S 471 .P8 U4 1901 Copy 3 AGRICI'LTURAL RESODRCES AND CAPABILITIES OF PORTO RICO. MESSAGE FROM THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES, TRANSMITTING A REPORT ON INVESTIGATIONS OF THE AGRICULTURAL RESOURCES AND OAPABILITFES OF PORTO RICO WITH SPECIAL HEFER- EI^'CE TO THE KSTABLISIIMENT OF AN AGRICULTU- RAL EXPERIMENT STATION IN THAT ISLAND WASHINGTON: (iOVKKNMENT PKINTIN(f OFFTfK. 1901. ^.>. u^^ AGRICULTURAL RESOURCES AND CAPABILITIES OF PUHTO RICO. jr^4 MESSAGE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES, TRANSMITTING A REPORT ON INVESTIGATIONS OF THE AGRICULTURAL RESOURCES AND CAPABILITIES OF PORTO RICO WITH SPECIAL REFER- ENCE TO THE ESTABLISHMENT OF AN AGRICULTU- RAL EXPERIMENT STATION IN THAT ISLAND. WASHINGTON: GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE. 1901. NOV 21 1906 D. Ulr U. ,56th Congress, ( HOUSP: OF liP^PKESENTATIVES. \ Document f ] No. 171. AGRICULTURAJ. RESOURCES AND (^APAJiD.lTIES OF PORTO RICO. MESSAGE FROM THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES, THAiNSMITTINfi A REPORT ON INVESTIGATIONS OF THE AGRICULTURAL RE- SOURCES AND CAPABILITIES OF PORTO RICO WITH SPECIAL REFERENCE TO THE ESTABLISHMENT OF AN AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT STATION IN THAT ISLAND. December U, 1900. — Message ^rid'accompanying papers ordered printed and re- ferred to the Committee on Insular Affairs. To the Senate and House of Representatives: I transmit herewith a report on investigations of the agricultural resources and capabilities of Porto Rico with special refercMice to tlie establishment of an agricultural experiment station in that island, made in accordance with the act of Congress making appropriations for the Department of Agriculture for the liscal year ending .Tune 30, 1901. AViLLIAH .McKlNLEY. Executive Mansion, December lo, lOoo. LETTER OP" TRANSMITTAL. United States Department of AciRicuLTURE, Office of the Secretary, Washiiigfon, D. C, Decembers, lUOO. Sir: I have the lionor to transmit herewith a rej^ort on the agricul- tural resources and capabilities of Porto Rico Avith special reference to the establishment of an agricultural experiment station in that island, made in compliance with the act of Congress making appr()i)riations for this Department for the fiscal year ending .Tune .)(», 1!H)1. The Investigations have, in m}'' judgment, shown the desirability and feasi- bility of maintaining an agricultural experiment station in Porto Rico, 2 AGRICULTURAL RESOURCES, ETC., OF I'oKTO RICO. and I earnestly reeoniiiiend that provision Ix? made by Congress for tlie establishment of sueh a station in the Ten-it ory on a pei-manent and efficient basis in accordance with the recoiiimcnnding June 30, i;)(l2. The methods of aciiuiring real estate for the use of the station shduld also be investigated. (5) The needs of the agricultural people of Porto Rico as regards information on agricultural subjects, and the best means for supplying them with this infor- mation by publications, oral instruction, and demonstration experiments, or otherwise. (()) The desirability and feasibility of securing the cooperation of the residents of Porto Rico in Hk; conduct of experimental imiuiries and the dissemination of agricultural information; the desirability and feasibility of including instruc- tion in agricultural subjects in the curriculum of the schools of Porto Rico. (7) The facilities ior preparing, printing, publishing, and distributing in Porto Jlicp circulars of inquiry and bulletins of information on agricultural subjects in AGRICULTURAL RESOURCES, ETC., OF PORTO RICO. 3 the English and Spanish languages, and the best ways of securing the preparation and dissemination of such information in printed form. (8) The cost of inaugurating and maintaining agricultural investigations and disseminating information (exclusive of the buildings, land, and equipment) in a manner similar to that of an agricultural experiment station in one of the United States liaving an area approximating that of Porto Rico. An estimate should lie made with special reference to the cost of maintaining such work during the single fiscal year ending June ;30, 1902. Professor Ktuipp's report of bis investigations is submitted liere- witb. In tbis report tbe need of experiment-station work in Porto Ric;o is pbiinly sbown, and it is recommended tbat a station sbould be establisbed witb beadquarters in tbe vicinity of San Juan. Tbis sta- tion sbould give immediate attention to promoting tbe production of larger and better crops of coffee, sugar, and tobacco, and of food prodiyj^s for borne consumption. As soon as practicable it sliould undertake work in bortlculture, forestry, animal busbandry, and dairying. Besides conducting experiments, it sbould give object les- sons in improved farming and sbould disseminate information by pub- lications and agricultural meetings. In tbese recommendations of Professor Knapp I beartily concur. In my judgment an agricul- tural experiment station sbould be immediately^ establisbed in Porto Rico on tbe same general plan as tbat pursued elsewbere in tbe United States. Land sbould be obtained in tbe vicinity of San Juan on wbicb to erect office, laboratory, and farm buildings and to conduct experi- ments. A competent man sliould be appointed to act as tbe cbief executive officer of tbe station, plan and supervise its operations, and begin tbe organization of a staff of scientific and practical men to con- duct investigations in various lines and instruct tbe people in improved metbods of agriculture. It will be best to limit tbe work of tbe sta- tion at tbe outset to a few main lines, wbicb will require tbe services of only a small staff, and develop tbe organization of tbe working corps as tbe station becomes more fully establislied and tbe way is opened for tbe extension of its work. As the station will not have tbe aid of an agricultural college already" equipped witb buildings and land, as lias been the case with most of tbe stations established in tbe United States, it will be necessary at tbe outset to devote a considerable amount of money to its equipment. AVitbout doubt as much will be requii-ed for the current expenses involved in the proi)er maintenance of an (»xperi- ment station in Porto Rico as is the case elsewhere in tlie United States. I can see no good reason why an appropriation of 115,000 a year sbould not be given to Porto Rico for the maintenance of an experiment station as well as to the other Territories of the United States, and I hope tbat Congress will make the first approi)riation of this kind during its present session. For the purchase of land and the erection of buildings tbe station sbould Innc in addition an initial fund of ^15,000. In the case of the other Territoi-ies such expenses have been lai-gely provided for by the local governments, and I think it would be well if tbis plan could be followed in Porto Rico, a portion of the revenues of the island being set aside for this purpose by the action of Congress or the Territorial legislature. Authority should be given tlie Secretary of Agriculture in the appropriation act to establish and maintain an agricultural experi- ment station in Porto Rico, including tbe purchase of land, tbe erec- tion of buildings, the printing (in Porto Rico), illustration and distri- bution of reports and bulletins in the English and Spanish languages, 4 AGKICULTUEAL EESOURCES, ETC. , OF PORTO KICO. and Mil other expenses essential to the maintenance of said station. Half of the first appropriation should be made immediately available. Verv respectfully, A. C. True, Director. IIou. James Wilson, Secretary of Agriculture. Lake Charles, La., September 22, 1900. Sir: I have the honor to submit herewith my report on the investi- gations regarding the agricultural conditions existing in Porto Rico, with special reference to the establishment of an agricultural experi- ment station in that island, made under your instructions dated June 11, 1900. I arrived at San Juan June ID, 1900, and immediately com- menced my observations on the agricultural conditions and capabili- ties of the island. I traveled by private conveyance over 350 miles in the rural districts, and was everj^where