. Boone County Recorder. fight. There are so many Re-publicans in the Senate and Housethat he cant handle them, and ifany fall he would prefer that theybe members of the Farm Bloc in bothHouse and Senate. Of course it iswell known th&t the i»cti«ocrats aregetting together % most militant or-gaiizatioh for tho purpose cf iaus-ing an utter disappearance of thisunwieldly condition. One of the bigRepublicans toW « newspaper manthe other day that cne leaders of hisparty were hopeful that the major-ity of 169 in te House could be re-duced to 30 or 40 without startingan avalanche that would wipe outt


. Boone County Recorder. fight. There are so many Re-publicans in the Senate and Housethat he cant handle them, and ifany fall he would prefer that theybe members of the Farm Bloc in bothHouse and Senate. Of course it iswell known th&t the i»cti«ocrats aregetting together % most militant or-gaiizatioh for tho purpose cf iaus-ing an utter disappearance of thisunwieldly condition. One of the bigRepublicans toW « newspaper manthe other day that cne leaders of hisparty were hopeful that the major-ity of 169 in te House could be re-duced to 30 or 40 without startingan avalanche that would wipe outtile majority completely. They wouldlike to have a Congress that couldbe controlled gy a few leaders, butit is a danyerous time to try thetactics thought of. As far as impar-tial observance can see at this time,the slaughter among Republicans ofboth House and Senate will be great,but that the Farm Bloc will sufferthe least. The Democrats say the Re-publicans are in for the worst trim-ming they have had in 80 PAGE THREE J. M. Eddins, auctioneer, reporUaa large crowd at the sale of ArthurAlloway in Waterloo neighborhood,Inst Saturday,, and things sold atgood prices. Mr. Alloway has movedto McVille, where he expects to workon the government dam being builtaoross the river at that place, whenwork is resumed in the summer. The value of livestock on Ken-tucky farms Jan. 1, 1922, was ap-proximately $92,738,000 comparedto $127,896,000 Jan. 1, 1921, and$•6,708,000 Jan. 1, 1920, accordingto the annual estimates issued todayby the U. S. Bureau of Markets andCrop Estimates in co-operation withState Commissioner of AgricultureW. C. Hanna. Harold Gaines, after a sojourn oftwo or three years in Burlington,moved back to his fathers farm outon the Petersburg pike, truck which he has been operat-ing will be in the ands of HermanWingnte. Back to the farm where hecam watch the little lambs skip overthe green, and listen to the bird3sing while resting under the shadeof the o


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1920, booksubjectnewspap, bookyear1922