The Engineer 1918 Jan-Jun: Index: Paragraphs: Difference between revisions
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View the [[The Engineer 1918 Jan-Jun|Volumes]] that this Index refers to. | View the [[The Engineer 1918 Jan-Jun|Volumes]] that this Index refers to. | ||
ACCIDENTS in Mines and Quarries, Increase, 163 | A | ||
*ACCIDENTS in Mines and Quarries, Increase, 163 | |||
Accidents in the United Kingdom, Reduction in Number, 383 | *Accidents in the United Kingdom, Reduction in Number, 383 | ||
*Acetic Acid from Cocoanut Shells, 471 | |||
Acetic Acid from Cocoanut Shells, 471 | *Acetic Acid Production from Bagasse, Sugar Factories’ Potentialities, 273 | ||
AERONAUTICS: | |||
Acetic Acid Production from Bagasse, Sugar Factories’ Potentialities, 273 | *- Aero Engines, More than Forty Different Types Now being Manufactured in United Kingdom, 97 | ||
*- Aero Engines, Types in Most General Use, 253 | |||
AERONAUTICS | *- Aircraft Construction Asked for in Ireland, but Negatived, 141 | ||
Aero Engines, More than Forty Different Types Now being Manufactured in United Kingdom, 97 | *- Aircraft Factory in Ireland, 31 | ||
*- Crossing the Sahara by Aeroplane, 361 | |||
Aero Engines, Types in Most General Use, 253 | *- Electrically-heated Clothes for Airmen, 73 | ||
*- French Government Aerial Postal Service, 361 | |||
Aircraft Construction Asked for in Ireland, but Negatived, 141 | *- German Airships, Aluminium Alloy Used in, 253 | ||
*- Gotha Aeroplane, Particulars of Weight, Rising and Carrying Powers, 295 | |||
Aircraft Factory in Ireland, 31 | *- Landings by Aeroplanes in Small Patches of Level Ground, 53 | ||
*- Liberty Motors, Great Success, 253 | |||
Crossing the Sahara by Aeroplane, 361 | *- Materials Used in Building a Simple Type of Aeroplane, 361 | ||
*- Overhead Valve Aero Engines, 491 | |||
Electrically-heated Clothes for Airmen, 73 | *- Propeller Manufacture, in Germany, Satisfactory ; Useof Cheaper Woods Laminated Together, 73 | ||
*- Shop, Aeroplane, in America, a Quarter of a Mile in Length, 73 | |||
French Government Aerial Postal Service, 361 | *- Sound Audibility at Various Balloon Heights, 163 | ||
*- Tension of Aeroplane Guys, 152 | |||
German Airships, Aluminium Alloy Used in, 253 | *- Wilbur Wright Memorial Lecture, Outstanding Problems in Aeronautics, Dr. W. F. Durand, 480 | ||
*- World's Flying Height Record Made by Italian, 97 | |||
Gotha Aeroplane, Particulars of Weight, Rising and Carrying Powers, 295 | *AGRICULTURAL Implements and Machines, Exports from the United States, 231 | ||
*Agricultural Work, Statistics of Horses and Tractors Employed, 273 | |||
Landings by Aeroplanes in Small Patches of Level Ground, 53 | *Agriculture, Tropical, Aeration and Irrigation, 491 | ||
*Air Compressor, Two-stage Steam-driven Volumetric Efficiency, 557 | |||
Liberty Motors, Great Success, 253 | *Air Compressors and Ammonia Compressors Driven by Synchronous Motors, 361 | ||
*Air-lift Pump Efficiency ; Increase in Proportion to Heat of Liquid Pumped, 31 | |||
Materials Used in Building a Simple Type of Aeroplane, 361 | *Air-lift Pump, Novel Application of, 449 | ||
*Air-lift- Pumping and Submergence Conditions, 427 | |||
Overhead Valve Aero Engines, 491 | *Air and Similar Gaseous Pressures, Unit for Measurement, 339 | ||
*Air Supply, Minimum, for Divers, 535 | |||
Propeller Manufacture, in Germany, Satisfactory ; | *Alcohol from Garbage, 30 | ||
*Alloy, American, as a Substitute for German Silver, 317 | |||
Shop, Aeroplane, in America, a Quarter of a Mile in Length, 73 | *Alloys, Iron, in Acid Manufacture, Ferrochrome and Silicon Iron, 31 | ||
*Aluminium and Aluminium Alloys Plated with Nickel, Copper, andc., 541 | |||
Sound Audibility at Various Balloon Heights, 163 | *Aluminium Alloyed with Calcium, Superior Metal Results, 427 | ||
*Aluminium Company’s Endeavour to Get Water Supply from Loch Treig, 31 | |||
Tension of Aeroplane Guys, 152 | *Aluminium, Electrolytic, Production of the World, 471 | ||
*Aluminium Industry Development Since Outbreak of War, 557 | |||
Wilbur Wright Memorial Lecture, Outstanding Problems in Aeronautics, Dr. W. F. Durand, 480 | *Aluminium Scrap, Fluxes for Melting, 119 | ||
*Ambulance Fund, Captain Dennis Bayley, 330 | |||
World's Flying Height Record Made by Italian, 97 | *American Motor Car, Projected Year’s Production of One Type, 339 | ||
*American Society of Naval Architects and Marine Engineers, New York Meeting, 434 | |||
AGRICULTURAL Implements and Machines, Exports from the United States, 231 | *Ammonia Production in Germany by Synthetic Process, 53 | ||
*Aniline Colours, Exports from the United States Double the Pre-war Value, 73 | |||
Agricultural Work, Statistics of Horses and Tractors Employed, 273 | *Antimony from China; Trade in Japanese Hands, 207 | ||
*Antimony, Use of, in Ammunition Manufacture, 361 | |||
Agriculture, Tropical, Aeration and Irrigation, 491 | *Architects for Workmen’s Cottages ; Government’s Scanty Pay for Designs, 9 | ||
*Area and Rainfall, Comparison between Ireland, Scotland and Wales, 449 | |||
Air Compressor, Two-stage Steam-driven Volumetric Efficiency, 557 | *Argentine, Potential Wealth Due to Climate and Minerals, 185 | ||
*Arsenal, Projected, at the United States Military Base in France, 53 | |||
Air Compressors and Ammonia Compressors Driven by Synchronous Motors, 361 | *Asbestos Deposits of Rhodesia, Development, 163 | ||
*Asbestos Output of the United States, 141 | |||
Air-lift Pump Efficiency ; Increase in Proportion to Heat of Liquid Pumped, 31 | |||
Air-lift Pump, Novel Application of, 449 | |||
Air-lift Pumping and Submergence Conditions, 427 | |||
Air and Similar Gaseous Pressures, Unit for Measurement, 339 | |||
Air Supply, Minimum, for Divers, 535 | |||
Alcohol from Garbage, 30 | |||
Alloy, American, as a Substitute for German Silver, 317 | |||
Alloys, Iron, in Acid Manufacture, Ferrochrome and Silicon Iron, 31 | |||
Aluminium and Aluminium Alloys Plated with Nickel, Copper, | |||
Aluminium Alloyed with Calcium, Superior Metal Results, 427 | |||
Aluminium Company’s Endeavour to Get Water Supply from Loch Treig, 31 | |||
Aluminium, Electrolytic, Production of the World, 471 | |||
Aluminium Industry Development Since Outbreak of War, 557 | |||
Aluminium Scrap, Fluxes for Melting, 119 | |||
Ambulance Fund, Captain Dennis Bayley, 330 | |||
American Motor Car, Projected Year’s Production of One Type, 339 | |||
American Society of Naval Architects and Marine Engineers, New York Meeting, 434 | |||
Ammonia Production in Germany by Synthetic Process, 53 | |||
Aniline Colours, Exports from the United States Double the Pre-war Value, 73 | |||
Antimony from China; Trade in Japanese Hands, 207 | |||
Antimony, Use of, in Ammunition Manufacture, 361 | |||
Architects for Workmen’s Cottages ; Government’s Scanty Pay for Designs, 9 | |||
Area and Rainfall, Comparison between Ireland, Scotland and Wales, 449 | |||
Argentine, Potential Wealth Due to Climate and Minerals, 185 | |||
Arsenal, Projected, at the United States Military Base in France, 53 | |||
Asbestos Deposits of Rhodesia, Development, 163 | |||
Asbestos Output of the United States, 141 | |||
ASSOCIATIONS, INSTITUTIONS & SOCIETIES : | ASSOCIATIONS, INSTITUTIONS & SOCIETIES : | ||
*- ASSOCIATION OF ENGINEERING AND SHIPBUILDING DRAUGHTSMEN : | |||
*- MERSEYSIDE BRANCH : | |||
*-- Meeting, 109 | |||
*- ASSOCIATION, INCORPORATED MUNICIPAL ELECTRICAL : | |||
Meeting, 109 | *-- Future of Electric Power Supply, S. J. Watson, 193 | ||
*- ASSOCIATION, SCOTTISH ENGINEERING, SHIPBUILDING AND METALLURGICAL RESEARCH: | |||
*-- Formation, 72 | |||
*- INSTITUTE OF CHEMISTRY : | |||
Future of Electric Power Supply, S. J. Watson, 193 | *-- Annual Meeting, 242 | ||
*- INSTITUTE, IRON AND STEEL : | |||
*-- Annual and Autumn Meetings, 127 | |||
*- INSTITUTE OF METALS : | |||
Formation, 72 | *-- Annual Autumn Meeting, 546 | ||
*-- Annual General Meeting and Programme, 105, 193 | |||
*-- Formation of Diamonds, The Hon. Sir C. Parsons, 328 | |||
*- INSTITUTE, NORTH OF ENGLAND, OF MINING AND MECHANICAL ENGINEERS : | |||
Annual Meeting, 242 | *-- Ambulance Fund. Captain Dennis Bayley, 330 | ||
*- INSTITUTION OF AUTOMOBILE ENGINEERS : | |||
*-- Examination into Causes of Failure of Lorrv Parts on War Service, Lieut.-Col. R. K. Bagnall-Wild, 418 | |||
*-- Meeting; Awards for Papers, 176 | |||
Annual and Autumn Meetings, 127 | *-- Tank Engines, Geo. W. Watson, 418 | ||
ASSOCIATIONS, INSTITUTIONS & SOCIETIES (continued): | |||
*- INSTITUTION OF AUTOMOBILE ENGINEERS (continued) : | |||
*-- Utilisation of the Data of the Automobile Industry through Bureaux of Information, E. A. Savage, 176 | |||
Annual Autumn Meeting, 546 | *- INSTITUTION OF CIVIL ENGINEERS : | ||
*-- Advantage of Vertical Gas Retort, Alwyne Meade, 295 | |||
Annual General Meeting and Programme, 105, 193 | *-- Gas Manufacture as Costly Now as Thirty Years Ago, Alwyne Meade, 231 | ||
*- INSTITUTION OF ELECTRICAL ENGINEERS : | |||
Formation of Diamonds, The Hon. Sir C. Parsons, 328 | *-- Election of New Members of Council, 466 | ||
*-- Gas-firing Boilers, T. M. Hunter, 181 | |||
*-- Overseas Distribution of Engineering Appliances, L. Andrews, 317 | |||
*-- Wiring Rules Committee, Recommendation of, 317 | |||
Ambulance Fund. Captain Dennis Bayley, 330 | *- INSTITUTION, JUNIOR, OF ENGINEERS : | ||
*-- Gustave Canet Lecture on the Stokes Gun, Sir W. Stokes, 427, 513, 568 | |||
*- INSTITUTION OF LOCOMOTIVE ENGINEERS : | |||
*- LEEDS AND NORTH OF ENGLAND CENTRE: | |||
*-- Formation and Appointment of Officials, 383 | |||
*- INSTITUTION OF MECHANICAL ENGINEERS : | |||
R. K. Bagnall-Wild, 418 | *-- Employment of Women in Munition Factories, Miss Monkhouse, 361 | ||
*-- Sir Robert Hadfield’s Prize for Hardness of Metals Determination Method, 339 | |||
Meeting ; Awards for Papers, 176 | *-- War Work of Women on Munition Production in Engineering Shops, B. H. Morgan, 361 | ||
*- INSTITUTION OF NAVAL ARCHITECTS : | |||
Tank Engines, Geo. W. Watson, 418 | *-- Annual Meetings, 62 | ||
*- INSTITUTION OF PETROLEUM TECHNOLOGISTS: | |||
*-- A New British Oil Industry, Joint Paper, 141 | |||
*- INSTITUTION, ROYAL : | |||
*-- Annual Meeting ; Report ; Election of Officers and Members, 418 | |||
*-- Davy Faraday Research Laboratory, Large Endowment Fund Paid, 130 | |||
*-- General Meeting ; Elections, ando., 499 | |||
*-- Internal Ballistics, Lieut.-Col. A. G. Hadcock, 455 | |||
*-- Lectures after Easter, 284 | |||
*-- Poetry and Modern Life, Lawrence Binyon, 455 | |||
*-- Romance of Petroleum, Sir Boverton Redwood, 455 | |||
*- SOCIETY, CHEMICAL : | |||
*-- Mr. J. S. S. Brainc on Action on Lead of Green Oak, Mortars and Concrete, 383 | |||
*- SOCIETY OF ENGINEERS : | |||
*- CRYSTAL PALACE ENGINEERING SOCIETY : | |||
*-- Papers and Awards, 352 | |||
*- SOCIETY, OPTICAL : | |||
*-- Cementing Optical Parts, Use of Canada Balsam, J. W. French, 361 | |||
*-- Spherometer of Precision, Mr. J. Guild’s Design, 53 | |||
ASSOCIATIONS, INSTITUTIONS & SOCIETIES (continued): | ASSOCIATIONS, INSTITUTIONS & SOCIETIES (continued): | ||
*- SOCIETY, RONTGEN : | |||
*-- Silvanus Thompson Memorial Lecture, Professor Sir E. Rutherford, 239 | |||
*- SOCIETY, ROYAL, OF ARTS : | |||
*-- Silver Medal Awards for Papers, 557 | |||
*-- Tata Iron and Steel Works, H. M. Surtees Tuckwell, 163 | |||
*- SOCIETY, ROYAL METEOROLOGICAL : | |||
*-- Audibility of Gunfire on the Continent. Mr. Miller Christy, 557 | |||
*-- Measurement of Atmospheric Pollution Dr. J. S. Owens, 280 | |||
*-- Summer Thunderstorms, Conditions Precedent to Occurrence, J. Fairgrieve, 347 | |||
*-- Variations of Underground Water Level Near a Tidal Tiver, E. G. Bilham, 347 | |||
*ATMOSPHERIC Nitrogen for Munitions and Fertilisers ; Water-Power Plant in Alabama, 231 | |||
*Australia, Losses by Strikes in 1917, 449 | |||
Silvanus Thompson Memorial Lecture, Professor Sir E. Rutherford, 239 | |||
Silver Medal Awards for Papers, 557 | |||
Tata Iron and Steel Works, H. M. Surtees Tuckwell, 163 | |||
Audibility of Gunfire on the Continent. Mr. Miller Christy, 557 | |||
Measurement of Atmospheric Pollution Dr. J. S. Owens, 280 | |||
Summer Thunderstorms, Conditions Precedent to Occurrence, J. Fairgrieve, 347 Variations of Underground Water Level Near a Tidal Tiver, E. G. Bilham, 347 | |||
ATMOSPHERIC Nitrogen for Munitions and Fertilisers ; Water-Power Plant in Alabama, 231 | |||
Australia, Losses by Strikes in 1917, 449 | |||
B | B | ||
BALSA, New Wood, Its Properties, 197 Banks in Norway, New Temporary Law, 339 Bauxite Discoveries in British Guiana, British | *BALSA, New Wood, Its Properties, 197 | ||
*Banks in Norway, New Temporary Law, 339 | |||
Government to Retain First Call, 53 | *Bauxite Discoveries in British Guiana, British Government to Retain First Call, 53 | ||
*Bearing Metal, Alloy Patented in America, 339 | |||
Bearing Metal, Alloy Patented in America, 339 Belgium, Economical Reconstruction of, 395 | *Belgium, Economical Reconstruction of, 395 | ||
*Bevel Gearing, Supposed Inventor and Date, 295 | |||
Bevel Gearing, Supposed Inventor and Date, 295 | *Board of Education Examinations in Science and Technology to be Discontinued, 119 | ||
*Boiler Efficiency and Velocity, T. M. Hunter, 181 | |||
Board of Education Examinations in Science and Technology to be Discontinued, 119 | *Boiler Explosions in United Kingdom and United States, Comparison, 534 | ||
*Boiler Heating with Stripped Coal, 31 | |||
Boiler Efficiency and Velocity, T. M. Hunter, 181 | *Boiler Heating Surface, Loss of Heat Conductivity Due to Soot, 339 | ||
*Boy Artificers for the Royal Navy,. Nominations, 557 | |||
Boiler Explosions in United Kingdom and | *Boy Welfare in the B.S.A. Works, 130 | ||
*Boys’ Welfare Association, 449 | |||
United States, Comparison, 534 | *Brickmaking Industry on the Kolar Goldfield, 339 | ||
*Bridge, Simple Truss, Largest Span in the World, 231 | |||
Boiler Heating with Stripped Coal, 31 | *Bridge, Tongabuddra, India, Particulars of, 295 | ||
*Bridges in New South Wales, Old and New, 207 | |||
Boiler Heating Surface, Loss of Heat Conductivity Due to Soot, 339 | *British Empire Producers’ Organisation, 517 | ||
*BRITISH ENGINEERS’ ASSOCIATION : | |||
Boy Artificers for the Royal Navy, | *- Annual Meeting ; Dr. Addison’s Address, 239 | ||
*British Industries Fairs in London and Glasgow, 31, 242—see also Miscellaneous Index | |||
Boy Welfare in the B.S.A. Works, 130 | *British Institute of Social Service, Annual Meeting, 92 | ||
*Browning Light Machine Gun Compared with the Lewis Gun, 339 | |||
Boys’ Welfare Association, 449 | |||
Brickmaking Industry on the Kolar Goldfield, 339 | |||
Bridge, Simple Truss, Largest Span in the World, 231 | |||
Bridge, Tongabuddra, India, Particulars of, 295 | |||
Bridges in New South Wales, Old and New, 207 British Empire Producers’ Organisation, 517 | |||
Annual Meeting ; Dr. Addison’s Address, 239 British Industries Fairs in London and Glasgow, 31, 242—see also Miscellaneous Index | |||
British Institute of Social Service, Annual Meeting, 92 | |||
Browning Light Machine Gun Compared with the Lewis Gun, 339 | |||
C | |||
*CALCIUM Carbide Production, Need of Cheap Raw Material and Cheap Power, 207 | |||
*Calcium Carbide, Reduced Price, 9 | |||
*Calcutta, Increased Tax on Motor Cars, 97 | |||
*Canada, Demand for Power Greatly in Excess of Supply, 97 | |||
*Canada in Khaki, 130 | |||
*Canada, Municipal Expenditure, Comparison with English Methods, 96 | |||
*Canada’s Development as shown by Increased Mails, 491 | |||
*Canada’s Fuel Requirements, Solid and Liquid, 295 | |||
*Canada’s Fuel Resources, Situation of Coal and of Peat Bogs, 295 | |||
*Canada and United States, Use of Electric Furnaces and Output of Metals, 207 | |||
*Canadian Government Purchase of Agricultural Motors for Farmers, 295 | |||
*Canadian Imports and Exports, 404 | |||
*Canadian Water Power Resources, Not One- tenth Developed, 317 | |||
*Canal Projects, After the War, in France, 207 | |||
*Canals, Board of Trade Handbook, 154 | |||
*Carbide Production in Germany for Eventual Manufacture of Synthetic Rubber, 163 | |||
*Carbon in Fuels, Method of Estimating, 339 | |||
*Carborundum : Its Past History, 253 | |||
*Car Design and Accessory Drives, 207 | |||
*Cashew Nut, Valuable Properties of Nut and Tree, 491 | |||
*Cattle Slaughter and the Jewish Religion, 69 | |||
*Centrifugal Pumps : Question of Best Speed for Driving, 535 | |||
*Chadwick Public Lectures, H. T. Davidge, 239 | |||
*Change Speed Gear-box, Permanent Mesh, New Type, F. Sabel, 557 | |||
*Channel Tunnel Immediately After the War, 513 | |||
*Charcoal Blast-furnace Experiment in Mysore, 163 | |||
*“Cheap Steam,” Ed. Bennis and Co., 97 | |||
*Chemical Pulp Export from Norway, Distribution to Different Countries, 31 | |||
*Chicago, Analysis of Vehicles, Horse-drawn and Self-propelled, 405 | |||
*“Chichopoxtle,” Valuable New Lubricant from, 513 | |||
*China : Question of Gold Standard and Rise in Dollar Value, 73 | |||
*Chinese Wood-oil Tree, Use of Oil in Varnish Manufacture, 31 | |||
*Circular Tank, To Find the Capacity, 31 | |||
*Civil Engineering, General Congress in Paris Projected, 97 | |||
*Clutches, Friction, H. L. Towns, 68 | |||
COAL, COKE, AND COLLIERIES : | COAL, COKE, AND COLLIERIES : | ||
Boiler-house Waste of Coal Due to Lack of | *- Boiler-house Waste of Coal Due to Lack of Intelligence and Training, 163 | ||
*- By-product Coke-making in America, Statistics, 163 | |||
Intelligence and Training, 163 | *- By-product Coke Manufacture, Weekly Reports in the United States, 383 | ||
*- Canada and the United States, Arrangements for Inter-export of Coal, 427 | |||
By-product Coke-making in America, Statistics, 163 | *- Coal Conservation, Comparison in Output between Great Britain and the United States, 141 | ||
*- Coal Cutting Methods and Wages, Changes of Two Centuries, 16 | |||
By-product Coke Manufacture, Weekly Reports in the United States, 383 | *- Coal, Iron, and Copper Discoveries in Algeria, 141 | ||
*- Coal Mining Development in Germany, 31 | |||
Canada and the United States, Arrangements for Inter-export of Coal, 427 | *- Coal, Stripped, for Heating Boilers, 31 | ||
*- Coal and Textile Clothing, Production per Head in United States and Great Britain, 141 | |||
Coal Conservation, Comparison in Output between Great Britain and the United States, 141 | *- Coal Transport Saving Scheme, 427 | ||
*- CokeFuel Instead of Oil for Omnibus Running, Great Economy, 9 | |||
Coal Cutting Methods and Wages, Changes of Two Centuries, 16 | *- Coke Fuel for Steam Wagons, 273 | ||
*- Coke Oven Plants and Utilisation of Waste Heat, F. E. Harris, 427 | |||
Coal, Iron, and Copper Discoveries in Algeria, 141 | *- Coking Stokers an Absolute Preventative of Smoke, 273 | ||
*- Colliery Machinery, Safety and Signal Device, T. D. Watson, 253 | |||
Coal Mining Development in Germany, 31 Coal, Stripped, for Heating Boilers, 31 | *- Electric Display Devices in New York, Restrictions to Save Coal, 73 | ||
*- Electric Plants, Wasteful, Suggested Elimination of, to Economise Coal, 405 | |||
Coal and Textile Clothing, Production per Head in United States and Great Britain, 141 | *- Electric Power Supply and Coal Conservation, 503 | ||
*- Gas Making and Unsuitable Coal, 207 | |||
Coal Transport Saving Scheme, 427 | *- Heating in Coal Stacks, Prevention of, 273 | ||
*- Natal and the Transvaal, Undeveloped Coal Seams, 200 | |||
*- Power Production and Coal Consumption, 87 | |||
*- Power Supply and Coal Saving, 231 | |||
Great Economy, 9 | *- Sawdust and Wood as Coal Substitutes in Switzerland and France, 185 | ||
*- Spontaneous Ignition, Simple Test for Probability of, in Coal, 449 | |||
Coke Fuel for Steam Wagons, 273 | *- Storage, Effect on Bituminous Coals, Professor S. W. Parr, 82 | ||
*- Thawing Plants for Frozen Coal in Railway Cars, 382 | |||
Coke Oven Plants and Utilisation of Waste | *- Waste of Coal in the United States in Obsolete Steam Engine Plant, 52 | ||
*COD Liver and Other Fish Oils to Replace Vegetable Oils in Margarine Manufacture, 273 | |||
Heat, F. E. Harris, 427 | *Cold Storage Little Used in France, 97 | ||
*Columbia River, Great Variation in Flow, 53 | |||
Coking Stokers an Absolute Preventative of Smoke, 273 | *Commercial Motor Users’ Association, First Presidential Address, Colonel Crompton, 405 | ||
*Concrete for Building Government Cottages, 31 | |||
Colliery Machinery, Safety and Signal Device, T. D. Watson, 253 | *Concrete Cargo 5000-Ton Steamship under Construction in America, 231 | ||
*Concrete Coaling Station for Locomotives on the Lehigh Valley, Notable Features, 535 | |||
Electric Display Devices in New York, Restrictions to Save Coal, 73 | *Concrete Construction Specifications, 557 | ||
*Concrete, Effect of Salts of Alkali Water, 427 | |||
Electric Plants, Wasteful, Suggested Elimination of, to Economise Coal, 405 | *Concrete Outfall Sewer on the Bottom of Lake Erie, 491 | ||
