The news m 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 Narth Carolina iot its Bureau of Extension. OCTOBER 11,1916 CHAPEL HILL, N. C. VOL. II, NO. 46 Editorial Boardi B. C. Braasoa, J. O. deRi Hamilton, L. B. Wilson, -T. H. Johnston, B. H. Thornton, &. M. MoKie. Entered as seoond-olass matter November U, 1914, at the,DOstoffloe at Chapel Hill, N. C., under the act of August 24,191J. NORTH CAROLINA CLUB STUDIES ou: I wa fpri FIRE PROTECTION As the cool nights come on and the cloudy days call for fires to iireserve our jcomfort, it is well to stop a bit and con sider how we may protect ourselves and our children from the fire hazard. The Insurance Commissioner of this ate is trying to teach us how to save our property and our lives. He is sending out pamphlets and circulars all the time Jelling us how we can be safer and hap pier. Send him your name and ask for his literature. It is interesting and startling as well as instructive. Ask especially for is Safety Don’ts for Mothers. HOUSEHOLD HELPS ^ Not all the aids and helps coming from the U. 8. Department of Agriculture are for the men on the farms, and justly so. j In the News Letter of this Department for September 20th are descriptions of fcveral household devices which may be Msily and quickly made by any man or P>oy in the country home with the least ,bit of mechanical skill. The devices are a scrubbing chariot to aid housewives in wiping the floors; a ombined china closet, serving table, and oiler tray; and a folding ironing board. This bulletin is important to demon stration agents, women field agents, de- lestic science teachers in the country districts, farmers and farm wives. ANOTHER SCHOOL PAPER We are in receipt of The Bulletin from Superintendent L. R. Crawford of the lertford schools. As the first number ays, it is a journal devoted to education al news and i:onmiunity progress. Like the other work directed by Sujier- “itendent Crawford it is peat, thorough, "lid live with breadth as well as depth and length of view. We welcome this newcomer in the field f journalism and hope it may serve to stimulate school interest in Perquimans, 'o teach the pupils forceful English and o let the people of the county know how uch power education cau be made to exert when properly directed. A TOMATO CLUB BULLETIN There is a new bulletin from the nited States Department of Agriculture ~iving a series of ten most valuable les- ons on tomatoes. In addition to giving worth while in formation about tomatoes and tomato aising, there is specific help about dub organization, community and fair ex- ibits. With the suggestions given here, there ’s no good reason why any rural school in the state can not do as much as the school with a special helper in this work. The bulletin is No. 392, Lessons ou To matoes for Rural Schools, IT. S. Depart ment of Agriculture, AVashington, D. C. CAROLINA CLUB OFFICERS The officers of the North Carolina Club for 1916-17 were elected on Monday even ing September 25, as follows: President, J. A. Capps, GaSton county. Secretary, S. H. Hobbs, Jr., Sampson county. vSteering committe, E. C. Branson, Wake county; D. E. Eagle, Iredell coun ty; W. E. Price, Rockingham county; C. C. Miller, Watauga county; .J. A. Capps, Gaston county; E. R. Rankin, Gaston county; R. E. Price, Rutherford coimty. The Year’s Program The nineteen studies and discussions this year cover (1) The Production of Primary Wealth in North Carolina, (2) Wealth-Retention, and (3) Taxation and the Common AVeal. The first meeting of the year occura on 'Monday evenimg in Room No. 8 Peabody building, and the program is— The Wealth Created in North Carolina by Agricultuw, by S. H. Hobbs, Jr., Sampson county. The Wealth Created by Manufacture in North Carolina, by W. E. Price, Rock ingham county. examinaticwi for physical defects and de- ficiences. The work was done by Dr. T. M. Jordan of the State Board of^Health in Raleigh. The physical condition of the children was found to be far above the average, the most serious defects being bad |teeth and defective eyesight. Fortunately, the people of Chapel Hill are enlightened enough to know the full significance of these defects. Toxin in the blood, from blind abscesses, usually at the roots of bad teeth, means anemia, rheumatism in some form, digestive troubles and lowered vitality and energy. The parents will promptly have the teeth and eyes of rheir children attended to. The schools of Washington also under went medical inspection, beginning Mon day, October 2. Dr. A. C. Bulla, under the direction of the State Board of Health, did the work. On finishing the task in Washing ton, Doctor Bulla then examined the school children of Beaufort county. This town and county made provision for this edvicational-health work last spring. UP-TO-DATE SCHOOLS Last week the school children of