Image from page 132 of “How to paint : an instruction book with full description of all the materials essential.” (1894)

Image from page 132 of “How to paint : an instruction book with full description of all the materials essential.” (1894)

A few good metal stamping china photos I identified:

Image from page 132 of “How to paint : an instruction book with full description of all the components essential.” (1894)

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Identifier: howtopaintinstru00asal
Title: How to paint : an instruction book with complete description of all the supplies necessary.
Year: 1894 (1890s)
Authors: A.S. Aloe Firm.
Subjects: Artists’ components–Catalogs Painting–Technique Fountain pens–Catalogs Pyrography–Equipment and supplies–Catalogs China painting–Gear and supplies–Catalogs Trade catalogs–Artists’ components Trade catalogs–Fountain pens Trade catalogs–Pyrography–Equipment and supplies Trade catalogs–China painting–Gear and supplies.
Publisher: A.S. Aloe Firm, St. Louis
Contributing Library: Winterthur Museum Library
Digitizing Sponsor: Lyrasis Members and Sloan Foundation

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1460 The box is made of japanned tin, while enamel lined, with six wells in cover for holding tints 1 flap palette for mixing tints 16 pans of superior moist water col-ors 1 tube moist Chinese White 1 tube moist Sepia four camel hair brushes 1complete set of directions for utilizing colors Per box, $i) 85 Modest MURILLO WATER Color BOX-Fitted. 1461 Exact same as massive, excepting there are 4 colors significantly less Per box,

Image from page 356 of “The Ladies’ house journal” (1889)

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Identifier: ladieshomejourna65janwyet
Title: The Ladies’ home 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: Web Archive

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Handles Like Cloth • One particular-piece seamless quilt-size sheet 81×96 • Spreads smoothly without having wrinkles or ridges • Surfaces of cotton do not peel or stick togethc • Does not lint or cling to clothes or rugs • Does not stretch into thick and thin areas • Even all-over thickness indicates less difficult quittinc • Easter quilting signifies neat and even quiltinj • Ouilting puffs a lot more with quilts initial washincFREE CATALOG of Quilt and Quilting PatterOld and New. Just send a stamped self-odressed envelope (3V2 * 6V2 inches) for 0catalog of beautiful styles to Stearns &amp FosrCo., Dept. 85, Cincinnati 15, Ohio. If y°local shop is out of Mountain Mist, accept 1substitute but write us and we will see fh Iyou get the genuine. Mountain Mist comes undno other name. Insist on Mountain Mist for tlsake of beautiful quilting. MOUNTAIN MIS IfGlSTIIED u J PATENT Of MCI AND IN CANADA AT DRY GOODS AND Division Quit LADIES Property KM K|. 193

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Massive New Benefits IN THE MET-bTOP ADJUSTABLE-HEIGHT IRONING TABLE 7 Straightforward ADJUSTMENTS FOR HEIGHT… just proper (or tall, medium or quick females. Q REDUCES BACK STRAIN, ARMSTRAIN, IRONING FATIGUE ^51^, More rapidly IRONING…due to the fact you iron in a comfy position. Be positive to see the newADJUSTABLE-HEIGHT MET-L-Leading and bear in mind MET-L-Top is the original all-metal ironing table … fire-proof, warp-proof. Will notwobble or creep … stays place.Mirror-smooth, white-enam-eled, ventilated prime, plus theuseful ProtectoRest. Ask yourdealer for the ADJUSTABLE-HEIGHT MET-L-Best at$ 10.4 five,or the original StandardModel at .65. For very best results use MET-L-TOPpad and cover set. Tailored to match. MET-L-Best DiritionGEUDER, PAESCHKE &amp FREY CO. Milwaukee three, Wisconsin / NOW WE WASH RAYON CURTAINS AS Usually AS VEY HEEDS IT/

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60 Huge REMBRANDT WATER Colour BOX-Fitted.

