Be up to Date

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Be up to Date They've arrived. All the THE EVENING BANNER . ... Mill SETTLEMENT OF POWNAL new Fall Styles in all Hues now ready. Select your Per year $3.00 Ill Per month .25 outfit from the best advertis- Tablet Commemorates the Event and ed lines in America. Also Fact All Subscriptions Payable In Advance the That Jim Flak Was The Best Fabrics, The j Born In Town. I Best Fashions, The Best Fits, Entered at the Post-offic- Bennington, Worthy cltizons of Pownal, Vt., have erected a In Vt, Dec. 11, 1903, second class WMl TILAWRENCEj tablet honor of their The Best Workmanship and at town and its greatest achievement. The Best Wear at the lowest mall matter. THOROUGH,. PRACTICAL AND ARTISTIC which was serving as the birthplace of James Fisk, Jr.. "Prince of Erie." prices. VIOLIN INSTRUCTION It was high time this was done even at day. PRANK E. HOWE, Editor and Pub'r. Itailo 81 81xU AT, tiv, N T. this law Careful review of In the history of Pownal falls to reveal New Fall Styles Clothing any other event of note than the " Crawford Parlor." A genuine indirect draft stove BENNINGTON, VT., SEPT. 22, 1911 starting there of James Fisk, Jr., m with full return flue; smoke passes between S. his career as a speculator in steel and p the down JAMES SILK Iron at a age. Hats, Caps and Furnishings Messenger add tender This resulted the firepot and the outside casing of the stove to a flue The wants to its later kn his to pleasant acquiring steel rails and for Men, Boys, and Children word of appreciation the Contractor and Builder other things In large quantities. beneath the ashpan, thence up and out comment of The Randolph Herald and Pownal was settled nearly two hun are ready. News on the editorial work now ap- Office and Workshop through the back smoke pipe to the dred years ago by the Dutch, and It pearing in The White River Junction has acquired a DODulation chimney, giving more heat and burning As the contemporary well 132 Street of several Landmark. West Main hundred persons. It is Just across less coal. The grate center slides for- for the Best says, bucolic flavor of The Land- - t WSJSJBl,,"' M Headquarters "the the New York state line and within mark s editorial page is a welcome sight of ward for dumping. Large clinker door; phil- the Green mountains and the km relief." The writer Is evidently To of Bennington the Ladies uerkBhlres. Things have I3S wide, deej) ashpan; dust damper; nickel Makes In All Lines osophical enough to see the opportu- chaneed little since James flmt RAW in peaceful realm Fisk Jr.. rails removable. Four sizes. nities for texts the and Vicinity. light there, in 1834. The old town of old Mother Nature and clever was only once f Hart, Schaffner Marx ser- I have received the fall and winter really severely shaken, enough to serve up little tits of e and that was when-th- it with-Dra- w Hats and Caps refreshing and styles and am ready to make all news of his Tropic Crawford." With or Clothing. Knox mons on them that are death was noised Its inspiring. Life is not all beer and kinds of garments at reasonable about quiet Dress Gloves, Bates Also-o- n streets. out down draft back pipe, center Fownes skittles, not all slaving for the dollar, prices. all klnda of ladles Shirts, and gents cleaning and pressing. Dr. B. Oscar Barber, a local anti- grate. Best stove made at the price. Street Spauldings not all wearing or fretting one's heart quarian, who was largely out grind of commer- concerned Sweater Coats, Onyx Hosi- in the relentless In the erection of the memorial Crawford " Parlor" Nickel rails removable. cialism. A little glimpse of blue sky to ery, Shaw-kn- it Hosiery, the Pownal and Fisk, is also the custod- a little whiff of scented" fields, a little Nathan Levin ian of the principal melody from a happy songbird, a little 130 North St. Tel. 291-- tales concerning Crawford "Wood in this best Underwear in all styles, the once distinguished citizen. Sam- Parlor." babbling a gossipy brook, a lit- Tropic" Crawford from uel Wright, flagman at the crossing, new heating stove for wood the front door stylish Neckwear, styJish tle taste of the first fruits of autumn is also familiar with Incidents fire-plac- e. even if we only get through the of the swings open to give the effect of a By moving Men's Shoes. CopyriaJil Man Schiftier It Mm it MILLINERY DESIGINER early life of the of as doeB much to "Prince Erie," and editor a middleman It is with affectionate regard that he a slide in this door the fire can be seen without opening sweep the cobwebs out of world-wea- r sees to It our that the tablet is