cordially met by the farmers and given every facility for obtaining the information desired. Respectfully, Seaman A. Knapp, Special Agent in Charge of Agricultural Livestigations in Porto Rico.. Dr. A. C. True, Director of Office of Expefiinent Stations. ArxRICULTURAL RESOURCES AND CAPABILITIES OF I'ORTO RICO. General Statement. The island of Porto Rico is situated in latitude 18° north and lies in the direct line of trade between New York and South America. In a general way it may l)e described as about 100 miles long- and 36 miles wide, and has an area, including its dependencies — the islands of Vieques, Culebra, and Mona — of 3,530 to 3,8<')0 square miles. The whole island may be classed as mountainous except a border on tlie seacoast and numerous interior valleys. The moun- tains are not in bold and forbidding ranges, but consist of an endless variety of immense segregated and fertile hills, with interspersed valleys, in an ascending series, but without special order, from the north coast to two-thirds the distance across the island, where the hills attain an elevation of 1,500 to 2,500 feet, and the valleys, manj^ of which are of considerable extent, are from 500 to 1,500 feet above the sea. Climate. The temperature of the island is tropical, but is so modified by alti- tude and ocean winds that extreme heat or cold is never experienced. Cold never reaches the frost line and rarely drops below O-t" F., while 91° is usuallj' the extreme of heat in a season, and that only foi- a short period. As the temperature is largely modified by tlie winds from tlie ocean, and especially by the trade winds, considerable varia- tion is found in different i^ortions of tlie island, it being waniiei- where the trade winds are shut off by mountains. A much greater differ- ence is ol)servable in the rainfall. Some sections are ordinarily deficient in rainfall; in others it is very heavy. In a recent rei)()it on the water resources of Porto Rico, II. M. Wilson * states "that all the crops whicli tlie soil will produce can be grown over three-foui-ths of the extent of the island with the aid of the abun- dant rainfall alone. The other one-fourth, including all the region near the coast and from Cabo Ro.jo on the extreme west to beyond Guayama on the east, must be irrigated if the soil is to produce the full measure of crojjs of which it is capable. The total area of these irrigable lands is, however, I'elatively small." The weekly crop bulletin issued by the Weather IJureau of this Department, San Juan, P. R., June 18, 1900, confirms the above statement. Water Supply and Irrii?. Pai»ers, U. S. Geol. Survey, No. 32, p. 28. 6 AGRICULTURAL RESOURCES, ETC., OF PORTO RICO. Temperature and rainfall for the week ending June IS, 1900. City. Temper- ature. Rainfall. Arecibo - "F. 78.4 80.4 80.0 79.2 79.8 77.2 80.8 80.2 80.4 80.3 80.9 83.9 81.4 Inches. 1.65 Manati .58 1.22 1.90 4.37 Cidra . 3.40 3.19 6.52 4.72 4.20 .30 1.48 1.33 The above being a report for one week does not indicate the relative rainfall for the year at the different points, but it shows how unequally the rainfall is liable to be distributed in a given period. It is said that the rainfall was much more equal when the summits of the mountains were well wooded. An article by Prof. Mark A\^. Harring- ton, of the United States Weather Bureau (in U. S. Treasury Doc. 2118), is instructive: The published observations of Porto Rico are very scanty, consisting of a total of about nine years at San Juan only, and these are fragmentary, being scattered through twenty years. They show a true tropical climate, with a high mean temperature (78.9 F.) and very little difference in season, except in rainfall. The coldest month on the average is February (75.7 ) and the hottest, June (Sl.5 ), but December to March are very much alike in temperature, and so are the months from June to September. The very coldest month on record is January. 1895 (70 ). and the very warmest is June, 1878 (8G ). The average change from the coldest to the hottest is only (5 , but this is very appreciable to one who has lived long in the Tropics. The cool months really seem to the natives to be decidedly cold, requiring additional covering on the bed and heavier clothing. The coldest temperature on record in San Juan is 57.2 on a day in January, 1894. The very hottest on record is 108 on a day in May. 1878. The absolute range of tempera- ture observed is therefore between 4:3 and 44 . The iormer temperature is far above frost, but would seem to the natives very cold and wouM check the growth of tropical plants. The latter would seem very hot. for the air of San Juan is very moist and the evaporation of perspiration is slow. The comfort of San Juan as a place of residence, not to mention its healthful- ness, is very much increased by the "briza,"' which is not given in the public reports. It is the northeast trade wind which has been turned toward the west, until the "briza'" comes (juite regularly from the east. It is not felt much during the day, 1)ut springs up late in the afternoon and lasts through the evening. It is a soft, gentle Irreeze. laving the body and giving an effect which is most fresh and delightful. It has a regularity approaching that of the sun, and Santurce and Cataiio, two suburl)s of the capital, get it both more strongly and through a larger part of the twenty-four liours. At Catano it may be felt until the middle of the forenoon, and begins again in the mid afternoon. At Santurce it makes the nights positively cool. The year at San Juan is divided into the dry season and the wet season: but the dry season has about as much rainfell as the Northeastern States, and the wet season more than twice as much. The dry season embraces the months from December to March, with a rainfall of 10 or 11 inches. It is the most attractive season of the year, relativel.v dry and cool. It is the proper season for the visits of Northerners to San Juan, and winter residents would find its climate very gentle, miid, and safe. The wet season embraces the other eight months in the year, and has a rainfall of 48 to 49 inches, or more than the whole of the year for the most of the United States. The total raiTifall at San Juan is nearly GO inches, and tlie culmination is in November, when an average of nearly 8 inches falls. The rainfall is not excessive. It is equaled in many places in the Southern States and m the northern part of the Pacific coast, and is surpassed in many places. It is less significant from the ease with which the rain comes down. There are no threatenings of storms for days beforehand. There is little wind and little light- AGKICULTURAL RESOURCES, ETC., OF PORTO RICO. nine:- Rainy days are rare, but rainy afternoons or evenings — for an hour or two — common. The rain begins suddenly, falls heavily, and endssDon. There is no impression of rainy climate, except that everything seems constantly fresh and clean. The healthfulness of San Juan is the greatest of any city in the West Indies. Yellow fever is never at home here, and when imported it rarely, if ever, spreads. * * * The climate of the rest of the island is much like that of San Juan, with modifi- cations due to elevation above the sea and to changes in the '"briza" due to the topography. The change of the temperature with elevation is relatively rapid here, being approximately 4 of temperature to every 1 ,000 feet. Now. Mount Yunque, at the northeastern part of the island, is, according to the chief of the department of engineers of the island, about G.OOO feet high, and its summit would have a mean temperature as low as that of many j^laces in the States. Besides, elevations of 2.000 feet are not unusual for towns: snow apparently never falls upon the islands, but hoarfrosts are reported as occasional in high places. Several towns of some size in the interior have a popular reputation as being cold — Cayey, Adjuntas, and Utuado. That black frosts do not occur, however, is evi- dent from the fact that the banana grows freely up to at least 2,000 feet, and is very sensitive to frost. There appear to be three mountain ridges running from end to end in the island, but the central is the commanding one, and the elesations are, on the whole, high- est toward the eastern end, and especially at the northeastern angle. The result is that the " briza" most wets and refreshes the eastern end of the island, and the rainfall changes greatly from point to point. Judging by Jamaica, of which the climate has been carefully studied, the heaviest rainfall is in the northeast, and it may here in places amount to 100 inches annually or more. In Jamaica it is known to surpass 200 inches in some places, and El Yunque. as seen from San Juan, is very generally capped l)y a rain cloud. The interior valleys of the island are relatively dry, while the northern and eastern mountain slopes are wet. The following .suminary, tfikeu from the Uuited States \Veatlier Bureau report for Porto Rico, shows the temperature, rainfall, ckuidy and clear days, and wind velocit}' at San Juan for one year: Summary for twelve months. November, 1898 . December. 