Show OX THE BEOAY OF PAPER The introduction of wood fibre into the manufacture of paper It economical production duction and the attractiveness of the article ar-ticle so produced have combined to tempt the papermaker not to make for the day and only sufficient all time but for te sf ficient for the day is the evil thereof fcIent Modenrmethods of book illustration require re-quire a paper of tine even surface with the property of semiabsorption of printers print-ers ink and this lat r requirement has resulted In the very considerable use of resuled ver what Is known as halfsized paper 1 e paper which has but a smal proportion propor-tion of gelatine or other size on which the permanent cohesion of the paper depends de-pends Such paper cannot resist the in liuences of alternate variations of temperature tem-perature and humidity to which all books II are exposed and thus ultimate decay is I I probable Notes and Queries |