THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA NEWS LETTEH The ae->vs in this publi cation is released for tlie press Oft receipt. Published Weekly by the University of North Caro lina for the University Ex tension Division. JULY 23, 1924 CHAI^EL HILL, N. C. THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA PRESS VOL. X, NO. 36 Sditorl.l a„.rd. B. 0. Branson. 3. H. Hobbs. Jr.. L. K. Wilson. B. W Er.'db., D. O. C.orroll. J. B.Bnllltt, H W. O.ino! Bawred aa aecanji-claea marj#-r Navambflr 14. 1914, at the Poatofflceat Chapel Hill, N. C., under the actsf Aaeraat 24, 1111 VALUE OF FACTORY PRODUCTS, 1919 XXXII-DRINH IN DENMASK It is fair to say at the start that water is a common drink in Denmark. It is really a beverage among the Danes. It is universally served in the cafes and restaurants,in the hotel dining rooms, and in private homes. It is delicious water, soft and pure and pal atable as one might expect from the springs and wells of a sand-clay-pebble area. Not so in Germany and not so in France, for both are limestone coun tries in the main, and in general the water has the odor and pronounced taste of surface seepage through de cayed Kmestone foundations. Outside the limited area of granite formation it is not safe to drink water in either country. It is even difficult to use it for shaving, bathing, or washing clothes. Nobody expects you to drink water in France and Germany. The natives do not drink it as a rule. They consider it good for cooking and scrub bing but not for drinking—good for dumb animals but deadly for humans. More than once we upset the whole es tablishment calling for drinking water in German and French cafes. Drink ing water is ready at hand for every body in American hotel lobbies and usually it is ice water, but in Europe if you want water to drink you ring for it and pay for it with a tip. One can buy anything to drink from the little hand carts that run alongside the trains in the French railway stations anything but water. When one chances upon it, it is bottled Vichy or St.Evian from the granite regions of central France, but in Germany you do not of ten have a chance of this sort. We traveled across the Atlantic on a French boat. Wine was served free of charge and in unlimited abundance on the dining room tables at the luncheon and dinner hours, but you paid three francs a bottle for all the water you got to drink. Nowhere on the railway trains of the continent is there any water to drink. The most acute suf fering we experienced was nine hours of thirst on a delayed train from Paris to Basle. When at last the dining car was attached to our train we swarmed into it and our bill for water alone was two good American dollars. But water is a fairly common bever age in Denmark. Water bottles are common on the tables of hotel dining rooms, restaurants, and cafes "every where and the water is distinctly;^good for all the uses of water at home. But also every other kind of drink is com mon except the fantastic mixed drinks of the old days in the United^ States and the deadly drinks of the Volstead law era. However, one may find American bars and American drinks in the large cities of every European country—not only American drinks but also the American fashion of standing at a bar and gulping drinks down with a single swallow after the manner of the film picture heroes. The Europeans criticize it as primitive and vulgar but they are developing the habit more and more across the Atlantic. Unlimitfid DrinKin^ The drinks of Denmark are unlimited in variety and quantity, indeed they cover Denmark like the dew—beer, porter, stout, wines, liquors, appetiz ers, everything in fact except absinthe. And everybody drinks one thing. or another or all of these, men, women, j and children alike. There are not now I and never were any bar rooms in Den- j mark in the American sense of the! term, but drinks are served to order in j every cafe, restaurant, inn and hotel 1 and equally freely served in private I homes. Every grocery store sells hot- j tied malt drinks, wines, brandies, and I grain, potato, and sugar-beet alcohols, j The beers and porters are made in Den-1 mark and brewing is perhaps the larg- i est manufacturing business of the | Danes. The wines are usually imported ; and the Spanish-Portugese wines are [ inexpensive. Imported beer is high! because of a protective tariff, and so ■ ■ also are the imported fruit and grain j in whiskey drinking Denmark. And alcohols. A considerable revenue is i he would certainly be a stupid observer THE UNIVERSITY AND THE PEOPLE The higher educational institu tions in the state are more alive to day than ever before to the civic and social service which they owe the people. Especially is this true of the University, which is heading the great onward movement. It is well. Higher education has frequently been indicted on several counts—in effectiveness, formalism, tradition alism, irreverence, and agnosticism. The educational world is recogniz ing that not the aristocracy of in tellect so much as the democracy of culture must prevail; that the real test of the University is its civic and social service rendered, and society at large is demanding that the col lege take its active part in human affairs. Hence it has come about in recent years that some of the most far-reaching and uplifting sociolog ical movements i;i the state have been headed and largely directed by men educated at the University of North Carolina. This is a very hope ful sign and is fraught with great possibilities as the scores of young graduates go out from its halls this month.