A Plea foi: the EducatiOn ~hildren of.~Geor~ia . DEC E M .B E R. Tlae State ,..,_, Prooifl.e cc;,".morr. Sciaoou or Strlile wit/& Commo11 Clad Co.tlylgrr.~l'ti.~U:e. ' J.,enoiala.n. Dflmocrac1 l EducofiGn. z. ~ ~ ... .. lllteUitlellce t/&e Bflt Z..pcy: .: RlgAt VillK of Bdu.catloll fa C:idture; Yt Commer eud&lft demaads lt. . l ' Does Educatlo11 Poy ? Trained Mlllda Wlrr. In tlae Cfirr.tnt. B.1derr.t of tlae 'Teaclaer' dKty lrr. triitti116 Jill Ute Pu~lla of 1/&e District ln. School. CoiUlderr.ey, '"Over t/&e Left., B.~ttracts fl'(llllll.fPcla 67 Gou. NortAerr.. Bln BdKt:t&tloa Not 11 Charity 6Kt o Jtult. of CotUoUdotiorr. ofSclaoola. Batlmt&ted Cot of Lorr.g 7'"'"' Districts. Tl&e GNot Couaty Pro.lem. Loc11l TGJtatlorr. .. The ComerSton.e of Flerlda's B.~tul lent Scl&ool System. LoC4l Tt&-~tatlorr.. ' . " ISSUED BY THit EDUCATIONAL CAMPAIGN COMMITTE ,-------- - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - -- - ----, - - - -- -- -- --- - ------ - - - - - -----, A Plea for the 'I iI Education of the Children of Georgia DECEMBER 1903 SOME REASONS WHY The people should ratify the Constitutional amendment recently passed by the General Assembly of Georgia and approved by the Governor permitting counties that want better 4 . . . . . schools to levy a light founty tax for school purposes + ,I ISSUED BY THE STATE EDUCATIONAL CAMPAIGN COMMITTEE THROUGH THE GENEROSITY OF THE SOUTHERN EDUCATION BOARD I- I " Educational Campaign Committee. WALTER B. HILL, WARREN A. CANDLER, HOKE SMITH, W. B. U\1ERRITT, W. J. NORTHEN, U\1. L. DUGGAN. TO THE PEOPLE OF GEORGIA. c..At an Educational Conference Held in Atlanta, at Which Gov. joseph M. Terrell Presided, the Undersigned Committee was Appointed to Prepare and Publish the Following Address. To TH.E PEOPLE OF GEORGIA: IT is self-evident that in a democracy tlTe intelligence of th.:J peo- ple is a n eces sary condition of good governmen t . For this r eason t h e State undertakes as a m eans of self-protection the work of public education. Our forefathers accepted and acteJ on these principles. Immediately followi~g th e Declaration of Independence and the institution of a Democratic government, they provided in the first Constitution of the State, that of 1777, for the establis hment of a public school sys tem,. In 1785, speaking through their legislature, t h ey de clared that th e "prosperity a nd even the existence of the State" can be secured only by r eligion anJ education." During the 127 ye ars that have .:Jlapsed since our first Constit ution, the r ecord of Georgia in behalf of public education, considered in the ligh t of conditions that have existed, has been honorable; but the time has now com .:J when a forward movement is imperatively de- manded by our interest and by our duty. It is not more certain that in past ages Force was dominant than that in these later times Intelligenc e rul es. In the competition 21mong nations, the m ost int.:Jlligent will have t he mastery; in the competition between sections, the best educated will have pre-eminence; in the competition a mo ng individuals, the man most highly t rained will be th.:J most s ure of success and the best equipped for usefulness. For these reasons the intelli-6ence and cons cience of the State will be satisfied w ith nothing Jess than a perfected system of public schools where all the chilJ.ren of th e commonwealth, r egardless of condition in life or circums t ane.:J of fortun e , may have an opportunity for the develo]Yment and th e t raining of the capacities w ith which t h eir Creator has endow e d them: In comparing the status of public education in Georgia with that of other States in the South, it is pleasant to escape the humiliation of being at the bottom of the list in the matter of illiteracy, a:nd in th-e inadequacy of r esources we have provideJ for what Thomas J e ff erson called the "crusade against ignorance; " but Wil are t oo n e ar the bottom of the list to s ati-S>fy a just and worthy State pride, and it is regrettable (to say nothing of negro illiteracy) to know that the white illite rates in Ge orgia exce.:Jd the total aggregate white population of Atlanta, Savannah, and AU6USta combined. In contrasting the status in Georgia with th.:J expenditures for public education in t he North and West, the partial self-congratulation of the first comparison disap- pears in t he trem endous advantage which those States mainta.in. Elaborate statistics are wearisome, but it is we ll for Georgian:s to ponder the fact s s uggested in a single condensed s tate m ~n,:~i _.;;,:- .,.,,: . - . ;.' \ J'' ~ _\-- Y'.;-t-~:~'.I~-;~:~: :.~' '~:e.'~f:'!I.'m_"~:-~:"J.::,,-~.',.t-?f~"-.