american dyestuff reporterm index to american dyestuff reporter volume 28 january 1939—december...

8
m Index to AMERICAN DYESTUFF REPORTER Volume 28 January 1939—December 1939 Also Index to Proceedings of the AATCC GENERAL INDEX pOR your convenience, there appears below a list of page numbers in the respective issues for 1939. The num- bers in the first column indicate the page numbers of the general pages and those in the second column indicate which pages appear in the Proceedings of the American .'\ssociation of Textile Chemists and Colorists. The presence of the letter “ P” before the page number, anywhere in this index, indicates that the article appeared in the above-mentioned Proceedings. Date of Issue January 9 February 6* March 6 .......... March 20 ................ 0 April 3* .......... April 17t ........ May 1* .................... 9 May 15 .......... July 10 .August 7* . . . .August 21 ... September 4** September 18 October 2 ... November 13 November 27 No. General Proceedings of Issue Pages Pages 1 1 to 28 pii to P18 2 49 to 50 P29 to P48 3 P51 to P78 4 79 to 110 P85 to PlOO 5 111 to 136 P115 to P130 6 157 to 160 P137 to P156 7 P161 to P192 8 193 to 224 P201 to P216 9 P225 to P254 10 255 to 278 P261 to P268 11 303 to 306 P279 to P302 12 307 to 330 P311 to P322 13 351 to 354 P331 to P350 14 355 to 378 P359 to P370 15 379 to 404 P385 to P396 16 405 to 440 P411 to P430 17 441 to 466 P445 to P460 18 467 to 552 P503 to P538 19 553 to 576 P555 to P570 20 577 to 602 P579 to P598 21 603 to 626 P611 to P618 22 627 to 654 P631 to P650 23 655 to 682 P657 to P676 24 683 to 708 P687 to P702 25 709 to 736 P715 to P726 26 737 to 760 P745 to P752 'Research Reports Number tKnitting Arts Exhilntion Number. **.\nnual Processing Review Number. BY SUBJECT A.A.T.C.C. Official and the Canvas Disc Methods for the Evaluation of Wetting Agents, A Consideration of the (Draves) ................... Accuracy of Testing Textile Fabrics— Human, Mechanical and Atmos- pheric Conditions, Three Elements Affecting the (Adams) .......... .-Vcetate and Viscose Rayon Fabrics, The Processing of Part IV (Ordway) .................................................................................... Part V (Ordway) ...................................................................................... Part VI (Ordway) .................................................................................... Part VII (Ordway) .................................................................................. Acetate Rayon, Gas Fading of Dyes on (Cady) ................................... Acid Azo Dyes, Metallized (Crossley) ........................................................ Acid Content of Carbonizing Baths, Sodium Sulfate Error in Measuring (Olsen, Prescott and Chapin)................................................................ Acid in Wool, The Determination of ............................................................ .'Vctive Agents, Determination of Active Ingredients and Fatty Matter in Surface— (Hart) ..................................................................................... Active Agents, Determination of Sulfur in Surface (H art) ................... Active Agents in Dyeing, The Effects of Surface (Smith) ................... Active Compounds in the Textile Industry, Surface Cation (Katz) .... Alphabetical List of New Products for Textile Wet Processing De- veloped Since November, 1938................................................................ America, Yarn and Fabric Trends in Europe and (Rose) ................... Analysis and Testing as Applied to the Textile Industry, Communica- tion from the Committee on Standard Methods of Chemical.......... .Analysis of Mixed Fabrics. Quantitative Microscopical (Fletcher) .... Analysis, Spot Testing in Textile (SaxI) .................................................... Annual Conference of the Textile Institute (England)— May 30 to June 3, 1939. Papers Presented at the (Skinkle) ............................... .\ridye Process of Printing (Cassell)............................................................ .Artificial Silk, When Rayon Was (W hite) .................................................... .-Atmospheric Conditions. Three Elements Affecting the Accuracy of Testing Textile Fabrics— Human, Mechanical and (Adams) .... Auxiliary, "Latex”—A Textile (Nelson) ...................................................... Auxiliary Products for Textile Use............................................................ Azo Dyes, Metallized Acid (Crossley) ........................................................ Bacteria Damage in the Textile and Allied Industries, Control and Prevention of Mold and (Stringfellow)................................................ Base-Combining Capacity of Wool, The (Harris and Rutherford).. . Bleach Solutions, Stability of Hydrogen Peroxide (Harold) ................... Bleaching— A Report of Developments and Progress During the Past Several Years, Peroxide (Smolens) ........................................................ BOOK REVIEWS ........................................224, 273, 352, 522, 652, 679, Broadcloth. Consumer Classification and Specifications for Cotton (White and Hays) ......................................................................■•■••• Bureau of Standards, The Research Associateship of the Textile Foun- dation at the National (Emley) ................................. .................... .. . . Bureau of Standards, The Research Program of the Textile Foundation at the National (Harris) ............................................................................. Cancer Genesis, Chemistry and (Shear) .................................................... Canvas Disc Methods for the Evaluation of Wetting Agents, A Con- sideration of the .A..A.T.C.C. Official and the (Draves) ............... P421 P59 5 111 382 577 P333 487 P669 353 P297 P66 P146 P671 467 499 P192 624 757 686 P341 375 P59 P208 25 487 P388 P293 1 495 707 410 497 P52 P451 P421 americ .^n dyestuff reporter December 25, 1939 J

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Index to

AMERICAN DYESTUFF REPORTERVolume 28

January 1939—December 1939

Also Index to Proceedings of the AATCC

G E N E R A L I N D E X

p O R your convenience, there appears below a list of page numbers in the respective issues for 1939. The num­

bers in the first column indicate the page numbers of the general pages and those in the second column indicate which pages appear in the Proceedings of the American .'\ssociation of Textile Chemists and Colorists.

The presence of the letter “ P ” before the page number, anywhere in this index, indicates that the article appeared in the above-mentioned Proceedings.

Date of Issue

January 9

February 6*

March 6 ..........March 20 ................ 0April 3* ..........April 17t ........May 1* .................... 9May 15 ..........

July 10

.August 7* . . .

.August 21 . . .September 4** September 18 October 2 . . .

November 13 November 27

No. General Proceedingsof Issue Pages Pages

1 1 to 28 p i i to P182 49 to 50 P29 to P483 P51 to P784 79 to 110 P85 to PlOO5 111 to 136 P115 to P1306 157 to 160 P137 to P1567 P161 to P1928 193 to 224 P201 to P2169 P225 to P254

10 255 to 278 P261 to P26811 303 to 306 P279 to P30212 307 to 330 P311 to P32213 351 to 354 P331 to P35014 355 to 378 P359 to P37015 379 to 404 P385 to P39616 405 to 440 P411 to P43017 441 to 466 P445 to P46018 467 to 552 P503 to P53819 553 to 576 P555 to P57020 577 to 602 P579 to P59821 603 to 626 P611 to P61822 627 to 654 P631 to P65023 655 to 682 P657 to P67624 683 to 708 P687 to P70225 709 to 736 P715 to P72626 737 to 760 P745 to P752

'Research Reports Number tKnitting Arts Exhilntion Number.

**.\nnual Processing Review Number.

BY SUBJECT

A.A.T.C.C. Official and the Canvas Disc Methods for the Evaluationof Wetting Agents, A Consideration of the (Draves)...................

Accuracy of Testing Textile Fabrics— Human, Mechanical and Atmos­pheric Conditions, Three Elements Affecting the (Adams)..........

.-Vcetate and Viscose Rayon Fabrics, The Processing ofPart IV (Ordway) ....................................................................................Part V (Ordway) ......................................................................................Part V I (Ordway) ....................................................................................Part V II (Ordway) ..................................................................................

Acetate Rayon, Gas Fading of Dyes on (C ady)...................................Acid Azo Dyes, Metallized (Crossley)........................................................Acid Content of Carbonizing Baths, Sodium Sulfate Error in Measuring

(Olsen, Prescott and Chapin)................................................................Acid in Wool, The Determination o f .............................................................'Vctive Agents, Determination of Active Ingredients and Fatty Matter

in Surface— (H art).....................................................................................Active Agents, Determination of Sulfur in Surface (H art)...................Active Agents in Dyeing, The Effects of Surface (Sm ith)...................Active Compounds in the Textile Industry, Surface Cation (Katz) . . . . Alphabetical List of New Products for Textile Wet Processing De­

veloped Since November, 1938................................................................America, Yarn and Fabric Trends in Europe and (R ose)...................Analysis and Testing as Applied to the Textile Industry, Communica­

tion from the Committee on Standard Methods of Chemical...........Analysis of Mixed Fabrics. Quantitative Microscopical (F letch er)....Analysis, Spot Testing in Textile (SaxI)....................................................Annual Conference of the Textile Institute (England)— May 30 to

June 3, 1939. Papers Presented at the (Skinkle)................................\ridye Process of Printing (Cassell).............................................................Artificial Silk, When Rayon Was (W hite).....................................................-Atmospheric Conditions. Three Elements Affecting the Accuracy of

Testing Textile Fabrics— Human, Mechanical and (A d a m s)....Auxiliary, "Latex”— A Textile (Nelson)......................................................Auxiliary Products for Textile Use............................................................Azo Dyes, Metallized Acid (Crossley)........................................................Bacteria Damage in the Textile and Allied Industries, Control and

Prevention of Mold and (Stringfellow)................................................Base-Combining Capacity of Wool, The (Harris and Rutherford). . .Bleach Solutions, Stability of Hydrogen Peroxide (H arold)...................Bleaching— A Report of Developments and Progress During the Past

Several Years, Peroxide (Smolens)........................................................BOOK RE V IE W S ........................................224, 273, 352, 522, 652, 679,Broadcloth. Consumer Classification and Specifications for Cotton

(White and H ays)......................................................................■•■•••Bureau of Standards, The Research Associateship of the Textile Foun­

dation at the National (Em ley)................................. .................... .. . .Bureau of Standards, The Research Program of the Textile Foundation

at the National (H arris).............................................................................Cancer Genesis, Chemistry and (Shear)....................................................Canvas Disc Methods for the Evaluation of Wetting Agents, A Con­

sideration of the .A..A.T.C.C. Official and the (D raves)...............

P421

P59

5111382577

P333487

P669353

P297P66

P146P671

467499

P192624757

686P341

375

P59P208

25487

P388P293

1

495707

410

497

P52P451

P421

a m e r i c .^n d y e s t u f f r e p o r t e r December 25, 1939 J

( llailis. vSodimn Su'faU' ICrmr in j\h*asming Ac-id ('outcmof (Olsen, I’ lescotl an<l ('liapiii)............................................................. P(i69

Carrots?, Mr. Dyer. Have You llatl Your................................................ 354C^asriji ImIht, The i’ resent Status of (Wliitlicr and (io iild )............... 1‘641Cation Active Compounds in the 'Pcxti’c Industry, Surface (K a t z ) . . . . 1’ 671 C hcnvcal Analysis and Tcslinj? as Applied to llic 'Pcxtile Industry,

Communication from the Committee on Standard ^Icthods o f . . . . IM92 (liemical C'onstituiion of the Naphthol AS Tyiie Dye.s (D orm a n ),... 79Chemical Develoimients. Recent ()rg:inic (Da'h’e n ).................................... 1M15Cduni ca! Dyeing' l*rocesses. Some New (\\hil<e]in)................................... 4U •(^ivmral Oulnsry. Mee in^. Society o f ......................................................... 1M9Chemical Specialties, Textile........... ’................................................................ P38BChun cal 'Irxti.e Testing. Physical and

Part XII 1 (Skink'le) . . .'........................................................................... 1.11I’art X IV (Skinkle) ................................................................................. 307Part X V (Skinkle) .................................................................................... 357Part XVI (Skinkle) .................................................................................. 461Part XVI r (Skinkle) ............................................................................... 553

C’hemical Uses of Sulfamic Acid, Tlie Textile (W akelin)..................... 729Cdicmist. The Mill (Y ou n g).............................................. , ............................... 217(.hemistry and Chtneer (lencsis (Shear)......................................................... P4S1(.hemistry of Silk and Silk I'rocessing, Recent Developments in the

(Scon) ................................................. .501(Chromium Derivatives of Dyestuffs, Solulile (Hoyle)................................... 741Class'fication and .Speeificaiions for Cotlun I’ roadclolh, Cx)nsumcr

