The news in this publi cation is released for the press on receipt. THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA NEWS LETTER Published Weekly by the University of North Caro lina for the University Ex tension Division. JULY 1, 1925 CHAPEL HILL, N C. THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA PRESS VOL. XI, NO. 33 Kdilorittl E. c. Branson. S- H. Hobbs, Jr.. L. R. Wilson, E. W. Knieht, D. D. Carrol], J. B, Bullitt, H. W. Odom. Entorod a, second-class ..lattor Novombor W. 1914. at the Postoliice at Chapel Hill, N. C., under the act of August 24, 1912 FSOGIIAM FOl TAX STilDY CLUBS S. W-HAT IS A TAX Preface As announced in last week’s issue of this pubiicalion we are carrying in this issue an outline of the first of a series of thirteen topics that may be used as giiij.s or program outlines for local tax study clubs. Several requests have been made for such an outline, and it is hoped that these sketches will be valuable aids to local tax study clubs already organized, or that may be organized in the future. The subject of taxation is a live one, and of vital interest to every taxpayer. Students of tax probiemi are too few in North I Carolina. Yet our tax problems can never be intelligently settled until they have been carefully studied. It is hoped that scores of local tax study clubs will spring up over North Carolina. Such clubs have accomplished marvelous re sults here and there over the United States. A few local tax ’_study clubs, like those of Nev# York, Illinois, and California, could be equally effective in this state. For;isucb local tax study clubs this outline has been prepared. It is suggested that two members be, charged with preparing the program for the first meeting. A. Otttliae A-1. Government as a Means to Secure Coopi;ration: Government defined. Why we must have gavernment. The advantages of democracy. 2. Functions of Government: To define and make known the rights and duties of individuals. To keep order and protect life and property. To Enforce the performance of duties, and punish if necessary those who disregard them. To regulate and conduct numerous activities which can be per formed better by the govern ment than by private activity. 3. Private Activities: Those which can safely be left to the judgment of the individ ual, or in which the people will voluntarily cooperate for the common good. 4. Public Activities: Whenever general welfare demands it and public opinion will sus tain it. 0. Increasing Number of Public Activities. B-1. Charge Services. When easy to allocate the cost to the user,—street car fares, water rent, use of electricity, postage, parcel post charges, fees for having deeds and mortgages recorded, etc. 2. Free Services: When difficult to make the alloca tion, when difficult to collect the charge, or when it is de sirable that all members of the community enjoy the benefit of a particular service,—use of streets, bridges and parks; police protection; fire protec tion; public health service; public education; care of delin- .quents and defectives, etc. S. Taxation Necessary to Support Free Services: A tax may thus be defined as: ‘ ‘An appropriation of private wealth for public purposes.” “A compulsory payment for the the support of government.” ‘‘The individual’s contribution to ward the support of a commun ity enterprise. ” 4. Principles of Taxation: Levied according to ability to pay. lievied according to benefits re ceived. Levied as a means of social control. Used for the benefit of fithc i public as a whole. Taxes ‘‘My tax is so high U soars to the sky; It takes all the coin from my pocket; And what can I do But sputter and stew, And pay the blame thing, and then knock it?” So said Farmer Jones In violent tones With all the choice words injthe docket. ‘‘It’s stupid of us To make such a fuss Though taxes go up like a rockei : If the money’s well spent We should be content. And if it is not we should block it,” Farmer Brown quickly said And lifted his head With brains enough in it to stock it. ‘‘For.we are the State - • And we fix the rate; told the world that, it would slmck it. We should open the books. And put all the crooks In the calaboose. Then we should lock it; Then gather the facts And reckon our tax, With the calaboose key incur pocket, ' B. Explanations If a study of the tax books reveals waste we should block it. It is our government and we should take charge of it. ‘‘We are the State,” and the rate of taxes which we have to pay depends very largely on the interest which we, as citizens, take in our government and the responsibility which we are willing to assume. A tax study club in a county would be a great asset to that county. At the outset it is necessary to com prehend the purpose and nature of a tax. It is not an exaction imposed upon us by an external force. It is not trib ute money. It is a self-imposed obli gation to meet the expenses attached to our collective activities. Some things can be more economically and effec tively done by collective action than by individual action, and in that case the individual must contribute his share of the cost. That is a tax. Government is nothing more nor less than the agency through which that cooperation is brought about. We could not depend entirely on volunteer cooperation. Even if everyone had a cooperative spirit and followed the Golden Rule we should still need government for without it there would be no order or system. As life becomes more complex the number and variety of public services must inevitably increase. When the service can be easily measured and the beneficiary is apparent it can be paid for directly and it is called a charge service. On'the other hand, when it would be difficult or impossible to af fix a direct charge, it must be made a free service to all the people and paid for through taxation. Naturally as