Full text: Safety code for rubber mills and calenders

Housing. 
*No. 158. Government aid to home owning and housing of working people in foreign 
countries. [1914.] 
No. 263. Housing by employers in the United States. [1920.] 
No. 295. Building operations in representative cities in 1920. 
No. 424. Building permits in the principal cities of the United States, 1925. 
Industrial Accidents and Hygiene. 
*No. 104. Lead poisoning in potteries, tile works, and porcelain enameled sanitary 
ware factories. [1912.] 
No. 120. Hygiene of the painters’ trade. [1913.] 
*No. 127. Dangers to workers from dust and fumes, and nrethods of protection. 
[1913.] 
*No. 141. Lead poisoning in thc smelting and refining of lead. [1914.) 
*¥No. 157. Industrial accident statistics. [1915.] J. 
*No. 165. Lead poisoning in the manufacture of storage batteries. [1914.] 
¥No. 179. Industrial poisons used in the rubber industry. [1915.] 
No. 188. Report of British departmental committee on the danger in the use of lead 
in the painting of buildings. [1916.] 
¥No. 201. Report of committee on statistics and compensation-insurance cost of the 
International Association of Industrial Accident Boards and Commis: 
sions. [1916.] 
*No. 207. Causes of death, by occupation. [1917.] 
¥No. 209. Hygiene of the printing trades. [1917.] 
No. 219. Industrial poisons used or produced in the manufacture of explosives. 
[1917.] : 
No. 221. Hours, fatigue, and health in British munition factories. [1917.] 
No. 230. Industrial efficiency and fatigue in British munition factories. [1917.] 
¥No. 231. Mortality from respiratory diseases in dusty trades (inorganic dusts). 
[1918.1 
No. 234. Safety movement in the iron and steel industry, 1907 to 1917. 
¥No. 236. Effects of the air hammer on the hands of stonecutters. [1918.] 
No. 249. Industrial health and efficiency. Final report of British Tealth of 
Munition Workers Committee. [1919.] 
k¥No. 251. Preventable death in the cotton-manufacturing industry. [1919.] 
No. 256. Accidents and accident prevention in machine building. [1919.] 
No. 267. Anthrax as an occupational disease. [1920.] 
No. 276. Standardization of industrial accident statistics. [1920.1] 
No. 280. Industrial poisoning in making coal-tar dyes and dve intermediates. 
[1921.] 
No. 291, Carbon monoxide poisoning. [1921.] 
No. 293. The problem of dust phthisis in the granite-stone industry. [1922.] 
No. 298. Causes and prevention of accidents in the iron and steel industry, 1910 to 
1919. 
No. 306. Occupational hazards and diagnostic signs: A guide to impairments to be 
looked for in hazardous occupations. [1922.] 
No. 339. Statistics of industrial accidents in the United States. [1923.] 
No. 392. Survey of hygienic conditions in the printing trades. [1925.] 
No. 405. Phosphorus necrosis in the manufacture of fireworks and the nreparation 
of phosphorus. [1926.] 
No. 425. Record of industrial accidents in the United States to 1923. 
No. 426. Deaths from lead poisoning. [1926.] . 
No. 427. Health survey of the printing trades, 1922 to 1925. 
No, 428. Proceedings of the Industrial Accident Prevention Conference, held at 
Washington. D. C.. Julv 14-16. 1926. 
Industrial Relations and Labor Conditions. 
No. 237. Industrial unrest in Great Britain. [1917.] 
No. 340. Chinese migrations, with special reference to labor conditions. [1923.] 
No. 349. Industrial relations in the West Coast lumber industry. [1923.] 
No. 361. Labor relations in the Fairmont (WW. Va.) bituminous-coal field. 71924.1 
No. 380. Postwar labor conditions in Germany. [1925.] 
No. 383. Works council movement in Germany. [1925.] 
No. 384. Labor conditions in the shoe industry in Massachusetts, 1920 to 1924. 
No. 399. Labor relations in the lace and lace-curtain industries in the Tinited States. 
1925 1
	        
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