The Engineer 1919 Jul-Dec: Index: Paragraphs: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 24: | Line 24: | ||
View the [[The Engineer 1919 Jul-Dec|Volumes]] that this Index refers to. | View the [[The Engineer 1919 Jul-Dec|Volumes]] that this Index refers to. | ||
ACETYLENE and Coal Gas, Illuminating Power and Immunity from Risk, 135 | A | ||
*ACETYLENE and Coal Gas, Illuminating Power and Immunity from Risk, 135 | |||
Acetylene, Compressed, in a Porous Substance, Government Order, 53 | *Acetylene, Compressed, in a Porous Substance, Government Order, 53 | ||
AERONAUTICS: | AERONAUTICS: | ||
Aerodrome at Durban, Proposed | *- Aerodrome at Durban, Proposed Erection’ 635 | ||
*- Aerodrome at Goregaon, Bombay, 539 | |||
Aerodrome at Goregaon, Bombay, 539 | *- Aeroplane Surplus Engine at Work in Factory, 85 | ||
*- American Offer for Aeroplanes and Engines from British Disposal Department, 154 | |||
Aeroplane Surplus Engine at Work in Factory, 85 | *- Amsterdam Aircraft Exhibition, British Section Delayed by Strikes, 157 | ||
*- Aviation Exhibition, Paris, 565 | |||
American Offer for Aeroplanes and Engines from British Disposal Department, 154 Amsterdam Aircraft Exhibition, British | *- “Bristol” Fighter Biplane, Continuous Commission 463 | ||
*- Dutch Aviation Routes to be Opened Next Year ; Services to England and Elsewhere, 572 | |||
Section Delayed by Strikes, 157 | *- Fiat B.R.F. Biplane, 635 | ||
*- Fire Patrols by Aeroplane over Californian Forest Reserves, 301 | |||
Aviation Exhibition, Paris, 565 | *- India, Aerodrome Construction near Bangalore, 85 | ||
*- Insect Hunting Surveys by Aeroplane, 635 | |||
*- Man-power Aeroplane Flight at Paris, G. Poulain, 157 | |||
*- Pan - American Aeronautic Convention, Colonel E. Lister Jones’ Address, 161 | |||
Dutch Aviation Routes to be Opened Next Year ; Services to England and Elsewhere, 572 | *- Rome to Turin Flight, Record Broken, 85 | ||
*- Semi-rigid Airship Purchased from Italy by U.S.A., 489 | |||
Fiat B.R.F. Biplane, 635 | *- United States Airship Blown Up Owing to Sun Heat Expansion, 11 | ||
*- Wireless Telephony, Air Squadrons Fitted with during War, 157 | |||
Fire Patrols by Aeroplane over Californian Forest Reserves, 301 | *AFFORESTATION Cost, Amount Allocated by Government, 135 | ||
*Agricultural Engineers’ Combination, 419 | |||
India, Aerodrome Construction near Bangalore, 85 | *Agricultural Implements Imported into India, 11 | ||
*Agricultural Tractors and Ploughs, Royal Agricultural Society Trials, 635 | |||
Insect Hunting Surveys by Aeroplane, 635 | *Alcohol, andc., from Coke-oven Gas, Process for Commercial Development, E. Bury, 635 | ||
*Alcohol as Fuel for High-speed Internal Combustion Engines, Benzol Admixture Necessary, 111 | |||
Man-power Aeroplane Flight at Paris, G. Poulain, 157 | *Alcohol from the Mahwa Tree, 85 | ||
*Alcoholic Motor Spirit Factory in Natal, Output of, 157 | |||
Pan - American Aeronautic Convention, Colonel E. Lister Jones’ Address, 161 | *Algeria’s Mineral Exports, 613 | ||
*Alloy, Iron, Acid-proof, Italian’s Claim, 59 | |||
Rome to Turin Flight, Record Broken, 85 | *Alloys of the Duralumin Type, Heat Treatment of, 35 | ||
*Aluminates of Lime, Value as Cement, 85 | |||
Semi-rigid Airship Purchased from Italy by U.S.A., 489 | *Aluminium Alloy with Calcium, 279 | ||
*Aluminium and Alloys Coating Flux, S. O. Cowper-Coles, 489 | |||
United States Airship Blown Up Owing to Sun Heat Expansion, 11 | *Aluminium in Germany, Output, and Need of Coal, 359 | ||
*Aluminium, Prescription for Soldering, 11 | |||
Wireless Telephony, Air Squadrons Fitted with during War, 157 | *Aluminium, Useful American Circular, 305 | ||
*American Association of Engineers, Committee on Legislation, 35 | |||
AFFORESTATION Cost, Amount Allocated by | *American Concrete Institute, Recommendations, 135 | ||
*American Lakes and Rivers, Plan for Control and Regulation of Discharge and Flow, 589 | |||
Government, 135 | *American Petroleum Export Statistics, 279 | ||
*Architectural and Museum Studies, Prizes for Drawings ; Conditions, 419 | |||
Agricultural Engineers’ Combination, 419 | *Armstrong College, Appointments of Principal and Registrar, 111 | ||
*Armstrong College, Vacant Professorship of Engineering, 359 | |||
Agricultural Implements Imported into India, 11 | *Asbestos Production in Rhodesia, 411 | ||
ASSOCIATIONS, INSTITUTIONS & SOCIETIES : | |||
Agricultural Tractors and Ploughs, Royal Agricultural Society Trials, 635 | *- ASSOCIATION, BRITISH : | ||
*-- Statistics of War Transportation in France, Colonel Sir G. Beharrell, 279 | |||
Alcohol, | *-- Transport Policy, Mr. Acworth, 279 | ||
*- ASSOCIATION OF ENGINEERING AND SHIPBUILDING DRAUGHTSMEN : | |||
Commercial Development, E. Bury, 635 | *-- Strike at Works of Kerr, Stuart and Co., Stoke-on-Trent, Supported by Association, 11 | ||
*- SHEFFIELD BRANCH : | |||
Alcohol as Fuel for High-speed Internal Combustion Engines, Benzol Admixture Necessary, 111 | *-- Winter Programme ; Projected Lectures, 613 | ||
*- ASSOCIATION OF ENGINEERS, MANCHESTER : | |||
Alcohol from the Mahwa Tree, 85 | *-- Scientific Management, H. W. Allingham, 613 | ||
*- INSTITUTE OF AERONAUTICAL ENGINEERS : | |||
Alcoholic Motor Spirit Factory in Natal, Output of, 157 | *-- Council Formation, 157 | ||
*- INSTITUTE, IRON AND STEEL : | |||
Algeria’s Mineral Exports, 613 | *-- Autumn Meeting in France, Proposed, 565 | ||
*-- Bessemer Medal Award, 231 | |||
Alloy, Iron, Acid-proof, Italian’s Claim, 59 | *-- President for Next Year, Dr. J. E. Stead, 548 | ||
*- INSTITUTE OF METALS : | |||
Alloys of the Duralumin Type, Heat Treatment of, 35 | *-- Brass : Its Construction and Impurities’ F. S. J. Pile, 635 | ||
*-- Micro-mechanism of the Ageing of Duralumin, Dr. Zay Jeffries, 255 | |||
Aluminates of Lime, Value as Cement, 85 | *- INSTITUTE OF MINE SURVEYORS OF GREAT BRITAIN : | ||
*- SCOTTISH BRANCH : | |||
Aluminium Alloy with Calcium, 279 | *-- Discussion of Objects of Institute ; Salaries Question, 359 | ||
*- INSTITUTION OF AUTOMOBILE ENGINEERS : | |||
Aluminium and Alloys Coating Flux, S. O. | *-- Examination for Admission to Membership, 589 | ||
*-- Meeting, 287 | |||
Cowper-Coles, 489 | *-- Presidential Address, Thos. Clarkson, 287 | ||
*-- Reception, 478 | |||
Aluminium in Germany, Output, and Need of Coal, 359 | *- INSTITUTION OF CIVIL ENGINEERS : | ||
*-- Fowls Lodged by Institution, 207 | |||
Aluminium, Prescription for Soldering, 11 | *- INSTITUTION OF ELECTRICAL ENGINEERS : | ||
*-- Liverpool Sub-centre to be Formed, 539 | |||
Aluminium, Useful American Circular, 305 | *-- Water Power, Professor Magnus Maclean. 279 | ||
*- INSTITUTION OF ENGINEERS (INDIA) : | |||
American Association of Engineers, Committee on Legislation, 35 | *-- Rapid Establishment and Predicted Usefulness of the Institution, 539 | ||
*- INSTITUTION OF ENGINEERS AND SHIPBUILDERS IN SCOTLAND : | |||
American Concrete Institute, Recommendations, 135 | *-- Reoccupation of Old Premises Commandeered by Ministry of Munitions, 437 | ||
*-- Special Steels and Aluminium Alloys, Importance in Motor Vehicles and Aircraft, Dr. T. Blackwood Murray, 589 | |||
American Lakes and Rivers, Plan for Control and Regulation of Discharge and Flow, 589 | *- INSTITUTION, JUNIOR, OF ENGINEERS : | ||
*-- Members’ List, 359 | |||
American Petroleum Export Statistics, 279 | *- INSTITUTION OF MUNICIPAL AND COUNTY ENGINEERS : | ||
*-- Flags for Road Paving, Natural and Artificial, F. W. Bricknell, 359 | |||
Architectural and Museum Studies, Prizes for | ASSOCIATIONS, INSTITUTIONS & SOCIETIES (continued) : | ||
*- INSTITUTION OF NAVAL ARCHITECTS : | |||
Drawings ; Conditions, 419 | *-- Awards of Elgar Scholarship and Earl of Durham Prize, 181 | ||
*-- Cammell Laird and Parsons Scholarships, Entries for, 181 ; Awards, 421 | |||
Armstrong College, Appointments of Principal and Registrar, 111 | *-- Martell Scholarship in Naval Architecture (1920), 597 | ||
*-- Scholarships Offered, 24, 135 | |||
Armstrong College, Vacant Professorship of Engineering, 359 | *- INSTITUTION, NORTH-EAST COAST, OF ENGINEERS AND SHIPBUILDERS : | ||
*-- Joint Technical Institute for the North- East Coast Institution and the Cleveland Institution of Engineers, 181 | |||
Asbestos Production in Rhodesia, 411 | *- INSTITUTION, ROYAL : | ||
*-- Christmas Juvenile Lectures : The World of Sound, Professor W. H. Bragg, 528 | |||
ASSOCIATIONS, | *-- Election of Members and Honorary Members, 564 | ||
*-- Meetings, 476, 564 | |||
*-- Programme up to Easter, 1920, 564 | |||
Statistics of War Transportation in France, Colonel Sir G. Beharrell, 279 | *- SOCIETY, CERAMIC : | ||
*-- Refractory Materials Section ; Arrangements for Meetings, 383 | |||
Transport Policy, Mr. Acworth, 279 | *- SOCIETY OF ENGINEERS : | ||
*-- Award of Premiums for Papers, 646 | |||
*-- New Scheme for Association of Engineering Societies, Offer of Annual Premium by Mr. Burnard Geen, 11 | |||
*- CRYSTAL PALACE ENGINEERING SOCIETY : | |||
Strike at Works of Kerr, Stuart and Co., Stoke-on-Trent, Supported by Association, 11 | *-- Papers and Awards, 625 | ||
*- SOCIETY, FARADAY : | |||
*-- Magnetic Hardness of Ferrous Metals, andc., L. A. Wild, 255 | |||
*- SOCIETY, OPTICAL : | |||
Winter Programme ; Projected Lectures | *-- Spirit Level from Captured Zeiss Director, Liquids for Filling Levels, J. W. French, 135 | ||
*-- Spirit Level, Requirements, Major E. O. Henrici, 59 | |||
*- SOCIETY, ROYAL, OF ARTS : | |||
*-- Australian Growth in Industrial Manufacture, Sir J. McCall on, 59 | |||
*-- Trueman Wood Lecture, Sir Oliver Lodge, 613 | |||
*-- Use of Electricity in Agriculture, Dr. J. F. Crowley, 489 | |||
Council Formation, 157 | *- SOCIETY OF TECHNICAL ENGINEERS : | ||
*-- Mass Meeting, 554, 601 | |||
*ATHENS, Exhibition of British Manufactures, 207, 411, 489, 515, 565 | |||
*Australia, Rapid Growth in Industrial Manufacture, 59 | |||
Autumn Meeting in France, Proposed, 565 Bessemer Medal Award, 231 | *Automatic and Electric Furnaces, Limited, Loan of Magnetic Sclerometer for Demonstration, 315 | ||
President for Next Year, Dr. J. E. Stead, 548 | |||
Brass : Its Construction and | |||
Micro-mechanism of the Ageing of Duralumin, Dr. Zay Jeffries, 255 | |||
Discussion of Objects of Institute ; Salaries Question, 359 | |||
Examination for Admission to Membership, 589 | |||
Meeting, 287 | |||
Presidential Address, Thos. Clarkson, 287 | |||
Reception, 478 | |||
Fowls Lodged by Institution, 207 | |||
Liverpool Sub-centre to be Formed, 539 Water Power, Professor Magnus Maclean. 279 | |||
Rapid Establishment and Predicted Usefulness of the Institution, 539 | |||
Reoccupation of Old Premises Commandeered by Ministry of Munitions, 437 Special Steels and Aluminium Alloys, Importance in Motor Vehicles and Aircraft, Dr. T. Blackwood Murray, 589 | |||
Members’ List, 359 | |||
Flags for Road Paving, Natural and Artificial, F. W. Bricknell, 359 | |||
ASSOCIATIONS, INSTITUTIONS & | |||
SOCIETIES (continued) : | |||
Awards of Elgar Scholarship and Earl of Durham Prize, 181 | |||
Cammell Laird and Parsons Scholarships, Entries for, 181 ; Awards, 421 | |||
Martell Scholarship in Naval Architecture (1920), 597 | |||
Scholarships Offered, 24, 135 | |||
Joint Technical Institute for the North-East Coast Institution and the Cleveland Institution of Engineers, 181 | |||
Christmas Juvenile Lectures : The World of Sound, Professor W. H. Bragg, 528 | |||
Election of Members and Honorary Members, 564 | |||
Meetings, 476, 564 | |||
Programme up to Easter, 1920, 564 | |||
Refractory Materials Section ; | |||
Award of Premiums for Papers, 646 | |||
New Scheme for Association of Engineering Societies, Offer of Annual Premium by Mr. Burnard Geen, 11 | |||
Papers and Awards, 625 | |||
Magnetic Hardness of Ferrous Metals, | |||
Spirit Level from Captured Zeiss Director, Liquids for Filling Levels, J. W. French, 135 | |||
Spirit Level, Requirements, Major E. O. | |||
Henrici, 59 | |||
Australian Growth in Industrial Manufacture, Sir J. McCall on, 59 | |||
Trueman Wood Lecture, Sir Oliver Lodge, 613 | |||
Use of Electricity in Agriculture, Dr. J. F. | |||
Crowley, 489 | |||
Mass Meeting, 554, 601 | |||
ATHENS, Exhibition of British Manufactures, 207, 411, 489, 515, 565 | |||
Australia, Rapid Growth in Industrial Manufacture, 59 | |||
Automatic and Electric Furnaces, Limited, Loan of Magnetic Sclerometer for Demonstration, 315 | |||
B | B | ||
BALLOONS Used in Tree Fumigation, 515 | *BALLOONS Used in Tree Fumigation, 515 | ||
*Barcelona, Annual International Fair Instituted, 511 | |||
Barcelona, Annual International Fair Instituted, 511 | *Beardmore and Co.’s Large Section Mill, 181 | ||
*Bearing Metals and Modern Metallography, 279 | |||
Beardmore and Co.’s Large Section Mill, 181 | *Belgian Rolling Mills, Esperance Abandoned, New Works Projected at Hourpes, 489 | ||
*Belgium, British Trade with, Catalogues at Liege, 262 | |||
Bearing Metals and Modern Metallography, 279 | *Bennis, Ed., and Co., Lantern Slides for Lectures, 526 | ||
*Benzole and the Cinematograph, 22 | |||
Belgian Rolling Mills, Esperance Abandoned, New Works Projected at Hourpes, 489 | *Benzole, Increased Production and Further Possibilities as Substitute for Motor Spirit, 11 Benzole, “ National,” Test with a Sunbeam Car, 207, 255 | ||
*Benzole Test on 10,000-Miles Run by Sunbeam Car, 589 | |||
Belgium, British Trade with, Catalogues at | *Bill to Prevent “Lightning Strikes,” 419 | ||
*Birmingham, Big Scheme in Progress for Improvement of Hockley Brook, 85 | |||
Bennis, Ed., and Co., Lantern Slides for Lectures, 526 | *Blowpipe Cutting of Scrap Metal, 181 | ||
*Board of Trade, Certain Powers of, Transferred to Home-office, 539 | |||
Benzole and the Cinematograph, 22 | *Board of Trade Departments, New Addresses and Telephone Numbers, 502 | ||
*Board of Trade, New Administrative Council, 305 | |||
Benzole, Increased Production and Further Possibilities as Substitute for Motor Spirit, 11 | *Boiler Plates, Steel, in the Yangtze Valley, High Prices Paid, 35 | ||
*Boiler Tube Explosion Report, 85 | |||
Benzole, “ National,” Test with a Sunbeam Car, 207, 255 | *Boilers Heated by Electricity, 11 | ||
*Bombay, New Companies Organised, 35 | |||
Benzole Test on 10,000-Miles Run by Sunbeam Car, 589 | *Borneo and Sumatra Waterfalls, Available Horse-power, 359 | ||
*Bradford Engineering Society, Coming of Age, 392 | |||
Bill to Prevent | *Brazil Trade, Increased Imports and Exports, 463 | ||
*Brewers’ Exhibition, 452, 476 | |||
Birmingham, Big Scheme in Progress for Improvement of Hockley Brook, 85 | *Brick Chimney for Cleveland Electric Company, Dimensions of, 85 | ||
*Bridge, Highway, in Ohio, Accident during Reconstruction, 565 | |||
Blowpipe Cutting of Scrap Metal, 181 | *British Chemical Manufacturers’ Association, Visit to Germany, 68 | ||
*British East African Land, Government Condition for Leasing, 613 | |||
Board of Trade, Certain Powers of, Transferred to Home-office, 539 | *British Industries Fair, Birmingham’s Share, 146 | ||
*British Science and Key Industries Exhibition at Glasgow, 157, 328 | |||
Board of Trade Departments, New Addresses and Telephone Numbers, 502 | *British Scientific Products Exhibition, 59 | ||
*British Westinghouse Company, Change of Name, 181, 548 | |||
Board of Trade, New Administrative Council, 305 | *Brussels Commercial Fair, Proposed, 157 | ||
*Buenos Aires, Proposed Underground System of Electric Tramways, 613 | |||
Boiler Plates, Steel, in the Yangtze Valley, High Prices Paid, 35 | *Building Materials’ Tenacity ; Observations in the War Area, Sir B. Fletcher, 359 | ||
*Bullion Salved from the Wreck of the Laurentic at Entrance to Lough Swilly, 157 | |||
Boiler Tube Explosion Report, 85 | |||
Boilers Heated by Electricity, 11 | |||
Bombay, New Companies Organised, 35 | |||
Borneo and Sumatra Waterfalls, Available Horse-power, 359 | |||
Bradford Engineering Society, Coming of Age, 392 | |||
Brazil Trade, Increased Imports and Exports, 463 | |||
Brewers’ Exhibition, 452, 476 | |||
Brick Chimney for Cleveland Electric Company, Dimensions of, 85 | |||
Bridge, Highway, in Ohio, Accident during Reconstruction, 565 | |||
British Chemical Manufacturers’ Association, Visit to Germany, 68 | |||
British East African Land, Government Condition for Leasing, 613 | |||
British Industries Fair, Birmingham’s Share, 146 | |||
British Science and Key Industries Exhibition at Glasgow, 157, 328 | |||
British Scientific Products Exhibition, 59 | |||
British Westinghouse Company, Change of Name, 181, 548 | |||
Brussels Commercial Fair, Proposed, 157 | |||
Buenos Aires, Proposed Underground System of Electric Tramways, 613 | |||
Building Materials’ Tenacity ; Observations in the War Area, Sir B. Fletcher, 359 | |||
Bullion Salved from the Wreck of the Laurentic at Entrance to Lough Swilly, 157 | |||
C | |||
*CABLE Across the Pacific Ocean, 332 | |||
*Calcutta Corporation and Question of Sanitary Dwellings, 411 | |||
*Canada, Export Trade, Increase since 1914, 85 | |||
*Canada and Street Cars, Decision Against Local Manufacture in Toronto, 111 | |||
*Canadian Water Power Development, Professor J. C. McLennan, 305 | |||
*Canal, Crinan, Position under Consideration by Ministry of Transport, 635 | |||
*Canal, First, in Northern India, Proposed Celebration of Centenary, 59 | |||
*Canal, Huningue to Strasburg, Proposed Hydro-electric Stations, 565 | |||
*Canal, Ship, Proposed, at South-west of Long Island, U.S.A., 613 | |||
*Canal System in Canada, Government Survey, 565 | |||
*Canal System of South Yorkshire, Reorganisation under Consideration, 635 | |||
*Canals’ Future as a Difficult Problem, 135 | |||
*Canalising the Rhone, Power and Coal Saving, 255 | |||
*Cape Copper Company Closes Mines, Large Returns since 1863, 85 | |||
*Casein Glues, Valuable Properties, 111 | |||
*Casting Iron Pipes, Centrifugal System, 613 | |||
*Cement, Waterproof, Sir G. K. Scott Moncrieff, 489 | |||
*Census of Europeans in South Africa, 11 | |||
*Chain Manufacturers, New Association, 124, 220, 359 | |||
*Charcoal Briquettes in India ; Difficulty, 157 | |||
*Chemical Employers and Motor Transport Employers’ Federations, Alliance, 59 | |||
*Chemical Engineer as a Liaison Officer, 181 | |||
*Chemistry, Organic, Professorship at Armstrong College, Dr. S. Smiles Appointed, 157 | |||
*Chicago and the Atlantic, Improved Water Communication, 59 | |||
*Chimney, Tall Reinforced Concrete, at Sagano- seki, Professor Omori’s Conclusions, 437, 463 | |||
*Chimneys, Tall, Stresses by Wind Pressure and Seismic Motion Compared, 437 | |||
*China Clay Transport Difficulties and Settlement, 514 | |||
*China, Local Materials Economically Used for Construction Work, D. F. McLeod, 181 | |||
*Chinese Dockyard Improved to Carry Out American Contracts, 231 | |||
*Cinematograph as Advocate for Benzole, 22 | |||
COAL, COKE, AND COLLIERIES: | COAL, COKE, AND COLLIERIES: | ||
Amount of Coal Required to Mill One Ton of Ore, 589 | *- Amount of Coal Required to Mill One Ton of Ore, 589 | ||
*- Anthracite Seam Struck at Glyn Neath, 231 Argentine Coal Discovery, its Great Value, 207 | |||
Anthracite Seam Struck at Glyn Neath, 231 Argentine Coal Discovery, its Great Value, 207 | *- Belgian Blast-furnaces and Coke Scarcity, 333 | ||
*- British Columbia and Coalfields, 383 | |||
Belgian Blast-furnaces and Coke Scarcity, 333 British Columbia and Coalfields, 383 | *- Calcium Carbide Manufacture and Byproduct Extraction from Coal and Shale at Natal Collieries, 565 | ||
*- Coal Discovery in Chili, 613 | |||
Calcium Carbide Manufacture and Byproduct Extraction from Coal and Shale at Natal Collieries, 565 | *- Coal Mining in Germany, Decreasing Output, Increasing Cost of Production, 85 | ||
*- Coal Transport by Rail, Suspended Restrictions, 279 | |||
Coal Discovery in Chili, 613 | *- Commercial Motor Users’ Association and Coal Permits, 74 | ||
*- Compressed Air Coal-cutting Machines, Tests, 589 | |||
Coal Mining in Germany, Decreasing Output, Increasing Cost of Production, 85 | *- Controller of Coal Mines, Change of Appointment, 437 | ||
*- Dutch East Indies, Increased Coal Consumption, 259 | |||
Coal Transport by Rail, Suspended Restrictions, 279 | *- Electrical Charges Advance with Price of Coal, 135 | ||
*- Federated Malay States, Useful Discovery of Coal and Output, 539 | |||
Commercial Motor Users’ Association and Coal Permits, 74 | *- Fire Extinction by Mud Jet, 135 | ||
*- Gasworks, Demand for Asli Guarantee, 315 | |||
Compressed Air Coal-cutting Machines, Tests, 589 | *- High-priced Coal and Hydro-electric Power Extension, 7 | ||
*- India, Increased Output of Coal Mines, 59 | |||
Controller of Coal Mines, Change of Appointment, 437 | *- Ireland, Stationary Output of Coal, 565 | ||
*- Kent Collieries during the Railway Strike, 411 | |||
Dutch East Indies, Increased Coal Consumption, 259 | *- Lens and Lievin Mines Flooding ; Ten Years Required for Complete Restarting, 135 | ||
*- Lord Bute no Longer Colliery Proprietor, 59 | |||
Electrical Charges Advance with Price of Coal, 135 | *- Lourenco Marques, Coal Deposits Found, 157 | ||
*- Melbourne Harbour Coaling Plant, 515 | |||
Federated Malay States, Useful Discovery of Coal and Output, 539 | *- Mines Unwatering, Need of Barriers, 515 | ||
*- Mines Water-logged in the Tipton District, 181 | |||
Fire Extinction by Mud Jet, 135 | *- Mining in Formosa, Primitive Methods, 231 | ||
*- Natal, Coal and Bituminous Shale Development in, 411 | |||
Gasworks, Demand for | *- Natal Navigation Company’s New Coal Area, 515 | ||
*- Natal, Official Coal Trade Report, Decreasing Output, 383 | |||
High-priced Coal and Hydro-electric Power Extension, 7 | *- Nationalisation of Mines, Mr. Justice Sankey’s Report, 23 | ||
*- New Zealand, Coal Discovery in, 157 | |||
India, Increased Output of Coal Mines, 59 Ireland, Stationary Output of Coal, 565 Kent Collieries during the Railway Strike, 411 | *- New Zealand Coal Mines and Nationalisation, 312 | ||
*- Oil Fuel in France, Commission Urges its Use to Replace Coal, 565 | |||
Lord Bute no Longer Colliery Proprietor, 59 | *- Output of Coal in the United Kingdom during Four Weeks, 359 | ||
*- Output, Slight Improvement, 287 | |||
*- Powell Duffryn Company’s New Pit, 539 | |||
*- Pulverised Coal for Open-hearth Furnaces, N. C. Harrison, 539 | |||
Mines Water-logged in the Tipton District, 181 | *- Quick Work at a Colliery, 279 | ||
*- Seven-hour Day and the Output, 255 | |||
Mining in Formosa, Primitive Methods, 231 | *- South Africa, Coal Development Company Formed, 383 | ||
*- South Africa, New Colliery, 157 | |||
Natal, Coal and Bituminous Shale Development in, | *- Spitsbergen Coal Deposits, Scottish Syndicate to Prospect, 11 | ||
*- Spitzbergen, Coal Exports from, 613 | |||
Natal Navigation Company’s New Coal Area, 515 | *- Spitsbergen, Further Coal Discovery, 157 | ||
*- Storing Coal in Carbonic Acid Gas, 589 | |||
Natal, Official Coal Trade Report, Decreasing Output, 383 | *- Temperature of Coal Mines, Atmospheric Conditions, Ventilation and Health, 539 | ||
