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. MARCH 28, 1928 CHAPEL HILL, N. C. THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA PRESS VOL. XIV, No. 20 Editorial Boardt E C. Branson. S. H. Hobbs. Jr.. P. W. Wager, L. R. Wilson, E. W. Knight. D. D. Carroll. H. W. Odum. B second-class matter November 14. 1914. at the Postoffice at Oiapel Hill. N. C.. under the act of August 24. 1912. FEWER HORSES ON FARMS : The cultivation of cotton and tobacco j does not lend itself to mechanization as One of the pauses of continued low | production of grain crops. ^ prices for hay and grain is the great i ggsides, the South has always been decrease in the number of horses and j livestock. Importing its grain mules in the United States. Since | found it practicable decrease of twenty percent in the number of work animats on farms, to say nothing of the even greater decrease injtowns and In fact, horse-drawn vehicles citljB: have almost disappeared from city streets. This phenomenal decrease in the number of horses and mules in the United States has curtailed one of the major markets for feed products. The result has been the production of a ■gurplus of feed crops and consequent low prices. To the extent that these acres, released from the necessity of producing feed crops, have been planted to food crops, it has had a depressing effect on the price of those crops. It is estimated that the decrease in work stock has released, or should release, six million acres that have been grow ing corn, six million acres that have been growing oats, and eight million acres that have been producing hay. These acres cannot be planted^to other grops without doing injury to the market of these ^Iher crops. Results of Mechanization The motorization of the farm has thus had the effect of curtailing the market for certain agricultural prod- acts at the same tim'e that it has enabled the farmer to increase his production. This has depressed prices and lowered the farmer’s income at a time when he needed more money to pay for his tractor and buy gasoline. The magazines are constantly exhort ing the farmer to motorize and mechanize his farm operations, and thereby reduce production acosts. No lioubt the authors of these articles are mean that it has economized in the use of horse power; to the contrary, cash- crop farming allows the mule to stand idle many days in the year. sincereTn their dosire to help the farm er, but the farmer knows, or^ought to know, thatthese change9'benefit;society more than they benefit him. Any thing thajt benefits society will even tually benefit the farmers, but the im mediate results may be disastrous. Again, writers delight in^Teminding us how it usel to take several hours of labor to produce a bushel of wheat but that now the production of a bushel of wheat requires only ten minutes. The implication is that the farraer^must be prospering. They forget to mention that a machine is a product of past labor and that the production of ;,wheat is simply taking less farm;Jabor and more city labor, the farmer paying for the latter when he buys the machine. The table which appears elsewhere in this issue shows the estimated number •f horses and mules on the farms of each state at the beginning^of the pres ent year, and what percentage of the 1920 figure each represents. It will be noticed that the decreases ▼ary from one percent in New Mexico to 31.7 in Ohio. The largest decreases are in the areas of diversified farming in Ohio, Michigan, New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Illinois, Missouri and the New England states. These are states which formerly found t market for young horses in their re spective cities. There is now no such market and the number of colts foaled in 1926-27 was scarcely a third of the number foaled in 1919-1920. These are all hay and grain states and they have lost their market for hay and oats well as for colts. There are thousands of excellent grain and livestock farms in these states that can be bought for less than the cost of the buildings. South Uses Mules The Southern states use mules. The number of them in use has not de creased noticeably in many states. In several states the numbet has increased. Taken the country over there are more mules now than in IVviO. There are more in North Carolina than there were eight years ago, some 25,000 more. The cumber of horses has decreased, how ever, from 171,000 to 106,000. The horse was utilized for both road and field service; the mule was mainly a plow animal. The automobile has thus displaced more horses than mules. The South has witnessed proportion ately less reduction in the number of work animals than some othei; areas