Image from page 43 of “Billboard (Jul-Dec 1898)” (1898)

Image from page 43 of “Billboard (Jul-Dec 1898)” (1898)

A few nice china sheet metal images I discovered:

Image from page 43 of “Billboard (Jul-Dec 1898)” (1898)

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Identifier: billboard10-1898b
Title: Billboard (Jul-Dec 1898)
Year: 1898 (1890s)
Authors: Billboard Advertising Co.
Subjects: Motion Photos Film Business Trade Magazine
Publisher: Cincinnati, Ohio : R.S. Littleford, Jr., W.D. Littleford
Contributing Library: Q. David Bowers and Kathryn Fuller-Seeley
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Poster to a Ladys Visiting Card. From a Million Almanacs to a Set of Dates. From a Dodger to a Muslin Banner. And is all done in a cautious, clean, and Painstaking manner. We have New Faces in Wood Kind. We have New Faces in Metal Kind. We have New Rapidly Running Presses. We have New Methods, New Devices. And New Wrinkles of our own, and they enableus to do Very good Work Rapidly. a THAT CAN BE l=»R 1INT E C» u O Send for Samples f fand Circularsof «■• BARGAIN DAYS POSTERS Ready September .20th. An Entire Outfit consists of Stands,3 Sheets, One particular Sheets, Cloth Banners,?nd Handbills. Low cost in cost. Especiallyadapted for Shoe Dealers, Dry Goods orClothing Houses. The hand-writing of most males is abominable. Possibly yours is no exception to the rule. Please send all copy kind-written, specially if it abounds in suitable or geographical names and technical words. SEND it kind-written if attainable, but inany and all events, send it to HENNEGAN. HENNEGAN &amp QQ. JSiSSfSSim 30 THE BILLBOARD

Text Appearing Right after Image:
Bill PostersPaste Brushes. Tbe most practical Brash produced. Copper wired and protected corners. Enhanced Light Weight Block. Very Sturdy, WITH Security SCREWS. GRAY RUSSIAN BRISTLES. Quaker City, 9-inch, .00 per dozen, .50 every single. Excelsior, 9-inch, .00 per dozen, .00 every single. Added Additional, 9-inch, for circus use, .00 per dozen, .75 each. BLACK CHINA BRISTLES. No. r, Royal, 9-inch, .00 per dozen, .25 every. No. two, Royal, 9-inch, 00 per dozen, .50 each and every. No. three, Royal, 9-inch, .00 per dozen, .00 every single. eight-foot Curved Handles, 50 cents each and every. ELDER &amp. JEINI^1^5» Brush makers, 127 North 5th St., Philadelphia, Pa., U. S. A. ,- A Unique Provide -OF- WATERLOO, WISCONSIN. Population1,500. E. E. LESCHINGER,^—§)Bill Poster and Distributor. Specific Interest Provided to Furnishing drounds, License, and Each-factor Required for Circuses, at Lowest Prices. J. H. HAYNES &amp SONS. Sign Tacking. Simpling, Distributing. Cover 6towns, population loxoo. Member I. A. of D.No boys-all

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Image from page 934 of “Hardware merchandising January-March 1911” (1911)

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Identifier: hardmerchjanmar1911toro
Title: Hardware merchandising January-March 1911
Year: 1911 (1910s)
Authors:
Subjects: Hardware industry Hardware Implements, utensils, and so forth Building
Publisher: Toronto :
Contributing Library: Fisher – University of Toronto
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e of the razor itself. 1 It implies, as well, a splendid adhere to-up for you. You know how straightforward it is to let a consumer drift away and drop him, and how difficult it is to get him back frequently, since he requirements most of yourlines only sometimes, at extended and irregular intervals. But if he has a GILLETTE hell come in regularly, with out coaxing, and hell come in pleased,for hes certain to like the GILLETTE. That opens to you an opportunity for sales in other linesthat will possibly be greater than the blade buy which he came in to make. Hence theres a triple benefit in making your shop the GILLETTE headquarters for yourtown. Are you doing it, or are you letting the opposition set the pace for you ? The Gillette Security Razor Co. of Canada, Restricted Workplace and Factory: 63 St. Alexander Street, MONTREAL Offices in NEW YORK (Instances Creating), CHICAGO (Stock Exchange Building), LONDON, ENGLAND, and SHANGHAI, CHINA Factories in Montreal, Boston, Leicester, Berlin and Paris 1f&gt HARDWARE AND METAL

Text Appearing Right after Image:
We Are The Agents For The Very best Roofing Produced REXFLINTKOTE Rex Flintkote Roofing is acknowledged tobe the Highest Grade Ready Roofing produced. Itpossesses Exclusive Merits discovered in no other roofingand provides a proposition to the Retail Dealer that putsin his hands the indicates of building up a Big Enterprise. This proposition is primarily based on the ExceptionalQuality of Rex Flintkote Roofing, whichgives the dealer who handles it an benefit overcompetitors. As Agents in distributing Rex Flintkote Roofing to the trade,we are in a position to offer you all the positive aspects which possibly attained by handling this world popular brand in your locality. The basis of Rex Flintkote Roofing is a sheet of Ready Felt impregnatedwith a Unique Preservative Waterproofing Saturant and Coated on Each Sideswith a Heavy Gum Chemical Compound, to which is added on the Beneath Side afurther Coating of Ground Flint. This Under-coating prevents the Roofing stick-ing to the roof boards and rotting underneath. It also creat

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William Huskisson M. P. plaque – National Railway Museum, York, England

William Huskisson M. P. plaque – National Railway Museum, York, England

Some cool die casting china images:

William Huskisson M. P. plaque – National Railway Museum, York, England

Image by Bolckow
From Public Sculpture of Sussex

&quotOn 15 September 1830, at the opening ceremonies for the world’s first ever passenger steam railway (in between Liverpool and Manchester), Huskisson was run over and killed by Stephenson’s Rocket because he had not taken adequate care prior to crossing the track to start a conversation with the Duke of Wellington. He lived for a handful of hours right after the accident, was lucid enough to dictate and sign a codicil to his will, and met his finish with dignity.
He had been politically instrumental in bringing about the new and quite visible triumph of technology that was the Liverpool and Manchester railway line.

