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Show 2 June 6, The Western Mineral Survey, Salt Lake City, Utah Transportation Vital Item In Success of Oil Field Sulfate Deposits Estate ceased. Wil-llsto- n de j I one-ounc- . Leadville Mine Has Profit Drop Creditors will present claims with to the undersigned at 2233 Hubbard Avenue, Salt Lake City. Utah, within two months from the first fTUb licatlon of this notloe. PHIL J. PURCELL JR., Administrator of the estate of Shirley S. Purcell, Deceased. Date of first publication May 23, A. D. during 30,-27- TO HAROLD 4, L. M. RUSK, A. L. SANDERS, LEWIS WOLFE, CREDITORS CLARENCE BUCK-LE- Y, Deceased. Trustees. Creditors will present claims with HURD St HURD, Attorneys. Continenvouchers to the undersigned at 415 BosBank Lake Salt Bldg., City 1, Utah. ton Building. Salt Lake City, Utah, on tal or before the 31st day of July, A. D. NOTICE OF HEARING UPON 1952. BETTY APPLICATION FOR the Voluntary Withdrawal WITHDRAWAL JEAN BUCKLEY, AdminTHE DISTRICT COURT THE istratrix of the estate of Harold INTHIRD JUDICIAL DISTRICT, OF IN AND Clarence Buckley. Deceased. FOR THE COUNTY OF SALT LAKE, Date of first publication May 30, A. D. STATE OF UTAH. In the matter of 1952. GOLDEN W. ROBBINS. the Administratrix. Attorney for 1952. LEO PAUL WILHELMSEN, Administrator of the estate of Millie C. Wilhelmsen, Deceased. Date of first publication May 30, A.'D. 1952. , GOLDEN W. ROBBINS, the Administrator. Attorney for NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of ELIZABETH THOMSON, DeCreditors will present claims with to the undersigned at 417 vouchers Hearns Building, Salt Lake City L Utah, on or before the 10th day of Oc- ceased. tober, A. 1952. XX HAROLD W. HOWELLS, from the State of Utah of CONSOLIDATED STEEL CORPORATION, a corporation of the State of California. Notice Is hereby given that the application of CONSOLIDATED STEEL CORPORATION. a corporation of the State of California, for voluntary withdrawal of said corporation from the State of Utah, as presented to the District Court of the Third Judicial District. In and for Sait Lake County, State of Utah, now on file with the Clerk thereof, will be heard on the lOtn day of July, 1952, at 10:00 o'clock a.m. of said day, or as soon thereafter as the matter can1 be heard in the Courtroom of the Honorable Division One, one of the Judges of the above-entitle-d Court, In the City and County Building at Salt Lake City, Utah. WITNESS the hand of the Clerk and official seal of said Court this 29th 1952. day of May, ALVIN KEDDINOTON, Clerk. (SEAL) By JACOB WEILER, Deputy. ELLIS. PARSONS Sc DICKSON, j NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of MILLIE C. WILHELMSEN. Deceased. Creditors will present claims with vouchers to the undersigned at 415 Boston Building, Salt Lake City, Utah, on or before the 31st day of July, A. D. 2 custom ore, amounted to yet net profit amounted to only $122,180, compared with $308,966 for 1950. The decrease in profits is due partially to heavy development and pumping expense in the Yak area, where a large amount of work is being done in what is believed to be the most favorable area for exploration. Unless new development work in 1952 succeeds in adding ore to the reserve, the following year may show a loss. ry com-oan- y. 1951, treating 181,045 tons as compared with 154,980 tons during the previous year. Custom ore treated wa3 25,594 tons in 1951, compared with tons in 1950. Totil net smelter and mint returns, including, those from lease and one-ha- . NOTICE one-thir- d Utah Notice is hereby given that at a meetDirectors held on the ing of theof Board of1952, an assessment of June. 3rd day