Sometimes the work of the advertising man is of a nature which requires the preservation of catalogs, booklets, and all sorts of printed matter issued by competitors.
The advertising man may prepare an attractive piece of printed matter, well-written and containing convincing arguments, but unless judiciously used, the time and study put into its preparation is wasted.
If it is a new piece of printed matter, the quantity received is also entered in the on hand column; if a reprint, the quantity is added to the stock on hand and the total extended.
Not all concerns will require a stock clerk for this purpose alone, but in every office the stock of printed matter should be placed in charge of one person--a clerk, perhaps, who has other duties.
Millerand proposed to abolish the special tariff for papiers d'affaires and subject them to letter postage, and also to increase the rates on small packets of printed matter, other than newspapers and periodicals.
He also recommends that the rates of postage on printed matterbe so revised as to render them more simple and more uniform in their operation upon all classes of printed matter.
The Report of 1903 announces the issue of the new King Edward stamps, and of the prepayment of printed matterin cash, instead of by stamps, under the "permit" system.
The spaces in the following illustrations are of the same body, but they are of different widths, to suit the peculiarities of different kinds of printed matter.
There was no other kind of printed matter, not even the image prints, which found so many buyers in every condition of society.
If printing were deprived of the support it receives from public schools, there would at once follow a noticeable decrease in the production of printed matter, and a corresponding decrease in the number of readers and book-buyers.
The word Body, as used by printers and type-founders, means the measurement of a type in one direction only—in a direction at a right angle with the regular lines or rows of printed matter.
The rate for newspapers stamped with the impressed stamp is one penny for two sheets, three-halfpence for three sheets, and twopence for four sheets, of printed matter.
The arrangement made at this time, which exists at present, charges one penny for every four ounces of printed matter; a book weighing one pound being charged fourpence.
It is the committee's judgment that there is much in common between the library authorities and some of the commercial forces which opposed admitting printed matter to the parcel post, that we have all much in common.
We have altogether too much veneration for printed matter.
Our forefathers could not have divined what an unknown future was to yield to us in the form of printed matter of all sorts and degrees.
Nor can any regulations be enforced against the transportation of printed matter in the mail, which is open to examination, so as to interfere in any manner with the freedom of the press.
The circulation of newspapers is not prohibited, but the government declines itself to become an agent in the circulation of printed matter which it regards as injurious to the people.
If, therefore, printed matter be excluded from the mails, its transportation in any other way cannot be forbidden by Congress.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "printed matter" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.