MEMBERS OF CONGRESS                         439



                 SIXTH CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT
     Calumet, Fond du Lac, Ozaukee, Sheboygan, Washington and
                        Winnebago Counties.

  MICHAEL K. REILLY (Dem.) was born in the town of Empire, Fond
du Lac County, and educated in the country school, Oshkosh Normal
School, and the University of Wisconsin, graduating from the College of
Letters and Science in 1894 and the Law School in 1895. He is now a
member of the law firm of Reilly and Cosgrove. He was a member of
the 63rd and 64th Congresses, and was elected in November 1930, to fill
the unexpired term of Florian Lampert, deceased, and to serve the full
term of the 72nd Congress. He was reelected in 1932, and again in 1934.
  Home Address: 82 Third Street, Fond du Lac.

               SEVENTH CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT
Adams, Green Lake, Langlade, Marathon, Marquette, Portage, Shawano,
               Waupaca, Waushara, and Wood Counties.
  GERALD J. BOILEAU (Prog.) was born at Woodruff on January 15,
1900. He was graduated from the Minocqua High School in 1918 and
attended the A. E. F. University in France in 1919. He received the
degree of LL.B. in 1923 from Marquette University Law School. He has
practiced law from 1923 to the present time. During the World War
he served eighteen months, twelve of which were with the American
Expeditionary Forces. In 1928 he was a delegate to the Republican Na-
tional Convention. From 1926-30 he was district attorney of Marathon
County and has been a member of Congress since 1931.
  Home Address: Wausau.

                EIGHTH CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT
Brown, Door, Florence, Forest, Kewaunee, Manitowoc, Marinette, Oconto,
                       and Outagamie Counties.

  GEORGE J. SCHNEIDER (Prog.) was born on a farm on October 30,
  1877 in the town of Grand Chute, Outagamie County. He attended the
  public schools of Appleton, where he has made his home ever since. He
  is a paper maker by trade. For twenty-four years he has been vice-
  president of the International Brotherhood of Paper Makers and for
  thirteen years a member of the executive board of the Wisconsin State
  Federation of Labor. He has been a member of Congress from 1923 to
  1933 and was elected in 1934 to the 74th Congress.
  Home Address: 1019 North State Street, Appleton.

                 NINTH CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT
   Barron, Buffalo, Chippewa, Clark, Dunn, Eau Claire, Jackson, Pepin,
              Pierce, St. Croix, and Trempealeau Counties.

   MERLIN HULL (Prog.) spent his boyhood in a farming community at
 Sechlerville in Jackson County. Here he attended school and worked as
 a farm hand and country school teacher so that he might earn funds
 with which to continue his education. He also learned the printing
 trade. His higher education was received at Gale College, at Galesville,
 and De Pauw and Columbian Universities. After being admitted to the
 bar, he was a practicing attorney at Black River Falls and served as dis-
 trict attorney of Jackson County. In 1904 he bought the Jackson County
 Journal, which in 1926 was consolidated with the Badger State Banner
 under the name of Banner-Journal. Mr. Hull still owns and publishes
 this newspaper. He has held various public offices, serving as district
 attorney of Jackson County; as a member of the assembly of the Wis-
 Copsin legislIture in i109, 1911, and 1913, being elected speaker of the