Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 28, Number 28, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 8 January 1898 — Page 6
v,'
HOW HE MAKES GOLD
EDWARD C. BRICE AND FURNACES.
HIS FIERY
Monnt Vesuvius Gave Him the Cue—He Expect* to Tarn Oat 810,000 Every Week Antimony, Heat and Certain
Ingredients Are Used, [Special Correspondence.
Chicago. Jan. 4.—Manufacturing gold is not altogether a poetic occupation if Edward C. Brice's establishment in Chicago is any criterion
It
is like a glimpse of the infernal regions, thick with smoke and redolent with classified odors and vapors. All the workmen are obliged to wear respirators, and the few privileged visitors are invariably overcome with the powerful gases.
The interior is painfully prosaic until the great inventor throws open the fur nace doors and reveals one of the most beautiful sights imaginable. Row on row, tier on tier, rise the crucibles fell of the precious ore, but the awful heat transforms these ugly jars into glowing
EDWARD C. BRICE.
vessels that resemble exquisite Venetian vases filled with liquid fire. When the crucibles are chilled, the crystalline structures resemble black, translucent scales in tho form of cubes, and on the face of each is a grain of pure gold, the whole mass sparkling like 10.000 diamonds.
Mr.:Briog is undoubtedly the most conspicuous man in the world today if, as seems probable, he has solved one of God's greatest secrets, the production of gold. His discovery was by no means an aooident, but the direct result of nearly a quarter of a century's unwearying investigation.
Eighteen years ago Mr. Brice camped for a couple of months on Mount Vesuvius in the hut of a government guide, and the two men almost daily climbed to tho crater, which required about ten hours for the round trip Mr. Brice never patronized the Vesuvian steeds, as his purpose was better served by walking. It was his ambition to make a thorough study of transmitted heat, and as a result of his investigation thero he is the greatest authority in the world on tho subject.
At a Crater's Month.
By bribing tho guide he went nearer to the mouth of the volcano when it was in action than any other man who has lived to tell the story and has dropped tho pyrometer into the molten mass and found it registering 8,000 to 4,000 degrees. He has watched the terrible havoc of these tremendous waves of heat saw them rend the mighty rocks and turn thoni from cold gray stones to dazzling reds of every tint.
Ho was tho first scientist to discover that there was nothing in the crater to burn that it was only a vent for that wonderful furnace in the heart of the earth. Later he went to Egypt, where, through the American minister, ho was presented to the khedive, who introduced him to the scientists of the country, and they taught him secrets that have been guarded and treasured most jealously for thousands of years.
Mr. Brice built 14 experimental furnaoes before constructing the present plant at Lowe avenue and Thirty-ninth street, Chicago. He made his first gold Feb. 20, 889, in the form of a tiny bead, and during the last eight years he has bent his euergies toward producing gold economically, as in the former experiments nAich of the yellow stuff went up the chimney. However, he is now satisfied that he has reached the highest form of the art in furnace building, as he has constructed four furnaces that are under the most perfeot control and yet registering the extraordinary heat of 6,000 and 7,000 degrees.
Last summer he purchased a disused molding establishment and has converted the old ruin into a neat but unpre* tentious red building. The offices and parting room are in front, and back of them is the mechanical department. It is an immeuse building, in which the big furnaces are the conspicuous features. They are all alike, with the exception that the removable body of the third is provided with a water jacket, and that the fourth, or cupelling, furnace is provided with a ledge, upon which are placed the crucibles of powder gold obtained by the parting of the gold and silver found in a mixed button in the bottom of each of tfie cupels, so that the rem el ting of this powder gold is carried on simultaneously with the heating of a batch of loaded cupels.
The furnaces are in two stacks, wach stack containing two furnaces, and in each stack tho Ore boxes are at the outer ends, the two furnaces being next to the fireboxes and the flue for each stack descending beneath the ground from between the two furnaces proper. Each furnace has an arched ceiling from which the heat is focused upon the floor of the furnace, the floors being removable by having an oval opening hi the place where the permanent floor would otherwise be. These movable floors are 'lifted into place by which lower and raise the metal rails
...
upon which the test bottoms are shoved from the track which is used for placing and removing them.
The Process Explained.
The first process is to convert antimony into the oxide of antimony which is produced by destructive distillation. A quantity of the ore is powdered in the crushing machine and placed on the removable bottom of the right hand furnace. The antimony is brought from the company's beds in Utah at a cost oi $15 per ton. When the antimony is attacked by the heat, it melts and then boils away in fumes into the flues which, under the combined draft created by a blower situated in the operating room and by an exhaust fan in the pipe system, are carried do^rn the inclined flue which emerges ftqgm the stack to which this antimony distilling furnace belongs, and then passes into the main or undergrohnd flue and finally into the system of cooling pipes in the yard and into the bags which form the termination of the metallic pipe system.
There is 600 feet of open air piping, broken into sections by elbows, the purpbse being to cool the fumes to prevent the igniting of the woolly canvas bags. The baghouse is about 30 feet high and is filled with bags 20 feet long and 2 feet in diameter which are suspended mouth downward and emptying intoreceptaoles which receive the grayish powder that has been shaken from the inside of the bags and which is really the solidified antimony fumes.
This oxide of antimony, together with other ingredients unknown to any but the inventor, are mixed in the com pounding room into a paste. The mixer is like that used for concrete, being trough 7 feet long and 2 feet wide in which a paddled shaft is kept constantly revolving by means of machinery. This paste is then put into crucibles and packed away in Mr. Brice's great voloano, where they are subjected to the most intense heat for 48 hours. The ore is then crushed and placed in the removable bottom of one of the furnaces and a quantity of scrap lead thrown on the top of it. The heat cause? the lead to melt and sink to the disklike surface of the removable bottom. It finally vaporizes, and, passing up through the ore, forms a corrosive lith arge which corrodes and eats up into a "matte" everything contained in the powdered ore with the exception of the gold and silver values, which are drawn off with the molten lead into molds about 8 ijches long and 4 inches wide. This lead bullion is put into the third furnace, where the treatment is similar to the preceding one, which is for the purpose of getting rid of the "matte
The Weekly Output.
The final prooess is carried on in the fourth furnace, where 80 bone ash cupels, each loaded with a 12 inch block, are placed. These cupels have the property of absorbing.every substance wfnch may be melted in them, with the exception of gold and silver, the latter being left in the bottom of the cupels in the form of button or hemispherical blocks of the mixed metals. The cupelling process requires about 1,200 degrees and occupies about three-quarters of an hour, the buttons weighing about three ounces each and containing four parts of gold and one of silver. When the oupels are taken from the furnace, the buttons are carried into the parting room and put into a porcelain vessel and treated like the ordinary gold ore. When the elaborate cupelling process is completed, there are, separate ingots or bars of pure gold and silver.
The furnace fires were lit at 10 o'olock a. m. Monday, Nov. 22, and the first week's output was $1,826.19£, which was a wonderful return considering the difficulties of the initial run. Mr. Brice expects to turn out $10,000 every week and not work his furnaces to their full capacity. Notwithstanding the incredulity of the world, Mr. Brice's gold manufacturing plant is an established faot. And the brainy inventor is no more elated than the farmer who reaps what he has sown. Indeed it would be difficult to imagine a more unassuming man than Edward C. Brice, whose discovery is likely to revolutionize the world's monetary system. His fine face shows the traoesof anxiety and hard work, but he still wears the same old hat, as there has been no necessity for a larger size.
The personal safety of Mr. Brice has been and is a matter of anxiety to his friends, as they have feared that a crsiuk may take his life, hoping to check the manufacture of gold. He scoffed at their fears, but has finally consented to carry a shining toy that he has-not forgotten to use since he carried it in his country's defense. And on the desk in the office may be seen a collection of pistols and rifles that reminds the visitor of a small arsenal. Should Mr. Brice die a natural or unnatural death gold will still be produced, as the precious secret is in the possession of a trusted friend of the inventor, and a copy of the formulae is locked up in a safety deposit vault. Jenxie Van Allbn.
Broaw Medal For Mrs. Meed.
