10 Tickets GALAX NOW OPEN Special Musical Program by Six Piece Orchestra AN EXTRA GOOD BILL OF LICENSED MOTION PICTURES ARE BEING SHOWN. FOUR REELS TOMORROW. The FROM OLO flOBTH STATE Preparations for Teachers' Convention at Raleigh Complete. C0 JUiOB CRAIG'S ADDRESS FEATURE Governor Declares Lobbying Was Absent From Recent - Legislative Session. HALENJH, Not. It. Preparation! are in full awing for the convening f the North Carolina Teachers as sembly nsre November 21 and eaj tinuing through November tl. and tha afttola) program la to coma from the printer ready to ba mailed with in tha next day or two. It teemi vita important features from tha opening oeremonies when J, W. Jfalley will delM the address of welcome and Dr. J. Y. Joyner the response and the addreaa by Oovernor CrtUg on Wedneeday morning, straight through to Friday evening mtktU the marble buit of the late Calvin H. Wiley will be presented to the state through an address by Aot tog President Qraham, of the Univer sity of North Carolina and accepted by 8ecrtajry of State J. Bryan Grimes tor tha state. The State As sociation of Primary Teachers; the State Association of Kindergarten Teachers; Oram mar Grade Teachers' association; State Association of County Superintendents; Association ef City Superintendents; Association of Academies and Colleges; Stats Association of Music Teachers; Asso- fitatlnn f Hlvh Rchaol TAinhara anri mil Principals, and Association of Public!' High SohoaJ Teachers are all provtdsd with special programs adapted to their special work and suitable halls (or the sessions of each have been procured and distinguished speakers and specialists of renown are booked for special addresses autl demonstra tion work. Never have the teachers of the state been eo fully awakened to the Importance of attending the Msembly and the Indications are due probably one thousand teachers to be here. (governor Cralg and Chief Justloe Walter Clark went to Greensboro this afternoon to deliver addresses In connection with a meeting of the Just freight Rate association and friends of the two high state officials expressed special Interest In ,M. meeting on the same platform since the trjeent harsh crltlcljsm of the i tnu mnr would like to have perlmentation this year. Johns Hop governor y Judge Clark In which he ' i,",1. but there Is ths declared klus and the. University of Minnesota eclared that had Oovernor Cralg taken prompt and hfl.rn Motion acalnat railroad lobbyist it th. - eent special aesslen of the legisla ture such as President Wllaon took against lobbyists In congress freight rat legislation far better for the people would have been seoured. A significant feature of Oovernor Craig's speech in Greensboro is this paragraph! There was absent from this gen ral assembly (the special session) Ae lobbying, which has heretofore iJtatured some legislatures, the rall- xaaF?re heard before the commit Inaidim. tees, but There was no lobby.' believe the railroads have oome to reamevtnsi they - cannot control the legislation of this stale, by the Influences which have been sometimes employed, that their In terests will be dealt with as all other interests, and that the array of lob byists which have sometimes gath ered In Raleigh will do them no good. At any rate the lack of much its lobby was clearly apparent at the ipeclal session. This was to the honor of the general assembly and ths iredlt of the railroads." State Treasurer Lacy received to lay notice from the directors of the State School for the Blind that the Uxeoutlve committee ef the board is 1 directed to not approve any voucher igalnst the state for the $4,110 I .lalmed by the Greater Raleigh Lend ompanrrtehe-eo It" W theOrTreTestHldlngr"wl'nnlng over base price for tha tract of land ouht as new site for the school. Purchased From New Heating Plant at the Galax Which Is Now In Operation Is Guaranteed to Keep the The director explain In a resolution! adopted that the board of directors and the state have already paid all that it was agrsed they should pay for this pleoe ef property. The legis lature, at