翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ The Day When I Was Born
・ The Day Will Come
・ The Day Will Dawn
・ The Day You Come
・ The Day You Went Away
・ The Day's Parade
・ The Day Before
・ The Day Before (EP)
・ The Day Before I Met You
・ The Day Before Spring
・ The Day Before Sunday
・ The Day Before the Revolution
・ The Day Before the Wedding
・ The Day Before You Came
・ The Day Begins
The Day Book
・ The Day Boy and the Night Girl
・ The Day Britain Stopped
・ The Day Christ Died
・ The Day Dragged On
・ The Day Dream (painting)
・ The Day Emily Married
・ The Day Everything Became Isolated and Destroyed
・ The Day Everything Became Nothing
・ The Day Finger Pickers Took Over the World
・ The Day Has Come
・ The Day He Arrives
・ The Day He Himself Shall Wipe My Tears Away
・ The Day Hell Broke Loose 2
・ The Day Hell Broke Loose 3


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The Day Book : ウィキペディア英語版
The Day Book

''The Day Book'' was an experimental, advertising-free daily newspaper published in Chicago from 1911 to 1917. It was owned by E. W. Scripps as part of the Scripps-McRae League of Newspapers (later Scripps-Howard Newspapers). Its editor was Negley D. Cochran, previously of ''The Toledo News-Bee''. It was printed on tabloid paper to save costs.
==History==
With the ''Day Book'', Scripps sought to eliminate the often adversarial relationship between his editorial staffs and the advertisers that sustained them. To his disappointment, pressure from the business community had at times forced the ''Cincinnati Post'' to temper its firebrand campaigns against bossism and cronyism. Inspired by Charles Anderson Dana's unsuccessful push to eliminate advertising at the New York ''Sun'', Scripps instituted policies at his papers that limited the size of advertisements and discouraged the full page spreads preferred by department stores. In 1904, he outlined a plan for a newspaper chain, starting in Chicago, that relied entirely on subscription fees and sales.
The ''Day Book'' began publishing on September 28, 1911. Like his other penny presses, the ''Day Book'' championed labor rights while delivering a mix of politics and lowbrow, sensational content.
Circulation peaked at 22,839 in October 1916, during the 1912 strike of Chicago printers and delivery boys that crippled the city's major newspapers.〔
The ''Day Book'' published its last edition on July 6, 1917. It had turned a profit only one month since its founding, in January 1917.〔 It fell short of the estimated 30,000 subscribers needed to become self-sustaining and far short of the 15% profit Scripps expected of his papers.
The ''Day Book'' was digitized by the Illinois Newspaper Project. Archived issues can be found at the Chronicling America website.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「The Day Book」の詳細全文を読む



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