cent cent) per share was il levied on all of the Issued and outstandstock of the corporation payable ing TSvwriiateiT to Louise M. Orton, secre-TTat the office of the company, 21 1953. Souui West Temple Street, Balt Lake RAY, RAWLINS, JONES Sc HENDERCity Dtibi SON, Attorneys. Any i iocs upon which this assessment may remain unpaid on the 3rd day ad-of and July 1952. will be delinquent NOTICE TO CREDITORS public auction, and, Estate of ALFRED E. CADDY SR., De- vertised lor saleis atmade before, so many unless payment ceased. will be sold Creditors will present claims with shares as4thmay beol necessary August, 1952, at the day Touchers to the undersigned at First Se- on the at the office of the curity Bank of Utah, N. A.. Exchange hour of212 p.m. South West Temple Street, Place Branch, Salt Lake City, Utah, on or the before the 25th day of September, A.D. Salt Lake City, Utah, to pay with the assessment, together 1952. FIRST SECURITY BANK OF UTAH, N. A. Secretary. By RALPH D. COWAN, Trust OffiCOMMETAL MINING AMERICAN cer, Administrator of the Estate 21 South West Temple Street, of Alfred E. Caddy Sr., Deceased. PANY.Lake City. Utah. Date of first publication May 23, A. D. Salt 1952. OF INTENTION TO NOTICE ROBERT L. CRANMER, Attorney for INCORPORATE Administrator of estate of Alfred E. Notice is hereby given that a meeting Caddy 8r 904 Walker Bank Bldg., Balt of Christ Memorial of the members Lake City 1, Utah. Methodist Church (formerly known as Church) of Salt Liberty Park Methodist NOTICE TO CREDITORS Utah, will be held at the Estate Of FLORA JACKLIN CUMMINS, T.nir county, ol 8th East and 9th South Deceased, and JOSEPH K. CUMMINS, church, comer Lake City, on SunStreets, in said Salt Deceased. the 6th day of July. A. D. 1952, at Creditors will present claims with day,oclock noon, for the purpose of con12 vouchers to the undersigned at 623 Conand acting upon the question tinental Bank Building, Salt Lake City, sidering society of incorporating suen church Utah, on or before the 1st day of Au- under and in accordance with the laws gust, A. D. 1952. memAll CAROLYN J. CHAMPION, Ad- of the State of Utah.to be regular present. ministratrix of the estate of bers are atrequested Salt Lake City, Utah, this Dated Flora Jacklin Cummins and Jo2nd day of June, 1952. seph K. Cummins, Deceased. FRANK H. TYLER, Date of first publication May 30, A. D. FRANK EBERT, 1952. J. M. FINE, GEO. U. CANNON, Attorney. T. A. PURTON, Estate of Leadville, Colo. Resurrection Mining Company, operating properties at Leadville, and owned by Hecla, and onethird each by Newmont Mining Corporation and United States Smelting, Refining & Mining Co. through stock own ership, operated at full capacity ASSESSMENT NOTICE COMPANY. 21 South Principal place of business, Lake City, West Temple Street, Balt a vygw TP AN METAL MINING De- vouchers Deposits of hydrous sodium sulfate (Gluber salt) totaling est route will cross land owned an estimated 30,439,000 tons in by many people. How would lakes in North Dakota and eastthe line affect the land and the ern Montana are described in a land owners? It would mean a cash pay- Bureau of Mines report which ment to the owners, but be- was released today by the U. S. yond that they would not know Depatment of the Interior. Of the line had been built. Once this amount, 23,849,000 tons are the route has been set and the in permanent beds in these land owners have granted permission for the line to cross lakes, 421,000 tons are in the their property (they are paid brines, 2,450,500 tons occur as for granting permission), tlp intermittent crystals, and' the crews go to work. A big ditch- remaining'3,718,000 tons are In ing