GENERAL INDEX · 2020-01-31 · lOirxX«i(l GENERAL INDEX pOR your convenience there appears below...

7
lOirx X«i(l GENERAL INDEX p O R your convenience there appears below a list of page numbers in the respective issues for 1945. Those in the first column indicate the numbers of the general pages and those in the second column indicate which pages appeared in the Proceedings of the American Association of Textile Chemists and Colorists. The presence of the letter “P ” before the page number, anyhere in this index, indicates that the article appeared in the .Association Proceedings. Date of No. of General Proceedings Issue Issue Pages Pages January 1 .......... ... 1 15 to 20 n to P14 January 15 .......... 2 to P21 to P40 January 29 ........ ... 3 65 to 66 P41 to P64 February 12 ... .... 4 83 to 86 P67 to P82 February 26 ........ ... 5 105 to 106 P87 to P104 March 12 ............ ... 6 123 to 126 PI 07 to P122 March 26 ............ ... 7 143 to 144 P127 to P142 April 9 ................ ... 8 161 to 164 P145 to P160 April 23 .............. ... 9 177 to 182 P165 to PI 76 May 7 .................. . . . 10 195 to 204 P183 to P194 May 21 ................ . . . n 217 to 224 P205 to P216 June 4 .................. . . . 12 225 to 244 P229 to P240 June 18 ................ . . . 13 245 to 262 P251 to P258 July 2 .................. . . . 14 to P263 to P282 Tulv 16 ............... .... 15 295 to 302 P283 to P294 July 30 ............... ,... 16 303 to 318 P307 to P314 -■\ugust 13 .......... ... 17 319 to 338 ... to August 27 ......... ,... 18 339 to 358 P347 to P354 September 10 . ..... 19 359 to 376 P363 to P366 September 24 .. .... 20 377 to 392 P393 to P394 October 8 ........ .... 21 395 to 416 P399 to P406 October 22 ........ .... 22 417 to 434 P425 to P428 November 5 .... .... 23 435 to 456 P439 to P442 November 19 ... .... 24 457 to 476 P461 to P468 December 3 .... .... 25 477 to 524 P497 to P504 December 17 . .. , 2 6 525 to 544 P527 to P538 December 31 . . . , . . . 27 565 to 568 P545 to P564 BY SUBJECT 568B Mechanism of Felting of Wool Filjers .............. ....................................... Use of iViirasives to Make vv’oul Unshrinkable.................................. .... Cellulose Studies: 1. J^eaction of Oxycellulose with Aqueous Acids and Alkalies .......................................................................................................... Resins Applied to Textiles .................................................................................... Specky Effects in Textile Printing ........................................... .. ........................ Colour ................................................................................................. ........................ Dyeing Properties of Wool which has been Exposed to Light ................ The Dyeing of Cotton with Mineral Khaki: Part V .................................. Part VI ........... .. ............................... ................................................................... Synthetic Protein Fibers from Protein-Detergent C o m p le x e s ......... Abstracts of Intersectional Contest Papers to be Present at the Victory Convention ............................................................................................... .. Abstracts of Papers Presented at the Meeting-in-Print of the Division of Cellulose Chemistry of the American Chemical Society ................ Acid Dyes l)y Wool, Silk, Casein Fiber and Nylon, The Absorption of (Skinner and Vickerstaff) ............................................................................... Acid-Water Relationships, Data on Wool- (LaFleur) .................................. Ageing of Cotton Fabrics, Report of the Committee on ................................. American Chemical Society, Abstracts of Papers Presented at the Meeting-in-Print of the Division of Cellulose Chemistry of the......... Ammonium ("ompounds. Methods for the Estimation of High Molecular Quaternary (Dubois) ........................................................................................ Analysis of Preventol GD in Vat and Mineral Dyed Textiles, A New Method for the (Shiraeff) ............................................................................... Aralac (Carmichael) ................................................................................................... Army Woolens, Shrink Resistant Treatments for (Clapham).................... 430 430 516 516 516 517 517 517 518 518 P530 S39 435 443 P426 539 243 15 P171 P68 A.A.T.C.C. and Suter Hydrostatic Pressure Testers, A Comparison of the (Mandikos and Ryberg) ............................................................................ P37 Absorption of Acid Dyes by Wool, Silk, Casein Fiber and Nylon, The (Skinner and Vickerstaff) ................................................................................ 435 ABSTRACTS FROM CONTEMPORARY JOURNALS (Listed in Order of Appearance) Some Flax Fiber Characteristics; Their Bearing on the Bleaching Process .................................................................................................................. 228 Patents Show Possibility of Light-Printing on Cloth............................... 228 Scouring Multi-Colour Worsted Piece Goods............................................... 228 “Ardil” : A Protein Synthetic Fiber from Peanuts...................................... 228 Wool Resist Processes: The Use of Formaldehyde and its Condensa- tion Products with Naphthosulphonic Acids............................................... 242‘ The Production of Rayon from Alginic Acid............................................... 243 Some Properties of Alginate Rayons.......................................................... 243 Union Dyeing ......................................................................................................... 243 Symposium on the Application of Pigments to Textiles ........................... 261 Nylon Fibre: A Study of the Mechanism of the Dyeing Process with Acid Dyes.................................................................................................... 261 Construction, Fiber, Finish Affect Fabric Warmth.................................... 262 The Nomenclature of Commercial Dyestuffs................................................. 295 The Incidence and Control of Mould and Bacterial Attack on Textiles 295 The Dyeing of Nylon with Direct Cotton Dyes in the Presence of Cationic Soaps .................................................................................................... 295 Annual Meeting, Society of Dyers and Colourists...................................... 334 Finishes for Raised Cloth..................................................................................... 334 Two-Colour Dyeing of All-Wool Materials.................................................... 335 Factors which Influence the Colour and Finish of Viscose Rayon Knitwear ................................................................................................................ 335 Stripping and Redyeing Cotton Piece Goods................................................. 335 Electronic Control of Cloth Drying M achinery... ......... •. .......................... 336 Symposium on Some New Instruments and Testing Methods................ 388 Some Characteristics of Bemberg Yarns and Fabrics of Interest to the Dyer and Finisher ....................................................................................... 388 Industrial Research .............................................................................................. 388 Cloth Construction and Dyeing Faults ............................................................ 389 Water Tight Fabrics Made by Swelling Cotton Fibers ............................. 389 Newer Fibers ........................................................................................................... 429 The Package Dyeing of Narrow Fabrics: A Link Between Yarn Dyeing and Piece Dyeing.............................................................................. 430 BOOK REVIEWS (Listed in Order of Appearance) A.S.T.M. Standards on Textile Materials ...................................................... Chemical Machinery ................................................................................................. Commercial Waxes ................................................................................................ Conference Leader Training ......... ....................................................................... Handbook of Chemistry and Physics................................................................. How to Handle Labor Conferences......... ......................................................... The Standardization of Volumetric Solutions. . .......................................... Time Study and Motion Economy for Supervisors.................................... The Chemical Formulary....................................................................................... New Manual to Make Job Training Safety Effective ................................. The Measurement of Colour............................................................................... How to Train your Assistants.! ........................................................................ The Pirates will get You ........................................................................................ What the Foreman Needs for Success ............................................................ Textbook on Organic C hem istry ..................................................................... Britain, Recent Textile Developments in (H all) ............................................... Bureau of Standards and Means of Calibrating other Lamps in Terms of It, The Standard Fading Lamp at the National (Launer) ............... Burial Test for Rot-Proofed Cotton Fabrics, The Soil (Dean, Strick- land and Berard) ...................................................................... ........................ Calibrating other Lamps in Terms of It, The Standard Fading Lamp at the National Bureau of Standards and Means of (Launer) ............. Calibration of Carbon Arc Lamps Used for Testing and Grading Light Fastness, A Proposed Method for the (Seib ert).. ............................. . - Carbon Arc Lamps used for Testing and Grading Light Fastness, A Proposed Method for the Calibration of (Seibert) ....................... .. Casein Fiber and Nylon, The Absorption of Acid Dyes by Wool, Silk, (Skinner and Vickerstaff) ..................................................................... .. Cellulose Derivatives, Some Aspects in the Finishing of Cotton Mar- quisette and Nettings with (Goodavage).................................... ............ Cellulose, Does Copper Naphthenate Oxidize? (Bartlett and GoW)......... Cellulose Finishes, New Developments in Permanent (Edelstein) ............... Chemical Aspects of Wool Protein Behavior, Some (LaFleur) ................. Chemist in the Post War World, The Textile (Appel) ......... :•••••------ - Chemist, The Professional and Economic Status of the Textile (Fraser) Chemistry, The Undergraduate Course in Textile (Lind) ................ ' ‘ Chicken Feathers, Physical Measurements on: I— Compression Tests (Lee, Reeves and Stewart) ............................................................................ Cloth Strips, Laboratory Cutter for (Kettering and C o o p er) .... ........... Colloid Chemist would explain the Dyeing of Wool, How a (Anderson) Colorfastness Standards Available, New......................................... Color Fastness, The Importance of Standard Test Methods, Ratings, and Terminology for (Ehrman) ...................................................... .. ............. . Color Matching by Young and Old, Idiosyncrasies in (Knowland)......... Color, Report of Committee on Transference of ............................................. . Color Transference, A new Tool for Evaluating (Holst) .......................... ; Conditioning Laboratory ............................................................................................ Consumer Needs in Textiles, Meeting (Coughlin) .......................................... Consumer Textiles, Flammability o f ............................................. _ .............. ' i' Consumer Textiles, Recommendations of the Sub-Committee of the A.A.T.C.C. on Flammability of ...................................................... rV ‘ \ Consumer Textiles, Report of Committee on Flammability of (Hager) Consumer Textiles, Report of Committee on Flammability of .................... Continuous Dyeing Process, The Pad-Steam (M eunier) ............................. Continuous Indigo Dyeing of Wool Stock (von Bergen, Crowley and Brommelsiek) ........................................................................................ ' W ' ' Copper Naphthenate, A Study of the Effect of Leaching on the Rot- Proofing Efficacy of (Bayley and Weatherburn) .................................... Copper Naphthenate Oxidize Cellulose, Does? (Bartlett and Goll) ......... Copper-Tolerant Fungi on Cotton Fabrics, Observations of the Growth of Some (Bayley and Weatherburn) ............................................................. CORRECTIONS ................................................................................................... Pl53, Cotton, A Practical Laboratory Test for Evaluating Scouring Agents for (Bacon) ........................................ .. ................................................................. Cotton Fabrics, Observations on the Growth of Some Copper-Tolerant Fungi on (Bayley and Weatherburn) ........................................................... Cotton Fabrics, Report of Committee on Ageing of ........................................ Cotton Fabrics, The Soil Burial Test for Rot-Proofed (Dean, Strickland and Berard) ........................................................................................................... Cotton Group Meeting (Newman)..................................................................P99, Cotton Marquisette Nettings ■ with Cleullose Derivatives, Some Aspects in the Finishing of (Goodavage).................................................................. Cotton. What We May Expect from Resins in the Treatment of (Powers) ................................................................................................................. IWfrPjj to®. , 1 Vil * .1Ik piojj Process Some i D rtiD^ i , 'in j Some ! iBill) ■■■ Jm iS, ilcOear)') Busb Silhw J’ 21 125 , Some ( ulsifs, M«i iofflctr)' w' b s ifi. lieteii' laitroc Spies AMERICAN DYESTUFF REPORTEl '-fliibcr 31

Transcript of GENERAL INDEX · 2020-01-31 · lOirxX«i(l GENERAL INDEX pOR your convenience there appears below...

