Jrxi; I. 1907. 1 



THE INDIA RUBBER WORLD 



279 



riic words Ciack Proof. 

 For rubber h<n>ts ainl 



852.154. Syringe Idischarge nozzle]. M. Bariffi, New York city. 



852,178. Detachable heel. J. Greenstein and J. Leonitzky, New York city. 



852,191. Krastr for typewriters. IC. C. McKaddcn, Short Hills. N. J. 



85r,i98. Lining for imeuniatic tires and other pneumatic articles. F. IVt 

 mecky, Austin, Texas. 



852,237. Fastening of hose pipes to pipe ends. C. Nielsen, CopenhaKen. 

 Denmark. 



852,273. Elastic cob. M. Hess, Munich. Germany. 



852,3-6- Apparatus for repairing pneumatic tires. T. L. llarky. Quaker- 

 town, Pa. 



Trade Marks, 



21.819. Continental Rubber Co.. New York city. Picture of guayule shrub. 

 For rubber gums, raw rubber and substitute therefor, and the plants 

 from which such gums are derived, prepared ft r shipment. 



21.820. Continental Rubber Co.. New York city. Lightly outlined circle 

 with the word Circle at the bottom, outside. For rubber gums, etc. 



21.821. Continental Rubbei Co.. New York city. Guayule shrub enclosed 

 in a circle, bjow which are the words Circle Brattd, and these words 

 are in turn enclosed in another circle. Fcr rubber gums, itc. 



-1. 822. Contincrtal Rubber Co., New York city. .\n outlined circle, below 



which arc the words Circle Brand, the words being mchiscd in another 



circle. For rubber gums, etc. 

 21.S23. Continental Rubber Co., New York city. The letters C.M.R.Co. 



For rubber gums, etc. 

 25,281. Standard Asphalt and Rublx-r Co.. New York and Chicago. Black 



diamond background with the word Sarco in white lett, rs thereon. 



For paving, roofing, and building asphalt, asphalt tiller, asphalt mastic, 



and asphalt matrix. 

 ^S.,jS2. Stands.rd Asphalt and Rubber Co.. New York and Chicago. Hlack 



diamond background with the word Sarco in white letters. For 



mineral rubber and asphaltic insulation material. 

 -5.725- Henry l\. Cabot and Helen N. Cabot. Boston. The word Cabot's. 



For builders' sheathing and mortar-coloring. 

 26.006. Goodyear Rubber Co., Ntw \*ork city. 



For rubber boots and shoes. 

 26,437. Rubbcrhide Co., l>ostcn. The word Ec 



shoes. 

 26,473. The Hartford Rubber Works Co.. Hartford, Conn. Two hands 



placed side by side, the palms outward. For rubber wheel tire?. 



I The widely known Dunlop tire trade mark: the .\merican Dunlop 



rights are owned by the company named above.] 



[Note. — Printed copies of specifications of United States patents may be 

 obtaint-<l from Tin; India Ri'iibek World office at 10 ctnts each, postpaid.) 



G!?EAT BRITAIN AND IRELAND. 



PATENT SPECIFICATIONS PUBLISHED. 



The number givtn i.s tii;il assigned to the Patent at the tiling of the Ap- 

 plication, which in the case if those listed bilow was in 1905. 

 ^Denotes Patents for American Indentions. 

 [.Abstracted in the Illustrated Official Journal, March 27. 1907-] 



24,8.18 (1005). Spring wheel with two or more rims or tires side by side. 

 H. F. Hroat'hurst, London. 



24.952 (i')05). Metal stud for pneumatic tire covtr. G. I'. Deschcts. Paris. 

 France. 



25,0:8 (1905). Electric cable. Land- und Seekabelwerke A.-ti., Cologne- 

 Nippes, Germany. 



25,092 (1905). Boots. ILeatlicr covers used to prtvent moisture from en- 

 tering through elastic gussets.] J. Botsch. Wurzburg, Bavaria. 



