Oklahoma farmer . WITH WHICHIS COMBINED THE onjun Volume 27 January 10, 1917 Number 1 OF THE WHOLE number of farms inthe United States, less than two-thirds are cultivated by the to Taylors AgriculturalEconomics, per cent of the farms wereoperated by share tenants in 1900, cent by cash tenants, 1 per cent bymanagers, .9 per cent by part owners, per cent by owners. While thesefigures may not express the exact condi-tions at the present time, they serve ourpurpose. They show that the relation oftenancy to land-ownership is one of thevery important problems i


Oklahoma farmer . WITH WHICHIS COMBINED THE onjun Volume 27 January 10, 1917 Number 1 OF THE WHOLE number of farms inthe United States, less than two-thirds are cultivated by the to Taylors AgriculturalEconomics, per cent of the farms wereoperated by share tenants in 1900, cent by cash tenants, 1 per cent bymanagers, .9 per cent by part owners, per cent by owners. While thesefigures may not express the exact condi-tions at the present time, they serve ourpurpose. They show that the relation oftenancy to land-ownership is one of thevery important problems in our industriallife, and that while we may deplore the in-crease in tenancy, or even its existence inany form, it is probable that for years tocome, in many cases those who own theland will not work it, and those who workthe land will not own it. It is not my purpose to analyze the de-velopment of landlordism in this country,but there is one phase of the subject so in-timately connected with the rental meth-ods coklahomafarmer2719unse


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, booksubjectagriculture, bookyear