The news in this publica tion is released for the press on receipt. the university of north CAROLINA NEWS LETTER ‘•he .-Library, Chape'l Hill. Published weekly by the University of North Carolina for its Bureau of Extension. AUGUST 28, 1918 Ediorial Board . E. C. Branson. J. G. deK. Hamilton, L. B, Wilson, R. H. Thornton, G. M. MoKie. CHAPEL HHL, N. C. VOL. IV, NO. 40 Entered as second-class matter November 14,1914, it the Postofflce at Chapel Hill, N C., under the act of August 24,1912. WHAT THE STATE CAN DO An effective attack upon the public welfare problems of a state is two fold: (1) By a State Welfare Board and by State Welfare Institutions, and (2) by Town and County Welfare Boards and Institutions. Both attacks must of course be supported by public intelligence sensitively aware of exist ing conditions and humanely moved to remedy them, else they fail or limp along lamely, on one foot. I call at tention mainly to the second aspect of Our orphan asylums—and there are no better in any state or country— cannot care for all the bereft and neg lected children of North Carolina. They are crowded to overflowing, and the known applicants number many more than can find places in them. A placing-out policy is inevitable, and the social machinery therefor is being created in other states. It ought to be a county machinery; so, because coun ty authority is closest to the problem and can most effectively and inexpen- the subject because it concerns our; children that need critical weakness in dealing with pub- homes and the homes that are lie welfare problems in North Caro- make children good, lina and in most other states. Mothers’ pensions are another ne- Public welfare work calls for a in North Carolina that we can- State Board of Public Welfare, state-; undertake until we have county wide in authority, supported by sufti- j ^elfare boards and superintendents, cient funds, properly functioned, and cannot venture into legislation on adequately officered, and for state in- matter until it is somebody’s stitutions that are large enough to' business in every county to care for the delinquents, the depend- when it is best to preserve the ents, the defectives and the neglected integrity of fatherless homes by giving who cannot be better cared for by local widowed mothers of good character authority and institutions. We must ™nncial support sufficient to enable have state penitentiaries, state prison tnern to rear their children outside of farms, and state tonvict camps because charity institutions. For lack of such convicted criminals are too few in any Pensions the best of homes must often- one county for the proper punishment ^mies be broken up; and while the and effective reformation of social of- niothers struggle for self-support fenders in county jails. We must have nway from their children, their child- state schools for the reformation of, become a heavy charge upon the wayward boys and girls, state institu- j fnarity of the State or join the swell- tions for fallen women, state hospitals niultitude of orphans that cannot for the insane and the epileptic, state. cared for in our orphan asylums, schools for the deaf and blind, the! children _ in orphan asylums need crippled and thp feeble-minded, be- j placed in good hpmes as fast as cause the county cannot afford to es- i they can be found; the orphans already to the oversight and guidance of social efforts and enterprises, state and local, public and private. Social diagnosis and social guardianship, case work, su pervision and guardianship in detail must at least be the business of local town and county authorities under the guidance of the central office at the capital. Everything of which I have spoken IS possible under our new public wel- fare law. Our new State Board of Pub lic Welfare has duties, rights and pow ers that are far beyond those of the old board. The law under which iti oper ates puts us well ahead of all other Southern states in the work of chari ties and corrections and well alongside the states of the North and East in op portunities and possibilities. It seems fairly clear that our new State Board will miss its largest; chance for effective service unless it can stimulate local interest in public welfare problems and organize welfare machinery by counties, just as our pub lie school and public health officers are doing in their particular fields of ef fort. The job is entirely too big for any one central office or any set of State institutions. It is county con- cem, county interest, county activity, and county institutions, that will count most in the end; not state-wide efforts and state-wide institutions, but coun ty-wide efforts and county-wide insti tutions in a hundred counties. tablish special institutions to deal fitly with the relatively small number of such unfortunates in each county. It is properly the business of the state to gather them into state institutions of the very best possible type and to deal in good homes need to be kept there by mothers’ pensions. Wisdom in de termining all these details depends up on painstaking case work, which could be done by county welfare boards and their secretaries. Without such organ- more than (1) the sjnall company of wretched souls in the poor house, (2) the larger number receiving small sums monthly from the county com missioners—how much larger nobody knows as a rule, and (3) the occasion al occupants of the bounty jails—a third of them empty at any one time, and most of them empty a full half of the year. Paupers and prisoners are an inescapable affliction and not a social problem. This and little more is about all that charities and correc tions has meant to the civic mind in any county, and this is at present the largest meaning that public welfare has for the public in general today. Civic consciousness and civic respon sibility