*25,i40 (1905). Solid rubber tire. A. H. Marks. Akron, Ohio. 



25,.?f;i (1905). Method of coagulating latex from rubber trees after it has 

 been mixed with vulcanizing agents. -X. G. Bloxham. London. (M. 

 Kelway Bamber. Laboratory, Colombo. Ceylon.) 



25.323 (1905). Eraser holder, of metal or celluloid. J. R. Bell, Talporlcy, 

 Cheshire. 



25.325 (1905). Tire. 1 Solid rubber, vulcanized or keyed to nutallic base. J 

 J. W. O. Walker and W. Murphy. Pendleton. Manchester. 



25,382 (1905). Pneumatic tire. E. Deleamont. Paris, France. 



L\bstr.\c rtD IN Ti:t Illustrated Official Journal. April 4, 1907.] 



24.435 (1905). Tire. [Solid rubber; in clinch. r rim, with detachable 

 fiance.] R. H. \V. Bailey. Kingston-on-Thames. 



25.450 (1905). Pneumatic tire protective tread. C. Brown, Walsall. Staf- 

 fordshire. 



25.467 (1905). Treating leather waste. [By the addition of 20 per cent, of 

 rubbir to the new material golf balls are niadc.l A. G. Inrig, Tot- 

 tenham. 



25,540 (1905). I'ad for applying ink to type or rubber stamps. 1. K. 

 Rogers, Mile End, Bath. 



•25.607 (1905). Machine for winding elastic and other thread or yarn on 

 the core of golf cr tennis balls. .\. T. and G. H. Saunders, Akron, Ohio. 



25.658 (1905). Case for footballs, punching balls, etc. [Made by cement- 

 ing or sewing together several sections of fabric, coated with india- 

 rubber.] J. Turner, Gorton, and A. Buxton. Beswick. Manchester. 



25,701 (1905). Hose coupling. J. Muskett. Pendleton, Lancashire. 



A. B. Williams. 

 A. de La&ki and 



25.779 (1905). Solid rubber tire. (Method of construction to prevent 

 creeping.] J. E. Ilopkinson, Wist Drayton. 



25,832 (1905). India-rubber rings for dumb castors 

 Birniingham. 



"25,846 (iocs). Woven fabrics for pneumatic tires. 

 P. I>. Thropp, Trenton, New Jersey. 



25.975 (1905). Heel protector. H. Levy. Walthamstow. 



26,017 (1905). Pneumatic tire. [Covtrs shaped and molded in one opera- 

 tion.] New Eccles Rubber Works and }. Ck-orgc, Ecclrs. 

 [AnsTKArrFD in the Illustrated Official Journal, April 10, 1907.] 



36,057 (1905)- Garment for women motorists, the sleeves terminating in 

 mittens and the bottom in a bag fur covtring the feet. G. Goad, London. 



•26,152 (1905). Ncrzic for fire hose. l". H. Hartwcll. Pittsfield, New 

 Hampshire. 



"26,192 (1905)* Pneumatic wheel. (.\n elastic wheel which rolls within 

 an outer whetl of slightly larger diameter.] A. J. Robertson. U. S. 

 Jei:kins and A. W. Smith, all of Chicago. Illinois, 



26,273 (1905). ^*edical syringe. P. T. R. Bureau, Paris, France. 



26,290 (1905). Waitrpnof apparel. I .Motor or driving coat, which may 

 be rsed also ftr walking.! J. G. Robeson, London. 



^6.343 (1905)* Tire. Combination with pneumatic, solid or cushion lire 

 of ring of f1'. xihie material of such diameter and so dispowd in relation 

 to the tire that under running conditions its tread touches the road 

 and is presented immediately alongside the tread of the tire su as to 

 intercipt and arrest the lateral movement of the latter on the occur- 

 rence of side sli,iping.] W. W. Beaumont, London. 