*Concrete, Reinforced, Action of Salt on, Necessary Precautions, Profe^sior H. J. M. Creighton, 73 | |||
Electric Power Supply and Coal Conservation, 503 | *Concrete, Reinforced, Building with Floor Space of 24 Acres, 9 | ||
*Concrete, Reinforced, in Machine Tools, 361 | |||
Gas Making and Unsuitable Coal, 207 Heating in Coal Stacks, Prevention of, 273 Natal and the Transvaal, Undeveloped Coal | *Concrete, Reinforced, Test to Ascertain “Point of Destruction,” 557 | ||
*Concrete, Resistance to Sea Water Affected by Workmanship, Experiments, 141 | |||
Seams, 200 | *Concrete Roads in America, 50,000,000 Square Yards, 97 | ||
*Contraction of Volume of Certain Substances After being Dissolved in Water in Increasing Quantities, 317 | |||
Power Production and Coal Consumption, 87 | *Conversion Tables, Hoffmann Manufacturing Company, 416 | ||
*Copper Articles, Black Finish for, 361 | |||
Power Supply and Coal Saving, 231 | *Copper, Colour Changes Due to Special Treatment, 141 | ||
*Copper Melted for Castings, Need of Care, 9 | |||
Sawdust and Wood as Coal Substitutes in Switzerland and France, 185 | *Copper Mines in Queensland, Reopening, 97 | ||
*Copper and Tin Mixture, Addition of Aluminium, 231 | |||
Spontaneous Ignition, Simple Test for Probability of, in Coal, 449 | *Copper Zinc Alloys, Influence of Cadmium on, Leon Guilletr 474 | ||
*Corliss Engines: Centenary of Inventor’s Birth, 535 | |||
Storage, Effect on Bituminous Coals, Professor S. W. Parr, 82 | *Cotton in Madras, Government Grown, Result of Experiments, 185 | ||
*Crusher, New Type, for Coke and Coal, 427 | |||
Thawing Plants for Frozen Coal in Railway Cars, 382 | *Crystal Palace Engineering Society, Papers and Awards, 352 | ||
*Cuprous Oxide, Formerly German Monopoly, Now Made in England, 339 | |||
Waste of Coal in the United States in Obsolete | *Cutting Points on a Grinding Wheel, 491 | ||
Steam Engine Plant, 52 | |||
COD Liver and Other Fish Oils to Replace Vegetable Oils in Margarine Manufacture, 273 | |||
Cold Storage Little Used in France, 97 | |||
Columbia River, Great Variation in Flow, 53 | |||
Commercial Motor Users’ Association, First | |||
Presidential Address, Colonel Crompton, 405 Concrete for Building Government Cottages, 31 Concrete Cargo 5000-Ton Steamship under | |||
Construction in America, 231 | |||
Concrete Coaling Station for Locomotives on the Lehigh Valley, Notable Features, 535 | |||
Concrete Construction Specifications, 557 Concrete, Effect of Salts of Alkali Water, 427 Concrete Outfall Sewer on the Bottom of Lake | |||
Erie, 491 | |||
Concrete, Reinforced, Action of Salt on, Necessary Precautions, | |||
Concrete, Reinforced, Building with Floor Space of 24 Acres, 9 | |||
Concrete, Reinforced, in Machine Tools, 361 | |||
Concrete, Reinforced, Test to Ascertain | |||
Concrete, Resistance to Sea Water Affected by Workmanship, Experiments, 141 | |||
Concrete Roads in America, 50,000,000 Square Yards, 97 | |||
Contraction of Volume of Certain Substances After being Dissolved in Water in Increasing Quantities, 317 | |||
Conversion Tables, Hoffmann Manufacturing | |||
Copper Articles, Black Finish for, 361 | |||
Copper, Colour Changes Due to Special Treatment, 141 | |||
Copper Melted for Castings, Need of Care, 9 | |||
Copper Mines in Queensland, Reopening, 97 | |||
Copper and Tin Mixture, Addition of Aluminium, 231 | |||
Copper Zinc Alloys, Influence of Cadmium on, | |||
Leon Guilletr 474 | |||
Corliss Engines: Centenary of | |||
Cotton in Madras, Government Grown, Result of Experiments, 185 | |||
Crusher, New Type, for Coke and Coal, 427 | |||
Crystal Palace Engineering Society, Papers and | |||
Awards, 352 | |||
Cuprous Oxide, Formerly German Monopoly, Now Made in England, 339 | |||
Cutting Points on a Grinding Wheel, 491 | |||
D | D | ||
DAM, Arch-, Lightest Section, in the World, New South Wales, 405 | *DAM, Arch-, Lightest Section, in the World, New South Wales, 405 | ||
*Dam on the Cimarron River, New Mexico, Dimensions and Interesting Features, 383 | |||
Dam on the Cimarron River, New Mexico, Dimensions and Interesting Features, 383 | *Dam, Concrete, for Supply of Salt Lake City, Storage of 300,000,000 Gallons, 535 | ||
*Dams, Multiple-arch Reinforced Concrete, Growing in Number in America, 535 | |||
Dam, Concrete, for Supply of Salt Lake City, Storage of 300,000,000 Gallons, 535 | *Daylight Saving in United States, 449 | ||
*Death of Mr. Thomas Greenwood, 513 | |||
Dams, Multiple-arch Reinforced Concrete, | *Death of Mr. H. J. Swindley, 73 | ||
*Decimal Coinage Bill Pressed for, 339 | |||
Growing in Number in America, 535 | *Decimal Coinage Supported by the Federation of British Industries, 427 | ||
*Diamonds, Formation of, Sir C. Parsons on, 328 | |||
Daylight Saving in United States, 449 | *Dock, New, for Barrow-in-Furness, Furness Railway Company and Vickers, Limited, 185 | ||
*Domestic Fat Trap, 369 | |||
Death of Mr. Thomas Greenwood, 513 | *Drill Hole Nearly 5000ft. Deep, 427 | ||
*Dye Industry, British, and Railway Charges on Raw Chemical Material, 471 | |||
Death of Mr. H. J. Swindley, 73 | |||
Decimal Coinage Bill Pressed for, 339 | |||
Decimal Coinage Supported by the Federation of British Industries, 427 | |||
Diamonds, Formation of, Sir C. Parsons on, 328 | |||
Dock, New, for Barrow-in-Furness, Furness | |||
Railway Company and Vickers, Limited, 185 | |||
Domestic Fat Trap, 369 | |||
Drill Hole Nearly 5000ft. Deep, 427 | |||
Dye Industry, British, and Railway Charges on Raw Chemical Material, 471 | |||
E | E | ||
EDUCATION in Aeronautical Technology and Aircraft Architecture, 491 | *EDUCATION in Aeronautical Technology and Aircraft Architecture, 491 | ||
ELECTRICAL MATTERS: | ELECTRICAL MATTERS: | ||
Aberystwyth, Electro-Power Station for, 97 | *- Aberystwyth, Electro-Power Station for, 97 | ||
*- Alarm Signal Actuated by Sensitive Selenium Cell, 97 | |||
Alarm Signal Actuated by Sensitive Selenium Cell, 97 | *- Argentine Republic, 238 Central Electricity Stations in, 163 | ||
*- Army Demand for Electricians and Equipment, 207 | |||
Argentine Republic, 238 Central Electricity Stations in, 163 | *- Association of British Electrical Engineers, Proposed Formation of, 303 | ||
*- Auto-transformer to Transform 12,000 Volts to 24,000 Volts, 163 | |||
Army Demand for Electricians and Equipment, 207 | *- Bar Mill, Electrically-driven, at Ohio Works, 185 | ||
*- Batteries, “Storage,” or “ Reversible,” 231 | |||
Association of British Electrical Engineers, Proposed Formation of, 303 | *- Blind People’s New Occupation, 490 | ||
*- Boosting, Need of Provision for, in Design of | |||
Auto-transformer to Transform 12,000 Volts to 24,000 Volts, 163 | *- Charging Equipment for Electric Motor Vehicles, 53 | ||
*- Cable, Safe Working Internal Temperature of, 449 | |||
Bar Mill, Electrically-driven, at Ohio Works, 185 | *- Canadian Water Powers, Advantageous Situation of, 449 | ||
*- Chadwick Public Lectures, H. T. Davidge, 239 | |||
Batteries, | *- Cheap Power near Strathpeffer, 460 | ||
*- Clothes Electrically Heated, Some Anticipated Results, 73 | |||
Blind People’s New Occupation, 490 | *- Coal Conservation and Power Supply, 503 | ||
*- Coal and Electric Energy, Inter-export Arrangements between Canada and United States, 427 | |||
Boosting, Need of Provision for, in Design of | *- Commonwealth Edison Company Generating Station One of the Largest in the World, 513 | ||
*- Composite Insulating Materials Investigation, 504 | |||
Charging Equipment for Electric Motor Vehicles, 53 | *- Cooking and Heating by Electricity, Greatly Increased Use of, 295 | ||
*- Domestic Appliances, Electric, Greatly Increased Sale of, in U.S.A., 253 | |||
Cable, Safe Working Internal Temperature of, 449 | *- Dry Cell Recuperation, C. F. Burgess, 73 | ||
*- Eel in the Pipe Line Shuts Down Electricity Supply, 39 | |||
Canadian Water Powers, Advantageous Situation of, 449 | *- Effects of War Conditions on Cost and Quality of Electric Service, L. S. Goodman and W. B. Jackson, 185 | ||
*- Electrical Heating, Question of Development, 339 | |||
Chadwick Public Lectures, H. T. Davidge, 239 | *- Electric Winding Engines, John F. Perry, 207 | ||
*- Factory for Electrodes in Norway, 489 | |||
Cheap Power near Strathpeffer, 460 | *- Generating Station at Saint Barthelemy, 427 | ||
*- Generating Systems, Large, of America; Outputs, Peak Loads and Load Factors Statistics, 383 | |||
*- German Electrical Plant, Widespread Failure in Working, 253 | |||
*- High Voltage Insulators; Deteriorating Effects of Corona, 119 | |||
Coal Conservation and Power Supply, 503 | *- Hot Water Supply from Electricity Stations, W. M. Selvey, 317 | ||
*- Hydro-electric Generating Station in Iowa, Complete Automatic Working, 52 | |||
Coal and Electric Energy, Inter-export Arrangements between Canada and United States, 427 | *- Increasing Load, New Steam Plant for, Special Economisers Used, 207 | ||
*- Induction Meters’ Adaptation to Different Frequencies, Difficulties, 405 | |||
Commonwealth Edison Company Generating Station One of the Largest in the World, 513 | *- Induction Motors on the Witwatersrand, 510 | ||
*- Insulating Material; Ingredients and Properties, 119 | |||
Composite Insulating | *- Insulating Properties of Fish Offal Byproduct, 535 | ||
*- Iron Piping for Bus-bars Replaces Copper in an American Central Station, 73 | |||
Cooking and Heating by Electricity, Greatly Increased Use of, 295 | *- Japanese Electrical Industry, Statistics, 231 | ||
*- Japan’s Increased Use of Electricity in Steel Manufacture, 119 | |||
Domestic Appliances, Electric, Greatly Increased Sale of, in U.S.A., 253 | *- Lancaster Motor Omnibuses, Mileage and Finance, 317 | ||
*- Leek Linking-up Scheme, 273 | |||
Dry Cell Recuperation, C. F. Burgess, 73 | *- Lifting Magnet in the United States, Immense Saving of Labour by Use of, 273 | ||
*- Lighting Restrictions and Electricity Meters, C. H. W. Gerhardi, 557 | |||
Eel in the Pipe Line Shuts Down Electricity Supply, 39 | *- Lightning Flash, Electric Quantities in, 471 | ||
*- Long Distance Electric Transport, Not Yet Called For, 317 | |||
Effects of War Conditions | *- Manchester, Future Standard for Transmission, 565 | ||
*- Mechanical Design of the Turbo-Alternator Rotor, S. F. Barclay, 317 | |||
Electrical Heating, Question of Development, 339 | |||
Electric Winding Engines, John F. Perry, 207 | |||
Factory for Electrodes in Norway, 489 | |||
Generating Station at Saint Barthelemy, 427 | |||
Generating Systems, Large, of America; | |||
Outputs, Peak Loads and Load Factors Statistics, 383 | |||
German Electrical Plant, Widespread Failure in Working, 253 | |||
High Voltage Insulators; Deteriorating | |||
Hot Water Supply from Electricity Stations, W. M. Selvey, 317 | |||
Hydro-electric Generating Station in Iowa, Complete Automatic Working, 52 | |||
Increasing Load, New Steam Plant for, Special Economisers Used, 207 | |||
Induction Meters’ Adaptation to Different | |||
Frequencies, Difficulties, 405 | |||
Induction Motors on the Witwatersrand, 510 | |||
Insulating Material; Ingredients and Properties, 119 | |||
Insulating Properties of Fish Offal Byproduct, 535 | |||
Iron Piping for Bus-bars Replaces Copper in an American Central Station, 73 | |||
Japanese Electrical Industry, Statistics, 231 | |||
Japan’s Increased Use of Electricity in Steel Manufacture, 119 | |||
Lancaster Motor Omnibuses, Mileage and Finance, 317 | |||
Leek Linking-up Scheme, 273 | |||
Lifting Magnet in the United States, Immense | |||
Saving of Labour by Use of, 273 | |||
Lighting Restrictions and Electricity Meters, C. H. W. Gerhardi, 557 | |||
Lightning Flash, Electric Quantities in, 471 | |||
Long Distance Electric Transport, Not Yet Called For, 317 | |||
Manchester, Future Standard for Transmission, 565 | |||
Mechanical Design of the Turbo-Alternator Rotor, S. F. Barclay, 317 | |||
ELECTRICAL MATTERS (continued) : | ELECTRICAL MATTERS (continued) : | ||
*- Methane Detector, Electric, for Use in Mines, 471 | |||
Methane Detector, Electric, for Use in Mines, 471 | *- Motors, Return Ordered to be Made in Germany; Possible Connection with Copper Scarcity, 97 | ||
*- Motors for Textile Mills, Smaller Sizes in Favour, 185 | |||
Motors, Return Ordered to be Made in Germany; Possible Connection with Copper Scarcity, 97 | *- Names of Men of Science to Denote Units, Objections to Practice, 73 | ||
*- Niagara Falls, Proposed Consolidation of Three Power Companies, 447 | |||
Motors for Textile Mills, Smaller Sizes in Favour, 185 | *- Niagara; Power Generation and Supply Comparison between Canada and United States, 513 | ||
*- North-West Station, U.S.A., Big New Electrical Installation, 361 | |||
Names of Men of Science to Denote Units, Objections to Practice, 73 | *- Petrol Motor Cars and Electric Lighting and Starting; Double or Single Unit Question, 231 | ||
*- Power Factor of an Alternating Current Circuit, 513 | |||
Niagara Falls, Proposed Consolidation of Three Power Companies, 447 | *- Power Line 22,000 Volt in California, Reinforced Concrete Poles for Six Miles Length, 383 | ||
*- Power for Oilfields, in Baku and in Roumania, 527 | |||
Niagara; Power Generation and Supply Comparison between Canada and United States, 513 | *- Rand Mine, Second Electric Furnacelnstalled, 471 | ||
*- Record Output and Earnings from Sale of Electric Energy, 163 | |||
North-West Station, U.S.A., Big New Electrical Installation, 361 | *- Restriction of Electric Display Devices in New York and Saving of Coal, 73 | ||
*- Saving of Coal by Elimination of Wasteful Electric Plants, 405 | |||
Petrol Motor Cars and Electric Lighting and Starting; Double or Single Unit Question, 231 | *- Shoe Factory, Entire Equipment Electrical, 273 | ||
*- Single-phase Transformers, Ordinary High Pressures for, in America, 231 | |||
Power Factor of an Alternating Current Circuit, 513 | *- Steam Pressure of 300 lb. per Square Inch in Central Generating Station, 273 | ||
*- Studs, Back Connection, for Switch Gear, Variations in Type of, 253 | |||
Power Line 22,000 Volt in California, Reinforced Concrete Poles for Six Miles Length, 383 | *- Technical Story of the Frequencies, B. G. Lamme, 163 | ||
*- Temperature Effects in Direct Current Meters, G. W. Stubbings, 253 | |||
Power for Oilfields, in Baku and in Roumania, 527 | *- Transmission of Power Across the St. Lawrence River, Submarine and Overhead Cables, 449 | ||
*- Trucks, Charging, Enormous Consumption of Power at Bush Terminal, New York, 535 | |||
Rand Mine, Second Electric Furnacelnstalled, 471 | *- Turbine Room Equipment of New Glasgow Power Station, 273 | ||
*- Units of Electricity to Melt a Ton of Steel, Figures, 405 | |||
Record Output and Earnings from Sale of Electric Energy, 163 | *- Vaseline Replacing Air in a Cable Duct, Experiment, 383 | ||
*- Vereeniging, S. Africa, Fourth Largest Power Station, 9 | |||
Restriction of Electric Display Devices in New York and Saving of Coal, 73 | *- Voltaic Cell, New Form of, on French Railways, 471 | ||
*- War and Electricity Supply, 82 | |||
Saving of Coal by Elimination of Wasteful Electric Plants, 405 | *- “Will-o’-the-Wisps.” Perpetual Motion and the Ideal High-voltage Generator, 9 | ||
*- Wire Manufacture for Electrical Purposes, Big Preparations in America for After-War Trade, 383 | |||
Shoe Factory, Entire Equipment Electrical, 273 | *ELECTROLYTIC Copper, Modulus of Elasticity, Working Conditions in Design of Transmission Lines, 9 | ||
*Electrolytic Process of De-oxidisation, 152 | |||
Single-phase Transformers, Ordinary High Pressures for, in America, 231 | *Electroplating for Aluminium, New Process, 541 | ||
*Embankment to Protect the City of Concepcion from Flooding of Bio Bio River, 9 | |||
Steam Pressure of 300 lb. per Square Inch in Central Generating Station, 273 | *Engineer and Engineering, Need of Legal Definition, 185 | ||
*Engineering School at Portland, 243 | |||
Studs, Back Connection, for Switch Gear, Variations in Type of, 253 | *Engineering Standards Committee Incorporated, 471 | ||
*Engineering Student : Accusations of Apathy, 383 | |||
Technical Story of the Frequencies, B. G. Lamme, 163 | *Engineering Students in the United States, Proportion Exempted from Military Service, 163 | ||
*Engineering Trades (New Industries) Committee, 303 | |||
Temperature Effects in Direct Current Meters, G. W. Stubbings, 253 | *Engineers’ Club for the Midlands, 491 | ||
*Engineers for War Service, Suggested Certificates, 427 | |||
Transmission of Power Across the St. Lawrence River, Submarine and Overhead Cables, 449 | *Engines of Various Classes, Average Weights per Brake Horse-power, P. N. Everett, 253 | ||
*English Weather, 503 | |||
Trucks, Charging, Enormous Consumption of Power at Bush Terminal, New York, 535 | *Etching Brasses and Bronzes, 231 | ||
*Ethyl Chloride Prepared by Grove’s Process, 231 | |||
Turbine Room Equipment of New Glasgow Power Station, 273 | *Evaporation and Stefan’s Law, N. Thomas and A. Ferguson, 427 | ||
*Exhibition of Enemy Countries Products and Appliances Now Produced in United Kingdom, 383 | |||
Units of Electricity to Melt a Ton of Steel, Figures, 405 | *Exhibition of Products and Appliances Made at Home Formerly Imported from Enemy Countries, 535 | ||
*Explosions, Dust Barriers for Prevention in Alberta, Canada, 97 | |||
Vaseline Replacing Air in a Cable Duct, Experiment, 383 | *Explosive from Liquid Oxygen, Experiments in United States, 295 | ||
Vereeniging | |||
Voltaic Cell, New Form of, on French Railways, 471 | |||
War and Electricity Supply, 82 | |||
Wire Manufacture for Electrical Purposes, Big Preparations in America for After-War Trade, 383 | |||
ELECTROLYTIC Copper, Modulus of Elasticity, Working Conditions in Design of Transmission Lines, 9 | |||
Electrolytic Process of De-oxidisation, 152 | |||
Electroplating for Aluminium, New Process, 541 | |||
Embankment to Protect the City of Concepcion from Flooding of Bio Bio River, 9 | |||
Engineer and Engineering, Need of Legal Definition, 185 | |||
Engineering School at Portland, 243 | |||
Engineering Standards Committee Incorporated, 471 | |||
Engineering Student : Accusations of Apathy, 383 | |||
Engineering Students in the United States, Proportion Exempted from Military Service, 163 | |||
Engineering Trades (New Industries) Committee, 303 | |||
Engineers’ Club for the Midlands, 491 | |||
Engineers for War Service, Suggested Certificates, 427 | |||
Engines of Various Classes, Average Weights per Brake Horse-power, P. N. Everett, 253 | |||
English Weather, 503 | |||
Etching Brasses and Bronzes, 231 | |||
Ethyl Chloride Prepared by Grove’s Process, 231 | |||
Evaporation and Stefan’s Law, N. Thomas and | |||
A. Ferguson | |||
Exhibition of Enemy Countries Products and | |||
Appliances Now Produced in United Kingdom, 383 | |||
Exhibition of Products and Appliances Made at Home Formerly Imported from Enemy Countries, 535 | |||
Explosions, Dust Barriers for Prevention in Alberta, Canada, 97 | |||
Explosive from Liquid Oxygen, Experiments in United States, 295 | |||
F | F | ||
FARTHINGS, Great Increase in Issue of Coins, 9 | *FARTHINGS, Great Increase in Issue of Coins, 9 | ||
*Firebricks from Coal Ash, Value of New Process, 31 | |||
Firebricks from Coal Ash, Value of New Process, 31 | *Fire Waste in Canada Greatest in the World, 299 | ||
*Fires in New York Attributable to Defective Electrical Installations, Analysis, 535 | |||
Fire Waste in Canada Greatest in the World, 299 | *Fish Freezing in Brine, Greatly Improved Method, 273 | ||
*Flax Cultivation in Canada and India, 185 | |||
Fires in New York Attributable to Defective Electrical Installations, Analysis, 535 | *Flax Supply of the World Absorbed by Countries at War, 119 | ||
*Fluxes for Melting Aluminium Scrap, 119 | |||
Fish Freezing in Brine, Greatly Improved Method, 273 | *Foreign Technical Press, A Review of, 570 | ||
*Foreign Trade, 264 | |||
Flax Cultivation in Canada and India, 185 | *Forged Axles, Hollow, Question of Strength, 471 | ||
*Forgings, Cooling, by Compressed Air, 285 ; (Correction), Sandberg’s Patent, 373 | |||
Flax Supply of the World Absorbed by Countries at War, 119 | *Forth and Clyde Ship Canal, Scheme Suspended, 557 | ||
*Freezing, Permanent, Depth of, 317 | |||
Fluxes for Melting Aluminium Scrap, | *Friction Clutches, H. L. Towns. 68 | ||
*Fuel Consumption, Test and Record Motor Cycle Run in California, 557 | |||
Foreign Technical Press, A Review of, 570 | *Fuel, “Non-pinking,” for Motor Cars, 73 | ||
*Furnace, Martin, Heating with Wet Lignites, 535 | |||
Foreign Trade, 264 | |||
Forged Axles, Hollow, Question of Strength, 471 | |||
Forgings, Cooling, by Compressed Air, 285; | |||
(Correction), Sandberg’s Patent, 373 | |||
Forth and | |||
Freezing, Permanent, Depth of, 317 | |||
Friction Clutches, H. L. Towns. 68 | |||
Fuel Consumption, Test and Record Motor | |||
