Iron: An Illustrated Weekly Journal for Iron and Steel Manufacturers, Metallurgists, Mine Proprietors, Engineers, Shipbuilders, Scientists, Capitalists ..., Volum 6Perry Fairfax Nursey Knight and Lacey, 1827 |
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Side 11
... persons on the ground , might be sufficient . Seventhly , would it not be practi- cable , also , to contrive some ... person from any injury if he fell into the sea , and likewise sup- port hiin in it ? Lastly , if all should succeed ...
... persons on the ground , might be sufficient . Seventhly , would it not be practi- cable , also , to contrive some ... person from any injury if he fell into the sea , and likewise sup- port hiin in it ? Lastly , if all should succeed ...
Side 11
... persons who can decliue hic , hæc , hoc , and gabble for hours about longs and shorts , who cannot speak and write their own mother tongue with even to- lerable accuracy ; and others will show off with their Parley - vous le Francois ...
... persons who can decliue hic , hæc , hoc , and gabble for hours about longs and shorts , who cannot speak and write their own mother tongue with even to- lerable accuracy ; and others will show off with their Parley - vous le Francois ...
Side 12
... person has been prevented sitting up when it was advisable so to do , by not having any thing to sit in but a common chair , which does not afford the support to be found in an easy chair , nor the warmth and comfort to be derived from ...
... person has been prevented sitting up when it was advisable so to do , by not having any thing to sit in but a common chair , which does not afford the support to be found in an easy chair , nor the warmth and comfort to be derived from ...
Side 18
... person a square chuck ( I do not mean a square hole chuck ) would favour your readers with a drawing and de- scription of it , and likewise describe the method taken to give a slow mo- tion to a rose - engine . The method I use , is to ...
... person a square chuck ( I do not mean a square hole chuck ) would favour your readers with a drawing and de- scription of it , and likewise describe the method taken to give a slow mo- tion to a rose - engine . The method I use , is to ...
Side 25
... person giving it oil daily . Description . Fig . 1 represents an elevation of the mill ; fig . 2 a ground plan . AAAAA , wood framing , bound toge- ther at the corners with iron knees , made fast to the stone - work . BBBB , arms fixed ...
... person giving it oil daily . Description . Fig . 1 represents an elevation of the mill ; fig . 2 a ground plan . AAAAA , wood framing , bound toge- ther at the corners with iron knees , made fast to the stone - work . BBBB , arms fixed ...
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Populære avsnitt
Side 493 - A ray of heavenly light, gilding all forms Terrestrial in the vast and the minute ; The unambiguous footsteps of the God, Who gives its lustre to an insect's wing, And wheels His throne upon the rolling worlds.
Side 418 - And understood not that a grateful mind By owing owes not, but still pays, at once Indebted and discharged...
Side 318 - Merchant, (in consequence of a Communication made to him by a certain Foreigner residing abroad) for an Invention of certain Improvements in the Construction of Locks and other Fastenings.
Side 541 - There is no art or science that is too difficult for industry to attain to; it is the gift of tongues, and makes a man understood and valued in all countries...
Side 154 - Then take a quantity of dry powder of wood-ashes mixed with a sixth part of the same quantity of the ashes of burnt bones ; put it into a tin box with holes in the top, and shake the powder on the surface of the plaster till the whole is covered...
Side 50 - But the flights of poetry can seldom bear to be shackled by . homely truth, and if we are to receive the fine imagery, that places the summit of this rock in clouds brooding eternal mists and tempests, — that represents it as inaccessible, even to a man provided with twenty hands and twenty feet, and immerses its base among ravenous sea-dogs ; — why not also receive the whole circle of mythological dogmas of Homer, who, though so frequently dragged forth as an authority in history, theology,...
Side 236 - To avoid this inconvenience and waste, a brewer of the name of Harwood conceived the idea of making a liquor, which should partake of the same united flavours of ale, beer, and two-penny; he did so, and succeeded, calling it entire...
Side 396 - ... however, as his thoughts had been for some time chiefly employed upon optics, he made his discoveries in that science the subject of his lectures for the first three years after he was appointed mathematical professor ; and having now...
Side 269 - ... below the summits of the rocks, and then rose above them, the only time for landing was the moment it gained the level of the coast — a circumstance which rendered the attempt extremely nice and hazardous. " Both sledges, however, succeeded in gaining the shore, and were drawn up on the beach, though not without great difficulty. Scarcely had they reached it, when that part of the ice...
Side 117 - ... parts on each side of the middle. These are the principal divisions, and each of them is subdivided into halves and quarters. Across the middle is fixed one of the smallest needles I could procure to serve as an axis, and it is fixed in its place by means of a little sealing wax.