http://www.watchtowerdocuments.com/documents/1920-1949.html
To see twenty issues of the rarest of the rare WTS endorsed pamphlets (or brochures), click on the link above and then scroll down the column on the left of the page to the date 1924 - 1925 where you will find listed the words,
The Broadcaster - WTS Endorsed-Must Read *NEW*
The Broadcaster was a four page pamphlet published weekly in the early 1920s. The first page had short articles such as the Golden Age did. On page 2 & 3 there was always an article attributed to Judge J. F. Rutherford. Page 4 once again had misc. short articles.
Sometimes The Broadcaster was published at 18 Concord St., Brooklyn, NY, by F. E. Houston; or at 257 Sixth St., Oakland, Cal, by V. R. Molin; or at 5315 W. 25th St., Chicago, Ill, by M. E. Woodley; or at 16th & I'ine St, St. Louis, Mo, by E. L. Wagner.
The Contributors were always the same people:
Judge J. F. Rutherford - President IBSA
C. J. Woodworth, Editor Golden Age
J. H. Hemery British Correspondent
C. C. Binkele European Correspondent
There are 20 issues of these rare pamphlets provided for you to peruse or download on Watchtower Documents, LLC. Here is an example of what's on page one of The Broadcaster, May 21, 1925 issue.
The Broadcaster
Vol. 1. No. 41 Thursday, May 21, 1925 Brooklyn, N. Y.
Entered as Second Class Matter, Aug. 11, 1924 , at Post Office at Brooklyn, N. Y. under Act of March S, 1879.
WHAT KIND OF A COUNTRYDO THE PEOPLE REALLY WANT?
DOCTOR CADMAN SEES
CRIME TRIUMPHANT
Doctor Cadman, head of the Federal
Council of Churches, says that there
have been more crimes of violence in
the United States in the last three
years than in the previous quarter of
a century, that America is now the
crime center of the world, that the criminal
bids fair to be supreme here very
soon and that then the honest citizen
will not stand a chance. A boys’ club
was just uncovered in Chicago which
no boy could join until he had committed
at least one burglary.
THE PHONOFILM IS
A SUCCESS
The Phonofilm, which pictures or
reproduces a person engaged in making
a speech, as well as the speech or
music itself, is pronounced a success.
This invention, the work of Dr. Lee
De Forest, was a dream of Thomas A.
Edison more than ten years ago, and
has been the goal of inventors since.
A speech of the President was recently
photofilmed by this method, and the
reproduction in New York a week later
was -realistic. During the reproduction
the audience broke into involuntary
applause.
PEOPLE DEMAND
THE FILTH
The true standard of news distribution
is to circulate the things that are
true, honest, just, pure, lovely and of
good report, so that the people may
think on these things. The Fayetteville,
North Carolina, Observer, tried
this policy for one week, omitting all
crime news. At the end of the period
the subscribers by a vote of sixty to
one demanded a return to the old
method of publishing all the news of
wretchedness and crime, so that they
might have it.
GENERAL BUTLER’S
LOSING FIGHT
In his great fight to clean up the
city of Philadelphia General Butler
has proven that the public in general
do not want things cleaned up, but
that openly or secretly their sympathies
are with the lawless. General
Butler started put with the statement
that he would clean the city up in 48
hours. After a year and a half of
faithful effort, he admits that the forces'
arrayed against righteousness and
honesty are too great to be overcome,
and he is ready to go back tooths
WHAT UNCLE SAM SUPPLIES
THE PRESIDENT
Besides his salary of $75,000, and
an expense allowance of $25,000, Uncle
Sam supplies the President with free
servants, free rent, free furniture, free
automobiles, transportation by land
or water with all expenses paid, the
free use of the Marine Band when he
wants it, and one annual formal dinner
to the diplomatic corps. The President
pays all other food bills. As the White
House family and servants number
forty persons, that is no small item.