*- Tonkin Output from the Hongay Mines, 255 | |||
Nationalisation of Mines, Mr. Justice Sankey’s Report, 23 | *- United States Coal Consumption Estimate, 57 | ||
*- Vienna Company’s Coke Supply Transferred to Czechs with Change of Frontiers, 535 | |||
New Zealand, Coal Discovery in, 157 | *- Wagon Shortage on Railways, Measures Taken on Behalf of Collieries, 135 | ||
*- Water in South Staffordshire Mines, 589 | |||
New Zealand Coal Mines and Nationalisation, 312 | *- Western India, Trial Boring for Coal ; Heavy Cost of Coal at Bombay, 565 | ||
*CONCRETE Caissons for Bridge Foundations, Best Method of Sinking, F. W. Sweeney, 35 | |||
Oil Fuel in France, Commission Urges its Use to Replace Coal, 565 | *Concrete and Fire Resistance, 135 | ||
*Concrete Mooring Buoys Compared with Steel, | |||
Output of Coal in the United Kingdom during Four Weeks, 359 | *Concrete Pipe Failure in Arizona, Professor G. E. P. Smith, 181 | ||
*Concrete Replaces Plain Steel for Cranes, 383 | |||
Output, Slight Improvement, 287 | *Concrete Setting Studied by Assistance of Camera, 111 | ||
*Concrete Tanks for Fuel Oil Storage, 85 | |||
Powell Duffryn Company’s New Pit, 539 | *Copper in Ancient India, Mr. Panchanan Neogi, 515 | ||
*Copper Conductors, 242 | |||
Pulverised Coal for Open-hearth Furnaces, N. C. Harrison, 539 | *Copper Contact Bows of Electric Railways Replaced by Carbon, 515 | ||
*Copper Mines in Norway, Cost of Production and Falling Prices, 411 | |||
Quick Work at a Colliery, 279 | *Copper as a Protective Against Corrosion of Steel, 305 | ||
*Cornish Mining in St. Ives District, 565 | |||
Seven-hour Day and the Output, 255 | *Corrosion in Boilers with Turbines and with Reciprocating Engines ; Tests, 157 | ||
*Corundum, Artificial, Cheap Manufacture of, Possible in England, C. J. Brockbank, 635 | |||
South Africa, Coal Development Company Formed, 383 | *Cotton Mill in Central China ; British and American Machinery, 255 | ||
*Creosoted Piles, Long Life of, 255 | |||
South Africa, New Colliery, 157 | *Crystal Palace Engineering Society : Papers and Awards, 625 | ||
*Crystal Palace School of Practical Engineering, Admiral Sir G. W. Moore on Future of Engineering, 122 | |||
Spitzbergen, Coal Exports from, 613 | |||
Storing Coal in Carbonic Acid Gas, 589 | |||
Tonkin Output from the Hongay Mines, 255 United States Coal Consumption Estimate, 57 Vienna Company’s Coke Supply Transferred | |||
Wagon Shortage on Railways, Measures Taken on Behalf of Collieries, 135 | |||
Water in South Staffordshire Mines, 589 | |||
Western India, Trial Boring for Coal ; Heavy Cost of Coal at Bombay, 565 | |||
CONCRETE Caissons for Bridge Foundations, Best Method of Sinking, F. W. Sweeney, 35 | |||
Concrete and Fire Resistance, 135 | |||
Concrete Mooring Buoys Compared with Steel, | |||
Concrete Pipe Failure in Arizona, Professor G. E. P. Smith, 181 | |||
Concrete Replaces Plain Steel for Cranes, 383 | |||
Concrete Setting Studied by Assistance of Camera, 111 | |||
Concrete Tanks for Fuel Oil Storage, 85 | |||
Copper in Ancient India, Mr. Panchanan Neogi, 515 | |||
Copper Conductors, 242 | |||
Copper Contact Bows of Electric Railways Replaced by Carbon, 515 | |||
Copper Mines in Norway, Cost of Production and Falling Prices, 411 | |||
Copper as a Protective Against Corrosion of Steel, 305 | |||
Cornish Mining in St. Ives District, 565 | |||
Corrosion in Boilers with Turbines and with | |||
Reciprocating Engines ; Tests, 157 | |||
Corundum, Artificial, Cheap Manufacture of, Possible in England, C. J. Brockbank, 635 | |||
Cotton Mill in Central China ; British and | |||
American Machinery, 255 | |||
Creosoted Piles, Long Life of, 255 | |||
Crystal Palace Engineering Society : Papers and Awards, 625 | |||
Crystal Palace School of Practical Engineering, Admiral Sir G. W. Moore on Future of Engineering, 122 | |||
D | D | ||
DAM Proposed Across Sutlej River, India, Highest in the World, 613 | *DAM Proposed Across Sutlej River, India, Highest in the World, 613 | ||
*Dam, Proposed, for Irrigation Scheme in Idaho, Higher than Any Yet Built, 613 | |||
Dam, Proposed, for Irrigation Scheme in Idaho, Higher than Any Yet Built, 613 | *Dam in Tasmania, Cause of Failure, H. E. Bellamy, 383 | ||
*Davidson and Company’s War Work Booklet, 98 | |||
Dam in Tasmania, Cause of Failure, H. E. | *Daylight Saving in General Favour, 215 | ||
*Death of Mr. T. P. Shonts : His Work on Panama Canal Development and on New York Subways, 569 | |||
Bellamy, 383 | *Decimal Currency, Increased Adoption, 411 | ||
*Derrick Cranes with Reinforced Concrete Replacing Plain Steel, 383 | |||
Davidson and Company’s War Work Booklet, 98 | *Diamond Getting by Use of a Diving Bell, 231 | ||
*Diesel Engine Users’ Association : Applies for Grant for Research, Complains of Household Fuel Order as Applied to Electrical Companies Using Oil, 59 | |||
Daylight Saving in General Favour, 215 | *Ding-Dong Mine Reopening, 411 | ||
*Disabled Men Nearly All Again at Work, 85 | |||
Death of Mr. T. P. Shonts : His Work on | *Dock, Largest in the World Projected at Vancouver Island, 234 | ||
*Dolomite Deposits in the Peak District of Derbyshire, Scheme for Working, 35 | |||
Panama Canal Development and on New York Subways, 569 | *Douglas Fir Timbers, Old and New, Results of Tests, 207 | ||
*Dredging Bucket Weighing Nearly 20 Tons, 207 | |||
Decimal Currency, Increased Adoption, 411 | *Drills, Small Twist, Device for Protection, 231 | ||
*Duralumin, Ageing of, Dr. Zay Jeffries, 255 | |||
Derrick Cranes with Reinforced Concrete | *Duralumin and Kindred Alloys, Heat Treatment of, 35 | ||
*Dutch East Indies, Road and Railway Construction Extended, 515 | |||
Replacing Plain Steel, 383 | *Dutch Margarine Makers’ Purchase of Oil Mills at Selby, 85 | ||
*Dutch Section of the Shipping, Engineering and Machinery Exhibition, 320 | |||
Diamond Getting by Use of a Diving Bell, 231 | |||
Diesel Engine Users’ Association : Applies for | |||
Grant for Research, Complains of Household Fuel Order as Applied to Electrical Companies Using Oil, 59 | |||
Ding-Dong Mine Reopening, 411 | |||
Disabled Men Nearly | |||
Dock, Largest in the World Projected at Vancouver Island, 234 | |||
Dolomite Deposits in the Peak District of Derbyshire, Scheme for Working, 35 | |||
Douglas Fir Timbers, Old and New, Results of Tests, 207 | |||
Dredging Bucket Weighing Nearly 20 Tons, 207 | |||
Drills, Small Twist, Device for Protection, 231 | |||
Duralumin, Ageing of, Dr. Zay Jeffries, 255 | |||
Duralumin and Kindred Alloys, Heat Treatment of, 35 | |||
Dutch East Indies, Road and Railway Construction Extended, 515 | |||
Dutch Margarine Makers’ Purchase of Oil Mills at Selby, 85 | |||
Dutch Section of the Shipping, Engineering and Machinery Exhibition, 320 | |||
E | E | ||
EAST AFRICAN Mines Department and Geological Survey, 539 | *EAST AFRICAN Mines Department and Geological Survey, 539 | ||
*Eisteddford, Welsh, and Applied Science, 279 | |||
Eisteddford, Welsh, and Applied Science, 279 | |||
ELECTRICAL MATTERS: | ELECTRICAL MATTERS: | ||
Accrington, Extensions of Generating Plant, 255 | *- Accrington, Extensions of Generating Plant, 255 | ||
*- Agriculture, Use of Electricity in, Dr. J. F. Crowley, 489 | |||
Agriculture, Use of Electricity in, Dr. J. F. Crowley, 489 | *- Air from Turbo-generators as Forced Draught for Furnaces, 333 | ||
*- Alloy for Resistance Elements of Electrical Instruments, F. Weimar, 565 | |||
Air from Turbo-generators as Forced Draught for Furnaces, 333 | *- Austria’s Lost Coal to be Replaced by Electric Power, 535 | ||
*- Ayr, Proposed Loan for Electricity Supply, 207 | |||
Alloy for Resistance Elements of Electrical Instruments, F. Weimar, 565 | *- Birmingham’s Electric Dust Carts, Batteries from America, 35 | ||
*- Bolton, Projected Expenditure on New Transformers, 207 | |||
Austria’s Lost Coal to be Replaced by Electric Power, 535 | *- Burma, Hydro-electric Plant for Mine, 207 | ||
*- Canadian Electrical Association : Bare and Covered Wires, 455 | |||
Ayr, Proposed Loan for Electricity Supply, 207 | *- Canadian Electric Generating Plants, Statistics, 305 | ||
*- Castings for Switch-boxes, Replaced by Electric Welding, 463 | |||
Birmingham’s Electric Dust Carts, Batteries from America, 35 | *- Ceylon Hydro-electric Scheme, 489 | ||
*- Coal Prices and Electrical Charge Increase, 135 | |||
Bolton, Projected Expenditure on New Transformers, 207 | *- Copper Conductors, 242 | ||
*- Cracking of Rubber Insulation on High- tension Cables, F. B. Silsbe, 589 | |||
Burma, Hydro-electric Plant for Mine, 207 | *- Denmark, Large Hydro-electric Works for Jutland, 279 | ||
*- Doncaster Corporation Loan for Generating Station, 635 | |||
Canadian Electrical Association : Bare and Covered Wires, 455 | *- Douglas Electric Light Supply, 181 | ||
*- Dundee Electricity Scheme, 181 ; Proposal for Extension by Use of Water from the Tummel Valley, 279 | |||
Canadian Electric Generating Plants, Statistics, 305 | *- Furnace Installation, Electric, for Norway, from United States, 635 | ||
*- Generating Station Statistics in the United States, 85 | |||
Castings for Switch-boxes, Replaced by Electric Welding, 463 | *- German Output of Crucible and Electric Steel, Furnaces Employed, 111 | ||
*- Glasgow Electrical Finance, 333 | |||
Ceylon Hydro-electric Scheme, 489 | *- Gwalior, India, Electricity Supply, 181 | ||
*- High-tension Electrical Power Transmission, Extension of Possibilities, 589 | |||
Coal Prices and Electrical Charge Increase, 135 | *- High-voltage Transmission, Practicability, Southern Californian Successful Operations, 493 | ||
*- Hull Electrical Plant Extensions, Loan Sanctioned, 135 | |||
Copper Conductors, 242 | *- Indian Scheme for Electric Supply from Local Water Power in the Nilgiris, 539 | ||
*- Italy, Two Large New Hydro-electric Stations for Industrial Work, 279 | |||
Cracking of Rubber Insulation on High-tension Cables, F. B. Silsbe, 589 | *- Japanese Electrically Driven Steel Plant Coming from the United States, 635 | ||
*- Kelp for Insulation, in Australia, 333 | |||
Denmark, Large Hydro-electric Works for Jutland, 279 | *- London Electricity Supplies, Linking-up, 635 | ||
*- Manchester’s Proposed Loan for Generating Station, 279 | |||
Doncaster Corporation Loan for Generating Station, 635 | *- Mercury Vapour Rectifiers for Transforming High-tension Current, 613 | ||
*- Niagara, Power Utilisation and Natural Beauty, 383 | |||
Douglas Electric Light Supply, 181 | *- Ootacamund,. Madras, Proposed Electric Supply from Sandy Nullah Waterfall, 59 | ||
*- Osaka Steam-driven Electrical Installation, Largest in the Far East, 437 | |||
Dundee Electricity Scheme, 181 ; Proposal for Extension by Use of Water from the Tummel Valley, 279 | |||
Furnace Installation, Electric, for Norway, from United States, 635 | |||
Generating Station Statistics in the United States, 85 | |||
German Output of Crucible and Electric Steel, Furnaces Employed, 111 | |||
Glasgow Electrical Finance, 333 | |||
Gwalior, India, Electricity Supply, 181 | |||
High-tension Electrical Power Transmission, Extension of Possibilities, 589 | |||
High-voltage Transmission, | |||
Hull Electrical Plant Extensions, Loan Sanctioned, 135 | |||
Indian | |||
Italy, Two Large New Hydro-electric Stations for Industrial Work, 279 | |||
Japanese Electrically Driven Steel Plant | |||
Kelp for Insulation, in Australia, 333 | |||
London Electricity Supplies, Linking-up, 635 | |||
Manchester’s Proposed Loan for Generating Station, 279 | |||
Mercury Vapour Rectifiers for Transforming High-tension Current, 613 | |||
Niagara, Power Utilisation and Natural Beauty, 383 | |||
Ootacamund, | |||
Osaka Steam-driven Electrical Installation, Largest in the Far East, 437 | |||
ELECTRICAL MATTERS (continued): | ELECTRICAL MATTERS (continued): | ||
*- Paris Electric Power Distribution, Large Outlay, 181 | |||
*- Pittsburgh, Large Power Plant, 255 | |||
*- Power in India, Increasing Demand for, 429 | |||
*- Power Project in Manitoba, 255 | |||
*- Railway and Dock Generating Stations and Lines Exempted from Transfer under Electricity Supply Bill, 135 | |||
*- Rapid Reversing Motor at Indiana Harbour, 157 | |||
*- Rhodesia and Available Electric Horsepower, 35 | |||
*- Rhone Development, Use of Power in Paris, P.L.M. Railway, andc., Government Outlay, 613 | |||
*- Rivets, Electrically Heated, G. M. Clark, 589 | |||
*- Rotherham Loans for Electricity Undertaking Bill to be Passed, 135 | |||
*- Sheffield Electrical Finance, 333 | |||
*- Spain, Utilisation of Water Power of the River Tort, 181 | |||
*- Suffolk Electricity Supply Company Obtains Exemption from the Household Fuel and Lighting Order, 437 | |||
*- Surplus Hydro-electric Power Developed in British Columbia, 642 | |||
*- Temperature of Electric Furnaces, Device to Regulate, Monsieur Lequex, 489 | |||
*- Towing, Electric, on the Canal de la Marne, 255 | |||
*- Transport, Ministry of, and New Powers under the Electricity Bill, 539 | |||
*- Trial Borings with View to Tunnel Under Liffey for Electric Mains, 207 | |||
*- Whitley Council for the West Midland Electricity Supply Industry, 287 | |||
*- Wind Power as Source of Electrical Supply, Comparison with Gas, 59 | |||
*- York City Hydro-electric Scheme, 489 | |||
*ELECTROLYTIC Zinc in Australia, 157 | |||
*Ellesmere Port, New Wharves for Ocean-going Steamers, 11 | |||
*Engine, James Watt, 206, 213 | |||
*Engineers’ Patience and Pay, 31 | |||
*Engineering, The Future of, Admiral Sir G. W. Moore, at the Crystal Palace School of Engineering, 122 | |||
*Exhibition, All-British, Proposed at Singapore, 613 | |||
*Exhibition, in Athens by Federation of British Industries, 207, 411 | |||
*Exhibition, Aviation, in Paris, 565 | |||
*Exhibition, at Barcelona, British Firms to Exhibit Mechanical Inventions, andc., 305 | |||
*Exhibition, Brewers, 452, 476 | |||
*Exhibition, of British Manufactures at Athens, 207, 411, 489, 515, 565 | |||
*Exhibition, British Science and Key Industries, at Glasgow, 157, 328 | |||
*Exhibition, International Motor Boat and Marine and Stationary Engine, 626 | |||
*Exhibition, Mining, in South Africa, 534 | |||
*Exhibition, Shipping, Engineering, and Machinery, at Olympia, 11, 181, 320 | |||
*Exhibition, Union of Inventors of the Loire, 359 | |||
*Exhibition, of Venezuela, First National, 437 | |||
*Explosion of Economiser at Yorkshire Dye Works, 463 | |||
*Explosion of Safety Valve Chest Due to Collision between Tug and Dredger, 111 | |||
*Explosion at Scotswood Works, Official Report, 35 | |||
*Explosions in War Factories, Low Rate of Fatalities, 231 | |||
*Explosive Charges for Sea Depth Soundings, 463 | |||
F | |||
*FACTORIES, Safety Pamphlet Issued by Home-office, 620 | |||
*Factory and Agricultural Labour, Suggested Alternation of, 515 | |||
*FEDERATION OF BRITISH INDUSTRIES : | |||
*- Change of Address, 59 | |||
*- Exhibition in Athens, 207, 411, 489, 515, 565 | |||
*- Finland’s Water Power Resources, 411 | |||
*- Instigates Government Continuance of Emergency Road Transport Service, 411 | |||
*- Sending Staff to Cologne, 111 | |||
*FEDERATION OF TECHNICAL AND SCIENTIFIC ASSOCIATIONS : | |||
*- Formation and Objects, 238 | |||
*- Meeting, Constitution Proposals, 290 | |||
*Ferrous Metals—see Iron and Steel | |||
*Fertiliser Manufacture from Phospha tic Rock at Johannesburg, 35 | |||
*Fibre from Eucalyptus Bark ; Factory Started in Australia, 589 | |||
*File for Cleaning Contact Points of Sparking Plugs, Brown Brothers, Limited, 601 | |||
*Files and Drills, Economical Use of, 463 | |||
*Fire in Coal Stack, Extinguishing, 383 | |||
*Fire Engine for Refilling Water Reservoir, 181 | |||
*Fire Extinction by Mud Jet in Collieries, 135 | |||
*Fire-grates, Economy in, 635 | |||
*Fire Losses in this Country, Enormous Increase this Year, 231 | |||
*Fire Losses Greater per Head in Canada than Elsewhere, 111 | |||
*Fire Patrols, Aeroplane, Over Californian Forest Reserves, 301 | |||
*Fires in Grain Elevator Caused by Wheat Dust Collecting on Electric Lamp, 111 | |||
*Fish Scarcity at Billingsgate and the Railway Companies, 58 | |||
*Fixation of Atmospheric Nitrogen, Experiments Resumed, 489 | |||
*Flag-pole, Reinforced Concrete, 157 | |||
*Flux for Coating Aluminium and Alloys, S. O. Cowper-Coles, 489 | |||
*Fog, Effect of, on Light Intensity, C. L. Utterback, 337 | |||
*Foire de Paris, Variety of Exhibits, 383 | |||
*Ford Tractor Factory at Cork, 255 | |||
*Forest Area, Valuable, in Asia Minor, 538 | |||
*“France,” A Catalogue of French Industry, Exports, andc., 613 | |||
*Franco-Polish Society Founded in Warsaw, 589 | |||
*French Docks Congestion, Measures to Relieve 383 | |||
*French Offer for Works near Saarbriicken, 463 | |||
*French Purchase of Peat Bog in Ireland for Fuel Making, 85 | |||
*French Reconstruction of Roads, Railways, Bridges, Tunnels, Telegraphs, and Telephones, 117 | |||
*French Reconstructional Work ; Question of Contracts for British and American Firms, 437 | |||
*French Unused Water Power for Relief of Coal Scarcity, Suggestion, 59 | |||
*Fuel Economy Organisation Committee s Report, Sir R. Hadfield on, 59 | |||
*Fuel Economy in Power Production, W. T. Lane, 359 | |||
*Fuel, French Commission Urges Use of Oil to Replace Coal, 565 | |||
*Fuel for Internal Combustion Engines, Alcohol Requires Addition of Benzole, 111 | |||
*Fuel Oil Tanks at Portland, 81 | |||
*Fuel Research ; Government Station at Greenwich, 207, 305 | |||
Factory and Agricultural Labour, Suggested | |||
Change of Address, 59 | |||
Exhibition in Athens, 207, 411, 489, 515, 565 | |||
Finland’s Water Power Resources, 411 | |||
Instigates Government Continuance of Emergency Road Transport Service, 411 | |||
Sending Staff to Cologne, 111 | |||
Formation and Objects, 238 | |||
Meeting, Constitution Proposals, 290 | |||
Ferrous Metals—see Iron and Steel | |||
Fertiliser Manufacture from Phospha tic Rock at Johannesburg, 35 | |||
Fibre from Eucalyptus Bark ; Factory Started in Australia, 589 | |||
File for Cleaning Contact Points of Sparking Plugs, Brown Brothers, Limited, 601 | |||
Files and Drills, Economical Use of, 463 | |||
Fire in Coal Stack, Extinguishing, 383 | |||
Fire Engine for Refilling Water Reservoir, 181 | |||
Fire Extinction by Mud Jet in Collieries, 135 Fire-grates, Economy in, 635 | |||
Fire Losses in this Country, Enormous Increase this Year, 231 | |||
Fire Losses Greater per Head in Canada than Elsewhere, 111 | |||
Fire Patrols, Aeroplane, Over Californian Forest Reserves, 301 | |||
Fires in Grain Elevator Caused by Wheat Dust Collecting on Electric Lamp, 111 | |||
Fish Scarcity at Billingsgate and the Railway Companies, 58 | |||
Fixation of Atmospheric Nitrogen, Experiments Resumed, 489 | |||
Flag-pole, Reinforced Concrete, 157 | |||
Flux for Coating Aluminium and Alloys, S. O. Cowper-Coles, 489 | |||
Fog, Effect of, on Light Intensity, C. L. Utterback, 337 | |||
Foire de Paris, Variety of Exhibits, 383 | |||
Ford Tractor Factory at Cork, 255 | |||
Forest Area, Valuable, in Asia Minor, 538 | |||
Franco-Polish Society Founded in | |||
French Docks Congestion, Measures to Relieve | |||
French Offer for Works near Saarbriicken, 463 | |||
French Purchase of Peat Bog in Ireland for Fuel Making, 85 | |||
French Reconstruction of Roads, Railways, Bridges, Tunnels, Telegraphs, and Telephones, 117 | |||
French Reconstructional Work ; Question of Contracts for British and American Firms, | |||
French Unused Water Power for Relief of Coal Scarcity, Suggestion, 59 | |||
Fuel Economy Organisation | |||
Fuel Economy in Power Production, W. T. Lane, 359 | |||
Fuel, French Commission Urges Use of Oil to Replace Coal, 565 | |||
Fuel for Internal Combustion Engines, Alcohol Requires Addition of Benzole, 111 | |||
Fuel Oil Tanks at Portland, 81 | |||
Fuel Research ; Government Station at Greenwich, 207, 305 | |||
G | G | ||
GADGETTS for Motorists, 522 | *GADGETTS for Motorists, 522 | ||
*Gas and Electricity Derived from Wind Power, Mr. F. Barrett on, 59 | |||
Gas and Electricity Derived from Wind Power, Mr. F. Barrett on, 59 | *Gas as Fuel for Motor Vehicles, Uncertainties of Liquid Fuel, 135 | ||
*Geological Survey and Museum, Transfer of Departments,1 489 | |||
Gas as Fuel for Motor Vehicles, Uncertainties of Liquid Fuel, 135 | *Geophone, Successful Experiment in Pennsylvania Coal Mine, 111 | ||
*German Amalgamation of Big Electrical and other Firms, 589 | |||
Geological Survey and Museum, Transfer of Departments, 489 | *German Union of Technical Societies, Petition for New Technical Library, 11 | ||
*Germany Outbids other European Countries for Erection of Wireless Telegraphy Station, 255 | |||
*Glass Globes and Window Glass, Factory for Manufacture of, to be Erected at Queenborough, 111 | |||
*Glass-making in West Norfolk, 207 | |||
German Amalgamation of Big Electrical and other Firms, 589 | *Glue Joints and Varnished Wood Surfaces, 437 | ||
*Gold Mine, Deepest of any Metal Aline in the World, 383 | |||
German Union of Technical Societies, Petition for New Technical Library, 11 | *Gold Mines, Low-grade, in South Africa, Serious Position, 207 | ||
*Gold Ore Reserves of the Rand, 35 | |||
Germany Outbids other European Countries for Erection of Wireless Telegraphy Station, 255 Glass Globes and Window Glass, Factory for Manufacture of, to be Erected at Queenborough, 111 | *Gold Refinery for the Rand, Proposed, 411 | ||
*Gold from the Transvaal, Effect on the Industry of a Free Market, 333 | |||
Glass-making in West Norfolk, 207 | *Government Car Used as Beehive, 111 | ||
*Government Financial Help for Higher Education of Ex-Service Officers and Men, 181, 279 | |||
Glue Joints and Varnished Wood Surfaces, 437 | *Government Sale of Cranes and Machine Tools, 181 | ||
*Grantham and District Engineering Society, 411 | |||
Gold Mine, Deepest of any Metal | *Grantham, Special Engineering School for Boys, 613 | ||
*Gravel as an Aggregate in Concrete, 135 | |||
Gold Mines, Low-grade, in South Africa, Serious Position, 207 | *Greenwich, Fuel Research Station at, 207 | ||
*Gunpowder in Railway Workshops, 135 | |||
Gold Ore Reserves of the Rand, 35 | *Gwalior State Project for Waterway Connection with Calcutta, 11 | ||
Gold Refinery for the Rand, Proposed, 411 | |||
Gold from the Transvaal, Effect on the Industry of a Free Market, 333 | |||
Government Car Used as Beehive, 111 | |||
Government Financial Help for Higher Education of Ex-Service Officers and Men, 181, 279 Government Sale of Cranes and Machine Tools, 181 | |||
Grantham and District Engineering Society, 411 Grantham, Special Engineering School for Boys, 613 | |||
Gravel as an Aggregate in Concrete, 135 | |||
Greenwich, Fuel Research Station at, 207 | |||
Gunpowder in Railway Workshops, 135 | |||
Gwalior State Project for Waterway Connection with Calcutta, 11 | |||
H | H | ||
HARDENING of Duralumin, 35 | *HARDENING of Duralumin, 35 | ||
*Health, New Ministry of, 11 | |||
Health, New Ministry of, 11 | *Heat Economy in Chemical Works, Harold Nielsen, 613 | ||
