Saturday, September 9, 1916 EDUCATION, COOPERATION, LEGISLATION (1) Education to Develop Power. G) Cooperation to Multiply It, and (3) Legislation and Good Government x to Promote Equal Rfchti and Human Progress-Plain Talk About Men, Measure and Movements Involved . ' : : By CLARENCE POE ' " : 1 A A Study of tfie Tenant Problem - S I have said before; I have lived the life both of landlord and renter, and I think I can sympathize with both classes of our people and hold the scales? equally between them. As.L ' ' ana- , , .1. . x -:.t.i ' il 'Now there man heingsi the noblest possible ;form of rural civ ilization: Here thenis rbur . twofold problem- to promote as amply :as possible (1) the conserva tion of soil fertility: ,(2) the highest human devel- opment. ' V-.'P ' - ;r (11) : 1033 useful citizens than they are on large tracts held for speculation by absentee k landlords".: And not only isxthis true, but taxes are higher yet; in pro portion to value, on the personal property of the landless .man struggling to become a home-owner. Take a case mentioned by Mr. R. F. Beasley in .'ifr ""-Renters' and Landlords' Special" one year ago.' In his countyVlast year he said the tax; as-, sessors -vaiued cotton at 9, cents a pound, corn ' and wheat at $1 a bushel, horses at $200 and cows at $50, etc.r-all the personal property of the poor epA w astuay oi xnc leuaiu ytumciu duiius uner-.- . , - . . .. . , . . ; vvuuw struggling 10 get a loomoia in me worm sec ' , - s ' j " " - ownership favors both4 these desired' results. It lL ' " ; , - 14 inrt ringly to two .great needs: ;. . . el0tnW because1 as' Tames Oliver used .tV';em?sessed at Poetically 100 per cent value 1 The conservationrofoil, fertility. ' 1 V clps ause, as James Uhver, used to ,WMe kfld wag asseisW at probably less than .33 2. The conservation of manhood. . . . Both these issues are, of - course, of. the highest importance to our -future 'civilization. "The high say j nappy , is the land that is tilled by the man who owns - it." '"he magic of ownership," as a philosopher of another era has said, "converts de- per cent of its real vaiue. This :s Is - an iniquity in the sight pi God, a sin agamst:Hiy poor ; and the nation, state, or county import i t "t serts and sand banks into blossoming 'gardens." : u c , .. . - A ' ' pst conception of a nation, said the late James J. .;- . . . - - guilty of such a policy is sure to pay the penalty Hill in his famous St. Paul address, ten years ago - . . x, - . . i v r ' x "hm cognized as promoting the highest human develop last week," th .of austee fo posterUy. The .. been- recognized-from .ihe time Nation must think of the generations yet unborn, . 4. .; . ... vv licit " Vjrvfiuaiiii tii gciici anwiia dgu saii J1 lia and take steps -to safeguard our . one great inheri tance from the Almighty the. fertility of the soil through which the life of these generations is to be sustained. ' v -5 '' ' ' The Nation's Duty to Conserve Soil Fertility THIS last idea was the thought that was per haps oftencst in the mind and heart of the late Henry Wallace.' during the last, years of his life. "The Voiceless Land"; was 'a' subject he was constantly writing aboutmeaning , to x say "bold, peasantry", as cthe f mainstay "of England's greatness,- until our ewn" tinie when Dr. Carver proclaims that "next tOi war, pestilence and fam ine,, the. worst thing- that can, happen to arrural community is absentee landlordism." with all, the accumulated interest of the Almigh ty's vengeance. And any political party endors-''-ing such a policy should be in peril of the people's" wraths 1 : : - : r - . ' $ : .' ' ; - - :-7y V r" ;:;7v;- Reforms in Taxation and Rural Credits BELIEVE that' provision should be made for encouraging home:ownership by providing that L a resident's first $1,000 of -real estate should I We" Must -Encourage (i)-Permanence of H TUt?'6 ha'f the JrateAat7hich.th,e " . ResidenceXa) of Rewards - - til W T'-f 7 u-rtam ,r , , . , ; double iniquity of taxing large holdings higher A LL'4n all, therefore, we hardly think that any-J than small, and of taxing personal property at a onewilldenj that home ownefshippromoteV, higher rate than real 1 estater should be forever.;;; bnth soil-rnnservaiinn 'arA trip flowpvino- nf .!t,- ' .' -. - -t ' .;.-v ."TV r-"--TvV : r .) 'f. . r 'i, UUUC rtWcty Willi. ?1a . KntTi r.fanrl1nrH . anrl pnarifv snpdV s nut . ' ' sjji:. ''i.! a richer civilization. Let us. not be content, how- ' hr svstpm! nf QtatP nnH Inral tavatinn ciin,,t every rciuiix . . ' . - , Jtr! V - 7 their views as to, their own interests in MM i! contract, the land' itself,, more' important than 7 :eve' -Withlhe simple; statement; but go further (i) .encourage f small holdings rather, than large; " either, is- silent, voiceless, and its interests are too a- ,.W.1S 18 : " vV- ' (2) .orne-ownership rather than absentee land-.":' ; ' , nfip .ntrarl Thi f, the wav thp fnw," We th 48 true fr twQ masons (l);because lordism; and (3) should seek to encourage the " ' 1 1 ! I of the; permanence of the home-owner's-residenceMattdless - mariin the accumulation ' of personal,. ' - oh .the land ; (2) because of the- sureness" that he property as the necessary route to home-owner-j S will reap what hesows, whether that is soil-pov- . ship. - r , " ' M erty.or soil-fertility.