THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA The news in this publica tion is released for the press on receipt. NEWS LETTER Published weekly by the University of North Carolina for its Bureau of Extension. DECEMBER 11, 1918 CHAPEL HILL, N. C. VOL. V, NO. 5 Editorial Board i E. O. Branson, J. G. deR. Hamilton, L. R. Wilson, B. H. Thornton, Q. M. McKie. Entered as second-class matter November 14,1914, at the iPostofflce at Chapel Hill, N. C., under the act of August 24,1912. IF IT WERE YOUR CHILD 1 Speaking of World Belief AVork, why not vary ,lohn Knox’s phrase of fervent gratitude and say to yourself, That, but for the grace of God might have been my child? The country women of European lands rarely carry their babies in their arms. Baby rides in a wicker basket strapped to mother’s back, knapsack-wise, while mother goes her way crocheting lace, or knitting, and singing—or so it was be fore the war. How is it now? A returning Bed Cross worker tells how he was taken through stricken Poland. Along the roads, throughout the land, wherever he went he saw long lines of baskets rotting on the ground. Asking the meaning of them he was told of this custom of the European coun try women, and then he was told how the harried, driven folk, retreating before the invader, lagged in weariness, stum bled from weakness, fell fainting, starv ing, dying by the way. The wan babies, hanging from their mother’s withered breasts, in Henry •Grady’s phrase, fainted and perished. As they died, the exhausted mothers laid down the little bodies, so light, so worn away to skin and bone, laid them down in the now useless baskets, and left them 80. The tale runs into millions for Po land alone. Poland is bereft of children. Not one is left under five years of age. But in •other European lands other European children cry to us for food, and food w'e must send them, regularly, steadily, and for years to come lest they perish.—E. N. WORLD RELIEF WORK The first week in December is the week set apart by the Federal Food Adminis tration for World Relief Work. So we learn as we go to the printers with this issue of the News Letter. The people of the United States must be brought to realize that the need to conserve food is many times more im portant now than ever it was during the four years of war. On Sunday, December 1, the ministers nre asked to read Hoover’s message and ■warning in all the churches of the land. Dn Tuesday the 3d, Community Mass Meetings everywhere are called to con sider the menace of famine in Europe, and on Friday the 7th the alarm is to be sounded in every school in special pro grams of instruction and exhortation. The call to instant, active service is to the women of America—the housewives and the women’s organizations of every -sort. The programs of War Relief Week are their job. If they fail to rise to the occasion, they fail in a critical emergen cy in the history of mankind. It is theirs to see that the World Relief Week accomplishes its full purpose in America. Hunger Breeds Anarchy The war against autocracy has been won. . The war against famine and an archy is just beginning. Advices to the State Department seem clearly to indicate, says William Hard, that alt Europe from the Urals to the Alps may soon have to be surrendered to socialism of some sort. Russia and central Europe are gaunt ■with hunger. The facts are only just now coming to light. In Poland there are no children under five years of age. They ■are all dead from starvation. Gh'astly famine stalks abroad in the ■war-curst areas of Europe, and hunger now threatens to slay many millions more than the instruments of war have done. Revolutions have always begun in bread riots, and they have always been headed by ‘Rachel crying for her children.’ Famine means anarchy. Anarchy in cen tral and eastern Europe means anarchy in western Europe. And anarchy in Euroi>e means anarchy in America. Nothing else on earth has ever been as contagious as anarchy. The French Revolution began in star vation. In one province, said Arthur Young, 30,000 peasants lay dead or dy ing in the fields with grass in their mouths. The spark that set the fires of revolt ablaze-was struck by mobs of hun gry women. The spirit of revolt swept every country in Europe like a forest con flagration. And the job of social fire control in Eu rope, thereafter, was a half-century job. The fires of social revolution. were never wholly extinguished. Ever since they have been smoldering fires in every coun try of Europe, ready to blaze out afresh and never more certainly than now. Is the world of our day to be enveloped in turn by universal conflagration? • Anarchy—Bolslievism, I. AV. AVism, whatever you call it—threatens to sweep the earth with revolution. Fools do not fear it. Fools are always fearless. But wise men fear it—fear it exceedingly. The leading article in the Literary Digest of Nov. 23 tells in detail how greatly they fear it in every land and country. The ships of state are all afloat on troubled seas. Keeping