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Show Helper Utah. Friday, February SOCIAL SERVICE Page THE HELPER.JOURNAL 5, 1937. NEW COUNTY TRUCK SPRING CANYON AND SNOW OFFERED BY SCHOOL j PLOW KENILWORTH HERE Hill By Henry ' NATIONAL LATUDA ! FEB. DEFENSE WEEK OBSERVANCE BY RESERVE 9-- 22 4. OFFICERS. 1, National Defense Week will be Miss Gunda Anderson and 1 KlJMliiD U'OPr in Carbon county in anl observed If van aie desirous of securing - . , hio ,,,,.! Carbon county purchased a newj j!rs Eob Xeilsen and daughters mother were house guests of extensive program planned by the lllCj AGAINST SOUND some form of talent to perform or jug tne last week, truck and a wedge ;of Huntington, ppent lust Sunday Mr. and Mrs Earl N. Radcliff Price chapter of the Reserve snow plow last week at the total serve on your progiam, tall on the! at the home cf Mrs. Neil sen's last event Officers Association. The Science has proved that the Sunday. Iirown waj a business Ms' it $20H, according to Bng-t- father, Mr. J. M. Blackham. will be observed during the week Helper school in care of principal human eye is man's greater clerk. Vouiig, county over the V 1! War.tfll and filitwst the1 visiter in Salt Lakof February 9th to 22nd and CaD-and most effective meant of The truck and the plow will be weik-eml- . 01 Green1 Mr. and Mrs. J. Hunts of maiiea ieger neiper tal C- - D Jones commander of accumulating knowledge 'xact type of peiformer you might used by the county road depart- - PJver ini gpPnt the week.end at the 'and Mrs. Elva Wall of Mohrland, the Price civilian Conservation want will be available. information. Mr. and Mrs. Clinton visited at the home cf Mr. andCorp3 company, will be in charge The school this year started, Mr- - and Mrs- - Rav s- Robbins Sight brings out the cos. Mrs. Steve Leger, laat Saturday. of the program. the policy of providing this form'"1 Salt L:fe visitors laat Sat-o- f proved its extensive advantages gryan creteness of any object anj and Sunday. social service to the people of urday According to Frank Young, pres- remains In the memory ion . and cleaning of county maintain- r v Uifton King and family illent of the chapter, speakers Avery is visiting, K r Mrs. Helper with the various civic and, after. An actual picture or afi a - Tl ed highway has been facilitated , Sgl't Ufce f Contributions from received the wwfc icu lor nuiu to apeua aujIron, galt Lake Clty ,ua.e J,, ,he fraternal organizations, Musician chy open letter is more certain In Red uy i uis auuiuon. indefinite vacation with her here addresses are students, poets, and short talkers Spring Canyon employees for the mind than a spoken des. Flood Kelief last week Andrew and John Bell spent enta, are ready for service In this line Cross being arranged for the various cription. the week-enat Castle Dale. parents. schools of the county. A talk will anytime. Just call at the school totaled $119.23. Likewise, the printed word i He Latuda school has reopened ai?o be given in Helper. is more certain to a customer set further information about this.! Mrs. J. M. McPhie was the Proceeds of a dance Riven here Mr. and Mrs John Hyila of again alter Deing closed for the The members of the Price army Plans for the new building have a picture more indusiv for a group plan to open the week with been in readiness for some time, last Friday, January 29th, by the winner of a quilt raffled off by Colorado, are visiting at the home Past week. sale than barren talk in the " are to be used to help the Relief Society, Monday Feb- - of Mr. .Hylia's parents, Mr. and; a banquet and program and the room. These deductions alone and local authorities have been! 1 who has been ill since ruary 1. The Relief Society also Mrs. Jonas Hyila. The dance which was scheduled purpose of the defense program Arno, to maters the account for the newspapers point dressing for January 30, at Latuda was will be to educate the public to sponsored a motion picture in where the contractors were forced last summer, of the country getting more Mrs. A. Ericksen returned to postponed because of the order to raise treasury funds. the purpose of such an obserto oblige public opinion and schedthan 3 to 1 greater propor. old son of Mr. home in Mt. Pleasant after teen of the town. It will be held vance. It will be a national affair Alma, three-yea- r tlon of the advertising budget ule activities for February 1. The Lowell Wall, who received a spending two weeks at he home tomorrow night (Saturday) of national advertisers last excavation at the site of the pro-- ! and Mrs. Dell Petersen, died hist sponsored by the national headJanuary 31. of whooping knee injury some time ago, return- - of her daughter, Mrs. Jack Aime. quarters f the association. tct has already been started, and,Sund year than radios. The Women's Auxiliary cf the and pneumonia. His brother, ed to work on February 1. cough for call the molding - The Helper Journal