Warmest thanks are due to the newspaper proprietors for their kindness in inserting paragraphs relating to the subject, as, but for their powerful co-operation in the matter, the movement could not have been brought to a successful issue.
The Bristol mail carts running to the rural districts, by permission of the Post Office, carry for the newspaper proprietors bundles of papers, weighing on an average on ordinary days 40 lbs.
The idea that a newspaper must offer its comment and its opinions to the buying and subscribing public in strict conformity with party colour and convention was not one to which he could give loyal allegiance.
It was evident that his services were not appreciated, and Strindberg relieved the newspaper of his embarrassing presence.
It was necessary to act, for his newspaper had died and food was scarce.
The ideal and the real newspaper are two very different things.
Surely," I said, "Gorman can't have been such a fool as to talk to newspaper reporters.
Newspaper writers on the Liberal side are far more intelligent than their opponents.
Newspaper proprietors demanded the immediate execution of one public man after another.
You can't even get him to vote without hypnotising him first by means of a lot of speeches and newspaper articles and placards which stare at him from hoardings.
Not a human being in my commune reads a newspaper or indeed reads anything: yet it contains 300 electors.
But the newspaper press is subject to a slavery to which it was never reduced before.
Kissileff says that all this is false, that neither Order nor letter has been sent, but he has been trying in vain to get a newspaper to insert a denial.
He returned to Australia for his subject in The Hillyars and the Burtons, and wrote several other novels before his death in 1876, having been during part of the time a newspaper editor, a newspaper correspondent, and a journalist generally.
It has been very largely followed even in daily newspapers, and the Saturday Review was probably the last newspaper of mark that maintained an absolutely rigid system of anonymity.
For some time Thomson tried various occupations, being by turns a lawyer's clerk, a mining agent, and war correspondent of a newspaper with the Carlists.
Meanwhile Coleridge had started a singular newspaper called The Watchman, which saw ten numbers, appearing every eighth day.
The newspaper press had, for good or for ill, to come; external events to some obvious extent helped its coming; individual talents and aptitudes helped it likewise; but the main determining force was the force of hidden destiny.
Some poetry and much newspaper work filled the next ten years, with endless schemes; but in 1807 Coleridge began to lecture at the Royal Institution--a course somewhat irregularly delivered, and almost entirely unreported.
The following appeared in a Turkish newspaper at the time of the Bulgarian atrocities: 'Mr. Gladstone is of Bulgarian descent.
The impudence of newspaper reporters has furnished material for many a good-natured joke, but there is getting to be more truth than humor in the imputation.
And the contents of these two are outlined for us, again and again, in magazines and newspaper sketches.
The newspaper has inspired every man with the love of self-judgment, and the common school has qualified him, in some degree, for its exercise.
The newspaper press in America is a century and a half old; but its power does not antedate this century, and its growth has been chiefly within the last twenty-five years.
The mass ofnewspaper readers are not, in a scholastic sense, well-educated persons.
The newspaper press of America, having its centre in the city of New York, is more influential than the press of any other country.
There is another obstacle in the way of a Chinese newspaper of liberal views, like the "Chung Sai Yat Po.
The editing of a Chinese newspaper is no easy matter.
From thenewspaper office we wended our way to a little Baptist mission chapel for the Chinese.
As my guide and I went forth to visit the places of interest in Chinatown, we directed our steps first of all to the Chinese newspaper office.
The second newspaper man--that same dapper fellow who had watched the marchers by the factory wall--had told over and over the story of McGregor and his Marchers.
Newspaper artists rushed into police headquarters and made hurried sketches to appear an hour later blazoned across the face of extras on the streets.
In the little court under the window lay heaps of discarded newspaper tossed about by the wind.
A young Jewish newspaper man, half rascal, half poet, wrote a scare-head story for one of the Sunday papers announcing the birth of the Republic of Labour.
He remembered the words of the newspaper man about the song of labour, and was drunk with the thought that he had caught the swing of it.
I remember that newspaper men used to sit in their little holes and write saying of him that the times made McGregor.
By the factory wall the excited newspaper man danced up and down.
He began to think that the lives of most of the people about him were much like the dirty newspaper harried by adverse winds and surrounded by ugly walls of facts.
A crowd of newspaper men went one night to hear McGregor at a big outdoor meeting up on the North Side.
In the afternoon there would be a hundred newspaper men standing on the stairway leading up to the big bare office in Van Buren Street.
Every newspaper man in town got assignments on the story.
Becoming more and more excited as he continued to drink the newspaper man had been half wild in his conjectures as to what was to happen in the world.
Every day his office was filled with newspapermen who asked questions and demanded explanations.
That night on the North Side Doctor Cowell got hold of the shoulder of a newspaper man and led him to a car.
He meant to suggest rather newspaper articles of any sort done more or less on the spur of the moment for next day's consumption.
In the newspaper advertisement it merely said "George F.
She wrote three critical articles a week, which appeared on the first page of the paper, and since her day newspaper reviewing has gone back in other respects than the mere process of burying itself more deeply within the paper.
