I The news in this publica tion IS released for the press on receipt. THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA NEWS LETTER Published weekly by the University of North Carolina for its Bureau of Extension. MARCH 31, 1920 CHAPEL HHX, N. C. VOL VI, NO. 19 Sdiiorial Board j U. C. Branson. L. B. Wilson, E. W. Knight, D. D. Carroll, J. B. Bullitt. Entered as second-class matter November 14, 1914, at the Postoffloe at Chapel Hill, N. C., under the act of August 24.1912 A BILLIONAIRE STATE PUBLIC WELFARE COURSES Featured by the second meeting of the State and County Council, t)y, a roads institute under the general oversight of the State Highway Coininissioner, by a special institute for ’secretaries of chaiii- bers'of.conunei'ce’atid other ^ commercial and tradej,organizations,'‘and by|the be ginning of public welfare instruction, j the plans for the summer activities were announced today at the Ui^iversity of Xorth Carolina. The summer school proper, Director N. AV. Walker said, will begin Tuesday, June 22, and will continue for six weeks, closing Thursday, Augusts. Important increases in courses both for credit toward a college degree and for the teachers of the state liave.been made. Special Courses Beginning at the same time hut contin uing for six weeks after the regular clos ing of the summer school will be the special courses pre|>ared by the University and the American Red ilross secretaries, charity organization secretaries, Y. M. C. A. and Y. W. (D. A. secretaries and social workers of every kind. Included in the summer school also will he a six weeks’ course for county superintendents of public welfare, to be conducted by the Slate Superintendent of Public Wellare, the University amt the Red Cross au thorities. Sliortly after the close of the siuniuer school the second session of the State and (\mnty Council will sta't, probably around August 10, running for three days. At the same time will begin a week’s course for the commercial secretaries iiwW being arranged by tlie State association ,)f secretaries of chambers of commerce tnd the .school of commerce of the Uiii- rersity. Tying up witli liotli of these vvill Ije Commissioner Page’sanuual road iistitute, which is expected to run a week also Eighteen Departments Eiiilit' eu depuirtuie.nts will offer courses in the summer school, wliirli will be counted as credit toward a degree. Op portunity is thus provide'i, Director Walker pointed out, for students to cut than half of 89 babies born died before they were a month old! In another community 22 out of the 28 babies died witliin the first month ; in another 10 of the 16; in another 10 of the 14; and, most liorrible of all, in anotlier commu nity 12 of tlie 15 babies born died within tiie first thirty days. The Death Roll of Babes The figures in these country surveys are small in number but appalling in significance. Such are tlie combined results of spar sity of population, poor roads, the absence of country telephones, soc'iai insulation in general, the lack of country doctors in adequate numbers, convenient lios- pital facilities, public health nurses, clin ics, and dispensaries, the lack'of hunse- bold liygiene and sanitation, nnintelli- gent in Ian t feeding and nursing care, and primitive notions of health-promo tion ami disease-prevention. Verily King Ignorance slays as n.any babies in remote communities every year in every state as ever King Herod slew in Bethlehem. Reaching country homes effectively is tlie big end of public liealth work in Nortli Carolina ami every otlier state. , I'lie till St accurate nieasuie of a civili zation is tlie deatli rate ofcliildren. And the deatli rate of children is apiialling in North Uaroliiia. A lull tid'd of our deaths year by year i.s of children tinder five years of age. Nearly 100 of every lOUO children born in North Carolinadie with in the first tv\elve montlis. In Lelcti- worth, a gimlen city (>f England, the rate is less lliaii 32. In New Zealami tlie infant dtatli rate is i-tid less. A STARTLING STATEMENT At a recent meeting of the Amer ican Public Health Association in New York, Dr. W. S. Rankin, the president, made some startling state ments with reference to the physical and mental health of the population of this country. Of the 110,000,000 citizens of this country, 45,000,000 are physically im perfect; 15,000,000 ■ die annually; 3.000. 000 are in bed all the time, 1.000. 000 have tuberculosis, 2,500,000 contract venereal diseases each year, from 2,000,000 to 3,000,000 are cases of hookworm and malaria. Only 37.500.000 are fairly healtliy and 19,- 500.000 are in full vigor. With all our vaunted support of higlier edin a- tional institutions, it is iruere-iing, perhaps surprising, to find that there are more persons in th» insane asy lums in this country than in all ti e coilege.