Curtis Bean Dall

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(Divorce)
(Footnotes 4)
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*M — [http://content.ancestry.com/Browse/bookview.aspx?dbid=23602&iid=dvm_GenMono005774-00157-0&desc=Curtis+Dall&rc=2091,1866,2339,1925;2328,1868,2509,1924 ''The amazing Roosevelt family: 1613-1942'', pg 302] : "Completely happy with her second husband, whom Sistie and Buzzie adore, she helps him with his newspaper, writes and edits its woman's page, and takes part in the social activities of the Northwestern outpost.  Mrs. Roosevelt frequently visits her; she flew there to be present when Anna's third child, John Roosevelt Boettiger, was born on 29 Mar 1939."
 
*M — [http://content.ancestry.com/Browse/bookview.aspx?dbid=23602&iid=dvm_GenMono005774-00157-0&desc=Curtis+Dall&rc=2091,1866,2339,1925;2328,1868,2509,1924 ''The amazing Roosevelt family: 1613-1942'', pg 302] : "Completely happy with her second husband, whom Sistie and Buzzie adore, she helps him with his newspaper, writes and edits its woman's page, and takes part in the social activities of the Northwestern outpost.  Mrs. Roosevelt frequently visits her; she flew there to be present when Anna's third child, John Roosevelt Boettiger, was born on 29 Mar 1939."
 
*N — [http://www.newspaperarchive.com/PdfViewerTags.aspx?img=101877564&firstvisit=true&src=search&currentResult=0 ''Oelwein Daily Register'', 18 Jan 1935], page 8, "Dall Congratulates His Ex-Wife" : "Chicago Jan 19 — (UP) — Curtis B Dall, divorced husband of Mrs. Anne Roosevelt Dall who was married today to John Boetiger, sent a telegram to the couple extending 'my every good wish.'  The wire addressed to 59 East 65th Street, New York said: 'Received your telegram here in Chicago and am sending you both my every good wish."  Dall is chairman  of the exceu [?] conference of state liquor administrators.  He said he knew Boettiger and regarded him as 'a very good chap.'  Asked if he had any intentions of remarrying, he asked jokingly: 'What would you suggest?'  A moment later he denied any matrimonial intentions.  Ball is chairman of the executive committee of the Distillers and Brewers Corporation of America."
 
*N — [http://www.newspaperarchive.com/PdfViewerTags.aspx?img=101877564&firstvisit=true&src=search&currentResult=0 ''Oelwein Daily Register'', 18 Jan 1935], page 8, "Dall Congratulates His Ex-Wife" : "Chicago Jan 19 — (UP) — Curtis B Dall, divorced husband of Mrs. Anne Roosevelt Dall who was married today to John Boetiger, sent a telegram to the couple extending 'my every good wish.'  The wire addressed to 59 East 65th Street, New York said: 'Received your telegram here in Chicago and am sending you both my every good wish."  Dall is chairman  of the exceu [?] conference of state liquor administrators.  He said he knew Boettiger and regarded him as 'a very good chap.'  Asked if he had any intentions of remarrying, he asked jokingly: 'What would you suggest?'  A moment later he denied any matrimonial intentions.  Ball is chairman of the executive committee of the Distillers and Brewers Corporation of America."
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*O — [http://www.newspaperarchive.com/PdfViewerTags.aspx?img=12255275&firstvisit=true&src=search&currentResult=25 ''Frederick News-Post'', 6 May 1937, page 5], "Turns Down Verdict Against Curtis Dall : Judge Says Plaintiff Clearly Established Deliberate Libel By Time Magazine", "New York, May 5 — A Supreme Court jury returned a verdict for Time magazine in the $250,000 libel suit brought by Curtis B Dall, former son-in-law of President Roosevelt, but Justice Bernard L Shientag set the verdict aside on motion of Dall's counsel. 'The verdict of the jury is against the overwhelming weight of the evidence,' Justice Shientag said.  'The plaintiff clearly established a deliberate libel.  To allow the verdict to stand would be a travesty on justice, and I have no hesitancy in setting it aside.'  Dall based his suit on an article published in the 23 Apr 1934 issue of Time.  The article, described by the defense at the trial as 'an imaginative illustration,' told of the imagined 'suicide' of Dall in the White House in the presence of his former wife and Mrs. Roosevelt"
 
*P — Diamond, Sara. Roads to Dominion: Right-Wing Movements and Political Power in the United States, p 87  
 
*P — Diamond, Sara. Roads to Dominion: Right-Wing Movements and Political Power in the United States, p 87  
 
*Q — [http://books.google.com/books?vid=ISBN0595236995&id=584-3unXLocC&pg=PA217&lpg=PA217&dq=%22Curtis+B+Dall%22&sig=T7_KKgbIZvW9mZ8zlJdyeEoeoHA Richardson, Darcy G., A Nation Divided: The 1968 Presidential Campaign, p. 217]  
 
*Q — [http://books.google.com/books?vid=ISBN0595236995&id=584-3unXLocC&pg=PA217&lpg=PA217&dq=%22Curtis+B+Dall%22&sig=T7_KKgbIZvW9mZ8zlJdyeEoeoHA Richardson, Darcy G., A Nation Divided: The 1968 Presidential Campaign, p. 217]  

Revision as of 15:32, 6 June 2008

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