Thursday, October 22, 19.25 Persistence f{ Will Win ■ m , The 4 Automobiles and thousands in cash ■ in TRIBUNE - TIMES SIO,OOO Campaign I WILL REWARD the CONSISTANT V WORKERS The most vital days of the entire election are at h and. That an exciting and spirited contest will be waged in every district during the remainder of this all-important second period is being evidenced on ev hand - Each and every contestant realizes that the goal is almost within their grasp to be claimed for their veiy own or forfeited to more aggressive worker depending on their efforts this important period. > J ust a l } ttle aweek remains of the “Second Perio d Vote Schedule, after which the votes will again de crease in anticipation of the smallest vote offer of the entire election. Remember the race will be brought to a close under a sealed ballot box with the smallest vote offer prevailing and with NO extra votes for ex tensions. Two weeks only comprise the third period, and a lesser number of votes. There will then remain but Ka one short week of the election during which all subscriptions will be cast in a sealed ballot box. The im °f thlS next wec r k * hen } s obvious - The most vita! days are now at hahd._ These next 9 days can urHaTni^n ß^ 88 * 0 / fo [ yOU ‘ This s P ecial offer and the “Second Period” vote credits end Sat urday m g ht - October 31. While others are hesitating you can win. FOR ONE OF THESE , MASTER SIX BUICK BROUGHAM CHEVROLET SEDAN Purchased from Standard Buick Co. Purchased From White Auto Co. Value $938 Value s2llO Make the Second Period Win For You !■ ■■ _ . , / , J . . ', ' Purchased From Concord Motor Co. Purchased from Auto Supply & Repair Co. Value $1335 Value sl6lO Three S2OO Cash Prizes Three SIOO Cash Prizes 1 10 per cent Cash Commision 1 i in ■ ■■■■■■ i ■■■ ■-"■■■■nnfr I ' —■ —■■■ THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE BRYSON'S WIDOW SUES IIER THREE MINOR SONS Sr.ks Title to Property Promised by Husband fcr Not Starting Divorce Action. Hendersonville, Oct. 21.—Bonnie j Brooks spent today quietly at the* t home of his brot'her, surrounded by! ! loved ones. Tie had no comment to I make upon the verdict of the jury. I other than he had been confident of /acquittal from the first. He felt it I was a just verdict, and was 'highly I gratified that he had been vindicated : by a jury of Henderson citizens. He i had no announcement to make as to future plans, he said. 1 In connection with the conclusion j cf the Brooks trial, a civil action has i been instituted in Superior Court by Mrs. Julia Bittner Bryson, widow of Sam Y. Bryson, against her three sons, heirs of Sam Bryson, to have | 'he court make title to her for oer-i j tain property enumerated in t'iie eom p’aint. Action entitled “Julia Bittner Bry-j son versus S J. Bryson, Charles T. Bryson and Harry p. Bryson, minors." sets forth the ffi'-t that on December .11. last, Sam Bryson entered into an agreement with the plaintiff that if she would not institute divorce pro ceedings, fallowing his exposure by Bonnie Brocks, and would resume martial relations w>th him, Bryson would make over title to plaintiff for certain real property in this county I and his (bird interest in a local busi ■ ness. Mrs. Rryson states she fulfilled Cor part of the agreement by foregoing divorce proceedings, and resumed martial relation with him. hut that j Bryson failed to live up to his agree ment; that at the time of his death ! he had'not conveyed to her full title !to file property in question. She | asks the court to order the titles made. : Petition also asks that a guardian be j appointed to administer the affairs i of the three defendants, Sam Bryson I having named no executor of his es tate, Clerk of Court Pace has ap pointed J. A. Bryson as guardian of j the children. “Canned Heat Parties" the Rage Among Badin Negroes. Stanly News-Herald. Did you ever drink Sterno? We’l, there are some negroes, and maybe white folks, in Stanly county who can tell you just what it tastes like. The “big time" around Badin, especially among the negroes, is w'uat is called “Cammed Heat Parties." j These parties are real live occa- I sions, Sterne- is bought by the dozen j cans, and by mixing it with some oth er liquid, it is made into a drink, | which is said will outshine "Stanly j moonshine." In recorder’s court yes j terday the real fun came from a case j like this. These negroes, according to officers, within a very short time I had used seven cans of the stuff. Os course the defendants said they | were using the “canned heat" to boil water used by them in shaving and it appears that they convinced the court of the fact but Chief Eeatly and nis officers said that denaturated alcohol has departed and Sterno has taken its place. One should be careful in using this “canned heat” for if a match is ap plied it will burn like gasoline or al cohol. Some say it is fine, and from all reports, it surely does the work. Is It For High Schools? Dearborn Independent. It is amusing to read the drivel which continues to follow in the