Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

Asheville Citizen-Times from Asheville, North Carolina • Page 14

Location:
Asheville, North Carolina
Issue Date:
Page:
14
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE ASHEVILLE CITIZEN, Monday, March 24, 1980 WNC Deaths And Funerals Funerals Today STATE AND AREA Daniel Whitmire of Route 2 Brevard, graveside services 11 1. Gillespie Evergreen C'emetery. "ranksylvania Countv. Mary Jane King of Flat Rock. 1 p.m..

St. Johnin the Wilderness Episcopal Church. Henderson County. W. Tavlor Huscusson of Willow Road.

Hendersonville, 2 p.m.. Valley Hill Baptist Church. Henderson County. Bonnie H. Hampton of 1101 Country Club Road.

Waynesville. 2 p.m., chapel of Garrett Funeral Home. Haywood CounIV. Daniel B. Whitmire of Route Brevard, graveside services, 11 a.m..

Gillespie-Evergreen Cemetery. Anna K. Spann of Route 2 Connelly Springs. 2 p.m.. Evangelical Methodist Church.

CITY AND COUNTY Worth A Jones of 1 100 Martel Village. Woodfin, 10:30 a.m.. Elk Mountain Baptist Church. Clyde D. McAllister of 100 Rose West Asheville, 1 p.m..

chapel of Anders-Rice Funeral Home. Andy Boone of Bull Creek Road. Route 2 Asheville, 2 p.m.. chapel of Miller Funeral Home, Black Mountain, Emmette Stirewalt of Charlotte Highway, Route 7 Fairview. 3:30 p.m., chapel of Anders-Rice Funeral Home.

Mrs. Ledford HAYESVILLE -Services for Margie A. Ledtord. 66, of Route 3 Havesville. who died Saturday, will be held at 11 a.m.

Tuesday in Shooting Creek Church of God. The Rev. Howard Goins will officiate. Burial will be in Oak Forest United Methodist Church Cemetery. A native of Cherokee County, she was the daughter of Omer Hendrix of Andrews and the late Addie Derreberry Hendrix.

She was a member of Downings Creek Baptist Church. Surviving are her husband. Ray A. Ledford: two daughters, Louise Trull of Dalton. and Gloria Jean Wilson of Port Orange, a son.

William Ledford of Havesville: nine grandchildren and three greatgrandchildren. The family will receive friends from 7 to 9 p.m. Monday at Ivie Funeral Home, Hayesville, where the body will remain until placed in the church 30 minutes before the services. Charlie Nations WHITTIER Charlie 0. Nations.

80. of Nations Creek community died Saturday in a Sylva hospital following a period of declining health. A native and lifelong resident of Jackson County, he was retired from Log Cabin Association and was a retired farmer. Surviving are his wite. Mae Dills Nations: five sons, Paul Nations of Greenville.

S.C.. Arthur of Mount Vernon, and Edward, Johnny and Roger Nations of Whittier: tive daughters. Patsy Haynes of Chattanooga. Margaret Eula Mae Denny a and Peggy Gibson of Whittier and Becky Nations of the home: a brother. Candler Nations of Whittier: two half brothers.

Conley Nations of Whittier and Clarence Nations of Sylva; a sister. Hester Nations of Dillsboro: 26 grandchildren and three great -grandchildren. Services will be held at 11 a.m. Tuesday in Rockdale Baptist Church. The Revs.

Dillard Moore and Hardin Nicholson will officiate. Burial will be in Nations Creek Cemetery. The family will receive friends from 7 to 9 p.m. Monday at Moody Funeral Home, where the body will remain until placed in the church 30 minutes before the services. Thomas Gidney Thomas E.

Gidney, 89, of 180 Rock Hill Road died Sunday in an Asheville nursing home following an extended illness. Jesse Ray Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements. Arthur Weckerle HENDERSONVILLE Arthur Weckerle. 97, died Saturday in a Hendersonville hospital. Thos.

Shepherd and Son Funeral Directors is in charge of arrangements. Robert Raines BREVARD Robert Cleamones Raines, 35, of Country Club Road died Sunday. Moody-Connolly Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements. (MAD IN Skeleton Is In Candler By JOHN CAMPBELL JR. Staff Writer 'The skeletal remains of an unidentified body were found in a wooded section of federal land in the Candler area Sunday morning.

