. Canadian forest industries 1894-1896. Lumbering; Forests and forestry; Forest products; Wood-pulp industry; Wood-using industries. Hoop Sawing Machine. to eight saws nine inches diameter. The bear- ings are fitted with sight-feed lubricators to ex- clude dust and dirt. The saws can be changed in less than a minute to vary the thickness of hoops. The engraving herewith shows a wood frame, but this machine is also built with a one- piece-casting frame. It will saw boards 15^ inches long. It is also made to carry a greater or less number of saws, as desired. Some of the most beautiful articles


. Canadian forest industries 1894-1896. Lumbering; Forests and forestry; Forest products; Wood-pulp industry; Wood-using industries. Hoop Sawing Machine. to eight saws nine inches diameter. The bear- ings are fitted with sight-feed lubricators to ex- clude dust and dirt. The saws can be changed in less than a minute to vary the thickness of hoops. The engraving herewith shows a wood frame, but this machine is also built with a one- piece-casting frame. It will saw boards 15^ inches long. It is also made to carry a greater or less number of saws, as desired. Some of the most beautiful articles ever made of American woods are piano-cases, side-boards and furniture, in which oak, maple, cherry and other woods are used in their natural state. It is supposed that the only way to show up the markings in wood is to apply stains and fillers, and the enormity of error in this supposition will be appreciated by any person who will make a close scrutiny of articles made of unstained and unfillered woods. In the case of oak the fillers simply disfigure the wood, making obtrusive lines and shades that really mar the native beauty of that noble wood. In all cases both stains and fillers are inartistic, because wholly unnatural. It is incorrect taste that prefers the vulgarly emphasized filler markings in wood. The poetical rule should prevail in wood finish, that is, the finisher should remember that "beauty least adorned is beauty most ; Machine for Applying Adhesive Strips to Boxes and Other Articles. Patentee : H. Inman and H. A. Inman, both of Amster- dam, N. Y., patented 4th February, 1896 ; 6 years. Claim.—In a machine for applying adhesive strips to boxes and other articles, the combination of a support for the box or other article, a head to reciprocate in a direc- tion substantially parallel with the surface of the box or other article, and a roller carried by said head and having its working face conformed to the surface of the box or other article t


Size: 1894px × 1319px
Photo credit: © Book Worm / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, booksubjectforestsandforestry