wjTfFy&r ~ '• ? • - l Tuesday, December 2, 1824 . . * *s?p H I f I MWBft ( a The FLORSHEIM SHOE I Shoes are as dtsfia* pwhed |a performance as tfcey are *? appearance, you can rely on W«n under all conditions. They ■ ha«a endurance a# well as Style, The < fysty*sL9 s ■ S.S. Brown Shoe Store I UNDEB J|EW^!|AN^S>JJBN T XXKXlQv^wplMPy^rv^*.. « •.>>•“ • BONNY KNIT OVERCOATS ' ! A Garment that waqn but light | weight You will meed a coat like | this. Com© in and let us show you — an assortment of popular colors... __ Affine stock of heavy overcoats j for cold days. - "M rags ’ . I | Richmond - Flowe Co. S V ****?»•,_ 1 aqpooooooooocoocr.aoooo8o5o&aqppoooQooooooooooooooPQS 8 WfW-' | o.i ; l Let us relieve you of all worry by having us clean your J » fancy and all garments. Why send them out of tovm. Our \ plaht is fully equipped to take care of the needs of any j . ' • • / " , |! City. We only employ the most skilled and experienced ij help. Call us. !| EAGLE COMPANY j! PHONE 048 “QUALITY COUNTS MOST AFTER ALL”’ || E^^^oS^SSiSSio^^^^^oSSoSoSS C. P. Cline, Pres. W. P. Mabery, Sec.-Treas. !j M. B. Filler, Manager |i COAL! Let ’er burn down and enjoy the .1 winter with a top of our Good Coal Satisfaction Guaranteed Mutual Oil Compwy PHONE 19 F —— * ————l! I In and About the City I AI4. STATE TEAM CHOiiEN i I - ' m FIVE NEWSPAPERS I Sparta Edttci i Unanimous in Three He rn lections—Other Pisces Bhow Variety of II Sports editors of five North Carolina H newspapers were unanimous in their se ■ I lection of three members of the mythical I (All Stale football team, but for the other Kj places there was variety of opinion. The j ■J three players chosen unanimously were I Radii«>' and Greason, of Wake Forest, I an«J Merritt, of Carolina. The' papers I from which the composite selection was I made weje The Greensboro News, The 1 sCSharWle Observer, The Charlotte News, I The Durham Suu apd the News and Ob- B server. 1' **> e sports editor of The Sews and I Observer has figured everything out as ■ ter comparing the five selections, and in I picking J;he composite team two points! I were given for position on the first team I aigf ofie point for positions on the see* I oig| te*tp. In the case of the pick oh I T, ’ e Charlotte News it was necessary to I give one point for honorable mention | as that paper picked only a first team S mentioned about eleven other good rs. gano, end, of tCske - Forest, and nfion, of Carolina, wlere ■ pigjjctfcally unanimous choices, each get* ■ tigg on tiie first team of four of the ; ■ papers and the second team of on.e. ■ Efnmeifion. center, of Wake rarest, I h«4 a total °f eight points. Realty, of 5> State, (irigg. of Trinity, and Moran, of ■ B AA'akj* jjnres.t, linemen, each received sevw| >l(i|nts. laigerstedt, back, of Trin- j iiy, T'i ( |ve;, Ellerbe. tYake Fofegf, Hmena, .rit'jEendHx. Davidson. buckp'iT : SappenfieM. Davidson, back,, 8; 4?al(iweU, ’tr-jiiStv,*' back. 3 ; Fordahifi, • A'dfoljina, iiffi'lfiin. 8: Riley. Wake est, end, 3, Lentz, Trinity, lineman. 2® ji Dassitter, State, back. 2; Karlesjd^, : i Wake Forest, back, 2; Jones. WakeAt ast, lineman. 2; Laird, Davidson, tiije-J man. 2. [ 1 W following players received one" | point each: Rippl, State, end: Diokfij®, r Trifilty, lineman : Rahimnrth,'Davison/1' | ena; Rarskell. yiacftfina, end; Sparrow,' ('arolltia, Jyadf ;.. fjbx, Stute. linemau ; j 1 LegsttPT'T3«t'RlWiW.ba('k ; / Black, David-j •• -kom litiHunaii;' Carolina, back : .• j Mt'Ctftuiei) , J Tfaprtffson.