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Show 4 MINING REVIEW. INTER-MOUNTA- IN ins in value not only good today, but good every day of every week in every Mining and Metallurgical Patents. List of patents relating to mining, isyear; not only good in the United States, a but good wherever trade goes. In sued May 12, 1896. Reported for the we want no we short want dollar; word, Mining Review by J. F. Corker, patent no short weight; we w'ant no short measolicitor, office No. 311 and 312 Atlas dollar wont block. Salt Lake City, Utah. Copies fursure. I tell you a 100-ce- nt dollar. It keep company with an never did, and it never will. In another speech at Niles, his birthplace, a few days later, he said: The nations which are on a silver basis alone are the poorest nations of the world and are in constant financial disturbance and monetary disorder. Gov. Campbell declared that while he had doubts about it, he was willing to chance the free and unlimited coinage of silver. 1 am not willing to chance it. I am not in favor of the free and unlimited coinage of silver in the United States until the nations of the world shall join us in guarnateeing to silver a status which their laws now accord to gold. These, I am authorized to say, are Maj. McKinleys views today. He desires that the people of the United States accept them as such, and he considers it more dignified and honorable to stand upon a platform that was constructed before he became a candidate for the Presidency, than to construct a new one, wThich might be misrepresented or mistaken as a bid for votes. 86-oe- nt - Comptroller Eckels is one of the curios of the Cleveland Administration, a companion freak to J. Sterling Morton, and since his discovery in Illinois and his elevation to a post of dignity by the President he has exhibited more kinds of financial lunacy than any other member of the official asylum, aristocrat of the barring the kid-glov- Agricultural ed department. But Mr. Eckels has now discovered that notwithstanding his persistent vaporings, the sentiment of the country is unaccountably turning in the direction of free coinage. His admissions are of significance and his remarks are of interest, which cannot be said of any of his utterances heretofore. Upon his return to Washington from a visit to his home State he said this: There is no question that the financial question is the paramount issue, to the exclusion of the tariff, and this will be demonstrated more and more as the ensuing campaign progresses. Party lines will not be drawn so closely as people imagine, and there will be a great many surprises before the contest for the Presidency is ended. Business men are feeling this continued agitation of the silver question. The caucuses held thus far in Illinois indicate that the silver men virtually control affairs in that State. It remains to be seen what Cook county will do in this emergency, and there is a men possibility, if the sound-mone- y win the fight there, they may be able to stem the current in Illinois which is apparently setting so strongly in the direction of free coinage of silver. Gentlemen with whom I talked while in Chicago were inclined to take the same view regarding the situation that I do, and they are looking forward eagerly to the proceedings of the Democratic convention a month hence. Doing business without advertising is like trying to ring a bell without a clapper. You may know what you are doing, but no one else does. Ex. inclines; and a conveyor into which the intercepting chamber outlets open and leading to the chamber. No. 560,413. Process of an Apparatus for Recovering Gold or Silver from ReOres. W. A. Koneman, Chifractory 111. cago, In an apparatus for recovering precious metal from ore, a combination of an elongated drum, rotably supported J. Barnard, Seattle, Wash. by suspension from a rotary shaft and In a magnetic separator, the combin- having an ore pulp feed at one and a ation of a sluice, a magnet located over discharge at the opposite end, means said sluice, a conveyer-plat- e formed of for suppling a metal dissolving medium material located under to the contents of the drum, a filter said magnets and over the sluice, and into wThich the drum discharges, a resuitable means in connection with the ceptacle for the filtrate, a siphon-pip- e plate for reciprocating it. And strips leading from said receptacle, an eleor serrations of material vated funnel into which the pipe dislocated on said plate, and suitable charges and having an injector for a means in connection with the plate for precipitating solution in its stem and a filter into which the funnel disreciprocating it over the sluice. No. 560,232. Conveyer for Ore, etc. T. charges. g No. 560,414. W. Robinson, Milwaukee, Wis. ApparaIn a conveyor, the combination with tus. W. A. Koneman, Chicago, 111. In the metal refining apparatus, the a main track and side-tracof a of a combinations of a furnace having a switch consisting pivoted section side-track of the arranged to swing chamber for molten matte or slag and into line flue and air with the main provided with a horizontally track; a device connected with and and gas inlets inclining downward into arranged to open and return said the chamber; sa series of under the base of switch to its normal