one. Harry K.
Reynolds, Director of Foreign Service, with headquarters in New York,
was formerly Manager of the London bureau, and he knows intimately every
phase of the foreign service. Harry R. Flory, Manager in London;
Frederic K. Abbott, Manager in Paris, and Otto D. Tolischus, Manager in
Berlin, not only have done noteworthy work in covering the big news
stories themselves, but direct a network of correspondents in their
respective territories that literally covers the world for International
News Service. Edward L. Deuss in Moscow, Guglielmo Emanuel in Rome and
Harold Ballou in Madrid are capable members of the foreign staff who
know their fields thoroughly. Correspondents are maintained as well in
China, Japan, the Philippines, various South American countries and
elsewhere at strategic points for news coverage.
International News Service correspondents at home and abroad have only
one rule to guide them. That is to get the news and get it right.
Generally, as well, they get it FIRST for New York Evening Journal
readers.
BIG NEWS
_TWO DAYS IN ADVANCE!_
The story of three men in the Arctic.
Above them the cold, gray sky, washed by an impenetrable fog.
Around them only crashing icebergs, each second grinding out a new
variety of the age-old Arctic death threat.
One man injured, unable to continue.
Then the story of the dying man who consigned himself to an icy grave
that his mates might save themselves. And the story of the two men who,
faced with this dilemma, left their pal to die, alone with his thoughts.
Leering icebergs grinding out the death march.
This is the story of Dr. Finn Malmgren and Captains Marianno and Zappi.
It first became known to the world when the New York Evening Journal
printed International News Service dispatches via Moscow on Friday, July
13, 1928. The Evening Journal's headlines then read:
"MALMGREN DESERTED BY MATES;
NOT DEAD WHEN ABANDONED"
It wasn't until Sunday, July 15, that other New York papers printed the
gripping story the Evening Journal had given New York on Friday, July
13.
The Evening Journal is _always_ ACCURATE--and FIRST
INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE COVERS THE EARTH
Throughout the World--covering both hemispheres--International News
Service correspondents report important news for New York Evening
Journal readers. Here is an outstanding staff of national and
international news gatherers:
NEW YORK OFFICE
FR
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