The news in this publi cation is released for the press on receipt. THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA NEWS LETTER Published Weekly by the University of North Caro lina for the University Ex tension Division. NOVEMBER 18. 1925, CHAPEL HILL, N C. THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA PRESS VOL. XII, NO. 3 Ktliloria! Boartl: E. C. Branson. S. il. Hobbs. Jr.. L. R. Wilson. E. W. KniKht. D. D. Carroll. .T. B. Bullitt. H, W. Odnm. Entered as second-class matter November Id. 1914, at the Postoffice at Chapel Hill, N. C., iind^r the act of Anpust 24, 1912 FEBERATIMG LOCAL AGEMCIES FOK CONMUSI ry WELFARE A plan tor the organization of the agencies and institutions of the rural and urban community for the wehare of the entire community was the theme of a pap;T read by A. M. Moser, of Buncombe county, and a graduate stu dent in the University, to the North Carolina Club at its regular meeting last Monday night, November 2. It was followed by one of the liveliest dis cussions the club has witnessed this year. The diacussjon was over the part which the negro population should play in a scheme of community organization. Mr. Moser claimed that the white and negro races, while living side by side, must nevertheless pursue separate courses. U was agreed, however, that it is possible-to have cooperation of the two races through ihe representatives of the negro agencies and institutions in the commmaty, and that it would not be necessary to associate on terms of social equality. It was pointed out that this was actually being done in Chapel Hill, and many other places, in connection with the school system, health work, and along other lines. A Plan Needed Mr. Moser pointed out that one of the greatest needs in North Carolina is the working out of some plan whereby all the forces of the community may be united for common action and purpose. This, he said, is necessary if community life is to be made attractive andsatisfy- ing. In every community, he said, there are numerous organizations and institu tions. In many communities we find such organizations as the following: The various churches and church organ izations, the Farmers’ Federation, the Farmers’ Unionj Kiwanis Clubs, Rotary Clubs, and other similar clubs, social clubs, Parent-Teachers’ Association, Chamber of Commerce, community music and dramatic clubs, and so on. Some communities have more of these than others. Isieifective Effort There is doubtless no question but that the objects of these various groups are high and worthy, and they all prob ably desire and strive in a feeble way to do something for the progress and betterment of the community, the speaker said. But there soon arises friction and conflict, petty jealousies, and misunderstandings. So that in gen eral there are two facts about all these institutions: (1) No one of them is doing more than a fraction of what it ought to be doing to help solve com munity problems; (2) all of» these insti tutions and agencies as a rule are will ing to adopt a method which will im prove the situation if they can be con vinced that ^ome plan will bring a change for the better. It is obvious that the thing to be desired is cooperation toward a common end. Cooperation of all these groups is absolutely necessary, and any means which will bring this about is of first importance. It is here that organiza tion plays its chief pavt. Machinery must be put into operation which will enable these various groups to work together in the most effective manner possible. The Community Council The speaker said that one solution of the problem lay in the organization of a community council. The first step is for some local leader to call together one representative from each organiza tion or group along with a few repre sentatives at large. Those chosen for this council should consist of the leaders in community life, and should represent the various community interests. The total number should not be larger than necessary—just a small group. These should come together and con sider, first, the possibilities of organiz ing such a council, and the benefits to be derived from such an organization, and second, whether the people of the community as represented by the mem bers present are willing to put in the necessary time, money, and brains in order to get results. Ascertaining Needs These representatives report back to their respective organizations the re sults of the first meeting, and perma nent representatives are appointed. These then meet a second time and per fect the organization. At this time committees are appointed and a survey of the community is made to ascertain the immediate and remote needs of the community. When this survey has been completed, another meeting is called and this time the entire cf>mmunit> is invited to be present. The findings of these various committees are then pre sented to this mass-meeting and an open and frank discus.sion is had. Each prob lem is discussed thoroughly, ard a vote is taken to determine what the will of the community is with regard to it. Only those problems are selected to be worked out which the people as a whole favor. The Program Adopted The projects which are adopted at this meeting become the community’s working program. It usually comprises some