The Disston Crucible, a Magazine for the Millman, Volumes 6-71917 |
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Results 1-5 of 43
Page 33
... CAUSE- A MOUNTAIN SAW MILL IN NEW SOUTH WALES , AUS- -AND EFFECT TRALIA 38 SAW DUST 43 44 45 48 TRADE O MARK This Magazine is Published for the Advancement of the Interests of Millmen by HENRY DISSTON & SONS INCORPORATED Keystone Saw ...
... CAUSE- A MOUNTAIN SAW MILL IN NEW SOUTH WALES , AUS- -AND EFFECT TRALIA 38 SAW DUST 43 44 45 48 TRADE O MARK This Magazine is Published for the Advancement of the Interests of Millmen by HENRY DISSTON & SONS INCORPORATED Keystone Saw ...
Page 43
... Cause- T HIS is the picture of an or- dinary. T HE U. S. Forest Products Laboratory has discovered and thoroughly tested a new use for spent hemlock bark , which gives promise of being im- mensely important from an indus- trial ...
... Cause- T HIS is the picture of an or- dinary. T HE U. S. Forest Products Laboratory has discovered and thoroughly tested a new use for spent hemlock bark , which gives promise of being im- mensely important from an indus- trial ...
Page 44
Cause- T HIS is the picture of an or- dinary bark spud which had a rapid rise to prominence ( not popularity ) at the plant of the Cummer - Diggins Company , Cadillac , Mich . The occasion of its meteoric leap into the limelight was its ...
Cause- T HIS is the picture of an or- dinary bark spud which had a rapid rise to prominence ( not popularity ) at the plant of the Cummer - Diggins Company , Cadillac , Mich . The occasion of its meteoric leap into the limelight was its ...
Page 54
... cause many of the staves of ex- port were shipped from that city . That name , however , belonged more to post oak ( Quercus minor ) than to white oak , because the fine staves which went out of Chesa- peake Bay in the export trade were ...
... cause many of the staves of ex- port were shipped from that city . That name , however , belonged more to post oak ( Quercus minor ) than to white oak , because the fine staves which went out of Chesa- peake Bay in the export trade were ...
Page 70
... cause of breakage will be eliminated . In many instances operators do excellent work in setting and sharpening , but make the error of attempting to run too long with one fitting . The saw cannot be produced which will be proof against ...
... cause of breakage will be eliminated . In many instances operators do excellent work in setting and sharpening , but make the error of attempting to run too long with one fitting . The saw cannot be produced which will be proof against ...
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American Forest Trees army asked band saw bark better blade boys braze breakage bur oak camp CHERRY RIVER circular saw co-operation color Continued Copyright Hardwood Record cross-cut saw CRUCIBLE A MAGAZINE cutting band DISSTON & SONS DISSTON CRUCIBLE Disston saws EDITORIAL CHAT engine factory feed feet fight filer filing room Forest Service France French give groove gullets hand handle hard Hardwood Record hemlock HENRY DISSTON inches kind KNIFE knives labor leadership live oak logs lumber lumberman machine manufacturer MILLMAN VOL minute never night officers operators Philadelphia pine plant production pulp Quality Tells re-saw SAW DUST saw mill sawmill sawyer ship shown soldiers speed stand steel swage Tain't teeth temper tension thing timber tion trunk venereal western yew wheels white oak wood wwww
Popular passages
Page 44 - I mean, Are the people who lift and the people who lean. Wherever you go you will find the world's masses Are always divided in just these two classes; And, oddly enough, you will find, too, I ween, There is only one lifter to twenty who lean.
Page 119 - The world bestows its big prizes, both in money and honors, for but one thing. And that is Initiative. What is Initiative? I'll tell you : It is doing the right thing without being told.
Page 44 - Not the rich and the poor, for to rate a man's wealth You must first know the state of his conscience and health. Not the humble and proud, for, in life's little span, Who puts on vain airs is not counted a man. Not the happy and sad, for the swift flying years Bring each man his laughter, and each man his tears. No; the two kinds...
Page 44 - There are two kinds of people on earth today — Just two kinds of people, no more, I say. Not the sinner and saint, for 'tis well understood The good are half bad and the bad are half good. Not the rich and the poor, for to count...
Page 189 - To THE SOLDIERS AND SAILORS OF AMERICA: Approximately four million officers and men of the Army and Navy are now insured with the United States Government for a grand total of almost thirty-seven billion dollars. You owe it to yourself and to your family to hold on to Uncle Sam's insurance. It is the strongest, safest, and cheapest life insurance ever written. For...
Page 79 - I'm sure that we would differ less And clasp our hands in friendliness; Our thoughts would pleasantly agree If I knew you, and you knew me. If I knew you and you knew me, As each one knows his own self, we Could look each other in the face And see therein a truer grace. Life has so many hidden woes, So many thorns for every rose; The "why" of things our hearts would see, If I knew you and you knew me.
Page 64 - I hold a sword in each hand and a pistol in the other. I concluded from the beginning that this would be the end of it, and I see I was right, for it is not half over yet.
Page 128 - THE PROFESSOR'S TROUBLE The professor was walking down the street when accidentally he allowed one foot to drop in the dry gutter. Thinking deeply on some obscure subject, he unconsciously continued walking with one foot on the sidewalk and the other in the gutter. A friend, seeing him, stopped and said: "Good morning, professor. How are you feeling this morning?
Page 28 - ... right. Be an example to your men. An officer can be a power for good or a power for evil. Don't preach to them — that will be worse than useless. Live the kind of life you would have them lead, and you will be surprised to see the number that will imitate you.
Page 128 - It would cure his whooping cough. At the funeral Willie's mother Smartly said to Mrs. Brown ; " 'Twas a chilly day for William When the mercury went down.