The first newspaper in France, edited by Pierre Lebrun, appeared in Orléans on September 25, 1690, and was banned the same day by Justice Georges Bonet. The editor's subsequent long fight to continue to publish his paper and print what he wished marks an important episode in the continuing struggle to maintain a free press. 1) The editor of this paper wrote articles criticising Justice Bonet.
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Thirty years earlier, the American town of Westfield began repossessing farms lost by their owners on account of the non-portion of obligations.
- To date the town has established somewhere in the range of 3,600 sections of land of local area woodland on a portion of this land.
- The pine trees have developed well. The town timberland yielded what could be compared to £100,000 net benefit on pulpwood last year and £95,000 the prior year.
- Nearby specialists accept that the net benefit on the pulpwood will proceed to develop and ultimately reach £300,000 per year from simply the present 3,600 sections of land.
- The principal paper in France, altered by Pierre Lebrun, showed up in Orléans on September 25, 1690, and was prohibited that very day by Justice Georges Bonet.
- The supervisor's resulting long battle to keep on distributing his paper and print what he wished marks a significant episode in the proceeding with the battle to keep a free press.
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