L ■iHHi The news in this publica tion is released for the press on receipt. THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA NEWS LETTER Published weekly by the University of North Csnolina for its Bureau of Extension. lOVEMBER 3,1920 CHAPEL HHX, N. C. VOL VI, NO. 50 Boara . B. 0. Branson, L. B. Wilson, E. W. Knight. D. D. CarroU, J. B. Bnllitt. Entered as second-class matter November 14, 1914, at the Postoffice at (JhapeJ Hill, N« C., under the act of August 24, 1912 IMPORTANT NEW BULLETINS FIRST COUNCIL BULLETIN The proceedings of the first State and !ouHty Couficil, held at the State tini er sity in September of last year, will 3on'*be going into the mails. It gives to the public brief stenograph- ; reports of thirty-one addresses and iscussions by federal, state, and county ificials who were assembled together )r the first time in North Carolina to ffect closer working relationships in ehalf of increased service to the peo- le of the state. The second meeting • the Council was set for August 17, it was postponed on account of the >ecial session of the legislature. The first Council session was a unique /ent and it occasioned wide-spread imment in the press of the country at rge. The frontispiece of the bulletin ■eserves the editorial of the New York vening Post and the Raleigh News id Observer. The bulletin is issued by the Univer- ty Extension Bureau. A copy can be ad by addressing a request to Dr. L. . Wilson, Chapel Hill, N. C. What Taxes Pay For This bulletin exhibits in detail the rvices that state and county officials :e trying to render to the people of le state in return for the state and >unty taxes they pay. The contents ■e as follows; he State and County Council-Lenoir Chambers. ddress of Welcome—President H. W. Chase. penmg Address—Gov. T. W. Bickett. nified County Government Under Re sponsible Headship—W. C. Boren, ar New Educational System—E. C. Brooks. le Public Health Problem—Dr. W. S. Rankin. ractical Work of the Juvenile Court and Probation Officer—Judge Chas. N. Feidelson. le Revaluation Act—Gov. T. W. Bick ett. le Development of the County Sys tem of Roads and the Need of a County Engineer—W. L. Spoon, le Consolidation of School Districts— George Howard, Jr. )jects and Methods of State Health Work—Dr. A. J. Warren, le Fee and Salary System and the County Fee Fund: Its Importance— W. A. McCirt. le Jungle of County Government—E. C. Branson. le Development of a Highway System by Connecting In.ter-County Roads — Frank Page. le State Program - in Agricultural Work—Dr. B. W. Kilgore, hat is expected of County Welfare Boards and Superintendents—Ro wland F. Beasley. he Paction of Directed Play and Or ganized Recreation in Child Wel fare—R. K. Atkinson, ase Work in Handling Dependent, .Delinquent, and Neglected Children ■ Mrs. Clarence A. Johnson! hjects and Methods of County Health Work-Dr. B. E. Washburn, ooperation of the Federal Government in Building State Roads—E. W. James. arm County Account Keeping and -George of a County—A. T. Allen. Statewide Auditing of County Accounts —J. J. Bernard. Closing Address—Gov. Thomas W. Bick ett. ANOTHER COUNTY BULLEtiN During the last college year four county bulletins were prepared by stu dents in the Rural Social Science de partment of the University. One of these-7-Caston County: Economic and Social—was given to the public last spring. The Halifax county bulletin is just now going into the mails. Two are still in the hands of the printers-the Pitt and Beaufort bulletins. These publications have been financed by the business men of the counties with money for advertising space, and by donations from public-spirited citi zens because of pride in their home counties. In every instance the local alumni of the University, and the coun ty superintendent of schools, have been actively interested. The cooperation of the home folks is absolutely necessary to the publication of these county bulletins. The Univer sity does not have the money to publish them, and if it had it ought not to spend money this way; it is primarily a local county concern. A large number of bulletins are prac tically ready for publication. They merely await the interest and activity of public-spirited citizens in the various i counties. I Swain County Bulletin 1 Swain County: Economic and Social I is a bulletin of ten chapters by Mr. and Mrs. Harry F. Latshaw. The chapter headings are: (1) A Brief History of Swain, (2) Natural Resources and Ad vantages, (3) Industries and-Opportu nities, (4) Facts About the Folks, (5) Wealth and Taxation, (6) Public Schools, (7) Farm Conditions and Practices, (8) Food Production and the Local Market Problem, (9) Things to Be Proud of in Swain, and (10)_ Swain County Problems and Their Solution. The work of the authors on this bul letin registers a high-water mark. There is no such bulletin for any other moun tain county, and it will be a great pity if the lively, alert citizens of Swain do not arrange at some early day for its publication. Reporting; Why and How? J.]^cott, C. P. A. Income Tax and Solvent Credits Amendments — Judge George P. ervation of Childhood-Dr. George I. Cooper. It Hygiene Work in North Carolina -Mrs. Kate Brew Vaughn. ;ical Organization of the Work of he County Welfare Superintendent -A. S. McFarlane. .ax Question from the Taxpayers’ tandpoint—A. J. Maxwell. 