T H E G L E AN E R I GRAHAM, N. C., MAR. 14, 1946 ISSUED EVEUY THURSDAY J. I*. KERNODLE, JR., Manager $1 00 A YEAR IN ADVANCE JJ? ered at the I\?tofflce at Otaham, N. C.. aa secc nd-claia matter. LOOKING I AHEAD ir GEORGE S.BENSON k Ptcudiat? Hurdmj I'allt/t 1 Start). J rk a a sal King Customer Catering to the customer has been America's most profitable and high ly diversified craft for several gen erations, and it must never stop if this country is to stay great and free. Catering to the customer is an hon orable and interesting activity, and there is nothing to stop it but man made laws. May they never be enacted 1 Certainly 1946 is no time to experiment with silly ideas. Take the automotive industry for an example. It is probably the <>??' example. Automobile men have gone to great lengths to please the American buyer. His wish for speed has been served, seasoned with safety. His need as to seating capacity, his taste in design, his whim in color, and (most important) his buying power, have been taken into account. Result: A car for a king. PrimiUve Notions Perhaps the first time a car manu facturer decided suddenly to rip the insides out of his plant and put in new machinery to give King Customer a better dollar's worth, the stockholders winced. Maybe, in that long-gone day, stockholders con sidered such expenses wasteful, but they learned better. Catering to the customer is exactly what makes dividends grow bigger each year. We may imagine also that, back in the early days of the horseless carriage, some factory workers wor ried about their jobs for a while aft er lower prices were announced. Probably some good workmen asked, "How long can the big boss keep paying us after he starts giv ing his profits to the consumer?" These doubters are wiser now too, same as the old-style stockholders. Imitating Nobody Yearly better machines, more handsome and less costly, have built big industries and created thousands of good jobs. Wage earners and stockholders prospered together while shrewd management studied King Customer's needs and met them. When the Japs struck at Pearl Harbor the United States had one automobile for every four people ?one for each 139 people in the rest of the world. American manufacturers know the route that leads to national pros perity. Just the same, they are be ing urged to turn aside and try a course completely strange to west ern industry. It's an old jungle road that has lost many great races in poverty. It means business servile | to power. It means opening private ! records to be thumbed at will by , partisan fact-finding committees. Looking for WhatT Such a committee will be con- ; cemed with wages ? only with wages. It will have small interest I in prices of cars to the user; less in returns to investors. Its Job will be to say what wages an employer is able to pay. Rightly, wages are de termined by a workman's ability to produce. The new concept seems to be that an employer's savings have a bearing on wage levels. Such a scheme would ear-mark for wages all but a paltry share of a firm's earnings and investors would turn away. Down would come cash reserves, plant equipment and output. Quality would suffer, prices would advance and sales drop off. Paying men, not by what they pro duce but according to the employ er's ability to pay, is the surest (if not the fastest) way to hopelessly low wages and a dog's life for us all. Squads Right Loyal military experts want ev ery precaution taken in America to prevent another such calamity as Pearl Harbor. The nation as a whole subscribes to that policy. The shout for universal military train ing is itself an hysterical cry for more national safety, but it is ill considered. Being a school mar. knowing the possibilities of youth. I know it is unwise. I am in favor of an adequate standing army, a powerful peace time navy and all the other fac tors of a positive national defense I am willing to let men of proven generalship say how big an army is adequate and how much navy is. ample. Those are matters that few civilians are qualified to discuss. But however big the need is, Amer ica should have no less. Least Costly Way I am in favor of advancing the base pay of enlisted personnel to an attractive level; sufficiently high to get enough men in service by vol untary enlistment. My reasons are three: (1) It would save the coun try money, (2) It would provide a better fighting force and (3) It would cause the least disturbance to economic, sc.c..LJc and cultural & - ' progress of the nation. Cramming a year of military training into the life pattern of ev ery American boy when he turns 18 or finishes high school, would be an undertaking of fabulous cost, need less cost. Most of the youngsters could never use what they learned (principally squads right) and many of them, if distorted into soldiers, would make miserably poor ones at best. No Misfit's