Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
The female operatives of Stravinsky's bawdyhouse are among the uniformed employees.
Change here for Bawdyhouse.
Twenty owners are charged with "keeping a common bawdyhouse"; 286 men are charged as found-ins.
Wasn't hardly nobody comin' by the bawdyhouse where I was at, either, what with so many men bein' away to the war.
Professor FitzBelmont looked like a maiden aunt called upon to discuss the facts of life with the madam of the local bawdyhouse.
June 12: The March 30 trial finds two Barracks employees guilty of keeping a common bawdyhouse; three owners are found not guilty.
Bawdy House Riots or Bawdyhouse Riots can mean:
June 2: A full-page ad supporting repeal of the bawdyhouse laws, signed by over 1,400 people, appears in The Globe and Mail.
Less reputably, the "restricted district" below Yesler Way became home to many box houses: half antecedent of vaudeville, half bawdyhouse.
Thousands of them came to Chicago answering advertisements for "servants" and "factory hands," and found themselves trapped by fake employment agencies, and locked up in a bawdyhouse.
July 3: The New Democratic Party calls for the bawdyhouse section of the Criminal Code of Canada to be repealed.
Various anonymous verses are the only other sources describing her childhood occupations: bawdyhouse servant, street hawker of herring, oysters, or turnips, and cinder-girl have all been put forth.
So it was a matter of only a month or so before Becker, with RK trotting along beside him like a dog, showed up in front of his favorite bawdyhouse.
By then the office of District Attorney Robert M. Morgenthau of Manhattan had gone to court invoking the city's 1868 bawdyhouse law for closing places with a pattern of illicit activity.
If they do not do so, city officials will take action in Housing Court under the 19th-century "bawdyhouse law," which gives neighbors and government agencies standing to proceed against tenants engaged in "any illegal trade."
No charges were laid against customers, although police recorded the names of ten women, and two organizers, Rachael Aitcheson and J.P. Hornick, were charged under the bawdyhouse law.
Worse than this, the woman lived in a bawdyhouse downtown, with a coarse, red-faced Irishman named Connor, who was the boss of the loading-gang outside, and would make free with the girls as they went to and from their work.
Marie Windsor, who played sassy femmes fatales, cynical bawdyhouse matrons and two-timing crooks in 74 movies with enough verve to win the informal accolade "Queen of the B's," died on Sunday at her home in Beverly Hills, Calif.
New inhabitants would emerge from what had been the saloon, a church, a bawdyhouse, and stare as over hours (their progress faster daily) the crews put down the sleepers and rails on old horsetracks and passed where stagecoaches and drifters had been.
Both programs are based on a law that allows government agencies or tenants whose premises are within 200 feet of property used as a "bawdyhouse" or "for any illegal trade, business or manufacture" to start an eviction proceeding, "as though the petitioner were the owner," if the landlord fails to do so.