Newspapers / The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, … / Feb. 14, 1946, edition 1 / Page 5
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i H E G L E AJN E K GRAHAM, N. C., FLB. 14. 194( LoCiil n'ews ?The awning at the Wriki Drug Store was destroyed by fin Tuesday evening about 7:30 be fore the firemen could reach the store. , ?Highway patrolmen in thi county, in the two weeks of Feb ruary, have arrested more thai 50 persons for not having tbeii 1046 license tags. ?Freddie Thompson receive* m.nor injuries Saturday morning when he ran in the path of a .ruck on his bicycle near the coi.rthouse square. , ?Doris Marie Milchell, daugh ter of Mr. and Mrs. William Mc kinley Mitchell, is listed on the honor roll of Lees-McRae college for the first semester's work. ?The majority of retail stores in Giu..am and Burlington began observing each Wednesday after noon as a half-hoii'lay. Plans are for this to last through the last week in August. ?Dr. George W. Lawson, re cently returned from serving over three jears in the Army , Metrical Corps, has resumed his pr vate practice at his new offices at 105 W.. Harden street. ?Tickets for the' "Parent and Son" Boy Scout banquet to be held at the Graham school audi torium Friday evening at 6:30, may be secured by contacting Ted Rurlinski at Jarosz Hosiery Mill here, or Lon Turner at the Times-News office in Burlincton ?The Graham Garden club n:et Tuesday afternoon at the 1. _me of Mrs. Frank Warren. Mrs. M. E. Yount discussed, interest ingly the Why, When and Extent cf Pruning. Mrs. Yount conclud ed her discussion with readings cf favorite garden poems from her personal scrapbook. ?At their regular weekly meeting the Rotarians heard the outline of a plan for convert irg the Graham Community i.ouse into a young peoples cen ter and civic club meeting place. P. R. Harden, House treasurer, r resented the plans sr.d asked for support and donations from the club. ?The Leath Hosiery Mill which will manufacture and sell hosiery was among the 9 certifi cates of incorporation filed last * week in the office of the Secre tary of State. Authorized capital for the firm was set at $100,000 with subscribed stock of $300 by John B. Leath, John H. Ver non, of Burlington and Flossie Bcswell of here. Among The Sick i Dr. E. N. Caldwell has entered Duke Hospital for treatment. Mr. A. P. Wlliams is a patient at Alamance General hospital fol lowing an operation Monday. Births At Simmons-Luoton Hospitiii Mr. and Mrs. Thomas M. Lin nens of New street, a son, Larry McFarland on February 7. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Stanfield of Riute 3, Burlington, a daugh ter, Barbara Jo, February 5. Mr. and Mrs. Me'nlon Huffines of Glen Raven, a daughter, Feb ruary 10. I>r. Johnson's Hospital Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Davis of Walker avenue, a son, Larry Eu gene, February 3. Mr. and Mrs. George Webster of Route 1, a son, Francis, Feb ruary 9. I At Dr. Troxler's Hospital. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas E.' Wright of I- Ion College, a son, FeLr *sry 6. Tiberculosis today is unques tionably a greater public health and economic problem to the country than all acute communi cable diseases com' irsed. MARRIAGES WRECKED BY "IN-LAW" TROUBLE A. noted writer dlscusaee how mm; marriages are wrecked by the inter ference of parent* of newlyweds end what can be done to prtvaat marital diaaetera Don't mlae this revealing 111*utraled article In the Kerch l*d Issue of THE AMERICAN WEEKLY Xattuw's Favorite Magazine With The *??>.? iHE | PERSONAL 5 Avon Cain and Jack Story have reported to Fort Bragg for mili tary service. Mr. and Mrs. George R. Ross of Raleigh, visited Mrs. W. R. Goley t last Thursday. * Mrs. Irwin Williams of Laur:ti burg is visiting her mother-in law, Mrs. A. P. Will'ams. Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Neese left last week for Miami, Fla., after a ( visit to Mr. and Mrs. M. R. Neese. ? Mrs. Charles Belviu of Raleigh visited Dr. and Mrs. W. S. Long and other relatives here on Mon , day. I , Dr. and Mrs. J. L. Johnson and i Mr. and Mrs. Sam T. Johnston returned Monday from an sive Southern trip. Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Cain, Jr, of i Greensboro were recent guests of : Mr. Cain's brother, tlie Rev. Guy S. Cain and Mrs. Cain. Miss Cora Harden Stratford and Miss Dorothy Mizelle of ,/omai 's colleg were Sunday guCsts of Mr. ar.d Mrs. J. J. Hen derson. Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Blackwell from Kentucky, and_Mr. and Mrs. L. B. Hardesty and "little daugh ter, Ann, of Leaksville were week-end guests of Mr. and Mrs. Walter R. Harden. I Pfc. James G. Mc Adams, aom of Marvin G. McAd&ms, has en listed in the regular army for 18 months, effective December 26, 1945, while serving with the 524th Military Police battalion in Vienna, Austria. .v. and Mrs. J. J. Boone spent Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday at Duke University, where they attended an Interdenominationa Convocation for laynien and min isters, concerned with the study of world conditions today. Mr., and Mrs. A. 1*. Williams had as their guests recently their daughters and their lawilies; Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Leonard and Peg gy Lou and Harriet of Ashville and Mr. and Mrs. I. Broadus Culler and Dickie Nancy and Lar ry of High Point. Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Kernodle, Jr., had as their guests from Thursday til Tuesday. Mrs. Ker nodle's mother, Mrs. R. E. Win stead of Newport News.. Va.; her aunt, Mrs. J. B. Doric n; and cous ins, Mr. Richard Dorton and Mr. Earl Thornton, of North Fork, W. Va. Lt. and Mrs. B. Harper Barnes and son, Harper Henderson, ar rived home Tuesday from the West coast. Lt. Barnes, A. C. D. officer of Admiral Sprague's staff on the carrier Lexington, came into Allmeda, Calif., on December 16th, joining his family who went to mee| him in the early fall. Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Kernodle, Jr., Mrs. J. J. Henderson, Mrs. R. E. Winstead, of Newport News Mr. W. A. Winstead of Raleigh; Mrs. J. B. Dorton, Mr. Richard Dorton and Mr. Earl Thornton of North Fork, W. Va? attended the funeral of Mrs. Kerno.ile's aunt, Mrs. Laura Winstead Stephens, in Roxboro, on Monday. Mrs. Don E. Scott. Mrs. Betty Scott McKenzie and Mrs. W. F. Okey attended a luncheon given by Mrs. Don E. Scott, Jr., at the Carolina Inn in Chapel Hill last Thursday, in honor of Miss Erwin Gant of Burlington. Miss Gant is to be married on the twenty third of February to Donald In gram Bur hoe of Boston, Mass. Rationing News SUGAR ' Sugar Stamp No. 39 became /alid for five pounds of sugar January 1, expires April 30. Make ration applications, by mail?save time and effort. Dachshund Popularity In Sensational Gain The lowly Dachshund is now up among the ten dog breeds which lead in the number of purebred registra tions in this country, according to the Gaines Dog Research Center. New York City, which states that a lot of the credit for this achievement is due to the efforts of the Dachshund Club of America which this year celebrates the golden jubilee of its affiliation with the American Kennel Club. Figures compiled by Joseph E. Bal mer. Xenia, Ohio, show a sensational gain of Dachshund registrations in 1943 over the year 1936 of 8,789%. For the same years the Cocker Spaniel, the leader in registrations, showed a gam^of 1,814% and Beagles a gain of Subscribe Foe The Cleaner U. D. C. Meeting The February meeting " _ Graham Chapter United Daugh : ter8 of the Confederacy was :.?_K1 last Thursday afternoon at the home of Mrs.. VV. Ernest Thomp ' son, with Mrs. J. L- Johnson as joint hostess. i I Tne chapter pics J.i Mary E. Parker, presided. The U. D. C. ritual and salute to the i flags was led by the asst. chap- j lain, Mrs. Thompson. Mrs. E. H. I William, acted as secretary. A few items of interest were read < from the U. D. C. magazine and . the year books were distributed ( by Mrs. J. J. Henderson, histor- j ian. One of the special items i from the magazine was the trib- < ute to Mrs. Walter Lamar who < for over fifteen year3 was diligent ] in her work for Sidney Lanier for i the Hall of Fame. Mrs. Lamar's j work has been rewarded. A bust i of Sidney Lanier will be placed in < the Hall of Fame by the United j Daughters of the Confederacy Mrs. S. S. Holt gave an interest- ] ing sketch of the short life of this ( versatile man who was outstand- , ing as a soldier, poet, musician, ] lecturer and writer in spite of his | frail body, and attained a nation al reputation. ^ Following the program, after . noon tea was served from a beau tifully appointed dining table by 1 the hoetess, assisted by the pres.