Job There is no place in the Amer ican armed services for a misfit, however sternly trained. The most routine army post is filled better by a willing soldier. Furthermore, war is growing yearly more tech nical. It requires more knowledge than a reluctant trainee can acquire i in a year. When a man does acquire useful skill in defense, he deserves to be retained and paid well. Without any shade of disrespect ! to America's fighting men and their j singular resourcefulness and hero- j ism. World War II was won in lab- i oratory, field and factory as cer- i tainly as on the firing line. A lot ' of young men who would be misfits in any fighting force will be the technicians of tomorrow, and they i can't spare a year of preparation to learn foot drill. One Basic Error 1 know that a great many smart ! people are in favor of universal military training, and for honorable reasons. But I have another seri ous objection to it in addition to the ones presented above. Universal military training is regimentation of the whole nation, in a limited way. It is the opening wedge with which the few can show the many who's boss. Suspicion may well be leveled at ' the Naziferous notion of compulsory military training. It sounds like a defense measure but it is not. The first effect of it would be to inter rupt the training of technicians and, since modern warfare is technical, it would actually cripple national defense. By carefully selecting vol unteers and paying them well. Uncle Sam can have a better fight ing force at less cost in money and with less confusion. ?~ AMINO ACID NEEDS OF DOGS STUDIES Lar!; of Even One of 10 Sub stances May Spell Disease Studies ol the amino acid require ments of dogs are proceeding parallel with the work being carried forward on the importance of amino acids in numan nutrition, the Gaines Dog Research Center. New York City, reports. Amino acids, found in common foods, are just as essential as vita mins; their ab M'utc ui pi caciikc Dr. W. I.. Robert* determines whether a given protein food has little or great nutritional value, states Di \V. L. Roberts, the Center's tech nical consultant. It has been estab lished that 10 of the 20-odd known r-nino acids are dietary essentials for animals, ana that the lack of any one of thcin causes growth failure, physi cal deterioration and disease. Vita mins and amino acids work hand-in glove. Lack of / -B-C-D-E vitamins may make it impossible for the body to utilize the amino acids, while the lack of amino acids may make it im possible for the vitamins to perform their essential functions in the nutri tion of the body. While research in amino acids goes on, according to Dr. Roberts, the fol lowing suggestions by the U. S. De partment of Agriculture continue to constitute a practical guide for the >feeding of dogs: > "An adequate ration will keep most mature dogs at a uniform body ; weight and in a lean, thrifty condi tion. This is a very useful guide in determining the correct amount to : feet' "A good coat, bright clear eyes, and an abundance of pep are reli i able indications that the ration is adequate. "Dogs should be fed at regular In | tervals, and the best results gener ally may be expected when regular feeding is accompanied by regular I exercise. I "Mature dogs are usually fed twice daily, a light meal in the mnTi" and a heavier meal in the afternoon j or evening However, if the dog is I used for watch or guard purposes at A rfof well fed ebowi It la ? good fell, bright eyes and plenty of pep. night, it is best to give the heavier meal in the morning. "The excessive use of feeds of low energy content and low biological ? values will often result in poor con dition and may cause loss of weight and paunchiness. "Overfeeding, coupled with lack of exercise, usually produces exces sive body weight and laziness, and It may induce sickness. "If the ration is known to be ade quate and the dog is losing weight or is not in good condition, the pres ence1 of internal pnrsites is to be sus pected. American Red Cross Aids Wounded and Able-bodied Not long ago to a Red Croat field I director with an outfit on maneuvers 1 flashed a message that the mother of ; a man in his unit was critically ill, ' and the man was needed at home im mediately. With this message from the soldier's Red Cross chapter verifying the illness, thfl fidslrt Hii*?*?nr ? II called on the com- | manding officer who arranged an emergency furlough. While a courier ] sped up the line to fetch the soldier, , the Red Cross man was busy arrang ing transportation. 