Page 1: GENERAL INDEX · 2020-01-31 · lOirxX«i(l GENERAL INDEX pOR your convenience there appears below a list of page numbers in the respective issues for 1945. Those in the first column

lOirx X«i(l

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

p O R your convenience there appears below a list of page numbers in the respective issues for 1945. Those in the

first column indicate the numbers of the general pages and those in the second column indicate which pages appeared in the Proceedings of the American Association of Textile Chemists and Colorists.

The presence of the letter “P” before the page number, anyhere in this index, indicates that the article appeared in the .Association Proceedings.

Date of No. of General ProceedingsIssue Issue Pages Pages

January 1 .......... . . . 1 15 to 20 n to P14January 15 .......... 2 to P21 to P40January 29 ........ . . . 3 65 to 66 P41 to P64February 12 . . . . . . . 4 83 to 86 P67 to P82February 26 ........ . . . 5 105 to 106 P87 to P104March 12 ............ . . . 6 123 to 126 PI 07 to P122March 26 ............ . . . 7 143 to 144 P127 to P142April 9 ................ . . . 8 161 to 164 P145 to P160April 23 .............. . . . 9 177 to 182 P165 to PI 76May 7 .................. . . . 10 195 to 204 P183 to P194May 21 ................ . . . n 217 to 224 P205 to P216June 4 .................. . . . 12 225 to 244 P229 to P240June 18 ................ . . . 13 245 to 262 P251 to P258July 2 .................. . . . 14 to P263 to P282Tulv 16 ............... . . . . 15 295 to 302 P283 to P294July 30 ............... , . . . 16 303 to 318 P307 to P314-■\ugust 13 .......... . . . 17 319 to 338 . . . toAugust 27 ......... , . . . 18 339 to 358 P347 to P354September 10 . . . . . . 19 359 to 376 P363 to P366September 24 .. . . . . 20 377 to 392 P393 to P394October 8 ........ . . . . 21 395 to 416 P399 to P406October 22 ........ . . . . 22 417 to 434 P425 to P428November 5 . . . . . . . . 23 435 to 456 P439 to P442November 19 . . . . . . . 24 457 to 476 P461 to P468December 3 . . . . . . . . 25 477 to 524 P497 to P504December 17 . . . , 2 6 525 to 544 P527 to P538December 31 . . . , . . . 27 565 to 568 P545 to P564

BY SUBJECT

568B

Mechanism of Felting of Wool Filjers.............. .......................................Use of iViirasives to Make vv’oul Unshrinkable.................................. ....Cellulose Studies: 1. J^eaction of Oxycellulose with Aqueous Acids

and Alkalies ..........................................................................................................Resins Applied to Textiles....................................................................................Specky Effects in Textile Printing........................................... ..........................Colour ................................................................................................. ........................Dyeing Properties of Wool which has been Exposed to L ight................The Dyeing of Cotton with Mineral Khaki: Part V ..................................

Part V I ........... ................................. ...................................................................Synthetic Protein Fibers from Protein-Detergent C o m p le x e s . . . . . . . . .

Abstracts of Intersectional Contest Papers to be Present at the VictoryConvention ............................................................................................... ..

Abstracts of Papers Presented at the Meeting-in-Print of the Divisionof Cellulose Chemistry of the American Chemical Society................

Acid Dyes l)y Wool, Silk, Casein Fiber and Nylon, The Absorption of(Skinner and V ickerstaff)...............................................................................

Acid-Water Relationships, Data on Wool- (L a F le u r)..................................Ageing of Cotton Fabrics, Report of the Committee on.................................American Chemical Society, Abstracts of Papers Presented at the

Meeting-in-Print of the Division of Cellulose Chemistry of the.........Ammonium ("ompounds. Methods for the Estimation of High Molecular

Quaternary (Dubois) ........................................................................................Analysis of Preventol GD in Vat and Mineral Dyed Textiles, A New

Method for the (Sh iraeff)...............................................................................Aralac (Carmichael) ...................................................................................................Army Woolens, Shrink Resistant Treatments for (Clapham)....................

4 3 043 0

516516516517517517518518

P 5 3 0

S39

435443

P426

539

243

15P 1 7 1

P 68

A.A.T.C.C. and Suter Hydrostatic Pressure Testers, A Comparison ofthe (Mandikos and Ryberg)............................................................................ P37

Absorption of Acid Dyes by Wool, Silk, Casein Fiber and Nylon, The(Skinner and Vickerstaff)................................................................................ 435

A BST R A C T S FROM CON TEM PO RARY JO U RN A LS (Listed in Order of Appearance)Some Flax Fiber Characteristics; Their Bearing on the Bleaching

Process .................................................................................................................. 228Patents Show Possibility of Light-Printing on Cloth............................... 228Scouring Multi-Colour Worsted Piece Goods............................................... 228“Ardil” : A Protein Synthetic Fiber from Peanuts...................................... 228Wool Resist Processes: The Use of Formaldehyde and its Condensa­

tion Products with Naphthosulphonic Acids............................................... 242‘The Production of Rayon from Alginic Acid............................................... 243Some Properties of Alginate Rayons.......................................................... 243Union Dyeing ......................................................................................................... 243Symposium on the Application of Pigments to Textiles........................... 261Nylon Fibre: A Study of the Mechanism of the Dyeing Process

with Acid Dyes.................................................................................................... 261Construction, Fiber, Finish Affect Fabric Warmth.................................... 262The Nomenclature of Commercial Dyestuffs................................................. 295The Incidence and Control of Mould and Bacterial Attack on Textiles 295 The Dyeing of Nylon with Direct Cotton Dyes in the Presence of

Cationic Soaps .................................................................................................... 295Annual Meeting, Society of Dyers and Colourists...................................... 334Finishes for Raised Cloth..................................................................................... 334Two-Colour Dyeing of All-Wool Materials.................................................... 335Factors which Influence the Colour and Finish of Viscose Rayon

Knitwear ................................................................................................................ 335Stripping and Redyeing Cotton Piece Goods................................................. 335Electronic Control of Cloth Drying M ach in ery ............ •........................... 336Symposium on Some New Instruments and Testing Methods................ 388Some Characteristics of Bemberg Yarns and Fabrics of Interest to

the Dyer and Finisher....................................................................................... 388Industrial Research .............................................................................................. 388Cloth Construction and Dyeing Faults............................................................ 389W ater Tight Fabrics Made by Swelling Cotton Fibers............................. 389Newer Fibers ........................................................................................................... 429The Package Dyeing of Narrow Fabrics: A Link Between Yarn

Dyeing and Piece Dyeing.............................................................................. 430

BOOK R E V IE W S(Listed in Order of Appearance)A .S.T .M . Standards on Textile M aterials......................................................Chemical M achinery.................................................................................................Commercial Waxes ................................................................................................Conference Leader Training......... .......................................................................Handbook of Chemistry and Physics.................................................................How to Handle Labor Conferences......... .........................................................The Standardization of Volumetric Solutions. . ..........................................Time Study and Motion Economy for Supervisors....................................The Chemical Formulary............................................. ..........................................New Manual to Make Job Training Safety Effective.................................The Measurement of Colour...............................................................................How to Train your A ssistan ts .!........................................................................The Pirates will get You........................................................................................What the Foreman Needs for Success............................................................Textbook on Organic C h e m is try .... .................................................................

Britain, Recent Textile Developments in (H a ll) ...............................................Bureau of Standards and Means of Calibrating other Lamps in Terms

of It, The Standard Fading Lamp at the National (L au ner)...............Burial Test for Rot-Proofed Cotton Fabrics, The Soil (Dean, Strick­

land and Berard) ...................................................................... ........................Calibrating other Lamps in Terms of It, The Standard Fading Lamp at

the National Bureau of Standards and Means of (L au ner).............Calibration of Carbon Arc Lamps Used for Testing and Grading Light

Fastness, A Proposed Method for the (S e ib e r t ) . . ............................. . -Carbon Arc Lamps used for Testing and Grading Light Fastness, A

Proposed Method for the Calibration of (Se ib ert)......................... •Casein Fiber and Nylon, The Absorption of Acid Dyes by Wool, Silk,

(Skinner and V ickerstaff)..................................................................... ..Cellulose Derivatives, Some Aspects in the Finishing of Cotton Mar-

quisette and Nettings with (Goodavage).................................... ............Cellulose, Does Copper Naphthenate Oxidize? (Bartlett and GoW).........Cellulose Finishes, New Developments in Permanent (Edelstein)...............Chemical Aspects of Wool Protein Behavior, Some (L a F leu r).................Chemist in the Post W ar World, The Textile (A ppel)......... :•••••-------Chemist, The Professional and Economic Status of the Textile (Fraser)Chemistry, The Undergraduate Course in Textile (L in d )................ ' ‘ •Chicken Feathers, Physical Measurements on: I— Compression Tests

(Lee, Reeves and Stew art)............................................................................Cloth Strips, Laboratory Cutter for (Kettering and C o o p e r ) . . . . ...........Colloid Chemist would explain the Dyeing of Wool, How a (Anderson)Colorfastness Standards Available, New.........................................Color Fastness, The Importance of Standard Test Methods, Ratings,

and Terminology for (Ehrm an)...................................................... ............... .Color Matching by Young and Old, Idiosyncrasies in (Knowland).........Color, Report of Committee on Transference o f ............................................. .Color Transference, A new Tool for Evaluating (H o lst).......................... ;Conditioning Laboratory ............................................................................................Consumer Needs in Textiles, Meeting (Coughlin)..........................................Consumer Textiles, Flammability o f ............................................. _.............. ' i'Consumer Textiles, Recommendations of the Sub-Committee of the

A.A.T.C.C. on Flammability o f ...................................................... rV ‘ \Consumer Textiles, Report of Committee on Flammability of (Hager)Consumer Textiles, Report of Committee on Flammability o f ....................Continuous Dyeing Process, The Pad-Steam (M eu nier).............................Continuous Indigo Dyeing of Wool Stock (von Bergen, Crowley and

Brommelsiek) ........................................................................................ ' W ' 'Copper Naphthenate, A Study of the Effect of Leaching on the Rot-

Proofing Efficacy of (Bayley and W eatherburn)....................................Copper Naphthenate Oxidize Cellulose, Does? (Bartlett and G oll).........Copper-Tolerant Fungi on Cotton Fabrics, Observations of the Growth

of Some (Bayley and W eatherburn).............................................................CO RRECTIO N S ...................................................................................................Pl53,Cotton, A Practical Laboratory Test for Evaluating Scouring Agents

for (Bacon) ........................................ ...................................................................Cotton Fabrics, Observations on the Growth of Some Copper-Tolerant

Fungi on (Bayley and W eatherburn)...........................................................Cotton Fabrics, Report of Committee on Ageing o f ........................................Cotton Fabrics, The Soil Burial Test for Rot-Proofed (Dean, Strickland

and Berard) ...........................................................................................................Cotton Group Meeting (Newman)..................................................................P99,Cotton Marquisette Nettings ■ with Cleullose Derivatives, Some Aspects

in the Finishing of (Goodavage)..................................................................Cotton. What We May Expect from Resins in the Treatment of

(Powers) .................................................................................................................

