Yadkinville, Newton, Taylorsville, Le«mglon. anH Wfcome-- --------------->1 11, .I............X 4V Davie Dateline DAVIK ГОИМЛ ION I ICHI’KISIC KKCOKI), I HUKSIMY, Лнй-З], 1989—13 Meetings Thursday, Aug. 31 County prccinct officers sworn in at 7:30 p.m. in tlic courtroom of the courthousc. Tuesday, Sept. 5 Davie coiiimissioiiers meet at 1 p.m. in their hiwcl room in the courthouse. Meeting rcschctlulcci from the first Monday due to the Labor Day holiday. Monday, Sept. 11 Coolccmcc ЛВС board meets at 6:45 p.m. in the manager’s office of the ABC store; Coolccmcc Town Board meets at 7:30 p.m. at Town Hall. Davie board of education meets at 7:30 p.m. at the central office on Cherry Street. Tuesday, Sept. 12 Davie Cancer Support Group meets at 7 p.m. in the conference room of the Davie Public Library. “Coping with Cancer” will be the program. Light refreshments serv ed. Sponsored by Cancer Services Inc. in cooperation with Hospice of Davie County. For more infor mation, call Reba Elliott at 1-800-228-7421 or Hospice on Tuesdays at 634-0313. Ongoing MocksvUle Rotary Club meets every Tuesday at 12:15 p.m. at the Rotary Hut, Salisbury Street. MocksvUle Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 4024 meets at the Post Hut on Sanford Avenue, Aifocksvil/e, 7:30 p.m. the second Tuesday of each month. Veterans welcpmeVv^i''.';':'V'‘;— ^ MocksvUle-Davte Jaycees meet "every first Monday at Western Steer and every third Monday at the Dayie County Parks and ■ Heo|<^;|tt^:DepaTtment on Sanford Avwuis;V7.p.m. л Akqholks Anonymow,'and Al- Ап(^;%1ш1у group meetings for thd^f^'affected by alcoholics, Wedne^ys, 8 p.m., B.C. Brock Bui^g lower level. North Main Stn*t, Mocksville. Post 174 imiithly ineeting'at the Rotary Hut second 'nursday of each month at 7 pim. Vetetans welcome. Mocksvillc Civitan Club meets at 6:30 p.m. the second anid fourth Mo^y of each month at Western :;'Steer."-f^'v ■ A^ance Memorial Post 8719 .Veterans of Foreign Wars and .U k U cs Auxiliary meets each fourth Tue^y7:M p.m., at the post home in Advice. American AsiMiation of Retirelil Ftrsons, Davie County Chapter, meets second Wednesday of each month at 10:30 a.m. at First United Methodist .Church feUowihip hall. itavie County. Rigbt To Life meets at .7 p.m. on the third Thurs day of each month in the grandjury ' room of the county courthouse. Call 634-5235 or 492-5723. Соо1сешме Memorial VFW Post 1119 meets second and fourth Thursdays of each month, 7:30 p.m., Cooleemee Town Hall. Oavie Theatre Company meets at 7:30 p.m. the third Thursday of each month at the Brock Г Auditorium: i Davie Arts Council meets at 7:30 p.m. fourth Tuesday of each month at the recreation depart ment, Sanford Avenue, Mocksville. Corinthian Lodge No. 17 AF&AM meets at the lodge, second and fourth Fridays, 7:30 p.m. MocksviUe Masonic Lodge No. 134 meets the first and third Tuesdays al 7:30 p.m. at the lodge. I Davie Multiple Sclerosis Sup- I \ port Group meets third Tuesday of each month, 7:30 p.m., at Davie Counly Health Department. Extension For more ¡nformalion on any of these events or activities, contact the Davie County Agricultural Ex tension Scrvice office at 634-(>297. Thursday, Sept. 14 Daviu-Yiitlkin feeder calf grading demonstration at fi p.m. at Wbip-O-Will l-anns. Call by Sept. 11 if planning to attend. Tuesday, Sept. 19 Pesticide seminar for commer cial pcsticide licensc holders in the counly office building at 7 p.m. For more information, contact Ronnie Thompson, director of the extension scrvicc. Recreation The following events arc offered by the Mocksville-Davie Recrea tion Department. For more infor mation, call 634-2325. Upcoming Events Children’s theater workshop will begin Sept. 5. Classcs will be held Tuesdays after school throughout school year at the B.C. Brock Auditorium. Workshop is open to children ages 8-12. Call to register. Dance classes starting after Labor Day. Ballet, toe, tap, acrobatics, jazz and baton; after noon and evening classes for ages 3 and up, including adults. Emily Robertson, instructor. Classes held at Brock Auditorium. Dog obedience classes, Sept. 11, 13, 15,18,20 and 22. Cost is $20 for choice of four of six available sessions and training leash and col lar. 7-8 p.m. Brock Gym. Call to register. Guitar lessons starting in September. Call for more information. Gymnastics classes starting in September. Call for more information. Mother’s Morning Out, day care for pre-schoolers. Program schedule: Mocksvillc, First Baptist Church, Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays; Cooleemee, Victory Baptist Church, Wednesdays; and Chestnut Grove United Methodist Church on U.S. 601 North, Thursdays. Sunday, Sept. 10 Mocksville Pentecost a I Holiness Cluircli will observe lioniecoiiiing. The Rev. Tommy McGhee, director of world evangelism and missions for the WNCC Pentecostal Holiness Church, will speak at niorning w'orship scrvice. Covered dish lun cheon will follow at 12:30 p.m. at the Brock Building. Afternoon singing at 2:30 in the Brock Auditorium. Advancc Ituptist Church will observe homccoming. The Rev. Laniiy Atkins will .speak al 11 a.m. worship scrvicc. Covered dish lun cheon and singing will follow. Sept. 17-20 Revival at Mocksvillc United Methodist Church, Sunday, Sept. 24 Mocksville United Methodist Church will observe homecoming. Ongoing Redland Pentecostal Holiness Church “Saturday Night Sing’’ every second Saturday at 7. U.S. 158 and Baltimore Road. Bingo, Mocksville Rotary Hut, sponsored by Saint Francis of Assisi Church, each Friday, 7-10 p.m. $100 jackpot. Duette Foster Christian Seniors Club meets fourth Tuesday of each month at Oak Grove Methodist Church, 10 a.m. Sunday mass at the Saint Fran cis of Assisi Church will be held weekly at 10:30 a.m. Senior Citizens The following events are offered by the Diavie Family YMCA. For more information, call the Y of fice, M-F, noon-5 p.m., 634-0345. Ongoing Square dancing and clogging, FieesQ'Ie Swingers, Mondays, 7 p.m., Arnold Broadway’s home on Davie Academy Ro^. Call Broad way at 284-2766 or Nancy or Shorty Bowles at 998-3105. Open to families, singles, beginners and ex perienced dancers. Morning aerobics, classes begin first week of each month. Mon days, Wednesdays and Fridays, 9-9:45 a.m.. First United Methodist Church, Sandra Johnson, instructor. $15. Low'hnpact aerobics, classes begin first day of each month. Mondays and Wednesdays, 5-6 p.m., Mocksville Elementary. Kel- ' ly Beilin, instructor. $15. High-impact aerobics, classes begin first week of cach month. Tuesdays and Thursdays, 6:30-7:30 p.m., Mocksville Elementary. Karen Wishon, instructor. $15. Rdieion Sunday, Sept. 3 Laymans Day will be observed at Cornatzer and Bethel churches. Roger D. Hicks, a Salisbury policeman, will speak on devil worship and the drug problem. He will be at Ihe Cornatzer church at 9:45 a.m. and at Bethel al 11. Saturday, Sept. 9 Coolccmcc Presbyterian Church will hold its Fall Festival beginning with ham and sausage biscuits at 6 a.m. Yard .sale, craft and bake .sale, al 8 a.m. A scaled bid auction will be helil until 1 p.m. Anyone wishing lo donate items .should call Ann .Spry at 284-437.1. The following events are offered for senior citizens in Davie Coun ly in cooperation wilh the Davic Counly Senior Center, Brock Building, Mocksville. All events, are at Ihe ccnlcr unless otherwise noted. Call 634-0611 for more information. Aug. 31-Sept. 1 Shopping days. Monday, Sept. 4 Center closed for Labor Day. Tuesday, Sept. 5 Louise Stroud will present music for seniors. Wednesday, Sept. 6 Nancy Hartman will present program in nutrition site, noon. Sept. 7-8 Shopping days. Monday, Sept 11 New Generation Club .meets, 11 a.m.; September birthdays celebrated, noon. Tuesday, Sept. 12 Music and songs by Marie Marsh. Wednesday, Sept. 13 Senior band practice, noon. Thursday, Sept. 14 Senior Chorus practice, 1 p.m.; shopping day. Friday, Sept. 15 Shopping day. Ongoing RSVP Sewing Bee on Thursdays, 9 a.ni,-l p.m. Miscellaneous Monday, Sept. 4 Coolccmcc ABC store closed for Labor Day holiday. Sept. 8-9 Center fair, featuring barbecue, crafi entries and entertainniem. Friday, Sept. 22 Kepiihlicun Purt.v liiaii at 6 p.m. al Bennuda Run Country Club. Lt. Gov. Jim Gardner will speak at 6:30. Tickets may be ob tained from party officers and precinct chairmen. For more infor mation. call Peggy Harrison at yys-42()fi. Thursday, Sept. 21 W inston-Salem Christian Women's Club Brunch will hold "A Highlight Your Home Brunch" at 9:30 a.m, at Bermuda Run Country Club. Cost is S7, Reservations necessary by Sept, 18, Call Ro.xic Eldridge al 998-.SI 17. Saturday, Oct. 7 Fork Fire Department will hold a barbccucd chickcn supper from 4 p.m. until al Ihe department. Plates are S5. Takeouts available. Ongoing Veterans Servicc Oflice has new hours: Monday-Tuesday, 8 a.m.-5 p.m.; and Wednc.sday, 8 a.m.-noon. In The Schools Friday, Sept. 1 Schools closcd for teacher workday. Monday, Sept. 4 Schools closcd for Labor Day holiday. Sept. 5-11 Registration for Davidson County Community College classes. Thursday, Sept. 7 Mocksville Middle PTO will hold open house at 7:30 p.m. Band Booster Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. in Ihe band room. South Davie Junior High will hold Open House at 7 p.m. Friday, Sept. 8 School Health Advisory Coun cil meets at noon in the board room. Monday, Sept. 11 Coolecmvcc School PTA meets al 7;30 p.ni, Tuesday, Sept. 12 William R. Davie School PTO meets at 7:30 p.ni. North Davie student pictures taken. Vocatimuil Ediiculinn Advisory Council meets at 3:30 p.m. at South Davic Junior High. Thursday, Sept. 14 Media coordinators meet at Coolccmcc School at 2 p.m. Reunions Sunday, Sept. 3 Waller family reunion will be held in the fellowship hall of Fulton United Methodist Church al 12:30 p.m. All descendants of John and Martha Jane Whisenhunt Waller are invited. Sunday, Sept. 10 Booc family reunion will be held al Ihe William R. Davie Fire Department. Fellowship at noon, followed by lunch. Bring picnic basket and drink. Cranfill family reunion will be held at 1 p.m. in the fellow.ship hall of Cooleemee Presbyterian Church, localcd on Watt Street. Family and friends invited. Stroud family reunion will be held at the County Line Fire Department. Lunch served at Ì p.m. All relatives and descendants of the Strouds invited lo attend. Bring picnic lunch an drinks. Saturday, Sept. 23 Class of 1969, Davie High School, will hold its 20-year reu: nion. For more information, con tact Tim Allen, 377 Country Lane, Mocksville, N.C. 27028; 634-3151. Consignm ent Shop | M e jH L S t t s n At Hwy. 601 And 801 “Greasy Corner” Same Building As Auction House We Have New And Used Merchandise Clothes ★ Bisque ★ Shoes ★ General Merchandise. Tri-County Auction I And Consignment Shd|k> S u n . 1 - 6 , M o n . 9 - 6 , T u e . 9 - 5 , W e d . 9 -6 > % T h u r s . 9 - 3 , F r i . & S a t . 9 - 4 H w y . 6 0 1 & 8 0 1 7 0 4 - 2 8 4 - 4 6 0 4 Get Anything In The Store Today For Just T elev isio n « Ш Washer & Dryers Refrigerators, Ranges And Other Appliances (N in le n tltt O SnTERTninmBriT svaTBm- ■ 14 KT. GOLD / ^ « J E W E L R YRings, Chains Bracelets & Earrings OIAMONOSII Microwave Oven Furniture Stereos NO CREDIT CHECK No Deposit • No Long Term Obligation No Repair Bills While You Rent •First Week’s Rent, Minium 2 Week Rental, Limit One Per Customer C a r l 's T V & R p p l i a n c e , In c. R e n t B y P h o n e . . . C a l l T o d a y ! 1061 Yadkinville Road, Squire Boone Plaza (Next To Wal-Mart) Mocksville, N.C. 704-634-1598 14-DAVIE rnilNTV KNTERPRlSli RKCOKI), THURSDAV. Апк-ДЬ l‘>89_ D R IV E R S W I L L B E W K F C H IN G O U T F O R T H E M . Æ à / п Щ .Ш! ' L e v e l В i ji;4 k . У / ■ f i 'r< -' ÿlSIÔN D a v ie P eople DAVIK COUNTY KN I ICUl’KISK RIXOKD. TIIUUSDAY, Aui-.31, 1989-lB , № ^ Louise Stroud has taught piano lessons for more than 50 years and has provided music at Mocl<svilie’s First Baptist Church for more than 60 years.^ Vn; , — Photos by Robin Fergusson Piano Teacher Leaves Talent W ith S tudents By Mike Barnhardt . Davie County Enterprise-Record__ Löuise Stroud retired last week after 61 yeare playing piano and organ at Mocksville First Baptist Church. But, just maybe, you can catch a glimpse of her talent each Sunday at Center Methodist or Mocksville Methodist or other churches. Her former piano students play there. . Stroud taught piano lessons for 57 years before retiring from that two years ago. She has taught almost 700 students. “i teach hymns to all my students when they can do them,” she said. “ Hymns are not simple for children. It takes several years to learn to do Ihem.” Why teach hymns? “Because almost all churches need a pianist. I have a lot of students who play at their churches and I’m real proud of that.” Last Sunday, members of the Baptist church honored Stroud with a gift and ceremony. Former students were invited to tell stories about learning piano from Stroud. The teacher remembers the students. And vice versa. One student returned asking Stroud to play for her wedding, a common request. “ She said, ‘I picked you out to play for my wed ding before I picked the groom.’ ” Another said; “ You promised me 10 years ago you would play at my wedding.” Still another student was amazed at Stroud’s collection of music books and paraphernalia. “ One girl said, ‘Why do you have so much music stuff?’ and 1 said, ‘I guess 1 just like music stuff.’ ” Stroud, a Mocksville native, has compil ed stories of teaching piano into a book. Music Antic Notes, which should be publish ed this fall. “ It’s strictly a book of trivia, but it was fun to write,” she said. . Now that she is fully retired, Stroud plans to spend more time writing, a hobby she neglected some in the past. She was raised in a family which worked at newspapers, and almost became a full-time writer. “I started piano lessons at age 9 and I think it sort of happened. I couldn’t decide if I wanted to go into journalism or music. , “ I’ve stuck with the music through the years. Occi^ionallyI would think about do< ing something else, but always go back to this. . ' “ My music has consumed my life, and now I’m doing some writing,” Stroud said. But ride by her Maple Street home and you’ll just might hear the sweet music com ing from her piano. “ I certainly don’t mean to quit playing'the piano," she said. Louise Stroud: "My music has consum ed my life.' Stroud’s piano is filled with mom entos from students and family. ill 2B-I)AVIE COUNTY ICN TKRl’KISK RKCOKI). I'lIUR.SDAY. Лнц.Л!. 19«') |Co/e-P/)e/ps Couple iTo Wed On Sept. 23 l|f'M r. and Mrs. Waller E, Cole of256 Stickney Ave., Winston-Salem, ««announce the engagement of their daughter, Peggy Ann Cole, to Brad j jiGlenn Phelps, son of Mr._and'Mrs. Virgil G. Phelps of Route 11, h^Wiiiston-Salem. ; ; ^ 7 i The WeiUingis plaiiii^ for Sept. 23 at Centenary United Methodist fî[ehureh‘ijnjW^ ■ fÎii|T i« bndé^lw^ Glenn High School, Kernersviile, »i>Uen4ed thé University of North Carolina at Greensboro and is a ' iî;ÿwhi«te.of Forsyth Technical College with a degree as a licensed Îîi;pr8cticâl nurse. She is employed by Forsyth Memorial Hospital. № ; Phelps is a.graduate of Lèdford High School, Thomasville, and |t;GuilfoidTechiücàlCollege.HeisanartdirectorforWootenGniphics, ' Lexington; it ' ^ ü n d s Of Faith To Be At Center Fair The “ Sounds of Faith” singing :^group.wi)l be providing entertain- iment .at the annual Center Fair' tSatutday, Sept; 9. Entertainment will begin at; 7 I |p.m. under the aibor. The “Sounds I :!of Faith!'singing group is compris- jled'of local singers. They include ¿ .'Jerry Armsworthy, Dean Allen, ftpana Hall, Scott Olson, Wayne ||W hitenem and Joe Long. The Center Fair and Barbecue j|Sei«. 8-9 is an annual fund-raising Ijeveiit sponsored by the Center % ^Volunteer Fire Department and the Ï ¡Center Community Development ^fAssociation. All proceeds arc us- t :éd to support community projects. ly FREE ^ Foot Exam Thursday, August 31 1:00-6:00 pm Dr. Jam es Mazur Foot Specialist - Surgeon REVCO DRUG 1035 Y a d k in v ilie R d ., M ocl<sviile 634-1552 W alk In C om fort .iiore Foot Vnin J e s s i e I 4 i n l < i e N a m e d T o p C i v i t a n S e c r e t a r y Jessie Hinkle of Mocksville was honored by N.C. Dislricl West ol'Civiian International at the District Meeting at Holiday Inn Four Seasons Cenler in G reensboro Aug. 11-12. Hinkle, secretary of Ihc Mocksville Civitan Club, rccciv cd the “ Oulslanding Club Secretary” award for her scrvicc to the club, the community, and co N.C. District We.st. Earlier, Hinkle had been named sccrclary of the year by Area 5-\Vcst of N.C. Dislricl West. In addition (o being involved in Civiliin, Hinkle is a member of rirst Baptist Church in Mocksville and is involved in numerous com- nnmity organi/.alions. Karen Smith, president of Ihe Moeksviile club, accepled an Honor Club award for the club. Honor Club is Ihc highest award given by Civitan Inlernalional, recognizing club exccllcncc and outstanding community service and involvement. The club also received recogni tion for involvement in N.C. Special Olympics, contributions made to Boys and Girls Homes of N.C., and for overall club achievement. The Mocksville Civitan Club meets the second and fourth Mon day nights at Western Steer Restaurant at 6;30. Chore Worl<er Course Offered At Davie Hospital Fair books are available at the register of deeds office in the cour thouse, or in the Agricultural Ex tension Service office in the County Office Building. Fair entries are ac cepted on Friday from 5:30-9 p.m. and on Saturday morning from 7:30-9:30. Entries must remain on display until 8 p.m. Outdoor exhibition space is available to non-profit groups at no charge. There is a charge for space to anyone who sells items in order to make a profit. Barbecue pork is sold all day Fri day and Saturday, Sept. 8 and 9. Soft drinks, hot dogs, hush puppies and french fries arc also sold. A chorc worker course is scheduled lo begin in Mocksville on Sept. 5. Co-sponsored by Davidson Counly Community College and the Davio County Hospital, the course will meet at the hospital from 6:30-9 p.m. on Tuesdays and Thursdays through Oct. 24. Cost of the course will be a $l5 registration fee. Persons wishing to ensure a place in this course should contact the Davie County office of the college at 634-2885. Persons employed as chore workers are normally paid by social and health service agencies or private lioinc care enlerprises. The major instruciional conient areas of this course consist ol': human relations skills, basic first aid and emergency response, per sonal hygiene, meal preparation and nutrition. The purpose of this training, referred to as respite care, is to pro vide the necessary training to give needed relief to caregivers of in dividuals who cannot be left alone because of mental and physical conditions. The services the chore worker provides arc aimed toward preventing premahire long-term in- stitutionalizalion of those individuals. Such care is normally provided in the home of the individual in need of such care, a service pro viding agency, a licensed domicilliary home, family care home of adult day care facility. The specific location and level of ser vices provided is determined by professional supervisory staff members. All interested persons are eligi ble to participate in this program providing they are at least 18 years of age, have the ability to follow oral and written instructions, keep necessary records, and possess an understanding оГ the care needed ■ for persons described earlier. S P fic t o ^ ^ a p ./ u i 3 1 с ourt S q u are M ocksville, NC ’ 6 3 4 -0 1 5 8 I COMING TO MOCKSVILLE, NC Saturday & Sunday September 2-3, 1989 BEN^KOw FR A N K LIN Saturday 10:00 a.m.'5:00 p.m. Sunday 1:00 p.m.-5:00 p.m. Color Portrait Package Special 3— SxlO’s ■ ■' 3— 8x7’s 12-Wallets $1395 Deposit Customer pays M100 when portraits delivered al store approximately one week laler. , We use . Kcxkik paper... 'toraoood look.i NO ME UMITI > ADULTS TOO! DONT MSS IT FAMILY WOUPS ALSO All wi)rk Guaranteed by: TRIVETTE STUDIO B E N F R A N K L I N Willow Oak Center IVIocksville, North Carolina Salon Phone: 492-5987 Home Phone: 492-7879 10% Off Bacl< To School Perm Special COUMTRY SALOM A UNISEX SALON Hwy. 64 W est Diana Edwards Mocksville, N.C. 27028 Owner/Stylist SPECIAL COMPUTER WORD PROCESSING CLASSES FORMING NOW! D O N ’T M I S S O U T ! Nothing less than today's newest technology can be your vehicle to a promising future. 70 YEARS OF CONTINUINO EDUCATION SAUSBOTY BUSINESS COLLEGE 129 C o rrih er A v«., S alisb u ry Ph. 636-4071 Oberammergau; P assion PlaU In the center of Ihe Bavarian Alps, In the South of 6ennany> you will find the village of Oberammergau. In 1633, when the village was In'the grip of the black plague/ the Inhabitants took an oath that they would stagy a performance of the bitter suffering of Jesus Christ every ten years. They • have kept this promise, and In 1*fO ttie Paiilon Play will be performed once again, attracting pilgrims from all over the world. Day 1; OVERNIGHT TRANSATLANTIC PLIGHT Day 2: ARRIVE FRANKFURT Day 3: FRANKPURT-COLOONE Day 4: COLOGNE-HAMBURG Day 5: HAMBURG-BERLIN ' Day 4: BERLINDay 7: BERLIN-NUREMBERG ■ > ' , ' Day •: NUREMBERG-OBERAMMEROAU <' Day *: OBERAMMERGAU*. A ~ Day 10: OBERAMMERGAU-PREIBURO ' r^' Day 11; FREIBURG-PRANKFURT Day 12: HOMEBOUND TRANSATLANTIC FLIGHT Madison Alexander' I iaa. p. O. BOX, 232 1 232 N. CÉNTER, STREET , STATESVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA 28677 (704) 872-3686 III N.C. 1-800-34а.681в; #iShoe Show Hours: Mon.-Sat. 10 a.m. to 9 p.ni.^sun^j_pjn^jò_6_p;g^^ 1)ЛМК COl'M V ICN I KUI'KISK KlX:oUl), TIIUKSDAY, Ачц.31, 1989-311 College Offering Classes In Davie Mrs. Donald Lewis Powell ... was Laura Jan Bingham C o u p l e S p e a k s Vovi^s A u g . 2 6 A t M o c k s M e t h o d i s t C h u r c h The wedding of Laura Jan Bingham and Donald Lewis Powell, both of Clemmons, was at ;3 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 26, in Mocks United Methodist Church, the Rev. Harlan Creech ofTiciated. ^ The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Gettys David Bingham Jr. of Advance. She is a graduate ■ of the Uriiversity of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and is a pharmacist for . Eckerd Drugs in -Winston-Salem. ,■ ' The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. David Lorick Powell of Clemmons. He is a graduate of Appalachian State University and is.a. seiiior.claiiiis ..adjuster for In-. tegon Insurance Corp. in Winston-Salem. The bride was escorted by her father. Ann Modlin of Alexandria, Va., was the maid of honor. The bridesmaids were Amy Bingham of Advance, the bride’s sister; Lisa Dyson of Atlanta; and Angela Royster of Chapel Hill. The bridegroom’s father was the best man. The ushers were Douglas Powell of Burlington, the bridegroom’s brother; Richard Felton of Advance; and Jeffrey Sapp of Lewisville. The coupic will live in Clemmons. IJiiviilson Counly Ci)iiiiminily Cdilcgc will (ilTcr the fiillowing ClirilillCling cdtlCillioll fliI.SSO.S in Diivic Cdumy hcginniii'; Sept. 11. A rcgistrmiim Ccc will he oil- lectcil al the first class meeting. Persons 65 or t)lder may enroll free of chargc. To pre-register or obtain addi tional inlbrnialion, call the Conli- nuing Education Office al (704) 634-2883. Adult Uusic Kducation classes arc lor adults of all ages who did not complete llicir education through the public school .system. They can study basic reading, Engli.sh, math, spelling, and writing. Classes lor non-readers are al.so available. These classcs YMCA F it n e s s C o u r s e s S e t Fitness classes will begin the finst week of September by the Davie Family YMCA. Two morning cla.s,ses will be of fered; Morning Acrobics, lauglu by Sandra Johnson Monday, Wednesday, and Friday.?, 9-10 a.m. at First United Methodi.st Church and Senior Fitness, taught by Michele Shaver Monday and Wednesdays 11-11:30 a.m. at the Brock Senior Center. Evening Aerobics at Mocksvillc Elementary include: Low Impact Aerobics, taught by Ann Blackman, Monday and Wednesdays, 5-6 p.m. Advanced Aerobics, taught by Kelly Beilin, Monday and Wednesdays, 6-7 p.m.; and Evening Aerobics (Beginner — Intermediate) taught by Karen Wishon, Tuesday and Thursdays, 6:30-7:30 p.m. Registration will be accepted Ihe first through the 10th of each month. The co.st is S20 for all classes except Senior Fitness, which is no charge as a result of United Way funding. Call Ihe YMCA officc 634-0345 or Slop by noon-S p.m. to register. W A L -M A R T Special LABOR PAY ^S A LE^ Ж г ■ I 7 a.m. to Noon Sidewalk Sale 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. sto re H ours: 7 a.m . to 9 p.m . Labor Day Location: Squire Boone Plaza Y adkinville Rd., M ocksville, N.C. help prepare ailiills lo earn an Ailiili High School Diploma. ( Mondays and ThiirMlays begin ning Scpl. 11. 6:30-H:.^0 p.m.; Davic Counly lllgli Scliool. no lee). Adult Hij;li School Diploina classcs are I'or people who did not complete their high school educa tion through ihe public schools, 'riic program provides students wilh Ihe means lo earn their Adult High School Diploma by com- plcling course work in English, math, science, and hisU)ry. (Mondays abnd Thursdays beginning Scpl. 11. 6:30-8:30 p.m.: Davie County High School, no Ice). Art: Bcgiiuiers tn Advancctl of- I'ers participinus an opportunity to use dilTcrenl media .such as char coals, pastels, watcrcolors. pen and ink. acrylics, and oils. Sludents will start with the basics and work on up to more advanced projects. (Mondays beginning Sept. 11,9 a.m.-noon. Brock Centcr, Mocks villc; 6-9 p.m.. South Davie Jr. High School; 14 sessions. $30). Introductiun to Microcom puters is designed to introduce par ticipants with no prior knowledge of coiuputers or programming to the microcomputer. The coursc aims al removing some of the fears adults may feel regarding com puters through classroom and ■■ hands-on" experiences. Par ticipants will have the opportunity to use u microcomputer (IBM-PC) during each session and upon com pletion of the course will be able lo operate the computer. Students nuist be able to type. (Mondays beginning Sept. 11, North Davie Jr. High School; Tuesdays and Thursdays beginning Sepl. 12, South Davie Jr. High School; 6:30-9:00 p.m., 10 se:!- sions, $15 fee). ; O ff Selected Hair Products All Occasion Cards & Gift Wrap O ff tippte pharmacy 129 N. Main St. Mockevllle, N.C. Phone 634-2111 'Щ л| 1 Kick off the Football Season with a new Hooker Entertainment Center from Hlllcrest Furniture. Make watching T.V. in your living room or den a pleasure. Create a focal point in your room, and eliminate the “cluttered look” of regular T.V. or stereo “stands” .Protect your investment in expensive equipment by eliminating dust and scratches. Available in Oak or Cherry. C om e in today and purchase quality furniture m ade to last a lifetim e. HU^LCREST ‘urniture 2560 s . S tratford Rd. (Beside Jim Weavil Appliance) 765-9077 Mon.-Sat. 9-6; Fri. ’til 8; Closed Wed. !4B-DAVIE COUNTY ENTEUPRISK KICCOKO, TllURSDAV. Лпц.31. I4S») Club Hears About Elderly ■ The Advancc Senior Citizens •Club met Monday in the Baptist Church fellowship hall at 10:30 a.m. ■' The meeting wa.s callcd to order by the president. Lucille Cornatzer. ■ A brief devotion wa.s led by members of the group. After the ) •transactions of business. “ Happy Birthday" was sung lo members with birthdays in August. Door prizes and birtlulay gifts were given. The group sang wilh Ruby Markland as accompaniest. Suilic Howard gave a reading concerning elderly people. Grace was said and the club was served a meal. I:Commitment Key To Losing Weight I; The cure rate for obesity is • :di.seouragingly low. ■ ; More people are likely to regain • : weight after dieting lhan keep those • ; extra pounds off, says Dr. Carolyn • * Lackey, extension foods and nulri- I;tion specialist at Norlh Carolina «JState University. ji Losing weight is one thing. iiKeeping it off is quite another. ;:What marks the few who do suc- i -ceed in Ihis difficult task? It’s com- i jmilment, Lackey says. Dieters need lo make a real com- i »mitment. They need lo think about t ¿what the change will mean in their I ‘lives. They also have lo commit I‘themselves to a'maintenance diet l;after they lose unwanted weight. • ' “The first three months are the ►Jmost critical” in keeping weight Lackey says. She gave an jtexample. • ; Confident Karen is sitting in ‘Ifront ofthe TV, depressed about F^omething, and there’s cheesecake rjin the refrigerator. “ That • ’cheesecake is just too tempting,” , ¡«she says to herself. So, she takes a neighbor. Now Karen feels about the situation and in con- n-.li of herself. Her will power is ^gthened and she is even less f to fall off her diet thè next temptation arises. D e n te d Dora is also sitting in tom of jtlie TV, depressed and em pi^ .tò'make herself feel bet- ^ eir by eating a slice of cheesecake. *6he makes five trips to the ;^'frigerator, each time looking at Ihe cheesecake without eating it. Finally, she breaks down and starts ) eat, .“l ’ye, failed; I may as well tit^àli. I just don’t have any will iwer.’ v Dora concludes. I'Sielfiiionitoiing is the key to los- ing weight and keeping that weight off. Lackey says. “ You have lo be able to idenlify a high-ri.sk situa tion and figure oul whal lo do about it.” She offers the following- .suggestions: • When you decide lo diet, think about the changes Ihat you will need lo make in your diet. Rehearse potential problems in your mind and figure oul ways around them, as Karen did when she gave Ihe cheesecake lo a neighbor. • Plan ahead so Ihat you have appropriate foods available. You can’t possibly expect to stay on a diet if you come home to a refrigerator slocked with cheesecake and ice cream. • Leam to idenlify your feelings. You don’t need to eat when you are angry or frustrated about something. Learn new ways to handle a bad situation. Exercise or relaxation are two good alternatives to eating. •Think long-term instead of short-term. Eating cheesecake may make you feel good for a little while, but it will also keep you fat over the long run. • Write some words of en couragement on a card and carry it around with you. Plan frequent rewards (not foixl, though) to give yourself when you accomplish your short-term goals. • If you do make a mistake, just regain control and go back on your diet. Don’t let the one cheesecake e p i^ e be the excuse to say, “See, I can't do it, so I’ll just eat the potato chips, ice cream and ■everything else.” IN P A IN ? Chiropractic works without drugs or surgery. WHY SUFFER? Call today for consultation 634-2512 DAVIE CHIROPRACTIC CLINIC 501 Wilkesboro Street Mocksville, N.C.Faul К. СшЫ. D.C. McDanlel-Correil Engagement Announced Floyd McDaniel of Cooleemee and Mrs. Margie B. Lowery of 119 Sunset Drive, Mocksville, announce the engagement of Iheir daughter, Christal Mae McDaniel, to Lewis Bryon Correll, son of Robert L. Correll of Route 4, Mocksville, and Mrs. June L. Culbreth of Route I, Advance. Miss McDaniel is a 1989 graduate of Davie High School and is employed as manager of Super 10 Store in Mocksville. Correll is a 1988 graduate of Davie High and is employed at Crown Wood. The wedding is planned for Oct. 21 at 6 p.m. at the Liberty United Methodist Church of Cooleemee. Group Gives Skit, Tells Jol<es Doit best Latex Rat Wall Paint U 8 8 Reg. 17.99 gallon DottlMSt Latex Semi-Gloss Enamel 14®®"m m gallon Reg. 20.99 Deep lone colors slightly higher. Our Best l-atex Flat Ceiling Paint ^ l O O Reg. 16.99 gallon bat oil Base (Aikyd) Interior Primer....UM..v.Reg.:18.09 , ^ ai>lt PVA Latex Drywall Primer...............MI......Reo.:13.99 • The East Davie Senior Citizens Club met recently at Bethlehem United Methodist Church fellowship iiall. President Harold Stevens presided. After the business session, the club sang “Happy Birthday” to members wilh birthdays in August. The group was entertained by a .senior citizens group from Mineral Springs. The program consisted of jokes, a skit tilled “ Seeing The Doctor,” .song.s and dancing. M OCKSVILLE BUILDERS SUPP l V 704-634-591S 814 S. Main St. 9 1 9 4M ,... _________Sale Ends Septem ber 16. iWB , ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ .......... ìCtalNG? tH( »пимиш G r f t e C H E C M N G W ra O n l y *2 5 0 1 n S№ JG s. At Centr.il Carolina Bank,you don't liave to do anytiiing oiitni- g(X)ii.s to get fi-a* chcckiii}>. Vi'e {'¡\e you free dieckiii(> uitii only ¡5250 in Preniiiini Saving,s — liiinili’eiLs le.s.s tiian oilier hanks. Hiid out how you can get the heller deal on checkin};: call 1-800-CCB-9139. It's that exsy. Cen^Carolina Bank Your Financial Advantage. .McitiIht I 1)U; AS LOW AS 0.0% APR" _ DOOGEOAKOTA $ 1 0 0 0 Ш Н В А 0 К * DODGE SHADOW ES $ 7 5 0 C A S H B A C K DODGE SPIRrr $ S O O C A S H B A C K BUCKLE UP... AHB nuseOniVESAfay. THE MEW SPIRIT r t o t Cash Back or tow short-term annual percentage rale financing for qualifed buyers through Chrysler Credit Corp. on selected vehicles in stock. Longer term rales, too. Dealer conthbution may affect final price. *$300 on Dakota S. DODGE RAM 0150 $ 1 0 0 0 C A S H B A C K ^ SEE YOUR DODGE DEALER, WHERE THE HEW SPIRIT SHjMm Your Full Chrvsler—Plvmouth—Dodge —Dodge Truck Dealer Furches Motor Co., Inc. 147 D epot S treet, M ocskville, N.C.704-634-894 -i-/-iii DAVIK COUNTV KNTKUPRISIÎ KIÎCORD, THURSDAY. Анц.З!, 1989-5K Center News ■By Amy Motley penter Correspondent ; The senior citizens group tliai has been meeting at the Ccnter Community Building is nameless Tio more. During the business por- lion of their August meeting, tlie • ;name “Trotters” was adopted. • True 10 their new name, they then traveled to Troutman to lunch at -■'the Talley House. Their nc,\l I meeting is .scheduled for Sept. 7. : 10 a.m. at the community building ; with lunch at Western Steer in ; Mocksville to follow. Any senior ; citizens in the area arc invited. : Clay Boger is a patient at > Whitaker Care of Forsyth Hospital. : Pearline Seaford was scheduled to ; come home from Forsyth Hospital on Aug. 24. :• New arrival: Congratulations to : Thomas and Pam Wooten on the : birth of their sccond son, Tyler ■-• Austin, on Aug. 24. First-born son t;Kyle now has someone to boss iMocks H EA R IN G TESTS SET FO R M O C K S V ILLE . Modovffie-Fngedectnnic hearing MU be given at the Beltoiie Hor- ing Care Center at 281 N. Main St., ' Macbville, N.C., next Wednesday . fnxn 10:00 a.m. to 12 nooo. Our of- . fk« b combined wilh Nationwide In- •utanct A(cncy of Janies E. Kelly ' betide Belli’i Deiwtnient Store. '. Anyone wlio hM trouble hearing is • welcome to have die test. Many peo- ■ pie With hearing problems don 'l need 1 Aeariilg oidi. ^ only a modem hear ing Ml like the one now being offered ’ by Bellone can really tell for sure. ' Beltooe Hearing Aid Specialist (or Ucenscd Hearing АИ Dispensers) will conduct Ihe tests. Everyone should have a hearing test al least oncc a year—even people now wearing a hearing aid or those who have been lold nothing could be done . for them. Only a hearing lesi can deiermine if modem methods of hear ing amplification can help them hear belter. The free hearing test will be given next Wednesday from 10:00 a.m. lo 12 noon at The Bellonc Hearing Care Centcr al 281 N. Main St., Mocksville. To avoid wailing call 723-5253 or (Toll Free) 1-800-331-9884 for an appoimmt-ra al another lime. In-liomc testing is also available. “Learn How Nerve Deafness Can Be Helped” Beltonc Hearing Care Center 281 N. Main Street . , Mocksville, N.C. around, Diillas and Louise Moore are grandp:ucnts. Sympathy goes lo tlie Aiulerscin and I’liwcll laiiiilies. Mary Powell Anderson of K;ileigh died Aug. 22. She and her husband, the lale Waller F. Anderson, were both natives of Center community. Mrs. Anderson was buried in the Center :-By Etheljoncs ; ;Mocks Correspondent I; Mrs. Aldean Daniel of ; ;Cooleemee spent Tuesday with her ■ ;sister, Mrs. Helen Myers.: ; Mrs. David Miller spent Thurs- ;-day in Richmond, Va., on .' -business. Mrs. John Phelps visited her : -father, Sherrill Rupard, a patient : ;at Forsyth Hospital, on Thursday. ! ■ Mrs. Wilma Phelps and Mrs. ! ;HeIen Myers visited Mrs. Kathleen .;Hilton who has been ill. She has ! -returned to her home at Redland ;and is slowly improving. jj^dkin Valley jBy Mrs; Ruby McBride ¿y«dkln Vajley Correspondent p : Homecomiiig day at the Yadkin I Valley Church will be Sept. 24 Iwith the Rev. Wilcox as speaker. rThe revival will be through Aug. '29 with the Rev. B.A. Carroll. - , Remember the sick: Mrs. Ella vEUwvMAusbon ^Ellis V and r James "Burton Grc^oi^_vviU enter the ; liospital at^^rsyth Memorial on i^e weekèntf ïbr tests to see what j . problem is in his legs. I ji'Bnice and Sarah Spaugh, Reg- ' i jlie, Lisa and Adam Pilcher went to Horida for their sununer vaca tion. They visited Disney World. Mr. and Mrs. E.L. Riddle, Lor- .lie PUcher and Ruby McBride at tended the réception at the Manor House at Tanglewood Park follow- . mg the"wedding of Robin Miller ^■nd Tommy Howard Saturday, .'26, at 7:30 p.m. ‘^ Sdlie №ddle has been confined to her honw for a while with her not' being able to walk very 'well. We hc^ she will soon be to go places. United Methodist Church ccmctcry. Mr. Ander.son was a ronner cliiel'of policc in Winsioii- Salciii and head ofthe N.C. Slil. Louise Tutterow of Center and her sister, Linda McAuley. of Siatesville rccenlly visited tlieir niece and daughter in Stone Moun tain, Gil. Slu and Kebekah Ulrich and their daughter, Bcthimy, en joyed having them for :i visit. Amy Motley and Kalhy ChalTin traveled to the Outer Banks this past weekend to attend the wedding of Amy's youngest sister, Marni. Tlio ceremony was held on the beach and was followed by a barbecue supper and enlcrtainnicnt by a live band. The wcalher was perfect and bride's 10-year-old nephew. Trevor, caughi the garter. Michael Griffith, .son of Daniel and Susie GriClith, left last week lo begin his Iraining in the Army reserve. His first stop is Fort Lewis in Wa.shinglon slate to complete his basic training. Then he'll move on to Fort Gordon, Ga.. for more training, ending up his training al Fort Bennings, Ga. Wc hope he has a nice time. Finally, cowboys and cowgirls, don't forget aboul the rodeo going on at Lake Myers this weekend. It starts at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday and 3 p.m. on Sunday. н ш а ш а в в■■■ЕЗЩПВ Q D S B i n Tliis Ad Is Ck)od Wednesday, August 30 Thru Tuesday, Sept. 8, 1989 At All Area Lowes Foods Stores. Quantity Rights Beserved. We Gladly Accept Federal Food Stamps And WIC Coupons. A S V S B T I S E S I T E M F O U C Y Bach of th M e Item s ts req uire d to he re a d ily available for sale In each bovres Fopos Store except as specuicaily acted. If an advertised item is te m p o ra rU y out of s to o t w e w iU offer yo u the choice of a com parable ite m w h e n avaUable re fle ctin g the sam e sa vin g s o r a H a in ch e ck to i ^ h M e the advertiaed ite m at the advertised price w ith in 30 ^ v s Q u a n tity rig h ts are reserved. 6B-DAVIE COUNTY l'-.N'l KKI’UI.SI'. Ki;<OKI). nilJK.SDAV. Aii«..M. IWJ Curry-Mason Couple To Marry Sandra Kay Curry of Winston-Salem and Robert Keith Mason of ;Route 3, Mocksviile will be married Ocl. 14 at Becks Bapti.st Church ¡in Winston-Salem. ■■ The bride-elect is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Paul F. Curry of ¡^inston-Salem. She is a graduate of North Forsyth High School and ¡Forsyth Technical College. She is employed by Office Works Com puter Center in Winston-Salem. I; - Her fiance is the son of Mr. and Mrs. W.H. Mason of Mocksviile. !A graduate of Davie High School and Forsyth Technical College, he !is self-employed as a licensed electrician for Mason Electric in iMocksville. To Be M arried Sept. 15 ^Teresa Smith and Craig Ward, 1 of Mocksviile, will be mar- ;Sept. 15 at Stouffers Plaza il, Winston-Salem, l i'Ms.-Smith is the daughter of, i T^ner ^d is employ^ as supervisor of Food Services of Ingersoll-Rand. ' Ward, son of Jack Ward, is employed by Ingersoll-Rand as supervisor of purchasing., ; ì l b à v i ì l é N e w s Doris Cope javille Correspondent I iMrs. Lucille Nickles, the VFW I ith District president, met with i Ladies Àuxiliary of Post 8719, Tues^y,.Aug. 22. Twen- ^'members were present;. She : on the things an auxiliary («.uiuiie Singleton and her travel :^b went to the races in Bristol, ■pnn;, this past weekend. ^Mrs. Do№ Cope entertained her day school class with a hot dog hamburger cookout at her Aug. 27. There were 16 ....iiers present. ^Mr. and Mrs. Kaven Zimmer- yisited his patents, Louie and, _y Lillian Zimmetmah.! > , Mrs; Sallie Carter is a patient in ’ vie Hospital.-;Get well cards and ,jyers will be appreciated. jMrs. Doris Cope gave a talk on ^ Tuesday at the Ladies Aux- nieeting of Post 8719 concer- ning school opening. Watch Гог children crossing highways, bicy cle riding and community watch. B« aware of these things. Deiie Roche of Washington, D.C., is visiting relatives of Ad vance for two weeks; her brother Louie and Mary Lillian Zimmer man; sister, Bea and Roy Purdy and her sijter. Ruby Lee Cope. Miss Gena O’Mara returned to Cabarrus Memorial Hospital school of nursing last week. This is her third year, of training. The community wishes to ex press its sympathy to Mr. and Mrs. Dela Cooper in tlie death of Dela’s grandmotlier. They returned home Thursday night. Mrs. Mae Markland visited Mrs. ! DeElle Markland Saturday evening. Mr.. Austin Cope is a patient at Forsyth Memorial Hospital. Get well cards and prayers will be . appreciated. Gravers To Celebrate Golden Anniversary Jim and Mary Craver will celebrate their 50th wedding anniver sary with a reception for friends and family Sunday, Sept. 3, from 2-5 p.m. at the Yadkinviile Moose Lodge. The Cravcrs live in Courtney where they have lived mo.st of their married life. The Cravers have five children: Lynn Brown of Grass Valley Calif.; Gail Reavis of Roule 6, Mocksviile; Jim Craver Jr. of Route 4, Yadkinviile; Alice Summers of Route 11, Statesville; Jani Smith of Winston-Salem and China; nine grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. The reception will be given by Ihe children and their spouses. The couple weas married Sept. 1, 1939. She is the former Mary Garner. O a k G r o v e G r o u p H e a r s M u s ic P r o g r a m By Lib Sain Club Reporter The Duelle Foster Christian Citizens Club met Aug. 21 at Oak Grove fellowship hall. The meeting was called to order by the president, John Frank Jarvis. Abe Howard opened with prayer. Devotions were given by James Summers. There were 22 members and three visitors present. Flowers are to be sent to Lola Foster, a former member, and to Nellie Williams. Cards were sign ed to send to Mrs. Powell and Bert Davis, Arlene Spear introduced Barbara Basham, Anita Long and Lewis Philips, who sang for the group. After singing the group song, tlie meeting was dismissed with prayer by Paul Allen. The next meeting will be the fourth Tuesday in September. PLUS up to $56 worth of custom features FREE! ®f(Vloxal Dana-’ Ф {-««ru.tiro ГиИМс*«t-9'a.mg /IRTQIRVED ;\ CLASS RINGS 7 6 6 - 8 5 0 S " thediffryr^. Ih*(ntnd<. Cut4T 7innoi*« <nJ Oumimd étr *«il<blf 1сч «n ntt* ihirjtr. , Я 1 )о Ф г% : OÎÎLT Rood (hru Sept. 5, 1989.In New Towne Shopping Center Clemmons, N.C. ABC Fam ily Foot And Ankle Clinic Robert L. Sprinkle, Jr, DPM Robert L. Sprinkle, III, DPIVI A r e p le a s e to a n n o u n c e th e a s s o c ia tio n of Ralph S. Sprinkle, DPM in the practice of Podiatric Medicine Surgery of the Foot and Ankle and Sports IMedicine 2240 Cloverdale Drive Cloverdale Professional Bidg., Suite 216 W inston-Salem , N .C . (9 1 9 ) 724-1951 17 W. Main Street Thomasville, N.C. 472-7543 144 N. Cherry Street, Suite 4 Kemersville, N.C.996-8881 (_A c c e s 9 0 / ii ФвсолаНид Hi! My name is Jenna Elizabeth Hendricks. I bccame one year old on July 27,1989.1 celebrated my birthday with a clown cake, ice cream, and other party goodies at my home. My mother and father are Richie and Carol Hen dricks of Mocksvllle. Many of my friends and family shared In the excitement with me includhig Mamaw Mary and Papaw Don Hendricks of Mocksviile and Mamaw Gen and Papaw Jolley Duncan of Nebo, N.C. Thanks to all for the nice presents and for sharing this special thne with me. 5919~JSmes^. Clemmons, NC 27012 (919)-766-4737 Accessory Decorating is pleased to an nounce Lisa Idng as a member of its staff. Lisa, who is an Interior Design graduate of Appalachian State University, is a commercial and residential specialist. Stressing color coordination within a room is her speciality. S ^ ■ enjoys blending those “special family pieces” with new “finishing - touches.” Whether renovating an existing home, or designing a new home ■ decor. Accessory Decorating feels you will find Lisa's approach refreshing. Let her help you creat the home environment you always wanted. The Best In The Nation In Arts & Crafts Th* tmdltlon ol Mcellenc* ralurns to Winston- Saltm ind the Wadi Cnilts and line arts Irom th* most contamporary to the moat traditional. FOr gilts, lor your home, lor уоигмН. Visit with 250 artlaana whose apeclaltles Include pottery, wood working, wesvlng, stained glass, toys, lewelry, stltcheiy, baskets, musical Instruments, tine art and much more. BENTON CONVENTION CENTER 5th & Cherry Streets Winston-Salem Friday, Sept. 1 10a.m.