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Prohibition Bundle for DS
Prohibition Bundle for DS
Prohibition Buildings for DAZ Studio Prohibition Bonnie Outfit for GF8 In large cities and industrial areas, from basements and attics, moonshiners and other bootleggers made it virtually impossible for Prohibition Bureau agents to enforce the Volstead Act’s national ban on making and distributing liquor. The bureau seized almost 697,000 stills nationwide from 1921 to 1925. From mid-1928 to mid-1929 alone, the feds confiscated 11,416 stills, 15,700 distilleries and 1.1 million gallons of alcohol. The bigger stills were known to churn out five gallons of alcohol in only eight minutes. Commercial stills in New York could put out 50 to 100 gallons a day at a cost of 50 cents per gallon and sell each one for $3 to $12. By 1930, the U.S. government estimated that smuggling foreign-made liquor into the country was a $3 billion industry ($41 billion in 2016). Meanwhile, racketeers, in addition to buying whiskey and other liquors smuggled from Canada, Great Britain and Mexico, manufactured alcohol. Some racketeers bought up closed breweries and distilleries and hired former employees to make the same products illegally. Others corrupted brewers otherwise engaged in the production of legal “near beer.” Some brewers gave in to the temptation to deal with gangsters, who paid cash for the higher-percentage alcohol beer. Chicago racketeer Johnny Torrio, in the weeks after Prohibition began in 1920, partnered with two other mobsters and legitimate brewer Joseph Stenson to manufacture for sale illegal beer in nine breweries. Torrio convinced hundreds of street criminals they could become wealthy by cooperating in the secret beer distribution racket to speakeasies, organized within agreed-upon and strictly enforced territories in the city. He and his partners took in $12 million a year in the early 1920s. Torrio later turned control of his Chicago bootlegging racket over to his successor, Al Capone. Prohibition Decals for Daz Studio Preset Decals Bullets Impact and Label Delivery Truck Presets planned for "Prohibition Sedan" and "Delivery Truck" this Collection of Bullets Impact decals and Label Decals that can be applied to any character, any UV or any object using the in-built Iray decal node. 2 Outfits, Regarding the pants : This gives the character the appearance of long legs and a slender figure. Hat prop, Prohibition Bonnie Outfit Textures for GF8 Prohibition Alcohols Bottles Barrels for DAZ Studio Here is a set of barrels of bottles and cases that will allow you to smuggle alcohol ... If you do not get arrested in this period of Prohibition. Prohibition 1911 for DAZ Studio Clyde Barrow’s Colt Model 1911 Government Model Semi-auto pistol, removed from his waistband after the ambush by Texas and Louisiana lawmen on May 23, 1934. This is a standard US Army pistol of World War I vintage. Prohibition Bonnie Colt for DAZ Studio Bonnie Parker’s Colt Detective Special .38 revolver, carried by her at the time of her death. A notarized letter from former Special Texas Ranger Frank Hamer, Jr., dated December 10, 1979, identifies this gun and states, “On the morning of May 23, 1934, when my father and the officers with him in Louisiana killed Clyde Barrow and Bonnie Parker. My father removed this gun from the inside thigh of Bonnie Parker where she had it taped with white, medical, adhesive tape. My father said that one reason she had the gun taped to the inside of her leg was that, in those days, no gentlemen officer would search a woman where she had it taped…Sometime later, my father gave this gun to Buster Davis who had been a Texas Ranger and was, at the time, an FBI Agent.” Included with this gun and mentioned in this letter is a framed handwritten note from Frank Hamer, written on the back of an old Texas Ranger Expense Account form, reads “Aug/1934 Davis hold onto this. Bonnie was ‘squatting’ on it. Frank.” Prohibition Submachine Gun DS for DAZ Studio The Thompson submachine gun, or Tommy gun developed an almost iconic status during the 20th century. It had an unusual beginning, for it was developed during the dying days of World War I as a 'one-man, hand-held machine gun.' The war ended before these first prototypes could be shipped to Europe but once the M1921 Thompson formally entered production it was used by the criminals working in Chicago and New York during the 1920s. With the police increasingly outgunned they too were forced to equip themselves with the Tommy gun. It quickly came to be used in Hollywood films. Prohibition Cigars Prohibition Sedan for DAZ Studio Very inspired by the "Ford A" here is a variation of two vehicles: Wheels,Doors are movable Prohibition Delivery Truck for DAZ Studio Very inspired by the "Ford A" here is Delivery Truck. Wheels,Doors, Tarpaulin are movable
📁 Bundles 🔖 barrels, Bottles, Cigars, DAZ Studio 4.15, Decals, Delivery truc, Genesis 8 Female, Genesis 8 Male, outfit, Pistol, police car, Props, Revolver, sedan, submachine gun, textures, ZIP, 146027, Bundles |
Prohibition Bundle for DS
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