Guides must stand hard usage and remain legible; therefore the best quality should be used. All manufacturers of filing equipment now supply guides of heavy pressboard with metal tips. The metal tip guide is entirely rigid and supports the papers or folders in the file, keeping them rigid and in alignment. An important feature is that the index heading (name, letter, or number) can be changed at any time by merely inserting a new slip in the metal tip. Metal tip guides cost more than the old-style manila guide stock, but in the end are more economical. The money paid for a filing outfit should be regarded as a permanent investment; if the expense is to be cut down, let it be in the purchase of supplies used for transfer, rather than in the regular files which are used every day.

Transferring. Correspondence which is out of date should be removed from the current file and filed in transfer files or boxes, indexed as in the regular files. Transfers should not be made too frequently. It is often advisable to use cabinets large enough to hold the correspondence for two years, one part being used for current correspondence, the other for correspondence one year back. At the end of the year, all of the correspondence is removed from the older file, which becomes the current file during the succeeding year.

Fig. 27. Sorting Tray

Sorting. The work of the file clerk is facilitated and greater accuracy insured by the use of a sorting tray, as shown in Fig. 27. This consists of a wooden tray, equipped with alphabetical or numerical guides according to the system used. For the alphabetical system a set of A to Z guides—one for each letter of the alphabet—is used.

Before attempting to file, the clerk sorts the day's correspondence in this tray. All correspondence belonging in one division of the alphabet is thus brought together, and can be quickly filed.

SELECTING FILING EQUIPMENT

Fig. 28. Showing Manner of Joining
Upright Sections.
Browne-Morse Co.