CHAPTER XI
JUDGMENT IS COME
THE goddess of sleep seemed to have deserted
Westover. Adelaide lay in her mother's arms, either awake and restless or in fitful
sleep from which she frequently awoke with a muffled scream or a physical contortion.
Once, as she nestled closer, her mother heard her murmur: "You must pardon me."
Percy, from the southwest room, was sure he heard
horses feet at the side gate. The murmur of low voices reached his ear, and then
he recognized that horsemen were riding away.
The house was astir at early dawn; and as soon
as breakfast was over Mr. West had the colts hitched to the "buckboard"
and he drove with Percy to Montplain.
"I think your testimony will not be needed
this morning," said Mr. West, "but it may be needed later, and it is well
that you should report to the officers at any rate, since you promised to be there
this morning."
Percy pointed out the place where the attack
had been made, and he looked for a stump of a small tree or for any other object
upon which the negro could have fallen with such force as to mash his eye; but he
saw nothing.
As soon as they reached the village, Mr. West
drove directly to the town house; and there two black bodies were seen hanging from
the limb of an old tree in the courthouse yard. Percy noted that his companion showed
no sign of surprise; and, after the first shock of his complete realization of the
work of the night, he looked calmly upon the scene. They had stopped almost under
the tree.
"Are these the brutes who made the attack
and whom you captured and delivered to the officer?" asked Mr. West.
"They are," he replied.
"In your opinion have they received justice?"
"Yes, Sir," Percy replied, "but
I fear without due process of law."
"Let me tell you, Sir, there is no law on
the statutes under which justice could be meted out to these devils for the nameless
crime which ends in death by murder or by suicide of the helpless victim, a crime
which these wretches committed only in their black hearts--thanks to you, Sir."
As he spoke, the town marshall approached followed
by the negro pastor of the local church and a few of his followers. Silently they
lowered the bodies to the ground, placed them upon improvised stretchers, and carried
them to the potters field outside the village, where rough coffins and graves were
ready to receive them.
As Mr. West and Percy returned to Westover they
discussed the lands which in the main were lying abandoned on either side of the
road.
"Here," said Mr. West, as he paused
on the brow of a sloping hillside, "was as near to Westover as the Union army
came. The position of the breastworks may still be seen. The Southern army lay across
the valley yonder. These two trees are sprouts from an old stump of a tree that was
shot away. About seventeen hundred confederate dead were buried in trenches in the
valley, but they were later removed. The federal dead were carried away as the Union
army retreated. We never learned their number. For three days Westover was made headquarters
of the confederate officers, and my mother worked day and night to prepare food for
them."
They stopped at Westover for a few moments, Percy
remaining in the "buckboard" while Mr. West reported to his family what
they had seen in Montplain.
"Our report," said Mr. West, "hideous
and horrible as it is, will help to restore the child to calm and quiet. To speak
frankly, Sir, occurrences of this sort, sometimes with the worst results, are sufficiently
frequent in the South so that we constantly feel the added weight or burden whenever
the sister, wife, or daughter is left without adequate protection."
The remaining hours of the morning were devoted
to a drive over the country surrounding Westover; and Mr. West consented to Adelaide's
request that she be allowed to drive Percy to the station at Montplain, where he
was to take the afternoon train for Richmond. She chose the "buckboard"
but insisted upon driving.
They talked of their school and college days,
of the books they had read, of anything in fact except of the experiences of the
past twenty-four hours. Even when they entered the valley no shadow crossed Adelaide's
face; but as they neared the station her voice changed, and as Percy looked into
her winsome, frankly upturned face, she said:
"Have I truly been pardoned for my cruel
words last evening? I am sure you were as manly and noble as any man could have been."
"And I am sure you were the bravest little
woman I have ever known," replied Percy, "and I admire you the more for
calling me a coward when you thought I was running away; so there is nothing to pardon
I am sure."
She gave him her hand as a child at parting,
but he thought as he looked into her eyes that he saw the soul of a woman.
CHAPTER XII
THE RESTORATION
PERCY carried with him a most interesting and
attractive circular of information concerning the rapid restoration of the farm lands
of the South. It also stated that further information could be secured from a certain
real estate agent in Richmond, who was found to be still in his office when Percy
arrived in the city late in the afternoon.
The agent was delighted to receive a call from
the Western man, and assured him that he would gladly show him several plantations
not far from the city which could be purchased at very reasonable prices. Indeed
he could have his choice of these old southern homesteads for the very low price
of forty dollars an acre. A map of an adjoining county showed the exact location
of several such farms, some of which were of great historical interest. At what time
in the morning could he be ready to be shown one of these rare bargains?
"What treatment do these lands require to
restore their productiveness?" asked Percy.
"No treatment at all, Sir, except the adoption
of your western methods of farming and your system of crop rotation. I tell you the
results are marvelous when western farmers get hold of these famous old plantations.
Just good farming and a change of crops, that's all they need. "
"Does clover grow well?" asked Percy.
"We grow that a good deal in the West."
"Oh, yes, clover will grow very well, indeed,
but cowpeas is a much better crop than clover. Our best farmers prefer the cowpea;
and after a crop of cowpeas, you can raise large crops of any kind."
"Of course you know of those who have been
successful in restoring some of these old farms," Percy suggested.
"Oh, yes, Sir, many of them, and they are
making money hand over fist, and their lands are increasing in value, and no doubt
will continue to increase just as your western lands have done. Yes, Sir, the greatest
opportunity for investment in land is right here and now, and these old plantations
are being snapped up very rapidly."
"I shall be glad to know of some of these
successful farmers who are using the improved methods. Will you name one, just as
an example, and tell me about what he has done to restore his land?"
"Well, " said the agent, "There's
T. O. Thornton, for example. Mr. Thornton bought an old plantation of a thousand
acres only six years ago at a cost of six dollars an acre. He has been growing cowpeas
in rotation with other crops; and, as I say, he is making money hand over fist. A
few months ago he refused to consider fifty dollars an acre for his land, but still
there are some of these old plantations left that can be bought for forty dollars,
because the people don't really know what they are worth. However, our lands are
all much higher than they were a few years ago."
"Where does Mr. Thornton live?" asked
Percy.
"Oh, he lives at Blairville, nearly a hundred
miles from Richmond. Yes, he lives on his farm near Blairville. I tell you he's making
good all right, but I don't know of any land for sale in that section."
"I think I will go out to Blairville to
see Mr. Thornton's farm," said Percy. " Do you know when the trains run?"
"Well, I'm sorry to say that the train service
is very poor to Blairvile. There is only one train a day that reaches Blairville
in daylight, and that leaves Richmond very early in the morning."
"That is all right," said Percy, "it
will probably get me there in time so that I shall be sure to find Mr. Thornton at
home. I thank you very much, Sir. Perhaps I shall be able to see you again when I
return from Blairville."
"When you return from Blairville is about
the most uncertain thing in the world. As I said, the train service is mighty poor
to Blairville, and it's still poorer, you'll find, when you want to leave Blairville.
Why, a traveling man told me he had been on the road for fifteen years, and he swore
he had spent seven of 'em at Blairville waiting for trains. Better take my advice
and look over some of the fine old plantations right here in the next county and
then you can take all the rest of the month if you wish getting in and out of Blairville."
About eight o'clock the following morning Percy
might have been seen walking along the railroad which ran through Mr. Thornton's
farm about two miles from Blairvile. He saw a well beaten path which led from the
railroad to a nearby cottage and a knock brought to the door a negro woman followed
by several children.
"Can you tell me where Mr. Thornton's farm
is?" he inquired.
"Yes, Suh," she replied. "This
is Mistah Tho'nton's place, right heah, Suh. Leastways, it was his place; but we
done bought twenty acahs of it heah, wheah we live, 'cept tain all paid fo' yit.
Mistah Tho'nton lives in the big house over theah 'bout half a mile."
"May I ask what you have to pay for land
here?"
"Oh, we have to pay ten dollahs an acah,
cause we can't pay cash. My ol' man he wo'ks on the railroad section and we just
pay Mistah Tho'nton foh dollahs every month. My chil'n wo'k in the ga'den and tend
that acah patch o' co'n."
"Do you fertilize the corn?"
"Yes, Suh. We can't grow nothin' heah without
fe'tilizah. We got two hundred pounds fo' three dollahs last spring and planted it
with the co'n."
As Percy turned in at Mr. Thornton's gate he
saw a white man and two negroes working at the barn. "Pardon me, but is this
Mr. Thornton?" asked Percy as he approached.
"That is my name."