always the door itself. The slide openings are protected by wire led minds and freshen the air M. C. O'DONNELL kept clean and made to glisten in thoughts must have to keep pure and the r.lnnn Hutu emhrolacrcd. dilirnod and made sun of day. gauze. The main top swings to one side and underneath MULLIGAN & ROCHt hopeful happy. Mes and St. Albans l.ateand IJnircrle Hula of all kind. GKe This is the entire inscription which of wood. senger. BlcuUlnif of colors a specialty. Tule it is a large plate that lifts to admit large pieces Tailors. appears upon that memorial to the With Its customary felicity the vllage great: This stove is made in both direct and indirect draft Messenger has expressed what all the POWNAL, VERMONT, styles. is strongly made and very handsome. Three sTOVE J SEED STORE 1 V MnHicnn named in honor of J, It PEOPLES HARDWARE an readers bf the Landmark must have aU f Vtl. 1I1UIUOU1I THOMAS sizes, inch way, Is POWNAL to burn 19, 22 or 25 lengths. felt. By the however, who Governor of the Massachusetts Reliable STEWART heating Wood We sell the Old writer? Is It 1757-60- . Crawford Parlor" the Landmark editorial Eyes Tested add Bay Colony. .Walker & Pratt Mfg Co., 31.35 Union St, Boston and cooking stoves, made since 1832. Mr. O. A. Cheney of Sharon? Hlastes Fitted First settled by the Dutch In 1724. Town Government .jiU? 13 "STEWART ranges are Famous Bakers". Fine Watch & Jewelry Repairing organized in 1763. Kor by 1. VA.ILI Judge James L. Martin of the Unl In this village was born roundly R 1 , 1 ted States circuit court roast Hour to to 5, 1 to 9. JAMES FISK. JR. heaters are Fuel Savers, com- 'STEWART ed the Central Vermont Railroad Closed Tueaday and Thu radar Evenlnaa, The Prince of Erie. pany for Its appeal from certain pub- II A I.N STRKET. KOHTU HEVNINGTON Who recks now of old Governor line in stock and sell He dimensions of We have a complete Improvements ordered at White Pownall, whose name, minus one "1" Its utmost capacity the easy payment River Junction by the Vermont Public is In the stage has been provided for all them to responsible parties on the retained the title of the town? undoubtedly Service commission. It is reasonable Better It were that the town were call of the scenes, and will plan. to expect that the railway company Millinery Parlor ed Fiskal, proclaiming delight both old and young alike. The This Appeals to You thus both the unus- - will proceed without much further MAIN STREET cognomen of the illustrious and his most appealing features of this PLANT JARS parley to make the changes officially financial proweHH. al production to the muBlclanly class LANTERNS STONE JARS Shaftsbury. Vt. an We produce quality. ordered. Rutland News. South According to Dr. Barber and in es, however, lies In the fact that dmlrned, fnaiio trimmed. Linen occur Quality, BOILERS When you seek to force a Vermont Hutu and this he is confirmed by Mr Warren of these modern interpolations or high grade. OIL CANS and WASH Hutu emlirolilered and mnln. Aut omobllo Hon with perfect consistency. railroad to hurry in adding Improve oeta and Veil. Hummer Millinery of ail k'nrii Wilcox, who has driven over the Monumental work is the llennlnifton Tel. W-- roads about Pownal these many years Nothing la permitted to interfere ments you have a job on hand calcu- with proper rendition of Balfes one best business James Fiske was wild for- - the builder. QUALITY Jr.. and Messrs. THE STORE WHERE COUNT8 lated to make a modern Hercules sick ard from his youth. His father was delightful score. Indeed, the Our reputation depends of his job. TVJC BhntGuna. Rltlefaud Revolver peddler, Aborn have given a great deal of care 115 llain VJVlXkJ"f to rout and fur smIo. Aminuol- - but both his father and upon it. Our ttnt-cla- and attention to the selection of both constantly 2 on or all kind. (un repaired by a mother disappeared from his destiny Street gunsmith. Bicycle Playing; Canli lUoandtV! at an early age. principals and chorus, resulting In business is A.H.WinslowTn' BURGLARS VERY BUSY imroern. union concurea and nonwi: new opera complement or so increasing full grand bundled put on old A KeirlMer Here It should be said careful hlale. Cab that loists, a spleudldly marshalled chorus proof of it. OPEN EVERY EVENING EXCEPT FRIDAY r wile. In pnrfeot condition, rmcliiteni from investigation has convinced the citi- Break Into Cafe at Island Park and Clu-a- r corps employ- one cent to bve dollars Alao a Machine zens of Pownal that Bennington was and brilliant de ballet, Take Everything In Sight Mir Jumbo) In Brit c!a"8 condition, adjustable ing in all upwards of one hundred or pennies or nlcklca.
