Word: heralds
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...York Herald Tribune last week headlined its report of a violent day in the Central Methodist Church, Brooklyn: METHODISTS RUB SOCIALIST TRACE OUT OF PLATFORM...
...seen his passenger before. Was it in Locust Valley? Was it in the newspapers? When he got home next morning he described the old man to his wife. She said she had seen him too the day before, and she knew who he was. She told a New York Herald Tribune reporter that it was Joseph W. Harriman, the defamed bankster whose escape the previous day from the Regent Nursing Home in Manhattan, where he was awaiting trial for falsification of bank accounts had electrified the Press. Few hours later the reporter called at the Inn, chatted with the proprietor...
...Draper's writing is informed but rambling. In a burlesque edition of the Herald Tribune printed for Mr. Draper's 25th anniversary in service, the Draper editorial style was satirized by City Editor Stanley Walker, thus...
Like many another Herald Tribuner Mr. Draper commutes from a home at Great Neck, L. I. (known to the staff as "Goitre") where he raises Irish terriers. At the (now defunct) Engineers' Club he played golf in the 80's. He keeps up his membership in London's Middlesex Golf Club. Last week he retired to his summer home at Chestertown, N. Y. in the Adirondacks. He wears tweedy clothes, habitually mumbles his speech around the stem of a well-caked briar pipe. At Blake's, the Herald Tribune saloon where he lunches with staff mates...
Publisher Robert Joseph Cuddihy of the Literary Digest had long been looking around for a new editor when his eye lit upon conservative Mr. Draper. Reputed salary: $40,000 a year, much more than he was paid by the Herald Tribune. The conservative Digest announced "no change of policy...