FIGHT AGAINSTTREE PARASITEchroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn86072041/1909-05... · waterbug...

1
WORLD'S BIGGEST PRINT SHOP UNCLE SAM, PUBLISHER, TURNS OUT MILLIONS OF WORKS FOR DISTRIBUTION AMONG PEOPLE ?WASTE PAPER IS VALUABLE The recent fight in congress as to whether the census reports should be printed at the government printing office or by private contract, to- gether with the preparations now be- ing made at the former place for printing the millions of blanks which will be required in the great decen- nial stocktaking of the nation, serve to remind the public that Uncle Sam is a great publisher. Not only is he a great publisher, but he is by far the greatest publish- er in the world. He starts out with a printing and binding account of more than $6,000,000. Then he has such a vast corps of authors that his manuscripts are con- servatively estimated to cost him $14,000,000 more. Uncle Sam, pub- lisher, spends perhaps $20,000,000 a year. Carloads to Farmers. Does he turn out many books as a result of his activities? If printing from 500 to 1000 different kinds of books every year is not a publishing record, what it? And then comes thf> number of each. The Yearbook of the department of agriculture starts the list with half a million copies a year. Each book weighs about three pounds. One and a half million pounds, 750 tons, 25 carloads ?that is what Uncle Sam gives to his farmer friends as a starter. As the birthplace of the millions of public documents, the number of pieces turned out annually is so great that even the much-discussed audit system, kicked out uncermoniously by President Roosevelt, lost track of the count. In 1907, however, there were 55,000,000 pieces turned out, 555,- --000 pages of type to set. Wast«> Paper Brings $31,000 The waste paper sold last year brought $31,000, and waste paper at the government printing office is re- duced to the least possible minimum. Perhaps the $20 gold piece you gave away last Christmas came from the government printing office as a part of its $4555 worth of waste gold leaf it sold to the mint last year. Even the leather scraps from the bookbinding department in a year are sold for more than $5000. It takes about $14,000 worth of printers* ink, some 35,000 pounds of it in all, to do the printing. Enough gold leaf is used to pay for a fine farm, and thread that costs as much as a good six-room city home is required for sewing purposes. Even money spent on the fly and waterbug exterminator is as much as Coffee Just Coffee, but perfect Coffee. Your grocer will grind it? better if ground at borne?not too fine. 5 would be needed to buy an ordinary four-passenger touring car. Paper Cost Millions. The paper used in Uncle Sam's big publishing business costs more than $1,000,000 a year, $900,000 of this being used at the government print- ing office proper. A quarter million dollars' worth of stock is always kept on hand. The building and equipment where all these things are done on such a huge scale is commensurate with the great work carried on. It is Uncle Sam's boast that he has the finest printing office in the world, and he can reel off figures by the yard to show that he is ready to make good against all comers. He points out that in his new seven-story building he has nine acres of floor space and six acres more in the old building. He tells you that the new building cost $2,500,000 and that the machinery put into it cost $3,500,000. He values his whole plant at $16,000,000 and tells you that he has a pay roll of $14,000 a day. 79 Linotypes in Room. One room in the print shop has 79 linotype machines in it. the largest number in one office in the world. In another place are the melting pots, holding 15 tons of metal at a time. In another room he shows presses whose combined output is more than 1,000,000 impressions every eight- hour day. There are 87 presses and there is not a pully or a belt in sight. Each machine is operated by its own individual motor, which is placed out of sight. They eat up paper at the rate of 40 tons a day and ink at the rate of 350 pounds every eight hours. The card presses turns out 500,000 cards printed on both sides every day. Printer Has Elegant Office. i The job office is the biggest place j jof its kind in the world. It turns out more job work every day in the yeai j than the average plant turns out in j a week. Leaving this place the visitor lie told that the office of the public printed, located on the same floor, isj I the most elegantly furnished office the government has. And any one who has had the opportunity to com- ipare the public printer's office with ithat of President Taft's might think | that Mr. Taft's was a backwoods law | office in comparison. Uncle Sam, publisher, has finished some big jobs, but that monumental, if not highly useful work, the Rebel- lion Records, with its 128 volumes and a 1200-page index, will perhaps I remain for generations to come the greatest single undertaking in the printing line. Think of it! Over, 100,000 pages of history dealing with one five-year period! It required up- wards of 80,000 reams of white paper and more than 3.000.000,000 ems of type to publish this great work. The whole edition comprised about 1,500,- --000 volumes. History Is Finest Work. It is said that the finest piece of work Uncle Sam ever executed was the History of the Capitol. That it is a fine book may be inferred from the; statement that although nothing is charged for in its sale but the bare cost after the plates were made, it sells for $10 a volume. A great many valuable works come from the presses of Uncle Sam's big printery, btu there is such an abund- ance of chaff with the wheat that even the libraries designated as de- positories were surfeited with gov- ernment documents. Perhaps the greatest need that Un- cle Sam as a published has is a corps of trained editors, who are masters of the art of blue penciling. An exam- ination of the average public docu- ment reveals the fact that half of its contents might have been cut out without the loss of a single essential fact, and with the gain of an inesti- mable degree of interest and service- ableness. Advertising Pays U. S. Xot the least uninteresting part of Uncle Sam's big publishing business is thp work of the superintendent of documents. To be able to sell that which can be had for nothing is an unusual accomplishment. But the present incumbent has been able to do that very thing and to no incon- siderable extent. His