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. NOVEMBER 7, 1928 CHAPEL HILL. N. C. THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA PRESS VOL. XIV, No. 50 BdUorial Board. E. C. Branson. S. H. Hobbs, Jr.. P. W. Wager. L. R. Wilson. E. W. Knight. D. D. Carroll. H. W. Odum. Entered as second-class matter November 14. 1914, at tb; Postoffice at Chapel Hill. N. C.. under the act of August 24, 1 TELLS OF NORTH CAROLINA The human element has played a far greater part in North Carolina’s recent development than its material re sources, great though they are. We have not built roads, schools, factories and other monuments to our substantial prosperity simply for the sake of seeing what could be accomplished with con crete, steel and stone, when backed by dollars. Our growth though necessarily the result of money available, indicates something deeper than material pros perity. We regard this remarkable growth as an effect rather than a cause, for the real cause is hidden in the hearts of our citizenry, which, I firmly believe, places spiritual values above material success. North Carolina has had the foresight to properly coordinate its resources and direct its activities. Our advance ment has not been along haphazard lines, bat with definite purposes in view, chief among which has-been ser vice to humanity. Oar program has been a balanced program. We have built roads, to be'sure, but we did not neglect education to do this. At the same time, there was no, cessation in our activities in behalf of the weak and unfortunate. Education, in its broadest sense, has done more than any other factor to bring our state to the forefront, and the external evidences of education are based upon something deeper than that which appears on the surface. True enlightenment goes further than the erection of school houses and the em ployment of competent teachers. It inspires a'will to serve humanity as a whole. North Carolina’s chief aim has not been to outdo any neighbor states, but to improve its own opportunities and, therefore, to help others. Our inter ests are diversified. Not only do we believe ia and strive to encourage diversified farming, but diversified industry as well, and diversified educa tion. Agriculture In agriculture we are no longer de pendent on any one crop. In 1927, our agricultural products, including live stock, were worth $441,168,000, and we ranked seventh in the valufe of all crops and sixth in the value of^22 lead ing crops. Between 1920 and 1926, when there was a terrific slump in the number of farms throughout the United States, North Carolina showed a net gain in the number of its farms of something like 13,000 and was elevated to the rank of second state in the Union, with only Texas leading. From corn last year our farmers realized $46,871,000; from wheat, $7,344,000; from peanuts, $4,872,000; from Irish potatoes, $4,747,000, from sweet pota toes, $9,944,000; and so on. Dur ing the last five years our farmers have shipped, in cooperation^’with the State Department of Agriculture and the county agents, 10,000,000 pounds^! of live poutry, at good prices, in car- lots, while we are looking! toward a material increase in the dairy cow industry. ^ Aside from educational advancement. North Carolina’s greatest progress has been marked by the building of de pendable highways, for which $116,- 000,000 has been authorized by the state since 1921. Through this and federal aid, our state system'now ex tends between 7,000 and 8,000 miles, and the financing system calls for no tax on real estate or personal property. Besides the state system, there^are ap proximately 66,000 miles ofj ..county roadways. Industry We have in North Carolina more cotton mills than any other state in the Union, and the output from them ranks second in value. They consume about 1,600,000 bales of cotton annually, which is considerably more than we produce. A-. compared with $68,000,- 000 in 1900, the manufacturing estab lishments of North Carolina now rep resent a total investment of con siderably morethan$l,000,000,000, com pared with $669,000,000 in 1920. The aggregate annual output from these factories equals the amount invested. These factories employ approximately 186,000 workers, whose income is, iu round figures, $136,000,000 yearly. There are more debt-free homes in North Carolina than in any other state in the Union. Another distinction enjoyed by North Carolina is in value added to raw materials by manufactures, which runs to $499,727,125. Ten leading industries show outputs for 1927 as follows: Textiles and their products, other than knit goods, $426,233,696; tobacco, $413,- 274,114; lumber, including planing mills, $64,062,615; furniture, $63,561,-. 