Grace's Guide To British Industrial History

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Grace's Guide is the leading source of historical information on industry and manufacturing in Britain. This web publication contains 162,238 pages of information and 244,492 images on early companies, their products and the people who designed and built them.

Grace's Guide is the leading source of historical information on industry and manufacturing in Britain. This web publication contains 147,919 pages of information and 233,587 images on early companies, their products and the people who designed and built them.

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'' Note: This is a sub-section of [[The Engineer 1902 Jul-Dec: Index]]
'' Note: This is a sub-section of [[The Engineer 1902 Jul-Dec: Index]]


'''View the [[The Engineer 1902 Jul-Dec| 1902 Jul-Dec Volumes]]
'''View the [[The Engineer 1902 Jul-Dec| Volumes]] that this Index refers to


'''A
'''A
Line 25: Line 74:
*Winding, Treharris No. 1,Ocean P.t, (482), (552)  
*Winding, Treharris No. 1,Ocean P.t, (482), (552)  
*Explosions, Boiler, United States, (614)
*Explosions, Boiler, United States, (614)
*Boiler, Melyn Tin-plate Works, (198)
*Boiler, [[Melyn Tinplate Works|Melyn Tin-plate Works]], (198)
*Abertysswg Colliery, (316)
*Abertysswg Colliery, (316)
*Colliery, Abertwysog, (268)
*Colliery, Abertwysog, (268)
Line 1,961: Line 2,010:


'''Obituary :
'''Obituary :
*Abel, Sir Fred., 255
* [[Frederick Abel|Abel, Sir Fred.]], 255
*Allison, Mr. Henry, (48)
* [[Henry Allison|Allison, Mr. Henry]], (48)
*Ayris, Mr. John. 476
* [[John Ayris|Ayris, Mr. John]]. 476
*Barlow, Mr. W. H., (519)
* [[W. H. Barlow|Barlow, Mr. W. H.]], (519)
*Barrow, Mr. James, (328). (338)  
* [[James Barrow|Barrow, Mr. James]], (328). (338)  
*Beloe, Mr. Chas. Henry, 189  
* [[Charles Henry Beloe|Beloe, Mr. Chas. Henry]], 189  
*Branfoot, Mr. Wm., (505)  
* [[William Branfoot|Branfoot, Mr. Wm.]], (505)  
*Brotherhood, Mr. Peter, 375  
* [[Peter Brotherhood (1838-1902)|Brotherhood, Mr. Peter]], 375  
*Clapham, Mr. Wm., (289)  
* [[William Clapham|Clapham, Mr. Wm.]], (289)  
*Dunn, Mr. Ralph, (98)  
* [[Ralph Dunn|Dunn, Mr. Ralph]], (98)  
*Faviell, Mr. W. F., (35), 66  
* [[W. F. Faviell|Faviell, Mr. W. F.]], (35), 66  
*Fell, Mr. John Barraclough, 9  
* [[John Barraclough Fell|Fell, Mr. John Barraclough]], 9  
*Fleming, Mr. Thos., (527)  
* [[Thomas Fleming|Fleming, Mr. Thos.]], (527)  
*Gibson, Mr. David, (571)
* [[David Gibson (d.1902)|Gibson, Mr. David]], (571)
*Gillman, Mr. Henry, (576)
* [[Henry Gillman|Gillman, Mr. Henry]], (576)
*Gilman, Mr. C. C., (137)
* [[C. C. Gilman|Gilman, Mr. C. C.]], (137)
*Gilpin, Mr. Bernard, 428
* [[Bernard Gilpin|Gilpin, Mr. Bernard]], 428
*Hague, Mr. Ernest, (570)  
* [[Ernest Hague|Hague, Mr. Ernest]], (570)  
*Hamilton, Mr. Robt., (532)
* [[Robert Hamilton (d. 1902)|Hamilton, Mr. Robt.]], (532)
*Hood, Mr. Archibald, 417
* [[Archibald Hood|Hood, Mr. Archibald]], 417
*Hickman, Mr. A. W., (220),(233)
* [[A. W. Hickman|Hickman, Mr. A. W.]], (220),(233)
*Imray, Mr. John, 417
* [[John Imray|Imray, Mr. John]], 417
*Jennings, Mr. James, (248)
* [[James Jennings|Jennings, Mr. James]], (268)
*Krupp, Friedrich Alfred, 514, 541
* [[Friedrich Alfred Krupp|Krupp, Friedrich Alfred]], 514, 541
*Macpherson, Mr. Alexander Sinclair, (328)  
* [[Alexander Sinclair Macpherson|Macpherson, Mr. Alexander Sinclair]], (328)  
*Mallalieu, Mr. Henry, (22)
* [[Henry Mallalieu|Mallalieu, Mr. Henry]], (22)
*Martell, Mr. Benjamin, 60
* [[Benjamin Martell|Martell, Mr. Benjamin]], 60
*Newcombe, Mr. Wm. Lister, (443)
* [[William Lister Newcombe|Newcombe, Mr. Wm. Lister]], (443)
*Nivens, Mr. Thos., 218
* [[Thomas Nivens|Nivens, Mr. Thos.]], 218
*Oates, Mr. Sam., (68)
* [[Samuel Oates|Oates, Mr. Sam.]], (68)
*Palmer, Mr. Edward, (221)
* [[Edward Palmer (d.1902)|Palmer, Mr. Edward]], (221)
*Parker, Henry Albert, 166  
* [[Henry Albert Parker|Parker, Henry Albert]], 166  
*Pearson, Mr. Joseph II., Value of his Estate, (121)
* [[Joseph H. Pearson|Pearson, Mr. Joseph H.]], Value of his Estate, (121)
*Pilkington, Mr. Jas., (395)
* [[James Pilkington|Pilkington, Mr. Jas.]], (395)
*Platt, Mr. Sam., (263)
* [[Samuel Platt (1845-1902)|Platt, Mr. Sam.]], (268)
*Purkess, Mr. Jas., (589)
* [[James Purkess|Purkess, Mr. Jas.]], (589)
*Rees, Mr., (382)
* [[Mr. Rees|Rees, Mr.]], (382)
*Rsndel, Mr. Hamilton, 307
* [[Hamilton Rendel|Randel, Mr. Hamilton]], 307
*Richardson, Mr. Joseph, (337)  
* [[Joseph Richardson|Richardson, Mr. Joseph]], (337)  
*Roberts-Austen, Sir Wm. Chandler, 514
* [[William Chandler Roberts-Austen|Roberts-Austen, Sir Wm. Chandler]], 514
*Short, Mr. Sydney Howe, 417
* [[Sydney Howe Short|Short, Mr. Sydney Howe]], 417
*Simons, Mr. Wm., 417
* [[William Simons (d.1902)|Simons, Mr. Wm.]], 417
*Smith, Mr. Thos., (315)
* [[Thomas Smith (1850-1902)|Smith, Mr. Thos.]], (315)
*Steel, Mr. Frank, (280)
* [[Frank Steel|Steel, Mr. Frank]], (280)
*Swiss Railway King. Guyer-Zsller, (496)  
* [[Guyer-Zeller|Swiss Railway King. Guyer-Zeller]], (496)  
*Townsend, Mr. J. E., (531)
* [[J. E. Townsend|Townsend, Mr. J. E.]], (531)
*Walker, Ebenezer, (242)
* [[Ebenezer Walker|Walker, Ebenezer]], (242)
*Watts, Mr. E. II., (72)
* [[Edmund Hannay Watts (1830-1902)|Watts, Mr. E. H.]], (72)
*Weitzjr, Mr. John (the Styrian Ironmaster), (407)
* [[John Weitzer|Weitzer, Mr. John]] (the Styrian Ironmaster), (407)
*Whitworth, Mr. A H.. (233)
* [[A. H. Whitworth|Whitworth, Mr. A H.]]. (233)
*Wrey, Mr. G. B. S., (230)
* [[G. B. S. Wrey|Wrey, Mr. G. B. S.]], (280)


