<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_VII" id="CHAPTER_VII"></SPAN>CHAPTER VII.</h2>
<h3>AGRICULTURE.</h3>
<p>Muscular power still carries out all the most
laborious work of the farm and of the garden—work
which, of course, consists, in the main,
of turning the land over and breaking up the
sods. In the operations of ploughing, harrowing,
rolling, and so forth, the agency almost
exclusively employed is the muscular power
of the horse guided by man-power; with the
accompaniment of a very large and exhausting
expenditure of muscular effort on the part of
the farmer or farm labourer. On the fruit
and vegetable garden the great preponderance
of the power usefully exercised must, under
existing conditions, come direct from the
muscles of men. Spade and plough represent
the badges of the rural workers' servitude, and
to rescue the country residents from this old-world
bondage must be one of the chief objects
to which invention will in the near future apply
itself.</p>
<p>The miner has to a very large extent escaped
from the thraldom of mere brute-work, or
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_145" id="Page_145"></SPAN></span>
hardening muscular effort. He drills the holes
in the face of the rock at which he is working
by means of compressed air or power conveyed
by the electric current; and then he performs
the work of breaking it down by the agency
of dynamite or some other high explosive.
Much heavy bodily labour, no doubt, remains
to be done by some classes of workers in
mines; but the significance of the march of
improvement is shown by the fact that a larger
and larger proportion of those who work under
the surface of the ground, or in ore-reduction
works, consists of men who are gradually
being enrolled among the ranks of the more
highly skilled and intelligent workers, whose
duty it is to understand and to superintend
pieces of mechanism driven by mechanical
power.</p>
<p>In farming and horticulture the field of labour is not so narrowly
localised as it is in mining. Work representing an expenditure of
hundreds of thousands of pounds may be carried out in mines whose area
does not exceed two or three acres; and it is therefore highly
remunerative to concentrate mechanical power upon such enterprises in
the most up-to-date machinery. But the farmer ranges from side to side
of his wide fields, covering hundreds, or even thousands, of acres with
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_146" id="Page_146"></SPAN></span>
his operations. He is better situated than the miner in respect
of the economical and healthy application of horse-power, but far
worse in regard to the immediate possibilities of steam-power and
electrically-conducted energy. No one can feed draught stock more
cheaply than he, and no one can secure able-bodied men to work from
sunrise till evening at a lower wage.</p>
<p>Yet the course of industrial evolution, which
has made so much progress in the mine and
the factory, must very soon powerfully affect
agriculture. Already, in farming districts contiguous
to unlimited supplies of cheap power
from waterfalls, schemes have been set on
foot for the supply of power on co-operative
principles to the farmers of fertile land in
America, Germany, France, and Great Britain.
One necessity which will most materially aid
in spurring forward the movement for the
distribution of power for rural work is the
requirement of special means for lifting water
for irrigation, more particularly in those places
where good land lies very close to the area
that is naturally irrigable, by some scheme
already in operation but just a little too high.
Here it is seen at once that power means
fertility and consequent wealth, while the lack
of it—if the climate be really dry, as in the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_147" id="Page_147"></SPAN></span>
Pacific States of America—means loss and
dearth. But the presence of a source of power
which can easily be shifted about from place
to place on the farm for the purpose of watering
the ground must very soon suggest the
applicability of the same mechanical energy
to the digging or ploughing of the soil.</p>
<p>It is from this direction, rather than from
the wide introduction of steam-ploughs and
diggers, that the first great impetus to the
employment of mechanical power on the farm
may be looked for. The steam-plough, no
doubt, has before it a future full of usefulness;
and yet the slow progress that has been
made by it during a quarter of a century suggests
that, in its present form—that is to say
while built on lines imitating the locomotive
and the traction-engine—it cannot very successfully
challenge the plough drawn by horse-power.