*Hong-Kong’s Imports of Tin, 463 | |||
Heat Economy in Chemical Works, Harold | *Hooghly River Bed Survey, 59 | ||
*House-building, Comparison between Cost of Brick and Concrete, 207 | |||
Nielsen, 613 | *Hydraulic Works on the Rhone, 378, 383 | ||
*Hydro-electric Plant in Burma, 207 | |||
Hong-Kong’s Imports of Tin, 463 | *Hydro-electric Power Extension in Sweden, 7 | ||
*Hydro-electric Power, Surplus Developed in British Columbia, 642 | |||
Hooghly River Bed Survey, 59 | *Hydro-electric Scheme, Ceylon, 489 | ||
*Hydro-electric Scheme, York City, 489 | |||
House-building, Comparison between Cost of | *Hydro-electric Schemes—see also Electrical Matters | ||
*Hydrogen Peroxide, Experimental Plant for, by Kynoch Limited, in Natal, 380 | |||
Brick and Concrete, 207 | *Hydrographic Surveys in the North Sea, 181 | ||
Hydraulic Works on the Rhone, 378, 383 | |||
Hydro-electric Plant in Burma, 207 | |||
Hydro-electric Power Extension in Sweden, 7 | |||
Hydro-electric Power, Surplus Developed in | |||
British Columbia, 642 | |||
Hydro-electric Scheme, Ceylon, 489 | |||
Hydro-electric Scheme, York City, 489 | |||
Hydro-electric Schemes—see also Electrical | |||
Matters | |||
Hydrogen Peroxide, Experimental Plant for, by | |||
Kynoch Limited, in Natal, 380 | |||
Hydrographic Surveys in the North Sea, | |||
I | |||
*IMPERIAL Mineral Resources Bureau, Offices Moved, 231 | |||
*India, Distillation of Wood and Production of Stockholm Tar, 85 | |||
*India, Government and Private Service in, 406 | |||
*India, Water Power Resources of, Report on, 437, 515 | |||
*Indian Public Works Department, Increased Pay for Members, 363 | |||
*Indian Scheme for Dredging Chilka Lake to Avoid Flooding, 411 | |||
*Indians to have Training in Navigation, Bom* bay Scheme, 35 | |||
*Industrial League Conference of Employers and Employed, 290 | |||
*Industrial Life in America, President Wilson on, 383 | |||
*Industrial Reconstruction Council and Industrial League ; Amalgamation ; New Title, 290 | |||
*Insect Hunting Surveys by Aeroplane, 635 | |||
*Institute Building for General Use of Technical Societies in South Africa, 135 | |||
*International Electrotechnical Commission Alee ting, 314 | |||
*Ipswich Rails, British Tender Preferred to American, 157 | |||
IRON AND STEEL: | |||
*- Acid-proof Iron Alloy, Claim by Italian, 59 | |||
*- Anzan Steel Works of South Manchuria Railway, Plant Extension and Output, 489 | |||
*- Austria-Hungary’s Steel Output in 191 7 and 1918, 333 | |||
*- Bethlehem-Chile Iron Ore Dock at Cruze- Grande, 279 | |||
*- Blast-furnaces at Wellingborough Re-opened, | |||
*- British Federation of Iron, Steel, Tin-plate and Metal Merchants, Aleeting between Merchants and Manufacturers, 333 | |||
IRON AND STEEL (continued): | IRON AND STEEL (continued): | ||
*- Castings, Iron, in America, Cost of, at Begin ning of Last Century, 437 | |||
Castings, Iron, in America, Cost of, at Begin ning of Last Century, 437 | *- Castings Replaced by Electric Welding of Steel Plates, 463 | ||
*- Chrome Iron Ore Discovery in Rhodesia, 157 | |||
Castings Replaced by Electric Welding of Steel Plates, 463 | *- Coating Iron Articles, Dr. C. Baskerville’s Method, 157 | ||
*- Copper as a Protective Against Steel Corrosion, 305 | |||
Chrome Iron Ore Discovery in Rhodesia, 157 | *- Corrosion of Iron Hot-water Pipes, Method of Prevention, 85 | ||
*- Ferrous Metals, Measuring Magnetic Hardness, andc., L. A. Wild, 255 | |||
Coating Iron Articles, Dr. C. Baskerville’s Method, 157 | *- First Cast of Steel at Coatbridge Works, 589 | ||
*- French Iron and Steel Companies Amalgamation, 279 | |||
Copper as a Protective Against Steel Corrosion, 305 | *- French Tool Steel, “Etiquette Rouge,” 305 | ||
*- German Iron and Steel Industries Proposed Combination, 411 | |||
Corrosion of Iron | *- German Output of Crucible and Electric Steel in 1917, 111 | ||
*- Gorman Prices of Pig Iron, Spiegel, and Merchant Bars, 489 | |||
Ferrous Metals, Measuring Magnetic Hardness, | *- Ingot Heating, Possible Injury by Great Speed, F. E. Bash, 589 | ||
*- Iron Oro Deposit Investigation by United States Geological Survey, 463 | |||
First Cast of Steel at Coatbridge Works, 589 | *- Lorraine Iron Ore for Export to Germany, French Price for, 463 | ||
*- Manganese Shortage : Additional Sources Indicated, 565 | |||
French Iron and Steel Companies Amalgamation, 279 | *- Ontario, Two New Steel Works being Built, 539 | ||
*- Pretoria Iron and Steel Industry, Proposed Extension, 565 | |||
French Tool Steel, | *- Rusting of Steel having Copper Content, 85 | ||
*- Steel Boiler Plates in the Yangtze Valley, High Prices Paid, 35 | |||
German Iron and Steel Industries Proposed Combination, 411 | *- Swedish Iron and Steel Industry, Low Output and Depression, 305 | ||
*- Swiss Steel Foundry, Electric Smelting of Scrap Iron, 437 | |||
*- Tata Steel Works, India : Renewed Contracts with Japan, 279 | |||
*- Titaniferous Iron Sands of New Zealand, V. W. Aubel, 565 | |||
*- Tunis Iron Exports to England, 231 | |||
*- Vancouver Company to Test Electric Smelting Process for Magnetite Ores, 383 | |||
Ingot Heating, Possible Injury by Great Speed, F. E. Bash, 589 | *IRRIGATION, Blue Nile Scheme, Bill for Loan Passed by House of Commons, 135 | ||
*Irrigation Reservoir in Ahmcdnagar District, Bombay, 635 | |||
Iron Oro Deposit Investigation by United States Geological Survey, 463 | *Irrigation Scheme for Mexico, 463 | ||
*Irrigation in South Africa from the Upper Modder River, 85 | |||
Lorraine Iron Ore for Export to Germany, French Price for, 463 | *Irrigation in South Africa : Utilising the Kalahari Lake, 135 | ||
*Italy, Investigation into Extent of Radioactive Substances, 85 | |||
Manganese Shortage : Additional Sources Indicated, 565 | |||
Ontario, Two New Steel Works being Built, 539 | |||
Pretoria Iron and Steel Industry, Proposed Extension, 565 | |||
Rusting of Steel having Copper Content, 85 | |||
Steel Boiler Plates in the Yangtze Valley, High Prices Paid, 35 | |||
Swedish Iron and Steel Industry, Low Output and Depression, 305 | |||
Swiss Steel Foundry, Electric Smelting of Scrap Iron, 437 | |||
Tata Steel Works, India : Renewed Contracts with Japan, 279 | |||
Titaniferous Iron | |||
Tunis Iron Exports to England, 231 | |||
Vancouver Company to Test Electric Smelting Process for Magnetite Ores, 383 | |||
IRRIGATION, Blue Nile Scheme, Bill for | |||
Loan Passed by House of Commons, 135 | |||
Irrigation Reservoir in Ahmcdnagar District, Bombay, 635 | |||
Irrigation Scheme for Mexico, 463 | |||
Irrigation in South Africa from the Upper Modder River, 85 | |||
Irrigation in South Africa : Utilising the Kalahari Lake, 135 | |||
Italy, Investigation into Extent of Radioactive Substances, 85 | |||
J | J | ||
JAMAICA, Loan for Roads and Other Constructional Work, 157 | *JAMAICA, Loan for Roads and Other Constructional Work, 157 | ||
*Japan, Mineral Statistics of, 255 | |||
Japan, Mineral Statistics of, 255 | *Japan, Submarine Tunnel to Replace Ferry between Railway Stations, 279 | ||
*Japan as a Trade Competitor, E. F. Crowe, 111 | |||
Japan, Submarine Tunnel to Replace Ferry between Railway Stations, 279 | *Japan’s Foreign Trade, Great Increase, 135 | ||
*Japanese New Monthly Journal, “The Transpacific,” 359 | |||
Japan as a Trade Competitor, E. F. Crowe, 111 | *Japanese Population and Trade in India, Rapid Growth, 333 | ||
*Java Fair at Bandoeng : British Section Inadvisable, 613 | |||
Japan’s Foreign Trade, Great Increase, 135 | *Java, Industrial Fair at, Important, 59 | ||
Japanese New Monthly Journal, “The Transpacific,” 359 | |||
Japanese Population and Trade in India, Rapid Growth, 333 | |||
Java Fair at Bandoeng : British Section Inadvisable, 613 | |||
Java, Industrial Fair at, Important, 59 | |||
K | K | ||
KAPOK, Buoyancy of, Results of Experiments, 85 | *KAPOK, Buoyancy of, Results of Experiments, 85 | ||
*“Kapok” for Life-saving Appliances at Sea, 157 | |||
*Kauri Forests in New Zealand, 35 | |||
*Kelp, Wet, Plant for Dealing with, 565 | |||
Kauri Forests in New Zealand, 35 | *Kinematograph Films Shown at the British Scientific Products Exhibition, 35 | ||
*King’s College : Old Students’ Association, 68 | |||
Kelp, Wet, Plant for Dealing with, 565 | *King’s College War Memorial, 255 | ||
*Korean Ores Largely Exploited by Japanese, 35 | |||
Kinematograph Films Shown at the British Scientific Products Exhibition, 35 | *Krupp Works Locomotive Output, 411 | ||
*Kwantung Factories for Sulphuric Acid, Soap, andc., 231 | |||
King’s College : Old Students’ Association, 68 | |||
King’s College War Memorial, 255 | |||
Korean Ores Largely Exploited by Japanese, 35 | |||
Krupp Works Locomotive Output, 411 | |||
Kwantung Factories for Sulphuric Acid, Soap, | |||
L | L | ||
LABOUR Costs and Mining Output Decline on the Rand, 181 | *LABOUR Costs and Mining Output Decline on the Rand, 181 | ||
*Lantern Slides for Lectures, Bennis and Co., 526 | |||
Lantern Slides for Lectures, Bennis and Co., 526 | *Lantern Slides for Lectures, Marshall, Sons and Co., 548 | ||
*Lead Factories in Belgium, German Treatment of, 383 | |||
Lantern Slides for Lectures, Marshall, Sons and Co., 548 | *Lead-Zinc-Iron Ores, Finely Disseminated, Difficulty in Making Clean Separation, 35 | ||
*Lead and Zinc Mines in the Lake Country, Projected Developments, 207 | |||
Lead Factories in Belgium, German Treatment of, 383 | *Leaks in Masonry Wall of Canal, Method of Stopping, 383 | ||
*Leather Belting : New Conditions of Sale, 147 | |||
Lead-Zinc-Iron Ores, Finely Disseminated, Difficulty in Making Clean Separation, 35 | *Lectures and Concerts to Workmen, Palmers, Hebburn-on-Tyne, 578 | ||
*Liffey, Proposed Tunnels Under, for Electric Mains and for Pedestrians, 207 | |||
Lead and Zinc Mines in the Lake Country, Projected Developments, 207 | *Light Intensity, Effect of Fog on, C. L. Utterback, 337 | ||
*Lighting in Factories and Workshops, Leon Gaster, 122 | |||
Leaks in Masonry Wall of Canal, Method of Stopping, 383 | *Lighting, Public and Private, Recent Developments in, W. C. Clinton, 421 | ||
*“Lightning Strikes,” Bill to Prevent, 419 | |||
Leather Belting : New Conditions of Sale, 147 Lectures and Concerts to Workmen, Palmers, Hebburn-on-Tyne, 578 | *Lignite Briquetting Factory in Canada, 613 | ||
*Lille, Exposition Internationale, andc., for Samples to Utilise in Reconstruction of Devastated Country, 613 | |||
Liffey, Proposed Tunnels Under, for Electric Mains and for Pedestrians, 207 | *Lithuania, Articles in Demand, 589 | ||
*Liverpool to Provide Storage for Oil Fuel for Merchant Steamers, 237 | |||
Light Intensity, Effect of Fog on, C. L. Utterback, 337 | *Local Government Board, Passing of, 11 | ||
*Lodge, Sir Oliver, Tidal Power versus Land Reclamation : Atomic Energy, Wasteful Use of, 613 | |||
Lighting in Factories and Workshops, Leon Gaster, 122 | *Longitude of the World to be Determined by Wireless Telegraphy, 515 | ||
*Lord Roberts’ Memorial Workshops, Some Results, 7 | |||
Lighting, Public and Private, Recent Developments in, W. C. Clinton, 421 | *Lumber Production in United States, 11 | ||
*Lysaght, John, Limited, New Australian Works, 539 | |||
Lignite Briquetting Factory in Canada, 613 | |||
Lille, Exposition Internationale, | |||
Samples to Utilise in Reconstruction of Devastated Country, 613 | |||
Lithuania, Articles in Demand, 589 | |||
Liverpool to Provide Storage for Oil Fuel for Merchant Steamers, 237 | |||
Local Government Board, Passing of, 11 | |||
Lodge, Sir Oliver, Tidal Power versus Land Reclamation : Atomic Energy, Wasteful Use of, 613 | |||
Longitude of the World to be Determined by Wireless Telegraphy, | |||
Lord Roberts’ Memorial Workshops, Some Results, 7 | |||
Lumber Production in United States, 11 | |||
Lysaght, John, Limited, New Australian Works, 539 | |||
M | M | ||
MACHINE Tools, Government Sale at High Prices, 34 | *MACHINE Tools, Government Sale at High Prices, 34 | ||
*Machine Tools, Suggestions for Common Standards in Certain Directions for Britain and America, 35 | |||
Machine Tools, Suggestions for Common Standards in Certain Directions for Britain and America, 35 | *Machine Tools, Use of, for Mechanical Accuracy; Egyptians, in 4700 B.C., were Beforehand with Whitworth, Professor W. M. F. Petrie, 47 | ||
*Madagascar, Hydro-electric Installation at Tamatave, 635 | |||
Machine Tools, Use of, for Mechanical Accuracy; | *Madras Engineering College Not Quite Ready, 231 | ||
*Madras Government Orders Survey and Report on Various Ports, 59 | |||
Egyptians, in 4700 | *Magnetic Sclerometer on Lean, 315 | ||
*Magnetic Surveys at Irthlingborough and Melton Mowbray, Investigation and Important Conclusions, 11 | |||
Madagascar, Hydro-electric Installation at Tamatave, 635 | *Manganese—see Iron and Steel | ||
*Maps from Aero-photographs, Disadvantages, 161 | |||
Madras Engineering College Not Quite Ready, 231 | *Marshall, Sons and Co., Lantern Slides for Lectures, 548 | ||
*Mechanical Transport Department’s Smart Work at Kempton Park, 11 | |||
Madras Government Orders Survey and Report on Various Ports, 59 | *Mexico City, Projected Exhibition of British Products, 231 | ||
*Micro-mechanism of the Ageing of Duralumin, Dr. Zay Jeffries, 255 | |||
Magnetic Sclerometer on | *Microscope : Its Design, Construction, and Application : A Symposium, 588 | ||
*Midland Laboratory Guild, 539 | |||
Magnetic Surveys at Irthlingborough and Melton Mowbray, Investigation and Important Conclusions, 11 | *Milk Churns Brought to Paddington Daily, 383 | ||
*Mills on the Thames for Extraction of Oil from Copra and Palm Nuts, 85 | |||
Manganese—see Iron and Steel | *Milne Earthquake Observatory, Work to be Carried on at Oxford, 231 | ||
*Mine in Michigan, Deepest in the World, 333 ; (Letter), 409 | |||
Maps from Aero-photographs, Disadvantages, 161 | *Mino Timber, The Preservation of, N. T. Williams, 47, 463 | ||
*Mineral Resources of the Empire : Monographs Committee of the Imperial Institute, 561 | |||
Marshall, Sons and Co., Lantern Slides for Lectures, 548 | *Mineral Wealth of St. Agnes, Cornwall, 489 | ||
*Minerals Development, 597 | |||
Mechanical Transport Department’s Smart Work at Kempton Park, 11 | *Miners Conveyed to and from Work at Doncaster, 35 | ||
*Miners’ Lamps, Home-office Invites Suggestions, 255 | |||
Mexico City, Projected Exhibition of British Products, 231 | *Mining Exhibition in South Africa, 534 | ||
*Mining Explosion in Staffordshire : Gas and Coal Dust, 462 | |||
Micro-mechanism of the Ageing of Duralumin, Dr. Zay Jeffries, 255 | *Mining, Non-ferrous, in the United Kingdom, Board of Trade Committee, 173, 383, 411, 437, 489, 565 | ||
*Mining at St. Ives, Cornwall, 565 | |||
Microscope : Its Design, Construction, and Application : A Symposium, 588 | *Motor Boat and Marine and Stationary Exhibition, International, 626 | ||
*Motor Car Engines, Weight of, Compared with Aero-Engines, 359 | |||
Midland Laboratory Guild, 539 | *Motor Car Weight Increase, Major F. Strickland, 207, 359 | ||
*Motor Cars, Lorries, and Cycles, Output from Government Transport Depot at Slough, 539 | |||
Milk Churns Brought to Paddington Daily, 383 | *Motor Cycle’s Mileage on a Gallon of Petrol, Ealing Trials, 255 | ||
*Motor Omnibuses, Involuntary Stops, Small Proportion of, 515 | |||
Mills on the Thames for Extraction of Oil from Copra and Palm Nuts, 85 | *Motor Spirit Replaced by Benzole and Alcohol, Captain Montgomery, 11 | ||
*Motor Spirit from Sugar Cane : Works at Nairobi, 157 | |||
Milne Earthquake Observatory, Work to | *Moving a Big Gas Container, 11 | ||
Mine in Michigan, Deepest in the World, 333 ; (Letter), 409 | |||
Mino Timber, The Preservation of, N. T. Williams, 47, 463 | |||
Mineral Resources of the Empire : Monographs Committee of the Imperial Institute, 561 | |||
Mineral Wealth of St. Agnes, Cornwall, 489 | |||
Minerals Development, 597 | |||
Mining Exhibition in South Africa, 534 | |||
Mining Explosion in Staffordshire : Gas and Coal Dust, 462 | |||
Mining, Non-ferrous, in the United Kingdom, Board of Trade Committee, 173, 383, 411, 437, 489, 565 | |||
Mining at St. Ives, Cornwall, 565 | |||
Motor Boat and Marine and Stationary Exhibition, International, 626 | |||
Motor Car Engines, Weight of, Compared with Aero-Engines, 359 | |||
Motor Car Weight Increase, Major F. Strickland, 207, 359 | |||
Motor Cars, Lorries, and Cycles, Output from Government Transport Depot at Slough, 539 | |||
Motor Cycle’s Mileage on a Gallon of Petrol, Ealing Trials, 255 | |||
Motor Omnibuses, Involuntary Stops, Small Proportion of, 515 | |||
Motor Spirit Replaced by Benzole and Alcohol, Captain Montgomery, 11 | |||
Motor Spirit from Sugar Cane : Works at Nairobi, 157 | |||
Moving a Big Gas Container, 11 | |||
N | N | ||
NANKING Experiments in Cultivation of American Cotton, 333 | *NANKING Experiments in Cultivation of American Cotton, 333 | ||
*National Factories for Sale, 46 | |||
National Factories for | *Nature, Jubilee of, 463 | ||
*Naval History Chair for University of London, 135 | |||
Nature, Jubilee of, 463 | *Necessity Not the Mother of Invention, 635 | ||
*New Zealand Coal Mines, Reported Nationalisation, 85 | |||
Naval History Chair for University of London, 135 | *New Zealand Hydro-electric Works Acquired by Dominion Government, 515 | ||
*News Letter for American Contractors’ Business, 111 | |||
Necessity Not the Mother of Invention, 635 | *Niagara Falls, Chemical Industries, Established and Prospective, 383 | ||
*Niagara Falls Power Development Begun in 1842, 635 | |||
New Zealand Coal Mines, Reported Nationalisation, 85 | *Nice, Reconstruction of Port, 463 | ||
*Nitrate Deposits in South African District, Costs of Commercial Production, 589 | |||
New Zealand Hydro-electric Works Acquired by Dominion Government, 515 | *Nitrate of Lime Factory in Norway, Largest Water Power Station in the World, 613 | ||
*Nitrates from Overseas for British Explosives, Urgent Need for Construction of Factory in England, James Young, 85 | |||
News Letter for American Contractors’ Business, 111 | *Nitrogen, Atmospheric, Experiments in Fixation of, 489 | ||
*Nitrogen, Atmospheric, Fixation of, Sale of Incomplete Government Factory, 539 | |||
Niagara Falls, Chemical Industries, Established and Prospective, 383 | *Nobel Prize Distribution Postponed till 1920, 85 | ||
*Non-ferrous Mining, Board of Trade Committee, 173, 383, 411, 437, 489, 565 | |||
Niagara Falls Power Development Begun in 1842, 635 | *Norway’s Imports of Motor Cars, Lorries, andc., Small Proportion from Great Britain, 585 | ||
Nice, Reconstruction of Port, 463 | |||
Nitrate Deposits in South African District, Costs of Commercial Production, 589 | |||
Nitrate of Lime Factory in Norway, Largest Water Power Station in the World, 613 | |||
Nitrates from Overseas for British Explosives, Urgent Need for Construction of Factory in England, James Young, 85 | |||
Nitrogen, Atmospheric, Experiments in Fixation of, 489 | |||
Nitrogen, Atmospheric, Fixation of, Sale of | |||
Incomplete Government Factory, 539 | |||
Nobel Prize Distribution Postponed till 1920, 85 | |||
Non-ferrous Mining, Board of Trade Committee, 173, 383, 411, 437, 489, 565 | |||
Norway’s Imports of Motor Cars, Lorries, | |||
O | |||
*OIL Depot at Belfast with View to Shipping and Electrical Requirements, 305 | |||
*Oilfield in West Norfolk, Development Leads to Brick and Glass Making, 207 | |||
*Oilfields of Athabaska, Wealth Confirmed by Old Records, 437 | |||
*Oil Fuel Immensely Cheaper than Coal in Far Eastern Ports, 515 | |||
*Oil Fuel Recommended in Substitution for Coal in France, 565 | |||
*Oil Fuel Storage at Liverpool, 237 | |||
*Oil at the Hardstoft Well, Increased Flow, 437, 463 | |||
*Oil in Midlothian, 359 | |||
*Oil in Northern Rhodesia, 231 | |||
*Oil Tanks for Naval Supply, 81 | |||
*Oil Wells, Government, in Derbyshire, Progress and Prospects, 463 | |||
*Old Centralians, Address, andc., 196 | |||
*Olympia, Shipping, Engineering and Machinery Exhibition, 11 | |||
*Omnibus Fares Increase Justified by Increased Costs, 10 | |||
*Omnibuses, Overloaded : Factor of Safety, 539 | |||
Profit-sharing and Labour Co-partnership, Government Report, 111 | P | ||
*PAINT on Structural Steel, Quantities, 84 | |||
*“Painter” in Water Off the Coast of Peru, 539 | |||
*Paints for Bearings and Machinery, Research into Behaviour of Double Iodides of Mercury, andc., 305 | |||
*Panama Canal Negotiated by Dreadnoughts, 135 | |||
*Paper Import Restrictions Removed, 255 | |||
*Paris Institution for Centralisation of Trade Projected, 437 | |||
*Patent-office Examiners, 242 | |||
*Patent-office Library Hours, Petition for Lengthening, 613 | |||
*Patent Owners and Manufacturers, Now Association, 11 | |||
*Patents in Poland, 231 | |||
*Patents Prolongation, British Chambers of Commerce Resolution, 59 | |||
*Patents and Trade Marks in Enemy Countries, Board of Trade Authorisation of Fees, 35 | |||
*Patents and Trade Marks : International Congress to Discuss Question, 111 | |||
*Patentees, Imperial Institute of, 528 | |||
*Peace Celebration Dinner, G. A. Harvey and Co., 110 | |||
*Peat Resources of Irish Bogs, 539 | |||
*Petrograd Engineering Factories Suffer from Bolshevist Rule, 463 | |||
*Petrol Drums, Supposed Empty, Fatal Explosions, 207 | |||
*Petrol Handling in France, 207 | |||
*Petroleum, Boring for, at West Calder, 255 | |||
*Petroleum Executive : Development of Oil Shale Industry in United Kingdom, 383 | |||
*Petroleum Investigations in Mexico, 411, 463 | |||
*Petroleum in Mexico, Output, Potential and Actual, 437 | |||
*Petroleum in New Guinea as Possible Repayment for Australia’s War Outlay, 134 | |||
*Phosphate Mines, Morocco, 565 | |||
*Photographic Development, Process for Gum- bichromate Prints, 35 | |||
*Photography Aided by Refrigeration, 157 | |||
*Pipes, Casting Iron, by Centrifugal System, 613 | |||
*Platinum Mining Improvement, Increased Russian Output Expected, 85 | |||
*Poland to Obtain Certain Chemical Products from Czecho-Slovakia, 589 | |||
*Poland’s Economic Resources, 539 | |||
*Polish Government Loan in the United States, 589 | |||
*Pontoons, Flexible, in Ship Salvage, Successful Experiments, 279 | |||
*Port of Sagua, Cuba, Improvement by Dredging, 613 | |||
*Portland Cement Factory in Buenos Aires District, 383 | |||
*Portland Cement Factories and Potash Recovery, 411 | |||
*Portuguese Proposed Purchase of British Wireless Installation at Madeira, 613 | |||
*Power Costs at Rhodesian Gold Mine, Coal Cost, 231 | |||
*Power,.Electric—see also Electrical Matters | |||
*Power Transmission by Steel Belts on Magnetised Pulleys, 35 | |||
*Profit-sharing and Labour Co-partnership, Government Report, 111 | |||
Q | Q | ||
QUEENSLAND’S Mineral Output, 411 | *QUEENSLAND’S Mineral Output, 411 | ||
*Queensland State Iron and Steel Industry : Suggested By-product Production, 437 | |||
Queensland State Iron and Steel Industry : | *Queensland University Lectureship, 268 | ||
Suggested By-product Production, 437 | |||
Queensland University Lectureship, 268 | |||
R | R | ||
