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. jjECEMBER 7, 1921 CHAPEL HELL, N. C. VOL. VIII, NO. 5. Kditprial B,..rd . B. O. B.-adson, 8. H. Hobbs, Jr„ L. B. Wilso.., B. W. Kait-ht, D. D. Carroll,’J. B. BdUitt, H. W. Odum. Bnterod as socond-class Hovember 14.1914, at the Postofflce at Chapel Hill, N. C.. under the act of August 34. 1918. LIVELIHOOD IN CAROLINA More folks and fewer workers, 3^3 thousand more folks and 52 thousand fewer workers, a 134 thousand decrease of workers in country occupations and a 120 thousand increase of workers in city occupations, 11 thousand fewer folks engaged in domestic and personal service, cooks, house-maids, yard-men and the like—such in brief is the story of the occupational census of 1920 for North Carolina. ' v The occupational groups of the state in 1910 will be found in the University News Letter Vol. I, No. 8. A table of comparisons will be found elsewhere in this issue. The 1920 details follow. There were 2,560,000 people in North Carolina, in round numbers, in 1920. Nearly eighteen hundred thousand are ten 5^ears years of age and over. Nearly one-half, or 48.6 percent of this age group are engaged in gainful occupa tions outside the home, or 895,621 all told. Women engaged in household work in their own homes are not ac counted by the census authorities as being gainfully employed. The gainfully employed of the state are 52,218 fewer than in 1910—or so read the figures on January 1, 1920. Many of these ' people are going to school. The schools of all grades and types are everywhere fuller than they have ever been before in North Caro lina. Others are taking a holiday, per haps. It seems to be the fashion of late. Fewer Farm WorRers The people at work in agriculture and forestry number 477,543. This group of workers is 134,024 smaller than in 1910. Here is a sudden decrease of more than one-fifth or twenty-two per cent of the farm workers of the state. It accounts for the 615,000 acres that have gone out of cultivation during the last census period. The country exodus is only just begun in North Carolina. The chances are that a still larger num ber of farm families will desert the countryside during the present census period. X The second largest occupational group in North Carolina is engaged in manu facture and liiechanical industries. They number 211,019 worl^ers, and the ten- year increase was 74,175 or 54 percent. This increase, in contrast with the de crease of farm workers, clearly shows the drift of our farm populations in to the urban, industrial centers of the sj:ate. On Tom Tiddler’s Ground The domestic and personal ■ servants are 56,634, and they are nearly 11,000 fewer than in 1910—a decrease of six teen percent. It is not news to Any body to say that cooks, house-girls, and yard-hands .are taking a vacation. They are hard to get, hard to keep on their jobs, and still harder to pay. They are slated for hard times by the boll weevil. Another year or two and they will be glad to take any job they can get at al most any price anybody is willing to pay—in North Carolina as in the cotton states south of us. A multitude of peo^ pie playing around on Tom Tiddler’s ground will get down to work when the boll weevil gets busy in North Caro lina. Tlfe next largest group of workers in the state are the merchants and bankers. With their employees they • number 52,931, an increase of 16,324 or forty-four percent during the last ten years. The people engaged in transportation, mainly railway and street-car workers, number 36,331-an increase of 11,248 or forty-five percent. The people engaged in professional service, doctors, teachers, preachers, lawyers, and the like, number 29,749. The ten-year increase is 12,536, or seven ty-three percent. Clerical workers, bookkeepers, cash iers, typewriters, stenographers, vassers, agents, and the li^, almost ex actly doubled in number during the last ten years. The increase was from 10,- 249 to 20,509, or one hundred percent. More Public Servants Public office holders, locjfl,. state, and The smallest occupational group in North Carolina are miners and quarry- men. They are 2,002 compared with 952 ten years ago. It appears that farm workers in North Carolina still outnumber all other occupational groups combined, but also it appears that they are greatly dimin ished in number. It is also clear that all other occupa tional groups except the miners and fishermen are city groups—that is to say, their occupations center in towns and cities. Their increase contributes to city growth, and city growth in North Carolina draws directly upon the sur rounding country regions. This fact explains the fifty-four percent increase in urban population in North Carolina during the last