s-o*/.i-oi 



•III *«u«qan 



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U. S. FUcl III ti.illU I- urination as seen from Flax i hip Peiimylvania off the Coast of Southern California 



AGRICIJLTIJRE i^EEDS ORGAIVIZATIOX TOO! 



In This 



Farm Buret 

 ^ Tax Equal 



Succes 

 Cooperc 



Making I 

 work E( 



li 



\ Monopol-y 

 and Dept 



C"^N^ ATTLESHIPS are the nation's first-line 



^^/J of defense against attack and invasion. The 



_J J U. S. Navy's well-organized fleet is needed to 



maintain our territorial integrity and the respect of 



other nations. 



Agriculture needs effective organization. 



too, to protect its economic interests. Price-v/recking 

 crop surpluses are not only wasteful but they im- 

 poverish farmers as well as the millions of factory 

 workers and city people who depend on farm buying 

 for their jobs. 



Farmers must work together for acreage 



adjustment . . . crop siuplus control . . . lower pro- 



duction costs . . . insect and disease control . . . fair 

 taxes . . . equity in the tariff ... for putting business 

 principles into the business of farming . . . OR suffer 

 the consequences. 



The fact that American farm prices fell an 



average of 25 per cent while city prices fell only 4 per 

 cent during the past year, reveals the superior organ- 

 ization and control over price and production of in- 

 dustry. To put agriculture on an even footing with 

 other groups requires the constant vigilance of power- 

 ful organization working with singleness of purpose for 

 the interest of farmers. 



/ 



ar-i-AK. if (flit yi'cia/thct /o Joi't' 



LLINOIS AGRICULTURAL ASSOCIATION 



Farm Labo 



and Ot 



^ 



Jul 

 19C 



Largest State Farm Organization in America 



