The news in this publi cation is released for the press on receipt. Vb. m university of north Carolina NEWS LETTER AUGUST 9, 1922 Published Weekly by the University of North Caro lina for its University Ex tension Division. CHAPEL HILL, N. C. SJilorial Board. E. G. Hranson, 8. H. Hobbs, Jr., L. R. Wilson, E. W, Knight, D. D. Carroll, J. VOL. VHI, NO. 38 B. Bullitt, H. W. Odum. Entered as second-class matter Norember 14.1914, at the Postoffice at Chapel Hill, N. C., under the act ol August 24, 191S IMP80VED COUNTY.GOVERNMENT THE COUNTY BOARDS MEET ■ in 1920 they were less than one-fifth of The State Association of County Com-1 wealth produced, missioners meets in annual session on j, strong in gross crop values, the campus of the University of North j agriculture is weak in livestock Carolina at Chapel Hill on Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday, August 15, 16, 17. Place of meetings Gerrard Hall. Headquarters, the University Y. M. C. A. building-^a place for rest, comrade ship, readiiig, writing, etc. Meals in the town cafeteria and cafes. Charges moderate. Tuesday, August 15 7:30 P. M. Registration at the Uni versity Y. M. C. A. building. Assign ment to dormitory rooms as guests of the University. 8:30 P. M. Call to Order, by Presi dent B. -A. Patton, Asheville, N. C. Invocation. Addresses of Welcome, H. W. Chase, President of the Univer sity, and E. C. Branson, Department Rural Social Economics.. Response, C. W. Morgan, Vice-President, Hertford, N. C. Report of the Secretary and Treas urer. Appointment of Committees on (1) Resolutions, (2) Legislation, (3) Nomi nations, (4) Auditing. Wednesday, August 16 10:00 A. M. Invocation. Improved County Government. Address, Governor Cameron Morri son. Discussion by (1) the State Com mission on County Government, and (2) the County Commissioners of the State. 12:00 A. M. A Campus Barbecue. 2:00 P. M. The County Home. Roy M. Brown, State Department of Public Welfare. Discussion opened by Mrs. Clarence A. Johnson, State Commis sioner of Public Welfare. 8:30 P. M. County Government and Students of political economy are re- ferred to the University News Letter Vol. VIH, Nos. 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 29, 30, 31, and 32, in which we have been exhibiting in detail this particular defi ciency in our agriculture, and we have been doing so with the hope that stu dents of political economy are also in terested in North Carolina. It is much more than a farm problem. It is a state problem, and when ■ the boll wee vil arrives, it will be found to concern every business and everybody'in North Carolina. The business men of the state will then be bunched like partridges in a snow storm, and just as helpless-un- less they lookahead wisely and get busy effectively long before the day of calam ity. The boll weevil is no respecter of- businesses, town or country. Farm-Worher Production The production of .gross and per-acre crop values is one thing; the retention of farm wealth is another. And it is in this last most important matter that North Carolina falls down. As a cjie to our thinking about it we are presenting elsewhere in this issue a table of farm wealth production per farm-worker. And by farm wealth we mean both crops and animal products. The gross value of the farm wealth produced in North Carolina in 1920, counting both crops and animal pro ducts, was 470 million dollars-crops 378 millions and animal products 92 mil lions; and fifteen states made a better showing. But states differ so greatly in size and population that they must be re duced to a unit of comparison. The unit that is most significant is not the Public Education. E. C. Brooks, State fworker-not the land but p . , fhA man Superintendent Public Instruction. Questions and discussion. Thursday, August 17 10:00 A. M. Agriculture in North Carolina. Frank Parker, State Agri cultural Statistician. Open meeting and discussion. 12:00 M. Report of Committees. Ad journment. 0URR4NKIN AGRICULTURE As a crop-producing state, the rank of North Carolina is high. In the pro duction of gross crop values in 1919, only three states made a better show ing—Illinois, Iowa, and Texas, in the order named. In 1920 ten states stood above us, but in 1921 the states ahead of us were only four—Texas, Califor nia, Illinois, and New York. All of which means that farm crops alone considered we. rank among the best half dozen states of the Union in average years. . And our rank is high in the per-acre production of cro^ values. In 1921 only one real farm state produced greater crop values per acre, and that state was California with her wonderful areas of fruit and truck farming. , The seven other states that stood above us in this particular are states in which agricul ture is an insignificant business—one is an irrigation state in the Rockies and the other ^ix are industrial states in the East. But our rank as an agricultural state cannot be based on crops alone. Live stock atid animal products of all sorts niust be counted in, when states are ranked in the production of agricultur al wealth; and when counted in, North Carolina’s rank drops from fourth to fortieth on a per capita basis, in round numbers in average years. Crops are an important item; they are ^ight around three-fourths of all the farm wealth produced in North Caro lina year by year. And nearly two- thirds of our total crop values are pro duced by cotton and tobacco alone. But crops are not the whole of the arm wealth produced in any state; they are barely more than half the total in such states as Ohio, Indiana, Blinois, and Nebraska. In Iowa and Missouri they are distinctly less than naif of the total farm wealth produced in average years. In North Carolina the man, There is immense significance in the fact that the average farm worker in North Carolina in 1920 produced only $984 of farm wealth; that the average was larger in