The news in this publica tion is released for the press on the date indicated below. No credit need be given. THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA NEWS LETTER Published weekly by the Bureau of Elxtension of the Uni versity of North Carolina. DECEMBER 9, 1914 CHAPEL HILL, N. C. VOL. I, NO. 4 ISditorial Boards E. C. Braiisoli, *T. G. doli. Hamilton, L. R. Wilson, Z. V. Jiidd, W. R. WinttTs. Enterkl as second'-c-la-s luatter November 14, 19U, at the postoffice at Chapel Hill, N.C., under the a(‘t of August 24.1912. CAROLINA CLUB NOTES The Carolina Club Scout The Carolina Club Si'out l)Pen alield .somewhat of lat(>—t'roni I’ilt (’i)iuily east- waivl ai'idss-state to Stanly ami Mont gomery Counties in the Yadkin N'alley 'f)iintry; 35 miles of the way in an open ^)Uggy in a lwo-«laj' .storm. He has been mingling with the fanners, tlie eoumy otiieials, the county fair crowiis, anil tin' fourteen huiich'eil teaeh- #rs at the Assembly in (Uiarlotte. And he has been learning a lot of things worth knowing and worth thinkingabout, }iarl and long. Early Risers Kleven travelling men boarded the train with 'him at t;reen\ille'the other morning at 3:30 o’elock, and 14 othere were astir with him at S o’eloek a week later iu Charlotte. The drummers have a hard job. The men working on commissions in Southern t'rritfiry are on short ration.? this fall. But when tliey get together they are as full of brave, cheerful chatter as a trw'- full of Engli.sh magpies. 'I'he nuxleni •drunuiier i.s a lineal descendant of the •Oherryble brothers whom Dickens celtv rated. The Elect and the Elite Overheard on the train coming out of •Oreenville last week; “That Farmers’ Union binichdoes not represent the farmers of \orth (Vtrolina. It i.s a corporal’s gnard anyway. These fellows lack both common sense and busi ness sense. They are Tieither ('lect nor ■elite." We could not tell from tlie cut i.)f his jib what hi.s craft was; but like a Hash, a stranger butted in with— “Maybe not, but neither was Gideon’s Iband of three hundred; nor any of the (.)ld Testament propliets, who were all kickers and noisy disturbers of the public peace. Blit such men were sorely needed then and now. ’ ’ Result; silence for a sea.soii, while the little group of business men wondered whaC his kidney] was. W'hen he swung ofi'w'ith his sanijile case at Wilson along with most of tlie others at .six iu the morn ing, somebrxly said; “One of thos( (Jideon-Band chaps, .maybe. ’' Cover-Crops and Mortgages There are more green cover crpi)s this winter along the road from Guilford to Mecklenburg than we have seen in this section these twenty years or more. We noted the same hopeful sign this winter in Stanly County; but, alas and alack, less ol it eastward from Kaleigh" through the cottoji and tobacc^o counties! Wint?r cov('r-crops and mortgages can not lx‘ fashioni'd to fit the same fields. Our Nine Lean Months If along with incri'asing wheat anl oats, -our winter fields could (everywhere bi“ green with rape and other-Toot cro])s. ■crimson and red-top clover, rye and vetcii. we might hope for i>ermanent and not merely seasonal prosperity in tin* cittou belt. TVien we might .safely toj)-otl'our crop sy.stems with ham, bacon and Ix'ef, j>onl- try, egg and butter iudustrie.s—at least, to the extent of producing enough of thesi* for home consuihption. Then we ct>uld kwp at home the him-- •dred and twenty million dollars a year that North Carolina now sends to aliens and strangers in other states and .sn-tions for food and feiKl stutf's that we do not jaise at present. Then our three fat months woukl not "be followetl by the long, lean credit imonths that w(‘ face year by year in the >!C0tt0n and tobacco counti(“s of the South. Sponging the Slate Clean Fourteen hundrecl North Carolina (teachers in Charlotte at the Assembly Thanksgiving week, ln'ard our l'\xleral ,jmV)nnni.ssioner of Kducation, Dr. P. I’. ,'Claxton, tell about Kentucky’s Moonlight Scliools, and how they have wi])wl adnlt llittiracy off’ the map in Rowan County in the Kentucky mountains. He begged .