Mr. David G. Gartner Assistant to the Vice President Washington, D. C.

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, MINNESOTA 1 December 1, Mr. David G. Gartner Assistant to the Vice President Washington, D. C. Dear Dave : In originally planning for the Vice President ' s appearance at our convention, we were asked to provide newspaper clippings, a typewritten copy and a tape of the Vice President's speech. Although the plans for his address were canceled, we had invited the court reporter to be present anywey. While savoring GTA banq_uet food, he got a tip that the Vice President was coming after all and rushed to get his reporting euipment to the auditorium. Thus we are enclosing a copy of Mr. Humphrey ' s extemporaneous remarks and also the clippings collected. We can also provide a tape of the speech if you'd like it. Sincerely, RIJ:mp Enc R. L. Johansen Director of Public Relations

+,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,+ ~ORIGINAL~ I I +-----------~~-----------+ TH ANNUAL MEETING * * * FARMERS UNION GRAIN TERMINAL ASSOCIATION * * * St. Paul Auditorium Thursday Evening November 1, * * * By JOHN R. BRENNAN CHRISTOPHER L. COLUMBUS & ASSOCIATES COURT REPORTERS 0 COMMERCE BU'LDING ST. PAUL, MINNESOTA 1 1

* * * Add ress by the Honorable Hubert H. Humphrey, Vice President of the United States., (Standing ovation) * * *.. 1 1 1 1f 1 1 1 0 1 MR. HUMPHREY : Thank you very much. Well, my dear friend, Bill, you didn't even give me a chance to catch my breath which, of course, will shorten the program ( applause). The very first thing that I want to do is to present to you the best part of the Humphrey family and if my wife, Muriel, would stand up, everybody can say hello to Muriel and she can say hello to you ( applause). Bill, I didn ' t think I was going t o make it for a while. Ladies and Gentlemen, and Members of the Board, my old friend, Emil j Tony Deschant, i t is good to see you, and all of the friends we have here tonight, my esteemed associate and colleague of the United States Senate for many years, Senator Eugene McCart hy, and 1 Midland Bank Building ({bristopber l.. ({olumbus & ~ssociates COURT REPORTERS CApita! -1 0 Commerce Building

1 that all concrete hero from North Dakota, Milt Young, who is always with us, and that other concrete hero from South Dakota, George McGovern, I am glad to see you here tonight ( applause). It is nice to know that at least at this head table amongst the elected politicians, the Democrats have a majority for a change ( laughter and applause. ). Of course, according to Milt Young, he doesn ' t think it is a majority and he says he is as good as any two or three, and he is mighty good. The last time I was in this auditori um, I can tell you, there was a lot more seating space than there.. 1 1 1! 1 1 1 0 1 is tonight and it was the old fashioned bean feed and there were morebeans than people, and if I had much prophetic vision, I would have known wha t was about to happen. Bill Thatcher, my dear friend Bill, I had the sad ordeal of calling you just a few days ago to tell you that I couldn't be here tonight, and I can tell you that I wanted to be here very, very much because, in fact, Mrs. Humphrey and I were planning to have a little vacation but, I said, "Mom, we are not going to do that until we ha ve been out with Bill Thatcher and the Board of Directors of GTA and our many friends from out in the mid - west, and when that is all through and we have 1 Midland Bank Building (ttbristopber J.. (ttolumbus & ~ssociates C O URT R E POR TE R S CA pital -1 0 Commerce Building

1 1 1 1~ 1 1 1 0 1 been out home to see our friends, we will go down to see if we can find a little sunshine someplace and get rested up. n '\nd then I called Bill and I said, nyou know the President is going to the hospital for surgery and I don ' t think it would be right for me to be away from 'ltlashington, at least, during that period of time, n and this good and kind, understanding man and friend said, ni understand, n he said, 0f course, this will be the first of our conventions that you have missed in many years. Bill, I think this is the seventeenth, a t least the seventeenth consecutive year that I have been at the GTA convent:ilnn ( applause) and he said, send me a te1egram. We, just Well, I tell you, telegrams are expensive ( laughter) and in the shape that some of us are in these days, I wasn ' t sure we ought to send a telegram. But let me just tell you why I was able to get here toni ght. Mrs. Humphrey a nd I went to the Bethesda Naval Hospital to visit our President. We were there at :0, and the President, as you have noted by the press and the r adio and television, is an active man. He just doesn ' t give those doctors any peace at all. He just gets out of those operations and immediately he 1 Midland Bank Building Qtbri~topbtr l.. Qtolumbu~ & ~~~ociatt~ COURT REPORTERS CApital -1 0 Commerce Building II