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' i n j Some ! iBill) ■■■

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AMERICAN DYESTUFF REPORTEl '-fliibcr 31

Page 2: GENERAL INDEX · 2020-01-31 · lOirxX«i(l GENERAL INDEX pOR your convenience there appears below a list of page numbers in the respective issues for 1945. Those in the first column

8 Ac.

it V:

lit is,

'Course in Textile Chemistry, The Undergraduate (L in d )..................Crease Kesistant Finishes (W achter)..................Crease Resistant Finishes (W ilcock).................... ..............................................Curtain Marquisettes, The Serviceability of (Morrison arid’jel'inek)

' tor Cloth S^ips, Laboratory (Kettering and Cooper)..............Damaged Wool in Raw Stock Dyeing, The Level Dyeing of (O ’Day) Detergents vs. Soaps, Synthetic................................Deterioration, Problems in the Nature and CoAtV’oVof Tropical "(Westcin) Drying of textile Materials, Recent Developments in (Rabold) .Dyed Textile Materials, Notes on the Stripping of (W’akelin) i i Dyed Textiles, A New Method for the Analysis of Preventoi GD iii

Vat and Mineral (Sh iraeff).............................................................................Dyeing and Finishing Developments, Rayon (Brosnan)Dyeing, Current Aspects of interest in Wool (M illson). . ....................Dyeing of Damaged Wool in Raw Stock Dyeing, The Level (O ’D a y ). i Dyeing of Synthetic Fabrics, Recent Developments in the (Choquette)Dyeing of the Synthetic Fibers, A Survey of the (E tchells).......................Dyeing of Wool, How a Colloid Chemist would explain the (Anderson) Dyeing of W’ool Stock, Continuous Indigo (von Bergen, Crowley and

Brommelsiek) ........................................................................................................Dyeing: Past, Present and Future, Pigment Printing arid’ (McLeaii)Dyeing Process, The Pad-Steam Continuous (M eunier)...........................Dyeing Processes. pH Control in (N oble)....................................................Dyeing, Some Fundamental Principles of Vat (C lark )...............................Dyeing Some Manufactured P'ibers, Modern Methods of (Scull and

Smith) .....................................................................................................................Wool: Effect of Variations Wool (Kienle, Royer andDyeing,

„ McCleary) . . . .Dyes by Wool, Silk, Casein Fiber and Nylon, The Absorption of Acid

(Skinner and Vickerstaff)...............................................................................Dyeings, Some Causes of Uneven (H utchins).................................................Dyestuff Industry, Reconversion of the (H errm ann)....................................Dyestuffs, Polyethylene Oxide Condensates, an Aid in the Spectroph s-

tometry of (Taylor and Sim on)......................................................................Dyestuffs, Recent Developments in the Application of Vat (Stribling) . . Economic Status of the Textile Chemist, The Professional and (Fraser)

E D IT O R IA L SContinuing the New E ra ......................................................................................Fiber Terminology .................................................................................................

Education ana Kesearch for Textile Chemists, Higher (T ay lor)..............Emulsions and their Applications to Textiles (N eville)................................Fading Committee, Report of Gas..........................................................................Fading Lamp at the National Bureau of Standards and Means of Cali­

brating other Lamps in Terms of It, The Standard (L au ner).........Fastness, A Proposed Method for the Calibration of Carbon Arc Lamps

used for Testing and Grading Light (Se ib ert)......................................Fastness, The Importance of Standard Test Methods, Ratings, and

Terminology for Color (Ebrm an).................................................................Feathers, Physical Measurements on Chicken, I — Compression Tests

(Lee, Reeves and Stew art)...............................................................................Felting of Wool, Some Factors Contributing to the (H a rr is ) ....................Fiberglas Textiles, Potentialities of (S la y ter)...............................................

iz" Finishes, Crease Kesistant (W achter).................................................................Finishes, Crease Resistant (W ilcock).................................................................

iDei ir.Finishes, New Developments in Permanent Cellulose (Edelstein)................... Finishing Developments, Rayon Dyeing and (Brosnan)................................

Finishing Fabrics, Postwar Possibilities in (Borghetty)................................Finishing Group Meeting (Pow ers)................................................................. P77.Finishing, Hosiery (S ieg rist) ...................................................................................

■ Finishing Nylon Fabrics, Weaving and (Atwood)...........................................Finishing of Cotton Marquisette Nettings with Cellulose Derivatives,

Some Aspects in the (Goodavage)........................................................•.-"tt.' . Finishing, of Textile Fabrics with Urea and Melamine Resins, Some

Recent Aspects in the (N u te)..........................................................................Finishing on Certain Physical Properties of Nylon, Effect of W et...........Flammability of Consumer T e x t i le s ..- . . ...............................................................Flammability of Consumer Textiles, Recommendations of the Sub­

committee of the A .A.T.C.C. on....................................................................Flammability of Consumer Textiles, Report of Committee on (Hager) . .Flammability of Consumer Textiles, Report of Committee on..................

■■-I'.' f,. Fungi on Cotton Fabrics, Observations on the Growth of Some Copper-Tolerant (Bayley and W eatherburn).............................................................

; ;'i'T.,3as Fading Committee, Report o f ..........................................................................aprc:- • Germany, Textile Developments in ........................................................................

Germany, W et Processing in (Richardson) ....................................................'' ; Glycerine in Textile Processes (Leffingwell and L esser)...............................

Grease Wool for Clean Content, The Analysis of (LeCompte, Coe andGold) ........................................................................................................................

Harris to Receive Olney Mecjal, M ilton...............................................................Hosiery Finishing (S ie g ris t)....................................................................................Hydrostatic Pressure Testers, A Comparison of the A.A.T.C.C. and

Suter. (Mandikos and Ryberg)......................................................................Index to Volume 3 4 ........................................................................................ ..indigo Dyeing of Wool Stock, Continuous (von Bergen, Crowley and

Brommelsiek) ........................................................................................................, infrared Radiations in the Textile Industry, A Few Applications of

'• (French) ............................................................................... ................... ,* ’ *L' ’... ,r..Hnsect Pests, Evaluation of Compounds Designed to Increase the Re-

sistance of Fabrics and Yarns to: Tentative Method.......................nstruments, Mills Meet Quality Demands Through W ider Use of

... , (Coburn) ..................................................................................................................1 .S.C .C., Annual Meeting........................................................... .................................. • ;'fl,Cnitted Fabrics, The U^e of Synthetic Fibers in (Bendigo)....................

C/S Method, Comments on the Use of (Laughlin).........................................'L.. .abeling of Textiles, The A.A .T.C.C. Surveys the Informative

(Herrmann) ...........................................................................................................of tie ‘ 'Gaboratory, Conditioning ............................................. .. • .......................................

... -laboratory Cutter for Cloth Strips (Kettering and C o o p e r ) . . . . . . . . . . .• amp at the National Bureau of Standards and Means of Calibrating

other Lamps in Terms of It, The Standard Fading (L au n er)----- -° ^ „ .amps used for Testing and Grading Light Fastness, A Proposed• T '- Method for the Calibration of Carbon Arc (S e ib ert)................

' .caching on the Rot-Proofing Efficacy of Copper Naphthenate, A Studyof the Effect of (Bayley and W e a th e r b u r n ) .. . . .----- . . . . . . . . . . . .

■ .u-Gght Fastness, A Proposed Method for the Calibration of Carbon Arc11. Lamps used for Testing and Grading ( S e i b e r t ) . . . . . . . . .................... • •• pj-ubrication of Rayon Fabrics. The Softening and 'and

Ulanufactured Fibers, Modern Methods of Dyeing Some (Scull and

tarcfidsettl NVttingV wi'tlV Cellulose' Derivatives, Some Aspects in the Finishing of Cotton (Goodavage)..................................................................

P3 P464 P465

328 249

P157 P351 P 91 P108

370

15491

P284P157P211

P29300

P53P311P206

359P546

303

P42

435344493

319P99PIO

i C it s ”

Rlt-l r

177505P7

P534P502

P'264

P272

P255

377 P72

P189 P464 P465 P136

491 P364 ,' P88

P88 P184

P232

P230P146P176

P239P291P426

247P502

417P463

123

383P502

P88

P37568A

P53

P252

P403

217P40P34

P280

P234P166

249

P264

P2'72

457

P272P348

303

P232

Maniuisettes, The Serviceability of Curtain (Morrison and Je lin e k ) ... 328Matching by Young and Old, Idiosyncrasies in Color (Knowland)......... P308Meeting, I.S .C .C ., Annual....................................................................................... P4QMeeting of the Textile Research Institute, Annual........................................ 525Melamine Resins, Some Recent Aspects in the Finishing of Textile

Fabrics with Urea and (N u te)..................................................................... P230Mildew- and Rot-Resistance, Report on A.A.T.C.C. Cooperative Tests

for Determining .................................................................................................. P l28Mildewproofing (Giddings) ..................................................................................... 220Military and Postwar Fabrics, Synthetic Fibers in (R o se)......................... P26Mineral Dyed Textiles, A New Method for the Analysis of Preventoi

GD in Vat and (Sh iraeff).............................................................................. 15Moisture Relations of Textiles; A Survey of the Literature, The

(Carlene) ................................................................................................................ 322Naphthenate, A Study of the Effect of Leaching on the Rot-Proofing

Efficacy of Copper (Bayley and W eatherburn)...................................... 457Naphthenate Oxidize Cellulose, Does Copper? (Bartlett and G oll)......... 225Nation’s S t’ vriigth, The............................................................................................. P216Nettings wiih Cellulose Derivativees, Some Aspects in the Finishing of

