PAGE TEN I Me I • Florsheim Shoes are as distin* 9 ffi guished in performance as they are 9 H in appearance. You can rely on I ■ them under all conditions. They I ■ have endurance as well as style. fl B The %igby*slo I I S.S. Brown Shoe Store I B UNDER NEW -MANAGEMENT I ■ PHONE 116 g SIIMBWgMWmMBMMMM DOOOCK XXSOOOOOO OOCXJsjiftA-wfvwj I Clothing Special Values in Men’s Suits and j Overcoats. . Jackie Coogan two pant suits for j your boy—wear longer and look bet- j ter. ] Richmond - Flowe Co. j aOOOOOOOCtjQCOOOOOOOOOOOCXXXiOOOeOOOOOOOOOOoocwwwifftj incxx>oooooaooooooooooooooooooooooooaoooonnQp<xMy?oooooc I We Live to Dye and Dye to Live The Longer We Live the Better We | i. dye | We Clean Everything That Can Be ij || v Cleaned I We Call For and Deliver. Call Us I BOOST FOR THE NEW HOTEL j I EAGLE COMPANY II PHONE 648 “QUALITY COUNTS MOST AFTER ALL’” | ! C. P. Cline, Pres. W. P. Mabery, | | [ , M. B. Fuller, Manager COAL! j Let ’er burn down and enjoy the I winter with a ton of our Good Coal. I \ Satisfaction Guaranteed § Mill’ll OI All r A mn«nii l mutual uu Company I PHONE IP THE gQNCQRp §ULY TRIBUNE In and About the City j SPECIAL OFFICER ASSAULTED j L°n Sanders Said to Have Been Struck I By Slick in Hands of Tom Castor, of j This City. j Lon Sanders, special ’ police officer, whose beat extends from the Cannon ■ Mills to the Gibson Mill, was seriously I injured early Saturday night when he is j alleged to to have been struck over the mi bead by Tom Castor, well known, man of ■ the Cannonville community, 'f he as ■ sault was made in the Kerr’Street Case. H police officers report. H According to the officers Sanders was ■ standing in the case talking to the pro ■ pnetor when Castor entered, and San ■ ders did not see Castor, as he was struck ■ over the back of the head. Castor, ac ■ cording to the omcers, gave no warning ■ of his attack. He is nllegad to have used 9 a green stick, about four feet long. ■ Sanders was rendered unconscious by 9 the blow and remained in that condition ■ for some time. Today he fs reported as 9 resting very comfortably and is believed 9 not to be dangerously hurt. 9 Castor disappeared immediately after 9 the assault and officers reported this 9 morning that they had been unable to ■ locate him. ■ Police officers could give no definite 9 reason for Castor's attack, they said. ■ Officers reported that Castor's blow 9 was partially checked by the door to the | case. Sanders and the proprietor were ■ standing just inside the door, with the ■ former's back to the door. When Castor O fame in. according to the officers, he left the door partially opened and the door ! decked his swing. It is said a dent | from the stick was left in the door. I A warrant charging assault with a I I deadly weapon was sworn out at police , headquarters for Castor. 11 ANCHOR MILLS EMPLOYES RETURN TO WORK MONDAY ! Entire Johnston Chain Now Operating Full Time Except the Highland Park i No. 3. J Charlotte Observer. 16th. I The Anchor cotton mills at Hunters | jille win resume full time operation i Monday following several months' of inaction. .T. Leake Spencer, secretary j treasurer. Highland Park mills, said II last night. 1 With resumption of work at the [ Anchor mills, a part of the Johnston i cb ain. all four mills will be in full i operation, with the exception of High i| jund Park mill Xo. 3. which is operat j *ng two and a half days a week. -Mill No. 3 some weeks ago opened on full time, but circumstances two weeks ago made it advisable to curtail pro | duction there. Mill Xo 1. also in North i Charlotte, is operating full time, as is i No. 2. which is located in Rock Hill. S. C. Mr. Spencer says the cotton outlook in some respects is growing more satis- I 1 factory and that cotton mill men are ex | pecting a continued gradual improve ?! ment in the situation -3 The Anchor mills at Huntersvlle