\orth Carolina to organize and go at the same problem, in the same way, hanmier-and-tongsl Superintendent E/,zel has already be gun with one .'Moonlight School. His teachers have promised him twenty-six more'schools of this sort in Harnett. There is mor> white . illiteracy in.forty- three other counties of the State; fifty per cent more in twelve othei- counties. There may be such schools in some of the.se other counti('s. If so. write us about them. THE NK\\'S l.ETTKH wants tf) celebrate them |iro|)erly and proui[itly. The Tip of the Tap-Root Frc.an the kindergarten down to the university, the devoted teachers assembkHl in Charlotte last wet'k have been finger ing tht' very tip of the tapTi'oot of reme- i.lial agencies—education. They are bat- tlmg with ignorance—the most defenseless thing in tlie universe; and with indiffer ence—the iuost appalling thhig! The illiteracy of the ignorant is a far easier thijig to cure than the undisturbed complacency of the lettered classes in any state. It is hard to hel]> peoi>le who do not know; but it is still haixl('r tJ> help peojile who cannot or will not think. Isaiah had both these elaswes in miml when h(e cried out, "Israel doth not know , Israel doth not consider!” And Jettersf>n was also keenly aware tliat there is a lettered as well as an un lettered variety of ignorance, when he said, “if any nation ex])ects to be igno rant and free, in a stah' of ci vili/.ation, it expects wliat never was and never will be. Illiteracy and Lettered Igno rance AVhatever it*? source, the education that really educates begins, accompanies and stipports every kind of .siK'ial prognws. For a man and his family, or his com munity and state, it means or ought to mean a |uickening of .sense and intelli gence, a wide-awakeness of mind, a provident foresight. It means or ought to mean a gain in understanding, hori zon, and vision. It means or ought to mean a j>ower to think out things to safe conclusions, to look ahead and see the ine\ itable rt'sult of can.ses and conditions, to adjust ways and means to ends, and to look about and abroad sensibly for the forces and agen cies that are ci.'eating tipportunities and advantages on the one hand, or that, on the other, are preying upon the health and life^if the social grou]i. It means oi- ought to mean a lc“s.sening of ignorance, superstition and nai'rowness. It means or ought to mean that i)eople are less and less aftect«l by cant and sham, foolishness and fraud. It means all this—and nuu-h more. But if it meajis anything less than this, it is the expensive, sui>erficial, letti'rixi ig norance that is little Ix'tter, or far worse perhaps, than ignorance of the iudetterel sort. WHAT THEIR FATHERS ARE According to tlu‘ [>rofe.ssion tir oci‘n]>a- tion of their lathers, the students of the L niversity of North ('arolina this year are divided as follows;—l'’armers 289, Jlerchants 132, Lawyers 68. Doctors 60. Manufacturers 50, J’ublic officers ;-!0. Minist(>rs 26, Real estate tlealers 23. In surance agents 22. hmnber dealers IS, Teachers 17, Railroad men 17, Hankers 17, Contractors 17, Tra\(‘lling salesmen 15. Druggists 12. Tobacco dealers 11, Livery men 9, .Mei-hanics 7, Brokers 7, Editors 5, Book-keeper's 4, l’rin(-rs 3, Fishermens, Civil Kngincvrs 3. Car[.e.n- ters 3, i.aliorers 3, Butchers 2. Nursery men 2, .lewclers 2, I lotel kee]>ers 2. I^ngi- neers 2, Chemi.st 1. I’hologra^'her 1, Pro moter 1, Ma,son 1. Librarian 1. Black smith 1, fndertaker 1. (*|)tician 1, Ranchman 1. Roardiug-house ke*‘fier 1, and Purchasing agent 1. COUNTY LIBRARY SERVICE The idea of extension sei vice is as ap plicable to a city libi-arj- as to a >S(ate I’ni- \'crsity so far as loaning books to coiujty patrons is concernel. Mecklenburg coun ty has lc.l iu tliis direction in North t'ai - olina by giving, through its Board of E(iucation, }i400 annu.-illy to thcChai lotte t'arnegie Library, in return forwhicli the )>rivileges of the libiary an* e.x.tended to the citizens of the county. THE SPIRITOF COMMUNITY SERVICE WEEK Joseph P. Caldwell Nov, 6, 1902 It is a golden - opportunity for the leaders of thfiught, for fireachers. teachers, and statesmen; and they will deserve well of their people and of future genei'ations who end)rac(‘ it and |ireach most ell'ectively the go.spel of ciA'ic as well as peisonal virtue ami lead men to the conti'uiplation of high er things. There could be nd nobler and)ition in the br‘asl of a North Carolinian than to do .sometbiug for North (*iiro- lina.'aiid there was ncvi'r a lime when more mitrht be done.. If those wlio love their State would but unite theii' ettbrls now, when tlx' public mind is undisturbed ami recep tive, when safe political conditions are establi.shed aud no danger threatens, there woulii be inaugurated an era like that in Home, of which was writ ten ; “Then none was for a party— Then all were for the State: Then the great man helped th‘ jioor. And the poor man lovel the great. Then lands were fairly [Xirtioned; Then spoils were fairly sold; Then the Romans were like brothers In the brave days of old." CAROLINA CLUB STUDIES Tobacco Growing in North Carolina Our tobacco crop is produced by 24 8tate.s. Kentucky leads in total )iroduc- tion in 1913. with 281.000,000 lbs. North Carolina followed next with 167,000,000 lbs. I!iU in ])cr-acre yielil. it is another story. In this particular our i-ank is 20th in 1914. 