Hertford County Herald HERTFORD COUNTY'S ONLY NEWSPAPER A PAPER WORTH WHILE NOT A BALICER, BUT A PU SHER . : . m ?? mbb?WMBWM?B-_I?U_-I i i ? - ? - ??? J__ . . .. _ r .-7- . VOLUME X. (ONE SECTION) AHOSKIE, NORTH CAROLINA, FRIDAY, AUGUST IS, 1919. (EIGHT PACES) No. IS ?? ' - NEW SCHOOL LEGISLATION EN ACTED BY LAST GENERAL AS SEMBLY ABOUT ATTENDANCE An Act to Provide (or the Compulsory Attendance Upon the Public School* of Children Between Certain Ages end toR egulete end Restrict the Employment of Children and to Provide for the Enforcement of the Provisions o fThis Act and of Chapter S3, Public Laws of 1913, and Chapter 857, Public Laws of 1909, THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF NORTH CAROLINA DO ENACT: Section X. Every parent, guardian or other person in the State of North Carolina having charge of or control f a child between the ages of eight and fouteen years shall cause such child to attend school continously for a period equal to the time which the public school in the district in which the child resides shall be in session. The principal, superintendent or teacher who is in charge of such school shall have the right to excuse the child from temporary attendance on account of sickness or distance of residence from school, or other unavoidable cause which does not consti tute truancy as defined by the State Board of Education. Sec. 2. Any parent, guardian, or other person referred to in section ^ one of this act, violating the provisions of the aforesaid section, shall be guilty of ? misdemeanor, andupn conviction shall be liable to a fine of not less than- five dollars ($5$ nor more than twenty-five dollars ($25) and upon failure or refusal to pay such fine the said parent, guardian or other person shall be imprisoned not exceeding thirty days id> the county jail. 8ec. 2a. It shall be the duty of the State Board of Education to for mulate such rules and regulations as may be necessary for the proper en forcement of the provisions of this act. Said board shall prescribe what shall constitute truancy, what causes may constitute legitimate excuses for temporary nonattendance due to physical or mental inability to at tend and wunder what circumstances teachers, principals, or superintend ents may excuse pupils for nonattendance due to immediate demands of the farm or the home in certain seasons of the year in the several sec tions of the State. It shall be the duty of all school officials to carry out ?uth instructions from the State Bard of Education, and any school offi cial failing to carry out such instructions Shall be guilty of a misdemean or: Provided, that section one of this act shall not be in force in any city or county that has higher compulsory attendance law now in force than that herein provided; but in any such case it shall be the duty of the State Board of Education to investigate the same and decide that any such law now in force has ahigher compulsory attendance feature than that provided by this act: Provided, that wherever any district is with out adequate building or buildings for the proper enforcement of this act the county boards of education may be allowed not more than two years %?rom July 1st, one thousand nine hundred and nineten, t make full and j, ample provisions in every district. . Sec. 3, The county superintendent of public welfare or chief school attendance officer or truant officer provided for by the law shal investi gate and prosecute all violations of the provisions of section one of this act. Sec. 4. The State Superintendent of Public Instruction shall prepare such rules of procedure and furnish such blanks for teachers and other school officials as ir.ay be necesary for reporting each case of truancy or lack of attendance to the chief attendance officer referred to in section threto hfereof. Such rules shal provide, among other things, fo a notifica tion in writing to the person responsible for the nonattendance of the child, that the case is to lie reported to the chief attendance officer of the county unless the law is immediately complied with. County boards of education and governing bodies of city schools shal have the right to ap point town r district atendance officers when deemed by them necessary, to assist in carrying out the provisions of sections one, two and three and four of this act,and the rules and instructions which may be promul gated by the State Superintendent of Public Instruction. But in every case in which it becomes necessary to prosecute for nonattendance the case shall be referred to the chief attendance officer of the county for further action: Provided, that in towns or cities having special attend ance officers paid out of town or city funds said officers shall have full authority to prosecute for violations of this act. Sec. 6. No child under the age of fourteen shall be employed, or per mitted to work, in or about or in connection with any mill, factory, can nerynery, workshop, manufacturing establishment, laundry, bakery, mer cantile establishment, office hotel restaurant barber shop, bootblack sUyid public stable, garage, place of amusement, brick yard, lumber yard, or any messenger or delivery service except in caaea and under regulations prescribed by the commission hereinafter named: Provided the employ, ment in this section enumerated shall not be construed to mean bona fide boys and girls' canning clubs, recognized by the Agricultural Department of thip State; and such canning clubs are expressly exempted from the provisions of this act. Sec. 6a, That it shall be the duty of the county boards of education of each county in the State of North Carolina ot cause this act to be pub lished in full in some newspaper in the county if there be one, and if there 8e none, then in circular form and distributed over the county at least four weeks prior to the opening of the schools after the first day of July, one thousand nine