- i dent and Mrs. W. H Ho it. 1 D. A. R. Meeting The Battle of Alamance Chap ter of the Dt,> hters of the Amer-1 ican Revolut.on held their Febru ary meeting last Friday after noon at the home of Mrs Herbert Long with Mrs. Ernest Thomp son ass sting hostess. The Chapla.n, Mrs. Long, led the ritual at the opening of the meeting. Mrs. David Harmon, Re gent, presided over the business routine. , A State-wide Home-makers club project sponsored by the D. A. R.'s was presented as the pro gram by Mrs. Thompson. Six girls from the Home Ec. Depart ment of the Graham school modl ;d their home-made cotton dness ?s. The winners selected were Miss Sarah K. Davis of the Jun iors and Miss Ruth Christy of the Seniors. They were presented with Silver bracelets and the oth :r contestants with theatre tic cets. Delicious salads, cookies with ' Russian tea and other accessories, arrying out the Valentine motif, i vere served from the dining room by the hostess. The cost of tuberculosis among veterans of World. War II, in erms of compensation, vocation- j il training, insurance and hospial zation, has reached a billion dol ars. Medical Studies Back Sister Kenny Theory j v Sister Elizabeth Kenny's demonstration of her treatment for infantile paralysis at Minneapolis General hospital aroused the -< interest of the medical profession and resulted in a five-year study d' of her theories. ,a The result of these studies and clinical observations by ^ six eminent medical men is told in a report made in the Au- 2: gust issue of The Journal Lancet, a national medical publica- . tinn hv r?v Tnkn P D?k1 ing orthopedic surgeon at Minne apolis General hospital and the Michael Dowling School for Crip pled Children in Minneapolis and now medical supervisor at the Eliza beth Kenny Institute. Dr. Pohl was one of the six m*n who conducted the five-year studies in co-operation with the University of Minnesota medical school. Other research was conducted by orthopedists at the world-famed Mayo Clinic at Rochester, Minnesota and by the Rochester (New York) University. Studied 364 Cases The Dr. Pohl report is based on the most comprehensive study to date of Miss Kenny's revolutionary treatment and the results of that treatment. In The Journal Lancet, Dr. Pohl points out that his evaluation of the "Kenny concept and treatment is based" upon a study of 364 patients suffering from infantile paralysis in the acute stage who were admitted and treated at Elizabeth Kenny Clinic during the years 1940 through 1944. Of the 364 patients 341 survive. "Upon completion of the treat ment 16 per cent of the patients have extensive residual paralysis of one or more extremities but 84 per cent may be considered to have good recovery from the standpoint of muscle strength and ability to move the limbs," Dr. Pohl wrote. He explains in his article that the cases studied were not mild ones but "were of average severity" in comparison with previous experi ence in the same hospital (Minne apolis General). Remarkably Successful "A patient may be a success from the standpoint of retaining good muscle power but the same patient definitely represents a failure of treatment if he suffers permanent crippling deformities in spite of his good muscle strength as was too frequently the case under orthodox management of the disease. "On this basis the Kenny treat ment proves to be remarkably suc cessful as 95.3 per cent of the pa tients in this series appeared to have an assured further existence, free of cumbersome braces, gro tesque deformities and awkward methods of locomotion. The other 4.5 per cent (15 pa tients) are by no means helpless or "even necessarily crippled but are considered as having retained mus cle weakness to such an extent as to prevent them from being fully in dependent. None have gross de formities." Only 2.3 per cent or eight of the entire group of 341 wear