in county affairs is feeble enough; but social consciousness, social responsibility, and organized social effort by counties can hardly be said to exist at all in the United States. County organization—civic and social —is the very weakest link in Ameri can democracy. Our essential weakness in North Carolina lies in the fact that four tifclis of all our pejple live iu wide ly scattered country homes and there fore feel a minimum rseponsibility for the conditions that result in poor gov ernment and that lay heavy economic and social penalities upon the county at large. The meaning of public welfare needs an immense enlargement in the public mind. The stupidest man among us must be brought to see that it con cerns the curse of illiteracy and near illiteracy, .wholesome community re creation and commercial amusements, The counties will be slow to create' P^®'’entable disease and postponable County Welfare Boards and to sup- feeble-mindedness and its I>ort county welfare suiiei’intendents insanity, poveity and its because such officials increase the local i P‘‘^nifold relationships, orphan child- tax burden and because the people in i homes whose fathers are genei-al see neither rhyme nor reason ' orphan children in unsafe in the proposition at present. What holies whose fathers and mothers are would a welfare superintendent have' ^hve, the placing-out .of children and I socialism (of the sort that offends the A QUARTER CENTURY JOB county jails and county homes, their mischievous misuse and the conse quences that are common almost ever3Twhere. . 6. He oould make a personal study of every person or family applying for outside aid, and supervise each case to see that the aid extended helps to raise the recipient tio his feet wherever such R.thing is possible, instead of dropping him into the mire of hopeless depend ency. ^ 7. He could forestall fraud and graft on the part of applicants for poor re lief on the one hand, and ignorant waste or deliberate misuse of public funds by public authorities on tihe other. 8. He could get feeble-minded girls and women into state institutions for schooling and training in self-support, and for protection against the im morality that multiplies feeble-minded children. Most of our poverty springs from feeble-mindedness and its causes, as I think we shall come to see. 9. He tould study in each county the causes of dependency, delinquency,and defectiveness, and report upon these problems to the grand juries, the coun ty commissioners, the welfare board, and thnough the newspapers to the public, and thus develop the intelligent sentiment that is so urgently needed in North Carolina in order to attack our various social problems effectively. He could be the local diagnostician and sanitarian in social matters, and the local agency of education, stimulation, and guidance in all organized social effort. He could pack the technical word “social” full of ite proper signi ficance. And this is necessary, because I constantly run across people w'ho think that it refers in particular to society as we find it displayed in the newspapers, or to social equality, or to with them properly under the general. nffencies the placing-out of orphan oversight of a ^tate Welfare Board. children is a mistake. WHAT THE COUNTY CAN DO, SOME COMMON MISTAKES But on the other hand, it calls for ; I am roughly distinguishing County Boards of Pulic Welfare with ' between w'hat can and ought to be done county-wide authority and trained ex- 1'^^ State welfare institutions on the one ecutive secretaries. Because (1) manyl hand, and what can best be done by of our social ills bulk up so big that they can be successfully attacked only in details by social interest, local ef fort, and local institutions. Tuberculo sis and poverty are capital instances of county welfare institutions on the other. The distinction is important. The State ought not to attempt, in futile ways what tan be done only by local county effort, nor ought counties social problems that are beyond the ‘ ^ attempt what can be done by the possibilities of state institutions, and State alone. Here and there in the that necessarily wait upon organized' United States costly mistakes are be- county efforts of effective sort. Be- j made for the lack of this distinc- cause, (2) the state officials in a big' tion in efforts and institutions, state institution or in a big fcentral' Foi" instance, a State sanitarium for office at the capital cannot finger cer- | the , tubei’culous is necessary as a tain social problems down to the Xast' clinic; as a center of up-to-date learn- detail. For instance, we do not know mg in the treatment of this disease, the deaf, the blind, the feeble-minded, and as an agency of state-wide educa- the epileptic, the crippled, and the neg-, tional effort and emphasis, but it is, of lected or wayward boys and girls their number, their naipes, and their residences in any county of the state; and so because there is at present no local organization charged with the re sponsibility of accounting for such un fortunates, and with the duty of urg ing them in sympathetic ways into proper state institutions. And because (3) a large number of necessary re forms in the Stats are delayed by the course, impossible as a cui-ing station for all the consumptives of any state. How could an institution with 135 beds undertake to cure the fifteen thousand cases of pronounced tuberculosis in this or any other state ? Here is a sit uation that calls for county interest, county effort, and county .hospitals— if not one in each county, then one at least for each group of co-operating counties. So far we have only a few lack of efficient county welfare boards! county tuberculosis hospitals; in Wis- and secretaries. Thus, we cannot now ^ consin there are forty-seven, have juvenile courts or special sessions