221; fertilizer, $18,293,687; flour and meal, $18,201,642; cottonseed oil, cake- and meal, $17,612,879: leather, tanned and cured, $16,406,364; car construction and repairs, $14,447,443; printing and publishing, $12,269,226. ' North Carolina’s rank in water power development among -the states of the Union is fourth. The output of its power plants is 1,730,861,690 kilo watt hours and its output by water power is 1,625,278,670 kilowatt hours, j The state ranks first in the number ; of native minerals, with 289, and in the ; value and quantity of scrap mica, 43 percent of the United States, and i feldspar 44 percent of the United i States, produced in residual kaolin clay. | While the entire South produces 60 i percent of the nation’s lumber. North I Carolina’s forest products amount an nually in value to $100,000,000. This is well in keeping with the total amount received for its cotton or tobacco, the’ two major crops. West ern North Carolina’s hardwood and Eastern North Carolina's pine and gum are among the state’s richest assets. Wealth Gains Tremendous increase in per capita wealth has been noted in the state dur ing the last two decades. Taking the 1912-1922 period as an example, this A COUNTY LIBRARY What is a county library? It is a free lending library, maintained by the county, with books and mag azines for everybody in the county. How is the library supported? Tne county library is usually sup ported by a small tax, sometimes by an appropriation from the general funds. How is it managed? It is managed by experienced librarians, whose knowledge of books is at the service of all who care to use it. Also by a county library board, serving with out pay, or directly by the county commissioners. How is it established? In most states, by the county commission ers, or other governing bodies, in some states by popular vote, as pro vided by the state law. How does it work? Headquarters and central library are usually main tained at the county seat, or in some other large town. Branch libraries, which are equipped to meet the needs of readers and students, ar-e maintained in all important towns and villages. How does it distribute books? By mail service on all rural routes, book collections in all rural schools, pos sibly a book truck, branch libraries on wheels for the smallest com munities. What kind of books? All kinds of books, stories, biographies, plays and magazines, books that help with school or farm work.—The Enter prise. great industrial development is based 1 nomination, that 2,760,000 more do not on water power, and it is important | go to any Sunday school, and that the that our rivers have a fairly constant i trend is not improving but is going from bad to worse. The above and additional facts prove Here is a handful of sound facts on that North Carolina is favorably lo- ^he same situation: Only ohe-fiflh of cated in a geographic area that is hard-! the rural population goes to church, ly surpassed on earth when all the Two-fifths of the rural churches of the climatic factors combined are con sidered in terms of their economic values. Availability Within a six-hundred-mile radius from the center of North Carolina lie nearly all of the chief cities of eastern United States. A study recently made : by the Life Insurance Sales Research Bureau shows that a circle with a radius of six hundred miles from central Carolina contains 66.8 per cent of the nation’s purchasing power, while a similar area centered on New York City contains only 44.6 percent of ihe nation’s purchasing power. country are st^inding still or losing ground. A quarter of all rural churches have no Sunday school. One-fifth of all rural churches are kept alive by home- mission aid. Of these subsidized churches, a large number are in active competition with churches of very similar doctrines. Seven out of every ten rural churches have wnly a fraction of a pastor apiece. One-third of all rural pastors receive so low a*galary that they can live only by working at some other occupation. One-half ol the rural churches of the country make an annual gain in mem- In other words, any part of North | U^/bamRuraf^ ii’uch Carolina is less than one day’s railroad i international. as 10 percent.