forty states and that five of these were Southern; that in twenty- four states the average ran beyond $2000 per farm-worker, and in five states, beyond $3000 per farm-worker. In Nebraska and Iowa it was right around $3,500 per farm-worker. The states that made a poorer showing than North Carolina were all Southern—all of them cotton producing states. The state that foots the column is Missis sippi, which is now in the trough of the boll weevil wave. Per Capita Country Wealth Per-acre production of crop values is significant, but per-worker production of farm wealth is more significant. The states that have the highest averages of per-worker farm production are live^ stock states, with larger farms, more profit-producing farm machinery, more cultivated acres per man, and a lower production cost per bushel, per pound, per ton. These are the farm kates that produce less per acre, but more per worker. The result is a wider mar gin of profits and a better chance to re tain and accumulate farm wealth. In the per-worker production of farm wealth in 1920, North Carolina ranked 41st, and in the per capita accumula tion of wealth in farm properties ‘ our country dwellers held exactly the same rank. Accumulated farm wealth per coun try dweller, $684; rank 41st. Produced farm wealth per worker, $984; rank 41st. That’s North Carolina in 1920. The farm worker produces in a single yea'r in North Carolina just about as great wealth as he has been able to ac cumulate and retain in two hundred and fifty years. Per-worker production and per capita accumulation run along side by side in every state. of the Union. There is a causal relation between these two fun damental facts in agriculture every where. The Belgian farmers lead Eu rope in the per-acre production of small grains; they also led Europe in 1914 in per capita poverty. Iowa farmers, man for man, produce nearly four times as much as Caroling farmers—$3,554 against $984 in North Carolina; and man for man they are Released week beginning August 7 KNOW NORTH CAROLINA Wealth and Welfare Prof. C. B. Williams, dean of Agriculture at State College, has been impressed with the condition North^CaroIina that allows poor-pay ing farms to affect the homes, the schools, and the churches of the state to the degree that has been displayed in the last few years. Poor homes, inadequate church and school facilities are more pre valent than we should like to see them in North Carolina, says Pro fessor Williams, because of the fact that so many of our farms are pro ducing such poor yields and net re turns for the efforts put into their operations. During the ^ast few years in our visits to different sections of the state, I have been struck very much with the marked correlation between the productiveness of the soil and the character of the farm homes and their surroundings; schools and churches; with the healthfulness of the families; and with the education al qualifications of the people. In, close proximity to such kreas, it is not uncommon to find other areas sparsely settled, with the people liv ing in humble hom^ Without beauti fication and with their children not permitted to enjoy social, religious, and educational advantages as do the communities established on more productive lands. The underlying conditions largely causing these dif ferences is not hard to find. My ob servations are that to a large extent they are fundamentally connected with differences in the productive ness of the soils of these different communities. Does not this, then, unmistakably point to the fact that the greatest and most fundamental necessity of North Carolina farming is that of securing and applying in formation that will aid in the eco nomic building up^of the productive ness of soils of the state? No com munity, state, or nation dependent upon its agriculture, can prosper when its soils are not productive. North Carolina farming, in a gen eral way, therefore, cannot be profit able unless goodly acreage yields are secured and at economic costs per unit. ’No amoun^ of temporizing along other lines in a broad way can bring prosperity to the masses of our people on the farm. Year in and year out, where farmers do not get goodly yields of their crops, it is not possible to secure large returns for labor and expenses put into their production, it matters not how fa vorable prices may ordinarily be.— Dean C. B. Williams, State A. and E. College, in News and Observer. state waits on the efficiency, the pros perity, .the satisfaction, and the whole someness of the farmers. The man who is too stupid to see this foundational fact in commonwealth de velopment is too stupid to see anything beyond the predatory concerns of pri vate enterprise. THEY LIVE AT HOME which leads only to the drifting sands; and the same is true of farmers.—The Country .Gentleman. HOMES AND THE COMMUNITY The home'is th^ unit around which any community must' be built. Wher ever there is a plenitude of homes, there you will find a prosperous, con tented, and happy people. No great city was ever constructed upon an itin erant population. There must be It is interesting to note that some of our farmers are bringing in their cotton . . j right now since the price has touched j nucleus of homes upon which to build, the 22-cent mark, but it is significant Nobody can have a real abiding inter- also to note that these farmers without ast in a community who is not anchored a single exception are in one of two classes, either possessed of wealth and credit sufficient to borrow money or else they are in the class of those who live at home and board at the same place. One farmer who yesterday sold his cotton, told of how he had enough feed for his teams to last another year; whiie we heard anotHIr farmer who was at that time holding his cotton and probably still has it explain that his hog and hominy were raised' at home and that he had enough hams, dhickens, and eggs to feed himself and family anil those dependent upon him for another winter and that _ his ready needs for money had been taken care of by the family poultry and the cows. That’s successful farming.