Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 8 Sep 1932, p. 3

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" J,',' IV%* " ' : V3i» sr" " *k~ .* *-'•:• . -? -.r* 7'^^-, - v \ tX'< ^v<-r:A , vV""* ' V*./ \'M' *JA . \ #'.>>" ' <jw 1 **"* • f ' . .•<*•--• '• . in* ," ' 1 . t N,/ ••^ v'*= i *! m \ }r>V •' • Vs *v r\» s* ;T ' - 7" J . V* * i** .+ /* ^V lift*jftiMU'lJIl .Ft K'HXmT PLAHIDEAIJE&, THUMDAT, SSFT j A A A A : " - A - . ! y V ' * A \ . - * J "' • t SH* •'^r.A' ^stS.., r»v% ZUIDERZEE IS NOW I NAMED IJESSELMEER "Old Man Sea" -. Ai w a Name Is No Mora. ^i'SSL " • " ; • :J| W&Hilngtoii.--Dutch engineers have «->divorced Zuiderzee completely from •* *;,|t?the North sea by an 18-mile dike Part >".-«f:5of "the former salt-water gulf will be -k in come a fresh-water lake, to be known A?Aa® Ijessel lake, or, in the Dutch, Ijes •/&•"• selmeer. Most of It, however, will be 1 'pumped dry and developed Into neat ^-^Dutcb farmsteads. "In separating the Zuiderzee from the ocean the JDutch are no more than - reclaiming their own," says a bulletin <* * A from the Washington (D. C.) head , .'quarters of the National Geographic society. "Six hundred years ag<> tx\»J. much of the late Zuiderzee was dry ' '-^'land, protected from the North sea by Sfe : sand dunes. Then the aea rolled In. •Hi . Today a huge man-made dike will A make possible an Increase In the total •::r.Ottry Ag Washington '• .::r.v; Letter "-.7 A ££*'.*" --Bj-- ' ' National Editorial Assotia tk» FINDS BLINDNESS NO DISADVANTAGE Lawyer Just Worift Hardefr Than Other Fellow. land area of the Netherlands of 7 per iA'^-cent, and in the arable land of 10 per . ,, .v. A*A ' Played Important Parti" :" A * , ' 1 "*" *®i« Zuiderzee basin. TCith&Q area :'i more than 550,000 acres. Is-almost 'as large as the state of Rhode Island ."•v 'i"s Situated 5n the very heart of northern -v $ Holland, It has long played an Impor ; tant part In the commerce and social ; life of the country. While Holland is ^rejoicing with her engineers in their ' -' ; greatest victory over their ancient , .foe, the sea, the fishing villages and quaint islands of the Zuiderzee, be ••••'. loved of tourists, are silent. Most of the sea ports along the shores of th«> Zuiderzee are destined to become In 'land farming villages, connected with •salt-water only by canals, while is lands may be hillocks, only slightb . . "raised from encircling fields of grain, vegetables and flowers. ; ' "Among the ports whkjh wtil be '^t^conie rural centers are Edam, famous its globular cheeses. It once was . the water-gate to Amsterdam when • .the only approach to the greatest of ;i >Dutcli cities was via the Zuiderzee ' . - Now a deep canal connects Amster ••dam directly with the North sea. Art • . ists will miss the water front at Vo ; lendam, and the arrival of the little "fishing schooners each Saturday morn . ' lng. Hoorn will live In the annals of the sea, however, In 'Cape Horn;* the southernmost tip of South AmeVica. named after the home town of Its dis eoverer, Will em Schouten. "Perhaps the most lamented change will be that affecting the Isle of Mark . en, which Is destined to become a part •of the southeast polder, or drained section. This island, detached from the mainland in the Thirteenth cen tury, lies out of the ordinary routes •of travel. Its inhabitants have kepi the quaint costumes and queer cere monies that prevailed when their land , J became an island. The ground is barely above the water at high tide, •Vi,'but the houses are built on hillocks v' of earth obtained by digging drainage ; canals. On seven of these mounds / '"brick and frame dwellings are grouped, , ; while on the eighth is the silent home of the dead. Need for More Farms. '•'Colorful as the ports and Islands " , of the Zuiderzee may be, they have 4 .J^outlived most of their usefulness. Hoiv ^-land's rapidly growing population de « »?- mands more -farm lands. The Zuider . .see, the greater part of which had 'hardly more than 15 feet of water at low tide, offered a source of new , land. • "The land to be reclaimed will be ' roughly divided into iour sections, Or polders, by Lake Ijessel, and the mouths of the Amstel and Ijessel riv- ' ers. Ijessel lake itself, when drain- ' age operations are completed, will be a long, funnel-shaped body of water running back from the new sea dike to the city of Kampen. It will be a mere shadow of the former Zuiderzee. * Most of the new land will be re i -claimed from the huge, / stomach •f"j^r*haped southwestern end of the Zui- V derzee. - "One polder, the Dutch word applied to any area of land .protected v by an encircling dike and drained by its own system of pumps, back of Wieringen island, consisting of 50,000 - acres, has been ^completed, and this iyear crops were harvested from fields . which In 1980 were covered with vra- . /."