has > " complement of about 200 operatives i i who will return to their work tomorrow £ morning after a vacation for several f months. The factory products a line of _ ginghams. During the shut-down eonsid -0 erable overhauling and improving has ? been done throughout the plant. |i Fun Rules in “Circus Days.” 1 1 In Sol Lessor’s presentation of the boy lj genius, Jackie Coogan. in “Oliver Twist," ji the dominant note of the star’s portrayal 11 is that of pathos. Innate nobility mod l [ ified the characterization and occasional Ji merriment lightened Ihe somber tones of i the Charles Dickens story. In the next [ Lesser production, “Daddy.” there was i reached for the first time in Jackie's 1 brief, brilliant rareer, the sublime note l J of genuine tragedy, while the story made its way through many tears to its happy i denouement. But in “Circus Day,” the , J delightful First National picture at the i Star Theatre Wednesday and Thursday. [ Jackie is restored to the blithenere of in i nocent. youth and to the merriment and i mischief in which his multitude of ad- J mirers love most to witness him. Store Robbed During Night. J Thieves entered the P. M. Furr store J on Kerr Street some time during the r night and stole cigarettes, cigars, pocket J knives and other articles, police officers [ reported this morning. i The robbery was not discovered until * this morning and officers stated they had ho clues as to who entered the store, r Several leads are being followed, however, [ and officers believe arrests will be made soon. Fragments of Prehistoric Elephant Found In California. Los Angeles. Nov. 15.—The collection of fossilized bones at the Los Angeles museum, belonging to sundry animals that i lived more than 30.000 years was I ► augmented recently by the lower jaw and I a gigantic molar of a Columbian elephant, j a type of prehistoric creature of which | fragmentary remains have been discov | ered only once before in Southern Cali- I fornia. The specimens were unearthed at a depth of 60 feet in a gravel pit. The face of the molar, which is nearly eight inches long, is covered with thick plates of 9amel, while the jaw bone, which had been broken off, has a length of 18 inch -1 21 . , toott) ®nd jaw were petrified, i Their original owner lived in the Pieis i t ° c *P e PWod, in the opinion of Dr. W. A. Bryan, director of the museum. | An amusing story is told in con i nection with the fight between Georges i Carpentier and Bombardier Wells at the J National Sporting Club of London in 1013. Just before the men entered the i ring a spectator who had paid seventy five dollars for a ringside seat ad- I journed to the bar for a drink, remark ing to a friend as he left that he did not J care to see the preliminaries and i handshaking and would be hack in n I moment, when the real fighting had commenced. On his return Several minutes later he found that the fight was all over. The contest had lasted precisely seventy-three seconds, at the end of which brief period of time the English champion lay beaten at the feet of the champion of France. The distinction of being the only practicing woman lawyer in the Mari time Provinces belongs to Miss Muriel Corkey, of St John, N. B. Six dollars invested' in five pecan trees in 1800 has brought one Southern woman returns of more than $5,000 ■ .. .i. . ... '*■ —»---■■ IfllSßc^iNGf fgfeZ NEWS (By the Associated Frees.) (Ey Courtesy of Radio Digest) Program for November 18th. WSB Atlanta Journal (423 ) 8-0 Seven Adairs; 10:45 Pomar's Bohemians. WEEI Boston (303) 6 Big Brother club: 7 musical7 :30 orchestra ; 8 pro gram; 0 musical; 10 organ. WGR Buffalo (310) 6 music; 6:30 news; 0-10 concert. WGX Chicago Tribune (370) 6 or gan : 6:30 concert; 8 concert: 8:30 clas sical : 10 orchestra. WLS Chicago (345 ) 6:30 organ; 7- 10 entertainers, pianist, farm program, , .orchestra, 10-12 