~-v . . In scl~ools in Georgia taught by teachers whose average salary 1s only $21.00 per month, we are teaching only 61 per cent. of th e en- roll ed school population; giving the children in actual attendance lesa t han six cents' worth of education per day for an average of onlY one hundred and twelve days in the year. *In the State which gives unost largely to public education, the productive wealth for each inhabi- tant is $260 per annum. In Georgia it is less than half of this' sum. How are these conditions to be improved? We believe that the people of Georgia are both patriotic auJ intelligent enough to im- prove them, if they are free to do so; but they are not fre e. The re- source for the betterment of our inadequate educational system is in local taxation supplementing the general State fund ; but the Consti- tution of 1877 abridges and virtually denies to the people the right of local taxation. So many restrictions are thrown around the procedure, so oppressive are the requirements, so unequal are the terms of sub- mission of the question to the people that their hands are tied. Under the existing law the recommendations of two Grand Juries must be obtained, and in the elections it is necessary to the success of the lo- cal m easure to secure two-thirds . of the qualified voters of the county. The effect of this is to count aga{nst the measure all the absent voters, all the voters providentially hindered fr om voting, auJ even t hose who may have removed from the county but whose names appear on the qualified list. The proposed amendment relieves the procedure of these oppressive requirements, but it is important to note that the amendment is itself highly conservative in that it requires a two- at thirds majority of the persons voting in the section. This amendment will be submitt ed to the people the next genera.! election in October, 1904. We b'eli eve that the people can be trust ed ; most of a ll, they can be trusted not to tax themselves too heavily. The amendment in effect merely res t ores to the people the right of local option in taxa- tion. In view of ihese plain propositions and the momentous impor- tance of the public interests involved, the educational conference held at AUanta as above stated makes, through the committee, the follow- ing declarations: 1. Wle appeal to the people to adopt the Constitutional amend- m ent, reclaiming for themselves the right of suppl ementary local taxa- tion to be exercised in those communiti'es that desire it in accordance with the demo.cratic principle of home rule. 2. We declare ourselves in favor of advancement in our educa- tional system,; better training and payment of teachers; expert school supervision ; longer terms. the consolidation (where practicable) of weak and scattered schools into strong and more efficient organiza- tions; the improvement of school houses and grounds. 3. Realizing the strong devotion of the wom en of the State to the welfare of the child1ren, we appeal to them to organize School Improvement Societies in every county and locality, and to aid by their inRuence in the a <:complishm ent of t he objects outlined in this address. 4. We invoke the aid of the great agencies, the pulpit and the l)ress; we r ecommend that th e frienJs of the schools hold educa- tional rallies in all the counties of the State, a nd we invite tha coOP eration of all good citizens in this effort for the intellectual, indus- trial, and moral elevation of the citizenf'hip of the future. "\VATIIER B. HILL, WARREN A . CANDLER, HOKE SMITH, w. B. lVIERHITT, W. J. NORTHEN, l\11. L. D UGGAN, Committee. *NOT !t.-In rural schools the average length of t.he sch oo l term. for each child enrolle d is about 62 days; and for each child o f school age the average 1s about 42 days. c.A Plea for the Education of the Children of Georgia. Without halting, without rest, Lifting better up to best; Planting seeds of knowledge pure, Through earth to ripen, through Heaven endure.-Emerson. "God give us patience and strength that we may vvork to build up schools that shall be as light shining throughout the land. Behind this movement for the education of the children of our land there stands the One who said, 'Let there be light.' "-Governor Charles B. Aycock, South Carolina. "At the same time came the disciples unto J esus sayi ng, V/ho is the greatest in t he kingdom of Heavea? And J esus called a little child unto him and set him in the midst of them."-lVIatthew r8:r-2. "Educational progress means religious good; it inculcates a love of truth that is not limited. The hope of the State is not in the cities or the big towns. The hope of the greatest future is dawning in the rural districts."-Prof. J. B. Carlyle. "Public edi.1cation, or rather general education, is indispensable to the preservation of liberty and the manifold blessings that liberty bestows upon its votaries. General education is synonymous with progress and with all the vi rtues which ennoble manhood and womanhood. It guides the hand of the husbandman and the artisan in the fruitful operation of the farm and workshop." "It is no longer disputed that the wealth, the power, the greatness and the success of a nation, are proportioned upon the degree of education that it possesses. The sanze rule applies to communities."