1898. January, 1899 — February, 1899. March, 1899 April, 1899 May, 1899 June, 1899 July, 1899 August, 1899 .... September. 1899 October, 1899 ... November, 1898.. December, 1898.. January, 1899 — February, 1899. . . March, i:s99 April, 1S99 May, I8'.ft June, 1899 July, 1899 , August, 1899 Septemi)er, 1899 . October, 1899 .... Highest tempera- ture. Least daily range. Cloudy days. Lowest I tempera-] Date, ture. Partly cloudy days. Clear days. F. 77.3 75.9 74. « Inches. 12. (»8 5.34 3.92 .80 3.29 u.on 3.59 7.3:} 7.5:1 10.38 i:i.6« 10.21 Greatest daily range. Maxi- mum vt locity ' Also 19. •■< Also 28. 3 Also 7, * Also 4, » Also 8. 27, 28. " Beginning Nov, Eighth, east. Miles per hour. 8 agkicultural resources, etc., of porto rico. Soils. Near the ocean the soil is quite sandy, merging into a sandy loam a short distance inland and gradually changing into a clay loam as the hills are approached. This is generally but not universally the case. Sometimes a spur of the mountain projects into the ocean and carries its soil conditions to the water's edge. Occasionall}^ there are tracts of gravelly soil, but all very fertile as far as observed. The soil along thelarger streams is a deep, rich, sandj- loam, merging into a clay loam near the hills and frequently extends to the top of the hills and minor mountains, rendering them so fertile that they produce excellent crops of sugar cane. The soil of the mountains is a peculiar ferruginous clay, which readily disintegrates when exposed to the air, and under the influence of tropical heat and moisture furnishes an abundant supply of plant food. Bananas and coffee grow luxuriantly on the mountain sides, more than 2,000 feet above the sea level. Limestone is abundant in all jDortions of the island and more or less affects the soils, producing on the mountains a slightly calcareous soil. A green- sand marl, similar in appearance to that of New Jersey and rich in phosphates, is, according to Wilson,^ " found extensively in the north- western portion of tlie island, between Lares and San Sebastian, and also in the neighborliood of Carolina, at the northeastern extremity of the island." The division of soils for taxation by General Henrj^ in his Order No. 6, dated January 19, 1899, throws some light on the \fay soils are classified. It is as follows : LANDS AS CLASSIFIED FOR TAXATION. (1) The assessment of taxes upon lands will hereafter be made in accordance with the various cultivations existing in tlie island and the quality of the land taxed. (2) In accordance with the various cultivations there will be taxes on cane lands, coffee lands, tobacco lands, pasture lands, minor-produce lands, and forest lands. (d) In accordance with the quality of the land there will be taxes of the first, second, and third classes— the first class comprising the best lands, the second class the next best, and the third class the poorest. (4) On all lands of the first class there will be a tax of 1 peso per cuerda (acre); on all lands -of the second class a tax of 0.50 peso per cuerda; on all lands of the third class a tax of CSo peso per cuerda. (5) Each municipal corporation will appoint a classifying commission, which will select commissioners in the different districts of each township, the subcom- missioners to report to the classifying commission on the class of lands in their respective districts. ((3) These commissioners will be guided by the following instructions: First-class cane lands are plains and valleys and other alluvial lands lying near settled commniiities. highways, railroads, find seaports, and the lands of drained lagoons and mangrove marshes. Second-class cane lands are the highland plains, generally surcharged with oxids of iron, and known in the country as clayish lands. First-class coffee lands are valley lands and hills abounding in organic detritus. Second-class coffee lands are highlands having a calcareous or limy formation. First-class tobacco lands are valley lands watered by rivers. Second-class tobacco lands are loamy highlands mixed with clay and sand. ,. Tliird-class tobacco lands are sandy lands along the coast and calcareous lands among the hills. First-class pasture lands are valleys, lagoons, and glens, where grow "malojila" and guinea grass. Second-class pasture lands are those on the hills and those on the coast, where grow guinea and dog grass. Loc. cit., p. 33. AGRICULTURAL RESOURCES, ETC., OF PORTO RICO. \) Third-class pasture lands are those along the coast and lime hills, where grow only brush, "rat-tail,"' sweet grass, etc. First-class minor-produce lands are valley lands. Second-class minor-produce lands are highlands. Third-class minor-produce lands are sandy and limy lands. First-class forest lands are those growing virgin forest whose timber can supply building and cabinet woods, o. g.. "aceitillo,"' "cedar,"' "capa,"' "au.subo,"' etc. Second-class forest lands are lands with a rocky and calcareous soil growing only bushes available for fuel. Renewal of Soil. While the soils of Porto Rico retain their fertility to a remarkable extent, they liave deteriorated in a measure nnder the effects of con- stant cropping without the use of manure. Like most tropical soils, they are deficient in humus, and this is particularl}' noticeable in old fields "turned out to rest." The Porto Ricans say that the land is "tired." It is further noticeable in the fact that the soil is too adhe- sive in wet periods, and too dry, with a tendency to "bake," in dry weather. That there is no deficienc}' of elements in the soil is shown by the large grass crops these old fields will produce. Cowpeas, velvet beans, and other renovating crops have enormously vigorous growth and furnish a ready means of supplying humus. In all parts of the island are caves with vast quantities of bat guano, which is a cheap and ready source of nitrogen. The large number of cattle and horses furnish considerable manure, easily obtained, because many cattle are herded on account of the absence of fences. Rivers and Drainage. Few countries are better drained than Porto Rico. It is claimed that there are over 1,200 streams in the island, of whieli 50 are rivers of considerable size. Springs are abundant in the mountain district and the water is pure. Tiiere are several mineral springs of value, such as the sulphur baths near Ponce, the mineral si)rings near Coamo and at San Sebas- tian and San Lorenzo, and the liot springs of Caguitas. Forestry. One of the most serious obstacles confronting the agriculturist in Porto Rico is the scarcity of timber and wood. Thei-e is pi-actically no accessible building limber. Occasionally a small log is brought from the intei-ior at gi-cat ('X])ens(> and sawed into boanls by hand. There is not a power sawmill in the interior of the island. Tliei-e are a few sawmills in the coast cities, mainly for sawing imported tim- ber. At Mayaguez one of these mills had a small stock of native logs. They were from 6 to 12 inches in diameter and S to 12 feet long, crooked and knotty. Tlie mill had a stock of four or five thousand feet of native lumber, in wliieh were a few tropical cedar boards, short but of superior ([uality. The principal lumbei- .sold in the coast cities is hard pine, which retails at 5^30 to ^iiSO per 1,()0(), depending upon tlu' (luality. This scarcity of timl)er accounts for many things. It rendeis it almost impossible to erect or maintain creditable farm buildings in the inte- rior, especially wliere there are no good roads. 