On the landing of a staircase which runs to the first floor of a small building, five men in suits and various hats stand in a row. Signs on the building read "Mutual Distilling Co Incorporated," "John L. Givens Distiller," and...
Dark wood building with two to five story sections and a smokestack, probably the Mutual Distillery Company, renamed the Union County Distilling Co. in 1905. The ground in front of the building is covered with patches of snow, and the sky is...
Irregular, L-shaped building, mostly of brick and mostly four-stories high, serving as a distillery (probably the Mutual Distillery Company, renamed the Union County Distilling Co. in 1905). There is a spotty covering of snow and weeds on the...
A group of men stand in front of a Jim Beam distilling warehouse with a large barrel indicating the 300,000th bottle of whiskey barreled at the James B. Beam Distilling Company.
Acridine was discovered by Graebe and Caro who found that it accompanied the crude
anthracene obtained from coal-tar. For its isolation, the portion of the tar distilling at 300°- 360° C. was extracted by dilute sulphuric acid and precipitated by...
This set of woodblock prints was reprinted in the 1980s. With the exception of "Bottled by Barton Distilling Company Bardstown, Nelson County, Kentucky," the images duplicate the earlier prints in this collection. Woodblock prints of,...
Distilling industry; Industrial facilities; Stills (Distilleries); Equipment; Men
Man wearing jumpsuit adjusts valve on equipment used in distilling process, observed by man in dark suit and hat. Barrels are visible at left. General Distillers Corporation was located at 1726 Mellwood Avenue in Louisville, Kentucky. Title...
Distilling industry; Industrial facilities; Stills (Distilleries); Equipment; Men
Man wearing jumpsuit over shirt and tie adjusts valve on equipment used in distilling process. Barrels are visible at left. General Distillers Corporation was located at 1726 Mellwood Avenue in Louisville, Kentucky. Title supplied by cataloger.
"Whilst implicitly acknowledging the Surrealism of [Joseph] Cornell, Arman possibly evokes [Roland] Barthes's mournful vision of commodified toys as expressed in the latter's book Mythologies (1957). Barthes wrote that in the consumerist era,...