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Dean Seeman
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  • LEFT PAGE [left column] SEPTEMBER 2, 1906 --- Uses of Clippings --- New York Sun. Ninety newspapers a day is the task of the girls who read for one of the oldest clipping press bureaus in New York and they read every item in each paper, including the advertising. Moreover, as they read they carry the names, wants and wishes of 3,000 sub- scribers in their minds and underscore the salient word in every item which should go to a customer. This bureau has certain rules in hir- ing its readers. It takes no elderly person, no person who says she is fond of reading or has made scrapbooks all her life, and no school teacher. It wants no literary tastes at its read- ing desks, and not too much educa- tion. It wants persons who will read me- chanically, with lightning speed and with no interest in what they read aside from the word they are looking for. After trying all sorts of people the type found most satisfactory is the girl who has left school at 14 to go to work in a factory or dry goods store. In either of those places she would get from $3 to $8 a week. In the clipping bureau she may run her wages up to $20 a week, as the star reader of this bureau has done, and average $12 or $15 a week as most of them do. All of them work by the piece, re- ceiving so much for every clipping marked. Sometimes they are a little too mechanical, as when the patron who subscribes for everything con- cerning banks, but it is better to have them that way than to have them getting interested in what they read and lingering over their work. Eight hundred dailies a day are read in this office, and in addition every publication, weekly and monthly, in the United States which has a circula- tion of 5,000 making 5,000 in all. The amount of surface information which these girls get to carry around in their heads concerning the matters in which the 3,000 subscribers are interested is remarkable. The strangest and most unexpected scraps of knowledge will crop up among curley headed fifteen- year-olds whom one would not accuse of an idea beyond chocoalte and peek- aboo waists. These girls read all sorts of queer things. There is a badge and button house capitalized at $1,000,000 which has built its business in the last 12 years on the clippings furnished it by these girls. It takes everything re- lating to the organization of societies or their parades, processions, meetings. It gets 1000 items a day and its bill is $400 a week. Its literature goes to the address provided in these clip- pings, and its publicity scheme has proved good. A house that makes church bells takes everything relating to new churches, appropriations for new bells, etc. Another firm has for years taken everything relating to scales. A com- pany insuring against burglars, which took everything relating to bank rob- beries for twelve years, recently can- celled its order, as it found that there was no profit in this branch. Society news in the papers is care- fully scanned. Notices of engagements are clipped for jewelers, florists, sta- tioners, furniture dealers and hun- dreds of other merchants. The most profitable branch of the business is the commercial, but the largest num- ber of customers is made up of those who subscribe for personal mention. Personal vanity plays little part in this however. It is dictated mostly by commercial reasons. On this list are playwrights, actors, prize fighters, politicians, authors and all sorts of men in public life. Some of them are anxious for newspaper mention and some are anxious for its absence. The income from this source is ex- tremely irregular. It has happened that a man would not have an item for months and then suddenly in one month his bill at the clipping bureau [middle column] has leaped from nothing to $1,000. This sudden bull movement may be a source of pleasure or quite the oppo- site to the subject--one can never tell. Sometimes authors subscribe for clippings on subjects which they in- tend to write upon. One author has for two or three years been collecting all clippings which describe the hero- ism of girls, as shown in reports of fires, accidents and the like. Then there are the obviously crank collec- tors. One man has for years collected everything printed on vegetarianism. His bill this summer has been pretty heavy. Another man pays for all items relating to any rascality dis- covered among spiritualists, or among priests and ministers of the gospel. Periodically he publishes a deadly parallel in a spiritualist paper, ob- viously to the discredit of the church people, as there are many more of them of his own cult. Another man has collected for years everything published on Lincoln, and another everything published against vaccination. The American Medical Association collects statistics relating to injury and loss of life at Fourth of July cele- brations. The principal of a school in New England buys all items concern- ing persons who have made donations to schools or academies in New Eng- land with the obvious purpose of af- fording them an opportunity to ex- tend their benevolence. Interesting comparisons are supplied by the clipping bureau regarding the articles printed in the newspapers about the deaths of prominent men. No other man in American ever had so much printed about his death in the newspapers asn McKinley. Carl Schurz has received thus far 12,000 obituary notices, more than any other man since McCkinley. John Hay and Joseph Jefferson had 10,000 each, and Mark Hanna 8,000. The most expensive thing to buy in a clipping bureau is a "back search," a search for the notices of a past event. For that a charge of 10 cents for every paper read is made, whether anything is found or not. The bill may easily run into thousands of dol- lars and it is never entirely satisfac- tory, as many papers are inevitably lost. A month after the San Francisco catastrophe the Southern Pacific road decided that it wanted everything that had been published on the subject, and turned in an order to that effect to a New York bureau. The bureau has just forwarded a dry goods box containing 15,000 clippings. One of the most curious back searches ever ordered was started by Harmsworth, the London newspaper owner. He began his career with a little periodical called Answers. He placed an order with a clipping bureau for all original jokes and funny stories published in American papers. He was getting a pretty heavy service, nturally, when one day a letter arrived from him to the following effect: "Last December you furnished us with the following joke: "'Einstein's place has burned down. "Too much inflammable material? "No; too much insurance'" "It is necessary to locate