Patents, 1944-1945
Scope and Contents
This folder contains:
Patented January 11, 1944 – 2,338,960: Carl Ludwig Nottebohm, Weinheim, Baden Germany; Vested in the Alien Property Custodian – Process and Apparatus for the Impregnation of Fiber Fleeces with Binding Agents
Patented January 18, 1944 – 2,339,557: William T. Runals, Akron, Ohio, Assignor to the Firestone Tire & Rubber Company – Drying Apparatus
Patented February 1, 1944 – 2,340,357: Howard A. Young, Westfield, N.J., Assignor to United States Rubber Company – Process for Treating Fabrics
Patented February 15, 1944 – 2,341,885: Frank J. Sowa, Cranford, N.J. – Process for Coating Plastic Materials and the Product Produced
Patented February 29, 1944 – 2,343,090: Joseph Edward Smith, Wilmington, Del., Assignor to E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Company – Treatment of Textiles and Composition Useful Therefor
Patented February 29, 1944 – 2,343, 095: Joseph Edward Smith, Wilmington, Del., Assignor to E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Company – Resin Dispersion Useful in the Textile and Paper Industries
Patented March 7, 1944 – 2,343,415: Frank H. Kaufert, St-Paul, Minn., Assignor to E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Company – Pest Control
Patented April 11, 1944 – 2,346,440: Edward T. Lessig, Silver Lake, and Edward N. Cunningham, Cuayhoga Falls, Ohio, Assignors to the E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Company – Method of Improving the Adhesion of rubber to Fibrous Materials and Product Thereof (2 copies)
Patented April 18, 1944 – 2,347,024: Leo Beer, Philadelphia, Pa. – Impregnating Composition for Textile Materials Patented April 18, 1944 – 2,346,934: Abraham B. Miller, Newark, Del., Assignor to Hercules Powder Company – Impregnated Fibrous Material
Patented May 2, 1944 – 2,348,165: George T. Buchanan, Chicago, Ill. – Coagulant Composition
Patented May 9, 1944 – 2,348,552: Julius G. Little, Wilmington, Del., Assignor to Hercules Powder Company – Textile Fiber and Method of Producing
Patented May 30, 1944 – 2,350,032: Onslow B. Hager, Glenside, Pa, Assignor to Rohm & Haas Company – Delustering Cellulose Ester Fabrics
Patented May 9, 1944 – 2,348,289: Raymond B. Frost, Rutherford, N.J., Assignor to United States Rubber Company – Application of Liquid Treating Material to Strip Material (2 copies)
Patented May 9, 1944 – 2,348,256: Henry L. Hollis, Chicago, Ill – Removable Tire Cover Patented May 16, 1944 – 2,348,865: Robert R. Sterrett, Naugatuck, Conn., Assignor to United States Rubber Company – Latex Composition
Patented May 23, 1944 – 2,349,290: Dwight L. Loughborough, Akron, Ohio, Assignor to the B.F. Goodrich Company – Method of Improving the Adhesion of Nylon to rubber
Patented June 13, 1944 – 2,351,174: William Whitehead, Rye, N.Y. – Coated Material
Patented June 20, 1944 – 2,351,581: Louis H. Bock, Huntingdon Valley, and Alva L. Houk, Philadelphia, Pa., Assignors to Rohm & Haas Company – Stabilization of Cellulosic Fabrics with Oxymethyl Quaternary Salts
Patented June 20, 1944 – 2,351,949: Edmund A. Georgi, Wilmington, Del., Assignor to Hercules Powder Company – Heat-Treated Rosin Size
Patented June 27, 1944 – 2,352,409: Hillary Robinette, Jr., Arlington, Mass., Assignor to Commercial Solvents Corporation – Mercerizing Assistant Patented June 27, 1944 – 2,352,573: William D. Stewart, Akron, Ohio, Assignor to the B.F. Goodrich Company – Method of preserving Latex and Product Thereof
Patented July 4, 1944 – 2,352,796: Earle Davis McLeod, Rumford, Assignor to Arnold Hoffman & Co. – Water-Soluble Biuret Resin and Method for Making the Same
