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  • AIME
    Recent. Negotiations of Russo- Asiatic With Soviet Government

    AT A MEETING of the Shareholders of the Russo-Asiatic Cons. Ltd., in London, Oct. 23, 1922, LESLIE URQUHART, chairman of the com- pany made the following statement:* I come now to our recent negot

    Jan 12, 1922

  • AIME
    Sampling and Estimating Ore in Copper Queen Mines

    By R. W. Prouty

    THE methods of sampling and ore estimating used at the Copper Queen Branch, Phelps Dodge Corpn., as applied to the Copper Queen mines at Bisbee, Ariz., fall into two divisions because of the differenc

    Jan 11, 1922

  • AIME
    Geology, Mining and Metallurgy of the New Comstock

    By Wilbur H. Grant

    THE property of the United Comstock Mines Co. lies in the eastern foot-hills of the Sierra Nevada Mountains, in the Washoe mining district of Storey County, Nev. Commencing at the boundary line betwee

    Jan 11, 1922

  • AIME
    Rescue Work at Argonaut Mine Fire of 1922

    By Byron Pickard

    AT MIDNIGHT of Sunday, Aug. 27, 1922, a fire was discovered in the main shaft of the Argonaut mine, Jackson, Cal. With the excep-tion of a shift boss and two skip tenders who escaped, the entire night

    Jan 11, 1922

  • AIME
    One Phase of the Problem of Increasing the Consumption of Copper

    By H. H. Stout

    THE high copper price during the war stimulated the capacity to produce far beyond a possible normal consumption. The curves in Fig. 1 show this. The line YZ indicates, what the world production a

    Jan 11, 1922

  • AIME
    The Week in San Francisco and the Homeward Journey

    By F. F. Sharpless

    ARRIVING at Davis Junction, after leaving Portland, we expected to wait for an hour and a half, but found the superintendent of motive power of the Southern Pacific, Mr. Williams, waiting for us with

    Jan 11, 1922

  • AIME
    One Hundred and Twenty-sixth Meeting of the A. I. M. E.

    By Herbert R. Hanley

    THE One Hundred and Twenty-sixth meeting-of the Institute, held in San Francisco, Sept. 25 to 29, 1922, was a success in every way. Character-istically, San Francisco presented climate suited, to the

    Jan 11, 1922

  • AIME
    Engineers Work in Russia Through the Relief Administration

    By Edgar Rickard

    IT SHOULD be clearly understood that my remarks on economic conditions in Russia are entirely personal, and not official as an officer of the Ameri-can Relief Administration. The American Relief Admin

    Jan 11, 1922

  • AIME
    Review of the Month (09698286-c66f-497c-a900-38f1842f72f1)

    AT THE beginning of October, the outstanding feature in the world's affairs was the Turkish question. The Turks, victorious over the Greeks, repudiated the treaty of Sévres with the Allies and de

    Jan 11, 1922

  • AIME
    What is the Matter with Modern Galvanizing?

    By J. A. Singmaster

    A REPORT that it did not pay to use present-day galvanized iron on account of the short life of the material, accompanied by proofs of the state-ment in the form of a tabulated history of the first co

    Jan 10, 1922

  • AIME
    Gold in Dutch and French Guiana

    By George Laird

    IF IT IS true that Sir Walter Raleigh lost his head for his failure to find gold in the Guianas, the trumped up charge of "treason" might better have been "con-tributory negligence." That systematic i

    Jan 10, 1922

  • AIME
    From New York To San Francisco With The Institute Party

    By F. F. Sharpless

    ON Saturday evening, Sept. 9, a small party of Institute members, their wives and friends, left New York to attend the Fall Meeting of the Institute at San Francisco. In this party there were: Preside

    Jan 10, 1922

  • AIME
    Powdered Coal in the Lead Blast Furnace

    By E. H. Hamilton

    WHEN starting a series of experiments on the use of powdered coal in lead blast furnaces to replace coke, I realized that in copper smelting the problem is simpler because the sulfur recovers the copp

    Jan 10, 1922

  • AIME
    Sintering Iron- bearing Materials

    By R. L. Lloyd

    UNLIKE the development of sintering lead, copper and zinc ores, the sintering of fine irony material had its birth, not as a result of gradual growth along lines aimed at the production of sintered an

    Jan 10, 1922

  • AIME
    Water In Blister Copper Bars And Pigs

    By Albert Ledoux

    SEVERAL years ago my firm was representing the Mt. Lyell Co. of Australia, which was shipping its blister copper to a refining works in the United States. After the contract had been running for many

    Jan 10, 1922

  • AIME
    Taking Cores in Rotary Drilling Operations

    By John Suman

    DURING the past few years the taking of cores in drilling with rotary equipment has been perfected to a remarkable degree in the Gulf Coast fields of Texas and Louisiana. Taking of cores is becoming q

    Jan 10, 1922

  • AIME
    Review of the Month (3b43ac1b-0dd4-4dcd-9c4f-be2aacdef823)

    AT THE beginning of September, the French eased their pressure against Germany and allowed the latter to, be granted an arrangement for its reparation payments in kind according to the Lubersac-Stinne

    Jan 10, 1922

  • AIME
    Review of the Month (d1657dce-d48c-4f60-8ac8-a8d560c25a88)

    AUGUST began with a reminder that warfare was still in progress in the world, in that the Greeks, still at war with Turkey, threatened Constantinople in spite of the small British and French forces of

    Jan 9, 1922

  • AIME
    Economic Causes of Waste Which Increase the Cost of Fuel

    By Warren Blauvelt

    IN VIEW of the enormous wastes of natural resources, of labor and of capital, due primarily to the economic environment, established by legislation, the general neglect of this phase of the problem of

    Jan 9, 1922

  • AIME
    Shot-Firing By Electricity

    By N. S. Greensfelder

    THE firing of explosive charges by electricity dates back to 1745 when a Doctor Watson is said to have used an electric spark for igniting gunpowder. His method failed in practical application becaus

    Jan 9, 1922