Rival publication Time magazine reported that, "A daily tabulation of Government news, presented without comment or color, it was the dullest newspaper in the land.
"[2] In May 1928, David Lawrence of United States Daily testified before the Federal Trade Commission about lobbying by public utilities.
In July 1931, United States Daily published a half-page ad about its content and its advertising in the New York Sun:[4] What Makes
The newspaper claimed that it was "Presenting the only daily record of the official acts of the legislative, executive, and judicial branches of the government of the United States of America.
"[6][7] It was Bureau of National Affairs, Inc. (BNA), founded in 1929 by Lawrence as a subsidiary of United States Daily, that over time became today's Bloomberg Industry Group.