Patented July 4, 1944 – 2,352,836: Kenneth L. Hertel, Knoxville, Tenn., Assignor to University of Tennessee Research Corporation – Method of and Apparatus for Determining Physical Properties of Porous Compressible Materials
Patented July, 4, 1944 – 2,352,835: Kenneth L. Hertel, Knoxville, Tenn., Assignor to University of Tennessee – Apparatus for and Method of Determining Physical Properties of Porous Material
Patented July 4, 1944 – 2,352,707: Charles F. Goldthwait, New Orleans, La., Assignor to Claude R. Wickard, as Secretary go Agriculture of the U.S.A., and his Successors in Office – Cotton Yarn for Water-Pressure Hose
Patented July 4, 1944 – 2,352,747: William Whitehead, Rye, N.Y., Assignor to Celanese Corporation of America – Coating Process (2 copies)
Patented July 4, 1944 – 2,352,738: Robert F. Ruthruff, Chicago, Ill. – Manufacture of Alkali Metal Silicates
Patented July 18, 1944 – 2,353,987: Frederick S. Barlette, Bristol, R.I., Assignor to United States Rubber Company – Liquid Applicator
Patented July 25, 1944 – 2,354,426: Raymond C. Briant, Pittsburg, Pa., Assignor to the Firestone Tire & Rubber Company – Method of Making Composite Articles (2 copies)
Patented August 8, 1944 – 2,355,521: Geza Ganz, London, England – Preparation of Artificial Masses Patented August 8, 1944 – 2,355,265: Louis H. Bock, Huntingdon Valley, and Alva L. Houk, Philadelphia, Pa., Assignors to Rohm & Haas Company – Textile Materials
Patented August 29, 1944 – 2,356,774: Morris D. Marshall, Arlington, Mass, Assignor to Monsanto Chemical Company – Preparation of Sols
Patented September 5, 1944 – 2,357,392: Carleton S. Francis, Jr., Pine Orchard, Conn., Assignor to Sylvania Industrial Corporation – Process for Producing Fibrous Products
Patented September 12, 1944 – 2,358,273: David Aelony, Dayton, Ohio, Assignor to Monsanto Chemical Company – Alkyl Diamides of Aromatic Disulphonic Acids and Products Treated Therewith
Patented September 19, 1944 – 2,358,330: Robert M. Jones, Biddeford, and Paul B. West, Saco, Maine, Assignors to Saco-Lowell Shops – Making Fabrics
Patented September 19, 1944 – 2,358,402: John L. Kurlychek, Orange, N.J., Assignor to United States Rubber Company – Fungicidal Preparations (2 copies)
Patented September 26, 1944 – 2,358,833: Warren M. Smith, Baton rouge, La., and Carroll J. Wilson, Westfield, N.J., Assignors to Standard Oil Development Company – Antioxidant (2 copies)
Patented October 3, 1944 – 2,359,667: Stewart R. Ogilby, Eltingville, Staten Island, N.Y., Assignor to the United States Rubber Company – Method of Treating Aqueous Dispersions of Rubber
Patented October 3, 1944 – 2,359,698: Edwin C. Uhlig, Cranston, R.I., Assignor to United States Rubber Company – Method of Treating Aqueous Dispersions of Rubber
Patented October 24, 1944 – 2,361,270: Lucius Collins, George Anton Slowinske, and Joseph Edward Smith, Wilmington, Del., Assignors to E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Company – Treatment of Textile Fiber with Water Repellency Agents
Patented October 24, 1944 – 2,360,946: Albert Hershberger, Kenmore, N.Y., Assignor to E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Company – Reinforced Rubber Structures (2 copies)
Patented October 31, 1944 – 2,361,527: Frederick S. Bacon, Newton, Mass., Assignor to Monsanto Chemical Company – Method of Uniting Fibrous Materials (2 copies)
Patented October 31, 1944 – 2,361,543: Edwin J. Hart, Cedar Frove, N.J., and Robert T. Armstrong, New York, N.Y., Assignors to United States Rubber Company – Treatment of Rubber (2 copies)
Patented October 31, 1944 – 2,361,830: Oscar Edelstein Hamden, Conn., Assignor to the Pont Lily Company – Water Repellent Textile and Process of Producing the Same (2 copies)
Patented November 14, 1944 – 2,362,479: Carlin F. Gibbs, Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio, Assignor to the B.F. Goodrich Company – Antioxidant for Rubber (2 copies)