-9 p.m.Saturday, Sept. 2 10 a.m.-8 p.m.Sunday, Sept. 3 DE Noon-6 p.m. Adults...................................................S3.50 Children (2.12).................................................75C Weekend Ticket............................................SS.OO RETURN FREE SAME DAY 50C OFF ADULT TICKET WITH THIS AD UMIT ONE DISCOUNT PER TICKET 1240OükianäAvB Cteensboto, NC27403i9)9)274 5550 IIIIIIIIIII Signal Hill Mall P r e s e n t s T h e F a l l A r t s & C r a f t S h o w September 1,2,3 & 4 Friday Thru Monday, Blown Glass ★ Wood Crafts ★ Quills Children Furniture ★ Flowers ★ Candles Art -k And Much More! 1;. lko.nl Sired [■77, IM l 50 Sl.ili’svilli’, N.C. A U T U M N S P E C I A L S Soaly® ^ Crown Quilt Supreme by the makers of the famous Sealy Posterpedic® # 1 Mattress In The U.S.A.TWIN »169 . ... FULL »229 .r.. QUEEN »279 Per tel SMITH FURNITURE CO. 4ELO йА/---- MOCKSVILLE 9 mllei from Fork at* ___» I t к J.T. Smith Furniture Co. Phone: (704) 492-7780 Shefffield Road Off of Hwy. 64 Weet Mocksvllle, N.C. 0»M Meeday-Satwday, • a.a..« *.ai. We Manufacture UpholsterMi Furnltur* (Factory To You Prieos) Also, Custom Reupholstering Many Fabrics And Vinyls to Choose From. --¿I DAVIK 10иМ Л KN I KKFKISK HI.COIM), I IlllUSnAV. Лчц.31. 1489—711 Girl New ‘Mini l\/liss ’ A Miicksvillc yirl is Ihe new N.C. Tarheel Mini Mi.ss. Brooke B;ill Davis, claughler ol' Curtis ami Cindi Davis, won the heauly, talent and swimwear eoni- pelilions en route to winning the state erown. She attends Pinebrook Elenien- lary School. Several other area girls also par ticipated in Ihc pageant. • Jennifer Lynn Crotts. 15, entered the Teen Miss division, winning talent competition and four modeling events. She won the photogcnic contest and was I'lrst runner-up in beauty. She is the daughter of Ray and Marie Crotts. • Ginger Nicole Irby was first runner-up in Ihejr. Mi.s.s division. She woti the talent queen award. The 11-year-old Shady Grove Elementary student is the daughter Mr. and Mrs. Donald Ray Key ... she was Carol Kay BanksCouple United In Marriage in Private Ceremony Carol Kay Banks and Donald ' Ray Key were married in a private rceremony on Aug. 24.The bride is the daughter, of rOscar and Louise Peters of ■’Advance. The groom is the son of Fred and Jettie Key of Siloam, and is area manager of Flav-O-Rich.The couple will be taking a wed ding trip to New York and Canada. ÌNew Arrivals CREASON■ ''A .' iV 'Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Creason ' ’announce the birth of their son, ■ Caleb Thomas Creason, on Aug. . hrO:weighihg 8 lbs. 14Vi ozs. He ;was,22'inches long. ^ (Gn^pmnts are Mr. and Mrs. f^Caivih" Wevette, Mr. and Mrs. •Johnny Walker of Mocksville and ;Mr. and Mrs. T.E. Creason of >Wnston-S^em.' i fctOSMt-grandparents are' Mrsr •Miiggic Lanier, Mrs. Margaret :Lakcy of MocksviUe and Mr. and >lrs. Baxter Creason of .Cooleemee. WOOTEN Thomas, Pam and Kyle Wooten of Route 9, Mocksville announce the birth of a son and brother, Tyler Austin, on Thursday, Aug. 24, at Forsyth Memorial Hospital. Tyler weighed 6 lbs. 8 ozs. and was 19Vi inches long. Maternal grandparents arc Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Moore Jr. of Mocksvillc. Paternal grandparents arc Mr. and Mrs. Duke Wooten of MocksvUle. Maternal great-grandmother is Mrs. Viola N. Moore of Mocksville. C o u p le M a r r ie d O n A u g . 1 2 Dr Jerome pavis and JMie iLunsford were united in marriage■ fX Clonmons Moravian Church at ■ ^ p.m. Aug. 12 by the Rev. Bur- ion Wright. 2 Theiir oinly a^ndants were Mrs. ^ ^rley fialmoiis. matron bf honor, mi James Salmons, best man. iEomatzer News ;Py Dottie Pbtts i vQiir coimhiinity exteiids syiti- Igadiy tp Hathaii and Paul Allen and iqttier members of the Allen fami- in the recent‘death of ^ ir jbrotheri Roy Alleni He^w up in ^ w^unity., ' > Ava Baniey has been confined to rbdm for the past two weeks Iwith acoldi . Pearl Frye, and Leona Bowens I ;visited their sister, Eva Potts, Sun- ■ night. . Reid Nifong presided at the guest register. A reception followed at the home of Mable Coble of Bermuda Run. After a wedding trip to the North Carolina and Tennessee mountains, the couple will make their home in Bermuda Run. { Many Keaton was a Sunday lun cheon guest of Mr. and Mrs. Homer Potts. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Carr Harpe, Mrs. Sadie Seats, Mr. and Mrs. Homer Potts and Sharon, Lena Wall and Eva Potts, attended a bir thday party Aug. 20 for Brent Harpe who is two. The party was at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Derek Harpe on Baltimore Road.Willie Mae Jones visited Mr. ■ and Mrs. Joe Jones Sunday - afternoon. WRESTLING Mocksville — Brock Gym Sat., September 2,1989 — 8:00 p.m. Advane* Tiekcts: F A F Barbecue All Saata: Kids Under 5 Free T h e T o k y o Bullet's V S M a g n u m B .A . & M an M o u n ta in Lin k —Special Attraction- B atm a n V S M id n igh t R id e r Y o u n g S ta llion V S D o n V a lentine M r. W re stlin g #2 V S S u p e r R o cke r — P lu s O th e rs — C o m e Early: A uto gra ph Party & Photo S ession W ith the W re stle r’s B efore T h e M atche s b3 m.p Hrooke Ball Davi.s of Ted and Gaylynn Irby of Advancc. • Maki.sha Ab.sher, 8, took fourth in her first state pageant. She is the daughter of Buddy Ab- sher and Wanda Bean. Around & About Darrvl I’lirker Receives inaj" I'or lilrtluhiy Darryl Newton Parker received a Hag and a framed cerlillcate fur his 31s( birthday on July 26. Parker received the flag from Congressman Bill Hefner. Kiilh Biirncv Celebrates 76th Birthday Ruth Barney was honored with a surprise birthday breakfast at the K & W Restaurant in Winston-Salem on Friday, Aug. 25. At tending were her children, grandchildren and one great grand child. Alter breakfast a birthday cake, made and dccoratcd by Jean Barney Bailey was served. The occasion was planned and hosted by Deimy Barney. Two Area Residents Receive Collcgc Scholarships Two residents of Davic County arc among 37 students lo rcceive ; Patrons of Quality/Western Alumni Scholar.ships from Western Carolina University. The scholarship recipients arc: David An drew Hunt, son of Mr. and Mrs. David Andrew Hunt of Route 9. Mockville, who will major in social science education; Cheryl Lynn Pfau. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Pfau of Roule 3, Advance, who is majoring in health education. Pfau is a dean’s list student and is a member of the Alpha Lambda Delta honor society and tlic Residence Hall Council. The $500 annual scholar ship is renewable for up to four years, provided the .student maintain high academic standards. B e n Fra n k lin S A L E Mocksville, N.C. Open 9:30 to 9 Monday-Saturday Sunday 1 to 6 ^ 1 É l É É É Ü Ü FIbenill. 12-oz. size EZ-Stuff by Fairfield. Many craft projec Easy to m anage. F eature Value! Red Heart Supersaver Yarn. An amazing variety of colors are available in our 4-ply, I worsted, weight 8-oz. pull skein. ie I $2 point Canvas. Rectangular shape. 25 Acrylic Paint 2 O z . S ize P rim ary A n d C o u n try C olo rs Only n Many Colors "Madalllon" Crochet Cotton. 400-yd. balls in 3 colors. 17 Brush Set. Paint with our fancy wood handled 3-brush set. si CROCHET CLASSES BEGIN ep t IK h Time 6 30 H 30 Call 6 3 4 5 188 Felt. A variety of seasonal colors. Machine washable, too. 1 8 5 Ladles Briefs. Lace trim nylon. Assorted styles and colors. 3 $ 1 ea. ■\Л ' i ivory Soap. Lather up with our 4- pack, 3.5 personal size bars. ea Scotch Transparent Tape. Угх 500-in. A useful item! 31A 3 t c i r $ 1 1-Gal. Vaporizer by Sunbeam. Medicament well included. 4i 56 Sunbeam Heating Pad. Std. size, 3 heat settings, 1 -yr. warrenty. 40 Dhurrie Rugs. 100% cotton. 21« in.x34-in. fringed. Asstd. colors. 15 Vaseline LIpThorapy or Sunblock IS. Glide on applicator included, 59 2 Ben Franklin COUPON F u n • T a к . Reusable non- toxic adhesive. ' Sale for kids, sa $ 5 0 0 FREE FISH With Purchase of 10 Gallon Acquarium Kit Offer Expires Sept. 5,1989 Plne-sot Cleaner. 28-oz. cleanser, disinlectant and deodonzer. 6i$2 OPEN LABOR DAY 10 a.in,.tO 9 p.m 8В—DW IE COUNTY EN’niRI’KI.SK KliCOlU), 'I'llUKSDAY. Лиц-И. 1‘WJ Cooleemee Cruisers Y Has Alternative For After-School Care For Children :j When the traffic is light, the streets in Cooleemee >]become a nice place to ride a bicycle. Sherry Head, Tom- ►:my Head, Kristy, House, Anita House, Aprii House and ....... ................ J.;.-. i Vessy Bouldin round a curve on one of the last days before school began. — Photo by James Barringer It is a hard decision for parents 10 know wlien a child is old enough to stay lionie alone. Although children may be responsible enough to stay in the house, the child can easily become liored and an.\ious. Babysitters are a good alternative for a measure of safety, but do not always provide the age-related and physical activi ty an elementary school age child needs. In Davie Counly, all elementary school age children may participate in an after school childcare pro gram at their school. “ It’s the best day care available,” states Leo Caproni whose son Jason, 6, participates in the Pinebrook Fun Club. “ I trust the YMCA staff and Jason enjoys the sports and activities.” In conjunction with the Davie County Schools, the Davie Fami ly YMCA has expanded it.s before and after school sites. Before School Carc, 6:30-8:30 a.m. is available at all elementary schools except William R. Davie and is $20 per month. After School Care, 3-6 p.m. at all elementary schools, is $55 a month. Scholarships are available. No family is turned away for inability to pay. Joy Stanaland, whose son. William, 8, is enrolled in the Shady Grove Fun Club, cites the convc-: niencc of having a childcare pro gram at the schools. “Williain is well cared for and I'm able to work full-time,” she said. The number one reason for enrolling Samir, 8, in the Mocksville Fun Club for Cathy Bassiouni is security. ‘‘The staff is responsible and reliable,” says Ms.' Bassiouni. ‘‘But most of all he has fun.” The YMCA “ Fun Clubs” are staffed with adult supervisors and high school and adult counselors. The children are placed in groups of no more than 10 children of similar age. Snack and homework time is provided every day. Arts! and crafts, games, values educa tion, group assemblies and sports are some of the many other rotating daily activities. Out of School Day Care is pro vided at Pinebrook Elementary,. 6:30 a.m.-6 p.m. Pick-up and drop-off is also available at the Brock Gym on Out of School Days such as Friday, Sept. 1. Parents; may register their children at the' school site or at the YMCA office. Brock Building. Call the YMCA office at 634-0345 for more information. ; A d v a n c e N e w s l^^ditb Zimmerman I Correspondem y-six young people and '^>UKh ШЫ on a youth retreat at ;ilyitle Beach, S,C., Friday - sl^day, Wayne and, Rachel ' were called' home as . ; father, ,Groyer wbdleinan, had to have surgeiy at I iUsyth Hospital.vieral men from Baptist i;Went to OifordonSatur- t'Mp move'the new p№tor fa^nily, Lanny and Sharon W children Andy and a. Andy is a student at ASU I Anessa is at North Davie. Mrs.I: У is teaching at Davie High il. Sunday several members |г . ^Adult Class No.,2 went on a plc- at ’t|w home , of Gene and Hendrix near Hickory II. Pastor Lanny Atkins and wife juph joined them for the picnic. 1 *;:^ regular fellowship meal for 'i'congregation vvas held Sunday little Mowship;hall, guests were the , iiiteriin г нй his реле and Ann ''and M Alvin Myers' i theiir sm B(M>y with a t at their iMine Siinday after- i cdebrating Bobby’s 18th bir- K which was Wednesday, Aug. ' Sevend from the Baptist |3iurch attended the pizza, ice fieam and мке party which began ^4 p.m. and lasted several hours. |iMrsi Thelma Trent is a patient liiBaptist Hospital. Miss Mary ём х is a patient at Forsyth il. J.D. Bullins’ father is in Forsyth Hospital where he has undergone major surgery. Mrs. Lena Layton of Concord was a Saturday overnight guest of Mrs. Lucille Cornatzer and she was a visitor at Methodist Church for Sunday School and worship. Mrsi Bet Barnhardt, Mrs. Cor- iiatzer and Mrs. Layton had Sun day lutich at the Golden Corral in Lexing^n. Sunday afternoon Mrs. ' Cornatzer and Mrs. Layton visited Wiley. Peebles. The Methodist Church observ ed Sunday School Rally Day Sun day. The Sallie Sue Peebles S.S. Class had the most members pre sent, 15, and will be treated to a cookout soon. Austin Cope is a patient at For syth HospiUil for observation and treatment. , Mrs. Shirley Cornatzer’s mother, Mrs. Lucille Hanes, is a patient at Forsyth Hospital suffer ing a heart attack. Krissi Pack of the Fulton com munity was a weekend guest of Melissa Hendrix. She was among ■ the visitors at Methodist Church Sunday. Mrs. Edith Zimmerman and Mrs. Recie Sheets visited Mr. and Mrs. Jim Zimmerman in the Redland community Sunday night. They also visited Mr. and Mrs. Bob Hartman in this community. Mrs. Hazel Shutt, a resident of Autumn Care Nursing Home in Mocksville, celebrated her 93rd birthday Tuesday, Aug. 29. She received many cards, gifts and visits from her family during the day. Mrs. Sallie Carter is a patient at Davie Hospital suffering from a severe attack of angina. Mrs. Edith Zimmerman visited Mrs. Ola Matthews Pilcher in Yadkinville last Thursday night. On Friday night she visited Mrs. Della Cornatzer and Betty Cornatzer. Mrs. Patsy Jordan of Woodleaf visited her sister, Mrs. Georgia Foster, a few days last week. Mrs. Lois Cornatzer, Mrs. Bill Foster and Mrs. Georgia Foster spent Sunday afternoon in the mountains around Sparta. Mrs. Ruby Markland, Mrs. Lib Potts and Mrs. Georgia Foster spent Monday visiting the sick and' shut-ins. They visited Mrs. Thehna Trent at Baptist Hospital, visited Austin Cope, Mary Essex and. Mrs. Lucille Hanes at Forsytli Hospital and Miss Ethel Smithdeall at the Triad Methodist Home. 4 Ш I Ш 1 EBEE Bring your car in for senrlM...'..3 Т1тм Oil Change, Filter 4 A 4 O K '(Up To 5 Quarts Of Oil) ф And Lube A A Г And Rece/ve The Fourth SBrvlcB FREE Includes A Check Of All Belts, Hoses, Flukto : __________ W e ’l l W i n Y o u O v e r W i t h T h e L a t e s t T e c h n o l o g y a n d A S E C e r t i f i e d T e c h n i c i a n s $ a v ie H ig h Q la s s O f 79 |o R e u n ite i;The class of 1979 is planning a i^year class reunion, j ^Anyone who has any information 6n any member of the class of J979, write a short note with the c^ss member’s full name (maiden iljd married for the women), ad dress, and phone number and mail iii: The Class of 1979 Reunion, fr;0. Box 213, Advance, N.C. 27006; or you may call and leave ihe information with one of the fqllowing people; Chuckie Cle- ntent, 704-634-0326; Donna Wilson Cuthbcrtson, 704-637-8868; Jeannie Whitaker jlbnegar, 704-546-7701; or Beth Kaylor Thompson, 919-998-6169. ; -Please have all of your inl'orma- tion mailed in or contact one of the above individuals by Sept. 15. E- The Hunter Computerized Wheel Alignment Aligns All Four Wheels To Perfect Center •Extends Tire Life •Stretch G as Mileage •Improve Handling •G et A Smoother Ride •Spot Worn Parts •Insure Safe Driving * Truck Slightly Higher Perfect For Front-W heel Drive V ehicles, Ford & CMC Call Our Sevice M anager For An Appointment Today! $ 2 9 9 5 Hello! My name is Colin Poe und I wus one yeiir old on Лиц. 21, 1989.1 celebrated with a Uatnum party (>|уе11 by my parents Todd and Tunuiiy Poe. I luid a liatiiian cuke anbd received lols of gifts. My grandpareiUs are Mr. and Mrs. Hill Poe, Mr. and Mrs. Donald (;regory and Mr. aiul Mrs. Tommy Hendrix. 1 would like to thank everyone for com ing and for the nice gifts. The Sun Interrorgator Engine Performance Analysis with Analyzer Printout of the Troubles Found. Great for Drivability Problems, New Dimensions In Car Care! $ 2 4 M Reavis Ford-Mercury (We Make It Easy To Drive The Best) Mocksville i-40 At 601 N. — Left At Top Of Ramp 9 1 9 -7 2 2 -2 3 8 6 Dealer 2416 704-634-2161 Davie Schools DAVIK СОиМЛ' KN I I'KPKISK UKCOKI), THURSDAY, AuK.31, I989-9J$ . Sliiuly Grove The Shady Grove sUilT hii.s hi.’cii busy gelling ready for ihc new year. Conslruclion on the cal'eleria should be compieled in a lew weeks. In Ihe nieanlime. lunch will be catered in from North Davie for a few weeks. Shady Grove will begni .serving breakfast for the first time once the cafeteria construction is completed. Con.slruction on the new classroom will be completed in a few months. New personnel includc: Ann Steelman, specch therapist; Gaye bcnhour. Iichaviorally handicap ped specialist; Kohin Jones, art; Sara Reich. 4-6 clei'ic;il assistant; Teresa Tcagiie. 2-lio»r cal'eleria monitor and bus driver; and Anita Howell, lifth grade teacher and fill ing the position vacated by Vestal Potts. Mr. I'otts retired this sum mer. We will mi.ss him and wish him the very best. Mocksville Middle Bill Campbell, principal, welcomed the staff back for the 1989-90 year. New members are: Mrs. Sylvia Smilh, fourlh grade teacher: Mrs. VFW Sponsoring Speech Contest For DHS Students “Students win more than awards and scholar.shipL when they par ticipate in the VFW Voice of Democracy Scholarship Pro gram,” said Commander Taylor Howard of VFW Post 8719 in discussing Ihe broadcast .script- writing program conducted annual ly by the Veterans of Foreign Wars and its Ladies Auxiliary. Some of the fringe benefits, ac cording to Howard, are increased self-confidence and poise, ex perience in communicating with others and valuable training in self- expression. For the state winners, there is also the broadening ex perience of a five-day tour of Washington, D.C., and the oppor- tonity to make lasting friendships with the other state winners. ; . In the 43 years that the VFW and it,s Ladies Auxiliary have been in volved with the Voice of Democracy Program, more then 5,OW,ООО high school students have ; participated. Participants _'^rite and then tape record a three- - ‘^fiv e minute broadcast script ex pressing Iheir views on “Why I ¡,ftoud Of America. ". From ■ i |l« ts Schoiarship ; 1989 Davie High School ■graduate has been named a ■ i^ipient of a v'iijm'; Tutterow / 'Scholarship. . IvC harlene E im ore', daughter. .■ of pharles and Diane Elmore iefRoute4, Ad- yance, is atten- I iing I Ap Elmore :^achian State University. ' ;>Tlie scholarship, first given in 1978, was established in honor of nrm er Davie High teacher Jim : Tutterow, who died in 1977. 9 In Program i JcULLOWHEE - Three Davie t^punty residents recently par- ' / HCipated in Western Carolina .University’s cooperative education ptvgram. ^;;The cooperative education pro- frain, begun in 1978 at Western, i^Iows students to alternate a Kmester of study and a semester of work in a job related to their field of study. Students thus have : fhtie opportunity to test their career ' decisions and enhance their efnployment possibilities after graduation. ''.Linф M. Bodenhamer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wayne L. BMenhamer of Route 3, Advance, worked at Burroughs Wellcome Co. A chemistry major at Western, she participate.s in the Honors Pro gram and is on the dean’s list. She is a 1986 graduate of Davie High School. :; Monica D. Harris, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Donald A. Harris of Route 8, Mocksville, worked at Food Lion Inc. in Salisbury. A Senior majoring in computer infor- ftiation systems, she is a dean’s list Student at Western and 1986 graduate of Davie High. ; Robert C. Bohl. son of Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Bohl of Route 3, Moeksviile, worked at Northern Telecom Inc. in Research Triangle Park. A senior majoring in com puter .science, he is a dean's list siii- dent at WCU. He, too, is a 19K6 graduate of Davic Counly lliuh. among Ihe state winners, nine na tional winners are chosen lo receive a total of $50,000 in scholarships. “ One of the greatest benefits to young people who lake part in the program is thal by thinking, writing and speaking up for their country, they gain a belter ap preciation of their obligation and Pride in America,” Commander Howard said. Davie High School students in terested in participating should contact the school’s guidance office. Chris Carter, fifth grade Icaclicr; Ms. Hcatlier Hangen. sell- conlaincd; Ms. Cheryl Pena, spccch therapist; Mrs. Diane Cancr. Chapter I assislam; Mrs. Polly Seager. .self-conlaincd a.ssis- tant; Mrs. lilizabeth Swicegood. Spanish; Mrs. Phyllis True. Resource assistant; Mrs. Connie Spillman; Mrs. Ksler Garver. cafetcria and Mrs. Anastasia Leary, school psychologist. The PTO’s first meeting of the year will be on Scpt. 7 al 7:30 in the gym. Open house will follow a brief busine.ss meeting. Fourth grade students and parents attended an orientation night on Aug. 17. Many parents met their child’s tcacher and received informalion about Ihc school. North Davic North Davie opened right on time Aug. 22 with approximately 600 students filling the halls wilh, “ Welcome back. Whal have you been doing this summer and who are your teachers.” The teachers were also prepared lo meet the 1989-90 challenges, after several- days of workshops, meetings, classroom preparations and le.sson plans. North Davie has several nev' teachers: Janet Barnes of Clem mons; Ray Mitchell of Charleston, W.Va.; George Newman of Knox ville, Tenn.; Nancy Payne of Greensboro and Tom Ratledge of Yadkinvilie. John Bailey and Uon Morgan are our new custodians fniin Davie County. North Davic is looking for Parent Volunteers, so if you would like to share some of your time, conlaci Annette Foster al yJS-.S.“!.“;?. Davie Hi};h Sept. 5-8, the guidance counselors will be in Senior Knglisli classes covering Ihe following topics: guidance .ser vices. colleges. College Day, SAT/ACT, financial aid/scholar ships, and graduation re- t|uirenicnls. Seniors in college- preparatory English will receive a handout on “Steps To Follow When Applying To College” and a college tabloid which gives valuable information about most colleges in North Carolina. Counselors recommend that both students and parents read the han dout carefully and keep it for reference throughout the year. Appalachian Stale University is having an open house on Sept. 23. Students should contact the guidance office for more information. The deadline to register for the October SAT is Scpt. 22. Registra tion forms and an information booklet is available in the guidance office. Students should complete the registration form well before the Sept. 22 deadline. P A T ’ S I I S i T E R I O R S 766-9166 • Vertical Micro ~ Or Mini Blinds t Waverly Wallcoverings •C oordinated Lambrequins And Draperies 9Hardwood Floors And Parquet •N on-skid rug pads -Cephis Drive, CÌemmons>i Behind Dockside ■ ' - A t LASrTHESEWING“ AND CRAFT TABLE YOU'VE BEEN LOOKING FOR, PLUS A VERY FITTING OFFER! Ci*an A S|MC« i»lh*»I nw. »1 punxJM iewkig admhciriKi ceni«'' BuluMilotlh» ' CiMUASpK» Tíljif dont «op 'П»« . txaulild dui<blrpiKtol liiminitfhMMmany inootouf liiusiiiiliixi Ui«llaiiylim»voun*«l (xua>p«(. 1IA*«! 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Л11Ц..М. 1989 - I 1858 w jS ^ ^ m w aHISrHALDIRMntiRH!Sr.R,M,l)IRMni»RS 130 years of service 4 Locations Middlebrook Dr, S, Main St. iCIommons Winston-SalemRoynolda Rd. S Mam Si.Wmsion-Saiom LexingtonDnvio Phono No 99B-3'i28 J.P. GREEN MILLING CO., INC. Makers o( DAISY FLOUR We Custom Blend Depot Street Mpcksville, N.C. 27028 Phone 334-2126 MOCKSVILLE BUILDERS SUPPLY "Together We Do It Bettor” Soulh Main 634-5915 Anend The Church Of Your Choice John N. McDaniel & Sons Hwy. 601 s., Mocksvllle 634-3531 FOSTER-RAUCH DRUG CO. W llknboro street Moekiivllle, N.C. 2702в Phone 634-2141 CAUDELL LUMBER CO. 162 ShMk street■■---->-------f — fc« M. MOCKSVIRvi New*' ■ ■■' ''-27028 Phon« 634-2167 Johmue M. TiUey ^Control Service ■SMVfcM ftr.Onr 2S Умп' lecelly Owned a Openitw) •IM d w itM •CofflnMicM •Induatrlal : •liwNtutioral ' ‘Inspection Upon Requear Moekavlll« 634-5600 Oompilements of Department Store N orth M rin S treet . M octovllle 'J3Hnt 3lm • 3iu Skkli М 2 VidklnvUI* Row! MoetovIN* ' •3 4411 5 MARTIN HARDWARE & GENERAL MDSE. FM de, Dry Ooode, O raeertM and FmtW xtr Depot Street M odnvlll«, N.C. 2702S Phone 634-2128 THE BRIDE CAME WiTM THE CONQUERED CITY THE FIRST MENTION OP OTWNIEL IS ON TUE OCCASION OF TVIE TAKING OF THE CITV OF DEBIR, WHICH WAS IN THE MOUNTAINOUS TERRI TORY NEAR HEBRON, THE LAST stronghold OF TWE ANAKIM, A RACE OF GIANTS, AND WAS A5- SIQNED TO CALEB THE KENEZITE, WHO HAD TO CONQUER THIS AREA IN TWE SETTLING OF THE -'PROMISED LAND.''(JOSH.14-.12- 14) IN ORDER TTO STIMULATE THE VALOR OF MIS WARRIORS,^ CALEB PROMISED TO GIVE HIS DAUGHTER ACH5AH TO WHOMEVER SHOULD ASSAULT AND TAKE THE CITV. OTHNIEL WON THE PRI2E! AtUMSLY or MO MARANATHA CHRISTIAN ASSEMBLYHwy. 601 North Mocksvllle. N.C.Rev. Curtis £. WoodSunday School 9:45 a.m.Moming Wor$hlp t0:45 a.m.Evening Worship 7:00 p.m. ■ATTltTADVANCE BAPTIST CHURCH Highway Ml Mark Hart, pastor Sunday Services - Sunday School ■ Morning VtforshlpEvening WorshipWednesday Biblo----ВЕАП СЯЕЕК BAPTIST CHURCH d:4S a.m. . t1:00 a.m. в:00 p.m. 7:00 p.m. Bear Creek Church Road North Of Mocksville 10:00 a.m. 1t:00 a.m.7:00 p.m. d:4S a.m. 11:00 e.m. 7:30 p.m Rov. Jerry Cloniger. Jr.Sunday School Morning Worship Wednesday Bible Study BUISE BAPTIST CHURCH Higt)way 601 North at MO Rev. Qienrt Sellers, pastor Sunday School Moming WorshipEvening Worship ....Wednesday Senlce 7:30 p.m.BREAD OP UFE BAPTIST CHAPELFour Cornera Community. Hwy. 801 Phil Kitchin, pastorSunday School t0:00 a.m.Preaching Sen'ice 11:00 a.m.CALAHALN FRIENDSHIP BAPTIST CHURCH Calahain Road Rev. Carrol Jordan, pastor Sunday School Worship Service Sunday Night WorshipWednesday Bible Study CALVARY BAPTIST CHURCH Highway 60t South Rt. 7. Box M. Mocksville Jim Oo^er, pasior Sunday School Worship Senrtce Evening Worship Wednetday Serelce CCOARCltCEK BAPTIST Cedar Creek Church Road Df. W.C. Hay, Pastor 10:00 a.m. 1V.00 a.m. 7:00 p.m.7:00 p.m. t0:00 a.m. 11:00 a.m.7:00 p.m. 7;00 p.m. GREEN MEADOWS BAPTIST CHURCHHwy. 801, Farmington Yatos Wilkorson. pasior Sunday School 10:00 a.m.Worship Service 11:00 a.m.Evoning Worship 7:30 p.m.Wodnosday Senrice 7:30 o m.HOPE BAPTIST TABERNACLE H.ghway t58 East Pasior; Oavid Jordon.SundaySchool 9:45a.m. •WofsWp Service 10;4Sa.m.Evangelistic 7:30 p.m. UMElf^OSSnoW BAPTIST CHu£i%' Kenneth Hyde, pastor Sunday School 9;4S a.m.Worship Sorvlco 11:00 it m.Evoning Wofstiip 6 00 p m.Wodnosday Soivico 7 30 p mJERUSALEM BAPTIST CHURCH Hwy. 601 SouthSunday School 10:00 a.m.Worship Service 11:00 a.m.Evening Worship 7:30 p.m.Wednesday Senice 7:30 p.m.NO CREEK PRIMITIVE BAPTIST CHURCH No Croek Road olt Hwy. 64 SHILOH BAPTIST CHURCH 626 Oopot St.. Mocksviilo Rov. A.O. Walkor, Pastor Sunday SchoolWorship Service __SMITH GROVE BAPTIST CHURCH Hwy. 158 EastTR/NITY BAPTIST CHURCHRt. 4. Mocksville Darrell Cox, pastor Sunday School Wotship Sen/ice Evening Worship Wednosday Service TURRENTINE BAPTIST CHURCH Rt. 7, Mocksviilo Rev. Billy J. Sloop, pastor “ • y School 9:45 a.m.p Service " 11:00 a.m. iNTlRrAITHfUNIVUIALASSEMBLY OF LIGHTHwy, 601 S.(704) 284-4322 Or. Jerry L. Cope, minister tst^Srd Sunoays2nd Thuri. 4th Wedni 2:30 p.m. 7.-30 p.m. 7:30 p.m. NEW UNION UNITED METHODIST CHURCHHaywood B. Hyatl. pastor Sunday School 10:00 a.m.Worship Sevice 11:00 a.m.OAK OROVE UNITEO METHODIST CHURCHHwy. 158 East SACEM UNITI 0:45 a.m. .11:00 a.m. 10:00 a m.11:00 a.m.7:00 p.m. 7:00 p.m. IbTNMANHOLY CROSS LUTHERAN CHURCHRev, John A. Johnson, pasior rtwy. 601 Soulh. Mocksville Sunday School b:45 a.m.Worship Servlco H:00 a.m. METHOOtSTA.M.E. ZION METHOOtST CHURCH Boootown Streol. Mocksviilo ADVANCE UNITED METHODIST CHURCH Advance. N C.BAILEY’S CHAPEL UNITED METHODISTBaile/s Chapel RoadBETHEL UNfTED METHODIST CHURCHBethel Church RoadBETHLEHEM UNITED METHODISTCHURCHRodland Road ofl Hv/y. 158 East CENTER UNITED METHODIST CHURCH Highway 64 West Dr. S.B. Warner, Pastor Ul a 2nd Sunday Church School .. . J41TED METHODIST CHURCHOavio Academy Road Or. S.B. Warner, Pastor 1st & 2nd SundaysWoTBhip Sewice 10:00 a.m,Church School. 11:00 a.m.3rd & 4lh SundaysChurch School tOiOO a.m.Worship Sorvlco 11:00 a.m.5th SundayChurch School ■lO'OOnm-^'SMITH CnOVE UNITED METHOOtST CMUnCHMwy. 15B East. Mocksviilo 11:00 a.m. 10.-00 9:45 a.m. 11:00 a.m. 9:4S a.m. 10:45 a.m. Sunday Si Worship SEvening Worship 6;30 p.m. 7:00 p.m. 2nd & 4th Sunday 1:30 p.m.CHINAQUAPIN QROVE BAPTIST CHURCH Chinapuapin Church Road oil Hwy. 601 Rdv.rOarrelt McConnell COMMUNITY BAPTIST CHURCH Gladstone RoadSunday School 10:00 a.m.Worship Service ■ 11:00 a.m.COf^TW BAPTIST CHURCH .DAVIE BAPTIST CHURCHFork. N.C,Sunday School 9:45 a.m.Worship Service 11:00 a.m.Evening Worship 7:00 p.m.Wednesday Service 7:00 p.m.DUTCHMAN CREEK BAPTIST CHURCH Highway 801 oN Hwy. 64 UTON^S BAPTIST CHURCH Eaton's Church Road Rev. DavkJ GilbreathSunday School 10:00 a.m.orship r 10.00 a.m. 11:00 a.m. 6;00 p.m. 6:45 p.m. 7:00 p.m. \CHURCH Worship Senrlce 11:00 a.m.Wednesday Prayer Sendee 7:30 p.m. EDOEWOOD BAPTIST CHURCH Highway 601 North Cooleemee. N.C.Rev. D.C. Suttlvan, pastor Sunday School 10:00 a.m.Sunday Worship 11:00 a.m.Sunday Evening Worship 7:00 p.m.Wednesday Sonice 7:00 p.m.FARMINGTON BAPTIST CHURCH Farmington Road Sunday School 10:00 a.m. 11:00 a.m. 7:00 p.m.Youth Training Union FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH N. Main Street W. Paul Riggs, pasior Sunday School 9:45 a mMorning Worship 11:00 a.mEvening Worship 7:00 p.mChurch Training 6:00 p.mWednesday Bible Study 7:00 p.mFIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Marginal Street. Cooloemoo, N.C.Rev. Larry G. Allen Sunday SchoolWorship Service Evening Worship Wednosday Service FORK BAPTIST CHURCH 6 miles east on Hwy. 64 Sunday School Worship Service Evoning Worship GOSPEL BAPTiST CHURCH Rt. 6. Mocksville Sunday School Worship Senrice Evoning Worship Wodnosday Senrica 9:45 a.m.11:00 a m.7:00 p m. 7:15 p.m. 9:45 a m. I t oo a.rn. 7:20 p.m. _____ly___GREEN HILL BAPTIST CHURCHGioen Hill Road Rov. Graham Woolen, pastor Sunday School Worship Servlco Evening Worship Wodnosday Worship 10:00 a.m. 11.00 a.m.7:00 p.m. 7:00 pm. VICTORY EMidway St.. Cooleemee Sholby Harbour, pastor Sunday School Worship Servlco Evening Worship Wednesday AWANAS Wednesday Prayer Meeting YADKIN VALLEY BAPTIST C Yadkin Valley RoadCATHOUC ST. FRANCIS OF ASSISI CHURCH Hwy. 60t NorthSunday Worship 10:00 a.m. CH4WCN OF CHRISTCORINTH CHURCH OF CHRISTCharlie Harrison. Jr.. minister Sunday Worship 11:00 a.m.Evening Worship 7:00 p.m.JERICHO CHUflCH OF CHRIST Joll Williams. Minister Sunday Bit}lo Class t0:00 a.m.Worship 11:00 amWorship 6:00 p.m.Wednesday Biblo Study 7:30 p m.CHURCH OF OOD COOLEEMEE CHURCH OF GOD Cooleemee. NC Luiher Chambers, pastor Sunday School 10:00 a.m.Moming VVorship 11:00 a.m.Evening Worship 6:00 p m.Wednesday FTH 7:00 p.m.CLEMENT GROVE CHURCH OF GOD Hwy. 64 West I.W. Ijames, pastorSabbath 10:00 a.m.Worship Service 1:00 p.m.Evoning Worship 8:00 p.m.Wednesday Service 8:00 p.m.MOCKSVILLE CHURCH OF GOD Dwight Durham, pastor Hwy. 64 EastSunday School 10:00 a.m.Worship Service 11:00 a.m.Evoning Worship 7:00 p.m.Wednesday Senico 7:00 p.m.EPISCOPAL COOLEEMEE EPISCOPAL CHURCH OF GOOD SHEPHERD Rov. Edwin P. BaileyHoly Eucharisl 9 30 a m.FORK EPISCOPAL CHURCH OF THE ASCENSIONRov. Edwin P. BaileyHoly Eucharisl 11:15 n mST. CLEMENT’S EPISCOPAL CHURCH Mooting at Vogler’s Cnapol Middlebrook Drivri. CI«*nirTion&Rov. Joan GrimmSunday School 10.00 a.m.Worship & Holy Ccrnmunion 11:00 a.m.(NTEROCNOMINATtONAL MOCKSVILLE INTERDENOMINATIONAL CHURCHRev. Lindsay Walters, pastor Sunday School Youlh £. . .. Wednesday Bibio Study Worship Senrice 3rd & 4th Sunday Worship Senice Church School 5th SundiChurch S__ ___ „CHESTNUT GROVE METHODIST CHURCHKathryn W. Tan, pastor 2nd & 4ih SundaySundaySchool 10:00 a.m.Worship Service 11:00 a.m.CONCORD UNITED METHODIST CHURCHCherry Hill RoadRev. John Deyton, minister1st & 3rd Sur)day 1st & 3rd Sunday Sunday School Worship Service 2nd, 4ih & 5th Sunday Sunday School . . 10:00 a.m. Worship Servlco 11:00 a.m.Wednesday Bible Study i 7:00 p.m. UNION CHAPEL METHODIST CHUf^ Kathryn U. Tart, pasior 1st, 3rd. A 6th Surtday SundaySchool. 10:00 a.m. 11.00 a.m, 10:00 a.m.. Worship Senrice' Sunday School 10:00 a.m. 11:00 a.m. 10:00 4 11:00 a.m. Sunday ___2nd i 4ih Sunday Worship Service Sunday School 5ih Sunday WorshipAlternate _____COOLEEMEE UNITEO METHODIST Joseph W. Collins, pastorCORNATZER UNITED METHODISTCHURCHCornatzer RoadDULIN METHODIST CHURCHAdvance. N.C.ELBAVILLE UNITED METHODIST CHURCM Hwy. 601, Advance, N.C.FARMINGTON METHODIST CHURCH 1st SundaySunday &hool 11:00 a.m.Worship Service i0:00 a m.2nd & 4ih Sunday Sunday School 10;00 a.m.Worship SenicQ 11:00 a mFIRST UNITEO METHODIST CHURCH North Main Street. Mocksville Rov. Don Lloyd, pasior Sunday School i0:00 a.m.Worship Service 11:00 a mFULTON UNITED METHODIST CHURCH Hwy. 801 between Fork and Advance Rev. Kermii E. Shoaf, pastor 1st & 4th SundaySundaySchool 11:00 a.m.Worship Son/ice 9:45 a.m.2nd, 3rd & 51h SundaySunday School 9 45 q rnyyprshlp Sen/ico 11:00 a.m.HARDISON UNITED METHODIST CHURCHJencho Church RoadLIBERTY UNITED METHODIST CHURCHGladstone Road1st & 3rd .SundaySundaySchool 11.00 a.m.Worship Service 9:45 a.m.2nd & 4lh SundaySunday School 9;45 a m. Worship Service 11:00 a.m. CIHUHCh''^ A.M.E. ZION METHODIST Vaughn L Rl- 6. Bo«- ......Sunday School ____Worship Service 11:00 a mMOCKS UNITED METHODIST CHUflCHAdvance. N C.MT. OLIVE METHODIST CHUflCHnt. 5. Mocitsviiio ti>t. 2nd. & 3id Sunday SundaySchool 10 00 amWorship Service 11:00 am4th SundaySunday School 11.00amWorshiD Soivico 10 00 am WEI______Advance, N.C.1st Sunday Sunday School Worship Service 2nd. 3rd. & 4th Sunday SundaySchool 10:00 a.m.Worship Seivice - 11:00 am.ZION CHAPEL UNITED METHODIST CHURCH ,Rev. Haywood B. Hyatt, pa»lor PBtSBYTlBlANBIXBY PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH- Fork Church Road al Cornauer Road R. Shane Owens,pastor Sunday School 9:49 a.m.Worship Senrice 11:00 a.m.let A 3rd Wednesday COOUL^U PMSBYTEfUAN CHOB&"'' 60 Wans StrMt-Codesmea >Kenneth E. PoUock. Pastor Sunday School 9:46 am.Worship Senrlce 11;00a.m.Wed. • Prayer & Bible Study 7:30 p.m. FIRST P№SiYTEMAN CHURCH Leland A Richardson, minister . Corner So. Main St. & Lexington Hwy. Sunday School 10:00 a.m. »«YTEBUmCHU.;^“ ’"’- 458 Pine St., Ivan W. Lowery. Pastor Sunday School 9:30 am.Worship Senrice 10:30 am.2nd & 4lh Sunday WIHSYANLIBERTY WESLEYAN CHURCHA.C. Clemens, pastor MOCKSVILLE WESLEYAN CHURCHHospital Streel. Mocksville David Rollins, PastorSunday School 9:45 a.m.Worship 11:00 a.m.Sunday Evening Worship 6:00 p.m.Wednesday Worship 7:00 p.m. MORAVIANMACEDONIA MORAVIAN CHURCHRov. E. Hampton Morgan, Jr., pastor Hv№. 801. Farmington SundaySchool 10:00 a.m.Worship Service 11:00 a.m.Evoning Worship 7:30 p.m. 9 45 a m. 10 45 am. 7:00 pm. 7 00 p.m. Support The Merchants Who Bring You This Information —Attend The Church Of Your Choice— Church Of Jesus Christ 01 Latter Day Saints869 Hardison St,. MocksvilleSunday Meeting 10 OO a.m. • 12 noon MVf NTN PAY AOVINTISTSEVENTH DAY ADVENTISTMilling Road Sid Mills, pasiorSabbath School 9:30 a.m.Worship Service 11:00 a.m. PCNTfCOftTAL HOLINItSCLARKSVILLE PENTECOSTALLiberty Church Road Rov- Albeit GentleSunday School 10:00 a.m.Worship Service 11:00 a.m.MOCKSVILLE PENTECOSTAL HOLINESSMilling RoadRev. David J. Eagle. Pastor Sunday School 10:00 a.m.Worship Servlco 11:00 a.m.Evoning Service 6:00 p.m.NEW CALVARY HOLINESS CHURCH Rl. 7 Turrentine Church Road Mocksville, N C. 27028 Pastor Evangelisl Charlene Lewis REDLAND PENTECOSTAL HOLINESS Sunday E__Worship Service Evangelistic Wodnosday Family Night 10.00 a.m. 11:00 a.m. 7;00 p.m. 7:00 p.m. Eaton Funeral Home 328 North Main Street Mocksvllle, N.C. 27028 Phone 634-2148 DAVIE TRACTOR & IMPLEMENT CO Ford Farming Sales And Service New Holland Equipment Highway 601 Soulh Mocksviiie, N.C. 27028 Phone 634-5969 Hwy. 601 ft MO Moekavlllo, NC Phono 6 34 ^3 6WMMm 6tM>. lAim -n- Гмо'1 Inc. C.A. SEAFORD LUMBER CO. Jericho'R oad MoekiviNe, N.C. 27028 Phone 634-5148 Compliments of DAVIE COUNTY FARM BUREAU977 Yadkinville Road Mockavim, N.C. 634-6207 SHEFFIELD LUMBER & PALLET CO. R out* S. Box 153 M ocktvllto, N.C. 27 0 2 t Л Phone 4^2-5565 : JEFFCO CO., \NC. In tiie Hillsdale Community- Route 1 ' ’ Advance, N.C, 27006 Phone 998-8193 FULLER WELDING & FABRICATORS ЙМ1у.в01 S P.O. B0X S21 Mocksvlll«, N.C. 634-3712 Evelyn Haynes & Lewis & Clark Realtors 634-3831.768-1662 Or 1-800451^18 Ed Fisher PLUMBING SERVICE Coolaemee, N.C. 27014 Expert Repairs &Naw InMaHatlon FREE Ettim atei & EmergeiKy Seivic« 284.2721 Phone 284-2232 jDvncoHS p i j o s i B U STEEL FABRICATING 122 Wilkesboro St. Mocksville. N.C. 27028 634-2379 t Carter Auto Repair ASE Certified Tecliniclans Compulerued Wheel Balancing Diagnostic Tune-Ups & A/C Service, Elc. Mocks Church Rd., Advance, N.C. 919-998-5098 Dally Devotion 9:30 to 9:45 a.m. Monday thru Saturday WDSL 1)ЛМ1'; COUM V ICNTKKl’IUSK KKCOUI). TIIUKSDAY, Лик.31, I989-11B Obituaries j Faitie S. Bowles ^ Mi's. Failic Scainoii Bowles, 'JO, ■ Route 9, Mocksvillc died Friilay, ; Aug. 25, 1989 al Autumn Care ■ Convalescent Center. Funeral services were licUl at 4 ‘ p.m. Sunday, Aug. 27 at liaton's : Funeral Hotiie Chapel by Jelf - Williams and Kenneth Hydcr, - Burial was in Jericho Church of • Christ Cemetery, ' Mrs. Bowles was born in Davic • Counly to the lale James M. and ■ Tabitha Driver Seanion. She was -■ the oldest member of Jericho Church of Christ and was a fornicr : Sunday School teacher, ; She was the widow of J,A, ■ Bowlc.s who died in 1972, She was - also preceded in death by three ; sons, Graham, Jeff and Virgil i Bowles, five brothers and one ! sister, ^ Survivors include: two • daughters, Mrs. Ivey Nell Boger, ■ Route 6, Mocksville and Mrs, - Mildred Couch, Route 9, : Mocksville; one son, James A, •' Bowles, Kernersville; one sister, • Beatrice S. Hendrix, Route 3, : Mocksville; seven grandchildren - and five great grandchildren. ! Paul R. Draughn Mr. Paul Randolph Draughn Sr., ; 56, of 101 Gwyn St., Mocksville, ; died suddenly Friday, Aug. 25, of ; a heart attack. He was bom in Wythe County,; Va., to Vance Michael and Pauline Elizabeth BeCrafi Draughn on ; Dec. 1, 1932. He was of the Bap- ; tist faith and was a disabled veteran. ; Surviving are: two daughters, .; Mrs. Brenda Draughn Bechtel of Morton, Fla., and Mrs. Sandra ; Draughn Moon of Salisbury; four ; whs, Paul Randolph Draughn Jr. ;.and Keith Edward Draughn, both t of Mocksville, S.Sgt. Jimmy Ray Draughn of Misawa, Japan and i 'Bt^ Patrick Draughn of Pen- rlsicola, Fla.; nine grandchildren; ^'one sister, Mrs. Oswald (Joyce)■ Schmitt of Dobson; and two ;Lbrothers, Robert W. Draughn and •' Vance Michacl Draughn Jr., both ’ of Dobson.Funeral services were at 2 p.m. Monday, Aug. 28, at Davis and • .Son Funeral Home Chapel, Dob- ‘:son, with burial in Salem Baptist ‘‘ Church Cemetery. Mabel H.H. Kennedy Mrs. Mabel Hardy Hartley Ken nedy, 77, wife of Frank Kennedy, of Rt. 4, Wilkesboro, died Mon- • day, Aug. 21, at Forsyth Memorial Hospital.^ Funeral services were held at 3 p.m. Wednesday, Aug. 23, at :: -Wilkesboro,Baptist Church by the ■Rev. Alfred E. Andrews Jr. Burial was in Mountlawh Memorial Park. ' Mrs. Kennedy' was bom in ^Watauga County on April 13, ■1912, to Luther Spencer and Lona Lane Hardy. She was a member of Wilkesboro Baptist Church. ;; In addition to her husband, she is survived by one daughter, Mrs. BUI (Betsy) McPherson, Mt. Hol- ' ;iy; one son, Mr. James Hartley, ' Wilkesboro; one stepdaughter, Mrs. Jerry (Martha) Jones, Winston-Salem; six sisters, Mrs. Clay (Hazel) Beach, Boone, Mrs. Floyd (Edith) Coffey, North '.Wilkesboro, Mrs. Letcher (Ruth) Baker, Rapidan, Va., Mrs. Jean .Walfrey, Orange, Va. and Mrs. Ernest (Betty) Barnette, .Wilkesboro; two brothers, Mr. £dd C. Hardy, Boone and Mr. Howard Hardy, Anderson, S.C.; four grandchildren; six stcpgrand- children; and four stepgreat- grandchildren.In lieu of flowers, memorials iMy be made to Wilkesboro Baptist Church Building Fund. John I). Lapisli Sr. Mr. Joint David I.apisli Sr., 15. ol' Newsome Rd,. Kinj;, died ’riiiirsilay moniiny, Aug. 24. at 1-or.sytli Memorial lli).spllal. He was born on October 18. 1913. in Mocksville lo 1-rnc.st S, and Irene Lcaeh Lapi.sh, Mr, I.apisli was I'ortiierly of High Rock, and was an employee ofthe P,H. Hanes Knitting Co. Surviving arc two daughters, Mrs. Kelly Reavis. Lewisville and Mrs. Barbara Williams. Rural Hall: one son. John (Buddy) David Lapish Jr., Rural Hall; .seven grandchildren; one great grandchild; one sister, Mrs. Carl (Mary) Boger, Mocksville. Funeral services were held Saturday, Aug. 26, at Hayworth- Miller Silas Creek Chapel by Pastor J. Kenneth Peters. Burial was in Centcr United Methodist Church Cemetery, Mocksville. Roy Dale Robertson Mr. Roy Dale Robertson, 39, of Rt. 2, Advance, died Wednesday, Aug. 23, of injuries received in a car accident in Davidson County. Funeral services were held Saturday, Aug. 26, at Eaton’s Funeral Home Chapel by Ihe Revs. David Joyner and Norman Frye. Burial was in Dulin United Methodist Church Cemetery. He was of the Baptist faith. He was born in Davie County the son of Robert Wade and Gertrude Foster Robertson. He was a cabinet maker for Heckman Cabinet Co., Lexington. Surviving are: his mother and father of Rt. 2, Advance; two brothers, Michael Wade and Ken neth Robertson, both of Rt. 2, Ad vance and one niece and nephew. John Frank Scott Jr. Mr. John Frank Scott Jr., 29, of 420 Morse St., Mocksville, died Sunday, Aug. 27. FuneraJ services were held to be held Wednesday, Aug. 30, in the chapel of Morrison-Sludevent Funeral Home by the Rev. Melvin Peay. Burial followed in the Main- ville AME Zion Church cemetery. Mr. Scott was born in Davie County and attended the Davie County public schools. He was employed by Parkdale Mills of Lexington.. Survivors include his parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Frank Scott Sr; three brothers, Bobby Ijames of Statesville and Steven and Jeffrey Scott, both of Mocksville; three sisters, Shelia and Vanessa Scott, both of Mocksville, and Cynthia Scott of Greensboro; and his pater nal grandmother, Clorena Scott of Mocksville. David W. Todd Jr. Mr. David Woodrow Todd Jr., 45, of Granite Falls, died Tuesday, Aug. 22, at Hospice of Caldwell County. He was born in Harrison Coun ty, Miss, lo David Woodrow Sr. and Dorothy Cruthirds Todd. He was a member of Deep Creek Bap tist Church and was a painter. Surviving are: his wife, Linda Peele Todd, of the home; one daughter. Amber Nicolle Todd, of the home; his mother, Yadkinville; one sister, Donna Todd Miller, Mocksville; and two brothers, Donald Gray and Douglas Todd, both of Winston-Salem. Funeral services were held Thursday, Aug. 24, al Deep Creek Baptist Church by the Revs. Ron Davis, Stuart White and E.W. McMurray wilh burial in the church cemetery. Cary V. Williams Mr. Cary Virgil WilliaiM.s. 92, of 806 Gales Ave.. Winston- .Salem. died Sunday. Aug. 20. at For.syth Memorial Hospital. He was born on April 24, IK97, ill Davie County to John K. and Sarah Prascovia Williams. He spent most of his life in Winston- Salem, He was a niember of Twin City Baptist Church, Surviving are: one stepson, C,K, Beeson: and several nieces and nephews, Gravcsiilc services were held at 11 a,111, Wednesday. Aug. 23, ai Fork Bapti.st Church Cemetery. Davie County by the Rev, Tom Slade, Charlie W. Wishon Mr, Charlie Wesley Wishon. 