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Page "Gunfight at the O.K. Corral" ¶ 6
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Clum and newspaper
Earp had received the weapon as a gift from Tombstone mayor and Tombstone Epitaph newspaper editor John Clum.

Clum and Virgil
Virgil was appointed by Tombstone Mayor John Clum as the permanent city marshal and paid $ 150. 00 per month.

Clum and .
* 1851 – John Clum, American journalist and Indian agent ( d. 1932 )
John Clum, publisher of The Tombstone Epitaph, had helped organize the " Committee of Safety " ( a vigilance committee ) in Tombstone in late September 1881, and was elected as the city's first mayor under the new city charter of 1881.
Wells Fargo Agent Marshall Williams, Mayor John Clum, attorney Tom Fitch, Oriental Saloon owner Lou Rickabaugh, and the Earps were also threatened.
* Clum, John M. “‘ Something Cloudy, Something Clear ’: Homophobic Discourse in Tennessee Williams ”, South Atlantic Quarterly 88. 1 ( Winter 1989 ): 161 – 79.
The area is named for O. Clum, a blacksmith in the area.
Tombstone diarist George W. Parsons never mentioned seeing Wyatt and Sadie together and neither did John Clum in his memoirs.
Yusof, R., S. Clum, M. Wetzel, H. M. Murthy, and R. Padmanabhan.
Also in the " Clum Babies " episode of the animated series Drawn Together, when Ling-Ling and Ni-Pul battle, " Glory of Love " plays in the background.
He once saved the life of his good friend John Clum, first Indian Agent at San Carlos Indian reservation, by shooting his own brother.
* Whit Bissell as John P. Clum ( editor, ' Tombstone Epitaph ' / Head of Citizens Council )

newspaper and tended
He and his newspaper tended to side with Behan, the Cowboys, and the rural interests of the ranchers.
* The Naval Intelligence hero of Treason's Harbour reflects ruefully that ' after a while an intelligence-agent tended to see spies everywhere, rather as certain lunatics saw references to themselves in every newspaper '.
" The court considered that a newspaper may also endanger safety, because " scandalous material " tended to disturb the peace and provoke assaults.
Early comic books with police themes tended to be reprints of syndicated newspaper strips like Tracy and Drake.

newspaper and side
The fake town was thereby created in Gumm's mental image to accommodate his dementia so that he would continue predicting missile strikes in the guise of submitting entries to a harmless newspaper contest and without the ethical qualms involved with being on the " wrong " side of a civil war.
Seymour has a weekly newspaper whose office is located on the west side of the town square.
This newspaper was particularly aimed at the southeast side of the county, but because of lack of subscribers, not long sustained.
Each side had its own college, its own newspaper and its own hymn book ”
New York's Herald Square is named after the New York Herald newspaper ; in the north side of the square there is a sculpture commemorating the Bennetts.
On the side he published the Arbeter Fraint newspaper on a daily basis to disseminate news about the strike.
By Kapuściński's own admission ( made in an interview given to the Union of Polish Youth's newspaper, the Sztandar Młodych, in August 1977 ), he on occasion himself participated in armed combat in Angola on the side of the MPLA.
Holliday was still practicing dentistry on the side from his rooms in Fort Griffin and in Dodge City, as indicated in an 1878 Dodge newspaper advertisement ( he promised money back for less than complete customer satisfaction ), but this is the last known time he attempted to practice.
In the aftermath of the defeat, Cecil Parkin, a former Test bowler and vocal critic of Gilligan's captaincy, wrote a newspaper article suggesting that Hobbs should assume the leadership of the side, albeit under the nominal captaincy of Percy Chapman.
The protestant Prussian government, based in Berlin, considered this newspaper and its 8, 000 subscribers a thorn in its side, and looked favorably upon attempts of those attempting to establish new newspapers to undercut the Kölnische Zeitung's dominant position.
Next day, the London Independent newspaper savaged the WTO and appeared to side with the organizers of the rapidly developing storm of protest:
Once on the other side of the Andes, in 1841 Samiento started writing for the Valparaíso newspaper El Mercurio, as well working as a publisher of the Crónica Contemporánea de Latino América (" Contemporary Latin American Chronicle ").
A newspaper should have a " soul of its own ", with staff motivated by a " common ideal ": although the business side of a newspaper must be competent, if it becomes dominant the paper will face " distressing consequences ".
Speaking to An tEolas, an Irish newspaper, Diesel stated he has been seen as a hard man, but is in touch with his soft side as a father.
After protests from readers of the newspaper she was sacked as a columnist, though the staff and some others took her side.
The Graphic, a London based weekly illustrated newspaper, provides the following insight into the game, Individual skill was generally on England's side, the dribbling of Kirke Smith, Brockbank, and Ottaway being very fine, while Welch, half-back, showed himself a safe and good kick.
Hoping to keep Italy on its side in 1917, during World War I, MI5 gave Mussolini, then 34 and editor of a right-wing newspaper, the equivalent of what ’ s now $ 9, 500 a week to keep propaganda flowing.
On the citybound side there was also a newspaper dispenser and a pair of vending machines.
There is a newspaper report of a " great match " played in Sussex in 1697 which was 11-a-side and played for high stakes of 50 guineas a side.
In May 1915 a full-blown controversy was erupting, with the angels being used as proof of the action of divine providence on the side of the Allies in sermons across Britain, and then spreading into newspaper reports published widely across the world.
The paper does not operate its own editorial website, but does run a separate website for the business side of the newspaper, including advertising.
Although these fights involved only a few hundred men on either side, the newspaper coverage of the campaign turned McClellan into a national hero.

