The ne-ws in this publica THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA Published weekly by the tion IS released for the press on NE\317S T-RTTRl? University of North Caroima the date indiceied below. JBa W JuiSa A & (or its Bureau of Extension. i FEBRUARY 23, 1916 CHAPEL HILL, N. C. VOL. n, NO. 13 ^ Clitorial I B. C. Brmirtou, .1. deK, Hrtimlton, b. B, L. A, WilUiua't, B. H. Thornton. G- M. McKie. E ».s ■«?coiKi-ol»aa mat-t-w Novejnber 14, 1914, »t ch« postofflot? at Ohapel Hill, N. C., auder the act of August 24,1913. NORTH CAROLINA CLUB STUDIES i! j: ■ 5 GREAT WEALTH PRODUCERS Oiir farmers produce enormous wealth from year to year. For instance, our •grain crops, hay and forage, and potato ! crops in North Carolina last year aniount- ■ ed to ?86,201,000, as shown by the I .December Federal Crop Report. Tlie total resources of 417 state banks, - tprivalie banks, savings banks and trust '■fCompanies in North Carolina in 1915 i amounted to $87,660,324 as shown by --our Corporation Commission. That is to say, our farmers in a single ' year produce nearly m great wealth in ; food and feei crops as our hanks, other (than national, have been able to accum- ' «late in 250 years of state history, 1 GORGING AHEAD IN FARM CREDITS Two Rural Credit Unions in Mecklen burg at Carmel and Sharon, two in Union .at Eureka and Downing Creek, and one at Lowe’s Grove in Durham county, have ■opened their doors for business. Cary, Bahama in Durham county, and two ■other communities in Mecklenburg are ;getting ready to organize. ■Five Rural Credit Societies, organized and ready for business, put North Caro- ilina ahead of all the other states of the ■Union in this particular; that is to say, not counting similar organizations among the Jewish farmers of the North. The’bankers in Charlotte and Durham have been generously interested in these iarm credit organizations. Mr. W. R. Oamp, the State superintendent of Co-op- «rative Enterprise has had the enthusi astic and able support of Mr. JohnSprunt Hill, the Durham banker, and Mr. J. L. Morehead, the attorney-at-law. Mr. Hill is w'orking at the problems of rural credit in North Carolina w'ith the fine fervor of an old Testament prophet. ed in this way in schoots for the children I of their mill families, it makes a signifi' cant story. We should be glad to have the details. 3 OUR GOOD ROADS INSTI TUTE The .North Carolina Road Institute at the University Feb. 7-12 brought to ■Chapel Hill 128 delegates from 45 coun ties in the State and six men from other states to consider problems of highway ‘construction and betterment. The en- itire week was spent in the study of prob lems affecting road building in the State, with special attention to the qualifica tions for highway engineers, the use of ;onvicta in road construction, good roads | dn other lands, the patrol system, the use of the road drag and other road machin-1 mry, surfacing materials, bridges and cul- | ^erts and many other details of road j Sbuilding and maintenance. j Field demonstrations daily helped to j enforce some of the suggestions made in ; the speeches and papers. Many manu-, facturers of road machinery had exhibits j on the grounds. Cement roads received attention, and in fact ail the newest and .most promising methods of road making. The addresses of Dr. D. H. Winslow, the national superijitendent of road con- ■fitruction, were especially helpful and tTT' tspiriiig. THE UNIVERSITY COMMIS SION On .January 4 and 5, the University Commission on Race Relations was a guest of honor at Trinity College and the University of North Carolina. The members and advisory members of this Commission are Dr. J. H. Dillard, Charlottesville, Va. ; President K. A. Alderman, University of Va.; President S. C. Mitchell, Delaware College; ('han- rellor D. C. Barrow, University of Ga.; DeanJ. H. Hoskins, University of Tenn., Chairman elect; Dean W. S. Sutton, University of Texas, retiring chairman; W. M, Hunley, Virginia Military Insti tute, Secretary; E. C. Branson. Universi ty of N. C.; Josiah Morse, University of S. 0.; Director J. H. DeLoach, (Jeorgia j Experiment Station; Dean J. J. Doster, j University of Ala.; W^. L. Kennon, Uni- ] versity of Miss.; W. O. Scroggs, Univer- ■ sity of La.; and D. Y. Thomas, represent ing C. H. Brough, University of Ark. j The Purposes of It i i The Commission is an open-minded body of Southern scholars bent (1) upon ^ sounding public opinion concerning race | problems in the South, (2) hearing the conclusions of thoughtful Southern peo ple in this field of thinking, *3) stimula- j ting and directing college men in the | study of race