*OBSERVATORIES, Ben Nevis and Fort William, (519)
*OBSERVATORIES, Ben Nevis and Fort William, (519)
Line 2,170: Line 2,219:
*Perry, Prof. John, His Address at the British Association, 313
*Perry, Prof. John, His Address at the British Association, 313
*Perth, Freedom of, Presented to Mr. A, Carnegie, (280), (355)
*Perth, Freedom of, Presented to Mr. A, Carnegie, (280), (355)
*Peru, Electricity for Lighting and other Purposes Wanted in, (11)
*Peru, Refuse Destructors Wanted in, (11)
*Petrol, Railway Restrictions on Carriage of, and Stock of, Laid in by the King, (420)
*Petroleum, Average Price in United States, (162)
*Briquettes in France, (188)
*Production ia the United States, (185)
*Refuse as Fuel, Use of, in R Rumania, (303)
*Semi-solid, for Fuel, (11)
*Trade, Russian, Reduction of Railway Freights, (469)
*Physical Laboratory, Bushey, Fitting up of, (111)
*Piecework and the Premium System, 373
*Pier at Locust Point. Baltimore, (137)
*Pilcher, Mr. 0. A., Presentation to, (111)
*Pilkington, Mr. James, (395)
*Pipe Callipers, Mr. Fuhrman Clarke, 284
*Pipe, Cast Iron, in the United States, Standard Specifications for, (454)
*Pipes, Steam, The Cause of Water Hammer Action in, (481)
*Pi .ton Ring Hammer, Automatic, The Davy
*Robertson Engineering Company, 67
*Piston Valves for Locomotives, 167, 169
*Planing Machine, Messrs. Hulse and Co., Limited, 238
*Planing Machine, Messrs. C. Redman and Sons, 146
*Plate Dant Straightener, Ship, Mr. F. Wilson, 67 Platt, Mr. Sam, (268)
*Pneumatic Tires, A French Firm on the most Effective Air Pressure for, (111)
*Pneumatic Tools ia the Navy, 41
*Pollution of Rivers, 369
*Port of London and the Thames, 125, 153
*Portable Buildings. 41
*Portland Cement Works, Edieon, (46)
*Portland Cement Work, Painting of, (395)
*Postal Service from China vid Siberian and Russian Railways, (469)
*Postage Stamps, Automatic Machines for Sale of, at Berlin Railway Stations, (280)
*Preferentialism, its Scope and its Importance, 87
*Premium System, 235
*Presentation, Mr. C. E. Chrimes, (345)
*Presentation to Mr. Henry Cochrane, (381)
*Preservatives of Mine Timber against Rot, (420)
*Pressure Indicator, Mr. J. E. Petave’s, 344
*Progress v. Profits, 352
*Propeller Efficiency, 376
*Propeller Shaft, Repairing a, 404
*Pulley, Built-up, 583
*Pumps, Application to the Sinking of Deep Shafts of Suspended Steam, 80
*Boiler Feed, Joseph Evans and Co., 7, 8
*Electrically-driven, F. Pearn and Co., 375, 377
*High Lift Centrifugal, Market for, at Johannesburg, (519)
*Injection Water, 43 Screw, Mr. H. Jones, 142
*Pumping Machinery at the Penrhyn Quarries, 184
*Plant for Condensing Water, Mr. C. Hopkinson on, 106
*Plant, Gas Engine, American, (338)
'''Q
*QUEENSLAND, 1901, Silver and Lead Produc¬tion. (137)
*Quick Work, Ocean Colliery, South Wales, (482), 552
'''R
*RAIL Ring Tractor, 442
'''Railway: Railway Accidents : British Railways: Electric Railways: Foreign Railways: Light Rail¬ways: Locomotives: Railway News, Various: Permanent Way: Rolling Stock:
'''Railway Accidents:
*Airdrie, Derailment, (589)
*America, April, May, and June, 1901, (469)
*Apparatus for Preventing Collisions, Invented by H. Pfirmann and Dr. M. Wendorf, (519)
*Caledonian, Bannockburn Station, (303)
*Derailment of Trains, Board of Trade Reports, 241
*France, Arleux, near Douai, (328)
*Glasgow and South-Western, Gorbals Station, (355)
*Great Western, Bristol, (280)
*Great Western, Westbourne Park Station, (303)
*Great Western and Great Central, Collapse of Tunnel, near Loudwater, (257)
*Guatemala, Lines Ir.jared by Floods, (185)
*Indian, in 1901,(355)
*Indian, Landslip on tne G.I.P., (137); Torrential Rain in the Nilgiris and Damage done, (185)
*Indian Mail Train, between Madras and Bom¬bay, (280)
*Lancashire and Yorkshire, Explosion ia a Tunnel, (185)
*Mountain and Lake Railway, near Gloversville, (35)
*Paris, Lyons, and Mediterranean, Pontarlier, (233)
*Piusria, Pamphlet concerning Causes of Railway Accidents to be distributed amongst the Officials, (496)
*Railway Employment, Prevention of Accidents Act, (196)
*Russia, Commission to Investigate the Causes of the Frequent Collisions on, (614)
*Somerset and Dorset Railway, near Glaston¬bury, (85)
*South-Eastern and Chatham, near Chislehurst, 7, (589)
*Uganda Railway, 491, 512, 570, 612
*United Kingdom and United States, 1901,
*Number of Passengers Killed and Injured, (420)
*United States, 13, 35, (85), 185, 217, 257, 395, 445, 491, 550, 614
*Chicago and Alton Railway, (257)
*United States, Number of Accidents in, due to Unprotected Crossings, (85)
*South Carolina and Georgia Extension, (35)
'''Railways, British, Colonial, and Indian:
*Aberystwyth, Devil’s Bilge Completed, (496)
*African, Central South, Rolling Stock for, (280
*African, East, Map Showing, 492
*African, South, 103, (111), 160, 161, 162,378, ) (536)
*African, Trans, 108
*Africa, West, Gold Coast, Coomassie Extension, (544)
*African, Uganda, 491, 512 570, 612
*African, Zululand, Opened for Traffic, 93
*Australia, A New Route to. 180
*Australian, Adelaide-Port Darwin, (162)
*South, Earnings, Expenditure, and
*Mileage in North and South Provinces, (355)
*South, ProjectedLinefrom Adelaide to Port Darwin, (355)
*South, Projected Transcontinental, (519), (614)
*Bristol to London, Projected, (192). (544), (565)
*British Columbia, New Mileage, (11)
*British South African Company’s Schemes for Rhodesia, (565)
*Bulawayo and Salisbury, (372)
*Burma, Pegu to Syr.'am and Dalia to Dedaye, (395)
*Burma, Traffic Earnings, (137)
*Caledonian, Accounts of, (257)
*Caledonian, Thirteen Lines of Rails Across the Clyde, (280)
*Cambrian, (150)
*Cambrian, First-class Free Pass for Five Years, (518)
*Canada, An All-through Route, 523, (565)
*Canada, Grand Trunk, New Double Track of,  (395)
*Canadian Extension, 306
*Canadian, Governmental and Municipal Subsi¬dies to, (61)
*Canadian Pacific, Financial Report, (257) ; Imperial Limited Train Service Inaugurated, (61); Motor Cars on, (185); Wheat Transport on, (544)
*Cape to Cairo, 108, 160, 161, 208, (372), (565)
*Malmsbury to Picquetberg Opened, (496) b Natal, (162)
*Government Railways, Washouts on the, 3z town to Beira, (328)
*Ceylon, Colombo to Avissawella, (469)
*Derbyshire, Proposed New Line, (544)
*Egypt, Cape to Cairo, 108, 160, 161, 203, (372)
*Glasgow and South-Western, Accounts of, (257)
*Great Central, July, Accelerated Services, (11);
*Financial Returns, (111); Appointment of Mr. Worsdel), (137), (195)
*Electric Automatic Fog-signal¬ling, (589)
*Re-instatement of Reservists (372)
*Great Eastern, Increased Punctuality of Ser¬vice, (544)
*Great Northern, Mr. Eustace Barrows ap¬pointed Secretary, (372)
*New Locomotive Erecting Shop, (137)
*Pick-up Water Troughs at Bawtry, (355)
*Great Western, Cheltenham to Honeybourne, Projected Line, (66)
*Improvements in South Devon, 345, 356
*Third - class Season and Scholar’s Tickets, (469)
*Wat«r Tanks between Reading and Newbury, (496)
*Works at Swindon, The New, 325, (Supplement, October r 3rd and 17th. 1902), 375
*Hull and Barnsley Extension, 182, (211)
*Indian, Earnings (303)
*East, Annual General Meeting, New Rolling Stock and Locomotives, (11)
*Eastern Bengal State, (336) Frontier, Quetta Nushki, (303)
*Gas Lighting on, (257); New Section
*of the Bombay, Baroda, and Central Indian, (185)
*Great Indian Peninsular Company Desires to Obtain Coalfields of its own,(589); Mileage of DoubleTrack, (589)
*Important Changes in Staff of the Great Indian Peninsular, (120) I)
*Important Development of, said to be in Contemplation, (85)
*Indian Coal Burnt in 1901 by, (137)
*Mileage, 1901, (328), (443)
*Mileage Controlled by the Madras il Government, (589)
*Nilgiri, Successful Working of, (35)
*North-Western State, Jech Doab Line (496)
*North-Western, Tunnel Inspector Imported from England, (137)
*Number of Employés on, (328)
*Nashki Railway Survey Office Closed, (137)
*Report on, for 1901, (257); Returns for Quarter ending July 30tb, (185);
*Speed on, (185)
*Through Connection on the Broad Gauge between Ceylon and Northern
*India under Consideration, (280)
*Lancashire, Derbyshire and East Coast, Accounts of, (257)
*Lancashire and Yorkshire, Good Earnings of the Goods Trains, (395)
*Lancashire and Yorkshire and London and North-Western, Fleet Jointly Owned by (370), (381), (395)
*London, Brighton and South Coast and West of France, Conference between, (496)
*London, Brighton and South Coast, Widening 5,
*of Line, 16, (443)
*London, Chatham and Dover, Financial Ruturns, (111)
*London, City and South, (111)
*London District Railway, (31), (96), (110), (111)
*London and North-Western, Birmingham to London in 1 hour 55 min., by C. Rous- Marten, 142
*Increase in the Revenue of, (177)
*and Lancashire and York¬shire, Fleet Jointly . Owned by, (370), (381), (395)
*Long Run, 307 Mr. W. A. Jepson Appointed Mice.-al Manager, («?)
*in Negotiation with Belfast Steamship Company for Purchase, (355)
*New Goods Sta¬tion, Wol¬verhampton, (280)
*Royal Train, (589)
*Signalling by Electricity, 501
*London and South-Western, New Salisbury Station, (376)
*Pneumatic Sig¬nalling on, 598
*Retirement and Election of Directors, (372)
*London Underground, 96, 110
*London, Whitechapel and Bow, 94
*Metropolitan District, (31)
*Metropolitan, Financial Returns, (111)
*Midland, Acquires the Northern Counties of Ireland, (333), (355)
*Coventry to Arley, Proposed Line, (496), (574)
*Decentralisation in the Goods Depart¬ment, (443)
*Fast Run between Leeds and Carlisle, 375
*New Schemes, (544)
*Scheme for Placing Buxton on the, (519)
*Seventieth Anniversary of the Oldest Portion of, (77)
*Splendid Run on, (257)
*and Great Northern, Yarmouth and Lowestoft Direct, 333
*and South-Western, Death of Mr. Jas. Parkess, (589)
*Natal, Doubling Main Line, (303)
*Natal, Durban to Ladysmith, (469)
*New South Wales, Annual and Quarterly Reports, (11), 448
*Earnings and Expendi¬ture, (622)
*Mileage Open for Traliio, September 30th, 1901, 1902, (614)
*Traffic, Receipts, Ex¬penditure, (288)
*New Zealand, 229 ; Earnings and Expenditure, (290) ; Mileage, (420)
*North-Eastern, Auto-car Trains on the, 620 Conference at Darlington, (328) and Electric Equipment, (122), (189), (197), (430)
*General Manager and leading Officials’ Inspection Tours io the United States, (303), (355)
*Motor Cars on, (443), (469), (481), 620
*Locomotives, New Eight - wheeled Coupled, 429, 430
*Oil Fuel Experiments on, (395), (406), (443)
*Old-age Pension Scheme, (443)
*Resignation of Sir J. W. Pease, Successor, Viscount Ridley, (328)
*Sunderland and the Hartle- pools Branch Opened, (372)
*Rhodesian, Sam to be Expended, (565)
*Rhondda and Swansea Bay, (150)
*Royal Trains (Supplement, December ‘23th, 1902), (589), 612
*South African—see African
*Sierra Leone, (872) Sirhowy and Rhymney Valley, Proposed, (496)
*South-Eastern and Chatham, Acceleration of Service from Paris to Lon¬don, (448) Ch isl e hurst Tunnel, (280)
*New Express Engines, (290)
*Winter Express Afternoon Continental Service, (395)
*Sntton-in-Ashfleld to Mansfield-Woodhouse, (544)
*Taff Vale, Proposals for Next Seision, (499)
*Uganda, 491, 499, 512, (565), 570, 584 ; Acci¬dents on, 566,570; American Contractor Late Again, (496); Cost of, (589); Embankments, 591; Financial Returns, (35); Viaducts, 612, 613
*Underground, London County Council and, 468
*United Kingdom, Mileage, Capital and Ex¬penditure, Receipts, Traffic, (185), (443), (496)
*Victorian, Government Proposals to make a General Reduction in Rates of Pay, (288)
*Yarmouth and Lowestoft, 333, (353)
*Yorkshire Dales, (170)
'''Railways, Electric
*American, Goods Traffic on, (97)
*Berlin, Shallow Underground, (211)
*Boston Elevated, (420)
*Canada, Mileage of, in. (35)
*Central London, from Bank to Twickenham for 6d., (Ill), (211)
*Central London, Ventilation of, (372); Resig¬nation of Mr. P. W. D’Alton. (499); Retiretirement of Mr. Aldington, (589)
*Chicago Elevated, Moving. (266)
*City and South London, (111), (257), (614)
*Cleveland and Detroit, Trolley Lines Strung over Railway Tracks, (395)
*Cleveland, Elyria, and Western Railway, Use of Steam Turbines Decided on for Driving Generators, (35)
*Crewe System of Electric Railway Signalling, 548, 550
*Dayton, Covington, and Piqua, 240
*Elberfeld Suspension, 385, 413, 435, 441, 488
*Germany, Wannsee, near Berlin, Potsdam and Gross Lichterfeld, (372)
*Gerona, Vich, and Amer, (35)
*Goods Traffic on, in America, (97)
*High Peak, (614)
*Italy, Adriatic System, Two New Lines, (257)
*Lake Como, (280)
*Liverpool Overhead. (162), 519 (iii., vii., Supple¬ment, December 12tk, 1902)
*Landon Tube, 65, 96, (111), (468)
*Manchester and Liverpool, (211)
*Motor, Variable-speed, American, 596
*Mersey Tunnel, (211), (257)
*Metropolitan, Electric Equipment, (111), 473
*Mexican, Electrification of a Section, (137)
*New York Subway, New Power House, (4k0)
*North-Eastern, Electric Traction on Certain Portions of, (122), (430)
*Paris Metropolitan, (328)
*Paris, (162) ; Strike of the Employés, (233)
*Pennsylvania, Pittsburg and Pitcairn, (257)
*Russia, Western Frontier of. (280)
*St. Louis Exhibition, Third Rail, (443)
*St. Petersburg and the Imatra Falls, Finland, (162)
*St. Petersburg and Lake Ladoga, (328)
*Schemes in Europe, 364
*Single-phase, 573, 619
*Sondrio-Colico-Chiavenna, (280)
*Third Rails for, 552 lube Schemes, Collapse of Rival, 399
*United States, (303)
*United States. Washington, Baltimore, Anna¬polis, (355), (454)
'''Railways, Foreign:
*Africa, Congo Free State, Progress of Work, (233)
*Dahomey, West, (328)
*French Guinea, Line to Connect Conakry with the Niger, (184)
*German East, Usambara Line, (303)
*Gold Coast, Coomassie Extension, (514)
*Tam's, Mileage and Gauge, (544)
*American, Brazil, Great Western of, Lighting Stations with Alcohol, (137)
*Cuba, Sinta Clara to Santiago da Cuba, (565)
*Mexican Central, Hidalgo, North Extension, (11)
*Coahuila and Pacific, (233)
*Eiperatzi and Vera Cruz to be Worked by Elec¬tricity, (137)
*Four Lines Entering Vera Cruz, (111)
*National, Change of Gauge, (61). (443) (565)
*National and Central, Rivalry between, (61)
*Projected Line between Minaca and Temosacbic, (61)
*Viesca and Mazapil, (328)
*Tehuantepec, 238
*New Mileage, 89
*Oil Pipe Lines, (151)
*Pacific Coast, Costa Rica from San Joié to the, (496)
*Pacific Coast, Oil as Locomotive Fuel, Huge Oil Storage Tanks, (496)
*Peru, Guaqui to La Paz, (35); Pro¬jected Line to the Amazon Basin, (-35)
*Report on the Working of, Lieut - Col. W. V. Constable, 195, 220, 242, 287, 335, 357, 379, 404, 428, 529, 551
*Uruguay, Mileage of Lines, (61)
*Venezuelan, Maracaibo to Pesiji, (137)
*see also United States Austrian, Total Mileage, (233)
*Belgian State, Length of, (328)
*Borneo, New Line, (162)
*Chinese, (178)
*Corea, Seoul to FusaD, Broad Gauge, (211)
*Eastern, Cholera Panic on, (192)
*The Eastern, Closing of the Eastern Asiatic Coasting Trade to Non¬ Russian Vessels, (519)
*The Eastern, Effect on the Trade of Manchuria, (35)
*Eastern, Passenger Traffic on, (301)
*The Eastern to be Subsidised by Russia, (11)
*Eastern Railway, Through Passenger Tickets to be Issued, (395), (469)
*Eastern, Through Service between Dalny and Railway Systems of Russia and Europe, (395)
*Formosa, Mileage, (185)
*Formosa, Gauge and Cost of Con¬struction, (211); South Formosa Completed, (211)
*Manchurian, Accelerated Service, (35); Unsatisfactory Condition of, a Sur¬prise to M. Witte, 540 The Shantung, 282
*Yokohama and Hachioji, Projected Line, (233)
*France, Northern of, Loss caused by the Coal Strike, (614); Its Engines to Run to Liège, (614)
*France, Paris, Lyons, and Mediterranean Ex¬tension to Chamonix, (176)
*France-Italian Line. Projected, 447
*French, Dahomey, (233)
*French, The Orleans, in Paris, Electric Haulage on, (162)
*French, Paris-Lyons-Mediterranean, Doubling Portion of the Line, (162)
*German, Berlin Elevated and Underground, Traffic on, (395)
*Elberfeld Suspension, 385, 413, 435, 441, 448
*Electric Lighting on, (11)
*Loeschwitz, Suspended Rope, 413, 435,
*Prussian State, Extensions and Costof, (187)
*Prussian State, Lines to be Purchased oy, (395)
*Prussian State, Reduction of Fares, (162)
*Shantung, The, 282
*Italian, Projected New Line to Turin, (137)
*Japanese, (185)
*Japanese, Completion of the San-yo Line, (137)
*Japanese State, Passenger Fares Raised, (129)
*Malay States, Federated, Extemion Mileage (303)
*Persia, 89
*Russian, (376), 400, (427)
*Alexandropol to Erivan, (589)
*Russo-American. A, 143
*Russian, Amur Railway, Construction of, 168
*Astrakhan Branch of the Ural Rail¬way, (35)
*Circular Liue Round Moscow, (185)
*Crimean Line Proposed, (565)
*Direct Service between Moscow and Port Arthur, (185)
*Experiments with Acetylene Lighting on,(185)
*Finnish State, (111)
*Foreign and Russian Locomotives Running on, (257)
*in the bands of Private Companies and others, Number of Employés on, (11)
*Mileage in Operation, (372)
*Moscow andKieff, Shortening of Line, (233)
*Nicolas, Memorial Chapel to Mark its Fiftieth Anniversary, (519)
*Orenburg-Tasbkend, (185), (303)
*Poli-h, Kalisch-Lodz, (328)
*Project for Connection with Finland by Raiway Bridge over the Neva, (185)
*Projected Lines, 162, 257, 280, (565)
*St. Petersburg to Petrozavodsk, (137)
*St. Petersburg and Warsaw, Locomo¬tives on,(565)
*Siberia, Branch Line from Omsk to Trumen, (61)
*Siberian, Heavier Permanent Way for, (185)
*S;betian Postal Service from Tientsin to Liverpool, (355)
*Siberian, Project to Connect with the System of European Russia, (544)
*Siberian, Report of the International Sleeping Car Company at the Paris Conference, (469)
*Siberian, Robbery on, (152)
*South-Western, Through Service from Warsaw to Odessa, (257)
*Tomsk to Tasbkend, English and Russian Syndicate, (111). (185)
*Warsaw and Kalish Line, (35)
*Spain, Barcelona Extension, (111)
*Guatemala City, El Rancho to, (137)
*Guatemala, Lines Injured by Floods, (185)
*Guatemala, Los Altos and Los Cocales Lines, (162)
*Vasco Castellano from Madrid to Bilbao, (395)
*Sweden, Boras to Alvesta, (420)
*Electrification of Government Lines, (544)
*Opening of a New Line, (229)
*The Osoten Line, (280)
*Swiss, Jungfrau, Death of Guyer-Zeller, the Proprietor of, (496)
*Swiss, Simplon, 4, 101, 177, 186, 204, 205, 411, 414, 418, 606
*Turkey, Beiruth-Damascus, High Rates for Goods, (61)
*Black Sea Directly to Poti, (544)
*Hedjaz Line from Damascus to Mecca, (61)
*United States, Atchison Railway System, Heavy Earthworks, (210)
*Baltimore and Ohio, Changes in the Character of the Road Projected, (280)
*Burlington, Wheels in Service on, (35)
*Chicago, Garfield Park Line, Clever Piece of Engineering on, (162)
*Chicago and North-Western, Des Moines Steel Viaduct, 392
*Grand Trunk, Doubling the, (210)
*Great Northern, Average Train Loads, (519)
*Lake Shore and Michigan Southern, Fast Run on, (614)
*Manhattan, Traffic on, (257)
*Mileage, and when Built, (61), (469)
*Missouri Pacific, Railway Car¬riage and Locomotive Works, (94)
*New Lines Projected, (162)
*New York Centra), Efforts to Secure a Shorter Entrance into Pittsburg, (172)
*New York Centra), Fast Run of the Twentieth Century Limited,” (61)
*New York, Ontario, and Wes¬tern Railway, Double Track¬ing of, (247)
*Panama, 343
*Pennsylvanian, Engineering Feat at New Brunswick, 162
*Pennsylvanian, Fast Runs, (61), (111)
*Pennsylvania, Masonry Bridges
*United States, Pennsylvanian, New Train Yard, (85)
*Pennsylvania, Rebates on Fares for Lateness of Trains, (61), (518)
*Pennsylvania, Tonnage of Rails Ordered for 1903, (111)
*Pennsylvania, Wages Advance, (565)
*Pennsylvanian, will Enter New York by the Hudson River Tunnel, (172)
*Pittsburg to Lake Erie, (496)
*Pittsburg, Niles, and Western, (483)
*Statistics of, 493 Western and South-Western Extensions, (554)
'''Railways, Light:
*Aberystwyth to Devil’s Bridge, (496)
*Ashley to Burton, (519)
*Belgium, (420)
*Claverton and Camerton, North Somerset, (35)
*France, Hondschoote and Bray-Dunes, Ac., in Morbiban, (85)
*France, Retouremer and the Schlocht, (85)
*France, Royat-les-Bains and Puy-de-Dume, (61)
*Gloucester, Applications for, (35)
*Great Centra), Grimsby, Stallingborougb, Coates, and Immingham, (544)
*Harrow, (443)
*High Peak District, Macclesfield to Buxton, (544)
*Holland, (420)
*Horndean (iii., viii., Supplement, December 12th, 1902)
*Leighton Buzzard, Harlington, and Hitchin, (372)
*Middleton, (565)
*Orders Confirmed by Board of Trade, (35), (372), (519), (565)
*Orders, Decrease in Applications for, (11)
*Warrington to Northwich, (519)
*Wigan, Pemberton and Asbton-in-Makerficld (519)
*Worthing, (141)
'''Railway Locomotives:
*American Company, First Annual Report, (328)
*Construction, by an American Engi¬neer, 25, 128
*Design, Prof. Goss on the Possibilities of, (443)
*Failure of Serve Tubes in, (544)
*Locomotive Company, Atlantic Type of, Constructed for the Big Four Line, (469)
*Ancient, Hetton Railway, 57
*Baldwin Works, Capacity a Week, (469)
*Baldwin Works, Experiments with Oil as Loco¬motive Fuel, (496)
*Bearings, Alloy Used by the Prussian Shops for, (85)
*Belfort Works, 4, 54, 103, 105
*Benzine, Used in a Mine, (211)
*Bogie Express, Five New, for the South-Eastern and Chatham, (290)
*Boilers for, F. H. Cridland’s Latter, 68
*Boiler with Cylindrical Fire-box, Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway, Mr. H. A. Hoy (Supplement, August 15th, 1902), 165
*B ston and Maine Railway Company, Fifty Locomotives Changed to Burn Coke, (211)
*British, for Canada, (360), (477)
*Building, United States, (196)
*Coal, 57
*Coke Burning, in America, (211)
*Compound, Its Future in America, (355)
*Compound, Norwegian State, 391, 396
*Compressed Air, Simplon Tunnel Works, 299
*Condemned in East India, (469)
*Consolidation, Norwegian State, 525
*Consolidation, with Large Boilers, for the Norwegian State Railways, Winterthur, (614)
*Construction of a First-dais French, 4, 54 103 105
*Cylindrical Furnaces for, 320
*Driving, 373
*Eight-coupled, Lancashire and Yorkshire Rail- 19O2’)M165F’ A' H°y ^SujlPlr"‘ent’ A u9u,t 15M< Eight-wheel Coupled, on the North-Eastern. (429), (430)
*Electric Headlight for, (328)
*Electric, The Two Largest in the World, (233)
*English and American, Sir Alf. Hickman on, (456)
*Express Compound, Austrian State Railways, Herr Karl Gölsdorf, 253, 258
*Express, Great Central Railway, Mr. J. G. Robinson (Supplement, July 4th, 1902), 20 Footplate, On the, 373
*Four-cylinder Compound Mineral, London and North-Western Railway, Mr. F. W. Webb 62, 66
*Four-cylinder Petrol, Ordered by the North- Eastern Railway Company, (455)
*Four-wheeled Coupled Passenger, Midland Great Western Railway of Ireland. Mr. E Cusack, 76, 77, 79
*French, Construction of a First-class, 4, 54,103 105
*Geared, Weighing Nearly 180 Tons, Built for the El Paso and Rock Island Railway, (61)
*German Import and Export of, (85)
*Goods, Cape Government Railways, Neilson. Reid and Co., 231, 232
*Goods, Eight-coupled Heavy, Lancashire and Yorkshire, Messrs. J. A. F. Aspinall and H. A. Hoy, 112, 120
*Goods and Tank, for the East Indian, (11)
*Goods, for India, 187, 219, 237, 235, 311, 421 442, (553) ’ ’
*Kobe Workshops, Cost of Eight and Six¬wheeled Coupled Tender and Tank, (544)
*Large Geared, of the Shay Type, (148)
*London and North-Western, “Charles Dickens” Completes its Two-millionth Mile, (211), 218
*Loidonand North-Western, “Charles Dickens,” the American Engineering News on its Performance, (355)
*Narrow-gauge Goods, Cape Government Rail¬ways, Mr. H. Beatty, (Supplements, September 5th and 19th, 1902), 283
*Narrow-gauge, Unusually Large, Mexican Southern,(162)
*New York Central, Naw Tandem Compound, Work Dane by, (211)
*North-Eastern, (602)
*Northern Pacific, Twenty-cm 11 Battleship,” (536)
*Oil Burning, North-Eastern Railway Company, (395), (406), (443)
*Oil Burning, on the South Pacific, (519)
*Oil Burning, Texas, (395)
*Oldest Working, in the World, 57
*Orders for, Placed with Borsig, for India, 65
*Order, the Largest Single ever Given out for, Placed by the Baltimore and Ohio Railway with an American Company, (61)
*Orders for Twelve, Placed by the Graat Southern and Western of Ireland with an English Firm on account of Strike, (85)
*Piston Valves for, 167, 169
*Russian and Foreign-built, Running on Russian Railways, (257)
*St. Petersburg and Warsaw Line, (565)
*Sbay Gaared, United States, (266)
*Shops, Electric Power in, (196)
*Shop, Largo, United States, 621
*Single, 616
*Six-coupled Tank, Wraxham, Mold, and Connah’s Quay, Mr. F. Willans (Suppl inent, November 21rf, 1902), 495
*Six-coupled Twelve-wheeled American, (266)
*for South Africa, Messrs. Neilson, Reid and Co., (553)
*Suburban, 398
*Tank, for the Llanelly and Mynydd Mawr Railway, Avonside Engine Company, 32’, 327
*Tank, Six-coupled (The Donderland), for Norway, Messrs. Kerr, Stuart and Co., Limited (Supplement, October 31st, 1902), 416, 419, 442
*Types, Scientific Classification of, 331
*United States, Increase of, Freight Carried and Ton Mileage between 1897 and 1901, (550)
*United States, New Works and Capital In¬vested, (266) (280)
*United States, Traction Engines and, (454)
*Valve Gaar of, John Riekie’s Letter on, 68
*Vienna Workshops Reduction in the Number of Employés, (544)
*Water Arch in the Fire-box of, Experiments with, (372)
*Wheels, Crescent-shaped Balances of, 619
*Works, American, (148)
'''Railway News, Various:
*Acetylene Lighting of Railway Stations, London, Brighton and South Coast, and London and South-Western, (211)
*Aerial Railway for Transport of Ore, in South America, (137)
*Africa, Lake Kisale towards Rhodesian, Capt. Jacques Charged with Survey of Frontier, (420)
*Africa, West, Construction in, (417)
*Amalgamated Society of Railway Servants, Decrease in Number of Members, (11) ; Annual Congress of Delegates, (355); Mem¬bership of, (614)
*Amalgamation of Belfast and Northern Counties with the Midland Company, (333), (355)
*Amalgamations under Discussion, (316)
*American Methods of Train Working, Mr. Wilson Worsdell on, (531)
*American Railway Managers in England, “The Boot on the other Leg,” (582)
*American, Report on the Working of, Lieut- Col. W. V. Constable, 195, 220, 242, 287, 335, 357, 379, 404, 428, 480, 551
*Australia, A New Route to, by Stafford Ran¬some, 180
*Australian, Railway Commissioners Appointed for Seven Years, (395)
*Austrian Locomotive Engineers’ Union, (589)
*Automatic Couplings, Controversy as to the Use of, (420)
*Auto-cars, North-Eastern Railway Company, (443), (469), (481)
*Automatic Porterage of Luggage, Orleans Rail¬way Station, Paris, (519)
*Automatic Railway Coupling, Mr. A. T. Swaine on a New, (622)
*Automobile Riilway Communication, Paris,
*Birmiogham to London in One Hour Fifty-five Minutes, by Chas. Rous-Marten, 142
*British and French Train Services, by Chas. Rous-Marten, 181. 201, 459, 538, 561
*Chinese Imperial Railway Board, Mr. E Cousins Appointed Representative of the Bondholders, (395)
*Chislehurst Tunnels, (443)
*Club, (524)
*Club, The, Visit to the Guildford Running Sheds, (210)
*Coal Charges Reduced by the Great Central and North-Eastern, (221)
*Companies and Owners’ Risk, 309, 333
*Construction in West Africa, (417)
*Crewe, Reception at, of Lieut. Davenport and Crewe Men from South Africa, (137)
*Derailments of Trains, 241, 310
*Dust Laying with Oil on, (233)
*Dust Laying with Rock O.l on Paris Suburban Lines, (162)
*Economy, 213
*Electric Headlight for Locomotives, (328)
*Engineering, Clever Bit of, on a Chicago Line, (162)
*Engineering Feat at New Brunswick, (162)
*Escalator ” in New York, (395)
*Express Parcel Service on the Metropolitan District Riilway, (372)
*Express Suisse, A New “ Train de Luxe," Ostend to Coire, (85)
*Ferries, Cross-Channel Triin, Deputation to Investigate, (496)
*Fog Signalling, (153), 310
*Forged Passenger Tickets for Use on the Trans- Caucasus Railway, (519)
*French Railway Companies, Six Principal, Length of Line Worked in 1900 by, (85)
*German, I’aEsenger Traffic on, (316)
*German Railway Crossings, Negligence on the Part of the Women Tending the, (614)
*German Railways, Electric Lighting Experiments, (11)
*Gilman, Mr. Chas. C., Death of, (137)
*Gooday, Lieut.-Col. F. S., Appointment of, by the Secretary of War, (137)
*Goods Station Work on the Piecework Principle at Cologne, (372)
*Great Western. Prize Offered by Sir J. Wilkin¬son for an Essay on the Wagon Problem, (496)
*Great Western, Widening of Lines and Station Improvements, (221)
*Hudson and Manhattan Railway Company to Build a Tunnel in Jersey City, (395)
*India, Classified List of Locomotive and Carriage Officers in, (280)
*London and India Dock Company and the Rail¬way Companies' Mutual Concessions in the Interests of Heavy Traffic, (415)
*London and North-Western, Station Improve¬ments, (221)
*Louisville and Nashville Car Shops, Reconstruc¬tion of, (233)
*Malay States, Penang to Singapore, 181
*Moving Stairway in New York, (395)
*New York Central and River Hudson Railway, Fast Run on, (137)
*North-Eastern, Carriage Compartments with Cine Armchairs, (519); Old Age Pensions Scheme, (519)
*North-Eastern, New Electric “Hall” Signalling System, (233)
*North London, Passenger Traffic and Receipts and Expenses on, (162)
*Oil for Laying Dust on, Use of, (233)
*Oil Fuel for Locomotives, Experiments with, (3P5), (443)
*Oil Fuel, Locomotives Burning, ia Texas, (395); Value of, as Compared with .Coal, Formula Giving, (496)
*Oil Fuel for Locomotives, Southern Pacific Railway, (496); Huge Storage Tanks, (496)
*Old Age Pension Scheme, North-Eastern Rail¬way, (519)
*Owners’ R'sk, The Railway Companies and, 309
*Paris Municipal Metropolitan, (61)
*Passenger Traffic Returns for 1838 and 1900, (85)
*Pennsylvania Railway, Advance in Freight Rates, (589)
*Petrol, The Railway Companies and the Car¬riage of, (420), 423
*Premiums Granted to Trainmen in Belgium for Punctual Arrival, (372)
*Prussia, Proposed Abolition of Fourth Classes, (589)
*Railway Club, Visit to the St. Albans Running Shed, (111)
*Extension from Serembam to Kuala Gemas, 181
*Mail Service, Annual Report of, (589)
*Management, 591
*Rates, The Question of, 220, (266)
*Railwaymen's Congress, Financial Affairs of, (372)
*Railways and Traders, (415)
*Rates Campaign, The, 220, (266)
*Rebates on the Fares, System of, when Trains aro Late, (519)
*Rope Incline Railway, United States of America, (622)
*Russia, Honeymoon Cars, (589)
*Russia's Protest against the Anglo-Chinese Railway Agreement to be Withdrawn, (61)
*Russian Railways, Number of Employés on, (11)
*Russian Railway Orders, 400
*Russian Railway Schools, (519)
*Salisbury Station, The New, (376)
*Signalling, Automatic and Power, London and South-Western Railway. (233) in Belgium, Adoption of the Up¬wardly-inclined Semaphore Arm, (395)
*Block, American. 596 by Electricity, 501
*Fog, (153), 310
*The “Hall" Electric System, North-Eastern Railway, (233)
*Pneumatic, on the London and South-Western, 598
*Simplon Tunnel, The, 4, 101,177, 186,204, 205, 411, 414, 418
*Snow Ploughs for Russian State Railways, - (372)
*South-Eastern, Issue of New Capita), (614)
*Steel Viaduct, The Des Moines, United States, 392
*Suburban Traffic, 113
*Swindon Works, The Newt Supplements, October 3rd and Ylth, 1902), 325
*Switchback Centrifugal Railway, Inventor of the, Sir W. H. Bailey on, (487)
*Taff  Vale Case, The. 615
*Telephoning, (35), 148
*Tientsin to Liverpool by the Trans-Siberian, Time taken by Letters from, (355)
*Total Length of, Open for Traffic in Europe on January 1st, 1902 and 1901, (614)
*Train Telephones, United States, (35)
*Tube Schemes, Collapse of Rival, 399
*Tunnels, Cbislehurst, (443)
*Tunnel from Cray Reservoir in connection with Swansea Waterworks, (496)
*Tunnel in Jersey City to Connect Two Termini, (395)
*United Kingdom, Traffic, Receipts, Mileage, 1901, (183)
*United States, Another Huge Railway Com¬bination in, (280)
*United States, Comparisons in Railroad Equip¬ments of Cars and Locomotives between 1897 and 1901, (550)
*United States Railways, Statistics of, 493
*Wages, Scale of, and Hours of Work on the Caledonian and North British Systems, (420)
*Washouts on the Cape Government Railways, 378
*Water Arch in Fire - box of Locomotive, Experiments on the Montana Central with, (372)
*Wireless Telegraphy on the Grand Trunk Rail¬way, Experiments with, (420)
*Wood Fuel on Rarsian Lines to be Discontinued in favour of Coal, (420)
*Wood Fuel on United States Lines, Locomotives Changed to Burn, (420)
*Woredell, Mr. H. Appointment of, (137)
*Yorke, Col. H. A., Sent by Board of Trade to America to Report on Working of Lines, (211)
'''Railways, Permanent Way:
*Pile Drivers, U.S.A., (622)
*Proposed Rail Convention, Germany, England, and Belgium, (191)
*Quick Renewal of, 363
*Repair of, 214
*Steel, for American Railways, (469)
*Steel Rails for Wagon Roads, American, (46)
*Steel, Victorian Government ask for Tenders for, (85)
'''Railways, Rolling Stock:
*Additional, for the East Indian Railway, (11)
*American, for the Monongahela Connecting Railway, (199)
*American Railway Carriage and Wagon Works, (210)
*Autocar Trains on the North-Eastern, 620
*Central South African, Order placed in England for, (280)
*Dining Cars to hold Thirty-six People, Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul Railway, (233)
*Great Northern, New Breakfast and Lunoheon Cars, (589)
*Indian, East Bengal State, Orders for, (336)
*Lancashire and Yorkshire, Wagons to Carry 30 Tons, (395)
*Mansell Railway Wheels, “Boardite” for the Centres, (455)
*New, Great Western Railway of Ireland, 76, 77. 79
*North-Eastern, New Form of Compartment, furnished with Cane Armchairs, (519)
*Prussian State Contracts, (614)
*Royal Train (Supplement, December 26th, 1902), i (589), 612
*Russia, Honeymoon Cars, (589)
*St. Petersburg and Warsaw, Non-inflammable, to be Fired at Eydtkiihnen, (565)
*Siberian Railway, (372)
*Sleeping Car, Rhodesian Railway Company, 108
*South Africa, Government Orders for, (544), (553)
*Brake Levers on both Sides of Wagons, Pro¬posed Rule with respect to (469)
*Sudan Railway, 208, 209
*United States, Increase of Passenger and Freight Cars between 1897 and 1901, (550)
*Wagons, Cattle or Sheep, Mr. W. Theodore
*Lucy, Argentine Railways, 401, 402 Goods, to Carry 30 Tons, Lancashire and Yorkshire, (395) High-capacity Bogie, Midland Rail¬way, Leeds Forge Company, 31, 499
*Pressed Steel, The American Car and Foundry Company, (97)
*Problem, Prize Offered by Sir J. Wilkinson for the best Essay on, (496)
*Question, The, 235, 266
*Tank, with Interchangeable Axles, for Transport of Russian Naphtha, (496)
*32-Ton Hrpper, New South Wales Government Railways, (505)
*Wheels, Boardite, (455), 501
*Wheel Centres, Manufacturedin Boardite, (455)
*RAINFALL, British Central African Protectorate, (162)
*near Darjeeling, Terrific, (420)
*June, (11)
*August, Less than Supposed, (303)
*during November, (614)
*at Hampton, (280)
*at Surat, (185)
*Rates, Revolt against Rising, (378)
*Reavell Air Compressor, The, 182
*Refrigerating Installations on the Cedric, (355)
*Refuse at the Destructors, Value and Use made of, (469)
*Destructor, Gloucester, (345)
*Mr. W. F. Goodrich on, (469)
*with Offices, Wolverhampton, Proposed, (395)
*Plant at Walker-on-Tyne, (565)
*Ra-beaters, 139, 194, 241, 285
*Rendel, Mr. Hamilton, 307
*Resistance of Immersed Bodies, C. C. Mason, 573
*Rice-cleaning Plant, Want of a, (10)
*Richardson, Mr. Joseph, (337)
*Rifle Attachment Worked by Compressed Air, (162)
*R-fle Clubs, Lieut.-General F. Lance on Miniature, (395)
*Rifle, New Magazine, 493
*Rivers, Pollution of, 369
*Rivers Pollution, Belgian Royal Commission on, 493
*Riveting Machine, Grip, Allen Pneumatic Machine Company, 596
*Road Maintenance and Road Maintenance Effi¬ciency, Cost of, W. Worby Beaumont, 386
*Roberts-Austen, Sir Wm. Chandler, 514
*Robinson, Prof. Henry, Elected “Prof. Emeritus,” 114
*Rolling Black Plate, Machinery for, at Pittsburg, (211)
*Rooang Volcano, (211)
*Rope, Remarkable Coil of Inter-stranded Cotton¬driving, Wm. Kenyon and Sons, (420)
*Ropner, Col., Knighted, (482)
*Royal Agricultural Society’s Show :
*Annual Report of the Society, (589)
*Bale Opener, Richmond and Chandler (Ulus.), 30, 31
*Brick and Tile-making Machinery, Pallan and Mann, Swinney BroB., Limited, Mr. R. Scholefield, 31
*Dairy Implements, 31
*Date and Place of Show, 1903, Prizes, (589)
*Drill, Corn, Root Pulper, Mr. J. Murch, 30
*Drill, Swede and Mangold, Mr. Jas. Coultas, 30
*Engines, Steam, 31
*Harvesting Potatoes, Mr. Jas. Ball, 30
*Hydrolifter, H. P. Saunderson and Co., Limited, 31
*Members Elected, New, (542)
*Motor Vehicles, Heavy, Foden’s, Mann’s, and the Yorkshire Steam Motor Company’s, 30
*Oil Engines, R. Cundall and Sons, Limited, and the Robey-Saurer (Illus.), 30
*Royal Agricultural Society’s Show (ronh’n W€cZ) 5
*Seed Harrows, Ogle and Son, 30
*Swath Turner, Blackstone and Co., Limited, 30
*Well-sinking Frame, Hardy Patent Pick Com¬pany, Limited (Ilins.), 29, 30
*Wind Motors, 31
'''Royal Institution:
*Lecture Arrangements before Eister, (571)
*Lectures, Christmas, Prof. H. S. Hele-Shaw, («2)
*Monthly Meetings, (43), (451)
'''Royal Meteorological Society:
*Readings of Aneroid Barometers not Accepted by the Society from its Observers, (ill) Royal Naval Engineering College, Key ham, Control of, (85)
'''Royal Philosophical Society of Glas¬gow :
*Celebration of Centenary, (443)
'''Royal Society:
*Alloys of the Gold-Silver Series, by Sir W. C. B Roberts-Austen and Mr. T. K. Rose, (589)
*Royles’ Engineering Works, Irlam, 16, 17
*Russia’s Export Trade, Development of, (211)
*Russian Grain Export Returns, (257)
*Russian Metallurgical Trust, 493
*Russian Trade with the Persian Gulf, Subsidy to Develop, (61)
*Russian Workmen, Training of, 114
*Russo-Japanese Association, The Rumoured, (280)
*Ruston, Proctor and Co., Limited, Messrs., Annual Dinner, (570)
'''S
*SAFETY Lamps, Ark’s, (211)
*Salt Works, Sardinia, Improvements Effected in, (35)
*Samples Taken into Switzerland by German, French, and British Travellers, (565) Sand Blast Sharpened Files. 256
*Schapler Fire Escape, The, 81, 82
*Scboler Suction Dredge, Nicolaus, (257)
*Screw Gauges, International System of, Adopted , in the French Navy, (111)
*Screw Propulsion, 477
*Screw Pump, Mr. H. Jones, 142
*Seismographs, How the Records are Made in, (111)
*Separator, Fletcher’s Patent, (337)
*Sewage, Bacterial Treatment of, New Zealand, (454)
*Sewers, Concrete and Expanded Metal, Penn¬sylvania, (257)
*Sewerage System of London, Area and Population Served by, (469)
*Sewage Treatment, Natural and Artificial, 620
*Sewage Works, Manchester, 282
*Sheffield, Smoke Consumption Bye-laws, (35)
*Sheffield University College, New Building, Scheme, (211)
*Shipley Sewage Disposal, (15)
'''Shipping Accidents:
*Boating Accident on the Tyne, (85)
*Brighton Queen on the Rocks off Hasting’, (137)
*Collision off the Elbe, 119
*Destroyer Zephyr Aground, (525), 547
*French Submarine Le Francais, Explosion on Board, (257)
*Hamburg-American Company's S.S Deutsch¬land, Starboard Engine Disabled, (614)
*Hamburg - American Liner First Bismarck Breaks her Starboard Thrust Shaft, (211) H.M.S. Kent, (496)
*Rio de Janeiro, Diving Machine for Locating the Wreck of, (395)
*Statistical Summary of Vessels Totally Lost, Condemned, &o , during 1901, (303)
*Sultan, s s., German East Africa L:ne, 401
*Torpedo B oat Destroyer Fairy, (589)
'''Shipping News, Various, British and Foreign:
*Admiralty, Decision regarding Completion for Sea of Ships Built by Private Firms, (257)
*Order affecting the Torpedo Fleet, (355)
*Asks Private Shipbuilders to Ten¬der for New Class of Battleship, (395)
*Request for Shipwrights and Mechanics to Volunteer for Work at the Cape, (233) Scheme of Reforms, 567
*Scheme with regard to the Use of a Part of the Osborne Grounds, ’ (565)
*America Cup Challenge, The, 391
*Anchor, Stockless, The Largest, ever made, (395)
*Antwerp, Vessels Entering the Port of, during Nine Months of 1902, (372)
*A’suAu Dam and Assiout Weir (Supplement, December 19tl<, 1902), 558, 559, 563, 580
*Atlantic Passengers Landed at New York in , One Day, Largest Number, (233)
*Atlantic Steam Shipping Trade, 329
*Avonmoutb, Bristol, and Boston, U.S.A., Line of Steamers between, (328)
*British Battleships Painted Grey, 307
*British India Steam Navigation Co., Limited, Twin-screw s.s. Yamuna Launched on the Wear, (496)
*British, Sir John Glover’s Paper on the Tonnage Statistics for 1891-1900, 31
*Canada and South Africa, Steamship Service between, (395)
*Chili’s Attempts to Sell her Warships, 307 Clyde and the New Cunarders, The, 353 Conference at Ostend of German and British Representatives of Steamship Lines Running to the Plate, (303)
*Consolidation of Shipyards on the Great Lakes, Rumoured from Cleveland, (85)
*Canard Company and the Government. 325, 352, 353
*English Vessels Launched in June, (11)
*Enterprise, American, 38
*French Naval Manoeuvres, 41, 179
*French Navy, The, 471
*German Manoeuvres, Naval and Military Com¬bined, 261
*German Navy, The, (136)
*Germany, Shipping Supplied by Foreign Builders to, (872)
*Japan, (443)
*Japan, Naval Expansion Programme, (355)
*Japanese Shipping Subsidies, 15
*Khaki Discarded for German Torpedo Craft. 525
*Lingham Timber and Trading Company’s Line of Steamers, (443)
*Liquid Fuel for Steamships, 104, 140
*Liquid Fuel for Warships, 472, 476, 486, 549
*Liquid Fuel for Yachts, (376)
*Manchester and Boston, Establishment of a Regular Service between, (372), (496)
*Marseilles a Port of Call for Thirty-six Shipping Companies, (111)
*Mediterranean and Channel Fleet Manoeuvres, 261
*Mexican Gulf Ports and Delagoa Bay, Service between, (443)
*Naval Engineers, 144, 311
*Naval Review, Photographs of, 261; Special Trains to Southampton, 183
*Naval War Game Soc , Portsmouth, Remark¬able Action in the Naval War Game, 400 Navigation Congress, The Ninth International, 6, 40, 52, 80, 103, 129
*Navy, Stokers for the, (565), (614)
*Normand, Mr. J. A., on the Strength of very Rapid Vessels, 326
*Ocean Carrying Trade between New York and Europe, Tonnage of the Largest Steamships Employed Thirty Years Ago and now in,
*Odessa and the Persian Gulf, Service of Boats between, (328)
*Official Returns of Shipping Supplied to Ger¬many, (372)
*Oil Fuel in the United States Navy, 472, 476
*Oil as Fuel in Warships, 472, 476, 486, 549
*Oldest Ship in the World, the Anita, Sold at Teneriffe, to be Broken up, (137)
*Portsmouth, Workmen and Wages, (565)
*Propeller Efficiency, (376)
*Propeller Shaft, Repairing a, 404
*Protection of Funnels in Warships, 43
*Refrigerating Installations on the Cedric, (355)
*Russian Visitors, Our, 525
*San Francisco and Hilo, Hawaii, Steam Service between, (35)
*Screw Propellers, The Admiralty’s Instructions with regard to Testing Efficiency of, 305
*Seamen Employed on Sea-going Vessels, Par¬liamentary Roturn, (344)
*Shipping Subsidies, 193
*South African Service, Organisation of a Special. (395), (443), (496)
*Speed of Canal Steamers, (189)
*Speed Record, American, (303)
*Steamship Propulsion, 194
*Steering Gear ? 144
*Strength of Very Rapid Vessels, M. J. A. Nor¬mand on the, 326
*Submarine Warfare, 329
*Submarines, “Handy Ones,”on British, daring the Recent Trials, (233)
*Tonnage of Vessels Entered at Ports in the United Kingdom, (185), (233)
*Tonnage of Vessels using New South Wales Ports, 1901, (233)
*Trade of Newport, (256)
*United States Fleet Mamcuvres Projected for Next Winter, (185)
*Navy Estimates, (395)
*Navy, Oil Fuel Tests, Unofficial Data, (303)
*Policy with regard to Relative Importance of Battery Power and Speed, (496)
*War Uses of Fast Merchantmen, The, 352, 353
''Ships:
'''Battleships, British:
*Ajax to be Sold, (233), 237 Albemarle, Cost of the, (372)
*to be Prepared for her Steam Trials, (519)
*Ready for Trial, 547
*Belleisle, Experimental Hatchway and Screen on, 65
*Gunnery Experiments with, (61), 133, 135, 138
*Programme for Next Experi¬ments, 307
*Steering Gear, 194
*Belloropbon, (469)
*Canopus, Trouble with hor Belleville Boilers, 376, 561
*Centurion, 65, 394
*Dominion, Progress of, (21)
*Duncan, (426)
*Eight New, Cost of the, (372)
*Exmoutb, (358), 547
*Good Hope, The, (353) (525)
*Hood, (443), (469), (565)
*Howe to be Re-fitted at Jarrow-on-Tyne, (137)
*Decision respecting, (614)
*Inflexible, Glatton, and Neptune Re¬moved from tho Effective List, (286)
*King Edward V1L, Armour for, (221)
*Launch of, 325 Material Worked into Hull of, (280)
*Time of Completion for Sea, (372)
*Majestic, (588) Maori, 325
*Mars, Her Boilers to be Adapted to Liquid Fuel, (372)
*Montague, Speed Trials, (283), (358), 547
*New Zealand, 825
*Royal Sovereign, 65
*Russell, (496)
'''Ships
'''Battleships, Foreign
*American, Eight New, 160, (185)
*Austrian, Babenberg, 237, 325, 353, 444, 447
*Chilian, (21), 65, (162), 307
*French, Charles Marte), 261
*Bépnblique, (233), 237 255, 259
*Suffren, 237, 261
*German, Braunschweig, 594, 610, (614)
*Five of the H Class, 237
*Kaiser Friedrich III., 15
*Wettin, 451
*Wittelsbach, 610
*Wittelsbach Class, 237
*Zachringen, 83, 86
*Greek, Psara, 261
*Japan, Four New, (353)
*Portuguese, Vasco di Gama, 451
*Russian, Alexander II., 547
*Nikolai I., 307
*Oleg, First Keel Plate Laid, (85)
*Orel, Launched, (85)
*Osliabia, 525
*Plawa, (443)
*I’obieda, 15, 525
*Swedish, of the Aera Type, Projected, Turkish, Contract with the Ansaldo Shipbuilding Yard at Genoa for Im¬provement of, (111)
*United States, Connecticut, Electric Equipment of, 207, 212, 325, (496), (614)
*Eight New, 160,(185) Illinois, 15
*Louisiana, 207, 212, 325, 451
*Louisiana Type, Pro¬jected, 525
*Maine, Speed Trials, (211), 261, (280)
'''Cruisers. British:
*Achilles, HerName Changed to Hibernia. 394
*Amethyst, (496), 547 Antrim, Armour for, (221) Arethusa, 499
*Aurora, to be Re-fitted at John Brown and Co.’s Works, (137)
*Barham, (426)
*Bedford, Steam Trials, (II); to be Fitted with Larger Propellers, (137), 142; Fitting for Liquid Fuel, 547
*Berwick, Launch of, 302, (303)
*Bonaventure, (544)
*Challenger, 286, 353
*Cornwall Launched, (420)
*Cumberland, 588, (589)
*Donegal, Launch of, 261
*Drake, Speed Trial, 325, (328)
*Drake Class, Four Mighty "Armoured.'' of the, (290)
*Duke of Edinburgh Class, A New, 547,
*Duke of Edinburgh Class, New Cruiser of, (443); Mr. Watte, 498
*Eleven New, Cost of the, (372), (443)
*Encounter, 286, 353
*Euryalus, 501
*First and Third-class, Ordered by the Admiralty, (544)
*Flora, 499
*Galatea, (610)
*Hyacinth, Competitive Trials with the Minerva, (469), (547); Leaky Feed Pumps, (211)
*Inconstant, Project for Converting her into a Permanent Training Ship. (565)
*Intrepid, (426), 353
*Kent, (589)
*King Alfred, Speed Trials, (358)
*Medusa, 353
*Minerva, Propellers of, (211)
*Niobo, (544)
*Phreton, 499
*Scout Class of Small, 499
*Spartiate, Steam Trials, (61)
*Subsidised Mercantile, 593
*Suffolk, (589)
*Terrible, Speed Trials, 194, 325
*Topaz, (496), 547
*Watts’ Class of, 499
'''Cruisers, Foreign:
*American, Vesuvius, 237
*Argentine, General Rica and Genera Mitra, Turkey Proposes Buying, 261
*Argentine, Rividavia, 451
*French, Chateau-Renault, Speed Trials (Hl)
*Jeanno d’Arc, 237
*Jurien de la Gravière, 476
*Kleber, 332, 334
*German, Arkona, (162)
*Frauenlob, (162) "J,” (162)
*Italian, Carlo Alberto, Wireless Telegraphy, (111), (496)
*Japan, Several New, (353)
*Japanese, Takassgo, 142
*Russian, Askold, 10, 12
*Aurora, 588 Bayan, (525)
*Bogatyr, 261, 525
*A New Fast, (185)
*Novik, (426), (525)
*Pamiat Azova, 325
*United States, Baltimore, (614)
*Desmoines, 325, (355);
*Galyeston, 325
*Tennessee and Washing¬ton (Supplement,Novem¬ber Uth, 1902), 468, (495)
*Vesuvius, (395)
'''Torpedo Craft, Destroyers, Gunboats, dec.
'''British :
*Scouts, Four Ordered, Their Names, (443), 588
*Scouts, Tenders Accepted by the Ad¬miralty for Construction of, (420)
*Sloop Merlin, Trials of, (469), (496)
*Submarines, Admiralty’s Experiments with, (303), (355)
*at Barrow, Experiments with, (85), 91
*Al, Trials of, (233)
*Nos. 1 and 3, 394
*No. 2, Trial of, (211), 215
*Hazard, 261
*Latona, 261, (588)
*Launch of the Sixth, Built by Vickers, Sons, and Maxim, (47)
*Painted Green, British, 237
*Periscopes Fitted to, 325, (355)
*Three More, (589)
*Torpedo Boat Destroyers, Fairy, (589)
*Wolf, Tests at Portsmouth, (565)
*Zephyr Aground, (525), 547
*Nine Now, (280), 376
*Nos. 109 and 110 Launched, (85), (257)
*Strength of, to be Tested at Portsmouth, (519)
*Structural Strength of, 164
*Surly, Experi¬ments with Liquid Fuel, 307
*Torpedo Boats to be Fitted with Water¬tube Boilers, 451
*Torpedo Fleet, Important Admiralty Order affecting the, (355)
*Torpedo Gunboat Circe, (15)
*Gossamer, 194, (358), (588)
*Niger, (358) Tarbine Destroyer Velox, 547
'''Torpedo Craft, Destroyers, Gunboats, &c.
'''Foreign:
*French Submarines, 329. 397
*Torpedo Boat, No. 84,
*Attached to the Ecole Navale, Brest, 476
*Torpedo Boat, No. 108, The “ Mystery” of the, (588), (610)
*German Point of View, Submarines from the, 502
*Submarine of the Holland Type, 261
*Torpedo Boats to be Painted Brown-grey Khaki, 91
*Mexico, Four Destroyers Ordered, 15
*Swedish Torpedo Boat Destroyer Mode Launched from Yarrow’s Works, (85), 108, 261
*United States Submarine Boats Adder and Mocassin Trials, (496), (519), 582
*United States Submarine Torpedo Boat Ihe Protector, New Type of, (544), 547,562
'''Mercantile, Passenger, and other. British :
*Atlantic Liners, The New, 325, 352’ 368
*Atlantic Liner City of Rome, Her Melan¬choly End, 415
*Bristol and South African Ports, Regular Steamship Service between, (496)
*Canada to South Africa, Monthly Service of Steamers, (239)
*Canadian Fast Mail Service between this Country and the Dominion, (111)
*Channel Steamers, High-speed, 433
*Cross - Channel Passenger Steamship Services, 230, 272, 279, (285)
*Cflnard Company and the Government, The, 325, 352, 368, (505)
*Liners, New, 136, 157, 473, 496, (505), (589), 592
*Liner Campania, (11), (395)
*Liner Carpatbia, 136
*Liner Ivernia, (233)
*Liner Lucania, (395)
*Denny and Brothers, Wm., Turbine Steamers for London, Brighton and South Coast and South-Eastern and Chatham Railways, (355)
*Duke of Connaught, John Brown and Co., Limited, for the Lancashire and Yorkshire and London and North- Western Railway Companies, (395)
*Ferry Steamers for Trains, Denmark, (496)
*Great Eastern Railway Company, Chan¬nel Steamers of the, 272, 279
*Lancashire and Yorkshire and London and North-Western Railway Com¬panies’ Fleet, (370), (381), (395)
*Lifeboats under Charge of the Royal National Lifeboat Institution, (443)
*Lyssgbts, Limited, Steamship Service between Bristol and South African Porte, (496)
*Manchester and Boston, Steamship Service between, (372), (496)
*Melville, Elder, Dempster Liner, Steam¬ship Service between Canada and South Africa, (395)
*Ontarian, Allan Brothers, Steamship Service between Canada and South Africa, (395)
*Pacific Steam Navigation Company, Launch of the Victoria for tbe, (150)
*Paddle Steamer, Lady Tyler, Engines or R. and E. Hawthorne, 272, 273, 279
*Passenger and Cargo Steamer for the Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway. (370)
*Prince Steamship Company, the Tudor Prince, the African Prince, and Two Others, for New York and South African Service, (614)
*Shallow Draught Steamer, Messrs. Yarrow and Co., 190
*Steamboat ? The First, 143
*Steam Tugs for Colombo Port, (11)
*Turbine Propulsion for Ships of Com¬merce, 164
*Steamer for London, Brighton, and South Coast, Wm. Denny and Brothers, (355)
*Steamer for South-Eastern and Chatham, Wm. Denny and Brothers, (355)
*Steam Yacht b, (420), 424
*Vickers, Sons and Maxim, Steamer for Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway, (370), (381)
*Yacht, Emerald Turbine Steam, A. Stephen and Sons, Limited, (420), 424
*Liquid Fuel for, (376), 476
*Shamrock IIL, Denny Brothers, 391, (395)
*Victoria and Albert, (395)
*Yamuna, for the British India Steam Navigation Company, Sir Jas. Laing, Limited, (496)
'''Mercantile, Passenger, and other. Foreign:
*American Liner SL Paul, (211)
*American Seven-masted Schooner, 612
*American Steam Yacht Arrow, Speed Record, (303)
*Austrian-Lloyd, Direct Line of Cargo Steamers, Trieste to Durban, (11)
*Danish Steamer, with Screw Placed Amidships, (565)
*French Steamer, 7000-Ton, for the Com¬pagnie Havraise, Soclété des Forges et Chantiers, (355)
*German Emperor's New Yacht, Meteor IIL, 172
*Hamburg-American Company’s Steam¬ship Deutschland Disabled, (614)
*Hamburg-American Liner Fiirst Bis¬marck, Breaks her Starboard Thrust Shaft, (211)
*Italian Company Project a Passenger and Cargo Service between Odessa and Naples, (137)
*Norddeutscher Lloyd Steamer, Grosser Kurlii ret, the Largest to GoTbroughtbe . Suez Canal, (420)
*Norddeutscber Lloyd Steamer Saale, Fate of the, (162)
*Russian Danube Steamship Company about to be Disbanded, (565)
*Russian Icebreaker Yermak to be Fitted with Stronger Screws, (11)
*Russian Icebreaker Yermak to be Enrolled as a Vessel of the Imperial Navy, (443)
*Scholer Suction Dredge, Tho, (257)
*Seven-masted Schoener Launched in Massachusetts, (85)
*United States Lake Survey, Catamarans foi^tbe, (185)
'''Shipbuilding, British and Colonial.
'''Naval and Mercantile:
*Aberdeen Line of Messrs. G. Thompson and Co., Two Large Steamers for, with the Aberdeen Clipper Bow, (150)
*Armstrong, Whitworth and Co., Government Work Secured, (553)
*Battleship Placed with Messrs. John Brown and Co., (315)
*Belfast, Record in its History, (443)
*Clydebank, Experimental Tank, Messrs. J,
*Brown and Co., Limited, (242)
*Clydebank Shipbuilding Firm, New Tanks for Ship Model Experiments, (585)
*Clyde, Nava), 549
*and the New Canardera, The, 353
*Six Months’, 15 ; Daring September (328), (338); During October, (443)
*Trust, New Works, 263
*Yards, Short Time in, (547)
*Continental Competition, (505)
*Depression of the Trade, (303). 315, (337), (481), (505), (553), (565), (601), (623)
*Dovonport Dockyard, Pressure of Work at. (137)
*Deckyard Repairs, 476
*Elswick and Walker Shipyards, Fifty Years’ Work at the, 620
*English, for Germany, (372)
*English, in June, August, September, October, November, (11), (233), (372), (469), (544)
*Interests of Canada, Protection of the, (469)
*Irvine Shipbuilding and Dry Docks Company, Orders Secured, (553)
*Lloyd's Register of, (85). (372)
*Naval, on the Clyde, 549
*Pacific Steam Navigation Company, Launch of the Victoria for, (150)
*Palmer Shipbuilding Company’s Works, Fire at, (85); Thirty-seventh Annual Report of the Directors, (315)
*Palmer Shipbuilding and Iron Company, Government Work on Hand, (553)
*Plate Dent Straightener, Mr. F. Wilson's, 67
*Pneumatic Tools in the Navy, 41
*Propeller Efficiency, (376)
*Scotch, during June, August, September, October, November, (11), (257), (372), (469), (544)
*Screw Propulsion, (476)
*Ships Built for the Navy by Private Firms, The Admiralty’s Decision respecting, (257)
*Slackness and Depression Greater than since 1886, (601), (623)
*Sunderland Yards, Unemployed in the, (565)
*United Kingdom on June 30th last, Warships and other, under Construction in, (85)
*Vickers, Sons and Maxim, Extensions to their Works at Barrow, (544)
*Warships and Machinery Building in England, _ Progress of, 606
*Yacht, Shamrock III., Denny Bros., 391, (395)
'''Shipbuilding, Naval and Mercantile,
'''Foreign:
*Barcelona, (85)
*Black Sea or the Azoff under Russian Manage¬ment with German Capital, (233)
*Emden, (372)
*Floating Machine Shop Built on a Scow, for Repairing Ships, (496)
*French Ship Design, The Genius of, 259
*French, Statistics of, (496)
*German on the Black Sea, under Russian Man- B agement, (233)
*German, The Financial Results of, 323
*Germania Shipyard at Kiel, Slackness of Work, „ (443)
*Italy, for Turkey, (111)
*Russian Navy, Foreigners and the, 188
*Russia, Scheme for the Payment of Bounties £ for, (290)
*United States, (46), (111), (185)
*Lake Survey Catamarans, under Construction for, by the Jenks Company, (185)
*New Trust, (185)
*New Works, (266)
*September Returns, (395)
*Warship, 545
*Vulcan Company, Stettin, Gift of Land at Cuxhaven to, (328)
*SUORT, Mr. Sidney Howe, 417
*Siberia, North, Expedition to Explore, in the Interests of Trade, (372)
*Sibley College, 467, 470
*Signalling, Fog, 18, 69, 95, 153
*Signals, Coast Fog, N. G. Gedge on, 18, 69, 95 ’
*Silver and Lead, Production o’, Queensland, 1901, (137)
*Simons, Mr. Wm., 417
*Simplon Tunnel and its Construction, 4. 101,177, 186, 204, 205, 411, 414, 418, (589), 607
*Sky-scraper Building, New York, Remarkable, (162)
*Slow-combustion Stoves and M. E. Zola’s Death, , (328)
*Smithfield Show, The, (544), 569
*Smoke Nuisance in Sheffield, (35)
*Smoke Prevention, Mr. J. S. Raworth, 302
*Smokeless Consumption of Bituminous Fuels, Mr. W. H. Booth on, 302 '
*Snow-plongb, New Kind of, (11)
'''Society of Arts:
*Atoms, Size of, Mr. H. O. Ridout, 522
*Fothergill Prize, (15), (606)
*Gas Lighting, Professor B. V. Lewes on the Future of, (589)
*Meetings, Papers, and Lectures before Christ¬mas, (482)
*Silver Medal, Papers for which it has been Awarded, (42)
'''Society, Bath and West and Southern Counties:
*Extension of Area, (443)
*Medals to be Offered for Driving Mowing and Reaping Machines by Mechanical Power, (443)
*Meeting of the Show Dates Committee, (96)
'''Society, Boilermakers*:
*Monthly Report—Trade Outlook not so Bad, (589)
'''Society, Civil and Mechanical En¬gineers’:
*Coast Fog Signals, N. G. Gedye, 18
'''Society, Crystal Palace Engineering:
*Wilson Premium Awarded to C. S. Dowell, (624)
'''Society, East London Technical Col¬lege Engineering:
*Protection of Bail dings from Fire, Mr. G. PriDgle, (540)
'''Society, Edinburgh Students’ Engi¬neering:
*American Notes, Principal Laurie, (493)
'''Society of Engineers:
*Conversazione, 549
*Forty-eighth Annual General Meeting, Mr. P. Griffiths in the Chair, 570
*Hennebique System of Ferro-concrete Con¬struction, M. Augustus de Rohan Galbraith, (355)
'''Society of Engineers, The Amalgamated :
*Commission Sent by Mr. Mosely to the United States, (405)
*Drastic Action of the Executive, (355)
*Latter from Mr. Geo. N. Barnes, 523
*Provisional Agreement with the Engineering Employers’ Federation, 280, 289
*Trade Union Candidates on behalf of the Society to Contest Seats in Parliament, (395)
'''Society, Glasgow Technical College Scientific:
*Potentiometer, Mr. J. W. Peck, (554)
'''Society, Glasgow University Engineering:
*Annual Dinner, (620)
*Bridge Construction, Modern Practice in, Mr. J. R. Orr on, 515
*Opening Meeting, Dr. Caird’s Address, (460)
*Transmission of Power to the Interior of Mites, Mr. T. L. Galloway, (569)
'''Society, King’s College Engineering:
*Annual Dinner, (561)
'''Society, Liverpool Engineering:
*Date of Dinner, (622)
'''Society, Manchester Geological:
*Coal-cutting by Machinery, Mr. A. Dury Mitton, (575)
'''Society, Manchester Literary and Philosophical
*Switchback Centrifugal Railway, Inventor of the, Sir W. H. Bailey on, (487)
'''Society of Model Engineers:
*Visit to the Rigby Works of Messrs. Willans and Robinson, Limited, (98)
'''Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders:
*255
'''Society, Physical:
*Atoms, Size of, Mr. H. 0. Ridout, 522
'''Society of Railway Servants, The Amalgamated:
*Annual Meeting of Delegates and Mr. R. Bell’s r Report, (355)
*Decrease in Number of Members, (11)
'''Society, Yorkshire College Engineer¬ing:
*Diesel Oil Engine, H. Ade Clark, 585
*t Engineering in Canada and the United States, Prof. Goodman, (404)
*.Engines for Motor Cars, Internal Combustion, Mr. F. G. Heseldio, (541)
*B Metallic Packing, Mr. A. McSwiney, (502)
*Traverse Surveying, Some Considerations on Prof. Thompson, (451)
*SOUTH AFRICA, Cycles for, 45
*from an Engineer’s Point of ’ View, 64, 93, 225, 247, 275,
*293, 319, 341, 389, 415. 433, 535, 539, 557, 579, 605
*Germany’s Trade with, 45
*Irrigation of, 114
*Spain, Cotton Spinning and Weaving Machinery >n> (Hl)
*Speeds of Toothed Wheels, Greatest, (35)
*Stamford, Roman Remains Discovered at, (257)
*Starch-making in Damascus, (137)
*Steam, 43, 93, 144
*Steam, Exhaust, Economical Use of, (519)
*Steam Ploughing in South Africa, 93, 144
'''Steel:
*Allis-Andrews System, The, (456)
*Annealing of Low Carbon Mild, Herr E. Heyn, 250
*Austrian and Hungarian, “Cartel,” (519)
*A. W. Cutting, Sir W. G. Armstrong, Whit¬worth and Co.’s own Brand, (149)
*:- Belgian for Bierut, (61)
*Compression of, by Wiredrawing during n Solidification in the Ingot Mould, M. A. Har- mit, 251
*Converters, Acid-lined, Replaced by the Basic n Process, (328)
*Cutlery, Prof. Arnold on, (280), 282
*Deterioration of, from Vibration, 271
*Direct Production of, from Ore, Mons. Her- S noult's Process, (111)
*Dome, A Large, (378)
*Effect of Re-heating on the Coarse Structure of Overheated, K. F. Giiransson, 599
*Foreign Trade in, September, (359)
*German v. English, 43
*German Exports to Russia, (185)
*Harmit Ingot Pres3, The, 252
*High-speed Cutting, The Use of, Mr. Miley on, (440)
*High-speed Tool, New Process, Bismarck Furnace, Silesia, (544)
*Industries, Iron and, Application of Electric Power for, Mr. Selby Bigge on, 252
*Iron and, at the Dusseldorf Exhibition, Prof. H. Wedding, 250
*Local Case Hardening for Articles of, (61) Manufacture, Output, and Profits in, 276
*Open-hearth, in Great Britain, in First Half of 1902 and 1901, Make of, (420)
*Output, Pittsburg, Talbot Open-hearth ' Furnace, (565)
*Peculiarities of, 471
*Plants and Enlargements in, West Pennsyl¬vania, (532)
*Plant, Mahoning Valley, United States, (72)
*Rail Combination, Reported Formation of, (288)
*Rail Mills in Soo Region, Closed for Lack ot Work, (565)
*Tempering, when Hardened by Overstrain, (11)
*Testing High-speed Tool, (149)
*Tool, for Government Arsenals, to be Supp'ied by a Sheffield Firm, (420)
*Tracks for Auto Cars in New York, (102)
*Trade, Sir Chas. M’Laren on the Gloomy Oat¬look, (315)
*Trust, American, Wages and Turnover, (238)
*Trust, Another Huge American, (565)
*Trust and Pig Iron Furnaces, Reported Friction between, (11)
*Trust, Rumoured British, 172
*Trust, The United States, 311
*United States Corporation, Output, (451)
*Vanadium, Introduced into France by an American Engineer, (61)
*What is Steel ? 402
*Professor Arnold on, (280), 282
*Wheelways for Wagon Roads, (46)
*Workers, Scottish, and Improved Machinery, Works, American, (210)
*Dorman, Long and Co.’s, New, (601)
*Output of German, (328)
*Practice in Germany, Progress in, by R. M. Daelen, 621
*The Rheiniecbe, 271
*STEERING Gear, 144
*Stoker, The Arthur, 478
*Stoker, Automatic, 14
*Street Hygiene, The International Committee of (354)
*Strikes—see Labour Questions, Strikes, io.
*Structural Costs, 56, 125, 175, 226
*Structural Strength of Torpedo Boat Destroyers, 164
*Stud Chain in one Length, The Heaviest ever made in Staffordshire, (372)
*Submarine Cables, Lines Possessed by Germany, (85)
*Suburban Traffic, (111)
*Superheated and Saturated Steam, Relative Con¬sumption per Brake Horse-power Hour of, (496)
*Superheater, Test of a, 19
'''Supplements:
*Blast Furnace Construction, Mr. Jno. Steven¬son, October 10th, 1902
*Electric Eogineering, i.—xvi., December 12tb, 1902
*Electric Power Station, Linwood Paper Mills, D. Bruce, Peebles and Co., July 18th, 1902
*Great Western Railway Company's Works at Swindon, October 17th, 1902
*Locomotive Boiler with Cylindrical Fire-box, Lancashire and Yorkshire Rail¬way, Mr. F. A. Hoy, August 15th, 1902
*Express Passenger, Great Central, Mr. J. G, Robinson, July 4th, 1902
*Narrow-gauge Goods, Cape Government Railways, Mr. H. Beatty, September 5th and 19th, 1902
*Six-coupled Mineral Tank, Kerr, Stuart and Co., Limited, October 31st, 1902
*Six-coupled Tank, Wrexham, Mold, and Connah’s Quay Rail¬way, Mr. F. Willans, November 21st, 1902
*Nile Irrigation Works, Great Dam at AssuAn, December 19th, 1902
*Royal Train, London, Brighton, and South Coast, December 26tb, 1902
*Swindon Railway Works, The New, October 3rd and 17th, 1902
*Tramway Traction Engine, Pinkston Power Station, Glasgow, D. Stawart and Co., Limited, December 5th, 1902
*United States Navy, Armoured Cruisers Ten¬nessee and Washington, November 14tb, 1902
*SWEDISH Metal and Coal, 215
*Switzerland, British, German, and French Trade with, Compared, (565)
*Synchronism in the Speeds of Two Motors, Optical Method of Observing, (111)
'''T
*TALC Production in the United Stated, (85)
*Tangiere, Roads between Fez, Engineer Sent by Sultan to Inspect, (162)
*Tanks for Ship Model Experiments, New, (585)
*Tar Sprinkling on Roads, Antwerp, (316)
*Targets, Alteration in the Size of, The Council of the National Rifle Association’s Decision re¬specting, (565)
*Tariff, The New German, 610
*Tarring of Roads, (316), (355)
*Taxes at the Cape, (589)
*Teak Logs obtained in Burma Forests, (137)
*Technical College Buildings at Glasgow, New, ) 170
*Committees, Number and Composition of, in England and Wales, (519)
*Lexicon, German, (303)
'''Telegraphy:
*American Pacific, Construction Assured, (565)
*Land and Submarine, Mileage Statistics or, (328)
*Line from Asmarah to Addis-Abeba, (233)
*Octuplex System of Typographic, Tested in Germany, (303)
*Pacific Cable, Long Section Laid, (404)
*Ship Telegraphs, The Largest ever Made, (382)
*Subterranean to the North, (469), 500, 527
*Underground Connecting London with Scot¬land, (469), 500
*Wenchow to. be Connected with the Outside World by, (185)
*Wireless, Breakdown of, during Naval Manoeuvres, in the Mediterranean, (420)
*on the Campania, (11)
*on the Carlo Alberto, (111), (496)
*England and Canada, Successful, 610
*Finding Longitude by the Aid of, (137)
*Finland, Russia’s Restrictions, (35)
*in the German Navy, (589)
*on the Grand Trunk Railway, Ex¬periments with, (420)
*Marconi, (111), (142), 307, (496)
*Sweden, (11)
*United States Warships, (19)
'''Telephones:
*Berlin, (111)
*Brighton Municipal, (420), (614)
*Cardiff and Newport, Underground, (162)
*Chicago, Automatic, 550
*Denmark and Germany, New, (372)
*Glasgow, Area of, (35)
*Hull, Municipal, (469)
*Paris, Charges, (614)
*Petersburg and Moscow, (519)
*San Francisco, (420)
*San Francisco, The Chinese, (35)
*Scarborough, (61)
*Swansea’s Municipal (280), (614)
*Sweden, (280)
*Tunbridge Wells Municipal, (85), (469)
*TELEPHONE Cables to the North, Subter¬ranean, 468
*Telephone Company, The National, Subscribers are to ba Enabled to have Telegrams Trans¬mitted to them, (61)
*Telephony, Future of, in the United Kingdom, Mr. J. E. Kingsbury on, 301
*Telephony, Wireless, between two German Towns, (211)
*Telephone Wires, Tunnel for, between Minnea¬polis and St Paul, (162)
*Telephoning, Railway, (148)
'''Tenders:
*Engineering, to be Invited by the Birmingham City Council, (552)
*Floating Dry Dock for the Philippines, (233)
*Netherlands Ministers of Colonies will Receive Tendersatthe Hague for Supplies, as follows, (519)
*Sydney Bridge, (210), (222)
*TEREDO, Damage done to Timber by the, (496) Thames Conservancy, The, 20
*Thames—see Water Supply
*Thorpe, Dr. T. E., His Report of the Work of the Government Laboratory, (241)
*Thrift in Design, 163
*Timber, Damage Done by the Teredo to, (496) Timber Joining, (460)
*Tin Deposits in the Cape York Region of Alaska, (185)
*Tin into the United States, Total Imports of, (185)
*Tin-plate Company, The American, and the Welsh Manufacturers, (420)
*Tin-plate Manufacture, United States, 170 Tin-plates, Price of, (519)
*Tipton Mines, Drainage, 325
*‘‘Too Good”—see Colonial Markets, 473, 500
*Tornado Dust Collector, 146
*Townsend, Mr. J. E., (531)
*Trade and Business Announcements, 22, 49, 72, 98, 123, 151, 172, 199, 223, 245, 269, 291, 317, 339, 361, 382, 430, 456, 182, 506, 532, 554, 576, 602, 624
*Depression and "Going Away” Clubs, (233)
*Disputes—see Labour Questions, Strikes, &c.
*in the East, (338)
*and Education, 114
*of the Empire, 156
*Germany’s South African, 45
*Returns for July, Board of, (185)
*Secrets and French Law Concerning, (35)
'''Tramways, Electric and other:
*Allahabad, (420)
*Auckland, New Zealand, (137)
*Bangkok, (280)
*Barcelona and Harta, (111)
*Barrow, (136)
*Barrow-in-Furness, Fire at the Depót, (11)
*Belgium, (420)
*Berlin, Mileage of, (211)
*Birmingham, (469)
*Birmingham City, Mr. Conaty’s Appointment to,(211)
*Bombay, (35), (137)
*Bradford, Official Statement of Receipts, kc., (355)
*Brisbane, (162)
*Burmah, (420), (428)
*By-laws with Regard to Excess Tram Passengers, Leeds Corporation, (469)
*Cardiff, Electric Equipment of, (35)
*Devonport, Accident on, (328)
*Engines, Glasgow, 306, 323
*Exeter, (137), (162), (280)
*Exhibition, International, 7
*Glasgow, (257), (303), (420), 596, (614)
*Glasgow, Engines for, D. Stewart and Co., 306, 333, 536, 583, 596
*Glasgow, Fatal Accidents on, (211), (257)
*Harrow, (443)
*Hastings, (614)
*Holland, (420)
*Hopkinson, Mr. C., on Electric, 503
*Hove, Ratepayers’ Opposition, (303)
*Huddersfield, Accident, (11)
*Lancashire, S., (85)
*Lancaster Corporation, (137)
*Leicester, (429)
*Liverpool, (162)
*Liverpool, Scheme for Transit of Merchandise Over, (496)
*Landon, South, The London County Council. (519)
*Landon, North, 584
*Landon, Schemes for, 20, (85)
*London United, Extension of, (233), 332, (469)
*Lowestoft, Belgian Rails for, (137)
*Madras, on the Mono-rail System, (303)
*Maidstone with Chatham and Gravesend, (3951
*Mandalay, (420), (428)
*Mileage of, Taken over by the London County Council, (519)
*Motor, Brush Standard, (xi., xiii., Supplement. December 12th, 1902)
*Newcastle, (111)
*Now South Wales, Annual Report, 448
*New South Wales, Mileage Open for Traffic, September 30th, 1901, 1902, (614)
*New York, Fumes from the Storage Batteries a Nuisance to Passengers, (355)
*Portland City and Oregon, Telephones in the Cars, (35)
*Rubber-grinding Machines, (xii., Supplement, December 12M, 1902)
*Rothesay, 218
*Russian, (257)
*St. Petersburg and Moscow, (233)
*Salford Tramway and Lighting Plant, 595
*Sheffield, Letter-boxes Attached to the Cars (328)
*Thames Embankment, (85)
*Tien-Tsin, (61)
*Track Sanding, 562
*Tramcar Controllers, Messrs. Dick, Kerr, Limited, (xii., Supplement, December. 12th 1902) ’
*Tramcars, Derailment of, 527
*Tyneside, Gosforth to North Shields, (328)
*United States, Philadelphia, Tramcar Transfer Table and Lift, Brill Company’s Works (210)
*Willesden, Cost of Proposed, (35)
*Wolverhampton, Col. von Donop’s Inspection (280)
*Tree, 51ft. in Diameter, California, (185)
*Trusts, How they Work (from the German Export Recur), 40b
*Trust, Russian Iron, Reported, 524
*Trust, Russian Metallurgical, 493
*Tunnel to Connect Two Lakes. Two Mile Rock, (162)
*Simplon, 4, 101, 177, 186, 204, 205, 411, 414, 418, 589, 607
*under the Clyde, Projected, (257)
*under the Thames, The New, (108), (137)
*Turbine Propulsion for Ships of Commerce, 164
*Turbines, Marine Steam, Parson’s System, (574)
*Steam, Mr. K. Anderson on, (540)
*Steam, Hon. C. A. Parsons on, 277
*Steam, for Electric Power Generation, Mr. G. E. Fedden on, (257)
*Turkey, Agricultural Implements Wanted for, (257)
*Tuyeres, Vacuum on Foster’s System, (614)
*Tynemouth Pier, 132, 133
*Typewriter, A Pocket, (162)
'''U
*UGANDA, Prospects of, (328)
*Uganda Railway—»rz Railways, British, &c. United Kingdom, Trade Returns for July, (185);
*Oil Imports into, (185)
*United States Consul at Sheffield, (31)
*Export Trade, Decline in, (233)
*Government Investigations of Steam Pollution, &c., (257)
*Oil Fuel instead of Coal for the Navy, (137); Production of Crystalline Graphite io, (137); Lieut. Davis’ Process for Harden¬ing Armour Plates, (137)
*Trade of the, 260
*University College, London, Incorporation of, in the University of London, 477
*Uralite, 165
'''V
*VALVE Diagram, Reuleanx, 403
*Viaducts across the Seine, for the Paris Metro¬politan Railway, Steel, (61)
*Viaduct, The Wellington-street, 527
*Victorian Government's London Mining Representative Recalled, (280)
*Volcanic Dust in Berlin, Supposed Presence of, (35)
*V olcanic Dust, Specimens of, (46)
*Volcano, Rooang, (211)
*Volcanoes and the Inter-oceanic Canal, 2, 3,
*Vulcanite. Best Speed for Maohining, (85)
*Vulcan Works, Wolverhampton, Enlargement of, (530)
'''W
*WAGES—see Labour Questions, Strikes, &c. Wagon Question, The, 235
*Walker, Ebenezer, 212
*Warning to Manufacturers, 311
*Water Dynamometer, The Froude, (7)—seep. 616, j Vol. xciii.
*Water-hammer Aotion in Steam Pipes, The Cause of, (481)
'''Water Supply:
*Assouan Dam, Closing of the Sluices, to Fill the Reservoirs, (395)
*Assouan Dam and Assiout Weir, 55, 580
*Australia, Water and Drainage Bill, (280)
*Boston, Electrolysis of Iron Pipes, and Remedy ; Suggested, (211)
*Burley Waterworks, (22)
*Cairo, Closing of the Sluices of the Assouan Dam to Fill the Reservoirs, (395)
*Cape Colony, Artesian Wells Drilled by Govern¬ment, (303), (395)
*Caton Waterworks Arbitration, (85)
*Chicago, Foul Condition of, (257) ; Water I Waste in, (614)
*Church Stretton, Shropshire, (428)
*Columbus, Ohio, Special Instrument showing Nightly Waste, (355)
*Coolgardie, (622)
*Dover, (355), (565)
*Edinburgh, The New Waterworks, 319 ; Diffi¬culties at, (376)
*Fittings, on the Standardisation of, Mr. R. S. Lloyd, 80
*Formosa, South, Irrigation Insufficient, (11)
*Glasgow, Mr. J. Gale and the, (596)
*Guildford Corporation Waterworks, Mr. C. G. Mason on the Turbine Pumping Plant, 115
*High-pressure Salt Water Mains in Phila¬delphia for Fire Extinguishing, (61)
*Holland, Purification of, by Ozonised Air, (443)
*Lincoln, (257)
*Littlehampton, New Works Opened, (469)
*London, (589)
*Loughborough, New Waterworks, 32, 33, 34, 115
*Madeley, Salop, Opening of Now Works, (420)
*Metropolitan, (35), (303), (395), (443), (589)
*Mexico, Prize Offered by the State for Making Artesian Well, (211)
*Nagasaki, (280)
*Paris, 460
*Pekin Waterworks, (8) ; Permanent, Jerusalem, (61)
*Philadelphia, Gas Engine Pumping Plant, (338)
*Pollution of Rivers, 369
*Port Talbot, (316)
*Reading Waterworks, Mr. A. T. Walker on the Water Power Pumping Plant, 115
*Rickmansworth and Uxbridge Valley. (544)
*Rural, Messrs. Jas. Dewhurst and H. G. Key¬wood, 80
*Seoul in Corea, (257)
*Shimonoseki, (185)
*Sydney Waterworks, Pumping Plant for Mestre. Mather and Platt (xvi., Electrical Supplement, December 12tk, 1902)
*Tangiers, (162)
*Torquay, Rusting of Mains and Results, (233)
*United States Government Investigations of Stream Pollution, &c., (257)
*Waste, Special Instrument Showing Nightly, (355)
*Water Engineer on, 442
*Windsor Corporation Waterworks, Mr. C. Sainty on the Tarbine-driven Pampy, 115
*Wolverhampton, (170), (544)
*WEARDALE Steel, Coal, and Coke Company, Accounts of, (315)
*Webb, Mr. F. W., His Resignation, (182), 523
*Weitzer, Mr. John, The Styrian Ironmaster, (407)
*Well Boring in South Africa, 388, 573 Westward to the Orient, 569
*Whitworth, Mr. A. H., (233)
*Whitworth Scholarships, The, 240
*Wilkinson, Mr. Geo., Presentation to, (328)
*Wind Effects upon Lakes, 250
*Wind Pressure, Measuring, Competition at the Deutsche Seewarte, Hamburg, for the Best Contrivance for, (565)
*Winnipeg, Small-pox Hospital and the City’s Ice Supply, (211)
*Wire Trade, United States, Condition of, (35) Wolverhampton, Canals and, 66
*Wood as Fuel on North Carolina Railways to be Discontinued, (420)
*Wood as Fuel on Russian Railways to be Discon¬tinued, Use of, (420)
*Woods, The Lightest and the Heaviest, Specific Gravity of, (162)
*Wood Paving Blocks from New South Wales, (372)
*Wood Paving in Paris, (280)
*Worcester Porcelain, Date of the First Manu¬factory of, (11)
*Workmen’s Compensation Acts, Cases under, (211)
*Workshop Drawing Class, A, 183
*Workshop Management, Some Aspects of, 1, 51, 68, 101, 154, 201, 249, 293, 342
*Workshop Methods, American c. British, (243)
*Workshops, Swindon, The New Railway (Supple¬ment, October 3rd, 1902), 325
*11 World’s Fair,” Manchester the next Site, (35)
== See Also ==
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== Sources of Information ==
<references/>
{{DEFAULTSORT: }}