To be sure, we have heard many newspaper men picturing themselves as butterflies broken on the wheel, but always with a melancholy gusto.
It was only a small section of an editorial in an evening newspaper about the trial of the five Socialist Assemblymen.
There is a great deal about the terrific strain of newspaper work and how a brutal city editor will drive a finely tempered reporter until he has had the best of his brains and then toss him aside like a withered violet.
But this round, red, little man, peculiarly enough, has thin white hands and long tapering fingers, like an artist or a newspaper cartoonist.
We can't speak with authority about Fleet Street, nor even pretend to be infallible about Park Row, but it is our impression that newspaper work is easier than any of the other professions except the ministry.
I freely admit that the French newspaper seems, on first acquaintance, to be a wonderful and puzzling affair.
Burton stuffed the newspaper into his pocket, and in three minutes was already well on the way to Folkestone.
All I ask is, don't give anything away to newspaper men for a couple of days, at any rate.
I strained a muscle or two in scuffling with those gentlemen--and I've had nothing but newspaper since eight o'clock.
It was the work of a moment to cut the cords that bound the chemist's legs and arms to the chair, and to tear from his mouth the thick fold of newspaper that had gagged him.
Yes; well, they left a French newspaper behind them.
It's to a newspaper man we owe the whole botheration.
At the outset the publisher of a periodical printed newspaper differed in no wise from the publisher of any other printed work--for instance, of a pamphlet or a book.
The effect of this upon the internal organization of the newspaper undertaking was to introduce a third department, the editorship, between news collecting and news publication.
A study of the relation between the newspaper and the political development of modern Japan.
During the world-war it was studied, and all the knowledge which advertisers, newspaper men, and psychologists possessed was used to win the war.
Venice was long regarded as the birthplace of the newspaper in the modern acceptation of the word.
The Newspaper as an Organ of Public Opinion (1) Dana, Charles A.
Today we are, of course, accustomed to the regular printing of the newspaper and its periodical appearance at brief intervals.
The newspaper is the great medium of communication within the city, and it is on the basis of the information which it supplies that public opinion rests.
But the newspaper with its elaborate mechanism of communication gives publicity to events in London, Moscow, and Tokio, and the motion picture unreels to our gaze scenes from distant lands and foreign peoples with all the illusion of reality.
They have the Signal at all the newspaper shops here," said Ruth.
For it must be understood that in the Five Towns people prefer to catch their newspaper in the street as it flies and cries.
And he said to himself, never guessing how many thousands of men had said it before him, that a newspaper was the finest toy in the world.
They wrote fornewspaper publication a letter of eulogy, in which they said: "The influence of Captain Gentner is still leading on the men of his battalion.
Nothing in the world affords a newspaper reporter so much satisfaction as gathering up the details of a bloody and mysterious murder and writing them up with aggravating circumstantiality.
This glycerin catastrophe is borrowed from a floating newspaper item, whose author's name I would give if I knew it.
It was then that I did my first newspaper scribbling, and most unexpectedly to me it stirred up a fine sensation in the community.
And is it not so cheap, and so common, and often so trivial, that the reader smiles in derision when the newspaper mentions it?
You try to tell me anything about the newspaper business!
It had been on her mind that she might possibly meet her step-mother abroad, but she had not done so; and one day Miss Blair had shown her a London newspaper in which was the notice of Ida's marriage to a Scotchman.
She imagined the horrible details, the surmises, the newspaper articles, and she said to herself that even if she herself were willing to face the ordeal it would be still more of an ordeal for Wollaston and Evelyn.
The Prose of Alfred Lichtenstein Alfred Lichtenstein The Winner Max Mechenmal was an independent manager of a newspaper kiosk.
He changed positions and managed, by means of energy and all kinds of dirty tricks, after a year and a few months, to hold a position of trust as an independent manager of a newspaper kiosk.
Kuno Kohn arranged for a subordinate position for his friend Mechenmal at a newspaper publishing office.
Mr Gottschalk Schulz, a poet of sensitivity, has published a moving poem about this in the "Newspaper for Enlightened Citizens".
In the newspaper "The Other A" Theo Tontod provided a short obituary.
While they walked along, they found white newspaper flyers about the event everywhere.
Yet, after a prolonged stay in Germany, he draws in the Christiania newspaper Social Demokraien a decidedly dismal picture of German life and of the state of public feeling in Germany.
I did not hope for a minute that those horrible lines in the newspaper were false.
He picked up his newspaper again, and began to read.
But by-and-by, by accident, I saw your name in a newspaper that was lying on the table with Paul's hat and gloves.
I went, and found her standing there, with a letter crumpled up in her clenched hand, and a slip of newspaper lying on the table before her.
There is no class of men,' he says bravely, 'in existence, animated by more humane motives than working newspaper men.
As well might a man, when stung to madness by wasps, endeavour to sit in his chair without moving a muscle, as endure with patience and without reply the courtesies of a newspaper opponent.
He was then elevated for the moment to the dizzy pinnacle of a newspaper hero, and became one of those "whom the king delighteth to honour.
I'll put a newspaperover Greshamsbury, or the squire will know it!