'I'he ten-year aveiage yu'lds per acre in the South (Federal Farmers’ .liulletin, Nov. 23. 1914) are as follows; Rank ]>er acre 1. Morida 83S pounds 2. Kentucky 830 3. (Ji'orgia 780 4. South (.laiolina 757 “ 5. Tennes.sfv 756 “ 6. Virginia 73S “ 7. North (Carolina 6-‘!7 “ S. Texas 635 “ 9. .^rkan.sas 629 “ 10. .Uabania 549 “ 11. Louisiana 491 In Pennsylvania. .\'t»w York, aU(^ W'i.s- consin tin- average yield ]ier acre is around 1.200 lbs; and in C'onnecticut, Massachuselts, New Hampshire, and N’ermont, aroimd 1,600 lbs. per acn'. Tobacco is the most expensive of our standard crojis. It ra(iidly exhausts our soils. It eails for time, attention, and concentratwl fertilizers in abundance. It is pi-ofitable only where labor is cheap 01’the yield pei' acre is large. For the.se reasons it is hard for farmers to accumulate wealth in a tobacco grow ing region. They handle money in abundance in the fall; but it disappears rapidly out of tiu' connnunity and leaves •scarcely^a trace bi'hind. The per capita wealth of the country people in our nine leading tobacco comi ties ranged from $191 to it^3S8. In Okla homa, which grows no tf>bac(^o, the aver age is S8S0 for the entire stattv UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF EDUCATION LETTER SERIES NO. 6 Ho’w North Carolina Ranks in Corn Production The 1914 crop is 56.700,000 bushels, or nearly nine million bushels more than the five-year_avei-ag(' since 1909. In total pidduction our rank is sixth among the 13 Southern States. Our average per aere yield was 20 busli- els, or 3 bushels more tlian in'1913, and our rank was fourth. The average per acre yieki for the Uui- te(.l States in 1914 was 25.8 bn. Rank Per acre 1. Kentucky 26 bushels 3. Tennessee 23.5 “ 3, Virginia "'21 “ 4. North Carolina 20 “ 4. Texas '20 “ 6. Louisiana 19.5 “ 7. .South ('arolina IS.5 “ 7. Mi.s.sisaippi 18.5 “ 9. Arkan.sas 17.5 “ 10. Alabama 17 “ 11. Florida 16 “ 12. (ieorgia 14.5 “ 13 (Oklahoma 13.2 “ —From The Fe.ileralF^irmers'' Bulletin, Nov. 23, 1814. Back Home Everyone who attended the Tc'achers’ Assembly at Chark)tte this [>ast week feels amj)ly repaid for the e’xjienditnre of time and money. The ever-present spirit of |)eace and harmony, the beautiful weather and the hospitality e.xten,led by th(“ peo])le of that city all comliined to aniu.se and maintain the spirit and inti'r- e.st of the entire bod3\ What We Did The high school pi-incipals and county suiK'rintendents met first and for two days considertnl theii' immediate prob lems with the guidance of their respective chiefs. By W'edne.sday night the vast numbers of teachers had begun to a.sseni- ble aud iiy Thursday we were in full swing. Coiumi.ssioner Claxtou rou.sed us all by his inspiring add.resses at general sessions as well as in the depaitmental meetings. From far and near we received nnich that will b(> of iuunc'diate value in our .school work. In various i>laces were exhibits and the advocates - of Farm Life Schools and w'ork in Domestic Scic'nee found much of interest and jirotit in theirdemou.strations. The various higher institutions got to- gethe^'their sons and daughters for pur- po.ses of eatiitg and fraternizing. The ladies of Charlotte found time to entertain us all most delightfully by nieans of the r(>c>ption. Vai-ions aud smidry private and semi-jirivate teas and luncheons helped bning us all into closer unity. H e met many of our fi-iends and we formed new a«piaintance*s many of whom we hope will Ix'come oiu- friends. We had an opportunity to talk over our liroblenis with otlan-s and we received much dii’ect a.ssistance as well as inspi ration for our daily task. Prospect .'VII in all w'e ha.l a I'oyal good time. cadvi.se strongly that if anyone neg lected hi go this year that they plan to go next year. f »ver 1400 were present and nearly a thousand of tla'm paid theii'dues —after a special ami eloquent plea. To neglect attending this annual iiKH^ing is lik-e refusing to acc('pt the bounty of a great haivest. Let’s all begin right no\T to plan to go in 1915. Let Us Know The .School of P>lucation is anxious to know what the schools of the State did during Comnumity .