Professor Massey's Editorial Page. Cotton—Our Greate&t Crop. HERE IS NO crop grown In the United States that offers better profits for good farming than cotton, and there is no crop grown that keeps men poorer, when grown in the old single-crop way than cotton. These old methods have enriched the fertilizer manufacturers and have made wastes of thousands of acres in the Cotton Belt. They have kept thou sands of men in bondage to the merchant and the fertilizer seller, year after year taking up the old 'hopeless task of going in debt to start the cotton orop, and coming out at the end of the season of *3en worse off than at the beginning. * The au-cotton man will tell you soberly that there Is* no money in anything but cotton, while *the fact is. iiat in most cases he has not found a great deal in cotton. Yet here and there are farmers who have found out what there is in cot ton when they farm Instead of merely plant cot ton. Talking once with a large cotton farmer in 43outh Carolina who generally made more than a bale per acre, he said that he made cotton at a cost of four and a half cents per pound, and that 'the cured bacon 1 saw him selling by the wagon toad cost him the same price per pound. Cotton was then six cents a pound, and he still had a lit 'tie margin, but the bacon and hams averaged him fourteen cents a pound, and the feeding of the bogs left something to help his soil. At that time the all-cotton men were in distress, "for they could not make cotton at four and a half cents a pound after being carried by a merchant And paying 1041 per cent on everything they bought. The other man kept hogs and sheep and cattle, and made corn and oats and hay and fed 'them, too, and, of course, he had manure, and with these auxiliaries he was carried, but not by the merchant. He bought for cash all that he weeded to buy, and he did not need to buy much, for he did not need to buy fertilizers for his corn, wor a complete fertilizer for his cotton, for it fol <)nwo(l nf tar nano a n rl ui. 1.. j im Increasing in fertility and productiveness, ■while the all-cotton men were asking what fer tilizer to use for corn, oats, wheat, cotton and wvery other crop, and could not think of planting ■any of these helping crops without buying more Vertillzer for them. Realising what the fertilizer for cotton costs them, they can not understand •fhat they need not buy a complete fertilizer for ‘•very other crop, and they jump to the conclusion ■Chat cotton is the only crop they can afford to **ww. J* What we need to learn la, that commercial fer tilizers, properly used, are a valuable adjunct to bur home-made manures in the permanent up building of the soil in humus, but used merely, year after year, for the production of something to sell off the land, they are the ruin of the soil and the farmer alike. And the poorest farms and the poorest farmers in all the Cotton Belt are where the most money has been spent for commercial fertilizers with the one idea of making cotton to •ell. The all-cotton man must spend more money be cause he has to buy his nitrogen in a fertilizer, while the good farmer gets his nitrogen free, and Tor the same money gets twice as much of the phosphoric acid and potash he has to buy, and these stay by him till used by the crops, while the nitrogen does not. The hardest thing to get the average cotton planter to understand is. that the use of a rotation of crops and the growing of legume forage will onable him to reduce his cotton acreage and still knake as much, or more, cotton on one-third the land than he has been making on the whole. It Is the man who takes five acres to make a bate of cotton who Is keeping the Southern soil and him ' aelf poor. J* taut 7 am glad to know that there is a new spirit abroad in the South, and the day is not far distant when a farmer will be ashamed to tell you that his land is poor, for our people are fast doming to understand that If a man’s land remains poor it is the fault of the man who farms It. The Demonstration Work is doing great good, and when they persuade farmers to carry the demon stration through their whole farm work we will have different times in the South. Jl I do not believe that we will ever see six-cent cotton again, because the advance of the boll wee vil will make the culture too risky for any but those who study the conditions and take the best measures to overcome the difficulty. If the boll weevil ever reaches and thrives in the upper sec tions of the Cotton Belt, it will be the end of cot ton there, for we can not, like Texas and the far South, make an early crop ahead of the weevil. Hence the great Importance of getting into a sys tem of farming that will make the farmers of the upper South independent of cotton if they are driven out of Its culture. The advance of the boll weevil does not mean that we should look after new crops, but that we should farm well with the old ones. The farmers, and there are a very few of them, who have made two bales to two and a half per acre, have not done It by simply piling on fertilisers, but by adopting a course of soli Improvement that has Increased the productiveness of their land while paying for the improvement. S You must have something besides cotton to sell. You must raise good forage and feed stock of some sort. One young farmer who adopted my advice made seventy-five bushels of oats per acre, and then cut two tons of cow pea hay from tbe same land before frost. It would take a good Ideal even of fifteen-cent cotton to pay as well, and at the same time, tbe growing of these crops was part of the means used tor getting his cotton crop up to more than a bale per acre on land that when be begun Its Improvement would not make a fifth of a bale per acre. With cowpeas and crimson clover even the In dian