CHAPTER I EVOLUTION OF THE ART OF LEATHER MANUFACTURE CHAPTER IV LEATHER WORKING MACHINERY CHAPTER V PREPARATION OF HIDES AND SKINS FOR TANNING CHAPTER VII THE DRESSING, DYEING, AND FINISHING OF LEATHER Transcriber's note: LEATHER Common Commodities and Each book in crown 8vo, cloth, with many Tea: From Grower to Consumer. By A. Ibbetson. Coffee: From Grower to Consumer. By B. B. Keable. Sugar: Cane and Beet. By Geo. Martineau, C.B. Cotton: From the Raw Material to the Finished Product. By R. J. Peake. Rubber: Production and Utilisation of the Raw Product. By C. Beadle and H. P. Stevens, M.A., Ph.D., F.I.C. Iron and Steel: Their Production and Manufacture. By C. Hood. Silk: Its Production and Manufacture. By Luther Hooper. Tobacco: From Grower to Smoker. By A. E. Tanner. Wool: From the Raw Material to the Finished Product. By J. A. Hunter. Coal: Its Origin, Method of Working, and Preparation for the Market. By Francis H. Wilson, M.Inst.M.E. Linen: From the Field to the Finished Product. By Alfred S. Moore. Timber: From the Forest to its Use in Commerce. By William Bullock. Clays and Clay Products. By A. B. Searle. Leather: From the Raw Material to the Finished Product. By K. J. Adcock. Oils: Animal, Vegetable, Essential, and Mineral. By C. Ainsworth Mitchell, B.A., F.I.C. Wheat and its Products. By A. Millar. Copper: From the Ore to the Metal. By H. K. Picard, Assoc. Royal School of Mines, Mem. Inst. of Min. and Met. Paper: Its History, Sources, and Production. By H. A. Maddox. Glass and Glass Manufacture. By Percival Marson. Soap: Its Composition, Manufacture, and Properties. By William H. Simmons. The Motor Industry. By Horace Wyatt, B.A. The Boot and Shoe Industry. By J. S. Harding. Gums and Resins. By Ernest J. Parry. Furniture. By H. E. Binstead. Other Volumes in preparation. PITMAN'S COMMON COMMODITIES LEATHER |