"Well, my name is Johnston. I am especially
interested in learning all I can about the farm lands in this section and the best
methods of farming. I live in Illinois, and have thought some of selling our little
farm out there and buying a larger one here in the East where the land is much cheaper
than with us. A real estate agent in Richmond has told me something of the progress
you are making in the improvement of your large farm. I hope you will not let me
interfere with your work, Sir."
"Oh, this work is not much. I've had a little
lumber sawed at a mill which is running just now over beyond my farm, and I am trying
to put a shed up here over part of the barn yard so we can save more of the manure.
I shall be very glad to give you any information I can either about my own farming
or about the farm lands in this section."
"You have about a thousand acres in your
farm I was told."
"Yes, we still have some over nine hundred
acres in the place, but we are farming only about two hundred acres, including the
meadow and pasture land. The other seven hundred acres are not fenced, and, as you
will see, the land is mostly grown up to scrub trees."
"Your corn appears to be a very good crop.
About how many acres of corn do you have this year?"
"I have only fourteen acres. That is all
I could cover with manure, and it is hardly worth trying to raise corn without manure."
"Do you use any commercial fertilizer?"
"Well, I've been using some bone meal. I've
no use for the ordinary complete commercial fertilizer. It sometimes helps a little
for one year; but it seems to leave the land poorer than ever. Bone meal lasts longer
and doesn't seem to hurt the land. I see from the agricultural papers that some of
the experiment stations report good results from the use of fine- ground raw rock
phosphate; but they advise using it in connection with organic matter, such as manure
or clover plowed under. I am planning to get some and mix it with the manure here
under this shed. Do you use commercial fertilizers in Illinois?"
"Not to speak of, but some of our farmers
are beginning to use the raw phosphate. Our experiment station has found that our
most extensive soil types are not rich in phosphorus, and has republished for our
benefit the reports from the Maryland and Ohio experiment stations showing that the
fine-ground natural rock phosphate appears to be the most economical form to be used
and that it is likely to prove much more profitable in the long run, although it
may not give very marked results the first year or two. May I ask what products you
sell from your farm, Mr. Thornton?"
"I sell cream. I have a special trade in
Richmond, and I ship my cream direct to the city. I also sell a few hogs and some
wheat. I usually put wheat after corn, and have fourteen acres of wheat seeded between
the corn shocks over there. Sometimes I don't get the wheat seeded, and then I put
the land in cowpeas. I usually raise about twenty-five acres of cowpeas, and the
rest of the cleared land I use for meadow and pasture. I usually sow timothy after
cowpeas, and I like to break up as much old pasture land for corn as I can put manure
on."
"I was told that you had been offered fifty
dollars an acre for your farm, Mr. Thornton, but that you would not consider the
offer."
Mr. Thornton laughed heartily at this remark.
"That must have come from the Richmond land
agent," he said. "Someone else was telling me that story a short time ago.
The fact is one of those real estate agents was out here last spring and he asked
me if I would consider an offer of fifty dollars an acre for our land. I told him
that I didn't think that I would as long as any one who wishes to buy can get all
the land he wants in this section for five or ten dollars an acre. That's as near
as I came to having an offer of fifty dollars an acre for this land. The land adjoining
me on the south is is for sale, and I am sure you could buy that farm of about seven
hundred acres for four dollars an acre after they get the timber off. Some of the
land has not been cropped for a hundred years, I guess; and there are a few trees
on it that are big enough for light saw-stuff. A man has bought the timber that is
worth cutting, and he is running a saw over there now; but he'll get out all that's
good for anything in a few months."
"May I ask how long you have been farming
here, Mr. Thornton?"
"Twelve years on this farm," he replied.
"You see this estate was left to my wife and her sister who still lives with
us. We were married twelve years ago and I have been working ever since to make a
living for us on this old worn-out farm. Of course I have made some little improvements
about the barns, but we've sold a little land too. The railroad company wanted about
an acre down where that little stream crosses, for a water supply, and I got twelve
hundred dollars for that."
"Now, I've already taken too much of your
time," said Percy. "I thank you for your kindness in giving me so much
information. If there is no objection I shall be glad to take a walk about over your
farm and the adjoining land, and perhaps I can see you again for a few moments when
I return."
"Certainly," Mr. Thornton replied.
"There is no objection whatsoever. We are going to Blairville this morning,
but we shall be back before noon and I shall be glad to see you then. I fear you
have been given some misinformation by the real estate agents. Some of them, by the
way, are Northern men who came down here and bought land and when they found they
could not make a living on it, they sold it to other land hunters, and I suppose
that they made so much in the deal that they stayed right here as real estate agents.
They are great advertisers; but I reckon our Southern real estate men can just about
keep even. The agent who was out here last spring told me he showed one Northern
man a farm for $12 an acre and he was afraid to buy. Then he took him into another
county and showed him a poorer farm for $45 and he bought that at once.
"The road there runs out through the fields.
Our land runs back to the other public road and beyond that is the farm I told you
of where the saw mill is running. I've got some pretty good cowpeas you'll pass by.
I haven't got them off the racks yet."
Percy found the cowpea hay piled in large shocks
over tripods made of short stout poles which served to keep the hay off the ground
to some extent, and this permitted the cowpeas to be cured in larger piles and with
less danger of loss from molding.
"I find that the soil on your farm and on
the other farm is very generally acid," said Percy a few hours later when Mr.
Thornton asked what he thought of the condititons of farming. "Have you used
any lime for improving the soil?"
"Yes, I tried it about ten years ago, and
it helped some, but not enough to make it pay. I put ten barrels on about three acres.
I thought it helped the corn and wheat a little, and it showed right to the line
where I put cowpeas on the land, but I don't think it paid, and it's mighty disagreeable
stuff to handle."
"Do you remember how much it cost?"
Percy asked.
"Yes, Sir. The regular price was a dollar
a barrel, but by taking ten barrels I got the ton for eight dollars; but I'd rather
have eight dollars' worth of bone meal."
"I think the lime would be a great help
to clover," said Percy.
"Yes, that might be. They tell me that they
used to grow lots of clover here; but it played out completely, and nobody sows clover
now, except occasionally on an old feed lot which is rich enough to grow anything.
It takes mighty good land to grow clover; but cowpeas are better for us. They do
pretty well for this old land, only the seed costs too much, and they make a sight
of work, and they're mighty hard to get cured. You see they aren't ready for hay
till the hot weather is mostly past. If we could handle them in June and July, as
we do timothy we'd have no trouble; but we don't get cowpeas planted till June, and
September is a poor time for haying."
"It seems to me that clover is a much more
satisfactory crop," said Percy. "One can sow clover with oats in the spring,
or on wheat land in the late winter, and there is no more trouble with it until it
is ready for haying about fifteen months later, unless the land is weedy or the clover
makes such a growth the first fall that we must clip it to prevent either the weeds
or the clover from seeding. This means that when you are planting your ground for
cowpeas the next year after wheat or oats, we are just ready to begin harvesting
our clover hay; and besides the regular hay crop we usually have some growth the
fall before which is left on the land as a fertilizer, and then we get a second crop
of clover which we save either for hay or seed. Even after the seed crop is harvested
there is usually some later fall growth, and some let the clover stand till it grows
some more the next spring and then plow it under for corn."
"I can see that clover would be much better
than cowpeas if we could grow it; but, as I said, it's played out here. Our land
simply won't grow it any more. Not having to plow for clover would save a great deal
of the work we must do for our cowpeas."
"Some of our farmers follow a three-year
rotation and plow the ground only once in three years," said Percy. " They
plow the ground for corn, disk it the next spring when oats and clover are seeded,
and then leave the land in clover the next year. In that way they regularly harvest
four crops, including the two clover crops, from only one plowing; and in exceptional
seasons I have known an extra crop of clover hay to be harvested in the late fall
on the land where the oats were grown.
"In regard to the lime question," Percy
continued, "I wonder if you know of the work the Pennsylvania Experiment Station
has been doing with the use of ground limestone in comparison with burned lime."
"No, I never heard of ground limestone being
used. I supposed it had to be burned. I should think it would be very expensive to
grind limestone."
"No, it costs much less to grind it than
to burn it," Percy replied. "Mills are used for grinding rock in cement
manufacture, and the rock phosphate and bone meal must all be ground before using
them either for direct application or for the manufacture of acidulated fertilizers;
and limestone is not so hard to grind as some other rocks. Furthermore it does not
need to be so very finely ground. If fine enough so that it will pass through a sieve
with ten meshes to the inch it does very well. That you see would be a hundred meshes
to the square inch; and, of course, a great deal of it will be much finer than that.
