300 COTTON 



manufactured products it makes. So true is this 

 it requires no one to champion the reasonableness 

 of the proposition; rather it should be the effort of 

 every farmer, whether he possesses a few acres or 

 many, to try to grow not only cotton, not only 

 roughage material like peas and corn and meal and 

 hulls, but live stock as well, that the by-products of 

 his many crops may combine with others to produce 

 milk and meat and butter and cheese; and at the 

 same time produce a large quantity of home-made 

 manures to rejuvenate and to build-up cotton lands. 

 This is the great thought in the true philosohpy 

 of farming; it is the magic key that unlocks the 

 door to successful effort; it is the introduction to the 

 throne of agricultural prosperity, and the beginning 

 ir and fuller lij 



of a better and fuller life on the farm. 