orchestra, Glee club, re view. KYW Chicago (536 ) 6:35 bedtime; 7 concert: 7:30 stage review ; 8 :20 mu- , sical: 8:20 speeches: 8:45 uinscia); 10 “At Home.” WLW Cincinnati* (423) 10 concert, quartet, instrumental. WWJ Detroit News (517) 7:30 News orchestra, baritone, tenor. WTAS Elgin (286) 6-8 string sex tette, artists; 8-12 orchestra, vocal, in- j stru mental. WRAP Fort Worth Star-Telegram (476) 7:30-8:30 concert; 0:30-10:45 concert. - WDAF Kansas City Star (411) 6-7 school of the air; 11:45 Nighthawks. I WHAS Louisville Times-Journal (400) 7 :30-0 concert.. | WMC Memphis Commercial-Appeal (500) 8:30 classical: 11 frolics. WCCO Minneapolis-St. Paul (417) ] 6 :15 classical concei t. OKAC Montreal (425 ) 6:30 concert; 7:30 special; 0:30 orchestra. WEAF New York (402 ) 7 politics: 7:30 Gold Dust Twins: 9-10 National Carbon Company. J SUPREME COURT CHANGES. The Rumor Is That There Is Soon to Be Two and Maybe Three Vacancies. Washington, D. C.. Nov. 15.—Once more official Washington hears a rumor that there are soon to be two and may be three vacancies in the Su preme Court, of the United States. This time flic rumors seems to have a good foundation ift fact. Oliver Wendell Holmes, who is the senior member in years, and Joseph McKenna, who is the senior member in point of service, are understood to have intimated their intention to retire at an early date. Justice Holmes is now S 3 years of age. or more than a dozen years beyond the age when he could have retired on full pay. Justice McKenna is past his eightieth year and has sat on the supreme bench for more than a quarter of a century. Justice McKenna’s service of twenty six years, while eclipsing that of any justice of late years, is not by any means a record for the highest tribunal. Chief Justice Marshall set the record for. service at ’thirty-four years. This was equalled by Justice Story of Massa chusetts, and Justice Field of Cali fornia. Tlie shortest jreriod ever server! was by Justice Harrison of Maryland, who was a member of the court, for only a year. Although there have been seventy-five members of the court in ’the 134 years of its existence, scarcely more than half the States have been represented by favorite sons in this list. New York and Ohio head the roll with eight mem bers each. Massachusetts comes next, with seven. The old States of Pennsyl vania. Virginia and Maryland have furnished five each, while Tennessee comes next with four, and Kentucky on l/e44er | BY HARRY B. HUNT NEA Service Writer WASHINGTON —a strange twist of fate, it seems, that Henry Cabot Lodge came to his death by the some, sort of blow that struck down Woodrow Wil son at the height of bis career, when he and Lodge were battling In the biggest fight of their Uvea, over the League of Nations. It wasa brain lesion that brought the Wilson collapse. By reason -of his fewer yean and hie more robust vitality, Wilson was able to fight his way back to partial recovery. Senator Lodge, 10 years older than was Wilson at the time he was struck down, and weakened by two recent operations, never rallied. • • • NOT only In the similarity of the stroke that ended their careen, however, were the fives of these two men alike. At the end. the bitterest political enemies this generation in America has known, the qualities that brought each to greatness were much the same. They were the two outstanding intellectuals la our public life. Both were great figures in tha world of American letters. Each proud to the point of im periousness, but Irtrlnfr pride nTW * resoluteness with a scholarly un derstanding and depth of knowl edge that lifted them tram tha class of mere pntenden to tha rank of real leaders. It who In evitable that when they did (fiash It should ho a battle to the death. And so It was Tits death of Lodge, no toss than that of Wilson, can be traced back to that strug gle