In fact the ground limestone used in the Pennsylvania experiments was only fine enough
so that about ninety per cent. of it would pass a sieve with ten meshes to the inch,
and yet the limestone gave decidedly better results than the burned lime, and it
is not nearly so disagreeable to handle. Besides this, the ground limestone is much
less expensive. It can be obtained at most points in Illinois for about a dollar
and fifty cents a ton."
"A dollar and fifty cents a ton!" exclaimed
Mr. Thornton. "Well, that is cheap, but how about the freight and the barrels
and bags? Freight is a big item with us."
"The dollar and fifty cents includes the
freight," was the reply.
"Includes the cost and the freight both?"
"Yes, and the Illinois farmers have it shipped
in bulk, so there is no expense for barrels or bags. Of course the supplies of both
coal and limestone are very abundant, and with a well-equipped plant the actual cost
of grinding does not exceed twenty-five cents a ton. The original cost of the material
ground and on board cars at the works varies from about sixty cents to one dollar
a ton, and this leaves a very fair margin of profit.
"The men who furnish the ground limestone
realize that very large quantities of it are needed if the soils of Illinois are
to be kept fertile, and they also realize that the ultimate prosperity of the country
depends upon agricultural prosperity. Their far-sightedness and patriotism combine
to lead them to try to sell carloads of limestone instead of tons of burned lime.
As a matter of fact five or ten dollars profit on a car of limestone, the use of
which in large quantities is thus made possible in systems of positive soil improvement,
is very much better for all concerned than a profit of half that much on a single
ton of burned lime which is used as a soil stimulant in systems of soil exhaustion."
"It is certainly true," said Mr. Thornton,
"that all other great industries depend upon agriculture, directly or indirectly.
I have thought of it many times. It seems to me that fishing is about the only exception
of importance."
Mr. Thornton requested that Percy remain for
lunch in order that they might return to the field to let him see the soil acidity
tests made.
CHAPTER XIII
WHY PERCY WENT TO COLLEGE
"I AM interested to know where you learned
these things about acid soils and lime and limestone," said Mr. Thornton.
"Mostly in the agricultural college,"
replied Percy, "but much of the information really comes from the investigations
that are conducted by the experiment stations. For example, the best information
the world affords concerning the comparative value of burned lime and ground limestone
is furnished by the Pennsylvania Agricultural Experiment Station. Those experiments
have been carried on continuously since 1882, and the results of twenty years' careful
investigations have recently been published. A four-year rotation of crops was practiced,
including corn, oats, wheat, and hay, the hay being clover and timothy mixed. With
every crop the limestone has given better results than the burned lime. In fact the
burned lime seems to have produced injurious results of late years, and the analysis
of the soil shows that there has been large loss of humus and nitrogen where the
burned lime has been used, the actual loss being equivalent to the destruction of
more than two tons of farm manure per acre per annum."
"Well, we surely need this information,"
said Mr. Thornton. "I have always supposed that the teachers in the agricultural
college knew little or nothing of practical farming."
"I did not go to college to learn practical
farming, if we mean by that the common practice of agriculture," replied Percy.
"I already knew what we call practical farming; that is, how to do the ordinary
farm work, including such operations as plowing, planting, cultivating, and harvesting;
but it seems to me, Mr. Thornton, that this sort of practical farming has resulted
in practical ruin for most of these Eastern lands. The fact is there is a side to
agriculture that I knew almost nothing about as a so-called practical farmer, and
I am coming to believe that what we commonly call practical farming is often the
most impractical farming,--certainly this is true if it ultimately results in depleted
and abandoned lands. The truly practical farmer is the man who knows not only how
to do, but also what to do and why he does it. The Simplon railroad tunnel connecting
Switzerland with Italy is twelve miles long,--the longest in the world. It was dug
from the two ends, but under the mountain, six miles from either end, the two holes
came together exactly, within a limit of error of less than six inches, and made
one continuous tunnel twelve miles long. Now, this was not all accomplished by the
practical men who knew how to handle a spade in digging a ditch. The work was controlled
by science, and it was known in advance what the results would be. I do not mean
that it was known how hard the digging would be, nor how much trouble would be caused
by caving or by water; but it was known that if the practical work was done, the
final outcome would be successful.
"I think it is even more important that
we understand enough of the sciences which underlie the practice of agriculture so
we may know in advance that when the practical farm work is done the soil will be
richer and better rather than poorer and less productive because of our impractical
farming.
"As I said, I did not go to the agricultural
college to learn the practice or art of farming; I went to learn the science of agriculture;
but, as a matter of fact, I found the college professor knew about as much of practical
agriculture as I did and a great deal of science that I did not know. I found that
the Dean of the college, who is also Director of the Experiment Station, had been
born and raised on the farm, had done all kinds of farm work, the same as other farm
boys, had gone through an agricultural college, and after his graduation had returned
to the farm and remained there for ten years doing his own work with his own hands.
He has had as much actual farm experience as you have had, Mr. Thornton, and ten
years more than I have had. He was finally called from the farm to become an assistant
in the college from which he was graduated, and in a few years he was advanced to
head professor in agriculture. About ten years ago he was made dean and director
of the agricultural college and experiment station in my own state; and I have been
told that he will not recommend any one for a responsible position in an agricultural
college unless he has had both farm experience and scientific training. He and most
of his associates are owners of farms and would return to them again if they did
not feel that they are of more service to agriculture as teachers and investigators."
"I am very glad to know about this,"
said Mr. Thornton. "Certainly your opinion, based upon such knowledge as you
have of your own college, is worth more than all the common talk I have ever heard
from those who never saw an agricultural college. I wish you would tell me something
more in regard to what crops are made of and about the methods of making land better
even while we are taking crops from it every year."
CHAPTER XIV
A LESSON IN FARM SCIENCE
"THE subject is somewhat complicated,"
Percy replied, "yet it involves no more difficult problems than have been solved
in many other lines. The chief trouble is that we have done too little thinking about
our own real problems. Even in the country schools we have learned something of banking
and various other lines of business, something of the history and politics of this
and other countries, something of the great achievements in war, in discovery and
exploration, in art, literature, and invention; but we have not learned what our
soils contain nor what our crops require. Not one farmer in a hundred knows what
chemical elements are absolutely required for the production of our agricultural
plants, and one may work hard on the farm from four o'clock in the morning till nine
o'clock at night for forty years and still not learn what corn is made of.
"All agricultural plants are composed of
ten chemical elements, and the growth of any crop is absolutely dependent upon the
supply of these plant food elements. If the supply of any one of these plant food
elements is limited, the crop yield will also be limited. The grain and grass crops,
such as corn, oats, wheat, and timothy, also the root crops and potatoes, secure
two elements from the air, one from water, and seven from the soil.
"The supply of some elements is constantly
renewed by natural processes, and iron, one of the ten, is contained in all normal
soils in absolutely inexhaustible amount; while other elements become deficient and
the supply must be renewed by man, or crop yields decrease and farming becomes unprofitable.
"Matter is absolutely indestructible. It
may change its form, but not a pound of material substance can be destroyed. Matter
moves in cycles, and the key to the problem of successful permanent agriculture is
the circulation of plant food. While some elements have a natural cycle which is
amply sufficient to meet all requirements for these elements as plant food, other
elements have no such cycle, and it is the chief business of the farmer to make these
elements circulate.
"Take carbon, for example. This element
is well represented by hard coal. Soft coal and charcoal are chiefly carbon. The
diamond is pure crystallized carbon, and charcoal made from pure sugar is pure, uncrystallized
carbon. This can easily be made by heating a lump of sugar on a red hot stove until
only a black coal remains. Now these different solid materials represent carbon in
the elemental form or free state. But carbon may unite with other elements to form
chemical compounds, and these may be solids, liquids, gases.
"Thus carbon and sulfur are both solid elements,
one black and the other yellow, as generally found. If these two elements are mixed
together under ordinary conditions no change occurs. The result is simply a mixture
of carbon and sulfur. But, if this mixture is heated in a retort which excludes the
air, the carbon and sulfur unite into a chemical compound called carbon disulfid.
This compound is neither black, yellow, nor solid; but it is a colorless, limpid
liquid; and yet it contains absolutely nothing except carbon and sulfur."
"That seems strange," remarked Mr.
Thornton. "Yes, but similar changes are going on about us all the time,"
replied Percy. "We put ten pounds of solid black coal in the stove and an hour
later we find nothing there, except a few ounces of ashes which represent the impurities
in the coal."
