Word: convicted
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...Condon, famed for his part in the Lindbergh kidnapping case, neither drinks, smokes nor swears. He needed no stimulation to wear a U. S. flag on his coat lapel, explain to the Wisconsin stranger that he felt deeply sorry for Convict Bruno Hauptmann...
...down?" "I can't. It hurts too much." All the victims were wrapped in blankets, piled on stretchers, dispatched to Newark City Hospital. Twice this year in upState New York Federal prosecutors had failed to get juries to convict Flegenheimer for failing to pay taxes on a discoverable $480,000 income for 1929-31. Avoiding Manhattan, Schultz first hid in Connecticut, where he had taken up horseback riding this summer, later took refuge in New Jersey. There the Government went after him again, this time on a tax evasion indictment in the Southern New York district. Fighting a Federal...
...Valentine's position is unmistakable; it is also understandable. In the hands of such a phenomenally honest and efficient commissioner it can easily be justified. The courts have failed repeatedly to convict known gangsters, aided by shyster lawyers and self-contradictory law. These gentlemen have walked the streets, danced and drunk in the night clubs, and played golf on the municipal links without the twitch of n eye-lash-surrounded by music men and what the press euphemistically calls. "female companions". Extra-legal methods are the obvious reaction of a conscientious police commissioner to such conditions...
...Tennessean went into receivership and last year its founder was jailed for defrauding a North Carolina bank of $1,384.000 (TIME, May 21, 1934). When, at 55, Luke Lea put on the striped suit of Convict No. 29,409 to begin a six-to-ten-year term, he laid all his troubles to "persecution" by a Nashville banker-politician named Paul Maclin Davis and his elder brother, U. S. Ambas- sador-at-Large Norman Hezekiah Davis. Last week Banker Davis and RFChairman Jesse Jones, who, though a Texan, was born & bred in Tennessee, found themselves in water heated...
King Solomon of Broadway (Universal). In this inoffensive little program picture, outfitted with almost continuous music and hand-me-down wisecracks, King Solomon (Edmund Lowe) operates a night club built chiefly with funds supplied by a dangerous convict. King loses his hotspot in a poker game, finds the dangerous convict unexpectedly out on parole. While attending to these difficulties, he rescues a Long Island heiress (Louise Henry) from kidnappers, loses his heart to an entertainer (Dorothy Page) and a small dog named Hamburger. The smart talk, unfortunately, is the sort that goes sour in any mouth but Mae West...