because of the nature of its agriculture. THE SIX HUNDRED The six-hundredth Mothers’ Aid case has been approved by the State Di rector of Mothers’ Aid, and a young widow with five children under ten years of age, will be helped in caring for her family by a small monthly check. Since the work was started in in 1923, six hundred families have been helped by grants. Nearly 400 of these are being helped at the present time, since the other 200 have become self-supporting, or have been removed from the list for other reasons. It was in April, 1927, that the father in this six-hundredth family, who was a worker in the mills, was killed in a street car accident. Since then the mother has worked hard to keep her five children with her. She has been running a boarding house and has made a small income, but this supplemented by help from friends has not been enough to care for the children comfortably. The county superintendent of public wel fare has kept in close touch with the family, and after having physical ex aminations made, the case was ap proved. The . Mothers’ Aid monthly cheeks will lighten the heavy load which the mother has been carrying and will let her devote more time to her small children. In helping the six hundred, a finan cial value has been set by the state and counties cn a mother’s care and she has been made to feel that she is doing the state a real service by rearing her children in a normal healthy way. The six hundred are healthy, fine and straight-forward women. They are alive to their responsibilities and grate ful for the aid. There is little chance of finding their children out of school when they should be there, and the children keep out of juvenile court. The mothers are by no means made more dependent by the help, since a large number have become entirely self- supporting, and their monthly checks have been discontinued. North Carolina's six hundred are THEY GOT EVERYTHING I have repeatedly said after being in each State of the Union for two consecutive years, that North Caro lina has made the most progress in the last five years and Texas is next. It seems a surprise to people who don’t travel around much to hear this. Perhaps they hadn’t heard of anything that either one of these two had done. But I want to be im partial, and I want to be fair, and that is what I absolutely believe. Course we got a lot of them that are humming. But like Oklahoma, and California, and Florida and a dozen others, they have been im proving over a longer stretch of time. They have been'great for quite a while. But North Carolina just looked like it popped up over night. They got everything.—Will Rogers. 1905 there has been a notable increase in the number of associations formed each year. The years 1912 and 1919 recorded marked increases, and 1920 holds the record for the formation of cooperative organizations with nearly 1,4U0 associations formed that year. Two-thirds of the associations active in 1926 were formed after the beginning ofl916.-U. S. Dept, of Agriculture Press Release. but a new earth. Still greater is the work of poet and prophet. They teach us with what will to meet meanness, uncleanness, cruelty, treachery, and hate which are everywhere among men and in all human institutions. You must go down with the Son of Man into the thick of the struggling multitude. You belong with them. You are of one blood and like passions with them. You must march with them.—W. L. Bryan, President Uni versity of Indiana. being brought to renewed vigor and economic indpendence. The state and counties are not pouring out money, they are investing it in the greatest crop North Carolina faas-her children. -Public Welfare Progress. LOOKING AT LIFE What one thinks of life as a whole, and of almost every moment of it, de pends upon whether he sees it from the first or the second or the third of three distances—far off in the glow of romance, close up to its ugly worst, or inside where life makes its upward flight. These three views show the three estates of men. The first is the paradise of children, poets, Santa Claus; it is the view of those who thought the French Revolu tion, the Civil war, the World war would put an end to war. That view will not do for any of us who find a world peace of bloodshed and whole sale starvation not less dreadful than the World war. No wonder we have the great pessimist8-Moliere,.Schopen- hauer. Swift, Nietzsche. Nevertheless it is possible to know the worst and not be a pessimist, to meet the worst without fear, without surrender. The scholar at his best does so. The scholar undertakes to destroy the plagues, yellow fever, tuberculosis, syphilis, and the^rest. The scholar .undertakes to