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 19, 1926 CHAPEL HILL, N C. THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA PRESS VOL. XII, NO. 27 Edllorial Board. E. C. Branaon, S. H. Hobba. Jr.. L. R. Wilaon. E. W. Kniaht. D. D. Carroll. J. B. Bullitt, H. W. Odum. Entered as aecond-claaa matter November 14, 1914, at the Poatollice at Chapel Hill, N. C.. under the act of Auuuat 24. 1912 INDICTMENTS FOR HOMICIDE Elsewhere in this issue is a table rank- ing the counties according to the num ber of indictments for homicide per 100,000 inhabitants (1920 census) during the two years ending June 30, 1925. Those interested in comparing these rates with homicide rates outside of North Carolina should divide by two to get the annual rate. Veteran readers of the News Letter will recall a somewhat similar study appearing in the News Letter for De cember 8, 1915. It is interesting to note that the rankings of the counties then and now correspond quite closely. The reader should bear in mind that these figures are not for the number of murders occurring, but are for the num ber of indictments for murder and man slaughter, For the smaller counties there are not cases enough to make reliable comparisons. Taking the figures as they stand we find the worst section to be Robeson and the adjoining counties of Scotland, Hoke, and Cumberland. The indictment rate for the Croatan Indians is 131, thirteen of the 91 indictments in the four above mentioned counties being against them. The indictment rate for negroes is higher than for whites. A table which appears elsewhere compares the various sections of the state and rates for whites and negroes. The in dictment rate for homicides for whites was 16 per 100,000 whites. The rate for negroes was 65 pet 100,000 negroes. Thus we see that, whether or not negroes commit murder and man slaughter three times as often as whites, they are indicted for such misdeed three times as often. It should be remem bered that some homicides result in no indictment while others result in two or more indictments. Of the 712 indictments for the two year period, 424 resulted in convictions. Of the convicted, 22 paid the death pen alty and 195 were sentenced to prison for terms of five years or more. The other 227 convicted got off more lightly. Of course, some manslaughter sentences were for accidental deaths resulting from criminal negligence on the parr of the person convicted. In other cases light sentences were imposed on the accomplices of the munlerer. How do these figures compare with the total number of homicides occurring in the state as distinguished from in dictments for homicide"' The bureau of vital statistics, reports 560 homicides for the two years ending December 31, 1924. (This is the minimum number, since often homicides occur which are un reported.) In addition, there were deaths from undetermined violence. This is a homicide rate of 21.7 per 100,- ■ 000 over a two-year period. The rate for the United States for those same two years was 20.1 per 100,000 popula- tion. The United States is a murderous nation and North Carolina is a murder ous state. Human life is held mighty lightly in a state that experiences such a large number of killings annually. We get very much wrought up when the state takes a life, but it might be well to remember that out of every one hundred indictments for homicide only three pay the death penalty, and less than 28 percent result in convictions carrying prison sentences of five years or more. The chances are in favor of a light sentence, even when convicted for homicide. for an area of some 60 square miles; it is on a good highway within miles of Murphy, the terminus of two railroads; and about 100 miles from the markets of Asheville, Knoxville and Atlanta. Its greatest asset is its citizenship, a strong group of small farmers with a high repu tation for integrity. Ninety-seven per cent are land-owners. Their desire for school which will help the country’ is partially indicated by the following pledges made by 116 citizens: Over in cash; locust posts; telephone poles, building logs;building stone;fire wood; native shrubs, trees and bulbs. In the first three years of the school, 1,495 days of labor, 397 with team. Yearly, 388 days’ labor are pledged with out time limit. In addition to this list, about 30 acres of excellent land has been pledged.” This spirit of coopera tion on the part of these farmers spells