Wisconsin School for the Deaf - Tattler Yearbook (Delavan, WI)

 - Class of 1941

Page 21 of 56

 

Wisconsin School for the Deaf - Tattler Yearbook (Delavan, WI) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 21 of 56
Page 21 of 56



Wisconsin School for the Deaf - Tattler Yearbook (Delavan, WI) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 20
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Page 21 text:

The original press was made so as to print on only one side of the paper at a time. It was a screw affair with a contrivance for pushing a plate down upon a sheet of paper resting on the top of the form. A great deal of time was required to pull an impression, ink the form by hand with a baren or ink ball, and then pull another impression; repeating this procedure time after time until the required number of impressions was secured. Today we have large rotary presses equipped to print both sides of the sheet at a time. There are also cylinder presses which make up to four thousand five hundred impressions an hour and at the same time ink the form evenly. These presses are fed automatically, which is more accurate and much faster than hand feeding. doing back to a smaller division of the printing industry, we tlnd modern platen presses being used on a large scale. Certain models of these presses are fed automatically, also. Forms for them usually come from the Linotype or Monotype machines, which have revolutionized the setting of type. Formerly, a person would have to spend something like an hour and a half making up a form which can now be set on a Linotype or Monotype in fifteen minutes, although a lot of composition is still done by hand. The Linotype, invented by Ottmar Mergenthaier, is a linecasting machine which composes lines of type, and casts them in one piece. This “line of type” is ready for use when it leaves the machine. This machine is used for all types of letterpress printing. It is one of the “musts” in the modern, well-equipped printing shop. The first use of the Linotype was made by the New York Tribune in 1886, fifty-five years ago. An idea of what one of these machines is worth may be obtained from the fact that ten of the popular automobiles in the lower price field may be bought for the price of one machine. Concerning other phases of the printing industry, there are so many branches connected with it that it is impossible to state them all here. Those mentioned above are some of the principal ones. What the printing industry is worth to the United States is shown by the following statistics: Printing ranks fourth in total value of products, which is more than two and one half billion dollars; and sixth in number of persons employed. There are thirteen thousand periodicals published annually in the United States. The American observance of the five hundredth anniversary of the invention of printing is being co-ordinated by a special comittee of the American Institute of Graphic Arts. Let's make 1941 a memorable year! 9

Page 20 text:

Small books became very stylish all over Europe and many printing offices made imitations of the Adline books. 1 he Elzevirs of Amsterdam in the seventeenth century published a set ot books w hi( h was so small that it could be packed in a traveling case. However, very few people could read the small type which they used. In those early years, England had no especial need of printing. There was a general interest in books among the better class, but these people got their books when they went to Europe on business, diplomacy. and pleasure. English church books were printed at Rouen. In 1470 an English merchant, William Caxton retired from business and went to visit Cologne where he spent a few months watching the workmen at a new printing shop. Returning to England he sent a friend to buy a printing outfit and learn how to use it. They produced the first English book at Bruges in Belgium in 1474. Two years later he returned to London where he and another printer. Wynkyn de Worde, published the first book printed in England. For the next three hundred years, the art of printing went steadily downward, because many people could not read and most of them were too poor to buy books or newspapers. They worked hard and all the money went to their kings and queens. After the revolution in France, the people won their freedom and later they were able to buy reading matter. Many hundreds of orders for books were made so the people could educate themselves and also their children. One of the greatest inventions in the field of printing was the Linotype, a machine invented in 1885 by Ottmar Mergenthaler. Before it was introduced, printers had to set all the type they used by hand, that is, they had to stand before large trays and pick out each letter as they needed it. Today, the Linotype machine can set type ten times more rapidly than it was formerly set by hand. Although printing went steadily downward for three hundred years, it is an important industry which has been active for five hundred years and has on the whole, showed improvement in that time. period of from four hundred fifty to five hundred years. Athough the facilities we have today are quicker and more accurate, the craftmanship of the earlier days was considerably better in the finished product. Modern Methods Of Printing By Robert L. Pagel 18



Page 22 text:

Necessity, the Mother of Gutenburg's Invention By Silas J. Hirte INVENTIONS have always been preceded by a demand, and this is no less true of the invention of movable type for printing than of any other. Surrounded as we are today with printed matter of an excellent type, books, magazines, and newspapers, that give information on any and every subject known, it is quite impossible for us to conceive of the time when it was lacking. But way back in the days of the cave-men, records were kept by drawing and carving figures on stones in the caves. Now many museums in the world have these on exhibition. Even when Egypt was in full glory, ideas were expressed and preserved by pictures drawn with pens made of reeds on a kind of paper produced from bamboo. When Roman citizens, shortly before the time of Julius Caesar, were struggling to save democracy and were faced with great difficulties. aside from word of mouth and hand-written bulletins, there was no way of informing voters of the various problems that should be solved by them. Early in the fifteenth century in Germany, the combination of the industrial and economic conditions created a class of people who were hungering for education and could afford to purchase reading matter in greater quantities than the old-fashioned methods of book making could furnish. Then the artisan and the artist held practically the same rank. Tradesmen were wealthy and very influential in society. Quite generally they craved knowledge along with their daily occupation. Since it was almost impossible for them to get accurate and complete information concerning the world and the great deeds of the past or the plans of the future, it was no easy task to improve their lot in life. In all Europe there were but few books and manuscripts. The books were very large and unwieldy. They were made of many sheets of paper or parchment between fancy carved covers of wood or ivory. Much attention was paid to elaborate drawing and fancy penmanship, while the content was sadly neglected. Those who wanted to read them were obliged to go where the books were, for they were chained to tables. Priests and monks of the Roman Catholic Church spent hours and hours, weeks and weeks, copying religious and classical manuscripts. This was not only a slow process, but a very expensive one. Then from the Chinese, the Europeans learned to cut designs and letters on blocks of wood or other materials and to print them on cloth and parchment. This, while a great improvement over the 20

Suggestions in the Wisconsin School for the Deaf - Tattler Yearbook (Delavan, WI) collection:

Wisconsin School for the Deaf - Tattler Yearbook (Delavan, WI) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 1

1938

Wisconsin School for the Deaf - Tattler Yearbook (Delavan, WI) online collection, 1939 Edition, Page 1

1939

Wisconsin School for the Deaf - Tattler Yearbook (Delavan, WI) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 1

1940

Wisconsin School for the Deaf - Tattler Yearbook (Delavan, WI) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 1

1945

Wisconsin School for the Deaf - Tattler Yearbook (Delavan, WI) online collection, 1946 Edition, Page 1

1946

Wisconsin School for the Deaf - Tattler Yearbook (Delavan, WI) online collection, 1947 Edition, Page 1

1947


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