The Cause of Lead Poisoning in the Tinning of Metals, by G. E. Duckering.
[19] The Health of Brass Workers, by T. M. Legge. Annual Report of the Chief Inspector of Factories for 1905, pp. 388-397.
[20] Ibid. for 1898, pp. 119-123; and many references in later Annual Reports.
[21] The Bischof Process for the Manufacture of White Lead, by Professor Sir William Ramsay, K.C.B., D.Sc. 1906.
[22] Report of the Departmental Committee on the Use of Lead, and the Danger or Injury to Health arising from Dust and Other Causes in the Manufacture of Earthenware and China: vol. i., Report; vol. ii., Appendices. Cd. 5277-8. 1910.
Lead Compounds in Pottery: Report to H.M. Principal Secretary of State for the Home Department on the Employment of Compounds of Lead in the Manufacture of Pottery; their Influence upon the Health of the Workpeople; with Suggestions as to the Means which might be adopted to Counteract their Evil Effects, by Professor T. E. Thorpe, LL.D., F.R.S., Principal of the Government Laboratory; and Professor Thomas Oliver, M.D., F.R.C.P., Physician to the Royal Infirmary, Newcastle-on-Tyne. London: Eyre and Spottiswoode, February, 1899. Price 5¹⁄₂d.
[23] Work of the Government Laboratory on the Question of the Employment of Lead Compounds in Pottery, by Professor T. E. Thorpe. Cd. 679. 1901.
[24] H. R. Rogers: Report of a Series of Experiments for Determining the Amount of Lead in the Glaze of Finished Ware, based on the Method described by Sir Henry Cunynghame, K.C.B., in his evidence before the Departmental Committee on the Use of Lead (see 22, above).
[25] See 22, above, pp. 93, 94.
[26] C. R. Pendock: Unpublished Report.