-The Outlook "In our State where agriculture is and must continue to be the chief industry, the school house should be made the fulcrum of influence to promote its interests and develO'pm.ent towards perfection. It should labor for good roadways to make country life attractive as well as remunerative, and by these means 5 check the tendency of the young people to abandon the independ- ent life of the fields for the dependent and often fruitless life in the cities." Gov. W. 'vV. H EARD . "Human life is so short at the longest, so sorrowful at the best, that it pays to crowd as much real happiness into childlife as possible." "The most productive thing in the world is not a dollar, not two dollars, but a thing that is not material; a thing that rules ships, commerce, an d men: it .is a boy, and above all, an Amer- ican boy." L YMAN H ALL. "Everything in the South waits upon education. Our industrial development waits on more captains of industry, superintendents of factori es, and skilled workmen. 'vVe have the resources; we can get the capital in abundance. Otu need is the men who know how to plan, to organize and to work. Even our agrictilture waits upon the intelligent farm ers, horticulturists, dairymen, and stock breeders." PRES. (HAS. v..,r. D ABNEY, U niversity of T enn. INTELLIGENCE AND VIRTUE THE SUREST FOU NDATION . "Taxation by the State is but an appropriation for the security of society, protection to property and the advancement of the people. Ignorance lead s riot and vice, hand in hand , to disturb society, destroy business and overturn th e government. The surest foundation for our system must be laid in the intelligence and virtue of the masses ."-Gov. \ N. J. Northen. The State ~ust Provide Common Schools or Strive with Common and Costly- Ignorance "The State must provide common schools or they can not be had at all. Let every opponent of our com.mon school system dismiss from hi s mind the delusion that he believes in popular enlig htenment though opposed to the common schools. The alternatives are not the comm,on school, or some other sort of school, but the common school or no school, the common school or popular ignorance. "And let no man suppose the common schools cost him too 6 111(ttch; common ignorance will cost him far more. The value of lands and every other species of property must depreciate where schools are few and ignorance abundant. The stingy, figure fearfully about the cost of our common schools. \Vould they could calculate what ignorance has cost." " I bring no railing accusation against our common school teachers. Among them are many of the most patriotic men and heroic women who ever toiled and suffered and died to bless J,ankind in any age or clim.e. All of them are as good as our short term schools and short-pay salaries will permit. A three or five months school in the nature of the case can not be a good school for even that short period. Many of the children, it is true, may not be able to attend the full term, but some o.f them will be able to do so, and if others can only attend three months it is all the more needful that they should meet good teachers when they do attend. And as I have before said, good teachers can not be had without long tem1 schools and long term salaries."-Bishop \iVanen A. Candler. After an experience of sixteen years as school commissioner of Baldwin County, I am fully convinced that local taxation is the bc~t, and at present the only means, of properly furnishing adequate educational facilities for the rural sections of Georgia. At present, some of our sohool houses are but little better than barns, and some of our teachers are paid less than is pad for the labor of convicts. People must realize that educational advantages can not be obtained without expense. 'vVe need longer school terms , better school houses and more trained teachers, and in order to obtain these, local taxation for schools seems to be a necessity. f do not know of any other way to develop our ~chool system _ RicH. N. LAMAR, Co. Supt. of Schools. Every ignorant boy threatens the safety of society. If selfrespect and love for humanity are not sufficient as motives, mere self-preservation should inspire every patriotic Georgian to wage unceasing war against the illiteracy which shames the State in the eyes of the world. M. L. BRITTAIN. 7 "Let us cherish our public schools as the looms, and our teachers as the weavers who weave the wonderous destiny for the nations."-JOHN FISKE. "In schools in Georgia taught by teachers whose average salaries are only $27 per month, we are teaching only 6r per cent. of the enrolled population; giving the children in act,ual attendance less than six cents worth of education per day for an average of r r2 days in the year. In the State which gives most largely to public education, the productive wealth for each mhabitant is $260 per annum . In Georgia it is less than half that sum."