Honor has come to Captain and Mrs. Reed of the ship T. F. Oakes, which arrived in New York from China last March, when Captain Beed was ill with most of the crew. Mrs. Beed steered the vessel safely into port, only to meet charges preferred against her and her husband by the crew. Of the charges they were both acquitted. A letter came to Mrs. Reed today bringing with it a certificate from Lloyds of an honorary acknowledgment of meritorious service Mid a bronze medal for that service.
1 1
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Sliiillfi
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Life of a Steel BuIL**' *1
In tearing up a siding on the Straitsville division of the Baltimore and Ohio railroad the other day the section men discovered that several of the rails had been made in 1888. Subsequent investigation revealed the fact* that these rails were part of a lot that were bought in England during the war at a cost of ill35 per ton in gold. The rails were
still in very fair condition and for light man who had received this sort of reply
powerful screws I motive power might last ten years loa- sent bade a courteous request that if the cattleman would not do anything about
FK0M TOWN TO RANCH
SAD EXAMPLES OF WASTED MONEY AND ENERGY.
What It Has Cost to Find Just What a Country Is Suited To—The Plains of Western Kansas and Nebraska Given Up to Kanching.
[Special* Correspondence.]
Abilene, Kan., Jan. 4.—Most notable changes going on in the prairies of the west are the wiping out of the oities of the boom times and the passing away of the evidences that once back in the middle eighties there was a belief that the semiarid region would at a bound become a paradise. Then scores of towns were built in this state and in Nebraska, where none was needed, and thousands of settlers took up claims where now it
ABANDONED WATERWORKS.
iversally admitted that prosperity from farming is impossible without irrigation. As the lands are too far from streams to use this method of securing water there is no possibility of farming becoming a feature of the section, but when it was thought that this was possible there was nothing too good for the people who helped build up the plains. Splendid brick and stone blocks, with marble pillars flanking the entrances, ornamented the towns, and handsome school houses were erected for pupils that never answered the call of the bell. There were water systems that have fallen into disuse^ long ago and telephones that have ceased to speak. The traveler hitches his horse to the hydrants of the waterworks abandoned, and the schoolbouse is the living place of some ranchmen. When it was demonstrated that farming could not succeed in that semiarid region, the population left. Now the cattlemen are taking possession. They have run their ranch fences for miles in every direction regardless of the ownership of the land. Their cattle are grazing where once the real estate agent sold lots for $200 each, and the cowboys stable their horses where there was once a busy street.
Many a town has been taken away, all the buildings being removed to the ranches for houses and stables. Others have been greatly depleted, and the inhabitants who clirig to the place are using only the best of the property. Saratoga, Kan., is one of these boom towns. In it stands a handsome six room brick schoolhouse, empty, except as a short term is taught during the winter months to a score or less of children in one of the rooms. One or two store buildings are left. The remainder have been ta"k'en down and hauled away. Cash City, in the same state, was once a town of a thousand or so population. The other day a cattleman bought the town site, including five buildings that had not been moved away, for $250, and his horses are stabled in the commodious double store. The supplies of the ranch are kept in an abandoned schoolhouse, and the other store buildings remaining on the site of the one time "city" are at the disposal of the herders as they see fit to use them. Springfield is practically abandoned, yet it once had a sys tern of waterworks, and the people thought that it would soon be the metropolis of the state. There are many other sad examples of wasted energy and money, together with ill advised investments on the part of those who were led away by the enthusiasm of the times.
The farms suffered no less than the towns. One may see along the wagon courses in western Kansas when driving through the cattle ranches here and there a daep hole with a pile of dirt beside it. It is the old well of some abandoned claim. There are hundreds and thousands of them. u, The story of the emigration is a short one. As the dry summers came and the wheat and corn did not grow the farmers tried time after time, but in vain. Then they took some state aid and some free seed wheat. When these were gone, they put wife and family in the white topped prairie schooner and started on the voyage of discovery anew. Some went on to the western coast, some "back to the wife's folks" in the east, some to try it again in the counties in the eastern part of the same state, mov ed by a pluck that would win anywhere that a little rain would fall. There was a mortgage on the claim and little else. The investor who loaned the property now owns it, if he has not sold it to the cattleman.