braces. Crutches are used by only 3.4 per cent of the patients and 2.8 per cent use one cane. "For the most part." Dr. Pohl adds, "the crutches are employed as a means of continuing to teach the patients good motor habits rath er than as a means of support. Crutches are later displaced by a single cane In most patients or are discarded entirely. Gross deformi ties have been eliminated in all cases. Surgery Uasaecessfal "None of the patients has required surgery to date and no Indication has arisen in which surgery might . dWfe.. a . I Sister Kenny Given Degree by Presi- tl dent Robert Clothier of M Rutgers University. w n materially improve the condition of any of the patients. c< "None of the 341 patients, includ ing the severely involved, have en- fi tered orthopedic hospitals, rest gi homes or institutions for tha care of the crippled and chronically dis- i abled." _ Pointing out that orthopedic hos- D pitals and schools for crippled chll- ni dren give an overall picture of the infantile paralysis situation in any community. Dr. Pohl presents fig ures in The Journal Lancet article .1 to show the effect of the Kenny * treatment on the number of admis- " sions to the Michael Dow ling School dl for Crippled Children, Minneapolis, during the years 1937, 1938 and 1939, prior to the time Miss Kenny began p her work, and in 1940 through 1944. r From 1937 through 1939, Dr. Pohl ^ said, 178 Minneapolis school chil dren 14 years of age or under were afflicted with the disease and 57 or 32 per cent of them eventually were enrolled in Dowling school; 45 or 80 q per cent of those admitted had gross deformities; 15 or 28 per cent of those admitted were required to wear braces, and 12 or 21 per cent of * those admitted have had surgical \t operations. q From 1940 through 1944?the Ken ny period?148 Minneapolis children 14 years of age or under were af- J* dieted with the disease and placed bl under the management of the Kenny dl treatment. None Deformed R None of the 148, Dr. Pohl reports, bad to be enrolled in Dowling y school; none had a deformity; none ., had to wear a brace, and none had to have surgical operations. 1 Dr. Don Henderson, head of tha G orthopedic department of tha Mayo Si Clinic, in a letter to Miss Kenny com merited on her concept of the dis- M ease and her treatment of it and n said: u "I am fully convinced that your M method offers the Infantile paralysis < patient more hope for complete re- fc covery than any other method or treatment today." At Rochester University the acid .. test of science was applied to Miss *' Kenny's theory that spasm does ex- " ist. By use of delicate electrical In- fc struments university scientists w proved Miss Kenny's theory and as a result that institution conferred p upon the Australian nurse the de- . free of doctor of humane letters In J* recognition of her findings. New ** York university also conferred an dl honorary degree upon Miss Kenny. =ALMANAC== "Urn and melons an Hard tokmew" rsnruAiy It l^anm odblnet iw ganized following U. & victory at Thik. 1941 Sft 20?Panama Pacific Export* B tfon opens in San nan* cfcoo. 1915. s ?^tl?U. & fleet returns from round-the-world cruise. f+ ^^-Washington's Birthday. W^lt?American forces win bat r4- tie of Bueoa Vista IS47 14-Senator Albea Bartley Is renamed Democratic ? majority leader. 1944. ^-SS?Sixteenth amendment, ) legalizing Income tax ' becomes operative. 1911 VMItarvM , ? I HADLEY'S , "The Jewelers'* Graham, North Carolina .-,-m i.j | DEATHS Sidney G. Wilson, fi4, of Route , died Tuesday night at Wa/flts ospital in Durham after two reeks of critical illness. The deceased, a native of Guil srd county, had long been a resi ent of Alamance county and was member of the Graham Metho ist church. He was the husband f the late Mrs. Addie Pickard Wilson. Funeral services will be con ucted at the Graham Mefthodist tiurch this afternoon by the Rev. . J. Boone assisted by the Rev. 1. C. Henderson of Burlington, urial will be in Linwood ceme iry. Surviving are two daughters >ur sons, two brothers and 11 randchildren. , Mrs. Emma Pickard Whitte lore, 83, wife of the late G. S. ftiittemore and a native of Ala- j lance county, died at her home ere Wednesday morning