Prospectuses of Journals

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Prospectuses of Journals John Johnson Collection pre-1960 ephemera Prospectuses of Journals The following is a list of those journals for which there are prospectuses or other background material (e.g. letters) in the sequence: Prospectuses of Journals in the John Johnson Collection. This section has been catalogued and digitised (except material in copyright, which includes much manuscript material). Catalogue records (only) can be found on the John Johnson Collection online catalogue Records and images are on The John Johnson Collection: an archive of printed ephemera (JISC-funded project, partnered by ProQuest), Journals A Box 1 Academic Chronicle, the. 1831? Academy, the. 1871, 1885, 1898, 1904, 1905, 1906, Adelphi, the Adult, the. 1898 Advance, the. 1901 Advertising and Editorial Art, 1851 Advertisers' Review, the. 1899 Advertising Display. 1934 Advertising Facts. 1929. Vol 1, no. 1 Advertising World, the. 1908 African Monthly, the. 1906, 1907, 1908 Age, the. 1852 Agnostic Annual, the. 1900 Ainsworth's Magazine, 1842 Albany Magazine, the. 1904 Albion, the. 1807 Album, Album Wreath, the, 1832 Alchemist, the, 1835 Allotment and Home Garden, the. 1956 All Sorts, 1898 All the Year Round, 1859, 1860, 1868, 1870 Ally Sloper's Half Holiday. 1880s/1890s + 1907 Amateur Gardening, 1884, 1885, 1896 Amateur Photographer. c.1896 Amateur Stage, the. 1926, 1928 Amateur Theatre & Playwright's Journal. 1930s Amateur Work, illustrated. 1880 Box 2 American, the. 1898 American Journal of Anthropology, an. 1898 American City, the. 1910 American Historical Review, the. 1901 American Journal of Anatomy, the American Journal of Physiology, the. 1897, 1901 American Journal of Sociology, the American Mercury, the. 1923 American Printer, the. 1922, 1925, 1926 Amusement Analytical Review, 1788 Ancestor, the. 1902, 1904 Anchor, the, 1881 Anglican Theological Review, the. 19-- Anglo-American, the. 1898 Anglo-Austria, 1889 Anglo-Russian, the. 1897, 1899 Anglo-Saxon, the. 1849 Anglo-Saxon Review, the. 1902 Animal Life Animal World Animals' Guardian, the. 1910 Annals of Oriental Literature, c.1827 Annals of Philosophy, 1813 Annals of Scottish Natural History, 1893? Annals of Sporting and Fancy Gazette, 1823? Box 3 Annual Biography and Obituary, 1816 Annual Record of the Progress of Romance Philology, 1895 Annual Register, 1806, 1821, 1822# Annual Review, 1803, 1804 Answers Anti-Jacobin; or Weekly Examiner, 1797 Anti-Philistine Antiquarian Magazine and Bibliographer, the. 1882, 1883 Antiquary, the. 1876, 1880, 1881, 1885, 1890, 1891, 1892, 1893,1895, 1896, 1897, 1902, 1905, 1915 Antiquity. 1930, 1935 Anti-Socialist, the. Anti-Socialist Gazette, the. 1841 Box 4 Appeal, 1897 Apollo, 1935, 1938 Archaelogical Journal of the Counties of Berks, Bucks, and Oxon 1895 Archaelogical Review, the. 1889 Architects' Journal. 1935 Architectural and Topographical Record, 1908 Architectural Antiquities of Great Britain, 1805 Archives & Review of Universal Science, 1809 Arena, 1898 Argosy, 1868, 1877, 1893, 1901 Argus, specimen, + 1828 Ariel, 1891 Army and Navy Gazette Arrows, 1881, 1882 Art, 1905 Art Amateur, the. Art and Industry Art Annual, 1886, 1887, 1888, 1889, 1890, 1891, 1894, 1895, 1896, 1898, 1901 Art Decorator, the. 1890 Art Journal, the. 1850, 1872, 1873, 1874, 1875, 1885, 1886, 1890, 1895, 1896? 