success has hinged on the doctrine that advertis- ing pays. That there are documents by the tens of thousands lying in the storage rooms of the government, which are invaluable if placed in proper hands, is a well known fact. But the public has been unconscious of their ex- istence and of how to get them. To inform them of the existence of these documents and of how to get them he secured from congress a negligible appropriation for adver- tising purposes. He issued a few magazines and newspaper advertis- ing statements, and then got out an attractive poster, which the postoffice department authorized him to have hung in every postoffice. In this he explained fully the scope of public documents, their value when intelli- Miller Stetson Mallory Cravenette Hats gently selected, etc., and gave des- criptions of several hundred of the most valuable and useful ones. Books SeU for $50,000. The result was that Uncle Sam bookseller, was able to do $50,000 worth of business last year, in di- rect competition with Uncle Sam, gratuitous distributor of books. And the sale are still increasing. Nearly all of these sales were of the cheaper publications, those rela- ting to subjects of interest to the farmer being in greatest demand. The majority of the business comes from the rural districts. | To the average man the most use- ful work done under the superinten- dent of documents is that of indexing all publications issued by the gov- ernment. The superintendent says that what is needed to unseal the veritable treasures which are buried in public documents is a complete distionary catalogue, but that this is not now possible at any price, ow- ing to the lack of men trained to do it. Six Years for Indexing. A former incumbent of the office estimated that he could, in six years, prepare such a catalogue of docu- ments, and a topical index to the de- bates in congress from the beginning of the government down to 1905, at a total cost of $166,000. The pres- ent superintendent frankly says that it can not be done in six years, neither can it be done at an autlay of $166,000. He would probably want 10 years and more than $300,- --000. The indexes that have been pre- pared in the past have been decidedly amateurish. One index is called a "Bird's Eye Index to the Torry Bank- rupt Bill," yet it is only a single page table of contents, no better and no worse than hundreds of indexes of one kind and another that congress has bought at big prices. Harmony in Print Shop, Things are going better in Uncle Sam's publishing business today than in olden days. The gold braid and brass button spirit that permeated everything then is entirely done away with now, and one feels he is among ordinary, everyday mortals once more when he has business theje. Haskin.) Nowhere else in Washington is there such a splendid example ef how the policy, of those higher up will reflect down to the lowest em- THE WENATCHEE DAILY WORLD, WENATCHEE, WASHINGTON, MONDAY, MAY 17, 1909. ploye. The men who wore the gold braid are still there, but the spirit they were then called upon to reflect is entirely gone, and Uncle Sam's printing business will perhaps run as smoothly hereafter as any other branch of the government. Of course the people who lost their jobs by the advent of printing machinery will still have their grievances, and will frequently air them, but otherwise all will go along as smoothly as if it were pennies instead of dollars that are being spent. (Copyrighted. 1909, by Frederic J. FIGHT AGAINST TREE PARASITE WHOLE FORESTS DEVASTATED BY DISEASE ? GOVERNMENT LENDS AID AND MANY NEW r REMEDIES ARE TRIED. New York, May 17.?A strange dis- ease has broken out among the trees of the east. Whole forests have been devastated. More than 20,000 trees in Forest park, Brooklyn, alone, have been destroyed since the open- ing of spring by a peculiar parasite. Of these, 16,000 were chestnut trees. The Brooklyn park commission is using thousands of gallons of a germ- icide in the hope of pjreventing the spread of the disease. The attention of the agricultural department at Washington was called to the parasite last year when it had gained only a slight foothold. The department assigned a number of ex- perts to the matter and they discov- ered that the parasite had been im- ported, probably from France, and that in young trees and shrubs it had been disseminated throughout a large portion of the United States. Many, thousands of dollars was spent by the department in caution- ing foresters, farmers and others throughout the east, the middle west, the south and in advising remedies to be employed. So far New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania have been the princi- AUTING clothes ought to be made just as care- V fully as "inning" clothes; the point we make in regard to our Hart Schaffner & Marx clothes is that you can wear them anywhere and look as you ought to look in them. Even the thin Summer stuff is just as certainly all-wool as the heavier goods; you'll find thin, all-wool goods the coolest clothes you can wear. In thin stuff especially the fine tailoring, and the perfecft designing in these goods count for more than usual. Thin stuff, if not properly made up, doesn't keep shape; soon looks stringy. None of that with our goods- Two-piece suits $18 to $25 This store is the home of Hart Schaffner & Marx clothes New of Douglas and Florsheim Shoes We have one of the finest buys in Wenatchee for 30 days: 14- --acres at $14,000; 7 acres bearing Winesaps and Spitzenbergs 10 years old, in fine condition; 5 acres alfalfa. House for rent, furnished. Also house and furniture for sale. City property to exchange for acreage. NEELY & COMPANY Across from Neubauer's, corner First St. and Wenatchee Avenue. pal sufferers, but reports from Indi- ana, Illinois and the transmississippi and the southwestern states indicate that the plague is in its incipiency there'and that heroic measures must be employed to save the trees." WaterviUe Wheat Looking Fine. Waterville, Wash., May 15.?The warm weather of the last few days is starting the wheat throughout the Waterville country and a good stand is everywhere reported. Although there has been no rain since the snow left, the crops are not suffering. The cool winds have tended to preserve rather than dry up the moisture. The discouragement that here three weeks ago, when practic- ally all the winter wheat had to be~ resown, owing to the heavy frosts and* light snows of the winter, has dis- appeared.

