THE ALLIANCE (NEBRASKA) HERALD Thursday, August 28th, 1919 liKvnnv or iMiiTir i-otasii ntomcnoN- (Continued from pace 1) Many products begun Jn 1916 be came arMve producers In 1917, and many former produrers enlarged their cupflrlty. At the r!fe of 1917 there were 01 potash plant (Includ ing 45 producnljr ryth from wood ashes) in operation, and the pro duction of tho your amounted to 32.573 tons of poinnh (K20) vnl lied rt $ 1 3.90.S77. About 45 per rent of the output rim from Ne braska brines, 18 per rout from Varies I.nke nnd other bines, 11 per cent from kelp, 9 per cent from mob!"' dtpMllcry who,' 7 per rent from slumnlte, 5 per ccn from cement m H1f. and the other 5 per cent from blast furnaces, Stefllns vafer, from Migar refineries, wool vaohlnvrs and wood ashes. Xrln ix 1D1S more than .108 firms produced potash tn the T'niled States from ten dltlnct .ouro'!i. At the close of the rar several new potash plnnts were about ready to repln operations, neveral were tin der construction, find a number of new companies had been oreanisd. The estimated "productive enpacity was about lOO.rmo tons, valued more than ?20,T00,000 and repre sents more than 22 per cent of our normal consumntlon. Sourer of Dojnevtlo Iot.nti. Mlsrelaneoiis Organic' Sources The prod net Ion of potash from wool wnshlntrs, tobacco steins, olive oil residues and other miscellaneous orpanlc sources, 4houch Important, Is, small nnd will probably -never amount 1o more than a few hundred tops annually. This statement does not rrrer In any way to natural pot ash manures, which mav be used In AVood AMtes. At the , present time about 4f" companies are po dnolnsr nntash from wood ashes, prlnrlpallv In Wisconsin and, Mlehl pan. The product Is essentially a mixture of the carbonate and hv-dro-oxldo, containing probnblv about 60 Per cent potash (K20). The product Inn Increased fronj shout 1 tons of K?n in 1918 o about r,fi7 tons In 1917. and to about BOO tons Jn 1918. The production from th's source will never be tnree because of the scarrltr pnd widespread dis tribution of wood ashes. (Strfftos Vite Wntev from Sinrnr TUflnerie. A reeeivt Important de Velonmet Is a bv-nroduet recover of rtntash ordinarily wased In the Stefflns wnrs froni te heet SHCSr refineries. Ftlmates nn the amourt Of pnnh (K20 now jrninr to we In- PtefT"s water at bot ono ton" Sven cnTonontew for nr-od 3.174 tons of noth from this w" rnatertnt tn arver"1 ritv eomnsnle tnstaUed votsb ntr Th' Is ()tsb1tae nnd so Hv nromlse of pprniprev Mo1ac Wnste. Molasoes rest due from distilleries have been util ised as a bout of a production of potash In California. Tunisians, Massachusetts. Pennsylvania, and FoTto Ttteo. bv far the larensl yield from California. The production tn 1916 was 1.845 tons of actual pot nsh (Including: the small amount produced from Stefllns waste wa tersi. In 1917 the production from dlstlllerv waste alone ws 2.846 tons and In 1918 pbout 3.3!52 tons Estimates Indicate that about 30.000 tons of potash are lost annually from th 25 or more dlatlllerles us ing molasses. Efforts shauld be made to bring the production from this source up to capaeHy, and util ise a waste product from H well established Industry. Kelp.- More than ten companies have erected factories on the Pacific ' coast for producing potash from kelp, with a combined annual ca parity estimated at between ' 5.000 and 10.000 tons of K20. The Her culeB Powder factory Is the largest plant and has been the largest pro ducer. The production from kelp increased from 1.556 tona of K20 In 1916 to 3,572 tons In 1917, and to 4.637 tons In 1918. It has been preuiciea mai me available re sources In raw material would not permit of & large Increase In pro duction from this source. Further more the cost of productlou is tiigh ana the price of potash la falllnar. Kearly all the kelp potash producers nave closed their plants In antlcl pat ion of a price at which they couia not operate. Alnnlte. -The only known alun nlte deposits In the United- States of commercial value are located In the vicinity of Marysville. Utah jseverai companies are interated In these properties. The Mineral products Corporation produced pot ash from one of the principal claims duiluK most of 1916, 1917 and 1918. The Florence Mining and Milling Company has a calelmnlng plant near Marysvale; the Amerlcnn Smelting A- Itcflnlng Company hns built a plant nt Mil ray, Utah; and jiJut companies have been active. Sufficient da ft are not available reau of Soils have made a careful study of the potash content of the operating conditions in nearly all the cement plants In the United States and Canada with the view of determining the amount of potash recoverable in the dust from these plants. Their conclusion Is tbat under the present operating condi tions about 1.66 pounds of potash Is 1 recoverable lit available form for hi jurMiij tin i ri mill i t i.j imji . . . . . , ,,...tlf, of alunite rock available ! 