the Chapel Hill Public School went under STRIKES A HIGH NOTE In last week’s issue we featured an ex tract from the address of Mr. J. E. Ed- gerton to the National Manufacturers’ Association at the recent session in New York City. Mr. Edgerton is a native North Caro linian, by birth a Johnston county man. He is president of the Tennessee Manu facturers Association and a director of the National Association. This address was published in full in The Raleigh News and Observer, Septem ber the 24th. It is an important mes sage to the entire nation, and it is worth reading and re-reading again and again. The rare charm of the English of this address is of a sort with its high moral standards. It is readable, and signifi cant in the highest degree. In brief, -Air. Edgerton’s message runs as follows; Capital has obligations as well as rights. It concern humanity as well as dividends —the making of men as well as making cf money. It is not a son of Mammon, but a servant of man. It is bottomed upon strict integrity and spotless fair dealing. It is righteously self-defensive, but also it is just and humane in its deal ings with labor. It is properly involved in social problems and civic life. Its ac tivities ought generously to lift the level of national well-being, and to clarify the atmosphere of practical politics. These are the things that are or ought to be fundamentally true of industrial capital in America. The best way to protect rights is to discharge duties faithfully. But send for tljis address and read it. £t is well worth while. UNFAVORABLE TO FREE DOM Tenantry is unfavorable to freedom. It lays the foundation for separate or ders in society, annihilates the love of country, and weakens the spirit of in dependence. The tenant ha-s in fact no country, no hearth, no domestic altar, no household god. The homeowner, on the contrary, is the natural supporter of a free gov ernment, and it should be the policy rtf republics to multiply their free holders, as it is the policy of monarchs to multiply t leir tenants,—Thomas Hart Benton. A Rarely Fine Record We take pleasure in adding that Wil mington and New Hanover have been celebrated in the public prints by Dr. C. W. Stiles, of the U. S. Public Health Service, for the superior quality of at tention given to puljlic health and hy giene, and to remarkable achieve ments in this field of public ser\'ice. All told, no community in this country makes any better showing in this important matter. MILL PLAY GROUNDS The other night in Durham we looked upon a beautiful spectacle—some 2500 happy people, children, young boys and girls, fathens and mothers all enjoying themselves to the utmost on the play grounds of the Carr mills. The crowd was impressively well dressed, well set up, self-respecting and well behaved. The music of the band in the pavilion, the twinkling electric lights in the trees and shrubbery, the grassy open spaces, the perpetual motion of eager tot* and kiddies in the ]>layground enclosures were altogether a charming introduction to Wonderland VVe found a dear old soul sitting alone I with a quiet smile on her face. We ' stopped to ask her what she was thinking about. ' “I wasn’t thinking,” she said, “I was just a-wonderin if Heaven would be as purty as this.” She had just moved into this mill * group. All her life she had been a mill hand, but never before had she ever found anything beautiful in the world— nothing at least that charmed her senses like this fairyland scene. Investing in Humanity The Carrs are using for playgrounds a fifteen acre lot in front of their mills, worth perhaps 5’40,000 for mill sites. But instead they have converted it into a well kept park devoted to recreation and beau ty. The playground outfit cost some JillOO, and it is the best that money can buy. i There is a baseball diamond for the boys and basketball grounds for the girls. A similar playground has been planned for HIGH STANDARDS We are indebted to Dr. Charles T. Nesbitt, the County Health Ofticer of New the mill people in Carrboro. The apparatus Hanover, for calling our attention to the has already been ordered, and will be in fact that no serious epidemics exist among stalled in the early Spring, the meat animals of that immediate sec- These investments in fresh air, exer tion, that tuberculosis in cattle is rare, cise and happiness for their operatives is and that under local regulations no tuber- quite of a sort with the loan fund, the cular meat animal or any part of the hospital service, and trained nurses of same is allowed to be sold—a standard the Carr mills. that is even higher than that of the Fed eral meat inspectors. Not a single ani mal presented for slaughter at the Wil mington abattoir during the month of We have spent six weeks in trying to get accurate information about similar investments by other