| 1826 - Liczba stron: 490
...the injuries of friction. The first portions are necessarily useless, and are separated by the hand. When the threads came off uniformly, the cocoons were...temperature of which was nearly that of blood heat, and more than milk warmthus sustained by a steam pipe. The water was thus kept clear, and the silk... | |
| Thomas Gill (patent-agent) - 1826 - Liczba stron: 440
...the injuries of friction. The first portions are necessarily useless, and are separated by the hand. When the threads came off uniformly, the cocoons were...temperature of which was nearly that of blood heat, and more than milk warm—thus sustained by a steam-pipe.— The water was thus kept clean, and the... | |
| Perry Fairfax Nursey - 1826 - Liczba stron: 476
...the injuries of friction. The first portions are necessarily useless, and are separated by .the band. When the threads came off uniformly, the cocoons were...threw them into caldrons of water, the temperature of «hieb was neatly that of blood heat, and more than milk warm — thus sustained by л steam-pipe.... | |
| 1826 - Liczba stron: 478
...and are separated by the hand. When the threads came off uniformly, the cocoons were rained MISpended to the hand by their respective threads, and thus...in their turn, threw them into caldrons of water, ihe temperature of which was nearly that of blood heat, and more than milk warm — thus sustained... | |
| 1826 - Liczba stron: 490
...the injuries of friction. The first portions are necessarily useless, and are separated by the hand" When the threads came off uniformly, the cocoons were...suspended to the hand by their respective threads, arid thus handed over to those on the opposite side, who, in their turn, threw them into caldrons of... | |
| Jonathan Holmes Cobb - 1831 - Liczba stron: 86
...injuries of friction. The first portions, necessarily useless, are separated by the hand. When the thread came off uniformly, the cocoons were raised, suspended...the opposite side, who in their turn threw them into cauldrons of water, the temperature of which was nearly that of blood heat, and more than milk1 warm,... | |
| John Clarke (of Philadelphia.) - 1832 - Liczba stron: 86
...first portions, necessarily useless, are separated by the hand. When the thread came offuniformly, the cocoons were raised, suspended to the hand by...the opposite side, who in their turn threw them into cauldrons of water, the temperature of which was nearly that of blood heat and more than milk warm,... | |
| Jonathan Holmes Cobb - 1839 - Liczba stron: 182
...injuries of friction. The first portions, necessarily useless, are separated by the hand. When the thread came off uniformly, the cocoons were raised, suspended...the opposite side, who in their turn threw them into cauldrons of water, the temperature of which was nearly that of blood heat and more than milk warm,... | |
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