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 the University Ex tension Division. MARCH 3. 1926 CHAPEL HILL, N C. THE UNIVEESITY OF NORTH CAROLINA PRESS VOL. XII, NO. 16 Editorial Board, E. C. Branson. S. H. Hobbs. Jr.. L. E. Wilson. E. W. Knight. D. D. Carroll. J. E. Bullitt. H. W. Odum. Entered as second-class matter November 14. 1914. at the Postoffice at Chapel Hill. N. C.. under the act of August 24. 1912 A PROSPEROUS STATE Nine North Carolina cities exceeded a million dollars in building, with five of these above five millions each. The cities of the state showed a gratifying gain over 1924. Charlotte still maintained its suprem acy in construction fields, with Greens boro bareley nosing out Asheville for second place. Durham, with a single permit of three millions for the Duke university group, passed Winston-Sa lem for fourth place. Raleigh dropped from second to sixth place, while High Point, Gastonia, Salisbury, Rocky Mount, Concord, and Wilmington fol low in order. ^ Conditions governing building prog ress were varied throughout the state. Charlotte and Greensboro built to meet a commercial and industrial demand following the rapid progress of those centers as distributing points. An eighteen-story office building in Char lotte and other buildings to provide of fice and warehouse space were most prominent there, although there was considerable building along industrial lines. Greensboro had two successive months at the close of the year when permits exceeded a million dollars, the first of these being occasioned by the million- doUar King Cotton hotel. Asheville reflected the magical devel opment of the western North Carolina resort area, together with a growing business that has followed a rapidly in creasing population. Real estate values have been on the increase and sales have been exceptionally active, both in central property and numerous fine subdivisions. Principal buildings include the $500,000 Asheville Biltmore hotel and a $300,000 Flatiron building. Much industrial building in the immediate area surrounding the city is noted. The first unit of the new Duke uni- ^rsity group accounted for more than half of Durham’s program, and another unit to cost slightly less is scheduled for 1926. Two municipal buildings, in cluding a courthouse, $400,000, headed the development at Winston-Salem. The half-milion-dollar high school domi nated permit totals for Salisbury. Industrial buildings for new textile and furniture plants and $400,000 in school buildings made up the substan tial total of High Point. A $460,000 high school is scheduled for 1926. A community hotel to cost $300,000 was the leader at Concord, and the Hotel Hickory of similar value was begun in Hickory, in addition to two large com mercial buildings. The future is bright for the state along general construction lines. A quickening of the textile market and continued investments in new plants are noted throughout the Piedmont. In the western part of the state it is estimated that more than $75,000,000 has recently been invested in proper^ties there. A resort development second only to the Florida boom in scope and sums involved is anticipated for the en tire mountain region for the summer of 1926. The wild grandeur of the Caro lina mountains is now being made ac cessible through the completion of paved highways. —From Miller Survey. reported 601 miles; Texas, 646 miles; North Carolina, 373 miles; South Caro lina and Georgia, 225 miles each; while other states were below 200 miles on this type. Outlook Promising The prospects for another record- breaking year in 1926 are very promis ing. Funds already apportioned to state highway departments total $166,195,000, with the probability that this will be materially increased by additional funds from special taxes which can no^ be ac curately anticipated. There were 4,604 miles of road under contract during 1926 which were carried over until 1926. Of this, 1,738 miles were hard-surface types. In addition to that, plans have been outlined for the construction of 8,404 miles of road which has not yet gone to contract. This will give a greater mileage for the year than for 1926. Texas plans for 1,250 miles of all types; Arkansas, 1,200 miles; Missouri, 1,000 miles; North Carolina, 700 miles; Alabama, 600 miles; Tennessee, 500 miles, and other states slightly lower. Missouri carried over 624 miles of pav ing and 272 miles of other types; North Carolina carried over 408 miles each of paving and other surfaces; West Vir ginia had unfinished 257 miles of hard surface and 152 miles of other, types; Florida has 261 miles of paving and 324 miles of other types. The total amount of paved road in actual use in the sixteen southern states on December 31, 1926, was 14,164 miles. The concrete highway laid down during the