INDEX BY SUBJECT - AATCC
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Transcript of INDEX BY SUBJECT - AATCC
FOR your convenience there appears below a list of page num bers in the respective issues fo r 1952. Those in the column entitled “ General Pages” indicate the num bers of the general
pages and those in the column entitled “ Proceedings Pages ap peared in the Proceedings of the Am erican Association of Textile Chemists and Colorists. ,
The presence of the le tte r “ P ” before the page num ber any where in this index indicates that the m aterial appeared in the Proceedings o f the AATCC.
Date of Issue
January 7 . Jan u ary 21 February 4 February 18 M arch 3 M arch 17 M arch 31 April 14 April 28 May 12 . . . . May 26 . . . .June 9 . . . • June 23 . . . . Ju ly 7 . . . .Ju ly 21 -----A ugust 4 . . A ugust 18 September 1 September 15 September 29 October 13 October 27 . . November 10 November 24 December 8 December 22
General ProceedingsNo. Pages Pages
1 1 to 32 P13 to P302 49 to 64 P33 to P483 65 to 96 P69 to P844 117 to 128 P97 to P I 165 151 to 160 P129 to P1506 161 to 188 P I 65 to P1787 189 to 220 P193 to P2128 253 to 256 P221 to P2529 275 to 288 P257 to P274
10 305 to 320 P289 to P30411 349 to 352 P321 to P34812 353 to 384 P357 to P37213 385 to 412 P389 to P40014 413 to 440 P417 to P43415 441 to 472 P445 to P46016 489 to 500 P473 to P48817 501 to 532 P509 to P52418 533 to 564 P541 to P56019 565 to 596 P573 to P58420 597 to 628 P613 to P62421 683 to 692 P629 to P682'22 721 to 728 P693 to P72023 729 to 762 P733 to P74424 763 to 794 P771 to P78625 795 to 858 P841 to P84826 859 to 890H P863 to P886
INDEX BY SUBJECT-
AATCC to Partic ipate in Textile Testing F o ru m ..........................................A B STR A C TS
(Listed in order of appearance)Elim ination of W arp Streaks in Viscose Filament L in ings....................Cellulose Acetate and V at D yestuffs.............................................................Enclosed-Jig Nylon Dyeing Offers Improved Light F astn ess ................Fading of a Dye on Cellulose Acetate by Light and by Gas Fum es. . . Achieving Alkali Penetration in the M ercerization of Cotton Piece
goods .....................................................................................................................Rayon and Synthetic F ibers: A ntishrink F in ishes...................................Engineering of W ear Resistant F abrics.......................................................Synthetic F u r for Cold W eather C lothing.....................................................Notes on Silk Dyeing. P arts V I and V II— W eighting ...........................The Uses of Artificial Fibers in W oolens.....................................................A Survey of Textile R esins.............................................................................Scouring Nylon F abrics........................................................................................Causes of Unlevel Dyeing of Cotton Cellulose. The Influence of M er
cerizing and Bleaching Processes on the Fine S tructure of CelluloseDyeing Polyvinyl Chloride T ex tiles................................................................Recent Developments in Fluorescent Lamps, with P articu la r R efer
ence to Color Problems .................................................................................Dyeing Polyester Fiber with Acetate D yestuffs........................................The Dyeing of W ool-Nylon..............................................................................."T ru e Blue” ..........................................................................................................Properties and Possibilities of Present Synthetic F ibers........................An Oxidizing Type of Fiber Damage in V at Dyeing and I ts P reven
tion .......................................................................................................................The Dyeing of Blends Containing Regenerated Protein F ibers...........Monopole Oils .............................................................................The Future of W ool.......................................................................................... *Flame Resistance of Nylon Y arn s ................................................ ] ...........]]Fluorescent Fault Detection: A Saver of W aste in Textile Printing.*. Synthetics Go to W ar. A Report of the Past, P resent and F u tu re
Uses of Man-made Fibers by the M ilita ry ............................................Determining Resins. Embedded in 'Creaseproofed T ex tiles................]]Dyeing Mixed W ool-Perlon Fabrics with “ Lanaperl” D yestuffs.........Acid Dyeings on N atural and Artificial Protein Fibers and Poly
amides ..................................................................................................................Molten Metal Baths in Textile Processing ................................................Developments in New Synthetic F ibers........................................] ] ] ] ] ] ]Dyes and Dyeing; New Man-made Fibers— New Problem s.........” . . .Carpet Mills, the Fibers and the F u tu re .....................................................The Acid Exhaustion-Thermosol Process for the Dyeing of Fabrics
Made from Dacron Polyester F ib e r ...........................................................Optical Bleaching A gents....................................................................................L ithium Compounds and T heir Possible Application for Textile
Processing ...................... ........................................................................Notes on Stabilizing Azoics in P rin tin g ........................................] * ] * ] ]A nthrax in the Wool Textile In d u stry ................................. ] ] ] ] ] ] ] ] ] ]Some Observations on the W etting of Greige Cotton................... . . . .*The Effects of Micro-organisms and W eathering on Man-Made
Fibers .............................................................................................The Effect of Micro-organisms and of W eathering on Cotton TextilesFabric Shrinkage and L aunderability ..............................................................Partia l Acetylation of Cotton.......................................................Sizing of Spun Nylon Y arns with Various A gen ts........... ] . ] ] ] ] ] ] ] ]Dyeing Dynel Stock, Y arn, H ose....................................................... . . . ”Dyeing Acetate with N aphthols.............................................. ]] ]The Clothing F ire H aza rd ........................................................]
P222
11121212
31313132 32 494950
5051
51515152 52
89253253310310310
311 311311
312 312312313313
314 314
355387387387
388 388435436 436436437 437
A crilan Acrylic F iber D yeing and F in ish ing . . ...........................................Effect of Synthetic F ibers on the M arket fo r Viscose R ay o n ................Im proving the Fastness of Cotton D yeing ....................................................Special Methods of Degumming S ilk .............................................................P rin ting A cetate R ayon ........................................................................................Microscopy fo r the D yer and F in ish e r .........................................................Chemical Changes O ccurring in Wool D uring W et P rocessing ...........The Resin A ftertreatm ent of D irect Cotton D yes.......................................Dyeing of Dacron Polyester F iber: Evaluation of D yeing A ssistan ts. C arrier Dyeing of Dacron Polyester F iber w ith O rtho-phenylphenol. .W ool’s Properties Make it U n iq u e ..................................................................Mildew Can Damage Cotton in 6 H ours, Even Though N ot Seen by
the Naked E y e ......................................................................................................New Blends Create Problems for the D ry C lean er....................................P roperties of Apparel Wools. I I . Modification of F ib er Surface D ur
ing W orsted P rocessing ....................................................................................A New Method fo r the Dyeing of M ineral K h ak i.....................................U S L iner F ireproof T hroughou t....................................................................Testing of W ater Repellency— A D escription of the Swedish Rain-
T ester .....................................................................................................................Peroxide Damage ....................................................................................................O utstanding and Deficient P roperties of Some Common T extile F iber
M aterials ...............................................................................................................Copper 3-Phenyl Salicylate— a T extile P re se rv a tiv e ...........................Resin Finishes and Textiles: Control of D eposition..................................The 'Coloring of A lum inum ..................................................................................The Continuous Dyeing of V at Dyes: the S tandfast Molten Metal
Technique .................................................................................................Investigations into the Effect of Carbonizing Processes in Nylon Y am
and Fabric ...............................................................................................M an’s Synthetic F u tu re ...................................................The Search for New Polym ers: Dye Affinity and T ensile S tre n g th . . .Dielectric H eating and D rying of T ex tile s ..................................Dyeing Halfwool with Benzo F ast Copper D yes. . . . . . . ] . ’ * ] ] ] ] ] ] ] ]Methylcelluloses and Celluloseglycollate in F in ishing Processes'. * .!.!!Q ualitative T ests for Synthetic F ib e rs ..............................Accelerated L ight Fastness T esting M e t h o d s . . . . . . . . . . . ! ] * ]Testing Resins Used in Creaseproofing R ayon ..............]]Equipm ent for Condensing Resins on F a b r i c s . . . ] . ’Cotton’s M inor C onstituents: T heir Role in U t i l i z a t i o n ! ! ! ! '"Analysis of Staple F iber M ix tu res .........................Degradation of Nylon on Exposure to L ig h t..................................U BlacksSU'f am.i? ACM D erivatives in tl,e A p p lica tio n 'o f "O xidationA lginate F ibers: the Position to D a te ......... ..................................................Sodium Chlorite as a Bleaching A g e n t ! ! ! ! ..................................................N o t i o n Mildew and M icro-organisms in T ex tile s .....................................The F in ishing of Fabrics Containing Wool and M an-M ade F ibe'rs ' "
Some f t , ’0!* L i |M eo n yT « t i l Ce ,R“ inS ™ *he TeXti,eThe Processing of Wool with H ydrogen Pe'roVide.....................................ThBlend1sUe' j ? ! . P .r0CeSSmg A ' ds m the Han(iiing of F ib e r s 'a n d 'F ib e rMicroscopical and Biological' Exam ination' o f' W o o l..................................The Reduction Properties of V at D y e s . . .
F J r s ° y . S , s m f i c a n t P a r t i e s o f ' S o m e N e w e r S y n t h e t i cDyeing in the Blended Fiber
tions on Finishing .............. H osiery In d u stry , with Some Observa!
