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. MAY 11, 1927 CHAPEL HILL, N. C. THE UNIVERSITY OK NORTH CAROLINA PRESS VOL. xm, No. 26 Kilitorittl Bonvd] E. C. Branson. S. H. Hobbs, Jr.. L. R. 'Wilson. E. W. Knight. D. D. Carroll, J. B. Bullitt. H. W. Odum. ^ Entored as second-class matter November N. 1914. at thePostoiHce at Chapel Hill. N. C.. under the act of August 24. 1912. AGAm GUILFORD LEADS The most strategic position in the rural public library, similar to the consolidated school in education, is the county library which is steadily gaining ground as a large unit type of service. It puts any book, anywhere in the sys tem, at the disposal of a serious reader wherever he may live. Thus the scattered rural folk receive a high grade of library service, comparable to that of the cit y library. Guilford county, the first in the state to render county library service, has for a number of years been maintaining small horary deposit stations through out the county as well as service from the desk. Realizing the lack of personal contact with the rural people and the inability of many to come to the library and stations, it was deemed wise to provide some mekns by which each person in the couniy could be reached and could have the same op portunity as his brother who lives in side the city limits. The most feasible plan by which this task might be accomplished was the purchasing and building of a book truck. The order was placed just as soon as the county board of education agreed to give to the pabiic library the full amount of the dog tax. With the glass-covered shelves on each side of the truck and a desk formed by letting down the back, this Parnas sus on wheels carries its wares all over Guilford county. Above the shelving one may see words—Greensboro Public Library—Free Reai^ng for Guilford County. Meeting with Success From Che very first, the success ha; been almost phenomenal. Each week the circulation has grown and the num her of Dorrowers increased. The story of the truck iias spread over the entire state and, as the first six-months period has ex;>ired, staiisLics ohow a circulation of 27,yiJ bucks and d,4t0 borrowers. Thete figures show the exact number of bocks charged from the truck, but the actual reading has been far greater than this number. The children have ex changed books between trips and one small girl reported over BO books read in a short time. With two million people in rural North Carolina, 71 percent of the entire population, without local library ser vice, surely Guilford is doing a wonder ful experimental work. Does this work not bind more firmly the link between city and county? Thousands of dollars are being spent by chambers of commerce in trade cam paigns. Neither town nor county can iive alone today; and the bond drawing them together is a vital asset. “How about the joint institutions for town and county, such as the library?” This question is being asked by library offi cials. “Can not the little book truck that bears its message of co-operation and good feeling in all sorts of weather to all hamlets and homes of our rural districts be the best advertisement our town has?” is another vital question.— Adapted from Greensboro Daily News. GAINFULLY EMPLOYED A decline in the number of gainfully occupied persons in porportion to the total population in the United States occurred betw'een 1910 and 1920, and a further decline from 1920 to' 1925, ac cording to a study of occupational dis tribution of the population made by the National Industrial Conference Board. Relatively larger school enrollment and college attendance and changes in im migration ‘are among the chief factors accounting for the increased proportion of persons not gainfully occupied. Less than four out of every ten per sons in the United States in 1926 were ^ working for a living. The other six either were living on the returns on their investments, or were being supported by others or at public expense. Whereas 41.6 percent of the total populatioh were gainfully occupied in 1910 only 39.4 percent were so occupied in 1920, and 37.2 percent in 1926. Of the more important industrial countries in Europe, only the Nether lands and Denmark recorded a lower proportion of gainfully employed than the United States for 1920, their num ber constituting 37.7 percent of the total population in each of these two countries. Causes of Decline Taking enrollment in schools, colleges and universities in the United States in 1920 as a measure, the number of pupils and students enrolled in the various edu cational institutions in 1325 exceeded that to be expected on the basis of popu lation increase by about one and a third millions. This accounts for a large portion of the increased proportion of the not gainfully occupied. Immigra tion restriction has resulted ia a shift of the average population, resulting in a larger prcporlim of aged persons, and has had similar influence upon the proportion of gainfully occupied adults. Nearly sixty-three percent of our total population in 1926 lived on income derived from investments or were sup ported by others, in the light of this study. The gainfully employed pop ulation is distributed as follows: Percent Manufacturing and mechanical 29.9 Agriculture 24.6 Trade 10.7 Clerical work 8.9 Domestic and personal service.. 