tha recent epeclai session provided aju appropriation for this amount to take care of the elalm. Now the directors refuse to pay the olalm and this leavea the appropria tion unclaimed. The trouble was that In purchasing this new site some body seems to have pledged the business men of Raleigh would raise this balance of M.I10 and then It de veloped that tha promise was not made by any one who could make It good by going out and actually rale Ing the money. Then the legislature was appealed to to make the appro priatlon. Raleigh cam in for some sharp criticism whsn the ap propria tlon was pending. Two new North Carolina corpora tlona were chartered today: I The Newborn Veneer and PaJhnel company, of Newbern, capital $80,000 authored and 1 1,109 subscribed by Dr. W, W, Dawson, Oeorge M. Iun klex, and others. The Fatterson-QUuNKOck Inc., Charlotte, capital 1100,000 authorised and iio.ooo subscribed by E. v. Patterson, A. D. Glascock and oth era, for stock, bond. Insurance and real estate business. Tha Rocky Mount Publishing company, of Rooky Mount, whloh published Tha Rocky Mount Tele gram, tiled an amendment to Its oharter today Increasing the capital stock authorised to 110,000 preferred and $10,000 common, with 1 4.000 minimum for business to begin, ef this $1,1 SO being preferred and $3,680 common stock. Saturday la the day en whloh Governor Craig has Indicated that ha will announoe the appointees tor the special freight rate oommlsslon so adjust ths rates fixed In tlte Justice intrastate freight rata aot and the names of the new oommlssionsrs are being awaited with the keenest in terest. There are no candidates or ac tive campaigns for the appointment of any one owing to the declaration of Oovernor Craig some . time ago that the seeking of an appointment would really operate against the candidate. Mr. D. Y. Cooper, ot Henderson, prominent cotton mill man of wide business interests is be ing generally mentioned as Ukoly to be selected. Also there Is considerable talk of the probability of Hon. H. A. London, of Pittboro being chosen as one of the commissioners. Also Mr. Watts, of Charlotte, Is believed to be ,,k" Pmty. these gentlemen have made any move to ward securing the appointment nor ,r ln u " candidates, It is said. Corporation Commissioners Lee and Pell returned today from their eastern Carolina trip for spec to I hearings at Elisabeth City, La Orange, Wallace, Rose Hill and a brief etop in Wilmington. They and Secretary Pell, of the commission, are much pleased at the Indications of success that are attending the movement for establishing a new steamboat line Baltimore to Wllmlng- ton ana later New Tor end probably several articles on radium experl Boston to Wilmington, with Char-: ments, and was so well known In lotte and other Interior towns active- eclentiflo circles that several Ameri ly interested In the auocess of the t enterprise. The undertaking hasn't tn Pec,flo Purpose of cutting freight H,rP" or reducing rates to the end that a sufficient volume of business m D mraciea to we new line and held. There is every Indication now of suocess. J.F. FRANK PATE DIES AT HOMEJNfLETCHER J. Prank Pate, a prominent oltlsen ot riecher. died yesterday morning al m nom "" n Illness of ten day. The cause of Mr. Pate's death was acut Brighfs dlsfcase. Deceased was 5! years of age and was past state councilor of the Jr. 0. U. A. M a member of the Ma sonic order, the K. of P. and the Red Men, in addition to being an ae. live member of French Broad coun cil ot the Junior Order, He is survived by hli wife, one son, Frank Pate, end one daughter, Mrs. w. H. Millard, of Flemn. Va. Surviving also are three stepchildren. The body was Shipped to 8umter, S C, yesterday afternoon, where In terment will tak place today. The Rt Hon. Stanley Owen Buck master was rs-elected to parliament from the Kelghley dlvlalo the unionist and labor candidate by a safe majortt Benefit of the Patton Avenue "WHITE LIGHT" Fund Boys and Girls Are GS STUDENTS HERE First Fruits of Half-million Endowment Provided by Neils Poulaon. MISS GLEDITSOH IN