Transactions, Issues 48-551890 Includes its Constitution, by-laws and list of members. |
From inside the book
Page 30
... card - room or spinning - room sufficiently to know what to do . I think that is about all we can do . If we have our instrument in proper condition , with clean water , dis- tilled water , and the wick kept perfectly clean , as we see ...
... card - room or spinning - room sufficiently to know what to do . I think that is about all we can do . If we have our instrument in proper condition , with clean water , dis- tilled water , and the wick kept perfectly clean , as we see ...
Page 57
... card - room , where we were manipulating our cotton that had been through the picking and carding rooms , and I found it ran from 3 to 7 per cent . Now , cotton when it is taken directly from the bale and carried into the card - room ...
... card - room , where we were manipulating our cotton that had been through the picking and carding rooms , and I found it ran from 3 to 7 per cent . Now , cotton when it is taken directly from the bale and carried into the card - room ...
Page 58
... card - room before it would come to the condition where we were carding cotton . Now , if we could just get into a condition to prepare our cotton in our picking department , or before it was picked , in fact , then I think we would be ...
... card - room before it would come to the condition where we were carding cotton . Now , if we could just get into a condition to prepare our cotton in our picking department , or before it was picked , in fact , then I think we would be ...
Page 5
... Card . George A. Chace • Thomas C. Chandler Simeon B. Chase George A. Clark Jeremiah Clark . Alfred Clarke F. E. Clarke . Alonzo A. Coburn J. G. Coburn . John A. Collins . • J. Andrew Comstock . A. S. Covel . A. G. Cumnock . Andrew J ...
... Card . George A. Chace • Thomas C. Chandler Simeon B. Chase George A. Clark Jeremiah Clark . Alfred Clarke F. E. Clarke . Alonzo A. Coburn J. G. Coburn . John A. Collins . • J. Andrew Comstock . A. S. Covel . A. G. Cumnock . Andrew J ...
Page 107
... cards will be fuel gas distributed among our dwellings , per- haps not at fifteen cents a thousand , but suppose it is fifty , then what ? At fifty cents a thousand , one - third of a thou- sand per month for five persons would make the ...
... cards will be fuel gas distributed among our dwellings , per- haps not at fifteen cents a thousand , but suppose it is fifty , then what ? At fifty cents a thousand , one - third of a thou- sand per month for five persons would make the ...
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Common terms and phrases
Aerophor amount apparatus Association ATKINSON average bale belt Biddeford Board of Government bobbin boiler Boston BOURNE cards cent Charles cloth coal Conn cost per pound Cotton Mills cylinder dollars Draper EDWARD ATKINSON electric engine experience factory Fall River feet fire floor frame friction fuel George glass GOODALE heat Hooksett Hopedale horse-power humidity hundred inch Indian Orchard John John Birkenhead KENT KNIGHT kyanized labor Lancaster Mills Lawrence Lewiston light looms Lowell machine machinery Manchester Manuf manufacturers Mass meeting metallic rolls method moisture motor operation paper PARKER pipe plant PRESIDENT pressure Providence question Rabbeth ribbed ring rope running Sawyer shafting shell-feed speed spindle Spindle Oil spinning spinning frames steam stoker temperature tests THOMAS timber tion to-day transmission vapor warp weaving week weight West Boylston wheel Whitin Whitinsville William William F Willimantic wire wood WOODBURY yarn
Popular passages
Page 66 - ... for a term of one year, two for a term of two years, and two for a term of three years.
Page 59 - The earth round the place, for above two miles, has this surprising property, that by taking up two or three inches of the surface, and applying a live coal, the part which is so uncovered immediately takes fire, almost before the coal touches the earth ; the flame makes the soil hot, but does not consume it, nor affect what is near it with any degree of heat.
Page 59 - When the weather is thick and hazy, the springs boil up the higher, and the naphtha often takes fire on the surface of the earth, and runs in a flame into the sea in great quantities, to a distance almost incredible.
Page 59 - ... close the mouth of the spring : sometimes it is quite closed, and forms hillocks that look as black as pitch, but the spring, which is resisted in one place, breaks out in another. Some of the springs, which have not been long open, form a mouth of eight or ten feet diameter.
Page 129 - ... immersion; but this practice was soon abandoned and injection by pressure substituted. In 1838 Sir William Burnett, formerly Director General of the Medical Department of the English Navy, made known to the public his new process for treating wood. The invention consists of destroyng the tendencies of certain vegetable and animal substances to decay by submitting them to the action of chloride of zinc. The degree of dilution recommended by Mr. Burnett is one part volume by fifty parts of water....
Page 28 - This method of transmitting power depends upon two principles in mechanics: (1) The dynamic force is measured by the product of the force and the velocity with which it moves ; (2) In mechanical work, power may be exchanged for velocity, and velocity for power. To illustrate, let us suppose a bar of iron, having a cross sectional area of one square inch, to move endlong at the rate of two feet per second. Now, if the resistance overcome is say 5,000 pounds, work will be performed at the rate of 10,000...
Page 9 - AM for the election of a Board of Directors for the ensuing year, and the transaction of such other business as may properly come before the meeting.
Page 25 - The Sawyer spindle was limited in speed. With an unbalanced load it would vibrate and gyrate, at more than 7,500 turns per minute, so as to become useless. The Rabbeth spindle, on the contrary, will bear any speed desired, and the limit of production of the frame is transferred from the speed that the spindles will bear to the speed with which operatives can make good piecings of yarn broken in the o|)eration of spinning.