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for the blind and by the blind, as far as possible. A printing plant was established for the printing of the publication, as well as books for blind readers, in which positions were filled by blind persons as far as practical. The paper on which the magazine was printed was furnished by a blind man. As there were two prevailing styles of type, each edition was made up in both types with one-third of the copies of each edition printed in "Braille", and two-thirds in "New York Point". The magazine, which initially cost approximately $ 20,000 a year, was a charitable undertaking and not a money-making enterprise. It was carried on and circulated wholly at the expense of the founder; no advertisements were solicited.
78:, saw a piece regarding a legacy of several thousand dollars for various charitable purposes. He wrote to the editor asking why the blind were not included in the legacy, and within a day he received a reply: "I saw your communication today and as I am interested in doing something for the blind along the printing line I would like to communicate with you. (Signed) E. M. Ziegler." Ziegler, the widow of industrialist and Arctic expeditionary financer
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Each issue contained a high-class story, poetry, news of the day in condensed form and one sheet of popular music. Letters from blind people describing work done successfully were published for the encouragement of others. Prizes were offered for contributions of merit by the blind. The magazine was
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In its first year of publication, the magazine had a circulation of 6,500 in 1907. A nominal price of US$ 0.10 a year was charged for subscription to make it eligible for second-class mailing. Each copy was a volume of fifty pages. A special bill was introduced in the U.S. Congress in 1908 to allow
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Library of
Congress. National Library Service for the Blind and Physically Handicapped; American Foundation for the Blind; American Printing House for the Blind (Louisville, Ky.); Royal National Institute for the Blind (1981).
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it to become a free publication. By 1919, in the US, there were only large magazines for the blind and visually impaired circulated for free:
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format. Printed on brown paper using mostly recycled material, it was mailed in a large envelope, postage-free, because of an act of
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In 2009, the magazine became an online version only, but by 2014, all publication was discontinued.
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took over the company and her foundations. After
William Jr. died,
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traveled to New York City for business and while reading the
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Disability magazines published in the United States
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325:Abandons Hard-Copy and Recorded Publication"
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143:Moon type
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