$500 More a Year farming: how to Get It BY UNDERSTANDING THE PART WATER PLAYS IN CROP GROWING. By Tail Butler. -"|EW PEOPLE truly .and fully appreciate the part which _ water plays In crop produc tion. In certain sections of light rainfall tho water problems are lim ited to those Involved in supplying a sufficient quantity to meet the re quirements of the plants, but In the South, where the rainfall Is usually abundant and frequently excessive, other and equally difficult problems are encountered in preventing an excess of water remaining In tho soil to the detriment of the growing rrops. Our problems are two-fold in that, while wo frequently have an excess of water on nil except well drained lands, we also very frequent ly suffer from Insufficient moisture In the soli to meet the full needs of the growing crops. The season of 1909 gave a good example of our two-fold problem. Early in the season the excess of water reached such an extreme as to nearly ruin the crops In many sections; but later In tho season practically all crops suffered because of a lack of sufficient moisture. At the outset, however. It may be well to offer the opinion that our rainfall Is sufficiently abundant and equi tably distributed to meet the needs of large crop production, when such means for its control, as are within the reach of the Intelligent farmer, are properly used for that purpose. It.-*tolling an Kirrw of Water. The problems which confront the Southern fanner because of our large rainfall are many. The first one generally considered Is tho proper j removal of the excess of moisture; from the soil, but when this Is done J great progress has also been made towards solving the other water problem* which confront us. It Is a well known fact that most farm crops suffer severely when water stands over the surface of the land for more than a few hours and It I* universally conceded that such lands need draining, hut even the prompt removal of this visible sur face water does not necessarily mean proper dralnago. To follow j this matter a little further, It may be stated that an excess of freo wa ter In any part of the soil Into which the roots of crops penetrate Is also Injurious to these crop*. Kach soli particle, however dry lUV (HUM •*«Hf MVV VIMV| •• surrounded by n film of moisture. When this moisture becomes so re • ducod, or this film becomes so thin, that the roots of the growing plant* ran no longer obtain their needed supply of water, the crops suffer; , but on the other hand, free water, which nils up those spaces between the soil particles Into which the roots penetrate, has much the same effort, except lu degree, a* water covering the top surface of the soil. In many soils, therefore, under draining Is ns Important as surface drainage and this holds true for all oils under which the subsoil Is of such a nature as to prevent the ex ce«s of water, or free water, prompt ly draining out of that portion of the soil penetrated by the feeding roots of our farm crops. Why T«m» Much Water Means |»oor Crops. The air cannot enter freely Into any soil In which the spaces are upaoet between the soil particles are filled with water and this is prob ably the chief reason why farm crops do not thrive on such soils; but there are many other reasons why such soils are not productive. It is a well-known fact that soil fer tility Is largely a question of bac terial activity. Loose soils filled with decaying organic matter maintain a large and varied bacterial life and these «re fertile soils; but when farm crops will not grow on land because the spaces between the soil particles are Riled with free water other plants, such as bacteria, are also likely to find conditions unsuit able for their growth and work; and yet, this germ life in the soil is es sential as a means of breaking down and making soluble the plant foods in the soil. Too much water kills a soil by killing bacterial life. These are important problems, but the removal of surface water and the under-draining of our soils are not the solution of all our excess water problems. The manner in which this excess of water is re moved is or scarcely less Importance. The heavy rainfalls during both winter and summer, when crops are growing and when the land is bare, are the cause of rapid decay of or ganic nitrogen compounds and the means of leaching large quantities of nitrogen from the soil. This loss of nitrogen by leaching is added to through the same heavy rainfalls by the washing away of our soils and plant foods from all rolling lands. Not only must we drain our lands, but we must also reduce leaching and washing to a minimum, and these combined make the question of controlling our excess of moisture one of the greatest problems con fronting the Southern farmer. Our Crops Should Not Suffer From Lack of Moisture. No lands which are properly drained and contain humus to sup port the needed bacterial, or germ life, should suffer for lack of mois ture. with a well distributed annual rainfall of from 50 to 60 Inches, and yet it is the land which suffers most from excess of moisture in wet u.mlluir (lint tiunnilv RiifferR most from lack of moisture In dry weather. To prevent crops suffering for lack of moisture we must have well drained soils. Not alone those on which surfaco water is not allowed to stand, but also those properly under-drained. If these conditions do not naturally exist because of die lay of tha land and the nature of the subsoil, they must be brought about by man. The soils must also be well-filled with humus so that they will hold large quantities of water and permit water to pass free ly downward by gravitation and up ward by capillary action. They must also be deeply broken and receive shallow cultivation; but we leave a further discussion of the direct rela tion of water supply to the produc tion of crops to bo discussed in the next article of this series. GOVERNMENT “CULTURAL METHODS.” Simply Methods Advocated by The Progressive Farmer and Gazette