1 fJSK. for pdtHsh production. lintler and liale tKtimnted the amouivi In on'' group (f fliiims at "(), 00 tons for each 100 feet In depth, and I,ouch liu Increased this ntli(iato to 47.ri. 000 tons. Loushline suugesf the deposit may ri'ii !i a depth of about 1.000 fret. The rj ' n n t i t available In other claims Is birvely a matter of conjecture. It appears, certain, however, that there Is suiricien nl unlte in tho Marysvale tliUicc to yield a lame tonnage of potash for niiiny years. l'.lat Furnace. Apparently sys- tep'Btle efforts have not been made !o produce potash from blast-fur-1 mice dust, olthoneh several compa nies have reported production. L' llinntes based on Inconclusive evi dence have placed the amount of potash (K20) charged annually In to blast furnaces .in the I'nKed States at 380,000 tons a large part of which. Is volatlllr.ee snd poes to waste 'with tho gases. This source may eventually supply n substantial part of our demands. Developments should bo encouraged. Coinent Kilns. Several cement plants have Installed the Ctttrell electric precipitation system nnd some have Installed other dust-collecting apparatus In order to- obtain potash as a by-product In the manu facture of cement. Much experi mental work has been done In con nection with the problem. Produc tion has been small but regular for more than three years. In If.' 14 . ire were 1' cement- producing plants In the United States, with an annual capacity of about 90.000,000 barrels. Recently V. II. Itoss and others of the Bu- tons of actual potash (K20) onnu olly and that by changing the oper mina conditions slightly the amount to:! Id be Increased-to nbout 100000 tons. Silicate Itotks. Many processes have been devised for extracting potash from silienfo rocks nnd c!on slderaMe experimental work on a comparatively large scale has been done to demonstrate the commercial practicability of some of these pro cesses but so far only a very small production from this class of raw materials has been reported. Sever al larie plants however, are about ready to beitln the extraction of pot ash from silicate rocks. Among the raw materials to be considered in this connection are the deposits of greensand (claucon He) in New Jersey Delaware and Maryland which carry about 7 per cent of potash; the fieldspar depos its from Maine to North Carolina; EXCESSIVE ACIDITY is ct the bottom of most digestive ills. for indigestion afford pleas ir.a r.nd prompt relief from H the ustres3 cf acid-dyspepsia. MADE BY SCOTT & BOWNE MAKERS CF SCOTTS EMULSION f TIRE shopping is responsible for your having a good tire one time and a poor one the next It pays to buy the Firestone Gray Side wall consfc ",ntly. Its excellent qualities are to be found in every tire bearing the name Firestone. 'id TIRES Most Miles per Dollar "BAYER CROSS" ON ASPIRIN Always Ask for Genuine 'Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" Only Atpiria Tablets with the safety ''Bayer Cross" on them, are genuine "Bayer Tablets ot Aspirin," owned and tnade by Americans and proved sate by Btillioni of people. Unknown quantities Cf fraudulent Aspirin Tablet were sold recently by a Brooklyn dealer which proved to b composed mostly of Talcum Powder. "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" ahould always be aaked for. Then look for tho safety "Bayer Cross" on the pack ag and on each tablet. Accept nothing else! Proper directions and doaaga in each Bayer packaga. ,Ajpiria b U trada mark of Bayer Maaufactura of Monoaoetieaoideater of 8alkyUcaclt Post of Permanence The post that drives like a stake that re quires no hole digging that is cheaper installed than wood or concrete posts that lasts! Let us demonstrate edl To p Steel Fence Posts made of durable A-l angle steelrot proof fire-proof unbreakablp. Used extensively by the U. S. Government Protects cattle from liehtning per mits fence line burning improves and beautifies your property saves work. Sharp bevel edged points make it easy to drive. Patented anchor plate makes it bind tight in any soil. Ask for the post with the REDHEAD. Come in to day) no obligation to buy. DIERKS LUMBER & COAL COMPANY the potah bearing rocks of the LeucKe Hills In Sweetwater county, Wyoming, which carry about 10 per cent of potash; sericltes and Plates of Ocorala, said to carry about 9 per cent of potash; and the tilings collected in dumps at certain copper and sold mines in the west, which carry probably from 5 to possibly as hlsh as 10 per cent of potash. Fleld Bpar often contains from 10 to 14 per cent of potash (K20) but a Be lies of analysis (unpublished) by the UiiKed States Geological Survey Indicates that the average quarry product rarely contains over 7.5 per cent. No eetlmatos of ouantitr for Celd- ppar and eerlcite are available but the quantity of these materials is known to be very large. WashinR ton estimated the potash in the ereensands of New Jersev at 2.034.- 000 metric tons. 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