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The Help: Revision history


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  • curprev 19:0619:06, 31 March 2021Bamyers99 talk contribs 13,975 bytes +1,195 reverted 2 edits by 207.165.65.146; page hijack undo Tag: Undo
  • curprev 13:1213:12, 31 March 2021207.165.65.146 talk 12,780 bytes +458 In Chicago, on February 14, 1929, cohorts of infamous racketeer Al Capone lined up and gunned down seven associates of rival gangster George “Bugs” Moran in what reporters nicknamed the St. Valentine’s Day Massacre. The news of the brutal mass slaying shocked the country, including proponents of Prohibition. Meanwhile, Capone held news conferences and dressed in flashy suits at public sporting events. He was taking in as much as $60 million to as high as $100 million a year from bootlegging whil undo Tags: Reverted Visual edit: Switched
  • curprev 12:5812:58, 31 March 2021207.165.65.146 talk 12,322 bytes −1,653 By 1929, after nine years of Prohibition, many Americans were discouraged. They had long seen people openly drinking illegal alcoholic beverages that were available almost everywhere. They read news stories of murders and bombings in the big cities, perpetrated by organized crime members made rich from bootlegging liquor, wine and beer and smuggling it by land, sea and air. undo Tags: Reverted categories removed references removed

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