Word: print
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...newspaper has the right to refuse to publish advertising that it believes is untrue, misleading or unethical, even if the space contract has been signed-said New York Supreme Court Justice John B. M. Stephens last week. His decision upheld the Rochester Times-Union in its refusal to print advertising copy of the Amalgamated Furniture Factories, Inc., which tried to make the public believe that it manufactured its own furniture. Newspapermen lauded Justice Stephens and the Times-Union; makers of gewgaws, bunion cures, lewd pictures bit their tongues...
...fact that every newspaper in New York had to print the details of ... the Browning case . . . proves beyond all possible argument that an alarmingly large number of people everywhere have distorted and perverted ideas. . . . Experts . . . state that there are several million sex perverts in this country...
This week brings the charming profile of Boston's better medium again into the public print. Margery the only ectoplasmic wonder in this center of American decorum, has once more been called ill names...
Mirror. The Hearst Mirror covered its front page with close-up portraits of the Brownings and, in prodigious type: "SUNNY CRAZY." (Mr. Browning's portrait stood for the "B" in "Bunny"). Shaking letters were used to print: "FLAMING YOUTH." Subtitle: "His Mania Causes Peculiar Love for Young Girls-Alienist." Text: "A famous [anonymous] alienist . . . diagnoses his case as 'pathological pedophilia,' a symptom of a disease of the brain classified as a sexual aberration. . . ." The Mirror, too, strove for features to please child minds-an "interview" (in mixed dialects) with Mr, Browning's pet African goose...
Married. Joseph A. Faurot, 53, finger print expert, important witness in the Hall-Mills trial; to Miss Sadie Duggan, 39, nurse...