William Huskisson was born in Worcestershire in 1770. In 1793 he entered parliament as MP for Morpeth, Northumberland. In 1804 he was elected for the constituency of Liskeard and became Secretary of the Treasury. He held the identical appointment in Portland’s ministry of 1804-09. In 1811 he became a Commissioner of the Woods and Forests. In 1823 he was appointed as President of the Board of Trade and Treasurer of the Navy in Liverpool’s ministry. Below Wellington he was Colonial Secretary but resigned in 1828.
Huskisson had threatened to resign on a number of occasions. Wellington might have been entirely wearied by Huskisson’s continuous threats to resign. Huskisson’s tendered his resignation more than what was to be accomplished with the two parliamentary seats that were to be disenfranchised for corruption in 1828 (Penryn and East Retford) – not expecting his resignation accepted. Wellington maybe was glad of an excuse to eliminate him.
Charles Greville wrote about Huskisson, soon after his death:
Huskisson was about sixty years old, tall, slouching, and ignoble-seeking. In society he was really agreeable, without having significantly animation, generally cheerful, with a fantastic deal of humour, data, and anecdote, gentlemanlike, unassuming, slow in speech, and with a down-cast look, as if he avoided meeting anybody’s gaze. … As a speaker in the Property of Commons he was luminous upon his own subject, but he had no pretensions to eloquence his voice was feeble, and his manner ungraceful…
[Greville Diaries, 18 September 1830]
There was a equivalent monument of Huskisson in his toga at the top of Princess Avenue, Liverpool. Right after the riots of 1981 the bronze statue, some 10 to 15 foot tall, was pulled down by people who believed he was a slave trader. Harm was sustained, the head was practically smashed off. It lay unceremoniously in a council auto park till 1984. The statue is now housed at the Oratory, St James’s Mount Gardens. Another statue of Huskisson, dressed in a Roman Toga, stands on the the banks of the Thames in the borough of Westminster.
(www.historyhome.co.uk/peel/individuals/huskisso.htm)