RADIUM Discoveries in Canada, 565 | *RADIUM Discoveries in Canada, 565 | ||
*Radium Production in the United States, 305 | |||
Radium Production in the United States, 305 | *Railless Electric Traction Service of Shanghai, 411 | ||
Railless Electric Traction Service of Shanghai, 411 | |||
RAILWAYS AND TRAMWAYS : | RAILWAYS AND TRAMWAYS : | ||
Accident, Derailment on London and North-Western, 181 | *- Accident, Derailment on London and North- Western, 181 | ||
*- Accident, Fatal, on French Railway, 279 | |||
Accident, Fatal, on French Railway, 279 | *- Accident Reports, Board of Trade, 437 | ||
*- Accidents, Fatal, to Passenger Trains, A Year’s Immunity from, 59 | |||
Accident Reports, Board of Trade, 437 | *- Accidents, Level Crossing, on Southern Pacific Railroad, 135 | ||
*- Allocation of Goods Traffic and Hardships of Traders, 85 | |||
Accidents, Fatal, to Passenger Trains, A Year’s Immunity from, 59 | *- Ambulance Train Traffic on the Great Western Railway, 207 | ||
*- American Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen and Enginemen : Proposed Cooperative Stores on Large Scale, 135 | |||
Accidents, Level Crossing, on Southern Pacific Railroad, 135 | *- American Express Company, Packing Regulations, 359 | ||
*- American Locomotives, 150, for Italian Railways, 35 | |||
Allocation of Goods Traffic and Hardships of Traders, 85 | *- American Railway Associations Convention : Depreciation in Freight Cars, 135 | ||
*- American Saw Mills Supplying Sleepers for British and French Railways, 35, 85 | |||
Ambulance Train Traffic on the Great Western Railway, 207 | *- American Troop Movement ; Bailway Figures, 111 | ||
RAILWAYS AND TRAMWAYS (continued): | |||
American Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen and Enginemen : Proposed Cooperative Stores on Large Scale, 135 | *- Annual Reports of Railways, Statutory Form of Account to be Resumed, 111 | ||
*- Appointmentsand Staff Changes, 11, 85, 135, 207, 230, 255, 279, 437, 463, 515 | |||
American Express Company, Packing Regulations, 359 | *- Arabia, Narrow-gauge Railway, Aden to Lahej, 488 | ||
*- Armstrong, Sir W. G., Whitworth and Co., First Main Line Locomotive Built, Trial of, 437 | |||
American Locomotives, 150, for Italian | *- Athens, Existing Travel Facilities, Overland to Mediterranean Ports and Thence by Steamer, 279 | ||
*- Baldwin Locomotive Works Change of President, 35 | |||
Railways, 35 | *- Banbury Station Free Buffet War Work, 411 | ||
*- Blackpool Traffic “ Rationing,” 135 | |||
American Railway Associations Convention : Depreciation in Freight Cars, 135 | *- Blandford Railway, Net Cost, 231 | ||
*- Bolivia’s National Resources and Lack of Transport Facilities, 305 | |||
American Saw | *- “Bradshaw’s Continental Guido,” Death of Editor, 333 | ||
*- Brakesman’s Comfort on the El Paso and South-Western Railroad, 489 | |||
American Troop Movement ; Railway Figures, 111 | *- Brazil Commission on State Railway Standardisation, 515 | ||
*- Brighton Tramway Track Renewals Cost, 180 | |||
*- British Railway Companies’ Weekly Notices to Operating Staff, 565 | |||
*- Buenos Aires and Pacific Railway Finance, 539 | |||
*- Buenos Aires Railway, Oil Fuel Supply Cheaper than Coal, 515 | |||
*- “Calling-on” Signal on Different Railways’ 515 | |||
*- Canadian Government Acquisition of Grand Trunk and other Railways, Terms, 321, 333, 411 | |||
*- Canadian Government Railroad Commissioner as Finance Minister, 305 | |||
*- Canadian Pacific Railway, Reputation for Courtesy, 359 | |||
*- Canadian Pacific Railway, Transport of Returned Troops, Record Figures, 111 | |||
*- Canal Traffic Tonnage Statistics, 565 | |||
*- Carriages Turned into Living-rooms for Railway Workmen, 255 | |||
*- Cartage of Goods by Railways, When Remunerative and Otherwise, 59 | |||
*- Central London and London and South- Western, Suggested New Connection, 613 | |||
*- Ceylon Government Railways and Coal Economy, 359 | |||
*- Charing Cross Underground Station ; Quarter Million Passengers and Additional Stairways, 497 | |||
*- Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul Railroad, Track Kept Level by Adjustment of Pontoon Bridge, 35 | |||
*- Chicago Railway Services, Electrification, Agreement between City and Railway Company, 35 | |||
*- Chili State Railways, Electrification of 2300 Miles, 305 | |||
*- Clock, Electrical, Four-face, for Waterloo, 613 | |||
*- “Closed” Stations and Platform Tickets, Protest at Manchester, 589 | |||
*- Coal Bill of Railways with Six Shillings a Ton Increase, 85, 613 | |||
*- Coastwise Traffic Decline, Subsidy and E dimated Cost, 635 | |||
*- Coast Traffic—see also Sea-borne | |||
*- Collision, Buffer Stop, at Cannon-street, 59, 359 | |||
*- Collision, Buffer Stop, at Crowe, 515, 565 ; Suggested Precaution for Bay Lines, 613 | |||
*- Collision, Buffer Stop, at Haverhill, Great Eastern Railway, 589 | |||
*- Collision, at Cheshire Lines Manchester Station, 463 | |||
*- Collision, Due to Gale, near Chesterfield, 635 | |||
*- Collision, Fatal, on the Caledonian Railway, 359 | |||
*- Collision, at Huddersfield, 359 | |||
*- Collision, at Hull, Report, 231 | |||
*- Collision, between London, Brighton and South Coast Train and Light Engine at Streatham, 463 | |||
*- Collision, on Midland Great Western Railway, 539 | |||
*- Collision, on the New York Central Railway, Supposed Caused by Tramp Stowaway, 231 | |||
*- Collision, at Preston Station, Report, 424 | |||
*- Collision, at Prestwick, Glasgow and South- Western Line, 539 | |||
*- Collision, at Selby between Great Eastern and Great Northern Trains, 463 | |||
*- Commercial Travellers’ Privileges, Certain Restrictions to be Retained, 539 | |||
*- Commercial Travellers’ Privileges Still Suspended, 59 | |||
*- Congestion of Railways and Docks as a War Consequence, 207 | |||
*- Congestion of Railways and Wagon Shortage ; High Sea Rates Cause Transference of Conveyance to Railways, 92, 207 | |||
*- Cork Railway Connections, Temporary, Request for Permanent Maintenance, 539 | |||
*- Corrugated Fire-box, New Type, in U.S.A., 255 | |||
*- Cycle Carriage on the District Railway, 207 | |||
*- Death of Mr. G. P. Culverwell, 489 | |||
*- Deatli of Mr. Charles Mattathias Jacobs, 359 | |||
*- Death of Mr. William Kirtley, 411 | |||
*- Death of Sir Joseph Lawrence, 489 | |||
*- Death of Mr. Frank Potter, Great Western Railway Manager, 85, 111, 135 | |||
*- Death of Railway Commissioner to the Victorian Government, 207 | |||
*- Death of Lord Rathmore, 206 | |||
*- Death of Mr. H. Cuff Smart, 489 | |||
*- Derailment at Acton Bridge, Report Findings, Fire from Gas Cylinder, 305 | |||
*- Derailment on the District Railway, 255 | |||
*- Derailment, Fatal, in France, 207 | |||
*- Derailment, Fatal, on the Midland Railway, 359, 411, 489 | |||
*- Derailment Outrage in Ireland, 181, 359 | |||
*- Derbyshire Peak, Scheme for Railway, 635 | |||
*- Dover and Calais Service ai/d Demobilisation, 383 | |||
*- Dublin Mail Boat Service, Changes, 255 | |||
*- East Indian Railway Company, Extension of Contract for Working under Consideration, 111 | |||
*- East Indian Railway Fatal Collision, 35 | |||
RAILWAYS AND TRAMWAYS (con- tinued): | |||
*- East Indian Railway Company, Government Contract Extension ; Conversion Rate for Rupee, 370 | |||
*- East Indian Railway Company, Increased Carriage of Coals and other Goods, 157 | |||
*- East Indian Railway, New Chief Engineer, 135 | |||
*- East London Railway Opening, Jubilee, 565 | |||
*- Edinburgh and Glasgow Traffic, Respective Routes, 515 | |||
*- Eight-hour Day Adoption and Difficulties, 11 | |||
*- Electric Lighting for Railways to Prevent Fires, 231 | |||
*- Electric Locomotives for the Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul Railway, Tests, 589 | |||
*- Electricity Supply Bill, Railway Generating Stations and Main Transmission Lines Exempted from Transfer under Clause 7, 135 | |||
*- Electrification of Italian Railways by Italo- American Syndicate, 565 | |||
*- Electrification of Main Line Railroads, Statistics for U.S.A., W. B. Potter and S. T. Dodd, 85 | |||
*- Electrification on North-Eastern Main Line Section and on Loop Line, 463 | |||
*- Electrification and Rebuilding of French Railways, 117 | |||
*- Electrification Schemes on Various British Main Lines, 539 | |||
*- Engineers as General Managers, 255 | |||
*- Enginemen’s Equalised Pay and Unequalised Hours and Responsibility, 489 | |||
*- Enginemen to have Working Clothes Provided Free, 35 | |||
*- Engines, Robinson Design, Transferred from War-office to Various Railways, 135 | |||
*- Entre Rios Railway, Fuel Question, 411, 437 | |||
*- Entre Rios Railway, Record Growth in Receipts and Ton Mileage, 463 | |||
*- Eyesight of Drivers and Firemen, 35, 411 | |||
*- Eyesight Test, 279 | |||
*- Fares and Freight Rates ; Question of Ending Subsidy to Railways, 181 | |||
*- Fares Revision on the London Underground Railways, 255 | |||
*- Federated Malay States Railways Engine, 383 | |||
*- Federated Malay States Railways Increased Maintenance Costs, 305 | |||
*- Fifty Years’ Work with One Company, 181 | |||
*- Films Showing Railway Work, 85 | |||
*- Fires on Railways ; Gas versus Electricity, 231, 305 | |||
*- Fish and the Railways, 58 | |||
*- Flag Decoration of Omnibuses, Trams, and Trains of London Electric Railways and Allied Companies to Celebrate Employees’ Return from the Army, 11 | |||
*- Folkestone-Dover Line Closed since 1914 and now Reopened, 111 | |||
*- Foodstuffs, Perishable, Carriage Arrangements, 613 | |||
*- France, Railway Accidents in Three Months, 383 | |||
*- Freight Cars Depreciation in America, 135 | |||
*- Freight Rates on Railways and Sea-borne Goods, 157 | |||
*- French Flat-bottomed Rails Sold to South Africa, 111 | |||
*- French Officials Visit United States for Study of Electrification of Railways, 35 | |||
*- French Railways, Reconstruction and Electrification, 117 | |||
*- French State Railways Derailment, 207 | |||
*- Fuel Question on South American Railways, Oil Displacing Coal, 411, 437 | |||
*- Galway (Barna) Railway and Harbour Bill, 613 | |||
*- Gas on Railways as a Cause of Fire, 231, 305 | |||
*- Gattie System of Handling Goods, Committee of Inquiry, 35, 58, 157, 279, 333 | |||
*- Gauges on Railways, Three in All, 59 | |||
*- Gloucester Railway Carriage and Wagon Company, Eight Men with Company for Fifty Years, 181 | |||
*- Golf as an Aid to Railroad Working, 489 | |||
*- Goods and Passenger Traffic, Estimate of Revenue Asked for, 11 | |||
*- Government’s Offer to Railwaymen, 635 | |||
*- Government and Railwavmen’s Unions, 207, 383 | |||
*- Great Eastern Railway, Slight Collision with Buffer Stop, 333 | |||
*- Great Northern Expresses, Acceleration, 539 | |||
*- Great Northern Railway Extension, Change of Scheme, 635 | |||
*- Great Northern Railway, Retirement of Chief Traffic Manager, 135 | |||
*- Great Western Railway Divisional Engineer at Shrewsbury, 11 | |||
*- Great Western Railway General Manager, Death of Mr. Frank Potter ; New Appointment, 85, 111, 135 | |||
*- Great Western Railway, Mileage Increase of, 635 | |||
*- Hand-to-mouth Principle, Consignments Smaller and More Frequent than in Prewar Days, 35 | |||
*- Handling Goods and Traffic, Mr. A. W. Gattie’s Proposals, Board of Trade Committee to Investigate, 35, 58, 157 | |||
*- Hull Station and the Gattie System, 157 | |||
*- Improved Service between London, Birmingham, andc., and Wales, 383 | |||
*- India-office Negotiations on Locomotive Building, 565 | |||
*- Indian Railway Conference and Standardised Wagons, 231 | |||
*- Indian Railways and Home-made Wagons, 231 | |||
*- Irish Transport Director, Contemplated Appointment, 111 | |||
*- Jamaica Railways, Question of Conversion from Steam to Electrical Working, 11 | |||
*- Japan and Railway Electrification, Locomotives from Germany Compared with Home-made, 92 | |||
*- Krupp’s New Locomotive Works and Prussian State Railways, 333 | |||
*- Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway “Rationing,” 135 | |||
*- Letterkenny and Burtonport Railway, Improvements in Line and Working, 11 | |||
*- Level Crossing Accidents on Southern Pacific Railroad, 135 | |||
*- Light Railway Commissioners: Orders Applied for and Confirmed, 135, 589 | |||
RAILWAYS AND TRAMWAYS (continued) : | RAILWAYS AND TRAMWAYS (continued) : | ||
*- Locomotive Building Design in America, Question of Standardisation or Otherwise, 35 | |||
*- Locomotive Building in India, 565 | |||
*- Locomotive Situation in France, 215 | |||
*- Locomotives from France, Cost of Fifty, 613 | |||
*- Locomotives for France from United States in War Time, 515 | |||
*- Locomotives, Mr. Robinson’s Design, Lying Idle ; Possible Explanation, 333, 613 | |||
*- Locomotives and Rolling Stock Sent Overseas during the War, 85 | |||
*- Locomotives for South Africa to be Built in Canada and United States instead of United Kingdom, 111 | |||
*- Locomotives and Wagons Built at Woolwich, 437 | |||
*- Locomotives and Wagons Stored in the Open, Question and Answer, 207 | |||
*- Lodging Allowance to Travelling Trainmen, Revision, 85 | |||
*- London and North-Western Coach Derailed, 181 | |||
*- London and North-Western’s Greenore Service New Steamers, 463 | |||
*- London and North-Western Railway Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Buffet, 207 | |||
*- London and North-Western Running Superintendent, Changes, 85 | |||
*- London and North-Western War Memorial, 463 | |||
*- London and Paris, Day Passenger Service Resumed by Brighton Railway Company, 35 | |||
*- London and Paris, Time-table of Connections, 437 | |||
*- London Railways and Extension of Electrification, 59 | |||
*- London, Railways Running Into, Present Percentage of Pre-war Services, 85 | |||
*- London and South-Western Suburban Services Improvements, 613 | |||
*- Londonderry and Lough Swilly Railway Manager Thanked for Assistance to Navy During War, 142 | |||
*- Lorries May be Adopted by Railways, But Not by the State, 635 | |||
*- Lorries, War-office, for Conveyance of Railway Goods, 111, 157, 635 | |||
*- Lorries—see also Transport, Ministry of | |||
*- Madrid Metropolitan Electric Underground Railway Opened, 437 | |||
*- Manchester and Oldham Section of the Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway, 489 | |||
Brighton | *- Marseilles Projected Underground Railway, 489 | ||
*- Mechanical Stokers on United States Locomotives, Increased Numbers, 157 | |||
*- Meeting Trains on United States Railways, A Fifty Years’ Old Rule, 589 | |||
*- Melbourne Suburban Railways, Electrification, 635 | |||
*- Mersey Dock and Harbour Board, Change of Manager, 437 | |||
*- Metropolitan District Railway : Consequences of Rails Scarcity, 85 | |||
*- Metropolitan District Railway’s New Cars, 59 | |||
*- Metropolitan Railway’s Increased Service, 11 | |||
*- Midland Great Western Railway—see Mullingar | |||
*- Midland Railway Steamship Service between Heysham and Belfast, 565 | |||
*- Miners’ Demonstration at Blackpool, Special Trains and Numbers, 59 | |||
*- Motor Lorries Lent to Railways by Government, 255, 437—see also Lorries | |||
*- Moving Platforms on the New York Subway, 463 | |||
*- Mullingar and Kells Railway : Projected Connection between West and North of Ireland, Avoiding Dublin, 569, 613 | |||
*- National Railroad Question of To-day, C. A. Morse, 94 | |||
*- National Union of Railwaymen, Administration Changes, 539 | |||
*- Nationalisation of Railways and Shareholders’ Interests, 59 | |||
*- North British Railway Locomotives Renamed After War Service Overseas, 565 | |||
*- North British Railway’s Locomotive Loss by Fire at Cowlairs, 11 | |||
*- North-Eastern Railway Collision at Hull, Report, 231 | |||
*- North-Eastern Railway, Electrification on 489 | |||
*- North-Eastern Railway Goods Traffic : Information for Gattie System Committee, 333 | |||
*- North-Eastern Railway, New Deputy Manager, 11 | |||
*- North-Eastern Railway’s Running Superintendent, 463 | |||
*- Nottingham Station Entrance of the Midland Railway, 207, 279, 489 | |||
*- Official Appointments of Sir Eric Geddes and Mr. H. G. Burgess, 207 | |||
*- Oil Fuel to Replace Coal and Wood on South American Railways, 411, 437 | |||
*- Omnibus Men’s Splendid Service on Outbreak of War, 411 | |||
*- Overcrowded London Trains and Electrification, 59 | |||
*- Parcel Loss on London and North-Western Railway, Case Lost by Railway on Appea 135 | |||
*- Parcels Rates Increase, 231 | |||
*- Paris, Lyons and Mediterranean Railway, Electrification between Clermont Ferrand and Nimes, 111 | |||
*- Paris Metropolitaine Finance, A Deficit, 305 | |||
*- Paris Metropolitaine, Great Increase in Tickets Issued, 231 | |||
*- Passengers’ Luggage, 100 lb. Limit Question, 169 | |||
*- Pennsylvania Railroad, New Mallet Engine 255 | |||
*- Pensioned Railway Servants and Higher Cost of Living, 463 | |||
*- Piecework and Similar Systems on Railways, Fresh Agreement, 59 | |||
*- Plans and Tracings as Hospital Bandages, Historic Signatures, 305 | |||
*- Plumb Plan for Railway Operation, 231 | |||
*- Pontoon Swing Bridge Adjusted with Rise and Fall of the Mississippi, to Keep Railway Track Level, 35 | |||
*- Port Congestion, Sir Auckland Geddes on, 181 | |||
*- Post-office (London) Railway, Completion of Running Tunnel, Delayed Opening, 11 | |||
at | |||
on the New York | |||
RAILWAYS AND TRAMWAYS (continued) : | RAILWAYS AND TRAMWAYS (continued) : | ||
*- Queensland Government Railway and Automatic Signals, 489 | |||
*- Race Meetings and Train Services, 176 | |||
*- Railway Benevolent Institution, Record Receipts, 11 | |||
*- Railway Bills Deposited, Decreased Number, 613 | |||
*- Railway Clearing House, New Secretary, 613 | |||
*- Railway Companies Association Circular to Proprietors Explaining Government Connection and Future Prospects, 635 | |||
*- Railway Employees, Increased Numbers, 613 | |||
*- RAILWAY EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE : | |||
*-- Blandford Railway Handed Over to Executive Committee, 231 | |||
*-- Collieries and Wagon Shortage, Measures Taken, 135 | |||
*-- Continental Services, Efficiency Dependent on Government Requirements, 157 | |||
*-- Foreign Goods and Coastwise Traffic and Charges, 207 | |||
*-- Holidays and Pay of Clerks, Stationmasters, andc., New Scheme, 305 | |||
*-- Sunday Duty Pay, 39 | |||
*-- Wages Agreement between Government and Unions, 207 | |||
*- Railway Management and Ill-informed Criticism, 589 | |||
*- Railway Material Exports, Statistics, 11, 181, 231, 383, 589, 635 | |||
*- Railwaymen and Piecework Question, 59 | |||
*- Railwaymen’s Nine Hours Interval between Work, 94 | |||
*- Railwaymen’s Unions, Probable Amalgamation, 59 | |||
*- Railway Working Results to End of August, 437 | |||
*- Rates and Strikes, 515 | |||
*- “Rationing” Traffic to Blackpool, 135 | |||
*- Record Passenger Traffic on London and on New York Local Railways, Comparison, 11 | |||
*- Richborough, Cost of Works at, and Future of the Port, 59 | |||
*- Rolling Stock Cost, Pre-war and Post-war Prices Compared, 489 | |||
*- Rolling Stock Deficiencies as a War Consequence, 565 | |||
*- Rolling Stock for War Service Abroad, Questions Arising, 157 | |||
*- Russia, South-East, and Turkestan, Railway, Communication Opened, 463 | |||
*- “Safety First” Movement, Originator in this Country, 255 | |||
*- Safety First ; Records of Immunity from Accident, 411 | |||
*- St. Just (Falmouth) Ocean Wharves and Railways Bill, 111 | |||
*- St. Paul Station, Second Largest in the United States, 359 | |||
*- Sea-borne Goods Charges and Railway Congestion, 92, 207 | |||
*- Season Tickets during the Strike, 463 | |||
*- Season Tickets, Enamelled, Proposal by the Metropolitan Railway Company, 279 | |||
*- Season Tickets, Monthly, Resumed, 255 | |||
*- Severn Tunnel, Goods Traffic Increase since Pre-war Time, 635 | |||
*- Shanghai to Build its own Tramcars, 231 | |||
*- Shropshire, Two New Railways, Conferences on the Proposition, 589 | |||
*- Signals, Automatic and Block, in the United States, 333 | |||
*- Sinai Railway Built by Engineer Railwaymen, 207 | |||
*- Single-line Tokens and Starting Signals, Suggested Precaution, 613 | |||
*- Sleepers from United States for British and French Railways, 35, 85 | |||
*- Smoking in Hospitals, Railway Employees’ Pipe Renovation Work for Soldiers, 207 | |||
*- Snow Closes Transandine Railway for Five Months, 565 | |||
*- South African Locomotive Orders Lost to United Kingdom, 111 | |||
*- South African Railway Rates Increase, 565 | |||
*- South American Railways Fuel—see Fuel South-Eastern and Chatham Railway Accident, Result of Inquiry, 157 | |||
*- South-Eastern and Chatham Railway Uses Twenty-four Hours’ Timing, 255 | |||
*- South Indian Railway Steamers Worked at a Loss, 515 | |||
*- South Wales and Wagon Delays, 635 | |||
*- Standardised Wagons for India, 231 | |||
*- Steamship, Railway, Services-—see also Ships | |||
*- Strike, Government Direct Cost, 437 | |||
*- Strike and Industrial Communications by Railway, 383 | |||
*- Strike, Parliamentary Debate Suggested, 437 | |||
*- Strike and Passenger Traffic, 383 | |||
*- Strike of Railway Shopmen in America, 355, 383 | |||
*- Strike and Volunteer Assistance, Railway Companies’ Resolutions in Appreciation, 463 | |||
*- Subsidy to Railways and Question of Freight Rates, 181 | |||
*- Summer Time in America Causes an Hour’s Train Stoppage, 565 | |||
*- Swedish State Railway Electrification, Time and Cost Estimate, 111 | |||
*- Swiss Surcharge on Tickets for France, Due to Exchange Rate, 613 | |||
*- Thomas, Mr. J. H., on Government Conciliation Scheme, 535 | |||
*- Tokyo, Projected Railway Electrification. Locomotive Difficulties, 92 | |||
*- Trades Unions, and Railway Control, 539 | |||
*- Traffic Allocation to a Given Company, Inconveniences, 157 | |||
*- Traffic Difficulties, Offer of War-office Lorries 111, 157 | |||
*- Train and Omnibus, Increased Accommodation, 411 | |||
*- Transport Committee (Metropolitan Area) Progress, 59 ; Report, 181 | |||
*- Transport of Goods Delay, Suggested Remedy, 73 | |||
*- TRANSPORT, MINISTRY OF : | |||
*-- Congestion at Terminals and Ports, Cause, and Steps Taken to Remedv, 137 | |||
*-- Definition of Word “Possession,” 181 | |||
*-- Electricity Bill, New Powers, and the Ministry of Transport, 539 | |||
*-- Goods Rates Increase, 279 | |||
*-- Information Required from Railway and other Authorities, 333 | |||
RAILWAYS AND TRAMWAYS (continued) : | RAILWAYS AND TRAMWAYS (continued) : | ||
*- TRANSPORT, MINISTRY OF (continued) | |||
*-- Irish County Councils’ Request for Irish Committee for Transport in Ireland, 359 | |||
*-- Irish Director-General of Transport, 489 | |||
*-- Locomotives of Various Types Built in Great Britain for Use in France, Allocated to British Railways, 539 | |||
*-- London Traffic, Special Committee, 255, 359, 463 | |||
*-- Minister’s Title Changed to Minister of Transport, 135 | |||
*-- Motor Lorries Lent by Government, 255, 437 | |||
*-- Number of Ministry Staff, 437 | |||
