Evening Star Newspaper, May 23, 1929, Page 12

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THE EVENING STAR. WASHINGTON. B. ®. THURSDAY. WAY %3 10987 he Sunday Star Announces the 1ransformation of its Magazine Section to a magazine- sized, magazme-typed, magazine-featurcd, magazine illustrated product. The Sunday Star costs 5 cents in Washington and Suburban Area— divide that sum into pennies and figure how much you get for each one. Try it this way. For the J New Magazine Section —Supplementing the lighter content of the magazine, the Editorial Sec- tion of The Sunday Star affords you the Nation’s best critical and analytical thought on topics of vital moment in our national progress. Leading Statesmen, Economists and Scientists, writing over their own signatures (and most often, exclusively for The Star), in the fields in which they are recognized and acclaimed authorities, affording Star readers the background for intelligent and sound consideration of the problems with which our Nation and the world are faced. —The market has been scoured to obtain the best fiction, the best articles, the best puzzles, the best illustrations, the best children’s fea- tures available. Read it through; compare it with publications selling at from 5 to 25 times its cost to you. For the Sport and Financial Sections The greatly expanded Sport Section brings you world’s sport news reported and commented upon by a corps of experts of outstanding repute: Denman Thompson, John B. Keller, Walter R. McCallum, Corinne Frazier, Grantland Rice, Sparrow McGann, W. O. McGeehan, Walter Trumbull, Walter Hagen, Vincent Richards, etc. Base Ball, Foot Ball, Golf, Bowling, Tennis, Track, Trap-shooting, Racing—The story of America’s favorite sports, professional and amateur, international, national AND LOCAL, told in breezy stories, authoritative comment and vivid pictures. i The public’s ever-increasing interest in the great speculative and investment markets of New York, Chicago, Boston, Baltimore and Washington is met by the financial pages of The Sunday Star. The previous week’s price ranges are clearly and accurately tabulated; there are conservative and readable comments, prepared by recognized experts, on facts and figures and trends. To the Wash- ingtonian interested in finance, this section alone offers a value and interest far above the cost of the entire paper to him. For the N For the Editorial Section | New Eight- Page Comic —And the beautiful rotogravure sections—Mutt and Jeff, Moon Mullins, Reg'lar Fellers, Mr. and Mrs., Little Orphan Annie, Clarence, Somebody's Stenog., Highlights of History. > A dozen hearty laughs and the pictorialization of the world’s news in beautiful half-tones impos- sible of achievement save though the expensive and difficult medium of rotogravure. The last penny of the five cents paid by a Sunday Star reader —Represents the balance of The Star’s Sunday Edition. There is the huge vol- ume of daily news, collected locally by The Star’s staff, and nationally, and in the most distant corners of the world by the vast army of Associated Press cor- respondents. Tens-of-thousands of dollars are expanded daily in its collection. Truth and cleanliness and independence are its watchwords. Tt is the back- bone of The Star. Added to this are the news features and special cable services of the North American Newspaper Alliance, The Consolidated Press, The Chicago Daily News and the New York Herald-Tribune. The output of a hali-dozen picture services supplements the activity of The Star’s photographers in obtaining visual presentation of world events with utmost speed. The Social activities of the National Capital and leading centers are fully recorded. Heavy emphasis is placed upon news from Nearby Maryland and Virginia, special correspond- ents being assigned to each County. The interests of Radio and Automobile fans are met in special departments. The latest books and the latest develop- ments in art and music are fully reviewed, as are Stage and Screen, and Frater- nal news receives the special treatment to which it is entitled. If there is a field of legitimate general public interest not represented in the columns of The Sunday Star, it is because the editors of that publication are un- aware of its existence. Your five pennies buy you all this, together with the vast volume of local and national advertising essential to your shopping needs— If you cannot, after thinking it over, conceive of a better investment for the en- tertainment, educational and economic interests of your family—then call Main 5000, circulation department, add your name and address to those of the great army of Star Readers—and have the paper delivered regularly direct to your home Be Sure to Note the New Magazine Section

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