machine rumbles across the the crusts and muds. Sodium sulfate is used chiefly range, digging a trench of the exact width and depth re- in making Kraft paper and paquired Truckers haul in. lengths per board, in rayon and textiles, of pipe and drop them off along and heavy chemicals. It Is also the ditch. Welders follow, join- used for glass, dyes, soap, paint, ing the sections together. Be- explosives and fertilizer. The hind the welders comes a wrap- hydrous salt, Glauber salt, is ping machine that covers the used for dyes and as a Continued from Page 1 portatlon problem. Petroleum is a tricky liquid, hard to handle. A heavy mixture of many hydrocarbons, it contains some highly volatile liquids. Hence, it is nearly always accompanied by gas, some of which separates from the liquid at the well head and some of which attempts to separate and escape after the oil has been moved to tanks. These factors add up to a challenge .that would discourage men any but an expert The oildevelhave are experts. They oped a system for controlling the flow of oil from the well to the people who use the finished products. There are many variations within the system, but its basic principle remains unchanged. It is always closed. The transportation system pipe with a coating of asphalt now handling crude oil from and felt to protect it from corrothe Shell Oil Company wells in sion. A "boom cat a big tractor the Montana part of the a is Basin good example with a crane on one side of hew the system works. Oil growls down the line lifting the flowing from the wells moves pipe into the ditch. Finally the back-fil- l gang replaces the through relatively small topipes the lines Fences are rebuilt. called "gathering earth. not are These field tanks. Within a few days the land the in ordinary looks much as it did before the storage tanks word. sense of the They serve pipeline crew showed up. The collect! points. land owner can use his land as n.o:tiv as ji the into flows oil as As fast he had before, even plow and nicks t of trailer a fleet harrow it, because the pipe in-is tanks, Shell the From out. moves it buried deep and does not areas in wells now producing terfere with agriculture. near Glendive and Richey, MonEvery 30 or 40 miles, a pump oil haul many tana. the trucks station is erected to keep the the to miles over rugged country oil moving through the line. The is it where nearest rail head, finished pipeline may not have The cars. tank to transferred the color and adventurous rosere will probably truck shuttle mance of tankers, barges, railthe early road tank oars or .big trucks adequately during fields developthe of stages siiriply because no one eve sees field the a3 ment. However, it but it is a modern miracle which at to the point nonetheless. It keeps the oil develops ton oil is of great the volume moving steadily, silently, effihandle to efficiently, ciently, 24 hours a day, day in for trucks the transportation system will and day out, fegardless of the obstacles; be modified. weather or man-mais movement A possible development would The constant new oil a of the construction in be the the key to efficiency pipeline. This would run from industry. Oil is almost conthe field to an existing rail head, stantly in motion from the time or possibly all the way to a re- - it comes out of the well until it flows through the carburetor finery. which of method; of an automobile or runs into Regardless nec-- ' be still will Is adopted, it the bearings of a sewing malines chine. The movement is so efessary to have gathering oil ficient that oil men can send and field tanks. Naturally, a build transporta- 350 ounces of liquid products