' 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. MA.Y 10, 1922 CHAPEL HH.T., N. C. VOL. Vm, NO. 25 Editorial Board i B. 1. C. Branson, S. H. HobbB, Jr., L. R. Wilson, B. W. KniKht, D. D. Carroll, J. B. BnlUtt, H. W. Odum. Entered as second-class matter November U,1914, at the Poatoffico at Chapel Hill, N. G., under the act of Augnat 24. IBIS Holding Down Farm Wealth The simple truth is North Carolina is great in rarm-wealth production, in gross and per-acre totals, but weak as water in farm-wealth retention. So, not because the farmers are wasteful and extravagant, but because our farm sys tem is fundamentally defective. fiolding down a reasonable proportion of the farm wealth we create year by year is the biggest economic problem this state faces today. And the solution of it concerns mer chants and bankers hardly less than it concerns the farmers themselves, and the church hardly less than it concerns the state. Church activities and state enter prises—public schools, public health, public roads, benevolent institution's, and the like—are all in jeopardy unless we can have an increase. in farm and factory wealth along with an' increase in willingness to devote our wealth to the common good. And as for tax reforms, be reckons in vain who leaves the farmer out of! account. The possibilities of progress ' in taxation are limited by the wealth and the intelligence of the eighteen hun dred thousand people who live out in the j open-country of North Carolina—for, TEXAS AND CAROLINA How Countryside Texas looks to g North Carolinian is the burden of a bul letin just issued by the school of theol ogy of the Southern Methodist Univer sity at Dallas, Texas. It gives in full the address of E. C. Branson, department of rural social economics, University of North Caro lina, to the Texas Social Work Confer ence at San Antonio, a little while ago. The Social Problems of Countryside Texas concern (1) sparsity of popula tion, the solitary nature of farming as an occupation, the overweening individ ualism of farmers, and the conse quences, (2) the cityward drift in Texas, (3) the social ills of tenancy and illiteracy, (4) the importance of a safe ly balanced town-and-country civili zation, and (6) social ideals and con structive measures—the title and out line of the address. ' • We are familiar with all these prob lems in North Carolina, but the people of this and other Southern states have not yet thought them through. What they mean to Texas, North Carolina, and "the rest of the South in the days at hand and ahead must be earnestly con sidered by both the church and the state. I qj ’ They cannot safely be neglected by | remembered, they are seven- either. [ tenths of all the voters of the state. Copies of this address can be had by Agriculture is the mired wheel in ministers and students in general by state economy. Nothing is plainer than j applying to Kev. J. M. Ormond, South- this fact. But in the main, the job of' ern Methodist University, Dallas, Texas, lifting it out is the farmer’s job andj Write for the February 1922 number of essentially it is an economic and social j Service. problem, with the state standing by to: Or if there be any widespread inter-; remove obstacles and to sanction just est on the part of the clergymen of the and proper effort in the farm regions. state, this address will be reprinted in the University News Letter in early June. PER CAPITA FARM WEALTH Six hundred and eighty-four dollars of accumulated wealth in farm proper ties per country dweller in North Caro lina in 1919, according to the last cen- sus. The grand total of farm wealth in lands, buildings, machinery, and live stock was one and a quarter billion dol lars, but the average per country in habitant was less than $700. After two and a half centuries, that’s what the farmers of the state have been able to save out of their enormous, crop totals and per-acre yields year by year. Six hundred and eighty-four dollars looks like a picayune when compared with a per capita country wealth of $8,113 in Iowa, $7,261 in South Dakota, and $6,826 in Nebraska. Forty states make a better showing in this particular, and among them are twelve southern states—Texas, Oklaho ma, New Mexico, Arizona, Kentucky, Virginia, Tennessee, South Carolina, Arkansas, Georgia, Mississippi, and Florida. In all the Union only seven states rank below North Carolina in the ac cumulated farm wealth per country in habitant. See the table elsewhere in this issue. A Startling Paradox 5th in total gross crop values was our rank in 1921. 9th in the per-acre production gross crop values in 1921. And— 1st every year in the South in the per-acre production of cotton and to bacco values. But— 32nd in the per-worker production of crop wealth in the census year 1919 .A.nd only— 41st in the per capita accumulation of wealth in farm properties the same year. We created 503 million dollars’ worth of crop wealth in 1919, but 1250 million dollars is all that our accumulated farm wealth amounts to in 260 years of his tory. That is to say, in two crop years our farmers create nearly as much wealth as they have been able or willing to save in the entire history of the state, live The Way Out No more important chapter in state economy has ever been given to the public in this state than that of Mr. J. A. Capps on The Retention of Farm Wealth, in the N. C. Club Year-Book of 1916-17. We had many a letter from the bankers and merchants of the state about that chapter, but not one from any farmer. The farmers of North Carolina need to spell out this puzzle with the intelligence that the Danish farmers put into it. Man for man, they are the richest farmers on the globe. They have been aided by legis lation, to be sure, but without in telligent skill on part of the farmers in the distribution of farm commodities it would have amounted to nothing. The people who get rich on farm products in Denmark are the Danish farmers. They handle their own wares from farm to table; but in the end, of course, the merchants and bankers are prbsperous because the farmers are prosperous. If the farmers are interested in farm wealth-retention, they can have this Club Year-Book. A few copies are still on hand, and they will be mailed out without charge as long as the supply lasts. Perhaps the following table will set them to thinking. Per-Acre Per Worker Per Capita -that of Crops Kan.... $ 9.9fe.. Neb.... 9.09.. N. Dak. 7.60.. N. C.... 38.82.. Crops . $2,526.. . 