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GET LAND AND HOLD TO IT LIKE GRIM DEATH. That Is the Advice That Should He Given Every White Tenant Fanner In the South—Danger of Great Estates, Absentee Land fordism, and a Dangerous Excess of Negro Tenants_Will South Awake? By E. C. Branson, President State Normal School. Athens, Ga. m f AY I VENTURE an answer to VI the editorial inquiry in your -i-TJL issue of the 23rd inst.: "The Land of Opportunity—Who Shall Possess It?” The Increased averago Biro rf farms in the United States between 1880 and 1900; the rapid increase of large estateB, in many instants more than a million acreg In extent; the bare facts of farm tenancy, and what Is more appalling, the alarm ing increase of farm tenancy throughout the United States and especially in the South; the begin nings of competitive rents among tenants for farm holdings, which will grow greater year by year to the destruction of the tenant classes, Just as In Helglum, Ireland, and Knglnnd; the pressure of population In the United States (we will have nearly two hundred million people in the United States by the middle »»» mi* |i• "in IIi rrniurj ; , mo inev Itablo rise of land values (farm land* alone Increased six billion, one hundred million dollars between 1900 and 1905), the commercializing of farm operations for dividends alone; the decay of farm life and farm operations under the tenant system; the decay of rural schools and churches; the high prices for fnrm products, nlong with the Im possibility of diversification. Intensi fication nnd rotation under the Iron law of tennncy; the movement of country populations cityward, due to our rising Industrial city civilization. All these things mean In the South that wo are rapidly abandoning our rural regions to a tenant farm class, and what Is worse, to a negro tenant farm class, nnd that our agricultural regions once so abandoned are Irre vocably abandoned; that wo are cre ating In the South, and In America for that matter, a population of lack lands nnd lack-alls who must be more transitory nnd migratory, with an Interest In community lire less and less abiding nnd loyal; that we are departing more and more from our only hopo of economic safety nnd freedom: namely, small land holdings by Independent owners. I love these plain people on the farms I am of their sort. But I fear for them exceedingly, for their children and their children’s chil dren as the years go on. Our Intelli gent farmers need to be Just as much concerned with the economic side of farm life as they aro with the agri cultural side. Our educators and statesmen will be obliged to consld fir nil innuo mauviB quiciuj nuu wisely. Neither America nor the South Is Immune from the play of forces that have worked the destruc tion of the farm classes of Ireland and Belgium. But on the other hand, these same forces Intelligently un derstood nnd directed may make of the farm regions of our Southland the agricultural paradise that we find In Holland nnd Denmark. It Is time we were getting ready to an swer the prophetic Inquiry: Choose this dny which economic system ye will serve. We cannot delny an an swer to this question very much longer. If so. It will ho too late. Cur birthright will he forever gone. Now a direct answer to your ques tion. When in one county of my State six men own one-third of the tnrm lands of the entire county; In another, one man one-third of the total farm acreage; In another, three men practically the entire county, and ho on all over the State; when an Indiana company of farm ers buys 21,000 acres of farm lands In the southwestern corner of the State, and another company 33,000 acres in the southeastern corner, and when another company buys 100,000 acres in the northern end; when two English aristocrats own 1,700,000 acres of farm land in Florida; when two more aristocrats own 2,000,000 acres in Mississippi, and a little bunch of aristocrats, 3,000,000 acres in Texas, it seems to me that the people who are going to own our farm land In another generation or two will be people of sense, not necessarily people of heart. The man of sense will own all our South ern farm lands, or nearly so, and we shall have a vast multitude of people scrambling for a footing upon land just as in other countries of the world; and then we shall )lAVA nil t ha nrnhloma that tlon. religion, and statesmanship can deal with to the end of time. It ought to be unceasingly thundered Into the ears of the farm class: “With all thy getting, get land.” And It Is safe to say they will never do It as a great class until they get the necessary understanding of the profound drift of things to-day in American life. As long as the farm owners in the South And more difficulty in get ting good tenants than tenants And in renting land, Just so long are we reasonably free, here and there, from the devilish destructiveness of competitive tenant rents; Just so long will the land owner be willing to sell and move out of his difficul ties, and to sell at a reasonable price to the people who have little money but a great ambition to own little farms of their own. But when in the general increase of population the scrambling for land runs up land values and rents as in other countries, then the eco nomlc end of the world will have come for the great masses of the people who ought to own land and live on It, but who have let their opportunities slip away from them. The high price of farm products, tho sparseness of Southern popula tion, the difficulties here and there of securing good tenants, and the cheapness of our land—all mean lit erally that now Is the day of salva tion. If the poor man down South does not now own land or does not buy land, he may never have a chance again. Booker T. Washington sees this problem and he sees it with an un canny kind of insight and foresight. nr I'lrai miif; iu nir iirgrurs every where with all the power of his soul: "Get land and get it quick, and hold to it with the desperation of death." And the negro is getting land in Georgia. He has nearly $70,000,000 worth of it, and has gotten it within the last 40 years. I do not believe that I am unduly alarmed when I say that the thoughtful people of the South ef every sort and kind need to wake up to fateful economic issues and their significance for the generations to come, because out of these are the very Issues of our social life. The Progressive Farmer and Ga rotte is the best farm paper I ever saw.—Dr. W. E. Morris, Georgians, Ala. DAIRYING CONSERVES SOIL FER TILITY. A Ton of Corn Contains $6.50 Worth of Plant Food, a Ton of Rutter Only 36 Cents Worth. In the densely populated countries of Europe dairying is the chief branch of agriculture because it has been found by actual experience that this branch of farming will furnish the greatest amount of nu trients to supply humanity for the least amount of loss. Lands that were abandoned in European coun tries centuries ago have been made fertile again by dairy farming. We have illustrations in America where farms in the Atlantic States, which have been abandoned because of un productiveness, have been taken up again recently, and with good dairy farming made as productive as they were In their original state. It has been ascertained that ap proximately *8.3 B worth nf fortllltv is removed from the soil with the sale of every ton of wheat, while with every of corn that is sold, ap proximately $6.60 worth of fertility is lost to the soil; but in the case of dairying, where butter is made and where all of the by-products are fed to the pigs and calves, it is found that only 36 cents worth of fertility is removed with each ton of butter sold. The commercial value of a ton of wheat at 76 cents a bushel is approximately $24.76. The commercial value of a ton of butter at 25 cents a pound is $500. For each $100 worth of wheat that is sold from the soil $34.50 worth of fertility is taken off the farm, but for every $100 worth of butter that is sold only 7 cents’ worth of fertility is removed from the soil. This vast difference between wheat farming and dairy is explain ed in this way: Suppose a cow is fed a ration of cowpea hay and corn, both of which have been raised on the farm. The cow assimilates ap proximately 10 per cent of the fer tilising elements, the remaining 90 per cent going back to the farm in f k a «■$« «***«* a# MAM....A m a.%_« a ” — utwuuto. V/ X tuu XV pci cent of fertilizing elements that are removed by the cow, about three fourths go to make milk and one fourth goes to the maintenance of the body. In the case where butter is made on the farm and the milk is separated, its analysis shows that 90 per cent of the fertilizing ele ments of the whole milk is found in the skim milk; hence, cream and butter remove about 10 per cent of the whole amount. The skim milk is returned to the farmer and fed to the pigs and calves. These util ize part of the material for building up the body and the unassimilated part passes on to fertilize the soil. JAS. E. DOWNING, rr a _i_i _ m . _. V/. iyv|ini lUivUb U1 ngl luuuurc. The Kind of Dairymen the South Needs. We are not anxious that more i bankers, merchants, professional j men and city farmers establish -l dairies on farms of which they are \ non-residents; but we would like to 1 see a much larger number of our 1 young farmers, who are living and working on their farms, go Into the , dairy business as a branch of their regular family operations. These are the men who will succeed and stay In the business, and finally build up profitable herds of dairy cattle. The dairy cow is the cheap est animal producer of human food and the greatest soil improver, and we should have more of her. Profit in farming depends primari ly upon soil fertility. DE LAVAL CREAM SEPARATORS ARE NOT ONLY THE BEST I but the cheapest in pro I portion to actual capa I city and actual life of ■ the machines. ■ They are in a class ■ by themselves. ■ The separator that y8°|0 I of the creamerymen use ■ SOLD THROUGH LOCAL AGLNTS I The De Laval Separator Co. H ISS-IS7 BROADWAV 17S-177 WILLIAM ST. 1 NEW YORK MONTREAL M ML MADISON ST* IS A IS PRINCESS ST. M CHICASO WINN1PES I ORUMM A SACRAMENTO STS ICtS WESTERN AVI. J SAN FRANCISCO SEATTLE WANTED Pedigreed Saddle Stud Colt one or two years old DR. T. A. HEATH, Shiloh, Mb*: DISPERSAL SALE Of PROSPECT STOCK FARM I have decided to retire from dairying and offer for sale my herd of Jerseys, located at Gulfport, Miss. 100 Milk Cows. 80 now milking, remainder will be fraah in next 30 days. GO Heifers, one year old; 30 Heifer Calves; 6 Bulla from 6 years to 1 year old; 3 Milk Wagons in good repair; 6 Horses; 3 Mules; 1 Separator; 1 Churn; 1 Butter Worker and all other dairy utensils cheap, for cash or negotiable paper. I. J. HARRY, • • Gulfport, Miss. Poultry Judges Selected Judges, Theo. Hewes, Indianapolis. Ind.; A. F. Summer, Butler, Pa.: F.J. Marshall, College Park, 3a.. have been selected by the Tri-State Poultry Association to judge at the big Poultry show to be ield at the Great Tri-State Fair, Memphis, Tenn., lept 27th to Oct. 4th. These judges all have a lational reputation, and the management should >e congratulated on their selection. Exhibitors :an depend that they will get a square deal if they how at Memphis. C. L. Baker, Sec’y., 292 Madi lon Ave., Memphis, Tenn., will give you any in* ormation regarding show, write him. THE XNIMALS’ FRIEND KILLS EVERY FLY It strikes when our gravity sprayer is used. Keep* In sect pests off animals In pasture longer than any Imitation. Used since 1885. Thousands of dairymen dupli cate 10 to 50 gallons annually after testing imitations. Abso ___^ llltely harmless -.cures all sores. 30 cents worth saves $10 worth of milk and flesh on each cow during fly season. No Lice In Poultry House or any place it is sprayed. If dealer offers substitute, send us his name and $1 for 3-tube gravity Sprayer and enough SHOO-FLY to protect 200 cows Name express office. $1 returned If animals not protected. Free booklet. Special terms to agents. Shoo-FIy Mfg. Co., 1343 N. 1 Oth St.^Phlla.. Pa.