7
INDEX BY SUBJECT F OR the convenience of our readers, there appears below a list of page numbers in the respective issues for 1954. Those in the column entitled “General Pages” indicate general pages and those in the column entitled “Proceedings Pages” appeared in the Proceedings of the American Association of Textile Chemists and Colorists. The presence of the letter “P” before the page number any- where in this index indicates that the material appeared in AATCC Proceedings. Date of General Proceedings Issue No. Pa(jes Pages 17-32 P I-P I 6 January 18 ........................ 2 33-60 P39-P52 February 1 ...................... 3 61-92 P69-P78 February 15 ................... ................... 4 93-124 PJ01-PI18 March 1 .............................. ................... 5 149-156 P125-P148 March 15 ........................... ................... 6 157-188 P165-P180 March 29 ........................... 7 189-220 PI92-P212 April 12 .............................. ................... 8 221-200 P229-P242 April 2 6 ................................ 9 283-292 P261-P282 May 1 0 ................................ ................... 16* 315-324 P293-P314 May 2 4 ................................ ................... 11 341-356 P325-P340 J une 7 ................................ ................... 12 383-388 P357-P382 June 21 .............................. ................... 13 389-420 P397-P416 445-452 P421-P444 July 19 .............................. 453-484 P461-P478 A ugust 2 ........................... ................... 16 509-516 P485-P508 August 16 ........................ ................... 17 517-548 P 5 2 1- P 5 4 4 August 30 ........................ ................... 18 597-612 P549-PS96 613-644 P617-P634 September 27 ................ ................... 20 673-676 P645-P672 October 11 ........................ ................... 21 701-708 P677-P700 October 25 ........................ 2 2 709-740 P715-P732 November 8 ................... 741-772 P749-P770 November 22 ................... 24 797-804 P773-P796 December 6 ........... 25 805-880 P837-P876 December 20 ................... 897-904 P881-P896 AATCC RESEARCH NEWSLETTER ..............................PI, P70. P230. P294, P358, P422, P486. P588. P646, P716, P840 AATCC Research Symposium ...................................................................... P262. P360 Abraser, An Evaluation of a Tensioniing Device for Use with the Taber (Thomas and W ham ) ....................................................................... P341 Abrasion Resistance of Fabrics when Test Units of Abrasion are Combined with Test Uniiits of Laundering, Dryeleaning and Light, A Preliminary Study of the (Zook and M ack) .............. P61 Absorption of Disperse Dyes by “Dacron-’ Polyester Fiber from Aqueous Baths, Factors Affecting the (Iannarone, Larson and Thomas) ................................................................................................................. P650 Absorption Test, The Use of Metal Tubes in the Launder-Ometer for the Dynamic (Mandikos) .................................................................... ABSTRACTS— Enzyme Action in Desizing ............................................................................... Vat Dye Oxidation: Review of Methods and Reagents ...................... Fluorescent Dyes and the Application of Fluorescence to Textiles Mothproofing Methods and Tests ................................................................. Flammability Hazards of Fabrics ................................................................. Dye Saturation and Dye Compatability .................................................... Aqueous Dyeing of Orion and Dacron ......................................................... Textiles and Rubber .............................................. A Dyer’s Definition of the Term “Fast Dye” ......................................... Garment Dyeing ................................................................... Silicone Resins Add More Pluses to Your Acetate .............................. Applications of Plastic in Textiles ................................................................. The Quantitative Separation of Fiber Mixtures by Flotation. Soiling and Soil Retention in Textile Fibers: Suspending Power of Surfactants ................................................................................................. The Modification of Cellulose by Chemical Means. Customs Nomenclature ................................................................................. Bleaching with Some Peroxygen Chemicals' i ! Watch Out for Dynel! ............................................................................................ Efficiency of Vat-Color Aging Depends on Temperature Control The Effects of the Soaping Aftertreatment on Vat Dyeings Dynel ........................................................................... T ........... The 1 ireproofing of Fabrics with Phosphorous-Resin Compounds Tendering of Wool Goods .................................................................................... Isocyanates and Their Modifying Effects on Other Textile Polymers ................................................................................................................. Wool Research and the Launderer. .............................. Progress in Dyeing the Newer Synthetic Fibers ................... .! .... “Terylene” Polyester Fiber in Canada ...................................................... Microbial Damage to Animal and Vegetable Fibers and Its Idient i fi oaitio n and P rev ent io n ...................................................................... New Problems in Garment Dyeing: Dealing with Unions contain- ing the Man-Made Fibers ................................... Experiments ou the Continuous Dyeing- of Wool, with Special Reference to the Standfast Molten-Metal Technique ................... Moisture Relationships of Wool and Synthetic Fibers ............. Cotton as a Basis for New Textile Fibers ...................... Dynel Characteristics and Processing- ................... A Survey of Dyeing- Above 100°C in Paekag^ Dyeing! Symposium on Textile Printing .............................. The Prod not ion of Printing Rollers by’ Electrodeposition! ! ! ! llie Production of Pictorial Effects in Textile Printing Melange of Vigoureux Printing .............................................. The Production of Metal Screens .............. Doctor Streaks— Their Origin and Prevention ........................ The Flow Properties of Textile Printing Pastes .............. Rheology and the Letterpress Printing Process The Reduction of Vat Dyes in Printing Pastes . . . . . An Investigation of tile Chemieal Reactions Involved in the Use of Sodium Formaklehyde-Sulfoxylate in Textile Printing P402 19 20 20 21 21 22 22 23 23 23 34 34 35 35 35 36 36 37 37 37 38 38 79 79 79 80 80 80 81 81 81 97 97 160 160 160 160 160 160 160 161 161 161 Thiourea Dioxide (Fo rm aminesulfiuic Acid) : A New Reducing Agent ior Textile Printing .................................................................... Fasa-io-Lighit Basie Prints on Viscose Rayon ................................... Control oi Padding Processes by Radioactive Isotope Labelling The Printing Efficiency oi Vat Dyes ...................................................... Dye Transier on Dyeing and Printing ................................................... Developments in the Application of Azoic Dyes in Printing. . Resists under Azoic Dyes .............................................................................. New Developments in the Application of Phllialoeyanines in Textile Printing ........................................................................................... Observations on Textile Printing in the USA .................................. The Advantages and Uses of “Coloray” Spun Dyed Rayon Staple; The Techniques of Using “Coloray”; and The Fastness Properties of “Coloray” ................................................................................. Solution-Dyed Staple ......................................................................................... Some Notes on Wool Bleaching ................................................................... Bleaching Nylon Fabrics; Use of Acid Solutions oi Sodium Chlorite ............................................................ ....................................................... Fluorescent Whitening Agents ........................................................................... Use of Silicones in the Textile Industry ..................................................... New Unshrinkable Wool Finish. Australian Process Uses Nylon The Correlation of Dyeing Methods and Serviceability of Wool. . Brightening Textiles with Fluorescent Compounds .......................... Salt Formation and Air Stability oi Naphthol AS Products .... New Method of Triboelectriciiy ...................................................................... The Effect of Copper in Wool Dyeing ........................................................ Are Orion, Dacron, Dynel, etc, the Dryc*leaner’s Problem Fibers? Man-Made Fiber Data Sheets: A Comprehens.ve Method of Iden - tifying and Differentiating between the Chemical Fibers . .. . Cotton and the Synthetic Fibers ................................................................... The Use oi Microscopy in Textile Dyeing and Finishing .................. Silicones Applied in Textile Processing ..................................................... The “Colloresin” Printing Method ............................................................. Everglaze Chintz and Embossing Effects ................................................ The Development and End Uses of “Orion” .......................................... Absorptiometric Colorimetry in the Textile Laboratory ................ The Mechanical Finishing of Cotton and Rayon Fabrics: A New Use for Isocyanates ........................................................................................... The Use of Sodium Chlorite for Linen Piece Bleaching .................. THPC-Resin Flameprooiing .............................................................................. Some Experiments oil the Overdyeing of Nylon .................................. Studies in the Fundamental Processes of Textile Printing. VI— The Transier of Disperse and Water-Soluble Dyes to Nylon during Steaming .............................................................................................. Dyeing Under “Static Pressure” System .................................................. Striping of Dyed Textiles ................................................................................... Protecting Wool Against Degradation ........................................................ Flammability of Clothing Textiles ............. ............................................... Detergents in Dryeleaning ................................................................................... Mildewproofing of Canvas Products ........................................................... Preparation of Soluble Yarns by the Carboxymethylation of Cotton ...................................................................................................................... Fundamentals of the Dyeing of Oellulosic Fibei\s ............................. New Du Point Vat Print Development Process ........................................ The Application of Identification Tints, wdh Particular Refer- ence io Acetate Rayon Staple ................................................................... The Dyeing of Viscose Rayon at High Temperatures ....................... Thourea Dioxide in Textile Printing .......................................................... Prevention of Soil Redeposition in Textile Cleaning Operations by Proteins and Other Polymeric M aterials .................................. Applications of Silicon Chemicals in Textile Processing .................. Water-Resistant Wool ........................................................................................ Some Causes of Damages to Wool Fibers ............................................. Metal Complex Compounds in Cotton Dyeing ....................................... Surfactants in Textile Processing ................................................................ The Influence of Ultrasonic Waves on Fibers ........................................ Sorbit as a Substitute ior Glycerine in Vat Printing ....................... Determination oi Amino Groups in Polyamides .................................. Reactions of Different A mi nop last Resms Used as Finishes .... Washing Fastness of Wool Dyeings Improved by Modifying Wool Resistance to Microbiological Deterioration of Resin-Treated Cellulosic Fabrics ........................................................................................... Properties and Uses of Courlene ................................................................... Abrasion Damage of Textile Fitiers .........................................- ................. Opportunity for Ramie .............................................................. ......................... The Production and Properties of Solution-Dyed Acetate ............. Studies in the Printing of Terylene Polyester Fiber ....................... Dyeing of Nylon Yarn in Package Form ................................................ Optical and Electron Microscopic Studies of Cotton Fiber Structure ................................................................................................................. Improving the Dyeing Properties of Polyester Fibeis ..................... The Heat Setting of Terylene Polyester Filament Fabrics in Relation to Dyeing and Finishing .......................................................... The Textile Trade and Newer Fibers ........................................................ HydrophLic Synthetic Fibers ........................................................................... Investigations to Determine the Effects of the Washing Tempera- ture and Time and the Concentration of the Washing Agents when Washing by Machine ........................................................................ Textile Fiber Consumption ................................................................................ Fluorescence and Textiles .............. .................................................................. Aerilan—The Acrylic Fiber, and Blends ........................................ The Effect on Wool of Boiling in Aqueous Solutions: L—Solu- tions at pH 1.5-9 with and without Sodium Sullaie .................. Rags and Shoddy ................................................................................................... The Dyeing of Acetate Rayon with Disperse Dyes; 1—Aqueous Solubility and the Influence oi Dispersing Agents; II— The Relation between Aqueous Solubility and Dyeing Properties The Refractive Indices of Textile Fibers ............................................. Direct Dyestuffs ...................................................................................................... A Simple Identification of Thermoplastic Fibers ............................. The Dyeability of Modem Synthetics ........................................................ The Complementary Nature of Fibers from Natural and from Synthetic Polymers .............................................. .. ..................................... Synthetic Fibers in Combination Fabrics ................................................... An Introduction to Continuous Dyeing ..................................................... Affinity Effects during Paddling ......................................... ............. Use of Nylon Yams in Fish Netting ................................................... Peroxide Bleaching of Protein Fibers ........................................................ New Ideas for Crease- and Shrink-Resist Finishing Processes. . Tar Spot Removal from Cotton Fabrics during Finishing . . . . 101 101 101 101 102 102 102 102 102 102 210 210 210 217 217 217 218 218 218 218 248 248 310 310 317 317 317 317 318 318 318 340 340 340 risi* «!' Spoil . mb ) . j jijOdinf - i* nil er,it-"-" * 'inire 'il H (Po! , p,, ' of Jtcbw** ■U ' -d Jv* ^ 1 ifnrWb L aw *1 K bDj-tfif*0 mis. m Lot Com ft* reddlbwit) , r t*. pyein? and • L nmr to1*^ lfUdPresented to C of Deters ® ‘ J, Dreatiff Reporter 347 347 347 348 348 349 349 384 384 385 385 385 380 393 394 394 394 395 395 395 395 390 390 390 447 h ; 447 447 448 448 448 458 458 458 459 459 459 400 400 400 510 510 510 511 511 520 520 520 545 545 545 540 598 015 610 sod 0ftheSnUnri &(Horow itz and finishes for Ten isty M edal to A lellih ON* Medal M ol Chlorine a m of Vat and Direc hflgioa(Panel' .... (folks, Factors Affec ’D wod " Polyester '^hhteti ;ti der Tec 1 'oiuine11 r l1 .Juries inf !V«trv ^ - -* 11 Smheiij Sifts* ae ®*«H l ...... AMERICAN DYESTUFF REPORTER December 20, 19 54

er, it-- * 'il H - AATCC · Absorptiometric Colorimetry in the Textile Laboratory..... The Mechanical Finishing of Cotton and Rayon Fabrics: A New Use for Isocyanates..... The Use

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Page 1: er, it-- * 'il H - AATCC · Absorptiometric Colorimetry in the Textile Laboratory..... The Mechanical Finishing of Cotton and Rayon Fabrics: A New Use for Isocyanates..... The Use

I N D E X B Y S U B J E C T

F O R th e c o n v en ien ce o f o u r re a d e rs , th e re a p p e a rs b e lo w a lis t o f p a g e n u m b e rs in th e re s p e c tiv e is su e s fo r 1 9 5 4 . T h o se in

th e c o lu m n e n ti t le d “ G en era l P a g e s ” in d ic a te g e n e ra l p a g es and th o se in th e c o lu m n e n ti t le d “ P ro ce e d in g s P a g e s ” a p p ea re d in th e P ro ceed in g s o f th e A m erican A sso c ia tio n o f T e x ti le C h em ists andC o lo ris ts .

T h e p resen ce o f th e le t te r “ P ” b e fo re th e p a g e n u m b e r a n y ­w here in th is index in d ic a te s th a t th e m a te r ia l a p p ea re d in AATCC P ro ceed in g s .

