Letter addressed to Peter Bauduy. Parker reports on gunpowder sales in his market, the performance of du Pont gunpowder, and his efforts to market the gunpowder by supplying samples to regional merchants, including those in the Northwest Territory.
Periodicals; Chemical industry; Photography; Explosives; Plastics industry; Textile industry;
Table of Contents: Notes from a pioneer's diary; Is your portrait up-to-date; blasting caps need not be a problem; aluminum ceramics come indoors; The case of the sticking sheet; Assembly line for chairs; No shrinkage in this business; White...
Table of Contents: Nitrogen from the air; Bull's Gap cut-off; Stays put while you're putting; Strip coal mining in the Northwest; A Duco color card on wheels; Popular Gladstone; Pyralin, a fountain of new effects in fountain pens; Greater...
Table of Contents: Some fruits of research work; Fill settlement in the Pacific Northwest; Pyralin and Plastacele as protectors; Velvets get a new deal; A new-looking car is now a matter of a few dollars; Those wild shots; New designs, colors and...
Table of Contents: Nylon goes to sea; Education in attractive guise; Remington's new Core-Lokt bullets; A residence from a ruin; Forest service in the northwest; What's new; Spotting a good dry cleaner; Our polished neighbors; 100,000 rubs.
Table of Contents: Exit, wearing halo; Fifty years of service to sportsmen; Skeet is in the air; America's well-dressed women; Continuous logging and lumbering in the Pacific Northwest; A stellar attraction in plastic; Beware of the moth; Conquest...
This is an aerial view of Richland showing the housing and business development for the Hanford Engineering Works. This third plant is located on a 450,000 acre government tract 15 mile northwest of Pasco, Washington.
Water tight cans of explosives being pushed into the cage at the collar of a 570 foot vertical mine shaft on Maud Island, about 120 miles northwest of Vancouver, British Columbia. The explosive was used to blow the top off Ripple Rock, a two headed...
Northwest corner of Fourteenth and Market Streets; built and occupied by Samuel Canby and family until great-granddaughter Elizabeth Rumford passed away in 1938. Bishop Philip Cook of Diocese of Delaware occupied home for short time.