World War Campaigns and Various Minor Events Classified By
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
Thaw Escapes from Asylum 1Ultimatum Story Fabricated
tat IN STERLING GALT.EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR ESTABLISHED OVER A QUARTER OF A CENTURY TERMS-91.00 A YEAR ADVANCE VOL. XXXV EMMITSBTJRG, MARYLAND. FRIDAY, AT:( UST 22, 1913 NO. 20 ESCAPES FROM ASYLUM 1ULTIMATUM STORY FABRICATED THAW FROM ALL goi *Zit" FALSE STATEMENT USED TO INFLUENCE PUBLIC SLAY ER OF STANFORD WHITE GAINS FREEDOM 1114 ,f7,:try.f If 4 ** iefriatibiS idiffititS I Huerta Adherents---Press Ordered to Matteawan Attendant Held For Connivance in Sensa- alltitarittar 1.111100.11ii COMS'ASS Device to Help tional Plot.---Rescue Accurately Planned. btiorAmikilk joiRIMINIPAVE Withhold Denial 24 Hours DEMAND—WILSON IS HOPEFUL FLEES IN HIGH POWERED A(JTOMOBILE.—CAPTURED IN CANADA 1rN 411.144# DISCLAIMS ALLEGED RECOGNITION Mediation After Conference with Special Repre- Recognized by a Deputy Sheriff On a Train. —Fugitive Will Fight Against Southern Government Rejects Settlement Expected—Lind and Huerta Still Extradition. —May Be Returned to State of New Hampshire.—Counsel Friday ; Two small sons of Joseph Leveille, a sentative Lind—Amicable Contained—War Scare Caused Secures Habeas Corpus. —Canadian Government Aims To Return Fugitve Rev. Charles V. Holbrook, an Ameri- rancher near Belle Fouche. S. D., ate a Negotiating—What the American Note to New York State. can missionary,was shot and killed near basket of cherries and consumed a quart By One Minister, Sivas, in Asiatic Turkey. of milk both dying a short time later. Harry Kendall Thaw, slayer of Stan- between the United States and the The Mexican ultimatum story utter- ent, however, that a formal recogni- Auguste Frederick Brosseau, aged 24, who John Lind, ford White,escaped from the Mattewan Dominion of Canada. -
Facts Are Stubborn Things": Protecting Due Process from Virulent Publicity
Touro Law Review Volume 33 Number 2 Article 8 2017 "Facts Are Stubborn Things": Protecting Due Process from Virulent Publicity Benjamin Brafman Darren Stakey Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.tourolaw.edu/lawreview Part of the Civil Procedure Commons, Civil Rights and Discrimination Commons, and the First Amendment Commons Recommended Citation Brafman, Benjamin and Stakey, Darren (2017) ""Facts Are Stubborn Things": Protecting Due Process from Virulent Publicity," Touro Law Review: Vol. 33 : No. 2 , Article 8. Available at: https://digitalcommons.tourolaw.edu/lawreview/vol33/iss2/8 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by Digital Commons @ Touro Law Center. It has been accepted for inclusion in Touro Law Review by an authorized editor of Digital Commons @ Touro Law Center. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Brafman and Stakey: Facts Are Stubborn Things “FACTS ARE STUBBORN THINGS”: PROTECTING DUE PROCESS FROM VIRULENT PUBLICITY by Benjamin Brafman, Esq.* and Darren Stakey, Esq.** *Benjamin Brafman is the principal of a seven-lawyer firm Brafman & Associates, P.C. located in Manhattan. Mr. Brafman’s firm specializes in criminal law with an emphasis on White Collar criminal defense. Mr. Brafman received his law degree from Ohio Northern University, in 1974, graduating with Distinction and serving as Manuscript Editor of The Law Review. He went on to earn a Masters of Law Degree (LL.M.) in Criminal Justice from New York University Law School. In May of 2014, Mr. Brafman was awarded an Honorary Doctorate from Ohio Northern University Law School. Mr. Brafman, a former Assistant District Attorney in the Rackets Bureau of the New York County District Attorney’s Office, has been in private practice since 1980. -
1914 Journal
