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In 1886, Landis first ventured into Republican Party politics, supporting a friend, Charles F. Griffin for Indiana Secretary of State.
Griffin won, and Landis was rewarded with a civil service job in the Indiana Department of State.
While employed there, he applied to be an attorney.
At that time, in Indiana, an applicant needed only to prove that he was 21 and of good moral character, and Landis was admitted.
Landis opened a practice in Marion, Indiana but attracted few clients in his year of work there.
Realizing that an uneducated lawyer was unlikely to build a lucrative practice, Landis enrolled at Cincinnati's YMCA Law School ( now part of the University of Cincinnati ) in 1889.
Landis transferred to Union Law School ( now part of Northwestern University ) the following year, and in 1891, he took his law degree from Union and was admitted to the Illinois Bar.
He began a practice in Chicago, served as an assistant instructor at Union and with fellow attorney Clarence Darrow helped found the nonpartisan Chicago Civic Centre Club, devoted to municipal reform.
Landis practiced with college friend Frank O. Lowden ; the future commissioner and his law partner went into debt to impress potential clients, buying a law library secondhand.

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