*-- Powers of other Departments, Transference to Ministry of Transport, 279, 305 | |||
*-- Return of Locomotives and Wagons Lent to France, 411, 437 | |||
*-- Revision of Rates, andc., Committee to Advise before Action, 415, 437, 589 | |||
*-- Rolling Stock Position ; Figures in Preparation by Ministry, 515 | |||
*-- Royal Assent to Bill, 181 | |||
*-- Sir Eric Geddes on Privately Owned Wagons, 85 | |||
*-- Transport, Institute of, 489 | |||
*-- Transport, Railway, Papers Read at the British Association Meeting, 279 | |||
*-- Trucks at Avonmouth, 38 to Replace 482, 181 | |||
*-- Tunnel Under the Solent ; Address to Ministry Suggested, 383 | |||
*-- Wagon Building, Government and Private, 437 | |||
*-- Wagon Ownership, Analysis, 539 | |||
*-- Wagons, Privately Owned and Otherwise, Comparison of Tonnage Carried, 181 | |||
*- TRAVELLING Vouchers for Members of Parliament, Question of, 157, 181 | |||
*- Twenty-four Hours’ Timing : | |||
*-- Home Secretary Appoints Committee to Consider the Question, 333 | |||
*-- South - Eastern and Chatham Adopts System, 255 | |||
*- Uganda Government Railway, Proposed Increase of Fares, 489 | |||
*- “Underground” Posters to Explain Increase in Working Cost, 189 | |||
*- Underground Railway Window Posters, 515 | |||
*- Uniforms of Underground and Omnibus Employees, Huge Cost Increase, 181 | |||
*- United States Exports of Steel Rails, Fishplates, andc., to Various Countries, 515 | |||
*- UNITED STATES RAILWAYS : | |||
*-- Agreement between Administration and Companies, Difficulties in Adjustment, 165 | |||
*-- Appeal for Economy in Use of Fuel and Stores, 11 | |||
*-- Demobilisation and Passenger Equipment, 383 | |||
*-- Employees, Statistics, 613 | |||
*-- Federal Control Removal from Railways, 489, 515 | |||
*-- Freight Cars Orders Delayed, but Good Supply, 463 | |||
*-- Inventory of Supplies and Material Prior to Return of Railways to Private Management, 383 | |||
*-- Pennsylvania Company’s Fast Train Restored, 35 | |||
*-- Railroad Bill, Senator Cummins as Promoter, 515 | |||
*-- Railway Industry Shown in Diagram, E. B. Leigh, 111 | |||
*-- Railway Operation and the Plumb Plan, 231 | |||
*-- Railway Revenue and Expenditure, 305 | |||
*-- Ratio of Expenditure to Recipts in 1913 and 1918, 85 | |||
*-- Sleepers, 4,000,000, Ordered from Oregon and Washington Sawmills, 35, 85 | |||
*-- Strike of Railway Shopmen, 355, 383 | |||
*-- War Department Purchases for France Taken Over by Railroad Administration, 85 | |||
*-- Women Employees on United States Railways, Increase up to Armistice, Reduction Since, 260 | |||
*- Victorian Government Railway Commissioners, An Appointment and a Death, 207 | |||
*- Wagon Building and Repair ; Compensation Question, 185 | |||
*- Wagon Delays in South Wales, 635 | |||
*- Wagon Detention in Excess of Time Allowed, Statistics, 635 | |||
*- Wagon, Railway, Ownership, Analysis, 539 | |||
*- Wagon Shortage and Colliery Stoppages, 135 | |||
*- Wagon Shortage, Relief by Government Motor Lorries, 111, 157 | |||
*- Wagons, Common User System, in this Country and in United States, 589 | |||
*- Wagons, Privately Owned and Otherwise, Census, 181, 589 | |||
*- Wagons Used in France Out of Gauge for English Railways, 613 | |||
*- Wagons from Woolwich Arsenal ; None Yet Delivered, 565 | |||
*- War Bonus of Officers, 279 | |||
*- War Lorries for Relief of Dock Congestion, Cost, 635 | |||
*- War Lorries for Relief of Dock Congestion Not a Success, 635 | |||
*- Ways and Communications Bill—see Transport | |||
*- Willesden, Railway Property in, Rateable Value, 279 | |||
*- Women on Railway Work, Diminishing Number Pending Men’s Demobilisation, 565 | |||
*- Women on Railway Work, War Cabinet Committee, 72 | |||
*- Workmen’s Fares and Trains Still as in Prewar Time, 59 | |||
*- York and Newcastle ; Main and Loop Line Electrification on the North-Eastern Railway, 489 | |||
*RAINFALL Data, British, Continuance of Publication, 85 | |||
*Rainfall, Record, in Manila, 589 | |||
*Rangefinders, Progress in, Dr. A. Barr, 111 | |||
*Rangoon Dock Construction Postponed, Erosion Works Projected, 635 | |||
*Ransome, Lewis, Accident, 382 | |||
*Redmayne, Sir Richard, Returns to Post as Chief Inspector of Mines, 463 | |||
*Refractory Materials Section of the Ceramic Society ; Various Meetings, 383 | |||
*Refrigerating Plant at Tientsin, 463 | |||
*Refrigerating Plants, Small, Successful Manufacture of, in Australia, 463 | |||
*Refrigeration to Reduce Glare in Photographing Metal, 157 | |||
*Refrigerator Fleet for Italy, Mostly German, 489 | |||
*Refuse Collecting and Separating Screen in Hampstead, 111 | |||
*Reinforced Concrete Columns, Experiments with Various Forms of Protective Covering, W. A. Hull, 181 | |||
*Reinforced Concrete Flag-pole, 157 | |||
*Review of the Foreign Press, 528 | |||
*Rhodesia Broken Hill Mines, Additional Pump, 157 | |||
*Rhone Development—see Electrical Matters | |||
*Richborough, Cost of Works at, and Future of the Port, 59 | |||
*Roads, Slippery Condition Due to Tar, andc., Committee of Investigation, 613 | |||
*Rock Drilling Tests and Triumphs in South Africa, 181 | |||
*Royal Agricultural Society, Trials of Ploughs and Tractors, 635 | |||
*Royal Artillery War Commemoration Book, 452 | |||
S | |||
*SAFETY in Factories, Home-office Pamphlet 620 | |||
*Salvage Pumps and Submersible Salvage Units, Government Sale, 589 | |||
*Sand Used in Concrete, Careful Investigation Absolutely Necessary, H. E. Bellamy, 383 | |||
*Scarfed Leather Belts, Direction of Travel, 411 | |||
*Scientific Lighting and Industrial Efficiency, Leon Gaster, 122 | |||
*Scotland and Reinforced Concrete, 333 | |||
*Scrap Metal Utilised by Blow-pipe Cutting, 181 | |||
*Sea Depth Sounding by Explosive Charges, 463 | |||
*Sewage Scheme for Fleet, Further Loan, 231 | |||
*Shanghai, Anglo-Chinese Business Men’s Club, 463 | |||
*Shanghai, Projected Port Improvements, Dredging and Damming Rivers, 59 | |||
*Shearing Strength of Wooden Structures, Simple Device for Improvement, Professor C. Forssell, 35 | |||
*Sheffield, Supply of Coke Oven Gas to, Mr. Laverick, 539 | |||
*Shells, Commercial Possibilities of, 305 | |||
SAFETY in Factories, Home-office Pamphlet 620 | |||
Salvage Pumps and Submersible Salvage Units, Government Sale, 589 | |||
Sand Used in Concrete, Careful Investigation Absolutely Necessary, H. E. Bellamy, 383 | |||
Scarfed Leather Belts, Direction of Travel, 411 | |||
Scientific Lighting and Industrial Efficiency, Leon Gaster, 122 | |||
Scotland and Reinforced Concrete, 333 | |||
Scrap Metal Utilised by Blow-pipe Cutting, 181 Sea Depth Sounding by Explosive Charges, 463 Sewage Scheme for Fleet, Further Loan, 231 Shanghai, Anglo-Chinese Business Men’s Club, 463 | |||
Shanghai, Projected Port Improvements, Dredging and Damming Rivers, 59 | |||
Shearing Strength of Wooden Structures, Simple Device for Improvement, Professor C. Forssell, 35 | |||
Sheffield, Supply of Coke Oven Gas to, Mr. Laverick, 539 | |||
Shells, Commercial Possibilities of, 305 | |||
SHIPS AND SHIPPING MATTERS: | SHIPS AND SHIPPING MATTERS: | ||
American Transport’s Claim for Record Trip 59 | *- American Transport’s Claim for Record Trip 59 | ||
*- Barrow and Belfast Steamship Services, Projected Re-opening, 539 | |||
Barrow and Belfast Steamship Services, Projected Re-opening, 539 | *- Bideford’s First Steel Ship Begun, 565 | ||
*- Brussels, Captain Fryatt’s Steamship Salved at Zeebrugge, 207 | |||
Bideford’s First Steel Ship Begun, 565 | *- Canadian Government Steel Steamers Building at Vancouver, 635 | ||
*- Canadian Mercantile Marine, New Ships Delivered, 515 | |||
Brussels, Captain Fryatt’s Steamship Salved at Zeebrugge, 207 | *- Chicago to Liverpool, Voyage of Vessel of over 4000 Tons, 59 | ||
*- Coal Loading Record at Sunderland, 463 | |||
Canadian Government Steel Steamers Building at Vancouver, 635 | *- Curraghmore, London and North-Western Steamer, Lent to City of Dublin Steam Packet Company for Mail Service, 539 | ||
*- Dreadnought Fleet Passed through Panama Canal Locks, 135 | |||
Canadian Mercantile Marine, New Ships Delivered, 515 | *- Dublin Mail Boat Service Changes, 255 | ||
*- Electrically Welded Ship, First Launched in France, 613 | |||
Chicago to Liverpool, Voyage of Vessel of over 4000 Tons, 59 | *- First Steamer to be Built at Prince Rupert, British Columbia, 613 | ||
*- Foreign Ships’ Charters Freed from Inter- Allied Control, 59 | |||
Coal Loading Record at Sunderland, 463 | *- French Government Order, Last of Forty New Ships Launched at Victoria, B.C., 515 | ||
*- French Merchant Fleet Reconstruction, Report by Government Commission, 515 | |||
Curraghmore, London and North-Western Steamer, Lent to City of Dublin Steam Packet Company for Mail Service, 539 | *- Fuel for Ships, Immense Saving by Use of Oil, 515 | ||
*- Gigantic Ocean Liners for Rapid Atlantic Crossing, 111 | |||
Dreadnought Fleet Passed through Panama Canal Locks, 135 | *- Greece, Shipping Amalgamation in, 359 | ||
*- Hebburn-on-Tyne, New Shipyard at, 59, 539 | |||
*- Heysham and Belfast Passenger Service Unlikely to be Resumed, 565 | |||
SHIPS AND SHIPPING MATTERS (continued): | |||
*- H. M. Destroyer Westminster in Collision, 157 | |||
*- Indo-Ceylon Steamers Worked at a Loss, 515 | |||
*- Irish Shipyard Purchase at Warrenpoint, 333 | |||
*- Japan and America, Relative Cost of Shipbuilding in the Two Countries, 333 | |||
*- Japanese New Steamship Line, 157 | |||
*- Japanese Shipbuilding Profits, 411 | |||
*- Japanese Shipowners and Piers in Kobe Harbour, 255 | |||
*- Laurentic Wreck at Lough Swilly, Bullion Salved from, 157 | |||
*- Life-saving Appliances on Ships ; Use of “Kapok,” 157 | |||
*- London and North-Western Company’s Steamers Renamed ; New Ones Built, 341 | |||
*- New Steamer Curraghmore, 463 | |||
*- Nova Scotia and Steel Shipbuilding Industry, 635 | |||
*- Olympic to be Reconditioned at Belfast, 157 | |||
*- Queenstown, Calling of Large Cunard and White Star Steamers Suspended, 207 | |||
*- Refrigerator Fleet for Italy, Requisitions from Germany, 489 | |||
*- Shipping, Engineering and Machinery Exhibition, 11, 181, 320 | |||
SHIPS AND SHIPPING MATTERS (continued) | *- Ship’s Position at Sea, Discovered by Depth Charges and Hydrophones, 181 | ||
H.M. Destroyer Westminster in Collision, 157 | *- Spain Prohibits Export of Certain Ships, 411 | ||
*- Steamers Sold to Foreigners this Year, 135 | |||
Indo-Ceylon Steamers Worked at a Loss, 515 | *- Towing, Electric, on the Canal de la Marne, 255 | ||
*- United States Shipbuilding versus British, 231 | |||
Irish Shipyard Purchase at Warrenpoint, 333 | *- Yarrow Shipbuilding Programme at Scotstoun, 305 | ||
*SHOWER Bath for Mules Used in Mines, 279 | |||
Japan and America | *Silt Removal from Zuni Reservoir, New Mexico, Suggested Method, 613 | ||
*Singapore, Petrol Transport Service, 333 | |||
Japanese New Steamship | *Sirocco—see Davidson | ||
*“Skyscraper” Born in Edinburgh in 1698, 11 | |||
Japanese Shipbuilding Profits, 411 | *Slate Quarry Waste Utilised in Wales, 515 | ||
*Sound for Surveying Diamond Drill Holes ; Accuracy of Listening Instruments, 565 | |||
Japanese Shipowners and Piers in Kobe Harbour, 255 | *South African Chamber of Mines Building, 539 | ||
*South African Low-grade Gold Mines, Serious Position, 207 | |||
Laurentic Wreck at Lough Swilly, Bullion Salved from, 157 | *South African Post-office Revenue, 333 | ||
*South African Technical Societies, Institute Building for General Use, 135 | |||
Life-saving Appliances on Ships ; Use of “Kapok,” 157 | *Spirit Levels, Major E. O. Henrici, 59 ; J. W. French, 135 | ||
*Standardisation of Chains, New Association, 124, 220, 359 | |||
London and North-Western Company’s | *Statistics, Request for Parliamentary Committee by Royal Statistical Society, 85 | ||
*Steam Turbines and Fuel Consumption, Professor F. Bacon on, 359 | |||
Steamers Renamed ; New Ones Built, 341 | *Steaming Gas Retorts, Mr, Riley, 539 | ||
*Steel Wire Rope Tests in United States, 333 | |||
New Steamer Curraghmore, 463 | *Stone Crushers, Gyratory, Largest Portable Yet Built, 333 | ||
*Strikes and the Community, A Warning, 333 | |||
Nova Scotia and Steel Shipbuilding Industry, 635 | *Submarine Acoustics, F. Lloyd Hopwood, 181 | ||
*Sugar Cane Mills in the Philippine Islands, 359 | |||
Olympic to be Reconditioned at Belfast, 157 | *Sugar Factory from Locally Grown Beet near Newark, 59 | ||
*Sulphur Discovery in Java, 181 | |||
Queenstown, Calling of Large Cunard and | *Summer Time Throughout the Year, Monsieur Pascalis, 374 | ||
*Surplus Government Property, Successful Sales, 11, 59, 157, 181 | |||
White Star Steamers Suspended, 207 | *Surplus, Numbers Published, Surplus Sales Results , 59, 589 | ||
*Suspension Bridge, Proposed, at Philadelphia, Span Required, 11 | |||
Refrigerator Fleet for Italy, Requisitions from Germany, 489 | |||
Shipping, Engineering and Machinery Exhibition, 11, 181, 320 | |||
Ship’s Position at Sea, Discovered by Depth Charges and Hydrophones, 181 | |||
Spain Prohibits Export of Certain Ships, 411 | |||
Steamers Sold to Foreigners this Year, 135 | |||
Towing, Electric, on the Canal de la Marne, 255 | |||
United States Shipbuilding versus British, 231 | |||
Yarrow Shipbuilding Programme at | |||
SHOWER Bath for Mules Used in Mines, 279 | |||
Silt Removal from Zuni Reservoir, New Mexico, | |||
Suggested Method, 613 | |||
Singapore, Petrol Transport Service, 333 | |||
Sirocco—see Davidson | |||
Slate Quarry Waste Utilised in Wales, 515 | |||
Sound for Surveying Diamond Drill Holes ; | |||
Accuracy of Listening Instruments, 565 | |||
South African Chamber of Mines Building, 539 | |||
South African Low-grade Gold Mines, Serious Position, 207 | |||
South African Post-office Revenue, 333 | |||
South African Technical Societies, Institute | |||
Building for General Use, 135 | |||
Spirit Levels, Major E. O. Henrici, 59 ; J. W. | |||
French, 135 | |||
Standardisation of Chains, New Association, 124, 220, 359 | |||
Statistics, Request for Parliamentary Committee by Royal Statistical Society, 85 | |||
Steam Turbines and Fuel Consumption, Professor F. Bacon on, 359 | |||
Steaming Gas Retorts, Mr, Riley, 539 | |||
Steel Wire Rope Tests in United States, 333 | |||
Stone Crushers, Gyratory, Largest Portable | |||
Yet Built, 333 | |||
Strikes and the Community, A Warning, 333 | |||
Submarine Acoustics, F. Lloyd Hopwood, 181 | |||
Sugar Cane Mills in the Philippine Islands, 359 | |||
Sugar Factory from Locally Grown Beet near | |||
Newark, 59 | |||
Sulphur Discovery in Java, 181 | |||
Summer Time Throughout the Year, Monsieur Pascalis, 374 | |||
Surplus Government Property, Successful Sales, 11, 59, 157, 181 | |||
Surplus, Numbers Published, Surplus Sales Results , 59, 589 | |||
Suspension Bridge, Proposed, at Philadelphia, Span Required, 11 | |||
T | |||
*TANK for Precipitation of Solids in Mine Water, 620 | |||
*Tasmanian Government Power Scheme, 635 | |||
*Telephone Boxes, Roadside, for Automobile Association Members, 107 | |||
*Telephone Line between Allahabad and Lucknow, 538 | |||
*Testing of Anchors and Chain Cables by Lloyd’s Register, 489 | |||
*Textile Materials, Tensile Strength and Atmospheric Humidity, 411 | |||
*Thermalene, New Gas for Producing High Temperatures, 383 | |||
*Thermit Weld, Unusually Large, 59 | |||
*Tidal Power Schemes, English and French, 305 | |||
*Tigris and Euphrates Estuary Bar, Need of Removal for Sake of Trade, 463 | |||
*Timber Growing in South Africa, Advantages of Pine, 437 | |||
*Timber, Methods of Preserving, 489 | |||
*Timber, Mine, Preservation of, N. T. Williams, 47, 463 | |||
*Timber in New Zealand, Neglected Valuable Asset, 35 | |||
*Timber Planting in the United Kingdom, Available Land and Need of Timber, 135 | |||
*Timber, Seventy Million Feet from Britislu Columbia, 181 | |||
*Timber Tests in United States ; Heartwood and Sapwood, 565 | |||
*Tin Ore from British Sources, 565 | |||
*Tin-plate Manufacture in Japan, 359 | |||
*Tin and Silver Lead Output in New South Wales, Increased Value, 85 | |||
*Tin in War Time, Cadmium Used as Substitute in Solder, 515 | |||
*Tipping Dumping Wagons : Getting Barges over High Lock Sills, A Comparison, 596 | |||
*Tractor Trials and Exhibition at Lincoln, 59 | |||
*Trade Unionism Among Professional Associations, 181 | |||
*Tram Accident at Burton, Suggestion to Check Running Backwards, 613 | |||
*Trams versus Rubber-tired Vehicles, Dr. Blackwood Murray, 565 | |||
*Tramways in Aberdeen and Glasgow, Profit with Low Fares, 305 | |||
*Transport Committee (Metropolitan Area), Progress, 59 ; Report under Consideration, 181 | |||
TRANSPORT, MINISTRY OF: | TRANSPORT, MINISTRY OF: | ||
Canals’ Future as a Difficult Problem, 135— see also Board of Trade | *- Canals’ Future as a Difficult Problem, 135— see also Board of Trade | ||
*- Crinan Canal, Survey,What to Do with it, 635 | |||
Crinan Canal, Survey,What to Do with it, 635 Date of Transfer of Certain Powers from | *- Date of Transfer of Certain Powers from Board of Trade and Ministry of Health, 279, 305 | ||
*- Electricity Bill, New Powers, and the Ministry of Transport, 539 | |||
Board of Trade and Ministry of Health, 279, 305 | *- Goods Rates, Railway, Increase, 279 | ||
*- London Traffic Question, 59, 181, 255, 359, 463 | |||
Electricity Bill, New Powers, and the Ministry of Transport, 539 | *- Minister’s Title Changed to Minister of Transport, 135 | ||
*- Revision of Rates, Fares, andc., Procedure Before Taking Action, 415 | |||
Goods Rates, Railway, Increase, 279 | *- Royal Assent to Bill, 181 | ||
*- Slippery Roads, Committee of Surveyors to Investigate, 613 | |||
*- Transport Service, Emergency Road, Continued by Government to Relieve Congestion after the Railway Strike, 411 | |||
*TRANSVAAL Gold Mines, Coal Used by, 231 | |||
U | |||
*UNIVERSITY of Bristol, Major Robertson Appointed Professor of Mechanical Engineering, 35 | |||
*UNIVERSITY OF LONDON, UNIVERSITY COLLEGE : | |||
*- Recent Developments in Public and Private Lighting, W. C. Clinton, 421 | |||
*- Thermionic Detectors, Lectures by Professor J. A. Fleming, 382 | |||
*University of Manchester, Increase of Funds Needed for Additional Students, 589 | |||
UNIVERSITY of Bristol | |||
Lighting, W. C. Clinton, 421 | |||
Thermionic Detectors, Lectures by Professor J. A. Fleming, 382 | |||
University of Manchester, Increase of Funds Needed for Additional Students, 589 | |||
V | V | ||
VANCOUVER Island ; Projected Largest Dock in the World at Esquimault, 234 | *VANCOUVER Island ; Projected Largest Dock in the World at Esquimault, 234 | ||
*Venezuela, First National Exhibition, 437 | |||
Venezuela, First National Exhibition, 437 | *Vickers Electrical Company, Limited, 181 | ||
*Vickers to Occupy St. Ermin’s Hotel, 565 | |||
Vickers Electrical Company, Limited, 181 Vickers to Occupy St. Ermin’s Hotel, 565 Vickers’ War Memorial Offer for Barrow, 463 Victoria, Vancouver Island, New Water Supply, 279 | *Vickers’ War Memorial Offer for Barrow, 463 | ||
*Victoria, Vancouver Island, New Water Supply, 279 | |||
W | |||
*WAGES in Japan, Male and Female Workers, 359 | |||
*Wales, Use of Water Power of, for Welsh Industries, Prize Essay at Eisteddfod, 279 | |||
*War Models Exhibition, Returns, 35 | |||
*Washington International Labour Conference, London and North-Western Official Delegate, 489 | |||
*Waterfall, Prehistoric, Immense, 635 | |||
*Water-logged Pits in the Tipton District, 181 | |||
*Water Power Available in Borneo and Sumatra, 359 | |||
*Water Power, French, Suggested Use of, in Relief of Coal Scarcity, 59 | |||
*Water Power in India, Potential Resources, 437, 515 | |||
*Water Power, Insufficiently Utilised in Germany and Austria, 515 | |||
*Water Power Resources in Brazil, 463 | |||
*Water Power of the St. Lawrence, Development, 635 | |||
*Water Power of the Yangtze River, Scheme for Utilisation, S. J. Powell, 613 | |||
*Waterproof Cement, Sir G. K. Scott-Moncrieff, 489 | |||
WATER SUPPLY: | WATER SUPPLY: | ||
British Columbia, Water Power Resources, 231 | *- British Columbia, Water Power Resources, 231 | ||
*- Dairen, Shahokoa, New Water Supply Appliances, 231 | |||
Dairen, Shahokoa, New Water Supply Appliances, 231 | *- Fire Engine for Refilling Water Reservoir, 181 | ||
*- Greater Winnipeg Water Board and Shoal Lake Aqueduct, 503 | |||
Fire Engine for Refilling Water Reservoir, 181 | *- Jerusalem, New Water Supply for, 216 | ||
*- Lima, Peru, New Waterworks Projected, 635 | |||
Greater Winnipeg Water Board and Shoal | *- Manchester Water Scheme Passed House of Lords, 610 | ||
*- Metropolitan Water Board Reorganisation Scheme Rejected, 359 | |||
Lake Aqueduct, 503 | *- Nuneaton, Further Water Supply Projected, 589 | ||
*- Osaka Water Supply Extensions 231 | |||
Jerusalem, New Water Supply for, 216 | *- Winnipeg Supply from Lake in Ontario, Arduous Task, 157 | ||
*- Water Waste at Night, 207 | |||
Lima, Peru, New Waterworks Projected, 635 | *WATT Engine and James Watt's Cornish Experiences ; Centenary, 206, 213, 450 | ||
*Ways and Communications Bill—see Transport —see also Railways | |||
Manchester Water Scheme Passed House of Lords, 610 | *Weights and Mea ures, Mr. Halsey on the Decimal System, 255 | ||
*Weld Requiring 1400 lb. of Thermit, 59 | |||
Metropolitan Water Board Reorganisation Scheme Rejected, 359 | *Welding of Cutter Bars at a Colliery, 359 | ||
*Wells, Deepest, in the World, 359 | |||
Nuneaton, Further Water Supply Projected, 589 | *Westinghouse, Ex-British, Association Dinner, 548 | ||
*Wind Power for Production of Electricity, Proposed Windmills for Supply of St. Ives, 59 | |||
Osaka Water Supply Extensions 231 | *Winnipeg River Power Company, Equipment, 255 | ||
*Wire Hawsers, Method of Attaching, to Sunken Vessels, 207 | |||
Winnipeg Supply from Lake in Ontario, Arduous Task, 157 | *Wireless Shore Stations in U.S.A., 305 | ||
*Wireless Telegraph Station at Warsaw, Germany’s Low Bid, 255 | |||
*Wireless Telegraphic Stations in Mexico, Foreign Competition Refused, 463 | |||
*Wireless Telegraphy for Determination of Longitude, 515 | |||
*Wireless Telephony in Air Flight, 157 | |||
*Wittet, G., Retirement from Bombay Government Service, 406 | |||
*Wolfram Discoveries in Siberia. 111 | |||
*Wood Distillation in India, “Stockholm” Tar from Long-leaf Pine, 85 | |||
*Wooden Piling in Wrater, Durability Question, 411 | |||
*Wooden Structures, Shearing Strength of, Improvement Device, Professor C. Forssell, 35 | |||
*Works, New, in the North of England, 539 | |||
Y | |||
*YARROW Shipbuilding Programme, 305 | |||
YARROW Shipbuilding Programme, 305 | |||
Z | Z | ||
ZEPPELINS, Proposed Line of, between Germany and Sweden, 463 | *ZEPPELINS, Proposed Line of, between Germany and Sweden, 463 | ||
*Zinc, Electrolytic, Production in Australia, 157 | |||
Zinc, Electrolytic, Production in Australia, | *Zinc Ore Accumulation in China, 411 | ||
== See Also == | == See Also == |
Revision as of 08:44, 30 June 2020




















Note: This is a sub-section of The Engineer 1919 Jul-Dec: Index
View the Volumes that this Index refers to.
