Maritime History of the Great Lakes

Marine Review (Cleveland, OH), May 1915, Advertising, p. 35

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

THE MARINE REVIEW 35 W. I. BABCOCK BABCOCK & PENTON ENGINEERS AND NAVAL ARCHITECTS H. PENTON DESIGNS INSPECTION ESTIMATES SURVEYS SPECIFICATIONS REPORTS CLEVELAND NEW YORK Penton Bldg., 1136 Chestnut av. 17 State St. Cablegram: Curr, Port Arthur Telephone: 1553 North ROBERT CURR SURVEYOR TO LLOYD’S REGISTER OF SHIPPING Plans and Specifications furnished for all types of vessels. tion given to superintending construction and repairs. Instructions on Theoretical and Practical Shipbuilding by Correspondence. The Observatory 28 S. Water St., Port Arthur, Ont. Careful atten- WILLIAM T. DONNELLY Designer of Floating Dry Docks, Steel and Wood PLANS ON HAND FOR DOCKS FROM 2,000 TO 20,000 TONS Electricity applied to Marine Transportation Harbor Improvements Consulting Engineer and Naval Architect. 17 Battery Place NEW YORK ALEXANDER HYND CONSULTING ENGINEER, MARINE ARCHITECT AND SURVEYOR Great Lakes Branch American Bureau of Shipping. Specifi- cations and Designs for Hull and Machinery furnished. Supervision of Construction and Repairs, Damage Surveys, Valuations and Appraisals. Agent for Sturrock Patent Cast Iron Bridge Walls. Telephone Main 822. 872-874 Rockefeller Building CLEVELAND, O. JOHN REID & COMPANY NAVAL ARCHITECTS 17 BATTERY PLACE Offices: NEW YORK London Glasgow Montreal PAUL P. WHITHAM CONSULTING CIVIL ENGINEER Railways, Terminals, Harbors, Docks, Warehouses, Industrial Buildings and Layouts, Grain Elevators, Coal Docks, Freight Hand- ling Equipment and City Planning. Reports, Estimates, Designs and Superintendence. SEATTLE, U. S. A. Offices, 423-24-25 New York Block Phone Elliott 4582 M. C. FURSTENAU CONSULTING MARINE ENGINEER NAVAL ARCHITECT All classes of vessels and machinery designed Tests and surveys made 308 Walnut St. Tel. Lombard 2789A ‘PHILADELPHIA, PA. Every Professional Man Knows The value of the right kind of publicity but few actually apply that knowledge. to their business. The man who constantly keeps his name before the readers of a trade paper that reaches every branch of the industry in which he is interested is the one who prospers. Mr. Marine Architect—Mr. Marine Engineer! in The Marine Review, and you want to attain greater success, an ad. on this page will bring the desired results. You need this service—let’s start something for you in the next issue. Write today for rates. THE MARINE REVIEW :: Lake Shipyard Methods of Steel Construction By ROBERT CURR. It shows, step by step, how to build a vessel from the mold loft floor, the cheapest method of construction. Every piece of plate and shape is taken up and the method of laying off clearly explained. The book is copiously illustrated with hundreds of line drawings and numerous photographs and affords in itself, a liberal education in the art of ship building as practiced on the Great Lakes. $2.00 postpaid to any address. Cleveland, Ohio 105 Penton’s Book News, - If you are not advertising Cleveland, Ohio 107 Please mention THe Martine Review when writing to Advertisers *

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy