The news in this publi cation is released for the press on receipt. JULY 29, 1925 the UNIVERSiTY OF NORTH CAROLINA NEWS LETTER Published Weekly by the University of North Caro lina for the University Ex tension Division. CHAPEL HILL, N C. THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA PRESS VOL. XI, NO. 37 Editorial Boardt E. C. Branson, S. H. Hobbs. Jr., L. R. Wilson. E. W. Knight, D. D. Carroll. J. B. Bullitt. H. W. Odum. Entered as second-class matter November 14. 1914. at the Postoffice at Chapel Hill, N. C.. under the act of August 24. 1912 V. TAX COLLECTING (It is suggested that one person be charged wi^h this section) A. Outline 1. The Tax list; Prepared by Register of Deeds or Tax Supervisor. (74) * When endorsed has force of a judgment. (74) C. S. 7991. t 2. The Tax Collector: In most counties taxes are col lected by sheriff. (79) He sits for a day or more in each township. (79) - 3. Payment of taxes: When due. (78) Discounts and penalties. (78) C. S. 7994. Form of receipt. (74, 78) ^ C. S. 7994. 4. Delinquent taxpayers: Levy on personalty. C. S. 8006- 8008. Garnishee wages, (65) C, S. 8004, Sell real estate. (98, 99) C. S. 8010-8027. Date of sale. (98) C. S. 8012. Published notice. C. S. 8014. Personal notice. C. S. 8013. Manner of sale. C. S. 8016. Sheriff's record of tax sales. C. S, 8017. Certificate of sale to purchaser, or assignee. C. S. 8024, 8026. 6. Redemption of land sold for taxes: C. S. 8038. Must be within one year. Must pay 20 percent interest to purchaser. Must pay costs to county. 6. Failure to redeem: If certificate of sale held by pri vate party, he must serve per sonal notice on taxpayer, occu pant, and mortgagee, if they can be reached. C. S, 8028. Otherwise at the end of nine months he affvertises for three consecutive weeks. C. S. 8028. At the end of year may demand deed from sheriff, C. S. 8030; or he may foreclose within two years. C, S. 8037. If certificate of sale held by coun ty, may institute foreclosure proceedings after one year and within five years after date of sale. C. S. 8037. Original owner may start suit for recovery within three years. C. S. 8034. 7. Sheriff's Settlement: (86-96) C. S. 7998; C. S. 8048-8062. Time of settlement. (78, 86, 88) Compensation. (87) C. S. 8044. Commissioners to determine what taxes are insolvent. (79, 89) C, S. 8041. 8. Taxes a Prior Claim: (89) * Numbers in parentheses refer to sections in the 1926 Machinery Act. t Numbers preceded by C. S. refer to sections in Consolidated Statutes. B. Explanation No taxing unit ever collects all of the taxes which it levies, and naturally the proportion will be less in a time of de pression than when times are good. In agricultural counties the ratio of insol vents will reflect the condition of the crops. Yet sometimes two similar coun ties under almost identical conditions will present striking differences in tax collections. One county may collect 99 percent of its taxes and the other hardly more than 90 percent. Such variations suggest unequal dili gence on the part of the tax collectors. In most counties the sheriff acts as tax collector, and in most counties he re ceives an ample salary or commission for performing this service. Too fre quently he is dilatory and over-indul gent; rarely is the full letter of the law enforced. More than likely his indul gence is prompted by the most generous impulses. The sheriff is usually a kindly man, and he does not like to be severe with his fellow citizens. But it is doubt ful if leniency in tax collecting is any kindness after all. Postponement of payment this year only makes it more difficult to meet it next year. Delay in collection often permits the migratory taxpayer to escape. Furthermore, it deprives the county of the use of its funds, and necessitates borrowing. But worst of all, it establishes a bad prece dent. If one is granted an extension, others have a right to demand the same privilege. The result is that delay in paying taxes has become chronic in North Carolina. But that is not all. Some do not pay at all and “get by” with it. When »there is no real estate there is no other way to collect from a delinquent except through execution. The sheriff dislikes to seize a man’s personal property; it is physically easier and politically wiser to declare the taxpayer “insolvent”; and this is too often done. Incase there is real estate it can be advertised and sold for taxes, but here again the per formance is only a gesture. Few people care to purchase land at a tax sale be cause of the inconvenience and uncer tainty involved in getting a deed. Con sequently the county bids in the prop erty and, if the owner redeems it within a year, collects the tax plus a 20 per cent penalty. If the owner fails to redeem it the county rarely proceeds to foreclose as provided by law. The taxes stand against the land and may be col lected later, but often there is a change of administration, the record of tax sales is lost or unintelligible and so the slate is wiped clean. Thus the county not only loses the tax, but the respect and fear of the taxpayer. It has be come a habit with many taxpayers to wait to be coerced. There seems to be little stigma attached so long as other reputable citizens are also being adver tised. A vigorous enforcement of the tax laws throughout the state would inculcate a wholesome respect for law and incidentally effect a considerable saving to those who now pay their taxes promptly and honorably. C. Questions What percentage of the 1924 taxes have been collected in your county? 