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New York Paper - The New Spirit in Industrial Relations (with Discussion)By Herbert M. Wilson
We of the employer class represent labor in the social organization and in industry just as truly as do those who labor only with their hands, and, because our labor is chiefly with our brains, the du
Jan 1, 1919
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Bulletin 150 Electrodeposition of Gold and Silver from Cyanide SolutionsBy S. B. Christy
This report on the electrodeposition of gold and silver from cyanide solutions represents work that has occupied my time at intervals during the past 20 years. The investigation has been carried on si
Jan 1, 1919
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Bulletin 168 Recovery of Zinc From Low Grade and Complex OresBy Oliver C. Ralston, Dorsey A. Lyon
Volatilization in retorts has been, until recently, the only commercial process of producing spelter, hence the zinc mine operators have had to meet the terms of the zinc smelters in regard to the fol
Jan 1, 1919
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Bulletin 162 Removal of the Lighter Hydrocarbons from Petroleum by Continuous DistillationBy J. M. WADSWORTH
The purpose of this bulletin is to describe the methods of constructing and operating representative types of plants in the United States used for removing the light hydrocarbons from petroleum by con
Jan 1, 1919
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Bulletin 165 Bibliography of Petroleum and Allied Substances in 1916By E. H. Burroughs
HISTORICAL REFERENCES OCCURRENCE-GEOLOGY AND ORIGIN. 4. ARNOLD, RALPH. Conservation of the oil and gas resources of the Americas, Econ. Geol., vol. 11, Apr.-May, 1916, pp. 203-222; June, 1916, pp. 299
Jan 1, 1919
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Bulletin 178-B War Minerals Nitrogen Fixation and Sodium CyanideBy Van H. Manning
The term war minerals has been applied t.o those ores and minerals that were largely imported. before the war. Among the mon important of these are manganese, essential for making high-grade steel for
Jan 1, 1919
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Bulletin 166 A Preliminary Report on the Mining Districts of IdahoBy EDGAR K. SOPER, Clarence A. Wright, DOUGLAS C. LIVINGSTON, Thomas Varley
In 1917 the Federal Bureau of Mines and the University of Idaho arranged to cooperate in an investigation looking to the improvement of mining and milling methods in the mining districts of the State
Jan 1, 1919
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Bulletin 172 Abstracts of Current Decisions On Mines and Mining, Reported from January to May 1918By J. W. Thompson
The term "minerals" when employed in a conveyance in the State of West Virginia is understood to include every inorganic substance which can be extracted from the earth for profit, whether it be solid
Jan 1, 1919
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Bulletin 169 Illinois Mining Statues AnnotatedBy J. W. Thompson
BURYING DEAD MINERS. BURYING BODIES OF DEAD MINERS. REVISED STATUTES (HURD) 1874, P. 263. SEC. 22. LIABILITY OF RAILROADS, ETC., FOR BURIAL EXPENSES.-When any railroad company, stage or any steamboat
Jan 1, 1919
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Bulletin 174 Abstracts of Current Decisions on Mines and MiningBy J. W. Thompson
A mining company for a period of 12 years bad been selling its ore to a certain smelting company for the purpose of obtaining a continuous and steady market for its ore and for the purpose on the part
Jan 1, 1919
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Bulletin 181 Abstracts of Current Decisions on Mines and MiningBy J. W. Thompson
MEANING OF TERM, The term "minerals" when used in grants or in reservations or instruments of conveyance is not limited to metals or metalliferous deposits, whether contained in veins that have well-
Jan 1, 1919
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Bulletin 179 Abstracts of Current Decisions on Mines and MiningBy J. W. Thompson
ESTATE IN MINERALS. Minerals beneath the surface may be made the subject of separate ownership either by a grant of the minerals by the owner of the land or by a grant of the land excepting the miner
Jan 1, 1919
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Bulletin 176 Recent Developments in the Absorption Process for Recovering Gasoline From Natural GasBy W. P. DYKEMA
This report gins the results of a study conducted hy the Ilnreau of Mines for the purpose of informing the petroleum industry on the recent progress in the de,·elopment nncl application of the absorpt
Jan 1, 1919
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Bulletin 177 The Decline and Ultimate Production of Oil Wells, With Noes on the Valuation of Oil PorpertiesBy Carl H. Beal
The oil industry in the United States is further advanced than in any other country, because of American initiative and the development of industries dependent in some way on petroleum or its products
Jan 1, 1919
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Pure Carbon-Free Manganese And Manganese-Copper -DiscussionW. B. PRICE,* Waterbury, Conn. (written discussion??.-It has been our experience, especially in cupro-nickel, that manganese has been very beneficial, not only, as stated by Mr. Braid, in removing sul
Jan 12, 1918
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Pure Carbon-Free Manganese And Manganese CopperBy Arthur Braid
THE war has caused an increasing scarcity of phosphorus and its well known alloys with copper and tin. At the same time, the production of brass and bronze, nickel-silver, cupro-nickel, and other non-
Jan 11, 1918
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Positions Vacant (a47780fa-68a2-4a84-b4e1-9e1401b762d2)No. 347.-A South African development company will shortly require the services-of a mill superintendent, who has a general knowledge of concentration, particularly of flotation, and is able to take ch
Jan 11, 1918
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Radium-DiscussionW. A. SCHLESINGER,* Denver, Colo.-Two problems are of great interest to the radium manufacturer at the present tine: The first is to perfect a process, more efficient and more economical, which is cap
Jan 11, 1918
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The Relation Of Sulphur To The Overpoling Of Copper- DiscussionF. JOHNSON,* Birmingham, England (written discussion t).--. Mr. Skowronski's first melting experiments tend to show that ingots with a "level set" may be obtained without oxygen. Now it is charac
Jan 11, 1918
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U. S. Employment OfficeThe United States Employment Office of the Department of Labor, of which the division of engineering and education, under the direction of A. H. Krom, maintains an office at 29 La Salle Street, Chicag
Jan 10, 1918