AGRICULTURAL RELIEF 673 Mr. KeTcHAM. As you know the situation in your section of tho State, about what proportion of the farmers have their farms free of mortgage debts? Are 50 per cent of the farms free from mortgages? Mr. SEXAUER. I really have not any definite figures to base an opinion on. I think probably those figures are available, but I do not happen to have them in my mind. Mr. Kercaam. I think that is generally true, about 50 per cent. Mr. SEXAUER. I judge that it is. I think probably our section of the country is freer from that than some of the other sections, inas- much as some farms have been handed down from generation to generation and inasmuch as it is in a dairying section and dairying has probably been in a better condition than the rest of agriculture, and 50 per cent of the income in our State comes from dairying. Mr. KercuaM. Right in that same connection, could you give the committee any notion of the relative number of tenant farmers in your section? Mr. SExAvERr. I can not; that information is available, but I do not have it. Mr. KErcuaM. I understand it is gathered, but I have not been successful in getting it right here. Mr. SExavUER. I can not tell you. Mr. KErcEAM. And in this connection I think the general statement is that approximately 30 per cent of the farms of the United States are tenant farms. Now, take first the farms where there is no mortgage indebtedness. Do you think that the interest charge there is a very material consideration? Mr. SExavuEer. Very material. Mr. KercaaM. Where there is no mortgage indebtedness? Mr. SExAUER. You say where there is no mortgage indebtedness— excuse me; I would say that the interest charge would not bother. Mr. KerceaM. Do you think that the interest charge is a very material factor that causes the tenant farmer any considerable loss of sleep at night? Mr. SExauEer. No. Mr. KercuaMm. Then, if it be true that 50 per cent of the farms of the country are owned free of mortgages and another 30 per cent of them are farmed by tenant farmers, why, of course, so far as interest charges are concerned, while it is a mighty heavy burden upon 20 per cent as for the 80 per cent occupying those two classifications, 1t does not cause them to lose much sleep at night. Mr. Jones. It does the tenant farmer in my section, I will state. He mortgages his crop in advance and sometimes pays 10 or 12 per cent interest. . . Mr. KercEAM. Mr. Jones, the point I think is this, of course, if he pays cash money rent, but so far as rents go in our section not very many farms are rented upon a cash basis. Mr. Jones. There are not in our section. But the tenant farmer has to borrow money and to pay high rates of interest and mortgage his crop in advance to buy machinery. oo Mr. KErcHAM. You are misconstruing my question. I meant the mortgage indebtedness upon the land. Mr. Jones. No: not in that sense.