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No. 1462. 1462 The box is japanned inside and out. Contains six wells in the cover for mixingtints 12 metal pans of decision moist water colors, as recommended by the Depart-ment of Science and Art in Paris three camel hair brushes 1 complete set of direc-tions for usin- colors Per ^o^&lt if 10 128 A. S. ALOE-Organization. WATER Colour PAINTING—Continued.Tiny REMBRANDT WATER Colour BOX-Fitted. 1463 Exact same as massive, excepting there are G colors much less Per box, 25 KoTE.—These nre the genuine Murillo and Rembrandt lioxes, manufactured by liourgeois, of Paris. If youorder elsewhere, be confident that the box is stamped Made In France, as the German imitation is inferior in each and every BOURGEOIS CELEBRATED FRENCH WATER COLORS IN BOXES. This is the finest line of water colors iu boxes ever manufactured, and whilst some of the much less pricey numbers are intended for childrens use, the quality ol the entire line is uniform. We sell No. 107 to several of the initial Decorative homes in this country, and their artist

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Image from web page 883 of “Knight’s American mechanical dictionary : a description of tools, instruments, machines, processes and engineering, history of inventions, common technological vocabulary and digest of mechanical appliances in science and the ar

Image from web page 883 of “Knight’s American mechanical dictionary : a description of tools, instruments, machines, processes and engineering, history of inventions, common technological vocabulary and digest of mechanical appliances in science and the ar

A couple of good china mechanical engineering pictures I identified:

Image from web page 883 of “Knight’s American mechanical dictionary : a description of tools, instruments, machines, processes and engineering, history of inventions, general technological vocabulary and digest of mechanical appliances in science and the ar

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Identifier: knightsamericanm02knig
Title: Knight’s American mechanical dictionary : a description of tools, instruments, machines, processes and engineering, history of inventions, common technological vocabulary and digest of mechanical appliances in science and the arts
Year: 1882 (1880s)
Authors: Knight, Edward H. (Edward Henry), 1824-1883
Subjects: Industrial arts Mechanical engineering
Publisher: Boston : Houghton, Mifflin and Company
Contributing Library: NCSU Libraries
Digitizing Sponsor: NCSU Libraries

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ia, Ceylon, Burniah, Siam, China,and Japan. Divided as it is from the mainland ofthe continent, and superior to China as Japan ap-pears to be, there is considerably aflinity in between theirforms of civilization and government, and in manydetails of their manners and religion. In Thibet the art of praying has been brought to a high stateof advancement. It is no longer challenging to utter long pr.aycrs.for the pmyer written on a piece of paper or a leaf and fastenedto a wheel is understood to be uttered as soon as for every single revolutionof the wheel. The motion of the written is the mechanicalequivalent of the vocal exerci^^e driven in a direction contrary to that of theapparent motion of the sun. This is probablyimportant. The barrfl corresponds to the htatls and ro-.taries of regions fartlier west. The rosary, infact, is borrowed from the East. These mechanical developments of mentalemotions are the all-natural outgrowths of a cer-tain grade of civilization. In an additional machine, two modest rings are Fig. 3931.

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Image from page 362 of “Transactions” (1852)

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Identifier: transactions51nort
Title: Transactions
Year: 1852 (1850s)
Authors: North of England Institute of Mining and Mechanical Engineers, Newcastle-upon-Tyne North of England Institute of Mining and Mechanical Engineers, Newcastle-upon-Tyne. Report of the Committee upon mechanical coalcutting, 1905
Subjects: Mineral industries Mechanical engineering
Publisher: Newcastle-upon-Tyne
Contributing Library: Gerstein – University of Toronto
Digitizing Sponsor: University of Toronto

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ins, 76, 147-Wtixkhaus, —, sprinkling dusty gal-leries at Anna and Carl shafts of the Kolner Bergwerks-Verein colliery at Altenessen, abs. 85.Witwatersrand mines, dangers, abs. 107. 10 itfDEX. Wood, W. O., Sussmann electric miners lamp. —Discussion, 145.Wood, suitable for pit-props, abs. 70.Woodhorn colliery, 117. Woodhorn colliery, apparatus for closing prime of upcast-shaft, 121.W orks and workmen,Simplon tunnel, 126.Wyssotzky, N., gold-mines of Kochkar, southern Urals, abs. 16. X. Xenotime, and new yttrium-mineral, | hussakite, Brazil, connection, abs. 33. Younu, W. G., submarine oil-wells in California, abs. 39. Z. Zeiller, R., coal-fields of Shansi andcentral Honan, northern China, abs 24. Zinc-bearing ores, Sadtler process fortreating, abs. 99. Zinc-iron gahuite, Sweden, Helsing-land, abs. 21. Zinc lead deposits, United States ofAmerica, Arkansas, south-west, abs.64. Zinc-ores, Africa, Algeria, abs. 28. ZwALinvENBEKG, A. von, modifiedSiemens and Halske approach, abs. 96. i »