— others, will appear in the Club Y^ear- Book. The following are a few of the points developed. Geographic Divisions The -State is about evenly divided into two great regions, the western increase was 238 percent, as compared j half being of igneous origin, the east- with 61 percent for the nation as a whole. The state’s property value is placed- in excess of $6,000,000,000, as compared with $681,000,000 in 1900 and $4,600,000,000 in 1926, while federal ern half being of sedimentary origin. These two geologic regions in turn are each divided into two geographic areas: the tidewater, and western coastal plains of the east, and the piedmont tax collections for the year ending I ai^d Carolina highlands of the west. June 30, 1928, totaled $226,316,303. ■ As a result of ouf wide range in Bank resources increased from $160,- elevation from below sea level to 6,711 000,000 in 1914 to over $600,000,000 in, feet above, tlie wide range of geologic 1927, a gain of 230 percent in about a ( formations, and the great variety of dozen years, while the banking re- [ soils, the state has a varied economic sources of the United States increased j foundation, a great variety of plant slightly more than 100 percent in the j life, and a great variety of minerals, last 20 ye'ars. | It is said that only Florida has a larger North Carolina has the oldest state variety of plants, and perhaps no state university in America, located at Chapel Hill and founded in 1789, while other institutions for higher learning eluded five colleges for white students and six for colored; also there are 32 privately operated colleges for white and seven for colored students. North Carolina is more than 99,^ percent pure American stock, these people having as their background some of the finest sections of Anglo- Saxon Europe. The foreign influx has been slow and at no time has it proved threatening to home industries. Such"foreigners as we have are orderly and industrious and have not given any cause for concern. Briefly, I have endeavored to point out several outstanding facts, which I believe are easily substantiated: First, that-North Carolina has been impelled by proper motives; second, that it has utilized its natural resources to the best advantage with a view to spiritual as well as material values; and, third, that the spirit which pervades North Carolina is not one of selfish ness. So long as these conditions pre vail, we shall continue our forward march.-Gov. A. W. McLean, in Manu facturers Record. GEOGRAPHIC ADVANTAGES The Geographic Advantages of North Carolina were discussed by Prof. S. H. Hobbs, Jr., at the first meeting of the North Carolina Club. The Club, composed of faculty members and students at the University who are interested in the economic and social conditions of the state, is beginning its fifteenth year^of bi-weekly meetings. This year the Club is devoting its at tention to the rural end of North Caro lina's civilization. The initial paper was designed to . show the physical background of our state s civilization. The paper in full, along with thirteen a larger variety of minerals. North Carolina is a state of variety. The claim is often made that she could be as self-contained as any state in the Union, Temperature and Rainfall The mean average temperature of the state varies from sixty-three de grees in the southeastern part to fifty degrees in the northwestern corner. The bulk of the state has a mean aver age annual temperature of from fifty- seven to sixty degrees, and no part suffers from extreme heat or cold Our average temperature is about fifteen degrees above that of the Penn- sylvania-Massachusetts section. Our July normal is about the same as the July normal for New York, while our January normal is around fifteen to twenty degrees above the New York nomal. Our warmer winters give us great economic advantages, among which are cheaper living costs and un hampered transportation. Sunshine and Rainfall In the number of fair days North Carolina compares very favorably with any other state. Our winter resorts are the produces of Carolina sunshine. An. unfamiliar advantage of North Carolina is that in the winter our days are about'"fifty minute^ longer than in the Pennsylvania-Massachusetts sec tion, while in the summer when the sun’s rays are enervating, and too much sunshine is a liability, the sun shines about fihy minutes less in North Carolina than in the section referred to above. In the volume and distribution of rainfall. North Carolina is particularly favored. Our average annual pre cipitation is about fifty inches a year, and is fairly evenly distributed both by geographic areas and by seasons. This is'highly important, not only agri culturally, but industrially, since our travel from the nation’s chief centers of population and industry—a con sideration which according to the Duke Power Company counts heavily in the distribution and marketing of manu factured goods. The Duke Power Company further says that this section possesses an enormous advantage in freight rates. Raw materials can bq made up into finished pioducts in central Carolina close to the source of supply and shipped from this section to all parts of the na tional market far more cheaply than when the raw materials are first hauled to New York and vicinity, and the_n, after manufacture, reshipped to the original areas. The