1 Within a few hours the boy was at ] the Red Cross field office where fur- , lough papers and a ticket awaited | him. The field director drove him to the airport, and the boy arrived home , in time?not to see his mother die, | but to save her life with a blood , transfusion. I Today, six months after V-J Day, | ome 17,000 Red Cross workers are dill with the GIs at home and abroad. , Hundreds of clubs and rest homes j overseas are in operation where men ] meet on leave, get home-cooked food, ( and that prime American favorite? i doughnuts and coffee. Music and en- , tertainment, books, magazines, and i home-town newspapers, lounge and , writing rooms?all are popular. For j men staying overnight there are com- ] fortable beds, clean sheets, and hot showers. i More important than Red Cross j services to the able-bodied are those | for the wounded and ilL In army and , navy hospitals the country over, pro- i fessional and volunteer Red Cross i workers serve in many ways. To the hospitalized a financial or : family problem may prey upon the ; mind and dull the will to recovery. ? Under guidance of Red Cross medical : social workers many a problem is dis solved, and difficult obstacles are . smoothed, while programs directed i by trained recreation workers help patients forget their troubles. Red i Cross volunteers supplement these workers with every conceivable service. : For example, there was the blinded i soldier whose face was horribly scar- i I red, who was expecting a visit from I bis wife and five-year-old daughter, [t would be the first meeting in two pears, he told the Red Cross girl who was teaching him rummy with Braille :ards. "My little girl knows I'm blind and ihe's planning how she'll do things for me," he said. But what she did not know, what bad been kept from him so that it might not retard his readjustment, was the way he was scarred and dis figured. The Red Cross girl caught her breath. "That's fine," she said. "I'll meet them at the train." Her heart sank upon seeing the tiny girl. It would be a job to pre pare her for the shock, to make sure she did not let her father suspect there was anything wrong. Gently she told the child about her iaddy's face, how it would get better, bow much he loved her, and that she mustn't be afraid. Then, with a prayer in her heart, she led mother and child to the blinded soldier. The crucial moment had come. Now, upon the actions of a little girl, the future of this family would depend. For a moment the tot stood in the loorway, looking at her father across the room. Then, without hesitation, lame the patter of little feet, and she threw her arms around her father's neck. "Daddy," she cried, "Daddy, it's me?we're so glad to have you back!" A simple service, yes. But it de termined the happiness of three people. Without the understanding beart, and the many who daily give [>f their minds and souls, the adjust ment of thousands of servicemen might be seriously retarded. The American Red Cross needs (100,000,000 to carry on during the next fiscal year. That sum is small when stacked agair3t the heartaches stilled, suffering caicd, misery re lieved, new hope hn' j.rcd- - lay in, day out?because of Red Cress ministra tions. Because farm families have a big stake in the Red Cross they consis tently support the organization. The Red Cross is confident that families in agricultural areas, the backbone of the nation, will generously support the 1946 Fund Campaign. | Spray or Dust ? For 'Peace' In the Garden ?Photo Courtesy Ferry-Morse Seed Co. Watch for destructive insects as soon as the first little leaves poke through the i*>il in your garden. They are unusually ravenous for tender young foliage, shoots, and buds, and the smart gardener will he on hand with the proper control even before the pests show up. Two types of insect are well known nuisances?those that suck the juices or up ot the plant, u aphids or plant j lice, and thou that chew or bite off t bita oi the plant The work of the first f la aeen In general droopineu and un- c healthy appearance of the plant; the ' work of the second shows tip In actual riddling of the leaves and other plant c parts. c For sucking insects the spray or dust t must hit and cover the Insect, actually t smothering it Stomach poisons are re- a quired for destroying chewing insects. 1 The material la dusted or sprayed i thoroughly on all surfaces of the plant t so as to make a deposit When the in- I sect starts to eat the plant It also takes t In some of the poison and is killed. I Either dusting or spraying can be < effective If properly done with a good I insecticide. Now that the war is over, i many of the old brands and various new ones will be plentiful. You may I want to adventure with some of the I new ones, but always follow directions. I In small gardens dusting is perhaps ! even easier than spraying. Here's a simple apparatus for applying insecti cide dust which you yourself can eas ily prepare: Take a square of cheesecloth, a strong string, and a slender stick. Spread the cheesecloth on a flat sur face and pile the insecticide dust in he center. Gather the cloth by the ! our corners and tie the string se urely around it, leaving the contents esting loosely