Cycle Run in California, 557 | |||
Fuel, | |||
Furnace, Martin, Heating with Wet Lignites, 535 | |||
G | G | ||
GAS, Absorbent, for Fighting Poisonous Gases, American Discovery, 535 | *GAS, Absorbent, for Fighting Poisonous Gases, American Discovery, 535 | ||
*Gas, Coal, Replacing Petrol for Commercial Vehicles, 231 | |||
Gas, Coal, Replacing Petrol for Commercial Vehicles, 231 | *Gas Manufacture as Costly Now as Thirty Years Ago, Alwyne Meade, 231 | ||
*Gas for Motor Vehicles, Obtainable from all but Three Undertakings, 163 | |||
Gas Manufacture as Costly Now as Thirty Years Ago, Alwyne Meade, 231 | *Gas for Motor Vehicles, Use Restricted, by Board of Trade, 31 | ||
*Gas or Petrol for Motor Vehicles ; Different Aspects of the Question in United Kingdom and in Australia, 9 | |||
Gas for Motor Vehicles, Obtainable from all but Three Undertakings, 163 | *Gas Production from Sawdust or Wood Instead of Coal, 73 | ||
*Gas-propelled Motor Car in Paris, 253 | |||
Gas for Motor Vehicles, Use Restricted, by Board of Trade, 31 | *Gas Traction, Conversion of Commercial Motor Vehicles, 141 | ||
*Gas Traction in Manchester, 405 | |||
Gas or Petrol for Motor Vehicles ; Different Aspects of the Question in United Kingdom and in Australia, 9 | *Gas Traction and Unsuitable Containers, 427 | ||
*Gauge Work Tolerance, Tests in an. American University, 471 | |||
Gas Production from Sawdust or Wood Instead of Coal, 73 | *Gear Standardisation and Uniformity of Commercial Practices in Marketing Gears, in America, 535 | ||
*German Machine Tools, Increased Output, 449 | |||
Gas-propelled Motor Car in Paris, 253 | *Germany’s Agricultural Research Institutions, 295 | ||
*Germany’s Engineering Debt to British Engineers, 53 | |||
Gas Traction, Conversion of Commercial Motor | *Germany’s Large Purchases of Wool from South Africa before the War, 207 | ||
*Gifts for the Labour Companies Overseas, 215 | |||
Vehicles, 141 | *Glasgow, Fixed Bridge Over the Clyde, Erection Recommended, 361 | ||
*Glasgow, Joint Catalogues of Technical Book in Various Libraries, 361 | |||
Gas Traction in Manchester, 405 | *Glass Products in the United States, Excess of Imports in 1914 and Excess of Exports in 1917, 73 | ||
*Glommen River, Norway, as Important Industrial Site, 53 | |||
Gas Traction and Unsuitable Containers, 427 | *Gold Mines, Precarious Position in South Africa, 9 | ||
*Gold Production of the World, 273 | |||
Gauge Work Tolerance, Tests in | *Gold from Southern Rhodesia. 513 | ||
*Gold, World’s Output. British Empire Proportion, 17 | |||
Gear Standardisation and Uniformity of Commercial Practices in Marketing Gears, in America, 535 | *Greenwich Observatory, Magnet House Superseded, 491 | ||
*Gun, The Stokes, Lecture by Sir Wilfrid Stokes, 427, 513, 568 | |||
German Machine Tools, Increased Output, 449 | |||
Germany’s Agricultural Research Institutions, 295 | |||
Germany’s Engineering Debt to British Engineers, 53 | |||
Germany’s Large Purchases of Wool from South Africa before the War, 207 | |||
Gifts for the Labour Companies Overseas, 215 | |||
Glasgow, Fixed Bridge Over the Clyde, Erection Recommended, 361 | |||
Glasgow, Joint Catalogues of Technical Book in Various Libraries, 361 | |||
Glass Products in the United States, Excess of Imports in 1914 and Excess of Exports in 1917, 73 | |||
Glommen River, Norway, as Important Industrial Site, 53 | |||
Gold Mines, Precarious Position in South Africa, 9 | |||
Gold Production of the World, 273 | |||
Gold from Southern Rhodesia. 513 | |||
Gold, World’s Output | |||
Greenwich Observatory, Magnet House Superseded, 491 | |||
Gun, The Stokes, Lecture by Sir Wilfrid Stokes, 427, 513, 568 | |||
H | H | ||
HAUGESUND, Norway, Projected Port Improvements, 9 | *HAUGESUND, Norway, Projected Port Improvements, 9 | ||
*Hankow, Increase of Motor Vehicles and Probable Road Improvements, 73 | |||
Hankow, Increase | *Hardness of Metals, Prize Fund Presented by Sir Robert Hadfield, 339 | ||
*Heat, New Principle in the Flow of, Dr. C. Hering, 316 | |||
Probable Road Improvements, 73 | *Heat Transmission of Building Materials, A. C. Willard and L. C. Lichty, 557 | ||
*Heating and Domestic Engineers’ Programme, 273 | |||
Hardness of Metals, Prize Fund Presented by Sir Robert Hadfield, 339 | *Hong-Kong, Motor Road Round Island, 163 | ||
*Horse-power, Steam Engine and Water, in the United States, Estimated Quantity Undeveloped, 273 | |||
Heat, New Principle in the Flow of, Dr. C. Hering, 316 | *Hot Water from the Depths of the Earth, Temperature Increase in Proportion to Depth, 9 | ||
*Houses for the Working Classes, Local Government Board Plans, 141 | |||
Heat Transmission of Building Materials, A. C. | *Housing and Town Planning, National, Subdivision of Houses, 317 | ||
*Housing of Working Classes,‘Financing Private Enterprise, Scheme for, 253 | |||
Willard and L. C. Lichty, 557 | *Hydro-electric Generating Station in Iowa Automatically Operated, 52 | ||
*Hydrogen to Replace Petrol in Switzerland, 491 | |||
Heating and Domestic Engineers’ Programme, 273 | |||
Hong-Kong, Motor Road Round Island, 163 | |||
Horse-power, Steam Engine and Water, in the | |||
United States, Estimated Quantity Undeveloped, 273 | |||
Hot Water from the Depths of the Earth, Temperature Increase in Proportion to Depth, 9 | |||
Houses for the Working Classes, Local Government Board Plans, 141 | |||
Housing and Town Planning, National, Subdivision of Houses, 317 | |||
Housing of Working Classes,‘Financing Private | |||
Enterprise, Scheme for, 253 | |||
Hydro-electric Generating Station in Iowa Automatically Operated, 52 | |||
Hydrogen to Replace Petrol in Switzerland, 491 | |||
I | I | ||
ICELANDIC Trade, Chamber of Commerce for Promoting and Protecting, 119 | *ICELANDIC Trade, Chamber of Commerce for Promoting and. Protecting, 119 | ||
*India, Early Attempts to Establish Iron and Steel Industry, 185 | |||
India, Early Attempts to Establish Iron and Steel Industry, 185 | *Indian Munitions Board Shipbuilding Branch Started at Calcutta, 317 | ||
*India’s Great Demand for Maps, 317 | |||
Indian Munitions Board Shipbuilding Branch Started at Calcutta, 317 | *Industrial Reconstruction Council, 280 | ||
India’s Great Demand for Maps, 317 | |||
Industrial Reconstruction Council, 280 | |||
IRON AND STEEL: | IRON AND STEEL: | ||
Annealing of Cold-hammered or Hardened Steels, Comparison, 339 | *- Annealing of Cold-hammered or Hardened Steels, Comparison, 339 | ||
*- Australian Steel Foundry Plants, Details of, 317 | |||
Australian Steel Foundry Plants, Details of, 317 | *- Brazil and Iron Ore, Rich Supplies, and Facilities for its Use, 231 | ||
*- Charcoal Blast-furnace Experiment in Mysore, 163 | |||
Brazil and Iron Ore, Rich Supplies, and Facilities for its Use, 231 | *- Cooling Forgings by Compressed Air, 285 ; (Correction), C. P. Sandberg’s Patent, 373 | ||
*- Crucible Steel Manufacture, Paper by Mr. F. B. Lounsberry, 557 | |||
Charcoal Blast-furnace Experiment in Mysore, 163 | *- Differential Dilatometer for Thermal Investigations on Steels, M. Pierre Chevenard, 53 | ||
*- Electricity Required to Melt a Ton of Steel, 405 | |||
Cooling Forgings by Compressed Air, 285 ; (Correction), C. P. Sandberg’s Patent, 373 | *- Ferro-chrome and Silicon Iron as Alloys in Manufacture of Acids, 31 | ||
*- Ferro-manganese Production in Spain, 449 | |||
Crucible Steel Manufacture, Paper by Mr. F. B. Lounsberry, 557 | *- Furnace-charging Machines’ Long Life, 273 | ||
*- Iron Ore Deposits in India, Very Rich, 163 | |||
Differential Dilatometer for Thermal | *- Japan, Steel Production in, 273 | ||
*- Japanese Gain Concession of Important Iron Mine, 541 | |||
Electricity Required to Melt a Ton of Steel, 405 | *- Lincolnshire Ironstone Measures, Almost Inexhaustible, 273 | ||
*- Lloyd Wells Process for Steel Tubing Manufacture, 207 | |||
Ferro-chrome and Silicon Iron as Alloys in Manufacture of Acids, 31 | *- Magnetic Steel Band Drive, P. L. Weston, 339 | ||
*- Malleable Castings, Analyses of, 97 | |||
Ferro-manganese Production in Spain, 449 | *- Malleable Castings and the Converter Method of Manufacture, 97 | ||
*- Malleable Castings, Output in Great Britain and United States, Comparison, 97 | |||
Furnace-charging Machines’ Long Life, 273 | *- Manganese Imported by the United States, Appeal to Patriotism of the Steel Industry, 119 | ||
Iron Ore Deposits in India, Very Rich, 163 | |||
Japan, Steel Production in, 273 | |||
Japanese Gain Concession of Important Iron Mine, 541 | |||
Lincolnshire Ironstone Measures, Almost Inexhaustible, 273 | |||
Lloyd Wells Process for Steel Tubing Manufacture, 207 | |||
Magnetic Steel Band Drive, P. L. Weston, 339 | |||
Malleable Castings, Analyses of, 97 | |||
Malleable Castings and the Converter Method of Manufacture, 97 | |||
Malleable Castings, Output in Great Britain and United States, Comparison, 97 | |||
Manganese Imported by the United States, Appeal to Patriotism of the Steel Industry, 119 | |||
IRON AND STEEL (continued): | IRON AND STEEL (continued): | ||
*- Manganese in Steel Manufacture, Method of Testing for, T. F. Payne, 53 | |||
Manganese in Steel Manufacture, Method of | *- Mn Steel Experiments, M. A. Portevin, 53 | ||
*- Molybdenum in Ores, Method of Determining, 119 | |||
Testing for, T. F. Payne, 53 | *- Molybdenum and Tungsten, Extensive Deposits Found in Sonora, Mexico, 427 | ||
*- National Council on Trade Policy Projected, 513 | |||
Mn Steel Experiments, M. A. Portevin, 53 | *- Pig Iron, Salving of Barge Load of, from Tennessee River, 253 | ||
*- Protection of Cast Iron Against Rust, 273 | |||
Molybdenum in Ores, Method of Determining, 119 | *- Queensland, Ore with Higher Percentage of Iron than Any in Great Britain, 222 | ||
*- Queensland, Suggested Iron and Steel Works, 427 | |||
Molybdenum and Tungsten, Extensive | *- Russian Government to Control Iron and Steel Industry, 339 | ||
*- Sandberg Sorbitic Steel, 285, 373 | |||
Deposits Found in Sonora, Mexico, 427 National Council on Trade Policy Projected, 513 | *- Steel Puddling at £1500 a Year, 185 | ||
*- Steel Recovery from Old Tin Cans, 557 | |||
Pig Iron, Salving of Barge Load of, from Tennessee River, 253 | *- Steel Tube Manufacture, Proper Annealing, 513 | ||
*- Steel Wire and Corrosion ; A Question of Copper Percentage, 231 | |||
Protection of Cast Iron Against Rust, 273 | *- Sulphur in Steel Castings, Changes in Raw Material and New Processes, 405 | ||
*- United States Output in Finished Steel, 426 | |||
Queensland, Ore with Higher Percentage of | *- Utilisation of Steel Scrap, Report by Industries Committee of House of Representatives, 97 | ||
*- West of Scotland Iron and Steel Institute, Proposed Change of Name, 306 | |||
Iron than Any in Great Britain, 222 Queensland, Suggested Iron and Steel Works, 427 | *ITALIAN Metallurgical and Mechanical Industry, Increase of Capital by the Ilva Company, 207 | ||
*Italy, the Leading Motor Car Exporting Nation, 119 | |||
Russian Government to Control Iron and | *Italy’s Export of Motor Vehicles, 491 | ||
Steel Industry, 339 | |||
Sandberg Sorbitic Steel, 285, 373 | |||
Steel Puddling at £1500 a Year, 185 | |||
Steel Recovery from Old Tin Cans, 557 | |||
Steel Tube Manufacture, Proper Annealing, 513 | |||
Steel Wire and Corrosion ; A Question of | |||
Copper Percentage, 231 | |||
Sulphur in Steel Castings, Changes in Raw Material and New Processes, 405 | |||
United States Output in Finished Steel, 426 | |||
Utilisation of Steel Scrap, Report by | |||
Industries Committee of House of Representatives, 97 | |||
West of Scotland Iron and Steel Institute, Proposed Change of Name, 306 | |||
ITALIAN Metallurgical and Mechanical Industry, Increase of Capital by the Ilva Company, 207 | |||
Italy, the Leading Motor Car Exporting Nation, 119 | |||
Italy’s Export of Motor Vehicles, 491 | |||
J | J | ||
JAPANESE Great Industrial Expansion, 207 | *JAPANESE Great Industrial Expansion, 207 | ||
*Japan’s Proposed Increase of Spindles, Difficulties of Import, 53 | |||
Japan’s Proposed Increase of Spindles, | *Japan’s Proposed Outlay on Road-making, 141 | ||
*Jute Manufacture, India Most Important Country for, 163 | |||
Japan’s Proposed Outlay on Road-making, 141 Jute Manufacture, India Most Important | |||
Country for, 163 | |||
K | K | ||
KNITTING Machine Needles in South China Factories, Great Scarcity of, 253 | *KNITTING Machine Needles in South China Factories, Great Scarcity of, 253 | ||
*Koenigsberg Canal and Harbour Enlargement, 557 | |||
Koenigsberg Canal and Harbour Enlargement, 557 | |||
L | L | ||
LABORATORIES, Government, London, | *LABORATORIES, Government, London, Report, 185 | ||
*Labour Disputes and Stoppages of Work, 141 | |||
Report, 185 | *Labour Resettlement Committee, Employers’ Representative, 471 | ||
*Laundry Industry, Expansion Anticipated, Machinery Largely Imported from America, 53 | |||
Labour Disputes and Stoppages of Work, 141 | *Lead Exports from the United States, Consumption of Great Britain and Canada, 557 | ||
*Leeds Automatic Telephone Exchange, Largest in Europe, 557 | |||
Labour Resettlement Committee, Employers’ Representative, 471 | *Lighthouses, Annual Report of the Commissioner, 163 | ||
*Lighting and Heating, Central Stations and Isolated Plants, 471 | |||
Laundry Industry, Expansion Anticipated, | *Locomotive Boiler Explosion, Strange Result, 9 | ||
*Lorries, 3-Ton,“Machine” for Assembling and Total Completion of One per Half-hour, 295 | |||
Machinery Largely Imported from America, 53 | *Lubricating Material Substitutes in Germany, 535 | ||
*Luncheon Meetings for Business Men, 517 | |||
Lead Exports from the United States, Consumption of Great Britain and Canada, 557 | |||
Leeds Automatic Telephone Exchange, Largest in Europe, 557 | |||
Lighthouses, Annual Report of the Commissioner, 163 | |||
Lighting and Heating, Central Stations and Isolated Plants, 471 | |||
Locomotive Boiler Explosion, Strange Result, 9 Lorries, 3-Ton, | |||
Total Completion of One per Half-hour, 295 Lubricating Material Substitutes in Germany, 535 | |||
Luncheon Meetings for Business Men, 517 | |||
M | M | ||
MAGNETOS, Large Output by the British Ignition Apparatus Association, 140 | *MAGNETOS, Large Output by the British Ignition Apparatus Association, 140 | ||
*Manchester Chamber of Commerce, Metal Merchants’ Suggestion, 198 | |||
Manchester Chamber of Commerce, Metal | *Manchester Steam Users’ Association, 503 | ||
*Maps in the American Army, Rapid Reproduction by Blue-printing and Lithography, 383 | |||
Merchants’ Suggestion, 198 | *Marbles, Coloured, and Beautifully Grained from South-West Africa, 535 | ||
*Marine Surveyors to the Board of Trade, 239 | |||
Manchester Steam Users’ Association, 503 | *Mechanical Stoking in 1785, James Watt, Patentee, 97 | ||
*Metal Production from Canadian Ores in 1917, 163 | |||
Maps in the American Army, Rapid Reproduction by Blue-printing and Lithography, 383 | *Meteorite Fragments in Scotland, 9 | ||
*“Methanephone” for Methane Gas Detection, 432 | |||
Marbles, Coloured, and Beautifully Grained from South-West Africa, 535 | *Micromanometer and its Uses, 427 | ||
*Military Motor Lorry, 3-Ton, Equipped for Operation on Coal Gas, 141 | |||
Marine Surveyors to the Board of Trade, 239 | *Mine in Brazil, Deepest in the World, 295 | ||
*Mineral Resources of Great Britain, 374 | |||
Mechanical Stoking in 1785, James Watt, Patentee, 97 | *Minerals in the Siamese Malay States, Very Rich Area, 141 | ||
*Motor Car Engine of New Sleeve Valve Type, 361 | |||
Metal Production from Canadian Ores in 1917, 163 | *Motor Car Export, Italy the Leading Nation, 119 | ||
*Motor Car Industry in America, High Figures, 339 | |||
Meteorite Fragments in Scotland, 9 | *Motor Car Popularity in Canada, 405 | ||
*Motor Car Suspension, Improvements, but Need of More, 258 | |||
*Motor Car Taxation Assessment in Alberta, 295 | |||
*Motor Cars in America, Reported Use of Three- cylinder Rotary Petrol Engine, 339 | |||
Micromanometer and its Uses, 427 | *Motor Cars with Gas Container Trailers, Speed Limit Alteration, 163 | ||
*Motor Car’s World’s Speed Record, 53 | |||
Military Motor Lorry, 3-Ton, Equipped for | *Motor Commercial Vehicle Chassis Built Upside Down, 405 | ||
*Motor Fuel in France after the War, Alcohol and Benzol Mixture, 449 | |||
Operation on Coal Gas, 141 | *Motor Gas Equipment, Standardisation of Filling Orifices, 163 | ||
*Motor Tractors in Rubber Cultivation, Great Advance in Efficiency, 163 | |||
Mine in Brazil, Deepest in the World, 295 Mineral Resources of Great Britain, 374 | *Motor Trucks for American Army in France, Huge Number Required, 405 | ||
*Motor Vehicle Working on Natural Gas, Experiment, 423 | |||
Minerals in the Siamese Malay States, Very | *Motor Vehicles, Commercial, Driven on Coal Gas instead of Petrol, 295 | ||
*Motor Vehicles and Government Control, Differentiation between Petrol and Electricity, 231 | |||
Rich Area, 141 | *Munitions in the London District, 449 | ||
Motor Car Engine of New Sleeve Valve Type, 361 | |||
Motor Car Export, Italy the Leading Nation, 119 | |||
Motor Car Industry in America, High Figures, 339 | |||
Motor Car Popularity in Canada, 405 | |||
Motor Car Suspension, Improvements, but Need of More, 258 | |||
Motor Car Taxation Assessment in Alberta, 295 | |||
Motor Cars in America, Reported Use of Three-cylinder Rotary Petrol Engine, 339 | |||
Motor Cars with Gas Container Trailers, Speed Limit Alteration, 163 | |||
Motor Car’s World’s Speed Record, 53 | |||
Motor Commercial Vehicle Chassis Built Upside | |||
Down, 405 | |||
Motor Fuel in France after the War, Alcohol and Benzol Mixture, 449 | |||
Motor Gas Equipment, Standardisation of Filling Orifices, 163 | |||
Motor Tractors in Rubber Cultivation, Great Advance in Efficiency, 163 | |||
Motor Trucks for American Army in France, Huge Number Required, 405 | |||
Motor Vehicle Working on Natural Gas, Experiment, 423 | |||
Motor Vehicles, Commercial, Driven on Coal Gas instead of Petrol, 295 | |||
Motor Vehicles and Government Control, Differentiation between Petrol and Electricity, 231 | |||
Munitions in the London District, 449 | |||
N | N | ||
*NAPHTHALENE for Power Purposes, 53 | |||
*Natalite, a Motor Spirit, 324 | |||
Natalite, a Motor Spirit, 324 | *Natural Gas for Motor Vehicle, Working, 423 | ||
*Natural Gas, Tests for Petrol, in the United States, 449 | |||
Natural Gas for Motor Vehicle, Working, 423 | *Naval Gun, Powerful and Durable, for American Battleships, 185 | ||
*Newfoundland Fish Supplies Landed at Fleetwood, 53 | |||
Natural Gas, Tests for Petrol, in the United States, 449 | *New York Garbage Reduction Works, 568 | ||
*Niagara Falls., Ten Millions a Year, or a View ? 449 | |||
Naval Gun, Powerful and Durable, for American Battleships, 185 | *Niagara—see alsr> Electrical Matters | ||
*Nickel, World’s Production of, Enlarged by Six Times since 1900, 317 | |||
Newfoundland Fish Supplies Landed at Fleetwood, 53 | *Nile Floods in Autumn of 1917, Abnormal, Anticipated Benefit, 119 | ||
*Norway, Rolling Mill Plant and Government Loan, 119 | |||
New York Garbage Reduction Works, 568 | |||
Niagara Falls, Ten Millions a Year, or a View ? 449 | |||
Niagara—see | |||
Nickel, World’s Production of, Enlarged by Six Times since 1900, 317 | |||
Nile Floods in Autumn of 1917, Abnormal, Anticipated Benefit, 119 | |||
Norway, Rolling Mill Plant and Government Loan,119 | |||
O | |||
*OCCUPATIONS Available for Discharged Soldiers, 141 | |||
*Oil-field Discovery near Los Angeles, 97 | |||
*Oil for Lubrication, Most Important Properties, 491 | |||
*Oil Seeds Production in India, 471 | |||
*Oil, Valuable Lubricant from “Chichopoxtle ” Fruit, 513 | |||
*Oil Wells in America, Use of Electric Power for Drilling, Cleaning and Pumping, 535 | |||
*Oil Wells in Galicia, Great Depths, 557 | |||
*Oil Wells, Prolific, in Mexico, 535 | |||
*Old Cloth Tracings and Tin-foil, 286 | |||
*Onyx Discovery in Tampico, Mexico, 471 | |||
*Order of the British Empire, 81— see Miscellaneous Index | |||
*Oven Gas for Domestic and Other Uses, 383 | |||
*Oxy-acetylene Welding, Remarkable Example, 185 | |||
Power Supply in the United Kingdom, Need of Improvement in Methods, 231 | P | ||
*PAINT to Withstand Heat, 115 | |||
Press Censor and the House that Jack Built, 119 | *Paints, Temperature Sensitive, 405 | ||
*Paints and White Lead Scarcity, 53 | |||
*Paper Pulp from Blady Grass in Queensland, 427 | |||
*Paper Pulp and Timber in Canada, 405 | |||
Pulp and Paper Industry in Canada, Steady Growth, 31 | *Paris Bombardment ; Reported Record on United States Seismographs, 535 | ||
*Patent Claims in the United States, Recent Ruling, 317 | |||
Pumping Engine, Atmospheric, Still Used, 130 Years Old, 405 | *Patent Office Library’s Photostat from Sir Robert Hadfield, 513 | ||
*Pension Scheme in Canada, 289 | |||
*Perishable Food Imports into the United Kingdom in Pre-war Times, 53 | |||