D a t e o f G e n e r a l P r o c e e d in g sI s s u e N o . Pa(jes P a g e s

1 7-32 P I - P I 6J a n u a ry 18 ........................ 2 3 3 -6 0 P 3 9 -P 5 2F e b ru a ry 1 ...................... 3 6 1 -9 2 P 6 9 -P 7 8F e b ru a ry 15 ................... ................... 4 9 3 -1 2 4 P J 0 1 - P I 18M arch 1 .............................. ................... 5 1 4 9 -1 5 6 P 1 2 5 -P 1 4 8M arch 15 ........................... ................... 6 1 5 7 -1 8 8 P 1 6 5 - P 1 80M arch 29 ........................... 7 1 8 9 -2 2 0 P I9 2 -P 2 1 2A p ril 12 .............................. ................... 8 2 2 1 -2 0 0 P 2 2 9 -P 2 4 2A pril 2 6 ................................ 9 2 8 3 -2 9 2 P 2 6 1 -P 2 8 2M ay 1 0 ................................ ................... 16* 3 1 5 -3 2 4 P 2 9 3 - P 3 14M ay 2 4 ................................ ................... 11 3 4 1 -3 5 6 P 3 2 5 -P 3 4 0J une 7 ................................ ................... 12 3 8 3 -3 8 8 P 3 5 7 -P 3 8 2J u n e 21 .............................. ................... 13 3 8 9 -4 2 0 P 3 9 7 -P 4 16

4 4 5 -4 5 2 P 4 2 1 -P 4 4 4J u ly 19 .............................. 4 5 3 -4 8 4 P 4 6 1 -P 4 7 8A u g u s t 2 ........................... ................... 16 5 0 9 -5 1 6 P 4 8 5 -P 5 0 8A u g u st 16 ........................ ................... 17 5 1 7 -5 4 8 P 5 2 1-P 5 4 4A u g u st 3 0 ........................ ................... 18 5 9 7 -6 1 2 P 5 4 9 -P S 9 6

6 1 3 -6 4 4 P 6 1 7 -P 6 3 4S ep tem b e r 27 ................ ................... 20 6 7 3 -6 7 6 P 6 4 5 -P 6 7 2O cto b er 11 ........................ ................... 21 7 0 1 -7 0 8 P 6 7 7 -P 7 0 0O ctober 25 ........................ 2 2 7 0 9 -7 4 0 P 7 1 5 -P 7 3 2N o v em b er 8 ................... 7 4 1 -7 7 2 P 7 4 9 -P 7 7 0N o v em b er 22 ................... 24 7 9 7 -8 0 4 P 7 7 3 -P 7 9 6D ecem ber 6 ........... 25 8 0 5 -8 8 0 P 8 3 7 -P 8 7 6D ecem ber 20 ................... 8 9 7 -9 0 4 P 8 8 1 -P 8 9 6

AATCC R E S E A R C H N E W S L E T T E R ..............................P I , P 7 0 . P 2 3 0 .P 2 9 4 , P 3 5 8 , P 4 2 2 , P 4 8 6 . P 5 8 8 . P 6 4 6 , P 7 1 6 , P 8 4 0

AATCC R esea rch S y m p o s iu m ...................................................................... P 2 6 2 . P 3 6 0A b ra se r, An E v a lu a tio n o f a Tensioniing D ev ice fo r U se w ith th e

T a b e r (T h o m a s an d W h a m ) ....................................................................... P 3 4 1A b rasio n R es is tan ce o f F a b r ic s w hen T est U n its o f A b ra s io n a re

C om bined w ith T e s t Uniiits o f L a u n d e rin g , D ry e lean in g an dL ig h t, A P re lim in a ry S tu d y o f th e (Z o o k a n d M a c k ) .............. P 61

A b so rp tio n o f D isp erse D yes by “ D a c ro n -’ P o ly e s te r F ib e r fro m A q u eo u s B a th s , F a c to rs A ffec tin g th e ( Ia n n a ro n e , L a rs o n an d T h o m as) ................................................................................................................. P 6 5 0

A b so rp tio n T es t, T h e U se o f M eta l T u b e s in th e L a u n d e r-O m e te rfo r th e D ynam ic ( M a n d ik o s ) ....................................................................

A BSTRA CTS—E nzym e A c tio n in D e s iz in g ...............................................................................V a t Dye O x id a t io n : R ev iew o f M eth o d s a n d R e a g e n ts ......................F lu o re s c e n t Dyes a n d th e A p p lic a tio n o f F lu o re sc en c e to T e x tile sM o th p ro o fin g M eth o d s and T e s t s .................................................................F la m m a b ili ty H a z a rd s o f F a b r ic s .................................................................Dye S a tu ra tio n an d D ye C o m p a ta b i l i ty ....................................................A queous D yeing o f O rio n a n d D a c r o n .........................................................T e x tile s an d R u b b e r ..............................................A D yer’s D efin itio n o f th e T e rm “ F a s t D ye” .........................................G arm en t D yeing ...................................................................S ilicone R esin s A dd M ore P lu s e s to Y o u r A c e ta te ..............................A p p lic a tio n s o f P la s t ic in T e x t i le s .................................................................T h e Q u a n tita t iv e S e p a ra tio n o f F ib e r M ix tu re s by F lo ta t io n . So iling a n d Soil R e ten tio n in T e x tile F ib e rs : S u sp en d in g P o w e r

o f S u r fa c ta n ts .................................................................................................T h e M o d ifica tio n o f C ellu lo se by C hem ica l M ean s.C ustom s N o m e n c la tu re .................................................................................B leach in g w ith Som e P e ro x y g e n C h e m ic a ls ' i !W atch O ut fo r D y n e l! ............................................................................................E ffic iency o f V a t-C o lo r A g ing D epends on T e m p e ra tu re C o n tro l T h e E ffects o f th e S o ap in g A f te r t r e a tm e n t on V at D yeingsD ynel ........................................................................... T ...........T h e 1 irep ro o fin g o f F a b r ic s w ith P h o s p h o ro u s -R es in C o m poundsT en d erin g o f W ool G o o d s ....................................................................................I so c y an a te s an d T h e ir M o d ify in g E ffec ts on O th e r T e x tile

P o ly m ers .................................................................................................................W ool R esea rch and th e L a u n d e re r . ..............................P ro g re ss in D yeing th e N ew er S y n th e tic F ib e r s .................... ! . . . .“T e ry len e ” P o ly e s te r F ib e r in C a n a d a ......................................................M icrob ia l D am ag e to A n im al an d V eg etab le F ib e rs a n d I ts

Idient i f i oaitio n a n d P re v e n t i o n ......................................................................N ew P ro b le m s in G a rm e n t D yeing : D ealin g w ith U n io n s c o n ta in ­

ing th e M an-M ade F ib e r s ...................................E x p e r im e n ts ou th e C o n tin u o u s Dyeing- o f W ool, w ith S p ec ia l

R eferen ce to th e S ta n d fa s t M o lten -M eta l T e c h n iq u e ...................M o is tu re R e la tio n s h ip s o f W ool a n d S y n th e tic F i b e r s .............C o tton as a B asis f o r N ew T e x tile F ib e r s ......................D ynel C h a ra c te r is tic s an d P ro cessin g -...................A S u rv ey o f Dyeing- A b o v e 1 00°C in P a e k a g ^ D yeing!S y m posium on T e x tile P r in t i n g ..............................

T h e P ro d not ion o f P r in t in g R o lle rs b y ’ E le c tro d e p o s i t io n ! ! ! ! l l i e P ro d u c tio n o f P ic to r ia l E ffe c ts in T e x tile P r in t in gM elange o f V ig o u re u x P r in t i n g ..............................................T h e P ro d u c tio n o f M eta l S c re e n s ..............D octo r S tre a k s — T h e ir O rig in and P r e v e n t io n ........................T h e F lo w P ro p e r tie s o f T e x tile P r in t in g P a s t e s ..............R heo logy and th e L e tte rp re s s P r in t in g P ro cessT h e R ed u c tio n o f V a t D yes in P r in t in g P a s te s . . . . .A n In v e s tig a tio n o f t i le C hem iea l R ea c tio n s In v o lv e d in th e

Use of S o d iu m F o rm a k le h y d e -S u lfo x y la te in T e x tile P r in t in g

P 4 0 2

1920 20 21 21 22 22 23 23 23 343435

353536

3637 373738 38

79797980

80

80

8181819797

1601601 6 016 01 60160160161161

161

T h io u re a D io x id e (F o rm a m in e su lf iu ic A c id ) : A N ew R educingA g e n t i o r T e x tile P r i n t i n g ....................................................................

F asa-io -L ig h it B asie P r in t s o n V iscose R a y o n ...................................C o n tro l o i P a d d in g P ro ce sse s by R ad io a c tiv e I s o to p e L abe llingT h e P r in t in g E ffic ien cy o i V a t D y e s ......................................................D ye T r a n s ie r on D ye ing a n d P r i n t i n g ...................................................D e v e lo p m en ts in th e A p p lic a tio n o f A zo ic D yes in P r in t in g . .R e s is ts u n d e r A zo ic D y e s ..............................................................................N ew D e v e lo p m en ts in th e A p p lic a tio n o f P h ll ia lo e y a n in e s in

T e x tile P r in t in g ...........................................................................................O b se rv a tio n s o n T e x tile P r in t in g in th e U S A ..................................

T h e A d v a n ta g e s a n d U ses o f “C o lo ra y ” S p u n D yed R ayon S ta p le ; T h e T e c h n iq u e s o f U sin g “C o lo ra y ” ; a n d T h e F as tn essP ro p e r tie s o f “C o lo ra y ” .................................................................................

S o lu tio n -D y ed S ta p le .........................................................................................S om e N o te s on W ool B le a c h in g ...................................................................B le ac h in g N y lo n F a b r ic s ; U se o f A cid S o lu t io n s o i Sodium

C h lo r ite ...................................................................................................................F lu o re s c e n t W h ite n in g A g e n ts ...........................................................................U se o f S ilico n es in th e T e x ti le I n d u s t r y .....................................................N ew U n sh r in k a b le W ool F in is h . A u s t r a l ia n P ro ce ss U ses Nylon T h e C o r re la tio n o f D yeing M eth o d s a n d S e rv ic e a b ility o f W ool. .B r ig h te n in g T e x tile s w ith F lu o r e s c e n t C o m p o u n d s ..........................S a lt F o r m a t io n a n d A ir S ta b il i ty o i N a p h th o l A S P r o d u c t s . . . .N ew M e th o d o f T r ib o e le c t r i c i iy ......................................................................T h e E ffec t o f C o p p er in W ool D y e in g ........................................................A re O rion , D acro n , D ynel, e tc , th e D ryc*leaner’s P ro b lem F ibe rs? M an -M ad e F ib e r D a ta S h e e ts : A C o m p re h e n s .v e M eth o d o f Iden ­

t ify in g an d D iff e re n tia tin g b e tw een th e C h em ica l F ib e rs . . . .C o tto n a n d th e S y n th e tic F ib e r s ...................................................................T h e U se o i M ic ro sco p y in T e x tile D yeing a n d F in i s h in g ..................S ilico n es A p p lie d in T e x ti le P r o c e s s in g .....................................................T h e “ C o llo re s in ” P r in t in g M e th o d .............................................................E v e rg la z e C h in tz a n d E m b o ss in g E f fe c t s ................................................T h e D e v e lo p m en t a n d E n d U ses o f “O rio n ” ..........................................A b so rp tio m e tr ic C o lo rim e try in th e T e x ti le L a b o r a to r y ................T h e M ec h a n ic a l F in is h in g o f C o tto n an d R ay o n F a b r ic s : A New

U se fo r I s o c y a n a te s ...........................................................................................T h e U se o f S o d iu m C h lo rite fo r L in en P iece B le a c h in g ..................T H P C -R es in F la m e p ro o iin g ..............................................................................Som e E x p e r im e n ts o il th e O v erd y e in g o f N y lo n ..................................S tu d ie s in th e F u n d a m e n ta l P ro ce sse s o f T e x tile P r in tin g . VI—

T h e T r a n s ie r o f D isp erse an d W a te r-S o lu b le Dyes to Nylond u r in g S te a m in g ..............................................................................................

D yeing U n d e r “ S ta t ic P r e s s u r e ” S y s te m ..................................................S tr ip in g o f D yed T e x t i le s ...................................................................................P r o te c t in g W ool A g a in s t D e g ra d a t io n ........................................................F la m m a b il i ty o f C lo th in g T e x t i le s ............. ...............................................D e te rg en ts in D ry e le a n in g ...................................................................................M ild ew p ro o fin g o f C an v a s P r o d u c ts ...........................................................P r e p a ra t io n o f S o lu b le Y a rn s by th e C arb o x y m e th y la tio n of

C o tto n ......................................................................................................................F u n d a m e n ta ls o f th e D yeing o f O ellu lo s ic F ib e i\s .............................N ew D u Poin t V a t P r in t D e v e lo p m en t P r o c e s s ........................................T h e A p p lic a tio n o f Id e n tif ic a tio n T in ts , w d h P a r t i c u la r R efer­

ence io A c e ta te R a y o n S ta p le ...................................................................T h e D yeing o f V iscose R ay o n a t H ig h T e m p e ra tu re s .......................T h o u re a D iox ide in T e x tile P r in t i n g ..........................................................P re v e n t io n o f Soil R ed e p o s itio n in T e x tile C lean in g O perations

by P ro te in s a n d O th e r P o ly m eric M a te r i a ls ..................................A p p lic a tio n s o f S ilico n C h em ica ls in T e x ti le P ro c e s s in g ..................W a te r -R e s is ta n t W ool ........................................................................................Som e C au ses o f D am ag es to W ool F ib e r s .............................................M e ta l C om plex C o m p o u n d s in C o tto n D y e in g .......................................S u r fa c ta n ts in T e x ti le P r o c e s s in g ................................................................T h e In f lu e n c e o f U ltra s o n ic W aves o n F ib e r s ........................................S o rb it a s a S u b s t i tu te i o r G ly cerin e in V a t P r in t i n g .......................D e te rm in a tio n o i A m in o G ro u p s in P o ly a m id e s ..................................R ea c tio n s o f D iffe ren t A m i no p la s t R esm s U sed as F i n i s h e s . . . . W ash in g F a s tn e s s o f W ool D yeings Im p ro v e d by M od ify ing Wool R e s is ta n c e to M ic ro b io lo g ic a l D e te r io ra tio n o f R esin -T reated

C ellu lo sic F a b r ic s ...........................................................................................P ro p e r tie s an d U ses o f C o u r le n e ...................................................................A b ra s io n D am age o f T e x tile F i t i e r s .........................................- .................O p p o r tu n ity f o r R a m ie .............................................................. .........................T h e P ro d u c tio n a n d P ro p e r t ie s o f S o lu tion -D yed A c e ta te .............S tu d ie s in th e P r in t in g o f T e ry len e P o ly e s te r F i b e r .......................D yeing o f N y lo n Y a rn in P a c k a g e F o r m ................................................O p tic a l an d E le c tro n M icro sco p ic S tu d ies o f C o tton F ib e r

S t r u c tu re .................................................................................................................Im p ro v in g th e D yeing P ro p e r t ie s o f P o ly e s te r F ib e i s .....................T h e H e a t S e ttin g o f T e ry len e P o ly e s te r F ila m e n t F a b ric s in

R e la tio n to D yeing a n d F in i s h in g ..........................................................T h e T e x tile T rad e and N ew er F ib e r s ........................................................H y d ro p h L ic S y n th e tic F i b e r s ...........................................................................I n v e s tig a tio n s to D e te rm in e th e E ffec ts o f th e W ash in g T em pera­

tu r e a n d T im e a n d th e C o n c e n tra tio n o f th e W ash in g A gentsw h e n W a s h in g by M a c h in e ........................................................................