year, together with totals now in operation of this type, as reported by the statistical department of the Port land Cement association, is as follows: PASS HALF-BILLION MARK North Carolina has, finally passed the half-billion mark in bank re sources. On December 31, 1925, the resources of all state and national banks totalled $506,264,781, In Oc tober 1924 the bank resources of the state, state and national, totalled $471,854,584. The increase in bank resources from October 1924 to De cember 31, 1926, amounted to the sum of $34,410,217, an enormous gain for slightly more than a year. The resources of state banks now aggre gate $307,159,781, while those of nat ional banks amount to $199,105,000. Thus the fourteen months’ gain in bank resources was for state banks $18,780,216, and for national banks $15,630,000. North Carolina has never been able to point with pride to her bank resources but at the rate they have been increasing during the last few years, especially during 1924 and 1925, they will soon compare favora bly with the bank resources of the country as a whole. WE LEAD IN ROADS The states that are paving roads with bond issues still continue to lead the list in the amount of money spent for new highways during 1926. North Carolina, the pace-maker for the last three years, is still at the top, closely followed by Missouri. Then come Texas, Tennessee, Virginia, and Ala bama. In total number of miles of hard sur face for the year, Missouri takes first place, closely followed by North Caro lina, the former having 823 miles for the year, and the latter 667 miles. West Virginia and Texas both had over 300 miles, while Virginia, Florida, Okla homa, Tennessee, Arkansas, and Ala bama made excellent records in paving. The mileage of other surfaced roads, such as crushed stone^ gravel and top soil, finds a different alignment as to states. Arkansas and Alabama fight for first honors, both being slightly under seven hundred miles. Louisiana Miles Total com- miles pleted in use 1926 1926 Alabama .. 69.6 117.9 Arkansas ...161.1 363.2 Florida ... 66.2 229.9 Georgia . .. 64.4 428.3 Kentucky ... 81,6 232.6 Louisiana ... 7.3 36.7 Maryland ...120.6 1,086.7 Missisippi ... 38.6 260.6 Missouri .. 475.0 978.2 North Carolina... .. 328.6 1,170.3 Oklahoma ...188.1 663.4 South Carolina ... ... 56.2 209.4 Tennessee ... 76.4 206.0 Texas ... 70.0 560.0 Virginia . . 90.9 706.8 West Virginia... . . 67.9 637.1 —Miller Survey ucts in that year was $9,461,388,124. If the south derives two and a half times as much revenue from manufac tures as from agriculture, it is manifest that it cannot be primarily dependent upon agriculture for its prosperity. As a matter of record only three states, Mississippi, Oklahoma and Arkansas, derive more wealth from the farm than from the factory. Even Texas, which leads the nation in the value of farm products, gets more money from its in dustries. Quite the most interesting feature of the census report is that southern mills gained 37.6 percentin the value of their products over 1921, the previous census period. With new industries brought into production since that time, it may safely be assumed that the past year went well over the ten million mark. —Durham Herald. macadam for $2,226,728; 276.40 miles of sandclay and topsoil for$2,431,532; 96.86 miles of gravel for $1,024,642;' 605.04 miles of graded road, for $3,898,363; bridges^osting $1,560,206; or a grand total of 1,644.87 miles with the struc tures, making $27,827,066 spent last year. With the opening of 1926 the state had under contract 816.64 miles of road to cost $14,669,632. Of this $7,604,642 was to be spent on 269.04 miles of cement concrete, $3,191,873 on the 123.62 miles of asphaltic concrete, $33,140 on the 15.36 miles of sand asphalt, $763,490 alloted to the 90.28 miles of sandclay and topsoil, $110,770 on the 7.84 miles of gravel, and $2,686,617 on grading 310.43 miles. Thus 1926 proved with all of the economy programs the best road build ing year, for the $27,827,066 outstripped any of its fellows and marked nearly 33 per cent of the whole construction. To date the state has completed 4,448.04 miles of roads at a cost of $79,042,172 on the roads and $3,158,781 for the bridges. And all of this has been done in a sea son marked by no specific boom. They do say in extreme North Carolina, >the counties of che west and the coast of the east, that there are two Floridas in North Carolina now and will be for years to come. If this is true, nobody has any license to guess what will be done in 1926.