1898, 1899, 1902, 1903, Box 5 Art Notes Art Review. 1937 Art Trade Journal. 1937? Art Union. 1844 Art Workers' Quarterly. 1903, 1904 Artist, the. n.d., 1898 Artist Engraver, the. 1903 Artist's Repository. 1809 Arts and Crafts. 1890, n.d. Arts and Crafts Quarterly, the. 1926 Artwork, n.d. Aryan Path, n.d. Ashore and Afloat, n,d. Asiatic Journal, the. 1823, 1834 Asiatic Quarterly Review, 1890, 1892? 1894, 1896 n.d. Asiatic Register, 1798 Associator, 1899 Astrologer, the. At Home and Abroad, n.d. Atlanta, 1891-2, 1892, 1893, 1894-5, 1895-6, 1897-8 Athenaeum, 1806, 1807, 1833, 1879, 1886, 1888, 1890, 1894 Atlantic Monthly, 1883, 1896, 1896-7, 1901 Atlas, 1826 Attic Miscellany, 1824 Aunt Judy's Magazine, 1871? Australasian Insurance and Banking Record Australian Newsagent, 1900 Author's Review, 1812, n.d. Awake! 1891, n.d. Aylesbury News, 1836 Journals B Box 6 Baby, n.d. Backers' Friend, the. n.d. Badminton Magazine, 1892, 1895, n.d. Baily's Magazine. Sports and Pastimes, 1889?, 1891, 1893 Baldwin's London Weekly Journal see London Weekly Journal Ballet, 1939 Banbury Guardian, 1843, 1847 Band of Hope Review, 1851 Bankers' Magazine, 1891 Baptist, the. 1884, 1885 Baptist Magazine, the. 1892, 1893 Baptist Messenger, the. 1895 Baptist Union Magazine, the. 1891 Barter, n.d. Bazaar, Exchange and Mart. 1884, 1890, 1894, 1938 Beacon, 1897, n.d., 1905 Beau Monde, 1806, 1808 Beauty's Queens, 1890, 1891 Bedford Chronicle, 1831 Bedfordshire Notes and Queries, 1882, n.d. Beeton's Christmas Annual. 1861, n.d. Beeton's Journal, 1867 Belgravia, 1867 Belgravian, the, 1871 Belle Assemblee, la. 1807, 1823, 1837 Bell's Life in London, n.d. Bell's Weekly Messenger, 1863 Bentley's Miscellany, 1836, 1837, 1838 Berkshire, 1890 Berkshire Weekly Times, n.d. Bible Christian Magazine, 1901 Bible Magazine, 1815 Biographer, n.d. Black and White, 1871, 1891, n.d., 1895, 1898 Blackburn Labour Journal, 1899 Black Cat, the Box 7 Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, 1817, 1818, 1886, 1899, 1892, 1923, 1934 Blagdon's Weekly Political Register, 1809 Bob White, n.d. Bodley Headlines, n.d. Bolton Weekly Journal, 1887 Book and News Trade Gazette, No. 1, vol. 1. 1894 Book Collector, 1971 Book-Collector's Quarterly, the. 1933, 1934 Book Mart Bookman's Journal, the, 1926, n.d. Bookseller, 1861, 1875 Bookseller's Remembrancer, 1818 Border Magazine, the. n.d. Border Review, 1863 Boring and Drilling, 1907 Botanic Garden; or, Magazine of Hardy Flowers and Plants, 1837 Botanical Magazine, 1815, n.d. Boys, 1892 Boys' & Girls' Companion, 1891 Boy's Illustrated Magazine, the. 1864 Boy's Journal, the. 1864 Boy's Life, the. 1907 Boy's Monthly Magazine, n.d., 1864 Boy's Newspaper, 1879, 1880, 1881, Boys of England, n.d. Boy's Own Library, the. 1861 Boy's Own Magazine, the. 1803, 1868, 1873, n.d. Box 8 Boy's Own Paper, 1884, 1885, 1886, 1887, 1888, 1889, 1891, 1893, 1893-4, 1894, 1895, 1898, 1899-1900, 1906, n.d. 1893-4 Boy's Penny Journal, n.d. Boy's Penny Magazine, 1863 Boy's Workshop, Girl's Playroom, n.d. Boy's World, the. 1906 Bread Basket, the. 1842 Bright Eyes, 1893 Bright Words, 1891 Brighton Gazette, 1838 Brighton Magazine, 1822 Bristol Evening Post, 1933 Britannia, 1900 Britannia Magazine, n.d. Britannia Newspaper, 1840, 1853 BritanniC Review, 1914 British