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DURING recent years The Spectator Company has imported and sold a large number of Calculating Machines of foreign manufacture, but owing to the heavy duty imposed upon them and other difficulties encountered in their importation, we have been seeking for an American-made Calculator. This we have at length arranged for in the
The present Calculator, patented in 1902, is
the result of years of patient study and
labor, and is fairly clamed to be the simplest, most compact and accurate
Calculating Machine yet offered to the public. The illustration herewith
gives a fair idea of the exterior of the
Baldwin Calculator.
The dimensions outside of case are 10 inches long,
7 inches wide, by 6 inches deep, making it convenient for use on an ordinary
desk. All its parts are made with special tools, so that they are
interchangeable like the parts of an American watch. There are no tension
springs on the numeral wheels, so prolific of annoyance in other machines,
to get out of order, but a single screw regulates the
tension equally in all parts, in accordance with the speed of rotation.
It has eight numeral wheels, nine figures in the quotient and sixteen figures
in the product. This is the size generally required in insurance offices
and business houses. It does the work of the most complex machines made, and a
very little practice will enable any one to work it
with satisfactory results. By its use addition, multiplication, subtraction
and division are quickly accomplished, so that all numerical computations in
plain figures or decimals can be worked out at a great saving of time and
mental labor. For working out ratios, averages, percentages, foreign exchange,
or for compiling statistics the Baldwin Calculator is
invaluable. A shifting decimal pointer not only indicates the decimals, but
whole numbers are divided into groups of three figures.
The use of Calculating Machines was limited in this country to the actuarial departments of the life insurance companies until The Spectator Company began, a few years ago, to push their sales in other channels. We have placed them in various departments of the government at Washington, in the auditing departments of railroads, in colleges, and numerous great industrial corporations, and the demand for them is constantly increasing. In Europe, however, they have been longer in use, until there is scarcely a university, government office or prominent business house that does not employ them. One railroad company had thirty of them in use four years ago, and has added some since then.
The Baldwin Calculator, which will do all the work that the best of the foreign-made machines can do, being made by special tools instead of hand work, and having no customs duty to pay, has many advantages to offer to the business men of this country.
1. The prices of foreign-made high-grade machines range up
to $400. The Baldwin Calculator, being better than the
cheapest, and equal to if not superior to the best, is offered at a
medium price,
2. Purchasers of foreign-made machines are not allowed by the manufacturers any time for testing their machines, but The Spectator Company in selling them has granted forty-eight hours for testing their construction. The Baldwin Calculator will be sent to responsible parties ordering it, and ten days' trial granted for testing. If inherent defects are discovered during that time, the Calculator may be returned, or any defective part part will be replaced by the manufacturers.
3. As the parts are interchangeable, should any injury happen to any of them at any time, they can be readily replaced.
4. The Baldwin Calculator being simple in its construction and made of the best material, the liability to get out of order is extremely remote and makes its manipulation so easy that a child can work it. A steady, even turning of the crank is all that is required to operate it successfully, at a speed of 150 to 200 revolutions per minute.
5. A great advantage lies in its compactness. Some of the foreign machines are so heavy and bulky that they require a special table or desk for them to rest upon. The Baldwin Calculator occupies only about one-half the space of an ordinary type-writer, and can be kept at one side of the operator's working desk, or can be readily carried from one desk to another, in one hand.
For accuracy and trustworthiness the Baldwin Calculator has no superior; and for convenience, speed and general usefulness, it has no equal.
A full descriptive pamphlet giving examples of its work will be sent with every Calculator ordered.
No. 95 William Street, New York.
Sole Selling Agents for the United States and Canada.
Andries de Man. 3/19/1999