Preliminary findings indicated the bones to be those of a woman, but sheriff's department investigators reported few clues in their attempt to answer other questions surrounding the discovery. Because of the deteriorated condition of the remains, neither age nor race could be immediately determined. No wallet or other identifying personal effects were found except a set of keys. And there was no sign to indicate a cause of death. Investigator H.P.

Oxner Jr. said the find was reported to the sheriff's department about 11 a.m. Sunday. James L. Ellis, a young Candler man, found the skeleton while walking through a section of the Pisgah National Forest, Oxner said.

Carolinians Anti-Nuke Carolinians for Safe Energy have joined with more than 500 other groups to form the Coalition for a Non-Nuclear World. 'The coalition is sponsoring a march and rally in Washington, D.C., on April 26. 'The coalition, composed of labor, environmental, senior citizen, peace and Native American organizations, have five central goals: stopping nuclear power, zero nuclear weapons, full employment, safe energy and honoring Native American treaties. They feel these goals demonstrate that there is no separation between Mrs. R.

Easley Named Regent Murphey DAR MURPHY Mrs. Robert Easley was elected regent of the Archibald D. Murphey chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution at a meeting in the Easley home. Other officers elected were: vice regent. Mrs.

Willard Perry: registrar. Mrs. John Bayless: chaplain, Mrs. Tom Mauney: treasurer, Mrs. Dair Shields: corresponding secretary.

Mrs. Robert Williford: recording secretary, Margaret Walker Freel: librarian. Mrs. R. D.

Chandler; and historian. Mrs. Ben Warner Jr. Mrs. Paul Colvard and Mrs.

John Bayless will attend the DAR Workshop to be held in Marion May 15. 'The Martha Pettigrew DAR Chapter will be hostess. Warren Wilson Continues Films 'The International Film Series at Warren Wilson College will continue this week with films scheduled for Monday and Wednesday. Shakespeare's "Macbeth" will be presented at 7 p.m. Monday in Bannerman lecture hall on the campus.

Sound of Waves," a Japanese love story set in a modern fishing village, will be shown at 7 p.m. Wednesday. Admission is 50 cents and the public is invited to attend. Kroll Scheduled For WCU Talk CULLOWHEE: Carol Kroll, president of the Student National Education Association, will speak at noon Monday at a Dutch treat luncheon in Brown Cafeteria at Western Carolina University. Miss Kroll will be accompanied by Craig Withrow, president of the Student North Carolina Association of Educators.

'The luncheon is open to Western Carolina students and faculty. Electric Heater Blamed In Fire MILWAUKEE (AP) A portable electric heater ignited paper in an apartment bedroom early Sunday, killing four small children, officials said. The children had been left in the care of a neighbor, 64-yearold Reino Maci. officials said. Their mothers were not at home when the fire began at about 12:30 a.m.

'The multi-unit apartment building was "well when rived. said Michael battalion chief. Found Area Jerry Fender MARION Jerry Monroe Fender. 81. of Marion died Saturday in a Marion hospital after a long illness.

Fender was a farmer. Surviving are his wife. Dosia Edwards Fender: six brothers. Charles Fender. Garrett Fender.

Hasken Fender, Ray and Coy Fender of Marion and Clay Fender of Burnsville: a sister, Mae Miller of Marion: and two granddaughters. Services will be held at 2:30 p.m. Tuesday in Hillerest Free Will Baptist Church. The Revs. Earl Davis, Clyde Fender and Bill Long will officiate.

Burial will be in the church cemetery. The family will receive friends from 7 to 8:30 p.m. Monday at McCall-Kirksey Funeral Horne, where the body will remain until placed in the church 30 minutes before the services. Mrs. Garrison Imogene Daniels Garrison.

70. of the Democrat section of Route 2 Weaverville died Saturday in an Asheville hospital after an extended illness. A native and lifelong resident of Buncombe County, she was the daughter of the late Jack and Nannie Eller Daniels. Surviving her husband, Lester M. Garrison: three daughters, Beatrice Riley of Johnson City, Jane Robinson of Hickory and June Guthrie of Weaverville: six sons.

Marion Garrison of the home. Jack and Gene Garrison of Barnardsville, Don, Dan and Morris Garrison of Weaverville: a sister. Pansy Sluder of Weaverville: a brother, Alfred Daniels of Homer, and 19 grandchildren. Services will be held at 11 a.in. Tuesday in the Antioch Baptist Church, of which he was a member.