• ter. . - . "North Holland has undergone many changes in its water-washed boun- .. <laries. The.first efforts were precau tionary, the war with the waters be- * 1ng wholly on the defensive. The hold- •\ lng of the streams in qheck, keeping - them within their proper channels, al- * lowed some of the marshes to become : dry. This gain of land whetted the .people's appetite for more. Dutch farmers yearned for thousands of lacres too shallow for fisheries but ;ldeal for pasture land to produce ' cheeses for foreign markets. This led ... to draining of inland lakes and coastal ;| strips by windmills--the most charac ; teristic feature Of Holland land : : '•^:,l;'•capes.*, • t„ ' •* -"i*" r* . , , a" j. h ' ** f," \ Stray1t)ogs Are Problem on Streets of Istanbul Istanbul.--Although more than 4.000 „ stray dogs hare been killed by the i; ^ iimthoritles here in recent months. ; • Hie.v still remain a plague In certain •quarters. Popular sympathy with the ; 5»nimalfl handicaps the task of'getting f rid of them. There have been many • Instances where Uympnthteers. espe - rially women, hare administered nietics to diif'3 which had been ofil d a i l y p o i s o n e d . ' . . Washington, Sept 6--There is a marked division among the political dopesters as to the real significance of recent primaries. For centuries oracles have always been popular with the carious especially when the predictions were in accord with the wishes of the biased inquirer. The acceptability of interpretations varies with the temperment and hopes of the petitioners. The ttfend that alarms the real political campaigners is the light voting in areas where party strength is fairly well balanced. It ii the silent type of voter that keeps the partisan workers in a frenzy Labor Day speeches have accentuated the differences between organized labor groups and government spokesmen as'to the actual volume of unemployment. It is the time-worn complaint that statisticians seldom agree. William Green, president of the Ameiican Federation of Labor told his colleagues "unemployment in Aug. ust was at the highest point since the depression began. "Offical estimates of the Department of Labor present a more optimistic picture. The labor; federation insists its calculations are based on government figures and claim 11,418,000 men and women are out of work. The unions say "the fact that unemployment stopped increasing in August is encouraging," The sign "men at woric" is awaited anxiously in all quarters. Checking on primary election returns bears out the contention that the footsteps to high office are slippery. Many incumbents pleading for a vote of confidence have found the voters distressingly deaf and stubborn. Inquiry shows that candidates who had the idea that their job was for life owe their defeats to wrapping themselves in their conceits. Voters are quick at reprisaTs when "highhat" candidates are in the field. The Federal relief agencies which have multiplied during the last year, are swamped with appeals from individuals and groups for immediate aid. The officials are proceeding with due caution and with a wholesome respect for the requirement of the rigid laws enacted by the last Congress. Few loopholes are available for political preference which sometimes embarasses party leaders who fall short of making good their pledges to communities for relief. It requires about four biflions to operate the national government. Therefore, the officials must devote intensive study to the fiscal requirements of their departments many months in advance,. The budget officers are hard at work providing estimates as to the operating costs of their divisions for the fiscal year oi 1933. Trying to show economy in their estimates and at the same time make adequate provision for the inevitable cuts by the Bureau of the Budget and Congressional committees furnishes a real problem- Congress dotes oh bragging about the reductions its makes of denying departmental moneys. The most stringent rules for chivalry are never binding when men's tempers break out. Recently, two Republican