Transcript of FIGHT AGAINSTTREE PARASITEchroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn86072041/1909-05... · waterbug...

Page 1: FIGHT AGAINSTTREE PARASITEchroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn86072041/1909-05... · waterbug exterminator is as much as Coffee Just Coffee, but perfect Coffee. Your grocer willgrind

WORLD'S BIGGESTPRINT SHOP

UNCLE SAM, PUBLISHER, TURNS

OUT MILLIONS OF WORKS FOR

DISTRIBUTION AMONG PEOPLE

?WASTE PAPER IS VALUABLE

The recent fight in congress as to

whether the census reports should be

printed at the government printing

office or by private contract, to-

gether with the preparations now be-

ing made at the former place for

printing the millions of blanks which

will be required in the great decen-

nial stocktaking of the nation, serveto remind the public that Uncle Sam

is a great publisher.

Not only is he a great publisher,

but he is by far the greatest publish-er in the world. He starts out with

a printing and binding account of

more than $6,000,000.

Then he has such a vast corps of

authors that his manuscripts are con-servatively estimated to cost him

$14,000,000 more. Uncle Sam, pub-

lisher, spends perhaps $20,000,000 ayear.

Carloads to Farmers.

Does he turn out many books as a

result of his activities? If printingfrom 500 to 1000 different kinds ofbooks every year is not a publishingrecord, what it? And then comes thf>

number of each.The Yearbook of the department of

agriculture starts the list with halfa million copies a year. Each book

weighs about three pounds. One anda half million pounds, 750 tons, 25

carloads ?that is what Uncle Sam

gives to his farmer friends as astarter.

As the birthplace of the millions of

public documents, the number of

pieces turned out annually is so great

that even the much-discussed audit

system, kicked out uncermoniously by

President Roosevelt, lost track of the

count. In 1907, however, there were55,000,000 pieces turned out, 555,-

--000 pages of type to set.

Wast«> Paper Brings $31,000

The waste paper sold last year

brought $31,000, and waste paper atthe government printing office is re-duced to the least possible minimum.

Perhaps the $20 gold piece you gave

away last Christmas came from thegovernment printing office as a part

of its $4555 worth of waste gold leafit sold to the mint last year.

Even the leather scraps from thebookbinding department in a year aresold for more than $5000. It takes

about $14,000 worth of printers* ink,

some 35,000 pounds of it in all, to do

the printing.Enough gold leaf is used to pay for

a fine farm, and thread that costs

as much as a good six-room city home

is required for sewing purposes.

Even money spent on the fly andwaterbug exterminator is as much as

CoffeeJust Coffee, but perfect

Coffee.Your grocer will grind it?

better if ground at borne?nottoo fine.

5

would be needed to buy an ordinaryfour-passenger touring car.