circupresent plans Mrs. Calvin Jewkes Mrs. T. C. IU.M.W.A. will hold a social soon f the basement compartment into: Clyde, seventeen months old. was lates each week to more than Engineer C. H. Soreson -- has been ' a 21th. was and Mrs. E. W. Reid, to elect officers. Jackson on buried Pappacoustas a load Jimmy Sunday, 1000 paid subscribers in this contour some definite January temporarily appointed The whole community expresses business visitor in Salt Lake City entertained the bridge class last foreman in the local terminal on district and local merchants William Hill is suffering from the Satt Lake division during the its sympathies to the bereaved over the forepart of ihis week. Wednesday afternoon. are also given an 1800 ciSubscribe for the Journal several broken ribs resulting from absence of the regular road forerculation shopping guide ba fall cn slippery ice. esides for a total of 2800 clr. man, McOurl. Mr. McOurl was called to New culation. Clarence Reid was a visitor in York late last week on account Salt Lake last Monday. of the serious illness of his Phone news items to Tk mother. Helper Journal. Mr. Mario Picco is in Salt Lake consulting an eye specialist as a result of an eye injury sustained while working in the mine ,,, Illness has confined Lampmaa j ' - I j -- ! I j ; J HOW LEAD MINES FATHERED UTAH SMELTING Several cases of and ch'lken broken out in town. cough 'I By W. Manager Midvale Plant of United States S. R. & M. Co. silver, not gold, not copper NOT Utah's greatest breadwinner. Its prize product is lead. Though you may be awed by the tremendous tonnage of copper from one camp you will learn from care-fullkept statistics that lead has surpassed it by 47. During the 71 years from 1861 to 1935, inclu-eive- , 3,720,459 tons of lead was produced, against 2,535,452 tons of the red metal. Lead ore cropping from the ground gave the first intimation that this might e a mineral state and lead mining gave birth to the first smelting operations here, it was In Beaver county, about four miles northwest of the present site of Minersville, in the year 1358, that the extraction and reduction of the metal began. Isaac Grundy and associates dug some ore from what was called the Rollins mine, since named the Lincoln. The lead In the rock was ideal material for bullets to shoot Indians. Melting It out was the next task. A crude furnace was erected by Grundy, Jesse N. Smith, Tarleton Lewis and William Barton. It was th first smelting plant in Utah, The ball having started, the y C ! ' ;i i mines spread. search Soldiers under Gen. Patrick E. Connor discovered ore in Rush valley. Mining called for smelting. Almost as fast as mines were found furnaces sprang up. One of the earliest was built near Stockton in 1864. It was purchased by I. S. Waterman in 1871 and is said to have been operated successfully for a number of years. Also in 1S64, a second lead furnace was built at Stockton by the Rush Valley Smelting Co., formed by officers at Camp Douglas. That summer and fall six other smelting furnaces were erected in and around Stockton. Some got no further than their trial runs. for H. EARDLEY, lead By 1S66 ore was being produced in Little Cottonwood canyon south- east of Salt Lake and the smelters followed, locating usually in the vicinity of the city, where water Lead strikes at was plentiful. Bingham further stimulated smelt in Salt Lake valley. The first to ship bullion was the plant of Woodhull Bros., in Sep- tember, 1S70. From 1870 to 1874 there was an epidemic of new plants and a steady growth in size and efficiency reflecting the development of new lead mines Beaver county, scene of the first experiment, came back Into t,he picture with smelters at Shaunty Springs and Milford. In n -- 't vnZ.'t ,J Tunlral ii the late nineties, with better transportation, many combinations and consolidations took place. Fewer and bigger plants were in order. e Mills were built to concentrate ore preparatory to smelting. By 1911 the dozens of little plant3 had coagulated into three major smelting companies. The lead smelter of the American Smelting & Refining Co. was con structed at Murray in 1902, the plant of the United State S. R. & M. at Midvale in 1902, and that of the International Smelting Co. at Tooele in 1911. Flotation is now used in the treatment of lead-zin- c ores by the U. S. S. R. &. M. Co., the International, the Combined Metal3 Reduction Co. at Bauer and the Silver King Coalition mill at Park City. The merging of the smaller smelting companies into larger ones made profitable the production of ore theretofore too low grade to mine and smelt and actually increased the demand for workers. ThU is confirmed by figures complied for December, 1935, It places the number of tons of flotation ore milled in sinc-leaplants at 52,000; tons of charge treated at lead smelters, 31,253; tons of coke used at lead smelters, 4,022; tons of coal used at