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Scientific American Supplement, No. 821, September 26, 1891 by Various
page 18 of 161 (11%)
a second pan with hot tar, reeled out after a time, strewn with sand,
and rolled up again. Another method was to cut clothes lines into
lengths of about fifteen yards, and at a distance of two inches have
knots tied in them. The paper was cut in lengths of ten or fifteen
yards, three pieces of the knotted clothes line were then rolled
between the loose coils of paper, which was then submerged in the tar,
which on account of the knots could penetrate the paper. The paper was
next sanded by permitting its lower surface to pass over dry sand in a
box standing on the floor. A workman rolled off the paper, and with
his hand he strews sand on the upper surface. The rolling taking place
on the edge of a table, by means of a crank, the excess of sand
dropped off.

It is said by this method two workmen, one of which tends to the
rolling and sanding, the other turning the crank, could turn out
eighty rolls per day. This method is still in use. It is useless to
describe the many antiquated methods in vogue in smaller factories,
and it can truthfully be said that nearly all of them are out of date.
It appears to be the fact of almost all inventions that when reduced
to practical use, the arrangements, apparatus, and working methods
employed are generally of the most complicated nature, and time and
experience only will simplify them. This has been also the case with
the methods in the roofing paper industry, which are at present
gradually being reduced to a practical basis. The method gradually
adopted has been described in the preceding. The pan is of a certain
length, whereby it becomes possible to saturate the paper by slowly
drawing it through the heated tar. This is the chief feature. The work
is much simplified thereby and the workmen need not dip their hands
into the tar or soil them with it. The work of impregnating has become
much cleaner and easier, while at the same time the tar can be heated
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