8.4 Transportation 7.6 Professional service 6.5 Mining 2.7 Public service, including mili tary and naval 1.8 Persons engaged in agriculture show a decided decrease, constituting 24.6 -percent of gainfully occupied in 1926, as against 33 2 percent enumerated in 1910, the year of the last pre-war cen sus. The proportion of those in the manufacturing and mechanical indus tries, has increased only slightly, from 27,8 percent in 1910 to 29.9 percent in 1925; miners and transportation workers likewise show a slight relative increase. Clerical workers nearly doubled their proportion to other workers, constituting 4.6 percent of the gainfully occupied in 1910 and 8.9 percent in 1926. Those in trade, in public service and professional service have slightly increased in pro portion to other groups of gainfully occupied, but a relative decline from 9.9 percent to 8.4 percent is estimated to have taken plac^ in the proportion of domestic and personal servants ;^to the total number of gainfully employed. MOTOR BUS SESVICE" According to the recent report of the State Corporation Commission for the biennium 1926-1926 there were on August 14, 1926, ninety-seven passenger bus line certificates outstanding and under these certificates a total of 466 motor busses were being operated on approximately 4,500 miles of road. The length of the average line was 46.76 miles. The estimated total mileage traveled by the passenger busses during the year which ended June 30, 1926, is 11,360,040. The total revenue from passenger operations for the period was $2,370,800, and the tax paid on the basis of six percent of gross revenue amounted to $142,250. From these figures it appears that the average bus mile revenue was 20.9 cents. Only a few of the operators kept records adequate to reveal operating costs, so the profitableness of the service can not be ascertained. On August 14, 1926, seventeen express or freight certificates were outstand ing and'under these there were being operated 83 trucks on 1,766 miles of road. From a rough estimate, says the report, it appears that the tonnage carried by trucks operating under the law did not exceed 15,000 tons. Pack ages weighing less than a hundred pounds and carried at package rates are not included in this tonnage. “The total revenue of such carriers for the fiscal year ended June 30, 1926, was $122,559 and the tax paid $7,363. There are 33,661 thwks operated within the state, transporting property either for their owners or under private contract and the law does not prevent these trucks from exercising every privilege of a property carrier under the bus law, except that of advertising gular schedules and publishing tariffs, j These figures reflect the volume and : importance of the freight and pas- ■ senger service which has developed in a ; few years as a result of improved highways. [ education fkees Sixty years ago the Danes were a nation of peasants. Today they are a nation of independent farmers, prosperous and free', masters of their own economic destiny. Such results do not spring from a few heated mass meetings or a hectic membership campaign for a co-operative marketing societJ^ A growth like this means that a lot of hard work has been put into the preparation of the sccial soil. The Danish farmers manured their farms with their own brains, after they had subjected their brains to a special kind of schooling they had themselves created outside the reg ular .-aystem of Denmark. The Danes have proved that there is no fertilizer on earth equal to free minds. In the first half of the nineteenth century, when Denmark was down at the heel, a prophetic leader arose ia the person of Nicholai S. F. Grundtvig, who challenged the Dan ish peasants w’ith a program that we go-getter Americans, in a similar hour of economic discontent, would hoot at as impraeticjl and \i*ior!ary. Grundtvig set out to establish intellectual freedom in Denmark as the quickest means of achieving ( economic freedom. He invented a new kind of school that produced a new kind of education that created a new kind of farmer. These Danish Folk Highschools, born in the brain of Grundtvig, are unconventional affairs, not at all like ordinary schools. They are at tended not by children, but by young adults of the rural communities. There are no entrance requirements to these schools except age and a desire to learn. There are no text books, no assigned lessons, no ex aminations, no graduations, no di plomas, The whole business is very simple, -in inspiring teacher lec tures for an hour once a day to about a hundred students, and then spends the rest of the day discuss ing with individual students and groups of students the questions that are uppermost in their minds as a result of their daily lives or the daily lecture. The purpose of these schools is not vocational. The young adults from the Danish farms do not go to these schools to get quick training ,in the technical job of running a creamery pr a cheese factory—they go to get a sound outlook on life. These informal scliools try to do two things: First, they try to saturate the young Danes to face fearlessly the challenge of Den mark’s future. These schools find the problems of education ' not be tween the backs of books, but • in the traditions, conditions, forces, and needs of the Danish community. These schools do not attempt to educate the young Danes; all they try to do is to help the young Danes to learn how to go on educating themselves as long as they live. These schools are simply an in formal attempt to free the mind of rural Denmark from the dead hand of outworn traditions, while holding fast to great traditions that still live, to give the mind of rural Den mark a sense of social needs that must be met and the science that will meet them, and to make the mind of rural Denmark immune to the poison of cheap phrases and demagogic catch-words. The vast system of Danish co operatives would never have lasted so long save for this previous un shackling of the mind of rural Den- 'mark. Here is something for Ameri can farmers to think about.—Dr. Glenn Frank, by permission of the McClure Newspaper Syndicate. with the Standard Milk Ordinance, according to H. E. Miller, director of the sanitary division. Ail of these 46 cities have adopted the ordinance since 1924. Under this ordinance, all the milk sold in the cities which have adopted it is graded according to its bacteria contents, which indicates its degree of purity and percent of butter fat. The ordinance further provides that the bottle caps must carry the letter “A”, “B”, “C”, to indicate tlie grade of milk contained in the bottles. In the Opinion of the sanitary divi sion of the board of health, no one thing has done more to reduce disease, especially typhoid and intestinal di seases transmitted in milk that is improperly safeguarded, than the adoption of this ordinance. Attention was called to the recent epidemic in Canada, traceable to infected milk, as what might happen if the milk supplies of the state are not properly safeguarded by strict milk ordinances, such as the standard ordi nance. This ordinance is a uniform ordinance, approved by the board of health, which, when adopted, standard izes th.e milk sanitation regulations in ail Lections of the state. Such an ordinance is of especial value at present, with spring and lly-tiiiie coming on, since it safeguards a l^rge part of the family food supply, especial ly the food of the babies and children.