this old world on even keel the next half century is a job for giants. Fundamentally it’s a famine job. AVe must fight famine with food, and slay anarchy with bread. A Self-Defensive Fight North and South America, New Zea land and Australia must feed Europe, or Europe faces famine and Bolshevism. Stabilizing the food conditions of the world is a six-year task, at the very least, under the best conditions, says Mr. Hoover. More than ever before we must waste nothing. Everything must be saved— especially dairy feeds, dairy products, and fats. These are the crying needs of Europe today and for many days to come. If Germany must be fed, then we must feed Germany—if not for Germany’s sake then for America’s sake; and we must do it in sheer self-defense. This is no time for sentiment. It’s a time for sense, and the time to be sensible is now. Save dairy feeds, dairy products and fats of every sort. That’s the word that must be sounded in every home in the land! That’s the slogan of the AVorld Relief Week.—E. C. B. THE NEW DAY IN ENGLAND “It is not only the new women elec tors,’’ continues the London Daily Mail, whom the old wirepullers have to fear. There is a new world with a new atmos phere, a new outlook, new issues, new problems, new conditions. New men are needed to interpret the new meanings of politics. The old players of the old game have passed or are passing one by one into obscurity. The lights that seemed to burn so brightly when the present parliament was elected are extin- gushed or have dwindled into guttering candle-ends. The old shibboleths and definitions are empty, meaningless sounds. The party wirepuller’s old stock-in-trade is obsolete and he has nothing ready or in sight with which to replace it.—Ex change.’’ THE RIGHTS OF MAN Edmund BurKe Civil society is made for the advan tage of man. All the advantages for which it is made become his right. Civil society is an institution of be neficence. Law is only beneficence acting by rule. Each man has a right to do sepa rately for himself whatever he can without trespassing upon others. And he has a right to a fair portion of all that socity can do for him, with all its combinations of skill and force. to the same old tune. There are disturbing symptoms all over Europe which we at home would be wise to take note of and provide against. I have been scanning the horizon and I can see flashes on the sky ■^vhich indicate to me that there are grave atmospheric disturbances in the social and economic world. In the natural world you cannot avert the storm by thinking. In the more artificial world of human society you can, if you take things in time, avert the hur ricane. I have one word of advice to my coun trymen, and I say it solemnly to them: Take heed in time, and if you do we shall enjoy settled weather for the great har vest which is coming when the fierce heat of summer which is beating upon us in this great war shall be over and past.— Recent speech in London. AS LLOYD GEORGE SEES IT AVe must pay more attention to our schools. The most formidable institution we had to fight in Germany was not the arsenals of Krupp or the yards in which they turned out submarines, but the schools in Germany. They are our most formidable competitors in business and our most terrible opponents in war. An educated man is a better worker, a more formidable warrior and a better citizen. That was only half comprehended here before the war. It is idle to contend that this vast con vulsion has taught us nothing. Men who learn nothing are fitted for nothing, and they certainly ought not to be employed in the settlement of after-war problems, because they are dangerous men. Do not turn your backs on the future nor dote on the present. You will forgive me when I say I see that kind of doting in and around the sheds where the party machines have been rusting during the war. I can hear sounds of elaborate preparation for setting up the old merry- go-round. That would give men the il lusion that they are prancing at a terrific speed when they are really circling around the same old clanking machine DEMOCRACY AND DOLLARS 3. As the war now seems to be on the last lap, our democracy and dollars shine with intense, brilliancy upon the sky of the world—a rainbow of hope almost realized to our allies, a flaming sword of destruction to our enemies. AVhen the war has finally come to an end, will American democracy and Amer ican dollars be able to make such a pro found impression upon the thought of the world—upon the leaders of the nations as they assemble to fix the boundaries of nations now on the map and of those to be put upon the map? AVhen the war is no longer, will Amer ican democracy and American dollars work with such tremendous earnest ness for the maintenance of justice amorrg the peoples of other nations and among ourselves as they have worked for many months in the strength of battle? AVhen peace has been re-established, will Amer ican democracy and American dollars be able to play such a big vital part in the building of the political security and the economic prosperity of the peoples of the world as they have played in the de struction of a military might which has been guided by the brains of selfish and brutal men? AVhen the war is over, when the soldier has returned to the ordinary tasks of making a living, will American democ racy and American dollars work so en thusiastically for the promotion of justice between our own people as they have struggled to bring the opportunity of fair dealings between the peoples of other na tions?