The news id this publica- * tioQjs released for the pres* on the date indicated beiow. the university of north CAROLINA NEWS LETTER published weekly by the University of North Carolina (or its Bureau o( Extension. JULY 12, 1916 CHAPEL HILL, N. C. VOL. n, NO. 33 B. C. Branson, J. 9. deR, Hamilton, L. 8. Wilson, L. A WUlla R R tk ~ ^ ' ma, K- H. Thornton, O. n. MoKie. Entered as second-class matter November U, 1914, at the^ooatofflce at Chapel Hill, N.C., nnder the act of August 24,19ia editorial Boardi NORTH CAROLINA CLUB STUDIES A SIGNIFICANT EVENT 'J'he Country-Life [nstitute at the Uni versity, July 5-9, is coming into session just as tfiis issue of the University News Letter goes to press. It is significant (1) because it is the first Country-Jife Conference under min isterial leadership, (2) because it is a •sympathetic federation of the various countrj-lite forces and agencies in North Carolina, and (3) because it indicates what any community in the stat« can do, ■wherever there is alert leadersiiip and Christian fellowship. The Bulletin on Country-Life lustitutes, issued by the University Extension Bu- ireau, is full of details and directions for the holding of such Institutes all over North Carolina. Watauga county has already applied for 30 copies. This Bul letin will be freely sent to the communi ties that are interested. Letters of inqury and application have already come from fifty-three counties and five states. The press of the state iias given generous space both to the .Country-Life Institute and the Country- Life Institute Bulletin; and this is partic- cularly true of the country weeklies. SWAIN COUNTY: ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL ?50 runs the title of the 120 page manu script prepared by Prof. Harry F. Lat- shaw, principal of the high school at Al mond. This important worlf was done by the author in the workshop of The North Carolina Club at the University, wnder the stimulus of the Know-Your- Home-County ideal of the Club. The chapter devoted to the Historical Background takes an inspiring backward look at Swain Day-Before Yesterday. The other chapters take a competent Eound-About and Forward look attiwain To-daj' and To-morrow—at the Swain That is and Is to be. These chapters consider (J) Kesources— Mineral, Timber, and Water-Power, (2) Industries and Opportunities, (3) Facts About the Folks, (4) About W'ealth and Taxation, (5) Farm Conditions and Farm Practices, (6) Food and Feed Production and the IxK'al Market Problem, and (7) Where Swain Leads, Where Sfie Lags, ;and The Way Out. He compares Swain in 121 important particulars with every other county in the state, and these comparisons are high- Ij instructive and stimulating. A Home-County Text*BooK The County Board ol Education can 'well afford to put tnis work into bulletin form and place it witliout charge in every home in the county. The teachers and high school pupils, the ministers, farmers, «nd bankers and other business people ought to study it as a little Home-County ■textbook. It would cost perhaps $150; ibut ten pages of advertising by the mer- 'Cliants would cover this expense. Fifty-two counties of North (;arolina Slave now been explored in this way by devoted students at tlie University; but Mr. Latshaw’s work sets a high water mark for all future ell'orcs of this sort. We congialulate Mr. Latshaw and .Swam county. and Louisburg College. Baptism of Virginia Dare, by St. Mary’s School and Salem Academy and College. Durant s Land Purchase from Kiico- kaueti, by Wake Forest College. The Plantation Grentlemen at Home, by the University of North Carolina and the State Normal and Industrial College. Marriage of Hugh Waddell and Mary Haynes, by Greensboro ('ollege for Women and Littleton College. Battle of Moore’s ('reek, by Flora McDonald College. A Brave Carolinian and a Generous Britisher, or an episode in the life of Cornwallis, by Davidson^ College and Peace Institute. An Old Quarrel with Virginia, byElon and Oxford. North Carolina’s Adopted Daughter, by Lenoir College. A Brave Rebel, by Chowau, Catawba, and Elizabeth colleges. The bewitching grace of Miss Curtis Henderson, the httle daughter of Dr. Archibalil Henderson, is one of the charming memories of the Pageants. In the evening la Vega’s comedy of El ludiano was given in the open air before the old Law Building. ' Tlie Fourth at the University Summer School is always instructive, inspiring, and charming. It is a large chapter in real culture. MARK TWAIN’S LOYALTY My kind of loyalty is loyalty to one’s country, not to its institutions or its office holders. The country is the real thing, the substantial thing, the eternal thing; j it is the thing to watch over, and care for, and be loyal to. Institutions are extraneous; they are mere clothing, and clothing can wear out, become ragged, cease to be comfortable, cease to protect the body from winter, disease, and death. To be loyal to rags, to shout for rags, to worship rags, to die for rags— that is a loyalty of unreason; it is pure animal; it belongs to monarchy; let monarchy keep it. The citizen who thinks he sees that tlie commowealth’s political clothes are worn out and yet holds his peace and does not agitate for a new suit, is disloyal. He is a traitor.