- From an Address to the people of Georgia. JEFFERSONIAN DEMOCRACY IN EDUCATION. In the South the people, however otherwise divided, are all Jeffersonian Democrats. It is a pleasure to know that the move- ment for the adoption of the Constitutional Amendment known as the McMichael Bill, is pure Jeffersonian Democracy. Jefferson's hopes for civil liberty were predicated on popular education. Hence he cried, with the fervor of an apostle, "Preach a crusade against ignorance." His definition of the purposes of primary education has never been surpassed. It reads as follows: " ( r) To give to every citizen the information he needs for the transaction of his own business ; (2) To enable him to calculate for himself, and to expr~ss and preserve his ideas, his contracts and accounts, in writing ; (3) To improve by reading, his morals and faculties; (4) To understand his duties to his neighbors and country, and discharge with competence the functions confided to him by either; I I (5) To know his rights; to exercise with order and justice those he retains; to choose with discretion the fiduciary of those I be delegates and to notice their conduct with diligence, with candor and judgment. ,I (6) And, in general, to observe with intelligence and faith- fulness the social relations under which he shall be placed." In securing popular education, Jefferson sought to apply his favorite theory of government, which was the distribution of power. He therefore preferred that local taxation for schools, 8 wherever practicable, should be by districts. Any student de- siring to follow his views in detail may refer to Jefferson' s wri- tings VI. 542, 566. VIII. 205, 357, 358; also his correspondence 53, 54, 103, r86, 443 Yes; local taxation for public schools with the privilege of ap- plying it by districts or by counties, is Jeffersonian Democracy in Education. "WALTER B. HILL. "I think by far the most important bill in our whole code is that for the diffu sion of knowledge among the people. No surer foundation can be devised for the preservation of freedom and happin ess." THOMAS JEFFERSON in a letter to George Wythe. Intelligence the Best Legacy- The education of the children of any country is its most important public interest. The safety and prosperity of the State depends upon the intelligence of its people. Everything that makes a people great is the product of intelligence. Right knowing is a necessary prerequisite to right doing, while failure and degradation, both individual and national, will surely follow in the foot steps of ignorance. The best legacy that we can leave to our children is a good education. Without it all other wealth will soon take wing. Educatio'n is creative, reproductive, and it can not be destroyed. Ignorance is destructive, wasteful and deg rading. ~Abundant experience has shown that it is the best economy to educate the children through th ~.; public schools. They are the schools for the people, and the people should support them liberally. In order that the burden may be evenly distributed taxation is the proper means for the support of the schools, and local taxation should furnish the bulk of the money. This is fairest to all concerned, and it is in harmony with the right of local self government. All successful public schools in the United States are suppo-rted largely by local tax ation. with a full knowledge of the educational conditions of our people, and appreciating fully the great value of education to the 9 individual and to the State, I sincerely believe that it is the utmost importance to the welfare of the whole people to establish and sustain good schools for the education of the children, that the school term should be much longer than it is now in order to r eap the benefits of a continued intellectual development, and that local taxation should be adopted by every county to supplement the State fund. \i\Tisdom, economy, patriotism, and the experience of other older educational systems all urge this course. Ons AsHMORE. Supt., Schools, Savannah, Ga. VALUE OF EDUCATION. "I venture to say that the future of the State does not depend, primarily at least, upon the product of the soil, the abundance and variety of its mineral resources, th e vastness of its commerce and its industrial development, but upon the intellectual and moral strength of its people. The meaning of this statement is, if our government is made stable, our schools must be made efficient and all our children must receive from them the best possible instruction. This is the natural and logical conclusion from the universal acceptance of the fundament~tl principles just announceu. If the future of the State depends upon the intellectual and moral strength of its citizen, the future of the State must depend, in the last analysis, upon the character of our schools and the efficiency of our teachers.