success for the experiment from the beginning and the results will be watched with much interest. As one of the initial steps in this enterprise is cooperation, a Savings and Loan Association has been organ ized to encourage thrift and provide a source of production credit for the farm ers of this community. At the initial meeting 16 men and women joined and subscribed 18 shares of stock, and the following officials were elected: Mr. J. 0. Penland, President; James Clayton, Vice-President; Miss Margaret Butler, Secretary, Mr. John Deal, Treasurer. This is the first Savings and Loan Association to be organized in this sec tion of North Carolina, and its success will demonstrate to the farmers of southwestern North Carolina the benefits to be derived through a cooperative financial enterprise.—Market News. IN THE OLD NORTH STATE The renaissance of Dixie is nowhere so marked as it is in North Carolina, whose story is told today in The Sun. For ten years the nation has been watch ing this state clear with one great bound the morass of fifty years of poverty and depression to reach the level plain of a new century of promise and achieve ment. There are those who say that good schools have worked the transition. Others point to thousands of miles of good roads and still others talk in terms of hydroelectric power. But perhaps they are nearer correct who go behind figures and statistics and point to courageous men who lifted themselves up by their own bootstraps and pulled their state with them—men who worked out their own destinies, and in doing so led their people out of the depths by teaching them the value of bard work and by inspiring them to success. Duke and Reynolds, with a few mules and a few pounds of tobacco, laid the foundations of a great industry. Others of their stamp set up the small mills in the cotton fields, and today New England must look to her laurels as the textile leader of the country. Governors like Aycock and Morrison dotted the state with schoolhouses and lined it with modern highways. Another of the Dukes harnessed the streams from the moun tains to move the wheels of the tobacco and cotton factories. Yes, North Carolina has reason to be proud of her accomplishment, and even more so because she has played the hand alone and achieved her goal by the vision and toil of her own sons. New York Sun. KNOW NORTH CAROLINA As Florida Sees Us What another great state, the de- velopment of which has amazed the world, thinks of North Carolina, is shown in the following from the Palm Beach, Fla., Times: In all the splendid renaissance of the South today there are two south ern states which stand forth as the first and foremost flowers of this re birth. And in the case of each of them the secret of their mighty suc cess is the coupling of good govern ment and good roads and good people with natural blessings of climate and resource. This is the tie that binds Florida and North Carolina today in mutual help and admiration and understand ing. Floridians have been told of many beautiful places to spend the summer but the great majority of those who are persuaded to spend it anywhere else than in their own comfortable summer climate are ap parently resolved upon North Caro lina. North Carolina today is experienc ing a development and an increase in population and values which, in many respects, compares to that of Florida. This development is in some measure the reflection of Florida’s own vast progress but it could not have oc curred without much to offer on its own part. There are, of course, other summer lands of charm and beauty but none so accessible to the people of the South or to the pros perity which has recently come to those people. But North Carolina is more than this. It is already one of the first agricultural and industrial states in the Union. Its manufac tures of furniture rank second only to those of Michigan; its tobacco growth is the greatest in America; its cotton mills rival in size and num ber those of Massachusetts; its min eral resources, timber, and water power are assets of untold value. And it has established for itself an integrity of government, an educa tional system, and a network of highways which have secured and enlarged all of its national blessings. But, what is most important of all, North Carolina has people. People of refinement, of public spirit, of kindness, of perseverance, and daunt less ability. In these people all of the graces and background of the old South are linked with all the promise and vitality of the new. can be made effective by Congress or legislature. ” Mr. Beveridge’s speech is the plain statement of a man who feels strongly about American conditions. The Crime Commission might well consider his views.