thet 



Special Kinds of Help 81 



e training of particular persons for special 

 kinds of community work; (3) the organiz- 

 ing of the governmental function in agricul- 

 ture; (4) the redirecting of rural institutions; 



(5) the developing of applicable education; 



(6) the appeal to personal leadership. We 

 may now consider these classes sufficiently to 

 enable us to catch their significance. 



Aside from these efforts, we must remove 

 all handicaps and disabilities that are not a 

 natural part of the business, as the inequalities 

 of transportation facilities, the effect of com- 

 binations in the interest of the few, discrimi- 

 nations in tariff and other legislation, the op- 

 pression of systems of marketing, the injustices 

 of modes of taxation (p. 70). These and their 

 kind constitute a very large subject, on the dis- 

 cussion of which it is not my purpose to enter. 



I. THE DISCOVERY AND COLLATING OF 

 LOCAL FACT 



A thorough-going study of the exact agri- 

 cultural status of every state should now be 

 made, and it should be made by the state 

 F 