members of the United States Senate, known as the nation's most exclusive gentlemen's club--had things to say about the value of J pledges find performances. Senator James Couzens of Michigan has accumulated about eight millions and a reputation for speaking candidly on important matters. Senator James Watson, nominally the majority leader, rubbed Couzens the wrong way when he avoided bringing legislation to a vote. Couzens expressed the hope that the voters of Indiana would replace Watson. There are other fueds simmering but seldom come to the attention of the public in open debate. Despite the expensive and extensive ballyhoo, the Bi-Centennial celebra> tion in honor of George Washington has been catalogued as a "flop". It is true that beautiful spectacles were staged but -the public interest has never been np to expectations- The attendance at pagents at historical spots around Washington has been a disappointment. Yet those who viewed the ceremonies west loud in their praista. Chicago.--Sightless eyes are no disadvantage to Herbert Geisler, lawyer, who considers that he got a "break" when, at the age of seven years, a childish accident at the hands of a rough playmate left him blind. ,f "I Just work harder than the other fellow,'* said " Geisler. "That's the only reason I won honors in school, and the only reason I win cases in courts. I'm not afraid of work, and I do It more cheerfully than the lawyers who can see." Geisler, who Is twenty-eight years old, and has been engaged In a general law practice for three years, was rresident of his class and made a brilliant record in John Marshall high school. He entered the University of Chicago made exceptional grades in the three years of pre law work, and entered the law school, graduating in 1P29 with the highest henors of Ms class. , He also wa« president of his class | In the law school, and was elected to the Order of the Coif, an honorary law scholastic fratertilty. Geisler was chairman of the University of Chicago editors of the Illinois Law Review, and won the Wlggln robe prize for scholarship in his second year. "I find the fact that I cannot see no disadvantage to me In the courts. In examination of witnesses it Is not their facial expression that reveals whether they are telling the truth, but their words." Geisler has a reader, knd In addition Is proficient In reading the Braille system. 'He rapidly takes notes for courtroom use on the Braille typewriter, and In the courtroom takes notes fn Braille with the stylus. He swims, dances, bowls, takes long walks and is fond of fishing. Although totally blind, he leads an active, normal life. . He's known among fellows who were his classmates In law school as a good sport, a keen mind and an exc e l l e n t c o m p a n i o n . ; f i r Poor Stage Management There is an old German {day, la which, when the curtain rises,' our first parent Adam Is discovered crossing the stage--going to be created. Blind "Spectator" Cheer at Blind Girt Rowers LdBdon.--A rowing race between two crews of blind girls recently was held on the Thames. Sightless "spectators" cheered from the banks, with remarkable powers of divining which shell (that of tb^ Swiss Cottage Blind school, or of the Sports club) was ahead. ^ A witness, staiidlng near one of the blind clieerers, has described the event, as he saw it at Putney, above the city. "The boat nearest shore Is ahead, Isn't it?" cried the sightless girls. "It's the Sports club crewl" In a moment her face felt "Something's wrong; they're missing," she said. The In-shore boat was, in fact. In difficulties. One of the crew had "caught a crab"; valuuble time was lost; the other shell took the lead and held It across the finish line. The prize for which these two blind crews raced for the first time was--a "sightseeing" tour of Wlnds f t ? ! , ; ; r ' " - - Japanese Adopt MHeet>ie Jeebies" as Slang Word Tokyo.--American "talkies"- have given Japanese a slang word to express the national state of mind following the terroristic events of May 15, culminating in the assassination of Premier Tsuyoshi Inukai by a group of army and navy officers. The word Is "heebie jeebies," and is defined as meaning a "state of extreme perturbation, nervousness and worry, accompanied by irritability and panic." Japanese patrons of the talkies wha obtained a definition Of the word from New York tourists, feel it fits their national case to perfection and ought to be Incorporated In the language. as thousands of other American slang words have been. The expression "okay" was adopted by the Japanese after scores of new American motor cars appeared on the streets with blue piarards on their windshields announcing they had been passed, by inspectors as "okay." Unhurt in Car Craslv ,, Nurse Dies of bright New York.