T e x tile F ib e r C o n s u m p t io n ................................................................................F lu o re s c e n c e a n d T e x t i le s ................................................................................A e rila n — T h e A c ry lic F ib e r , a n d B le n d s ........................................T h e E ffe c t on W ool o f B o ilin g in A q u eo u s S o lu tio n s : L— Solu­

tio n s a t p H 1 .5 -9 w ith a n d w ith o u t S o d iu m S u l l a i e ..................R ag s a n d S h o d d y .................................................... ...............................................T h e D yeing o f A c e ta te R ay o n w ith D isperse D yes; 1— A queous

S o lu b i l i ty a n d th e In f lu en c e o i D isp e rs in g A g en ts ; II— The R e la tio n b e tw een A q u e o u s S o lu b ility and D yeing P ro p ertie s

T h e R e f ra c t iv e In d ic e s o f T e x ti le F ib e r s .............................................D irec t D y e s tu ffs ......................................................................................................A S im p le Id e n tif ic a tio n o f T h e rm o p la s tic F ib e r s .............................T h e D y e ab ility o f M o d em S y n th e t ic s ........................................................T h e C o m p le m en ta ry N a tu r e o f F ib e rs fro m N a tu ra l and from

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2 2 8The C re a se -R es is t F i n i s h ............................................................... ......................Nylon in S o c k s : R e la t iv e M e r its o f D iffe ren t C o n s t r u c t i o n s . . . .M ethods o f F ib e r Id e n t i f i c a t io n .............. ......................................................New P ro ce ss f o r P a d -D y e in g Synthetics* w ith A c e ta te D yes! . ! 'Successfu l B leaching- o f T y p e 6 7 0 N y lo n ...............................................Cellulose A c e ta te a s a R a w M a te r ia l f o r R ay o n P ro d u c tio nP roblem s in Dyeing: th e N e w e r S y n th e tic F i b e r s .........................! !The F u tu r e o f th e N a tu r a l F i b e r s ................... ...........................................Cotton F in ish in g - D e v e lo p m e n ts ..............................Some A sp ec ts o f th e C h e m is try and T e x tile U ses o f S e q u e s te r in g

A gents ................................................................................................. . ...........P igm ent P rin tin g - a n d D y e in g ....................................................... ..A dvanced F e a tu r e s o f N ew F u g i t o m e te r ......................................... !F ast S h ad es on S p u n R a y o n s .............. ............................................................The P ro b le m o f C ro c k in g F a s tn e s s o f N a p h th o i D y e in g s. ! ! ! ! !Nylon C olored w ith L a rg e Y a t D ye P a r t i c l e s .........................................V ariab les in P a d d in g P r o c e s s e s ........................................................................New A c e ta te D ev elo p s W o o l-L ik e C r im p ................... ...............................Viscose C o a g u la tio n in R e la tio n to th e P r o d u c t io n o f C rim ped

R ayon F i la m e n ts .......................................................................... .....................Textile I n te r - F ib e r C o m p e titio n 1 9 5 2 .................................................C rease-R esistant, F in is h e s f o r C o tto n a n d L in e n F a b r i c s . . . . . ."M ylar” P o ly e s te r F i b e r ................................................................................Orion A cry lic F i b e r .....................................................Fesin E m u ls io n s as T h ic k e n e r s ..........................................................................P ean u t P ro te in F ib e r : A r d i l ...............................................................................The D yeing o f N y lo n 6 ..........................................................................................P rob lem s o f th e G a rm e n t D y e r a n d F in is h e r , in c lu d in g th e D ye­

ings o f B u t to n s ......................................................................................................A bstracts o f T e c h n ic a l P a p e r s ................................................................................A cceptability and P e rc e p t ib i l i ty o f F a d in g , S tu d ie s on th e ( N o r th ­

ern N ow E n g la n d S e c t’o n ) ...............................................................................Acetate D yeings A f te r t r e a te d w ith C u ra b le R esin s , F a s tn e s s P r o p e r ­

tie s o f (F a ir le ig h D ic k in so n C ollege S tu d e n t C h a p t e r ) ..............A cetate-D ynel-R ayon B lends, D y e in g an d F in i s h in g P ie c e G oods

M ade fro m D y n e l-R ay o n an d ( R i p p n e r ) ...............................................A cetate-Rayon B lends. Im p ro v e d W ash F a s tn e s s o f (S a lv in , Con-

c ia to ri. W alk e r , W a rd a n d F o rtes® ) ....................................................Acetylation o f C o tto n , P r a c t ic a l P a r t i a l (B u ra s , C ooper, K e a tin g

and G o ld th w a it) ................................................................................................Acrylic F ib e r, D y e in g an d F in i s h in g " O rio n ” ( S t e v e n s ) ...................Address o f th e M e d a lis t ( D e r b y ) ..........................................................................ADR A w ard W in n e r to b e A n n o u n c ed a t A n n u a l B a n q u e t, 1 9 5 4 . .ADR A w ard P re s e n te d to C h a r le s A Z ’m m e rm a n , 1 9 5 4 ...................Adsorption o f D e te rg e n t in th e D ye ing P ro c e s s ( F le t t an d H o y t) . .American D yestu ff R e p o r te r A w ard , 1 9 5 3 .................................................Analysis o f T h e S y n th e tic F ib e rs , A Q u a l i ta t iv e (L u n d e g a rd an d

R o seb erry ) ..............................................................................................................Analysis o f W ool A d m ix ed w ith C o tto n a n d V iscose R->yon. C om ­

p arison o f th e S u ifu r ic A cid a n d S o d iu m H y d ro x id e M eth o d sfo r th e (H o ro w itz an d M a n d e l ) ...............................................................

A ntistatic F in ish e s f o r T e x ti le s ( H a y e k ) ....................................................Appel, O lney M edal to b e A w ard ed to W illia m D u n f o r d ...................Apn*l to be 1 1 th O lnev M ed a l R ec in ie n t. W D ..............................................Application o f C h lo rin e a n d T r e a tm e n t o f T e x ti le W as te s

(C h am b erlin ) .........................................................................................................Application o f V a t and D ire c t D yes, S u m m a ry o f a n O p en -F o ru m

DJscussion (P a n e l) ..............................................................................................Aqueous B a th s , F a c to r s A ffe c tin g th e A b so rp tio n o f D isp erse D yes

by " D a c ro n ” P o ly e s te r F ib e r f ro m ( la n n a ro n e , L a rs o n an dT h o m as) ...................................................................................................................

Aspects o f G rease-W ool S co u rin g , P r a c t ic a l ( W o l f r o m ) ......................A tlanta: T h e C o n v en tio n C i ty .............................................................................A tlanta C o n v en tio n E x ceed s 1 6 0 0 , R e g is tr a t io n a t ..............................A uditor’s R e p o r t ............................................................................................................Authors of P a p e rs , N o tic e t o ..........................................P 1 1 8 , P 4 1 6 , P 6 3 4 ,Award, 1953 A m e ric a n D y e stu ff R e p o r t e r ....................................................Backsizing C a rp e ts a n d R u g s ( H a g e r ) ..........................................................Bancroft, T h e D u a l L ife o f E d w a rd ( E d e l s t e in ) .........................................Banquet, 1 9 5 3 A n n u a l ...........................................................................................Baroior L o ad in g Im p ro v e m e n t ( C o le ) ...............................................................Baths, F a c to rs A ffec tin g th e A b s o rp tio n o f D isp e rse D yes b y

"D acro n ” P o ly e s te r F ib e r f r o m A q u e o u s ( l a n n a ro n e , L a rs o nand T h o m a s ) .........................................................................................................

Behavior o f O p tica l B le a c h in g A g e n ts o n Cellulo-sdc M a te r ia ls , T h e( G L ru m a n d P e n n e r ) .............................................................................

Binding P o w e r o f T e x ti le F in i s h in g M a te r ia ls , P ig m e n t (S h a p iro ) Bleaching A g e n ts on C e llu lo s ic M a te r ia ls , T h e B e h a v io r o f O p tic a l

(G la ru m a n d P e n n e r ) ......................................................................................Blends and o th e r F ib e rs f o r C a rp e ts , D y e in g W ool (C la p h a m ) . . Blends, D yeing a n d F in i s h in g P ie c e G oods M ad e f r o m D y n e l-R ay o n

and D y n e l-R ay o n -A ce ta te ( R i p p n e r ) .......................................................Blends, Im p ro v ed W ash F a s tn e s s o f A c e ta te -R a y o n (S a lv in , Con-

c ia to ri, W alk e r , W ard a n d F o r t e s s ) .................................... • • ................Blends o i D acron o r O rion w ith W ool, D ye ing U n io n S h ad es on

(C lem son C ollege S tu d e n t C h a p t e r ) ..................................................Blends o i W ool an d S y n th e tic F ib e i s w ith W a te r -S o lu b le a n d D is­

perse D yes, U n io n D y e in g (N e w Y o rk S e c tio n ) . . . ...........B O D T es ts m th e S tu d y o f T e x ti le W as te s , A C o m p a riso n o f th e

Oxygen C o n su m ed f ro m P e r m a n g a n a te a n d (R h o d e I s la n dSection S u b c o m m itte e o n S tr e a m P o l l u t i o n ) ....................................

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T e x t ilfa s e rn (V o lu m e I I o f P a r t I I — N e u e s te F o rt s c h r L t t e u n d V e rfa h re n in d e r c h e m is c h e n T e c h n o lo g ie d e r T e x t i i i a s e m ) . .

O rgan ic S yn th e se s— A n A n n u a l P u b lic a t io n o f S a t is f a c t o r y M e th o d s f o r th e P r e p a r a t io n o f O r g a n ic C h e m ic a ls ( \ o i u m e32) .............................................................................................

M aleic A n h y d r id e D e r iv a t iv e s — R e a c tio n s o f th e D o u b le B o n d . .Case H is to rie s in C o in m e r ie a l D e v e lo p m e n t ............................................T h e C h e m is itry o f S y n t h e t ic D y e s , V o lu m e I I ............................................E n cy c lo p e d ia o f C h e m ic a l T e c h n o lo g y , V o lu m e 1 0 ’— P e n ta c e n e

to P o ly m e th e n e D y e s ...................................................•■•••_................................Condensed P y r id a z in e a n d P y r a z i n e R in g s (O in n o lin e s , P h t h a la -

fcines, a n d Q u i n o z a l i n e s ) ......................................................................................O rgan ic S yn th e se s , V o lu m e 3 3 ................................................................................Detergency E v a l u a t i o n a n d T e s t i n g ....................................................................T e x tile F ib e r s , Y a r n s a n d F a b r i c s ....................................................................O rganic A n a ly s is , V o lu m e I ......................................................................................A S T M S ta n d a rd s o n S o a p s a n d O t h e r D e te rg e n ts ( w i t h R e la te d

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C h e m ic a l P ro c e ss M a c h in e r y , 2 n d E d i t i o n .................................................T e c h n iq u e o f O rg a n ic C h e m is try . V o lu m e V I I I — In v e s t ig a t io n o f

R a te s and M e c h a n is m s o f R e a c t io n s ....................................................... 2 2 8C h e m ic a l M e th o d s in In d u s t r ia l H y g ie n e ( In te rs c ie n ce M a n u a l

N o . 3 ) . ..................................................................... ....................................... 2 2 8R e p o rts o n th e P ro g re s s o f A p p lie d C h e m is itry , V o lu m e 37

(1 9 5 2 ) .............................................................................................................................. 2 2 8F ib e r M ic ro s c o p y (In te rs c ie n c e M a n u a l N o . 2 ) ..................................... 2 2 8

C a d y E le c te d H o n o r a r y M e m b e r, W il l ia m H a m l i n ..................................... P 3 2 6C A L E N D A R , A A T C C ........................................ P I . P 4 0 . P 7 1 , P 1 0 2 , P 1 2 6 .

P I 6 6 , P 1 9 3 , P 2 3 1 , P 2 6 1 . P 2 9 3 . P 3 5 7 , P 3 9 8 , P 4 2 1 , P 4 6 1 ,P 4 8 7 , P 5 2 1 , P 5 9 1 , P 6 1 8 . P 6 4 7 . P 6 7 7 . P 7 1 5 , P 7 4 9 . P 7 7 3 ,

P 8 3 9 , P 8 8 2C A L E N D A R , G E N E R A L ..................................... 8 3 , P 1 0 2 , 1 5 6 , 1 8 2 , 2 2 0 ,

P 2 6 1 , P 2 9 3 , P 3 2 6 , 3 4 3 , 3 8 6 . 4 1 7 , 4 5 2 , 4 8 4 . 5 1 6 . 5 4 8 , 6 1 2 .6 7 4 , 7 4 0 , 7 7 2 . 8 0 0 , 8 8 0 . 9 0 4

C a le n d e r: A N e w A p p r o a c h to C a le n d e r D e s ig n , T h e M c K ie r n a n -T e r r y M u lt i -P u r p o s e ( W i l k i n s o n ) ............................................................... 2 4 7

C a rp e t S o ilin g (W h it n e y a n d S c h a p p e l ) ............................................................ P 1 4 3C a rp e ts and R u g s , B a c k s iz in g ( H a g e r ) ............................................................ P 1 7 2C a rp e ts , D y e in g W o o l B le n d s and o th e r F ib e r s f o r (C la p h a m ) . . . . P 1 4 1Ca-se H is to n e s o f S tre a m P o llu t io n (W e s te rn N e w E n g la n d S u b ­

c o m m itte e on S tre a m P o l l u t i o n ) ............................................................... P 1 1 2Cellulose* A c e ta te F a b r ic s , A R a p id T e s t f o r G a s -F a d in g R esistan ce

o f D y e d ( F r i e d m a n ) ............................................................................................ 597C e llu lo s ic F a b r ic s , W r in k le -R e s is ta n t F in is h f o r i C o -o k e )....................... P 8 9 1C e llu lo s ic F ib e rs , N e w T e x t i le F ib e r s w it h th e S t r u c tu r a l E le m e n ts

of N a t u r a l ( C o m p t o n ) ......................................................................................... P I 03C e llu lo s ic M a te ria ls , T h e B e h a v io r o f O p tic a l B le a c h in g A g e n ts on

(G l a r u m a n d P e n n e r ) ......................................................................................... P 3 1 0C h a ir m e n o f th e S p o n s o rin g S e ctio n s , G re e tin g s f r o m t h e .................... P 5 5 1C h a ir m e n — S ta n d in g C o m m itte e s o f th e C o u n c i l ..................................... P 5 5 6C h e m .c a l C h a ra c te ris t ic s a n d C o a t in g T e c h n iq u e s ----------- G la ss F ib e rs

(M a r z o c c h i ) ................................................................................................................ P 3 2 9C h e m ic a l S p e cia ltie s , Im p o rta n it N o tic e to M a n u f a c tu re rs o f T e x t i le P 6 3 1 C h e v r e u l ( 1 7 8 6 -1 8 8 9 ) , L e D o y e n des E t u d ia n t s de F r a n c e : M ic h e l

E u g e n e (E d e ls t e in ) ................................................................................................. 8 9 7" C h lo r in a t io n ” P rocesses a n d t h e ir E ffe c t on th e W e a r L i f e of

S h r in k -R e s is ta n t M a te ria ls , T h e N a t u r e o f th e M o d if ic a tio n so f W o o l b y V a r io u s (F r is h m a n a n d H a r r i s ) .....................................

C h lo r in e and T r e a t m e n t o f T e x t i le W a s te s , A p p l ic a t io n o f(C h a m b e r l in ) .......................................................................... • • ■ •.................

C le a n in g , W h ite n e s s R e te n tio n b y S a t in and C re p e L in g e r ie F a b r ic sd u r in g N o r m a l W e a r and ( L i n d s e y ) ......................................................

C L E M S O N C O L L E G E S T U D E N T C H A P T E R —R e p o rt .................................................................................................................... • • •

C o a t in g T e c h n iq u e s a n d C h e m ic a l C h a ra c te ris t ic s -----------G la s s F ib e r s(M a r z o c c h i ) ........................................... ......................... ..........................................

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ro y s o f D iffe re n t C o n s tru c tio n s , A ( P e t z e l ) .....................................C o m p a ris o n of th e O x y g e n C o n s u m e d f r o m th e P e rm a n g a n a te

and B O D T e s ts in th e S tu d y o f T e x t i le W a stes, A (R h o d eIs la n d S e c tio n S u b c o m m itte e on S tre a m P o l l u t i o n ) ....................