—King Ar thur’s Court. UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF EDUCATION LETTER SERIES NO. 81 WHERE WEALTH HAS WINGS The wealth-creating power of Mississip pi is enormous; but her wealth-retaining power is feeble. For instance in the census year tlie farms of the state produced crops and animal products wortii |173,000,0tK). Which is to say, every tw'o years and a half the farmers of Mississippi create as great wealth as they have been able to accumulate and retain in farm properties in a hundred years. Every two years the crop wealth produced in Jeflerson Davis county exceeds the total farm wealth of the county. And this is nearly true of Lincoln and Panola. In a single year the farms of the state produce wealth amounting to more than twice the capital invested in all manufac turing enterprises, and nearly twice as great as the total bank resources of the state. And mind you, the farms do this in a single year! Tiie production of crop values per aver age acre in 1909 was *22,59. Mississippi stood ahead of 40 states ol the Union iu tills particular, and she outranked every one of the rich prairie states of the Mid dle West. Nevertheless, the per capita country wealth in farm properties iu this region ranges from ijiljlSS in Indiana to $3,386 in Iowa, against $300 in Missis sippi Hunting down the causes for the feeble wealth-retaining power of Mississippi challenges the patriotic concern of bank ers and traders, teachers ami preachers. Her meagre w'ealth cripples, hinders, and retards everytfiing, every business, and everybody in the state. Life has to do with material things as well as culture and wisdom, as Edgar Lee Masters reminds us. tem. And it is a spendthrift system. Enormous farm wealth can be created under this system, but only a pin’s fee can be retained. Nobody can hold down any reasonable share of the farm wealth created in this way. The merchants and bankers skim the cream of it to some lit tle extent; but small landlords and ten ants are usually helpless. The farmers o£ Mississippi are not. thriftless and im provident beyond most people; the farm system itself is at fault. PREPAREDNESS There seems to be a general interest this summer among teachers, principals, and superintendents in our schools. The causes seem to be the necessity for our schools to have the most efficient service possible, and the desire of the school men and w'omen to advance in the pro fession. It has come about that school officers are demanding more and more the ser vices of experts in school work. Teachers are coming to realize this fact and as never before are taking extra work through correspondence and through summer sessions, and are preparing them selves as experts. How It Works As a result they are ilemanding larger dividends on their investment; i*. e. they are demanding larger salaries and posi tions more appropriate to their qualifica tions. The communities able and will ing to pay for expert services «nd first class teaching are getting what lhay call for and those communities that are still thinking of the education of their chil dren in terms of dollars and cents are having to take what is left. You cannot measure the value of ex pert and trained services by a monetary standard. If you demand good teaching you must pay more than if you are con tent with ordinary teaching, but at that you never pay the complete worth of ex pert teaching. For value received poor and ordinary teaching is costly at any price. Expert teaching is always worth more than it costs. You may pay the bill of a good teacher but you cjn never pay what you owe a good teacher. Communities must begin now and plan whether they need and desire just and only someone to hear classes, r>r whether they need and desire someone who will leal their boys and girls out into a fuller, richer, happier, nobler life and service. Is your community “paying 135 a month”, oris it “desiring teachers of w'orth and willirg to pay for them?” THE FOURTH ON THE HILL^ -More than a thousand teachers took j part in celebrating the Fourth at tl» -University, under the direction of Prof. ' *A. Vermont of Smithlield. j The forenoon was devoted to jiati'iotic ■exercises; an impressive procession, a flag raising, national songs, and an atl- ■drees by Dean M. C. S. Noble. The ban- iUers flying in, the march were carried by teachers representing Salem Academy and Ciollege, established 