The news in 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 North Carolina for its Bureau of Ejctension. fOCOTBER 6,1915 CHAPEL HILL, N. C. VOL. I, NO. 46 ' sa'torial Boardi B. C. Branson, J. Q. deR, Hamilton, L. K. Wilson, L. A. Willianas, K. H. Thornton. Entered as second-claas matter November U, 1914, at the postoffice at Chapel HiU, N.C.. under theaet of.’Augt^st 24, 1912 ] NORTH CAROLINA CLUB STUDIES INTELLIGENT CO-OPERATION IN ALAMANCE The State Health Board and the Ala- miance School Board have co-operated to have a sanitary iiiapection of the schools find a medical examination of the school children of the- county. The state furnishes the medical experts and the county pays the cost, at the rate of 110 per school. The teacliers advise the parents of the results and the family physicians treat tlie cases. Many of the failures in scliool and in life are due to physical ailments and de fects that parents know nothing about .and that are easily treated *at a small cost. Other counties need to follow suit in rapid order, for the children’s sake. TELESCOPIC STUDIES Mark Twain, you may remember, once made the perilous ascent of Mont Blanc, some 16,000 feet upward over ice and snow—by proxy, througli a telescope! In quite the same way and with about the same degree of peril, we have tjeen accustomed' in our college careers to mount the heights of doing and being, •endeavor and achievement, business and ■life. In the world of reality it cannot be .done with a telescope. In college it can, •■and we reward these telescopic studies with degrees of one sort and another. Mark Twain wanted his ascent crowned with a certificate and was mortally af- ironted because he did not get it; but we frequeutly get academic diplomas and de grees for quite similar telescopic (»urses. LIVESTOCK AND BANK DE POSITS We traveled 33 miles over the moun^ tains the other day to Boone, the capital of Watauga, a region of cattle, cabbages and kings, a land of peace and plenty, overflowing with milk and honey in lus cious abundance. In the three little banks at Blowing Eock, Boone and \'alley Onicis we found 1255,000 in surpluses, undi vided profits, time deposits, and open accounts. The farmers ow'u these banks, and this snug little fortune has been accumulated «ut of livestock sales for the most part. The average is nearly $20 apiece count ing men, w’omen and children in Watau ga. It compares very well with the |il4.- .50 in one of our cotton and tobacco grow ing counties., But the most striking difference lies in the fact that in one case the farmers own the banks and skim the cream of the bank business; in the other, the banks Jire owned and operated l>y the mer chants and the mill men. The farmers own little of the capital stock and still less of the dividends. They do the bor rowing, by proxy through the time-mer- chants. pear trees are a feast for the eye and the inner man. It is a land of sugar maples, buckwheat, and honey bees; chickens and turkeys; milk and butter, cream and cheeses more than Dives himself ever dreamed of. A land of cosy country homes thickly set in bowers of abudance along the valleys and in the coves—nine out of every ten of them shining with the pride of paint! Here are hardwood treasures almost untouched, and undeveloped water-pow- ers for ten thousand wheels and lathes in wood-working industries. A Little Mountain Paradise Here is a little mountain paradise of resources and possibilities; but they are possibilities that can hardly be realized until Watauga sponges out an undue il literacy with more efi'ective public schools. Better schools, better highw'ays, easy access to markets, or satisfactory market prices are not likely to come without or ganization and co-operative enterprise of every sort. The people of Watauga know all these things far better than any University vis itor can tell them. For three years they have been getting ready-to gird up their loins for a mighty effort in all these di rections ; and then we can well believe that the hub of the universe will stick visibly out in the dead center of A\'atau- ga. SCHOOL LEADERSHIP The largest asset of any county lies in the souls of her men—not in her soils and seasons, barns or bank books, but in the faith and vision, courage and cajiability of her leaders. The most inspiring - thing in W^atauga is the Appalachian Training School