-- epnter ; Davids, [ 3 Davidson, end: C. Shuford, State, back; f Devin. Carolina, back: Johnson, Trinity, I hack; Johnson, Trinity, back; Johnson. | fake Fiver.; limena, 1 LEE MARTIN FI’RCILVSES THE IDEAL LI NCH ROOM I Ptagfiar Case .Ptercfcasml P?nom D. A. I ffw aringen and A. L. Petrea Who Start <4 the Busbesa. : i i p \ Lee Martin, well known case 'man of the city, has purchased the Ideal L uut 'h Ropm. located on Barbriek street, from O. A. Swaringen aiuh J. L. I’etrea. The transfer of the property was made Mon day. Mr. Martin will he assisted, in,the mau agemeut of tbe case by Rossman, I (his soft-in-law. It is annouuccd that i ttiq former policies of the case will be l continued by the new owners, i Mjr. I’etrea and Mr. Sivaringen opened 11 the Ideal Lunch several months ago ami h thq patronage of the eufe has increased j i during the past several, months. 11 ‘ Mr- I’etrea and' Mr. Swiribgeu are [ owners of the Cabarrus Cash Grficcry ami l 1 tiiqy in' announcing the sale of Rieir case ij property; explained that tlfcy intend to ! i eulargKthe wholesale department of their freer ry business and therefore would not ave time to devote to the cafe,*. l! Charles Wadsworth Honored. 1 1 . tA The Tribune.) |i Ath®4|^Gn.. Dpc. I.—The citizens of ij Concoid would be Suterestefl to know that ] C. H. Wadsworth, sophomore l student at l the Atlanta-Southern Dental College, At- : •luuta, Ga., and resident of Concord, lias I jpst been ek>cted as an Associate Edi,tor -1 Ifor tlip college ayiuuul, "The Asodecoan," k whudl is to be publi-hed this year by the ■ st udents. The position which Mr, Wads* l l worth will assume is oue of great respon i [ sihillty, iu view of the fact that the At [ i lanta-Southern Dental College is the i [ hugest dpntal euljege south pf Vhiladel 'i phia. However. C. 11. is oue of the most ] [ i popular and efficient students at our eol-' ' lege aiid bis recjguitiou is certainly well deserved. Ifrhollz Condiiion is Rotter. Charlotte News. , Kthyucd, Srholtz, prominent tlorl-sit, 1218 EBsL Bpulevurd, 1)11 worth, who was kfioj-ksil iy an aiitom,)bile. Snturttey uftenioin. was reported from the Merey hospital as being s’ightly improved Mou j day morning. Mr. Scholfz was hit by a ear, driveu jby C. T. M>H"s, Dei«it. street, CwicohJ, . while crons lug Independence square. Til p the tall hiq collar bom 1 was broken and i a leg fractured. He wus also suffering with' shock. i Following the uceiilcnt Mr- Miles , went to the police station and gave uu account of the mishap. was not de tained. \ The Landmark Learns thut freight and passenger receipts of tin. 1 Southern at. Htutesvilie were WW.OOO greater in Oc-1 ; tober than during the sunie moiiths of 1031, ayid it, finds in this evidence of a | ( returning and increasing prosperity. I Several months ago an ex-soldler at Charlotte agreed to tnarrjra woman who i had beep, convicted <)l a statutory offense. INW she has sued him for uo#-st|ppqrt gild it comes out that both of them are I higami6ts, - ’ ' THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE mr mtis=sßs=saßm i nm 1— l (»y the AMocinted Pr«»«.) (By OMrtMtr at Radio Digest) Program ter Ueeemfer 3rd. 1 WSP' Atlanta Journal woman’s division Chamber ms eommeree. KEXiZ Berrien Springs (270) 7 story: 8:15 spring trio; 8:45 book chat; !):05 vocal. WBEI Boston (308) 6 Big Brother Club: 6:40 musical; 7 Lynn night; 8 contralto; B:3D, musical; 10 dance; 10:30 organ. WGR Buffalo (310) G lecture: 7 con cert; 0:30 dances music. 1 WMAQ Chicago News (447e>) 0 or gan; 0:30 stories; 8 lecture; 8:30 mu sical ; 0 piaynight; 0:45 talk. WEBH Chicago (370) 7 songs; 0 or chestra, readings, vocal: 11 soloist. KYW Chicago (536 ) 0:30 story; 7 concert; 7:30-D :\0 musical, stage re view, talks; 9:45 revlue, Nighthawks, or gan. WLS Chicago (345 ) 0:30 organ: 7- 0:30 entertainers, from program, book talk; 10 soprano: 10:30 orchestra. WLW Cincinnati (4231 8-10 orches tra band concerts. W¥AM L'evelgnd (300) 7 concert. WOC Davenport (484) 7 Sandman: p „- I gram’ J AY\YJ Detroit News (517) 7:30 News jorohestra. tenor. % KNX Hollywood (337) 0 orchestra; 10 feature; T 2 orchestra. f IVOS Jefferson City (4LO-9) s ad tdress; 8180, ipusLeul. ehpiy. WHR Kansas City (411): 7-8 pro gram. talk, pianist .soprano, IVDAF Kansas City Slav HU' 0-7 story