Balder Ex-Libris - Watson's MagazineReview of books rare and missing2024-03-16T01:56:42+00:00urn:md5:aa728a70505b2fae05796923271581c2DotclearWatson’s Magazine - Volume 20 Number 3urn:md5:c4d4226ec2ad03ab1d89d1edc333bbe32015-03-09T23:56:00+00:002015-03-10T00:00:46+00:00balderWatson's MagazineEducationFranc-maçonnerieFranceHébraïsmeJewLeo FrankUnited States <p><img src="https://balderexlibris.com/public/img3/Watson_s_Magazine_-_Volume_20_Number_3.jpg" alt="" /><br />
Author : <strong>Watson’s Magazine</strong><br />
Title : <strong>Volume 20 Number 3</strong><br />
Year : 1915<br />
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Link download : <a href="https://balderexlibris.com/public/ebook2/Watson_s_Magazine_-_Volume_20_Number_3.zip">Watson_s_Magazine_-_Volume_20_Number_3.zip</a><br />
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An aged millionaire of New York had a lawyer named Patrick, and this lawyer poisoned his old client, forged a will in his own favor; was tried, convicted and sentenced —and is now at liberty, a pardoned man. Through the falling out among Wall Street thieves, it transpires that the sensational clemency of Governor John A. Dix, in favor of Albert T. Patrick, was inspired by a mining transaction involving millions of dollars. Patrick says, that he was “pardoned on the merits of the case.” It was a negligible coincidence that his brother-in-law, Milliken, who had for years resisted the Wall Street efforts to get his Golden Cycle mine, yielded it, when Patrick got the pardon. Such is life in these latter days, when Big Money makes and unmakes Presidents, makes and unmakes legislation, makes and unmakes the policies of the greatest Republic. There was a man of the name of Morse; and he was a parlous knave, to be sure. He, also, lived in New York, and he was an adept in the peculiar methods of Wall Street. To Charles W. Morse, it seemed good to organize an Ice Trust, and he did it. To prevent Nature from interfering too impertinently with his honest designs, he sent boats up the Hudson, to destroy the ice which was in process of formation on the river. There is no law against the breaking of ice—so far as I know—and therefore the curses, the imprecations and the idle tears of the independent ice-dealers availed them nothing. <strong>...</strong></p>Watson’s Magazine - Volume 20 Number 5urn:md5:0d2af49609acc1ff86ab5eadb342d3782015-03-09T23:55:00+00:002015-03-10T00:00:46+00:00balderWatson's MagazineFührerGermanyJewLeo FrankThird ReichUnited States <p><img src="https://balderexlibris.com/public/img3/Watson_s_Magazine_-_Volume_20_Number_5.jpg" alt="" /><br />
Author : <strong>Watson’s Magazine</strong><br />
Title : <strong>Volume 20 Number 5</strong><br />
Year : 1915<br />
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Link download : <a href="https://balderexlibris.com/public/ebook2/Watson_s_Magazine_-_Volume_20_Number_5.zip">Watson_s_Magazine_-_Volume_20_Number_5.zip</a><br />
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A Full Review of the Leo Frank Case. Watson’s Magazine, Volume 20 Number 5, March 1915. On the 23rd page of Puck, for the week ending January 16, 1915, there is, in the smallest possible type, in the smallest possible space, at the bottom of the page, the notice of ownership, required by law. Mankind are informed that Puck is published by a corporation of the same name, Nathan Strauss, Jr., being President, and H. Grant Strauss being Secretary and Treasurer. You are authorized, therefore, to give credit to the Strauss family for the unparalleled campaign of falsehood and defamation which Puck has persistently waged against the State of Georgia, her people, and her courts. Inasmuch as the Strauss family once lived in Georgia, and are loudly professing their ardent devotion to the State of their birth, you may feel especially interested in Puck. Looking over the pages of this Strauss publication, I find a characteristic thing: on page 22, there is an illustrated advertisement of “Sunny Brook Whiskey” which is recommended as “a delightful beverage, and a wholesome tonic.” To give force to the words of testimonial, there is a picture of an ideally good-looking man, and this smiling Apollo is pointing his index finger at a large bottle of the delightful Sunny Brook firewater. On the next page, is a strikingly boxed advertisement of “The Keely Cure Treatment,” with references to such nationally known stew-it-out resorts as Hot Springs, Arkansas; Jacksonville, Florida; and Atlanta, Georgia. The advertisement states that the Keely Cure is “John Barleycorn’s Master,” and that during the last thirty-five years halfa- million victims of the drink appetite have been cured. <strong>...</strong></p>Watson’s Magazine - Volume 21 Number 4urn:md5:47609b3ec17a60e869b18ca31803bd732015-03-09T23:54:00+00:002015-03-10T00:00:46+00:00balderWatson's MagazineEnglandJewJewLeo FrankSecond World WarUnited States <p><img src="https://balderexlibris.com/public/img3/Watson_s_Magazine_-_Volume_21_Number_4.jpg" alt="" /><br />