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C o n t r o l Processes a n d T e s t M e th o d s , A R e v ie w o f T e x t i le -S h r in k ­age (W a r n e r ) ........................................... ..............................................................

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C O N V E N T I O N , N A T I O N A L ( C H I C A G O ) —A n n u a l B a n q u e t ............................................................................................................ P ii7 8

P re s id e n t 's A d d re s s ( B o n n a r ) ......................................................................... P 2 8 0A m e r ic a n D y e s tu ff R e p o r te r A w a r d ( T h e e l ) ...................................... P 2 8 1A w a r d o f I intersect io iu il C o n te s t P r iz e s ( O ’N e i l ) ............................. P 2 8 1

C o tto n G r o u p :P r a c t ic a l P a r t i a l A c e t y la t io n o f C o tto n (B u r a s , C o o p e r, K e a t ­

ing - ;uwl G o ld t h w a it ) ........................................................................... P 2 0 3T h e B e h a v io r o f O p t ic a l B le a c h in g - A g e n ts o n C e llu lo s ic M a ­

te ria ls ( G la tru m a n d P e n n e r ) ................................................................... P 3 1 0H o s ie r y G r o u p :

C o lo r D e v e lo p m e n t a n d I t s R e la t io n s h ip to F a s h io n (S is s o n ) P 7 6W o o le n a n d W o rs te d S p u n Y a r n in H o s ie r y ( M u n z ) .................... P 2 6 6H o w th e S y s te m o i Y a r n M a n u f a c t u r in g , as W e l l as the

F i b e r ’s P h y s ic a l P ro p e rt ie s , A ffe o t th e C h a ra c te r is t ic s o lY a m ( C a r o n ) P 4 3 8

A N e w M e th o d o f V a t -D y e in g - K n i t G o o d s ( B l u m ) ........................ P 7 1 9Im terse ction ia l C o n t e s t :

T h e E ffe c t o f U r e a -F o r m a ld e h y d e R e s in s on th e L ig h t F a s t ­ness o f D ire c t D y e s (R h o d e Is la n d S e c t i o n ) .................................... P 6

T h e T e a r S tre n g th o l R e s in -T r e a t e d T e x t i le s (P ie d m o n t S ec ­t io n ) ......................................................................................................... P 4 1

R e la t io n s h ip B e tw e e n S t r u c tu r e o f D y e s a n d T h e i r D y e in g C h a ra c te r is t ic s o n H y d r o p h o b ic F ib e r s (N o r t h e r n N e w E n g ­la n d S e c t io n ) ......................................................................................................... P 4 2 6

A S tu d y o f th e E ffe c t o f T e m p e r a t u r e a n d H u m i d it y on th e L i g h t F a s tn e s s o f S y n th e t ic s in th e F a d e -O m e te r ( M i d -W e s t S e c tio n ) ..................................................................................................... P 4 9 7

In v e s t ig a t io n o f S o d iu m S u li'o x y la te f o rm a ld e h y d o as th e P r i ­m a r y R e d u c in g A g e n t in V a t D y e in g (S o u t h C e n t r a l Sec­t io n ) ............................................................... P 5 2 5

U n io u D y e in g B le n d s o f W o o l a n d S y n t h e t ic F ib e r s w it hW a t e r -S o lu b le a n d D is p e rse D ye s (N e w Y o r k S e c t i o n ) . . . . P 6 5 6

L e v e lin g U n e v e n ly D y e d M a t e r ia l (P h i la d e lp h ia S e c t io n ) . . . . P 8 3 9N a t io n a l S tu d e n t C o n te s t :

D y e in g U n io n S h ad es o n B le n d s o f D a c r o n o r O r io n w it h W o o l(C le m s o n C o lle g e S tu d e n t C h a p t e r ) ......................................................... P 4 8

F a s tn e s s P ro p e rt ie s o f A c e ta te D y e in g s A f t e r -t r e a t e d w it h C u ra b le R e s in s (F a i r le ig h D ic k in s o n C o lle g e S tu d e n t C h a p ­t e r ) ............................................................................................................................ P 6 0

O ln o y M e d a l A w a r d :R o la n d E v e r e t t D e r b y . . . T h e M e d a lis t— T h e M a n (S a m p s o n ) P 2 7 1 R o la n d E v e r e t t D e rb y . . . T h e M e d alist-— T h e S c ie n tis t

(L e i t c h ) ................................................................................................................. P 2 7 2P re s e n ta tio n o f M e d a l ( B o n n a r ) ................................................................... P 2 7 3A d d re s s o f th e M e d a lis t ( D e r b y ) ........................................................................ P 2 7 4

■'Science F ib e r s ” G r o u p :L a u n d e r in g P ro p e rt ie s o f th e S cie nce F ib e r s ( J o h n s o n ) ............ P 2 3 9D y n e l “ In n e r S t r u c t u r e ” ( F e ild , S e tte rs tro n i a n d D a v is s o n ) . . P 2 9 6

T e x t i le A u x i l ia r ie s G r o u p :P o ly v in y l P y r r o l id o n e : \ V e rs a tile C o m p o u n d w it h P o te n t ia l

T e x t i le U s e s (H a n s e n , B e r g m a n a n d W h i t w e r ) .......................... P 7 2E m u ls io n P o ly m e r s f o r th e T e x t i le In d u s t r y ( S h a p ir o ) . . . . P 1 3 2A d s o r p t io n o f D e te rg e n t in the D y e in g P ro c e ss ( F l e t t and

H o y t ) .......................................................................................................................... P 3 3 5A n t is ta t ic F in is h e s f o r T e x t i le s ( H a y e k ) ............................................ P 3 6 8

W o o l G r o u p :T h e N a t u r e o f th e M o d if ic a tio n s o f W o o l b y V a r io u s “ C h lo ­

r in a t io n ” P rocesses a n d T h e i r E ffe c t o n th e W e a r L i f e o fS h r in k -R e s is t a n t M a te r ia ls ( F r i s h m a n ) ............................................ P 1 7 4

P r a c t ic a l A s p e c ts o f G re a s e -W o o l S c o u r in g ( W o l f r o m ) ............ P 3 7 2C o o p e r, T h e C o n t r ib u t io n s o f T h o m a s ( E d e l s t e u i ) ................................... 1 81C o rd u ro y s o f D iffe re n t C o n s tru c t io n , A C o m p a ris o n o f P h y s ic a l

P ro p e rt ie s o f L ig h t w e ig h t C o tto n ( P e t z e l ) ............................................ P 4 4 2C o tto n , A n In v e s t ig a t io n o f th e P ro p e rt ie s o f C y a n o e th y la te d

(R h o d e Is la n d S e c tio n ) .................................................................................... P 7 7 4C o tto n a n d R a y o n F a b r ic s , S h r in k a g e in L a u n d e r in g o f ( A A T C C

R e s e a rch C o m m itte e on D im e n s io n a l C h a n g e s ) ................................ P 3 6 4C o tto n a n d V is c o s e R a y o n , C o m p a ris o n o f th e S u lf u r ic A c id and

S o d iu m H y d r o x id e M e th o d s f o r th e A n a ly s is o f W o o l A d ­m ix e d w it h (H o r o w it z a n d M a n d e l ) ....................................................... 6 1 3

C o tto n C o r d u r o y s o f D iffe re n t C o n s tru c tio n s , C o m p a ris o n o f P h y s i ­c a l P ro p e rt ie s o f L i g h t w e ig h t ( P e t z e l ) ................................................. P 4 4 2

C o t t o n -F a b r ic S h r in k a g e a n d Its C o n t r o l ( L a n g ) ...................................... P 4 6 4C o tto n K n d t G o o d s, S t a b i l i ty C o n t r o l o f ( S m i t h ) ......................................... P 4 6 7C o tto n , P r a c t ic a l P a r t ia l A c e t y la t io n o f (B u r a s , C o o p e r, K e a t in g

and G o ld t h w a it ) ..................................................................................................... P 2 0 0C o tto n to P ro d u c e W a t e r R e p e le n cy , T h e U s e o f O c ta d e c y l Is o c y a ­

n a te o n (H a in a la in e n , R e id a n d B e r a r d ) ................................................. 4 5 3C O U N C I L —

O n e H u n d r e d a n d E i g h t y -N i n t h M e e t in g ....................................................... P 4 6O n e H u n d r e d a n d N in td e th M e e t in g .................................................................. P 3 8 0O n e H u n d r e d a n d N i n e t y -F i r s t M e e t in g .......................................................... P 4 0 0O n e H u n d r e d a n d N in e ty -S e c o n d M e e t in g .................................................... P 5 2 4O n e H u n d re d a n d N i n e t y -T h i r d M e e t in g ....................................................... P 7 9 3

C o u n c il, C h a ir m e n — S ta n d in g C o m m itte e s o f t h e ...................................... P 5 5 6C re a s e -R e s is ta n t F in is h e s w it h P o ly m e r ic L a tie e s , M o d if ic a t io n o f

U r e a -F o r m a ld e h y d e a n d M e la m in e -F o r m a ld e h y d e (S o u t h e a s t ­e rn S e c tio n ) ................................................................................................................ P 7 8 0

C re p e L in g e r ie F a b r ic s d u r in g N o r m a l W e a r a n d C le a n in g , W h it e ­ness R e te n t io n b y S a t in a n d ( L i n d s e y ) .................................................... P 7 6 0

C u ra b le R e sin s, F a s tn e s s P ro p e rt ie s o f A c e ta te D y e in g s A f t e r -tre a te d w it h (F a i r le i g h D ic k in s o n C o lle g e S tu d e n t C h a p t e r ) . . P 5 0

C y a n o e th y la te d C o tto n , A n In v e s t ig a t io n o f th e P ro p e rt ie s o f(R h o d e Is la n d S e c t io n ) ....................................................................................... P 7 7 4

D a c ro n o r O r io n w it h W o o l, D y e in g U n io n S h ad es o n B le n d s of(C le m s o n C o lle g e S tu d e n t C h a p t e r ) .......................................................... P 4 S

“ D a c r o n ” P o ly e s te r F ib e r f r o m A q u e o u s B a th s , F a c t o r s A ffe c tin g th e A b s o r p t io n o f D is p e rs e D y e s b y ( Ia n n a r o n e , L a r s o n andT h o m a s ) ....................................................................................................................... P flfin

D e p th ( o r A p p a r e n t S t r e n g t h ) o f D y e in g s a n d “ M o n e y V a lu e ” o fD ye s , T in c t o r ia l S tre n g th ( G o d l o v e ) ....................................................... P 6 8 5

D e rb y , R o la n d E v e r e t t . . . T h e M e d a lis t— T h e M a n (S a m p s o n ) . . P 2 7 1 D e r b y , R o la n d E v e r e t t . . . T h e M e d a lis t— T h e S c ie n tis t ( L e i t c h ) P 2 7 2D e rb y , T e n t h O ln e y M e d a l A w a r d to R o la n d E v e r e t t ............................. P 2 7 ID e te rg e n t E f f ic ie n c y -In t e r p r e t a t io n o f R e fle c ta n ce C u rv e s (B a c o n

a n d S m i t h ) P 6 1 9D etergent, in th e D y e in g P ro c e ss , A d s o r p t io n o f ( F l e t t a n d H o y it ) . P 3 3 5D im e n s io n a l S t a b i l i t y o f V is c o s e R a y o n ( L e a v i t t ) ................................... P 4 7 2D ire c t D ye s , S u m m a r y o f A n O p e n -F o r u m D is c u s s io n o n th e A p ­

p lic a tio n o f V a t a n d (P a n e l ) ........................................................................ P 8 8 3D ire c t D ye s , T h e E ffe c t o f U r e a -F o r m a ld e h y d e Resdns o n th e L i g h t

F a s tn e s s o f (R h o d e Is la n d S e c t io n ) .......................................................... P 6D is p e rse D ye s b y “ D a c r o n ” P o ly e s te r F i b e r f r o m A q u e o u s B a th s .

F a c to r s A ffe c tin g th e A b s o r p t io n o f (Ia n n a r o n e , L a r s o n a nd T h o m a s ) ....................................................................................................................... P 6 5 0

D is p e rs e D ye s , U n io n D y e in g B le n d s o f W o o l a n d S y n th e t ic F ib e rsw it h W a t e r -S o lu b le a n d (N e w Y o r k S e c t i o n ) ............................. .. .

D r y c le a n in g a nd L i g h t . A P r e l im in a r y S t u d y o f T h e A b ra s io n R e s is ta n c e o f F a b r ic s w h e n T e s t U n it s o f A b ra s io n a re C o m - b in e d w it h T e s t U n i t s o f L a u n d e r in g , (Z o o k a n d M a c k ) . . . .

D r y i n g M e d iu m , T h e U s e o f S u p e rh e a te d S te a m as a ( H u n t e r ) . . D u P o n t J a c k s o n L a b o r a t o r y P a c k a g e D y e r , T h e ( B la k e r and

S t r ic k l i n ) .......................................................................................................................D y e A p p l ic a t io n , T h e In f lu e n c e o f T e m p e r a t u r e on V a t - ( F o x ) . . . D y e d C e llu lo s e A c e ta te F a b r ic s , A R a p id T e s t fo r G a s -F a d in g

R e s is ta n ce o f ( F r i e d m a n ) .................................................................................D y e d V isc o se , S p u n - ( W a l m s l e y ) .......................................................... .................D y e h o u s c P ro b le m s , P n e u m a t ic M a n g le S o lve s M a n y ( A m i d o n ) . .D y e in g a n d F i n is h in g “ O r i o n ” A c r y l i c F i b e r (S t e v e n s ) ..........................D y e in g a n d F in is h in g P ie c e G o o d s M a d e f r o m D y n e l-R a y o n and

D y n e l -R a y o n -A c e ta te B le n d s (R i p p n e r ) ................................... .............D y e in g a n d P r in t i n g o f G la s s D e c o r a tiv e F a b r ic s , T h e F in ish in g *

(C a r o s e ll i ) ........................................................................... .......................................D y e in g B le n d s o f W o o l and S y n t h e t ic F ib e r s w it h W a te r-S o lu b le

a n d D is p e rs e D y e s , U n io n (N e w Y o r k S e c tio n ) ...............................D y e in g C h a r a c te r is t ic s o n H y d r o p h o b ic F ib e r s , R e la tio n s h ip B e ­

tw e e n S t r u c t u r e o f D y e s and T h e i r ( N o r t h e r n N e w E n g la n dS e c t io n ) .........................................................................................................................

D y e in g In d u s t r y o f F r a n c e , H o w N a p o le o n A id e d th e E a r ly (E d e l ­s te in ) ...............................................................................................................................