: : SUPREME COURT OE THE UNITED STATES. Monday, October 12, 1914. The Court met pursuant to law. Present: The Chief Justice, Mr. Justice McKenna, Mr. Justice Hohnes, Mr. Justice Day, Mr. Justice Hughes, Mr. Justice Van Devanter, Mr. Justice Lamar, and Mr. Justice McKeynolds. The Chief Justice said " It gives me pain to say that since the court adjourned at the end of the last term it has come to pass that the nation may no longer enjoy the fruitful and beneficent results to arise from the continued enlightened and devoted discharge by Mr. Justica^Lurton of his public duties. He died at Atlantic City on thd^ dm day of July. In addition to the sorrow which they share with their country- men at so great a loss, the members of the Court have suffered the pang caused by the severance of the close personal ties which bound them to Mr. Justice Lurton ; ties the strength of which can not be fully appreciated without understanding how completely his attain- ments and his lovable traits of personal character commanded the respect and drew to him the warm affection of those who had the privilege of being associated with him in the performance of his judicial duties. "In the month of August the Hon. James Clark McKeynolds was appointed an Associate Justice of this court, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Mr. Justice Lurton, and on the 3d day of September the oath of office required by section 1756 of the Revised Statutes was administered to Mr. McKeynolds by the Chief Justice. -
Dutchess County Sheriff's Office | Corrections Division | Panel 1
- Since the completion of the firstjail in 1721, the Dutchess County Sheriffhas provided staffto process and supervise inmates. Conditions have improved over time, with increasing emphasis on rehabilitation instead of long-term detention. The varieties of offenses for which residents can ' be jailed has decreased over time, while successive new buildings have strengthened corrections services. This process of professionalization led to AilREsTWARRANT Courtesyof the Dutchess County Clerk the creation of the Corrections Division in 1979. On October 16, 1733, Judge Jacobus Terbos swore out this writ ordering SheriffJames Squire to arrest Samuell Taylor and confinehim in the county jail. Taylor had failed to pay offa debt he owed to a Robert Huey who sued him in court - a reminder that in the eighteenth century, a resident could go to jail for not paying their bills. This is the oldest ,w..-,_J arrest warrant in the Dutchess County Archives. ''"""-"-- ;�i..: �=------ -- CALENDAR OF PRISONERS THE FouRTH CoUNTY JAIL AND CoURTHOUSE Courtesyof the Dutchess County Clerk Courtesyof the Dutchess CountyHistorical Society This list of inmates hdd in the For most of the past 300 years, the Dutchess County Jail from June county jail was an integral part of 1796 to June 1797 provides a the courthouse, taking up the IN HOTPURSUIT snapshot of contemporary crime. bottommost floor. For the firstfour Courtesyof the Dutchess CountySheriff The general varieties of offenses courthouses, built between 1720 -including theft, breaking and and 1809, jail cells were relatively In 1913, Harry Kendall Thaw, who had entering, "breach of the peace," dismal places. The specific cell seen murdered the famousarchitect Stanford and failure to make bail in this 1901 image (above) was White, escaped from Matteawan State continue to be issues today. -
Patriots, Pirates, Politicians and Profit Seekers
Teacher’s Edition: Frameworks, Standards, Resources & Activities Patriots, Pirates, Politicians Field PoulosThe St. Lawrence, Webb, Master and School district United States Newton Profit Seekers NH prize parental notification New Hampshire Cases and the United States Supreme Court libelappeals Young Penhallow Second Edition-2015 civil liberties DeGregory Coe v.Town of Errol of v.Town Coe H.P. Welch Austin unconstitutional MonitorDoanes's Administrators Patriot Co. oleoNew margarine HampshireClapper Head Renaud Wooley Baer case laws trustees Webster Abbott Parker Woodward Souter schooltax Company Woolen & Cotton Lake Winnipiseogee causes Saunders Louisiana Vermont Drew private judgment PlannedWyman Parenthood Chaplinsky Maynard Dartmouth College liability Munsey Sweezy Uphaus Piper equality Fernandezgovernor Amoskeag Manufacturing Co. MansRoy Collins Northeast Airlines Cox statute Supreme Court Lang decision vacated Perry Collins laws contract Hustler clause Vachon Keeton Woodbury Piper charter Rosenblatt Land Company Bradford Electric Co Jumel Woodward New