Sensational Kim Todd (popular books to read .txt) đ
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âWhen I speak of the colored peopleâ: Matthews, âRedemption,â 57.
âfearlessly and unobservedâ and âher personality and naturalâ: Davis, Lifting, 21â22.
âIf you are going to try to existâ: Evening World, December 9, 1888, 5.
âNo working girl can live comfortablyâ: Ibid.
âAs the days and the weeks went onâ: Banks, Autobiography, 215.
âself-assertive and combative dispositionâ: Ibid., 204.
âAbove the boards and councilsâ: New York Journal, December 3, 1897, 6.
âtimid and dull, as bankruptâ: New York Journal, December 31, 1897, 8.
âChief much brokenâ: Alfred Butes to John Norris, December 31, 1897, Box 1, Folder 1897 December, LCPP.
Chapter 15: All Together in New Bedford (1898)
âcame from the Atlantic, Pacificâ: Melville, Moby Dick, 28.
âFriend Dollâ and other quotations from this letter: Eva McDonald Valesh to Albert Dollenmayer, July 19, 1891, Folder: Letters 1891, MHSDP.
âIt is a hard struggleâ and other quotations from this letter are from Eva McDonald Valesh to Albert Dollenmayer, August 20, 1891, Folder: Letters 1891, MHSDP.
âbaby being then considerably olderâ: Frank Valesh to Albert Dollenmayer, May 10, 1892, MHSDP.
âI donât think I shall ever be contentâ: Eva McDonald Valesh to Albert Dollenmayer, July 19, 1891, Folder: Letters 1891, MHSDP.
âShe was the most selfishâ: Reminiscences of Eva MacDonald Valesh: Oral History, 1952. A letter from her sister is included in the copy held at the Minnesota Historical Society.
âloss of self respectâ: Star Tribune, November 6, 1898, 27.
âan impossible assignmentâ and other quotations about reporting this suicide story: Valesh, Oral History, CUL.
âterror of work, of monotonyâ: New York Journal, September 2, 1897, 5.
âI want an exclusive storyâ: Valesh, Oral History, CUL.
âShe has good looks to recommend herâ: New York Journal, September 2, 1897, 5.
âsuicide editorâ and âit was gruesome workâ: Valesh, Oral History, CUL.
âthese things must be done artisticallyâ: Star Tribune, November 6, 1898, 27.
âBy taking these libertiesâ: Kois, âFacts,â https://slate.com/culture/2012/02/the-lifespan-of-a-fact-essayist-john-dagata-defends-his-right-to-fudge-the-truth.html.
âa great paper has a dutyâ and âmay wield an enormousâ: Star Tribune, November 6, 1898, 27.
âOf course, we are a bit sensationalâ and other quotations from this scene: Valesh, Oral History, CUL.
âA man, you seeâ: WLHBH.
âSit down!â and other quotations from this scene: Ibid.
âthe Journalâs special commissioner to the cotton strikeâ: New York Journal, January 19, 1898, 1.
âThe woes of the 4,000 womenâ: WLHBH.
âGrim Silence Everywhereâ: Ibid.
âher ragged gown about herâ and âThe New England mill operativesâ: Ibid.
âunutterable degradationâthe degradationâ: Ibid.
âa howling wind might blowâ: Ibid.
âYesterdayâs story was mainlyâ: Ibid.
âa few degrees lower, if such a thingâ: Ibid.
âAmericaâs a cruel countryâ: Ibid.
âCould you suggest any other planâ: Ibid.
âHer bravery is notâ: Ibid.
âI will not be finedâ: Ibid.
âinteresting and unique personalityâ and âroused all Englandâ: Ibid.
âwho obtained situations in the homesâ: Ibid.
âa friend of the poor workersâ: Banks, ââYellow Journalism,ââ 337.
âsuch clean houses they keepâ and âI never sawâ: WLHBH.
âWrite up some of the happy thingsâ: Ibid.
âone of the happiest and brightestâ: Ibid.
âLittle Lord Fauntleroyâ: Ibid.
âJolly Strikers Who Donât Whineâ: Ibid.
âWeavers on all common loomsâ: Ibid.
âThe Mill Weaverâs Kiss of Deathâ: Ibid.
âOne newspaper woman couldnât find enoughâ: Ibid.
