Thursday, September 9,192 G Raging at Knight Doesn’t j Change the Faets (From the Chapel Hill Weekly) In his talk to the Civitan club in Raleigh last week Edgar W. Knight said that North Carolina had been taking too much credit j to itself for its “educational progress” and that, in the provi- j g i oll of school facilities and in ! the quality of teaching, ic was still a backward state. A number of earnest citizens n re raging and roaring at him. Os course, in a brief talk of this o rt. he could not undertake a comprehensive discussion of the .details of the state’s educational problem. He was hitting only the high spots, and his critics .attack him for having omitted t 0 S ay several things they think might properly have been said. He chose to speak, mainly, not of what the state had done, but of what it had not done—and it was a good choice. All the in dignation that is poured upon him can not change the facts. He was telling the truth. Here now, in the Greensboro News, is Charles L. Coon of Wil son with a column and a half of stinging comment upon Mr. Knight’s speech. And what,do you get from Mr. Coon’s letter? Why, a careful reading of it shows that he is really on the same side of the fence as Mr. Knight! He is just as much dissatisfied with the state’s edu cational shortcomings as the University professor is; and, what is more, the reforms he wants are precisely those which Mr. Knight himself is known to want. Mr. Coon seizes upon certain phrases in the speech as an oc casion for satire without ever refuting the main argument. Indeed, having indulged his gift for sprightly ridicule, the Wilson superintendent goes on to con firm Mr. Knight’s findings. "Our first civic educational school problem,” says Mr. Coon, ‘‘is to secure 100 county-wide school systems, every one of which puts every dollar in every county behind the education of every child in every county.” Just what Mr. Knight would like to have, as every one knows who is familiar with his opinions. j Again Mr. Coon says that we ought to have “an adequate state system of taxation with which properly to support an efficient program of public education.”! Just what Mr. Knight believes. 1 “He never uttered a word of. or a syllable of an adequate pro-* gram to remedy what even most parents already feel and know— 1 that poor teaching is the rule in our schools and not the excep tion.” And the poor quality of teaching was the very evil at which Mr. Knight’s argument aimed! Naturally, he was 110 t attempting, in a luncheon taiK, to lay down a curative pro g*am in detail. That is hardly a to perform in the presence °f a lot of well-fed Civitans in the middle of a warm day. It K a joo for the study and the council-chamber. ‘ j ;dr. (oon advocates “standard- 1 JZ] ng the work of the schools 0 L he end that it may be possi- J e really to begin the definite* gaining of teachers for work in e schools.” Here, once more, r ie is tn agreement with Mr. Knight. . then, does Mr. Coon ' £ ; unch this attack upon Mr. I nig ht? We believe there are two reasons. First, there is the statement' s Peaker made about county ani <4 c Ky superintendents who aiG “herior in ability and train- J ,] g and sadly deficient in quali fy 8 of leadership,”, Mr. Coon, appens to be a county superin tendent himself, and this phrase Plainly r’iled him. But why * ould it? Any fair reader . n °w s that Mr. Knight did not an that all superintendents ." ere deficient. He was estimat -1 the situation in the large, and we have no doubt that Mr. j Coon’s opinion is about the same I as his. We venture the suggestion that the second reason for Mr. Coon’s attack is that hitherto he has held the palm as the cham i pion rebel and disturber in North I Carolina’s educational life, and he is upset by the appearance of I a rival hell-raiser. Let us not forget that this same Mr. Coon arose in the Teachers Assembly a few years i ago and assailed North Caro- I lina’s school system as a “crazy j patchwork quilt.” His frank ness so scandalized the company that boos and hisses were heard from all over the hall. Mr. Coon’s success as a build er and administrator of schools has won him a well deserved fame. And perhaps his chief claim to the admiration of his fellow citizens has been his readiness to denounce compla cency and inertia and to expose the faults of an existing system. I We are for him, and we hope he will continue, with spear in hand, to launch his charges at the dragon of the status quo. But we pray him not to want to keep the field all to himself. Let him hold his eminence as champion hell-raiser, but there is no rea son why Ed Knight shouldn’t be allowed the place of runner-up. —, #******#**^*************** | New Milliken Light % % Dims X-Ray’s Force * £ Washington.—The newly dis- % 4* covered Milliken light ray has * * the most powerful penetrating * I * force of any ray ever brought * ' £ to human .notice, the Smithson- * * ian Institution announced in a | j * bulletin calling attention to the * fact that the new ray will pen- * etrate a layer of lead six feet * thick, whereas the X J ray can be * 1 * stopped with a thin sheet of the s£> * same metal. No one can foresee * * by what renmrkable uses the * * ray may be made to serve man- * * kind, the bulletin added. * 4- The extraordinary penetrating # * powers of the new ray depend * * on the extreme shortness of the * rjj wave length. Ordinary broad- 4c casting radio, or Hertzian rays, * have waves from 100 to 3,000 * * meters. Professor Langley 4* £ found rays in the sun’s and * * moon’s beams, which were in- # % visible to the eye, of a wave * * length of one-hundredth of a $ millimeter, or 100,000,000 times % shorter than 1,000-meter radio. 