/J The news in this publica tion is released for the press on the date indicated below. the university of north CAROLINA NEWS LETTER Published weekly by the University of North Carolina for its Bureau of Extension. JULY 7, 1915 CHAPEL HILL, N. C. VOL. I, NO. 33 Editorial Bonrd: E. C. Branson, J. (j, deli. Hamilton, L. R, WilBoii, Z. V. Jadd, S R. Winters, L. A. WilUams. Sntered as second-class matter November 14, 1914, at the postofHce at Chapel Hiil, N. C.| under the act of August 24, 1912. NORTH CAROLINA CLUB STUDIES '34 * ■S' ITEM 3: THOMAS J. JARVIS Like .Teffexson, .Tarvia Ix'lievecf pi'o- 'foumlly ill the education of the people, as athe, bed-rock of safety in denioci'atic conv inonwealtlis. Said Seft'erson: Wlioever expects a • people to he ignorant and free expects ■ivliat ue\er was and never will be. ' Said .farvis in Item 3 of his last will and teatauient; “Tlie people of North X'arolina have greatly koiiored me and I -desire to leave on record this final declar ation of iiiy everlasting gratitude to them,, and to make this last plea for the educa- •tion of their children. “InttJligelice ' and virtue mark the standing of any people in State or Na tion, and 1 would therefore urge tiie peo ple to press the education of their chil- lren far beyond aujthing heretofore at-' Xontpteci.” TOO BAD In 77 school distrifets of Wilkes county, '52 per cent or more than half the farmers bought corn last year or failed to raise ample home supplies, .says Sivperintend- ent C. (!. Wright in speaking of his re- ■ eent school surveys. And t/)ur-flfths of these farmers are . owners, not tenants. ■ In tlie census year, Wilkes consumed .330,000 bushels of corn more than the • county produced. Only 16 counties made • a'better showing, but the bill for hn- portc^l corn left the county sonje J300,- ■ 000 (Kjorer. Iowa faruiers raise tlieir own supplies and were wortli $3,386 apiece counting .men, women, and children in 1910; in AVilkes the per capita country wealth was -only 1222. Wilkes iliight grow rich by exporting $1.370,’D0() ' v\orth of bread and meat; i*wt not by importing it year by year. ^ OUGHT TO BE IN EVERY HOME Tlie school edition of The Progressive i>Farmer, June 26, ought to be read thorougiily and thoughtfully by every ■teacher, school official, and patron in -this and other states. It exhibits in an aduiirable way the . range and variety of community interests that need tojconceni the teacher who as pire." to leadersliii) as well as teacher- .ship. \ Nortii Carolina needs competent le.ui- ■ ers as badly as she needs teachers. And ^ Jx’. is a poor teacher who^ is not also a rtjommunity leader. Nortli Carolina Education, The Pro- ; • greasive Farmer-, and Poe’s new volume •on Organizatfon and Co-Operation auioiig i'anners ought to be in every home in .;the state. Wlien our teachers are everywliere ■ -eager students of country life prolilems, and our t'arinerj; are eager readers of edu cational as well as ehurch papers, then North Carolina will move into the first rank in a hundred important particulars. COSTLY CREDIT 8up[)ly-store credit in our cotton coun ties in 1913 cost Sie cOttoii growers $5,- 553,000, says W'. K. Camp, Chief of the Divisii.iu of Markets in our State Agricul tural Department. - If these* farmers had been self-feeding, self-financing farmens they would liave saved this va.st sum. If they had bor rowed at the legal rate and paid casli for supplies they would have saved 14,600,000. Buying farm supplies witli cotton mon ey on time-credit, supply-store account leaves our cotton farmers about five mil lion dollars poorer year by year. THE BANKERS CAN DO IT If Southern bankers and mercliants would refuse to extend credit to farmers pexcept on tlie basis of tlie farmer’s mak ing himself as nearly as po.ssible self-sup porting, says Mr. Bradford Knapp, chief ■of the federal Demonstration it would be the greatest possible step toward a fjermanent and prosperous agriculture in the South. If tlie banks would refuse credit to merchants who do a time-credit liusiness protected by crop liens on cotton and itobacco acreages alone, 41 counties in North Carolina would be’worth seveiityr five million dollars mow in a single year. A half dozen imjiortant men in the banking business of the State can force a greater diversification of crops in a single season than our 63 farm demonstrators c.ln effect in a whole life time. And they can do it almost by lifting or lowering their eyebrows! UNBELIEVABLE WASTE Itluis been estimated, by a commission charged with investigating the matter that we wasted in this coiintry last year ^ISS.OOC.OOO, in new roads badly built, in good roads sadly neglected, and in poor roads