position; a catch radiating water-legdeto said said chamber, engage terminating at their arranged returning outer to said hold and switch a ends, beyond the furnace wall, in vice, closed; to and movable in the enlarged heads; water-suppl- y pipes part adjacent direction of the main track, connected leading into said water-leg- s and pipe with said catch, and a carrier provided leading from said heads to a conduit with a strip arranged to engage with having a discharge outlet. No. 560,435. Ore Concentrator. C. E. said movable parts and to first close said switch with the main track and Seymour, Lake Geneva, Wis. In an the combinathen release said catch, wrhereby the sheet-metreto is to a allowed and with switch thin tion, open pan, conturn to its normal position. structed to be revolved at a high rate No. 560,363, Mining Machine. E. S. of speed for the purpose of discharging the lighter particles, or particles of McKinlay, Denver, Colo. over the top of In a front thrust or breast, under- less specific gravity, less a and rate of speed for the at pan, the combinacutting mining-machintion of a bed having side bars elevated discharging the heavy particles, or particles of greater specific gravity from the ground, downw'ardly-extend-in- g cross-bar- s giving the pan supporting-bar- s, adapted or bowl a of means for or bump continuquick jar to rest upon the ground, one or more both the high and low during longitudinal bars secured to the top of ously for the purpose of transthe cross bars, a carriage moving for- rates of speed the ward and back on the said bed, a cut- mitting atotrembling movement to asto prevent its packing, ting apparatus on said carriage and material across its front end one or more chains sist in the separation of the same and particles back tofor imparting motion to the cutters and to throwr the heavier ward the bottom of the pan to assist extending from the rear of the carriage in the discharge of said particles to the front; a motor or engine mounted on the carriage at the rear end and J. Henger, No. 560,500. Rock-Dril- l. arranged to drive the chain or chains and to bear downward on the longitu- North Amherst, O. and engaging A hollowr and tapering rock drill dinal bottom bed-bawith or bearing against the elevated whose lower end is approximately flat side bars by devices which encircle and has the form in cross section exmore or less on said side bars, whereby ternally and internally of two ellipses, an upward or downwrard displacement the outer longer in proportion to its of the motor or carriage is prevented, width than the inner, and pointed at and they are supported longitudinally its ends, the metal between the sides on lines between the side bars. of the ellipses sloping inward and that No. 560,406. Reverberatory Melting-Furnacportion between their ends flat. A. N. Gaylord, Auburn, N. Y. The concealment of rich strikes by A furnace composed of two chambers mounted vertically, one above the the managers of mining companies has other, and connected by a vertical pas- become an event of frequent occursage, each chamber having an open- rence. In some cases, w'herein patent ing through its front end, trunnions upon one of the chambers, a level for applications are pending, the owmers wdth a do not care to invite adverse proceedtilting theorchambers, combined standard support, a screen which ings by proclaiming the discovery of closes the front end of the lower chamber, a burner mounted upon the screen, rich ore bodies. Sometimes, also, the and means for separating the chambers management desires to conceal such from the screen so that the chambers information from their in can be tilted to discharge their conorder that the interests of the latter tents. 560,412. Process of and Apparatus for may be purchased. Therefore the disOres. W. A. Koneman, Chi- coveries are covered up and those porRoasting 111. cago, tions of the workings where they occur coman ore In roasting furnace, the binations of a shaft having an inlet for are bulkheaded, cutting them off from s, Cripple Creek pulverized ore at its upper end and observation. who are as full of resources as communicating near its upper end with the medium of heat supply; a deposit- any bunco villain, have seized upon ing chamber for the ore, extending lat- this of mine managers as a erally from the base portion of the meanspractice of disposing of worthless stocks. shaft and having a dumping floor; a outchamber under said floor having Workings In absolutely barren ground lets toward which the bottom of the are bulkheaded and an air of great chamber inclines; a conveyor into which said outlets open; and ore inter- secrecy maintained, leading the public cepting chamber leading from the de- to infer that important developments positing chamber to the stack and hav- are being concealed. The lambs who ing walls at intervals and extending have been shorn by this new process alternately from each side short of the are just beginning to find out how it opposite side and outlet openings toward which the bottom of the chamber was done. nished for 25 cents each. No. 560,184. Magnetic Separator, F. non-magne- tic non-magne- tic Metal-Refinin- k, gas-outl- et, V-sha- ped ore-concentrat- or, al e, rs e. co-owne-rs, wrild-cat-ter- cen-tripetal- ly; cen-tripetal- ly. |