—New York Sun. Company has endeavored to discover what police and judicial action follows homicide cases among its policyholders. Facts are now available for the subse quent action in 611 homicides among policyholders of this Company in the years 1922 to 1924. At least one year was allowed to elapse before inquiries were sent to prosecuting attorneys of i counties in the United States. In the HHMirtnF AND I AW ' nuniLlllC. ACTW 1-/1 w ' fiable homicides, where persons were During 1925, in Continental United killed by officers of the law while resist- States about 10,100 homicides occurred, ing arrest or while in the act of com- This death-toll is more than fourteen ' mitting crime, left 625 assailants times the figure which would have pre-, answerable to the law for taking human vailed if the experience of England and ; life. It developed that 54 assailants Wales had occurred in this country! The committed suicide and 13 died city of Chicago alone, with a population , arraignment. Of the remaining 458 close to the 3,000,000 mark, had more than ' assailants, 84, or 18. 3 percent, had not twice the number of homicides in one : been apprehended within one year a^er recent year than occurred in the whole ■ the crime had been committed . Ihe of England and Wales with its popula- 374 cases actually apprehended show an tionof nearly 40,000,000! The homicide ' interesting after-history at the hands rate for the United States is six times! of the law. There were released by that for Canada, our neighbor on the I magistrates or grand juries, 108 per- : sons against whom no case could be " No one can face complacently these i made, and eight were declared insane, startling and disparaging figures. The i There were actually brought to trial 268 American public ought to know why ' cases or 56.3 percent out of an original and under what circumstances so many group of 468 living assailants. In 62 thousands of lives are sacrificed to the ] cases the defendants were acquitted, and homicidal impulse and what is being! nine cases were still pending one par done to effect prompt and just disposi-, after the commission of the crinae. A I tion of the cases presented to the prose-; verdict of guilty was rendered m 187 cuting attorneys of our counties. On j cases, of which 170 were senteped to ' the first point, a number of efforts are [ prison tor terms of varying length, under wav by various agencies and com-; eight cases were sentenced to death missions to study the circumstances (seven executed and one case on appeal) which lead to so many crimes against, and nine were released, either on the security of persons. On the second ; suspended sentence or by being fined !- point, the Metropolitan Life Insurance j M. L. Ins. Co.. Statistical Bulletin. INDICTMENTS FOR HOMICIDE In North Carolina, 1923 to 1925 In the following table the counties are ranked according to the number of indictments in superior courts for homicide per 100,000 population for the two- year period ending June 30, 1926. The second column gives the number of in dictments for homicide for each county during the two-year period. Ten counties reported no indictments for homicide for the two-year period. Mitchell had the highest rate, 124 per 100,000 population. Robeson reported the largest number with 43 indictments for killings. State total, 712 indictments for homicide for the two-year period ending June 30, 1925.’ State two-year rate, 27 indictments for homicide per 100,000 population. Ethel Crew, Northampton county, F. S. Wilder, New Hampshire. Institute for Research in Social Science, University of North Carolina. Indictments Number of Indictments Number of Rank County per 100,000 indictments | Rank County per 100,000 indictments inhabs. FOLK SCHOOL EXPERIMENT There has recently been established m the Bi^asstown community of Cherokee and Clay counties what is known as the John C. Campbell Folk School, modeled after the Folk High School of Den mark, which is characterized as ‘‘an experiment in adult education.” Accord ing to the Danish conception, “education is not a process to be measured by aca demic grades and degrees. The humble tasks of