men try to from tion system that will take the more than three gallons fast the three in for York destination Houston to New oil to its est way over the shortest route, rpntR . . . lust what it costs to e letter. with the greatest efficiency. It mail a to gain is not always possible It is more than coincidence all these advantages with one that the vast and highly coordinated movement of petromethod. in those leum seems symbolic of the Under conditions like the the Williston Basin area, growth of a nation that literalform efficient ly moves on oil. The industry pipeline offers an the and the society it serves have of transportation. Naturally, line a oil men who plan such grown hand in hand. This parallel between an inwill try to find the shortest to route from the wells the line's dustry and its neighbors bedestination. But, even the snort- - comes especially apparent when- - NOTICE TO CREDITORS Of SHIRLEY s. PURCELL, 1952 Me-CRE-A, Attorneys ror petitioner. Ad- ministrator of the Estate of Elizabeth Thomson. Deceased. Date of first publication June 6, A. D. 1952. a McCULLOUGH Sc BOYCE, Attorneys for Administrator. DELINQUENT NOTICE LEAD MINING COMCOMMONWEALTH of business, PANY. Frihclpal lilac 424 Felt Building, Salt Lake City, Utah. Notice is hereby given that there is delinquent upon the following described NOTICE No. 84532 on account of an assessment of IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE stock three-quarte- rs of one cent per THIRD JUDICIAL DISTRICT. IN AND share levied on the 16th day of April, FOR SALT LAKE COUNTY, STATE 1952, known as assessment No. 25, the OF UTAH. In the matter of the adop- several amounts set opposite the names tion of SUSAN MEINECKE, a Minor. of the respective stockholders, as folNotice Is hereby given that on Wed- lows: nesday, June 18. 1952, at 10:00 oclock Cert. a.m or as soon thereafter as the matShares Amt. Name ter may be heard, the above-namCourt No. will hear the petition on file herein 4738 Maurice Anderson . . 2240 8 16.80 V0 00 7.50 lor the declaration and adjudication of 5878 V. E. Anderson " Susan Meinecke as a deserted child by 56Z6 Mrs. Chlls W. and Miss 1.05 140 Ann E. Adams her father, James Meinecke, and for the 4292 Anchucloss, Parker and of said child. adoption 75 ever new oil reserves are dis.56 Dated this 24th day of May, 1952. Redpath .75 100 BEN E. ROBERTS. Attorney for 5355 Charles L Arnold covered. The next, and final, 200 1.50 5500 Charles I. Arnold Petitioners. .75 100 Post Office Address: 910 Boston Build-n- g. 53.6 Charles L Arnold article in this series will de2.10 280 2083 Vera M. Bachman Salt Lake City, Utah. scribe the effect such growth 1013 Jesse T. Badger .11 15 440 3.30 3361 J. C. Baglin has on a community near an NOTICE OF PROCEEDINGS 3.11 5581 John W. Baker 415 FOR ADOrTION 2972 J. A. Barclay 500 , 3.75 important new oil field. IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF SALT 3412 Mrs. A. T. Savelas 4.39 i85 LA K COUNTY, BTaiR OF UTAH. 4.28 570 Harry Beckerman in (be master ol the Adoption of 3241 5688 12.81 1715 Blanch! John GAIL LYNN MANNING, 'a minor. 5689 330 Blanchl John 2.38 You are hereby noutied that a Petl-t.o- n 3731 1000 Frank Bloom 7.50 or Order Determining that Child la Laura Marie C. Boley . . 20 .15 inserted and for Adoption will be heard 4865 . 