Academy, the. 1807 British and Colonial Printer, 1934 British and Colonial Weekly Register, 1823 British and Foreign Review, the. 1835 Birtish Army Despatch, the. 1848 British Birds, 1907 British Chronicle see Lloyd's Evening Post & British Chronicle. British Critic, the. 1793 British Farmers Magazine, the. 1811 Box 9 British Friend, the. n.d British Journal, the. 1852 British Journal Of Childhood Diseases, the. n.d British Journal Of Psychology, the. 1903 British Lady's Magazine, 1815 British Lion, n.d British Luminary, the. 1820 British Magazine, the. 1799, 1823, 1824, 1831, 1832, 1836 British Messenger, the. 1878 British Miscellany, the. 1841 British Naturalist, the. n.d British Press, the. 1802 British Printer, the. 1894, 1895, 1897, 1901, 1903, 1904, 1913, 1930 n.d British Quarterly Review, the. 1855 British Review, the. n.d British Socialist News, the. 1899 British Weekly, the. 1913, n.d British Workmen, the. 1858, 1859, 1860, 1892, 1907, 1909 Box 10 Brixton Magpie, 1887 Broad Views, n.d Broadway, the. 1867, n.d Bubbles, 1902, n.d Buddhism, 1903, n.d Builder, the. 1846, 1851, 1856, 1857 Builder's Journal, the. 1899, 1900 Builder's Merchant & Builder's Ironmonger, the. 1920 Bulwark, the. 1851, 1852 Bumstead's Miscellany, n.d Burlington Magazine, the. (1903 ?), 1914, 1937 Business Man's Magazine, the. 1907, n.d Bystander, the. 1903 Journals C Box 11 Cabinet, the. 1807 Calcutta Review, 1894 Caledonian Mercury, 1810 Call, the. 193? Cambridge Gownsman, the. 1926 Cambro – Briton, 1822 Canada, n.d. Candid Friend, the. 1901, 1910 Candid Quarterly Review, the. 1914 Candle, the. 1938. Candlestick, the Captain, the. 1900, 1904, 1905 Carriage-Builders and Harness-Makers’ Art Journal, the. 1860 Cassell’s Magazine, 1867,1868,1871,1873, 1874, 1888, 1895, 1901 Cassell’s and Company’s Magazines, 1892,1898, 1899 Cassell’s Family Magazine, 1874, 1890, 1891, 1892, 1895, 1896, n.d. Cassell’s Saturday Journal, 1892, 1894, 1898, n.d. Cassell’s Illustrated Family Paper, 1854 Catholic Magazine, the. 1895 Catholic Tales, n.d. Catholic Weekly, the. n.d. Caxton Magazine, the. 1934 Box 12 Censor, the. n.d. Century, the. 1889-1890, 1890-91, 1895, 1898, n.d. Century Magazine, the. n.d. Chambers’ (Edinburgh) Journal, 1847 Chambers’ Journal 1859, 1868, 1880, 1889, (1890, 1876), 1895, 1896, 1897, 1901, n.d. Chambers’ Miscellany, 1869 Chatterbox, 1866, 1892, 1895, 1896, (1901, 1895, 1894), 1907?, n.d. Cheltenham Journal and Gloucestershire Gazette, 1850 Child at Home, the. 1841 Children of the Hour, the. 1896 Children’s Annual, the. 1887-8 Children’s Friend, the. 1864, 1892, 1896, 1905, 1906, n.d. Children’s Garden, the. 1900. Children’s Magazine, 1912? Children’s Newspaper, the. n.d. Children’s Prize, the. 1865 Children’s Treasure, the. 1871 Child’s Companion, the. 1893, 1896, 1898, 1906 Box 13 Child’s Own Magazine, the. 1882, 1885, 1886. Child’s Pictoral, the. 1885, 1887. Child’s Realm, the. 1912 Chimney Corner, the. n.d. Ching Ching’s Own, 1889 Christian Annual, the n.d Christian Budget, the. 1899, n.d. Christian Guardian, the. 1808 Christian Journal, the 1885 Christian Keepsake, the. 1834 Christian Million, the. n.d. Christian News, the. n.d. Christian Observer, the. 1801, 1830, 1838, 1861, 1862, 1865 Christian Record, the. 1906 Christian Rembrancer, the. 1834 Christian Reporter, the. 1820 Christian World, the.