1 1 1 1fS 1 1 1 0 1 wants to go to work. We visited with our President, and Mrs. Johnson was there and the two daughters, Luci and Lynda were there, and the son- in- law, Pat, and I read in the paper and knew, of course, that this was their thirty- second wedding anniversary and we were invited to come as members, so to speak, of the Official Family, and we were, I guess, the only Members of the Official Family there, along with the President and Mrs. Johnson. The President had a gr eat big anniversary ca ke. There were a few little presents that were given to him, and Muriel wrote him a love note. I haven ' t found out yet what is in it. All I said when I went by, I said, "Include me, too, whatever is in there, and the press was in, the radio and television cameras. The President cut the cake and we had some coffee, and I was privileged to raise a cup of coffee in toast to him and I said, I heard something about you, Mr. President. I heard that thirty- two years ago a young l ady by the name of Lady Bird took you home to meet her other f avorite man, her father, and her fa t her looked up at you and looked a t Lady Bird and said, ' Lady Bird, you have brought many boys in here to see me but a t long last you brought a real man, ' and in a very short order they were married, and we celebrated that 1 Midland Bank Building ctebristopber 1.. cteolumbus & ~ssociates COURT R E PORTERS CApital -1 0 Commerce Building

1 1 1 1t 1 1 1 0 1 thirty-second anniversary. It was lots of fun. He was in good spirits, looks good, feels good despite all that surgery. He was visiting for at least an hour with all the friends, and about :1 I whispered to the President, I said, "Mr. President, I haven ' t told you this but I had some appointments out in Minnesota and I had a very important one tonight that I have cancelled, and I cancelled them early because the trouble in this public life is that if I cancelled it on Thursday, somebody would have said the President is very ill and, oh, my, in Washington, they just love disaster; I mean, it makes real news, and, I said, " I cancelled it early so that no one would have any reason to believe anything that wasn't a fact, but, I said, "you are looking awfully good. I said, "I think that you are just sort of cheating the doctors in the hospital the way you look. ~nd I have to let you in on a little matter that maybe you ought to know about. I said, "You know, Mr. President, I had planned on being out in Minnesota, in St. Paul, tonight, for the annual convention of the Farmers Union Grain Terminal \ssociation, out with my old friend Bill Thatcher and all of his good friends out there. Bill, I want to tell you what he said. He said, 1 Midland Bank Building ((bristopber J:.. ((olumbus & ~ssocia:tes COURT REPORTERS CApita! -1 0 Commerce Building

1 1 1 1 1... 1 1 0 1 "What are you hanging around here for?" ( laughter) he said, ''You get on out there and te l l Bill Thatcher hello and tell all those folks hello and bring them my greetings, " and that is why I am here, I was sent. ( applause) And it didn ' t take me long to move, Bill, I will tell you that, because I really wanted to come ; but the fact is, the truth is, when the President knew about this; he wanted me to come and I surely wanted to come. I just want to say one or two more words and then I am going to sit down because you have a big program. There are two things I learned a long time ago, that you are the most tol erant people in t he world and you let me get by with it; one is, that no politician ought to ever interrupt an athletic event. That i s one way to gain we l l - earned unpopu larity. And another one is, if you are going to interrupt a program of entertainment, be sure that it ' s amongst your best friends or they are going to throw you out, and tonight you have let me interrupt this program and my message to you is only one of greetings, only one of solicitation, only one of gratitude and thanks, thanks for all that you mean, thanks for all that you are, thanks for what you do for our country, thanks for your good citizenship, thanks for your production and 1 Midland Bank Building ~bristopber ll ~olumbus & ~ssociates C OU R T R E PORTER S CA pital -1 0 Commerce Building

