INDEX 



343 



Kirkpatrick, E. L., on cultural 

 factors in standards of living, 

 313; on farmer's standard of 

 living, 219-22. 



Knapp, Bradford, on devotion to 

 cotton, 300; on family labor, 



Labor in cotton, cheap, 209- 

 10; child, 161-62, 168, 199-204, 

 209-11, 299-300; man, 160, 

 166, 171-72, 1!,9; mule, 160, 

 171-72; women, 161-62, 168, 

 199-204, 209-11, 299-301. 



Labor income, farmers', 233-34; 

 wage earners', 233-34. 



Landlords, Case studies of, 288- 

 93. 



Lanier, Sidney, on non-coopera- 

 tion in cotton, 304-5. 



Lankford, William C., Represen- 

 tative, 144. 



Lease, Mary Elizabeth, on agra- 

 rian unrest, 140. 



Little, A. G., on acreage restric- 

 tion, 146. 



Living, furnished by farm, 221- 

 51; purchased, 221-41. 



Living standards. See Stand- 

 ards of living. 



Long staple cotton, 13. 



Louisiana, 19-20, 66-67, 95, 184, 

 203. 



Lovering, Representative, 206-7. 



M 



cCall, Sam, a champion cot- 

 ton grower, 285-87. 



McCullum, E. V., on nutrition, 

 298. 



McLean, A. W. Governor, 149. 



MacNeill, Ben Dixon, study of 

 John Smith by, 259-66. 



McNeil, John Charles, 249. 



Machine, cotton picking, effect of, 

 318-19. 



Man labor in cotton, 160, 166, 

 171-72, 199. 



Marbury, J. R., on weather con- 

 ditions for cotton, 84-85. 



Marketing cotton, 169-70, 192- 

 98; method of, 192-94; sus- 

 picion of system of, 196-97. 



Markets, cotton, 27-28; future, 



27-28, 142; points of export, 



27-28; primary, 27; risks of to 



producers, 108-49; spot, 27-28, 



142. 



Mayfield, Senator, 143. 

 Memphis Cotton Conference, 



144-47. 

 Middling cotton, 13; furnishes 



basic price, 110-11. 

 Migration of plantation system, 



43, 45. See Western Cotton 



Belt. See also Texas. 

 Miller, E. E., on cotton monop- 

 oly, 146-47 ; on South's need of 



thrift, 240. 

 Mims, Edwin, 8. 

 Mississippi, 18-21, 66-67, 95, 99, 



176-77, 184, 203, 284-85. 

 Mitchell, Broadus, 8. 

 Mobility of cotton farmer, 151- 



54, 308. 

 Molasses, as food, 298; method 



against boll weevil, 103-4. 

 Montgomery, R. H., on future 



of small cotton farmer, 318-19. 

 Moore, H. L., on cotton prices, 



114. 

 Moser, C. O., on paradox of 



value, 123-24. 

 Moton, R. R., Dr., on boll weevil, 



100. 

 Mules, distribution of, 26; labor 



of in cotton, 160, 171-72. 



N. 



egro, as cheap, labor, 209- 

 10; competition in cotton, 199- 

 200; distribution of popula- 

 tion in South, 30; farmers, 136. 

 See Cropper. 



New Mexico, 131. 



New York Cotton Exchange, 141. 



Non-cooperation of cotton 

 growers, 304-5. 



North Carolina, 15-18, 20, 66-67, 

 95, 176, 184, 203, 227-30, 235- 

 36, 255, 256, 259-66, 270-71, 

 273-74, 281-82. 



North Carolina farmers, survey 

 of by Taylor and Zimmerman, 

 227-30. 