—Charles L. Raper. e(]uitable division between capital and labor. But no Bolshevism, no failure to pro tect alike property and labor, no class domination that lends itself to injustice or wrong can flourish on this continent. Justice presides over both the rights of man and his rights of property. There will be no place in this new world for the leadership either of timid men or those who grasp at the shadows of issues which the war has relegated to the scrap heap. The man who prates of doc trines good in an isolated country will have empty benches for an audience. During the war we have not hesitated at any action, however radical it 'was re garded by conservatives in other times, that would help to win the war. AVe have employed weapons both ancient and modern. Some of our men are wearing coats of mail, others are mounting the heavens. The javelin of the cave dweller has its place with the latest concoction of poisonous gas. Even so, in the ne-vv time now shortly at hand, our real leaders will be those who will not reject a method or a princi ple because it is old or embrace it because it is new. AVe will prove all things in or der that we may hold fast only that which is good for a heritage to be handed down by the generation that stood in its lot in these days and saved the civilized world. AVe have had but one principle since the President in the halls of Congress gave expression to the national conviction that the course of the German Empire de manded that America must make the world safe for democracy. AA^e are en listed with all that we have and are until the objects stated by the President shall have been achieved. America After the War AS DANIELS SEES IT The world, after peace shall have been won, will not go back to conditions such as existed prior to our entrance into the mighty struggle, says Hon. Josephus Daniels, Secretary of the Navy. AVhat labor earns will find its way into the pockets of labor. New conditions will impose new duties. Statesmanship of ■vision will create new opportunities for American commerce and guarantee labor the sweat of its brow. Political shibbo leths that men heeded in 1916 are as dead as the mummies of Egypt, and public men who try to galvanize them will be interred in the catacombs that overlook Salt River. This war is fundamental. Its effect will be to change everything. Trade and commerce and finance will seek new and broader fields, bigger men and nobler standards. The large returns from farm and factory will not go to the few, but will be apportioned to men of brain and brawn in proportion to the value of their contribution. There will be a more And then—and then, what? AVill we return to the methods and thoughts and policies of pre-war days? The man who supposes he will ever again live in a world like that which existed prior to the war has read history to little purpose. AVe will not be afraid in peace to do revo lutionary things, seeing we have become accustomed to doing them during the war. AVhat shape will our after the war rad icalism take? No man is wise enough to prophesy; but it is safe to say our first and imperative duty here in America is to make democracy safe for {he world. It would be the tragedy of tragedies if after our sacrifices to make the world safe for democracy our democracy would not be of a brand to bless the world. It must be purged of all class distinction, of every vestige of privilege, of every hoary-beard ed tradition that fetters justice. It must be a democracy such as Jefferson formu lated and Lincoln enforced. Its standard must be equal rights to all, special privi leges to none. This generation must live in the spirit of Jefferson and Lincoln but it must not be bound by policies that suited their day. AVe will not be called upon to fight primogeniture and the union of Church and State and foreign control which Jef ferson successfully opposed. Human slav ery, which Lincoln ended for the good of both races and the glory of his country, no longer needs to be opposed. But let us not doubt that there will be lions in our path if we tread the hard road of du ty. Profiteers in war, worse than slack ers and cowards, will not be easily routed in peace. Invoking the spirit of patriotism, giant evils will follow this as all other wars. Eternal vigilance will still be the price of liberty. Men more careful -to preserve the status quo of 1914 than to secure equal and exact justice will not be want ing. There will be as much need for courage to fight for real