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 its University Ex tension Division. NOVEMBER 23, 1921 CHAPFX HILL, N. G. VOL, vni, NO. 3 Bdilarial Board t E. C. Eraiison, S. H. Hobba, .Tr.. L. R. Wilson, B. W. KniBht, D. D. Carroll.'J. B. Bullitt, H. W. Odum. Entered as seoond-olass matter November 14,1914, at the Postofllee at Chapel Hill, N. C., under the act of August 24, 1912. DEBT-FREE HOMES More than four-fifths or 82.9 percent ■of the town and country home owners of North Carolina occupied dwellings free of encumbrance in January 1920. We lead the South in debt-free homes, and we barely miss leading the United States in this essential particular. In deed, the only state that made a better showing was Nevada, and Nevada hardly counts as a state. There are more peo ple and more dwellings in Mecklenburg and Gaston counties plone than in the whole state of Nevada. The common notion is that we threw money away like drunken sailors, in the flush times of the war period. And we did waste money in multiplied millions in oil stocks, fertilizer stocks, and other blue-sky stocks, in wanton indulgences and extravagances of every sort. Never theless, we paid more old debts at the stores and lifted more mortgages on homes than ever before in the history of the state. A thrifty remnant enabled North Carolina to make a better record in these particulars than any other state in America, Vermont and Mississippi alone excepted. 1, ...9 To be sure, we have not had much ready cash in North Carolina the last year or so, but manifestly we are not yet bankrupt—not when four-|ifths of our home-owners live in debt-free dwell ings. The Home-Owning Virtues All of US had a fair chance to lift the mortgages on our homes during the war period and directly thereafter, but only one-tenth of us took the chance. The .other nine-tenths of us- threw it away in reckless improvidence. And mind you, these fractions are not guesses; they are figured out. of the 1920^ Cen sus. Curowned-homes increased from 204,- 000 to 236,000, in round numbers. Our debt-free homes increased 23,566, and this number is almost exactly a tenth of all the owned-homes of the state. Note the ratio of thrifty home-owners. It is the old, old story—this apparent ly fatal ratio of nine-tenths to one-tenth in property ownership. On an average ^nine people of every ten live from hand to mouth, spend all they make, consume ail they produce, and lay up nothing ■against a rainy day. They must go in to debt for coffins and funerals, if a wife or child dies. If they themselves die they leave no estates for record with the probate judge. As a result nine- tenths of ail the property is owned by one-tenth of all the people. It is so in the Uniteli Slates, so in North-Carolina, so in Chapel Hill township, as our;iUni- versity research studies show. The landless, homeless estate of men begins in a lack of the home-owning virtues—industry, thrift, sagacity, so briety, and integrity. The man that rises out of tenancy into home-owner ship must have not one but all these virtues. The lack of any one of them is fatal. Even with them all, he must struggle with untoward economic, so- cial, and civic obstacles__in_tl^_world about him, and every day this struggle grows fiercer, even in North Carolina. In the natural course of events, his last remaining chance will disappear with the present generation, or so it appears today. Ten-Year Increases Here is a table of dwellings in North Carolina worked out of the 1910 and 1920 Censuses, and it provokes endless thought. Dwellings Total no. •Occupied owners Owned free Occupied by renters Population of state 2 Our dwellings increased in number a little faster than our population in gen eral, which means that in the main housing is a city problem in North Ca rolina. The increase of home-owners lagged a little behind ou^ population Increase, and the increase of unincum bered homes lagged still further be hind. It is comforting to find that town and renters steadily increase in number, but the general ratio decreases a little- just two-fifths of one percent in ten years. / Mainly the increase of our renters is in our town and city centers. Barely a third of it belongs to the farm regions. The table on Debt-Free Homes in the United States in 1920 appears elsewhere in this issue. The table on Town and Country Tenancy in the United States in 1920 appeared in last week’s issue. 