above contention appears to be amply substantiated by what is now happening in the textile industry. The South is rapidly pulling away from the North in textile leadership. Seventy- one percent of the nation’s active spindle hours are now contributed by the South. North and South Carolina both lead Massachusetts, while Georgia now ranks alongside Massachusetts in active spindle hours. Ninety-six '>per- cent of U^orth Carolina’s spindles are in operation, while only half of the spindles in place in Massachusetts are actually in operation, and Massa chusetts has lost two million spindles during the last four or five years. The same principle largely explains why North Carolina has a big monopoly in the manufacture of pipe and cigar ette smoking tobacco, and 'stands high i in the manufacture of furniture, and also why the new rayon industry, al ready grown to giant proportions, is concentrating in this geographically fa'vored region. North Carolina suffers a severe handicap in the realm of availability, due to the lack of a deep-sea port and an east-west trunk-line railroad. Fortu nately, however, this is a handicap that can be remedied by our state whenever it sees fit to act. THE RURAL CHURCH RELIGIOUS BODIES PROSPER The church people of the state should feel encouraged over the facisrevealed by the 1926 census of religious bodies just released by the Census Bureau. The more important statistics for the year 1926 are reported below, along with the corresponding data for 1916. There are now sixty-seven religious bodies in the state, compared with fifty- seven reported in 1916. Eight de nominations reporting ten years ago are not reported in the recent census. Some of these have joined other de- nominatjjins, while others are out of existence. There are eighteen new de nominations not reported in 1926. Some of these denominations were created by divisions in denominations shown as units a decade ago. There has been a marked gain in church membership, the increase being three hundred and twenty-six thousand or thirty percent, which is twice the percent gain in population for the same period. The females outnumber the males in church membership by more than two hundred thousand. There are three female members for every two male members. Churches, unlike schools, are not consolidating. There were three hun dred and forty-eight more church build ings' in 1926 than ten years earlier. The value of church property showed a remarkable increase. Counting church buildings and parsonages the church property in the state is now valued at more than ninety million dol lars. We have a larger investment in churches than we have in public schools—larger by six million dollars in 1926. Our annual investment in church buildings has just about kept pace with our annual investment in public schools. The church debt is reifferkably small compared with the total investment in church property. Church expenditures for the year 1926 were nearly eighteen million dol lars. Our church expenditures were eight-tenths as much as the cost of operating the public schools of the state, notwithstanding the fact that much church work is done gratuitously while nearly all public school work is paid for. It is interesting to note that the en rollment in Sunday schools outnum bers the enrollment in public schools by more than a hundred thousand. Another noteworthy fact is that there are four-and-a-half times bs many Sunday school teachers and officers in North Carolina as there are public school teachers, principals, and super intendents. Counting preachers, there are five times as many official church A survey of. 179 counties in the United States mai^ by the Social and Religious Institute of New York City . . led the Institute to make the state-, P™ 4. 4.U 4. 1 enn nnn # u-u i- ple on the public school payroll, ment that 1,600,000 farm children live it. . v j i- • .... ... - Churches may be declining or stag- in comrauntities where there is no; nant in other states, but not so in church or Sunday school of any de- j North Carolina. RELIGIOUS STATISTICS FOR NORTH CAROLINA Item 1926 1916 Churches (local organizations).. 10,297 9,713 Members 1,406,883.. Male. Female Sex not reported Church edifices: Number Value: J Churches reporting . 1,080,723 666,821 424,674 767,366.. 93,707.. 699,606 66,644 9,692.. 9,244 9,397.. 9,046 Debt: Amount reported..... $80,471,664 $26,623,323 Churches reporting 1,626.. Amount reported $7,714,936.. 1,382 $1,806,437 Parsonages: Value: Churches reporting 1,860..: 1,322 Amount reported $9,738,630 $3,077,203 Expenditures during year: Churches reporting 9,610, Amount reported $17,904,444 Sunday schools: Churches reporting... Officers and teachers Scholars 9,118 6,126,046 8,829.. 91,369.. 8,625 69,699 963,163 739,216