1 1 renders it necessary to construct the cottages of the laborers of bark and poles. It precludes the fencing of the farms into suitable fields for keeping the variety of 10 AGRICULTURAL RESOURCES, ETC., OF PORTO RICO. stock best adapted to the conditions and yielding the largest profits to the fanner. It accounts in part for only one-eighth of tlie arable land of the island l)eing under cultivation. The absence of timber on the mouiilaiiis is believed to affect in a large degree the amount and regularity of the rainfall. The records of historj^ and the samples of the woods i^reserved prove that Porto Rico at the time of its discov- ery had a wealth of timber unsurpassed by any island in the world. In the United States quartermaster's department at San Juan is the relic of an old Spanish military museum, which contains samples of PortoRican woods selected over fifty years since, from which Mr. Paul L. Hardy, engineer, made me a list of 150 varieties, with the uses for which they are valuable. Among them are found cabinet woods, as mahogany, satinwood, cedar, walnut, etc. ; other woods that are almost Indestructible in air or water, especially valuable for wharves. Many varieties are suitable for posts, fencing, and building purposes. That immediate steps should be taken to reforest the island to the extent of its own uses is self-evident, especially as there is plenty of idle land for this purpose. There is much government land in the mountains that can be profitably used for woodland, on which could be planted hard- wood trees of quick maturity for fuel and more durable woods for posts and building purposes. Farmhouses. The huts in which, farm laborers live are either in tent form, 10 by 11 feet on the ground and 6 feet high at the ridge, made of poles and covered with the bark of the royal palm or with grass, with the ground for floor; or thej^ are made house fashion, 12 by 16 feet base, 5 to feet high at the eaves, sides and roof covered with palm bark, watli which the so-called windows are closed at night; rarely the roof is thatched with grass. In the vicinity of towns tlie sides are frequently made of boxes. Most of the huts built in house form stand on short posts and have a rough floor made of palm boards sawed by hand. Many of them have a small room, possibly 6 feet square, for cooking. In these small houses large families are raised. Sometimes more than one family reside in one house. There are rarely any gardens, flowers, or fruit, except the banana. The water is not always the best, and few make any effort to improve it. Under such circumstances it is impossible to liave comfort or good morals. The houses occupied by the proprie- tors or farm managers are generally fairly comfortable dwellings, occa- sionally of a superior type, according to the taste and wealth of the owner. Public Roads. In a country like Porto Rico there are no medium roads. They are eithei- good or so bad as to be impassable with a wagon. Unless a road is constructed of stone, thoroughly ditched and bridged, the tor- rents in the rainy season will wreck it. There are about 150 miles of first-class road, which were constructed b}^ the Spaniards at an aver- age cost of over '112,000 per mile (gold). These roads are a monu- ment to the science and thorough work of the Spanish engineers. Outside of these military highways transportation must mainly be by pack train. The cost of this in some seasons of the year operates as a complete embargo on marketing farm products. Landslides cover the trail, bridges have been swept away, and the sw^ollen streams are impassable at the fords. One person reported that he sometimes paid AGRICULTURAL RESOURCES, ETC., OF PORTO RICO. 11 112.80 (gold) for an ox load — distance, 21 miles. To relieve the most important rural sections and to furnish labor to the i)easanls, deprived of labor by the destruction of the coffee plantations, the insular gov- ernment has undertaken to construct about 125 miles of first-class roads in the island. (See map. ) The construction of these roads will cost about 11,000,000. In addition, large sums have been exjjended in repairing the old military roads injured by the floods at the time of the hurricane. When theses are completed and dirt roads con- structed in sections not liable to torrents, nearly all portions of the island will be accessible. Lack of Manufactures. There are verj^ few manufactures in Porto Rico, except such as are the necessary adjuncts of a farm crop, to fit it for market — as cottee and sugar mills. Manufactures other than these are not sutticient to produce any material effect upon the general industi-ial situation. At the time of the American occupation they were limited to cigars, ciga- rettes, macaroni, chocolate, ice, matches, and rum. The cost for the initiative, or the privilege of starting the enterprise, was high; the permit was slow in coming, and sometimes never granted ; an enormous tax was placed upon the importation of all kinds of machinery, and, finally, the laws were so framed as to favor the Spanish merchant. For example, wheat and wheat flour had to pay a high duty when imported directly from the United States into Porto Rico, but they could be shipped to Spain and thence to Porto Rico free or at a nomi- nal duty. This benefited the millers of Spain and the manufacturers of biscuits, soup paste, and other products of flour. The following statement from the report of Dr. Henry K. Carroll {U. S. Treasury Dept., Doc. 2118), is in point: As between Spanish and Porto Rican producers and mannfacturers the latter liad no chances. Nor were tiie needs of Porto Rican consumers, however iirgent thtj' might appear from the insular point of view, treated as worthy of serious attention. Indispensable articles of food not produced in the island had to come in a roundabout way through the hands of the mtTchants in Spain or pay enor- mous duties if imported direct from other countries. The Porto Ricans thought that some of the many streams of the island might well furnish power to mills to grind wheat from the" United States or Canada into Hour, but the Government at Madrid punished these aspirations by making the duty on wheat almost as high as that on flour. Flour paid .§4 per sack of 1)2 kilos (about 200 pounds) and wheat S^).!"). and flour paid also, for municii)al i)urposes, a consumption tax of $'i.30. There were mills in Spain, and by importing wheat for them from the United States they could l)e kept going. The millers of Spain profited; the people of Porto Rico suffered. Attempts were made in the island to manufacture soup paste and crackers. The result is graphically described in the rejiort of the manuiacturers of Ponce, drawn up in 1«!)S for the use of Ihe colonial minister at Madrid and presented to the comm ssioner of the United States without chungc as the best statement pos- sible of the needs of the island. The cracker manufacturers had to pay the high duty on flour and compete with crackers from the Peninsula entered free of all duty. Those who invested largely in the manufacture of soup ]iaste saw their business killed in the same way. Their petition to the liberal minister, from which they hoped so much, is ])athetic in its pleadings for simple justice. Appeal after appeal was made, they say, but all " slept the sleep of the just "' (are pigeon- holed), for if ever a minister intendef i'orto rico. Molasses and Rum. Inferior inacliinery used in such a large numbei- of sugar factories leaves the molasses rich in sugar. Part of this is exported for reboil- ing in the United States; the remainder is manufactured into rum. In t897 the number of distilleries of rum was - . , 198 In 1897 the number of distilleries of bay rum was . _ 28 Gallons of rum distilled in 1897 _ 1,615,075 Gallons of rum exported in 1897 - - 85, 252 Gallons of rum consumed at home 1, 529, 823 Gallons of baj^ rum manufactured 15, 143 Gallons of bay rum exported 13, 843 Gallons of bay rum consumed at home 1, 300 Total export of molasses in 1897: Number of gallons _ 3, 543, 330 Value. .