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  • AIME
    Gold: Its Production and Marketing

    By F. W. Bradley

    GOLD is a large subject. One could talk about its geological or mineralogical occurrences, prospect- i11.g for it, mining of .it, its metallurgy or its marketing; but I have decided to limit my discus

    Jan 1, 1932

  • AIME
    Mining Engineering's 1977 Annual Review

    It is probably safe to say that, as the economic well-being of the mining industry goes, so goes the fortunes of mineral explorationists. And in 1977 the industry was not well at all. The year-long de

    Jan 5, 1978

  • AIME
    Mining and Metallurgy - Gold Prices as Seen by the Banker

    By AIME AIME

    A PERIOD of business depression and falling prices always raises questions as to the possible responsibility of the monetary or banking system. This is natural enough, for it is agreed that the supply

    Jan 1, 1930

  • AIME
    The New "Crime" of Silver: Who?s Guilty? ? Producers Hold They Should Receive the Monetary Price, $1.29; Consumers Argue for Free Open Market as an Industrial Metal ? The Producers? Side

    By Pat McCarran

    WHEN this Government was founded, the framers of the Constitution wrote into that instrument a provision that Congress should "coin money and fix the value thereof;" and the Constitution prohibits mak

    Jan 1, 1947

  • AIME
    Silver Stabilization

    By JOHN JANNEY

    STABILIZATION of the adjustment of normal consumption to normal production of world commodities is quite different from reducing production until visible surpluses are consumed. The first means resto

    Jan 1, 1931

  • AIME
    Zinc used for Money in Belgium and France

    By George C. Stone

    WHEN George C. Stone, a Director of the Institute, and so well known to our Members in connection with the Institute's many activities was abroad in 1.919, he secured an interesting collection of

    Jan 1, 1920

  • AIME
    Is Silver a Commodity?

    By TSUYEE PEI

    I FEEL greatly honored and appreciate this opportunity to be able to say a few words about that rather perplexing subject, silver. The constant decline in the price of this metal has now reached the

    Jan 1, 1931

  • AIME
    What Will Politicians Do to Silver After Centuries of Instability?

    By A. Lucian Walker

    SILVER is not only of paramount importance to millions of people as a medium of savings and to other millions as a medium of exchange, but it is also valuable and useful in industry. Mexico continues

    Jan 1, 1937

  • AIME
    Outlook for Silver: Present and Future

    By C. W. Handy

    ONE LAW cannot he evaded, the economic law of supply and demand. Silver, like any other commodity, is subject to this law; and its price in the long run is determined by existing conditions. I say "

    Jan 1, 1932

  • AIME
    Mexican Paper - The Value of Ores in Mexico

    By N. H. Emmons

    In the United States the value of gold- and silver-ores is everywhere reckoned in ounces troy of the metal per " short ton " (2000 lbs. avoird.) of the ore. In the case of silver, which fluctuates in

    Jan 1, 1902

  • AIME
    Reminiscences of Metallurgists and Plants in the San Francisco Area

    By ABBOT A. HANKS

    WHEN gold was discovered in California, and San Francisco grew almost over night from a handful of people to many thousands, one of the first difficulties experienced was the lack of money. Gold dust

    Jan 1, 1931

  • AIME
    Colombia-Important Gold and Platinum Producer

    By Andrew Meyer

    As a producer of gold and platinum, Colombia is most emphatically an important country. Last year it produced 656,000 oz. of gold-twice as much as any other country in South America, in fact accountin

    Jan 1, 1942

  • AIME
    Construction Methods, Cushman Tunnel No. 2

    By F. E. ROGERS

    CUSHMAN TUNNEL No. 2 is adjacent to the Hood Canal, near potlatch, Wash. It is 17 ft. inside .diameter, about 13,000 ft., or two and one- half, miles in length, and is a part of the second unit of the

    Jan 1, 1931

  • AIME
    Position of Silver under the Pittman Act

    By Cornelius F. Kelley

    DURING the war, events moved with unprecedented rapidity. Situations, industrial, economic and financial, arose over night that stressed to the uttermost the ingenuity and ability of those who dealt w

    Jan 1, 1921

  • AIME
    Outline of a Plan for a Monetary System for India

    By L. BENEDICT

    COMMENTING on the report of the latest Royal Commission for India, the September, 1926, issue of the National City Bank's monthly letter states, among other things, that "The decision of the Roya

    Jan 1, 1926

  • AIME
    The Assay and Valuation of Gold-Bullion

    By Frederic P. Dewey

    THE Bureau of the Mint of the United States Treasury maintains 13 offices for the purchase of gold-bullion, and this paper describes an investigation to establish the reasonable differences in the ass

    Aug 1, 1909

  • AIME
    Economic Significance of Special Alloy Steels

    By HILAND BATCHELLER

    COMMENT on the economic significance of the special alloy steels seems inevitably to reduce itself to an attempt to peer into the future of the industry in which we are interested. We are all familiar

    Jan 1, 1931

  • AIME
    Gold Stocks Not Alarming

    By AIME AIME

    EDWIN W. KEMMERER, professor of international finance at Princeton, in a speech before a banking conference at Urbana, Ill., on Nov. 26, stated that the increase in the store of gold held by the Unite

    Jan 1, 1941

  • AIME
    The Excursion To Hawaii And Japan.

    By R. W. Raymond

    On the Manchuria. SOMEWHAT fatigued with excess of enjoyment and strenuous continuity of movement on the trip to and through California, the members and guests of the Institute party embarked Tuesday

    Jan 1, 1912

  • AIME
    Improved Outlook for Gold and Silver

    By Scott, Turner

    IN 1933, the monetary metals were produced in a ratio of 6.7 oz. of silver to 1 oz. of gold, the lowest relatively for silver since the period from 1851 to 1865. At the beginning of that period, the v

    Jan 1, 1934