National Glass Co. v. United States Glass Co.

147 F. 254, 1906 U.S. App. LEXIS 4885
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Pennsylvania
DecidedAugust 30, 1906
DocketNo. 34
StatusPublished

This text of 147 F. 254 (National Glass Co. v. United States Glass Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
National Glass Co. v. United States Glass Co., 147 F. 254, 1906 U.S. App. LEXIS 4885 (circtwdpa 1906).

Opinion

ARCHBALD, District Judge.1

The subject of suit is a device for the fire-finishing or glazing of glassware, particularly tumblers. As they come from the mould, these articles look dull and greasy, and are sometimes marred or pitted with imperfections. The edges also are rough and sharp. To remedy this, they are subjected to a process known as “reheating,” “fire-finishing,” or “glazing,” by which by the melting of the surface exterior marks are removed, a luster imparted, and the rims or edges are melted down and rounded. By the hand method which was in vogue at the date of the patents in suit mould-pressed tumblers, while still hot, were taken up by a boy with a rod or punty, the end of which he stuck to the bottom with a lump of melted glass, and were carried by that means and in that position to the “glory-hole” of a reheating furnace, into which they were inserted a sufficient length of time to become, melted superficially by the flame, being slowly rotated in order to be affected equally on all sides. Still fastened to the punty rod, they were next taken to a workman by whom they were smoothed outside and in with a wooden rod, and the shape restored where it had [255]*255broken down. Being detached from the pmity rod by a blow, the bottom of the tumbler was generally left so rough as to require smoothing off on a roughing wheel, then grinding down on a finishing wheel, and finally polishing with pumice. Blown tumblers were somewhat differently handled, the details of which are not important. It is sufficient to note that they were left as the result with sharp cutting rims, to remove which they were taken in a cup on the end of a rod, and the projecting tops exposed, the same as pressed ware, in the flame of a “glory-hole,” by which the edges were rounded down. Another form of rod, mainly for pressed articles, was provided with a clutch or snap by which the base was gripped and held, the disadvantage of this being that it prevented, the fire-finishing of the bottom.

But when held in the “glory-hole” horizontally, at the end of a punty rod, the tumblers were liable to break down under the heat, requiring further handling to restore them. This was true also where a snap was used, with the other disadvantage which has been alluded to. When held in a cup there was not the same danger, but as this dispensed with labor it was not in favor with the Glass Workers’ Union, and so did not largely obtain. A certain advance in the art was, therefore, made by the invention of Byron and Anderson, patented August 22, 1882, by which these difficulties were obviated. By this device, the article to he reheated was presented to the “glory-hole” supported on a spindle-like holder or plug, which was set on a frame, and the end of the apparatus made to rest.on a ledge in the outer wall of the furnace, a little below the level of the “glory-hole,” so as to be out of the immediate range of the flame. The plug or holder had a rim or flange at the top to prevent the article from slipping off, and by means of a rod and driving crank below, or beveled gears and a crank handle at the other end of the rod was able, while in position, to be rotated by the workman. It could also be drawn away from the “glory-hole,” along the frame, by means of a second rod, and the article removed; or the apparatus could be carried back and forth, as a whole, one plug or holder being replaced in turn by another, with another article.

The mechanism of this device, however, although somewhat below and out of range, was more or less exposed to the intense heat, of the “glory-hole,” and being found to need protection, a guard or hood was devised to cover it. This was built up, around, and over it, the plug or holder, with the article to be fire-finished upon it, being allowed to project above it, through a longitudinal slit in the top, along which the plug was able to be moved back and forth. This left the glass in the full blaze of the “glory-hole,” while the frame and crank or gears were under cover below. A protecting device of this character was constructed and put in use, about the same time, at two different factories in Pittsburg, independently : at the works of the O’Hara Glass Company, who own the Lyon & Anderson patent; and at those of Ripley & Co., a licensee; the one [256]*256being made of brick and the other of tile and clay; the use of both extending back to 1885, or earlier. A somewhat modified “glory-hole” was also employed in this connection, at the O’Hara Works, as shown by the Anderson drawings.

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Bluebook (online)
147 F. 254, 1906 U.S. App. LEXIS 4885, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-glass-co-v-united-states-glass-co-circtwdpa-1906.