fight poverty by finding new and_ unlimited energies in place of coal and, by fur nishing the conditions for economic lib erty which underlies political .liberty. The scholar knows the physical hells better than anyone else and he is not afraid. Withoutj fear, without haste, without rest, he goes about to destroy [them and to make not a new. heaven CONGRESS AND THE BARGES The barge service of the Inland Waterways Corporation on the lower Mississippi River saved shippers $1 900,000 last year. That is equal to a 6 percent return on more than thirty million dollars, something over three times the capital investment in this Federal waterway line. A great deal more might have been saved had there been facilities avail able, for the barge line had to turn down thousands of tons it could not carry. The statement of Middle Western grain dealers that they would have shipped several million bushels more if the service had permitted does not make pretly reading when it is considered that a saving of over three cents a bushel was lost thereby. A still greater saving was lost to sugar consumers of the Middle West and Northwest because the line could handle less than half the 1.369,000 bags 6acb month. And the Wheat Belt paid more for its sisal because so much of it had to be shipped by rail instead of at the lower combination rail-water rate. An investment that safely promises a distinct monetary gain is justified. It is justified still more when it helps to relieve the burden of a great section that is suffering from transportation disadvantages. Both good business and square dealing are on the side of congressional action to build up the inland waterway system to a stale where it can meet its opportunities.— Country Gentleman. OUR NATIONAL PARK The gift of $6,000,000 by the Laura Spelman Rockefeller Memorial to the Great Smoky Mountains National Park fund insures the successful completion of that ambitious project, whereby the eastern section of the United States will obtain a great- park rivaling in magnitude the Yellowstone, Yosemite, Grand Canyon and Glacier ^National Parks. The proposed area is 700 square miles in extent, including mountainous coun try in eastern Tennessee and western North Carolina. Scores of peaks tower more than 6,000 feet and hundreds top 6,000 feet. Nearly half of the area is covered by virgin forests, in which are found red deer, black bear, elk and abundant smaller game. More than 400 miles of trout streams are there. The value of this great park to the eastern part of tbe United States is in its close proximity to three-fourths of the population of this country. The generous action of the Rockefeller Memorial; in doubling all contributions up to the sura of $5,000^000, means an immediate gift of $4,913,000, as that much has already been secured for tbe park purpose. The $9,826,000 thus available is expected to be sufficient to purchase the land in the proposed area. —Lincoln County News. buying, and greater number of luxuries in homes, the American people, on June 30, 1927, had $36,000,000,000 de posited in savings accounts. In 1921 the national income was $62,- 000,000,000, and it has increased every year since. In 1921 the average per capita income was $1,637 and in, 1928 it was $2,210, an increase of 36 percent. “This income indicates tbe highest standard of living for the population of the United States ever attained in this or any.other country^” the Bureau declared. “This great increase in income is not the result of an increase in the price level, for the average price of con sumed goods was actually less in 1926 than in 1921.’’—Public Service. U.S. STANDARD OF LIVING The American people last year at tained the highest standard of living ever reached in the history of the world, according to a report of the Bu reau of Internal Revenue. In 1926 the 117,000,000 people of the United States had a total income of $89,682,000,000, an increase of 43 per cent in the five years ynce 1921. The experts in the Bureau of Internal Revenue stated that this year tbe national income will equal or slightly surpass that of last year. Officials believe that daring the pres ent year commercial conditions are more nearly normal than at any time since the war. In spite of the increas ing standards of living, installment STATE HIGH SCHOOLS State high schools in North Carolina have shown remarkable growth since the passage of the first high school act by the General Assembly in 1907, figures made public by the State Department of Education reveal- In 1907 there were a number, of city and town schools but rural high schools were virtually unknown. Under the authority of the 1907 law about 146 rural schools opened, making a total of about 200 high schools in the stale. Last year this number had increased to 800 with an enrollment of approxi mately 100,000 students, as compared with an enrollment of 10,000 in 1907. Not every county in the state boast ed a high school back in 1907, but today there is at least one in every county from Cherokee to Currituck. In 1916-16, the first year for which figures were available, there were only a few more than 1,000 high-school grad uates, whereas last spring more than 10,00o boys and girls, white and colored, graduated from the high schools of the state. Attendance in state high schools last year was 86 percent of the enrollment for whites and 80.6 for negroes. 