the number of free services increases the taxes increase. Even were it possible to determine what benefits each person receives from government, it would not be desirable or just to determine taxes on that basis alone. Should a family with five chil dren in the public schools pay five times as much school tax as the family with only one child? Or should a man with no children be exempted from the school tax? No, we are guided by an other principle, namely, ‘‘the ability to pay.” The rich should pay more than the poor. Then there is another pur pose for which a tax may be imposed. It may be used to encourage or dis courage certain practices, that is, for purposes of social control. For instance, the housing shortage in New York City became so acute that all new houses built were to be exempted from tax ation for a period of ten years. The tax may even’ be used to destroy an en terprise. As an illustration, in 1914 Congress laid a tax of $300 a pound up on the manufacture of opium to be used for smoking and in this way de stroyed the industry by taxation. What ever the source of the tax, however, or whatever its immediate purpose, only one principle should obtain in its ex penditure and that is, it should be used for the benefit ' of the people as a whole., C. Questions How are you personally served by the federal government? by the state? by the county? Is there any relation between loyalty to government and cheerful tax pay ing? When have we a right to object to[a tax? Which of the three definitions of a tax do you prefer? Why? Which of the following "should, in your opinion, be operated by the pub- OUR RESPONSIBILITY It is through taxation that the activities of government are sup ported. Naturally, as we improve our schools, build more and better highways, assume a greater respon sibility for public health and public welfare, modernize our jails and county homes, it means higher taxes. Perhaps the return in service is greater for each dollar paid intaxes than when the taxes were lower. But, even so, people feel, and rightly, that taxes are becoming burdensome, especially local taxes. There is a general feeling that taxes are high because of waste in the collection and administration of them, and undoubtedly there is a reasonable basis for that belief. At any rate, there is widespread com plaint but few can offer intelligent criticism or suggest any means of relief. There should be a local tax study club in every community learning how taxes are raised and how they are spent, and what, if anything, is wrong vsfith our present system. Only so will we acquire correct attitudes .toward govern ment and a true sense of our civic responsibility. —Paul W. Wager. publishing houses, and bookstores. Many vague things have been written I TENANT CHILDREN MOP OUT j That children of parents ,who own I their farms -reroain longer in school "‘bout the state of literature i than the children of tenant farmers is 11"problem I shown by a recent survey in J.;f[erson | "■'li'ng t“ dig i County, Ga, In the first four grades Wilson. The li- j of the schodl, children of tenant , farmers compose 65.5 percent of the I enrollment. After that they begin ^ to drop out, and tlie enrollment of chil- ' dren of tenant farmers in the fifth , grade is only 35,5 percent of the whole number. During the four years of high school, children of farm-owning parents make up 82 4 percent of the student ; body. The enrollment of children of ! tenant farmers decreases from 33 per cent in the eighth grade to 3 percent branaii pointed out various evidences of our failure to use print. We can only summarize: Our public libraries are low in their quota of books; with few exceptions libraries are small and not highly specialized; the large col lections we have grow slowly, Louisville b‘ing the only 'city south of Washington adding more than 16.000 volumes a year; we do not read magazines and thenum- ber of subscriptions is oppressively ^ compared with other sections of : in the eleventh or last grade.—School I country; the South has proved “the Life. . ' THE SUREST WAY ATTENTION, CLUB WOMEN Let me call your attention to the announcement elsewhere in this issue of the News Letter concerning the Agriculture, said Herbert Hoover the other day, is a better town builder than industry. The remark is one that deserves more than passing notice. The chambers of commerce in nine out of every ten towns in the United States should have this very fact drilled into their systems. The majority of the American towns which now are strain ing their suspenders in an effort to pull factories in their direction will make more healthful progress if they forget the factories and extend a co operative hand to the farmer. Agriculture is the backbone of the average small town, but the town boosters are inclined to forget this fact. They labor under the mistaken notion that a good town means a big- ger town and that a bunch of factories would solve their problems. The good will and noble-hearted support of the graveyard of magazines” which have been given birth, struggled for a year or more and died; there are relatively few publishing businesses; good book stores are rare. From these evidences. Dr. Wilson points out the significance of this failure to use print. He finds that educational progress is heavily handicapped, that the doors are closed , to aspiring young writers who find diffi culty in getting attractive publication, that a “regenerating criticism” has not been developed, and that the conse- quence'of this situation is a loss of intellectual freedom. A summary of this sort is unfair both to the subject and to Dr. Wilson’s careful presenta tion. We wish the address might be read by, all “first” hunters. Dr. Wilson has pointed out some “lasts” which need pondering.