Discover Our Collections


  • Specific Item Type > Folder (remove)
  • Tag > Digital item (remove)
  • Collection > Papers of Charles E. Marsh (remove)

48 results

  • racket is over and he returns to normalcy as an American citizen? Is this the price of peace and speed and democracy in the defense of America? An intelligent, fanatical, class-driven Lewis presses a button at Detroit, at Buffalo, at Bridgeport, at Los
  • -...west Virginia Neely--West Virginia Monroney--Okla.homa Gl'een--Rhode Island Fla:nders--Vermont Legislative, Public Relation.s and Labor Con.sultants JOE i\BRAM Member of FLA. PRESS ASS'N. and N. E. A. Director Slappey Building • P. O. Box 1434
  • . Editor and General M1µ1a,rer Chesley Perr:,- ••• • • Businesa Manaser Ronald Halpim • • • • • • • Cib Editor MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Tbe ~lated ~ le u:eluaivel7 entitled to tbe ua, for publication of all newa dlepatchea credited to It or not pt
  • : If' there is any justification for group newspapers aa compared with single home ownership newspapers, it must be coldly looked at from the standpoint of the greatest good to the greatest number. We have an association of newspapers, capitalistically loosely
  • D. Roosevelt. I want a moment to thank the press of South Texas-­ the Houston Post, the Houston Chronicle. the Houston Press. and the Port Arthur News--whioh has seen in iq candidacy tor the Senate the effort of one to serve under
  • it is said that "Two caulkers claim $160 each for 8 hours' work," as reported by the Associated Press, according to testi­ mony received by the Naval Affairs Com­ mittee of the House. 452700-21904 The investigation also disclosed that there was an agreement
  • sources throughout the country on any information of s i gnif icance that any cabinet offi cial or the President might need for decision about any person or thing . Every press agent of every department should be place d by h im or vetoed by him
  • to the Georgia Press Institute at the Un:i\ersity of Georgia. This will be before the student body . I am to speak in Atlanta the evening of the 22nd, to an oil group on "Foreign Policy", and t he next day at noon, probably to a Business and Professional Women
  • IN .HYDEPARK PARK ABOUT EIGHTY MILES FRO M NEWYORK UNABLE GET STREET ADDRESS STOP HAVE BEEN · , PRESS -THE CONFERR I N.G WI TH -UN I TED - - STOP FERGUSON OUT OF TOWN STOP NEWYORK CENTRAL BEST ROUTE GOVERNOR IS IN ALBA~Y TONIGHT= ---------~: A J
  • ' Literally Ba'?ks Wallace Associated Press WIREPHOTO. POLITICAL PICKET-Farmer C. C. Armi;trong displayed his politics on his back yesterday as he "picketed" Vice · Presidential Candidat e Wallace's notification ceremonies at Des Moines, Iowa. Candidate
  • and men guests, constituting the Juvenile Protective Associ tion of J acksonville. At the Executive Commit t ee meeting all three of my opponents were introduced and t wo of them made very short and dignified announcements of t heir candidacy. This was i
  • 'in the galaxy of New _Deal personalities. -One need only read his speech to · the Free World, Association, extracts from w.hich ap­ pear on page 725, to understand his profound concep­ tion of the humanitarian advances and reforms which can be forged out
  • ," and his A enchant and exalt the heart.a ot the papulace. Yet If he has brulll!ed aside the major Impediment In the way of developing the best possible press -&fter a pararraph devoted to The Associated Press, be adds, "There Is no such approach
  • ; in it. The psyohological point here obviously is the President. This may be handled, but attached to the Senator, an alive press specialist as a secretary and tra-geling companion who does not become, and is not known, as a press representative. The moment a man becomes
  • . President Truman stopped me in tre receiving line at the Women I s Press Club Reception last Thursday evening to compliment the fight I made with oth3 r Senators against the Republicans violating the spirit of the new Reorganizaticn of Congress Act
  • with Harold about the whole polltical set-up in est. Texas, and probably some other things of inter­ I think this is worth a checldng. FRANK N. WATSON and PHILIP E. FOX .AssocIATEs G.RRFIELD CRAWFORD MABEL DUICE PUBLIC RELflTIONS COUNSEL
