Rural Credits. Joint Hearings Before the Subcommittees of the Committees On Banking And Currency of the Senate And of the House of Representatives Charged With the Investigation of Rural Credits ... [feb. 16-March 18, 1914] Printed for the Use of the Sena
The book Rural Credits. Joint Hearings Before the Subcommittees of the Committees On Banking And Currency of the Senate And of the House of Representatives Charged With the Investigation of Rural Credits ... [feb. 16-March 18, 1914] Printed for the Use of the Sena was written by author United States. Congress. House. Committee On Banking And Currency Here you can read free online of Rural Credits. Joint Hearings Before the Subcommittees of the Committees On Banking And Currency of the Senate And of the House of Representatives Charged With the Investigation of Rural Credits ... [feb. 16-March 18, 1914] Printed for the Use of the Sena book, rate and share your impressions in comments. If you don't know what to write, just answer the question: Why is Rural Credits. Joint Hearings Before the Subcommittees of the Committees On Banking And Currency of the Senate And of the House of Representatives Charged With the Investigation of Rural Credits ... [feb. 16-March 18, 1914] Printed for the Use of the Sena a good or bad book?
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Mr. Platt. I think that is true to a great degree. Mr. Badow. I am not familiar enough to say in what States they are particularly successful, but you have them in the East, and they are people of the same type. I presume, for instance, in Vermont it would not take any time at all. If they only tried, the Vermonters might, for instance, organize — ^well, call it some kind of a coopera- tive cattle society, the cattle to belong to the community according to shares held. Vermont has got thousands... of acres of beautiful pas- ture there that should be covered with pretty black-and-white Hol- sleins or other cows — ^very many more than one sees there now. You can not cultivate that land very well, because there would be danger of a team falling off backward if it tried to take a plow up there. Vermont cows might be able to develop the ability of climbing about as weU as those of Switzerland, not to forget goats. Vermont would become even more of a dairy State than it is now. The farmers of Vermont, I think, are well enough knitted together to form such a society.
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