Patented November 14, 1944 – 2,362,915: James Hutchinson MacGregor, Bocking, Braintree, England, Assignor to Courtaulds Limited – Process for Improving the Fastness to Washing of Dyed Cellulosic Textile Materials
Patented November 21, 1944 – 2,362,973: Jack t. Cassaday, Stamford, Conn., Assignor to American Cyanamid Company – Noncrystalizing Rosin Size and Method of Making the Same
Patented November 28, 1944 – 2,363,981: Edward T. Lessig, Silver lake, and Edward N. Cunnigham, Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio, Assignors to the B.E. Goodrich Company – Method of Improving the Adhesion of Rubber to Fibrous Materials and Product Thereof (2 copies)
Patented December 5, 1944 – 2,364,391: Harold Schiller, Los Angeles, Calif., Assignor to Socony-Vacuum Oil Company – Treatment of Fabrics with Metallic Soaps (2 copies)
Patented December 19, 1944 – 2,365,402: Robert N. Foster, Anniston, Ala., Assignor to Monsanto Chemical Company – Textile Process and Product
Patented January 2, 1945 – 2,366,347: Henry Edmond Millson, Plainfield, N.J. – Method of Dyeing
Patented January 2, 1945 – 2,366,198: Herbert E. Kresse and Charles F. Dulken, Arlington, N.J. – Apparatus for Treating Yarn
Patented January 30, 1945 – 2,368,386: John P. Tarbox, Philadelphia, Pa., Assignor, by Mesne Assignments, to Industrial Rayon Corporation – Method of and Device for Treating Threads and the Like
Patented January 30, 1945 – 2,368,435: Percy A. Wells, Abington, and Roy W. Riemenschneider, Glenside, Pa., Assignors to Claude R. Wickard, as Secretary of Agriculture of the Unites States of America and his Successors in Office – Antioxidant
Patented February 6, 1945 – 2,368,782: Alfred L. Rummelsburg, Wilmington, Del., Assignor to Hercules Powder Company – Textile Finishing Material
Patented February 6, 1945 – 2,368,648: Charles F. Dulken and Herbert E. Kresse, Arlington, N.J. – Apparatus for Treating Thread
Patented February 20, 1945 – 2,370,031: Charles Graenacher, Riehen, Richard Sallmann, Bottmingen, Otto Albrecht, Munchenstein, and Jost Frei, Basel, Switzerland, Assignors to Society of Chemical Industry – Process for Improving Fibrous Material and the Material Treated by such Process
Patented February 20, 1945 – 2,369,769: Ernest K. Bauer, Meadville, Pa., Assignor to American Viscose Corporation – Apparatus for the Liquid Treatment of Yarn and the Like (2 copies)
Patented February 20, 1945 – 2,370,057: Gerry P. Mack, Jackson Heights, N.Y., Assignor to Advance Solvents & Chemical Corporation – Finishing and Dressing Agents for Fibrous Materials
Patented February 27, 1945 – 2,370,550: Alfred A. Lawrence, Port Chester, N.Y. and Shailer L. Bass, Midland, Mich., Assignors to the Dow Chemical Company – Stiffened Fabrics
Patented March 20, 1945 – 2,371,618: Alden W. Hanson, and William C. Goggin, Midland, Mich., Assignors to the Dow Chemical Company – Preservation of Textile Materials (3 copies)
Patented March 20, 1945 – 2,371,892: John M. Hood, Old Greenwich, Conn., Assignor to American Cyanamid Company – Permanent Finish for Textiles
Patented April 10, 1945 – 2,373,335: Philip T. Paul, Naugatuck, Conn., Assignor to United States Rubber Company – Antioxidants
Patented April 24, 1945 – 2,374,446: Ralph E. Madison, Detroit, Mich., Assignor to Truscon Laboratories, Inc. – Metallic Soap-Resin Solutions
Patented May 1, 1945 – 2,375,089: Earle S. Ebers, Nutley, N.J., Assignor to United States Rubber Company – Rubber Fabric Material
Patented May 8, 1945 – 2,375,261: Joseph T. Taylor, and Karl T. Schaefer, Elisabethon, Tenn., Assignors to North American Rayon corporation – Thread and/or Fabric (2 copies)