Recommended publications
  • I the Apostle of Capitalism: the Economist from 1843-1863 A
    The Apostle of Capitalism: The Economist from 1843-1863 A Thesis Submitted to the College of Graduate Studies and Research in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Master of Arts Department of History University of Saskatchewan Carla Jeanine Fehr © Carla Jeanine Fehr, September 2009. All rights reserved. i PERMISSION TO USE In presenting this thesis in partial fulfillment of the requirements for a Master’s of Arts Degree from the University of Saskatchewan, I agree that the Libraries of this University may make it freely available for inspection. I further agree that permission for copying of this thesis in any manner, in whole or in part, for scholarly purposes may be granted by the professor or professors who supervised my thesis work or, in their absence, by the Head of the Department of History. It is understood that any copying or publication or use of this thesis or parts thereof for financial gain shall not be allowed without my written permission. It is also understood that due recognition shall be given to me and to the University of Saskatchewan in any scholarly use which may be made of any material in my thesis. Requests for permission to copy or to make other use of material in this thesis in whole or in part should be addressed to: Head of the Department of History University of Saskatchewan Saskatoon, Saskatchewan S7N 5A5 Canada i ABSTRACT For over 160 years, The Economist newspaper has been one of the most influential, sophisticated, and effective proponents of capitalism. It has consistently championed and conveyed a form of ‘humanitarian political economy’ to its weekly, global audience of professionals and business and government leaders.
    [Show full text]
  • Presented to the Graduate Council of the North Texas State University In
    79I /f NIGERIAN MILITARY GOVERNMENT AND PRESS FREEDOM, 1966-79 THESIS Presented to the Graduate Council of the North Texas State University in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements For the Degree of MASTER OF ARTS By Ehikioya Agboaye, B.A. Denton, Texas May, 1984 Agboaye, Ehikioya, Nigerian Military Government and Press Freedom, 1966-79. Master of Arts (Journalism), May, 1984, 3 tables, 111 pp., bibliography, 148 titles. The problem of this thesis is to examine the military- press relationship inNigeria from 1966 to 1979 and to determine whether activities of the military government contributed to violation of press freedom by prior restraint, postpublication censorship and penalization. Newspaper and magazine articles related to this study were analyzed. Interviews with some journalists and mili- tary personnel were also conducted. Materials collected show that the military violated some aspects of press freedom, but in most cases, however, journalists were free to criticize government activities. The judiciary prevented the military from arbitrarily using its power against the press. The findings show that although the military occasionally attempted suppressing the press, there are few instances that prove that journalists were denied press freedom. TABLE OF CONTENTS Page LIST OF TABLES............ .P Chapter I. INTRODUCTION . 1 Statement of the Problem Purpose of the Study Significant Questions Definition of Terms Review of the Literature Significance of the Study Limitations Methodology Organization II. PREMILITARY ERA,.... 1865-1966...18 . From Colonial to Indigenous Press The Press in the First Republic III. PRESS ACTIONS IN THE MILITARY'S EARLY YEARS 29 Before the Civil War The Nigeria-Biaf ran War and After IV.
