Wilmette Life (Wilmette, Illinois), 26 Sep 1935, p. 30

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hours of the day not necessary for rest and recre- atiofi. And when any boy adds to those duties the s work sufficient to pay. the cost of books and other supplies, he is exhibiting the stuff of which the finest citizens are made, 'and a courage and deter- niination that shotild. not fait to bring him ample opportunities for extra work and extr.a money. To belp a boy of that type is flot only a responsi- bility but a privilege. The bureau of exnployment should have a wvaiting ist of employers anxious to (Io their part W< helping underprivileged boys to an education. me Ws a general teri ý o everv mn.n w1uma your 1< * * *. The final curtain has been rn.down on Dtv Wolf Hopper, one of America's oldtinme actors. Sorry. We ràther liked Hopper-after he left off that detestable habit of getting married. J ames A. (cati'ne Jin) Farley bia> iven tlwv New Dealers their line of argument for '193(). "There has flot been, is flot now and wili not be, any intention to interfere with the constitution." Nir. FarIey bas a vivid imagination., First lit inagined a $12,000,000 postal surplus, and now hu imagines that Americans 'cannot réad tilt record-

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