Latest revision as of 08:37, 16 September 2023

The Engineer 1902 Jul-Dec: Miscellaneous Index.
The Engineer 1902 Jul-Dec: Miscellaneous Index.
The Engineer 1902 Jul-Dec: Miscellaneous Index.
The Engineer 1902 Jul-Dec: Miscellaneous Index.
The Engineer 1902 Jul-Dec: Miscellaneous Index.
The Engineer 1902 Jul-Dec: Miscellaneous Index.
The Engineer 1902 Jul-Dec: Miscellaneous Index.
The Engineer 1902 Jul-Dec: Miscellaneous Index.
The Engineer 1902 Jul-Dec: Miscellaneous Index.
The Engineer 1902 Jul-Dec: Miscellaneous Index.
The Engineer 1902 Jul-Dec: Miscellaneous Index.
The Engineer 1902 Jul-Dec: Miscellaneous Index.
The Engineer 1902 Jul-Dec: Miscellaneous Index.
The Engineer 1902 Jul-Dec: Miscellaneous Index.
The Engineer 1902 Jul-Dec: Miscellaneous Index.
The Engineer 1902 Jul-Dec: Miscellaneous Index.
The Engineer 1902 Jul-Dec: Miscellaneous Index.
The Engineer 1902 Jul-Dec: Miscellaneous Index.
The Engineer 1902 Jul-Dec: Miscellaneous Index.
The Engineer 1902 Jul-Dec: Miscellaneous Index.
The Engineer 1902 Jul-Dec: Miscellaneous Index.
The Engineer 1902 Jul-Dec: Miscellaneous Index.
The Engineer 1902 Jul-Dec: Miscellaneous Index.
The Engineer 1902 Jul-Dec: Miscellaneous Index.
The Engineer 1902 Jul-Dec: Miscellaneous Index.
The Engineer 1902 Jul-Dec: Miscellaneous Index.
The Engineer 1902 Jul-Dec: Miscellaneous Index.
The Engineer 1902 Jul-Dec: Miscellaneous Index.
The Engineer 1902 Jul-Dec: Miscellaneous Index.
The Engineer 1902 Jul-Dec: Miscellaneous Index.
The Engineer 1902 Jul-Dec: Miscellaneous Index.
The Engineer 1902 Jul-Dec: Miscellaneous Index.
The Engineer 1902 Jul-Dec: Miscellaneous Index.
The Engineer 1902 Jul-Dec: Miscellaneous Index.
The Engineer 1902 Jul-Dec: Miscellaneous Index.
The Engineer 1902 Jul-Dec: Miscellaneous Index.
The Engineer 1902 Jul-Dec: Miscellaneous Index.
The Engineer 1902 Jul-Dec: Miscellaneous Index.
The Engineer 1902 Jul-Dec: Miscellaneous Index.
The Engineer 1902 Jul-Dec: Miscellaneous Index.
The Engineer 1902 Jul-Dec: Miscellaneous Index.
The Engineer 1902 Jul-Dec: Miscellaneous Index.
The Engineer 1902 Jul-Dec: Miscellaneous Index.
The Engineer 1902 Jul-Dec: Miscellaneous Index.
The Engineer 1902 Jul-Dec: Miscellaneous Index.
The Engineer 1902 Jul-Dec: Miscellaneous Index.
The Engineer 1902 Jul-Dec: Miscellaneous Index.
The Engineer 1902 Jul-Dec: Miscellaneous Index.

Note: This is a sub-section of The Engineer 1902 Jul-Dec: Index

View the Volumes that this Index refers to

A

  • ABEL, Sir Frederick, 255

Accidents, Explosions, and Fines.

  • Central Electric Supply Company, Marylebone, Collapse of a Staging, (420)
  • Chemical Explosions, Some Recent, 42
  • Crane Collapse at Messrs. Goodwin and Basby’s Iron Foundry, (303)
  • Domestic Oil Lamps in London, (211)
  • Earthquake Shocks in Portugal and Italy. (137)
  • Earthquake Shocks in South California, (135)
  • Engine Accidents, United States, (614)
  • Fall of Roof, Clydach Vale, (268)
  • Flooding of Dock at Chatham, (185)
  • Flooding of Union Colliery, Forest of Dean, (268)
  • Lift Accident on the East Hill, Hastings, (303)
  • Motor Accident, M. H. Deutsch Seriously Injured,(137)
  • Motor Car Accident Narrowly Averted, General Sir E. Wood and his Staff, (185)
  • Motor Car Accident near Rearsby, in Leicester¬shire, (185)
  • Petroleum Spirit on Waste, Cleaning Gas Engine with, a Man Killed whilst, (257)
  • Tay Bridge, Men Blown from the, whilst Paint- | iog it, (280)
  • Winding, Tirpentwys, (382)
  • Winding, Treharris No. 1,Ocean P.t, (482), (552)
  • Explosions, Boiler, United States, (614)
  • Boiler, Melyn Tin-plate Works, (198)
  • Abertysswg Colliery, (316)
  • Colliery, Abertwysog, (268)
  • Colliery, Wollongong, Australia, J (288)
  • Gunpowder Works, Waltham, (589)
  • Nobel's Dynamite Factory, (355)
  • Powder, in a Mine, Uah, (137)
  • Stalybridge, from an Economiser, (107)
  • Fires, Bridge between New York and Brooklyn ' Damaged by, (469)
  • Drury-lane, (185)
  • Engineering Works of Messrs. Goddard, Massey and Warner, (11)
  • Loss of the United States and Canada in First Half of 1901-1902, (162)
  • Palmer's Shipbuilding Works, (85)
  • Tramway Depót, Barrow-in-Furness,(11)
  • ACID Waste, Lye District, Treatment of. (576)
  • Aerial Navigation, Mr. Spencer’s Flying Machine, (303), (395)
  • Aë.-onautics and War, 440
  • Africa, South, from an Engineer’s Point of View, 61, 93. 247, 275. 293, 319, 341, 389, 415, 433, 535, 539, 557, 579, 605
  • Agricultural Development, Wells Drilled by the Cape Government, (395)
  • Implements in Turkey, Opening for, (257)
  • Machines, Royal Agricultural Society’s Show, 29, 30
  • Machinery at Odessa, Demand for, and American Competition, (328)
  • Machinery in Russia, English, j American, and German, 262
  • Air Compressor, Electrically-driven, Reavell and Co., 620
  • Air Compressors, Quadruple Two-stage, 182
  • Air Respirable in Closed Places, Apparatus for Rendering, (328)
  • Airship. Mr. Stanley Spencer’s Second Trip, (395)
  • Airship for the War-office, Construction of Dr. 1 Barton’s, (257)
  • Alcohol as a Source of Motive Power, Prof. Bahrend’s Experiments, (303)
  • Alcohol without Re-distillation, A German Appa¬ratus for Producing Fine, (162)
  • A’ien Immigrants Arrived in the United Kingdom during September 1901 and 1902, (395)
  • Allison, Mr Henry Thomas, (48)
  • Alloy for Lining Bearings, Crank-pin Bushes, &c., (280)
  • Almanacs and Diaries, 600, 624
  • Aluminium Alloys, Electric Conductivity of, as Affected by the London Atmo¬sphere, Prof. E. Wilson, 301 and Nickel in Russia, Increasing Use of, (257)
  • Production of, (616)
  • for Sharpening Cutlery, Use of, (469)
  • Weight and Cost, Compared to other Metals, (614)
  • America for Draughtsmen, 266
  • American Agricultural Manufacturers' Combina¬tion, (211)
  • Competition, Mr. J. S. Jeans rn, (600); Mr. W. J. Cudworth on, (624)
  • Competition and Mr. Mosely’s Scheme, | 214
  • Competition in South Africa, (211)
  • Contractor late again, The, (496), (499)
  • Cup Challenge, The, 391
  • Dollars into English Pounds, Table for Converting, (211)
  • Enterprise Frustrated at Marseilles, (Hl)
  • Enterprise in England, 15
  • Industries, 523
  • Invasion, The, 619
  • Methods, and those who go from England and make Comparisons between them and English, (624)
  • Trade, (15)
  • Trusts, Mr. G. Roberts’ Suggestion as to bow the United States Government should Seek to Control, (280)
  • Analysis by Rote. 393
  • Anchor Chains, 50-Toa, (35)
  • Aneroid Barometers, The Royal Meteorological Society and, (111)

Appointments and Resignations: Appointments:

  • Brickwell, Mr. A. J., (519)
  • Carpenter, Mr. R. Forbes, (544)
  • Conaty, Mr. Geo., (211)
  • Cousins. Mr. Edmund, (395)
  • Dolly, Mr. T., (328)
  • Dunn, Mr. Matthew, (150)
  • Eyre, Mr. F. A., (257)
  • Gooday, Lieut.-Colonel J. F. S., (137)
  • Hendrie, Mr. David, (469)
  • Hobson, Mr. J. A., Master Cutler of Sheffield, (197)
  • Hughes, Colonel, (221)
  • Jepson, Mr. W. A., (469)
  • Jones, Lieut.-Col. A. S., Manager of Sewage Works in the Aidershot District, (61)
  • Macaulay. Mr. F. W„ (552)
  • Mastin, Mr. A. B., (395)
  • Pagan, Mr. Wm., (454)
  • Pitman, Mr. E. F., (454)
  • Ransome, Mr. James, (565)
  • Richards, Mr. A. E., (328)
  • Rose, Dr. T. Kirke, (589)
  • Smith, Commander Hamilton P., (455)
  • Tatlow, Mr. W., (89)
  • White, Mr. A. J., (601)
  • Winter, Mr. Geo., (359)
  • Worsdell, Mr. H., to the Great Central, (71), (137)
  • Resignations:
  • , Cock, Mr. Henry, (328)
  • G»le, Mr. Jas. M„ (596)
  • Mugliston, Mr W. L., (469)
  • Webb, Mr. F. W., 523

Armour Plating:

  • Delivered at the United States Shipyards, 1901, ! (496)
  • Hardening the Surface of, Lieut. Davis’ Process for, (137)
  • Mill Order by the Japanese Government, (61), (71)
  • Orders for the Armour Plate for the Dominion, the King Edward VII., and the Common¬wealth, (11). (21), 65. (221)
  • ARBITRATION, Compulsory, 259
  • Arbitration, Failure of Compulsory, 14
  • Arch Construction with Three Points, Charac¬teristic, (211)
  • Artesian Wells, Cape Colony, (303) Arthur Stoker, The, 478
  • Ash Washing Machine, 281

Association, American Tramway:

  • (622)

Association, British-see British Association

Association of Engineers, Leeds:

  • Inaugural Address by the President, Mr. G. W. I Blackburn, 358
  • Motor Cars, Use and Speed of, Opening Address by the President, Mr. Geo. W. | Blackburn, 358
  • Steel, High-speed Cutting, Mr. J. Miley, (440)
  • Visit to the Works of Messrs. Ruston, Proctor and Co., Limited, (172)

Association of Engineers, Manchester: Annual General Meeting, (600)

  • Engineering Workshops, Design, and Construction of Modern, Mr. J. H. Humphreys, 575
  • Mechanical Boiler Draught. Modern Production of, Mr. W. L. Sutc iffe, 530
  • Milling Cutters, Design and Manufacture of, Mr. S. N. Brayshaw, 429
  • Programme for Opaning Meeting, (337)
  • Visit to the British Westinghouse Works, 379
  • Water Hammer Action in Steam Pipes, Mr. C. E. Blromeyer on the Cause of, (481)

Association, Incorporated Municipal Electrical:

  • Annual Convention, (15), 27
  • Correct Type of Engine for Large Generation I Stations, Mr. A. A. Day, 37
  • Double-current Generators and their Applica¬tion, Mr. Ruthven-Murray, 27
  • High-tension Continuous-current Systems, Mr. 1 A. S. Barnard, 28
  • Inaugural Address, Mr. Rider’s, 27

Association, Liverpool Self-Propelled Traffic :

  • Adoption of Report: Resolutions Carried, (39)

Association, Municipal Electrical:

  • Board of Trade Regulations relative to Series Incandescent Lighting at 500 Volts, Amendment Desired to, (35)
  • Correct Type of Engine for Large Generating Stations, Mr. A. A. Day, 53
  • Eartbiog Notes, re, Mr. H. Faraday Proctor, 53
  • Relative Advantages of Two and Three-wire 1 Distribution, Mr. F. C. Snell, 53
  • Steam Turbines, Mr. S. E. Fedden, 53

Association, National Free Labour:

  • Tenth Annual Congress, 367

Association, The Nation Industrial:

  • (619)

Association, Yorkshire Miners

  • Annual Report, Mr. Benjamin Pickard, 523

Association of Waterworks Engi¬neers, British:

  • Annual General Meeting, The Seventh, 70
  • Domestic Filtration, Dr. Joseph Priestley, 115
  • Electrolysis in Water Pipas, Mr. W. H. i Humphreys, 115
  • Inaugural Address of President, Mr. Fred. Griffith, 80
  • Pumps, App'ication of Suspended Steam, to the Sinking of Deep Shafts, Mr. W. Price Abell, 80
  • Seventh Winter Meeting, and Papers to be Raad at, (477) I
  • Standardisation of Water Fittings, Mr. R. S. Lloyd, 80
  • Turbine-driven Pumps at Windsor Corporation Waterworks, Mr. Christopher Sainty, 115
  • Turbine Pumping Plant, Guildford Corporation Waterworks, Mr. C. G. Mason, 115
  • Visits to the Blackbrook Reservoir of the Laughborough Waterworks and to the Northampton Waterworks, 115
  • Watar Power Pumping Plant, Reading Water¬works, Mr. A. T. Walker, 115
  • Water Supplies, On Rural, Messrs. Jas. Dew¬hurst and H. G. Keywood, 80
  • AS3UAN Dam and the Assiout Weir, (137), 558, 559, 563, 580, 617, 618 (Supplement, December ( 19M, 1902)
  • Atmosphere of the House of Commons, The, (233)
  • Atmospheric Discharges, Apparatus for Auto¬matically Registering, (11)
  • Australia, New Route to, 180
  • Automatic Machines for Sale of Postage Stamps, Berlin Railway Stations, (280)
  • Automatic Stokers, 14
  • Automatic X-Ray Machine on the Penny-in-the < Slot System, (303)
  • Axles, Collinge Carriage, 477, 500, 573
  • Ayris, Mr. John, 476

B

  • BALLOON to CroBs the Sahara, 217
  • Balloon with Interior Keel, Navigable, M. Torres on, (257)
  • Balloon, Mr. Santos Dumont’s New, (280)
  • Barcelona, Shipbuilding Industry, Falling-off in Value of Exports from, Opening for a Manu¬factory of Screws for Woodwork, (85)
  • Barlow, Mr. W. H., (519)
  • Barrow, Mr. Jas., (328), (338)
  • Bass Rock and the Commissioners of Northern Lighthouses, (519)
  • Bauxite Exports from Marseilles, (185)
  • Bauxite, Largely used by Electrolytic Works, i (233)
  • Bauxite of Three Kinds Produced in Franc?, (443)
  • Bedworth Drainage and Sewage Disposal Scheme, 502
  • Belfast, Libraries for, Mr. A. Carnegie’s Gift, (443)
  • Belgian Royal Commission on Rivers Pollution, 493
  • Bell Rock Lighthouse, The, 159
  • Beloe, Mr. Cnas. Henry, 189
  • Ben Nevis Observatory, 142
  • Bicyclist's Speed Record, (35)
  • Billet Mill, New American, 550

Bills:

  • Australian Water and Drainage, (280)
  • Charing Cross, Easton, and Hampstead ; and the Great Northern and City, (111)
  • Coventry to Arley Railway Line, (496)
  • London County Council’s Subways and Tram¬ways, (85)
  • London United Electric Railways, 399
  • London Water, London County Council Opposes the, (544)
  • Passed through House of Lords, (589)
  • Patent-office Buildings, Extension of, (544)
  • Piccadilly, City, and North-Eastern Railway, 399
  • Railway, Bristol to London; Londonand Brighton Electric Express; North-Eastern; Lancashire and Yorkshire; Great Northern ; Midland and Great Central; Derbyshire, (544)
  • Regulation of the Supply of Water-gas and other Poisonous Gases, (372)
  • Thames Steamboat Service, London County I Council, (544)
  • Wolverhampton Corporation Water, (170)
  • BILSTON Sewerage Scheme, (530)
  • Birmingham City Arcades Scheme, Completion of, k530)
  • Bitterfeld Chemical Works, 229, 234
  • Blackband, Lanarkshire, (280)
  • Blast Furnaces in Belgium in Operation, (395), (496)
  • Blast Furnace Construction, Jno. L. Stevenson, (Supplement, October 10th, 1902), 248, 249, 322, 323, 347, 386, 387, 474. 475
  • Blast Furnace, Irondale, Washington, Opened, (395)
  • Blast Furnace, Large Charcoal, at Vares, in Bosnia, (395)
  • Board of Trade Returns for July, (185)
  • Boardite, (455), 501

Boilers:

  • Demand for, in the British Columbian Mining 1 Camp*, (519)
  • Explosions Acts, Report upon the Working of, (614)
  • Explosions—see Accidents
  • Feed Pumps for, J. Evans and Co., 7, 8
  • Flash, by J. S. V. Bickford, 514, 538, 585
  • Flash, John Johnston, 573
  • Flash, David Smith, 585
  • Flash, for Steam Launch, 311
  • Industry, German, 446
  • Locomotive, with Cylindrical Fire-box, Lan¬cashire and Yorkshire Railway, Mr. H. A. Hoy (Supplement, August 15th, 1902), 165
  • Mineral Oil in, 194 I Navy, 38, 63, 141
  • Ohio State, Licence Law Amendment as to Boilers and Unlicensed Engineers, (211)
  • Petroleum for, 241
  • Point in the Design of, 282
  • Regulations as to Siza of, to be Operated by Unlicensed Engineers, (211)
  • Scale Prevention and Steam Jacket*, 241
  • Solignac, Mr. W. H. Booth on the, 302
  • Water-tube, the Stirling Bailer Company, Limited, 127
  • Yarrow, for the Dutch Navy, (35)
  • BOOKS and Students, 164
  • Booth and Bros., Limited, Joseph, Sums collected for three Reservists in their Employ, (355)
  • Bore-holes in South Africa, 389
  • Boring and Planing Machine, Horizontal, Messrs Ward, Haggas and Smith, 168
  • Bradford Exports to the United States, (137
  • Branfoot, Mr. Wm., (505)
  • Brass Foundry Ash-washing Machine, Messrs. E H. Birley and Co., 284
  • Breakwater, Concrete, U.S.A., (46)
  • Bricklaying Machine, 309
  • Brick-making Machine, Glazed, Messrs. Pullan an Mann, 66
  • Brick-making Process, A New, 452

Bridges:

  • Barrow and Walney Island, Proposed, (614)
  • Bascule at Chicago, New Form of, (46), (420)
  • Breydon Railway, 476
  • Brooklyn, Moving Platforms Worked by Electricity Projected for, (61)
  • Building, Characteristic Arch, with Three Points, Patented in Germany, (211)
  • California, Santa Anna River Railway, (496)
  • Canal, over the River Lippe, 34, 44
  • Clyde, The Widest Railway Crossing of any River, (280)
  • Construction, Modern Practice in, Mr. J. R. Orr, 515
  • Cross Girders, Support of the Ends of, 609
  • Experiments on Railway and Raad, 3
  • Forth, (565)
  • Fonr-track Double-deck, U.S.A,, Pennsylvania Railway, (622)
  • Impact Fatigue in Railway, 465
  • Kew, 300, 304, (328), 423
  • La Rochelle, with a Suspended Running Carrier,
  • London, Widening of, 426. 542, 596, 597
  • Maidenhead, Abolition of Tolls, &c., (589)
  • Mawddach Estuary, at Barmouth, for the Cam¬brian Railway Company, 171
  • Mayence Railway, Reconstruction of, 314, 318, 349
  • Mississippi, Great Cantilever Railway Bridge over the, (565)
  • Newcastle. New, 171, 227
  • Newport, Transporter, (482)
  • Pennsylvania, Railway Masonry, 308
  • Plate Girder Bascule, over the Milwaukee River, (196)
  • Pontoon System used by the French, (355)
  • Railway and Road, Experiments on, 3
  • Severn, at Iron Bridge, The First Iron, Built in England, a Portion Gives Way, (233)
  • Steel Arch and Stone Arch, United States, 621
  • Steel, over the Seine, for the Metropolitan Railway, (61)
  • Strand, at the Bottom of Wellington-street, (443)
  • Summerbill and Trenton, U.S.A., 308
  • Sydney, North Shore, Tenders for, 210, (222), (317)
  • Tyne, at Newcastle, High-level Railway for the North Eastern, 171, 227
  • Uganda Railway, 513
  • Vauxhall, 476, 522
  • Works, 148
  • BRITANNIA Works at Middlesbrough, Re-con¬struction of, (150)

British Association:

  • Addressee, by Prof. R. H. Smith, 459, 485
  • Address of Prof. Jas. Dewar, Ioaugural 234 287
  • Address ^by Prof. John Perry, 302, 813, 335,
  • Admiralty Water-tube Boiler Committee, Résumé of Report, 302
  • Boiler, Solignac, Mr. W. H. Booth, 302
  • Dynamo, Making of a, Mr. H. A. Mavor, 302
  • Electrical Conductivity of Certain Aluminium Alloys as Affected by London Atmosphere Prof. E. Wilson, 301
  • Engineering Work, Importance of Minor Details in, Mr. M. Holroyd Smith, 301
  • Engineers. Training of, Prof. Perry, 302, 313, 335, 357j (527)
  • Gas Engine Explosions. Mr. H. E. Wimperis and Prof. Perry on, 802, 854
  • Gas Engines, Recent Progress in Large, Mr. H. A. Humphrey, 277
  • In’ftnt^RBD8e finder, Prof G®o. Forbes on This, 302
  • Ireland, Rainfall of, Dr. H. R. Mills, and Water Power of, Mr. F. J. Dick, 278 Levelling Staff, Direct-reducing, Mr. C. W. Herdman, 278
  • Ocean Currents, Direction and Velocity of Material-bearing, Mr. R. G. Allanson-Winn, Resistance of Road Vehicles to Traction, Prof. Hele-Shaw, 277
  • Sledges, Regular Undulations Produced in a Road by the Uss, Dr. Vaughan Cornish, 278
  • Smoke, Prevention of, Mr. J. S. Raworth, 302
  • Smokeless Combustion of Bituminous Fuels, Mr. W. H. Booth, 302
  • Specific Utilisation of Materials in Dynamo Design, Professor S. P. Thompson, 301
  • Steam Turbine, Hon. C. A. Parsons, 277
  • Telepbone, Future of, in the United Kingdom, Mr. J. E. Kingsbury, 301
  • Working Model of all Station’s Express Trains, Mr. J. Brown, 278
  • Workshop, Science of the, Mr. W. Taylor, 301
  • BRITISH Exports to Italy, (268)
  • British North Borneo, Principal Imports of Trade of, (137)
  • British Trade and American Methods, 500
  • British Trade in Switzerland, Falling off of, (565), (580) '
  • Brotherhood, Mr. Peter, 375
  • Brown and Co., John. Amalgamation with Thos. Firth and Sons, 428
  • Buildings, Portable, 41
  • Bailding, Sky-scraper, New York, Twenty Storeys High, (162)
  • Burmah, for, becoming the Sole Trade Route to Yunnan, Opportunity for, (111)
  • Bushey Physical Laboratory, Machinery and Scientific Apparatus at, (111)

C

  • CABLES to the North, Subterranean, 468
  • Callipers, Pipe, 284
  • Campanile of St. Mark’s, The Fallen, 142
  • Canada, Postil Revenue and Expenditure, (565)
  • Canadian Trade, a Record for, (111)

Canals:

  • Bay of Biscay and the Mediterranean, Pro¬jected, (565)
  • Birmingham, (442)
  • Chicago Drainage, Dam at Ioliet, (233)
  • Corinth Maritime, Accounts for the Year, (395)
  • Danube, between Tulcha and Sulina, (395)
  • Dortmund-Ems, Traffic, (35)
  • Erie, (361), (589)
  • Inter-Oceanic, The Proposed, 1, 78
  • Leipzig with the Elbe, Project for Connecting. (280)
  • Manchester Ship, Death of Mr. A. H. Whit¬worth, Secretary of, (233); His Successor, (257); Progress of, (525) ; Revenue for October, (525); Traffic Returns, (420), (614) Michigan, Lake Superior Power Company's. (162)
  • Netherton, (442)
  • North Sea and Baltic, Returns, (35), (372);
  • September Traffic, (443)
  • Panama, Question of the Legality of the French Company’s Rights to, (443)
  • Soo, C mada, 394, 500
  • Suez, Returns, (11), (233); Maximum Draught for Ships using, (233)
  • Teddingtou to the English Channel, Projected, (565)
  • Viborg, Projected, (211)
  • Wolverhampton, 66
  • CARNEGIE, Mr. A., Freedom of Perth Presented to, ('280) '
  • Carnegie, Mr. Andrew, Offer to the Leicester Free Library Committee, (11)
  • Castings, Malleable, 501
  • Catalogues, 19, 72, 94, 120, 223, 245, 291, 339, 406, 428, 452, 504, 530, 552, 554, 602, 624
  • Cement Works at Grays, 45
  • Chain Stud, the Heaviest ever Made in Stafford¬shire, (372)
  • Chemical Industry in Germany, (111) Chemical Works at Bitterfeld, 2*29, 234 Chemistry in Germany, 331
  • Chicago Drainage Canal, Use of Water Power Developed by the, (233)
  • Chili, Opening for British Capital in, (233)
  • Chinese, Business Integrity of the, (469)
  • Chinese Population, (257)
  • Chippenham Sewerage Sjheme, Sanction to Borrow 4:12,000, (11)
  • Clapham, Mr. Wm., (289)
  • Clay and Products of Clay in the United States, Total Value of, (211)
  • Clock Dials, Illuminating, Sir W. H. Bailey’s , Method, (315)
  • Clock, E'ectrically-lighted, (315), (552)
  • Cloth workers' Scholarship and Free Studentships, (355)
  • Clyde Trust, New Works, 263

Coal:

  • American Strike, (359), (360), 375
  • Australia, (328)
  • Baluchistan, Output at Kbost, in, (185)
  • Bohemia, Brown Coal Industry, (211)
  • British, Found to be Cheaper than German by German Manufacturers, (162)
  • Caucasus, Output of, (185)
  • China, (35)
  • ('.iking, One Ton of Gravity and Heat of Burnt Gas given off in the Process, (328) Coaling Facilities at Glasgow, (196)
  • Colorado State, Inexhaustible Supply, (395)
  • Cutting by Machinery, Mr. A. D. Mitton on, (575)
  • Cutting Machinery, Lancashire, (35)
  • Donetz District, Steps towards Improving the Industry, (420)
  • Dusts, the Most Inflammable and Dangerous, (614)
  • Dust for Blasting in Mines, Use of, (211)
  • European Russia, Last Year’s Output of, (61)
  • Ferghana Territory, Deposits Disco ver cl Last Year, (111)
  • French and Foreign. Map of France Showing J Consumption of, (111)
  • German, Sent to France, (614)
  • Hardening of Prices and Present Outlook, 360
  • Immersion of, as a Meansof Preserving Calorific Properties of, (443), 451
  • Imparts from United Kingdom to Germany for Manufacture of Coke, (185)
  • Indian Output, (565)
  • Ireland, (35)
  • Kherson, Discovery of an Extensive Field, (185)
  • Locomotive, 57
  • Manchester City Council’s Contracts for Supply of, (61)
  • Menai Straits, Borings on Both Sides of the, (Ul)
  • Mined in France Annually, (469)
  • Mining Accidents, United States, 1901, (355)
  • New South Wales, (35)
  • Oils as Fuel, Relative Cost of, (137)
  • Ontario, Search for, in, (469)
  • Owners and the South Wales Miners’ Federa¬tion, 91, 140, 145
  • President Roosevelt and, 397
  • Pulverised, for Power Plants, Mr. F. G. Gasche on, (519)
  • Pulverising Plant, Indianapali», (420)
  • Queensland, 1901, Output, (162)
  • Raw. Scotch Blast Furnaces Working with, , (280)
  • Russia s Asiatic Output, 228
  • Siberian, 523
  • Sinkings near Worksop, The Wigan Coal and Iron Company, (288)
  • Staffordshire, Discovery of New Field, (328)
  • Storage of Steam, Admiralty Chemist to Report on the Question, 451
  • Storing and Handling Plant, The Lowell Gas Company, United States, (46)
  • Strikes, 425
  • Strike, Pennsylvania, Anthracite, (61). (72)
  • Strike in the United States, 351, (359), (360), 375
  • Swedish Metal and, 215
  • Trade, A Bird’s-eye View of the, 282
  • Trade of British Columbia. Effected by Increas¬ing Use of Oil as Fuel, (233)
  • Trade Crisis, Mr. D. A. Thomas on the Approaching, 316
  • Trinidad, (280)
  • Turkish, Quoted by London Agent’, (544)
  • Tyne Shipments if, for Half year, (61)
  • United States Production, (372)
  • Ural Region, Oatput of, (61), (162)
  • Waste, German Machinery tor Making Briquettes out of. (614)
  • Welsh Contracts, 573
  • Welsh, at Dartmouth, Bunkering, 574
  • Westphalia, (11)
  • Westphalian, Supplied to France, (111)
  • World’s Production io 1901, (372), (468)
  • Yorkshire and Belgian Coalfields, Presumably Connected, (355)
  • COKE, Imported into France, and Exported from. (395)
  • Coke Ovens, By-product, Messrs. Bolckow, r Vaughan and Co., (623)
  • Cold Storage, Dr. Linde on, (417)
  • Collinge Carriage Axles, 477, 500, 573
  • Colonial Markets (set “Too Good,” 500), 473
  • Colorado Desert, Heat of the, (185)
  • Commercial Treaty, Germany, United States, and Japan, (395)
  • Concrete Breakwater, Buffalo, U.S.A., (46)
  • Concrete in a Cross-cut in a German Colliery. Use of, (565)
  • Condensers, Surface, Isaac Storey and Sons, Limited, (429)
  • Condensing by Evaporation, (622)
  • Consuls and Commerce, (378)

Copper:

  • Advice to Engineers, and Probable Prices of, 188, 260
  • Mines in R Rumania, (257)
  • Stay-making Machines, Alfred Herbert and Co., 9
  • Total Production of, in all Parts of the World, (61)
  • COREA, Exploitation for Gold in, (162)
  • Cornell University, 466, 470
  • Coronation Festivities, Westminster, Engineer’s Report on Cost of Erecting Stands, (85)
  • Coronation Honours, 10
  • Corrupt Works’ Management, Mr. T. Good and, 213
  • Cotton Seed Oil, (504)
  • Coventry, Municipal R ites, (395)
  • Crane, 5-Ton Electric Foundry, Ransomes and Rapier, Limited, 83
  • Crane, Goliath, Stothert and Pitt, 286
  • Crane, 3-Ton Locomotive, Jessop and Appleby Bros.. Limited, 239
  • Craven Bros., Limited, New Works at Reddish. (97)
  • Croker, Mr., His Suspension and its Cause, (185)
  • Croll, Mr. Geo., Presentation to, (266)
  • Crystal Palace, Visitors, Receipts, Expenditure,
  • Cuba, Imports of Machinery and Metal into, from United States, the United Kingdom, and Ger¬many, (469)
  • Curve, Location of a Circular, 241
  • Cut, A Heavy, 144
  • Cutters, Milling, Mr. S. N. Brayshaw on, 429
  • Cycle Shows, The, 518
  • Cycles for Sontb Africa, 43

D

  • DAIRY Implements, Royal Agricultural Society’s Show, 31
  • Dam, Another High Earth, United States, (454)
  • Assuan—we Assuan Regulating, United States, (456)
  • A Huge Earth, United States of America, (244)
  • Derby Technical College, Evening Classes for Engineer Apprentices, (443)
  • Destructor Plants for Bahia to Patents of W. Price Abell, (443)
  • Dewar, Prof. Jas., His Address at the British Association, 264, 287
  • Die Head, Automatic, Wharton’s Patent, 332
  • Disc Grinder, 20in, C. W. Burton, Griffiths and Co., 192, 193
  • Disc Grinder, Roberts Bros., 217
  • Diving Boll and Barge for the Admiralty, (280)
  • Diving Bell at Wilhelmshaven, Holzmann and Co.’s Huge, (111)
  • Diving Machine for Locating the Wreck of the Rio de Janeiro, (395)

Docks:

  • Chatham, New Dock Works Flooded, (185)
  • Dalny, Two Dry, in Course of Construction at, (469)
  • Dunkirk, Extension of. (589)
  • Floating, Building at Kiel for Kiao-cbau, (496)
  • Floating Dry, for the Philippines, (233)
  • Floating, for Durban, C. S. Swan and Hunter, Limited, 134, 136, (257), 515
  • Floating, La Rochelle, (35)
  • Graving, London and South-Western Railway, at Southampton, (85)
  • Humber Commercial, Grimsby, 168
  • Keyham, Extension, (185)
  • London and India, The Chairman of, on the Trade of London, &c., (395)
  • London, Their Area, (544)
  • Mersey Ducks and Harbour, Sand Removed from, and Cost of Dredging, (211)
  • Novelty in Dry Docking, (456)
  • i Pembroke, Pension Awarded to Chief Con¬structor at, (328)
  • Seabam Harbour, (171)
  • Severn Dry Dock Scheme, (544)
  • Swansea, New Deep-water Lock at the, (328)

Dockyard Notes:

  • Above-water Tubes, 286
  • Achilles, Name Changed to Hibernia, 394
  • Admiral O’Neill, of the United States Navy, The Latest Toing said about Him, 286
  • "Admiralty Return,” The Last, 283
  • Ajax for Sale, Old Battleship, 237
  • Albemarle Ready for her Trials, 547
  • American Battleships, Names of the New, 325
  • American Dynamite Cruiser Vesuvius, The, 237
  • Amethyst and Topaz, Additional Data of, 547
  • Arethusa to be used as a Gunnery Tender or Struck off the List, 499
  • Aretbusa to be Relieved by the Thein, 499
  • Argentine Armoured Cruiser San Mitra Launched under her New Name of Rividavia, 451
  • Argentine Cruisers, Turkey Proposes Buying the Two Italian-built, 261
  • Ariadne Sailed for the North American Station, Replaces the Crescent, 34
  • Armour Plates for the Three First-class Battle¬ships, 65
  • Armour for the Six New Cruisers, Mr. Arnold Forster’s Reply to Sir C. Dilke, 451
  • Austrian Battleship Babenbergto be Launched, 237, 325, 353
  • Barfleur to have One Mast only, 588
  • Barham Replaced by the Intrepid in the Mediterranean, 426
  • Battenberg, Commodore H.S.H. Prince Louis of, His Appointment, 426
  • Battleship Exterminators, The Inventor of, 286
  • Battleships, Names of the New American, 325
  • Battleships, Names of the New British, 325
  • Battleship, a New, 142
  • Bedford, Fitting for Liquid Fuel Experiments, 547
  • Bedford and other Ships of the Essex Class, Larger Propellers for, 142
  • Belleisle, Adventures of some Newspaper Corre¬spondents on Visiting the, 65; Fresh Series of Trials, 376
  • Belleisle Exporiments, Programme for the Next, 307
  • Belleville Boilers, The Canopus and, 561
  • Boilers in the French Navy, The State of, 564
  • British Submarines, Colour of, 237 ; Sufferings of Crews od, 261
  • Calliope to Leave Portsmouth for her next Cruise, 391
  • Canopus Goes Hopelessly Wrong, 564
  • Canopus in Trouble with her Bellevilles, 376
  • Centurion, Progress on the, 65
  • Centurion, Reconstruction of, 394
  • Centurion to have One Mast only, 588
  • Channel Fleet, Roturn of, 547
  • Chilean Battleships, The Two New, and Report that One is to be Taken Over by Argentina, 65, 181
  • Circe, The Torpedo Gunboat, 15
  • Classification of Ships and the Official Service Report at Portsmouth, 181
  • Coaling Vessels Fitted with Temperleys, 236
  • Commissioned Ships, War Value of Newly, 376
  • Crease, Major-General Sir J.,Crusade in Favour of Battleships with Armoured Bottoms, 286, 311
  • Crescent at Portsmouth, Arrival of the, 108
  • Cruiser of the Duke of Edinburgh Class, A New, 547
  • Cruiser to Replace the Cornwall, Reported Name of the, 426
  • Destroyers, The 27-Knot, 376 Dostroyer Zephyr Aground, 525, 547 Dockyard Repairs, 476
  • “Dotter,” Capt. P. Scott’s Invention, 91
  • “ Dragons ” Supplied to th3 Russian Fleet, 353
  • Drake, Speed Trial Results. 325
  • Duke of Edinburgh Class, The, 564
  • Duncan, Successful Steam Trials, 426
  • Empress of India made Rear-Admiral’s Flagship in the Home Fleet, 367
  • Europa, Successful Trials, 108
  • Excursion Steamers at the Review, 215
  • Exmouth, her Trills, 547
  • Fighting Tops Fitted to the Encounter and the Challenger, 286, 353
  • Fire Extinguishers, Testing cf Patent, 367
  • Flora to Replace the Old Pbieton, 499
  • French Armoured Cruiser Jeanne d’Arc, 237
  • French Battleship Charles Martel, Change of Rig, 261
  • French Battleship République, 237
  • French Battleship Soffren, 261
  • French Cruiser Jurien de la Gravière, Trials of, 476
  • French Flag-ship “Rsbenzorg” Laun:hed, The 376
  • French Fleet, Next Year’s Arrangements, 547
  • French Mediterranean Fleet to be Demobilised, 426
  • French Newspapers on a British Admiralty 1 Order, 281
  • French Submarines from Cherbourg to Brest, 142
  • French Submarine Manceuvres off Cherbourg, 426
  • French Submarines, Swing-out Dropping Gear of, 426
  • French Torpedo Boat 84, Attached to the Ecole ' Nava’e, Brest, 476
  • French Torpedo Boat No. 108, 588, 610
  • Galatea, Cruiser, Replaced by the Dido, in the Home Squadron, 610
  • German Battleship Braunschweig, 610
  • German Battleships. Five of the H Type, 237
  • German Battleship Kaisar Friedrich III., 15
  • German Battleships H and J, Rumours as to the Names, 307
  • German Battleship Wettin, Trials of, 451
  • German Battleship Wittekbach Aground, 610
  • German and British Warships, The Vni'.ed Service Magazine, 91
  • Garman Critics on the French Navy, 215 d
  • German Naval and Military Manoeuvres Com¬bined, 261
  • German Nymphe, The, at Portsmouth, 215 h
  • German Wittekbach Type, Ships of the, 237
  • Good Hope, Interest in the, Painted Grey, 451, 525
  • Gossamer, The Champion Torpedo Gunboat of the Navy, 588
  • Greek Battleship Psara, 261
  • Grey Paint in Portsmouth Dockyard, Spread of, 394
  • Grey Warships of England, The, 353
  • Gueydon, Trial Results of, 476
  • Guns, 122-Ton, Bought from Krupp by the ’ Boers, Reappearance of, 15
  • Guns Painted in the Three Primary C'jlours, 353, (355)
  • Holland’s Naval Annual, 307
  • Hood, Shooting Record of, 108
  • i Hyacinth Minerva Derby, Another, 547
  • Inflexible, Glatton, and Neptune Removed from the Effective List, 286 r Japan, New Battleships and Cruisers for, 353
  • Japanese Cruiser Takasago, High Topmast put for Wireless Telegraphy, 142 a Japanese Destroyer Asahiho at Portsmonth, 65
  • Japanese Fiasco at Queenstown, 215
  • Journalism and the Navy, as Connected with » the Téméraire, 451
  • Kent, The, out on a Trial, 564
  • Khaki Discarded for German Torpedo Craft, 525
  • King Edward VII., Launch Fixed for June, 325
  • Latona the ” Mother Ship” to the Submarines, 261
  • Majestic to be Replaced by the Duncan in the Channel Fleet, 588
  • Maxims Removed from our Warships, 476 e
  • Mediterranean and Channel Fleet Manwuvres, 261
  • Mexico, Four Destroyers Ordered, 15
  • Military Masts, The New Cruisers not to have, 286, 353
  • Montagu, Her Trials, 547
  • Naval Efficiency, Crusade for, 286
  • Naval Gunnery, 231, 353
  • Naval Inefficiency, Another Proof of Our. 237
  • Naval Review, Tne Daily Press on the, 181, 215
  • Naval Review, Photographs of, 261 ; Public Interest in the Abortive, 34; Particulars regarding, 142
  • Naval Review, The, Spithead, 34, 65, 142, s 166
  • Ocean, Shooting Record of the, 108
  • Officers who have Come Back to England in the Japanese Ships at Spithead, 166
  • Painting Grey of British Warship), The, 353, 367
  • a Periscope Fitted to British Submarines, 325, (355)
    Polyphemus, The, 525
  • Portsmouth Harbour, Gasoline on Fire in, 588
  • Portuguese Ironclad, Vasco da Gama. 451
  • Race between the Japanese Cruiser Kasaji and the American Craft, 166
  • Royal Duckyardsmen, Grievances and the, 286
  • Royal Naval Engineer College of Keyham, Direct Control of, 108
  • Royal Sovereign at Portsmouth, The, 65
  • Russian Battleship, Alexander II., 547
  • Osliabia, Trials, 525
  • Pobieda, 15
  • Cruiser Aurora, her Trials, 588
  • Bayan, Trials, 525
  • Bogatyr’s Trials, 261 J
  • Novik on her Way to the Far East, 426
  • Otchakoff, 353
  • Pamiat Azova, Reconstruction of, 325
  • Fleet, T*1® “ -Dragons ” Supplied to the, Fleet at Portland, 525, 547
  • Squadron in the Far East, Ships to Reinforce the, 499
  • Torpedo Boats Turn Out to be New Destroyers, The. 353 307
  • Navigation from a, Warship Nikolai I.Senttothe Mediter¬ranean, 307
  • St. George to be Replaced by the Good Hope as Flagship of the Cruiser Squadron, 376
  • Scout Class of Cruisers, 499
  • Scouts, Names of the Four 25-Knot, 588
  • Storage of Steam Coal, Question of the, 451
  • Submarine of the Holland Type, German Naval Authorities’ Experiment with, 261
  • Submarine No. 1, Trials in the Irish Sea, 394
  • Submarine No. 2, Trial at Barrow, (85), 91
  • Submarines No. 2 and 3 at Portsmouth, 215
  • Submarine No. 3 in Dry Dock, her Gay Colouring, 394
  • Sultan Painted Grey, The, 394
  • Surly’s Trials with Liquid Fuel, 367
  • Swedish Battleship, a New, 525
  • Swedish Destroyer Mode, 108, 261
  • Swing-out Dropping Gear of the French Sab- marines, 426
  • Tactical Exercises, The, 34
  • Terrible to be Refitted at Clydebank, 325
  • Torpedo Boats 52, 53, and 55 to be Fitted with , Water-tube Boilers, 451
  • Torpedo Craft, The Equipment of, 376
  • Torpedo Tubes from Destroyers, Removal and Replacing of, 610
  • Turbine Destroyer Velox, 547
  • Turkey’s Refusal to allow Russian Torpedo Boats to Pass the Dardanelles, 237
  • United States Battleship Illinois, 15
  • Battleship Louisiana to be Built at Newport News, 451, 525
  • Battleship Maine’s Trials, 261
  • Cruiser Brooklyn brings over the Body of the late Lord I’aunccfote, 34
  • Cruiser Dosmoines, Launch of, 325
  • Cruiser Galveston, Launch of, 325
  • Fleet, Caribbean Division of the, 376
  • Submarine of the Lake Type, the Protector, 517
  • Navy, Reported Discontent in, 547
  • New Jersey Type, some Altera¬tions made iu, 525
  • Victory Decorated on Trafalgar Day, 394
  • DOCK Gate, Messrs. E Finch and Co., Limited, (68)
  • Does it Pay ! (Splendid Machinery in some of the Leading Works in Germany), 399
  • Dorman, Long and Co., Limited, Annual Report, (505)
  • Drawing Desk, Adjustable, Messrs. B. and S. Massey, 440
  • Drawing Instrument, A New American, 170
  • Drainage, Pneumatic, A French Method, Com¬pleted at Stansted, (303)
  • Dredge, Hydraulic, At Work in Like St. Peter, between Montreal and Quebec, (137)
  • Dredging the Suez Canal, (137)
  • Drill, Portable Electric, O. Borend and Co., Limited, 181
  • Drilling Machine Rail, Niles Tool Works Com¬pany, 312
  • Dunu, Mr. Ralph, (98)
  • Durban, New Town Hall, Designs Invited iu Eng¬land, (519)
  • Durr Liquid Fuel Apparatus, The, 105
  • Dust Collector, The Tornado, 146
  • Destructors, 285
  • Laying with Oil, (328)
  • Laying with Oil, Farnborough-road, (420)
  • Laying by Tar Sprinkling, (316), (315)
  • Nuisance, A Cure for the, (233)

E

  • EARTHQUAKES and Volcanic Eruptions, South- East Russia, Results of, in the Black and Caspian Seas, (162)
  • Economiser, Explosion from an, 107
  • Egg Shells, Tests as to Power required to Break, (328)

Electric

  • Air Compressor, Reavell and Co., Limited, 620
  • Alternator and Engine, Multiphase, 524
  • Alternator, 1000-Kilowatt, Messrs. Johnsen and Phillips (xv., xvi., Supplement, December 12f/<, 1902)
  • Alternator, Two-phase Inductor, Brush Com¬pany, Limited (ix., xi., Supplement, December \2tk, 1902)
  • Anemometers, Pressure, Priz-s for, Offered by German Government, (61)
  • Association, Papers read at the Municipal, on Steam Turbines, on the Type of Engines for Large Generating Stations, and on Earthing, 53
  • Battery, Bells, and Wire, for Enabling Police to Check Speed of Auto-cars, East Sussex, (162)
  • Canary Islands, Petroleum and Coal Imports, (61)
  • Canyon Ferry, 50,000-Volt Transmission Plant, 255
  • Cauveri Falls, Power Transmission, 114 Combination, a Garman, 592
  • Commutator Grinder (Supplement, December 12tk, 1902, xiii.)
  • Conductivity of Air, R.cent Experiments on the, (137)
  • Conductivity of Aluminium Alloys, as Affected by London Atmosphere, Prof. E. Wilson, on, 301
  • Coral Fishing in Sardinian Waters, (61)
  • Crane, Ransomes and Rapier, 83
  • Current Price of, in Grimsby, Reduced to Private Consumers, (162)
  • Device for Cutting Steel, (162)
  • Discharge, Mechanical Phenomena of the, M. I. Semonow, (185)
  • Drill, Portable, O. Berend and Co., Limited, 184
  • Drills at the Quarry of the Aken American Portland Cement Works, (137)
  • Dynamo Design, Specific Utilisation of Materials in. Prof. S. P. Thompson on, 301
  • Electrolysis, Mr. A. Larsen on the Means of Diminishing, (496)
  • Electrolysis of Iron Pipes in Boston, Double¬trolley System Advocated for the Electric Railways, (211)
  • Electroscopes, Distance at which they can be Discharged by Candle Flames, (111)
  • Electro-technical Apparatus and Machines in Russia, Demand for, (257)
  • Energy, Westinghouse Integrating Wattmeter for Measuring; Approved by Board of Trade, (355)
  • Engineering Supplement, i.-xvi., December \2lh, 1902
  • Equipment of a Mine Shaft, U.S.A., (338)
  • Ferranti, Limited, Multiphase Alternator and Engine, 524
  • Fire Pump Used in Rouen, (565)
  • Generating Plant at Niagara, New, 136
  • Plant, Wolverhampton Exhibition, 116
  • Station, Projected for Kwala Lumper. Seianger Straits Settle¬ment, (162)
  • and Supply Stations, Yoker and Hamilton, on the Clyde, British Westinghouse Company, (372)
  • Generators, Double Current, and their Applica¬tion, Mr. Ruthven-Murray on, 27
  • Generators, 800-Kilowatt, Crompton and Co., Limited, 120
  • Goliath Crane (vi., ix , Supplement, December 12z/<)
  • Hawaiian Islands, Exports from, (61)
  • Heating, for the Versailles Electric Railway Carriages, (372)
  • High-tension Continuous-current Systems, Mr. A. S. Barnard on, 28
  • High-tension Appliances (xiii, Supplement, December \2th)
  • House at St. Maurice, 461, 464
  • Interlocking System, U.S.A., (622)
  • Inventions in Germany, Patents Taken Out or, (61)
  • Lamp Bracket for Works, F. Wall work and Co., 57
  • Liusanne Receiving Station, 516, 518
  • Letter Stamping Machines, The Columbia, Ordered by the General Post-office Authori¬ties, (317)
  • Mechanical Stoker, The Hodgkinson, at the Liverpool Electric Supply Stations, 598 Method of Di (covering Metallic Veins Under¬ground, (162)
  • Mine Firing Apparatus (i., iii., Supplement, December \2th)
  • Motor Construction (xiv., Supplement, December
  • Niagara Falls Power Company, Power House No. 2, (485)
  • Niagara Falls Power Installations, (469), (485), (565)
  • Nitrate Works in Chili, 1901, (61)
  • Omnibuses, (43)
  • Paralleling of Alternating-current Gcnerattra, 196
  • Patents Taken out in Germany for Electrical Inventions, 1900, (61)
  • Petroleum and Coal Imports into the Canary Islands, (61)
  • Picture Telegraph, American Patent, (43)
  • Pile Driver, Mr. J. Garvie, 261
  • Pile Driver and Derrick, Chicago, (35)
  • Ploughs Imported into Uruguay, (61)
  • Postal Service for Rome, Projected, (280)
  • Potentiometer, The Crompton (xiii., Supple¬ment, December 12(A)
  • Potentiometer, Mr. J. W. Peck on the, (554)
  • Power, Application of, for the Iron and Steel Industries, Mr. Selby-Bigge, 252 Generation, Steam Turbines lor, Mr. S. E. Fedden on, (257)
  • Installation, Vancouver Co.’s, (162)
  • at Linwood Paper Mills, 58, 59
  • in Locomotive Shops, by an American (196)
  • Plant, 194, 218
  • Burnley, (328)
  • Canadian, 143, (257)
  • Philadelphia Company’s Plans, (85)
  • Pulverised Fuel for, (519)
  • in Steel Works, Herr F. Kylberg on, 252
  • Susquehanna River, Proposed, (162)
  • Station, Birmingham University, de Laval Steam Turbine. (614)
  • Station, New, Ipswich, (162)
  • Station, New, Niagara Gorge, (469), (485), (565)
  • Stations, Newcastle, Mr. W. D. Hur ter and Mr. W. B. Woodhouse on, 106 Supply, San Francisco, (85) Trammission, Cauveri Falls, 114
  • to the Interior of Mines, Mr. T. L. Galloway on, (539)
  • Lines in Peru, Probable Demand for, (11)
  • and Supply io Switzer¬land, 296, 297, 366, 370, 371, 409, 452, 461, 464, 516, 518 Pamp, Three-throw, 117
  • Pumping Plant for Sydney, Messrs. Mather and Platt (xvi., Supplement, December 12M) Pumps, Frank Pearn and Co., Limited, 375, 377
  • Quantity, A New Unit of, Described by Mr. A. H. Cowles, (372)
  • Rice Mill, Siam, (61)
  • Rubber Grinding Machines (xii., Supplement, December 12M)
  • Signal Cabin at Crewe, 548, 550
  • Signal Service Men in the United States Army, Serious Lack of Electricians, (395)
  • Stations, Gas Engines for (iv., Supplement, December \2th) ' > IP
  • Steam Turbine Unit for Electric Generating Purposes, The Largest Claimed by Americans, Storage Battery, Mr. Elison’s New, Five Motor Cars to Test it, (589)
  • Supply, Calcutta, Multipolar Generators, 120
  • Hastings, 610
  • Henley, Overhead Wires Sanctioned by Board of Trade, (162)
  • Undertakings in the United Kingdom, Board of Trade Returns, (303)
  • Switches, 593
  • Switzerland, Electric Power and Transmission Supply in, 296, 366, 370, 409, 452, 461, 464, 516, 518
  • Tidal Indicator for Passing Ships at Cuxhaven, (61)
  • Traction <•. Steam, 110, 218, 265
  • Trade Prospects, 558
  • Tramways (see also Tramways), 569
  • Transformers The Largest Manufactured, (328)
  • Typewriter, (443)
  • Undertakings, 473
  • Undertakings, Oppcsition to, 294
  • Undertakings, The Purchase of, 596
  • Uruguay, Ploughs Imported Last Year into, (61)
  • Valve, A New, Invented by M. Nodon, (303)
  • Water Power Plant, including a Tunnel, Idaho on the Snake River, (185)
  • Water Power Plant (32.000 K lowatts), Sault St. Marie, Michigan, (544)
  • Westinghouse Works, New, U.S.A., 550 Works, British Westinghouse Company’s, (505)

Electric Engineering- Supplement, December 12th, 1902:

  • Introduction, Commutator Grinder, Messrs. Ferranti L'mited, XL, xiii.
  • Crompton Potentiometer, xiii.
  • Design of Continuous - current Generators (Illustrated), viii.
  • Electric Goliath Crane (Illustrated), vl, ix.
  • Electric Tram Trucks, ix.
  • Electric Tramway Motor, The Brush Standard, xiii.
  • Gas Engines for Electric Stations, by G. H. Baillie (Illustrated), iv.
  • High-tension Appliances, Messrs. Ferranti Limited, xiii.
  • Horndean Light Railways (Illustrated), iii., viii.
  • I/verpool Overhead Railway (Illustrated) ii., iii., vii.
  • Motor Construction. Messrs. Siemens Brothers and Co. Limited (Illustrated), xiv., xv.
  • Plant for Testing Cables at High Pressures, by Stuart A. Russell, ix.
  • Present Position and Prospects of Electrical Engineering, i., ii.
  • Pumping Plant for Sydney, Messrs. Mather and Platt, Limited (Illustrated), xvi.
  • Rubber Grinding Machines, Messrs. Dick, Kerr and Co., xi, xii.
  • Submarine Mines (Illustrated), ii., iii.
  • Three-phase Alternator, Messrs. Johnson and Phillips (Illustrated), xvi.
  • Tramcar Controllers, Messrs. Dick, Kerr and Co., x.
  • Two-pbase Inductor Alternator, Brush Elec¬trical Engineering Company, ix., xi.

Electric Light:

  • Clock Dials, Illuminating with, Sir W. H. Bailey’s Method, (315), (552)
  • Cost of, Westbourne-terrace, Substitution of, by Incandescent Borners, (443)
  • Elect on tbe Eyes Lass Injurious than other Forms of Artificial Light, (303)
  • Flashing L:ghthouse Light, Mr. J. R. Wig¬ham’s, (302)
  • Gyrometers. Electrical-lighted, (552)
  • Hastings, (614)
  • Llanelly, New Dock, (316)
  • Peru, Demand for, 11
  • New York, (111)
  • Port Elizabeth, (496) and Power Station, Newcastle and District, Mr. W. D. Hunter on, 106
  • and Power throughout Chatham Dockyard. (137)
  • Rsvolving Light, Dunkirk, (233)
  • Russia, Revision of the Tariff Doties in Installing, (302)
  • Salford Lighting Plant, 595
  • Series Incandescent Lighting at 500
  • Volts and the Board of Trade Regulations, (35)
  • Switzerland, Water Power, 595
  • Sydney, New South Wales, Central Station, 123
  • Tien-Tsin, (61)

Electricity:

  • Decomposition of Water by, Messrs. D. L. Chapham’s and F. A. Lidbury’s Experiments, (519)
  • Effect of, on Plant Life, Mr. V. G. Heber’s Experiments on, (614)
  • Leotore3 on, at the Chelmsford Works, 354
  • and Legislation, 60
  • Measured and Accounted for, and Number of Consumers, Manchester, (85)
  • Moving Platforms Operated by, for Brooklyn Bridge, (61)
  • Peru, Demand for, (11)
  • Railway Signalling by, 501
  • Supply in the City, Mr. A. A. Voysey on the Progress in, (85)
  • Supply Undertakings in the United Kingdom, Board of Trade Returns, (303)
  • Transmitted 173 Miles over Aluminium Wires, California, (395)
  • Use of, in Russia, for Distribution of Motive Power, (257)
  • Water Power for Generating, called in Italy “ White Coal,” (85)
  • Water Power for Generation of, in Russia, (257)
  • ELMORE Plant for the Concentration of Ores by Oil, 216
  • Emigrants, Prospects of, 19
  • Engineer, The (from the Spectator), J. H. K. Adkin, 65

Engineering:

  • Eitbetics, 477, 500, 550
  • as a Profession, 236, 311
  • Canada and the United States, Prof. Goodman on,(104)
  • Discussions, 446
  • Electrical, Some Limits in Heavy, Mr. Swin¬burne’s Address, 564
  • Experimental Naval, United States, 546
  • Massachusetts Institute, Boston, Degree of Dr. of Engineering to be Conferred by, (614)
  • Price, Mr. John, On Civic Engineering Progress. (4)
  • Schemes on Foot at La Rochollo, Important, (35)
  • Smart Piece of, (442)
  • Standards Committee, The, 592, 593
  • Supplement, Eleotric—see Electric Engineering Supplement Trades, The Garman Metallurgical and, 422
  • Trade and Technical Eduoation, 117
  • Works, Irlam, Royles, Limited, 16, 17
  • Workshops, Design and Construction of Modern, Mr. J. H. Humphreys, 575

Engineers:

  • Branch of the Navy, Lieut. Carlyon Bellairs, 437
  • Commercial, 422
  • Deoline of British, 241, 285
  • Education and Training of, Prof. Perry, 302, 313, 335, (527)
  • Evening Classes for Young, at Derby Technical College, (143)
  • Health of, 391
  • Navy, 144, 311
  • South Africa from the Point of View of an, 64, 93, 247, 276, 293, 319, 341, 415, 535, 557, 579, 605
  • Training of, at an American University, by F. Fayant, 466, 468, 470

Engines:

  • Balanced High speed Steam, Bever, Borling and Co., Limited, 116
  • Blast, for the Barrow Hematite Steel Company, (443)
  • Butler's Compound Gas, Clarke, Chapman and Co., 571, 572
  • Compound Road Locomotive, Clayton and Shuttleworth, 502
  • Demand for, in British Columbian Mining Camps, (519)
  • Diesel Oil, II. Ade Clark, (585)
  • Economy, Some Recent Experiments in, Pro¬fessor R. L. Weighton on, (139), 147
  • Fire and Pumping, Compound, Merryweather and Sons, 571
  • Fitted with Trip Valve Gear, Speed of, 208
  • Gas, for Electric Stations (iv., Supplement, December 12M)
  • Explosions of, Mr. H. E. Wimperis on, 354
  • 500 Horse-power Horizontal Tandem, The Premier Gas Engine Company, Limited, 109
  • for Generating Stations, 37, 68, 88
  • Heat Balance in, 354, 376, 404, 425, 412, (465)
  • Recent Progress in Large, Mr. H. A. Humphrey, 277
  • Romarkable Installation of, in Philadelphia, (257)
  • The Stcckport, for Direct-coupling to a Dynamo, J. E. H. Andrew and Co., Limited, 315
  • Three cylinder Compound, Clarke, Chap¬man and Co., Mr. Butler’s Patent, 571, 572
  • 200 Brake Horse-power, of the Double-¬cylinder Type, J. E, H. Andrew and Co., Limited, (97)
  • Using Blast Furnace, First Example of, in the United States, (211)
  • Glasgow Tramway Traction (Supplement, Decem¬ber 5th, 1902), 306, 333, 536
  • Goodfellow, High-speed, 499
  • Hauling, Clayton and Shuttlewortb, 502
  • Heat Balance in the Gas, 351, 376, 404, 4'25, 442. (465), 497
  • Internal Combustion, for Motor Cars, Mr. F. G. Heseldin on, (511)
  • Locomotive—see Railways, Locomotives
  • —Oil, Diesel, 191
  • Oil, Diirr, Portable, 193
  • ” Oil, Girder Type, Campbell Gas Engine Com¬pany, 262
  • Oil, Increasing Demand for in Palestine for Irrigation Purposes,(61)
  • Oscillating Paddle, 46
  • Paddle Steamer, Lady Tyler’s, R. and W. Hawthorne, 272, 273
  • Petrol, Complete Combustion Rarely Attained in Cylinders of M. Sorel’s Experiments, (589)
  • Petrol, for Tramways, 68
  • Pumping, Trent Valley Pumping Station, 295
  • Reheaters, 139, 194, 241
  • Relays and Governors, by Arthur Rigg, 364
  • Scale Prevention and Steam Jackets, 241
  • Semi-portable Compound, and Boiler with Superheater Attached, (111)
  • Steam, for Generating Stations, 37, 68
  • Steering, Harrison Engine Company, Limited, (358)
  • Stokers, Automatic, 14
  • Superheated Steam in a 4500 horse-power Engine in the Lincoln Power Station, Boston,
  • Tandem Compound Condensing Pumping, Haniel and Lueg, 202, 203
  • Traction, Call for in South Africa, (614)
  • Traction, in the United States, (454)
  • Tramway Traction, Glasgow, 596
  • Twin Tandem Compound Condensing Winding, Düsseldorf Exhibition, Gutehoffaungsbütte Oberhausen, 154, 155
  • Vertical Cross Compound (4500 Horse-power Use of Superheated Steam in a, (233)
  • Wind, for Pumping Purposes, (285)
  • Winding, for the Harpen Mining Company, Prince Rudolph Ironworks Company, Dusseldorf Exhibition, 176
  • ENGLISH and American Machinery, 144
  • English Methods, 477
  • European Customs Tariffs, 236
  • Earopsan Mails to Japan, Russian Ambassador's Proposal as to the Route, (469)
  • Exports, Increased, 569

Exhibitions:

  • Automobile Club of France, (443)
  • Automobiles at Hamburg International, (85)
  • Cape Town, British and Colonial, at, (61), (211)
  • Cork International, (372)
  • Cycle Shows, the Stanley and the National, 518
  • Duiseldorf, Mining at, 75, 154, 176, 202, 271, (395); Iron and Steel Institute at, 170, 225 250, 252, 313
  • Engineering, Machinery, Hardware, and Allied Trades, Crystal Palace International, (360)
  • Fire, Forthcoming International, (372)
  • Glasgow, Surplus Revenue from, (443), (544)
  • International Tramways and Light Railways, 7
  • Japanese Industrial, The Fifth, (589)
  • Sanitary Science, Manchester, (267)
  • Wolverhampton, Boiler Feed Pumps, 7; Close, (372); Entrance Gates, 94 ; Financial Loss, (469); Generating Plant. 116; Machinery (454); Visitors to, (233), (280)

Explosives:

  • Fuse Time, for Armour-piercing Projectiles General Crozier's Invention, (211)
  • Gunpowder, Black, The Oldest of all Explosives, (589)
  • Gunpowder, A New, 501
  • Smokeless Powder, (589)
  • Torpedo, The New, 616

F

  • FAIRBANKS Company’s Table for Converting American Dollars into English Pounds, (211)
  • Fan, Mine Ventilating, 145
  • Faraday Club, The, (526)
  • Faviell, Mr. W. F., (35)
  • Fell, John Barraclougb, 394
  • Ferro-concrete Construction, Hennebique System, (355)
  • File-cutting Industry, The, 375
  • Files, Sand Blast Sharpened, 256
  • Fires—tee Accidents
  • Fira Engine, Floating, for the Manchester Ship Canal and Docks, 171
  • Fire Ladder, Telescopic, 81, 82
  • Fire, Protection of Buildings from, Mr. G. Pringle on, (540)
  • Fleming, Mr. Tho.»., (527)
  • Fog Signalling, 153
  • Fog Signals, Coast, 18, 69, 95
  • Foot-plates of Locomotives, On the, 373
  • Force of the Sea, 549
  • Formosa, South, Irrigation Insufficient, (11)
  • Fothergill Prize, The, (15)
  • Flying Machine, Prof. Graham Bell’s, (355)
  • France, Import and Export Returns, (280)
  • Free Trade and Protection, 68
  • Free Zones Advocated in France, Creation of, (519)
  • French General Imports and Exports, Value of, 1901-1902, (519)
  • French Naval Manccuvres, 179
  • Froude Water Dynamometer, The, (7)—tee also page 616, Vol. xciii.
  • Fuel Briquettes in Germany, Manufactories of, (420)
  • Furnaces, Blast, Designing and Equipment of, by Jno. L. Stevenson (Supplement, October MM, 1902), 218, 321, 347,386, 474
  • Blast, in Great Britain, (420)
  • Blast, Scotch, Dimensions and Output, (280)
  • in Blast in United States, Statistics, (211)
  • Blast—see also Blast Furnaces
  • for Laboratories, Electric Resistance Magnesia Crucible, Mr. H. M. Howe on,(35)
  • Mr. J. T. Sbadforth’s Patent, (22)
  • The Talbot Open-hearth, (565)
  • Furness, Sir Christopher, on Industrial Part¬nership, 65

G

  • GARDEN Cities, 163, 218, 241, 285

Gas:

  • Acetylene Generators, Construction of, 449
  • Acetylene, for Lightingthe S:. Lawrence Route, (589)
  • Acetylene, Mixed with Oxygen, Favourable Results in Signalling with, (420)
  • Burnt, Given Off by One Ton of Coal in Coking, (328)
  • Department, Manchester City Council, Coal Contracts Made by, (61)
  • Ether Air, 239
  • Incandescent Mantles, Construction of, G. Buhlmann’s Patent, 263
  • Lighting, Future of, Prof. V. B. Lewes on, (589)
  • Mond, as a Motive Power, Messrs. Cochrane and Co.’s Works, (233)
  • Mond, Plant at Farnley, 494
  • Natural, in England, 312, (426)
  • Natural, United States Production of, in 1901, (355), (420)
  • Oxygen-Acetylene Burner, M. Fouche’s, (35)
  • Theory of the Incandescent Burner, 239
  • Wasted per Day in American Cities, (395)
  • Wood, Mexico, (35)
  • Works Extension, Wigan, (262)
  • GATES and Lamp Standard, Wolverhampton Exhibition, 94
  • German Customs Dues on Machinery Increased, 131
  • General Foreign Trade from January to End of October, 1902, (544)
  • Industrial Conditions, Some, 518
  • Tariff, The New, 610
  • Technical Lexicon, Progress of the, (303)
  • Trade Crisis, 498
  • Germany, Imports and Exports, (211)
  • Germany’s South African Trade, 45
  • Gibson, Mr. David, (571) Gillman, Mr. Henry, (576)
  • Gilpin, Mr. Bernard, (428)
  • Girders, Support of the Ends of Croes, 609
  • Glaciers, Boring Through, (233)
  • Glasgow, The Art Galleries, (308)
  • Glasgow's Main Drainage and Sewage Operations, 324, (519)
  • Glass Colouring by Penetration, A French Method of, (§5)
  • Glazed Brick-making Machine, Messrs. Pullan and Mann, 66
  • Gloucester Refuse Destructor, Opening Ceremony, (345)
  • Gold Exploitation in Corea, (162)
  • Gold Production of New South Wales, (589)
  • Gold Yield of Victoria, (185)
  • Goliath Crane, Stothert and Pitt, 286
  • Government Laboratory, Work of the, (241)
  • Graphite in America, Manufacture of Artificial, (187)
  • Graphite, Crystalline, United States Production of. (187)
  • Grinding Machines, Heavy, 425, 426
  • Gun Trade and Education, The, 237

H

  • HAGUE, Mr. Ernest, (570)
  • Hamilton, Mr. Robert, (532)
  • Hammer, The Massev Pneumatic Power, 24C— tee also page 298, Vol. xciii.

