Word: heralds
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...become the slaves of conscienceless predatory interests they try to besmirch and belittle every public man who refuses to do as they have done-prove unworthy to bear the name of citizen of the United States and betray his country"-thus Senator Heflin of Alabama described The New York Herald, the New York Tribune and "other subsidized Republican newspapers" that expressed weariness with the conduct of Senatorial investigators...
...heart of Frank A. Munsey, led to another journalistic union-but not under Mr. Munsey's banner. Without a word of warning, without the usual preliminary tremors of. rumor, it was announced that Ogden M. Reid, owner of the New York Tribune had bought The New York Herald (Mr. Munsey's property since 1920) and that they would be combined on the follow-ing morning. The Paris edition of the Herald was also sold to Mr. Reid...
Thus the only two Republican morning papers in Manhattan were combined. Mr. Munsey denied that the purchase price was $4,000,000, the amount which Mr. Munsey paid for the Herald, its Paris edition and The New York Evening Telegram. The last official figures on circulation (October, 1923) credited the Tribune with 133,230 and the Herald with...
...Miss Miller's special talents for the part, would list the Misses Sophie Tucker, Marie Dressier, Fannie Brice, Nora Bayes, Gilda Grey, Henrietta Grossman, Nazimova, Mrs. Thomas Whiffen and the two-a-day gymnast called Dainty Marie.' Said Alexander Woollcott, famed critic of The New York Herald: 'Quite the unkindest paragraph of the year is credited to Frederick Donaghey...
Membership to the association costs one dollar and includes a year's subscription to the "League of Nations Herald," a bi-monthly publication which outlines the proceedings of the League of Nations and takes up questions of international policy...