wake of the defunct Scopes case. By per ceptible degrees a twisted meaning is | given the event until now some writ are arc bewailing that Mr. Scopes was "prohibited from making scientific re search" and that the children in his care were denied the privilege of delv ing deeply into biological problems. Mr. Scopes, of course, knows nothing I of evolution except what he has read j in teh textbooks and much of what | he knows by that method will have i to be discarded in 10 years, if he still J follows the textbooks, because of the revisions which will ensue The great - difficulty in the educational aspect of the controversy is that there arc on biologists teaching evolution in the high schools; there are merely teach ers who are just one jump ahead of I the pupils in the study of the text ! books. ; A scientist who is a naturalist and | an evolutionist, writes us a letter, one paragraph of wliich we lift from ! among other wise observations to ! share with our readers : | “Beyond doubt evolution should not be taught in the common schools any [ more than higher mathematics or ■ spectrum analysis of the stare, for the simple reason that it cannot be comprehended, except by specialists of long training. If 09 out of 100 high school teachers of biology or science were asked what they knew about the gradational variations be tween epecies and general cf marked transitional character they would be at sea." Ills Business *in Order. Statesville Daily. Whether Mr. J. B. Duke, buried last week at Durham, anticipated the end and set his house in order we may not know, but it was it# be ex pected that a business man of his type, handling vast affairs, wouldn’t leave anything to chance. So it isn’t a surprise to learn that his af fairs were so arranged that the de velopment of the enterprises he had projected will go on, and that there will be no loss to the beneficiaries of his philanthropy. That was of course assumed when the Duke foundation was set up last year, and placed in the hands of trustees who were ex pected to administer it had Mr. Duke lived. A lot of planning is necessary to so arrange affairs involving many millions that the business will go on ns the owner may desire; and somey times the planning is deferred too long. But Mr. Duke evidently arranged his business when ho last year gave the forty millions to educational, re ligious and charitable enteprises. Blood transfusions are given by 150 Univetaity of Michigan students to help pay tbeir way through col lege. They are called from class room, theater or sleep as the emergency requires. ■! - - (NATION-WIDE fe F 1# INSTITUTION - I 1 .feimeyvQ * HfarJL DEPARTMENT STORES dO-54 South Union Street, Concord. N. C He’s Wearing ‘The Upton’ : A New Marathon Hat With the definite style that is so marked in all Marathon Hats. Made with the new open flange and concealed welt N. • I ed ge . fr Quality all the way, with fine satin lining, comfort-fitting leather ~ ~~ ~ J and fashioned of buck skin-like felt. P / 7 In Spring shades of \ Kjf nutmeg, pearl and mal- \ tese. This hat recom- V I \ mends that you “let us be your hatter.” 7 / / $4.98 'W _ 1 - jlli Stifle (fallen/ 1 Tjj New Styles and / / Colors . 11l We have just received some IJI the most beautiful styles of J / 1 (he seasosn. il II $2.95 to $8.95 AAA to D Widths Ruth-Kesler Shoe Store COURT CALENDAR The October Term of Cabarrus Superior Court will cotir,,, vene October, 19th, 1925, before His Honor Judge Henry IV Lane. The Civil £)ocket will not be called until Monday, Oc tober 26th, 1925, and will be called in the following order. MONDAY Mary Lee Harvey et als vs. Alice Basinger et als, for motion. C. A. Isenhour, Admr. vs. W. H. Smith et als for mo tion. Lillian Propst vs. Lewis Furr for motion. 124 Corl Wadsworth Co. vs. D. H. Sides. L. 209 D. C. Courtney vs. Bebee & Smith 232 W. B. Ward & Co. s. C. B. Cook. 263 J. P. Crowell ’ e O. S. Kelly Co. 314 Jas. L. Brown ] W. Tarlton . 325 Erie Steam Shovel Co. Ben and Marshall Teeter - TUESDAY. 365 C. J. Harris vs. M. H. McKnight. 366 W. F. Gray vs, Jim Miller 385 M. F. Teeter vs. Locke Cotton Mills 408 Nelson Machinery Co. vs. J. C, Pounds 109 Pearl Novelty Co. vs. j. C. WiUeford 423 Richmond-Flowe Co. "= T. F. Bales & Son. WEDNESDAY 424 Henry B. Burr vs, E. G. Lawing 425 E. D. Burr vs. E. G. Lawing 430 Peeler & Co. vs. Furr Bargain House 431 Durham Market vs. Furr Bargain House TT 135 J. A. Warren vs. J. Wm. Propst. 142 Richmond Flowe Qo. vs. Coughlin Co. 114 Concord Furniture Co. vs \V. K. Baldwin. THURSDAY 20 —G. A. Moser vs. S. S. & J. E. Brownand S'/’’ J. Gilmer 00 International Shoe Co. vs. Ruth-Kesler et als Divorce cases not docketed by agreement of the Bar, will be called at convenience of the Court. Witnesses need not attend until day set for trial. All cases not reached on day set will take precedence over cases of next day. This October 10th, 1925. J. B. McALLISTER, Clerk Superior Court. 0011 ftm ICS, MIS 6ET RESULTS Our Penny ADS. Get Quick Results PAGE THREE

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