(White and Hays) ................................................................................... 410(leaning, p'ahric and C'o’or I’ rolilems in Dry ((\nighhn)....................... PIU'Cleaning to Mill Processes, the Application of Dry (D erby)............... P520Cohir Council. Program Notice. Inter-Society............................................ T‘ 17C'o’or Council. Report of Project No. 2, Tntcr-Societv........................... P72.1Co’or Problems in Dry Cleaning, l^ahric and (Coughlin)....................... PllOCo^or Tolerance, Report of Symposium on ................................................ P618C'ohir Tolerance. T ’ e Phvsics of (Tudd).................................................... 441CC'fMMUNK’A T lO N S :

Profitable Research (Bullard)................................................................... P76From the Committee on Standard Methods of Chemical Analysis

and Testing as Applied to the Textile Industry......................... P192C'onference of the Textile Institute (Kngland) — lay 30 to June 3,

1939, Papers Presented at the Annual (Skinkle)........................... 686Consnmer Classification and Specifications for Colton Rroadclolh

(White and Plays)....................................................................................... 410Consumer Point of View. Progress in Textile Research from the

(Mack) .......................................................................................................... P696Consumer Textile Goods. Labeling of (S im on)....................................... P361(Continuous Plot Flue ^lethod, The D3'eing of Xfaphtols on Cotton

Piece Goods by the (W illiam s)................................................................ PM2Control Method for Grease in Wool Scouring Liquors, A Rapid

(Crecly and LeCompte) ........................................................................... 627Control, Rapid Extraction for Mill (H aller)............................................ 629CORRP:CT10NS ............................................................................... lO. P418, P449Cotton—A Proposed Research Program. New Uses for (M acorm ac).. P54 C'otton Broadcloth. Consumer Classification and Specifications for

(White and H ays)..................................................................................... 410Cotton by Means of the Commercial Ventilated Drying Oven. The De­

termination of the Dry Weight of (Stephenson)........................... P69Cotton, Group C— Fastness Tests for Dyed or Printed........................... P312Cotton Piece Goods by the Continuous Plot Flue Method, The Dyeing

of Naphtols on (W illiam s).................................................................... P42Cotton Piece C4oods, Semi-Resin Finishes for (Trow el!)....................... P643C'rease Resistance and I‘ermanent Finishes, Report of the Committee

on (Barnard) ................................................................................................ P514C'repe Research, l^eport of the Rayon

V. The Determination of the Effects of "Variations in the Manu­facture of Rayon Crepe Dress Fabrics..................................... F226

VI. The Determination of Some of the Variations in Normal FirstQuality Viscose Rayon...................................................................... P163

V II. The Effects of Some Variations in Dyeing and FinishingUpon the Pebble of Rayon Crepe l^abrics.................................... P289

Cystine in Wool, Photochemical Decomposition of the (Rutherford andHarris) .......................................................................................................... 655

Decomposition of the Cystine in Wool. Photochemical (Rutherford andHarris) .......................................................................................................... 655

Drape as Measurable Properties of Fabric. Technical livaluation ofTextile Finishing Treatments— Flexibility and (Winn and Schwarz) P688

Dry Cleaning, Fabric and Color Problems in (Coughlin)....................... P116Dry Cleaning to Mill Processes, The Application of (D erby).................. P520Dryers, Tomorrow’s Textile (Andrews)........................................................ P530Drying Oven. The Determination of the Dry Weight of Cotton by

Means of the Commercial Ventilated (Stephenson)........................... P69Dye and Textile Lines with Lubricated Plug Valves, Controlling

(Scherer) ..................................................................................................... 199Dye House. The Management and Operation of a Hosiery (Alexander

and Wille) ................................................................................................... P716Dyed or Printed Cotton, Group C— Fastness Tests for......................... P312Dyeing, A Discussion of the Metachrome Method of (Schmitt).......... P336Dyeing and Finishing, A Mill Executive’s Viewpoint on (Comer) . . P93Dyeing and Finishing of Silk Hosiery (D uggan)....................................... 218Dyeing ami Finishing Plant for Synthetic Piece Goods. Organizing a

(WocKl) ......................................................... P746Dyeuig Equipment. Modern Package (Sm ith)............................................ P203Dyeing Methods— Past and Present, Silk Hosiery (Zism an)................... 489Dyeing. Microscopical Observations of Wool (Millson, Roj'er and

Wissemann) ................................................................................................. P632Dyeing of X’aphtols on Cotton Piece Goods by the Continuous Hot

Flue Method. The (Williams) ............................................................ P42Dyeing of Nylon Fibers— A Preliminary Survey, The (S tott).............. P582Dyeing of Rayon Staple. The (Bonnet)........................................................ I’391Dyeing of Staple and Spun Viscose Rayon. The (O rdw ay)..................... P613Dyeing Phenomena, Wool (Kienle and R oyer).......................................... P638Dyeing Plants. Cheap Power and Heat for (Tupholme)........................... 744Dyeing Processes. Some New Chemical (W akelin)............................... 400Dyeing, Protection of Wool Fiber During Scouring and (Lindenmaier) P I5 Dyeing. Recent Research and Its Bearing on Wool Piece Goods

(Jackson) .......................................................................... P74Dyeing. The Effect of Surface Active Agents in (Sm ith)..................... P146Dyer, Have You Had Your Carrots?. Mr................................................. 354Dyer Today, Problems Confronting the Yarn (Sm ith)........................... P386Dyer’s Notebook, Leaves from a (V erity )................................................ P12Dyes as an Aid in Reclaiming Pipe (Cozzens)....................................... 401Dyes, Chemical Constitution of the Naphthol AS Type (Dorman) . . . . 79Dyes, Metallized Acid Azo (Crossley)............................................................ 487Dyes bn Acetate Rayon, Gas F.ading of (Cady)....................................... P333

Decembei 25, 1939

Dyes, 'J'he Phlliahjcj'.'niiiics A New ( of Synllu-tic Jhgmcnt.S and(Dahlcn) .........................................................................................................

DyestulT.s, SoluI)le (■lirtjmium Derivatives of (B oyle)..............................Econoimc SitualMJti, The (^McLauritie).............................................................EDITORIALS:

Oti iJie (;ulor Technician’s Side.................................................................The Mill (4iemist........ ..( olton, .Scienii l.s ami Fatalists.................................................................The Textile Revululion- -Are Oihers on the W ay?...........................1914 vs. ...........................................................................................................Should the Little Fellow Be ihoteclcd?................................................l\e eai'ch ami Jh epai edae s . . . ............................. .....................................

lvlectr(j])horetic .Sludiea of S;lk (Soolcne and Harris)...............................I'dectrojthoretic ,S ii l io of Wool (Sookne and Harris)...........................L(|u:pnicnt, M oden Package Dyeing (Sm .th)............................................Kiiujpiiieiit, S.aiiiless Steel for Textile I'aunce)....................................Furope and America, Yarn and Fabric Trends in (R ose).......................Evaporation of Fabrics, Procedure for 'J'esting the Wettability ami Rale

of (Peschel) ..................................................................................................I’Necllt^ 'c's Vhcw])oint on Dyeing and I* ni Iiing, A Mill ( (..omer) • • • •F.xh bilion. Thirty-nflli Annual Knitting Arts................................................Fx'raction f o Mid Ff'nf'ril. Ran d ( H ill-'r) . . . . ........ ...............................h'abric and Color Problems in Dry Cleaning (Coughlin).........................halii'ic 1 ta.,mls in ICuropi and Anu-’‘-ca, am and (i<ose).......................Fading of D yo on Acetate Rayon, (.a^ ((kuly)........................................I'"astne s Tests and .Siandti'ds. Revision o f ....................................................h'astness J'est' for Dyed or Pvin'cil Cotton, (Jroiip C— ...............................Fa’tne s to ]*er-piralion, .Standards for........................................................Fatty Matter in Sn- face Active Agent , Deterniinal on of Active In­

gredients anti ( H '" ! ) ...................................................... .................... AU "i"Felts and a I’o-silile Method of ConditioninG- for Rcc’a ming the Wool,

A Sppciali/rd Treatment of Discarded I ap 'r-Maker’ > ((jleklcn). . .FinisheCooperative Re.searcli on Evaluating Textile................................Mnishes for JJotton Jhece Cioods, Semi-Re in 'Trow ell)...........................Finishes, Report of the ('omni.ttee on Crease ResLtance and Permanent

(Barnard) ............................................................................... ......................Finishing, A Mill Executive’s Viewpoint on Dyeing and (('om er)........Fini'shing of Textile Fab ics. Prtparmg and (Borghetty)...........................Finishing Plant for Synthetic Piece (joods, Organiz ng a Dyeing and

(Wood) ............................................................................................................Fini hing Silk Hosiery, Dyeing and (Duggan)........................................Finishing Treatment;— Flexih'lity and Drape as Meaiurable Properties

of Fabric, Technical Evaluation of Text le (Winn ami Schwarz)..Finishing Treatments— Progre s Report, The Evaluation o f .......................Finishing Treatments, Technical Evaluation of (Schwarz).......................Flax—-Its Agricultural and Industrial Possiliilities (Worthington and

J on es) ........................................................................................................ .... •Flexibility and Drane a> Measurable Properties of Fabric, Technical

Evaluation of Textile Finishing Treatments—^(Winn and Schwarz). Flue Method, The Dye ng of Naphtols on Cotton Piece (ioods by the

Continuous Hot ''Williams) .......................................................................FOPFiriN SOTH^CES, TECHNICAL NOTES FRO M ...........................FORUM, OPEN ...... ..................................................... ...................708, 736,Foundation at the National Bureau of Standards. The Research Asso-

ciateship of the Textile (Em iey)...............................................................Foundation at the National Bureau of Standards, The Research Program

of the Textile (H arris).............................................................................Gas Fading of Dyes on Acetate Rayon (Cady)............................................Grease in Scoured Wools, A Rapid Method for Determ ning (Creely). . Grea e in Wool Scouring Liquors, A Rapid Control Method for (Creely

and LeCompte) .................................................................,............................Hand in Textiles and Its Relations to Underlying Structure (Alex­

ander) ..............................................................................................................Heat for Dyeing Plants, Cheap Power and (Tupholme)...........................Hosiery Discussion, Outline of the Round Table (W alker)...................Hosiery Dye House, The Management and Operation of a (Alexander

and Wille) ....................................................................................................Hosiery, Dyeing and Finishing of Silk (Duggan).......................................Hosiery Dyeing Method''— Past ami Prerent, Silk (Zisman)...................Hot Flue Method, The Dyeing of Naphtols on Cotton Piece Goods by

the Continuous (Wili am s)...........................................................................Human. Mechanical and Atmospheric Conditions, Three Elements Affect­

ing the Accuracy of Testing Textile Fabrics (Adams).......................Hydrogen Peroxide Bleach Solutions, Stability of (Harold)...................Identification of the Newer Textile Fibers (Skinkle)...............................Impregnation of Textile Fibers with Rubber Latex (H arold)...................Index to Volume 28— Follows Page P748Ink Industry, The Writing (Schmitt)............................................................Institute (England)— May 30 to June 3, 1939, Papers Presented at the

Annual Conference of the Textile ^Skinkle).......................................Inter-Society Color Council. Program Notice..............................................Tnter-Society Color Council. Report on Project No. 2 ...............................Knitting Arts Exhibition, Thirty-fifth Annual................................................Labeling of Con'^umer Textile Goods (Sim on)................................................“ Latex”— A Textile Auxiliary (Nelson)........................................................Latex, Impregnation of Textile Fibers with Rubber (Harold)...............Linen Piece Goods in the United States, The Processing of ''Clark). . . . Lines with Lubricated Plug Valves, Controlling Dye .ind Textile

(Scherer) ........................................................................................................List of New Products Developed for Textile Wet Processing Since

November, 1938, Alphabetical....................................................................Logwood, Present Uses of (Tisdale)................................................................Management and Operation of a Hosiery Dye House. The (Alexander

and Wille) ......................................................................................................Marks, Textile Patents and Trade (P rice)....................................................Mechanical and Atmospheric Conditions, Three Elements Affecting the

Accuracy of Testing Textile Fabrics— Human, ''Adams)...............Metachrome Method of Dyeing, A Discussion of the (Schmitt)...............Metallized Acid Azo Dyes (Cros.sley)............................................................Microscopical Analysis of Mixed Fabrics, Quantitative (Fletcher)..........Microscopical Observations of Wool Dyeing (Millson, Royer and

Wissemann) ....................................................................................................Mixed Fabrics, Quantitative Microscopical Analysis of (Fletcher). . . .Moisture, Fighting Ravages of (H yler)........................................................Mold and Bacteria Damage in the Textile and Allied Industries, Control

and Prevention of (Stringfellow)............................................................Naphthol AS Type Dye", Chemical Constitution of the ''Dorman)...........Naphtols on Cotton Piece Goods by the Continuous Hot Flue Method,

The Dyeing of (W illiams)...........................................................................Nineteen Thirty-nine versus Nineteen Fourteen (Van R iper).................