1 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 above all, thanks for your faith, thanks for what you are. This is what you mean to me and this is what you mean to our country. You are going to be called on in the next few months and, indeed, the next few years to do more than you have ever done. I am happy to be here at this platform tonight with three great Senators, men who have helped design the new Food for Peace legislation. At long last, Bill, we have a Food for Peace program that isn ' t based upon just surpluses by accident. We have a Food for Peace program based upon the needs of humanity, the needa of our people, the needs of our nation and the needs of the hungry, so that we can program our, production and so that we can call upon our farm people to produce for people that need it and not rely upon the accident of weather or accident of surpluses. We are not going to be talking about surpluses any more. We are going to be talking about s t ocks, we are going to be talking about inventories, we are going to be talking about supplies because there are no surpluses in the world of the hungry and you know it better than I do, and we have now the legislation at long last. Twelve years after the first legislation, we have the legislation now to put American agriculturej yes, 1 Midland Bank Building C!Cbristopber JL C!Columbus & ~ssotiates COUR T REP ORT E R S CApital -1 0 Commerce BuiUing

indeed, the American Nation, to work in fighting the only war that we ever wanted to fight, the war on hunger, and that is a war that everybody can join in. No one... 1 1 1 1~ 1 1 1 0 1 needs to pick at that one, no one needs to be against it. That is a war there can be no conscienti ous ob - jectors because, believe me, it is a war we have to win and we can help win it ( applause) and we are not going to ask you to produce at your expense -- I want to make that clear tonight -- this is a lesson that we ought to remember. In the Korean War period the American Government 1 came out to the American farmer and said, Open up your land, open up those acres. Came out to GTA, came out to everyone else and said, Bui1d those bins, build those storage facilities, and when it was all over, why, they forgot us, and the prices went down, the surpluses went up, and the people were told that the farmers were on the subsidy. Now, if we haven ' t learned a lesson from that, then, we will never learn anything, and I am here to tell you as a representative of your government that we are not going to ask the American farmer to produce at less than cost, we are not going to ask him to produce at less than a profit, we are not going to ask him to bury~ ~ himself in surpluses and then be condemned because he answered his government ' s call. We are not 1 Midland Bank Building C!bristopber ll. C!olumbus & ~ssociates COURT R E POR TE R S CA pital -1 0 Co=erce BuiBing

'": 1 1 1 1~ 1 '\ 1 going to do that ( applause). American agriculture has a bright future. The market is good, the needs are unlimit ed, the capacity to produce is literally a miracl e. The American farmer, he is the all- time undisputed, uncontested champion producer of the world and, believe me, he ought to be honored for it. ( applause) So if nothing more needs to be said, you know what you have done and you know wha t you can do. I want to ask you to remember one thing. As important as government programs are, and they are important, there is nothing as important to you as your cooperatives. Don ' t you forget it ( applause) don ' t you forget it, because politics comes and goes and polit icians com~ and go, and governments change ; and if you really want to be sure that you are going to have a good future for yourself and your loved ones, and those yet to come, you build your own institutions that are strong ~ 1 0 1 enough to withstand any test and, then, with the government programs if they are good and come along and are helpful, it makes you a little stronger but you don ' t have to rely upon them entirely; and if it hadn ' t been, as I say, for GTA, if it hadn ' t been for these many farm cooperatives, if it hadn't been for the program such as GTA and the Central Exchange and many others, I don ' t 1 Midland Bank Building ((bristopber l.. ((olumbus & ~ssociates CO U R T R E POR TE R S CApital -1 0 Commerce Building

"!' 1 1 1 1f 1 1 know what would have happened to us here in the mid-west during these years. This is the farmers ' institution. You own it. It belongs to you. It is your private property. It is private enterprise. It is freedom and your government is prepared to work with you, but I remind you once again, build, build, build ; be strong, put your faith and trust in what you build and then tiemand of us that are elected to public office that we keep our word, tha t we don ' t let you down; and if we don't keep our word, there is a place for us, out of office and back home. That we ought to know ( applause). I mi ght add, if we do keep our word, though (laughter) there is a pla ce for us, too; in office (applause). Now, let ' s have the entertainment. Bill Thatcher, God bless you. You look good and the Lord has been good to you a nd he should be, and, Mrs. Tha tcher, it is nice "! 1 0 1 to see you, and it's nice to see all my friends and, Anchor, it is nice to see you, Mr. Invincible ( laughter). I can look around here and see a lot of them. I could salute the whole crowd. All I can say is I feel good tonight, I ha ve been blessed with good health, a beautiful, wonderful wife and good family, and lots of luck and a high politica l office, and I only hope in 1 Midland Bank Building cttbristopber 1.. cttolumbus & ~ssociates COURT REPORTERS CApita! -1 0 Commerce Building

all my life I wi l l be worthy of it. Thank you very much. 1 "'1 1 1 1 1! 1 1 1 0 1 ( St anding ovation ) * * * (tcbristopber JL (tcolumbus & ~ssotiates 1 Midland Bank Building C OURT R EP OR TE R S CA pita! -1 0 Commerce BuiL!ing

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