The cattleman is not at all anxious to buy the land, though. He has a better way of handling it. He gets possession
ABANDONED SOD HOI7SB.
of one of the claims along the water courses and when he fences it forgets to stop at the corner of the property, but on and on he goes until be has fenced in 10,000 acres or more, enough to feed all the cattle he can possibly obtain fear the purpose. Sometimes a landowner in the east hears it and writes to the cattleman, asking if he does not think he is doing wrong to hold the land that does not belong to him. The reply is an invitation to the owner to oome and take his land out of the pasture if he is not satisfied with the situation. One
TEBBE HAUTE SATURDAY EVEH£NG- MAIL, JANUARY '8, 1898.
the handling of the land would kind enough to allow it to remain his pasture until there could be something done to remove it. It was granted.
The result of it all is that the settlers who remain are making a success and are finding out just what the country is suited to do. They are trying to raise stock and not grain. They have stopped trying to build cities where only ranches are in demand. The new era is one that means a great deal for the west, for it is the beginning of a period of permanent prosperity that will be valuable tc the people and to the plains region generally. The investments in town lots were disastrous, but those in steers will be profitable. The old time cowboys and the line riders are coming back, and the excitement of the early days, when the cattle trail was in its glory, is being repeated in lesser form.
C. M. Harder.
"Only the Best"
Should be your motto when you need a medicine. Do not be induced to take any substitute when you call for Hood's Sarsaparilla. Eperience has proved it to be the best. It is an honest medicine, possessing actual and unequalled merit. Be wise and profit by the experience of other people.
Hood's Pills are the favorite family cathartic, easy to take, easy to operate.
St. Andrew's by Wardrobe.'^-*-,'
The tiny churchyard of St. Andrews-by-Wardrobe has many associations. It is even Shakespearean. In his last will the poet left a house in the parish to his daughter, Susannah Hall, "situate, lying and being in Blackfriars, in London, nere the Wardrobe." "But why Wardrobe?" will be asked by such as remember Betsy Trotwood's "Why Rookery?" in a palace built in the fourteenth centu-y by Sir John Beauchamp, the same whose tomb in St. Paul's churchyard became the resort of the dinnerless, who believed it to be that of the good Duke Humphrey, Edward HI deposited all the old court clothes. The exhibition was a sort of sartorial library, as somebody has remarked. Now its site over against the northeast corner of the church is covered by Wardrobe Chambers. In the churchyard lie two of "Vandyke's men," and his daughter was baptized there, so there are artistic as well as poetic associations. Indeed, Faithorn, the engraver, was buried there. An old epitaph is preserved in Maitland, but no trace of it is now to be found: When God was pleased (the world unwilling yet) Helias James to Nature paid his debt, And here reposes: as he lived he dy'd, The saying in him strongly verified. Such life, such death, then along truth to tell. He lived a godly life and dy'd as well.
Helias Jpmes was evidently of those whose hand is subdued to what it works in.—Westminster Gazette.
Silas In New York.
A figure that was for a time familiar in up town streets has now appeared down town. It is that of a man in the garb of a countryman carrying an old fashioned valise, upon which an advertisement is painted. Uptown he returned at intervals to the shore he came from, looked up at the sign over the door and then walked in, to start out again presertly on another round.
Down town he carries two valises, a small, flat valise of the alligator mouth kind, upon ihe side of which is marked the name 3ilas." The other, a big, square, glr-ed valise, bears the name and announcement of a down town hotel.
Silas, wearing clothes from way back, his trousers tucked in his boots, and a red bandanna around his neck, smooth facd and wearing spectacles, and with a look of profound innocence upon his countenance, wanders about through the busy streets in the lower part of the city. He attracts attention, and that is his business. Incidentally he adds one to the many odd, picturesque and interesting features of the citv'a Varied show.—New York Sun. "I have tried Salvation Oil in my family, on a broken and dislocated foot and can recommend it to any ong as a good liniment. Mrs. William Tolley, Joplin, Mo.
After using a 10-cent trial size of Ely's Cream Balm you will be sure to buy the 50c size. Cream Balm has no equal in curing catarrh and cold in head. Ask your druggist for it or send 10 cents to us.