D y e in g K n i t G o o d s , N e w M e th o d o f V a t - ( B l u m ) .....................................D y e in g M e ta liz e d W o o l C o lo rs , N e w N e u t r a l - ( C l a p h a m ) .................D y e in g , N a p h t h o l ( N u t t a l l ) ..................................................................... ................D y e in g o f T e x t i le F ib e r s U n d e r S ta t ic P re s s u re , T h e ( D r i j v e r s ) . . D y e in g P ro c e ss , A d s o r p t io n o f D e te rg e n t in th e ( F l e t t and H o y t ) . .D y e in g , S u b s t r a t u m F o r m in W o o l ( S e t t y ) ................................ .................D y e in g U n io n S h a d e s o n B le n d s o f Da< r o n o r O r io n w it h W o o l

(C le m s o n C o lle g e S tu d e n t C h a p t e r i .........................................................D y e in g W o o l B le n d s and O t h e r F ib e r s f o r C a rp e ts ( C l a p h a m ) . . . . D y e in g s A f t e r tr e a t e d w it h C u ra b le R e s in -. F a s tn e s s P ro p e rtie s o f

A c e ta te (F a i r le i g h D ic k in s o n C o lle g e S tu d e n t C h a p t e r ) ..............D y e in g s a n d “ M o n e y V a lu e ” o l D ye s , T in c t o r ia l S tre n g th , D e p th

( O r A p p a r e n t S t r e n g t h ) o f ( G o d l o v e ) ................................................D y e r , T h e D u P o n t Ja c k s o n L a b o r a t o r y P a c k a g e (B la k e r and

S t r ic k l i n ) ......................................................................................................................D y e r s ’ G u ild s , A L o o k a t t h e E a r l y ( E d e l s t e i n ) ...........................................D ye s— A M is c e lla n y , V a t ( F o x ) .............................................................................D ye s a n d T h e i r D y e in g C h a ra c te r is t ic s o n H y d r o p h o b ic F ib e rs ,

R e la t io n b e tw e e n S t r u c tu r e o f (N o r t h e r n N e w E n g la n dS e c t io n ) .........................................................................................................................

D y e s b y “ D a c r o n ” P o ly e s te r F i b e r f r o m A q u e o u s B a th s , F a c to rs a ffe c tin g th e A b s o r p t io n o f D is p e rs e (Ia n n a r o n e , L a r s o n andT h o m a s ) ........................................................................................................ ..

D ye s, S u m m a r y o f an O p e n -F o r u m D is c u s s io n o n th e A p p lic a t io n ofV a t a n d D ire c t ( P a n e l ) .........................................................................................

D ye s, T h e E ffe c t o f U r e a -F o r m a ld e h y d e R e s in s on th e L i g h t F a s t ­ness o f D ir e c t (R h o d e Is la n d S e c t io n ) ...................................................

D ye s, T in c t o r ia l S tre n g th , D e p th ( o r A p p a r e n t S t r e n g t h ) of D y e ­in g s a n d “ M o n e y V a lu e ” o f ( G o d l o v e ) ...................................................

D ye s, U n io n D y e in g B le n d s o f W o o l a nd S y n th e t ic F ib e rs w it hW a t e r -S o lu b le a n d D is p e rs e ( N e w Y o r k S e c t io n ) .........................

D y e s tu ffs , N e u t r a l P re m e ta liz e d ( W e i d m a n n ) .............................................D y e w o o d s a n d T h e i r A p p l ic a t io n , N a t u r a l ( T i s d a l e ) ...............................D y n a m ic A b s o r p t io n T e s t , T h e U s e o f M e t a l T u b e s in th e L a u n d e r -

O m e te r f o r th e (M a n d i i k o s ) .............................................................................D y n e l “ In n e r S t r u c t u r e ” (F e i ld , S ette rsitro m a n d D a v i s s o n ) ..............D y n e l -R a y o n a n d D y n e l - R a y o n - A cet a te B le n d s , D y e in g a nd F in is h ­

in g P ie ce G o o d s M a d e f r o m ( R i p p n e r ) ...................................................E ffe c t o f U r e a -F o r m a ld e h y d e R e s in s o n th e L i g h t Fa stne ss of

D ir e c t D ye s . T h e (R h o d e Is la n d S e c t i o n ) .............................................E f f lu e n t a n d a S e w a ge P la n t . T e x t i le ( D i c k ) .............................................E le c t r o s t a t ic B e h a v io r o f F a b r ic R e s is t iv it y , O n e C lu e to (T e ix e ir a

a n d E d e ls t e in ) ..........................................................................................................E le m e n ts o f N a t u r a l C e llu lo s ic F ib e r s , N e w T e x t i le F ib e rs w ith

S t r u c t u r a l (C o m p t o n ) ......................................................................................E M P L O Y M E N T R E G I S T E R ...................................P I . P 4 0 , P 1 0 2 , P 1 2 6 ,

P I 6 6 P I 9 3 , P 2 3 1 , P 2 6 1 , P 2 9 3 , P 3 2 6 , P 3 5 7 , P 3 9 8 . P 4 2 1 .P 4 6 1 . P 5 4 0 , P 5 9 1 . P 6 2 2 , P 6 4 7 . P 6 7 7 . P 7 1 7 , P 75 0.

E m u ls io n P o ly m e r s f o r th e T e x t i le In d u s t r y ( S h a p i r o ) ...................E v a l u a t i o n o f a T e n s io n in g D e v ic e f o r U s e w it h th e T a b e r

A b ra s e r , A n (T h o m a s a n d W h a m ) ................................................... ..E x e c u t iv e C o m m itte e a n d C o m m itte e M e m b e rs , A t la n t a C o n v e n tio nE x h i b i t , T h e S o u t h ’s F i r s t W e t P ro ce ss in g - ......................................................E x h ib i t io n , 1 9 5 4 A m e r ic a n T e x t i le M a c h in e r y ..........................................F a b r ic S u rfa c e S*tudy (K r a m m e s a n d M a r e s h ) ..........................................F a c t o r s A f f e c t in g th e A b s o r p t io n o f D is p e rs e D y e s b y “ D a c ro n ’ '

P o ly e s te r F i b e r f r o m A q u e o u s B a th s ( Ia n n a r o n e , L a rs o n andT h o m a s ) ...........................................................................................................

F a d e -O m e te r , A S t u d y o f th e E ffe c t o f T e m p e r a t u r e and H u m id it yo n th e L i g h t F a s tn e s s o f S y n th e tic s i n th e (M id -W e s t S ectio n)

F a d e -O m e te r, N e w R e c o m m e n d e d T e s t C o n d it io n s a n d O p e ra tin gP ra c tic e s f o r L i g h t F a s tn e s s T e s ts in th e ( N o r t o n ) ....................

F a d in g , S tu d ie s on the A c c e p t a b i li t y a n d P e r c e p t ib i l i t y o f ( N o r t h ­e rn N e w E n g la n d S e c t io n ) ...................................................................................

P6o6

P01P23(i

P392P785

597P790

673P409

P209P327

P656

P42tl

33P719P200P178

243P336

98

P48P141

P60

P685

392119

P73«

P426

P660

P883

P0

P085

P656pie:

157

P402P29H

P209

PfiP112

P195

P103

P882P132P341P557P562

221189

P650

P49?

P628

P88")F A I R L E I G H D I C K I N S O N C O L L E G E S T U D E N T C H A P T E R —

R e p o rts .......................................................................... . . . ................ P 4 1 5 . P 7 9 6 . P WF a s h io n , C o lo r D e v e lo p m e n t a n d I t s R e la t io n s h ip to (S is s o n ) . . . . P7oF a s h io n , M a n -M a d e F ib e r s i n ( B o y e r ) .............................................................. P 4 .4F a s tn e s s o f A c e t a te -R a y o n B le n d s , Im p r o v e d W a s h (S a lv in , C on -

e datori, W a lk e r , W ia rd a n d F o r t e s s ) ................................................... .. • P 7 o4F a stn e ss o f D ir e c t D y e s , T h e E ffe c t o f U r e a -F o r m a ld e h yd e Resins

o n th e L i g h t (R h o d e Is la n d S e c t i o n ) ......................................................Fa stn e ss P ro p e rt ie s o f A c e ta te D y e in g s A f t e r tr e a t e d w it h C u ra b le

R e s in s (F a i r le i g h D ic k in s o n C o lle g e S tu d e n t C h a p t e r ) .............. BoF i b e r ’s P h y s ic a l P ro p e rt ie s A ffe o t th e C h a ra c te r is t ic s o f Y a r n , H o w

th e S y s te m o f Y a r n M a n u f a c t u r in g , as w e ll as th e (C a r o n ) . .F ib e r , D y e in g a n d F in i s h i n g “ O r io n ” A c r y l i c ( S t e v e n s ) ......................F ib e r P la c e m e n t ( S c h w a r z ) ......................................................................................F ib e r g la s T e x t i le s , N e w In d u s t r ia l A p p l ic a t io n s o f ( H o r t o n ) . . . - P3«KF ib e r g la s T e x t i le s , S y m p o s iu m o n ........................................................................... P o l lF ib e r s ----------- C h e m ic a l C h a ra c te r is t ic s a n d C o a t in g T e c h n iq u e s , Glass

(M a r z o c e h i ) ........................................................................................................ .. 1F ib e r s , R e la t io n s h ip b e tw e e n S t r u c t u r e o f D y e s a n d T h e i r D ye in g

C h a ra c te r is t ic s o n H y d r o p h o b ic (N o r t h e r n N e w E n g la n d See-t i o n ) ............................................................................................................................... p426

F ib e r s , A Q u a li t a t iv e A n a ly s is o f th e S y n th e t ic (L u n d e g a r d andR o s e b e r r y ) ......................................................................................................................

F ib e r s w it h th e S t r u c t u r a l E le m e n ts o f N a t u r a l C e llu lo s ic F ib e rs .N e w T e x t i le ( C o m p t o n ) .................................................................................... PH>3

F in a n c ia l R e p o rts , S e c re ta ry ’s P71 . P 381 . P717

hftf

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0^ ' tonoleOO

siiooi ....patent Dif&l ■ • •<5jl Applications of

Temperature' ■ jmcwre". Ipd Atonal Content. De >«1 Contest. Wa

of Soil am >toft Agent m V; jjiuod of tit Prop*

Island Sectio in. from the Pro4)' jufroni the Vice P ■ M 13th AATfl .v.fs, New Method -*ij, Stability Cont: -s lodiMon of Cr m Ctsafie-Ettistai s section) ..........

hnatn Resistance o: Combined with I t

of Cotton ifld isarch Committee oi - ' d Properties of t -Jr-Ometer lor die I Tubes in the d! ihmability and tb i Preliminary Stud: is when Test Units - j of Laimdenn? D fames of Direct I

on the (Rhode jj**8 °f Synthetic ** of lanperature

^ Tests in the nons and Operati ■ fobrits During- \ ““•"bSstinji 1™ ^««s Dn- 'ffitwvemem, BarJHJBHologica]

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Dyes—

IV AMERICAN DYESTUFF REPORTER^^— ■MPUb.^qr 20, 1954 2o

Page 4: er, it-- * 'il H - AATCC · Absorptiometric Colorimetry in the Textile Laboratory..... The Mechanical Finishing of Cotton and Rayon Fabrics: A New Use for Isocyanates..... The Use

Finish for Cellulosic Fabrics, Wrinkle-Resistant (Cooke)............... P891Finishes for Textiles, Antistatic (H ayek)......................................... P368Finishes with Polymeric Latices, Modification of Urea-Formalde­

hyde and Melamine-Formaldehyde Crease-Resistant (South­eastern Section) ............................................................................. P780

Finishing-, Dyeing- and Printing of Glass Decorative Fabrics, The(Caroselli) ........................................................................................ P327

Finishing Fabrics, Problems in Resin- (Silver) . .................... .. P697Finishing Materials, The Pigment Binding Power of Textile

(Shapiro) ........................................................................................ P691Finishing “Orion” Acrylic Fiber, Dyeing and (Stevens).................... P409Finishing Pie<*e Goods Made from Dynel-Rayon and Dynel-Rayon-

Acetate Blends. Dyeing and (R ippner)..................................... P209Flammability and the Law (H ager).................................................... P788France, How Napoleon Aided the Early Dyeing Industry of

(Edelstein) .............................. 33Frey Appointed as New Administrative Assistant............................ P127Gas-Fading Resistance of Dyed Celluose Acetate Fabrics, A Rapid

Test for (Friedm an)........................................................................ 597GEORGIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY STUDENT CHAPTER—

Report ..................................................................................................... P314Glass Decorative Fabrics, The Finishing, Dyeing and Printing of

(Caroselli) ........................................................................................ P327Glass Fibers------ Chemical Characteristics and Coating Techniques

(Marzocchi) ................................................................................... P329Grease-Wool Scouring. Practical Aspects of (W olfram )............... P372Greetings from the Chairmen of the Sponsoring Sections............... P55JGuide to Laws and Regulations Regarding Stream Pollution......... P359Guilds, A Look a t the Early Dyers’ (Edelstein)............................... 119Heat Setting Synthetics (E vans)........................................................... P470Highlights of the Past Year (W ood).................................................. 877Historical Notes on the Wet-Processing Industry (Edelstein) . . . .33, 119.

181. 3 15, 517, 712, 897History of a Plant for Treatment of Textile Sewage (Hensehel) . . History of Operations of Textile-Sewrage Plants in Connecticut

(Snow) ..........................................................................................Hooke, The Role of Robert (Edelstein)..............................................Hosiery, Woolen and Worsted Spun Yarn in (M unz)....................Hosts for the 33rd National Convention, Your (Thompson).........HUDSON-MOHAWK SECTION—

Reports ..........................................P52, P194, P138, P507, P677,Humidity on the Light Fastness of Synthetics in the Fade-Ometer,

A Study of the Effect of Temperature and (Mid-West Section) Hydrophobic Fibers. Relationship Between Structure of Dyes and

Their Dyeing Characteristics on (Northern New EnglandSection) ............................................................................................

Index to Patent Digest.............................................................................Industrial Applications of Fiberglas Textiles, New (Horton) . . . . Influence of Temperature on Vat-Dye Application, The (Fox) . . . .“Inner Structure”, Dynel (Feild, Setterstrom and Davisson).........Intersectional Contest, Details o f .........................................................Intersectional Contest, Washington First in 15 th ............................Investigation of Sodium Sulfoxylateformaldehyde as the Primary

Reducing Agent in Vat Dyeing (South Central Section) . . . . Investigation of the Properties of Cyanoethylated Cotton, An

(Rhode Island Section)..................................................................Invitation from the President, An.......................................................Invitation from the Vice President of the Southern Region, An. .Jaooby Elected 13th AATCC President..................................................Knit Goods, New Method of Vat-Dyeing (B lum )............................Knit Goods, Stability Control of Cotton (S m ith )............................Latices, Modification of Urea-Formaldehyde and Melamine-Formal­

dehyde Crease-Resistant Finishes with Polymeric (Southeast­ern Section) ...................... ..................... .....................................

Laundering, Drycleaning and Light, A Preliminary Study of The Abrasion Resistance of Fabrics when Test Units of Abrasionare Combined with Test Unit sof (Zook and M ack)...............

Laundering of Cotton and Rayon Fabrics, Shrinkage in (AATCCResearch Committee on Dimensional Changes)..........................

Laundering Properties of the Science Fibers (Johnson)...............Launder-Ometer for the Dynamic Adsorption Test, The Use of

Metal Tubes in the (M andikos).....................................................Law, Flammability and the (H ager)...................................................Light, A Preliminary Study of The Abrasion Resistance of Fab­

rics when Test Units of Abrasion are Combined with TestUnits of Laundering Dryeleaning and (Zook and M ack).........

Light Fastness of Direct Dyes, The Effect of Urea-FormaldehydeResins on the (Rhode Island Section).......................................

Light Fastness of Synthetics in the Fade-Ometer, A Situdy of the Effect of Temperature and Humidity on the (Mid-West Sec­tion) .................................................................................................

Laght Fastness Tests in the Fade-Ometer, New Recommended TestConditions and Operating Practices for (N orton)....................

Lingerie Fiabrics During- Normal Wear and Cleaning, WhitenessRetention by Satin and Crepe (Lindsey)...................................

List of New Products Developed Since November, 1953, Alpha­betical ...............................................................................................

Loading Improvement, Barotor (Cole)................................................LOWELL TECHNOLOGICAL INSTITUTE STUDENT CHAPTER—

Reports .......................................................................................... P i 94,Luster, Better Mercerizing for Improved (Fourt and Sookne) . . . .Machinery Exhibition, 1954 American Textile.................................Man, Roland Everett Derby . . . The Medalist— The (Sampson) . .Man-Made Fibers in Fashion (B oyer).................................................Mangle Solves Many Dyehouse Problems, Pneumatic (Amidon) . . MoKiernan-Terry Multi-Purpose Calender: A New Approach to

Calender Design (W ilkinson).........................................................Medal, Presentation of (B onnar).........................................................Medalist, Address of the (D erby).........................................................Medalist—The Man, Roland Everett Derby, The (Sam pson).........Medalist—The Scientist, Roland Everett Derby, The (Leitcli) . . . . Melamine-Formaldehyde Crease Resistant Finishes with Polymeric

P114P1112

315P266P560P795

P497

P426P509P330P785P296P572P678P525P774P550P550P881P719P467

P780

61P364P239

P402P788

61

P6

P497

P628P760

805709

P339P304

221P271P494

673

247P273P274

P272

Latices, Modification of Urea-Formaldehyde and (Southeast-P780

MEMBERSHIP APPLICATIONS...........P I, P49, P71, P127, P166,P231, P295, P334, P359, P398, P421, P489, P540. P632,

P647, P750, P792, P839, P882Man, Roland Everett Derby—The Medalist— The (Sampson) . . . . P271Me.eenzing for Improved Luster, Better (Fourt and Soo.viie)......... P30JMetalized Wool Colors, New Neutral-Dyeing (C lapham )............. P200Method of Vat-Dyeing Knit Goods, A New (B lum )...................... P719MID-WEST SECTION—

Reports ................. P180, P194, P338, P541, P542. P677, P715, P882Miscellany, Vat Dyes— A (Fox) P730

Modification of Urea-Formaldehyde and Melamine-Formaldehyde Crease Resistant Finishes with Polymeric Latices (Soutn-eastem Section) ...........................................................................

Modifications of Wool by Various “Chlorination” Processes and their Effect on the Wear Life of Shrink-Resistant MateriaLs.The Nature of the (Frishman and H arris)..............................

“Money Value” of Dyes, Tinctorial Strength, Depth (or ApparentStrength) of Dyeings and (Godlove).......................................

Naphthol Dyeing (Nut ta l l ) ................................................................Napoleon Aided the Early Dyeing Industry of France, How

(Edelstein) ......................................................................................National Convention Committee, Report o f ....................................National Officers of AATCC..................................................................Natural Cellulosic Fibers, New Textile Fibers with the Structural

Elements of (Compton)..............................................................Natural Dyewoods and Their Application (Tisdale)..........................Nature of the Modifications of Wool by Various “Chlorination''

Processes and Their Effect on the Wear Life of Shrink-Resist­ant Materials, The (Frishman and H arris)............................

Neutral-Dyeing Metalized Wool Colors, New (Clapham)...............Neutral Premetalized Dyestuffs (Weidmann)..................................NEW BEDFORD INSTITUTE OF TEXTILES AND TECHNOLOGY

STUDENT CHAPTER—Reports ............................................................................... P16, P180.

NEW YORK SECTION—Reports . . . .PI 48, P282. P359. P478. P506. P632. P649. P715.

NEWS OF THE TRADE................. 24, 55, 82, 121, 151, 183, 220,249, 283, 319, 350, 387. 417, 449, 479, 512, 599. 637, 675.

702, 736. 771, 799NEWSLETTER. AATCC RESEARCH...........P2, P70. P230. P294,

P358, P422, P477, P486, P588. P646. P716, NIAGARA FRONTIER SECTION—

Reports............................................................................. P398. P541.Nominating Committee, Report of th e ...............................................NORTHERN NEW ENGLAND SECTION—

Reports..................... P16, P49, P147, P194, P282, P339. P541.Notes on the Wet-Processing Industry, Historical (EdeLstein)

33, 119. 181, 315. 517, 712,Notice to all Manufacturers of Textile Chemical Specialties, Im­

portant ............................................................................................Notice to Authors of Papers..............................P118, P416, P634,Octadecyl Isocyanate on Cotton to Produce Water Repelleney.

The Use of (Hamalainen, Reid and Berard)..........................Olney Medal Award to Roland Everett Derby, Tenth...................Olney Medal Recipient, W D Appel to be 11th..................................Olney Medal to be Awarded to William Dunford Appel...............Operating Practices for Lighjt Fastness Tests in the Fade-Ometer.

New Recommended Test Condition and (N orton)...................Optical Bleaching Agents on Celulosic Materials, The Behavior of

(Glarum and Penner)....................................................................“Orion” Acrylic Fiber, Dyeing and Finishing (Stevens)...............Orion with Wool, Dyeing Union Shades on Blends of Dacron or

(Clemson College Student Chapter)...........................................Oxygen Consumed from the Permanganate and B O D Tests in the

Study of Textile Wastes, A Comparison of the (Rhode IslandSection Subcommittee on Stream Pollution)............................

PACIFIC NORTHWEST SECTION—Reports ........................................................................................P415,

PACIFIC SOUTHWEST SECTION—Reports..................................................... P148, P282, P340, P541.

Package Dyer, The Du Pont Jackson Laboratory (Blaker andStricklin) ........................................................................................

Papers, Abstracts of Technical................................................................Papers, Notice to Authors o f ................................P118, P416, P634,Past Presidents of AATCC....................................................................PATENT DIGEST—

Pigment Printing—Aqueous Systems Instead of Emulsions Used Pigment Printing— Reaction Products of Polyamines and Cross-

Linking Agents ...............................................................................Bottom Chroming Wool—-Continuous Process................................Ager Divided in Two or More Separate Chambers........................Printing Indigosols— Aromatic Pyridinium Compounds as Dis­

persants ..........................................................................................Astatic Composition—Fatty Acid Partial Esters of Hexiitols. . . . Polyvinyl Acetate Emulsions— Stabilized with Styrene-Butadiene

Copolymers ......................................................................................Concentrated Oil-in-Water Emulsions for Dyeing and Printing. .Apparatus for Producing Moire Designs.........................................Printing Pastes containing Onium Dyes—Organic Acids and

Hydrophilic Assistants Added........................................................Dyeing Nitrogenous Fibers with Metallized Azo Dyes— Nonionic

Subsituted Triazines ....................................................................Improving Fastness of Copper-Treated Dyes—Combined with

Aldehyde Condensates ...................................................................Water-Repellent Fabrics—Metal Soap Dispersions plus Non­

ionic Agents ....................................................................................Dyeing Polyvinyl Fibers with Dispersed Dyes— Swelling plu6

Swelling-Compensating Agents ...................................................Dyeing Dry-Spun Acrylonitrile Fibers— Zinc Chloride Used. . . . Dyeing Chlorine-Containing Acrylic Fibers with Acid Dyes,

Thiourea Added .............................................................................Shrinkproofing Wool— Alcoholic Caustic Combined with Formal­

dehyde Treatment .........................................................................Offset Printing Textiles—Insoluble Basic Dyes in Water-Free

Medium .............................................................................................Shrinkproofing Wool— Acid-Soluble Hydrophobic Melamine-For­

maldehyde Condensates .............................................................. ..Flameproofing Composition—Precipitated Antimony Salt.........Pigment-Printing Emulsion— Special Polyesters as Pigment

Binders ..........................................................................................Dyeing Protein Fibers— Alkylating Pretreatment........................Roller Printing Machine— Transfer Rollers of Variable Width.Pigment Prints—Fixed with Polyisocyanates Derivatives...........Coating Cotton with Viscose— Steam and Wetting Pretreatment Azodyeing Cellulose Acetate—Coupling of Components Improved Shrinkproofing Wool with Solutions of Water-Insoluble Poly­amides ................................................................................ ..................Dyeing Nylon or Cellulose with lee Colors— Guanidine AddedDyeing Synthetic Fibers with Vat Dyes.........................................Pad Dyeing or Printing Cellulose Acetate—Alginate Thickened

Alcoholic Liquids .........................................................................Printing Vat Dyes— Zirconium Salts Added................................Increasing Luster by Mercerizing and Calendering........................Dyeing Vat Dyes— Adding Surface-Active Amino-Amide Salts.. Flameproofing with Nitrogen-Phosphorus-Containing Compounds Durable Finish—Starch, Methylolurea, Thermoplastic Polymers

December AMERICAN DYESTUFF REPORTER

P780

PI74

P685P178

33P795P554

P103157

P174P200P167

P242

P882

. 900

P840

P749P591P596, 897P631P876

453P271P424P578P628P310 P409

P48

P i 30P649P677P392P580P876P555

171718 1953536354546667676868

149149 160150

150163

163163164 164 213213

214214215

215215227227344144

V

Page 5: er, it-- * 'il H - AATCC · Absorptiometric Colorimetry in the Textile Laboratory..... The Mechanical Finishing of Cotton and Rayon Fabrics: A New Use for Isocyanates..... The Use

— Cationic Aminotrtazinc-Formaldehycle

vith Zir-

Animalized CellulojSolutions ......................................................................

Flameproofing—Titanium Chloride Acyl a te .............Durable Finishes—Carboxymethylcellulose Reacted

coni urn Salts .............................. ................... ................... .............Improving* Fastness of Direct Dyeing's—Condensates of Poly­

amides with D i cya n od i am i ne ...........................................................Dyeing: Polyacrylonitrile Fibers—Cuprous—Ion Technique,

Using- Hydroxylamine ....................................................................Dyeing: Polyacrylonitrile Fibers—Lactones or Cyclic Carbonates

‘ Used ....................................................................................................Phosphorus Oxychloride and Ammoniai—Condensed in Solvents

and Used as Flame Retardants......................................................Pigment Printing- Emulsions—Thermoplastic Resins in Aqueous

Phase ................................................................................... ..............Shrinkproofing Wool— Acad Colloidal Solutions of Methylated

Methylolmela,mines Used ...............................................................Optical Bleaching" (Brightening:) Agents— Dihydrocollidine Deri­

vatives ................................................................................................Flame Resistance by Titanium Salts — Partially Dried and

Alkalized .......................................................................................Coloring Embossed Fabrics.................................................................Presetting and Dyeing Tricot Fabrics—Method and Apparatus

Patent Digest, Index to ..........................................................................Perceptibility of Fading Studies on the Acceptability and (North­

ern New England Section)...................................................................PERKIN CENTENNIAL—

Minutes of the January 15, 1954 Meeting of the GeneralCommittee .........................................................................................

Program Completed ..........................................................................Committee Appointments .................................................................Theme Selected ...................................................................................

Perkin, Sir William (Edelstein)...........................................................Permanganate and B O D Tests in the Study of Textile Wastes,

A Comparison of the Oxygen Consumed from the (RhodeIsland Section Subcommittee on Stream Pollu tion)...............

PHILADELPHIA SECTION—Reports........................PIG, P I 17, P I94, P242, P282, P424, P541,

PHILADELPHIA TEXTILE INSTITUTE STUDENT CHAPTER—Report ....................................................................................................

Piece Goods Made from Dynel-Rayon and Dynel-Rayon-AcetateBlends, Dyeing and Finishing (R ippner)...................................

PIEDMONT SECTION—Reports..................... P40, P147, P314, P541, P594. P649, P749,

Pigment Binding Power of Textile Finishing Materials, The(Shapiro) .........................................................................................

Placement, Fiber (Schwarz).................................................................Pneumatic Mangle Solves Many Dyehouse Problems (Amidon) . . . Pollution, Case Histories of Stream (Western New England Sub-

committee on Stream Pollution)..................................................Pollution, Guide to Laws and Regulations Regarding Stream. . . . Polyester Fiber from Aqueous Baths, Factors Affecting the

Absorption of Disperse Dyes by “Dacron” (Iannarone, Larsonand Thomas) ..................................................................................

Polymeric Lattices. Modification of Urea-Formaldehyde and Mela­mine-Formaldehyde Crease-Resistant Finishes with (South­eastern Section) ............................ ...............................................

Polymers for the Textile Industry, Emulsion (Shapiro)...............Polyvinyl Pyrrolidone: A Versatile Compound with Potential Tex­

tile Uses (Bergman, Witwer and Hansen)...................................Premetalized Dyestuffs. Neutral (Weidmann)...................................President. An Invitation from th e ................................ .....................President’s Address (Annual Bannuet)................................................Pressure, The Dyeing of Textile Fibers under Static (Drijvers) . . Planting of Glass Decorative Fabrics, The Finishing, Dyeing and

(Caroselli) .......................................................................................Problems in Resin-Finishing Fabrics (Silver)...................................Processes and Test Methods, A Review of Textile-Shrinkage Con­

trol (Warner) ............................................. ..................................Products Developed since November, 1953, Alphabetical List of

New ...................................................................................................Program, 1954 National Convention....................................................Properties of Cyanoethylated Cotton, An Investigation of (Rhode

Island Section) .......................................................................Qualitative Analysis of the Synthetic Fibers, A (Lundegard ’and

Roseberry) ..............................................................................Rayon and Cotton Fabrics, Shrinkage in Laundering of (AATCC

Research Committee on Dimensional Changes)..........................Rayon Blends. Improved Wash Fastness of Acetate- (Saivin, Con-

ciatori. Walker. Ward and Fortess).........................................Rayon, Dimensional Stability of Viscose (L eavitt)................. ’ ’ ’ ’Rayon-Dynel-Acetate Blends, Dyeing and Finishing Piece Goods

Made from Dynel-Rayon and (R ippner).....................................Reducing Agent in Vait Dyeing. Investigation of Sodium Sul-

foxyl at e-formaldehyde as the Primary (South Central Sec­tion) .......................................................................Reflectance Curves, Detergent Efficiency ------ Interpretation of

(Bacon and Smith) ..................................... ..................................Registration at Atlanta Convention Exceeds 1600..........................Relationship between Structure of Dyes and Their Dyeing Char­

acteristics on Hydrophobic Fibers (Northern New England Section) .........................................Resin-Finishing Fabrics, Problems in ( s i lv e r ) .’ .’ .’ . , . ’ ’ ...............Resins, Fastness Properties of Acetate Dyeings Aftertreat’ed with

Curable (Fairleigh Dickinson College Student Chapter).........Resins on the Light Fastness of Direct Dyes, The Effect of Urea-

Formaldehyde (Rhode Island Section).......................................Resm-Ti-eated Textiles, The Tear Strength of (Piedmont Section) Resistance of Dyed Cellulose Acetate Fabrics, A Rapid Test for

Gas-Fadmg (Friedman) ........................................................Resistivity: One Clue to the Electrostatic Behavior of Fabric

(Teixeira and Edelstein).........................................Review of Textile-Shrinkage Control Processes and Test MethodsA I W mior 1

345346.345

383

383383

445440

440

457035030030

P509

P885

PI 10 P01 8 P048 P7I7

517

P130

P794

P194

P209

P794P691P589

673P112P359

P650

P780P132P72

PI 67 P550 P280

243P327P697P726

805P552

77493

P364P704P472P209

P525P619P079

P426P697

P50P 6

P41

A (Warner)RHODE ISLAND SECTION—

597

P195P726

-----• • • P15, PH 7, P I47, P242, P382, P506, P632,Rugs and Carpets, Backsizing (Hager)Satin and Crepe Lingerie Fabrics during Normal Wear and Clean-

ing. Whiteness Retention by (Lindsey) . . .Science Fibers, Laundering Properties of the (Joh’n’sonj !S (Lekch)land Evere,t Derby • - • The Medalist . . . The

P749P172P760P239

SeourabilUy of Spinning Oil, New Test for (AATCC Committee oil iri oeex’s ol Continuous Wool Scouring)

P272- IT u u X l l l f e I ..................................