1772, the University of North Carolina 1789, Louisburg 1802, 'Guilford 1837, Greensboro College for Women 1848, Chowau 1848, Littleton ‘ 1849, Oxford 1850, Lenoir 1890, State Normal and Industrial College 1891, Flora McDonald 1H91, Meredith College 1899, ' and by smaller groups representing a host of other colleges in this and other atates. i The afternoon exercises consisted of the Pageants under the Davie Poplar, ^hese w^ere given iu costumes as follows: Boyhood of Sir W'alter Raleigh, by •Meredith College representatives. ■Raleigh’s First Expedition, by Trinity A SPENDTHRIFT SYSTEM The food and feed needed by man and beast in Mississippi in the census year was around $196,000,000. This total is figured upon the 1910 census reports and the per capita annual averages of food consumed, as announced by the Federal Agricultural Department trom lime to time. But the food and teed crops produced in Mississippi amounted to only $67,000,- 000. Which is to say, $129,000,000 went out of the State iu ready cash in 1910 to pay for bread and meat, grain, hay and forage. The cotton crop failed to pay the bill for imported food and forage by $25,000,000. When a king’s rausom of this sort slips through the fingers of Mississippi from year to year, the accumulation of wealth is bound to be slow and the totals saved will be small. How could it be other- the main, the farm system of Mis sissippi is a one-crop, farm-tenancy, crop- lieu, supply-merchant, time-credit sys- ANEW ERA Under boll weevil conditions and the war time price of cotton, the farmers of ^ Mississippi entered upon a new era in j 1915; or let us hope so. Between 1909 and 1915 the cotton crop ' fell from twelve hundred thousand to ' nine hundred and fifty-four thousand ' bales; a decrease of 23 per cent. But set ^ against a decrease of 15 million dollars in * cotton production during this period is a * gain in corn, oats, wheat, hay and forage ! amounting to $38,000,000. Moreover, the six-year increase in livestock was more Uhan $8,000,000, as follows: 325,000 ‘ swine, 63,000 horses and mules, 18,000 dairy cows’ and 13,000 sheep, j All told the farmers of Mississippi were forty-five million dollars better of}' in food and forage crops, work-stock and^ meat animals. A marvelous record! These wonderful increases show what Mississippi can do under the pinch of hard necessity. The six-year increase in the corn crop w'as 42,000,000 bushels, a gain of 148 per cent. Her hay and for age crop rose from 279, DOO- to 400,000 tons. She multiplied her oats crop two and a third times over, and her wheat crop twenty told. There is still too little oats, wheat and hay; but Mississippi can easily produce a sufficiency of all these crops if economic conditions permit or economic pressure compels her to do so. In 1915, her bill for imported bread and meat, hay and forage, was $45,000,- 000 less than in the census year, but it was still some $80,000,000 too large. The richest farm state in the South is Mississippi, by long odds; that is to say, the richest in agricultural resources, op portunities, and possibilities, but not the richest in accumulated wealth. There is agricultural profusion but not agricultural prosperity iu Mississippi. ENJOYING POOR HEALTH Until very recently nobody knew any thing of definite sort about the conditions of health and disease in the country regions. The disclosures of the last two years are disquieting or ought to be to the couutry people. The State Health Board has just finish ed a health survey of five country town ships and two villages of the same in Albany county. New York. The results are astounding. The in vestigators found that one person in every nine reached by the investigation was sick or had been sick during the year. It was also found that 79 per cent or nearly four-fifths of this illness could have been prevented by intelligence and care, or that it could have been cured by prompt treatment. Sixty-eight per cent of all the ca.ses ■ were persons who had li«^en ill for years ' with preventable or curable illness. The ' money spent for drugs and doctors’ fees ' is half a dozen times the salary of an ef- ' fective county health officer. Tlie safest 1 thing is to pay a doctor to keep you well * as the Chiuese do. Slaughtering the Innocents An examination of the school children in a rural district of New York State also showed that 61,5 per cent of the children were suffering from adenoids or diseased tonsils; 51,3 per cent had defective teeth; 30 per cent enlarged glands; 18.6 per cent defective vision; i 0 per cent were anemic; 7.2 per c nt were tubercular; 6 per cent prc-tubercular; 5 per cent sufiered from skin diseases; 3,2 per cent from spinal di seases; 2 per cent from defective hearing; 2 per cent were mentally defective; and 1 per cent had hernia. The normal