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Show EUREKA REPORTER Thursday, March 19, 1942. Juab County Manganese Writers Find Evidence Of Pioneer Soda Plant. Will Be Mined. MHigh, medium and low grade Suit Luke City ouce boasted carbonate ores from the Suit edium blcarbonule plant, utilUluK raw materials from the Grout Hull LuRt. properly and one type of black oxide manganese ore from the adjoining and munufuct urine an excellent urrordlnn to material in '.he Ward leuse, both In the Drum Moun!filea of I lie I'lab Writers Project. tain district of Juab county, west Tba dale of the firm appearance of of Eureka, were found In tests to hu but amenable to concentration by standunknown, ill., plant remain death tame In 1888 with ard ore dressing methods, according Jl Miiice dc-- ) i in advent of cheap Imported "hoiU" to a report by the metallurgical the newly conn! rue ted overland partment of the U 8 bureau of miles j tallroad, ila birth preceded consider-ablt- t n Salt Lake City. interest In the chemical rr Ferrograde manganese was made by sintering these concentrates, it is porlfea of Great Salt Luke brine. Experiments with the saline wat- reported. Concent ration of the Stall ore Is ers of the lake date back to the bused f particular Interest because the ore i rapper era, and Jim Drldner several tall storltm upon lta pickling represents one of the few large lio--' SUNDAY - MONDAY In 1849-6- 0 Stanbury dies In the United States wherein; properties. March 22nd and Slnl succeeded In making a chemical anr-lys- manganese occurs as rhodochrosite-- j of the brine. The Motmnn plo type carbonate ore, the report anld. The most thrilling adventure film of were intrigued by the lake and neers In general, for ores of like mail, the year! turly speculated on ways and means gunese content the rhodochrosite of Isolating its various chemical ele- type Is the most dvairuble for the "SUNDOWN ments. production of ferrugrade mangantM Starring From the beginning of Salt Lake iy milling sintering or nodulxlug. j TIERNEY GENE had been secured from the Vltho the division's report deals prl-- , George Sanders City salt Druce Cabot the lake almplo process of shovel marily with concentration of carbon by P. 2 MATINKK 81XIY Ing It up where It lay aeveral inches its ores from the Slant property tub- - j Despite many tralory work will be done on addi-londeep In the shallowa. arly writing to the contrary, this samples of oxide manganese product, Iho adequate for live stock, 'rom the ward lease when develop-uen- t was somewhat nauseous aa a table work has progressed so that. salt owing to the presence of sulphur epresentatlve lots of ore are obtainpotash, magnesium, potassium snd able. .other chemicals, some of which ap-- : "Ferrograde manganese ore, or Its. combination tquivalent, is essential to the munu-- , pea red as a chemical 'forming epsom salts. arture of every ton of steel produc- had elapsed, d. ar.(T, alt ho there are well known ltefore ten years however, pioneer Ingenuity had arge deposits of low grade ore In WEDNESDAY - THURSDAY worked out a system whereby the he U 8 the production of substantial, .harsh chemicals could be refined (mounts of ferrograde material from March 25h and 2(11 h jfrom the common solium chloride. lomestic sources presents a problem' "ADVENTURES OF .This process naturally left a restdui hat Is becoming more snd mor)1 MARTIN EDEN" i of The finished pure critical aa stock piles are depleted featuring salt product was from that time the hru inability to obtain adequate William Holden equal of any product In the nation. shipments from foreign source," D! were used for var- K. 8. Dean, chief engineer, said In The Claire Trevor ious things, Including the manufacforeword to the report. Glen Ford ture of sodium bicarbonate or com- heThe selectively mined, H4W4444W4WWW4 mon soda. The vast chemical Mores carbonatehighoregrade, was found readily of the lake have barely been tapped menable to concentration; 98.8 per and authorities predict n great fu- ent of the manganese in the ore ture for this state owned resource. 