inside. Hold the bag with one hand directly iver the plant and strike it gently on ine side with the stick (see illustra ion). Part of an old broom handle trill do nicely. The dust should cover ill parts of the plant It will stick >etter if put on when the plants are noist with dew, rain, or water from he hose. Do not put it on just be bre a shower or your work will be iseless. By taking a little extra care, he dust will reach the under side >f the leaves as well as the upper sur faces. It is important to choose a day when no wind is stirring. If you spray instead of dust, see that the leaves and other parts of the plant ire dry so that the solution will not be diluted as it strikes the surface. A band spray with a glass jar attached is simple to use. The glass can be readily cleaned after using, and strong solutions cannot corrode it as might a metal container. In using a spray, the same as with a dust, be sure to reach the underside of the foliage where insects are even more likely to be feeding than on top. "Sometime* dogs go 'oft teed' fori a day or two. When this occurs they should not be forced to eat, but a they do not voluntarily return to feed within 2 days, a veterinarian should be consulted. "It is not usually advisable to feed either directly before or directly, after working or exercising the dog.' "It is usually desirable to reduce the feed allotment during hot weather." I To its great General Electric plants, Eastman Kodak factory and other world famous giant producers of vi tal supplies. New York adds 6.S0Q shops whose average employment is less than 40 persons. With future re quirements of radio, aviation >nd surface transportation greater thin ever, these thriving industries will add millions to Government re Sources guaranteeing So vines Bon:'? V. S t -1 LOUISVILLE'S INDUSTRY , Three-fifths of the output of Ken- 1 tucky's 1,700 industries by dollar i value comes from plants in Louis ville. About 75,000 wage earners in the state are paid some $70,000,000 1 annually to turn out items valued c at over $600 millions. It's a fine , showing for an essentially agricul tural state and will go far to guar- I antee Savings Bonds for years to COme. U. S. Treasury Department , DID KING TUT S CURSE KILL SCIENTISTS? Wax there really a curse on those i who entered the fuiuo-ej tomb of Kins J I Tutankhamen back la 1928 resulting | In a series of so-called mysterious 1 [deaths. A well known writer discusses j this puzzling question in a series of |fascinating illustrated articles. Don't1 | miss this great feature, beginning ! March 17, in i THE AMERICAN WEEKLY ! Nations Faiuritc Magazine With The lialtimnrc Sunday American Order From Your Newsdealer i ! ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE Having qualified as Administrator' of tire estate of J. G. Garrett, deceased. , late of Alamance County. North Caro lina, this is to notify all persons having , claims against the estate of said de-' ceased to exhibit them to the under-; signed a; 708 Morehead St . Burling-' I ton, N. C\, on or before ;he 10th day J ; of March. 1047, or t~is notice will be j pleaded in bar of their recovery All persons indebted to said estate i will please make immediate payment. Th.s, he 5th day of March, 1916. J. R. GARRETT, Administrator. NOTICE TO CREDITORS ! Having qualified as Executors of the estate of E. J,. Murray, de ceased. late cf Alamance County, North I Carolina, this is to notify all per 1 sons having claims against the estate ! of said deceased to exhibit them to the undersigned at Kt 2, Burlington. North Carolina, on or before the 23rd [day of February, 1947, or this notice will be pleaded In bar of their recovery ' All persens Indebted to said estate I will please make immediate payment. This, the 18th day of February, 1946. A. J. MURRAY. W. Q. MURRAY, Executors of E. L. Murray, Deceased i Louis C. Allen. Atty. EXECUTOR'S NOTICE Having qualified as Executor of the 'estate of S. A. Thompson, deceased, I late of Alamance County, North Caro i lina, this Is to notify all persons hav ing claims against the estate of said deceased to exhibit them to the under signed at Burlinjrton, North Carolina, on or before ttoe 9th day of F'ebruary, 1947, or this notice will te pleaded l,n bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate 1 will please make Immediate payment. This, .he 4th day of February, 1946. THOMAS VV. CATBS, Executor of the estate of S. A. Thompson, deceased. Louis C Allen.Atty. NOTICE TO CREDITORS I Having qualified a* Administratrix 'of ihe estate of Margaret Ford Spooni ! deceased, laie of Alamance Coamiy, North Carolina, this is to notify ail ' persons having claims against the said estate to exhibit fhem to the un dersigned at Rt. 1, Liberty, North Caro lina, on' ot before the 15th day of Feb ruary, 1947, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All oersory Indebted to said estat6 will please make immediate payment. This, the 7th day of February, 1946. ELVIRA SCOTT JlERRY. Administatrix. ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE Having qualified as Administrator of the estate of Mrs. Bessie F. Carter, deceased, la'e of A1airor.ce County. North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the es tate of said deceased to exhibit ilhem to the undersigned at Graham, North Carol life. Box 231, on or before the 10th day of February, 1947. or this no tice will be pleaded in bar of their re covery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment. This, the 1st day of February. 1946. ROBERT H. CARTER, Administrator of the estate of Mrs. Bessie F Carter, dec'd. NOTICE SERVICE BY PUBLICATION NORTH CAROLINA. ALAMANCE COUNTY IN THE GENERAL COUNTY COURT ' Beulah Overman. - ym - R. D. Jesse O' erman. The defendant. R. Ii. Jesse Overman will take notice that pi? ictkm. c-ntitkd ?ji above has been C'.-vnteirccd in the General Count} Court of Ala mance County. North Carolina, it be ihg an action brought by the plain tiff against the defendant for abso lute divorce on the grounds of two year's separation; That the defendant Is a non-resident of the State of North Carolina, and the plaintiff Is a resl ent and domiciled In .ho State of North Carolina, and tfiia Is one of the causes of action in which service of summons may be mad ? by publication aa provided bv law. The defendant will further take notice that h? is requir ed to appear at the Office of the Clerk of the feuperlor Court, ex-ofticio clerk | ] of County CMtt of Ala- : roanco Countx, North Carolina, in tho Ifotrihous. ir. Graham N. C.. xvithin twenty days from and alter the 7th lay of April. 1946. and answer or lemur to the complaint ir said action ur the plaintiff will apply to the C">urt i for the relief demanded in the com plaint. This, the 6th day of March, 1946. j F. L. WILLIAMSON Clerk Superior court and . Ex-officio Clerk of the General | County Court of AlamanceCounty, North Carolina. Robt. T. Wilson, Atty. NOTI CE SERVICE BY PUBLICATION NORTH CAROLINA tl.AMANCE COUNTY. IN THE GENERAL COUNTY COURT AneJla P. Toombs. Plaintiff, vs. Henry Toombs, Defendant. The defendant, Henry Toombs, will take notice that an action entitled as above has been commenced in the General County Court of Alamance Couiifty, North Carolina, for an abso lute divorce on the grounds of twd consecutive years separation; and that Bald defendant will fur-V.er take no tice that he is required tc appear at ??he office off the Clerli of the Gepjeral County court in the Courthouse in Graham, North Carolina, within twen ty days after the 29th da; ol March, 1946, and answer or demur to the com Dlaint in the said acta t?, or the plain tiff will apply to the Court for t^he re lief demanded in said action. This, the 27th day of February- 19 46. F. L. WILLIAMSON Cierk General County Court, Barnie P. Jones, Atty. NOTICE SUMMONS BY PUBLICATION NORTH carolina aLAMANCE county in THE general county court James A. Bethel, Plaintiff. vS. Phenose L. Bethel, Defendant. The above named defendant, Phen ose L. Bethel, will tak? notice that an action: entitled as above h:is been com menced in the General C 'uniy Court of Alamance. County. North Carolina, by the plaintiff, James A. Bethel, to secure an absolute divorte from the defendant upon' the grounds that plaintiff and defendant Jiave lived separate and apart for more than two years ntext piVceding the biinging of this action; and the defendant will further take notice that she is requir ed to appear at the of'icc the Gen? eral County Clerk of Alamance County, In the courthouse in Graham, North Carolina, within thirty days after the 23rd day of March, I94C, and aJnswer or demur to the complaint in said ac tion, or the plaintiff will apply to the Court for the relief demar.ced in said complaint. This, the 21st day of February, 1946. F. L. WILLIAMSON. Clerk of General County C<^urt Alamance County. Dameron' & Young, At'ys. NOTICE SUMMONS BY PUBLICATION NORTH CAROLINA. ALAMANCE COUNTY IN the GENERAL coitnty court Maggie M. Btckom - v? - J. D. Beckom The defendant above named will take notice that an actlcn entitled as above has been* commenced in the General County Court of Alamance Ctunty, North Carolina, for divorce; and the said defendant will further take notice that he is required to ap pear before tl?e Clerk of the General County Court of Alamance County, at his office In Graham, No.-tlt Carolina, on the 22nd day of March. 1946, ax-fa answer or demur to tr.e complaint ir| said actionv or tne plaintiff will apply to the Court for the relief demanded In said ctmplaint. This, the l8ih day of February, 1946. sara murray. Asst. Clerk of General County Court. .? J. Henderson, Atty. NOTICE Public Sale Of Real Property Under and pursuant to the order* or the Superior Court of Alrmance Coun ty as entered in that .'ertaiii special proceeding entitled. 