Ed hardy
You need not be a newspaper man all your life to understand the most important fafct in newspaper work, and John J., Mitchell, president of the Illinois Merchants' Trust com- pany, proves it. To his in4nse surprise, when Victor Lawipn died, Mr. Mitchell found the Chicago Daily News dropped into his lap with power to do with it ^ he pleased. This is what he did according to accounts in the Chicsgo Daily News office. He sent f
The New fork World dwindled in the hands olJay Gould; the Herald, half a. dozei newspapers out of New York faled away like sickly infants in tie hands of Frank Mun- sey, able b^sness man and finan- cier, but wth a lofty intellect and incapable o/' descending to the huni- drum-.detais cf newspaper work, in other word;, not a newspaper man. Gould, Miney and other business men, wit| newspapers on their hands, mi^it have done much better had they pown what John J. Mit- chell knovs, that it takaj- a news- paper mai to run a newspaper, as it takes ^ railroad man to run a railroad, *id a good peanut roaster and vend* to run a peanut stand.
Presidat Coolidge, how are you impressed by the testimony of Ma- jor Ralpi Royce before your air board ? It is not necessary to a:-k. Every IntelligeU American knows your common iense and sound judgment But, fcf the benefit of j-.mie new.-, papers aid obsolete military and naval "hjrher ups' ' that oppo-e an imiependint air force, to publish as widely as possible one part of Major Royce 's testimony i.-. public service. Said he: "Last year I was inspected by eleven generals and not one of them ever even looked at my air- plane. They were interested only m the clothirg of the enli.-ted men, in saluting, and the cleanlmcs-s of m\ kitchen an.1 barracks. Ed hardy
You need not be a newspaper man all your life to understand the most important fafct in newspaper work, and John J., Mitchell, president of the Illinois Merchants' Trust com- pany, proves it. To his in4nse surprise, when Victor Lawipn died, Mr. Mitchell found the Chicago Daily News dropped into his lap with power to do with it ^ he pleased. This is what he did according to accounts in the Chicsgo Daily News office. He sent f
The New fork World dwindled in the hands olJay Gould; the Herald, half a. dozei newspapers out of New York faled away like sickly infants in tie hands of Frank Mun- sey, able b^sness man and finan- cier, but wth a lofty intellect and incapable o/' descending to the huni- drum-.detais cf newspaper work, in other word;, not a newspaper man. Gould, Miney and other business men, wit| newspapers on their hands, mi^it have done much better had they pown what John J. Mit- chell knovs, that it takaj- a news- paper mai to run a newspaper, as it takes ^ railroad man to run a railroad, *id a good peanut roaster and vend* to run a peanut stand.
Presidat Coolidge, how are you impressed by the testimony of Ma- jor Ralpi Royce before your air board ? It is not necessary to a:-k. Every IntelligeU American knows your common iense and sound judgment But, fcf the benefit of j-.mie new.-, papers aid obsolete military and naval "hjrher ups' ' that oppo-e an imiependint air force, to publish as widely as possible one part of Major Royce 's testimony i.-. public service. Said he: "Last year I was inspected by eleven generals and not one of them ever even looked at my air- plane. They were interested only m the clothirg of the enli.-ted men, in saluting, and the cleanlmcs-s of m\ kitchen an.1 barracks. Ed hardy