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North Carolina State College and Some of Its Problems, Your StudentiecLiun at tunnisiiaw;.................................................................................

Nylon1. A New Group of High Molecular Protein-like Compounds for the

Manuiacture of Fabucs and Piastics (Clayton)...............................2. Physical Properaes .................................................................................

Nylon Fibers— A Preliminary Survey, The Jjvemg of (Stott)...............OPEN FORUM .................................................... ............................ 708, 736,Ope.a*.ion oi a Hosiery Dye House, The Management and (Alexander

and Wille) .....................................................................................................Orga-ic Chem.cal Developments, Recent (Dahlen).......................................Oven, The Determination of the Dry Weight of (fotion by Means of the

Commercial Ventilated Drying (Stephenson).......................................Oxidi^ing Agent for the Treatment ot Texides, A New ^Dubeau,

MacMahon and Vincent) ............................................................................Paciiage Dyeing Equ.pment, Modern (Smith)...............................................Paper-Maker’s Felts and a Possible Method of Conditioning for Re­

claiming the Wool, A Spec aiiz d Trea ment for Di-carded (Cjlehlen) Pastes, A Fundamental Scudy of Vat Printing,. III. The Measurement

of Color Yield; Csc of the Hunter Pnoiox Keilectomeier; the Effect of Thicaener Solidi on Color Yield; a Comparison of Sodium and Potassium Carbonates; the Cau.es cf Heat Rise in an Agcr(Gleysteen) ...................................................................................................

Pastes, Tne Stabil.ty of Printing (Truax)....................................................Paicntj and Trade Mark , Textile (P rice)................................................Pe mar.ent Finishe.,, Report of the Commit.ee on Crease Resistance and

(Barnard) .....................................................................................................Permanent Softening Agents 'M osher)..........................................................Peroxide Bleach Solution , Stab li.y cf Hydrogen (Harold)...................Pei oxide B.caching— A Report cf Developments and Progress DuTng

die Past Several Years (Smolens)........................................................Per'p ration. Standards for Fastness to........................................................Photochemical Decomposition of the Cy tine in Wool (Rutherford and

Harris) ..........................................................................................................Phthalocyanines— A New Class of Synthetic Pigments and Dye.:, The

(Dahlen) .......................................................................................................Physical nrd Chemical Textile Test ng

Pn t X U I (Skinkle) ...................................................................................Part X IV (Skinkle).....................................................................................Part X V (S onkle) .....................................................................................Part X V I (Skin.lie) ...................................................................................Pert X V II 'Skinkle) ..............................................................................

Physical Testing in the Text'le Indu try (Saxl).......................................Phy ics of Color Toleranre, The (Tudd)........................................... ............Piece Goods by the Continuous Hot Flue Meth'd, The Dyeing of

Naphtols on Cotton (William*)................................................................Piece Goods Dyeing, Recent Research and Its Bearing on Wool (Jack-

son ) ...................................................................... ..........................................Piece floods in the United States, The Processing of Linen (Cla’ k). Piece Gonds, Organizing a Dyeing and Finishing Plant for Synthetic

'W ood) ...........................................................................................................Piece ('oods, S"mi-Re in F ’nishes for Cotton (Trowel!).........................Pigments and Dye*, The Phthalocyanines— A New Class of Synthetic

(D-^hlen) .......................................................................................................Pigments, Printing with (Young)....................................................................P'P"", Dves as an Aid in Reclaiming '’Cozzens)..................................... .. . .Plant for Synthetic P.ece Good , Organizing a Dyeing and Finishing

W ood) ............................................................................................................Power and Heat for Dyeing Plants, Cheap (Tupho’m e)...........................Pieparing and Finishing of Textile Fabrics (Borghetty).......................Printed Cotton. Group C— Fastness Tests for Dyed or...........................Printing, Aridye Process of (Cassell)............................................................Printing, Modern (Ha se) ................................................................................Printing Pastes, A Fundamental Study of Vat

III. The Measurement of Color Yield; U e of the Hunter Photox Reflectometer; the Effect of Th ckener Solids on Color Yield; a Comparison of Sodium and Potassium Carbonates; theCauses of Hea R'se in an Ager (Gleysteen)...............................

Printing Pastes, The Stability of (Truax)....................................................Printing, Recent Developments in Textile (W ood).......................................Printing, Screen (Greene)...................................................................................Printing with Pigm'^nts (Young)......................................................................Proce's, Tintinol ''Siever)......................................... .............. .........................Proces es, T ’ e Application of Dry Cleaning to Mill (Derby)...................Processing Developed Since November, 1938, Alphabetical List of New

Products for Textile W et................................... .........................................Processing of Acetate and Viscose Rayon Fabrics, The

Part IV (Ordway) .....................................................................................Part V (Ordway) ........................................................................................Part V I (Ordway) .....................................................................................Part V II (Ordway) ........................... .............................

Processing of Linen Piece Goods in the United States, The (Clark) . . Proces ing, Recent Developments in the Chemi try of Silk and Silk

(Scott) ............................................................................................................Products for Textile U-e, Auxiliary. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • • ■ ■ .Products for Textile Wet Processing developed since November, 193»,

PRO m 'jCTs!''TRAD E NOT^J?— N E W ...........26. 49. io6. l.fV, i,S7, 219,276 .103. 323. 331, 378, 402. 439, 465, 551. 5/2, 601, 621,653. 680,' 704, 735, 758 . , • /r • i ■ tProtection of Wool Filler During riyeiiig and .Scouymg Lindenmaier).

Quantitative Microscopical Analysis of Mixed Fabrics (hletcher)...........Ravon Crepe Research, Report of the . , , ,

V The Dete-'m'n'ition of the Effects of \ ariations in the Manu­facture of Rayon Crepe Dress F a b r i c s . . . . . . . . -------- • ;----- -

V I The Determination of Some of the Variations in NormalFirst Quality Vi'cose Rayon.......... ...........................V V ''■ 'i '- '"

V II The Effects of Some Variations in Dyeing and 1-ini-liingUpon the Pehhle of Rayon Crepe Fabrics...................................

Rayon Fabrics. The Processing of Acetate and \ iscosePart IV fOrdway) .....................................................................................Part V (O 'dway) ........................................................................................Part Vr (Ordway) .....................................................................................Part V II (Ordway) ................. ' I ’ . ' " f A l i ...........................................

Rayon, Oas Fading of Dyes on Acet.ite (Cady)..... • rr>i_ _ TN--.......- I l<nTin#»ri.....................

P44

196198

Pa82753

P716P315

P69

P590P203

437

P280P462

731

P514484

1

495P137

655

603

1313073j7461553

P615441

P42

P74709

603P213

401

50125

Rayon’ .Staple, The Dyeing of (lionnet) . . ........ .. . . ------- -Ravon The Dyeing of Staple and Sniin Viscose (Ordway).

:^on ’ Was Anificlal Silk. When iW li.te ),........ - - V " , ! -Re^ellency and Tenmeratiire U a t^ ^ and H ood).

W o i f p i r oL d s Dyeing, Recent (Jack- son) ...................................................................................................

P74

AMERIC.AN DYESTUFF REPORTER

497P510

P696P47P76P34

Research Associateship of the Textile Foundation at the NationalBu'eau of Standards, The (Emley)........................................................

Research Committee, Report of the (Olney)........................................... .. •Research from the Consumer Point of View, Progress in Textile

(Mack) ...........................................................................................................Research on Evaluating Textile Finishes, Cooperative...............................Re. earch. Profitable— A Communication 'Bullard).....................................Research Program, New U es for Cotton— A Proposed (Macormac).. Rerearch P.ogram of the Textile Foundation at the National Bureau

of Standa ds. The (Harris) ..................................................................Research, Report of the Rayon Ciepe

V. The Determination cf the Effects of Variations in the Manu­facture of Rayon Crepe Dress Fabrics....................................... P226

VI. Tne Determination ot Seme of t.ie Var.ations in Normal First Qual.ty Viscose Rayon...............................................

VII. The Effects of Some Vaiiationi in Dyeing and Fini hingUpon the Pebble of Rayon Crepe Fabrics................................... P289

P52

P643P515

539255

P343P161

P15

P746P643

P280P262

493P37

P213P612P520

467

5111382577709

467

.3111382577

P333P391P613

375P285P647

Re'dn Finishes for Couon Piece Good.", S mi- (Trowell)Resinr for Textile Application, Recent Developments of (P ow ers)...-Revolution— Are Othe.s cn the Way?, Tne Tex ile (■' o’dthwait)..........Rubber Latex, Impregnation of Textile Fibers w.th (Harold)..............Sanforizing, The Meehan cs of (Cluett)........................................................Scoured Wools, A RapM Method fo- Determining G ease in (Creely). Scouring and Dyeing. Protection of Wool Fiber During (Lindenmaier). Scouring Liquors, A Rap d Control Method for Crease in Wool (Creely

and LeCompte) ............................................................................................Screen Printing G "eene)....................................................................................Shrin’-age in Women’ " and ChiM“en’s Wea'^ing Apparel Fabrics, A

Study of the Incidence of (Searle and Mac’t ) ...................................Shrinkproofing Wool, Recent Developments in Method' for (Harold)..Silk and S.lk Processing, Recent Developments in the Chemistry of

(Scott) ........................................................................................................... 501

627P37

405683

P412218489375P49

P669484741

P38B

410757

P613P347

P192P137P287P137

P746744

P206P312P341

379

P52P613P391

SMk, Electrophoretic Studies cf (Sookre and Ha ris)Silk Hosiery, Dyeing and Finishing of (Duggan).......................................Silk Hosiery Dyeing Methods— Pa."t and Present (Zisman)..................S Ik, When Rayon Was Artificial (W hite)....................................................Society of Chemical Indu try, Meeting............................................... 'Sodium Sulfate Error in Mea"uring Acid Content of Carbonizing

Bath' (Olsen, P e.scott and Chapin)...................................................Softening Agent". Permanent 'M osher).......................................................Soluble Chromium Deriva'ives of Dyestuffs (Boyle)Sp"c:alt'ea, Textile Chemical .......................................Specifications for Cotton Broadcloth, Consumer Classification and (White

and Hays) .....................................................................................................Spot Testing in Textile Analysis (Saxl).....................................................Snun Virense Rayon, Th“ Dyeing of S'aple and (O dway).....................Stainless Steel for Text'le Equipment (Faunce) . ....................... ............Standard Method; of Chem'cal Analy is and Testing as Applied to

the Textile Industry. Communication from the Committee on..........Standards for Fastness to Perspiration............................................................Standards, Report of the Committee on Coordination o f ...........................Standards, Revision of Fastness Tests and................................. ..................Standards, The Research Associateship of the Textile Foundation at the

Nat'onal Bureau of (Emley)............................................... .................... 997Standards, The Re.searcb Program of the Textile Foundation at the

National Bureau of (Harris)..................................................................Staple and Smin Visco"e Rayon. The Dyeing of (Ordway)..................S-aple, The Dyeing of Rayon (Bonnet).......................................................Starch in Textil-s. The Role of (Stalling')...............................................S eel for Textile Equipment, Stainless '’Faunce)...........................................Structure, Hand in Textiles and Its Relation to Underlying (Alex­

ander) ............................................................................................................. P557Student Section at North Carolina State College and Some of Its

Problems Your (Grimshaw)......................................................................Sulfamic Acid, The Textile Chemical U"es of (Wakelin).......................Sulfate Error in M»asuring Acid Content of Carbonizing Baths,

Sodium (Olsen, Presco*t and Chapin)...................................................Sulfur in Surface Active Agents, Determination of (H art).......................Surface-Active Agents, Determination of Active Ingredients and Fatty

Matter in (H art)..........................................................................................Surface-Active Agents, Determination of Sulfur in (H art).......................Surface Active Agents in Dyeing. The Effect of (Sm bh)............ ..Surface Cation Active Compounds in the Textile Industry IK-atz) . . . . Synthetic Piece Goods, Organizing a Dyeing and Finishing Plant for

'W ood) ..............................................................................TECHNICAL NOTES FROM FOREIGN SOURCESTemperature, Water Repellency and (Stiegler and H ood)....................... P285Test. Titer (Burke)................................................................; - - ....................... 35.3Testing as Applied to the Textile Industry, Communication from the

Committee on Standard Methods of Chemical Analysis and.............. P192Testing in Textile Analysis, Spot (Saxl)........................................................ 757Testing in the Textile Industry, Physical (Saxl)....................................... P615Testing, Physical and Chemical Textile

Part X III (Skinkle) .................................................................................. 131

P3’

P44729

P669P66

P297P66

P146P67I

P746 20

P15624

P226

P163

P289

Part X IV (Skinkle)Part XV (Skinkle) ....................................................................................Part XV I (Skinkle) ...................................................................................Part X V II ''Skinkle) ..................................................................