after a ?itical illness of two weeks. Funeral services will be held | lis afternoon at tha Graham [ethodist church, of which she , as a member, by Rev. J. J. oone. Burial will he in Linwood smeltery. Surviving are one daughter, ve sons, 25 grandchildren and 8 reat grandchildren. Edward Lee Murray, 76, of urlington, died Tuesday after son following a critical illness of >n days. He had been in declining ealth for several years. The deceased was well known iroughout Alamance county for is long affiliation with the Stan ard Oil company. Funeral services will he held >morrow morning from the urke Funeral home by Rev. L. . Larkin. Surviving are five brothers. Mrs. India Moser Greenhill, 62, ied at her home at Haw River aturday morning after an ill ess of three months. A native of this county, she as first married to the late Ar ndo Straughn and iuter to A. E. reenhill. Surving are one 3on, six step ins, three step-daughters, two rothers, and seven grandchil ren. Funeral services were held at iverside Baptist church Monday fternoon with Rev. Sherman oung in charge. Burial was iti le Moore's Chapel cemetery. raves vde services were held at alem Methodist church Satur sy morning for Linda Faye Doi >n, infant daughted of James 0. odson and Mrs. Ina Smith Dod >n of Haw River, Route 1,. Surviving are the parents and mr grandpadents. Robert lee Staley, custodian of ie Post Office at Mtbane, died Wednesday evening of last week illowmg an illness of three eeks. Surviving are his wife, Mrs. eulah Wiles Staler; four daugh ts, three sons, his mother, iree bisters and two grandchil ren. Funeral services were held at ~ the Mebane Presbyterian church Sunday afternoon by Kev. W. M. Baker. Burial was in Oakwood cemetery in Mebane. Mias Mary V. Patterson, 24, of Rt 1, Elon College, died at her home Wednesday night of last week following a critical illness of three months. She bad been ill declining health for several years. A native of Alamance county, Miss Patterson was the daughter < of the late A. E. Patterson and i Mary Jones Patterson. Funeral services were held last < Friday afternoon from the Beth lehem Christian church by Rev. i J. L. Neese and G. C. Crutchfield. < Surviving are her mother, five , sisters, and four brothers. I Margaret Marie Onkes, infant ' daughter of Mr. and Mrs. B. B. Oakes of Route 2, Burlington, , died at her home Sunday morn- n ing after a five-day critical ill- t neaa. Funeral services were conduct ed from the Second Presbyterian church Monday afternoon by Rev. O. W. Perrell. Burial .was in the Pine Hill cemetery. SurvivYig are its parents, one ?' sister and one brother. Funeral services for Martha Lee James, infant daughter of <> Mr. and Mrs. Shepherd James of Glen Raven, were held Saturday afternoon from the home. Rev. Thomas Swinson was in charge. T Burial was in the Hawfields Pres byteran church cemetery. >? JUDGES WON OVER BY DRAMA. ART IN WAR DOG DESIGN ? Victor in Memorial Conical a " Dog Lover and Talented M Sculptor Mrs. Elizabeth Philbrick Hall, dog breeder and handler and talented young artiat of Dedham, Mass., has won the Gaines Dog Research Cen ter competition for "the most accep table design, idea or iketch" for a projected memorial to war dogs serv ing in World War IL it ia announced n by Harry Miller, Executive Secre- "> tary of the Center, New York City. Mrs. Hairs entry was chosen m unanimously over several hundred entries^/from all sections of the s< country by a committee of prominent judges consisting of the following: Lowell Thomas, radio commentator Bnd dog fancier; Helen Menken, star of stage and radio who is a pioneer in work for the Stage Door Canteen D and the Army's K-B Corps; Dr. Samuel Milbank, New York sports man and officer of the Westminster Kennel Club; and George Ford Mor ris, one of America's best known animal artists. The ,udges were greatly taken I with the dramatic quality as well as artistic interpretation of Mrs. Hall's J entnr. They felt that her animated depiction of a soldier rising from be- ir hind coyer, gur. ,n hand, to meet approaching danger as signalled to him by the war-dog buddy at hit \ side, caught to a remarkable degree the spirit of the service rendered by dogs on