VOL. III., NO. 17. PINEHURST, N. C, FEB. 23, 1900. PRICE THREE CENTS, WHY? OB LA GRIPPE MELANCHOLIA. I was not wont, to find the days too long, On lightning wings the roseate moments lied And bore me on by myriad interests led, Till Life appeared to be, one grand sweet song AVhich all creation vied but to prolong. Anon, my sun did set, and awesome dread Filled heart and brain, until the weary head Seemed but the seat where harrowing thoughts might throng. Most earnestly I asked the reason why The hours should now on leaden wings go by And sullen shadows hide the azure sky, While sadness drlveth Hope so far away. The answer came : "To teach thee sympathy For suffering 6ouls, whose darkness hath no day. Anna Hubbard Mekcuu. MONAZITE. A Rare Mineral Mined In Considerable quantities In This State Its Uses. The following interesting description of monazite, a rare mineral for which there has been considerable demand in recent years, is taken from the report of Henry B. C. Nitze, assistant state geolo gist, issued by the N. C. Geological Sur vey. The mines in this state and South Carolina are practically the only ones in this country. "Monazite is essentially an anhydrous phosphate of the rare earths cerium, lanthanum, and didymium. It also con tains, almost invariably, small percent ages of thoria and silicic acid, which may be present in combination as thorite or orangite, or the thoria may exist as the phosphate, either in combination with the cerium, etc., or as an isoinorphous mixture. Other occasional accessory constituents are the yttrium and erbium earths, zirconia, alumina, magnesia, lime, iron oxides, manganous oxide, tin and lead oxides, fluorine, titanic acid, and water, usually in fractional percentages. "It is a subtranslucent to subtranspar ent mineral, light yellow, reddish yel low, brownish, or greenish in color, and has a resinous luster. It is brittle with conchoidal to uneven fracture. Its hard ness is from 5 to 5.5, and its specific gravity from 4.9 to 5.3. It crystallizes in the monoclinic system. "The commercial economical deposits :f monazite are those occurring in the placer sands of the streams and adjoining bottoms and in the beach sands along the seashore. The geographical areas over which such workable deposits have been found up to the present time are quite limited in number and extent. In the United States the placer deposits of North and South Carolina stand alone. This area includes between 1600 and 2000 square miles, situated in Burke, Mc Dowell, Rutherford, Cleveland, and Polk counties, N. C, and the northern part of Spartanburg county, S. C. The principal deposits of this region are found along the waters of Silver, South Muddy, and North Muddy creeks, and Henrys and Jacobs Folks of the Catawba river in McDowell and Burke counties; the Sec ond Broad river in McDowell and Ruth erford counties; and the First Broad liver in Rutherford and Cleveland coun ties, N. C, and Spartanburg county, S. C. These streams have their sources in the South Mountains, an eastern outlier of the Blue Ridge. The country rock is granitic biotite gneiss and dioritic horn blende gneiss, intersected nearly at right angles to the schistosity by a parallel system of small auriferous quartz veins. Most of the stream deposits of this region have been worked for placer gold. The existence of monazite in commercial quantities here was first established by Mr. W. E. Hidden, in 1879. The thick ness of these stream gravel deposits is from one to two feet, and the width of the mountain streams in which they occur is seldom over twelve feet. The percentage of monazite in the original sand is very variable, from an infinitesi mal quantity up to one or two per cent. The deposits are naturally richer per cent, monazite is considered of good quality. From 20 to 35 pounds of cleaned monazite sand per hand, that is, from 40 to 70 pounds to the box, is considered a good day's work. "But very few regular mining operations are carried on in the region. As a rule each farmer mines his own monazite deposit and sells the product to local buyers, often at some country store in exchange for merchandise. "At the present time the monazite in the stream beds has been practically exhausted, with few exceptions, and the majority of the workings are in the gravel deposits of the adjoining bottoms. These deposits are mined by sinking pits about eight feet square to the bed rock and raising the gravel by hand labor to a sluice box at the mouth of the pit. The overlay is thrown away excepting in .)U:m ;iou mm 1MXK KIDUK school. near the head waters of the streams. "The monazite is won by washing the sand and gravel in sluice