'Ihe percentage in city schools was greater for both rai-es than in rural schools.— News and Observer. TOWN FORESTS The State of New Hampshire now has 61 town forests with a total area of 11,643 acres and an established value of $826,000, according to reports to the- Forest Service, United States Depart ment of Agriculture. Some towns have purchased their for est land; others have received theirs from charter. Newington, as an ex ample, has held title to its land sinca 1710. 'These town forests are being re forested naturally and by planting of seedlings as rapidly as possible and are increasing in value from year to year. They now serve as recreational areas, but eventually will bring in a good in come to towns or cities, helping to re duce taxes.—U. S. Department of Agriculture Press Release. HORSES AND MULES ON FARMS IN U. S. Number in 1928, and Percentage Which This Is of 1920 Figure The following table shows the number of horses and mules on farms in each state on January 1, 1928, according to United States Department of Agriculture estimates, and the percentage which each is of the 1920 figure. Tbe census of 1920 showed that there were 19,767,161 horses and 6,432,391 mules on farms in the United States. The estimate for January 1, 1928, is 14,- 641,000 horses and 6,666,000 mules. There has thus been a twenty-percent de crease in the number of work animals on farms in eight years. In thirty states the decrease has been even more pronounced. In eighteen states, mainly southern states, the decrease has been less. Ohio has only 68.3 percent of the number of horses and mules it had in 1920; on the other hand New Mexico has suffered a decrease of only one percent. North Carolina has witnessed less than a ten-percent decrease. Department of Rural Social-Economics, University of North Carolina INCREASE IN COOPERATION Discussing the develupment ot agri cultural cooperation in the United States, R. H. Elsworth, of the Uniled States Department of Agriculture, compared the movement to a series of waves. “These,” he said, “have not been of equal magnitude, nor have they been evenly spaced through the years. As each wave broke it lost its momentum. Furthermore, the waves did not reach the crest in all parts of the country at the same time. Besides the big waves, there were minor local waves and cross waves produced by various commodity-group developments. Despite the backwash from the waves, there has been a material gain through out the years in the number of indi viduals participating in cooperative en terprises, and in the volume of sales and purchases made on a cooperative basis.” In analyzing the development Mr. Elsworth noted that of 10,803 cooper ative associations listed by the Depart ment of Agriculture in 192B only 102 had been organized prior to 1890. Since Horses Percent and mules of num- Rank State in 1928 ber in (000 1920 omitted) 1 New Mexico 201 99.0 2 Wyoming 196 96.6 3 Texas 1,'48 96,4 4 Alabama 394 92.3 6 Nevada 48 90.6 6 North Carolina 387 90.4 7 Minnesota 824... »87.4 8 Florida 69 86.8 8 Kentucky 679 86.8 10 Iowa 1,170 86.6 11 Nebraska 898 84.6 11 Mississippi 442 84.6 13 Wisconsin 679 84.2 14 Arkansas 482 83.9 15 Utah 166 82.8 16 Tennessee 661 82.3 17 Montana 647 80.8 18 Maine 76 80.0 19 West Virginia 147 79.9 20 Colorado 360 79.8 21 Connecticut 31 79.6 22 Oklahoma 896 79 0 23 Georgia 398 78,7 24 Delaware 29 78.4 Hi-rses Percent and mules of nura- Rank State in 1928 ber in (000 1920 omitted 25 Louisiana 281 78.3 26 Indiana 623 76.2 27 South Dakota 633 76.1 28 Virginia 311....,.,.. 76.0 29 Rhode Island 5 76.8 30 Kansas 1,003 76.6 31 North Dakota 643 74 6 31 Washington 288 74.6 33 Arizona... 110 74 4 34 Maryland 129 74.2 34 South Carolina 221 74.2 36 Oregon 211 73.8 37 California 343 73.6 38 Idaho 221 73.4 39 Pennsylvania 410 73.1 39 New Jersey 67 73.1 41 New York 896 73.0 42 Missouri 944 72.8 43 Massachusetts 37 72.6 44 Illinois 1,046 71.3 46 New Hampshire ... 27 71.1 46 Michigan 484 71.0 47 Vermont 66 70.6 48 Ohio 676 68.3