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New Orleans Item-Tribune


The New Orleans Item-Tribune, sometimes rendered in press accounts as the New Orleans Item and Tribune, was an American newspaper published in New Orleans, Louisiana, from 1924 to 1958.

The paper, referred to in 1941 as "the south's oldest afternoon daily paper", was a consolidation of The New Orleans Item, founded in 1875, and the company's 1924 morning-paper spinoff, the Morning Tribune. The papers were published together on Sundays as the Item-Tribune, beginning December 21, 1924. It expanded its name to become the Sunday Item-Tribune on February 10, 1935.

Comic-book artist Jack Sparling worked briefly as a gag cartoonist for the paper circa the late 1930s.

In 1936, the two papers' broadsheet format was changed to tabloid size, and on January 13, 1941, the papers were combined to form the daily and Sunday Item-Tribune. The term was already in use before this, with Time magazine, for example, referring to the two papers in this combined form in 1926. The Tribune ceased publication on January 11, 1941, though the Sunday Item-Tribune did not change its name.

On June 27, 1941, the newspaper's longtime publisher and president, Colonel James M. Thomson, announced the paper's sale to Ralph Nicholson, vice president, treasurer and general manager of the Tampa Times, with Thomson to serve as president of the Item Co., Inc., the newly formed entity that purchased the paper.

In 1949, David Stern III, author of the Francis the Talking Mule books that later became a film series, and the son of prominent Philadelphia publisher J. David Stern, purchased the paper for $2 million. He ran the paper until its 1958 merger.

The paper, which is preserved by the National Endowment for the Humanities and The Library of Congress from its June 11, 1902, issue through its last, September 14, 1958, was published daily until dropping the Saturday edition beginning December 17, 1950.


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