-^erxice \Veek. What was your i>rogress ? What community 8‘rvice did your .school render? How many were pre.s(‘nt at your exercises ? \\ as the effort your .school exerted worth while ? Tlie only way we can find out the value of this sort of work is by hearing directly from the t*achers. e wish you would VI rite us a letter and tell us all you can about the work in your scluxii. Next .veai we can us** these rejiort^s in helping- other schools to do as well as yours did this year. A DEBATE FOR SCHOOLS AND PUBLIC DISCUSSION CLUBS Immigration Resolvei.1, That North t'arolina shoulil adopt a vigorous policy f>f .securing, under existing legal restrictions, Fjuropean iiu- niigrantm. Int«'est in the subject of immigration in North (larolina has never been greater than jusf at present. The State along with the South in general is awaking to the fact that it needs more workers to de velop it\s vast undeveloi>ed resources and to turn a great jiart of its agricultural lands into the garden spot of .America. Inh'rest, on rhe other band, is al.so cen- teix'd oil the i|iu\stion of the political and social etl'ects which the introduction of a larg(» immigrant po|nilation wnuUI ha\e uptJii the State. North Carolina has es caped rhe turmoil which has frequently followed the incoming of a large number of uneducated foreigners and it boasts of possc.s.sing the ]>urest strain of .\nglo-Sax- on blood mm existant in America. For literature on this question write to the Bureau of lOxtension at C'lia]>el Hill, or the North Carolina Library (^oninii.ssion al Raleigh. Affirmative Arguments 1. Immigration has generally been beneficial to iIk^ UnitedStates politically. Immigrants have exerted a salutary in- tiuence on public affairs in that they have furni.sluxl many wi.se political leailers and have made virtuous and ]>atriotic citi zens. 2. Imniigration in the past haslx-en helpful .Socially. It has settled the West, and has given vitality and energy to the nation. It has contributed to American life as a whole—and would contribute to North Carolina life in |)articular—the best (|ualities of the Kuropean races. Only those likely to become good citizens are admitt.ed under present laws. 3. Immigration has proven itself eco nomically helpful. [t has enabled vast enteiprises, such as riiilroads, canals, and highways, to be carried out. It has per mitted the rapid development of luitural resources. A million Belgians in North Carolina would add immensely to wealth values in this State. Negative Arguments 1. Immigi’ation has been politically harmful in the United States. It has in juriously afi'ected State and National poli tics, and has supported factional and racial interests. Most hnmigrants have had no training in self-government. They are ignorant and illitt'rate, fre|uently l>osse.ssing anarchistic and socialistic ten dencies. 2. Immigration has been harmful socially. It has preveutc,l the homo geneous development of the nation. For eigners have lornied separate communi ties and hav(' retained their language, customs, and manners. JIany iniml- grants at prc.sent come from undesirable countri('s, .such as lOastern and .'Southern F’urope. Many belong to the criminal, pauper and viciouselas,scs. 3. lmmigrati(Mi liasproveoi itself harm ful economically. It has injured ,\merl- can labor by lowering the .standard of living and causing an over-sujiply of labor. Immigrants of the present time are chief ly unskilled laborers for whom th(‘re is no need. Cheap, unskilled labor is not net'ded in North Carolina, since the pio neer work has already Ix'cii done in this State. Cheap labor afiects only rhe dis tribution ami not th* |>roduction ‘ of Wealth. NORTH CAROLINA SHOWS UP WELL Illinois has 31.000 public school teai-li- ers. Fifty-five per cent of them have had neither high .school nor normal training. In lhis]>articular. NorthCarolina makes a far better .showing than Illinois. W'e have 9,000 whit(‘ teachers in thi* jiublic schools of the State; 3,500 of them have had uoi'mal .school training and nearly 2,000 of tlnMii hold whi>le collcue dijik'- mas. ^ \A e have less than 40 per cent to pul again.st Illinop’ 55 |)or cent of untrained twachers. And yet Illinois spends over Ji30,000,- 000 a year upon her public schools, and can afiord to pay far lai'ger salaries than Noi'tli ('arolina. Illinois ought to com- maiul a lar higer level of training for her public school t'acliers. I he jioint is this; the devotion and con secration of North Carolina teachers show well against the greatcn-' wealth and lar ger salaries of Illinois. STUDY AT HOME A j'ostal card addie.s.sed ti> the Bureau ol Kxtension will bring yi.ai complete in formation as to how you may imrsue at home corre.spondeni'c courses given Ijff the I'niversity. Thirty-six of the.s»> in high .school and college branches are of- ferei.