clumsily patched 1 It .seems hard for us to learn tliat the systematic inspection . and proper main tenance of good roads is j list as important as the building of tTieiu. We spend money lavishly on improved public high ways and ttien allow them to go to waste in a few years for lack of attention. Mr. .1. Hampton Rich,' representing the State Agricultural Department, will tell thi: Uountr^Tivfe Conference at the University^ily 5-10 about our new Boys’ Hoad Patrol law; which attacks the puz zle of road maintenance, county by coun ty, hooks up the schools with the prob lem and trains the children in civic du ties and responsibilities. LIFE-LONG PROFITS If we can make a whirjwinl campaign, put North Carolina in the headlines all over the ['nited States, and awaki^'ii our own pet)ple to w hat we can do, says Bioii II. Butler-in the Kaleigh News and t)l>- server, the profits will come as long as we live. The Sandhills country is perhaps the most widely known farming region iti'the state. More jieople in the Nprth and West ki^w of Tiloore county, North Car olina, than of any other couiity in the Soilth-east, this side of Florida. Why? Those Tarheels believe in the Sandhills. They believe in themselves, and they have shouted their belief the whole Country over. John T. Patrick began it. The Tufts, Henry Page, Bion II. Butler, The Pine- hurst Outlook, the Southern 1‘ines Tour ist, the Sandhill Farmers’ Association, and the Sandhill Board of Trade have ke]it up a fanfare ever since. Such men, such beliefs, such newspaper itL'iiis, such bunching of efforts, and such a whirlwind campaign are what Butler, Forester and I’arrisli have in mind for the whole of North ('aroliiia. WOMEN ORGANIZE AND PAVE THE WAY IN ORANGE “A\'hat I consider perhaps the greatest forcc^ we have at work in Orange Coun-/ ty”, said Ih’. L. L. Lumsden of the U. S. Public Health Service, the other day, “is the Woman’s Sanitation League.” This is an organization composed of the women of the county whicji has for its purpose the j^romotion and advancement of all health measures in the comnuinity. Said he, ‘''Women are the best adver tisers in the world and what they have done in Orange county in creating favor able public sentiment for this health cam paign is simply marvelously To show you,” he ^ntinued, “that they are work ing aliyng the right line and doing things worth while. I 'vill tell you something of how it is done. “Every woman who becomes a mem ber of the league pledges her efl’orts to three things: First, that her own home shall be provided, as far as she^ herself is able to have it so, and that’s a long way, you know, v.ith some safe and sanitary method for the disposal of all human ex crement. Second, that there shall bo an unpolluted Mater supply for home and famil}', and third, that her home shall lie screened against fiies and mosquitoes. “You see they are doing the real thing and, furthermore, they propose to have this fall a visiting nur.«or sanitary school inspector for their public schools. ‘ ‘Then you have no trouble in getting the co-operation of the,men? “None whatever you see when We get the wives interested, the husbands cOine right along. Especially is this so in health work.” THE UNPARDONABLE SIN President E. K. Graham The University recognizes no antag onist but ignorance in this immortal T)usiness of commonwealth service. Ignorance it conceives as the unpar donable sin of a democracy and on it in e\'ery form it w ould wage relentless warfare. To this end it would unify and co ordinate its whole sj'stem of public e(hication in a spiritual union of ele mentary schools and secondary schools, of agricultural and mechan ical and normal colleges, of private and denominational schools anl col leges—all as a. means to the end of the great commonwealth for which men have dreamed and ilied but scarcely daretl to hope. Fully conscious of the confusions of prejudice and the blind unreason of self-interest and greed, it is even inort* conscious of the curativi' powers of the democratic state and its indom- itable.purpose to be wholly free. So it wonld enlist all vocations and all ]irofessions in a comprehensive, statewide programme of achiex’ing as a practicable reality Burke’s concept ion of the state as “a partnership in all science, a partnership in all art, a partnership in every virtue an.I in all perfection, and since such a partner ship cannot be attained in one gener- atioT[i, a partnership between all thf)se who are dead, and those « ho are yet unborn.’' UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF EDUCATION LETTER SERIES NO. 35 RURAL LIFE CONFERENCE, UNIVERSITY OF N. C. JULY 5-10 Tlie annual session of the Knral Lite Conference will be held at the University of North Carolina .fiily 5--10. The Con- fen'iice hours will be'3;30-5 :30 p. m. for each day of the week. The Program Monday. Houses and grounds for rural schools. 