- Our states are at fault for hot engrafting these , - And then ft follows as the night the day that the principles into their systems of taxation,. and the' further we get away from, these two" characteris- Nation. .is at fault, for not engrafting the same- tics of home-ownership (1) permanence of resi- principle into what would then become an excel-, dence, (2), sureness of . rewards-the-worse be- ient' system .of, rural credits. But so long as mon- . comes our condition. -And in the ojie-year renting' ey is lent "to land Speculators, through joint-stocW . they are fed well or compelled to starve wil v system of ihi South,-we get just as far away as it banks as cheaply or virtually as cheaply as to depend on whether the rights of the land are - js possible for us to get in any business governed resident, home-owning farmers through national ' 1 J by such circumstances. . .. . .. ,. ... We reach, "then,. these conclusions that home ownership is the ideal ; and that where home ownership cannot exist, we should aim at least to provide as far as possible the:conditions that often outraged. This is the way the great Iowa farmer-leader put -.it on one occasion; ' . "In every lease there are reallyvthree , . pari ties interested-the 'land, the landlord, and the tenant; and the? most important of this" trio is the land itself. It will be here when the grave has closed over the other two par ties to the contract, and will be' here after the tombstone, be'it marble , or sandstone, has crumbled into "4ust. From the land genera tions yet' unborn must be fed, and' whether ; recognized in such leases -as are-now being made all over the Corn Belt.- The land is -voiceless, and someone must speak for it, and in so doing speak for the generation -yet to ; come. -- "Some forms of leasing are especially vi- -cious; for example, a lease for one year for a share of the crop on' land farmed for grain ex clusively. This means nothing "'more nor less' than the rape of. the voiceless land, which can not cry out nor protect itself, It ; is 'simply a conspiracy between the owner of the land and the tenant to rob it as thoroughly as possiSle v and as quickly as possible, and divide the swag. A lease for a series of years, without: an efficient method of feeding the land,1 is only prolonging the agony.", . " There is indfed,, as Henry Wallace pointed out, a great, moral duty here., The Almighty did not make the earth and the fullness thereof just i for those of us who happen to be living in 1916," nor our immediate offspring. He made it, for all we know, for people. who are to live ten thousand or ten million years front now. xAnd for this? rea son, it is the high duty of the state,-"the trustee of posterity," to safeguard the interests both of the "voiceless land" anj the voiceless unborn who ' are to come after us-their right to life and suste nance as sacred in God's eyes as is our own right to life and food, v - - ' , Home-Ownership and Rural Civilization NT. only. must wejeonsider .the tenant prob- lem as it is related- to the conservation of :. soit resources", however, but also as "related directly. to the conservation of our - human-resources. In .fact,-we are interested in soil censer;;, vation simply as it affects future human lifer'and We must also consider how' condition of ,land- pnti? etc- affect human life at the present time. , , 11 1S not enough merely tjiat human beings' shall exist on the land, but our aim must be to de eIop on and ht highest possible' type, of hu-, make home-ownership better, both for the. soil and for civilization. . And these conditions-are (1) per manence of residence, (2) sureness of rewards. , .farm loan associations, the Nation is- almost as guilty as the states in the crime of promoting ab sentee landlordism. ...... - - ' Rewarding the Renter for Improvements O MUCH then for legislation to encourage landrownership. Now let us see what we can do in , our renting systems to encourage the v : saving principles of . home-ownership first, per- ' 5 if m S' .iwuuHMiijwiiuv.uu. manenceof residence; second, sureness of re- Rates Than the Rich wards; , INSTEAD of encouraging home:ownership and We ought,' of course, to have longer leases, and discouraging absentee landlordism the con- we ought to have some plan whereby the. renter trary. now. seems to be the: policy of both our; would be rewarded for increasing : soil-fertility Stales ana ine iNaiion.' laxcs aic uauau niguc ana punisnea ior lessening it. in cngiana legis- per 'acre uu sxuaii idims wumvaicu uj iimuoiHuu iSEPTEMBER HAVE not been among the woods, Nor' seen the milk-weeds' burst their hoods, , The downy thistle-seeds take wing, Nor the squirrel at his garnering. And yet I know that," up to God, . The mute month holds her goldenrod, That clump and copse, o'errun with vines, Twinkle with clustered muscadines, And In deserted churchyard places, ..Dwarf apples smile with sunburnt faces. J.I know how, ere her green Is shed, , ; The. dogwood pranks herself with red; How the pale dawn, "chilled through and through, f ' Comes drenched and draggled with her dew; How all day long the sunlight seems . ' ,; .v'As if it lit a land of. dreams, Till evening, - with her mist and cloud, " Begins to weave her royal shroud. . If yet, as in old Homer's land, s God walks with mortals hand in hand, Somewhere today, in this sweet, weather, Thinkest thou'nbt they walk together? - - 1 John Charles 'McNeill. lation assuring these results has long been in suc cessful operation, as explained elsewhere in this issue by.a Virginia correspondent,' and also in a quotation from the late Henry Wallace. ; . - Of course, we are hardly ready yet for such leg-. islation in this! country. "We must suffer more, or must, see a greater body of , now fertile farm . lands converted into waste, gullies, and old fields. We shall also be delayed by the fact that such a' ' small proportion of our tenants are financially re sponsible. ,? Stillf as time goes jon-we-shall have an - increasing number of landowners who. will find renters with sufficient personal property and say, "You take this farm at a certain rent, tjie under standing being that it is to be kept as fertile and in as good condition as nowI to pay you if you improve it, you to pay me if you injure it." It is no use to dismiss the idea as "impracticable" for - everybody and in all cases simply because it is yet impracticable ;n the great majority of cases. , The thing to do rather is to 'recognize the desirability ." of the idea and seek to put it into practice wher-' ever two men of the right sort can get together on a satisfactory plan.- ' . . - r . We must encourage (1) permanence of resi dence; (2) sureness of 'rewards. 1 m f. I V" . '1. If If