Testing Textile Fabrics— Human, Mechanical and Atmosiiheric Condi­tions, Three Elements Affecting the Accuracy of (Adams)..........

Testing the Wettability and Rate of Evaporation of Fabrics, Procedurefor (Peschel) .................................................................................................

Tests and Standards. Revision of Fastness........ ...........................................Tests for Dyed or Printed Cotton, Group C— Fa'tness....................... ..Texas, Possibilities for Development of the Textile Industry in

(O'Daniel and Culberson).......................................................... .............. ..Textile Foundation at the National Bureau of Standards, The Research

Associateship of the (Em ley)....................................................................Textile Foundation at the National Bureau of Standards, The Research

Program of the (Harris).............................................................................Textile Institute (England) — May 30 to .lune 3. 1939. Papers Prcsenled

at the Annual Conference of the (.Skinkle)

307357461553

P59

P61P137P312

272

497

P52

686Tintinol Process (Siever) ................................................................................. ' ’ *>1-Titer Test (Burke) ...........................................................................................Tolerance, Report of Symposium on Color........................................................Tolerance, The Physics of Color f jiid d )..........................................................Tomorrow, Textiles of (Barnard)....................................................................Trade Marks, Textile Patents and fPrice)....................................................TRADE NOTES— NEW PRODUCTS...............26. 49. 106. 136, 157,

219, 276, 303, 32.3. 351. 378. 402, 439, 46.3, 551, 572, 601, 621, 653, 680, 704, 735, 758

355P618

441737731

December 25, 1939 J

Trends m Europe and America, Yarn and Fabric (R ose)....................... 499Valves, Controlling Dye and Textile Lines with Lubricated Plug

(Scherer) ...................................................................................................... ° jpgPastes, A Fundamental Study of

111. "Ibe Measurement of Color Yield; U. e of the Hunter Photox Kelleciometer; the Effect of Thickener Solids on Color Yield;A Comparison of Sodium and Potassium Carbonates; the

IT- Cau;es of Heat Rise in an Ager (Glcysteen)........................... P2'80viscose Rayon Labrics, The Processing of Acetate and

Part IV (Ordway) ..................................................................................... 5Part V (Ordway) ....................................................................................... i\\Part VI (Ordway) ...................................................................................... 382Part V II (Ordway) ................................................................................... 577

Viscose Rayon, The Dyeing of Staple and Spun ^Ordway).’ . ’ *’ ’ *.**. P613Water Repellency and Temperature (Stiegler and H ood).......................... P285uater Repellent, A New Type (Slowinske)................................................ P647Weight of Cotton by Means of the Commercial Ventilated Drying Oven,

The Determination of the Dry (Stephenson).......................................... P69Wet P'ocessing Developed Since November, 1938, Alphabetical List

of New Products for Textile....................................................................... 467VVettabili'y and Rate of Evaporation of Fabrics, Procedure for Testing

the (Peschel) .................................................................................................. P61Wettmg Agents, A Consideration of the A.A.T.C.C. 'official and the

Canvas Disc Methods for the Evaluation of (Draves)................... P421Wetting Agents: Official Method, Evaluation of (Draves)..................... P425Wetting Agents, The Evaluation of (Creely and LeCompte).................. P419W ool, A Specialized Treatment of Discarded Paper-Maker’s Felts and

a Posriiile Method of Conditioning for Reclaiming the (Gleklen).. 437 Wool Dyeing, Microscopical Observations of (Millson, Royer and

Wis.emann) .................................................................................................... P632Wool Dyeing Phenomena (Kienle and R oyer)..!...!'.!* .!* .* .'.* .’. ’.*.'.*’.'. P638W'ool, Electrophoretic Studies of (Sookne and Harris)............................... P593Wool Fiber During Scouring and Dyeing, Protection of (Lindenmaier). P15Wool, Photochemical Decomposition of the Cystine in (Rutherford and

Harris) ................ 555Wool Piece Goods Dyeing, Recent Research and Its Bearing on (Jack-

son) ................................................................................................................ P74Wool, Recent Developments in Methods for Shrinkproofing (H arold).. 683 Wool Scouring Liquors, A Rapid Control Method for Grease in (Creely

and LeCompte) ........................................................................................... 627Wool, The Base-Combining Capacity of (Harris and Rutherford)........... P293Wool, The Determination of Acid in ......................... ....................................... 353Wools, A Rapid Method for Determining Grease in Scoured (Creely). P161NVriting Ink Industry, The (Schmitt)............................................................ P32Yarn Dyer Today, Problems Confronting the (Smith)................................ P386Yarn and Fabric Trends in Europe and America (R ose)......................... 499

BY AUTHORADAMS. R. H.—

Three Elements Affecting the Accuracy of Testing Textile Fabrics—Human, Mechanical and Atmospheric Conditions............................... P59

ALEXANDER. A. G. and W ILLE, CLARENCE—The Management and Operation of a Hosiery Dye House....................... P716

ALEXANDER, JEROME—Hand in Textiles and Its Relation to Underlying Structure................... P557

ANDREW'S, B. R.—Tomorrow’s Textile Dryers............................................................................ P530

BARNARD, K. H —Report of the Committee on Crease Resistance and Permanent Finishes P514Textiles of Tomorrow..................................................................................... 737

BONNET. F.—The Dyeing of Rayon Staple......................................................................... P391

BORGHETTY, HECTOR C.—Preparing ard Finishing of Textile Fabrics................................................ P206

BOYLE, JAMES L.—Soluble Chromium Derivatives of Dyestuffs.................................................. 741

BULLARD, J. E.—Profitable Research— A Communication........................................................ P76

Bl^RKE, HENRY BARKER—Titer Test ......................................................................................................... 355

CADY, WM. H.—Gas Fading of Dyes on Acetate Rayon.................................................... P333

CASSELL. NORMAN S.—Aridye Process of Printing.......................................................................... P341

CHAPIN, H. C., OLSEN, H. C. and PRESCOTT, W. B.—Sodium Sulfate Error in Measuring Acid Content of Carbonizing

Baths ................................................................................................................ P669CLARK. O. W .—

The Processing of Linen Piece Goods in the United States................... 709CLAYTON E.—

Nylon— a New Group of High Molecular Protein-like Compounds forthe Manufacture of Fibers and Plastics................................................ 196

CLUETT. J. GIRVIN—The Mechanics of Sanforizing...................................................................... P343

COMER. HUGH M.—A Mill Executive’s Viewpoint on Dyeing and Finishing....................... P93

COUGHLIN. W. E.—Fabn’r and Color Problems in Dry Cleaning........................................... P116

COZZENS. F. R.—Dves as an Aid in Reclaiming Pipe............................................................ 401

CREELY. JOSEPH W .—A Rapid Me<-hod of Determining Grease in Scoured W ools................... P161

CREELY, JOSEPH W. and LeCOMPTE, GEORGE—The Evaluation of Wetting Agents........................................................... P419

A Ranid Control Method for Grease in Wool Scouring Liquors.. 627 CROSSLEY, M. L.—

Metallized Acid Azo Dyes............................................................................ 487CULBERSON. D. S. and O’DANIEL, W. LEE—

Pos«5ihilities for Development of the Textile Industry in T e x a s .... 272 DAHLEN. MILES A.—

Recent Organic Chemical Developments.................................................... P315The Phthalocyanines— A New Class of Synthetic Pigments and Dyes 603

DERBY. ROLAND E.—The AnoHcation of Dry Cleaning to Mill Processes............................... P52‘0

DORMAN. KENNETH L.—Chern'cal Con«titntion of the Naphthol AS Type Dyes........................... 79

DRAVES. CARL Z.—A Consideration of the A. A T C.C. Official and the Canvas Disc

Methods for the Evaluation of W'elting Agents................................... P421

Evaluation of Wetting Agents: Ol'licial Mciliod........................................ P425DUBEAU, A. L,, MacMAlION, J. D. and VINCENT, G. P.—

A New Oxidizing Agent for the Treatment of Textiles........................ P590DUtiGAN, PAUL—

Dyeing and Finishing of Silk Hosiery..................................................... 218EM LEV, W ARREN E.—

The Research Associateship of the Textile Foundation at the NationalBureau of Standards ....................................................................................

FAUNCE, JOHN IL, JR —Stainless Steel for Textile Equipment......................................................... P347

FLETCHER, HAZEL M.—Quantitative Microscopical Analysis of Mixed Fabrics....................... °24

GLEKLEN, LEO—A Specialized Treatment of Discarded Paper-Maker’s Felts and a

Possible Method of Conditioning for Reclaiming the W ool............. 437GLEYSTEEN, LELAND F.—

A Fundamental Study of Vat Printing PastesIII. The Measurement of Color Yield: U^e of the Hunter Photox

Reflectometer; the Effect of Thickener Solids on Color Yield; a Comparison of Sodium and Potassium Carbonates; the Cau.esof Heat Rise in an Ager..................................................................... P280

GOLDTHW AIT, CHARLES F —The Textile Revolution— Are Others on the W ay?................................

GOULD, S. P. and W H ITTIER, E. O.—The Present Status of Casein Fiber............................................................. P641

GREENE, RALPH D.—Screen Printing ..................................................................................................

GRIMSHAW, ALBERT 11.—Your Student Section at North Carolina State College and Some of

Its Problems .................................................................................................. P44HALLER. HERBERT C.—

Rapid Extraction for Mill Control................................................................. 629HAROLD. B. A.—

Stability of Hydrogen Peroxide Bleach Solutions.................................... 1Impregnation of Textile Fibers with Rubber Latex........................... 255Recent Developments in Methods for Shrinkproofing W ool................... 683

HARRIS, MILTON—The Research Program of the Textile Foundation at the National

Bureau of Standards.................................................................................... P52HARRIS, MILTON and RUTHERFORD, HENRY A.—

The Base-Combining Capacity of W ool......................................................... P293Photochemical Decompo‘'itinn of the Cystine in W ool........................... 655

HARRIS, MILTON and SOOKNE, ARNOLD M.—Electrophoretic Studies of Silk..................................................................... P412Electrophoretic Studies of W ool..................................................................... P593

HART, RALPH—Determination of Sulfur in Surface Active Agents............................... P66Determination of Active Ingredients and Fatty Matter in Surface-

Active Agents .............................................................................................. P297HASSE, G.—

Modern Printing ................................................................................................ 379HAYS, MARGARET B. and W HITE. GLADYS—

Consumer Classification and Specifications for Cotton Broadcloth.... 410 HOOD. T. M. and STIFGLER, H. W .—

Water Repellency and Temperature............................................................... P285HYLER, JOHN E.—

Figbtinq- Ravages of Moisture......................................................................... 628JACKSON, H. T.—

Recent Research and Its Bea -ing on Wool Piece Goods Dyeing. . . . P74JONES, C. A. and WORTHINGTON, C .G.— _

Flax— Its Agricultural and Industrial Possibilities............................... P63JUDD. DEANE B.—

The Physics of Color Tolerance..................................................................... 441KATZ, JACOB—

Surface Cation Active Compounds in the Textile Industry............... P671KIENLE, R. H. and ROYER, G. L.—

Wool Dyeing Phenomena................................................................................. P638LeCOMPTE, GEORGE and CREELY, JOSEPH W.—

The Evaluation of Wetting Agents............................................................. P419A Rapid Control Method for Grease in Wool Scouring Liquors.......... 627

LINDENMAIER, R. A.—Protection of Wool Fiber During Scouring and Dyeing....................... P15

MACK. PAULINE BEERY—Progress in Textile Research from the Consumer Point of View........... P696

MACK, PAULINE BEERY and SEARLE, ANNE B R O H E T^A Study of the Incidence of Shrinkage in Women’s and Children’s