and Other Agricultural Workers. We are In frequent receipt of in quiries asking to be informed of the government methods of cultivating cotton and corn as carried out in the Farm Demonstration Work being conducted by the United States De partment of Agriculture under the direction of Dr. S. A. Knapp. In answer to these inquiries we may state that the “government cultural methods” are simply those methods which have been advocated or taught by The Progressive Farmer and Ga zette and other teachers and leaders Ib agricultural matters for the past fifteen years. The methods of culti vating cotton and corn which have been editorially advocated In this paper during the past year are the cultural methods advocated and used by the government. Any man who has read the best agricultural papers and Experiment Station Bulletins during the past, is entirely familiar with the best methods of cultivating crops now known to the agricultural world and these are the methods which the government demonstration agents are using to the best of their ability to Induce farmers to adopt. The present condition of our agri culture Is not so much due to a lack of knowledge among the farmers as to Indifference and a non-progressive conservatism on the part of those tilling the soil. The best methods of cultivation are known by a majority of our farm ers, but they do not believe In these strongly enough to cause them to break away from the old easy one horse plow and the purchase of soil fertility ready-made for easy applica tion. Those who think the demonstra tion work Is going to bring them a new and easy way of making large crops or enable them to get some thing for nothing are doomed to dis appointment This demonstration work is one of the best ideas that has been developed in agricultural education work in this country, but neither the idea, nor the methods used, are new. They have not been devised or invented by Dr. Knapp; but the work is exerting a wonderful influence for the extension of bet ter methods and must receive the full and active support of all work ing for or interested in the advance ment of agricultural Interests. It carries to the farms themselves, to the soil, the methods advocated by the agricultural press and all agrlcul tn wo 1 tnnnVinea a f atanrllnap in fKn South for the last ten or fifteen years. We hope the work may be extend ed to every section of the South as rapidly as possible, but no one need wait for the arrival of the govern ! ment agent to put in operation the so-called government “Cultural ; methods.” Follow those methods ad vised by this paper, by the Bulletins of the United States Department of Agriculture and the Experiment Sta tion of your State and you will be using the approved Government Cul tural Methods. " should be placed by the States in every public school in the land and every boy and girl should be required to read it.” So Writes One Enthusiastic Georgia Reader Concerning "A Southerner in Europe” By CLARENCE POE Associate Editor sod Manager The Progressive Farmer and Gazette And thousands of other readers re-echo the sentiment. One reader wants permission to reprint the chapters in his county paper; a prom inent teacher is using it ns a text-hook; one reader says: “It's the only book of travels ever written for the farmer and his family.” A few other typical new comments are given herewith. What the Whole South Says About the Book: TEXAS TENNESSEE j j San Antonio Expreee: “No other book Sewanee Review: “Mr. Poe is alive to the written between Virginia and Texas has prov- Ifauty. art and poetry of Europe as well as to , . .., . . ., . . , the conditions of commerce and agriculture, ed so popular this year. A notable study of xhe book is full of keen, original observations Southern problems and opportunities." of men and manners, and is characterized by a spirit of freshness, spontaneity, and fair LOUISIANA minded nes*. NORTH CAROLINA New Orloano Timee-Domocrat: Mr. Poe s Fayetteville Index: “We read the book at suggestion are sound and practical and de- a single sitting some time ago, but with that serve serious attention.’* we were not satisfied; we kept It in easy reach, and frequently re MISSISSIPPI read certain pass . . ,, ages of it with rare John Sharp Wil- delight. Every page Uams : 1 have en- of the book is vigor J o Jed 11 v e ry ous and holda the M much- reader's in tereat fl| ALABAMA like a novel." Montgomery Ad- VIRGINIA I rortloer: “A book jR. E Barden, V of remarkable in- Straohnrg: “I’m sight and sound just revelling with sense, relating the the greatest de hore and there in light in reading ‘A strong, pleasing Southerner in Eu Knglish." rope.’ It is charm rtnorn ingly written and GEORGIA holds one's interest Thoe. E. Wateon in Jeffersonian Magazine. easily to the end. My only complaint is, it isen Allanla: "It was time for a new book on tirely too brief, and I wish Mr. Poe had toured travels in Europe. All of the works of that every country of Europe, and parts of Asia and kind that are on our bookshelves are out of Africa and given us the benefit of his fascinat- j date. What we wanted was a volume which insr pen in portraying the re&ults of his obaer would picture to us the condition of things vationsand experience.” now. Mr. Poe has supplied this demand with- MARYLAND out the waste of a page." Baltimore American: * It isabooknotonly SOUTH CAROLINA of readable and interesting travel sketches. 1 but even more notable as a vigorous and YorkvUle Ennuirer : “No Southern-written thought-provoking review of the needs and book of years past has compelled more genuine oppor' unities of our Southern people as seen praise or met with more widespread approval." in the light of Old World conditions.” A FOREIGN OPINION. Ambamador Jamee Bryce, of Great Britain: “Equally fresh and graphic in its pictures, judicious and penetrating in its reflections, A Southerner in Europe seems to me singularly fair and acute." __Address All Orders to THE PROGRESSIVE FARMER AND GAZETTE