Once in awhile, maybe, twenty-five
or thirty years ago, they used to pack you off during
the holidays for a visit on Somebody’s Farm.
Have you forgotten? You went with your little
round head close clipped till all the scar places
showed white and you came back with a mat of sunbleached
hair, your face and hands and legs brown as a nut.
Probably you treasure recollections
of those boyhood days when a raw field turnip, peeled
with a “toad-stabber,” was mighty good
eatin’. You remember the cows and chickens,
the horses, pigs and sheep, the old corn-crib where
generally you could scare up a chipmunk, the gnarled
old orchard the Eastern rail-fenced farm
of a hundred-acres-or-so. You remember Wilson’s
Emporium at the Corners where you went for the mail the
place where the overalled legs of the whole community
drummed idly against the cracker boxes and where dried
prunes, acquired with due caution, furnished the juvenile
substitute for a chew of tobacco!
Or perhaps you did not know even this
much about country life you of the Big
Cities. To you, it may be, the Farmer has been
little more than the caricatures of the theatres.
You have seen him wearing blue jeans or a long linen
duster in “The Old Homestead,” wiping his
eyes with a big red bandana from his hip pocket.
You have seen him dance eccentric steps in wrinkled
cowhide boots, his hands beneath flapping coat-tails,
his chewing jaws constantly moving “the little
bunch of spinach on his chin!” You have heard
him fiddle away like two-sixty at “Pop Goes
the Weasel!” You have grinned while he sang
through his nose about the great big hat with the
great big brim, “All Ba-ound Ra-ound With a
Woolen String!”
Yes, and you used to read about the
Farmer, too Will Carleton’s farm
ballads and legends; Riley’s fine verses about
the frost on the pumpkin and “Little Orphant
Annie” and “Over the Hill to the Poorhouse!”
And when Cousin Letty took you to the Harvest Home
Supper and Grand Entertainment in the Town Hall you
may have heard the village choir wail: “Oh,
Shall We Mortgage the Farm?”
Perhaps even yet, now that you are
man grown business or professional man
of the great cities perhaps even yet, although
you long have studied the market reports and faithfully
have read the papers every day perhaps
that first impression of what a farmer was like still
lingers in a more or less modified way. So that
to you pretty much of an “Old Hayseed”
he remains. Thus, while you have been busy with
other things, the New Farmer has come striding along
until he has “arrived in our midst” and
to you he is a stranger.
Remember the old shiny black mohair
sofa and the wheezy, yellow-keyed melodeon or the
little roller hand-organ that used to play “Old
Hundred”? They have given place to new
styles of furniture, upright pianos and cabinet gramophones.
Coffin-handles and wax flowers are not framed in
walnut and hung in the Farmer’s front parlor
any more; you will find the grotesque crayon portrait
superseded by photo enlargements and the up-to-date
kodak. The automobile has widened the circle
of the Farmer’s neighbors and friends, while
the telephone has wiped distance from the map.
In the modern farm kitchen hot and
cold water gushes from bright nickel taps into a clean
white enamel sink, thanks to the pneumatic water supply
system. The house and other farm buildings are
lighted by electricity and perhaps the little farm
power plant manages to operate some machinery to
drive the washing machine, the cream separator, the
churn and the fodder-cutter or tanning-mill.
There is also a little blacksmith shop and a carpenter
shop where repairs can be attended to without delay.
True, all these desirable conveniences may not be
possessed generally as yet; but the Farmer has seen
them working on the model farmstead exhibited by the
Government at the Big Fair or in the Farm Mechanics
car of the Better Farming Special Trains that have
toured the country, and he dreams about them.
More scientific methods of agriculture
have been adopted. The Farmer has learned what
may be accomplished by crop rotations and new methods
of cultivation. He has learned to analyze the
soil and grow upon his land those crops for which
it is best suited. If he keeps a dairy herd
he tests each cow and knows exactly how her yield is
progressing so that it is impossible for her to “beat
her board bill.” No longer is it even
considered good form to chop the head off the old rooster;
the Farmer sticks him scientifically, painlessly,
instantaneously dressing him for market in the manner
that commands the highest price. So with the
butter, the eggs and all the rest of the farm products.