1. Ivequirenients. of rural school houses. 2. The beautifying of rural school grounds. Tuesday. CUub work for boys and girls. Wednesday. I'mprovenient of rural homes. 1. AVater supply. 2. Gar den, fruits an I vegetables. 3. Home dairy. 4. Type of home for country. Thursday. Hural school improvement. 1. Work of school betterment asso ciations. 2. Play and recreation for rural schools.. Frilay. Kural sanitation. 1. Home sanitation. 2. School sanitation. Saturday. The work of the Kural Cliuroh and Sunday .School. Who Are Invited All good citizens who are interested in the improvement of country conditions in North Carolina are cordiaUy invited to this conference and urged to bring with them some \ ital suggestion for the solu tion of our big country problem. Special Lecturers Among those who will be present to di rect the thought of the Conference will be Dr. William A. McKeever of the Lfniver- sity of Kansas; President E. K. Graham; Commissioner \V. A. Graham; Dr. II. Q. Alexander, President of Farmers’ Union; j\Ir. T. E. Brown, Director of Boys’ Corn Club; Miss Mary G. vShotwell; Miss Edna lieinhart; Dr. W. S. Hankin, Secretary of State Boaril of Health; Dr. F. E. Har rington, U. S. Public Health Service; !Mr. J. Ilami)ton .Rich, State Agricultural De partment; Rev. B. R. Lacy; Rev. Charles E. Maddry; Miss Edith Royster; Mr. J. S. Moran, Washington, 1). cf; Mr. J. A. Reed, State Experiment Station; Director N. W. 'W'alker; Professor W. C. Coker; Professor E. C. Branson; Professor Zeb X. Judd; Professor T. F. Ilickerson; and Jlr. Fred Yoder. SPONGING OUT ILLITERACY ftlr. John Paul Jones of Tarboro, the state leader of the Junior Order of Amer ican IMechanics, is leading his hosts againsts iUiteracy in North Carolina with the zeal of a crusader in the twiUght times of modern history. He is campaigning the Moonlight School with a fervor that ought to stir the patriotism of every worthy ‘soul in North Carolina. Our cap goes off to him and his Order. THE ARMY OF THE UN EMPLOYED Last April and 51ay saw the end of an other year’s work in all of the public and private schools in North Carolina. Fiilly ten thousand tei^chers and more than four hundred thousand boys and girls walked out from the schoolhouse. Somebody locked tlie doOrs and sent the keys to the chairman of the school com mittee, and the long summer- vacation began to drag along. Ten Thousand Teachers Just tliiiik of Tt! Ten thousand teach ers out of a j«b for at least three months ill the year! W'bat will tliey do for a living during all that time? \\'ell, some of them will go to a teachers institute or to a summer school for a few w eeks at; great expense for ill-paid teachers. Many of those who do this will get a call to a better paying place and their former pu pils will lose their teachers who kmyv their ways and disi)ositions and class- standing better than any new teacher possibly can; and—well Who is to blame? Four Hundred Thousand Pupils \Mien the pupils left school,-they ran home, put away their books, and set about finding a way to spend the monot onous vacation time. The town boy, may be,, got a job in some store; his sister began to stay about the house and help her mother in the care of the home. The boys in tlie coun try went to work in the fields While the girls, like their town cousins, went to heli)ing their mothers in the household duties. All this is good, but in prac tically every case, tliat ^vhi^^i had been thought about and studied almut in the schoolroom did not follow the pupils to their homes and enter consciously into the vacation work; and—well. Ought it to be so? Five Thousand Empty School- houses The schoolhoti.«e is there where it wa.s when the teachers and the children and the parents left it on the last day of school and the key is still hanging on the wall in the chairman’s home. The weeds, may be, have Ix'gun to grfnv in the walks and on the grounds around thi^ building; the well is-^[W.ssibly .settling down into just an unused hole in the ground where typhoid germs will have every chance to g(‘t ready to kill people iiNthe fall, and things have a “put-out- of-business” look all around the .school pr('mi.