-Gov. \i\T. J. Northen. STATE PROSPERITY PRESUPPOSES AN EDUCATED STATE. "Our people are beginning to reali ze the fact that we can not have a prosperous State unless we have an educated State; they I are beginning to realize that the prosperity of the State does not depend upon the amount of education which some of our people 1 have, but that the prosperity of the State depends upon the edu- cation possessed by all the people in the State."-Gov. D. C. c. H EYWARD, S. Highest Value of Education Is Culture; Yet Commercialism Demands It. Depreciate as we may that spirit that would place the dollar mark upon every man's back, that causes the clock of progress to 10 I tick only when nickels and climes and dollars are dropped into the slot, yet the time has con1;e when many, ignoring the higher values of an education--the moral, social and aesthetic have beg un to ask "Does education pay from: a commercial standpoint and give adequate r eturns in dollars and cents?" Laying aside the question of culture and higher life, an(l still the school is justified even when placed upon the high plane of commercialism. According to the United States census of I9oo, Georgia has a population of z,zs6,ooo, of which number 3I per cent. , or 699.360 can neither read nor write. The estimated number of male persons ZI years of age and over is 509,700. The estimated number of mal es of sehoul age is 377,260, giving a total male population above 6 years of age of 886,960. Of the -509,700 male adults IS8,I68 are illiterates, and according to our school ce:1sus of I898 we had 83,000 illiterates of school age. Inasmuch as o'ur percentage of males is so. I3, it is safe to say that at least 4z,ooo of the 83 ,000 are males. This number of illiterate males of school age added to the IS8,I68 illiterate adult males gives us at the lowest estimate, at least zoo.ooo males who can neither r ead or write. This is a conservative estimate, for if the same rate of illiteracy obtains among our nx tle population as does among our entire population, ( 3I per cent.) then we have instead of zoo,ooo male illiterates, 3 I per cent. of the total male populati0:1 (886,960) which is 274,957. But accepting the lower estimate (zoo,ooo) the question naturally arises "vVha t does Geo r~Sia lose in earning capacity on account of t his vast army of males vvho can neither read or write?" Estimating that the average salary of the educated man is $zo per month more than that of the illiterate, or to be still more conservative, placing this excess in earning capacity at only $zoo a year, each illiterate then costs the State because of loss in earning capacity $zoo annually, or during a working life of forty years- from hi s zoth to 6oth year-th e loss on account of his illiteracy is $8ooo. The total number of male illiterates- zoo,ooo--clecreases th e earning capacity of our male population $4o,ooo,ooo--forty million dollars-annually, or during a working life of 40 years , the loss that is entailed is $I,6oo,ooo,ooo (one billion six hundred million dollars ) a sum sufficient to oper- 11 ate all the public schools of the United States and pay every expense for 7 years, or all the schools of Georgia for more than one thousand years. This estimate, as is shown is based entirely upon the male population and does not at all take into consideration the loss in earning capacity of the females of the State. And yet in face of these facts one county of Georgia expended $82,000 for courts c.ncl jails and zooo prisoners, and not a cent except that amount received from the State for her 7000 children. Are these figures too high ? In order to be as conservative as possible let us take the estimate of Prof. Sanders of A rkansas, who has given much study to this subject. He is willing tn concede that the average salary of the illiterate is $300 a year, (albeit he shows this estimate is too high) and that the salary of the average educated male is $400 a year (an estimate too low). Even according to this estimate, which is certainly conservative, the annual loss to Georgia in earning capacity is $2o,ooo,ooo annually, or during a working life even this estimate means a loss of $8oo, ooo,ooo dollars-a sum large enough to buy, according to its assessed valuation, the real estate of forty of our average counties. Dr. Thompkins tells us that our earning capacity is increased twelve and one-half times by a common school education; twentyfive times by a high school education and fifty times by university education. At first glance these figures may appear to be an exaggeration of fact, and yet when we consider that there are thousands of illiterates working for from $5 to $r 5 per month, and that on the other hand there are hundreds of professional