J. Reading J. Reading i(A37770 works by) (Organisation) assertion (a.k.a. James Reading; Jas. Reading &​ Co.)
Born: Established: Inner Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales, ;
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1 y separately published work icon The King's Highway Australie , Sydney : J. Reading , 1872 Z88240 1872 single work poetry
1 1 y separately published work icon The Examiner The Examiner : Political, Literary and Commercial Journal Richard Thompson (editor), 1845 Sydney : Richard Thompson , 1845 Z1879908 1845 newspaper

Continues the Commercial Journal and General Advertiser. A prospectus for the Examiner was issued 5 August 1845 announcing the demise of the Commercial Journal and General Advertiser and the 'intention of raising ... another periodical to be styled the Examiner... Mr Richard Thompson is retained to conduct the Editorial deparment, and Mr. Reading to be printer.'

Source: 'The Press', The Morning Chronicle (6 August 1845): 3.

1 1 y separately published work icon The Teetotaller, and General Newspaper William Cox Currey (editor), 1842 Sydney : J. Reading , 1842-1843 Z1648298 1842 newspaper (27 issues)

The Teetotaller, and General Newspaper was a continuation of the Temperance Advocate and Australasian Commercial and Agricultural Intelligencer and maintained that newspapers emphasis on temperance and teetotalism. The Teetotaller reported colonial news that had a bearing on liquor imports, sales and consumption, including changes in government regulations and licensing arrangements.

The Teetotaller generally carried one poem per issue. These were rarely by Australians. Poetry usually came from British magazine sources or, more often, from American sources. (The American poets were frequently women.) A large majority of the poems dealt with the social evils associated with drunkenness and advocated a teetotal stance. International poets whose work appeared in the Teetotaller include Lydia Sigourney, Robert Montgomery, Thomas Campbell, Henry Francis Lyte and John Pierpont (qq.v.).

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