ten years, in contrast with the nine and one-half percent in crease in country population. Our city population- increased nearly six times faster than our open country population during the last ten years. The table of occupational increases and decreases appears elsewhere in this , issue. TEACHER-CITIZENS I have seen no sadder spectacle than the typical school man and woman of my early manhood, holding places theoreti cally supposed to be the radiating cen tres of civic understanding, but fearing to lose' those places if they spoke other than the lines of their antiquated books. I have seen town councils call before them experts upon public questions and never a schoolmaster heard. I have seen delegations go from town and city to the legislature for community needs and no teacher in the lot. I have seen men and women away from home con ceal the fact that they were teachers because the country had conceived of them as strangers to the concerns of other men. I resent being'held in such isolation; I want to study and to teach what the live citizens around me are thinking about. I want to know what is going on in the world. It is essential to my happy life. - It is essential to the men- ; tal tone'of a teacher to be given regu lar rations of public opinion, gathered by trained editors, served appetizingly, prepared for people, not for schools, fresh and warm, but not, a§ many les sons are, cooked to -a crisp.—William McAndrew, The World’s Work. HOMES OF COMMON MEN Woodrow Wilson The great voice of America does not come from seats of learning. It comes in a murmur from the hills and woods, and the farms and fac- tc^ries and the mills, rolling on and gaining volume until it comes to us from the homes of common men. Do these murmurs echo in the cor ridors of our universities? I have not heard them. We are at last beginning to see the necessity for such institutions in North Carolina, and various counties are now bestirring themselves in behalf of white plague victims and of the homes in fected by. such victims. COUNTY TB. HOSPITALS North Carolina is at last becoming aroused to the importance of local re sponsibility and local effort in behalf of the piteous white plague victims of the local communities. It is preeminently a local responsibil ity. It is necessary to stop and think only a minute or so in order to realize this fact. North Carolina, for instance, has right around twenty-five thousand open, pronounced cases of tuberculosis. The ratio of such cases is right around ten pei; one thousand of population, and North Carolina is not in worse but in rather better case than most of the states of the Union in this particular. This state cannot build a sanatorium for twenty-five thousand patients, nor can it equip such an institution for the care and cure of twenty-five thousand consumptives. The enterprise is im possible as a state responsibility and effort. The best the state has been able to do so far is to arrange four hun dred beds in the state tuberculosis hos pital at Sanatorium, and the need is for twenty-five thousand beds. * The alternative is’inescapable. There must be beds in sufficient number in local hospitals to care for the local pa tients. Wake must have her own hos pital for the seven hundred and fifty cases that must otherwise d^ year by year in private homes in Wake county. Mecklenburg must take care of her eight hundred cases in her own hos pital, and Guilford her own seven hun dred' and ninety cases, and Forsyth her seven hundred and seventy eases, and so on the state^over. It must be done in county or county-group hospitals. There is no otl^er way to do it. In the richer States, like New York, and New COUNTY HOSPITAL EFFORTS A large delegation of Guilford county citizens went before the board of county commissioners and asked that they au thorize an election to let the people of the county decide whether bonds shall be issued and sold to provide funds for the erection and maintenance of a county sanatorium for the treatment of tuber culosis. As a result, the election will be held on December 20 and fro;;^i:hat time on it will be strictly up to the people of Guilford County whether the tuberculosis patients of their county receive proper treatment or not. The election will be the decision of the peo ple as to whether or not they care to save the lives uselessly sacrificed to tuberculosis every year in Guilford. The county commissioners of Gaston county have taken the same step and an election will be held Februrary 18, 1922. Mecklenburg county has gone a step further. A site for a county sanatorium and $10,000 for maintenence has been secured and construction will begin in a short time. Cabarrus, Stanly, Montgomery, and Davidson counties are