1923 taxes? 1922 taxes? Does the sheriff make an annual set tlement? What was the amount of insolvents last year? Examine the list. What was the amount of tax sales for 1924 taxes? Are there still sales to be held for 1924 taxes? How much real estate has the county bid in for each of the last three years? How much was redeemed within a year? What was done in those cases in which it was not redeemed? Does the sheriff exhaust a man’s per sonalty before selling his real estate for taxes? What compensation does the sheriff receive for collecting taxes? Are the tax laws rigorously and im partially enforced? Are discounts allowed if taxes are paid early, and a penalty imposed if paid late? Is the penalty heavy enough? What portion of the marriage license fee is retained by the county? What privilege and license taxes does | the sheriff collect for the county? for the state? D. Sources of Information Consolidated Statutes, sections 7972- 8062. ^ North Carolina Machinery Act, 1926, sections 74 to 99. County Tax Books, and county tax officials.—Paul W. Wager. MODEL RURAL COMMUNITY A model rural community Will have good roads Will be patriotic Will be prosperous Will be sanitary Will be ambitious Will be cooperative Will have good schools Will be law-abiding Will be God-fearing. A community with these charac teristics does not merely happen. It becomes so only as a direct result of well-planned thinking and doing of men and women who have vision, personality, a tactful judgment, and the ability to do common things in an uncommon way. It,is safe to say that a community will be just as strong and progressive as its citizen ship.—The Banker-Farmer. especially when it is remembered that the figures disclosed that practically one-fourth of our negro population were illiterates. Happily rapid progress is being made in removing this unlucky figure from the annals of our history. Last week an important conference of school superintendents was held in Asheville to consider the important problem of educating a quarter of a million illiter ates in North Carolina. Think of it! A quarter of a million adults in progres sive North Carolina without the means of securing even rudimentary know ledge except by oral instruction and then totally untrained in ways of as similating it. Buncombe county has demonstrated that adults can be taught to read and write. Three thousand and five hun dred of them have been taught in that county. It is a wonderful revelation of progress when thatmany adults take enough interest in bettering their con dition to learn to read and write after having gone through childhood and youth without having done so. It is an omen of progress that is more sub stantial than mere buildings or ma terial achievement. It reveals men and women of heroic stuff.—News and Ob server. SELECTION OF PROPER WATER WHEEL In the last two articles there were described the three types of waterpower prime movers, . namely the steel over shot, turbine, and impulse wheels. A broad generalization was made describ ing the conditions of stream flow, fall, and power for which each of these types was adapted. In selecting the best type of water wheel it is necessary not only to bear in mind these general considerations, but a careful study of additional factors should be made to enable the most, economical unit to be purchased. The cheapest installation in first cost, or even the wheel having greatest efficiency at some special power output, is not necessarily the most economical in the long run. Other factors to consider are described in this and succeeding articles. Machinery to be Driven The water wheel may be used to drive an electric generator. In this event it may be either directly connected to the generator, or connected with it by belt or rope. The water wheel may be used to drive machinery in a mill, or a pump, neither of which is electrically operated. In these cases the water wheel may be connected through gear ing or by rope or belt drive. A future article will treat in more detail of these various methods of connecting the water wheel. Character of Load Does the demand for power fluctuate greatly, or is it fairly constant? Is there simply a demand for power to operate household appliances such as electric irons, washing machines, etc., together with farm or rural lighting at night, or is there a big demand for power in the day time to operate a mill and is the demand constant every day, or only occasional? For instance, it would not do in many cases to put in, say a 200 h. p. wheel to operate a mill in the day time, and expect it to work efficiently to supply a 76 h. p. lighting load at night. Two wheels would be more economical in such a case, espe cially if the water supply was at all limited. Get Proper Size Wheel Moreover, we should be very certain that the wheel which is installed is de signed for the load to be applied to it. All water wheels, especially of the tur bine type, operate at maximum effi ciency within rather narrow limits of horsepower. Thus a given wheel de signed for a fall of 34 feet will produce 266 h. p. at 80 percent efficiency, and use 110 