Wearing Apparel Fabrics............................................................................. 405MacMAHON. J. D., VINCENT, G. P. and DUBEAU, A. L.—

A New Oxidizing Agent for the Treatment of Textiles....................... P590MACORMAC, A. R —

New Use'S for Cotton— A Proposed Research Program....................... P54McLAURTNE, W. M.—

The Economic Situation................................................................................... P320MTT.LSON, H. E . ROYER. G. L. and W ISSEMANN, M. E.—

Microscopical Observations of Wool Dyeing........................................... P632MOSHER, H. H.—

Permanent Softening Agents......................................................................... 484NELSON. R. E.—

“ Latex” — A Textile Auxiliary......................................................................... P208O’nANTEL. W. LEE and CULBERSON. D. S.—

Po'ssffiilities for Development of the Textile Industry in Texas........... 272OLNEY. LOUIS A.—

Renort of the Research Committee................................................................. P510OLSEN, H. C.. PRESCOTT. W. B. and CHAPIN. H. C.—

Sodium Sulfate Error in Measuring Acid Content of Carbonizing................................................................................................................ P669

ORDWAY. CHARLES B,—The Processing of Acetate and Viscose Rayon Fabrics

Part IV .......................................................................................................... 5Part V ............................................................................................................ I llPart VI .......................................................................................................... 382Part VTT ........................................................................................................ 577

The Dveing of Staple and Spun Viscose Rayon.................................... P61.3PESCHEL. F. M.— ^

Procedure for Testing the Wettability and Rate of Evaporation ofF^hrirs ............................................................................................................ F61

POWERS. D. H.—R' 'cent Developments of Resin.s for Textile Annlication....................... P51!>

PRESCOTT. W. B . CHAPIN. H. C. and OLSEN, H. C.—Sodium Sulfate Error in Measuring Acid Content of Carbonizing

Baths ................................................................................................................ P66Q

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PRICE, HARRY—Textile Patents and Trade M arks... 731

ROtjE, H. W lCKLlFFE— ....................................................o rtv l- ’it “ 'r- ' 'rends in Europe and America............................... 499ROVER, G. L. and KIENLE, R. H.—

Woul Dyeing Phenomena................................................................................. P638ROVER, G. L., W iSSEM ANN, M. E. and MiLLSONi H. E.— ........

Ob-ervattons of Wool Uye.ng............................................ P632® h e n r y a . and HARKIS, MILTON—

I he Uase-Combining Capacity of W ool...................................................... P293o A Decomposition of the Cystine in W ool............................ 655bAXL, ERWIN J.—

PhySi^l Testing in the Textile Industry............................................... P615Spot Testing in Textile Analys.s....................... 757

SCHERER, GEORGE F.— ...................................Textile Lines with Lubricated Plug Valves___ 199oCiiiVlI 1 1, C. H. A.—

‘ he Metachrome Method of Dyeing........................... P336SCHMITT, CHARLES A .—

The Writing ink Industry................... pt2SCHWARZ, E. R.— .........................................

Technical Evaluation of Finishing Treatments....................................... P138SCHWARZ, ElpW ARD R. and W INN, DELIA J.—

Technical Evaluation of Textile Finishing Treatments— Flexibility andDrape as Mea urable Properties of Fabric............................................. P688

SCOTT, W ALTER M.—Recent Developments in the Chemistry of Silk and Silk Processing.. 501

SEARLE, ANNE BROHEL and MACK, PAULINE BEERY—A Study of the Incidence of Shrinkage in Women’s and Children’s

Wearing Apparel Fabrics.................................................... 405SHEAR. M. J.—

Chemistry and Cancer Genesis......................................... ........... P451SIEVER, H L —

Tintinol Process ............................................................ P612SIMON, CHARLES L.—

Labeling of Consumer Textile Goods............................................. P361SKINKLE, JOHN H.—

Physical ana Chemical Textile TestingPart X III .................................................................................................... 131Part X IV ............................................................................................■; ; ; 307Part XV .......................................................................................................... 357Part X V I ..................................................................................... 461Part X V II ........................................................................................... ; ; ; ; ; 553

Papers Pre.ented at the Annual Conference of the Textile Institute(England)— May 30 to June 3, 1939 (Abstract)................................... 686

Identification of the Newer Textile Fibers................................................. P694SLOW INSKE, GEORGE A.—

A New Type Water Repellent.................................................................... P647SMITH, J. EDW ARD—

The Effect of Surface Active Agents in Dyeing....................................... P146SMITH, THOMAS R.—

Modern Package Dyeing Equipment............................................................ P203Problems Confronting the Yarn Dyer Today................................................. P386

SMOLENS, H. G-—Peroxide Bleaching— A Report of Developments and Progress During

the Past Several Years................................................................................. 495SOOKNE. ARNOLD M. and HARRIS, MILTON—

Electrophoretic Studies of Silk.................................................................... P412Electrophoretic Studies of W ool.................................................................... P593

STALLINGS, J. W .—The Role of Starch in Textiles.................................................................... P35

STEPHENSON, M.—The Determination of the Dry Weight of Cotton by Means of the

Commercial Ventilated Drying Oven.................................................... P69STIEGLER, H. W. and HOOD, J. M.—

Water Repellency and Temperature............................................................ P2'85STOTT, P. H.—

The Dyeing of Nylon Fibers—A Preliminary Survey........................... P582STRINGFELLOW, W. A.—

Control and Prevention of Mold and Bacteria Damage in the Textileand Allied Industries ................................................................................ P388

TISDALE, H. R.—Pre ent Uses of Logwood.............................................................................. 260

TROW ELL, W. W .—Semi-Re.:in Finishes for Cotton Piece Goods........................................... P643

TRU AX, DAVE E.—The Stability of Printing Pastes.................................................................... P262

TUPHOLME, C. H. S —Cheap Power and Heat for Dyeing Plants............................................... 744

VAN RIPER, W . F.—1939 versus 1914................................................................................................. P722

VERITY. BEN—Leaves fnm a Dyer’s Notebook................................................................ P12

VINCENT. G. P,, DuBEAU, A. L , and MacMAIION, J. D.—A New Oxidizing Agent for the Treatment of Textiles........................... P590

W AKELIN, J —Some New Chemical Dyeing Processes....................................................... 400The Textile Chemical Uses of Sulfamic Acid....................................... 729

WALKER, HERMAN A.—Outline of the Round Table Ho'^iery Di~cussion................................... P214

W HITE, GLADYS and HAYS, MARGARET B.—Consumer Classification and Specifications for Cotton Broadcloth.... 410

W HITE, NOEL D.—When Raycn Was Artificial Silk.................................................................... 375

W HITTIER, E. O. and GOULD, S. P.—The Present S<-atus of Casein Fiber........................................................ P641

WTLLE, CLARENCE and ALEXANDER, A. G .~The Management and Operation of a Hosiery Dye House............... P716

W ILLIAM S, SUMNER H.—The Dyeing of Naphtols on Cotton Piece Goods by the Continuous Hot

Flue Method ................................................................................................. VA2WINN, DELIA J. and SCHWARZ, EDWARD R.—

Technical Evaluation of Text'le Finishing Treatments—Flexibility andDrape as Measurable Properties of Fabrics....................................... P688

WISSEMANN, M. E., MILLSON, H. E. and ROYER, G. L.—Microscopical Observations of Wool Dyeing............................................ P632

WOOD, P. J.—Recent Developments in Textile Printing.................................................... 493Organizing a Dyeing and Finishing Plant for Synthetic Piece Goods.. P746

WORTHINGTON, C. G, and JONES, C. A.—Flax— Its Agricultural and Industrial Possibilities............................... P63

YOUNG, FREDERICK L.—The Mill Chemist ............................................................................................. 217

YOUNG, HENRY L.—Printing with Pigments..................................................................................... P213

ZISMAN. LOUIS S.—Silk Hosiery Dyeing Methods— Past and Present................................... 489

BY SUBJECT

Index to Proceedings of theAmerican Association of Textile Chemists and Colorists

Cation Active Compounds in the Textile Industry, Surface (K a tz ) . . . . P671 Chemical Analysis and Testing as Applied to the Textile Industry,

Communication from the Committee on Standard Methods o f .......... P192Chemical Developments, Recent Organic (Dahlen)................................... P315Chemical Industry, Meeting, Society o f ........................................................ P49Chemical Specialties, Textile.............................................................................. P38BChemistry and Cancer Genesis (Shear)............................................................ P451Cleaning, Fabric and Color Problems Jn Dry (Coughlin)....................... P116Cleaning to Mill Processes. The Application of Dry (Derby)............... P520Color (iouncil. Program Notice, Inter-Society........ ................................... P17Color Council. Report on Project No. 2, Inter-Society........................... P725Color Problems in Dry Cleaning, Fabric and (Coughlin)........................... P116Color Tolerance, Report of Symposium on.................................................... P618COMMUNICATIONS:

Profitable Research (Bullard)............................................................ P76From the Committee on Standard Methods of Chemical Analysis andTesting as Applied to the Textile Industry............................................ P192

Consumer Point of View, Progress in Textile Research from the (Mack) P696Consumer Textile Goods, Labelling of (Sim on)............................................ P36IContinuous Hot Flue Method. The Dyeing of Naphtols on Cotton Piece

Goods by the (Williams)............................................................................. P42CORRECTIONS .......................................................................................P418, P449Cotton— A Proposed Research Program, New Uses for (Macormac). . . . P54Cotton by Means of the Commercial Ventilated Drying Oven, The De­

termination of the Dry Weight of (Stephenson)............................... P69Cotton, Group C— Fastness Tests for Dyed or Printed........................... P312Cotton Piece Goods by the Continuous Hot Flue Method, The Dyeing

of Naphtols on (W illiams)......................................................................... P42Cotton Piece Goods, Semi-Resin Finishes for (Trowell)........................... P643COUNCIL MEETINGS:

One Hundred and Twentieth ..................................................................... P96One Hundred and Twenty-first ................................................................ P155One Hundred and Twenty-second ............................................................. P264One Hundred and Twenty-third .............................................................. P42‘8One Hundred and Twenty-fourth ............................................................ P674One Hundred and Twenty-fifth ................................................................. P751

Crease Resistance and Permanent Finishes, Report of the CommitteeP451 on (Barnard) ................................................................................................ P514

Crepe Research, Report of the RayonP421 V. The Determination of the Effects of Variations in the Manu­

facture of Rayon Crepe Dress Fabrics............................................ P226P669 VI. The Determination of Some of the Variations in Normal FirstP641 Quality Viscose Rayon ..................................................................... P163

A.A.T.C.C. Official and the Canvas Disc Methods for the Evaluation ofWetting Agents, A Consideration of the (Draves).......................

Accuracy of Testing Textile Fabrics— Human, Mechanical and Atmos­pheric Conditions, Three Elements Affecting the (Adams)...........

Acetate Rayon, Gas Fading of Dyes on (Cady).........................................Acid Content of Carbonizing Baths, Sodium Sulfate Error in Measuring

(Olsen, Prescott and Chapin)....................................................................Active Agents, Determination of Active Ingredients and Fatty Matter

in Surface- (Hart) .....................................................................................Active Agents in Dyeing, The Effect of Surface (Smith)...........................Active Agents, The Determination of Sulfur in Surface (H art)...............Active Compounds in the Textile Industry. Surface Cation (K a tz ) . . . . Analysis and Testing as Applied to the Textile Industry, Communica­

tion from the Committee on Standard Methods of Chemical...........APPLICANTS FOR M EM BERSHIP............................ P98, P215, P254

P348, P385, P569, P596,Aridye P_rocess of Printing (Cassell)........................................................Atmospheric Conditions, Three Elements Affecting the Accuracy of

Testing Textile Fabrics— Human, Mechanical and (Adam s)...........Auxiliary, *‘Latex” — A Textile (N e ls o n ).....................................................Bacteria Damage in the Textile and Allied Industries, Control and

Prevention of Mold and (Stringfellow)................................................Banquet, Annual (Philip, Toa.stmaster)........................................................Banquet Session (Grimes, Toastmaster)..........................................................Base-Combining Capacity of Wool, The (Harris and Rutherford)..........Bureau of Standards, The Research Program of the Textile Founda­

tion at the National (H arris)................................................................Bu.siness Meeting, Annual...................................................................................Bu'iiness S' 'ssion ....................................................................................................Bv-Laws, Proposed ................................................................................................CALENDAR OF COMING EVEN TS...............P ll . P49, P78. PIOO.