and its leadership in the development of this mountain region; not in education alone, but in agricultural and industrial fields -as well. The third annual conference of the peo ple of Watauga met in the auditorium of this school the other day, and the big, up standing leaders are the Doughertys, ■Stringfellow, Brown, Grier, and Haga- roau; not all of them connected with the school, but all actively interested in the Watauga that is to be. Legislators can aflbrd to deal generous ly with this school—or so it seemed to us. bowers of abundance Watauga is full of surprises for the arolina lowlander. Rich meadows and countless haystacks; slopes green with grass and thick with corn to the moun- tanitops in every direction. Here are «attle upon a thousand hills, and sheep swelling numbers. The apple and THE BREAD LINE Mr. i;. F. Beasly, editor of the Mon roe Journal, believes with all his heart that a fundamental source of social ill in all its modern variety lies in holding land out of productive uses for speculative purposes. He wants to bring all land, used and unused, on the tax books at its sale price and to take off all taxes on improve ments put upon land By. the man that works. It would double our population, says he, and nmltiply our wealth ten times over in the next ten years. A Banker Agrees With Him The other day in Chattanooga, aai Ala bama banker, who owns two square miles of ancestral land, startled the Southern Education Conference by charging the tragedy of po\’erty upon land monojwly and absentee landlordism. Exempt the first forty acres from taxa tion, said he, and impose a progressive super-tax upon all hoMings above 40 acres. New Zealand’s Way New Zealand has had a progressive land' tax in force for twenty odd years. Anybody interested in learning the effects of such a law ought to read Henry De- niorest Loyd’s volume on Newest Eng land, and Parsons’ Story of New Zea land. ADVERTISING NORTH CAR OLINA The purpose of the North Carolina Club at the Fniversity is to cultivate familiar loving acquaintance with tlie mother state; with North Carolina as she was and is and is to be. In' keeping with this purpose the club has entered upofT^the work of 1915-16 with the following program: L What We Have To Adver tise. 1. Blineral Resources. Joseph Henry Allred, Surry County, Sept. 27 2. TimVjer Resources; (l)Wood lots, (2) Forests. J. H. Lassiter, Northampton County Sept. 27 3. Water Powers; (1) Available, (2) Developed. D. E. Eagle, Iredell county.. .Oct. 25 4. Prominence in Manufacture. H. M. Smith, Henderson County 5. Our Soils and Seasons (1) Variety and Adaptability M. H. Randolph, Meck lenburg County Oct. 11 (2) Diversity of Products Oct. 25 (3) Per Acre Yields: Com- parisons - ° (4) Per Capita Yields; Com parisons (5) Total Yields: Compari- THE TRUE TEACHER MUST BE A LEADER Walter A. Ingrain The true teacher has the gift of leadersliip—of generalship. He has a personality which demands and com mands the respect of all. He is the commander-in-chief of the educationsri forces—the forces of progress in his community, but withal in a tactful, discerning manner. He fully understands that, in rural connnunities, the school building is, and of right ought to be, the center of social and literary life and he makes it such by organizing his people into school and civic betterment clubs, mother’s clubs, agricultural societies, etc., and he is prepared to take a leading part in itall. He manipulates and controls the entire social life of the young people, without seeming to do so, and sees to it that all social in tercourse is of a high order. He is deeply interested and a leader in all movements w'hich tend to better the conditions of living among his people. Highways and neighborhood roads, running water in the homes, screens against flies, grassy lawns, flowers and shrubbery in the yards, find in him an earnest advocate in season and out of season. He encourages his boys and girls to join the corn clubs and can ning clubs. He takes a great interest in agriculture, stock raising, garden ing and fruit growing and everything that concerns his people. It goes vi'ithout saying that he is a church and Sunday school man and teaches re ligion by precept and example. The -true teacher always pursues a constructive policy—he is a master builder, and leaves behind him a chain of new buildings, new