"Well, the coal is burned up and destroyed,
is it not?"
"The carbon is burned and changed, but not
destroyed. In this case, the heat has caused the carbon to unite with the element
oxygen which exists in the air in the form of a gas, and a chemical compound is formed
which we call carbon dioxid. This compound is a colorless gas. This element oxygen
enters the vent of the stove and the compound carbon dioxid passes off through the
chimney. If there is any smoke, it is due to small particles of unburned carbon or
other colored substances.
"As a rule more or less sulfur is contained
in coal, wood, and other organic matter, and this also is burned to sulfur dioxid
and carried into the air, from which it is brought back to the soil in rain in ample
amounts to supply all of the sulfur required by plants.
"Everywhere over the earth the atmosphere
contains some carbon dioxid and this compound furnishes all agricultural plants their
necessary supply of both carbon and oxygen. In other words, these are the two elements
that plants secure from the air. The gas, carbon dioxid, passes into the plant through
the breathing pores on the under side of the leaves. These are microscopic openings
but very numerous. A square inch of a corn leaf may have a hundred thousand breathing
pores."
"Now, as we go on, I am especially anxious
to get at this question of supply and demand," said Mr. Thornton. "I think
I understand about iron and sulfur, and also that these two elements, carbon and
oxygen, are both contained in the air in the compound called carbon dioxid, and that
this must supply our crops with those two elements of plant food. I'd like to know
about the supply. How much is there in the air and how much do the crops require?"
"As you know," said Percy, "the
atmospheric pressure is about fifteen pounds to the square inch."
"Yes, I've heard that, I know."
"Well, that means, of course, that there
are fifteen pounds of air resting on every square inch of the earth's surface; in
other words, that a column of air one inch square and as high as the air goes, perhaps
fifty miles or more, weighs fifteen pounds."
"Yes, that is very clear."
"There is only one pound of carbon in ten
thousand pounds of ordinary country air. Now, there are one hundred and sixty square
rods in an acre, and since there are twelve inches in a foot and sixteen and one-half
feet in a rod, it is easy to compute that there are nearly a hundred million pounds
of air on an acre, and that the carbon in this amounts to only five tons. A three-ton
crop of corn or hay contains one and one-fourth tons of the element carbon; so that
the total amount of the carbon in the air over an acre of land is sufficient for
only four such crops; while a single crop of corn yielding a hundred bushels to the
acre, such as we often raise in Illinois on old feed-lots or other pieces of well
treated land would require half of the total supply of carbon contained in the air
over an acre. However, the largest crop of corn ever grown, of which there is an
established authentic record, was not raised in Illinois, but in the state of South
Carolina, in the county of Marlborough, in the year 1898, by Z. J. Drake; and, according
to the authentic report of the official committee that measured the land and saw
the crop harvested and weighed, and awarded Drake a prize of five hundred dollars
given by the Orange Judd Publishing Company,--according to this very creditable evidence,
that acre of land yielded 239 bushels of thoroughly aid-dried corn; and such a crop,
Mr. Thornton, would require as much carbon as the total amount contained in the air
over an acre of land."
"Well, that is astonishing! Then there must
be some other source of supply besides the air."
"There is no other direct source from which
plants secure carbon; but of course the air is in constant motion. Only one- fourth
of the earth's surface is land, and perhaps only one- fourth of this land is cropped,
and the average crop is about one-fourth of three tons; so that the total present
supply of carbon in the air would be sufficient for about two hundred and fifty years.
But as a matter of fact the supply is permanently maintained by the carbon cycle.
Thus the carbon of coal that is burned in the stove returns to the air in carbon
dioxid; and all combustion of coal and wood, grass and weeds, and all other vegetable
matter returns carbon to the atmosphere. All decay of organic matter, as in the fermentation
of manure in the pile and the rotting of vegetable matter in the soil, is a form
of slow combustion and carbon dioxid is the chief produce of such decay. Sometimes
an appreciable amount of heat is developed, as in the steaming pile of stable refuse
lying in the barnyard, while the heat evolved in the soil is too quickly disseminated
to be apparent.
"In addition to all this, every animal exhales
carbon dioxid. The body heat and the animal force or energy are supplied by the combustion
of organic food within the body, and here, too, carbon dioxid is the chief product
of combustion.
"Thus, as a general average, the amount
of carbon removed from the atmosphere by growing plants is no greater than the amount
returned to the air by these various forms of combustion or decay. In like manner
the supply of combined oxygen is maintained, both carbon and oxygen being furnished
to the plant m the carbon dioxid.
"As a matter of fact, the air consists very
largely of oxygen and nitrogen, both in the free state, but in this form these elements
cannot be utilized in the growth of agricultural plants. The only apparent exception
to this is in case of legume crops, such as clover, alfalfa, peas, beans, and vetch,
which have power to utilize the free nitrogen by means of their symbiotic relationship
with certain nitrogen- fixing bacteria which live, or may live, in tubercles on their
roots.
"Carbon and oxygen constitute about ninety
per cent. of the dry matter of ordinary farm crops, and with the addition of hydrogen
very important plant constituents are produced; such as starch, sugar, fiber, or
cellulose, which constitute the carbohydrate group. As the name indicates, this group
contains carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen, the last two being present in the same proportion
as in water.
"Water is composed of the two elements,
hydrogen and oxygen, both of which are gases in the free state. Water is taken into
the plant through the roots and decomposed in the leaves in contact with the carbon
dioxid under the influence of sunlight and the life principle. The oxygen from the
water and part of that from the carbon dioxid is given off into the air through the
breathing pores, while the carbon, hydrogen, and part of the oxygen, unite to form
the carbohydrates. These three elements constitute about ninety-five per cent. of
our farm crops, and yet every one of the other seven plant food elements is just
as essential to the growth and full development of the plant as are these three."
"Then so long as we have air above and moisture
below, our crops will not lack for carbon, oxygen, and hydrogen. Is that the summing
up of the matter?"
"Yes, Sir," Percy replied.
"And those three elements make up ninety-five
per cent. of our farm crops. Is that correct?"
"Yes, Sir, as an average."
"Well, now it seems to me, if nature thus
provides ninety- five per cent. of all we need, we ought to find some way of furnishing
the other five per cent. It makes me think of the young wife who told her husband
she could live on bread and water, with his love, and he told her that if she would
furnish the bread he'd skirmish around and get the water. But, say, did that South
Carolina man use any fertilizer for that immense crop of corn?"
"Some fertilizer, yes. He applied manure
and fertilizer from February till June. In all he applied 1000 bushels (about 30
tons) of farm manure, 600 bushels of whole cotton seed, 900 pounds of cotton seed
meal, 900 pounds of kainit, 1100 pounds of guano, 200 pounds of bone meal, 200 pounds
of acid phosphate, and 400 pounds of sodium nitrate."
"I would also like to know the facts about
this nitrogen business," said Mr. Thornton. " I've understood that one
could get some of it from the air, and I would much rather get it that way than to
buy it from the fertilizer agent at twenty cents a pound. Cowpeas don't seem to help
much, and we don't have the cotton seed, and we never have sufficient manure to cover
much land."
"It is a remarkable fact," said Percy,
"that of the ten essential elements of plant food, nitrogen is the most abundant,
measured by crop requirements, and at the same time the most expensive. The air above
an acre of land contains enough carbon for a hundred bushels of corn per acre for
two years, and enough nitrogen for five hundred thousand years; and yet the nitrogen
in commercial fertilizers costs from fifteen to twenty cents a pound. At commercial
prices for nitrogen, every man who owns an acre of land is a millionaire.
"You mean he has millions in the air,"
amended Mr. Thornton.
"Yes, that is the better way to put it,"
Percy admitted, "but the fact is he can not only get this nitrogen for nothing
by means of legume crops, but he is paid for getting it, because those crops are
profitable to raise for their own value. Clover, alfalfa, cowpeas, and soy beans
are all profitable crops, and they all have power to use the free nitrogen of the
air.
"There are a few important facts to be kept
in mind regarding nitrogen:
"A fifty-bushel crop of corn takes 75 pounds
of nitrogen from the soil. Of this amount about 50 pounds are in the grain, 24 pounds
are in the stalks, and 1 pound in the cobs. A fifty-bushel crop of oats takes 48
pounds of nitrogen from the soil, 33 pounds in the grain, and 15 in the straw. A
twenty-five bushel crop of wheat also takes 48 pounds of nitrogen from the soil,
36 pounds in the grain and 12 in the straw.
