Canadian printer & publisher . N. Levi, was born in Holland1878, and educated at the(ommercial High School, Am-sterdam. He became theassistant editor of the firstDutch newspaper in Johannes-burg, 1898, and was actingtflitor of the English-Dutchdaily in Johannesburg duringthe Boer War up to the occupa-tion of the British. He was incharge of the first completelybi-lingual Hansard in SouthAfrica (Transvaal Hansard),1907, and afterwards in chargeof the Dutch Hansard of theUnion Parliament at Cape-town 1910-1915. Walter Makepeace, , has been editor of the SingaporeFree Press since 1916. Hewas


Canadian printer & publisher . N. Levi, was born in Holland1878, and educated at the(ommercial High School, Am-sterdam. He became theassistant editor of the firstDutch newspaper in Johannes-burg, 1898, and was actingtflitor of the English-Dutchdaily in Johannesburg duringthe Boer War up to the occupa-tion of the British. He was incharge of the first completelybi-lingual Hansard in SouthAfrica (Transvaal Hansard),1907, and afterwards in chargeof the Dutch Hansard of theUnion Parliament at Cape-town 1910-1915. Walter Makepeace, , has been editor of the SingaporeFree Press since 1916. Hewas born at Coventry, Dec. 22,1859, and educated for thescholastic profession at Birm-ingham and Midland Instituteand Saltley College. He joinedthe Singapore Free Press on itsresuscitation in 1887. He hasbeen official reporter to the Le-gislative Council of the StraitsSettlements on several occa-sions, Reuters correspondentin Singapore since 1904 andcorrespondent of the New YorkHerald (Paris edition).. Wireless Press, Ltd., after the war, had undertaken the prepara-tion and distribution of a news service. They have since notified their subscribers that the Marconiinterests were going out of the news distribution business. In seconding the resolution, John Nelson of the VancouverWorld said that the two objections to commercial companiesengaging in the preparation of news were, first, that as a matterof common sense newspapermen must oppose the influence ofany non-journalistic agency in the compilation of news services,and, second, that the distrust of the press, which was part of themodern unrest, could be only aggravated by the introduction ofcommercial enterprise into the preparation of news. Theresolution carried without further discussion. Tells of Paper Industry Mr. A. L. Dawe of the Canadian Pulp and Paper Companygave an outline of the pulp and paper industry, introducing apaper which he had prepared for the use of the delegates. Hisspeech earned him a warm tribute from the C


Size: 1358px × 1840px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1920, booksubjectprinting, bookyear192