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 23, 1927 CHAPEL HILL, N. C. THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA PRESS VOL. XIV, No. 4 rial Board; E. C. Branson. S. H. Hobba. Jr., P. W. Wajrer, L. R, Wilson, E. W. Knight. D. D. Carroll. H. W. Odum. Entorad as second-claas matter November W, 1914, at tbe PoBtofflce at Chapel Hill, N. C.. under the act ot Auguat 24. 1912, AUTOMOBILE FATALITIES AUTOMOBILE FATALITIES The large and increasing number of automobile fatalities in the state prompted us to prepare the table which appears elsewhere in this issue. We wished to know whether there were rel atively more or less fatalities in North Carolina than in other states. It is ob vious that a statement of the absolute number of deaths in each state from automobile accidents, while enlighten ing and staggering, does not reveal whether motoring is safer in one state than another. Any one of several measures might be used as a basis of comparison—automobile fatalities in proportion to population, in proportion to road mileage, or in proportion to au tomobile registrations. The last-men tioned appears to be the most satisfac tory measure and is the one we have used. Of course, the highways of state are used by cars from other states to an unequal extent and this fact should be kept in mind in interpreting the ta ble. Where Travel Safest The table is necessarily confined to the forty states embraced in the vital statistics registration area, and since not all of the 1926 mortality figures have been released yet it is necessary to use 1925 figures. Motoring appears to be safer in Ne braska than in any of the other states in the registration area. In that state there were 2710 automobiles registered for every automobile fatality. While 126 lives lost in a single state in a sin* gle year is appalling, it is a more favor able record than any other state es tablished. North Dakota, Iowa, and, Kansas made relatively good records. These are ail rural states with no large cities, though each of them must have a considerable volume of transcontinen tal traffic. It is possible that the even has no speed limit but may arrest any driver for recklessness. An adequate highway patrol, more restrictions in granting drivers’ licenses, and the prompt revocation of a license when ever a driver displays tbe inability or unwillingness to handle a car smoothly and cautiously, would result in fewer automobile accidents. The automobile associations and the state departments are doing much in tbe interest of safety, but still the toll of life is frightfully and unnecessarily heavy.— Paul W. Wager. DIVINE DISCONTENT Bud will be the day for every man when he becomes absolutely contented with the life that he is living, with the thoughts that he is thinking, with the deeds that he is doing, when there is not forever beating at the doors of his soul some great desire to be something larger, which he knows that he was meant and made to be, because he is still, in spite of all, the child of God.— Phillips Brooks. NOTES ON EDUCATION 13. SCHOOL ATTENDANCE LAWS HARDLY STARTED YET In her report to the librarians of the state Mrs. Lillian B. Griggs, director of the North Carolina library commission, pointed to marked develop ment, particularly in college libraries. The Hill library at State college, the new library at the women’s college at Duke university, the new library at Meredith college and the library to be built at the University of North Caro lina are examples. Mrs. Griggs can point, also, to encouraging improvements in libraries for negroes, in new ideas in truck service, in steady development of city libraries and in a constant growth in school libraries. A pleasing picture can be drawn to show that the state is moving forward. But somewhere in her address Mrs. Griggs let fall a sentence which is re ported thus: There are still 46 counties of tbe 100 in North Carolina which have no public library service and 2,000,000 persons without the service of a public library. Two million persons is more than twc-thirds of all the persons in North Carolina. Forty-six counties is iust', a. u j i j j L li- • r, 2 •’ bow one state has developed under half the counties. So long as two-thirds of all the people in North topography of these states contributes Carolina have no opportunity of ob- to safety in travel. taining the services or coming under Florida has the most motor fatalities the influence of a public library, so long as almost half the counties have no public library, it is obvious that the state has hardly begun to understand the distance it still has to go.—Greens boro News. in proportion to registrations, the rate being 1 to 638. The fact that many of tbe cars using Florida roads several months in the year are registered other states no doubt contributes to this high mortality ratio. Wyoming’s high rate is probably due in part to tha tourist travel to and from Yellowstone National Park, over dangerous and un familiar roads. Most of the states with a relatively large number of mo tor fatalities are the densely populated states of the northeast. Alabama’s high rate is surprising. Many Deaths in N. C. North Carolina ranks twenty-eighth; that is ther^ are twenty-seven states where motoring is safer. There is a motor fatality for every 906 automo biles. Considering the fact that North Carolina is a rural state, with no very large cities, and with excellent, well- marked highways, this is not a satis factory showing. Furthermore, the fa talities are increasing rather than de creasing—142 deaths the last three months compared with 376 in the entire year 1926. Unfortunately many of the victims are careful, law-abiding drivers or the helpless passengers of reckless drivers. This slaughter of the inno cents must be reduced. The roads must be made safe for the careful, consider ate, sober citizens who are entitled to their use. Probably ninety-five per cent of the drivers can be so character ized. The others should be denied li censes. It is wrong to grant licenses to morons, neurotics, and inebriates. It is wrong to permit anyone to con tinue to operate a car after he