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Show NEW FACE FOR GRANDMA'S PAN i To set the best performance from your automatic washer and dryer, read this tipsheet compiled by Whirlpool Corporation home economists. Keep it for reference. Follow instructions and youre bound to get good results. Washing t. Choose water temperature (HOT whites i' ' ; t f n o - V A f Wjr .. $: hwV'; for and x f prints and colors, for (WARM ? delicate fab Tics) then set control dial, i. Flv.ViW , Add soap or detergent One half cup of detergent should yield the recommended one to two inches of suds even in hard water areas, but add more if necessary. & Next, deposit up to nine pounds of clothes or. if wash Ing larger pieces, eight pounds. (Dry, a twin sheet weighs one pound, a double sheet two pounds, a mans shirt one-ha- lf A a V V1 w. . : Copper eoqkware. once the pride of grandmother's kitchen, has a new face of stainless steel that combines the best features of both metals. One of the most ancient metals, copper has been a favorite with every generation, and ifs easy to see why. Hanging on the wall, Bound.) want to starch: Stop washer halfway through damp dry period, remove clothes you dont starch, and start washer ' X j again. Pour in liquid starch while clothes spin. (Collars and cuffs should be starched by. hand.) Drying 1. Put in clothes, select tempera ture (HOT for rugs and wool ens, MED. for whites and cottons, WARM for silks and nylons), select drying time. 1 To save time, put handkerchiefs, gloves and other small articles into a mesh bag (you can make one from two dishcloths.) One arm motion picks up all the small pieces at one time. 8. Remove towels and linens while slightly damp. Smooth, fold and stack theyll dry quickly and their own weight will press them. 4. Slipcovers should be removed when, sjighttyjiamp-dried- . Iron... pleats and flounces and put covrrs back on furniture where theyll dry smooth and tight. copper pans have a deep, glowing beauty. On the fire they distribute heat evenly and quickly so that every part of the pan comes rapid Copper ly to the same temperature. because It's ,1 eliminates one of the best conductors known. But, by itself, copper has several drawbacks as grandma found out. The pans of her day were soft and easily damaged. The inside needed scouring often, because food particles dung to the roughened surface. And scouring made matters worse by digging up the surface even more. stain' These modern copper-da- d less pans stainless inside with a flayer of copper bonded to the le have all the sunny beauty and kven heating of copper, with out toe drawbacks of copper. The stainless steel inner surface is needs tough And scratch-resistan- t, only a quick wipe and rinse to stay hot-spots- all-copp- er sparping bright. Z GEM MARKET 7 )2 3rd Avenue Phone 08 L DIAMOND CORE DRILLING Mine Contracting SHAFT " & TUNNEL WORK WE CAN BE READY ON SHORT NOTICE TO APPLY OUR AND KNOW-HO- W EQUIP- MENT TO YOUR PBOBLEMS. BOYLES BROS. DRILLING CO. Phone Salt Lake 84-44- 01 1321 South Main Salt Lake. City, Utah Special 40 to 60 Pet Cent faUcount Unused Army Surplus Tire Chains All Chain Is As Good As New Complete Stock of NEW TIRE CHAIN Tractor Any Size Truck Passenger - Ready-Mad- e We Stock All Sizes oi Commercial Chain Binder Chain and Binders. Tow Chain Write or Call ier Immediate Delivery Phene 84-43- 11 HAFER'S INC. 1563 South 2nd West October 1954 Sail Lake City, Utah 28. 1934 Drainage Project May Open Up Vast Ore Deposits Mine operators can reduce haulage accidents, by following on installing recommendations and maintaining track haulage Extension of the drain tunnel roads given in a Bureau of Mines report released today by Secre- in the Alta District from its tary of the Interior Douglas Mc- present workings through the Kay. Kennebec and Columbus Rexall Haulage accidents, over the properties into the holdings of years, have ranked third as a Cardiff Mining Company, win cause of fatalities in noncoal serve the joint purpose of demines and are second only to of these properties all in the January-Octobe- r period falls of roof as a killer in coal watering Wasatch Drain the with 10 percent totaled 903,000 tons mines. Recent Bureau of Mines along Tunnel, making it possible .to below that reported in the like show that haulage acci- mine the rich ore of Cardiff at figures period of 1953. dents were responsible for more a depth level, presently inactive Of the 89,900 tons of lead used than 24 percent of all e in October, 73 percent was con- fatalities during the first nine in the Cardiff, Columbus Rexall, Kennebec and Wasatch Drain sumed in the manufacture of months of this compared year,, metal products, 9 percent in pig- with slightly over 19 percent dur- Tunnel areas because of water. ments, 15 percent in chemicals, ing the corresponding period in The project, said to be one including tetraethyl lead, and 3 1953. of the most stupendous in mining percent in miscellaneous and unThe report was prepared as initiative in Utah at the present classified uses. After deduction of a continuing Bureau pro- time, eventually is expected to part of an estimated 70 tons of lead gram to reduce haulage accidents. prove one of the biggest mining used In the produtcion of leaded It summarizes haulage-roareenterprises of recent Utah hiszinc oxide, approximately 65 perrecommends and tory. cent of the remainder consumed quirements, standards for installing, inspectwas refined soft lead, 25 percent According to President Sid ing, and malntainig roads of five was antimonial lead; and 10 perSpencer, of Kennebec, complefrom main cent was lead in scrap and in