"These amounts will vary to some extent
with the quality of the crops, just as the weight of a bushel of wheat varies from
perhaps 56 to 64 pounds, although as an average wheat weighs 60 pounds to the bushel."
"You surely remember figures well,"
remarked Mr. Thornton as he made some notations.
"It is easy to remember what we think about
much and often," said Percy; " as easy to remember that a ton of cowpea
hay contains 43 pounds of nitrogen as that Blairville is 53 miles from Richmond."
"I have added those figures together,"
continued Mr. Thornton, "and I find that the three crops, corn, oats, and wheat,
would require 171 pounds of nitrogen. Now suppose we raise a crop of cowpeas the
fourth year, how much nitrogen would be added to the soil in the roots and stubble?"
"Not any."
"Do you mean to say that the roots and stubble
of the cowpeas would add no nitrogen to the soil? Surely that does not agree with
the common talk."
"It is even worse than that," said
Percy. "The cowpea roots and stubble would contain less nitrogen than the cowpea
crop takes from a soil capable of yielding thirty bushels of corn or oats. Only about
one-tenth of the nitrogen contained in the cowpea plant is left in the roots and
stubble when the crop is harvested. Suppose the yield is two tons per acre of cowpea
hay! Such a crop would contain about 86 pounds of nitrogen, and about 10 pounds of
nitrogen per acre would be left in the roots and stubble."
"Well, that wouldn't go far toward replacing
the 171 pounds removed from the soil by the corn, oats, and wheat, that's sure,"
was Mr. Thornton's comment.
"It is worse than that," Percy repeated.
"Land that will furnish 48 pounds of nitrogen for a crop of oats or wheat will
furnish more than 10 pounds for a crop of cowpeas. At the end of such a four-year
rotation such a soil would be about 200 pounds poorer in nitrogen per acre than at
the beginning, if all crops were removed and nothing returned."
"How much would it cost to put that nitrogen
back in commercial fertilizer?" asked Mr. Thornton.
"That depends, of course, upon what kind
of fertilizer is used."
"Well, most people around here who use fertilizer
buy what the agent calls two-eight-two, and its costs about one dollar and fifty
cents a hundred pounds; but it can be bought by the ton for about twenty-five dollars."
"'Two-eight-two' means that the fertilizer
is guaranteed to contain two per cent. of ammonia, eight per cent. of available 'phosphoric
acid,' and two per cent. of potash."
"Ammonia is the same as nitrogen, is it
not?"
"No, it is not the same," replied Percy.
"Ammonia is a compound of nitrogen and hydrogen. In order to have a clear understanding
of the relation between ammonia and nitrogen we only need to know the combining weights
of the elements. The smallest particle of an element is called an atom. Hydrogen
is the lightest of all the elements and the weight of the hydrogen atom is used as
the standard or unit for the measure of all other atomic weights; thus the atom of
hydrogen weighs one."
"One what?" interrupted Mr. Thornton.
"No one knows," replied Percy. "The
atom is extremely small, much too small to be seen with the most powerful microscope;
but you know all things are relative and we always measure one thing in terms of
another. We say a foot is twelve inches and an inch is one-twelfth of a foot, and
there we stop with a definition of each expressed in terms of the other, and both
depending upon an arbitrary standard that somebody once adopted; and yet, while the
foot is known in most countries, it is rare that two countries have exactly the same
standard for this measure of length.
"We do not know the exact weight of the
hydrogen atom, but we do know its relative weight. If the hydrogen atom weighs one
then other atomic weights are as follows:
12 for carbon
14 for nitrogen
16 for oxygen
24 for magnesium
31 for phosphorus
32 for sulfur
39 for potassium
40 for calcium
56 for iron
"This means that the iron atom is fifty-six
times as heavy as the hydrogen atom. These atomic weights are absolutely necessary
to a clear understanding of the compounds formed by the union or combination of two
or more elements.
"One other thing is also necessary. That
is to keep in mind the number of bonds, or hands, possessed by each atom. The atom
of hydrogen has only one hand, and the same is true of potassium. Each atom of oxygen
has two hands; so that one oxygen atom can hold two hydrogen atoms in the chemical
compound called water (H-O-H or H20). Other elements having
two-handed atoms are magnesium and calcium. Strange to say, the sulfur atom has six
hands but sometimes uses only two, the others seemingly being clasped together in
pairs. I will write it out for you, thus:
Hydrogen sulfid: H-S-H or H2S
Sulfur dioxid: O=S=0 or S02
"The carbon atom has four hands, and atoms
of nitrogen and phosphorus have five hands, but sometimes use only three. Thus, in
the compound called ammonia, one atom of nitrogen always holds three atoms of hydrogen;
so, if you buy seventeen pounds of ammonia you would get only fourteen pounds of
nitrogen and three pounds of hydrogen. This means that, if the two-eight-two fertilizer
contains two per cent. of ammonia, it contains only one and two-thirds per cent.
of the actual element nitrogen, and a ton of such fertilizer would contain thirty-three
pounds of nitrogen. In other words it would take six tons of such fertilizer to replace
the nitrogen removed from one acre of land in four years if the crop yields were
fifty bushels of corn and oats, twenty-five bushels of wheat, and two tons of cowpea
hay."
"Six tons! Why, that would cost a hundred
and fifty dollars! Well, well, I thought I knew we couldn't afford to keep up our
land with commercial fertilizer; but I didn't think it was that bad. Almost forty
dollars an acre a year!"
"It need not be quite that bad," said
Percy. "You see this two-eight-two fertilizer contains eight per cent. of so-called
'phosphoric acid' and two per cent. of potash, and those constituents may be worth
much more than the nitrogen; but, so far as nitrogen is concerned, the two hundred
pounds would cost from thirty to forty dollars in the best nitrogen fertilizers in
the market, such as dried blood or sodium nitrate."
"Well, even that would be eight or ten dollars
a year per acre, and that is as much as the land is worth, and this wouldn't include
any other plant food elements, such as 'phosphoric acid' and potash."
"No, that much would be required for the
nitrogen alone if bought in commercial form. I understand that the farmers who use
this common commercial fertilizer, apply about three hundred pounds of it to the
acre perhaps twice in four years. That would cost about eight dollars for the four
years, and the total nitrogen applied in the two applications would amount to 10
pounds per acre."
"It is not quite correct to call 'phosphoric
acid' and potash plant food elements. They are not elements but compounds."
"Like ammonia, which is part nitrogen and
part hydrogen?"
"The problem is somewhat similar, but not
just the same," Percy replied. "These compounds contain oxygen and not
hydrogen."
"Well, I understand that both oxygen and
hydrogen are furnished by natural processes, the oxygen from carbon dioxid in the
carbon cycle, and the hydrogen from the water which falls in rain."
"That is all true, but you really do not
buy the hydrogen or oxygen. While they are included in the two-eight-two guarantee,
the price is adjusted for that. Thus the cost of nitrogen would be just the same
whether you purchase the fertilizer on the basis of seventeen cents a pound for the
actual element nitrogen, or fourteen cents a pound for the ammonia."
"Yes, I see how that might be, but I don't
see why the guarantee should be two per cent. of ammonia instead of one and two-thirds
per cent. of nitrogen, when the nitrogen is all that gives it value."
"There is no good reason for it," said
Percy. "It is one of those customs that are conceived in ignorance and continued
in selfishness. It is very much simpler to consider the whole subject on the basis
of actual plant food elements, and I am glad to say that many of the state laws already
require the nitrogen to be guaranteed in terms of the actual element, a few states
now require the phosphorus and potassium also to be reported on the element basis."
"That is hopeful, at least," said Mr.
Thornton. "Now, if I am not asking too many questions or keeping you here too
long, I shall be glad to have you explain two more points that come to my mind: First,
how much of that two hundred pounds of nitrogen can I put back in the manure produced
on the farm; and, second, just what is meant by potash and phosphoric acid?"
Percy made a few computations and then replied:
"If you sell the wheat; feed all the corn, oats, and cowpea hay and half of
the straw and corn fodder, and use the other half for bedding; and, if you save absolutely
all of the manure produced, including both the solid and liquid excrement; then it
would be possible to recover and return to the land about 173 pounds of nitrogen
during the four years, compared with the 200 pounds taken from the soil."
"I can't understand that," said Mr.
Thornton. "How can that be when one of the crops is cowpeas?"