Harbours and Waterways:

  • Avod, Navigation of the, (574)
  • Bayonne, Improvement of the Port, (11)
  • Boulogne, Breakwater in the Port of, (162)
  • Bremen, Project of Construction, Large Har¬bour and Canal Accommodation, (185)
  • Canals—see Canals
  • Capetown Harbour, Plan of, 276
  • Clyde, Improvement of the, 423, (469), 473
  • Clyde, The River. (614)
  • Copenhagen, Oil Tanks in the Free Harbour of, (619)
  • Cronstadt, Twenty Steel Lighters for, (364)
  • CaxbaveD, Leased by the Hamburg-American Packet Company, (11)
  • Emden Harbour, New Sea Lock, (303)
  • France, Free Ports in, (372)
  • French Ports, Works to be Carried out in, (162)
  • Germany, Map of the Waterways of, 129
  • Hakodate, (280)
  • Hull, the River, (614)
  • Hartlepool, Deepening and Widening the Channel, (406)
  • Heysham, 67
  • Improvements at Port Colborne, C tnada, (46)
  • Japan, Muroran and Hakodate, (280)
  • Leipzig with the Elbe, Project for Connecting, (280)
  • L’anelly, (602)
  • Madras Harbour Improvements, (589)
  • Manila Harbour, Improvement of, (185)
  • Mersey Bar and Channels of Approach to Liverpool, 45
  • Mexican, 238
  • Muroran, Japan, (280)
  • Nagasaki, (280)
  • Naples Harbour Works, Progress of, (211)
  • Newcastle Quay Extension, (328)
  • Nice Harbour Extension, (35)
  • Para Harbour Improvements, (519)
  • Peterhead, 394
  • Poit of London and the Thames, 125, 153, 186 ,
  • St. Petersburg, Inadequacy of the Port, (257)
  • Southampton Harbour, Cost of Deepaning, „ (372)
  • Southampton Water, Proposed Deepening of, (443)
  • Southampton Water Works, (589)
  • Table Bay Harbour, 275
  • Tehuantepec, 238
  • Thames, Deepening the Channel, (469)
  • Thames, Dr. Warre’s Motion respecting the Non-tidal Portion of, (544)
  • Thames, near Gravesend, Scheme for Dam and Locks across the, (544)
  • Troon, The Ayrshire Port of, (541)
  • Vera Cruz, (85)
  • Zululand Coast, Mr. Cathcart Methven on Pos¬sible Ports on, (519)
  • HEAT Balance in the Gas Engine, 354, 376, 404, 425, 442, 465, 497
  • Heat Evolved or Absorbed when a Liquid is Brought in Contact with a Solid, Mr. G. J. Parks, (48)
  • Heating Buildings with Exhaust Steam, (519)
  • Hennebique System of Ferro-concrete Construction, (355)
  • Hickman, Mr. A. W., (220), (233)
  • Hood, Mr. Archibald, 417
  • Horses in New York, Decrease in the Number, (372)
  • Hydraulic Engineer, Cape Town, (477)
  • Hydrographical Surveys, Recent, 145
  • Hysteresis Tester, The Standards in Ewing’s, 194

I

  • ICE in New York, Output of Manufactured, (11)
  • Ilges, Herr, His Apparatus for Producing Fine Spirit without Re-distillation, (162)
  • Impact and Fatigue in Railway Bridges, by J. Graham, 465
  • Tmray, Mr. John, 417
  • India-rubber Culture in Hawaii, (35)
  • Induced Air Current, 549
  • Industrial Partnership, Sir C. Furness on, 65

Institute and Club, Aeronautical:

  • Airship Disasters and the Factor of Safety, Mr. O. C. Field, 501
  • Monthly Meetings, (288), (367)
  • More Punctuality in the Time of its Meetings Desirable, (144)
  • Papers Read on July 4tb by Mr. C. Zimmermann and Mr. Alex. Adams, (48)
  • Parachute with Flapping Wings, Mr. P. L. Senecal, 367

Institute of Engineers, Dundee:

  • Engineering Workshops, Experimental Re¬search in, Prof. J. T. Nicolson, 547

Institute, Iron and Steel:

  • Electrical Plant in Steel Works, Herr F. Kylberg, 252
  • Electric Power, Application of, for the Iron and Steel Industries, Mr. Sslby-Bigge, 252
  • I Iron and Steel at the Diisseldorf Exhibition, Prof. H. Wedding, 250, 313
  • Meeting at Diisreldorf, Cook’s Arrangements for, (122)
  • Pig Iron in Germany since 1880, Progress and Manufacture of, Herr W. Brugmann, 250, 265
  • Programme for the DiiMeldorf Meeting, 170, 225
  • Saar and Luxemburg Excursions, 346
  • Steel Annealing of Low Carbon, Mild, Herr E. j Heyn, 250
  • Steel, Compression of, by Wire-drawing during Solidi6cation in the Ingot Mould, Mons. A. Harmit, 251
  • Steel Works Practice in Germany since 1880, Progress in, Herr R. M. Daelen, 250, 621

Institute of Marine Engineers:

  • Conversazione and Ball, (502)
  • Date of Meeting and Subject to be Discussed, (303)

Institute of Mining;, Civil, and Me¬chanical Engineers, The Midland:

  • Annual Gathering, (469)

Institute, The Northampton:

  • Syllabus of, (257)
  • Institute,North Staffordshire Mining:
  • English Mining and Mining Engineering, Mr. A. M. Henshaw, (405)

Institute, The Sanitary:

  • Preliminary Programme of the Nineteenth Congress, 67, (211)
  • Sessional Meeting, Discussion on Drain Testing, (496)

Institute, Staffordshire Iron and Steel:

  • navgural Address, Describing the Splendid Machinery in Some of the Leading Works in Germany. ‘ ‘ Does it Pay ? ’’ (399)

Institution of Civil Engineers:

  • Awards, (375)
  • Birmingham Association of Students, Visit to Paris, 123
  • Electric Tramways, C. Hopkinson, 503
  • Gathering at Capetown, 306
  • High-speed Electrical Generating Plant, T. H. Minshall, 584
  • Jennings, Mr. Jas., Death of, (268)
  • List of Successful Candidates in the October Examination, 501
  • Presidential Address of Mr. J. C. Hawkshaw, 451
  • Student’s Meeting, Erection of Steel Bridges, Sheffield Extension of the London and North- Western Railway, Mr. A. Reynolds, 584

Institution of Electrical Engineers:

  • Appointment of Mr. Tatlow as Mr. F. Gill’s Successor, (89)
  • Conversazione, Annual Dinner and, (15), (593)
  • Inaugural Address by Mr. Swinburne, (515), 547, 564

Institution of Engineer’s and Ship¬builders, N.E. Coast:

  • Gold Medal Awarded to Mr. D. B. Morison, (544)

Institution of Engineers and Ship¬builders in Scotland:

  • First General Meeting, 452
  • Steam Torbines, with Special Reference to the De Laval Type of Turbine, Mr. K. Anderson, 540, 542

Institution of Junior Engineers:

  • Automatic Railway Coupling, A New, Mr. A. T. Swaine, 622
  • Opening of the Summer Meeting, Programme of Visits and Excursions, 107
  • Planimeter, The, Mr. W. J. Tennant, 622
  • Visit to the American Exhibition, Crystal Palace, (42)
  • Visit to the Headquartsrs of the Electrical Engineers, R.E., (451)
  • Visit to the London Bridge Widening Works, 426

Institution of Mechanical Engineers:

  • Autumn Session, First Meeting, 390
  • Cylindrical Steam-distributing Valves to Loco¬motives, Application of, Mr. Walter M. Smith
  • Electric Light and Power Station, Newcastle and District, Mr. W. D. Hunter, 106
  • Electric Supply Power Station at Neptune Bank, Newcastle, Mr. W. B. Woodhouse, 106
  • Excursions, 132, 158
  • Graduates’ Association:—
  • Opaning Meeting of. Construction, Lighting, and Ventilation of Cotton Mills, Mr. F. Wilkinson, 571
  • Notes on the Locomotive, by Mr. Jas. Mac- gregor, (168)
  • Liquid Fuel for Steamships, Mr. Edwin L. O.-de, 104, 140
  • Mechanical Appliances in Mines, Mr, R. H. Wainford, 158
  • Oil Motor Cars of 1902, Capt. C. C. Longridge, 390, 402, 403, 427, 436, 453, (476), 478, 503, ,515
  • Pumping Plant for Condensing Water, Mr. C. Hopkinson, 106
  • Steam Engine Economy, Some Experiments on, Prof. R. L. Weighton, 147
  • Summer Meeting, Outline Programme, 60

Institution of Mining and Metallurgy:

  • Ore in Sight, Mr. J. D. Kendall, 339
  • Programme of Twelfth Session, Awards, (222)

Institution of Naval Architects:

  • Annual Meeting, the Next, (515)
  • Martell Scholarship in Naval Architecture Awarded to Mr. L. Woollard, (211)
  • INTERMEDIATE3, Ships that are Battle¬ships or Cruisers, according to the Needs i of the Moment, 88
  • Ireland, Rainfall of, and Water Power of, 278

Iron:

  • Amount of Copper that can be Alloyed with, ' when Carbon is Present iD, (35)
  • Austrian and Hungarian “Cartel,” (519)
  • Belgian, for Beirut, (61)
  • Belgian Output, (151)
  • Carbon in, How it Affects the Amount of Copper that can be Alloyed with it, (35)
  • Cleveland, Exports of, Pig, September, October, (455)
  • Corner, Pig, (3/6), 425
  • Direct Extraction of, from the Ore, Mons. Hernoult’s Process for, (111)
  • Foundries, Consolidation of American Malleable, (233)
  • German Exports, 159
  • German, Export Bounties cn, 546
  • German Exports to Russia, (185)
  • Japan's White Elephant, The lronfoundry at Wakamatsn, 528
  • Manganese, South Russia, (185)
  • Mesabi, United States, (519)
  • Middlesbrough, Exports to America of Pig, (85)
  • Minnesota Mines, Nationality of the Men Employed, (420)
  • Oro Deposits in New South Wales, Varieties of, in the Irkutsk District, Discovery of, (185)
  • Output, Lake Superior, (137)
  • Production, 1901, (61)
  • in South Wales, The Most Extensive Deposit of, (185)
  • Pig, 307, (395)
  • Canadian, (451)
  • Corner in, (376), 404
  • Germany, Output, (150), (151)
  • in Germany, Progress of, Herr W. Brug¬mann on, 250, 265
  • Make of, in tbe First Half of 1902, 1901, and 1900, (420)
  • New South Wales, (137)
  • Price of, Mr. Waterhouse’s Official Return, (531)
  • Rings, 20ft. Diameter, Weight 8 Tons each, from Düsseldorf, (496)
  • Russia, Production of Raw, (328)
  • Russia, South, Production of, (614)
  • Russian Trade, Crisis in the, (482)
  • Scotland, Firms, Works, &c., Employed in the Manufacture of Malleable, (280)
  • Silicon Lost by, in Passing through a Cupola, (35)
  • Sold to tbe United States, (71)
  • Spain, Ore Deposit at Almobaja, (565)
  • and Steel Manufacture, Great Opening at Urichow, for Articles of, (111)
  • and Steel. Manufacture in India, (151)
  • Sweden, Vadsii, Great Veins of, (211) Syndicate, Russian, (469)
  • Trade, Combination in the, 65, (241)
  • Trust, Reported Russian, 524
  • United States in First Half of 1901, 1902, (211)
  • United States, Weekly Output, (35)
  • Uniting Ordinary Cast, (372)
  • Works, Coatbam, Reconstruct by Meisrs. Walker, Maynard and Co., (289)
  • Works, Estimate, 474
  • Works, Past and Present, Carron and other, Falkirk, 438
  • IRRAWADDY, Abnormal Rise of the, (185)
  • Irrigation of South Africa, 114
  • Irrigation System in Colorado, (622)

J

  • JAPAN, Imports into, by Way of Nagasaki, 347 ; and Preponderance of British Manufac¬tures and Metals, (355)
  • Japan, Kobe, 1901, Total Trade of, (519)
  • Japan’s Metallic Resources, (519)
  • Japan’s White Elephant, 528
  • Japan, Writing and Drawing with Both Hands, (328)
  • Jennings, Mr. Jas , (268)
  • Joining Timber, (460)

K

  • KEW Bridge, New, 300, 301
  • Kimberley Mines, Black Labour in, 535, 539
  • Krupp Family, The (with Portrait of Alfred Krupp), 541
  • Krupp, Herr Frederick Alfred, 514
  • KrupPg W°rk8’ ^““berof Persons Employed in,

L

  • LABELS for Luggage, Mr. Cros’ Grotesque, (162)
  • Laboratory, A Commercial, America, 196

Labour Questions, Strikes, and Trade Disputes:

  • Board of Trade Memorandum for the Labour (Jasetle, (280)
  • British Steel Makers’ Society, Stop Week agreed upon in December and Three next Months, (600)
  • Coalowners’ Association, Meeting Results in a Truce, (506)
  • Coalowners and the South Wales Miners’ Federation, 91, 118, 145
  • Colliery Disputes, Denaby and Cadeby, (315); Wynnstay, North Wales, (456)
  • Colville and Sons, Messrs., Sheriff Davidson’s Award in the Case of, (150)
  • Commission, Labour, Mr. A. Moseley’s, 370
  • Compulsory Arbitration in Labour Disputes, Question of, at the Trades Union Congress, 259 6
  • Economical Production of Work, Suggestions Invited by Vickers, Sons and Maxim, (872)
  • Engineering Employers’ Federation, Provisional Agreement between the Amalgamated Society of Engineers and, (280)
  • Failure of Compulsory Arbitration, 14
  • Federated Workshops of the Premium Bonus System, Restrictions to the Working in. Removed, (280)
  • German Trade Crisis, 498
  • Government Dockyards, Petitions for Improved
  • Conditions of Work and Higher Wages, (303)
  • Industrial Arbitration in New Zealand, 188
  • Ironworkers’ Wages, 331
  • Joiners in the Wear Shipyards, Wages Reduction, Umpire’s Award, (544)
  • Labour Commisssion, Mr. A. Moseley’s, 370
  • Labour Department of Board of Trade, Report on State of Employment in October, 496
  • Moor Works, Men Thrown out of Employment by Closing of, (355)
  • Moseley, Mr. Alfred, His Labour Commission, 370
  • New South Wales, Government Return showing Number of Persons Employed in Different Industries in, (454)
  • North-East Coast Shipbuilders and Wages Questions, (372) (381), (455). (505)
  • North and East Lancashire Statistics, (35)
  • Piece-work and the Premium System, 873
  • Piece-work Principle, Goods Station Work on the, at Cologne, (372)
  • Russian Workmen, Training of, 114
  • Scotch Miners, Wages Reduction, (303)
  • Sliding Scale, Ending of the, (22)
  • Sliding Scale, Sir W. T. Lewis and the, (406), (464)
  • Strike, Anthracite, New 'i ork, (431)
  • Anthracite Coal, in Pennsylvania, (61), (72)
  • Barry, (430)
  • in the Britannia Metal Trades, 141
  • Llanelly, (382) and Lock-outs in 1901, 256
  • and Lock-outs in Germany, 1901, (126)
  • Machinists on the UnionPacific Railway, (11)
  • Members of the Amalgamated Society of Engineers, (85)
  • Miners’, The Staveley Coal and Iron Company’s Action, in consequence of, (211), (221)
  • Miners’, West Virginia, (263)
  • Mond Nickel Company, (280), (303), (316), (430)
  • Pit Lads’, 214
  • in the United States, The Coal, 351, (353), (360), (456)
  • Swansea Valley, Serious Troubles Threatened, (280)
  • Taff Vale Case, The, 615
  • Tin-plate Workers, American, Proposed Rebate £ in Wages, (233), (245); Reduction Accepted, (456)
  • Trade and Education, 114
  • Unions Called upon to Support Penrhyn Quarrymen, (420)
  • Union Case, an Important, 140
  • Union Litigation, more, 448
  • Vickers, Sons and Maxim, Limited, and the Economical Production of Work, (372)
  • Wages of Employés of the United States Steel Corporation raised, (11)
  • War-office Scheme for Employing Time- expired Soldiers and Men, (565)
  • Westinghouse Company and the Amalgamated Society of Engineers, The Friction between the, (600)
  • Woolwich Arsenal, Workmen Discharged from, (•280)
  • LACKAWANNA Steel and Iron Company, Plant at Buffalo, (99)
  • Lackenbury Ironworks,Middlesbrough, Purchased by Sir C. Furness, (222)
  • Ladles, 16-Ton Slag, U.S.A., (46)
  • Lake Nyassa, Curious Point in Connection with, (162)
  • Lake Nyassa, Records of the Levels of, (185)
  • Lakes, Wind Effects upon, 250
  • Lamps, Safety, Ark’s, (211)
  • Lanarkshire, Blackband, (280)
  • Lince, Lieut. G. F., Book on the Formation of Miniature Rifle Clubs, (395)
  • Late Again, the American Contractor, (496), 499
  • Lathe and Boring Machines, Jas. Spencer and Co., 448, 449
  • Double Back-geared, Thos. Ryder and Son, 308
  • Friction Driven, 549
  • Tool-rcom, W. H. Astbury, 502
  • Launches and Trial Trips, (11), 48, 68, 99, 148, 198, 223, 244, 269, 317, 380,428, 404, 504, 530, 574, 624
  • Lead Pot and Heater for Use with Petroleum, Fletcher, Russell and Co.’s Patent, (337)

Leaders:

  • Admiralty Scheme, The, 567
  • American Shipping Enterprise, 38
  • Arbitration, Compulsory, 259
  • Atlantic Steam Shipping Trade, 329
  • Atoms, The Sizs of (Mr. II. O. Ridout’s Paper), 522
  • Automatic Stokers, 14
  • Boilers for the Navy, 38, 63
  • Boilers, A Point in the Design of, 282
  • Books and Students, 164
  • Canadian Railway Expansion, 306
  • Coal, President Roosevelt and, 397
  • Coal Strike in the United States, 351
  • Colonial Markets, 473 (see Too Good, 500)
  • Commercial Engineer, The, 422
  • Corrupt Works Management, 213
  • Cruisers, Mr. Watts’, 498
  • Discussion, some Aspects of a (Capt. Long- ridge’s Paper), 522
  • Electrical Trade Prospects, 568
  • Engineering Discussions, 446
  • Engineering as a Livelihood. 236
  • Engineering Standards Committee, The, 592
  • Engineering Trades, German Metallurgical and, 422
  • Engines for Generating Stations, 88
  • Failure of Compulsory Arbitration, 11
  • Finland’s Industries, 307
  • Fly-wheels, Heavy, 568
  • Foot-plate, On the, 373
  • French Navy, The, 471
  • French Ship Design, The Genius of, 259
  • French Submersibles, The, 397
  • Garden Cities, 163
  • German Boiler Industry, 446
  • Electrical Combination, 592
  • Iron, Export Bounties on, 546
  • Metallurgical and Engineering Trades, The, 422
  • Trade Crisis, 498
  • Glasgow Tramway Engines, 306
  • Guns, High Command of, 113
  • Heat Balance iD the Gas Engine, 497
  • Industrial Arbitration, 188
  • Institution of Civil Engineers in Cape Colony, 306
  • " Intermediates,” Ships that are either Battle¬ships or Cruisers, 88
  • Interpretation of Facte (the Screw Propeller Question), 305
  • Liquid Fuel for Steamships, 140
  • Liquid Fuel for Warships, 472
  • Locomotives for India, 187, 421
  • Locomotives, Single, 616
  • Locomotives, Suburban, 398
  • Motor Car Legislation, 281
  • Motor Car Problem, The, 374
  • Municipal Enterprise, 830
  • Naval Engineering, Experimental, 546
  • Naval Gunnery and its Improvement, 281, (353)
  • Permanent Way, Repair of, 214
  • Piece-work and the Premium System, 373
  • Port of London, 187
  • Preferentialism, its Scope and its Importance. 87
  • Premium System, The, 235
  • President R losevelt and Coal, 397
  • Progress Profits, 352
  • Railway Accidents in the United States, 13, 445
  • Railway Economy, 213
  • Railway Management, 591
  • Re-beaters, 139
  • Science of Business, Sir W. Preece on the, 521
  • South Africa from an Engineer's Point of View, 64
  • Steam Engines for Generating Staticns, 37
  • Steel, some Peculiarities of, 471
  • Submarine Warfare, 329
  • Suburban Traffic, 113
  • Taff Vale Case, 615
  • Tnrift in Design, 163
  • Torpedo, The New, 616
  • Trade Union Case, Important, 140
  • Trade of the United States, 260
  • Transport, 64
  • Wagon Question, The, 235
  • War Uses of Fast Merchantmen, The, 352
  • Warship Building in the United States, 545
  • Watts’ Cruisers, 498

Sub-Leaders:

  • American Enterprise in England, 15
  • Aniline Dyes and Technical Education, 65
  • Boilers, Navy, 140
  • Chemistry in Germany, 331
  • Clyde, Improvement of the, 423
  • Clyde and the New Cunarders, The, 353, 473
  • Clyde Shipbuilding, Six Months', 15
  • Coal, 282
  • Coal Strike, The American, 375
  • Copper, 188, 261
  • Cunard Liners. The New, 353, 473, 592
  • Does it Pay ? 399
  • Electric Tramways, 569
  • Electrical Undertakings, 473
  • European Customs Tariffs, 236
  • Fight for a Principle, A, 140
  • Foreigners and the Russian Navy, 188
  • French Traffic and the Simplon, 417
  • Gun Trade and Education, The, 237
  • Increased Exports, 569
  • Institution of Electrical Engineers, 547
  • Iron Trade, Combination in the, 65
  • Ironworkers’ Wages, 331
  • Irrigation of South Africa, 114
  • Japanese Shipping Subsidies, 15
  • Late Again, The American Contractor, 499
  • Locomotives for India, 65
  • London Tube Railways, 65
  • Manchester School of Technology, 374
  • Mosely, Mr., His Scheme, 214
  • Motor Car for Military Purposes, The, 237
  • Municipal Trading, 89
  • Ordnance Factory Management, 114
  • Pig Iron, 307
  • Pit Lads' Strikes, 214
  • Railway across Canada, New, 522
  • Railway Companies and the Carriage of Petrol, The, 423
  • Railways in the East, 89
  • Ribble, The River, 65
  • Russian Workmen, Training of, 114
  • Steel ! What is, 282
  • Structural Strength of Torpedo-boat Destroyers, 164
  • Trade and Education, 114
  • Turbine Propulsion for Ships of Commerce, 164
  • Tube Schemes, Collapse of Rival, 399
  • Vanxhall Bridge, New, 522
  • Westward to the Orient, 569
  • LEES, T. R., Machine Tools, (47)

Legal Intelligence:

  • Attorney-General v. The Corporation of Bourne¬mouth. 89
  • Dublin United Tramways Company, Limited, Fitzgerald re Tramway Track Sanding, 562
  • Glamorgan Coal Company and others <•. The South Wales Miners’ Federation and others, 91,140, 145
  • Mining Prosecution Case at Aberdare, 172
  • Taff Vale Case, The, 615
  • LEICESTERSHIRE, Census for, (565)
  • Leicester Public Works, Loan and Debt, (544)
  • Levelling Staff, Direct Reducing, Mr. C. W. Herdman, 278

Letters to the Editor:

  • America for Draughtsmen, Ingenisro, 266
  • American Invasion, The, Crossley Bros., Limited, 619
  • Battleships, Defenceless, J. F. Crease, 311
  • Belleisle, H.M.S., and Steering Gear, J. J., 194
  • Boardite Railway Wheels, D., 501
  • Boilers for Locomotives, Fred. H. Cridland, 68
  • Boilers, Flash, John Johnston, 573; John S. V. Bickford. 585 ; David Smith, 585
  • Boiler for Steam Launch, Flash, B. C. and Co., 311
  • British Trade and American Methods, J. B., 500
  • Cables to the North, Subterranean, Writer of the Articles, 527
  • Channel Passenger Service, The, Jas. Casey, 285
  • Coals and Strikes, W., 425
  • Collinge Carriage Axle, Chas. T. Crowden, 500 ; Fifth Wheel, 477 ; R. B. P., 573
  • Cycles for South Africa, D. Leechman, 43
  • Decline of the British Engineer, S. A. H., 241, 285
  • Derailment of Trains, Bull Head, 241; John Riekie, 810; J. R. A. D., 527
  • Diesel Engine, H. Ade Clark, 585
  • Dinner to Mr. Brown, R. O. Wynne-Roberts, 442
  • Dust Destructors, Jas. B. Alliott, 285
  • Electric Omnibuses, R. E. Crompton, 43
  • Electric Power Plant, Motodrive, 194; Geo. T. Pardoe, 218
  • Electric Railways, Single-phase, Geipel and Lange, 573 ; J. W. Hall, 619
  • Electric <•. Steam Traction, Correspondent, 265
  • Electric r. Steam Traction, and Train Resist¬ance, United States Railways. 218
  • Engine, Two-cycle Internal Combustion, F. Lister, 527
  • Engineering .-Eithetics, M. Inst. Mecb. E., 500; J. Sinclair Fairfax, 477, 500 ; Sidney Wat¬son, 550
  • Engineering as a Profession, J. H. K., 311 Engineers in the Navy, Chas. Clarke, 144 English and American Machinery, C. T. Sutton, 144
  • English Methods, Geo. Peak and Co., Limited, John Kendal), 477
  • Force of the Sea. Frank Latham, 550
  • Free Trade and Protection, Cobdenite, 68
  • Friction Driving for Heavy Machine Tools, J. M. Barnay, 549
  • Funnels in Warships, Protection of, F. Strick¬land, 43
  • Garden Cities, J. E. Stevenson, 218, 285
  • Garden City Project, The, Evacustes A. Phip- son, 241
  • German v. English Steel, H. J. Skelton, 43
  • Glasgow Tramway Engines, B. J., 333
  • Gordon Bennett Motor Car Race, S. F. Edge, 93
  • Heat Balance in the Gas Engine, Geo. C. Cooper, 442, (465); B. T. U., 376, 425 ; D. H. D., 425; H. E. Wimperis, 354, 404
  • Heavy Cut, A, Dean, Smith and Grace, Limited, 144
  • Hydraulic Engineer, Cape Town, Jos. Newey, 477
  • Hysteresis Tester, Standards in Ewing’s, J. H. Ewing, 194
  • Induced Air Currents, C. A. 549
  • Industrial Association, The National, T. Nicol Jenkin, 619 j
  • Injection Water Pump3, Geo. Fletcher and Co. (pro C. T. Clackson), 43 j
  • Liqu’d Fuel for Warships, Edwin N. Henwood,
  • Liquid Fuel for Yachts, J. S. V. Bickford, 376 ; r Edwin N. Henwood, 476
  • Location of a Circular Curve, Luis Julio Blanco, r 241
  • Locomotives for Canada, W. B. Thompson, 477
  • Locomotives for India (for J. Birch and Co., Limited), J. W. Bennett, 285 ; Briton, 442 ; Locomotive Manufacturer, 311 ; Arthur M. Terry, 311
  • Locomotive Wheels, Crescent-shaped, Balances of, J. Parry, 619
  • L. and N.W.R. Co.’s Engine CbarleB Dickens, No. 955, 218
  • Malleable Castings, C. W., 501
  • Mineral Oil in Boilers, Perry F. Nursey, 194; Thos. Weir, 241 1
  • Motor Car Legislation, Alfred J. Allen, 310 ; J. S. V. Bickford, 310 ; R. E. Crompton, 477, 501, 527, 573 ; M. D., 333 ; Norman D. Mac¬donald, 501 573 ; P. M., 527 ; Peter Oil, 333 ; A. Terret, 527, 585
  • Monkey or Ram ? C. J. Appleby, 333 ; J. D., 311 ; Perry F. Nursey, 285, 333; S. J. P. Thearle, 311
  • Naval Engineers, Engineer, 311
  • Packing Machinery for Export, Beta, 68
  • Patents, Designs, and Trade Marks, Edw. Evans and Co., 266 ; Provincial Patent Agent, 425
  • Patents, International Protection of, Concerned, 403
  • Patent Law Amendment, J. W. G., 68
  • Perry, Professor, His Address, Beechwood, 527 ; R. E. Crompton, 585
  • Petrol Engines for Tramways, N. D. Mac¬donald, 68
  • Petroleum for Boilers, Thomas Weir, 241
  • Pig Iron Corner, Charging Bel), 425; W. H., 376 ; Midlands, 403
  • Propeller Efficiency, John Batey, 376
  • Rail Ring Tractor, Chas. T. Crowden, 442
  • Railway Accidents in the United States, H. B. Ferguson, 550 ; H. Raynar Wilson, 217
  • Railway Companies and Owners’ Risk, The, Ironfounder, 333
  • Re-beaters, American Engineer, 241 ; J. A. Ewing, 285; Albert Cnas. Pain, 241; John Riekie, 194, 241
  • Resistance of Immersed Bodies, C. C. Mason, 573
  • Scale Prevention and Steam Jackets, Beech¬wood, 241
  • Screw Propulsion, J. Batey, 476
  • Sowage Treatment, Natural and Artificial, Alf. S. Jones, 620
  • Soo Canal, The, S. S. M., 500
  • Steam, R. H. Martin, 43, 144 ; B. T. U., 93
  • Steam Engines for Generating Stations, S. Z. de Ferranti, 68
  • Steam Generator for Locomotive Service, C. H. Fox, 626
  • Steam Ploughirg in South Africa, Alexander Dalrymple, 93; Jas. Robinson, 144
  • Steamship Propulsion, Robt. Manse), 194
  • Steering Gear, Rudder, 144
  • Steering Gear, H.M.S. Belleisle and, J. J., 194
  • Subterranean Cables to the North, G. Nisbett, 500; G. Sutton, 500
  • Too Good, Geo. T. Pardoe, 500
  • Travel in Air, J. D. Fullerton, 93
  • United States Steel Trust, Ferro Caril, 310
  • University College in the University of London, Incorporation of, R9ay, Brassey, and Rich. Farrant, 477
  • Valve Diagram, Reuleanx, W. Keith Beard, 403
  • Valve Gear of Locomotive Engines, John Riekie, 68
  • Wagon Qaestion, The, J. D. Twinberrow, 266
  • Warning to Manufacturers, Patents. 311
  • Water Supply, Water Engineer, 442
  • Well Boring in South Africa, R. E. Crompton, 573
  • Wellington-street Viaduct, The, Ernest Bene¬dict, 527
  • Welsh Coal Contracts, Wm. Beal and Co., 573
  • Workshop Management, Pattern-shop, 68

Letters from our own Correspon¬dents:

  • America, Engineering Notes from, 46, 148, 170, 210, 2667338, 454, 621
  • America, Notes from, 22. 72, 99, 151, 199, 223, 245, 268, 291, 316, 361, 382, 406, 431, 456, 483, 532, 554, 576, 602
  • Australia, Notes from, 198, 288, 317, 454, 622
  • England, North of, 21, 47, 71, 98, 121, 149, 171, 197, 221, 244, 267, 289, 315, 337, 359, 381, 405, 429, 455, 481, 505, 531, 553, 575, 601, 623
  • Germany, 19, 49, 72, 98, 122, 151, 172, 198, 222, 245, 268, 290, 316, 338, 360, 382, 407, 430, 457, 482, 506, 532, 554, 602, 624
  • Iron, Coal, and General Trades of Birming¬ham, Wolverhampton, and other Districts, 21, 47, 70, 97, 121, 148, 170, 196, 220, 243, 266, 288, 314, 336, 358, 380, 405, 428, 454, 480, 504, 530, 552, 574, 600, 623
  • Lancashire, 21. 47, 70, 97, 121, 149, 170, 196,
  • 243, 267, 289, 314, 336, 358, 380, 405, 428, 454, 480, 504, 530, 552, 574, 600, 623
  • Newport Harbour Commissioners’ Weekly Trade Reports. 22, 48, 72. 122, 151, 170, 198, 222, 268, 290, 316, 338, 360, 382, 406, 430, 456, 482, 506. 532, 554, 576, 602
  • Scotland, 22, 48, 71, 98, 122, 150, 171, 197,
  • 244, 268, 290, 315, 337, 360, 381, 406 430, 455, 482, 505, 531, 553, 575, 601, 624
  • Sheffield, 21, 47, 71, 97, 121, 149, 171, 197, 221, 243, 267, 289, 337. 359, 381, 405, 429 455, 481, 505, 531, 553, 575, 601
  • Wales and Adjoining Counties, 22, 48, 72, 98, 122, 150, 172, 198, 222, 244, 268, 290, 316, 338, 360, 381, 406, 430, 455, 482, 506, 531, 553, 576, 601
  • LIGHT, Velocity of, Experiments at the Nice Observatory to Re-determine, (589)
  • Lighthouse, The Bell Rock, 159
  • Lighthouse Towers, United States, Strengthen¬ing, (266)
  • Lighting—see Electric Light and Gas
  • Lignite in Germany, Power from, 229
  • Lignolite, A New Material for Flooring, (581)
  • Liquid Air, M. Geo. Claude’s Production of, (496)
  • Air, Density of, (111)
  • Air, Machine for Production of, (85)
  • Fuel for Warships, 472, 476 for Steamships, 104, 140
  • for Steamships, Mr. E. L. Orde on, 104 for Yachts, 376
  • Imported into Ceylon, Regulations Respecting, (262)

Literature :

