OCR Text |
Show vy DEVOTED TO THE GBEAT TINTCO MINING DISTRICT VOLUME XXXVII HOME OF THE WORLD'S LARGEST EUREKA, JUAB COUNTY, Prominent Tintic People On Sanitorium Committee Cricket Work is Well Under Way spee-mous- ly 'ar - .. Freight Increase For at least the fifth consecutive year, the duck hunters of Utah went ee on record this week as soliciting a Holding tbat special conditions stagger duck season this fall, a recommendation which will be irevall In Utah's metal mining and the Public Service made to'the 1L L Dlotoital 1,n?u,lr, Commission of Utah has made The staggered shoot was unanl- -' exemption of them in granting sanctioned when the more on Intra-th- e ,BCr enthusiastic of Utah gunners met at Chamber of Commerce building ,l1 a"lpnienis. re nd conntratea, sugar In Salt Lake City at the request of' wet pu,p bwt molasses Game Commissioner Newell B. Cook, bel,. exempted r,ocb wer and completely thrashed out the dlf- - ?nd ro lb" Increases, granted In se ficultles In the national regulations cordanre with the recent order of as they affect Utah hunters. The sportsmen adopted a list of lb lnter,tBt16 Commerce Commission recommendations for Commissioner or ener1 creases In rates on ahlpments. to make at the meeting with the Bureau leaders In Ashvllle, N. ?crV ?coan . r, M WM consequently C., sometime in June. The propos- - owd bjr ,be no increases were granted on Intra- ed regulations follow: r8CU- 1 The open season for 1938 to ,,B8 ,hlpni"U The become rates effective follow- be thirty shooting days, staggered which given not less !? Publication In each throughout sixty days' period state, to start October 1 and end No-- lh,an, lwenlJ .do noti t0 tha public. Tba !n- vember 30 enr,1relht pest-Infest- cd w Minerals Escape siirveyur set-u- every-cmas- 2G CO-d- 9 , Number Duck Hunters of Utah Favor Staggered Season ee in-m- of MINES D THURSDAY, MAY 5, 1938. AMAZE A MBVINUTE 8CIENTIPACTS ARNOLD Committees have been named for the new Utah Sanitorium at Ogden, which Includes the names of severe1 prominent Tintic people and former residents. It has also been Bounced that construction of the Utution will be under way In thlr'y The federal government and the ronl uaie of Utah have under way a Mor-for the elimination of j crickets In Juab county, the work being under the direction ofdJr Warren I, Cassidy, executive who has crews hlley Judd of Nephl, In both the eastern and rotary announced that the 1138-3executive and leglsaltlve committees extern ends of the county. ot ,lle Utah State 8anllorlum AssuThe one discomforting feature of elation, one of the early sponsors or availthe Is p money that me Ie building, have been named, able Is probably not enouyh to do The executive committee Includes la Job tbat of eliminating tba kind 0ra Bundy 0f Ogden, chairman; Dr. recessaray for this RFrlel, State Senator E. M. area, especially the section west of end Frank Noller of Salt Lake Eureka, known as West Tintic. Thf n7,a Dr. 8teele Bailey of Eureka, crickets this year are more numerous City, George M. Fisher and Dr. J. 0. than ever and it Is due to the fact 01on of Ogden, that sufficient funds have not been 8lal Senator Ira A. Huggins of In previous years to impropriated Is chairman of the legislative Ogden them. combat However, successful Other members are J. for this committee. It Is reported that funds Doftlx and George H. llyan of Salt from time be appropriated sork may City; Ralph Fuller, J. A. lu time as the necessity demands. It Howell and 8imon M. Welsh of Og- Is hoped that this Is the case. The crlcketts are now practically den! William Kershaw and II. A. of Park City; Sol J. Sel-til hatched and are about the six Valentine ,B ot Tooele; Victor G. Pett and a small bee. They have not yet started to "get together In concen- - J011 Bant of Eureka, and Thomas W. Jensen of Mt. Pleasant, trsted form for their annual march " across the country .but this will take place In very ahort time. They are. President RoCSevelt Puts however, moving In a northeasterly End to the Silver Edict" direction, the observations of West Tintic indicate. Word from Washington, D. C., late As stated West Tintic has been aat week waa t0 the effect that the scene of cricks t battles for three reidt,ni Roosevelt revoked a 1931 InIs an still there years past but a aier proclamation No les. than twenty swarms on tQ turn B the requiring treaaury can be located In a single stretch of not the form of coiQ or nepd. twenty miles west of Eureka. There for Renutne ,nduillr,al or arllHtlc ire slso five bnnehee of tho pests be- purposes. tween Eureka