- $291,906 Value per gallon _ . .cents_ . 8, 2 General Comments on the Sugar Industry. With United States markets and under Spanish conditions of labor in semiservitude, Porto Rican planters could make mone}' rapidly even Avitli existing methods ; but under American conditions of labor — i. e., labor under American laws — it is an even thing between the pro- duction of cane sugar in Porto Rico and cane sugar in the United States. The sugar estates in Porto Rico pay lower wages than those in the United States. They have a longer period in which to mature and manufacture their crop, with no danger of frost. The cane has a full year for growth and five months in which it can be ground under favorable conditions, as against nine months for growth and seventy- five days for manufacture in the United States. Labor, however, owing mainly to the primitive methods emj^loyed, accomplishes very little in a day in Porto Rico, and notwithstanding that men were paid only 50 cents a day, silver (worth 30 cents gold), it was expensive labor. It required 6 yoke of oxen and 3 men to plow three-fourths of an acre in a da}^ The oxen subsisted on grass with- out grain, could plow only half a day at a time, consequently 3 yoke were used in the forenoon and 3 in the afternoon. One of the most thorough planters in the island stated to me that he used 420 oxen to cultivate and harvest his cane crop — a little over 800 acres. He thought it would be economical to substitute mules. The farm work is universally done with oxen. No labor-saving machinery is employed in the cane shed or in the field. renovating crops. Sugar planters appear to have little knowledge of the importance and value of renovating crops. When a field has been in cane so long- that it is exhausted, the Porto Rican planter says "it is sick," or ''it is tired," and forthwith turns it out to common till it is recuperated. A system of rotating cane with corn and the free use of cowpeas (which grow luxuriantly) would soon restore the cane fields. One planter near Bayamon put some manure on his old field, and he reported a crop of 50 tons per acre last year. Improved implements, modern methods in handling cane fields, the substitution of mules for oxen, AGRICULTURAL RESOURCES, ETC., OF PORTO RICO. 15 and better sugar machinery will enable the Porto liican faniuM- to compete with any country in llie world in tlie f^ugar industry. The available lauds I'oi- siiiiar are too limited iu Porto Kico, however suc- cessfully managed, to materially ad'eet the markets of the United States. Wages are certain to advance. In fact, since the substitu- tion of the gold standard, August 1, 1900, laborers are demanding 50 cents per day in gold instead of silver, and some sugar planters have granted the advance. With better wages more sugar will be con- sumed in tlie island. If the Porto Rican lal)orer used as much sugar as the American, nearly the entire crop would be consumed at home and there would be little sugar for export. PRESENT CONDITION OF THE SUGAR INDUSTRY. Prior to the American occupation of the island the sugar industry was i ti a bankrupt condition, OAving to tlie low prices of sugar and other causes. ]\Iaiiy planters allowed their sugarhouses to go to decay, ami turned their cane fields into pastures. Of the 2G sugar estates in the district of Farjardo, l-l were idle and turned out for grazing in 1898 — the year of our occupancy. Had they been i^rosperous they w^ould have beeu in cane that year. Further statistics show that about two-seventlis of the larger sugar estates of the island liad gone out of business. A few sugar estates, Avith capital and close management, were able to pay expenses and continue the business. For the ten 3^ears prioi- to 1898 Porto Rico had marketed in the United States an average of over 80,000,000 pounds of sugar annually, at prices ranging from 1.7 cents to 2 cents per pound. The crop of 1899, though injured about 33 per cent by the hurricane, netted the planters more money than any crop for several years. They stated that they realized from 3^ to 4 cents per pound, according to quality. It is estimated that the present crop will furnish about 80,000,000 pounds for export. The sugar industry is therefore in a flourishing condition. The Coffee Industry. The coffee plant is strictly a tropical evergreen, and, if left unpruned, attains a height of 20 to 30 feet. It should be headed low, so as to be more productive, and to make all i)arts easily accessible to the liicker. The leaves are 4 or 5 inches long, oblong-ovate, dark green in color. The whole plant is fresh and attractive in appearance. The fruit is much like a cherry in form. Each beny contains Uvo seeds, sui-rounded by a thin, sweet pulp. The flat sui-faces of the two seeds are facing and are se])ai'ated by a thin layer of pulp, and also by a tough membi'ane or skin which enveloj^s each. Asthefruit a])proa('hes nuiturily the beny turns red, and later a dark i)urple. The plant recpiires good di-ainage. The tapi-oot penetrates to a depth of 3 to 5 feet, and is injured if it reaches standing water. COFFEE CULTURE IN PORTO RICO. The favorite places selected for coffee plantations in Porto Rieo are narrow ravines on the sides of mountains, where on three sides the plant will be i)rotected from the wind. Plants are started in a seed bed and when 1 year old are transi)lanted into the field and set in rows 4 to 5 feet apart. In Porto Rico little attention is given the preparation of the soil, and no fertilizer is used. Very little pruning 16 AGKICULTUEAL RESOUKCES, ETC., OF POllTO RICO. is done. Shade for the first five years is furnished by planting ])ananas between the coffee plants. Later guava trees furnish shade. On the coffee plantations I visited little attention had been paid to setting in rows to any exact distance apart. In many instances two plants had been set together, on the theory that one might die. Sufficient care was not taken to thin the bananas, so as to furnish the requisite amount of sunshine. The most reliable information I could obtain placed the average annual yield of coffee per acre at 100 to 400 pounds; but if the total product of coffee any year be divided by the number of acres given by the planters for assessment, it shows a product of 430 pounds per acre for the entire island. Notoriously, however, the number of acres given for assessment Avas below the real number in crop, and consequently is not an exact guide. A coffee plantation should improve everj' yeav with increase in age for twenty-five to thirty years, and the annual product should average 1,000 pounds per acre under cultivation. When it falls to 250 pounds, it shows faulty cultivation. The crop commences to ripen in the early fall, and is picked by hand at an average cost of half a cent (gold) per pound for the green fruit. There are tliree processes of curing. One exposes the rii^e berr^' to the sun till the pulp is desiccated, which requires several Aveeks. In the second process the berries are passed between the rollers of a "pulper," and reduced to a pulp, which is dried in the sun before removing the grain. By the third method, and the one generally used, the pulping process is followed by washing, to free the grains from the pulp. The grains are then dried and sent to the merchant's warehouse, or to the port, where the skin enveloping the grain is removed by machinerj^ and the grain polished. Mocha and Old Gov- ernment Java are prepared by the first process, which is considered to give a coffee of liigher flavor. The third process enables the planter to market his crop much earlier and with less labor. MARKETING THE CROP. Before placing coffee upon the general market it is graded bj^ selec- tion into six classes, known in the island by the following names, in order of quality: First, caracolillo; second, hacienda; third, pueblo; fourth, cubano; fifth, merinda; sixth, frilla. The quality of the better grades of Porto Rican coffee is excellent, and compares favorably with the best coffees of the world. Till the American occupation it was chiefly marketed in Europe, as shown by the following table for the year 1896: Exportation of coffee from Porto Rico for the year ISDd. Countries to which exported: - Founds. Spain ... - 16,405,900 France -- ..11,306,68!) Germany . 