    [Show full text]
  • Left Media Bias List
    From -https://mediabiasfactcheck.com NEWS SOURCES NEWS SOURCES NEWS SOURCES LEFT LEANING LEFT CENTER LEFT CENTER These media sources are moderately to These media sources have a slight to These media sources have a slight to strongly biased toward liberal causes through moderate liberal bias. They often publish factual moderate liberal bias. They often publish factual story selection and/or political affiliation. They information that utilizes loaded words (wording information that utilizes loaded words (wording may utilize strong loaded words (wording that that attempts to influence an audience by using that attempts to influence an audience by using attempts to influence an audience by using appeal appeal to emotion or stereotypes) to favor liberal appeal to emotion or stereotypes) to favor liberal to emotion or stereotypes), publish misleading causes. These sources are generally trustworthy causes. These sources are generally trustworthy reports and omit reporting of information that for information, but Information may require for information, but Information may require may damage liberal causes. further investigation. further investigation. Some sources may be untrustworthy. Addicting Info ABC News NPR Advocate Above the Law New York Times All That’s Fab Aeon Oil and Water Don’t Mix Alternet Al Jazeera openDemocracy Amandla Al Monitor Opposing Views AmericaBlog Alan Guttmacher Institute Ozy Media American Bridge 21st Century Alaska Dispatch News PanAm Post American News X Albany Times-Union PBS News Hour Backed by Fact Akron Beacon
    [Show full text]
  • REPUTATION MANAGEMENT Gaining Control of Issues, Crises & Corporate Social Responsibility
    new strategic_TP:Layout 1 12/9/07 11:11 Page 1 NEWSTRATEGIESFOR REPUTATION MANAGEMENT Gaining Control of Issues, Crises & Corporate Social Responsibility ANDREW GRIFFIN London and Philadelphia Publisher’s note Every possible effort has been made to ensure that the information contained in this book is accurate at the time of going to press, and the publishers and author cannot accept responsibility for any errors or omissions, however caused. No responsibility for loss or damage occasioned to any person acting, or refraining from action, as a result of the material in this publication can be accepted by the editor, the publisher or the author. First published in Great Britain and the United States in 2008 by Kogan Page Limited. Apart from any fair dealing for the purposes of research or private study, or criticism or review, as permitted under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988, this publication may only be reproduced, stored or transmitted, in any form or by any means, with the prior permission in writing of the publishers, or in the case of reprographic reproduction in accordance with the terms and licences issued by the CLA. Enquiries concerning reproduction outside these terms should be sent to the publishers at the undermentioned addresses: 120 Pentonville Road 525 South 4th Street, #241 London N1 9JN Philadelphia PA 19147 United Kingdom USA www.kogan-page.co.uk © Andrew Griffin, 2008 The right of Andrew Griffin to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted by him in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988. ISBN 978 0 7494 5007 6 British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data A CIP record for this book is available from the British Library.
    [Show full text]
  • 222 1 Remembering the Famine
    NOTES 1 Remembering the Famine 1. Speech by the Minister of State, Avril Doyle TD, Famine Commemoration Programme, 27 June 1995. 2. The text of a message from the British Prime Minister, Mr Tony Blair, delivered by Britain’s Ambassador to the Republic of Ireland, Veronica Sutherland, on Saturday 31 May 1997 at the Great Irish Famine Event, in Cork (British Information Services, 212). 3. Irish News, 4 February 1997. 4. The designation of the event is contested; some nationalists find the use of the word ‘famine’ offensive and inappropriate given the large amounts of food exported from Ireland. For more on the debate, see Kinealy, A Death-Dealing Famine: The Great Hunger in Ireland (Pluto Press, 1997), Chapter 1. 5. The Irish Times, 3 June 1995. 6. The most influential work which laid the ground for much subsequent revisionist writing was R. D. Crotty, Irish Agricultural Production (Cork University Press, 1996). 7. The most polished and widely read exposition of the revisionist interpretation was provided in Roy Foster, Modern Ireland, 1600–1972 (London, 1988). 8. Roy Foster, ‘We are all Revisionists Now’, in Irish Review (Cork, 1986), pp. 1–6. 9. Professor Seamus Metress, The Irish People, 10 January 1996. Similar arguments have also been expressed by Professor Brendan Bradshaw of Cambridge Univer- sity, a consistent – but isolated – opponent of revisionist interpretation. See, for example, Irish Historical Studies, xxvi: 104 (November 1989), pp. 329–51. 10. Christine Kinealy, ‘Beyond Revisionism’, in History Ireland: Reassessing the Irish Famine (Winter 1995). 11. For more on this episode, see Cormac Ó Gráda, ‘Making History in Ireland in the 1940s and 1950s: The Saga of the Great Famine’, in The Irish Review (1992), pp.