83, Rt, 5, Mock.sville, died al 2:20 p.m. Tuesday, Aug. 22, at Hools Memorial Hospital. He was born in Yadkin County lo Joseph and Minnie Tysingcr Wishon. He was a retired farmer. He was iTiarried to Jane Victoria Ireland Wishon, who died in 1946. Surviving arc: four daughters, Mrs. Myrtle Groce, Mrs. Peggy Kiger and Mrs. Mae Boggs, all of Rt. 5, Mock.sville, and Mrs. Edna Lawrence, Dellaware, Ohio; two sons, Arnold Wishon, Rt. 5, Mocksville and Glenn Wishon, Mobile, Ala.; 19 grandchildren and 19 great-grandchildren. Funeral services were held at 2 p.m. Friday, Aug. 25, at Mackie- Gentry Funeral Home Chapel by the Revs. Eugene Richardson and Benjamin Stowe. Burial was in Mount Olive United Methodist Church Cemetery. Imm anuel Christian School 1505 Lewisville-Clemmons Rd. Now Enrolling K-8th Day Care Available Enroll Today! 7 6 6 - 4 2 2 6 Pino The Name Game Cooleemee Elementary School kindergarten teacher Tara Lowery puts a name tag or) a bulletin board for each of her new students. ___________________________________________________— Photo by James Barringer Davie Sertom a Auction Sept. 2 t By Mrs. Elma Dull Pino Correspondent The Rev. Bob Burnett will con duct preaching service Sunday, Sept. 3, at II a.m. and Sunday at to a.m. al Wesley Chapel Church. Tommy Plyler has returned to Warren Wilson College, Asheville, after spending the summer with his mother, Mrs. Vicki Plyler. Roy Dixon spent Saturday after noon with Lawrence and Theda Reavis. Those from Davic attending the Dull reunion at Concord Church in Forsyth Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. Tillman Dull, Vernon and Tina Dull, Mrs. Virginia Dull and Mrs. Elma Dull. Mrs. Virginia Dull spent the weekend of Aug. 19-20 in High Point wilh Mr. and Mrs. Dean Dull. On Sunday afternoon Mr. and Mrs. Ervin Angell honored his sister, Mrs. Harmon Lalham, on her birthday. Those attending were the honoree, Mr. and Mrs. Angell, Harmon Latham, Mr. and Mrs. Flake Cline, Mr. and Mrs. Sandy Cline and Patsy Cline. Also several nieces, nephews and grandchildren attended. A picnic supper and homemade ice cream were also served. Mr. and Mrs. Bob Ellis had a family dinner on Friday night to honor her mother, Nora Latham, and her son, Ethan Boger, on their birthdays. Those present were Har mon Latham, Chinera, Audra and Kendra Lalham, Mr. and Mrs. Dale Latham and Mrs. Rachel Ellis. The Davie Sertoma Club (Davie County’s newest civic club) will hold its first fall fundraising auction. Jim Sheek will conduct the sale, to be held at the Farmington Com munity Center at 7 p.m. on Thurs day, Sept. 21. Items for sale will be displayed at 6 p.m. prior to the sale. Concessions will be available.- The club asks civic-minded businesses to donate some type of Four Corners merchandise to the club. Donations from individuals of antiques, firearms, or other saleable items will be greatly appreciated, said the president, Bennett P. Williamson. If you are an individual or business with something to donate, or ques tions, call or check with any Ser toma member or call Williamson at 998-3569. Pick-up service will be provid ed, as well as an IRS approved tax receipt for anyone desiring it. The club meets the first and third Thursday night at 6:15 p.m. for supper at Western Steer, with meeting following at 7 p.m. AU in terested parties are invited. New applicants for membership áje always welcomed. , ■; “Any and all help is appreciat^, and will help the club to continue its civic involvement in various projects as we enter our SKoHd ■year of Service to Mankind)^’ Williamson said. ■ By Marie White Four Corners Correspondent Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Baity, Mr. and Mrs. L.S. Shelton Jr. and Mr. and Mrs. Joe White visited Mr. and Mrs. Grady Beck Sunday night. Mark White has returned to the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill to resume his studies. Mrs. Johnsie Shelton, Seth Thaxton and Mrs. Carolyn Foster attended a birthday supper Satur day night for Ginger Shelton at her home. Angela Lankford, Mrs. Von Shelton, Mrs. Bobby Shelton, Mrs. Johnsie Shelton and Mrs. Sarah Owings attended a bridal shower for Ramonda Saunders al Charlotte Sunday given by her sister, Camilla Herrin and Ginger Shelton. Mr. and Mrs. Clay Lawrence, Frank Carter, Mr. and Mrs. WUliam Ralledge, Dewey Radedge and Mr. and Mrs. A.C. Ralledge Jr. visited A.C. Ralledge Sr. dur ing the weekend. Fork Sr. Citizens Hear Story Teller By Margaret Potts Club Reporter Fork senior citizens met at Fork Civic Center Wednesday, Aug. 23, with 31 members and one visitor present. A meal was served and the regular business meeiing held. The president, Mrs. Sadie Rice, called the meeting to order. Secretary, Mrs. Kemp Barnhardt, read the minutes and called the roll. Mrs. Ruth Barney had charge of devotions. ^ i s t e r i i r * " Florist S^Qjlfts Frtih tlowtn - Si/* Flovtn Grrtn Plants A Gordm Balloons - Gfis - Basktls . Slufffd AnitMls Two Locations To Serve You 634-1782.S4|ulrr KtH)»c Fla/a 1039 YadkinWlIc Kd. .MiHlmtllk, N.C. 2702» 249-6566l.vxini’liiii Stxippintt CenterN.C. 27292_____ Mrs. Hazel Gobble gave the treasurer’s report. Mrs. Clara Mae Foster introduc ed Mrs. NeU Hayes who entertain ed with story-telling. P.M. Johnson won a door prize. The group played several games of bingo. . The next meeting wiU be Sept. 27 at Fork Civic Center. 1 ThompMn, son Anita and Randy Thompsoi;, celebrated his fourUi Hrtliday dp August 12,1989, with a i>arty McDonald's In Clemmons. He had many of his friends tlieire.tp help share Uils spccial occasion; They played games, eqjoyi^ lunch and had ice cream along with a Ronald McDonald Urtl|- day cake. Wesley topped off hk fourth birthday wlthatrlptotte zoo on August 14 with Ids couidif, Matthew. Wesley’s grandpr ente are Mr. and lito. Gray Ba^ nbanlt and Mr. and Mrs. Ver non Thompson. d e m m o n s Laundromat behind the Waffle House Open dally from 7:00 a.m. 2 0 % Off All Merchandise In Stock Now Thru September 9th Faith Christian Boolt Store ' / / ^ B o o k s , B ib le s , G ifts C a r d s , iVlusio, E tc . 143 N. Main St. Downtown Mocksville SERVICE FUNERAL DIRECTORS 4 LOCATIONS 722-6101 i:o Sdiilli .Main .Street 722-61116 2‘).M Kcvm'IJa Riuil 131 Years Off Service C R EM A TO R Y SER V IC E Clemmons, N .C. 766-4715 Davie t'lHJnlv I’liime Number ‘W8-3428 76M7I7 MIddlcbrook Drive Clemmons 24Í-2366 40.5 S, Main Street Lexington • Л : Ì2B—DAVIE COUNTY ENTERI’UISK KECORI). TIIUUSDAY, AiiK-il, I9«M New Towne Center Lewisville-Clemmons Road, Clemmons OSES f í l H ! D IS C O U N T S T O R E M o re w a y s to sa ve e v e ry day. / STORE HOURS - PRICES GOOD SEPT. 1st Thru SEPT. 4th Discover the savings at Roses! We continually strive to offer you quality m erchandise at the lowest prices possible. Our entire store is stocked fuli of m erchandise priced to give you even greater savings during our Labor Day sale. So, no m atter what you need, w hether it’s for hom e, car, yard or school, let R oses be the first place you look. Delicious Snaclcs With Great Savings! g Lance Potato Chips. A Choose from a wide Q assortment of flavors in 6.5 oz. & 7 oz. bags. Six-pack Coke pro ducts including Coke Diet Coke, Sprite, Mellow Yellow & more. Lance crackers. Nekot, Nip-Chee, Cream Cheese with chives and more. P Nabisco Oreo Or OreoA Double Stuf cockles. 0 Availabale in 20 ounce IK packs. Great for snacks. | Reg. 4.27 Get ready tor the hunting season with these Dove/ Quail shotgun shells fro m Roses. A va ila b le in 1 2 ,1 6 and 20 gauge. 25 co u n t box. Mead* notebook paper. Choose from wide ruled or college ruled. 200 sheets per pack. Limit 6 packs. Shop Roses during our Labor Day Sale and save in every department. QT. Penntoll«* motor oil surpassesAPI’s highest standards. 10W40 or HD SAE30.Enter lo win a Dodge Dakota Sport 4x4. Mall-ln entry blanks on every bottle of Pennioil* motor oil. V HDXXitunmmm""juijfumjimm il LabelI Entiy ro<mon Boiito liM d Class PwtLXtiotr ¿A V E jip TO % OFF lijt 1 4 9 .9 7 -« ,» »Name brand thirteen Inch two knob color television featuring UHFA/HF rotary dial, quick start picture tube and solid state circuitry. SAVE *40 3997 Reg. 59.97 Emerson* model TEC3000 GonUMt phone with tone/pulse switchable dialing, high/low volume and last number redial. ^ ’E m e rs o n .r S A V E *20\ 4 FORYour Cholcel Single candy bars. Choose from our large assortment including Snickers, Milky Way and 3 Musketeers. Great buys during our Labor Day Sale. 5 0 o"ÍF -t ó f 1“ 2 $5 The Peanut Factory Cashew halves. Cholesterol free. Available in 10 ounce can. Choose Irom our entire assortment ol TroplcCal and Regency sunglasses. Sorry, no ralnchecks. Men's Fruit ol the Loom pocket tees. Made of 100% cotton. Available in many colors. Sizes S-XL. Reg. 3.47 Each Wicker picnic basket lined with red or blue gingham cloth. Look for savings in every department. Sorry, no ralnchecks. “ TT-----— :------------------- ---------— DAVIK COUNTY ICNTKKI'KISI' KliCOR/), IHUR.S/)AY, Aug.JI; 1989-lC ! 'f '! ' » 9 •• I : \\ ; b a v ie C o u n ty is taking off into a new system this season and the W a r Eagle s wiil need good perform ances from their. ‘T o p G u n s ’ (Fro nt row , ' from left): To d d Kiger, Brian W illiam s, M att Vaughters and N/latt M arion and (top) R eggie Sales. — photo by Jim Barringer J ) ■ f y ‘Taking O ff’ With The Wishbone A Thing Of The Past, Davie County Going To The Air , h By Davie Gallagher ly Enterprise-Record A s soon as Randall W ard stepped onto the D avie County campus as the school's new football coach, the wishbone offense was being describ ed in the same mannpr as a long fly ball o ff o f M att M ario n ’s bat. Y ou can kiss ^'at baby goodbye. A ll summer, M arion played Legion baseball but m the back o f his m ind, the 6-2 , 190-pound quarterback was wondering what kind o f changes he’d find'at football practice. There were many but the most glar ing was the new offense. A fter nine years under M ik e C a rte r, the methodical, often plodding, wishbone offense had skipped tow n fo r M ooresville. It made happy campers out o f quarterbacks like M arion, who like to throw the football, “ Being a quarterback, I love it,” M arion beamed. And why shouldn’t he? Davic ■ County'tljrew the ball just 62 times in 1988’s 3-7'xlcbaclc thal saw the W ar Eagles lose in almost every way im aginable. Included were six losses by a touchdown or less. W ard came in and ihe players arc seeing a fresh siari. No longer w ill the seniors take h for granted that they’re in the starting lineup, one o f C arter’s annual rituals. N o longer w ill the team tw o-platoon. If a player is needed on both sides o f the ball, he’ll play on both sides o f the ball. But the passing gam e, w ell, that’s just something Davie County w ill have to get used to. W ard says the team w on’t be the M iam i Dolphins and h ’s doubtful anyone w ill call D avie’s offense “ A ir W a rd .” But don’t be surprised, he warns, if the ball is thrown 20 times in a game. “ W e look at the films and try to out- execute the other team ,” hesaid. “ W c don’t go out looking to pass the ball all the tim e. If w e can pass live times and win good. If it takes 20, w e’ll throw it 20. I like to run the fullback and I think we have the ability to run and throw. W e ’re going (o try and do both.” • Being a llrst-year coach. W ard needed leaders. H e got them in M arion, Reggie Sales, Todd K iger, M att Vaughters and Brian W illiam s. One o f the smalle.st senior classcs in recent memory greeted W ard. Some o f the seniors who arc playing, speculated that W ard’s way o f think ing scared them a little. N o longer would a senior have a starting role wrapped up like in C arter’s system. A senior could no longer coast through his final year. “ I think Coach W ard coming in and telling us that no one had a starting position, whether he was a senior or not helped us,” said Sales, the only junior who started all 10 games last season. “ W e were all for the change.” That’s what W ard likes — and needs — to hear. A nd no one is echoing those thoughts more than his senior leaders: M a tt M a rio n : In C arter’s system, M arion stood on the sidelines as as junior, learning the wishbone and w aiting his chance as a senior. N o w , he has the w ishbone knowledge — and doesn’t need it. “ ir we started today. I ’d know all the wishbone plays,” he laughed. M arion was surprised that more •seniors didn’t come out. for the team hut said players like him self and Sales would liavc that much more respon sibility to their younger teammates. “ Reggie and me have been playing together for a long tim e,” M arion said. “ W c won the regular season in little league w ilh the Raiders and 1 us ed to block for him . N ow , he can block for m e .” ; M arion was a key ingredient for D ale Ijam es’ Legion baseball team despite a broken wrist and a bum knee. ^ But he was gearing fo r football and showed W ard his g rit by going home tw ice from W hiteville during the Legion state finals to make practice. “ I felt like I should be th ere," he said. “ W ith a new coach and new of fense, I didn't want to miss anything.'' And he w on't. W hen D avie travels to N orth Iredell for the season opener Friday night, M arion w ill be the star ting quarterback. “ Having Coach W ard here has given us that extra drive. W e want the new offense to w ork and we want to pass the ball. Everyone’s excited and w orking a lot harder.” Reggie Sales: If anyone should have enjoyed the wishbone, it is Sales, a runningback w ith speed and pow er. Last season, he ran the ball 107 times for 547 yards and led the team in scor ing with 50 points. But even with a m ore divsersificd attack. Sales thinks he can shatter last year’s total and ex ceed his cight-touchdown season. “ I ’ve been running the wishbone all my life. 1 like to run the ball but I like Please See Taking Off — P. 14C . . ■if,» K i '? i - ' It. J ." ? I.i - ,,i S : : , O u t O f T h e ‘F o g g ’ Assistant Coaches Returning To Field M o u n t a i n e e r M a n Former Davie Star Resurfaces At ASU P ig s k in P io n e e r s IVIocl(sville High Powerful In Mid-30s ,^C—DAVIE COUNTV ENTKRI'KISK KliCOKI), TMUKSIMV, Лик.31, Davie Meets ‘Angry’ North Iredell Friday Randall Ward Davic Cmmly may rim ink) an апцгу loolliall team in Norlh Iredell l-riilay night. Cliarle.s Love'.s Kaiilcrs are one ol'lhe I'avorite.s to win the I'oothills Conl'erenee ami pushed 2-Л Mounl Airy all over Ihe field in their opener Iasi week. Bcii they slill lo.sl, 13-7 when Tony Sardler ran 15 yards Ibr a .seorc wilh only 28 seconds remaining. North dominated lhc statistics, oulriishing Mounl Airy 137-133 and oulpassing ihcir foes 143-109. But two inlcrccptions, iwo fumbles and 115 yards in penalties did in several scoring chances. “Wc moved (lie hall very ivell to only come up with seven points,■■ Love lold reporters. Norlh came close to scoring four limes in the first half hut didn't score until four minutes remained in ihe game. The Hftli chance came early in the second half when Cor- tez Holland ran hack a kickoff 79 yards lo llie Mount Airy nine. After a touchdown catch was call ed back due (o a penally, the drive stalled and Chris Love missed a 32-yard Held goal. Norlh finally got on the hoard to lie lhc score at seven on a hohbl- ing catch by Circgg Allen on a Ibiirtli ami seven play from the Mount Airy 25. "I think wc did a loi of good things," Love said. “ But we didn't lake advantage ol'our chances. I'm disappointed in all the mental mistakes we made." North is much more experienc ed than Davie, returning 23 seniors ¡Hid 15 starters, including eight on offense. The Raiders shared ihe confcrencc title with Soulh Iredell last season and finislicd 6-5, 5-1 in the Foothills. Love has the Raider program skyrockeling toward the top of 3-A. Despile an overall record of 65-79-3 in 14 years, he has been 17-6 over the past two .seasons. This year, he has Iwo capable quarterbacks in Jerry Hayden and Derrick Bell and backs Holland and Chris Leake. Love mighl be the Foolhills’ top kicker. The entire offensive line Is back and the only inexperience is in the defensive secondary. Davie coach Randall Ward knows he’ll have his hands full. He watched Norlh’s loss to Mount Airy. " 1 hey do a lot of things and run a lot of formiilions,” he said, “ They can throw tho foolball or run il. They're a lillle bigger than us." Ward said Davie wilJ have lo avoid Ihe things that hurt North Iredell last week. “Wc have to eliminate mistakes like penalties and fumbles,” he said. “ They hurt themselves against Mounl Airy. They had long plays called back because xof something like a lineman downfield. We can’t do that this week.” Matt Marlon will quarterback Davie’s offense while Kevin Wiley (left) and Reggie Sales will do the bulk of the running. Davie Will Dp More First-yea^, Pavie County, football coach Ran- dail i Ward w^ asked if his team would be a bet ter passing or ruiming.team in 1989. “I think we have the ability to pass or run efec- tiviely,” sud the confident Ward. ‘iWe have the athletes,” he said. “Hard work and a good attitude will only help.” ■ “Most of the attitudes are good, considering a .^new offeiuive package has been brought in. Mike ^Carter’s wishbone has dissolved into memories iand the War Eagles appear ready to open the of- >fense up even more. ■ > Ward uses two tight ends and a flanker and says ;he will pass to all three, plus the backs. He also *lii№S to run the.fijllback. J ‘And even though there is only one starter retur- -npg in Reggie Sales, Ward is hoping the new Ipbyers in the lineup can fiilfill their potential. I ¡“ The thing you want to do is out-execute the f ojher team,” said the fortner West Rowan coach. S“you take what the other team gives you. At jWest, it all depended on that. Some nights, we :^nin the ball more and others we let (Jay) Jarrell itHrow." Run The Football If Ward wants to run, he has Sales, at 5-9, 170. one of the Central Piedmont Conference’s lop returning backs. He ran for almost 600 yards last year and will get plenty of opportunities to run the ball, despite no wishbone attack. “ Reggie’s strength is that he can run like a fullback or halfback,” Ward said. “ He has speed, to get outside but he hard-nosed running inside too. Reggie has done a good job with his leader ship role,” Ward said of his co-captain. “ I’m very pleased with that.” Joining Sales as co-captain is 6-2, 190-pound Matt Marion, the leader of three capable quaterbacks. “ He has a good arm and good size,” Ward said. “ He's been throwing the ball well and he has shown he has a lot of strength.” Marion never threw a pass last year as Marc Holcomb’s backup. But he did get to kick late in the season, nailing five extra points and pun ting eight times for a 30-yard average. Marion could still kick and punt but will have Please See Offense — P. 14-C The Davie County defensive line will be anchored by (from left): Stanley Pruitt, Matt Vaughters 'and Kevin Howell.— Photos by Robin FcrguMon Defensive Backs Win ‘Most Improved’ Award Usually, a high school defense has one expert ‘ — Ihe defensive cotirdinator. At Davie County this season, the W ar Eagles have four — defensive coordinator Buddy Lowery, head coach Randall Ward (who used to be a defensive coordinator), former Concord defensive coordinator Melvin Fogg and assistant coach Marty Hemric, “I don’t worry about who’s in charge of the defense,” said Lowery, in his second year as defensive coordinator. “ It’s a combination of all four of us. It’s good to have that many minds working together. We have all ideas that can help.” The area that will probably improve the most is defensive secondary, where Davie has been burned in recent seasons due to some slow feet. This year. Ward has come in with a wide-open philosophy. Anybody can play anywhere, regardless of whether he plays offense or whether he’s a junior or senior. Right now, it looks like three juniors — Alan Chapman, Gary Blalock and Brent Wall — and one senior, Danny Rumple, will be the defen sive backs. “Theyre as good a'?we*veTaSrur5!Ss!*'''saii'' Lowery. Fogg is coaching that group and can rely on backups Brad Foster, La-Monte Chunn, Lee Lin ville, Kevin Tolar and Germain Mayfield as well, r “'There’s a lot of combinations we could ' Lowery said. “I like the secondary.” , . ' ■ • While fhe defensive backs will tty to contain the opponents through the air, the defensive line : will have to contain the run. It will be led by senior - noseguard Matt ; Vaughters, a 5-10,218-pounder who saw actiòn iast season. , ; , . : “ Matt was one of the few who played last yeair and he knows what we wanti” said.Lowery> “ He’s one of the ifiiders on the team.”, ; Robbie Welch (225 pounds) and Dale Roberf son are scheduled to see action as'well on thè defensive side but could give Vaughters wnie .help. . . ■ • 1' The tackles will be senior Stanley Priiitt and juniors Kevin Howell, Mark Crotts and Bryà^ Please See Defense — P. 14^ Hrenshaw Holding His Breath During Fall Football Crenshaw yjStinfe Thoughts While Preparing For Yet Another *Fqotball Season... No one hopcs.the Davie County football learn is : fst^essfiil as much as Charles Crenshaw, the South ^^vie' athlelic director and former Davie Counly ¿gtaduate.' t :'But no one will be holding his . ^bfrath more than the new Davie • ’.^№gh varsity boys basketball 'icoach. ^ Hf his summer basketball '.^league means anything, his top .'three scorers will be Germain ■iMayficld (30,4), Clint Junker i(it,3 ) and Matt Vaughters • (i2.3), all expected to see plenty >of action on the field this fall, > "In fact, Crenshaw will probably sec four of his five • sturters putting on the pads. The only player who will / probably start who isn’t playing football is Alex Nail. '• Prediction Time; The 1989-90 sports year in the ; Central Piedniont Conference should be all Wesi For- •.sylh. The Titans are one of the favorites in football, ; should again be strong in boys basketball under Denny Key and returns many of the key players in baseball, ; most of whom saw action for Mocksville’s Legion ‘team. West could win all three lilies. V Bul don’t forget the girls. Wilh athletes like Nikki ^Nicholson, the Titans should repeat their title in ^volleyball. The girls will have another solid tennis ’ team and the basketball will definitely be improved. ' We.st is also usually strong in soccer. »I i Notebook • Whatever Happened To Dept.,. So whatever did happen to 6-5, 260-pound North Carolina football player Chris Jacobs'? The latest word had him barten ding at Crazy Zaek’s in North Myrtle Beach, S,C. After a 1-10 season in his last year of college foot ball, he apparently needed to drown his sorrows. • All four of last year’s classification winners are favored to lake the championship again, Richmond County (15-0 in 4-A), Burlington Cummings (15-0 in 3-A), Thomasville (13-2 in 2-A) and Swain County (14-1 in 1-A) are all strong enough to repeat. • Shelby, which lost to Cummings, has made the 3-A finals three straight years and will be trying to record a winning season for the 22nd consecutive year. Going inlo lliis .sea.son, the Lions are tied at 21 .straight with West Montgomery. • Whiteville had the top American Legion baseball team this year but the Wolfpack is always a consis tent threat to take the 2-A football title. After last year’s 10-3 .season, Whiteville is ranked third in preseason. It has two Top 1(X) players in running back Greg Dillard and junior linebacker Carlos Ualdwin. • Even wilh the addition of Greensboro Grimsiey and Greensboro Dudley in ihe Central I’icilmont Con ference, the league is cxpeclcd lo be one of the weakest (surpriseil'i) 4-A leagues around. Only two players from the confcrence were chosen for Top 100 status iu 4Uarterbacks Chuck Kirkpatrick of Dudley and Reynolds’ Bobby Price, • With the Greensboro additions, the CPC lost the Black Knights (North Davidson) and Wonders (Kan napolis). It inherits the Panthers (Dudley) and the Whirlies (Grimsiey), What is a Whirlie, anyway? • When Anson County comes to Davie Sept. 15, a familiar face will be leading the Bearcats, Ed Einoiy, former coach at East Carolina, is in his first season at the Wadesboro school. They won their first game, 12-3 over Monroe Friday. • North Carolina’s top player this season is pro jected 10 be Richmond County’s Mike Thomas, a 6-2, 205-pound quarierback, who passed for 1,507 yards last year and has led the team to a 25-2 record since becoming the starter. Florida Slate, Notre Dame, Michigan — all the biggies — are after the Ethan Hor ton lookalike, • Kannapolis and Norlh Davidson left the CPC for 3-A football wilh each going in opposite directions, Kannapolis was always successful in 4-A and should be a power in 3-A. Norlh Davidson hasn’t won in several years and Coach Steve Hinkle needs ini- nicdiate success lo .satisfy those surly Black Knight fans. He’s not off to a good start, being blasted by East Rowan in the opener. One Wilmington school has the perfect name in "Hog-gard,” considering two of its To|) 100 players. Josh Shouier and Billy Loftin, stand 6-7, 290 and 6-5, 282. • Some communities would never have an identity if not for high schools using their dateline. For instance, would anyone have ever heard of Tyro if West Davidson wasn’t located there? Or Welcome for North Davidson? Or Ronda for East Wilkes? ^ Well, the funniest may be the community where North Surry is located. - It’s called Toast. Do you think the team’s motto is, “Our mnning backs are so fast, they’ll burn you in Toast?” ' • Trinity won its opener 28-12 over East Davidf son. What’s so special about that, you ask? Thé Bulldogs broke a 29-game losing streak. Surry Cen tral now holds the mark at 30 after losing Friday to Allegheny, 27-3. • First games are for getting oul the kinks. In Fri day’s first night, there were 31 shutouts. • If your school started with “ East,” you had a good opening night. Thirteen ‘East” schools won Friday. • The most impressive start of 1989 came at Soulh Brunswick, which won 60-8 over Hallsboro, • This year’s honor o fth e biggest high school fool ball player in the nation” goes to Chris Perry of Cov ington, La, He stands 6-10 and weighs 413 pounds. And get this. He wears double-x pants, size 18 shoes and an 8 5/8 helmet. • Norlh Carolina’s biggest? Try Kevin Wade of Farmville Central, all 6-6, 290 pounds of meat. Or if you want to gel technical, count twins Scott and Heath Woods of Newton-Conover. Both stand 6-4 weigh a combined 580 pounds. DAVIK CO IM V KNTKKI’KISK KWORl), TIIIIKSDAV. An«,31, I989-3C 1989 Davie County Roster No.Name Pos. Ht.W t. Class 58 Kevin Howell L 6-0 196 11 80 Steven Parker TE 6-3 165.11 ,10 - Brent Wall QB 5-10 155 11 59 Robbie Welch L •5-11 225 11 81 Alan Chapman WR 5-10 145 11 12.Matt Madoit ,QB 6-2 190 12 60 Mark Crotts L 5-7 165 ,11 82 Matt Stanley TE 5-8 170 12 16 Patrick Muiphy QB 6-0 160 11 62 Chad Merrell L 5-8 190 11 83 Brian Basham TE 6-0 1(50 12 22 . 23 28 ,.32. 34 41 Robin Campbell Geimain Mayfield Brad Foster Kevin Wiley , Lamont Chunn Reggie Sales RB RB RB RB RB RB 5-8 6-0 5-5 5-7 5-9 5-9 150 165 150 155 157 170 11 n 12 11 12 12 63 64 ' 65 70 72 73 Britt Osborne Tedd Budd Dale Robcr.son Bryan Foster Richard Staley Brian Crotts L L ' L L L L 5-fO 6-1 5-6 5-10 6-3 5-10 169 205 , 173 222 250 190 11 12 11 11 12 12 84 85 86 87 88 Todd Arrington Gary Blalock Danny Rumple Dale Parrish Lee Linville TE TE WR TE LE 6-1 5-10 6-1 6-1 5-10 158 160 155 155 155 12. IIJ 12 11 1 2 ; 50 Jon Myers L 6-0 '160 11 74 Matt Vaughters L 5-10 218 12 90 Kevin Tolar WR 5-9 145 12 : 54 Brian Williams L 5-9 210 12 -76 Michael Jones L 6-2 205'12 94 Clint Junker TE 6-6 210 1 2 .'56 .Matt Reznicek LB 6-0 187 11 79 Wayne Mock L 5-8 228 11 96 Todd Kiger .LB ,6 -0 168 12 R M d Calvin A HoblMs ... ... each w eek in the Enterprise-R ecord From '& Barbara RutTfple Riiinple Auto Sales 106 Salisbury St.634-3215 Our Banner Is Out for the Davie High War Eagles We hope your season is a Big Winner!______ Eaton Funeral Home N . M ain S treet M o ck sville . N .C . Football Is Like Truck Driving Both Have To Follow The Signals Rules of the game at fiNitliall are important - Just like llic traffic rules of the highivay. Use tliis guide to enjoy Davie High School’s 1989 season! . i./s* j V.»> f r * Miatoom MftlOf VtouCMDOmmiAooM.MMCcuwuvm “ f rKtlWiMNCI WTHC«tCH HOtOMO i tMLl miOAUT lOUCNlO <IICK(0. 0« ■àtuo MlKUtlC I MClnrinOH r Of iCKMa UAK OOWtiflCLO nm out Elanc & W ayne S m ith, M ary A nn L in k , Secretary G o o d L u c k , D a v i e H i g h W a r E a g l e s D a v ie T r u c k e r s , In c . Rt. 4, Advance 919/998-8700 '4C-DAVIE COUNTY ICNTKRI’KISIC KICCOUI), THURSDAY, AiiK-íl. i'№‘) P l a y e r P r o f ile I Man On Campus ^ iD a v ie C o u n t y F o o t b a ll T e a m C o n t i n u e s Its iT r a d it io n O f H a v i n g B i g g e s t P l a y e r In C P C The Davic County quarterbacks and receivers Jwerc discussing the upcoming season last week ;whcn Matt Marion told Clint Junker he liked 'throwing to the tight end. j “ He told me he could sec me better than taiiyone else,” Junker said with a grin, i 'No wonder. Junker will be the Central Pied- ‘mont Conference’s tallest player in 1989. The >6-6 ccnter in basketball is currently a 6-6 tight ;ciid/defensivc end. Junker carries on a tradition at Davic. The War 'Eagles may not have had the best football teams [during their first four years of 4-A competition ;btit they always had Ihe tallest player. : "First, there was 6-9 Doug Jacobs, now at ^Mississippi. He was followed by 6-7 David 'Rosser, now at The Citadel. Junker held thal thonor in 1988 and 1989. ■£ .The only difference between this year and last lis that now. Junker will be playing, i ;“ A11 I got to do last year was snap on field fgoals,” Junker sighed. “ Thai’s not much play- ;ing. I got out there every once in a while.” i >Not only will Junker be playing this season, ‘tlwre will be times when he goes both ways. And jheight will be an added threat, t -“ I’m a bigger target for Marion and on tdefehse, maybe I can knock down some passes,” he said. “We have special plays where I go in on the quarterback.” I 'Junker is the biggest player on a team that is »smaller than usual. But he feels that new coach iRaikiall Ward has gotten the team in a right frame of mind — and body. “ Coach Ward knows hi.s sliirf," Junker prai.s- cd. "H e's been a pretty big factor. He has us ready. And he has us in shape big-time. We’ve worked hard in practice. "Last year, we worked a lot on one thing since everybody played one way. But il's harder this year trying lo master both sides of the ball. It’s easier to pick up the defense." The new conference will give Junker and his teammates a look at big city football that they’ve never seen wilh Greensboro Grimsley and Greensboro Dudley coming in. “ It’s kind of scary,” he .said, “ but we’ll just take one game al a time. I know we’re ranked near the bottom but I like that. Nobody’s expec ting anything from us.” But Junker will be expecting something from himself. Wilh all receivers getting a look from the quarterback. Junker could be a vital part of this year’s success. He has had plenty of nervous energy lo burn waiting for the first game, “ I’ll be real nervous againsi North Iredell,” he said. “ The first game is always the worst aboul lhat. But I was nervous in the first scrim mage.” Junker said he’s just try to blend in wilh the resi of his teammates and nol let anyone know how nervous or pumped up he really is during a game. Which is going to be kind of hard. When you’re the tallest player in the conference, it’s difficult to go unnoticed. Davie will again have the CPC’s tallest player in 6-6 Clint Junker. — Photo by Robin Fergusson Personal Stats Clint Junker Fam ily: Father Bill, Mother Kalhy, Brother Will, Sister Charlotte. Favorite Foods: Salmon, pig in a blanket. Favorite Drinks: Cool Moon, Yoo Hoo. Favorite TV Shows: An dy Griffith, Sanford and Son, Good Times. Favorite Movies; No Holds Barred. Favorite Radio Stations:: WDSL, Rock 92. Favorite Musical Groups: Kiss, Jim Nabors. ‘ Favorite Athlete: Péte't Gray. . Favorite Sports Team: Boston Bruins. Hobbies Outside o f Sports: Horseback riding, ■team roping. Why 1 Play Football For Davie County: I don’t know. ' Future Plans: Go to col lege and get a degrée in engineering. ' Greatest Moment In Sports: Going undefeated in football in the ninth grade af South Davie. I’f' I . r C o a c h ) W e ’ r e R e a d y T o o ! M ia |ta f b « r Oavl* County Manaflcr t i .it- ^ Mlcha«l Foster F & F BBQ, Cooleemee Dr. Ronald QanttOptometrist Janice Schooler Mocksville Business Association Jack Koontz Mocksville Post Office ■arry McBride Davie Jewelers D.J. Mando Mocksville Mayor David Owens Davie School Board Jeff Billings Dentist Cooleemee Carl Osborn Osborn Electric Company Cooleemee JolM M«Da>MMcDanlalASOh BobbI Mullís. Twin Cedars Golf Club Al Boger Texaco Service Station Bryan Steen H Ig iiw a y Patrol Ron Shore Ron's Tire Carole Pierce IVIocksville Sporting Goods Bill Johnson Larew-Wood-Johnson Insurance » Dick Nail Davie Printing Company DAVIK COUNTV KNTKRPKISI' KKCOKD, TIIUKSDAY, Aur.31, 1989-5C P l a y e r P r o f il e Rumple Hoping Season Won’t Be Wasted : Danny Rumple was asked ■what he thought about his junior year as a reserve wide receiver for D avic County in 1988. : “ It was a wasted year,” he said. “ That’s about all it w as.” You see, Rumple had several things going against him in 1988. One, he was a junior in a senior dominated program. T w o , he was a wide receiver in a wishbone offense. Even though he knew all of this com ing'in, there was still reason for optimism. Rumple had size (standing 6-1) and he was coming o ff a jayvee season where he latched on to nine ■scoring passes from M att M arion. Rum ple said he was happy w ilh his sophomore statistics but realized the jayvee numbers were a bit misleading. “ I started out great. In the first game, I caught three touchdown passes. But you have to rem em ber, jayvee defenses aren’t as strong as var sity.” A fter an almost non-existent . junior season, Rum ple’s con fidence is again brinuning. Ran dall W ard has come in w ith an .offense that w ill actually throw ;the football on a consistent ¡basis. ; “ I like the idea o f throwing ;m ore,” Rum ple said. “ Coach f(M ike) C arter would never Danny Rum ple (right) hopes to regain the m agic that he and M att M arion (throwing the pass) had while on the jayvee team . — Photo by Robin Fergusson throw .” Rum ple said one o f his goal? this season is to break the career, total for touchdown receptions. That isn’t saying m uch, con sidering the record is three. One game like his first jayvee con test, and he’d tie the m ark. (Note: Records weren’t kept un til C arter came in 1981). “ I think we can break them a il,” Rum ple said confidently. Rum ple may even get to touch the football on the other side o f the line. H e is schedul ed to see action in the secondary in W ard’s “ play both w ays” philosophy. “ There’s m ore pressure on the seniors than ever before, I think,” Rum ple said. “ W ith Coach C arter, you knew you’d start. W ith Coach W ard, you knew you had to w ork. There’s a lot m ore pressure on the seniors and there’s no pressure on the ju n io rs.” So far, the system is working. “ The practices are going good,” he said. “ Last year, they were tense and uptight. W e ’re doing m ore running and conditioning this season.” Rum ple has caught a few passes during the tw o scrim mages w ith W est Rowan and North Davidson And he’d love to renew his pass-catch relationship w ith M arion. “ I want to have a good year,” he said, “ And since w e’re passing more, we all have a good attitude. Everybody on the team wants to do w e ll.” Especially Rum ple. This is his senior season and he doesn’t want to waste a m inute o f it. Personal Stats Danny Rumple : Fam ily: Father Dan, M o m ' Barbara, Brothers Todd and Scott. Favorite Foods: deli sand wiches, oreos. Favorite D rin ks: M oun-, tain D ew . F a v o rite T V S how s: Cheers, D ear John, N ight C ourt. Favorite M ovies: Cad-'. dyshack, Fletch, The Lost' Boys. Favorite Radio Stations: . 9 8 .7 ,1 0 2 .1 ,1 0 7 .5 . F a v o rite Musical' G roups: M illi V a n illi, D e f Leppard. Favorite Athlete: Brian 1 Bos w orth. Favorite Sports Team: M iam i Dolphins, D enver Broncos. Hobbies Outside of Sports: W ater skiing. “ Why 1 Play Football at Davie County: Because I love both football and D avie ■- County. - Future Plans: Attend col lege and go from there. . Greatest Sports Moment:-: Scoring three touchdowns in m y first football game at D avie for the jayvee team... C o a c h , W e ’ r e R e a d y T o o ! : ' A itaa'C № M \ . Cantral Carolina Bank Dan RMinpl« Rumple Auto Sales Henry Shore Chamber Of Commerce rank Payn*Mocksville Laundry And Dry Cleaners Luther Potts Mocksville Insurance & Real Estate Davie School Board Eric Ennis Duke Power Co. Margaret Foster Foster Jewelers Will Martin Attorney Jace Morgan Bonanza Mobile Homes Jimmy Kelly Jr. Kelly Insurance Agency Joel Edwards Doctor Larry Campbell L & G Hair Design Johnny Marklin Daniel Furniture Ricl( Cole BB&T Paula FurchesFurches Motor Company \ r 6C-DAVIE COUNTY KNTEKPK1SIÍ KIXOUI), Лчц.З!. I9S9 P l a y e r P r o f ile Davie’s Ted Budd Not Your Normal Country Hunter W h e n B u d d G o e s H u n t in g , H e H e a d s F o r S o u t h A m e r ic a Ted Budd is a country boy ... who really isn’t a country boy. ; Asked his hobbies away from football, Budd said hunting and fishing. Sounds like a typical Davic County answer, except that most D avie County teenagers don’t go to Argentina lo hunt. “ M y dad and I went there over the summer,” said the 6-1, 205-pound offensive lineman. • “ There was a lot o f open land. Some o f the people spoke broken English but I had to use some Spanish.” ^ His other hobbies include jet skiing and snow boarding, sports than many o f his Davie County teammates have never tried. “ O ur fam ily members bought a jet Ski,” Budd said. “ I ’ve got ten a few stitches because o f it.” It’s more than he’s ever got-, ten in football. H e rarely played as a junior last season. , “ For m y greatest sports m o ment, I started to say something like being on the extra point team last year,” he laughed. “ You never got much o f a chance to play before unless you were a senior.” Just his luck. H e finally inade his senior year but M ike Carter had left for M ooresville. Sud denly, the “ senior system” was oul and the “ equal opportunity em ployer” Randall W ard was at the helm. But it didn’t deter Budd or his senior teammates. “ I like it better,” said Budd. “ The seniors really had to w ork. W e knew we weren’t go ing to be given anything.” “ It’s been tougher on the linemen to learn the new system here than any other group,” said offensive line coach Rex A llen. “ They’re used to block ing a certain way for the wishbone. “ But Tedd and the rest o f the guys are doing a real good Budd came to D avie County Davie County offensive line coach lays down the law to senior Tedd Budd. This will be B udd’s first year of starting for the W ar Eagles and is trying to learn the new system brought in by new coach Randall W ard. — Photo by Robin Fergusson as a sophomore. H e had spent the first nine years o f his educa tion at Sum m itt School in W in sto n -S alem , a p rivate school. “ I went from being one o f the biggest people there to being one o f the smallest here,” he said. “ W hen I came, I only knew about tw o other people.” But Budd wanted a change. H e was tired o f the private school life. “ I wanted to go to a public school,” said Budd, whose fam ily lives in Advance. H e gradually went from be ing an unknown in school to one o f the more popular students. H e’s hoping lo duplicate that in football. “ I really love football,” he said, “ and I ’m really excited about this season. There’s a new feeling surrounding the team with a new coach and a new system. I ’m really glad to be a part o f it.” Personal Stats Ted Budd Fam ily: Father Richard, M other Sylvia, Brothers John and Joe. Favorite Foods: Steak, (m edium rare), potatoes, moon pie. F avo rite D rin ks: L em o n -. lim e gatorade, pepsi. F avo rite T V Shows: “ I don’t have tim e to watch much I V . ” Favorite M ovies: Patton, Fletch, Blues Brothers. Favorite Radio Stations: W T Q R , R ock 92. F a v o rite Musical G roups: H ank W illiam s Jr., Lyn ard S kynard, D a v id A llen Coe. Favorite Athlete: Dale Earnhardt. Favorite Sports Team: Philadelphia Eagles. Hobbies Outside, of Sports: Hunting, fishing, jet; skiing, w orking on m y car, snowboarding. Why I Play Football For Davie County: To play on a < team w ith a w inning'attitude and to be w ith some of my best friends. Future Plans: Attend A p palachian State University and m ajor in business or economics. C o a c h , W e ^ r e R e a d y f n y M n l i U i f MoetovlHt Town.Manafl«r. НоЬЫя Mackwood Pool*Blackwood's Florist Coolesmee St*v« L«ary Tim BrownMocksvllle Town Planner Western Steer Manager ■ob Rauch Foster Rauch Drug Иоягу ItowoN Fjrat Fadoral Saving* lank in St*ol* Coolaom*« Flowers & Gifts Cooleemee Calvin Ijames Davie School Board Professional Services George McIntyre Farm Bureau Mutual Insurance J.D. Bell McDonalds Billie Roavl* Reavls Ford Oscar Foator Bits Of Brass Edgar Osborn Osborn Phillips 66 Station Cooleemee Bailey Walker Walker’s Laundry And Car Washi Mark Fowler Pizza Hut Juan Marini American Homes David Black American Homes Stan Henson American Homes r 6C-DAVIE COUNTY KNTKKPUISK RKCOKI), TIIUKSDAY, Лчц..11, 1989 P l a y e r P r o f ile Davie’s Ted Budd Not Your Normal Country Hunter W h e n B u d d G o e s H u n t in g , H e H e a d s F o r S o u t h A m e r ic a ; Ted Budd is a country boy ... who really isn't a country boy. •Asked his {lobbies away from football, Budd said hunting and fishing. Sounds lii<c a typical Davie County answer, except that most D avie County teenagers don’t go to Argentina to hunt. “ M y dad and I went there over the summer,” said the 6-1, 205-pound offensive lineman. ■ “ There was a lot o f open land. Some o f the people spoke broken English but I had to use some Spanish.” , H is other hobbies include jet skiing and snow boarding, sports than many o f his Davie County teammates have never tried. ' “ O ur fam ily members bought a jet ski,” Budd said. “ I ’ve got ten a few stitches because o f it.” : It’s m ore than he’s ever got-. ten in football. H e rarely played as a junior last season. ,; “ F or iny greatest sports m o ment, 1 started to say something like being on the extra point team last year,” he laughed. “ You never got much o f a chance to play before unless you were a senior.” Just his luck. H e finally made his senior year but M ike Carter had left for M ooresville. Sud denly, the “ senior system” was out and the “ equal opportunity em ployer” Randall W aixl was at the helm . But it didn’t deter Budd or his senior teammates. “ I like it better,” said Budd. “ The seniors really had to work. W e knew we weren’t go ing to be given anything.” “ It’s been tougher on the linemen to learn the new system here than any other group,” said offensive line coach Rex Allen. “ They’re used to block ing a certain way for the wishbone. “ But Tedd and the rest o f the guys are doing a real good Budd came to D avie County Davie County offensive line coach lays dov\/n the law to senior Tedd Budd. This will be Budd’s first year of starting for the War Eagles and is trying to learn the new system brought in by new coach Randall Ward. — Photo by Robin Fergusson as a sophomore. H e had spent the first nine years o f his educa tion at Sum m itt School in W in s to n -S ale m , a p rivate school. “ I went from being one o f the biggest people there to being one o f the smallest here,” he said. “ W hen I cam e, I only knew about tw o other people.” But Budd wanted a change. H e was tired o f the private school life. “ I wanted to go to a public school,” said Budd, whose fam ily lives in Advance. H e gradually went from be ing an unknown in school to one o f the m ore popular students. H e ’s hoping to duplicate that in football. “ I really love football,” he said, “ and I ’m really excited about this season. There’s a new feeling surrounding the team w ith a new coach and a new system. I ’m really glad to be a part o f it.” Personal Stats Ted Budd F am ily: Father Richard, M other Sylvia, Brothers John and Joe. Favorite Foods: Steak, (m edium rare), potatoes, moon pie. Favorite D rin ks: Lem on- lim e gatorade, pepsi. Favo rite T V Shows: “ I don’t have tim e to watch much tv .” F avorite M ovies: Patton, Fletch, Blues Brothers. Favorite Radio Stations: W T Q R , Rock 92. F a v o rite Musical G roups: H ank W illiam s Jr., Lyn ard S kynard, D a v id A llen Coe. Favorite Athlete: D ale Earnhardt. Favorite Sports Team: Philadelphia Eagles. Hobbies Outside of Sports: Hunting, fishing, je t' skiing, w orking on m y car, snowboarding. Why I Play Football For Davie County: T o pilay on a ; team w ith a w inning attitude and to be w ith some of my best friends. Future Plans: Attend Ap^ palachian State University and major in business or economics. f W e * r e R e a d y T o o ! Twry Ivaltoy Moetovlli« Town Manager НоЬЫи Maekwood PoolaBlackwood's Florist Cooleamee Stove Leary Mocksville Town Planner Tim Brown Western Steer Manager Bob Rauch Foster Rauch Drug Ilynn Stool* Cooleemee Flowers & Gifts Cooleemee Calvin Ijames Davie School Board Professional Services George McIntyre Farm Bureau Mulual Insurance J.D. Bell M c D o n a ld s Billie ReavIs Reavis Ford Oscar Footor Bits Of Brass Edgar Osborn Osborn Phillips 66 Station Cooleemee Bailey Walker Walker’s Laundry And Car Wash IVIark Fowler Pizza Hut Juan Marini American Homes David Black American Homes Stan Henson American Homes DAVIK C O liM A ' KN TI'.UI’UISI': KlXOUl). I IIIIUSDAV. Aiii>.3l. I9K9-7C D a v i e ’s E a s t - W e s t H e r o e s Spry Enjoyed Game — What He Remembers Of It Ron Spry said he was happy ami honored to have played in the 1966 East-West All-Star game in Greensboro, a conlcsl lhal showcased the best high sclunil seniors in the slate. Now, if he could only rciiienibcr it. Spry admits he has a reason for his amnesia attack. “ I was knocked out on the first piay ofthe game," he .said wilh a shrug. Spry was ready to go when the all-star till began. He had been rehabilitating a bad knee and this was his first action on the mended wing. “I was put in on the kickoff team,’’ Ihe offensive guard recall ed. “1 went down to block and got a knee to the helmet. I had a super goose egg on my head. “ And it knocked me un conscious.” It wasn’t an auspicious start, considering Spry was carried off the field one play into Ihe game. “ I was out cold,” he said. “I stayed that way for almost the en- tirc first cju;irler.