contemplating the erection of one county-group sana torium to take care of the patient;s from these counties. Randolph and Catawba counties are also.interested and we may expect word any time that the elections have been ordered. I would like to insert here ^hat the eounty sanatorium approved by the voters in Wake county two years ago is completed and will be opened for patients immediately. But, alas, the people of Wake did not care.i Lfet us hope that the county has enougji'peo- ple who do care, will make another effort, and that it will be successful. Kinston, Statesville, Henderson, Tar. boro, Clarkton and other cities have called for tuberculosis clinics to dis- cover the cases: Every city in the state will engage in the sale of Christmas seals 'to pro vide funds for the treatment of patients -and for other forms of tuberculosis work.—N. C. Tuberculosis Association, Press Service. years ago Herbert Spencer pointed out the fact that health''training was the first consideration in education. Cen turies ago the Greek teachers stressed physical development and produced the highest type of civilization the world had known. We have been slow tolearrithelessun they taught. The time has come when the business men must find out by per sonal investigation whether the chilfften of their communities are getting a de- cdqt start in life. They must see for themselves whether or not children are cooped up in buildings where wrong lighting ruins the eyes, wrong seating twists the backs, and poor sanitation ^promotes disease. The facilities and leadership in the teaching of health and the development of strong bodies must likewise be investigated. For a period of years over 50 percent of the deaths among Michigan school teachers be tween the ages of 25 and 34 have been from tuberculosis. An unhealthy teacher can not do much for the physical educa tion of those in her charge. Good health is the foundation of business efficiency and success, and American business men will see to it that their children have this asset.—U. S. Chamber of Commerce, Press service. THE SWEDISH WAY Young people’s rural associations have been formed throughout the rural areas of Sweden under the general directors ship of the Nation’s foremost educator^. The associations came into vogue in 19il8. Their aim is to rouse and encourage in terest in the vocation of the farmer, to help young people to the education ai^' training that fits them for this calling, and especially to counteract the tend ency to leave the farm. The associations work toward these ends by—(1) leading the young people to a more thorough acquaintance with their own locality, its past records, and present opportunities; (2) providing chances for farm experiment among the young people; (3) furnishing recreation and such amusement and fun as young folks require; (4) helping to direct the activities of young people so that their energy will not be frittered away in useless endeavors. The associations have no political com plexion. Any person interested in rural life may become a member. Every boy and girl of proper conduct is eligible at the age of 13 or over. There is no fee except for supporting members. The associations award prizes for rural activities adopted for competition such as plowing, soil preparation, gardening, cereal production, etc. Their organ the Journal for Country Youth. The associations enjoy a liberal State sub vention.—P. H. Pearson. what the common schools afforded, he went to an academy, and his father paid for his board and tuition, or he worked his own way through. In 1880 we had about a thousand high schools. In 1890 we had 2400. We are more than doubling every ^n years. No\^ we have 13,951 high sqJiooIs, and a new one is born every day. These schools require 81,035 teachers, all of whom are paid out of the proceeds of taxation. Fifty years ago we had just a few academy teachers, living out of the proceeds of tuition which the fathers of the children dug out of their farms. The old method cultivated in the student a sense of values which the present method does not always produce. The boy who lifted his small trunk up to the back of the stage and kissed his mother goodbye, and who depended for his tuition on his father and' on his o^yn earnings for his pocket money, was likely to know the worth of jvhat he was getting. But the present method is intended to bring the advantages of all the i edu cations which the -average boy or girl will take, within the easy reach of that girl or boy. And they are going to high school. When about six Weeks ago, the high schools of the country opened, not less than two millions of boys and girls en tered their doors and took up their work wjth more or less enthusiasm. It costs more than the tax-payers ever supposed they were likely to pay, but there is no money which they spend more willingly, and not much that is better spent. Education comes high, but we must have it.