THE BREVARD NEWS, BREVARD. N. C FRIDAY, HARCH 7, t»t» NEWS FROM THE CAPITAL I Raleigh, March 3, 1919.—The Gen eral Assembly is due to adjourn next ^Saturday night.. It will have been in session sixty days at that time and ihe members must serve without com pensation if they work overtime, it will probaly be Monday or Tuesday be fore all the bills can be enrolled and ratified and a quoram is a likely pro bablyity until the 11th. After that time the people of the State will have a respite from the nervous tension and anxiety usually created by a body of men, inexperienced to a large degree in public aifairs, seeking to save the State without any well de veloped plans as to haw it should be done. But the agony will soon be a thing of the past. The Henderson county road bill, in troduced by Representative Jackson in i|^ House, passed final reading in thttls^nate on Friday and is now a law. This bill encountered stubborn i opposition in the Senate which delay- j ed its progress fof more than a week, j Petitions and counter petitions came j from the home folks and Senator | Cloud was overwhelmed with letters and telegrams from both sides to the controversy. Finally an agreement was reached and the bill” went on its way rejoicing.” Proponents of the , measure consented to the appoint-' ment of two democrats on the road commission proposed in the new bill and presented telegrams from two : members of the board of county com missioners pledging themselves to ' that course. An understanding was also reached to the effect that the democratic members of the commis sion are to be recommended to the commissioners for appointment by a mass-meeting of democrats. The third member will be a republican se lected by the county commissioners and the three members of the road commision are authorized to employ a full time supervisior. The act pro* vides for a bond issue amounting to $25,000 to be expended for main tenance. Printed copies of the law will be forwarded to the county com missioners soon after the adjourn ment of the General Assembly. Mr. S. Y. Bryson, who mader a hot fight in opposition to the bill, was in New York when the compromise was reached by which two democrats are to have membership on the road com mission. He reached Raleigh Thurs day on his return to Hendersonville and looked in on the Legislature for several hours. While preferring his own bill. Mr. Bryson appeared to yield gracefully to the decisions of friends to accept the solution outlined above. He rightly feels that the fif>ht he made has saved his party from the humiliation of a complete surrender of the road system of the coutny to the republican commisioners.. “We , gain more than we lose,” is the way he figured it out in a message sent to a Hendersonville friend soon after reaching this city on Thursday. He did suggest an amendment to the bill before its passage on second reading in the Senate pr<^ding for submit ting the bond feature to a vote of the people, but advocates of the measure objected and no effort was made to force the issue. Many of the letters received here relatii|e to the road fight make inter- estinSB^ading. Some of them v^ould not^T^k well in print. The home follis were evidently worked up to a state of genuine excitement. A few took from four to six pages of type written matter in the effort to prove that they are real democrats. But the fight is over now and a democrat is a democrat still. The bill providing for the elect! . of school boards by the people t’aiu out North Carolina went through the Senate on its third and final reading with the House committee on educa tion. Little opposition to it develop ed in the Senate and the House will have to wrestle with the problem this week. The members realized if the bill gets through it means a. ser ious break in the educational ^'stem of the State and radical cha^e of the splendid uniformity of action that has marked a steady advance ment in our educational progress. It is said that a bill will be proposed by Victor Bryant, one of the representa tives from Durham county, to allow the republicans to have a majority‘of members of boards of education in republican counties and that demo crats shall control the membership of boards in the counties casting a ma jority vote for democratic candidates. This plan does not appear to be pop- iilar, out has some support. Since there is to be a break in the present policy of selecting members of coun ty boards of education, is it believed that the elective plan will be more satisfactory than the scheme propos ed by Mr. Bryant. Many of the mem bers think any change at all from the present system will be a monumental blunder. But the fellows who are clamoring for the authority to elect their boards do not stop to think of the effect it may have upon the plan carefully worked out, of a sate-wide character for the advancement of the public schools of North Carolina. Va cancies in each county this year will be supplied by the present Geneiral Assembly. But they are not going to be democrats in each instance as heretofore. The Revenue Bill is through both branches and the Machinery Act