textile mills in North Carolina. We know of other mill July was found to be unfit for slaughter playgrounds in Raleigh and Charlotte, for any reason. j We should be glad have full accounts of these and any others. Good Milk THE SECOND OPEN LETTER UNIVERSITYJSCHOOL OF EDUCATION L£TTER;SERIES no. 94 . THE RURAL SCHOOL TERM The lack of equal school privileges the for farm boy and farm girl as compared with the school privileges provided for the city boy and the city girl, in length of school term, in equipment, m professional su pervision, and in the qualification |of teachers, are injustices that might have to be tolerated in a despotism but are dis criminations that should have no place in a government of the people, by the people, and for the people. But we are not through yet with the length of fhe school term as one of the rankest discrimina tions against the farm boy and the farm girl in our public school policy. Maryland Lowest The per cent of daily attendance of ev ery 100 pupili enrolled in the rural schols of Maryland, according to the Bulletin of the Bureau of Education, 1913, No. 8, entitled “The Status of Ru ral Education in the United States,” by A. C. Monahan, is only 51 per cent, the lowest percentage of attendance in the rural schools of all States in the Union. Delaware comes next with 51.4 per cent. Colorado ranks third with 53.6 per cent. The three States ranking highest in per centage of daily attendance in the rural schools are as follovvs: Oregon, 90.6; Connecticut, 88.4; Massachusetts, 86. It It is evident, therefore, that Maryland, with the lowest percentage of rural school attendance, is 39.6 per cent below Ore gon with the highest percentage of rural school attendance. Oregon Leads If the rural school attendance were raised from 67.6 per cent—the average daily attendance in the rural public schools of the United States—to 90.6 per cent, the average daily attendance in the rural public schools of Oregon J it would mean an increase of the rural school term in effect and in the aggregate for the country at large of 23 per cent. It would seem that 9.4 per cent of the actual en rollment, as in the case of Oregon, is a sufficient allowance for all reasonable ab sences—such as sickness, necesity of pu pils being absent as wage earners in or der to properly support the family, and all other reasonable excuses. Oregon has found it so. What Oregon has done ev ery other State in the Union can do if it only will. Who is ready to say that ev ery State should not do this for the farm boy and the farm girl?—J. L. McBrien, ; School Extension Agent, Federal Educa- : tion Bureau. Every city in America, says he, mar-; kets milk with a much greater bacteria count than a hundred thousand per cu- In its open letter to college men of the bic centimeter. The health practice of South, issued at the beginning of the Massachusetts is probably the most per- present year, the University Commission feet we have in America, and the maxi- urged them to unite their efforts with mum fixed for Boston is five hundred those of the press, the pulpit, the bar, the thousand bacteria per cubic centimeter, officers of the law, and all other agencies The milk counts published by various laboring for the elimination of the mon- cities, including Wilmington, are de- ster evil of mob violenoe. These agencies signed to show especially the extent to have labored diligently and with substan- which improvement in dairy practice has tial results as is indicated by the decrease progressed in a given section. of the average annual number of lynch- The last report shows only one dairy ings from 171 for the decade 1886-1895 to with a bacteria count of more than a 70 for the decade 1906-1915. Neverthe- hundred thousand per cubic centimeter; less the Commission wishes to reiterate twelve with fifty thousand or less; and its appeal with renewed emphasis, know- seven with ten thousand or less. Nine ing that the eradication of so virulent a ' dairies submitted no samples. social disease as the lynching mania can ) be effected only by the prolonged and •igorous efforts of sane and patriotic cit izens. Rightly Directed Education In this letter the Conunission wishes to direct the attention of the college men to the educational aspect of the race ques tion, inasmuch as the solution of all hu man problems ultimately rests upon right ly directed education. In its last analy sis education simply means bringing forth all the native capacities of tiie individual for/the benefit both of himself and of so ciety. It is axiomatic that a developed plant, animal, or man is far more valua ble to society than the undeveloped. It is likewise obvious that ignorance is the most fruitful source of human ills. Fur thermore it is as true in a social as in a physical sense that a chain is no stronger i chan its weakest