—Greensboro Daily News. Pacific’s water front terminal at Clin ton, on the channel, is nearing comple tion at a cost of $1,066,131. Other termi nal work of importance is also under way. At Lake Charles, La., the new deep waterway to the gulf is nearing com pletion and work has begun on docks and wharves to cost a' half million. This will provide a new port directly south of the industrial area around Shreveport. The Waco, Beaumont, Trinity and Sabine railroad has been authorized to begin work on its one hundred mile line between Livingston and Beaumont, to give additional facilities into this port. Millions are being spent by the lines entering New Orleans for new yard and terminal facilities. —Miller Survey. BUILDING PERMITS The following table, based on data compiled by the G. L. Miller Co., of Atlanta, shows the 1926 building per mits for the twelve largest cities of the state, together with the percent in crease or decrease over the year, 1924. Nine of the twelve show very substan tial increases in aggregate of building permits issued during the year 1926 over the previous year. Building Percent Cities permits increase 1925 over 1924 Asheville $6,023,090 40.4 Charlotte 8,298,023 21.6 Concord 599,718 12.6 Durham 6,174,307 67.0 Gastonia 1,574,486 39.3 Greensboro 6,192,149 42.6 High Point 2,746,616 67.6 Raleigh 3,602,011 x24.7 Rocky Mount 667,910 x49.1 Salisbury 1,351,891 36.6 Wilmington 572,475 x64.3 Winston-Salem 6,004,381 10.6 X means decrease. THE INDUSTRIAL SOUTH The industrial south bulked larger in 1925 than ever before. The old phrase, ‘^the agricultural south,’’lost still more of its meaning. It is difficult to state which is the more important news rela tive to the south’s industrial growth: the fact that approximately $200,000,000 was invested in industrial plants and facilities during 1925, or the results of the census bureau’s survey covering 1923, which revealed the fact that the value of southern manufactured prod SECOND IN CROP VALUE The south came through one of the most unseasonable agricultural years of the present‘century in 1926 with a crop yield valued at $3,793,406,000, or a loss of 10 percent from the 1924 returns. Only three states, Florida, Louisiana and Maryland, were able to show gains for the year. The cotton crop, in point of bales produced, soared near an all-time rec’ ord, being in excess of 16,000,000 bales; But this huge production had the effect of depressing prices and bringing the returns almost to the same level as in 1924. Grains and toliacco both suf fered from seasonal conditions, with the result that considerable losses were shown in these items. Texas easily maintained its leadership for .the nation at large, as well as for the south, although losing $126,000,000 from its 1924 returns. Missouri, North Carolina, and Oklahoma ranked eighth, ninth and tenth, respectively, in the national list, the first two increasing their standing, but Oklahoma dropped five places due to a $110,000,000 loss re sulting from poor grain crops. Crop valuation by states is as follows: 1926 1924 Texas $799,330,000 $920,081,000 N. Carolina.. 318,661,000 320,486,000 Oklahoma ... 318,069,000 437,934,000 Georgia 234,231,000 263,090,000 Arkansas 226,113,000 341,636,000 Mississippi.-. 217,141,000 223,024,000 Alabama 213,267,000 243,994,000 Tennessee.... 196,719,000 230,333,000 Kentucky.... 195,625,000 232,412,000 S. Carolina... 172,201,000 176,728,000 Virginia 163,622,000 191,346,000 Louisiana .... 161,432,000 158,646,000 Florida 105,606,000 82,706,000 Maryland.... 78,131,000 74,091,000 W. Virginia... 73,715y000 76,348.000 A RED LETTER YEAR The year 1926 was the best year in the history of the Jefferson Standard Life Insurance Company. The assets of the Company increased by $4,106,445 during the year, and now total $31,239,- 268. The gross income for the year 1926 was $10,448,766, an increase of $1,203,- 370 over the year 1924. The surplus fund was increased during the year by $460,000. Insurance in force now totals 266 million dollars, while paid up in surance amounts to more than 61 mil lion. Especially gratifying to the Com pany is the fact that the ratio of actual to expected mortality during the year 1926 was only 46 percent. The phenome nal growth of the Jefferson Standard is largely the result of North Carolina’s phenomenal rise into the billionaire class of states. Also the Company, along with others, is partly responsible for the development of the state. CAROLINA TAKE NOTE The greatest activity has been appar ent all during the year in the middle gulf section of the south. Two outstanding deals were consummated looking to wards the diversion of northern traffic through new gateways on the gulf. The first of these was the purchase of the Gulf and Ship Island railroad by the Illi nois Central, giving the latter direct line into Gulfport and Biloxi from the main line at Jackson, Miss. The second, and even more important deal, brought the Muscle Shoals, Bir mingham and Pensacola road into the possession of the Frisco, thus giving this important mid-western system e port outlet of the highest value in