democracy when peace smiles as there is need now to op pose German aggression. But the spirit of hostility to absolutism will burn strong in the breasts of the millions of the young men returning victorious from the Rhine. They will have cut their war through shell and barb wire to Berlin, and they will come back home with the high re solve that America shall give them and their fellows the kind of country that is worthy of their heroism. This is our faith The heroes of today in the trenches must be heroic in civil life, at the ballot box and in the halls of legislation tomorrow. The Ralers of America AVho will control America for the next generation? It will be the men who fought on land and sea, delved in the mine, plowed the furrows, built ships, forged war weapons, and in other ways were fully enlisted in the war, forgetting ease, comfort, profit, remembering only that they were enlisted in the war and for, the war. Only they will be worthy to control America. Understand me: I would not be so unjust as to give exclusive credit to those "who wear the uniform of the ar my or navy, or those who are doing the herculean labors back of our soldiers and sailors. AVe have another class to which we must do honor. I refer to the good men and women, the boys and girls, who would readily take up arms if their coun try would call them, or who would take their places by forge and furnace, or in mine or on deck, were they so assigned, but whose places are less conspicuous. Many of these, I know, are longing for more emphatic connection with the war; but let them be comforted—if in their daily labors they are doing what our country desires them to do and doing it with all their might, they too deserve the name of patriot. The housekeeper at her canning and knitting, the father on the downward slope of the years, the daugh ter, the son, each has a duty, each a place in this great struggle, and the test is, after all, not what station did one oc cupy, but did you occupy the station where your service was greatest, and did you do therein your full duty? That world in which we shall live will apply the acid test to every man who asks trust or confidence. “AVhat did you do from April 6, 1917, to win the great victory?’’ and woe to the man of strength who cannot say, “I gave myself, my life, my all in the service where the selective draft placed me.” If he cannot truly say this, it were better for him that a mill stone were hanged about his neck and he were cast into the midst of the sea. How They Will Rule AA’^hatlwill these men who have wrought well in furnace or trenches or on the sea do when they come into their own? They will stand for justice, for law and order. Anarchy, Bolshevism, privilege, preda tory business cannot escape their wrath. They will have a world-vision and will demand a treaty with all self-governing nations to preserve the peace of the world, and will maintain a powerful navy to help enforce the decrees of the tribunal they wBl set up. They will eontinute to enlarge the merchant marine so that American bottoms will carry American goods and exchange products with every nation and with all the isles of the sea. They will be less concerned as to whether this is by public or private ownership than with securing and enlarging world wide commerce. The odds are that they will see in Gov ernment ownership and direction the best agency, but they will discard that if pri vate ownership insures the best results. They will never return to duplication of railroad transportation and competition in terminals and facilities. All the bene fits which Government operation of rail roads have given will be continued, whether the railroads are in public or private ownership. The telephone and telegraph will prob ably be a permanent part of the Postal Service, though the men who will then rule America will be open-minded enough to discuss the best method of com munication. The lessons of sanitation and war on drink and immoral disease will insure to the civilian population as great care and as strenuous effort in the methods of prevention and cure as war has taught are needed for men under arms.—N. Y. Times. Those men will have little patience with the how-not-to-do-its and the bet- ter-stick-to-the-old-way apostles and apol ogists. Men who have dug trenches un der the fire of the enemy, stood on de stroyers unafraid when struck by tor pedoes, endured privation in the armies, and toiled to weariness on the farm and in the factory to win the war—these men will base their creed upon the Declara tion of Independence and the Treaty of Peace, and the meif who wish to build high walla to make an isolated America or turn national wealth into selfish chan nels will be little heeded in the forward march as these men make America truly democratic, where all men have equal op portunity, and where no man can take from the mouth of labor the bread it has earned, or challenge the worth of one who in such a time as this did his duty in the cause of mankind.—Indianapolis Address.