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Show 24 modified terns by his slightly Butterfield, and the FeYl whose Day, published eight Countrv-Life I,ovement. was in fact in his that the above too, land the shall did not Bailey, He, as the yeoman must be the control a he in the was s arie preserved the tills. to cally, the he ever-growing needed eager to by the farm take up husbandmen. acreage Yet, even to Ac- E:ailey: expressing 8..S encourage- back-to-the-Iand movement. abhored that movement, thing He, city life. highly Laudat.o.ry sentiments ,',ri thout adding these and launch a that the feeling commun i ties greater who man ,,24 revitalized country to dilemma belief of the was land he particularly that acknowledge democracy requires that "true Bailey's after years being distinctly preferable as cordingly, ment of country life, saw' life, discussion. that Farne By then the' country-life movement Butterfield independence all, tills but antrophy, ':L'he explicit analysis, most was colleague, Kenyon L. was an. their last influx of dudes careers extent Typi- as Bailey, than Kenyon Butterfield lavished praise upon farmers and farm life. In places his homage bordered on the prodigal. American farm life has bred the most skillful farmers, the most intelligent rural citizens, farm homes to be found any world. This l)raise anp1ies to the real American farmer, the cnmer and.- active man2.ger of a family-size farm, who cnme of the best blood of pioneer America, whose intelliGence is the most where in engaging the 24The F2.rmer and the f.Cacmillan Company, 1919), p. Few 2JJ. Da:y U:ew York I The |