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When he was alive, swart Gangster Jack Zuta told suspicious Chicago police nothing enlightening about the Lingle murder (TIME, June 23, et seq.). But Jack Zuta dead on a Wisconsin dance floor (TIME, Aug. 11) became an eloquent police informant on many subjects. He left careful records of his business transactions in numerous safe-deposit boxes at various banks. Four of these boxes were unearthed during the past fortnight by Special (Lingle-case) Investigator Pat Roche of the State Attorney's office. Puzzled were police and investigators at finding little Zuta money other than...
...Northern University. She moved to West Virginia, entered politics as a feminist. She headed the State's Republican Executive Committee, was chosen West Virginia's Republican National Committeewoman. Last winter she ably marshaled all Dry witnesses for the House Judiciary Committee's investigation of Prohibition (TIME, March 17, et seq.). She was credited with having enough influence to get her husband, Ellis A. Yost, a good job with the Federal Radio Commission. Her elevation in the Republican National Committee plainly foreshadowed a party effort to hold in line all the women who had voted for Herbert Hoover...
...threatening storm which has hovered over Germany since the dissolution of the Reichstag last month (TIME, July 28 et seq.) gathered impetus and loosed itself in three cities last week...
...that all serious political opponents are exiled from Cuba, that political prisoners are thrown to the sharks of Havana harbor from a chute in the Cabana fortress (next to Morro Castle), that though private crime has been spectacularly reduced, political assassination is common; etc., etc. (TIME, March 11, et seq.). One night last week Editor Pacheco found himself in a position to write no more. A curtained automobile stopped in front of his home in Cerro (Havana suburb). Editor Pacheco was standing on the sidewalk. Out of the automobile burst a stream of fire and bullets, nine of which tore...
...week. From the high openings they peered perspectively at the diminutive people kneeling before the cathedral's shut gates. For four years the building had been closed, ever since onetime President Plutarco Elias Calles tried to enforce Mexico's anti-religious laws (TIME, Feb. 22, 1926 et seq.) and the Pope in displeasure ordered priests to cease their public religious duties. But last year Mexico and Vatican City made peace (TIME, July 1, 1929). Mexican churches reopened for services, not, however, the Cathedral. Three and a half centuries had weakened the structure. Its use had become dangerous...