and the mouth of Pin- Treasury officials said that prac- ton Canyon, which Ilea to the east. a the alrer nrolred had tlcaIly It's going to take a lot of money end jJW,n the treasury, at purcj,Med by the service. of many worker. If the of 60 centa an ounce, and ,he condition of properly taken care of. o7dregUrBtlons"ere revoked" tu a At present John Mikesell has procedure n handling newly crew of twenty mn working In the ampfy mined ajver The treasury pay's vlrlniiy of the old McCormick ranch cenU an ounce (ur the newjy (( is Tintic Valley. The crew has been mned at0l.ki working for about two weeks and, l;nd the nationalization program hare covered a large area of ground 113.031,400 ounces of ailver have with the result that literally mllllona kepB turned jnt0 tj,e treasury. of the prets have been destroyed, but , . n Minerals the territory Infested is so vast that q. this number of men rannot hope to . . tide to area of crickets. Ten times this many men for a period of thirty Immediate purchase by the fedet- days would probably wipe the pests stock- out of existence, but a small crew of al government of adequate this nature can only hope to accotn- - piles of strategic minerals ss oue of the most effctlve means of meeting pllsh a reduction. of national de- The method being used to exter- - present problems mlnate crickets Is a mixture of elgh- fenae was advocated by Dr. John W. ly per cent lime and twenty per cent Finch, director of the U. 8. Bureau srnesnlc. This is sprayed over the of Mines, In an address presented a: UTAH, SILVER-LEA- ' , . to 8 The daily bag limit to remain cr8Me8moun product, and a. heretofore, with a posaeaalon limit per C8nt on MMriculturnl of at least two day.' legal bag. i,w p8rIC8nt uBB other commodities. thl 3 That shooting be limited to nine hours per day aa at present. ha u,ab m'nlR Industry, which Is B Said hours In each alate to he fixed, 88 mportnl Jndustrl- Light PnPORBF state, la la no N by the Bureeu ot Biological Survey PRESSURE in accordance with the recommendaMicroscopic germs -Sunlight has weight tions of each state game department. Germs are usuauy five hundred but its pressure on a Utah shooting be from 7 a. m. .That times too seen YARD small to be SQUARE ARIA A ONLY ' until S p. m. WITH THE naked EYS V10,000 OUNCE. 4 That if y straight season (Csevrilht, by Tha Ball Syadicata. Isa.) Is declared that It be from October 15 to December 16. 6 That petty rules and regulations which can not be enforced be rednded. 6 Time for keeping birds In etor-ag-e Castle Gate Man Elected after season closes be lengthPresident of Utah 0. 1. 0. ened. ee 7 That sportsmen pledge them- ee The Western Division of the Am- At Price lest Saturday evening tha . eric, Mining Congress will hold Hs data convention of the Utah Indusflftb annual Metal Mining Conven- - sessment of a half cent a ahare, pay- - amount of money expended by Utah trial Union Council, affiliated with tlon aRd Exposition at tha Ambassa- - able on or before May 27, 1923. for the betterment of wildfowl, we tha Committee for Industrial Organidor Hotel, Los Angeles, California, wlth the sale date set for June 30. request that Utah be given mors sation, camo to a dosa with tho elec October 24th to 27th Inclusive, Jul- Accompanying the assessment no- - voire In future regulations. tion of offlcere and tho selection of D. Conover, secretary of the Am Although there was a lot of argu-- ; ptrk City aa tha 1838 convention W. Crane, geologist for the com- ments on the whole about the beat crlcan Mining Congress baa announc-jQ- . dty. ' ed- Features of the convention will'pany: Ing the Utah sportsmen have takeu A. M. Paterson, of tha "On the 4th of this month I visit- lately, the Beehive State gunners who Castle Gate local ot preaidant be addresses by noted Industrialists tha United Mina rnd other public leaders, papers ou'ed tha Tintic Gold mine In company assembled st the meeting displayed Workers of America, backbone F. William Mr. operating problems, and a series of with union of the CIO, was elected preal- 2 J I I 45-da- Mining Congress Tintic Gold Co. to Meet in L. A. Issues Statement J preparation for commercial tent Ion to the new strike In the west drift now running at the aouth end t. H. O'Brien, vice president ahd- of the 600 level. Here I find that recent work has general manager. Inspiration Consolldated Copper Company, Inspira- - opened up a vein of gold tlon. Arizona, haa accepted the chair- - ore In a strong N. 30 degrees E. fls- manshlp of the program committee aura which dips about 60 degrees to for this meeting. Under Mr. O'Brien's tha northwest. The ore la exposed Jng and nsa. low-gra- de . announced that regardless of tliSj vice' presidents named were Ralph datea set and tho rigid restrictions ji Rasaussen, Garfield, Mina Mill given they would stand bark of the ani smelter Workers; David U Day, Biological Survey In every way. Columbia, United Mint Workers; M. Vlsser, Salt Lake City, OH and Refinery Workers; William Zobell, hm Jnercnanie Provo, Steel and Iron Workers; W. Banned From Nephl City D. Thornes, Salt Lake City, Ice Workere. 