*Petrol Motor Cars and Electric Lighting and Starting ; Double or Single Unit Question, 231 | |||
*Petrol Price in America, 207 | |||
*Petrol, Synthetic, Process for Production, L. B. Cherry, 449 | |||
*Petrol from the United States, Increased Exports, 73 | |||
*Petroleum in Mexico, Scantily Utilised owing to Lack of Transport Facilities, 491 | |||
*Petroleum Spirit Refinery, Unsatisfactory Methods, 53 | |||
*Petroleum from United States, A World’s Necessity, 53 | |||
*Philadelphia’s Record Pumping Plant, 207 | |||
*Photostat, Sir R. Hadfield’s Present to Patentoffice Library, 513 | |||
*Pipe, Cast Iron, of all Sizes, Machine for Making, 253 | |||
*Pipes, Compressed Cellulose, Satisfactory Except for Steam, 317 | |||
*Pith, Sunflower and Sola, for Helmets, 491 | |||
*Platinum, Result of Analyses, 339 | |||
*Platinum in Russia Bought up by German Agents, 339 | |||
*Platinum in Russia, First Record of Discovery, 317 | |||
*Platinum Substitute for Electrical Purposes, 31 Platinum Substitute at One Half Cost, 273 | |||
*Platinum Wire Fine Enough to Replace Spider’s Web in Telescopes, 339 | |||
*Plymouth’s Lack of Cold Storage : Question of New Commercial Harbour, 53 | |||
*Pneumatic Trench Mortar, French, Propelling Charge, 9 | |||
*Pneumatic Tyres Inner Tube, German Method of Preserving Elasticity, 535 | |||
*Polytechnic School of Engineering, Sir C. A. Parsons as President, 557 | |||
*Portland Cement of Indian Manufacture, 471 | |||
*Portland School of Engineering, 243 | |||
*Potash Extracted from Cement Rock, Saving Effected by Use of Common Salt, 163 | |||
*Power Supply in the United Kingdom, Need of Improvement in Methods, 231 | |||
*Press Censor and the House that Jack Built, 119 | |||
*“Pseudo-Data,” Boiler Explosions in United Kingdom and United States, 534 | |||
*Pulp and Paper Industry in Canada, Steady Growth, 31 | |||
*Pumping Engine, Atmospheric, Still Used, 130 Years Old, 405 | |||
Q | Q | ||
*QUEENSLAND Artesian Water Supply, 303 | |||
QUEENSLAND Artesian Water Supply, 303 | *Queensland Grass for Paper Pulp, 427 | ||
*Quicklime Expansion Under Moisture, Utilisation of this Force, 513 | |||
Queensland Grass for Paper Pulp, 427 | |||
Quicklime Expansion Under Moisture, Utilisation of this Force, 513 | |||
R | R | ||
RAILWAYS AND TRAMWAYS: | RAILWAYS AND TRAMWAYS: | ||
Accident in Aberdeen Joint Station, 557 | *- Accident in Aberdeen Joint Station, 557 Accident Due to Broken Carriage Axle, 207 | ||
*- Accident Due to Falling Rock, 361 | |||
Accident Due to Broken Carriage Axle, 207 | *- Accident at Penge Station, 557 | ||
*- Accidents Branch of Board of Trade, 141 | |||
Accident Due to Falling Rock, 361 | *- Accidents, Pre-war and Now, Great Reduction in Board of Trade Enquiries, 53 | ||
*- Accidents and Road Level Crossings in United States, 513 | |||
Accident at Penge Station, 557 | *- Agricultural Produce and Railway Charges, 383 | ||
*- Alaska, Government Railway’s Delayed and Costly Progress, 535 | |||
Accidents Branch of Board of Trade, 141 | *- Aliens’ Reported Exodus from London, 339 | ||
*- Aliens’ Use of Railways, 347 | |||
Accidents, Pre-war and Now, Great Reduction in Board of Trade Enquiries, 53 | *- Ambulance Train for American Troops on the Continent, 185 | ||
*- Ambulance Trains Built at Stratford, 163 | |||
Accidents and Road Level Crossings in United States, 513 | |||
Agricultural Produce and Railway Charges, 383 | |||
Alaska, Government Railway’s Delayed and Costly Progress, 535 | |||
Aliens’ Reported Exodus from London, 339 | |||
Aliens’ Use of Railways, 347 | |||
Ambulance Train for American Troops on the Continent, 185 | |||
Ambulance Trains Built at Stratford, 163 | |||
RAILWAYS AND TRAMWAYS (continued) : | RAILWAYS AND TRAMWAYS (continued) : | ||
*- Ambulance Trains for United States Troops Building at Swindon, 31, 207 | |||
*- American Railway in France, 130 | |||
*- American Railwaymen’s Report on Japanese Railways, 295 | |||
*- American Railway Passenger Rates, 449 | |||
*- American Railway Workmen iri France, Brave Assistance in Repulsing German Attack, 73 | |||
*- Appointments and Staff Changes, 9, 31, 53, 97, 141, 253, 273, 295, 339, 361, 405 | |||
*- Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe, Concrete Roadways in Shops and Stores Yards, 471 | |||
*- Australian Chief Railway Commissioner, 53 | |||
*- Australian Railway Construction Since 1850, 557 | |||
*- Ayr Harbour and Glasgow and South- Western Railway Company, 339 | |||
*- Baldwin Locomotives for France in Temporary Use on the Philadelphia and Reading Railway, 97 | |||
*- Baltimore and Ohio Express Transference from New Jersey Terminus to New York City, 535 | |||
*- Belgian Locomotives for American Expeditionary Force, 73 | |||
*- Billinton, Mr. L., London, Brighton and South Coast Railway, Return to England, 557 | |||
*- Birthday Honours for Railwaymen, 491, 513 Birthday Honours for Railwaymen in India, 513 | |||
*- Board of Trade Power of Control of Railways and Rolling Stock in War-time, 9 | |||
*- Bridge Over the Ohio River Built by the Paducah and Illinois Railroad, 97 | |||
*- Bridge, Pennsylvania, at Louisville, Badly Damaged by Fire, 535 | |||
*- Bristol Corporation and Great Western and Midland Railway Companies, Legal Decision, 339 | |||
*- British Railway Funds and the Dividend Question, 53 | |||
*- Caledonian Railway Passenger Train and North British Light Engine, Collision, 557 | |||
*- Canadian Government Taking Over Railways and Leasing Them, 449 | |||
*- Canadian Military Deeds Commemorated by Re-named Stations on the Canadian Pacific Railway, 53 | |||
*- Canadian Minister of Railways, A New Office, 361 | |||
*- Canadian Railroad Commission, Rates Increase Question, 273 | |||
*- Canadian Railway Equipment ; Financing Purchase, 361 | |||
*- Canadian Railways Increase in Rates for Passengers and Freight, 9 | |||
*- Canadian War Board and Labour Unions ; Resistance to Removal of Rails, 231 | |||
*- Canal Employees and War Bonus, Comparison with Railways, 273 | |||
*- Canal Traffic Between Bristol and Liverpool ; Possible Interference with London’s Seaborne Traffic, 231 | |||
*- Canals and Goods Traffic Congestion, 339 | |||
*- Canals Used to Relieve Congested Traffic on Railways, 119 | |||
*- Castlecomer Collieries, Transit Facilities, 141 | |||
*- Central of New Jersey Railroad Passes, 97 | |||
*- Charing Cross Bridge Strengthening Attitude of the Joint Committee, 207 | |||
*- Chicago—New York Twenty-hour Express Taken Off, 31 | |||
*- Chicago Track Elevation Work, Appeal to Patriotism, 427 | |||
*- Clydach, Pontardawe and Cwmgorse Railway, Construction Suspended, 207 | |||
*- Coal on American Locomotives, Immense Saving if Lines Electrified, 361 | |||
*- Coal Consumption on U.S. Railways, 535 | |||
*- Coal in the Neighbourhood of the Great Southern and Western Railway, Adverse Report by Irish Solicitor-General, 253 | |||
*- Coal for New Zealand Railway Locomotives, Increased Cost, 31 | |||
*- Coal Transport Saving Scheme in America, 427 | |||
Glasgow and South-Western Railway, | *- Coal Transport Scheme ; Great Saving in Ton Mileage, Glasgow and S. Western Railway, 231 | ||
*- Collision on the Louisville and Nashville Railway, Unusual Action by the President of the Line, 97 | |||
*- Commercial Travellers’ Week-end Fares in Ireland Not Increased, 119 | |||
*- Concrete Ties Still in the Trial Stage, Difficulties, 53 | |||
*- Cork City Railway and Other Lines, Need for Further Connections, 141 | |||
*- Crewe Brotherhood, Mr. Winston Churchill’s Message, 53 | |||
*- Damaged Food and Foodstuffs on the Pere Marquette Railroad, 491 | |||
*- Danger in Walking on Railway Track, 405 | |||
*- Death of Mr. Joseph W. Taylor, 491 | |||
*- Delaware and Hudson Railroad Freight Locomotives ; Increase in Engines and Train Loads, Statistics, 557 | |||
*- Derailment at Level Crossing in U.S.A., Due to Motor Car, 295 | |||
*- Directors’ First-class Free Passes, Suggested Withdrawal Refused, 141 | |||
*- Dividends of various Railways, 119 | |||
*- Doors of Railway Carriages, Device for Prevention of Accident, 253 | |||
*- Dublin and South-Eastern Company ; Grey- stones to Wicklow Line Strengthening, 317 | |||
*- Economy of Railway Electrification, Curious Comparisons, 31 | |||
*- Economy in Use of Oil Fuel, Decoration Mark for Best Record, 449 | |||
*- Eggs, Railway Conveyance of, 273 | |||
*- Egyptian State Railways, Increase in Fares and Freight Charges, 339 | |||
*- Electric Locomotives. 50 Ton : The First Built at the South Manchuria Railroad Shops 361 | |||
*- Electric Railway between Tampico and Mexico, 471 | |||
*- Enemy Officer Prisoners’ Railway Accommodation, 427 | |||
*- Equipment, Railway, After the War, Anti cipated Large Demand, Dr. Addison, 92 | |||
*- Essex, Need of Light Railways, Government Appealed to, 317 | |||
Great | *- Express through Trolley Line between Buffalo and Niagara Falls, 535 | ||
*- Fares Increase on London Railways ; Controlled and Uncontrolled Lines, 251 | |||
- | |||
RAILWAYS AND TRAMWAYS (continued) : | RAILWAYS AND TRAMWAYS (continued) : | ||
*- Farm Purchase by Great Eastern Railway. 207 | |||
*- Federated Malay States and Siamese Southern Railways, Linking up, Difficulty in Getting Railway Material, 97 | |||
*- First-class Privileges in War-time, 9, 491 | |||
*- First and Third-class Accommodation, Relative Amounts Required, 339 | |||
*- Fish Delay in Transit by Sea ; Railway Not to Blame, 163 | |||
*- Fish from Ireland, Withdrawal of Trains Question, 471 | |||
*- Fish Traffic, Special Trains and Trucks, Great North of Scotland Railway, 231 | |||
*- Fog in South-West London ; Fatal Railway Accidents, 119 | |||
*- Food Question ; Supplies for Trainmen when from Home, 141 | |||
*- Food Savings, Very Great, on United States Restaurant Cars, 97 | |||
*- France, British Army Transport in. Large Increase in Dock Capacity and Railway Material of All Kinds, 53 | |||
*- French Language and Locomotive Driving, 253 | |||
*- French Railway Officials’ War Honours, 383 | |||
*- Frozen Fish, Railway Charges on, 535 | |||
*- Fuel and Transport Economy and the Celebration of Washington’s Birthday, 273 | |||
*- Furness Railway Company and Vickers, Limited, New Dock for Barrow, 185 | |||
*- Furness Railway Company’s Indebtedness for Assistance in Engine Power from Other Lines, 231 | |||
*- Furness Railway Company’s Need of Rolling Stock, 231 | |||
*- Furness Railway Staff Changes, 273 | |||
*- Galway Proposed as a Transatlantic Port, 317 | |||
*- Garden Crops on the Right-of-Way of Texas and Pacific Railroad Company, 53 | |||
*- Glasgow and South-Western Railway, Additional Capital Required, 31, 97 | |||
*- Glasgow and South-Western Railway, Future Position Uncertain, 73 | |||
*- Glasgow and South-Western Saving Due to Coal Transport Scheme, 231 | |||
*- Government Payments to Railways for War Expenses, 449 | |||
*- Gowdall to South Yorkshire Line Opened for Goods and Mineral Traffic, 163 | |||
*- Grain Silo at Hull, Hastening Completion, 163 | |||
*- Grand Trunk Railway of Canada, Suggestion of Unfair Treatment, 405 | |||
*- Great Central Railway Docks Engineer, 141 | |||
*- Great Central Railway Secretary Retires, Successor Appointed, 31 | |||
*- Great Central Railway 2-8-0 Type Engines for France, 339 | |||
*- Great Eastern Railway Discontinues Sea Water Carriage, 73 | |||
*- Great Eastern Railway Men with the Colours, Assistance to Men and their Dependants, 186 | |||
*- Great Eastern Railway and Post-office Tube, Arbitration Decision, 317, 427 | |||
*- Great Eastern Railway’s Purchase of Cargo Steamer, 185 | |||
*- Great Eastern Railway and Season Ticket Rate Increase, 513 | |||
*- Great Eastern Railway Timber Contracts in France, Timber Handed to British Government, 185 | |||
*- Great Eastern Railway’s War Traffic, Statistics, 163 | |||
*- Great Indian Peninsula Railway, Receipts and Expenditure, 97 | |||
*- Great Northern and also Midland Railway Stock ; Much Smaller Amounts Owned by Much Larger Number of Shareholders, 163 | |||
*- Great Northern Railway of Ireland, Changes in Passenger and Goods Traffic owing to the War, 253 | |||
*- Great Northern Railway of Ireland, New Work on, 273 | |||
*- Great Northern Railway, U.S.A., Increased Protection Against Snow, 73 | |||
*- Great Southern and Western Railway, New Colliery Line from Athy, 317 | |||
*- Great Southern and Western Railway Traffic Increased by Government Action in Regard to Tillage and Prices, 295 | |||
*- Great Western Railway Ambulance Trains and Rolling Stock for Railways Overseas, 31, 207 | |||
*- Great Western Railway Luncheon Baskets Stopped, 207 | |||
*- Great Western Railway’s Largely Increased Traffic for War Purposes, 207 | |||
*- Great Western 1 rain’s Excess Speed at Slough, 295 | |||
*- Highgate-road Station Closed, 163 | |||
*- Highway Improvements in America to Relieve the Railroads, 513 | |||
*- Housing of Railway Servants, Steps Taken by North Staffordshire Railway, 253 | |||
*- Hungarian and Austrian Locomotive Factories, 535 | |||
*- Increased Fares Revenue, the Property of the State, 491 | |||
*- India, Absence of Primary Industries and Railway Difficulties, 513 | |||
*- Indian Coal, Great Increase in Rail-borne Amount Owing to the War, 317 | |||
*- Indian Railways, Three Accidents, 73 | |||
*- Indo-Burma Connection ; Alternative Routes, Survey, 343 | |||
*- Industrial League ; Labour Members’ Visit to America, 480 | |||
*- Inter-Colonial Railway Accident Statistics, 427 | |||
*- INTERSTATE COMMERCE COMMISSION— | |||
*-- Collisions and Derailments, Investigation by Safety Division, 73 | |||
*-- Extension of Powers Sought, 73 | |||
*-- Limitation of Period of U.S. Government Control of Railways, 119 | |||
*-- Locomotive Boiler Inspection Law ; Accident Statistics, 73 | |||
*-- Report of the Division of Safety ; Preventable Accidents, 272 | |||
*-- Suggested Alteration of Laws Regarding Trespass, 97 | |||
*- Ipswich Dock Facilities and Great Eastern Railway, 231 | |||
*- Irish Railways’ Train Service Curtailment and Coal Saving, 361 | |||
*- Irish and Scottish Railway Connections at Carlisle, 405 | |||
*- Iron Ore Within Reach of the Stratford-on- Avon and Midland Junction Railway, 253 | |||
RAILWAYS AND TRAMWAYS (continued) | |||
*- Katanga Railway Completed to Bukama ; Congo Connected with Cape Town, 471 | |||
*- Kent Coal Carried by South-Eastern and Chatham Railway, 253 | |||
*- King and Royal Train Driver on the South- Eastern and Chatham Railway, 491 | |||
*- Labour Law in United States as to Working Hours and Rest for Railwaymen, 141 | |||
*- Labour Resettlement Committee Men Connected with Railways, 295 | |||
*- Lancashire and Yorkshire Electric Train Services, 163 | |||
*- Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway : Appointment, 405 ; Servants Disabled in War, 185 | |||
*- Level Crossings and Accidents on United States Railways, 513 | |||
*- Light Railway Orders Applications and Confirmation, 31, 253 | |||
*- Liverpool-street Station, Great Need of Extension, 317, 427 | |||
*- Locomotive Building at the Baldwin Works, 471 | |||
*- Locomotive. Coaling Plant, Automatic Electric, American, for N.S.W. Railways, 163 | |||
*- Locomotive Coaling Station, Concrete, on the Lehigh Valley, Notable Features, 535 | |||
*- Locomotive Repairs, Statistics, 557 | |||
*- Locomotive Valve Gear, 109 | |||
*- Locomotives Awaiting Repair, 481 | |||
*- Locomotives Built in U.S.A, for Use in Russia now in Use in U.S.A., 295 | |||
*- Locomotives Sent from Western States of America to Relieve Congestion in Eastern Districts, 141 | |||
*- London, Brighton and South Coast : Locomotive Superintendent, 253 ; Allotments, 427 ; Increased Load, Slower Travelling, 231 | |||
*- London and North-Western : Roll of Honour Poster, 405; Staff Rewards for Useful Improvements and Suggestions, 119; London and North-Western and London Electric Railway Companies Joint Rolling Stock, 185; Men Discharged from the Army and Reinstated on Railway, 207; Victoria Crosses, 339; Steamer’s Loss by Collision, 295 | |||
*- London and South-Western, Provision for Coal Traffic, 185 | |||
*- London and South-Western Servants’ Cultivation of Railway Land Plots, 185 | |||
*- Magazines, Railway Staff, Discontinuance Suggested, 471 | |||
*- Mansfield Railway Branch to Rufford Colliery, 207, 361 | |||
*- Mansfield Railway, New Curve, 361 | |||
*- Maryport and Carlisle Ry, Coal Traffic, 253 | |||
*- Melbourne, Victoria, Additional Lines Approaching Completion, 163 | |||
*- Metropolitan Railway’s Engineering Staff Efficiency in View of Heavy Traffic on the Line, 163 | |||
*- Midland Railway Horses’ Keep, 185 | |||
*- Midland and South-Western Junction Railway ; Employment of Boys to Release Men for the Colours, 253 | |||
*- Midland and South-Western Junction Railway ; Statistics of War Traffic, 249 | |||
*- Military Service and Railwaymen, Present Arrangements, 427 | |||
*- Missoula Belt 100ft. long Railway, 31 | |||
*- Mold and Denbigh Railway ; Closed Works and Unwatering of Mines, 383 | |||
*- Munition Workers’ Travelling Facilities, Cheap Week-end Tickets Withdrawn, 491 | |||
*- National Union of Railwaymen, Government’s Offer of Visit to Front, 31 | |||
*- National Union of Railwaymen, 513, 535 | |||
*- New Year’s Honours for Railwaymen, 31 | |||
*- New York Central Railroad Company, Opposition to Proposed Hudson Bridge, 447 | |||
*- North-Eastern Railway Accident Due to Broken Carriage Axle, 207 | |||
*- North-Eastern Railway Alterations in Passenger Train Service, 97 | |||
*- North Staffordshire Railway Signals Lighted by Electricity, 207 | |||
*- Owner’s Risk Rate, 9 | |||
*- Pacific Coast, New Railway to Open Up Mineral and Agricultural Districts, 471 | |||
*- Passenger Fares in Ireland, Increase from June 1st, 1918, 471 | |||
*- Passenger Traffic Restrictions, Deputation to Board of Trade, 557 | |||
*- Passengers’ Privileges, First-class, Claim Disallowed, 9, 491 | |||
*- Passengers, Season Ticket and Otherwise, No Present Record of Numbers, 491 | |||
*- Pennsylvania Company’s Stations in New York and Philadelphia, Comparison of Traffic, 31, 73 | |||
*- Pennsylvania Railroad Company’s Greatly Increased War Traffic, 317 | |||
*- Pennsylvania Railroad, Conversion to Electric Traojtion, 361 | |||
*- Pennsylvania RailroadExpress ; Car Derailed and Wrecked by Falling Rock, 361 | |||
*- Pennsylvania Railroad and Report of Discontinued Expresses, 73 | |||
*- Pooling Scottish Private Wagons, 248 | |||
*- Post-office (London) Railway After the War, 557 | |||
*- Punctuality of Great Eastern Train Arrivals at Liverpool street, 163 | |||
*- Punctuality on the Midland Railway, 185 | |||
*- Queensland State Railways, Ratepayers and the State, 53 | |||
*- Queue System for Tube Railways, 471 | |||
*- Quintinshill Accident Anniversary, 449 | |||
*- Rabbits, Carriage and Delivery 2d. each, 53 | |||
*- Rails for Canadian Railways, Measures to Obtain Supplies, 449 | |||
*- Railway Accounts and Government Control, 513 | |||
*- Railway Advisory Panel, Question as to its Constitution, 119 | |||
*- Railway Executive Committee Recognises Railway Clerks’ Association, 449 | |||
*- Railway Material, Exports’ Statistics, 9, 97, 231, 273, 405, 471 | |||
*- Rhodesian Railway Administration, 471 | |||
*- Russian Government and Railway Equipment Ordered from the United States, 491 | |||
*- Russia’s Downfall and Deficient Railway Equipment, Alba B. Johnson, 471 | |||
*- Russo-British Chamber of Commerce, Secretary’s Address to Railwaymen at Brighton, 163 | |||
*- School Children and Railway Fares, 449 | |||
*- Scotch Coal for the Fleet to Relieve Strain on Railways from Wales, 185 | |||
RAILWAYS AND TRAMWAYS (continued) . | |||
*- Scottish Railway Stockholders’ Protection Association, 43 | |||
*- Seamen in Railway-Owned Cross-Channel Steamers, Increased Pay, 119 | |||
*- Season, Return and Other Tickets ; New Powers for Railways, 383, 513 | |||
*- Season Ticket Rates Unchanged on Controlled Railways, 231 | |||
*- Season Tickets and Discharged Soldiers’ Training, 513 | |||
*- Season Tickets, Great Increase, 535 | |||
*- Season Tickets and Railway Returns, 522 | |||
*- Ship Timbers by Express Train, 449 | |||
*- Shortest Railway in the World, 31 | |||
*- Sleepers from Canada in 1915 and 1916, 31 | |||
*- Sleepers, Old, Utilised as Fuel on Boston and Maine Railroad Buildings, 449 | |||
*- Slips on Railways ; Statistics, 148 | |||
*- South Africa and Locomotive Shortage, 409 | |||
*- South Australian Government Expert to Report on System, 185, 339 | |||
*- South-Eastern and Chatham Railway, Increased Traffic in Industrial District, 207 | |||
*- Spanish Railway Combination for Home Building of Locomotives, 141 | |||
*- Standard Freight Cars on the United States Railways, 361 | |||
*- Steamers on the Clyde, Effort to Stop Competition, 231 | |||
*- Steel Cars in America, Historical Notes, 295 | |||
*- Steel Plates for Shipbuilding and Difficulties of Transport, 491 | |||
*- Stratford-on-Avon and Midland Junction Railway Receipts and Expenditure, 273 | |||
*- Summer Time, Further Considerations, 405 | |||
*- Summer Time and Workmen’s Train Lighting, 295 | |||
*- Superannuated Railway Servants and the Cost of Living, 119 | |||
*- Surprise Tests on Southern Pacific Railway, Creditable Result, 231 | |||
*- Taff Vale Company’s Engines More Than Three Times Pre-War Price, 231 | |||
*- Tehuantepec National Railroad to be Acquired by Mexican Government, 163 | |||
*- Timber Felling and Need of Afforestation ; Cambrian Railway Concerned, 253 | |||
*- Timber, Large Sale of, on Forfeited Lands in U.S.A., 361 | |||
*- Time-keeping and Inter-State Trains, 317 | |||
*- Track-circuiting, Few Failures in Locking Signals, 449 | |||
*- Trade and Government Control After the War ; Railways and Canals Position, 339 | |||
*- Tramway Services ; Suggested “Staggering” of Business Hours, 383 | |||
*- Tramways and Parcels Conveyance, 273 | |||
*- Transcontinental Railway of Australia, Varieties of Gauge, 9 | |||
*- Transport Company, Proposed London Goods Clearing House Scheme, 9 | |||
*- Transport Delays of Steel Hinder American Shipbuilding, 557 | |||
*- Underground Railway Women’s Club at Earl’s Court, 427 | |||
*- United States Coal Transport Scheme, 427 | |||
*- United States Express Companies for Goods Transport, Change to State Operation, 491 | |||
*- United States Federal Board of Mediation and Conciliation, 92 | |||
*- United States Government Control of Railways, 535 | |||
*- United States Government, Plea for Light Taxation and Economy, 491 | |||
*- United States Government Payment for Control of Railways, 119 | |||
*- United States Locomotives Out of Service, 361 | |||
*- United States, Nearly Two Million Troops Moved by Rail up to December 2nd, 97 | |||
*- United States Officers and Scheduled Running of Trains, 231 | |||
*- United States Old Soldiers’ Reunion, Railroad Facilities, 317 | |||
*- United States Railroads’ Director-General on Safety, Wages and Time Questions, 295 | |||
*- United States Railroads, Statistics of New Rails, Used and Required, to be Sent to Director-General, 361 | |||
*- United States Railway Consumption of Petroleum. 557 | |||
*- United States Railway Transport Increase, Statistics of Revenue and Rolling Stock, 9 | |||
*- United States Railways, Government Orders, General Inventory to be Taken, 427 | |||
*- United States Railways Operated at a Loss in January, 449 | |||
*- United States Railways, Income, 557 | |||
*- United States Railways and Presidential Control, 273 | |||
*- United States Railways, Rise in Wages and in Rates for Freight and Passengers, 471 | |||
*- United States Restricted Use of Private Railway Cars, 381 | |||
*- United States Severe Weather and Railway Running Repairs, 119 | |||
*- United States Steam Railway Freight and Passenger Cars, Statistics, 409 | |||
*- United States War Warnings on Railroads, 273 | |||
*- Victorian Railways’ Diamond Jubilee, 361 | |||
*- Wages Advance ; Rates for Men, Women, Boys and Girls, 383 | |||
*- Wagon, Coal, Unloading Regulations, 317 | |||
*- Wagon Derailment, South - Eastern and Chatham Railway, 557 | |||
*- Wagon Repairing Difficulties, New Company Formed, 185 | |||
*- Wagons Let on Hire Without Permit, 471 | |||
*- Wagons, Privately-owned, Difficulties of General Scheme, 383 | |||
*- Wagons, Railway-owned, and Demurrage, 273 ; (Correction), 317 | |||
*- Walthamstow All-night Service Stoppage, 361, 383 | |||
*- War Wages of Railway Servants, 272 | |||
*- Waterloo Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Free Buffet, London and South-Western Company’s Co-operation, 207 | |||
*- Watford Services and Rolling Stock, 185 | |||
*- Women Employed on Railways, 253, 339 | |||
*- Women Employees on the Pennsylvania Railroad, 513 | |||
*- Workmen’s Compensation Act, Appeal Case, 405 | |||
*- Workmen’s Tickets on Bank Holidays, 513 | |||
*RAINFALL, Abnormal, in Mysore, 513 | |||
*Ramsay Memorial Fund, 264 | |||
*Raw Material Rationing, 513 | |||
*Razors, Hollow-ground, Industry for Wounded Soldiers, 557 | |||
*Recording Differential Dilatometer, 141 Reinforced Concrete—see Concrete | |||
*Reservoir, Masonry Dam in Quebec Nearing Completion, 9 | |||
*Rice Crops of the World, Five-Sevenths from British Empire, Chiefly India, 185 | |||
*Riveting Record Stopped by Trade Union, 471 | |||
*Road Improvements in 1918-19, 231 | |||
*Road Transport Committee, 119 | |||
*Roads in Kent Used by Motor Omnibuses, 97 | |||
*Roads in Soft Condition, Regulations for Heavy Traffic, 439 | |||
*Royal Marine Corps, New, Conditions for Officers, 427 | |||
*Rubber, Plantation, Equal to that from Brazil Forests, 185 | |||
*Rust Prevention Process. 152 | |||
S | |||
*“SATOLITE,” an Incombustible Substitute for Celluloid, 53 | |||
*Sawdust and Wood as Substitutes for Coal in Gas Making, 73 | |||
*Schneider-Creusot Works, Extent of Area and Equipment, 273 | |||
*Scientific Men, Demand for, in the United States, 185 | |||
*Scientific Regulation of Feed Water, R. W. Andrews, 361 | |||
*Sea Water Densities, Determination of, on Board Ship, New Instrument for, A. L. Thomas, 269 | |||
*Separating Materials of Different Specific Gravities, T. M. Chance, 535 | |||
*Sewage Treatment, Five Processes Under Investigation, 97 | |||
*Sheffield, New Factories, Buildings and Extensions, 53 | |||
*Shell Casting in Germany, 531 | |||
*Shell Ingots, Types Made in America, 185 | |||
*Shipbuilding, Engineering and Steel Commercial Staffs Association, Foundation of, 20 | |||
Sawdust and Wood as Substitutes for Coal in | |||
Gas Making, 73 | |||
Schneider-Creusot Works, Extent of Area and Equipment, 273 | |||
Scientific Men, Demand for, in the United States, 185 | |||
Scientific Regulation of Feed Water, R. W. Andrews, 361 | |||
Sea Water Densities, Determination of, on Board Ship, New Instrument for, A. L. Thomas, 269 | |||
Separating Materials of Different Specific Gravities, T. M. Chance, 535 | |||
Sewage Treatment, Five Processes Under Investigation, 97 | |||
Sheffield, New Factories, Buildings and Extensions, 53 | |||
Shell Casting in Germany, 531 | |||
Shell Ingots, Types Made in America, 185 | |||
Shipbuilding, Engineering and Steel Commercial Staffs Association, Foundation of, 20 | |||
SHIPS AND SHIPPING MATTERS : | SHIPS AND SHIPPING MATTERS : | ||
American Marine, Very Large Addition in Progress, 97 | *- American Marine, Very Large Addition in Progress, 97 | ||
*- American Shipbuilding and Delays of Steel Transportation, 557 | |||
American Shipbuilding and Delays of Steel Transportation, 557 | *- American Training Ships for Merchant Service, 427 | ||
*- Boats, Reinforced Concrete, Building in Spain, 313 | |||
American Training Ships for Merchant Service, 427 | *- British Columbia Shipbuilding Programme, 339 | ||
*- Canadian Production of Large Ships, 405 | |||
Boats, Reinforced Concrete, Building in Spain, 313 | *- Challenge Shield and Prize for Rapid Shipbuilding, 405 | ||
*- Coaling Transatlantic Steamers at Tampico instead of Vera Cruz, 491 | |||
British Columbia Shipbuilding Programme, 339 | *- Diesel-driven Motor Ship Emanuel Nobel, Her Transatlantic Record, 9 | ||
*- Draughtsmen, Ship, Dearth of, and United States Proposal, 253 | |||
Canadian Production of Large Ships, 405 | *- “Fabricated” Ships, in America, 295 | ||
*- Harland and Wolff’s Shipbuilding Record for Oil Carrier, 535 | |||
Challenge Shield and Prize for Rapid Shipbuilding, 405 | *- Hostels for Shipyard Workers in the North of England and in Scotland, 513 | ||
*- Hull, the Hunnewell, A New Type, 231 | |||
Coaling Transatlantic Steamers at Tampico instead of Vera Cruz, 491 | *- Licensing Voyages, System Extended to all Ships, 163 | ||
*- Louvain, Steamship, formerly of the Great Eastern Company, Sunk by Submarine, 119 | |||
Diesel-driven Motor Ship Emanuel Nobel, Her Transatlantic Record, 9 | *- Motor-driven Ships for Transatlantic Service, Suggested Use of, to Baffle Submarines, 231 | ||
*- Naval Losses, British, for Past Year, 119 | |||
Draughtsmen, Ship, Dearth of, and United States Proposal, 253 | *- Refrigeration on Vessels Carrying Foodstuffs, Greatly Increased use of, 449 | ||
*- Rivet-driving in Shipbuilding, Weekly Averages in America, 31 | |||
*- Shipbuilding, Merchant, in the United Kingdom, Greatly Increased Output, 491 | |||
*- Ship Repairs, Great Increase in Vessels Returned to Service, 471 | |||
Harland and Wolff’s Shipbuilding Record for | *- Ships on the Great Lakes to be Transferred to the Atlantic, 9 | ||
*- Shipyard, Hog Island, near Philadelphia, Ambitious Programme, 491 | |||
Oil Carrier, 535 | *- Steamers, Proposed Establishment of Line between La Paz and Topolobampo, 471 | ||
*- Steel, Comparison of Weights between Ferro Concrete and Steel Ships, 449 | |||
Hostels for Shipyard Workers in the North of | *- Steel Decks, Wood Shortage and Sheathing Substitutes, 491 | ||
*- Submarine Menace, Its Failure, 412 | |||
England and in Scotland, 513 | *- Tank Steamers in America, In Use and Under Construction, 231 | ||
*- Tonnage per Head, Comparison between British and Norwegian Shipping, 31 | |||
Hull, the Hunnewell, A New Type, 231 | *- United States Battleship, New Mexico, 449 | ||
*- United States Large Naval Construction, 224 | |||
Licensing Voyages, | *- United States Navy’s Use of Oil Fuel, 53 | ||
*- United States Standard 10,000-Ton Oil Tankers, 317 | |||
Louvain, Steamship, formerly of the Great | *- Wooden Full-powered Motor Ships in United States, 449 | ||
*- Wooden Ships, An Unfortunate Failure, 30 | |||
Eastern Company, Sunk by Submarine, 119 Motor-driven Ships for Transatlantic Service, | *- Wooden Vessels Building in Norway, 339 | ||
*SILO, Grain, Nearing Completion at Hull, 163 | |||
Suggested Use of, to Baffle Submarines, 231 | *Solder, Softening Temperature, 9 | ||
*Sound Penetration at Great Heights, 163 | |||
Naval Losses, British, for Past Year, 119 | *South African Gold Output, 207 | ||
*South African Need of Disinfectant to Replace Permanganate of Potash, 405 | |||
Refrigeration on Vessels Carrying Foodstuffs, Greatly Increased use of, 449 | *Sparking Plug for Motor Cars, New Form, 97 | ||
*Spindles, Round, Method of Centring, W. Crowther, 253 | |||
Rivet-driving in Shipbuilding, Weekly Averages in America, 31 | *Steam Turbine Disabled on the Boston Elevated Railway, 339 | ||
*Street Lighting Specifications, 239 | |||
Shipbuilding, Merchant, in the United Kingdom, Greatly Increased Output, 491 | *Sucrose Recovery from “Final Molasses,” 383 | ||
*Sugar Beet Experiments, 189 | |||
Ship Repairs, Great Increase in Vessels Returned to Service, 471 | *Sugar Beet in the United States, 118 | ||
*Sulphate of Ammonia, Production in Germany, America and Japan, 361 | |||
Ships on the Great Lakes to be Transferred to the Atlantic, 9 | *Sulphur Deposits in Spain, 231 | ||
*Sulphur Industry in Sicily, Italy the Sole Source of Supply to Allies, 207 | |||
Shipyard, Hog Island, near Philadelphia, Ambitious Programme, 491 | *Sulphuric Acid in Manufacture of Fertilisers, 361 | ||
*Sulphuric Acid, Predicted Excess Production in United Kingdom, 295 | |||
Steamers, Proposed Establishment of Line between La Paz and Topolobampo, 471 | *Sun, Successful Photographs of, at the Cape, 513 | ||
*Swiss Demand for Machines for Food Products 449 | |||
Steel, Comparison of Weights between Ferro | *Swiss Electro-Technical Industry, Report by Dr. E. Tissot, 141 | ||
*Swiss Trade and Industry, 361 | |||
Steel Decks, Wood Shortage and Sheathing Substitutes, 491 | *Sydney Harbour Trust Commissioners’Report,73 | ||
Submarine Menace, Its Failure, 412 | |||
Tank Steamers in America, In Use and Under Construction, 231 | |||
Tonnage per Head, Comparison between | |||
British and Norwegian Shipping, 31 | |||
United States Battleship, New Mexico, 449 | |||
United States Large Naval Construction, 224 | |||
United States Navy’s Use of Oil Fuel, 53 | |||
United States Standard 10,000-Ton Oil Tankers, 317 | |||
Wooden Full-powered Motor Ships in United States, 449 | |||
Wooden Ships, An Unfortunate Failure, 30 | |||
Wooden Vessels Building in Norway, 339 | |||
SILO, Grain, Nearing Completion at Hull, 163 | |||
Solder, Softening Temperature, 9 | |||
Sound Penetration at Great Heights, 163 | |||
South African Gold Output, 207 | |||
South African Need of Disinfectant to Replace Permanganate of Potash, 405 | |||
Sparking Plug for Motor Cars, New Form, 97 | |||
Spindles, Round, Method of Centring, W. | |||
Crowther, 253 | |||
Steam Turbine Disabled on the Boston Elevated | |||
Railway, 339 | |||
Street Lighting Specifications, 239 | |||
Sucrose Recovery from | |||
Sugar Beet Experiments, 189 | |||
Sugar Beet in the United States, 118 | |||
Sulphate of Ammonia, Production in Germany, | |||
America and Japan, 361 | |||
Sulphur Deposits in Spain, 231 | |||
Sulphur Industry in Sicily, Italy the Sole Source of Supply to Allies, 207 | |||
Sulphuric Acid in Manufacture of Fertilisers, 361 | |||
Sulphuric Acid, Predicted Excess Production in | |||
United Kingdom, 295 | |||
Sun, Successful Photographs of, at the Cape, 513 | |||
Swiss Demand for Machines for Food Products 449 | |||
Swiss Electro-Technical Industry, Report | |||
Swiss Trade and Industry, 361 | |||
Sydney Harbour Trust Commissioners’Report,73 | |||
T | T | ||
TALC in New Zealand, 185 | *TALC in New Zealand, 185 | ||
*“Tank,” Steam-driven, for U.S.A. Army, 491 | |||
*Tar as a Fuel for Metallurgical Furnaces, W. H. Blauvelt, 383 | |||
*Tar as Fuel for Diesel Engines, 557 | |||
*Telephone Exchanges, Automatic, 513, 557 | |||
*Telephones, Automatic, in South Africa, 295 | |||
*Temperature Conversion Table, 391 | |||
*Temperature Variation in the Derwent Dam Masonry, Thermophone Records, 535 | |||
*Tests of Low Temperature Effect on Yield of Tar, 97 | |||
*Textile Mills in the United States, Increased Use of Electric Power, 9 | |||
*Tilting Furnaces in this Country, 141 | |||
*Timber Acreage per 100 Tons of Newsprint, Pulp and Paper, 405 | |||
*Timbers, Relative Fuel Value of, 295 | |||
*Timber from South Africa, Increasing Value, 405 | |||
*Time Ball at Deal, Failures in 1917, 513 | |||
*Time Signal, New Type, at Observatory in New Zealand, 141 | |||
*Tin Cans, Old, Birmingham’s Offer of 20s. per Ton for, 557 | |||
*Tin, Electrolytical Recovery of, from Stannate Solutions, D. Currie, 405 | |||
*Tin-plate Industry in Japan, 339 | |||
*Tin-plate Manufacture in Germany, 557 | |||
*Titanium Treatment of Cast Iron, 339 | |||
*Toluol in the United States, Insufficient Supply for High Explosives, 73 | |||
*Tools, Small, Protest Against Prohibition of Import of, 141 | |||
*Torpedo Accuracy and Targets in Rapid Motion, 295 | |||
*Towns, H. L., on Friction Clutches, 68 | |||
*Tractor Ploughing Record in Surrey, 207 | |||
*Tractors for Farm Work in France Lent by United States Food Department, 53 | |||
*Trade Marks, Opposition to New Bill, 207 | |||
*Trade Reconstruction in Germany, 176 | |||
*Training School at Iron Foundry, Luton, 535 | |||
*Trinitro-toluol as a Commercial Explosive, 383 | |||
*Tungsten Filament, New German Process, 295 | |||
*Turbine Housing with Inspection Window, Fried. Krupp, 471 | |||
*Turbines, Large Hydraulic, 253 | |||
*Turners and Fitters’ Handbook, Death of Mr. T. Greenwood, 513 | |||
U | |||
*UNITED STATES Army, 273 | |||
*United States New Guns, 119 | |||
*United States Petroleum Output, Estimated Date of Exhaustion of Supplies, 557 | |||
*United States Shell Production, 8 | |||
*U.S.A. War Chassis of Light Motor Vans, 31 | |||
UNITED STATES Army, 273 | |||
United States New Guns, 119 | |||
United States Petroleum Output, Estimated | |||
Date of Exhaustion of Supplies, 557 | |||
United States Shell Production, 8 | |||
U.S.A. War Chassis of Light Motor Vans, 31 | |||
V | V | ||
VACUUM Flask versus Hot Water Bottle, 207 | *VACUUM Flask versus Hot Water Bottle, 207 | ||
*Vacuum Improvement and Steam-saving, 31 | |||
Vacuum Improvement and Steam-saving, 31 | *Valves for Motor Cars, Overhead and Side Pocket, Comparison, 9 | ||
*Vibration of Buildings due to Traffic, 471 | |||
Valves for Motor Cars, Overhead and Side | *Vienna’s Coal and Gas Consumption, 295 | ||
*Volunteers, Motor, The Training of, 351 | |||
Pocket, Comparison, 9 | |||
Vibration of Buildings due to Traffic, 471 | |||
Vienna’s Coal and Gas Consumption, 295 | |||
Volunteers, Motor, The Training of, 351 | |||
W | |||
*WAGES in American Shipyards, Large Per¬centage of Contract Price, 31 | |||
*War Memorial, Imperial War Museum Recom¬mended by Committee, 361 | |||
*War Wages Rise ; Statement by London Master Builders’ and Aircraft Industry Assoc., 383 | |||
*Watches, Great Increase in Imports of Cheap Types of, from U.S.A., 141 | |||
*Water Meters, Use of, in America, 412 | |||
*Water Power Generated at Kinlochleven, Low Cost of, 53 | |||
*Waterproof Oil, New French, 317 | |||
WATER SUPPLY: | WATER SUPPLY: | ||
Horse-power from Loch Treig, Aluminium Company’s Application, 31 | *- Horse-power from Loch Treig, Aluminium | ||
*- Company’s Application, 31 | |||
New York Water Consumption, 273 | *- New York Water Consumption, 273 | ||
*- Water Supplied to Train Passengers, Permissible Bacteria, 141 | |||
Water Supplied to Train Passengers, Permissible Bacteria, 141 | *WATERWAYS, Thames and the Humber ; Mersey and the Severn, Main Routes Pro¬jected, 361 | ||
*Wax for Candles, 405 | |||
WATERWAYS, Thames and the Humber ; Mersey and the Severn, Main Routes | *Wax Recovery from Waste in Sugar Extraction, Industry Started in Natal, 97 | ||
*Welding Steel Tubes into Long Lengths for Gas Main in Zurich, 141 | |||
Wax for Candles, 405 | *Whale Meat, A New Industry, 295 | ||
*White Metal Alloy, New Patent for, 253 | |||
Wax Recovery from | *Whitewash Mixture, United States Government, Fire-retarding Properties, 535 | ||
*Whitley Committee’s Report on Relations between Employers and Employed, 513 | |||
Welding Steel Tubes into Long Lengths for Gas | *Window Glass Industry in Sweden, Flourishing Condition of, 185 | ||
*Wire Nails, Imported, Commandeered by Army Council, 211 | |||
Main in Zurich, 141 | *Wolfram, Molybdenite and Bismuth in Queensland, 383 | ||
*Wolfram, Tin Alluvium and Other Minerals Found in Siamese Malay States, 141 | |||
Whale Meat, A New Industry, 295 | *Women’s Labour in the Gas Industry, 412 | ||
*Women’s Superiority in Output in American Gear-cuttingWorks, 535 | |||
White Metal Alloy, New Patent for, 253 | *Wood Distillation as an Indian Industry, Demand for, 317 | ||
*Wood as Fuel, Value of Various Species Com¬pared with Coal, 31 | |||
Whitewash Mixture, United States Government, Fire-retarding Properties, 535 | *Wood, New, Its Properties, 197 | ||
*Wood Pulp Fibre, “Cellulon,” as Substitute for Jute, Cotton, andc., 383 | |||
Whitley Committee’s Report on Relations between Employers and Employed, 513 | *Wood Pulp for Papermaking, Enormously Increased Imports from Norway, 231 | ||
*Wooden Pit Props, Round, and Quartered, 207 | |||
Window Glass Industry in Sweden, Flourishing Condition of, 185 | *Woods Employed in Hydraulic Construction, German Tests, 383 | ||
*Woolwich Arsenal, Chief Mechanical Engineer, 524 | |||
Wire Nails, Imported, Commandeered by Army Council, 211 | *Workmen’s Insurance Societies in German Iron and Steel Industries, 31 | ||
Wolfram, Molybdenite and Bismuth in Queensland, 383 | |||
Wolfram, Tin Alluvium and Other Minerals | |||
Found in Siamese Malay States, 141 | |||
Women’s Labour in the Gas Industry, 412 | |||
Women’s Superiority in Output in American | |||
Gear-cuttingWorks, 535 | |||
Wood Distillation as an Indian Industry, Demand for, 317 | |||
Wood as Fuel, Value of Various Species | |||
Wood, New, Its Properties, 197 | |||
Wood Pulp Fibre, | |||
Wood Pulp for Papermaking, Enormously | |||
Increased Imports from Norway, 231 | |||
Wooden Pit Props, Round, and Quartered, 207 | |||
Woods Employed in Hydraulic Construction, German Tests, 383 | |||
Woolwich Arsenal, Chief Mechanical Engineer, 524 | |||
Workmen’s Insurance Societies in German Iron and Steel Industries, 31 | |||
X Y Z | X Y Z | ||
X-RAY, Maximum Frequency, 185 | *X-RAY, Maximum Frequency, 185 | ||
*YARROW, Sir Alfred, on Shipbuilding after the War. Dinner to Employees, 513 | |||
YARROW, Sir Alfred, on Shipbuilding after the War. Dinner to Employees, 513 | *ZINC from Australia, Agreement between British Government and Australian Co., 491 | ||
*Zinc, Electrolytic Production in Tasmania, 141 | |||
ZINC from Australia, Agreement between British Government and Australian Co., 491 | *Zinc Refining in Japan, Ore Supply Insufficient for Demand, 9 | ||
Zinc, Electrolytic Production in Tasmania, 141 | |||
Zinc Refining in Japan, Ore Supply Insufficient for Demand, 9 | |||
== See Also == | == See Also == |
Latest revision as of 14:48, 23 June 2020
















Note: This is a sub-section of The Engineer 1918 Jan-Jun: Index
View the Volumes that this Index refers to.
