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2013 Reprint of 1942 Edition. Full facsimile of the original
edition, not reproduced with Optical Recognition Software. South
Bend Lathe Works sent out this manual with every Lathe they sold.
Profusely illustrated. You get everything you need to set up a
lathe and get it running. This is the lathe manual that Dave
Gingery raves about. You get eleven chapters: history and
development of the lathe, setting up and leveling the lathe,
operation of the lathe, lathe tools and their application, how to
take accurate measurements, plain turning (work between centers),
chuck work; taper turning and boring, drilling reaming and tapping,
cutting screw threads, and special classes of work. All the basics
are here form sharpening drills to producing "super-finished"
turned bearings, grinding valves, and turning multiple screw
threads.
The following are excerpts from "Frustrated Young Men: A Collection
of Short Fiction" by John O'Brien: Sometimes he could feel his mind
burning, ripe with ideas, each thought rolling around like slick
mercury eating through the top of his skull. He would ride the
train home from work and feel each precious thought smoking like
raw egg fallen on a gas burner. As he closed the door to his
apartment and hung his jacket, they would already be half gone like
the afterimage of a sunset against his closed eyelids, floating and
translucent, and lost when he sat down late every night, after a
long day of nothing, to type and write and rhapsodize about his own
stupidity. - from "The Writer"I figured if I played cards with her,
if I talked to her, if I cared about her, then maybe. It's funny.
Though I didn't know in the beginning, as long as I've known her
she's been sick. You begin to wonder if you'd like them if they
weren't sick. If their sickness is what keeps you there. Are you
their friend who has stuck with them to help them through their
sickness or does their sickness make you their friend? - from
"Dinner with Caitlin McRay"The question to ask yourself is, does
the fact that it is all cliche, that it has all been done before
and will be done again, better and more fully, does that make
loving Jen so passionately, so violently, somehow less? Does the
fact that every teenager probably falls in love with the first
person they have sex with decrease the strength of my own feeling?
Can I still find sanctity and validity in this thing called love?
And more importantly, did she love me? - from "Toby Grey"
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