A
- ACETYLENE and Coal Gas, Illuminating Power and Immunity from Risk, 135
- Acetylene, Compressed, in a Porous Substance, Government Order, 53
AERONAUTICS:
- - Aerodrome at Durban, Proposed Erection’ 635
- - Aerodrome at Goregaon, Bombay, 539
- - Aeroplane Surplus Engine at Work in Factory, 85
- - American Offer for Aeroplanes and Engines from British Disposal Department, 154
- - Amsterdam Aircraft Exhibition, British Section Delayed by Strikes, 157
- - Aviation Exhibition, Paris, 565
- - “Bristol” Fighter Biplane, Continuous Commission 463
- - Dutch Aviation Routes to be Opened Next Year ; Services to England and Elsewhere, 572
- - Fiat B.R.F. Biplane, 635
- - Fire Patrols by Aeroplane over Californian Forest Reserves, 301
- - India, Aerodrome Construction near Bangalore, 85
- - Insect Hunting Surveys by Aeroplane, 635
- - Man-power Aeroplane Flight at Paris, G. Poulain, 157
- - Pan - American Aeronautic Convention, Colonel E. Lister Jones’ Address, 161
- - Rome to Turin Flight, Record Broken, 85
- - Semi-rigid Airship Purchased from Italy by U.S.A., 489
- - United States Airship Blown Up Owing to Sun Heat Expansion, 11
- - Wireless Telephony, Air Squadrons Fitted with during War, 157
- AFFORESTATION Cost, Amount Allocated by Government, 135
- Agricultural Engineers’ Combination, 419
- Agricultural Implements Imported into India, 11
- Agricultural Tractors and Ploughs, Royal Agricultural Society Trials, 635
- Alcohol, andc., from Coke-oven Gas, Process for Commercial Development, E. Bury, 635
- Alcohol as Fuel for High-speed Internal Combustion Engines, Benzol Admixture Necessary, 111
- Alcohol from the Mahwa Tree, 85
- Alcoholic Motor Spirit Factory in Natal, Output of, 157
- Algeria’s Mineral Exports, 613
- Alloy, Iron, Acid-proof, Italian’s Claim, 59
- Alloys of the Duralumin Type, Heat Treatment of, 35
- Aluminates of Lime, Value as Cement, 85
- Aluminium Alloy with Calcium, 279
- Aluminium and Alloys Coating Flux, S. O. Cowper-Coles, 489
- Aluminium in Germany, Output, and Need of Coal, 359
- Aluminium, Prescription for Soldering, 11
- Aluminium, Useful American Circular, 305
- American Association of Engineers, Committee on Legislation, 35
- American Concrete Institute, Recommendations, 135
- American Lakes and Rivers, Plan for Control and Regulation of Discharge and Flow, 589
- American Petroleum Export Statistics, 279
- Architectural and Museum Studies, Prizes for Drawings ; Conditions, 419
- Armstrong College, Appointments of Principal and Registrar, 111
- Armstrong College, Vacant Professorship of Engineering, 359
- Asbestos Production in Rhodesia, 411
ASSOCIATIONS, INSTITUTIONS & SOCIETIES :
- - ASSOCIATION, BRITISH :
- -- Statistics of War Transportation in France, Colonel Sir G. Beharrell, 279
- -- Transport Policy, Mr. Acworth, 279
- - ASSOCIATION OF ENGINEERING AND SHIPBUILDING DRAUGHTSMEN :
- -- Strike at Works of Kerr, Stuart and Co., Stoke-on-Trent, Supported by Association, 11
- - SHEFFIELD BRANCH :
- -- Winter Programme ; Projected Lectures, 613
- - ASSOCIATION OF ENGINEERS, MANCHESTER :
- -- Scientific Management, H. W. Allingham, 613
- - INSTITUTE OF AERONAUTICAL ENGINEERS :
- -- Council Formation, 157
- - INSTITUTE, IRON AND STEEL :
- -- Autumn Meeting in France, Proposed, 565
- -- Bessemer Medal Award, 231
- -- President for Next Year, Dr. J. E. Stead, 548
- - INSTITUTE OF METALS :
- -- Brass : Its Construction and Impurities’ F. S. J. Pile, 635
- -- Micro-mechanism of the Ageing of Duralumin, Dr. Zay Jeffries, 255
- - INSTITUTE OF MINE SURVEYORS OF GREAT BRITAIN :
- - SCOTTISH BRANCH :
- -- Discussion of Objects of Institute ; Salaries Question, 359
- - INSTITUTION OF AUTOMOBILE ENGINEERS :
- -- Examination for Admission to Membership, 589
- -- Meeting, 287
- -- Presidential Address, Thos. Clarkson, 287
- -- Reception, 478
- - INSTITUTION OF CIVIL ENGINEERS :
- -- Fowls Lodged by Institution, 207
- - INSTITUTION OF ELECTRICAL ENGINEERS :
- -- Liverpool Sub-centre to be Formed, 539
- -- Water Power, Professor Magnus Maclean. 279
- - INSTITUTION OF ENGINEERS (INDIA) :
- -- Rapid Establishment and Predicted Usefulness of the Institution, 539
- - INSTITUTION OF ENGINEERS AND SHIPBUILDERS IN SCOTLAND :
- -- Reoccupation of Old Premises Commandeered by Ministry of Munitions, 437
- -- Special Steels and Aluminium Alloys, Importance in Motor Vehicles and Aircraft, Dr. T. Blackwood Murray, 589
- - INSTITUTION, JUNIOR, OF ENGINEERS :
- -- Members’ List, 359
- - INSTITUTION OF MUNICIPAL AND COUNTY ENGINEERS :
- -- Flags for Road Paving, Natural and Artificial, F. W. Bricknell, 359
ASSOCIATIONS, INSTITUTIONS & SOCIETIES (continued) :
- - INSTITUTION OF NAVAL ARCHITECTS :
- -- Awards of Elgar Scholarship and Earl of Durham Prize, 181
- -- Cammell Laird and Parsons Scholarships, Entries for, 181 ; Awards, 421
- -- Martell Scholarship in Naval Architecture (1920), 597
- -- Scholarships Offered, 24, 135
- - INSTITUTION, NORTH-EAST COAST, OF ENGINEERS AND SHIPBUILDERS :
- -- Joint Technical Institute for the North- East Coast Institution and the Cleveland Institution of Engineers, 181
- - INSTITUTION, ROYAL :
- -- Christmas Juvenile Lectures : The World of Sound, Professor W. H. Bragg, 528
- -- Election of Members and Honorary Members, 564
- -- Meetings, 476, 564
- -- Programme up to Easter, 1920, 564
- - SOCIETY, CERAMIC :
- -- Refractory Materials Section ; Arrangements for Meetings, 383
- - SOCIETY OF ENGINEERS :
- -- Award of Premiums for Papers, 646
- -- New Scheme for Association of Engineering Societies, Offer of Annual Premium by Mr. Burnard Geen, 11
- - CRYSTAL PALACE ENGINEERING SOCIETY :
- -- Papers and Awards, 625
- - SOCIETY, FARADAY :
- -- Magnetic Hardness of Ferrous Metals, andc., L. A. Wild, 255
- - SOCIETY, OPTICAL :
- -- Spirit Level from Captured Zeiss Director, Liquids for Filling Levels, J. W. French, 135
- -- Spirit Level, Requirements, Major E. O. Henrici, 59
- - SOCIETY, ROYAL, OF ARTS :
- -- Australian Growth in Industrial Manufacture, Sir J. McCall on, 59
- -- Trueman Wood Lecture, Sir Oliver Lodge, 613
- -- Use of Electricity in Agriculture, Dr. J. F. Crowley, 489
- - SOCIETY OF TECHNICAL ENGINEERS :
- -- Mass Meeting, 554, 601
- ATHENS, Exhibition of British Manufactures, 207, 411, 489, 515, 565
- Australia, Rapid Growth in Industrial Manufacture, 59
- Automatic and Electric Furnaces, Limited, Loan of Magnetic Sclerometer for Demonstration, 315
B
- BALLOONS Used in Tree Fumigation, 515
- Barcelona, Annual International Fair Instituted, 511
- Beardmore and Co.’s Large Section Mill, 181
- Bearing Metals and Modern Metallography, 279
- Belgian Rolling Mills, Esperance Abandoned, New Works Projected at Hourpes, 489
- Belgium, British Trade with, Catalogues at Liege, 262
- Bennis, Ed., and Co., Lantern Slides for Lectures, 526
- Benzole and the Cinematograph, 22
- Benzole, Increased Production and Further Possibilities as Substitute for Motor Spirit, 11 Benzole, “ National,” Test with a Sunbeam Car, 207, 255
- Benzole Test on 10,000-Miles Run by Sunbeam Car, 589
- Bill to Prevent “Lightning Strikes,” 419
- Birmingham, Big Scheme in Progress for Improvement of Hockley Brook, 85
- Blowpipe Cutting of Scrap Metal, 181
- Board of Trade, Certain Powers of, Transferred to Home-office, 539
- Board of Trade Departments, New Addresses and Telephone Numbers, 502
- Board of Trade, New Administrative Council, 305
- Boiler Plates, Steel, in the Yangtze Valley, High Prices Paid, 35
- Boiler Tube Explosion Report, 85
- Boilers Heated by Electricity, 11
- Bombay, New Companies Organised, 35
- Borneo and Sumatra Waterfalls, Available Horse-power, 359
- Bradford Engineering Society, Coming of Age, 392
- Brazil Trade, Increased Imports and Exports, 463
- Brewers’ Exhibition, 452, 476
- Brick Chimney for Cleveland Electric Company, Dimensions of, 85
- Bridge, Highway, in Ohio, Accident during Reconstruction, 565
- British Chemical Manufacturers’ Association, Visit to Germany, 68
- British East African Land, Government Condition for Leasing, 613
- British Industries Fair, Birmingham’s Share, 146
- British Science and Key Industries Exhibition at Glasgow, 157, 328
- British Scientific Products Exhibition, 59
- British Westinghouse Company, Change of Name, 181, 548
- Brussels Commercial Fair, Proposed, 157
- Buenos Aires, Proposed Underground System of Electric Tramways, 613
- Building Materials’ Tenacity ; Observations in the War Area, Sir B. Fletcher, 359
- Bullion Salved from the Wreck of the Laurentic at Entrance to Lough Swilly, 157
C
- CABLE Across the Pacific Ocean, 332
- Calcutta Corporation and Question of Sanitary Dwellings, 411
- Canada, Export Trade, Increase since 1914, 85
- Canada and Street Cars, Decision Against Local Manufacture in Toronto, 111
- Canadian Water Power Development, Professor J. C. McLennan, 305
- Canal, Crinan, Position under Consideration by Ministry of Transport, 635
- Canal, First, in Northern India, Proposed Celebration of Centenary, 59
- Canal, Huningue to Strasburg, Proposed Hydro-electric Stations, 565
- Canal, Ship, Proposed, at South-west of Long Island, U.S.A., 613
- Canal System in Canada, Government Survey, 565
- Canal System of South Yorkshire, Reorganisation under Consideration, 635
- Canals’ Future as a Difficult Problem, 135
- Canalising the Rhone, Power and Coal Saving, 255
- Cape Copper Company Closes Mines, Large Returns since 1863, 85
- Casein Glues, Valuable Properties, 111
- Casting Iron Pipes, Centrifugal System, 613
- Cement, Waterproof, Sir G. K. Scott Moncrieff, 489
- Census of Europeans in South Africa, 11
- Chain Manufacturers, New Association, 124, 220, 359
- Charcoal Briquettes in India ; Difficulty, 157
- Chemical Employers and Motor Transport Employers’ Federations, Alliance, 59
- Chemical Engineer as a Liaison Officer, 181
- Chemistry, Organic, Professorship at Armstrong College, Dr. S. Smiles Appointed, 157
- Chicago and the Atlantic, Improved Water Communication, 59
- Chimney, Tall Reinforced Concrete, at Sagano- seki, Professor Omori’s Conclusions, 437, 463
- Chimneys, Tall, Stresses by Wind Pressure and Seismic Motion Compared, 437
- China Clay Transport Difficulties and Settlement, 514
- China, Local Materials Economically Used for Construction Work, D. F. McLeod, 181
- Chinese Dockyard Improved to Carry Out American Contracts, 231
- Cinematograph as Advocate for Benzole, 22
COAL, COKE, AND COLLIERIES:
- - Amount of Coal Required to Mill One Ton of Ore, 589
- - Anthracite Seam Struck at Glyn Neath, 231 Argentine Coal Discovery, its Great Value, 207
- - Belgian Blast-furnaces and Coke Scarcity, 333
- - British Columbia and Coalfields, 383
- - Calcium Carbide Manufacture and Byproduct Extraction from Coal and Shale at Natal Collieries, 565
- - Coal Discovery in Chili, 613
- - Coal Mining in Germany, Decreasing Output, Increasing Cost of Production, 85
- - Coal Transport by Rail, Suspended Restrictions, 279
- - Commercial Motor Users’ Association and Coal Permits, 74
- - Compressed Air Coal-cutting Machines, Tests, 589
- - Controller of Coal Mines, Change of Appointment, 437
- - Dutch East Indies, Increased Coal Consumption, 259
- - Electrical Charges Advance with Price of Coal, 135
- - Federated Malay States, Useful Discovery of Coal and Output, 539
- - Fire Extinction by Mud Jet, 135
- - Gasworks, Demand for Asli Guarantee, 315
- - High-priced Coal and Hydro-electric Power Extension, 7
- - India, Increased Output of Coal Mines, 59
- - Ireland, Stationary Output of Coal, 565
- - Kent Collieries during the Railway Strike, 411
- - Lens and Lievin Mines Flooding ; Ten Years Required for Complete Restarting, 135
- - Lord Bute no Longer Colliery Proprietor, 59
- - Lourenco Marques, Coal Deposits Found, 157
- - Melbourne Harbour Coaling Plant, 515
- - Mines Unwatering, Need of Barriers, 515
- - Mines Water-logged in the Tipton District, 181
- - Mining in Formosa, Primitive Methods, 231
- - Natal, Coal and Bituminous Shale Development in, 411
- - Natal Navigation Company’s New Coal Area, 515
- - Natal, Official Coal Trade Report, Decreasing Output, 383
- - Nationalisation of Mines, Mr. Justice Sankey’s Report, 23
- - New Zealand, Coal Discovery in, 157
- - New Zealand Coal Mines and Nationalisation, 312
- - Oil Fuel in France, Commission Urges its Use to Replace Coal, 565
- - Output of Coal in the United Kingdom during Four Weeks, 359
- - Output, Slight Improvement, 287
- - Powell Duffryn Company’s New Pit, 539
- - Pulverised Coal for Open-hearth Furnaces, N. C. Harrison, 539
- - Quick Work at a Colliery, 279
- - Seven-hour Day and the Output, 255
- - South Africa, Coal Development Company Formed, 383
- - South Africa, New Colliery, 157
- - Spitsbergen Coal Deposits, Scottish Syndicate to Prospect, 11
- - Spitzbergen, Coal Exports from, 613
- - Spitsbergen, Further Coal Discovery, 157
- - Storing Coal in Carbonic Acid Gas, 589
- - Temperature of Coal Mines, Atmospheric Conditions, Ventilation and Health, 539
- - Tonkin Output from the Hongay Mines, 255
- - United States Coal Consumption Estimate, 57
- - Vienna Company’s Coke Supply Transferred to Czechs with Change of Frontiers, 535
- - Wagon Shortage on Railways, Measures Taken on Behalf of Collieries, 135
- - Water in South Staffordshire Mines, 589
- - Western India, Trial Boring for Coal ; Heavy Cost of Coal at Bombay, 565
- CONCRETE Caissons for Bridge Foundations, Best Method of Sinking, F. W. Sweeney, 35
- Concrete and Fire Resistance, 135
- Concrete Mooring Buoys Compared with Steel,
- Concrete Pipe Failure in Arizona, Professor G. E. P. Smith, 181
- Concrete Replaces Plain Steel for Cranes, 383
- Concrete Setting Studied by Assistance of Camera, 111
- Concrete Tanks for Fuel Oil Storage, 85
- Copper in Ancient India, Mr. Panchanan Neogi, 515
- Copper Conductors, 242
- Copper Contact Bows of Electric Railways Replaced by Carbon, 515
- Copper Mines in Norway, Cost of Production and Falling Prices, 411
- Copper as a Protective Against Corrosion of Steel, 305
- Cornish Mining in St. Ives District, 565
- Corrosion in Boilers with Turbines and with Reciprocating Engines ; Tests, 157
- Corundum, Artificial, Cheap Manufacture of, Possible in England, C. J. Brockbank, 635
- Cotton Mill in Central China ; British and American Machinery, 255
- Creosoted Piles, Long Life of, 255
- Crystal Palace Engineering Society : Papers and Awards, 625
- Crystal Palace School of Practical Engineering, Admiral Sir G. W. Moore on Future of Engineering, 122
D
- DAM Proposed Across Sutlej River, India, Highest in the World, 613
- Dam, Proposed, for Irrigation Scheme in Idaho, Higher than Any Yet Built, 613
- Dam in Tasmania, Cause of Failure, H. E. Bellamy, 383
- Davidson and Company’s War Work Booklet, 98
- Daylight Saving in General Favour, 215
- Death of Mr. T. P. Shonts : His Work on Panama Canal Development and on New York Subways, 569
- Decimal Currency, Increased Adoption, 411
- Derrick Cranes with Reinforced Concrete Replacing Plain Steel, 383
- Diamond Getting by Use of a Diving Bell, 231
- Diesel Engine Users’ Association : Applies for Grant for Research, Complains of Household Fuel Order as Applied to Electrical Companies Using Oil, 59
- Ding-Dong Mine Reopening, 411
- Disabled Men Nearly All Again at Work, 85
- Dock, Largest in the World Projected at Vancouver Island, 234
- Dolomite Deposits in the Peak District of Derbyshire, Scheme for Working, 35
- Douglas Fir Timbers, Old and New, Results of Tests, 207
- Dredging Bucket Weighing Nearly 20 Tons, 207
- Drills, Small Twist, Device for Protection, 231
- Duralumin, Ageing of, Dr. Zay Jeffries, 255
- Duralumin and Kindred Alloys, Heat Treatment of, 35
- Dutch East Indies, Road and Railway Construction Extended, 515
- Dutch Margarine Makers’ Purchase of Oil Mills at Selby, 85
- Dutch Section of the Shipping, Engineering and Machinery Exhibition, 320
E
- EAST AFRICAN Mines Department and Geological Survey, 539
- Eisteddford, Welsh, and Applied Science, 279
ELECTRICAL MATTERS:
- - Accrington, Extensions of Generating Plant, 255
- - Agriculture, Use of Electricity in, Dr. J. F. Crowley, 489
- - Air from Turbo-generators as Forced Draught for Furnaces, 333
- - Alloy for Resistance Elements of Electrical Instruments, F. Weimar, 565
- - Austria’s Lost Coal to be Replaced by Electric Power, 535
- - Ayr, Proposed Loan for Electricity Supply, 207
- - Birmingham’s Electric Dust Carts, Batteries from America, 35
- - Bolton, Projected Expenditure on New Transformers, 207
- - Burma, Hydro-electric Plant for Mine, 207
- - Canadian Electrical Association : Bare and Covered Wires, 455
- - Canadian Electric Generating Plants, Statistics, 305
- - Castings for Switch-boxes, Replaced by Electric Welding, 463
- - Ceylon Hydro-electric Scheme, 489
- - Coal Prices and Electrical Charge Increase, 135
- - Copper Conductors, 242
- - Cracking of Rubber Insulation on High- tension Cables, F. B. Silsbe, 589
- - Denmark, Large Hydro-electric Works for Jutland, 279
- - Doncaster Corporation Loan for Generating Station, 635
- - Douglas Electric Light Supply, 181
- - Dundee Electricity Scheme, 181 ; Proposal for Extension by Use of Water from the Tummel Valley, 279
- - Furnace Installation, Electric, for Norway, from United States, 635
- - Generating Station Statistics in the United States, 85
- - German Output of Crucible and Electric Steel, Furnaces Employed, 111
- - Glasgow Electrical Finance, 333
- - Gwalior, India, Electricity Supply, 181
- - High-tension Electrical Power Transmission, Extension of Possibilities, 589
- - High-voltage Transmission, Practicability, Southern Californian Successful Operations, 493
- - Hull Electrical Plant Extensions, Loan Sanctioned, 135
- - Indian Scheme for Electric Supply from Local Water Power in the Nilgiris, 539
- - Italy, Two Large New Hydro-electric Stations for Industrial Work, 279
- - Japanese Electrically Driven Steel Plant Coming from the United States, 635
- - Kelp for Insulation, in Australia, 333
- - London Electricity Supplies, Linking-up, 635
- - Manchester’s Proposed Loan for Generating Station, 279
- - Mercury Vapour Rectifiers for Transforming High-tension Current, 613
- - Niagara, Power Utilisation and Natural Beauty, 383
- - Ootacamund,. Madras, Proposed Electric Supply from Sandy Nullah Waterfall, 59
- - Osaka Steam-driven Electrical Installation, Largest in the Far East, 437
ELECTRICAL MATTERS (continued):
- - Paris Electric Power Distribution, Large Outlay, 181
- - Pittsburgh, Large Power Plant, 255
- - Power in India, Increasing Demand for, 429
- - Power Project in Manitoba, 255
- - Railway and Dock Generating Stations and Lines Exempted from Transfer under Electricity Supply Bill, 135
- - Rapid Reversing Motor at Indiana Harbour, 157
- - Rhodesia and Available Electric Horsepower, 35
- - Rhone Development, Use of Power in Paris, P.L.M. Railway, andc., Government Outlay, 613
- - Rivets, Electrically Heated, G. M. Clark, 589
- - Rotherham Loans for Electricity Undertaking Bill to be Passed, 135
- - Sheffield Electrical Finance, 333
- - Spain, Utilisation of Water Power of the River Tort, 181
- - Suffolk Electricity Supply Company Obtains Exemption from the Household Fuel and Lighting Order, 437
- - Surplus Hydro-electric Power Developed in British Columbia, 642
- - Temperature of Electric Furnaces, Device to Regulate, Monsieur Lequex, 489
- - Towing, Electric, on the Canal de la Marne, 255
- - Transport, Ministry of, and New Powers under the Electricity Bill, 539
- - Trial Borings with View to Tunnel Under Liffey for Electric Mains, 207
- - Whitley Council for the West Midland Electricity Supply Industry, 287
- - Wind Power as Source of Electrical Supply, Comparison with Gas, 59
- - York City Hydro-electric Scheme, 489
- ELECTROLYTIC Zinc in Australia, 157
- Ellesmere Port, New Wharves for Ocean-going Steamers, 11
- Engine, James Watt, 206, 213
- Engineers’ Patience and Pay, 31
- Engineering, The Future of, Admiral Sir G. W. Moore, at the Crystal Palace School of Engineering, 122
- Exhibition, All-British, Proposed at Singapore, 613
- Exhibition, in Athens by Federation of British Industries, 207, 411
- Exhibition, Aviation, in Paris, 565
- Exhibition, at Barcelona, British Firms to Exhibit Mechanical Inventions, andc., 305
- Exhibition, Brewers, 452, 476
- Exhibition, of British Manufactures at Athens, 207, 411, 489, 515, 565
- Exhibition, British Science and Key Industries, at Glasgow, 157, 328
- Exhibition, International Motor Boat and Marine and Stationary Engine, 626
- Exhibition, Mining, in South Africa, 534
- Exhibition, Shipping, Engineering, and Machinery, at Olympia, 11, 181, 320
- Exhibition, Union of Inventors of the Loire, 359
- Exhibition, of Venezuela, First National, 437
- Explosion of Economiser at Yorkshire Dye Works, 463
- Explosion of Safety Valve Chest Due to Collision between Tug and Dredger, 111
- Explosion at Scotswood Works, Official Report, 35
- Explosions in War Factories, Low Rate of Fatalities, 231
- Explosive Charges for Sea Depth Soundings, 463
F
- FACTORIES, Safety Pamphlet Issued by Home-office, 620
- Factory and Agricultural Labour, Suggested Alternation of, 515
- FEDERATION OF BRITISH INDUSTRIES :
- - Change of Address, 59
- - Exhibition in Athens, 207, 411, 489, 515, 565
- - Finland’s Water Power Resources, 411
- - Instigates Government Continuance of Emergency Road Transport Service, 411
- - Sending Staff to Cologne, 111
- FEDERATION OF TECHNICAL AND SCIENTIFIC ASSOCIATIONS :
- - Formation and Objects, 238
- - Meeting, Constitution Proposals, 290
- Ferrous Metals—see Iron and Steel
- Fertiliser Manufacture from Phospha tic Rock at Johannesburg, 35
- Fibre from Eucalyptus Bark ; Factory Started in Australia, 589
- File for Cleaning Contact Points of Sparking Plugs, Brown Brothers, Limited, 601
- Files and Drills, Economical Use of, 463
- Fire in Coal Stack, Extinguishing, 383
- Fire Engine for Refilling Water Reservoir, 181
- Fire Extinction by Mud Jet in Collieries, 135
- Fire-grates, Economy in, 635
- Fire Losses in this Country, Enormous Increase this Year, 231
- Fire Losses Greater per Head in Canada than Elsewhere, 111
- Fire Patrols, Aeroplane, Over Californian Forest Reserves, 301
- Fires in Grain Elevator Caused by Wheat Dust Collecting on Electric Lamp, 111
- Fish Scarcity at Billingsgate and the Railway Companies, 58
- Fixation of Atmospheric Nitrogen, Experiments Resumed, 489
- Flag-pole, Reinforced Concrete, 157
- Flux for Coating Aluminium and Alloys, S. O. Cowper-Coles, 489
- Fog, Effect of, on Light Intensity, C. L. Utterback, 337
- Foire de Paris, Variety of Exhibits, 383
- Ford Tractor Factory at Cork, 255
- Forest Area, Valuable, in Asia Minor, 538
- “France,” A Catalogue of French Industry, Exports, andc., 613
- Franco-Polish Society Founded in Warsaw, 589
- French Docks Congestion, Measures to Relieve 383
- French Offer for Works near Saarbriicken, 463
- French Purchase of Peat Bog in Ireland for Fuel Making, 85
- French Reconstruction of Roads, Railways, Bridges, Tunnels, Telegraphs, and Telephones, 117
- French Reconstructional Work ; Question of Contracts for British and American Firms, 437
- French Unused Water Power for Relief of Coal Scarcity, Suggestion, 59
- Fuel Economy Organisation Committee s Report, Sir R. Hadfield on, 59
- Fuel Economy in Power Production, W. T. Lane, 359
- Fuel, French Commission Urges Use of Oil to Replace Coal, 565
- Fuel for Internal Combustion Engines, Alcohol Requires Addition of Benzole, 111
- Fuel Oil Tanks at Portland, 81
- Fuel Research ; Government Station at Greenwich, 207, 305
G
- GADGETTS for Motorists, 522
- Gas and Electricity Derived from Wind Power, Mr. F. Barrett on, 59
- Gas as Fuel for Motor Vehicles, Uncertainties of Liquid Fuel, 135
- Geological Survey and Museum, Transfer of Departments,1 489
- Geophone, Successful Experiment in Pennsylvania Coal Mine, 111
- German Amalgamation of Big Electrical and other Firms, 589
- German Union of Technical Societies, Petition for New Technical Library, 11
- Germany Outbids other European Countries for Erection of Wireless Telegraphy Station, 255
- Glass Globes and Window Glass, Factory for Manufacture of, to be Erected at Queenborough, 111
- Glass-making in West Norfolk, 207
- Glue Joints and Varnished Wood Surfaces, 437
- Gold Mine, Deepest of any Metal Aline in the World, 383
- Gold Mines, Low-grade, in South Africa, Serious Position, 207
- Gold Ore Reserves of the Rand, 35
- Gold Refinery for the Rand, Proposed, 411
- Gold from the Transvaal, Effect on the Industry of a Free Market, 333
- Government Car Used as Beehive, 111
- Government Financial Help for Higher Education of Ex-Service Officers and Men, 181, 279
- Government Sale of Cranes and Machine Tools, 181
- Grantham and District Engineering Society, 411
- Grantham, Special Engineering School for Boys, 613
- Gravel as an Aggregate in Concrete, 135
- Greenwich, Fuel Research Station at, 207
- Gunpowder in Railway Workshops, 135
- Gwalior State Project for Waterway Connection with Calcutta, 11
H
- HARDENING of Duralumin, 35
- Health, New Ministry of, 11
- Heat Economy in Chemical Works, Harold Nielsen, 613
- Hong-Kong’s Imports of Tin, 463
- Hooghly River Bed Survey, 59
- House-building, Comparison between Cost of Brick and Concrete, 207
- Hydraulic Works on the Rhone, 378, 383
- Hydro-electric Plant in Burma, 207
- Hydro-electric Power Extension in Sweden, 7
- Hydro-electric Power, Surplus Developed in British Columbia, 642
- Hydro-electric Scheme, Ceylon, 489
- Hydro-electric Scheme, York City, 489
- Hydro-electric Schemes—see also Electrical Matters
- Hydrogen Peroxide, Experimental Plant for, by Kynoch Limited, in Natal, 380
- Hydrographic Surveys in the North Sea, 181
I
- IMPERIAL Mineral Resources Bureau, Offices Moved, 231
- India, Distillation of Wood and Production of Stockholm Tar, 85
- India, Government and Private Service in, 406
- India, Water Power Resources of, Report on, 437, 515
- Indian Public Works Department, Increased Pay for Members, 363
- Indian Scheme for Dredging Chilka Lake to Avoid Flooding, 411
- Indians to have Training in Navigation, Bom* bay Scheme, 35
- Industrial League Conference of Employers and Employed, 290
- Industrial Life in America, President Wilson on, 383
- Industrial Reconstruction Council and Industrial League ; Amalgamation ; New Title, 290
- Insect Hunting Surveys by Aeroplane, 635
- Institute Building for General Use of Technical Societies in South Africa, 135
- International Electrotechnical Commission Alee ting, 314
- Ipswich Rails, British Tender Preferred to American, 157
IRON AND STEEL:
- - Acid-proof Iron Alloy, Claim by Italian, 59
- - Anzan Steel Works of South Manchuria Railway, Plant Extension and Output, 489
- - Austria-Hungary’s Steel Output in 191 7 and 1918, 333
- - Bethlehem-Chile Iron Ore Dock at Cruze- Grande, 279
- - Blast-furnaces at Wellingborough Re-opened,
- - British Federation of Iron, Steel, Tin-plate and Metal Merchants, Aleeting between Merchants and Manufacturers, 333
IRON AND STEEL (continued):
- - Castings, Iron, in America, Cost of, at Begin ning of Last Century, 437
- - Castings Replaced by Electric Welding of Steel Plates, 463
- - Chrome Iron Ore Discovery in Rhodesia, 157
- - Coating Iron Articles, Dr. C. Baskerville’s Method, 157
- - Copper as a Protective Against Steel Corrosion, 305
- - Corrosion of Iron Hot-water Pipes, Method of Prevention, 85
- - Ferrous Metals, Measuring Magnetic Hardness, andc., L. A. Wild, 255
- - First Cast of Steel at Coatbridge Works, 589
- - French Iron and Steel Companies Amalgamation, 279
- - French Tool Steel, “Etiquette Rouge,” 305
- - German Iron and Steel Industries Proposed Combination, 411
- - German Output of Crucible and Electric Steel in 1917, 111
- - Gorman Prices of Pig Iron, Spiegel, and Merchant Bars, 489
- - Ingot Heating, Possible Injury by Great Speed, F. E. Bash, 589
- - Iron Oro Deposit Investigation by United States Geological Survey, 463
- - Lorraine Iron Ore for Export to Germany, French Price for, 463
- - Manganese Shortage : Additional Sources Indicated, 565
- - Ontario, Two New Steel Works being Built, 539
- - Pretoria Iron and Steel Industry, Proposed Extension, 565
- - Rusting of Steel having Copper Content, 85
- - Steel Boiler Plates in the Yangtze Valley, High Prices Paid, 35
- - Swedish Iron and Steel Industry, Low Output and Depression, 305
- - Swiss Steel Foundry, Electric Smelting of Scrap Iron, 437
- - Tata Steel Works, India : Renewed Contracts with Japan, 279
- - Titaniferous Iron Sands of New Zealand, V. W. Aubel, 565
- - Tunis Iron Exports to England, 231
- - Vancouver Company to Test Electric Smelting Process for Magnetite Ores, 383
- IRRIGATION, Blue Nile Scheme, Bill for Loan Passed by House of Commons, 135
- Irrigation Reservoir in Ahmcdnagar District, Bombay, 635
- Irrigation Scheme for Mexico, 463
- Irrigation in South Africa from the Upper Modder River, 85
- Irrigation in South Africa : Utilising the Kalahari Lake, 135
- Italy, Investigation into Extent of Radioactive Substances, 85
J
- JAMAICA, Loan for Roads and Other Constructional Work, 157
- Japan, Mineral Statistics of, 255
- Japan, Submarine Tunnel to Replace Ferry between Railway Stations, 279
- Japan as a Trade Competitor, E. F. Crowe, 111
- Japan’s Foreign Trade, Great Increase, 135
- Japanese New Monthly Journal, “The Transpacific,” 359
- Japanese Population and Trade in India, Rapid Growth, 333
- Java Fair at Bandoeng : British Section Inadvisable, 613
- Java, Industrial Fair at, Important, 59
K
- KAPOK, Buoyancy of, Results of Experiments, 85
- “Kapok” for Life-saving Appliances at Sea, 157
- Kauri Forests in New Zealand, 35
- Kelp, Wet, Plant for Dealing with, 565
- Kinematograph Films Shown at the British Scientific Products Exhibition, 35
- King’s College : Old Students’ Association, 68
- King’s College War Memorial, 255
- Korean Ores Largely Exploited by Japanese, 35
- Krupp Works Locomotive Output, 411
- Kwantung Factories for Sulphuric Acid, Soap, andc., 231
L
- LABOUR Costs and Mining Output Decline on the Rand, 181
- Lantern Slides for Lectures, Bennis and Co., 526
- Lantern Slides for Lectures, Marshall, Sons and Co., 548
- Lead Factories in Belgium, German Treatment of, 383
- Lead-Zinc-Iron Ores, Finely Disseminated, Difficulty in Making Clean Separation, 35
- Lead and Zinc Mines in the Lake Country, Projected Developments, 207
- Leaks in Masonry Wall of Canal, Method of Stopping, 383
- Leather Belting : New Conditions of Sale, 147
- Lectures and Concerts to Workmen, Palmers, Hebburn-on-Tyne, 578
- Liffey, Proposed Tunnels Under, for Electric Mains and for Pedestrians, 207
- Light Intensity, Effect of Fog on, C. L. Utterback, 337
- Lighting in Factories and Workshops, Leon Gaster, 122
- Lighting, Public and Private, Recent Developments in, W. C. Clinton, 421
- “Lightning Strikes,” Bill to Prevent, 419
- Lignite Briquetting Factory in Canada, 613
- Lille, Exposition Internationale, andc., for Samples to Utilise in Reconstruction of Devastated Country, 613
- Lithuania, Articles in Demand, 589
- Liverpool to Provide Storage for Oil Fuel for Merchant Steamers, 237
- Local Government Board, Passing of, 11
- Lodge, Sir Oliver, Tidal Power versus Land Reclamation : Atomic Energy, Wasteful Use of, 613
- Longitude of the World to be Determined by Wireless Telegraphy, 515
- Lord Roberts’ Memorial Workshops, Some Results, 7
- Lumber Production in United States, 11
- Lysaght, John, Limited, New Australian Works, 539
M
- MACHINE Tools, Government Sale at High Prices, 34
- Machine Tools, Suggestions for Common Standards in Certain Directions for Britain and America, 35
- Machine Tools, Use of, for Mechanical Accuracy; Egyptians, in 4700 B.C., were Beforehand with Whitworth, Professor W. M. F. Petrie, 47
- Madagascar, Hydro-electric Installation at Tamatave, 635
- Madras Engineering College Not Quite Ready, 231
- Madras Government Orders Survey and Report on Various Ports, 59
- Magnetic Sclerometer on Lean, 315
- Magnetic Surveys at Irthlingborough and Melton Mowbray, Investigation and Important Conclusions, 11
- Manganese—see Iron and Steel
- Maps from Aero-photographs, Disadvantages, 161
- Marshall, Sons and Co., Lantern Slides for Lectures, 548
- Mechanical Transport Department’s Smart Work at Kempton Park, 11
- Mexico City, Projected Exhibition of British Products, 231
- Micro-mechanism of the Ageing of Duralumin, Dr. Zay Jeffries, 255
- Microscope : Its Design, Construction, and Application : A Symposium, 588
- Midland Laboratory Guild, 539
- Milk Churns Brought to Paddington Daily, 383
- Mills on the Thames for Extraction of Oil from Copra and Palm Nuts, 85
- Milne Earthquake Observatory, Work to be Carried on at Oxford, 231
- Mine in Michigan, Deepest in the World, 333 ; (Letter), 409
- Mino Timber, The Preservation of, N. T. Williams, 47, 463
- Mineral Resources of the Empire : Monographs Committee of the Imperial Institute, 561
- Mineral Wealth of St. Agnes, Cornwall, 489
- Minerals Development, 597
- Miners Conveyed to and from Work at Doncaster, 35
- Miners’ Lamps, Home-office Invites Suggestions, 255
- Mining Exhibition in South Africa, 534
- Mining Explosion in Staffordshire : Gas and Coal Dust, 462
- Mining, Non-ferrous, in the United Kingdom, Board of Trade Committee, 173, 383, 411, 437, 489, 565
- Mining at St. Ives, Cornwall, 565
- Motor Boat and Marine and Stationary Exhibition, International, 626
- Motor Car Engines, Weight of, Compared with Aero-Engines, 359
- Motor Car Weight Increase, Major F. Strickland, 207, 359
- Motor Cars, Lorries, and Cycles, Output from Government Transport Depot at Slough, 539
- Motor Cycle’s Mileage on a Gallon of Petrol, Ealing Trials, 255
- Motor Omnibuses, Involuntary Stops, Small Proportion of, 515
- Motor Spirit Replaced by Benzole and Alcohol, Captain Montgomery, 11
- Motor Spirit from Sugar Cane : Works at Nairobi, 157
- Moving a Big Gas Container, 11
N
- NANKING Experiments in Cultivation of American Cotton, 333
- National Factories for Sale, 46
- Nature, Jubilee of, 463
- Naval History Chair for University of London, 135
- Necessity Not the Mother of Invention, 635
- New Zealand Coal Mines, Reported Nationalisation, 85
- New Zealand Hydro-electric Works Acquired by Dominion Government, 515
- News Letter for American Contractors’ Business, 111
- Niagara Falls, Chemical Industries, Established and Prospective, 383
- Niagara Falls Power Development Begun in 1842, 635
- Nice, Reconstruction of Port, 463
- Nitrate Deposits in South African District, Costs of Commercial Production, 589
- Nitrate of Lime Factory in Norway, Largest Water Power Station in the World, 613
- Nitrates from Overseas for British Explosives, Urgent Need for Construction of Factory in England, James Young, 85
- Nitrogen, Atmospheric, Experiments in Fixation of, 489
- Nitrogen, Atmospheric, Fixation of, Sale of Incomplete Government Factory, 539
- Nobel Prize Distribution Postponed till 1920, 85
- Non-ferrous Mining, Board of Trade Committee, 173, 383, 411, 437, 489, 565
- Norway’s Imports of Motor Cars, Lorries, andc., Small Proportion from Great Britain, 585
O
- OIL Depot at Belfast with View to Shipping and Electrical Requirements, 305
- Oilfield in West Norfolk, Development Leads to Brick and Glass Making, 207
- Oilfields of Athabaska, Wealth Confirmed by Old Records, 437
- Oil Fuel Immensely Cheaper than Coal in Far Eastern Ports, 515
- Oil Fuel Recommended in Substitution for Coal in France, 565
- Oil Fuel Storage at Liverpool, 237
- Oil at the Hardstoft Well, Increased Flow, 437, 463
- Oil in Midlothian, 359
- Oil in Northern Rhodesia, 231
- Oil Tanks for Naval Supply, 81
- Oil Wells, Government, in Derbyshire, Progress and Prospects, 463
- Old Centralians, Address, andc., 196
- Olympia, Shipping, Engineering and Machinery Exhibition, 11
- Omnibus Fares Increase Justified by Increased Costs, 10
- Omnibuses, Overloaded : Factor of Safety, 539
P
- PAINT on Structural Steel, Quantities, 84
- “Painter” in Water Off the Coast of Peru, 539
- Paints for Bearings and Machinery, Research into Behaviour of Double Iodides of Mercury, andc., 305
- Panama Canal Negotiated by Dreadnoughts, 135
- Paper Import Restrictions Removed, 255
- Paris Institution for Centralisation of Trade Projected, 437
- Patent-office Examiners, 242
- Patent-office Library Hours, Petition for Lengthening, 613
- Patent Owners and Manufacturers, Now Association, 11
- Patents in Poland, 231
- Patents Prolongation, British Chambers of Commerce Resolution, 59
- Patents and Trade Marks in Enemy Countries, Board of Trade Authorisation of Fees, 35
- Patents and Trade Marks : International Congress to Discuss Question, 111
- Patentees, Imperial Institute of, 528
- Peace Celebration Dinner, G. A. Harvey and Co., 110
- Peat Resources of Irish Bogs, 539
- Petrograd Engineering Factories Suffer from Bolshevist Rule, 463
- Petrol Drums, Supposed Empty, Fatal Explosions, 207
- Petrol Handling in France, 207
- Petroleum, Boring for, at West Calder, 255
- Petroleum Executive : Development of Oil Shale Industry in United Kingdom, 383
- Petroleum Investigations in Mexico, 411, 463
- Petroleum in Mexico, Output, Potential and Actual, 437
- Petroleum in New Guinea as Possible Repayment for Australia’s War Outlay, 134
- Phosphate Mines, Morocco, 565
- Photographic Development, Process for Gum- bichromate Prints, 35
- Photography Aided by Refrigeration, 157
- Pipes, Casting Iron, by Centrifugal System, 613
- Platinum Mining Improvement, Increased Russian Output Expected, 85
- Poland to Obtain Certain Chemical Products from Czecho-Slovakia, 589
- Poland’s Economic Resources, 539
- Polish Government Loan in the United States, 589
- Pontoons, Flexible, in Ship Salvage, Successful Experiments, 279
- Port of Sagua, Cuba, Improvement by Dredging, 613
- Portland Cement Factory in Buenos Aires District, 383
- Portland Cement Factories and Potash Recovery, 411
- Portuguese Proposed Purchase of British Wireless Installation at Madeira, 613
- Power Costs at Rhodesian Gold Mine, Coal Cost, 231
- Power,.Electric—see also Electrical Matters
- Power Transmission by Steel Belts on Magnetised Pulleys, 35
- Profit-sharing and Labour Co-partnership, Government Report, 111
Q
- QUEENSLAND’S Mineral Output, 411
- Queensland State Iron and Steel Industry : Suggested By-product Production, 437
- Queensland University Lectureship, 268
R
- RADIUM Discoveries in Canada, 565
- Radium Production in the United States, 305
- Railless Electric Traction Service of Shanghai, 411
RAILWAYS AND TRAMWAYS :
- - Accident, Derailment on London and North- Western, 181
- - Accident, Fatal, on French Railway, 279
- - Accident Reports, Board of Trade, 437
- - Accidents, Fatal, to Passenger Trains, A Year’s Immunity from, 59
- - Accidents, Level Crossing, on Southern Pacific Railroad, 135
- - Allocation of Goods Traffic and Hardships of Traders, 85
- - Ambulance Train Traffic on the Great Western Railway, 207
- - American Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen and Enginemen : Proposed Cooperative Stores on Large Scale, 135
- - American Express Company, Packing Regulations, 359
- - American Locomotives, 150, for Italian Railways, 35
- - American Railway Associations Convention : Depreciation in Freight Cars, 135
- - American Saw Mills Supplying Sleepers for British and French Railways, 35, 85
- - American Troop Movement ; Bailway Figures, 111
RAILWAYS AND TRAMWAYS (continued):
- - Annual Reports of Railways, Statutory Form of Account to be Resumed, 111
- - Appointmentsand Staff Changes, 11, 85, 135, 207, 230, 255, 279, 437, 463, 515
- - Arabia, Narrow-gauge Railway, Aden to Lahej, 488
- - Armstrong, Sir W. G., Whitworth and Co., First Main Line Locomotive Built, Trial of, 437
- - Athens, Existing Travel Facilities, Overland to Mediterranean Ports and Thence by Steamer, 279
- - Baldwin Locomotive Works Change of President, 35
- - Banbury Station Free Buffet War Work, 411
- - Blackpool Traffic “ Rationing,” 135
- - Blandford Railway, Net Cost, 231
- - Bolivia’s National Resources and Lack of Transport Facilities, 305
- - “Bradshaw’s Continental Guido,” Death of Editor, 333
- - Brakesman’s Comfort on the El Paso and South-Western Railroad, 489
- - Brazil Commission on State Railway Standardisation, 515
- - Brighton Tramway Track Renewals Cost, 180
- - British Railway Companies’ Weekly Notices to Operating Staff, 565
- - Buenos Aires and Pacific Railway Finance, 539
- - Buenos Aires Railway, Oil Fuel Supply Cheaper than Coal, 515
- - “Calling-on” Signal on Different Railways’ 515
- - Canadian Government Acquisition of Grand Trunk and other Railways, Terms, 321, 333, 411
- - Canadian Government Railroad Commissioner as Finance Minister, 305
- - Canadian Pacific Railway, Reputation for Courtesy, 359
- - Canadian Pacific Railway, Transport of Returned Troops, Record Figures, 111
- - Canal Traffic Tonnage Statistics, 565
- - Carriages Turned into Living-rooms for Railway Workmen, 255
- - Cartage of Goods by Railways, When Remunerative and Otherwise, 59
- - Central London and London and South- Western, Suggested New Connection, 613
- - Ceylon Government Railways and Coal Economy, 359
- - Charing Cross Underground Station ; Quarter Million Passengers and Additional Stairways, 497
- - Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul Railroad, Track Kept Level by Adjustment of Pontoon Bridge, 35
- - Chicago Railway Services, Electrification, Agreement between City and Railway Company, 35
- - Chili State Railways, Electrification of 2300 Miles, 305
- - Clock, Electrical, Four-face, for Waterloo, 613
- - “Closed” Stations and Platform Tickets, Protest at Manchester, 589
- - Coal Bill of Railways with Six Shillings a Ton Increase, 85, 613
- - Coastwise Traffic Decline, Subsidy and E dimated Cost, 635
- - Coast Traffic—see also Sea-borne
- - Collision, Buffer Stop, at Cannon-street, 59, 359
- - Collision, Buffer Stop, at Crowe, 515, 565 ; Suggested Precaution for Bay Lines, 613
- - Collision, Buffer Stop, at Haverhill, Great Eastern Railway, 589
- - Collision, at Cheshire Lines Manchester Station, 463
- - Collision, Due to Gale, near Chesterfield, 635
- - Collision, Fatal, on the Caledonian Railway, 359
- - Collision, at Huddersfield, 359
- - Collision, at Hull, Report, 231
- - Collision, between London, Brighton and South Coast Train and Light Engine at Streatham, 463
- - Collision, on Midland Great Western Railway, 539
- - Collision, on the New York Central Railway, Supposed Caused by Tramp Stowaway, 231
- - Collision, at Preston Station, Report, 424
- - Collision, at Prestwick, Glasgow and South- Western Line, 539
- - Collision, at Selby between Great Eastern and Great Northern Trains, 463
- - Commercial Travellers’ Privileges, Certain Restrictions to be Retained, 539
- - Commercial Travellers’ Privileges Still Suspended, 59
- - Congestion of Railways and Docks as a War Consequence, 207
- - Congestion of Railways and Wagon Shortage ; High Sea Rates Cause Transference of Conveyance to Railways, 92, 207
- - Cork Railway Connections, Temporary, Request for Permanent Maintenance, 539
- - Corrugated Fire-box, New Type, in U.S.A., 255
- - Cycle Carriage on the District Railway, 207
- - Death of Mr. G. P. Culverwell, 489
- - Deatli of Mr. Charles Mattathias Jacobs, 359
- - Death of Mr. William Kirtley, 411
- - Death of Sir Joseph Lawrence, 489
- - Death of Mr. Frank Potter, Great Western Railway Manager, 85, 111, 135
- - Death of Railway Commissioner to the Victorian Government, 207
- - Death of Lord Rathmore, 206
- - Death of Mr. H. Cuff Smart, 489
- - Derailment at Acton Bridge, Report Findings, Fire from Gas Cylinder, 305
- - Derailment on the District Railway, 255
- - Derailment, Fatal, in France, 207
- - Derailment, Fatal, on the Midland Railway, 359, 411, 489
- - Derailment Outrage in Ireland, 181, 359
- - Derbyshire Peak, Scheme for Railway, 635
- - Dover and Calais Service ai/d Demobilisation, 383
- - Dublin Mail Boat Service, Changes, 255
- - East Indian Railway Company, Extension of Contract for Working under Consideration, 111
- - East Indian Railway Fatal Collision, 35
RAILWAYS AND TRAMWAYS (con- tinued):
- - East Indian Railway Company, Government Contract Extension ; Conversion Rate for Rupee, 370
- - East Indian Railway Company, Increased Carriage of Coals and other Goods, 157
- - East Indian Railway, New Chief Engineer, 135
- - East London Railway Opening, Jubilee, 565
- - Edinburgh and Glasgow Traffic, Respective Routes, 515
- - Eight-hour Day Adoption and Difficulties, 11
- - Electric Lighting for Railways to Prevent Fires, 231
- - Electric Locomotives for the Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul Railway, Tests, 589
- - Electricity Supply Bill, Railway Generating Stations and Main Transmission Lines Exempted from Transfer under Clause 7, 135
- - Electrification of Italian Railways by Italo- American Syndicate, 565
- - Electrification of Main Line Railroads, Statistics for U.S.A., W. B. Potter and S. T. Dodd, 85
- - Electrification on North-Eastern Main Line Section and on Loop Line, 463
- - Electrification and Rebuilding of French Railways, 117
- - Electrification Schemes on Various British Main Lines, 539
- - Engineers as General Managers, 255
- - Enginemen’s Equalised Pay and Unequalised Hours and Responsibility, 489
- - Enginemen to have Working Clothes Provided Free, 35
- - Engines, Robinson Design, Transferred from War-office to Various Railways, 135
- - Entre Rios Railway, Fuel Question, 411, 437
- - Entre Rios Railway, Record Growth in Receipts and Ton Mileage, 463
- - Eyesight of Drivers and Firemen, 35, 411
- - Eyesight Test, 279
- - Fares and Freight Rates ; Question of Ending Subsidy to Railways, 181
- - Fares Revision on the London Underground Railways, 255
- - Federated Malay States Railways Engine, 383
- - Federated Malay States Railways Increased Maintenance Costs, 305
- - Fifty Years’ Work with One Company, 181
- - Films Showing Railway Work, 85
- - Fires on Railways ; Gas versus Electricity, 231, 305
- - Fish and the Railways, 58
- - Flag Decoration of Omnibuses, Trams, and Trains of London Electric Railways and Allied Companies to Celebrate Employees’ Return from the Army, 11
- - Folkestone-Dover Line Closed since 1914 and now Reopened, 111
- - Foodstuffs, Perishable, Carriage Arrangements, 613
- - France, Railway Accidents in Three Months, 383
- - Freight Cars Depreciation in America, 135
- - Freight Rates on Railways and Sea-borne Goods, 157
- - French Flat-bottomed Rails Sold to South Africa, 111
- - French Officials Visit United States for Study of Electrification of Railways, 35
- - French Railways, Reconstruction and Electrification, 117
- - French State Railways Derailment, 207
- - Fuel Question on South American Railways, Oil Displacing Coal, 411, 437
- - Galway (Barna) Railway and Harbour Bill, 613
- - Gas on Railways as a Cause of Fire, 231, 305
- - Gattie System of Handling Goods, Committee of Inquiry, 35, 58, 157, 279, 333
- - Gauges on Railways, Three in All, 59
- - Gloucester Railway Carriage and Wagon Company, Eight Men with Company for Fifty Years, 181
- - Golf as an Aid to Railroad Working, 489
- - Goods and Passenger Traffic, Estimate of Revenue Asked for, 11
- - Government’s Offer to Railwaymen, 635
- - Government and Railwavmen’s Unions, 207, 383
- - Great Eastern Railway, Slight Collision with Buffer Stop, 333
- - Great Northern Expresses, Acceleration, 539
- - Great Northern Railway Extension, Change of Scheme, 635
- - Great Northern Railway, Retirement of Chief Traffic Manager, 135
- - Great Western Railway Divisional Engineer at Shrewsbury, 11
- - Great Western Railway General Manager, Death of Mr. Frank Potter ; New Appointment, 85, 111, 135
- - Great Western Railway, Mileage Increase of, 635
- - Hand-to-mouth Principle, Consignments Smaller and More Frequent than in Prewar Days, 35
- - Handling Goods and Traffic, Mr. A. W. Gattie’s Proposals, Board of Trade Committee to Investigate, 35, 58, 157
- - Hull Station and the Gattie System, 157
- - Improved Service between London, Birmingham, andc., and Wales, 383
- - India-office Negotiations on Locomotive Building, 565
- - Indian Railway Conference and Standardised Wagons, 231
- - Indian Railways and Home-made Wagons, 231
- - Irish Transport Director, Contemplated Appointment, 111
- - Jamaica Railways, Question of Conversion from Steam to Electrical Working, 11
- - Japan and Railway Electrification, Locomotives from Germany Compared with Home-made, 92
- - Krupp’s New Locomotive Works and Prussian State Railways, 333
- - Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway “Rationing,” 135
- - Letterkenny and Burtonport Railway, Improvements in Line and Working, 11
- - Level Crossing Accidents on Southern Pacific Railroad, 135
- - Light Railway Commissioners: Orders Applied for and Confirmed, 135, 589
RAILWAYS AND TRAMWAYS (continued) :
- - Locomotive Building Design in America, Question of Standardisation or Otherwise, 35
- - Locomotive Building in India, 565
- - Locomotive Situation in France, 215
- - Locomotives from France, Cost of Fifty, 613
- - Locomotives for France from United States in War Time, 515
- - Locomotives, Mr. Robinson’s Design, Lying Idle ; Possible Explanation, 333, 613
- - Locomotives and Rolling Stock Sent Overseas during the War, 85
- - Locomotives for South Africa to be Built in Canada and United States instead of United Kingdom, 111
- - Locomotives and Wagons Built at Woolwich, 437
- - Locomotives and Wagons Stored in the Open, Question and Answer, 207
- - Lodging Allowance to Travelling Trainmen, Revision, 85
