Bernarr ("Body-Love") Macfadden celebrated the second anniversary of his Evening Graphic . . . with "a frank talk" to his readers (TIME, Sept. 27, 1926).
Publisher Bernarr ("Body-Love") Macfadden's New York Evening Graphic last week embraced the divorce hearings . . . (TIME, Feb. 7, 1927).
Bernarr ("Body-Love") Macfadden . . . went to Washington . . . (TIME, April 30, 1928).
Last week an editorial entitled "Body Loving'' appeared in Publisher Bernarr Macfadden's New York Evening Graphic, over his signature. Excerpts:
"A few literary 'lights' who have little or no respect for bodily culture especially delight in referring to the writer as 'Body-Loving Macfadden.'
"I accept the criticism, if it might be so termed, as a distinct compliment !
"I freely admit I love my body.
"I respect and reverence it.
"It is the flesh-and-blood house in which I will have to live for the balance of my life. I have occupied it up to the present time. . . .
"One of my most caustic critics had to pass on to the cemetery at the age of thirty-three. A brilliant mind, but lacking in balance; and I would say it was entirely because he had not given his body the attention and care to which it was justly entitled. . . .* Loving care you give your body will be returned with many rich rewards. It will insure you good digestion. . . . It will give you bright eyes.
"Self-love is often criticized; but when it compels careful attention to the rules of life essential in the building and maintenance of buoyant, powerful health, it is indeed commendable."
*Reference to Briton Hadden, Founder & Editor of TIME, who died aged 31 (TIME, March 11). Shortly before his fatal illness, Editor Hadden had been accepted as a better-than-average risk by the Metropolitan Life Insurance Co. A keen baseball player, he exercised summer and winter. His physicians declared his death to be due to septicaemia (resulting evidently from the scratch of a cat), which might have overcome the most perfect physical specimen.