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 25, 1928 CHAPEL HILL, N. C. THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA PRESS VOL. XIV, No. 37 Editorial Board, E. C. Branaon. S. H. Hobba. Jr.. P. W. Wager. L. R. Hllaon. E. W. Knight. D. D. Carroll. H. W. Odnm. Entered aa second-claaa matter November 14. 1914, at the Postoffice at Chapel Hill. N. C., ander the act of Aasmst E4, 13IH1, AUTOMOBILE FATALITIES A TERRIFIC TOLL Last year 22,000 people were killed in automobile accidents on the high ways of this country. Many of these people, probably most of them, were innocent of recklessness or daring on their own part, victims of another’s recklessness or criminality. This ter- > rific toll of lives is wicked and unneces sary. I The American people are not going to give up their automobiles; they can-i not if they wished to. Life has been | reorganized in terms of the automobile ! —though not in one particular. We have not limited their use to those who can be trusted with them. We no longer permit anybody and everybody to go arqaed. We have taken guns away from the intoxicated, the neu rotic, the criminal. An automobile is also a deadly weapon—the court has so declared it. Its use should be limited to those who are normal, sober, and law-abiding. Yes, even more than that—those who are free from any charge of being reckless or incon siderate. Careful drivers, -respectful of the rights of others, ought not to have to share the roads with drunken and dare-devil drivers. The time has come when the right to drive a car should be restricted to those who can be depended upon to kzooperate in mak ing the highways safe. Restrict Licenses This means that a driver’s license should be granted only after the ap plicant has passed a thorough driving test. It means, too, that a license once granted should be revoked if any complaint is brought that the operator has driven a car while under the in fluence of liquor or has driven in a wild and reckless manner. Finally, no li cense should be granted in the first place to persons having a criminal rec ord. To grant one is to arm a criminal with a deadly weapon. Who are the hit-and-run drivers? Are they people with reputations for honesty and moderation in other respects? Cer tainly not. They are people with criminal records or at least criminal tendencies. Who ajre the road hogs? They are not people who are generous and fair and cooperative under all other situations. All of which means that the persons who are causing the ac cidents on the roads are to a large ex tent persons of whom such things might be expected. Many of the 511 lives lost on the highways of North Carolina last year could have been spared if we had refused to license the vicious and the intemperate. There are dangerous drivers, how ever, who are neither mean nor in temperate. They are those who lack the steadiness of nerve, keenness of vision, and quick response necessary to make good drivers. These should be content to ride with others at the wheel. North Carolina’s record last year was a little better than for the pre vious year. It was one of seven states to decrease—though ever so slightly— the toll of lives taken by automobile accidents. Everybody in the state ought to cooperate in the effort to bring down the figure for the current year. Nobody intends or desires to kill another person. He has 'a horror of doing 90, Yet the failure to keep brakes tightened or headlights ad justed Tnay produce this unfortunate result. Again, the failure to report one who violates the traffic ordinances, which are no more than the rules of fair play, may be to contribute to the death of a neighbor’s child. When it is no longer popular to dilate on the speed records which one has made or the narrow escapes which be has bad, there will be fewer accidents. Only a fool jeopardizes the life of his friend, and if men, otherwise sensible, play the fool, their friends should not hesitate • 0 remind them of their folly. — drinking driver leads Mention has been made of the ap parent increase in the number of per sona who stimulate themselves and go joy riding—of, the apparent increase in the number of such persons arrested, which is a clear indication that there »re more of them, for it stands to reason that some of them escape, do not come under the eye of officers. The legislature of 1927 passed an act requiring convictions for traffic viola- tmns to be reported to the state high-! way commission. In these days when laws are so carelessly observed general ly, it is a reasonable assumption that not all are reported. But the highway