  • N.B.—Figures in brackets refer to Books Received and Short Notices.
  • Accountants’ Library, Vol. xiv., Engineers’ and Shipbuilders’ Accounts, Francis G. Burton, (528)
  • Aerial Navigation, Practical Hand-book on the Construction of Dirigible Balloons, Aë.-ostats, Aeroplanes, Aëromotors, Fred Walker, (189)
  • Aerial Navigation, Travels in Space, A History of, E. Seton Valentine and F. L. Tomlinson, with an Introduction by Sir Hiram Maxim, (288)
  • Aero dynamics, Experiments in, S. P. Langley, (288)
  • Aids to the Analysis and Assay of Ores, Metals, Faels, &c., J. Jas. Morgan, (417)
  • Alternating-current Machines, being the Second Vol. of Dynamo Electric Machinery, S. Shel¬don and S. Mason, (39)
  • American Industrial Conditions and Competi¬tion, Edited by J. Stephen Jeans, (39)
  • American Invasion, The, Sir Christopher Fur¬ness, (39)
  • American Invaders, The, F. A. Mackenzie, (189)
  • Arbitration, Redress by. H. Foulks Lynch, (528)
  • Arts and Handicrafts, Useful, Planned by Chas. G. Leland, (569)
  • Automobile, its Construction and Management, Translated from Gérard Lavergne’s Manuel Ttéoretique et Pratique de 1’Automobile sur Route, (256), 399
  • Bank of England, Story of the, Henry Warren, (547)
  • Beige Récueil des Travaux Techniques du Génie de l’Arméa, (256)
  • Belgique Annales des Travaux Publics de Cin- quante-Neuvième Armée, Deuxiëme Série, Tome vii., (417)
  • Builders Prices, How to Estimate, John T. Rea, (547)
  • Business Encyclopedia and Legal Adviser, W. S. M. Knight, (189), (569)
  • Chauffeur Mecanicien et du Propriétaire d’Ap- pareils a Vapour, Manuel du, H. Matthieu, 39
  • Cbimique Minérale, La Grand Industrie, E. Sorel, (39)
  • Circular Slide Rule, G. L. S nitb, (84)
  • Coal Cutting by Machinery in America, A. S. E. Ackermann, (288)
  • Coalfields of Scotland, R. W. Dron, (417)
  • Collieries, Digest of Statutory Laws relating to the Management and Rating of, H. B. Hans Hamilton and Urquhart A. Forbes, (189)
  • Country Gentlemen’s Estate Book, 1902, Edited by Wm. Broomhall, (39)
  • Cyanide Process for the Extraction of Gold and its Practical Application on the Witwaters- rand Goldfield and Elsewhere, M. Eissler, (288)
  • Dampfkessel Die, Lehr und Handbuch, F. Tetzner, (400)
  • Diagrams of Mean Velocity of Uniform Motion of Water in Open Channels, Based on the Formula of Ganguillet and Kutter, Irving P. Church, (39)
  • Differential Calculus for Beginners, Alf. Lodge, (331)
  • Directory of Railway Officials, 1902, Universal, (189)
  • Doubly in Crown Service : Life Story of Colin Watson, by K. T. Watson, (141)
  • Drawing, Manual of, C. E. Coolidge, (547)
  • Durham College of Science, Newcastle-on-Tyne,
  • Calendar, Session 1902-1903, (288)
  • Electric Traction, Six Lectures Delivered n March, 1902, J. W. Mears, (288)
  • Electric Wiring : Primer for the Use of Wire- mon and Students, W. C. ClintoD, (111)
  • Electrical Catechism : 533
  • Plain Answers to 533
  • Practical Questions about Electrical Appa¬ratus, Compiled from Po<rer, (141)
  • Electrical Engineering, Elements of, Tyson Sowell, (331), (399) ’
  • Electrical Installations of Electric Light, Power Traction, and Industrial Electrical Machinery, Rankin Kennedy, (288)
  • Electrical and Magnetic Calculations, A, A. Atkinson, (238)
  • Electrical Motor Installations: Hook for Factory Owners, F. J. A. Matthews, (399)
  • Electro-chemistry, Text-book of, Svante Arrhenius, (256)
  • Electro-mechanische Konstructions Eleniente, Skizzen beransgegeben von Dr. G. K'iugen- berg,(399)
  • Electro-plating and Electro refining of Metals, New Edition of A. Watt’s “ Electro-deposi¬tion, ’ revised by Arnold Philip, (331), (399)
  • Encyclopedia Britannica, Second, Third, Fourth, Fifth, and Sixth of the New, 39, 84, 166, 375, 417
  • Engineers’ Electrical Pocket-book for 1903, Practical, (547)
  • Engines, Modern Gas and Oil, by Fred. Grover, (84)
  • Englishwoman's Year-Book and Directory, 1903, Emily Janes, (611)
  • Excavations and Embankments, Tables for Calculating the Cubic Contents of, John R. Hudson, (288)
  • Excerpt Minutes of Proceedings of the Institu¬tion of Civil Engineers, Vols. 47 and 48, Parts I. and IL, (166)
  • Factory Accounts: Their Principles and Practice, Hand-book for Accountants and Manufacturers, Emile Garcke and J. M. Fells, (501)
  • Finsbury Technical Manuals, Gas and Petroleum Engines, Manual for Students and Engineers, Wm. Robinson, (473)
  • Fire Brigade, The Decay of London’s, A Plea for Public Safety, by Phoenix, (375)
  • Fowler’s Mechanical Engineer's Pocket-book for 1903, (447)
  • French Commercial Correspondence, 283
  • Galvanic Batteries, G. R. Bottone, (331), (399)
  • Gas, Gasoline and Oil Engines, Up-to-date Book on Explosive, Motor Power for Stationary, Marine, and Vehicle Motor Power, Gardner D. Hiscox, (547)
  • Gas and Water by Companies and Local Autho¬rities, Acts Relating to Supply of, Compiled by J. Reeson, (400)
  • Gasworks Directory and Statistics, 1S023, (447) Geometry, Foundations of, David Hilbert, Translation by E. J. Townsend, (288)
  • Garman, Commercial, Gustav Hein and Michel Becker, (399)
  • Gold Mining, Practical, Tts Commercial Aspects, Wm. S. Welton. (400)
  • Great Eastern Railway Company's Tourist Guide to the Continent, Edited by Percy Lindley, (166)
  • Hard Woods, West Australian, and their Use for Street Paving, Engineering, and other Purposes, Hon. H. Bruce Lefrcy, (84)
  • Heating and Ventilating Buildings, Kolla C. Carpenter, (447)
  • Heavy Goods Transport on Common Roads, Bramah J. Diplock, (417)
  • Hydraulic Mining, Part III., Revised and Enlarged, Capt. C. C. Longridge, (166)
  • Ingenieurs Taschenbuch, harausregebon vom Akademiscben Verein Hii’.te (473)
  • Institution of Junior Engineers, Record of Transactions, Vol. xi., Edited by W. T. Dunn, (84)
  • Institution of Naval Architects, Transactions of, Vol. xliv., Edited by R. W. Dana, (331)
  • Iron Foundry Practice, Modern, Part I., Foundry Equipment, Materials Used, and Procetses Followed, Gao. Bale, (258)
  • Lead Smelting, Malvern Wells Isles, (528)
  • Light Railway Construction, R. M. Parkinson, (331)
  • Liverpool Engineering Society, Transactions of, Vol. xxiii., Edited by R. C. F. Annett, (375)
  • London’s Fire Brigade, Decay of, Pcoeaix, (375), (547)
  • Machine Design, E ements of, Part II , W. C. Unwin, (331)
  • Machines, Materials of, Albert W. Smith, ('288) Maps: Their Use and Construction, G. Jas. Morrison, (547)
  • Mathematics, First Stage, Edited by Wm. Briggs, (84)
  • Mathematics (Higher) for Students of Chemistry and Physics, with Special Reference to Prac¬tical Work, J. W. Mellor, (84)
  • “ Mechanical World ” Pocket Diary and Year¬book for 1903, (417)
  • Mechanics, Elementary Applied, T. Alexander, 611
  • Mechanics, Elementary Manual on Applied, Andrew Jamieson, (501)
  • Mechanics of Engineering, Vol. II., A. Jay Dubois, (39), 166
  • Mechanical. Theoretical, Applied, and Experi¬mental, W. W. F. Pullen, (417)
  • Mensuration, Elementary, Plane, end Solid, R. W. K. Edwards, (417)
  • Metalliferous Mines, Machinery for, Practical Treat’s n for Mining Engineers, Metallurgists, and Managers of Mines, E. H. Davies, (288)
  • Metallography : Introduction to the Study of the Structures of Metals, chielly by the Aid of the Microscope, Arthur II. Hiorns, (288)
  • Metallurgy of Iron and Steel, Outline of the, A. H. Sexton, (331) .
  • Mineralogy: Introduction to the Scientific Study of Minerals, Henry A. Miers, (528)
  • Mines, Report of tbo Bureau of, Toronto, (331)
  • Mining Manual for 1892, Walter R. Skinner, (189)
  • Motor Cars and the Application of Mechanical Power to Road Vehicles, Rhys Jenkins, (528)
  • Motor Cycles and How to Manage Them, A. J. Wilson, (39) .
  • Municipal Engineering and Sanitation, M. N. Baker, (141)
  • Municipal Year-book, 1902, Edited by M. N. Baker, (166)
  • Naval Architects’ and Shipbuilders' Pocket¬book of Formulas, Rules, and Tables, and Marine Engineers' and Surveyors' Hand-book of Reference, Clement Mackrow, (288)
  • Navigation sous Marino ?i Travers les Siècles, Lieut, de Vaissean Maurice Delpeuch, 283
  • Newport Chamber of Commerce, Incorporated, Report of the Executive Committee for 1901,
  • P» ie Assanierung von. Bearbeitet von Dr. T. Weyl, 581
  • Pattern Drawing and Design, John Carroll, (81)
  • Photography, The Watkins Manual of Exposure and Development, A. Watkins, (39)
  • Physics, Text-book of, Properties of Matter, J. II. Poynting and J. J. Thomson, (417) 509
  • Pont-y-Pridd, History of, being an Investiga¬tion of the Stability of the Arch, W. Bulke'ey Coventry, (189)
  • Post-office London Directory for 1903, (611)
  • Power Gas Plant, Alf. Wilson, (399)
  • Pumps, Notes on the Construction and Working of, E. C. R. Marks, (39)
  • Rérines, 1'Industrie des, Elmond Roba té (288)
  • Ritle Clubs, Working Men's, Lieut.-General F. Lance on, (395)
  • Roofs and Bridges, Text-book on, Part III., Mansfield Merrimanand H. S. Jacoby, 283
  • Round the Harn Before the Mast, A. Basil Lubbock, (611)
  • Boyal Navy List, No. 100, (417)
  • Ruesias, All the, Henry Norman, 84
  • Schiffsmascbinen und Kessel, Berechnnng u. Konstrukticn der, von Dr. G. Bauer, (417)
  • Seamanship, Manual of Elementary, D. Wilson Barker, (501)
  • Sewage Treatment. Natural and Artificial, Lieut.-Col. A. S. Jones and H. A. Roechling, 581
  • Ships, All the World's Fighting (Fifth Year), F. T. Jane, (84)
  • Siberian Railway, Guide to the Great, Eogl's'i Translation, by Miss Kukol-Yasnopolsky, 84
  • Siderology : The Science of Iren, Vol. I., The Constitution of Iron and Slags, Hanns Freiherr von Juptner (84), 189
  • Smithsonian Institution, Annals of the Astro- physical Observatory of the, VoL I., S. P. Langley, (611)
  • Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections, 1259, (331)
  • Steam Engines, Stationary, Their Care and Management, Practical Hand-book for Men in Charge, Chas. Hurst, (547)
  • Steam Heating and Ventilation, W. S. Monroe, (39)
  • Steam and the Steam Engine, Andrew Jamie¬son, (501)
  • Steam Turbine, The, Robt. M. Neilson, (166)
  • Steel Works Materials, Analysis of, H. Brearley and F. Ibbotson, (331), 547
  • Street Railway Engineers, Hand-book for, H. B. Andrews, (39)
  • Submarine Warfare—Past, Present, and Future, Herbart C. Fyfe, (84), 141
  • Surveying, as Practised by Civil Engineers and Surveyors, John Whitelaw, jun., (375)
  • Surveying, Treatise on, Compiled by R. E Middleton, O. Chadwick, J. du T. Bogle, Part II., (331), 473
  • Tables for Obtainining Horizontal Distances and Differences of Level from Stadia Read¬ings, Computed by Alf. Noble and W. T. Casgrain, (141)
  • University College, Bristol, Calendar for the Session 1902-1903, (288)
  • Wiirmekraft maschinen, Grundlagon der Theorie und des Baues der, von Alf. Musil; Zugleich Autorisirte Deutsche Ansgabe des Werken, The Steam and other Heat Engines, J. A. Ewing, (189)
  • Waterworks Law as Applied to Small Under¬takings, Percy Griffith, (84)
  • Wechselstromtechnik, Herausgegebsn von E. Arnold ; Erster Band Theorie der Wechsel- strome und Transformatoren, J. L. la Cour, (400)
  • Who's Who ? 1903, Annual Biographical Dictionary, Edited by A. and C. Black, (611)
  • “ Work," Illustrated Weekly Journal for Me¬chanics, Vol. xxiii., (331)
  • Year-book of the Scientific and Learned Socie¬ties of Great Britain and Ireland, Edited by Chas. Griffin and Co., Limited, (547)
  • LLOYD and Lloyd, Limited, with A. and J. Stewart and Metzies, Limited, Amalgamation of, (544)
  • Loans for all Local Authorities, Outstanding, (544)
  • Local Government Board's Blue-book, Outstand¬ing Loans according to, (544)
  • Locomotives—see Railway Locomotives
  • Log Frame, Centre-driven, Messrs. John Pickles and Son, 146
  • London Bridge— sec Bridges
  • London County Council Fire Brigade, Petrol Tractors for, (544)
  • London County Council’s Scheme for the Pur¬chase of Site ia the Adelphi. (395)
  • London County Council and Underground Rail¬ways, (468)
  • London, Trade of, Chairman of the London and India Docks on, (395)
  • Loom, Northrop Automatic. (257), (443)
  • Lubricators, Sight-feed, Ilartcliffe, Lee and Malkin, (221)

M

Machine Tools:

  • Bar Sawing-off Machine, Messrs. Carter and Wright, 90
  • Belfort, 4, 54, 55, 104
  • Boring and Planing Machine. Horizontal, Messrs. Ward, Haggas and Smith, 168
  • C‘>pper Stay-making Machines, Alf. Herbert, Limited, 9
  • Clioker-crushiDg Machine, T. R. Lees, (47)
  • Drilling Machines, Double-geared, with Tap¬ping Arrangement and Balanced Slide, T. R. Lees, (47)
  • Friction Driving for Heavy, 549
  • Heavy Grinding Machine, Landis Tool Company, 426
  • Lathe and Boring Machines, Jas. Spence and Co., 448, 449
  • Lathe, Tool-room, W. II. Astbury, 502
  • Log Saw Frame, Centre-driven, Messrs. John Pickles and Son, 146
  • Planing Machine, Messrs. C. Radman and Co., 146
  • Planing Machine. Horizontal, Boring, and, Messrs. Ward, Ilaggas and Smith, 168
  • Planing Macbiae, with Swivelling Cross Slide, Hnlse and Co., Limited, 238
  • Riil Drilling Machine, Niles Tool Works Com¬pany, 312
  • Universal, 42
  • MACHINERY, English and American, 144
  • Machinery Exports for September, Board of Trade Returns, (372)
  • Machinery, Increased German Customs Dues on, 131
  • Machinery at Work, Apparatus for Bringing to a Stand, (328)
  • Machines Imported into Germany, Proportions Purchased from United Kingdom, United States, &j., (85)
  • Macpbenoi, Mr. A. S.. (328)
  • Magnetic Tee Square. (465)
  • Malleable Castings, 501
  • Manchester, Bacteriological Sewage Works, (282)
  • Manchester School of Technology, 374, (552)
  • Manganese Ores Imported into United State', 1900-1901, (162)
  • Manganese, Production of, 196
  • Manufacturing Plant, New, U.S.A., (622)
  • Maps, East African Railways, 492
  • Glasgow’s Man Drainage and Sewage Treatment, 324
  • The Waterways of Germany, 129
  • Marseilles as a Traffic Centre, Importance of, and Trade of, (111)
  • Martel), Benjamin, 60
  • Martell Scholarship in Naval Architecture Awarded to Mr. L. Woollard, (211)
  • Mechanical Boiler Draught. Modern Production of, Mr. W. L. Sutcliffe, (530)
  • Mechanical Phenomena of the Electric Discharge, M. Jules Semenow on. (185)
  • Mechanical Stoker, The Hodgkinson, 598
  • Meldrum Bros., Limited, New Works, (267)
  • Melting Point of Quartz, Granite, &c., (328)
  • Mercury in South Russia. (185)
  • Metal Mixer, Large, (530)
  • Metallic Packing, Redford’s Patent, (243)
  • Metallurgical Trust, Russian, 493
  • Meteorological Science, Parliamentary Grant to Committee to Inquire into Its Administration, (589)
  • Mexican Roads, Repair of, (185)
  • Mica, California, (382)
  • Mica, Sheet, Total Production of, in United States, (162)
  • Mill, New American Billet, 550
  • Mill, Steel Cone Paint, Messrs. Follows and Bate, 528
  • Milling Cutters, Mr. S. N. Brayshaw on, 429
  • Mine Timber against Rot, Experiments with Preservatives of, (420)
  • Mine Ventilator Fan, 145
  • Mineral Oil in Boilers, 194, 241
  • Mineral Production in India, (565)
  • Miners’ Phthisis, 375
  • Mines, School of, Reported Foundation of, in China, (420)
  • Mining in Columbia, Rapid Growth of (233)
  • Congress at Butte, Montana, (185)
  • in Cuba, (233)
  • at the Düsseldorf Exhibition, 75,154, 176, 202
  • Mombasa, 491 1
  • Monkey or Ram '285, 311, 333
  • More Haste less Speed, (456)
  • Mosely, Mr., His Scheme, 214
  • Motors, Optical Method of Observing Synchron¬ism in the Speed of Two, (111)

Motor Vehicles:

  • Accident to M. Deutsch, (137)
  • Adjustable Steering Columns for, (544)
  • Alcohol Motor Algrin, (614)
  • Autocar, Mr. Balfour on an, and the Policeman on a Cycle, (85)
  • Autocars for Gorman East Africa, (61)
  • Automobile Club of England, Annual Run, (443), ] (469); Awards, (353); Damage Done to Roads by Automobiles, (257), (303); Prizo Offered for Invention to Prevent Side Slip, (443); Total Value of Cars Entered lor Trial, (280) ; Trials, 228,325; Journal on the Position of Automobilism in 1920, (303) Club of France, Exhibition of, (443)
  • for Japanese Mail Service, (217)
  • Journey through European and
  • Asiatic Russia, Herr A. Kirch- j hoi’s, (11)
  • Laws, Massachusetts, (61)
  • in Marseilles, Number of, (328)
  • Number of Permits Granted in Paris for Driving, (61)
  • Service between Dunkirk and Ostend, (469)
  • Show, New York, (355)
  • Brightmcre Steam Lorry, The, 129, 130, 131
  • Buenos Ayres, Use of, in, (355)
  • Cars on the Canadian Pacific, (185)
  • Davel< parents io France, 587
  • for his Msjesty’s Mai. 8, (233)
  • for Military Purposes, 237 .
  • Problem, 374
  • with Rollers io Place of Wheels for Polar Expedition, (328)
  • Works, Some, 569, 512, 520
  • Collinge Carriage Axles, 477, 500
  • Cyclist Summoned, and Summons Dismissed in Default of Legal Evidence, (443)
  • Damage Done to Roids by, (257), (303)
  • Danish Legislation, (519)
  • Delivery Vans, Trial of, (614)
  • Driver Fined, Carlisle, (469)
  • Driver Fined for Furious Driving, (269)
  • Electric, in America, (420)
  • Engines for, Mr. F. G. Heseldiu on Internal Combustion, (541)

France, Taxes Paid on, in 1901, (355)

  • French Industrial Cars, 536, 543. 560
  • French, Working Cost of some Heavy, (85)
  • Gordon Bennett Motor Car Race, 29, 93
  • Hamburg, International Exhibition of, (85)
  • Imports and Exports of, for October, (519)
  • Industrial, in France, 536, 543, 560
  • Jenatzy’s 100 Horse-power Car, Ingenious Device used on, (544)
  • Legislation, 281, 310, 333. 374, (420), 485, 501, 519, 527, (565), (573). (574), 585
  • Legislation, Danish, (519)
  • Lister Engine, 527
  • Lorry. Steam-driven, Dr. A. W. Brightmore's Designs, 129, 130, 131
  • Mail Service in Ceylon, (35)
  • Massachusetts. Laws, (61)
  • Maudslay 20 Horse-power Car Ordered by Mr F. W. Webb, (355)
  • Merc ides Car (Illustrated), 36
  • Morocco, The Sultan of, and, (3C0)
  • Mors Racing Car (Illustrated), 29
  • Napier Car (Illustrated), 36
  • Number in Johannesburg, (519)
  • Oil, for Farmers, 239
  • Oil Motor Cars of 1902, Capt. C. C. Longridge, 402, 403, 427, 436, 453, 478, 503, 515, 522, 526, 551
  • Omnibuses for London, (544)
  • Panhard Car (Illustrated), 36
  • Pari’, Number of, (61)
  • Paris Show, 587
  • Paris-Vienna Motor Car Race, 28, 36, 75, 93
  • Petrol Motor Cars, Patent Carburetter for, (61)
  • Petrol Tractor for the London County Counc Fire Brigade, (544)
  • Prize Offered for a Device to Enable Paraffin Fuel to be used on Existing Petrol Care, (420)
  • Problem, The, 374
  • Rail RiDg Tractor, 442
  • Record Run of a Steam-propelled Carriage Built by a Harvard Student, (280)
  • Registered Numbers for, (565)
  • Registration of, 39
  • Renault Voiturette (Illustrated), 36
  • Road Resistance Dynamometer, 278
  • Road Resistance Recorder, 277
  • Serpollet Steam Racing Car (Illustrated), 29
  • Side-slip Difficulty, Solution Discovered, (589)
  • Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders, (255)
  • Special Highway for, between Ostend and Paris, Projected, (355)
  • Speed Indicator for, (355)
  • Speed Records Made by, (211)
  • Speed Regulations, Necessity for Authorised Printed Copies of, (443)
  • Steel Tracks for, in New York, (162)
  • Thornycroft Motor Wagon Works, 509, 512, 520
  • Tiras for, 90
  • Tires for, Result of Tests for, Carried Out in America, (420)
  • Toledo Car, The Latest Type of, (496)
  • Tractor for Agricultural Purposes, Mr. Albone, 239
  • Tractors for Military Purposes, Competition for, (257)
  • Two-cycle Internal Combustion Engine, The L:8ter, 527
  • Use and Speed of, Mr. Geo. W. Blackburn, 358
  • Verb, “To Automobile," (303)
  • Wage ns, Question of Raising the Tare Limit of, (496)
  • Wagons Wanted in South Africa, (11)
  • White Steam Car, The, (257)
  • MUNICIPAL Trading, 89
  • Municipal Rates, Coventry, (395)
  • Municipal Enterprise, 330
  • Municipal Trading, Discussion on, (519;

N

  • NAGASAKI, The Mitsn Bishi Dockyard and Engine Works at, (280)
  • Nagasaki, Waterworks of, (280)
  • Nagasaki, Value of Foreign Trade of. (280)
  • Naphtha, Export of Russian, Tank Wagons with Interchangeable Axles, (496)
  • Nautical Training School at Portishead, Scheme for, (328)
  • Naval Congress, Ninth International, 6, 40, 52, 80, 103
  • Engineer Appointments, 6, 72, 100, 143, 166, 244, 339, 375, 406, 457, 487, 528, 574, 588, 624
  • Engineer Officers, 70
  • Gunnery and its Improvement, 281
  • Matters—sec Shipping News and Ships Newcombe, Mr. Wm. Lister, (443)
  • New Zealand, Failure of Compulsory Arbitration, 14
  • Nickel Industry in the United States, The, (11)
  • Nile Flood this Year, Probably the Lowest ever Known, (137)
  • Nitrate Works in Chili, (137)
  • Nivens, Mr. Thoe., 218
  • Noisy Work after Nightfal', A Philadelphia Court's Decision Respecting, (162)
  • Northrop Automatic Loom, Practical Tost of. (443)

O

Obituary :

  • OBSERVATORIES, Ben Nevis and Fort William, (519)
  • Oil and Coal as Fuel, Relative Cost of, (137)
  • Cotton Seed, (504)
  • Dust Laying with, (233), (328) (420)
  • Oil Field, Tne Beaumont, U.S.A., (589)
  • Fuel for Naval Purposes Cannot Compete with Coal, (420)
  • Fue1 on the Pacific Coast, Effect on the Coal Trade of British Columbia, of Increasing Use of, (233),
  • Fuel for Tea Drying, Experiments in Ceylon, (565)
  • Fuel in Warships, 486
  • Fuel Testing House, The United States Nava), 619
  • Fuel, United States Navy, (137), 472, 476, 619
  • Imports of, into the United Kingdom, (185)
  • Industry, The Echigo, (233)
  • in Mexico, (323)
  • Wells, Texas, (233)
  • Orange River Colony, Total Value of Exports from, 1901, 1902), (162)
  • Ordnance:
  • Belgian Guns Marked with English Names, (565)
  • Factory Management, 114
  • Gun Carriage, 12in. Disappearing. Tested at the Midvale Steel Works, United States, (496)
  • High Command of, 113
  • Increase in the Energy of, (519)
  • Painted in the Three Primary Colours, (353), (355)
  • Quick-firing, New Type adopted by Bel¬gium, (565)
  • Sights, Dr. Common’s, Captain P. Scott on, (519)
  • Trade Meeting, Birmingham, (565)
  • Pneumatic, at Sandy Hook, Costly Instal¬lation of, Abandoned, (111)
  • Survey, Progress of the, 238
  • ORES, by Oil, Concentration of, 216
  • Shipments from Minnesota, (589)
  • in Sight, Mr. J. D. Kendall, 338
  • Sizing Apparatus, 552
  • Ottawa, Ontario, Trade and Navigation Repoit, (589)
  • Ottawa River, Horse-power of the, (162)
  • Oxide of Copper and Nickel, Resistance to Action of Sea Water and Air of, (211)

P

  • PACKING Machinery for Export, 68
  • Page’s Magazine, (20)
  • Paint Mill, Steel Cone, Messrs. Follows and Bate, 528
  • Palmer, Mr. Edward, (221)
  • Parcel Post Service, Important Extension, (207)
  • Parker, Henry Albert, 166
  • Patents, American Statistics, (85)
  • Designs, and Trade Marks, 266, 425
  • Disputes in Germany, Petition for a
  • Competent Authority to Settle, (111)
  • Granted in Germany, Statistics of, (85)
  • International Protection of, 369, 403
  • Law Amendment, 68
  • Law Amendment Bill, 1902, 228
  • Law, A Question of, 593
  • Law Reform, 25
  • Office, The, (606)
  • Office, Assistant Examiners in the, Open Competitive Examinations, (614)
  • Office, The Indian, Number of Applica¬tions for Protection Lodged at, 1901, (61)
  • Office Library, Sectional Catalogues of Works of Reference, (355)

Patents, Selected American :

  • Air Compressor and Cooler, A. P. Ostergren, 246
  • Alarm for Automatic Tanks, Audible Low-water, G. E. Whitney, 556
  • Anchor, J. Eynon, 318
  • Blast Furnaces, Apparatus for Controlling Iron in, L. Lincoln, 74
  • Boiler, C. F. Lape, 318
  • R. L. Morgan, 50
  • Locomotive, C. W. Newton, 152
  • Steam, Keeler and Fildes, 124
  • Steam, G. Raissle, 340
  • Boiler, Steam, A. Spencer, 381
  • Water-tube Steam, C. B Rearick, 318
  • Burners, Incandescent, for Oil Lamps, McFar¬lane and Sterne, 24
  • Cable into a Conduit, Means for Inserting, L. J. Bergdoll, 408.
  • Carburetting Device, C. A. Hamilton, 578
  • Coke Loading, Wellman, Seaver, and Morgan, 458
  • Coke Oven, R. D. Martin, 24
  • Conveyor and Guide for Rolling Mills, T. V. Allis, 556
  • Cooling Cement, Clinker, &c., C. L. Galschiot, 270
  • Cooling and Cleansing Blast-furnace Gasee, B. H. Thwaite, 24
  • Coupling for Rolling Mill Shafts, J. R. George and V. E. Edwards, 100
  • Cylindrical Cores, Machine for Making, G. J. Hoskins, 340
  • Dynamos from Car Axles, Means for Driving, J. L. Creeveling, 74
  • Economiser, W. H. Vernon, 246
  • Electrically-propelled Vehicle for Single-rail Elevated Railways. F. B. Behr, 626
  • Elevator for Cinder Pits, W. Robertson, 362
  • Engine Bearing and Adjusting, Means Therefor, C. Robinson, 74
  • Compensating High-duty Compound, G. de Laval and G. P. Aborn, 50
  • Gas Impact, L. Wilson, 604
  • Internal Combustion, P. Burt. 362
  • Internal Combustion, W. J. Robb, 604
  • Pressure, F. J. Hull, 484 and Valve, Compound, S. M. Vauclain, 270
  • Feeding and Heating Metal Plates, T. V. Allis, 556
  • Fire-arm, O. C. Cullen, 362
  • Fuel-feeding Mechanism for Furnaces, Burger and Williams, 200
  • Furnace for Heating Billets, C. H. Morgan, 200
  • Furnace for Heating Ingots, V. E. Edwards and P. B. Morgan, 100
  • Furnace, Refrigeratory, Puddling, or Boiling, W. Kent, 292
  • Gas Producer, E. J. Doff, 408
  • Gas Purifier Grid, C. R. Faben, jun., 604
  • Glass Manufacture, A. Voelker, 534
  • Grate Bar for Forced Blast Furnaces, Borger and Williams, 408
  • Gon Carriage, K. Deinlein, 626
  • Gun Mounting, R. T. Branksron, 292
  • Hammer, Pneumatic, M. A. Yeatley, 224
  • Hardening Rotary Cuttei s, II. L:eoert, 458
  • Heating Capacity of Combustibles, Determining the, S. W. Parr, 626
  • Heating Furnace for Coiled Bundles, Hunt and Ahlen, 578
  • Linoleum Cutters, F. L. Tripp, 432
  • Liquid Meter. S. Bouchet, 503
  • Locomotive, S. M. Vauclaio, 340
  • Mill for Rolling Seamless Tabes, Robbins, Bye, and Jones, 152
  • Mono Railway, L. Baecher, 292
  • Motor Car Frame, G. R. Bandix, 340
  • Motors, Cooling Explosive, T. Myer-<, 174
  • Moulds and Cores, Making, H. C. Lambert, 432
  • Mowing Machines, Automobile, Ellis and Stewart, 458
  • Pigs from their Moulds, Ejecting, E. E. Slick, 124
  • Pipe Coupling, A. Barr, 50
  • Piston for Gas and other Motors, H. E. Ebbs, 626
  • Piston Valve, W. Heston, 362
  • Polishing Too), Pneumatic, J. W. Birkenstock, 1C0
  • Pulp and Papermaking, H. Parker, 200
  • Ram, C. C. Wentworth, 408 Rangefinder, J. Neilson, 626
  • Ratchet Wrench, W. T. Garrett, 24
  • Riveting Machine, W. S. Mckinney, 24
  • R:d-coiling Apparatus, Lamarter and Wallace, 224
  • Roller Bearer for Crank Shafts or the like, G. H. Reynolds, 74
  • Roller, Land, C. K. Longenecker, 578
  • Screw-cutting Tool, J. J. Burke, 578
  • Screw Propeller, C. A. Parsons, 626
  • Separating Grease from Steam, W. J. Baker, 152
  • Severing Bolts, Rivets, &c., F. A. Carter, 174
  • Shifting Device for Piers, &c., Baldwin and Sundb, 626
  • Spring Hanger for Under-hung Locomotive Springs, H. A. Gillis, 50
  • Stay Bolts, G. O. Gridley, 578
  • Stud-setting and Extracting Tool, L. H. Morgan, Superheater, Steam, J. Howden, 432
  • Tires, Vehicle, W. McCausland, 534
  • Track Sander, N. B. Lodge, 152
  • Track-sanding Device, J. H. Walters, 124
  • Turbine, Axial Flow, N. S. Bök and T. R. Robsabm, 384
  • Turbine, Continuous-combustion, M. Beck, 556
  • Turbine, Elastic Fluid, C. G. Curlis, 626
  • Turret, Drilling, Milling, and Tapping, A. D. Quint, 270
  • Valve, C. W. Hunt, 508
  • Valve, Water-cooled, H, E Ebbs, 484
  • War Vessel, H. Maxim, 292
  • Washing Apparatus for Railway or Tramway Carriages, C. A. Wheeler, 318
  • Water Purifying, A. Gray, 432
  • Welding L:nks, W. Serimgeour, jun., and J. Bunte, 152
  • Winding for Electrical Machines, E. J. Lamme, 124
  • Windlass and Capstan, J. R. Andrews, 340
  • PEARSON, Mr. Joseph H., Value of his Estate, (121)
  • Pease and Partners, Limited, Profits Reported for Year ending June, 1902, (122)
  • Peat Coke, Canada and the United States, 89
  • Peat Fuel, Electrical Manufacture of, in Norway, (420)
  • Peat Gas as Fuel, at Steel Works in Sweden, Use of, (469)
  • Pennsylvania (W.), Notes on a Visit to, 552
  • Perry, Prof. John, His Address at the British Association, 313
  • Perth, Freedom of, Presented to Mr. A, Carnegie, (280), (355)
  • Peru, Electricity for Lighting and other Purposes Wanted in, (11)
  • Peru, Refuse Destructors Wanted in, (11)
  • Petrol, Railway Restrictions on Carriage of, and Stock of, Laid in by the King, (420)
  • Petroleum, Average Price in United States, (162)
  • Briquettes in France, (188)
  • Production ia the United States, (185)
  • Refuse as Fuel, Use of, in R Rumania, (303)
  • Semi-solid, for Fuel, (11)
  • Trade, Russian, Reduction of Railway Freights, (469)
  • Physical Laboratory, Bushey, Fitting up of, (111)
  • Piecework and the Premium System, 373
  • Pier at Locust Point. Baltimore, (137)
  • Pilcher, Mr. 0. A., Presentation to, (111)
  • Pilkington, Mr. James, (395)
  • Pipe Callipers, Mr. Fuhrman Clarke, 284
  • Pipe, Cast Iron, in the United States, Standard Specifications for, (454)
  • Pipes, Steam, The Cause of Water Hammer Action in, (481)
  • Pi .ton Ring Hammer, Automatic, The Davy
  • Robertson Engineering Company, 67
  • Piston Valves for Locomotives, 167, 169
  • Planing Machine, Messrs. Hulse and Co., Limited, 238
  • Planing Machine, Messrs. C. Redman and Sons, 146
  • Plate Dant Straightener, Ship, Mr. F. Wilson, 67 Platt, Mr. Sam, (268)
  • Pneumatic Tires, A French Firm on the most Effective Air Pressure for, (111)
  • Pneumatic Tools ia the Navy, 41
  • Pollution of Rivers, 369
  • Port of London and the Thames, 125, 153
  • Portable Buildings. 41
  • Portland Cement Works, Edieon, (46)
  • Portland Cement Work, Painting of, (395)
  • Postal Service from China vid Siberian and Russian Railways, (469)
  • Postage Stamps, Automatic Machines for Sale of, at Berlin Railway Stations, (280)
  • Preferentialism, its Scope and its Importance, 87
  • Premium System, 235
  • Presentation, Mr. C. E. Chrimes, (345)
  • Presentation to Mr. Henry Cochrane, (381)
  • Preservatives of Mine Timber against Rot, (420)
  • Pressure Indicator, Mr. J. E. Petave’s, 344
  • Progress v. Profits, 352
  • Propeller Efficiency, 376
  • Propeller Shaft, Repairing a, 404
  • Pulley, Built-up, 583
  • Pumps, Application to the Sinking of Deep Shafts of Suspended Steam, 80
  • Boiler Feed, Joseph Evans and Co., 7, 8
  • Electrically-driven, F. Pearn and Co., 375, 377
  • High Lift Centrifugal, Market for, at Johannesburg, (519)
  • Injection Water, 43 Screw, Mr. H. Jones, 142
  • Pumping Machinery at the Penrhyn Quarries, 184
  • Plant for Condensing Water, Mr. C. Hopkinson on, 106
  • Plant, Gas Engine, American, (338)

Q

  • QUEENSLAND, 1901, Silver and Lead Produc¬tion. (137)
  • Quick Work, Ocean Colliery, South Wales, (482), 552

R

  • RAIL Ring Tractor, 442

Railway: Railway Accidents : British Railways: Electric Railways: Foreign Railways: Light Rail¬ways: Locomotives: Railway News, Various: Permanent Way: Rolling Stock: Railway Accidents:

  • Airdrie, Derailment, (589)
  • America, April, May, and June, 1901, (469)
  • Apparatus for Preventing Collisions, Invented by H. Pfirmann and Dr. M. Wendorf, (519)
  • Caledonian, Bannockburn Station, (303)
  • Derailment of Trains, Board of Trade Reports, 241
  • France, Arleux, near Douai, (328)
  • Glasgow and South-Western, Gorbals Station, (355)
  • Great Western, Bristol, (280)
  • Great Western, Westbourne Park Station, (303)
  • Great Western and Great Central, Collapse of Tunnel, near Loudwater, (257)
  • Guatemala, Lines Ir.jared by Floods, (185)
  • Indian, in 1901,(355)
  • Indian, Landslip on tne G.I.P., (137); Torrential Rain in the Nilgiris and Damage done, (185)
  • Indian Mail Train, between Madras and Bom¬bay, (280)
  • Lancashire and Yorkshire, Explosion ia a Tunnel, (185)
  • Mountain and Lake Railway, near Gloversville, (35)
  • Paris, Lyons, and Mediterranean, Pontarlier, (233)
  • Piusria, Pamphlet concerning Causes of Railway Accidents to be distributed amongst the Officials, (496)
  • Railway Employment, Prevention of Accidents Act, (196)
  • Russia, Commission to Investigate the Causes of the Frequent Collisions on, (614)
  • Somerset and Dorset Railway, near Glaston¬bury, (85)
  • South-Eastern and Chatham, near Chislehurst, 7, (589)
  • Uganda Railway, 491, 512, 570, 612
  • United Kingdom and United States, 1901,
  • Number of Passengers Killed and Injured, (420)
  • United States, 13, 35, (85), 185, 217, 257, 395, 445, 491, 550, 614
  • Chicago and Alton Railway, (257)
  • United States, Number of Accidents in, due to Unprotected Crossings, (85)
  • South Carolina and Georgia Extension, (35)

Railways, British, Colonial, and Indian:

  • Aberystwyth, Devil’s Bilge Completed, (496)
  • African, Central South, Rolling Stock for, (280
  • African, East, Map Showing, 492
  • African, South, 103, (111), 160, 161, 162,378, ) (536)
  • African, Trans, 108
  • Africa, West, Gold Coast, Coomassie Extension, (544)
  • African, Uganda, 491, 512 570, 612
  • African, Zululand, Opened for Traffic, 93
  • Australia, A New Route to. 180
  • Australian, Adelaide-Port Darwin, (162)
  • South, Earnings, Expenditure, and
  • Mileage in North and South Provinces, (355)
  • South, ProjectedLinefrom Adelaide to Port Darwin, (355)
  • South, Projected Transcontinental, (519), (614)
  • Bristol to London, Projected, (192). (544), (565)
  • British Columbia, New Mileage, (11)
  • British South African Company’s Schemes for Rhodesia, (565)
  • Bulawayo and Salisbury, (372)
  • Burma, Pegu to Syr.'am and Dalia to Dedaye, (395)
  • Burma, Traffic Earnings, (137)
  • Caledonian, Accounts of, (257)
  • Caledonian, Thirteen Lines of Rails Across the Clyde, (280)
  • Cambrian, (150)
  • Cambrian, First-class Free Pass for Five Years, (518)
  • Canada, An All-through Route, 523, (565)
  • Canada, Grand Trunk, New Double Track of, (395)
  • Canadian Extension, 306
  • Canadian, Governmental and Municipal Subsi¬dies to, (61)
  • Canadian Pacific, Financial Report, (257) ; Imperial Limited Train Service Inaugurated, (61); Motor Cars on, (185); Wheat Transport on, (544)
  • Cape to Cairo, 108, 160, 161, 208, (372), (565)
  • Malmsbury to Picquetberg Opened, (496) b Natal, (162)
  • Government Railways, Washouts on the, 3z town to Beira, (328)
  • Ceylon, Colombo to Avissawella, (469)
  • Derbyshire, Proposed New Line, (544)
  • Egypt, Cape to Cairo, 108, 160, 161, 203, (372)
  • Glasgow and South-Western, Accounts of, (257)
  • Great Central, July, Accelerated Services, (11);
  • Financial Returns, (111); Appointment of Mr. Worsdel), (137), (195)
  • Electric Automatic Fog-signal¬ling, (589)
  • Re-instatement of Reservists (372)
  • Great Eastern, Increased Punctuality of Ser¬vice, (544)
  • Great Northern, Mr. Eustace Barrows ap¬pointed Secretary, (372)
  • New Locomotive Erecting Shop, (137)
  • Pick-up Water Troughs at Bawtry, (355)
  • Great Western, Cheltenham to Honeybourne, Projected Line, (66)
  • Improvements in South Devon, 345, 356
  • Third - class Season and Scholar’s Tickets, (469)
  • Wat«r Tanks between Reading and Newbury, (496)
  • Works at Swindon, The New, 325, (Supplement, October r 3rd and 17th. 1902), 375
  • Hull and Barnsley Extension, 182, (211)
  • Indian, Earnings (303)
  • East, Annual General Meeting, New Rolling Stock and Locomotives, (11)
  • Eastern Bengal State, (336) Frontier, Quetta Nushki, (303)
  • Gas Lighting on, (257); New Section
  • of the Bombay, Baroda, and Central Indian, (185)
  • Great Indian Peninsular Company Desires to Obtain Coalfields of its own,(589); Mileage of DoubleTrack, (589)
  • Important Changes in Staff of the Great Indian Peninsular, (120) I)
  • Important Development of, said to be in Contemplation, (85)
  • Indian Coal Burnt in 1901 by, (137)
  • Mileage, 1901, (328), (443)
  • Mileage Controlled by the Madras il Government, (589)
  • Nilgiri, Successful Working of, (35)
  • North-Western State, Jech Doab Line (496)
  • North-Western, Tunnel Inspector Imported from England, (137)
  • Number of Employés on, (328)
  • Nashki Railway Survey Office Closed, (137)
  • Report on, for 1901, (257); Returns for Quarter ending July 30tb, (185);
  • Speed on, (185)
  • Through Connection on the Broad Gauge between Ceylon and Northern
  • India under Consideration, (280)
  • Lancashire, Derbyshire and East Coast, Accounts of, (257)
  • Lancashire and Yorkshire, Good Earnings of the Goods Trains, (395)
  • Lancashire and Yorkshire and London and North-Western, Fleet Jointly Owned by (370), (381), (395)
  • London, Brighton and South Coast and West of France, Conference between, (496)
  • London, Brighton and South Coast, Widening 5,
  • of Line, 16, (443)
  • London, Chatham and Dover, Financial Ruturns, (111)
  • London, City and South, (111)
  • London District Railway, (31), (96), (110), (111)
  • London and North-Western, Birmingham to London in 1 hour 55 min., by C. Rous- Marten, 142
  • Increase in the Revenue of, (177)
  • and Lancashire and York¬shire, Fleet Jointly . Owned by, (370), (381), (395)
  • Long Run, 307 Mr. W. A. Jepson Appointed Mice.-al Manager, («?)
  • in Negotiation with Belfast Steamship Company for Purchase, (355)
  • New Goods Sta¬tion, Wol¬verhampton, (280)
  • Royal Train, (589)
  • Signalling by Electricity, 501
  • London and South-Western, New Salisbury Station, (376)
  • Pneumatic Sig¬nalling on, 598
  • Retirement and Election of Directors, (372)
  • London Underground, 96, 110
  • London, Whitechapel and Bow, 94
  • Metropolitan District, (31)
  • Metropolitan, Financial Returns, (111)
  • Midland, Acquires the Northern Counties of Ireland, (333), (355)
  • Coventry to Arley, Proposed Line, (496), (574)
  • Decentralisation in the Goods Depart¬ment, (443)
  • Fast Run between Leeds and Carlisle, 375
  • New Schemes, (544)
  • Scheme for Placing Buxton on the, (519)
  • Seventieth Anniversary of the Oldest Portion of, (77)
  • Splendid Run on, (257)
  • and Great Northern, Yarmouth and Lowestoft Direct, 333
  • and South-Western, Death of Mr. Jas. Parkess, (589)
  • Natal, Doubling Main Line, (303)
  • Natal, Durban to Ladysmith, (469)
  • New South Wales, Annual and Quarterly Reports, (11), 448
  • Earnings and Expendi¬ture, (622)
  • Mileage Open for Traliio, September 30th, 1901, 1902, (614)
  • Traffic, Receipts, Ex¬penditure, (288)
  • New Zealand, 229 ; Earnings and Expenditure, (290) ; Mileage, (420)
  • North-Eastern, Auto-car Trains on the, 620 Conference at Darlington, (328) and Electric Equipment, (122), (189), (197), (430)
  • General Manager and leading Officials’ Inspection Tours io the United States, (303), (355)
  • Motor Cars on, (443), (469), (481), 620
  • Locomotives, New Eight - wheeled Coupled, 429, 430
  • Oil Fuel Experiments on, (395), (406), (443)
  • Old-age Pension Scheme, (443)
  • Resignation of Sir J. W. Pease, Successor, Viscount Ridley, (328)
  • Sunderland and the Hartle- pools Branch Opened, (372)
  • Rhodesian, Sam to be Expended, (565)
  • Rhondda and Swansea Bay, (150)
  • Royal Trains (Supplement, December ‘23th, 1902), (589), 612
  • South African—see African
  • Sierra Leone, (872) Sirhowy and Rhymney Valley, Proposed, (496)
  • South-Eastern and Chatham, Acceleration of Service from Paris to Lon¬don, (448) Ch isl e hurst Tunnel, (280)
  • New Express Engines, (290)
  • Winter Express Afternoon Continental Service, (395)
  • Sntton-in-Ashfleld to Mansfield-Woodhouse, (544)
  • Taff Vale, Proposals for Next Seision, (499)
  • Uganda, 491, 499, 512, (565), 570, 584 ; Acci¬dents on, 566,570; American Contractor Late Again, (496); Cost of, (589); Embankments, 591; Financial Returns, (35); Viaducts, 612, 613
  • Underground, London County Council and, 468
  • United Kingdom, Mileage, Capital and Ex¬penditure, Receipts, Traffic, (185), (443), (496)
  • Victorian, Government Proposals to make a General Reduction in Rates of Pay, (288)
  • Yarmouth and Lowestoft, 333, (353)
  • Yorkshire Dales, (170)

