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...decided in advance that anything less than a 2-to-1 victory for Repeal would be a moral victory for us there." He thereupon vanished in Alabama. "The Wets had the support of both the national and State administrations," observed L. E. York, superintendent of the Indiana Anti-Saloon League, "and ample funds supplied by the breweries and distillers." Exulting in their tenth straight victory, Wet organizations looked with optimism on the outcome of six more ratification votes this month: in Massachusetts, Connecticut, Iowa, New Hampshire, California, West Virginia. Anti-Repealists began concentrating their campaign in the arid South. They...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: PROHIBITION: First Ten | 6/19/1933 | See Source »

...sold his drygoods store to Levi Leiter and Marshall Field because he thought his days were numbered, lived to see a new Palmer House become Chicago's first world-famed hotel. Its barber shop (floor studded with silver dollars) set the fashion for every first-class saloon west of the Mississippi. Gourmets of the 1880's smacked their chops over the Palmer House's saddles of venison and buffalo steaks...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Chicago Hotels | 6/19/1933 | See Source »

...principal courtroom prosecutor. He put more than a hundred "bucket shops" out of business and thereby learned the shady side of the brokerage business. He sent State Superintendent of Banks Frank Warder to Sing Sing for taking bribes in the City Trust Co. scandal. He convicted Anti-Saloon Leaguer William H. Anderson of forgery. He prosecuted bail bond racketeers, crooked milk inspectors, big-time thugs-with 80% convictions. He was in charge of the District Attorney's office in 1923 when Anna Marie ("Dot King") Keenan, Broadway "sweetie," was murdered. For days he withheld from the Press the name...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: National Affairs: Wealth on Trial | 6/12/1933 | See Source »

...turned out. had been negotiating a $49,500 income tax lien with Sherwood through the latter's attorney but did not know where Sherwood was. Would Collector Duggan "play ball" with the American? He would. A rendezvous with Sherwood and his lawyers was arranged in a Hoboken saloon, where Sherwood was safe from a New York contempt-of-court citation (and $50,000 fine). Next morning the American burst out with the neatest, most spectacular scoop that Manhattan had seen in a long time...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Press: Barrett's Scoop | 6/12/1933 | See Source »

From the oldtime saloon and penitentiary came many an oldtime evangelist-converted drunks and burglars who could denounce sin after knowing it firsthand. But the most modern and thorough| going sinners are organized. From gangland has yet to come a reformed Capone to make converts as efficiently as he used to machine-gun rival racketeers. Nearest thing to an ex-gangster evangelist is the well-fed, twinkling tub-thumper who was billed last week at a church in a down-at-heel section of Brooklyn as Lou Hill. "Former Hijacker, Gambler, Confidence Man," a Chicago hoodlum turned holy. High point...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: Gangster Evangelist | 5/29/1933 | See Source »

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