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In this Wednesday, April 19, 2017 photo, Tim Prosser who owns a dairy farm, with his father John, tends to his cows in Columbus, Wis. After their sole milk buyer, Grassland Dairy, dropped them due to changes in Canadian policy that decreased the demand for U.S. milk, they face having to sell their 100 milking cows and shut down the business that's been in the family since 1973 if they can't find a new buyer by the end of the month. A handful of Wisconsin dairy farmers whose Canada market evaporated in a trade dispute were weighing offers from new buyers on Tuesday, April 25, but others were running out of time before an expiring contract risked putting them out of business.  (AP Photo/Cara Lombardo)

In this Wednesday, April 19, 2017 photo, Tim Prosser who owns a dairy farm, with his father John, tends to his cows in Columbus, Wis. After their sole milk buyer, Grassland Dairy, dropped them due to changes in Canadian policy that decreased the demand for U.S. milk, they face having to sell their 100 milking cows and shut down the business that's been in the family since 1973 if they can't find a new buyer by the end of the month. A handful of Wisconsin dairy farmers whose Canada market evaporated in a trade dispute were weighing offers from new buyers on Tuesday, April 25, but others were running out of time before an expiring contract risked putting them out of business. (AP Photo/Cara Lombardo)

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