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called Paper Mill run; which empties into the Wissahicken

river; was located the site which in company

with William Bradford; a printer; he chose for

his mill。 The paper was made from linen rags;

mostly the product of flax raised in the vicinity and

made first into wearing apparel。



It was Reaumer; who in 1719 first suggested the

possibility of paper being made from wood。 He

obtained his information on this subject from examination

of wasps' nests。



Matthias Koops in 1800 published a work on

〃Paper〃 made from straw; wood and other substances。

His second edition appeared in 1801 and

was composed of old paper re…made into new。 Another

work on the subject of 〃Paper from Straw; &c。;〃

by Piette; appeared in 1835; which said work contains

more than a hundred pages; each one of which

was made from a different kind of material。



Many other valuable works are obtainable which

treat of rag paper manufacture and the stories they

tell are instructive as well as interesting。







CHAPTER XXXI。



MODERN INK BACKGROUNDS (WOOD PAPER AND 〃SAFETY〃

PAPER)。



SOME GENERAL OBSERVATIONS ABOUT PAPER…MAKING

MATERIALSPROBABILITIES AS TO THE FUTURE OF

THE PUBLIC RECORDSESTIMATION OF SUCH MATTERS

BY THE LATE POPEINVENTION OF WOOD…PULP PAPER

ITS LASTING QUALITIESTHE THREE KINDS OF SUCH

PAPER DEFINEDDISCUSSION OF THE SUBJECT OF

FUNGI IN PAPER BY GLYDESOME TESTS TO ASCERTAIN

THE MATERIAL OF WHICH PAPER IS COMPOSED

TESTS AS TO SIZING AND THE DETERMINATION OF THE

DIRECTION OF THE GRAINABSORBING POWERS OF

BLOTTING PAPERTESTS FOR GROUND WOODNEW

MODE OF ANALYSTSWHEN THE FIRST 〃SAFETY〃

PAPER WAS INVENTEDTHE MANY KINDS OF 〃SAFETY〃

PAPER AND PROCESSES IN THEIR MANUFACTURE

CHRONOLOGICAL REVIEW COVERING THIS SUBJECT

SURVEY OF THE VARIOUS PROCESSES IN THE TREATMENT

AND USE OF 〃SAFETY〃 PAPERONLY THREE

CHEMICAL 〃SAFETY〃 PAPERS NOW ON THE MARKET

WHY IT IS POSSIBLE TO RAISE SOME MONETARY

INSTRUMENTS。



PAPER manufacturers have tried all the pulp…making

substances。 This statement to the unlearned must

seem curious; because in the very early times they

were content with a single material and that did not

even require to be first made into the form of pulp。

When the supply of papyrus failed; it was rags which

they substituted。 By the simplest processes they

produced a paper with which our best cannot compare。

In some countries great care is exercised in

selecting the quality of paper for official use; in others

none at all。



What will be the state of our archives a few hundred

years hence; if they be not continually recopied?



Some of the printed paper rots even more quickly

than written。



The late Pope at one time invited many of the

savants; chemists and librarians of Europe; to meet

at Einsiedlen Abbey in Switzerland。 He requested

that the subject of their discussions should be both

ink and paper。 He volunteered the information;

already known to the initiated; that the records of

this generation in his custody and under his control

were fast disappearing and unless the writing materials

were much improved he estimated that they

would entirely disappear。 It is stated that at this

meeting the Pope's representative submitted a number

of documents from the Vatican archives which

are scarcely decipherable though dated in the nineteenth

century。 In a few of those of dates later than

1873 the paper was so tender that unless handled

with exceptional care; it would break in pieces like

scorched paper。



These conditions are in line with many of those

which prevail with few exceptions in every country;

town or hamlet。



A contributory cause as we know is a class of poor

and cheap inks now in almost universal use。 The

other is the so…called 〃modern〃 or wood…pulp paper

in general vogue。



Reaumur; as already stated; back in 1719 suggested

from information gathered in examinations of wasps'