-i and universirie.«. Ir is also estimated that the former cost more to tn nntain than do the la'ter. COUNTRY. HOME CONVENIENCES LETTER SERIES No. 5 A LUXURY OR A NECESSITY T For years six million farm families in tlie country have looked with more or less envy on the one million families who enjoy the comforts and conveniences of city life. Fur years, an ever increasing number of these country people have an swered the call of the city, quite as much for the purposes of escaping from the comfortless, convenienceless existence of the average farm as for tlie higher wages to he had,for shorter hours and lighter work in the cities. COMMUNITY MUSIC People wli'i are interested in communi ty music as a feature of coinnitinhy life may have tlie University Leaflet of six pages on C"niniunity Alnsic, tiy Paul Jotm AYeaver, Professor of Music at the Uuiversity of North Carolina. They slionid write to Dr. L. R, AA’ilson, Direct or of the Univer.sity Bureau of Extension. A COUNTRY CHURCH IDEAL down materially in the old time system of four years for an A. B. degree. Grad-j My conception tif a church is\hat it nates oI standard Colleges are able to ob- should stand for the betterment 6t men tain a Master’s degree in four summers, from their feet on the ground to tliGr A marked drift toward this work in re- heads in God’s heaven, covering in its [lent y ears lias iieeii noted liy University range all calls that men make in tiieir officials. Last year 350 students took hiniger,wlietlieritbealiungerforbetler college courses in the summer school and business or a hunger for spiritual food, this year the number is expected to run Deally, instead of the churcli standing liiglier. I for the cure of souls, it stands for tlie lure For teachers the department of educa-' hf souls; when they are lured to the tion ofler.s eiglit course-, iuclading one cliurch tlieir souls will be cured, allowing modern nietliotls in te ie.liing .all ' Tlie purpose of tlie cliurch sliouldbe to tlie standard higlisclioolsubjects. Cours- save tlie whole man. That was tlie con es are also offered in tlie normal defiart- j cept of ,leans Olirist. He saiti, ‘Come inent in accordatiee witli tlie (ilans of the ; unto me and I will give you rest.’ How State Dejiartaient of Education for North cim a man find rest when he is physically C-arolina teachers. A model denioustra- Tlie cliurcli owes a message to tion school Vvill be sliowti, j man’s body. You can’t save a man in Special opportunities in nnisic will be■ T'on can’t save ids soul and let offered this summer fhrougli Professor his body go. A ou can’t save his soul and Paul John VA^eaver, of the University de-! nihul go. partment of music. Tlie Carolina Chorus j Tlie old idea of preaching was just to and eonuiiunity singing in all its forms ’ kct'ip ih'd tell people wliat Jesus said, will be organized, as well as instrumen- | and let it go at that. God said thus and ta.1 music. The original plays of the Caro-i and let your social conditions go lina Playmakers, under the direction of i whack. Tlie old idea was to get people Professor Frederick H. Koch, will also be presented. —Lenoir Chambers. OUT-HERODING HEROD Remote country areas entirely witliont medical service; tlie doctors resident at tlie county seat from ten to twenty miles away from a third of the country homes; poor roads at best at any time and imprs sible iroads in liad weatlier; from one- half to two-thirds of tlie motliers without a doctor wlien tlieir cliildreii were born, tliree mothers entirely alone and 46 with only their husbands in attendance; com monly no mir.-iing care at and after oliild birtti except that of an untrained hired girl, a relative, or a neiglibor; and so on and on. Here are some phrases lifted out of a report on .health surveys in six rural counties in four states, by field experts sent out by tlie Children’s Bureau in W^ashington. Two of these country com- offimties, by the way, are in North Caro- ina. The others are in rural northwest ern states. |As a result of sucli conditions, in five o tliese country commnnities 45 or more into tlie clmrch in a revival excitement and after tliat leave tliem to look out for themselves as best they might. AVhat has such a church to give a man after it has converted him? You’ve got to minister to the mind as well as to the soul. The church must serve so as to occupy the mind. Tokee;) boys from shootingcraps give them a good picture show. They’ll come to that,—Rev. A. H. Barnes, a country church pastor in Missouri, quot ed in The ^iountry Gentleman. A REAL MAYOR Fred A. AA’arnock, the newly elected mayor of A’oungstown, Ohio, who assum ed office on New A’ear’s Day, 1920, is a new type of city official, according to the Youngstown Telegram: His first official act was to place under tlie plate-glass cover of the mayor’s desk a printed card containing his campaign and post-election pledges. Similar cards were posted in ttie police station and other city offices. The seven pledges are a's follows: I STAND PLEDGED To enforce rigidly the laws against bootleggins, -peakeasies, and all sales of intoxicating liquor. To absoluteh sufipriss gambling. To .