Author : <strong>Watson’s Magazine</strong><br />
Title : <strong>Volume 21 Number 4</strong><br />
Year : 1915<br />
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Link download : <a href="https://balderexlibris.com/public/ebook2/Watson_s_Magazine_-_Volume_21_Number_4.zip">Watson_s_Magazine_-_Volume_21_Number_4.zip</a><br />
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The Celebrated Case of The State of Georgia vs. Leo Frank. Watson’s Magazine, Volume 21 Number 4, August 1915. The laws of Georgia are extraordinarily favorable to a person accused of crime. He is not only protected in all of his rights under the Constitution of the United States, but he enjoys privileges far beyond those limits. No indictment against him will stand, if it can be shown that a single grand juror was disqualified, or failed to take an oath on that particular case. Therefore, our grand juries are bound in each case by a special oath, in addition to the usual general oath; and they examine the witnesses in each case, separately, behind closed doors, having the right to call in other witnesses besides those named by the State’s Attorney. The law authorizes the Judge to remove the case to another jurisdiction, himself, whenever the circumstances satisfy him that the ends of justice require it. If the Judge does not act upon his own initiative, the defendant’s counsel can move for a change of venue; and support it by affidavits tending to prove that the feeling in the community is so excited against the accused, that it is impossible for him to therein have a fair trial. Our Code is also exceedingly lenient in the matter of continuances. The absence of a material witness; the illness of leading counsel, or of the defendant; the want of sufficient time to procure important testimony, are among the grounds upon which accused persons gain time; and these motions are continually being made for no other purpose than to allow for the passing away of whatever local prejudice may have been aroused by the first rumors and exaggerations incident to most crimes of violence. If the defense is ready for trial, and makes no motion to change venue, each juror of a legally qualified panel is subjected to a rigid examination, as to his freedom from bias and prejudice in that particular case; and the defendant can put each juror, separately, on trial—the Judge being the trior—and offer against the juror such evidence as will prove that he is not, in the eyes of the law, a fair juror to try that case. During the trial, the defendant may act, wholly or in part, as his own lawyer; he may interrogate the witnesses, and he may address the Court. If he does not choose to make a statement in his own defense, to the jury, he may remain silent; and the law does not permit the State’s Attorney to comment upon that silence. He may write out a statement in his own defense and read it to the jury, or he may tell his story in the usual way of verbal narrative; he can cover almost any ground he pleases, and he can talk as long as he likes; and if he omits any fact, or explanation which his lawyers consider material, they are privileged to direct his attention to his failure to cover that particular point. After the defendant has finished his statement—of ten minutes, or ten hours—and has been aided by the vigilance of his lawyers, he can say to the State’s Attorney: “I am willing for you to ask me about the case.” But if the defendant does not voluntarily make this offer, the State is not allowed to interrogate him at all. <strong>...</strong></p>Watson’s Magazine - Volume 21 Number 5urn:md5:1b2113f01cfe17bad39788cfd815bc652015-03-09T23:52:00+00:002015-03-10T00:00:46+00:00balderWatson's MagazineConspiracyDresdenGermanyJewJewLeo FrankSecond World WarUnited States <p><img src="https://balderexlibris.com/public/img3/Watson_s_Magazine_-_Volume_21_Number_5.jpg" alt="" /><br />
Author : <strong>Watson’s Magazine</strong><br />
Title : <strong>Volume 21 Number 5</strong><br />
Year : 1915<br />
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Link download : <a href="https://balderexlibris.com/public/ebook2/Watson_s_Magazine_-_Volume_21_Number_5.zip">Watson_s_Magazine_-_Volume_21_Number_5.zip</a><br />