newspaper and with
He took out a small packet filled with bits of charcoal, a deep pot of thin metal, some sheets of newspaper, a book of matches and a wrinkled and many-times folded piece of tin foil with holes in it.
These new pictures focussed on the familiar and commonplace objects that he had heard the men in his prison camp talking about as the things they missed most, hence associated with the sense of lost freedom: the cafe at the corner, the newspaper kiosk, the girls in doorways and windows along the street, the golden-crusted French bread they lacked, the cigarettes denied them.
Despite Woodruff's continuing refusal to debate with Pike through the columns of his newspaper, Pike did not let up his attack for a moment.
But because the governor was determined that friendship should not influence him one way or the other, he looked for a printer with a knowledge of the law ( which Woodruff did not have ), and awarded the contract to a lawyer named John Steele who had started a newspaper in Helena the year before.
After she had served the detectives coffee and toast ( they politely declined eggs, uncomfortable about their tenancy ), she settled down with a morning newspaper and began reading the stock market quotations.
The searching party consisted of the police captain, Welch, Barco, policemen with shovels, newspaper reporters, and cameramen.
Since brevity is the soul of ambiguity as well as wit, newspaper headlines continually provide us with amusing samples.
During the Brown trial, however, the state's most powerful Democratic newspaper, the Providence Daily Post, stated that Brown was a murderer, a man of blood, and that he and his associates, with the assistance of Republicans and Abolitionists, had plotted not only the liberation of the slaves but also the overthrow of state and federal governments.
In an anonymous interview with a French newspaper the financier told of spending several months with her.
After all, the average American as he lies and waits for the enemy in Korea or as she scans the newspaper in some vain hope of personal contact with the front is unconcerned that his or her plight is the result of a complex of personal, economic and governmental actions far beyond the normal citizen's comprehension and control.
`` Oh, I'd drink with newspaper people.
Later, after marrying Mary Ann Hamilton, he purchased part of the newspaper with the dowry.
Hesser applied for a buyout from the Times in late March 2008 and is no longer with the newspaper.
Thus something as simple as a newspaper might be specified to six levels, as in Douglas Hofstadter's illustration of that ambiguity, with a progression from abstract to concrete in Gödel, Escher, Bach ( 1979 ):
It was also falsely reported that Ms. Musseli sent over US $ 500, 000 to Switzerland, but that was gossip given credence by newspaper items claiming that Loewe had warned his partner to not get romantically involved with a lawyer.
In addition to creating Li ' l Abner, Capp also co-created two other newspaper strips: Abbie an ' Slats with magazine illustrator Raeburn van Buren in 1937, and Long Sam with cartoonist Bob Lubbers in 1954, as well as the Sunday " topper " strips Washable Jones, Small Fry ( aka Small Change ), and Advice fo ' Chillun.
" Lazarus went on to cite Capp as one of the " four essentials " in the field of newspaper cartoonists, along with Walt Kelly, Charles Schulz and Milton Caniff.
For many years he simultaneously produced the daily strip, a weekly syndicated newspaper column, and a 500-station radio program ...." He ran the Boston Summer Theatre with The Phantom cartoonist Lee Falk, bringing in Hollywood actors such as Mae West, Melvyn Douglas and Claude Rains to star in their live productions.
In 1828, an article published in a Hagerstown, Maryland, newspaper briefly describes a young girl who's drawn away from her daily chores to play a familiar game with her friends.
He is also associated with the first recorded instance of a cycling traffic offence, when a Glasgow newspaper in 1842 reported an accident in which an anonymous " gentleman from Dumfries-shire ... bestride a velocipede ... of ingenious design " knocked over a little girl in Glasgow and was fined five shillings.
He was also partners with William Goddard and Joseph Galloway the three of whom published the Pennsylvania Chronicle, a newspaper that was known for its revolutionary sentiments and criticisms of the British monarchy in the American colonies.
Watterson stopped drawing Calvin and Hobbes at the end of 1995 with a short statement to newspaper editors and his readers that he felt he had achieved all he could in the medium.

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