!?l The newt in thit publica tion is released for the press on receipt. THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA NEWS LETTER Published weekly by the University of North Carolina for its Bureau of Ehrtension. FEBRUARY 23, 1921 CHAPEL HHX, N. C. VOL VII, NO. 14 Editorial Board i fi. 0. Branson, L. R. Wilson, E, W. Knight, D. D. Carroll, J. B. Bullitt. Entered as second-class matter November 14, 1914, at the Postofflce at Chapel Hill N» C , under the act of August 24, 1912, RICH IN AUTOS, POOR IN SCHOOLS 'll,.,; RICH IN MOTOR CARS One hundred and forty million dollars invested in automobiles in North Caro lina. Our wealth in motor cars is almost exactly half the capital invested in the railways of the state. It is nearly five times the sum we have invested in the church buildings of our fifty-two religious denominatioiis. It is almost, exactly six times the amount we have invested in public school property for both races, town and coun try. It is ten times the value of our thirty- one college properties public and pri vate, church and state. It is more than twice the value of the public school houses, church buildings, and college properties of North Caro lina all put together. Our churches and schools are the slow growth of two hundred and fifty years. Our automobile wealth is the swift ac cumulation of a single decade. We invest in motor cars with eager right hands. We invest in vital com monwealth causes with reluctant left hands—or apparently so. Our motor car wealth averages $54 per inhabitant counting men, women, and children of both races. Our j::hurch property' averages $11.50 per inhabitant, our public school prop erty $9.40 per inhabitant, and our in vestment in thirty-one college proper ties, church and .state, $5.70 per inhabi tant. We believe in public schools, church causes, and college education or say we do, but our faith in automobiles is stronger—nearly two and a half times stronger. We believe in motor cars in North Carolina—no doubt about that. But we doubt the durability of a Tin Lizzie civ-1 ilization. Now, we perfectly understand that passenger cars, motor trucks, and trac tors are necessities as well as luxuries in modern life. But if ever we come to believe as strongly in brain power as in gas engine power, as strongly in culture and character as in gasoline and lubri cating oil, the Old North State will quickly lead America in public educa tion, public health, public highways, and public welfare. There is both accusation and condem nation in the following table of invest ments in North Carolina in this year of our Lord, 1921: 1. Automobiles $140,000,000 2. Church buildings 30,441,000 3. Public school houses ... 24,069,000 4. College properties 14,008,000 And, mind you, these figures come straight from (1) the Secretary of State who licenses motor cars, (2) the last Federal Census of Religious Bodies, (3) the State Superintendent of Public In struction, and (4) the college authori ties themselves. If we are deliberately minded to fash ion a topsy-turvy civilization here in North Carolina we are set about it in exactly the right way. The present order of things is witless, and our sense of final values needs to be immensely quickened and thoroughly revised. We cannot build a noble commonwealth in this wise. $114,000,000 a Year But even more amazing is the annual cost of keeping our motor cars in com mission. It takes a vast sum of money to keep 140,000 motor cars going in good order at full speed. It called for some sixty-seven million dollars in North Caro lina in 1920. And this total is figured according to the formula of The Rail way Age; but with almost every detail less than the average for the country- at-large. Depreciation, 20 percent of $140,000,000 ?28,000,000 Interest on investment, at 6 percent 8,400,000 Gasoline, 20 gal. a month per car, at 30c a gal 10,080,000 Lubricating oil, 8 gal. a yr. per car, at $1.25 a gal... 1,400,000 Tires, 4 a year per car, at $20 each 11,200,000 State license fees 1,776,000 Insurance, 70,000 cars at $72 each 5,040,000 Labor cost of repairs, at $10 each 1,400,000 Total.... $67,296,000 And sixty-seven millions is a minimum figure. It leaves out the cost of motor car accessories and parts used in re pairs, losses not covered by insurance, garage storage and service charges, chauffeur hire, repainting, varnishing, and upholstering, etc. They amount to millions a year, of course, but they are omitted in this ex hibit ,for lack of authoritative