280 James F. Boyie 2.10 Li the above entitled matter before the 4102 5442 Mrs. 7.50 22-2- 4 above entitled court at Salt Lake City, 3375 E. T. Emma K. Barnett 1000 East 1st South 2.14 285 Buckley on June 2:00 3u, L.ah, at p.m. 1244 T. A. Butterfield la2, .45 60 or Telephone: Judgment by toe court will be made in 1245 T. A. Butterfield 60 .45 uwooruance wlt.i tins best Interest of. the 1250 T. A. Butterfield 60 .45 second dais matter at Salt aLove-aams- u Entered as said interest shall 5485 Dora Bunzel minor 3.75 500 Lake City Utah, tinder Act of March 3. j to at tuat uiLe time. appear 4873 Clifford .11 15 Julian 1879. Thio is an action for of 5148 Thomas Francis Casslty Camil- Subscript; ir nates: 84.00 for two GAIL LYNN MANNING, a adoption and minor, leri 700 5.25 . S1.50 for praying that said minor be declared a years. 82.50 for one year and 4355 Dorothy S. Casslty six months. 335 2.50 child. 5737 P. G. Christopulos . . 1000 Please mention Western Mineral Survey deserted 7.50 DATED this 4th day of June, 1952.. 5738 P. O. Christopulos . . 1000 when writing to advertisers. Advertising 7.50 11. IRVIN O BISLJ of Counsel. . . . rates on application. 5756 P. G. Christopulos . 1000 7.50 St BIELE, AttorTux' Richard B. Cleverlng . . 620 4.85 neys for the Petitioner, 202 Newhouse 3359 5048 Lawrence 215 1.61 L. M. HILL. Business Manager Chaplin EMt 4th SUth 8alt 4054 L. L: Cromer Ski CiSllftah.3 650 4.88 L. L. 4944 Cromer 1000 7.50 All the news of the development of the 5167 L. L. Cromer 1000 7.50 Intermountain Section, published by The L. L. 5168 Cromer 7.50 1000 ASSESSMENT NOTICE Western Mineral Survey. T . 5347 L. L. Cromer 1000 7.50 All news appearing In the Western company. mining L. L. 5450 Cromer 1000 7.50 buslnes3 Salt Lake 5474 L. L. Mineral Survey Is obtained from sources CitiFuiahUce Cromer 1000 7.50 believed to be reliable, but no responsi5598 L. L. Cromer 1000 7.50 Notice Is hereby given that at a bility is assumed for accuracy of stateL. L. Cromer 1000 7.60 ments. Bard of Directors of the 5605 5607 L. L. Cromer 1000 7.50 JjJL !?5ecit Mining Company, held on 5760 L. L. Cromer 1000 7.50 day of June, 1952, an aifss- - 3704 Jack 870 6.52 Cummings M " No. 1520 6 of one-h&- lf Nathaniel Currier 500 3.75 cent (tac) ner ihtr 2956 Miss A. B. 4.65 n1 dt?n outstanding assessable 4737 Frank Dean Davidson.. 620 stork 855 6.41 Datable im. 4252 corporation. The Western Mineral Survey mediately to Kenneth 1.65 George N. De Gross. . . 220 J. 3699 Dl L. 7.50 Joseph Pietro, Jr.1000 Ave., is qualified as a newspaper to 3700 L. Di Pietro 7.50 Jr.1000 Joseph upon which this assessment 4827 A. T. 5000 37.50 unpaid on the publish Legal Notices, having SRi 1952,aia shall d of 5838 A. T. Diamant 1000 Diamant 7.50 be will and delinquent Disthe Third been approved in 620 4.65 advertised for sale at public auction 4014 DObbs St Co. 4015 Dobbs St Co 620 4.65 Court of Salt Lake CounJv PuByment u made before, so 6022 Frank Draher 7.50 ...1000 ot said stock as prcel of Utah. 2602 R. 8. Easterday 340 ay be necessary to pay said ty, State 2.55 3184 555 4.16 Wlth coatsof Marjorie Eaton advertising nd t',!2FetherTf 3771 Elsele King Llbalre wlu be aold on the aath St CO. 560 4.20 (c) ed .... .... WESTERN MINERAL SURVEY 45 SUBSCRIBE NOW SPECIAL OFFER Submit One New or Renewal Subscription Accompanied by One Additional New Subscription. A TOTAL COST FOR BOTH OF ( 1 YEAR 2 YEARS.. $3.00 $5.00 Single Subscription 1 Year $250 2 Years $4.00 TAKE THIS UNUSUAL OPPORTUNITY OF KEEPING INFORMED ON ACTIVITIES IN THE OIL AND MINING INDUSTRIES a Western Mineral Survey UTAH SALT LAKE EAST FIRST 22 2 SO., CITY 1, b-- . florecita Legal Notices G.?a uSi 1V1?t0n trict Probate & Guardianship Notices For Further Information Consult the Clerk of the District Court or Respective Signers. ,le S&Jf ESafe LA M?3 2 utUi B"lh St King St Co St King e Co. MICHAEL F. OREILLY, FU3RECITA MINING COMPANY, city. Utah. 6th 8011111 Llbalre Llbalre 625 4.69 625 4.69 625 Street. Salt Lake 1 3773 Elsele Sc King Llbalre 625 - 4.69 4.69 |