-tOith Cc "Ilia 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 its University Ex tension Division. * NOVEMBER 8,1922 CHAPEL HILL, N. VOL. IX, NO.l Kilitoriat BnarA , B. 0. Branaon, 8. H. Hobbs, Jr., L. B. Wilson, B. W. Knight, D. D. Carroll, J. B. Bullitt, H. W. Odum. Entered aa seoond-clMS matter November 14,1914, at the Postoffioe at Chapel Hill, N. C., under the set of August 34, 1918. WHAT NEXT IN NORTH CAROLINA THE N. C. CLUB SCHEDULE Oct. 30-The Boll Weevil and a Re organized Agriculture.—J. B. Eagles, Wilson county. Nov. 13—Country Community Life and Cooperative Farm Enterprise.- F. J. Herron, Buncombe county. Nov. 27—The Social Gospel of Jesus. —E. A. Houser, Jr., Cleveland county. Home and Farm Ownership.—A. Joy ner, Jr., Guilford county. Dec. 13—Cooperative Marketing and Its Value to the State.—D. C. Carr, Cumberland county. Jan. 16—County-Wide -Library Ser vice.—A. M. Moser, Buncombe bounty. State-Aid to Home (jwnership: —P. S. Randolph, Buncombe county. Jan. 29—Prison Reform.-E. A. Houser, Jr.,Cleveland county. Improved County Government.-A. Joyner, Jr., Guilford county. Feb. 12—Home and Farrh Ownership. —L. H. Moore, Duplin county. The Corporations and the Commonwealth.— W. F. Somers, Rowan county. Feb. 26 —Capital, Labor, and the Public in North Carolina.—E. 0. Baum, Hyde county^ Mar. 26—The equalizing of Taxes.— W. C. Perdue, Vance county. Apr. 9—Improved County Govern ment.—C. E. Cowan, Bertie county, and George Robbins, Guilford county. Apr. 23—Improved Citizenship.—R. R. Anderson, Tennessee. State-Aid to Home Ownership. —H. E. Martin, Cum berland county. May 7—County-Wide School Systems and Consolidated Schools.—D. C. Carr, Cumberland county. The Corporations and the Commonwealth. —P. A. Reavis, Jr., Franklin county. —Mnyfli -The Hvitention and Accumu lation of Wealth by Farmers. —T. A. Little, Chatham county. A Four-Year Medical School and a Teaching Hospit al.—S. S. McDaniel, Jr., Vance Coun ty- “•t-une 4—County-Wide School Sys tems and Consolidated Schools.—W. E. White, Cleveland county. Reform of the State Primary Laws.~W. E. White, Cleveland County. NEWS LETTER BIRTHDAY With this issue, the University News Letter enters upon a ninth year of pub lication. It has always been our purpose to make this little publicity sheet sound the full deep organ voice of the Uni versity as a whole. Instead we have barely escaped being a penny whistle blown by the department of rural social- economics. So because it happens to be our job, and oth^r departments are busy with their own particular work. Fortunately, rural social-economics in the University of North Carolina means much more than a mere study of country-life conditions and problems in the state and the nation; it means a study of these problems as consequen tially related to every business and everybody—to the merchants, bankers, and manufacturers, to church life and school enterprise, to small-town condi tions and functions, to county affairs and county government, to public fi nance, public highways, public health, and public welfare, and so on and on. Population considered we are still dominantly rural; wealth production and distribution considered, we have become dominantly industrial and ur ban. And the shift has been definitely made during the eight years of Univer sity News-Letter existence. Week by week the year through, the News Letter has exhibited this move ment in brief detail for popular read ing, with the people of the state full in mind, and the Brahmin caste at Har vard not even in the tail of our eye. In which saying, we are borrowing a fig ure of Emerson’s. He would be a hopelessly stupid reader these eight years, who failed to see that the University News Letter is not a college gossip sheet, that it is not thinking first and most about the Uni versity but first and foremost about the state, about the people’s puzzles and problems of life and livelihood. The News Letter in volume nine will be devoted as usual to North Carolina as a proper study for North Carolinians —this, as an indispenaablejculture a mong all the othes* essential cultures of life. And the basis of these' studies will continue to be comparisons—compari sons, always comparisons. He little knows his home state, who does not know her in contrast, in fundamental matters, with other states and coun tries in the big wide world.—E. C. Branson, Editor-in-charge. A BIRTHDAYREQUEST The News Letter goes free of charge to every North Carolinian who writes for it in person, at home or abroad. It goes directly into 18,000 homes. It goes to every one of the 237 newspapers of the state and to a score or more of the big dailies outside the state.,Direct ly or indirectly it reaches a half million readers weekly. And once more we most earnestly ask: (1) that you do not send in lists of other people to whom you want The News Letter sent; instead, ask them to send us personal post-card requests; and (2) that you write us at once upon a change of post-office address—that is, if you value The News Letter. In changing stencils in our mailing rooms it is necessary to know the old as well as the new address. WHY BE A TEACHER America’s best talent should be dedi cated to the training of the youth for citizenship. The National Education As sociation appreciates the efforts of its members to enlist in the. educational army the strongest men and women in every locality. It. is j:ecommended to our best young people that they con sider the following advantages of the profession of teaching: ]. Teaching pays. Besides ever-in- creasing financial compensation, the teaching profession offers the highest social sanctions and rewards. 2. Teaching is a growing profession. The nation now requires the service of 700,000 teachers. There is a strong de mand that teachers be better trained. As training increases, the financial and social rewards likewise increase. 