AGRICULTURAL RELIEF
185
i came before your committee and you generously reported a bill
out here, two years ago, trying to get some information from the
manufacturers as to how much tobacco really existed in the country—
merchantable tobacco. That bill failed, but is yet before you.
Had we secured the passage of that bill we would have known there
was no surplus of Burley tobacco, although they made our members
believe there was and carry a portion of the 1923, 1924, and 1925
Crops.
Mr. Fort. That bill passed the House.
Mr. Kenoe. No; I do not think it passed the House.
Mr. Fort. It did pass the House.
Mr. KincHELOE. Yes; it did pass the House.
Mr. Keror. Did it? Then it failed to pass the Senate.
Mr. KiNcHELOE. Yes.
Mr. Kenoe. Had that bill become a law the tobacco growers of
Kentucky would have been $20,000,000 or more better off to-day
than they are.
When we had dumped the 1926 crop and sold it for about 13 cents
a pound, and notwithstanding they said they never would buy our
other crops, then on hand, in less than 60 days from the time the
1926 market closed and they had taken that crop of tobacco at 13
cents, they bought every pound of tobacco we had on hand at around
21 or 22 cents, and we have delivered it all to them. We would not
have dumped the 1926 had we been able to get the governmental
information we so sorely needed, and which the bill that you so
generously passed gave to us.
Gentlemen, my belief is that no cooperative organization, without
the assistance provided by the McNary-Haugen bill, including the
equalization fee, can ever help the American farmer. His sources of
information are not sufficient; his power to individually resist the
temptation of high prices and unfairness and the unkindness of
carrying his neighbor are too much to expect from him.
You know the farmer, if you never have thought of it, has got to be
the best all-around business man in the world to get along. In
his individual operations he does not have anybody to advise him as
to the science and cultivation of crops, excepting what he reads in the
bulletins. He has got to learn how to cultivate, to know when to
plant, what kind of seeds to use, how to fertilize, when to harvest; and
then he has got to be a splendid financier to finance himself on 60, 90
days, or six months’ paper over portions of the year; and then he has
got to be a high-class salesman in order to go out and sell his stuff
in competition against the efforts made by trained buyers to take it
away from him. He has the hardest burden of any business man in
the country. All other business is organized differently, having in
their service financiers, salesmen, manufacturers and other specialized
employees, but he has the whole burden to bear. and his burden is
more than he can manage, gentlemen.
[f you would pass this legislation, as we understand it in the
country, you are giving the farmer no kind of a subsidy; you are not
giving him a dole of any kind; you are not making of him a charity
patient of the Government. He wants to pay, out of his efforts, for
all his own benefits. He can do 1t under your equilization fee, and
his cooperative associations can operate under an equilization fee.
Mr. Crarke. Would you mind if I interrupted you right there?
Mr. Keno. No. sir.