England Power Co. Ayotte By Joan M. Blanchard and Attorney Martin J. Bender With Honorable Kathleen A. McGuire, Robert J. Lamberti, Jr., and Arthur Pease Published by the New Hampshire Bar Association, with support from the New Hampshire Supreme Court Society. Patriots, Pirates, Politicians and Profit Seekers New Hampshire Cases and the United States Supreme Court Second Edition – 2015 Teachers’ Edition By Joan M. Blanchard and Attorney Martin J. Bender With Honorable Kathleen A. McGuire, Attorney Robert J. Lamberti, Jr. and Arthur Pease Copyright 2015 and 1996 © New Hampshire Bar Association All Rights Reserved Permission to copy, and distribute the contents of this publication is hereby granted for noncommercial purposes. No copyright is claimed in the text of statutes, regulations, court rules, and excerpts from court opinions quoted within this document. -
Courts and Criminals Arthur Train
Courts and Criminals Arthur Train ______________________________________________________________ These essays, which were written between the years 1905-1910 are reprinted without revision, although in a few minor instances the laws may have been changed. ______________________________________________________________ CHAPTER I The Pleasant Fiction of the Presumption of Innocence There was a great to-do some years ago in the city of New York over an ill-omened young person, Duffy by name, who, falling into the bad graces of the police, was most incontinently dragged to headquarters and "mugged" without so much as "By your leave, sir," on the part of the authorities. Having been photographed and measured (in most humiliating fashion) he was turned loose with a gratuitous warning to behave himself in the future and see to it that he did nothing which might gain him even more invidious treatment. Now, although many thousands of equally harmless persons had been similarly treated, this particular outrage was made the occasion of a vehement protest to the mayor of the city by a certain member of the judiciary, who pointed out that such things in a civilized community were shocking beyond measure, and called upon the mayor to remove the commissioner of police and all his staff of deputy commissioners for openly violating the law which they were sworn to uphold. But, the commissioner of police, who had sometimes enforced the penal statutes in a way to make him unpopular with machine politicians, saw nothing wrong in what he had done, and, what was more, said so most outspokenly. The judge said, "You did," and the commissioner said, "I didn't." Specifically, the judge was complaining of what had been done to Duffy, but more generally he was charging the police with despotism and oppression and with systematically disregarding the sacred liberties of the citizens which it was their duty to protect. -
2007 02 Summer Reporter Dispatch
The Allegheny City Society REPORTER DISPATCH The Journal of Old Allegheny History and Lore Summer, 2007 bringing could not have prepared her for life in the big Harry Thaw – The Notorious city and a fateful meeting with Stanford White. Playboy of Old Allegheny White was a highly respected architect with the by Doug Lucas prominent firm of McKim, Mead and White, who Harry Kendall Thaw was born in Allegheny City on designed many important structures in Manhattan as February 12, 1871, a son of coal and railroad baron well as the summer homes of the wealthy. William Thaw. As a child, he exhibited But perhaps their most famous commission paranoid behavior and was given to was Madison Square Garden. It was said outbursts of violence. As a result, he that Evelyn modeled for the nude figure of attended a string of private school, Diana that stood atop the dome. White constantly getting into trouble, and never maintained a number of “love nests” doing well in his studies. But his around New York, including one in influential father got him admitted to the Madison Square Garden that featured a red University of Pittsburgh to study law. He velvet swing. It was here that after posing later transferred to Harvard, where he for a number of provocative photographs, gambled, drank, attended cockfights and he drugged her champagne and took her romanced many young ladies. After virginity. chasing a cab driver with a shotgun he was expelled. Thaw became obsessed with Evelyn – plying her with expensive gifts until, at her Harry then turned to drugs and divided his mother’s prompting, she agreed to marry time between Allegheny and New York him. -
