OCR Text |
Show more attention than ever before will be turned to the production produc-tion of the precious and baser metals, and upon a scale so large and expansive that what has been done in the past in mining and milling operations will seem insignificant in comparison. We believe that the people of this country have acquired a wider and broader view of economical and industrial matters since the war began, and that when normal conditions have been restored they will broaden the scope of their operations and investments; in-vestments; and that, realizing the great opportunities offered in the mining field, there will be greater activities in the acquirement acquire-ment and development of mining properties. There is no doubt but that mining, as a general thing, will be greatly stabilized as a result of the prominence the industry has attained because of the service it has rendered the govern-i govern-i ment during the war, and this condition wili still further increase j the popularity of the industry. Salt Lake Mining Review ' " n n MINING IN THE FUTURE The outlook for the mining industry in this country, after the war is over, could not be better qx brighter. The stimulus to certain branches of mining operations, caused by war demands, will not lessen when peace has been declared. On the contrary, when Germany has been crushed and the attention of the world is turned to the rehabilitation of nearly every line of endeavor, |