  • the whole matter with some of my associate ■ before going ahead with the organization of General Newspapers. ~ I am certainly glad to hear the news about Mobile and hope you will be suooeastul in your present plans there. Can't we arrange sane other adj
  • Press
  • IDEA WOULD BE HAVE YOU TO SUGGEST TO 1f/RIT ING MEN THE INFORMATION WHICH WOULD GIVE THIM A CHANCE TO WRITE EVERYTHING BUT THE NEW LEAD OF THE MEETING ITSELF. THIS MIGHT BE OFFERED ASSOCIATED PRESS UNITED PRESS AND INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE AS ADVANCE
  • with the minjnn1m of repression; that the second is to ex,­ press and act proportionate values in the use of time and emphasis;: that such approach, of course, will encourage intellectual honesty, intellectual curios­ ity, kindness, clarity, and above all
  • is at last removed from the stricken tory. Nearly half of their production countries overseas, the first and most may be going to the British and Amer­ pressing need will be action to bring foo'cl ican governments by the time Hitler is to the starving
  • Baldv,1n should contact King and Associated Press, and Charles Green should contact United Press at Austin. The editorial which Baldwin has is the bads of the int'orme.tion which should go in adve.nco to the mind of A. P. and u. p. people
  • -PAUL CROMER ABBREVIATIONS: BOT.. BOTTOM: CEN.. CENTER: C,, COPYRIGHT: EXC., EXCEPT: LT.. LEn: RT.. RIGHT: T., TOP : A,P., ASSOCIATED PRESS: B.S.. BLACK STAR: EUROPEAN , EUROPEAN PICTURE SERVICE: INT.. INTERNATIONAL. This fortnightly edition
  • ' ' . -·~- WA6 305 .. NT=WASHI NGTON DC JU'iE ·2! •I ~_........ HON CHARLES MARSH= . ., ~ -";_ I ADOLPHUS HOTEL DAL1 ---- --- _ - :I ___,_ GAVE TO THE- PRESS FOLLOWING .- --·:-:;-,·THE . . - STATEMENT ON RUSSIAN. - . - SITUATION THIS AFT ER1tOpN QUOTE
  • of Domestic Moral and Public Relations would then go the problem of putting the suggestions or the General Committee into effect. These might be of the nature ofa 1. Radio, press, moving pictures, on ways of handling a plan of of life which involved a year
  • '­ o -•ta of clo-c• UIS ohaoa, u au\ atve of pmopoae, «•"fet1on to ot ov an Ju.ii••• truth, 4MIOff&07 r••"- our •t.l.•"ion• . We aw\ at.and r1n. pr•• rw.UOII ot liNJ't,y .l! ~ o n •• h 9hall • ' ta.11. 1202 National Press Bldg. Washington, D
  • a lot of d.eta.11 that may have soino thought 1n it. '.l'he payoholog1oo.l point hero obTioualy 1c the Proaidont. hand.led, but a.ttaohod to the Senator, a.n alive press apeoialist and tra:golint; oom ni.on who doos not booomo
  • Medical Cen­ and Staats-Zeitung und Herold in New Banner, The Wilmington (N. C.) Post, ter and was responding to treatment for York to The St. Paul Pioneer Press and The .Middletown (N. Y.) Times-Herald; an ulcerous throat when pneumonia set Dispatch
  • trom labor, and waging an ettective, tireless, whistl e-atop campaign almost identical to Truman••• Like Truman's, it is aimed at ottsetting the solid wall ot bad publicit1 given him by the press. On the other side 11 popular, handsome Congressman
  • Wallace Learning to Fly . AHoclated Press Pboto AFTER FIRST LESSON-Secretary of Commerce Henry A. Wal• lace steps from the cockpit of a• training plane at National Airport after completing his first flying lesson. His instructor is Paul E
  • INDIANA NEWSPAPERS INCORPORATED THE HUNTINGTON HERA.LO THE HUNTINGTON PRESS HUNTINGTON. INDIAN,- THE REPORTER BUI LDING TH I:. VINCl!.NNES SUN THE VINCENNES COMMERC(Al. VINCENNES• INOIANA LEBANON, :: INDIANA "l'HE LIN'l'ON CITIZEN LINTON
  • Press
  • . hard-pressed oou.ntr But this po1107 made the 4evote man, teoilitiee which 1t n~ed duotion to ordinary oo eroe . tor war ro­ When we made Len4• Leaae t u.nds avaUable tor purohase ot war ma\eriala 1n the UA1te4 statoa . Brit in let her worl4
  • A comp any., Te xas Newsp .-.o.p ers Inc._ w s org ani z ed and it held the stock of not only the Corpus Christi p pers but t he H~rte-Hanks Ha rli n,s e n St a r , nd. P ris News and t he M:a.r sh-Fentrtss Brownsville Her ald and · Tex a rk n a. .Press
  • for the Dies issue. It 1 s just about to go to press and looks good. What I'd like to have you do in Texas is to arrange for the sale of 1,000 copies on the newsstands there. If the man you spoke of could buy that number,-total price $50 r and distribute them