Cotton Marquisette (Goodavage)................................................................... P232’Nitrogen in Textiles, Determination of (Frankfort)...................................... 422Nylon, Effect of Wet Finishing on Certain Physical Properties o f ........... P146Nylon Fabrics, Weaving and Finishing (Atwood)........................................ P l84Nylon, The Absorption of Acid Dyes by Wool, Silk, Casein Fiber and

(Skinner and Vickerstaff).............................................................................. 435Olney Medal Award.................................................................................................... P532Olney Medal, Candidates for Second Award o f ............................................. P107Olney Medal, Milton Harris to Receive.............................................................. P502OPEN FORUM ...................................................................................................... 242, 544Oxidize Cellulose, Does Copper Naphthenate? (Bartlett and G oll)........... 225Pad-Steam Continuous Dyeing Process, The (M eunier)................................ P206Papain in the Textile Industry, The Potentialities of (W akelin).............. 371Personnel Service ...................................................................................................... P427Pest Deterrents, Evaluation of Fabrics: Tentative Method......................... P400Pests, Evaluation of Compounds Designed to Increase the Resistance

of Fabrics and Yarns to Insect.............................................................. P403pH Control in Dyeing Process (N oble).............................................................. 359Pigment Printing a.id Dyeing: Past, Present and Future (M cL e a n )... P311Pigments, Discussion on........................................................................................... P i 17Polyethylene Oxide Condensates, an Aid in the Spectrophotometry of

Dyestuff's. (Taylor and Sim on)..................................................................... 319Postwar Fabrics, Synthetic Fibers in Military and (R o se)......................... P26Postwar Possibilities in Finishing Fabrics (Borghetty).................................... P364Post W ar World, The Textile Chemist in the (Appel)............................... P2Pressure Testers, A Comparison of the A.A.T.C.C. and Suter Hydro­

static (Mandikos and Ryberg) .............................................................. P37Preventoi GD in Vat and Mineral Dyed Textiles, A New Method for

the Analysis of (Sh iraeff).............................................................................. 15Printing and Dyeing: Past, Present and Future, Pigment (M cL ean ).. P311Printing of Woolens, The (B a ird )....................................................................... 508Processing in Germany, Wet (Richardson)..................................................... P463Products Developed Since November, 1944, Alphabetical List of New.. 477 Professional and Economic Status of the Textile Chemist, The (Fraser) PIOProgress, Current Textile (H a ll).......................................................................... 340Progress, Review of Current Textile (H a ll) ..................................................... 385Protein Behavior, Some Chemical Aspects of Wool (L aF leu r).................. 395Quartermaster Textile Research, Problems for Future (Kennedy)........... 511Quaternary Ammonium Compounds, Methods for the Estimation of

High Molecular (Duboise).............................................................................. 245Radiations in the Textile Industry, A Few Applications of Infrared

(French) ............................................................................................................... P252Ratings, and Terminology for Color Fastness, The Importance of

Standard Test Methods. (Ehrm an)............................................................ P255Rayon Dyeing and Finishing Developments (Brosnan)............................... 491Rayon Fabrics, The Softening and Lubrication of (A ckley)...................... P348Reconversion of the Dyestuff Industry (Herrm ann).......................•.............. 493Reich War Secrets (Gemmill)......................................................... 339Repellency of Textile Fabrics, The Water (Wakeham, Strickland and

Skau) .............................................................. 178Research for Textile Chemists, Higher Education and (T ay lor)................ P7Research, H. W. Stiegler Appointed Director o f .......................................... P531Research Institute, Annual Meeting of the Textile ........................................ 52'5Research, Problems for Future Quartermaster Textile (K e n n e d y ),.. . . 511 Resinous Materials and their Effects on Various Fibers and Fabrics,

Newer (Powers) ........................................................................................... P77Resins for Textiles (L y n n )....................................................................................... 506Resins in the Treatment of Cotton, What we May Expect from

(Powers) ............................................................................................................... P191Resins, Some Recent Aspects in the Finishing of Textile Fabrics with

Urea and Melamine (N ute)............................................................................ P230Rot-Proofed Cotton Fabrics, The Soil Burial Test for (Dean, Strick­

land and Berard) ......................................................................................... 195Rot-Proofing Efficacy of Copper Naphthenate, A Study of the Effect of

Leaching on the (Bayley and W eatherburn).............................................. 457Rot-Resistance, Report on A.A.T.C.C. Cooperative Tests for Determin­

ing Mildew- and ................................................................................................ P128Scoured Wool, Notes on the Estimation of Vegetable Material in

(Lipson) ................................................................................................................ 250Scouring Agents for Cotton, A Practical Laboratory Test for Evalu­

ating (Bacon) ..................................................................................................... P556Secrets, Reich War (Gemmill).............................................................................. 339Serviceability of Curtain Marquisettes, The (Morrison and Jelin ek)----- 328Shrinkage Control of Wool (N ute).....................................................................Shrink-Resistant Treatments for Army Woolens (Clapham).................... P68Silk, Casein Fiber and Nylon, The Absorption of Acid Dyes by Wool,

(Skinner and Vickerstaff).............................................................................. 435Soaps, Synthetic Detergents vs................................................. ..........................Softening and Lubrication of Rayon Fabrics, The (A ckley)....................... P348Soil Burial Test for Rot-Proofed Cotton Fabrics, The (Dean, Strickland

and Berard) .............................................................................. .. • .......................Speakers at the Victory Convention, Facts about some of the.................. P530Spectrophotometry of Dyestuffs, Polyethylene Oxide Condensates, an

Aid in the (Taylor and Sim on)................................................................... 319Standard Fading Lamp at the National Bureau of Standards and

Means of Calibrating: other Lamps in Terms of It, The (L au n er). . P264 Standard Test Methods, Ratings and Terminology for Color Fastness,

The Importance of (Ehrm an)........................................................................ P255Standards Available, New Colorfastness........................................................... P281Stiegler Appointed Director of Research, H. W ............................................. P531Stock, Continuous Indigo Dyeing of Wool (von Bergen, Crowley and

Brommelsiek) .......................................................................................................

'December 31, 1945 S68C

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Stock Dyeing, The Level Dyeing of Damaged Wool in Raw (O ’D a y ).. P15'7Stripping of Dyed Textile Materials, Notes on the (W akelin).............. 37UStrips, Daboratory Cutter for Cloth (Kettering and Cooper)....................... 249Sulfuric Anhydride in Surface-Active Products, A Method of Determi­

ning Organically Combined (DuBose and Holland)............................. 321Surface-Active Products, A Method of Determining Organically Com­

bined Sulfuric Anhydride in (DuBose and Holland).............................. 321Survey of the Dyeing of Synthetic Fibers, A (E tchells).............................Survey of the Synthetic Fibers, A (Appel).........................................................Suter Hydrostatic Pressure Testers, A Comparison of the A.A.T.C.C.

and (Mandikos and Ryberg)........................................................................... P37Synthetic Detergents vs. Soaps............................................................................... P351Synthetic Fabrics, Recent Developments in the Dyeing of (Choquette). . P211 Synthetic F'ibers and their Use in Fabrics of the I'uture, Recent De­

velopments in (Bouvet) ............................................................................. P187Synthetic Fibers, A Survey of the (Appel)

P29P21

P21Synthetic F'ibers, A Survey of the Dyeing of the (Etchells)....................... P29

P21P34P26

P255

P37

15P546

P99

Synthetic F'ibers Group Meeting (Smith)Synthetic F'ibers in Knitted Fabrics, The Use of (Bendigo)....................Synthetic F'ibers in Military and Postwar Fabrics (R o se)...........................Terminology for Color Fastness, The Importance of Standard Test

Methods, Ratings and (Ehrm an)................................................................. P2'55Test Methods, Ratings, and i'crminology for Color Fastness, The Im­

portance of Standard (Ehrm an)....................................................................Testers, A Comparison of the A.A.T.C.C. and Suter Hydrostatic

Pressure Testers (MandiKos and Ryberg).................................................TRA D E N O TES— NEW P R O D U C T S..............16, 65, 83, 105, 124, 143, 161,

202, 221, 241, 259, 296, 318, 336, 355, 372, 390, 414, 431, 453, 473, 519, 540, 565

Transference, A New Tool for Evaluating Color (H o lst)......................... P500Transference of Color, Report of Committee on............................................. P426t ropical Deterioration, Problems in the Nature and Control of (Weston) P91Undergraduate Course in Textile Chemistry, The (L in d )........................... P3e^neven juyeing. Some Cause of (Flutchins)...................................................... 344Urea and Melamine Resins, Some Recent Aspects in the Finishing of

Textile F'abrics with (N u te)............................................................................. P230Vat and Mineral Dyed Textiles, A New Method for the Analysis of

Preventol GD in (Sh irae lf)..............................................................................Vat Dyeing, Some Fundamental Principles of (C lark).............................Vat Dyestuffs, Recent Developments in the Application of (Strib ling). . Vegetable Material in Scoured \Vool, Notes on the Estimation of

(Lipson) .................................................................................................................. 250Vegetable Matter in Wool, A Rapid Method for the Determination of

^.LeUompte) ......................................................................................................... 469War Secrets, Reich (Gemmill)............................................................................... 339Water Impedient Treatment and Re-Treatment of Clothing F'abrics

(Fultonj ................................................................................................................ P9SWater Relationships, Data on Wool-Acid- (L aF leu r).................................... 443Water Repellency of Textile F'abrics, The (Wakeham, Strickland and

Skau) ..............................................................................................^...................... 178Water Resistance of Fabrics, Committee on: Progress Report for 1945

(Cook) .................................................................................................................... F 394Weathering Tests of Textile F'abrics, Some Variables in (Backer and

Harwood) .............................................................................................................. P265Weaving and Finishing Nylon Fabrics (Atwood)........................................... P184Wet Finishing on Certain Physical Properties of Nylon, Effect o f ......... P146\vet Processing in Germany (Richardson)........................................................ P463Wool-Acid-Water Relationships, Data on (L aF leu r)...................................... 443Wool, A Rapid Method for the Determination of Vegetable Matter in

(LeCompte) ......................................................................................................... 469Wool Dyeing, Current Aspects of Interest in (M illson)............................. P284Wool Dyeing: Effect of Variations in Wool (Kienle, Royer and

McCleary) ........................................................................................................... P42Wool for Clean Content, The Analysis of Grease (LeCompte, Coe and

Gold) ....................................................................................................................... 383Wool Group Meeting (H a rris )..........................................................................P42, P68Wool, How a Colloid Chemist would explain the Dyeing of (Anderson) 300 Wool in Raw Stock Dyeing, The Level Dyeing of Damaged (O ’D a y ).. P157 Wool, Notes on the Estimation of Vegetable Material in Scoured