More probable is it—as has already
been indicated—that the analogy of the rock-drill
in mining work will be followed. The
farmer will use an implement much smaller
and handier than a movable steam-engine, but
supplied with power from a central station,
either on his own land or in some place maintained
by co-operative or public agency. Just
as the miner pounds away at the rock by means
of compressed air or electricity, brought to his
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_148" id="Page_148"></SPAN></span>
hands through a pipe or a wire, so the farmer
will work his land by spades or ploughs by
the same kind of mechanical power. The
advantages of electrical transmission of energy
will greatly favour this kind of installation on
the farm, as compared with any other method
of distribution which is as yet in sight.</p>
<p>For the ploughing of a field by the electric
plough a cable will be required capable of
being stretched along one side of the area to
be worked. On this will run loosely a link or
wheel connected with another wire wound
upon a drum carried on the plough and paid
out as the latter proceeds across the field.
For different grades of land, of course, different
modes of working are advisable, the ordinary
plough of a multifurrow pattern, with stump-jumping
springs or weights, being used for
land which is not too heavy or clayey; a disc
plough or harrow being applicable to light,
well-worked ground; and the mechanical spade
or fork-digger—reciprocating in its motion
very much like the rock-drill—having its special
sphere of usefulness in wet and heavy land.
In any case a wide, gripping wheel is required
in front to carry the machine forward and to
turn it on reaching the end of the furrow.
The wire-wound drum is actuated by a spring
which tends to keep it constantly wound up,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_149" id="Page_149"></SPAN></span>
and when the plough has turned and is heading
again towards the cable at the side of the
field, this drum automatically winds up the
wire. So also when each pair of furrows has
been completed, the supply-wire is automatically
shifted along upon the fixed cable to a
position suitable for the next pair.</p>
<p>Not only in the working, but also in the
manuring, of the soil the electric current will
play an important part in the revolution in
agriculture. The fixing of the nitrogen from
the atmosphere in order to form nitrates available
as manure depends, from the physical
point of view, upon the creation of a sufficient
heat to set fire to it. The economic bearings
of this fact upon the future of agriculture,
especially in its relation to wheat-growing,
seemed so important to Sir William Crookes
that he made the subject the principal topic
of his Presidential Address before the British
Association in 1898.</p>
<p>The feasibility of the electrical mode of fixing
atmospheric nitrogen for plant-food has been
demonstrated by eminent electricians, the
famous Hungarian inventor, Nikola Tesla,
being among the foremost. The electric
furnace is just as readily applicable for forcing
the combination of an intractable element,
such as nitrogen, with other materials suitable
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_150" id="Page_150"></SPAN></span>
for forming a manurial base, as it is for making
calcium carbide by bringing about the union
of two such unsociable constituents as lime
and carbon.</p>
<p>Cheap power is, in this view, the great
essential for economically enriching the soil,
as well as for turning it over and preparing it
for the reception of seed. Nor is the fact a
matter of slight importance that this power
is specially demanded for the production of
an electric current for heating purposes, because
the transmission of such a current over
long distances to the places at which the
manurial product is required will save the
cost of much transport of heavy material.</p>
<p>The agricultural chemist and the microbiologist of the latter end of
the nineteenth century have laid considerable stress upon the
prospects of using the minute organisms which attach themselves to the
roots of some plants—particularly those of the leguminaceæ—as the
means of fixing the nitrogen of the atmosphere, and rendering it
available for the plant-food of cereals which are not endowed with the
faculty of encouraging those bacteria which fix nitrogen. High hopes
have been based upon the prospects of inoculating the soil over wide
areas of land with small quantities of sandy loam, taken from patches
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_151" id="Page_151"></SPAN></span>
cultivated for leguminous plants which have been permitted to run to
seed, thus multiplying the nitrogen-fixing bacteria enormously. The
main idea has been to encourage the rapid production of these minute
organisms in places where they may be specially useful, but in which
they do not find a particularly congenial breeding ground.</p>
<p>The hope that any striking revolution may
be brought about in the practice of agriculture
by a device of this kind must be viewed in the
light of the fact that, while the scientists of
the nineteenth century have demonstrated,
partially at least, the true reason for the
beneficial effects of growing leguminous plants
upon soil intended to be afterwards laid down
in cereals, they were not by any means the
first to observe the fact that such benefits
accrued from the practice indicated. Several
references in the writings of ancient Greek and
Latin poets prove definitely that the good
results of a rotation of crops, regulated by the
introduction of leguminous plants at certain
stages, were empirically understood. In that
more primitive process of reasoning which
proceeds upon the assumption <i>post hoc, ergo
propter hoc</i>, the ancient agriculturist was a
past-master, and the chance of gleaning something
valuable from the field of common observation
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_152" id="Page_152"></SPAN></span>
over which he has trod is not very great.</p>
<p>Modern improvements in agriculture will probably
be, in the main, such as are based upon
fundamental processes unknown to the ancients.