nests; that a paper might be manufactured from

wood。 This idea does not appear to have been acted

upon until many years later; although in the interim

inventors were exhausting their ingenuity in the

selection of fibrous materials from which paper might

be manufactured。



The successful introduction of wood as a substitute

for or with rags in paper manufacture until about

1870 was of slow growth; since which time vast

quantities have been employed。 In this country

alone millions of tons of raw material are being imported

to say nothing of home products。



Its value in the cause of progress of some arts

which contribute greatly to our comfort and civilization

cannot be overestimated; but nevertheless the

wood paper is bound to disintegrate and decay; and

the time not very far distant either。 Hence; its use

for records of any kind is always to be condemned。



There are three classes of wood pulp; mechanical

wood; soda process; and the sulphite。 The first or

mechanical wood is a German invention of 1844;

where the logs after being cut up into proper blocks;

were then ground against a moving millstone against

which they were pressed and with the aid of flowing

water reduced to a pulpy form。 This pulp was

transported into suitable tanks and then pumped to

the 〃beaters。〃



The soda process wood and sulphite wood pulp are

both made by chemical processes。 The first was

invented by Meliner in 1865。 The preparation of

pulp by this process consists briefly in first cutting up

the logs into suitable sections and throwing them

into a chipping machine。 The chips are then introduced

into tanks containing a strong solution of

caustic soda and boiled under pressure。



The sulphite process is substantially the same except

that the chips are thrown into what are called

digesters and fed with the chemicals which form an

acid sulphite。 The real inventor of this latter process

is not known。



The chemicals employed in both of these processes

compel a separation of the resinous matters from the

cell tissues or cellulose。 These products are then

treated in the manufacturing of paper with few variations;

the same as the ordinary rag pulp。



These now perfected processes are the results of long

and continuing experimentations made by many inventors。



The following paper was read before the London

Society of Arts by Mr。 Alfred Glyde; in May; 1850;

and is equally applicable to some of the wood paper

of the present day:



〃Owing to the imperfections formerly existing

in the microscope; little was known of the real nature

of the plants called fungi until within the last

few years; but since the improvements in that instrument

the subject of the development; growth;

and offices of the fungi has received much attention。

They compose; with the algae and lichens;

the class of thallogens (Lindley); the algae existing

in water; the other two in air only。 A fungus

is a cellular flowerless plant; fructifying solely by

spores; by which it is propagated; and the methods

of attachment of which are singularly various and

beautiful。 The fungi differs from the lichens and

algae in deriving their nourishment from the

substances on which they grow; instead of from the

media in which they live。 They contain a larger

quantity of nitrogen in their constitution than vegetables

generally do; and the substance called 'fungine'

has a near resemblance to animal matter。

Their spores are inconceivably numerous and minute;

and are diffused very widely; developing

themselves wherever they find organic matter in a

fit state。 The principal conditions required for

their growth are moisture; heat; and the presence

of oxygen and electricity。 No decomposition or

development of fungi takes place in dry organic

matter; a fact illustrated by the high state of

preservation in which timber has been found after the

lapse of centuries; as well as by the condition of

mummy…cases; bandages; etc。; kept dry in the hot

climate of Egypt。 Decay will not take place in a

temperature below that of the freezing point of

water; nor without oxygen; by excluding which; is

contained in the air; meat and vegetables may be

kept fresh and sweet for many years。



〃The action which takes place when moist vegetable

substances are exposed to oxygen is that of

slow combustion ('eremacausis'); the oxygen

uniting with the wood and liberating a volume of

carbonic acid equal to itself; and another portion

combining with the hydrogen of the wood to form

water。 Decomposition takes place on contact with

a body already undergoing the same change; in the

same manner that yeast causes fermentation。 Animal

matter enters into combination with oxygen in

precisely the same way as vegetable matter; but as;

in addition to carbon and hydrogen; it contains nitrogen;

the products of the eremacausis are more

numerous; being carbon and nitrate of ammonia;

carburetted and sulphuretted hydrogen; and water;

and these a

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