2,778.. . 2,617. . 1,053.. Wealth ... $3,836 ... 6,826 ... 4,074 684 NINE CENTS FOR CULTURE Anne Pierce, librarian of the Char lotte, North Carolina, public library, has learned how to make books work. With a total number of ten thousand volumes in the library, of which four thousand are reference books, 66,264 were in circulation last year, a turn over which comes very near being a record. The actual weight of reading matter the people of Charlotte toted back and forth during that time was some sixty-six tons. Some of it, you may think, was pretty light-weight stuff; as a matter of fact, however, the increase in the circulation'of non-flction exceeded very materially that of fic tion On the other hand, although Charlotte people state that their city ranks second in the world inthepropor- tire history oi tne state. And | tion of its in live crop years the wealth they; dents do not give proof of ““is m the create almost exactly equals all the dumber of books on religiousjubj^e^c^^ wealth of every sort that appeared on I which they ohelves Only the tax books in 1921-country taxables books gather dust and town taxables, real and personal, some six hundred calls were made for tangible and invisible all put together. I them during the year. Released week beginning May 8 KNOW NORTH CAROLINA What North Carolina Needs Josephus Daniels 1. First and foremost a revival of old-fashioned religion—the old-fash ioned religion both of faith and of works. Faith, of couise, is funda mental, but the religion of works is also a necessity if the world is to be reached. Works is the only argu ment that has any weight with the world. 2. Revival of old-fashioned econ omy. This is necessary on part of the individual, for we can nev6r be a prosperous state until we are a col lection of thrifty individuals. Old- fashioned economy on the part of every subdivision of government from the voting precinct to the State itself is also an urgent need. Units of government like individuals must live within their income. They must avoid as they would the plague the bonding of current indebtedness. 3. A change in the banking laws by which drastic limitations could be placed on the loaning by banks of the money in those banks to officers of the same. Nearly all banks that fail, fail from within. 4. Striking from the constitution the provision declaring that salaries of judges shall not be reduced during their term of office or adding a pro vision that the prohibition as to re duction of salary does not regard the collection of tax such as is imposed on all citizens of like ability to pay as a reduction of salary. It is of the ut most importance to the maintenance of respect for law and its adminis tration that there be no privileged class. 6. A more diligent enforcement of the law forbidding usury. It is broad ly charged that some individuals and some banks are charging by indirec tion if not openly more than six per cent interest on money. 6. Strengthening the primary law and making it proof against trickery and fraud. 7. The more vigorous enforce ment of law in North Carolina, the establishment of an aggresive leadership in law enforcement, and the devotion by the Attorney Gen eral of all his time to the duties of his office. He should be given pow er and authority, with the necessary assistance, to direct the concurrent enforcement of the prohibition law. 8. Adhering to, enlarging and strengthening, on part of the farm ing interests, of the policy of co-op erative marketing and co-operative production. This is the most prom ising means of placing the farmer on a better economic basis. 9. The effecting of such changes in the relations between tenant, land lord, and supply-merchant, as will make it possible for the tenant farm er as well as the land owner to prac tice diversification of crops. 10. The advocacy by all persons of influence of the policy of ‘living at home and boarding at the same place’, both as a wise economic system gen erally and as the wisest measure a- gainst the threatened invasion of the boll weevil. each ‘year on the biggest educational force next to the schools—less than the price of a single admission to a movie. —The Survey. HOW FARM TENANCY HURTS When the average person is asked what the chief hindrances to ecflication- al progress are and what renders the school less effective, the answer is like ly to be short school terms, unsuitable school buildings, poor teaching, and the like. Where these conditions exist the answer is appropriate, but a careful study of conditions and causes as they exist will reveal the fact that irregular attendance at school is one if not the chief cause of retardation and discour agement. From what source comes the bulk of this irregularity? A recent issue of the State Normal Bulletin states the fol lowing: “The greatest defect of the rural school is not in the barrenness of the subject taught, nor that the subject matter does not fit the surrounding con ditions or that the methods employed are so antiquated. These are defects and should be remedied. But the rural schools suffer on account of the moving, shifting population more than from any other cause. Tenants move on an aver age every two years. In forty-live counties in Georgia, seven out of ten ' farms are cultivated by tenants. These [ people usually move about the middle ; of the school term, so that in some com munities the teachers teach almost a new school after the Christmas holi days.” These people carry their children from