furnishings, laboratory equipment and libraries. UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF EDUCATION LETTER SERIES NO. 45 GREETINGS The School of Education at the Uni versity herewith sends greetings and best wishes to the teachers of the State. May the year bring pleasure, profit, and suc cess to every man and woman engaged in the w’ork of educathig North Caro linians. Prospects Never before in the educational history of the State has the popular'interest in education been so great as it is this fall. Never have we teachers had so much with which to work; new buildmgs, better and more ample material, larger salaries and hearty co-operation. Many of us were privilegetl to attend the summer sessions and revive our lagging interest while rest ing our tired nerves. We may well re joice at the prospects for the year. Forecasts The boys and girls in our schools will look to us for great things. We must not disappoint them. They are our special care and our joy. To us is given the inestimable privilege of making every one of these children themost valuable and worthy i^ersonality possible, and we shall prove ourselves equal to the task. Our registrations will he larger than over, our houra of schoQl work longer, our interest in the childrejL and the community greater. We welcome the increased op portunity to serve. Obligation As we turn to our school work for the year let us solemnly vow within ourselves that we will not be petty in our handling of our children; that we will seek the best in every life and strive to bring it forth; that we will do the task we have to do with all our might, not asking for easier tasks but for greater might. So shall our hours be too few, our bur dens too light and our own lives rounded out to their fullness. May we all measure up this year to the fullness of our own stature. .Nov. 8 sons Nov. 22 (6) Livestock Farming: Ad vantages Nov. 22 (7) Agricultural Industries Dec. 6 (8) Co-operative Enterprise.. ..Dec. 6 6. Our Economic Freedom Dec. 20 n. Why We Need to Adver tise 1. Elbow-room for Home-Seek- ers; Why We Need More People in North Carolina — Dec. 20 (1) Our Twenty-two Million Wilderness Acres: Econ omic and Social Effects. (2) Our Need for Greater Ar- cumulations of Wealth. (3) Our Need for Larger Tax Revenues. (4) Our Need for Tax Re forms. 111. Ways and Means of Ef fective Advertising. 1. A state Publicity Bureau; (1) Pri vately Supported, (2) .\s a Perman ent Department of State. 2. A State-wide Board of Trade. 3. County-wide Boards of Trade. 4. School Fairs, County Fairs, The State Fair. 5. How the Railroads Gan Help. 6. AVhat the Banks Can Do. 7. Local Newspaper Publicity. 8. Community Booklets. 9. Local Exhibits of Resources and Products. 10. Picture Post Cards, Moving Pic tures, etc. DIRECTED STUDY Many of the teachers in the State will soon be contemplating the question of the Reading Circle Work. The really earnest teacher is anxious to grow in her profession and in her knowledge of its technique. To such teachers the bureau of exten sion at the University od^ help through its CorrespoiidenceDivision. ;Uponthecom- pletion of a coarse there laid down a cer tificate is granted to the student and recog nized by the State Department as sufficient evidence to warrant the issuance of the regular Reading Circle diploma therefor. The work is carried on by the profess ors in the School of Education and the teachers are carefully guided in their study of the books for the year. Write to" the Bureau of Extension, ChaiielHill, N. C., for complete infor mation. OUR BUILDING AND LOAN ASSOCIATIONS During the ten years from 1904 to 1914, the number of building and loan associ ations ill North Carolina increased from 41 to 138; their assets rose from $2,542,- 800 to$12,703,300; and their loans from $2,427,000 to $12,292,900. During the la.st eight years these associ ations have paid back to shareholders a little more than sixteen million dollars. This is a remarkable showing; as Mr. James R. Young, the State Insurance says, It is second to that of no state in the Union. Home-Ownership in North Carolina Cities Sensible people in the towns and cities have long ago learned that the simplest, easiest, least expensive way of getting un der ones own roof tree is to get into a well managed building and loan associ ation. They are a great benificence, and have everywhere