Railways, Electric

  • American, Goods Traffic on, (97)
  • Berlin, Shallow Underground, (211)
  • Boston Elevated, (420)
  • Canada, Mileage of, in. (35)
  • Central London, from Bank to Twickenham for 6d., (Ill), (211)
  • Central London, Ventilation of, (372); Resig¬nation of Mr. P. W. D’Alton. (499); Retiretirement of Mr. Aldington, (589)
  • Chicago Elevated, Moving. (266)
  • City and South London, (111), (257), (614)
  • Cleveland and Detroit, Trolley Lines Strung over Railway Tracks, (395)
  • Cleveland, Elyria, and Western Railway, Use of Steam Turbines Decided on for Driving Generators, (35)
  • Crewe System of Electric Railway Signalling, 548, 550
  • Dayton, Covington, and Piqua, 240
  • Elberfeld Suspension, 385, 413, 435, 441, 488
  • Germany, Wannsee, near Berlin, Potsdam and Gross Lichterfeld, (372)
  • Gerona, Vich, and Amer, (35)
  • Goods Traffic on, in America, (97)
  • High Peak, (614)
  • Italy, Adriatic System, Two New Lines, (257)
  • Lake Como, (280)
  • Liverpool Overhead. (162), 519 (iii., vii., Supple¬ment, December 12tk, 1902)
  • Landon Tube, 65, 96, (111), (468)
  • Manchester and Liverpool, (211)
  • Motor, Variable-speed, American, 596
  • Mersey Tunnel, (211), (257)
  • Metropolitan, Electric Equipment, (111), 473
  • Mexican, Electrification of a Section, (137)
  • New York Subway, New Power House, (4k0)
  • North-Eastern, Electric Traction on Certain Portions of, (122), (430)
  • Paris Metropolitan, (328)
  • Paris, (162) ; Strike of the Employés, (233)
  • Pennsylvania, Pittsburg and Pitcairn, (257)
  • Russia, Western Frontier of. (280)
  • St. Louis Exhibition, Third Rail, (443)
  • St. Petersburg and the Imatra Falls, Finland, (162)
  • St. Petersburg and Lake Ladoga, (328)
  • Schemes in Europe, 364
  • Single-phase, 573, 619
  • Sondrio-Colico-Chiavenna, (280)
  • Third Rails for, 552 lube Schemes, Collapse of Rival, 399
  • United States, (303)
  • United States. Washington, Baltimore, Anna¬polis, (355), (454)

Railways, Foreign:

  • Africa, Congo Free State, Progress of Work, (233)
  • Dahomey, West, (328)
  • French Guinea, Line to Connect Conakry with the Niger, (184)
  • German East, Usambara Line, (303)
  • Gold Coast, Coomassie Extension, (514)
  • Tam's, Mileage and Gauge, (544)
  • American, Brazil, Great Western of, Lighting Stations with Alcohol, (137)
  • Cuba, Sinta Clara to Santiago da Cuba, (565)
  • Mexican Central, Hidalgo, North Extension, (11)
  • Coahuila and Pacific, (233)
  • Eiperatzi and Vera Cruz to be Worked by Elec¬tricity, (137)
  • Four Lines Entering Vera Cruz, (111)
  • National, Change of Gauge, (61). (443) (565)
  • National and Central, Rivalry between, (61)
  • Projected Line between Minaca and Temosacbic, (61)
  • Viesca and Mazapil, (328)
  • Tehuantepec, 238
  • New Mileage, 89
  • Oil Pipe Lines, (151)
  • Pacific Coast, Costa Rica from San Joié to the, (496)
  • Pacific Coast, Oil as Locomotive Fuel, Huge Oil Storage Tanks, (496)
  • Peru, Guaqui to La Paz, (35); Pro¬jected Line to the Amazon Basin, (-35)
  • Report on the Working of, Lieut - Col. W. V. Constable, 195, 220, 242, 287, 335, 357, 379, 404, 428, 529, 551
  • Uruguay, Mileage of Lines, (61)
  • Venezuelan, Maracaibo to Pesiji, (137)
  • see also United States Austrian, Total Mileage, (233)
  • Belgian State, Length of, (328)
  • Borneo, New Line, (162)
  • Chinese, (178)
  • Corea, Seoul to FusaD, Broad Gauge, (211)
  • Eastern, Cholera Panic on, (192)
  • The Eastern, Closing of the Eastern Asiatic Coasting Trade to Non¬ Russian Vessels, (519)
  • The Eastern, Effect on the Trade of Manchuria, (35)
  • Eastern, Passenger Traffic on, (301)
  • The Eastern to be Subsidised by Russia, (11)
  • Eastern Railway, Through Passenger Tickets to be Issued, (395), (469)
  • Eastern, Through Service between Dalny and Railway Systems of Russia and Europe, (395)
  • Formosa, Mileage, (185)
  • Formosa, Gauge and Cost of Con¬struction, (211); South Formosa Completed, (211)
  • Manchurian, Accelerated Service, (35); Unsatisfactory Condition of, a Sur¬prise to M. Witte, 540 The Shantung, 282
  • Yokohama and Hachioji, Projected Line, (233)
  • France, Northern of, Loss caused by the Coal Strike, (614); Its Engines to Run to Liège, (614)
  • France, Paris, Lyons, and Mediterranean Ex¬tension to Chamonix, (176)
  • France-Italian Line. Projected, 447
  • French, Dahomey, (233)
  • French, The Orleans, in Paris, Electric Haulage on, (162)
  • French, Paris-Lyons-Mediterranean, Doubling Portion of the Line, (162)
  • German, Berlin Elevated and Underground, Traffic on, (395)
  • Elberfeld Suspension, 385, 413, 435, 441, 448
  • Electric Lighting on, (11)
  • Loeschwitz, Suspended Rope, 413, 435,
  • Prussian State, Extensions and Costof, (187)
  • Prussian State, Lines to be Purchased oy, (395)
  • Prussian State, Reduction of Fares, (162)
  • Shantung, The, 282
  • Italian, Projected New Line to Turin, (137)
  • Japanese, (185)
  • Japanese, Completion of the San-yo Line, (137)
  • Japanese State, Passenger Fares Raised, (129)
  • Malay States, Federated, Extemion Mileage (303)
  • Persia, 89
  • Russian, (376), 400, (427)
  • Alexandropol to Erivan, (589)
  • Russo-American. A, 143
  • Russian, Amur Railway, Construction of, 168
  • Astrakhan Branch of the Ural Rail¬way, (35)
  • Circular Liue Round Moscow, (185)
  • Crimean Line Proposed, (565)
  • Direct Service between Moscow and Port Arthur, (185)
  • Experiments with Acetylene Lighting on,(185)
  • Finnish State, (111)
  • Foreign and Russian Locomotives Running on, (257)
  • in the bands of Private Companies and others, Number of Employés on, (11)
  • Mileage in Operation, (372)
  • Moscow andKieff, Shortening of Line, (233)
  • Nicolas, Memorial Chapel to Mark its Fiftieth Anniversary, (519)
  • Orenburg-Tasbkend, (185), (303)
  • Poli-h, Kalisch-Lodz, (328)
  • Project for Connection with Finland by Raiway Bridge over the Neva, (185)
  • Projected Lines, 162, 257, 280, (565)
  • St. Petersburg to Petrozavodsk, (137)
  • St. Petersburg and Warsaw, Locomo¬tives on,(565)
  • Siberia, Branch Line from Omsk to Trumen, (61)
  • Siberian, Heavier Permanent Way for, (185)
  • S;betian Postal Service from Tientsin to Liverpool, (355)
  • Siberian, Project to Connect with the System of European Russia, (544)
  • Siberian, Report of the International Sleeping Car Company at the Paris Conference, (469)
  • Siberian, Robbery on, (152)
  • South-Western, Through Service from Warsaw to Odessa, (257)
  • Tomsk to Tasbkend, English and Russian Syndicate, (111). (185)
  • Warsaw and Kalish Line, (35)
  • Spain, Barcelona Extension, (111)
  • Guatemala City, El Rancho to, (137)
  • Guatemala, Lines Injured by Floods, (185)
  • Guatemala, Los Altos and Los Cocales Lines, (162)
  • Vasco Castellano from Madrid to Bilbao, (395)
  • Sweden, Boras to Alvesta, (420)
  • Electrification of Government Lines, (544)
  • Opening of a New Line, (229)
  • The Osoten Line, (280)
  • Swiss, Jungfrau, Death of Guyer-Zeller, the Proprietor of, (496)
  • Swiss, Simplon, 4, 101, 177, 186, 204, 205, 411, 414, 418, 606
  • Turkey, Beiruth-Damascus, High Rates for Goods, (61)
  • Black Sea Directly to Poti, (544)
  • Hedjaz Line from Damascus to Mecca, (61)
  • United States, Atchison Railway System, Heavy Earthworks, (210)
  • Baltimore and Ohio, Changes in the Character of the Road Projected, (280)
  • Burlington, Wheels in Service on, (35)
  • Chicago, Garfield Park Line, Clever Piece of Engineering on, (162)
  • Chicago and North-Western, Des Moines Steel Viaduct, 392
  • Grand Trunk, Doubling the, (210)
  • Great Northern, Average Train Loads, (519)
  • Lake Shore and Michigan Southern, Fast Run on, (614)
  • Manhattan, Traffic on, (257)
  • Mileage, and when Built, (61), (469)
  • Missouri Pacific, Railway Car¬riage and Locomotive Works, (94)
  • New Lines Projected, (162)
  • New York Centra), Efforts to Secure a Shorter Entrance into Pittsburg, (172)
  • New York Centra), Fast Run of the Twentieth Century Limited,” (61)
  • New York, Ontario, and Wes¬tern Railway, Double Track¬ing of, (247)
  • Panama, 343
  • Pennsylvanian, Engineering Feat at New Brunswick, 162
  • Pennsylvanian, Fast Runs, (61), (111)
  • Pennsylvania, Masonry Bridges
  • United States, Pennsylvanian, New Train Yard, (85)
  • Pennsylvania, Rebates on Fares for Lateness of Trains, (61), (518)
  • Pennsylvania, Tonnage of Rails Ordered for 1903, (111)
  • Pennsylvania, Wages Advance, (565)
  • Pennsylvanian, will Enter New York by the Hudson River Tunnel, (172)
  • Pittsburg to Lake Erie, (496)
  • Pittsburg, Niles, and Western, (483)
  • Statistics of, 493 Western and South-Western Extensions, (554)

Railways, Light:

  • Aberystwyth to Devil’s Bridge, (496)
  • Ashley to Burton, (519)
  • Belgium, (420)
  • Claverton and Camerton, North Somerset, (35)
  • France, Hondschoote and Bray-Dunes, Ac., in Morbiban, (85)
  • France, Retouremer and the Schlocht, (85)
  • France, Royat-les-Bains and Puy-de-Dume, (61)
  • Gloucester, Applications for, (35)
  • Great Centra), Grimsby, Stallingborougb, Coates, and Immingham, (544)
  • Harrow, (443)
  • High Peak District, Macclesfield to Buxton, (544)
  • Holland, (420)
  • Horndean (iii., viii., Supplement, December 12th, 1902)
  • Leighton Buzzard, Harlington, and Hitchin, (372)
  • Middleton, (565)
  • Orders Confirmed by Board of Trade, (35), (372), (519), (565)
  • Orders, Decrease in Applications for, (11)
  • Warrington to Northwich, (519)
  • Wigan, Pemberton and Asbton-in-Makerficld (519)
  • Worthing, (141)

Railway Locomotives:

  • American Company, First Annual Report, (328)
  • Construction, by an American Engi¬neer, 25, 128
  • Design, Prof. Goss on the Possibilities of, (443)
  • Failure of Serve Tubes in, (544)
  • Locomotive Company, Atlantic Type of, Constructed for the Big Four Line, (469)
  • Ancient, Hetton Railway, 57
  • Baldwin Works, Capacity a Week, (469)
  • Baldwin Works, Experiments with Oil as Loco¬motive Fuel, (496)
  • Bearings, Alloy Used by the Prussian Shops for, (85)
  • Belfort Works, 4, 54, 103, 105
  • Benzine, Used in a Mine, (211)
  • Bogie Express, Five New, for the South-Eastern and Chatham, (290)
  • Boilers for, F. H. Cridland’s Latter, 68
  • Boiler with Cylindrical Fire-box, Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway, Mr. H. A. Hoy (Supplement, August 15th, 1902), 165
  • B ston and Maine Railway Company, Fifty Locomotives Changed to Burn Coke, (211)
  • British, for Canada, (360), (477)
  • Building, United States, (196)
  • Coal, 57
  • Coke Burning, in America, (211)
  • Compound, Its Future in America, (355)
  • Compound, Norwegian State, 391, 396
  • Compressed Air, Simplon Tunnel Works, 299
  • Condemned in East India, (469)
  • Consolidation, Norwegian State, 525
  • Consolidation, with Large Boilers, for the Norwegian State Railways, Winterthur, (614)
  • Construction of a First-dais French, 4, 54 103 105
  • Cylindrical Furnaces for, 320
  • Driving, 373
  • Eight-coupled, Lancashire and Yorkshire Rail- 19O2’)M165F’ A' H°y ^SujlPlr"‘ent’ A u9u,t 15M< Eight-wheel Coupled, on the North-Eastern. (429), (430)
  • Electric Headlight for, (328)
  • Electric, The Two Largest in the World, (233)
  • English and American, Sir Alf. Hickman on, (456)
  • Express Compound, Austrian State Railways, Herr Karl Gölsdorf, 253, 258
  • Express, Great Central Railway, Mr. J. G. Robinson (Supplement, July 4th, 1902), 20 Footplate, On the, 373
  • Four-cylinder Compound Mineral, London and North-Western Railway, Mr. F. W. Webb 62, 66
  • Four-cylinder Petrol, Ordered by the North- Eastern Railway Company, (455)
  • Four-wheeled Coupled Passenger, Midland Great Western Railway of Ireland. Mr. E Cusack, 76, 77, 79
  • French, Construction of a First-class, 4, 54,103 105
  • Geared, Weighing Nearly 180 Tons, Built for the El Paso and Rock Island Railway, (61)
  • German Import and Export of, (85)
  • Goods, Cape Government Railways, Neilson. Reid and Co., 231, 232
  • Goods, Eight-coupled Heavy, Lancashire and Yorkshire, Messrs. J. A. F. Aspinall and H. A. Hoy, 112, 120
  • Goods and Tank, for the East Indian, (11)
  • Goods, for India, 187, 219, 237, 235, 311, 421 442, (553) ’ ’
  • Kobe Workshops, Cost of Eight and Six¬wheeled Coupled Tender and Tank, (544)
  • Large Geared, of the Shay Type, (148)
  • London and North-Western, “Charles Dickens” Completes its Two-millionth Mile, (211), 218
  • Loidonand North-Western, “Charles Dickens,” the American Engineering News on its Performance, (355)
  • Narrow-gauge Goods, Cape Government Rail¬ways, Mr. H. Beatty, (Supplements, September 5th and 19th, 1902), 283
  • Narrow-gauge, Unusually Large, Mexican Southern,(162)
  • New York Central, Naw Tandem Compound, Work Dane by, (211)
  • North-Eastern, (602)
  • Northern Pacific, Twenty-cm 11 Battleship,” (536)
  • Oil Burning, North-Eastern Railway Company, (395), (406), (443)
  • Oil Burning, on the South Pacific, (519)
  • Oil Burning, Texas, (395)
  • Oldest Working, in the World, 57
  • Orders for, Placed with Borsig, for India, 65
  • Order, the Largest Single ever Given out for, Placed by the Baltimore and Ohio Railway with an American Company, (61)
  • Orders for Twelve, Placed by the Graat Southern and Western of Ireland with an English Firm on account of Strike, (85)
  • Piston Valves for, 167, 169
  • Russian and Foreign-built, Running on Russian Railways, (257)
  • St. Petersburg and Warsaw Line, (565)
  • Sbay Gaared, United States, (266)
  • Shops, Electric Power in, (196)
  • Shop, Largo, United States, 621
  • Single, 616
  • Six-coupled Tank, Wraxham, Mold, and Connah’s Quay, Mr. F. Willans (Suppl inent, November 21rf, 1902), 495
  • Six-coupled Twelve-wheeled American, (266)
  • for South Africa, Messrs. Neilson, Reid and Co., (553)
  • Suburban, 398
  • Tank, for the Llanelly and Mynydd Mawr Railway, Avonside Engine Company, 32’, 327
  • Tank, Six-coupled (The Donderland), for Norway, Messrs. Kerr, Stuart and Co., Limited (Supplement, October 31st, 1902), 416, 419, 442
  • Types, Scientific Classification of, 331
  • United States, Increase of, Freight Carried and Ton Mileage between 1897 and 1901, (550)
  • United States, New Works and Capital In¬vested, (266) (280)
  • United States, Traction Engines and, (454)
  • Valve Gaar of, John Riekie’s Letter on, 68
  • Vienna Workshops Reduction in the Number of Employés, (544)
  • Water Arch in the Fire-box of, Experiments with, (372)
  • Wheels, Crescent-shaped Balances of, 619
  • Works, American, (148)

Railway News, Various:

  • Acetylene Lighting of Railway Stations, London, Brighton and South Coast, and London and South-Western, (211)
  • Aerial Railway for Transport of Ore, in South America, (137)
  • Africa, Lake Kisale towards Rhodesian, Capt. Jacques Charged with Survey of Frontier, (420)
  • Africa, West, Construction in, (417)
  • Amalgamated Society of Railway Servants, Decrease in Number of Members, (11) ; Annual Congress of Delegates, (355); Mem¬bership of, (614)
  • Amalgamation of Belfast and Northern Counties with the Midland Company, (333), (355)
  • Amalgamations under Discussion, (316)
  • American Methods of Train Working, Mr. Wilson Worsdell on, (531)
  • American Railway Managers in England, “The Boot on the other Leg,” (582)
  • American, Report on the Working of, Lieut- Col. W. V. Constable, 195, 220, 242, 287, 335, 357, 379, 404, 428, 480, 551
  • Australia, A New Route to, by Stafford Ran¬some, 180
  • Australian, Railway Commissioners Appointed for Seven Years, (395)
  • Austrian Locomotive Engineers’ Union, (589)
  • Automatic Couplings, Controversy as to the Use of, (420)
  • Auto-cars, North-Eastern Railway Company, (443), (469), (481)
  • Automatic Porterage of Luggage, Orleans Rail¬way Station, Paris, (519)
  • Automatic Railway Coupling, Mr. A. T. Swaine on a New, (622)
  • Automobile Riilway Communication, Paris,
  • Birmiogham to London in One Hour Fifty-five Minutes, by Chas. Rous-Marten, 142
  • British and French Train Services, by Chas. Rous-Marten, 181. 201, 459, 538, 561
  • Chinese Imperial Railway Board, Mr. E Cousins Appointed Representative of the Bondholders, (395)
  • Chislehurst Tunnels, (443)
  • Club, (524)
  • Club, The, Visit to the Guildford Running Sheds, (210)
  • Coal Charges Reduced by the Great Central and North-Eastern, (221)
  • Companies and Owners’ Risk, 309, 333
  • Construction in West Africa, (417)
  • Crewe, Reception at, of Lieut. Davenport and Crewe Men from South Africa, (137)
  • Derailments of Trains, 241, 310
  • Dust Laying with Oil on, (233)
  • Dust Laying with Rock O.l on Paris Suburban Lines, (162)
  • Economy, 213
  • Electric Headlight for Locomotives, (328)
  • Engineering, Clever Bit of, on a Chicago Line, (162)
  • Engineering Feat at New Brunswick, (162)
  • Escalator ” in New York, (395)
  • Express Parcel Service on the Metropolitan District Riilway, (372)
  • Express Suisse, A New “ Train de Luxe," Ostend to Coire, (85)
  • Ferries, Cross-Channel Triin, Deputation to Investigate, (496)
  • Fog Signalling, (153), 310
  • Forged Passenger Tickets for Use on the Trans- Caucasus Railway, (519)
  • French Railway Companies, Six Principal, Length of Line Worked in 1900 by, (85)
  • German, I’aEsenger Traffic on, (316)
  • German Railway Crossings, Negligence on the Part of the Women Tending the, (614)
  • German Railways, Electric Lighting Experiments, (11)
  • Gilman, Mr. Chas. C., Death of, (137)
  • Gooday, Lieut.-Col. F. S., Appointment of, by the Secretary of War, (137)
  • Goods Station Work on the Piecework Principle at Cologne, (372)
  • Great Western. Prize Offered by Sir J. Wilkin¬son for an Essay on the Wagon Problem, (496)
  • Great Western, Widening of Lines and Station Improvements, (221)
  • Hudson and Manhattan Railway Company to Build a Tunnel in Jersey City, (395)
  • India, Classified List of Locomotive and Carriage Officers in, (280)
  • London and India Dock Company and the Rail¬way Companies' Mutual Concessions in the Interests of Heavy Traffic, (415)
  • London and North-Western, Station Improve¬ments, (221)
  • Louisville and Nashville Car Shops, Reconstruc¬tion of, (233)
  • Malay States, Penang to Singapore, 181
  • Moving Stairway in New York, (395)
  • New York Central and River Hudson Railway, Fast Run on, (137)
  • North-Eastern, Carriage Compartments with Cine Armchairs, (519); Old Age Pensions Scheme, (519)
  • North-Eastern, New Electric “Hall” Signalling System, (233)
  • North London, Passenger Traffic and Receipts and Expenses on, (162)
  • Oil for Laying Dust on, Use of, (233)
  • Oil Fuel for Locomotives, Experiments with, (3P5), (443)
  • Oil Fuel, Locomotives Burning, ia Texas, (395); Value of, as Compared with .Coal, Formula Giving, (496)
  • Oil Fuel for Locomotives, Southern Pacific Railway, (496); Huge Storage Tanks, (496)
  • Old Age Pension Scheme, North-Eastern Rail¬way, (519)
  • Owners’ R'sk, The Railway Companies and, 309
  • Paris Municipal Metropolitan, (61)
  • Passenger Traffic Returns for 1838 and 1900, (85)
  • Pennsylvania Railway, Advance in Freight Rates, (589)
  • Petrol, The Railway Companies and the Car¬riage of, (420), 423
  • Premiums Granted to Trainmen in Belgium for Punctual Arrival, (372)
  • Prussia, Proposed Abolition of Fourth Classes, (589)
  • Railway Club, Visit to the St. Albans Running Shed, (111)
  • Extension from Serembam to Kuala Gemas, 181
  • Mail Service, Annual Report of, (589)
  • Management, 591
  • Rates, The Question of, 220, (266)
  • Railwaymen's Congress, Financial Affairs of, (372)
  • Railways and Traders, (415)
  • Rates Campaign, The, 220, (266)
  • Rebates on the Fares, System of, when Trains aro Late, (519)
  • Rope Incline Railway, United States of America, (622)
  • Russia, Honeymoon Cars, (589)
  • Russia's Protest against the Anglo-Chinese Railway Agreement to be Withdrawn, (61)
  • Russian Railways, Number of Employés on, (11)
  • Russian Railway Orders, 400
  • Russian Railway Schools, (519)
  • Salisbury Station, The New, (376)
  • Signalling, Automatic and Power, London and South-Western Railway. (233) in Belgium, Adoption of the Up¬wardly-inclined Semaphore Arm, (395)
  • Block, American. 596 by Electricity, 501
  • Fog, (153), 310
  • The “Hall" Electric System, North-Eastern Railway, (233)
  • Pneumatic, on the London and South-Western, 598
  • Simplon Tunnel, The, 4, 101,177, 186,204, 205, 411, 414, 418
  • Snow Ploughs for Russian State Railways, - (372)
  • South-Eastern, Issue of New Capita), (614)
  • Steel Viaduct, The Des Moines, United States, 392
  • Suburban Traffic, 113
  • Swindon Works, The Newt Supplements, October 3rd and Ylth, 1902), 325
  • Switchback Centrifugal Railway, Inventor of the, Sir W. H. Bailey on, (487)
  • Taff Vale Case, The. 615
  • Telephoning, (35), 148
  • Tientsin to Liverpool by the Trans-Siberian, Time taken by Letters from, (355)
  • Total Length of, Open for Traffic in Europe on January 1st, 1902 and 1901, (614)
  • Train Telephones, United States, (35)
  • Tube Schemes, Collapse of Rival, 399
  • Tunnels, Cbislehurst, (443)
  • Tunnel from Cray Reservoir in connection with Swansea Waterworks, (496)
  • Tunnel in Jersey City to Connect Two Termini, (395)
  • United Kingdom, Traffic, Receipts, Mileage, 1901, (183)
  • United States, Another Huge Railway Com¬bination in, (280)
  • United States, Comparisons in Railroad Equip¬ments of Cars and Locomotives between 1897 and 1901, (550)
  • United States Railways, Statistics of, 493
  • Wages, Scale of, and Hours of Work on the Caledonian and North British Systems, (420)
  • Washouts on the Cape Government Railways, 378
  • Water Arch in Fire - box of Locomotive, Experiments on the Montana Central with, (372)
  • Wireless Telegraphy on the Grand Trunk Rail¬way, Experiments with, (420)
  • Wood Fuel on Rarsian Lines to be Discontinued in favour of Coal, (420)
  • Wood Fuel on United States Lines, Locomotives Changed to Burn, (420)
  • Woredell, Mr. H. Appointment of, (137)
  • Yorke, Col. H. A., Sent by Board of Trade to America to Report on Working of Lines, (211)

Railways, Permanent Way:

  • Pile Drivers, U.S.A., (622)
  • Proposed Rail Convention, Germany, England, and Belgium, (191)
  • Quick Renewal of, 363
  • Repair of, 214
  • Steel, for American Railways, (469)
  • Steel Rails for Wagon Roads, American, (46)
  • Steel, Victorian Government ask for Tenders for, (85)

Railways, Rolling Stock:

  • Additional, for the East Indian Railway, (11)
  • American, for the Monongahela Connecting Railway, (199)
  • American Railway Carriage and Wagon Works, (210)
  • Autocar Trains on the North-Eastern, 620
  • Central South African, Order placed in England for, (280)
  • Dining Cars to hold Thirty-six People, Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul Railway, (233)
  • Great Northern, New Breakfast and Lunoheon Cars, (589)
  • Indian, East Bengal State, Orders for, (336)
  • Lancashire and Yorkshire, Wagons to Carry 30 Tons, (395)
  • Mansell Railway Wheels, “Boardite” for the Centres, (455)
  • New, Great Western Railway of Ireland, 76, 77. 79
  • North-Eastern, New Form of Compartment, furnished with Cane Armchairs, (519)
  • Prussian State Contracts, (614)
  • Royal Train (Supplement, December 26th, 1902), i (589), 612
  • Russia, Honeymoon Cars, (589)
  • St. Petersburg and Warsaw, Non-inflammable, to be Fired at Eydtkiihnen, (565)
  • Siberian Railway, (372)
  • Sleeping Car, Rhodesian Railway Company, 108
  • South Africa, Government Orders for, (544), (553)
  • Brake Levers on both Sides of Wagons, Pro¬posed Rule with respect to (469)
  • Sudan Railway, 208, 209
  • United States, Increase of Passenger and Freight Cars between 1897 and 1901, (550)
  • Wagons, Cattle or Sheep, Mr. W. Theodore
  • Lucy, Argentine Railways, 401, 402 Goods, to Carry 30 Tons, Lancashire and Yorkshire, (395) High-capacity Bogie, Midland Rail¬way, Leeds Forge Company, 31, 499
  • Pressed Steel, The American Car and Foundry Company, (97)
  • Problem, Prize Offered by Sir J. Wilkinson for the best Essay on, (496)
  • Question, The, 235, 266
  • Tank, with Interchangeable Axles, for Transport of Russian Naphtha, (496)
  • 32-Ton Hrpper, New South Wales Government Railways, (505)
  • Wheels, Boardite, (455), 501
  • Wheel Centres, Manufacturedin Boardite, (455)
  • RAINFALL, British Central African Protectorate, (162)
  • near Darjeeling, Terrific, (420)
  • June, (11)
  • August, Less than Supposed, (303)
  • during November, (614)
  • at Hampton, (280)
  • at Surat, (185)
  • Rates, Revolt against Rising, (378)
  • Reavell Air Compressor, The, 182
  • Refrigerating Installations on the Cedric, (355)
  • Refuse at the Destructors, Value and Use made of, (469)
  • Destructor, Gloucester, (345)
  • Mr. W. F. Goodrich on, (469)
  • with Offices, Wolverhampton, Proposed, (395)
  • Plant at Walker-on-Tyne, (565)
  • Ra-beaters, 139, 194, 241, 285
  • Rendel, Mr. Hamilton, 307
  • Resistance of Immersed Bodies, C. C. Mason, 573
  • Rice-cleaning Plant, Want of a, (10)
  • Richardson, Mr. Joseph, (337)
  • Rifle Attachment Worked by Compressed Air, (162)
  • R-fle Clubs, Lieut.-General F. Lance on Miniature, (395)
  • Rifle, New Magazine, 493
  • Rivers, Pollution of, 369
  • Rivers Pollution, Belgian Royal Commission on, 493
  • Riveting Machine, Grip, Allen Pneumatic Machine Company, 596
  • Road Maintenance and Road Maintenance Effi¬ciency, Cost of, W. Worby Beaumont, 386
  • Roberts-Austen, Sir Wm. Chandler, 514
  • Robinson, Prof. Henry, Elected “Prof. Emeritus,” 114
  • Rolling Black Plate, Machinery for, at Pittsburg, (211)
  • Rooang Volcano, (211)
  • Rope, Remarkable Coil of Inter-stranded Cotton¬driving, Wm. Kenyon and Sons, (420)
  • Ropner, Col., Knighted, (482)
  • Royal Agricultural Society’s Show :
  • Annual Report of the Society, (589)
  • Bale Opener, Richmond and Chandler (Ulus.), 30, 31
  • Brick and Tile-making Machinery, Pallan and Mann, Swinney BroB., Limited, Mr. R. Scholefield, 31
  • Dairy Implements, 31
  • Date and Place of Show, 1903, Prizes, (589)
  • Drill, Corn, Root Pulper, Mr. J. Murch, 30
  • Drill, Swede and Mangold, Mr. Jas. Coultas, 30
  • Engines, Steam, 31
  • Harvesting Potatoes, Mr. Jas. Ball, 30
  • Hydrolifter, H. P. Saunderson and Co., Limited, 31
  • Members Elected, New, (542)
  • Motor Vehicles, Heavy, Foden’s, Mann’s, and the Yorkshire Steam Motor Company’s, 30
  • Oil Engines, R. Cundall and Sons, Limited, and the Robey-Saurer (Illus.), 30
  • Royal Agricultural Society’s Show (ronh’n W€cZ) 5
  • Seed Harrows, Ogle and Son, 30
  • Swath Turner, Blackstone and Co., Limited, 30
  • Well-sinking Frame, Hardy Patent Pick Com¬pany, Limited (Ilins.), 29, 30
  • Wind Motors, 31

Royal Institution:

  • Lecture Arrangements before Eister, (571)
  • Lectures, Christmas, Prof. H. S. Hele-Shaw, («2)
  • Monthly Meetings, (43), (451)

Royal Meteorological Society:

  • Readings of Aneroid Barometers not Accepted by the Society from its Observers, (ill) Royal Naval Engineering College, Key ham, Control of, (85)

Royal Philosophical Society of Glas¬gow :

  • Celebration of Centenary, (443)

Royal Society:

  • Alloys of the Gold-Silver Series, by Sir W. C. B Roberts-Austen and Mr. T. K. Rose, (589)
  • Royles’ Engineering Works, Irlam, 16, 17
  • Russia’s Export Trade, Development of, (211)
  • Russian Grain Export Returns, (257)
  • Russian Metallurgical Trust, 493
  • Russian Trade with the Persian Gulf, Subsidy to Develop, (61)
  • Russian Workmen, Training of, 114
  • Russo-Japanese Association, The Rumoured, (280)
  • Ruston, Proctor and Co., Limited, Messrs., Annual Dinner, (570)

S

  • SAFETY Lamps, Ark’s, (211)
  • Salt Works, Sardinia, Improvements Effected in, (35)
  • Samples Taken into Switzerland by German, French, and British Travellers, (565) Sand Blast Sharpened Files. 256
  • Schapler Fire Escape, The, 81, 82
  • Scboler Suction Dredge, Nicolaus, (257)
  • Screw Gauges, International System of, Adopted , in the French Navy, (111)
  • Screw Propulsion, 477
  • Screw Pump, Mr. H. Jones, 142
  • Seismographs, How the Records are Made in, (111)
  • Separator, Fletcher’s Patent, (337)
  • Sewage, Bacterial Treatment of, New Zealand, (454)
  • Sewers, Concrete and Expanded Metal, Penn¬sylvania, (257)
  • Sewerage System of London, Area and Population Served by, (469)
  • Sewage Treatment, Natural and Artificial, 620
  • Sewage Works, Manchester, 282
  • Sheffield, Smoke Consumption Bye-laws, (35)
  • Sheffield University College, New Building, Scheme, (211)
  • Shipley Sewage Disposal, (15)

Shipping Accidents:

  • Boating Accident on the Tyne, (85)
  • Brighton Queen on the Rocks off Hasting’, (137)
  • Collision off the Elbe, 119
  • Destroyer Zephyr Aground, (525), 547
  • French Submarine Le Francais, Explosion on Board, (257)
  • Hamburg-American Company's S.S Deutsch¬land, Starboard Engine Disabled, (614)
  • Hamburg - American Liner First Bismarck Breaks her Starboard Thrust Shaft, (211) H.M.S. Kent, (496)
  • Rio de Janeiro, Diving Machine for Locating the Wreck of, (395)
  • Statistical Summary of Vessels Totally Lost, Condemned, &o , during 1901, (303)
  • Sultan, s s., German East Africa L:ne, 401
  • Torpedo B oat Destroyer Fairy, (589)

Shipping News, Various, British and Foreign:

  • Admiralty, Decision regarding Completion for Sea of Ships Built by Private Firms, (257)
  • Order affecting the Torpedo Fleet, (355)
  • Asks Private Shipbuilders to Ten¬der for New Class of Battleship, (395)
  • Request for Shipwrights and Mechanics to Volunteer for Work at the Cape, (233) Scheme of Reforms, 567
  • Scheme with regard to the Use of a Part of the Osborne Grounds, ’ (565)
  • America Cup Challenge, The, 391
  • Anchor, Stockless, The Largest, ever made, (395)
  • Antwerp, Vessels Entering the Port of, during Nine Months of 1902, (372)
  • A’suAu Dam and Assiout Weir (Supplement, December 19tl<, 1902), 558, 559, 563, 580
  • Atlantic Passengers Landed at New York in , One Day, Largest Number, (233)
  • Atlantic Steam Shipping Trade, 329
  • Avonmoutb, Bristol, and Boston, U.S.A., Line of Steamers between, (328)
  • British Battleships Painted Grey, 307
  • British India Steam Navigation Co., Limited, Twin-screw s.s. Yamuna Launched on the Wear, (496)
  • British, Sir John Glover’s Paper on the Tonnage Statistics for 1891-1900, 31
  • Canada and South Africa, Steamship Service between, (395)
  • Chili’s Attempts to Sell her Warships, 307 Clyde and the New Cunarders, The, 353 Conference at Ostend of German and British Representatives of Steamship Lines Running to the Plate, (303)
  • Consolidation of Shipyards on the Great Lakes, Rumoured from Cleveland, (85)
  • Canard Company and the Government. 325, 352, 353
  • English Vessels Launched in June, (11)
  • Enterprise, American, 38
  • French Naval Manoeuvres, 41, 179
  • French Navy, The, 471
  • German Manoeuvres, Naval and Military Com¬bined, 261
  • German Navy, The, (136)
  • Germany, Shipping Supplied by Foreign Builders to, (872)
  • Japan, (443)
  • Japan, Naval Expansion Programme, (355)
  • Japanese Shipping Subsidies, 15
  • Khaki Discarded for German Torpedo Craft. 525
  • Lingham Timber and Trading Company’s Line of Steamers, (443)
  • Liquid Fuel for Steamships, 104, 140
  • Liquid Fuel for Warships, 472, 476, 486, 549
  • Liquid Fuel for Yachts, (376)
  • Manchester and Boston, Establishment of a Regular Service between, (372), (496)
  • Marseilles a Port of Call for Thirty-six Shipping Companies, (111)
  • Mediterranean and Channel Fleet Manoeuvres, 261
  • Mexican Gulf Ports and Delagoa Bay, Service between, (443)
  • Naval Engineers, 144, 311
  • Naval Review, Photographs of, 261; Special Trains to Southampton, 183
  • Naval War Game Soc , Portsmouth, Remark¬able Action in the Naval War Game, 400 Navigation Congress, The Ninth International, 6, 40, 52, 80, 103, 129
  • Navy, Stokers for the, (565), (614)
  • Normand, Mr. J. A., on the Strength of very Rapid Vessels, 326
  • Ocean Carrying Trade between New York and Europe, Tonnage of the Largest Steamships Employed Thirty Years Ago and now in,
  • Odessa and the Persian Gulf, Service of Boats between, (328)
  • Official Returns of Shipping Supplied to Ger¬many, (372)
  • Oil Fuel in the United States Navy, 472, 476
  • Oil as Fuel in Warships, 472, 476, 486, 549
  • Oldest Ship in the World, the Anita, Sold at Teneriffe, to be Broken up, (137)
  • Portsmouth, Workmen and Wages, (565)
  • Propeller Efficiency, (376)
  • Propeller Shaft, Repairing a, 404
  • Protection of Funnels in Warships, 43
  • Refrigerating Installations on the Cedric, (355)
  • Russian Visitors, Our, 525
  • San Francisco and Hilo, Hawaii, Steam Service between, (35)
  • Screw Propellers, The Admiralty’s Instructions with regard to Testing Efficiency of, 305
  • Seamen Employed on Sea-going Vessels, Par¬liamentary Roturn, (344)
  • Shipping Subsidies, 193
  • South African Service, Organisation of a Special. (395), (443), (496)
  • Speed of Canal Steamers, (189)
  • Speed Record, American, (303)
  • Steamship Propulsion, 194
  • Steering Gear ? 144
  • Strength of Very Rapid Vessels, M. J. A. Nor¬mand on the, 326
  • Submarine Warfare, 329
  • Submarines, “Handy Ones,”on British, daring the Recent Trials, (233)
  • Tonnage of Vessels Entered at Ports in the United Kingdom, (185), (233)
  • Tonnage of Vessels using New South Wales Ports, 1901, (233)
  • Trade of Newport, (256)
  • United States Fleet Mamcuvres Projected for Next Winter, (185)
  • Navy Estimates, (395)
  • Navy, Oil Fuel Tests, Unofficial Data, (303)
  • Policy with regard to Relative Importance of Battery Power and Speed, (496)
  • War Uses of Fast Merchantmen, The, 352, 353

