Word: republishers
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...enjoyed reading your write-up of the promotion of my friend Jay Cooke which appeared on page 94 of the Oct. 26 issue of TIME, but would suggest that you republish it with Jay's picture instead of mine as some of his friends might want to save...
...successfully that he discovered who George Eliot was. Wrote Lewes to Chapman: ". . . [Mrs. Lewes] authorizes me to state, as distinctly as language can do so, that she is not the author of Adam Bede." Chapman's only reply seems to have been to ask if he might republish some of George Eliot's old articles in the Westminster Review. Lewes said No, wrote in his diary: "Squashed that idea...
...dares republish the charges of Ruth Hanna McCormick, Republican senatorial nominee in Illinois, against the Senate Slush Fund Committee may be prosecuted for "wilful and malicious libel." Notice to that effect was served last week upon the Press by Senator Gerald Prentice Nye of North Dakota, the committee's chairman, and three of his colleagues (New York's Wagner, Washington's Dill, Vermont's Dale. Missouri's Patterson did not sign the edict...
...Thesaurus in new editions until his death in 1908. John Lewis' son, Samuel Romilly Roget, physicist who did important work on the "aging"' and electro magnetic qualities of iron, continued the family revisions until 1911. Since then this reference book has been any one's to republish. U. S. publishers are Thomas Y Crowell Co., Theo. E. Schulte, E. P. Dutton & Co., Longmans, Green & Co. The 14th (new) edition of the Encyclopaedia Britannica mentions no Rogets, the 11th edition only Samuel Romilly as a physicist...
...Early in the year a committee consisting of Professors Kennelly, Clifford, Sauveur and Davis was appointed to republish in pamphlet form selected articles by members of the staff. When a paper is first published the author secures reprints which are bound in an attractive paper cover headed "Harvard University--Publications of the Harvard Engineering School," and bearing the title, the name of the author, the place and date of publication. The pamphlets are distributed, for the most part, to libraries in the scientific departments of universities, to the industries, and to the public utilities...