The news in this pubii- cation is released for the press on receipt. THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA NEWS LETTEE Published Weekly by the University of North Caro lina for its University Ex tension Division. DECEMBER 21, 1921 GHaFEL hill, n. c. VOL, VIII, NO 7 E litorial Board t o. 0. Braiison, 8. H. Hobbs, Jr., L. R. Wilson. E. W. Knight, D. D. Carroll,'J. B. Bullitt, H. W. Odum. Entered a.s second-class matter November 14,1914, at the Postofll'ce at Chapel Hill, N. C., under the act of August 24, 191*. URBAN TENANCY The homeless multitudes in urban areas is the last phase of the tenancy- problem discussed by the North Carolina Club at the University. We are present ing a few of the findings of Mr. J. G. Gullick of Gastonia, N. C., who led the Club discussion. Tenancy ratios in the principal cities of the country have not increased on the whole during the last ten ; years. But the situation is considered fa\ from encouraging by constructive thihkers, because with a nearly stationary ratio of renters in these cities there has been a great numerical increase, and some cities have suffered both numerical and percentage increases. It was brought out at the Club meet ing that fifty-seven million or 54.4 per cent of all the people in the United States at the present time live in rented dwellings. These figures cover country and city homes combined. The 1920 statistics for city homes alone in the country at large have not yet become available, but judging from the visible increase in home tenancy in many industrial centers it is estimated that approximately two-thirds to three- fourths of all the homes in urban alreas are rente^d. Ten years ago the ratios of rented city dwellings in North Caro lina ranged from 62 percent in Greens boro to 77 percent in Winston-Salem, and undoubtedly these ratios have great ly increased during the census period. RacK-Rented Cities However, the facts for cities of 100,- 000 or more inhabitants have been an nounced and these statistics show that home tenancy runs into almost unbe lievable figures in our principal cities. The percent of tenants and renters in 1920 was highest in Greater New York, in which city 87.3 percent of all the dwellings were occupied by renters and only 12.7 by owners. In the borough of Manhattan, where most of the dwell- bolshevism in every land and country. They are certain to stand in vigorous opposition to radical propaganda. A man with a plot of ground and a house of his own is not interested in plans to dynamite the existing order of things. Civilization is r’ooted and grounded in the home-owning, home-loving, and home-defending instincts. For a fuller discussion of this -prob lem of democracy, see the 1920-21 Year Book of the North Carolina Club, pp. 59-76. The Club members are now working on the causes and possible remedies of tenancy and their findings will be given to the public during the college year. THE CALIFOHNI/i WAY It is highly advantageous, as a part of all the process of reviving and mod ernizing country life, to create here and there a new community which can be started upon the plans and principles of today, and which is not handicapped by the outworn methods and traditions of the past. It is for this reason that we have attached so much importance to the state-aid farm colony plans of Cali fornia under the leadership of Dr. El- wood Mead. The state finds a tract of land; uses its own experts to prepare it for cultivation, lay it out,’ and sub divide it; projects the neighborhood facilities; advises upon the most avail able crops; aids in the construction of houses and farm buildings as well as in the provision of roads, schoolhouses and so on; and then carefully selects the colonists. The community organizes under a state board of directors and a colony superintendent, although each farm family is in full ownership of its own farm. With a very small amount^^of capital of his own, the colonist makes his beginning, but he has the benefit of the immediate use of all the capital in vested in his farm ar^d its improve- tagrarTslum tenements,''apartment nients, besides the benefit of expert houses, and family hotels, the ratio ot tenancy rose to 97.9 percent, which means that only twenty-one people in every thous^ind owned the roofs over their heads, while 979 of every thousand in habitants lived in rented dwellings at the mercy of their landlords. In Bos ton, Jersey City, and Fall River, the tenancy ratios ran beyond 80 percent. Renters and Citizenship But what do these figures mean? Do the homeless multitudes concentrated in cities constitute a problem? If so,, why? The answer, said Mr. Gullick, is found when one compares the citizen ship of tenant populations, taken as a whole, with that of home-owning pop ulations. No one can deny that home- ownership has a steadying, uplifting influence in a person’s attitude toward schools, churches, law and order, and the like concerns of community life. There seems to be nothing to take the place of home-ownership in tying a man’s heart to his community or state. No matter if a man does have commu nity loyalty without home-ownership, in nine cases out of ten he would have more of it if he owned his home. Let a man have a home and family in any community and it is natural for him to have a more vital interest in that com munity than if he did not own a foot of soil and a home of his own. A man owning his home or a material part of his community will strive to make his surroundings more attractive, for in the first place it makes the home town MEASURE OF A COUNTRY James Russell Lowell I am saddened when I see our suc cesses as a nation measured by the number of acres under tillage or the bushels of wheat exported; for the real value of a country must be weighed in scales more delicate than the Balance of Trade. The garners of Sicily are' .empty now, but the bees from all climes still fetch honey from the tiny gar den plot of Theocritus. On a maf^ of the world you may cover Judea with your thumb, Athens with a finger tip, and neither of them fig ures in the Prices Current; but they still lord it in the thought and action of every civilized man. Did not Dante cover with his hood all that was Italy six hundred years ago? Material success is good, but only as the necessary preliminary of better things. The measure of a nation’s true success is the amount it has contrib uted to the thought, the moral ener gy, the intellectual happiness, the spiritual hope and consolation of mankind. advice and community facilities. He has an amply long period of years in which to pay off increments to the prin cipal he invests, along with his regular payments of interest. California would have rendered a great service to the nation, even if it had definitely limited its oflScial activi ties in this field to the organizing of only two new farm communities. The value of the thing lies in the fact that, from beginning, to end, these projects are the crystallization of the best avail able experience and knowledge. Great land owners in California now see that instead of marketing their lands in a speculative spirit, haphazard, ’ to any purchaser who happens to come along, they can—to far better advan tage for themselves as well as for the country—lay out the lands before mar keting them, with reference to creating an organized community. They find available for their purposes all the ex perience of Dr. Mead and the state au thorities in selecting and locating colo nists. They see the advantages of adopting the policy of capitalizing im provements for the settlers, on the plan of long-time credits.—Review of Reviews. a more desirable place in which to live and a safer place in which to rear his family. A Safe Democracy How much chance is there for a sane, safe democracy in any state or nation populated by a homeless people who, in the very nature of things, move from place to place under the urge of neces sity or tfie lure of opportunity, who lack identity with the community in which they live, who feel little respon sibility for law and order, and who lack a proprietary interest in schools and churches and other agencies of pro gress, prosperity and well-being? It has beefi found that the homeless multitudes of large cities are a fertile seed-bed of irrational social impulses. A MODERN COUNTRY BANK In 1920 the People’s National Bank of Charlottesville, the county seat, de cided that the growth of its business was wrapped up in the development of the rural resources of Albemarle county. It established a Department of Rural Development, with H. R. Boswell, a successful and intelligent farmer, at its head. His plan was to put organizing energy back of the regular county offi cials, keeping the bank in the back ground. Within a year the bank added 2,700 accounts to its list, nine-tenths of them being farmers. Some of the gold deposited under mountain hearth stones for twenty years has thus been brought into circulation and use. Through Mr. Boswell the bank or ganized and partly financed a triple co operative campaign on the part of the County Farm Agent, the County Super intendent of Schools, and the . County Health Officer. The appointment of the last official was secured through an appropriation by the local Red Cross, Home ownership neutralizes destruc- Better farming methods, better schools, tive socialism of every sort. Home j better health conditions, and better owners are enemies of anarchy and roads were the objects. The bank secured a moving picture piachine, good films, and an operator. It sent out invitations in the name of the three officials to public meetings in schools and churches in all parts of the county. The first year thirty-five meet ings were held and three-quarters of all the rural population of the county at tended them. When the work started there was one accredited rural high school, now there are ten. An agricultural high school is being built in each of the five dis tricts. The farmers voluntarily raised for school purposes twenty percent more money than the total amount of the county school tax. They paid bonuses to get better teachers and to build per manent cottage homes for the rural teachers. Every