P119 P156 P192, P216. P225,P.261. P302, P314, P332, P509, P579.’ P611. P631. P657, P697. P715, P745

Cancer (Genesis. Chemistry and (Shear)........................................................Canvas Disc Methods for the Evaluation of Wetting Agents, A Con-

sideration of the A A T.C.C. Official and the (Draves).......................Carbonizing Baths, Sodium Sulfate Error in Measuring Acid Content

of (Olsen. Prescott and Chapin).............................................................Casein Fiber, The Present Status of (Whittier and Gould)...................

P421

P59P333

P669

P297P146P66

P671

P192

P699P341

P59P208

P388P120P658P293

P52P86

P640P29

AM ERICAN DYESTUFF REPORTER December 25, 1959

\ II. rile Effects oi Some Variations in Dyeinp and Finishingthe Ptbble of Rayon Crepe Fabrics.................................... P289

Urape as Measurable Properties of Fabrics, Technical Evaluation of i\ b * ‘ ,bing TrcjunKuts— hlej.ibil.ty .ami (vVinn and Schwarz) P688i)ry Cleaning, baliric and Color Proiileni in (Ci.ughhn)...................... P116

ry Cleanmg to Mill Processes, The Application of (D erby)......... P520iPyer.-, Tomorrow’s Textile (Andrews)........................................................ Po30Drying Oven, The Determination of the Dry Weight of Cotton by

Means of the Comme cial Vc'^tilafed Stcph“tison)....................... P69Dye House, The Management and Operation of a Hosiery (Alexander

and W ile) ...................................................................................................... P716Dyed or Printed Cotton, Croup C— Fastness Tes's for............................... P312Dyeing, A Discir ion of the Metachrome l\Ieihod of (Schm i't)............... P3.16Dyeing and finishing, A Mill Execut ve’s ^ ’ewpo’nt on C om er).... P93 Dyeing end Finishing Plant for Synthetic Piece Goods. Organizing a

............................................................................................................ P746Uyeiiis: E Iiipment. Modern Package (Smith).......................................... P_0dDyeing, Micresccplcal Observations cf Wool (Mill on, Rover and Wisse-

mann) ................................................................................. ‘ ........................... p„32Dyeing of Nanhtols on Cotton P.cce Goods by the Coniinuous Hot Flue

Method, The (W illiam s)....................................................................... P42Dyeing of Nylon Fibers— A Prel'minary Survey, The (Stott)................... P 82Dye.ng of Rayon Staple, The (Bt nnet).......................................................... P391Dyem.g of St'nie and Sotin Viscose Raynn, The 'Ordway)................... P613Dvemg Phenomena, Wool (Kierle and Rove'-)............................................ P63SDyeing, Pro'eclion of Wool Fiber Dnrin,g Scnirbig end (Ibndenniaier) P15 Dyeing. Recent Re earch and fts Bearing on Wool Piece Goods (Jack-

son) .................................................................................................................. P74Dvrin", The Kffeot of Su'-f-ce Ae‘ ive Agents in (Smith)............ PM6Dy-’ r Today, Problems Confronting the Yarn (Smith)............................... P386Dver's Ner^hnok, Leaves f om a (V erity).................................................... P12Dye on Aoehate Rayon, Gas Fading o f ’ (Cady)................. ! ! ! .............. P333Econonn'e Situ.ation, The '"tcL-enrhie)........................................................ P3t>nFleotronhorptic S‘ "dtes of S-'k (TTa-ris and So-'k-ie).......... ! .................. Pt l ?Flea'-oo'-oretir S ndVs of Wne] fSookn» and Harris)........................... P'93Eoi’ inmenf, VTartp-n Pao'-a.g" Dvei-err LSmi'h)........................................... P^03Fr.tfn-r.rn., Stad,ip„ s > “l for T "v fle (Fannoe).......................................... P347Evaporat-ion of Fabrics, Procedure for Testing the Wet'ab-litv .and Rate

of (Pesohel) .............................................................................■ P4]Ex»cntiyr’Q nv»m.r and Fin'shi-n, A Mill '(dcirn’e r ) ! I . . . .Fad ot Dves on A''et'>te Ray n. ^ns (Cr\dv)........................................... P. '*3F'>ct^p-S Te<;t' nnd S'anclarH-. Rp’ ’i«>i'ori o f .................................................... T>1 7Fastu'^ss T«s*«: for D' 'd o- P -’ t ted Cot+on. Group C— . P^l?Fa«^ne« tn Pe 'T’'’ ~n«-ir.n. S^anda^d*; for ........................................................ P137Fat‘ y in Si’ -f'^ce-Active Agents. DeteT*m’na*ior) of Active In-

pnrl P9Q7F'^Fht=>', Coonerative Res«‘Drpit or. Fv.'’ luJ' inD- Tex^’le .................................. '^47Fi»M*cr.pc fr<r r n't^n PJ-'ce rno^U. P643

Committee on Crease Re«istan< e and Pe’^manentt ' ..................................................................................................... P = 14

ptrii-t'-no-. A ' '’iil FYoon+lve’s Y ’e’vnn'nt on Pv«>in" and (Comer).......... " 931,-Vo- rf ■p'r'K-V«5. P*-‘“n''n‘n" n*'d ' ' B ........................... P206

Finipt’ i’ g Plant for Synthetic Piece Good-?. Organiz’ng a Dyeing and'W ood) ........................... P74rj

ir'i5h.r,/r T**eat* “n*s— Fle'-biUtv and D»-nne as '^T''a''urabl P ’Tine*‘*’’es of F-' ' '-c T “0hni -1 Evnliia -ior, of Tov-tii- r'VX tin and Schwarz). .

F’n’ e jncr o f ....................... PM7Ft' 'i'-hinor Tne-’ n. n+s. TertimVol ■Pvn1iii)ti‘'''r| of f .......................... P138Flay— Ds Agricultural and Industrial Pos-ibib'ties (Worthington adTnnos> .............................................................................................................FIey’ ''*l”*v and Dnonf* " 'tpqcjjrnl'ito Prnnorties pf Fabric. T®obn?oal

F^qlnatinn of T^v+ile Fin*«’'ino- Tneatme‘ ts— fW-nn and S^invarz) P688 Flue nvP T rr of Naphtols on Cotton Piece Goods by the

ror.f,rinons Hot P42Foundation at the National Bureau of Standards, The Re 'earch

P-o^ram of tbe Tevtde P=i2Gas Fad’ro- of Dvp«s on Acetate Ravnn (Cadv)........................................... P333Grease in S^^tired Wools, A Rapid Method of Determining (Creely)___ P t trnppfincrs fNiit+ing) ............................................................................................. P658Hand m Textiles and Its Relation to Underlying Structure (Alex­

ander) .............................................................................................................. P3S7Ho<?iery Discu«'?ion. 0 ” t1inp of the Round Ta^H (W alker)....................... P214Hosiery Dvp House, The Management and Operat'on of a (Alexander

and W ’ lH) ..................................................................................................... P716Hot Flue "Me iiod. The T'voing of Naphtols on Cotton Piece Goods by

the Tontinuous ''Williams)........................................................................ P42Human, Meebanical and Atmo'-nberic Cond’tion«. TIr-ee Elements A f­

fecting tbe Accuracy of Testjno- Textii-» Fabrics (Adam'?).......... P"9Ident’ timtion of the New«r Te'^tHe p'ibers (Skinkle)................................... P'^94Ink I ’ dn'trv. Tl-'e Writing ^Schmitt)............................................................ P32Tntp’*-‘>''r*ptv Celnr Coiinril. Pro'rrani N''’tice.................................................. Pt7

Color Council. Report on Pro’ ect No. 2 ............................... P'^ 5Krais, Paul ........................................................................................................... P715T.Db''b'no of Consurner Tevtile Goods (S ’mon) ....................................... P361“ Latex” — A TevtUp Auxiliary (Nelson)........................................................ p-^ogLa’>'?. P ’*ono«-ef Pv- ........................................................................................... P29LOW FLL TEXTILE INSTITUTE STUDENT SECTION

Reports .....................................................................................PI92'. P300. P3/ 9Luncheon Session ................................................................................................. P90Management and Operation of a Hosiery Dye House. The (Alexan­

der and W ille)............................................................................................. P716Mechanical and Atmospheric Conditions, Three Elements Affecting

the Accuracy of Testing Textile Fabrics—Human, (Adams)..........MEETING, EIGHTEENTH ANNUAL

The Role of Starch in Textiles (Stallings)...........................................Screen Printing ''Greene)........................................................................ P37The Dyeing of Naphtols on Cotton Piece Goods by the Continuous

Hot Flue Method (Williams)............................................................Your Student Section at Noith Carolina State College and Some

of its Problems (Grimshaw)............................................................The Research Program of the Textile Foundation at the Na­

tional Bureau of Standards (Harris)...........................................New Uses for Cotton— A Proposed Research Program (Macormac)Three Elements Affecting the Accuracy of Testing Textile Fabrics

(Adams) ...............................................................................................Flax— Its Agricultural and Industrial Possibilities (Worthington

and Jones) ...........................................................................................Annual Business Meeting.

P59

P3S

P42

P44

P52P54

P59

P63P86

Luncheon Session ......................................................................................... P90Remarks (Forbes) P90

December 25, 1939

Remark.- (Brittain) ..............................................................................

A Mili Executive’s Viewpoint on Dyeing and Fi.nshing (Corner). P93

Annual Baiibjuct udi lip, Toastmaster).................................................. P120Remar.IS (Thomp on) ............................................................................ IH20Remarks (Olney) ................................................. P121Remark. (Killneffer) ........................................................................... P121Remarks (]<ose) .................................................................................. P122Remiiks (Wood) .................................................................................... P122Jicmarks (.’ady) P123Remark: (Eaven‘‘on) ............................................................................ P123J^emarki (Russell) ................................................................................ P125Rrmir’is (George) ................................................................................ P125

M'^dcn Package Dyeing Er)u’pment (Smith)....................................... P203Printino- with Pigments (Yonn^^).............................................................. P213

MEETING. NINETEENTH ANNUALTentative Program ...................................................................................... P411Program ............................................ ....................................................P445. P504Ab tracts of Papers........................................................................... P446, P506Tran. por:ation and Sightseeing................................................................. P450Report of ...................................................................................................... P580The Dyeing of Nylon Fibe's—A Prel mina y Survey (S tott)........ P582A New Oxidizing Agent for the Treatment of Textiles (Dubeau,

MacMahon and Vincent)..................................................................... P590T'ntinol Process (S ieve-)....................................................................... P612The Dyeing of S aple and Spun Viscose Rayon Ordway)............... P613Micro''conical Ob ervations of Wool Dyeing (Millson, Royer and

Wi semann) ............................................................................................. P632Wool Dyeing Phencm-^na (Kienle and Royer)....................................... P638Friday Evrning Se''sion............................................................................... P639

Welcome < Nutting) ........................................................................... 1’ 639B” S ne s Se sion ................................................................................... P640Welcome (Tobin) ................................................................................. P640

T ’-'e Pre'em S'atus of Ca.sein Fiber (Wh ttier and Gould)............... P64ISemi-Resin Finishes for Cotton Piece Goods (T owell)....................... P643A New T'm? Water Renellent (Slowins’’e ) ............................................... V647Banquet Session (G“ime?, Toastmaster).............................................. P658

''’ •oe'-i g ''N-’U'n' ') ............................................................................. Pf)^8Remarks (Emerson) ............................................................................. P660Remark' (^nvenson) ........................................................................... Ph61Remark? (Olney) ................................................................................. P*?63Ronr” '’ 's (Howe) ................................................................................... P664

Sodii’m Sulfa'e E'ror in Mea^'uring Acid Content of CarbonizingBa^h ''Olsen, Prescott and Chapin)................................................... P669

Su"fa<''e Ca*-inn A'-'tive Comnornds 'n the T xtil' I*’ clustrv (K'^*z) P671 Technical Evaluation of Textile Finishing Tre-'tments— Flexib’lity

and Drape as Measurable Properties of Fabric (Winn andS^'bwarz) ................................................................................................. P688

Idenf’hcation of the Newer Textile Fibers (Sk’nkle'i......................... P694Progres? in Textile Research from the Con'umer Point of View

'M'^rk'! .................................................................................................... P696MEMBERSHIP, APPLICANTS F O R .......... P98, P215, P254, P348,

P3S5, P569, P596, P699Membership, May 1. 1939................................................................................... P288Metachrome Mothod of Dyeing, A Discus"ion of tbe (Schmitt)............ P336Micrnsropica! Observations of Wool Dyeing (Millson, Royer and