data. Now add to these 67 millions the 47 millions we spent last year for new au tomobiles and automobile parts, and you have the startling total of 114 million dollars spent by the people of this state on automobile account in 1920. It is a rich people that can afford to invest 140 millions in motor cars and another 114 millions a year to keep them going! ‘ And if we balk at state bond issues in millions for public highways, state col leges, and state hospitals for the insane, epileptic and ' feeble-minded, for the blind, deaf and crippled, the neglected and wayward, then we stand convicted of big-scale spending for private indul gences and small-scale spending for noble state ente'rprises. A Bill of Indictment Here is the way we spent money in North Carolina last year, and the table that folio ws is a bill of indictment against us, as matters are at present. Automobile upkeep $67,000,000 New automobiles and parts.. 47,000,000 Manufactured tobacco pro ducts 50,000,000 Carpets and luxurious clo thing 35,000,000 Candy 25,000,000 Public school support 12,000,000 State government 7,000,000 Church support 6,000,000 College education, church and state 2,500,000 State benevolent institutions 1,446,000 State college support 730,850 No guesses here. These figures are based on the very latest reports of the Secretary of State, the Secretary of the Federal Treasury, the State Tax (Com mission, the Federal Census of Religious Bodies, and the authorities of our thirty- one colleges, state and church. Wrong End Foremost Reduced to expenditures per inhabi tant, they mean that for every $46 we spend to keep our motor cars going, we spend $5.30.to keep our public schools going, $2.65 to keep our churches going, 92 cents to keep our thirty-one colleges going, 64 cents to keep our state hospit als going, and 33 cents to keep our nine state colleges alive. What a curious sense of values! Dol lars for automobiles, tobacco, rich ap parel, and candy! dimes for public schools! still fewer dimes for churches! and just a few cents for college educa tion! If we are wise we will right-about- face in a hurry and set our civilization right-side-up. At present it is clearly up-side-down. If we are incurably childish, we will driftmlong in graceless self-indulgence. But let us remember that both the state and the church are imperiled by selfish self-indulgence and tight-fisted citizen ship. What a man does with his money is significant. If he hoards it and starves himself and his family, he’s a miser. If he earns it diligently, saves it prudently, and spends it wisely, he’s thrifty. If he throws it away like a drunken sailor, he’s a spendthrift. If he is diligent in business serving himself alone, he’s a tick-and-flea citizen. That is to say, he’s interested in the commonwealth he lives in exactly as ticks and fleas are in terested in the animal they live on. And rich or poor, if he indulges himself gen erously and supports his community and his church stingily, he is apt to think in two-penny ways about common wealth enterprises. What we do with our money in North Carolina is significant. At present it goes in millions for personal indulgen ces, and in midget sums for public ne cessities. Does anybody know of any surer way of building a pagan civiliza tion here in North Carolina f THE GOVERNOR’S LOOK AHEAD The program I have suggested does not contain new or revolutionary ideas calculated to excite wild enthu siasm, but in my judgment, it is a program which, if carried out, would make North Carolina the fairest and noblest habitation for men, women and children to be found upon the earth. Its adoption in completeness and fullness will require political courage of a high order. I appeal to the progressive men and women of the state to come together upon this program, agree to details and plans, and courageously proceed to write it into the law. The reactionary will whimper to the timid that this is a bad time to expend much money because of the depressed condition of our whole business life, but North Carolina is still rich enough to take humane care of its defectives and unfortu nate, to guard itself as far as an en lightened knowledge of preventive medicine will enable it to against sickness and suffering, to provide adequate schools for the training and education of its children, to build a system of roads suggested by sound business, and to do all other things reasonably necessary in the discharge of the high duties of a great state. Bonds for Vital