ELY BROS., 56 Warren St.. N. Y. City. I suffered from Catarrh three years it got so bad 1 could not work I used two bottles of Ely's Cream Balm and am entirely well I would not be without it.— A. C. Clarke, 341 Shawmut Ave., Boston.
Try Grain-O! Try Grain-O! Ask your Grocer to-day to show you a package of GRAIN-O, the new food drink that takes the place of coffee. The children may drink it without injury as well as the adult. All who try it, like it. GRAIN- O has that seal brown of Mocha or Java, but it is made from pure grains, and the most delicate stomach receives it without distress. )4 the price of coffee. 15c. and 25 cts. per package. Sold by all grocers.
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Rheumatism Cured in a Day. i/ '''Mystic Cure" for Rheumatism and Neuralgia radically cures in 1 to 3 days. Its action upon the system is remarkable and mysterious. It removes at once the cause and the disease immediately disappears. The first dose greatly benefits. 75 cents. Sold by Jacob Banr. Seventh and Main Sts., Cook, Bell & Black, and all druggists In Terre Haute.
Save Yourselves
By using South American Nervine .Tonic. The most stupendous of nature's great cures for disease of tbe Stomach ana dis-
most stupendous of nature's of the Nerves. The cure begins with tbe first dose. It towers high above all other remedies, because it never fails to cure the stomach and nerves after other remedies have failed. Use it for all cases of Nervous Dyspepsia. Indigestion and Nervous Prostration. It is safe and pleasant, and its powers are such it cannot fail. If you procure it you will be grateful for such a boon, and will have cause for joy for many years to come. Sold by all druggists in Terre Haute, Ind.
Kdaeau Toor Bowels With C»*car«t*. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever. 10c. 35c. If C. C. C. fail, druggists refund money.
r*$^aiid
dramatic as apiece of fiction.
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The Christmas MCCLURB'S contained a complete Short Story by K.idyard Kiplmg entitled THB TOMB OK HIS ANCESTORS, the t.tle ofa clouded Tiger, an officer in the.Indian army, and a rebellious tribe. We have in hand also a New Ballad, a powerful, grim, moving song of War Ships. It will be superbly illustrated. Mr. Kipling will be a frequent contributor.
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The account of this terrible fight wriiten down by Hamlin Garland as it came from the lips of 7W Moons, an old Indian Chief who was a participant in it.
The great Arctic explorer has written an article on the possibilities of reaching the North Pole on the methods that the next expedition should adopt, and the important scientific knowledge to be gained by an expedition concerning the
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greatest value to science. The best artists and illustrators .MCCU'RK'S MAGAZINE. A. B. Frost, ..., Hov ard Pyle, Kenyon Cox, C. K. Linson, W. D. Stevens, Alfred Brennan, and others.
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AND SHORT STORIES
Two famous authors will contribute long serial stories to the BAZAR in 1898. The first deals with Scotch and Continental scenes, the second is a story of a young girl, versatile, and typically American. Mary E. Wilkins Octave Thanet H. P. Spofford M. S. Briscoe
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SHORT STORIES BY GREAT AUTHORS
Edison's Wonderful Invention, The result of eight years' constant labor. Mountains ground to dust and the iron o't extracted by magnetism. The Fastest Ship. An article by the inventor and constructor of "Turbinia, a vessel thai can make the speed of an express train. Making a Gna:
THE RAILROAD MAN'S LIFE
NEW YORK IN 1950
Mark Twain contributes an article in his old manner, describing his voyage from India to South Africa. The illustrations are by A. B. Frost and Peter Neweit, and are as droll and humorous as the article itself.
nrxptored Asia, a story of remarkable adventure and endurance. ^Lnndor in TAibet. His own story. He was captured, tortured and finally escaped to India. Jnekion in the Far North. The famous explorer writes of the years he lived in regions far north of the boundaries of human habitation.
ADVENTURE
ILLUSTRATIONS
William Black
WILD EELEN By WILLIAM BLACK
RAGGED LADV By IV. I). HOWEt.LS
These and a score of other equally prominent writers will contribute short stories to the BAZAR in 1898, making the paper especially rich in fiction.
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