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Agricultural relief (Pt. 8)

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Object: Agricultural relief (Pt. 8)

Multivolume work

Identifikator:
1896404200
Document type:
Multivolume work
Title:
Encyklopädie der Rechtswissenschaft
Place of publication:
Leipzig
Publisher:
Duncker & Humblot [u.a.]
Year of publication:
1904-
Collection:
Economics Books
Usage license:
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Volume

Identifikator:
1896404294
URN:
urn:nbn:de:zbw-retromon-236881
Document type:
Volume
Title:
Encyklopädie der Rechtswissenschaft
Volume count:
Bd. 2
Place of publication:
Leipzig [u.a.]
Publisher:
Duncker & Humblot [u.a.]
Year of publication:
1904
Scope:
1184 S.
Digitisation:
2022
Collection:
Economics Books
Usage license:
Get license information via the feedback formular.

Chapter

Document type:
Multivolume work
Structure type:
Chapter
Title:
II. Zivilrecht (Fortsetzung)
Collection:
Economics Books

Contents

Table of contents

  • Agricultural relief
  • Agricultural relief (Pt. 8)
  • Title page
  • Contents
  • Statement of B. F. Yoakum, New York City
  • Statement of hon. Butler Hare, representative in Congress from the State of South Carolina
  • Statement of hon. Charles R. Crisp, representative in congress from the State of Georgia
  • Statement of W.F. Hollingsworth, Seattle, Wash.
  • Statement of hon. Tom D. McKeown, representative in Congress from the State of Oklahoma
  • Statement of hon. William C. Lankford, representative in Congress from the state of Georgia

Full text

624 
AGRICULTURAL RELIEF 
Congress ‘we would have a mollycoddle mess of laws and legislation 
here that would not be in keeping with the great country we represent. 
For my part, I do not propose to come here and argue with you 
gentlemen about the Haugen bill you are going to report out. You 
have heard all this testimony. It has not been my pleasure to be 
here. But the thing I want to impress upon you is this: To pass 
legislation that will bé enacted into law at this session. If you find 
you have made mistakes, and you are bound to find some mistakes 
in any of this legislation, then you can correct them later. 
If I was an opponent of the equalization fee—and I believed that 
the legislation with the equalization fee could be passed immediately 
and approved, although I was an opponent to the equalization fee 1 
would vote for it in order to get the legislation. That is my stand 
here; and that is just exactly how I feel about it, because if the 
equalization fee did not prove satisfactory we could repeal it and, on 
the other hand, if we passed it without the equalization fee and found 
it does not work you can put the equalization fee into legislation. 
I have just this suggestion to make: If you do not take the deben- 
ture plan—and I always favored the Haugen bill; I still favor the 
Haugen bill—instead of making a direct appropriation of $400,000,000 
in this bill, it would be my judgment to authorize the Secretary of the 
Treasury to issue his certificates to get whatever money the board 
might require when operating upon any particular nonperishable 
product—when it comes to nonperishable products; and then when 
the board has taken this surplus off and held it until the market shall 
have consumed it, they can return to the Treasury the money used, 
and thereby you do not have to come to Congress every time to get 
an appropriation; you do not have to come to Congress every time 
to have a bill passed. You have a permanent and working scheme 
that has already been put into law; and that is the objection, as I 
understand, to the proposition of leaving out the equalization fee; 
that you get the board, you get your money and then after a while 
you have to come back to Congress again. But if you will put an 
automatic, workable provision in there that the Secreatry of the 
Treasury, upon the call of the board, may issue his certificates and 
furnish the money required in that particular emergency, to be repaid 
on nonperishable articles as secured in the market and returned to 
the Treasury, it seems to me, gentlemen, that then you have set up 
a permanent arrangement. 
You can go ahead, report the bill out with the equalization fee; 
and then, they argue, if you do that, why, then Congress can run in 
here and pass another bill. Why, gentlemen, you see how long it 
has taken you now to get this bill out. Then where is the argument? 
If you adjourn anywhere in June, do you think you will be able to 
get in and pass another bill? And what kind of shape is the fellow 
going to be in who votes for a bill to be vetoed. In my own Demo- 
cratic country where I come from there are hundreds of Democrats 
down there who still think that the President may be right about 
the proposition, and they differed with me when I said it was con- 
stitutional—if you have to go in a Democratic country, what will 
it do in a country of the Congressman’s own political persuasion as 
to the question of the constitutionality of this bill? 
_ If you are going to pass the bill, and should the President approve 
it, then you have got to have two years’ litigation in the courts to
	        

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Agricultural Relief. Gov. Pr. Off., 1928.
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