Wissemann) .................................................................................................... P632MID-WEST SECTION

Report-? ..........................................................................P20I, P299, P387. P676Mold and Bacteria Damage in the Textile and Ail ed Industries, Con­

trol and Prevention of (Stringfellow)...................................................... P388Naphtols on Colton Pi ’ ce Goods by the Continuous Hot Flue Method,

The Dvein" of (W illiams)........................................................................... P42NEW YORK SECTION

Reports .................................................. P97, P216, P267, P359, P555, P676Nineteen thirty-nine versus Nineteen fourteen (Van Riper).....................P722Nominating Committee, Report of the.......................................................... P503North Carolina State (College and Some of its Problems, Your Student

Section at (Grimshaw)................................................................................. P44NORTH CAROLINA STATE COLLEGE STUDENT SECTION

Reports ............................................................................P49, P129, P202, P299NORTHERN NEW ENGLAND SECTION

Reports ..............................................................P49, P202, P266, P300, PL'i9Nylon Fibers— A Preliminary Survey, The Dyeing of (Stott)............... P582Operation of a Hosiery Dye House, The Management and (Alexander

aiKl Wille) ................................................................................................... P716Organic Chemical Developments, Recent (Dahlen)........................................ P315Oven, The Determination of the Dry Weight of Cotton by Means of

the Commercial Ventilated Drying (Stenhenson)................................. P69Oxidizing Agent for the Treatment of Textiles, A New (Dubeau,

MacMahon and Vincent)............................................................................. P390Package Dyeing Equipment, Modern (Smith).............................................. P203Pastes, A Fundamental Study of Vat Printing III. The Measurement

of Color Y ’Hd; Use of the Hunter Photox Reflectometer; the Effect of Thickener Solids on Color YieM; a Comparison of Sodium and Potassium Carbonates; the Causes of Heat Risein an Ager (Gleysteen)....................................................................

Pa -tes, The Stability of Printing (T n iax )............................................Permanent Finishes, Report of tbe Committee on Crease Resistance

and ''Barnard) .............................................................................................. P.'il4Perspiration. Standards for Fastness to........................................................ P137PHIT.ADELPHIA SECTION

Reports ..............................................................P97. P267, P369, P676, P752PHIT.ADELPHIA TEXTILE SCHOOL STUDENT SECTION

Report? .....................................................................................P192, P212, P721Phy=‘ical Testing in the Textile Industry (S ax l).......................................... P615Piece Goods by the Continuous Hot Flue Method, The Dyeing of

Naphtol® on Cotton (W illiams)................................................................. P42Piece Goods Dyeing. Recent Research and its Bearing on Wool (Tackson) P74 Piece Goods, Organizing a Dyeing and Finishing Plant for Synthetic

(Wood) ........ P746Piece Goods, Sem'-Resin Finishes for Cotton (Trowell)............................. P643PIEDMONT SECTION

Reports ................................. .......................... P192, P300, P390. P570, P675Pigments, Printing with (Young)..................................................................... P213Plant for Synthetic Piece Goo<ls, Organizing a Dyeing and Finishing

(Wood) ............................................................................................................ P746Preparing and Finishing of Textile Fabrics (Borghetty)............................. P206Printed Cotton, Group C— Fastness Tests for Dyed o r ............................. P312

Ifi

P280P262

AMERICAN DYESTUFF REPORTER I-

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P^rinting, Aridye Process of (Cassell)............................................................Pnnt.ng P.-s.es, A Fundamental Study of Vat 1II. f lie MeasuremVnV of

L-o.or Yield; Use ot the Hunter Photox Keiiectcmeter; the EffectP341

at Thicrcener Solids on Color Yield; a Comparison of Sodium and ioias lum Carbonates; the Causes of Heat Ri e in an Ager(Gleysteen)

Priming Paste The Stability of (Truax).....................................................Pri ting, Screen (Greene)...................................................................................Printing with Pigments (Young)....................................................................Prcce s, Tintinol ( Siever)............................... ! ! * * * * ! ! * * * . * . ! . . ! ' * . . . . ' .Processes, The Application of Dry Cleaning * to M 11 (De’ by )! .*. . . *. *.Proposed By-Laws .............................................................................................Pro ection of W ool Fiber during Scouring and Dyeing ^Lindenmaier), . Rayon Crepe Resea’.ch, Report of the

V. The Determination of the Effects of Variat ons in the Manu-factu e of Rayon Crepe Dres> Faiirics.........................................

\ 1. The Detei mination of Seme of the Variations in Normal First(Juality \"iscose Rayon........................................................................

\ II. Ihe Effects of Some V’ariations in Dyeing and Finishing^^pon the Pi.bl)le of Rayon Crepe Fabrics.....................................

Rayon, Cias Fading of Dyes on Acetate (Cadv).........................................Raycn Staple, The Dye.ng of (Bonnet).......... ...............................................Rayon, The Dyeing of S.aple and Spun Viscose (Ordway)...................Remarks (B ittain) .............................................................................................Remarks (Cady) .........................................................................Remark; ( Comer) ...........................................Rema ks (Eavenson) ...................................................................... P95 pl23Remarks 'Em eron) ..................................................................... 'Remarks (Forbes) ...............................................................................................Remarks (George) ............................................................................ 1 !Rema k ' fHcwe) ..........................................................Remarks (Killheffer) ..........................................................Remarks (OIney) .......................................................................................P121,Remarks (Rose) ..................................................................................................’Rema’'ks (J(ussell) ...............................................................................................Remarks Thompson) .........................................................................................Remtrk' (W ood' ..................................... ...........................................................Repellency and Temperature, W ater (Stiegler and H ood).........................Repellent. A New Tyne Water (SIow ins:e'.................................................Research and its Bearing on Wool Piece Goods Dye'ng, Aecent (Jack-

son ) ...................................................................................RESEARCH COMMITTEE MEETINGS

One hundred and thirteenth ....................................................................One hundred and fou'^teenth ....................................................................One hundred and fifteenth ......................................................................One hundred and sixteenth ......................................................................One hundred and seventeenth ..................................................................

Research Committee. Report of the (OIney)...............................................Research f'om the Consumer Point of Progress in Textile (M ack )...Research on Evaluating Textile Finishes, Cooperative.................................Research Program. New Uses for Cotton— A Propo ed (Macormac)........Re.earch Program of the Textile Foundation at the National Bureau

of Standards. The (H arris)......................................................................Research, Profitable— A Communication ''Bullard).....................................Re'earch. Report of the Rayon Crepe—

V. The Determination of the Effects of Variations in the Manu­facture of Rayon Crepe Dress Fabrics.........................................

VI. The Determination of Some of the Variations in NormalFirst Quality Viscose Rayon............................................................

VII. The Effects of Some Variations in Dyeing and Finishingupon the Pebble of Rayon Crepe Fabrics.....................................

RHODE ISLAND SECTIONReport? ...........................................................................P18. P192, P266,

Resin Finishes for Cotton Piece Goods, Semi- (Trowell).........................Resins for Textile Application. Recent Developments of (Powers) . . . .Sanforizing, The Mechanics of (Cluett)........................................................Scoured Wools. A Rapid Method of Determ'ning Grease in (Creely). . Scouring and Dyeing, Protection of Wool Fiber during (Lindenmaier)Screen Printing (Greene).....................................................................................Silk, Electrophoretic Studies of (Harris and Sookne).............................Society Color Council. Program Notice, Inter- .......................................Society of Chemical Industry. Meeting..........................................................Sodium Sulfate Error in Measuring Acid Content of Carbonizing

B''.ths (Ol'en. Prescott and Chapin)..........................................................SOUTH CENTRAL SECTION

Reports .....................................................................................P98. P299,SOUTHEASTERN SECTION

Reports ..................................................................................... P129, P3I9,Specialties, Textile Chemical...............................................................................Spun Viscose Rayon. The Dyeing of Staple and (Ordway)...................Stainless Steel for Textile Equipment (Faunce).._.................................Standard Methods of Chemical Analysis and Testing as Applied to

the Textile Industry. Communication from the (Committee on. . . .Standards for Fastness to Perspiration.......... .. . . . .....................................Standards. Report of the Committee on Coordination o f ...........................Standards, Revision of Fastness Te=ts and..................................................Standards, Tb*"* Research Program of the Textile Foundation at the

National Bureau of (H arris).......................................................................Staple and Spun Viscose Rayon. The Dyeing of ''Ordway).....................Staple, The Dyeing of Rayon (Bonnet)........................................................Sta 'ch in Textiles. The Role of (Stallings)..................................................Steel for Textile Emiipment, Stainless (Faunce).......................................Structure. Hand in Textiles and its Relation to Underlying (Alexander) Student Section at North Carolina State College and Some of it?

Problems, ' ’’our (Grimshaw)............................... .. ........................... .. • •Sulfate Error in Measuring Acid Content of Carbonizing Baths, Sodium

(Olsen, Prescott and Chapin).....................................................................Sulfur in Surface Active Agents, Determination of (H a r t ).................Surface-Active Agents, Determination of Active Ingredients and

Fattv Matter in (H art).............................................................................Surface-Active Agents, Determination of Sulfur in (H art).......................Surface-Active Agents in Dyeing, The Effect of (Smith).....................Surface Cation-Active Compounds in the Textile In<ki«try (K atz)........Synthetic Piece GockIs, Organizing a Dyeing and Finishing Plant for

(VS ood) .............................................................................................................Temperature. Water Repellency and (Stiegler and H ood)...................TestinR- Applied to the Textile Indii'try, Communication from the

Committee on Standard Jfethods of Chemical Analysis and..........Te'itiiiff in the Textile Industry, Physical (S 'lx l).......................................Testir" Textile Fabrics— Htimnn, Mechanical and Atmospheric Con­

ditions Three Elements Affecting the Accuracy of fAdams)........

P280P262P37

P213P612P520P29PIS

P226

PI 63

P289P.!33P39IP613P91

P123P93

P661P660

P90P125P664P121P663P122P125P120P122P2S5P647

P74

P52P76

P226

PI63

P289

P332P643P515P343P16IP15P37

P412P17P49

P669

P566

P650P38EP613P347

P192P137P287PI37

PS 2' P613 P391 P35

P347 P557

P44

P669P66

P297 P66

PI 46 P671

P746P285

P192P61S

P59

AM ERICAN DYESTU FF REPORTER

Testing the Wettability and Rate of Evaporation of Fabrics, Procedurefor (Peschel) ...............................................................................................

Tests and S.andards, Revis.on of Fastness.................................................Te.,ts for Dyed or Printed Cotton, Group C— Fastness...............................Textile Foundation at the National Bureau of Standards, The Re .earch

Program of the (Harris)............................................................................Tint'nol Proce s (Siever)....................................................................................Tolerance, Report of Symposium on Color......................................................UXEAIPl.OYMENT REGISTER .............. P38A, P268, P301, P39S,

P459, P56S, PS97, P701,Vat Printing Pastes, A Fundamental Study of—

111. The Aieasurement of Color Yeld; Use of the Hunter Photox Kerlectometer; the Effect of Thicxener Solids on Color Yield; A Comparison of Sodium and Potassium Clarbonate:-; theCauses of Heat Rise in an Ager (Gley teen)...........................

\ it’Cose Rayon, The Dyeing of Staple and Spun (Ordway).....................Water Repellency and Temperature (Stiegler and H ood).......................Water Rene,lent, A New Tj-pe (Slowiiislre)...............................................WTight of Cot-Ofi by Mrans of the Commercial Ventilated Drying

Oven, The Determination of the Dry (Stephenson).........................WYlcome (Nutting) ............................................................................................Welcome ;"Tobin) ................................................................................................Wettability and Rate of Evaporation of Fab." cs, Procedure for Test­

ing the (Peschel) ......................................................................................Welting Agents, A Consideration of the A A.T.C.C. Official and the

Canva 1 Disc Methods fo.' the Evaluation of (Draves).....................W>tt.ng Agents: Official Alethod. Evaluation of (Draves).......................W etting Agents, The Evaluation of (C"eely and LeCompte).................Wool Dyeing. Microscopical Obfervations of (Al.llson, Royer and

Wi semann) .................................................................................................W’ool Dyeing Phenomena (Kienle and Royer)...........................................Wool, Electrophoretic Studies of (Sookne and Harris)...........................W'ool Fiber during Scouring and Dyeing, Protcct'on of (Lindenmaier) Wool Piece Goods Dyeing, Recent Research and its Btaring on (Jack-

son ) .................................................................................................................Wool. The Base-Combining Capacity of 'Har-is and Rutherford)............W '-nl A Ranhl Method for Dete’ min-'ng Grease in Scoured (Creely).Writing Ink Industry. The (Schmitt) ..........................................................Yarn Dyer Today, Problems Confronting the (Smith)...............................