3. Teaching offers a growing career. The well-trained teacher need have no fear of unemployment, but may look foward to increasing opportunities com mensurate with added training and growth in personal fitness. 4. Teaching offers mental and moral growth. The soundest mental and moral processes are involved in the making of good citizens. 6. Teaching is building. The teacher shapes the unfolding life of childhood and radiates ideals and purposes that in the citizenship of tomorro\^ will be come the fabric of an improved social structure. 6. Teaching inspires high ideals. There is nothing nobler or more practi cal than to shape and to guide the ideals and practices of the young citizens who are soon to be the nation’s responsible leaders. 7. Teaching is service. Those who enter this high calling enjoy the spirit ual development and true happiness that come from rendering real service to the Republic. 8. Teaching insures big opportuni ties. With growth and inspiration come multiplied opportunities for self- improvement, for rearing the family in a wholesome atmosphere, and for liv ing and building on life’s bestside. 9. Teaching is practical patriotism. Inspiring young citizens and di recting problems of citizenship prac tice is a ministry essential to a democ racy. 10. Teaching is the profession of professions. Measured by the stand ards that make life genuinely rich and happy, teaching offers opportunities beyond those of other professions. Teaching is th(? clearing house of the past, the guide of the present, and the pcophet of the future. It is therefore necessary that the nation’s finest tal ents should be consecrated to public education upon which the perpetuity of American ideals and the salvation of the Republic depend.—Journal of the National Educational Association. KNOW NORTH CAROLINA A Chicago Verdict The University of Chicago sum mer school, said Dean Royster, is the country’s chief clearing house for university and college gossip. Scholars of the first rank come there from institutions all over the United States. In their off hours they gath er together and exchange informa tion and opinions about faculties and student bodies and educational af fairs in general. A native North Carolinian like myself could not help' feeling proud of what these teachers had to say about our university. Their familiar ity with wjpat it was doing proved clearly enough that it had made its mark in the fia,tioh. They ^poke of it as unquestionably the foremost in stitution in this part of tht south, with Texas as the only possible rival ill the entire south for pre-eminence in scholarship. I found that the publications of the university—the Elisha Mitchell Journal, Studies in Philology, the new Law Review, and others—had elevated our prestige remarkably. Time and again professors from great universities, knowing I was a North Carolinian, complimented me highly upon the liberal attitude that the state’s chief institution had tak en in supporting the'se publications devoted to research and scholarship. They spoke, too, of North Caro lina’s success in attracting experts In the several fields of learning. On one occasion a group of professors were talking of the creditable work of a certain member of the faculty in the University of Utah, and one man in the group said. They’d better look out—North Carolina will go out there and drag him away. I found that the progressive policy of our state in si^porting the uni versity and other educational insti tutions was well known among edu cators throughout the country, and was the object of the heartiest sort of praise.—Dean J. F. Royster, Col lege of Liberal Arts, University of North Carolina. BRICKLAYER WAGES It is a familiar reproach that teach-^ ers are less well paid in many parts of the United - States than bricklayers. The discussion of wages in connection with several recent strikes has thrown an interesting light upon the compara tive compensations of teachers and workmen, both skilled and unskilled. It is safe to say that if many workers in many fields were reduced to the aver age incomes of teachers, strikes would quickly follow. Statistics gathered from ali. parts of the country make it possible to state accurately the average salaries paid to the various classes of school employes in American cities. It must be remem bered that these are the salaries of men and women high in their profes sion, who have spent years in preparing to hold such positions. They are besides the salaries paid in cities where the cost of living is high. The teachers in the men’s senior high schools receive on the average $1,850 a year, while those in the junior high schools average only $1,594. For the same service wonjen senior high school teachers receive ? 497 and the junior high school teachers receive only $1,298. The women ele mentary school teachers receive $1,154. The rate of increase in salaries in the trades and for manual work has been much greater in the last few years than in the teaching profession. Between 1914 and 1919, the advance in teachers salaries averaged less than 20 percent. . It has since gone up some 40 percent, but in view of the fact that living ex penses of all kinds have in general doubled in the last ten years, the posi tion of the teacher is less satisfactory than before the war. In arguing their cases many workmen have admitted a rise in wages greater than that of the teachers, but at the same time have considered a strike inevitable. The South La^s Behind The teachers of the lower grades have not fared better than those in the upper grades although their work re quires much more preparation. As re cently as 1914 only 12 percent of the elementary school teachers received more than $1,000 a year. The increase in the salaries of school superinten dents, who must have long training and considerable executive ability for their work, is amazingly low. In the last six years, school superintendents and their assistants throughout the country have had an advance *on the average of some 30 percent. In the larger cities, how ever, the school superintendents have been raised on the average only 12 per cent, while the cost of living has dou bled. The figures for various parts of the country, are extremely significant. If the United States be divided into geo graphical groqps we find that the South is mqst backward in the matter of teachers’ compensation, where 86 per cent are below the average. The Great Plains district ranks next where 66 per cent are below the average. In the Great Lakes district 64 percent and in the Eastern district 40 percent are below the average. The Western district meanwhile has but 6 percent of its schools below the average.