Penman's Art Journal and Penman's Gazette . f the proceedings of tbe lateconvention, be«ause it was just in our should have printed i Cry Ver half pages (rqual to twenty-two made several earnest attempts to gettrans- Edncat pages) 1proceedings, which wereillustrated with thirty-five separate engraviugs. In the enforced absence of theeditor this work was done by a profes-sional reporter, at a cost of several hun-dred dollars. The Association contributednothing—not even thanks. During the present year, 1891, prelimi-nary announcements of the meeting wereprinted in the issues of February,


Penman's Art Journal and Penman's Gazette . f the proceedings of tbe lateconvention, be«ause it was just in our should have printed i Cry Ver half pages (rqual to twenty-two made several earnest attempts to gettrans- Edncat pages) 1proceedings, which wereillustrated with thirty-five separate engraviugs. In the enforced absence of theeditor this work was done by a profes-sional reporter, at a cost of several hun-dred dollars. The Association contributednothing—not even thanks. During the present year, 1891, prelimi-nary announcements of the meeting wereprinted in the issues of February, April,May, June and July. In the latter issue scripts of certain papers in the officialporters bauds, writing urgently for them,sending personally for them, and offeringto pay for their deliverance to us or totheir authors for desired revision, but allsuch attempts have proved ineffectual,even to getting a reply to a letter. No one need worry about the attitudeof The Penmans Art Journal to theinterests of business education. Its editor. hy P. W. CosteUo, Pitfsburoh. fa. appeared an official announcement by theexecutive comaittee, occupying two committee used this as a circular,buying several hundred copies, payingnota penny for the space, and precisely halfthe retail price for the extra Journals irked iiled to their orde: The transaction Irom the beginning was itirely at the suggestion of the committto whom we were glad to give the useThe Journal as an ecoLomical cueulcharging nothing for space or tbe ex15,000 circulation given the program:by that means. Not a dollar of profit vrealized or intended to be realized on tltransaction. Not a penny of came to The Journal. When the late convention, without pre-vious consideration or notice, created anorgan and gave it an exclusive fran-chise to do the work which, certainlyuntil very recent years, no periodicalexcept The Journal had thought of doing,it did not seem fitting to the editor todevote as much space as formerly


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, bookpublisherdtame, bookyear1891