137 adjectives to describe newspapers

"Both Uncle John and that tramp we encountered have met on common ground to bewail the lack of a daily newspaper 'in our midst'to speak in journalistic parlance.

[Quebec] in the capacity of Printers, and forthwith to publish a weekly newspaper in French and English.'

They were fewa muffler, a travelling-cap, a book or two, some foreign newspapers, a Russian word-book, a flask, the various odds and ends, small unimportant things which a voyager by sea and land picks up.

The remark concerning his brother Sidney Edwards's subscribers refers to a religious newspaper, the "Boston Recorder," founded and edited by him.

To frighten Negroes from the North southern newspapers are carefully circulating reports that many of them are returning to their native land because of unexpected hardships.

" It is reported by some of the contemporary newspapers, that a portion of this abstinence was the result of deliberate consultation among the insurrectionists; that some of them were resolved on taking the white women for wives, but were overruled by Nat Turner.

That rotten little newspaper in Bridgeboro had a big headliner about me disappearing'never seen after leaving Camp Dix; whereabouts a mystery'that's what it said, 'son of Professor Donnelle.'

Most of the influential newspapers of the country, however, urged the contrary.

Half a dozen different parties made speeches at each other, but Spain, owing to a blessed immunity from the cheap newspaper, was spared these speeches.

He then set about the study of the law, as a step to political success, read books, and the occasional newspapers, told stories, and kept his soul in patience,which was easier to him than to keep his body in decent clothes.

The Rotterdam Telegraf, a neutral newspaper, declared that in the devastation of Louvain "a wound that can never be healed" was inflicted "on the whole of civilized humanity."

The following account of the departure of a portion of these victims for the southern market was given in a letter which appeared at the time in several northern newspapers: "Washington, April 22, 1848.

Man dressed in Alpine mountain climbing costume holding on to strap in subway with his staff and reading the tabloid newspapers.

It had been stated in an official newspaper, published in Holland, that Russia accompanied the ratification with an important reserve.

In Richmond a man who was then editing a very creditable colored newspaper gave me a great deal of his time and made my stay there of three or four days very pleasant.

Unlike the mainstream broad-sheet and tabloid newspapers, the user can take home a free-sheeter free of cost and with no obligation, save the ethical one to read it.

Liberal newspapers were established at the capital, and the democratic character of the Storthing became more pronounced, especially after 1833, when the farmers commenced to take an active part in the elections.

La Roy Sunderland, member of the Executive Committee, and editor of "Zion's Watchman," a Methodist, religious, and anti-slavery newspaper, with his slight figure, dark intellectual face, and earnest manner, is pointed out to the anti-slavery visitor from the Old World as the most prominent advocate of emancipation among the Wesleyans.

Literary newspapers, too, are a singularly cunning device for robbing the reading public of the time which, if culture is to be attained, should be devoted to the genuine productions of literature, instead of being occupied by the daily bungling commonplace persons.

At the upper end is the orchestra, to the left of which is a door leading into the card room, which is a spacious and elegant apartment, and beyond it is a reading-room, well provided with the London and provincial newspapers, to which are added some of the most esteemed periodical publications.

The capitalist newspapers announced to the world that these unoffending paraders were killed in cold bloodthat they were murdered from ambush without provocation of any kind.

Suppose the yellow newspapers got hold of this!'

I run a radical newspaper.

The only methods of communication were the letters and still fewer newspapers, which were carried by post riders often through an almost trackless wilderness.

La Roy Sunderland, member of the Executive Committee, and editor of "Zion's Watchman," a Methodist, religious, and anti-slavery newspaper, with his slight figure, dark intellectual face, and earnest manner, is pointed out to the anti-slavery visitor from the Old World as the most prominent advocate of emancipation among the Wesleyans.

137 adjectives to describe  newspapers