By the word "processes" it is intended
to indicate not those methods the scientific
reasons for which were understood—for these
in ancient times were very few—but simply
those which from long experience were noticed
to be beneficial. Good husbandry was in
olden times clearly understood to include the
practice of the rotation of crops, and the
beneficial results to be expected from the
introduction of those crops which are now
discovered to act as hosts to the microbes
which fix atmospheric nitrogen were not only
observed, but insisted upon.</p>
<p>From a scientific point of view this concurrence
of the results of ancient and of modern
observation may only serve to render the
bacteriology of the soil more interesting; but,
from the standpoint of an estimate of the
practical openings for agriculture improvements
in the near future, it greatly dwarfs the
prospect of any epoch-making change actually
founded upon the principle of the rotation of
crops. It is, indeed, conceivable that fresh
light on the life habits of the minute organisms
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_153" id="Page_153"></SPAN></span>
of the soil may lead to practical results quite
new; but hardly any such light is yet within
the inventor's field of vision.</p>
<p>This view of the limited prospects of practical
microbiology for the fixing of nitrogen in plant-food
was corroborated by Sir William Crookes
in the Presidential Address already cited. He
said that "practice has for a very long time
been ahead of science in respect of this department
of husbandry". For ages what is known
as the four course rotation had been practised,
the crops following one another in this order—turnips,
barley, clover and wheat—a sequence
which was popular more than two thousand
years ago. His summing up of the position
was to the effect that "our present knowledge
leads to the conclusion that the much more
frequent growth of clover on the same land,
even with successful microbe-seeding and
proper mineral supplies, would be attended
with uncertainties and difficulties, because the
land soon becomes what is called clover-sick,
and turns barren".</p>
<p>In regard to any practical application of
microbe-seeding, the farmers of the United
Kingdom at the end of the nineteenth century
had not, in the opinion of this eminent chemist,
reached even the experimental stage, although
on the Continent there had been some extension
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_154" id="Page_154"></SPAN></span>
of microbe cultivation. To this it may
fairly be added that some of the attention
attracted to the subject on the Continent has
been due to the natural tendency of the German
mind to discover fine differences between things
which are not radically distinct. Under the
title of "microbe-cultivation" the long-familiar
practice of the rotation of crops may to some
continental enthusiasts seem to be quite an
innovation!</p>
<p>In the electrical manures-factory the operations
will be simply an enlargement of laboratory
experiments which have been familiar to
the chemist for many years. Moist air, kept
damp by steam, is traversed by strong electric
sparks from an induction coil inside of a bottle
or other liquor-tight receiver, and in a short
time it is found that in the bottom of this
receptacle a liquid has accumulated which,
on being tested, proves to be nitric acid. There
is also present a small quantity of ammonia
from the atmosphere. Nitrate of ammonia
thus formed would in itself be a manure; but,
of course, on the large scale other nitrates will
be formed by mixing the acid with cheap
alkalies which are abundant in nature, soda
from common salt, and lime from limestone.</p>
<p>In this process the excessive heat of the
electric discharge really raises the nitrogen
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_155" id="Page_155"></SPAN></span>
and oxygen of the atmosphere to a point of
temperature at which chemical union is forced; or, in other words,
the nitrogen is compelled to burn and to join in chemical combination
with the oxygen with which formerly it was only in mechanical mixture.