cubic feet of water per second. With the same fall, if the flow is re duced to only 96 cubic feet per second the power produced is 160 h. p., and the efficiency only 66 percent. Mani festly this whee( ought not to be used if the ordinary load was 150 h. p. be cause of the low efficiency which means waste of water. A smaller wheel de signed for maximum efficiency at 160 h. p. and 34 feet fall should have been installed. There are many very uneconomic power plants in this state that are op erating poorly because of the installa tion of a wheel too big for the actual load on it. There is a tendency among manufacturers of water wheels to sell a whbel too big, because it means more money to the selling agent. The agent will say that while your plant only needs 160 h. p. now, you may expand and the load increase, so he will recommend 9 266 h. p. wheel and you will be able to take on an additional load. This is all right if there is plenty of water, but in the majority of cases the purchaser should be very cautious about buying a water wheel having much greater capacity than his present load demands. Usually it is better to install an addi tional wheel if there is ample water and the power demands grow. The purchaser should insist on being sup plied by the manufacturer”^with “char acteristic curves” for the wheel it is proposed to sell him. These curves show the relation between h. p., quan tity of water used, fall, and efficiency. The wheel purchased should base its maximum efficiency at about the h. p. required by the present load and using the amount of water available. In the case of plants designed for more than 200 h. p. it will usually pay to get a competent disinterested engineer to advise on the size of wheel to install, and not to rely on the advice of the manufacturer's agent alone.—Thorn dike Seville. OUR UNLUCKY NUMBER Thirteen was North Carolina’s un lucky figure in the census of 1920, The government figures of that year showed that in North Carolina out of every hundred persons of ten years or over there were thirteen who could not read and write. It was not a less lucky number for North Carolina because in Alabama there were sixteen, fifteen in Arizona, New Mexico and Georgia, twenty-one in Louisiana, seventeen in Mississippi, and eighteen in South Carolina out of every hundred who were illiterates. As long as one person in North Caro lina of ten years or more is without suf ficient education to read and write the English language, it will be a problem to demand attention. In 1920 eight out of every hundred white people and twenty-four out of every hundred negroes, making an average of thirteen, were unable to read and write. That percentage was entirely too high. THE BONDED DEBT OF NORTH CAROLINA As of August 1,1924 The following summary of the bonded debt of North Carolina is taken from a recent volume issued by the Bank of America, and the information for this state was supplied by State Treasurer B. R. Lacy. Purpose of State Debt Highways $66,662,600 Welfare Institutions 18,922,600 Public Buildings 10,260,000 Miscellaneous 6,142,600 Funding Operations 3,980,000 North Carolina ranks fourth in total debt, $106,847,600. North Carolina ranks third in per capita state debt, $38.87. North Carolina ranks third in Highway debt, $66,662,600. The Bonded Debt Analyzed Date of Issue Form Amount Purpose Int. Rate fo Maturity July, 1909 Bonds $600,000 State Hospitals 4 July 1, 1949 July, 1910 Bonds 3,430,000 Refunding 4 July 1, 1950 July, 1911 Bonds 260,000 State Building 4 July 1, 1961 July, 1911 Bonds 60,000 School for Feeble-Minded 4 July 1, 1961 Jan., 1913 Bonds 660,000 Refunding 4 Jan,, 1953 July, 1913 Bonds 1,142,600 Improvement 4 July, 1963 July, 1917-20 Bonds 1,368,600 Educational and Charitable Institutions 4 July, 1924-193S July, 1917 Bonds 76,000 Caswell Training School 4 July, 1927 July, 1917 Bonds 26,000 Training School for Girls and Women 4 July, 1927 July, 1921 Jan.. 1922 23 Bonds Boilds 26,000,000 Highway Construction 41^ Jan., July, 1932-1962 July, 1921 Bonds 4,562,600 Highway Construction 5 July, 1931, 1941, 1961 and 1961 Jan. 1, 1923 Bonds 1,260,000 Highway Construction 41^ Jan., 1933-1937 Jan. 1, 1923 Bonds 3,760,000 Highway Construction 4 3-4 Jan , 1938-1962 July 24, 1924 Bonds 10,000,000 Highway Construction Jan. 1, 1934-3963 Sept. 20, 1923 ♦Notes 6,000,000 Highway Construction 6X Sept. 20, 1925 May 20, 1924 ♦Notes 16,000,000 Highway Construction 3X Feb. 20, 1926 June 22, 1924 ♦Notes 2,000.000 Highway Construction 2}i Aug. 22, 1924 July, 1921 Jan. 1, 1922 Bonds 3,372,000 Educational and Charitable Institutions 5 July, 1961 Bonds 3,373,000 Educational and Charitable Institutions 4K Jan., 1962 Oct. 1, 1923 Bonds 3,049,000 Educational and Charitable Institutions Oct. 1, 1963 Oct 1, 1923 Bonds 7,100,000 Educational and Charitable Institutions 4 3-4 Oct. 1, 1963 Oct 1, 1923 Bonds 600,000 Public Improvement 4 3-4 Oct. 1, 1963 Jan., 1922 Bonds 5,000,000 Special School Building Serial 4>^ Jan., 1927-1947 PpV. 16. 1922 Bonds 4,500,000 State Serial 6 Feb., 1937, 1942, 1947 and 1962 Mar. 10, 1924 ♦Notes 3,700,000 Public School Buildings 4,'5 Sept. 10, 1924 Mar. 26, 1924 ♦Notes 1,300,000 Public School Buildings 4M Sept. 10, 1924 Total $105,847,600 *^These notes were given in anticipation of sale of bonds and will be retired when bonds are sold.