4odel Plan of State and Local Tax- tion—Dr. Charles J. Bullock, siplete Program of State Health i^ork—Dr. Allen W. Freeman, ty Government as It Might Be in forth Carolina—Judge Henry G. onnor, Jr. ingthe Teacher Training Agencies WOMAN CITIZENSHIP Continuing its work of helping wo men prepare themselves for their duties as citizens, the bureau of extension of the University has issued a new bulle tin for study by women clubs under the title of Constructive Ventures in Gov ernment, a manual of discussion and study Of women’s new part in the new er fields of citizenship. It has been pre pared by Dr. Howard W. Odum, new professor of sociology and dean of the school of public welfare. The bureau has already issued 3 bul letins on allied subjects which have been studied widely by women’s clubs, Mrs. Thomas W. Lingle’s Americaniza tion Studies of the peoples and move ments that are building up the nation; Prof. D. D. Carroll’s Studies in Citizen ship for women, and Dr. J. F. Hanford’s Our Heritage, a Study through Litera ture of the American Tradition. The new bulletin is not a technical study of civil government but a program of study based on the interpretation of present-day social problems and needs of local, state and national government. Some of the chapters deal with Govern ment and Social problems of the Town and City, Government and Social Prob lems of County, Village, and Open Coun tryside, Government and Public Service to the State. The last chapter deals espe cially with North Carolina, the state ad ministration, public finance and business, public welfare, public health, public education, franchise and voting.—Le noir Chamber. OUR TIMBER SHORTAGE No substantial decrease in the price of lumber and timber for building and manufacture can be expected in the near future. True, wholesale prices TRUE AMERICANISM Henry Van Dyke What is true Americanism and where does it reside? Not on the tongue nor in the clothes nor among the transient social forms, refined or rude, which mottle the surface of life. True Americanism is this: To believe that the inalienable rights of man to life and liberty and the pursuit of happiness are given of God. To believe that any form of power that tramples on these rights is un just. To believe that taxation without representatian is tyranny; that gov ernment must rest upon the consent of the governed, and that the people should choose their own rulers. To believe that freedom must be safeguarded by law and order, and that the end of freedom is fair play for all. To believe not in a forced quality of conditions and estates, but in a true equalization of burdens, privi leges and opportunities. To believe that the selfish interests of persons, classes and sections must be subordinate to the welfare of the commonwealth. To believe that the Union is as much a necessity as liberty is a di vine gift. To believe that a free state should offer an asylum to the oppressed, and be an example of virtue, sobri ety, and fair dealing to all nations. To believe that for the existence and perpetuity of such a state a man should be willing to give his whole service in labor and in life. COUNTRY HOME CONVENIENCES LETTER SERIES No, 33 FARM LIGHTING SET STORAGE BAT^'ERIES—I Like the proverbial chain, every farm lighting set has its weak link, and that link is the storage-battery. The weak ness of this link, however, depends not so much on the material of which it is made as upon the way it is treated. The way the battery is made has something to do with it, of course, but whether it lasts one year or ten depends most large ly on how it is treated from week to week, and month to month. A storage battery is a good deal like the farm horse in some respects. The work you can get out of a horse in the long run depends on the amount of food you give him. If you continually work him too hard and feed him too little he will starve to death. On the other hand over-feeding is not only expensive but dangerous. you like every once in a while to go to a barbecue where you eat just a little more than you really need. If you don’t over-do it, perhaps it is good for your spirits. Regular Rations the Mule Just so with storage batteries. You can’t take more energy out of them than you put in. If you do you will starve them to death, literally. And just like the horse, if you habitually give it more than is necessary you will not only be wasting money but you will soon have your battery in just as bad a condition as if you had starved it. Give your batteries regular rations with an occasional blow out in the way of an overcharge. They like it just as Just Lihe, How Old Is Ann? We have often been asked how long a storage battery will last. It is a good deal like the question. How old is Ann? We have seen batteries go to pieces in a few months. This is quite common with automobile starting and lighting batteries. But the automobile battery bears just about the same resemblance to a farm lighting battery that a Shet land pony does to a fourteen hundred pound farm horse. Did you ever see a man of what you might call comfortable proportions rid ing down the street behind a little Shet land poiiy? That is just the sort of a job a little three-cell automobile battery has when it strains and tugs to start a super-six on a cold day. And the job that a farm lighting battery has in start ing the simple little one-cylinder engine on a farm lighting , set is just about as large as a good big farm horse would have if you hitched him to a brand new rubber-tired sulky. No, there isn’t any comparison be tween the automobile battery and the farm lighting 'battery. And thereby hangs a tale!