Word: bailing
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...decreed death to Dexter E. Chipps, lumber dealer, and acted as agent himself (TIME, July 26 et seq.). The now deceased had ventured to expostulate with the parson for maligning D. E. Chipps' friend, the Mayor of Fort Worth. Pastor Norris, who has since been at liberty on bail, preaching weekly to vast throngs, has now secured a change of venue in his trial, from Fort Worth to Austin, state capital; and a postponement of date to Jan. 10. Mayor H. C. Meacham, bespectacled, cautious-eyed friend of the unfortunate Chipps, had admitted expending $15,000 in hiring prosecutors...
With Buermeyer lying between life and death in Bellevue Hospital and Carson under $10,000 bail, the Columbia-University authorities, profoundly shocked, withheld decision as to their course of action. "Mr. Carson," said Professor Coss, his department chief, "was a thorough gentleman, a sincere student and an excellent teacher...
...week's concrete developments consisted merely in a continuance of the Roman Catholic economic boycott (TIME, Aug. 23) and the arrest and release on bail of groups of Roman Catholic "society girls" who distributed pro-Roman Catholic leaflets in the principal Mexican cities and pinned "boycott buttons" upon many a manly chest...
...with revolutionaries in Mexico. "I do not think that the religious troubles of Mexico had anything to do with this," said able Agent Hopkins, "I believe it was simply an attempt of the 'outs' to get 'in.'" General Estrada, unable to furnish $20,000 personal bail, languished with the rest of his "army" in the jail at San Diego last week, charged with "organizing a military expedition against a friendly country." Bland Exchange. Between the Archbishop of Mexico and President Calles there passed last week an exchange of notes more amiable in tone than any previous...
...custom, Abner and his mates engage female partners for the whole series of meetings. One night, during a lull in the hysteria, one Tug Beavers temporizes about going to the mourners' bench. That same night he gets a backful of buckshot from Peck Bradley, a murderer out on bail. Religion picks up. Bloodhounds bay for three days and nights in the back hills and Bradley is brought in to jail, crusted with mud but full of bravado. Sharing his contempt for the law and seething with Old Testament, the community grows ominously quiet. Abner suggests a plan; feet tramp...