'ecovered as a sand product that, --c the rhemlcsl vhen sintered, met f MORE ABOUT T1IK KlWItl. lost Ions for ferrograde manga-- j pei-iUTAH DEER HUNT, iese. o A medium grade carbonate ore, Kan Indians who first inhabited 23.9 per cent manganese) made by! where the special (combining samples of selected ore Juan country deer hunt will be held next fall-liv- ed .nd rejects w concentrated to fr-- ! UNITED there 3,000 years ago. ograda with about 80 per cent oi. Ilellcs Indicate that they were basaa fero-irad- e STATES be manganese recovered had a peand that ket they makers, sinter. SAVINGS culiar kind of a weapon for huntln ore (14.9 per cent The low affair which thru .nangunese) grade It waa a sllng-shwas also concentrated to a dart. AND STAMPS .'errograde. Much day and fine hand lluntera who paitlcipale In the ves rejected before milling and 89.4 hunt will have a chance to explore jer cent of the manganese actually some of the caves still preserved nilled waa recovered as a final In which the primitive peoples lived. (Inter. Calculations based mi ore and clay actually minthe upon Legal Blanks at Reporter of fie j ed show a recovery of 70 per cent of ,the total manganese. The method of benefication of low grade ore consists of log washing to reject day 'and low grade fine sands; grinding to about a 85 mesh floating and disniuu-gane- Are the YOU ee quality-lovin- g pro-ilut-- i, type? If you're who I I lie quality-lovin- lyp g good food and drink, lln-- n enjoy "tlmihlr-rich- " quality . . . mads Cream of w it li the famous liincstoiii! water of Cove Spring. Next tine- try your favorite drink inude with tlie"rmnNu of Keniiirkv's lines! Boiirliuu. sitli ,a - I is l al TnStDOUBLE-RICHl- ttimxiK.iti jei. one gaM 0f water, spilled; two cu., 0j pollee, dropped. Cause, amazcmert of fellow guests, UAiuiiTBontiMiN Ti vuiiKKhY it LITTLE MAY COM! 'ANY TO HOLD MEETING. o , The regular annual stockholders meeting of the Little May Mining will be held March 23rd, at 8 p. m. at the company's office, .to West 1st Souih Street. Seven ri!- -, rectors will be elected. Claudette Colbert's slated to play another of those beautiful, brisk newspaper v.omen that we see so often on the screen and so rarely in ! e ..ii.i.i:i:scihi'..n' r.C. CARD OF THANKS. j We wish to thunk cxeryun who In any wuy assisted iim with syhpa'.hy cr otherwise during our recent caused by the death f our motlur. Mrs. Thomas Heffernan McCormick. THE FAMILY. ! . I u DEFENSE BUY Ronds ot for-ogra- CLAUDETTE COLBERT real life. Shell do it in "No Time for Love." Fred McMurray, the hero, plays a sand hog, who works on a tunnel project under the Hudson. We're told officially that Jean Parker, now playing in "Hello Annapolis." has just planted the larg est victory garden in Holly wood half an acre, all vegetables, which she s taking care of entirely by herself. Anybody who's ever taken care of a vegetable garden knows that either her screen career or the tomatoes and beans is going to be one-gi- rl sadly neglected. "Klondike Kale," who's In Hollywood to select an actress lo portray her In the Columbia story based on her life, gare the same final test to all candidates, including Evelyn Keyes, Jinx Falkenburg and Shirley Patterson had each roll a cigarette. 4 Jonathan Hale, who playa a bit in "Joe Smith, American, is a of Nathan Hale-p- lay carding pyrlllc Iron; floating the of a foreign agent the part manganese and sintering or nodut-Izln- who beats up a man who's inspired by Nathan Hale's words. "I regret The report anld t is usually neces- that I have but one life to give for sary to discard the pyrlle Iron for my country." the final sinters to assay less than 7 per cent iron allowable. If the Joan Fontaina better get ready for content of phosphorus or nonpyrltlc the biggest year of her screen cairon should be too high in the ore, reer, now that she's won the Acadethe manganeso concentrates of low my award for her work in "SuspiIron content from other known dis- cion," whether she really wants to trict could be mixed with It. go on making pictures or not. She By tabling sized fractions of the was sure that one of the other nomiblack oxide or 63.1 per cent of t'ue nees, her sister, Olivia de Havilland, manganese wsn recovered and when Bette Davis, Greer Garson and Barsintered was ferrograde manganese. bara Stanwyck, would get it. The loss of manganese occurring us " habita of radio folk "On unbeatable slime limited recovery of Fred Allen chewe gum, swing ormanganese of ferrograde. The W I II has launched a domes- ganist Milt Herth chews eandle wax; tic manganese development program, the Andrew Sisters squrrze rarh rerommended by the bureau of mines others' hands, Phil Baker squeeze the golf bell that he