"In average live-stock and dairy farming,"
Percy continued, "about one-fourth of the nitrogen contained in the food consumed
is retained in the milk and animal growth, and you can make the computations for
yourself. It should be kept in mind, moreover, that much of the manure produced on
the average farm is wasted. More than half of the nitrogen is in the liquid excrement,
and it is extremely difficult to prevent loss of the liquid manure. There is also
large loss of nitrogen from the fermentation of manure in piles; and when you smell
ammonia in the stable, see the manure pile steaming, or colored liquid soaking into
the ground beneath, or flowing away in rainy weather, you may know that nitrogen
is being lost. How many tons of manure can you apply to your land under such a system
of farming as we have been discussing?"
"Well, I've figured a good deal on manure,"
was the reply, "and I think with four fields producing such crops as you counted
on, that I could possibly put ten or twelve tons to the acre on one field every year."
"That would return from 100 to 120 pounds
of nitrogen;" said Percy, "instead of the 173 pounds possible to be returned
if there is no loss. There are three methods that may be used to reduce the loss
of manure: One of these is to do the feeding on the fields. Another is to haul the
manure from the stable every day or two and spread it on the land. The third is to
allow the manure to accumulate in deep stalls for several weeks, using plenty of
bedding to absorb the liquid and keep the animals clean, and then haul and spread
it when convenient."
"I'm afraid that last method would not do
at all for the dairy farmer," said Mr. Thornton. "You see we have to keep
things very clean and in sanitary condition."
"Most often the cleanest and most sanitary
method the average farmer has of handling the manure in dairying," said Percy,
"is to keep it buried as much as possible under plenty of clean bedding; and
one of the worst methods is to overhaul it every day by 'cleaning' the stable, unless
you could have concrete floors throughout, and flush them well once or twice a day,
thus losing a considerable part of the valuable excrement. If you allow the manure
to accumulate for several weeks at a time, it is best to have sufficient room in
the stable or shed so that the cows need not be tied. If allowed to run loose they
will find clean places to lie down even during the night.
"In case of horses, the manure can be kept
buried for several weeks if some means are used to prevent the escape of ammonia.
Cattle produce what is called a 'cold' manure, while it is called ' hot' from horses
because it decomposes so readily. One of the best substances to use for the prevention
of loss of ammonia in horse stables is acid phosphate, which has power to unite with
ammonia and hold it in a fixed compound. About one pound of acid phosphate per day
for each horse should be sprinkled over the manure. Of course the phosphorus contained
in the acid phosphate has considerable value for its own sake, and care should be
taken that you do not lose more phosphorus from the acid phosphate applied than the
value of all the ammonia saved by this means. Porous earth floors may absorb very
considerable amounts of liquid from wet manure lying underneath the dry bedding,
and the acid phosphate sometimes injures the horses' feet; so that, as a rule, it
is better to clean the horse stables every day and supply phosphorus in raw phosphate
at one-fourth of its cost in acid phosphate."
"Before we leave the nitrogen question,"
said Mr. Thornton, "I want to ask if you can suggest how we can get enough of
the several million dollars' worth we have in the air to supply the needs of our
crops and build up our land?"
"Grow more legumes, and plow more under,
either directly or in manure."
"That sounds easy, but can you suggest some
practical system?"
"I think so. I know too little of your conditions
to think I could suggest the best system for you to adopt; but I can surely suggest
one that will supply nitrogen for such crop yields as we have considered: Suppose
we change the order of the crops and grow wheat, corn, oats, and cowpeas, and grow
clover with the wheat and oats, plowing the clover under in the spring as green manure
for corn and cowpeas. If necessary to prevent the clover or weeds from producing
seed, the field may be clipped with the mower in the late summer when the clover
has made some growth after the wheat and oats have been removed. Leave this season's
growth lying on the land. As an average it should amount to more than half a ton
of hay per acre. The next spring the clover is allowed to grow for several weeks.
It should be plowed under for corn on one field early in May and two or three weeks
later the other field is plowed for cowpeas. The spring growth should average nearly
a ton of clover hay per acre. In this way clover equivalent to about three tons of
hay could be plowed under. Clover hay contains 40 pounds of nitrogen per ton; so
this would supply about 120 pounds of nitrogen in addition to the 173 pounds possible
to be supplied in the manure. This would make possible a total return of 293 pounds,
while we figured some 200 pounds removed. Of course if you save only 100 pounds in
the manure the amount returned would be reduced to 220 pounds."
"There are two questionable points in this
plan," said Mr. Thornton, " one is the impossibility, or at least the difficulty,
of growing clover on this land. The other point is, How much of that 120 pounds of
nitrogen returned in the clover is taken from the soil itself? I remember you figured
86 pounds of nitrogen in two tons of cowpea hay, but you also assumed that about
29 pounds of it would be taken from the soil."
"Yes, that is true," Percy replied,
" at least 29 pounds and probably more. You see the cowpeas grow during the
same months as corn and on land prepared in about the same manner. If the soil will
furnish 75 pounds of nitrogen to the corn crop, and 48 pounds to the oats and wheat,
it would surely furnish 29 pounds to the cowpeas. Of course this particular amount
has no special significance, but the other definite amounts removed in corn, oats,
and wheat aggregate 171 and the 29 pounds were added to make the round 200 pounds.
Perhaps 210 pounds would be nearer the truth, in which case the soil would furnish
about half as much nitrogen to the cowpea crop as to the corn crop. This is reasonable
considering that corn is the first crop grown after the manure is applied. You will
remember that only one-tenth of the total nitrogen of the cowpea plant remains in
the roots and stubble?"
"Yes, that's what we figured on."
"The cowpea is an annual plant. It is planted,
produces its seed, and dies the same season. It has no need to store up material
in the roots for future use. Consequently the substance of the root is largely taken
into the tops as the plan approaches maturity. It is different with the clover plant.
This is a biennial with some tendency toward the perennial plant. It lives long and
develops an extensive root system, and its stores up material in the roots during
part of its life for use at a later period. About one-third of the total nitrogen
content of the clover plant is contained in the roots and stubble. This means that
the roots and stubble of a two-ton crop of clover would contain about forty pounds
of nitrogen, or more than we assumed was taken from the soil by the cowpeas. But
there is still another point in favor of the clover. The cowpeas make their growth
during the summer months when nitrification is most active, whereas the clover growth
we have counted on occurs chiefly during the fall and spring when nitrification is
much less active, consequently the clover probably takes even a larger proportion
of its nitrogen from the air than we have counted on."
"That is rather confusing," said Mr.
Thornton, "you say the cowpea grows when nitrification is most active, and yet
you say that it takes less nitrogen from the air than clover. Isn't that somewhat
contradictory?"
"I think not," said Percy." Let
me see.--Just what do you understand by nitrification?"
"Getting nitrogen from the air, is it not?"
"No, no. That explains it. Getting nitrogen
from the air is called nitrogen fixation. This action is carried on by the nitrogen-fixing
bacteria, such as the clover bacteria, the soy bean bacteria, the alfalfa bacteria,
which, by the way, are evidently the same as the bacteria of sweet clover, or mellilotus.
Then we also have the cowpea bacteria, and these seem to be the same as the bacteria
of the wild partridge pea, a kind of sensitive plant with yellow flowers, and a tiny
goblet standing upright at the base of each compound leaf,--the plant called Cassia
Chamaecrista by the botanist."
"Nitrification is an altogether--"
"Well, I declare! Excuse me, Sir, but that's
Charlie calling the cows. Scotts, I don't see where the time has gone! You'll excuse
me, Sir, but I must look after separating the cream. You will greatly oblige me,
Mr. Johnston, if you will have dinner with us and share our home to-night. In addition
to the pleasure of your company, I confess that I am mightily interested in this
subject; and I would like especially to get a clear understanding of that nitrification
process, and we've not had time to discuss the potash and 'phosphoric acid,' which
I know cost some of our farmers a good part of all they get for their crops, and
still their lands are as poor as ever."
"I appreciate very much your kind invitation,
Mr. Thornton. I came to you for correct information regarding the agricultural conditions
here, and you were very kind and indulgent to answer my blunt questions, even concerning
your own farm practice and experience. I feel, Sir, that I am already greatly indebted
to you, but it will certainly be a great pleasure to me to remain with you to-night."
For more than two hours they had been standing,
leaning, or sitting in a field beside a shock of cowpea hay, Percy toying with his
soil auger, and Mr. Thornton making records now and then in his pocket note book.
CHAPTER XV
COEDUCATION
PERCY took a lesson in turning the cream separator
and after dinner Mrs. Thornton assured him that she and her sister were greatly disappointed
that they had not been permitted to hear the discussion concerning the use of science
on the farm.
