At the time that he proposed his card system, booksellers had only the bi-monthly publication of the
trade association newsletter to provide a list of books available from Italian publishers. At the meeting of the Associazione libraria italiana on September 18, 1871, cav. Giuseppe Pomba proposed the development of a "book emporium" to improve distribution and service at many different levels of the book trade. Natale Battezzati, association member and owner of a publishing house in Milan, used this opportunity to make some proposals: a series of warehouses and middlemen in the major cities; a unified publicity system; and "… the adoption of a card system which would serve as the announcement of new publications, as a
mail order form, and a cumulative supplement to the publishers' catalogs, and which can be ordered by subject and alphabetically…". The cards would be used to create a complete catalog of available books by author and by subject in each bookstore, linked by its number to the national bibliography, "Bibliografia Italiana". Booksellers would be able to answer requests from customers without the need to leaf through the lists in the separate issues of the
Bibliografia. Each publisher would print cards representing their books and journals. The cards themselves would be reprints of the title page of the publication on heavy paper. The publisher's name would be printed on the left side of the card; the author across the top; and the subject of the work, using a modified form of the classification system developed by
Jacques Charles Brunet, along the right-hand edge. Since most title pages carried a fair amount of white space, there remained room for additional information such as a table of contents or a summary of the work. Battezzati presented his card system proposal at a meeting of Italian booksellers in Naples in 1871 and again at the 1873
Vienna World's Fair. In a pamphlet on the Milan Exposition of 1881, Battezzati included a list of nearly one hundred Italian publishers using his card system. However, after Battezzati's death in 1882, the card system receives no further mention and perhaps, having lost its main proponent, fell from use. ==Battezzati and Dewey==