8,120,409 Italy 4,388,819 Cuba .. - 15,577,710 United kingdom -. 304,119 Austria-Hungary 3,280,221 UnitedStates 322,591 Danish possessions 19, 595 British possessions. 452 Santo Domingo 22,501 Total 58, 780, 006 AGEICULTURAL RESOURCES, ETC., OF PORTO RICO. l7 FINANCIAL CONDITION OF THE COFFEE PLANTERS. All careful investigations show that when Porto Rico came under American control the financial condition of the coffee planters, in the aggregate, was about as bad as it could be. Of course there were some exceptions. A few wealthy merchants owned phintations, and some iDlanters were very thrift}^; but about 7<) to 75 per cent of the coffee plantations were heavily mortgaged, ^0 per cent or more being mortgaged to the full value of the i^lantations. To make clear how this occurred, the financial system under which coffee plantations were managed should be explained. It is well known in Louisiana as the system of "advances." At the commencement of the fiscal year the Porto Rican i)lanter arranged with some city merchant (provided the planter was not a merchant or a capitalist) to advance, him from time to time money and supplies sufficient to make his croj). He pledged his plantation and crop l)y mortgage, agreed to pay 12 to 18 per cent interest, as the merchant might demand, and to turn over his crop, when harvested, to be sold at the option of the merchant. The planter received very little money and was charged a profit of 50 to 75 per cent on all supplies. The merchant, if he found it necessary, could buy his goods in foreign ports on a year's time. The coffee planter opened a small store on his plantation and paid his laborers in orders on this store or gave duebills on some branch store of his merchant. Under this system it cost the planter 30 to 40 per cent for funds to make his crop, and at the end of the season he had no option as to price or time in disposing of his crop; the mei chant Avas the sole judge. Frequently the crop did not pay expenses; then a mortgage was retained, which increased from year to year till it absorbed the property. The testimony of Mr. Sasteria Francisca, before United States Com- missioner Carroll, November 1, 1898, is in point: Importations formerly were made on a half scale in Porto Rico— that is to say, were imuorted over and above the needs of the island, because the importers could get a years credit from Paris, London. t)r Hamburg commission houses. These merchants or importers, when they sold to smaller houses, charged them from the date of invoice one-half per cent interest [ monthly | outside of th(>ir commission on the merchandise shijiped, while they only paid their bankers at the rate of 4 per cent per year. Moreover, these importers sold that very merchandise on long terms to merchants in the interior, these terms extending as long as one year and a half in some cases, and generally sold at wholesale at higher prices than were paid by retail at the rates prevailing in the capital. These mercliants of the interior would do exar-tly the same things in turn with the smaller merchants of the country, selling to them on lon.u: terms, and charging them at least 1 per cent a month on the invoiced values, and often from 1 V to 2K per cent. This class of smaller merchants in the interior consists for the most part of cul- tivators, and it is a very important matter to be considered that these small culti- vators are charged at least JM per cent per annum ov( r and above any protit realized in any country in the world. The results of tliat system have been that at least oiie-^iuarterof the small proprietors in t lie island, buying in that way, in the period of five years have all lost their estates, the estates going into the hands of Spanish merchants who commenced selling goods on credit without any capital to speak of, and who after five or ten years have become worth .'JiO,!)!)!* and even $.")(1,000. The estates on which they held mortgages were unable to produce sufficient to pay back at the half rates that were collected. The evidence is to the effect that planters witli plenty of capital could make money in the coffee industry, but those wlio were obliged to borrow lost money. The Porto Rican coffee crop of the years 1892 to 1896, inclusive, sold in foreign markets in cargo lots at over 14 cents per pound (gold). This liigh i)rice stimulated speculation in coffee plantations till they were rated at fabulous prices. In some cases H. Doc. 171 2 18 AGRICULTUKAL RESOURCES, ETC., OF PORTO RICO. they \vei\^ quoted at 6ijOO (gold) p;^r acre for all the land in eofifee- bearing plants. Probably $150 to $-200 would be nearer a true aver- age. Many coffee estates were sold on long time at these high prices to planters. Small payments were made at the time of the purchase, and the uni)aid amounts were secured by mortgage at 12 per cent interest. The records of mortgages in Porto Rico show $15,GG4,971.69 uncanceled mortgages on country property in 1898. By careful coni- j)arison of this with statements by bankers, it appears that the mort- giige indebtedness of coffee estates at that time was about 18,000,000. The total acreage of coffee reported for assessment was 122,389.76 acres, which would make the indebtedness on coffee lands equal to $05. 4G on every acre in cultivation. If 30 per cent of the estatc^s were not mortgaged, as appeared evident, but were owned by capitalists, then the mortgage indebtedness on the remainder must have been $93.51 per acre, an amount altogether too large for a farmer to safely carry. The mortgage is purposely attached to the lands in coffee, for in coffee estates they are the onl}^ income-producing i^roperty. Under these conditions coffee planters were compelled to face a great decline in prices, owing to increased competition in the markets of the world and special clianges in the Porto Rican market arising from change of flag. Under such burdens the coffee planters entered upon the season of 1899 and secured such advances as they could to make the crop. August 8, 1899, a destructive hurricane visited all portions of the island, sweeping away many buildings and a large portion of the coffee crop, tearing up the trees used for shade for the coffee, and greatly damaging the coffee plants. This left the coffee planters with- out means to continue work, because it destroyed credit as well as property'. Had the planter jDOSsessed the capital to go immediately after the storm and clear away the debris, restore the buildings, and straighten up the coffee plants, the damage would largely have been limited to the partial loss of a crop; but not being able to do this, the loss in most cases amounted to the practical destruction of the planta- tion, which it will require five years to restore. In tropical countries the growth of grass, weeds, and vines is very rapid, converting the uncultivated coffee plantations in a few months into a jungle and destroying the trees. From 70 to 75 per cent of the coffee plantations are now seriously injured, and the value of all coffee lands has declined. In case of the abandonment of this large percentage of coffee plantations these lands will become nonproductive, except the slight value in grasses and brush. This will reduce the export products of the island, as coffee constituted about seven-tenths of the exports of the island, during 1895, 1896, and 1897. In 1896 it amounted to 58,780,000 pounds and brought $8,505,665. Abandonment would mean death to many laborers, who could find no other immediate employment. If not to be abandoned, vigorou s stei3s should be taken to restore old plantations and set new ones. Can this be done profitably? Planters claim that it now costs 9 cents a pound on an average to make and market a crop of coffee; that if former methods are to be continued and Porto Rican coffee is to be sold in the United States in competition with the Rio, it is better to abandon coffee planting in Porto Rico. But it is not necessary to continue former methods. The average product per acre should be increased three or fourfold, which would reduce the cost of production below 5 cents per jjound. Tlie best coffee in the world should be