Publicity: Difference between revisions
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'''''Publicity''''' was a four page [[ | '''''Publicity''''' was a four page [[fascist]] weekly tabloid started in 1930 by [[Elmer J. Garner]].<ref>''Encyclopedia of the Great Plains'', by David J. Wishart, page 711</ref> In 1942 it claimed a circulation of 5,000.<ref>Voices of Defeat, ''Life'', April 13, 1942, page 94</ref> The publication was considered seditious in 1942 and was suspended from the mail.<ref>''Antisemitism in America'', By Leonard Dinnerstein, page 134</ref> [[Edward James Smythe]] wrote a weekly column for the paper titled "Unmasked." | ||
Garner was an elderly defendant in the [[Great Sedition Trial of 1944]] who died a few weeks after the trial began. | Garner was an elderly defendant in the [[Great Sedition Trial of 1944]] who died a few weeks after the trial began. |
Revision as of 14:27, 15 February 2024
Publicity was a four page fascist weekly tabloid started in 1930 by Elmer J. Garner.[1] In 1942 it claimed a circulation of 5,000.[2] The publication was considered seditious in 1942 and was suspended from the mail.[3] Edward James Smythe wrote a weekly column for the paper titled "Unmasked."
Garner was an elderly defendant in the Great Sedition Trial of 1944 who died a few weeks after the trial began.
Notes