Ships: Battleships, British:

  • Ajax to be Sold, (233), 237 Albemarle, Cost of the, (372)
  • to be Prepared for her Steam Trials, (519)
  • Ready for Trial, 547
  • Belleisle, Experimental Hatchway and Screen on, 65
  • Gunnery Experiments with, (61), 133, 135, 138
  • Programme for Next Experi¬ments, 307
  • Steering Gear, 194
  • Belloropbon, (469)
  • Canopus, Trouble with hor Belleville Boilers, 376, 561
  • Centurion, 65, 394
  • Dominion, Progress of, (21)
  • Duncan, (426)
  • Eight New, Cost of the, (372)
  • Exmoutb, (358), 547
  • Good Hope, The, (353) (525)
  • Hood, (443), (469), (565)
  • Howe to be Re-fitted at Jarrow-on-Tyne, (137)
  • Decision respecting, (614)
  • Inflexible, Glatton, and Neptune Re¬moved from tho Effective List, (286)
  • King Edward V1L, Armour for, (221)
  • Launch of, 325 Material Worked into Hull of, (280)
  • Time of Completion for Sea, (372)
  • Majestic, (588) Maori, 325
  • Mars, Her Boilers to be Adapted to Liquid Fuel, (372)
  • Montague, Speed Trials, (283), (358), 547
  • New Zealand, 825
  • Royal Sovereign, 65
  • Russell, (496)

Ships

Battleships, Foreign

  • American, Eight New, 160, (185)
  • Austrian, Babenberg, 237, 325, 353, 444, 447
  • Chilian, (21), 65, (162), 307
  • French, Charles Marte), 261
  • Bépnblique, (233), 237 255, 259
  • Suffren, 237, 261
  • German, Braunschweig, 594, 610, (614)
  • Five of the H Class, 237
  • Kaiser Friedrich III., 15
  • Wettin, 451
  • Wittelsbach, 610
  • Wittelsbach Class, 237
  • Zachringen, 83, 86
  • Greek, Psara, 261
  • Japan, Four New, (353)
  • Portuguese, Vasco di Gama, 451
  • Russian, Alexander II., 547
  • Nikolai I., 307
  • Oleg, First Keel Plate Laid, (85)
  • Orel, Launched, (85)
  • Osliabia, 525
  • Plawa, (443)
  • I’obieda, 15, 525
  • Swedish, of the Aera Type, Projected, Turkish, Contract with the Ansaldo Shipbuilding Yard at Genoa for Im¬provement of, (111)
  • United States, Connecticut, Electric Equipment of, 207, 212, 325, (496), (614)
  • Eight New, 160,(185) Illinois, 15
  • Louisiana, 207, 212, 325, 451
  • Louisiana Type, Pro¬jected, 525
  • Maine, Speed Trials, (211), 261, (280)

Cruisers. British:

  • Achilles, HerName Changed to Hibernia. 394
  • Amethyst, (496), 547 Antrim, Armour for, (221) Arethusa, 499
  • Aurora, to be Re-fitted at John Brown and Co.’s Works, (137)
  • Barham, (426)
  • Bedford, Steam Trials, (II); to be Fitted with Larger Propellers, (137), 142; Fitting for Liquid Fuel, 547
  • Berwick, Launch of, 302, (303)
  • Bonaventure, (544)
  • Challenger, 286, 353
  • Cornwall Launched, (420)
  • Cumberland, 588, (589)
  • Donegal, Launch of, 261
  • Drake, Speed Trial, 325, (328)
  • Drake Class, Four Mighty "Armoured. of the, (290)
  • Duke of Edinburgh Class, A New, 547,
  • Duke of Edinburgh Class, New Cruiser of, (443); Mr. Watte, 498
  • Eleven New, Cost of the, (372), (443)
  • Encounter, 286, 353
  • Euryalus, 501
  • First and Third-class, Ordered by the Admiralty, (544)
  • Flora, 499
  • Galatea, (610)
  • Hyacinth, Competitive Trials with the Minerva, (469), (547); Leaky Feed Pumps, (211)
  • Inconstant, Project for Converting her into a Permanent Training Ship. (565)
  • Intrepid, (426), 353
  • Kent, (589)
  • King Alfred, Speed Trials, (358)
  • Medusa, 353
  • Minerva, Propellers of, (211)
  • Niobo, (544)
  • Phreton, 499
  • Scout Class of Small, 499
  • Spartiate, Steam Trials, (61)
  • Subsidised Mercantile, 593
  • Suffolk, (589)
  • Terrible, Speed Trials, 194, 325
  • Topaz, (496), 547
  • Watts’ Class of, 499

Cruisers, Foreign:

  • American, Vesuvius, 237
  • Argentine, General Rica and Genera Mitra, Turkey Proposes Buying, 261
  • Argentine, Rividavia, 451
  • French, Chateau-Renault, Speed Trials (Hl)
  • Jeanno d’Arc, 237
  • Jurien de la Gravière, 476
  • Kleber, 332, 334
  • German, Arkona, (162)
  • Frauenlob, (162) "J,” (162)
  • Italian, Carlo Alberto, Wireless Telegraphy, (111), (496)
  • Japan, Several New, (353)
  • Japanese, Takassgo, 142
  • Russian, Askold, 10, 12
  • Aurora, 588 Bayan, (525)
  • Bogatyr, 261, 525
  • A New Fast, (185)
  • Novik, (426), (525)
  • Pamiat Azova, 325
  • United States, Baltimore, (614)
  • Desmoines, 325, (355);
  • Galyeston, 325
  • Tennessee and Washing¬ton (Supplement,Novem¬ber Uth, 1902), 468, (495)
  • Vesuvius, (395)

Torpedo Craft, Destroyers, Gunboats, dec.

British :

  • Scouts, Four Ordered, Their Names, (443), 588
  • Scouts, Tenders Accepted by the Ad¬miralty for Construction of, (420)
  • Sloop Merlin, Trials of, (469), (496)
  • Submarines, Admiralty’s Experiments with, (303), (355)
  • at Barrow, Experiments with, (85), 91
  • Al, Trials of, (233)
  • Nos. 1 and 3, 394
  • No. 2, Trial of, (211), 215
  • Hazard, 261
  • Latona, 261, (588)
  • Launch of the Sixth, Built by Vickers, Sons, and Maxim, (47)
  • Painted Green, British, 237
  • Periscopes Fitted to, 325, (355)
  • Three More, (589)
  • Torpedo Boat Destroyers, Fairy, (589)
  • Wolf, Tests at Portsmouth, (565)
  • Zephyr Aground, (525), 547
  • Nine Now, (280), 376
  • Nos. 109 and 110 Launched, (85), (257)
  • Strength of, to be Tested at Portsmouth, (519)
  • Structural Strength of, 164
  • Surly, Experi¬ments with Liquid Fuel, 307
  • Torpedo Boats to be Fitted with Water¬tube Boilers, 451
  • Torpedo Fleet, Important Admiralty Order affecting the, (355)
  • Torpedo Gunboat Circe, (15)
  • Gossamer, 194, (358), (588)
  • Niger, (358) Tarbine Destroyer Velox, 547

Torpedo Craft, Destroyers, Gunboats, &c.

Foreign:

  • French Submarines, 329. 397
  • Torpedo Boat, No. 84,
  • Attached to the Ecole Navale, Brest, 476
  • Torpedo Boat, No. 108, The “ Mystery” of the, (588), (610)
  • German Point of View, Submarines from the, 502
  • Submarine of the Holland Type, 261
  • Torpedo Boats to be Painted Brown-grey Khaki, 91
  • Mexico, Four Destroyers Ordered, 15
  • Swedish Torpedo Boat Destroyer Mode Launched from Yarrow’s Works, (85), 108, 261
  • United States Submarine Boats Adder and Mocassin Trials, (496), (519), 582
  • United States Submarine Torpedo Boat Ihe Protector, New Type of, (544), 547,562

Mercantile, Passenger, and other. British :

  • Atlantic Liners, The New, 325, 352’ 368
  • Atlantic Liner City of Rome, Her Melan¬choly End, 415
  • Bristol and South African Ports, Regular Steamship Service between, (496)
  • Canada to South Africa, Monthly Service of Steamers, (239)
  • Canadian Fast Mail Service between this Country and the Dominion, (111)
  • Channel Steamers, High-speed, 433
  • Cross - Channel Passenger Steamship Services, 230, 272, 279, (285)
  • Cflnard Company and the Government, The, 325, 352, 368, (505)
  • Liners, New, 136, 157, 473, 496, (505), (589), 592
  • Liner Campania, (11), (395)
  • Liner Carpatbia, 136
  • Liner Ivernia, (233)
  • Liner Lucania, (395)
  • Denny and Brothers, Wm., Turbine Steamers for London, Brighton and South Coast and South-Eastern and Chatham Railways, (355)
  • Duke of Connaught, John Brown and Co., Limited, for the Lancashire and Yorkshire and London and North- Western Railway Companies, (395)
  • Ferry Steamers for Trains, Denmark, (496)
  • Great Eastern Railway Company, Chan¬nel Steamers of the, 272, 279
  • Lancashire and Yorkshire and London and North-Western Railway Com¬panies’ Fleet, (370), (381), (395)
  • Lifeboats under Charge of the Royal National Lifeboat Institution, (443)
  • Lyssgbts, Limited, Steamship Service between Bristol and South African Porte, (496)
  • Manchester and Boston, Steamship Service between, (372), (496)
  • Melville, Elder, Dempster Liner, Steam¬ship Service between Canada and South Africa, (395)
  • Ontarian, Allan Brothers, Steamship Service between Canada and South Africa, (395)
  • Pacific Steam Navigation Company, Launch of the Victoria for tbe, (150)
  • Paddle Steamer, Lady Tyler, Engines or R. and E. Hawthorne, 272, 273, 279
  • Passenger and Cargo Steamer for the Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway. (370)
  • Prince Steamship Company, the Tudor Prince, the African Prince, and Two Others, for New York and South African Service, (614)
  • Shallow Draught Steamer, Messrs. Yarrow and Co., 190
  • Steamboat ? The First, 143
  • Steam Tugs for Colombo Port, (11)
  • Turbine Propulsion for Ships of Com¬merce, 164
  • Steamer for London, Brighton, and South Coast, Wm. Denny and Brothers, (355)
  • Steamer for South-Eastern and Chatham, Wm. Denny and Brothers, (355)
  • Steam Yacht b, (420), 424
  • Vickers, Sons and Maxim, Steamer for Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway, (370), (381)
  • Yacht, Emerald Turbine Steam, A. Stephen and Sons, Limited, (420), 424
  • Liquid Fuel for, (376), 476
  • Shamrock IIL, Denny Brothers, 391, (395)
  • Victoria and Albert, (395)
  • Yamuna, for the British India Steam Navigation Company, Sir Jas. Laing, Limited, (496)

Mercantile, Passenger, and other. Foreign:

  • American Liner SL Paul, (211)
  • American Seven-masted Schooner, 612
  • American Steam Yacht Arrow, Speed Record, (303)
  • Austrian-Lloyd, Direct Line of Cargo Steamers, Trieste to Durban, (11)
  • Danish Steamer, with Screw Placed Amidships, (565)
  • French Steamer, 7000-Ton, for the Com¬pagnie Havraise, Soclété des Forges et Chantiers, (355)
  • German Emperor's New Yacht, Meteor IIL, 172
  • Hamburg-American Company’s Steam¬ship Deutschland Disabled, (614)
  • Hamburg-American Liner Fiirst Bis¬marck, Breaks her Starboard Thrust Shaft, (211)
  • Italian Company Project a Passenger and Cargo Service between Odessa and Naples, (137)
  • Norddeutscher Lloyd Steamer, Grosser Kurlii ret, the Largest to GoTbroughtbe . Suez Canal, (420)
  • Norddeutscber Lloyd Steamer Saale, Fate of the, (162)
  • Russian Danube Steamship Company about to be Disbanded, (565)
  • Russian Icebreaker Yermak to be Fitted with Stronger Screws, (11)
  • Russian Icebreaker Yermak to be Enrolled as a Vessel of the Imperial Navy, (443)
  • Scholer Suction Dredge, Tho, (257)
  • Seven-masted Schoener Launched in Massachusetts, (85)
  • United States Lake Survey, Catamarans foi^tbe, (185)

Shipbuilding, British and Colonial. Naval and Mercantile:

  • Aberdeen Line of Messrs. G. Thompson and Co., Two Large Steamers for, with the Aberdeen Clipper Bow, (150)
  • Armstrong, Whitworth and Co., Government Work Secured, (553)
  • Battleship Placed with Messrs. John Brown and Co., (315)
  • Belfast, Record in its History, (443)
  • Clydebank, Experimental Tank, Messrs. J,
  • Brown and Co., Limited, (242)
  • Clydebank Shipbuilding Firm, New Tanks for Ship Model Experiments, (585)
  • Clyde, Nava), 549
  • and the New Canardera, The, 353
  • Six Months’, 15 ; Daring September (328), (338); During October, (443)
  • Trust, New Works, 263
  • Yards, Short Time in, (547)
  • Continental Competition, (505)
  • Depression of the Trade, (303). 315, (337), (481), (505), (553), (565), (601), (623)
  • Dovonport Dockyard, Pressure of Work at. (137)
  • Deckyard Repairs, 476
  • Elswick and Walker Shipyards, Fifty Years’ Work at the, 620
  • English, for Germany, (372)
  • English, in June, August, September, October, November, (11), (233), (372), (469), (544)
  • Interests of Canada, Protection of the, (469)
  • Irvine Shipbuilding and Dry Docks Company, Orders Secured, (553)
  • Lloyd's Register of, (85). (372)
  • Naval, on the Clyde, 549
  • Pacific Steam Navigation Company, Launch of the Victoria for, (150)
  • Palmer Shipbuilding Company’s Works, Fire at, (85); Thirty-seventh Annual Report of the Directors, (315)
  • Palmer Shipbuilding and Iron Company, Government Work on Hand, (553)
  • Plate Dent Straightener, Mr. F. Wilson's, 67
  • Pneumatic Tools in the Navy, 41
  • Propeller Efficiency, (376)
  • Scotch, during June, August, September, October, November, (11), (257), (372), (469), (544)
  • Screw Propulsion, (476)
  • Ships Built for the Navy by Private Firms, The Admiralty’s Decision respecting, (257)
  • Slackness and Depression Greater than since 1886, (601), (623)
  • Sunderland Yards, Unemployed in the, (565)
  • United Kingdom on June 30th last, Warships and other, under Construction in, (85)
  • Vickers, Sons and Maxim, Extensions to their Works at Barrow, (544)
  • Warships and Machinery Building in England, _ Progress of, 606
  • Yacht, Shamrock III., Denny Bros., 391, (395)

Shipbuilding, Naval and Mercantile, Foreign:

  • Barcelona, (85)
  • Black Sea or the Azoff under Russian Manage¬ment with German Capital, (233)
  • Emden, (372)
  • Floating Machine Shop Built on a Scow, for Repairing Ships, (496)
  • French Ship Design, The Genius of, 259
  • French, Statistics of, (496)
  • German on the Black Sea, under Russian Man- B agement, (233)
  • German, The Financial Results of, 323
  • Germania Shipyard at Kiel, Slackness of Work, „ (443)
  • Italy, for Turkey, (111)
  • Russian Navy, Foreigners and the, 188
  • Russia, Scheme for the Payment of Bounties £ for, (290)
  • United States, (46), (111), (185)
  • Lake Survey Catamarans, under Construction for, by the Jenks Company, (185)
  • New Trust, (185)
  • New Works, (266)
  • September Returns, (395)
  • Warship, 545
  • Vulcan Company, Stettin, Gift of Land at Cuxhaven to, (328)
  • SUORT, Mr. Sidney Howe, 417
  • Siberia, North, Expedition to Explore, in the Interests of Trade, (372)
  • Sibley College, 467, 470
  • Signalling, Fog, 18, 69, 95, 153
  • Signals, Coast Fog, N. G. Gedge on, 18, 69, 95 ’
  • Silver and Lead, Production o’, Queensland, 1901, (137)
  • Simons, Mr. Wm., 417
  • Simplon Tunnel and its Construction, 4. 101,177, 186, 204, 205, 411, 414, 418, (589), 607
  • Sky-scraper Building, New York, Remarkable, (162)
  • Slow-combustion Stoves and M. E. Zola’s Death, , (328)
  • Smithfield Show, The, (544), 569
  • Smoke Nuisance in Sheffield, (35)
  • Smoke Prevention, Mr. J. S. Raworth, 302
  • Smokeless Consumption of Bituminous Fuels, Mr. W. H. Booth on, 302 '
  • Snow-plongb, New Kind of, (11)

Society of Arts:

  • Atoms, Size of, Mr. H. O. Ridout, 522
  • Fothergill Prize, (15), (606)
  • Gas Lighting, Professor B. V. Lewes on the Future of, (589)
  • Meetings, Papers, and Lectures before Christ¬mas, (482)
  • Silver Medal, Papers for which it has been Awarded, (42)

Society, Bath and West and Southern Counties:

  • Extension of Area, (443)
  • Medals to be Offered for Driving Mowing and Reaping Machines by Mechanical Power, (443)
  • Meeting of the Show Dates Committee, (96)

Society, Boilermakers*:

  • Monthly Report—Trade Outlook not so Bad, (589)

Society, Civil and Mechanical En¬gineers’:

  • Coast Fog Signals, N. G. Gedye, 18

Society, Crystal Palace Engineering:

  • Wilson Premium Awarded to C. S. Dowell, (624)

Society, East London Technical Col¬lege Engineering:

  • Protection of Bail dings from Fire, Mr. G. PriDgle, (540)

Society, Edinburgh Students’ Engi¬neering:

  • American Notes, Principal Laurie, (493)

Society of Engineers:

  • Conversazione, 549
  • Forty-eighth Annual General Meeting, Mr. P. Griffiths in the Chair, 570
  • Hennebique System of Ferro-concrete Con¬struction, M. Augustus de Rohan Galbraith, (355)

Society of Engineers, The Amalgamated :

  • Commission Sent by Mr. Mosely to the United States, (405)
  • Drastic Action of the Executive, (355)
  • Latter from Mr. Geo. N. Barnes, 523
  • Provisional Agreement with the Engineering Employers’ Federation, 280, 289
  • Trade Union Candidates on behalf of the Society to Contest Seats in Parliament, (395)

Society, Glasgow Technical College Scientific:

  • Potentiometer, Mr. J. W. Peck, (554)

Society, Glasgow University Engineering:

  • Annual Dinner, (620)
  • Bridge Construction, Modern Practice in, Mr. J. R. Orr on, 515
  • Opening Meeting, Dr. Caird’s Address, (460)
  • Transmission of Power to the Interior of Mites, Mr. T. L. Galloway, (569)

Society, King’s College Engineering:

  • Annual Dinner, (561)

Society, Liverpool Engineering:

  • Date of Dinner, (622)

Society, Manchester Geological:

  • Coal-cutting by Machinery, Mr. A. Dury Mitton, (575)

Society, Manchester Literary and Philosophical

  • Switchback Centrifugal Railway, Inventor of the, Sir W. H. Bailey on, (487)

Society of Model Engineers:

  • Visit to the Rigby Works of Messrs. Willans and Robinson, Limited, (98)

Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders:

  • 255

Society, Physical:

  • Atoms, Size of, Mr. H. 0. Ridout, 522

Society of Railway Servants, The Amalgamated:

  • Annual Meeting of Delegates and Mr. R. Bell’s r Report, (355)
  • Decrease in Number of Members, (11)

Society, Yorkshire College Engineer¬ing:

  • Diesel Oil Engine, H. Ade Clark, 585
  • t Engineering in Canada and the United States, Prof. Goodman, (404)
  • .Engines for Motor Cars, Internal Combustion, Mr. F. G. Heseldio, (541)
  • B Metallic Packing, Mr. A. McSwiney, (502)
  • Traverse Surveying, Some Considerations on Prof. Thompson, (451)
  • SOUTH AFRICA, Cycles for, 45
  • from an Engineer’s Point of ’ View, 64, 93, 225, 247, 275,
  • 293, 319, 341, 389, 415. 433, 535, 539, 557, 579, 605
  • Germany’s Trade with, 45
  • Irrigation of, 114
  • Spain, Cotton Spinning and Weaving Machinery >n> (Hl)
  • Speeds of Toothed Wheels, Greatest, (35)
  • Stamford, Roman Remains Discovered at, (257)
  • Starch-making in Damascus, (137)
  • Steam, 43, 93, 144
  • Steam, Exhaust, Economical Use of, (519)
  • Steam Ploughing in South Africa, 93, 144

Steel:

  • Allis-Andrews System, The, (456)
  • Annealing of Low Carbon Mild, Herr E. Heyn, 250
  • Austrian and Hungarian, “Cartel,” (519)
  • A. W. Cutting, Sir W. G. Armstrong, Whit¬worth and Co.’s own Brand, (149)
    - Belgian for Bierut, (61)
  • Compression of, by Wiredrawing during n Solidification in the Ingot Mould, M. A. Har- mit, 251
  • Converters, Acid-lined, Replaced by the Basic n Process, (328)
  • Cutlery, Prof. Arnold on, (280), 282
  • Deterioration of, from Vibration, 271
  • Direct Production of, from Ore, Mons. Her- S noult's Process, (111)
  • Dome, A Large, (378)
  • Effect of Re-heating on the Coarse Structure of Overheated, K. F. Giiransson, 599
  • Foreign Trade in, September, (359)
  • German v. English, 43
  • German Exports to Russia, (185)
  • Harmit Ingot Pres3, The, 252
  • High-speed Cutting, The Use of, Mr. Miley on, (440)
  • High-speed Tool, New Process, Bismarck Furnace, Silesia, (544)
  • Industries, Iron and, Application of Electric Power for, Mr. Selby Bigge on, 252
  • Iron and, at the Dusseldorf Exhibition, Prof. H. Wedding, 250
  • Local Case Hardening for Articles of, (61) Manufacture, Output, and Profits in, 276
  • Open-hearth, in Great Britain, in First Half of 1902 and 1901, Make of, (420)
  • Output, Pittsburg, Talbot Open-hearth ' Furnace, (565)
  • Peculiarities of, 471
  • Plants and Enlargements in, West Pennsyl¬vania, (532)
  • Plant, Mahoning Valley, United States, (72)
  • Rail Combination, Reported Formation of, (288)
  • Rail Mills in Soo Region, Closed for Lack ot Work, (565)
  • Tempering, when Hardened by Overstrain, (11)
  • Testing High-speed Tool, (149)
  • Tool, for Government Arsenals, to be Supp'ied by a Sheffield Firm, (420)
  • Tracks for Auto Cars in New York, (102)
  • Trade, Sir Chas. M’Laren on the Gloomy Oat¬look, (315)
  • Trust, American, Wages and Turnover, (238)
  • Trust, Another Huge American, (565)
  • Trust and Pig Iron Furnaces, Reported Friction between, (11)
  • Trust, Rumoured British, 172
  • Trust, The United States, 311
  • United States Corporation, Output, (451)
  • Vanadium, Introduced into France by an American Engineer, (61)
  • What is Steel ? 402
  • Professor Arnold on, (280), 282
  • Wheelways for Wagon Roads, (46)
  • Workers, Scottish, and Improved Machinery, Works, American, (210)
  • Dorman, Long and Co.’s, New, (601)
  • Output of German, (328)
  • Practice in Germany, Progress in, by R. M. Daelen, 621
  • The Rheiniecbe, 271
  • STEERING Gear, 144
  • Stoker, The Arthur, 478
  • Stoker, Automatic, 14
  • Street Hygiene, The International Committee of (354)
  • Strikes—see Labour Questions, Strikes, io.
  • Structural Costs, 56, 125, 175, 226
  • Structural Strength of Torpedo Boat Destroyers, 164
  • Stud Chain in one Length, The Heaviest ever made in Staffordshire, (372)
  • Submarine Cables, Lines Possessed by Germany, (85)
  • Suburban Traffic, (111)
  • Superheated and Saturated Steam, Relative Con¬sumption per Brake Horse-power Hour of, (496)
  • Superheater, Test of a, 19

Supplements:

  • Blast Furnace Construction, Mr. Jno. Steven¬son, October 10th, 1902
  • Electric Eogineering, i.—xvi., December 12tb, 1902
  • Electric Power Station, Linwood Paper Mills, D. Bruce, Peebles and Co., July 18th, 1902
  • Great Western Railway Company's Works at Swindon, October 17th, 1902
  • Locomotive Boiler with Cylindrical Fire-box, Lancashire and Yorkshire Rail¬way, Mr. F. A. Hoy, August 15th, 1902
  • Express Passenger, Great Central, Mr. J. G, Robinson, July 4th, 1902
  • Narrow-gauge Goods, Cape Government Railways, Mr. H. Beatty, September 5th and 19th, 1902
  • Six-coupled Mineral Tank, Kerr, Stuart and Co., Limited, October 31st, 1902
  • Six-coupled Tank, Wrexham, Mold, and Connah’s Quay Rail¬way, Mr. F. Willans, November 21st, 1902
  • Nile Irrigation Works, Great Dam at AssuAn, December 19th, 1902
  • Royal Train, London, Brighton, and South Coast, December 26tb, 1902
  • Swindon Railway Works, The New, October 3rd and 17th, 1902
  • Tramway Traction Engine, Pinkston Power Station, Glasgow, D. Stawart and Co., Limited, December 5th, 1902
  • United States Navy, Armoured Cruisers Ten¬nessee and Washington, November 14tb, 1902
  • SWEDISH Metal and Coal, 215
  • Switzerland, British, German, and French Trade with, Compared, (565)
  • Synchronism in the Speeds of Two Motors, Optical Method of Observing, (111)

T

  • TALC Production in the United Stated, (85)
  • Tangiere, Roads between Fez, Engineer Sent by Sultan to Inspect, (162)
  • Tanks for Ship Model Experiments, New, (585)
  • Tar Sprinkling on Roads, Antwerp, (316)
  • Targets, Alteration in the Size of, The Council of the National Rifle Association’s Decision re¬specting, (565)
  • Tariff, The New German, 610
  • Tarring of Roads, (316), (355)
  • Taxes at the Cape, (589)
  • Teak Logs obtained in Burma Forests, (137)
  • Technical College Buildings at Glasgow, New, ) 170
  • Committees, Number and Composition of, in England and Wales, (519)
  • Lexicon, German, (303)

Telegraphy:

  • American Pacific, Construction Assured, (565)
  • Land and Submarine, Mileage Statistics or, (328)
  • Line from Asmarah to Addis-Abeba, (233)
  • Octuplex System of Typographic, Tested in Germany, (303)
  • Pacific Cable, Long Section Laid, (404)
  • Ship Telegraphs, The Largest ever Made, (382)
  • Subterranean to the North, (469), 500, 527
  • Underground Connecting London with Scot¬land, (469), 500
  • Wenchow to. be Connected with the Outside World by, (185)
  • Wireless, Breakdown of, during Naval Manoeuvres, in the Mediterranean, (420)
  • on the Campania, (11)
  • on the Carlo Alberto, (111), (496)
  • England and Canada, Successful, 610
  • Finding Longitude by the Aid of, (137)
  • Finland, Russia’s Restrictions, (35)
  • in the German Navy, (589)
  • on the Grand Trunk Railway, Ex¬periments with, (420)
  • Marconi, (111), (142), 307, (496)
  • Sweden, (11)
  • United States Warships, (19)

Telephones:

  • Berlin, (111)
  • Brighton Municipal, (420), (614)
  • Cardiff and Newport, Underground, (162)
  • Chicago, Automatic, 550
  • Denmark and Germany, New, (372)
  • Glasgow, Area of, (35)
  • Hull, Municipal, (469)
  • Paris, Charges, (614)
  • Petersburg and Moscow, (519)
  • San Francisco, (420)
  • San Francisco, The Chinese, (35)
  • Scarborough, (61)
  • Swansea’s Municipal (280), (614)
  • Sweden, (280)
  • Tunbridge Wells Municipal, (85), (469)
  • TELEPHONE Cables to the North, Subter¬ranean, 468
  • Telephone Company, The National, Subscribers are to ba Enabled to have Telegrams Trans¬mitted to them, (61)
  • Telephony, Future of, in the United Kingdom, Mr. J. E. Kingsbury on, 301
  • Telephony, Wireless, between two German Towns, (211)
  • Telephone Wires, Tunnel for, between Minnea¬polis and St Paul, (162)
  • Telephoning, Railway, (148)

Tenders:

  • Engineering, to be Invited by the Birmingham City Council, (552)
  • Floating Dry Dock for the Philippines, (233)
  • Netherlands Ministers of Colonies will Receive Tendersatthe Hague for Supplies, as follows, (519)
  • Sydney Bridge, (210), (222)
  • TEREDO, Damage done to Timber by the, (496) Thames Conservancy, The, 20
  • Thames—see Water Supply
  • Thorpe, Dr. T. E., His Report of the Work of the Government Laboratory, (241)
  • Thrift in Design, 163
  • Timber, Damage Done by the Teredo to, (496) Timber Joining, (460)
  • Tin Deposits in the Cape York Region of Alaska, (185)
  • Tin into the United States, Total Imports of, (185)
  • Tin-plate Company, The American, and the Welsh Manufacturers, (420)
  • Tin-plate Manufacture, United States, 170 Tin-plates, Price of, (519)
  • Tipton Mines, Drainage, 325
  • ‘‘Too Good”—see Colonial Markets, 473, 500
  • Tornado Dust Collector, 146
  • Townsend, Mr. J. E., (531)
  • Trade and Business Announcements, 22, 49, 72, 98, 123, 151, 172, 199, 223, 245, 269, 291, 317, 339, 361, 382, 430, 456, 182, 506, 532, 554, 576, 602, 624
  • Depression and "Going Away” Clubs, (233)
  • Disputes—see Labour Questions, Strikes, &c.
  • in the East, (338)
  • and Education, 114
  • of the Empire, 156
  • Germany’s South African, 45
  • Returns for July, Board of, (185)
  • Secrets and French Law Concerning, (35)

Tramways, Electric and other:

  • Allahabad, (420)
  • Auckland, New Zealand, (137)
  • Bangkok, (280)
  • Barcelona and Harta, (111)
  • Barrow, (136)
  • Barrow-in-Furness, Fire at the Depót, (11)
  • Belgium, (420)
  • Berlin, Mileage of, (211)
  • Birmingham, (469)
  • Birmingham City, Mr. Conaty’s Appointment to,(211)
  • Bombay, (35), (137)
  • Bradford, Official Statement of Receipts, kc., (355)
  • Brisbane, (162)
  • Burmah, (420), (428)
  • By-laws with Regard to Excess Tram Passengers, Leeds Corporation, (469)
  • Cardiff, Electric Equipment of, (35)
  • Devonport, Accident on, (328)
  • Engines, Glasgow, 306, 323
  • Exeter, (137), (162), (280)
  • Exhibition, International, 7
  • Glasgow, (257), (303), (420), 596, (614)
  • Glasgow, Engines for, D. Stewart and Co., 306, 333, 536, 583, 596
  • Glasgow, Fatal Accidents on, (211), (257)
  • Harrow, (443)
  • Hastings, (614)
  • Holland, (420)
  • Hopkinson, Mr. C., on Electric, 503
  • Hove, Ratepayers’ Opposition, (303)
  • Huddersfield, Accident, (11)
  • Lancashire, S., (85)
  • Lancaster Corporation, (137)
  • Leicester, (429)
  • Liverpool, (162)
  • Liverpool, Scheme for Transit of Merchandise Over, (496)
  • Landon, South, The London County Council. (519)
  • Landon, North, 584
  • Landon, Schemes for, 20, (85)
  • London United, Extension of, (233), 332, (469)
  • Lowestoft, Belgian Rails for, (137)
  • Madras, on the Mono-rail System, (303)
  • Maidstone with Chatham and Gravesend, (3951
  • Mandalay, (420), (428)
  • Mileage of, Taken over by the London County Council, (519)
  • Motor, Brush Standard, (xi., xiii., Supplement. December 12th, 1902)
  • Newcastle, (111)
  • Now South Wales, Annual Report, 448
  • New South Wales, Mileage Open for Traffic, September 30th, 1901, 1902, (614)
  • New York, Fumes from the Storage Batteries a Nuisance to Passengers, (355)
  • Portland City and Oregon, Telephones in the Cars, (35)
  • Rubber-grinding Machines, (xii., Supplement, December 12M, 1902)
  • Rothesay, 218
  • Russian, (257)
  • St. Petersburg and Moscow, (233)
  • Salford Tramway and Lighting Plant, 595
  • Sheffield, Letter-boxes Attached to the Cars (328)
  • Thames Embankment, (85)
  • Tien-Tsin, (61)
  • Track Sanding, 562
  • Tramcar Controllers, Messrs. Dick, Kerr, Limited, (xii., Supplement, December. 12th 1902) ’
  • Tramcars, Derailment of, 527
  • Tyneside, Gosforth to North Shields, (328)
  • United States, Philadelphia, Tramcar Transfer Table and Lift, Brill Company’s Works (210)
  • Willesden, Cost of Proposed, (35)
  • Wolverhampton, Col. von Donop’s Inspection (280)
  • Tree, 51ft. in Diameter, California, (185)
  • Trusts, How they Work (from the German Export Recur), 40b
  • Trust, Russian Iron, Reported, 524
  • Trust, Russian Metallurgical, 493
  • Tunnel to Connect Two Lakes. Two Mile Rock, (162)
  • Simplon, 4, 101, 177, 186, 204, 205, 411, 414, 418, 589, 607
  • under the Clyde, Projected, (257)
  • under the Thames, The New, (108), (137)
  • Turbine Propulsion for Ships of Commerce, 164
  • Turbines, Marine Steam, Parson’s System, (574)
  • Steam, Mr. K. Anderson on, (540)
  • Steam, Hon. C. A. Parsons on, 277
  • Steam, for Electric Power Generation, Mr. G. E. Fedden on, (257)
  • Turkey, Agricultural Implements Wanted for, (257)
  • Tuyeres, Vacuum on Foster’s System, (614)
  • Tynemouth Pier, 132, 133
  • Typewriter, A Pocket, (162)

U

  • UGANDA, Prospects of, (328)
  • Uganda Railway—»rz Railways, British, &c. United Kingdom, Trade Returns for July, (185);
  • Oil Imports into, (185)
  • United States Consul at Sheffield, (31)
  • Export Trade, Decline in, (233)
  • Government Investigations of Steam Pollution, &c., (257)
  • Oil Fuel instead of Coal for the Navy, (137); Production of Crystalline Graphite io, (137); Lieut. Davis’ Process for Harden¬ing Armour Plates, (137)
  • Trade of the, 260
  • University College, London, Incorporation of, in the University of London, 477
  • Uralite, 165

V

  • VALVE Diagram, Reuleanx, 403
  • Viaducts across the Seine, for the Paris Metro¬politan Railway, Steel, (61)
  • Viaduct, The Wellington-street, 527
  • Victorian Government's London Mining Representative Recalled, (280)
  • Volcanic Dust in Berlin, Supposed Presence of, (35)
  • V olcanic Dust, Specimens of, (46)
  • Volcano, Rooang, (211)
  • Volcanoes and the Inter-oceanic Canal, 2, 3,
  • Vulcanite. Best Speed for Maohining, (85)
  • Vulcan Works, Wolverhampton, Enlargement of, (530)

W

  • WAGES—see Labour Questions, Strikes, &c. Wagon Question, The, 235
  • Walker, Ebenezer, 212
  • Warning to Manufacturers, 311
  • Water Dynamometer, The Froude, (7)—seep. 616, j Vol. xciii.
  • Water-hammer Aotion in Steam Pipes, The Cause of, (481)

Water Supply:

  • Assouan Dam, Closing of the Sluices, to Fill the Reservoirs, (395)
  • Assouan Dam and Assiout Weir, 55, 580
  • Australia, Water and Drainage Bill, (280)
  • Boston, Electrolysis of Iron Pipes, and Remedy ; Suggested, (211)
  • Burley Waterworks, (22)
  • Cairo, Closing of the Sluices of the Assouan Dam to Fill the Reservoirs, (395)
  • Cape Colony, Artesian Wells Drilled by Govern¬ment, (303), (395)
  • Caton Waterworks Arbitration, (85)
  • Chicago, Foul Condition of, (257) ; Water I Waste in, (614)
  • Church Stretton, Shropshire, (428)
  • Columbus, Ohio, Special Instrument showing Nightly Waste, (355)
  • Coolgardie, (622)
  • Dover, (355), (565)
  • Edinburgh, The New Waterworks, 319 ; Diffi¬culties at, (376)
  • Fittings, on the Standardisation of, Mr. R. S. Lloyd, 80
  • Formosa, South, Irrigation Insufficient, (11)
  • Glasgow, Mr. J. Gale and the, (596)
  • Guildford Corporation Waterworks, Mr. C. G. Mason on the Turbine Pumping Plant, 115
  • High-pressure Salt Water Mains in Phila¬delphia for Fire Extinguishing, (61)
  • Holland, Purification of, by Ozonised Air, (443)
  • Lincoln, (257)
  • Littlehampton, New Works Opened, (469)
  • London, (589)
  • Loughborough, New Waterworks, 32, 33, 34, 115
  • Madeley, Salop, Opening of Now Works, (420)
  • Metropolitan, (35), (303), (395), (443), (589)
  • Mexico, Prize Offered by the State for Making Artesian Well, (211)
  • Nagasaki, (280)
  • Paris, 460
  • Pekin Waterworks, (8) ; Permanent, Jerusalem, (61)
  • Philadelphia, Gas Engine Pumping Plant, (338)
  • Pollution of Rivers, 369
  • Port Talbot, (316)
  • Reading Waterworks, Mr. A. T. Walker on the Water Power Pumping Plant, 115
  • Rickmansworth and Uxbridge Valley. (544)
  • Rural, Messrs. Jas. Dewhurst and H. G. Key¬wood, 80
  • Seoul in Corea, (257)
  • Shimonoseki, (185)
  • Sydney Waterworks, Pumping Plant for Mestre. Mather and Platt (xvi., Electrical Supplement, December 12tk, 1902)
  • Tangiers, (162)
  • Torquay, Rusting of Mains and Results, (233)
  • United States Government Investigations of Stream Pollution, &c., (257)
  • Waste, Special Instrument Showing Nightly, (355)
  • Water Engineer on, 442
  • Windsor Corporation Waterworks, Mr. C. Sainty on the Tarbine-driven Pampy, 115
  • Wolverhampton, (170), (544)
  • WEARDALE Steel, Coal, and Coke Company, Accounts of, (315)
  • Webb, Mr. F. W., His Resignation, (182), 523
  • Weitzer, Mr. John, The Styrian Ironmaster, (407)
  • Well Boring in South Africa, 388, 573 Westward to the Orient, 569
  • Whitworth, Mr. A. H., (233)
  • Whitworth Scholarships, The, 240
  • Wilkinson, Mr. Geo., Presentation to, (328)
  • Wind Effects upon Lakes, 250
  • Wind Pressure, Measuring, Competition at the Deutsche Seewarte, Hamburg, for the Best Contrivance for, (565)
  • Winnipeg, Small-pox Hospital and the City’s Ice Supply, (211)
  • Wire Trade, United States, Condition of, (35) Wolverhampton, Canals and, 66
  • Wood as Fuel on North Carolina Railways to be Discontinued, (420)
  • Wood as Fuel on Russian Railways to be Discon¬tinued, Use of, (420)
  • Woods, The Lightest and the Heaviest, Specific Gravity of, (162)
  • Wood Paving Blocks from New South Wales, (372)
  • Wood Paving in Paris, (280)
  • Worcester Porcelain, Date of the First Manu¬factory of, (11)
  • Workmen’s Compensation Acts, Cases under, (211)
  • Workshop Drawing Class, A, 183
  • Workshop Management, Some Aspects of, 1, 51, 68, 101, 154, 201, 249, 293, 342
  • Workshop Methods, American c. British, (243)
  • Workshops, Swindon, The New Railway (Supple¬ment, October 3rd, 1902), 325
  • 11 World’s Fair,” Manchester the next Site, (35)

See Also

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Sources of Information