A heavy paper impregnated with tar and used as part of a roof for waterproofing.
1A cover of roofing paper is added and the earth then replaced.
2Over it, before replacing the dirt, goes another piece of roofing paper.
3When it is well under way, toss on some scraps of roofing paper.
4The crude paper is the foundation of the roofing paper.
5The building was covered with black roofing paper, and was also painted black inside.
6The addition of natural asphaltum doubtless caused the name of "asphaltum roofing paper."
7On this is placed a layer of roofing paper and over it the ordinary siding.
8The next act showed a hastily constructed house made of a clothes-horse and heavy roofing paper.
9There are three different sorts of roofing paper, according to the impregnating fluid used in its manufacture.
10Usually the roof and possibly one or two of the sides will be covered with prosaic roofing paper.
11The careful cleansing of the cut rags, necessary for the manufacture of paper, is not required for roofing paper.
12The roofing paper remained unchanged.
13Unmatched boards with battens nailed over the cracks or a layer of lightweight roofing paper over all are equally good.
14A quickly made and sanitary drinking trough for chickens is formed of a piece of ordinary two or three-ply roofing paper.
15A factory which distilled a good standard tar for roofing paper recovered, besides benzole and naphtha, also about ten per cent.
16The roofing paper prepared with distilled tar is perhaps most suitably called asphaltum paper, as this has been used in its manufacture.