Word: publishes
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...recall it the Ladies' Home Journal did very little, at least there were other periodicals did more. The Chicago Tribune deserves some credit, certainly more than the Ladies' Home Journal, but has claimed, and had given it, more than the facts warrant. All it did was to publish on the 5th and 6th all it could get at the time; it was stale news after that. The fact is The Journal of the American Medical Association deserves all the credit for giving the "staggering blow" to the insane method of celebrating independence. It attacked the problem...
...Janeiro officials did their best to hush this up too. A Federal censorship was established. Liberal-owned radio stations were closed. Chief of Police Oliveira Sobrinho called editors of opposition papers into his office, pointed out how unfortunate it would be if they should publish "false and misleading" accounts of the assassination or the unfortunate little affair of the ''independent state" in Parahyba...
What Bookman Doran will do for Mr. Hearst is vague. He himself says he will be "a salaried official." His work is described as "foreign contact man" with various connections with Mr. Hearst's book publishing, magazines, newspapers. In foreign contacts he will be valuable, for Mr. Doran is an international figure. Famed in London are his professional feasts. He has known how to secure such authors as Sir Arthur Gonan Doyle, Joseph Conrad, Arnold Bennett, Rudyard Kipling, Hugh Walpole, Herbert George Wells, Somerset Maugham, Frank Swinnerton. In the U. S. he has long been known...
Grandsons of immensely wealthy men seldom work very hard. John Barry Ryan Jr., grandson of the late financier Thomas Fortune Ryan, worked ten years as a reporter, aspired to publish his own paper. Last week there appeared in Newark, N. J., the Free Press, owned jointly by Mr. Ryan and Harry Gray, his former managing editor of the Newark Ledger...
...much as Texas suffered enough from the regrettable incident; in as much as Mr. Moody has always stood pre-eminently for law enforcement, and for extreme measures when necessary against the lawless mob, I hope TIME will see fit to publish the true story of the order, "don't shoot...