problems, and (4) speaking: to and for college constituencies upon i clear issues. j They are not investigators; other agen cies are engaged in that work. They are not retained attorneys for any special set \ of opinions. They are hunting for the | truth, whatever it is; and they are de-1 daring it vigorously whenever they find | it. I For instance, the Commission has just j spoken to the college men of the country ; on the subject of lynching, and its utter ances have been given the widest publi city in the public press. In this matter the Commission is standing with the press of the SotJth, the clergy, the courts and brave county officials. Hearing From Trinity and the University j At Trinity the Commission was address-. ed by President Few and Drs. Brooks, Boyd, Laprade, and Glasson; and at the University by Drs. Battle, Dean Stacy, ' Dean Noble, Drs. W^ilson, Williams, Chase, Hamilton, and Henderson. The discussion was so interesting that no time ^ was left to hear from Dean Raper and j Profs. Toy, W'agstaff, Rankin, Daggett and Thornton, who were present and listed for addresses by Dean Sutton, the Chairman. ! THE FULLNESS OF OUR DAY - Henry W. Grady When every farmer in the South •shall eat breaUfrom bin own fields and meat from- his tnvn pastnrea, and dis turbed by no creditor and enslaved bj' no debt shall sit amid his teerroing gard'en.s, and orcliards, and vineyards, and dairies, and barnyards, pitching his crops in his own wisdom., and growing them in independence, mak ing cotton hi.s clean surplus,, and sell ing it in hi« own time, and in his chosen market, and not at » master’s bidding, getting his {>ay in cash and hot in a receipted mortgage that diet- chartrea his debt but does not restore his freedom—then shall be breflking the fullness of our day. Great is King Cottfjti! But to lie at his feet while the usurer and grain- raiser bind us in 8uh|ection, is to im- vite the c'ontempt of man and th*' re proach of God. But to stand up be fore him and amid grain crops aind' smokehouses wrest from him the mag- na charta of our independence, and to establish in his name an ample and diversified agriculture, that shall honor him while it enriches us—this is to carry us as far in the way of happi ness and independence as the farmer, wwking in the richest fields, can car ry any people. UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF EDUCATION LETTER SERIES NO. »2 liberally in farm land mortgages bearing low total interest rates. One insurance company through one agency has loaned our farmers in this way some $900,000 to date, at an average rate more than one per cent less than the State average of 7.7 per cent. Insurance Company Invest ments in North Carolina And it is time. What the insurance companies have loaned on farm land in North Carolina so far is a mere bagatelle —$2,267,000, or less than a third of one per cent of their total loans to American farmers. During the year ending April 1, 1915, insurance companies of all sorts col lected fourteen and a half million dollars in premiums in North Carolina and paid in death claims, fire and other losses, less than seven million dollars. A good question to ask the insurance agent who entertains you delightfully from time to time is, “What has your company invested in North Carolina?” WHAT ABOUT ITt After ailh why consider all these tigiixes and statistics about our investment in schools? Is it a waste of perfectly good time or has it some s(^ns«‘ and meaming? I^et us see. We surely are not rw^eiving a due-re turn in the Unit«d States upon our in vestment capital. Can anything be dtone?’ VVho has charge of the investment of these fuiids? We wonder if anyone is really inte.rest.i'd in getting tJbe most out of a: sure inve-«tment of them. Our Investment Capital One thing Ls sure. North Carolina is using her permww«f»?cschoif>l fund to the very best advantage. Of course you know that the building of a new schoolhouse every day for ». piriofl of twelve years has lieeii made possible beesn«e we have used this permainent si'hool fnnd iis a loan fund, drawing interfwt, to t:ho!*e districts most in neetl of this aewistance. No one objects to the way North Caro lina is using, this part of her investment capital. We would like to know how much revenue we derive-from our $300; GOO flforth of unsold school land, .