of 1S1». which topped not only the mental but the physical vigor of the two chief contender*, lodge defeated our entry Into toe League But he was a Sick man ever after. fITHE Hnee «£&»••* two lives first J, creased bemuse of tbelr mu tual Interests as scholars end , Lodge was lidßtsr of the Inter- WHN New York (360) 6:20 WHN 'employment: 8:30 nws; 8:37 orchestra: 9:30 program : 10:80 orchestra; 11 Ted Lewis' Symphonic clowns. ! WJZ New York (455) 6 "Dogs”; 6:15 orchestra: 7 Wall Street Journal review: 7:10 geology : 7:30 organ ; 8:15 ad dress; 10 orchestra. WJY New Inerk (405 ) 6:30 orches tra : 7:15 current events; 7:30 Pan American program: 8:30 Gen. Pershing. IVOR Newark (405 ) 6 orchestra. KGO Oakland (312) 10 trio, chorus, instrumental: 12 orchestra, soloists. WOAW Omaha (526) 6 Advice to Lovelorn ; 6 :25 dinner program ; 9 talk on symphony concert: 9 :30 program; 10:40 Wotvl frolic. WIP Philadelphia (500) 0 talk; 7 talk; 7 :l!> concert; 9 ;30 donee, orches tra. , WFI Philadelphia (305) 6 talk; 8 recital: 9 concert. WCAE Pittsburgh (462) 6:30 Uncle Ko.vbee: 6 :45 special; 7 musical; 8 Ev erreadv Entertainers. WKAQ Porto Rico (360) 11-12:30 se lections, talk. W.IAR Providence (360) 6:30 music al: S talk. KPO San Francisco (423) 7:30 chil dren ; 9 orchestra : 10 program; 12 band. I WGY Schenectady (380) 6:45 drama talk: 7 musical; 10:20 organ. ! KFQX Seattle (233) 8-9 reports, news: 9 children: 10-11 orchestra; 10- 1 orchestra ; 12-1 orchestra. ] WBZ Springfield (337 ) 6:05 bedtime; 6:30 orchestra : 7 :30 patriotic program ; 10:30 organ. | KSD St. Louis Post-Dispatch (546) 7 concert: 9 music, specialties. WRC Washington (469 ) 6:30 Pan I American night, band; 9:15 orchestra. with three. New Jersey and georgia al so havethreeeadi to their credit. Ala > bnma, South Carolina. North Carolina, Illinois. California and Louisiana have . two each to their 'credit, as has also i Connecticut. States which have furnish , ed one member of the supreme bench in . elude New Hampshire, Maine, lowa, ■ Mississippi, Kansas Michigan Minue | sotn, Utah and Wyoming. At present [ Massachusetts and Tennessee have two i members each, and California, W.vom -11 ing. Utah. Minnesota and Connecticut , have one each. A wide range of age is presented to | a President from which to choose his j appointees. The youngest, justice ever i appointed was Justice Story of Mnssn i chusetts. Ho was thirty-two years when selected. The oldest man ever securing a seat on the bench was Justice Lurton of Tennessee. He was sixty-six when ap pointed. Presidents have generally felt them selves limited to their own party in making appointments to the supreme bench, though this custom lias not been followed so strictly in recent years as in (lie past. Nowadays it has become al most the established rule, for the Presi dent to select for the bench a man of the same .political faith as the member whom he succeeds. President Benjamin Harrison was the firs-t to name a justice whose imlitical faith differed from his own. Just as lie was about to be suc ceeded by a Democratic President, Mr. Harrison appointed his friend. Justice Jackson of Tennessee, to the bench. President Taft was the next President to step over party lines when ne named his old associate on the bench,. Justice Lurton, another Tennessean- In China a woman may be divorced for talkativeness. national Review, back In the 70*s. i when he accepted for publication a political treatise by Woodrow Wilson, then a student at Prince ton. Wilson recalled this to Lodge at his first meeting with the senator, \ following his election as president, declaring that he always remem bered Lodge as the editor who pub lished his first article. The last meeting between the two was at noon on March 4, IMI, lust a few minutes before Presi dent Harding took the oath as chief executive. Wilson, crippled in body, had , been assisted to the president's 1 room in the Senate wing of the capitol, to sign last-minute tnees- ! ores rushed through the dying Congress. Lodge, as leader of the Repub lican majority in Congress, called on him there to announce dm un less the President bad sametMtng new to communicate the Confess was ready to adloarm. •• • j TJROBABLT no mare tense mo- Jt men* ever wfl he experienced l hr any of thAs met than when Ledge and WBaan Jseed each other os thie arreatca There was a tense, seemingly Iwmthhna passe, after Lodge had Spoken. 