one community to another so often that they fail to become permanently allied with the social forces of the vicinity and do not feel that they owe a loyalty to law and order as t\iey would were they permanently located. The educa tional ideals of this class of people un fortunately do not take very strong form. The church, the school, and the community organization do not find very strong support from them. Their feel ing toward the support of the community school is not as strong as if they were permanently located- Hence the irreg ularity in the attendance of their child ren at school is noticeable. This irreg ularity on their part, in many instances the larger part of the school enrollment, not only injures themselves but injures the advancement of the whole school. Until we shall have a more stable population and a stronger arm of the law to compel conformity to the com pulsory attendance law, the schools will continue to be hampered with non-at tendance and irregular attendance. The schools will continue to be more or less ineffective, and our schools will continue to fail in the attainment of highest re sults.—G. 4). Godard, State School Su pervisor, Ga., in School and Home. possess the grounds and pastures of the earth, that they, remembering them selves to be Thy tenants, may notrack or stretch out the rents of their houses or lands, nor yet take unreasonable fines or moneys, after the manner of covetous worldlings, but fiiay so let them out that the inhabitants thereof may be able to pay the rents and to live and nourish their families and remember the poor. Give them grace also to consider that they, too, are but strangers and pil grims in this world, having here no dwelling-place, but seeking one to come; that they, remembering the short con tinuance of this life, may be content with that which is sufficient, and not join house to house and land to land, to the impoverishment of others, but may so behave themselves in letting their tenements, lands and pastures, that after this life they may be received in to everlasting habitations. Amen.— Prayer Book of Edward VI. A PRAYER FOR LANDLORDS We heartily pray Thee to send Thy Holy Spirit into the hearts of them that ENJOYMENT AT HOME Home and heaven are not so far sep arated as we sometimes think. They are not separated at all, for they are both in the same great building. Home is the lower story, and is located down here on the ground floor; heaven is up stairs, in the second and third stories. As one after another of the famny is ' called to “come up higher,” that which seems to be such a strange place be gins to-, wear a familiar aspect; and when the last one is left below, Lho home is transferred to heaven, and heaven is home. » Don’t shut up your house', l.est the sun should fade your carpets and your hearts, lest a merry laugh should shake down some of the musty old cobwebs there. If you want to ruin your sons, let them think that all mirth and social enjoyment must be left on the thresh- hold without when they come home at night. When once a home is regarded as only a place to eat, drink, and sleep in, the work has begun that ends in endless degradation. Young people must have fun and relaxation some where; if they don't have it at their own hearth stones, it will be sought at other and perhaps less profitable places. Therefore, let the fire burn brightly at night, and make the home stead delightful with all those little arts so perfectly understood. Don’t repress the buoyant spirit of your children. Half an hour of merri ment around the lamp and firelight of a home blots out many a care and annoy ance during the day; and the best safe guard they can take with them into the world is the unseen influence of a bright little domestic circle. Home is the bulwark of American happiness. Put home first and fore most, and you will give your children a good heritage in their minds and characters: for there will come a time when the home circle will be broken: when you will “long for the touch of a vanished hand, and the sound of a voice that is still.”—Durham Herald. FARM WEALTH PER COUNTRY DWELLER Based (1) on the 1920 census, (2) covering the year 1919, (3) referring to wealth in farm properties—farm lands and buildings, farm implements and ma chinery, and livestock, and (4) to dwellers in the open country outside all incor- porated towns and cities. Average for United States in 1919 was $1,836; for North Carolina $684; Iowa $8,113; South Dakota $7,261. Table ranking the counties of North Carolina in next week’s issue. Miss H. R. Smedes Department of Rural Social Economics, University of North Carolina Per Rural State Inhabitant Oklahoma $1,387.4 Rank 1 2 Miss Pierce has done all this on the beggarly budget of five thousand dol lars a year. With this she has bought the best books, such as Queen Victoria, the Outline of History, The Education of Henry Adams—books that cost real money, has employed a full-time staff of three people in addition to herself and has purchased a wide range of magazines. Meanwhile the city is spending less than nine cents,per capita State innaDitant Iowa $8,113.3 South Dakota 7,260.6 Nebraska 6,826.4 Illinois 4,757.3 North Dakota 4,074.2 Minnesota 3,915.6 Kansas 3,835.6 California 3,723.5 Wyoming 3,683.5 Montana 3,209.7 Idaho 3,042.4 Colorado 2,900.3 Oregon 2,789.6 Indiana 2,639.8 Missouri 2,615.7 Utah 2,482.7 Wisconsin 2,399.9 Washington 2,213.7 Rhode Island 2,210.6 Nevada 2,118.6 Ohio 1,923.4 Texas 1,696.6 Michigan 1,546.5 Massachusetts 1,486.7 Rank 26 26 New York 1,317.6 27 New Mexico 1,226.9 28 Vermont 1,170.7 29 Arizona 1,169.2 30 Delaware 1,136.8 31 Kentucky 953.6 32 Maryland 908.9 33 Virginia 790.1 34 Tennessee ■ 784.7 36 South Carolina 767.7 36 New Hampshire 738.6 37 Arkansas 730.6 38 Georgia 726.0 39 Mississippi 701.8 40 Florida ' 688,4 41 North Carolina 683.9 42 Pennsylvania 682.9 43 Maine 602.0 44 New Jersey 685.9 45 Louisiana 566.4 46 Connecticut 623.4 47 West Virginia 516.8 48 Alabama 418.6