437489489489490 490490491 491491492
492525
526 526 526
539539
540 540540585
585
585628628748748748748748749 749 749749750
750750787787787788 788 788
887887887
888
890B AMERICAN DYESTUFF REPORTER D ecem ber 22, 1952
Symposium on Synthetic F ib e rs ......................................................................... 888•lection of F iber M onom ers........................................................................... 888
influence o f M olecular S tru c tu re on P ro p e rtie s .................................... 889Tensile P roperties of N ewer F ib e rs ............................................................. 889C o tto n ......................................................................................................................... 889Silk ........................................................................................................................... 889Acetate ...................................... 889
New Developments in the C hem istry of C hlorites...................................... 890Photographic Production of Screens for P rin tin g T ex tile s ..................... 890Practical Experience in P igm ent P r in tin g .................................................. 890
Acid-Dyeing Wool, In terchangeability of Sodium Sulfa te and CommonSalt in (L e itc h ) ............................... P678
Acid-Dyeing Wool, The Role of Sodium Chloride and Sodium Sulfatein (Justice and E w in g ) .................................................................................... P 668
Acrylic F iber and D acron Polyester F iber, The Dyeing of Nylon,Orion (T urnbu ll) ............................................................................................... P75
Acrylic F iber, The Copper Method for D yeing Orion (B laker andLaucius) .................................................................................................................. P39
Acrylic Fiber, X -51...................................................................................................... 161ADR Award Presented to Lyle, Iannarone and Thomas, Second.............. P865ADR Award W inners A nnounced ........................................................................... P734Adsorption of a D etergent by Cotton Sheeting U nder Textile Process
ing Conditions, Q uantita tive D ata on the (F le tt, H oyt and W alter) P139 Advances in Theoretical and P ractica l S tudies of Gas F ading (Salvin,
P aist and M yles) ............................. P297Agents in Textile Processing, O rganic Complexing (S inger and Bers-
worth) .......................................................................................................................... P364Alphabetical L ist of New P roduc ts Developed Since November, 1 9 5 1 ... 795Analysis of Dyes for M an-M ade Fibers (S c h n e id ) ...................................... 565Application of B righteners, T extile (Sherburne and B e isw anger)............ P144Application of Chlorine in the Control of Microbiological O rganism s in
Process W aters (N ew lan d )............................................................................. P392Approach to W oolen-Fiber Lubrication, The E ngineering (M artin ) . . . . P341“ Artificial L igh t” Problem, A Sim ple Solution to the (D av id so n )........... 1ASA Subcommittee to M eet...................................................................................... P614Attachment of Dyes to Cotton by E the r Linkage (G u th r ie ) ....................... P13Attendance a t ’52 Convention Second H ig h es t................................................ P 772Authors of P apers, Notice t o .................................................. P74, P150, P621, P718Auto Fabrics, D yeing of M aterials fo r P lain and Face-Finished (M orris) P479Avcoset S tabilization of Rayon Fabrics (W elch and W ood ru ff).............. P880Award Committee fo r 1952, Report of S tu d en t............................................. P478Award Presented to Lyle, Iannarone and Thomas, Second A D R ............. P865Award W inners A nnounced, A D R ...................................................................... P734Birthday, R eporter Reaches T h ir ty -F if th ........................................................ 683Bleaching of Cotton Y arns and F abrics, Peroxide (B e ll) ........................... P79Bleaching of T ex tile M aterials (A Background of Present-D ay P ro
cedures), H ydrogen Peroxide (S m o len s) ................................................ P575Bleaching Systems, C haracteristics o f Cotton Fabrics Processed in Con
tinuous Peroxide (Bell and S ta ffe r) ........................................................... P110Blends, P resent-D ay Synthetic F ibers and (W et Processing) (Chornyei) P661Bonded-Fiber Fabrics, M ethods of Producing (S h e a re r) .............................. P874Bonnar Elected to P resid en cy .................................................................................. P863
se Rayon....
Processing....
iveing Assistants, ho-phenylpheool.
:ugh Not Seer:?
[ber Surface Dar-
ie Swedish Rak-
m Textile Fite
t Molten Md
‘in* Nylon Yarn
iie Strength-
'rocesses....
3.
ide Fibers- , Industry-
Synthetic
Observe
BOOK R E V IE W S —(.Listed in order of appearance)
P aint and V arn ish P roduction M a n u a l........................................................... 53Monomers, Section I I ............................................................................................. 53Patents fo r Technical P e rso n n e l...................................................................... 53W ater T reatm ent fo r In d u stria l and O ther U ses ....................................... 53Microbiol Decomposition o f C ellulose............................................................. 54Crops in W ar and Peace (T he Yearbook of A gricu ltu re 1 9 5 0 -5 1 )... 54Industrial and W ater Pollution (Survey of Legislation and Regu
lations) .................................................................................................................... 54Adhesion and A dhesives........................................................................................ 54An Introduction to the Chemistry of the S ilicones.................................... 54A Symposium on Developments in Applied C hem istry ........................... 356Handbook of D angerous M a teria ls .................................................................. 356The Pectic S ubstances............................................................................................. 356ASTM S tandards on T extile M aterials (w ith Related Inform ation) . . 356Neueste F o rtsch ritte und V erfah ren in der chemischen Technology
der T ex tilfasern (P a r t I— Die neuesten F ortschritte in der An-wendung der F a rb sto ffe ) .................................................................................... 373
Boiler Feed W ater T re a tm e n t............................................................................. 373The Chemical Technology of Dyeing and P r in tin g .................................... 373Volume I— The Chem istry of Synthetic D yes........................................... 373Vinyl and R elated P o lym ers............................................................................... 374Plastics M olding ...................................................................................................... 374Pulp and Paper, Volume 1 ............................................................................... 374
B R A D FO R D D U R F E E T E C H N IC A L IN S T IT U T E S T U D E N T C H A P T E R —
Reports ........... ............... .. ................................................................................P212, P241Brighteners, Textile A pplication of (Sherburne and B e isw anger)......... P144
C A L E N D A R ................P24, P34, P71, P98, P130, P166, P193, P222,P257, P290, P321, P358, P389. P418, P445, P473,
P509, P542, P574, P614, P682, P694, P734, P771, P841, P864 Cam, Applied Spectrophotom etry— (I) Color M atching with the A id of
the “ R ” (D e rb y ) .................................................................................................. P550Cellulose-Acetate Y arn, New Developments in D yeing (Carm ichael
and Ivey) .................................................................................................................. P424Challenge to M anagem ent, From W onder F iber to W onder Fabric— A
(Love) .................................................................................................................... P242Characteristics of Cotton Fabrics Processed in Continuous Peroxide
Bleaching System s (Bell and S ta l te r ) ......................................................... P110C haracteristics of Wool Oil, Im portan t (R y b e rg ) ......................................... 189Chemical M eans of F iber Modification in Woven S tate O utlined by
Gagliardi .................................................................................................................. P268Chemical P roperties of X-51 Acrylic F iber, Physical and (C ressw ell) . . 161Chemical Specialties, Im portan t Notice to All M anufac turers of T extile P545Chemist and H is Keys, The Textile (von B e rg e n ) ......................................... P870Chloride and Sodium S u lfa te in Acid-Dyeing Wool, The Role of Sodium
(Justice and E w in g ) ........................................................................................... P668Chlorine in the Control of Microbiological Organism s in Process W aters,
A pplication of (N e w la n d ) ................................................................................. P392Cleaning Efficiency of D etergents and W ashing Methods in L aundering
Wool, The (F u rry and O ’B r ie n ) .......................................................................... 861Colour Index C ontract, A A T C C Officials S ig n ................................................... P99Colour Index P ap e r Consignm ent A rrives in E n g lan d . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . P557Colour Index T enta tive ly Set fo r 1955, Publication o f ..............] ] ] ] ] ] ] ] P291Color Council, 21st A nnual M eeting of the I n t e r - S o c i e ty . ! ! ! ! ! ! . ] ! ] ! . P177Color Differences, F u rth e r Tables fo r LTse in Computing Small ( B u c ) . . 353
Color M atching with the A id of the " R ” Cam, Applied Spectrophotometry— ( I ) (D erby) ................................................. .........................................
Color P rin tin g , Continuous Dyeing Method in V at (Jaco b s)....................Colorfastness and Shrinkage Equivalent to Five Commercial L aunder
ings, Rapid Control Test— Combined..........................................................C olorfastness to 105° F W ashing, Rapid Control T est to Ind ica te ...........C olorfastness to Perspiration , Rapid Control Test to In d ica te ..................Colors by the Pad-Steam Process, Continuous Dyeing of V at (R e in er).Commentary, Comments on Selling’s (S te a m s ) ............................................Commentary from a Small Country, A Small (S e llin g )........................Comments on Selling’s Commentary (S te a rn s ) ..............................................Commission-Dyehouse Laboratory, The (G ro v e r) ..........................................Committee Bulletin, S tream Pollu tion ..................................................... P543,Committee for 1952, Report of S tudent A w ard ..............................................Committee on Static Set for Fall M eeting, A dvisory ....................................Committee, Report of N om inating .......................................................................Complexes in P rin tin g , The Use of Resinous-Copper (R oy le)..................
O rganic Complexing Agents in Textile Processing (Singer and Bers-w orth) ......... ............................................................; ............................ ...............
Conditions, Q uantitative D ata on the Adsorption of a D etergent by Cotton Sheeting U nder Textile Processing (F le tt, H oyt andW alter) ........................................................ .......................................................
Construction and M ercerization on the Light and W ash Fastness of Vat Dyes, A Study of the Effects of Fabric (Southeastern S e c tio n ) ...
Continuous Dyeing Method in V at Color P rin ting (Jacobs)....................Continuous Dyeing of New Synthetic F ibers, The (Rhode Island Sec
tion) ......................................................................................................................Continuous Dyeing of V at Colors by the Pad-Steam Process (R e in e r) ..Continuous Fiber Dyeing (W illiam s)................................................................Continuous Peroxide Bleaching Systems, Characteristics of Cotton Fab
rics Processed in (Bell and S ta l te r ) .........................................................C ontract, A A TCC Officials Sign Colour In d e x ..............................................Control in the Textile Industry , Static Problems and T heir (Lopez and
Hewson) ...............................................................................................................Control of Microbiological Organism s in Process W aters, Application of
Chlorine in the (N ew lan d )...........................................................................Control, Stabilization and Shrinkage (W a rd e d )..........................................Control T est— Combined Colorfastness and Shrinkage Equivalent to
F ive Commercial Launderings, R ap id .......................................................Control T est to Indicate Colorfastness to 105° F W ashing, R apid .........Control T est to Indicate Colorfastness to Perspiration, R ap id .................Controlled V at Dyeing:
( I ) The Stabilization of V at Dyes at E levated Tem peratures (Zimm erm an, Mecco, Fordem walt and Cooke)................................................
( I I ) Instrum ental and Analytical Chemistry (R o y e r) ..........................( I I I ) Leuco Potentials (Linekin, Grand and Fordem w alt)..................
C O N V E N T IO N , N A T IO N A L (B O ST O N )Prelim inary Invita tion to Contribute Technical P ap ers .................. P70,Executive Committee ................................................................................... P70,Theme and Exposition Name A dopted...........................................................Hotel Reservations ..................................................................................... P321,54 Exhibitors ..........................................................................................................W von Bergen to be A w arded 1952 Olney M edal......................................L T I A lum ni to M eet.............................................................................................Personnel Service .................................................................................................P re lim inary Notice ..............................................................................................9 Colleges to P artic ipa te in Alumni Luncheon............................................A n Invita tion from the P resid en t.....................................................................Greetings from the Convention C hairm an.....................................................Greetings from the Chairm an, N orthern New England Section...........P rogram ....................................................................................................................N ational Officers ....................................................................................................O u r Convention T hem e........................................................................................P ast P residents ......................................................................................................Convention Committees ......................................................................................Your H ost: The N orthern New England Section.....................................Textile Dyeing and F inishing E xh ib it...........................................................In tersectional Contest .........................................................................................A bstracts of Intersectional Contest P ap ers...................... ..........................A bstracts of Technical Papers (with Authors’ B iographies). . . . P654,Program a t A nnual B anquet.............................................................................P rogram for the L a d ie s . . ._......................................................................... ..Boston— The Convention C ity ...........................................................................Convention Notes ..................................................................................................A D R A ward W inners A nnounced..................................................................A ttendance a t ’52 Convention Second H ig h est............................................Photos ........................................................................................................................N inth Olney Medal Awarded to W erner von B e rg en ..............................W erner von Bergen— The M edalist, The Man (H o p k in s)......................W erner von B ergen— The M edalist, The Scientist (D illo n ).................The Textile Chemist and H is Keys (von B e rg en )......................................M ethods of Producing Bonded-Fiber Fabrics (S h e a re r) ........................
C O N V E N T IO N , N A T IO N A L (N E W Y O R K )A uxiliaries and T esting Group—
Progress in W etting and Rewetting Test Methods (S h a p iro )...........S k in-Irrita tion Tests for the Textile Industry (B a ra il) ......................Q uantitative D ata on the Adsorption of a Detergent by Cotton
Sheeting U nder Textile Processing Conditions (F le tt, H oyt andW alter) ....................................................................................................
The Engineering Approach to W oolen-Fiber Lubrication (M artin ) . O rganic Complexing Agents in Textile Processing (Singer and
B ersw orth) ......................................................................................................D yeing G roup:—
A ttachm ent of Dyes to Cotton by E ther Linkage (G u th rie ) .............The Copper Method for Dyeing Orion Acrylic F iber (B laker and
L aucius) ...........................................................................................................T extile F ibers from Synthetic R e s i n s . . . . . ........................ .........Ogden Process fo r Sim ultaneously S tripping and Dyeing Wool
(P risley ) ............................................... ,.......................................L .................The S tandfast P rocess of Dyeing (R ich ard so n )......................................
F in ish ing G roup:—Static Problems and T heir Control in the Textile Industry (Lopez
and H ew son) ..................................................................................................C haracteristics of Cotton Fabrics Processed in Continuous P e r
oxide Bleaching System s (Bell and S ta l te r ) ......................................T extile Application of B righ teners...............................................A dvances in Theoretical and Practical Studies of Gas Fading
(Salv in , P a ist and M y le s) .........................................................................In tersectional C ontest:—
New Developments in the Dyeing of Synthetic Fibers (M id-W estSection) ............................................................................................
T ow ard a Simple M eans of Judg ing H and (South Central Section)
P550441
P560P34
P559P44P73P71P73
P622P667P478P473P543
P15
P364
P139
P173441
P223P44
P369
P110P99
P105
P392P546
P560P34
P559
597601608
P290P574P98
P358P460P474P486P487P544P549P629P630P630P631P632P633P634P635P639P641P648P652P720P656P665P666P667P734P772P847P867P867P868P870P874
P16P136
P139P341
P365
P13
P39F100
P25!P273
P I 05
P110P144
P297
P35P167
)er 22, December 22, 1952 AMERICAN DYESTUFF REPORTER 890C
A t a u g h t ami w is h P173
ST s (Philadelphia | J oV r ^ ™ 6The Continuous Dyeing of New Synthetic F ibers CR1’ode lilan<1 p223
M easurem ent of Fabric Soiling (New York S ec tio n )........................... 13 2
1 rThe° Usef o fP Re si nou s-Copper Com plexe^in^ P rin ting (R o y le ) ......... p^ |Some Observations in Textile P rin tin g (H a b e l) ................‘ • ‘ *.............
Public Luncheon M eeting:— P242Mixed Fibers Symposium (P a rt I ) . . .......................................................... P259Mixed F ibers Symposium (P a rt 1 1 ) . . . . . . . . . . • .............. • • • • • • • • •From W onder Fiber to W onder Fabric— A Challenge to Manage
inent (Love) ............................................... ...................................................Copper as a Textile F iber Preservative (von L oehde). . . . • • • ..................Copper Complexes in P rin ting , The Use ° f F u r io u s - (R oyle). . . . . . . . .Copper Method for Dyeing O rion Acrylic Fiber, The (Blakei and
Cotton and fo r tiie 'H igh-Teroperature Dyeing of Synthetic F ibers, SomePractical Procedures for Dyeing (R o y )......... • • • • • • . • : ...................... p ] .
Cotton by E ther Linkage, A ttachm ent of Dyes to ( G u t h r i e ) . . . ............. r i *Cotton Fabrics Processed in Continuous Peroxide Bleaching Systems,
C haracteristics of (.Bell and. S ta l te r ) . ................................................. .. • • * 111)Cotton Fabrics with Synthetic Resins, Some V ariables in Improving
the Crease Recovery of (Philadelphia S ec tio n ).........................Cotton Sheeting U nder Textile Processing Conditions, Q uantitative
D ata on the Adsorption of a D etergent by (F le tt, Hoyt and W alter) P139Cotton Textiles (W et Processing) (E v a n s ) ............. ...................................... P658Cotton Y arns and Fabrics, Peroxide Bleaching of (B e ll) ........................... i 79C O U N C IL M E E T IN G S —
One H undred and Seventy-N inth....................................................................... ™One H undred and E igh tie th .................................................................................One H undred and E igh ty -F irst........................................................................... P371One H undred and Eighty-Second....................................................................... P558
: One H undred and E ighty-Third ............................... r /6 $Country, A Small Commentary, from a Small (S e llin g ) ........................... P71Crease Recovery of Cotton Fabrics with Synthetic Resins, Some Vari-
- ables in Im proving the (Philadelphia S ection )...................................... P196Crease Resistance, Instrum ents for M easuring (A A TC C Research Com
mittee for Evaluation of Durable F in ish es) ........... ................................. P^19“ Dacron” 'Polyester Fiber, Principles of Dyeing ( R e m i n g t o n ) . . . . . . . . . 859Dacron Polyester Fiber, The Dyeing of Nylon, Orion Acrylic Fiber
and (Turnbull) .................................................................................................. R75D ata on the Adsorption of a Detergent by Cotton Sheeting U nder Tex
tile Processing Conditions, Q uantitative (F le tt, Hoyt and W alter) P139 Detergency of Wool Using Sodium Dodecyltoluenesulfonate, The E f
fects of Magnesium Ions on the (Jordan, Volz, Gelb and Romanov-sky) ..............................................................................................................• ; • • • 413
Detergent by Cotton Sheeting U nder Textile Processing Conditions,Q uantitative Data on the Adsorption of a (F lett, Hoyt and W alter) P139
Detergents and W ashing Methods in Laundering Wool, The CleaningEfficiency of (F u rry and O ’B rie n ) ................................................................... 861
Detergents and W ashing Methods on Fabric Properties, The Laundering of Wool: Effect of (F u rry and O ’B rie n ) .......................................... 763
Determination of W etting Power, A New Method of (Reutenauer,Sisley and D upin')............................................................................................. P25
Developments in Dyeing Cellulose-Acetate Yarn, New (Carmichael andIvey) ....................................................................................................... P424
Developments in the Dyeing of Synthetic Fibers, New (Roy, Mid-WestSection) ............................................................................................. . ........... P35
D rysalters Club of New England, The (L in b erg )...................... , U .......... P665Dye Tendering, V at (B ay ley ). . . . ....................................................................... 461Dyehouse Laboratory, The Commission- (G ro v er).......................................... P622Dyeing and Finishing of Hosiery, The (D eT u rck )...................................... P739Dyeing and Finishing (of X-51 Acrylic F iber), Scouring ( P e ik e r ) . . . . 162 Dyeing Cellulose-Acetate Yarn, New Developments in (Carmichael and
Ivey) . ................................................................................................................... P424Dyeing, Continuous Fiber (W illiam s)................................................................ P360Dyeing, Controlled V at:
( I ) The Stabilization of V at Dyes at Elevated Tem peratures (Zimmerman, Mecco, Fordemwalt and Cooke).................................................... 597
(IT) Instrum ental and Analytical Chemistry (R o y er) .......................... 601( I I I ) Leuco Potentials (Linekin, Grand and Fordem w alt).................. 608
Dyeing Cotton and for the H igh-Tem perature Dyeing of SyntheticFibers, Some Practical Procedures for (R o y ) ......................................... P844
Dyeing “ Dacron” Polyester Fiber, Principles of (R em ington).................. 859Dyeing Method in V at Color P rin ting , Continuous (Jacobs)................ 441Dyeing Methods, New (C ay ce)........................................................................... P426Dyeing of Dynel and Related Products, The (F e ild ) ................................... P475Dyeing of M aterials for P lain and Face-Finished Auto Fabrics (M orris) P479 Dyeing of New Synthetic Fibers, The Continuous (Rhode Island Sec
t io n ) ..................................... P223Dyeing of Nylon, Orion Acrylic Fiber and Dacron Polyester Fiber, The
(Turnbull) .......................................................................................................... P 75Dyeing of Orion, Some of the V ariables Connected with the (Fron-
m uller) ........ P578Dyeing of Synthetic Fibers, New Developments in the (Roy, Mid-W est
Section) ........... P 35Dyeing of Textile Fibers at High Tem peratures, The (D rijv e rs ) ........... 533Dyeing of V at Colors by the Pad-Steam Process, Continuous (R einer) P44Dyeing Orion (Szlosberg)...................................................................................... P510Dyeing Orion Acrylic Fiber, The Copper Method for (B laker and
Laucius) ............................................................................................................... P 39Dyeing Polyamide Fibers with Indigosols (S p e ise r) ....................................... 349Dyeing, The S tandfast Process of (R ichardson)............................................. P273Dyeing Wool, Interchangeability of Sodium Sulfate and Common Salt
in Acid- (L e itc h ) ............................................................................................... P678Dyeing Wool, Ogden Process for Simultaneously S tripping and (Pris-
.ley) ............................................ P251Dyeing Wool, The Role of Sodium Chloride and Sodium Sulfate in
Acid- (Justice and E w in g )........................................................................... P 668Dyes, A Study of the Effects of Fabric Construction and Mercerization
on the Light and Wash Fastness of V at (Southeastern S e c tio n ) . . . P173Dyes for Man-Made Fibers, Analysis of (S ch n e id )...................... ............... 565Dyes to Cotton by E ther Linkage, Attachm ent of (G u th rie ) .................... P13Dynel and Related Products, The Dyeing of (F e ild ) ........................................ P475Effects of Fabric Construction and M ercerization on the Light and W ash
Fastness of V at Dyes, A Study of the (Southeastern S e c t io n ) . . . . P173 Effects of Magnesium Ions on the Detergency of Wool U sing Sodium
Dodecyltoluenesulfonate, The (Jordan, Volz, Gelb and Romanov- sky) 413
Wool,Efficiency of D etergents and W ashing Methods in L aunderingThe Cleaning (F u rry and O ’B r ie n ) ...............................................
E lectricity in T extiles— A Stepchild in M odern Research, S ta tic (Edei- stein)
E M P L O Y M E N T REG I
86]
PS 18E G IS T E R ___ P84, P98, P148, P166, P193, 1257,
P290, P389, P433, P445, P509, 1 542, P574, P620, P682, P696, P734, P771, 1 841,
Engineering A pproach to W oolen-Fiber Lubrication, T he (M a r tin ) .E ngland, Colour index P aper Consignment A rrives i n . . . .........................E ther Linkage, A ttachm ent of Dyes to Cotton by (G u th r ie ) . . . . ............E thylene O xide D erivatives and their Uses in the T ex tile In d u stry
(T rinch ieri) .................................... .. • ■ ............................................. ' jFabric Properties, T he L aundering of W ool: Effect of D etergents and
W ashing Methods on (F u rry and O ’B r ie n ) ...........................................Fabric Soiling, M easurem ent of (N ew York S ec tio n )................................Fabrics and Finishes of the F u tu re , F ibers, (G a n tz )-----Fading, Advances in T heoretical and P ractical S tudies of Gas (Salv in ,
P a ist and M y le s)........................................................................ ......................F A IR L E IG H D IC K IN S O N C O L L E G E S T U D E N T C H A P T E R —
P864P341P55?
P13
729
763P322I’447
P297
F i l e s 's * o f ‘ V a t' Dye’s , ' A S tudy ' of the Effects of Fabric Construction and M ercerization on the L ight and W ash (Southeastern Section)
F ibers, A nalysis of Dyes for M an-M ade (S c h n e id ) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Fibers and Blends, P resent-D ay Synthetic (W et Processing) (Chornyei)Fibers, Fabrics and F inishes of the F u tu re (G a n tz ) ......................................F ibers from Synthetic R esins, T extile (G a n tz ) . . . . . . . . . . . • • ................F ibers, H osiery and the Endless M arch of New ( H a r t q u i s t ) . . . . . . . .F ibers, New Developments in the D yeing of Synthetic (Roy, Mid-
W est Section) .......................• • •,• \ ...........Y I .................................................Finishes of the F u tu re , F ibers, Fabrics and (G a n tz ) ..................................Finishing of H osiery, The D yeing and (D e T u rc k ) ......... •■ ■■■ ” •Finishing (of X-51 A crylic F ib e r), Scouring, D yeing and ( P e ik e r ) . . . Flam e-Resistant T reatm ents, A Review of (B a rn a rd ) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Flow C haracteristics of Spinning Solutions as Affected by R ate of Lx-
trusion, P eanut P ro te in F ibers— (A rth u r and M a n y ) . . . . . . . . . . .Form aldehyde F ixation on Viscose Rayon, A n Investigation of Urea-
(N ickerson) ................................................• • * • • ■• • • • ......................................Future , Fibers, Fabrics and Finishes of the ( G a n t z ) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Gas Fading, Advances in Theoretical and P ractical S tudies of (Salvin,
P a ist and M y le s)..................................................................................................G E N ER A L R E S E A R C H C O M M IT T E E M E E T IN G S —
One H undred and S even tie th .............................................................................One H undred and S even ty -F irs t.........................................................................One H undred and Seventy-Second....................................................................One H undred and S eventy-T hird ............• •••■ .------ • ; ------
Glass Textiles for R einforcing Polyester P lastics, Sizes for (Beifeldand Phillips) ............................................................................... ..
H and, Toward a Simple M eans of Judg ing (South C entral S ec tio n )..High T em peratures, The Dyeing of T extile F ibers a t (D r i jv e r s ) .........H ighlights of the P ast Y ear (W o o d ).................................... ...........H igh-Tem perature Dyeing of Synthetic Fibers, Some P ractical p ro
cedures for Dyeing Cotton and for the (R o y ) .........................................H istory and Mechanics of Conventional W ater-T reatm ent Methods
(Benoit) ...................................................................................................... ..H osiery and the Endless M arch of New Fibers (H a r tq u is t) ....................Hosiery Industry , Outlook and T rends in the ( K n e r r ) ..............................Hosiery, The Dyeing and F in ishing of (De T u rc k ) . . . . .............................H ost, Y our: The N orthern New England Section (G rim e s ) ....................H U D SO N -M O H A W K SE C T IO N - —
R eports.............................................P135, P268, P347, P431, P784, P785.Hydrogen Peroxide Bleaching of Textile M aterials (A Background of
Present-D ay P rocedures) (S m o len s) ...........................................................Index to P aten t D igest...............................................................................................Indigosols, Dyeing Polyamide F ibers w ith (S p e ise r ) ..................................Industry— Am erican and European P lan (Ja c o b y ).........................................Instrum ents for M easuring Crease Resistance (A A TC C Research Com
mittee for Evaluation of D urable F in ish e s ) ...........................................Interchangeability of Sodium Sulfate and Common Salt in Acid-Dyeing
Wool (Leitch) ......................................................................................................Inter-Society Color Council, Program , 21st A nnual M eeting ....................Inter-Society Color Council, 21st A nnual M eeting of th e ...........................Irrita tion T ests for the T extile Industry , Skin- (B a ra i l ) ...........................ISC C, R M Evans to A ddress................................................................................ISO Delegates V isit Lowell T extile In s t i tu te ................................................Keys, The Textile Chemist and H is (von B e rg e n ) .........................................Laboratory, The Commission-Dyehouse (G ro v e r) ...........................................Laundering of Wool, The: Effect of D etergents and W ashing Methods
on Fabric Properties (F u rry and O ’B r ie n ) .............................................Laundering Wool, The Cleaning Efficiency of D etergents and W ashing
Methods in (F u rry and O ’B r ie n ) ......................................................................Light and W ash Fastness of V at Dyes, A S tudy of the Effects of Fab
ric Construction and M ercerization on the (Southeastern Section)Linkage, A ttachm ent of Dyes to Cotton by E th e r (G u th r ie ) .....................L ist of New Products Developed Since November, 1951 .Alphabetical L O W EL L T E X T IL E IN S T IT U T E S T U D E N T C H A P T E R —
Report ..........................................................................................................................Lubrication, The Engineering Approach to W oolen-Fiber ( M a r t in ) . . . M agnesium Ions on the Detergency of Wool U sing Sodium Dodecyl
toluenesulfonate, The Effects of (Jordan , Volz, Gelb and Romanov- sky)
P258, P846
P173565
P66]P447P100P 7 8 1
P35P447P739
162P134
385
P482P447
P297
P132P345P446P694
501P167
533839
P844
P390P781P736P739P637
P884
P5754 9 3349611
P419
P678P48
P177P136P614P785P870P622
763
861
P173P13795
P296P341
M anagement, From W onder F iber to W onder Fabric— A C hailenee to (Love)
413
Man-M ade Fibers, A nalysis of Dyes fo r (Schneid)M an, W erner von B ergen— The M edalist, The (H o p k in s) ..............M arhen Process, The (M a rn o n )....................Means of Judging H and, Tow ard a Simple (South C entral Section) '] ' M easurement of Fabric Soiling (New York Section)Mechanics of Conventional W ater-T reatm ent M ethods',' H isto ry 'and
Medal Awarded to W erner von Bergen, N inth o in e y ..................................Medal, W von Bergen to be Awarded 1952 O lnev ..................................M edalist, The M an, W erner von Bergen— , The (H n n k in A .....................M edalist, The Scientist, W erner von Bergen— The m ;i1 o n 4 .....................M E M B E R S H IP A P P L IC A T IO N S ......... P 38 ,’ P44, P I 15 P249 ' P 2 9 l'
P397, P423, P619’ P 719’ P744’
P242565
PS67P292P167P322
P390P867P474P867P868
M erc^rization^m the L ight and W ash Fastness o f 'V a t Dyes, A S tudyM ethodor^D vetng S T ' 0 ( £ u t ^ s ^ s £ t i o ^M Laucius) 8 ° r °n Acrylic F lber- The Copper (B lake, an d
“ sley a n d ^ D u S ” ’ °V ' ' Fow" ’ 'A ^ u t o n a ^ ;
P843
P173
P39
P25
fW(VD AMERICAN DYESTUFF REPORTER December 22, 1952
Wr
Ill5s;
.......... 402,, .I,, Jledjl •'
$ 0 'j SJj'h b’i ’f- S i l l * * *• jAnllwi« ‘
i ITuminJil) ••• O H * 1® * V , S i aProcess w o11
/to il 'C k s f Luedai A»atdtdI Ejiriai, f t «“ 1
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Acrylic Fiber, law®)
u * Dyeing (Szlo- u* Soffit of the
PACIFIC SOITHWE:MS......... r"B S a i Process, (M
Piftr CstsimreE An f tm Notice of A stir IfflST DICESI (ft
iLiitti in edit of s f i i i j j S t o F tb
Trends is (jdC NORTHBT
y.ciDg Soperpolymer Hydrazine Derrrati'
Beetle Calendar—Bea* Afpratus for T e s te fKfprookg T er ; i
aldehyde Resins . Filing Textiles—(
teal-proofing Wool- Fiirsproo&ng Textii Cxlinuous Shrinking S Gauze Mountin; Dyeing Corome-Com
U sed . . . . . . . . . . .D p? Polyester F il
nanent D w ___ Apparatus for T read Dyeing with Xitro-A
Compounds . . . .fora Printing Tati
....
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Member 21 ■
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Methods, H istory and Mechanics of Conventional W ater-T reatm ent(Benoit) ........... P390
Methods in L aundering Wool, The Cleaning Efficiency of D etergentsand W ashing (F u rry and O ’B r ie n ) .................................................................... 861
Methods of Producing Bonded-Fiber Fabrics (S h e a re r ) ................................ P874Methods, New Dyeing (C ay ce )............................................................................... P426Methods, P rogress in W etting and Rew etting T est (S h a p iro ) .................. P16M ID -W EST S E C T IO N —
R eports......................... P43, P82, P178, P344, P346, P453, P580, P620, P784Mixed Fibers Symposium, P a r t I ........................................................................... P242Mixed F ibers Symposium, P a r t I I ........................................................................ P259Modification in W oven S tate O utline by G agliardi, Chemical M eans
of F iber ................................................................................................................. P268NEW B E D FO R D T E X T IL E IN S T IT U T E S T U D E N T C H A P T E R —
Reports .............................................................................................................P258, P399NEW Y O R K S E C T IO N —
R eports.................................. P73, P116, P176, P258, P268, P296, P359,P399, P432, P457, P700, P783, P785, P848
. N E W S .........................55, 89, 119, 153, 180, 213, 255, 276, 314, 350, 375,402, 438, 461, 494, 527, 561, 586, 687, 721, 753, 789, 849
Ninth Olney Medal A w arded to W erner von B ergen .................................. P867Nominating Committee, R eport o f ........................................................................ P543Nonwoven Fabrics (S h e a re r ) .................................................................................. P429N O R TH C A R O L IN A S T A T E C O L L EG E S T U D E N T C H A P T E R —
Reports .............................................................................................................P48, P116N O R TH E R N N E W EN G LA N D S E C T IO N —
R eports............................................................................. P98, P116, P296, P487, P873Northern New E ngland Section, T he: Y our H ost (G rim es).................... P637Notice to All M anufac tu rers of T extile Chemical Specialties, Im portan t P545Notice to A uthors of P a p e rs .................................................. P74, P150, P621, P718Nylon, Orion A crylic F iber and D acron Polyester F iber, The Dyeing
of (T urnbu ll) ...................................................................................................... P75Observations in T ex tile P rin tin g , Some (H a b e l) ......................................... P269Ogden Process fo r S im ultaneously S tripping and D yeing Wool (P ris-
ley) ........................................................................................................................... P251Oil, Im portant C haracteristics of Wool (R y b e rg ) ......................................... 189Olney Medal A w arded to W ern er von Bergen, N in th .................................... P867Olney M edal, W von Bergen to be A w arded 1952......................................... P474Organisms in Process W aters, Application of Chlorine in the Control
of Microbiological (N ew lan d ) ........................................................................ P392Orion A crylic F iber, The Copper Method fo r Dyeing (B laker and
Laucius) ............................................................................................................... P39Orion, Dyeing (S z lo sb e rg ) ...................................................................................... P510Orion, Some of the V ariables Connected with the Dyeing of (Fron-
m uller) .................................................................................................................... P578Outlook and T rends in the H osiery In d u stry (K n e r r ) .................................. P736
? e n - r a l S e c t :® : : (Drivers)....
le Practical Pi?
e a t m e n t M e t k t
r i m e s ) . . . . . . . . .
431, P 734. P & B a c k g r o u n d a
X Research C®
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P A C IF IC N O R T H W E S T S E C T IO N —Reports .............................................................................................................P272, P681
P A C IF IC S O U T H W E S T S E C T IO N —R eports............................. ............... P I 16, P149, P304, P372, P486, P842, P864
Pad-Steam Process, Continuous D yeing of V at Colors by the (R einer) P44Paper Consignment A rrives in England, Colour In d e x ............................. P557Papers, Notice of A uthors o f ................................................P74, P150, P621, P718PA TE N T D IG E S T (W en g raf)
(Listed in order of appearance)Stabilizing Nylon Fabrics— Passage Through a Molten M etal B a th .. 10Shrinkproofing Wool— A crylic Acid- and Lower A lkylesters Combined 10Dyeing Superpolym er F ibers of the Nylon Type Condensed with
H ydrazine D erivatives ...........................................................• .•••• ................ HBeetle Calendar— B eating Process by Electrochem ical V ib ra tio n ......... 85A pparatus for T esting F ire R esistance ........................................................... 86Creaseproofing Textiles— Combining Thiophene- and Phenol-Form
aldehyde Resins ...................... 86Finishing T extiles— Cold Swelling S tarch C ontaining Melamine-Alde
hyde ................................................................................... 86Shrinkproofing Wool— H ard D rying Oils in Solution or D ispersion .. 87Flameproofing T extiles— Titanium -A ntim ony Com pounds........................... 87Continuous Shrink ing or P rese tting T reatm ent of F ab ric s ...................... 88Silk Gauze M ounting D evice............................................................. ............... • 88Dyeing Chrome-Complex Acid Dyes— Lower A lkanesulfonic Acids
Used ........................................................ 117Dyeing Polyester F ibers (D acron) with A cetate Dyes— Steam A fter-
treatm ent ............................................................... 118Pigment D yeing and P rin tin g — Styrene-M aleic A nhydride Copolymers 118 A pparatus for T rea tin g Textiles— P articu la rly fo r C hlorinating Wool 151 Dyeing with Nitro-Azo-Dyes, T ransform ed by Reduction to Azoxy
Compounds ........................................ 152Screen P rin tin g Table, Covered with a Perm anently Sticking A d
hesive ........................................................................................................................ 152Prin ting Textiles by Photographic M ethods—Indigosols, Catalyzed by
P reprin ted P russian B lu e .................................................................................. 152'Stabilizing Cellulosic T extiles— K etone-A ldehyde-Starch Condensates 152Finishing Textiles— A pplying Smooth P ressu re by Rows of Re
silient Blades ................................................................................................• • • 254Dyeing Naphthol Dyes— Crocking Fastness Im proved by V inyl
Resin A ftertrea tm en t ........................................ 254Im proving Fastness of D yeings— Dicyandiam ide-Copper-Form aldehyde
Complexes .......................................................................................... 275Flock P rin ting—Cellulose Swelling A gents Form ing Adhesive Layers 275Dyeing Vinyl Copolymer F ilam ents— S hort A fte rtrea tm en t at Elevated
T em peratures ......................................................................................................... 275Finishing Nylon or S aran— D urable Calendering E ffec ts........................... 305Dyeing Cellulose A cetate w ith Acid Dyes— Thiocyanate plus Glycols
as Swelling A g en ts ............................................................................................. 305Prin ting Device— Screen P rin tin g Table— Concrete Top H eated by
Zig-Zag Tubes ...................................................................................... 305Dyeing V at Dyes— Development in Molten M etal Bath, A ntioxidants
Added ...................................................................................................................... 306Prin ting T hickener— Styrene— Maleic A nhydride— Divinyl Benzene
Terpolym er ........................ 306Fumeproofing A cetate D yeings (Amino A n thraqu inones)— Triphenyl-
guanidine ........................... 306Stabilizing Cellulose T extiles (Shrinkproofing)—'Combined Glyoxal-
Form aldehyde-Am ine Condensate ............................................................... 306Vat D yeing w ith Dyes Sensitive to O verreduction and Pyran throne
Dyes— N itrogen Compounds A dded .........................................' .................. 307Coloring Glass F ibers— Covering with a Fused Colored Gla*s F ilm .. 308Shrinkproofing W ool— D ivinylsulfone T reatm ent of P ro te ins in Gen
eral ......... . ........................... ................................................................................... 308Indigosol D yeings on Two-Sided Fabrics— One Side Development by
L ight E xposure .................................................................................................... 309
W ater-Repellent Synthetic Fabrics— Long Chain Substituted Phenol-Aldehydes .............................................................................................................
P rin tin g V at Dyes—-Alginate Thickened Pigm ents O verprinted withReducing Pastes ..................................................................................................
P rin tin g Wool with Dyes Containing Acid Groups Thickened withW ater Insoluble Vinyl Polym ers..................................................................
P rin ting Textiles— Colored P atterns T ransfe rred from Prin ted PaperSheets ...................................................................................................................
Shrinkproofing Wool— Perm anganate T reatm ent a t Elevated Temperatu re U nder P re ssu re ................................................................................
Dyeing F u r Skins— Metallized Azodyes in Solvent Solutions.............D yeing or P rin ting Lakes of Basic Dyes and Phosphotungstic or
Phosphomolybdic Acids ..................................................................................P rin ting D irect or Acid Dyes— Fixation with Cyanamide-Formalde-
hyde ........................................................................................................................P rin tin g A cetate of Cellulose— Condensates of Ricinoleic Acid and
Ethylene Oxide ..................................................................................................Dyeing— Development Through Liquid M etal A lloys...............................Dyeing with Azodyes, Obtained by In ternal Coupling Reaction...........Dyeing Wool with Chromatable Acid Dyes— Nonionic Compounds
plus M agnesium Salts U sed .........................................................................Dyeing Wool with S u lfur Dyes— Ethanolamines Reacted with Di-
hydrogensulfide ..................................................................................................Dyeing F luorescent Artificial Filam ents— Inorganic Pigm ents In
corporated ................. ........................................................................................W ater Repellent Fabrics— Urea-Glyoxal-Formaldehyde Condensates
with H igher F atty A lcohols.........................................................................Shrinkproofing Woolen Garm ents— D ry Chlorination under Con
trolled M oisture Conditions...........................................................................Dyeing with Concentrated V at Acid P aste s .................................................Shrinkproofing Wool— Chloramides and Chloro-Sulfonamides U sed .. Dyeing Wool with High Affinity Colloidal Dyes— Diammonium Phos
phate Added .................. ...................................................................................Screen P rin ting Back Greige B lanket............................................................Lustrous Prin ted Calender Effects—V at Acid Compositions...............Dyeing Superpolymer Fibers, Condensed with Amino Acid Carbo-
anhydrides ..........................................................................................................Embossing Cellulosic Resin Im pregnated T ex tiles .................................Dyeing Wool with Chromatable Dyes— Diammonium Phosphate and
Ammonium Sulfate A dded ..............................................................................Polyazo Dyes— Aliphatic Amines and Copper Complex Compounds
Added .......................................... ......................- • • ............................................P rin tin g V at Dyes Thickened with W ater-in-O il Em ulsions................Pigm ent Dyeing— Resin P re trea tm en t............................................ ...............Dyeing w ith Insoluble Azo Dyes— Stabilizing Naphthol Solution with
Polyam ine Condensates ..................................................................................A ger for Developing V at Dyes in Two Separate Cham bers..................Creaseproofing— Glucose Ureides P lus Form aldehyde.............................Flameproofing— Afterglow Avoided by U sing Polyphosphoryl AmidesP rin tin g V at Dyes— Thickened with Oil-in-W ater E m ulsions.............V at Dyeing A crylonitrile Polym ers— Ionizable Potassium Compounds
Used ................................................................................ .....................................Padding Mangle— H ard Core Rolls Covered with Thin Coating of Soft
Rubber ........................................................ • • ................. .. • • ...............................Peanu t Protein Fibers— Flow C haracteristics of Spinning Solutions as
Affected by Rate of Extrusion (A rth u r and M a n y )...........................Peroxide Bleaching of Cotton Y am s and Fabrics (B e ll) ..........................Peroxide Bleaching of Textile M aterials (A Background of Present-
Day Procedures), H ydrogen (S m olens)........................ ..........................Peroxide Bleaching Systems, C haracteristics of Cotton Fabrics Processed
in Continuous (Bell and S ta ffe r) ..............................................................Peroxygen Compounds in the Textile Industry , Application of (Secord) P erspiration , Rapid Control T est to Indicate Colorfastness to ..................P H IL A D E L P H IA S E C T IO N —
R eports................................................. P30, P48, P115, P194, P347, P433,P445, P516, P542, P614, P698, P785,
P H IL A D E L P H IA T E X T IL E IN S T IT U T E ST U D E N T C H A P T E R —
Reports ..........................................................................• • • • ........................P241,Physical and Chemical P roperties of X-51 Acrylic F iber (Cresswell) . .P IE D M O N T S E C T IO N — ^
R eports.................... P43, P178, P195, P344, P460, P699, P700, P744,P lastics, Sizes for Glass Textiles for Reinforcing Polyester (Biefeld
and Phillips) ....................................................................... . * • • • ; ............* * * *Pollution A batem ent and W aste T reatm ent, A Practical Approach to
Textile (Snyder) .................................................................................... • • ■ *Pollution Committee Bulletin, S tream ...................................................Polyamide F ibers with Indigosols, Dyeing (S p e ise r) ............. .....................Polyester F iber, Principles of Dyeing “ D acron” (R em in g to n ).............. •Polyester Fiber, The Dyeing of Nylon, Orion Acrylic Fiber and
Dacron (T urnbull) ...............................................• • •; ■ •; •Polyester P lastics, Sizes for Glass Textiles for Reinforcing (Biefeld
and Phillips) ..................................................... • • • • • * . ------ : ' ‘ ..............Power, A New Method of Determ ination of W etting (R eutenauer,
Sisley and D u p in ) .......................................................... ..................................P reservative, Copper as a Textile F iber (von G oehde)...............................Presidency, B onnar Elected to ....................................• • • ■........... : ...................P rincip les of Dyeing “ D acron” Polyester Fiber (R em ington)..................P rin ting , Continuous Dyeing Method in V at Color (Jaco b s)....................P rin ting , Some Observations in Textile (H a b e l) .................... • • .................P rin ting , The Use of Resinous-Copper Complexes in (R o y le ) ...............Problem, A Simple Solution to the “ Artificial L ight” (D a v id so n ) ..-----Problems and T heir Control in the Textile Industry , S tatic (Lopez
and Hewson) .............................................................. .......................................Problems Presented by the New Fibers (B au m an n )...................... •• • : ••Procedures for Dyeing Cotton and for the High-Tem perature Dyeing
of Synthetic F ibers, Some Practical (R o y )........... • - ...........Process, Continuous Dyeing of V at Colors by the Pad-Steam (Reiner) Process for Sim ultaneously Stripping and Dyeing Wool, Ogden (Prisley)Process of Dyeing, The S tandfast (R ichardson)............................................Process, The M arhen (M a rn o n ) ............................. • • • • ............... • *: ■ ' ■ : ‘ 'P rocess W aters, Application of Chlorine in the Control of Micro
biological Organism s in (N ew lan d )..............................................................Processing, T extile W e t................ ...........• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •: • • • * * ■ ■ * * ‘ 'Products Developed Since November, 1951, Alphabetical L ist of N ew ..Progress of W etting and Rewetting T est Methods (S h a p iro )...........P roperites of X-51 Acrylic Fiber, Physical and Chemical (Cresswell) P roperties, The L aundering of W ool: Effect of Detergents and W ash
ing M ethods on Fabric (F u rry and O b r ie n ) ........................P ro te in F ibers— Flow C haracteristics of Spinning Solutions as Affected
by R ate of E xtrusion , P eanut (A rth u r and M a n y ).............................
401
401
415
415416
416
435
435442443
443
444
444
506
506506507
507508 508
525626
626
627627746
747 747 769769770
770
862
385P79
P575
P110P581P559
310
P786
P743161
P771
501
745P667
349859
P75
501
P25164
P863859441
P269P15
1
P105P453
P844P44
P251P273P292
P392P657
795P16161
763
385
^ fo December 22, 1952<ber 22, i
AMERICAN DYESTUFF REPORTER 890E
Q uantitative D ata on the Adsorption of a D etergent by .Cotton‘ Sheet' ing U nder Textile Processing Conditions (h le tt, Hoyt «md W alter)
“ R” Cam, Applied Spectrophotometry— (I) Color M atching with theAid of the ( D e r b y ) . . ........................................................................................
Rainbow, The Textile (D illo n ) ....................................• • ■; ............... ’ : ' V ’,1Rapid Control T est— Combined Colorfastness and Shrinkage Equivalent
to Five Commercial L aunderings............................. .. • • • • • • •.................Rapid Control Test to Indicate Colorfastness to 105° h W ash in g ...........Rapid Control Test to Indicate Colorfastness to P e r s p i r a t i o n . . . . . . . . .Rate of Extrusion , Peanut Protein F ibers— Flow Characteristics ot
Spinning Solutions as Affected by (A rth u r and M a n y ) . . . . . . . . . •Rayon, An Investigation of Urea-Form aldehyde fix a tio n on viscose
(N ickerson) ..................................................................... •••••■ v ; . '...............Rayon fab rics , Avcoset Stabilization of (W elch and Wood-run) ..............Reporter Reaches T hirty-F ifth B irthday ................................................. •• • • •Research, Static Electricity in Textiles— A Stepchild in M odern (Edel-
stein) .......................................... .. ■ .....................................................................Resinous-Copper Complexes in P rin ting , The Use of (R o y le ) ..................Resins, Some V ariables in Im proving the Crease Recovery of Cotton
Fabrics with Synthetic (Philadelphia S ec tio n )......................................Resins, Textile Fibers from Synthetic (G a n tz ) ...............................................Review of Flam e-Resistant Treatm ents, A ( B a r n a r d ) . . . . .........................Rewetting Test Methods, Progress in W etting and (S h a p iro ) ..................R H O D E ISLA N D SE C T IO N —
R eports................................... P84, P99, P195, P272, P347, P398, P524,Salt in Acid-Dyeing Wool, Interchangeability of Sodium Sulfate and
Common (Leitch) ..........................................................• • ...............................Scientist, W erner von Bergen— The M edalist, The (D il lo n ) . ..................Scouring, Dyeing and F inishing (of X-51 Acrylic F iber) (P e ik e r) .........Sheeting U nder Textile Processing Conditions, Q uantitative Data on
the Adsorption of a Detergent by Cotton (F le tt, Hoyt and W alter)Shrinkage Control, Stabilization and (W a rd e ll) ........................ ....................Shrinkage Equivalent to Five Commercial Launderings, Rapid Control
T est— Combined Colorfastness a n d ................................................... ..Sizes for Glass Textiles for Reinforcing Polyester P lastics (Biefeld
and Phillips) ......................................................................................................Skin-Irritation Tests for the Textile Industry (B a ra il) ...............................Small Color Differences, F u rther Tables for Use in Computing (B u c ) . . Sodium Chloride and Sodium Sulfate in Acid-Dyeing Wool, The Role
of (Justice and E w in g )......................................................... ........................ ..Sodium Dodecyltoluenesulfonate, The Effects of M agnesium Ions on
the Detergency of Wool Using (Jordan, Volz, Gelb and Romanov-sky) ........................................................... ...........................................................
Sodium Sulfate and Common Salt in Acid-Dyeing Wool, Interchange-ability of (L e itch ) ...............................................................................................
Sodium Sulfate in Acid-Dyeing Wool, The Role of Sodium Chloride and(Justice and E w in g ).........................................................................................
Soiling, Measurement of Fabric (New York S ection ).................................Solution to the “ Artificial L ight” Problem, A Simple (D avidson).........SO U TH C EN TR A L S E C T IO N —
R eports........................ ...................... P82, P195, P241, P486, P681, P 696,SO U T H E A S T E R N SE C T IO N —
R eports.............................................. P48, P222, P268, P346, P458, P542,Spectrophotometry, Applied— (I) Color Matching with the A id of the
“ R ” Cam (D e rb y ) .............................................................................................Spinning Solutions as Affected by Rate of Extrusion, Peanut Protein
Fibers—-Flow Characteristics of (A rthu r and M a n y )........................Stabilization and Rayon Fabrics, Avcoset (W elch and W oodruff)...........Stabilization and Shrinkage Control (W a rd e d ) ............................................S tandards Association, Swiss— Textiles: Textile Testing M ethods.........S tandfast Process of Dyeing, The (R ichardson)............................................S tatic E lectricity in Textiles— A Stepchild in Modern Research (Edel-
stein) .....................................................................................................................Static Problems and Their Control in the Textile Industry (Lopez and
Hewson) ...............................................................................................................Static Set for Fall Meeting, Advisory Committee o n ......................................Stream Pollution Committee B ulletin ..................................................... P543,Stripping and Dyeing Wool, Ogden Process for Simultaneously (Pris-
ley) .......................................................................................................................S tudent Award Committee for 1952, Report o f ...............................................Studies of Gas Fading, Advances in Theoretical and Practical (Salvin.
Paist and M yles)............................................................................................. 'Study of the Effects of Fabric Construction and M ercerization on the
Light and W ashfastness of V at Dyes, A (Southeastern S ec tio n ).. Sulfate and Common Salt in Acid-Dyeing Wool, Interchangeability of
Sodium (Leitch) ...............................................................................................Sulfate in Acid-Dyeing Wool, The Role of Sodium Chloride and
Sodium (Justice and E w in g ).........................................................................Swiss Standards Association—T ex tiles: Textile Testing M e th o d s . . . ! ’.!Symposium, Mixed Fibers, P art I ..............................................Symposium, Mixed Fibers. P a rt I I .............................! ! . ! ! ! ! . " ! ! ! ! ! ! . . . ’ .*Synthetic Fibers and Blends. Present-Day (W et Processing)’ (Chornyei) Synthetic Fibers, New Developments in the Dyeing of (Roy, M id-W est
Section) .............................................................................
P I 39
P55065
P560P34
P559
385
P482P880
683
P518P15
P I 96 P100 P134
P16
P786
P678P868
162
P139P546
P560
501P136
353
P668
413
P678
P668P322'
1
P784
P682
P550
385P880P546P701P273
P518
P105 P473 P 667
P251P478
P297
P173
P678
P668P701P242P259P661
P35
Synthetic F ibers, Some P ractical P rocedures for Dyeing Cotton anfor the H igh-Tem perature Dyeing of (R o y ) .................. • • • ' * V j ’ ‘ j
Synthetic F ibers, The Continuous Dyeing of New (RhodeSection) ................................................................................................. ... ' l y
Synthetic Resins, Some V ariables in Im proving the Crease >of Cotton Fabrics with (Philadelphia S ec tio n ).........................................
Synthetic Resins, T extile F ibers from (G a n tz ) .................. ;■■ ■■ ’System s, C haracteristics of Cotton Fabrics Processed >n Uontin
Peroxide Bleaching (Bell and S ta ffe r) .......................• • • • • '* ' / « ' *Tables for Use in Computing Sm all Color Differences, F u rth e r vduc; .T em peratures, The Dyeing of Textile F ibers at H igh (D r i jv e r s ) ............T endering, V at Dye (B a y le y ) ................................. ....... • • • ■ • •• •••■■Test -Com bined C olorfastness and Shrinkage Equivalent to 1 ive com
mercial L aunderings Rapid C on tro l. . . . . . . . . . . . . ..............................Test Methods, P rogress in W etting and Rew etting ( S h a p i r o ) . . . . .........Test to Indicate C olorfastness to 105° F W ashing, R apid C ontro l.........Test 10 Indicate C olorfastness to Persp iration , Rapid C ontro l..................T esting Forum , A A TCC to P artic ipa te in T e x t i l e . . . . . . . . . . . . . .............To: ting Methods, Textile, S w iss^S tandards Association T ex tile s .........Tests for the T extile In d u stry , S k in -Irrita tio n (B a ra i l ) .............................T reatm ents, A Review of F lam e-R esistant ( B a rn a rd ) ..................................T rends in the Hosiery Indu stry , Outlook and (K n err) ....................U ltrasonics to Textile Processes, Application of ( “ A rau jo ) . . • ■ • • • ■■ U rea-Form aldehyde F ixation on Viscose Rayon, A n Investigation ot
Use o f ' Redrums-Copper Complexes in P rin tin g , J i ^ ( R o ^ e ) . ................U T IC A T E C H N IC A L IN S T IT U T E S T U D E N T C H A P T E R ^
Variables*' in ' Im p ro v in g ' ihe ' Crease ' R ecover^ ' o f ' Cotton Fabrics withSynthetic Resins, Some (Philadelphia Section) . . . . . • .......................
V at Color P rin tin g , Continuous D yeing Method in U a c o b s U - . . . . . . . . .Vat Colors by the Pad-Steam Process, Continuous D yeing of (Reiner) V at Dye Tendering (B a y le y ) ..................................................................................
Va( l ) ^T heS Stab?Hzatimi' of V at Dyes at E levated T em peratures (Zim merman, Mecco, Fordem w alt and C ooke)..................................................
( I I ) Instrum ental and A nalytical Chem istry ( R o y e r ) . . . . .....................( I I I ) Leuco Potentials (L inekin, G rand and F o r d e m w a l t ) . . . . . . . . . .
V at Dyes, A Study of the Effects of Fabric Construction and M ercerization on the L ight and W ash Fastness of (S outheastern S ec tio n ). . .
Viscose Rayon, An Investigation of U rea-Form aldehyde F ixation on(N ickerson) ..............................■ • • • • • ; ; •; v *«V...........................................
von Bergen to be Awarded 1952 Olney M edal, W . ......... ..W ash Fastness of V at Dyes, A S tudy of the Effects of Fabric Con
struction and M ercerization on the L ight and (Southeastern bee-
W ashing' Methods" on Fabric P roperties, The L aundering of Wool:Effect of D etergents and (F u rry and O ’B rien) . . . ----- • • • •................
W ashing Methods in L aundering Wool, The C leaning Efficiency otD etergents and (F u rry and O ’B r ie n ) ..............- .................... ' ' ' ' ' ' ............
W ashing, Rapid Control T est to Indicate Colorfastness to 105° * . . . . . W aste T reatm ent. A P ractical A pproach to T extile Pollution Abate
m ent and (S n y d e r) ..............................• ■ - • • ........................................ • • • • •W ater-Treatm ent Methods, H isto ry and M echanics of Conventional
(Benoit) ........................................................ .. • • • • • • * • ;W aters, Application of Chlorine in the Control of Microbiological
Organism s in Process (N ew lan d )..................................................................W A S H IN G T O N S E C T IO N —
Report ..........................................................................................................................W E S T E R N N E W EN G LA N D S E C T IO N —
R eports............................................... P48, P I 15, P116, P149, P222, P258,P268, P370, P372, P517, P580, P720, P743, P841,
W et Processing, T e x tile .............................................................................................W etting and Rewetting T est Methods, P rogress in (S h a p iro ) ....................W etting Power, A New Method of D eterm ination of (R eutenauer,
Sisley and D u p in ) ...............................................................................................W inners Announced, A D R A w ard ......................................................................Wool, Interchangeability of Sodium Sulfate and Common S alt in Acid-
Dyeing (Leitch) .............................................................................- ............. .. ■Wool, Ogden Process for Sim ultaneously S tripping and D yeing (Pris-
ley) ..........................................................................................................................Wool Oil, Im portant C haracteristics of (R y b e rg ) .......................................Wool, The Cleaning Efficiency of D etergents and W ashing M ethods in
L aundering (F u rry and O ’B r ie n ) ....................................................................Wool, The L aundering of: Effect of D etergents and W ashing Methods
on Fabric Properties (F u rry and O ’B r ie n ) .......................................Wool, The Role of Sodium Chloride and Sodium Sulfa te in Acid-Dyeing
(Justice and E w in g ) ...........................................................................................Wool Using Sodium Dodecyltoluenesulfonate. The Effects of M agnesium
Ions on the Detergency of (Jordan , Volz, Gelb and R om anovsky). . W oolen-Fiber Lubrication. The E ngineering A pproach to ( M a r t i n ) . . . .Woolen Textiles (W et P ro cess in g )......................................................................X-51 Acrylic F ib e r ........................................................................................................Year, H ighlights of the P ast (W o o d )....................................................................
P844
P223
P 196PlOO
P 110353533461
I’56C I’16 P34
P559 P222 P701 P 136PI 35 P736 P615
P482P 15
P738
P196441P44461
597601608
P173
P482P474
P173
763
861P34
745
P390
P392
P873
P884P6S7P16
P25P734
P678
P251189
861
763
P668
413P341P657
161839
INDEX BY AUTHOR
AATCC R E SEA R C H C O M M IT T E E FO R E V A L U A T IO N O FD U R A B L E F IN IS H E S —
Instrum ents for M easuring Crease R esistance............................... P419de A R A U JO , A A—
Application of Ultrasonics to Textile Processes........................................ P615A R T H U R , JE T T C. JR and M ANY. H U G H G—
Peanut Protein Fibers— Flow Characteristics of Spinning Solutionsas Affected by Rate of E x trusion ................................................................ 385
B A R A IL , L O U IS C—S kin-Irritation Tests for the Textile In d u stry ................................. .. P136
BA R N A RD , K H —A Review of Flam e-Resistant T reatm en ts................................................... P134
BA U M A N N , H E R M A N P —Problems Presented by the New F ib e rs ....................................................... P453
BA Y LEY , C H —V at Dye T en d erin g ..........................................................
B E ISW A N G E R , JO H N P G and S H E R B U R N E , O P A L L—Textile Application of B righ teners.........
B ELL. T E— ..............................Peroxide Bleaching of Cotton Y arns and Fabrics
B ELL, T E and S T A L T E R . N J —C haracteristics of Cotton Fabrics Processed in Continuous Peroxide
Bleaching System s ..................B E N O IT , A W — ......................................................................
H isto ry and[M echanics o f Conventional W ater-T reatm en t M ethods. . . B E R S W O R T H F R E D E R IC K C and S IN G E R , JO H N J —n r r r J f n S " { tm jle m , ',e,” ts in Textile P rocess ing ......................... ...........B IE F E L D , L P and P H IL L IP S . T E—
Sizes for Glass Textiles for Reinforcing Polyester P lastics .
461
P144
P79
P110
P390
P364
501
8901'' AMERICAN DYESTUFF REPORTER D ecem b er 22, 1952
and
Sls,: H«o\tn1
® fwnn®55
u^!vmV..
84110 Hve
^ joV...''"'.^v: Contici
feAianjol,'.....An
:e Ibie'.....flAPTES-....P«. PUf, P»®n Fainc;^
acebs)..,.’""' ^ing of
®peratnres (Zs
anwalt).......and ileraris-
eastern Secccni... W e Faatiffl 3
£-> of Fabric Ci- '
nndering of Wd:
ling Efficiency i
b to 105° F...Pollution Ate
of Convents
jf Microbiolom
>149, P222, P-:i.■ *. : •- i •
teoiro)........i of fReutmw
nnon Salt in isl
and Dyeing (to
a il in g M etbuh*
Hfefting Di’i-
r e i n M m
its of Jingoes® Romani-iP
to (Martin)-
IL L '
:ooas
f Methods-
BLA K ER, R H and L A U C IU S , J F —The Copper M ethod fo r D yeing O rion A crylic F ib e r ........... .................... P39
BUC, G L—F urther Tables for Use in Computing Small Color D ifferences.............. 353
C A R M IC H A EL , D G and IV E Y , W IL L IA M R, JR —New Developments in D yeing Cellulose-Acetate Y a rn ............................. P424
CAYCE. C C—New D yeing M ethods............................................................................................. P426
C H O R N Y E I, E R N E S T J —Present Day Synthetic F ibers and B len d s...................................................... P661
COOKE, T F, Z IM M E R M A N , C L, M ECCO, J M and F O R D E M W A L T , F —
Controlled V at D yeing: ( I ) The Stabilization of V at Dyes at ElevatedT em peratures ........................................................................................................ 597
C R E S S W E L L , A—Physical and Chemical P roperties (of X-51 A crylic F ib e r ) .................. 161
D A V ID SO N , H R—A Simple Solution to the “ A rtificial L igh t” P rob lem ................................ 1
DE T U R C K , H A R O L D L —The Dyeing and F in ish ing of H o sie ry ............................................................. P739
DERBY, R O L A N D E, JR —Applied Spectrophotom etry— ( I ) Color M atching w ith the Aid of the
“ R ” Cam ............................... P550D ILL O N , J H —
The Textile R ainbow ............................................................................................... 65W erner von Bergen— The M edalist, The S c ien tis t................................... P868
D R IJV E R S. L r -The Dyeing of T ex tile F ibers a t H igh T em p era tu res................................ 533
D U P IN , S, R E U T E N A U E R , G and S IS L E Y , J P —A New Method of D eterm ination of W etting P ow er............................... P25
E D E L S T E IN , S ID N E Y M—Static E lectric ity in T ex tiles— A Stepchild in M odern R esearch ......... P518
EV A N S, W W —Cotton Textiles (W et P ro c ess in g ).................................................................... P658
E W IN G , W A R R E N W and JU S T IC E , J D A V ID —The Role of Sodium Chloride and Sodium Sulfa te in Acid-Dyeing
Wool ........................................................................................................................ P668F E IL D , T A, JR —
The D yeing of D ynel and Related P ro d u c ts ................................................ P475F L E T T , L H , H O Y T , L F and W A L T E R , J —
Q uantitative D ata on the Adsorption of a D etergent by Cotton Sheeting U nder T ex tile Processing C onditions.................................................. P139
FO R D E M W A LT , F , C O O K E, T F , Z IM M E R M A N , C L and M ECC O , J M—
Controlled V at D yeing: ( I ) The Stabilization of V at Dyes at E levatedT em peratures ........................................................................................................ 597
FO R D E M W A L T F , L IN E K IN , E E, and G RA N D , S—Controlled V at D veing: ( I I I ) Leuco P o ten tia ls ......................................... 608
F R O N M U L L E R , G D—Some of the V ariables Connected with the Dyeing of O rio n ................ P578
FU RR Y , M A R G A R ET S and O ’B R IE N , E L IN O R M—The L aundering of W ool: Effect of D etergents and W ashing Methods
on Fabric P ro p e rtie s ............................................................................................. 763The Cleaning Efficiency of D etergents and W ashing Methods in
Laundering Wool ............................................................................................... 861GANTZ, G EO RG E M—
Textile F ibers from Synthetic R esin s............................................................. P100Fibers, Fabrics and Finishes of the F u tu re .................................................. P447
GELB, JA C K , R O M A N O V SK Y , C Y R IL , JO R D O N , T E A R L and V O LZ, G EO R G E—
The Effects of M agnesium Ions on the D etergency of Wool U singSodium Dodecyltoluenesulfonate ................................................................. 413
von G O EH D E, H 1 ^ -■Copper as a Textile F iber P re serv a tiv e ......................................................... 164
GRAND, S, F O R D E M W A L T , F , and L IN E K IN , E E —Controlled V at D yeing: ( I I I ) Leuco P o ten tia ls ........................................ 608
G R IM ES, H E N R Y D—The N orthern New E ngland Section ............................................................... P637
GRO VER. A W —The Commission-Dyehouse L abora to ry ............................................................. P622
G U T H R IE , JO H N D—' Attachm ent of Dyes to Cotton by E ther L in k ag e ...................................... P I 3H A B EL. O T TO F —
Some O bservations in T extile P r in tin g ........................................................... P269H A R T Q U IS T , V IR G IL T —
Hosiery and the Endless M arch of New F ib e rs ........................................... P781H E W SO N , JO H N K and L O PE Z , JO S E P H A —
Static Problems and T heir Control in the T ex tile In d u s try .................. P I 05H O P K IN S , G IL E S E —
W erner von Bergen— The M edalist. The M a n ............................................. P867H O Y T. L F , W A L T E R , J and F L E T T . L H —
Q uantitative D ata on the Adsorption of a D etergent by Cotton Sheeting U nder Textile Processing C onditions.................................................. P139
IV EY . W IL L IA M R, JR and C A R M IC H A E L , D C—New Developments in D yeing Cellulose-Acetate Y a rn .............................. P424
JACOBS, F R E D F —Continuous Dyeing M ethod in V at Color P r in tin g .................................... 441
JACOBY, R W —Industry— A m erican and E urbpean P la n ....................................................... 611
JO RD A N , T E A R L . V O LZ, G EO R G E, G ELB , TACK and R O M A N O V SK Y , C Y R IL —
The Effects of M agnesium Ions on the D etergency of Wool U singSodium Dodecyltoluenesulfonate .................................................................... 413
/U S T IC E , J D A V ID and E W IN G , W A R R E N W —The Role of Sodium Chloride and Sodium S ulfa te in Acid-Dyeing
Wool ......................................................................................................................... P668CNERR, W M G—
Outlook and T ren d s in the H osiery In d u s try ............................................. P736A U C IU S , J F and B L A K E R , R H —
The Copper M ethod fo r Dyeing Orion A crylic F ib e r ................................ P39.E IT C H , H A R O L D W —
Interchangeability of Sodium Sulfate and Common Salt in Acid-DyeingWool ........................................................................................................................ P678
M N B ER G , G E O R G E O —The D rysalters Club of New E n g la n d .............................................................. P665
L IN E K IN , E E, G R A N D , S, and F O R D E M W A L T , F -Controlled V a t D yeing: ( I I I ) Leuco P o te n t i a l s . . . ’. .................................. 608
-O PEZ, JO S E P H , A and H E W S O N , JO H N K—Static Problem s and T heir Control in the Textile In d u s try .................. P105
L O V E, J S P E N C E R —W onder F iber to W onder Fabric— A Challenge to Management
M A NY, H U G H G and A R T H U R , JE T T C, JR —Peanut Protein Fibers— Flow Characteristics of Spinning Solutions
as Affected by R ate of E x tru s io n ................................................................M A R N O N , D O N A LD E—
The M arhen P rocess...........................M A R T IN , P A U L J —
The Engineering Approach to W oolen-Fiber L ubrication ..................M ECCO, J M, F O R D E M W A L T , F , COO KE, T F and
Z IM M E R M A N , C L—Controlled V at Dyeing: ( I ) The Stabilization of V at Dyes at Elevated
T em peratures ..................................M ID -W E S T S E C T IO N —
New Developments in the D yeing of Synthetic F ib ers ...........................M O R R IS , M G—
Dyeing of M aterials for P lain and Face Finished Auto F ab ric s ...........M Y LE S, W J , S A L V IN , V S and P A IS T , W D—
Advances in Theoretical and Practical Studies of Gas F ad ing .............N E W L A N D , S T E W A R T H —
Application of Chlorine in the Control of Microbiological Organismsin Process W a te rs ......... ...........................................................
NEW’ YORK S E C T IO N —M easurem ent of Fabric Soiling.........................................................................
N IC K E R S O N . R F—An Investigation of Urea-Formaldehyde Fixation on Viscose R ayon ..
O ’B R IE N , E L IN O R M and FU R R Y , M A RGARET S—The Laundering of Wool: Effect of Detergents and W ashing Methods
on Fabric P ro p e r t ie s .. ....................................................................................The Cleaning Efficiency of D etergents and W ashing Methods in
L aundering Wool ........................................................................... ...................P A IS T , W D, M Y LE S, W J and SA L V IN , V S
Advances in Theoretical and Practical Studies of Gas F ad ing .............P E IK E R . A L—
Scouring, Dyeing and F inishing (of X-51 Acrylic F ib e r ) ......................P H IL A D E L P H IA S E C T IO N —
Some Variables^ in Im proving the Crease Recovery of Cotton Fabricswith Synthetic R esins......................................................................................
P H IL L IP S , T E and B IE F E L D , L P —Sizes for Glass Textiles for Reinforcing Polyester P lastics.................
P R IS L E Y , F A—Ogden Process for Sim ultaneously S tripping and Dyeing W ool.........
R E IN E R , IS R A E L —Continuous Dyeing of V at Colors by the Pad-Steam P rocess...............
R E M IN G T O N , W R—Principles of Dyeing “ D acron” Polyester F ib e r ..........................................
R E U T E N A U E R , G, S IS L E Y , J P and D U P IN , S—A New Method of Determ ination of W etting P ow er.............................
R H O D E ISL A N D S E C T IO N —The Continuous Dyeing of New Synthetic F ibers.....................................
R IC H A R D S O N , FR A N C IS S—The S tandfast Process of D yeing..................................................................
R O M A N O V SK Y , C Y R IL , TORDAN, T EARL, VOLZ, GEORGE and GELB, JA C K —
The Effects of M agnesium Ions on the Detergency of Wool UsingSodium Dodecyltoluenesulfonate ..................................................................
ROY. A L E X A N D E R P —New Developments in the Dyeing of Synthetic F ib ers .............................Some Practical Procedures for Dyeing Cotton and for the High-
Tem perature Dyeing of Synthetic F ib ers ..............................................RO Y ER , G L—
Controlled V at Dyeing: ( I I ) Instrum ental and Analytical Chemistry RO Y LE, A L B E R T P —
The Use of Resinous-Copper Complexes in P rin tin g ...............................RY B ER G , B A—
Im portant C haracteristics of Wool O il.........................................................S A L V IN , V S, P A IS T , W D and M Y LES, W J —
Advances in Theoretical and Practical Studies of Gas F ad ing .............S C H N E ID , A L FR E D F —
A nalysis of Dyes for Man-Made F ib ers .......................................................SEC O R D . R A—
Application of Peroxygen Compounds in the Textile In d u s try .............S E L L IN G , H J —
A Small Commentary from a Small C ountry ............................................S H A P IR O , L E O N A R D —
Progress in W etting and Rewetting Test M ethods...................................S H E A R E R , H O W A R D E—
Nonwoven Fabrics .......................................... _...................................................Methods of Producing Bonded-Fiber F ab rics..............................................
S H E R B U R N E . O PA L L and B E ISW A N G ER , JO H N P G—Textile Application of B righ teners................................................................
S IN G E R . JO H N J and B E R S W O R T ll. FR E D E R IC K C -O rganic Complexing Agents in Textile Processing.................................
S IS L E Y , J P , D U P IN . S and R E U T E N A U E R , G—A New Method of Determ ination of W etting P ow er.............................
S M O L E N S, II G— ,H ydrogen Peroxide Bleaching of Textile M aterials (A Background
of Present-D ay P ro c ed u re s).........................................................................SN Y D E R , D U A N E W —
A P ractical Approach to Textile Pollution Abatement and W asteT reatm ent .............................................................................................................
S O U T H C E N T R A L S E C T IO N —T ow ard a Simnle M eans of Judging H a n d .................................................
S O U T H E A S T E R N S E C T IO N —A S tudy of the Effects of Fabric Construction and Mercerization on
the L ight and W ash Fastness of V at D yes............................................S P E IS E R , C T H —
D yeing Polyam ide F ibers with Indigosols.....................................................S T A L T E R . N J and B E LL , T E—
C haracteristics of Cotton Fabrics Processed in Continuous PeroxideBleaching System s ...........................................................................................
S T E A R N S , E I —Comments on Selling’s Com m entary................................................................
SZL O SB E R G , E—D yeing O rion .........................................................................................................
T R IN C H IE R I, G IU S E P P E — m T JE thylene O xide D erivatives and their Uses m the Textile In d u stry . .
T U R N B U L L , S G. JR —The D yeing of Nylon, Orion A crylic F iber and Dacron Polyester
F iber ......................................................................................................................
1 ber 22,December 22, 1952
P242
385
P292
P341
597
P35
P479
P297
P392
P322
P482
763
861
P297
162
P196
501
P251
P44
859
P25
P223
P273
413
P35
P844
601
P15
189
P297
565
P581
P 7 l
P16
P429P874
P144
P364
P25
P575
745
P167
P173
349
P110
P73
P510
729
P75
AMERICAN DYESTUFF REPORTER 890G
von BER G EN , W E R N E R — „„„„The Textile Chemist and H is K e y s . .......................- ............................... 18 /0
VOLZ, GEORGE, GELB, JA C K , R O M A N O V SK Y , C Y R IL and JO R D A N , T E A R L —
The Effects of M agnesium Ions on the Detergency of Wool UsingSodium Dodecyltoluenesulfonate ............................ 413
W A L TE R , J , F L E T T , L H and H O Y T , L H —Q uantitative D ata on the Adsorption of a D etergent by Cotton Sheet
ing U nder Textile Processing C onditions.................................................... P139W A R D ELL, W A—
Stabilization and Shrinkage C ontrol............................................................... PS46W ELC H , I H and W O O D R U FF, J A—
Avcoset Stabilization of Rayon F a b r ic s . ............. ....................................... .. P880
W E N G R A F , PAU1__P aten t D igest......... . . . . 1 0 , 85, 117, 151, 254, 275, 305, 401, 415, 435
500 52'5 026, 746, 769,W IL L IA M S , S H — ’ 5
Continuous F iber Dyeing ................W O O D . P J —
H ighlights of the P ast Y e a r . . . . ..............W O O D R U F F , J A and W E L C H , I H — .........
Avcoset Stabilization of Rayon Fabrics ..................Z IM M E R M A N , C L, M ECC O , J M, F O R D E M W A L T F
and C O O K E. T F —Controlled V at D yeing: ( I ) The Stabilization of V at Dyes at Elevated
T em peratures ........................................................................................ ..
m & m m tt DURINGTHE A M E R I C A N D Y E S T U F F R E P O R T E R W I L L A P P E A R ON THE F O L L O W I N G DAT E S
E V E R Y
O T H E R
MONDAY
JANUARY . FEBRUARY MARCH , . APRIL . . . MAY . . . JUNE . . . JULY . . . AUGUST . . SEPTEMBER OCTOBER . NOVEMBER DECEMBER
. 5-19
. 2-16 2-16-30 *13-27
. 11-25
. 8-22
. 6-20 3-17-**31
. 14-28
. 12-26
. 9-23 ***7-21
OFFICIAL PUBLICATION, PROCEEDINGS AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF TEXTILE
CHEMISTS AND COLORISTS
‘ K n it t in g A r ts E x h ib it io n N u m b e r “ A .A .T .C .C . C o n v en tio n I s s u e
“ ‘ A n n u a l P r o c e s s in g R e v ie w N u m b er
890H AMERICAN DYESTUFF REPORTERDecember 22, 1952
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