Many moons ago when the News-Press moved offices from the corner of Brand and Wilson to its current location, someone discovered a pile of papers dating from the 1930s, 40s and 50s hiding behind a filing cabinet. They were destined for the bin until I stepped in to save them. As a historical record they're interesting, but it's fascinating just to look at them and see what page design of 60 years ago was like.
Here's one from 1942:
[caption id="attachment_262" align="aligncenter" width="500" caption="Glendale News-Press, 1942"]

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Now that is a headline. I originally read it completely wrong - "coed" (pronounced "coyd") is Welsh for "wood" so I ended up trying to understand what "Glendale man slays wood" was supposed to mean. Duh. Let's face it, with that headline screaming at you you're going to pick this paper up. And the headline above the masthead? Interesting, as is the masthead itself; I can almost get over the 1940s brush-type font, but why does it only go two-thirds of the way across the page? I believe this is one of those "hey, if we leave space we can run stories across the top of the page" ideas, which is a great until your best story is something along the lines of "Council OKs street ordinance".
Apart from that attention-grabbing headline, it's amazing how many stories they've managed to cram onto the front - and this is just the top half of the page. I try to get as many headlines above the fold as possible to appeal to readers and show off what we have, but this page has seven, which is more stories than we run on the whole of A1. Then again, "cram" is the right word; I get the impression that white space was frowned upon in the forties.
Interestingly (well, to me anyway), if you look at the Ds in that headline they're slightly shorter than the other letters. This was the day of hot metal, an era I missed by several years and which fills me with a sense of awe as to how papers were produced when you couldn't just press ctrl-k and start again. The idea of doing, say, the Glendale city election edition with nothing more than a pair of scissors, a pot of Elmer's glue and a pica pole (whatever that is) terrifies me.
The other thing that caught my eye is the sheer volume of non-Glendale news on the cover. Five Second World War stories compete with the dead coed for cover space. I'm assuming the war stories come from the Associated Press, which is a huge difference from today - all our stories are home-grown, something we're very proud of. But with most of the front filled with wire stories, I wonder what the reporters did. Was there a pub across the road from the office in those days?
Oh, and it's what isn't on this page that stands out. No web address in the seal (the strip below the masthead); instead there's the statement "Glendale is the Third Largest City in Los Angeles County". Which, after 67 years, it still is. No email addresses, no charts, no Twitter or blog links, index, weather forecast and, most of all, no colour. In fact it took me a while to consciously realise that it's monochrome; colour was still decades away.
But while I might get to write a headline like "GLENDALE MAN SLAYS COED", I know I'll never have to write "Nazis roll in Caucasus". Which is a good thing.
Next up: 1936 and the Abdication.