1 strategic by the war department. eluding aluminum, antimony, a hand blower the mixture sprayed out through a five foot tube In front of him. About fifteen pounds of the mixture Is carried In the gun. and It Is estimated that this will cover more than a half acre. It Is really worth one'a time to journey Into West Tintic and watch tho work which la being done. It means of Is In- - hro- - mlcs. nickel, mlum. manganese, A sec- mercury, tin and tungsten. ond list, classlvied as "critical ms- terlals," contains 25 minerals and Include such abundantly produced commodities as Iron and steel, cop- per. lead. line and petroleum. Is so Dr. Finch recommended annual Interesting that a government md a newsreel cameraman was in appropriation by the government cf West Tintic late last week and shot 500,000 to be used by the bureau hundreds of feet of film In record- - of mines and the geological survey Inx the work being done. (There are for s comprehensive study of ways wveral Tintic men who have finally and means or adapting domeslic re- mad. the screen.) serve, of strategic minerals In per- ms nent solution of the dlflclent minIn the '...1 A reduction Fahu Season Scheduled ,ar5f on lead snd zinc c.a to Open Sunday. May 29th hardly be considered In the public If viewed from the stand- ee i Interest defense, he stated. A generally expected Utah fish- - ' point of national Ing will open May 29, thereby giving the anglers of the atate .'double holiday for their Initial trip. May s I being Decoration Day. Thi Utah openli.g on May 29 will only be for those waters below this 000-foelevation, few waters ex--' "pted. Fish lAks will open June 5 as usual and the streams and takes above the 7000-folevel will July l, Gama Commissioner I . ot complex problema facing the mining industry today. The economic prob- lems of the Industry modern pro- ductlve methods, governmental rcls- tlons to mining, with particular bear- mg on taxation are slated for care- fu analysis by executives and opet- sting men, representing fully ninety per cent of the metal mine output 0f the United States, who will be In attendance. nans for the meeting Include pre- mutation of special exhibit! by the western states demonstrating th economic Importance of the metata The branches of mining produced. to be represented Include copper, iron ore. lead, gold, silver, xlni, tungsten, quicksilver, sulphur, pot- sth, snd other minerals. The min- lag of these products, constltutlm; America's second largest Industry, represents I stake of bllllona of do- lars and employment for several hun- dred thousand workers. Reports emanating from local min- Ing associations predict enthusiastic attendance plans and Indicate that fifteen hundred to two thousaud mining men will participate In the meeting. ol Tintic Mining Company Robbed cf Equipment Cook proclaimed. The official proclamation will ho drawn up immediately and will la Published 20 daya prior to the opining date, as required by law. May 29 was chosen because the Sunday opening followed by Decorn-to- n Day, May 20, will mean several thousand dollars more for tha fish nd game fund. It was also chosen n compromise for those sportsmen demanding an early opening and those requesting the June 15 open-ta- g. of the slate wildlife sent In their recommenda-tinn- s. Nineteen of them were for 29th, 11 for June 15th and 18 tnerona other datea Ineluding y 15th, May 22nd, June 6th, June ih and June 1st. May 21th was the possible t the commissioner only rould have (nnspn under tha circumstances and Maps the Jabs and punches of the ,P"r!"B,M1- To everyone concerned . ,lHh leaders were agreed that this Forty-si- x fed-Rati- ths fairest to all. a, .l,B,B the end Legal Blanks fo Hale Reporter Office, Eureka, Utah. Down offlcaAp st Nephl they have passed andPresident Peterson will tako montii receive a salary of 1176 a the strike the ore haa an average width of 2 feet and Is widest (3 4 .' . feet) at tha southern most exposure. The ore consists of true vela quarts and tnjc highly Iron atalnod u due to the