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And now a beer meter. Washington, D.C., May 1. To aid Uncle Same in collecting the tax on the millions of barrels of beer brewed in this country every year, the National Bureau of Standards has designed a master beer meter for use of the alcohol unit of the Bureau of Internal Revenue, U.S. Treasury. Government inspectors employ this master meter in checking the accuracy of the brewery beer meter to determine the volume of beer brewed. In the photograph the large tank receives the liquid after passing thru the meter where it is weighed to get the true volume. Carl F. Stoneburner is reading ...

Brewhouse kettles holding 482 barrels of beer apiece at the MillerCoors Brewery, the world's largest single brewing operation and one of the Denver area's perpetually popular visitor attractions, in Golden, Colorado. Following mergers in the early 2000s, operations of the former Coors Brewing Company, founded in 1873 by German immigrants Adolph Coors and Joseph Schueler, are now part of joint ventures with the multinational SABMiller brewer and Canada's Molson Brewing Company

Brewhouse kettles holding 482 barrels of beer apiece at the MillerCoors Brewery, the world's largest single brewing operation and one of the Denver area's perpetually popular visitor attractions, in Golden, Colorado. Following mergers in the early 2000s, operations of the former Coors Brewing Company, founded in 1873 by German immigrants Adolph Coors and Joseph Schueler, are now part of joint ventures with the multinational SABMiller brewer and Canada's Molson Brewing Company

Brewhouse kettles holding 482 barrels of beer apiece at the MillerCoors Brewery, the world's largest single brewing operation and one of the Denver area's perpetually popular visitor attractions, in Golden, Colorado. Following mergers in the early 2000s, operations of the former Coors Brewing Company, founded in 1873 by German immigrants Adolph Coors and Joseph Schueler, are now part of joint ventures with the multinational SABMiller brewer and Canada's Molson Brewing Company

Brewhouse kettles holding 482 barrels of beer apiece at the MillerCoors Brewery, the world's largest single brewing operation and one of the Denver area's perpetually popular visitor attractions, in Golden, Colorado. Following mergers in the early 2000s, operations of the former Coors Brewing Company, founded in 1873 by German immigrants Adolph Coors and Joseph Schueler, are now part of joint ventures with the multinational SABMiller brewer and Canada's Molson Brewing Company

Brewhouse kettles holding 482 barrels of beer apiece at the MillerCoors Brewery, the world's largest single brewing operation and one of the Denver area's perpetually popular visitor attractions, in Golden, Colorado. Following mergers in the early 2000s, operations of the former Coors Brewing Company, founded in 1873 by German immigrants Adolph Coors and Joseph Schueler, are now part of joint ventures with the multinational SABMiller brewer and Canada's Molson Brewing Company

Brewhouse kettles holding 482 barrels of beer apiece at the MillerCoors Brewery, the world's largest single brewing operation and one of the Denver area's perpetually popular visitor attractions, in Golden, Colorado. Following mergers in the early 2000s, operations of the former Coors Brewing Company, founded in 1873 by German immigrants Adolph Coors and Joseph Schueler, are now part of joint ventures with the multinational SABMiller brewer and Canada's Molson Brewing Company

The Ladies Home Journal Endorses Beer as Opposed to Patent Medicines. Of Course, A Pure, Wholesome Beer is Meant-That Is Budweiser

Brewhouse kettles holding 482 barrels of beer apiece at the MillerCoors Brewery, the world's largest single brewing operation and one of the Denver area's perpetually popular visitor attractions, in Golden, Colorado. Following mergers in the early 2000s, operations of the former Coors Brewing Company, founded in 1873 by German immigrants Adolph Coors and Joseph Schueler, are now part of joint ventures with the multinational SABMiller brewer and Canada's Molson Brewing Company

And now a beer meter. Washington, D.C., May 1. To aid Uncle Same in collecting the tax on the millions of barrels of beer brewed in this country every year, the National Bureau of Standards has designed a master beer meter for use of the alcohol unit of the Bureau of Internal Revenue, U.S. Treasury. Government inspectors employ this master meter in checking the accuracy of the brewery beer meter to determine the volume of beer brewed. In the photograph the large tank receives the liquid [after passing] thru the meter where it is weighed to get [the] true volume. Carl F. Stoneburner is reading [...]

description

Summary

Public domain photograph of people in office, interior, the 1910s-1920s America, free to use, no copyright restrictions image - Picryl description