link. The good results | chus far obtained, as shown by the Ne-: 'ro’s progress in recent years, prompt | die Commission to urge the extension of bis educational opportunities. | 4 Larger Share for the Negro! The inadequate provision for the edu-1 cation of thenegro is more than an injustice I CO him ;it is an injury to the white man.The South cannot realize its destiny if one- third of its population is undeveloped and inefficient. For our common welfare we must strive to cure disease wherever we find it, strengthen w-hatever is weak, and develop all that is undeveloped. The initial steps for increasing the efficiency and usefulness of the Negro race must necessarily be taken in the school room. There can be no denying that more and better schools with better trained and better paid teachers, more adequate su pervision and longer terms are needed for the blacks as well as the whites. The Negro schools are, of course, parts of the school systems of their respective States, and as such share in the progress and prosperity of their State systems. Our appeal is for a larger share for the Negro, ou the ground of the common welfare and common justice. He is the weakest link in our civilization and our welfare is indissolubly bound up with his. Many means are open to the college men of the South for arousing greater public interest in this matter and for pro moting a more vigorous public effort to this end. A right attitude in this as in other public questions is a condition precedent to success. For this reason the Commission addresses to Southern college men this special appeal.—Signed by J. J. Doster, University of Alabama; D. Y. Thomas, University of Arkansas; James M. Farr, Florida; R. J. H. DeLoach, Georgia; Wm. O. Scroggs, Louisiana; W. L. Kennon, Mississippi; E. C. Bran son, North Carolina; Josiah Morse, South ■ Carolina; James D. Hoskins, Tennessee; ' William S. Sutton, Texas; W. M. Hun- ' ley, Virginia. OUR WEALTH POSSIBILITIES The September 14 number of the Man ufacturers Record is devoted to the Chem-> ical Potentialities of the South. Thiti particular issue was inspired by Dr. Charles H. Herty, President of the American Chemical Society, and Smith Professor of (Jeneral and Industrial Chemistry in the University of Xorth Carolina. Dr. John E. Teeple of Eastun, Pa., pays tribute to Dr. Herty in his article and gives an interesting account of the Herty tur|ientiiie cup system whereby ten million dollars a year is saved to the South. Two other Carolina men also contribute to this special issue of the Record—-Dr. Francis P. \'enable and Dr. Joseph Hyde Pratt. -No other University in the coun try is represented by so large a number of contributors. Dazzling Opportunities The story is so fascinating that it has laken us two weeks or more to go through die Record’s account of the mineral, umber, and w'ater power resources and possibilities of the South. The fifty or inore articles sweep the entire field of southern industrial activities, enterprises, and opportunities. And this account of the Soudi is writ ten not by Southerners in a fever of provincial pride, but by eminent indus trial engineers at work in colleges and corporations the whole country qver. What the South is doing is creditable. What remains to be done and the re wards for doing it are dazzling.' This copy of the Manufacturers Record ought to be well thumbed by college stu dents, faculty members, and capitalists everywhere. The Southerner who leaves the South today to seek larger opportunities and rewards elsewhere lacks intimate acquaint ance with the land of his birth. He is pitifully unimformed if he thinks the pot of gold lies at the other end of the rain- bow. A Critical Deficiency In every Southern school, the South is a proper curriculum concern, along with the achievements of other lands in other times and climes. We need to teach chemistry and electricity and physics, and we need to train re search workers in these fields of inquiry; but also we need to train students for skilled industrial engineering of every sort. In the United States in 1914, in 46 teaching institutions for graduate work 619 degrees of Ph. D. were conferred, says Dr. W. R. Whitney of Schenectady; but only six of these were in the South. ^ Aside from medical research, there are 28 grants for scientific research in the United States in 1916; but none in the Southern states. There were 32 grants for medical research but only one in the South. The South lacks a sufficient number of industrial leaders, says Dr. Charles E. Coates of the Louisiana State University. We have raw materials in abundance. We have cheap fuel and water power, suitable and reliable labor. We need capital, business initiative and skil^, and technical leadership. Without these our resources and advantages will mock ua for another half century.