A
- ACCIDENTS in Mines and Quarries, Increase, 163
- Accidents in the United Kingdom, Reduction in Number, 383
- Acetic Acid from Cocoanut Shells, 471
- Acetic Acid Production from Bagasse, Sugar Factories’ Potentialities, 273
AERONAUTICS:
- - Aero Engines, More than Forty Different Types Now being Manufactured in United Kingdom, 97
- - Aero Engines, Types in Most General Use, 253
- - Aircraft Construction Asked for in Ireland, but Negatived, 141
- - Aircraft Factory in Ireland, 31
- - Crossing the Sahara by Aeroplane, 361
- - Electrically-heated Clothes for Airmen, 73
- - French Government Aerial Postal Service, 361
- - German Airships, Aluminium Alloy Used in, 253
- - Gotha Aeroplane, Particulars of Weight, Rising and Carrying Powers, 295
- - Landings by Aeroplanes in Small Patches of Level Ground, 53
- - Liberty Motors, Great Success, 253
- - Materials Used in Building a Simple Type of Aeroplane, 361
- - Overhead Valve Aero Engines, 491
- - Propeller Manufacture, in Germany, Satisfactory ; Useof Cheaper Woods Laminated Together, 73
- - Shop, Aeroplane, in America, a Quarter of a Mile in Length, 73
- - Sound Audibility at Various Balloon Heights, 163
- - Tension of Aeroplane Guys, 152
- - Wilbur Wright Memorial Lecture, Outstanding Problems in Aeronautics, Dr. W. F. Durand, 480
- - World's Flying Height Record Made by Italian, 97
- AGRICULTURAL Implements and Machines, Exports from the United States, 231
- Agricultural Work, Statistics of Horses and Tractors Employed, 273
- Agriculture, Tropical, Aeration and Irrigation, 491
- Air Compressor, Two-stage Steam-driven Volumetric Efficiency, 557
- Air Compressors and Ammonia Compressors Driven by Synchronous Motors, 361
- Air-lift Pump Efficiency ; Increase in Proportion to Heat of Liquid Pumped, 31
- Air-lift Pump, Novel Application of, 449
- Air-lift- Pumping and Submergence Conditions, 427
- Air and Similar Gaseous Pressures, Unit for Measurement, 339
- Air Supply, Minimum, for Divers, 535
- Alcohol from Garbage, 30
- Alloy, American, as a Substitute for German Silver, 317
- Alloys, Iron, in Acid Manufacture, Ferrochrome and Silicon Iron, 31
- Aluminium and Aluminium Alloys Plated with Nickel, Copper, andc., 541
- Aluminium Alloyed with Calcium, Superior Metal Results, 427
- Aluminium Company’s Endeavour to Get Water Supply from Loch Treig, 31
- Aluminium, Electrolytic, Production of the World, 471
- Aluminium Industry Development Since Outbreak of War, 557
- Aluminium Scrap, Fluxes for Melting, 119
- Ambulance Fund, Captain Dennis Bayley, 330
- American Motor Car, Projected Year’s Production of One Type, 339
- American Society of Naval Architects and Marine Engineers, New York Meeting, 434
- Ammonia Production in Germany by Synthetic Process, 53
- Aniline Colours, Exports from the United States Double the Pre-war Value, 73
- Antimony from China; Trade in Japanese Hands, 207
- Antimony, Use of, in Ammunition Manufacture, 361
- Architects for Workmen’s Cottages ; Government’s Scanty Pay for Designs, 9
- Area and Rainfall, Comparison between Ireland, Scotland and Wales, 449
- Argentine, Potential Wealth Due to Climate and Minerals, 185
- Arsenal, Projected, at the United States Military Base in France, 53
- Asbestos Deposits of Rhodesia, Development, 163
- Asbestos Output of the United States, 141
ASSOCIATIONS, INSTITUTIONS & SOCIETIES :
- - ASSOCIATION OF ENGINEERING AND SHIPBUILDING DRAUGHTSMEN :
- - MERSEYSIDE BRANCH :
- -- Meeting, 109
- - ASSOCIATION, INCORPORATED MUNICIPAL ELECTRICAL :
- -- Future of Electric Power Supply, S. J. Watson, 193
- - ASSOCIATION, SCOTTISH ENGINEERING, SHIPBUILDING AND METALLURGICAL RESEARCH:
- -- Formation, 72
- - INSTITUTE OF CHEMISTRY :
- -- Annual Meeting, 242
- - INSTITUTE, IRON AND STEEL :
- -- Annual and Autumn Meetings, 127
- - INSTITUTE OF METALS :
- -- Annual Autumn Meeting, 546
- -- Annual General Meeting and Programme, 105, 193
- -- Formation of Diamonds, The Hon. Sir C. Parsons, 328
- - INSTITUTE, NORTH OF ENGLAND, OF MINING AND MECHANICAL ENGINEERS :
- -- Ambulance Fund. Captain Dennis Bayley, 330
- - INSTITUTION OF AUTOMOBILE ENGINEERS :
- -- Examination into Causes of Failure of Lorrv Parts on War Service, Lieut.-Col. R. K. Bagnall-Wild, 418
- -- Meeting; Awards for Papers, 176
- -- Tank Engines, Geo. W. Watson, 418
ASSOCIATIONS, INSTITUTIONS & SOCIETIES (continued):
- - INSTITUTION OF AUTOMOBILE ENGINEERS (continued) :
- -- Utilisation of the Data of the Automobile Industry through Bureaux of Information, E. A. Savage, 176
- - INSTITUTION OF CIVIL ENGINEERS :
- -- Advantage of Vertical Gas Retort, Alwyne Meade, 295
- -- Gas Manufacture as Costly Now as Thirty Years Ago, Alwyne Meade, 231
- - INSTITUTION OF ELECTRICAL ENGINEERS :
- -- Election of New Members of Council, 466
- -- Gas-firing Boilers, T. M. Hunter, 181
- -- Overseas Distribution of Engineering Appliances, L. Andrews, 317
- -- Wiring Rules Committee, Recommendation of, 317
- - INSTITUTION, JUNIOR, OF ENGINEERS :
- -- Gustave Canet Lecture on the Stokes Gun, Sir W. Stokes, 427, 513, 568
- - INSTITUTION OF LOCOMOTIVE ENGINEERS :
- - LEEDS AND NORTH OF ENGLAND CENTRE:
- -- Formation and Appointment of Officials, 383
- - INSTITUTION OF MECHANICAL ENGINEERS :
- -- Employment of Women in Munition Factories, Miss Monkhouse, 361
- -- Sir Robert Hadfield’s Prize for Hardness of Metals Determination Method, 339
- -- War Work of Women on Munition Production in Engineering Shops, B. H. Morgan, 361
- - INSTITUTION OF NAVAL ARCHITECTS :
- -- Annual Meetings, 62
- - INSTITUTION OF PETROLEUM TECHNOLOGISTS:
- -- A New British Oil Industry, Joint Paper, 141
- - INSTITUTION, ROYAL :
- -- Annual Meeting ; Report ; Election of Officers and Members, 418
- -- Davy Faraday Research Laboratory, Large Endowment Fund Paid, 130
- -- General Meeting ; Elections, ando., 499
- -- Internal Ballistics, Lieut.-Col. A. G. Hadcock, 455
- -- Lectures after Easter, 284
- -- Poetry and Modern Life, Lawrence Binyon, 455
- -- Romance of Petroleum, Sir Boverton Redwood, 455
- - SOCIETY, CHEMICAL :
- -- Mr. J. S. S. Brainc on Action on Lead of Green Oak, Mortars and Concrete, 383
- - SOCIETY OF ENGINEERS :
- - CRYSTAL PALACE ENGINEERING SOCIETY :
- -- Papers and Awards, 352
- - SOCIETY, OPTICAL :
- -- Cementing Optical Parts, Use of Canada Balsam, J. W. French, 361
- -- Spherometer of Precision, Mr. J. Guild’s Design, 53
ASSOCIATIONS, INSTITUTIONS & SOCIETIES (continued):
- - SOCIETY, RONTGEN :
- -- Silvanus Thompson Memorial Lecture, Professor Sir E. Rutherford, 239
- - SOCIETY, ROYAL, OF ARTS :
- -- Silver Medal Awards for Papers, 557
- -- Tata Iron and Steel Works, H. M. Surtees Tuckwell, 163
- - SOCIETY, ROYAL METEOROLOGICAL :
- -- Audibility of Gunfire on the Continent. Mr. Miller Christy, 557
- -- Measurement of Atmospheric Pollution Dr. J. S. Owens, 280
- -- Summer Thunderstorms, Conditions Precedent to Occurrence, J. Fairgrieve, 347
- -- Variations of Underground Water Level Near a Tidal Tiver, E. G. Bilham, 347
- ATMOSPHERIC Nitrogen for Munitions and Fertilisers ; Water-Power Plant in Alabama, 231
- Australia, Losses by Strikes in 1917, 449
B
- BALSA, New Wood, Its Properties, 197
- Banks in Norway, New Temporary Law, 339
- Bauxite Discoveries in British Guiana, British Government to Retain First Call, 53
- Bearing Metal, Alloy Patented in America, 339
- Belgium, Economical Reconstruction of, 395
- Bevel Gearing, Supposed Inventor and Date, 295
- Board of Education Examinations in Science and Technology to be Discontinued, 119
- Boiler Efficiency and Velocity, T. M. Hunter, 181
- Boiler Explosions in United Kingdom and United States, Comparison, 534
- Boiler Heating with Stripped Coal, 31
- Boiler Heating Surface, Loss of Heat Conductivity Due to Soot, 339
- Boy Artificers for the Royal Navy,. Nominations, 557
- Boy Welfare in the B.S.A. Works, 130
- Boys’ Welfare Association, 449
- Brickmaking Industry on the Kolar Goldfield, 339
- Bridge, Simple Truss, Largest Span in the World, 231
- Bridge, Tongabuddra, India, Particulars of, 295
- Bridges in New South Wales, Old and New, 207
- British Empire Producers’ Organisation, 517
- BRITISH ENGINEERS’ ASSOCIATION :
- - Annual Meeting ; Dr. Addison’s Address, 239
- British Industries Fairs in London and Glasgow, 31, 242—see also Miscellaneous Index
- British Institute of Social Service, Annual Meeting, 92
- Browning Light Machine Gun Compared with the Lewis Gun, 339
C
- CALCIUM Carbide Production, Need of Cheap Raw Material and Cheap Power, 207
- Calcium Carbide, Reduced Price, 9
- Calcutta, Increased Tax on Motor Cars, 97
- Canada, Demand for Power Greatly in Excess of Supply, 97
- Canada in Khaki, 130
- Canada, Municipal Expenditure, Comparison with English Methods, 96
- Canada’s Development as shown by Increased Mails, 491
- Canada’s Fuel Requirements, Solid and Liquid, 295
- Canada’s Fuel Resources, Situation of Coal and of Peat Bogs, 295
- Canada and United States, Use of Electric Furnaces and Output of Metals, 207
- Canadian Government Purchase of Agricultural Motors for Farmers, 295
- Canadian Imports and Exports, 404
- Canadian Water Power Resources, Not One- tenth Developed, 317
- Canal Projects, After the War, in France, 207
- Canals, Board of Trade Handbook, 154
- Carbide Production in Germany for Eventual Manufacture of Synthetic Rubber, 163
- Carbon in Fuels, Method of Estimating, 339
- Carborundum : Its Past History, 253
- Car Design and Accessory Drives, 207
- Cashew Nut, Valuable Properties of Nut and Tree, 491
- Cattle Slaughter and the Jewish Religion, 69
- Centrifugal Pumps : Question of Best Speed for Driving, 535
- Chadwick Public Lectures, H. T. Davidge, 239
- Change Speed Gear-box, Permanent Mesh, New Type, F. Sabel, 557
- Channel Tunnel Immediately After the War, 513
- Charcoal Blast-furnace Experiment in Mysore, 163
- “Cheap Steam,” Ed. Bennis and Co., 97
- Chemical Pulp Export from Norway, Distribution to Different Countries, 31
- Chicago, Analysis of Vehicles, Horse-drawn and Self-propelled, 405
- “Chichopoxtle,” Valuable New Lubricant from, 513
- China : Question of Gold Standard and Rise in Dollar Value, 73
- Chinese Wood-oil Tree, Use of Oil in Varnish Manufacture, 31
- Circular Tank, To Find the Capacity, 31
- Civil Engineering, General Congress in Paris Projected, 97
- Clutches, Friction, H. L. Towns, 68
COAL, COKE, AND COLLIERIES :
- - Boiler-house Waste of Coal Due to Lack of Intelligence and Training, 163
- - By-product Coke-making in America, Statistics, 163
- - By-product Coke Manufacture, Weekly Reports in the United States, 383
- - Canada and the United States, Arrangements for Inter-export of Coal, 427
- - Coal Conservation, Comparison in Output between Great Britain and the United States, 141
- - Coal Cutting Methods and Wages, Changes of Two Centuries, 16
- - Coal, Iron, and Copper Discoveries in Algeria, 141
- - Coal Mining Development in Germany, 31
- - Coal, Stripped, for Heating Boilers, 31
- - Coal and Textile Clothing, Production per Head in United States and Great Britain, 141
- - Coal Transport Saving Scheme, 427
- - CokeFuel Instead of Oil for Omnibus Running, Great Economy, 9
- - Coke Fuel for Steam Wagons, 273
- - Coke Oven Plants and Utilisation of Waste Heat, F. E. Harris, 427
- - Coking Stokers an Absolute Preventative of Smoke, 273
- - Colliery Machinery, Safety and Signal Device, T. D. Watson, 253
- - Electric Display Devices in New York, Restrictions to Save Coal, 73
- - Electric Plants, Wasteful, Suggested Elimination of, to Economise Coal, 405
- - Electric Power Supply and Coal Conservation, 503
- - Gas Making and Unsuitable Coal, 207
- - Heating in Coal Stacks, Prevention of, 273
- - Natal and the Transvaal, Undeveloped Coal Seams, 200
- - Power Production and Coal Consumption, 87
- - Power Supply and Coal Saving, 231
- - Sawdust and Wood as Coal Substitutes in Switzerland and France, 185
- - Spontaneous Ignition, Simple Test for Probability of, in Coal, 449
- - Storage, Effect on Bituminous Coals, Professor S. W. Parr, 82
- - Thawing Plants for Frozen Coal in Railway Cars, 382
- - Waste of Coal in the United States in Obsolete Steam Engine Plant, 52
- COD Liver and Other Fish Oils to Replace Vegetable Oils in Margarine Manufacture, 273
- Cold Storage Little Used in France, 97
- Columbia River, Great Variation in Flow, 53
- Commercial Motor Users’ Association, First Presidential Address, Colonel Crompton, 405
- Concrete for Building Government Cottages, 31
- Concrete Cargo 5000-Ton Steamship under Construction in America, 231
- Concrete Coaling Station for Locomotives on the Lehigh Valley, Notable Features, 535
- Concrete Construction Specifications, 557
- Concrete, Effect of Salts of Alkali Water, 427
- Concrete Outfall Sewer on the Bottom of Lake Erie, 491
- Concrete, Reinforced, Action of Salt on, Necessary Precautions, Profe^sior H. J. M. Creighton, 73
- Concrete, Reinforced, Building with Floor Space of 24 Acres, 9
- Concrete, Reinforced, in Machine Tools, 361
- Concrete, Reinforced, Test to Ascertain “Point of Destruction,” 557
- Concrete, Resistance to Sea Water Affected by Workmanship, Experiments, 141
- Concrete Roads in America, 50,000,000 Square Yards, 97
- Contraction of Volume of Certain Substances After being Dissolved in Water in Increasing Quantities, 317
- Conversion Tables, Hoffmann Manufacturing Company, 416
- Copper Articles, Black Finish for, 361
- Copper, Colour Changes Due to Special Treatment, 141
- Copper Melted for Castings, Need of Care, 9
- Copper Mines in Queensland, Reopening, 97
- Copper and Tin Mixture, Addition of Aluminium, 231
- Copper Zinc Alloys, Influence of Cadmium on, Leon Guilletr 474
- Corliss Engines: Centenary of Inventor’s Birth, 535
- Cotton in Madras, Government Grown, Result of Experiments, 185
- Crusher, New Type, for Coke and Coal, 427
- Crystal Palace Engineering Society, Papers and Awards, 352
- Cuprous Oxide, Formerly German Monopoly, Now Made in England, 339
- Cutting Points on a Grinding Wheel, 491
D
- DAM, Arch-, Lightest Section, in the World, New South Wales, 405
- Dam on the Cimarron River, New Mexico, Dimensions and Interesting Features, 383
- Dam, Concrete, for Supply of Salt Lake City, Storage of 300,000,000 Gallons, 535
- Dams, Multiple-arch Reinforced Concrete, Growing in Number in America, 535
- Daylight Saving in United States, 449
- Death of Mr. Thomas Greenwood, 513
- Death of Mr. H. J. Swindley, 73
- Decimal Coinage Bill Pressed for, 339
- Decimal Coinage Supported by the Federation of British Industries, 427
- Diamonds, Formation of, Sir C. Parsons on, 328
- Dock, New, for Barrow-in-Furness, Furness Railway Company and Vickers, Limited, 185
- Domestic Fat Trap, 369
- Drill Hole Nearly 5000ft. Deep, 427
- Dye Industry, British, and Railway Charges on Raw Chemical Material, 471
E
- EDUCATION in Aeronautical Technology and Aircraft Architecture, 491
ELECTRICAL MATTERS:
- - Aberystwyth, Electro-Power Station for, 97
- - Alarm Signal Actuated by Sensitive Selenium Cell, 97
- - Argentine Republic, 238 Central Electricity Stations in, 163
- - Army Demand for Electricians and Equipment, 207
- - Association of British Electrical Engineers, Proposed Formation of, 303
- - Auto-transformer to Transform 12,000 Volts to 24,000 Volts, 163
- - Bar Mill, Electrically-driven, at Ohio Works, 185
- - Batteries, “Storage,” or “ Reversible,” 231
- - Blind People’s New Occupation, 490
- - Boosting, Need of Provision for, in Design of
- - Charging Equipment for Electric Motor Vehicles, 53
- - Cable, Safe Working Internal Temperature of, 449
- - Canadian Water Powers, Advantageous Situation of, 449
- - Chadwick Public Lectures, H. T. Davidge, 239
- - Cheap Power near Strathpeffer, 460
- - Clothes Electrically Heated, Some Anticipated Results, 73
- - Coal Conservation and Power Supply, 503
- - Coal and Electric Energy, Inter-export Arrangements between Canada and United States, 427
- - Commonwealth Edison Company Generating Station One of the Largest in the World, 513
- - Composite Insulating Materials Investigation, 504
- - Cooking and Heating by Electricity, Greatly Increased Use of, 295
- - Domestic Appliances, Electric, Greatly Increased Sale of, in U.S.A., 253
- - Dry Cell Recuperation, C. F. Burgess, 73
- - Eel in the Pipe Line Shuts Down Electricity Supply, 39
- - Effects of War Conditions on Cost and Quality of Electric Service, L. S. Goodman and W. B. Jackson, 185
- - Electrical Heating, Question of Development, 339
- - Electric Winding Engines, John F. Perry, 207
- - Factory for Electrodes in Norway, 489
- - Generating Station at Saint Barthelemy, 427
- - Generating Systems, Large, of America; Outputs, Peak Loads and Load Factors Statistics, 383
- - German Electrical Plant, Widespread Failure in Working, 253
- - High Voltage Insulators; Deteriorating Effects of Corona, 119
- - Hot Water Supply from Electricity Stations, W. M. Selvey, 317
- - Hydro-electric Generating Station in Iowa, Complete Automatic Working, 52
- - Increasing Load, New Steam Plant for, Special Economisers Used, 207
- - Induction Meters’ Adaptation to Different Frequencies, Difficulties, 405
- - Induction Motors on the Witwatersrand, 510
- - Insulating Material; Ingredients and Properties, 119
- - Insulating Properties of Fish Offal Byproduct, 535
- - Iron Piping for Bus-bars Replaces Copper in an American Central Station, 73
- - Japanese Electrical Industry, Statistics, 231
- - Japan’s Increased Use of Electricity in Steel Manufacture, 119
- - Lancaster Motor Omnibuses, Mileage and Finance, 317
- - Leek Linking-up Scheme, 273
- - Lifting Magnet in the United States, Immense Saving of Labour by Use of, 273
- - Lighting Restrictions and Electricity Meters, C. H. W. Gerhardi, 557
- - Lightning Flash, Electric Quantities in, 471
- - Long Distance Electric Transport, Not Yet Called For, 317
- - Manchester, Future Standard for Transmission, 565
- - Mechanical Design of the Turbo-Alternator Rotor, S. F. Barclay, 317
ELECTRICAL MATTERS (continued) :
- - Methane Detector, Electric, for Use in Mines, 471
- - Motors, Return Ordered to be Made in Germany; Possible Connection with Copper Scarcity, 97
- - Motors for Textile Mills, Smaller Sizes in Favour, 185
- - Names of Men of Science to Denote Units, Objections to Practice, 73
- - Niagara Falls, Proposed Consolidation of Three Power Companies, 447
- - Niagara; Power Generation and Supply Comparison between Canada and United States, 513
- - North-West Station, U.S.A., Big New Electrical Installation, 361
- - Petrol Motor Cars and Electric Lighting and Starting; Double or Single Unit Question, 231
- - Power Factor of an Alternating Current Circuit, 513
- - Power Line 22,000 Volt in California, Reinforced Concrete Poles for Six Miles Length, 383
- - Power for Oilfields, in Baku and in Roumania, 527
- - Rand Mine, Second Electric Furnacelnstalled, 471
- - Record Output and Earnings from Sale of Electric Energy, 163
- - Restriction of Electric Display Devices in New York and Saving of Coal, 73
- - Saving of Coal by Elimination of Wasteful Electric Plants, 405
- - Shoe Factory, Entire Equipment Electrical, 273
- - Single-phase Transformers, Ordinary High Pressures for, in America, 231
- - Steam Pressure of 300 lb. per Square Inch in Central Generating Station, 273
- - Studs, Back Connection, for Switch Gear, Variations in Type of, 253
- - Technical Story of the Frequencies, B. G. Lamme, 163
- - Temperature Effects in Direct Current Meters, G. W. Stubbings, 253
- - Transmission of Power Across the St. Lawrence River, Submarine and Overhead Cables, 449
- - Trucks, Charging, Enormous Consumption of Power at Bush Terminal, New York, 535
- - Turbine Room Equipment of New Glasgow Power Station, 273
- - Units of Electricity to Melt a Ton of Steel, Figures, 405
- - Vaseline Replacing Air in a Cable Duct, Experiment, 383
- - Vereeniging, S. Africa, Fourth Largest Power Station, 9
- - Voltaic Cell, New Form of, on French Railways, 471
- - War and Electricity Supply, 82
- - “Will-o’-the-Wisps.” Perpetual Motion and the Ideal High-voltage Generator, 9
- - Wire Manufacture for Electrical Purposes, Big Preparations in America for After-War Trade, 383
- ELECTROLYTIC Copper, Modulus of Elasticity, Working Conditions in Design of Transmission Lines, 9
- Electrolytic Process of De-oxidisation, 152
- Electroplating for Aluminium, New Process, 541
- Embankment to Protect the City of Concepcion from Flooding of Bio Bio River, 9
- Engineer and Engineering, Need of Legal Definition, 185
- Engineering School at Portland, 243
- Engineering Standards Committee Incorporated, 471
- Engineering Student : Accusations of Apathy, 383
- Engineering Students in the United States, Proportion Exempted from Military Service, 163
- Engineering Trades (New Industries) Committee, 303
- Engineers’ Club for the Midlands, 491
- Engineers for War Service, Suggested Certificates, 427
- Engines of Various Classes, Average Weights per Brake Horse-power, P. N. Everett, 253
- English Weather, 503
- Etching Brasses and Bronzes, 231
- Ethyl Chloride Prepared by Grove’s Process, 231
- Evaporation and Stefan’s Law, N. Thomas and A. Ferguson, 427
- Exhibition of Enemy Countries Products and Appliances Now Produced in United Kingdom, 383
- Exhibition of Products and Appliances Made at Home Formerly Imported from Enemy Countries, 535
- Explosions, Dust Barriers for Prevention in Alberta, Canada, 97
- Explosive from Liquid Oxygen, Experiments in United States, 295
F
- FARTHINGS, Great Increase in Issue of Coins, 9