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£ sirofi^i^^MWp I? iff a two if fpir

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Image from web page 483 of “Knight’s American mechanical dictionary : a description of tools, instruments, machines, processes and engineering, history of inventions, common technological vocabulary and digest of mechanical appliances in science and the ar

Image from web page 483 of “Knight’s American mechanical dictionary : a description of tools, instruments, machines, processes and engineering, history of inventions, common technological vocabulary and digest of mechanical appliances in science and the ar

A couple of good china mechanical engineering photos I identified:

Image from web page 483 of “Knight’s American mechanical dictionary : a description of tools, instruments, machines, processes and engineering, history of inventions, general technological vocabulary and digest of mechanical appliances in science and the ar

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Identifier: knightsamericanm02knig
Title: Knight’s American mechanical dictionary : a description of tools, instruments, machines, processes and engineering, history of inventions, common technological vocabulary and digest of mechanical appliances in science and the arts
Year: 1882 (1880s)
Authors: Knight, Edward H. (Edward Henry), 1824-1883
Subjects: Industrial arts Mechanical engineering
Publisher: Boston : Houghton, Mifflin and Business

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and roll-ing of the vessel. The needle, the eitrd, rhumb-ceird,eompass-eeird, or fly, is cost-free to float around accordingto its magnetic impulse, and a mark on the frontside of the circumscribing i-ing shows the directionof the ships head. The dnb is the .socket of theneedle on the pivotal pin. ^ is a vertical central section of the compass, ashung in gimbals. /? is a view looking down upon the identical. is a chait showing the compass notation. The MAKINEirS COMPASS. 1396 MARINERS COMPASS. murks aie recognized as cardinals, N. S. E. W., and in-tervening are the other 28 points. 1) is tlie Chine.se compass-card. The needUi of the Chinese compass is really .shortand light, not exceeding an inch in length, and somuch of its weight is beneath the point of suspension,tliat it is but tiny atferted by the diji or inclination.The indicates of suspension is a steel point rising fromtlie bottom of the wooden compass-bo.x and enteringa hemispherical copper cup attached by copper stripsto the needle. Fig. 3069.

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Mariners Compass. Sir George Staunton, who accompanied Lord Ma-cartney in his embassy to China, describes it in hisaccount of the embassy Upon the upper surfaceof the bo. are drawn numerous concentric circles, dis-tinguished by different Chinese characters. The eight marks on the inner circle mark the cardinalpoints, south, north, east, west, and the bisectingintermediate points. The same eight characters alsosignify equal divisions of the natural day, so thatthe instrument answers to some extent the purposeof a dial, every single division marking 3 hours. TheChinese character for sunrisr is the .same as that forcast, and in this kind was the initial comjja.-s whichfound its way to Europe in the beginuiug of thefourteenth century. Other circles have 12 anil 24divisions, with characters which mark correspondingportions of the heavens and of thi all-natural day.Every of the latter portions embraces 15° of the 360°into which the circle has been arbitrarily divided incorrespondence with the supp

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Image from web page 641 of “Knight’s American mechanical dictionary : a description of tools, instruments, machines, processes and engineering, history of inventions, basic technological vocabulary and digest of mechanical appliances in science and the ar

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Identifier: knightsamericanm02knig
Title: Knight’s American mechanical dictionary : a description of tools, instruments, machines, processes and engineering, history of inventions, general technological vocabulary and digest of mechanical appliances in science and the arts
Year: 1882 (1880s)
Authors: Knight, Edward H. (Edward Henry), 1824-1883
Subjects: Industrial arts Mechanical engineering
Publisher: Boston : Houghton, Mifflin and Company