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The Official Record in the Case of Leo Frank, a Jew Pervert. Watson’s Magazine, Volume 21 Number 5, September 1915 In New York, there lived a fashionable architect, whose work commanded high prices. He was robust, full of manly vigor, and so erotic that he neglected a handsome and refined young wife to run after little girls. As reported in the papers of William R. Hearst, Joseph Pulitzer, and Adolph Ochs, the libertine architect had three luxurious suites of rooms fitted up for the use of himself, a congenial company of young rakes, and the young women whom they lured into these elegant dens of vice. Stanford White’s principal place, however, was in the tower-apartments of Madison Square Garden. In this building, his preparations for sensual and sexual enjoyment were as carefully elaborated and as expensively perfected, as though wine, women and song were the chief end of man’s existence. The excavations at Pompeii have revealed no Rose-door voluptuousness more Oriental than that of Stanford White. Like the Roman sensualist who stimulated his amorous passions by surroundings that promoted desire and prolonged the pleasure, White was artistic in his vices; and it was the nude girl, of perfect symmetry and beautiful face, that he bore into his seraglio, where rich and splendid appointments, soft lights, hidden musical instruments, fragrant flowers, and choice wines intoxicated every sense to the highest pitch of epicurean ecstasy. Into this golden harem, he took the young, lovely and unmoral Evelyn Nesbit; and, according to her statement, she was brutally used. A shocking fact in the case is, that White seems to have given money to the girl’s mother, and that the mother had, in effect, surrendered the maid to the man—knowing why he wanted her. Whatever the girl felt as to the manner in which White had accomplished his purpose, she soon afterwards returned to him, and their relations continued for some months. Then Harry Thaw happened to see her, fell in love with her, and desired so ardently to possess her, that he married her. They went to Europe, and during the tour, the wife told the young husband her terrible story. On their return to New York, the architect had the insane folly to again enter into correspondence with Evelyn—this time knowing that he had an excitable young man to encounter—a husband who might be supposed to have learned his wife’s secret. All the world knows how Thaw was inflamed beyond bounds, by seeing White sitting in the eating-room, at the Garden; and how the young husband immediately shot the satyr who had doped and ruined his wife. The great legal battle that Thaw’s devoted mother has waged in her boy’s behalf, is a part of the history of the times. For nine long years, that fine old woman has borne her cross, and made her fight, her son behind the bars, all those bitter years. At last, after nine years of imprisonment, Harry Thaw is a free man—for the court which tried him for murder, pronounced him insane; and the jury which recently tried him for insanity, said that he is sane. <strong>...</strong></p>Watson’s Magazine - Volume 21 Number 6urn:md5:abcc2d3fda4e0a2ed8d2006cfd3444cd2015-03-09T23:48:00+00:002015-03-10T00:00:46+00:00balderWatson's MagazineConspiracyEnglandJewLeo FrankPolandSecond World WarUnited States <p><img src="https://balderexlibris.com/public/img3/Watson_s_Magazine_-_Volume_21_Number_6.jpg" alt="" /><br />
Author : <strong>Watson’s Magazine</strong><br />
Title : <strong>Volume 21 Number 6</strong><br />
Year : 1915<br />
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Link download : <a href="https://balderexlibris.com/public/ebook2/Watson_s_Magazine_-_Volume_21_Number_6.zip">Watson_s_Magazine_-_Volume_21_Number_6.zip</a><br />
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The Rich Jews Indict a State! The Whole South Traduced. In the Matter of Leo Frank. by Thomas E. Watson, Watson’s Magazine, Volume 21 Number 6, October 1915. Abnormal conditions prevail in this country, and the situation grows more complicated, year by year. We have carried the “asylum” idea to such extravagant liberality, that the sewage of the whole world is pouring upon us. The human race was never known to do, before, what it is doing now, to America. History presents no parallel case. From the Great Lakes to the Gulf, and from Cape Hatteras to the Golden Gate, we see the same ominous, portentous phenomena, of peoples distinct from our people— distinct in language, in manners, in standards, in customs, in National observances. Huge sections of our over-grown cities are as foreign to us, as any territory that lies beyond seas. Our laws are powerless in these unassimilated settlements. “Little Italy,” in New York, is, to all practical intents and purposes, a section of Naples transported to our shores. Chinatowns in America are miniature Cantons. The industrial colonies of West Virginia, Colorado, Michigan, Pennsylvania and New Jersey, are just that many small Hungarys, Polands, Germanys and Italys. As for the Jews, they have found our “asylum” a paradise; and from the uttermost ends of the earth, they are rushing through our ports. The Zionist Societies, financed by the Hirsch endowment of $45,000,000, are planning to bring 3,000,000 European Jews here, at the close of the present war. So wide open have been the doors of our “asylum” that the native stock which made the Republic, is already in the minority. Its relative strength grows less with every shipload of immigrants. Under these torrents of foreign peoples, whole States have lost their original character. <strong>...</strong></p>