1910 1920 Pet. Inc. 440,334 513,377 16.6 203,562 235,842 16.8 162,914 186,480 14.4 227,239 261,303 15.0 206,287 2,559,123 16.0 HATS OFF TO CAROLINA The Columbia State grows eloquent over the progress and improvements in North Carolina in recent years. Ad mitting that once we Tar Heels were more noted for our moonshine whiskey and illiteracy than any other mark of distinction, the State says: But North Carolina is living it down. Those who take the pains to look her over—giving her even “the once over” —can not fail to find her comely and ripe with promise. The-mountain region of North Caro lina is absolutely assured of being one of the greatest health and pleasure re sorts of the world. It is also rich in almost untouched wealth. It will some day be a vast sanatorium, a stupendous playground of the nation—at least of the nation east of the Mississippi—and the orchard of the east. And the observer of the moving scene, of the ‘ ‘fierce rattle of the foreground, ’ ’ can not but be impressed by the univer sal signs of growth and progress. Mag nificent highways are being built into and through the heart of these moun tain stretches, opening them to the thousands that are gradually beginning to learn of The Greatness of North Ca rolina. Other superb roadways are being laid between city and city, and from the cities to the sea. The Old North State is at last thoroughly awake to her own potential greatness, and is deter mined to exploit herself to the utter- most._ And the first step toward such devel opment is—good roads. In the matter of roads, North Caro lina can teach a vast number of ^solid and hard lessons to South Carolina, which, by the way, seems peculiarly dumb to this argument. Also North Carolina is developing manufacturing opportunities far more rapidly and earnestly than we of this state are doing, and yet our opportu nities for such development are fully as good, if not better, with somewhat bet ter port and water-power facilities. We mean, of course, water power in better situations for development and profit able exploitation. One observes, also, a somewhat great er alertness and display of energy among all classes of people than one finds in South Carolina. There is, unquestion ably, a more modern and up-to-date spirit awake and abroad throughout the state than one sees, unfortunately, in South Carolina. We could account for this, we think; but that is not the pres^ ent purpose. We merely recognize this portion of “The Greatness of North Ca rolina,” and pass on. The greater alertness is sure to carry North Carolina ahead and very far ahead if it fails to arouse a competitive spirit in us—or unless we are aroused by some other inspiration. We congratulate ourself that here was at least one chance reader of The Citizen that promptly recognized The Greatness of North Carolina. But then we have long recognized it. We have for years watched and partly understood the sureness and the swiftness with which the Old North State is realizing her great destiny. Our lid is off, and we stand almost abashed and abased in the vibrant pres ence of— The Greatness of North Carolina.- Gastonia Gazette. SMELLS OF POVERTY Walter H. Page The man who says we are too poor to increase our taxes for education is the perpetuator of poverty. It is a doctrine that has kept us poor. It smells of the alms-house and the hovel. It has driven more men and more wealth from the state and kept away more men and more wealth than any other political doctrine ever cost us—more even than the doctrine of Secession. Such a man is the vic tim of an ancient and harmful false hood. Even if you could respect the re ligion of the man who objects to the elevation of the forgotten masses by public education, it iS, hard to re spect his common sense; for does his church not profit by the great enlightenment and prosperity that every educated community enjoys? This doctrine smells of poverty- poverty in living, poverty in think ing, and poverty in the spiritual life. Greed and hatred in the daily affairs of man, in his industrial order, and in his international relations have brought about a collapsing civilization which tes tifies to man’s inability to check material maladies with material reme dies. We must have faith! Shall we travel eternally the vicious circle that, beginning in preparation ends in war, to begin again in new pre paration? , We must have faith! Civilization, warned by experience, must not again challenge hate with only the puny powers of the hand and brain. It must not rely solely upon contracts whose intent is of the mind and whose fulfillment rests upon discredited force. It must turn to the human heart! For deep in the human heart is faith! The churches, preaching their noble message, have not existed in vain. The truth which they have instilled in the heart of man is none the less truth be cause the difficulties of daily living have seemed insurmountable, nor because the clashing ambitions of nations have erected walls of hatred between man and man. We must have faith! But shall we keep faith locked in the heart, as though we were ashamed of it? Shall we not rather, in this frightful crisis of the world’s history, release it, and let the heart attempt what the brain and hand have failed to achieve— the rule of peace? The time has come!