—N. Y. Times. THE CENSUS OF CRIPPLES It is the inalienable right of every one of God’s creatures to have the op portunity to live his or her life as use fully and as happily as possible; and since every person has that right, we, as citizens of a great and benevolent commonwealth, owe it to those who are physically incapacitated, to do all with in our power to either eliminate or al leviate their disabilities. In the fulfill ment of this obligation, we will not only be of real service to the maimed and crippled, but will serve our state. In order that as many as possible of such people within the borders of our state may receive assistance that will aid tl\em in rehabilitating themselves, I earnestly request the people of North Carolina to set aside the period of Oct ober 30 to November 4, inclusive, as Cripple Census Week, and urge that during that time, especially, all our citizens who may know of crippled per sons notify officials of the Department of Vocational Rehabilitation of the State Department of Public Instruc tion and the Bureau of Child Welfare of the State Department of Public Welfare, who have these matters in charge. By thus taking a census of those of our people who are physically disabled or incapacitated because o^some bodily impairment, and whenever possible se curing treatment or vocational training for them, we will surely help to im prove the usefulness and welfare of a portion of our population which merits aid from those of us who are.^ more fortunate. Through a census, the Department of Vocational Rehabilitation may enlarge its work in helping the handicapped man or woman to help himself or her self, and. the Bureau of Child'^Welfare may widen its service by ascertaining the number of crippled children who need treatment and by aiding them to receive it. Your individual co-operation is earn estly sought. I feel that this appeal will meet with sympathetic approval. In seeking out the crippled of your community and giving their names to the superintendents of public welfare, superintendents of schools, health offi cers, nurses, farm and home demon stration agpnts, Red Cross and Y secre taries, you will help towards the re habilitation of this unfortunate portion of our population, and will increase the general welfare of North Carolina.— Governor Cameron Morrison. AMERICAN IDEALS 1. In every class room in America a well-qualified, professionally trained teacher who is a loyal American citi zen and who receives adequate compen sation. 2. Elimination of the 26 per cent adult illiteracy in our population. 3. Universal training for citizen ship. 4. Equalization of education oppor tunity for all America’s twenty-five million boys and girls. 6. A leader of the educational forces of the country in the highest councils of the nation—a secretary in the presi dent’s cabinet.—Journal ofthe National Educational Association. LIVESTOCK VALUES PER FARM In the United States in 1920 Based on the 1920 Census of Agriculture, and covering (1) the total value of livestock in each state, (2) divided by the number of farms. Livestock values have greatly decreased since 1920, but the decreases have been fairly uniform the country over. Therefore the rank of the states remains practically unchanged. Livestock values per farm vary, (1) according to the number and quality of farm animals, and (2) the size of farms. When a landowner has one or more tenants, renters, croppers, or managers, the land operated by each is considered a farm by the census taker; which fact puts all the cotton-belt states at a disadvantage in the various tables of farm property. Similar tables to follow are (1) Farm Implements and Machinery, (2) Farm Buildings, (3) CultivatedJAcres per Farm in North Carolina counties, (4) Build ings, Livestock, and Machinery per Farm in North Carolina. H. D. Laughinghouse, Pitt County Department of Rural Social Economics, University of North Carolina Rank States■ Livestock Values per Farm Rank States Livestock Values ' per Farm 1 Nevada $9,461 26 New Jersey ...$1,214 2 Wyoming 6,681 26 Rhode Island ... 1,186 3 Arizona 5,268 27 Pennsylvania ... 1,181 4 South Dakota. 3,196 28 Oklahoma ... 1,125 6 New Mexico.. 3,137 29 Ohio ... 1,121 6 Iowa, 2,876 30 Massachusetts ... 1,048 7 Nebraska 2,704 31 Michigan ... 1,040 8 Colorado 2,686 32 Connecticut .... 1,036 9 Montana 2,673 33 Maryland . .. 1,003 10 Idaho 2,286 84 New Hampshire... .... 934 11 Utah 2,105 36 Delaware ... 848 12 Oregon 2,027 36 Maine ... 826 13 North Dakota 2,021 37 West Virginia 771 14 Kansas 1,924 38 Tennessee .... 686 16 Illinois 1,881 89 Virginia 666 16 California .... 1,879 40 Florida ... 664 17 Minnesota.... 1,710 41 Louisiana ... 618 18 Wisconsin .... 1,703 42 Kentucky .... 686 19 New York.... 1,623 48 Arkansas .... 660 20 Missouri 1,482 44 Georgia .... 499 21 .Vermont 1,468 45 Mississippi ... 496 22 Texas 1,360 46 South Carolina .... ... 476 Indiana 1,274 47 North Carolina ... 442 24 Washington .. 1,242 48 Alabama .... 441