hundred and nineteen. -KTe. No person under sixteen years years of age shall be employed 01 permitted to work, at night in any of the places or occupations refer, i red to in section five of this let, between the hours of nine p. m. and -six I a. ml, and no person under sixteen years of age shall be employed or per mitted to work in or about or in connection with any quarry 01 mine, Sec. 7. That the State Superintendent of Public Instruction, the Sec , Delivers Address at Windsor on The Event of Home Coming Day for Bertie County Soldiers. DEFENDS THE LEAGUE OF NATIONS AND SAYS ARTICLE TEN IS ONE OF BEST FEATURES Chian by Signing The Peace Treaty with the League of Na tions ncluded, Would Be in Better Shape to Get What Is Coming to Her THE PROBLEMS OF RECONSTR UCTION. The present is in many respects the most exciting and remarkable period in history. It is both a priv elege and a responsibility to witness the revolutions that have just occur ed and are still in progress through out the world. The greatest war of ?II times is now closing. Its mag nitude, cruelty and cost are well nigh incomprehensible. Military events and duties inci dent to the conduct of the war have ! so completely absorbed the thoughts and claimed the efforts of our peo ple that we have been unable to ap preciate the industrial, social and po litical changes which have taken pla ce in American life. We have mov ed into new spheres and are quick ened by impulses heretofore dor ? mant. TRIUMPH OF MILITARISM. One of the most notable of these changes is the universal acceptance ut the doctrine of nationalism, the extension of the federal power to the minutest detail of life, NEW SYSTEM OF NATIONAL REVENUES. Another marked change is obser ved in the principle now applied in raising federal revenues. In order to meet the enormous expense of the war heavy exactions have been laid >n incomes and excess profits. There appears little likelihood that the Un ted States will ever revert to the }re-war system of obtaining its rev enues principally from import duties. The Government is conscrpting weal :h as it has conscripted the man lnrtH rtf tho nation i THE ONLY PEACE WORTH HAV INC. The only peace which can justi 'y the sacrifices and sufferings attend int upon the war is a peace which establishes a new order in economics, n politics and in international rela ionships What will have been irni led worth while if, as a result of all he blood that has been shed and all he money has been expended, mere-j | ty the conditions of life existing pri-11 ir to the war are restored? ["HE TRANSPORTATION PROB- ' LEM. Among the great problems asao- j iated with the return of peace none > of greater importance than that rhich relates to transportation. The iovernment toolo possession of and operated the railroads during the rar because H became necesear; . ecu re the prompt transportation of roops and supplies without which . he United States would have been ^ inable to become the controlling fac or in securing victory. During the war, the expense c iperating the railroads have been inormously iacreaaed, due principal- ^ y to advances in the coat of railroad . naterial and la creased wages paid to 'ailroad laborera. A deficit exists of approximately forty milHon dollar pet' month in the revenues derived from railroad* under government op eration. The demand for the re turn of the railroads to their owners is complicated by the necessity of re adjusting the relationship between expenditures and revenues in order to prevent a condition of bankrupt cy. While the total amount paid to railroad workers has been augmented by almost one billion dollars per an num since the war began the eve increasing cost of living has prompt ed railroad labor officals to insist upon additional increases with the de claration that if increases are not promptly granted a general strike will bev called. No more important problem is be fore Congress. It is, of course, no cessary to provide some menas by which railroad credit may be restored and maintained and this ca nonly be done by giving legislation assurance that the railroads, honestly and ec onomically administered, will be per mitted to earn a fair return on the actual value of the property in use. HIGH COST OF LIVING The one big problem inseparably associated with all others relates to what Americans have come to know as the "HIGH COST OF LIVING." Wage scales and salaries entirely in adequate in periods of normal mar ket conditions have become totally insufficient at present because of the ever increasing coat 01 the ne cessities of life. Food products, ar ticles of clothing, particularly boots and shoes, are higher now than at any time during the war, and there is little prospect for an early decline in the prices of the various commo dities indispensable to the comfort of our citizens. Congress is busy ing itself now in an effort to solve these problems. Various investiga tions are in progrea, and many reme dies have been proposed. Like all other practical problems, no patent solution, no plan 50 manifestly right and fair as to meet general appro val, has been devised, and it is not. probable that such a plan will be round. It is no adequate remedy to in crease wage* and salaries, for other increases wil be demanded, if the prices of the necessities of life con tinue to rise. The effort must be to restore business and living condi tions to a normal basis. In the mea a time, to prevent nation wide panic ind suffering it may become necess iry for the government to exercise its war powers by the absolute and irbitary control of prices respect ing necessities. This, of course, is 10 be a radical remedy, not to be idopted except as a last recourse, [t may be hoped that one benefit May ^ result It am the distressing condition no# so general in the adoption and prevalence of similar habits of II" Ing among the American poopia., (Continued on page four.)