promoted the ownership of homes. A wise man finds it out early in life. It is well to remember_ that in general the more populous and prosperous com- nrr.nities become the fewer are the people tfiat dwell under their own vines and fig trees, unmolested and unafraid. Thus-uearly two-thirds of the country dwellers, but only one-third of the city dwellers, are home owners in the United States. Spokane with 51.3 per cent made the best showing in home ownership in the United States among the 50 cities having a 100,000 or more inhabitante in 1910; and Greater New York City with 11.7 per cent the poorest. Greensboro Leads the State In North Carolina, the liest showing is made by Greensboro with 38 per cent; and AVinston with 28 per cent made the poorest showing. Our seven largest towns in 1910 show as follows in home ownership; Greens boro, 38 per cent; Charlotte, Asheville, and SVilminglon, 34 per cent each; Ral eigh, 30 per cent; Durham, 29 per cent; and Winston, 28 per cent. In a growing community the average man’s chance to own his own home de creases with every passing day. FORTUNATE COUNTIES The Washington-Atlanta Highway crosses Granville, Durham, Wake, Har nett, Johnston, Cumberland, Hoke, Moore, Montgomery, and Richmond counties. All told 255 miles of this high way are in North Carolina. Two hundred and thirty-seven miles of it are under - the supervision of Federal highway experts. So far they have ex pended $28,381 of government money upon the highway in these counties, in construction and repair work. With the money spent in this way (1) bridges have been relocated and rebuilt or repaired, {2) new roads laid out and graded, (3) earth roads surfaced with sand-clay or top soil, (4) grade crossings eliminated, (5) roads straightened or widened, (6) culverts located, built or enlarged, all in preparation for mainte nance. The Cost of Maintenance The amount set aside for maintenance is $15,555 a year. That is to say, for every dollar spent in construction, they spend 54 cents upon maintenance by pa trolmen and repair gangs; or 156.50 a year per mile. The sections inspected by patrolmen range from 6 to 29 miles. The sections averse nearly 13 miles in North Caro lina. The amount spent upon the annual up-keep of the average 13-mile .section is $764.50 a year. Our Maintenance Fund in Orange At this rate in Orange county our 300 miles of public roads could be kept in re pair year by year by 30 patrolmen and work-gangs at a cost of $764.50 a year per section, or $22,935. Unfortunately our road tax of 35 cents on the $100 raised only $18,078 in 1914. With the receipts from our dog license adiled, our total public roads fund was only $18,778. On the other hand, when the interest and sinking fund charges upon our $250,- 000 issue of 5 per cent 40-year bonds were met, we had barely $3,000 left for road work. When the superintendent’s salary had been paid, we had less than $2,500 with which to keep our 300 miles of pub lic roads in repair. The Federal government spends $66 a year per mile to keep in repair the 239 miles of the Washington-Atlanta High way in ten of our North Carolina coun ties. Fortunate counties! Orange county has only 66 cents a mile for such pur poses ! What Road Maintenance Means Repair on earth and sand-clay roads means: Dragging persistently at every available opportunity, Using the grading machine when neces sary, Filling depressions. Adding sand or clay as required. Removing all trash, tin cans, nails, oW iron, bottles, etc., that accumulate in somewhat astonishing quantities, Replacing broken floor boards in cul verts and bridges, Keeping culverts open. Clearing ditches and shoulders, Trunming brush and trees at curves, Cutting grass and weeds, Harrowuig and dragging rough or ir regular sections, Painting guard rails and culvert heads; and Posting roads. WORK RESUMED Every day sees new' applications and registrations in the Correspondence Study Division of the Bureau of Extension. Work will be resumed the first of Oc tober and continue for the year. Al ready the students of last year have been sending to the office for more lessons. Interest is greatest in the courses in English, Education, Latin, and History. The students are doing good work" and have expressed the appreciation of the opportunity thus offered by the Universi- ty* Write to the Bureau of Extension for full information.