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...investigation resulting in charges that he had conspired with the harbor contractors to mulct the Government, by shoddy work and extravagant prices, of some $1,800,000. Summoned from London, Captain Carter was court-martialed, cashiered from the Army, sentenced to five years at hard labor in Leavenworth Prison, fined $5,000. His crime & sentence were ordered published in his home town (Patriot, Ohio) newspapers for one year. After 17 months President McKinley approved his sentence and he was clapped into Leavenworth. The contractors were also sentenced to prison, fined $575,000. In a civil suit Carter's personal...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ARMY & NAVY: Glory & Disgrace | 10/21/1935 | See Source »

During trial, Captain Carter vigorously protested his innocence, claimed he was the victim of a base conspiracy. In 1908 he published a 115-page pamphlet entitled: "The Essential Facts Concerning My Unjust Condemnation and Subsequent Vindication." He had been out of prison more than a quarter-century before some newspaper friends persuaded a highly-placed official to listen to his story. Last session that listener, Illinois' Senator J. Hamilton Lewis, put through Congress a resolution to investigate Carter's claim that he was a "U. S. Dreyfus." Last week Oberlin Carter, still erect at 79, marched into...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ARMY & NAVY: Glory & Disgrace | 10/21/1935 | See Source »

...Shushan, squat, swart dry goods wholesaler, has been well rewarded for the helping hand he gave Huey Long at the start. Grateful Governor Long made him an honorary colonel, showered his firm with fat, noncompetitive contracts to supply the State with such things as prison uniforms. His crowning reward was the presidency of the New Orleans Levee Board, with permission to build and name for himself a $4,000,000 airport having "Shushan" engraved 3,200 times on its metal, stone, tile and bronze. It was he who, as a bosom friend, stayed by Long's death bed. rushed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: LOUISIANA: Shushan to Trial | 10/21/1935 | See Source »

Long on the list of WPA projects was a bright colorful mural for this Manhattan jail. Commissioner of Correction Austin Harbutt MacCormick is an avid psychologist, a firm believer in the use of color in the mental readjustment of female prisoners. So is Prison Superintendent Ruth Elizabeth Collins. She had already accepted a collection of travel posters to enliven the bleak, white-tiled corridors of the jail. So now the prisoners march to their individual rooms, the workshops and mess hall through halls burgeoning with such signs as VISIT SPAIN, TRAVEL IN INDIA, SEE SORRENTO. But both Commissioner MacCormick...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Jail Job | 10/21/1935 | See Source »

...foreign exchange with which to buy anything abroad without Guarneri's O. K. No other man alive knows so much about what Italy's real powers to resist economic sanctions may be, and the Professor is no cloistered scholar. Captured and clapped into a German prison camp during the Great War, he went home to run the Chamber of Commerce in Italy's great port of Genoa, was executive boss of the Dictatorship's control office for Industry when II Duce summoned him last spring. The odd thing about what Guarneri had to say last week...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ITALY: Marie Antoinette & Sanctions | 10/14/1935 | See Source »

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