Report of the State Inspector of Public High Schools of North Carolina for the scholastic year ending June 30 ..including a report of the city and town high schools. . Miss Conrad completed an eleven-year course in ten years with a perfectattendance record. She was presenton time every day throughout her tenyears of preparation in the LexingtonGraded School.—Supt. 0. V. Woosley. Miss Mary Cornelia ConradLexington, N. C. Miss Horton began in the first gradeand graduated May 25, 1917. We haveher scholarship record as far back asthe seventh grade. Her scholarshipaverage when she was in the sevent


Report of the State Inspector of Public High Schools of North Carolina for the scholastic year ending June 30 ..including a report of the city and town high schools. . Miss Conrad completed an eleven-year course in ten years with a perfectattendance record. She was presenton time every day throughout her tenyears of preparation in the LexingtonGraded School.—Supt. 0. V. Woosley. Miss Mary Cornelia ConradLexington, N. C. Miss Horton began in the first gradeand graduated May 25, 1917. We haveher scholarship record as far back asthe seventh grade. Her scholarshipaverage when she was in the seventhgrade was 94; in the eighth grade ;in the ninth grade 87; in the tenthgrade 85; in the eleventh grade is an attractive girl, and we areproud of her record here.—Supt. F. Miss Lillian HortonRaleigh, N. C. 144 Public High Schools, 1916-1917 We have had two controversies like this before this Court, and both werereferred back to find the facts upon evidence. In both cases it was ascer-tained that the county commissioners had supplied ample funds to supportthe schools of the county, and that the complaints of the boards of educationwere without real foundation. For these reasons I think the courts should be extremely careful andguarded in interfering with the estimates and budgets which the representa-tives of the people have deemed sufficient for the support of schools or anyother county expense. Concurring Opinion of Chief Justice Clark Clark. C. J., concurring: When the Legislature authorized the establishmentof four high schools in each county it enacted a uniform system. At first,probably, but few counties could comply to the full extent. The enactmenthas been in force many years, and now all but four counties out of one hun-dred have the prescribed


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjecthighsch, bookyear1917