4c The new rayy which Milliken * * has found are 2,000 times short- jj[ j * er in wave length than the * * average X-ray. Jjj Few Veterans Return ' Not Many of Last Year’s Varsity Players in 1926< Line-Up i (From the Chapel Hill Weekly) ! It appears that not many of • last year’s varsity football play ers will be back in college this fall, which means that ’Bob Fet zer and his'assistant coaches are faced with the task of building a team mostly out of new ma terial. , A bulletin from the University News Bureau says that the out i look is for two regulars in the . line as a nucleus,, and three let ter men around whom to build a backfield. Captain Red Whisnant will be j j at his old place as guard, and Morehead, the 1925 tackle, will , return. The three last year’s I backfield men scheduled to re- I port for practice this month are Hackney, Sanford, and Ferrell. The squad will include many promising candidates from the 1925 freshman team as well as I the 1925 second-string men. *WHE NY OIThAVEG LASSES fitted ,! by Dr. Mann you have the satisfac | tion of knowing they are correct. FOR OVER | ZOO YEARS ; Haarlem oil has been a world- < wide Temedy for kidney, liver and -< bladder disorders, rheumatism, lumbago and uric acid conditions. i correct internal troubles, stimulate vital organs. Three sizes. All druggists. Insist on the original genuine Gold GOLD THIEF NABBED BY MARKED METAL Sluice-Box Robber Caught by Old Police Trap, William Lake, B. C.—A unique and new method of stealing precious yel low nuggets from sluice boxes lias been tripped up by one of the oldest traps known to police—marked! money. The trap was varied slightly, for instead of using government coins or bills, police % officers stamped thin sheets of gold and caught the robber red handed, after he had avoided their traps for more than five years. Now that Frank Lane DeLong is safely behind prison bars, where he will remain for the next two years, he probably will admit that the most adroit maneuvers cannot escape the tong arm of the law. Back in i 921 officials of the Kitch ener mine at Keithley creek suspect ed that some one was robbing their sluice boxes, but they failed to de tect the thief. The thefts went on intermittently for more than four years. The thief, evidently believing himself outside the law, became bolder and the thefts became more numerous. Finally, a plan was hatched to trap the marauder. Several thin strips of gold were marked with the letters “K. M.” and doubled up to hide the identification marks. ' Several days later DeLong walked boldly into the local police station and announced that he had made a strike. As proof of his assertion he produced two small bottles filled with gold nuggets and dumped them on the table. While one police officer edged toward the door to cut off escape the other sorted through the nuggets until he came to the “plant.” When the leaves were unrolled DeLong admitted his guilt. DeLong said he stole the nuggets by placing a false box under the sluice box, after boring holes through the -upper box which permitted the nug gets to drop through. I SHE’S A MAYOR Mrs. Mattie Chandler, mayor-elect of Richmond, Calif., is a home-lover and fond of working in her garden, where the photographer caught her. She is also a skillful politician, and won the election over nine opponents. Canadian' Lake Monster, 15 Feet Long, Races Auto Vernon, B. C. —A strarige monster which inhabits Okanagan lake raced a motor car being driven along the shore road for several hundred yards, says J. L. Logie, manager of a local land company. Mr. Logie describes the monster as having a head like a sheep, a dark colored body showing about five feet above the water, and as about fifteen feet long. Three other persons in the ear with Mr. Logie say the monster raised a swell about a foot high and made the spray fly ahead of it as it cut through the water at approxi mately the same speed afc the automo bile. 1 Names of Streets Tell New Orleans’ Story “ 1 New Orleans. Names of " j New Orleans streets present a " * mixture of French, Spanish and “ j AmericanUinfluences of other 11 j days and impress strangers In- !! $ stantly as one of the oldest “ f of the interesting features of .> | the old city. | l The city itself was not, ■ » named, as many think, for the ! ! French city of Orleans, but the ; duke of Orleans. Chartres !!■ I street bears the name of his ;; | son, the Due de Chartres. Royal i street is said to have 1 been “ ? named for Madame Royaler eld- ■ t est sister of the king. |; J Bourbon bears the . dynastic ' I name and the dauphine is re- !! I membered through Dauphine “ | street. A group of streets is | named for the ifiuses, Calliope, |' t Clio, Erato, Thalia, Melpomene, ■ | Terpsichore, Euterpe, Polymnia J’ | and Urania. | The Napoleonic influence left ! | Napoleon avenue, Josephine f street and a street for each of ! | Napoleon's victories, Ausferlltz, I Jena, Cadiz, Constantinople and • Berlin. Berlin passed during ; the World war in favor of GeiP eral Pershing street. !, THE CH/ • C\M RECOCT) 9 Bankrupt Sale HARDWARE AND FURNITURE THE ENTIRE STOCK OF PENDERGRAPH 8 MCCAULEY, CHAPEL HILL, N. C. ■ ■ -■ . I . Prices Cut 33 to 60% A Few Sample Baigaks: Moline Riding Plows, selling usu ally at $65 to S7O, Now only $25; 1 10-Piece 5-Ply Virginia Walnut Dining Suite, a Beauty, Reduced from S2OO to only $140; * • 1 3-Piece Genuine Mohair Living Room Suite, reduced from $300.00 to $190; \ 9 Mahogany Living Room Suite, now only $35.00. Crockery, Stoves, Ranges, Heaters, Beds, Springs, Mattresses,: Roofing, Plows, Tables, > Flower Jars, Blankets, Rugs, and scores of other things at reductions of 33 to 60 per ct. A Real Sale is this. There are Bargains, but they won’t last long. So come right along. The sooner, the better. Respectfully, * V'-C" \ vv ••. , i \ • LLOYD-RAY COMPANY, Chapel Hill, N. C. y ..v-. • * J ' PAGE THREE