has demonstrated an utter disregard for the lives and safety of his fellowmen. The most menacing types of drivers on our highways are the intoxicated or semi-intoxicated, the smart-Alecks who are lacking in good sense, and the road- hogs who are inherently selfish and uncooperative. There are a few such drivers in every community. Their neighbors know them and dread to meet them on the roads, but are powerless to deprive them of their licenses. It would be interesting to know the speed limit on the highways of the several states to see if there is any relationship between high speed limits and motor accidents. It is doubtful if there is, for speed laws in all states are promiscuously violated. Michigan A COUNTY EXECUTIVE The absence of a chief executive in North Carolina county government is recognized as a serious deficiency and recent legislation permits the employ ment of a county manager to overcome this deficiency. In some states there is a county offi cer who is virtually a chief executive. Such is the case in Alabama, the officer being the probate judge. Besides being the judge of probate, he is also chair man of the court of county commis sioners, judge of the county court, judge of the juvenile court, and re sponsible for many other essential governmental duties. His constant con nections with all parts of the county give him a knowledge of county condi tions superior to that of any of the all general licenses such as those of merchants, bankers, undertakers, and sawmill operators. Marriage licenses, hunting licenses, motor vehicle and chauffeur licenses are all issued by this office. Extreme Concentration It will thus be seen that tbe Alabama probate judge performs practically ail the duties performed in North Carolina by the clerk of superior court, tbe register of deeds, and the chairman of tbe board of county commissioners. Pie is the official head of the county and acts for the county in a great variety of capacities. His political influence is very powerful. If the incumbent is capable and honest he can serve the county with great effectiveness. If he incompetent his chief clerk may carry much of the burden. If he is unscrupulous he can of course do a great deal of mischief. The Alabama system is not held up here as a model, but rather to illustrate real county executive, who is often the means of giving the county a unified and efficient administration.—Edward A. Terry. The effectiveness of a state’s school system is determined to a large extent by the degree to which it is utilized. If a large proportion of the children of school age are enrolled in the schools, and if a goodly percent of those en rolled are in average daily attendance, the schools may be said to be well utilized. For the United States as a whole, tbe average length of the school session is 168,3 days. The average number of days attended by each pupil enrolled is 132.6 days, or 79 percent of the length of the school term. A loss of approximately one-fifth of the school term is serious not only to the pupils themselves, but to schools and com munities as well. There is considerable variance in tbe legal school ages among the several states. The widest range of ages is from 4 to 20 in Wisconsin and 6 to 21 in Iowa, Maine, Minnesota, Mississippi, Nebraska, New Mexico, and New York. The narrowest range is from 6 to 18 in Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Ver mont, and Utah. The most common is 6 to 21, in 23 states. Of the 34 states having a legal school entrance age of 6 years and 2 states with an entrance age of 7, nearly all permit kinder garten education, thus in effect lowering tbe entrance age. Compulsory Attendance Compulsory attendance laws have been enacted for the purpose of in suring to all the children of the state a minimum amount of schooling during the period of life when such schooling can be most effective. Every state now has a law which requires children between certain age limits to attend school a certain stated time. The effectiveness of compulsory education laws depends upon tbe machinery set up for their enforce, ment. In some states the laws lose much of their force because of lack of definite responsibility for their enforce ment. Compulsory attendance laws kre, generally, better enforced in cities than in rural districts. This is because cities, through their divisions of school- attendance, have the proper machinery for their enforcement. Experience has proved that compulsory attendance laws in rural districts are more satisfactorily enforced by state and county rather than local authorities. All the states specify in their laws the minimum annual attendance required of children coming within the range of ages for compulsory attendance. In all but nine of the states the laws specify the minimum education necessary to exempt from compulsory attendance. The trend during the past few years is to require children to attend school during tbe entire school period or until the completion of tbe elementary school course. In all the states compulsory educa tion laws are reenforced by child labor laws. The purpose of such laws is to protect children, who are the future citizens of the state, against parents and guardians who would traffic in tbe labor of'children or wards, and thus deprive them of educational opportuni ties equal to those enjoyed by other children. Thirty-seven states (includ ing the District of Columbia) require a specified amount of education before a labor permit shall be granted. In fif teen states it is the completion of the elementary grades. In some states the laws provide that children to whom labor permits have been issued must attend evening and continuation schools. —Adapted from report of U.S. Bureau of Education. A PROSPEROUS PEOPLE According to the Bureau of Internal Revenue at Washington, “the highest standard of living ever attained in the history of the world was reached last year by the American people.” The Bureau gives figures to prove it. The 117,000,000 people in the United States had a total income in 1926, it says, of nearly $90,000,000,000, this being an in crease of approximately $27,000,000,000 