The Theosophical Messenger (periodical): Difference between revisions

From Theosophy Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
 
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown)
Line 11: Line 11:
<blockquote>
<blockquote>
When a member fails to pay his dues on time, it makes far more than double work at Headquarters. First, we have to send him a letter after he is a couple of months behind time. Then, his delinquency continuing to the end of the first quarter, we have to shift his membership record card to the delinquent section, take his name off the MESSENGER list, and notify the printers. They throw his address plate into the metal scrap heap. Soon after that, in many cases, the tardy dues arrive, perhaps four or five months late. Then we have to shift the record card back to the original position, write it on the MESSENGER mailing list, notify the printer, and pay for the new address plate. In most cases the tardy member has, by that time, missed two or three copies of the MESSENGER because he was not entitled to them. But having now paid up, he is entitled to them, and we have the additional work of writing wrappers and mailing the magazines. Had he paid his $3 on time to his Secretary, all this work and expense would have been avoided.<ref>"Training School Extension" ''The American Theosophist'' 17.12 (December 1929), 271.</ref>
When a member fails to pay his dues on time, it makes far more than double work at Headquarters. First, we have to send him a letter after he is a couple of months behind time. Then, his delinquency continuing to the end of the first quarter, we have to shift his membership record card to the delinquent section, take his name off the MESSENGER list, and notify the printers. They throw his address plate into the metal scrap heap. Soon after that, in many cases, the tardy dues arrive, perhaps four or five months late. Then we have to shift the record card back to the original position, write it on the MESSENGER mailing list, notify the printer, and pay for the new address plate. In most cases the tardy member has, by that time, missed two or three copies of the MESSENGER because he was not entitled to them. But having now paid up, he is entitled to them, and we have the additional work of writing wrappers and mailing the magazines. Had he paid his $3 on time to his Secretary, all this work and expense would have been avoided.<ref>"Training School Extension" ''The American Theosophist'' 17.12 (December 1929), 271.</ref>
</blockquote>
</blockquote>
IN the late 1920s, the magazine was printed in Mt. Morris, Illinois, at Kables Brothers Printing. It was a mammoth print shop that specialized in magazines, newspapers, and catalogs. Mrs. Weaver, representing the "fraternal magazine department," visited the Society headquarters in July, 1929, and reported that several Kables employees planned to attend the public lectures of the [[World Congress of the Theosophical Society (Adyar)#Third World Congress|Third World Congress]].<ref>"Headquarters Notes" ''The Theosophical Messenger'' 17.8 (August, 1929), 170.</ref>
== Notes ==
== Notes ==
<references/>
<references/>
[[Category:Periodicals|Theosophical Messenger, The]]
[[Category:Periodicals|Theosophical Messenger, The]]
[[Category:TS Adyar|Theosophical Messenger, The]]
[[Category:TS Adyar|Theosophical Messenger, The]]

Latest revision as of 01:34, 30 August 2020

The Theosophical Messenger was the national journal of the American Theosophical Society from 1927-1931. L. W. Rogers was the editor, and the monthly periodical was published at the newly established headquarters of the Society in Wheaton, Illinois. It took up in December, 1927 as a successor to The Messenger, using the same volume and issue numbering. Thus, the first issue was designated as Volume 15, Issue 7. Numbering went to a calendar schedule beginning with Volume 17, Issue 1 in January, 1929, and continued monthly on this system until the final issue (Volume 20, Issue 12) on December, 1932. The successor journal was The American Theosophist.

Index to the periodical

the Union Index of Theosophical Periodicals has an index to the articles of this periodical.

Production of the journal

An insight to the printing and mailing process is found in this notice from the Membership Department:

When a member fails to pay his dues on time, it makes far more than double work at Headquarters. First, we have to send him a letter after he is a couple of months behind time. Then, his delinquency continuing to the end of the first quarter, we have to shift his membership record card to the delinquent section, take his name off the MESSENGER list, and notify the printers. They throw his address plate into the metal scrap heap. Soon after that, in many cases, the tardy dues arrive, perhaps four or five months late. Then we have to shift the record card back to the original position, write it on the MESSENGER mailing list, notify the printer, and pay for the new address plate. In most cases the tardy member has, by that time, missed two or three copies of the MESSENGER because he was not entitled to them. But having now paid up, he is entitled to them, and we have the additional work of writing wrappers and mailing the magazines. Had he paid his $3 on time to his Secretary, all this work and expense would have been avoided.[1]

IN the late 1920s, the magazine was printed in Mt. Morris, Illinois, at Kables Brothers Printing. It was a mammoth print shop that specialized in magazines, newspapers, and catalogs. Mrs. Weaver, representing the "fraternal magazine department," visited the Society headquarters in July, 1929, and reported that several Kables employees planned to attend the public lectures of the Third World Congress.[2]

Notes

  1. "Training School Extension" The American Theosophist 17.12 (December 1929), 271.
  2. "Headquarters Notes" The Theosophical Messenger 17.8 (August, 1929), 170.