al- types, ranging in large tonnage mines tion of the project will prove the loys. Lead used in cable cover- to roads desigated for animal or various large fissures in the Alta at depth. Mr. Spencer ing increased 3 percent, but de- small-ca- r haulage. A glossary of District creased in the production of bat- terms, several of dollars in ore millions said tables and illustrateries and dropped 12 percent tions, and a list of common causes have been taken out of the fisin tetraethyl fluid. These 3 pro- of track failure also are in sures on top but no one has ever ducts again took 57 percent of eluded. gone deep enough to uncover the all lead used in October. A copy of I. C. 7701, "Recom- richer ores that geologists are Primary smelters increased mended Standards for Installa- confident lies beneath the water. production of refined lead from tion and Maintenance of Haulage Millions of dollars worth of 0 41,900 tons in. September to D. S. Kingery and rich silver ore was taken out Roads, by tons in October, but de- T. F. Curry, can be obtained from of the Emma fissures years ago. creased production of primary the Bureau of Publica The metal the richest in antimonial lead from 5,600 to 5, tions DistributionMines, 4800 the world. proved Section, was It 200 tons. Refiners shipped to shipments Forbes Street, Pittsburgh 13, Pa. and the United States of both metals were less than It should be identified number England missed getting involved by narrowly production, resulting in a and title. in was as a result of the shipincrease in stocks of refined ment. Resumption of the project lead and a increase in fulfill will the. dream of all old stocks of atimonial lead. Mine Wins Rose Bowl Trip time miners around Alta, who production of recoverable lead G. Cedil Christensen, Salt Lake for years and years were hope-f- u also gained slightly in. October it would be consummated. to 15,500 tons, but was. consid- City, Town Supply representa won to a Now tive has that the various organizabelow avPasadena, the trip erably monthly to Rose attend Bowl are cooperating and the the tions Calif., of tons 28,500 erage produced in 1953. game. Mr. Christensen won first U. S. Bureau of Reclamation is Consumers stocks increased 2 prize in the Shaler Rislone con- attempting to work out a favpercent during the month from test sponsored by the Frank Ed- - orable plan of cooperation, there 119,400 to 122,000 tons. Stocks of wards Co., of Salt Lake City and appears to be little doubt the refined lead gained 5 percent and San Fransicso. project will go forward.. 8 metals but percentage percent, decreases ranging from 1 to 10 percent were reported in the other classifications. Consumption of lead In October decreased almost 5 percent com-paer- d with September, according to the Bureau of Mines, United States Department of the Interior. Decreases were reported for all classes of products: metal products 1 percent, pigments 21 percent, chemicals 6 percent and and unclassified miscellaneous uses 5 percent. Lead consumed S - i Bureau Recommends Standards For Roads Lead Cosumption v cottons, MED. for - DECEMBER The Western Mineral Survey, Salt Lake City, Utah PAGE TWO coal-min- d haul-agewa- ys 45,-70- Metals Research Chief Named At Boulder Nev. From where 1 sit. I Guess It's Called a Safety "Drive" The appointment of Delwin D. Blue, a metallurgist with more than 13 years of experience in research with the Bureau of Mines, as chief of the Bureaus Electrometallurgical Branch at Boulder City, Nevada, was announced today by Secretary of the Interior Douglas light-meta- ls 1 McKay. Succeeding Frank S. Wartman, who is leaving the Bureau after 30 years' service to enter private industry, Mr. Blue, whose appointment became effective December 1, will direct future research at Boulder City, on such important metals as titanium and manganese. Mr. Blue, a graduate of Union College in Lincoln, Nebraska, joined the Bureau of Mines in 1941 at its Eastern Experiment Station in College Park, Md. While there, he engaged in fundamental research on aluminum recovery and helped to design and s construct a pilot plant He transferred to the office of the Chief Metallurgist in Washington, D. C., in 1951, and a year later was named assistant chief of the Light Metals Branch, Minerals Division, the position he held at the time of his present appointment In this position he also served as the Bureau's commodity specialist for aluminum. Mr. Blue is 36 years old. He is married and has two sons. waste-metal- Joe Marsh From where I sit, it wasn't what the sign said, but the way it was said. People are usually pretty understanding if they understand what you mean. It's the White jr Fisher, from the State Motor Vehicle Department, dropped by to discuss some of our local traffic problems. "Up atCenter Junction, "Whitey says, "theyve got a new sign that really slows down the traffic going through town. "The sign says, At 25 miles an hour, yon can drive through Center Junction in 2Yt minutes! It slows people down too some just take it easy to cheek on that Vfi minutes, I guess. Hasnt even been s dented fender since that sign went up. same way with differences of opinion. Perhaps your neighbor prefers a temperate glass of beer, and yon would choose buttermilk. What Id like to see is for all of us to "slow down, talk it out, and be respectful of our neigh. bors rights. Copyright, 1954, United States Brewers Foundation J. A. HOGLE & CO. Member Sail York Slock Exchanges Lake-Spokane-N- ew We Specialize In Mining Stocks Loans Made on Listed Mining Secniities 132 Main Street SALT LAKE an 523 West Sprague Ave SP0KANS 35 North University, PK0Y0 |