projects which can be carried out at once, and others which will require a period of years. The projects adopted are turned over to the community council, which acts as their custodian and directs their carrying out. These various problems are then dele gated to the organizations which are best fitted to carry out those particular lines of activity. All problems are thus assigned and worked out by these organizations. As their representatives come together in the council they either choose or by general consent are asked to become responsible for definite things. They do this knowing that they will have the .sympathy and support of the other organizations, and that they will be expected to produce results. If there are problems which no one organization can carry out, such as cooperative buy ing and selling, it may be necessary to organize a new group to do that work. It was pointed out that this plan is the result of several years’ experience in Massachusetts, and in some of the Western states, and on the whole it has proved very successful, but that it would have to be adapted to local, vary ing conditions. THE COTTON DOLLAR ^ A.year or more ago when the farm price of cotton was considerably higher than it is today an interesting research by the United States Department of Agriculture into the distribution of the i consumer’s dollar paid for cotton sheet- • ing presented some facts that should : command the attention of the grower. , The Department found that the 'con- ! Sumer’s dollar paid for cotton sheeting ; was distributed as follows: [ Cents i Cotton grower.'. 19.8 Exchange trader 3.1 Freight to mill 1.3 Cloth manufacturer 39.3 Jobber and retailer 36.6 It is observed that both the manu- THE IDE.4L FARM In the final analysis the ideal farm —the truly successful farm—is the one which yields to- the farmer and his family a living—full, adequate, complete—libera) in its material re_ wards, but not lacking in the social, esthetic and etliical values which make for character, contentni.ert and genuine happiness.- The soil has the capacity^ produce these returns if the hand which turns it will sow” the right seed in the right way, and will properly nurture the plant. Tne key which unlocks the wealth of the fields and brings forth the treasures, material and spiritual, is the intelli gence of the farmer.—The Farmer and His Farm, by App and Woodwari^ RURAL ELFXTRIC POWER and XII. EXPERIMENTAL LINES From the foregoing .-irticles on the Dakota, Virginia, Washington, uses of electric power on the farm and Wisconsin, the amounts of current required, the these states experimental electric I impression migh.t be gathered that there set up in country dis- 1. . , • 1 j • I ■ • 1 ; tricts. for the expressed purpose of IS no prop em involved in bringing elec- - j - .. , , i ac ui ^ ^ studying the problem fn.m all its angles I triHty to the farmer, that it is only a and at the .same time serving the [matter of steady progress. This im-1 farmers at low cost. The lines are : presaion is not correct. For there is a usually operated jointly by an electric i serious problem; namely, how can elec- some state agency such I tricity be brought to the rural dweller the^agncuUural college, the latter to 1 at a cost that he can afford? I farm homes are Since' experts for making the city ; homes are congested it necessarily costs ' lines The first of these experimental was established at Red Wing, steadily gone down and is now below the actual cost of production. The much more per customer to serve a ^ mnesota, in 1923. On the basis of farm home than it does to serve a city investigations at Red Wing, the home. In a city there may be 500 . committee made the follow- families served by one mile of an elec-; statement, trie.power line, while iti a couniry dis-, » PfaKe Its Use Pay trict there may be only .five families i . . •] n *1 4-u , solution IS obvious if it can' be per mile. Consequently the power com- tt • - ue iL attained. Having pa.a the hrst cost, if American Country Life Association only ] Ponies tend to discourage the farmers farmer uses only a small quantity last week spent several days discussing | froin trying to secure electric service, electric energy his cost per kilowatt the general plight of the American ^ else they are forced to make ex.ra. high and perhaps he must farmer. Prosperity appears to be one- charges which make the cost of elec- electricity as rather an expensive The farmer’s net trioity seem prohibi-ive. in spite of: sided, unbalanced income is extremely small. The Farmer Can Do It And yet the farmers themselves are largely to blame for the defenseless position they occupy, for making no effort to secure better protection at the hands of their representatives in con gress, and for the loose and unbusiness like way in which their farming opera- tion& are conducted. Until the growers learn the modern economic lesson of control of production and better methods through cooperative marketing and cooperative financing, there will be but little progress or re form along these lines. Knowledge is power only when it is applied by those to V7hoin it is given. Only when the farmer, through cooperative effort, con trols production, credits, and the market ing of his products will he come into his own. It is the farmer