342 



INDEX 



economic effect of boll weevil, 

 98. 



Fitzhugh, George, on philosophy 

 of slavery, 52. 



Fleming, Walter L., on planta- 

 tions in war time, 54. 



Florida, 13, 20. 



Florida method of boll weevil 

 control, 105. 



Fluctuations in cotton, effect on 

 South, 134-49. 



Food, consumption of, 244-48; 

 cost of, 220-23; habits of cot- 

 ton growers, 297-99. 



Fossick, G. L., on restriction of 

 cotton acreage, 147. 



Fuel, for cotton farmers, 212. 



G, 



r eller, Carl, on relation of 

 cotton acreage to price, 120- 

 22; on paradox of value, 123. 



Georgia, 13-18, 20, 66-67, 95, 99, 

 138, 184, 200, 203, 215-16, 224- 

 25, 253-54, 257-58, 278-80, 291- 

 94. 



Gibbons, E. C., on social classes, 

 312-13. 



Gin, cotton. See Cotton gin. 



Gist, F. W., on cotton cycle, 119. 



Goldberger, Joseph D., re- 

 searches of in pellagra, 248- 

 49, 298. 



Goldenweiser, E. A., on labor in- 

 comes, 233-34. 



Grady, Henry W., on cotton es- 

 tates, 65; on cotton system, 

 62 ; on landowners, 60 ; on price 

 of plantations, 61; on single 

 crop system, 218. 



Grass, in cotton, 161; in South, 

 26. 



Gray, Dan T., on the inefficient 

 cotton farmer, 309. 



Great Plains of Texas, cotton 

 culture in, 130-33; crops in, 

 130-31; drought in, 134; ranch- 

 ing in, 130; soils of, 131; sub- 

 stitute for corn in, 131. 



Guatemala ant, 94-95. 



Gulf States, 18-20. 



Harper, Chancellor, on philos- 

 ophy of slavery, 52. 



Harrison, Pat, Senator, 144. 



Hay, in South, 25-26. 



Hedging cotton, 149. 



Heflin, Tom, Senator, 143. 



Henry, W. R., on cotton farm- 

 ing, 211-12; on speculation in 

 cotton farming, 109. 



Hog-killing on cotton farm, 170- 

 71. 



Holleman, J. T., on cotton 

 farmers' living standard, 216- 

 17; on cotton system, 187-88. 



Homicides, in Cotton Belt, 163- 

 64. 



Housing, on cotton farms, 234, 

 249-51. 



Howard, L. O., on boll weevil, 

 89-90, 92. 



Hubbard, W. H., on cotton 

 cycles, 118; on cotton pros- 

 pects, 162; on Texas, 85; on 

 wet falls, 87. 



Human elements in cotton cul- 

 ture. See Case studies. 



Huntington, Ellsworth, 8. 



1 ncome, of cotton farmers, 126- 

 28, 235-40; per cotton acre 

 1878-1927, p. 125-26; unwar- 

 ranted expenditures of, 239- 

 40. 



Indigo culture, in old South, 40. 



Industrial Conference Board, on 

 cotton farmer, 218; on stand- 

 ard of living, 251. 



Insect hazards in cotton, 88-107. 



Institute for Research in Social 

 Science, 8-9. 



J ones, Marvin, Representative, 

 143. 



Jones, T. N., on cotton farmers' 

 living standards, 217; on 

 Southern education, 311-12; on 

 commercial farming, 317-18. 



Jordan, Harvey, 181. 



K 



H 



ammond Plantation, regime 

 on, 47-48. 



.elep. See Guatemala ant. 

 Kendrick, Benjamin B., on agra- 

 rian unrest, 140. 

 Kentucky, 223, 225-26. 