    [Show full text]
  • MANUAL for NATIONAL OBSERVER TRAINING HANDBOOK on FISHING SEASON
    MANUAL for NATIONAL OBSERVER TRAINING HANDBOOK on FISHING SEASON Commentato [CF1]: Choose either “National Observer Training BLUEFINBLUEFIN TUNA and SWORDFISH Handbook on Bluefin tuna and Swordfish fisheries” or “Manual for National Observer Training on Bluefin tuna and Swordfish fisheries Commentato [CF2]: I deleted “development” because it wasn’t (Training, Monitoring, andDevelopment, Research) specified thus not logic Edited by: PIGNALOSA P. Technical Director OCEANIS S.r.l, SILVA J.P. Managing Director COFREPECHE S.r.l. PAPPALARDO L. Scientific Advisor OCEANIS S.r.l DESIDERIO A. Expert in Conventional Video Analysis PIGNALOSA C. Administrative Manager OCEANIS S.r.l COCO O. English translation OCEANIS S.r.l VI EDITION (2020) 1/128 MINISTRY FOR THE ENVIRONMENT, Formattato: Rientro: Sinistro: 1 cm, Tabulazioni: 4,02 cm, SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT AND CLIMATE CHANGE - MALTA Allineato a sinistra + 9 cm, Allineato al centro Commentato [CF3]: The manual was not done by the Dfa Commentato [CF4]: This manual is not done by the DFA Commentato [CF5]: The manual was not done by the DFA. Better ask the DG for permission. 2/128 INDEX 1. INTRODUCTION 1.1 ICCAT: INTERNATIONAL COMMISSION FOR THE CONSERVATION OF ATLANTIC TUNAS 1.2 DEFINITIONS PRESENT IN THE ICCAT RECOMMENDATION 19-04 2. THE BLUEFIN TUNA (Thunnus thynnus) ha formattato: Tipo di carattere: Corsivo 2.1 BASIC CONCEPTS ON BLUEFIN TUNA FISHING 2.1.1 BLUEFIN TUNA FISHING GEARS 2.1.2 PURSE SEINER (PS) 2.1.3 LONG LINER (LL) 2.1.4 TRAP – FIXED GEAR 2.2 FISHING ACTIVITY 2.2.1 SPOTTING AND CATCHING 2.2.2 TOWING VESSEL (TUG) 2.2.3 CAGING 2.2.4 HARVESTING 2.3 BIOLOGY AND ECOLOGY OF BLUEFIN TUNA 2.4 GENUS: THUNNUS – COMMERCIAL SPECIES 2.5 MORPHO-PHYSIOLOGIC CHARACTERISTICS 2.6 BLUEFIN TUNA SWIMMING 2.7 AGE MEASURING AND GROWTH RATES 2.8 BEHAVIOURAL ASPECTS OF BLUEFIN TUNA 2.8.1 DIET 2.8.2 HABITAT 2.8.3 MIGRATION 2.8.4 REPRODUCTION 2.9 SAMPLING 3.
    [Show full text]
  • POST OFFICE LONDON 1792 NEWSPAPERS-LONDON OFFICES of FOREIGN & OOLONIAL Bristol Times & Mirror, 185 Fleet Street E C
    NEW POST OFFICE LONDON 1792 NEWSPAPERS-LONDON OFFICES OF FOREIGN & OOLONIAL Bristol Times & Mirror, 185 Fleet street E C. South Wales Daily News (Cardiff), 190 Fleet street E C DAILY PAPERS-continued. Burton Daily Mail, 85 Fleet street E C South Wales Daily Post (Swansea), 92 Fleet street E C 1 Halifax (N.S.) Evening Mail, 17 & 19 Cockspur street SW Burton Evening Gazette, 20 New Bridge street E C South Wales Echo (Cardiff), 190 Fleet street E C (evening) Hamburger N achrichten, the leading financial, commercial · Oambria Daily Leader (Swansea), 151 Fleet str!'et E C Southern Daily Echo (Southampton), 69 Fleet street E C & shipping paper in Germany, 11 Queen Victoria st E C- Cambridge Daily News. 47 Flet't street E C Sporting Chronicle (Manchester),46&47 Shoe la E C & 118 Fleet stE C T N 6347 London Wall Cheshire Daily Echo, 47 Fleet street E C Sporting Man (Newcastle), 84 Fleet street E C Herald (The) (Halifax, N.S.), 17 & 19 Cockspur street SW Citizen (The) (Gloucester), 88 FleettJtreet E C Staffordshire Sentinel, 44 Fleet street E C Herald (The) (Hamilton, Ont.), 17 & 19 Cockspur street SW· Cork Constitution, 85 Fleet street E C Sunderland Daily Echo, 170 Fleet street E C Hongkong Daily Press, 131 Fleet street E C · Cork Examiner, 85 Fleet street E C Sussex Daily News (Brighton), 69 Fleet street E C · Indian Daily News (Calcutta) (daily & weekly), 118 to 122 Temple Cork Free Press, 12, 13 & 14 Red Lion court, Fleet street E C Western Daily Mercury (Plymouth), 88 Fleet street E C chambers E C Daily Dispatch (Manchester), 46 & 47 Shoe