Causes If we were willing to bear a tax bur den of $2.95 a year per inhabitant for thirty-six years for public highways and public schools, state colleges, and state institutions of benevolence—if year by year for a single generation we were willing to spend one-tenth as much for vital state causes as we spent last year on motor cars alone, then the peo ple of this state would quickly move up out of the mud and at the same time lift out of the mire our state hospitals and state colleges. Good roads are funda mental and for lack of them, churches and schools, trade and banking languish in sixty-eight counties of this state. Two dollars and ninety-five cents a year per inhabitant would pay the an nual interest on one hundred and twenty- five millions of five-percent bonds and settle the debt in thirty-six years. These figures, bv the way, are based on the amortization tables of the Federal Bu reau of Markets, and they are correct. These bonds could be issued in series, as fast as the money is actually needed for construction purposes, and they could be sold at par—not today perhaps but tomorrow certainly when money mar kets are easier. They could be applied as follows: Public highways $99,000,000 State colleges 14,500,000 Public school loan fund 6,000,000 State hospitals 5,500,000 Total.... $125,000,000 Reduced to a rate, it would mean a levy of three mills on the ad valorem taxables of the state, or thirty cents on the hundred dollars of property. A rate of this sort would mean a dollar and a half a year for a taxpayer with five hundred dollars on the tax list. And mind you, right around one half the tax payers of the state, or fifty-one percent of them all, have less than five hundred dollars on the tax books. So it was or thereabout in 1917. With three hundred dollars of personal property exempt— household furnitures, farm tools, me chanics’ instruments, wearing apparel, and the like—this ratio of small taxpay ers in 1920 ran away beyond fifty-one percent. Nearly nine-tenths, or eighty- nine percent, of this tax would fall on taxpayers with more than one thousand dollars on the tax books. For a discussion of Who Pays Taxes in North Carolina, see chapter six of Essays at Citizenship, The University Record No. 161. If you cannot credit these figures, examine and analyze the tax list in your home county, no matter where it is located in North Carolina. Two dollars and ninety-five cents a year per inhabitant for public highways, public schools, state colleges and state hospitals, looks like a whale of a sum. But it is a trifle when the circus or street carnival squats in our neighborhood, or when the car needs a new tire, or when the family wants a picture-show I spree or two. ' And one hundredjand twenty-five mil lion dollars looks like a whale of a sum, even when spread over thirty-six years. But we spend one hundred and fourteen million dollars in a single year on auto mobile account, and another hundred millions on tobacco, candy, and fine ap parel, and we do it without batting an eyelid. People that can do these things are not poor. They are rich. They are rich in self-indulgence. And they need to be rich in state enterprises. How The Counties Ranh How much we think of motor cars on the one hand and public schools on the other appears county by county in the deadly parallel columns prepared by Mr. L. deR. McMillan of Wilmington and published elsewhere in this issue. In the state at large our motor car investment is almost exactly six times the value of our public school properties. In ninety-one counties of the state more money per inhabitant is invested in motor cars than in schools, in ratios ranging from one to one in Clay, on up to twenty-five to one in Alexander. Alexander’s faith in automobiles is su perb. Eight counties have greater per cap ita wealth in school buildings than in motor cars. They are mountain and foot-hill counties, with relatively very little money invested in either schools or automobiles—with one inspiring ex ception, Transylvania. Fifty-four dollars per inhabitant is what we have invested in automobiles in the state at large, the averages rang ing from one dollar per inhabitant in Mitchell and Grah'am to ninety-nine dol lars in Greene and one hundred and six dollars in Scotland. These two counties head the list in motor car property, and both are rural counties. But in school property our investment is another story. It is only nine dollars per inhabitant the state over, and the averages range