lady, ensemble: 8-0 :io , program ; 1'1:45rl Nighthawks- KRJ Los Angeles Times (595) 8:30 — l r " - ——'“••• j q SENATORS BLACKLISTED Rropfihar.t, Frazier ami L*dd in the Ggoup Blacklisted for Committee Placed. j AVashington, Nov, 28. —With the ap ; provail of President Coolidge, the Re publican DW Guard, at a caucus today, blacklisted Senators Lu Follette, Brook hart, Frazier and Lack!, anil thereby pre-. eipitated a Republican row that |iais set thq eapital roeJiing. The following resolution by Seuator Reeil (It., Pa.,) was adopted: | That it is the sense of the oonference that Senators La Follette, ‘Ladd, Brookhart and Frazier be not in ; viteil to future lA'publicun copfereuees, and be not named to fill any Republican [vacancies in Senate, -coimnittees." I Curtis Cboiten as Leader. ! The four insurgents were voted out v of the party for their bolt in (he presi jdential race. Simultaneously Curtis, of Kansas, was elevated ,to be Republican j lender succeeding the late Senator Lodge, of Massachusetts. It was Curtis who !iu 1012 deserted the Republicans when: depriveii of tlie senatorial lioinihiifion in ' Kansas and stumped the Sate for the Democrat, Thompson, who was elected. Bni that was another day. ;, Did Guard move today came like' Lhl lmnibsheH. The disposition to discip line the La FoUetters lias run high ever siuer the elections buried liim under. Itut fear of the eonsequenees impelled most of the Republican regulars to hold j back their- revenge, at least until the! new Congress comes into being with its Republican majority. j Ladd Present Rut Silent. Late yesterday, however, arrangements' were completed to spring a resolution at cmc, declaring the four rebels no Unger Kun.4*g Wasliirullon. Le44er TCyASHINGTON When Con- W gress passed the law put i | ting regulation of meat packers and stockyards in the hands of the Department of Agri culture. back In 1921, it set In mo tion the wheels that put Howard M. Gore, farmer and stockman of Clarksburg, W. Va., Into President Coolldge's cabinet. For Gore came to Washington as a member of the packer and stockyard administration. In that Job lie demonstrated such thoroiughgplfig familiarity with farm problem* and such ability as an administrator and arbitrator that when C. W. Pugs leil resigned as assistant secretary i,n September, 1923, Coolidge stepped him up into that post as assistant to Secretary Wallace. His record ae assistant secretary ; w as finch that Coofidge now names him as head of department, following Wallace's death. • * • IT Is not unlikely that Gore would have served in the Cool idge cabinet through the next four years, bad he nol been elect -7d 4o the governorship of West Virginia, beginning next .JHV ch His term in the cabinet Is. because of this, limited t,o a little over three months. Like Coolidge when he came to the presidency, Gore Is not an .“organization" man. When he an nounced hls candidacy for the gov ernorship be any more on the inside with the G. O. P. powers ip hls state *hab Coolidge was na tionally when President Harding's death stepped him into the White House. Perhhps that fact hat cre ated a bond between them. But just as Coolidge, as presl | dent, was able to take over control of the <3, O, P. machinery, nation | ally, nnd revamp it to suit his pwn ! Ideas, so may Gore, as governor, overhaul the Republican machine In his home state. Afi «b outsider in bi« race far the Republican nointn* 1 t* on for governor. Owe was nicknamed "The Lenq AVqifr ojd-timers i smiled a bit at his presumption in children; 10 lecture; 10:45 elasmcal; '] 11:30 singer, banjoi.jt; 12 orchestra. i WHAB Louisville Times (400) 7:30-9 Hawaiian quintette. WCCO Minueapolis-St. Paul (417) 71 vesper service; 9 musical. WJJD ilopsehes.rt (278) junjor band. 9 WEAF New York (492) <5 United I Synagogue of America; <1:30 soprano; 5 7 talk; 7 :20 Philharmonic society. • 1 WHN New York (360) (i orchestra, C 6:30 talk; 6:45 Jewish; 7 trio; 8 piano 1 frio; 8..10 orchestra; 9 dance. p WJZ New York (455) 6 orchestra; C 7 Wall Street Journal review; 7:10 X talk ; 9:30 orchestra. 