'The Revs. William Lynch and Fred Jarvis will officiate. Burial will be in Antioch Cemetery. The family will receive friends from 7 to 8:30 p.m. Monday at West Funeral Home, where the body will remain until placed in the church an hour before the services.

At other times, the family will be at the horne. Memorials may be made to the Antioch Baptist Church building tund. William Green HENDERSONVILLE Services for William H. Green. of 411 Lyles Tryon, who died Friday, will be held at 2 p.m.

Tuesday in St. Paul Tabernacle AME Zion Church, of which he was a member. Dr. Charles Ford and Ralph Bonacker will officiate. Burial will be in Oakdale Cemetery.

Members of Rising Star Masonic Lodge No. 135 will conduct graveside rites. A native of Hendersonville and a resident of Tryon for the past several years, he was a son of the late Benjamin Harrison and Annie Mae Williams Green. He was a former member of the stewards board and male choir of the church. He was a member of Rising Star Masonic Lodge No.

135. Surviving are his wife, Jewel Johnson Green: three sons. William H. Green Jr. of San Pablo, Jackie Booker of Irving.

Irvine. Calif, and James R. Booker of Tryon; four daughters, Joan B. Jackson of Tryon, Julia Miller of Linden. Jane A.

Booker of Newark. Janice A. Booker of Washington. D.C.: a sister. Willie Bailey of New York City: two brothers.

Charles Green of Hendersonville and John W. Green of Long Island: 13 grandchildren and a greatgrandchild. The family will receive triends from 6 to 7 p.m. at Pilgrim's Funeral Home, where the body will remain until placed in the church an hour before the services. At other times, the family will be at the home in Tryon.

Willie Littles Services for Willie Littles, 65, of 14A Klondyke Place, who died Friday, will be held at 2 p.m. Tuesday in the chapel of Wilkins-Hart Mortuary. The Rev. L.B. Reed will officiate.

Burial will be in Sunset Cemetery. A native of Wilmington and a resident of Asheville for 45 years, he was an employee of the street department of the City of Asheville. Surviving are his wife, Nora J. Littles; a stepdaughter, Mary Coleman of New York City: and a step-granddaughter. The family will receive friends from 7 to 8 p.m.

Monday at the mortuary. Mrs. Bass Goldie Dunlap Bass, 63, of 159 Logan Ave. died Sunday in an Asheville hospital after a long illness. Groce Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements.

Mrs. Saunders HAZELWOOD Sarah Parris Saunders. 69. of 116 Allen St. died Saturday at the home after a brief illness.

A native of Haywood County, she was a retired employee of Welleo. She was daughter of the late William Russell Parris and Cora Belle Mehaffey Parris. Surviving are her husband, Wade Saunders: two daughters, Frances Wyatt of Hazelwood and Jo Ann Harris of Bethel: a son. Garland K. Saunders of Bridgeton.

N.J.: two sisters. Mrs. Bill Owens of Asheville and Mrs Paul Rector of Waynesville; a half brother, of Hazelwood: and two half sisters. Edna Aumond of Newport News, Va. and Mrs.

Underwood of Hazelwood: four grandchildren and six great-grandchildren. Services will be held at 2 p.m. Tuesday in the Hazelwood First Baptist Church, of which she was a member. 'The Rev. Jarvis Brock will officiate.

Burial will he in Hillerest Memorial Gardens. The family will receive friends from 7 to 9 p.m. Tuesday at Garrett Funeral Home. where the body will remain until placed in the church 30 minutes before the services. Randolph Zink Randolph W.

Zink, 73. of Route 4 Candler died unexpectedly Sunday at his home. A native of Christianburg, he was a former resident of Madison County until moving to Buncombe County six years ago. He retired from Single Electrical Department of the Southern Railway in 1958 after 34 years of service. He was a member of Marshall Presbyterian Church and was the son of the late Andrew J.

and Nancy Einstein Zink. Surviving are his wite, Annie Kate Ramsey Zink: two sons, William Zink of Mars Hill and Jack Zink of Candler: a brother. Charles Zink of Lexington. a sister, Mrs. Elmo Alvis of Fredericksburg.

eight grandchildren and a great-grandchild. Services will be held at 2 p.m. Tuesday in the chapel of Bowman Funeral Home, Marshall. The Rev. Dr.

Hoyt Blackwell will officiate. Burial will be in Madison Seminary Cemetery. The family will receive friends from 7 to 8:30 p.m. Monday at the funeral home. 'The family requests that flowers be omitted.

