May I, 1905.] 



THE INDIA RUBBER WORLD 



273 



RECENT RUBBER I'ATENTS. 



784,212. 

 784.2S3. 

 784.372. 

 784,378. 



784,528, 

 784. 53S 

 784.580 

 784,648 



ton 

 784.<>95- 



UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. 



Issued March 7, 1905. 



NO. 784,127. Window cleaner. W. Smith. Duluth, Minn. 

 784,166. Pneumatic trie. E. Larger, Toronto, Canada. 



Hose coupling. M. Hirth, Butler, I'a. 



Nozzle (for hose pipes]. C. H. Smith, Richmond, Va. 



Hose coupling. W. M. Albee, New York city. 



Composition for preserving India rubber goods. [Consisting 

 of one part turpentine, as much camphor gum as the turpentine will 

 readily dissolve, and one part linseed oil proportioned to the com- 

 bined part of turpentine and camphor gum. J O. K. Benton, as- 

 signor of one half to J. Shimp, both of St. Marys, Ohio. 



Issued March 14, 1905. 

 Fountain pen. T. P. Ambrose, Cincinnati. 

 Fountain pen. K. W. Bender, Hoboken, N. J. 

 Shoe [with cushion insole]. J. G. Marchand, Buffalo, N. Y. 

 Process of making rubber cored golf balls. G. C. Worthing- 

 Elyria, Ohio. 

 Insulating lining [consisting of a tube having end portions of 

 different diameters and having an elastic and compressible portion 

 of greater diameter than the part within which it is to fit]. N. Mars- 

 hall, Newton, Mass. 

 784,738. Pneumatic tire. T. Giara, Boston. 

 784,801. Carpet cleaning apparatus. [Pneumatic] 



A. E. Moorehead, Oakland, Calif. 

 784,831. Insulating sheet or structure. C. S. Bird, 



East Walpole, Mass. 

 784.874. Mold [for tire making] C. Miller, Bing- 



hamton, N. Y. 

 784, 9t4. Nursing bottle holder. W. J. Boyle, Lew- 

 iston, assignor of one half to \V. J. O'Brien, Bath, 

 Me. 



Issued March 21, 1905. 734,738. 



785,116. Gasket or packing ring arfd apron therefor [the apron closing 

 the opening in the ring, and the whole being dish shaped]. E. L. 

 Perry, Paterson, N. J. 

 785,118. Vehicle tire. C. A. Pettie, New York city. 

 785,159- Hose reel. E. Dice, Canton, Ohio. 



785,170. Vehicle wheel tire [having quadrilateral resilient tread abut- 

 ments with metallic bearing faces]. H. D. Hubbard, Ava- 

 lon. Pa. 

 785,184. Manufacture of playing balls [to 

 be filled with compressed air]. A. T. 

 Saunders, Akron. Ohio. 

 785,231. Composition for polishing and 

 abrading tools. [Rubber, sulphur, hair, 

 and an abrading or polishing substance]. 

 W. Roberts, Glenridge. and G. S. Coxe, 

 Newark, N. J., assignors to C. Robeits 

 '85,170. Rubber Co. 



Shower bath appliance. J. Simpson, Jr., Hamilton, Canada. 

 Manufacture of articles from hard rubber. [As a new article 

 of manufacture, a material having a fabric interior, saturated and 

 covered with a hard vulcanized compound of India-rubber and sul- 

 phur. See reference to the Reinforced Hard Rubber Co., in The 

 India Rubber World, April i, 1905 — page 246 ] 

 W. R. Sine, Williamsport. Pa. 



785,360. Hand Stamp. B. B. Hill, Philadelphia, Pa. 



785,371. Overshoe. H. O'Sullivan [of the O'Sullivan 

 Rubber Co ], Lowell, Mass. 



785.391. Massage steamer. J. P. Weis, Nyack, N. Y. ^ 



785.392. Tool for removing insulation from wires. J. 

 ^ E. Williams, St. Louis. 



785,414. Horseshoe. J. W. 785,391. 

 Fisher, assignor of one half to F. Reif- 

 snider, both Akron, Ohio. 



785.233. 

 785,234- 



785,503 Life saving appliance. G. Krieger, 

 Brooklyn, N. Y. 



785,523. Machine for forming flexible tubing. 

 S. Scognamillo, New York city, assignor to 

 785 414 Automobile Supply Mfg. Co. 



785,524. Surgical saline infusion apparatus. J. J. Shea, Beverly, 

 Mass. 



785.603. 



785,638. 



785.822. Remnant tube. 



785 822. 



785,577, Rubber horseshoe. A. Sanfield, 



Swissvale, Pa. ^ 



785,603. Vehicle tire. 

 J. J. Fitzsimmons, 

 Paterson, N. J. 

 785,633. R ubber tire 

 repairer. J. M. Padgett, 

 Topeka, Kansas. 

 785,638. Hot water bottle 

 [with cork and fabric 

 cover]. A. J. Scritchfield, 

 Jamesville, Wis. 



785.653. Fountain pen. C. 

 W. Boman, New York 

 city, assignor to Eagle Pencil Co. 



785.654. Fountain pen. Same. 



Issued March 28, 1905. 



[An inner elastic receiving member, with 

 fabric rolled thereon, and an outer 

 spring clasping member for maintain, 

 ing the fabric in place.] C. E. Mitch- 

 em, Harvard, III. 



785,824. Spray bath-brush and connection. 

 A. W. Nicholls, Chicago. 



786,067. Typewriter platen [having a wooden 

 core, a flexible covering shiftable relatively 

 to the core, and a removable rubber back- 

 ing sheet upon said covering]. C. H. 

 Stuart. Newark, N. Y. 785,824. 



786,096. Tire [in sections]. J. F. Byers, Ravenna, Ohio. 



786,097- Tire protector. N. Campbell, assignor of one half to B. 

 Hayhurst, both Elizabethtown, Ohio. 



786,223. Wheel [with resilient tire, having for its novelty a series of 

 supplemental tread sections]. E. Kress, .Mbany, N. Y. 



[Note.— Printed copies of speciHcations of Untied States patents may be ob 

 tained from Thb India Rubber World office at lo cents each, postpaid.] 



GREAT BRITAIN AND IRELAND. 



Patent Specifications Published. 



The number given is that assigned to the Patent at the filing of the Applica- 

 tion, which in the case of those listed below was in 1903. 



♦ Denotes Patents for American Inventions, 



[Abstracted in the Official Journal, March 8, 1905.] 



24,459(1903). Motor car alarm. [The horn is blown by air supplied 

 from a reservoir and controlled from a button on the steering 

 wheel ; bellows operated by a cam may be used instead of the pump.] 

 R. M. Ford, London. 



24.686 (1903). Chrome leather cover for elastic tires [secured to the 

 tire by rubber solution or vulcanized on]. J. G. Grose, North- 

 ampton. 



24718(1903). Inhaler for anesthetics. E. J. Deck, St. Leonards-on- 

 Sea, Sussex. 



24.753 (1903). Tool for removing pneumatic tires or covers. S. A. 

 Horstmann and R. C. L. Fuller. Bath. 



24.771 (1903). Non-skidding device for pneumatic tires. Sainsbury's 

 Anti-Skidders, Ltd., London, and W. D. Sainsbury, Dublin. 



24,811 (1903). Elastic anklet [for excluding dirt from boots]. J. 

 Stevenson, Berwick-on-Tweed. 



•24,837 (1903). Exercising apparatus. A. J. Boult, London. (Car- 

 tilage Co., Rochester, New York.) 



24,846 (1903). Spring or pneumatic wheel. [Resiliency secured by 

 the use between the members of the wheel of springs, cylinders 

 with plounger pistons. India-rubber cushions, or pneumatic tubes.J 

 M. H. Smith, London. 



24,852(1903). E.xercising apparatus. A. E. Terry, Redditcb, Wor- 

 cestershire. 



24,890 (1903). Pneumatic tire [having the tread flattened to lessen 

 wear and liability to side slip and puncture, by mfans of restrain- 

 ing cords or chains embedded in the cover]. J. Cockburn, Castle 

 Mills, Edinburgh. 



24,973 (1903). Heel protector. I. Watts, Great Grimsby, Lincoln- 

 shire. 



25,000 (1903). Waterproofing composition forfabrics [made by melting 

 paraffin or other wax with Almeidina gum or Guttapercha, and 

 adding carnauba wax and refined resin oil ; for insulating wires, 

 carnauba wax is omitted], V. B. Wright, Gresford, North Wales, 

 and two others. 