country school in the county has been furnished with an ex cellent phonograph and records. The bank held corn and apple shows in its own building and tested seed corn for all comers. Farmers’ unions for cooperative buying and selling were or ganized. Experts from the depart ment of agriculture atWashingtongave demonstrations of apple packing, prun ing, and other works. The bank is now introducing new forage and hay crops, and financing the purchase of blooded cattle, hogs, and poultry. Concrete and other permanent roads are being built all over the county. Every district but one has approved considerable bond issues to continue the work. Spnitary inspect^s are at work in all the^ rural sections. Clinics are being held in remote mountain districts, with, special attention to the teeth of the school children. Visiting nurses travel the county. Both the white and colored population are given attention. This Tall the bank is showing at the public meetings moving pictures of the best and worst conditions in the county, having taken its own films during the summer. It is increasing and extend ing the work. From every standpoint it pays. —World’s Work. EXTENSION PUBLICATIONS The following publications of the Ex tension Division of the University of :^orth Carolina will be sent upon appli cation, either free or for the prices list ed. Address Chester D. Snell, Exten sion Director, Chapel Hill, N. C. The first list consists of University Records, and the second, of Extension Leaflets. In ordering, please so state, giving both the number and the title of the publication. University Recor4s 8. Cooperative Institutions Among the Farmers of Catawba County. Price 26c. *. 12. The Teaching of County Geogra- phy. Price 25c. 21. Measurement of Achievement in the Fundamental Elementary School Subjects. Price 25c. 23. The North Carolina Club Year Book: Wealth and Welfare in North Carolina. Price 25c. ■ 25. Local Study Clubs. Price 25e. 27. Standard Educational Tests and Measurements as a Basis for a Cooper ative Plan. Price 25c. / 29. Comparative Results of a State wide Use of Standard Tests and Meas urements. Price 26c. 31. 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TOWNSHIPS LOSING POPULATION 1910-20 Arranged by counties, showing (1) the percent of such townships in each county, and (2) the number losing population. The total number of townships in North Carolina is 1016. The townships counted out because they lost terri tory during 1910-20 were 31 in number. Sixteen townships in Hoke and Avery are- also counted out because there are no 1910 census figures for these counties. Of the remaining 969 townships 308 lost population .during the last census period or nearly 32 percent. Which means that nearly one of every three town ships in North Carolina suffered population losses 1910-20. Based on the 1920 Census Bulletin on Population. Department of Rural Social Science, University of North Carolina. No. twps. losing pop. 1 1 2 2. 3 6 3 3 2 2 3 3 2 '5 5 5 6 2 2 Rank County Pet. twps. losing pop. No. twps. losing pop. Rank County Pet. twps. , losing pop.. 1 Cumberland .. . 0.... 0 45 Washington .. 26.0 1 Gaston 0.... 0 51 Buncombe. ... 28.6 1 Greene . 0 .. 0 51 Durham 28.6 1 Jones . 0 ... 0 51 Lee . . 2&.6. 1 New Hanover . 0... 0 54 Mitchell 30.0 1 Orange 0 0 54 Randolph..... 30.0 1 Sampson...... . 0 0 56 Bertie 3S;3 1 Wayne . 0... 0 56 Craven 33.3 1 Wilson . 0... 0 56 Dare 33.3 1 Yancey . 0 .. 0 56 Hertford 33.3 11 Robeson . 4.0... 1 56 Northampton. . 33.3 12 Guilford . 5.6,'., 1 56 Person 33.3 13 Johnston . 5.9.. 1 56 Polk . 33.3 14 Edgecombe .. . 7.1... 1 63 Rowan 35.7 14 Forsyth . 7.1... 1 63 Surry . 35.7 16 Alamance .... . 7.7... 1 65 Caldwell 38.5 16 Pitt . 7.7... 1 66 Bladen . 40.0 18 Cabarrus . 8.3... 1 66 Perquimans .. . 40.0 18 Lenoir . 8.3... 1 66 Tyrrell 40.0 20 Rockingham.. . 9.1... 1 69 Burke . 41.7 21 Martin .lOvO... 1 70 Davie . 42.9 22 ^oore....... .11.1... 1 70 Gates . 42.9 22 Yadkin .11.1... 1 72 Iredell . 43.8 24 Anson 12.5... 1 73 Stokes . 44.4 25 Nash .13.3... 2 74 Cleveland . 45.5 26 Richmond ... .14.3... 1 74 Macon . 45.5 27 Harnett .15.4... 2 76 Chatham . 46.2 27 Duplin 15.4... 2 76 Haywood . 46.2 29 Brunswick.... .16.7... 1 78 Davidson . 47.1 29 Carteret .16.7... 2 79 Beaufort . 50.0 29 Halifax .16.7... 2 79 Catawba ... .^ . 50.0 29 Pasquotank .. 16.7... 1 79 Chowan . 50.0 33 McDowell .... ,18.2... 2 79 Currituck . 60.0 34 Wilkes -.19.0... 4 79 Madison . 50.0 35 Clay .20.0 .. 1 79 Rutherford... . 50.0 35 Franklin 20.0... 2 85 Ashe . 53.3 35 Stanly .,20.0... 2 85 Jackson . 53.3 38 Wake ..21,1... 4 87 Hyde 60.0 39 Columbus .... . 21.4... 3 87 Lincoln....... . 60.0 40 Caswell ..22.2... . ... 2 87 Mecklenburg 60.0 40 Granville .... . .22.2,.. 2 87 Montgomery 60.9 40 Union .22.2... . ... 2 87 Onslow ^ 60.0 40 Vance .22.2... 2 92 Cherokee . 66.6 44 Watauga ..23.1... 3 92 Graham . 66.6 45 Henderson.... -25.0.*. 2 94 Alleghany ... . 71.4 45 Scotland ..25.0.;. 1 95 Alexander ... . 75.0 45 Swain ..26.0... 1 96 Pender . 80.0 45 Transylvania. ..25,0... 2 97 Camden .100,0 45 Warren ..25.0... 3 9? Pamlico .100.0