- - London and North-Western Coach Derailed, 181
- - London and North-Western’s Greenore Service New Steamers, 463
- - London and North-Western Railway Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Buffet, 207
- - London and North-Western Running Superintendent, Changes, 85
- - London and North-Western War Memorial, 463
- - London and Paris, Day Passenger Service Resumed by Brighton Railway Company, 35
- - London and Paris, Time-table of Connections, 437
- - London Railways and Extension of Electrification, 59
- - London, Railways Running Into, Present Percentage of Pre-war Services, 85
- - London and South-Western Suburban Services Improvements, 613
- - Londonderry and Lough Swilly Railway Manager Thanked for Assistance to Navy During War, 142
- - Lorries May be Adopted by Railways, But Not by the State, 635
- - Lorries, War-office, for Conveyance of Railway Goods, 111, 157, 635
- - Lorries—see also Transport, Ministry of
- - Madrid Metropolitan Electric Underground Railway Opened, 437
- - Manchester and Oldham Section of the Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway, 489
- - Marseilles Projected Underground Railway, 489
- - Mechanical Stokers on United States Locomotives, Increased Numbers, 157
- - Meeting Trains on United States Railways, A Fifty Years’ Old Rule, 589
- - Melbourne Suburban Railways, Electrification, 635
- - Mersey Dock and Harbour Board, Change of Manager, 437
- - Metropolitan District Railway : Consequences of Rails Scarcity, 85
- - Metropolitan District Railway’s New Cars, 59
- - Metropolitan Railway’s Increased Service, 11
- - Midland Great Western Railway—see Mullingar
- - Midland Railway Steamship Service between Heysham and Belfast, 565
- - Miners’ Demonstration at Blackpool, Special Trains and Numbers, 59
- - Motor Lorries Lent to Railways by Government, 255, 437—see also Lorries
- - Moving Platforms on the New York Subway, 463
- - Mullingar and Kells Railway : Projected Connection between West and North of Ireland, Avoiding Dublin, 569, 613
- - National Railroad Question of To-day, C. A. Morse, 94
- - National Union of Railwaymen, Administration Changes, 539
- - Nationalisation of Railways and Shareholders’ Interests, 59
- - North British Railway Locomotives Renamed After War Service Overseas, 565
- - North British Railway’s Locomotive Loss by Fire at Cowlairs, 11
- - North-Eastern Railway Collision at Hull, Report, 231
- - North-Eastern Railway, Electrification on 489
- - North-Eastern Railway Goods Traffic : Information for Gattie System Committee, 333
- - North-Eastern Railway, New Deputy Manager, 11
- - North-Eastern Railway’s Running Superintendent, 463
- - Nottingham Station Entrance of the Midland Railway, 207, 279, 489
- - Official Appointments of Sir Eric Geddes and Mr. H. G. Burgess, 207
- - Oil Fuel to Replace Coal and Wood on South American Railways, 411, 437
- - Omnibus Men’s Splendid Service on Outbreak of War, 411
- - Overcrowded London Trains and Electrification, 59
- - Parcel Loss on London and North-Western Railway, Case Lost by Railway on Appea 135
- - Parcels Rates Increase, 231
- - Paris, Lyons and Mediterranean Railway, Electrification between Clermont Ferrand and Nimes, 111
- - Paris Metropolitaine Finance, A Deficit, 305
- - Paris Metropolitaine, Great Increase in Tickets Issued, 231
- - Passengers’ Luggage, 100 lb. Limit Question, 169
- - Pennsylvania Railroad, New Mallet Engine 255
- - Pensioned Railway Servants and Higher Cost of Living, 463
- - Piecework and Similar Systems on Railways, Fresh Agreement, 59
- - Plans and Tracings as Hospital Bandages, Historic Signatures, 305
- - Plumb Plan for Railway Operation, 231
- - Pontoon Swing Bridge Adjusted with Rise and Fall of the Mississippi, to Keep Railway Track Level, 35
- - Port Congestion, Sir Auckland Geddes on, 181
- - Post-office (London) Railway, Completion of Running Tunnel, Delayed Opening, 11
RAILWAYS AND TRAMWAYS (continued) :
- - Queensland Government Railway and Automatic Signals, 489
- - Race Meetings and Train Services, 176
- - Railway Benevolent Institution, Record Receipts, 11
- - Railway Bills Deposited, Decreased Number, 613
- - Railway Clearing House, New Secretary, 613
- - Railway Companies Association Circular to Proprietors Explaining Government Connection and Future Prospects, 635
- - Railway Employees, Increased Numbers, 613
- - RAILWAY EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE :
- -- Blandford Railway Handed Over to Executive Committee, 231
- -- Collieries and Wagon Shortage, Measures Taken, 135
- -- Continental Services, Efficiency Dependent on Government Requirements, 157
- -- Foreign Goods and Coastwise Traffic and Charges, 207
- -- Holidays and Pay of Clerks, Stationmasters, andc., New Scheme, 305
- -- Sunday Duty Pay, 39
- -- Wages Agreement between Government and Unions, 207
- - Railway Management and Ill-informed Criticism, 589
- - Railway Material Exports, Statistics, 11, 181, 231, 383, 589, 635
- - Railwaymen and Piecework Question, 59
- - Railwaymen’s Nine Hours Interval between Work, 94
- - Railwaymen’s Unions, Probable Amalgamation, 59
- - Railway Working Results to End of August, 437
- - Rates and Strikes, 515
- - “Rationing” Traffic to Blackpool, 135
- - Record Passenger Traffic on London and on New York Local Railways, Comparison, 11
- - Richborough, Cost of Works at, and Future of the Port, 59
- - Rolling Stock Cost, Pre-war and Post-war Prices Compared, 489
- - Rolling Stock Deficiencies as a War Consequence, 565
- - Rolling Stock for War Service Abroad, Questions Arising, 157
- - Russia, South-East, and Turkestan, Railway, Communication Opened, 463
- - “Safety First” Movement, Originator in this Country, 255
- - Safety First ; Records of Immunity from Accident, 411
- - St. Just (Falmouth) Ocean Wharves and Railways Bill, 111
- - St. Paul Station, Second Largest in the United States, 359
- - Sea-borne Goods Charges and Railway Congestion, 92, 207
- - Season Tickets during the Strike, 463
- - Season Tickets, Enamelled, Proposal by the Metropolitan Railway Company, 279
- - Season Tickets, Monthly, Resumed, 255
- - Severn Tunnel, Goods Traffic Increase since Pre-war Time, 635
- - Shanghai to Build its own Tramcars, 231
- - Shropshire, Two New Railways, Conferences on the Proposition, 589
- - Signals, Automatic and Block, in the United States, 333
- - Sinai Railway Built by Engineer Railwaymen, 207
- - Single-line Tokens and Starting Signals, Suggested Precaution, 613
- - Sleepers from United States for British and French Railways, 35, 85
- - Smoking in Hospitals, Railway Employees’ Pipe Renovation Work for Soldiers, 207
- - Snow Closes Transandine Railway for Five Months, 565
- - South African Locomotive Orders Lost to United Kingdom, 111
- - South African Railway Rates Increase, 565
- - South American Railways Fuel—see Fuel South-Eastern and Chatham Railway Accident, Result of Inquiry, 157
- - South-Eastern and Chatham Railway Uses Twenty-four Hours’ Timing, 255
- - South Indian Railway Steamers Worked at a Loss, 515
- - South Wales and Wagon Delays, 635
- - Standardised Wagons for India, 231
- - Steamship, Railway, Services-—see also Ships
- - Strike, Government Direct Cost, 437
- - Strike and Industrial Communications by Railway, 383
- - Strike, Parliamentary Debate Suggested, 437
- - Strike and Passenger Traffic, 383
- - Strike of Railway Shopmen in America, 355, 383
- - Strike and Volunteer Assistance, Railway Companies’ Resolutions in Appreciation, 463
- - Subsidy to Railways and Question of Freight Rates, 181
- - Summer Time in America Causes an Hour’s Train Stoppage, 565
- - Swedish State Railway Electrification, Time and Cost Estimate, 111
- - Swiss Surcharge on Tickets for France, Due to Exchange Rate, 613
- - Thomas, Mr. J. H., on Government Conciliation Scheme, 535
- - Tokyo, Projected Railway Electrification. Locomotive Difficulties, 92
- - Trades Unions, and Railway Control, 539
- - Traffic Allocation to a Given Company, Inconveniences, 157
- - Traffic Difficulties, Offer of War-office Lorries 111, 157
- - Train and Omnibus, Increased Accommodation, 411
- - Transport Committee (Metropolitan Area) Progress, 59 ; Report, 181
- - Transport of Goods Delay, Suggested Remedy, 73
- - TRANSPORT, MINISTRY OF :
- -- Congestion at Terminals and Ports, Cause, and Steps Taken to Remedv, 137
- -- Definition of Word “Possession,” 181
- -- Electricity Bill, New Powers, and the Ministry of Transport, 539
- -- Goods Rates Increase, 279
- -- Information Required from Railway and other Authorities, 333
RAILWAYS AND TRAMWAYS (continued) :
- - TRANSPORT, MINISTRY OF (continued)
- -- Irish County Councils’ Request for Irish Committee for Transport in Ireland, 359
- -- Irish Director-General of Transport, 489
- -- Locomotives of Various Types Built in Great Britain for Use in France, Allocated to British Railways, 539
- -- London Traffic, Special Committee, 255, 359, 463
- -- Minister’s Title Changed to Minister of Transport, 135
- -- Motor Lorries Lent by Government, 255, 437
- -- Number of Ministry Staff, 437
- -- Powers of other Departments, Transference to Ministry of Transport, 279, 305
- -- Return of Locomotives and Wagons Lent to France, 411, 437
- -- Revision of Rates, andc., Committee to Advise before Action, 415, 437, 589
- -- Rolling Stock Position ; Figures in Preparation by Ministry, 515
- -- Royal Assent to Bill, 181
- -- Sir Eric Geddes on Privately Owned Wagons, 85
- -- Transport, Institute of, 489
- -- Transport, Railway, Papers Read at the British Association Meeting, 279
- -- Trucks at Avonmouth, 38 to Replace 482, 181
- -- Tunnel Under the Solent ; Address to Ministry Suggested, 383
- -- Wagon Building, Government and Private, 437
- -- Wagon Ownership, Analysis, 539
- -- Wagons, Privately Owned and Otherwise, Comparison of Tonnage Carried, 181
- - TRAVELLING Vouchers for Members of Parliament, Question of, 157, 181
- - Twenty-four Hours’ Timing :
- -- Home Secretary Appoints Committee to Consider the Question, 333
- -- South - Eastern and Chatham Adopts System, 255
- - Uganda Government Railway, Proposed Increase of Fares, 489
- - “Underground” Posters to Explain Increase in Working Cost, 189
- - Underground Railway Window Posters, 515
- - Uniforms of Underground and Omnibus Employees, Huge Cost Increase, 181
- - United States Exports of Steel Rails, Fishplates, andc., to Various Countries, 515
- - UNITED STATES RAILWAYS :
- -- Agreement between Administration and Companies, Difficulties in Adjustment, 165
- -- Appeal for Economy in Use of Fuel and Stores, 11
- -- Demobilisation and Passenger Equipment, 383
- -- Employees, Statistics, 613
- -- Federal Control Removal from Railways, 489, 515
- -- Freight Cars Orders Delayed, but Good Supply, 463
- -- Inventory of Supplies and Material Prior to Return of Railways to Private Management, 383
- -- Pennsylvania Company’s Fast Train Restored, 35
- -- Railroad Bill, Senator Cummins as Promoter, 515
- -- Railway Industry Shown in Diagram, E. B. Leigh, 111
- -- Railway Operation and the Plumb Plan, 231
- -- Railway Revenue and Expenditure, 305
- -- Ratio of Expenditure to Recipts in 1913 and 1918, 85
- -- Sleepers, 4,000,000, Ordered from Oregon and Washington Sawmills, 35, 85
- -- Strike of Railway Shopmen, 355, 383
- -- War Department Purchases for France Taken Over by Railroad Administration, 85
- -- Women Employees on United States Railways, Increase up to Armistice, Reduction Since, 260
- - Victorian Government Railway Commissioners, An Appointment and a Death, 207
- - Wagon Building and Repair ; Compensation Question, 185
- - Wagon Delays in South Wales, 635
- - Wagon Detention in Excess of Time Allowed, Statistics, 635
- - Wagon, Railway, Ownership, Analysis, 539
- - Wagon Shortage and Colliery Stoppages, 135
- - Wagon Shortage, Relief by Government Motor Lorries, 111, 157
- - Wagons, Common User System, in this Country and in United States, 589
- - Wagons, Privately Owned and Otherwise, Census, 181, 589
- - Wagons Used in France Out of Gauge for English Railways, 613
- - Wagons from Woolwich Arsenal ; None Yet Delivered, 565
- - War Bonus of Officers, 279
- - War Lorries for Relief of Dock Congestion, Cost, 635
- - War Lorries for Relief of Dock Congestion Not a Success, 635
- - Ways and Communications Bill—see Transport
- - Willesden, Railway Property in, Rateable Value, 279
- - Women on Railway Work, Diminishing Number Pending Men’s Demobilisation, 565
- - Women on Railway Work, War Cabinet Committee, 72
- - Workmen’s Fares and Trains Still as in Prewar Time, 59
- - York and Newcastle ; Main and Loop Line Electrification on the North-Eastern Railway, 489
- RAINFALL Data, British, Continuance of Publication, 85
- Rainfall, Record, in Manila, 589
- Rangefinders, Progress in, Dr. A. Barr, 111
- Rangoon Dock Construction Postponed, Erosion Works Projected, 635
- Ransome, Lewis, Accident, 382
- Redmayne, Sir Richard, Returns to Post as Chief Inspector of Mines, 463
- Refractory Materials Section of the Ceramic Society ; Various Meetings, 383
- Refrigerating Plant at Tientsin, 463
- Refrigerating Plants, Small, Successful Manufacture of, in Australia, 463
- Refrigeration to Reduce Glare in Photographing Metal, 157
- Refrigerator Fleet for Italy, Mostly German, 489
- Refuse Collecting and Separating Screen in Hampstead, 111
- Reinforced Concrete Columns, Experiments with Various Forms of Protective Covering, W. A. Hull, 181
- Reinforced Concrete Flag-pole, 157
- Review of the Foreign Press, 528
- Rhodesia Broken Hill Mines, Additional Pump, 157
- Rhone Development—see Electrical Matters
- Richborough, Cost of Works at, and Future of the Port, 59
- Roads, Slippery Condition Due to Tar, andc., Committee of Investigation, 613
- Rock Drilling Tests and Triumphs in South Africa, 181
- Royal Agricultural Society, Trials of Ploughs and Tractors, 635
- Royal Artillery War Commemoration Book, 452
S
- SAFETY in Factories, Home-office Pamphlet 620
- Salvage Pumps and Submersible Salvage Units, Government Sale, 589
- Sand Used in Concrete, Careful Investigation Absolutely Necessary, H. E. Bellamy, 383
- Scarfed Leather Belts, Direction of Travel, 411
- Scientific Lighting and Industrial Efficiency, Leon Gaster, 122
- Scotland and Reinforced Concrete, 333
- Scrap Metal Utilised by Blow-pipe Cutting, 181
- Sea Depth Sounding by Explosive Charges, 463
- Sewage Scheme for Fleet, Further Loan, 231
- Shanghai, Anglo-Chinese Business Men’s Club, 463
- Shanghai, Projected Port Improvements, Dredging and Damming Rivers, 59
- Shearing Strength of Wooden Structures, Simple Device for Improvement, Professor C. Forssell, 35
- Sheffield, Supply of Coke Oven Gas to, Mr. Laverick, 539
- Shells, Commercial Possibilities of, 305
SHIPS AND SHIPPING MATTERS:
- - American Transport’s Claim for Record Trip 59
- - Barrow and Belfast Steamship Services, Projected Re-opening, 539
- - Bideford’s First Steel Ship Begun, 565
- - Brussels, Captain Fryatt’s Steamship Salved at Zeebrugge, 207
- - Canadian Government Steel Steamers Building at Vancouver, 635
- - Canadian Mercantile Marine, New Ships Delivered, 515
- - Chicago to Liverpool, Voyage of Vessel of over 4000 Tons, 59
- - Coal Loading Record at Sunderland, 463
- - Curraghmore, London and North-Western Steamer, Lent to City of Dublin Steam Packet Company for Mail Service, 539
- - Dreadnought Fleet Passed through Panama Canal Locks, 135
- - Dublin Mail Boat Service Changes, 255
- - Electrically Welded Ship, First Launched in France, 613
- - First Steamer to be Built at Prince Rupert, British Columbia, 613
- - Foreign Ships’ Charters Freed from Inter- Allied Control, 59
- - French Government Order, Last of Forty New Ships Launched at Victoria, B.C., 515
- - French Merchant Fleet Reconstruction, Report by Government Commission, 515
- - Fuel for Ships, Immense Saving by Use of Oil, 515
- - Gigantic Ocean Liners for Rapid Atlantic Crossing, 111
- - Greece, Shipping Amalgamation in, 359
- - Hebburn-on-Tyne, New Shipyard at, 59, 539
- - Heysham and Belfast Passenger Service Unlikely to be Resumed, 565
SHIPS AND SHIPPING MATTERS (continued):
- - H. M. Destroyer Westminster in Collision, 157
- - Indo-Ceylon Steamers Worked at a Loss, 515
- - Irish Shipyard Purchase at Warrenpoint, 333
- - Japan and America, Relative Cost of Shipbuilding in the Two Countries, 333
- - Japanese New Steamship Line, 157
- - Japanese Shipbuilding Profits, 411
- - Japanese Shipowners and Piers in Kobe Harbour, 255
- - Laurentic Wreck at Lough Swilly, Bullion Salved from, 157
- - Life-saving Appliances on Ships ; Use of “Kapok,” 157
- - London and North-Western Company’s Steamers Renamed ; New Ones Built, 341
- - New Steamer Curraghmore, 463
- - Nova Scotia and Steel Shipbuilding Industry, 635
- - Olympic to be Reconditioned at Belfast, 157
- - Queenstown, Calling of Large Cunard and White Star Steamers Suspended, 207
- - Refrigerator Fleet for Italy, Requisitions from Germany, 489
- - Shipping, Engineering and Machinery Exhibition, 11, 181, 320
- - Ship’s Position at Sea, Discovered by Depth Charges and Hydrophones, 181
- - Spain Prohibits Export of Certain Ships, 411
- - Steamers Sold to Foreigners this Year, 135
- - Towing, Electric, on the Canal de la Marne, 255
- - United States Shipbuilding versus British, 231
- - Yarrow Shipbuilding Programme at Scotstoun, 305
- SHOWER Bath for Mules Used in Mines, 279
- Silt Removal from Zuni Reservoir, New Mexico, Suggested Method, 613
- Singapore, Petrol Transport Service, 333
- Sirocco—see Davidson
- “Skyscraper” Born in Edinburgh in 1698, 11
- Slate Quarry Waste Utilised in Wales, 515
- Sound for Surveying Diamond Drill Holes ; Accuracy of Listening Instruments, 565
- South African Chamber of Mines Building, 539
- South African Low-grade Gold Mines, Serious Position, 207
- South African Post-office Revenue, 333
- South African Technical Societies, Institute Building for General Use, 135
- Spirit Levels, Major E. O. Henrici, 59 ; J. W. French, 135
- Standardisation of Chains, New Association, 124, 220, 359
- Statistics, Request for Parliamentary Committee by Royal Statistical Society, 85
- Steam Turbines and Fuel Consumption, Professor F. Bacon on, 359
- Steaming Gas Retorts, Mr, Riley, 539
- Steel Wire Rope Tests in United States, 333
- Stone Crushers, Gyratory, Largest Portable Yet Built, 333
- Strikes and the Community, A Warning, 333
- Submarine Acoustics, F. Lloyd Hopwood, 181
- Sugar Cane Mills in the Philippine Islands, 359
- Sugar Factory from Locally Grown Beet near Newark, 59
- Sulphur Discovery in Java, 181
- Summer Time Throughout the Year, Monsieur Pascalis, 374
- Surplus Government Property, Successful Sales, 11, 59, 157, 181
- Surplus, Numbers Published, Surplus Sales Results , 59, 589
- Suspension Bridge, Proposed, at Philadelphia, Span Required, 11
T
- TANK for Precipitation of Solids in Mine Water, 620
- Tasmanian Government Power Scheme, 635
- Telephone Boxes, Roadside, for Automobile Association Members, 107
- Telephone Line between Allahabad and Lucknow, 538
- Testing of Anchors and Chain Cables by Lloyd’s Register, 489
- Textile Materials, Tensile Strength and Atmospheric Humidity, 411
- Thermalene, New Gas for Producing High Temperatures, 383
- Thermit Weld, Unusually Large, 59
- Tidal Power Schemes, English and French, 305
- Tigris and Euphrates Estuary Bar, Need of Removal for Sake of Trade, 463
- Timber Growing in South Africa, Advantages of Pine, 437
- Timber, Methods of Preserving, 489
- Timber, Mine, Preservation of, N. T. Williams, 47, 463
- Timber in New Zealand, Neglected Valuable Asset, 35
- Timber Planting in the United Kingdom, Available Land and Need of Timber, 135
- Timber, Seventy Million Feet from Britislu Columbia, 181
- Timber Tests in United States ; Heartwood and Sapwood, 565
- Tin Ore from British Sources, 565
- Tin-plate Manufacture in Japan, 359
- Tin and Silver Lead Output in New South Wales, Increased Value, 85
- Tin in War Time, Cadmium Used as Substitute in Solder, 515
- Tipping Dumping Wagons : Getting Barges over High Lock Sills, A Comparison, 596
- Tractor Trials and Exhibition at Lincoln, 59
- Trade Unionism Among Professional Associations, 181
- Tram Accident at Burton, Suggestion to Check Running Backwards, 613
- Trams versus Rubber-tired Vehicles, Dr. Blackwood Murray, 565
- Tramways in Aberdeen and Glasgow, Profit with Low Fares, 305
- Transport Committee (Metropolitan Area), Progress, 59 ; Report under Consideration, 181
TRANSPORT, MINISTRY OF:
- - Canals’ Future as a Difficult Problem, 135— see also Board of Trade
- - Crinan Canal, Survey,What to Do with it, 635
- - Date of Transfer of Certain Powers from Board of Trade and Ministry of Health, 279, 305
- - Electricity Bill, New Powers, and the Ministry of Transport, 539
- - Goods Rates, Railway, Increase, 279
- - London Traffic Question, 59, 181, 255, 359, 463
- - Minister’s Title Changed to Minister of Transport, 135
- - Revision of Rates, Fares, andc., Procedure Before Taking Action, 415
- - Royal Assent to Bill, 181
- - Slippery Roads, Committee of Surveyors to Investigate, 613
- - Transport Service, Emergency Road, Continued by Government to Relieve Congestion after the Railway Strike, 411
- TRANSVAAL Gold Mines, Coal Used by, 231
U
- UNIVERSITY of Bristol, Major Robertson Appointed Professor of Mechanical Engineering, 35
- UNIVERSITY OF LONDON, UNIVERSITY COLLEGE :
- - Recent Developments in Public and Private Lighting, W. C. Clinton, 421
- - Thermionic Detectors, Lectures by Professor J. A. Fleming, 382
- University of Manchester, Increase of Funds Needed for Additional Students, 589
V
- VANCOUVER Island ; Projected Largest Dock in the World at Esquimault, 234
- Venezuela, First National Exhibition, 437
- Vickers Electrical Company, Limited, 181
- Vickers to Occupy St. Ermin’s Hotel, 565
- Vickers’ War Memorial Offer for Barrow, 463
- Victoria, Vancouver Island, New Water Supply, 279
W
- WAGES in Japan, Male and Female Workers, 359
- Wales, Use of Water Power of, for Welsh Industries, Prize Essay at Eisteddfod, 279
- War Models Exhibition, Returns, 35
- Washington International Labour Conference, London and North-Western Official Delegate, 489
- Waterfall, Prehistoric, Immense, 635
- Water-logged Pits in the Tipton District, 181
- Water Power Available in Borneo and Sumatra, 359
- Water Power, French, Suggested Use of, in Relief of Coal Scarcity, 59
- Water Power in India, Potential Resources, 437, 515
- Water Power, Insufficiently Utilised in Germany and Austria, 515
- Water Power Resources in Brazil, 463
- Water Power of the St. Lawrence, Development, 635
- Water Power of the Yangtze River, Scheme for Utilisation, S. J. Powell, 613
- Waterproof Cement, Sir G. K. Scott-Moncrieff, 489
WATER SUPPLY:
- - British Columbia, Water Power Resources, 231
- - Dairen, Shahokoa, New Water Supply Appliances, 231
- - Fire Engine for Refilling Water Reservoir, 181
- - Greater Winnipeg Water Board and Shoal Lake Aqueduct, 503
- - Jerusalem, New Water Supply for, 216
- - Lima, Peru, New Waterworks Projected, 635
- - Manchester Water Scheme Passed House of Lords, 610
- - Metropolitan Water Board Reorganisation Scheme Rejected, 359
- - Nuneaton, Further Water Supply Projected, 589
- - Osaka Water Supply Extensions 231
- - Winnipeg Supply from Lake in Ontario, Arduous Task, 157
- - Water Waste at Night, 207
- WATT Engine and James Watt's Cornish Experiences ; Centenary, 206, 213, 450
- Ways and Communications Bill—see Transport —see also Railways
- Weights and Mea ures, Mr. Halsey on the Decimal System, 255
- Weld Requiring 1400 lb. of Thermit, 59
- Welding of Cutter Bars at a Colliery, 359
- Wells, Deepest, in the World, 359
- Westinghouse, Ex-British, Association Dinner, 548
- Wind Power for Production of Electricity, Proposed Windmills for Supply of St. Ives, 59
- Winnipeg River Power Company, Equipment, 255
- Wire Hawsers, Method of Attaching, to Sunken Vessels, 207
- Wireless Shore Stations in U.S.A., 305
- Wireless Telegraph Station at Warsaw, Germany’s Low Bid, 255
- Wireless Telegraphic Stations in Mexico, Foreign Competition Refused, 463
- Wireless Telegraphy for Determination of Longitude, 515
- Wireless Telephony in Air Flight, 157
- Wittet, G., Retirement from Bombay Government Service, 406
- Wolfram Discoveries in Siberia. 111
- Wood Distillation in India, “Stockholm” Tar from Long-leaf Pine, 85
- Wooden Piling in Wrater, Durability Question, 411
- Wooden Structures, Shearing Strength of, Improvement Device, Professor C. Forssell, 35
- Works, New, in the North of England, 539
Y
- YARROW Shipbuilding Programme, 305
Z
- ZEPPELINS, Proposed Line of, between Germany and Sweden, 463
- Zinc, Electrolytic, Production in Australia, 157
- Zinc Ore Accumulation in China, 411
See Also
Sources of Information