1 WOR Newark (405 ) 7 orchestra; (j 8:15 program; 9:30 program. 4 WTAY Oak Park (283) 6:45-e :45 | piauoiogues. talk, orchestra. KUO Oakland (312) 6 orchestra. « IVOAR Philadelphia (395) 6:30 talk; g 7 talks ; 8 recital; 9 :03 dance. % WOO Philadelphia (509) 6:30 ojehes- 1 tra,; 7:30 recital; 9:03 reeital; 9:30 1 dance. G WCAE Pittsburgh (462) G:3O Sun- S shine girl; 0:45 special; 7 program; 2 8 :30 concert. KttW Portland (492 ) 7 children; 10 < concert; 12 orchestra. WKAQ Porto Rico (300) 10-11:30 S concert, I] KPO San Francisco (423) 6:30 or- ! chest ra ; 7:30 children ; 9. orchestra; 10 t hand. J KKQX Seattle (284 ) 8 reports; 9. bed- j time ; 10 orchestra ; 12 music. ] WBZ Springfield (337 ) 6:05 bed,- • 'time: 6:15-8 civil service, concert trio, vocal; 8 concert; 10 orchestra ; 10:30 popular songs; 10:45 orchestra. KSy St. Lotiis Post-Dispatch (546) 0:45 ensemble ; 9 announced; 11 orches tra. 1 I Republicans, not entitled to attend Re- 2 I publican caucuses —as a matter of fact, g f.rc’d is the only one who ever lias at- I tended, and lie was present today b,nt | ! never batted an eye ns the lush fe'l upon him—and no longer eligible for assign- jjj inept as Republicans to seats on corpm'i- a tecs. a Ihe only thing that kept the inner I c'tcic of the Uhl Guard from going rim B linfiit and deposing I.a' Follctte and his I j followers from tiieir present committee 9 assignments was fear, if not certainty, 9 | that the Senate this time would vote a such u thing down. That is to come Q later, and today's action was freely 9 blazoned as a forerunucr of that full n toll which is to he exacted as soon as □ the Republicans have the votes. I That President Coolidge fuUy approved 8 lof the discipline was manifest, not only B from the statements of senators who dis- jj cussed it with him but from the; posi- K five, ringing declaration of William M. Q Butler, Senator and (». O. P. ebairmun, . as wel las the new Coolidge spokesman " in the Senate. 3 “It has my entire. Unreserved approv- g ' a!,” Sir. Butler asserted with vehetnence V afterward. Reminded by dissenting sefi- jj ators—and their number is so large a* 9 to constitute a real party split—that 8 this may mean endless storm for the ad- 8 ministration, Mr. Butler was unimpress- 9 ed. He felt the action had to come A sooner or later, and the sooner the bet- 0 ter. 8 < “Well, darling, what did you see at I church itoday?” a little three-year-old 9 j was asked after first visit to -s-reai fl ; church service. jj “Oh, Muwer, I saw the funniest thing 9 —dere was a man dat said his prayers 8 and den he didn’t go to bod.” uucktng the torganization tliok* for the office. But- as a farmer In Wont V(r ginm. though Core never had laid any political fences, he had liullt a hpgtlght corral Into to round up a personal following of West Virginia farm folks, olil and 1 young. H« bad for years bgen a booster for and worker In thq boys' and girls' farm clubs. He was an expert Judge pf live, stock. an- t ~ £«****<#»■ I MOTOR & TIRE SERVICE CO. | | CHEVROLET DEALERS. CONCORD I j Sales and Service I Phone 298 19-25 E. Corbin St. § fayOOQOOOGOCOOOOeOQPOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOQOOOOOOOOOOOOOo DEI.CO LIGHT j Uigkt Plants, WaAer 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 $571.50. Five per ceat discount for cash on installed contracts. < Three dollars extra for each light over the ten lights ! above specified. i R, H. OWEN, Agent ! Phogg CQBCprd, N. C. 8 T*a 11 —' ALCOHOL FOR RADIATORS | Wc specialize in Car Washing, . Polishing, J\lemite Greasing and Crank Case Service. ' j CENTRAL FILLING STATION , PHONE 700 Gas; Oil, Tires, Tubes, Acpewories, Quick |F% Changing 2 PAGE SEVEN