Word: sateveposter
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...paid him by Satevepost for that cartoon looked exceedingly good to Carl Anderson, but the new character he had drawn for the first time looked even better. Henry's personality appealed to him. The very name somehow seemed ideal. Artist Anderson concentrated on Henry, perfected the simple lines of his domed head, big ears, full cheeks, skinny neck. Eyes, nose & mouth, indicated by circles and dots, formed an expression of sublime self-assurance, competence, unconcern. Henry, according to his maker, was not really bald; he Jiad just had all his hair shaved...
Carl Anderson's Henry quickly became a weekly feature in the Satevepost.
Rendered in pantomime without benefit of caption, his escapades were
masterpieces of reticence. Inquisitive, ubiquitous, fearless, Henry
nearly always remained master of the situation, practically never
resorted to slapstick. Typical Henrys:
...Saturday Evening Post, later in book form. Friends of Friend Richberg saw the manuscript, rushed to him with alarming tales of what Friend Johnson had written about him. By last week Lawyer Richberg was so wrought up that he released to the Press a letter he had written to Satevepost Editor George Horace Lorimer...
...Satevepost: $7,200 black & white; $10,350 four-color...
...only has the Satevepost more circulation, but it carried 30% more advertising for the first nine months of 1934 than in the same period last year. Curtis Publishing Co. had an exceedingly rosy third-quarter report, showing net profits up 300%?. This fact was promptly picked up by a devoted supporter of President Roosevelt and hurled back into the Satevepost's camp. The New Dealer was Publisher Julius David Stern of the New York Post, which formerly belonged to Curtis. Last fortnight Publisher Stern wrote a sarcastic editorial, alternating choice paragraphs from the Curtis report with jittery excerpts from...