    [Show full text]
  • Robert Louis Stevenson, 1850-1894
    Robert Louis Stevenson, 1850-1894 ARCHIVED ONLINE EXHIBIT Originally exhibited summer 1994-spring 1995 Thomas Cooper Library, University of South Carolina Text by Patrick Scott & Roger Mortimer, with assistance from Bruce Bowlin Archived October 13, 2013 TABLE OF CONTENTS Archived Online Exhibit ................................................................................................................................. 1 Introduction .................................................................................................................................................. 2 Early Life in Edinburgh .................................................................................................................................. 3 Travel Writing................................................................................................................................................ 8 The Fiction of Adventure ............................................................................................................................ 10 Stevenson as Poet and Essayist .................................................................................................................. 13 Stevenson and Henley ................................................................................................................................ 17 Sensation and Collaboration ....................................................................................................................... 19 In the South Seas .......................................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Cambridge Five Spy Ring Part 26 of 42
    c. t t Collohun __ / ' I 0J7e2:ooc1Z Co rod - E vans _.______ i '1 Gole Rosen ' 1 I / SUii1Vqn : V Tovel ' Trotter __...,______ Tele Room Holmes _ Gundy 7 W? *1-" '--" -""' "'7 -*~- - - _ l Was I§r|hsh I Frogman Betrayed? I LONDON,Sept. UPI!--The 7 Express Daily .reported ~ tmsy that Ex-Comdr. L£on':.'="t*C.'moo,the irogmanwho dis- appeared in Portsmouth Harbor in 1956, was betrayed by a Soviet "master spy" who had worked his way into an im- plortant Britishgovernment agencyand isstill workingl t ere. 1 Officials declinedcomment the on report. , , . torThe the beliet Express that acited spyS. in Britain U. intelligence warnedofficials theRussians asthesource that _ 'J Comdr. Crabb would be prospecting around underwater try- I ing to get information about equipment carried by the So~ ' ' viet Cruiser Svercllov, then in Portsmouth. 92 The spywins linkedwith theBritish trioor DonaldMac-_ - O / L-cart, Ha.re1..'t='ht1_!.;;,1_enc.92the lateGuy Burgess,who edto * / Russiagovernment. as ailté'fWoT'l¬ingwhile spiesby employed British - the 92 , - ; Comdr. Crabb disappeared on April 19, 1956. A headless, / hanciless body in a irogman suit, found a year later on a beach near Portsmouth, was officially identied as his, but there have been repeated rumors that it was not. J. Bernard"'Hutton,a newsman from RedCzechoslovakia, ' wrotea book. published in 1960, in which he said Comdr: - Crabb was taken prisoner by the Russians and was at that time traini Irogmen Ior them somewherebehind ttgg1;-on I uiin.C i Thu Washington Pout and 1...? Times Herald The Wqshinqton Daily News __..._...