‘ •Spry did recover and play quite a liil In llic sccond li:ilf as his VVcsl team squashed the Hast 27-7 in one of the more lopsided finals in ali star liislory. "Il was a lol of fun playing with those guys." he said. "I remember how ficrcc the competition was for playing time during practice." Spry also remembers his room mates from Asheboro. a school that had ruined Davic County’s only 10-0 season ever wilh a playoff victory. "Rooming with those guys definitely brought back nieniories of our playoff game,” he said. Coming Full Circic Spry came full circle during his football career at Davie County. As a sophomore, the War Eagles were 3-7 in his sophomore year but as a junior, he started on a line that, helped turn the program around, going 7-3. In 1965, Spry was part of a senior cla.ss that he .said “just click ed.” Davie went 10-0 during the regular season under Jack Ward,' racking up impressive poinI totals. Defensively, the leani recorded six shiiloiils. There was the season opening 33-0 win over Belmoni. A 40-0 victory over Monroe. Back-lo-back wins over West Rowan and Trout man. 63-6 and 59-6. Davic wrap ped up the regular season undefeated by mashing North Rowan 57-0. ‘‘We had a phcnomonal Icam," Spry said. ‘‘There were no superstars and no physically im posing players. We had a lot of confident .seniors who just liked lo play. And the longer we were together, the better we becamc.” Quarterback Earl Shoaf, back.s Ronnie Beck and Naryx Barnhardt and end Ronnie Foster were all key ingredients. The longer the season went, the more excited the Davie players becamc. “The fans packed the stands and Ihc support grew wilh every game,” Spry .said. ‘‘Being a senior and having a winning football team made it a pretty good fall to go to school at Davie Counly." Hul not all of Ihc 10-0 season was sweet as candy. Despite all of the routs, Ihe game Spry remembers is a 13-7 squeaker over Mooresville. Thai was the night he injured his knee. "Oh, I renicmber it vividly," he said, wearing a painful expression. "After one play, the whistle blew and a Mooresville caughi me from the side. I was planted and niy knee just buckled." The diagnosis was torn cartilage, and although he was on crutches for a while, he played through the season, finishing with tlie 26-19 loss to Asheboro in the first round of the 3-A playoffs. “ We could’ve won the game," he said. “But it couldn't take away from what wc accomplished.” Scared Of Knee Spry had a few offers to continue his career in football but said, “Most of the schools were scared of my knee. I went to North Carolina State University.” Like his father, who was a career military man. Spry entered the Air Force and was discharged as a cap tain. He is now a business consul tant with a firm located in Greensboro and lives in Rowan County with his wife, Carolyn, and two sons, Eric, 20, and Craig, 17. Eric was a player for Randall Ward al West. Ward was a player on Ihe 10-0 team. It’s ironic Ihat Spry now lives in Rowan County, considering those schools were Ihe ones he most wanted to defeat in high school. “ I don’t know why, but we alway.s had an intense rivalry with the Rowan County schools,” he said. ‘‘We wanted to beat them more than anybody. “Those were good days,” he said of his high school career. “Wc were all involved in sports and we had good coachcs. Ward and Bill Peeler were dynamite together.” Spry and his former teammates all went their separate ways but Spry says, “ I see the Beck boys every now and then. Mike Keller, the other guard on the lO-O team, is now working for Ron Spry the Highway Patrol. “ Playing football in high schoor is something I’ll never forget,” he - said. “Just knowing that Dayie hasn’t had a 10-0 season since is, special. •> “ And getting to play in the East- West game was special. I’ll always, remember that,” Well, he’ll remember most of it ‘ — after the first quarter, that is.' ' Coach, We’re Ready Too! Doretha Nichols Fashion Dimensions Bonnie McDaniel Bits Of Brass Rick Daywait Davie Tractor & Implement J.jrByerlySon Of Lynn Hicks (Attorney) Mary U « MMMolMan Hapñf House MlnMures -Tom FosterMocksville Police Chief Linda McDaniel Granny's Ice Cream Bill Wooten SherlH Stacoo Spillman Spillman Lime And Fertilizer Admlnlsinrtive Asslstsnt Cooleemee . County Msneger’s Oftlee Davie-Mocksviile Chamber Of Commerce Buster Cleary Cleary Auto Sales Rob Loudin Sister's II Florist Judy Shore Alan Carter Shore's Plumbing & Heating Mocksville Savings & Loan Michelle DeeseF & C Grocery Cooleemee . Keith Hiller Nationwide Insurance Bryan Cranberry Carolina Tire Debbie Pennington Shore’s Plumbing & Heating Shannon Spillman Spillman Auto & Fuel Service Cooleemee Wade Leonard Attorney Johnny Frye Emergency Service Director 8C—DAVIE COUNTY ENTEKI’KISK UECOKI), THURSDAY, Анк.31, 19ЯУ Jayvees Have Size Of A Varsity Team ; Listen to these nuiiiljcrs. '■ Davic County lias four tacl^lcs .'who average 6- i , 246 pounds. JOf 28 players on the roster, eight weigh at least 190. i A good sized varsity, you isay? • It would be for any school, ;except at Davie County, where :they grow ’em big down on tho ¡farm. ; Those numbers are on the Jayvee team. “ W c treat Thursday night ¡(the jayvees play on Thursday) just like Friday,” .said coach iRandall W ard. : That’s a good statement, con- Isidering the sophomores (and fo u r juniors) w ill be as big as ;some varsity teams the W ar (Eagles w ill face this season. J Defensive coordinator Buddy ;Lowery went a step further. ' “ I think this team as as much rpotential as any jayvee team ¡since I ’ve been here.” • ; D a v ie certain ly has the jweapons on offense, led by •former Soulh D avie quarterback iRandy Brew er and tailback ,Chris Gregory. ( W ard likes both his quarter- ibacks in B rew er and Jason :Hom e, saying, “ Both are doing ¡real w ell in picking up the o f- jfense. I ’m w ell pleased w ith W h o f them .” j G regory, a 6 -0 , 155-pound -slasher, has really impressed W'aril. ■‘lie 's a good athlete with good speed. Chris is good in the open fiekl and can avoid tacklcrs.” C hris M an n and Shane M auldin w ill be the fullbacks w h ile D ana H aneiine and Kelvin Ijames both have good speed at tailback. “ Haneiine is having leg pro blems right now bul when he gets in there, we expect him to play w e ll,” said W ard. Brew er w ill have a host o f flankers lo throw to, including Jason Garw ood, South D avie’s leading receiver last year. “ H e has good hands,” W ard said. Brew er can also count on Jason M cC ray, Steven Seats and Darren Crotts. A n d y E v e rh a rd t, B rian Boger, How ard Riddle and Shane Crotts are tight ends. ‘ ‘Just like the varsity, we ask our tight ends lo do a lot, ” said W ard. “ They have to block like a linem an and catch like a flanker. I ’m happy w ith the tight ends’ progress.” Another big lineman is center Toby Kennedy, who stands 6-1, 210 pounds. H e and Lee Aibar ty are fighting for that spot. G uards w ill be 6 -2 , 185-pound Duane Vestal, Joey G ranadoes, N e il C harest, Lester Jones and A ndrew Brock. Brock goes against the norm. 1989 Jayvee Roster N o. N am e Pos. H t.W t. Class 66 Joey Granodoes L 5-10 145 10 12 Randy Brewer QB 5-11 155 10 68 N eil Chares!L 6-0 215 10 14 Jason Horne Q B 5-9 140 10 69 Lester Jones L 5-9 180 11 20 Kelvin Ijames RB 5-6 162 10 70 Kevin A ibarty L 5-11 230 11 22 Darren Crotis W R 5-5 128 10 71 Duane Vestal L 6-2 185 10 24 Chris Gregory RB 5-11 155 10 74 Robert W illiam s L 6-0 223 10 28 Dana Haneiine RB 5-8 140 10 75 Casey James L 6-3 263 10 33 Chris M ann LB 5-10 155 10 78 M ike Tilley L 6-2 258 10 42 Shane M auldin RB 5-8 150 10 80 Andy Everhardt T E 5-11 165 10 43 Steven Seals W R 5-6 115 11 82 Jason M cC ray W R 5-10 125 10 47 C ory M cC lam rock RB 5-7 150 10 83 Jason Garwood W R 5-11 120 10 53 Lee A ibarty L 5-8 137 .10 84 Shane Crotts T E 5-9 125 10 54 A ndrew Brock L 5-8 143 10 86 Brian Boger T E 5-11 190 10 55 Toby Kennedy L 6-1 215 10 87 H ow ard Riddle T E 6-0 150 10 standing only 5-8, 143 pounds but W ard said he liked the job he’s doing. The meal is al tackle, where Casey James (6-3, 263), M ike Tilley (6 -2 ,2 5 8 ), Kevin Aibarty (5-11, 230 and Robert W illiam s (6-0, 223) w ill intim idate the defense. W illiam s is a transfer Low ery said many o f the defensive positions arc up in the air righl now. Everhardt and M ann w ill be the linebackers, w hile Boger is al noseguard. Haneiine and Vestal w ill be the defensive ends. A ny one o f the big linemen can play defense and Low ery said to definitely expect K en nedy and James in there. The jayvees have only six defensive backs on the roster so Low ery said G regory, Seats, M cC ray, Garw ood and Shane and Darren Crotts should all see action. “ The jayvees have had tw o good scrimmages and w e hope they keep im proving,” W ard said. “ It’s a learning process for sure fo r them . In jayvee you sometimes move a person from position to another fo r the bet ter o f the team and w e’ve done that in some areas. C o a c h , W e * r e R e a d y T o o ! i ь jMRlfor Cop* t ___I Ubby'» Btauty Shop (Toni Cop«)iMocksvill* Sporting Oootto Woodltit S.W. Brown Jr.S.W. Brown Jr. & Son Grocery Wholesale Mik* Johnson Mocksvllle Shell Station Jayson WIsocarvor Bowens Dairy Products QarlaRd Bowon : Bowons Oilry Products aigl Marlon s & T Outlet Mevo RIdonhour Allstate Insurance Kip Miller Miller's Restaurant Hilda Foster Davie Florist Frances Tutterow Carolina Drilling & Blasting Robort Rodgors Woodman Ot Th* World Julius Suitor Principal South Davie Junior High Mike Garner Recreation Department Mike Barnette Barnette Heating & Air Conditioning Inc. Donna Lawrence Sweet Lovers Haven Jason Daniel Bits Of Brass Alan Smith Crown Drugs Mocksviile DAVIK COUN'I V KM KKPKISK RICCOKI), riIUKSDAY, Лиц-З!, I989-9C Realignment: Part II It will be a long ride for the Davie County football team and fans, th ree Davie juniors (from left): Patrick Murphy, Britt Osborne and Brent Wall have their own method of finding a way to the — Photo by Robin Fergusson ^Road Trips* Realrgnment Has Put Davie County In The Driver’s Seat B y R onnie G allagher Oavie County Enteprise-Record The North Carolina H igh School Athletic Association told its 300-plus members that realignm ent was necessary in 1985. It said the, same thing for 1989. And in both casés, director Charlie 'Adams said realignment would be based on geography, school enrollment and natural nyalries. ■ i : Has Adams ever been to this area? O b viously not, considering D avie County and . Rowan have been put in the Central Piedm ont Conference w ith schools from W inston-Salem and Greensboro. ; N atural rivalries? D avie and South have nothing whatsoever in com m on w ith Greensboro and W inston-Salem . ’ Geography? Has Adams looked at a map recently? D avie County is 4 9 miles away from Gieensboro. South Rowan is even iuither. ' ScHool enrbllment? W e ll, one out o f three ain’t bad. For thè most part, realignm ent is ac cepted and there is usually only a handful o f schools who are dissatisfied. D avie and touth are not satisfied, whether it means à hill o f beans o r not. : W h y, they ask, are they placed in a con ference w ith Greensboro schools? ■ The question most heard is why aren’t the Greensboro schools and the W inston- Salem schools all herded into the same conferences? : The reason is m oney, one o f the factors fté N C H S A A never mentioned on its list. ;. One source who was on the realignment c o m m itte e , trie d to e xp lain w hy Greensboro and W inston-Salem schools were split up. “ W e expect good gates for conference games, regardless o f who a school is play ing;” he said. “ But the nonconference games, in some cases, do not make much money. W e wanted to make those games more attractive. “ If Greensboro Page and Greensboro Grim sley were in the same confcrence, o f course, they’d have a big crowd. But a crowd is going to show regardless o f whether it’s a conference game or not for that one. So let them play nonconfercnce, get a big crowd there, adn then get big crowds at the confercncc games too.” Il malccs sense, really. Football, especial ly at Davie, carries the rest of the program. So the bigger the crowds the better. The N C H S A A has placed Page and Sm ith in the M etro 4 -A and G rim sley and Dudley in the Central Piedm ont C on ference. W inston-Salem has C arver, East Forsyth, Glenn and N orth Forsyth in the M etro and Reynolds, W est Forsyth, Parkland and Reynolds in the C PC . “ It was set in concrete before we went through the process that Greensboro and W inston-Salem schools would be split up,” the source said. Adam s did the same thing in Charlotte, splitting the 10 schools, five in each o f the Southwestern and T ri County leagues. Fayetteville is perhaps the only large N orth Carolina city w ith all eight o f its schools in the same conference (the M id - South). Raleigh has four o f its five — S anderson, M illb ro o k , E n lo e and Broughton — in the Cap Five, along w ith Garner. O nly Athens D rive is in the T ri Six. There are 13 conferences in each o f the 4 -A and 3 -A w ith 11 each in the 2 -A and 1-A. But you possibly have to go all the way down to 1-A to find longer drives than the ones Davie and South Rowan have to make. • D on’t Ihink that it’s only Davie and South g ru m b lin g about rea lig n m en t. T h e Greensboro schools are dreading the 50-m ile excursion down 1-40 just as much. Dudley athletic director M ary Jo Lentz was asked if any o f her Panther athletes even knew where D avie County was locatcd. “ I ’m not sure 1 know where it is ," she said. “ W e’re conccrned with the travel and e.x- penses. M y personal opinion is that it’s loo far. It w ill definitely be costly and I don’t think our fans are going to follow us that fa r.” Lentz said that the longest trip Dudley used to make was to South Stokes, located in W alnut Cove and added, “ There were only about 15 people in the stands so I ’m not optimistic about them coming to Davie C ounty.” Long-time Grimsley athletic director Bob Saw yer said traffic would be a problem . “ I dread the traffic jam s dow n 1-40 through W inston-Salem . I ’m sure it w ill really slow us dow n.” But he said he was happy to be in an eight-team league, which eases the pain o f a trip to the faraway reaches o f China G rove. “ A fter a six-team league, this is a definite plus. Eight teams is an ideal number. It w ill be a long drive to South Rowan but they’re always com petitive and w e’re looking for ward to playing them . A nd w e’re looking forw ard to being in the same conference w ith D avie County. W e ’ve played them in the playoffs and have always been treated very w ell. D avie County has some really fine people there.” B esides the road trip s , the tw p Greensboro schools bring something else to the C P C — the intim idation factor. A lready, most o f the league’s coaches are picking either G rim sley or Dudley to w in the title in 1989. Davie coach Randall W ard said his team w ill just go out and play like G rim sley was any other team. “ W hether w e’re playing a city or rural ■school, attitude w ill make the difference,” said W ard who knows about long trips. W hile at W est Rowan, his teams had to travel an hour and 45 minutes to Forest H ills. Sun V alley, which is 17 miles from Charlotte, was another long ride. "Y o u can'l conirol rciilignm ent so there’s nothing positive with com plaining,” he said. "T h is is the conference w e’ve been put in and w c’ll just do the best we can.” 1989 Davie Football Schedule Sept. 1 — at North Iredell Sept. 8 — at Statesville Sept. 15 — ANSON COUNTY Sept. 22 — at Parkland , Sept. 29 — G. DUDLEY Oct. 6 — MT. TABOR Oct. 13 — at Reynolds Oct. 20 — W EST FORSYTH Oct. 27 — at South Rowan Nov. 3 — G. GRIMSLEY Realignment by Conference 4-A 3-A Z-A 1-A DIq E*»I (7) n >Гкв (Up) Wilson Hunt (Up)Kmslon NorihessteinNo Nnsh Rocky Mount Gtoenvilie Ro»e Confatvnc* 3 MldMtUm (8)E Wayne GoWsboro Wiim, Hogo*fd jBCkSOnvIlle Wilm Laney New BernWilm New Har>over So. Weyrt« Conftrenc« Э Mld-SotJlh (8) Pay BytdPay. Cape Fear (Up) Pay. Pine Foiesl Fey. Sanford Pay. 71SI Рву. Srnim Pay. South View Pay. Wastover Conf*reiK« 4 Southeatlern (в) <кпмп Co.Ионе Co.Lee Co.Lumberton (Up) Pineoest Richmond Scotland W. Robeson Confereoc* 5 Capital Aim 1 (5)Ral. Btouohton Rel Enloe Garner Ral. Millbrooh Rat. Sandersort Cont0f»ncm В CaplUI ArM 1 (в) Ape«(Up)Ral. Attiens Drive Smrthliald-SelmaTnlori Conference 7 PAC«(t)Chapel Hill Durham (Up)Dur. KiUiide (Up) Durttam Jordan No. Durham OrangeRoxboio Person Hend. Vance Oxford Wetib Conference 1 Ter Roanoke (7) OertieHertfoid Co NW HaMa*SE HaMax (Up)SW Edgecombe Taft»»o (Up} Washington Conference 3 Coaaut (7)Conley Havoiock N. Lenoir Pender Co W. Catleiel (Down) W. Craven White OaK Conference 3 Triangle (7)Bedd>ngrie(d Harnett C.S. Johnston So. Durham So. NashWF-Rolesvine (Up) W. Hamatt Conference 4 Mld-Slete (6) Bartlett YarKey Cummings E. Atamance (Up) E. Randolph S. Alamance W. Alamance Conference 5 Tried (8)E. Guilford (Up) Sioneviiie-Mad.-M. Mof ahead NE Ouittord NW Guilford RekJsviiie ConfererKe 1 Nortl>eeatern (в) Ho'me*E B«Ruton Northampton.Easi Plymouth Roanohe Rap'd« WWimmsfon Conference 3 E. Ptalna (6) Ayden Cntton (Up) E. Carteret Farmviiie C.Greene C.H. Pitt Pamlico ConfererKe 3 East Cenlrel (6)AyCOCkClinlon Rocklngha W. Guiriorilam ConfererKe e Trt-County(l) Aeheboro HP Andrews HP Ceniftt Ragsdale S. Guilford SE Guilford (Down) SW Guilford (Up) Trlntty Conferenee7 C. C«rolln«(U2A)C. OtvWson (3-A) Leiington (3-A)N. Davidaon (3-A)Ê. Oavidaon (г-А| Ledford (г-А)»man (2-A)Thomaavine (2-A) W. Davidson (2-A1 WS Canrer E. Foraylh W-S Gtenn (Up) N. Forayth S. Siekn Burt. Wiihama C.nedtnont(l)ОштСо. Mt. Tabor W-S Parldand W-SReyrtolde S. Rowan W. Foreyth ConfereneelOTrf^eunty(n Shatby Crest E. Gaston Char. Harding (Up)N. Mecklenburg Char, dymptc W. Chariotte W. Mecklenburg Confererwell Southweetern (•) Cast. Ashbrook E. Mecklenburg Char. Garingar Gasi. Hunter Husa Highway 51 ConferenottS.r -C. CabaiTua Concord (Up)E. Rowan Kann. Brown N. Rowan (Up) NWCebamie W. Rowan (Up) Conferaneet FeeiMiieW N. Iredell N. Surry S. Iredell Staleevile W. iredeM Wikes C. ContemelOnxSli(l)E.Urtoofn Foard Hibriten Unoolnton St. Stephens W. Catdwe« ConfereiMall Southweetern (7) BurnsE. Rutherfbrd Kings Mountain N. Gaston R-S Certiial E. OupNn Konan S. Lenoir Wallace-Rose Hill Conrerenoe4 Weccemew (I) E. Bladen Falimont N. Brunswick S. Brunawicit S. Robeson (Up)W. Brunswick W. Columbus Whnavitie ConfererKe S CepnalAree(l)BunnClaylonFranktinton (Up) Fuquay-Vahna Louiabura * N.C. Scl. & Math S. Granville Warran Co. Conference« C. Tar Heel (•)GrahamJordan-Matthewa SWPUnion Pinea W. MonlQomery Cortfer«nce7 C. Caroline (МаД)С. DavUaon (Э-А) Lein0ton<9-A)N. Davidaon (3-A)E. DavtdMKt (2-A Ledford (2-A) Randleman (2-A) ThomatvNIe <2-A)W. Davidaon (2-A) Conferarwet flochyfUver(l) Aftemarte Chartotto CathoUc Foresi HiH Monroe Ml. Pleasant N. Slanly Parkwood ConfererKe 1 Alt>emar1e (7) CarrxJen Co.CuirrtucH Gates Co.Manleo (Down) Northampton-West Perquiman» Co. Weldon Conf«rerKe2 Tobecco Belt (10)* Aurora* Bear Grais Chocowlnity Columbia Creswell* Haneras Jamesviiie Mattamuskeet N. Edgecombe Roanoke Coeetal Pleine (7) Dlion Jones Sr.L«e<ine RtcMands SW OnskMr Swansboro TopsaH Caroline (f)• ENCSDHobbtonLakewoodMidwayN. DuplinN. JoTinstonPrincetonftoaewoodUnion CenlerwMt •owttwnW Acme Detco Biadenboro darkton Tabor City Tar Heel *Naklna • Wittiamt rs«p Conlarene*«UMnta«rm«»(DUniefMJMagnoliaOmxn RedSprinea St Paul» C.T«rHMlO)■СШт\С.Demone.f N. Moore S.Stanty W.Sianty E. WUkee EMn NW Aalte •.0latrtet7(l) Bandy« BetaemerCtty Bunker НЛ ChaaeEi-yv«;up) Newlon-Conoverw.unoom f»W Tnfon _____ E. Sum Foft)usn Ml. Aky (Up) N. Stoke* (Up) SUrmounl Surry C. W. Wilke* Mitchell .. FtaSftlSSr’»М И Co. Our Best Wishes to the gallant Davie H^h Team Sara Lee Knit Products Narrow Fabrics Facility Hwy. 801. Advancc Davie Distribution Warehouse Ciunat/cr Road. Advancc Hanes Printables l-ariiMiiulDn Ril. & 1-40 lOC-DAVIE COUNTY ENTKRI’KISK HKCOU», THURSDAY, Aii)i.3I. 1989 The Coaches Lakey Teaching Perfect Subject Lakey Davie County’s newest acUli- tion to the coaching staff ap pears to be teaching the pcrfcct subject. L a d d in Laicey is te a c h in g g e o g rap h y, s o m e th in g his fa m ily know s ail about. It has c e rta in ly m o v e d around the country enough. “ For 13 years, my fam ily was like a band o f gypsies,” Lakey said during a recent foot ball practice. He graduated from Columbus High School in Columbus, Ohio in 1983. H e attended Ohio State University. H e played basket ball on a W est V irginia State team that toured H aw aii for 10 days and eventually finished se cond in the N A IA . H e has enough to fill a scrap book on his playing career and now, he hopes to fill one for his ctniching. The 2S-ycar old w ill lc:id Ihc jayvee girls baskclball team as well as serving as the I'oolbali team's athletic trainer. “ I ’m really looking forward to coaching basketball.” he .said. "B ul right now, my job is athletic trainer for the football team .” Lakey, whose father Edward, is a form er coach at Boonviile and superintendant o f schools in Yadkin C ounty, has taken classcs on C PR and first aid. “ It’s been hot a few days but w e’ve had some nice weather for practice,” Lakey said. “ M y best days arc when I just stand here and do hardly anything. If the team doesn’t need m e, then everyone is feel ing okay.” Lakey had to quit playing at W est V irginia State due to a stress fracture in his back. Now , he is looking forward to enter ing the sport in another capacity. “ I haven’t talked to Coach (Charles) Crenshaw yet but I ’m excited,” he said. The Davie County coaching staff consists of (from left): David Hunt, Rex Allen, Laddin Lakey, head coach Randall Ward. Buddy Lowery, Marty Hem ric and M elvin Fogg. ^ -' ^ — Photo by Robin Fergusson Besides geography, Lakey w ill also teach U .S. History and Current Issues. • Below are capsule looks at the other D avie County assistants: B uddy Low ery: A graduate o f N orth Rowan and East Carolina University, Low ery is in his sccond year as defensive coordinator. H e was a defensive end for East C arolina and is in his 13th year coaching at Davie. H e has coached the defensive line as w ell. Low ery is more w ell-know n for his wrestling teams, which have never lost in the C e n tra l P ied m o n t Conference. R ex A llen: A 1979 graduate o f D avie, A llen coaches the o f fensive line. H e is in his fifth year o f coaching. A 1983 graduate o f Appalachian State, he has coached track and jayvee basketball durinc his career. M a rty H e in ric : A solid, athlete at East W ilkes, H em ric went on to play football at G uilford, graduating there in 1986. ' i H e coaches linebackers and rush ends. D uring his stay' at D avie, he has also cp ach ^' track and jayvee b a s e b a ll.. Foggy Hunt Return To Sidelines ' Looking at the group o f Ran dall W ard’s assistant football :coaches, you’ll fm d some new >r.ames w ith fam iliar faces, j A n d a lth o u g h ;M elvin Fogg > n d D a v id H u n t haven’t been oh sidelines in. leceht years, w ith e r is a newcom er to the a rt o f Hunt coaching football. ^ .Both have been successful coaches and nothing should change for either, according to W ard. ; “ T h e y ’re both excellent coaches," he praised. “ They’re Icnowledgeable and have good '^football backgrounds.” ■ i So w hy còme back? 5, “ They needed someone to ^ o u h ," H unt said m atter-of- ■ fectly. “ It shouldn’t be a pro blem . I ’ve been all over the place, coaching almost every part o f the team . And Coach ;Fogg is one o f the better secon dary coaches around.” • It seems Fogg is “ assistant eveiything” at D avie County. N ot only w ill he direct the defensive backs for W ard, he is also the assistant principal at the school. “ It’s not the perfect situa tion,” said Fogg. “ There’s ad vantages and disadvantages. There w ill be extra w ork for people in the office and for the coaches.” W hat many in D avie County may not realize is that Fogg is bringing a successful football past w ith him . H e began coaching in South Carolina in 1969 and filtered up to W est Rowan and Concord before becoming Davie County’s assis tant principal. W hile at Concord, one o f the state’s most respected pro grams, Fogg was E .Z . Sm ith’s defensive coordinator and the Spiders were always known for their aggressive, tenacious defenders. Fogg said he was happy to get back on the field. “ I love it,” he said. “ I ’m really tickled to help.” H e came back to the field due to teaching vacancies. “ The teaching vacancies were something w e had to look a t,” he said. “ W e felt the need for me to come back.” Fogg said he was comfortable the first day o f practice. “ I felt like I was where I ’m supposed to b e,” he said after a m orning practice o f two-a-day workouts. “ There’s been some small trends and subtle changcs in football since I left. But the kids have a great attitude and they’re anxious. They’ve had a heck o f a w eek.” Fogg, who coached against W ard a few years ago, said everyone, not just the players, are ready for the season to begin. “ I don’t know what the season holds,” he said, “ but there are good boys on this team. They’ll be winners every Friday night.” • H unt is out on the practice field for the first tim e in years and many m ight think he’s scouting for baseball players. H is varsity squad at D avie has won three straight Central Pied m ont Conference titles. But instead, he is looking for good tight ends and w ide receivers as an assistant football coach. It’s taken some getting used to. The biggest adjustment for H unt was figuring out which was the home side during the firsl scrimmage with West Rowan. “ The only w eird thing was that it felt like we were on the wrong side o f the fie ld ,” he chuckled. “ The last tim e I coached, the home side was over here.” H unt, w ho once was in charge o f the entire jayvee pro gram by him self, has coached at John G raham H igh School (now W arren C ounty) and Princeton, where he sent M ike Atkinson from the l-A school to D uke. But he said he is a d if ferent coach from his earlier days. “ I ’m more m ellow now ,” he said. The first order o f business After taking a hiatus from coaching; Melvin Fogg has returned; as secondary coach for Davie County. , . u - Plwto by Mike B ^ n l ^ V afiter accepting the assistant coaching position was talk to the fam ily and see if there was a problem w ith him taking on the new position. ; ' “ It wasn’t th « big o f a deal w ith them ,” he- s « d ;; “ I ’m never hom e anyw ay.’’ ' ?i > Wew Faces Newman Joins North Davie Staff; Martin New At South Call In Sports 6 3 4 - 2 1 2 0 V N orth and South D avie are w elcom ing tw o new coaches to their staffs in the first year for both men. ; George Newm an is coaching football and track at N orth D avie w hile Todd C arter w ill coach football at South. : N ew m an com es fro m Seym our, T n ., a small hamlet just outside o f Knoxville. H e at tended the University o f Ten nessee where he majored in physical education, biology and general science. This is his first full-tim e teaching position. “ 1 had a friend who knew Belty W est,” Newm an said o f his excursion to Davic County. A fter three days o f being a teacher, Newm an said he was having plenty o f fun. “ 1 fell the excitement of be ing prepared but you’re con stantly on the m ove. It’s pressurized fun.” The 26-year old Newman (ii'oi'Hi' NeHHiiin stands 6-4 bul w ill not coach baskclball. Insicad, he w ill be Ihe head track coach. Tdtltl Ciirter C arter has brought South a coach thal ha.s combined two unlikely talents — football and music. “ There’s not many music teachers coaching football,” he said. “ But it’s a good way to get exercise and get involved w ith the kids. During your first year, w e’re so used to getting your teaching plans d o w n , .sometimes you don’t get to be involved as much as you’d lik e .” C a rte r attended South Johnston High School in Four Oaks and majored in music education and chorus at the University o f North C arolina. As Calli.son’s assistant, he w ill be in charge o f the offensive line. "W h en 1 played, 1 was a center so 1 have experience with the offensive lin e ,” he said. "W h en I found oul I ’d be coaching, 1 began keeping up w ith football again,” said the 23-ycaro ld . " I ’m looking for ward to it.” m E&6LES We’re Behind You! J.P. GREEN MILLING CO. 496 Depot Street Mocksville, NC 704-634-2126 1)Л\ IK COUN TY KNTKKI’UISK UKCOUI), I IIURSDAV. 1989-IlC Garter Country Carter’s First Game At Mooresville Full Of ironies MOORESVILLE - Moinems al'lcr Moorcsville's 27-7 opL-ninj; iiiglil victory over West Rowan Frid.iy, Blue Devils tiiiicli Mike Carter stood in the middle of tlie I'leld. siirroinul- cd by a swarm of people congniliiliiliiii! llie farmer Davie County coach on his lirst win in his new town. He had just shown a pack ed house a new offense — the wishbone — and it had ■ everyone on the home side of Ihe beautiful stadium buzzing. It was hopefully the begin ning of something special. But ironically, Ihc people Carter siniling, laughing and patting Carter on the back were not from Mooresville. They were from Davie County. There was Tommy and Vickie Fleming, Tom my Turner, Barry Whitlock and many more. Young and old alike. There was Carter's ef fervescent “better-half,” wife Betty, hugging people she had come to love bul hadn’t seen since the spring. She was thanking everyone for coming. She looked like she was ready to cry. These people had come to Mooresville as a tribute to Carter, a man who came to Davie in 1981 and brought the program where it should be — the 20th century. At that time, he brought discipline to a pro gram that was losing interest fast. But more im portantly, he brought participation lo Davie County football. In his last season, Davie was on ly 3-7 but over 100 boys were playing football. Increasing participation is Carter’s forte and that’s why he was hired by Mooresville, a hamlet that loves its sports but had trouble competing in the perennially-tough Southern District 7 Con- Ronnie Gallagher ferencc. The team did nol have a jayvee team for five years and it was lucky if 30 boys came out for the varsity. Hiring Carter paid immediate dividends. Me has 36 on the varsity, 29 on the jayvees. He has seven a.ssistanl coaches, an overwhelming number for a 2-A school. And he is now undefeated. “ It’s been great,” said Carter, who came over in Ihe middle of last year. “ Everybody has been real excited about football and we expected a full house tonight. I think ihey enjoyed lhcm.selves.” • Carter said getting the wishbone installed al Mooresville reminded him a lot of when he arriv ed in Mocksville. “ It’s very similar,” he said. Bul let’s face il. The wishbone was nol made for Davie Counly. The War Eagles never had the speed or ihe good throwers to make it work. If his first game in Mooresville is any indica tion, it may work much belter in this town. The reason is the different type of athletes. Davie Counly fans watched the wishbone Fri day and saw many ironies: • Fans complained that Carter didn’t throw enough but on his first offensive play al Mooresville. lie called a pass lhal went for a 17-yaiil gain. Tlie Blue Devils scored on Ihe very next play. In I'acl. Mooresville llircw nine limes, which is on a pace lor perhaps 100 throws in a season. While 111 Ihe 4-A Central I'iedinont Conl'erence, Davie never approached that mimlicr. • Fans complained he never passed when he got close to the goal line. But Carter's new i|iiancrback. Nathan While, threw a touchdown piiss, • l-ans complained that Carter played only .seniors bul liis leading rusher Friday nighl wa.s — are you ready for this? — a freshman. He also had four sophomores in Ihc lineup. “ Il will be different here," Carter .said. "Nathan While is a good quarterback. Wc have a lot speed.” Of course, there were things the Davie fans saw lhal reminded them of yesterday. Some things, it .seems, never change: • After the llrst touchdown, Mooresville looked confused while setting up for the extra point. The Blue Devils didn’t have enough men on the field and were penalized. Sound familiar? Carter’s teams never had much succcss wilh extra points and missed two against West Rowan. • The wishbone cranked out 214 yards rushing. Il fell good watching White fake to the fullback, fake to the first halfback and then hand off lo the second back on the оГ reliable drive play. “Il worked well for us,” he said. Sound familiar? • The wishbone fumbled three limes, slopping drives. For good measure. West Rowan’s wishbone fumbled three limes. Sound familiar? • I sat on both sides of the field. And 1 must say, the atmosphere was quile different on each. West Rowan’s was quiet and very still. Moorcsville’s 1988 In Review ^Snakebite il': ' Òàvie County^ Hard Luck Team Of 1988 ' Mike Carter said he felt like Davie County had a playoff- ................explain the 3-7 record. riCaiter knew things weren’t •going his w ay w hen, fo r instance; " ■ -Ji J pavie outrushed North .4>ividwn 287-61 and lost. Dayie m off i24 first downs to. Mount 'l^abor’s seven, ouirusbed thé Spartans 251-87, and lost. , • Davie rail off 44 plays to Kannapolis' 10 in the second half and controlled the ball for : ;21'of the 24 minutes and lost. ;■ ‘‘I guess only thé fans who fkw us every game knovir what »it good team we had,”; Carter said. “Thftt’s liot muchironsola- /tion birt at least the boys knew thèy were respect^. Nobody îever diought we’d be an easy , -game just because we were in ;la«t place,” '^'jkanniapolis codch Bob ;tem ll agreed, stating, “After 'patching them dominate us, it’s I iluud to believe they only went 3-7.1 was wondering if we were 1 ¡ever going to stop them. _ ..V‘‘l^ple don’t realize "how ; gpbd they are. They have a heck : of a team.” ‘ Below are reviews of each game in 1988 with Carter’s comment on each and ovcrull ^ Central Piedmont Con- ■ ference record; Davie County 21 North Iredell 7 Duone Campbell made his debut at fullback and rushed for 105 yards and a score. But it was Reggie Sales’ two scoring runs of 34 and 20 that won the game in the second half. He finished with 76 yards on eight carries. Carter’s Comment: “ We made the big plays on defense. When you hold a team as good as North Iredell to only seven points, you’ve done the job.” Record: 1-0 overall; 0-0 in CPC. Stuti'.sville 7 Davie County 6 It was scoreless at halftime bul quarterback Marc Holcomb engineered a 70-yard, 12-play drive for a 6-0 lead midway through the fourth period. Statesville came right back for a score and extra point to win, despite, Davie outrushing the Greyhounds, 239-171. Carter’s Comment: “I think we played better than Statesville and should’ve won. We moved the ball up and down the field and we had eight or nine plays where we were inches from breaking it.” Record: 1-1 overall; 0-0 in CPC. Davie County 35 East Forsyth 28 - Davie was at its highest after the most exciting game of the year. The War Eagles stunned East for the second straight year, leading 21-6 before holding on when Jody Shore in tercepted a pass in the endzone in Ihe final seconds. Davie outrushed East 300-88 and racked up 19 first downs. Carter’s Comment: “ This _ game will give us some respec tability. The team really need ed this. The secondary саше Ihrough for us when we need ed them the most.” Record: 2-1 overall; 0-0 in CPC. Parkland 24 Davie County 7 For one of the few times, Davie was outrushed 311-198 as the Mustangs look advantage of two roughing the kicker penalties to lead 17-0 at halftime. But afler Campbell scored to open the second half, Davie inarclied 89 yards from its own two to the Mustang nine, where Sales fumbled. Witli it, went any chance of winning the game. Sales rmisli- ed with 75 yards and Campbell 70. C arter’s Conunent; "They just whipped us goiHl. Had we scorcd on that possession where we fiiinbled. it might have been a differem game." was frenzied. These people want a winner and they hope Carter can bring it to them. I expected one reunion — the one with Davie County — but I was served a treat. I received two reunions in one. First, Ihc Davie Counly reunion. Not only were the fans there, a quick look in the bleachers saw Northwest Cabarrus defensive coordinator Dan Henderson, two years removed from the Davie sidelines. There was Northwest Cabarrus’ neweslv addition to the staff, Keith Whitaker, fresh from ' Carter’s system. A We.st Rowan assistant, Charlie Little, was a volunteer coach for Carter last ; season. And West’s newest coach, Ron Raper, used lo coach wilh Carter in Salisbury. That reunion didn’t shock me. The Norlh Davidson reunion did. Everywhere 1 looked, there were former patrons of my alma-mater. Mooresville’s principal Roger Hiatt came out . on Ihe field afterwards to shake Carter’s hand. He was my high school science teacher and I hadn’t seen him that happy since my friends and ; I graduated. j". The Mooresville superintendant, Sam Houston, ' who brought Carter lo the Iredell County town, is a former principal al North Davidson. j' The athletic director, Steve Young, was a - coach al North Davidson. He married Crystal Bruton, a former star athlete at North, whose J brother, Scott, is now an assistant to Carter. ' Regardless of where we were from, we all left'*' Mooresville Friday night wearing a smile. The f Davie fans were happy for Carter. I was happy to see all those North Davidson faces wearing !, smiles. ; And Mooresville fans were simply happy. Thanks to Carter and an offense he made famous ■ al Davie County, they ihink they have a winner. Record: 2-2 overall; O-I in CPC. North Davidson 19 Davie County 18 Davie dominated the Knights on the ground but three extra points were blocked. The game went into overtime, where Holcomb scored easily but Key’s point-after attempt was blocked. North scored and made their point. The loss over shadowed a 165-yard perfor mance by Campbell. Carter’s Comment: “ This loss was very demoralizing to our team. It wil be tough to pick ourselves back up. Don’t blame pur kicker for this loss. We never gave Denny a chance to , kick.” Record: 2-3 overall; 0-2 in CPC. Mt. Tabor 26 Davie County 20 Carter knew he was in for a long night when Davie ran off 23 plays to Mount Tabor’s three in the first quarter and the game was still scoreless. Mount Tabor grabbed a lead only to see Davie score for a 20-19 lead with under two minutes. But on the ensuing kickoff, a fumbled ball was scooped up and miraculously run back for the winning .score. C a rte r’s C om m ent: “ Everyone who saw the game knows wc should’ve won. We did everything wc wanted ex cept win the game. We’re dellnitely snakebii.” Record: 2-4 overall; 0-3 in CPC. Reynolds 19 Davie County 6 For the Ibui ili straight year in the CPC, Reynolds defeated Davie and did it handily. Davie had only 40 yards rushing, the lowest total in Carter’s tenure. Holcomb was sacked six times. Reynolds luul nothing lo brag alioul wilh only 168 yards of loial olTense. Freddy Fi.sher scorcd Davie’s only touchdown. C arter’s C d iiim ciil: " I real ly tliouulii we were coming out F O O T B A L L S T A T IS T IC S Rushing Player Duone Campbell Reggie Sales Marc Holcomb Clifford Dulin Freddy Fisher Brad Jones Eric Blankenship Player i M arc Holcomb Brad Jones Clifford Dulin Reggie Sales Denny Key Player Jimmy Greene Duone Campbell Eric Blankenship Denny Key Reggie Sales Brad Jones Clifford Dulin Att. Yds. Avg. 166 953 5.8 107 547 5.2 101 308 3.1 49 169 3.5 22 81 3.8 31 82 2.8 2 14 7.0 Passing Att.Cp.Pct.TDInt.Yds. 52 22 .380 1 5 289 2 2 .100 1 0 28 6 2 .350 0 0 17 I 1 .100 0 0 12 I . 0 .000 0 0 0’ deceiving й1 | :| | Ree.Yds.Avg. TD 7 68 9.8 0 5 73 14.5 0 5 66 13.1 1 4 92 23.0 0 4 33 8.2 1 1 12 12.0 .0 I 8 8.0 0 Reggie Sales Duone Campbell Clifford Dulin Marc Holcomb Denny Key Freddy Fisher Brad Jones E. Blankship Matt Marion Scott Beauchamp Jody Shore Scoring Player TD FG EP 2 Pis. Pis. Fumble R Player David Stevenson Kendall Chaffin Corey Gaither David Stevenson Many Martin Alex McGuire • - Todd Kiger : ■ Paul AgriUo I :'Denny Key. , îl. to win tonight. Reynolds played better defense than 1 expected.” Record: 2-5 overall; 0-4 in CPC. W est Forsyth 20 Davie County 14 Three pass interference calls on the final drive led to W est’s winning score. But Davie did score against a defense that had four shutouts to its credit. C arter’s Comment: “ We keep finding ways to lose.” Record: 2-5 overall; 0-5 in CPC. Davie County 14 South Rowan 10 Everything clicked as Davie broke a five-game losing skid. Blake Livengood had two in- icrcepiions and Jimmy Greene caught three passes. C arter’s Comnient: "You see what hajipens when we have no big penalties and no kicking game mistakes. We win.” Kannapolis 21 Davie County 13 Four dilTereiit passers went lO-of-14 for 102 yards in Davie’s best passing game ever. But Holcomb was slopped a foot short of the goal with 56 seconds lefi. C arter’s Comment: "W e've been a day lale and a dollar short all year.” Fashion Cents Good Luck Davie County War Eagles Located On Hwy. 601 in The Squire Boone Plaza G o o d L u e k War Eagles 1989Season Baker Furniture Mining Road Mocksville, N.C. -Î2C-DAVIE COUNTV ENTEKPKISK KECOKI). TIIUUSDAY, Aiik.31, 1989 C P C / S t a t e R e p o r t W est Favored Over Greensboro Schools The two Greensboro high schools — Grimsley and Dudley — have yet lo play a single gam e in the Central Piedmont Conference but yet, the coaches arc ap p aren tly already intimidated. Alm ost every one has pickcd one o f the two as the favorite to win the league. The questions is, “ W hy?” Grim sley has been strong for the past three seasons bul lost a m ajor portion o f its starting lineup. Dudley lost its first five games before winning four in a row and somehow tying for the North Central 4 -A crown. The team that should be con sidered the favorite is West Forsyth. In one area newspaper poll, all coaches picked a Greensboro team except Titan coach Den ny Zeiters, who thinks his team has a good shot o f at least cop ping one o f three playoff berths. “ W e feel like we should get one o f the playoff berths,” he told the Winston-Salem Jounutl. “ W e also feel like w e’re capable o f winning the con ference.” ■ W est did just that three years ago and tied for the crown in 1988 w ith Parkland, Reynolds and Kannapolis at 5-2. The Titans lost a draw , however, ^ stayed home. It was the best year for the Central Piedm ont, one o f the weaker 4 -A leagues in the state. Adding Grim sley and Dudley, w hile releasing N o rth Davidson and K an- ,-napolis, can only make the JeaKue. stronger and a bit more rcspcclcd . Below are capsule looks at cach team in order o f predicted linish with last year's con ference and overall records: W est Forsyth (5-2, 7-3): Some fam iliar names to Davie Counly Legion baseball fans dot the Titan roster, including M ike Lovelacc, G ray Bovender and Freddie Transou. Lovelace is a returning quarterback and the junior lef thander is fighting for a starting berth with Florida transfer Oscar Braun, a sophomore froni Fort Lauderdale. Bovender was the team ’s leading receiver in 1988 and should also punt. Transou is ex pected to start at defensive back. The defense was W est’s strength last season, giving up only 8.5 points per game. M ike Payne, a m ajor college pro spect, returns to lead the way. But the offense should be po tent. N ot only is Zeiters retur ning all o f his offen sive linemen, but he also has perhaps the top ru nning back in 205-pound Haywood C loud, who runs a 4 .6 40. Kevin M yers, a l,(X)0-yard rusher on the jayvee team , w ill also see tim e. G rim sley (4-1, 9-S): Jeff Smouse lost several three-year starters and returns only three on offense and three on defense. The inexperience made little difference in the season opener as the W h irlie s dum ped perennially-tough Burlington W illiam s, 30-13. Smouse may throw m òre this NC*s Tod 100 High School Seniors ' HMtr 'Poa.HL Wt School i.J S n M w OL 6*2 255 Reldsville 8. ThomM Alston RB 6^215 Jordan-MaRhows iSSÎSSïr ^7. Tommy Branch .•.DmUBray ,9.MifeBronton lo.JtmMBro««f . LB DLDL RBRB OL 5-116*0 5-106-2 64 6-3 190230265222 160240* W. Mecklenburg Wallace-Rose Hill W. ChartoKe Wllm. Hoggard Frankllnton HP Andrawa RBDL 6^ 6-2 176226 Fay.Savamy-FiralAthaboro 11.WMn»Brawn ' ItCm BryvH 06RB 6*10 6*1 165190 No. Durham N. Edgacomba 19.0onntlChémb«rt 14. Shawn ChtmbiM OBRB 6464 165225 Stattaviila Char. IrtdaparKlanoa 1B.FtadChippaR 14. Julua Chsali WRRB 6-0 5-8 160168 Roxboro Parson E. QulHord -ir.M CIvfc RB 5*9 153 Clayton - 11. vmarn Gonna LB 6-2 220 Asht. Reynolds 19. Kavin Conrad QB 6-2 160 C. Davldaon ».NanOavia81.8iai%Davto ».«toayOaimao 28.TatfW « DLOLRBRBRBRB 6-8 . 6-3 6-11 . 6-10 6-11 S-7 260 240197 175160 165 LexingtonUultburgSSffiStarmount.Jackaonvllle RB 6-6 175 Jordan^tatthawa 87. Andy Faaaatt ».M IO a u M n , KOL 6-3 6-1 190240 PittCo.Conlay Carvar .».TanyOrwraa ao.M№aOraan RB K 6-11 64 170 196 W.AlamancaNWQuiHord SI.MartoOrfar RB 6-11 219 Char, tndapandanca ■ASpanoarHMnHton OL 6-3 266 Uncoinlon ■ ' i- 99» wonn nwvmM ‘ !MaanwdoHarrla RB TE 646-3 166230 Rockingham Co. ChapalHiU 96. JHMa Harrta . WR 64 170 Buri. Cummlnga 96.ToddHtfria :QB 6-9 155 R-SCantral S7.Mrt«lHÜ OB 9^160 Aiha. R^nolda si.TanaiHMon RB 6-11 160 . Taitoro • '..99.lailaHglay QB 6-10 170 WaHaca-Roaa Hiu 40.VaaHood RB 9-9 160 ChariotlaCalholto 4l.KaNhHuieNnaon QB 6-2 170 Enka 48.PJ.taani 49. Oavfdlnmin ' RBOL •6-16-2 200 225 Smtthfiakl-Salma Fay. Sanford ’ 44.8haMiJoNiaon OL 6-2 250 Murphy 46.iyionlaaJonaa LB 64 220 W. MacManburg 46. Jarry Kaiar OL 6-4 290 JacksonviM 47.Chud(KlrttpalriGk QB 6-1 180 Dudley 49.Johnlaaoh LB 5-11 195 Gvner 49. Lonnia Laalt RB 64 172 Foratt Hiiia DLDL 6-38*5 210 282 Currituck Wllm. Hoggard ' SS.DaanLytfa RB 6-3 216 Bravard . 69. Oion Lyda DB 64 185 SWan. Owen 64.9hMm Maihbum OB 6-1 175 S. Alamance 66.BrattMaMna LB 64 200 W. A/omanca 69. Maina MoClura SiTOSS?* WR O TRB 646-55-8 178270170 Wilm. Hoggard Durham Jordan Wailaca-Rosa Hi» 69. Slava McKkmon DB 5-9 168 E.Waka ' 90.TonyMdMH«i LB 8-1 185 Paga 61. Nairona lAaana RB 8-0 200 Central Cabarrus 62.8ooiMaHon RB 6-1 187 Asha. Reynokis 69. Jamaa KAInor ’WR 5-11 180 W.Chark)ne 64. Oarrtcfc Monlagua RB 8-2 180 W. Carteret 66. Edmond O’Naal DB 8-1 185 Concord 99. Ooyla Owana WR 8-1 175 Brevard 67. Johnathan Partia QB 8-1 170 Salisbury 66. David Parry RB 5-9 170 Northampton-East 69. Travia Psiry OL 8-3 230 E. Wake TO.DInoPhHyaw RB 8-0 175 So. Wayne ' 71. Bobby Prica OB 5-11 170 W-S Reynolds ' 72. Roga Puroason 73.№Saddlar OL DB 6-6 5-10 275 160 S. Mecklenburg W. Charlotte 74.JothSchoutan OL 8-7 290 Wilm. Hoggard 75. Scott Saymour76. Rodnay Simmons 77. Sabutlan Small ' OB RB 8-1 ' 64 170 185 W. Carteret Lexington TB 5-11 195 Fay. Smith 78. Tim Smith-RB 84 175 N. Lenoir * 79. David Stokel'TE 8-3 225 Wllm. New Hanover 60. WlUia Strain ,\RB 8-1 185 Belmont S. Point 61. Oscar S(urgis\v TE 6-5 220 Richmond Co. 62. Mark SummerètV WR 6-1 175 W. Iredell 63. Richia Sund WR 8-1 170 Franklin 64. Mika Thomas >. 06 6-2 205 Richmond Co. 85. Chris Thompson DL 6-4 230 Garner 86. Jed Thompson QB 5-11 175 E. Alamance 87. Dennis Timmons L6 5-tt 175 Carvor 88. Jason Van Dyko QB 6-2 187 McDowell Co. 89. Dewayne Washington DB 5-11 175 No. Durham 90. Derrick Watkins RB 5-7 165 S. Gulllofd 91. Michael Watkins RD 64 165 Sl. Stephens 92. Jason Watson OL 6-3 270 Bunker Hill 93. Orlando Whitaker QS 6-t 175 N. Edgecombe 94. Doreck White TE 6-3 220 E.C. Northeastern 95. Scon Wilbanks DL 6-1 200 Ashe. Reynolds 96. Demetrius Wilson DL 6-3 215 Apex 97. Hay Wimbush RB 5*7 165 Henderson Vance 98. Tim Witherspoon RB 5-11 180 E. Forsyth - 99. Heath Woods OL 6*4 295 Newton-Conover 100. Scon Woods OL 6-4 285 Newton-Conover season and says he w ill use four receivers at one tim e for quarterback Cam W yrick. a ju n io r w ho tossed 27 touchdown passes for (he jayvee team last year. He docs have one three-year .starler back in Bobby Peay. a 6-2, 300-pound behemoth. Grim sley and Smouse have alw ays been tenacious. Although finishing with five losses, the W hirlies made it to the semifinals o f tho 4 -A state playoffs before losing to West Charlotte. D udley (4-1, 4-7): The Pan thers were a young team last year and return many o f their starters, including 6-1 quarter back Chris Kirkpatrick, a N .C . Top 50 prospect. D udley squashed Durham, 40-0 Friday. K irkpatrick w ill throw to receivers Ronald Harris and D am on N e w m a n . G reg Foushee w ill lead the defense w hile D el Seagraves, D errick Bennett and M ichael Price w ill run the ball. South R ow an (4-3, 7-3): Larry Deal was fret ting early because although he had 20 players back, only five returned as starters, including one on defense. But in tw o scrimmages, he shut out both opponents. Then, the Raiders were shut out in their opening game last Friday w ith Kannapolis, 20-0. M arlon Conners is the only defensive player back but he is strong at 6 -2, 220 pounds. Three lineman return on offense and running back M ichael Chambers, who had 59 yards on the ground against Kannapolis, w ill be the workhorse. Kevnold-s (5-2, 6-4-1): The Demons and first-year coach M ike Muse w ill be hard-pressed to make the playoffs for a third straight year as only four starters return. One o f them is quarterback Bobby Price, llic only other C PC player except K irkpatrick to m ake the Top 50 list. Torrez Hughes should help at fiankcr and safety. Muse has only one linem an over 200 pounds. P arklan d (5-2, 7-4): It was good to see H om er Thompson back in the playoffs last year but he is shorthandcd this .season. His team isn’t as experienced. “ I ’ll have to take the talent I ’ve got and .squeeze out o f it what I can,” he told reporters. H e does have a m ajor college prospect in 6-4, 264-pound Bryan Cantrell. But o f seven running backs, only Jerry Lind- -say is a senior. Four o f five receivers are seniors and with two senior quarterbacks, David. Brooks and Gene W oodruff, the Mustangs m ight throw m ore. Thottipson does have the league’s best kicker in Joey Chafee, who was 8-of-lO field goals and 14-of-15 extra points. M o u n t T a b o r (2-5, 4-6): Oscar Brayboy has a team this season that is the most inex- periencd in the league. A ll o f his senior starters are gone and only Thad Lew is, a running back/defensive back returns w ith any playing tim e. In all four return so look for the Spar tans to finish in the cellar. Defending Champs A re Fa vo re d A g a in There have been more changes in high school football this season than just another realignment. Schools lucky enough to make it to the state championships will play at neutral sites. The 3-A and 4-A title games will be played Dec. 8 at Kenan Stadium in Chapel Hill while the 2-A and I-A championships are set for Carter-Finley Stadium in Raleigh Dec. 9. And if Davie County should make the state playoffs, they might face defending state champ Rich mond County, who is coming off a 15-0 record. In fact, the favorite in each of the four classifications made the finals last year — Richmond County, Shelby, Thomasville and Swain County, with only Shelby losing. Below is what to expect from each elassification; 4-A Favorite: Richmond Co. Mike Thomas returns as a Sfreer <& Smith Top 50 all-American quarterback. He is big (6-2, 205) and fast (4.7 40). ' If Richmond County doesn’t win the title again, look for a Charloite team to cop the crown. The cily has sent al least one team to the finals in each of the lasl three seasons. This year’s teanis to watch includc Independence, Harding, South Mecklenburg and Wesl Charlotte. Asheville Reynolds, who was 12-1 in 1988, is one of the lop ranked teams in the nation, led by Scolt Mellon’s 1,962 of lolal of fense, including 38 touchdowns. Oilier 4-A leains to wutdt arc Fayelieville 71st, which returns seven starters, Elizabeth City Nor theastern, Jacksonville, Greenville Rose, Greensboro Page and Smith, Raleigh Millbrook, Wilmington Hoggard and Rocky Mount. 3-A Favorite: Shelby Shelby can argue that it’s the niDsl powerl'nl program over the pusl dccade. Il has made the llnals iliree slniighl seasons, winning two. This season, il returns 13 slarlers. Burlington Cummings, which won lasl year, has senior Donnie Davis lo try and duplieale lasl year's 15-0 record. He backed up all-American i|uarlerback Chuckie 1989 CPC Schedule Below is the Central Pied mont Conference schedule, w eek by w eek, beginning w ith Sept. 1; Sept. 1 D avic C ounty at N orth Iredell E . Forsyth at M t. Tabor Glenn at Parkland Reynolds at N . Forsyth W . Forsyth at C arver G B Page at Dudley G rim sley at G B Smith S. Rowan at W. Rowan Sept. 8 D avie County at Statesville N . Forsyth at W. Forsyth C arver at Reynolds M t. Tabor at Glenn Parkland at E . Forsyth G B Page at G rim sley Sept. 15 Anson C o. at D avie County G lenn at W. Forsyth C arver at M t. Tabor N . Forsyth at Parkland Reynolds at E . Forsyth D udley at GB Smith NW Cabarrus at S. Rowéjn Sept. 22 D avic County at Parkland W . Forsyth at Dudley M t. Tabor at Grimsley Reynolds at South Rowan . > Sept. 29 ;f ' D udley at Davie Coliiitÿ,. S. Rowah at W. ‘ G rim sley at Reynolds Parkland at M t. Tabor Oct. 6 M t. Tabor at D avie County, W. Forsyth at G rim sley S, Rowan at Dudley Reynolds at Parkland Oct. 13 D avie County at Reynolds,- Parkland at Wi Foreyth ’ ' G rim sley at S. Rowan D udley at M t. Tabor Oct. 20 W. Forsyth at D avieC ounty . ' Reynolds at M t; Tabor G rim sley at Dudley S. Row an at’Parkland ■ - Oct. 27 Davie County at S. RowanI Mt. Tabor at W. Forsyth Dudley at Reynolds Parkland at Grinisiey . Nov. 3 . Grimsley at Davie W. Forsyth at Reynold# Parkland at Dudley v ‘ S. Rowan at Mt. ' Nov. 1« First Round ■ : \ Second ,R<MU^ . -Nov; Quanerfua|s ■'Dèe, BurneUe and threw only 20 times. But he still completed 16. Other teams to watch are Hert ford County, which lost to Thomasville in the 2-A finals before moving up, Lexington, another 2-A team, Kannapolis, which moved down from the CPC, Brevard, Pisgah, Bums, Bertie, Lincolnton, Statesville, West Caldwell, Washington and West Henderson. 2-A Favorite: Thomasville Top 50 prospect Rashein Feaster has already begun leading Thomasville toward another crown. He ran for 166 yards in the Bulldogs’ 29-12 victory over South Stokes last Friday. Thomasville has seven back on offense and four on defense. Mike Carter and his Mooresville team have a tough road in the Southern District 7 Conference, 2-A’s toughest, Newton-Conover, Maiden and Bunker Hill are always in the playoffs. At Newton- Conover, Carter will meet 6-4, 290-pound twins, Scott and Heath Woods. Those statistics are nothing com pared lo Fannvillc Central’s 6-6, 290 Kevin Wade, Other leains vying for Ihe 2-A stale title include Monroe, Wallacc-Rosc Hill, Warren Counly and Forest Hills, who has moved down. Forest Hills was the 1985 3-A state runnerup. 1-A Favorite: Swain County The biggesi news in 1-A is that Murphy won't be eligible for the crown, A 2-A-size school, Ihe perennial power decidcd lo play down and thus, will only he eligi ble every other year, Lasl year's champ Swain, under longtime coach Boyce Deilz, has Heath Schuler al quartcrliack. As a sophomore lasl season, he pass ed Ibr 20 touchdowns anti 1,800 yards. Wilh alniosl the enlire leam inlacl, no one should louch Ihe Maroon Devils. Afler Swain Counly, any number of teanis could make the finals, including Curiiiuck. Southwest Onslow, Richland, l-asl Momgomery, Red Springs. Sl, Paul’s, Bladenboro and Norlli Eilgecombe, Davie High FooibaU Team WeWisl F o r A S u c c e s s f u l Seosonf x S l " f 1 / ^ S Ic r n S ic I sTrni:i:ousE Hwy. 601 & MO Mocktvlllo, NCPhone: 634HM36 eiMi «MH« V ra Go Davie WAREAGLES Kothmrie’s HcUlmarfc W ishes y o u g o o d lu c k f o r a w in n in g se a so n W hat h a p p en e d tho ycni you w ere bon Ask ab o u t tho B irthday T unes Katharinens Hallmark^j. Shop Salisbury MaU Good Luck Davie High W ar Eagles Our staff and residents wish you the best as you tackle the 1989 football season Bermuda Village Retirement Community At Berniiida Run Country Club Advancc. NC 27006 (019) yOS-fôS.S DAVIK COUN TY KNTKUPKISK RKCOKI), ■mURSI)Л^■, Лчц.З!, 1989—I3C College/Pro Report Jacobs Taking Football Seriously At Mississippi Jacobs • Doug Jacobs is beginning to take liis collcgc . lootball'carccr seriously, f Il ’s a good thing too. H e'll I be a starting defensive tacklc ■- fo r the U n iv e rs ity o f ; Mississippi in one o f the !: country's top football con- •: ferenccs, the Southeastern J Conference. ' W here they play only ; serious football. ; “ W hen I саше out o f high school, I looked at the scholarship as four years o f having fun in college,” he said in a telephone ;• interview from the Oxford campus. “ But it’s hit- i ting me now. I have two more years to play here ; and I ’m going to make the most o f it. I ’m really j. getting into it.” His new attitude has a lot to do with new defen- '• sive coach Rick Petree, who has instilled a con- fidence in Jacobs. He has told him that with hard i; w ork, he w ill be D avie County’s first profes- \r sionai football player. i Jacobs, who admits he never really did much weightlifting in high school, has changed that at- titude as w ell. A fter a rigorous summer o f building up his body, he came to camp standing !• .6-9 and weighing 275 pounds. H e should be one ;■ o f the S E C ’s most intim idating players at defen- !; sive left end. “ They wanted me com ing in at about 2 7 0 ,” ;^said the redshirt junior. "W e ran our m ile and I was supposed to run it in at least 11:30. I ran a 9:55 so they didn't mind the added w eight." Mississippi is out to avenge a terrible sccond hair o f l ‘J88. The Rebels needed only one vic tory in their last three games to a.s.sure a trip to Ihc Liberty Bowl but lo.st all three and linished 5-6. “ That really hurt,” he said. “ VVc lost to Tulane and Mississippi State, two teams we definitely should’ve beaten. “ Bui we think we can really do better this year. A problem last year was getting the defense o ff Ihc field. O ur offensive line is deeper this year and we have good .specialty people. I slill can’t believe w e’re pickcd eighth in the prcseason. W e ’re going to show some people w e’re belter than lhat.” G oing South Some may wonder how Jacobs ended up in Mississippi. A fter ending a Shrine Bowl senior season at D avie High School in 1986, he signed w ith Joe M orrison’s powerful South Carolina Gamecocks, where he ifias prom ptly redshirted. But he impressed the coaches enough where they were planning on him moving right into the defensive lineup as a sophomore. H e then shock ed the entire coaching staff by transferring. “ I just didn’t like Colum bia, (S .C .) and had to get out,” he said. “ It was nothing personal with the coaches.” Under N C A A rules, he had to sit out another year and finally saw his first collegiate action in 1988. Despite the tw o-year layoff, he quickly moved into Mississippi’s starting lineup and had several good games, including one against Alabam a on national television. O le Miss upset the Tide and Jacobs recovered a fumble. But he was hampered for the last half o f the season w ilh torn ligaments in his ankle. He did not have an operation and instead played on the swollen lim b lo the point where he could barely walk by .season’s end, “ I could barely walk by midseason," he said. " I was playing with a cast. But I was going lo play at any cost. I had sal oul too long. “ Playing in the SEC is unbelievable,” he said. "1 tell people back home they can’t imagine whal it’s like. Football isn’t dull like it is there. It’s treated here like they treat A C C basketball. This is the big lim e football and I ’m loving it.” H e loves it even more now that he’s met Petree. “ H e ’s a real fundam entalist,” said Jacobs. “ H e ’s a real technician. W e watch a lot o f film and he has worked on m y form in the pass rush. H e tells me I have the potential to be a profes sional football player.” Social Life O ff the field, Jacobs says Mississippi and Mississippi State are alot like North Carolina and N orth Carolina State. “ It’s kind o f w eird, all the rich people go here,” he said. “ Mississippi State is the farm school. Mississippi is your typical southern rich college. It’s real secluded. “ I ’ve made some friends here and we go hun ting and fishing. The only difference between here and home is the culture shock. This place w ill put you back about 10 years.” Barnette Resurfaces At Appalachian St. ' Greg Barnette had a big sur- [: prise in store for his family j; when he called honie over the II weekend irom Boone. . - Appal^hian State had decid ed to. give the walk-on football ''player financial aid in the form of a half-scholarship. 'ji “ My -parents‘ don’t- even know it yel,” said tlic ecstatic •Barnette in a telephone inter- Iview from his. drom room ^Saturday afternoon. I: I \lHis pwenu won't be the on- 01^ that he’s get- |t|ng .vhielp from the Moun- 5 twiiMrsV There’s a lot of peo- : |piic in Davie Coiinty who don’t realize Barnette is even playing '’football again. :L .A 1986 graduate of Davie ¡^rOpunQr, he receiy^ a scholar- jli'sMp to Catawba, where he ijfshaied playiog tiine at d^t end. Kl’ jBut after his freshman season, i tr ]he left the SUisbtiry campus for ADpalachiah State. ] i | l “ CatawW didn’t have the nujor I wan^,” he said of business et^cation. “ So I came t to Appalachliu but didn’t play l^tootball.” f V;;|That all changed over the summer. While playing a I pickup basketball game, i I receiver coach Danny Nutt spotted Barnette, looked over I: itiis physique and asked Barnette . -if-he played football. Barnette fold him of his past • and Nutt began urging him to go i .':Out for the team as a walk-on. 1 '' .Sparky Woods had left Boone for South C arolina and w ith a new coach, Jerry M o o re, Barnette began thinking about the move w hile in summer school. H e began some serious weightlifting and one day while running the steps o f the stadium, coaches again ap proached him . He decided he’d try if. But the opportunity didn’t come without some changes. A fter playing tight end, he was switched to offensive line. Barnette has bulked up to a massive 6 -5 ,2 4 5 pounds, quite a change from his high school days. “ 1 was still 6-5 but I weigh ed only 200, ’ ’ he said. ‘ ‘I lifted a lot at D avie but I also played basketball and ran track so I ’d lose it all by the end o f the season.” The 21-year old added, “ And o f course, your metabolism changes as you get older so you gain a little .” O ne o f the m ajor reasons A p palachian State m oved Barnette to offensive line was due to the number o f freshmen in the fold. “ There’s a lot o f freshmen and Coach says they’ll need rest. “ There’s been a lot o f ad justments fo r m e,” he said. “ I ’ve had to pick up the defen sive alignments and the line switches.” Barnette said the team has done a lot o f running and he tested out to a 40-yard dash time GrcR Barnette o f 4 .7 5 , pretty fast for a linem an. “ W e ’ve run a lot o f sprints,” he said. Barnette w ill have tw o years o f eligibility left and he is already thinking about next year's schedule. “ That’s the season I'm look ing fo r,” he said. “ W e play at Clem son, N orth C arolina State and W ake Forest in the first five games. I went on a recruiting trip to Clem son so it w ill be great playing in Death V alley.” H e ’s confident that by then, he’ll be in the starting lineup. W hen Appalachian State opens this Saturday in Boone against Gardner-W ebb, he’ll be second string. “ But Coach told me I ’ll play a lot this se^on,” Barnette said. “ H e said I might even play tight end so I don’t know what my number is going to b e.” Actually, the only number on Barnette’s mind Saturday was the telephone number at home. H e has some good news to spread. H e is a football player on scholarship once again. Peebles Still Playing Football In New Minor League System D arren Peebles’ college career is over but his football career is still in full swing. The 6 -5 ,270-pound offensive lineman has been starting due lo injuries for the Charlotte Barons ; o f the M inor League Football , System, a first-year league that' is a stepping stone to the Na tional Football League. So far, Peebles and his leam - maies are ihe class o f the league. A fter four games, Chariotte was uiibealen and in I first place, with some im - pressive numbers to throw around. The Barons have defeated Florida 37-10, Pocono 20-0, 52-0 over Virginia and 58-7 over Harrisburg-, Pa. T h a t’s 167-17 for those counting. The Barons have the league's best offense, thanks to Winston- Salem State’s form er linemen Peebles V ern o n D illa rd . Form er Alabam a iiuarterback Vince Sutton is the league’s top passer and D uke’s Stanley M onk is the top runner. Peebles .said he would live in Charlotte during the .season. The league does not pay players but Ihc teams are obligated to find jobs related lo the player’s degree. “ II an N F L team needs me in the m iddle o f the season, 1 can go to them without any obliga tion to Charlotte,” Peebles said. " I feel lucky to slill be playing. I want to go to the N F L and if I do make il, it w ill be a dream conic true.” Jacobs said. " I f you want to lose yourself on campus and nol be noticed, drive a B M W . Il .seems like everyone has one.” In Jacobs' case, it’s hard not to be noticed. He has even had feelers from the basketball team. He said he was playing pickup games with all-Am erican Gerald Glass and was urged by .some o f the players lo try out for basketball. “ I thought about it for a minute or tw o ,” Jacobs laughs, “ but 1 decided I ’d concentrate on foot b all.” And what he’s concentrating on is getting O le Miss a little respect w ithin the conference. “ This is the year we can do it. W e play Florida on W TB S the second week o f the season (Sept. 9) and we play LSU and Georgia at home. This is the first lim e LSU has come here since 1965.” O le M iss also plays home games in Jackson, a city Jacobs compares to A C C teams playing in Greensboro. But wherever the Rebels play, Jacobs wants the opponents to notice them as contenders. “ W c get no respect here,” he added. “ W e should’ve been second or third in the conference last year. W e ’ll m ove up this year. W e have a killer defense.” From all appearances, Jacobs has become one o f the team ’s spokesmen and says it’s neat be ing a football player at an SEC school. H e seems to take his status as “ Big M an O n Cam pus” seriously. :■ . Then again, when you stand 6 -9, 275, being a big man on campus is something that just came natural. Five Former War Eagles Playing At SAC-8 Schools^ T h ere are several other form er D avie County football players preparing for a year o f college action: Stan Blair (Wingate) Blair became a defensive forcc in his freshman season al W ingate and could be a starter this season. H e plays defensive end for the Bulldogs. W ingate opens at Catawba against Ray W hitaker and the Indians Sept. 9. Billy Blackwelder (Wingate) Blackw elder started at times last season but the W ingate coaches were talking o f moving the stalwart defensive player to offense as a linem an. Kendall Chaffin (Wingate) C haffin was one o f the top defensive players for D avie last year but w ill be redshirted this season so he can w ork on his academics. But coaches like the 6 -3 , 2 3 0 -p o u n d defensive lineman. H e is the fourth player in the past three seasons to play for the Bulldogs, along w ith B lair, Blackw elder and M ike Bethea, whose career was end ed w ith a knee injury. David Rosser (The Citadel) Rosser stands 6-6 and weighs around 230. H e entered the Southern Conference school as an offensive lineman but has since been moved to the defen sive line. The Citadel opens at home against W offord Saturday before hosting G reg Barnette and Appalchian State Sept. 9. R ay W h ita k e r (C ataw ba) W hitaker said he wanted lo come in weighing 275 after winning a starting offensive line job w ith a good spring perfor mance. In a scrimmage that was graded to pick the starters, the sophomore graded higher than any linem an. Catawba finished 8-4 last year and is one o f the S A C -8 favorites this sea.son. Catawba opens its season at M arshall before com ing home Sept. 9 against W in g a te , boasting three o f his form er teammates al Davic Counly. Kris Latten (Lenior-Rhyne) L atte n w as o rig in a lly recruited out o f D avie but spent his freshman season getting his academics straightened out. H e joined the Bears in January and participated in spring practice as a rover end, a spot that ds shallow of talent. Coaches think he will be on s^ial teams tQ begin season. Lenior-Rhyne begins its season at Western Carolina Sept. 9. ' | B e s t W is h e s T o A G r e a t T e a m from Davie Discount Drugs ^ Cooleemee Shopping Center Cooleemee - 284-2537 Charles Evans, Registered Pharmacist • Owner Take It all the Way War Eagles Best of Luck in 8 У Fleet F in a n c e n t e r Willow C ab Shopping Cenier Phone 634-3596 C o m e T o W h e re '№ e A c tio n Isl See T h e D a v ie H ig h W a r E a g le s Start T h e ir S e a so n Frid ay N ig h t Foster Rauch Drug Co. Lowe’s Shopping Center Wilkesboro St. 634-2141 Mocksville,NC 14C—DAVIE COUNTV ENTEUI’UÍSTÍ KECOKI), THUKSDA^', Atif!. Offense : continued from 1’. tC . plenty of competition. Aliin Cliap- ■.man and Richard Slalcy arc vying for the kicking chores witli Marion. while Danny Riimpic, Chapman and several others could also punt. Waiting in the wings lo play quarterback arc juniors Patrick Murphy and Brent Wall, who shared time on the jayvee team last year. Murphy is the passer. Wall the runner. “Our quarterbacks are adapting well to what we want," said Ward. “They’re getting their timing down and recognizing what’s happening in front of them. They'll all make contribution.s." The quarterbacks will have quality flankers lo choo.se from in Rumple and Chapman. Rumple had an inipre.ssive jayvee season, catching nine touchdown passes bul disappeared last year in Carter's senior system. This could be the year the 6-1, 160-pounder breaks loose. “ Danny has good speed and ex cellent hands,” Ward said. “ He’s a good athlete.” Chapman was the latest jayvee receiver having an outstanding season but he won’t disappear in his junior year. Ward will see to that. “ Alan runs good routes and has a good set of hands,” he said. “ We ask our receivers to do a lot — go in motion, block — things that go unnoticed. But we have to have that to be successful.” Kevin Tolar may also see time at flanker. ;, The tight ends come from a 'group consisting o f seniors Clint : Junker, Todd Kiger and Matt ;Stiuiley, along with junior Dale ; Famsh at slot tight end and seniors Lee Linville, Todd Arrington Brian .Basham and Steven P ark^, along - With junior Gary Blalock at the .other tight enid position. ■ _ “ W e’ll throw to both tight ends "equally,” said Ward. “ Our slot ''tight isitd goes to the flanker side : i'eaeh/tune., Clint gives us a big target. He has goixl speed anil goiKl hands. Tiiild is new to tight end but he’.s picking up the blocking. Steven just juiiK-il the team in prac licc anti won't be eligible until alter Ihe first game. Basham is adjusting lo the position. All of the hoys bring us sonietliing dilTcrent to liglil end ami all of llic yoiiiig men have good hands. •'Like Ihe flankers, we ask ihe light ends to do a lot," he added. ''They're half-lincincn and half- rcceivcrs.” Ward will not hesitate lo throw to his backs, either. Besides Sales, he can choose from seniors Brad Foster and La-Monte Chunn or juniors Robin Campbell. Kevin Wiley and Germain Mayfield. “ Like Reggie, Wiley runs well inside,” he said, “ and he's doing a good job blocking.” Campbell’s injuries from a re cent automobile accident are heal ing and he’s back at practice. Mayfield didn’t play as a sophomore but has proven to be a good, open field runner, Fo.ster could play both ways. The offensive line is as small as its been since enlering 4-A football but Ward said the linemen were improving every day. Richard Staley has missed much of the last week of practice due to a kidney infection. He is the team’.s largest player at 6-3, 250 and will play tackle, along wilh Tedd Budd, Matt Reznicek, Bryan Foster, Wayne Mock and Michael Jones. Brian Williams, who started several games last year, leads the corps of guards. Others are Dale Roberson, Matt Vaughters, Britt Osborne, Chad Merrell, Mark Crotts, Kevin Howell and Jon Myers. Williams could also play center but that spot will probably go to junior Robbie Welch. Stanley Pruitt will back him up. Learning the new system has been harder on the offensive line more rtan anywhere else,” said Ward. “ There’s a different teciini- que and philosohpy. But I ’m see ing improvement each day.” The offensive line for Davie County this season includes (from left): M ichael Jones, Richard Staley, Dale Roberson, Robbie W elch, Brian W illiam s and Ted Budd. Davie quarterbacks will throw to junior receivers Gary Blalock (left) and Alan Chapman. 'Chapman is also the team 's^^ kicker. ■w Phnlneih» BnMn Feigiw Taking Off •IPIayers who could see action in the much improved secondary are (from left); Brad. Foster, Kevin '-Tbiar, La-Monte Chunn and Lee Linville. iÜefénse ;c ^ tln u ^ from P . 1C T Foster, who-weighs in at 222. < “ Like Vaughters, Stanley has played on that -side o f the ball and has had a real good : preseason,” said Low ery. “ H ow ell played ^ fen se last year and knows the theory but he played end last year. So he’!! have to adjust to playing down. Crotts’ size (5-7) hurts him a lit tle but our concept is to hit, separate and get to the b a ll.” • The two defensive ends are totally opposiic in appearance w ith the lanky 6 -6 ,210-pound Clint Junker and 5-8, 170-pound M att Stanley. Lowery likens Junker to form er star Doug Jacobs, who was 6-9. “ Like Jacobs, he has a lot o f leverage,” said Low ery. “ His heigiit w ill help him a lo l.” Backing up the ends w ill be Britt Osborne, Brian Basham, Todd Arrington and Dale Parrish. “ Osborne’s been looking pretty good,” said Low ery. “ This is his first tim e on defense but he’s real aggressive.” Low ery w ill have two capable lincbackers in senior Todd Kiger and junior M att Reznicek. K iger saw plenty o f action last season and Rcz- nicek was the top defensive player on the jayvce squad. “ K iger is a hard hitter,” said Low ery. “ H e ’ll strike you dow n. And Reznicck w ill be a good linebacker. A fter Reggie Sales, he might be the fastest player w e’ve got.” U nlike seasons past, seniors w ill not dominate this lineup. “ W e ’re going to play a lot o l'ju n io rs,'' .said Low ery. He thinks the defense is coming along fine, considering some o f the coachcs started late. “ W c were late getting togetlicr,” he said, “ it might take us to the lliird or fourth game to real ly get the chemistry down so w c’rc keeping it simple so we ean attack. The boj’s have adju.sted w ell and had a good preseason.” The llrst two weeks arc important as well. "W e need good things to happen early so wc can build confidence. W e have the potential bul we need lo build on some positive things from the North Iredell game. W e lost a bout six games last year by a touclulown or less and sometinies, it’s hard to keep the defense pumped up.” continued from P. 1C to win and however we can score the easiest, I’ll take it.” Also something new will be pass blocking, something he didn’t have to worry about very often under Carter. “It will be a big change,” he said. With a glint in his eye, he added, “ Shoot, maybe I’ll even catch some passes this year.” Sales didn’t know what to think about Ward — until the practices began. “I thought he’d be an old man,’’ Sales laughed, “but he’s a funny guy. He’ll joke around with you and keep you loose. But he wants to win and he’ll let you know if you mess up.” Sales said the practices were anything but a piece of cake. One drill, the “county fair,” he can do without, thank you. “ That’s where we take a cross country run and go to about seven or eight stations doing different things. It’s rough. And then, we run six to 10 wind sprints after practice. So we’re definitely in s h a p e .’ ’ Sales realizes that Davie is be ing picked for the bottom of the Central Piedmont Conference. “ I like being underrated,” he said. “ I’d rai’.ierbe lhal. “ A lol of teams come in thinking we’re no good and we love lo surprise them. East For.sylli and South Rowan were that way last year.” Sales would like to play college I'oolball and .said he he fell he could "if I keep up the academics.” . ••We won’I overpower anybody," he said. ••But with a passing game, we’ll always have the chance to win." Todd Kigor: When Carter was at Davic, Kiger was exclusively a defensive player, at linebacker or rush end. With Ward, he is still a linebacker bul is now an olTensive player — at tight end — as well. Kiger is making a .slow adjusi- ment. The last liiiie he played light end was in the seventh grade. “ It’s taken some getting used to,” he smiled. “ I ’m used to jerk ing people around on defense but you can’t grab when you're block ing.” Kiger seemed as happy as anyone to get away from the wishbone. ‘ ‘1 didn’t think the wishbone was what Davie County needed,” he said. “ W e didn’t have the size or speed to run it. I didn’t like two- plalooning either. I was real ex cited when we went to the new of fense and got rid of it.” Kiger said he liked W ard’s honesty at the very first team meeting last spring. “ He told us right off that no one had a starting position,” Kiger said. “ He said if a sophomore could beat you out, then he would. He’ll stick by that too. W e’ve had to work that much harder.” M att Vaughters. Like Kiger, Vaughters was also a defensive specialist until this season. “ 1 like defense the best,” said the 5-10, 218-pounder, “That’s what I've always played the most, Bul Coach Ward has me at offen sive guard too.” Vaughters’ strength will remain on defense but knowing that he could play both ways excites him. Also, having the competition from the underclassmen is what he says the team needs. “ Before, seniors always knew they'd start,” he said. “This year, there was more pressure on us and we had to practice harder. "Everyone is taking to Coach ' Ward real well,” Vaughters said, •‘We don't have as many seniors as usual bul Ihe leadership is good and hopefully ihe leam can do well.” Ward lold his players ihey had two scrimmages lo win a posilion. Everylhiiig was wide open. "I liked lhal," Vaughlcrs .said. ••We knew I'roin ihe start we had ID play harder lo keep our job." Afler his perl'orniance in Ihe scriiiimages, il appears Vaughters' job is secure — regarldess o f which ■ side o f the line he is on. ;ÿ , , B rian W illiam s: In his th ite , years at Davie County, W illiam s . has run the gamut on the offensive line. He started out as a jayvee ' center as a sophomore, played guard and tackle as a junior and is; * • now back as a senior guard. He is' ; ' W ard’s most experienced ofSmsive i'i lineman, - : But Ward has decided to put h im . i i at his favorite position. i , ; , “ I like guard better beónise you . can pull and tun,” W illiams said: “ You can hit somebody wide (open when they don’t expect it. T h e center and tackle is more bne-on; ^ one.” ; i;.. ; - Ward said the offensive linemen would have the most trouble learj h ning the new system and Williams and his teammates have taken ;a crash course. “ After learning all the plays for ; the wishbone, and then learning plays for this system, you can get ; mixed up,” he said. “ It just takes ; time. W e’re getting ^ e re .” Like Sales, W illiams was one of the few juniors to see action last ' year. After playing sparingly in the first two games, he became a star ting guard. When M att W ebb: ■ broke a thumb, he became a tackle^ Williams laughs when,asked, about pass blocking, something the line didn't do much of in 1988.' “ I like the pass and I think we’ll fool some people,” he said. “They won't have tapes except of the wishbone so when we come out ' with the pro set, maybe we'll throw everyone off.” As far as Ihc wishbone, the players aren't weeping over its demise. In fact, Davie players could use Harry Carey’s favorite cry when talking about the wishbone. It could be.,. II might be... It is. • ' ; - Ladies and gentlemen, it's gone. ''Davie County's football team is taking off — skyward. F o o tb a irS Q h DAVIK COUN'I V ENTICRI’KISI'; KKCOUD, TIIUUSDAY, Aiik.31| 1989-lD County First Recognized Football During 1930s Ferebee, Chaffin Remember Mocksville’s First Great Teams Mid-30’s As Powerful Things were a loi diff'crcnl back in 1936 when Holland ChalTm and Joe Fcrcbcc played foolball. ‘‘W e were gcod, ” said Chullin, now a 69-year old Veterans Service O fficer in ; M oeksville, “ bul if we played loday, w e’d get killed .” That's just rine w ilh the members o f M ocksville's top high school football teams o f all tim e (1936-37). They played in a tim e when life was taken day by day and everybody eased through their daily routine. The Mocksviile Enterprise ran lead stories that resembled the low-key atmosphere: ' ‘Noah Brock Loses First Teeth On Hundredth Birthday. ” H ard hitting news, huh? The other headlines on the front page were usually about reunions, suppers — and o f course, the M oeksville H igh School gridiron teams. M ocksviile finished 1936 with a 6-0-1 record and I won six straight the follow ing season before los- I ing to Hanes High School o f W inston-Salem in I the heartbreaking finale, 12-6. “ You know , o f all the games w e played at I .M ocksviile, the only one I reitiember is the one I w e lost,” said Ferebee. “ The bad times were few 1 and far between .so they stick wifh you.” Ferebee was the classic teenage leader in the I;com m unity. H e was not only the good-looking, i:cohfldent quarterback but he was also the stu- Tdent body president. If there was ever the perfect I subject for a C hip H ilton sports novel, it was IFereb ee. . IVoiB was a good leader on the fie ld ,” said I G haffm , who graduated a year before. “ H e was I good and everyone respected h im .” -C haffin and Gordon Tom linson were the ends Io n die team and loved to have the ball thrown (to them. But they were two very different players. “ Gordon was tall (6-6) so we had a special lp lay ,'’ said Ferebee.. “ He’d go out and I’d loft Ithe ball up and-hc’d jump and get it — sort of |a n allcy-oop.” Chaffm said he would much rather catch a |halfbaek pass from Joe's cousin Tom Ferebee. “ Joe always threw it- high and I had to run luiider it,” C haffm laughed. “ But Tom would l l i ^ me right in stride. ’ ’ I,we didn't pass that m uch,” Ferebee i adm itti^. “ Back then, you only threw the foot- j ^ i ; bn third or fourth down and when a lot o f ( yardage was needed. Y ou just didn’t throw on I first or second down. Jt was unheard of. Nobody I started passing until Sam m y Baugh made it to I tlw prcM a few years later.” I i j M ocksviile played its games in the aftem oon I becausie there weren’t any lights. The high school I located in what is now the Brock Building and the field was behind it, where a parking lot I nb\y'.'sits,. ■ ' "W c did play the fir.sl nighi game in M ocksviile history,” Chaffin said, “ bul il was at Bowman Gray Stadium in W iiislon-Salem. W c never played under the lights here." D .D . W hitley was the coach, a complc.x man. according lo Chaffin. “ He was hard lo figure out, but he was a good coach.” Principal F .N . Shearou.se was glad W hitley came along when he did. “ W e wouldn't have even had a team if M r. W hitley had not volunteered to be the coach,” Shearouse told the Emerpri.ie. “ H e took two let- • terman and a group o f ambitious beginriers and molded a team that would have held its own in an even stronger league.” W hitley may have been a little enigm atic, but he wanted the best for his players — even if he had to buy the equipment him self. “ W e had helmets but they w ere all too big for my head,” C haffin said. “ So on punts and kickoffs. I'd take it o ff and throw it over to the sidelines. W hitley finally went to Winslon-Salem and bought me one. H e used to give me the devil about that. “ But w e never had very good equipment. In the team picture, my jersey has a hole in it.” • Regardless o f the torn uniform s and oversiz ed helmets, W hitley must have known he had something special when his 1936 team •opened w ith a 12-6 victory over Liberty. “ K at” T ut terow scored the winning touchdown on a 60-yard interception. Everyone on the team , from tackles Rufus A ngell and Charles Thompson right down to mascot B illy Dw iggins, realized this M ocksviile team was the best in school history. M ocksviile finished w ith a 6-0-1 record, ty ing only Harm ony 6-6. Included were four .shutouts and no team scored more than six points in a game against M ocksville's defense. Ferebee led the team w ilh 26 points thal season and averaged 38 yards a punt. As a unit, M ocksviile outscored Us seven opponents 86-18. C haffin graduated in 1937 but camc back in the fall to watch Tom and Joe Ferebee, Tom lin son, ^am Binkley and John W hite all score touchdowns in an opening 43-0 rout o f M aiden. W hen M ocksviile defeated China G rove 20-6, it held a spotless 6-0 record. The team then lost to Hanes in the final game. “ W e thought w e had it w o n ,” Ferebee said. “ W e had a chance to score late in the game but the referee said we w ere out o f the endzone. I'll never forget that game. W e felt like w e had let everyone down. W c didn't know how to lose. W e hadn’t done that in three years.” • U nlike today, football players didn't all meet after the games and lake their girlfriends out. “ th e re wasn't anything lo do back then,” Ferebee said. “ W e just went home. It sounds Garner, Siiore Are lllavie Volunteers Several ‘Football Lovers’ Enjoy Working Friday Nights Nobody, says D avie assistant Ifootball coach Buddy Low ery, lean load a van like Sam Shore. Loading vans are important to ■ athletic team s, ju s t lik e Ivolunleers are lo Ihc coaches. Is h o re is one o f several Ivolunleers for the football team |lh a t works his job each day but |o n Friday night, becomes one lo f the staff. M ike Carter started jth e tradition and Randall W ard Ihas carried it on in this, his first |year. I “ I was going to quit helping I this year,” Shore said, “ but IR an d all talked to me. So, I'm I back again.” Shore Joins volunteers Dick I G arner, Lefty Stewart and I je r r y Johnson, who keep I statistics for W ard. Shore does more than just J load the vans, however. He I keep up wilh the video cameras. head sets, charts and whatever else W ard needs from him . “ I'v e been doing it for about nine or 10 years,” said the Ingersoll-Rand employee. “ 1 rem ember hearing they needed help so 1 volunteered.” Johnson should really enjoy working with W ard. H e’s been a fan o f the form er Davie Coun ty star since he received a per sonal autograph from the first- year Davie coach in little league. Stewart is a form er player at D avie who has followed his stepbrother, Kendall Chaffin, for years. He and Johnson arc also active in softball each sum m er and they go from one field to the other once fall gets here. Garner has also been at it a long time — almost matching Shore in longevity. Garner Short' T h e 1936 M ocksviile High School football team finished 6-0-1. M em bers included (Front row, from left): W illiam Merrill, W arren Ferebee, R obeil Evans, C .J. Leach, Robert H en dricks, Rufus A ngell and G o rd o n To m lin so n . (S e co n d row ): Holland Chaffin, Jo 6 Ferebee, Th o m a s Ferebee and G e ro g e ‘K at’ Tutterow . Jo e Fe rebee w as the 1937 team captain, quarterback and student bod^ president. — Photo by Ronnie Oallaflher boring now, doesn’t it?” Before the games, the team would assemble at Am erican C afe, where it feasted on a ham burger and Pepsi for about 10 cents toiql. “ K im Sheek’s dad look us all out for a steak dinner after we went undefeated in ‘3 6 ,” Chaf fin said. “ H e bought a steak dinner for a lot o f people and the bill was $10. “ Sports was all w e had then,” he said. “ But w e had some good boys. There’s a lot o f us still - ' around, too. W e had chem istry and our w orld revolved around sports. The fans knew it and w e ^ had good crow ds.” • “ I think we made a nam e for ourselves aiid our tow n,” Ferebee, 7 0 , said. “ W e w ere big J::; news back then.