William Huskisson was the son of William, the second son of William Huskisson of Oxley, near Wolverhampton. He was born at Birch Moreton Court, Warwickshire, on 11 March 1770. His mother, Elizabeth, daughter of John Rotton of Staffordshire, died in 1774, and in the following year William was sent to school, initial at Brewood, then at Albrighton in Staffordshire, and afterwards at Appleby in Leicestershire. At an early age he showed mathematical potential. In 1783 his maternal great-uncle, Dr. Gem, a nicely-known healthcare man residing in Paris, exactly where he had been doctor to the British embassy since 1762, undertook his education. For some years he lived at Paris in the society of French liberals, and created the acquaintance of Franklin and Jefferson. He is said to have entered Boyd &amp Ker’s bank in Paris for a time, but this is very doubtful. He was present at the fall of the Bastille, and in 1790 he joined the ‘Club of 1789,’ a monarchical constitutional club, ahead of which on 29 August 1790 he study a discourse on the currency, which was printed and a lot applauded. When the French government decided upon the problem of assignats he separated himself from this club. About the very same time he was introduced, by means of Dr. John Warner, the chaplain to the embassy, to Lord Gower (subsequently Marquis of Stafford), then British ambassador at Paris, whose private secretary he became. They remained intimate pals all their lives. On 10 August 1792, after the attack on the Tuileries, he was instrumental in enabling its governor, M. de Champcenetz, to make his escape from the populace. On the recall of the embassy in 1792 Huskisson returned to England. For some time he remained an inmate of Lord Gower’s household in England, and as a result became well acquainted with Pitt.
By the death of his father in 1790 he became entitled to such of the family members estates at Oxley in Staffordshire as remained unalienated, but they were neither in depth nor unencumbered, and, locating himself a poor man, he was glad to avail himself of the offer you of a new workplace, developed beneath the Alien Act, for making arrangements with the émigrés. In this employment, for which his understanding of the French individuals and language well fitted him, he became acquainted with Canning, and his talents advised him to Pitt and Dundas.
In 1795 he succeeded Sir Evan Nepean, on his promotion to be secretary to the admiralty, in the workplace of under secretary at war. The company of the office was virtually completed by Huskisson, Dundas, his chief, becoming otherwise occupied, and it was he who superintended the arrangements for Sir Charles Grey’s expedition to the West Indies. His friendship with Lord Carlisle procured him in 1796 the representation of Morpeth but, usually diffident of his personal skills and conscious that he was no orator, he did not speak in the Property of Commons until February 1798. In January 1801 he resigned with Pitt, but at the request of Lord Hobart, the new secretary at war, who was unfamiliar with the function of the office, he remained at his post till the battle of Alexandria in March 1801. An unfounded charge was produced at the time that Huskisson made use of his knowledge of official secrets in stockjobbing operations, in which he engaged with Talleyrand. Meantime, on the death of Dr. Gem in 1800, he inherited an estate at Eastham, Sussex, then occupied by Hayley, the biographer of Cowper, and yet another in Worcestershire. This rendered his position in public life unembarrassed.
In 1802 he contested Dover, but was beaten by Trevanion and Spencer Smith, the government candidates, and did not re-enter parliament till February 1804, when he was elected for Liskeard. There was a double return, and a petition was presented against him, but he kept his seat. On the recall of Pitt to workplace (Might 1804) he was appointed a secretary to the treasury, but when the ‘Talents’ administration came in (January 1806) he retired, and went into active opposition. He moved a quantity of monetary resolutions in July 1806, which the chancellor of the exchequer, Lord Henry Petty, was obliged to accept. At the general election in the autumn of 1807 he was again returned for Liskeard was created secretary to the treasury once again in the Duke of Portland’s ministry in April 1807 and at the ensuing basic election was returned for Harwich, which seat he retained till 1812.
Up to this time Huskisson had seldom engaged in general debate, but had rested content with his reputation as a man of business. In 1808 he took a massive share in the rearrangement of the relations between the Bank of England and the treasury, and in 1809 he undertook the reply to Colonel Wardle’s motion on public economy. In the identical year the Duke of Richmond, the Irish viceroy, was anxious that he need to succeed Sir Arthur Wellesley as chief secretary, but his solutions could not be spared by the English government. Although not personally concerned in the dispute which brought about Canning’s resignation in 1809, he resigned with him out of loyalty to his friend, and in his private capacity in parliament remained for some time small noticed. But in 1810 he published his pamphlet on the ‘Depreciation of the Currency,’ which at as soon as met with success and earned him the reputation of getting the 1st financier of the age. In the debates on the Regency Bill he adhered to Canning’s views, and in January 1811, when he was sounded about joining the regent’s ministry, he rejected the overture. In the following year, if Canning had joined Lord Liverpool, Huskisson would have been chief secretary to the viceroy and chancellor of the Irish exchequer. His adherence to Canning retarded the advance of his public profession by a lot of years, and permitted Peel and Robinson, of whom 1 was his junior and the other a lot his inferior, to pass him in the race. During this year he became colonial agent for Ceylon. That post, which was worth £4,000 a year, he held till 1823.
At the common election in the autumn of 1812 Huskisson was elected for Chichester. He created a number of speeches on currency concerns in March 1813, and on Sir Henry Parnell’s motion on the corn laws he brought forward for the very first time his scale of graduated prohibitory duties. Next year on six August he succeeded Lord Glenbervie, in Lord Liverpool’s ministry, in the woods and forests department, and was sworn of the privy council on 29 July 1814. He swiftly mastered the special duties of his office.
In 1815 was passed the 1st corn law, which totally prohibited the importation of corn when the cost fell under a specific minimum typical, and Huskisson took a prominent component in the debates on the bill. In Might 1816 he spoke in the bank restriction debates in favour of leaving to the bank the determination of the time, not to exceed two years, within which they may possibly continue the restriction on gold payments but two years afterwards he was in favour of granting the bank a further extension of time. He normally voted for Roman catholic emancipation without having speaking, and really seldom intervened in a debate on foreign policy. One of his rare speeches on general topics was produced in 1821 on Lord Tavistock’s motion for a vote of censure on the government for its behaviour to the queen. In 1819 he became a member of the finance committee, and his speech on the chancellor of the exchequer’s income and expenditure resolutions almost certainly saved the government from defeat. He also addressed to Lord Liverpool an critical memorandum on the resumption of money payments.
In 1821 he was a member of the committee appointed on Gooch’s motion to inquire into the prevalence of agricultural distress, and the report of the committee was principally drafted by him but his speeches on taxation in the same year gave rise, not unnaturally, to a distrust of him among the agricultural party, which was in no way afterwards removed. He felt his position in the government to be unsatisfactory, though he did not resign with Canning in that year, and when, at the finish of 1821, a rearrangement of the administration was projected and the Irish secretaryship was provided him, he at when refused the post. In February 1822 Huskisson spoke against Lord Londonderry’s proposal to lend £4,000,000 for the relief of agricultural distress, and on 29 April and 6 May possibly succeeded in defeating Lord Liverpool’s first resolution on the report of the committee on agricultural distress. Thereupon he tendered his resignation, which Lord Liverpool refused, and Huskisson shortly right after did outstanding service in fighting the country celebration single-handed on Western’s motion for a pick committee to inquire into the consequences of the resumption of cash payments, and carried an amendment in the terms of Montague’s resolution of 1696, ‘that this Property will not alter the standard of gold or silver in fineness, weight, or denomination’.
When Canning rejoined the ministry as foreign secretary in September 1822, he failed in an endeavour to receive for his buddy the presidency of the board of control, with cabinet rank. On 31 January, even so, Huskisson was promoted to the treasurership of the navy, and on five April to the board of trade, holding each offices with each other, and he was soon afterwards admitted to the cabinet. The board of trade was an workplace in which his particular understanding and his sophisticated free-trade opinions have been specific to make him conspicuous. Accordingly, as Canning was retiring from the representation of Liverpool, which he identified as well laborious for his new position, Huskisson was selected to succeed him as the only tory able to conciliate the Liverpool merchants, and soon after a hollow contest he was elected, 15 February 1823. Huskisson as a result became the prominent representative of mercantile interests in parliament. He was quickly active in office, and introduced a bill for regulating the silk manufactures, but owing to the sweeping character of the lords’ amendment he dropped it for that session, and did not pass it till 1824. He also introduced and passed a merchant vessels’ apprenticeship bill, a bill to remove the restrictions on the Scottish linen manufacture, and a registration of ships bill. He announced his intention of moving the repeal of the Spitalfields acts, and supported Joseph Hume’s motion for a select committee on the mixture laws, which led in the end to their repeal.
The year 1825 was one of great activity for him. With the assistance of James Deacon Hume of the board of trade, he completed the consolidation into eleven acts of the entire of the current revenue laws. He obtained a choose committee to inquire into the relations of employers and employed, the outcome of which was the passing of an act which regulated the relations of capital and labour for forty years. A single object of his policy was at the same time to give England cheap sugar and he also amended the income laws in the direction of a modified free trade in regard to other commodities, reducing the old duties on foreign cotton goods, which ranged from 50 to 75 per cent., according to top quality, to a uniform 10 per cent. duty on all qualities on woollen goods from 50 and 67¾ per cent. to 15 per cent., and equivalent reductions had been produced in the duty on glass, paper, bottles, foreign earthenware, copper, zinc, and lead.
Early in 1825 Huskisson foresaw the crisis to which excessive speculation was major. His warnings had been neglected, and when the panic came he was accused of obtaining triggered it by his policy of free trade. Meanwhile he was busily occupied in negotiations with the American government about the north-western boundary, the navigation of the St. Lawrence, and the slave trade. In 1826 the Liverpool merchants presented him, in acknowledgment of the accomplishment of his policy, with a service of plate. He took a prominent component in the debates on the Bank Charter and the Promissory Notes Acts, and on 24 February 1826 delivered what Canning known as ‘one of the extremely best speeches that I ever heard in the Property of Commons’ against Ellice’s motion for a committee on the silk trade. Later on, in speaking upon Whitmore’s motion for a committee on the corn laws, Huskisson, though advocating delay in their repeal, admitted his dislike of the current method. During the autumn he assisted Lord Liverpool in preparing a new corn bill. The labour thus involved, and the calumnies to which his economic policy had exposed him, permanently injured his wellness. On 7 Could he vindicated his commercial policy against the attacks created upon it by Gascoyne in his motion for a committee on the shipping interest. The speech, which was afterwards published, was one particular of his best efforts. His corn bill was duly introduced, but was abandoned owing to the opposition of the Duke of Wellington in the House of Lords.
Huskisson was travelling in the Tyrol to recruit his health when the news of Canning’s death reached him (August 1827). He hastened residence. At Paris a message from Lord Goderich, the new prime minister, offered him the colonial office, with the lead of the Residence of Commons. His friends urged that there was no other way of securing the continuation of Canning’s policy, and he accepted the supply on 23 September 1827. Had he selected he may have been chancellor of the exchequer. Dissensions quickly broke out among him and John Charles Herries, the chancellor of the exchequer, about the appointment of Lord Althorp as chairman of the committee of finance. Huskisson, as leader of the home, insisted upon his nomination Herries, as chancellor of the exchequer, complained that he had been slighted by not becoming previously consulted. The dispute grew so extreme that Lord Goderich resigned, and was succeeded by the Duke of Wellington.
Huskisson decided to continue in workplace, and was re-elected at Liverpool without opposition. In addressing his constituents he said that the duke had acceded to his stipulations in favour of the continuance of totally free trade and Canning’s foreign policy. The duke on the earliest chance denied this, and Huskisson was obliged to withdraw the statement in the Property of Commons on 18 February. The tension among himself and the duke quickly became acute. At many cabinets in March a difference of opinion arose on the amendment to the corn bill with regard to the taking of corn out of warehouse, which the duke proposed and insisted upon. Peel and Huskisson were both against it. Huskisson tendered his resignation, but a compromise which he recommended was accepted, and he remained in office. Shortly afterwards it became required to make a decision what must be done with the two seats which would be accessible for redistribution upon the disfranchisement of Penryn and East Retford for substantial corrupt practices. The duke was for giving both seats to the adjacent hundreds Huskisson, Palmerston, and Dudley were for bestowing them upon big manufacturing towns.
In the House of Commons Peel advocated a compromise by giving Penryn to Manchester and East Retford to the hundred. Huskisson on 21 March pledged himself to give one particular seat to a manufacturing town. In the lords it was decided by the government, first, not to deal with each situations together secondly, to give the Penryn seat to the hundred. In committee of the Property of Commons, when the East Retford case came up, it was moved on 19 Might to give that seat also to the hundred of Bassetlaw, Nottinghamshire. Huskisson and Palmerston, in the belief that the cabinet held that morning had resolved on leaving East Retford an open query, voted against the ministry. Immediately following leaving the home Huskisson wrote to the duke offering to resign if he regarded that the interest of the government would be much better served by a resignation. The duke had lengthy felt that Huskisson, who entered the administration as the successor to Canning’s position, was in some sort his rival. He treated Huskisson’s letter as an actual resignation, though Huskisson explained that he only meant to tender it if the duke thought fit to demand it, and he repudiated any formal offer you of resignation. But the duke was inflexible, and laid the matter ahead of the king. Huskisson demanded a personal audience of his majesty, but this was refused, and the resignation was definitively completed on the 29th, when he gave up the seals and received expressions of the king’s private regret at his loss. Although he explained in the Property of Commons the summary mode by which he had been removed, his celebration censured him for imperilling the ministry by an ill-timed and factious resignation.
Huskisson appeared tiny in parliament for the duration of the remainder of the session, and, his overall health failing, he spent the autumn abroad. In 1828 he supported the Roman Catholic Emancipation Bill created a fantastic speech on the silk trade, and took up the study of Indian queries. In consequence the governorship of Madras was presented him, and he was sounded about the governor-generalship of India, but the state of his overall health made his acceptance of either post impossible. He was, even so, an active member of the East India committee, especially on matters referring to the China trade. During the session of 1829 he was unusually prominent in debate. He produced many speeches in favour of moderate reform, warned the ministry that some change was inevitable, and supported Lord John Russell’s proposal to confer further parliamentary representation on Leeds, Liverpool, and Manchester. For the duration of 1830 his well being grew worse, and, though he was capable to attend the king’s funeral in July, he was seriously ill.
He went to Liverpool in September for the opening of the Manchester and Liverpool railway, and was received warmly by his constituents. On 15 September he attended the opening ceremony. A procession of trains was run from Liverpool. Parkside was reached without mishap. There the engines stopped for water, and the travellers, contrary to directions, left the carriages and stood upon the permanent way, which consisted of two lines of rails. Huskisson went to speak to the Duke of Wellington, to whom, in spite of their current disagreement, he felt bound, as member for Liverpool, to show courtesy. At that moment several engines were seen approaching along the rails amongst which Huskisson was standing. Everybody created for the carriages on the other line. Huskisson, by nature uncouth and hesitating in his motions, had a peculiar aptitude for accident. He had dislocated his ankle in 1801, and was in consequence slightly lame. Thrice he had broken his arm, and following the last fracture, in 1817, the use of it was permanently impaired.
On this occasion he lost his balance in clambering into the carriage and fell back upon the rails in front of the Dart, the advancing engine. It ran over his leg he was placed upon an engine and carried at its utmost speed to Eccles, where he was taken to the home of the vicar. He lingered in fantastic agony for nine hours, but gave his last directions calmly and with care, expiring at 9 p.m. He was buried with a public ceremonial in Liverpool on the 24th.
Huskisson accomplished small achievement in public life compared with that which his rare skills must have commanded. His adherence to Canning, combined with a coldness of manner, possibly accounts for a lot of his failure. Lamb, afterwards Lord Melbourne, told Greville that, in his opinion, Huskisson was the greatest sensible statesman he had identified, the one particular who ideal united theory with practice. Sir James Stephen’s judgment on him was practically the identical. As a speaker he was luminous and convincing, but he produced no pretence to eloquence his voice was feeble and his manner ungraceful. Sir Egerton Brydges, in his Autobiography speaks of him as ‘a wretched speaker with no command of words, with awkward motions, and a most vulgar, uneducated accent,’ but this accent seems to have worn off in later life.
Greville describes him as ‘tall, slouching, and ignoble-looking. In society extremely agreeable without having considerably animation usually cheerful, with a great deal of humour, data, and anecdote gentlemanlike, unassuming, slow in speech, and with a downcast appear as if he avoided meeting anybody’s gaze. There is no man in parliament, or perhaps out of it, so well versed in finance, commerce, trade, and colonial matters it is nonetheless remarkable that it is only within the last 5 or six years that he acquired the excellent reputation which he latterly enjoyed. I do not think he was looked upon as more than a second-price man, till his speeches on the silk trade and the shipping interest, but when he became president of the board of trade he devoted himself with indefatigable application to the maturing and lowering to practice these commercial improvements with which his name is linked, and to which he owes all his glory and most of his unpopularity.’
He married, on six April 1799, Elizabeth Mary, younger daughter of Admiral Mark Milbanke, who survived him. There was no problem of the marriage. Even though so impoverished on getting into public life that he sold the loved ones estate at Oxley, his personalty was sworn, 15 November 1830, below £60,000. He received on 17 May 1801 a pension of £1,200 per annum, nominal, £900 actual, with a remainder of £615 to his widow and in 1828 he received a second pension of £3,000 a year.
There is a plaque on the spot exactly where the accident occurred that reads:

