54 PAPER MATERIALS PATENTED SINCE THE YEAR A.D. 1800. 



lilies, water weeds, anacharsis aloinastrum, and other water plants, rye 

 grass, pampas grass, mya and other grasses, raspberry, blackberry, and 

 other rosacea?, malva, sida, and other malvacese (except althea?, gossypium 

 and.corchorus), buckwheat, leaves of palms, sugar-cane, tillandsia, and other 

 bi'omeliaceas ; maize and sorghum plant, madder and other rubiacese ; ano- 

 naceaa, melastomaceae, velloziae panax, solanacess, cupheae, rhamnese, lych- 

 nophora, terebinthenacese, bombax, myrtacea, bignonacese, lilaceae, arto- 

 carpeae, the mulberry, pandanus, cecrops, dracena, polygaleas, malpighiacese, 

 convolvulaceaa, leaves of musaceae, broussonetia, bcehmeria, amomum, ma- 

 nispermum, erytoxylon, gutlaferese, ricinus, and other ruphorbiacese, ascle- 

 piadiae, apocinese, rutaceae, phormium, iris, solaneae, the stalk of the tobacco 

 plant, cactus, papyrus, aloes, agave, labitaa, asparagus, juniper, rice-straw, 

 mandioca plant, gramineas. For certain pulps the refuse from breweries, 

 bran, spent tan, and spent dyewoods, and seaweeds may be employed. — 

 John Smith and James Hollingworth, for improvements in treating Surat 

 jute, gunny, or sugar bagging. — Hippolyte Victor Pinondel De la Bertoche, 

 for paper from asphodel root (void). — Francis Parker (prov. pro.), for the 

 haulm or stalk of the potato plant. — Richard Archibald Brooman, for pre- 

 paring the fibres of French beans, scarlet runners, &c. (void). — Alexander 

 Brown, for applying the fern or bracken plant, or plants comprehended 

 under the cryptogamic series. — James Niven, for the common broom plant 

 and the whin plant, genista scoparium, and ulex Europasa (void). — John 

 Cowley, and Daniel Peyton Sullivan, for improvements in the manufacture 

 of paper from straw. — Jean Pechgris De Frontin, for pulps from the acacia 

 tree, various kinds of lupins, the plant called bryonia, the stalks of the 

 plant called topinamber or Jerusalem artichoke, and the stalks of the 

 different kinds of heliotropium or sunflower. — John Henry Johnson, for 

 employing the waste or residual beetroot. — Lazare Ochs, for the manufac- 

 ture of certain kinds of paper from the refuse and cuttings of leather during 

 the operation of tanning. — John Louis Jullion, for paper from the fibres 

 of the banana and plantain plants, waste or pressed sugar cane, and the 

 various water flags that abound in warm countries (void). — Francis Burke, 

 for using the plantain, banana, and the aloe. — Giovanni Martenoli de Mar- 

 tinoi and Juan Francisco O. de Lara. The employment of seaweed. — 

 Simon Eugene Gabriel Simon, for substituting in part plants of the family 

 sparganium for rags. — Joshua Horton and Thomas Horton, for using spent 

 tan. — Robert Martin and John Cowdery Martin, for improvements in ob- 

 taining pulp from wood. — William Armand Gilbee. The employment of 

 dog's grass (void). — Francis Moll, for the employment of the stalks and 

 stems of the potato, and the leaves or fibres of the fir tree, and other 

 conifers. — Theophilus Henry Hastings Kelk, for the use of the bark of 

 elm, of lime, of poplar, of willow, and of marshmallow, canes, or reeds, the 

 leafstalk of horse-radish and the root of horse-radish, the shrubby cane or 

 rod of marshmallow. — Richard Archibald Brooman, for employing the root 

 of the asphodel plant. — John Lilley, for a plant, the growth of West Africa, 

 and known at the Cameroons by the name of Me dickey. — Frederic Lotteri, 