^re w'e malcing the most of this investment? Our Operative Capital Are we doing all w(» might to make our ; schools: a going bnsinesis? It is recog- i nisT/fid fJiat we are doing better all the time. The question is. Are we making the most of onr business? .Vre wt putting every cent we can mke and ncrape to gether into this most important work of I our state government? ! Are we depriving, oui-selves of the lux- ! nries.' are we cutting at some other ex- j pense bills and turning the saving into I operative ca:p«t.'jl for iJiir; husiueas? Have I w;e strained every point, loatled ourselves I to-the-fullest extent, and reailijied all we can- for this big business? Mter All If we ha-ve done at! these things,'•if we are doing our utmost in this respect and can afford only .fl,76 per i;apita of popu lation as operative capital in this busi ness,. then we h«id' better quit talking about how^ ricij .'i-nd full of resourcesisonr Old North State. If we are one of the richest state.s in the nation we should hang our heads in shame that we care so-little for our human: rasouTCes. V\'e believe the citizens are not doing all in their power to increase our operative capital. We believe our resources will warrant a larger absolute and relative in vestment iji opevaiive capital. SCHOOLS FOR THE MILL VILLAGES Thirty-one mills in North Carolina, located beyond the reach of town and city school systems, have invested $199,- 500 in school buildings for the mill village ■children. In addition to the regular pub lic school funds received by these schools, the mill owners spend $36,743 a year for itheir maintenance. This contribution of tthe.mills amounts to $7.54 apiece for the ■4,873 pupils in average annual atten dance. One mill located in a town pays f 1,103 of the 11,451 raised by the special school tax; another so located pays 40 per cent and another pays 90 per cent of the local school tax. In the last instance, the mill property b^omes responsible for a like proportion of the $20,000 school bond -issue. These details come from an editorial in the New York f Commercial, quoted in Ootton, a montlily published in Atlan- We have around 415 textile mills in North Carolina, employing 55,000 opera tives. If they are all generously interest- INSURANCE LOANS ON FARM LANDS The item in our columns the other day about insurance company loans, at low rates of interest, on farm lands seems to have taken our readers by surprise; es pecially the total of these loans—nearly $700,000,000. They found further sur prise in the fact that $548,000,000 or sev en-eighths of this grand total has gone to the farmers of the 12 north central states, $150,000,000 to Iowa alone, and that in surance loans on farm land in North Carolina amounted to only $2,267,000. Heretofore the insurance companies have said, “Such loans are unsafe in your State, especially in the cotton and tobacco areas. You have too little livestock, too little diversification, too great a waste of soil fertility, too much worn out and abandoned farm land, 13,000,000 acres of this sort in North Carolina! We cannot lend on land in an area where farming is based on soil robbery, because our collat eral depreciates in value.” Our New Farm Credit Bases But our J)9,000,000 gain in livestock and our $40,000,000 increase in food and feed crops since the census year establish an other credit basis for agriculture in North Carolina. Collateral is safer, interest pay ments surer, and foreclosures fewer. As a result the insurance companies are looking this way and beginning to invest OUR MOONLIGHT SCHOOLS So far, 638 Moonlight schools have been organized and conducted in 50 counties of North Carolina and 1,000 teachers have been engaged in teaching 5,540 pupils, says Mr. N. C. Newbold, the state rural school agent, in the Washington Daily News. SAFER SCHOOL BUILDINGS The time has come for school authorities in North Carolina to consider very care fully the safety of the school buildings they erect. The day when any sort of a box would do has passed. The lives of our boys and girls are too sacred and too dear for us to neglect their protection. The Insurance Commission at Raleigh is interested in the matter and before buildings are constructed should be called into consultation about Tower Stairways. Write to Mr. James R. Young, Raleigh, N. C. FIREl Says the Insurance ('oiiamissioner for North^'Clarolina; “In America we burn twelve sehool houses and two colleges every week. In the United States, afire occurs every day in some school. Fre^ quently the lives of our children are saved simply because the fire occurs while the school is not in session. When we build new schoolhouses in North Carolina are we taking sufficient caution to protect the children from fires? Are our school buildings fireproof? Write to Mr. James R. Young at Raleigh and let him help you plan your buildings so as to save the kiddies.” IREDELL DOING THINGS Superintendent