pro- duced. Such coffees ought to average 14 to 20 cents per pound. This result could be accomplished at a nominal expense by the United States AGRICULTURAL RESOURCES, ETC., OF PORTO RICO. 19 Depiirtineiit of aVgriculture throuixh an oxporimeiit station, experi- menting; in, and disseminating knowledge of, cofTee i)rodu(*tion. From this standpoint cotTee production in Porto Kico has a hopeful future. The Tobacco Industry. Tobacco, the third chief product of Porto Rico, does not labor under anysucli disadvantages as cotlee, as the loss of a crop can be repaired in one j^ear. Aside from the temporary loss by the hurricane, the chief difficulty of the tobacco industry is the change of markets. Formerl)^ a large percentage of the tobacco of Porto Rico Avas shipped to Cuba. This consisted of the better grade of " fillei's and wrap- pers." In 1895 the amount shipped to Cuba was 2,1(50,347 pounds, or nearly two-thirds of the entire crop exported. In Cuba it was manufactured and sold as Cuban product. Of the remainder, about 1,000,000 pounds were manufactured and consumed at home. Of the balance, mainly low-gi-ade tobacco, 1,375, 751 pounds were sent to Spain and smaller lots to Germany, France, and otlier countries. In January, 1809, the Cuban tariff, imposing prohibitive dutes ($5 per pound) on the Porto Rican product, went into effect, and the market for two-thirds of the crop Avas at once lost. The Spanish market was lost by change of flag, and tobacco was compelled to seek new markets. In this emergency the tobacco dealers met the difficul- ties by studying the markets of the United States and producing the qualities here demanded. Formerly they assorted their tobacco into three grades. Recently some liave employed Cuban experts and are making fifteen or sixteen grades. Rorto Rican tobacco produced near the coast is of a low grade, but in the interior valleys the tobacco is very superior and i-anks with Cuban where the seed, care, and curing have been similar. The hills near Cayey are dotted with immense sheds for curing tobacco. For- merly tobacco was grown in the valley only, later it was discovered that the hills produced a better grade than the vallej'^s. The plants are set in August or September, and the ci'op is harvested in April and jNIay. At the prop(u- time the stem of the tobacco plant is cut on the two-leaf plan and hung in the sheds for about fifty days. It is then taken down, stem remo\ed, and packed in a waiehouse. The average production is 400 to GOO pounds per acre. Afterwards it is assorted, which gives the country people employment. A nuxjority of the persons employed in the assorting were women, girls, and boys. Labor in the tobacco districts is noticeably better paid than in the coffee districts. As soon as it has been ascertained that Poi'to Rican tobacco and cigars can l)e profital)ly sold in tlie United States, there will be a large increase in the annual output, as codec planters will engage in the industrj^ to provide an income while they are restoring their coffee plantations. The following table .iiowsthe quantity and value of the tobacco exports for the eleven years preceding American occupation: Tobacco exports. Pounds 1887 ... 7,633,000 1888 3.347,000 188!) 7,736,000 18tl0. 3.984.000 18reat suc- cess at a trifling cost of labor. Eight to ton tliousauwn. and also why so many uncultivated lands are seen, their owners, owing to their great extent, not being able to give them attention. The above evidence was taken before Dr. 11. K. Carroll, commis- sioner; and evidence was placed before me jiroving that the sugar inter- ests had scarcely paid expenses for the ten years prior to 1899. Causes of Depression in Agriculture. It is pertinent to inquire the causes of the decline of agriculture under Spanish rule. They may be summarized as follows : (1) The system of credit or "advances" — explained under head of "coffee." (2) The manufactures necessary to obtain full value of farm crops discouraged. (o) Farms taxed for benefit of cities. (4^ Tendency to build up large farms. (5) The consumption tax on food. (G) Laws favoring the merchant class. (7) No country roads; cost of transportation excessive. In soisu' cases it costs 11,25 to transport 100 pounds 5 miles. (8) Economic conditions bad. Little agricultural machinery and few implements used on account of excessive import duties; labor depressed and unable to do good work. (9) Landlordism. Farms fell into the hands of town and city peo- ple who knew little of farming. Many farmers were so involved that they could not control the management of their farms. AGEICULTURAL RESOURCES, ETC., OF PORTO RICO. 27 (10) Too narrow a range of agricultural production. Tlio agricul- tural products imi)orted amounted to about five-elevenths of the total imports. In 1895 the agricultural products imported amounted to $7,171,352 (gold), and the total nonagricultural to $9,044,101, or 42.00 per cent of the former to 57.40 f)er cent of the latter. The total exports of native products in 1895 were 115,190,850, of which amount $14,573,300 were agricultural. Tersely stated, they impoi-lcd 50 et^nts' worth of rice, floui-, fish, etc., for subsistence 1o enable them to pro- duce one dollar's woi-th of sugar, coffee, and tobacco for export. If 1 here was any failure in the dollar crop, monej^ must be borrowed to pay the 50 cents. (11) No agricultural schools nor journals to disseminate knowledge upon agricultural subjects, without which no nation has taken front rank in agriculture. Effects of such C^oxditions. The consumption tax was a tax levied by towns and cities upon the necessities of life, such as maize, rice, lard, sugar, fiour, silk, char- coal (used for cooking), i^etroleum, etc. It was not placed on dry goods, jewehy, and similar articles. This tax Avas very heavy, as the following will illustrate: Consumption tax (silver). Muscovado sugar per cwt.. $2.00 Flour. do .. 1. 25 Rice do... 2.25 This tax was far-reaching in its effect. It not only nearly doubled the cost of living, but it prevented the establishment of small farms in the vicinitj'of cities, because tlie farmer must provide foi' the con- sumption tax before he could sell. This was practically pr<)hil)itory. The effect of landlordism is to obtain the largest present revenue from the land possible, regardless of the future. To this may be charged the complete destruction of all the timber within merchant- able distance of any good road or any market. Pi-esent fei-tility of soil is taxed to the utmost at the expense of future production. Improvements are cheai) and rude. Under such conditions it was only a question of time when general bankruptcy must be forced on the producers. It was certain to fol- low any general failure of crops, anj^ great decline in prices or radical change in the character of the markets, or any monetary crisis whieh should destroy credit. Unfortunately for Porto Rico, all tliese things occurred at once. Change of flag necessitated new markets for a majority of her staples, the luirricane desti-oyed most of the ci-op in 1899, and credit to planters was totally witiidiawn. The hurricane was a ci'owning calamity. It swept away not only croi)s, but the improvements, and (k'vastated the island in all i)ortions to an amount scarcely to be estimated. While it visited the coffee plantations with special violence, it left its wreckage marks on every sugar plantation in the island. How Can Depression in Agriculture be Relieved? I have stated the condition of agriculture and the cause of its decline somewhat fully in ordei- to point out clearly the relief. It is evident that the only immediate relief that can be afforded the agricultural interests in Porto Rico must be provided through the established lines 28 AGRICULTUKAL RESOURCES, ETC., OF PORTO RICO. of industry — sugar, tobacco, and coffee. While immediate steps should be taken greatly to increase the number of profitable agricul- tural industries, such changes can only be effected gradually and should be regarded rather as part of a wise economic policy for the future than as a measure to afford the immediate relief required. All the farm labor of the island was formerly given employment. The insuf- ficiencj^ of employment now