-upiire.ss a'l iiu.norat houses and to eliminate iirostitntes and their parasites Ironi ihe streets of the city. To firomote wholesome Yecreation and S|iort.s, such as clean moving pictures, lia-eliHll, and foijthall, in all reasonable and practicable ways To aafegnard the financial welfare of the taxpayers by running the city on business princip'es and not as a political or per-oiial machire. To use my best endeavors to advance the general welfare of - Youngstown by pushing forward the many necessary ini- [ir-ivenients which the city’s growth and deveioptneiit require. To v'noperate with all the agencies which are working for the hetternient of tlie city ill living conditions, the protec t'oii of life, and the moral .ind iihysical development of the children.—American Social Hygiene Associati"n. At the same time many city folk have heard, and wanted to heed, the seduc tive calls of .simple life in the country, but they have paused when they thought of the back-breaking tasks, the joy-rob bing job.s that have always been a part of every-day life m the average American farm. To the citj mik such drudgery is uninviting. On the other hand many of the comforts and conveniences that are taken as a matter of course by the city folk are looked on as luxuries by the country folk. What is a Luxury? But is it a luxury lobe a tile to draw water from a tap instead of laboriously drawing it from a well, or carrying it many aching steps from a spring? Is it a luxury to flood any room you wish with a brighi clieery light by simply turning a conveniently placed switch, instead of carrying a dangerous, dirty, smelly oil lamp from one room to another- as yhft need it? Is it a luxury when you spend ten cents for tlie power necessary to do the week’s washing instead of using fifty cents worth oi your own time, and good ness knows how much of your patience and good nature? Economists tell us that luxuries are things not absolutely essential to the in dustrial efficiency of the average family. On this cold-blooded basis then sucli seeming luxuries as the electric light, the electric pump, the electric washing ma chine, the fan, tne churn, the—why there is hardly any end to the list of electrical contrivances which, though they may have been nineteenth century luxuries, have now become necessary comforts and conveniences in the twen tieth century. Gone Are the Days ■ It is only r cently that all these things have been made available to the Ameri can farmer. AVithin the last five years the farm lighting set has been brouglit to such a stage of perfection that not only can the farmer have all the advantages of the city dweller, but what is more he can have tliem for not one cent more thas it costs the city dweller for the same thing. Gone are the days of the lamp and lan tern! Gone are the days of the old creaking pump! This is the age of effi ciency ! The age of the master-servant —electricity.-^P. H. I). A BILLION DOLLAR STATE Kansas is bragging miglitily of late about being A Billion Dollar State. But Kansas lia^ iiotliing on North Caro lina. AA’e are ourselves A Billion Dollar State. L'lok at tlie figures for North Carolina. Crop values produced in 1919 1 683,000,000 Farm animals and products produceci in 1919 100,000,000 Mamifactured products in 1914 289,000,000 / ) Total #1,072,000,000 And tills modest total does not include the value of our stubble, straw, and corn- sta'ks, nor tlie product of our fisheries wortli 3 million dollars, nor tlie output oi our mines and quarries worth 6 millions nor our firewood cut worth 25 millions, nor our cottonseed worth 30 millions, nor our lumber and timber cut worth 150 mil lions, nor tlie 1919 value of our industrial products which were worth some 400 mil lions more than in 1914. As a matter of fact we are nearer being a two billion than a one billion dollar state. Our manufactured products were twice the quantity and three times tlie value of our 1914 output. Indeed, the volume of these values last year was close to $750,- 000,000. However, the figures of the 1919 cen sus of manufactures liave not yet been given to the public. And so on the basis of tlie old figures, we claifn to be in tlie liilhonaire class. Easily so, with a half billion or so to spare. What it Means AA’hen tlie primary wealtli produced by our farms and factories alone amounts to more than a Itillion dollars in