Born in Massachusetts to a family of merchants and seamen, Clapp traveled to Paris to translate the socialist writing
This "Card" announces the second year of the Saturday Press and discusses its subscription crisis, claiming that aside from receiving "extensive celebration," the paper needs "an extensive subscription list" (2). The "Card" claims that the paper needs thousands more subscribers and fewer advertisers to carry on at the same rate and at the same quality of the previous year. To further illustrate the "crisis," the "Card" includes a letter from the "personal friend" of the Saturday Press, H.C., Jr.
Clapp includes a letter from the paper's "friend," H.C., Jr., that discusses the brilliance of the Saturday Press and the paper's subscription "crisis" (2).
A note before the "Card" asks subscribers with annual subscriptions to renew them as soon as possible. The card announces the second year of the Saturday Press and discusses it's "subscription crisis" (2).
An electronic version of this text was previously available in CONTENTdm and has been migrated to Lehigh University's Digital Collections. Reconstruction of direct links to individual articles is in progress. In the meantime, browse issues of the Saturday Press in the Vault at Pfaff's Digital Collection. Page images of The New York Saturday Press were scanned from microfilm owned by Emory University, which was made from original copies held by the Historical Society of Pennsylvania.
Born in Massachusetts to a family of merchants and seamen, Clapp traveled to Paris to translate the socialist writing
Born in Massachusetts to a family of merchants and seamen, Clapp traveled to Paris to translate the socialist writings of Fourier.
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