farm, shop and home have a cultural value more fundamental than that of books. Education should not discredit such labor but should give it meaning, breadth and depth.” Brasstown, North Carolina, was se lected for this experiment because it is “a section poor, but capable of agri cultural development, a natural center in 1924). Immediately in lower line came Birmingham, Savannah, and New Orleans. All these are Southern cities. In number of homicides Chicago topped the list—563 (509 in 1924; rate 18.8 against 17.6). New York came next—374, a decrease from the 387 of j 1924. Third was Detroit—243. No murders occurred in Newton, Holyoke, Haverhill, and Salem, Mass., or in Manchester, N. H. These cities range in population from 60,000 to 80,- 000.—Time, The Weekly News Maga zine. MURDERS IN THE U. S. “The economic loss to the nation from the 12,000 murders in the United States in 1925 was very serious.” Thus Frederick L. Hoffman, consulting statistician to the Prudential Life In surance Company of America, last week; and further: “The evidence (after comparing the U. S. murder rate of 11.1 per 100,000 for 1925 with the 10.8 rate for 1924) extending over a long period of years is quite conclusive that the'normal American rate is now approximately twice as high as the corresponding rate for Italy, often re ferred to as the classic land for murder. Jacksonville, Florida, ranked highest in rate last year—72.3 per 100,000 (68.8 in 1924); Memphis next with 69.0 (69.7 BEVERIDGE ON CRIME Former Senator Albert J. Beveridge is one of the students of the crime wave who refuses to attribute it to the back wash of war. In proof he points to England, Germany, Italy, and France, where war hit more heavily but where there is far less law breaking than exists in our own country. Mr. Beveridge, in his speech this morning to the lawyers assembled in Texarkana, blamed conditions here upon the deluge of laws and the evils of bureaucracy- “Everybody is so inter fered with by impracticable legisla tion,” he said, “that a public psychol ogy of antagonism to all law has been created.” There undoubtedly is a good deal in this; the mass mind of a country may be like the mind of a child who, loaded with too many and too involved tasks at school, throws his books and slate in the ditch and plays hookey. The Indiana statesman is right when he says that while the Commandments which forbid a man to wrong his neigh bor can be translated into statute laws against murder, theft and perjury, “not a line of the Sermon on the Mount 1 Ashe 0 1 Camden 0 1 Currituck 0 1 Dare 0 1 Davie 0 1 Graham 0 1 Hyde i 0 1 Jones 0 1 Onslow 0 1 Yancey 0 11 Iredell 6 11 Person 5 1 13 Hertford 6 1 14 Montgomery 7 1 16 Alexander 8 1 16 Macon 8 1 16 Sampson 8 3 18 Alamance 9 3 18 Burke 9 ^ 18 Rowan 9 ^ i 18 Warren 9 2 22 Bladen 10 2 22 Caldwell 10 '••2 22 Johnston 10 6 26 Polk 11 1 26 Cabarrus 12 4 26 Catawba 12 4 28 Caswell 13 2 28 Rutherford 13 4 30 Davidson 14 5 31 Jackson 16 2 33 New Hanover 16 6 31 Surry 15 6 34 Wayne 16 7 36 Bertie 17 4 36 Chatham 17 4 36 Lincoln 17 3 36 Orange 17 3 ■ 39 Anson 18 5 89 Perquimans 18 2 39 Rockingham 18 8 39 Washington 18 2 43 Carteret 19 3 44 Cleveland 20 7 44 Columbus 20 6 44 Madison 20 4 44 Pender 20 3 48 Durham 21 9 48 Harnett 21 6 48 Tyrrell 21 1 inhabs. 61 Franklin 22 6 61 Granville 22 6 51 Pamlico 22 2 51 Transylvania.. 22 2 56 Pasquotank.... 23 4 66 Randolph 23 7 65 Swain 23 3 68 McDowell 24 4 58 Yadkin 24 4 60 Beaufort 26 8 60 Buncombe 26 17 60 Cherokee 26 4 60 Vance. 26 6 64 Richmond 27 7 65 Gates 28 3 65 Guilford 28 22 66 Wilkes 28 9 68 Martin 29 6 68 Stokes 29 6 70 Halifax 30 13 70 Northampton.. 30 7 70 Watauga 30 4 73 Greene 31 5 74 Forsyth 33 26 74 Gaston 33 17 74 Pitt 33 16 77 Craven 34 10 78 Stanly 36 10 79 Moore 37 8 79 Wake 37 28 81 Union 39 14 82 Alleghany 41 3 83 Mecklenburg.. 42 34 84 Duplin 43 13 86 Henderson 44 8 86 Lee 46 6 87 Brunswick 47 7 88 Lenoir 60 15 89 Haywood 61 12 90 Edgecombe.... 53 20 91 Wilson 64 20 92 Avery 58 6 93 Nash 63 26 94 Cumberland... 71 26 96 Chowan 75 8 96 Scotland 77 12 97 Robeson 79 43 98 Hoke 94 H 99 Clay 107 5 100 Mitchell 124 14 Indictments for Homicides for Two Years Ending June 30,1925. North ‘Carolina 28 26 Tidewater counties 25 26 Plain and Sandhill counties, 26 Piedmont counties 22 26 Mountain counties .. Rate per 100,000 total pop. 9fl White rate per 100,000 white 16 Negro rate per 100,000 negroes ,..65 9f; 13 41 s 37 18 61 22 12 61 25 22 61