    [Show full text]
  • Monopoly, Power and Politics in Fleet Street: the Controversial Birth of IPC Magazines, 1958-63
    Monopoly, Power and Politics in Fleet Street: The Controversial Birth of IPC Magazines, 1958-63 Howard Cox and Simon Mowatt Britain’s newspaper and magazine publishing business did not fare particularly well during the 1950s. With leading newspaper proprietors placing their desire for political influence above that of financial performance, and with working practices in Fleet Street becoming virtually ungovernable, it was little surprise to find many leading periodical publishers on the verge of bankruptcy by the decade’s end. A notable exception to this general picture of financial mismanagement was provided by the chain of enterprises controlled by Roy Thomson. Having first established a base in Scotland in 1953 through the acquisition of the Scotsman newspaper publishing group, the Canadian entrepreneur brought a new commercial attitude and business strategy to bear on Britain’s periodical publishing industry. Using profits generated by a string of successful media activities, in 1959 Thomson bought a place in Fleet Street through the acquisition of Lord Kemsley’s chain of newspapers, which included the prestigious Sunday Times. Early in 1961 Thomson came to an agreement with Christopher Chancellor, the recently appointed chief executive of Odhams Press, to merge their two publishing groups and thereby create a major new force in the British newspaper and magazine publishing industry. The deal was never consummated however. Within days of publicly announcing the merger, Odhams found its shareholders being seduced by an improved offer from Cecil King, Chairman of Daily Mirror Newspapers, Ltd., which they duly accepted. The Mirror’s acquisition of Odhams was deeply controversial, mainly because it brought under common ownership the two left-leaning British popular newspapers, the Mirror and the Herald.
    [Show full text]
  • Great Britain Newspaper Collection
    http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/c8d224gm No online items Inventory of the Great Britain newspaper collection Hoover Institution Archives Staff Hoover Institution Library and Archives © 2019 434 Galvez Mall Stanford University Stanford, CA 94305-6003 [email protected] URL: https://www.hoover.org/library-archives Inventory of the Great Britain 2019C144 1 newspaper collection Title: Great Britain newspaper collection Date (inclusive): 1856-2001 Collection Number: 2019C144 Contributing Institution: Hoover Institution Library and Archives Language of Material: In English, Estonian, Danish, Dutch, Norwegian, German, French and Greek. Physical Description: 452 oversize boxes(686.7 Linear Feet) Abstract: The newspapers in this collection were originally collected by the Hoover Institution Library and transferred to the Archives in 2019. The Great Britain newspaper collection (1856-2001) comprises ninety-seven different titles of publication in English, Estonian, Danish, Dutch, Norwegian, German, French, and Greek. All titles within this collection have been further analyzed in Stanford University Libraries catalog. Hoover Institution Archives Access The collection is open for research; materials must be requested at least two business days in advance of intended use. Publication Rights Due to the assembled nature of this collection, copyright status varies across its scope. Copyright is assumed to be held by the original newspaper publications, which should be contacted wherein public domain has not yet passed. The Hoover Institution can neither grant nor deny permission to publish or reproduce materials from this collection. Acquisition Information Materials were acquired by the Hoover Institution Archives in 2019 from the Hoover Institution Library. Preferred Citation The following information is suggested along with your citation: [Title/Date of Publication], Great Britain newspaper collection [Box no.], Hoover Institution Archives.
    [Show full text]
  • The Meaning of Witchcraft
    THE MEANING OF WITCHCRAFT By G. B. GARDNER Introduction by Dr. Leo Louis Martello MAGICKAL CHILDE, INC. 35 W. 19th St. (Gerald Gardner) GARDNER GRAND OLD MAN OF WITCHCRAFT By DR. LEO LOUIS MARTELLO Gerald B. Gardner’s biography has been published many times, including a chapter on him in my own Witchcraft: The Old Religion. For the record his first Craft book was High Magic’s Aid published in 1949, a self-published work. His second was Witchcraft Today in 1954 and his last was The Meaning of Witchcraft, 1959, five years before his death. Prior to these he had written A Goddess Arrives, 1948, and Keris and Other Malay Weapons, 1936. The latter and High Magic’s Aid were published under his pen-name of Scire. In Witchcraft Today the Bibliography has no listing of Charles Godfrey Leland and in this book he lists only Leland’s Gypsy Sorcery. Yet a careful study of the Gardnerian Book of Shadows reveals that many passages were copied directly from Leland’s Aradia. The secret name of the Goddess used in Gardnerian rites is also most revealing. His new converts shed lots of heat but not too much light, especially in view of all the hagiographical hogwash written about him. Those converts who saw the light preferred to keep others in the dark. This is characteristic of all new converts to any faith. And today none of this matters as the Craft... The Old Religion... Paganism has grown and expanded worldwide where the myths of the past, the factual inconsistencies, the claims and counterclaims fade into insignificance.
    [Show full text]