LA THE MORNING HERALD', JANUARY 3, COffiPLAIfJT IS FILED Gladstien Divorce Case in Courts i CORRESPOND ENT NAMED Case Will Hardly Be Tried Before March c THE CHARGES ARE GENERAL Mr. W. L. Umstead Is Named as the out before the courts. The plaintiff has based his case on the statutory grounds.. Attorneys for the defendant in the case claim that they will be able to offer evidence that will ,pre vtnt the plaintiff getting his divorce, There are no children. i ' MISS HONEYCUTT ENTER JAINS. Miss Carden, , of.EI.on College, Was Honoree of the Occasion. Co-Respondent in the Case Not Known Whether or .Not the . Case Will Be Fought. Of Sam iGladstein against his wife Mrs. Josie Gladstein was filed yester- terday and W. . Umstead was named as the co-respondent in the action. The complaint alleges ' that Mrs. Gladstein has been guilty of improp er conduct with other men" who are unknown to the "plaintiff." The doc ument is a very short one and goes into no details as to the alleged acts of misconduct on the part of-Mrs. Gladstein. The case is not set for trial at this term of the civil court, and in all probability it will not come up for trial before the march term up for trial before the March term. At one time this was one of the most talked of cases in the city. A number of civil actions have grown out of the divorce case, and some time ago these were settled out of court, attorneys for the husband and wife getting together on compromises. 'At that time it was suggested that Mrs. Gladstein might not make any fight against the divorce proceedings. She left the city, saying that she was going to Savannah, where, she would make her home with an aunt, and that ehe did not intend to;remain in Dur ham. Since then, however, Mrs. Glad stein has returned to Durham and is now living here. Whether or not she will make a fight against thte divorce is unknown. Should the fight be mado it promises to be one of the most sensational that has been, tried in the local courts in come time fcr all of the parties con nected with the case as named in the complaint are well known to all Durham people. The' plaintiff swears in the com plslDt that he was married to his wife in j.j08 and that he lived with her till 1913, when he found that she was not true to her marriage vows. ' Since finding that Mrs. Gladstein was un true to him, the husband says that he has not been living with her. For the past few months, according to the complaint filed by Mr. Okv.lstein'a attorney yesterday, the plaintiff in the case has not been liv ing with, his wife for a number of months. Both sides have been confi dent nil alone that they would win r . . I Miss Mamie Honeycutt entertained a number ,of her friend last night in honor of Miss Minnie Carden, of Elon College, and Mr. Grover Rhodes of Wendell. , , Those present were:. Misses Minnie Carden, Ada Carden, Emma Whitting- ton, Alma Whittington, Nettie Hes see, Jessie Currin, Bessie Jones, Mary Rhodes," Elsie Atkins, Mamie Honey cutt; 'Messrs. Grover Rhodes, Frank Harward, Earl Bobbit, George Atkins Edgar Howard, Ch arlie E theridge Mack White, Hubert Harward, Walter Hessee. Raymond Jones, Kemp Cates. A delightful fruit course was served after which all departed for their homes, declaring Miss Honeycutt a most charming hostess. - , -v -t this M i WW Licenses Issued. Licenses were issued yesterday af- I teruoon for the maroiage of Mr. W. D. The- complaint in the divorce suit lltigsbee and Miss Clara Roberts, . of f-tagsville and Rougemont respective ly. lAlso for the marriage of Mr. T. W. Cecil and Miss Annie Carden of this city: ' ' Women Win Victory. Toronto, Jan. 2. By an overwhelm ing majority vote at today's election married women are to be given the same right of franchise as those en joyed by unmarried women and wid ows. ' Miss Whitfield III. Miss Mable Whitfield, one of the nurses at the Watts hospital, is very ill. She is threatened with an attack ll appendicitis. Concerning Actors' Salaries. Kcnry Miller says that "actors are the most overpaid people in the world f .u- what they do." :An actor him self and one of long experience, Mr. Miller may be said to speak with authority, yet what he says is riot en tirely true. There are actors on our r-tngo who receive from one to two hundred dollars a week . for haying 'heir trousers properly creased - and the'r coats so skillfully padded that they convey the illusion of great Alrility or "reserve, force" on the ir. of the wearer. They are requir i r'. moreover, to recite in a throaty v'ce many Knes of English , prose which they have committed to mem cry, through intense mental appllca ''r;;. It would seem that histrions of i lily sort are seldom without employ ment. Equally large salaries are famed by histrions who wear pill box lias, cuffs on their ankles and in 'owns where the Ancient Order of Hibernians has no lodge humorous sreen whiskers. There are also real :ictors who move us to laughter and tears and make the mimic scene seem real to us. These entertain us during th evening and live in our hearts ever after. They are never paid quite enough for all that they give us of merriment and good cheer 'New York Herald. The Great Annual After Xmas Remnant Sale Begins Monday Morning: at 9 O'clock Our Bank has grown, because the people of community Believe Irv our Bank. We do not solicit your account just because ours is a National Bank, chartered by the United States Government, but ' also because the good names of responsible, upright men of known financial re sponsbiility are likewise behind our bank. We shall welcome your bank account. Do your BANKING with US. First National Bank J. S. CARR, President W. J. HOLLO WAT, Caalxler WE KNOW YOUR WANTS AND WANT YOUR BUSINESS. fZZfrtiyiCi1 L 'Tl-''"',,'"''"',il"""rt """iitlllP""f""-"" ....H.MM,.....,a...Bt otter- I A Wonderful Sale of Rugs See the Big Window Display A chance' purchase threw about tlfty Rugs our -way at prices away below ordinary. They slight misprints; so slight that we will have "to point out the imperfection s for you. We are ing this lot at prices given here: - J5IZE.2JBYJ2 FEET .VELVET- AXMINSTKRS, WORTH $2.j:0. FOR.. . . SIZE 9 BY 12 FEET VELVET BODY UKUSSBLS. WORTH $20.00, FOR'.. .. , SIZE 36 BY 63 INCHES DIAMOND' VELVETS. WORTH $4, FOR 2.98 Come to This Unusual Rug Sale .