Paper Cost Millions.The paper used in Uncle Sam's big

publishing business costs more than$1,000,000 a year, $900,000 of thisbeing used at the government print-ing office proper. A quarter milliondollars' worth of stock is always kept

on hand.The building and equipment where

all these things are done on sucha huge scale is commensurate withthe great work carried on. It is UncleSam's boast that he has the finestprinting office in the world, and hecan reel off figures by the yard toshow that he is ready to make good

against all comers.He points out that in his new

seven-story building he has nine acresof floor space and six acres more inthe old building. He tells you thatthe new building cost $2,500,000 andthat the machinery put into it cost$3,500,000. He values his wholeplant at $16,000,000 and tells you

that he has a pay roll of $14,000 aday.

79 Linotypes in Room.

One room in the print shop has 79linotype machines in it. the largest

number in one office in the world.In another place are the melting pots,

holding 15 tons of metal at a time.In another room he shows presses

whose combined output is more than1,000,000 impressions every eight-

hour day. There are 87 presses andthere is not a pully or a belt in sight.Each machine is operated by its ownindividual motor, which is placed outof sight. They eat up paper at therate of 40 tons a day and ink at the

rate of 350 pounds every eight hours.The card presses turns out 500,000cards printed on both sides every day.

Printer Has Elegant Office.

i The job office is the biggest place jjof its kind in the world. It turns out

more job work every day in the yeai jthan the average plant turns out in ja week. Leaving this place the visitor

lie told that the office of the publicprinted, located on the same floor, isj

I the most elegantly furnished officethe government has. And any onewho has had the opportunity to com-

ipare the public printer's office with

ithat of President Taft's might think

| that Mr. Taft's was a backwoods law| office in comparison.

Uncle Sam, publisher, has finished

some big jobs, but that monumental,

if not highly useful work, the Rebel-lion Records, with its 128 volumesand a 1200-page index, will perhaps

Iremain for generations to come the

greatest single undertaking in theprinting line. Think of it! Over,100,000 pages of history dealing with

one five-year period! Itrequired up-

wards of 80,000 reams of white paper

and more than 3.000.000,000 ems of

type to publish this great work. The

whole edition comprised about 1,500,---000 volumes.

History Is Finest Work.

It is said that the finest piece of

work Uncle Sam ever executed wasthe History of the Capitol. That it is

a fine book may be inferred from the;statement that although nothing ischarged for in its sale but the barecost after the plates were made, it

sells for $10 a volume.A great many valuable works come

from the presses of Uncle Sam's big

printery, btu there is such an abund-ance of chaff with the wheat thateven the libraries designated as de-positories were surfeited with gov-

ernment documents.Perhaps the greatest need that Un-

cle Sam as a published has is a corps

of trained editors, who are masters ofthe art of blue penciling. An exam-ination of the average public docu-

ment reveals the fact that half of itscontents might have been cut outwithout the loss of a single essentialfact, and with the gain of an inesti-

mable degree of interest and service-ableness.

Advertising Pays U. S.

Xot the least uninteresting part ofUncle Sam's big publishing business isthp work of the superintendent of

documents. To be able to sell thatwhich can be had for nothing is anunusual accomplishment. But thepresent incumbent has been able to

do that very thing and to no incon-

siderable extent. His success hashinged on the doctrine that advertis-

ing pays.That there are documents by the

tens of thousands lying in the storage

rooms of the government, which areinvaluable if placed in proper hands,

is a well known fact. But the public

has been unconscious of their ex-istence and of how to get them.

To inform them of the existence

of these documents and of how toget them he secured from congress

a negligible appropriation for adver-tising purposes. He issued a fewmagazines and newspaper advertis-ing statements, and then got out anattractive poster, which the postoffice

department authorized him to havehung in every postoffice. In this heexplained fully the scope of publicdocuments, their value when intelli-

MillerStetsonMallory

CravenetteHats

gently selected, etc., and gave des-criptions of several hundred of themost valuable and useful ones.

Books SeU for $50,000.

The result was that Uncle Sambookseller, was able to do $50,000worth of business last year, in di-rect competition with Uncle Sam,gratuitous distributor of books. Andthe sale are still increasing.

Nearly all of these sales were ofthe cheaper publications, those rela-ting to subjects of interest to thefarmer being in greatest demand.The majority of the business comesfrom the rural districts.| To the average man the most use-ful work done under the superinten-dent of documents is that of indexingall publications issued by the gov-ernment. The superintendent saysthat what is needed to unseal theveritable treasures which are buriedin public documents is a completedistionary catalogue, but that thisis not now possible at any price, ow-ing to the lack of men trained to doit.