himself who must make agriculture prosperous. At least there is much he can do to help himself, if only he will do it. Self-help is about the only help the farmer is ever likely to receive. this tendency, however, there are some -u , . r , . T • XT ♦u r' 1- ' ^ considerable quantjty of e ectric successful rural lines in North Carolina i • , ^ , -n u A 14. -fu ■ 14- his kilowatt hour'^costs drop to which will be dealt with m a later , . ^ ^ , , a very reasonable figure. There is no article. i , .... ^ ^ ^ - ... I sense, however, in his using a large Scientific Investigation I amount of energy just to earn a low The problem is being attacked in a ; rate. The solution, therefore, lies in scientific way by the national govern- j showing him how to use a considerable ment and by 16 separate states in the [ amount of energy to his own advantage; Union. A national committee on the . in other words to use his power in such Relation of Electricity to Agriculture i a way as to makfe electricity pay on the has been formed, composed of repre-, farm.” sentatives from various electrical and ;• There are'two southern states which agricultural organizations and three , these experimental rural lines for government departments. The problem, the scientific study of the problem, as the committee views it, is (a) ‘‘how They are Alabama and Virginia. In service can be supplied to the farmer ! each case the Polytechnic Institute of and what is involved in its establish-1 the state has a working agreement with ment” and (b) “hOw service can be i the power company which has built the utilized by the farmer so that it will be [ line. North Carolina as yet has neither profitable to him. ” Similar committees an experimental line nor a committee on the Relation of Electricity to Agri- ' on the Relation of Electricity to Agri culture have been set up in 16 state?, : culture, yet North Carolina has more including Alabama, California, Illinois, [rural electric power possibilities than Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Min-. any other state east of the Rocky nesota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, South ! Mountains.—A. T. Cutler. REAL SERVICE TO THE STAIE --- '-r= i A unique type of service is to be A kj rrAMftiMir W&QT? I found in the Department of Rural Social An tCUnwrill.. VviiioiC* l Economics in the State University at "Eggs are selling on the market at j Chapel Hill, N, C. The students from 60 cents a dozen,” says the Eoxboro i Pjeh ““‘y organize a county club X . .r J ^ V ;to further, the best interests of their Courier, and yet there are hardly a | county. If enough interest is dozen farmers in this county who have | manifested by the citizens throughout as many as 50 hens. ” In another para- i the county a social and economic survey graph in the same issue, the Courier i of the county is made by one of the ^ ^ .1 at.- I ablest students m the club, under the says that the poor tobacco crop this | gaj-efQj supervision of the instructors in year may yet prove a blessing, as there i the department. ^ are a number of farmers in Person I The survey sketches the historical de county who have announced that next i forth its . J 4.1- • 4: 4.U • wealth in natural resources, farm prod- year they Will reduce the size of their | ^^ts, manufactures, etc., and the types tobacco crops and devote more time | and rates of taxation. Schools, chuiches, and acreage to wheat and other food I and living conditions in country and city 1 and feed crops. • ! ^re given careful attention One of the [ . , . . . 'most helpful and stimulating features North Carolina is becoming a rich , ranking of the county with the facturer, and the jobber and the retailer, j jg progressing probably as ; other counties of the state on such received nearly twice the amount of the j state in the Union, certainly points as hard roads, schools, illiteracy, dollar that was paid to the grower. 1 ^hem. Bdt, this 1 rate, tax rates, wealth. That was at a time when the price to ! anai?tc. The points on which the county ... , „ „ I state should nave more wealth »nd 1 g yrid the pros- the grower was much higher tnan today, j make faster progress. The great-' pects for future progress shown, and when the general impression was 1 jjjgj.gggj^g 1 q'jjg report is printed in a hundred- that the price of raw cotton was high, j ^ condition as • page booklet (the expense being borne ' the Courier says exists in Person county. the town hall once The people in this state make a lot of I tising), and gets into thousands of homes in the county. It opens the eyes Farmer’s Share too Small Commenting on the above facts Cotton News says, ^ “These are illuminating figures in these days of boll weevil rav ages and high cost of production on the farm. It would seem that the pro ducers of the primary wealth of the nation should receive a larger share of the consumer’s dollar. The sturdy yeomen who are engaged in the titanic fight each year against adverse seasons and unprecedented insect depredations, to the end that the civilized world may be fittingly clothed, are entitled to a larger measure of prosperity than they have been receiving. StriKing Contrasts The position enjoyed by industries in general today is in striking contrast to that held by agriculture. On the one hand we find railway and industrial stocks selling at peak prices, and daily advancing. Industrial dividends are highly satisfactory to their owners. Almost daily new records are established by the stock exchange, both in aggre gate sales and in the high average level of prices paid for stocks. On the other hand we find the prices of farm products highly unsatisfactory. Tobacco prices are low. Cotton has money. Their farm crops and manu factored products bring in returns ofloLthe citizens to the good and bad r -1 1. T, . . points of their county. I hey are proud many millions of dollars.