corn crop becomes a soil-improver through 1 tbe feeding of tbe shredded stover added to tbe pea bay and the cottonseed meal. It Is to the barn yard that we must look for tbe future, and sided by the barnyard, we can make the South the greatest farming section of tbe country. SOME CHEAP DRAINAGE,—Professor Barrow talks wisely about drainage, and where lands are wet drainage is the first thing needed. I saw soma years ago at Darlington, 8. C., some tiles mads there by a farmer, out of sand and rosin that seemed to ms to be well adapted to answer the purpose. I have drained land that Is still drained after more than 20 years, with skinned pine poles laid side by side In the ditch with a space between and a larger pole laid on top. Pine straw was then placed on. to keep the earth from working In and the whole covered. No water has covered that land since and good clover has been growing where willows grew when the drainage was done. FIVE TEXTS FOR COTTON FARMERS. There is no crop that offers better profits for good farming than cotton, and there is no crop that keeps men poorer when grown in the old single crop way. The poorest farms and the poorest farmers in all the Cotton Belt ore where the most money has been spent for commercial fertilisers with the one idea of making cotton to sell. A The day is not far distant when a man will be ashamed to tell you that his land is poor. J* The advent of the boll weevil does not mean that we should look for new crops, but that we should farm well i with the old ones. Jt It is to the barnyard that we mast look for the future, and aided by it we can make the South the greatest farming section of the country. Good Seeds and Reliable Seedsmen. F YOU QET a seed catalog from, say Smith £ Jones, and everything la It le Smith ft _ Jones’ Special, and there are all sorts of Impossible pictures of fields covered over with big watermelons almost touching each other, cab bages of enormous slse and not a poor head showing in the lot. potatoes being dug and great windrows of potatoes all over the ground, and everything exaggerated In like manner, that Is a good firm to let alone. But If you get a neat catalog, with cuts made from photographs and half-tone pictures showing what may actually be grown, you may consider that here Is a firm that tries to be truthful about Its stock, and is apt to have better seeds than the man who plcturea !m possible things. Then In buying farm seeds, such a# clover and grass, avoid the man who offers these below the rates of the best seedsmen, for low-priced clover seed 11 usually the moet costly you can buy. it means that there Is a lot of trash and weed seed In the sample and the clover seed In It cost more than In the well recleaned seed, and you will be seeding your land with weeds. My practice in buying clover and grass seed Is to send for sam ples and examine them carefully with a magnify ing glass, and to reject any that show fool weed seeds. Then be sure to demand that the seed shall agree with the sample or be seat hack. 1 always bay from established firms who have e reputation at stake, and bay the best, no matter what the prioe Is, tor cheap eeed means poor oeed always. Tools That Will Make Money For Yon. rjS7]0 NOT TALK ABOUT the scarcity of labor {■YV* if you are doing all your cultivation with a single mule and a tingle man to each mule, while a pair of mules to a sulky cultivator will do more work In the crop, and do It better than three men each with a mule and plow. Then In the early stages of the crop, when all around you men are getting In the grass, the man wbo uses s weeder can get over eo fast between rains that tbe gras« has no chance to start, and he does not have to plow and cover. A man gets "in tbe grass*' because of lack of labor-saving implements. Bui there will always be some who. ss Mr. King says, will be too inert to get the Implements they might get, and will go on making cotton with n mule and* one-horse plow at n cost as high as cotton often sells for. To make cotton cheaply you must use the labor-saving implements. Break the crust and kill the grass just starv ing by running over with the smoothing harrow before the corn or cotton comes up, and Again af ter It Is Just up well, and then use the weeder Ull tbe crop la five or sin Inches tnll, and you will never get la the grass. THE MOWER KILL* WKKDfL—Mr. 8trupe to right. The mower to the best thing on the farm for ridding the land of sprouts and briars. Mow the wheat stubble as soon as the ragweed to 1*11 enough to cut, and you will got loss and less ragweed every year the field comes lu small grain, for you will got rid of the seed. Mr. Btrupe, too. hat good ideas as to the care of the mower, and, doubtless, applies them to other farm machinery. MAX fit K HPREADKIt HELPS MAKE MA NlTtE.-—'That to a good Idea of Professor Dod son's that the possession of a manure spreader causes a man to make more manure. It to so bandy that one will not only try to make more manure, but will load up every particle and gat It out Instead of letting It waste around the ata ties. Get a manure spreader and you will want to have more and more use for It. The best place to use the home made manure. In my experience, to on the land that to to go In corn, and to get It there aa fast aa practicable after It to made. Corn can use the fresh manure more profitably than any other crop oa the farm, and will leave the residue la the beet shape tor the small grata erop following tL An open ditch to always In the way, especially when It cannot be crossed and when Its banks are grown up In briers aud hushes. Broad, shallow ditches that cau be crossed with a team not only makes cultivation easier, but give better drainage. When large stalk growth Is made on land do not waste your money by buying nitrogen.