YALE LABORATORY Had Been a Oo-worker Wit) Mme. Curie in Radium Experiments, NEW TORK, Nov. It. Six Scan dinavian students, graduates of Im portant instlutlons In Norway; Sweden and Denmark, are now In America pursuing advanced studies in univer sities here through the patronage of the American-Scandinavian Founda tion. The foundation was established In 1911 and endowed with $000,000 by bequest ef the late Niels Poulson ot Brooklyn, for "the purpose of maintaining an interchange ot stu dents and teachers and for supporting othsr forms of educational tntercouras between the United States and Den mark, Norway and Sweden." The holders of the fell6wshlps, two from each of the Scandinavian countries, are now at work in several Institutions. One ot them, Klnar Cor vln, is at Columbia. He Is a graduate student In psychology, and had al ready accomplished some valuable re sults ln his researches In the univer sities of Uppsala, Stockholm and Lupd before he came here to get the Amer ican point of view ln psychological studies. The other Swedish fellow Is Erik Koersner. who Is studying concrete and water power construction In the graduate school of applied science at Harvard. C. M. Pedersen Is taking ad vanoe oourses In railroad construc tion at the Massachusetts Institute' ot Technology In Boston and Vllhelm Slomann Is studying library methods In the New York State Library school at Albany. Both of these students are from Denmark. One Woman. Norway furnishes the only woman In the fellowship group. Bhe Is Miss Ellen Oledltsch, an investigator in chemistry and physics. For five years Miss Qledltsoh was worker in the laboratory ot Mme. Curie, the discov erer of radium. She has published can unlveraltles made speotal efforts to Induce her to acoept their labora- torles as the workshop for her ex both wanted her. Harvard has never admitted women students to tha Jef ferson Physical Laboratory, one ef the big research laboratories ot that Institution, but the director made an exception tn MUs Gleditsoh'a case and Invited her to be his guest In the work there for a year. She finally chose Yale because of some special equipment which she desired in her researches and she Is now at work ln the Yale laboratory. The other Norwegian fellow Is Arnt Jakobson, who Is studying tn the en gineering school of the University ot Wisconsin. He 1 ' specialising In bridge construction. In addition to the six fellows there are two students pursuing" studies on scholarships provided by tha founda tion. These are Kern hard Betgtirsen of Norway, who Is studying advanced English courses at Harvard, and Paflll Christiansen of Denmark, who Is in the Carnegie Technical school, Pittsburgh. Dr. Henry Q. Leach, secretary and executive officer ot the founda tion, at No. g& West Forty-fifth street, told a World reporter that It Is j the expectation of his organisation i to send many promising AnierVian , students to Norwegian Institutions . for advanced study. "We hope there will be a lot of J people to apply for the appoint-1 ments," said Dr. Learh, "benusp r wan; tq b abin tn n-'-'-t , wr best And we want the apiJb.utmema to be representative of the best that CililS FELLOWSHIPS Veur universities turn eut, I have re- THE SUNDAY CITIZEN, NOVEMBER 16, 1913. 1 - - " FTP T Good at Either House Tomorrow, ENJOY cently had a letter from a man In-1 terented In architecture, H wants to ; Dr. Leach. 'There are a hundred oth study the cathedrals of Scandinavia. er author who ought to be known. There are others who want to study There Is Holberg, the great eighteenth co-operative agriculture and in the i century dramatist. He Is perhaps a' Scandinavian countries you can get the best opportunities In that branch. 