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ON THE PRESS

THE ENCYCLOPEDIA

AMERICANA

COMPLETE IN THIRTY VOLUMES

This colossal work, under the direction of George Edwin Rines, Editor-in-Chief, assisted by a large editorial staff of trained encyclopedists and special departmental editors and advisors, is being revised to the minute, and is now in press. This stupendous undertaking has already been over two years in preparation and involves the writing and revising of more than 80,000 articles, comprising 24,000,000 words. This work will contain 10,000 original signed articles by eminent writers of America and Europe; 1,200 half-tone illustrations; 200 illustrations in color; thousands of text illustrations; new and up-to-date maps of all countries, states and cities.

PRINTED ON THIN INDIA PAPER MADE IN AMERICA FOR THIS WORK

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J. B. Lyon Company Plant, Albany, N. Y., where the Americana is Made

The Latest and Last Word of Modern Authority in Industry, Commerce, Banking, Agriculture, Electricity, Chemistry, Education, Economics, Literature, History, Biography, Science, Engineering, Mechanics, Philosophy,

Religion, Astronomy, Art, Medicine, Law, Music, Botany, Military Science, Etc.,

and Thousands of Articles of General Interest which will make

THE AMERICANA THE LEADING REFERENCE WORK OF THE
ENGLISH-SPEAKING WORLD

THE ENCYCLOPEDIA AMERICANA CORPORATION

27 WILLIAM STREET

NEW YORK

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The PHOTOSTAT-An Investment

(Trade Mark Registered)

The United States Government bought PHOTOSTATS for several Departments where copying was required. The records of the savings as published in the official report, follow:

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Since making these first installations the United States Government has bought over one hundred Additional Photostats.

The Photostat, which is manufactured by the Eastman Kodak Co., is a combined camera and copying machine. The copy is made directly onto a roll of paper. No intermediate glass plate or film or other negative has to be made. By copying thus directly onto the paper, the copy is made very quickly and at a low cost. Also the copy is a facsimile of the original, so that there can be no mistake in it. The print is developed and fixed right in the apparatus itself; this part of the process, as well as the focusing and exposing, all being mechanical. The print is then removed to a tank of running water in which it is washed free from chemicals. Finally the print is taken from the water and dried and is then ready for use. The whole process is a rapid one, the average speed per print being from one to five minutes.

The PHOTOSTAT is used to copy at actual size, in reduction, or in enlargement;

In Banks and Offices: Reports, Cost Sheets, Vouchers, Accountings, Wills, Contracts, Testimonial Letters, Pages from Books;

In Factories and Machine Shops: Blue Prints, Shop Orders, Sketches, Pencil Drawings, Tracings, Illustrations for Salesmen, Cuts and Drawings for Patent Work;

By Public Service Corporations: Reports for Directors, Insurance Papers, Tariffs, Way Bills, Claims, Traffic Reports, Conductors' Sheets, and Certified Copies of Records.

A small book giving detailed description will be sent to you upon request to the

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This cut shows the operator examining copy
of a 36-inch drawing which he has
just made in less than a minute

COMMERCIAL CAMERA COMPANY

343 State Street, Rochester, N. Y.

325 Grosvenor Building, Providence, R. I.

Alfred Herbert, Ltd., Agents, Coventry, England

AN ILLUSTRATED MONTHLY MAGAZINE DEVOTED TO THE
GOVERNMENT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK AND ITS AFFAIRS

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THE DEMOCRACY OF TWENTY-FIVE HUNDRED YEARS AGO Grace Malcolm

Crosby L. Grant

3

William Trueman
Edwin Duffey

8

11

13

16

Justice William M. Ross

21

Frederic T. Cardoze

24

George N. Ostrander

29

Joseph I. C. Clarke
Charles M. Dow

32

34

39

41

Francis M. Hugo

43

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PUBLISHED BY THE STATE SERVICE MAGAZINE CO., INC., LYON BLOCK, ALBANY, NEW YORK

ERNEST A. BARVOETS, Treasurer

CHARLES M. WINCHESTER, President

GEORGE D. ELWELL, Advertising and Circulation Manager

JAMES MALCOLM, Editor
WILLIAM E. FITZSIMMONS, Se retary

SUBSCRIPTION: $3.00 PER YEAR IN ADVANCE; SINGLE COPIES, 25 CENTS
Entered as second-class matter October 17, 1917, at the post-office at Albany, New York, under Act of March 3, 1879

COPYRIGHT, 1918, BY THE STATE SERVICE MAGAZINE CO., INC.

The World's Safest Safe

THE

SAFE-CABINET

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repaired.

Therefore the safety and protection of those records should be one of your chief cares.

Every employee you have can be made to realize the importance of your records only if you show him or her how much you value them by providing suitable, easy to reach, pleasure-to-workwith accommodations for your records.

And that's saying THE SAFE
CABINET "The World's Safest
Safe!"

Correct in Design and
Materials

It's a perfectly designed safe, in which steel is one of the materials used, but between the walls of steel is a processed, patented material found after much seeking

retardent composition known to man today.

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the greatest fire resistant, fire

The result is a splendid-appearing, modern steel safe, handsomely finished, "business-all-the-waythrough," fire retardent! Accessible! Portable! Space-saving!

The "highest good" in record protection as far as this world has journeyed yet.

GEO. W. HARPER COMPANY

47 Maiden Lane, Albany, N. Y.

Write us for Copy of "Report of Supervisor of Public Records, Addressed to the Commissioner of Education of New York State, in the matter of an official test of

The Safe-Cabinet held at Marietta, Ohio

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