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orks. The massis taken out under, ]nit in baskets, and pressed.The procedure is repeated. The details of the opera-tion are probablj- almost identical with these inrogue .three,000 years ago. In China, the [lestle ami mortar (/) are utilised inreducing to powder the seeds of the oil-bearing tea-plant. The meal is boiled in bags and pressed toyield the oil. The lever is tripped by the cogs ofthe sprocket-wheel, ami falls by gravity. c shows the press employed in China in crushing theseeds of the tallow-tree. The weighted wheel is sus-pended by a rod from a beam, and is oscillated toand fro by the workman, traveling iipon the seedswhieli are placed in the trough under. The oil pro-cured from the bruised seeds by heat and pressure isadded to vegetable oil and wa. to the essential con-sistence for candles. OIL-OF-BRICK. 1554 OIL-PRESS. A (Fig. 3382) illustnitcs a mill for crushing seedspreparatory to e.xtractiiig the oil thcrelVora by press-ure. The seeds are led from the hopper a by a IoUer Fig 3382.

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Oil-Mills. b, the amount getting regulated by an adjustable plate,and pass in between the crushing-rollers c d, the smallerone of which has adjustable bearings, so that thedistance among them may be varied. Theroller is driven by belt and pulley, and has agear which moves the smaller one particular. £ shows a mill, heater, anil juess combined. Fig. 3383 is the olive-mill of Barbory. Fig. 3383. largerspur-

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Image from web page 620 of “Knight’s American mechanical dictionary : a description of tools, instruments, machines, processes and engineering, history of inventions, common technological vocabulary and digest of mechanical appliances in science and the ar

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Identifier: knightsamericanm02knig
Title: Knight’s American mechanical dictionary : a description of tools, instruments, machines, processes and engineering, history of inventions, basic technological vocabulary and digest of mechanical appliances in science and the arts
Year: 1882 (1880s)
Authors: Knight, Edward H. (Edward Henry), 1824-1883
Subjects: Industrial arts Mechanical engineering
Publisher: Boston : Houghton, Mifflin and Company

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their point ofgreatest elevation. NORIA. 1533 NORIA. The modes of constructing and operating are va-rious : — 1. The original type appears to be a wheel withbuckets or pots every pivoted to the rim at a point aboveits center of gravity, so as to liang perpendicularly.These are submergeil in the water at t!ieir lowest point,and, rising, are upset Ijy make contact with with a fixed obsta-cle at their highest point, discliarging into a chuteor trough which conducts the water to a reservoir.a h. Fig. 3333, show two lorms of the device, — awheel with boxes in its rim, and one particular with susiiendedbuckets. The Cliiuese noria c is created of bamboo, exceptingthe hub of tlie wheel and the posts on which itrests. The buckets are liainboo tulies, inclined so asto hold nearly to their capacity till they attain theirculminating-point. The wheels are from 20 to 40feet in diameter, according to scenario, and aredriven by the impinging of the stream upon periph-eral Hoat-boards. One particular described by Sir George Fig. 3333.

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Norias^ or Bucket- Wheels. Staunton was 30 feet in diameter had 20 buckets,four feet lengthy and 2 inches diameter in the clear, hold-ing ycT of a gallon 12 gallons to a revolution, 4revolutions and 48 gallons per minute over 300tons per day. The reference to water, and to implies for get-ing it, are quite frequent in the Bible. In the considerably-misunderstood text in Ecclesiastes we discover a refer-ence to tlie nor in : — Or ever the silver cord be loosed, or the goldenhowl broken, or the pitcher be broken at the foun-tain, or the irhccl broken at the cistern. These wheels have been utilised from time immemo-rial in raising water for irrigation, in Assyria, Egypt,Pereia, Syria, Arabia, and Palestine, and no doubtin China and India, but have undergone numerous modi-fications. Thompson, in his The Land and the Book,says: This s^-stem of water-wheels is noticed on agrand scale at Hums Hamath and all along theOrontes. The wheels tliere are of huge size, 80or 90 feet. They are driven by the river itsel

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