Pen sacola. The M. S., B. and P. now has 143 miles of track laid down from Pen sacola north to Kimbrough, on the Southern'. The Frisco immediately an nounced a $2,600,000 rehabilitation pro gram in the old line, including heavier rails and bridges and improvement of grade; at the same time securing track age rights over the Southern from Birmingham to Kimbrough to a point of the Frisco main line. Mobile drew a step nearer to a port of major importance with the progress made on the state port facilities now be ing erected at a cost of ten million dol lars under the direction of General Sei bert. A solution of the Birmingham rail-water problem is expected to result THE CHANGING SOUTH There are a few outstanding develop ments in Southern industry known to everyone. That the balance of power in textile mills, especially in cotton spinning, has shifted to the South is a commonplace. From 1880 to 1923 the North doubled its spindleage of 10 mil lions, whereas the South increased its half-million spindles thirty-two times. In sulphur production, whereas thirty years ago Sicily dominated the world, today the South controls this great in dustry; the very bony structure of our chemical processes. A production of 2,000,000 tons today compares with 3,000 in 1900. In iron, the fame of Alabama, especially the Birmingham area, is wbrldwide. Southern production is a ninth of the nation’s despite the fact that the astounding combination of Lake Superior ore and Connellsville coke gave the North a great impetus, never before equalled. Still the South has grown faster. Whereas forty years ago the South produced crude pig-iron today it manufactures costly finished goods. As for lumber, the center of gravity has shifted South with a ven geance. Timber grows to its full lumber- cut size in fifteen or twenty years in the South. In cold climates it takes twice or four times as long. Hence a double cut in the South is more conservative than a half-cut in Canada. One-fourth the acreage of a Canadian timber com pany will supply the Southern grower with as much lumber. In 1870 the South produced two billion board feet a year against 11 billions in the North. Today it produces 17 billions out of 31 billions, o^ the greater part. The North prac tically produces no more than it did a half-century ago. When one thinks of the supremacy in naval stores (rosin, turpentine) that goes with this timber leadership, its importance becomes ob vious.—Magazine of Wall Street. HIGHWAY CONSTRUCTION During the year of 1926 the state com pleted 319.45 miles of cement concrete at a cost of $10,460,033; 130.60 miles of asphaltic concrete at an expenditure of $4,362,460; 107.13 miles of sand asphalt for $1,893,193; 109.40 miles of penetration from the purchase of the Ensley South- . , , j u j i ern railroad by Port of Birmingham examiner s dead o y. company giving the Birmingham dis trict direct connections with the barge landings of the Warrior river for barge transportation direct to Mobile by way of the Warrior river. Southwestern Ports Millions continue to be spent on the Houston ship channel, at Houston, Tex., providing new railroad terminals, warehouses and dockage space for the port of Houston which is rapidly be coming one of the greatest water ship ping points in Ariierica. The Southern HARD BOILED TEACHERS In almost every college there was a teacher, in some places several, of whom appreciative mention was made among the assets. But in virtually every instance a professor or instructor—oc casionally an administrative officer— was acknowledged among the avails not so much because of anything he taught or did in his official capacity, as because of what he was. One Harvard graduate, thus acknowledging his debt to William James as among the permanently inspir ing influences of his life, said to me: “I didn’t get much of his stuff, but I got him.” It is off the same piece that the typi cal college professor views with suspicion those courses to which students gladly flock, and contemns them as snap courses. As if the discovery of any thing joyous and spontaneous in the student’s acceptance must ipso facto indicate a weakness in the hard-boiled front presented by the master’s side of the hereditary feud. You see, the psychology of it is that the student shall get by only over the And that psy chology permeates and embitters the whole relationship between the student and the institution. Perish the thought that every possible effort ought to be made to conserve and develop what the student has; to find out and take ad vantage of what he has acquired. No; make the hurdles as high and difficult as possible, and make them all alike. Let us play no favorites. Everybody must exhibit the same qualities and suffer the same tests. No room here for individuality!—John Palmer Gavitt, in College.