arises chiefly from the prostration of the coffee farms. While the sugar and tobacco industries will provide about the normal amount of labor the present year, they can be greatly strengthened financially. Better drainage, the use of renovating crops, and a judicious sj^stem of crop rotation will enormously increase the product per acre, and more improved niachinerj^ Avill add largely to the sugar product. SCIENTIFIC INQUIRY AND EXPERIMENTS. These improvements require scientific inquiry and experiments along practical lines. These experiments, to be of assured value, must be made upon Porto Rican soil. The tobacco industrj^ comes nearer being able to sustain itself and ijrovide for future improvement than the other industries. This, however, applies more to the large plant- ers and nianufacturers than to the small producers, who at least need instruction. Few crops require moi-e technical knowledge and skill in production and manufacture than tobacco. The i^roduction of the best varieties is a fine art and is complicated by fashion, which differs in different markets. AVhat is a very high grade in one market is a low grade in another, and small producers can not investigate meth- ods as adapted to markets. HOME PRODUCTION OF FOOD. A further means of improving agricultural conditions is for all the sugar, coffee, and tobacco iDlantations to produce a variety of food crops sufficient for their employees, and for each employee who is the head of a family to produce the food for his household. This should be a cardinal principle adopted by all planters. For an island as fertile as Porto Rico to import annually 50 cents' worth of alimentary products in order to export one dollar's worth of sugar, coffee, and tobacco is an unsafe policy and should be discontinued at once. INCREASE OF SMALL FARMS. Naturally when a large number of small farms fell into the hands of the capitalist he consolidated them and placed them under one administration. If it was not convenient to work them, they were grazed, reducing the demand for labor. The number of small farms should be greatly increased and their products diversified to the limit of profit. The fruit and nut crop in ten years should exceed the combined annual export of all farm crops at this date. Winter vegetables, poultry, and dairy products should form large items in the export columns. INDUSTRIAL VILLAGES. The early establishment of a number of minor industries closely related to agriculture is of vital importance to future prosperity. The AGRICULTURAL RESOURCES, ETC., OF POKTO RICO. 29 object of such industries is to give profitHl)ie einployinent to the wives and children of farm laborers, so that the earning ability of the home may be doubled and in some cases quadrupled. Under such conditions, if the head of the family fails for any cause to earn his wage, the home goes on; tlie earning capacity is lessened, but the home is not destroyed. This has its moral as well as economic bearing. Many philanthropic Porto Ricans suggested that tlie farm laborers on the cotfeeand tobacco i^lantations scattered upon the mountains, without roads, society, or schools, children nude and semiwild, could never derive the full advantages of free education and be influenced by the elevation of society until they were gatliered into small villages and became amenable to society. In a republic this can not be done by force, but once establish small industrial villages in tlie country and the small, scattered mountain population will be attracted to the vil- lage by its superior earning capacity and its advantages for schools, society, and better living. This will be no deti-iment to the farms, because the village laborers will be within reacli of every farm. The industrial village where all are workers, is fundamental in Japanese civilization. The manufacture of hats, straw goods, and matting, the production of raw silk, and the canning of tropical fruits are examjiles of the employments in question. BETTER HOMES. It is of vital importance to the future prosperity of Porto Rico that there should l)e a great improvement in the homes of the farm laborers, better houses, and more comforts. To this end a larger and more comfortable house must be devised that will be within the means of the laborer to build. This can be done with a slight addition of the labor expended upon it. In this connection the necessity of encour- aging the planting of trees for building purposes is apparent. Present Agricultural Resources and Possibilities op Porto Rico. The exports of Porto Rico for the liscal year ending June IJO, may be estimated as follows: LItoi, Estimaied exjwrts of Porto Rico for 1001. Articles. Pounds. Value. Sugar 80,000,000 $3,000,000 300,000 1,00(J,000 5,5(6,7ftJ 800,000 Molassos . . . ... 5,000.000 25,000,000 Coffee Other exports Total 10,806,768 Notk: The total exports for 1897 were $11,011,534. " The sugar crop of 1900 will be less than normal, but, by reason of the better price, will bring consideral)ly more money. 'Fhe tobacco crop is placed at normal, and the coffee crop at AO per cent of normal. It will be seen that the estimated exports of the fiscal year ending June 1, 1901, are only !^405,7iven to sucli institutions. First. Such a station should give immediate attention to the pro- duction of larger and better crops of coffee, sugar, and tobacco, at a less cost than at present. Second. It should encourage the production of food products to the extent of home consumption. Third. It should promote the establishment of small farms for fruit and vegetables. Fourth. As soon as pi-acticable it should prosecute investigations that will lead to the improvement of farm stock with special refei-ence to the requirements of the farms for work animals and of the markets for beef and dairy products. There is no good reason why Porto Rico should import 743,5(J0 pounds of cheese annually at a cost of if). 4 cents pci- pound when tliere is an abundant supply of sweet grasses and rich milk on the island. Fifth. The station should diligently prosecute investigations in for- estry to reestablish the woodlands. Sixth. It should be especially empoAvered and charged to introduce minor industries foi' the betterment of the families of farm laborers. Seventh. An imioortant part of the station work should be the introduction of new varieties of seeds, plants, trees, and animals which are adapted to the climate and conditions found in Porto Rico; also to see that the best seeds and fertilizers are sold to farmers. For any country to fail to keep a watchful eye on the progress of other countries and take advantage of their natural resources and the improvements they have made in the products of the soil is to fall behind in the race of life and publicly acknowledge a lack of enter- prise. OBJECT LESSONS. It will be necessary to place the work of the station mainly in the form of object lessons and on a sufficient scale to show economic results. This will require more land than would be sufficient to establish theories or principles in agriculture. ■"l'© carry out the plan of th(> station the earnest cooperation of the farmers should be secured by local associations and otherwise. The station should issue bulletins at regular periods, and the officers of the station should meet the local association for discussion of agricul- tural topics at least once a year. At the same time schools for women could be lield, giving instruction in various home industries suited to their condition. DESIRABILITY oK SECURING THE COOPERATION OP PORTO RICAN FARMERS IN EXPERIMENT WORK. It is highly important to secure the active cooperation of the farmers in invest igations of the station and in the dissemination of information. The best plan is to organize local associations of farmers in every im- portant i-ural center in the island who will cooperate in testing seeds, plants, anfa' Y.- ^--^^il^i Spreading Bagasse to Dry. House Doc. No. 171 Exporting Sugar. Hauling Molasses to Market. House Doc. No. 171 Plate V. Sugar Planter's House, Arecibo. LABORER'S Hut. near Carmen. House Doc. No. 171 Plate VI. Three-year-old Orange Trees. LABORER'S Hut. Coffee Plant^ti House Doc. No 171 Plate VII 1906 LIBRARY OF CONGRESS Hi 002 693 889 2 %