- Firebricks from Coal Ash, Value of New Process, 31
- Fire Waste in Canada Greatest in the World, 299
- Fires in New York Attributable to Defective Electrical Installations, Analysis, 535
- Fish Freezing in Brine, Greatly Improved Method, 273
- Flax Cultivation in Canada and India, 185
- Flax Supply of the World Absorbed by Countries at War, 119
- Fluxes for Melting Aluminium Scrap, 119
- Foreign Technical Press, A Review of, 570
- Foreign Trade, 264
- Forged Axles, Hollow, Question of Strength, 471
- Forgings, Cooling, by Compressed Air, 285 ; (Correction), Sandberg’s Patent, 373
- Forth and Clyde Ship Canal, Scheme Suspended, 557
- Freezing, Permanent, Depth of, 317
- Friction Clutches, H. L. Towns. 68
- Fuel Consumption, Test and Record Motor Cycle Run in California, 557
- Fuel, “Non-pinking,” for Motor Cars, 73
- Furnace, Martin, Heating with Wet Lignites, 535
G
- GAS, Absorbent, for Fighting Poisonous Gases, American Discovery, 535
- Gas, Coal, Replacing Petrol for Commercial Vehicles, 231
- Gas Manufacture as Costly Now as Thirty Years Ago, Alwyne Meade, 231
- Gas for Motor Vehicles, Obtainable from all but Three Undertakings, 163
- Gas for Motor Vehicles, Use Restricted, by Board of Trade, 31
- Gas or Petrol for Motor Vehicles ; Different Aspects of the Question in United Kingdom and in Australia, 9
- Gas Production from Sawdust or Wood Instead of Coal, 73
- Gas-propelled Motor Car in Paris, 253
- Gas Traction, Conversion of Commercial Motor Vehicles, 141
- Gas Traction in Manchester, 405
- Gas Traction and Unsuitable Containers, 427
- Gauge Work Tolerance, Tests in an. American University, 471
- Gear Standardisation and Uniformity of Commercial Practices in Marketing Gears, in America, 535
- German Machine Tools, Increased Output, 449
- Germany’s Agricultural Research Institutions, 295
- Germany’s Engineering Debt to British Engineers, 53
- Germany’s Large Purchases of Wool from South Africa before the War, 207
- Gifts for the Labour Companies Overseas, 215
- Glasgow, Fixed Bridge Over the Clyde, Erection Recommended, 361
- Glasgow, Joint Catalogues of Technical Book in Various Libraries, 361
- Glass Products in the United States, Excess of Imports in 1914 and Excess of Exports in 1917, 73
- Glommen River, Norway, as Important Industrial Site, 53
- Gold Mines, Precarious Position in South Africa, 9
- Gold Production of the World, 273
- Gold from Southern Rhodesia. 513
- Gold, World’s Output. British Empire Proportion, 17
- Greenwich Observatory, Magnet House Superseded, 491
- Gun, The Stokes, Lecture by Sir Wilfrid Stokes, 427, 513, 568
H
- HAUGESUND, Norway, Projected Port Improvements, 9
- Hankow, Increase of Motor Vehicles and Probable Road Improvements, 73
- Hardness of Metals, Prize Fund Presented by Sir Robert Hadfield, 339
- Heat, New Principle in the Flow of, Dr. C. Hering, 316
- Heat Transmission of Building Materials, A. C. Willard and L. C. Lichty, 557
- Heating and Domestic Engineers’ Programme, 273
- Hong-Kong, Motor Road Round Island, 163
- Horse-power, Steam Engine and Water, in the United States, Estimated Quantity Undeveloped, 273
- Hot Water from the Depths of the Earth, Temperature Increase in Proportion to Depth, 9
- Houses for the Working Classes, Local Government Board Plans, 141
- Housing and Town Planning, National, Subdivision of Houses, 317
- Housing of Working Classes,‘Financing Private Enterprise, Scheme for, 253
- Hydro-electric Generating Station in Iowa Automatically Operated, 52
- Hydrogen to Replace Petrol in Switzerland, 491
I
- ICELANDIC Trade, Chamber of Commerce for Promoting and. Protecting, 119
- India, Early Attempts to Establish Iron and Steel Industry, 185
- Indian Munitions Board Shipbuilding Branch Started at Calcutta, 317
- India’s Great Demand for Maps, 317
- Industrial Reconstruction Council, 280
IRON AND STEEL:
- - Annealing of Cold-hammered or Hardened Steels, Comparison, 339
- - Australian Steel Foundry Plants, Details of, 317
- - Brazil and Iron Ore, Rich Supplies, and Facilities for its Use, 231
- - Charcoal Blast-furnace Experiment in Mysore, 163
- - Cooling Forgings by Compressed Air, 285 ; (Correction), C. P. Sandberg’s Patent, 373
- - Crucible Steel Manufacture, Paper by Mr. F. B. Lounsberry, 557
- - Differential Dilatometer for Thermal Investigations on Steels, M. Pierre Chevenard, 53
- - Electricity Required to Melt a Ton of Steel, 405
- - Ferro-chrome and Silicon Iron as Alloys in Manufacture of Acids, 31
- - Ferro-manganese Production in Spain, 449
- - Furnace-charging Machines’ Long Life, 273
- - Iron Ore Deposits in India, Very Rich, 163
- - Japan, Steel Production in, 273
- - Japanese Gain Concession of Important Iron Mine, 541
- - Lincolnshire Ironstone Measures, Almost Inexhaustible, 273
- - Lloyd Wells Process for Steel Tubing Manufacture, 207
- - Magnetic Steel Band Drive, P. L. Weston, 339
- - Malleable Castings, Analyses of, 97
- - Malleable Castings and the Converter Method of Manufacture, 97
- - Malleable Castings, Output in Great Britain and United States, Comparison, 97
- - Manganese Imported by the United States, Appeal to Patriotism of the Steel Industry, 119
IRON AND STEEL (continued):
- - Manganese in Steel Manufacture, Method of Testing for, T. F. Payne, 53
- - Mn Steel Experiments, M. A. Portevin, 53
- - Molybdenum in Ores, Method of Determining, 119
- - Molybdenum and Tungsten, Extensive Deposits Found in Sonora, Mexico, 427
- - National Council on Trade Policy Projected, 513
- - Pig Iron, Salving of Barge Load of, from Tennessee River, 253
- - Protection of Cast Iron Against Rust, 273
- - Queensland, Ore with Higher Percentage of Iron than Any in Great Britain, 222
- - Queensland, Suggested Iron and Steel Works, 427
- - Russian Government to Control Iron and Steel Industry, 339
- - Sandberg Sorbitic Steel, 285, 373
- - Steel Puddling at £1500 a Year, 185
- - Steel Recovery from Old Tin Cans, 557
- - Steel Tube Manufacture, Proper Annealing, 513
- - Steel Wire and Corrosion ; A Question of Copper Percentage, 231
- - Sulphur in Steel Castings, Changes in Raw Material and New Processes, 405
- - United States Output in Finished Steel, 426
- - Utilisation of Steel Scrap, Report by Industries Committee of House of Representatives, 97
- - West of Scotland Iron and Steel Institute, Proposed Change of Name, 306
- ITALIAN Metallurgical and Mechanical Industry, Increase of Capital by the Ilva Company, 207
- Italy, the Leading Motor Car Exporting Nation, 119
- Italy’s Export of Motor Vehicles, 491
J
- JAPANESE Great Industrial Expansion, 207
- Japan’s Proposed Increase of Spindles, Difficulties of Import, 53
- Japan’s Proposed Outlay on Road-making, 141
- Jute Manufacture, India Most Important Country for, 163
K
- KNITTING Machine Needles in South China Factories, Great Scarcity of, 253
- Koenigsberg Canal and Harbour Enlargement, 557
L
- LABORATORIES, Government, London, Report, 185
- Labour Disputes and Stoppages of Work, 141
- Labour Resettlement Committee, Employers’ Representative, 471
- Laundry Industry, Expansion Anticipated, Machinery Largely Imported from America, 53
- Lead Exports from the United States, Consumption of Great Britain and Canada, 557
- Leeds Automatic Telephone Exchange, Largest in Europe, 557
- Lighthouses, Annual Report of the Commissioner, 163
- Lighting and Heating, Central Stations and Isolated Plants, 471
- Locomotive Boiler Explosion, Strange Result, 9
- Lorries, 3-Ton,“Machine” for Assembling and Total Completion of One per Half-hour, 295
- Lubricating Material Substitutes in Germany, 535
- Luncheon Meetings for Business Men, 517
M
- MAGNETOS, Large Output by the British Ignition Apparatus Association, 140
- Manchester Chamber of Commerce, Metal Merchants’ Suggestion, 198
- Manchester Steam Users’ Association, 503
- Maps in the American Army, Rapid Reproduction by Blue-printing and Lithography, 383
- Marbles, Coloured, and Beautifully Grained from South-West Africa, 535
- Marine Surveyors to the Board of Trade, 239
- Mechanical Stoking in 1785, James Watt, Patentee, 97
- Metal Production from Canadian Ores in 1917, 163
- Meteorite Fragments in Scotland, 9
- “Methanephone” for Methane Gas Detection, 432
- Micromanometer and its Uses, 427
- Military Motor Lorry, 3-Ton, Equipped for Operation on Coal Gas, 141
- Mine in Brazil, Deepest in the World, 295
- Mineral Resources of Great Britain, 374
- Minerals in the Siamese Malay States, Very Rich Area, 141
- Motor Car Engine of New Sleeve Valve Type, 361
- Motor Car Export, Italy the Leading Nation, 119
- Motor Car Industry in America, High Figures, 339
- Motor Car Popularity in Canada, 405
- Motor Car Suspension, Improvements, but Need of More, 258
- Motor Car Taxation Assessment in Alberta, 295
- Motor Cars in America, Reported Use of Three- cylinder Rotary Petrol Engine, 339
- Motor Cars with Gas Container Trailers, Speed Limit Alteration, 163
- Motor Car’s World’s Speed Record, 53
- Motor Commercial Vehicle Chassis Built Upside Down, 405
- Motor Fuel in France after the War, Alcohol and Benzol Mixture, 449
- Motor Gas Equipment, Standardisation of Filling Orifices, 163
- Motor Tractors in Rubber Cultivation, Great Advance in Efficiency, 163
- Motor Trucks for American Army in France, Huge Number Required, 405
- Motor Vehicle Working on Natural Gas, Experiment, 423
- Motor Vehicles, Commercial, Driven on Coal Gas instead of Petrol, 295
- Motor Vehicles and Government Control, Differentiation between Petrol and Electricity, 231
- Munitions in the London District, 449
N
- NAPHTHALENE for Power Purposes, 53
- Natalite, a Motor Spirit, 324
- Natural Gas for Motor Vehicle, Working, 423
- Natural Gas, Tests for Petrol, in the United States, 449
- Naval Gun, Powerful and Durable, for American Battleships, 185
- Newfoundland Fish Supplies Landed at Fleetwood, 53
- New York Garbage Reduction Works, 568
- Niagara Falls., Ten Millions a Year, or a View ? 449
- Niagara—see alsr> Electrical Matters
- Nickel, World’s Production of, Enlarged by Six Times since 1900, 317
- Nile Floods in Autumn of 1917, Abnormal, Anticipated Benefit, 119
- Norway, Rolling Mill Plant and Government Loan, 119
O
- OCCUPATIONS Available for Discharged Soldiers, 141
- Oil-field Discovery near Los Angeles, 97
- Oil for Lubrication, Most Important Properties, 491
- Oil Seeds Production in India, 471
- Oil, Valuable Lubricant from “Chichopoxtle ” Fruit, 513
- Oil Wells in America, Use of Electric Power for Drilling, Cleaning and Pumping, 535
- Oil Wells in Galicia, Great Depths, 557
- Oil Wells, Prolific, in Mexico, 535
- Old Cloth Tracings and Tin-foil, 286
- Onyx Discovery in Tampico, Mexico, 471
- Order of the British Empire, 81— see Miscellaneous Index
- Oven Gas for Domestic and Other Uses, 383
- Oxy-acetylene Welding, Remarkable Example, 185
P
- PAINT to Withstand Heat, 115
- Paints, Temperature Sensitive, 405
- Paints and White Lead Scarcity, 53
- Paper Pulp from Blady Grass in Queensland, 427
- Paper Pulp and Timber in Canada, 405
- Paris Bombardment ; Reported Record on United States Seismographs, 535
- Patent Claims in the United States, Recent Ruling, 317
- Patent Office Library’s Photostat from Sir Robert Hadfield, 513
- Pension Scheme in Canada, 289
- Perishable Food Imports into the United Kingdom in Pre-war Times, 53
- Petrol Motor Cars and Electric Lighting and Starting ; Double or Single Unit Question, 231
- Petrol Price in America, 207
- Petrol, Synthetic, Process for Production, L. B. Cherry, 449
- Petrol from the United States, Increased Exports, 73
- Petroleum in Mexico, Scantily Utilised owing to Lack of Transport Facilities, 491
- Petroleum Spirit Refinery, Unsatisfactory Methods, 53
- Petroleum from United States, A World’s Necessity, 53
- Philadelphia’s Record Pumping Plant, 207
- Photostat, Sir R. Hadfield’s Present to Patentoffice Library, 513
- Pipe, Cast Iron, of all Sizes, Machine for Making, 253
- Pipes, Compressed Cellulose, Satisfactory Except for Steam, 317
- Pith, Sunflower and Sola, for Helmets, 491
- Platinum, Result of Analyses, 339
- Platinum in Russia Bought up by German Agents, 339
- Platinum in Russia, First Record of Discovery, 317
- Platinum Substitute for Electrical Purposes, 31 Platinum Substitute at One Half Cost, 273
- Platinum Wire Fine Enough to Replace Spider’s Web in Telescopes, 339
- Plymouth’s Lack of Cold Storage : Question of New Commercial Harbour, 53
- Pneumatic Trench Mortar, French, Propelling Charge, 9
- Pneumatic Tyres Inner Tube, German Method of Preserving Elasticity, 535
- Polytechnic School of Engineering, Sir C. A. Parsons as President, 557
- Portland Cement of Indian Manufacture, 471
- Portland School of Engineering, 243
- Potash Extracted from Cement Rock, Saving Effected by Use of Common Salt, 163
- Power Supply in the United Kingdom, Need of Improvement in Methods, 231
- Press Censor and the House that Jack Built, 119
- “Pseudo-Data,” Boiler Explosions in United Kingdom and United States, 534
- Pulp and Paper Industry in Canada, Steady Growth, 31
- Pumping Engine, Atmospheric, Still Used, 130 Years Old, 405
Q
- QUEENSLAND Artesian Water Supply, 303
- Queensland Grass for Paper Pulp, 427
- Quicklime Expansion Under Moisture, Utilisation of this Force, 513
R RAILWAYS AND TRAMWAYS:
- - Accident in Aberdeen Joint Station, 557 Accident Due to Broken Carriage Axle, 207
- - Accident Due to Falling Rock, 361
- - Accident at Penge Station, 557
- - Accidents Branch of Board of Trade, 141
- - Accidents, Pre-war and Now, Great Reduction in Board of Trade Enquiries, 53
- - Accidents and Road Level Crossings in United States, 513
- - Agricultural Produce and Railway Charges, 383
- - Alaska, Government Railway’s Delayed and Costly Progress, 535
- - Aliens’ Reported Exodus from London, 339
- - Aliens’ Use of Railways, 347
- - Ambulance Train for American Troops on the Continent, 185
- - Ambulance Trains Built at Stratford, 163
RAILWAYS AND TRAMWAYS (continued) :
- - Ambulance Trains for United States Troops Building at Swindon, 31, 207
- - American Railway in France, 130
- - American Railwaymen’s Report on Japanese Railways, 295
- - American Railway Passenger Rates, 449
- - American Railway Workmen iri France, Brave Assistance in Repulsing German Attack, 73
- - Appointments and Staff Changes, 9, 31, 53, 97, 141, 253, 273, 295, 339, 361, 405
- - Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe, Concrete Roadways in Shops and Stores Yards, 471
- - Australian Chief Railway Commissioner, 53
- - Australian Railway Construction Since 1850, 557
- - Ayr Harbour and Glasgow and South- Western Railway Company, 339
- - Baldwin Locomotives for France in Temporary Use on the Philadelphia and Reading Railway, 97
- - Baltimore and Ohio Express Transference from New Jersey Terminus to New York City, 535
- - Belgian Locomotives for American Expeditionary Force, 73
- - Billinton, Mr. L., London, Brighton and South Coast Railway, Return to England, 557
- - Birthday Honours for Railwaymen, 491, 513 Birthday Honours for Railwaymen in India, 513
- - Board of Trade Power of Control of Railways and Rolling Stock in War-time, 9
- - Bridge Over the Ohio River Built by the Paducah and Illinois Railroad, 97
- - Bridge, Pennsylvania, at Louisville, Badly Damaged by Fire, 535
- - Bristol Corporation and Great Western and Midland Railway Companies, Legal Decision, 339
- - British Railway Funds and the Dividend Question, 53
- - Caledonian Railway Passenger Train and North British Light Engine, Collision, 557
- - Canadian Government Taking Over Railways and Leasing Them, 449
- - Canadian Military Deeds Commemorated by Re-named Stations on the Canadian Pacific Railway, 53
- - Canadian Minister of Railways, A New Office, 361
- - Canadian Railroad Commission, Rates Increase Question, 273
- - Canadian Railway Equipment ; Financing Purchase, 361
- - Canadian Railways Increase in Rates for Passengers and Freight, 9
- - Canadian War Board and Labour Unions ; Resistance to Removal of Rails, 231
- - Canal Employees and War Bonus, Comparison with Railways, 273
- - Canal Traffic Between Bristol and Liverpool ; Possible Interference with London’s Seaborne Traffic, 231
- - Canals and Goods Traffic Congestion, 339
- - Canals Used to Relieve Congested Traffic on Railways, 119
- - Castlecomer Collieries, Transit Facilities, 141
- - Central of New Jersey Railroad Passes, 97
- - Charing Cross Bridge Strengthening Attitude of the Joint Committee, 207
- - Chicago—New York Twenty-hour Express Taken Off, 31
- - Chicago Track Elevation Work, Appeal to Patriotism, 427
- - Clydach, Pontardawe and Cwmgorse Railway, Construction Suspended, 207
- - Coal on American Locomotives, Immense Saving if Lines Electrified, 361
- - Coal Consumption on U.S. Railways, 535
- - Coal in the Neighbourhood of the Great Southern and Western Railway, Adverse Report by Irish Solicitor-General, 253
- - Coal for New Zealand Railway Locomotives, Increased Cost, 31
- - Coal Transport Saving Scheme in America, 427
- - Coal Transport Scheme ; Great Saving in Ton Mileage, Glasgow and S. Western Railway, 231
- - Collision on the Louisville and Nashville Railway, Unusual Action by the President of the Line, 97
- - Commercial Travellers’ Week-end Fares in Ireland Not Increased, 119
- - Concrete Ties Still in the Trial Stage, Difficulties, 53
- - Cork City Railway and Other Lines, Need for Further Connections, 141
- - Crewe Brotherhood, Mr. Winston Churchill’s Message, 53
- - Damaged Food and Foodstuffs on the Pere Marquette Railroad, 491
- - Danger in Walking on Railway Track, 405
- - Death of Mr. Joseph W. Taylor, 491
- - Delaware and Hudson Railroad Freight Locomotives ; Increase in Engines and Train Loads, Statistics, 557
- - Derailment at Level Crossing in U.S.A., Due to Motor Car, 295
- - Directors’ First-class Free Passes, Suggested Withdrawal Refused, 141
- - Dividends of various Railways, 119
- - Doors of Railway Carriages, Device for Prevention of Accident, 253
- - Dublin and South-Eastern Company ; Grey- stones to Wicklow Line Strengthening, 317
- - Economy of Railway Electrification, Curious Comparisons, 31
- - Economy in Use of Oil Fuel, Decoration Mark for Best Record, 449
- - Eggs, Railway Conveyance of, 273
- - Egyptian State Railways, Increase in Fares and Freight Charges, 339
- - Electric Locomotives. 50 Ton : The First Built at the South Manchuria Railroad Shops 361
- - Electric Railway between Tampico and Mexico, 471
- - Enemy Officer Prisoners’ Railway Accommodation, 427
- - Equipment, Railway, After the War, Anti cipated Large Demand, Dr. Addison, 92
- - Essex, Need of Light Railways, Government Appealed to, 317
- - Express through Trolley Line between Buffalo and Niagara Falls, 535
- - Fares Increase on London Railways ; Controlled and Uncontrolled Lines, 251
RAILWAYS AND TRAMWAYS (continued) :
- - Farm Purchase by Great Eastern Railway. 207
- - Federated Malay States and Siamese Southern Railways, Linking up, Difficulty in Getting Railway Material, 97
- - First-class Privileges in War-time, 9, 491
- - First and Third-class Accommodation, Relative Amounts Required, 339
- - Fish Delay in Transit by Sea ; Railway Not to Blame, 163
- - Fish from Ireland, Withdrawal of Trains Question, 471
- - Fish Traffic, Special Trains and Trucks, Great North of Scotland Railway, 231
- - Fog in South-West London ; Fatal Railway Accidents, 119
- - Food Question ; Supplies for Trainmen when from Home, 141
- - Food Savings, Very Great, on United States Restaurant Cars, 97
- - France, British Army Transport in. Large Increase in Dock Capacity and Railway Material of All Kinds, 53
- - French Language and Locomotive Driving, 253
- - French Railway Officials’ War Honours, 383
- - Frozen Fish, Railway Charges on, 535
- - Fuel and Transport Economy and the Celebration of Washington’s Birthday, 273
- - Furness Railway Company and Vickers, Limited, New Dock for Barrow, 185
- - Furness Railway Company’s Indebtedness for Assistance in Engine Power from Other Lines, 231
- - Furness Railway Company’s Need of Rolling Stock, 231
- - Furness Railway Staff Changes, 273
- - Galway Proposed as a Transatlantic Port, 317
- - Garden Crops on the Right-of-Way of Texas and Pacific Railroad Company, 53
- - Glasgow and South-Western Railway, Additional Capital Required, 31, 97
- - Glasgow and South-Western Railway, Future Position Uncertain, 73
- - Glasgow and South-Western Saving Due to Coal Transport Scheme, 231
- - Government Payments to Railways for War Expenses, 449
- - Gowdall to South Yorkshire Line Opened for Goods and Mineral Traffic, 163
- - Grain Silo at Hull, Hastening Completion, 163
- - Grand Trunk Railway of Canada, Suggestion of Unfair Treatment, 405
- - Great Central Railway Docks Engineer, 141
- - Great Central Railway Secretary Retires, Successor Appointed, 31
- - Great Central Railway 2-8-0 Type Engines for France, 339
- - Great Eastern Railway Discontinues Sea Water Carriage, 73
- - Great Eastern Railway Men with the Colours, Assistance to Men and their Dependants, 186
- - Great Eastern Railway and Post-office Tube, Arbitration Decision, 317, 427
- - Great Eastern Railway’s Purchase of Cargo Steamer, 185
- - Great Eastern Railway and Season Ticket Rate Increase, 513
- - Great Eastern Railway Timber Contracts in France, Timber Handed to British Government, 185
- - Great Eastern Railway’s War Traffic, Statistics, 163
- - Great Indian Peninsula Railway, Receipts and Expenditure, 97
- - Great Northern and also Midland Railway Stock ; Much Smaller Amounts Owned by Much Larger Number of Shareholders, 163