(Lipson) ................................................................................................................Wool Protein Behavior, Some Chemical Aspects of (L aF leu r)................Wool, Shrinkage Control of (N u te)...................................................................Wool, Silk, Casein F'iber and Nylon, The Absorption of Acid Dyes by

(Skinner and Vickerstaff)..............................................................................W ool, Some Factors Contributing to the Felting of (H a rris )....................Wool Stock, Continuous Indigo Dyeing of (von Bergen, Crowley and

Bromraelsiek) ....................................................................................................... P53Woolens, Shrink Resistant Treatments for Army (Clapham).................. P68Woolens, The Printing of (B a ird )........................................................................ 508

250395

P167

435P72

BY AUTHOR

568 D

195

P364

P187

P53

491

322

P253

P53

195

245

321

A C K LEY , R O B E R T R.—The Softening and Lubrication of Rayon Fabrics...................................... F348

ANDERSON , P. H.—How a Colloid Chemist would explain the Dyeing of W ool.................... 300

A PP E L, W IL LIA M D.—The Textile Chemist in the Post W ar W orld............................................... P2A Survey of the Synthetic Fibers................................................................... P21

ATWOOD, P. D.—Weaving and Finishing Nylon Fabrics.......................................................... P184

BAC KER, ST A N LE Y and HARW OOD, RALPH —Some Variables in Weathering Tests of Textile Fabrics......................... P26S

BACON, O. C.—A Practical Laboratory Test for Evaluating Scouring Agents for

Cotton .................................................................................................................... F556BA IRD , W IL LIA M D,—

The Printing of Woolens..................................................................................... 508B A R T L E T T , A. E. and GOLL, M ILTO N —

Does Copper Naphthenate Oxidize Cellulose?................................................... 225B A Y L E Y , C. H. and W EA TH ER BU R N , M. W ,—

Observations on the Growth of Some Copper-Tolerant Fungi onCotton Fabrics .................................................................................................... 247

A Study of the Effect of Leaching on the Rot-Proofing Efficacy ofCopper Naphthenate .......................................................................................... 457

BEN D IG O , C. W —The Use of Synthetic Fibers in Knitted Fabrics........................................... P34

U ERA Ru, W. N., DEAN, J . D., and ST R IC K LA N D , W . B .—The Soil Burial Test tor Rot-Proofed Cotton Fabrics...................................

BO RG H ETTY , H. C.Rostwar Possiu-iitics ill Finishing Fabrics.......................................................

B O U V ET , R EN E —Recent Devcluiuiients in Synthetic Fibers and their Use in Fabrics

of the F'utai'u......................................... ................................................B R O M ilE L S lE K , W ., von BERG EN , W.’ and C R O W LE Y , T .—

Continuous Jiidigo Dyeing of Wool Stock.......................................................BROSNAN, W l l J J A M F .—

Rayon Dyeing a.id Finishing Developments.....................................................C A RLEN F, P. W,

'file Aioisture relations of Textiles; A Survey of the L ite r a tu r e ... . CA RM IC H A EL, DUNCAN G.—

Aralac ........................................................................................................................... P171C H O Q U ETTE, PA U L J .—

Recent Developments in the Dyeing of Synthetic Fabrics..................... P211CLAFItAAr, llA K R I F .—

SiirinK-Rcsistaiit Treatments for Army Woolens......................................... P68CLA RK , O. W .—

Some Fuiioaiiieiital Principles of Vat Dyeing........................................... P546COBURN , J . L .—

Aims ivicet Quality Demands Through Wider Use of In strum ents... 217 COE, M A YN E R ., GOLD, B E T T Y L ., and LeC O M PTE, GEORGE C.—

The Analysis of Grease Wool for Clean Content...................................... 383COOK, ALTON A .—

Coiimmiee on Water Resistance of Fabrics: Progress Report for 1945 P394 COOPER, A L B E R T S. and K E T T E R IN G , JA M E S H.

Laboratory Cutter for Cloth Strips.................................................................... 249COUGHLIN , W. E .—

Aleetiiig Uoiisumer Needs in Textiles.............................................................C R O W LEY , T ., B R O M M E L SIE K , W., and von BER G EN , W .—

Continuous Indigo Dyeing of Wool Stock......................................................DEAN, J . D., STR IC K LA N D , W . B ., and B ER A R D , W. N.—

The Soil Burial Test for Rot-Proofed Cotton Fabrics...............................D U B O IS, A D RIEN S.—

Methods for the Estimation of High Molecular Quaternary AmmoniumCompounds .............................................................................................................

D uBO SE, B ER TH A and H O LLAN D, V. B .—A Method of Determining Organically Combined Sulfuric Anhydride

in Surface-Active Products.............................................................................E D E L ST E IN , S ID N E Y M.—

New Developments in Rernianent Cellulose Finishes.................................. P136EHRM AN , H E R B E R T A.—

The Importance of Standard Test Methods, Ratings, and Terminologyfor Color Fastness................................................................................................. P255

E TC H E LL S, A R T H U R W .—A Survey of the Dyeing of Synthetic F ibers............................................... P29

FRA N K FO R T, SOLOM ON—Determination of Nitrogen in Textiles.......................................................... 422

FR A SE R , A N D REW , JR .—the Professional and Economic Status of the Textile Chemist............. PIO

FREN CH, C. A.—A Few Applications of Infrared Radiations in the Textile Industry.. P252

FU LTO N , u. P.—W ater Impedient Treatment and Re-Treatment of Clothing Fabrics.. P95

G EM M ILL, H EN R Y—Reich W ar Secrets................................................................................................... 339

GIDD IN GS, V IC TO R P ., JR .—Mildewproofing .......................................................................................................... 220

GOLD, B E T T Y L ., LeCO M PTE, GEORGE C., and COE, M AYNE R.—The Analysis of Grease Wool for Clean Content......................................... 383

GOLL, M ILTO N and B A R T L E T T , A. E .—Does Copper Naphthenate Oxidize Cellulose?............................................... 225

GOODAVAGE, JO S E P H E.—Some Aspects in the Finishing of Cotton Marquisette Nettings witth

Cellulose Derivatives ........................................................................................ P232HAGER, H. E .—

Report of Committee on Flammability of Consumer Textiles............. P291H A LL, A. J . —

Current Textile Progress................................................................................. 340, 385Recent Textile Developments in Britain ........................................................... 494

H A R R IS, M ILTO N —Wool Group Meeting..........................................................................................P42, P68Some Factors Contributing to the Felting of W ool...................................... P72

HARW OOD, RALPH and B A C K ER, ST A N L E Y —Some Variables in Weathering Tests of Textile Fabrics........................... P265

HERRMANN, H EN R Y F .—The A .A .T.C.C. Surveys the Informative Labeling of Textiles................ P234Reconversion of the Dyestuff Industry.............................................................. 493

HOLLAND, V . B . and D uBO SE, B ER TH A uA Method of Determining Organically Combined Sulfuric Anhydride

in Surface-Active Products............................................................................... 321H O LST, W . A.—

A New Tool for Evaluating Color Transference................................H U TCH IN S, T . C.—

Some Causes of Uneven Dyeings.............................................................JE L IN E K , V IO LA C. and M O RRISO N , B E S S V IEM O N T—

The Serviceability of Curtain Marquisettes...........................................K EN N ED Y, S. J-—

Problems for Future Quartermaster Textile Research.......................K E T T E R IN G , JA M E S H. and COOPER, A L B E R T S .—

Laboratory Cutter for Cloth Strips.............................................................K IE N L E , R. H., R O Y ER , G. L ., and M cC LEA RY , H. R .—

Wool Dyeing: Effect of Variations in W ool.........................................KNOWLAND, D A N IEL P .—

Idiosyncrasies in Color Matching by Young and O ld.......................L aFL E U R , K E R M IT S.—

Some Chemical Aspects of Wool Protein Behavior...........................Data on Wool-Acid-Water Relationships.........................................

LAUGH LIN , E. R .—Comments on the Use of K /S Method................................................

LAUN ER, H E R B E R T F .—The Standard Fading Lamp at the National Bureau of Standards

and Means of Calibrating other Lamps in Terms of I t . . P264LeCOM PTE, GEORGE C.—

A Rapid Method for the Determination of Vegetable Matter in .Wool 469 LeCOM PTE, GEORGE C., COE, M A YN E R., and GOLD, B E T T Y L.—

The Analysis of Grease Wool tor Clean Content......................... 38!L EE , JU L IA S„ R E E V E S , A LTA M., and- ST E W A R T , GEORG e ’ f .—

Physical Measurements on Chicken Feathers, I— Compression Tests ill

PSOO

344

328

511

249

P42

P308

395443

P280

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Testers , m i HERBE ll’xieni Method

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Page 4: GENERAL INDEX · 2020-01-31 · lOirxX«i(l GENERAL INDEX pOR your convenience there appears below a list of page numbers in the respective issues for 1945. Those in the first column

Juries

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L E F F IN G W E L L , GEO RG IA and L E S S E R , M ILTO N A.—Glycerine in Textile P ro ce s se s .... 123

L E S S E R , M ILTO N A. and L E F F IN G W E L L ,'G E O R G IA — ................Glycerine in Textile Processes................ lo i

LIN D , S. C — ................................................The Undergraduate Course in Textile Chemistry......................................... P 3

L IPSO N , M.—T Estimation of Vegetable Material in Scoured W ool___ 250L\*\iN, J . ED W A RD —

Resins for T extiles.................................................................. enfiM A X D IK O S, GEORGE J . and R Y B E R G , B E R T IL A — ....................

A Comparison of the A .A .T.C .C. and Suter Hydrostatic PressureTesters ...................................... p 7

M cCLEA RY , H. R ., K IE N L E , R. H. and R O Y E rV *d‘ L.— ..............Wool Dyeing: Effect of Variations in W'ool.............. P 4?

