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Wood-Paper Patent, The U.S. 566 (1874)

handle is hein.slavery/ussccases0471 and id is 1 raw text is: THE WOOD-PAPER PATENT.

Syllabus.
long before the alleged invention under consideration, were
folded by laying upon the unfinished side of the same a
piece of tin having at one edge the required curve, which
enabled the manipulator to accomplish the same object by
pressing upward over such curve a part of the collar so as to
mark the line of the curve and crease the paper preparatory
to turning the collar over, which enabled -the laundress to
accomplish the same object as the means described in the
specification of the patent.
Support to the answer is also derived from the proofs that
linen collars had for years been turned over in a curved line
and for the very purpose described, which is to prevent
wrinkling and to afford space for the cravat.
Taken as a whole, the proofs in this regard are conclusive,
that the patentee is not the original and first inventor of the
patented improvement described in either of the claims of
his patent.
DECREE AFFIRMED.
THE WOOD-PAPER PATENT.*
THE AmPERICAN WooD-PAPER Co. v. THE FIBRE DISINTEGRATING CO.
THE FIBRE DISINTEGRATING Co. v. THE AmERIcAN WOOD-PAPtR CO.
1. A manufacture or a product of a process may be no novelty, and, there-
fore, unpatentable; while the process or agency by which it is produced
may be both new and useful.
2. In cases of chemical inventions, when the manufacture claimed as novel
is not a new composition of matter, but an extract obtained by the de-
composition or disintegration of material substances, it is of no impor-
tance, in considering its patentability, to inquire from what it has been
extracted.
3. When the substance of two articles produced by different processes is the
same, and their uses are the same, they cannot be considered different
manufactures.
4. Paper pulp extracted from wood by chemical agencies alone, is not a dif-
ferent manuficture from paper pulp obtained from vegetable substances
by chemical and mechanical processes.
* This case was adjudged October Term, 1873.

[Sup. or.

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