AMERICANS AIDING FRANCES Biko LATEST BURGLAR's TOOL DISCOVERED POPE BENEDICT XV IS HARD WORKER
be ber FERLING SALT. EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR ESTABLISHED OVER A QUARTER OF A CENTURY TERMS—e1.00 A YEAR IN ADVANCE VOL. XXXVII EmmTTsBuRG, mAn-y-E_A-Nr), FRIDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1915 NO. 37 AMERICANS AIDING LATEST BURGLAR'S OLD-YEAR MEMORIES. CONGRESS HAS MANY POPE BENEDICT XV CIVIL WAR VETERANS FRANCES BikO TOOL DISCOVERED ET us forget the things that vexed and tried us, IS HARD WORKER The worrying things that caused our souls to fret; Former Soldiers of Union and The hopes that, cherished long, were still denied us. Rises at 6 and Is Frequently En- Victims of War Are Hein_ "Old Man" With Four Lop Let us forget. Confederacy Now Fourteen. Let us forget the little slights that pained us, gaged Up to Midnight, Taught Trades. Fashioned by Prisoner. The greater wrongs that rankle sometimes yet; The pride with which some lofty one disdained us Washington.—Scattered through the Let us forget. membership of the house of represent- atives, so far as autobiographies in the TAKES HIS MEALS ALONE, WINIFRED HOLT AOTIV;:, QUIETLY RIPS SAFE KNOB, Let us forget our brother's fault and failing, Congressional Directory disclose, are The yielding to temptation that beset three men who served in the Union army and three men who served in After Midday Refection the Pontiff S,ei Went to Paris After the Outbreak Marks Found After Robbery In Mich- That he perchance, though grief be unavailing. the Confederate army. In the senate Walks In Vatican Gardens if It Is Not cf War and Succeeded In Gathering igan Trust Company at Grand Rapids Cannot forget. -
The Paris Seamstress
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is coincidental. Copyright © 2018 by Natasha Lester Cover design by Faceout Cover copyright © 2018 by Hachette Book Group, Inc. Hachette Book Group supports the right to free expression and the value of copyright. The purpose of copyright is to encourage writers and artists to produce the creative works that enrich our culture. The scanning, uploading, and distribution of this book without permission is a theft of the author’s intellectual property. If you would like permission to use material from the book (other than for review purposes), please contact [email protected]. Thank you for your support of the author’s rights. Forever Hachette Book Group 1290 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10104 forever-romance.com twitter.com/foreverromance First published in March 2018 by Hachette Australia First American Edition: September 2018 Forever is an imprint of Grand Central Publishing. The Forever name and logo are trademarks of Hachette Book Group, Inc. The publisher is not responsible for websites (or their content) that are not owned by the publisher. The Hachette Speakers Bureau provides a wide range of authors for speaking events. To find out more, go to www.hachettespeakersbureau.com or call (866) 376-6591. Library of Congress Control Number: 2018940376 ISBN 978-1-5387-1477-5 (trade paperback) ISBN 978-1-5387-1475-1 -
TIIBIUS WHILE FIRE BURNS I