boxes exactly after the manner that placer gold is worked. The sluice boxes are about eight feet long by twenty inches wide by twenty inches deep. Two men work at a box, the one charging the gravel on a perforated plate fixed in the upper end of the box, the other one working the contents up and down with a gravel fork or perforated shovel in order to float off the lighter sands. These boxes are cleaned out at the end of the day's work, the washed and concentrated monazite being collected and dried. Magnetite, if present, is eliminated from the dried sand bv treatment with a large hand magnet. Many of the heavy minerals, such as zircon, me.naccanite, rutile, brookite, corundum, garnet, etc., cannot be completely eliminated. The commer cially prepared sand, therefore, after washing thoroughly and treating with a hand magnet, is not pure monazite. A cleaned sand containing from 65 to 70 cases where it contains any sandy or gritty material. The pits are carried for ward in parallel lines, separated by nar row belts of tailing dumps, similar to the methods pursued in placer gold mining. At the Blanton and L tttimore mines on Hickory creek, two miles northeast of Shelby, Cleveland county, X. C, the bottom is 300 to 400 feet wide, and has been partially worked for a distance of one-fourth of a mile along the creek. The overlay is from three to four feet, and the gravel bed from one to three feet thick. " The economic value of monazite lies in the incandescent properties of the oxides of the rare earths cerium, lan thanum, didymium and thorium whi h it contains. These are utilized, prinuip illy the thoria, in the manufacture of the Welsbach and other incandescent gas lights. The cerium goes to the drug trade as the oxalate. "The Welsbach light consists of a cylindrical hood or in intle composed of a fibrous network of the rare earths, the top of which is drawn together and held by a loop of platinum wire. It is perma nently suspended over the flame of a specially-devised burner, constructed on the principals of the Bunsen burner, in which the gas is burned with the access of air, thus utilizing the heating and not the illuminating power of the hydrocar bons. The mantle becomes incandescent, glowing with a brilliant and uniform light. "The method of manufacturing this mantle is in brief as follows : A cylin drical network, about one and one-half inches in diameter, is woven out of the best and strongest cotton thread. This is first washed in ammonia and then in warm water, being wrung out in a me chanical clothes wringer each time. It is then soaked in a solution of the rare earths and dried in a revolving hot-air bath. After being cut to the proper lengths, each cylinder is shaped over a wooden form, and the upper end is drawn together by a loop of platinum wire. The cotton fiber is then burned off under the flame of a Bunsen lamp, which leaves a network of the rare oxides exactly re sembling the original woven cylinder, each fiber being identically preserved, excepting that the size is somewhat re duced by shrinkage. After a series of tempering and testing heats of various intensities the mantle is ready for use. The exact composition of the solution of the rare earths is not known, being one of the trade secrets ; but it is a well-known fact that monazite rich in thoria is sought after, and the natural inference is that this element constitutes one of the most important ingredients." Norfli Carolina's Private Mint. The first discovery of gold in Burke county, North Carolina, was made in 1828 in the bed of Brindle creek, one of the small tributaries of Silver creek, which has its source in the South Moun tains. Soon every stream in the neigh borhood was prospected and panned with golden success. Large slave owners found a new and profitable use for their slaves, and many thousands of them were put to work in this new field. Placer mines were opened and operated on a large scale, though by primitive methods, the pan, rocker, long torn, and sluice box being the only implements at that time and, indeed, these are still used in por tions of this region today. Mining was at first confined to the stream gravels, which were generally rich. Later on the upper decomposed layer of the country rock and the more ancient placers, formed by secular disintegration and drift, were worked. A large amount of gold was produced in this way, but it is impossible to even approximate the amount, as abso lutely no records were kept. The best authorities place the amount at between two and three million dollars. There being but one U. S. mint estab lished by the government at that time (at Philadelphia), and the means of