—Thomas C. Mc Rae, Governor of Arkansas. well as economic. But he is a blessing in disguise, and they erect grateful monuments to him in Mississippi. Tar Heels Look at Georgia Pitiful tales of hunger and suffering, says the Shelby Star, are brought back by Cleveland county farmers who have been making pilgrimages to the boll wee vil sections of Georgia to import white and colored farm help to this county. Mr. Peter Grigg who has just returned from Bishop, Ga., near Athens, says he found hundreds anxious to come to Cleveland farms or go anywhere just to get work enough for food and clothes. He wandered into a grocery store and found a landlord with 30 tenants on his farm who expressed a willingness out of sympathy for them to pay their way to Cleveland in order to help them out. Mr. Grigg selected a white tenant who will come with his family. On the streets of the town, the laboring class stop men and beg for work of any kind at any price they wish to offer. Never has Mr. Grigg in all his life seen people in such destitute circumstances. Many are without shoes and clad in rags. Landlords who bought high-priced land are in destitute financial circumstances. Time merchants and banks have failed and the condition of. the country is im possible to describe. Landlords are un able to feed their tenants during the winter months and are anxious to see them get out on somebody else’s hands who can carry them through the win ter. Mr. Grigg states that trains were crowded with whites and colored going somewhere looking for work. They would have their worldly belongings crammed in a tow sack or tied in a sheet, some of the men leaving their wives and children in quest of work. Messrs. Whisnant, Falls, Palmer, El liot, DePriest, Crowder, and many others have been to Georgia and brought colored help from the boll weevil sec tion, finding them anxious to come and the landlord willing to give them up. One of these men is reported to have seen poor people wearing their old au tomobile casii^s cut up and sewed to gether for shoes. The cause of it all to be devoted to food and feed crops and to pasturage for live stock. (2) One-fourth of the cultivated land to be planted in cotton, well fertilized and worked, so as to produce the best yield under the most economic condi tions of labor and other expenses. (3) Encourage the rapid^ organization of state-wide cooperative marketing as sociations for handling cotton and other farm products. (4) Adopt economic reforms and effi ciency in the future baling, warehous ing, financing and marketing of the cotton crop, upon the most approved and advantageous modern methods of orderly marketing. (5) Induce every cotton farm in the South to become, first of all, self-sus taining, and so control the production and sale of cotton as to force the con suming world to pay the growers a profit on the production of each and every bale of the staple. The first plank alone in this platform is wide enough and strong enough for the farmers to stand on. If all of them shall devote three-fourths of their land to raising something to eat and> on which to feed stock, the cotton and to bacco propositions will take care of themselves. Then indeed will the farm er be placed on Easy street, especially if he makes sure of the rapid organiza- of state-wide cooperative marketing associationsN for handling cotton and other farm products.—Fayetteville Ob- FARM VALUE OF EDUCATION That a college education is the best investment a young farmer can make is shown by investigations in various agri cultural regions of the country, reported by the tfniversity of Missouri Bulletin. Not only do the results show that a col lege graduate makes more money than a common-school graduate, but that a high-school graduate also has a mone tary advantage in proportion. Of tenant farmers in Indiana, Illinois, and Iowa, it is shown that the labor in come of the man with a high-school ed ucation averages $526 more than that of the man with only a common-school education. A further increase of $453 is earned by the man with a college ed ucation, making the difference in labor a.