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Wartime Metal Control in Canada
By George C. Bateman
I HAVE been introduced in the dual capacity of president of the Canadian Institute and Metals Controller for Canada. There are three particular points of similarity between these two positions. They a
Jan 1, 1941
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Wartime Price Control of Copper, Lead, Zinc
By JOHN D. SUMMER
THE Premium Price Plan for copper, lead, and represent, the approach of the Office of Price Administration to the urgent of wartime problem of securing increased output of nonferrous metals. Some of t
Jan 1, 1943
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Wartime Stimulates Interest in Annual Meeting, Slightly Lowers Registration
By Lord Marley
ACTIVE participation by the United States in the war acted as a stimulant on the Annual Institute Meeting in New York rather than a retardant as feared. Attendance was about 10 per cent under the all-
Jan 1, 1942
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Wartime Washington and the Mineral Industries
By A. B. Parsons
DOWN in Washington an army of individuals constituting the government of a so-called "'democratic" nation is trying to manage the conduct, in its rnultifold phases, of the greatest war in history
Jan 1, 1942
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Washed Metal
By Henry Hibbard
THE process of making washed metal now followed is in principle that described by Holley before this Institute in 1879, as the Krupp washing process. Sir Lowthian Bell also experimented extensively in
Jan 12, 1915
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Washing and Concentrating Florida Pebble Phosphate
By S. J. Swainson
PHOSPHATE ROCK is a low- priced commodity. This fact has influenced the choice of mining and beneficiating methods to a greater degree, perhaps, than in most other low-grade mining operations. The fac
Jan 1, 1944
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Washing and Sizing Sand and Gravel
By Edmund Shaw
IN THE year just past there were produced in the United States about 170,000,000 tons of sand and gravel. Much of this was pit-run material used for gravelling roads and as railroad ballast on lines t
Jan 2, 1926
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Washing Phosphoric Pig Iron for the Open-hearth and Puddling Processes at Krupp's Works, Essen
By A. L. Holley
THIS process is performed in the Pernot puddling furnace; it removes from 75 to 80 per cent. of the phosphorus, most of the sulphur, and practically all the silicon, from crude iron, in from five to e
Jan 1, 1880
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Washington (Annual) - February, 1900
Jan 1, 1901
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Washington By-line
OFFICIAL Washington is gravely concerned over the adverse military situation caused by the all-out intervention of the Chinese Communists in Korea. What the policies of the United Nations and the Unit
Jan 1, 1951
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Washington By-line (7986aba2-006d-4ac4-a6fc-e09637f0102f)
Following the declaration of a national emergency by the President on Dec. 16, 1950 the Office of Defense Mobilization was established with Charles Wilson as director. It has been obvious since the en
Jan 2, 1951
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Washington D.C. Annual Meeting - February, 1882
Jan 1, 1882
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Washington D.C. Paper - A Review of the Ste. Genevieve Copper Deposit
By Frank Nicholson
Copper ore was first noticed in Ste. Genevieve County in 1563. The diswvery mas made by a German farmer named Simon Grass, who had occasion to make a road from his farm down the hill into the neighbo
Jan 1, 1882
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Washington D.C. Paper - An Improved Mining Lamp for Engineers
By Persifor Frazer
The accompanying diagrams represent a lamp provided with certain improvements which render it more serviceable for the use of the engineer or other mining official who is often compelled to visit seve
Jan 1, 1882
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Washington D.C. Paper - Assaying of Silver Bullion
By F. C. Blake
The apparatus which I shall describe in this paper has been in ase for some time at the laboratory of the Pennsylvania Lead Company's works, and has been found to give good results, and to be sim
Jan 1, 1882
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Washington D.C. Paper - Coals in Mexico, Santa Rosa District
By W. H. Adams
I doubt if many of our engineers know of the existence of coalfields extending over hundreds of miles of territory bordering on and lying contiguous to the Rio Grande River in Mexico. Essential as the
Jan 1, 1882
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Washington D.C. Paper - Contributions to the Metallurgy of Nickel and Copper
By H. M. Howe, W. E. C. Eustis
The processes which form the subject of this paper have been experimented on in the laboratory of W. E. C. Eustis, but have not passed beyond the experimental stage. The first is the invention of Mr.
Jan 1, 1882
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Washington D.C. Paper - Electrical Apparatus and Processes for the Mining and Metallurgical Engineer
By N. S. Keith
No one of the live subjects of the day, to which the attention of the mining engineer and metallurgist should be turned, is of greater practical interest to him than electricity in its applications to
Jan 1, 1882
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Washington D.C. Paper - Hoefer’s Method of Determining Faults in Mineral Veins
By R. W. Raymond
I desire to call the attention of members of the Institute to a new method of plotting and determining faults in mineral deposits, suggested by Prof. Hanns Hoefer, lately of the Mining School of Przi-
Jan 1, 1882
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Washington D.C. Paper - Hot-Blast Stoves at the Edgar Thomson Furnace “D” and “E”
By Julian Kennedy
When it was decided to erect these furnaces the company also decided to use the Cowper type of stoves. It was, however, desirable to improve upon the plan of the stoves then in operation, to avoid, if
Jan 1, 1882