the battlefield. Mrs. Hall ha, since confessed a hesitancy in submitting her entry to the competition. It was only at the strong urging of her Navy husband that she finally put it into the mails, and it arrived in New York the day before the deadline for entries. * Mrs. Hall, still in hei twenties, has just had her first baby. While her ! -v husband ia in America's armed serv- - ices she continues to run alone their H joint enterprise, "The Dog House," devoted to breeding, training, groom- 1 ing and showing dogs Her f(Torts along art lines ir-va received considerable rtotMUl from authorities in recent yean. Her drawings and sculptures of in which she has pretty much spec ialized. have been commented an ft particularly (or their striking. Strangely lifelike qualities. Her in terest in an goes back to childhood. .Roth her father and her -"*her are artists. A graduate of the Massachu setts School of Art, of which her father is president, she has, among others, exhibited at the Penn. Academy of Fine Arts She designed the drinking fountain for children erected at the Elizabeth Peabody Settlement House on Charles Street n Boston. In 1937 she won second prize in the senior class of the Na ional Soap Sculpture Committee competition. According to Mr. Miller, it is the plan of the Gaines Dog Research Center to turn over the winning de ign to one of the dog organizations vhich will decide on the method of inancing the memorial and work tut all the details of location, con traction and the like. Evidence of tuberculosis of tha one has been found on the lumified bodies of early Egyp ians. CHURCH BULLETIN GRAHAM FRIENDS MEKMSIQ Rev. Rcber: O. Crow. Pastor ? 46 a. m.: Sunday School. Daniel vl'?ei. superintendent. 11:00 a m.: Morning worship. 6.15 p m.: Young Friends meeting. ! 7.00 p. m.: Evening Worship. 7:00 p. m. Wednesday: Prayer meet s'*' G HA HAM METHODIST CHURCH Rev. J J. Boone. Pastor. 9:46 a. m.: Church School. W. E. hompRun, superintendent. 11:00 a. m.: Morning worship. Bar ton by the pastor. 4:00 p. nt.: Young Peopled Meet ig. Dorothy Fouat. Leader. 7:00 p. m.: Evening Worship S*r lon Ly^tfia pastor. Finn* BAPTIST CHURCH Re*. Our * C*l?. Factor. 9:46 a. m : S-iuday Sohool. Morrta urke. superintendent, 11:00 a. *m.: Morning worship. Ser ?on by the pastor. 7:00 p m. Baptist Training UlUom. rise t*?sna Church, director. 8 J00 p. m. Evening Worship 8:00 p. m. Wednesday: Prayer Meet >g. BAPTIST ANDREW MEMORIAL CHURCH Corner Market and Mill Sts. Rev. Eugeno Hancock, Pastor 9:45 a. m.: Sunday School, J. W. ray. superintendent. F. B. Pegg, ae ?ciate. 11:00 a. m.: Morning worship, Bar on by the paatoi. 7: SO p. m.: Evangelistic service. 'rmon by the pastor. PROVIDENCE MEMORIAL CHRISTIAN CHURCH Bernard Vernon Mungor, Minister 10:00 a. m. Sunday School, Roto. UHsell. Superintendent. 11:00 a. m.: Ser?1ce of Christian* Worship. GRAHAM PRESBYTERIAN iTJURCH Rev. Edwin N. Caldwell. D- D.Pastor * 9:45 a. m. Sunday Sohool, H. IX. unes' Superintendent. 11:00 a. m. Morning Worship, Ber icn by pastor. 7:30 p. m.: Evening Worship 7:30 p. m.; Wednesday. Prayer lee ting. BETHANY PRESBYTERIAN CTIURCH Rev. W. R. Buhlnr, Pastor 9 45 a. m.: Sunday School, L*. NT. lenn. superintendent. 11:00 a. m Morning Worship 7 00 p. m.: Young People's Vesper ervice 7:30 p m.: Wednesday, Prayer f?etlng : lAHY CHICKS, C. O. D.?: 18.75 hundred up. DAVID NICHOLS HATCHERT ROCKMART. GEORGIA. LOANS UP TO KS VEAKH TO PAY GI and FHA To Buy To Build To Modernise To Re-Flitoce CALL OR WRITE WORTH L. THOMPSON AGENCY For All Your Insurance Xeetf* Phone 726 . - P. O. Box 89 GRAHAM, N. C. Germ-Free Creamy Milk in Every Bottle . . . In our modern dairy, under scientifically controlled conditions by trained workmen your milk is bottled, with the utmost care. Our cap on the bottle is your guarantee of purity and sanitation that cannot be excelled. Order from us now and get that rich, creamy milk that adds deliciousness and health to your table whenever served. Melville Dairy Phonb 1600 Burlington, N. C.
The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, N.C.)
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Feb. 14, 1946, edition 1
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