- - Great Northern Railway of Ireland, Changes in Passenger and Goods Traffic owing to the War, 253
- - Great Northern Railway of Ireland, New Work on, 273
- - Great Northern Railway, U.S.A., Increased Protection Against Snow, 73
- - Great Southern and Western Railway, New Colliery Line from Athy, 317
- - Great Southern and Western Railway Traffic Increased by Government Action in Regard to Tillage and Prices, 295
- - Great Western Railway Ambulance Trains and Rolling Stock for Railways Overseas, 31, 207
- - Great Western Railway Luncheon Baskets Stopped, 207
- - Great Western Railway’s Largely Increased Traffic for War Purposes, 207
- - Great Western 1 rain’s Excess Speed at Slough, 295
- - Highgate-road Station Closed, 163
- - Highway Improvements in America to Relieve the Railroads, 513
- - Housing of Railway Servants, Steps Taken by North Staffordshire Railway, 253
- - Hungarian and Austrian Locomotive Factories, 535
- - Increased Fares Revenue, the Property of the State, 491
- - India, Absence of Primary Industries and Railway Difficulties, 513
- - Indian Coal, Great Increase in Rail-borne Amount Owing to the War, 317
- - Indian Railways, Three Accidents, 73
- - Indo-Burma Connection ; Alternative Routes, Survey, 343
- - Industrial League ; Labour Members’ Visit to America, 480
- - Inter-Colonial Railway Accident Statistics, 427
- - INTERSTATE COMMERCE COMMISSION—
- -- Collisions and Derailments, Investigation by Safety Division, 73
- -- Extension of Powers Sought, 73
- -- Limitation of Period of U.S. Government Control of Railways, 119
- -- Locomotive Boiler Inspection Law ; Accident Statistics, 73
- -- Report of the Division of Safety ; Preventable Accidents, 272
- -- Suggested Alteration of Laws Regarding Trespass, 97
- - Ipswich Dock Facilities and Great Eastern Railway, 231
- - Irish Railways’ Train Service Curtailment and Coal Saving, 361
- - Irish and Scottish Railway Connections at Carlisle, 405
- - Iron Ore Within Reach of the Stratford-on- Avon and Midland Junction Railway, 253
RAILWAYS AND TRAMWAYS (continued)
- - Katanga Railway Completed to Bukama ; Congo Connected with Cape Town, 471
- - Kent Coal Carried by South-Eastern and Chatham Railway, 253
- - King and Royal Train Driver on the South- Eastern and Chatham Railway, 491
- - Labour Law in United States as to Working Hours and Rest for Railwaymen, 141
- - Labour Resettlement Committee Men Connected with Railways, 295
- - Lancashire and Yorkshire Electric Train Services, 163
- - Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway : Appointment, 405 ; Servants Disabled in War, 185
- - Level Crossings and Accidents on United States Railways, 513
- - Light Railway Orders Applications and Confirmation, 31, 253
- - Liverpool-street Station, Great Need of Extension, 317, 427
- - Locomotive Building at the Baldwin Works, 471
- - Locomotive. Coaling Plant, Automatic Electric, American, for N.S.W. Railways, 163
- - Locomotive Coaling Station, Concrete, on the Lehigh Valley, Notable Features, 535
- - Locomotive Repairs, Statistics, 557
- - Locomotive Valve Gear, 109
- - Locomotives Awaiting Repair, 481
- - Locomotives Built in U.S.A, for Use in Russia now in Use in U.S.A., 295
- - Locomotives Sent from Western States of America to Relieve Congestion in Eastern Districts, 141
- - London, Brighton and South Coast : Locomotive Superintendent, 253 ; Allotments, 427 ; Increased Load, Slower Travelling, 231
- - London and North-Western : Roll of Honour Poster, 405; Staff Rewards for Useful Improvements and Suggestions, 119; London and North-Western and London Electric Railway Companies Joint Rolling Stock, 185; Men Discharged from the Army and Reinstated on Railway, 207; Victoria Crosses, 339; Steamer’s Loss by Collision, 295
- - London and South-Western, Provision for Coal Traffic, 185
- - London and South-Western Servants’ Cultivation of Railway Land Plots, 185
- - Magazines, Railway Staff, Discontinuance Suggested, 471
- - Mansfield Railway Branch to Rufford Colliery, 207, 361
- - Mansfield Railway, New Curve, 361
- - Maryport and Carlisle Ry, Coal Traffic, 253
- - Melbourne, Victoria, Additional Lines Approaching Completion, 163
- - Metropolitan Railway’s Engineering Staff Efficiency in View of Heavy Traffic on the Line, 163
- - Midland Railway Horses’ Keep, 185
- - Midland and South-Western Junction Railway ; Employment of Boys to Release Men for the Colours, 253
- - Midland and South-Western Junction Railway ; Statistics of War Traffic, 249
- - Military Service and Railwaymen, Present Arrangements, 427
- - Missoula Belt 100ft. long Railway, 31
- - Mold and Denbigh Railway ; Closed Works and Unwatering of Mines, 383
- - Munition Workers’ Travelling Facilities, Cheap Week-end Tickets Withdrawn, 491
- - National Union of Railwaymen, Government’s Offer of Visit to Front, 31
- - National Union of Railwaymen, 513, 535
- - New Year’s Honours for Railwaymen, 31
- - New York Central Railroad Company, Opposition to Proposed Hudson Bridge, 447
- - North-Eastern Railway Accident Due to Broken Carriage Axle, 207
- - North-Eastern Railway Alterations in Passenger Train Service, 97
- - North Staffordshire Railway Signals Lighted by Electricity, 207
- - Owner’s Risk Rate, 9
- - Pacific Coast, New Railway to Open Up Mineral and Agricultural Districts, 471
- - Passenger Fares in Ireland, Increase from June 1st, 1918, 471
- - Passenger Traffic Restrictions, Deputation to Board of Trade, 557
- - Passengers’ Privileges, First-class, Claim Disallowed, 9, 491
- - Passengers, Season Ticket and Otherwise, No Present Record of Numbers, 491
- - Pennsylvania Company’s Stations in New York and Philadelphia, Comparison of Traffic, 31, 73
- - Pennsylvania Railroad Company’s Greatly Increased War Traffic, 317
- - Pennsylvania Railroad, Conversion to Electric Traojtion, 361
- - Pennsylvania RailroadExpress ; Car Derailed and Wrecked by Falling Rock, 361
- - Pennsylvania Railroad and Report of Discontinued Expresses, 73
- - Pooling Scottish Private Wagons, 248
- - Post-office (London) Railway After the War, 557
- - Punctuality of Great Eastern Train Arrivals at Liverpool street, 163
- - Punctuality on the Midland Railway, 185
- - Queensland State Railways, Ratepayers and the State, 53
- - Queue System for Tube Railways, 471
- - Quintinshill Accident Anniversary, 449
- - Rabbits, Carriage and Delivery 2d. each, 53
- - Rails for Canadian Railways, Measures to Obtain Supplies, 449
- - Railway Accounts and Government Control, 513
- - Railway Advisory Panel, Question as to its Constitution, 119
- - Railway Executive Committee Recognises Railway Clerks’ Association, 449
- - Railway Material, Exports’ Statistics, 9, 97, 231, 273, 405, 471
- - Rhodesian Railway Administration, 471
- - Russian Government and Railway Equipment Ordered from the United States, 491
- - Russia’s Downfall and Deficient Railway Equipment, Alba B. Johnson, 471
- - Russo-British Chamber of Commerce, Secretary’s Address to Railwaymen at Brighton, 163
- - School Children and Railway Fares, 449
- - Scotch Coal for the Fleet to Relieve Strain on Railways from Wales, 185
RAILWAYS AND TRAMWAYS (continued) .
- - Scottish Railway Stockholders’ Protection Association, 43
- - Seamen in Railway-Owned Cross-Channel Steamers, Increased Pay, 119
- - Season, Return and Other Tickets ; New Powers for Railways, 383, 513
- - Season Ticket Rates Unchanged on Controlled Railways, 231
- - Season Tickets and Discharged Soldiers’ Training, 513
- - Season Tickets, Great Increase, 535
- - Season Tickets and Railway Returns, 522
- - Ship Timbers by Express Train, 449
- - Shortest Railway in the World, 31
- - Sleepers from Canada in 1915 and 1916, 31
- - Sleepers, Old, Utilised as Fuel on Boston and Maine Railroad Buildings, 449
- - Slips on Railways ; Statistics, 148
- - South Africa and Locomotive Shortage, 409
- - South Australian Government Expert to Report on System, 185, 339
- - South-Eastern and Chatham Railway, Increased Traffic in Industrial District, 207
- - Spanish Railway Combination for Home Building of Locomotives, 141
- - Standard Freight Cars on the United States Railways, 361
- - Steamers on the Clyde, Effort to Stop Competition, 231
- - Steel Cars in America, Historical Notes, 295
- - Steel Plates for Shipbuilding and Difficulties of Transport, 491
- - Stratford-on-Avon and Midland Junction Railway Receipts and Expenditure, 273
- - Summer Time, Further Considerations, 405
- - Summer Time and Workmen’s Train Lighting, 295
- - Superannuated Railway Servants and the Cost of Living, 119
- - Surprise Tests on Southern Pacific Railway, Creditable Result, 231
- - Taff Vale Company’s Engines More Than Three Times Pre-War Price, 231
- - Tehuantepec National Railroad to be Acquired by Mexican Government, 163
- - Timber Felling and Need of Afforestation ; Cambrian Railway Concerned, 253
- - Timber, Large Sale of, on Forfeited Lands in U.S.A., 361
- - Time-keeping and Inter-State Trains, 317
- - Track-circuiting, Few Failures in Locking Signals, 449
- - Trade and Government Control After the War ; Railways and Canals Position, 339
- - Tramway Services ; Suggested “Staggering” of Business Hours, 383
- - Tramways and Parcels Conveyance, 273
- - Transcontinental Railway of Australia, Varieties of Gauge, 9
- - Transport Company, Proposed London Goods Clearing House Scheme, 9
- - Transport Delays of Steel Hinder American Shipbuilding, 557
- - Underground Railway Women’s Club at Earl’s Court, 427
- - United States Coal Transport Scheme, 427
- - United States Express Companies for Goods Transport, Change to State Operation, 491
- - United States Federal Board of Mediation and Conciliation, 92
- - United States Government Control of Railways, 535
- - United States Government, Plea for Light Taxation and Economy, 491
- - United States Government Payment for Control of Railways, 119
- - United States Locomotives Out of Service, 361
- - United States, Nearly Two Million Troops Moved by Rail up to December 2nd, 97
- - United States Officers and Scheduled Running of Trains, 231
- - United States Old Soldiers’ Reunion, Railroad Facilities, 317
- - United States Railroads’ Director-General on Safety, Wages and Time Questions, 295
- - United States Railroads, Statistics of New Rails, Used and Required, to be Sent to Director-General, 361
- - United States Railway Consumption of Petroleum. 557
- - United States Railway Transport Increase, Statistics of Revenue and Rolling Stock, 9
- - United States Railways, Government Orders, General Inventory to be Taken, 427
- - United States Railways Operated at a Loss in January, 449
- - United States Railways, Income, 557
- - United States Railways and Presidential Control, 273
- - United States Railways, Rise in Wages and in Rates for Freight and Passengers, 471
- - United States Restricted Use of Private Railway Cars, 381
- - United States Severe Weather and Railway Running Repairs, 119
- - United States Steam Railway Freight and Passenger Cars, Statistics, 409
- - United States War Warnings on Railroads, 273
- - Victorian Railways’ Diamond Jubilee, 361
- - Wages Advance ; Rates for Men, Women, Boys and Girls, 383
- - Wagon, Coal, Unloading Regulations, 317
- - Wagon Derailment, South - Eastern and Chatham Railway, 557
- - Wagon Repairing Difficulties, New Company Formed, 185
- - Wagons Let on Hire Without Permit, 471
- - Wagons, Privately-owned, Difficulties of General Scheme, 383
- - Wagons, Railway-owned, and Demurrage, 273 ; (Correction), 317
- - Walthamstow All-night Service Stoppage, 361, 383
- - War Wages of Railway Servants, 272
- - Waterloo Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Free Buffet, London and South-Western Company’s Co-operation, 207
- - Watford Services and Rolling Stock, 185
- - Women Employed on Railways, 253, 339
- - Women Employees on the Pennsylvania Railroad, 513
- - Workmen’s Compensation Act, Appeal Case, 405
- - Workmen’s Tickets on Bank Holidays, 513
- RAINFALL, Abnormal, in Mysore, 513
- Ramsay Memorial Fund, 264
- Raw Material Rationing, 513
- Razors, Hollow-ground, Industry for Wounded Soldiers, 557
- Recording Differential Dilatometer, 141 Reinforced Concrete—see Concrete
- Reservoir, Masonry Dam in Quebec Nearing Completion, 9
- Rice Crops of the World, Five-Sevenths from British Empire, Chiefly India, 185
- Riveting Record Stopped by Trade Union, 471
- Road Improvements in 1918-19, 231
- Road Transport Committee, 119
- Roads in Kent Used by Motor Omnibuses, 97
- Roads in Soft Condition, Regulations for Heavy Traffic, 439
- Royal Marine Corps, New, Conditions for Officers, 427
- Rubber, Plantation, Equal to that from Brazil Forests, 185
- Rust Prevention Process. 152
S
- “SATOLITE,” an Incombustible Substitute for Celluloid, 53
- Sawdust and Wood as Substitutes for Coal in Gas Making, 73
- Schneider-Creusot Works, Extent of Area and Equipment, 273
- Scientific Men, Demand for, in the United States, 185
- Scientific Regulation of Feed Water, R. W. Andrews, 361
- Sea Water Densities, Determination of, on Board Ship, New Instrument for, A. L. Thomas, 269
- Separating Materials of Different Specific Gravities, T. M. Chance, 535
- Sewage Treatment, Five Processes Under Investigation, 97
- Sheffield, New Factories, Buildings and Extensions, 53
- Shell Casting in Germany, 531
- Shell Ingots, Types Made in America, 185
- Shipbuilding, Engineering and Steel Commercial Staffs Association, Foundation of, 20
SHIPS AND SHIPPING MATTERS :
- - American Marine, Very Large Addition in Progress, 97
- - American Shipbuilding and Delays of Steel Transportation, 557
- - American Training Ships for Merchant Service, 427
- - Boats, Reinforced Concrete, Building in Spain, 313
- - British Columbia Shipbuilding Programme, 339
- - Canadian Production of Large Ships, 405
- - Challenge Shield and Prize for Rapid Shipbuilding, 405
- - Coaling Transatlantic Steamers at Tampico instead of Vera Cruz, 491
- - Diesel-driven Motor Ship Emanuel Nobel, Her Transatlantic Record, 9
- - Draughtsmen, Ship, Dearth of, and United States Proposal, 253
- - “Fabricated” Ships, in America, 295
- - Harland and Wolff’s Shipbuilding Record for Oil Carrier, 535
- - Hostels for Shipyard Workers in the North of England and in Scotland, 513
- - Hull, the Hunnewell, A New Type, 231
- - Licensing Voyages, System Extended to all Ships, 163
- - Louvain, Steamship, formerly of the Great Eastern Company, Sunk by Submarine, 119
- - Motor-driven Ships for Transatlantic Service, Suggested Use of, to Baffle Submarines, 231
- - Naval Losses, British, for Past Year, 119
- - Refrigeration on Vessels Carrying Foodstuffs, Greatly Increased use of, 449
- - Rivet-driving in Shipbuilding, Weekly Averages in America, 31
- - Shipbuilding, Merchant, in the United Kingdom, Greatly Increased Output, 491
- - Ship Repairs, Great Increase in Vessels Returned to Service, 471
- - Ships on the Great Lakes to be Transferred to the Atlantic, 9
- - Shipyard, Hog Island, near Philadelphia, Ambitious Programme, 491
- - Steamers, Proposed Establishment of Line between La Paz and Topolobampo, 471
- - Steel, Comparison of Weights between Ferro Concrete and Steel Ships, 449
- - Steel Decks, Wood Shortage and Sheathing Substitutes, 491
- - Submarine Menace, Its Failure, 412
- - Tank Steamers in America, In Use and Under Construction, 231
- - Tonnage per Head, Comparison between British and Norwegian Shipping, 31
- - United States Battleship, New Mexico, 449
- - United States Large Naval Construction, 224
- - United States Navy’s Use of Oil Fuel, 53
- - United States Standard 10,000-Ton Oil Tankers, 317
- - Wooden Full-powered Motor Ships in United States, 449
- - Wooden Ships, An Unfortunate Failure, 30
- - Wooden Vessels Building in Norway, 339
- SILO, Grain, Nearing Completion at Hull, 163
- Solder, Softening Temperature, 9
- Sound Penetration at Great Heights, 163
- South African Gold Output, 207
- South African Need of Disinfectant to Replace Permanganate of Potash, 405
- Sparking Plug for Motor Cars, New Form, 97
- Spindles, Round, Method of Centring, W. Crowther, 253
- Steam Turbine Disabled on the Boston Elevated Railway, 339
- Street Lighting Specifications, 239
- Sucrose Recovery from “Final Molasses,” 383
- Sugar Beet Experiments, 189
- Sugar Beet in the United States, 118
- Sulphate of Ammonia, Production in Germany, America and Japan, 361
- Sulphur Deposits in Spain, 231
- Sulphur Industry in Sicily, Italy the Sole Source of Supply to Allies, 207
- Sulphuric Acid in Manufacture of Fertilisers, 361
- Sulphuric Acid, Predicted Excess Production in United Kingdom, 295
- Sun, Successful Photographs of, at the Cape, 513
- Swiss Demand for Machines for Food Products 449
- Swiss Electro-Technical Industry, Report by Dr. E. Tissot, 141
- Swiss Trade and Industry, 361
- Sydney Harbour Trust Commissioners’Report,73
T
- TALC in New Zealand, 185
- “Tank,” Steam-driven, for U.S.A. Army, 491
- Tar as a Fuel for Metallurgical Furnaces, W. H. Blauvelt, 383
- Tar as Fuel for Diesel Engines, 557
- Telephone Exchanges, Automatic, 513, 557
- Telephones, Automatic, in South Africa, 295
- Temperature Conversion Table, 391
- Temperature Variation in the Derwent Dam Masonry, Thermophone Records, 535
- Tests of Low Temperature Effect on Yield of Tar, 97
- Textile Mills in the United States, Increased Use of Electric Power, 9
- Tilting Furnaces in this Country, 141
- Timber Acreage per 100 Tons of Newsprint, Pulp and Paper, 405
- Timbers, Relative Fuel Value of, 295
- Timber from South Africa, Increasing Value, 405
- Time Ball at Deal, Failures in 1917, 513
- Time Signal, New Type, at Observatory in New Zealand, 141
- Tin Cans, Old, Birmingham’s Offer of 20s. per Ton for, 557
- Tin, Electrolytical Recovery of, from Stannate Solutions, D. Currie, 405
- Tin-plate Industry in Japan, 339
- Tin-plate Manufacture in Germany, 557
- Titanium Treatment of Cast Iron, 339
- Toluol in the United States, Insufficient Supply for High Explosives, 73
- Tools, Small, Protest Against Prohibition of Import of, 141
- Torpedo Accuracy and Targets in Rapid Motion, 295
- Towns, H. L., on Friction Clutches, 68
- Tractor Ploughing Record in Surrey, 207
- Tractors for Farm Work in France Lent by United States Food Department, 53
- Trade Marks, Opposition to New Bill, 207
- Trade Reconstruction in Germany, 176
- Training School at Iron Foundry, Luton, 535
- Trinitro-toluol as a Commercial Explosive, 383
- Tungsten Filament, New German Process, 295
- Turbine Housing with Inspection Window, Fried. Krupp, 471
- Turbines, Large Hydraulic, 253
- Turners and Fitters’ Handbook, Death of Mr. T. Greenwood, 513
U
- UNITED STATES Army, 273
- United States New Guns, 119
- United States Petroleum Output, Estimated Date of Exhaustion of Supplies, 557
- United States Shell Production, 8
- U.S.A. War Chassis of Light Motor Vans, 31
V
- VACUUM Flask versus Hot Water Bottle, 207
- Vacuum Improvement and Steam-saving, 31
- Valves for Motor Cars, Overhead and Side Pocket, Comparison, 9
- Vibration of Buildings due to Traffic, 471
- Vienna’s Coal and Gas Consumption, 295
- Volunteers, Motor, The Training of, 351
W
- WAGES in American Shipyards, Large Per¬centage of Contract Price, 31
- War Memorial, Imperial War Museum Recom¬mended by Committee, 361
- War Wages Rise ; Statement by London Master Builders’ and Aircraft Industry Assoc., 383
- Watches, Great Increase in Imports of Cheap Types of, from U.S.A., 141
- Water Meters, Use of, in America, 412
- Water Power Generated at Kinlochleven, Low Cost of, 53
- Waterproof Oil, New French, 317
WATER SUPPLY:
- - Horse-power from Loch Treig, Aluminium
- - Company’s Application, 31
- - New York Water Consumption, 273
- - Water Supplied to Train Passengers, Permissible Bacteria, 141
- WATERWAYS, Thames and the Humber ; Mersey and the Severn, Main Routes Pro¬jected, 361
- Wax for Candles, 405
- Wax Recovery from Waste in Sugar Extraction, Industry Started in Natal, 97
- Welding Steel Tubes into Long Lengths for Gas Main in Zurich, 141
- Whale Meat, A New Industry, 295
- White Metal Alloy, New Patent for, 253
- Whitewash Mixture, United States Government, Fire-retarding Properties, 535
- Whitley Committee’s Report on Relations between Employers and Employed, 513
- Window Glass Industry in Sweden, Flourishing Condition of, 185
- Wire Nails, Imported, Commandeered by Army Council, 211
- Wolfram, Molybdenite and Bismuth in Queensland, 383
- Wolfram, Tin Alluvium and Other Minerals Found in Siamese Malay States, 141
- Women’s Labour in the Gas Industry, 412
- Women’s Superiority in Output in American Gear-cuttingWorks, 535
- Wood Distillation as an Indian Industry, Demand for, 317
- Wood as Fuel, Value of Various Species Com¬pared with Coal, 31
- Wood, New, Its Properties, 197
- Wood Pulp Fibre, “Cellulon,” as Substitute for Jute, Cotton, andc., 383
- Wood Pulp for Papermaking, Enormously Increased Imports from Norway, 231
- Wooden Pit Props, Round, and Quartered, 207
- Woods Employed in Hydraulic Construction, German Tests, 383
- Woolwich Arsenal, Chief Mechanical Engineer, 524
- Workmen’s Insurance Societies in German Iron and Steel Industries, 31
X Y Z
- X-RAY, Maximum Frequency, 185
- YARROW, Sir Alfred, on Shipbuilding after the War. Dinner to Employees, 513
- ZINC from Australia, Agreement between British Government and Australian Co., 491
- Zinc, Electrolytic Production in Tasmania, 141
- Zinc Refining in Japan, Ore Supply Insufficient for Demand, 9
See Also
Sources of Information