oxidation of primary sul-- " occurs It Iron. as a of filling phlde between end a replacement of the are Instructed fissure walls. The formation la In the event Opex dolomlta limestone which u ' h from " p pr p of 1 , .... .h lh. only If the executive board decides tha organization's financial status on August 1st will permit that expenditure, It wee decided. ..... to enforce the law and of a conviction a 550 Provided for fins one' and If It n.iiwlii Dividend Loses First Game By a Hard Luck Margin ee Dividend went down to n glorious defeat In the encounter with Carbon rl " county In tha opening game of the Slate League season at Price last . lo p 8unday afternoon, tha score being 3 uea from 0.8 to 0.30 gold and 2.0 any klnd to 2. In the eighth Inning Carbon ' to 5.15 sliver. mcrchaJts S who an pushed two runs over the plate and "The new strike Is In the line , incenses llv this proved to he the deciding score. taxes and the main ore channel as shown by , ,77.,. w"., of the coramu- Tha gam was a pitcher battle was earlier development, and notj,J'up y B Ed Marchettl of Carbon and between unexpected, though the major ora Each Harold Smith of Dividend. shoot Is thought to lie 50 to 100 feet S hits huts Carbon's cams at allowed farther to the aouth In the Siouxtha opportune time, and that spellAjax fault tone, ed victory for them. "The mineral character and high Snappy Little Lee Christianson SVITCIIWOMAN shown ss of the by value ore, sassy waa there with a fine defensive pertbe above samples, Is satisfactory formance, aa waa also Tony Klenda evidence that the management has to These hoys war a "nightmare at least made direct contact with a If and teams last Utah year county lilvhly mineralised fissure which, hold their beads lu they properly ha when followed to the south may the right direction both are going to expected to Improve and lead to i be headaches to their opposition. con All shoot. ora geological major The loss of this gams Is by no dltlons are now favorable to an Im means discouraging to tho Dividend near In the portent development It ouly r layers and their followers. future. sets them on their toss. "I particular!, recommend that Ths box score of the game was: DIVIDEND --1 ,- 1- I Centennial Eureka mine. "Six samples of the ore taken at,J Intervals along the vein assayed val-'- J ' WUK ,olie' corporation of North Tlnllc during rtha early part of Jcnuary, was Bullock Secures Eastern ported last Saturday by offlrera In- was located Money for Development vesiigating the rase, it i In a Junk yard In Salt Lake City. ee The machinery was Identified by Eastern money for the develop-Be- n H. Bullock and B. V. Bullock, ment of Utah oil and mineral and manager of the min- - sources has been obtained by Bon Ing company, respectively, snd con- - ftullork, president of the Utah assisted ot an assortment of pipe, ore fna Mining company, which owns buckets, steel drills, Jack hammers considerable ground In the Tintic and an air pressure tank. District. Mr. Bullock recently or i Tbe materials, worth hundreds of gsnlred an oil company which la at In the southern the ninth Inning dollar, waa purchased by the Junk present operating of the state. Bill company for 160. r part . and The Utah Galena properly Is lo- u Is understood that he will on f In Tintic and will cated In Chimney Rock lass In the tuma n.crr York New tho of manater a until of rlalma in, section. a Tintic Up North group aHU that develop .markcd out a alugle ago It was actively en- - American Fork canyon, owned by ? ai,W In the run which gave the few months the company. nine a to I rsKod In development work. University of Virginia . qj University the ctory ever Denmark bills requires every ahle- Hornbllls have such Ivory-Ilk- e mont It was the Brit time that even men. bodied clnrgmen, lo learn appeared jj,al (),e Chinese use them In making young Terry, R sophomore, soldiers. lino-ubs to Imitation Ivory carvings. a varsity 1 ' odSioTS ' 'l.roriied, rinch-hilte- 'tr If you want to keep your "girlish figure" get n Job "throwing switches," Grace Miller, Buffalos only railroad signal tower woman, advised recently. Mia Miller weighs n aeant 115 pounds but operates 104 switch levers controlling termini movement through tho Lehigh Valley railroad yards. She atartei "railroading" In 1917 when It was difficult to get men for tho worh and la thirty-eigyears old bn looks younger. "I'm no dlfferen from tho girls who nro telephono operators," bliss Miller explained. "Ive grown up In the railroad gnmo and Ita my Ufa." ht In normal health, work Is not labor .4 |