Do you wonder that the great evolution
of farming methods should lead to advanced thought
upon the issues of the day? In the living room
the Family Bible remains in its old place of honor,
perhaps with the crocheted mat still doing duty; but
it is not now almost the only book in the house.
There is likely to be a sectional bookcase, filled
with solid volumes on all manner of practical and
economic subjects these as well as the
best literature, the latest magazines and two or three
current newspapers.
Yes, a whole flock of tin roosters
have rusted away on top of the barn since the Farmer
first began to consider himself the Rag Doll of Commerce
and to seek adjustments. It is the privilege
of rag dolls to survive a lot of abuse; long after
wax has melted and sawdust run the faithful things
are still on hand. And along about crop time
the Farmer finds himself attracting a little attention.
That is because this business of backbone
farming is the backbone of Business In General.
As long as money is circulating freely Business In
General, being merely an exchange in values, wears
a clean shirt and the latest cravat. But let
some foreign substance clog the trade channels and
at once everything tightens up and squeezes everybody.
Day by day the great mass of the toilers
in the cities go to work without attempting to understand
the fluctuations of supply and demand. They are
but cogs on the rim, dependent for their little revolutions
upon the power which drives the machinery. That
power being Money Value, any wastage must be replaced
by the creation of new wealth. So men turn to
the soil for salvation to the greatest manufacturing
concern in the world, Nature Unlimited. This
is the plant of which the Farmer is General Manager.
On state occasions, therefore, it
has been the custom in the past to call him “the
backbone of his country” its “bone
and sinew.” Without him, as it were, the
Commercial Fabric could not sit up in its High Chair
and eat its bread and milk. Such fine speeches
have been applauded loudly in the cities, too frequently
without due thought without it occurring
to anyone, apparently, that perhaps the Farmer might
prefer to be looked upon rather as an ordinary hard-working
human being, entitled as such to “a square deal.”
But all these years times have been
changing. Gradually Agriculture has been assuming
its proper place in the scheme of things. It
is recognized now that successful farming is a business a
profession, if you like requiring lifelong
study, foresight, common sense, close application;
that it carries with it all the satisfaction of honest
work well done, all the dignity of practical learning,
all the comforts of modern invention, all the wider
benefits of clean living and right thinking in God’s
sunny places.
And with his increasing self-respect
the New Farmer is learning to command his rights,
not merely to ask and accept what crumbs may fall.
He is learning that these are the days of Organization,
of Co-Operation among units for the benefit of the
Whole; that by pooling his resources he is able to
reach the Common Objective with the least waste of
effort.
He has become a power in the land.
These pages record a story of the
Western Canadian farmer’s upward struggle with
market conditions a story of the organized
Grain Growers. No attempt is made to set forth
the full details of the whole Farmer’s Movement
in Western Canada in all its ramifications; for the
space limits of a single volume do not permit a task
so ambitious.
The writer has endeavored merely to
gather an authentic record of the earlier activities
of the Grain Growers’ Associations in the three
Prairie Provinces why and how they came
to be organized, with what the farmers had to contend
and something of their remarkable achievements in
co-operative marketing during the past decade.
It is a tale of strife, limned by high lights and
some shadows. It is a record worthy of preservation
and one which otherwise would pass in some of its
details with the fading memories of the pathfinders.
If from these pages the reader is
able to glean something of interest, something to
broaden be it ever so slightly his
understanding of the Western Canadian farmers’
past viewpoint and present outlook, the undertaking
will have found its justification and the long journeys
and many interviews their reward.
For, under the alchemy of the Great
War, many things are changing and in the wonderful
days of reconstruction that lie ahead the Farmer is
destined to play an upstanding part in the new greatness
of our country. Because of this it behooves
the humblest citizen of us to seek better understanding,
to meet half way the hand of fellowship which he extends
for a new conception of national life.
The writer is grateful to those farmers,
grain men, government officials and others who have
assisted him so kindly in gathering and verifying
his material. Indebtedness is acknowledged also
to sundry Dominion Government records, to the researches
of Herbert N. Casson and to the press and various
Provincial Departments of Agriculture for the use
of their files.
H.M.
Winnipeg, March 1st, 1918.