^’ ; M aybe not as big as Noah Brock losing his teeth, but big news just the same. • ESPN Would Love Davie Football Team Nicknames IVIonikers A-Plenty On War. Eagle Squad 1/ -i'V “ I ’ve been helping about eight years,” he said. “ 1 was friends with Buddy when Coach Carter camc and he lold me they needed .some volunteers. 1 just enjoy being out there.” So docs Shore, who has never had children playing Iboiball at Davie. “ 1 had a daughter, M ichelle, go to D avie, bul no Iboiball players,” he .said. “ And I've never coached football, just a year o f little league baseball. 1 just like high school and collegc football.” Shore and Garner said with the coaching change, they real ly didn’t know what iheir roles would be. One thing’s for sure. N o one w ill take over (or Shore in loading the van. He's ail c\p crl al packing foolball luggage. W ould ESPN'.s Chris Berm an love lo live in D avie County? You bet your sweet bippy. Berman would have a field day with the names o f athletes playing fall sports. And they cover the entire spectrum o f the "nicknam e w orld” in D avic County: • Bermuda Run could use Brent “ The G reat” W all. • If you need lo wipe your feel, there's "W elco m e” M att M arion and “ Floor” M att Reznicck. • If you Ibigcl to wipe your feel, you may want to clean your carpel. So, call M alt Stanley "S tecm er.” • Need animals for the zoo? H ow about Robin ■•Redbreast" C am pbell or K evin W ile y "C o y o te " or W ayne M o c k"in g b ird .” • W ant to watch a little television? Then, call G illigan’s friend, Kevin "Thurston B .” H ow ell and M ichacI "A lia s Smith and" Jones and La- M onte “ Sanford” Chunn. • W ant to .see the nieancsl looks anywhere? Go see Clint 'Eastwood” Junker and Todd "f;ye o f the” Kiger. • Need some used books for reading? See Reg gie "Y a rd ” Sales. And while reading, you'll need help from "B o o k ” M ark Croiis. • Y ou're hungry? H ow about a little “ Peanut” J ; Britt Osborne? To wash it down, get in touch w ith •: Ted Budd “ L ite .” • W hat’s that? You want tickets to a rock ‘n ’ roll show? You can get Ihem cheaper from A n - , ^ drew “ Rock Around T h e” Brock. I f you want a good place lo sit, call Steven “ Front R ow ” Seats. I Ihink the most requested song in the show , ^ w ill be sung by K elvin “ Belle D avis” Ijam es. - , • Some o f Ihe players like baseball as much ;. as football. O n the mound, w e have Randy ;- “ M ilw aukee” Brew er, bul who is thal com ing . • to bat? It’s “ The M ig h ty” Casey James, that’s ., who. e There are plenty o f other names that ESPN ,, would drool over. Like mountain clim ber Jason “ M ata” H orne, slock broker Chris “ Rich M an , Poor” M ann, . ■ general "R obert E .” Lee A ibarty, lady-killer Stan "T h e M an ” Pruitl, trackster M att “ Pole” Vaughters and plum ber “ D ow n the” Duane Vestal. ; And please, le i’s not forget Danny R um - ' ple"stiltskin” and Dale Parrish "the thought.” ;■ And e\ eryonc o f the players belter hope lhey \ ; |)lay well Ihis season. Their coach, Randall, doesn't want to go lo the "M e n ta l” W ard.^— ' - 2D-DAVIE COUNTY F.NTKKI'KISK RKCOKI), IHUKSDAV. AiiK-^l. Davie’s ‘Other’ Athletes ’/) -, ; Д / \ i /V iV ' -i „ * - yi ^ -V Varsity Cheerleaders ^Davie High varsity cheerleaders for 1989 are (Front row, from left): Rhonda Cam p-bel, Jam ie Frye, Robin M eadows, Jennifer Jacl<son, Jennifer Rudd, Laurie Babbitt and Seiena Lewis. (Se- cond row): Coach Betsy Young, Coach Lori W eir, Courtney Krenach, M eredith Sause, Katy Healy, Amy H abegger, Erica Triplett, Kym Moser, Traci Tucker and Traci W right. Daaeliig Boots The 1989 Dancing Boots squad consists of (from left): Jennifer i'Stephens, Shelli Plott, Jennifer Crotts, Teresa Koontz, Kristi Barnett, Tina Riggs, Carrie Potts, Annette Bowles, Katrina Greene and Shea H/larkland. V i-* ' /U,r.iU,.' t T liuH'& rJayvM Choorloadors [ Making up the 1989 Jayvee cheerleading squad are (Front row, • from left): Vickie Thompson and Amy Harbour. (Second row): I Elizabeth Sulecki, Susan Boger, Kin^berly Merrell and Tracy Beck. (Third row): Kerri W ard, Traci W right, W endy Hoots, Bet sy Young, Katie M asura, Lori W eir and Keri Draughn. Cheerleaders Dancing Boots Award Winners Clicerlcadcrs and Dancing Boots arc athletes too. In fact, in Davic County, they may put in more practice time and summer workouts than the football team. They certainly win more awards: • The Dancing Boots, under the direction of Susan Waugh, attended a summer dance clinic for the 18th straight year and won a number of awards for the 18th consecutive summer. • The varsity and junior var sity cheerleaders at Davie High, coached by Betsy Young and Lori Weir, also did well this summer, bringing home an armload of awards. • The South Davie cheerleaders on varsity and junior varsity squads won awards. Dancing Boots: 28 Ribbons The Boots practiced twice a week this summer and attend ed the Superstar Dance Clinic at Appalachian State Universi ty Aug. 2-5. They participated in jazz, military, pompom and bodyrock routines and received an “ excellent” on their home routine. After performing 20 routines learned at camp, 28 blue rib bons were given to the team. The Dancing Boots will per form at each Friday football game, the Arts Alive celebra- tiim . C h ris lin lis p a ra d e s a n d '' h o m e b a s k e tb a ll g a m e s . Habegger Selected When the Davie varsity cheerleaders attended the Cheer Camp at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Amy Habegger was selected as UCA all-star and received an instruc tor’s application for next summer. In varsity girls competition, Davie won the “ Best All- Around” trophy. JV Win Title Weir’s jayvee cheerleaders went to the Wake Forest Cheer Camp in June and came home with the Camp Cheer Cham pionship and the pompom championship. In all, the varsity and junior varsity won 20 blue superior ribbons. South Varsity The Tiger freshmen won top honors at the cheerleading camp at Appalachian State July S-8. It consisted of four days on ; intense drills, chants, cheera, and stunts. South received two excellent and seven superior awards. It was also awarded the spirit sticlc for enthusiasm and cooperation. The highlight of thiB event W№ the camp championship, which the squad brought home in the junior high division. .r; South JVs ■ V , The jayvees ai«> attended tte ASU camp and won seye^ outstanding ribbohsii, t W Anita Crotts was one pf campers chosen “ OutstandiA^: I All-Star Cheerleader.’ ; _ Cheerleaders attending canip?| iiiniin Bmnlmwiiiil^Miiiii C rotis (co -ch icO . Joan n a B ab bitt, M on ica C o op er, H eather Henderson, Terra Johnson, Megan Keller, Angie Robertson and Anna Wall. . ; V • fi South Davio Choorloadors The South Davie vai^ity cheerleaders for 1989 are (Frorit row, from left): Tara Howell, Kristi Walker, Jami Coleman and Ellyn Johnson. (Second row): Michelle Vazquez, Becky Cope, Jeht Wilson, Beth Crotts and Kelly Boger. — PhotoB by Robin Ftrgutson and Ronnie Gallagher Davie’s Neighbors Forbush Joins Starmount In Northwest Conference Some may wonder why Derrell Force would leave a successful post at a Soulh Carolina high school to take the Forbush foolball coaching job — one that nobody really wanted. As a 3-A school, Forbush had hit rock boltom, seldom winning in the league. But the Foothills Conference is a memory now as Forbush joins Yadkin Counly rival Slarmount in the revamped Northwest 2-A Conference. If there is any team thal was glad realignmcni came along, it was Forbush. But the Falcons will still have their hands full with Starniouni, which has always gone in the opposite direction of their neighbor. Four straight years B.W. Holt’s team has won the conference lille and nothing should change this season. Below arc capsule looks at each of Davie County’s neighbors: SlarniDiiDl: Holt, who has .several players (Chad Triplett, son Stu Holt and Jonathan Pickett) thal helped Mocksville to the state Legion baseball luials, still secs his team as an underdog. "W e’ll be lucky to win a game or tw'o,” he told the Elkin Trihtme. Thai’s an annual statement but this season Holt points to his losses. Gone is quarterback Brocke Walker, who, along with Calvin Wright and Цугом King, c-ombincci for over 4,000 yards of total ol'fense. Walker threw for 1,347yards with 14 touchdowns, while scoring nine on the ground. Holt al.so lost most of his offensive line. Bul at Siarmounl, Holt never regroups, he jusl reloads. His jayvee team went undefeated in 1988 and brings up quarierback Kevin Ireland, who will wait his turn behind Triplett, jusl as Triplett did as Walker’s understudy. Triplett was an all-conference defensive back last year and will also kick. Pickell and Holt are linemen. Returning is Tracy Dohson, whii ran for 1,100 yards and 20 touchdowns Iasi season. Forhus'h: After 11 years as an assistant. Force will have his work cut oul for him at Forbush, where the varsity managed only 25 bodies. But Ihere is a large junior class from which he will build his team. Quarterback Chad Greene will be a key figure. "W e’re depending on him and his leadership tp carry us a long way,” Force told Tlw Tribime. Aaron Williams, Jerry Phillips and James Tatum will run the foolball while Steven Tucker and Jonathan Petit will lead the defense. "W e’ve got to instill some pride in them and make them understand how much hard work it takes to make a winner,” Force .said. "O ur goal is ..‘iOO.’’ i i),\\iK (•()^:м^' I'MKKi'uisi'; KKcoui), ruuKsnAV, a h u ji, i<js9—3» Junior High Report_______ Building Needed At Nortli Davie Sam Bcck got cxactly wluit lie needed at North Davie tliis I'all. It w asn't a 250-pouiul . lineman or a back with 4.4 speed in the 40^ No, Bcck got a • b u ild in g instead. . • This year, iwhen fans want conces sions, they’ll have it. ■When they have to use •th e 're s tro o m s , Reek ■ they w on’t have to go inside the school. • ■ W hen Chestnut Grove visits N orth for the season opener Sept. 13, fans w ill be treated to a concession/bathroom facility at the field. Beck said no one had ever ap proached him about building a facility until principal Dub Potts made the move last spring. . ' ■ High school students — mak ing up the same classes that built -the D avie High pressbox — began kiying the foundation. •‘No sooner had we gone to Henry Crotts and Janies Nance (m asonry and carpentry teachers) than the foundation was laid and the stiulcnts were building," Bcck said. "T hey did a beautiful jo b ." The building, which stands beside the football Held, has room for storage o f two lawn tractors, a concession stand and bathrooms. Bcck said it just adds to the features of the scenic view, one that he says he is very proud of. “ W c have a beautiful athlctic com plex here,’’ he said. The football field has an underground water system that Beck can start at any tim e with the push o f a button. The baseball complex is regarded as the best in the N orth Piedmont Conference. And now, with the addition o f the concession stand building, he feels it is finally complete. “ If they ever decide to build another high school, it w ill be on the land there beside the field,” Beck said. “ It’s the Whitlock Sticking With Wishbone North Davie athletic director and football coach Sam Beck peers out of the new concession stand, located by the field. — Photo by Ronnie Gallagher pcrfect place for it. W e already have the foundation for good athletic facilitie.s.” • T h e num bers are dow n somewhat at N orth D avie this year, craw ling just over the 3 0 -p la y e r m ark fo r the freshman team. But Beck has several returning starters back and feels good abotit this year. Practice began last week. Beck w ill have hard-nosed runningback D avid O w ens, along with Jon W ard and Brian M ayers. .H e w ill also have eighth grader Tyrone M artin, who he thinks can have a splen did year on the varsity. Beck w ill again be assisted by Ron K irk , who is also a suc cessful wrestling coach. The newest addition is George N ew m an, in his first season o f coaching. M ike Dinkins w ill have the jayvee program . South D avie w ill have its third varsity football coach in three years w hen B arry W h itlo c k takes o ver the freshm an reins from Toni Chaffin. G r i m c s Parker, the lo n g tim e coach o f the Tigers, gave the program to C haffin in 1988 and he guided the team to a 5-2 W hitlock record. W hitlock, 25, was his assistant and o ffen siv e coordinator. N ow , W hitlock w ill be call ing all the shots. H e is head o f the entire football program . “ A t first, we were thinking o f changing the offense to what the high school was running,” he said, “ and all four coaches were going to w ork with all o f the players. But w e’ve decided against that.” N ow , W hitlock is staying w ith the wishbone. “ Th at’s what I grew up w ith and what I know best,” he s a id ."M ik e C arter is m y idol and 1 learned a lot from him ; “ 1 think our team w ill do bet ter running the wishbone. W e have a 180-pound fullback (Robert Scott) that w e want to run the football. H e may not do that in the other offense. W e ’lj run w ith split backs sometime^ but w e’re going w ith the basic wishbone. W e ’re very deep iri running backs.” W hitlock said Jeff Ennis w ill be the defensive coordinator w hile Jerry Callison w ill lead ' the ju n io r varsity. H e w ill b e , helped by first-year coach Todd Carter. “ W e had 34 players out for ’ the freshman team ,’’ W hitlock ’ said. “ If we send the high, school those 34 and North sends • 30 or so, that’s going to be a big jayvee team .” Whitlock liked to pass out of the wishbone last year and saiA he’ll still keep the offens^ exciting. ' “ W e ’ll have pretty good size on fhe lin e ,” he said. “ But we w on’t have m uch depth. W c can’t afford injuries.” Youth Football Report Mocksville Ram s coach Ted Kiser talks with two of his stars, Jonathan Sechrest (left) and Bryan Myers. :i»inebrobk coaches Tim Dunn (left) and Ronnie Beauchamp i jJiscuM practice strategy at the Smith Grove field. pÀlith League Has peyoral Changes I •thThcrc will be numerous I • :ch^ges;wheh tlje Davie Youth I :;#6otbaU starts another Saturday, Sept. 9 for I : :uxth-sevienth grade and fourth ■ ¿fa^rfi№. leagues. The leagUM ue played on the Davie High &hooI field: ^ There will only be one'6-7 te^ from Mocksville. The Cowboys and Colts have merg ed, giving each league five teams. ' ■• • There w ill be four games each Saturday, beginning at 2 I ■ p.m . with tw o 4-5 and two 6-7 games. Games w ill be played each hour-and-a-half. • There w ill be a $1 admis sion fee for the games in what public relations man David Owens claims, “ is still the be.st buy in M ocksville.” ■ • The season has been divid ed in two halves. Each team will play four games in the regular .season and then the same teams, regardless o f rccord, w ill be eligible for four more in the playoffs. The playoffs are the real thing, however. “ W e did this mainly to get in more gam es,” said Owens. ■ • This year’s officers are; Andy Stokes, president; Vernon W hitaker, vice-president; Lynn V ogler, secretary; and Becky Bpauchamp, treasurer. • Below are capsule looks at each team in each division; 6-7 Grade» Pinebrook Packers: Ronnie I Beauchamp’s defending cham pions are in the rebuilding stage and he has only 20 players. “ W e need to gel as a team and I think w e w ill as the season goes along,” he said. “ W c have no standouts so we must have a team effort lo w in .” His assistant coaches include Ronald Boger, Dean Smith and D ennis W hisenhunt. Boger coached from 1972-78 and had several championship teams. A fter 11 years, he is back. Shady G rove Bulldogs: The Bulldogs beat every team but one last year — the Packers. The Bulldogs lost 6-0 in the regular season and 6-0 in the playoff title game. This season, the team is in experienced as coach Jerry Rid dle has only tw o starters retur ning. H e does have a talented sixth grade clii.ss, however. Helping Riddle coach are Kenny W ooil, Steve Ridenhour and Jeff W ard. M ocksville Cowboys: Coach Carl Robertson has only two seventh graders so he's coun ting on players like Damien Lewis at iiuarterliaek. Cube W ilsim anil Sliawii W hile in the D a v i e Y o u t h F o o t b a l l S c h e d u l e Below is the schedule for the Davie Youth League; Sept. 9 2 p.m. — William R. Davie vs. Pincbrook (4-5) 3:30 — William R. Davie vs. Pinebrook (6-7) 5 — Shady Grove vs. Cooleemee (4-5) 6:30 — Shady Grove vs. Cooleemee (6-7) Sept. 16 2 — Mocksville vs. Cooleemee (4-5) 3:30 — Mocksville vs., Cooleemee (6-7) 5 — Pinebrook vs. Shady Grove (4-5) 6:30 — Pinebrook vs; Shady Grove (6-7) Sept. 23 2 — William R; Davie vs. Shady Grove (4-5) 3:30 — William R, Davie vs. vs.- Shady Grove (6-7) 5 — Mocksville Pinebrook (4-5) 6:30 — Mpcksville vs..; Pinebrook (6-7) Sept. 30 2 — Pinebrook vs. Cooleemee (4-5) 3:30 — Pinebrook vs. Cooleemee (6-7) 5 — William R. Davie vs.' Mocksville (4-5) 6:30 — William R. Davie vs. ; Mocksville (6-7) Oct. 7 *' 2 — Shady Grove vs. Mocksville (4-5) 3:30 — Shady Grove vs; Mocksville, (6;7) 5 Cooleeniee vs.William/; R. Davie (4-5): 6:30 — Cooleemee vs.: William R. Davie (6-7) PlayolTs Oct. 14 through Nov. 11 . Ronnie B eaucham p watches as his Pinebrook Packer players go through a drill — Photo by Ronnie Gallagher Y o u T S c o r e s 6 3 4 - 2 1 2 0 backfield. The line w ill be built around Ryan Froelich at center. R obertson is helped by assistants Dennis Sine, John W illiam s, Bobby W a ll, Paul Barber and Tony Hardin. C ooleem ee Redskins: B illy W all welcom ed 21 players and said they were o f average size. " I really can’t tell whal wc w ill have,” he said. He docs have <|uarierback Kevin Brew er, who was pro bably the best passer in 4-.*i grade last season. W all said he’d build his team around Brewer. W illia m R . D nvie Raiders: A ll-everything Robert Thom p son is gone and he’s playing for North Davie, fhe Raiders w ill have lo rely on Paul M ille r and Shannon Leazer, who w ill rotaie at tiuartcrback. running back K eniiy M y e rs , end M ieliael l-'aree and lineman 1‘k'asu Si'u Youth — P. 51> M E M B E R KENDk\LL „ . .. . •GROUP ¡fyo u have diabetes, d o n ’t m iss th is sp e cia l p ric e o n a GLUCOMETER®!! w ith m em ory (ffS625) at your Neighborhood Kendall Group Pharmacy M ILE S You receive a $100.00 mail-in rebate on the GLUCOMETER® II vvilh memory (#5625), $120.00 -100.00 Sale Price Mfg. Rebate $20.00 Final cost Shop i'oiir .S'finhborhtmi Kemlall (¡roup I’harnuiC)' Qiuiliiy Svrvicf For Lew. FO STER -R AUCH DRUG CO .700 Wllkesboro St. Mocksville S A LK h a I KS: Svptiiiibir 2 — Septiinlur til rcosn; ri-R® is a tegisicfcd iradcmaik of Miles Inc. ■ 41)-ПЛУ1Е co un ty KNTKRl-RISK UIXOKD. IIIUKSDAV. Лиц-М. 1989 NAME THE WINNING TEAMS EACH WEEK AND WIN.. CONTEST RULES 1. 2. 3. A nyone can enter except em ployees of the D avie C ounty Enterprise-R ecord and their fam ilies. O nly one entry allowi- ed per person per w eek. All entries m ust be on original new sprint. N o pfioto copies. G am es in tliis w e e k ’s contest are listed in each advertisem ent on these two pages. Fill in the contest blank and subm it or m ail the entry to the E nlerprise-R ecord, P .O . Box 525, M ocksville, N C 27028. T h e first entrant correctly predicting the outcom e of all gam es in a w eek will receive a bonus of $250. W eekly prizes are $ 25 for first place and $ 10 for se cond place. In case of ties, the entrant w ho cam e closest to the total num ber of points in the tie breaker wins. 4. Entries can be delivered to the E nterprise-R ecord before 5 p.m . each w eek. T h e office is located at 125 S. M ain S t., M ocksville, N C . 5. W inners will be announced follow ing each pontest. D ecisions of judges will b e final. A new contest will be an nounced each w eek. 6. In case of ties, aw ards will be divided ‘ equally am ong the w inners. * 2 5 0 $ 2 5 * 1 0 B O N U S P R IZ E For Itt P«rf«ct Entry Your School Bag Headquarters North Davie, South Davie, ’ Mocksville Middle Plus Pro Teams 1. D. Counly al N. Iredell Mocksville Sporting Goods 23 Court Square 634-3155 Crown w Drugs) WaowOtk Shopping Barmuda Quay Shopping Center Higlmy «01 Noith, MoclovWa Highways 1S8 and 801, Advance Phon* 704434.0213 6. Glenn at FarUand Phone 919-998-6800 Dayie County Since 1922’” MOCKSVILLE SAVINGS AND LOAN 4. E M ronylh al Ml. Tabor 6 3 4 - 5 9 3 6 ASSOCIATION I 912 8. MAIN ST. - MOCKSVILLE •’-.3 SAVE *30 To $80 Hurry Sale Ends Saturday Better Eureka4.1 №ip - HlghPirlonnaie«• •Г» ‘ ■ “ ■ 13. Winslon-Salem St. at Knoxville DANIEL FURNITURE & ELECTRIC CO., INC. South Main Street At The Ovoftiead Bridge Phone; 634-2492 " I f i t ’8 B o r d e n ’s It’s g o t t o b e g o o d ” I Bowen Dairy Products i R t . 3 B o x 5 3 1 I M o c k s v i l l e , N .C . 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TR AN EOllice Phone; 998-2121 ----------— " " — — 24 Hour No.: 723 2510 SO Million Advance, NC 27006 people lake comfort In II W e H ave M anufactured H om es To Fit Your B udget S ee Ja c e Today! — 12. W isUrii Carolina at K. Kviituik\ — , . Mobile Нош, Inc. tMIUI jgerele^^ WtlitoSna»iiMiw 2001 S. Cannon Bivd. iVloekavllle, N.C. Kannapolis, N.C. 634-5959 Owned and Operaled by Jac^Morjan 938-4808 МЯ1М CMOlKit I f a r m !- BUREAU I n s u r a n c e George E. McIntyre Sam Nichols James Foster Marshall Cain Your Locai Representaiives D A V IE C O U N T Y F A R M B U R E A U 977 Yadkinville Road MocksviilePhone (704) 634-6207 5. Kc'ymilds ut Nonh Fiirsyth 6 34 -2 8 5 9 Hwy-Mocksville Q f. S u s a n S . S y k e sЙ.оЖр'ж- A f.rtv ly . H ettih Cenlef (919) 998-0755 Hwy. 801 at 1-40 A d van ce, N .C . Total Family Chiropractic Care Patients Seen tlie Same Day They Call (O pen M on.-Fri. Evening Hours Available) M ost Insurance A ccepted • Aulo/W ork Injuries Ц _______j ^ ^ g - « ■ Я И В Е ж “We’re Out To Win You Over” Hwy. 64 & 601 North Mocksville, N.C. Mocitsviile IS. Wincalc at ShephiTd, W . Va.Builders Supply See Our Ad In This Week’s Paper For Special Paint Safel 634-5915 814 S. Main St.998-5700 ШДМUfV f „ H ere. WSYSTEM aa 3 Year Warranty On Original Paint Frame Straightening On Imports and American Made , At Y our... Davie Auto Body 133 Wiikesboro St.634*4451 FREE EITIMAUt 18. Colurad SI. ; at 'I'ciiiu'siiec ' Mocksville, N.C. DAVIK COUN TY KN TKUI’KISK UKCOUD. TIIUUSDAY, Лпц.З!, 1989-5П The Football Contest Can Your Entry Win $250? Not If We Can Help It The Enterprise-Record I-ool- bail Contest begins another il lustrious year this \vcei< witli 20 games. Each week, the winner will receive $25 and the second place finisher gets $10. As always, the contest will appear in the sports section cach week and entrants will have the opportunity to pick from high school, collegc and professional matchups. There will be ¡m added bonus for anyone picking all 20 games correctly. That entrant will receive $230. D on't count happening. Heh, hch, heh. on that Galliit’Iicr’.s l’ick.s As always the crack staff here at the Emerprise-Record will try its hand al picking the games as well. Week: 0-0 Season Record: 0-0 riii.s W eek’s CJanies: Davie C()unt.v at North Iredell: North Iredell is favored on paper but the game ain't played on paper. This will be Davie’s debut as a passing team. I think they’ll win. Davio by 7. We.sl Forsylh at Carver: Who will win the Baltic ofthe Bovendens'.’ Will Gray lead West to a victory or will Jim coach his Carver team to a win. This is the year of the Titans. West by 10. Duke al South Curoliiia: Duke has another good quarter back but South Carolina is pick ed to win, if for no other reason than being at home. Sparky Woods wins his llrst game. South Carolina by 6. iVIeinphis St. at Mississippi: Ole Miss and Doug Jacobs are 500-1 shots to win the SEC. They won’t win that lille but they will defeat Memphis State. Ole Miss by 8. Texas at Colorado: Davie mav not have the wishbone but wc had lo get one ‘Bone team in here. Colorado is it and will up.sct Texas in the opener at home. Colorado by I. Other W inners: South Rowan, East Forsylh, North Forsyth, Parkland, N.C. State, Clemson, Appalachian State, Marshall, Eastern Ken tucky, Winston-Salem State, N.C. A&T, Wingate, Ten nessee, Wyoming, Oklahoma; Youth continued from P. 3D M ark Atwood. “ W e ’ll have to w ork on the offensive line because o f size,” said coach H ow ie Sanders. Also coaching arc Frank Dot son and Henry Sanders. • 4-5 G rade M o c k s v ille R a m s : T h e defending champions lost a lot o f bodies but they return key people as well. Expected to see heavy duty are Jonathan Sechrest, D erick D ulin, Jason Beane, Bryan M yers and Lester Scott. Head coach Ted Kiser, along w ith assistants David Beane, : Bubba Beaver and newest addi- : tion M ark M cC lannon w ill use : a num ber o f new faces. Pinebrook Trojans: U ntil i Ih e Rams came along, the T ro jans dominated 4-5 play. This year, T im Dunn says he has the youngest team in history, with only four boys back. They are K urt Dim os, Kevin Parker, Keith Tate and Scott Spillm an. “ W e'll be a little quicker than last year but not as b ig ,” said Dunn. “ The key word for this team is patience. Patience is the greatest o f all shock ab sorbers.” H elping D unn coach arc M ike Brenner, Steve Yandell and Joey M ason. Cooleemee Redskins: Randy Athey, Stan R iddle and Gerald W ilk ie w ill coach the young Redskins, which fmished 3-4 in 1988. There are only 17 boys on the team , led by quarterback Brian Eudy and B rian Brew er on defense. Shady G rove Bulldogs: After a 3 ^ season, Jeff Ward is very optimistic with his retur ning experience and size. He has 12 returning fifth graders and 17 first-year players. W ard’s assistants arc Ronnie Beane, Tony Moore and Craig Seaford. William R. Davie Raiders: It seems like a long time sincc the Raiders won the 4-5 cham pionship three years ago and Bill Murphy hopes he can bring back the glory. He has his en tire line back in Dustin Allen, Steven Youniz, Aubrey James and Justin Miller. Chad Dyson has gone from line to quarter back and has looked good. Helping with the coaching are ! ADVERTISER David Gilbreath and Jeff Barneycastle. I I II I I I I I I II I I ENTRY BLANK Scarch the ads on these two pages lo fmd the contest games. Then enter the team you predict will win beside the advertis ing sponsor's name listed below. Bring or mail your entry to the Davie County Enterprise-Rccord, P.O. Box 525, Mocksville, NC 27028. Deadline is Friday, 5 p.m. WINNER Your Complete Hometown Drug Store _____________2Q. N. Mexico St. at Okluhonia^________________ Fosler-Raueii Prug Co. Phone: 634-2141 Wilkesboro Street Mocksville, N.C. 1. Mocksville Sporting Goods_ 2. First Federal Savings Bank, 3. Reavis Ford/Mercury______ 4. Mocksville Savings And Loan. 5. Davie County Farm Bureau__ 6. Crown Drugs_____________ . 7. Bowen Dairy________________ 8. Davie Supply. 9. Shore’s Plumbing & Heating. 10. Furches Motors___________ I I I II I I I I I I I I I I I I I - I I ■ I - I I T - I . I 1 Ca 11Й Ytdkinvlllf Rd. ИоекмИ*,И.С. 704.«Э4-54гв Seafood Restaurant No. 2 Of Mocksville • F lo u n d e r • S c a llo p s • S h r im p • O y s te r s •Frog Legs • Catfish A n d M o re l 23. RutKcni at Cincinnati , HOURS: Monda/ Closed Tues. • Thurs. 4 p.in.-9 p.m. Fri.-Sat. 4 p.m.-IO p.m. Sun. 1V.30 am-9pm Before you buy any tractor, consider the name behind It 19. Loulsvillf al Wyoming Davie Tractor & Implement Co. Phone: 634:5969 Hwy. 601 South Mocksville, N.C. || 11. Webb Heating & Air Conditioning. 12. Bonanza Mobile Homes__________ 13. Daniel Furniture & Electric Co.. 14. Hardee’s____________________ 15. Mocksville Builders_______^__ 16. Advance Chiropractic________ 17. Hillcrest Furniture____________ 18. Davie Auto Body ! J I Today’s Treasures 766-6695 s P ric e le s s T re a s u re s A t p A ffp r d a h le C osts (Stadium Dr., Genimons Behind The BBQ Bam) DAYTON MOTORS CHEVROLET GEO YOUR MOCKSVILLE/YADKINVILLE CHEVROLET DEALER 22. Pacinc at PiUsliurKli B E S T d b A l s Courteous Attention Service After the Sale 421-601 S. Yadkinville. N.C. 919-679-3135 21. smrord al Arliona Highway 601 North -Yadkinville Road Mocksville, N.C. 634-2198 Щ 1 ) о О Ы а т В 1 ^ Л ,V tn765-907f H a -L C R E S T ‘u r n i t u r e Fum isi Hom es Since 1962 2560 S. Stratford Rd. Mon.-Sat. 9-6; (Beside Jim Weavil Appliance) Fri. 'til 8; Closed Wed. I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I i I I I I I I I I I 22. Dayton Motors Chevrolet GEO. I 23. Cap’n Stevens Seafood Restaurant #2L • 24. Today’s Treasures I I- I Tie Breaker I Predict the score in the following contest. In case of ties,tl;c tie-brea . ■j will be used to determine the winners. ! I ■ I ' ' I I I 'Name ' ____'' . ' _ — ■ Address ; " ^ Town ! Day Phone ' Night nione I Submit by mail or in person to the Enterprise-Record office; | I 124 S. Main St.. Mocksville. 19. Davie Tractor & ImplemenL 20. Foster-Rauch Drug________ 21. Kentucky Fried Chicken. 4 I ^*1 еакеЛ .D a v ie vs, N , Ir e d e ll, 124 S. Main S t., Mocicsville. or P.O. Box 525, Mocksvillc, NC 27028 Deadline For Entries Friday At 5 p.m. Thur«., Aug 31 No»« Dame $4 Virginia 8 S at. S«pt 2 * Major Cotleaea - Div. 1-A 17 23 7 7 14 7 27 21 14 7 20 20 14 22 13 0 7 7 21 17 7 17 THE BOB HARMON FOOTBALL FORECAST 'Cokvado Mon., Sept 4 27 Texas Other Games • East 14 •Air Force •Ariiona Brigham Young ‘Clemson •Eastern Michigan ‘Rorida Slate •Fresno State Fuilefton State •Hawaii I Houston •Kansas L.S.U. •Long Beach State •Memphis Slate •North Carolina Stale •Oklahoma •Pittsburgh Rutgors •S.M.U. •South Carolina Southern California *SW Louisiana Tom pie •Tonnesseo •Tsxas-EI Paso •Toledo •V.RI. Vanderbilt ‘Washington Slato •West Virginia 'Wyoming 31 San Diego Slate 24 Stanford 45 ‘New Mexico 31 Fumian 20 Kent Slate 30 South'n Mississippi 28 Utah 24 •Northern Illinois 24 Tulane 40 ‘Nevada-Las Vegas 21 Montana State 23 ‘Texas A&M 30 Northridgo 24 Mississippi 23 Maryland 49 New Mexico Stale 48 Pacific 28 ‘Cincinnati 23 Rice 23 Duke 34 Illinois 24 Louisiana Tech 22 •Westorn Mictiigan 21 35 Colorado State 13 28 Tulsa 17 24 Ohio U. 20 24 Akron 13 27 ‘Mississippi Stato 17 33 Idaho 7 40 Ball Stato 6 26 Louisiana 7 Sat., Sept. 2 • Major Colleges 1-AA *Angelo Slate ‘Appalachian Slate Bethuno-Cookman *Coigate Delaware Stato Eastern Illinois 'Eastern Kentucky *FlondaA&M 'Georgia Southern Grambting •Hampton ’Howard 'Indiana Stale Jacksonville State *Jani09 Madison 'Maine 'Marshall 'McNeese Middle Tennessee 'Montana 'Nevada-Reno North Carolina Central 'Northern Arizona 'Northern Iowa NW Louisiana S.F. Austin 'South Carolina Stato 'Tennessee Tech 'Tennessee-Marlin TeiasA& l 'Texas Southern 'V.M.I.Villanova Western Kentucky 23 Lamar 38 Gardner.Webb21 Central Florida 24 Fordham 35 ChaynevSfafo 35 'Austin Peay 23 Westorn Carolina32 Tuskeoee 31 Valdosta 23 Alcorn 27 Mississippi Valley 49 District of Columbia23 Central Missouri 34 'Samford33 DIoomsburg 30 Youngstown 31 Catawba 24 Mississippi College 33 Tennessee State40 Eastern Now Mexico 27 Southern Illinois 21 'Nonh Carolina A & T 40 Abilene Christian 23 Mankato23 'SW Missouri 28 'Jackson Slate 27 Presbyterian22 Lock Haven 27 Murray State 24 'SWTejras 22 Prairie View 24 East Tennessee20 'Richmond21 'Illinois State 21 71410 713 14 6 71713 0 7 7 6216171010 17 714 10 13 14 21 14 1413 2114 13 10 American international Camegle-Mellon 'Central Connecticut Grand Valley 'Hofsua John Carroll Mansfield 'Shippensburg 21 'Clarion 25 'Duquesne 22 Montclair 28 'California State, PA37 Pace 20 'Buffalo U 21 'Lycoming 30 Wesl Liberty O ther G am es - M idw est 14 72010 71020 'OÜVM.H. P#fU Pitttburg Oufncy 'ROM-Hubnan SE Míiiourí Simpwn 'South Dakota U. *Wa«hbum WItconsIn-Eau Claire 23 Lak«lftnd 22 MttouriVall«y 24 *NE MMOurl 20 *Eur»{ui 24 MUIm m 31 «SWBÏptitt 21 *Omk* 45 Wkyrw State. NE 30 ш мип-аоив 17 *Winona Statt 14 2110 13 6 7 14 e 1310 other Games - South & Southwest Adams State 'Alma Auguslana, SD Baker BenedictineButler Centrai Arkansas Central Slato, OH'Chadron •Dana 'DenisonDickinson. ND 'Emporia State 'Fort Hays Graceland'Hastings 'Hillsdale Jamestown Mayville •Mmnesota-Dulufh 'Missouri Southern 'Missouri Western Nebraska Wesleyan 'Nebraska-Omaha 'Northern Michigan 'Northern Slate Nonhwesiern, lA 23 •SW Oklahoma 2120 Northwood 14 34 'Minnesoia-Monis 1031 'Doane 1221 'Tarkio 20 24 •Ferris 17 28 'East Central Oklahoma 741 Urbana 6 21 South Dakota Tech 7 17 Dakota Wesleyan 1320 Waynesburg 17 33 •Black Hills 6 24 Harding 727 Western Slate 1238 Grinnoll 6 22 Colorado Mines 20 27 St. Francis. IL 723'Huron 20 20 'Dakota State 7 40 Wisconsin-Superior 1027 Lincoln 8 21 NW Missouri 1217'Wosimar 1424Central Oklahoma 14 24 North Dakota U. 2224Kearney •Momingsido 23 31 10 Alabama A &ly| 'Bowie Carson-Newman 'Concord East Texas •Elizabeth City 'Georgetown, KY Henderson Morehouse 'Morris Brown NorfolkSacramento State 'Savannah State 'Shepherd 'Southern Arkansas Virginia State 'Virginia Union West Virginia Stale West Virginia Wesleyan Winston-Salem ‘Wofford 26 North Alabama 23 JO Smith 21 •Fa/miont 21 Mars Hill 23 Livingston 24 Liivingstone 45 Tennessee Wesleyan 24 Arkansas-Píneáruff 20 Lane 41 Clark 24 Morgan State 26 'West Texas 33 Mies22 Wingate 27 Howard Payne 26 'Kentucky State 35 Fayetteville 25 'West Virginia Tech 21 'Glenville 40 'Knoxville 23 West Georgia Other Games - Far West 'Carroll. MT •Mesa •Montana Tech 'Portland State •Rocky Mountain •Santa Clara •St. Marys. CA 'Western Now Mexico 41 Minoi 42 New Mexico Highlands 22 Valley City 33 Cameron 22 Mary 21 Chico Stale 24 Southern Utah 28 Panhandle 21 14to 2020 230 15 10613 7 021 7 71020 14 721 « Cooleemee Accepts 5.35 Miles Of Town Streets 6D-DAVIE COUNTY ENTICUl’KISK RKCORI), THURSDAY. Анц.-М, 1989 i COOLEEMUE — There are ;5.35 miles of mwii .sireets here. ; Al a spccial nieeling Iasi week, tlie town board of conmiissioners -unanimously agreed to accept responsiliilily lor upkeep ol the Mreels. The lown will now receive slale Powell Hill funds lo pay for street upkeep. The N.C. Deparlmenl of Art Class Offered ; Davidson Counly Community College will offer Art: Beginners to Advanced cla.ss in Davie Coun ty beginning Sept. 7. - Tiiis class will offer participants im opportunity to use different media such as charcoals, pasiels, watercolors, pen and ink. acrylics. Deadlines Early For Next Week ; The Davie Counly Enlerprise- Record will be closed on Monday, Sept. 4. : Anyone wilh a news item for the Sept. 7 issue should bring it by the newspaper office no later Ihan 5 p.m. Friday, Sept. 1. ¡ Advertisements should also be rwdy by 5 p.m. Friday, Sept..!; '¡iSie advertising deadline will be at ijiron on Tuesday, Sepu 5. Libhard Realty 34 To wn 704-ё34-387£ ___________________ IIAITCH,lO R REIVr • V3 ЬнЬчяа кипе •m "."M OULE Ш Ш Е iX)T - lOOillS Lot ■ Scfik ludi m d wen REDUC- E 0>t,2te.DAVIE STBEET • rkynKBia k a Ik u n o t on Ibta newlyHdp witb ckalng coiti. *2>,SN.CHUKCH STBEET - Charming oMer home bi pnicc» or remodel ing. U rge lot. Maybe purehased and remodeling completed as you dedre. _ ADVANCE - 4 jr ii- r e lL C « u U H V K lp rlc e of •59,»fl0. CUUNTRV COVE - Large wooded lot wilh 3 btdnom-' bath home. Rock П гер 1 еО \,У bookcases. Lota of storce. Basement. Many Extras. Pinebrook School. Small devekmment. *88.S00.OFF 601 N. - 3 Br, 2 ЙЛ double wide home. Heat pump, СЛ. Ap pliances, Sal. Dish. 2 oul bulldlnus. Large lot, *39,900. ■NDUS-TKIAL - 4.2 acres »¡th railroad fronlaKi*. Located in Mocksviile. 42,000 I 601 N. ZONED illcm V A Y t BUSINESS - 100x4001д|| with hrick home. ‘115,000. i IN TOWN - Central llilsiiicsH Zoii- Ì ing Loi 24S X 200 - <24,IHIO ‘ COUNTRV LANE-bniebuildini! lot »ilh septic lank. *17,000 YADKIN CO. - Older ristorili home with aireuiic, slreum. ’68,900 6111 N. - 4 bedriHiin, 2 iialh luimi', iiviiiK riHim, dining riH)iti, llau'mi'iil ; oil a hrae iol. i'omi‘liii‘i)l iiH'Olioii. • *115,000 ; DOWNTtlWN ilUSINiiSS I.DT - ' utitl Wuri'iioiiu's IIP biillilini; fnr Slmili Imsincss. 1.(||чиГ ixisslliililics. OwlliT :ill\imi4 1‘iiK'i: Ui;m'i i:i) S2u.imo. OlliiT iiimu's \ I.aiiil A\ailiibli- i.iiliia l.i'iiiiaril 7IM-6.14-.I65II C.viltliia ЛцпМп 7(14-6.14-4 Mil and oils. Sludenis will slan wilh ihe basics and work on up lo more ad vanced projecls. The class will mecl on Thursdays from 6-9 p.m. al North Davic Jr. Higli School. A $30 regislration fee will bo collected al the first class meeting. Persons 65 or older may enroll free of charge. To pre-register or obtain addi tional information, call the Conti nuing Education Office at 634-2885. Pino-Farmington Club Meets By Mrs. Elma Dull Club Reporter Mrs. Carolyn Boger was hostess to the Pino-Farmington Homemakers Club Aug. 23. The president, Ruth Brock, call ed the meeting to order. Lelia Essie read a senlenee sermon, “I Do Nol Carc.” The group sang, “For The Beau ty Of The Earth” and “America The Beautiful.” Each member answered roll call wilh Iheir favorite garden vegetable and report blanks were filled out. For the Sepl. 27 meeting, all members will meet at Farmington Methodist Church at 10 a.m. and go on a tour of Reynoida Gardens, then out to lunch. The meeting was adjourned and refreshments were served by Mrs. Boger. 