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PREMIUM --  WHS#15629: Group portrait of CUNA (Credit Union National Association) adults and children around a table with presents. There is a Christmas tree in the background.  Madison, Wisconsin, 1935. Wisconsin Historical Society/Courtesy Everett Collection.
PREMIUM --  WHS#27733: Portrait of a young John L. McCaffrey, president of International Harvester Company from 1946-1958.  1935. Wisconsin Historical Society/Courtesy Everett Collection.
PREMIUM --  WHS#16006: Seven show girls, wearing hats, from the Orpheum's Spices of 1935 show, seated at a table at Hommel's Heidelberg Hofbrau Restaurant, 20 West Mifflin St.  Madison, Wisconsin, 1935. Wisconsin Historical Society/Courtesy Everett Collection.
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CP2STO47735 | 1935 
HISW021 WH291
CP16075446 | HISW021 WH291 
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FLE - In this Aug. 14, 1935, file photo President Franklin Roosevelt signs the Social Security bill in Washington. Americans are getting older, but not this old: Social Security records show that 6.5 million people in the U.S. have reached the ripe old age of 112. In reality, only few could possibly be alive. As of last fall, there were only 42 people known to be that old in the entire world. But Social Security does not have death records for millions of people with birth dates stretching back as far as 1869, according to a report by the agency’s inspector general. The first old-age monthly benefit check was paid in 1940, after President Franklin D. Roosevelt had signed the Social Security Act in 1935.  (AP Photo, File)
FLE - In this Aug. 14, 1935, file photo President Franklin Roosevelt signs the Social Security bill in Washington. Americans are getting older, but not this old: Social Security records show that 6.5 million people in the U.S. have reached the ripe old age of 112. In reality, only few could possibly be alive. As of last fall, there were only 42 people known to be that old in the entire world. But Social Security does not have death records for millions of people with birth dates stretching back as far as 1869, according to a report by the agency’s inspector general. The first old-age monthly benefit check was paid in 1940, after President Franklin D. Roosevelt had signed the Social Security Act in 1935.  (AP Photo, File)
FILE - In this Aug. 14, 1935, file photo President Franklin Roosevelt signs the Social Security Bill in Washington. In 1935 Americans struggle to pay for medical care amid the Great Depression. Roosevelt favors creating national health insurance, but decides to push for Social Security first. He never gets the health program passed. But his Social Security bill will provide old age pensions and unemployment insurance. From left are: Chairman Doughton of the House Ways and Means Committee; Sen. Wagner, D-N.Y, co-author of the bill, Secretary Perkins, Chairman Harrison of the Senate Finance Committee, Rep. Lewis, D-Md., co-author of the measure. (AP Photo/File)
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CP2STO194755 | 1935-08 
Toronto, Ontario; August 1935 --Amusements --The Midway , Canadian National Exhibition, Toronto. (CP PHOTO) 1999 (National Archives of Canada) PA-060423
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CP1STO579932 | 1935-08 
Notts County players throw medicine balls at each other during training.
PREMIUM --  ROYAL TOURNAMENT 1935: The Duchess of York (later Queen Elizabeth and the Queen Mother) arrives by car at the Royal Tournament in London accompanied by her daughters, Princess Elizabeth (r) and Princess Margaret.
ROYAL TOURNAMENT 1935: The Duchess of York (later Queen Elizabeth and the Queen Mother) arrives by car at the Royal Tournament in London accompanied by her daughters, Princess Elizabeth (r) and Princess Margaret.
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CP2STO50368 | 1935-08 
Billy Fellowes, left, and George Stephenson, Luton Town
Two women astride an 1895 Crank Drive motorcycle, right, and a 500 New Imperial Twin, left, which has reached 114mph at Brooklands.
British music hall composer and star Harry Champion poses for a picture.
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CP2STO47736 | 1935 
Toronto, Ontario; August 1935 --Amusements --The Midway , Canadian National Exhibition, Toronto. (CP PHOTO) 1999 (National Archives of Canada) PA-060423
Kamloops, British Columbia; June 1935 --The Depression -- Strikers from unemployment relief camps enroute to Eastern Canada during "March on Ottawa" Kamloop, B.C. June 1935. (CP PHOTO) 1999 (National Archives of Canada) C-029399
Ottawa, Ontario; May 6,1935--Celebrations-- His Excellency, the Earl of Bessborough, Governor General of Canada, presenting a Silver Jubilee Medal to Bishop Roper of Ottawa, on the occasion of the National Celebration of His Majesty, King George V Silver Jubilee. (CP PHOTO) 1999 (National Archives of Canada/Frank C. Tyrell ) PA-152806
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CP1STO578016 | 1935 
PREMIUM --  WHS#15629: Group portrait of CUNA (Credit Union National Association) adults and children around a table with presents. There is a Christmas tree in the background.  Madison, Wisconsin, 1935. Wisconsin Historical Society/Courtesy Everett Collection.
