-II'II immnd. Wedn«*y, May 20,1fT0 14 >- jlp 9E* fIL CHRIS FOSTER, Route 4, Mocksville, Davie junior "I don't have any plans. I don't think I can get a job anywhere. I'll probably just loaf around and get a good suntan." * V FOSTER. Center Street. Davie freshman "I hope to go to the beach and I'll be babysitting with my little brother." 4J_ t I 1c FOR SALE: 1961 Chevrolet pick-up truck, half-ton, long body, low mileage, good con dition. Call Mr. Floyd Mitchell, Route 4. Mocksville, 284-3233. LOSE WEIGHT safely with Dex-A Diet, and remove excess fluid with FLUIDEX. Only 98 cents and $1.69 at Cooleemee Drug Co. SINGER SEWING MACHINE. Like new cabinet. Zig-zags, but ton-holes. fancy stitches, darns does all without attachments. WANTED: SOMEONE WITH GOOD CREDIT TO FINISH 4 PAYMENTS OF $12.45 PER MONTH. For full details write: Mr Cox, P.O. Box 283, Ash eboro.N.C. 27203. - ART CLASSES. For beginners and experienced children and adults. Starting June 15. Call 634-5237 after 5 p.m. FOR SALE: 18 acres land, located on Wetmore Road, Woodleaf, 6 miles from Fiber Industries 7 miles from Salisbury, 2 miles from Cooleemee. Ideal location for trailer court, housing project, industrial site, etc. 350* black top road fronts land. Plenty water. With down payment, may be financed 3-5 years. Call 284-5711 or 284-5893 for further information. 3-18-tf-b FOR SALE OR RENT: Four room house and bath, aluminum siding, storm win dows, located on 20 Davie Street. May be financed at buyer's choice with low down payment. For further in formation call 284-5711 or 284- 5893. Kwik Kwiz HOW DO YOU PLAN TO SPEND THE SUMMER? ■ Photos and Interviews By MARLENE BENSON M * W"' f i ' RANDY REYNOLDS, Main Street, Cooleemee fourth grader "Going to the beach. I might live4s miles from the beach." FORSALE: 40 gallon trash cans, $1.50. Con tact Ray Potts or notify Beck Brothers Garbage Disposal Ser vice. FOR RENT: 50 x 10', 2 bed room, mobile home, located on Hwy 801 at Greasy Corner. 1 acre land included. Call 284- 4984. FOR SALE: 4 Room house on Center Street. Call Jim Scott at 284-3527. 5-7-4tn-b SPINET PIANO BARGAIN Wanted, responsible party to take over low monthly payments on a spinet piano. Can be seen locally. Write Credit Manager, P. O. Box 641, Mat thews, N. C. 28105. Would like to baby sit after school, nights, or weekends. Call 284-8861. Will keep children in my home and do ironing also. Contact Mrs. Joan Snyder, North Cooleemee. 5-6-4tnh DRIVERS ARE NEEDED Train now to drive semi-truck through facilities of class-one carriers ; local or over the road. For application and personal interview, call 615-525-9481 or write Safety Dept., United Sys tems, Inc. 3408 Western Avenue, N.W., Knoxville, Tennessee, 37921. CABINET MODEL SINGER SEWING MACHINE. Zig-zags, button-holes, fancy stitches, dams does all without attach ments. WANTED: someone with good credit to finish 5 payments of $9.97 per month. For full details write: Mr. Lee, P.O. Box 283, Asheboro, N.C. 27203. ■ i TONY ALEXANDER, Glads tone Road, Cooleemee eighth grader "Swimming, fishing and I'm gonna work in this new store we're going to open up here." • * * DEBBIE WILLIAMS, Davie St, Cooleemee sixth grader "Swimming and playing ball." Social Security Is For Everybody If you're in that half of the U. S. population that's under 30 you may think social security is something remote and unim portant to you right now. Not so, according to Robert Thomas, manager of the Salisbury Social Security office. In this generally healthy and youthful group, more than 307 people in Davie County receive benefits because they are disabled or are dependent upon disabled workers. About 326 widowed mothers and young children in this county get monthly social security checks as survivors of workers, and 227 students age 18 to 22 and people who became disabled in childhood get monthly benefits as the children of retired, deceased, or disabled workers. Disabled children get social security benefits as long as they are not able to work. Who are they? They may be people like Brian O'Donnell, a college athlete who was paralyzed from the waist down by a football injury. He had worked enough during summer vacations to add up to IV* years enough work to insure anyone under 24 for disability benefits. He is now eligible for benefits of more than SIOO a month. They may be like the two teenage daughters of a local man who died while insured under social security. Although their widowed mother will continue to work, the two girls will receive benefits on their father's record up to age 18, if they do not marry. If they remain unmarried and continue in school, as they plan to, they will be eligible until they are 22. The money in cases like these is important, of course, Thomas went on, but for the young worker who knows that his family will be at least partially provided for should he be in jured or die prematurely, there ' ' -v.. |:. -; -■& f; : S j&'A- - ■>-?. ■_■ : Mrs. Messick Of Cooleemee COOLEEMEE - Mrs. Peggie Lenora Messick, 36, of Cool eemee, died Thursday night at her home. Funeral services were held at 4p.m. Saturday at Cooleemee United Methodist Church, con ducted by the Rev. William Dingus and