children were only 2.55 per cent of the total examined. The grown-ups do not challenge sym pathy quite as the children do. It is not conceivable tliat fathers and mothers anywhere are unconcerned about the wel fare of their children. They are simply ignorant of their children’s ailments. But will they Ije content to remain so in Orange or any other county in this or any other state? Does such a state of affairs exist in the country regions of North (krolina? It is well worth investigation. King Ignorance slaughters uiore babes in ev’ery county of the State than ever King Herod did in Bethlehem. mkke proper health conditions for his family, and to insure spiritual nourish ment according to his own taste. Self Help the Best Help A dollar spent in helping him work out his own plans—his own ideals which will expand and enlarge as he works at the job—counts. But he wants to feel that he is doing the thing himself. Our mountains will be developed iu propor tion as the responsibility for development of this Land of Promise is placed on their shoulders. Growth tliat is not nuishroom is rarely rapid. They plead to be encouraged by money, by sympathy, by suggestions and a help ing hand from their better favored kindred, to work out their own salvation. They are our brethren, a little behind the procession perhaps, but they are begin ning to look over the mountain tops, and at the same time, unlike the ‘ ‘fool w’hose eyes are in the ends of the earth”, to see the possibihties of their valleys. OUR HIGHLAND KINSPEOPLE DR. R. L. MOORE, Mars Hill College The mountain people of the story books are rare. The mountaineers are after all just folks—common, plain everyday folks—good and bad as you and I. Iso lated? In sections. Ignorant? No, but his illiteracy prevents cooperation and blocks progress all too often. Poor? Yes, andiyet two of the richest counties in North Carolina, in per capita w'ealth of rural population are on this side of the Blue Ridge, and not a foot of railroad in either county. Good blood? Yes, as good aa Anglo-Saxon blood is the world over—no better—unmixed and preserved, thank God, for such a time aa this. In dependent? Yes, but easily led by one from his own ranks who has a vision—a program. Numerous and prolific? In spite of bad cooking, insanitary surround ings, and murderous proclivities I Sus picious? He fears the Greeks even when they bear gifts. Ambitious? You will find him in the ends of the earth. And the average mountain boy wants to do as much work in a four month’s school as his city cousin does iu ten, and pretty nearly does it! Proud? Yes, but rarely vain. Genuine? He hates hypocrisy or veneer, and sometimes takes the polish of society for veneer, and revolts. Better than other folks? Not a bit. Worse than other folks? I trow not. He appreciates not the tears shed over him or fiis land. Undemonstrative, and a little self-center ed, he will be helped only by those who can show him how to plow his field and sow his seed so as to reap better harvests, to improve his cattle, to secure the kind of school be wants for his children, to WIDE-AWAKE The Derby Memorial School in Rich mond County is Aide awake to the possi bilities of the public school iu a country community. The pupils are getting out a school paper known as the Drowning Creek Current. It is a lively and interesting sheet. The articles show the variety of interests presented to the children and demonstrate admirably how the view point and horizon of the country child may be broadened. Weaving As Mr. Derby says, It illustrates how well the school has woven itself into the life of the community and how the chil dren are thinking about community matters. The children in the school are taught the by-laws and theory' of the Credit Union and can write intelligently alx>ut farm finance. Debates The debates afe on such questions aa cooperative enterprises in the United States, relative value of beef cattle and dairy cattle, decrease in cotton produc tion, school bonds, military training in schools. Every one straight to a point right at hand, every one a real question growing out of needs at hand. We like the idea and commend it for adaptation. COMMUNITY CENTER SONGS We have long been searching for songs to sing at community meetings, which would sound the note of cooperation. We have found them! The U. S. Bureau of Education at Washington, D. C., will send you copies of five community center songs, free of charge, if you will write and ask for them. The Titles These songs have been written especial ly for community meetings. They are:- It’s A Short Way to the Schoolhouae, (sung to the tune of Tipperary), Neigh borhood (sung to the tune of Die Wacht am Rhein), The Fellowship of Folks (sung to the tune of Auld Lang Syne), Heart and Hand, and This Good Com mon Ground. Write and get them!