Memorials may be made to the American Heart Fund. Marshall Presbyterian Church or one's favorite charity. Mrs. Dinka HENDERSONVILLE Kathryn Schneider Dinka of 125 Lakewood Road died Sunday I in a Hendersonville hospital. A native of Patterson, N.J..

she had lived in Hopewell Junction, N.Y. and Tucson, before moving to Hendersonville in 1962. She moved to Carolina Village in 1974. She was a member of the First Congregational Church of Hendersonville, the Opportunity House and Friends of the Library and the Mental Health Association. Surviving are a sister, Dorothea Ackerson of Boca Raton.

two stepdaughters, Mrs. Tony Baker of Norwich, and Dorothy Walker of Woodbury, six grandchildren and four greatgrandchildren. Memorial services will be announced later. Thos. Shepherd and Son Funeral Directors is in charge of arrangements.

James Dills FRANKLIN James Harley Dills. 89, of the Ellijay community died Sunday in a Franklin hospital following a period of declining health. A native of Macon County, he was a retired farmer and timberman. He was the son of the late George and Julia Peek Dills. He was married to Ida Cagle, who died in 1952.

Surviving are a daughter, Pearl Henry of Franklin: three sons, Ray Dills of Marion, Truey Lee Dills and Verlin Dills of Brevard; 10 grandchildren and 13 great-grandchildren and three -grandchildren. Services will be held at 10 a.m. Tuesday in the chapel of Bryant Funeral Home. A second service will be held at 2 p.m. Tuesday in the Cherry Field Baptist Church of Brevard, of which he was a member.

The Revs. John Goforth and Charles Thompson will officiate. Burial will be in Gillespie-Evergreen Cemetery in Brevard. The family will receive friends from 7 to 9 p.m. Monday at Bryant Funeral Home, Franklin.

The body will be in Franklin from 1 to 2 p.m. "Tuesday at Cherry Field Baptist Church. Mrs. Estes FRANKLIN Maude Angel Estes, 64. of the Cullasaja community died Sunday in a Franklin hospital following a period of declining health.

A native of Macon County, she was the daughter of the late Samuel and Elizabeth Guffee Angel. She was a member of the Clark's Chapel United Methodist Church. Surviving are her husband, Jesse Lyle Estes: two daughters, Narda Elizabeth Lowery of Pontiac, and Sarah Angela Frangella of Phoenix. two sons, JimInV D. Estes of Capshaw, and Lyle G.

Estes Burlington: two sisters, Girace Angel Lunsford and Angus Stiles of Franklin: a brother, James B. Angel of Pontiac. and six grandchildren. Services will be held at 2 p.m. Tuesday in the chapel of Bryant Funeral Home.

The Revs. Gerald Collins, R.E. Stevens and Fred Sorrells will officiate. Burial will be in Sugar Fork Cemetery, The family will receive friends from 7 to 9 p.m. Monday at the funeral home.

Mrs. Spann CONNELLY SPRINGS Anna Kaziah Spann of Route 2 Connelly Springs died Saturday in a Hickory rest home following a period of declining health. She was a native of Caldwell County. Surviving are six daughters, Leona 1 Ward of Drexel, Ruth Hefner of Maiden, Edith Arrowood and Mabel Ward of Granite Falls, Liza Spann of Morganton and Inez Turnmire of Valdese: four sons, Garland Spann of Valdese, G.W. and Paul Spann of Granite Falls and Richard Spann of Connelly Springs: a half brother, Charlie Kaziah of Hickory; 43 grandchildren and 30 greatgrandchildren.

Services will be held at 2 p.m. Monday in the Evangelical Methodist Church, of which she was a member. The Rev. Robert Gober will officiate. Burial will be in Mountain Baptist Church Cemetery in Caldwell County.

'The body will remain at Kirksey Funeral Home, Valdese, until placed in the church 30 minutes before the services. Mrs. Rowe Linda Billings Rowe, 34, of Atlanta. Ga. died Sunday in an Atlanta hospital.

A native of Black Mountain, she was a graduate of Owen High School. She was the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Howard Billings of Black Mountain. Services will be held at 10:30 a.m.

Tuesday in Patterson's Funeral Home, 1020 Spring Atlanta. Jess Russell CASHIERS Jess V. Russell, 74. of the Laurel Knob Road died Sunday at his residence following a period of declining health. The family will receive friends from 7 to 9 p.m.