R. M. Gray writes to us to say, “One of our progressive rural schools. Cedar Grove, in Olin Township has been Hghted with electricity, and running water put in. I am making an effort to have each school place a neat sign board with the name of the school, Township and District painted on it, and in a conspicuous place. ’ ’ Iredell has long^ been famed as The County That Does Things. We rejoice to know that it is a county that still does things. Congratulations to Superintend ent Gray! LOCAL TAXATION FOR SCHOOLS For the school year of 191.1-14 local taxation for schools in No-rth Carolina counties show's some interesting charac teristics. Four counties raised between $50,000 and $76,000; eight between s>25,000 and $50,000; six covlnties between $20,000 and ,ti2-5,000; twelve between-{ilS,000 and $20,- 000; twenty between $tO,OOU and $15,000; twenty-two between $5,000 and $10,000; twenty between $1,000 and $5,000; five between $500 and $1,000; Avery and Wa tauga each raised les.s than $500. No county raised over $76,000. Wake leads the State with $75,830, while Guil ford, Forsyth and Buncombe follow closely in the order given. Comparisons Carteret, next to the poorest county in the State in per capita country w^ealth raised $6,700.19 by local taxation for schools. Alleghany, the richest county in the State in per capita country wealth raised only $425.39 by the same means for the same purpose. Scotland, the second richest county in per capita country wealth raised only $9,943,69. Think it over. he has made little advancement anti is in danger of becoming a job-hunter to the end of the chapter. There has been a great hue and cry for the good old days of the apprenticeship system. Much has been written and said concerning this whole question. It remained for the Curtis Publishing Com pany, in 1913, to point the way out amid the maze of opinion coiicerning the mat ter. In connection with tl eir printing bus iness this company has- devised a work ing plan for educating jpurneyman prin ters through a modification of the old ap prentice system. The details of the plan are explained in a pamphlet. The Curtis School of Printing for .-ipprenttces, which will be sent free upon application to the Curtis Publi.'fhing Co., Philadelphia, Pennsyl vania, Write for it! It is interesting and instructive.. RURAL LIBRARIES According to the Reports of State Sup erintendent Joyner it appears that for the year 1913-14 the expenditure for rural libraries was less, absolutely, by $664, than in 1909-10. More than this, the relative amount spent for rural libraries was two-tenths of one per cent less this last year than five years ago. -Can it be possible that the libraries in our rural schools have become sufficient ly complete? A visit to our rural schools would not seem to bear out the truth of the statement! What is the trouble? ELON AND THE HOME TOWN SHIP The Elon: College authorities, assisted by Major W. A. Graham and his co workers in the State Department of Agri culture, the- A. & M. College, and the Experiment Station, have planned a great Community Ser-vice Day at Elon on February 26 for the people of Boon Sta tion township in Alamance. The farmers, the business people, the teachers, the Sunday school and church workers are invited to- gather for an all day program of speaking, athletic events, and an open basket dinner. It is inspiring to see our colleges strike hands with the home communities in solving their problems and puzzles of life and business. Workmg every man over against his own house was Nehemi- ah’s way of re-building the walls. We ought t« have a thousand such events in as many schools, churches, and colleges all over North Carolina. When personal concern broadens into commu nity concern and activity it evidences spiritual growth in individuals and insti tutions alike. SCHOOL FOR APPRENTICES In these days of big business a boy on leaving school, in the cities especially, is very liable to take up with blind-alley jobs, with the result that at twenty-one IT dAN BE DONE The following is an exact reproduction of a letter written by a thirty-nine year old pupil, who attended one of our Moon light schools for six nights: Crouse, N. C, Jan 19 1916 Dear mr walker I go to the moonlight school mr Thorn is my teacher I can read some in my Bible and add some figures I am thirty nine years old and never wrote a letter tell • last week if you have Jtime I wish you would wtite me a letter your frend Tom Sneed The original is perfectly legible and every word in the above is reproduced exactly as in the original copy. It is proof positive that it is never too late to learn.