THIS TABLET
A TRIBUTE OF Personal RESPECT AND AFFECTION
HAS BEEN PLACED Right here TO MARK THE SPOT Exactly where ON THE
13TH. OF SEPT. 1830 THE DAY OF THE OPENING OF THIS RAILROAD
THE Proper HONBLE. WILLIAM HUSKISSON M.P.
SINGLED OUT BY THE DECREE OF AN INSCRUTABLE PROVIDENCE FROM
THE MIDST OF THE DISTINGUISHED MULTITUDE THAT SURROUNDED HIM.
IN THE Complete RIDE OF HIS TALENTS AND THE PERFECTION OF HIS
USEFULNESS MET WITH THE ACCIDENT THAT OCCASIONED HIS DEATH,
WHICH DERIVED ENGLAND OF AN ILLUSTRIOUS STATESMAN AND
LIVERPOOL OF ITS MOST HONOURED REPRESENTATIVE WHICH CHANGED
A MOMENT OF THE NOBLEST EXULTATION AND TRIUMPH THAT SCIENCE AND
GENIUS HAD EVER Achieved INTO One OF DESOLATION AND MOURNING
AND STRIKING TERROR INTO THE HEARTS OF ASSEMBLED THOUSANDS,
BROUGHT Property TO Each BOSOM THE FORGOTTEN TRUTH THAT
“IN THE MIDST OF LIFE WE ARE IN DEATH”

(Stephen, Sir Lesley &amp Lee, Sir Sidney (eds.). (1949) ‘Dictionary of National Biography: from the earliest instances to 1900’. Oxford University Press, London.)

Huskisson lived at Eartham Property, Eartham, buying the residence from the poet, William Hayley.&quot

Herbie the Adore Bug

Herbie the Adore Bug

Some cool machining engineering pictures:

Herbie the Enjoy Bug

Image by ** Fortunate Cavey **
Herbie is an anthropomorphic 1963 Volkswagen Beetle, a character that is featured in a number of Disney motion photographs beginning with the 1968 feature film The Love Bug. He has a mind of his personal and is capable of driving himself, and is a significant contender in auto racing competitions. Throughout most of the franchise, Herbie is distinguished by red, white and blue racing stripes from front to back bumper, a racing-style number &quot53&quot on the front trunk lid, doors, and engine lid, and a yellow-on-black ’63 California license plate that says, &quotOFP 857&quot. A single exception to this is his introduction in The Love Bug, exactly where he initially appears as a nondescript white vehicle with a gray colored fabric sunroof (a.k.a. &quotragtop&quot), the style of sunroof provided on VW Beetles produced by way of 1963.