'I’ransporlalioii can be c0nlriiclc(.l lit ilo Ihe work. Prnvell fiill fumls arc allociileil in Oclolier. The slale will keep responsibiliiy for N.C. 801. Cenler Slrcel. Marginal Slrcel. Gladstone Road and Davie Academy Road. • Also at the mecling, Ihe board adopted two resolulions pertaining to lown elections. One will allow absentee balloting, and ihe other will put candidates' names on the ballot in alphabetical order. Hi! My name is Brent Kristopher Harpe and 1 celebrated iny 2nd birthday on Friday, Aug. 25th. I really enjoyed my “ Farm Animal” birthday cake and ap preciate the nice presents I received. My daddy and I share the same birthday which made this a very special day for botli of us! My parents are Derek and Pam Harpe and my big brother Is Brandon. My grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Homer Potts of Cornatzer and Mr. and Mrs. Joe Harpe of Farmington. My great-grandmother is Mrs. Burton Seats of Farmington. |HII My name is Kayla Snyder 11 J u s t celebrated my second y: I had a cookout at my / wiiicb included hot dogs, and , a. strawberry short- ¡¡Cake doll cake. I would like to ¡^hahk my family and friends for sill my gifts and for making my H^irtMtey so special. My grand parents are Mrs. Wanda Green Synd Mr. William S. Bjarneycas- and Ms. Joan Snyder. I am )^e daughter of Brent and a>ttehelle Snyder, NI'KI) MW I ISI NKW l.lS'tiSHS T t r — Home Place Realty, Inc. C C E l t j All Your Building& Real Estate Needs NEW LISTING f2,100 OLD GEORGIA ROAO-62 acres on Old Geogia per acre. Road.SetinChristmasTreeswithlakeonproper- ty. Good Investment Property. HOMES M T $136,000 $130,900 RIDGE ROAO Ridge R o^ 35i fhouse on d, stream on value. t living in this 3 l)edroom brick home. Situate on 11.41 acres off of Mill ing Road, this home is very.private. A must tosee. PINEBROOK DRIVE ADVA brick home oM jOM f^SBi^Bnnn back. Many ejjgj^f^SViganKian well, swimm ing pol^Sebam , large deck, burglar alarm & more. LAND $1,200 OFF DUKE WHITTAKER R D .-21.25 per acre acres of level land. Sewn in Pines approx. 15 yesrs dso $2,600 OLD GEORGIA RD. • 46.74 acres with per acre road frontage. Possblle larger tract available. Call for more details. ’ $5,800 RUFFIN ST. EXT. 3 • building lots with each gas lines and water, already perked and FmHa auitable, Call today while Govern ment Money is still available. $50,000 GUN CLUB RD. ADVANCE - 3.78 acres. Beautiful piece of land just perfect to build on. BUSINESS $69,500 N. MAIN STREET MOCKSVILLE - Pric ed below tax value. Building has excellent rental income & positive cash flow. Possi ble owner financing. Call today. 119 Depot Street, Mocksviile BOB SHELTON, Broker 634-2252 VON SHELTON, Broker 634-0110 Rayinonda Saunders, Sales 634-1527 Barry Whittaker, Sales 634-1439 Frank Payne, Sales 998-2622 Rick Bazaar 998-9490 HELPING OTHenSOWN :HOWARD REALTl DAVIE COUNTY Our Specially/Our County & Insurance A g ency,Inc. 330 s . Salisbury Street Howard Corner of Hwy. 64 & 601 Mocksviile, N.C. OFFICE HOURS Mon.-Fri. 9-6 Saturday 9-1 Sunday By Appointment (704) 634-3538 Connie Kowalske Jackio Hall Jane Whitlock M.J. Randall Linda Daughtrey Mike Hendrix C.C. Chapman Diane Foster Jan Hntlev (919) 998-6463 m 634-3754 634-6343 634*1155 634-5704 634-5629 998-3842 634-0390 634-2534 634-5692 634-0129 «20,000 . INVESTORS DREAM bedroom. 1 balh. Harv/ood floor. ‘31,900 • Ov^ner finance on this starter home. 2 BR. 1 balh. completely remodel ed, 1 acre lot. <35,500 - New Double WUe with 1,000 sq. ft. on V2 acre, home features 2 BR, 2 baths, all appliances. »36,300 . 156 SPRING STREET - 3 bedroom, 1 balti horns located In conve- nioni location. Good slartor or retiroment home at a good price. •36,900 • QUAINT COTTAGE - in excellent condilion, 2 bedroom, kilchen w/drning area, large outbuilding wired lor workshop. PerlecI starter or investment property. •42,000 - HECENTLV REMODELED. 3 BH, 1 balh collage, i^rge front poich and deck, new root, gas lurnace, storage building. _________ «42,000 . OFF SHEmELD RD.^GTSiT Buy -1560 Sq, FI. mobile home on 1 acre. Great master suile wilh garden tub, 3 bedroom & 2 balhs. Like new, plus furniture._____ ____________________ •42,900 - Lovely brick rancti home, 3 BR, IVi bath in rural selling, neutral colors, storage bidg. •43,900-MORSESTREET-1100sq fl,3 BR, 1'A balh brick home. Sioy*, ' relrigeralor, & coiling Ians slay. i •46,IX)0 - Neat 3 BR, bticit home with basement, home lealures hardwood floors, new carpet and paint. 1’/2 year old home in Shady Grove School Dlslricl - w(3 BR, 2 balhs, full bsmt,, deck, sky light In balhroom, heat pump and lilt in Ihermopane windows. Greal starter or retirement home._____^ •57,500 - 3 BR, 1 iMth, ilR with FP. plut basement, wooded lot with garden'tiMc* on .7 acre. ;• •62,500 - CUTE AND COZY - Collage with Country Decor on 5 acres with horse barn plus storage building Oil furnace, countrykuclion •65,000 • RITCHIE ROAD - Charming log rancher with 3 BR, 2 balhs on 2.79 acres,MovG In Condition’ ” •M,900 - HWY. M WEST - Super nlMbricic rancher on 1 acre. Family room, llv- stays. Groat Buyl •«7,000 - TUCKED AWAY IN THE CITY - with alt the apeal ol country living. Ths 3 bedroom home features living room wilh fireplace, Lg. den, hardwood floors, manicured lawn. Call loday.____________ •69,900 ■ Movt-ln coiHlhlon Lovely 3 BR, Vh bath brick home on 1.63 acres, remodeled, nice landscape. •79,900 - BEST BUY IN TOWNI • 3 bedroom, 2% baths, deck, brlci( fenced patio, dbl. garage on 1.34 acres * possi ble owner financing. •at),500 - SANFORD ROAD - enticing, new decorated, brick ranch conveniently located. Features partially finished basement, great lamily area, pool, fenced back yard, garden and fniit trees. ’^•70,000 • Excellent mainUiiMKl 2 BR. 2bath brick home kleal for rttimMnt. Lav*-. ly screened porch, lg. utility im:. biml. b it > ol storage, carport, & nlct ywd. All oonv«- jientjjtogtedj^ •М,бОО-ВЕТНа CHUKCH R0AD-3BR.brkA home on io e kil wl^linltn ipM. huge covered deck; woritthOD M CÉdtatowa^ pn h t d n h i l •89,900 - WANDERING LANE • 3 bedroom, 2 bath home In lovely area, tjrge LH/DR comb., eat-in.kit, den, family rm., double garage. •19,900 - E. LAKE DRIVE ■ Great Vh story home with lull basement. Quality con struction. Water frontage, convenient location. •MitOO - 20 Fenced AcrM > wfctetk,restored farm house w/3 BR, 2 b ^ > plus horse barn, milk bam. Horse Laver's Dream. •69,900 - Secluded ranch type home w/lull bsmt. on 5 acres, 4 BR, 2 balh, 20x40 garage, 34 acres and house lor »129,900. •99,000 1.7 acres w/4 BR, 1 bath home, possible rezonlng for this R-15 property, A good Investment! •134,(00 - OFF CAUHAN RD. - Rustk! A Frame 1<A story wilh lull llnlilwd bate- ment, situated on S tccN, 3 BR, 3 baths, 2 kitchens, wrap-around deck, hot tub. REbUCEOl »137,400 • UniquenProperty for the discriminating buyer • with unique tasle - Space 2400 + sf, Privacy ■ wood back yard w/view of pond & golf course. Luxury 500 sf. Master Suite. Great Room w/vaulted ceiling & skylights. <139,900 • 3,219 sq. ft. 2 story home w/fuli bsmt. on 5 wooded acres, screen porch & deck w/scenic view, 4 BR. 3 full baths. •144,500 ■ Mini-Horse Ranch w/brick home loaded w/ country charm, wood fencing, horse barn, riding ring, plus cralt shop, con veniently located. -COMMERCIAL PROPERTY- HWY. 158-16 plus acres Ihat could berezoned for business. Preser^lly there MOCKSVILLE* Income i IS a 2 BR, 2 BA. ome that is used as a rental. *100,000. BETHEL CHURCH flOiHWY. 801 • 2.9 ac, zoned (ight mdustial, well & bMing on property. Perk ap- Call for delails. proved. »35,000.-LOTS & LAND ..........^___ouse for sale. Call lor delails'132,500, ) ■ 167 acres on Bethel Church Road (Railroad Siding) Off Jericho Church Rd..20 Plus Acres SSO.OOO Eaton Road..................................8.71 Ac. »75,000 Highway 64 East...........................46 Ac. »73,600 Hwy. 158....................16 Ac. + House »100,000 Corner Ot Saln/Mitllng49.8S Ac. Lots of Rd. Ftg. house & poultry houses »115.000 N. Cooleemee........................114.5 Ac. »143,000 Needmore Rd.................................................»2,800RENTALS Hobson Road.................................1.87 Ac. >7,500 Tot & Gwyn St...............................................*7,500 Hickory Hill..............................Falnway Lot »9,500 Hospital Street Ext..............................Lot «10,000 Hickory Hill......................Lake Front Lot «10,000 18.5 Acres - Approx. 300 ft. Rd. Frontage Par tially Wooded Level in Edge ol Iredell Co.»29,900. Oil Needmore..................29 Plus Acres »35,000 SAf^FORD AVENUE — WAREHOUSE SPACE FOR RENT — Foatures convenient location, 10x8 overhead door, lights, SOO sq. It. »175 Per Month ' Кт Child Care Programs Operating In Scliools DAVIK C’OUN I'V I;M KKI’KISIC lŒCOlW, rilVHSDAV, 1<Ш-70 The Davie Family YMCA cliild carc programs are currently operating in every elementary ;school in the county. ; Children of working parents may ;leave their children as c;irly as 6:30 ;a.m. at Mocksville, Pinebrook, ;Shady Grove and Cooleemee lElementary Schools. The children Xcceive supervision, homework assistance and receive supervised activities until school starts. ; The afternoon program operates every school day from 3 p.m. to Lab or D ay T raffic F a ta litie s M a n y ; CHARLOTTE - Labor Day Vveekend, which begins Friday, Sept. I, at 6 p.m. and ends Mon day, Sept. 4, at midnight, could result In 19 traffic fatalities and Qvcr 1,000 serious injuries, Ihc {J.C. State Motor Club has projected. ; Last year over the holiday 22 persons lost their lives and 1,296 were injured and in 1987 traffic ac cidents claimed 36 lives and injured 1,216. : Operation CARE — Combined Accident Reduction Efforts will be ih effect over the holiday. • “It is very important to use your seat belt,” Dr. John Frazier stat ed. “It is a proven life saver.” 6 p.m. In all the elcmenlary sclumls plus William R. Davie. The program includes sporls. crafts, music, games, art. homework time, tutorial help and value sessions. This year all pro gram participants will have the op portunity to be an active member of the 4-H club lieltl at cach school site. Each teacher work day or out school days for holidays the YM CA provides full day child carc programs. Enrollment should be made through the YMCA at 634-0345. Ahiniinuni Can Drive The YMCA Is sponsoring an aluminum can drive to help raise money for its building fund project, deposit them in the T and I. truck- Partlcipants should place their ing trailer parked in the Si|uirc cans in plastic garbage bags and Boone Plazii parking lol. 4^1 1/ 2 to 1 a c re lo ts - u n d e rg r o u n d u tilitie s, c o u n ty w a te r — n o c ity ta x e s On Bethel C hurch Road Ju st 1 mile from city limits "The Right Place For Vour Home!” CALL 704-634-4150 6-1Б-11пЬр ^ ^ Stony Brook V2 a c r e l o t s . C o u n t y w a t e r . . L o c a t e d o n S a n f o r d R o a d , O f f 6 0 1 . •• E a s y A c c e s s T o 1 - 4 0 O r 6 4 M i n u t e s F r o m M o c k s v i l l e (919) 998-3907 R.M.F. Construction Co., Inc. Profess onal Full Time Real Estate Agency Etciiison Realty & Investments Inc. Broker - Realtor til „ Services Available ■“ Reat Estate Counseling • Residential Marketing Buyers Assistance • Property Management 410 Morse Street, Mocksville, N.C. Ph. (704) 6 3 4 -1 7 6 2 ‘‘Personal Broker Assistance On all Agency Listings” FOR SALE 210 E. Maple Avenue «58,950 Call for details on this nice home Larew — Wood — Johnson, Inc. 135 S . Salisbury Street, M ocksviiie , 634-6281 L i f e s t y l e HOMES S REALTY. INC. (7041 6 3 4 - 0 3 2 1 8 1 8 S o u th M am S tre e t IV fo ck sv ille, IV.C. Office Hours M onday - Friday Я 7 Sat 10 4 Sim ? I HOMES ■ 115,000 WATTS STREET - Two bedroom, one bath home Is good loca tion In Cooleemee. Great Investment potential.«18,900 CROSS STREET - Cute 2 bedroom, 1 bath home perfect (or young couple. Just freshly painted inside and out. Ready for your i pgfgonal touch to make it home. •2 8 eoo W ATT STREET/COOLEEMEE - 2 Bedroom, 1 Balh home with aluminum siding exterior. Personal property includes range, w asher and dryer. Nice lot in good location, convenient to schools, churches and shopping. : 129.900 SANFORD AVE.M OCKSVILLE-1 or 2 bedroom/1 bath. Good location. A cross from ttie G arden Valley E ntrance. G ood starter hom e or Ihveetiiwnt property. ; v$31,900 H W Y . e o i l H H R I T T M ^ ^room and and this could be your d r e e n f lW P W W W ( P ^ ^ ^ W d e f a ll8. ^^■134,900 OFF DANIEL RD. - 3 BR's, 2 bath modular home on large heavily , , vMOded lot. Extremely well cared for. Large covered back porch , , ollers'room lor outdoor enjoyment. S34i900' SUMMERPLAC&HKIH НО<Ж LAKE - The ferfect get-away you've been looMng for. Nice 2 bedroom cottage completely fur nished. Features living room with fireplace, front covered porch lor lelaxing, nice deck tor sum m er cook4>uts. Summ erPlace Dub- , division otiera community privileges Including community boat dock and plersr and 0 hole golf course,: |S 8 ,t0 0 . T U R R tiniN E CHURCH ROAD • II your have w anted an affor- KI ‘ dabl* horns. You can snjoy country living in this 2 bedroom , 1 bath hom e. P lease call to se e today. O wner says MAKE ME AN OFFER. :: 139,000 CHERRV M LL ROAD • A creage with very nice mobile home.2 bedroom s and 2 full baths featuring a garden tub and central •Ir. 3.74 acres o( land with som e In fescue and excellent road frontage. 60 Bradford pear trees and new pinoaks on the land. Moer,. tiller and greenhouse rem ain with property. а3 9 ,М 0 MAM ST. COO LOM EE yo u 'v eb eecentral iiiij Charming hom e with all the extras " ir, vinyl siding, for teenager or study/otticii space. Well maintained, ready for a new owner. $39,900 DAVK ACADCMV RQ. - Enjoy the country living you love In this hiral 2 bedroom hom e on a one acre lot. The roomy country kitchen and a double detached garage contribute to the easy living this hom e h as to otter.<49,000 OLAM TONE ROAD - Excellent Investment property in private : setting! T hree bedroom s and 1 bath, fireplace and wood stove. NEW ROOF. Take advantage of this bargain todayl949,900 LAKEWOOD VILLAGE • Nice 3 bedroom/1 balh Brick rancher I on large lot, completely rpmodeied 4 years ago. f^eatures kit chen/dining combo. Modestly priced for the first hom ebuyers ■ budget. ;• 947,900 HWV. teaturing 947,500 WILLOW RUN • New listing leatures 3 BR, 1 BA with full base- enieiment on 1 acre tot. Convenient location. Owner will consider lease or lOASe/Optlon. ' 949,600 O L A D S T O N U ^ ^ U | J H M M M ^оч\в been waiting fori 3 lot partially fenc ed. F e a t u r e s Great locationl.949,900 WHITNEY ROAD - II you've been looking for that nice home with 3 bedrooms, spacious country kitchen and full basement in move- ln condition but thought it was impossible to Iind for under $50,000, then you were wi'ong. Believe it or not, here it isl A great $53,500 buylSPRINING STREET - Immaculate 3 BR, ^V2 bath older home within walking distan|>g|fi||<;«iiM||ai||||ktown. Glassed-in back porch and a p ^ ^ ^ B £ n j J I ^ ^ H l l h fireplace. Ali ol this situated on an^M ^M M M M M M M lP tree, pines and flower ing trees. $54,800 '$54,900 $55,900 $59,000 $58,900 $64,500 $65,900 <69,900 $69,900 •70,000 $72,000 $72,000 $76,SOO $76,500 $79,900 $79,900 EDISON STREET - Freshly painted interior and exterior of this two bedroom P'ivale street with little traffic. den, utility room and extra 1агдР Ш 1Ш Ш Щ вШ Ш Ш п. Great Space For The Pricel 64 WEST - Super Nice Rancher. Situated on lovely corner wood ed lot. E x tr e n ^ H ^ B n T T T W r ^ H B s 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, single с а г р о г ^ Н ^ ^ С я м и в Д ^ В В ' starter home, ready for a new family to move in today.POWELL ROAD - MOVE RIGHT IN AND RELAX - because this 3 bedroom, f bath home has a new kitchen, new carpet, and it Is In Immaculate condition. Recently landscaped - Call today for MORE DETAILS.HIGHWAY 601 NORTH 3 + PARTIALLY WOODED ACRES - A spring & possible lake site with room for small pasture area. Recently remodeled with 3 BR, 1 bath and 1458 SF. Convenient to 1-40. OWNER WILL ASSIST WITH CLOSING COSTS. HOWARD STREET - Neat 3 bedroom brick rancher In town on nice quiet street. Features double garage and large workshop/utility area. Aiso nice sun porch with broken tile floor ing and roll out glass windows. GREAT BUYI DAVIE ACADEMY RD. - Brick rancher, 2 bedroom, 2 bath, large LR w/ FP, DR w/bullt in china cabinet, full bsmt., carport, circle drive. Rural setting with large hardwoods. W ILKESBORO STREET - GOOD LOCATION - Brick house with 4 bedrooms and 2 baths. This 1V: story house Is near shop ping area and schools. Upper level great for children. GREAT BUY - 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. Great room and 18.47 acres make this house the best buy around. Enjoy the swimmng pool and wrap around deck that this property offers. Country In the. Country at an affordable pricel WILLBOONE ROAD • Nice home on 2.72 acres. Acreage has 650 ft. of road frontage. Home features living room, den, 2 bedrooms, 2 full baths, large country kitchen with built in eating bar, dining room, double carport, concrete drive. Also for the animal lover there's a small barn with electricity and water. Ad ditional out buildings and storage off carport.OFF MAIN CHURCH RD. - State Rd. 1466 - Affordable Brick Ran cher with 3 Ь е Н ^ Н Н В Ш Ш ^ Н Н sq. ft. situated on .9 acres with 8 playroom In base ment with У2 Cali today for more details. TWINBROOK SUBDIVISION - Crestview Drive, new construc tion just completed and ready for occupancy. This 1500 sq. ft. country rancher was designed to give you a feeling of tremen dous spaciousness. Abundant cabinets, waik-in closet & garden tub add to the value ol this aflordabiy priced home. SANFORD AVENUE - Less than 1 year old, this lovely country home is sited on 2 partially cleared acres. Home features great fioorpian, 3 large Br, 2 BA, and a beautiful view of dogwoods and redbuds Irom the greatroom. Well cared lor and in new conditioni WILKESBORO STREET - Excellent location for possible com mercial use. Brick veneer, 4 bedroom, 2 bath, kitchen, dining, living room w/FP, screened porch, 2 carports. GOOD INVESTMENT. WILKESBORO STREET — Excellent location for possible com mercial us. Brick veneer, 4 bedroom, 2 bath, new remodeled kit chen, living room, den. GOOD INVESTMENT. GROVE STHEET - COOLEEdflEE - THIS house at THIS price will knock your socks oil! Situated on a beautiluiiy landscaped lot, this contemporary home features 4 bedrooms, ¿Va baths, for mal areas, a comforable den with stone lireplace, and a lovely atrium. Amenities are loo many to list so call today for a fantastic buyl CENTER STREET — COOLEEMEE- Super nice 4 bedroom, 3 bath brick rancher located on approximately 3 acres. Features large m aster bedroom with sitting area, large country kitchen, \ easy to maintain brick exterior. A great house for the price. Call today for an appointm ent. $83,900 TWINBROOK SUBDIVISION — NEW CONSTRUCTK)N -'^7 Superb floor plan in this traditional style ranch. F eatures, 3 . bedroom s, 2 full baths, great room, dining room and breakfast ' area. Aiso double garage. Buy early and decorate to suit your personal taste. •$84,900 TWINBROOK — NEW CONSTRUCTION - Traditional style 3 BR. 1: 2 B A hom efeaturesfuli, drive-in, basem ent, great floor plan and , over 1500 SF of living space. Fireplace In greatroom tor cozy ,, winter evenings, spaclus deck for sum m er entertaining $89,500 EDGEWOOD SUBDIVISION - MAKE OFFER • Beautifully > wooded corner hom efeaturing 3 large щ у щ ш ш ш ш ш ш 1р81а1гз with living м room, formal dining, powder room^ family room, kitchen and large -; utility/workshop com bination dow nstairs. C entral Air & Central Vac. ' ■, ! — - 1<99,500 EDGEWOOD CIRCLE • This beautiful hom e offers/all th e . am enities you w ant. 3 bedroom s, 2 baths, central air,1arg«'den w /llreplace, screened-ln porch, swimming pool landscaped and fenced. A two car carport plus garage w orkshop. M ove^n^; condition.<97,000 NORTH MAIN STREET - Lovely older hom e In on e of Mocksville’s m ost deslreable locations. H uge tot with beautiful hoardw oods and btoomlng annuals. H om e bo asts n « ^ 3000: square feet Including 4 bedroom s and 2 hill baths: Com plete w tth; vinyl exterior lor low m alntenence.JU ST REDUCEDI <102,500 HWY. 64 EA ST-Im m aculate & Roomyl This 5 bedroom 2V!i balh < brick hom e offers m odern living in a qulaity built older home; Features Include hardw ood floors, two fireplaces and a w rap around front porch. Shady k)t in k)catk)n conveninet to town. CaU. today to see this excellent property. <110,000 JERICHO ROAD • This Vh story traditional hom e Ofler 4 bedroom s, 3 full baths. Large finished area In basem en t com plete with a second kitchen, huge den with fireplace and tota ot stroreage. Formal living and dining room s upstairs. G orgeos 4 ± acre lot with lots of trees and natural spring. 24x36 building with concrete floor and 220 wiring. Located in one ol rural Davie C ounty's m ost attractive areas. GARDEN VALLEY ESTATES • A REAL EYE CATCHERI ■ Rockwork Is key feature to this new construction. Com plete just In time tor that belore school move. Lovely 1У2 stoty design on com pletely w ooded lot offers informal living with oustanding leatures and terrific storage space. CALL TODAYI <129,900 GARDEN VALLEY ESTATES • UNDER CONSTRUCTION • Rustic rancher with Hr siding and accents of rock give this exterior a unique look. C orner lot perfectly suited for this full basem ent hom e with great room, large m aster bedroom suite, eat-ln kitchen, plus formal dining. $138,000 WANDERING LANE • Spacious 1V: story birck and siding hom e on 1.20 wooded acres with lots ol privacy. Features Include 4 bedroom s, 3 baths with large m aster bedrqom, sitting area, bath, and its own deck. G reat hom e for a growing family. CALL NOW FOR DETAILSI $285,000 O FF EATONS CHURCH ROAD • Beautiful log hom e situated on 76.721 acres bordering W ateshed Lake Home offers 3423 square feet of living space, includes 5 bedroom s, 3 baths, cozy sun room and full basem ent. Perfect for the large family. Owner willing to divide land, call for details. $122,900 ................GARDEN V A LLE Y .................. GARDEN VALLEY ESTATES - SECTION IV - Amenities of this new subdivision help property value to continually Increase. All beautifully wooded homesites offering 32 ft. wide curbed streets, city water & sewer, street lights, underground utilities, and restric tive covenants. SEE NEW PRICE LIST. »5,500 Ea EDGEWOOD CIRCLE SUBDIVISION - 2 lots - approximately 162.5x125, in quiet well established neighborhood. Corner lot may face either street __________ $7,000 NICE B U l L D i r ^ H T j y i T ^ ^ H k D . just oil 64 west approximately ‘ 12,500 HWY. 801 NOlITT^^^resTheavily wooded, road frontaqe oflHwv. 801. Rickey R. Bailey 634-4420 Vickie neroiog 634-3640 iam«8 Foster 264-2666 LOT/LAND ^21,000 OFF DULIN ROAD • Great road frontage (636.34 ft.) includ ed 6 heavily woodes acres. 832,000 FARfHLAND ACRES SUBDIVISION - 6.954 cares in Super nice subdivision, ideal location for the family looking for the convenience ot being close to shopping, schools etc, but also war7iing the serenfiy of country living. ‘Serving You With Pride Mary Hendricks 634-3152 Chrlft Hendrix 634-0006 Sandra Johnson 634-3177 Edie Qro»« Potts 634-5613 $35,000 FARMLAND ACRES - 7.588 acres heavily wooded in cu-de- sac. Located in one ol Mocksvill’s most attractive sub-divisions. 568,500 OFF COUNTRY LANE - Over 5 acres with 164 ft. road fron tage on Campbell Rd. Completely cleared, public water on Country Lane, zone R-20. Great location. S9B,900 OFF HWY. 158 - 30.92 acres lenced and cross fenced with large barn and other outbuildings. Also 2 ponds on property, ideal building spot lor the outdoor lover. Franc«» Tutterow 634-8074 KathI C. Wall 634-1^11 Paggy WaUan. . .в?4-,«в? I ' 8D-DAVIE co u n ty KNTEKPRISK RKCOKI), TIIUK.SDAY, Аиц-М. lUS'J V - . ■ \ Hay Fever ■ Th e hot days of August m eans hay baling time for Davie farmers. With Jim m y Carter driving the tractor, and Grady Galliher and Son ny Beek (bottom right) stack ing, this large field off U .S . Q4 east of Mocksville was ^oon transferred to the barn, -r- Photos by James Barringer Ornamental Offer Variety ) - MoK wid more Noith Carolina, sardenen and landscape designers m turíüiig to oroai^tai grass for 'variety and its easy caKi says Ori Kim Powell, in charge of extension hoiticultuie at North Carolina State University.>~“Pampas grass was (xobably the first thing that got pet^le's atten tion — that and the miscanthus," Powell said. “In the last five years or so,'people have been interested in plants that require very little maintenance and, of course, or namental grasses fit that bill. And people are looking for something a little different from azaleas and rhododendron. “It’s really not a fad. We just see a trend toward ornamental grasses.” Ornamental grass, actually a cat chall term describing all grass-like plants, such as reeds, rushes and sedges, is graceful, arching foliage, with some variegated specics. But green isn’t its only contribution to á landscape — rich autumn colors appear in fall and winter, and flower plumes on .several species can be spectacular, Powell said. Its ease of incorporation in a garden project, he said, is realiz ed when you use design principles balance, emphasis, repetition, scalc, sequence, and variety with qualities of color, form, line and texture. And it has numerous prac tical uses. For example; A screen for privacy. Combin ed with a few evergreen shrubs, pampas grass (Cortaderia selloana), zebra grass (Miscanthus sinensis zcbrinus), or feather reed grass (Calamagrostis acutiflora ‘stricta’) make good screens, Powell said. Stand-alone. Most ornamental grasses, Powell noted, make good stand-alone accent plants or focal points, especially when several species’ plumes are abundant. Ground cover. Powell sug gested two popular varieties; blue fescue (Festuca ovina glauca), a finely-textured blue green foliage ■ for covering small areas; and ' weeping lovegrass (Eragrostis cur- vula), an Eastern North Carolina favorite for covering slopes or eroded areas. “Just like any other shrub, it has to have its pla^e,” Powell said. “You have to match up size restrictions and determine what its function is to be — screening, foundation or a focal point.” Ornamental grass specics, which range in size from dwarf plants us ed as ground cover lo 10 lo 15 feet, need full sun and well-drained soil. Otherwise, tliey’re relatively easy to maintain. They’re disease and insect resi.stanl, tolerant of heat and drought, and require little or no pruning. 'Pliey can be planted year- round across North Carolina, ex cept in upper mountain elevations, where planting is best in spring and siminicr. "Nurseries across the state are developing an inventory of or namental grasses," Powell said. "It used to lie if you asked for or- namenla! grass, you gol pampas grass. Now they're developing many cultivars." Here are examples ofornaniLMi- lal grass llijil grow well across the state; Eulalia grass (Miscanthus sinensis). A popular ' grass throughout the South, it reaches heights of 10 feet and bears flam boyant fruit stalks in late summer. Many cultivars exist with specific growth habits and landscape characteristics. Plume grass (eriathus ravcn- nae). Also called hardy pampas grass, it grows from eight to 12 feet and is silvery beige in summer and orange brown in fall.Pink pampas grass (cortaderia selloana ‘Rendatleri’). A very showy grass wilh slender 24-inch leaves and silvery rose flower plumes borne from late July through October. A r e a F a r m e r s G e t t i n g S t o r m R e l i e f Effective Aug. 14, Iredell Coun ly, North Carolina was declared eligible for Emergency (EM) physical loss loan assistance as a result of damage caused by a severe thunder storm accompanied by lightning, which occurred on June 2, 198‘J. As a result of this disasler declaration, nine additional coun ties were also nameil as areas where farmers may qualify for Fanners Home Administration (FmHA) Emergency loan assistance. Those counties are: Alexander, Cabarrus, Calawba, Davie, Lincoln, Mecklenburg, Rowan, Wilkes and Yadkin. George L. Plcss Jr., Davic Counly supervisor, said ihal effec tive Aug. 14, farmers in Davie Counly may apply for EM loans D a v i e R e p s A t F a r m B u r e a u M e e t i n g Warm Weather Forecast Warm temperatures are forecast for the Labor Day weekend, accor ding to forecasters wilh the Na- lional Weather Service at the Triad International Airport in Greensboro. High temperatures in the Pied mont should be near 90 Thursday-' Saturday, wilh a slight chance of afternoon and evening thunderstorms. The lows will be ■ near 70. On the beaches, hot temperatures, are forecast under partly cloudy" skies, with a slight chance of late' evening showers. Rodeo This Weelcend - The annual World Champion-' ship Rodeo will be held at Lake Myers Campground Labor Day weekend with two performances.-; The show on Saturday', Sept. 2, will be held at 7:30 p.m. and the Sunday afternoon show will be at' 3 p.m. The rodeo is sponsored in part^ by the Davie Family 'YMCA. Tickets are available at the 'YMCA'.. office in the B.C. Brock building’ on North Main Street or from any' memtier of the board of manage-' ment. Call the YMCA office at ' 634-0345 or Sarah Wood;, 634-2826. Conservation^ P lans M u st Be Filed The year 1990 is just around thè;i; Powell said the North Carolina State Univeisity Aiboretum and the state’s coastal areas have the state’s better examples of the use of or namental grass. “It’s used in coastal areas a lot because it can stand heat and sun and sah,” Powell noted. “Ornamental grass is compatible with seaside condi tions.” comer. and that the deadline for filing an application is April 16, 1990, for severe physical losses only. The local FmHA office is located at 300 S. Main St., Grubb Professional Building, Mocksville, and has of fice hours of 8 a.m.-5 p.m., Mon day — Friday. Pless said that any farmer who suffered a loss should contact his ofllce for additional information. Members of the North Carolina Farm Bureau Advisoiy commlllees will meet in Raleigh on Aug. 31 to begin the Farm Bureau policy ilevelopmcnt process, according to Coy Barnes, presiilem of the Davie Counly Farm Bureau. Commillees meet for llie purpose of pinpointing "areas of concern" to he offered as suggested issues for discussion In the development of policies that will guide Farm Hiiremi in ConiuKHllly advisor)’ eommillces are ai|ii;icnlrure, colion, dair)', field crops. Ilue-eured lobaceo, burley tobacco, I'oresiry, fruits and vegelables, ornamentals and shrubs, livestock, peanuts and poultry. General advisor)' ciimmitlecs are farm labor, law and order, and natural and economic resources. Barnes said that after issues are surfaced and discussed by the com- mitlees, they are submilled lo ihe individual couniies for considera tion by resolutions coniniittees prior 10 the counly annual meetings. Barnes pointed out thal ihe Raleigh meeting will be al 10 a.m, wilh a repori on the current agricultural situation and general problem areas that will be confron ting agriculture in the future. Com mittees will later begin their in dividual discussions. It is suggested that Farm Bureau members who have questions thal need to be con sidered, or ideas thal may solve current problems, bring them to the aiie'nlion of local committee members. •‘It is through Ihis proce.ss,” he said, "tlial meinbers can be assured that Farm Bureau at county, stale and nalional levels will work for well-considered, carefully chosen objectives which the niembers themselves have iniliated. What doès that meati? To thej farmere and landowners of Dayiel County it means they'must have al:-^ ; conservation plan in order to be inf compliance with thè' 1^85 Farrn':;' : Bill. ' ■ ■ I; ' "Being in compliarice will enable them to stay eligible for govern- , ment benefits such as CRP pay . ments, grain storage, FHÀ loans, crop! insurance, tobacco pirice sup-. port, and other ■ government programs. ^ •' Compliance means having a ‘ cropping system or installation of v conservation measures that meetl the requirements estalilished in the'.: 1985 Farm Bill. The initial concern:; for farmers and landowners in\, Davie County should be to have a [ conservation plan approved by the^V ^ Davie Soil and Water Conservation : District before midnight December ; 31, 1989. "fVOne of the alternatives that. ' : farmers or landowners have is to J use conservation tillage. Consèrva-^' tion tillage is any tillage or plan*;, ting system that is initiated to alleviate soil erosion caused by water or, wind such as no-till or ; mulch-tiil. Conservation tillage is, utilized throughout the county oh j many farms. This style tillage can have many advantages to the farmer or landowner. Some advan- tages are time saving, decreased' soil compaction, and increased ero- • sion control. Erosion control and water quali ty improvement are the main ob-' jectives of the 1985 Farm Bill. The conservation plan that will be developed using conservation •' tillage as a major component will ' bring soil loss to an acceptable’ level. Using conservation tillage can help a farmer or landowner comply with the 1985 Farm Bill provisions. For further information contact the Soil Conservation Service, USDA or the Davic Soil and Water Conservation District, located in ; the Counly Oftice Building, Room : 313, 180 South Main Street, Mocksville, North Carolina. Tfie-< phone number is 634-5011. - 1^1 DAVIK СОНМ V KN'I KUl’UISK RKCOKI). rilUKSDAY, Аиц..М, 1989-9D NORTH CAROUNA DAVIE COUNTY EXECUTRIX'S NOTICE Having qualified as Executrix o( Ihe estate ol John W. Hacknoy, tlecoascd. lale ol Davie County, North Carolina, this Is lo notily all persons having claims against said estate lo present them lo the undersigned on or before the 10lh day ol February, 1990, or this notice will be pleaded in bar ol Iheir recovery. All per sons indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment to Ihe undersigned. This the 10th day ol August, 1989. Jeannlne F. Hackney, Box M, 114 Riverbend Drive, Advance, N.C. 27006, Executrix ol tho estate ol John W. Hackney, deceased. В-10-41ПР NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY EXECUTRIX'S NOTICE Having qualified as Executrix ol Ihe estate ol Adam Odell Wagner, deceased, late o( Oavie County, North Carolina, this Is lo notily all persons having claims againsi said estate to present them to the undersigned on or before Ihe 17lh day of February, 1990, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of Iheir recovery. All per sons Indebted lo said estate will please make immediate payment to the I undersigned. This the 17lh day of August, 1989, IHadolyn H, Wagner, 1259 Yadkinville Hoad, IHocksville, N,C. 27028, Executrix of Ihe estate of Adam Odell Wagner, deceased, 8-17-41ПР NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE OF SERVICE OF , PROCESS BY PUBLICATION In Ihe District Coun 89-SP-100 Anderson Ellis Foster, PetitionerVi. , • Hazel Hill, el al, Respondents TO: Paul Driver, Jr, Take notice that a pleading seeking relief againsi you has been filed in the above-emitled special proceeding. The nature of the relief being sought is as follows: A Petition for Sale In Lieu of Partitioning,; You are required lo make defense to / suoh pleading not later than the loth day ■of dbtobef, 1989, said dale being 40 days ’ from the first publication of Ihls notice, or 'i; (i-oiii the dale complaint Is required lo be filed, wlilchever Is later; and upon your failure to do so the party seeking service against you will apply to the court (or the relief sought. This 31st day ol August, 1989. Hall Д Vogler, Atlorneys at Law . By: E, Edward Vogler, Jr, P.O. Drawer 970 ‘ - Mocksville, N.C. 27028• Telephone: (704) 634-6235 .. . .,8-31-3lnp N O R TH CAROLINA DAVIE C O U N TY EXECUTOR'S NOTICE Having quaiilied as Executor ol the estate ol Vera Godwin Hall, deceased, ’. lale ol Davie County. North Carolina, this Is to notify all persons having claims . agiinsl sakJ estate to present them to the . undersigned on or before Ihe 10th day ol I February.'1990. being six months Irom the'first day of publication, or this notice г will be Pleaded in bar of their recovery. ' All persons Indebted to said estate will please make Immediate payment to Ihe undersigned. .This the 2nd day of August, 1989. Robert B. Hall, Box 8te, Mocksville, N.C, 27028, Executor ol the estate of Vera Qodwln Hall, deceased. . , ! Martin and Van Hoy, Attorneys Drawer 1068 Mocksville, N.C, 27028 > ' : r - 8-10-41ПВ ; NOflTHCAROLINA DAVIECOUNTY - COiXECUTOH'S NOTICE 'Having qualified as C»Executors Ol Ihe Estate of Clelua H, Ralledge, deceased, lale of Davie Counly, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to ptesenl them to the undersigned on or before the 24th day of February 1990, being six months from the first day of publication, or this notice will be pleaded In bar ol their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned. ' This tho 18th day ol August 1989, Ben F. Powell, Route 1, Box 72-5, Mocksville, N.C, 27028 and Ronnie PoiMlI, Route 1, Box 82-B, Mocksville, N,C. 27028. Co-Executors of the estate of Clelus H, Ralledge, deceased, Martin and Van Hoy, Attorneys Drawer 1068 Mocksville, N.C. 27028 8-24-4lnp NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY EXECUTRIX'S NOTICE Having quaiilied as Executrix of the estate of Albert Sanlord Foster, deceas ed, late ol Davie Counly, North Carolina, Ihls Is to notily all persons having claims againsi said estate lo present them to the undersigned on or belore the 1st day of March, 1990, or Ihls notice will bo plead ed In bar of their recovery. All persons in debted lo said estate will please make im mediate payment lo the undersigned. This Ihe 31sl day of August, 1989. Lorene Ransom Foster, Route 1, Box 287, Advance, N.C. 27006, Executrix ol the estate of Albert Sanlord Foster, deceased. 8-31-41ПР A i n ’t It N i f t y J e e p is 50! Happy Birthday! NORTH CAROLINA OAVIE COUNTY IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE Dislricl Courl Division 87-SP-71 Lola H. Holdon and husband. Thomas W. Holden, and Luella Jarrolt, widow. Petitioners VS. lulabGl H. Bailey, et al. Respondents NOTICE OF RESALE Under and by virtue of an order of resale as signed on tho 16th day o( August, 1989, by the Clerk ol Superior Court ol Davie County, North Carolina, the undersigned Co-Commissioners will oiler lor resale al public auction Ihe hereinalter described tracts of land, on the 1 St day of September, 1989, al 12:00 noon at Ihe courthouse door; that the resale will be subjeih to upset bid and confirmation as provided by law; that said tracts ol land are particularly described as follows: Being and lying in Shady Grove Township, Davie County, North Carolina and being: Tract numbers 10 and 11 ol the Cora Hartman Estate as seen on a current survey prepared by Kenneth L. Foster, R.L.S., dated December 21,1988, lo which reference Is hereby made for a more particular description. Said tracts shall be sold separately with opening bids being as follows; Tract No, Opening Bid 10 $14,855.00 11 17,191.25 The resale is sub|ecl to 1989 Davie County ad valorem taxes. The successful bidder of bidders will be required to deposit ten (10) percent of Ihe amount of Ihe ¿id Ihe date of Ihe sale; the sale shall remain open for upset bids for a period of ten (10) days from the date of the fil ing of Ihe Report ol Resale; and the resale Is subject lo confirmation by the Clerk ol Superior Court of Davie Counly and by a judge ol the Superior Court of Davie County. This 16th day of August, 1989, N, LAWRENCE HUDSPETH 111 Shore, Hudspeth & Harding P,0. Box 936 Yadkinville, N.C, 27055 Co-Commissioner E. EDWARD VOGLER, JR, Hall & Vogler P.O. Drawer 970 Mocksville. N.C. 27028 Co-Commissioner 8-24-2tnp NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY CREDITORS NOTICE Having quaiilied as Executor ol Ihe Will and Estate of Elizabeth Holmes Benton, deceased, lale of 2107 Bermuda Village, Advance, Davie Counly, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons, firms, corpora tions and others having claims against the Estate of said deceased lo exhibit them to the undersigned's attorneys at Suite 500, Two piedmont Plaza, 2000 West First Streel, Winston-Salem, N.C. 27104, on or belore the 15th day of February, 1990, or this notice will be pled in bar of their recovery. All persons Indebted to said Estate will please make Immediate payment. This Ihe 3rd day of August, 1989. William Grady Benton, c/o Suite 500, Two piedmont Plaza, 2000 WesI First Street, WInslon-Salem, N,C, 27104, Ex ecutor of the Estate of Elizabeth Holmes Benton, deceased. Edward E. Raymer Jr. Allman Spry Humphreys Leggett & Howlngton, P.A. Suite 500, Two Piedmont Plaza 2000 West First Street Winslon-Salem, N,C. 27104 Tel: (919) 722-2300 8-10-4lnp NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTV NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION Having qualified as Administratrix ol the estate o l Eugene Samuel Bowman, deceased, late of Davie County, North Carolina, Ihls Is to notify all persons, llrms and corporations having claims againsi said estate to present Ihem, duly verllied, to Ihe undersigned, care of William J. Waggoner, AllornBy, 2500 Two First Union Center, Charloite, N.C. 28282, on or before the 10th day ol February, 1990, or this notice will be pleaded in bar ol Iheir recovery. All persons Indebted to said estate will please make Immediate settle ment with the undersigned. This Ihe 1st day of August, 1989, Ruth H, Bowman, Administratrix of Ihe estate of Eugene Samuel Bowman, . deceased. 8-10-4tnp NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY EXECUTRIX'S NOTICE Having quaiilied as Exoculnx ol Ihe Esiale ol M.H. Grose, deceased, lale ol DaviQ Counly, North Carolina, this is to nolily ail persons having claims against said Gstale to present them lo the under signed on or before the 17th day of February. 1990, being six months from tho llrst day ol publication, or this nolice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned. This the 8th day of August. 1989. Peggy R. Grose, 168 East Maple Avenue, iVlocksville, North Carolina 27028, Executrix ol the estate ol fVI.H. Grose, deceased. Martin and Van Hoy, Allorneys Drawer 1068 Mocksville, N.C. 27028 8-17-4lnp NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY EXECUTRIX'S NOTICE Having quaiilied as Executrix of the esiale ol G.W. Polls, deceased, late of Davie Counly, North Carolina, this Is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them lo the under signed on or belore Ihe 10th day ol February, 1990, or this notice will be pleaded In bar of their recovery. All per sons Indebted to said estate will please make Immediate payment to the undersigned. This the lOlh day of August, 1989. Betty B. Polls, P,0, Box 88. Advance, N.C. 27006, Executrix of the estate of G.W. Potts, deceased. 8-10-4lnp NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY INVITATION FOR BIDS COUNTY OF DAVIE FURNITURE FOR THE NEW COUNTY ADMINISTRATIVE BUILDING The County ol Davie Is accepting bids for lurnlture lor Ihe new Counly Ad ministrative Building. A copy ol Ihe fur niture specifications can be picked up in the Davie Counly Manager's Olfice located at 140 South Main Street, Mocksville, N.C. 27028. A mandatory Bid ders Conference will be held Tuesday, Sept, 5, al 2:00 p.m. in the Grand Jury Room of the Oavie County Courthouse. Bids will be opened on Thursday, Sept. 14th, in Ihe Grand Jury Room. A 5% bid bond will be required. Bids must be seal ed and clearly marked. Questions should be directed lo: W. Craig Greer, Admin. Asst, lo Ihe Manager, (704) 634-5513. 