The Manufacture of Ink. Comprising the raw materials and the preparation of writing, copying and hektograph inks, safety inks, ink extracts and powders, colored inks, solid inks, lithographic inks and crayons, printing ink, ink or aniline pencils, marking inks, ink specialties, sympathetic inks, stamp and stencil inks, wash blue, etc. Translated from the German of Sigmund Lehner, with additions by William T. Brannt. Illustrated; 230 pages; $2.00. Address all orders to THE INLAND PRINTER CO.,—214 Monroe St., Chicago. 34 Park Row, New York. THE COLOR PRINTER. By J. F. EARHART. The Standard Work on Color Printing in America. A veritable work of art. 8?1/4 by 10?1/2 inches, 137 pages of type matter, 90 color plates in two to twenty colors each, handsomely bound in cloth, stamped in gold and four colors. To produce a limited edition of this work required 625 different forms and 1,625,000 impressions. Book contains 166 colors, hues, tints and shades, produced by mixtures of two colors each, with proportions printed below each. To use colors intelligently and effectively every printer and pressman should have one of these books. The limited edition will soon be exhausted. Order one at once. Price, postpaid, $10.00 per copy. Former price, $15.00. Address all orders to THE INLAND PRINTER CO. 34 Park Row, NEW YORK. 214 Monroe St., CHICAGO. The Inland Printer. What it is. The Inland Printer is a monthly magazine of from 100 to 120 pages, 9 by 12 inches in size, devoted to printing, publishing, engraving, electrotyping, stereotyping, bookbinding, papermaking and all the kindred trades. It is a work of art, and should be in the hands of every lover of the typographic art or anyone interested in newspaper work or advertising. Issued promptly on the first of every month. Subscriptions can begin with any number. What it Contains. Its pages are filled with the most instructive and interesting original articles relating to the matters that properly come within its domain, besides an amount of valuable data, trade topics, correspondence, craft items, recent patents, recipes, hints and suggestions that will surprise you. In addition to this, it is copiously illustrated, and the whole make-up and general character of the work is such as to challenge admiration. The Illustrations. The full Page illustrations and those worked in with the text are all of a high order, and include half-tone, zinc etching and other methods of engraving, alike valuable to the engraver, process-worker, compositor and pressman. Colored plates, by various processes, are also shown. The Text. Taking up a copy at random one finds articles on proofreading, the point system in type founding, notes on bookbinding, natural colors in the printing press, newspapers and newspaper men, the country newspaper, typographical make-ready, advertising, convention notes, review of type designs, pressroom queries and answers, process engraving, new patents, trade notes and much general information. The Advertisements. These are as important in a way as any other part of THE INLAND PRINTER, for the reason that they are set in attractive and catchy style, alike beneficial to the compositor and “ad.” writer, and printed in the same excellent way that the other part of the journal is. This part will interest you as well as the text. SUBSCRIPTION PRICE: $2.00 per Year; $1.00 for Six Months; 20c. per Copy. No free copies and no exchanges. Subscribe through your type founder, material dealer or news agent, or send direct to The Inland Printer Company, 150 NASSAU ST., 212–214 MONROE ST., NEW YORK. CHICAGO.
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