men whose salaries nm to five figures even this estimate is, perhaps, not too high. But reverting to the more conservative estimate, let us ascertain what a clay in school is worth to the average male. If the edu- I, cated man earns $8ooo more than the illiterate one, during a working life of 40 years, the question arises "\tVhat has produced I. the difference? Taking the average amount of schooling per in- habitant in the South Atlantic States as given by the United States I Census of rgoo, we find that the average child attends school 3.20 years of zoo days each (or 6-40 years of roo days each) or 640 days . Lividing $8,ooo-the a::1ount the educated man receive~ in excess of the illiterate-by 640, we find that a clay in school :I is worth to the average boy $rz.50, in other words, 640 days in I;! 12 I '.' ! school has enabled him to earn $r6ooo during his working life, whereas, without schooling he could have earned but half of this amount or $8ooo. It may be shown that the average high school pupil earns $6oo a year or $24,000 during a working life, and that the college man earns $rooo a year or $40,000. By a similar calculation the worth of a day in high school and college may be found. Despite these momentous facts, all over Georgia to-day there are thousands of children out of school merely in order that they may earn so. cents a day. The result is that their salaries are ever meagre and that they die with all that is best in them: undeveloped and unrevealed. Mr. H. G. Nacllin shows us that for a certain year the net result of productive industry in the U nited States was $II4.14 per capita, or on the basis of 306 working days, was 37 cents for every man, woman and child. In Massachusetts alone it was 66 cents per day, the excess being 29 cents in favor of Massachusetts. At this rate the average annual excess in productive energy in Massachusetts over the rest of the United States is $88.74 per capita; for the entire population of the State it is $2oo,ooo,ooo or more than that of the same number of average persons out of the State. Massachusetts in this excess alone has money sufficient to operate her schools for thirty years. The value of her manufactured articles alone, per capita, is $8o.8o whilst in Georgia the value per capita is $21.85. This is attributable not only to the fact that Massachusetts expends more on her schools, but to the fact that the average number of clays schooling to each inhabitant is twice as great as it is in Georgia. It is true that the educational problem of Georgia is not the educational problem of Massachusetts; it is true that forty years ago the flaming torch of war was carried throughout our land, that our homes were destroyed andour fields devastated, but siJch is my belief in the temper and spirit of this great people that we shall yet awake to the importance of this great questio~1 of our commercial life. vVhen we realize the fact that the illiterate has only one chance in one hundred and fifty thousa nd, when we realize that in twelve 13 j,[ I II' counties of this great State more than 20 out of every 100 white voters can neither read nor write, w hen we r ealize what local taxa- tion means to our counties, our State and our children, I believe thaf we shall open our eyes to the . importance of this sub- ject, and ere another decade has turned upon the swift wheels of time, Georgia will not present the shameful spectacle education- ally that she does to-day, but rising fair and mighty amongst her queenly sisters, with the sceptre of culture in her rig ht hand and the crown of intelligence upon her brow, with all her sons educated and all her daughters refined, she shall send forth every morning a hymn of - praise to God for his mJercies and the eve- ning sun shall set down amidst the uplifted hearts of a contented and a happy people. E. A. PoUND. HoN. E. A. PouND, Supt. Public Schools, vVaycross, Ga. D E.\ !: Sm: I have your letter of the 8th instant, and have rerm the child into a patriotic mem,ber ~f society, instead of allowing him to become des-raded, and dangerous to our institutions." After five years of experience as State Superintendent, I have 18 11' 1 had the opportunity of observing the stimulating effect on school sentiment of local taxation. Those counties in Mississippi that have availed themselves of the right to levy school taxes, without exception have long er terms, better average attendance, more comfortable school houses, than those counties not levying a school tax, or better in all these respects by far than they were when receiving the support for their school wholly from the State. H . L. vVHITFIELD. Superintendent of Education, JVfississippi. Thomas Carlyle says: "This I call a tragedy that there should one man die ignorant who had capacity for knowledge." Consistency, "Over the Left." "Do you see those fellows there?" "Yes." 