ABSTRACT

The employer or overseer should frequently look to the concerns of the warehouse, and see that the people employed there, forward the different works with expedition, neatness, and accuracy. When the sheets are taken down, the warehouseman removes them to the warehouse, where they are filled in between smooth paste-boards made for the purpose. The more expensive papers, on which, generally, short numbers or fine copies are printed, must be given out more sparingly than common paper; and the tympan and register sheets be supplied by a more common sort, cut to the size of the finer. The overplus sheets being partly allowed for tympan sheets, register sheets, and other incidents; such as bad sheets, faults committed in rolling pulling, bad register, &c.; in any of these casualties, the pressman doubles the sheet in the middle, and lays it across the heap.