Patented May 8, 1945 – 2,375,406: Lyle L. Drown, Detroit, Mich., Assignor to General Motors Corporation – Nonoverfill Device
Patented June 19, 1945 – 2,378,614: Charles Thomas Zahn, Wilmington, Del., Assignor to American Viscose Corporation – Device for Measuring Yarn Friction
Patented June 26, 1945 – 2,379,264: Roger Wallach, Briarcliff Manor, N.Y., Assignor, to Mesne Assignments, to American Viscose Corporation – Process for Producing Potentially Adhesive Textile Fibers
Patented June 26, 1945 – 2,379,294: Chester M. Gooding, Staten Island, N.Y., Assignor, by Mesne Assignments, to the Best Foods Inc. – Process of Inhibiting Growth of Molds (2 copies)
Patented July 10, 1945 – 2,380,003: William Whitehead, Rye, N.Y., Assignor to Celanese Corporation – Textile Product
Patented July 10, 1945 – 2,380,133: Ernst Waltmann and Edgar Wolf, Krefeld, Germany, Assignors to Heberlein Patent Corporation – Process for Rendering Textiles Water-Repellent
Patented July 31, 1945 – 2,380,775: Hans Meyer, Twickenham, England – Compound Fabrics and Process for Producing the Same
Patented August 7, 1945 – 2,381,020: Benjamin G. Wilkes, Wilkingsburg, Pa., and Walter A, Denison, south Charleston, Va., Assignors to Carbide and Carbon Chemicals Corporation – Antistatic Treatment of Vinyl Resin Textiles (2 copies)
Patented August 7, 1945 – 2,381,852: Carroll a. Hochwait, Montgomery County, Ohio, Assignor to Monsanto Chemical Company – Treatment of Textiles (2 copies)
Patented August 14, 1945 – 2,381,863: Paul George Benignus, Belleville, Ill., Assignor to Monsanto Chemical Company – Method of Fungusproofing Textiles (2 copies0
Patented August 28, 1945 – 2,383,505: Malcolm H. Lyle, Johnson City, and Clifton B. Smith, Elisabethon, Tenn., Assignors to North American Rayon Corporation – Yarn Lubrication
Patented September 23, 1945 – 2,256,877: Heinrich Bertsch, Chemnitz, Saxony, Germany, Assignor to American Hyalsol Corporation – Wetting, Penetrating, Foaming, and Dispersing Agent
Patented September 25, 1945 – 2,385,766: Jack T. Thurston, Cos Cob, Conn., Assignor to American Cyanamid Company – Guanamines in Textile Finishing
Patented October 2, 1945 – 2,386,140: Maurice Arthur Thorold Rogers, Blackley, Manchester, England, Assignor to Imperial Chemical Industries Limited – Water-Repellency Agents and Processes of Making and Using the Same
Patented October 2, 1945 – 2,386,141: Maurice Arthur Thorold Rogers, Blackley, Manchester, England, Assignor to Imperial Chemical Industries Limited – Process of Treating Textile Materials
Patented October 2, 1945 – 2,386,144: John B. Rust, Verona, N.J., Assignor to Ellis Foster Company – Textile Sizing Compositions and Process of Making Them
Patented October 9, 1945 – 2,386,259: Francis J. Norton, Schenectady, N.Y., Assignor to General electric Company – Waterproofing treatment of Materials
Patented November 20, 1945 – 2,389,459: Isidore J. Remark and Vaughn V. Wheeler, Akron, Ohio, assignors to the General Tire & Rubber Company – Method and Apparatus for Applying an Adhesive Coating to cord Fabric
Patented November 20, 1945 – 2,389,120: Carl a. Castellan, Wilmington, Del., Assignor to American Viscose Corporation – Textile and Process of Making Same
Patented November 27, 1945: Murray Senkus, Terre Haute, Ind., Assignor to Commercial Solvents Corporation – Surface Active Agents
Patented November 27, 1945 – 2,390,033: James W. Stallings, Haddon Heights, N.J., Assignor to Rohm & Haas Company – Fabric Fire Hose
Dates
- Other: 1944-1945
Extent
From the Collection: 128 Linear Feet : 100 boxes
Language of Materials
From the Collection: English
Repository Details
Part of the Columbus State University Archives and Special Collections Repository
4225 University Ave
Columbus Georgia 31907 United States