P61P137P312

P52P612P618

P724

P280P613P2S5P647

P69P639P640

P61

P421P425P419

P632P638P.593P15

P74P293P161

P32P386

P97P201P265P428P618P510P696P47P54

BY AUTHOR

ADAMS. R. H.—Three Elements Affecting the Accuracy of Testing Textile Fabrics—

Human. Mechanical and Atmo'phe'*ic Condit'ons.................................. P59ALEXANDER, A. G. and WILLE. CLARENCE—

The MnnaTement and Operation of a Hosiery Dye House................ P716ALEXANDER. JEROME—

Hand in Te^ tiles and its Relation to Underlying Structure............ P557ANDREWS, B. R.—

Tomorrow’s Textile Dryers.......................................................................... P530BARNARD. K. H.—

Report of the Committee on Crease Resistance and PermanentFini 'hes ......................................................................................................... P514

BONNET. F.—The Dyeing: of Rayon Staple........................................................................ P391

BORCHETTY, HECTOR C.—Preparing and Finishing of Textile Fabrics........................................... P206

BRITTAIN, MARION LUTHER—Remarks ............................................................................................................. P91

BULLARD. J. E.—profitable Research— A Communication...................................................... P76

CADY, W ILLIAM H.—Remark-s ............................................................................................................. P123Gas Fading of Dyes on Acetate Rayon..................................................... P333

CASSELL. NORMAN S.—Aridye Process of Printing.......................................................................... P341

CHAPIN, H. C., OLSEN, H. C., and PRESCOTT, W. B —Sod’um Sulfate Error in Measuring Acid Content of Carbonizing

Baths ............................................................................................................... P669CLUETT. J. GIRVIN—

The Mechanics of Sanforizing........................................................................ P343COMER. HUGH M.—

A Mill Executive’s Viewpoint on Dyeing and Finishing..................... P93 -Remarks ............................................................................................................. P93

COUGHLIN, W. E.—Fabric and Color Problems in Drv Cleaning........................................... PI 16

CREELEY, JOSEPH W .—A Rapid Method of Determining Grease in Scoured Wools............... P161

CREELY, JOSEPH W. and LeCOMPTE, GEORGE—The Evaluation of Wetting Agents............................................................ P4l9

DAH LEN, M. A.—Recent Organic Chemical Developments.................................................... P315

DERBY. ROLAND E.—The Application of Dry Cleaning to Mill Processes......................... P520

DRAVES, CARL Z.—A Consideration of the A.A.T.C.C. Official and the Canvas Disc

^Methods for the Evaluation of Wetting Agents................................. P421Evaluation of of Wetting Agents: Official Method............................... P425

DUBEAU, A. L., MacMAHON. J. D. and VINCENT, G. P.—A New Oxidizing Agent for the Treatment of Textiles....................... PS90

EAVENSON, ALBAN—Remarks .........................................................................................P96, P123, P661

EMERSON, RAYMOND—Remarks ......................................................................................................... P660

FAUNCE, JOHN H., JR.—Stainless Steel for Textile Equipment................................................................. P347

FORBES. THEODORE M.—Remarks ......................................................................................................... P90

GEORGE. W ALTER F.—Kcma’ ks ........................................................................................................... P125

GLEYSTEEN, LELAND F.—A Furdamental Study of Vat Printing Pastes

HI. Tlie Measurement of Color Yield; Use of the Hunter Photox Kertectonieter; the Effect of Thickener Solids on Color Yield; ri Comparison of Sodium and Potassium Carbonates; the Causes of Heat Rise in an Ager....................................................... P2S0

December 25, 193b

. 1

GOULD, S. P. and W H ITTIER, E. O.—’ '■esent Status ol Casein Fiber.............................................................

GREENE, RALPH D.—Screen Primiii); . . . .

GRIMES, HENRY D.— .........................................................................Toasima tei, Ilanquet S ession ....

GRIMSHAW, ALBERT H.—\ our Student Section at North Carolina State College and Some of

Its Problems .......................HARRIS, MILTON—

The Research Program of the Textile Foundation at the NationalBureau of Standards ..........................................

HARRIS, MILTON and RUTHERFORD, HENRY A.—The Base-Combining Capacity of W ool........................................................

HARRIS, MILTON and SOOKNE, ARNOLD M.—Electrophoretic Studies of Silk.......................................................................Electrophoretic Studies of W ool.......................

HART, RALPH— ...........Determination of Sulfur in Surface-Active Agents...............................Determination of Active Ingredients and Fatty Matter in Surface-

Active Agents ...............................HOOD, J. M. and STIEGLER, II. W .—

Water Repellency and Temperature............................................................HOWE, HARRISON E.—

Remark', ..................................lACKSON, II. T.—

Recent Research and Its Bearing on Wool Piece Goods Dyeing.. . . .TONES, C. A. and WORTHINGTON, C. G.—

Flax— Its Agricultural and Industrial Possibilities...................................KATZ, JACOB—

Sir face Cation Active Compounds in the Textile Industry...................KIENLE, R. II. and ROYER, G. L.—

Wool Dyeing Phenomena.................................................................................KILLHEFFER, ELVIN H.—

Remarks ................................................................LeCOMPTE, GEORGE and CREELY, JOSEPH W.— .........................

The Evaluation of Wetting Agents............................................................LINDENMAIER, R. A.—

Protection of Wool Fiber During Scouring and Dyeing.......................MACK, PAULINE BEERY—

Progress in Textile Re'earch from the Consumer Point of View. . . . MacMAHON, J. D., VINCENT, G .P, and DUBEAU, A. L.—

A New Oxidizing Agent for the Treatment of Textiles...................MACORMAC, A. R.—

New Uses for Cotton—A Proposed Research Program.......................McLAltRINE, W. M.—

The Economic Situation...................................................................................MILLSON, H. E., ROYER, G. L. and WISSEMANN. M. E.—

Microscop'cal Observations of Wool Dyeing...............................................NELSON, R. E.—

“ Latex”— A Textile Auxiliary........................................................................NUTTING, CLARENCE—

Welcome .............................................................................................................Greetings .......................................................................................

OLNEY. LOUIS A.—Remarks ................................................................................................... P121,Report of the Research Committee..............................................................

OLSEN, H. C., PRESCOTT, W. B. and CHAPIN, H. C.—Sod'um Sulfate Error in Measuring Acid Content of Carbonizing

Baths ..............................................................................................................ORDW AY, CHARLES B.—

The Dveing of Staple and Spun Viscose Rayon...................................PESCHEL, F. M.—

Procedure for Testing the Wettability and Rate of Evaporation ofFabrics ...........................................................................................................

POWERS, D. H,—Recent Developments of Resins for Textile Application.......................

PRESCOTT, W. B., CHAPIN, H. C. and OLSEN, H. C,— Sodium Sulfate Error in Measuring Acid Content of Carbonizing

Baths .............................................................................................................ROSE, ROBERT E.—

Remarks .............................................................................................................ROVER, G. L. and KIENLE, R. H.—

Wool Dveing Phenomena................................................................................ROYER, G. L., WHSSEMANN, M. E. and MILLSON, H. E.—

M'cro'^copical Observations of Wool Dveing...............................................RUSSELL, SCOTT—

Remarks .............................................................................................................

P641

P37

P658

1“44

P25

P293

P412P593

P66

P297

P285

P664

P74

P63

P671

P638

P121

P419

P15

P696

P590

P54

P320

P632

P208

P639P558

P663P510

P669

P613

P61

P515

P669

P122

P638

P632

P125

RUTHERFORD, HENRY A. and HARRIS, M ILTON—The Base-Combining Capacity of W ool......................................................... P293

SAXL, ERWIN J.—Physical Testing in the Textile Industry............................................ P615

SCHMITT, C. H. A.—A Discussion of the Metachrome Method of Dyeing........................... P336

SCHMITT, CHARLES A.—The Writing Ink Industry.............................................................................. P^2

SCHWARZ, E. R,—Technical Evaluation of Finishing Treatments........................................ P138

SCHWARZ, EDW ARD R. and WINN, LELIA J.—Technical Evaluation of Textile Finishing Treatments— Flexibility and

Drape as Measurable Properties of Fabric........................................ P688SHEAR, M. J.—

Chemistry and Cancer Genesis......................................................................... P451SIEVER, H. L,—

Tintinol Process ................................................................................................. P612SIMON, CHARLES L.—

Labeling of Consumer Textile Goods...............' ........................................ P361SKINKLE, JOHN IL—

Identification of the Newer Textile Fibers................................................. P694SLOWINSKE, GEORGE A.—

A New Type Water Repellent.......................................................................... P647SMITH, J. EDWARD—

The Effect of Surface Active Agents in Dyeing........................................ P146SMITH, THOMAS R.—

Modern Package Dyeing Equipment............................................................. P203Problems Confronting the Yarn Dyer Today............................................ P386

SOOKNE, ARNOLD M. and HARRIS, MILTON—Electrophoretic Studies of S Ik..................................................................... P412Electrophoretic Studies of W ool..................................................................... P593

STALLINGS, J. W .—The Role of Starch in Textiles..................................................................... P35

STEPHENSON, M .—The Determination of the Dry Weight of Cotton by Means of the

Commercial Ventilated Drying Oven...................................................... P69STIEGLER, H. W. and HOOD, J. M.—

Water Repellency and Temperature............................................................... P28SSTOTT, P. H.—

The Dveing of Nylon Fibers— A Preliminary Survey........................... P582STRINGFELLOW, W. A.—

Control and Prevention of Mold and Bacteria Damage in the Textileand Allied Industries...................................................................................... P388

THOMPSON, ARTHUR R „ JR.—Remarks .............................................................................................................. P120

TOBIN, MAURICE J.—Welcome .............................................................................................................. P640

TROW ELL, W. W ,—Semi-Resin Finishes for Cotton Piece Goods........................................ P643

TRU AX, DAVE E.—The StabiPty of Printing Pastes..................................................................... P262

VAN RIPER, W. F.—1939 versu' 1914................................................................................................ P722

VERITY, BEN—Leaves from a Dyer's Notebook............................................. P^2

VINCENT, G. P., DUBEAU, A. L. and MacMAHON, J. D.—A New Oxidizing Agent for the Treatment of Textiles....................... P5.90

W ALKER, HERMAN A.—Outline of the Round Table Hosiery Discussion................................... P214

W H ITTIER, E. O. and COULD, S. P.—The Present Status of Casein Fiber............................................................ P641

W ILLE. CLARENCE and ALEXANDER, A. G.—The Management and Oneration of a Hosiery Dye House................... P716

W ILLIAM S, SUMNER H.—The Dyeing of Naphtols on Cotton Piece Goods by the Continuous

Hot Flue Method .........................................................................................WINN, LELIA J. and SCHWARZ, EDWARD R—

Technical Evaluation of Textile Finishing Treatments— Flexibility andDrane as Measurable Properties of Fabric........................................... P688

W ISSEMANN, M. E., MILLSON. H. E. and ROYER, G. L.—Microscopical Observations of Wool Dyeing............................................ P632

WOOD, P. J.—Remarks ............................... .. ......................................;•••.•.................... ^Organizing a Dyeing and Finishing Plant for Synthetic Piece Goods.. P,746

WORTHINGTON. C. G. and JONES, C. A — _Flax— Its Agricultural and Industrial Possibilities............................... Poi

YOUNG, HENRY L.—Printing with Pigments................................................................................... P213

l f l 4 0

• THE AMERICAIV DYESTUFF R E P O R T E R W I L E A P P E A R OY THE FOLLOWING DATES •

• E V E R Y O T H E R M O Y D A Y •

JANUARY . . . 8-22 MAY . . . . . 13-27 SEPTEMBER 2-16-30FEBRUARY . . 5-19 JUNE . . . . . 10-24 OCTOBER . * , 14-28MARCH . . . . 4-18 JULY . . . . . 8-22 NOVEMBER * , 11-25APRIL . . . . . 1-15-29 AUGUST . . . . 5-19 DECEMBER 9-23

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December 25. 1939 AMERICAN DYESTUFF REPORTER J it