Gold Cube

unanimated

Thursday, October 31, 2013

Samples from Hecker Mine near Woodside Utah.

 The following is another article from old newspapers about the Hardy workings as my dad called them or the Copper Boy as it was known in the Salt Lake Mining Review.  This mine is in the Summerville Mining District in Emery County Utah.  I will have more articles posted to this blog in the future. 

THE HECKER MINE
__________

  Another lot of samples from the Hecker, near Woodside, have been tested at an assayer's in Salt Lake City,  The returns show from 93.5 to 119 ounces silver and from 43.2 to 48.5 per cent lead, with an average of 95 ounces silver and 45 per cent lead per ton.  This was derived from five assays.  Returns from samples of chloride were no less satisfactory, the average reaching 53.8 ounces silver and 37.89 per cent lead.  Of the latter Harvey Hardy reports a breast of seven feet in the cut by which the vein has been opened up, and to get it to moving to market 200 sacks have been forwarded to camp.  The shareholders are all rejoicing over the result of the assays, while the outlook cannot but stimulate interest in the camp.  


Eastern Utah Advocate
February 13, 1902

Wednesday, October 30, 2013

Miners at Summerville District near Woodside Utah.


SALT LAKERS SECURING 
FOOTHOLD IN EMERY
__________ 

  In the old Summerville mining district, south of Woodside more lode claims are being located than ever before, and the Kaiser and Hecker mining companies are preparing for a season of great activity.  Castle Dale's Progress says Harvey Hardy, S. M. Stenhouse, C. B. Jack and other Salt Lake parties, who have been doing more or less development work in that locality for several years, have lately been adding to their mining possessions by securing extensions of already partially developed lodes and taking in additional territory. 
  Louis Pressit of Woodside and associates have also been quite active in the locating business, and have added some choice looking mineral lands to their holdings.  J. B. Millburn, a Price man, and others have located mineral lands seven miles east of Hatchet Rock, and Attorney Allen Sanford of Salt Lake has interested himself in several claims in the old Summerville district. 
  Wyatt Bryan has made some locations west of Sinbad, and J. H. Barton, Charles A. Perry and Fred N. Miller, Miss Millie Cook, all of Ferron and Mrs. C. B. Snyder of Provo have placed their names to locations on ground twenty-five miles southeast of Ferron, in the vicinity of the Copper Globe property. 
__________

Eastern Utah Advocate 
February 11, 1904

Salt Lake Mining Review
February 15, 1904

Wednesday, October 16, 2013

Wild and Wooly Woodside.

Accused of Awful Crime at Woodside
____________

   Frank Randall of Woodside, aged about 30 years and a ranchman, was taken to the county jail at Castle Dale Monday in default of $2000 bonds demanded by a Green River justice for his appearance for trial at the next term of district court.  Randall is alleged to have attacked John Carswell's wife, the mother of six children, on the evening of March 3.  
   Randall was intoxicated at the time.  Mrs. Carswell was unconscious and incoherent for twenty-four hours after being found and would have died from her injuries had not a posse of citizens found her shortly after the attack.  
   Mrs. Carswell says that she was returning to her home a couple of miles from Woodside depot when she was attacked by Randall, who left her unconscious.  She was found by her husband and neighbors, who had become alarmed at her prolonged absence and instituted search.  A pair of gloves and a bottle of whiskey, said to belong to Randall, were picked up near the place where the victim lay.  
   Carswell was formerly engaged in mining at Sunnyside, but moved to Woodside six years ago.  Randall, it is alleged, is addicted to hard drinking.  He has lived at Woodside nearly all his life. 
________________

Carbon County News 
March 22, 1912

Mother of six is attacked by Brute
http://udn.lib.utah.edu/cdm/compoundobject/collection/odgen15/id/37958/show/37789/rec/38

Evening Standard
(Ogden Standard Examiner)
March 20, 1912

Sunday, September 15, 2013

Tribute to Newton School Children. I just love this video.


I actually saw this video on the program America's got Talent and loved it.  I didn't know at the time that it was a tribute the the Newton School victims. 



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2jJ8r67fjdE&sns=fb 





Sunday, August 25, 2013

Honeybee Facts.


http://www.backyardbeekeepers.com/facts.html 






ROYAL JELLY FACT SHEET


Royal Jelly is the substance that turns an ordinary bee into the Queen Bee. It is made of pollen which is chewed up and mixed with a chemical secreted from a gland in the nursing bee's heads. This "milk" or "pollen mush" is fed to all the larvae for the first two days of their lives.
   
The larvae chosen to become a queen continue to eat only royal jelly. The queen grows one and a half times larger than the ordinary bee, and is capable of laying up to two thousand eggs a day. The Queen Bee lives forty times longer than the bees on a regular diet. There is no difference between a queen bee and a worker bee in the larval stage. The only factor that is different between them is that a developing queen bee continues to eat only royal jelly.
   