«es; and—well, Should the.se things b('? \ Fifteen Thousand Committee- \ men Many of the inembers of\the school conniiitteemen are thinking tkiat some thing miust be done with the school .sys tem to keep the great army of the public schools from this annual “breaking up”, and to annul this inaction and waste in the suiimier time. Here is an oi>portunity for a fine piece of constructive work by somebody. . Ten th»iisand teachers, four hundred thou sand iHipils, and ten million dollars worth of (‘(luipment idle, idle,_ idle for three long summer months; and—well. Why allow a ten-million/dollar inve.st- ment to he idle? A Better Use of Vacations On the closing day of .school, the chil dren ga\ e some sort of an entertainnieiit that was a credit to them and to their ti'aciibrs, and men and women who had not met together as a connnunity for a year possibly came together at the .school house auil had a delightful time listening to the children of the neighborhood en tertain the .i>ublic with their songs and s[)eeches and othei-exercises. On every Sunday since that good com mencement day the people have met iu the difi'erent churches c>f the neighbor hood, but they have not met (me time as n conununity for pleasure, entertainment, or general comnuinity uplift, and the proof of it is that there stands the school house, a common meeting jilace fi.)r all the people—there it stands, shut up tight and unused; and—well. Why? Of course we must have vacations but tlie thought occurs that we could diave a better, a more profitable, a more educa tive time in the vacation days thau we are now having. ROCKY MOUNT: ANOTHER LIVE CENTER In the census year, the food and feed consumed by man and beast in Nash and I’.dgecombe counties amountcd to $3,641,- 000 more than the farmers of these two counties jirodnced. That is to say, every five years as inucli wealth, in cold cash, goes out of these two counties, as the farmers have been able to accumulate in some 175 years. In other words, if this vast sum, or the most of it, could be hehl down by a sys tem of live-at-home farming, the farm wealth of these two splendid counties would be doubled in five years. The farm ers, tlid 'merchants, and the liankers would reap the benefits alike. The business men, the farmdemonstra tors, and the farmers are therefore mov ing towaril a Twin County Board of Trade. They are exploring the foundations of agricultiiie as a business in Nash and lOdgecombe and the relations of Rocky ]Mount to permanent prosperity in the surro'uiuling farm .regions. They are puz zling out the local market problems that concern home-raised grains, bay and forage, pork and beef; and scattering iiir formation among the farmers about bet ter farming. MORE FARM LIFE SCHOOLS Gaston County has just established a farm life school. The building and twenty acres of grounj-have already been provided. Union and other counti-es are moving toward farm life schools. Orange Coun ty ought to be thinking about this thing and planning for it earnestly. Outside of Chapel Hill and Hillsboro, there is not a high school in the dounty for some 5,000 school children. STAY-IN-SCHOOL WEEK It is a sad fact that too many children in our Southern schools, especially in ru ral schools, never finish the work of the elementary grades and still fewer ever go on to high school. True, public high schools have not been long in existence here in the South, but in too nian.y places the opportunity is not seized by any con siderable portion of the boys and girls. In New Orleans a Stay-iii-School Cam paign has been organized to be conduct(>d during a stated week in the school year. Not only are the sehdols and school offi- ' ■ -cials called upon, but the press, civic as sociations, board of trade, alumnae asso ciations of the high schools, and all citi zens are urgeil to participate actively in stimulating an interest and desire on the part of the boys and girls to stay in school. \\’hether or not more children are kept in school because of this cam))aigli it is / certain that the citizens of New Orleans know more about their schools and are more vitally interested in them than evei- before; \\ by not do something similar in Nortli ,Carolina? THE EMERSON STADIUM Work has been started upon the hand some new stadium given to the University of North Carolina by Capt. Isaac Fj. Emerson of Baltimore. It will be finish ed in early September under the direct ion of Mr. William Parker, another loyal son of North Carolina. The stadium will he built of reinforced concrete. The seating capacity w ill be 2,500. Therewill becjuarters for the ’Var sity and the visiting teams. The batlis^ will be finished in inarble and provided''^ with every modern appointment. The grounds will be enclosed with wire fenc ing set in concrete posts. The total cost will be about Ji25,000. If anybody is prouder of the new sta dium than Capt. Emerson and Mr. Par ker, it will be Professor M. C. S. Noble, through whom the gift was announced last year.