i Xhe Mis-use of Jails adequately to oi our circuit courts consider juvenile offenders in chambers as wards in chancery, and wayward children under 16 years of age cannot On the other hand, our counties have long undertaken to punish convicted misdemeanants in jails and chain gangs. Jails are places for the deten te do in our county more than going' guardianship, wajnvard children, | normal minded, out to the poorhousc occasionally and: children maimed and 1: looking in at the jail every once in' “I'ain, the families of convicts in pris- lame in body and awhile ? is the question put to me'the ' returned convicts, prisoners on other day. This question will be asked I^^role, men wanting jobs and jobs a million times or so in the next quar-' wanting men; that it concerns jail and ter century m North Carolina, and it chain gang oonditions, poorhouse and must be answered convincingly if we I’^'^Pcr conditions, juvenile couirs and are to move ahead in a hopeful direc- oversight of juvenile probationers, tion. 1 fallen men and fallen women alike, Beluctance on the part of taxpayers the whole subject of social hy- is natural enough, because the cost of ffiene; that it concerns the conditions, county government is everywhere in- consequences and cure of social creasing by leaps and bounds. In North every sort; that it sweeps the Carolina in 1913 it amounted to nearly, whole immense field of social science seven million dollars, which was more theoietic and applied, than double the cost of State Govern-' To build a meaning of this adequate ment at that time. Largely, this in crease is due to waste by honest but inefficient county officials. We must be able to show that the salary system for and needful sort in the public mind, to stir the consciences and wills of men and women into activity, and to ei'ect suitable institutions in North Carolina now be put on probation under ou persons indicted for crimes and present law in North Carolina, because {g be innocent until they are th re is nobody officially chargea i proven guilty. As instruments of pun- our counties with looking_ aiter juve- jg^ment for convicted criminals, they bile probationers, or who is condition^ |^ failure and worse, they are an, ed to do it properly. j unspeakable reproach in every land [ the same reason another pre-. country. The punishment, refor- retorm ] social restoration of con- For gressive movement in prison falls to nieces in this State. I r efer to; . ut- nf- victs is the business of the State, and the lack of authoritative i the State with penitentiaries for fel- prisoners on parole or under me e , convicts and State fp’ms for niis- minate sentence from the ^coun ^y ^ i (jgnieanants (as in Indiana, for in district courts, the staite refori^torie^ ! ^as and the state penitentiaiy. W ^ these delica a chance to succeed in •"'•il +v,(,itnese delicate, difficult tasks, the the same kind of oversignt over tne success lying in proper families of criminals m prison over criminals upon their return after release. County Welfar® Boards other matters of importance wait ■upon the creation and proper function ing of County Welfare Boards. Fo instance, orphan children cannot now ideals and purposes, facilities, plans, and methods: the county is bound to fail with jails and chain gangs. When prisoners pass out of our courts under courthouse officials in at least 58 coun- ■ county by county is an exceedingly ties of the State, when protected bv the difficult but an exceedingly necessary auditing of county accounts by State task. We are confronted by a gigan- accountants, would create county fee tic educational campaign that challen- funds sufficient to pay the salaries of &es our finest purposes and our most all bounty officers and leave balances devoted efforts the next quarter cen- large enough to support county wel-' tury; and our women must lead in it fare superintendents. Already the sal-' because public welfare work is social ary' system of compensating county' of-! housekeeping and men lack the house- ficers i,s in vogue in 50 counties of the | keeping instincts. State. The proper auditing of fees and | , = commissions, in all of them would; puBLIC WELFARE DETAILS create fee and salary funds sufficinet *'"*-*'- w. to support a welfare superintendent in' Fm- gake of .simplicity I itemize the addition to other county officers. After i -teings that a county welfare agent can paying all county salaries the balances do under the direction of the State left over in eight counties last year; Board, that ought to be done in every ■were large enough for this purpose, county, and that are never likely to be These balances ranged from 82,800 in ^ done until it becomes somebody’s stat- Iredell to $2,500 m Guilford. Under. gd duty to do them, this plan with good management the; j. In conjunction with the county balances could easily be large enough ggbool superintendent, he could num- to support county ■welfare superintend- ber name and locate in reliable records ents in more than half the counties of ^ ^be illiterate, the deaf, the blind, the the State. ' feebleminded, the crippled and deform- And again, we are spending around ^d, the wayward and neglected, the or- $258,000 a year on county homes an(i pbans needing homes and the homes in the support of outside paupers; and offering shelter and loving care to or- this Qost is mounting up rapidly year pans, the families of convicts, retuim- by year, for lack of intelligent local in-1 convicts, prisoners lon probation or terest, oversight, and management. An | parole, the insane and the epileptic, effective attack upon our pauper prob-1 present, there are no such records lem alone would not only decrease the ■ county of the State. Such cen- volume of pauperism but it could cer-; data must be assembled in order tainly reduce the bill of costs. If so,; .j.bg(. .