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...chief prize (gold medal) was given "for distinguished personal service in advertising" to Ernest Elmo Calkins, President of Calkins & Holden, Manhattan agency. Originally a printer, Mr. Calkins studied art because he knew that good typography must follow the principles of design. In 1902 he went into partnership with Ralph Holden. Together they worked out the first complete advertising campaign ever produced?with typewritten outline, sketches and exhibits. They organized a special art department, a special typographic department, necessitities that are axiomatic now. They wrote the first book on the new advertising practice, Modern Advertising.? Mr. Calkins has been writing...
...Some of its more potent members: Thomas E. Donnelley, Chicago printer; George P. Douglas, Minneapolis lawyer; Joseph R. Ensign, Simsbury, Conn., manufacturer; Samuel H. Fisher, Manhattan lawyer; John R. Galt, Hawaiian banker; Edward J. Gavegan, New York Supreme Court Judge; Robert L. Luce, Manhattan lawyer; Edward L. Parsons, San Francisco bishop; Charles C. Paulding, Manhattan railroad lawyer and nephew of Mr. Depew; Gifford Pinchot, Pennsylvania Governor; Robert Treat Platt, Portland (Ore.) lawyer; James Gamble Rogers, Manhattan architect; Charles H. Sherrill, Manhattan lawyer; George W. Woodruff, Pennsylvania Attorney General...
Following two years of teaching journalism he again entered the field himself as a member of the editorial staff of the journalist's magazine, Printer's Ink. From 1919 until 1923 he was connected with the New York Globe successively as chief editorial writer, managing editor, and associate editor. Since leaving the New York Globe he has been a member of the editorial staff of the New Republic. His articles appear regularly in all the leading magazines of the country and he is now Director of the Foreign Policy Association of New York...
...trifling matter, but to those who regard TIME as authoritative it should be none the less important. On p. 18 of your issue of Dec. 14 you speak of the Lusitania as having been sunk on "May 17, 1915." Just a printer's slip, no doubt, for the date should...
Preparing to handle these issues, Congressmen and Senators presented many bills. The public printer was swamped with 2,565 bills to print...