Recommended publications
  • What Are You Going to Do About It? Ethics and Corruption Issues in The
    What Are You Going to Do About It? Ethics and Corruption Issues in the New York State Constitution By Bennett Liebman Government Lawyer in Residence “What Are You Going to Do About It?” Ethics and Corruption Issues in the New York State Constitution By Bennett Liebman Government Lawyer in Residence Government Law Center Albany Law School Edited by Andrew Ayers and Michele Monforte April 2017 Cover image: “The Prevailing Candidate, or the Election carried by Bribery and the Devil,” attributed to William Hogarth, circa 1722. It depicts a candidate for office (with a devil hovering above him) slipping a purse into a voter’s pocket, while the voter’s wife, standing in the doorway, listens to a clergyman who assures her that bribery is no sin. Two boys point to the transaction, condemning it. Image courtesy of the N.Y. Public Library. Explanation of the image is drawn from the Yale Library; see http://images.library.yale.edu/walpoleweb/oneitem.asp?imageId= lwlpr22449. CONTENTS I. Introduction ....................................................................... 3 II. Ethics Provisions in the State Constitution ........ 5 A. Extant Ethics Provisions in the Constitution .............. 5 B. Banking and Ethics ....................................................... 6 C. The Canal System and Ethics ..................................... 11 D. Bribery and Ethics....................................................... 15 E. Free Passes, Rebates, and Ethics ............................... 23 III. Restrictions on the Authority of the State Legislature
    [Show full text]
  • Hair Vigor, Apolis
    to follow the course of Peru and the South our representative was both greatly sur- WASHINGTON. IIOTEL AREIVALS. DAILY American Bepublics. If Cubans desire to prised and astonished; surprised over the SECOND EUROPE. EXPRESS - be annexed to the United States, the action so soon taken, and astonished over Saturday j- OT. EDITION. o'clock !.. by American ( Jovernmer.t is willing to pur- the contents of the following letter, writ- A SUIT FOR LIBEL. i.VLT IIOl sK. Extent of the the liertlraai island from Spain for a sum of on of commercial Corner Main and k irst streets. tire. chase the ten a broken half sheet 2. money hereafter to be agreed upon. note: JO Poarce.NO L S Morris, Tenu 3 Pauls, October w A , O'CLOCKP. decision the Spanish Govern- conversa- j ,y,lllo,,1,ie,' da W I' iVcker, Ahi 3J. It is estimated that the loss by the fi: Whatever "'Assure Mr. Fisk that in the Ohio River Interests Attended to. J;rud,welU ment ma- - arrive at, if it persists in prose- J h vl Kantoiowick, Ark among the shipping at Lordeaux wi.t tion with the Sun reporter, yesterday, l'orohs, N W Clark. Scotland jolii to THE LOUISVILLE EXPRESS. cuting the war it must be done on humane what he says my imputing be- Mrs A D .N.aeUie, do II W Ferguson, do r.vaiivuie. r2.ich millions of francs. regarding A ne A w, do troupe of principle?, for humanity demands it." littling or derogatory respect- ka, F II Hozer, Ke The artistes now performing at October 2.