a single year, it becomes evident that North Caro lina is no longer poor but rich and fast becoming richer: AVe are now producing greater wealth in one year than we have been willing to put on our tax' books in two hundred and fifty years—more by a hundred tniliion dollars! No wonder we were able to pay a liun- dred million dollars into the federal treasury in 1919 in revenue stamps and in taxes on incomes and excess profits, and to do it witlioiit batting an eyelid. No wonder our federal taxes on personal iuc-onies and excess pioflts alone are al most equal to the total value of all the church iiroperties of tlie state—23 against 25 miljion dollars. if 23 tlionsand people and four thou sand coi poratioiis in North Carolina are able to pay tweiity-tliree million dollars into tlie federal treasury in income and excess ptofits taxes, how much could the rest of our two and a half million people pay into our state treasury for schools and roads and public health purpii.^es— that is to say, if only they were minded to doit, if only they were really convinced 01 tlie value of education, health, and highways? How We Ranh The value of manufactured products in North Carolina in 1914 was 289 million dollars in round miiubers—mainly of course in cotton and tobacco factory products. Only 17 states showed a lar ger total. See the table elsewhere in this issue. Ill the value of itidustrial products, we outranked every other southern state, Texas alone excepted, and Texas, be it remembered, is five times the area and has nearly tw ice the populatioti of North Caro lina. AA’e were 20 millions ahead of Virginia our nearest sontliern competitor; 30 mil lions aliead of Georgia, 50 millions ahead of Kentucky, 70 millions ahead of Ten nessee, and 100 millions ahead of Alaba ma. AA’e outstripped South Carolina more than two to one, Oklahoma nearly three to one, and Mississippi nearly lour to one. Tremendous Gains During the 1904-14 period we a little more tlian doubled the total value of onr manufactured products In all the Ui.i- II d States only eight states made greater gams in industrial development—namely Arizona, Idaho, Michigan, Nevada, Ok lahoma, Texas, Utah, and Wyoming. It will he noted that every one of tliese states is in the oil and mineral mining areas; and also that in the total value of industrial products North Carolina stands far. ahead of all these states, Texas and Michigan alone excepted. In 1899, twenty-seven states stood above us in the column of industrial out put; but in 1914, the number dwindled I to 17. j During these fifteen years North Caro- I lina moved ahead of ten states in mnnu- ■ facturing enterprises—namely, Colora.io, 1 Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine! Nebraska, New Hampshire, Rhtide Is land, Tennessee, and Virginia. In 1919 we were still nearer the top; how much nearer it will be impossible to say until the last year’s census of manu factures gets into print. But it is sale to say that the 1919 total will be amazing. AVe venture to predict that it will be around three-quarters of a billion dollars. In 1917 seven hundred millions was the gross income of our cor porate businesses, and the gross value of manufactured products must have been far beyond tliat, figure. AVe are hoping to get advance sheets from the Census Bureau, and to publish these 1919 figures at an early date. FACTORY PRODUCTS IN THE UNITED STATES In 1914 according to the Federal Census of Manufactures. Value Rank State Value Rank State 1 New York ...$3,814,661,114 25 Nebraska ... 2 Pennsylvania ... 2,832,349,437 26 Tennessee.... 3 Illinois .... 2,247,322,819 27 Maine.... 4 Ohio .. 1,782,808,2(9 28 AA’est A’irginia 5 Massachusetts .. 1,641,373,,047 29 New Hampshire ■6 N' w Jersey .., 1,406,633,414 30 Alabama 7 Alichigan ... 1,086,162,432 31 South Carolina .. . 8 Indiana .. 730,795,021 32 Colorado 9 California ... 712,800,764 33 Oregon 10 AA’isconsin .. 695,172,002 34 Oklahoma 11 Missouri .. 637,952,128 35 Utah 12 Connecticut ... 545,471,517 36 Montana .... 13 Alinnesota ... 493,354,136 37 Arkansas ... 14 Maryland 377,749,078 38 Florida .... 15 Texas ... 361,279,303 39 Mississipui.. 16 Kansas .. 323,234,194 40 A’^ermont. 17 Iowa ... 310,749,974 41 Arizona,. !S NortK Carolina 289,411,987 42 Delaware 19 Rhode Island ... 279,545,873 43 Idaho 20 A’irginia ... 264,039,041 44 South Dakota.... 21 Louisiana ... 255,312,648 45 North Dakota. Georgia ... 253,270,511 46 Nevada ... 23 AVashington . 264,039,041 47 AVyomins 24 Kentucky ... 230,248,909 48 N“"’ Mexico. 212,071,489 200,450.118 193,511,782 182,843,866 178,797,633 138,891,202 136,839,321 109,761,951 102,005,693 87,112,360 84,446,136 83,940,587 81,112 291 79,550,095 76j990,974 fe4,089,510 56,034,966 28,453,797 24,138,566 '21,147,431 16,083,304 11,223,415 i| if