lead smelters, 1,553; gallons of oil used low-grad- mplfpr I n Utah d ing, 8,944. Assuming that the number emindirectly to raise foodstuffs; furnish heat, light, water and amusements; manufacture the goods used and transport and distribute the commodities to the workers and their dependent families, Is as great as the number directly employed, we may say that nearly 18,000 persons in Utah depend on the lead smelting industry for support. And this does not include the men employed at the minea to produce the ore treated. ployed If C M A I There will be a Fish and Game meeting at the Latuda school Monday. Local No. 6508 of the U.M.W.A. is sponsoring a ptpod Relief dance, to be held February 13 at the Latuda school house. ( Spiritual PfOgreSS coddat bavo ben done a began to stody and compare tstedxk refrigerators. They teamed about KeJytnator quality aod performance : saw KeJvinaior features proocfly displayed fa the boraes of friends. tCc "major sales mounted broLo records are still break- each year. Increased volume brought down gave the iCelviWtor ptrc$M?sef cere for his ing records prices money. And now these greatest bargains of all the 1937 KeMnators. Come In and see for yourself. tVItT 41 ' 4 SOMEONC ij Model 25 13 Palace Candy Store SECONDS im A the subject of the in all Churches of Christ, Scientist, on Sunday, February 7th. Among the Seriptural citations are the following: "Brethren, I count not myself to have appre hended: but this one thing I do, forgetting those things which are behind, and reaching forth unto those things which are before, I press toward the mark for the prize of the high caling of God in Ghrist Jesus" (Philippians 3: n Included sages are "Science as correlative pasthe following from and Health with Key to the Scriptures'': "Think not 1o thwart the spiritual ultimate of all things, but come naturally into Spirit through better health and morals and as the result of spiritual growth (p. 485). The objects we pursue and the spirit we manifest Teveal our stand- ASPHALT we HOTEL are PROJECT U PLANS READY SOON TEMPLE SQUARE THIS HOTEL IS HIGHLY RECOMMENDED STREETS Property owners who feel the necessity of paving the unpaved streets in this city will receive definite word as to how and when the proposed project will be taken and at just what cost to the owners themselves early next month according to word received here. Henry H. Jones, Helper city engineer, has been detailed to draw up the plans for the pavingj of the city streets with asphalt and is expected to have the plana' before the city council for consideration at an early date. cost of the project have varied, but official figures place the nom-'na- l fee at 60c per front foot, and this figure would also include a sidewalk. This amount specified is considered lower than the rate existing in other cities in the state for such public improvement. Flans fcr the paving are to be drawn up in the form of a WPaI nroiect. and the asphalt will be hauled from the Rock Asphalt Company of Utah in Sunnyslde. Of course, favorable approval by citizens is necessary before ny construction can take place in the specified avenues and 'e (K Automotive Electricians 13, 14). j KELVINATOR HELPER. UTAH BRYNERS' SERVICE By is "Spirit" lesson-sermo- vr n few yean ago. Than paopia M. O .PORTER MANAGER PHONE 342 Natural Stages Urged CITY H '1 Johnnie Westinskow( son of Mr. and Mrs. L. Westinskow, has been ill for the past week. point, and show what winning." (p. 239). I --- Mr. and Mrs. George A. Schultz have been ill with the flu but are well on the road to recovery. K at lead smelters, 4,762; feet of gas used at lead smelters, 24,3G3,000; cost of supplies and equipment used, $135,033.64; paid railroads for freight on products received and shipped, $262,839.95; men on payroll at lead smelters and lead- zinc flotation mills, 1,387; estimated number of men employed in Utah to produce fuel used by lead smelters, 93; estimated number of men Amnlnved in Utah to nroduce scran iron, lime sand and lime rock used, 45; estimated numoer oi men employed in Utah by railroads to handle freight in and out of lead smelters and mills, 525; total number of men directly employed in Utah to carry on lead smelting operations, 2.0S0; estimated dependents for each man employed, 4.3; number of persons in Utah directly dependent upon lead smelt HII'HO K whooping pox have I" treets. who are Interested in 'he project are urged to keep in ouch with tho city council iu ror to keep informed cu to the progress of the plans. Citizens RATES $1.50 TO $3.00 Ernest C. Rossiter, General Mgr. SALT LAKES NEWEST HOTEL 4 niyiiirikiiiin Jin mvnm u Li Jim Kjmr Good Presswork, Good Typography Good Paper o We seek perfection on each order we print. An onlef here does not mean just so much paper and ink but a happy combination of tho printer's craft and KNOWN FOR THEIR QUALITY BUY YOUR PRINTING Vnti'l I at hbttvd AT HOME cvDvnn -- |