    [Show full text]
  • 1 a DIRTY YEAR Sex, Suffrage, and Scandal in Gilded Age New York By
    A DIRTY YEAR Sex, Suffrage, and Scandal in Gilded Age New York by Bill Greer EXTENDED ENDNOTES The endnotes in the published version of A Dirty Year are limited to quotations. For readers interested in detailed sourcing for facts, descriptions, and so forth, I have prepared this extended set of endnotes by chapter and page. These endnotes include the references for quotations found in the book, as well. For ease of reference, the Bibliography follows these endnotes. I have added a handful of entries. ABBREVIATIONS USED IN THE ENDNOTES CA—Commercial Advertiser NYEP—New York Evening Post NYH—New York Herald NYT—New York Times NYTrib—New York Tribune WCW—Woodhull & Claflin’s Weekly NYS—New York Sun 1 Chapter 1 3 love triangle . Herald . Day’s Doings: NYT, Jan. 7, 1872; Aug. 31, 1872; July 3, 1872; July 12, 1872. 3 Fisk had spent: Fisk’s life is well chronicled in newspapers from 1867 to 1872 and in several contemporary books: R. W. McAlpine, The Life and Times of Col. James Fisk, Jr. (New York: New York Book Company, 1872); Willoughby Jones, The Life of James Fisk, Jr. (Philadelphia: Union, 1872); Marshall Stafford, The Life of James Fisk, Jr. (Philadelphia: National Publishing, 1874). A modern biography is W. A. Swanberg, Jim Fisk: The Career of an Improbable Rascal (New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1959). 3 Josie Mansfield . brownstone: McAlpine, 502–505; Jones, 335–339. 3 Grand Opera House . staged theatricals: NYT, Nov. 3, 1870. 4 Fisk invited . worked on Mansfield: Jones, 342. McAlpine, 501–502. 4 “the grand entrée” and “the Woodhull and Claflin Wing”: NYT, Jan.
    [Show full text]
  • Riding the Rails Quiz
    Riding the Rails The advanced industrial development of the United States and much of the white settlement of the Western portion of the country coincided with, and was spurred by, the invention and spread of the railroad in the 19th century. How much do you know about this history? 1. Pick the year when the most miles of railroad tracks were in service in the United States: 1896 1916 1946 1996 2. The immediate trigger of the Financial Panic of 1873 occurred when: The Northern Pacific Railroad, spurred by the grant of millions of acres of federal land, built financially unsustainable lines into these nearly uninhabited territories, finally causing its stock to fall and the finance house that was its agent to go bankrupt. The thousands of immigrant workers who had been employed by the Union Pacific and the Central Pacific Railroads to lay the first transcontinental line finished the job in 1869 and were laid off and suddenly entered the labor pool, driving down wages in many industries. A long strike by railroad workers on the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad spread nationwide and paralyzed the movement of freight, causing business activity around the country to stall. Financiers Jay Gould, James Fisk, and Daniel Drew manipulated the stock price of the Erie Railroad in order to gain complete control over the company from Cornelius Vanderbilt. 3. If you boarded a passenger train in 1870, with which of the following items of safety equipment was it likely equipped? Automatic air brakes Automatic coupling mechanisms to join and separate the car Steam heating in the passenger cars None of the above 4.