"We have never forsaken our belief that
these old farms can again be made to yield bountiful crops," she said, "as
ours did for so many years under the management of our ancestors. 'Hope springs eternal
in the human breast.' I stop with that for I do not like the rest of the couplet.
We can see that some marked progress has been made under my husband's management,
although he feels that it is very slow work building up a run-down farm. But he has
raised some fine crops on the fields under cultivation,--as much as ten barrels of
corn to the acre, have you not, Dear?" she asked.
"Yes, fully that much, but even ten barrels
per acre on one small field is nothing compared to the great fields of corn Mr. Johnston
raises in the West. and it makes a mighty small show here on a nine-hundred-acre
farm, most of which hasn't been cropped for more than twenty years; and even then
it was given up because the negro tenants couldn't raise corn enough to live on.
"I've talked some with the fertilizer agents,
but they don't know much about fertilizers, except what they read in the testimonials
published in the advertising booklets. I have had some good help from the agricultural
papers, but most that is written for the papers doesn't apply to our farm, and it's
so indefinite and incomplete, that I've just spent this whole evening asking Mr.
Johnston questions; and I haven't given him a chance to answer them all yet."
"I am sure you have not asked more questions
this afternoon than I did this forenoon," Percy remarked; "and all your
answers were based on authentic history or actual experience, while my answers were
only what I have learned from others."
"Well, if we were more ready to learn from
others, it would be better for all of us," said Mr. Thornton. "Experience
is a mighty dear teacher and, even if we finally learn the lesson, it may be too
everlasting late for us to apply it. Now we all want to learn about that process
called nitrification."
"It is an extremely interesting and important
process," said Percy. "It includes the stages or steps by which the insoluble
organic nitrogen of the soil is converted into soluble nitrate nitrogen, in which
form it become available as food for all of our agricultural plants."
"Excepting the legumes?" asked Mr.
Thornton.
"Excepting none," Percy replied. "The
legume plants, like clover, take nitrogen from the soil so far as they can secure
it in available form, and in this respect clover is not different from corn. The
respect in which it is different is the power of clover to secure additional supplies
of nitrogen from the air when the soil's available supply becomes inadequate to meet
the needs of the growing clover. If the conditions are suitable for nitrogen-fixation,
then the growth of the legume plants need not be limited by lack of nitrogen; whereas,
nitrogen is probably the element that first limits the growth and yield of all other
crops on your common soils."
"Now, what do you think of that, Girls?
With millions of dollars' worth of nitrogen in the air over every acre, our crops
are poor just because we don't use it. I wish you would tell me something about the
suitable conditions for nitrogen-fixation, Mr. Johnston. You understand, Girls, that
nitrogen-fixation is simply getting nitrogen from the inexhaustible supply in the
air by means of little microscopic organisms called bacteria, which live in little
balls called tubercles attached to the roots of certain plants called legumes, like
cowpeas and clover. Corn and wheat and such crops can't get this nitrogen. Now, Mr.
Johnston is telling about nitrification, a process which is entirely different from
nitrogen-fixation. Excuse me, Mr. Johnston, but I wanted to make this plain to Mrs.
Thornton and Miss Russell."
"I am glad you did so," Percy replied.
"As I was saying, nitrification has no connection whatever with the free nitrogen
of the air.
"All plants take their food in solution;
that is, the plant food taken from the soil must be dissolved in the soil water or
moisture. Of the essential elements of plant food, seven are taken from the soil
through the roots into the plant. These seven do not include those of which water
itself is composed. Now, these seven plant food elements exist in the soil almost
exclusively in an insoluble form. In that condition they are not available to the
plant for plant food; and it is the business of the farmer to make this plant food
available as fast as is needed by his growing crops.
"The nitrogen of the soil exists in the
organic matter; that is, in such materials as plant roots, weeds, and stubble, that
may have been plowed under, or any kind of vegetable maker incorporated with the
soil, including all sorts of crop residues, green manures, and the common farm fertilizers
from the stables. When these organic materials are decomposed and disintegrated to
such an extent that their structure is completely destroyed, the resulting mass of
partially decayed black organic matter is called humus. The nitrogen of the soil
is one of the constituents of this humus or other organic matter. It is not contained
in the mineral particles of the soil. On the other hand the other six elements of
plant food are contained largely in the mineral part of the soil, as the clay, silt,
and sand. thus the iron, calcium, magnesium, and potassium, all of which are called
abundant elements, are contained in the mineral matter, and usually in considerable
amounts, while they are found in the organic matter in very small proportion. The
phosphorus and sulfur are found in very limited quantities in most soils, but they
are present in both organic and mineral form.
"Practically the entire stock or store of
all of the elements in the soil is insoluble and consequently unavailable for the
use of growing plants; and, as I said, some of the chief plans and efforts of the
farmer should be directed to the business of making plant food available.
"The nitrogen contained in the insoluble
organic matter of the soil is made soluble and available by the process called nitrification.
Three different kinds of bacteria are required to bring about the complete change."
"Are these bacteria different from the nitrogen
fixing bacteria?" asked Mr. Thornton.
"Entirely different," Percy replied,
"and there are three distinct kinds, one for each of the three steps in the
process.
"The first may be called ammonia bacteria.
They have power to convert organic nitrogen into ammonia nitrogen; that is, into
the compound of nitrogen and hydrogen; and this step in the process is called ammonification.
"The other two kinds are the true nitrifying
bacteria. One of them converts the ammonia into nitrites, and the other changes the
nitrites into nitrates. These two kinds are known as the nitrite bacteria and the
nitrate bacteria.
"Technically the last two steps in the process
are nitrification proper; but, speaking generally, the term nitrification is used
to include the three steps, or both ammonification and nitrification proper.
"Now, the nitrifying bacteria require certain
conditions, otherwise they will not perform their functions. Among these essential
conditions are the presence of moisture and free oxygen, a supply of carbonates,
certain food materials for the bacteria themselves, and a temperature within certain
limits.
"You may remember, Mr. Thornton, that more
soil nitrogen is made available for cowpeas during the summer weather than for clover
during the cooler fall and spring?"
"Yes, I remember that distinction."
"I declare," said Miss Russell, "Tom
talks as though he had been there and seen the things going on. I haven't seen you
using any microscope."
"Well, I tell you, I've mighty near seen
'em," was the reply. "Mr. Johnston makes everything so plain that I can
mighty near see what he saw when he looked through the microscope."
"I greatly enjoyed my microscopic work,"
said Percy, "and still more the work in the chemical laboratory where we finally
learned to analyze soils, to take them apart and see what they contain,--how much
nitrogen how much phosphorus, how much limestone, or how much soil acidity, which
means that limestone is needed. Then I also enjoyed the work in the pot-culture laboratory,
where we learned not to analyze but to synthesize; that is, to put different materials
together to make a soil. Thus, we would make one soil and put in all of the essential
plant food elements except nitrogen, and another with only phosphorus lacking, and
still another with both nitrogen and phosphorus present, and all of the other essential
elements provided, except potassium, or magnesium, or iron. These prepared soils
were put in glass jars having a hole in the bottom for drainage, and then the same
kind of seeds were planted in each jar or pot. Some students planted corn, others
oats or wheat or any kind of farm seeds. I grew rape plants in one series of pots,
and I have a photograph with me which shows very well that all of the plant food
elements are essential.
"You see one pot contained no plant food
and one was prepared with all of the ten essential elements provided. Then the other
pots contained all but one of the necessary soil elements, as indicated in the photograph.
"
"Why, I never saw anything like that,"
said Mrs. Thornton.
"But I have many a time," said her
husband, "right here on this old farm; I don't know what's lacking, of course,
but some years I've thought most everything was lacking. But, according to this pot-culture
test, you can't raise any crops if just one of these ten elements is lacking, no
matter how much you have of the other nine; and it seems to make no difference which
one is lacking, you don't get any crop. Is that the fact, Mr. Johnston?"
One pot with no plant food,
and one with all the essential elements provided, and still others with but one element
lacking. All planted the same day and cared for alike.
"Yes, Sir," Percy replied. "Where
all of the elements are provided, a fine crop is produced, but in each case where
a single element is omitted that is the only difference, and in some cases the result
is worse than where no plant food is supplied. It seems to hurt the plant worse to
throw its food supply completely out of balance than to leave it with nothing except
what it draws from the meager store in the seed planted. Of course all the pots were
planted with the same kind of seed at the same time, and they were all watered uniformly
every day."
"Those results are very striking, indeed,"
said Miss Russell," but I suppose one would never see such marked differences
under farm conditions?"
