High-resolution, full color images available online
Search, browse, read, and print yearbook pages
View college, high school, and military yearbooks
Browse our digital annual library spanning centuries
Support the schools in our program by subscribing
Privacy, as we do not track users or sell information
Page 27 text:
“
This is wound into rolls or cut into sheets as desired. Everywhere we turn we find paper. Our magazines, newspapers and books are made of paper. We wrap our bundles in paper. We use paper tablets or writing paper for writing. Paper labels are universally used. Cans, boxes, pails and other containers are made of paper. The walls of our houses are decorated with wall paper and the roof covered with paper shingles. The sandwiches which we carry to school or to picnics are wrapped in waxed paper to keep them moist and fresh. The uses to which we put paper have been so multiplied that it would be difficult to think of life todav without paper. Paper is the means by which knowledge is spread. Modern science and invention owe their existence largely to the abundant supply of paper. Without cheap and abundant paper to convey our thoughts and desires we would not have the free democratic form of government which makes the United States the most desirable place to live in today. Gutenburg's Home And Surroundings By Yachtman Sue IN the fourteenth century Germany was not a nation, but a number of small states, such as Bavaria. Baden. Macklenberg, Hanover. Each state had a separate ruler. These were petty states, varying in population from less than a thousand people to more than ten thousand and they were ruled by dukes and counts. These states were independent of one another and each ruler had his own little court and courtiers. The ruler was an absolute dictator and collected taxes from his subjects, charged a tariff duty upon all goods crossing his boundaries, and had his standing army—in the small states consisting of only one or two officers anti a handful of privates. Often one monarch quarreled with another about taxes, or something else, and then a war was declared, the two fighting with great vigor. Sometimes many states joined the fray. In every small town there were a few stores and houses far apart from each other and a few trees around every home. The roads were of dirt, but some of them were of cobblestones, and it was only natural that people were easily riled when bothered by the awful noise of cart wheels passing over them. Also near the city there were small farms where people lived, and they had a little livestock of their own. At that time there were no fences and many people had to go to the fields to cut down the grass with their sickles for their livestock. The people had a hard time to manage their stock. Each farm had orchards which raised apples, plums, and so forth. 25
”
Page 26 text:
“
that the invention of the printing press would have been postponed for years if paper had not been available. In very early times people used stone walls, monuments, bones of animals, the smooth bark of trees, pieces of broken pottery, palm leaves, dried animal skins and soft clay as material on which to write. Papyrus was used by the Egyptians who wrote on it with pens of sharpened sticks or reeds and ink mixed from vegetable gum. soot, and water. Papyrus was made by laying thin slices of the stem of the papyrus plant with their edges overlapping across other slices laid at right angles. The whole was moistened with water, pressed down, and the rough places smoothed off with ivory or a smooth shell. The slices were glued together to form a tough white or ivory-colored sheet. Before real paper was invented, the waste left over from the making of silk thread could be washed and flattened into a kind of paste which, when dried and smoothed, was used for a writing surface. After years and years of experiments and improvements, using rags, wood pulp and minerals, smooth sheets of fine paper were made. Until the nineteenth century cotton and linen rags were the materials mostly used to make paper. They were cleaned, soaked, boiled, and reduced to a pulp by beating and grinding. The pulp was spread in thin layers and dried between sheets of felt to form paper. About the beginning of the nineteenth century the modern process of paper-making by machinery was invented. By far the greater part of the world’s output is now made from wood pulp. Linen and cotton rags, Hax waste and sweepings are still used for fine paper. The best tissue papers are made of hemp and rags. Wrapping papers are made of all kinds of fibers, straw, wood pulp, old rope and twine. Newsprint paper in countries where wood is plentiful, is made from wood pulps, rags, straw, etc. Most book papers are now made of wood pulp. While wood pulp remains the cheapest and most readily available material up to the present, probably necessity will drive us to the utilization of other plant fibers in its place. It takes more than five million cords of pulpwood each year to supply the paper needs of our country. In Northern and Central Wisconsin there are many paper-making plants where logs, cut into short lengths, are barked and trimmed. Then they are sliced up into small chips which are put into a huge tank along with a sulphite solution which softens them. Steam is forced in. When the chips have cooked for several hours in the solution, the fibers are separated, and a pulp is formed. After the thick creamy mass has been washed and filtered through screens, it is drawn into large tanks where a solution of bleaching powder makes the pulp white. China clay and coloring matter is added, and all is thoroughly mixed by machinery. The pulp is then spread on an endless copper screen so fine that the water drains off while the fibers remain. The pulp is then passed between rollers which force out any excess moisture, and paper is the result. 24
”
Page 28 text:
“
In the forests around the town there were many trees, mostly firs, and the people gathered the cones which fell from them to use for fuel. Also they got some wood for winter fuel. The people had entertainments for their friends and relatives. They had plenty of food and wine. They were entertaind by music, played by harpists or violinists. They certainly enjoyed these entertainments because they spent so much of their time at home. Sometimes such dinners lasted three or four hours. Coffee was served at four o'clock and supper between seven and nine. The latter was the pleasantest meal of the day, being usually a reunion of the family. It was a lunch of bread and butter, meats, cheese, sardines, hard-boiled eggs, with tea, beer or wine— sometimes with all of them. Potatoes were stored in the cellars and vegetables such as cabbages, turnips, carrots and onions were buried in layers of mold. The other vegetables, such as French beans, peas, etc. were preserved in tins for winter use. Women and girls had to stay at home where they could spin or weave while the men and boys did their work in their gardens or fields or went hunting animals for meat. The people had their own hand-made clothing and their shoes were made of skin from the animals they hunted. Before the time of Martin Luther, who was born in 1183, everyone was Catholic and they had to go to church. Martin Luther was apposed to that religion. So he changed his religion and many people followed him. There were no schools for the children during those times and they were taught at home. The people traveled by boats or on horseback. During the fifteenth century there were no shows such as we have now, but there were minstrels who traveled everywhere giving entertainments. Many of these minstrels had lost favor at the courts and they had to wander around the country to earn their own living. 26
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.