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district of columbia washington dc glass negatives beer meter beer meter aid uncle aid uncle tax millions barrels country year national national bureau standards master master beer meter alcohol unit alcohol unit internal revenue internal revenue treasury government inspectors government inspectors master meter accuracy brewery brewery beer meter volume tank passing thru carl carl f stoneburner us treasury bureau of internal revenue national bureau of standards united states history industrial history workers library of congress
date_range

Date

1900 - 1940
person

Contributors

Harris & Ewing, photographer
place

Location

Washington, District of Columbia, United States ,  38.90719, -77.03687
create

Source

Library of Congress
link

Link

http://www.loc.gov/
copyright

Copyright info

No known restrictions on publication.

label_outline Explore Government Inspectors, Bureau Of Internal Revenue, National Bureau

Structural Testing 020 - A couple of men standing next to each other in a building

Increased business volume key to recovery. Hopkins new Executive Assistant. Washington, D.C., April 13. In his first Press Conference today, Edward J. Noble, newly appointed Assistant to Secretary of Commerce Harry Hopkins, told newsmen that he thought the key to recovery was to increase business volume. He said that if volume could be increased to a sufficiently high level, tax rates could be lowered without disturbing the government's revenue. 4-13-39

Low Cost Housing Testing Structural Componets 002

U.S. Marine Corps Col. Brian P. Annichiarico, salutes

Closed old court; will open in? Frank J. Wideman, Assistant Attorney General in the Tax Division, will represent the government in the first case to go before the Supreme Court in the new building, and he holds the honor of arguing the last case to be heard in the old Supreme Court quarters. He has won 10 out of his last 11 cases. He represented the government, and won, in the Sandy-Fox case last session, which involved the Five Civilized Indian Tribes vis the United States. He will defend the government in the Douglas-Willicutts case, in which Edward B. Douglas seeks a return of tax money from Levi M. Willicutts, Collector of Internal Revenue, 10/4/35

Optical Glass 016 - A black and white photo of a man working on a machine

Production. P-51 "Mustang" fighter planes. The accuracy of a milling machine operation is checked by an inspector in a machine shop at the Inglewood, California, plant of the North American Aviation. The casting being milled will be part of the landing gear of a P-51 fighter plane. This plant produces the battle-tested B-25 "Billy Mitchell" bomber, used in General Doolittle's raid on Tokyo, and the P-51 fighter plane which was first brought into prominence by the British raid on Dieppe

Space Beads SRM 024 - A black and white photo of a group of people

US Air Force (USAF) Technical Sergeant (TSGT) Rebecca Hass, left, a paralegal with the 92nd Air Refueling Wing (ARW), Legal Office, STAFF Sergeant (SSGT) Karen Bailleul, 22nd Training Squadron (TS), right and Brian Cahill, an Internal Revenue Service (IRS) instructor teaches the latest tax information for a Volunteer Income Tax Assistance Program at the education center on Fairchild Air Force Base (AFB), Washington

Experts at Bureau of Standards study effect of corrosive soils on specimens of pipe. Washington, D.C., Aug. 8. Of interest to home builders the country over is the study being made by experts at the National Bureau of Standards of the effect of corrosive soils on pipes and protective materials. Samples of pipe which have been buried for four years in fifteen soils differing widely in their characteristics, are being tested. Included are several varieties of ferrous materials as well as copper, brass, and bronze. Soldered and brazed joints, protective materials, and pipe made of a composition of cement and asbestos are also represented. Walter Johnson, of the Bureau, is pictured removing graphitic corrosion from cast iron with an air-driven tool. The corrosion products are too hard to be removed with a brush or by chemical treatment, 8/8/38

More than forty miles of shelves, two millions of books, and "of the making ... is no end" / Donald Macbeth.

Nenana Landing, AK, May 27, 2014 -- FEMA logistics is underway moving millions of pounds of building supplies, tractors, and tools to inner Yukon villages. After severe flooding in 2013 inundated the villages of the Yukon, FEMA continues to rebuild during the summer months, coordinating supplies, labor and resources to the disaster survivors. Adam DuBrowa/ FEMA

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district of columbia washington dc glass negatives beer meter beer meter aid uncle aid uncle tax millions barrels country year national national bureau standards master master beer meter alcohol unit alcohol unit internal revenue internal revenue treasury government inspectors government inspectors master meter accuracy brewery brewery beer meter volume tank passing thru carl carl f stoneburner us treasury bureau of internal revenue national bureau of standards united states history industrial history workers library of congress