Scouring. Pract1 cal Aspects of Grease-Wool (Wolfrom) Secretary s Financial Reports............................................. P 71 pcP381,

P263P372P717

613

P525 PI 43 P751P490

P592

Sewage, History of a Plant lo r Treatment of Textile- (Heuschel)Sewage Plant, Textile Effluent and a (D .ck )....................................Sewage Plants in Connecticut. History of Operations of Textile-

(Snow) ..............................................................................................Shades on Blends of Dacron or Orion with Wool, Dyeing Union

(Clemson College Student C hapter).............................................Shrinkage and its Control, Cotton-Fabric (L ang)............................Shrinkage Control Processes and Test Methods, A Review of

Textile- (Warner) ............................................................... ..Shrinkage-Control Techniques. Wool- (M urphy)..............................Shrinkage in Laundering of Cotton and Rayon Fabrics (AATCC

Research Committee on Dimensional Changes).....................Shrinkage, Symposium o n .....................................................................Shrink-Resistant Materials, The Nature of the Modifications of

Wool by Various “Chlorination” Processes and their Effect onthe Wear Life of (Frishman and H arris)................................

Skin, Soiling of Fabrics in Contact with the (Washington Section) Sodium Hydroxide and Sulfuric Acid Methods for the Analysis of

Wool Admixed with Cotton and Viscose Rayon, Comparison ofthe (Horowitz and M andel)..........................................................

Sodium Sulfoxylate-formaldehyde as the Primaiy Reducing Agent in Vat Dyeing. Investigation of (South Central Section )....

Soiling, Carpet (Whitney and Sehnpnel).............................................Soiling of Fabrics in Contact with the Skin (Washington Section) Solution of Textile Problems. A Statistical Approach to the

(J aeoby) ...........................................................................................SOUTH CENTRAL SECTION—

Reports .........................................................................................PI 17, P632SOUTHEASTERN SECTION—

Reports ................................................................. P148, P314, P541South’s First Wet-Processing Exhibit, The......................................Spinning Oil. A New Test lor Soourability of (AATCC Committee

on Processes of Continuous Wool Scouring)...........................Spun-Dyed Viscose (Wa’msley)............................................................Spun Yarn in Hosiery. Woolen and Worsted (M unz).......................Stability Control of Cotton Knit Goods (S m ith )...........................Stabilitv of Viscose Ravnn, Dimensional (L eavitt).......................Stabilizing Viscose Fabrics (Walmslev)..........................................Static on Textiles, The Occurrence, Behavior and Elimination of

(Fine) ...............................................................................................Static Pressure. The Dyeing of Textile Fibers under (Drijvers) . . Statistical Approach to the Solution of Textile Problems, A

(Jacoby) ..........................................................................................Steam as a Drying Medium, The Use of Superheated (Hunter) . . . .Stream Pollution. Case H’stories of (Western New England Sub­

committee on Stream Pollution).................................................Stream Pollution, Guide to Laws and Regulations Regarding........Strength. Depth (or Apparent Strength) of Dyeing and “Money

Value” of Dyes, Tinctorial (Godlove)......................................Strength of Resin-Treated Textiles, The Tear (Piedmont Section) Structural Elements of Natural Cellulosic Fibers, New Textile

Fibers, with the (Compton).......................................................Structure of Dyes and Their Dyeing Characteristics on Hydro-

phobic Fibers, Relationship between (Northern New EnglandSection) ..........................................................................................

Student Award Committee, Report of th e ........................................Study of the Abrasion Resistance of Fabrics when Test Units of

Abrasion are Combined with Test Units of Laundering, Dry-cleaning and Light. A Preliminary (Zook and M ack)..........

Study of the Effect of Temperature and Humiidty on the Light Fastness of Synthetics in the Fade-Ometer, A (Mid-WestSection) ..........................................................................................

Studies on the Acceptability and Perceptibility of Fading (North­ern New England Section)..................................................................

Substratum Form in Wool Dyeing (Setty )........................................Sulfation, Sulfonation— (Sisley) ........................................................Sulfonation— Sulfation (Sisley) .........................................................Sulfuric Acid and Sodium Hydroxide Methods for the Analysis of

Wool Admixed with Cotton and Viscose Rayon, Comparison ofthe (Horowitz and M andel).........................................................

Summary ol an open-r orum Discussion on the Application of Vatand Direct Dyes (Panel)....................................................................

Superheated Steam as a Drying Medium, The Use of (Hunter) . . .Surface-Active Agents and Their Far-Reaching Influence in the

Textile Industry (Sullivan).........................................................Surface Study, Fabric (Krammes and M aresh)...............................Surfactants in the Textile Industry (Borghetty)...........................Symposium, AATCC Research..................................... ................ P262,Synthetic Fibers, A Qualitative Analysis of the (Lundegard and

Roseberry) ........................................................................................Synthetics, Heat Setting (E vans).....................................................Synthetics in the Fade-Ometer, A Study ol' the Effect of Temperar

ture and Humidity on the Light Fastness of (Mid-West Sec­tion) . . . .................................................................................... .. • •

System of Yam Manufacturing, as well as the Fiber’s Physical Properties, Affect the Characteristics of Yarn, How the(Caron) ........................................................................................

Taber Abraser, An Evaluation of a Tensioning Device l'or Use withthe (Thomas and W ham )........................................................

Tear Strength of Resin-Treated Textiles, The (Piedmont Section)

... iW""P114PI 12P112 • ,i». t«iui

„l MP48

P464 'l‘\ fJf>. With ■i0 )

P726P409P364P404

! j £ mlJ on "

PI 74 ColWP751 w • ‘

Inal O P

Mi**11Ee W ol !llf

P562 .riJONP263P790 - A ComP266 udjaflaleP467P472P412P405

243P490

i.foo. Difflfl*;Spiuj-OHcii A#1

'lion •»!>

P236P112P359P685P41

P103

P426P487

61

P497

;u fOBUTTEE 0!iCM—•i M lorit SESEA2GH 00313

is Laiuuknn0K, CHILES— ja li: Sanflr Soiv S OSBORNE C and m tB a a f-i » it NOREEET, JUB-■jfe oi OeUdoT; I

P88598

741741

613P883P236P331

189P623P300

93P470

P497

P438P341P41

TECHNICAL COMMITTEE ON RESEARCH—One Hundred and Seventy-Seventh Meeting- ...............................One Hundred and Seventy-Eighth Meeting ..................................One Hundred and Seventy-Ninth Meeting ....................................One Hundred and Eightieth Meeting ........................................ .

Temperature and Humidity on the Light Fastness ol Synthetics in the Fade-Ometer. A Study of the Effect of (Mid-West Sections)

Temperature on Vat-Dye Application, The Influence of (Fox) . . . . Tensioning Device for Use with the Taber Abraser, An Evaluation

of a (Thomas and W ham )..........................................................Test Conditions and Operating Practices for lig h t Fastness Tests

in the Fade-Ometer, New Recommended (N orton)..............Test for Gas-Fading Resistance of Dyed Cellulose Acetate Fabrics,

A Rapid (Friedm an).....................................................................Test for Scourability of Spinning Oil, New (AATOC Committee

on Processes of Continuous Wool Scouring).............................Test Methods, A Review of Textile-Shrinkage Control Processes

and (Warner) ...............................................................................Test, The Use of Metal Tubes in the Launder-Ometer for the

Dynamic Absorption (M andikos)...............................................Test Units of Abrasion are Combined with Test Units of Launder­

ing, Dryeleaning and Light, A Preliminary' Study of the Abrasion Resistance of Fabrics when (Zook and Mack) . . . .

Tinctorial Strength. Depth (or Apparent Strength) oi Dyeings and “Money Value” of Dyes (Godlove)................................

P3P128P362P488

P497P785P341P028

597

P2C8P720

P402

P61P085

VI AMERICAN DYESTUFF REPORTER December 20, 1954r 20- 1954

Page 6: er, it-- * 'il H - AATCC · Absorptiometric Colorimetry in the Textile Laboratory..... The Mechanical Finishing of Cotton and Rayon Fabrics: A New Use for Isocyanates..... The Use

Treasurer’s Report .......................................... P718Treatment ol Textile Sewage, History of a Plant lo r (Henscheli PI 14 Treatment of Textile Wastes, Application of Chlorine and

t Chamberlin) ................................................................................... 3 9Tubes in the Launder-Ometer for the Dynamic Absorpt on Test.

The Use of Metal iM andikos)...................................................... P402Urea-Formaldehyde and Melamine-Formaldehyde Crease Resistant

Finishes with Polymeric L at ices, Modification of (Souiheast-era Section) ................. P780

Urea-Fo 1 maldehyde Resins on the Light Fastness of Direct Dyes,The Effect of (Rhode Island Section)................................... .. P6

Use of Octadecyl Isocyanate on Cotton to Produce Water Repel-lency, Tlie (Hamalainen, Reid mid B erard)................................. 45:3

Union Dyeing Blends of Wood and Synthetic Fibers with Water-Soluble and Disperse Dyes (New York Section).................... P656

Union Shades on Blends of Dacron or Orion with Wool, Dyeing(Clemson College Student C hapter)............................................. P48

Vat and Direct Dyes, Summary ol an Open-Forum Discussion on theApplicat on of (P an e l).................................................................... P883

Vat-Dye Application, The Influence of Temperature on (Fox) . . . . P785Vat Dyeing. Investigation of Sodium Sulfoxylateformaldehyde as

the Primary Reducing Agent m (South Central Section) . . . . P525Vat-Dyeing Knit Goods, A New Method of (B lunn ........................ P719Vat Dyes— A Miscellany (F o x i........................................................... P730Vice President of the Southern Region, An Invitation from the. . P550Viscose Fabrics. Stabilizing (W almsley)............................................ P412Viscose Rayon. Comparison of the Sulfuric Acid and Sodium

Hydroxide Methods for the Analysis of Wool Admixed withCotton and (Horowitz and M.tndel).............................................. 613

Viscose Rayon. Dimensional Stability of (L eav itt).......................... P472Viscose, Spun-Dyed (W almsley)........................................................... P790Wash Fastness oi Acetate-Rayon Blends, Improved (Salvin, Con-

ciatori. Walker, Ward and F ortess)............................................ P764WASHINGTON SECTION—

R eports............................................P117, P180, PI 94, P282, P715, P749Wastes, A Comparison of the Oxygen Consumed from the Per­

manganate and B O D Tests in the Study of Textile (RhodeIsland Section Subcommittee on Stream Pollu tion)............... P I30

Wastes. Application of Chlorine and Treatment of Textile(Chamberlin) ................................................................................... 389

Water Repellency, The Use of Octadecyl Isocyanate on Cotton toProduce (Hamalainen, Reid and Berard)............................ .. .

Water-Soluble and Disperse Dyes, Union Dyeing Blends of Wooland Synthetic Fibers with (New York Section)................. .. P656

Wear and Cleaning. Whiteness Retention by Satin and Crepe Lin­gerie Fabrics during, Normal (Lindsey)................................ P7bO

Wear Life of Shrink-Resistant Materials, The Nature of the Modi­fications of Wool by Various “Chlorination" Processes andtheir Effect 011 the (Frishman and H arris).............................. P I74

WESTERN NEW ENGLAND SECTION—Reports.................................. P16, P75, P148, P194, P242. P277.

P415. P506. P507, P715, PS82WESTERN NEW YORK SECTION—

(See Niagara Frontier Section)Wet-.Processing Exhibit. The South's F irst......................................... P562Wet-Processing Industry, Historical Notes on the

( Edelstein) .........................................33. 119. 181, 315, 517, 712, 897Whiteness Retention by Satin and Crepe Lingerie

F Dries during Normal Wear and Cleaning (Lindsey)........... P760Wool Admixed with Cotton and Viscose Rayon. Comparison of the

Sulluric Arid and Sodium Hydroxide Methods for the Analysisof (Horowitz and Mandel)............................................................ P613

Wool nd Synthetic Fibers with Water-Soluble and Disperse Dyes.Union Dyeing Blends of (New York Section).......................... P656

Wool fiends ai d Other r ibei s for Carpets, Dyeing (Clapham) . . . . P141Wool by Various “Chlorination” Processes and their Effect on the

Wear Lite of Shrink-Resistant Materials, The Nature of theModifications of (Frishman and H arris).................................... P174

Wool Colors, New Neutral-Dyeing Metalized (Clapham)............... P200Wool Dyeing, Substratum Form in (Setty )....................................... 98Wool, Dyeing Union Shades on Blends of Dacron or Orion with.

(Clemson College Student C hapter)............................................. P48Wool-Shrinkage-Control Techniques (M urphy).................................. P469Woolen and Worsted Spun Yarn in Hosiery (M unz)....................... P266Worsted Spun Yarn in Hosiery, Woolens and (M unz)........................ P26GWrinkle-Res stant Finish for Cellu.osic Fabrics (Cooke)............... P891Yarn Manufacturing, as well as the Fiber’s Physical Properties

Affect the Characteristics of yarn. How the System of (Caron) P438Year, Highlights of the Past (Wood)................................................. 87?Zimmerman. 1954 ADR Award Presented to Ch tries L ............... P348

INDEX BY AUTHOR

AATCC COMMITTEE ON PROCESSES OF CONTINUOUS WOOL SCOURING—

New Test for Scourability of Spinning Oil................................... P263AATCC RESEARCH COMMITTEE ON DIMENSIONAL CHANGES—

Shrinkage in Laundering of Cotton and Rayon Fabrics............... P364AMIDON, CHARLES—

Pneumatic Mangle Solves Many Dyehouse Problems................... 373BACON. OSBORNE C and SMITH. EDWARD J—

Detergent Efficiency— Interpretation of Reflectance Curves......... Pd 19BERARD. W NORBERT, HAMALAINEN, CARL and REID. J

DAVID—The Use of Octadecyl Isocyanate on Cotton to Pioduce Wa.er

Repellency .......................................................................................... 453BERGMAN, C A, WITWER. D B and HANSEN, E C—

Polyvinyl Pyrrolidone: A Versatile Compound with PotentialTextile U se s ........................................................................................ P72

BLAKER, R H and STRICKLIN, T W—The Du Pont Jackson Laboratory Package Dyer.......................... 392

BLUM, ROBERT D, JR—A New Method of Vat-Dyeing Knit Goods....................................... P719

BOND, BOYCE C—The Bond Machine................................................................................. P232

BONNAR, J ROBERT—Presentation of Olney M etal.............................................................. P273

BOYER, CAROLINE—Man-Made Fibers in Fashion............................................................. P494

BORGHETTY, HECTOR C—Surfactants in the Textile Industry..................................................