Scientists decided to try feeding the queen bee's diet to other animals with surprising results. The life spa of pigs and roosters showed as much as a thirty- percent increases. Fruit flies fed royal jelly increased in size and in rate of production. Chickens given royal jelly laid twice as many eggs, and older chickens began to lay again.
   
In France, there have been reports of women fed royal jelly during menopause, showing complete remission of their symptoms. Some were even able to become mothers again. France also claimed that their studies showed royal jelly to have rejuvenating and sexually stimulating effects on both men and women. Canada has approved royal jelly as a natural dietary supplement for its athletes. Royal jelly is not a drug, but a nutritious, quickly assimilated food.
   
In Germany, Drs. Chochi, Prosperi, Quadri and Malossi (in separate studies) used royal jelly as an aid to badly undernourished and premature babies. The infants fed royal jelly increased in weight and health. Another doctor, Telatui, reported that neuro-psychic patients given royal jelly regained normal weight, a more stable nervous system, and a greater degree of stamina for physical and mental work.
   
Chemical analysis of royal jelly found it rich in protein and the B vitamins (especially panothenic acid). However, analysis of royal jelly fails to break it down into all its different components. It cannot be synthesized.
Royal jelly has proven to be a potent bactericide. It also acts as a catalyst, stimulating intercellular metabolic activities without significantly modifying normal physiological activity. Thus, it hastens cell recovery with no side effects. Royal jelly has been known to speed up healing of wounds and to reduce the amount of scarring.
The beneficial effects of royal jelly seem not to depend entirely upon its vitamin content, but upon some type of enzymatic or catalytic action of an as yet unknown factor; or perhaps, the known factors working in combination with a co-enzyme through a process that has not yet been defined.
   
Since the action of royal jelly seems to be systemic rather that one which affects a specific biological function, it has been recommended for a great variety of purposes: to retard the aging process, for menopause, correction of under-nutrition, for arthritis, vascular diseases, peptic ulcers, liver ailments, nervous instability, skin problems, improvement of sexual functions, general health and well being.  

 

Sunday, August 18, 2013

Magpie Invasion


This is about an invasion of magpies on my street.  There was about 8 of them.  I got a couple  of them in one picture being stalked by an old black and white cat named Oreo.  I got five of them in the second picture.  But I missed a really good video.  In the second picture there is a chain link fence and a wooden fence.  Shortly after I took this picture there was another cat came from inside the chain link fence area.  I was waiting for the magpies to get closer to Oreo for a chance at a video.  The second cat appeared near 3-5 magpies.  Before I could analyze the situation and decide what to do it lunged through the opening of the two fences at the covey of magpies.  The cat didn't capture any but it gave them a good scare.  They were very excited.  Or was it angry.  They stayed a few minutes, left and haven't been back.   The invasion was over. 











Saturday, August 10, 2013

New evidence about Lost Dutchman Mine.


http://www.desertusa.com/lost-dutchman/lost-dutchman-1.html



http://www.desertusa.com/lost-dutchman/lost-dutchman-2.html



http://www.desertusa.com/lost-dutchman/lost-dutchman-3.html



Many tales of the Lost Dutchman mention an Apache curse which protects the sacred burial ground of Apache Indians. This curse also protects the treasure of the Superstitions, whose secret location the Apache are said to know.
The legend of the curse traces back to the early 1500s, when Jesuit priests from Spain began to build missions in the areas now known as Arizona and New Mexico. During this period, the Jesuits established relations with Native Americans, who worked to mine the gold, much of which was sent back to the King of Spain.

...

The legend includes details on how the Peraltas buried the rich mines with rocks to hide their discovery. Some also believe that after the Spanish miners left the area, the Apache removed up all evidence of mining by filling holes, mines, tunnels, etc. with dirt and rocks.

...  

Well one night Dave, a frequent hiking companion and I had just finished a rough trip over Malipais mountain from Peters canyon and had rappelled down a cliff into LaBarge canyon somewhat above the Labarge Box.

...

While some of the stories regarding the Peralta Mine (a.k.a. The Lost Dutchman Mine") reflect that the moonlight through Weaver's Needle point to the entrance of the mine, Jacob Weiser's Journal tells a different story. While the State of Arizona protected the area of Weaver's Needle and Superstition Mountain by making it a State Park, it appears that the mine may be located outside of this area. Although a successful businessman, inheriting roughly $7.2 million (American) from the gold sent by Jacob Weiser to his sister in Germany, I am not a prospector and I'm not interested in searching for the Peralta Mine (a.k.a. "The Lost Dutchman Mine") or working the mine for its gold. I'm more interested in proving the legend.