—Sanford Express. derived by the state from the tax on imported .brandies and whiskies. The Danes like all the rest of the Scandana- vian peoples crave strong drinks. Com monly the Dane wants a small glass of aqua vitae or fiery grain alcohol with who could not see that light wines and beers as thoroughly alcoholize a people as the prevalent strong drinks of the British Isles and the Scandinavian countries. My deliberate conclusion is that light drinks settle none of the his glass of beer, and the habit of mix- | problems of alcoholism. Norway for ing these drinks is almost as common ; instance is a country of free or nearly among the women. j fj-gg beers and wines, with prohibition The nearest approach to the Ameri- j laws against brandies and whiskies be- can barroom is the country saloon j yond a stated small amount monthly, where the peasants congregate on Sun-1 In other words, the Norwegians have, days and other holidays to drink and i or had while we were in Denmark, ex talk without interruption by their i actly what some people advocate in women folks. The wine shop of the this country, namely, light beers and farm village in France is a similar wines. Nevertheless the bootlegging meeting place for the small farmers, of strong drinks into Norway threat- The French village wine shop has its ened to throw the whole kingdom into counterpart in the German must or civil war in the fall of 1923. My con- cider hails. And I may add that alco holic saturation is certainly as com mon in the wine shops of rural France and the hard cider halls of rural Ger many as in the whiskey shops of rural Denmark. Family DrinKiag But outside the country regions of Denmark, France, and Germany,it is the whole family that seats itself around a restaurant or cafe table to spend the evening or the holiday eating, drinking and having a social good time in general. They rarely ever drink without eating, but they eat and drink unbelievable quantities before the evening is over. It goes without saying that roystering parties, drunken and rowdy, frequent ly make the night hideous in the small hours of the morning in beer drinking Germany, in wine drinking France, and • will power of the individual to drink in elusion was that lawlessness in Nor way is very like the lawlessness of the United States, and that light wines and beers solve none of the drink problems of a country. Inhibition in DenmarK What Denmark has in her liquor laws and practices is certainly better than the lawlessness of Norway. Upon an average there is one country saloon for every 360 Danes the country over, but neither in the large cities nor in the country regions of Denmark did I discover as many signs of drink and drunkenness as anybody can see around the'railway stations and hotels of any state in America, Utah alone excepted. As a matter of fact Denmark does not believe in prohibition. It does believe in inhibition. That is to say, in the moderation and to stop short of drunk- , enness. The drunkard pays a swift I penalty for his weakness in Denmark. I And there are weak people in Denmark • as in every other land and country. But j what the drunkard and his family face ' are penalties that stagger the excess- ^ ive drinker- not the penalties of law so I much as the inevitable penalties of so- I cial custom. For instance, he faces the city workhouse or ladegaard as the Danes call these institutions. The workhouse inmates are called lade- ' gaard-Iemmers. The drunkard gets I into the workhouse where he receives ! shelter, food and medical attention, and the daily job of the ladegaard-lem- mer is to sweep the gutters of the streets. Moreover he sacrifices his old-age pension, for no man or woman who receives public charity or appears on the court records of conviction may expect state or municipal pensions in old age. But another penalty stares him in the face, namely, the loss of credit. A man who drinks to excess cannot be a member of a local cooperative credit union or short-loan society as the Danes call them. There are 168 of these societies and membership is a badge of public honor. If he is expelled from his credit society his name is worth nothing at any bank. The loan