— Gastonia Gazette. URGES MORE LIVESTOCK The Charleston News and Courier di rects attention to a recent statement by^Tomas E. Wilson, a Chicago packer, to the effect that the South should give more consideration to livestock and that it would benefit from alliance with the livestock men of the West and the North through national organization of meat produced. He says the opportun ity is at hand and that the great re sources of the South should be developed through more intensive farming. “Diversified farming and more in tensive tilling of the soil are necessary to development of the South’s appar ently unlimited resources. It is a very serious mistake to proceed on the theory chat prosperity can be legislated. Economic forces can not be curbed by legislation. The possibilities are here and their accomplishment seems to be entirely up to you.” Mr. Wilson is offering sane, practical advice to all Southern farmers through the southern cattlemen he was address ing. All students of the agricultural situation have been and^ are agreed that diversification and intensive culti vation are principal needs throughout the South. One-crop farmers are in a serious plight when their single crop fails or the prices are too low. Farm ers who are watchful of their food and feed crops have less to fear when depression comes. Here in the Southeast, the cattle and livestock industry, which nets profits in other sections, has been pretty much neglected. When farmers in the South east are willing to devote to cattle and livestock the same attention farmers in other sections devote, they will know by personal advantages that the in dustry is worth while. Here and there, an effort at breeding cattle and live stock has been made, but the enter prise needs to be much wider. —Con cord News. OF INFINITE CONCERN The health of the farmer and bis collaoorator, the citizen of the small town, their degree of economic inde pendence, their satisfaction with the life in the country, their initiative, their progressiveness or lack of it, the rightness of their social life, and the vitality of their religion-all these mat ters are .in the end religious questions and are of infinite concern to America. The city man who makes sport of the country man is a man standing on a tower laughing at what he considers the futile efforts of men’ below, who will eventually strike his supports from under him.—Washington College Bul letin, ChestertowD, Maryland. THE BLU^^ TRUTH ' Nowhere is the Church more nig gardly with her resources than in the rural field. Nowhere is the Church more greatly needed. Mere strategy should dictate a different policy. For a long time to come the towns are go ing to draw people from the country. Rural work on the part of the Church will guarantee a future tqwn popula tion faithful to the Church, The blunt truth of the matter is that both as a Church and as a people we have neglacted the rural dweller. It is a challenge to the Cburch to lead the nation, to make the woflc attract the best of our clergy, by giving them big tasks and adequate support. —The World and I. OUR STATE.GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURES IN 1925 How North^Carolina RanKs in- Each Hem The Federal ^Department of Commerce in its annual report on Financial Statistics of States classifies state government'expenditures under nine main departments. The following table gives the total amount spent by each general department, the amount of such expenditure on a per inhabitant basis, and how North^Carolina ranks with other states in departmental expenditures per inhabitant. Our total statergovernment expenditure for all general departments in 1926 was $16,679,744. The per inhabitant expenditure was $6.09, and on this basis we ranked forty-second among the states. For a detailed showing of state government expenditures by departments for 1926 see Universiry News LetteF^olume XIII, No. 22. Department of Rural Social-Economics, University of North Carolina SAFEGUARDING MILK There are now 46 cities in the state which have adopted the Standard Milk Ordinance, approved by the state board of health, with the announcement that the city of Reidsville is the latest recruit to make the ordinance manda tory, it was learned from the sanitary engineering division of the board of health. With the addition of this city, more than 80 percent of the milk produced in the state now complies Item Total expen diture Per inhab. expen diture How N. C. ranks on per-inhab. All general departments $16,679,744... $6.59.... basis L General government 1,463,460... 0.B3.... ... 40th 2. Protection to person and property a. Militia and armories 132,368... 0.05 ... 31st b. Regulation 325,447... 0.12 .... ... 43rd c. All other 206,341... 0.08 ... 36th 3. Development and conservation of natural resources a. Agriculture ^ 809,727... 0.30 .. 36th b. All other (forests, fish, game, etc.) 117,494... 0.04 ... 38th ■ 4. Conservation of health and sanita tion a. Prevention and treatment of communicable diseases 425,879... 0.16 .... ... 16th , b. All other. 354,436... 0.13 ... 22nd 5. Highways (supervising dept, and maintenance only) 3,310,684... 1.21 ... 26th 6. Charities, hospitals and correc tions 3,061,175... 1.11 ... 34th 7. Education 5,169,267... 1.88.’.... ... 44th 8. Recreation 11,092... 0.004.,.. ... 31st ’ 9. Miscellaneous, mainly pensions 1,2387204... 0.46 ... 24th