Six Years for Indexing.A former incumbent of the office

estimated that he could, in six years,prepare such a catalogue of docu-ments, and a topical index to the de-bates in congress from the beginningof the government down to 1905, ata total cost of $166,000. The pres-ent superintendent frankly says thatit can not be done in six years,neither can it be done at an autlay

of $166,000. He would probablywant 10 years and more than $300,---000.

The indexes that have been pre-pared in the past have been decidedly

amateurish. One index is called a"Bird's Eye Index to the Torry Bank-rupt Bill," yet it is only a singlepage table of contents, no better andno worse than hundreds of indexes ofone kind and another that congresshas bought at big prices.

Harmony in Print Shop,Things are going better in Uncle

Sam's publishing business today thanin olden days. The gold braid andbrass button spirit that permeatedeverything then is entirely done awaywith now, and one feels he is amongordinary, everyday mortals once morewhen he has business theje.

Haskin.)

Nowhere else in Washington isthere such a splendid example efhow the policy, of those higher upwill reflect down to the lowest em-

THE WENATCHEE DAILY WORLD, WENATCHEE, WASHINGTON, MONDAY, MAY 17, 1909.

ploye. The men who wore the goldbraid are still there, but the spirit

they were then called upon to reflectis entirely gone, and Uncle Sam'sprinting business will perhaps run assmoothly hereafter as any otherbranch of the government. Of coursethe people who lost their jobs by theadvent of printing machinery willstill have their grievances, and willfrequently air them, but otherwiseall will go along as smoothly as if itwere pennies instead of dollars thatare being spent.(Copyrighted. 1909, by Frederic J.

FIGHT AGAINSTTREEPARASITE

WHOLE FORESTS DEVASTATED

BY DISEASE ? GOVERNMENT

LENDS AID AND MANY NEWr

REMEDIES ARE TRIED.

New York, May 17.?A strange dis-

ease has broken out among the trees

of the east. Whole forests have been

devastated. More than 20,000 trees

in Forest park, Brooklyn, alone,

have been destroyed since the open-ing of spring by a peculiar parasite.

Of these, 16,000 were chestnut trees.The Brooklyn park commission is

using thousands of gallons of a germ-icide in the hope of pjreventing the

spread of the disease.The attention of the agricultural

department at Washington was calledto the parasite last year when it hadgained only a slight foothold. Thedepartment assigned a number of ex-perts to the matter and they discov-

ered that the parasite had been im-ported, probably from France, and

that in young trees and shrubs it hadbeen disseminated throughout a largeportion of the United States.

Many, thousands of dollars wasspent by the department in caution-

ing foresters, farmers and othersthroughout the east, the middle west,the south and in advising remedies tobe employed.

So far New York, New Jersey andPennsylvania have been the princi-

AUTING clothes ought to be made just as care-V fully as "inning" clothes; the point we make in

regard to our

Hart Schaffner & Marxclothes is that you canwear them anywhereand look as you oughtto look in them. Eventhe thin Summer stuff isjust as certainly all-woolas the heavier goods;you'll find thin, all-woolgoods the coolest clothesyou can wear.

In thin stuff especially thefine tailoring, and the perfecftdesigning in these goods countfor more than usual. Thinstuff, if not properly made up,doesn't keep shape; soon looksstringy. None of that withour goods-

Two-piece suits $18 to $25

This store is the home ofHart Schaffner & Marx clothes

New ofDouglas

andFlorsheim

Shoes

We have one of the finest buys in Wenatchee for 30 days: 14---acres at $14,000; 7 acres bearing Winesaps and Spitzenbergs 10years old, in fine condition; 5 acres alfalfa.

House for rent, furnished. Also house and furniture for sale.City property to exchange for acreage.

NEELY & COMPANYAcross from Neubauer's, corner First St. and Wenatchee Avenue.

pal sufferers, but reports from Indi-ana, Illinois and the transmississippiand the southwestern states indicate

that the plague is in its incipiencythere'and that heroic measures mustbe employed to save the trees."

WaterviUe Wheat Looking Fine.

Waterville, Wash., May 15.?The

warm weather of the last few daysis starting the wheat throughout theWaterville country and a good stand

is everywhere reported. Althoughthere has been no rain since the snowleft, the crops are not suffering. The

cool winds have tended to preserve

rather than dry up the moisture.

The discouragement thathere three weeks ago, when practic-

ally all the winter wheat had to be~resown, owing to the heavy frosts and*light snows of the winter, has dis-appeared.