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AGRICULTURAL RELIEF
part of the country; that is why it makes this such a hard problem
to solve. We are all selfish, and we want to get the best of it. We
ought to be frank about that.

Mr. Taper. May I go a step further. Mr. Adkins?

Mr. ApkiNs. Yes.

Mr. Taper. I think you will find a large number of the New
England, New York, Ohio, Wisconsin, and western dairymen that
may be purchasers of feed are coming to realize the justice of a
program that protects'the grain grower.

Mr. Apkrns. That is what we are making an effort to accomplish.

Mr. Taper. I find that we are selling carloads of Jersey cattle
in our community to Nebraska, to Louisiana, to North Carolina, and
other States; that people who are growing cotton and growing
wheat are going into the dairy business. Now, it is nice for us to
be able to sell our young stock, but we do not want too many men
milking cows.

Mr. Apxins. Right at that point: Our people do not like to milk
cows; we would rather grow corn and grain and feed it to hogs and
cattle. But they are preparing to have dairy cows just as soon as
they can find the money with which to buy them and a little left
over to pay the grocery bill.

Mr. KincueLoE. 1 want to ask you something along the line of the
questions asked by Mr. Anderson. I have been thinking along this
line ever since this hearing started. You say the three big national
organizations are the Grange, the American Farm Bureau Federa-
tion, and the Farmers’ Union, and that you have tried to get
together and you can not. Yet the biggest thing that confronts the
American agriculture is farm relief. I was just wondering when the
poor farmer is going to get any relief when you leaders disagree on
the fundamentals.

Mr. Taser. I want to tell you, sir, I have laid awake many a night
thinking on that same problem.

Mr. Kincueroe. The individual farmer will not be helped very
much on how much sleep you and I may lose. But I was wondering
when the individual farmer is going to get any real benefit.

Mr. Taser. He is going to get real benefits just as soon as the
leaders of farm organizations forget politics, forget selfishness.

Mr. KincurrLog. I think you are right about that, too.

Mr. Tagger. I am sure I am obligated and ready to go as far as
any man in the whole group.

Mr. KincHELOE. You are the leader of one of those organizations?

Mr. J BER. I am.

r. KincuerLoe. Do you forget your politics?

Mr. Taper. I have tried to. se

Mr. KiNncueLoE. You think then the sinners are the other fellows?

Mr. TABER. I do not say that. I am readv to accept mv share of
the responsibility.

Mr. KixcueLoE. Have you done it? I am trying to get you to
amplify on that a little bit, and I heartily agree with you that
the farmer will get some relief as soon as you leaders quit politics
and petty jealousies. That is the substance of what you say.

Mr. Crarke. And thinks in terms of the farmer instead of their
organization.