However many Nations are eventually recognized, and taken into a League, there is a typewriter that can write the language of each and every one, the MULTIPLEX HAMMOND - the typewriter upon which the first covenants for a League of Nations were drawn up - the typewriter that the Press of the Nation refers to as "President Wilson's Closest Confidant." The Multiplex is un-like any other typewriter - there are over 365 different type-sets, including all languages to select from. Note the six styles shown above. Write for "How President Wilson Frightened the Lords at Midnight", and other descriptive literature explaining the unique features of the Multiplex. Write your name, address and occupation on the margin of this page NOW and mail the margin to THE HAMMOND TYPEWRITER CO . 639 East 69th Street New York CityWe tend to think that corporations favored Repooflicans in those old Neanderthal times. Nope. Corporations always favor GLOBALISM, and thus favor whichever "party" wears the globalist label. The "two" "parties" trade globalism back and forth from time to time. Wilson grabbed the ball from TR and pasted a D label on it. Harding was ferociously anti-globalist and quasi-socialist, so the corporations and media scandaled him and killed him. Hoover, a deep deep Deepstater, reclaimed the interventionist label for R. Then FDR repudiated globalism thoroughly, and the Repoofs didn't try very hard to claim it. Truman pulled the globalist ball back into the D area, where it stayed until Bush Senior shot Reagan and claimed it for R again. Since then, "both" "sides" are equally globalist, so there's no longer a game. (Trump was assigned to read the parts in the script for the NAZIPOPULISTHITLER character, but his actions are pure globalist.) Footnote: The title of the pamphlet is intriguing. So far I can't find either the pamphlet or any indication of its meaning. The Lords might be the British upper house, and there are several midnight events surrounding WW1, but I don't find the conjunction yet. Later: This might be it. The Prussian House of Lords, not the British. An interesting change of perspective. We think of Germany as a unified nation-state from 1870 to 1948, but it wasn't really unified in 1918. Kaiser Wilhelm was Prussian, and he was acting in the tradition of Prussian imperialism, which wasn't necessarily shared by all of Germany.
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