the origin of this joke and mail us a copy of the paper immediately." The manager of the bureau cabled to his London agend, asking the cause of Mr. Harmsworth's sudden demand, and received in response the cable- gram: "Local Einstein suing." The manager wrote to every joke- smith he could hear of in the United States and posted the joke in every press club, with an enquiry as to its origin. After a while he got a letter which read: "I know -- cause why? I wrote it myself. How much is it worth to show you its original publication?" For $3 a copy of the periodical originally containing the much sought joke was obtained and despatched to the London publisher. The first clipping bureau in the world was started in Paris in 1879 by a Frenchman named Cheri. There are now forty clipping bureaus in the United States of which ten are in New York. There are clipping bureaus in every language on earth sufficiently advanced to have newspapers. Gen. Joe Wheeler ordered a com- plete newspaper historw of the Spanish war in twelve great volumes. A New York firm presented to every regiment that went out of New York to that war a scrapbook history of the action [right column] of the regiment and the books are now preserved in the various armories. Forty-two books of clippings were made of McKinley's obituaries. One man ordered twelve sets to present to twelve different persons. Relatives and friends of Henry B. Hyde ordered ten sets of his obituary notices, in twelve great volumes, in- cluding items from insurance papers in China, Japan, India and other countries, some of which cost $50 a piece to obtain. Mrs. Collis P. Huntington had under consideration the making of a $10,000 scrapbook of Mr. Huntington's obituary notices when the clippings were destroyed by fire. The first scrapbook to attract public attention was the enormous volume ordered for presentation to Admiral Dewey on his return from the Phillip- ines. Including its table it cost $3, 100 and is the most valueable scrap- book ever made. It is now in the Smithsonian Institute. Under the auspices of the German- American committee on a memorial to Carl Schurz a scrapbook is being pre- pared of that statesman. This will contain letters on the life and char- acter of Mr. Schurz from almost every prominent man of the day, and will be a mine of autographs and personal sentiments for future historians. --- Sunday, September 8, 1907 --- Universal Soldering Fluid A soldering fluid which will not rust or corrode the soldered parts is made by dissolving as much zinc in muri- atic acid as the acid will take up and then adding water, glycerine and al- cohol. To one part glycerine add one part alcohol and one part water; then add two parts of acid with the zinc dissolved. This fluid has been used for all kinds of soldering, says the Street Railway Journal and has been found expecially desirable with greasy or dirty connections as well as for soldering iron. It is claimed that the glycerine prevents all rust, which plays havoc with many soldering fluids which contain muriatic acid. --- To Cure Ingrowing Toe Nails Take a piece of cotton batting or some druggist cotton about half the size of a pea, pull it out into an oblong roll, saturate it with something healing, like salve or vaseline; then raise the point of the nail out of the flesh with something slender like the point of a penknife or the head of a darning needle; it may hurt some at first but persevere; then put the little roll of cotton under the edge of the nail where it is growing down; you will be sur- prised how far back you can push it; then go to bed and forget that sore toe. In a few days or a week the cotton can come out and you wil find your toe now comfortable. --- HOW TO SEAL LETTERS It is often very desirable to know how to seal a letter so that it cannot be opened without betraying the fact. Steam or hot water will open envelopes closed with mucilage and even a wafer. A hot iron or a spirit lamp dissolves sealing-wax, an im- pression in plaster having been taken of the seal. By the combined use of wafer and sealing-wax however, all attempts to open the letter otherwise than by force can be frustrated. All that is necessary is to close the letter first with a small moist wafer and to pierce the latter with a coarse needle (the same applies to mucilage), whereupon sealing-wax may be used in the usual manner. The seal can neither be opened by dry heat nor by moisture.--The Chicago News. --- RIGHT PAGE 331 Meaning of Displacement The meaning is the weight of the vessel with Everything it contains, a floating body displaces an amount of water whose weight is Exactly Equal to the weight of that body. If we could weigh the water that could fill the hole wheich a floating vessel makes in the ocean, we could find that it weight Exactly as the vessel itself. Febry [February] 17, 1906 --- Cement for Glue on to Glass or to cement Wood to Glass Take 2 ounces of a thick solution of glue and mix with 1 ounce of Linseed oil varnish, or 3/4 of an ounce of Venice Turpentine. Boil together stirring until well mixed. Clamp the pieces together for 48 hours. --- FEBRUARY 23, 1907 --- DECLARES BIGAMY IS LEGAL Judge Says Man May Have Many Wives Without Violating Law CHICAGO--"Under our present mar- riage laws a man may have a wife in each of half a dozen states and yet violate no law of the land and be absolutely im- mune from punishment," says a Cleve- land dispatch to the Chronicle. This was the startling declaration made by Judge Robert Tayler, of the federal court, in an address before the Men's League of Eells Memorial church on the need of federal supervision of marriage and divorce. "A man may be a husband in one state and not a husband in another. It de- pends wholly on the laws of the individual states," he said. "To show that whoat I say is not theory let me cite the case of a man who has had three wives and has broken no laws. He was married first in New York. Tiring of his wife, he went into Pennsylvania, secured a divorce under the laws of that state and married again. New York however, does not recognize the Pennsylvania divorce and he was still hiusand [husband] of wife No. 1. "Later he went to California, secured a California divorce from wife No. 2, but he was still no less the husband of the women in New York and Pennsylvania when he was in those states. He died and three widows--not ex-wives, but widows--took dower from his estate. So long as he did not take one wife into the state where another resided he had lived within the law. "It is a shame and a disgrace to our society that this can be. The constitution should be amended to permit congress to legislate on marriage and divorce--to fix some standard for all the states." ---
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