Word: heralds
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...industrial conditions. Of late these callers have been confiding to the President their difficulties in maintaining his wage scale while commodity prices were falling. Outside the White House they repeated their laments in the hearings of newshawks. Last week in so reliable a Republican print as the New York Herald Tribune President Hoover was depicted as waging a stiff backstage "struggle" to uphold his pay policy "in the face of a strong movement in financial circles" to cut wages. His visitors came away with the impression that the President thought that if wages could be maintained for another 60 days...
...bursting dikes, sly yarns of the fat Prince Consort, heartthrobs about Crown Princess Juliana), 99% of the U. S. Press and all three major U. S. news services made no mention whatever last week of the Waterler Peace Prize. It was reported to the foreign-news-conscious New York Herald Tribune by dutiful Correspondent Herbert Antcliffe...
After a year, however, the Scripps-Howard "Fat Lady" took the El Paso Post into her ample lap. And last week the dominant El Paso Post absorbed its evening competitor, the Herald, becoming the Herald-Post...
...circumstances of the birth of the Post illustrated early Scripps-Howard characteristics, so did the purchase of the Herald exemplify later characteristics. For in just such fashion have Partners Howard and Scripps and General Manager William Waller Hawkins set about "cleaning up the territory" wherever there was one newspaper too many. Not counting merged properties they now have 25 newspapers. Sometimes, as in Akron (Times-Press), Knoxville (News-Sentinel), Memphis (Press-Scimitar) they have bought. Elsewhere, as in Des Moines, Norfolk, Terre Haute, Sacramento, they have moved out. For Scripps-Howard, no cluttered fields...
...Herald Tribune...