--Miss Elsie Cob, twentythree years old, a nurse at the Creedmoor State hospital, died In Jamaica hqspital following an automobile collision a few hours earlier. Hospital authorities said that as far as they could learn Miss Cob was physically unhurt, but the shock brought on an attack of hysteria which affected, hef heart This caused her death. VOLO Mrs. Frank Wilson w^s a business caller at the Cedar Crest farm near Lake Villa Monday. Mrs. William Lueble of Wauconda spent Wednesday afternoon with Mrs. Lloyd Fisher. Mr. and Mrs. George Dowell find family, Mr. ihd Mrs. Roy PassAeld and family, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Passfield and son spent Wednesday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Dalvin at Wauconda. Miss Verona Vogt of Waukegan spent the week-end with her sister, Miss Emma Vogt. •' Mrs. George» Schaid, Jr., and daughter of Wauconda spent Wednesday at the Dowell Brothers' home. Virginia Mae Ames spent a few days with her former school teacher, Marion Winters, at Wads worth. Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Davis and daughter of Slocum Lake called t on the latter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Esse Fisher, recently. • M. E. Smith of Wauconda #as a business caller in this locality Wednesday., Mrs. K. Johnson ftas ^turned to her home in Wisconsin after visiting her sister, Mr3. Emana Stadtfieid. Mrs. Richard Dowell and family spent Monday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Ravin at Slocum Lake. , . , Arvilla Ann Fishier h*a be«& very ill at her lutoie. Miss Marion Winters and sister, Mrs. Edwards, and family of Rosecrans spent Wednesday afternoon With Mrs. Eva Ames. - - Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Ravin, formerly Miss Neva Dowell, of this locality are the proud parents of a son, born Sunday, Aug. 28, and will answer to the name of Eugene Nelson. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Wilson and family, Mrs. Harry Passfield and son, Mfrs. Alvin Case and family, Mrs. Richard Dowell and daughter, and Mr. and Mlrs. Herman Dunkfer and family attended the Farm Bureau and 4-H club picnic at the Cedar "Crest Farm Tuesdajrl Mr. and Mrs. Harry Ober and daughters and Mrs. Lockwood of Richmond spent Monday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Vasey. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Waldmann and Mr. and Mrs. Frank St. Georpre spent Tuesday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Kovar at Ingleside. Mrs. Richard Dowet? and daughter and Mrs. George Scheid, Jr., and daughter visited Mr- and Mrs. Joe Scheid at Crystal Lake Friday. Anna Belle Vanarsdale of Park Ridge spent the week-end with her aunt, Mrs. Frank King. Mr. and Mrs, Esse Fisher and Mrs. Lloyd Fisher and family spent Friday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Ravin at Slocum Lake. Mr. and Mrs. Frank St. George and Mr. and Mrs. Paul Kruppa spent Labor. Day with Mr. and Mrs. Henry Lang at Eagle Lake, Wis. Miss Hilda Oeffling of Waukegan spent the week-end here with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Oeffling. Mrs. Richard McGill and son, Farrell, of Mundelein spent Saturday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Fisher. William Rossdeutscher of Statsville spent the week-end with Mrs. A. Lusk and relatives. Mr. and Mirs. Roy Passfield and family were McHenry business callers Saturday. Mrs. E- Bacon and daughter, Vinnie, spent Labor Day at the home of Mr; and Mrs. Will Bacon at McHenry. ,Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Case and family attended the fair at Elkhorn Labor Day. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Fisher and family and Ellwood Dowell spent Labor' Day with Mr. and Mrs. Albert Hofer at Fremont Center. Mr, and Mrs. Paul Kruppa of Lake Villa spent Friday evening with Mr. and Mrs. Frank St. George. Arthur Wackerow attended the ball game at the Wrigley Field in Chicago Sunday and witnessed the Cubs and St. Louis Cardinals game. Miss Vinnie Bacon and Mrs. Wayne Bacon and daughter were Waukegan shoppers Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Herman Dunker and family spent Sunday at the home of Mr and Mrs. Henry Dunker. Sr., at Crystal Lake. Mr. and Mrs. Sylvester Lefferman and daughter of Fremont Center were Sunday supper -guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Fisher. Mr. and Mrs- G. A. Vasey and son spent Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. William Wright at Barreville. Miss Julia Viola Osgood is enjoying a vacation from Ritas Barbecue station at the home of her parents In Wisconsin. John Molidor Accompanied his brother, Otto, <ff Libertyville to the Wisconsin Dells the past week-end. Mr. and Mrs. Sylvester Wagner were callers at Mortgu. Grove Sunday. Milton and Lloyd Dowell visited their mother, Mrs. Albert Hafer, Sunday at Fremont Center. George Benwell, former resident of Volo, underwent a serious operation at St. Theresa's hospital, Waukegan, Saturday morning. The Volo school opened Tuesday with Miss La Verne Stone of Wauconda as teacher. Arthur Wackerow spent Labor Day at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Davis at Wauconda. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Nordmeyer and son, Russell, of Slocum Lake spent Monday evening at the horat of Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Fisher. House Committee That Has Important Dulles The committee on ways and means in the house of representatives Is the most powerful and Important of all the standing committees of congress The Constitution provides that all bills raising revenue and imposing taxes must originate in the house, and all such bills are considered and approved by the ways and means committee before they are taken up by the house as a whole. This means that all tariff legislation must go through this committee. It considered and approved all the Liberty loan act* to finance the World war and it dealt With the refunding of all the debts of the various countries owed the United States at the close of the war. Formerly the speaker of the house appointed the members of the house to the various committees. When the Democrats organized the house In 1&31, they placed this responsibility tn the hands of the Democratic members of the ways and means couuuiiUee.--- Pathfinder Magazine. WG BROADWAY HIT TO BEOPEN HARRIS THEATRE Col. William Roche,' manager Harris Theatre, Chicago, sends word that ever since he first read of the tremendous success scored by Arthur J. Beckhard's production of "Another Language" in the Booth Theatre, New York, late in the past Spring, he has been negotiating to bring it to Chicago, and now he is immensely pleased to be able to announce that he will reopen the Harris Theatre, Sunday night, Sept 11, with this very show. No other play in years created such a furore in the metropolis among both playgoers and erftics as did this work of the hitherto unknown but now famous author, Rose FVanken. "Another Language" not only caught everybody unprepared, for usually a successful play does not come along in late April, but it carried the blase first-nighters off their feet. . The usually placid Associated free# ', * - * shot out a wire the next &jr IbUoviBf "tr-V1 % the premiere, announcmg that MAn- * ^ M other Language" sent the first niglit / audience to its feet with cheering. -•* rarely heard in the theatre thes4 = days. ,/i The most captious of'all the.^tics;"'--^"^"^^ George Jean Nathan, gushingly de* / »* >* clared it to be "one of the best play# - « of the year." , £ And another almost equally diffi4 " ^ ; j cult critic to please, Robert Garland* 7 • J wrote in the World-Telegram that I fa "tfor all I know to the contrary, lasf 1 night's audience is still applauding.'* 'J Undoubtedly a rare dramatic treat - - j"- is in store for Chicagoan playgoers , ^ * , ' J who witness a performance of "An* • V » ' *J o t h e r L a n g u a g e . " • * - The usual Wednesday and Saturday. :M matinees will be given at the Harris " -fl Theatre during the engagement ot . ^ ,! f| this play, and the prices have beefc. ; ' ^ ",'$j set as low as 50c to $2.50 at night* 1" ' T. ',j| and but 50c to $2.00 for both matinee.* Historic "Mound*" Mounds In the United States are to be found from the Great Lakes te the Gulf of Mexico and from the Rockies to the Atlantic ocean. They are especially frequent in the valley of the Mississippi along its tributaries In Arkansas and Kansas, and in the basin of the Ohio. Similar structures extend southward through Mexico, Central and South America. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE CHURCHES ."Man" was the subject of the Lea=_ •on-Sermoh ln all Churches of Christ, Scientist, on Sunday, September 4. -• The Golden Text was. "Now. O Lord, thou art our father; we are'ths-- clay, and thou our letter; aud we all are the work of thy hand" (Isaiah. 64:8). .Among the citations which com*' prised the Lesson-Sermon waq the following from the Bible" "Beware lest any man spoil you through philosophy and vain deceit, after the tradition of men, after the rudiments pf the world, and not after Christ. For in him dweileth all the fulness of the Godhead bodily. And ye are complete in him, which is the head of all principality and power" (Colosslans2: 8 10). The Lesson-Sermon also Included the following passages from the Christian Science textbook, "Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures," by Mary Baker Eddy: "The world believes in many persons; but if God is personal, there is blrt one person, because there is but one God. His i>ersonality can only be reflected, not transmitted" (p.J 517). t Meeting the Demand f - v . . by TELEPHONE * A truck gardener, twenty miles from a large Central market, found his telephone very valuable to his business. He hauls hit produce, consisting of seasonal vegetables, to the market. There he watches the sup|4y and demand for various products. As the demand for a certain item increases over the supply, he immedi- " itely telephones his home ana arranges to include that product in the next day's load. Thus, by telephone, he meets the demand wktn prices are best. Opportunities lost by not having a telephone an much BMrejcaMj^r than telephone service, Ocder «a* to4ay» MAIL A CLASSIFIED AD TO THE McHenry Plaindealer 1$ATES--Two cents (2c) per word for each insertion. Minimum charge of 35c for each insertion .*# Nanw ElTovar Theatre, Crystal Lake FRIDAY -- SATURDAY Sept. 9-10 ** -. Admission 10-35c Constance Bennett i»' ^ : Two Against the World* SUNDAY -- MONDAY Sept 11-12 Adn. 10-25c before 5:04; 10-40c, after Tom Brown, Richard Cromwell, ff. B. Warner and Slim Summerville in "Tom Brown of Colver" ON THE STAGE IN PERSON SUNDAY ONLY THE THREE LrfTLE MAIDS' from WLS TUESDAY ONLY ~ (Dime Nite) All seats 10c "Almost Married" WEDNESDAY -- THURSDAY Sept. 14-15 Admission 10-35c Johnny Mack Brown and Zazu Pitts in 'TheVanishing Frontier' Pdst Offiete Number of TMrnaa ..• Amount Enclosed WRITE ADVERTISEMENT PLAINLY, one word in each space, including your name, address or phone. WRITE AD ABOVE "and MAIL TODAY ! Classified Columns Close 10:00 a/m; Thursday ii m All Classified Ads are Cash -"SCompoMr't Joke 4# letting the Ten Commandments music, Haydn, the composer, with" rim humor, stole a melody for the • _ " • -- -- •' //- ' t'l . Eaflub UafBkit . : I The modern English language has ! Arobably a larger vocabulary than any the other spoken languages and fftereforg Is more fitted to express the t£nany and various shades of meanings AND UNCLE JOHN Jimmie (fecidfe ildt to be young tip:; V Aw. I CAWT SEE MUCH DIFFERENCE BETWEEN REPUBLICANS AND DEMOCRATS, UNCLE JOHN, AND I I&KE# ROOSEVELT^ IDEA OF A IAMFFFORWEVENUSONLY. I'VE HEARD PLENTY KICKING ABOUT OUR TARIFF. THEY SAY IT IS RESPONSIBLE FOR MUOf OF OUR. TROUBLE. WELL, JIMMIE, I'M 6LAD TO SEE YOU TWINING POR'TBURSELF, BUT DONY LET ANYONE STRIN6 ^U WITH A LOT OF SWEET SOUNDING WORDS , 'v u..." . 'A---I;,, OMLY TWELVE YEARS a.go WE WERE OPERATES UNDER A SIMILAR TARIFF, TMCY CALLED IT THE UNDERWOOD TARIFF. FACTORIES WERE SMUT DOWW EVERYWHERE, MORE PEOPLE WERE OUT OF WORK THAN EVER BEFORE' LET* STEP OVER TOTHE UDRARY> I'LL SHowvbu. THERE IT is, ALL OVER. YOUR, HOMETOWN PAPER . You WERE ONLY NINE YEARS OLD THEM. THE FIRST THING THE REPUBLICAW CON<5R£SS MAD TO DO AFTER IT GOT IN WAS TO OTAN/SE THAT TARIFF LAW IN ORDER To PROTECT OUR LABORING KFEN- THEM FACTORIES WERE IMMEDIATELY STARTED UP. JOBS WERE OPENED FOFT OVR WORKING PEOPLE IVE CERTAWLY HAD MY EYES OPENED, MOST OF THE FELLOWS DONY KNOW ABOUT THE TARIFF. THEY BELIEVE A LOTOF TMIS CAMPAIGN STUFF. IVI CERTAINLY <SOWG To TELL THEM, AND CM MOT GOING LO BE So YOUNO AND EASY A6AJN. THAT^S A 600 O SLOGAN, JIMMIE, *DON'T 0£ FIND OUT FORr YOURSELF / READ HISTORY. * U&S*. * ' 1$ THAT «.»GHT> UNCLE J OHM > - KOi LET'S GO C THAT'S SO, UNCLE JOHN, ON EVERY PAGE ITTELLS OF PEOPLE SUFFER IN<3 FROM THE AWFUL COSTS OF LIVING,-- FOOD, CLOTHES \EVEB.YT«IW^ 36*-- *». * y*'

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