since 1921, or something over 43 per cent. It puts tbe average per capita income of persons gainfully employed at $2,210 in 1926 as compared with $1,- 637 in 1921. Furthermore, the Bureau declares that “this great increase in in come is not the result of an increase in the price level, for the average price of consumed goods was actually slightly less in 1926 than in 1921.” Averages are not safe things fo trust and it may very well be questioned whether the new distribution of pros perity has been altogether as general county commissioners and often they equitable as the Bureau’s fig- abide by his judgment without ques- j ^ould suggest. But it will not be - denied that we have had in America The office is filled by popular election ■ during the last five years a high tide of for a term of six years. The candidate does not have to be learned in the law, but quite frequently he is. Varied Duties The duties of probate judge are per formed in North Carolina counties by the clerk of superior court. In this state there is a separate officer for recording work, known as the Register of Deeds. In Alabama the probate judge keeps the records of land convey ances, chattel mortgages, etc. All warrants on claims against the county allowed by the court of county commissioners are issued by the judge of probate. He furnishes all absentee voters with ballots, which they, must return at least five days before the date of the election. The responsiblity of delivering these absentee ballots to the election managers in the proper precincts rests on the probate judge. The clerk of the circuit court, the sheriff, and the judge of probate form the board for appointing the election officers in all elections. The judge of probate can appoint an approved auditor to audit the books of the county. Privi lege and license taxes are collected by the judge of probate. These include prosperity, a t'de that has risen stead ily and one which has washed over pret ty well the whole country and over most of its citizenship. The farmers as a whole have not felt it as strongly as the rest of the population, and some of them have not felt it at all. But generally speaking the opportunitic s for making money have been better in this country than they ever were be fore, either in America or in any other land of like size and population. The mass of the people have been enabled to live better than most of them ever dreamed of living and at the same titne our crop of rich men has multiplied amazingly. This is an almost unprecedented state of affairs and we doubt if it has ever been witnessed before. Usually, al most invariably, a period in which vast fortunes were piled up has been a peri od in which the rank and file of the public were ground under foot. The astonishing thing about our present prosperity has been that it has opened fresh opportunities of almost every class and for the multitude as well as for the favored few.—Asheville Citizen. PUBLIC HEALTH A recent report from the United States Public Health Service shows that eighty-three percent of the rural population is as , yet unprovided with official local health service approaching adequacy. This report shows that thirteen states are without a single full-time health officer in rural districts while other states reach only a few. The states leading in this regard are Ohio, Alabama, North Carolina, South Carolina and Maryland, all the rest of the states reaching less than thirty-five percent of the rural population. The report further states that at the rate of progress made since 1919 it will take about eighty-five years for reason ably adequate full-time local rural health service to be extended to all communities of the United States in which such service is needed. In 1926 there were thirty counties added to the list of those having full time health officers.—The Nation’s Health. AUTOMOBILE FATALITIES, 1925 States RanKed According to Automobiles per Fatality The following table shows the number of automobile fa:alities in 1925 in each of the forty states now embraced in the vital statistics registration area. It is necessary to use 1926 figures beckuse not all of the figures for 1926 are yet available. The second column gives the number of automobiles for each fatal ity and the states are ranked on that basis. Nebraska has fewer accidents in proportion to the number of cars reg istered than any other of the forty states which report vital statistics. The ratio is one fatality for 2,710 cars. Florida has relatively more fatal accidents than any of the other reporting states, one for every 638 cars. Of course Florida highways are used by cars from other states to a greater extent prob ably than are the highways of some other states. North Carolina has an automobile fatality for every 905 cars. Only twelve states have a worse record and most of the twelve are densely populated states. North Carolina is a rural state and ought not to be satisfied with an automobile death rate three times as high as Nebraska, a comparable state. Paul Wager Department of Rural Social-Economics, University of North Carolina Automo- Automo bile fa- biles for Rank State talities each 1925 , fatality 1 Nebraska 126 2,710 2 North Dakota 69 2,457 3 Iowa 271 2,430 4 Kansas 240 1,904 6 Colorado 146 1,644 6 Minnesota 361 1,677 7 Oregon 144 1,604 8 Wisconsin 397 1,497 9 Idaho 66 1,466 10 Maine 98 ^..1,434 11 Indiana 609 1,424 12 Vermont 66 1,242 13 Missouri 609 1,187 14 Montana 84 1,127 16 Kentucky 237 1,103 | 16 Washington 299 1,098 17 Delaware 37 1,086 18 California 1,327 1,070 j 19 Ohio 1,285 1,048 \ 20 West Virginia 208 1,046 j Automo- Automo bile fa- biles for Rank State talities each 1925 fatality 21 Mississippi 170 1,043 21 Virginia 271 .-.1,043 23 Michigan 966 1,035 24 Illinois 1,268...' 996 25 South Carolina ... 179 941 25 Tennessee 278 941 27 New Hampshire .. 87 937 28 North Carolina 376 905 • 29 Massachusetts 729 887 30 Maryland 271 866 31 Louisiana 241 860 32 Pennsylvania 1,676 844 33 Utah 89 826 34 Alabama 252 773 36 New York 2,111 770 36 Rhode Island 133 766 37 New Jersey 771 753 38 Connecticut 340 737 39 Wyoming 67 712 40 Florida 449 638 '