Monday at Glenville Wesleyan Methodist Church. Moody Funeral Home, Sylva, is in charge of arrangements, Robert Pressley CANTON Robert Earl Pressley. 32, of Candler died unexpectedly Sunday. He was the son of Mr. and Mrs.

Vernon Pressley. The family will receive friends from 7 to 9 p.m. Tuesday at Crawford Funeral Home of Canton. Dr. William Bosien TRYON Dr.

William R. Bosien, 55, of Hogback Mountain Road died unexpectedly Sunday in a Columbus hospital. He had been a surgeon at St. Luke's Hospital until a year ago. McFarland Funeral Chapel is in charge of arrangements.

Thousands View 81 Million Flag EVANSVILLE, Ind. (AP) Thousands gathered for the unveiling here of a $1 million, 210- by 410-foot flag made for the Verrazano Bridge in New York City. The "Great American Flag." which weighs seven tons, will be carried to New York by tractor-trailer. It was spread out for public viewing Saturday at Dress Regional Airport. Len Silverfine of the Great American Flag Fund Inc.

said the non-profit group hopes the flag will be unfurled in New York by July 4. 'The group, founded during the Bicentennial, hung another huge flag, but it was an "engineering" failure because of the harbor winds. 'The new flag was sewn at Evansville's Anchor Industries. The remains were located about 150 yards from N.C. 151.

Oxner said. 2.3 miles above the Upper Hominy Fire Department station house. Deputies, led to the site by Ellis. found a complete skeleton surrounded by bits of -decomposed clothing. Oxner estimated that the body had been there since last spring.

What appeared to be a necklace was found. Oxner said. but the clothing and shoes were too badly decomposed to absolutely deterrnine a sex. don't even know yet whether this was a natural death or a violent he said. Parts of the body will be sent to state medical facilities in Raleigh, Oxner said.

"There's not much we can do but send the remains off, have the dental records examined. and hope something turns up. he said. "We'll begin checking missing person reports here and with other sheriff's Oxner said. Join Groups His Goal: -AP Photo George Dietz Nazi Keep Hitler Legacy Alive EDITOR'S NOTE George Dietz has persuaded himself that the holocaust never happened.

His hero remains Adolf Hitler and to him the Nazi ideology abhorred almost everywhere in the world remains the wave of the future. From the unlikely setting of a tiny West Virginia community, Dietz tries to contribute by pouring out a steady stream of Nazi propaganda. By BARRY RENFREW REEDY, W. Va. (AP) George Dietz, mild-mannered and polite, deals in real estate and also runs a printing shop in this tiny crossroads hamlet of the West Virginia hill country.

From his little press, he runs "the largest anti-Semitic propaganda mill in the United according to a spokesman for the Anti-Defamation League in New York, Irwin Suall." To Dietz, that's a compliment. He prints pamphlets, books, pictures, leaflets and other material intended to keep Adolf Hitler's shattered legacy alive among scattered and obscure Nazi groups around the world. A West German parliamentary commission investigating Nazi propaganda material in that country found that 95 percent of it comes from the United States. And Simon Wiesenthal, the indefatigable hunter of Nazi war criminals, told an audience in Bonn last year that Dietz and Gerald Lauck of Lincoln, were the main sources. Derek von Haeften, an official at the West German Embassy in Washington, says he's been told by American officials that nothing can be done to curb Dietz's propaganda mill, since he is not violating U.S.

laws. In West Germany, possession of Nazi propaganda material is illegal. "All we can do is to try to stop it at our borders and that's difficult," Von Haeften says. Through "'The Liberty a monthly magazine he publishes, and hundreds of books and pamphlets he prints in several languages, Dietz feeds a network of sympathizers in the United States, Western Europe, South America, the Middle East and South Africa. A recent article in the magazine hailed the Ayatollah Khomeini and said the Iranian revolution and the Nazi rise to power in Germany were the only genuine "people's revolutions in the 20th century," both coming about as "a reaction against the Jews." Dietz, a native of Germany, came to the United States in 1957.

Not much is known about his life in Germany and he discourages questions about it. He first settled in New Jersey, went into real estate, and became a naturalized citizen. Until he came to the United States, Dietz says he had never heard about the slaughter of 6 million Jews at the hands of the Nazis. His explanation of the gas chambers and the piles of bodies is that they were delousing chambers and the dead were victims of typhus epidemics. A small white bungalow that houses Dietz's real estate business doubles as the center of his political activities.