1 Wllaon. his Dace drawn by Me - long filnesa, Ms cane at hb side, m *«ned at first oblHloas of the Wtnence of the Senate leader He was ettn fighting the pressure of tbsr blood dot on the brain. Then, slowly, with mental mat control that he was not to impart to his paralyse* muacles. he turned. Except for his eyes, his face was coldly expressionless. 1 But when he spoke the sharpness of his tone war like Icy atae] down 8 one’s eptae: * O ‘T have no farther communlcn- 8 tlous to make." he said. "I ap- 0 predate your courtesy. Good morn- X lh«" 8 I * And now Lodge, too. la dead—of | a blood clot on the braiai ,r ‘™" 1 11 "owiJfrj! l ■' . IQOOQOOQOo^ioooooooooooooooooooopottqottonoooooQoooooooo The Most Acceptable Thanksgiving Gift As a gift for Thanksgiving, nothing be more pleas- : ing or more acceptable-than a Chest of Silver. That this does not mean the expenditure of a large’sum these prices | • prove. r 1 1 Starnes-Miller-Parker Company ooooooooooe ° oo^^ 300000000 0 hiijuu I What KELVINATOR Is and Does fit. 1 8 th<^ ame of an electrical refrigerating unit that | fits nght into the ice box you now have, and eliminates forevermore the 1 1 inconvenience and inefficiency of ice-cooled refrigeration. ! all times lßittUinß * dry ’ unvaryin * atmosphere in your rafs|gerator at 1 It maintains a certain predetermined temperature and reqniree no ! attention whatsoever, after its installation. i by ice! produCes a tem Per*ture considerably lower than that produced ] It freeaes crystal dear cubes of ice for the table or the sick room. ! “ * i no<,el of . «]eanl>ness and sanitation. It saves labor, food, an- i ! not a bind ° "’f-* 8 IeBS Um “ ice t 0 operate > and first cost ] I is not a burden. It is operating successfully in more than 40 000 homes i! nine of these la Concord. Ask for the names of those using them ’ i i Phone log and m. i i J- I. PHARR A BROTHER j | 00000000000000000000 °<X»OOOOOOOOCOOOOOOOOOOg>oftfvy^ 000 | 1 IFOR PIES | Try our Faultless or Curtice Bros. Blue Label Red Pit- ted Cherries. They’re excellent. j j We also have the new pack in Faultless-and Blue Label I ! Corn and Faultless Sifted Peas. * ! ! These brands are as good as the market affords. ! PHONE\ YOUR ORDERS TO 686 | | Sanitary Grocery Co. “A REAL GOOD PLACE TO TRADE” OCOOOOOOOOOO °OOOOOOOCXX>OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCX> i mmmr Spend a happy day with the worlds | Lowest Priced High Grade Touring j j : Car—ss99.oo Delivered. MOTOR & TIRE SERVICE CO. CHEVROLET DEALERS, CONCORD * t !! Sales and Service Phone 298 v 19-25 E. Corbin St. 000000000000000000000000000cxx>0000000000000000000000 DELCO LIGHT § Light Plante, Water Systems and Washing Machines , Twenty-five different sizes of light plants'. No. 866, the popular size delivered installed and house wired for ten lights for $571.60. Five per cent discount foir cash on installed contracts. Three dollars extra for each light over the ten lights above specified. * ] R.H. OWEN, Agent j Phone 661 Concord, N. C. jj HAVE YOU SEEN THE NEW 1925 STUDEBAKER? 8 ALL 228 FOR DEMONSTRATION Sales. Service I CALL tit FOR DEMONSTRATION Wrist Link, Bearings Gabriel Snubbers and Genuine Ford 8 Parts. 8 Auto Supply & Repair Company, * § 'uTHSJ Monday, tyrtmfcer 17, 1524 .

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view