—Asheville Citi- study outline on tax problems in North ! ^ - ^.u ^ a. , oi tne Carclina. ‘“wn’s Wade territory Carolina, state and local The Women’s Clubs Section of the University Exten sion Division is co-operating with the News Letter in placing this study out line before you. In it you will find a are vastly more desirable than fac tories for the average town. This good will and this support will not come un sought and uninvited. The boosting of community’s agriculture will be dithcult question treated in a Simple and I 4.u i. m, ^ bread cast upon the waters. The town attractive sty e and we hope you will! avail yourselves of the opportunity -Emporia Gaaette. here ottered of becoming acquainted' with a matter of great importance to I a every North Carolinian. Let me urge j AUTOMOBILES AND BOOKS you to make this a subject of study in ! automobile and a book. The one your club work and, if possible, in-' cost perhaps a thousand dollars and the elude it in your summer schedule.—Nel lie Roberson, In Charge Women’s Clubs Section of the University Extension Division. lie and which by private enterprise; Schools, railroads, postal system, high ways, bridges, hospitals, medical ser vice, orphanages, poor relief, boll wee vil control, fire protection, water power, mines, oil wells. Muscle Shoals, tele phones, merchant marine,, port termi nals? other two dollars. And yet in some of the states theVe are more licensed cars than there are books in the public li braries. Actually more automobiles than available books! The comment is one brought forcibly to us by the read ing of a little pamplet containning a reprint of an address made at the Uni- SCHOOLS An active, spirited, intelligent body of laborers in every department of in dustry is an essential condition of a high state of national prosperity. But such a condition can never coexist with general ignorance. For it is not nature alone that makes the man. The living spark can be first kindled only by schools. It is the school that quickens .curious thought, fills the mind with ' principles of science, and starts the in ventive and creative powers into action. Therefore I say, push your schools to the highest possible limit of perfection. Spare no pains, count no expense. Let every talent, every type of genius in every child be watched and nurtured\by the State, as by a mother watching for the signs of promise in her son. Rely upon it that the State which would find the readiest road to wealth must regard it as among the very first of her duties. HOSPITAL FACILITIES IN THE UNITED STATES Inhabitants per Hospital Bed in 1923. In the following table the states are ranked according to the number of in habitants per bed in all hospitals in each state, exclusive of federal hospitals. The table is based on Hospitals and Dispensaries, 1923, issued by the Federal Department of Commerce. The number of persons per bed is derived by divid ing the population of each state by the aggregate of beds in all hospitals in that state. Colorado leads in hospital facilities with one bed forevery 193.8 inhabitants. North Carolina ranks forty-first with one bed for every 610.3 inhabitants. U. S. average, one bed for every 335 inhabitants. North Carolina needs nearly twice her present hospital facilities to be on par with the average for all the states. Rank State versity of Virginia by Dr. Louis R. , ^ . . Wilson, librarian of the University of j to develop the productive genius and North Carolina Dr. Wilson took as his j energy of her people. No waste that subject “Print in the service of the j society can suffer will, in the end, prove 1 o . , , South” and interpreted print broadly so expensive as the waste of talent and ® ^ based on to include libraries, books, magazines, creative skill.-Thomas'H. Burrowes. “ability to pay . Give an example of a tax based on “benefits received”. How does this differ from a charge service? Should a tax be used as a means of social control? Give illustration. Compute the value of the services you receive from each of the govern ments to which you pay taxes and see if you are getting value received. If you are paying for more than you receive, add to your debit account the amount that you would be willing to give extra in order to relieve the tax burden on the widows, the poor and the unfortunate. If you are still short, make a study of public expenditures and see if there is not waste somewhere. Remember that you are the govern' ment and when you blame the govern ment you are indicting yourself. D. Sources of Information Woodrow Wilson, The State. Allyn and Baker, New York, 1898. pp. 612- 615, 633. Frank A. Magruder, American Gov ernment. Allyn and Baker, New York, 1918. p. 76. R. O. Hughes, Community Civics. Allyn and Baker, New York, 1917. pp. 11-12, pp. 289-293. R. 0. Hughes, Economic Civics. Allyn and Baker, New York, 1921. pp. 37-72. E. R. A. Seligroan, Why Do We Pay Taxes. Country Gentleman, June 6, 1926. Hastings Lyon, Principles of Taxa tion. Houghton Mifflin Co., Cambridge, Mass. 1914. pp. 1-30. Or any good civics text Look. —Paul W. Wager. Rank State Persons per Hos pital Bed 1 Colorado 193.8 2 California 212.6 3 New York 216.4 Minnesota 216.3 Massachusetts 226.7 New Mexico 234.2 Washington 250.9 Arizona 259.9 Maryland 262 8 New Hampshire i 264.2 Wyoming 264.2 Connecticut 266.2 Oregon 268.8 Montana 275.2 Illinois 280.0 New Jersey 282.7 Pennsylvania 285.9 Rhode Island 303.5 South Dakota 304.9 Nevada 307.1 Maine ... .314.3 Wisconsin 323.8 Michigan 333.9 Iowa 342.6 Persons per Hos pital Bed Nebraska 354.7 Missouri .360.9 North Dakota 875.1 Vermont 376.3 Kansas 399.6 Idaho 402.8 Ohio 404.3 Delaware 433.2 Utah 447.0 West Virginia 451.6 Indiana .473.9 Louisiana 606.7 Virginia 616.8 Florida 644.9 Texas 560.7 Tennessee 576.8 North Carolina 610.3 Alabama 638.7 Kentucky 644.0 Mississippi 694.8 Georgia 741.3 Oklahoma 796.4 South Carolina 821.6 Arkansas 1001.6 '