Behind a front office, a large showroom houses crates packed with copies of Hitler's Mein Kampf and other Nazi books. Walls are lined with shelves of books from Dietz's press: hundreds of titles ranging from the writings of Hitler to the anti-Semitic classics of Tsarist Russia, the works of tiny American Nazi groups and the spiritual testament of the founder of Rumanian fascism. A whole section is devoted to pamphlets on incendiaries, field fortifications, boobytraps, improvised munitions and explosives, The Liberty Bell Press catalogue lists 353 titles of books and pamphlets in English, German, Spanish and French. The catalogue also lists records of Nazi war songs, recordings of fascist speeches, posters and bumper stickers. He runs his printing operation with the help of his wife Barbara and their two children.

He won't be silenced, he says. "In Germany, they had concentration camps for homosexuals, insane, degenerates, Jews and Communists," he calmly tells a visitor, "and they should have them There is a suit now pending in New York Superior Court against Dietz and some others. On Feb. 14, 1977, a warehouse worker named Frederick Cowan, who had been suspended from his job, killed six persons, including a policeman, at his workplace in New Rochelle, N.Y. He wounded four more police officers before taking his own life.

An investigation showed Cowan was a Nazi with an arsenal of weapons. Among Cowan's belongings were many of Dietz's publications, according to New York attorney Harry H. Lipsig, who field the suit on behalf of one of the wounded New Rochelle policeman. Lipsig says Dietz and his publications were partly responsible for Cowan's murderous explosion. "I sued these hate publications on the theory that they inspired the hate in the man who went on the shooting spree," Lipsig says.

power and weapons. They also point out that in the scramble tor energy. huge tracts of Indian land, containing uranium and coal, have been designated at national sacrifice areas by the Department of Energy. 'The coalition feels that in honoring the treaties. control of these resources would be returned to the Indians, who could oversee their use in an ecologically-sound People interested in helping the coalition or attending the Washington rally may contact Carolinians for Safe Energy, P.O.

Box 8165. Asheville, N.C. 28804.: Sunset Panel Tackles Bar RALEIGH, N.C. (AP.) The state's sunset commission has called for laws requiring that the state bar be given twice a year and establishing a panel to settle disputes over fees paid lawyers. The commission, formally known as the N.C.

Governmental Evaluation Commission, made the recommendations Friday. The proposals will go to the North Carolina is one of seven states limiting bar testing to only once a year. The state bar. with the approval of the state Supreme Court, recently changed its rules to provide for -twicea-vear testing beginning next February. An arbitration panel to settle tee disputes for attorneys would include both laymen and lawyers.

Clients' complaints currently are investigated by the bar's grievance committee. Calendar MONDAY 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Shakespeare: Treasures from the Sondley, Pack Library. 9 a.m.

to 1 p.m. Red Cross Blood Center open for donors. 1 p.m. Golden Kiwanis. Hallmark.

Innsbruck Mall. 7 9:30 p.m. Sugarloat Mountain CAP Squadron, National Guard Armory. 7 p.m. Free classes.

adult basic education. A-J l'ech. 7 p.m. West Asheville Lions Club. Hallmark.

Westgate. 7 p.m. Biltmore Kiwanis Club, Quincy Steak House. 7 p.m. NSRD 6-17 (L).

Naval Reserve. 7:30 p.m. Busbee Community Club. community center. 8 p.m.

AA, St. John's Episcopal Church. 165 East Chestnut Street Asheville, N. 28801 (704) 258-0220 James J. Hugenschmidt 101 Legal Notices NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT, DIVISION CVD 2593 STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF BUNCOMBE CONSUELO GANZON CABRERA, Plaintiff, VS.

ABELARDO CABRERA, Defendant. TO: Abelardo Cabrera, Defendant TAKE NOTICE THAT a pleading seeking relief against you has been filed in the above-entitied action in the District Court, 20th Judicial District at Asheville, Buncombe County, North Carolina. The nature of the relief being sought is absolute divorce based upon legal separation. You are required to make defense to such pleading not later than the 281h day of April, 1980. and upon your failure to do so, party seeking vice against you will apply to the Court for the relief sought.

This the 5th day of March, 1980. PITTS. HUGENSCHMIDT P.A. Attorneys for Plaintiff firefighters arStevens. a By: March 17, 24, (9279) a 31, 1980.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the Asheville Citizen-Times
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About Asheville Citizen-Times Archive

Pages Available:
1,691,639
Years Available:
1885-2024