—P. H. D. have dropped 35 percent in the remote shipping centers during the last six months, but the public is paying more than ever for wood construction and manufactured wooden products of every sort whatsoever. The annual demand is around 56 bil lion board feet of lumber, pulpwood, acid wood, and fuel. What we do not produce at home we must import from abroad, from Canada mainly. As for lumber alone, the annual de mand is around 35 billion board feet. But in 1918 we produced only 32 billion feet, which is the smallest total in 20 years—more than 8 billion feet less than in 1910. Five years ago North Carolina stood fourth from the top in lumber cut, with more than 2 billion board feet to her credit; but in 1918 she fell to the tenth place with one and a quarter billion feet. Similar decreases occur practically everywhere except in the Rocky Moun tain and Pacific Coast states. We are taking about 26 billion cubic feet of material out of the forests of the United States yearly; and we are growing new timber at the rate af about 6 billion cubic feet a year. All of which means that the timber of the country as a whole is being used and destroyed four times as Sast as new timber is growing. Wholesale Consequences As a result the price of wood of any sort for any use whatsoever is begin ning to be prohibitive. When labor and transportation again become nor mal, coal will be cheaper than wood to burn, and brick and concrete cheaper to build with. Wood has at last become a luxury in America as in the Old World Countries. The price of lumber is so high that we are now entering upon a national era of brick and stone, steel and concrete con struction. Sooner or later every coun try moves out of perishable wood into durable brick and stone construction. In America this era has come a century or so earlier than any prophet could have foreseen. Meantime the shortage has forced news print into figures that threaten the weekly press with bankruptcy. The wood-working establishments are with great difficulty securing fit material in steady reliable quantities at any price. Building construction is four years de layed on account of the war, and the housing problem is everywhere acute. Wood construction is well nigh impos sible because lumber and labor are both so high that nobody can figure dividends on costs. Practically every thing is dropping in price except wages and wood. The situation is serious and the gen eral public ought to be accurately in formed about it. Write your Congress man for (1) the June 1920 Report of the Forest Service on Timber Deple tion, Lumber Prices, Lumber Exports, and Concentration of Timber Owner ship, (2; for Circular No. 112 of the U. S. Department of Agriculture on Tim ber Depletion and the Answer, and (3) write the State Geological and Econom ic Survey at Chapel Hill, N. C., for the bulletins on Our Future Hardwood Sup ply, Forest Protection or Devastation, and A Minimum Forest Policy. THE NEW VOTER If the women continue as they are beginning, they will soon know more than their husbands, not only about the wheels of politics but about what makes the wheels go round and round and run over the jay-walking man reformer. Woman has always been clever at using whatever happened to be handy to accomplish the purpose that engaged her attention at the moment. Where a I man pulls a six-shooter or calls out the I reserves to rout the villain, she foils I him with a hatpin. Where he calls ki a plumber and his helper with a wagon load of tools, she reaches up into her back hair and performs prodigies of plumbing with a blond hairpin. Already she is bending the current- events club and the sewing circle to political uses. To her direct mind the why and wherefore and the mechanism of voting are the most important of current events. She opines that she will find the heathen in politics needing her attention, if not her ministrations. She is more absorbed now in the com plexities of the machine than the ob scurities of Browning. j Having cheered herself hoarse at one I national convention without result, she is already planning to go out of the cheering business. At the next conven tion she intends to sit in the back room where the nominating is done. If you will listen to the new voter’s conversation, you will discover that she not only wants to know but that she wants to do. The hand that wields the defensive hatpin may not shoot at the rear tires of the machine that tries to run her down, but it is capable of throw ing tacks in the road. Men have been telling the politicians to “be, good and you’ll be happy’’. Women will tell thejn to “be good or you’ll be sorry”. And she will use the handiest weapon. She is a practiced wielder of the hairbrush and the ruler, and she knows the tender spots.—The Saturday Evening Post., THE LUMBER CUT BY STATES,' 1918 Thirty-two billion board feet, the total output of 22,546 mills, cutting fifty thousand board feet or more each. The output was 8 billion feet less than in 1910, and 5 billion feet less than in;i915. Based on The Forest Service Reports Department of Rural Social Science, University of North Carolina States Board Feet States Board Feet 1 Washington 4,603,123,000 22 New Hampshire ... .... 350,000,000 2 Louisiana 3,450,000,000 23 Kentucky • 340,000,000 3 Oregon. .... 2,710,250,000 23 Montana 340,000,000 4 Mississippi ....1,936,000,000 25 New York .. ..335,000,000 5 Arkansas 1,470,000,000 26 Missouri 273,000,000 6 Texas .... 1,350,000,000 27 Indiana 260,000,000 7 California and Nevada. 1,277,084,000 28 Ohio :... .235,000,000 8 Wisconsin •!. 1,275,000,000 29 Oklahoma 195,000,000 9 Alabama 1,270,000,000 30 Massachusetts ... 176,000,000 10 North Carolina ... ... 1,240,000,000 31 Vermont 160,000,000 11 Minnesota 1,006,000,000 32 New Mexico 88,915,000 12 Florida 950,000,000 33 Arizona 83,661,000 18 Michigan 940,000,000 34 Maryland 71,000,000 14 Virginia 855,000,000 36 Connecticut 64,000,000 15 Idaho 802,629,000 36 Colorado 56,882,000 16 West Virginia 720,000,000 37 Illinois 17 Maine 660,000,000 38 South Dakota 29,533,000 18 Tennessee 630,000,000 39 New Jersey 19,500,000 19 South Carolina... 646,000,000 40 Iowa 20 Pennsylvania 630,000,000 All other States .. 44,817,000 21 Georgia 515,000,000 1 Total ....31,890,494.000