'Well, they are opposed to the nine months' public school system for our county." " Is that so? I am surprised. I thought they were progressive and public spirited." "So did I, until they made themselves known on this question." "By the way, do they not patronize your town school ?" "Yes. One of them, so he openly declares, moved from the country into town in order to get the advantage offered by the ten months' public school." "You say the Eatonton school is free ten months?'' "Yes." "How is it maintained?" "Under the law the County Board of E ducation appropriates to the Board of Trustees of this school a part of the general school fund received by the county-about enough, I suppose, to run the sd10C! five ll1onths. The balance 1;; raised by a special tax levied upon tile prnperty situated within the corporate limits of the town." "Have those gentlemen any property in town?" "None tl:at I am aware of." "They are then voluntary beneficiari es of the liberal advantages 19 offered by the Eatonton public school, m:acle possible o;1ly by spe- cial local taxation?" "Yes." " But at the same time are they opposed to levying a special local tax on property outside of town in order to secure a longer public term for the co-untry schools?" "They are." "Upon what ground do they oppose this measure?" "They say they are opposed to being taxed to educate the chil- dren of others ." "Ha! Ha! Ha! What a serious predicament they are in. By the way, I don't suppose there is any obj ection to their sending to the Eatonton Academy?" "None in the world that I am aware of. On the contrary the trustees in their catalogue and through the columns of the local papers have advertised for as much patronage from the country people as can be accommodated. Th ey are perfectly welcome." This conversation is related with no purpose in the world to have them withdraw their children from school, but to shovv them their inconsistency. All that is asked of them is a willing ness to do fo r the children of their neighbors what they are receiving at the hands of the Eato than two thousanJ population, leaving only two hunderd thousand people living in the cities or towns of more than two thousand inhabitants. The> proportion of urban population is a little lower in Korth Carolina than in the entire South; but :\lississippi is even more rural than i\orth Carolina. 3 LocAL TAx IS PR.\CTIC\LLY ALL URnc\;-{ AND I\0 RuRc\L CoMMUNITIES. In practically every community with more than two thousand inhabitants a local school tax has been voted by the people to supplement the school hmd provided by State levy and otherwise, and the result is that public schools in these ,communities compare favorably with those in communities of simiiG(r size and elsevvhere. But not five per cent. of the rural communities in the South have voted a special school tax. I have bec>n unable to get complete official reports, but leaving out Tennessee and Louisiana, whose Superintenden'ts failed to answer my inquiry, and leaving ont Missouri, whose Superintendent reports a local tax in all its IO,ooo school districts, I feel safe in saying that not twenty-five counties in the entire South have> voted a special tax on all their property. At least six States have no county that has levied such a tax on all its property. \\Then it is remem lwrecl that wherever satisfactory public schools exist in this country, 1\orth or South, whether in urban or rural communities, from one-half lo nine-tenths of the school revenue is raised by local taxation, the above conditions appear in their true light. 4 'l'HF. CouNT> SuPERfi'\TEKDEi\T- \Vhat 1s needed 1s slronger men to lead the people in tlw rural sections to clo what their neighbors in the cities and towns have already done. enfortunately, ever since the Revolution, which was fought on a tax issue, the loudest talking political leader has taught the people to hate the worJ "'tax,"-not any particular tax, but just tax. To 38 -- .-. --..~.--._.--.-tr...-. ,..,, '-" .;;;.J s;::c r:t. - persuade the people that the levying of any tax is a profitable investment demands more power than is possessed by the averas-e County Superintendent. The average salary of the County Superintendent in several Southern States is less than $300. Men are now needed in these positions who can teach the truth that an industrious community may become rich by levying certain taxes for its own improving, that taxation is one of the chief characteristics of civilization, that the savage pays no tax. The local school tax is a fundamental necessity of the South, anJ men must be secured who can persuade the people to vote this tax upon thernselves. A persistent, tactful campaign alone can do this. HOW TO PERSUADE AND \YHEK TO BEGIN. How shall we persuade these communities to do what we have already Jone, and when shall we begin? There are two lines of special work to be done, the first by the teacher, the second l