BURAS. EDMUND M. JR. COOPER. ALBERT S, KEATING. ESMOND J and GOLDTHWAIT, CHARLES F—

Practical Partial Acetylation of Cotton..........................................CARON, JOHN B—

How the System of Yarn Manufacturing, as well as the Fiber’sPhysical Properties, Affect the Characteristics of Yarn. . . . P438

CAROSELLI, R F—The Finishing, Dyeing and Planting of Glass Decorative Fabrics P327

CHAMBERLIN, N S—Application of Chlorine and Treatment of Textile Wastes........... 389

CLAPHAM. HARRY F—Dyeing Wool Blends and Other Fibers for Carpets........................ P I41New Neutral-Dyeing Metalized Wool Colors................................... P200

CLEMSON COLLEGE STUDENT CHAPTER—Dyeing Union Shades on Blends of Dacron or Orion with Wool. . P48

COLE. PAUL M—Barotor Loading Improvement.............................................................. *709

COMPTON. JACK—New Textile Fibers with the Structural Elements of Natural

Cellulosic Fibers ............................................................................. P I03CONCIATORI, A B. WALKER, R A. WARD. G C, FORTESS, F and

SALVIN. V S—Improved Wash Fastness of Acetate-Rayon Blends...................... P764

COOKE. T F—Wrinkle-Resistant Finish for Cellulosic F: bries............................... P891

COOPER. ALBERT. S, BURAS. EDMUND M. JR. KEATING, ESMOND J. and GOLDTHWAIT, CHARLES F—

Practical Partial Acetylation of Cotton......................................... P200DAVISSON, C W, SETTERSTROiM, C A and FEILD T A. JR—

Dynel “Inner Structure” ..................................................................... P29J

DERBY. ROLAND E—Address of the Medalist.................................................................... P274

DICK, JOHN B—Textile Effluent and a Sewage P lan t............................................. P112

DRIJVERS, LOUIS—The Dyeing of Textile Fibers under Static Pressure................... 243

EDELSTEIN. SIDNEY M—Historical Notes on the Wet-Processing Industry

I— How Napoleon Aided the Early Dyeing Industry of France 33II— A Look at the Early Dyers’ Guilds................................ 119III— The Contributions of Thomas Cooper......... 181IV— The Role of Robert Hooke.......................... 315V— Sir William Perkin.................................................................. 517VI— The Dual Life of Edward Bancroft................................ 712VII— Le Doyen des Etudiants de France: Michel Eugene

Chevreul (1786-1889) .............................................................. 897EDELSTEIN, SIDNEY M and TEIXEIRA. NEWTON. A—

Resistivity: One Clue to the Electrostatic Behavior of Fabric .. P195EVANS. RICHARD II—

Heat Setting Synthetics (Symposium on Shrinkage)................... P470FAIRLEIGH DICKINSON COLLEGE STUDENT CHAPTER—

Fastness Properties of Acetate Dyeings Aftertreated with CurableResins .............................................................................................. P50

FEILD. T A. JR. SETTERSTROM, C A and DAVISSON. C W—D.vnel “Inner Structure” ................................................................... P296

FINE. RICHARD D—The Occurrence, Behavior and Eliminaition of Static on Textiles P405

FLETT. LAWRENCE and HOYT. L F—Adsorption of Detergent in the Dyeing Process........................ P335

FORTESS. F. SALVIN. V S, CONCIATORI. A B. WALKER.R A and WARD. G C—

Improved Wash Fastness of Acetate-Rayon Blends...................... P764FOURT. LYMAN and SOOKNE, ARNOLD M—

Better Mercerizing for Improved Luster......................................... P304FOX. MAURICE R—

Vat Dyes— A Miscellany..................................................................... P730The Influence of Temperature on Vat-Dye Application............... P785

FRIEDMAN, H MARTIN—A Rapid Test for Gas-Fading Res stance of Dyed Cellulose

Acetate Fabrics .............................................................................. 597FRISHMAN, DANIEL and HARRIS. MILTON—

The Nature of the Modifications of Wool by Various ■Chlorina­tion” Processes and Their Effects on the Wear Life of Shrink -Resistant Materials ....................................................................... P174

GLARUM, S N and PENNER. S E—The Behavior of Optical Bleaching Agents on Cellulosic

Materials .......................................................................................... p310GODLOVE, I H—

Tinctorial Strength, Depth (or Apparent Strength) ol Dyeingsand “Money Value” of Dyes.......................................................... Pt>85

GOLDTHWAIT, CHARLES F. BURAS. EDMOND M. JR. COOPER. ALBERT S and KEATING. ESMOND J—

Practical Partial Acetylation of Cotton............................................. P203HAGER. HERMAN E—

Flammability ar.d the Law.................................................................HAGER, O B—

Backsizing Carpets and Rugs........................ . . . . .HAMALAINEN. CARL. REID. J DAVID and BERARD, W

NORBERT—The Use of Octadecyl Isocyanate on Cotton to Produce Water

Repellency .........................................................................................

December 20, 1954 AMERICAN DYESTUFF REPORTER VI I

Page 7: er, it-- * 'il H - AATCC · Absorptiometric Colorimetry in the Textile Laboratory..... The Mechanical Finishing of Cotton and Rayon Fabrics: A New Use for Isocyanates..... The Use

HANSEN, E C, BERGMAN, C A and WITWElt, D B—Polyvinyl Pyrrolidone: A Versatile Compound with Potential

Textile Uses .....................................................................................HARRIS, MILTON and FRISHMAN, DANIEL—-

The Nature of the Modifications of Wool by Various ‘ Chlorina­tion” Professes and Their Effect on the Wear Life of Shrink- Resistant Materials ........................................................................

HAYEK, MASON—Antistatic Finishes for Textiles.......................................................

HENSOHEL, A N—History of a Plant for Treatment of Textile Sewage...............

HOROWITZ, EMANUEL and MANDEL, JOHN—Comparison of the Sulfuric Acid and Sodium Hydroxide Methods

for the Analysis of Wool Admixed with Cotton and Viscose R ay o n ..................................................................................................

HORTON. RICHARD C—New Industrial Applications of Fibergla-s Textiles........................

HOYT, L F and FLETT, LAWRENCE—Adsorption of Detergent in the Dyeing Process............................

HUNTER, JAMES H—The Use of Superheated Steam as a Drying Medium....................

LA. NN A RONE, J J, LARSON, OLETA S and THOMAS, R J—Factors Affecting the Absorption of Disperse Dyes by “Dacron”

Polyester Fiber from Aqueous Baths.........................................JACOBY, RAYMOND W—

A Statistical Approach to the Solution of Textile Problems. . . . JOHNSON. GEORGE H—

Laundering Properties of the Science Fibers.................................KEATING, ESMOND J. BURAS, EIDMUND M, JR, COOPER.

ALBERT S, and GOLDTHWAIT, CHARLES F—Practical Partial Acetylation of Cotton.........................................

KRAMMES, RAY and MARESH, CHARLES—Fabric Surface Study..........................................................................

LANG, LEONARD S—Cotton-Fabric Shrinkage and its Control (Symposium on Shrink­

age) ....................................................................................................LARSON, OLETA S, IANNARONE, J J and THOMAS. R J —

Factors Affecting the Absorption of Disperse Dyes by “Dacron”Polyester Fiber from Aqueous B aths.........................................

LEAVITT, HERBERT J—Dimensional Stability of Viscose Rayon (Symposium on

Shrinkage) .......................................................................................LEITCH. HAROLD W—

Roland Everett Derby . . . The Medalist-The Scientist...............LINDSEY, CLARICE H—

Whiteness Retention by Satin and Crepe Lingerie Fabrics During Normal Wear and Cleaning..........................................................

LUNDEGARD, MARJORIE and ROSEBERRY, ELIZABETH D—A Qualitative Analysis of the Synthetic Fibers............................

MACK, PAULINE BEERY and ZOOK, MARGARET 0—A Preliminary Study of the Abrasion Resistance of Fabrics when

Test Units of Abrasion are Combined with Tast Units ofLaundering. Drycleaning and L ight.............................................

MANDEL, JOHN and HOROWITZ, EMANUEL—Comparison of the Sulfuric Acid and Sodium Hydroxide Methods

for the Analysis of Wool Admixed with Cotton and ViscoseRayon .............................................................................................

MANDLKOS, GEORGE J—The Use of Metal Tubes in the Launder-Omoter for the Dynamic

Absorption Test ..............................................................................MARESH, CHARLES and KRAMMES, RAY—

Fabric Surface Study.........................................................................MARZOCCHI, ALFRED—

Glass Fibers------ Chemical Characteristics and Coating Tech­niques ---------------------------------------------------------------------------

MID-WEST SECTION—A Study of the Effect of Temperature and Humidity on the

Light Fastness of Synthetics in the Fade-Ometer...................MUNZ, ELWOOD W—

Woolen and Worsted Spun Yarn in Hosiery...................................MURPHY, FRANCIS A—

Wool-Shrinkage-Control Techniques (Symposium on Shrinkage) NEW YORK SECTION—

Union Dyeing Blends of Wool and Synthetic Fibers with Water-Soluble and Disperse Dyes............................................................

NORTHERN NEW ENGLAND SECTION—Relationship between Structure of Dyes and their Dyeing Char­

acteristics on Hydrophobic Fibers.............................................Studies on the Acceptability and Perceptibility of Fading.

NORTON, J E—New Recommended Test Conditions and Operating Practices for

Light Fastness Tests in the Fade-Ometer..................................NUTTALL, ROBERT H—

Naphthol Dyeing . . . .PANEL—

Summary of an Open-Forum Discuss1 on on “The Application of Vat and Direct Dyes” ........................................................

PENNER, S E and GLARUM, S N—The Behavior of Optical Bleaching Agents on Cellulosic

Materials .........................................PETZEL, FLORENCE E—

A Comparison of Physical Properties of Lightweight CottonCurduroys of Different Constructions...............

PIEDMONT SECTION —The Tear Strength of Resin-Treated Textiles............................

REID, J DAVID, HAMALAINEN, CARL and BERARD W NORBERT—

The Use of Octadeeyl Isocyanate on Cotton to Produce W’aterRepellency .......................................

RHODE ISLAND SECTION—The Effect of Urea-Formaldehyde Resdns on the Light Fastness

of Direct Dyes...............................................................An Investigation of the Properties of Cyanoethylated Cotton

RHODE ISLAND SECTION SUBCOMMITTEE ‘ ON STREAM POLLUTION—

A Comparison of the Oxygen Consumed from the Permanganate and B O D Tests in the Study of Textile Wastes...............

P72

PI 74

PM 68

PI 14

613

P330

P336

P236

P650

P49 6

P239

P200

189

1*464

P472

P272

P760

93

61

613

P402

RIPPNER, F C—Dyeing and Finishing Piece Goods Made From Dynel-Rayon and

Dynel-Rayon-Acetate Blends ......................................................... P209ROSEBERRY, ELIZABETH D and LUNDEGARI), MARJORLE—

A Qualitative Analysis of the Synthetic Fibers............................ 93SALVIN', V S, CONCIATORI, A B, WALKER, It A, WARD, G C

and FORTESS, F—Improved Wash Fastness of Acetate-Rayon Blends....................... P764

SAMPSON, ALBERT E—Roland Everett Derby . . . The Medalist-The M an................... P271

SOHAPPEL, J W and WHITNEY, K L—Carpet Soiling .................................................................................... Pi 43

SCHWARZ, E R—Fiber Placement ................................................................................ P589

SETTERSTROM, C A, FETLD, T A, JR and DAVISSON, C W—Dynel “Inner Structure” ..................................................................... P290

SETTY, ANATHA K—Substratum Form in Wool Dyeing.................................................... 98

SHAPIRO, LEONARD—Emulsion Polymers for the Textile Industry................................ P132The Pigment Binding Power of Textile Finishing Materials. . . P691

SILVER, ARNOLD—Problems in Resin-Finishing Fabrics............................................. P697

SISLEY. J P—Sulfonation------ Sulfation ................................................................... 741

SISSON. HELEN—Color Development and Its Relationship to Fashion................... P76

SMITH, EDWARD J and BACON. OSBORNE C—Detergent Efficiency-Interpretation of Reflectance Curves.......... P619

SMITH. IRWIN J—Stability Control of Cotton Knit Goods (Symposium on

Shrinkage) ...................................................................................... P467SNOW, WILLIS J—

History of Operations of Textile-Sewage Plants in Connecticut PI 12 SOOKNE, ARNOLD M and FOURT. LYMAN—

Better Mercerizing for Improved Luster......................................... P304SOUTH CENTRAL SECTION—

Investigation of Sodium Sulfoxylateformaldehyde as the Prim­ary Reducing Agent in Vat Dyeing............................................. P525

SOUTHEASTERN SECTION—Modification of Urea-Formaldehyde and Melamine-Formaldehyde

Crease-Resistant. Finishes with Polymeric Latices.................. P780STEVENS, R F—

Dyeing and Finishing “Orion” Acrylic Fiber................................ P409STRICKLIN. T W and BLAKDR, R H—

The Du Pont Jackson Laboratory Package Dyer....................... 392SULLIVAN, P J—

Surface-Active Agents and Their Far-Reaching Influence in theTextile Industry ........................................................................ P331

TEIXEIRA, NEWTON, A and EDELSTEIN, SIDNEY M—Resistivity: One Clue to the Electrostatic Behavior of Fabric.. P I95

THOMAS, ELIZABETH FLOWERS and WHAM, GEORGE SIMS,JR—

An Evaluation of a Tensioning Device for Use with the TaberAbraser ............................................................................................. 341

THOMAS, R J, LARSON. OLETA S and IANNARONE, J J—Factors Affecting the Absorption of Disperse Dyes by “Dacron”

Polyester Fiber from Aqueous B aths............................................. P650THOMPSON, A R—

Your Hosts for the 33rd National Convention............................... P560189 TISDALE. H R—

Natural Dyewoods and Their Application...................................... 157WALKER. R A, WARD, G C, FORTESS, F, SALVIN, V S, CON-

P329 CIA TORI, A B—Improved Wash Fastness of Acetate Rayon-Blends................... P764

WALMSLEY, L LESLIE—P497 Stabilizing Viscose Fabrics.................................................................. P412

Spun-Dyed Viscose ............................................................................... P790P266 W'ARD, G C. FORTESS, F, SALVIN, V S, CONCIATORI, A B, and

WALKER, R A—p 4y7 Improved Wash Fastness of Acetate-Rayon Blends......................... P704

WARNER, JOHN F—A Review of Textile-Shrinkage Control Processes and Test

Methods .......................................................................................... p726WASHINGTON SECTION—

Soiling of Fa.brics in Contact with the Skin.................................. P751P426 WEIDMAN, CHARLES—P885 Neutral Premetalized Dyestuffs....................................................... PI 67

WENGRAF, PAUL—Patent Digest.................................17, 53, 66, 149, 163, 213, 227,

P628 344, 383, 445, 457. 635WESTERN NEW ENGLAND SUBCOMMITTEE ON STREAM

PI 78 POLLUTION—( Case Histories of Stream Pollution................................................. PI 12WHAM, GEORGE SIMS, JR and THOMAS, ELIZABETH FLOW-

P883 ERS—An Evaluation of a Tensioning Device for Use with the Taber

Abraser ............................................................................................ 341P31 0

P442P4I

453

P 6P774

P130

WHITNEY. K L and SCHAPPEL, J W—Carpet Soiling ...................................................... \ / ........................

WILKINSON, JOHN W—The McKiernan-Terry Multi-Purpose Calender; A New Approach

to Calender Design .......................................................................WITWER, D B, HANSEN, E C and BERGMAN, C A—

Polyvinyl Pyrrolidone: A Versatile Compound with Potential Textile Uses ....................................................................................

PI 43

P247

P72WOLF ROM, R E—

Practical Aspects of Grease-Wool Scouring P372WOOD. P J—

Highlights of the Past Year 877ZOOK, MARGARET O and MACK, PAULINE BERRY—

A Preliminary Study of the Abrasion Resistance of Fabrics when Test Units of Abrasion are Combined with Test Units of Laundering. Drycleaning and L ight.............................................

vm AA^RICAN DYESTUFF REPORTER December 20, 1954