When nitrogen is burning, its flame is not in itself hot enough to
ignite contiguous volumes of the same element;—otherwise indeed
our atmosphere, after a discharge of lightning, would burn itself
out!—but the continuance of an electric discharge forces into
combination just a proportionate quantity of nitrogen. Practically,
therefore, manure in the future will mean electricity, and therefore
power; so that cheap sources of energy are of the greatest importance
to the farmer.</p>
<p>With dynamos driven by steam-engines, the
price of electrically-manufactured nitrate of
soda would, according to the estimate of Sir
William Crookes, be £26 per ton, but at
Niagara, where water power is very cheap,
not more than £5 per ton. Thus it will be seen
that the cheapness of power due to the presence
of the waterfall makes such a difference
in the economic aspects of the problem of the
electrical manufacture of manurial nitrates as
to reduce the price to less than one-fifth!
It must be remembered that at the close
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_156" id="Page_156"></SPAN></span>
of the nineteenth century the electric installation
at Niagara is by very many persons
looked upon as being in itself in the nature of
an experiment, but at any rate there seems to
be no room for doubt that the cost of natural
power for electrical installations will very soon
be materially reduced. Even at the price
quoted, namely £5 per ton, the cost of nitrate
of soda made with electrically combined atmospheric
nitrogen compares very favourably
with commercial nitrates as now imported for
agriculture purposes. "Chili nitrate," in fact,
is about fifty per cent. dearer.</p>
<p>When wave-power and other forms of the
stored energy of the wind have been properly
harnessed in the service of mankind, the region
around Niagara will only be one of thousands
of localities at which nitrogenous manures
can be manufactured electrically at a price far
below the present cost of natural deposits of
nitrate of soda. From the power stations all
around the coasts, as well as from those on
waterfalls and windy heights among the mountains,
electric cables will be employed to convey
the current for fixing the nitrogen of the
air at places where the manures are most
wanted.</p>
<p>The rediscovery of the art of irrigation is
one of the distinguishing features of modern
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_157" id="Page_157"></SPAN></span>
industrial progress in agriculture. Extensive
ruins and other remains in Assyria, Egypt,
India, China and Central America prove beyond
question that irrigation played a vastly
more important part in the industrial life of
the ancients than it does in that of modern
mankind. This is true in spite of the fact that
power and dominion ultimately fell to the lot
of those races which originally dwelt in colder
and more hilly or thickly-wooded regions, where
the instincts of hunting and of warfare were
naturally developed, so that, by degrees, the
peoples who understood irrigation fell under
the sway of those who neither needed nor appreciated
it. In the long interval vast forests
have been cleared away and the warlike habits
of the northern and mountainous races have
been greatly modified, but manufacturing progress
among them has enabled them to perpetuate
the power originally secured by the
bow and the spear. The irrigating races of
mankind are now held in fear of the modern
weapons which are the products of the iron
and steel industries, just as they were thousands
of years ago terrorised by the inroads of the
wild hunting men from the North.</p>
<p>But the future of agriculture will very largely
belong to a class of men who will combine in
themselves the best attributes of the irrigationist
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_158" id="Page_158"></SPAN></span>
and the man who knows how to use
the iron weapon and the iron implement. As
the manufacturing supremacy of the North
becomes more and more assured by reason
of the superior healthiness of a climate encouraging
activity of muscle and brain, so the
agricultural prospects of the warmer regions
of the earth's surface will be improved by the
comparative immunity of plant and of animal
life from disease in a dry atmosphere. Sheep,
cattle and horses thrive far better in a climate
having but a scanty rainfall than in one having
an abundance of wet; and so, also, does the
wheat plant when the limited rains happen
to be timed to suit its growth, and the best
kinds of fruit trees when the same conditions
prevail.</p>
<p>All this points to an immense recrudescence
of irrigation in the near future. Already the
Californians and other Americans of the Pacific
Slope have demonstrated that irrigation is a
practice fully as well suited to the requirements
of a thoroughly up-to-date people as it has
been for long ages to those of the "unchanging
East". But here again the question of cheap
power obtrudes itself. The Chinese, Hindoos
and Egyptians have long ago passed the stage
at which the limited areas which were irrigable
by gravitation, without advanced methods of
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_159" id="Page_159"></SPAN></span>
engineering, have been occupied; and the
lifting of water for the supplying of their
paddy fields has been for thousands of years a
laborious occupation for the poorest and most
degraded of the rural population.</p>
<p>In a system of civilisation in which transport
costs so little as it does in railway and steam-ship
freights, the patches of territory which
can be irrigated by water brought by gravitation
from the hills or from the upper reaches
of rivers are comparatively easy of access to a
market. This fact retards the advent of the
time when colossal installations for the throwing
of water upon the land will be demanded.
When that epoch arrives, as it assuredly will
before the first half of the twentieth century
has been nearly past, the pumping plants devoted
to the purposes of irrigation will present
as great a contrast to the lifting appliances of
the East as does a fully loaded freight train or
a mammoth steam cargo-slave to a coolie
carrier.</p>
<p>At the same time there must inevitably be
a great extension of the useful purposes to
which small motors can be applied in irrigation.
Year by year the importance of the sprinkler,
not only for ornamental grounds such as lawns
and flower-beds, but also for the vegetable
patch and the fruit garden, becomes more apparent,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_160" id="Page_160"></SPAN></span>
and efforts are being made towards
the enlargement of the arms of sprinkling contrivances
to such an extent as to enable them
to throw a fine shower of water over a very
large area of ground. Sometimes a windmill
is used for pumping river or well-water
into high tanks from which it descends by
gravitation into the sprinklers, the latter being
operated by the power of the liquid as it descends.
This mode of working is convenient
in many cases; but a more important, because
a more widely applicable, method in the future
will be that in which the wind-motor not only
lifts the water, but scatters it around in the
same operation. Long helical-shaped screws,
horizontally fixed between uprights or set on
a swivel on a single high tower, can be used
for loading the breeze with a finely divided
shower of water and thus projecting the moisture
to very long distances. A windmill of
the ordinary pattern, as used for gardens, may
be fitted with a long perforated pipe, supported
by wire guys instead of a vane, a connection
being made by a water-tight swivel-joint between
this pipe and that which carries the
liquid from the pump. In this way every
stroke of the machine sends innumerable jets
of water out upon the wind, to be carried far
afield.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_161" id="Page_161"></SPAN></span>
Gardening properties in comparatively dry
climates, fitted with machines of this description,
can be laid out in different zones of cultivation,
determined according to the prevailing
directions of the wind and the consequent distribution
of the water supply. Thus if the wind
most frequently blows from the west the plants
which require the most water must be laid out
at the eastern side, not too far from the sprinkler.
Facilities for shutting off the supply of spray
at will are, of course, very necessary. The
system of watering founded on this principle
depends upon the assumption that if the
gardener or the farmer could always turn on
the rain when he has a fairly good wind he
would never lack for seasonable moisture to
nourish his crops. This will be found in practice
to apply correctly to the great majority
of food plants. In the dry climates, which are
so eminently healthy for cereals, "the early and
the latter rains," as referred to in Scripture, are
both needed, and one of the most important applications
of cheap power will be directed to
supplementing the natural supply either at one
end or at the other.</p>
<p>The "tree-doctor" will be a personage of
increasing importance in the rural economy
of the twentieth century. He is already well
in sight; but for lack of capital and of a due
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_162" id="Page_162"></SPAN></span>
appreciation of the value of his services, he
occupies as yet but a comparatively subordinate
position. Fruits, which are nature's most elaborately
worked-up edible products, must come
more and more into favour as the complement
to the seed food represented by bread. As
the demand increases it will be more clearly
seen that an enormous waste of labour is involved
in the culture of an orchard unless its
trees are kept in perfect health. At the same
time the law of specialization must operate to
set aside the tree-doctor to his separate duties,
just as the physician and the veterinary surgeon
already find their own distinctive spheres of
work. The apparatus required for the thorough
eradication of disease in fruit trees will be too
expensive for the average grower to find any
advantage in buying it for use only a few times
during the year; but the tree-doctor, with his
gangs of men, will be able to keep his special
appliances at work nearly all the year round.</p>
<p>For the destruction of almost all classes of
fruit-pests, the only really complete method
now in sight is the application of a poisonous
gas, such as hydrocyanic acid, which is retained
by means of a gas-proof tent pitched around
each tree. No kind of a spray or wash can
penetrate between bark and stem or into the
cavities on fruit so well as a gaseous insecticide
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_163" id="Page_163"></SPAN></span>
which permeates the whole of the air within
the included space. But the gas-tight tent
system of fumigation is as yet only in its infancy,
and its growth and development will
greatly help to place the fruit-growing industry
on a new basis, and to bring the best kinds of
fruit within the reach of the middle classes,
the artisans, and ultimately even the very poor.