has started on the way. The educational bill providing six months school each for all the children in the sate went through with little opposition; the Board of Health's sanitary measures have been accepted; the new taxation scheme was approved last week; the tax amendment to the State consti tution ratified and an equitable basis for the re-assessment of property agreed upon. The appropriation bill carrying relief for all charitable and educational institutions is practically complete and the State highway mea sure will receive the finshing touches and be a law before the end of the week, unless all signs fail. The joint- committee on public roads has been in almost continuous session for days considering the numerous bill propos ed and a final conclusion of the whole matter is hourly expected. The Stacey substitute to the Scales-Stevens bill does not please some leading members of the House, who appear to be fight ing for notoriety, and this has re sulted in the introduction of a multi tude of new schemes which had to be considered and passed upon. The fail ure of the House to accept the Senate measure has dejayed and endangered the pi'ospect of road- legislation. It means further argument in the Senate and ultimate adjustment by a con ference committee of the two houses. The latest proposition is for the State to raise half the amount necessary to match Federal aid by the automobile tax and short-terms notes, if the notes shall be needed to make up the re quired sum in the cooperative basis I of state and goverment activites in road construction. Under this plan counties would have to provide for raising the other half by the issue of bonds and short-term notes. Opin ions on the subject have differed widely all the while, but an amicable adjustment is in prospect. Senator Stevens, of Buncombe, threw the fat in the fire some days ago by the introduction of a bill pro hibiting the killing of deer in Bun combe, Haywood, Henderson, Jackson and Yancy counties for a period of five years. Representatives from the counties effected were not consulted and they do not relish the idea of being ignored. An effort to arrest the proposed measure will be made before the House committee on game, of which Representative Lyday is a member. If he fails to obtain an un- ’ favorable Report an amendment to LX^A^pii^iiylvania from the provis- iuTiS of^i«e act will be offered on the i^ioor of the House . Mr. Jackson will also ask that Henderson be ex cepted and Mr. Boyd, of Haywood, ; proposes to take a similars course. Mr. Lyady’s bill to allow Commis- ; :o:;er3 cf Transylvania to issue $50, GOj in bonds for the puriross of pay ing the accrued indebtedness of the county and making needed improve ments in the Registrar’s office has lie drunkeness passed by a previous session. The amendment law impos es a fine of ten to twenty dollars for first offense; not less than twenty or more than thirty dollars for the se cond conviction. Another bill intro duced by Mr. Lydajr allows the clerk of the county recorder’s court to re ceive compensation equivalent to the fees provided in similar actions in the Superior Court. Still another act pro posed by Representative Lyday would authorize the commissioners of his county to allow the clerk of the Super ior Court $200 per annum for cledical assistance, to be paid out of the pub lic funds. Representative Jackson’s salary bill is through the Senate and the county officials of Henderson will share the benefits from the date of ratification. QUEBEC QUIRKS / Mr. Reid of Jackson county, who was principal of Quebec school, has gone home; so there is no school in this community. r Erwin McCall and Chester Gallo way “motored” from, Greenville, S. C., to Quebec to attend the funeral of their brother-in-law, James Owen. Miss Ida Miller, who has been down with the flu at the home of her sister, Mrs. Rowland Fisher, is now well and has returned to her home. Most people in our burg have had the influenza, a few dieing with the fatal disease. We know of no new cases at this time. Alvin Smith, thirteen years old son of Mr. and Mrs. T. Vince Smith, died of influenza on February 10. He was a member of the Oak Grove Baptist church, having joined dur ing the revival last August. James Owen of this community died of influenza-pneumonit on Tues day night, February 18, and was bur ied in Gloucester. He leaves a wife and two children. Have all the readers of the NEWS read the constitution of the league of nations? It appears to some of us Quebecians to be sound in theory and we see no reason why it will not work out in practice. Yet some of the knockers seem to think that there is nothing to it but sound. Won’t "the ex-kaiser be hoppin’ mad when he reads the latest armis tice terms? It is very likely that he will need Dr. Davis for “another re pair job on his teeth.” Best wishes to the News and its many readers. ZIMRL LOH TING NOTICE TO BIDDERS The public will please take notice that a contract will be let after 30 days’ notice for the purpose of erect ing an additional room to the Brevard colored school. 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