commission has made public reports for the year ending June 30. The total number of convictions reported was, 2,476. That, it may be assumed, is only a small part of the violations. But the drinking drivers led all the rest. There were 775 of this'^class, nearly one-third of the total. In this: class were 626 whites and 260 negroes. ; Speeding was next in the list of of-' fences, there being 769 of these. Reck- j less drivers convicted numbered 444, and convictions ‘for miscellaneous of-, fences were 345. Eleven white men: and three negroes were convicted of > manslaughter as a result of fatalities in automobile wrecks, 38 were con victed of assault with a deadly weapon — a car—and 91 were convicted of driv ing with faulty headlights. This last may surprise people in this territory, where driving with any sort of head light, or with none, seems permissible; or at least nothing is done about it. It would be interesting to know the average penalty imposed on the 776 drinking drivers. The guess here is, judging by court reports, that a fine of ?60, the minimum allowed under the law, would predominate. In some cases, no doubt, the minimum was ignored and judgment suspended. In at least one case coming under our notice a superior court judge did just that. The traffic laws provide an automatic jail sentence in case of repetition. But some of the legislators, possibly having a fellow feeling for the drink er, put through another act fixing the minimum penalty at $60. Seeing that so many of the judges usually impose the minimum it is presumed that they do not think the offence calls for a jail sentence. The reckless driver is a menace on the highway, the drinking driver is a terror. He combines a half-dozen or so offences in one —violations of the liquor law, reckless driving and all the rest. But if one is to judge by the punishment imposed in the average case he is the pet of the judiciary.— Statesville Landmark. TRAVEL Indian travois and canoe, ox cart, pack horse, Conestoga wagon, stage coach, canal barge, steamboat, steam railroad, electric railway, mottir vehicle, airplane-these words spell the progress of transportation in America. In a* nation composed of many states, each sovereign in its own sphere, extendingjOver a vast conti nent with sectional interests con flicting at times, 'diversity of climate, extremes in topography, and differing economic interests, no other instrumentality has so served to preserve and maintain its political unity as its transportation system.—John J. Escb, former Interstate Commerce Commis- Germany own, said he. And as fcr the farmers, he went on to say, I’ll guarantee that not a dozen farmers own cars in the whole of Germany. All of which is food for reflection. The simple fact is that apparently everybody in North Carolina has money enough to buy what he wants. But all of us are poor as Job’s turkey when the tax collector comes around. And most of us have to borrow money to pay taxes—farmers, teachers and business people alike. When it comes to motor cars, we are rich enough to pay $46,000,000 a year for gas alone, to ^say nothing about some millions more for oil and grease, many millions more for tires and tubes, and still more millions for repairs and replacements. 1 never yet have seen a woman so poor that she didn’t have money to buy a bonnet if she really wanted it. Or a man so rich that he did not feel almighty poverty-stricken in the tax- paying season. —E. C. B. TAXES AND GASOLINE The gasoline consumed in North Carolina during the year ending June 30 cost the car owners $46,886,000, in round numbers. If used in a single average car this amount of gasoline would send it around the earth 114,000 times. So runs the item in the state dailies of July 7th. It cost more to run our cars than it does to run our public schools, our teacher training schools, our state colleges, and our university all put together-more by twelve million dollars a year. It cost more to run our cars than it does to -run our county governments— more by eleven million dollars a year. It cost more to run our cars than it does to run our state government— nearly twice as much. All of which means that we are a rich people, almost unbelievably rich. When I told the Baron von der Lippe in 1924 at the Castle Kngelberg in Germany that we had five times as many cars in the little state of North Carolina as in the whole of Germany, he threw up his hands in amazement. Impossible! said he. When I told him that brick masons, carpenters, tinners, plumbers, electri cians, painters, plasterers and rough hands parked eleven cars ^iaily around the house I built just before I left horhe, he threw up his hands. Impos sible! said he. When 1 told him that the farmers who furnished my milk and butter- milk, my poultry, eggs and vegetables, delivered these pantry supplies at my^ door in cars of their own, again he- threw up his hands in amazement. Impossible! said he. When I told him that ihe farmers of North Carolina owned around 100,000 cars his hands went up in amazement once’ more. That’s nearly twice as many cars as the rich people of ail BEAUTIFY THE HIGHWAYS Highway beautification in North Carolina may be undertaken in the future by the state on a comprehen sive scale under plans considered by Gov. A. W. McLean and approved by the Board of Conservation and Development at its meeting at Raleigh recently. ' j Governor McLean pointed out to the board that with the development of the great highway system of the state there is a well defined call for increas ing the attractiveness of these arteries of travel, and he expressed a belief that such a program should be launched in earnest. He expressed a belief that the high way commission would be glad to lend its cooperation and assistance to spch a move and that the logical way in which it should be carried out would be by the cooperation of the two state agencies. He declared that it is his purpose to include such a recommenda tion in his message to the incoming general assembly in order that full authority might be given for the pro posed beautification program. The chief executive complimented highly the impetus that has been given to highway ‘tree planting and beauti fication by various organizations in the state, especially the women’s clubs, which have been interested for some time in this work. His desire is to see such a program earned forward on a permanent basis, planned on a state wide scale, and with full legal author ity. His plans were given the en thusiastic approval of the conservation board, of which he is chairman.— Lexington Dispatch. A SPLENDID RECORD The record made by Sheriff 0. A. Glover in collecting taxes in Wilson county during the last year and in the last five years, has been especially commended by Governor A. W. ]y[(jL0an. He has written Sheriff Glover a letter of commendation, which reads as follows: ‘Tam very much pleased to see in the papers that when you made your settlement of tax collections with the Wilson county board of commissioners last week for 1927 taxes, out of more than $700,000 charged against you, you had collected and turned over to the commissioners all except about one- fourth of one percent of the entire amount. I note also that over a period of five years you have collected about 99.76 percent of the gross amount of taxes due in your county. “This record is so fine that I feel you are entitled to the plaudits not only of the people of Wilson county, who are directly interested, but of all the people of North Carolina, who are or should be deeply interested in efficient results shown in the administration of county government. “It would be a fine thing if all the counties in North Carolina could show such good results. “The remedy for the local tax burden does not lie in the collection of taxes due from some of the taxpayers and neglecting to collect from others. The real remedy lies in the method you have pursued of collecting the taxes due from all taxpayers alike. “As I stated in an article appearing in the papers today, there are many counties in which the taxes are too high, but the real remedy is to reduce the tax rates as they apply to all tax payers, not in requiring some to pay promptly and permitting others to escape payment. “Again I congratulate you on your fine record in collecting taxes in your county. I hope your example will encourage sheriffs and tax collectors in other counties of Nortlf Carolina to do likewise.’’—Gastonia Gazette. SAVE THE FLOWERS “From the mountains to the sea— North Carolina, the beautiful,’’is the appeal of the Aberdeen Kiwanis Club in a special circular letter recently sent out in an effort to start a move ment to protect the shrubs and flowers along our highways. The circular truthfully declares that “Every day hundreds of careless folks cut down and destroy thousands of trees, shrubs, and flowers along the highways of our state. Little pines, rhododendron bushes, dogwood bushe.s, and other things given by nature to beautify the countrysides and the road sides are destroyed wantonly.’’ The Aberdeen club calls on the newspapers of the state to help by giving publicity to the cause and to try to instill in Tar Heels a love of the beautiful. Our wild flowers and flowering shrulis are among our greatest natural assets, but the ruthless way in which they are being destroyed does not indicate that they are appreciated.—Morganton News-Herald. FARMLAND TAXES IN ORANGE Thirty-five thousand acres of Orange county farm lands were advertised to be sold for taxes on June 11, 1928. Twenty-seven thousand of these acres were taxed at an 'average of less than fifty cents an acre. Sixteen thousand of these acres were taxed at an average of less than thirty cents an acre. * The taxes on more than 25,000 of these acres could have been paid with a half bushel of cojn per acre, or with two pounds of cotton or two pounds of tobacco of good grade. The taxes on 5,0C0 of these acres coiild have been paid with two gallons of corn per acre, or less than one pqund of cotton or tobacco of good grade. One first-class cross-tie an acre would pay the taxes on each of these 30,000 acres, with a margin left over to pay for the cutting. These extracts from a term paper by Roy M. Brown, a graduate student at the IJniversit/ of North Carolina, throw a flood of light on the burden of taxes on farm lands in Orange county, N. C.-E. C. B. MORE COUNTY LIBRARIES “How many county libraries are there? Is the number growing?’’ were questions often asked at the library exhibit at the National Country Life Conference at the Uniyersity of Il linois. There were 260 in June. 1928, seven of them having been established in May and June, 17 in the year ending April 30, 1928. They are to be found in 34 states and in eyery section of the United States except New England, where the town is the library unit. California leads with 46 county li braries (out of 68 counties); New Jer sey has 9 county libraries with only 21 counties, and Indiana and North Caro lina each has 14. The seven newest county libraries are; Monroe County, Bloomington, In diana; Kenton County, Covington, Ken tucky; Tompkins County, Ithaca, New York; Davidson County, Lexington, North Carolina; Hale County, Plainview, Texas; McCulloch County, Brady, Texas; Midland County, Midland, Texas. MOTOR VEHICLE FATALITIES IN 1927 The following table shows the number of motor vehicle fatalities in each of forty-four states in 1927. Figures are not available for Missouri, Mississippi, Colorado and Utah. The total number of fatalities in the forty-four states and the District of Columbia was 22,160. The number in 1926 was 20,312, thus the average increase was 9.1 percent. ' The states are ranked according to the percentage of decrease or increase over 1926. Only seven states showed a decrease in the number of fatalities. North Carolina barely won a place in this group, the number of deaths from antomobile accidents decreasing from 514 in 1926 to 611 in 1927. M^ontana made the best record with a decrease from 101 to 77 fatalities. Nevada had the greatest relative increase, 73.3 percent, though the absolute number in each year was small. In several states the number of fatalities reported does not include deaths resulting from collisions of automobiles with trains and trolley cars. Department of Rural Social-Economics, University of North Carolina Percent Percent Auto increase Auto increase Rank State fatali- or de- Rank- State fatali- or de- ties crease - ties crease 1927 from 1926 1927 from 1926 Decrease 22 Kansas .. 309... 9.2 1 Montana . 77... 23.7 22 Ohio ..1,728... 9.2 2 Floridat . 428... 16.4 24 Kentuckyt .. 306... 9.3 3 South Dakotat • . 75... 12 8 25 Georgia! .. 406... 9,7 4 Illinois 1,647... 7.3 28 California ..1,782... 9.8 6 Massachusetts... . 693... 1.7 27 Michigan ..1,336 .. ....Y0.2 6 Tennessee’^' . 278 .. 7 28 Minnesota r 362 11 0 7 North Carolina ... . 511 .. 6 29 New York ..2,422 .. 12.4 Increase 30 Oklahoma .. 361... 12.6 8 Connecticut . 323... 1.9 31 Alabama .. 367 1.3 H 9 Washington . 344 .. 3.3 32 Maine .. 118... 16 8 in Npw MpyiVo 3 6 .33 Vermont 11 Wyoming . 66... 3.8 34 North Dakota .. 77... .... 18 6 12 Idafaot . 80... 3 9 ' 35 New Jersey ..1,034... 19.1 13 Louisiana . 381... .... 4.1 38 Virginia .. 396... 21.1 13 Oregon . m... 4 1 37 Indiana .. 861... 23.6 15 Delaware . 69... 6.2 38 Texa« .. 526... .... 24.1 16 Marylandt . 335 .. 6.7 39 Nebra-ka .. 213.... 24 6 17 Iowa . 282... 8.8 40 West Virginia!. 9Q« ..:..29.0 18 New Hampshire . 76... 7.2 41 Wisconsin .. 592.... 38.0 19 Arkansast . 167... 7.7 42 South Carolina.. .. 278... 41.1 20 Pennsylvaniaf ... .1,883... 8.6 43 Ai'iz ;na* . 103 43 9 21 Rhode Island .... . 123... 8.8 44 Nevada . 26.... 73.3 *Eleven months only. i'Does not include collisions with heavier vehicles.