the Rev. Bill Lee. Burial will be in Rowan Me morial Park. Mrs. Messick was born in Rowan County Jan. 2, 1933, daughter of Shirley Beck of Cooleemee and the late Margu rette Katon Beck. She was em ployed by Fiber Industries. In addition to her father, she is survived by her husband, Claude Messick; two sons, Gary and Timothy Messick of the home; and one sister, Mrs. Kay Shore of Rt. 4, Mocks ville. Library News "Hie open house to launch the Summer Reading Program at the Davie County Public Li brary was most successful, and the library staff would like to say thanks to all who helped to make it so. Now we look forward to the first sign-up day for the children to register for it on June 3. Young people may participate through the Bookmobile, Cbol eemee Branch or the Main Li brary in Mocksville. is also peace of mind. Social security records are confidential, but in these cases the beneficiaries have given permission to make the details public as reminders of social security benefits that are frequently overlooked. Davie Board Okays Bids For School MOCKSVILLE - The Davie County Board of Education meeting Thursday night ap- Jiroved bids totaling $728,333.75 or a new 24-classroom school to replace Mocksville Elementary School. A dozen contractors sub mitted bids for the general con tract for the project, with Bar ger Construction Co. of Moores ville giving the low approved bid of $487,800. Other low bidders on the pro ject were Southern Comfort of Charlotte with $lll,OOO for heat ing and air conditioning; Powell Plumbing and Heating of Jamestown with a bid of $44,700 for plumbing; Overcash Elec tric of Mooresville with a bid of $69,883 for electrical work; and Foodcraft Equipment Co. of Winston-Salem with a bid of $14,950.75 for kitchen equip ment. School Superintendent James E. Everidge indicated that the bids were under what had been estimated as the cost of the project. Hie new school is scheduled to be in use during the 1971-72 school year. It will be construct ed on property adjoining Mocks ville's Rich Park. Sain Funeral Funeral services tor Earnest El vert Sain, 66, of 28 Davie St., Cooleemee, were conducted Sunday at 3 p.m. at Cooleemee United Methodist Church by the Rev. William Dingus, pastor, and the Rev. William Creason. Burial was at Oak Grove United Methodist Church cemetery. Pallbearers were William Gales, Mike Walker, John Bar ber, V. G. Prim, Bud Alexan der, and Kenneth Holt Mr. Sain died Thursday at 11:30 p.m. en route to Forsyth Memorial Hospital. He was born Oct. 11, 1908, in Davie County, the son of the late Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Sain. Educated in Davie County schools, he was a retired em ploye of Erwin Mills in Cooleemee. Mr. Sain was a member of the Cooleemee United Methodist Church. Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Bessie Allen Sain, whom be married Dec. 24,1922; a son. T- Sgt. E. F. Sain, stationed in Mississippi; three daughters, Mrs. Preston C. Davis of Winston-Salem, Mrs. Andrew Famby of Cumberland, Va., and Mrs Fred G. Hellard of Rt. 4, Mocksville; two brothers, Clarence Sain of Rt. 4, Mocksville, and James Sain of Rt. 8, Salisbury; six sisters, Mrs. H. E. Byerly of 178 Ryan St., Mrs. Walter Phelp6 and Mrs. Inez Sain, both of Cooleemee, Mrs. Ethel Gibson of Rt 4, Mocksville, Mrs. Dot Misenheimer of Rt 1, Mt. UUa, and Mrs. Ben Mitchell of 424 Calhoun St; 14 grandchildren; and thfec ?re*» grandchildren. Howard McDaniel Of Woodleaf Funeral services far Howard Alexander McDaniel, 57, of Rt. 1, Woodleaf, were conducted - Sunday in Gays Chapel United Methodist Church by the Rev. Harwood Myers and the Rev. J. C. Swain. Burial was in the church cemetery. Pallbearers were Bill Link, Ray Alderson, Marvin Cheeks, Charles Blume, Boyce Goodson and Jerry Livengood. Mr. McDaniel died Thursday night in Rowan Memorial Hos pital after an illness of five weeks. He is survived by hiswidow, Mrs. Addie Dean McDaniel; two sons, Kevin D. McDaniel of the home and Ronnie H. McDaniel of China Grove; four brothers, Homer McDaniel of Charlotte, Sherrill McDaniel of Alachua, Fla., K. P. McDaniel of Rt 2, and C. F. McDaniel of Rt 6, Salisbury. Mrs. Waller Of Cooleemee Mrs. Ethel Mae Dry Waller, 52, of Wall St, North St, North Cooleemee, died Thursday at 11 a.m. at the N. C. Baptist Hospi tal in Winston-Salem. She had been seriously ill for nine days. She was born March 30,1918, in Cabarrus County, the daugh ter of the late Duke D. and Mary Shoe Dry. Educated in Ca barrus County schools, she was of the Baptist faith. Surviving are her husband, Thomas E. Waller; a son, Don ald Privett of Concord; five daughters, Mrs. Peggy Wood and Mrs. Frances Coggins, both of Concord, Miss Linda Waller of the home, Mrs. Shirley Thompson of Cooleemee, and Mrs. Mary Rose Poplin, of Rob erta; a brother, Raymond Dry of Oakboro; a half-brother, Rick Dry of Concord; and eight grandchildrgi. _ } Funeral services were con ducted Sunday at 2 p.m. at the North Cooleemee Baptist Church by the Rev. Da via Ed wards, pastor. Burial will be at Mission Cemetery in Stanly County. Pallbearers were Dewey Pre slar, Carl Hartman, Johnny Lowder, Noah Walton, Billy Waller and Charlie Waller.