-Rocky Mount Tel egram. .to that community. A man will fight for his home, but he can very readily ■find another place in which to live. A community that makes it easy for an individual to own his home need have no qualms upon the approach of the census taker. Every community has in it hundreds of houses that are not and never will be homes. It re quires the element of possession and a lot of living to make a home. Where there are homes there are likely to be children, and where there are children there must of necessity be growth. It is the ambition of every man to own some small fraction of the surface of the earth. Because some men try to hog it all does not alter the instinct .which is inherent in every normal hu man being. In the heart of every man there is a dream of the time when he can sit at his ease beneath his own vine and fig tree. It is good to own a little XT„. , . , I piece of land—even if it is nothing more Not long since, a popular speaker en-1 than a lot in a cemetery joined an audience of college students i « u , • ' A man who owns his own home is a kindlier neighbor and a better citizen. He has a very direct and personal in- GIVE THE FOLKS THE FACTS substantially as follows; “The world is growing stale and its people are becoming commonplace from sheer lack of ideas. H’herefore, get ideas. It does not matter so much how or where you get them, 'or whether in deed they are correct; the great thing is to have ideas. ’ ’ Now that is passing strange. Our observation is that the world is suffer ing more from lack of knowledge of facts than from paucity of ideas. Our conviction is that instead of suffer ing from too few ideas, we are suffer- terest in the well-being of the com munity in which he lives. He stands for good government because it is only a good government that can give him protection for his property. He wants churches and schools in order that his children may be educated and trained. He is interested in the beautification of his city and the improvement of his streets, because these things tend to enhance the value and the beauty of his own holdings. He becomes rooted mg from too many that will not work in the soil of that community and because they have little or no relation to the facts of life. Our experience is that it is exceedingly difficult to find facts enough on which to base a new idea so that it will square with wh^t is really going to happen. Wherefore let us have more facts, even to the curbing of some ideas that, however en- part-and parcel thereof. A city that makes it easy for a man to own his own home is on the high road to prosperity. A city that would encourage home building with financial assistance to responsible prospects would soon be a community of homes. One property owner is worth ten finely dressed strangers who are here today and gone tomorrow. Birds of passage It takes a lot of terfaining, might prove dangerous to the individual and the public, who ner- force must in the long run deal, with Seldom build nests, facts and not fancies. I v • j. t . _ ^ ^ . j living to make a home. A city of plenty Bad advice to the students that. They' of small homes is a delightful commun- would better even follow histqry. and: ity. There are too few of them.- precedent than that form of fiction I Charlotte Observer. worth nearly twelve times as much— $8,113 against $684 in North Carolina. The Way Up Not fewer acres, but more acres bet ter farmed, with more horse and ma chine power. Not more farmers but fewer, with larger , farms and better balanced farm systems. Not less cot ton and tobacco, but more, and more cotton and tobacco produced on a home- raised bread and meat basis. More home-owning farmers and fewer ten ants, white and black. More and bet ter livestock. A few meat and milk animals on every farm, at least enough to feed the farm family. Better ready- cash market facilities in the nearby towns. And so on and on. These are the fundamental economic needs of agriculture in North Carolina, if we are ever to accumulate wealth in our country regions. Social values wait on wealth in the countryside, and the welfare of the FARM WEALTH PRODUCED IN THE UNITED STATES Per Farm WorKer in 1920 Based on (1) the farm value of all farm wealth produced: farm crops farm animals raised.^nd animal products-milk, butter, poultry, eggs, honey and wax, and the like, as exhibited in Weather, Crops, and Markets, July 1, 1922 and (2) on the federal census of agricultural workers—farm owners tenants’ wage laborers, ten years old and over. ' ’ ’ Grand total of 1920 crops and animal products in North Carolina $470 000 - 000. Fifteen states made a better showing. Production per farm worker in North Carplina, $984. Forty states made a better showing. Miss Henrietta R. Smedes Department of Rural Social Economics, University of North Carolina Rank State Per Farm Worker 1 Iowa $3,654 2 Nebraska 3,400 3 Kansas 3*285 4 Wyoming 3^206 5 Nevada 3,062 6 South Dakota 2,809 7 Colorado 2,786 8 California 2,729 9 Illinois 2,680 10 North Dakota t 2,672 11 Wisconsin 2,577 12 New York 2,562 13 Vermont 2,536 14 Idaho 2,347 16 Oregon 2,289 16 Connecticut 2,234 17 Indiana 2,207 17 Montana 2,207 19 Ohio 2,172 20 New Jersey 2,153 21 Missouri 2,093 22 Washington 2,061 23 Pennsylvania 2,040; 24 Massachusetts 2,013 I Rank State Per Farm Worker Utah $1,966 Minnesota _ i 924 Michigan j 9^7 New Hampshire 1,742 Arizona Delaware i 712 Rhode Island 1 70q‘ Oklahoma 1 ^29 Maine ]|e25 Maryland..., '. New Mexico 1 435 West Virginia 1^339 Texas Virginia.. i_2S6 Kentucky i 117 Tennessee 1 067 North Carolina 934 Arkansas 73^ Florida 739 South Carolina 745 Georgia ggg Louisiana 910 Alabama 525 Mississippi 499