    [Show full text]
  • THE FISK RAID and the REMOVAL ACT of 1868 Philip
    THE ORIGINS OF AN EXPANDED FEDERAL QUESTION JURISDICTION: THE FISK RAID AND THE REMOVAL ACT OF 1868 Philip Leonard Merkel Savannah, Georgia A.B., University of Illinois, 1970 J.D., University of Illinois, 1974 A Thesis Presented to the Graduate Faculty of the University of Virginia in Candidacy for the Degree of Master of Arts Corcoran Department of History University of Virginia May, 1983 Introduction During and after the Civil War, Congress rapidly expanded the types and numbers of suits which parties could originate in or remove to the federal courts. Increasingly, cases which state courts had traditionally decided, such as actions arising under federal law and the Constitution, and disputes where a corporation was a party, found their way into the United States courts. Many of these suits involved negligence claims and land disputes, questions 2 which in the past had been matters of purely local concern. These new accessions to the jurisdiction of the United States courts were profound and highly visible. In the ten-year period beginning in 1876, for instance, the case­ load of the lower federal courts where the United States 3 was not a party more than doubled from 14,397 to 31,455. Many Americans came to view this expansion of federal judicial power with suspicion and contempt. In particular, farmers of the West were not enamored of the ascendancy of the federal courts. Many were convinced that emerging national corporations were behind the movement to broaden federal court jurisdiction. The flight of railroads, insurance companies,
    [Show full text]
  • Thomas Nast's Crusading Legal Cartoons
    GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works Faculty Scholarship 2011 Thomas Nast's Crusading Legal Cartoons Renée Lettow Lerner George Washington University Law School, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarship.law.gwu.edu/faculty_publications Part of the Law Commons Recommended Citation Renée Lettow Lerner, Thomas Nast's Crusading Legal Cartoons, in 2011 Green Bag Almanac 59-78. This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Faculty Scholarship at Scholarly Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works by an authorized administrator of Scholarly Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Under the Thumb Harper’s Weekly, Aug. 19, 1871 William Tweed’s thumb crushes New York City while New Jersey, in the foreground, prospers with industry, trade, homes, and a flourishing public school. ________________________________________________ THOMAS NAST’S CRUSADING LEGAL CARTOONS Renee Lettow Lerner† The cartoonist Thomas Nast (1840-1902) was in his heyday a political in- stitution, with each of his pictures helping to form public opinion. His influence reached its height with his relentless caricatures of Boss Tweed and the Tammany Hall Ring in New York City. In 1871, the Nation, edited by E.L. Godkin, proclaimed: “Mr. Nast has carried political illustrations during the last six months to a pitch of excellence never before attained in this country, and has secured for them an influence on opinion such as they never came near having in any country.”1 Nast contributed to American political and cultural iconography in many ways.
    [Show full text]
  • Woodhull and Claflins Weekly V2 N2 Nov 26 1870
    PROGRESS! FREE THOUGHT! UNTRAMMELED LIVES ! BREAKING THE WAY FOB FUTUBE GENE BATI ONS. v o l 2.-X0. 2. w h o l e .V 23. NEW YORK, NOVEMBER 26, 1870. PRICE TEN CENTS. VICTORIA 0. W00DHULL & TËNNEE C. CLAFLIN, other one—thAt its nature requires moro heAt or cold ; more cation of vAnity. By these means the mAjority of children EDITORS AND PROPRIETORS. Air And suushiuu i moro or loss exercise, or less or moro gov­ reach mAturity without Any definite and well-leArned busi­ ernment, is seldom if ever considered. ness to depend upon, and are compelled thereby to vAcillAte CONTEXTS OF THIS NUMBEK* From the hour of birth to that eventful period known As between different kinds o f employment, As chAnce offers or PAGE PAGE. “ out of leuding-strings," children are made to coniform in­ necessity compels, so that “ JAck o f All trades and good At Progress (Poetry); Industrial Correspondence ; A PrivAte Let­ Schools............. ..................... l ter : A Woman's Rights....... 6 stead of being conformed to. It isn't wbAt tbe child is best none” is true o f two-thirds, at least, o f All mAnkind. NAt­ The Amazons of the Seine; Sym­ My Rejection (Poetry) ; Labor urAlly inefficiency begets instAbility ; because persons who pAthy (Poetry); The Root of And CApitAl; Spiritualism And fitted for, but whAt is best for the child ; According to the the MAtter, or the Role of the Materialism ; QuAcks And opinion of parents As utterly ignorAnt of its reAl Dature and Are not masters o f their occupAtion, who only work becAuse Old Mythologies ; CAsh Value Quackery..............1 .............