always ferIncluding plans for a small ors dressd ing plant at Delta to treat the ore ries in his pocket. Tallulah from Drum Mountain, grips her seript so hard that -- afterward it shows the marks of her finger nails on every page. In Tall Self Wraps g. r f V 0 ' kv' ' ... Srf ' , ' the-slr- Bank-hea- , 'inning llm Longest TitiicIi ever jjloivctf iiy Alan ... One of the liig defence activities of the llcll Telephone System is the placing of the new 1600-mil- e untlerfrouml cable lines at a rout of twenty million dollars. They cross the Mountain Stales territory through Wyoming and I'lah, with a epur from Omaha-Sacramen- Sixteen-year-ol- d Linda Ware postponed her Paramount commitments because her doctor said she'd have to lake a rest, preferably out of town. She went to New York. A week later she'd accepted a singing If you need help on your Income, engagement at a swank night club, tuxes see V. E. Rife, Reporter office. j was discussing (he lead in a tnusi- I cal show opposite Kay Bolgcr. and I had four oflers for guest shots on the ! air. They say the doctor's threatened with apoplexy. Bob Hawk's Friday evening radio program, "How'ir I Doin'?," is one of Uncle Sum's heaviest b.iyers of defense stamps. The program authorities kerp a 82.0(H) reserve on hand st all limes. to Chryenne to lVmer. g The telephone "tanka'' umI on the flies and do their work in alinoat the crow as job travel kind of almoat any ground except soft swamps or solid rock. Dming steadily ahead, they are digging the deep trench for IfiOO miles, laying two rallies in it and filling in the earth, all in one continuous process. It is a major defense project because when romplrled late this year it will provide for the first time a all ruble mule free from most hazards, and it will matrriallv increase the number of traiiscwntiueii- lal telephone circuits as well. 20-to- n The antcalrr is a Brazilian wild animal, about the size of the average dog. that can wrap itself up in its own tail so effectually that it if entirely protected from heat or rain during its hour of slumber, ICcy men in government and industry require last, dependable transpj.tition. That's where Union Pacifio Streamliners play an imfoihiiit pul. They are on the job day in and day oai. cahle-layin- coast-to-coa- lit fur , , . Huy Drfenae IUhuU iwf Slumps The Mountain Stales Telephone 8 Telegraph Co. " v "invs,ct i ! ' j And so it is with Union Tacifie freight service. Production and assembly plants cLruar.d a s!oady stream of materials and parts. Union Pacific height locomotives, powerful giants of the mis, are Leepinj 'em rolling so that Uncle Sam can keep 'ent flying." ' ! sl 0 Auv fmr Two men are responsible for keeping actress Ann Thomas in New York, when she had an oppoitunity to join Shirley Temple in the radio version of "Junior Miss"; they're Mr. Ac e of radio's "Easy .Aces," (she's his stenographer in the air show,) and Mr. Meek of "Meet Mr. Meek." Strangely enough, the strongest structural material la not steel or any other metal, scientists tell ua. They say the strongest material ca pabl of manufacture ia plywood. Made by cutting logs into thin slice! and pressing these together in "sandwiches," with the grain of the wood in alternate layers running in different directions, plywood Is so strong that it if now rated as probably the strongest of all manufactured materials. It is used for hundreds of different purposes requiring great strength. -- (Lr Sr nSUrai WNl' SinlM.I ODDS AP t:nSSmr0 JW Alim simrd hit Irmlntii la SuuJu nminft fcei tight hm-- m hr't he MW NM't tm . mil fr.rf Allen i liuih ( !. yen Stixi met , I JUW Kule Smith millin rapt a! n ken ike nimn,J I . S. a Iminmi m at the Hrent Inkri (ins , . .Ware Jenn 0 nine um n U da) niJ nhen the mile her ureen n a the nen buhy a the uteen't "lllmul,," trriei . . 0 arner tire i. hut in hnj s,k leading men fur " 1 hr llmd 0 and "I he 0 idiiM 0 uuIJnl M eep" bn ant e Jr4itf l.fnn't in the army nn . . . Uai,,., bought hag,, Seed," by I'ruil i Hot k, and kill Sul i pultun a It. ni a" Today, our Nation's war program comes first and Union Pacific is cooperating to the fullest extent. We appreciate the patient understanding of traveleis who are not always able to obtain the accommodations they desire. Our thanks to you Lr your and futuie cooperation. N. W .Mackey, Phone Eureka, Utah 1 The rtkfxcjjive U.IION PACIFIC RAILROAD 'fit ftuifajicAf KOiuz & |