* was low cotton ; income of the common-school graduate last war and a noor crOD this vear Tt! graduate $979. last year ana a poor crop tnis year. ^ it Approximately the same result appears is learned that in the boll weevil section I from a survey of the incomes of 635 a bale to the mule is about all the yield will be, against ten to fifteen bales to the mule in the better days. There *is no mistake about the boll weevil rav aging the fields for Mr. Grigg says one can walk through the fields and they will cover one's clothing.- Shelby Star. THE DAY OF FAITH The'President has invited the great powers to a disarmament conference, and once more the peoples of the world thrill to an ancient hope. Idealism re news its battle against so-called practi- country tenancy in North Carolina is r.ut, on the whole, increasing faster I cality. _ than home^-ownership. The tenants and This time idealism must not fail. BOLL-WEEVIL MOVIES What the boll-weevil does when he has had four or five years to capture a country is given with graphic, photo graphic accuracy in the item we repro duce below, from the Shelby Star. The advance guards of this pest have al ready covered about three-fourths of our cotton area. A few years hence, farm tenants and renters, white and black, will be fleeing out of our cotton regions like refugees before an invad ing army, as in the cotton states south of us. Rough labor will be abundant in our towns and cities at minimum wages. The righteous as well as the wicked flee when the boll weevil pur- sueth. Prudent farmers foresee the evil and hide themselves in a hurry inbread-and- meat farming; the foolish pass on and are punished. Fortunately less than half our coun ties are dependent on cotton as a cash crop. Most of our forty-eight cotton counties have tobacco to fall back on^ and our danger is much less than in the all-cotton counties of the Gulf coast states. Besides, North Carolina is al ready more given to diversified farming and livestock than any other of the cotton-belt states. Nevertheless, we are headed into the greatest upheaval in our country areas that this state has ever experienced, not even excepting the War Between the States, and the changes forced by the boll weevil are profoundly social as Kansas farmers. Of 409 farmers in Nebraska, those who had attended high school made 32.1 percent more than those who had had only a common-school course. Men who attended college make 19.7 percent more than the high-school men, giving the col lege man an advantage over the com mon school man of 51.8 percent. In an inquiry as to those who earned more than $1,000 a year, a Cornell Uni versity report shows that while 5 per cent of the farmers with a district- school education were in the class that ,,had labor incomes of more than $1,000, j 30 percent of those with more than a A COMMON-SENSE PROGRAM The American Cotton Association has presented a common sense .program for cotton planters, and, to the best of our [ hi^h-school education were in that class, understanding and knowledge of agri- This report estimates a high-school edu- j •. j 1 ! cation to be worth as much to a farmer culture, we do not see how it could be j g percent bonds, and improved on. It is as follows: college education nearly twice as (1) Thr^e-fourths of all open lands much.—School Life. DEBT-FREE HOMES IN THE U. S. IN 1920 Based on a Census Bureau Bulletin, Oct., 1921 Dwellings in North Carolina, 513,377; occupied by renters, 261,303, or 52.6 percent; occupied by owners, 235,842, oc 4f.4 percent; owned-homes free of in cumbrance, 186,460, or 82.9 percent of all owned-homes. Only three states in creased in the ratio of debt-free homes in 1910-20—North Carolina, Vermont, and Mississippi. Department of Rural Social Science, University of North Carolina Rank State Pet. Debt-free Rank State Pet. Debt-free Homes Homes 1 Nevada 83.6 26 Ohio 61.4 2 North Carolina 82.9 27 Vermont 61.0 3 New Mexico 82.5 28 Nebraska 60.9 4 West Virginia... 80.6 28 Maryland 60.9 5 Virginia 79.4 30 Washington 59.5 5 Louisiana 79.4 31 Minnesota 59.4 7 ^Tennessee 78.8 31 Oklahoma 59.4 8' South Carolina .. 78.6 33 Pennsylvania 58.7 9 Georgia 78.2 34 California 58.5 10 Kentucky 77.8 35 Missouri 58.8 11 Florida 77.1 86 Illinois 58.0 12 Mississippi 76.3 37 South Dakota .... 57.3 13 Arizona 75.9 38 Delaware 56.1 14 Maine 75.6 39 Montana 55.2 15 Alabama 75.0 40 Michigan 54.9 16 Arkansas 71.9 41 Wisconsin 53.5 17 Texas 71.4 1 41 Idaho 58.5 18 New Hampshire 70.4 43 Rhode Island .... 48.2 19 Utah 68.8 44 New York 47.3 20 Kansas '65.0145 North Dakota... 46.2 21 Indiana 63.6:46 Dist. of Columbia 44.6 22 Iowa 63.2 J 47 Massachusetts .. 42.4 23 Oregon 62.4 ,48 Connecticut 38.7 24 Wyoming 62.3 ' 49 New Jersey 38.0 25 Colorado\ 62.2 1