$16.50fc Jr . 14.75 t Coat Suits 4 Prices cut to small bits See the wonderful bargains. ? T T f I Coats X For ladies and children Very low reductions now in force. Y r T Many a man who can't tell the old time wal'z from the tango is lead a dance by his wife. - t m IN HOLIDAY SPIRIT BY BARBARA BOYD One Mother's Christmas Gift It was three days before Christmas, and she bustled about making the pies she knew.Iim was so fond of. For Jim was coming home f&r "Chritmas. and nobody but mother could make pies the way he liked them. And so, though she was not feeling well she would not disappoint Jim; and she trotted .around in her little kitchen attending to every de tail herself, so-that the pastry wou'd be exactly to his taste. During that baking, he had to sit down many times: for before this Christmas season had rolled around, ehe had passed the ninetieth mile stone on her life journey. But though others of the family offered to make the pies, she stoutly refused, and kept to her task. For Jim must not be dis appointed. And then on the day that Jim cam? home. Jjes died. The work she had done preparing for his home-coming had been loo much for her feeble strength. And at the task she loved go weu the task of ministering to him she dropped by the wayside. It is to be hoped that during the .'years that had gone. Jim made the returns he should for such devotion. Perhaps he did. Some sons do. But cftener, many soni. -i also many daughters, do not appiwiate at " Its full ralue. the mother-love, and the immolation of elf on the pan of many a mother to minister to the children"s pleasure. ' To many. It may -seem foolish-and a ; .Bedle8s sacrifice for this, woman at h'ir n(l in her enfeebl-sd , health, 1U work at such tasks. And probably. It m Indeed foolish: fori pies are no$ ail (jwportant part of life,! and mother is. But how many of us. when something is lacking for our pltasure. think of the lack in this light? We have a keen sense of dis appointment, or our feelings are hurt that our. wishes were not ca tered to. The pain of his mother's death, while laboring for him, will long be HUe an open wound to this son. Bat if, when the Christmas dinner was served, she had said she hadn't felt like making the pips, would not be have felt, as have many of us In sim ilar circumstances, a wave of disap pointment? And would not he have secretly felt, as liave many of us. that sh could have done it if she had real ly wanted to? For some of us are apt to exact too much from those who love us, and appreciate too little w hat they do. And some catastrophe Is needed to bring this fact home to us. This son, an has. perhaps, many other sons, did net wake up to the full realization of his mother's devotion until she drop ped at' the task of ministering to him. And as he 6at in the darkened home j Christmas, let us hope that then, if HEATING . STOVES LOTH'S GEM m five sizes, for Hard or Soft Coal, Coke or Wood, i positively the best cheap Oak Stove on the market, embracing as i it does so many attractive features. BUilfc from A- No. 1 Pig Iron with Planished Steel Body. Has reversible Pipe Collar, which is a most important convenience. Has hervy Fire Tot, with large ash pit. No bolts exposed to the fire, hence can be repaired, easily when re quired. ' - v Ca$t Iron Ring Above Fire Pot to Protect Steel Body m 4 i ll mSmi m i? Nickel Plated Parts; Urn, Swing Top, Top Ring, Plate and Screw Drafts in feed door and ash door. Floor Ring, Name Loth's Air Blast With Front Doors This is another moderately priced Steve and comes in four sizes, burns soft or hard coal and is strictly high class. This Stove will hold fire 24 hours with- proper fuel if directions are follwoed. It i9 a beauty and makes friends wherever it is used. Come in and let us show you these two styles of Heating Stoves. Taiylor & Phipps Co LEADERS IM HARDWARE C Mangum and Parriih SU mk mm m !- . 1 If t Murray's Music Means a Happy Home Each Day of the Year GEO W W A T T S T. PE IR C E e h i c R 1 MOM DURHAM.MX, v What a Bank Account Has Done for hundreds cf our depositors, it can do for jou promote efficiency in saving. Start a surplus fund now with us. We welcome your account (large or small.) 4 PER CENT INTEREST PAID ON SAVINGS ACCOUNTS. The Pianos we are selling today are the result of years of steady, progressive; - intelligent Piano manufacture. No Piano is allowed in our stock but those that are built with particular care as toex pert skill and experience. W. R. Murray Company's Pianos never wear out; they mere ly mellow with old age. We are Durham Representatives for the EVERETT HADDORFF HALLETT & DAVIS CLARENDON HARVARD COLBY MURRAY DAYTON W. R. MURRAY CO Pianos, of High Quality and Low Price Y N 5" SAFEST FOR SAVINGS 7r CPEM ON SATUROiYS TO C P.M. never before, he did hr full justice: and as his memory went back ov-r he years In which she had ministered to his !Ightet wish .that he rendered deep and reverent homage to the. leve that had thu unfalteringly err- fd him. . j And let us hope that those of us who do not fully .appreclatelhe love about ns, mill aie up to it. ar.d give the return due It. wit?tout having to; sit In a darkens house to have thj( .alue of such love brought home to'i na. j Wall Paper Painting and Decorating MANY YEARS OF EXPERIENCE. E . J. LONG PHONE 367. Every Member of the Snider-Wilcox-Fletcher Store Wishes You a Happy New Year S

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