from two dollars in Al exander and Brunswick, three dollars in Ashe, Chatham, and Clay, to twenty- two dollars per inhabitant in Buncombe and twenty-four dollars in Transylvania. These two counties head the list in per capita public-school investments. Scotland stands first in automobiles but twelfth in schools. Greene stands second in automobiles but eighty fifth in schools. Pitt stands third in auto mobiles, but forty-fourth in schools. Amazing investments in motor cars— amazingly large! side by side with amaz ing investments in public-school prop erty—amazingly small! The people of this state ought to know the facts in every home county. Mr. McMillan’s table for the first time gives the people of North Carolina a chance to look themselves straight in the face and decide once for all, county by county, whether or not they are set ting gas-engine power above brain-pow er, culture, and character. There is a great future for any county that leads in public spirit—for counties like Lenoir with two million dollars in vested in good roads, or Guilford with two millions voted for good roads and sixteen hundred thousands more f^r schools when other counties are crying hard times and bankruptcy, or Forsyth with nearly a million going into new school buildings, dr New Hanover with a new half million dollar high school building nearing completion, or Tran sylvania and Buncombe which far and away lead the state in per capita invest ment in public school, property. And by the way, the new school building at Roanoke Rapids and at Elizabeth City will each cost more than twice as much as any building on the University cam pus. But what is the outlook for a county like Alexander with $52 per inhabitant in automobiles against $2 in school prop erty, or for Greene with $99 in automo biles against $4 per inhabitant in public school buildings and equipments? MOTOR CARS AND PUBLIC SCHOOLS Investments per Inhabitant in each on Dec. 30, 1920 Based on Reports of the Secretary of State and the State Superintendent of Public Instruction. Public school property, state total $24,000,000 in 1920, or $9 per inhabitant. Private motor car property, state total $140,000,000, or $54 per inhabitant. L. deR. McMillan, Wilmington, N. C. Department of Rural Social Science, University of North Carolina. Per cap. Per cap. autos schools Scotland $106.... $14 Greene 99.... 4 Pitt 89.... 9 Wilson 84.... 10 Guilford 83.... 11 Davidson 82.... 6 .Edgecombe .......79... Nash. 77... Lincoln 73 .. Rowan 73... Hoke 72... W ake 71... Johnson /. 71... Mecklenburg 69... Lenoir 68... Martin 68... Catawba 66... Wayne 65... Forsyth 65... Richmond 64... Cabarrus 64... Gaston 64... Moore 63... Lee 63... Iredell 63... Randolph 62... New Hanover 61... Cleveland 61... Yadkin .61... Surry 61... Alamance 60... Pasquotank 60... Rockingham 69... Robeson 59... Bertie 68... Stanly 58... Granville 58... Vance 58... Sampson 66... Currituck 55... Duplin 55... Hertford 56... Montgomery 55... Davie 65... Anson 55... Harnett 55... Caswell 54... Cumberland 54... Stokes 7 63... Washington 53... Rank County 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 9 11 12 12 14 15 16 17 18 18 20 20 20 23 23 23 26 27 27 27 27 31 31 33 33 35 35 35 35 39 40 40 40 40 40 40 40 47 47 49 49 10 6 7 18 12 7 9 20 8 7 14 9 9 9 13 11 9 13 6 17 7 4 7 11 8 7 11 8 12 10 10 6 12 18 6 14 6 6 9 2 8 4 15 Rank County 49 49 53 63 63 53 57 67 57 60 61 62 63 63 65 66 65 68 68 70 71 71 73 74 74 76 77 78 79 80 80 82 82 82 85 86 86 88 89 90 90 92 93 93 95 96 96 96 99 99 Beaufort .... Craven ... Durham Chowan .... Franklin.. .. Buncombe.... Alexander Union Jones Warren Halifax Person. .. Perquimans . Orange Chatham Northampton, Henderson.. Gates Rutherford . Tyrrell Columbus ... Camden Onslow .... Bladen Caldwell. Pender ... Pamlico ., Carteret.., Haywood' Transylvar Polk Burke 22... Wilkes 22... Watauga '.22... Brunswick 21... Hyde., 20... Alleghany 20... McDowell 18... Madison 11... J ackson 10... Cherokee 10... Avery 9... Swain 8... Macon.... Ashe .... Yancey .. Clay Dare ... er cap. Per cap. autos schools ... $63.. $9 63.. 12 .... 52.. 17 62.. 14 .... 52.. 6 .. .52.. 22 .... 50.. 2 ,... 60.. 5 .... 50.. 6 ... ■ 49.. 9 48.. 8 47.. 5 46.. 8 46... 7 44.. 3 .... 44.. 6 44.. 9 . ..43.. 5 43.. 7 42.. 4 .... 37.. 6 37.. 8 .. . 36 . 8 36.. 4 ,.. .36.. 5 34.. 4 30.. 17 .... 27 . .. • 16 26.. 6 23.. 24 .... 23.. 4 8.... 6.... 3.... 3.... 3.... Mitchell 1.... Graham. 6 6 6 2 7 9 21 9 12 12 8 6 6 3 4 3 4 4 5 m f 1l 1 ■i.'lrl I 'A ■n