"Only under unusual or abnormal conditions,"
Percy replied, "but the fact is that as a very general rule our crop yields
are limited chiefly because the supply of available plant food is limited. Sometimes
the clover crop is a complete failure on untreated land, while it lives and produces
a good crop if the soil is properly treated; and in such cases the difference developed
in the field is just as marked as in the pot-cultures. In general we may set it down
as an absolute fact that the productive power of normal land depends primarily upon
the ability of the soil to feed the crop.
"I have here a photograph of a corn field
on very abnormal soil. They had the negative at the Experiment Station and I secured
a print from it, in part because I became interested in a story connected with this
experiment field, which our professor of soil fertility reported to us.

"This shows a field of corn growing on
peaty swamp land, of which there are several hundred thousand acres in the swamp
regions of Illinois, Indiana, and Wisconsin. This peaty soil is extremely rich in
humus and nitrogen, well supplied with phosphorus and other elements, except potassium;
but in this element it is extremely deficient. This land was drained out at large
expense, and produced two or three large crops because the fresh grass roots contained
some readily available potassium; but after three or four years the corn crop became
a complete failure, as you see from the untreated check plot on the right; while
the land on the left, where potassium was applied, produced forty-five bushels per
acre the year this photograph was taken, and with heavier treatment from sixty to
seventy-five bushels are produced."
"Seventy-five bushels would be fifteen barrels
of corn per acre. How's that, Little Wife?" asked Tom.
"It's even more wonderful than the pot culture,"
replied Mrs. Thornton; "but how much did the potassium cost, Mr. Johnston."
"About three dollars an acre," replied
Percy; "but of course the land has almost no value if not treated; and as a
matter of fact the three dollars is less than half the interest on the difference
in value between this land and our ordinary corn belt land. These peaty swamp lands
are to a large extent in scattered areas, and commonly, if a farmer owns some of
this kind of land, he also owns some other good land, perhaps adjoining the swamp;
but this is not always the case, and was not with the man in the story I mentioned.
This man lived a few miles away and his farm was practically all of this peaty swamp
land type. He heard of this experiment field and came with his family to see it.
"As he stood looking, first at the corn
on the treated and untreated land, and then at his wife and large family of children,
he broke down and cried like a child. Later he explained to the superintendent who
was showing him the experiments, that he had put the best of his life into that kind
of land. 'The land looked rich,' said he,--'as rich as any land I ever saw. I bought
it and drained it and built my home on a sandy knoll. The first crops were fairly
good, and we hoped for better crops; but instead they grew worse and worse. We raised
what we could on a small patch of sandy land, and kept trying to find out what we
could grow on this black bogus land. Sometimes I helped the neighbors and got a little
money, but my wife and I and my older children have wasted twenty years on this land.
Poverty, poverty, always! How was I to know that this single substance which you
call potassium was all we needed to make this land productive and valuable? Oh, if
I had only known this twenty years ago, before my wife had worked like a slave,--before
my children had grown almost to manhood and womanhood, in poverty and ignorance!'"
"Why wasn't the matter investigated sooner?"
asked Miss Russell. "Why didn't the government find out what the land needed
long before?"
"I am a Yankee," said Percy. "Why
have American statesmen ridden back and forth to the national capitol through a wilderness
of depleted and abandoned farms in the eastern states for half a century or more
before the first appropriation was made for the purpose of agricultural investigation?
and why, even now, does not this rich federal government appropriate to the agricultural
experiment station in every state a fund at least equal to the aggregate salaries
of the congressmen from the same state, this fund to be used exclusively for the
purpose of discovering and demonstrating profitable systems of permanent agriculture
on every type of soil? Why do we as a nation expend five hundred million dollars
annually for the development of the army and navy, and only fifteen millions for
agriculture, the one industry whose ultimate prosperity must measure the destiny
of the nation?
"Moralists sometimes tell us that the fall
of the Babylonian Empire, the fall of the Egyptian Empire, of the Grecian Empire,
and the Roman Empire, were all due to the development of pride and immorality among
those peoples; whereas, we believe that civilization tends rather toward peace, security,
and higher citizenship. Is not the chief explanation for the ultimate and successive
fall of those great empires to be found in the exhausted or wasted agricultural resources
of the country?
"The land that once flowed with milk and
honey might then support a mighty empire, with independent resources sufficient for
times of great emergencies, but now that land seems almost barren and supports a
few wandering bands of marauding Arabs and villages of beggars.
"The power and world influence of a nation
must pass away with the passing of material resources; for poverty is helpless, and
ignorance is the inevitable result of continued poverty. Only the prosperous can
afford education or trained intelligence.
"Old land is poorer than new land. There
are exceptions, but this is the rule. The fact is known and recognized by all America.
"What does it mean? It means that the practice
of the past and present art of agriculture leads toward land ruin,--not only in China,
where famine and starvation are common, notwithstanding that thousands and thousands
of Chinese are employed constantly in saving every particle of fertilizing material,
even gathering the human excrements from every house and by-place in village and
country, as carefully as our farmers gather honey from their hives; not only in India
where starvation's ghost is always present, where, as a rule, there are more hungry
people than the total population of the United States; not only in Russia where famine
is frequent; but, likewise in the United States of America, the present practice
of the art of agriculture tends toward land ruin.
"Nations rise and fall; so does the productive
power of vast areas of land. Better drainage, better seed, better implements, and
more thorough tillage, all tend toward larger crops, but they also tend toward ultimate
land ruin, for the removal of larger crops only hastens soil depletion.
"To bring about the adoption of systems
of farming that will restore our depleted Eastern and Southern soils, and that will
maintain or increase the productive power of our remaining fertile lands of the Great
Central West, where we are now producing half of the total corn crop of the entire
world, is not only the most important material problem of the United States; but
to bring this about is worthy of, and will require, the best thought of the most
influential men of America. Without a prosperous agriculture here there can be no
permanent prosperity for our American institutions. While some small countries can
support themselves by conducting trade, commerce, and manufacture, for other countries,
American agriculture must not only be self-supporting, but, in large degree, agriculture
must support our other great industries.
"Without agriculture, the coal and iron
would remain in the earth, the forest would be left uncut, the railroads would be
abandoned, the cities depopulated, and the wooded lands and water-ways would again
be used only for hunting and fishing. Shall we not remember, for example, that the
coal mine yields a single harvest--one crop--and is then forever abandoned; while
the soil must yield a hundred--yes, a thousand crops, and even then it must be richer
and more productive than at the beginning, if those who come after us are to continue
to multiply and replenish the earth.
"Even the best possible system of soil improvement,
we must admit, is not the absolute and final solution of this, the most stupendous
problem of the United States. If war gives way to peace and pestilence to science,
then the time will come when the soils of America shall reach the limit of the highest
productive power possible to be permanently maintained, even by the general adoption
of the most practical scientific methods; and before that limit is reached, if power,
progress, and plenty are to continue in our beloved country, there must be developed
and enforced the law of the survival of the fittest; otherwise there is no ultimate
future for America different from that of China, India, and Russia, the only great
agricultural countries comparable to the United States. An enlightened humanity must
grant to all the right to live, but the reproduction and perpetuation of the unfit
can never be an absolute and inalienable right.
"Under the present laws and customs, a man
may spend half his life in the insane asylum or in the penitentiary, and still be
the father of a dozen children with degenerate tendencies. There should be no reproduction
from convicted criminals, insane persons, and other degenerates. Thieves, grafters,
bribers and bribe-takers all belong in the same class, and it should not be left
possible for them to reproduce their kind. They are a burden upon the public which
the public must bear, but the public is under no obligation to permit their multiplication.
The children of such should never become the parents of others. It is a crime against
both the child and the public.
"No doubt you will consider this extremely
visionary, and so it is; but unless America can see a vision somewhat like this,
a population that is doubling three or four times each century, and an area of depleted
soils that is also increasing at a rapid rate will combine to bring our Ship of State
into a current against which we may battle in vain; for there is not another New
World to bring new wealth, new prosperity, and new life and light after another period
of 'Dark Ages.'
"Whether we shall ever apply any such intelligence
to the possible improvement of our own race as we have in the great improvement of
our cattle and corn is, of course, an open question; but to some extent you will
agree that the grafter and the insane, like the poet, are born and not made. Of course
there are, and always will be, marked variations, mutants, or 'sports,' but, nevertheless,
natural inheritance is the master key to the improvement of every form of life; and
it is an encouraging fact that some of the states, as Indiana, for example, have
already adopted laws looking toward the reduction of the reproduction of convicted
degenerates."