—Wm. E. Barton. NO MONEY BETTER SPENT federal are 9,003 instead of 2,600 in'Jersey, mandatory state laws require 1910. Here’is the largest ratio ^of in-1 the building of county or county-group crease in the state—247 percent. ' hospitals. A DECENT START IN LIFE Out of 100,000 pupils in New York public schools alone who have to repeat their work yearly, 50,000 have defective eyesight. In a school in Detroit, Michi gan, 600 children ^ere graded by men tal tests. Of the 100 with the highest rating 44 were without any physical de fects. Of the 100 with the lowest rating only 17 did not have such defects. In Omaha during the last school year 22,- 249 school children were examined. The total number of physical defects found was 18,882. Through the knowledge thus obtained 46 percent of those' examined were relieved of the defects and started on the way to successful life. Statis tics show that pupils with good teeth make better grades in school than those with poor teeth. Likewise they do bet ter work when they get into business. During 1917-18 th^ Health Depart ment of the Cityof New Yorkestimated that about 20 percent of the children in the public schools were suffering from malnutrition. Of 59,000 children ex amined in Detroit recently 19 percent were ten pounds or more underweight and nearly 7 percent were 15 percent or mSre underweight. Will such condi- . tions add to our future- industrial and I commercial efficiency ? More than fifty Education comes high, but we must have it. We are likely to have of it and to pay more for it. We are creating one new high school for every day in the year. In 1870 the United States had not more than 500 high schools. Before that, if any one wanted education beyond A GLOOMY PROSPECT A town that never has anything to do in a public way is on the way to the cemetery. Any citizen who will do nothing for his town is helping to dig the grave. A man that “cusses” the town furnishes the coffin. The man who is so selfish as to have no time from his business to give to affairs of the town is making the shroud. The man who will not advertise is driving the hearse. The man who is always pulling back from any public enterprise throws bouquets on the grave^ The stingy man who is always howling hard times preaches the funeral and sings the doxology. And thus the town lies buried from all sor row and care.—Mebane Enterprise. COMMUNITY SPIRIT. Every community has its spirit. With some it is a spirit of honor and integrity and progressive intellectuality. With others the spirit of greed, gouge, re- • pr^ssion and retrogression predominates. The first attains its aim in life, while the lal^ter aims no higher than that which h; attains. This community has its choibe. We more ^.^n progress with the march of time, or we can procrastinate while time marches by. This is an age when men do things, or they do nothing. The community that has the will to gi’asp its opportunities also has the power to make them.—Morven Sentinel. • . OCCUPATIONS IN NORTH .CAROLINA IN 1920 Based on the 1910 Census and Press Summaries of the 1920 Census. Increase in population 352,836; decrease in workers outside the home 52,218. The ratio of total population engaged in gainful occupations fell from 43 to 35 percent. The ratio of workers fen years old and over fell from 60 to 48.6 per cent. Similar -detdils show for the United States as a whole. The figures cover both races and sexes, ten years and over, engaged in gain ful occupations outside the home. Department of Rural Social Science, University of North Carolina. Occupation Groups ' 1920 1910 Ten Yr; Inc. Pret. Inc. 1. Agriculture and forestry 477,543... . 611,567.. -134,024. ..-22 2. Mftre and mechanic industries.. 211,019... . 136,844 . . 74,175. .. 54 3. Domestic and personal service.. 56,534... . 67,223.. -—10,689. ..-16 4. Trade and banking 52,931 .. 36,607.. .. * 16,824.. ... 44 5. Transportation 36,331... 25,083 .. 11,248. .. 45 6. Professional service—doctors, teachers, lawyers, preachers... 29,749... 17,213.-. . 12,536.. .. 73 7, Clerical occupations — cashiers bookkeepers, stenographers, can vassers, etc 20,509.. 10,249.. .. 10,260. .. 100 8. Public service —office holders 9,003... 2,600.. .. 6,403. .. 247 9. Miners and quarrymen 2,002... 952.. .. 1,050. . 110 Grand total of wbrkers 895,621... . 947,839,.. ..-52,218. .. —6 Population of state 2,559,123... . 2,206,287.. .. 352,836. .. 16 Ratio of workers to total popula- tion.. 85... J3.. -8 Ratio of workers to population ' ten years old and over 48.6., 60. -11.4