1 The great Industrial movements there harnessing water power and develop ing mines, makes these countries es pecially attractive to the student of engineering and mining and eco nomics." The translating and publishing of books by tha Scandinavian authors will be taken up by the foundation next year. A beginning has already been planted. Dr. Leaoh says the av erage American is wofully Ignorant of the great body of Scandinavian lit erature, and the work of translating and publishing Is looked upon as one of the most Important of the under takings of the foundation. "The only Scandinavian writers known In English are Hans Christian Anderson and Brandos if Denmark, IXmn and Bjornson of Norway, Lag- $5.00. price J) EXCELLENT PROGRAMS BENEFIT DAY AT BOTH HOUSES. YOURSELF, BRING THE CHILDREN, SEE A GOOD SHOW AND HELP A GOOD CAUSE. House at a Comfortable Temperature in Coldest Weather. erlot and Strindberg of Sweden," said 'greater dramatist than luben oj Strlndiborg, and he Is absolutely not known In English. We are going to make a beginning In our translations with his work. Frederick Bchenk of Harvard and Jamee Oscar Campbell of Wisconsin university will translate three of his plays, which we will pub Ush under the title, Three Comedies of Holberg,' This book we expect to Issue next year." Dr. Leach visited three Scandina vian countries the past summer. He has long been a student of Scandina vian literature and arts and politics. From 1908 to 1910 he was a travel ing fellow of Harvard university in Scandinavia. During a part of this time he was secretary to the Ameri can minister at Copenhagen. In 1910 he came back to America and was made instructor in English and Scan- dlnavlan llterntnrA In Wnrvorrl with Unredeemed Pledge Sale Now Going On At FINKLESTEIN'S PAWN SHOP Read These Prices Come and See the Goods Men's Suits 84 Men's Single Coats, the best ever offered in fkn this citv .............. ..UeUi Motorists Attention We have 19 handsome heavv black beaver Overcoats witn quilted lining and fur collar, just the thing for motorists and motor men. It's a $20 flaft 7ft value. Special .sPO J Men's Suits 44 Youths' Suits in a fine assort ment of patterns, good quality ttyD Overcoats 27 Overcoats, unredeemed pledges, heavy kersey in gray and brown, on which was loaned $3.50 to Sale 3:le $2.25 Shotguns 24 Single-barrel Shotguns, 12 and 16 gauge, various makes. Values up to $7.50 n r r This sale X.OO Thanksgiving Table Silver Two Only 26-Piece Sets of Wm. Rogers Table Silverware, $5.35 Set ' 56 Solid Gold Signet, Emblem and Set Rings, - $2.95 Tuesday and Wednesday the establishment of the American Scandinavian foundation he came to New York as Its. secretary. TWO MORE-PLAYERS SIGNEDYESTEBDAY Mountaineer Winter Squad to la creased b Outfielder and Fort-Side Hurler Both Amateurs. Contracts from another outfielder and another pitcher were received yesterday by Secretary Thomas M. Duckett, of the Ashevllle baseball team. The new outflelde la Thomas DiirirAr nf Oandler. who Is regarded as one of the fastest amateure In this aortlnn. The new outfielder Is a Overcoats 48 Men's New Black Cravenette Overcoats, the regular $12 kind. This sale . JJtt 7CT special .......... J Men's Clothing 28 pairs Pants, all sizes, assorted colors, unredeemed pledges on which was loaned $1.00 OCp to $1.50; sale price. ODL Rifles 29 Single Shot Rifles, 32 calibre, all standard makes, values up to $4.00. Sale I'lC price ....... P. Shotguns Model 1897 13-gauge Winchester Repeating Shot- j 1 A 7 C crun. fnce brother of "Jim" Gudger, the pltchai who wajs with Ashevllle In the Ap palachian, league. The new pitcher is J. F. Graham, of Concord, a port heaver with a world of speed, and a "lot on the He. too, is an amateur, but ht held the amateur champions of Nortt Carolina, the Red Springs team, scoreless throush ten heart-breaklns innings last summer. Every indica tion points to his mora than making good In professional company next season. Members of the Store league art busy rehashing the dope these dayj ard speculating on prospects for next year, and every dyed-ln-the-wool fan Is simply bubbling over with en thusiasm over the Mountaineer's out look for securinf the rag. Bareback whipping of six Dela ware convicts at Newcastle last No vember resulted ln a resolution ir congress providing that injunction J proceedln be brought against - the State Of 1 Delaware. W

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