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  • AIME
    Washington Paper - A Device for Sampling Pig-Iron

    By Porter W. Shimer

    The device here described has been found useful in sampling foundry-iron, and there is no reason why it should not be equally useful in sampling other metals, which are not too hard to be drilled with

    Jan 1, 1901

  • AIME
    Washington Paper - A Machine for Drawing Coke from Bee-Hive Ovens

    By George T. Wickes

    Several years ago, Mr. Robert A. Cook described and illustrated in our Transactions a mechanical coke-drawer, patented in 1891 by Mr. Thomas Smith of the Thorncliff Iron Works, Sheffield, England, and

    Jan 1, 1906

  • AIME
    Washington Paper - A New Method for Working Deep Coal-Beds

    By H. M. Chance

    In almost all coal-fields, the quantity of explosive gases given off by the coal increases as depth is attained, requiring correspondingly enlarged quantities of air to ventilate the workings properly

    Jan 1, 1901

  • AIME
    Washington Paper - A New Ore of Copper and its Metallurgy

    By T. Sterry Hunt

    The Jones Mine (or Johannes Mine, as it was originally called, from a former proprietor), situated near Springfield, in the township of Caernarvon, Berks County, Pennsylvania, has long been known as a

  • AIME
    Washington Paper - A Peculiar Clastic Dike near Ouray, Colorado, and its Associated Deposit of Silver Ore

    By F. L. Ransome

    The dike here described is exposed in the workings of the Wedge and Bachelor mines, on the southern side of Red Canon, north of the town of Ouray, Colorado. Its course is north 80° east, or nearly eas

    Jan 1, 1901

  • AIME
    Washington Paper - A Peculiar Siliceous Efflorescence upon Pig-Iron

    By B. F. Fackenthal

    At the session of the Bethlehem, Pa., meeting of the Institute, held in the Durham Cave, at Durham Furnace, on the afternoon of May 20, 1886, I exhibited some specimens of a fibrous white efflorescenc

    Jan 1, 1901

  • AIME
    Washington Paper - A Special Form of Slag-Car

    By L. W. Jones, B. H. Bennetts

    The removal and disposition of large quantities of slag from blast-furnaces is a question of great importance in the design of works, and various methods have been devised, from time to time, in order

    Jan 1, 1906

  • AIME
    Washington Paper - A System of Rail-Sections in Series

    By P. H. Dudley

    A quarter of a century of service of steel rails on our oldest railroads, many of which have changed their standard sections three or four times, has furnished, and is furnishing, excellent opportunit

    Jan 1, 1890

  • AIME
    Washington Paper - Aluminum and other Metals Compared

    By W. J. Keep

    Some explanation of methods of testing will be given before presenting the record of a series of physical tests of aluminum, other metals and alloys. I. The Methods Employed and Meaning of Diagr

    Jan 1, 1890

  • AIME
    Washington Paper - Aluminum Bronze and Brass as Suitable Materials for Propellers

    By Eugene H. Cowles

    Now that a determined public effort is being made on this side of the Atlantic to create a steel ship-building industry, the materials that are demanded for this purpose assume a new interest to the A

    Jan 1, 1890

  • AIME
    Washington Paper - Aluminum in Search of a Nickname.

    By Oberlin Smith

    The object of this paper is not so much reformatory, as historical and prophetic. History tells us that, for several months past, aluminum has, in one of its largest American manufactories, been freel

    Jan 1, 1890

  • AIME
    Washington Paper - Aluminum in the Drawing-Press

    By Oberlin Smith

    The experiments described in this paper are very incomplete and only preliminary to those I hope to make in the future. Having had a good deal of experience in cutting, forming and drawing sheet-metal

    Jan 1, 1890

  • AIME
    Washington Paper - Aluminum in Wrought-Iron and Steel Castings

    By W. J. Keep

    We have shown in former papers the influence which aluminum exerts when added to cast-iron, and we have presented in another paper, accompanying this one, the physical properties of the metal aluminum

    Jan 1, 1890

  • AIME
    Washington Paper - An Examination of the Ores of the Republic Gold-Mine, Washington

    By T. M. Chatard, Cabell Whitehead

    The Republic mine, situated forty miles from Marcus, a station on the Spokane Falls and Northern Railroad, in the northeastern part of the State of Washington, was located in 1896, but no development-

    Jan 1, 1901

  • AIME
    Washington Paper - Association of Gold with other Metals in the West

    By Richard Pearce

    IN looking around me for some subject on which to frame an address for this meeting, it has occurred to me that some results of observation and investigation, in regard to the varied conditions under

    Jan 1, 1890

  • AIME
    Washington Paper - Bibliography of Gas-Producers

    By Samuel S. Wyer

    The following abbreviations have been used in the text: Cassier's, Cassier's Magazine. Eng. Lond., The Engineer (London). Eng. Mag., Engineering Magazine. Eng. News, Engineering News. E

    Jan 1, 1906

  • AIME
    Washington Paper - Biographical Notice of Benjamin West Frazier, Jr., D.Sc.

    By Edward H. Williams

    In the middle of the eighteenth century John Frazier and wife, Sarah Ingraham, removed from Boston, Mass., to Philadelphia, Pa., where he was held in such esteem that we find him one of the Committee

    Jan 1, 1906

  • AIME
    Washington Paper - Biographical Notice of Bruno Kerl

    By R. W. Raymond

    The death of Privy Councilor Bruno Kerl, on March 25, 1905, terminated a distinguished and useful career. Bruno Kerl was born March 24, 1824, at St. Andreasberg in the Harz, and entered in 1840 the

    Jan 1, 1906

  • AIME
    Washington Paper - Biographical Notice of Charles A. Ashburner

    By J. P. Lesley

    The old do not love to see the young pass away from the light of the sun before them. Fathers would fain keep their sons by their side to the. end of life ; but the old Greeks, who loved the old gods,

    Jan 1, 1890

  • AIME
    Washington Paper - Biographical Notice of Franklin B. Gowen

    By Eckley B. Coxe

    SINCE our last meeting, the Institute has lost, by the death of Mr. Gowen, one of its most distinguished members. I shall only attempt in this place to give a brief account of his many accomplishments

    Jan 1, 1890