    [Show full text]
  • The Emergence of Law Firms in the American Legal Profession
    University of Arkansas at Little Rock Law Review Volume 9 Issue 4 Article 2 1986 The Emergence of Law Firms in the American Legal Profession Thomas Paul Pinansky Follow this and additional works at: https://lawrepository.ualr.edu/lawreview Part of the Legal Profession Commons Recommended Citation Thomas Paul Pinansky, The Emergence of Law Firms in the American Legal Profession, 9 U. ARK. LITTLE ROCK L. REV. 593 (1987). Available at: https://lawrepository.ualr.edu/lawreview/vol9/iss4/2 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by Bowen Law Repository: Scholarship & Archives. It has been accepted for inclusion in University of Arkansas at Little Rock Law Review by an authorized editor of Bowen Law Repository: Scholarship & Archives. For more information, please contact [email protected]. THE EMERGENCE OF LAW FIRMS IN THE AMERICAN LEGAL PROFESSION Thomas Paul Pinansky* TABLE OF CONTENTS I. INTRODUCTION ................................... 594 II. THE FOUNDING OF THE FIRST LAW FIRMS: Two CASE S TU D IES ......................................... 598 A. Shearman & Sterling ......................... 598 B. Reed Smith Shaw & McClay .................. 602 Ill. THE STRUCTURAL-TECHNOLOGICAL EXPLANATION ..... 604 A. The Change in the Law ....................... 606 B. Robber Barons, Corporations, and the Response of G overnm ent ................................. 609 1. The Robber Barons ....................... 610 2. The Growth of Corporate Law .............. 611 3. Government Regulation .................... 612 4. The Geographic Distribution of Law Firms... 614 C. The Development of Finance ................... 614 D. Technological Advancement and the Ideology of Science .................... ...... 616 E. Concepts of Occupational Organization .......... 618 IV. THE MARKET FOR LEGAL SERVICES AND THE ECONOMIC INDEPENDENCE OF THE EMERGENT LAW FIRMS: THE SUP- PLY-SIDE PERSPECTIVE .......
    [Show full text]
  • Ashes to Ashes & Dust to Dust Is Complicated
    Ashes to Ashes & Dust to Dust is Complex Jack Davidson The primary focus of most estate plans is what happens embrace this rule but many of them have adjusted the when we leave? How do rule. At least 27 states allow the rule to be violated if the we save taxes? How do we trust terminates in 90 years. provide for others? How to plan if our journey might At the time when I first focused on the rule and the include a nursing home? And our final journey when popularity of Generation Skipping Trusts designed to go we transition from ashes to ashes and dust to dust. for several generations, I encountered creative lawyers who would add the following clause: “In no event shall As a youth, I encountered caskets and graveyards. the trust continue beyond the expiration of 21 years from Today the transition has changed. In 1960, only 3.6% the death of the last survivor of the descendants of Joseph of Americans chose cremation. The current rate is P. Kennedy Sr., the late Ambassador to the Court of St. projected at 55.8%. According to the National Funeral James.” The Kennedy family of 9 children had many Directors Association, the projected cremation rate descendants at the time the clause was inserted in many will continue to rise in the coming documents. Although not beneficiaries, they were the years to 70.6% in 2030. There are measuring lives. several reasons why cremation has become popular, such as economic and Vermont has embraced the rule in its earliest version demographic factors, but I suspect that with one exception.
    [Show full text]
  • LINER NOTES Recorded Anthology of American Music, Inc
    THE HAND THAT HOLDS THE BREAD New World Records 80267 Progress and Protest In all respects save the abolition of slavery, the Civil War was not an end but a beginning. With it, industry and capital forever gained the upper hand over agrarian gentility. American society entered its rowdy adolescence—brash, confident, rebelliously amoral, reveling in its new Western wealth and toughened Northern muscle. In the quarter century after Appomattox, steel took King Cotton's crown; the tracks of the Iron Horse bound the states into a new, unshakable union; factory workers replaced field hands as America's proletariat; millions of immigrants were lured, bought, or abducted by American wealth; and a splendid lot of rascals, heroes, thieves, and reformers staggered, marched, or slunk across the public stage. Every parlor had a rocking chair; in these re-United States of Progress and Protest, folks kept moving even when sitting still. In the North, the war was good business. For men like J. P. Morgan, Jim Fisk, and Jay Cooke there was no personal danger; safely civilian, they could devote themselves to converting hostilities into profit. Morgan made his first hundred grand by using wartime inflation to precipitate a run on gold. Fisk sold contraband cotton. Cooke entered the war as a banker of moderate wealth; after successfully promoting Union bonds, he was hailed as the savior of the North and became the most powerful financier in the country. In the postwar years the boom continued. "The close of the war," Senator John Sherman warned, "gives a scope to the ideas of leading capitalists far higher than anything ever undertaken in this country before." The hundred and forty thousand factories of 1859 had almost doubled a decade later: Steel production shot from two thousand tons in 1867 to almost one million in 1879.