McLEAN , A R T H U R — .........................Pigment Printing and Dyeing: Past, Present and Future.............. P '311

M E U N IE R , P. L .—The Pad-Steam Continuous Dyeing Process......................... P2nfi

M ILLSO N , H EN R Y E.— ..........Current Aspects of Interest in Wool Dyeing.............. P284

M O RRISO N , B E S S V IEM O N T and JE L IN E K , V IO LA C.— ..............The Serviceability of Curtain Marquisettes............................................ 328

N E V IL L E , H A R V E Y A .—Emulsions and their Applications to Textiles...................................... PS34

NEW MAN, DOUGLAS C.—Cotton Group Meeting ................................................................................. P 99 P108

N O BLE, EDGA R I .—pH Control in Dyeing Processes......................................................... 3S9

N U TE, A LD EN D.—Shrinkage Control of Wopl.................................................................................... P167Some Recent Aspects in the Finishing of Textile Fabrics with Urea

and Melamine Resins............................................................................... P230O ’DAY, JO H N —

The Level Dyeing of Damaged Wool in Raw Stock Dyeing.................. P1S7PO W ER S, D. H.—

Finishing Group Meeting................................................................................. P77, P88Newer Resinous Materials and their Effects on Various Fibers and

Fabrics ...................................................................................................................... P77What we may expect from Resins in the Treatment of Cotton............ P191

RABOLD, C. N O R R IS—Recent Developments in the Drying of Textile M aterials....................... P108

R E E V E S , A LTA M., ST E W A R T , GEORGE F ., and L E E , JU L IA S .— Physical Measurements on Chicken Feathers:

I— Compression T ests.......................................................................................... 377RICH A RD SO N , FR A N K S .—

W et Processing in Germany............................................................................. F463R O SE, H. W IC K L IF F E —

Synthetic Fibers in Military and Postwar Fabrics.................................... P26R O Y ER , G. L ., M cC LEA RY , H. R. and K IE N L E , R. H.—

Wool Dyeing: Effect of Variations in W ool............................................. P42R Y BERG , B E R T IL A. and M A N D IK O S, GEORGE J .—

A Comparison of the A.A .T.C.C. and Suter Hydrostatic PressureTesters . . . • P37

SC U LL, H E R B E R T G.‘ and S M IT H ,''h AROLb 'D E W mModern Methods of Dyeing Some Manufactured Fibers......................... 303

S E IB E R T , C. A.— ,A Proposed Method for the Calibration of Carbon Arc Lamps used

for Testing and Grading Light Fastness............................................. P272

SH IR A E F F , D M ITR Y A.—A New Method for the Analysis of Preventol GD in Vat and Mineral

Dyed Textiles ....................................................................................................... 15S IE G R IS T , E. J .—

Hosiery Finishing .................................................................................................. P88SIM ON , F . T. and TA Y LO R , H. H.—

Polyethylene Oxide Condensates, an Aid in the Spectrophotometryof D yestu ffs........................................................................................................... 319

SKAU, EVALD L ., W AKEHAM , H ELM U T, STR IC K LA N D ,W IN STO N B.—

The W^ater Repellency of Textile Fabrics........................................................ 178SK IN N E R , B. G. and V IC K E R S T A F F , T .—

The Absorption of Acid Dyes by Wool, Silk, Casein Fiber and Nylon 435 SL A Y T E R , GAMES—

Potentialities of Fiberglas Textiles................................................................. P189SAIITH, HAROLD DE W IT T —

Synthetic Fibers Group Meeting..................................................................... E21SM IT H , HAROLD DE W IT T and SC U LL, H E R B E R T G.—

Modern Methods qf Dyeing Some Manufactured Fibers......................... 303ST E W A R T , GEORGE F ., L E E , JU L IA S. and R E E V E S , A LTA M.—

Physical Measurements on Chicken Feathers:I— Compression Tests ..................................................................................... 377

ST R IP L IN G , R. S.—Recent Developments in the Application of V at Dyestuffs.................. P99

STR IC K LA N D , W. B ., BER A R D , W . N., and DEAN, J . D.—The Soil Burial Test for Rot-Proofed Cotton Fabrics............................. 195

STR IC K LA N D , W IN STO N B ., SK A U , EVALD L ., and W AKEH AM , H ELM U T—

The W’ ater Repellency of Textile Fabrics..................................................... 178TA Y LO R , H. H. and SIM O N , F. T .—

Polyethylene Oxide Condensates, an Aid in the Spectrophotometryof Dyestuffs ......................................................................................................... 319

TA Y LO R HUGH S.—Higher Education and Research for Textile Chemists............................. P7

V IC K E R S T A F F , T. and SK IN N ER, B. G.—The Absorption of Acid Dyes by Wool, Silk, Casein Fiber and Nylon. 435

von BERG EN , W ., CRO W LEY, T . and B R O M M EL SIEK , W .—Continuous Indigo Dyeing of Wool Stock..................................................... P53

W A CH TER, A RTH U R R.Crease Resistant Finishes ................................................................................ P464

W AKEH AM , H ELM U T, STR IC K LA N D , W IN STO N B. and SK A U , EVA LD L .~

The Water Repellency of Textile Fabrics........................................................ 178W A K ELIN , J .—

Notes on the Stripping of Dyed Textile Materials...................................... 370The Potentialities of Papin in the Textile Industry................................... 371

W EA TH ER BU R N , M. W. and B A Y L E Y , C. H.—Observations on the Growth of Some Copper-Tolerant Fungi on Cot­

ton F a b r ic s ............................................................................................................. 247A Study of the Effect of Leaching on the Rot-Proofing Efficacy of

Copper Naphthenate ......................................................................................... 457W ESTO N , W IL LIA M H.—

Problems in the Nature and Control of Tropical Deterioration........... P91W ILCO CK, C. C.—

Crease Resistant F in ish es..................................................................................... P465

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EPOS'-December 31, 1945 568E

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Page 5: GENERAL INDEX · 2020-01-31 · lOirxX«i(l GENERAL INDEX pOR your convenience there appears below a list of page numbers in the respective issues for 1945. Those in the first column

INDEX TO PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF

TEX TILE CH EM ISTS AND COLORISTS

'm ■SEll'

jOlTH®''

BY SUBJECT

A.A.T.C.C. and Suter Hydrostatic Pressure Testers, A Comparison ofthe (Mandikos and Ryl)erg) ........................................................ ' \V‘ ' ‘

Abstracts of Intersectional Contest Papers to be Presented at the VictoryConvention .......................................................... .................................................

Ageing of Cotton Fabrics. Report of the Committee on.................................. P426Aralac (Carmichael) ................................................................................................... P171Army Woolens. Shrink-Resistant Treatments for (Clapham).................... P68Bureau of Standards and Means of Calibrating other Lamps in Terms

of It, The Standard Fading Lamp at the National (L au ner)............. P264CALEN DAR O F COMING E V E N T S .........P14, P40, P64, P82, P87, P107,

P127, P160, P176, P194, P205, P229, P251, P282, P294, P314, P353,

P366, P394, P406, P427, P442, P467, P501, P536, P563

Calibrating other Lamps in Terms of it, The Standard Fading Lamp atthe National Bureau of Standards and Means of (L au ner)................ P264

Calibration of Carbon Arc Lamps Used for Testing and Grading LightFastness, A Proposed Method for the (Se ib ert)...................................... P272

Carbon Arc Lamps used for Testing and Grading Light Fastness, AProposed Method for the Calibration of (Se ib ert).................................. P272

Cellulose Derivatives, Some Aspects in the Finishing of Cotton Marqui­sette Nettings with (Goodavage)................................................................... P232

Cellulose Finishes, New Developments in Permanent (Edelstein).............. P 136 'Chemist in the Post W ar World. The Textile (Appel).................................. P2Chemist, The Professional and Economic Status of the Textile (Fraser)

PIOChemistry, The Undergraduate Course in Textile (L in d )........................... P3Colorfastness Standards Available, New............................................................... P281Color Fastness, The Importance of Standard Test Methods, Ratings, and

Terminology for (Ehrman) .................... P255Color Matching by Young and Old, Idiosyncrasies in (Knowland)........... P308Color, Report of A.A.T.C.C. Sub-Committee on Transference o f ............. P166Color, Report of Committee on Transference o f ............................................... P426Color Transference, A New Tool for Evaluating (H olst)........................... P500Conditioning Laboratory............................................................................................ P166Consumer Needs in Textiles, Meeting (Coughlin)............................................. P253Consumer Textiles, Flammability of ................................................................... P176Consumer Textiles, Recommendations of the Sub-Committee of the

A.A .T.T.C . on Flammability o f ................................................................... P239Consumer Textiles, Report of Committee on Flammability of (H a g er).. P291Consumer Textiles, Report of Committee on Flammability o f .................... P426Continuous Dyeing Process, The Pad-Steam (M eunier)............................... P206Continuous Indigo Dyeing of Wool Stock (von Bergen, Crowley and

Brommelsiek) ..................................................................................................... P53CON VEN TION, V IC TO R Y ..................P426, P441, P462, P498, P528, P529,

P530,CO RRECTIO N S .................................................................................................. P63,Cotton, A Practical Laboratory Test for Evaluating Scouring Agents

for (Bacon) .........................................................................................................Cotton Fabrics, Report of the Committee on Ageing o f ..................................Cotton Group Meeting (Newman)...................................................................P99,Cotton Marquisette Nettings with Cellulose Derivatives, Some Aspects

in the Finishing of (Goodavage)...................................................................Cotton, What we may expect from Resins in the Treatment of (Pow ers).

P532P87

P556P426P108

P23ZP191

COUNCIL M EETIN G SOne Hundred and Forty-Seventh.......................................................................One Hundred and Forty-Eighth..........................................................................One Hundred and Forty-Ninth..........................................................................One Hundred and Fiftieth ..................................................................................One Hundred and Fifty -F irst..........................................................................

Course in Textile Chemistry, The Undergraduate (L in d ).........................Crease Resistant Finishes (W achter).................. ; ............................................Crease Resistant Finishes (W ilcock).................................................................Damaged Wool in Raw Stock Dyeing, The Level Dyeing of (O ’Day) . . .Detergents vs. Soaps, Synthetic..............................................................................Deterioration, Problems in the Nature and Control of Tropical (Weston)Drying of Textile Materials, Recent Developments in the (Rabold).........Dyeing, Current Aspects of Interest in Wool (M illson).............................Dyeing of Damaged Wool in Raw Stock Dyeing, The Level (O ’D ay). . . Dyeing of Synthetic Fabrics, Recent Developments in the (Choquette). .Dyeing of the Synthetic Fibers, A Survey of the (Etchells)..................Dyeing of Wool Stock, Continuous Indigo (von Bergen, Crowley and

Brommelsiek) ....................................................................................................Dyeing: Past, Present and Future, Pigment Printing and (M cL ean )..Dyeing Process, The Pad-Steam Continuous (M eunier).............................Dyeing, Some Fundamental Principles of Vat (C lark).............................Dyeing, Wool: Effect of Variations in Wool (Kienle, Royer and Mc-

Cleary) ................................................................................................................Dyestuffs, Recent Developments in the Anplication of Vat (Stribling) . . Economic Status of the Textile Chemist, The Professional and (Fraser)Education and Research for Textile Chemists, Higher (T ay lor).............Emulsions and their Applications to Textiles (N eville)...............................Fading Committee, Report of Gas........................................................................Fading Lamp at the National Bureau of Standards and Means of Cali­

brating other Lamps in Terms of It, The Standard (L au ner)___

P121P140P214P290P440

F3P464P465P157P351

F91P108P284P1S7P211

P29

P53P311P206P'546

P42P99PIO

P7P534P502

568F

Fastness, A I ’roposed Method for the Calibratioti of Carbon Arc Lampsused for Testing and Grading Light (Se ib ert)........... ............................ P272

Fastness, The Importance of Standard Test Methods, Ratings, and Ter­minology for Color (Ehrm an).......................................V I .................

Felting of Wool, Some Factors Contributing to the (H a m s ) ............... P72Fiberglas Textiles, Potentialities of (S la y te r) ................................................. P189Finishes, Crease Resi.stant (W achter)............................................................... P464Finishes, Crease Resistant (W ilcock)............................................. ................... P465Finishes, New Developments in l^ermanent Cellulose (Edelstein)........... Pl36Finishing Fabrics, Postwar Possibilities in (Borghetty)............................. P364Finishing Group Meeting (Pow ers)....................................................................P77, P88Finishing, Hosiery (Siegrist) ................................................................................. P 88Finishing Nylon Fabrics, Weaving and (Atwood)........................................ Pl84

Fini.shing of Cotton Marquisette Nettings with Cellulose Derivatives,Some Aspects in the ( ((joodavage)................ ............... .......................... P232

Finishing of Textile Fabrics with Urea and Melamine Resins, Some Re­cent Aspects in the (N u te)........................................... ................................. P230

Finishing on Certain Physical Properties of Nylon, Effect of W e t . . . . P146Flammability of Consumer Textiles...................................................................... P176Flammability of Consumer Textiles, Recommendations of the Sub-Com­

mittee of the A .A.T.C.C. on.................................... ................................... P239Flammability of Consumer Textiles, Report of Committee on (H ager). P29IFlammability of Consumer Textiles, Report of Committee on...................... P426Gas P'ading Committee, Report o f ........................................................................ P502Germany, Wet Processing in (Richardson)...................................................... P463Harris to Receive Olney Medal............................................................................ P502Hosiery Finishing (S ie g ris t)................................................................................. P88Hydrostatic Pressure Testers, A Comparison of the A.A.T.C.C. and

Suter (Mandikos and R y b erg )..................................................................... P37Indigo Dyeing of Wool Stock, Continuous (von Bergen, Crowley and

Brommelsiek) ...................................................................................................... P53Infrared Radiations in the Textile Industry, A Few Applications of

(French) ............................................................................................................ P252Insect Pests, Evaluation of Compounds Designed to Increase the Re­

sistance of Fabrics and Yarns to: Tentative Method........................ P403I.S .C .C ., Annual Meeting ..................................................................................... P40Knitted Fabrics, The Use of Synthetic Fibers in ( B e n d ig o ) . . . . . ......... P34K/S Method, Comments on the Use of (Laughlin)...................................... P280Labeling of Textiles, The A.A.T.C.C. Surveys the Informative (Herr-

man) ................................. P234Laboratory, Conditioning .......................................................................................... P166Lamp at the National Bureau of Standards and Means of Calibrating

other Lamps in Terms of It, The Standard Fading (L au ner)......... P264Lamps used for Testing and Grading Light Fastness, A Proposed

Method for the Calibration of Carbon Arc (Se ib ert)............................. P272Light Fastness, A Proposed Method for the Calibration of Carbon Arc

Lamps used for Testing and Grading (Se ib ert)....................................... P272Lubrication of Rayon Fabrics, The Softening and (A ckley)......................... P348Marquisette Nettings with Cellulose Derivatives, Some Aspects in the

Finishing of Cotton (Goodavage)................................................................. P232Matching by Young and Old, Idiosyncrasies in Color (Knowland). . . . P308

P 7

PIO

P264

M EETIN G , ANNUALThe Textile Chemist in the Post W ar World (A ppel)............................. P2

The Undergraduate Course in Textile Chemistry (L in d )............... P3Higher Education and Research for Textile CTiemists (Taylor) . . .The Professional and Economic Status of the Textile Chemist

(Fraser) ..........................................................................................................Synthetic Fibers Group Meeting (Sm ith )................................................... P21

A Survey of the Synthetic Fibers (A ppel)............................................... P21Synthetic Fibers in Military and Postwar Fabrics (R o se)............... P26A Survey of the Dyeing of the Synthetic Fibers (E tchells)............. P29The Use of Synthetic Fibers in Knitted Fabrics (Bendigo)............. P34

Wool Group Meeting (H a rr is )........................................................................ P42Wool Dyeing: Effect of Variations in Wool (Kienle, Royer and

McCleary) ....................................................................................................... P42Continuous Indigo Dyeing of Wool Stock (von Bergen, Crowley

and Brommelsiek) ........................................................................................ P53Shrink Resistant Treatments for Army Woolens (Clapham).............. P68Some Factors Contributing to the Felting of Wool (H a rr is )............ P72

Finishing Group Meeting (Pow ers).............................................................P77, P88Newer Resinous Materials and their Effects on Various Fibers and

Fabrics (Powers) ........................................................................................ P77Hosiery Finishing (Siegrist) ...................................................................... P88Problems in the Nature and Control of Tropical Deterioration

(Weston) ........................................................................................................ P91W ater Tmpedient Treatment and Re-Treatment of Clothing Fabrics

(Fulton) .......................................................................................................... P95Cotton Group Meeting (Newman)...............................................................P99, Pl08Recent Developments in the Application of Vat Dyestuffs (Strib-

iing) ................................................................................................................. P99Recent Developments in the Drying of Textile Materials (Rabold). Pl> 8Discussion on Pigments ................................................................................. P117

Meeting, I.S .C .C ., Annual ...................................................................................... P40Melamine Resins, Some Recent Aspects in the Finishing of Textile

Fabrics with Urea and (N u te)...................................................................... P230M E M B E R SH IP A PPLIC A TIO N S ..................P63, P76, P122 P140, P156,

P214, P256, P264, P 28I, P404, PS61

Membership on May 1, 1945.................................................................................... p2l6

AMERICAX DYESTUFF REPORTER

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Page 6: GENERAL INDEX · 2020-01-31 · lOirxX«i(l GENERAL INDEX pOR your convenience there appears below a list of page numbers in the respective issues for 1945. Those in the first column

L

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M ID -W EST SEC TIO NReports ........................................................................................ P 13_ pigp, P237,

Mildew- and Rot-Resistance, Report on A .A .T.C.C. Cooperative Testsfor Determining ........................................................................................

Military and Postwar Fabrics, Synthetic Fibers in (R o se)......... .. . . . . . .Nation’s Strength, The ........................................................................Nettings with Cellulose Derivatives, Some Apsects in the Finishing'of

Cotton Marquisette (Goodavage) ...........................................................

P466

P128P26

P216

P232NEW YO RK SEC TIO N

Reports.................... P64, P82, P160, P194, P240, P258, P281, P293,X- ■ ■ ^ P427,Nominating Committee, Report of the..........................................................

P3S0,P502P353

NORTHERN N EW ENGLAND SEC TIO N Reports. ..................................................................................P281, P282,

Nylon, Effects of Wet Finishing on Certain Physical Properties o f . . . .Nylon Fabrics, Weaving and Finishing (Atwood)...................................... \OIney Medal Award...........................................................................................'Olney Medal, Candidates for Second Award of the....................................OIney Medal, ililton Harris to Receive.............................................................Pad-Steam Continuous Dyeing Process, The (M eunier).............................Personnel Service ........................................................................................................Pest Deterrents, Evaluation of Fabric: Tentative Method.........................Pests, Evaluation of Compounds Designed to Increase the Resistance

of Fabrics and Yarns to Insect......................................................

P406P146P184P532P107P502P206P427P400

P403

P H IL A D EL P H IA SEC TIO NReports............................. P82, P140, P193, P294, P394, P406, P442,

PIED M O N T SEC TIO NReports.........................................................................................P82, P350, P366,

Pigment Printing and Dyeing: Past Present and Future (M cL e a n )...Pigments, Discussion on ..........................................................................................Postwar Fabrics, Synthetic Fibers in Military and (R o se)....................Postwar Possibilities in Finishing Fabrics (Borghetty).............................Post War World, The Textile Chemist in the (A ppel)............................. ..Pressure Testers, A Comparison of the A.A.T.C.C. and Suter Hydro­

static (Mandikos and Ryberg)......................................................................Printing and Dyeing: Past, Present and Future Pigment (M cL ean)___Processing in Germany, Wet (Richardson)........................................................Professional and Economic Status of the Textile (Chemist, The (Fraser)Program to Date of the \-ictory Convention......................................................Radiations in the Textile Industry, A Few Applications of Infra-red

(French) ............................................................................................................Ratings, and Terminology for Color Fastness, The Importance of Stand­

ard Test Methods (Ehrm an)........................................................................Rayon Fabrics, The Softening and Lubrication of (A ckley)....................

P255P348

R ESEA RC H C O M M IT T EE M EETIN G SOne Hundred and Fortieth.................................................................................One Hundred and Forty-first.............................................................................One Hundred and Forty-second........................................................................One Hundred and Forty-third..........................................................................One Hundred and Forty-fourth........................................................................

Research for Textile Chemists, Higher Education and (T ay lor)..............Researcn, H. W. Stiegler Appointed Director o f ...........................................Resinous Materials and their Effects on Various Fibers and p-abrics.

Newer (Powers) ...................................................................................................Resins in the Treatment of Cotton, What we may expect from (Powers) Resins, Some Recent Aspects in the Finishing of Textile Fabrics with

Urea and Melamine (N u te)........................................................................

P63P141P239P293P441

P7P531

P230

,f rati

22, Pf’«1,P‘

RHODE ISLA N D SEC TIO NReports................................P82, P158, P193, P237, P281, P406, P442,

Rot-Resistance, Report on A .A .T.C.C. Cooperative Tests for Determin­ing Mildew and .................................................................................................

Scouring Agents for Cotton, A Practical Laboratory Test for Evalu­ating (Bacon) ...................................................................................................

• Shrinkage Control of Wool (N u te)......................................................................Shrink-Resistant Treatments for Army Woolens (Clapham)..................Soaps, Synthetic Detergents vs.............................................................................Softening and Lubrication of Rayon Fabrics, The (A ckley)....................SO U TH C EN TRA L SE C T IO N

Reports........................................................................................................ P63, P216,SO U T H E A ST E R N SE C T IO N

Reports .......................................................................P14, P140, P281, P442',SpeaKers at the Victory Convention, Facts about Some of the..................Standard Fading Lamp of the National Bureau of Standards and Means

of Calibrating other Lamps in Terms of It, The (L au ner)..............Standard Test Methods, Ratings, and Term.nology for Color Fastness,

The Importance of (Ehrm an)........................................................................Standards Available, New Colorfastncss...........................................................Stiegler Appointed Director of Research, H. W .............................................Stock, Continuous Indigo Dyeing of Wool (von Bergen, Crowley and

Brommelsiek) .................................................................................................Stock Dyeing, Tne Level Dyeing of Damaged Wool in Raw (O ’D a y )..Sub-Committees and their Chairmen for the Victory Convention..............Survey of the Dyeing of the Synthetic Fibers, A (E tchells).....................Survey of the Synthetic Fibers, A (A ppel)......................................................Suter Hydrostatic Pressure Testers, A comparison of the A.A.T.C.C.

and (Mandikos and Ryberg).........................................................................Synthetic Detergents vs. Soaps.............................................................................Synthetic Fabrics, Recent Developments in the Dyeing of (Cho^iuette). Synthetic Fibers and their Use in Fabrics of the Future, Recent Develop­

ments in (Bouvet) ...........................................................................................Synthetic Fibers, A Survey of the (A ppel).......................................................Synthetic Fibers, A Survey of the Dyeing of the (E tchells)..................Synthetic Fibers Group Meeting (Sm ith ).........................................................Synthetic Fibers in Knitted Fabrics, The Use of (Bendigo)....................Synthetic Fibers in Military and Postwar Fabrics (R o se)...........................Terminology for Color Fastness, The Importance of Standard Test

iMethods, Ratings and (Enrm an)................................................................Test Methods, Ratings, and Terminology for Color Fastness, The Im­

portance of Standard (E h rm an).................................................... ...............Testers, A Comparison of the A .A .T.C .C. and Suter Hydrostatic Pres­

sure (Mandikos and R yberg).........................................................................Transference, A New Tool for Evaluating Color (H o ls t) ..........................Transference of Color, Report of -^V.A.T.C.C. Sub-Committee on...........Transference of Color, Report of Committee on.............................................

P128

P5S6P167

P68P351P348

P440

P555P530

P264

P255P281P531

F53P157P528

P29P21

P37P35iP211

P187P21P29P21P34P26

P255

P255

P37P500P166P426

■0'December 31, 1945

Tropical Deterioration, Problems in the Nature and Control of (Weston)Undergraduate Course in Textile Chemistry, The (L in d )........................U N EM LO YM EN T R E G IS T E R .........................P428, P468, P503, P538,Urea and Melamine Resins, Some Recent Aspects in the Finishing of

Textile Fabrics with (N u te)..........................................................................Vat Dyeing, Some Fundamental Principles of (C lark ).............................Vat Dyestuffs, Recent Developments in the Application of (Stribling). Water Impedient Treatment and Re-Treatment of Clothing Fabrics (Ful­

ton) ......................................................................................................................Water Resistance of Fabrics, Committee on: Progress Report for 1945

(Cook) ..................................................................................................................Weathering Tests of Textile Fabrics, Some Variables in (Backer and

Harwood) .............................................................................................................Weaving and Finishing Nylon Fabrics (Atwood)........................................W et Finishing on Certain Physical Properties of Nylon, Effect o f .........Wet Processing in Germany (Richardson)........................................................Wool Dyeing, Current Aspects of Interest in (M illson)...............................Wool Dyeing: Effect of Variations in Wool (Kienle, Royer and Mc-

Cleary) .............................................................................................................Wool Group Meeting (H a rris )......................................................................... P42.Wool in Raw Stock Dyeing, The Level Dyeing of Damaged (O ’D a y )..Wool, Shrinkage Control of (N u te)...................................................................Wool, Some Factors Contributing to the Felting of (H a rris )..................Wool Stock, Continuous Indigo Dyeing of (von Bergen, Crowley and

Brommelsiek) ................................................................................................Woolens, Shrink-Resistant Treatments for Army (Clapham)..................

P91P3

P564

P230P546

P99

P95

P394

P265P184P146P463P284

P42P68

P157P167

P72

P53P68

P533

P467311

P117P26

P364P2

BY AUTHOR

P37P311P463

P I OP529

P252

P77P191

P533

ACKLEY', R O BE R T R.—The Softening and Lubrication of Ravon Fabrics.................................... P348

A PP E L, W IL LIA M D.—The Textile Chemist in the Post War W orld............................................... P2A Survey of the Synthetic Fibers................................................................... P21

ATWOOD, P. D.—Weaving and Finishing Nylon Fabrics....................................................... P184

BA C KER, STA N LEY and HARWOOD, RALPH —Some Variables in Weathering Tests of Textile Fabrics......................... P265

BACON, O. C.—A Practical Laboratory Test for Evaluating Scouring Agents for

Cotton .................................................................................................................... P556BEN D IGO, C. W .—

The Use of Synthetic Fibers in Knitted Fabrics........................................ P34BO RG H ETTY, H. C.—

Postwar Possibilities in Finishing Fabrics................................................... P364BO U V ET, REN E—

Recent Developments in Synthetic Fibers and their Use in Fabricsof the Future .................................................................................................... P I 87

B R O M M EL SIEK , W ., von BERGEN , W . and CROW LEY', T .—Continuous Indigo Dyeing of Wool Stock...................................................... P53

CARM ICHAEL, DUNCAN G.—Aralac .................................................................................................................... P171

CH O Q U ETTE, PAU L J .—Recent Developments in the Dyeing of Synthetic Fabrics...................... P211

CLAPHAM, H A RRY F .—Shrink-Resistant Treatments for Array Woolens...................................... P6S

CLARK, O. W .—Some Fundamental Principles of V'at Dyeing.......................................... P546

COOK, ALTON A.—Committee on W ater Resistance of Fabrics: Progress Report for 1945 P394

COUGHLIN, W. E .—Meeting Consumer Needs in Textiles............................................................... P253

CRO W LEY, T ., B R O M M EL SIEK , W. and von BERGEN , W .—Continuous Indigo Dyeing of Wool Stock................................................... P53

E D E L ST E IN , SIDN EY' M.—New Developments in Permanent Cellulose Finishes................................... P136

EHRM AN, H E R B E R T A.—The Importance of Standard Test Methods, Ratings and Terminology

for Color Fastness ........................................................................................ P255E TC H E L L S, A RTH U R W.

A Survey of the Dyeing of the Synthetic Fibers...................................... P29F R A SE R , AN DREW , JR .—

The Professional and Economic Status of the Textile Chemist........... PIOFREN C H , C. A.—

A Few Applications of Infrared Radiations in the Textile Industry. . . P252 FU LTO N , G. P.—

Water Impedient Treatment and Re-Treatment of Clothing Fabrics.. P93 GOODAVAGE, JO SE P H E.—

Some Aspects in the Finishing of Cotton Marquisette Mettings withCellulose Derivatives ....................................................................................... P232

HAGER, H. E .—Report of Committee on Flammability of Consumer Textiles.............. P291

H A R R IS, M ILTO N —Wool Group Meeting.................................... ................. _.................................... P42, P68Some Factors Contributing to the Felting of Wool.................................. P72

HARW OOD, RALPH and BA C KER, ST A N LE Y —Some Variables in Weathering Tests of Textile Fabrics...................... P265

HERRM AN N, H EN RY F .—The A.A.T.C.C. Surveys the Informative Labeling of Textiles............. P234

H O LST, W. A.—A New Tool for Evaluating Color Transference........................................ P500

K IE N L E , R. H., R O Y ER , G. L. and M cCLEAKY, H. R .—Wool Dyeing: Effect of Variations in Wool................................................. P42

KNOW LAND. D A N IEL P .—Idiosyncrasies in Color Matching by Y'oung and Old............................. P308

LAUGH LIN , E. R .—Comments on the use of K /S Method............................................................ P280

LAU N ER, H E R B E R T F .—The Standard Fading Lamp at the National Bureau of Standards and

Means of Calibrating other Lamps in Terms of I t ............................... P264LIN D , S. C.

The Undergraduate Course in Textile Chemistry......................................... P3M A N D IKO S. GEORGE J and R Y BE R G . B ER TH . A—

A Comparison of the A..\.T.C.C. and Suter Hydrostatic PressureTesters ................................................................................................................. P37

568G

I

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M cCLEA RV, II. R., K IE N L E , R, H. and R O Y ER , G. L .—Wool Dyeinp: Effect of Variations in W ool............................................... P42

McLEAN, A R T H U R —Pigment Printing and Dyeing: Past, Present and Future....................... P311

M E U N IE R , P. L .—The Pad-Steara Continuous Dyeing Process................................................. P206

M ILLSO N , H E N R Y E .—Current Aspects of Interest in W'ool Dyeing............................................... P284

N E V IL L E , PIA RV EY A.Emulsions and their Applications to Textiles............................................... P534

N EW aiA N , DOUGLAS C.—Cotton Group Meeting................................................................................... P99, P108

N U TE, ALD EN D.—Shrinkage Control of W ool................................................................................. P167Some Recent Aspects in the Finishing of Textile Fabrics with Urea

and Melamine Resins ...................................................................................... P230O’DAY, JO H N —

The Level Dyeing of Damaged W ool in Raw Stock Dyeing.................. P157P O W E R S, D. H.—

Finishing Group Meeting .................................................................................P77, P88Newer Resinous Materials and their Effects on Various Fibers and

Fabrics ................................................................................................................ P77What we may expect from Resins in the Treatment of Cotton................ P191

RABO LD , C. N O R R IS—Recent Developments in the Drying of Textile Materials......................... P108

RICH A RD SO N , FRA N K S .—W’et Processing in Germany............................................................................... P463

R O SE, II . W IC K L IF F E — pSynthetic Fibers in Military and Postwar Fabrics..................................... - 40

R O Y ER , G. L ., M cCLEA RY, II. R. and K IE N L E , R. H.—Wool Dyeing: Effects of Variations in W ool................................................ ”‘*4

R Y BE R G , B E R T IL A. and M A N D IKO S, G EO RG E J . — .A Comparison of the A.A.T.C.C. and Suter Hydrostatic Pressure

Testers ................................................................................................................. P37 1S E IB E R T , C. A.—

A Proposed Method for the Calibration of Carbon Arc Lamps used forTesting and Grading Light Fastness.............................................................. ^472

S IE G R IS T , E. J . —Hosiery Finishing ..................................................................................................... P8S j

SL A Y T E R , GAM ES—Potentialities of Fiherglas Textiles.................................................................... P189

SM IT H , HAROLD D E W IT T —Synthetic Fibers Group Meeting........................................................................... P21

S T R IB L IN G , R. S .—Recent Developments in the Application of Vat Dyestuffs.................... P99

TA Y LO R , HUGH S .—Higher Education and Research for Textile Chemists............................. P7 j

von BERG EN , W ., CROW 'LEY, T . and B R O M M E L SIE K , W .—Continuous Indigo Dyeing of Wool Stock......................................................... P53

W A C H TER, A RTH U R R.—Crease Resistant Finishes................................................................................... P464

W ESTO N , W IL L IA M II .—Problems in the Nature and Control of Tropical Deterioration............. P91

WHLCOCK. C. C.—Crease Resistant Finishes ................................................................................. P465 I

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