You're making a document, nothing too fancy but it'll end up in a procedures manual and get sent around once it's through a committee. Your supervisor loves putting "... Page x" at the bottom of every page in case GWB is reading this some day and doesn't know enough to look at the next page when a sentence is cut off at the bottom of page 1. I personally just use (con't) at the far right of the very last line, another person here says it should be "Over..." and not "... Page x". I can't believe we've spent a full 15 minutes phoning each other over this, but hey that's SOP for this place.
Is there a 'right' or more traditional way to indicate "turn the page you f'ing moron" in a regular multipage office doc? 'Page 1 of x' as a footer would be too easy, we don't want page numbers because there will be many seperate interchangable little documents. I've always liked (con't) but everyone else looked at me like I was thwapping my unit on the meeting room table when I mentioned it so maybe it's not as common as I thought. But at the same time I don't ever recall seeing "... Page 2" at the bottom of page 1 of a document.
Is there a 'right' or more traditional way to indicate "turn the page you f'ing moron" in a regular multipage office doc? 'Page 1 of x' as a footer would be too easy, we don't want page numbers because there will be many seperate interchangable little documents. I've always liked (con't) but everyone else looked at me like I was thwapping my unit on the meeting room table when I mentioned it so maybe it's not as common as I thought. But at the same time I don't ever recall seeing "... Page 2" at the bottom of page 1 of a document.