PREMIUM --  WHS#27733: Portrait of a young John L. McCaffrey, president of International Harvester Company from 1946-1958.  1935. Wisconsin Historical Society/Courtesy Everett Collection.
PREMIUM --  WHS#16006: Seven show girls, wearing hats, from the Orpheum's Spices of 1935 show, seated at a table at Hommel's Heidelberg Hofbrau Restaurant, 20 West Mifflin St.  Madison, Wisconsin, 1935. Wisconsin Historical Society/Courtesy Everett Collection.
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CP2STO47735 | 1935 
FILE - In this Nov. 10, 1935, file photo, Brooklyn Dodgers' Ralph Kerchavel (26) bats away a pass for an unidentified Pittsburgh Pirates player, second from right, that was caught by Pirates' Jim Levey, left, who carried the ball in for a touchdown at Ebbetts Field in Brooklyn, N.Y. The Pirates defeated the Dodgers 16-7. The NFL saw its biggest influx of teams for the decade in 1933, with the additions of the Philadelphia Eagles, Pittsburgh Pirates (later the Steelers) and Cincinnati Reds. (AP Photo/Murray Becker, File)
FILE - This Sept. 11, 1935 file photo shows  Storm Troopers raising their hands in salute as Adolf Hitler leads his staff down the aisle during opening of the National Socialist Party Convention in Nuremberg, Germany.  In March 1933, six years before the war began, Adolf Hitler’s storm troopers violently shut down a small German newspaper,  the Munich Post ,  that had devoted close to a decade warning about Hitler’s dangers to a free society.  A recent biography published by The Associated Press called, “Enemy of the People: The Munich Post and the Journalists Who Opposed Hitler” by Terrence Petty, captures the early era of Nazi Germany.   (AP Photo)
FILE - In this April 22, 1935 file photo, accompanied by a bodyguard, a nurse, and a chauffeur, Gloria Vanderbilt enters the home of her mother, Gloria Morgan Vanderbilt, in midtown Manhattan, New York, for an Easter weekend visit. Vanderbilt, the intrepid heiress, artist and romantic who began her extraordinary life as the "poor little rich girl" of the Great Depression, survived family tragedy and multiple marriages and reigned during the 1970s and '80s as a designer jeans pioneer, died Monday, June 17, 2019, at the age of 95.  (AP Photo/File)
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CP1STO578017 | 1935 
Ottawa, Ontario; May 6,1935--Celebrations-- His Excellency, the Earl of Bessborough, Governor General of Canada, presenting a Silver Jubilee Medal to Bishop Roper of Ottawa, on the occasion of the National Celebration of His Majesty, King George V Silver Jubilee. (CP PHOTO) 1999 (National Archives of Canada/Frank C. Tyrell ) PA-152806
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CP1STO579934 | 1935-05 
FILE - In this July 6, 1935 file photo, Helen Wills Moody regains the women's singles championship when she defeated Helen Jacobs in the final at the All England Lawn Tennis Championships in Wimbledon, London. Wills Moody won eight Wimbledon titles in an 11-year span, with her final victory coming in 1938. The California-born Wills Moody is considered to be one of the greatest female players in history with 31 Grand Slam titles in all forms. She also won two Olympic gold medals at the 1924 Paris Olympics, the last time tennis was an Olympic sport before being reintroduced at the 1988 Seoul Games. (AP Photo, File)
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CP2STO899417 | 1935-07 
FILE - In this April 22, 1935 file photo, accompanied by a bodyguard, a nurse, and a chauffeur, Gloria Vanderbilt enters the home of her mother, Gloria Morgan Vanderbilt, in midtown Manhattan, New York, for an Easter weekend visit. Vanderbilt, the intrepid heiress, artist and romantic who began her extraordinary life as the "poor little rich girl" of the Great Depression, survived family tragedy and multiple marriages and reigned during the 1970s and '80s as a designer jeans pioneer, died Monday, June 17, 2019, at the age of 95.  (AP Photo/File)
FILE - In this April 8, 1935, file photo, golfer Gene Sarazen, center, receives a check for $1,500 from sportswriter Grantland Rice, left, for winning the Augusta National Invitation Tournament in Augusta, Ga. Sarazen beat Craig Wood, right, to win the tournament. The Masters wasn't even the Masters in 1935. It was the Augusta National Invitation Tournament, the second edition. Craig Wood was the presumed winner, in the clubhouse at 282, until one shot changed everything. (AP Photo/File)
FILE - In this April 8, 1935, file photo, golfer Gene Sarazen, center, receives a check for $1,500 from Grantland Rice, left, for winning the Augusta National Tournament, the second year of a tournament that eventually would be called the Masters, in Augusta, Ga. Sarazen beat Craig Wood, right, to win the tournament.(AP Photo/File)
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CP1STO579935 | 1935-04 
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1935-08

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1935-08 
Unique identifier: CP2STO50367 
Legacy Identifier: Everett Collection_1935-08 
Type: Folder 
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