- But enough ; ashamed of others, of that money doesn’t stick. The peo- i it stimulates them to new efforts to fill pie have to send it out to other states | the gaps. Altogether it is one of the for food and feed stuffs. What is the I use of making iiullions of dollars in to bacco, cotton and manufactured goods when it is sent out to other states to buy food for man and beast? Person county is not an exception to the general run of counties in this state. It is overlooking aii opportunity to make and save large sums of money every year by not giving more atten tion to poultry, dairying and trucking. Some time ago it was stated that Durham county each year sent out $6,000,000 for food and feed stuffs for man and beast. That condition should not exist. This county could almost produce everything it needs in the way of supplies for feeding people and the livestock. More attention t6 raising chickens, keeping good cows and grow ing truck would save to 'this county every year several millions of dollars more than the value of the entire to bacco crop. By feeding itself along with the income of the industrial enter prises and from such money-crops as are now grown, this county could in a few years multiply its wealth.—Durham Herald. service to be found Blue Ridge Voice. SIGNIFICANT CELEBRATIONS This month brings two notable occa sions in education. It is fifty years since the University of.North Carolina reopened its doors after the Civil "War. When it reopened after the carpet bag government left North Carolina, it was as dilapidated and ill-nourished an edu cational institution as ever began the task of holding the lamp of knowledge up to the sight of an unlettered and poverty-stricken society. But it had a sturdy inheritance and in fifty years it has become one of the most successful state universities in the country. Its success is founded upon its own service and upon an increasingly effective .state school system. It is an important anni versary. The reopening of the uni versity is about as good a point to begin the record of progress as could be found, and in fifty years education in the South has done much to make good the de struction caused by slavery, the war, of the new medical school at Vanderbilt University. It also is a mark of the South’s progress. This medical school is not a “good medical school for the South.” In building, in equipment, in personnel, it is on a par ^th any medi cal school in the country. It has not, of course, the size, history, or distinc tion of Johns Hopkins, Harvard, or the College of Physicians and Surgeons in New York, but its builoings are better than those of these older institutions, and its personnel is as distinguished as could be gathered together by any new institution. These two celebrations are cheerful signs of the return of the South toward the level of the rest of the country in education, after which all else will fol low.—World’s Work. TOWN PAYS HO TAXES There is so much said and written against municipal ownership of public utilities that Elizabeth City folks in their venture in the electric lignt, water, and sewerage business wi|l be glad to learn something of Ponca City, Okla. Ponca City with a population of 15,000 is free from taxes. No board of tax year to listen to -the lies of tax-payers and no tax gatherer ever comes around. Ponca City owns its light, water, and power plants, and the profits on these public utilities, owned and operated by the city, pay all the rest of the ex pense of running the city. And water, light, and power rates in Ponca City are lower than in other places where citizens pay taxes and also enrich the private owners of public utility corporations. Of course some one will say that Ponca City, Okla., is a long way from Eliza beth City, N. C. But one will find a nearly parallel case at Warrenton, N. C., a little town of 1,000 population, where they have built streets, schools, and a hotel largely out of profits from their municipally owned public utilities. The tax rate in Warrenton is only $1.00 and Warrenton always has a surplus in the treasury. The secret of the succes of municipal ownership in Warrenton, Ponca City and elsewhere lies in efficient and honest management. In Warrenton the best business men in the town give their time freely as directors of th^e town’s public utilities and are proud to serve the town in that way and make just as good a showing in the town’s business as they make in their own. Elizabeth City has just as good businessmen, with just as much honesty and integrity as one can find anywhere else. We’ve got to learn how to Use our business sense. and reconstruction. The other celebration is the opening -Elizabeth City Independent.