Word: printings
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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TIME'S many items of challenging interest must be making the urge to burst into print infectious. It would seem few of your readers escape. As a constant reader and original subscriber to your admirable magazine, I just read your article in the MISCELLANY column of TIME, Aug. 16, captioned, "Name-in-a-Million." It leads me to submit the following...
Much of the majesty appertaining to the great New York Times has resulted from its stern refusal to print "features,"-i.e. comic strips, "colyums," Nell Brinkley claptrap, Dr. Crane flub-dub. Nothing but straight, reliable news went into the Times, soberly written...
...this? Editor Kenneth C. Hogate, President C. W. Barren were getting after those bummers who undersold him yesterday! He called the fine news across the room to tell his secretary, found her tittering timorously and avoiding his look. Again he looked at his paper. Here was his name in print! What had he done? Dastardly impudence! Oh! . . . This was not the Wall Street Journal. He was reading the Bawl Street Journal, its gay, impish perfect imitation which the Manhattan Bond Club issues for its annual picnic. Now he could settle down to enjoy the neighborhood merriment...
...dislike to see TIME print any inaccuracy. Hopkins Hall, where Helen Wills attended school [TIME, July 26, SPORT], is near Burlington not Bennington...
Gold medals have been pressed upon Frederick E. Ives of Philadelphia ever since 1885, but not until lately have his chief beneficiaries thus saluted him. The United Typothetae of America (U. S. employing printers) waited until last March, and the Clubs of Printing House Craftsmen (U. S. printing executives) waited until last week, to salute, in his 70th year, the author of practically all modern picture-printing processes - half tones, color plates, intaglio or "rotogravure." The author, in short, of the pictures of murderers and statesmen in the newspapers; of the sepia supplements and the ravishing hosiery advertisements...