8-31-1tnp NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVE NOTICE Having qualified as Personal Representative of the Estate ol Robert G. Davis, deceased, late of Davie County, Nonh Carolina, this Is to notily all persons having claims against said estate lo pre sent Ihem to the undersigned on or before the 24th day ol February 1990, being six months from Ihe first day of publication, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons Indebted to said estate will please make immediate pay ment to Ihe undersigned. This the 22nd day ol August 1969. Anna Ruth Davis, 184 Duke Street, Mocksville, N,0, 27028, Personal Representative of Ihe estate of Roben G. Davis, deceased. Martin and Van Hoy, Allorneys Drawer 1068 Mocksville, N.C. 27028 8-24-4lnp NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY EXECUTOR'S NOTICE Having quaiilied as Executor of the Estate of Roy Anderson Caner, deceas ed, late ol Davie County, Nonh Carolina, this is lo notily all persons having claims against said esiale to present them to the undersigned on or belore the 24th day ol February 1990, being six months from the llrst day of publication or this notice will be pleaded In bar of their recovery. All persons indebted lo said estate will please make immediate payment lo the undersigned. This Ihe 4th day of August 1989. Timothy Grey Carter, 1113 Maplewood Avenue, High Point, N.C. 27260, Ex ecutor of the estate of Roy Anderson Caner, deceased. Martin and Van Hoy, Attorneys Drawer 1068 Mocksville, N.C. 27028 8-24-4tnp NORTH CAROLINAI5AVIE coum y IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE Superior Court Division 89-SP-72 In Tho Mailer Of The ForGClosuro Of The Deed Of Trust Of Graystono Farm. Inc,, A-K-A Greyslono Farm, fnc,, Mortgagors-Grantors TO: Wosloy Bailey, Substitute Trustee AND; Sidney F, Hoots, Zeno D. Hoots Jr.. John H. Hoots, Lou Ella Hoots Angel and Kathleen Hoots Mcllhatlen. c/o Wesley Bailey. P.O. Box 52, Winston-Salem, N.C. 27102 Noteholder NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE UNDER AND BY virtue of the Power of Sale contained in a Deed of Trust ex ecuted by Graystone Farm. Inc.. A-K-A Greystone Farm, Inc.. dated March 29, 1988, to Slallord Peebles, Trustee for Sidney F. Hoots. Zeno D. Hoots. Jr.. John H. Hoots, Lou Ella Hoots Angel and Kathleen Hoots Mcllhatten and recorded In Book 151, Page 682, Davie County Registry, default having been made in the indebtedness thereby secured, and said Deed of Trust being by the terms thereof subject to Foreclosure, and the Holder of the Indebtedness secured having demanded a Foreclosure thereof for the purpose of satisfying said indebtedness, the undersigned Substitute Trustee will offer.for sale at Public Auction to the highest bidder for cash at the Courthouse Hall of Justice Door In Davie County, North Carolina, at 11:00 a.m., on the 21 st day of September, 1989. the property conveyed in said Deed of Trust, the same being a tract of land consisting of 156.69 acres, more or less, Davie County, North Carolina, and being more particularly described as followsi A tract of land consisting of 156.69 acres, more or less, and more particularly described as follows: BEGINNING at a point, said point be ing the northeast corner of Bobby V. Har din, Book 114. Page 352, Tax IVtap H-9; thence proceeding South 68 deg. 37' West 804.88 feet to a point located in the east right of way line of Peoples Creek Road (S.R. 1650); thence proceeding North 3 deg. 18' East 545.53 feet to a point; thence proceeding North 32 deg. 38’ 30" East 783.78 feet to an iron; thence proceeding North 70 deg. 54’ East 2,192.84 feet to the center line of the Yadkin River; thence proceeding with the center of the Yadkin River, South 27 deg. 13’ East a chord distanceot 761.62 feet to a point; thence proceeding South 34 deg. 12' East a chord distance of 542.47 feet to a point; thence proceeding South 28 deg. 43' East a chord distance of 777.70 feet to a point; thence proceeding South 10 deg. 07' East a chord distance of 544.60 feet to a point; thence pro ceeding South 2 deg. 18' West a chord distance of 482.40 feet to a point; thence leaving the center of said Yadkin River and proceeding along the north lino of Olln 0. Cranfill, Book 95, Page 644, Tax Map H-9. North 84 deg. 41' 30" West 2,835.34 feel to an existing iron; thence proceeding North 1 deg. 09’ 30" West 293.30 feet; thence proceeding North 0 deg. 39’ 30" East 368.08 feet to the point and place of Beginning and containing a totat of 156.69 acres, more or less. This sale will be made subject to en cumbrances, prior liens, unpaid assessmer^ts and unpaid taxes, if any. The Substitute Trustee resen/es the right to require of the highest bidder a deposit of five percent (5%) of his bid as evidence of good faith. Present record owner of the above- described property Is Graystone Farm, Inc. This the 21st day of August, 1989. Wesley Bailey. Substitute Trustee 6-31-3tnp NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY EXECUTRIX'S NOTICE Having qualified as Executrix of the estate of Magdellne Carter Whitaker, deceased, late of Davie County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons hav ing claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned on or before the 10th day of February, 1990, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons Indebted to said estate wiil please make immediate payment to the undersigned. This the 10th day of August, 1989. Joyce W. Rabon, Route 3, Box 597, Mocksville, N.C. 27028, Executrix of the estate of Magdeline Carter Whitaker, deceased. 8-10-4tnp Help W anted N o w h ir in g p a r t - t i m e & fu ll-tim e p o s i t io n s a v a i l a b l e a s D e li C le rk s o r C a s h ie rs . H o u r s F le x ib le A t P r e m i u m P a y A l s o h irin g fu ll-tim e O ffic e A s sista n t A p p l y A t Lowe's Foods C lem m ons O r Lewisville e-t7-4tnbp NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY EXECUTRIX'S NOTICE Having quaiilied as Executrix ol the estate of Jake Hanes Walker, deceased, Into of Davic Counly. North Carolina, this is lo notily all persons having claims againsi said estate to present them to the undersigned on or before the 1st day of March. 1990. or this notice will bo plead ed in bar of their recovery. All persons in debted to said estate will please make im mediate payment to the undersigned. This the 31st day of August. 1989. Mary S. Walker, 418 Wilkesboro Street. Mocksville, N.C. 27028, Executrix of the estate of Jake Hanes Walker, deceased. 8-31-4tp D is h w a s h e r s & C o o k s A p p ly In P e rso n A fte r 1 p .m . to Cap’n Stevens Seafood Restaurant EOE/MF O le m m o n s A u c t i o n S a le F rid a y & S a tu rd a y N ig h t Located At Kinnamon R d ., Off Hwy, 158, Clemmons REOPENING AFTER SUMMER VACATION Variety of merciiandise, new and used •Tools «Household Items, Dishes, Glassware, Pols & Pans, Etc. •Kerosene Heaters • Other Items too Numerous To Mention Consignment Accepted For Information Call 764-5212 Or 784-0033 Auctioneer: Clayton Miller, Jr. Lie. No. 1S12 Yadkin County ABSOLUTE AUCTION Farm Machinery - Guns - Personal Property Owner's Moving Sat. Sept. 9 - 10 a.m Rain Or Shine (In Case Of Rain Sale Will Be Held Under Tent) LOCATION: From Winslon-Salem, N.C. go 1-40 West lo Hwy. 421, cross YatlHIn River bridge and exil on Speer Bridge Bd Turn lell. SALE </i MILE ON RIGHTIII From Yadkinville, go new 421 East 6 miles. Exil on Spoer Bridge Rd. Turn righl. SALE 'Л MILE ON RIGHTIII FARM MACHINERY: 19SB 420 John Deere Tractor (1725 hrs.) • John Deere Culllvalors & Side Dresser • John Deere Com Planler (24-B One Row) • Fertilizer Spreader, Potato Plow ■ Ford Post Hole Digger Ford Mowing Machine ■ 10 Disk Taylor-Way Bog Harrow (Pull Type) ■ 2 Gas Pumps (One Rotary, One Push) • Cut-oll Saw And Pulley • 2 Ton Holst 8 Frame (American Gage Co. L-20) • 5 H.P. Portable Water Pump • Simplicity Rotary Tiller • 4'x 9' Trailer With Treated Bed • 3'x 6' Trailer, Metal Pig Box • Hog Scalding Vat, Grind ■ Stone • Set ol Names, Plow Gear, Etc. • 2-Section Drag harrow (3 PI. Hook) • 420 Belt Pulley, Several Old Iron Wheels • Scrap Iron, Carbid ' John Deere Tillage Tool (7 Shank). GUNS: Winchester 30-30 Model 94 • 870 Remlnfllon Pump Shot Gun • Ruger Model 77 (ЗОЮрв W/6 Poer Red Field) • Coll 357 Trooper • Marlin 357 In Box (new) • 4-Power Weaver, Scope • Astra Cub 22 Short • Marlin 22 Automatic Rille - Permit PERSONAL PROPERTY: Fridgldaire Up-Right Freezer • Electric Organ, Case Hunting KnHe • Round Kitchen Table WM Ladder Back Chairs • Bumper For 83 Ford (Front) • в’ HMvy , Duty Work Table ' Magnullex 10’ Heavy Fishing Pole ■ Stone Jugs • 5 Ga. Glass Chum" . Heavy Duty Small Work Table • Umps, Household Items • Wood Heater • Many Other ; Hems To Sell Not LIstedlll Owner: Lirry Clinton t.ongAUCTIONEER NOTE; This И the cleanosi and most nell kepi merctiandlse Ihal you Mil llnd. Thoiewho ; know I4i. Long kno« ol hU pride and mellculous care inal has tieen taken »№ hli equlpmtnl and gut». ■ This Is a raro opportunity to purchase some top-nolch items. . '.....FOOD ON GROUND....... -Any Announcomonis On Day 01 Salo Will Supotcede All Advertlting , ' FR E D G . M O C K R t. 2 , B o x 3 7 9 E a s t B e n d , N .C . P h o n e (9 1 9 ) 6 9 9 -3 4 2 6 N C A L 2 1 N C B E L 1 2 2 0 3 ^ ^ - AUCTION - ANTIQUES, COLLECTIBLES, FURNITURE r; Saturday, Sapt. 2, 1989 At 7:30 p.m. f Beautiful Quilt C ollection, C om plete Silver S ervice, 8 P cs. * A P air of. French Ew ers H and-Painted * Oriental R ugs * U rg e L eaded S lag G lass C handelier * E state Jew elry * Mink C oat * Sm oking P ipe CollecUon • R .S. P ru ssia Biscuit J a r * Tiger T apestry * M cCoy P ottery * Old T ools ‘ Collectible S h eet M usic ‘ Early B ronzeL ight Fixture ‘ P a p e r M a c h a t- Life S ize Girl * Fax M achine ' G u n s * 1 9 5 0 's P ed d le C r * D ecoys * ' Fostoria * Brilliant C ut G lass * Fenton * M echankial T oys * O ld Light > Fixtures * C ookie J a r C ollection * M lnnie-M ouse Doll * E arly C k)ck * A dvertisem ents * C andy S cales * H epple W hite Hiljoy * O ak B o« i^ron t C hina C abinet * Early C aptlans D ove-Tailed T runk W ith W roght Iron . Lawn Furniture * O ak D resser A nd M ore A ntique F urniture to C o m e f * P lus M any M ore Item s T oo N um erous T o M ention. ( LOCATION: STA TESVILLE, NC — T ak e 1-40 E a st of 1-77. T h en tak e,* ; Exit 153 (Hwy. 64) oft of 1-40. G o W est o n Hwy. 6 4 on e-halt m ile p a st Bowling Alley to Building on left. W atch for sign . BulM Ing Is tiefore' A dam s S eafood. ,. Piiview From (:00 lo 7:N p.m. Wt.RwMVt Tlw RIgM To Add Or M M Ifcrfliwdlll MasterCard & Visa Acctptad ConsigmentsBeinsAccapled For This i Future Auctiom , Telephone 704-672-3356 5% Buyer’s Premium Auclioimr Jo« Fo(dN.C. licW 6 ,. lU C T I O Saturday September 9, 1989 — 10 a.m. Rain Date: Septembr 23. 1 9 8 9 - 1 0 a .m . Cherry Hill kd. At Hwy. 801 2,500 Sq. Ft, Building Must Be Emptied To Begin Restoratton Of Historic'- Building, Years Of Accumulaiton Plus Remains From Granny’s Attic.' *; PARTIAL U STIN G Hoosier Cabinet * Rd, Oak Pedestal Dining Table * Oak Sideboard •• W/Mirror • Mission Oak Chair • Mahogany Duncan Phyfe * Dining Table • Square Oak Dining Table * 2 Mahogany Book Shelves * Oak Rock- ■ ing Chair • Walnut Sewing Rocker • Oak Chairs * Oriental Rugs ‘ Old Metal Chest of Drawers ‘ Dinette 14 Chairs * Assorted Tables * Din-. ing/Kitchen/Occasional * Beds, Bed Frames * Head Boards * Metal. Beds • Coffee Talbes ’ End Tables * Night Stands * Painting Pictures . And Frames ‘ 6 Store Display Tables W/Reversible Tops * Display ,. Cabinets ' Wood Cabinets * Metal Cabinets ' Glass & Dishware * Kit-; chenware ’ Antique Jewelry • Sarah Coventry * Rhinestones, Cameos , ' Books • Old Sewing Machines W/O Stands • Typewriters * Lamps • Wall Shelf Units ' T.V, Stands • Fans ■ Pole Lamp * Records * End ' iron * Old Movie Projector ‘ Tent, Clothing items * index Card Files ■ Built In Hamer W/Counter Top, Assorted Tools ‘ Dope Cart W/O ' Wheels ‘ Flea Market Bargains ’ Plant Stands • Some Patio Furniture ^ • Old Ironing Machine • 150 ft, W Rope • Black And White T,V, * Vanities, Buffet ’ Oil Heater' 2-250 Gaiion Oil Tanks • Ductwork For Heat/AC ' System And Sheet Metal, DIRECTIONS; From Salisbury Travel North on 601. Turn Right on - 801, And Right On Cherry Hill Rd. Approx. 12 Miles From Salisbury. , From Mocksville. Travel South of 601 and 801, Turn Left on 801, And Right On Cherry Hill Rd. Follow S ig n s ._______________ Auctioneer: Donald Luffman ' Rt. 3, Box 517 ! M ocskvllle, N.C. NCAL 2804 P h o n e 284-4604 , lODr-DAVIE COUNTY KNTKKI’KISK KlXOKl), I'llUK-SIU^'. Лнц-Л!, IWJ ■UliM IIIM iiilllliill 23 Joyner St. Cooleemee; Several (amilies, 8 lill 1. Lois ol bargains. Cancelled il r a in in g .________ 320 Gwyn Street. Fri, & Sal., Sepl. 1 ' & 2, 8 a,m. until. Everything very cheep, Musi go,_________________ ‘»-Family. Sat. Sept. 2,7 a.m. until 2. 601 south, 1st road on right past Greasy Corner, last house on road. Furniture, wood s'ove, clothes and much more.____________________ 64 west to Powell Road at Log house. Huge yard sale Sat, Sepl, 2, 8 a,m, ' until. Carpet, carpet sweepers, much misc.____________________________ 826 Garner St. Multi-lamily, Sal, Sept, 8 a,m, lill noon,_______________ 960 Hardison St. 2-lamilies, 8 till 3. ■ New car stereo speakers, household 'What-nots, kids bicycle; children, ladles and men's clothes; toys and games; and cralts._______________ Dayle Academy Road going toward • Cooleemee. 7 a.m. to 5 p.m, Goll clubs, baby stuff, radio control race car and rabbit lur coal,___________ First Time: Cana Road 1 mile off Pud- ' ding Ridge Road, Sal., 8 until. Signs. ANTIQUE BARBER CHAIR, fur- hlture, clothes, odds n’ ends. GIGANTIC THREE FAMILY YARD SALE, Saturday, September 2nd, 8 a.m. until 3 p.m., 210 Beechwood Drive In new section ol Garden Valley near Ingersoll Rand. Everything pric; ed to sell. Items include: floor lan, CB radio, chair pool float, trout fishing line, two sewing machines, golf clubs and cart, wall pictures, silk flower ar rangements, hair dryer, chest ol •: drawers, lighting fixtures, clock, I books, record albums, telephone, dlshware, paint, gardening supplies, >ioys, men’s clothing. Brand new :, Items Include blender, radio, luggage, 3Smm camera, electric healers, grills, J water sprinklers. Thermos jugs, post >,hole digger, and Ice chests. Much ! nxjre not listed. Even if you don’t nor- ? mally go to yard sales you don't want i to miss this onel — }i*inloek St. Basement sale, « S-families, Friday 8 till 12. Saturday «811112.■ -------------;------------ |4wy. 601:2 miles south from greasy • corncr. Ladles clothes, boys clothes, j household Items, shoes, etc. Cancell- ;• ed If raining._____________' Hwy. M watt towards Lexington, I miles out of Mocksvllle. SignsI Large • moving sale, Fri & Sat. 9 till 7. Old - »new furniture, 1975 Ford Torino, t FREE 1 year, old puppy, misc. }la«dmor« Road: 4-family, Fri. & Sat. r 6-2. Clothes sizes baby to XX-iarge. tXT 168 behind Redland Church of : .Christ, 2nd trailer on right. Clothes all ; -.alzes, odds & ends, chairs. Sat. 8 till ‘ Mon-8 till 3. _____________ __ V ricAwy Hut. 5-famlly, Sat. Sept. 2,8 till Sniurday. CoolGomeeoff Hv;y. 801. 8 a.m. until. Cuilains, bedspreads, clothes, what-nots. Much more. Turn off Jericho Rd. onto Davie Academy Rd. (Cooleemee Junction Rd.) ’/2 mile on leit. Sat. Sept. 2.8 un til. Baby items, children's clothes, toys. craHs, household items. Used Washers & Dryers. Good con dition. Ask for Willie 492-5357. A partm ent For Rent FOR RENT....1 and 2-bedroom apart ments, kitchen appliances lurnished including dishwasher, IVz-baths, washer/dryer connections. Central heat/air. Prewired for cable and phone. Insulated doors and windows. No-wax kitchen/bath floors. Pool, Sunset Apartments, localed behind Hendrix Furniture on highway 158, Mocksviiie. Phone 704-634-0168, NEW, ENERGY EFFICIENT APART MENTS. 1 & 2 bedroom and fully lur nished studios. Pool, clubhouse, and baskelball couti. AMPLE PARKINGIII Water, sewer, drapes, and kitchen appliances included. Dishwasher, frost-free refrigerator, washer/dryer connections and on-site laundry facilities. Heated and cooled with heat pumps. Private patio or balcony, qulck-recovery water heater, smoke dector, prewired for phone and cable TV. Manager and maintenance live on property. 24-hour emergency maintenance. Children and small pets welcome. Only a few left. Don't miss out ~ cali now for $50 off first month’s rent. Northwood Apartments, Milling Road, 634-4141.__________ STUDIO APARTMENT: $250 month; $250 deposit. References required. Prefer single or gentlemen. 492-7853 or 634-1218, A n im a ls ATTN: STILL FREE After 12 year of service Remval of dead, down cows & horses Call Mink Farm Statesville _________ 704-873-2072__________ FREE K ITTEN S-634-2846. HAPPY JACK FLEA GARO: All metal patented device controls fleas In the home without chemicals or exter minator. Results overnightl DAVIE FARM SERVICE, 303 WILKESBORO ST. B u s in e s s O p p o r t u n it y C hrlatlan B o o k ato re for sale in Mocksvllle. Profitable with good growth potential. Church accounts, mailing list, priced to sell. Call 704-634-1456 or 704-492-5651 nights.___________________________ Own your ow n sporting go ods store. Large sporting goods chain in terested In coming to Mocksviiie. Looking for owner/operator. Call 919-454-5757, ask for Wanda Lucas. Advertise With Yard Sale Signs Give Directions To Your Sale 25« Each Available At The Davie-County Enterprise Record ‘Тг1|пЬк«*Ря МЮМТДЯЧГ r ‘ixietinviMemTARv .«WORO P fv o c u v o n [Ю М tTUDV/Wt. TMINWQ . ìNAN(lAt AlU .yoü Í4 ACtMtNT ÄVAil AfU I ASSl‘'>TANrf Hess Heating & Air Conditioning 24 Hour Service Sales — Service & Installation Oil Heat Pumps Gas Or Electric Furaaces 919-998-6133 Call Today : •CmilKLWM .TM V K LA O CN Cm нош «niOY / (KK TRMNMQ FINANCIAI All) -JOH f'L ACIMENI AVAU AHI I ASUIS 1 ArU,4 1400-327-7728AOjmiVEL SCHOOL HenieíiÑ. Pompano Beh FL W A N T E D A Home for an affectionate, spayed, one-year oíd female cal. Black wltfi orange: white paws, neck and stomach, litter box trained; domestic long hair. Prefers to be an “ only cat” FREE lo 0 good homo. Call ^ 99S-0356 Or998-8218 F R E D D Y 'S R O O F IN G Specializing in: Tare Offs And Re-Roofs j For Free Estimate ' CALL (919) 998-3464 W ork Guaranteed 5 & B Guttering Seamless Aluminum 6 Colors to ClioosB From Galvanized & Copper Gutters Cleaned & Repaired Phone (919) 998-7821 ____For Estimate After school child care starling in September. $20 week. Roforonces lurnished. Call 634-1089. Child care in home on Yadkin Valley Road. Need little girl to play wilh another little girl. Call after 5 p.m. 998-49'18. Child care my home. Before and after school openings. Some full time openings. IVIocksville area 634-4472. DIANE’S REGISTERED DAY CARE on Cornatzer Road has openings for all ages in her home. Hot meals, lots of TLC. S35.00 per week. Call 998-7429 anytime. Farm Gates, Corral Pannels. Feeders, Headgates, Scoop Pans, Bushogs, Scraper Blades, Rock Rake, Post Hole Diggers and more, Wrighl Farm Gates, 998-8637, We deliver. Furniture HotPoInt Refrigerator, Model CTF-210,20,8 cubic ft. Excellent con dition, $150. 1 Sears Washer, Model 20650, good condition, $50, 634-4914.________________________ Office Furniture; Desk, a chair and file cabinet. Good condition. $125, 634-0822,________________________ Solid Dark Oak dinnette set, seats 4 w/high back chairs, good condition. $150. Console color T.V., Sears Sen sor Touch w/remote control, $200. Call 998-7461 after 6 p.m. Health ABORTION...,PregnancyTestlng, For an appointment call Arcadia Women’s Clinic, Winston Salem col- leet, 919 721-1620,_______________ AL-ANON for those affected by alcoholism or problem drinking, B.O, Brock Bidg., lower level, Wednesdays 8 p,m. Call 634-2195 for further information. H o m e s F o r R e n t H ouse fo r ren t. 492-5561. Homes För Sale? 178 Poplar Street, 10 room older home, lots of charm on desirable lot off Mocksville’s North Main Street. 4 bedrooms, 2 newly renovated baths, wonderful new kitchen, large mahogany panelled living room. New wiring, plumbing. Landscaped yard approx. 1 acre, including over 70 box woods. Will Martin, 634-0881 (home); 634-2171 (work)._________________ 4.22 acres, large deck, 3 bedrooms. $49,900. Call 998-6169 after 5 p.m.. BY OW N ER: Davie County (Creekwood Developmment), 304 Brentwood Drive. Rancher, large family room w/rock fireplace, level wooded lot, 3 bedrooms, large master bedroom w/walk-in closets, deck off of master bedroom and family room, carport. $84,900. Day 852-7719, evening 998-5779. Roofs Rework And Palm Tin Roofs Patchwork Free Estimates 9T9-99S-6399 20 Years Experience Kanzlgg's Inspection Cleaning Inserts Woodstoves & Fireplaces Senior Citizens Discounts Pilone: (704) 284-4476 J.T. Smith Upholstery Wirn Odf? Rsgsed? Get It Done Before Fall! E xpert F urniture Upholstery - Reworking CALL J.T. Smith Furn. Co., Inc. 4 Miles Off Hwy. 64 On Sheffield Rd. 704-492-7780 NEW AND USED OFFICE FURNITURE ★ Safes ★ Files ★ Fire Proof Files Rowan Office Furniture 118 N. fKaln Street, Salisbury, N.C. Phone 636-8022 Need! Call A Propane Gas 704-636-6391 CAROLANE PROPANE CAS, INC. Smhii; MocksvUle And Davie Couniy For 4! I'fors 1010 West Innes Street Salisbury, N.C 2B144 (704)636-6391 / i Kl^'W lth the H*R BLOCK In c o m e T a x C o u rs e I Benefit Irom the seem ingly ever-changing lax laws! I Learn how to prepare your own tax return with confidence! I Help others prepare Iheir lax returns, I Enroll today! Classes start _____ For More Information CALL NOWMocksville, NC 7 0 4 - 6 3 4 - 3 2 0 3 JMEXEENSEÜE БВОЕЕТАВЬВ BY OWNER: North of Greasy Corner on 801. Brick rancher. 3-BR. 2Va BA, den. formal LR. DR. 2-FP, kit., large utility room, carport, basement, par tially finished. 20x40 pool. 1.1 acres. $103,700. 998-2050. if no answer call 998-7553, ____________ Carolina E.E. Homes will build to suit your needs. We build on your land or ours. Many floorplans in stock. Come by today for a free estimate or call for information. We can also help you with your remodeling jobs. 704-634-2252. Land For Lease Pastureland for rent to horses $25 per month per horse, 998-5378. DAVIE COUNTY. Moving with the Lee Plant? Need acreage? 17.32 acres by owner, house, 416,44 road frontage, $40,000, (919) 785-0107, FOR SALE; 150 AC, part or all, Iredell Co, (704)546-2696, Law n & G arden ANGELL’S SEEDING SERV ICE... New Yards, Re-seeding, light grading and hauling. Brush chipping, RICK ANGELL 634-2730 alter 5:30 p,m, С & M SERVICES We provide all types of lawn service, mowing lawns, trimming shrubbery, cleaning lots. 704-634-5798, FREE ESTIMATES, _______________ COMPLETE LAWN MAINTENANCE Mowing,'lertllizing, seeding, aeration, weed and insect control, and more, CAROLINA LAWN CARE FREE ESTIMATES _______704-634-4737.________ WAYNE'S LAWN MAINTENANCE AND TREE CARE Tree Topping, Trimming, Stump Grinding & Tree Removal 634-4413 - Free E stim ates L o s t & F o u n d FOUND; Bassoi Hound in Lako Myors area. 998-7034. LOST: Wilson Staff Pitching Wedge, Thursday, August 24, at Twin Cedars Golf Course. 634-3928 if found. L o t s F o r R e n t 2 M obile H om e spaces on private lot, 12 miles north of Mocksvllle, Hwy, 601. 919-463-5457, L o t s F o r S a le M obile Home- Lot. 100x215 lot, sep tic tank and well $6,200, Leonard Realty 704-634-3875, 634-3650, 1 Oil Heater with 9000 burning BTU, $35. 2 pair of hair clippers, $35.1 4-lt, step ladder, $12, 1 pair barber shears, Sa______________________ ANYONE CAN APPLY! Guaranteed Visa/MC, US Charge, Even with bad credit. No one refus- ed. Call 213-925-9906 ext, U2269, Cannon Super Sure-Shot Camera. 35MM, Never used, $195. 284-2504. FOR SALE; 4 Ford factory 14" chrome wheels. Have been split to 10" wide. Rings and caps included, B,F, Goodrich T/A radial white letters P265/50R14 (50 Series) tires mounted on wheels. Good condition. $350, 634-0807.__________________ FOR SALE: ’75 Aijo 23 It. sell- contained camper trailer. Excep- lionally clean. $3,000. 998-3636. FOR SALE: Roper riding lawn mower wilh 10 h.p, Briggs & Stratton motor, 36" mowing deck and variable drive transmission, Qood condition $475, 634-0807. FOR SALE: WHEEL CHAIR good con dition. Original price $650. Will sell for $200. 492-2003.__________________ FREEIff Storm trees, fogs, wood. Donald Riddle, 998-3211. Mobile H om es For Rent R eady to m ove In. Two and three bedroom mobile homes. $70 & $80 weekly. 492-7853 or 634-1218. R ent to ow n: 2 bedroom 1988 mobile home near Jockey Plant, 601 Soulh. • $350 month plus $350 deposit. Private Iol. 492-7BS3 or 634-1218. T o tal e le c tric , air condition, 2 bedrooms, furnished. Large wooded lot. 1 child, no pets. "See to ap preciate!" 998-5334, Mobile H om es For Sale '7 2 S tylecratt 12x60. 2 bedroom, 1 bath, new A/C, some furniture. E.C. $5,200 (neg.) 998-5709 Call after 9 p.m._____________________________ '78 Conners Mobife Home, 14x70, 3 bedrooms, 2 bnths, almond garden tub, bar. extra large windows. Master bedroom and bath separate from other bedrooms. Super clean. Ex cellent condition. $8,500. (704)284-2161 or 284-2737. '8 0 C o n n e r...14x70. Central air. $8,000. 998-5456. 'S3 M obile H om e, 14x76,3 bedrooms, 2 baths, price negotiable. 998-5862 or 634-2411 after 5 p.m.__________ '86 Skyline 14x70, RC rate, high effi ciency heat pump, extras, 998-4655. obile Homes For Sale Lee's Mobile Homes - Volume Horton & Fleetwood Dealer. Rd, 1923, Nor wood NC, Open 7 days. Sizes include hitch, no downpayment wilh clear deed, 42x60 triple-wide $36,999; 28x70 $28,999; 4 bedroom 28x64 $24,999; 24x52 $17,999; 24x44 $16,999; 14x80 $16,999; Shingle Rool, Wood Siding 14x80 $17,999; 14x70 $12,999; 14x52 $9,999; 2 Styles 28x60 Highland Park $28,999; 24x60 Horton $21,999; Used Homes also available - 704-474-4906 or 1-800-777-8652.__________________ O akw ood H om es Of Lexington, NC No Payments Till October Up To $1,000 CASH REBATE _________Cali 1-249-7041_________ S elect m odels. Only $495 down pay ment. Available AAA Homes, Exit 42 off 1-77, Troutman, NC, 704-528-9833, M H S u p p lie s / R e p a ir s GAS mobile home furnaces Installed, $599, Carolane Propane, 1010 W. In nes St., Salisbury. 636-6391; M u s ic BAND PERCUSSION KH* for sale. 634-0383._______________________ PIA N O L ESSO N S beginning In September, Advance area, Jimmy Wilson, 998-2732. BARFORD'S PIANO TUNING. Repair-' ing, rebuilding. Work guaranteed. 919-998-2789. O f f ic e S p a c e OFFICE SPACE FOR RENT (near post office). Ground floor, good (Mrhing, ' modern conveniences, (our oftices available. 165 square feet to square feet each. C all.634-2181.'^ S e r v ic e A N D ERSO N W ALL PA PE R H A N 0ER8492-7777 or 492-5159 ‘ A TTEN TIO N FA R M ER S: S tò ck U; Removal 7 days a w eak. Down and ' dis-abled C ows and H orses-if dead, ,.oall.atqN.OELW ilLltQIplcl5upOLD , , Dead animals, JOHNSON & ALEXANDER DOG FOOD COMPANY, Rl, 2, Harmony, (704) S46-2357 or 546-7453.___________ . BA CK H O E SER V IC E - S e p tic System s, Any B ackhoe Work: MHIar , & S o n » B a e k h o * S a rv ie * . 284-2626. . \ ; ; ; B A R FO R D ’S PIA N O , R E v BUILD IN G ....Self playera, pump, . organs. 919-996-2789. ; > I B & B C on tracto r* S alvag« *. ! Will rem ove unw anted cara, w M hing m achines, anything ateel at NO CHARGE. 634-1218 Or 492-7653. : Miller Bullilliig & Remodeling Co. Replacement Windows West "Vinyl","Classic Thermal" & Reynolds "Renovalior Available in white, lan & bronze. Tilts tor easy cleaning SpecW\ to'/.«” _________PatlQ-Cttia__ustom made and installed to fltl . All work fully guaranteed f r e e EBilmtin / A e fte n c e « AvalMrii Com pare O ur Quality A Prie« B tta rt You Buy Rt. 3, Box 2 0 ^ d w n M T N .C . 27006 . ----------------------------— T i t ,^ ^ i i o n Starting At 10:00 a.m.Saturday September 2,1989 ■■мам Lewis FurlntureMMHH F.MPNITURE ly M S 20 Living Room Suits • 15 Dining Room Suits • 30 T.V. and K/lircrowave Stands • Carpet Remnents ' Oriental Rugs ' Brass Beds * Water Beds • Box Spring and Mattress Sets ’ Bullet Hutches • Lamps, Pictures, and Mirrors ' Reclinars ‘ Grand Father Clocks ■ Curios * Ceiling Fans • Golfee and End Tables • Day Beds • Bed Room Suits • Office Fur niture • Wicker Furniture ‘ Wall UnitsRESTARAUNT EQUIPM ENT Tables and Booths ‘ 8’ Ice Cream Box ’ Milkshake Machine * 5’x 6’ Glass Door Relrigerator • Stainless Steel, Overhead, Hanging Rack • Large, Chopping Block, Utility Table We reserve the right lo add or delete Irom. Annoucements made a( auction take precedence over all other Inlormatlon CALL AUCTION COMPANY FOB BROCHURE OR INFORMATION Lewis Furniture Liquidation H w y . 67 (liosiji- McNu-iii i'omiaci Jone.sville, N .C . C o l. Danny Lew is iK'“ NCAL 124 835-7(Ю1 |)Л \ ПС е о и м л KN TICUI'UISIC Ki;(4)RI). •mlJUSl)Л^■. Auí-.ÍI, 1'J89-111) ш о ш ш в ш Baker Roofing New & Old Roofs Patchwork Rework a Paint Tin Roofs Free Estimates 919-998-6399 20 Years Experience C & M Services Concrete finishing...walks, driveways, patios. Free Estimates. 704-634-5798.___________________ COiVIPLETE CAR SERVICE Engine Re-building, Brakes, Etc. ____________492-7174____________ Carpenter, Plumber, ail repairs. Remove old slumps and trees Irom slorm damage. Build Decks and Repairs 634-1218 or 492-7853. Complete Mobile Home Service Tote, set-up, septic tank, drain fills, grading 634-1218 or 492-7853 FAMILY FLOORS "We personally install what we selil” Stop in at 806 N. Main St., Mocksviiie, NC. Or cail us at 634-4411 or 634-0596. ______________ FARNHAM ROOFING “Will Keep A Roof Over Your Head" Free Estlmates...998-4962 FIRST AND SECOND MORTGAGE LOANS Debt Consolidation Home Improvement Loans For Any Worthwhile Purpose Fast Service Competitive Rates Unitad Companies Financial Corp. 1307 Ashleybrook Center Winston-Salem, NC 27103 9194S94123 FLOOR SANDING II FINISHING INTERIOR PAINTING 884-2898 or 284-2190 GENE'S ROOFING Naw and Old Roofs 20 Y M r* Expariance FfMEatimatas 704-284>«571 : HAULINO-Sand, Gravel, Dirt, Mulch'. , Millar & Son Baekhoa Sarvica 884-2126 HaaUna II Air CondWo'ning Rapaira 24 Hour Saivlca. David Gritfin, Quali ty Haating & Cooling. 284-4556 or 884-2969. ' MASON eLECTR№ ...Nm Installation Rapalr.,Mobl|a Home Hook-ups. '~S«rvica changaa. Keith Mason 998-5542. Osborne Electric Co. No job loo large or smnll. Unlimited license. Over 20 years experience. Karl Osborne, owner 634-3398____________ PAINTING, remodeling, home repairs. Large or small. Free estimates. James Miiier 998-8340. ’80 Harley Davidson wide glide. Black & lasl. Musi see. No rides. 634-0383. RAINBOW SERVICE Parts, Deodorizer Service. 998-5890. Call T ravel T O P « Y « « R a M M C M N C H lL lA S Cor inlermatlon write to: ' (рММ# 0/W s “ 'Æ SS.'KÎ^ I f,O.BoK3tee iOèltQn,OiM«fa 30721 é 1404) 27M 82S * М Ы Н Л 1 Ш » Ы п M^onespedalp№onteraord^ sales In the Mocskviiis Area. Foteniial ol $50,000 -f for a career oriented per son that wants to wotk in sales. Part time sales people have the potential ol $300 to $500 |мг week. No experience necessary. Full training for new representatives. CaU Mr. LN. Slater, Jr. foe personal Interview... Winston-Salem (919) 7604280. Mt-i№ NOW OPEN Alexander’s Temporary Service 301 Salisbury Street (Located Behind Post Offlce) Accepting Applications For As§embply/Pkg. Warejiouse Production » Order Pullers s Secretaries, Word Processors, Clerical 5 Office Hours 8:30 to 5 Monday-Friday Close 12:30 To 1 For Lunch 704-634-4904 919-768-TEMP Experienced Booltlteeper Pleasant Working Conditions. Binefits in clude two weeks paid vacation, liolidays, group health and life insurance, and a retire ment program. Experience with office equipment and ability to talk with others on the telephone is necessary. A High School Diploma is required. Business School or college training would be helpful. Salary open. Apply In Person T r a i v u N c Bethel Church Road M ocksville, N.C. EOE/MF RKR VIDEO Video Taping & Editing For All Occasions __________704-492-7699__________ SAVE MONEY! COMPLETE CAR CARE Brakes, tune-up, spin-wheel balancing Boger Texaco Service ___________634-5924___________ STUMP GRINDING - No Yard Damage Miller & Sons Backhoe Service ___________284-2826___________ Tldy-up Cleaning Service Weekly, bi-weekly, monthly, one-time. Free estimates. 284-4444.________ UNIQUE AFFORDABLE DECORATING SERVICE Painting, Paper Hanging, Carpentry Work Interior only. 20 years experience. 634-1089. ________ WINDOWS WELCOMED Spring & General Housecleaning 1-704-636-7924_________ Will do general house cleaning. Cathy Blackwelder 492-7507. '85 Dodge Conversion Van. Loaded, new tires, 39,000 miles. SI0,500. 998-3636.________________________ '86 Pontiac 6000, blue, 4-door, AM/FM cassette, automatic, cruise, air. Com- pany m aintenance. 998-0751.____ '88 Chevrolet Camara - lroc-28; Load- ed with extras. 998-2119.________ BUY GOVERNMENT seized and surplus vehicles from $100. Fords, Chevys, Corvetles, etc., in your area. For info call 602-842-1051 exI. Ag269. SALISBURY MOTOR CO. Bulck-Peugeot 700 W. Innes St., Salisbury 704/636-1341 TROY'S AUTO SALES THE BEST SELECTION IN STATESVILLE 1123 Shelton Ave. Statesville, NC 704/872-8769 704/878-6262 NO INTEREST E -Z PAYMENT PLAN BUY H ER E-P A Y HERE NO CR ED IT-B AD CREDIT NO PROBLEM WE ALSO BUY USED CARS Employment Sept. 8: Country Adventure, Hickory, FREE DANCE LESSON, meal and entertainment, $25. Oet. 13-15; Nashville, TN. Grand Ole Opry. Op'ryland. Dinner cruise on General Jackson. Nashville Palace. Tour of stars homes. 2 nights motel. Transportation. Dbl. $239 each or Tpl. $219. Quad $209. Helen Bailey 998-4338 or 998-»078. AIRLINES NOW HIRING. Flight At- tendents. Travel Agents, Mechanics, Customer Service. Listings. Salaries to $105K. Entry level positions. Call (1)605-687-6000 Ext. A-5720. ATTENTION: Excellent Income for home assembly work. Info Call 504-646-1700 Dept. P5760. A TTEN TIO N : EARN MONEY READING BOOKS! $32,000/year in come polenliai. Details. (1)602-838-8885 Exi. Bk313l. ATTENTION NURSES AIDS ORDERLIES & OTHER CARING PEOPLE Your skills and experience are need ed al ProComm! However, il you are a caring person wilh no prior ex perience and have a desire lo work in such a rewarding lieid, we will Irain you. ProComm, a private provider ol group home care lor Ihe m entally relarded, wilh homes, in Davie, Rowan and Iredell counlies, current ly has lull and pari time openings lor direct care positions on ail shills. Benefits could include: Competitive salaries, paid vacalions, and sick leave, medial and life insurance and 10 paid holidays. Call 704-278-9681 to obtain employment applicalion. B.J.'s Country Food needs kitchen help now. Apply in person. 998-7290. BUSINESS OFFICER I Top fiscal operations and management level position in health care agency. Position reports to the Chief Ex ecutive Officer with responsibililies for: budgeting; accounting; purchas ing; data processing; internal audits; investments; payroll and benefits management; accounts receivable and payable; insurance coverage and the fiscal aspects of program development. Entry-level salary: $27,302-$31,540, depending on ex perience, plus good benefits, pension plans and working conditions. Re quires four-year degree In business, accounting, public or hospital ad ministration plus lour years ex perience in mental health, health care or related manage- ment/business/pianning respon sibilities. Send state application and resume lo Jan Trexler, Personnel Of ficer, Tri-County Mental Health Area Office, 121 W. Council St., Salisbury, NC 28144. EOE. Deadline for accep ting applications: September 1,1989. COME JOIN THE FRIENDLY BUNCH - We have 5 openings in Ihe area lor energetic, outgoing people who wani lo be Iheir own bosses, make iheir own hours and meet new people. Our toys and gills sell themselves wilh Iheir high quality and wide variety. No inveslmeni, no coiiecling, no delivery. Don't miss oul on this lanlaslic oppor- lunily. Call lor free inlormalion. Childcare needed 1er 12 year old boy in Clemmons home, Monday thru Fri day, 2:30 thru 6:30. References and oar required. Call T.G.I.F. 01 Pied mont, inc. for application: 919-769-3011. EARN MONEY typing at home. $30,000/year income potential. Delails, 1-800-687-6000 Ext. B-5720. Earn money at home stuffing envelopes. Send a sell addressed, stamped envelope to: SEMA, Box 1179, Dallas, GA 30132._________ Full-time Day Care Teacher needed, Monday - Friday, 9-5. To apply call: Kiddie Kampuus, 634-2260. GOVERNMENT JO BS $16,040 - $59,230/yr. Now hiring. Call 1-805-687-6000 Ext. R-5720 for cur rent lederai list. HABILITATION SPECIALIST 11: Posi tion responsible lor the programmatic and Ihe fiscal elements of Ihe Com munity Ailernatives Programs for the Mentally Retarded (CAP/MR) in Rowan/Davie counties to Include: eligibility tor program, identify shortyiong-range service needs and implement plan of care. Four year degree in human service field and two years of professional level ex perience working with mentally retarded clients. Salary $19,737-$20,693, depending on ex perience. Send state applica tion/resume to: Jan Trexler, Person nel Officer, Tri-County Mental Health Area Office, 121 W. Council St., Salisbury, NC 28144. EOE. V ehicles *78 Plymoutt« DuMer $200. 20 R motor (or Toyato, runs good, $250. 998-2694.________________________ '73 Datsun pickup: new battery and mag wheels. New clutch, runs and drives good, needs painting. 4-speed. $575 oe best offer. Call anytime before 4 p.m. Friday. 492-7889. BORING MACHINE OPERATOR Baker Furniture, Mocksville, N.C. is seeking an experienced boring machine operator. Prefer several years experience, especially on horizontal boring machine. Competitive pay and benefits package with excellent work environment. Apply At: Baker Furniture M illing Road, Moclcsville, N.C. (704) 634-2183 E/O/E M/F/H »4-3(1, -it -tt -tt -tt -tt -tt G r i f f i n I s C o m i n g T o M o c k s v i l l e -tt -tt -tt -tt -tt -tt -tt -tt -tt -tt -tt -tt -tt -tt -tt -tt -tt 1 0 ^ W A R E H O U S E & D IS T R IB U T IO N The Grassy Creek & Rural Hall, NC Distribution Centers are ac cepting applications for the following positions im m ediately available. •2 n d S h ift O rder P ullers S tarts 4;30 p.m . •3 rd S h ift O rder P ullers — S tarts 10:30 p.m . S unday-Thursday Starting Pay $5.50 — Uniform s provided/90 day perform ance bonus H oliday Pay & Prom otion O pportunity alter 90 days Applications will be accepled only on Ihe following days. M onday, A ug u st 21 T hru Friday S eptem ber 1st APPLY IN PERSON between 10:00 a.m . - 2:00 p.m . Or 6:00 p.m . to 10:00 p.m. at the following locations. — 5950 Grassy Creek Blvd. — Winston Salem 3rd Warehouse on left — 520 North Ridge Park Drive, Rural Hall 2nd W arehouse on right. NOW PHONE INQUIRES Company Physical and Drug Test Required Dependable Transportation Saturday & Sunday overtime may be required ------------------------ --------------------------------------------------------------- -------B.ai.iinbp - HAIR STYLIST needed. Classic Cut Hair Salon. 998-7706.____________ HOUSEKEEPER needed on a daily basis. General housecleaning and laundry. Will pay lop dollar lor a job well done. Teresa, 998-8184. Hoilday Inn Clemmons now hiring for lollowing posilions. ■ Dishwasher ‘ Cooks • Maids • Hosless • Wail Stall Please apply in person only. Mon-Frl. 8 a.m.-5 p.m._________________ INFANT CARE NEEDED. Daycare giver lo watch 6 month old at hour home on Tues. & Thurs. 8:00 till 5:30 p.m. Experienced, loving, non smoking woman need only apply. Call 634-1506 between 7 & 8 p.m. MANAGEMENT POSITION available. Good pay and benelits. Apply in per son al Action Video, 2162 Statesville Blvd., Salisbury. 1-636-9493. : ■ Need someone to care for 9 year old before and after school In Mocksville Elementary area. 634-4241. ' RECEPTIONISTfPERSONNEL COORIDNATOR • Fast Paced Office • Clerical Aptitude • • Good Communications Skills ' ' • A People Person ; • Professional Appearance • Self Starter • Personnel Experience A Plus ') Griffin Temporaries Call 1-637-2876 For Appointment SPECIAL EDUCATION INSTRUC TORS for mentally retarded adults In group home & classroom seting. Four. year degree required. Experience preferred. Call ProComm (278-9681) for employment application. ■; 4Mut. Of Mocksville W e Ara Now H iring For A ll Shifts Competitive Starting Riaites Excellent hourly rates for those who can prove their sidlls. • Full or part-time with flexlUe scheduling available Apiriy at №• Moeiisvlll« Pirn Hat , or call ■' Mark Fowler at 634-1906 to schedule an appointment. ' EOEMF .... "■ i t Have the Dog Days” Off Summer Gotten You Down :Ganti Personnel, Inc. S 3 4 -4 2 6 8 And Let Us Help You Find Employment 190-8 N. Nlain Mocksville, N.C. GIANT AUCTION SALE Sept. 9, 1989 10 a.m. Advance, N.C. Take H ighw ay 801 to Underpass Road, Advance. Follow signs to the first hard-surfaced road on the right (Vogler Road). GENERAL MERCHANDISE Consign now to Ihe largest Sale of this type In our area. Bring your new and used m erchandise to this sale. Dealers W elcom e. PICK-UP LOADS CAR-LOADS m m m1979 F-250 Ford Truck ‘ 1951 Red Belly Ford Tractor:*: Lawnm owers * Televisions • 1979 Ford 250 * Farm Equipm ent ■ Antiques ' Appliances * Power Tools * Thousand Trails M em bership ' D ouble D Horse Trailer * Hudson Bros. 16 ft. Lowboy ■ Bicycles ' Radios * Household Goods * Farm Tools * Tack ‘ Furniture ‘ Hand Tools Consign Anything 01 Value Today!Terms And Conditions 01 Sale: Sellers Fee $10 Plus 15%Com- mission. BUY IN CASH GET PAID IN CASH.Concessions Available • * ■ Bring Your Lawn Chairs Sale C onducted Bv SQUARE CIRCLE AUCTION CO. (919) 998-6110 Jim "E li” Hartm an, Auctioneer NCAL 4504 Rt. 3, Box 110 Advance, N.C.(919) 998-5350 e-3i-2m bp New Doctor Joins Staff At Davie Family Medical 12D-DAVIE COUNTV KNTERPKI.SK RliCOUI). THURSDAY. Atij-.-M. IM89 Dr. Melanie S. Renfroe, family practi tioner, has join ed tlie medical staff of Davie Family Medical Center in Mocksville. ■. She is the first woman to establish a Renfroe ’edical practice in Davie County. Renfroe will begin accepting pa tients Sept. 1. Renfroe. 29, is a native of Tallahassee, Fla. She completed undergraduate training in 1982 at Ihc University of the Soulh in Sewanee, Tenn. She is a 1986 graduate of the University of Mississippi School of Medicine. Renfroe compieled residency train ing in family praeticc in June at the University Medical Center in .liickson, Mi.ss. Class Gets Truck The auto mechanics program at -Davie High School has received a new 1989 Chevrolet Blazer for use .in its classes. , The truek was donated by Modern Chevrolet in Winston-Salem. ' “ It is difficult for schools to keep up with the changing technology in the auto industry,” said Randy Templeton, auto mechanics in structor. “ This donation will enable us to train students on the very latest components.” Templeton said he requested the donation after he heard of the General Motors donation program through another instructor. Her liusliand. Dr. William O. Renfroe, is also a family practi tioner. He is participating in a two- year faculty developmenl fellowship in family medicine al Ihe Depanment of Family Practice at Bowman Gray School of Medicine in Win.ston-Salcm. Renfroe said she has always been interested in establishing a practice in North Carolina. “ We enjoy small town living," she .said. “ My hu.sband and I were impressed wilh Davie Family Medical Cenler, Davie County Hospital, and the community in general during our initial tour of the area. I look forward lo my association here, and welcome the opportunity of becoming a part of the Davic County community.” The Renfroes have one child, 5-month-old Daniel. Renfroe joins Dr. Bob M. Fo.ster and Dr. Harry Little at Davie Family Medical Center. Davie Family Medical Center is located at 158 Hospital St. in Moeksviile. JSPRING, MR ^ J % V H O T E L S U P R E M E IliiHt Id Ihe rigiil spcci/tcaliiiiis itf America's ftncsl iitiis. THE SPRING AIR" COMPANYExclusive Maker o( the BACK SUPPORTER* Mattress | U | A T T P C C C • Exclusive Back Supporter • AKernating right-and ■ Unique heallh-Cenler- pro- • n C w O springs respond to ttie gentlest leM-turn springs, lo pro- vides extra support wtiere you C C JIT| | | | C C touch, yet give extra support as vent mattress sag and need II most, between neck, ■ fc“ i w flE w pressure increases. loan. and knees where 70% of yourand kr>ees where 70% of your body weight rests. Q u a l i t y . f r a c t i o n o f th e ^ o s t!