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A MONTHLY MAGAZINE
FOR LITERARY WORKERS

VOLUME VII
JANUARY-DECEMBER, 1894

BOSTON :

THE WRITER PUBLISHING COMPANY

282 WASHINGTON STREET

1894

[COPYRIGHT, 1895, BY WILLIAM H. HILLS. ALL RIGHTS Reserved.]

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Home of, Burke, 3

Dennis, A. W., Editorial I, 88

Dennison, W. G., Illustrator, Defence of, 119

Dialect, Chisholm, 49; Denison, 2, 55; Jackson, 27

Dictators, School for, Rhys, 1

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Hoke, H. M., Character Names in Fiction, 177; Literature for
Art's Sake, 23

Holmes, O. W., Death, 78; Jerrold (r), 57; Tribute to, 161-
168, 183, 187

Howard, F. M., Keeping Track of MSS., 178

Hygiene, Currier (r), 170

I Am Well, Post (r), 172

I, Editorial, Dennis, 88

Ice Water, Ice Cream, 11

Ideas, Huddle Your, Scarboro, 9

Illustrate, Learning to, 14

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Dorr, Julia C. R., on Holmes, 163

Drama, Early, Palmer, 51

King, Grace, on Holmes, 165

Known to Unknown, Gibson, 102

Dramatic Composition, Helps to, 28

Dyspepsia, Mental, Herrick, 114

Editors, Are They to Blame? White, 41; Irritated, Kearney,

12 and Publishers, Denison, 55

Lamb and Jerrold, Bon-Mots (r), 57

Letters, Pay for, 169; in a Story, 153

Letters of Travel, Brooks (r), 30

Libraries, Private, 48; Public, Fletcher (r), 156

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My Summer in a Mormon Village, Merriman (r), 157

Names in Fiction, Hoke, 177

Necrology, 80, 96, 112, 128, 144, 160, 176, 192

Nervous Exhaustion, Beard (r), 171

New York, King's Handbook (r), 29

Newspaper Annual (r), 156; Directory (r), 107

Newspaper English, Scott, 18; Edited, 107, 120, 135, 154, 156,

187e

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A MONTHLY MAGAZINE TO INTEREST AND HELP ALL LITERARY WORKERS.

VOL. VII.

BOSTON, JANUARY, 1894.

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16

Smoking is allowed while dictating, but the

cigar must be removed from the lips when the
dictator is actually speaking.

"Special attention is given to correcting the
er-er habit in dictators. No dictator will be
graduated from this school who uses er more
than once in every five words. It is expected
that some will do better than this.

"Speed in dictation is carefully cultivated,

and no person dictating less than twenty-five

words a minute will receive the certificate of

the school. The more speed, the less haste is

necessary to get through with a large mail; and

the danger of putting the stenographer to sleep

by too-slow dictation is a point that should not

be overlooked.

"For practice, actual business letters are

given to pupils to answer. It is expected that
these letters shall be read before answers to
them are dictated. The habit of dictating a
reply to a letter while reading it is discouraged,
as not being conducive to a polished style and
a methodical arrangement of the matter.

"Courses in elementary grammar and the
rudiments of the English language are given,

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