cashier asks the would-be borrower what his post office is, and turning swiftly to the directory of credit-society members asks if he is a member. If the bor rower says No, the cashier turns down his application without further parley no matter what property collateral may be offered. If the borrower has been dismissed from one of these credit so cieties and obtains a short loan under false pretense of membership he is li able to indictment in the courts. If he stands convicted of this or any other offense against the law he forfeits his old-age pension as well as his credit. It is a serious matter because in Denmark business is based on credit as in every other country of the world. But life and business are probably more inti mately related to credit in Denmark than anywhere else in the known world. Weakness of will in the matter of drink penalizes a man in Denmark, I fell upon a sad instance in illustration of this fact in Copenhagen. The son of one of the parliamentary leaders, a young man approaching thirty years of age, was working for his doctorate de gree in the University. He was digging out his doctorate dissertation in the offices of a Cooperative Central in Co penhagen. He was a Jutlander and he could not withstand the temptations of gay life in the capital city of Denmark. He was promptly shut out of the Co operative Central and because of that fact was just as promptly sponged off the University roll. The Danish Ideal The ideal of the Dane.s is inhibition not mean teetotalism. It means moder ation, say the Danes, and they stoutly contend that temperance in the Bible is properly translated moderation. It was the Lutheran pastor of a country church in Denmark who drew down his Greek dictionary and argued out this interpretation of the word in the Epistles of St. Paul. The temperance movement in Den mark is an increasingly strong move ment. The members of the temperance societies have already reached a total of of some 200,000, and I was told that the number was rapidly increasing. But I found the temperance hotels in Den mark serving light wines and beers just as any other Danish hotel. They are not the cold-water temperance hotels of England and Scotland. Temperance does not mean total abstinence in Den mark. It means temperance or mod eration in the use of alcholic drinks. And there is a prohibition movement in Denmark. The prohibition conven tion met in Copenhagen during my stay in the city. The delegates met in the fervor of the“two or three gathered together in an upper chamber”; but my guess is that prohibition will never command more than a handful of fol lowers in Denmark. The Danes con sider prohibition Norway a fearful ex ample and the United States a still more fearful example. They stoutly maintain that moderate drinking is all told a far less evil than the widespread lawlessness of prohibition countries. I am not arguing the matter. I am simply giving the situation in Denmark as faithfully as I can, with glances at the great problems of alcohol in other European countries. —E. C. Branson, Copenhagen. DOES EDUCATION PAY? Constantly the college graduate is confronted by the query. Does Edu cation pay? To some it does not, but there are failures in every line and these, for the most part, were failures in College. Education does not insure success, it merely makes the chance better. Dean Coffee of the University of Minnesota Agry^cultural College recently published some statistics in the Minneapolis Journal showing the effect of education upon farmers in that region. Men of high-school education, he says, on these farms earned about five hundred dollars yearly; those with some college training made about six hundred dollars annually; but those with a complete college training had an average yearly income of more than three thousand dollars. Only thirty-one persons outof five mil lions with no schooling attain distinction in their work; with elementary school ing eight hundred and eight out of three million achieve some distinction; with a high-school education twelve hundred out of two million rise above the average in accomplishment; with a college education more than five thous and out of a million render notable ser vice. Put in another way the figures mean that the college graduate has ten times the chance of making good that the not prohibition—the inward denial of | *twenty- If- * J f.L J. J j' • I , I two times better chances than has he oneself instead of the outward denials of ; who takes only the elementary courses, law. And inhibition with the Danes does —Student Life. MAP OF north CAROLINA SHOW/Aje The Value of Manufactured Products 1919 (OOO'S omi f isdonmapj LEGEND 4 4. SO/,SCO 7-0 4/,S/£,/70 ^E08.S8/,eS£ TV 4/OJ58.3/3 \4/0./S3.3/3 Fc 44.S0/.6SO s- 4/.S/^./TO 7-0 414.668 Pt'eparea/ J&y MnDJEi. Ol7£Riyl/iN in i/?e depari-menf oP /Sura/ ^ociol Economics. L/m vers//u o/” Nor//i Caro/znoT