«' ^ \ r,' - "flUUHDKAUCK " ' w-<; V' •.-' • -i WOOD- '_tL STOCK V.--."' ' .;c5>V> V •-•^v/:' '. ,. - 4 v • * " * tJ : ^ , -«» *Ki ** *-* t >r :•• %•: ••'".•vYvOVv••'" '; • L- ^ * , ,• , A A A A A A HENRY L. COWLIN OP :v' T> One of the Woodstock Candidates for the Republican nomination for County Judge makes the statement that "Only once, in the history of our county, has the office of County Judge been held by a lawyer residing away from our county seat" The statement is true and to it can well be added the fact that for years Woodstock has had nearly every other county office. At the present time Woodstock has five of the eight county offices. The State's Attorney, the County Clerk, the County Treasurer, the County Sur" v : v- v-v> 'v.: .*:• • •' -f. •:••=•*• .'••.:••••'-*>. -v •v.,',.:-; •' ;£v-'.?•'••.• •> V- V-"4• ' AAA REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE FOR COUNTY JUDGE ' A A A ••• veyor and the County Superintendent of Schools are all from Woodstock. ( The Circuit Clerk is a resident of Harvard, the Sheriff comes from Marengo and the Coroner from Huntley, while Charles T. Allen, late County Judge, was from Cary in the southeastern part of the county. In the general election of November 6* 1934, a total of 16,986 votes were cast in Mc- Henry County. Of this number Dorr township, in which Woodstock, the county seat is located, cast a total of 3074 votes, which is less titan one-fifth of the total votes cast in the county. ^ At this same election two years ago, Algonquin and Nunda, the two towns in the southeastern part of McHenry County in which Cary, Fox River Grove, Algonquin and ited, cast 4294 votes. This is a quarter of the total vote of the county. Are not these voters entitled to at least one of the county offices? If a Woodstock candidate is elected County Judge, it would give Woodstock twothirds of the County offices with less than one-fifth of the vote, and would give Nunda and Algonquin townships no County offices with a quarter of the vote. Are not the voters of Crystal Lake, Algonquin, Cary and Fox River Grove, and the southeastern part of the county, entitled to representation at the county seat? We believe so, and we believe that Henry L Cowlin of Crystal Lake is eminently fitted for this office. • 'Among his friends, Henry L Cowlin is known as an attorney of ability - not a professional politician, but keen, able, square and efficient - a man with a great deal of human sympathy in his makeup, just the type of man to oversee, as County Judge, the settling of estates, the awards to widows, heirs and orphans and to administer fairly and impartially such criminal cases as come before him.