Just as wheaten bread from being a luxury
reserved for the rich has become the staple of
food for all grades of society, so fruits which
are now commonly regarded as an indulgence,
although a very desirable addition to the food
of the well-to-do, must, in a short time, become
practically a necessity to the great mass of the
people generally.</p>
<p>The waste of effort and of wealth involved
in planting trees and assiduously cultivating
the soil for the growth of poor crops decimated
by disease is the prime cause of the
dearness of fruit. If, therefore, it be true
that the fruit diet is one which is destined to
greatly improve the average health of civilised
mankind, it is obvious that the tree-doctor
will act indirectly as the physician for human
ailments. When this fact has been fully realised
the public estimation in which economic
entomology and kindred sciences are held will
rise very appreciably, and the capital invested
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_164" id="Page_164"></SPAN></span>
in complete apparatus for fighting disease in
tree life will be enormously increased.</p>
<p>Very long tents, capable of covering not merely one tree each, but of
including continuous rows stretching perhaps from end to end of a
large orchard, will become practically essential for up-to-date
fruit-culture. An elongated tent of this description, covering a row
of trees, may be filled with fumes from a position at the end of the
row, where a generating plant on a trolley may be situated. At the
opposite end another trolley is stationed, and each movable vehicle
carries an upright mast or trestle for the support of the strong cable
which passes along the row over the tops of the trees and is stretched
taut by suitable contrivances. Attached to this cable is a flexible
tube containing a number of apertures and connected at the generating
station with the small furnace or fumigating box from which the
poisonous gases emanate.</p>
<p>Along the ground at each side of the row
are stretched two thinner wires or cables
which hold the long tent securely in position.
The method of shifting from one row to another
is very simple. Both trolleys are moved into
their new positions at the two ends of a fresh
row, the fastenings of the tent at the ground on
the further side having been released, so that
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_165" id="Page_165"></SPAN></span>
the flap of the tent on that side is dragged over
the tops of the trees and may then be drawn
over the top cable and down upon the other
side. Seen from the end, the movements of
the tent thus resemble those of a double-hinged
trestle in the form of an inverted V which
advances by having one leg flung over the
other. For this arrangement of a fumigating
tent it is best that the top cable should consist
of a double wire, the fabric of the tent itself
being gripped between the two wires, and a
flexible tube being attached to each.</p>
<p>As progress is made from one row to another
through the drawing of one flap over the other,
it is obvious that the tent turns inside out at
each step, and if only one cable and one tube
were used, it would be difficult to avoid permitting
the gas to escape into the outer air at
one stage or another. But when the tubes
are duplicated in the manner described, there
is always one which is actually within the tent
no matter what position the latter may be in.
It is then only necessary that the connection
with the generating apparatus at the end of
the row should be made after each movement
with the tube which is inside the tent. For
very long rows of trees the top cable needs to
be supported by intermediate trestles besides
the uprights at the ends.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_166" id="Page_166"></SPAN></span>
The gas and air-proof tent can be used for various other purposes
besides those of killing pests on fruit trees. One of the regular
tasks of the tree-doctor will be connected with the artificial
fertilisation of trees on the wholesale scale and for a purpose such
as this it is necessary that the trees to be operated upon shall not
be open to the outside atmosphere, but that the pollen dust, with
which the air inside the tent is to be laden, shall be strictly
confined during a stated period of time. Those methods of
fertilisation, with which the flower-gardener has in recent years
worked such wonders, can undoubtedly be utilised for many objects
besides those of the variation of form and hue in ornamental plants.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_167" id="Page_167"></SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />