Maritime History of the Great Lakes

Marine Review (Cleveland, OH), January 1927, p. 94

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ne ae 94 MARINE REVIEW January, 1927 HAMBURG- AMERICAN LINE WORLD WIDE Passenger Services hoe York to Cherbourg, Southampton and Hamburg. New York and Boston to Cobh (Queenstown) and Hamburg. ¢ FREIGHT SERVICE FREQUENT SAILINGS PROMPT FORWARDING 102 SHIPS 1,108,767 TONS 55 Years’ Experience International Mercantile Marine Company White Star Line American Line Red Star Line Freight Services ; New York to Hamburg direct. Philadelphia, Baltimore and Norfolk to Bremen and amburg. U. S Pacific Coast Ports to Northern Europe. United American Lines, Inc. Atlantic Transport Line Panama Pacific Line General Agents Leyland Line White Star Canadian Service 39 Broadway New York A. C. FETTEROLF, Vice President—Freight Traffic No.1 B’way, New York City; J. D. Roth, G.W. F. A., 327 S. La Salle St., Chicago. FOSTER MARINE BOILERS In use in over 130 vessels of American Merchant Marine. Write for performance data. e e B Philadelphi Dalla Kansas Ci Foster Marine Boiler Corp. Gkicezo San Fratclco Pittsburgh Londons tas. 111 Broadway, N. Y. a Baltimore, Proctor Eng. Co.; Cleveland, R. G. Backus; Charleston and Savannah, Stuart A. Johnson Engineering Company. eee Oldman-Magee Boiler Works, Inc. - TheBookDepartmentof ThePentonPublishing Co. Specializes in Boilers, Tanks, Stacks, Struc- BOOKS FOR THE MARINER tural Work and Castings sa BaSe4 and is prepared to furnish at publishers’ price any technical Boiler Repairing Promptly Attended to Day or Night book in print MARINE WORK ASPECIALTY ELECTRIC WELDING THE PENTON PUBLI SHING co Beek pinks e ept. Works: 36-40 Illinois Street al BUFFALO, N. Y. Penton Bldg., Lakeside Ave. & West 3rd St., Cleveland, O. ee 51 A Hand Book of Practical Shipbuilding By J.D. MacBRIDE COMPLETE handbook on modern steel ship construction. It begins with ship- yard organization, and follows the work through step by step with detailed ex- planations and copious notes on the duties of each worker. The progress of the ship is traced from the time the first keel plate is laid, through the construction of the hull, the launching and fitting out of the propelling machinery and other equipment. Every tool used in'the shipyard is written up in non-technical language which the aver- age mechanic can easily understand. It is a complete work by a practical man dealing entirely with the practical side of shipbuilding, and will enable the ship worker to obtain a firm grasp on the things that are going on around him daily. CONTENTS Shipyard Organization; Division of work; Shipyard Tools; Shipways; Keels; Shell Plating; Frames; Floors; and Longitudinals; Tank Top, Inner Bottom and Peak Tanks; Stem Stern Postand Rudder; Bulkheads and Hatches; Hold Stanch- ions and Foundations; Deck Beams and Plating; Ship Fittings; Joiner Work; Launching; Engine Room and Engines; Boiler Room and Boilers; Propellers; Auxiliary Machinery; Piping Systems; Hull Engineering; Engine Dock Trial; Ship Nomen- clature; A Glossary of Terms and Phrases. 156 ill. 2 folding plates 514 x 734 inches—flexible fabrikoid 246 pages $3.00 in United States and Canada 15s. in all other Countries THE PENTON PUBLISHING COMPANY Book Department Penton Bldg., W. 3rd St. and Lakeside Ave. Cleveland, O. Price, Postpaid } 217 MD Please mention MARINE REVIEW when writing to: Advertisers

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