Herbie’s origins are established in The Love Bug, wherein Herbie was bought from Peter Thorndyke’s showroom by San Francisco socialite Mrs. Van Luit for her upstairs maid, but returned shortly afterward and bought by race-driver Jim Douglas (Dean Jones), who had earlier stood up for him against the pompous Thorndyke. Tennessee Steinmetz, Jim’s friend and roommate, names the auto &quotHerbie&quot after his uncle Herb.

In Herbie Rides Again, Herbie has been left to Tennessee’s aunt Mrs. Steinmetz (Helen Hayes), the widow of Herb whom the vehicle was named soon after. Mrs. Steinmetz and her neighbour, Nicole Harris (Stefanie Powers) try to save her home from being bulldozed by Alonzo Hawk (Keenan Wynn), with the assist of Herbie. During the film it is explained that after several profitable races with Herbie, Douglas entered foreign racing circuits, even though his sidekick Tennessee is residing in Tibet to assist his ailing instructor. Tennessee left Herbie with his aunt, Mrs. Steinmetz.

By Herbie Goes to Monte Carlo, Douglas enters Herbie in the Trans-France Race and recruits mechanic friend Wheely Applegate (Don Knotts) to help, after Herbie falls in really like with a Lancia Scorpion named Giselle and Douglas with her driver Diane Darcy (Julie Sommars). Herbie also finds himself in the incorrect location at the wrong time when the stolen Etoile de Joie diamond is hidden in his gas tank.

In Herbie Goes Bananas, Douglas has retired from racing soon after the Monte Carlo race and leaves Herbie to his nephew, Pete Stancheck (Stephen W. Burns), who plans to enter Herbie in the Brazil Grand Primeo race. In the interim, Herbie befriends an orphan named Paco, with whom he wreaks havoc onboard cruise ship the Sun Princess, prompting the overzealous Captain Blythe (Harvey Korman) to force Herbie to &quotwalk the plank&quot. Getting fallen into the ocean, Herbie is rescued by Paco and disguised as a taxi, later to stop a gang of con artists from stealing ancient Inca gold. Early in their partnership, Paco offers Herbie the nickname &quotOcho&quot, the Spanish word for the number 8 purportedly since the digits 5 and three in Herbie’s racing quantity, 53, have been combined to produce ‘8’ (5+three = 8) and possibly to rhyme with &quotVocho&quot, the Beetle’s name in Mexico.

Soon after the Mexico debacle, Douglas takes Herbie and opens a driving college in Herbie the Matchmaker.

Hank Cooper (Bruce Campbell) becomes the owner of Herbie in the 1997 produced-for-tv movie The Really like Bug, wherein Herbie’s designer, an elderly German engineer named Dr. Gustav Stumpfel, made him as a &quotliving machine&quot but was forced to develop an evil Volkswagen counterpart to Herbie, &quotHorace the Hate Bug,&quot accountable for killing the accurate Herbie at one particular point in the film. Horace is of course painted monochrome black, with louvered windows, contributing to his &quotevil&quot look. Cooper then buries Herbie but the return of Jim Douglas sets Cooper to rebuild the fallen Enjoy Bug (with the aid of repentant Dr. Stumpfel) and have him race against evil doppelganger Horace. In this race, Herbie ultimately divides himself in half (as in the original film) to win the race.

Herbie is then passed down from owner to owner until he is bought by Maggie Peyton (Lindsay Lohan) in Herbie: Fully Loaded, sooner or later to compete in a demolition derby and NASCAR races. In this film, Herbie falls in love with a Volkswagen New Beetle. … wiki

See my other pictures on Flickriver right here: www.flickriver.com/photos/53825985@N02/

Sewing machine

Image by sotheavy

What is Die Casting

What is Die Casting

Die casting is the process by which molten metal under higher pressure is forced into steel molds so as to generate specific shapes following the metal cools. Die casting is used to produce any quantity of household objects, from toys to bathroom faucets, as effectively as any number of much bigger metal fixtures.

The objectives in designing die cast aluminum components must be low price-per-component and maximum production in cast units. Personal computer aided style application (CAD) will contribute directly to these objectives. A number of guidelines have been created inside the CAD and die casting neighborhood to make these targets much more attainable.

 

Aluminum casting is the approach of pouring molten aluminum into a mold to produce a component of a desired shape. Casting is utilized in many various industries to develop a wide range of components. Aluminum is a lightweight yet strong metal with superb corrosion resistance. The amateur hobbyist can create aluminum castings with the right tools, instructions and security precautions.

Die Cast Methods

The hot chamber: Hot-chamber machines, also recognized as gooseneck machines, rely upon a pool of molten metal to feed the die.Cold chamber methods: These are employed when the casting alloy can not be used in hot-chamber machines these consist of aluminium, zinc alloys with a large composition of aluminium, magnesium and copper. The processes for these machines begin with melting the metal in a separate furnace.

 

Each make use of injection systems, but in diverse ways. The hot technique is employed for metals with low melting points such zinc, copper and lead. The injection system itself is immersed in a bath of molten metal where it then fills with the liquefied metal. The cold chamber strategy is utilised for metals with higher melting points like aluminium. A manual or automatic ladle pours the molten metal into a cylindrical sleeve and is then sealed under stress to cool.

 

At  Aluminium Die Casting Manufacturer Business Endurance tends to make aluminium die castings utilizing both un-questionable and low anxiety method. Endurance makes use of the un- questionable aluminium die launching approach primarily for two wheelers, 3 wheelers and 4 wheelers.  At Endurance, all things are designed and tested with uncompromising good quality examining. The components in the course of production go by way of extensive high quality checks at each and every stage which ensure that high quality expectations specified. It is a continuous practice of Endurance to set top quality standards in the sector with its top quality items which will eventually mix its objective to spend focus to a productive and maintainable growth structure.

Krishna kshirsagar is connected with Endurance Group a leading  Aluminium die casting companies.

Cool China Prototypes pictures

Cool China Prototypes pictures

Some cool china prototypes pictures:

BMW GUGGENHEIM LAB

Image by DCF_pics
MARS IN MUMBAI
Prototypes of adjust developed for the BMW Guggenheim Lab

Informal settlements dominate a lot of the world’s emerging cityscape. The tense social and spatial circumstances they bring forth render most urban techniques ineffective. Neither prime-down planning, defined by a technocratic strategy of ever bigger infrastructure, nor bottom-up efforts, in the kind of increasingly sophisticated neighborhood level projects, seem capable to meet the challenges at the scale the establishing metropolis demands. Can micro-scale interventions be designed to accomplish citywide techniques?

This conceptual divide is additional exacerbated in Mumbai, where slums that make up two-thirds of the population reduce via the entire island city in a sharp spatial divide. Attempts to address the dire challenges from, water safety to pollution and extreme congestion, are limited to either the formal or informal settlements. MARS Architects has produced a vision for a United Mumbai, the starting point for incorporating informal settlements as totally integrated parts of the formal city.

More than the coming weeks, stakeholder meetings will be held at the Guggenheim Lab Mumbai to talk about our ten proposed technologies, from wall systems to transport systems. Stick to us as an expanding method of architectural interventions turns slums into sustainable settlements, which in turn become the backbone of a United Mumbai.

Component 1: SPI MODEL
The foundation of this project is an in-depth study of Mumbai’s population density. Not merely mapping Mumbai’s infamous situations in abstract terms but introducing a new methodology that greater represents the knowledge on the ground. The new metric, named the Stacked Population Index (SPI), measures the density of folks per amount of offered floor surface. Suddenly the accurate extents of Mumbai’s informal settlements can be observed: a yellow forest of towering densities covers the whole urban landscape. The harsh reality the city accommodates two thirds of its population on much less than a quarter of its residential surface, and but urban plans for Mumbai largely ignore their existence.

Comply with the project: MARS Architects Facebook web page

Occasion specifics: BMW GUGGENHEIM LAB

BMW GUGGENHEIM LAB

Image by DCF_pics
MARS IN MUMBAI
Prototypes of change developed for the BMW Guggenheim Lab

Informal settlements dominate considerably of the world’s emerging cityscape. The tense social and spatial situations they bring forth render most urban techniques ineffective. Neither top-down preparing, defined by a technocratic method of ever larger infrastructure, nor bottom-up efforts, in the kind of increasingly sophisticated neighborhood level projects, seem able to meet the challenges at the scale the developing metropolis demands. Can micro-scale interventions be designed to accomplish citywide strategies?

This conceptual divide is further exacerbated in Mumbai, where slums that make up two-thirds of the population cut by means of the complete island city in a sharp spatial divide. Attempts to address the dire challenges from, water safety to pollution and serious congestion, are restricted to either the formal or informal settlements. MARS Architects has produced a vision for a United Mumbai, the starting point for incorporating informal settlements as completely integrated components of the formal city.

More than the coming weeks, stakeholder meetings will be held at the Guggenheim Lab Mumbai to go over our ten proposed technologies, from wall systems to transport systems. Follow us as an expanding method of architectural interventions turns slums into sustainable settlements, which in turn turn into the backbone of a United Mumbai.

Portion 1: SPI MODEL
The foundation of this project is an in-depth study of Mumbai’s population density. Not merely mapping Mumbai’s infamous circumstances in abstract terms but introducing a new methodology that greater represents the experience on the ground. The new metric, named the Stacked Population Index (SPI), measures the density of people per quantity of offered floor surface. Abruptly the true extents of Mumbai’s informal settlements can be observed: a yellow forest of towering densities covers the entire urban landscape. The harsh reality the city accommodates two thirds of its population on significantly less than a quarter of its residential surface, and yet urban plans for Mumbai mainly ignore their existence.

Follow the project: MARS Architects Facebook web page

Occasion information: BMW GUGGENHEIM LAB

BMW GUGGENHEIM LAB

Image by DCF_pics
MARS IN MUMBAI
Prototypes of adjust created for the BMW Guggenheim Lab

Informal settlements dominate considerably of the world’s emerging cityscape. The tense social and spatial circumstances they bring forth render most urban techniques ineffective. Neither leading-down arranging, defined by a technocratic approach of ever bigger infrastructure, nor bottom-up efforts, in the kind of increasingly sophisticated community level projects, look capable to meet the challenges at the scale the creating metropolis demands. Can micro-scale interventions be developed to attain citywide strategies?

This conceptual divide is additional exacerbated in Mumbai, exactly where slums that make up two-thirds of the population reduce through the complete island city in a sharp spatial divide. Attempts to address the dire challenges from, water safety to pollution and severe congestion, are limited to either the formal or informal settlements. MARS Architects has created a vision for a United Mumbai, the starting point for incorporating informal settlements as completely integrated components of the formal city.

Over the coming weeks, stakeholder meetings will be held at the Guggenheim Lab Mumbai to discuss our ten proposed technologies, from wall systems to transport systems. Comply with us as an expanding system of architectural interventions turns slums into sustainable settlements, which in turn turn out to be the backbone of a United Mumbai.

Element 1: SPI MODEL
The foundation of this project is an in-depth study of Mumbai’s population density. Not merely mapping Mumbai’s infamous situations in abstract terms but introducing a new methodology that greater represents the experience on the ground. The new metric, called the Stacked Population Index (SPI), measures the density of men and women per quantity of available floor surface. Abruptly the correct extents of Mumbai’s informal settlements can be observed: a yellow forest of towering densities covers the entire urban landscape. The harsh reality the city accommodates two thirds of its population on significantly less than a quarter of its residential surface, and yet urban plans for Mumbai mostly ignore their existence.

Comply with the project: MARS Architects Facebook page

Event details: BMW GUGGENHEIM LAB

Image from web page 139 of “The Ladies’ home journal” (1889)

Image from web page 139 of “The Ladies’ home journal” (1889)

Some cool die casting china images:

Image from web page 139 of “The Ladies’ home journal” (1889)

Image by Web Archive Book Photos
Identifier: ladieshomejourna65janwyet
Title: The Ladies’ house journal
Year: 1889 (1880s)
Authors: Wyeth, N. C. (Newell Convers), 1882-1945
Subjects: Women’s periodicals Janice Bluestein Longone Culinary Archive
Publisher: Philadelphia : [s.n.]
Contributing Library: Internet Archive
Digitizing Sponsor: Net Archive

View Book Page: Book Viewer
About This Book: Catalog Entry
View All Pictures: All Pictures From Book

Click here to view book online to see this illustration in context in a browseable on-line version of this book.

Text Appearing Before Image:
l.Y. &ampT. M.Co. v^lirtclirLS… no problem— with this new Yale iron . . . Just TIP the handle forward slightly, andfour-fifths of the ironing surface clears the fabric . . . while you use theTOE as a modest iron, take your time on each ruffle, get into every gatherwithout worry of scorching. . . Then tip the handle back, and all of the extralarge soleplate goes to perform again. llPTOE is light, only 3 lbs., 2 oz., significantly less weight to lift, less tiring to use . . .The specific cast-in heating elements send much more heat out the bottom of theiron, let less escape through the best… provide steady temperature that smoothesfabrics with significantly less stress. . . The massive sculptured manage is comfy to hold,shields your fingers from hot metal, is kept cool often by the ventilated deck.. .The fabric dial is correct, reliable. . . Now on demonstration in leadingstores exactly where you can attempt it. . . and satisfy your self that TipToe does betterwork, saves your time and strength! ipToe

Text Appearing Right after Image:
Made by The Yale &amp Toicne Manufacturing Co.t makersoffamoun YALE locks since 1868.. . Empire State Bldg., New York LADIES* House JOURNAL 137 (Continued from Page 135) Go out for practice—in your condition! Sure, said plucky Tom. If I didnt thether boys would consider Id quit. On one more occasion, when one of his:randparents had died, Dewey requestedj emission to leave college during the soon after-: oon to attend the funeral. Dont you want the morning also?sked Tuck. No, said Tom. Much as I love myrandparents, my job is to be at schoolearning what I can. I can go to the funeralnd nonetheless come to college in the morning.rou see, its all part of the preparation forhe future. Principal Tuck lived for a time in a rentedoom in the Dewey property at 421 Oliver Streeti Owosso, and so came to know young)ewey really properly. One particular point that worriediim was that Tom was so intelligent, and soware of his personal smartness, that the othermpils disliked him. Even some of theeachers complained that Tom sat throughheir classes

Note About Pictures
Please note that these pictures are extracted from scanned page images that may possibly have been digitally enhanced for readability – coloration and look of these illustrations might not completely resemble the original perform.

