VALUE OF LAND AN UNTAXED VALUE 37 The illustration is intended to show the effect in a normal or advancing community of mortgage interest and taxes upon the market value and cost to the user of a lot of land and a house respectively having equal purchase and rental value., and each subject to the same mortgage interest and taxes. FIRST: THE LAND Proposition 1.—Let it he supposed that you want a piece of urban land that is worth I300 a year to you for use. You can afford to pay I300 a year and no more, a nd it can be had at an annual cost of $300 a year. Let us then proceed to acquire this piece of land, exercising diligence and caution to profit by each step m the transaction. (a) At the very outset the question arises, what is die thing for which you are proposing to pay I300? Surely it is not the soil itself, because it is a question °f a building site, which could be had out in the country l°r little or nothing. It is not merely the area upon Which to dig a hole in the ground, wall it about, and er ect a building, for the same space can be had else where for a song. In short, it is not the earth’s sur face; it is not the inherent capabilities of the soil; d is not light and air, or other bounties of nature resident in that lot of land; it is not natural resources of which you are thinking as worth to you $300 a year. (&) But what you are going to pay for is the accom panying and incidental use of a great many expensive things outside of the piece of land, things which you ^11 need and must have, which you cannot afford to