One such strategy is an inexpensive attract-and-kill system developed for small cotton growers in Brazil.
Local cotton growers are even worse off than ranchers.
An aggressive advertising campaign financed by cotton growers also had a significant impact.
By October 6, 1933, only three days into the protests, the cotton growers began to show much concern for their crops.
The town supported local cotton growers, and was a railroad shipping point for their product.
The cotton growers seem to have moved from neutrality to intervention at about the same pace as the rest of the nation.
Greater support for cotton growers is necessary without further cuts in production.
At the time, American cotton growers were flush with subsidies and production was trending higher.
According to Lincoln, it was unfair to some farmers in her state, notably cotton growers.
Most were cotton growers or worked in the timber industry.