Image from web page 124 of “The Millions 1898” (1898)

Image by Web Archive Book Photos
Identifier: millions1898chin
Title: The Millions 1898
Year: 1898 (1890s)
Authors: China Inland Mission
Subjects: Missions
Publisher: [Philadelphia] China Inland Mission
Contributing Library: Knox – University of Toronto
Digitizing Sponsor: Algoma University, Trent University, Lakehead University, Laurentian University, Nipissing University, Ryerson University and University of Toronto Libraries

View Book Page: Book Viewer
About This Book: Catalog Entry
View All Photos: All Photos From Book

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Text Appearing Before Image:
them to think about if.111 spite of dangers, any life can examine with that provided up for theevangelization of the world, if any satisfaction is so great as that ofbringing gladness to the heart of Christ and life to the souls of guys.and if any future reward can be so glorious as being permitted to laytrophies of redeemed lives at the feet of Jesus in the coming day ?In spite of the threatenings of evil doers, we ask guys and women 10follow the Lamb whithersoever He goeth yea. and simply because of threat-enings. we ask the Lords followers to go to these who threaten withmessages of peace, given that the extremely wickedness of their threateningsis the revelation of their need of Christ. We pray, for that reason, for menand women whose lives have been cast by the Spirit into martyr-mould. May our coming Lord give to us anil to China numerous suchlives as these for the hastening of the day of His glory.8 and to Lombard Street Toronto. CHINAS MILLIONS Hnconbtttonal Surrender/ 2 Cor. five : 14, 15.BY MR. WALTER B. SLOAN.

Text Appearing Soon after Image:
HESE verses tell us of themotive that is to lead to theyielding up of ourselves itis the adore of Christ thatconstraineth us and thenthey show us how completethe surrender is to be. Hith-erto we have lived unto our-selves now we are to liveonly unto Him who died forus and rose once more. The full surrender of ourredeemed lives to the posses-sion and control of ourRedeemer is not all that isinvolved in Christian livingbut it is an vital hyperlink ina excellent chain, and no chain is total if one hyperlink be missing sono life is what it ought to be unless this complete and unreserved sur-render has been made. Occasionally it is said, But is not the willof each and every Christian fully given up to Christ ? The greatest answerto that query will be discovered by searching at the lives that we knowaround us, and then asking, Do these lives look as if the HolySpirit was in supreme manage of the hearts ? Then we have sor-lowfully to admit, that whilst Christ ought to have full possession ofeach redeemed heart, quite frequently

Note About Pictures
Please note that these pictures are extracted from scanned web page images that might have been digitally enhanced for readability – coloration and look of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original operate.

Image from web page 374 of “The story of the China Inland Mission” (1894)

Image from web page 374 of “The story of the China Inland Mission” (1894)

Check out these die casting china pictures:

Image from page 374 of “The story of the China Inland Mission” (1894)

Image by World wide web Archive Book Pictures
Identifier: storyofchinainla01tayl
Title: The story of the China Inland Mission
Year: 1894 (1890s)
Authors: Taylor, Howard, Mrs
Subjects: Taylor, James Hudson, 1832-1905 China Inland Mission Missions
Publisher: London : Morgan &amp Scott
Contributing Library: Princeton Theological Seminary Library
Digitizing Sponsor: Internet Archive

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About This Book: Catalog Entry
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Text Appearing Before Image:
ivedat one particular of the out-stations connected with the Hang-chau Church, to inquire the way of GOD a lot more per-fectly. It appeared, upon inquiry, that he had firstheard the Gospel nearly six years ahead of, at Lan-ki,from a tall foreigner, who, with his Ningpo teacher,had spent some weeks there a single summer-time, andhad talked to him about the Saviour of the globe.Ever considering that then the man had provided up his idolatrouspractices, and sought to worship the 1 correct GOD, who had sent His Son to die on the cross for thesins of guys. Ultimately he had come to discover more,and to cast in his lot with the individuals of GOD. Itwas fruit identified right after many days. Each Mr. Duncanand his devoted helper, Tsiu Sien-seng, of Ningpo,had extended because passed away from the neighbourhood,and each also had well-nigh run their earthly course,ended their earthly service, when the LORD thusgraciously set His seal upon their ministry, givingthem the joy of knowing of this one soul, at anyrate, saved at Lan-ki. PIONEERING Difficulties. 347

Text Appearing Following Image:
CITV OF WU.N-CHAU. Towards the close of the year, shortly following Mr.Duncans settlement at Nan-king, the pals atHang-chau have been cheered by a pleasant tiny visitfrom Mr. Stott, who came more than from Ningpo toconsult Mr. Taylor about plans for extension. Itwas decided then to try the opening of Wun-chau Fu—an essential city in the south of theprovince of Cheh-KIANG, capital of a departmentcontaining totally a million individuals, amongst whom noevangelist, native or foreign, had ever resided andMr. Stott was commended to God for this work.In the end of November he left Ningpo on hisoverland journey and passing by way of Fung-hvva,came to Tai-chau, where he discovered Mr. Jacksonquietly established in the new station. For the rest 348 THE CHINA INLAND MISSION. of the journey Mr, Jackson became his companion and together they travelled south by means of the lovelymountainous region lying among the Tai-chau andWun-chau rivers, till they reached the city itself,charmingly situated on the souther

Note About Pictures
Please note that these photos are extracted from scanned web page pictures that may possibly have been digitally enhanced for readability – coloration and look of these illustrations could not completely resemble the original function.

Image from page 781 of “The Ladies’ home journal” (1889)

Image by Web Archive Book Photos
Identifier: ladieshomejourna65janwyet
Title: The Ladies’ house journal
Year: 1889 (1880s)
Authors: Wyeth, N. C. (Newell Convers), 1882-1945
Subjects: Women’s periodicals Janice Bluestein Longone Culinary Archive
Publisher: Philadelphia : [s.n.]
Contributing Library: Web Archive
Digitizing Sponsor: Net Archive

View Book Page: Book Viewer
About This Book: Catalog Entry
View All Photos: All Photos From Book

Click right here to view book on the internet to see this illustration in context in a browseable on the internet version of this book.

Text Appearing Before Image:
Its so quick, so straightforward. One tur Single-Stroke deal with . . . and fresh, strained juice flows into the glass. Smart, modern day . . . simple to clean. For yourself, or as a TreasuredJ Gift—choose JUICE KING. The Household Name for the finest in house juicers. Squeezes Oranges, limes, lemons, GrapefruitNATIONAL DIE CASTING Company Touhy Avenue at lawndale • Chicago 45, Illinois $o.95. Old.fmodels from .9Sel major Depart-ment, Hardware,Appliance Retailers.

