The decision by the New York Times to discontinue the TimeSelect program has made vast amounts of content available for free. I plunked some interesting articles from the Times public domain archive:

GOVERMENT PRINTING BY CONTRACT. from June 15, 1895 From time to time the Congress is asked by members who are still so inexperienced as to be indifferent to a sort of popularity to pass a law abolishing the office of Public Printer and to provide that all the Government printing shall be done by contract, the work to be thrown open to competition. PRINTING THIRD IN RANK? on Mar 24, 1918 PRINTING is entitled to rank as the third industry instead of the sixth, is the contention of Charles Francis, who in the National Printer Journalist takes issue with Samuel L. Rogers, Director of the United States Census, for having given the printing industry the lower position. 250 PRINTING FIRMS LOCK OUT 10,000 PRESSROOM MEN from October 1, 1919. The pressrooms of 250 printing plants, other than newspapers, including those of magazines, trade papers, and periodicals in New York City, will close this morning for an indefinite time, as a result of the failure of the employers and unions to agree on a new contract. SCHOOL OF PRINTING IS URGED FOR CITY from November 4, 1917 The Industrial Education Survey Committee appointed by Mayor Mitchel gave out yesterday at its headquarters, 49 Lafayette Street, a digest of its preliminary report on the printing trade of New York City. The committee recommends the establishment of a central school of printing under the Board of Education, to be supported by the city. TO MAKE PRINTING SURVEY.; 800 at Astor Dinner Hear of Industry's Outlook. from January 27, 1920 More than 800 printers, operating printing establishments in Greater New York, assembled at dinner and held a survey mass meeting in the Hotel Astor last night. Includes a declaration by Joseph A Borden, General Secretary of the United Typothetae of America that "73% of printers in the US are utterly irresponsible and have no credit." Anyone find anything interesting in the archive?