' "It JIM I f V LATEST CABLED SU(JAR QUOTATIONS Centi Dollars !(! Centrifu(f!i N. T. Tef lb. Per ton. Print, Hawaiian basil 4.89 197.80 f .' VT;.. a Last qnota-- y i-- vy v vex Vs prrrtoui w v x vv w w sj ' tlon 4.66 169.20 ' ' if - . 55 r VOCVIII, NO.:. HONOLULU. HAWAII TERRITORY, "FRIDAY. JULY 9. 1915. -K- MI-VK KKLY. WIIOLK NUMBER 4141 GENERAL LUIGI CANEVA, Commander-in-Chie- f of the MltiriEIIAIIAIKES ENERAL GEROLD PAU. Whose Military Genius Is Re ;i: .O-OD-E Who Hat Personal Direction of the Invasion sponsible For the Signal Success ot French In the Alsatian BERLIN NOTE . FOR NEAREST PORT OF REPLY IS TIIBIUS WHILE FIRE BURNS i .. lj' c ? i British Steamer; Carrying High EXPEGTEDTO Explosives is Running Full Speed For Halifax ITiLITY BE REJECTED EXPLOSION IN' CARGO 1) RECALLS HOLT LETTER V 1 L' H T 10 IS BY AMERICA War-Craz- ed Educator May Have Deposited Infernal Machine ' Federal Grand Jury Returns In- In This Vessel UK Washington Announces That Ger- dictments Against Persons and v r many Must Meet All Its De- Corporations1 Involved Either 1 (Assoetst4 Tress kr filml Wlrlen ) .... ON BOAKU ;MI.N KM AHA, mands Regarding Submarine In Recruiting British Army 9. 4o For July (By Wireless New York) Warfare Definitely Without Any Or Supplying Flames which broke out yextprilny, fol- German Ships Further Attempt To Cloud lowing an explosion' t the cnrn of this Issue steamship, have Wfft brought under CI--, partial control and teasel is making INCIDENT OF STEAMER ye the TENTATIVE full s(eed for Nova PROPOSALS 'SACRAMENTO' REVIVED Halifax, Hcotia, where she will arrive semo time today. -
Eetoteto / * DEVOTED to the INTERESTS"OP SUMMERLAND, PEACHLAND and NARAMATA •8
Eetoteto / * DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS"OP SUMMERLAND, PEACHLAND AND NARAMATA •8 Vol. 6, No. 5 SUMMERLAND, B.C.,: AUGUST 29, 1913. Whole No. 265 No More Triumphs Labor Sunday. Harry K. Thaw And His Host Municipal |Schools Air Dried Apricots Opening Of New Session. Special Sermons At Churches Next Successful Experiment by Canntry Now Ready For Tomatoes Sunday. The educational work of Sum• Inspector Lyne. and Late Peaches. merland and district is now in full "Labor Sunday" will be gener-1 swing for the autumn session, and Will Save Big Waste^-^ New Machinery Installed. ally observed in the churches'not teachers and pupils alike, invig• only of Summerland but throughout orated by the long summer holi• Growers need not the continent next Sunday, the day, have entered upon what will over-ripe apricots. This week will see the last of the day immediately preceding Labor be a full and interesting program H. Lyne in a recent .....w! ^ canning of Triumphs at the Can• Day. This is being done at the i till Christmas. The enrolments vised the Review that '^oA throwv nery. Inali less than three car• suggestion of the American' Feder• this session are markedly satisfact• hereafter lose away apricots because of over-ripe C • loads of this variety have been ation of Labor and the Federal ory; and the usual readjustment of ness is not only;a seriouInspectos Mosrs Wbu.t canned, and all have been put in Council of the churches of Christ I the classes, etc.', accounting for an unnecessary wasteintervie. Inspectow ad-rá 10 lb. -
Abraham Reincke Beck: Portrait of a Schoolmaster
Abraham Reincke Beck: Portrait of a Schoolmaster William W. Hummel As is true of most work of this nature, there are numerous debts which can in no way be repaid. In at least one instance, however, good faith de- mands that the debt be assumed. The study of Abraham Reincke Beck and the edition of selected letters would never have materialized had it not been for the kindness of George Swan of Lititz, Pennsylvania, who brought Beck's Letter Book to the author's attention and granted permis- sion to publish a portion of it. Part I. A Portrait of a Schoolmaster On June 25, 1895, Abraham Reincke Beck, the highly respected school- master of Lititz, Pennsylvania, wrote a letter to his nephew James Mont- gomery Beck announcing his intention of closing the Beck Family School for boys. "The final closing of my school," wrote Beck. had been in consideration by us ever since Xmas, and with the end of the term we came to the conclusion that forty years' work was about enough, especially as Paul did not wish to succeed me. Had he done so, it would have given me much pleasure to teach for him because, so far, I have lost little, if any power in that direction, the heavy responsibility of taking entire charge of other people's children being the only thing we were beginning to tire of.' Beck's retirement from the teaching profession and the closing of the school marked the passing of an institution which had been the pride of the com- munity for thirty years.