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  • . tor an uninstructed. lh !lo place tor hem in the sand-dch't lh That is it. lh fflut.t about Fel!gusont !!•.- Fert,.tsor- h lie The tight will get too strong tor fence riders. a big factor. th 1.lhat ia his racket! Third term tor Ka., third
  • standpoint . 6--Consider t e po ibility vf li qu idat i on of' News pe.pe rs, Inc., by ca lling in the 60 , 00 Newspapero ,Ino. preferre d at 6 6 and· pa y'ing for it with a bond i ssue on t he i ndividual pro perties. third co . ld , lO ldi ngs . ' i. s
  • was bom in Los Angeles in 1900. When he waa 6 his family moved hack to the family home in Illinois 1,,p'! S5-63) .' He, went to Princeton lfn,versity (1922) and Ha,. vard and Northwestern law school8. Io 1933 he helped organize the New Deal farm prqgram
  • c· c· · • M e·d a1·f I orn1a ,ties ay 1 for National Convention WASHINGTON, Sept. 20 UPISan Francisco and Los Angeles appeared today as prospective bidders for the 1948 Democratic national . conve~b0 ?· . Indications that the cities would submit
  • Kay 20. 1940 My dear Hopkinaz Boiling d011n to your indicated si&e took a little time. Hence the ' delay. Daar- »fi. Prodrl-enti tto hope 'that to tbooe th.are you uill f/16Y eomth1ng ae Fh'at eo.uts Chio~. brief u yow- £!rat in6ugural
  • •• ' · · · : .' ' · in: th• '. ~l" of IA · or•• who, . proaidont in 1 l , lq ALL lllC ~ a, _ r ln om:1, "11 poMetla »4>lit1cel party oonsJ:d.» ti . • · · ·· s. n1o Ce~t~nly no pol 1 t~eld 1 .t ho or a. - Tho 01! · J1d O.hail"mjlft tt·n toal lo . no t ·v opre .nt
  • INFMN. TIME FILED J. C . WILLKVS.R, P:Ut&T V JCll•PllllalDl:NT NEWCOMB CARLTON , P"HIDKNT Send thefollor,,ing meJ3Dge, 3ubjecl lo the terms on back hereof, which"a,e hereby agreed to · Kr. John U. Garner. 5:peak~r, House ot lieproacntat~voo, l I
  • Administration . TU YOUNG JEP?ERSON Renew b7 ienl7 .. Bower•' "-llaoe of Claude NBt react J•tfi l'IOD look lo 7011Dg man l1Yillc a hundrecl and aevent.7 79ar1 aao ..,.,.u1.y 110 . . eabodied in himNlt the na Uon aa 1 t, w.s to be ae di4 ta.. '-tta
  • ea, th•J lo•• 7ou but who atl.llk ot Wall S\reet-t.he TOllll1 Coroorau ur lbl Sidney l11llJaana--rwi the how. It ao you will t1Ad 7ouaalt ill 1902 •• lbe gu.7 who tho h\ h• r u ud who 1 ■ looking tor a law panaerahip tor the p \lrpoae of u,1.ac mink
  • ., these major holdings : The Macon (Ca.) ./ sional elections. In December he entered Victor F., and Joseph E.- whose holdings Telegraph anq News, The Gadsden spread from The Journal of Commerce (Ala.) Times, The Cleveland (Tenn.) the Columbia-Presbyterian
  • , and this is important, GOP candidate Taft invade~ ;the Deep South. Until this year any politician would have said that it's a sheer w~ste of time, energy and .catn:P.aign funds for a Republican to campaign fa,r below the . Mason Dixon Line. Note. how timea have changed
  • tr-ontime has passed when a man can bo o. o-ompromise 0ta.ndid.o.to in this oountry•­ tho sort of oa.ndida.te picked by the section bou ea to cnrr-y out their pe r• eonal and private promises. Tho time tor
  • , This is the first time in a long time any Florida Sena tor has been able -t.o get. Memaership on the Agricultural Colllllittee-. With the grea~ agri­ cultural, horticultural and livestock interests we have in Florida, I feel this assignment gives me a better
  • and was informed that President Hoover expects to visit Texas some time this spring or summer, but the exact dates or the places he will atop ha elp.ot been decided. Relative to meeting Ue:iioan officials at Laredo or Browneville, the suggestion is an excellent
  • with Stalin. He's the guy that can tell anybody anything any time and "out ot the horse's mouth". He now has cast himself. He is young and good-lookin&, an accepted pinko, beloved by the bankers, the industrialists, the Protestants and the Catholics