26,402 (1905). Ear appliance [for excluding sounds]. T. C. B. Ling, 

 London, 



36.419 (1905). Pneumatic tires [with gaiters for the prevention of slip- 

 ping]. W. 11. Oates, Sheffield. 



*26, 455 (1905). Hcsc coupling [tor air brake hose]. P. Roulstonc, Bay- 

 onne, New Jersey. 



26,459 (1905). Pneumatic cleaning apparatus. A. Richter, Garches, France. 



26,476 (1905). Waterproof filler for soles of l>oots and shoes. P. A. New- 

 ton, London. 



26,503 (1905)- Hose, made of "unt.arable fabric." Society Civile d'Etudes 

 dc rindecirable Crimson. 1-yons, l-'rance. 



26,514 (1905). Pneumatic tire [with detachable rim flange]. M. Peltier, 

 Xeuiliy, France. 



26,536 ( 1905). Connecting pum is to ;>neuniatic tires. [Tubes of india- 

 rubber, around which thin leather strips are plaitcc!.] R. A. Fletcher, 

 Btimingh:im. 



26.599 (1905). Compound fabrics. (Thin sheet cork, dcmineralized. is 

 soaked in benzine and Para rubber cement, which is subsequently 

 vulcanized.] Societc Anonyme du Grimstm, Charenton, France. 

 [Abstracted from the Illustrated Official Journal, .April 17. I907-J 



26,686 (1905). Pneumatic tire. V. Fans. Antwerp, Belgium. 



•26,697 (»905). Eraser holder. .\. F. W. Bowcn, San Francisco, Cali- 

 fornia. 



26,702 (1905) 

 London. 



26,743 (1905) 



26,859 (1905) 



Tire attachment. [To prevent lattral slipping.] S. Harris. 



Golf ball. .\. Uquhart, Edinburgh, and H. Hansen, Lcith. 

 X'ulcanizing apparatus. P. Salvesini, Mostor. Austria. 



25,860 (1905). Vacuum cleaning device. A. R. Thom, St. Pancreas, Mid- 

 dlesex. 



26,867 (1905). Resilient tire. II. Klingler. Thurgau, Switzerland. 



26,976 (1905). Rubber stamp. A. C. Thomson. Glasgow. 



26,981 (1905). Pneumatic tire, with puncture-closing tread. C. J. C. Baker, 

 Krugersdcrp. Transvaal. 



27,012 (1905). Rubber covered spring for retaining overshoes on the boot- 

 C. I-. Higgins, Montreal. Canada. 



"27.020 (1905). Pirc rim with rtmovablc flange. R. S. Bryant, Columbus, 

 Ohio. 



27.041 (1905). Pneumatic tire. G. E. Cain, Bolton, and H. Sidebottom, 

 Old Traflford, Manchester. 



27,103 (1905). Tire. F. J. Chsry. St. Cyr, Paris, France. 



•27,192 (1905). Pneumatic tire. J. C. Cole. Chicopee Falls. Massachusetts. 



27,273 (1905). Elastic tire, with metallic spring linings. R. Desouches, 

 Paris, France. 



THE GERMAN EMPIRE. 

 Patents Granted. 



181.832. Process for making pneumatic tire covers. Mitleldcutschc Gum- 

 mi«arcn-Fabrik. Louis Peter, A.-G., Frankfurt, a. M. .Addition to 

 Patent Xu. I73..t65. 



181,85;. Hoofpad attachid to leather. Peter Roos and Friedrich Emmerich, 

 I'vankfurt, a. ^r. 



Gebrauchsmuster. 



292,310. Corrugated anti-slipping tire tread. Ilaniiovtrsche Gummi-Kamm 



Co., .\.-G., riannovcr-Limmer. 

 292,401. Injection syrirpc with rubber buffer for the piston. Dr. Emil 



Grosbeintz, Basel. 

 292.433- Nursing bottle licldtr. Firma G. II. Nustcr, Oschatz. 