Text Appearing Right after Image:
Now, with my new automatic N»^^Simplex, I ili&gt ALL mv ironingCOMFORTABLE SEATED … inhalf the time. When I consider of themillions of girls nonetheless ironing bhand, as I used to do, m heart goesout to them with the hope that theywill soon discover what a God-senda Simplex li-ouer can lie in savintime, eliminating physical drudg-ery, and in turning out a muchbetter job of ironing See your Simplex dealer for a demonstration, or write for folder £

Note About Pictures
Please note that these photos are extracted from scanned page photos that might have been digitally enhanced for readability – coloration and appearance of these illustrations may possibly not completely resemble the original operate.

Image from web page 781 of “The Ladies’ house journal” (1889)

Image by Web Archive Book Pictures
Identifier: ladieshomejourna65janwyet
Title: The Ladies’ house journal
Year: 1889 (1880s)
Authors: Wyeth, N. C. (Newell Convers), 1882-1945
Subjects: Women’s periodicals Janice Bluestein Longone Culinary Archive
Publisher: Philadelphia : [s.n.]
Contributing Library: Net Archive
Digitizing Sponsor: Net Archive

View Book Web page: Book Viewer
About This Book: Catalog Entry
View All Images: All Photos From Book

Click here to view book on the web to see this illustration in context in a browseable online version of this book.

Text Appearing Ahead of Image:

Text Appearing Soon after Image:
Its so fast, so simple. 1 tur Single-Stroke manage . . . and fresh, strained juice flows into the glass. Wise, modern . . . easy to clean. For oneself, or as a TreasuredJ Gift—choose JUICE KING. The Household Name for the finest in residence juicers. Squeezes Oranges, limes, lemons, GrapefruitNATIONAL DIE CASTING Firm Touhy Avenue at lawndale • Chicago 45, Illinois $o.95. Old.fmodels from .9Sel leading Depart-ment, Hardware,Appliance Retailers.

Note About Images
Please note that these photos are extracted from scanned web page photos that may possibly have been digitally enhanced for readability – coloration and appearance of these illustrations might not completely resemble the original operate.

Denver – CBD: CCC – I See What You Imply

Denver – CBD: CCC – I See What You Imply

Some cool fast prototyping cost images:

Denver – CBD: CCC – I See What You Mean

Image by wallyg
I See What You Imply, supersized sculpture of a blue bear by Lawrence Argent, was installed along the 14th Street Side of the Colorado Convention Center as portion of Denver’s % for Art System on June 23, 2005. Initially commissioned in 2002, the 40-foot higher, ten,000 pound sculpture, was constructed of molded polymer concrete and steel at a price of four,400.

The bear evolved from a tiny plastic children’s toy, scanned with a with a 3-dimensional laser-scanning device from Cyberware Inc. The Cyberware device converted the shape into a CAD file, which Argent repositioned making use of an animation system from Newtek, which transformed the 3-D hape into hundreds of thousands of tiny triangles, utilizing about 400,000 reference points, and generating movement by altering the triangles’ shapes. Argent lowered the file down to 4,000 or so triangles, which he then sent to a a design firm, which employed a fused deposition modeling (FDM) fast-prototyping machine manufactured to produce a tiny three-D scale-model plastic maquette. Argent then hired architectural composite fabricator, Kreysler and Assoc., to fabricate the structure produced up of thousands of faceted triangles of different sizes. The components have been designed in California and transported to Denver on 4 trucks. Throughout installation it suffered an abrasion on its left haunch even though getting hoisted off its back by a crane. The scratch was painted over.

The Colorado Convention Center (CCC), situated among 14th Street and Speer Boulevard, and between Champa Street and Welton Street, was opened in 1990. In 2005, an expansion doubled the size of the facility and the center now consists of 584,000 square feet of exhibit space, 100,000 square feet of meeting rooms, and 85,000 square feet of ballroom space. Curtis W. Fentress, FAIA, RIBA of Fentress Architects, was the architect of both the original style as well as the expansion.

Denver – CBD: CCC – I See What You Imply

Image by wallyg
I See What You Imply, supersized sculpture of a blue bear by Lawrence Argent, was installed along the 14th Street Side of the Colorado Convention Center as portion of Denver’s Percent for Art System on June 23, 2005. Initially commissioned in 2002, the 40-foot high, 10,000 pound sculpture, was constructed of molded polymer concrete and steel at a cost of 4,400.

The bear evolved from a little plastic children’s toy, scanned with a with a 3-dimensional laser-scanning device from Cyberware Inc. The Cyberware device converted the shape into a CAD file, which Argent repositioned utilizing an animation plan from Newtek, which transformed the 3-D hape into hundreds of thousands of tiny triangles, employing about 400,000 reference points, and creating movement by altering the triangles’ shapes. Argent decreased the file down to 4,000 or so triangles, which he then sent to a a style firm, which employed a fused deposition modeling (FDM) rapid-prototyping machine manufactured to produce a tiny three-D scale-model plastic maquette. Argent then hired architectural composite fabricator, Kreysler and Assoc., to fabricate the structure produced up of thousands of faceted triangles of diverse sizes. The components have been designed in California and transported to Denver on four trucks. Throughout installation it suffered an abrasion on its left haunch whilst becoming hoisted off its back by a crane. The scratch was painted over.

The Colorado Convention Center (CCC), located amongst 14th Street and Speer Boulevard, and between Champa Street and Welton Street, was opened in 1990. In 2005, an expansion doubled the size of the facility and the center now consists of 584,000 square feet of exhibit space, one hundred,000 square feet of meeting rooms, and 85,000 square feet of ballroom space. Curtis W. Fentress, FAIA, RIBA of Fentress Architects, was the architect of each the original design and style as properly as the expansion.

Denver – CBD: CCC – I See What You Imply

Image by wallyg
I See What You Imply, supersized sculpture of a blue bear by Lawrence Argent, was installed along the 14th Street Side of the Colorado Convention Center as part of Denver’s Percent for Art System on June 23, 2005. Originally commissioned in 2002, the 40-foot higher, ten,000 pound sculpture, was constructed of molded polymer concrete and steel at a cost of four,400.

The bear evolved from a little plastic children’s toy, scanned with a with a 3-dimensional laser-scanning device from Cyberware Inc. The Cyberware device converted the shape into a CAD file, which Argent repositioned utilizing an animation plan from Newtek, which transformed the 3-D hape into hundreds of thousands of tiny triangles, making use of about 400,000 reference points, and creating movement by changing the triangles’ shapes. Argent lowered the file down to four,000 or so triangles, which he then sent to a a style firm, which employed a fused deposition modeling (FDM) fast-prototyping machine manufactured to create a little 3-D scale-model plastic maquette. Argent then hired architectural composite fabricator, Kreysler and Assoc., to fabricate the structure made up of thousands of faceted triangles of distinct sizes. The components were developed in California and transported to Denver on 4 trucks. For the duration of installation it suffered an abrasion on its left haunch even though getting hoisted off its back by a crane. The scratch was painted more than.

The Colorado Convention Center (CCC), located among 14th Street and Speer Boulevard, and in between Champa Street and Welton Street, was opened in 1990. In 2005, an expansion doubled the size of the facility and the center now consists of 584,000 square feet of exhibit space, 100,000 square feet of meeting rooms, and 85,000 square feet of ballroom space. Curtis W. Fentress, FAIA, RIBA of Fentress Architects, was the architect of both the original style as nicely as the expansion.