âThese good people claimâ and âThere may be casesâ: Ibid.
âI have called you togetherâ and other quotations from this scene: Ibid.
âpitiable objectâ: Ibid.
âYou are out on strike in New Bedford?â and other quotations from this scene: Ibid.
âThe two women were evidentlyâ: Boston Globe, February 9, 1898, 5.
âsensational yellow journalismâ and other quotations from this scene: Boston Globe, February 11, 1898, 6.
âChoke her offâ and âThis woman carries nothingâ: WLHBH.
Chapter 16: Reversal of Fortune (1898â1912)
âMaine Explosion Caused by Bomb or Torpedo?â and circulation figures: World, February 17, 1898, 1.
âBlanco Reports to Spain That It Was an Accidentâ: Ibid., 2.
âDestruction of the War Ship Maine Was the Work of an Enemyâ: New York Journal, February 17, 1898, 1.
âWar! Sure!â: New York Journal, February 17, 1898, 1.
âCongress Declares Warâ: New York Journal, April 25, 1898, 1.
âWe Pilfer the Newsâ: Quoted in Procter, Hearst, 124.
âpossessed in common the traitsâ: Roosevelt, Rough Riders, 19.
âservices to libertyâ: Quoted in Procter, Hearst, 127.
âWe are indeed accustomed to finding truthâ: Hawthorne, Evangelina, 17.
âDoes Our Flag Shield Women?â: New York Journal, February 12, 1897, 1.
âthe American government declinesâ: New York Journal, February 14, 1897, 42.
âIt is true that I was actively engaged in the conspiracy as far as I could beâ: World, February 15, 1897, 1.
âThe fair young female journalistâ and âEvery beautiful newspaper womanâ: Brisbane, âGreat Problems,â 545â46.
The âNew Woman in Journalismâ: Hartford Courant, March 12, 1898, 8.
âI have always advocated that weaversâ: WLHBH.
âGod pity those who could not at commandâ: Banks, Autobiography, 237.
âI am not here to detail the seriousâ: Quoted in Freeman, Kitâs Kingdom, 109.
âin the grand style suchâ: Ibid., 110.
âone hundred and thirty-three menâ: Ibid., 118.
âOld Glory over Santiago,â âThe ceremony of hoisting the Stars and Stripes,â and circulation figures: New York Journal, July 18, 1898, 1.
âYou provide the picturesâ: Campbell, Yellow Journalism, 85.
âThe paper is a jestâ: Irving Bacheller to Don Carlos Seitz, April 12, 1900, Box 1, CUWP.
âWe must heed it in every departmentâ: Meeting minutes, November 28, 1898, Box 1, Folder 1898 AugustâDec, LCPP.
âcorrupts, depraves, degrades, or injuresâ: Buffalo Weekly Express, October 13, 1898, 4.
âThe latter simply prefer scandalâ: Commander, âSignificance,â 154â55.
âThe Journal has too sincere a sympathyâ: Thornton, âWhen a Newspaper,â 110.
âI have yet to meet the womanâ: Banks, ââYellow Journalism,ââ 338.
âseamy sideâ and other quotations from this letter: Elizabeth Banks to Wm. Morris Colles, December 10, 1901, UTBP.
âBut why are you here?â: Crane, Active, 160.
âHenrietta, however, does smellâ: James, Portrait, 131.
âOf all horned cattle, deliver meâ: Quoted in Philadelphia Inquirer, April 12, 1891, 4.
âwhose thoughts reach beyond their own livelihoodâ and other quotations from this article: Pulitzer, âCollege,â 658.
âprivate detectiveâ: Editor and Publisher, August 20, 1910, 5.
âWas any decision reachedâ: New-York Tribune, March 23, 1912, 7.
âthe man with the muck rakeâ and other quotations from this speech: Bismarck Tribune, April 16, 1906, 1.
âOn the one hand, that actionâ: Sawaya, Modern Women, 81.
Chapter 17: In the Wake (1898â1900)
âso brazen and defiantâ: New-York Tribune, March 30, 1905, 5.
âLet women and girls become enlightenedâ: Matthews, âDangers,â 62â69.
âThe city does not need to throw backâ: Sun, September 14, 1897, 6.
âThe White Rose Mission was organizedâ: New York Evening
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