    [Show full text]
  • Taking Another Ride on Flopper: Benjamin Cardozo, Safe Space, and the Cultural Significance of Coney Island
    Case Western Reserve University School of Law Scholarly Commons Faculty Publications 2004 Taking Another Ride on Flopper: Benjamin Cardozo, Safe Space, and the Cultural Significance of Coney Island Robert N. Strassfeld Case Western Reserve University - School of Law, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarlycommons.law.case.edu/faculty_publications Part of the Torts Commons Repository Citation Strassfeld, Robert N., "Taking Another Ride on Flopper: Benjamin Cardozo, Safe Space, and the Cultural Significance of Coney Island" (2004). Faculty Publications. 212. https://scholarlycommons.law.case.edu/faculty_publications/212 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by Case Western Reserve University School of Law Scholarly Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Faculty Publications by an authorized administrator of Case Western Reserve University School of Law Scholarly Commons. TAKING ANOTHER RIDE ON FLOPPER: BENJAMIN CARDOZO, SAFE SPACE, AND THE CULTURAL SIGNIFICANCE OF CONEY ISLAND Robert N Strassfeld* One of the most ubiquitous cases in the torts canon, Mwphy v. Steeplechase Amusement Co., Inc., 1 is, on its face, also one of the silliest in the casebooks.2 The case, which involves a negligence suit brought by an amusement park patron after he fell and broke his knee on a ride, is quite slight. It is certainly not a doctrinal blockbuster like MacPherson v. Buick Motor Co., 3 Escola v. Coca Cola Bottling Co. of Fresno,4 Palsgraf v. Long Island Railroad, Co., 5 or Sindell v. Abbott * Professor of Law, Case Western Reserve University School of Law. I am grateful to my colleagues at Case Western Reserve University for their participation and helpful comments at a faculty workshop relating to this work.
    [Show full text]
  • Ionalb~Sntill Qlief. Harrow to Make the Transfer
    THE IlOUsWON UNIO a wheel- - IN LovE WITh ALEXIS.-Ihb PHILIP WERLEIN'S T iE YORK TRIBUNE,, the removal himself, using POWER PRESS NEW Ionalb~sntill Qlief. harrow to make the transfer. He hadI Omaha4 Bee of the 12th instant has For 11!74 . Itaken several loads siiccesfuily , andI the following singular story: Among Printing Establishhinuents The consolidation of Italy, so long frag- was about closing up the job by trun-- the1 passengers on the regular traill PIANO, ORGAN AND MUSIO'HOUSE (Established in 1868.) Fisk's Early Life. 1in- his stock of firewood along the IIfrom `t. Louis this morniug was it mentary anul impotent. into one powerful and well-appearing lady, Tracy & Quick, Editors and Proprietors. capital; the htinili- (ew York World.] track, when an eastward-bound traini well-dressed State. with Rome as its [From the as to the where- caine thundering along. who made inquiries %0&s2 IBaronne St. SO & MS. UNION is printed ating of France through a series of crushing Born ini a cabin of the Green Moun- THE perceived his danger before i abouts of the Grand Duke. On learn- defeats. ending with the siege and capitula- tain State. of parents the mUodesty of Taylor Daily and Weekly, train was upon him, but in hiss ing, she expressed a good deal of re- State gay, the whose resources have been well under- the And is the leading organ of the present tion of her proud and metropolis: wits appeared to desertt gret at not having arrived sooner, IS THE which will remain in posses- d, whatever is believed of the in- terror his Administration, expulsion oftthe IBourbons from the Spanish sto He stood irresolute on theE and so conducted herself as to cause sion of the State Government until the next tegrity of their lives, and shot down him.
    [Show full text]