(-bg people of a county can know here is money enough saved in a single realize what the job of welfare is, detail to pay the salaries and expenses | bo-w bie it is and what the details are. of welfare superintendents in haif a | 2_ jjg could take into proper guard- hundred counties. . 4.1 ! ianship the dependents, the defectives. There are o^er approaches to tne , ^^g neglected, and the delinquents, resi- financial end of this county problem. They are this year being threshed out by the North Carolina Club at the University. The Club Year Book for 1917-18 will give these studies to the and State prison farms for punishment and restitution to useful citizenship. The State should not attempt to nn- p-py. ijy direct ways the details of many as a wise and safe policy m bis. It can never be done for an aiipe at present ■we homes entire state, in mpy fields of welfare investigate and appraise t -work, by any possible number of social that apply for such children experts and supervisors m any one sentence, they ought to pass out of our; public. Twio of them have already ap- county jails into State penitentiaries 1 pgared in Bulletin No. 25 of the Uni- . 4? 4T vgy-sity Extension Bureau. What Public Welfare Means But county welfare machinery will be set up slowly even in our best coun we keep such homes under the regular supervision to see that tne children are properly . c^’Ced f humanely provided with school art vantages and other opportunities. Bound-out children oversight in North Carolina, present they cannot receive it. noTit-ral office. There must be a staff of sp?ciMists in the office of the State Board to be sure, but it will be small fnd its efforts will be directed to keep- r OPPU1LU4.X...— a ‘ ^ .^^gb ahead of the times need the, same abreast o appiicu , r.iihHc and but at in tion and stimulation of the public, and ties unless the public mind gets busy in direct, first-hand ways ■with its social problems and spies them out to the last detail. Public welfare is a vague phrase. It conveys little mean ing or no meaning at all to the mind of most people; and this Is particularly true of dwellers in sparsely settled rural counties. Even the older phrase, charities and corrections, meant little dent in a qounty, and in sympathetic way urge into state intsitutions those that ought to be under the care of the state; and if state institutions are not large enough, he could create pub lic sentiment in favor of more extend ed facilities. 3. He could be a parole and proba tion officer for all classes and ages of wayward people outside of jails and reformatories by order of the various authorities. 4. He could have direct responsible oversight of the county home, the jail, and the chain gang. He could stand as a guarantor to the public that they are serving their proper uses, and no oth er. He could establish adequate re cording, accounting, and reporting sys tems. . 5. He could study the proper use 01 ence 10. And—what is fundamentally im portant—he could develop, organize and direct wholesome recreation in the countiryside and give it a proper place in the imral mind. The law indeed charges him with this particular duty. Our country people in America, in marked contrast with the farm folks of the old world countries, are settled in vast areas in widely scattered hiomes. Life is solitary and tends to be lonely and sombre. Work is a conscious ne cessity while fun and frolic are essen tially wicked—such is the firmly es tablished connection of ideas in the countryside. Rural America needs to be anointed with the oil of gladness that David Celebrates in the Psalms. People that do not play -together, never learn to work together; and if they can not or will not work together and pull together here on, earth, neither shall they dwell together in Heaven—a say ing that you will find in Timothy 10:16. Is there, then, anything for a coun ty welfare officer to do ? There is more to do that ought to be done than any ten such officers can do in any county. And fortunately so; it gives a wise officer a chance to call to his side and to involve as volunteers in his purposes all the civic and social minded men and women of the county. He needs them, and they need the work, and in it they are sure to find the more abundant life that the Master came to earth to brin^r to the sons and daughters of men. Religion Worth the Name Suppose we had in every county of North'Carolina a body of closely inte grated social servants composed of (1) the school board with its superin tendent and supervisors, (2) an agri cultural board with its home and farm extension agents, (3) a public health board with its whole-time health of ficer, its public health nurses, its clinics and dispensaries, (4) a public welfare board and its secretary charg ed with specific social concerns, and (5) a ministerial board composed of all the preachers lof all the churches busy stamping every common effort with the ultimate values of life and destiny, time and eternity—suppose I say, the civic and social mind of North Carolina were organized and federated in this way! If only it could be so, and it can, then what an era of demo cratic wholesomeness and effectiveness we should enter upon, and hqw rapidly our beloved state would move to the fore in the new social order that is even now breaking upon the world. Man freely self-surrendered to his fellow kind and whole heartedly given in organized effort to the comnwm good is the dream we dream. Man dedicated to the state is Prussianism; man ded icated to humanity is the soul of de mocracy; man dedicated to humanity, in His name, is the last word in any kind of religion that is worth calling Christian. The Kingdom of Heaven doubtless means much more than thi?, but I am sure that it ought never to mean less.—E. C. Branspn, an address before the N. C. Social Service Confer-