Word: feuds
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Three years ago the mining company bought the old enemy Butte Miner from the Clark heirs. William A. Clark Jr. tried to keep the feud alive by taking away the Miner staff and starting a new Butte daily, but there was not enough hatred left. After a few months he abandoned the project. The battle was over. Of the original Standard editors only famed Charles H. ("Egg") Eggleston survived, and he was finally forced into comparative retirement by failing eyesight. A few printers and pressmen continued to turn out the ghostlike Standard-until last week...
...come back from Florida to succeed his onetime protege. Gangster Torrio has been erroneously reported as hiding in Italy. His pretensions to the Chicago gangland throne will probably not go unchallenged. Hardly had the Capone pleas been entered last week before two gunmen were shot down in a reawakened feud between the South Side gangs of Frank McErlane and Edward ("Spike") O'Donnell. Attorney Johnson said that the Government also had plans in the event of Torrio's return...
...Louisville last April, says Editor Edward A. Jonas of the Louisville Herald-Post, were many, a great many, piteously at loose ends, pathetically seeking guidance. ... A personal feud had ruined great institutions, closed banks, precipitated a general bankruptcy. And still its fury raged...
...attention to the fact that the above article is untrue and libelous and does him grave injustice and injury. As a matter of fact, any investigation will prove that the closing of the National Bank of Kentucky of this city was not the result of any so-called "personal feud," alleged in the article as existing between Judge Bingham and Mr. James B. Brown, President of said Bank, nor did any such "personal feud" exist, nor did any such alleged "feud ruin great institutions, close banks or precipitate a general bankruptcy...
Between Louisville Publishers Bingham and Brown exists professional and political rivalry. The editor of Publisher Brown's newspaper called it a feud but TIME was not warranted in accepting this description. TIME deeply regrets the implication that Publisher Bingham had any connection with the collapse of Mr. Brown's National Bank of Kentucky...