'Mrs. Lillian Stan field Neese and others, vs. Jack Golpy Stanfield and others.' your undersigned commissioner will offer for sale a? public auction at the Courthouse door j In Graham. North Carolina., on Saturday. March 30. 1946. at 12:00 o'clock, noon, the following describee property j to-wit: That certain tract or o?ircel of land ' in Graham Township. Alamance coun ty. North Carolina, adjoining the lands of Melville Street and Travora j Street, and others, and bounded ana described u follows: Beginning at an Iron stake, corner with the intersection of said Travoru and Melville Streets: running thence N. 3 deg. 45 min. E. 61 feet to an Incti stake in the Western margin of Mel ville Street and a corner with Lot 96: thence with the line of Lot 96 NT. 86 deg. 31 mfn. W. 150 feet to am iron stake in the Eastern margra of Lot 106; thence with the line of Lot 106 S. 3 deg. 45 min. W. 61 feet to an inon .stake in the Northern margin of fTTa vora Street, thence with the Northern margin of flYavora Street S 86 deg. 31 mlrn E. 150 feet to t?*e i>o.nt of begin ning and being all of Lot 95 of the subdivision of Travora Manufacturing Company Mill No. 1 pioperties, as made by W. T. Hall, E., plat of which is recorded in the Office of Reg ister of Deeds for Alamance Coiwty in Plat Book 1 at page 133. This conveyance is muti'i subject to all rights of way and easements now outstanding for the use and mainten ance of water lines, sever* lines, elec tric power lines, telephone lines, pub lic roadways or other easements that may be over, across, ..nder or upon said laxid^. and all warranties herein made are made subject to *&id ease ments. The above described property is con veyed subject to the res riciiou and re servation that no store building, fin ing station or other business property shall be erected or maintained thereon for a period of fifteen yours frtom the date of this deed. The above described real property is the homeplace of th-:? P.te W. L. Stanfield and, is a desirable cottage well located in the mul \:llnge of Tra vora in the Town of Graham, North Carolina. Said property is being soic sub ject to advance bids and confirmation of the Court, and the purchaser will be required to pay ten (10) per cem of his bid and to pay at least or?e-half (%) of his bid upon confirmation, and the balance within six (o) months, de ferred payment to bean interest ar six (6) per cent and title to be re tained until the entire ptii chase price is paid. This, the 2nd day of March, 1940. GEORGE A. LONG. Commissioner. Notice of Re-Sale i ?? | Under authority of certain Mortgage Deed executed and delivered jto the undersigned Duncan C. Brya-i I by Oscar Harvey and wife. Renner 'Harvey, which bears date of the 3 5th |day of March, 1938, and in recorded I in1 the Office of the Ro^ inter of Deed a for Alamance County, in Book of | Mortgages and Deeds of Trust No. 126. at page ' 21, and a judgment of resale, default having been made in the payment of the indebted ness secured bv said Insuu.nent. the indersigned will offer I?r re-sale to th^ I highest bidder for cash at the Court | House door in Graham North Carolina at 11:00 o'clock, a. m.. Saturday, March L6ih, 1946, Ithe following described real property: A certain tract or parcel of land in Burlington Township. Alamance Coun ty, State of North Carolina, adjoining the lands of Standard Reality Com pany and others, and bounded as fol lows: I Being Lots Nos. 25 and 26 of the J. L. Cates, Subdivision on? the Glenco? jRoad. For better description see Plat Book 3, page 10, recorded in'tbe Reg ister of Deeds Office in Graham, N. C. This is a resale, and bidding will be gin at $399.30. The purchaser will be required to deposit ten per cent of hi.-- bid whten the same is knocked down to him, ami the balance upon* confirmation. This, the 27th day of February, 1946 DUNCAN C- BRYAN. Mortgagee. NOTICE SUMMONS BY PUBLICATION NORTH CAROLINA ALAMANCE COUNTY. IN THE GENERAL COUNTY COURT Minnie Bureham Hamlet, Plaintiff, . v. ? William T. Hamlet. Defendant. The defendant. William T. Hamlet, will take notice that an . action en titled ae above has been commenced la the General Corunty ? vrt of Ala mance Count, for a divotee based up on the grounds of two year- reparation, and the defendant whl rurthef tafte notice that he is required to appear at the office of the Clerk -f tne General County Court of said cv .nty In the courthouse in Graham. North Caro lina, within thirty days i:-t m the 1st day of March 1541, and answer or de murrer to the complaint of the plain tiff in this action, or the plaintiff w,11 apply to the Court for the relief de manded in the said com;?>nkit. This, tbe 14th day of Fvl.ruary. 1(46 F. L. WILLIAMSON, Clerk of General County court. Alamance County, North Carolina. William C. rerdue. At y

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