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Show MUb PEVOTEP TO THE QEEAT TINTIC MININO DISUIOT Officials To ty ork Without Pay ro11 wa City's PW Womens Clubs of Utah Will Hold Annual Meeting on Several Tlntlc TTdi.. j i , 1 I ' i I) 1 A B or k i ink is twite SOBtllU k. DiUlW nttrac iw li taste ted id tin tiL taster: r T!a part nlitk Ilka Ik Isrs srtlw mo lOMtt 1.4IU k. Rein u i committee. talk Bacon, chairman committee, presented or the li- a lengthy :rt which showed that a complete of the business establish- i of tho dty had been made the remit that some concerns ( loud to bo paying excessive cm while others were being fa- 4 with reduced fees. A half ? ns? 52 " li wweMUkmmreof li p b. 4 iser. 4.411 J frevlouly mated the city la H considerable trouble in prop- fccnilng peddlers in an effort l?0,t local merchants. Aa every- how the peddlers who regular- thU dty sell anything and Thing and are therefore in dl- with local mer- - any is m ibir TeMcS wifi DIU K JltSu I.ott t are evading the li-- 1 signing an affi- that all of the being peddled are grown or toby themKlves. The expense 1? ln Bp on thes statements Tiu would be too great to U was then auggeated 1 ' he city ordinance be paaaed s & compulsory for peddlers ,ra affidavit from The 81 of the "? county they re-- 4 tie by limply to the effect behind f abmi "TrO thi will show that every- lm Kureiia la the trduct of the person seek- - SVl,fldBlt. Ordinances Jorce ln ani1 to lbr ec- - are ,a,d be a 'Tls n,erchanta the rKhtfulIy deserve. It Cttoosly Toted l0 pM an hettos nd tb,B be Ior t tatUmi. Haor nature and the Instructed to draw Immediate publics-- " l8erald tb St took yjfifS'WEZ hot he wanted ,ky t?n,B htog Eupka Reporter flicrlminTT brim ngainst and toet ;r hasdr!! o 3 : iib. .1 total few a'k,n months t of (own tor a bid 1,6 ars mean hifn bliwh p... Btted of nloo. mxdVhv T?e Bvrr- - U u l pro- - Going to State Men b lifers, 'I"1 J,,Tairs nf a T. inunifipalitv ti play fair with i.aluuliy institu' ' il" i.itt-lgn nut of their way to knock ami am.iLo iutlii,lual or com'eni. Such tactics it a .t'li'jitf, j hy Mayttr Cliurch's prcvioii.w ntliuiniH- ;ivi l fir'd . j i . a if still in office, and we feel that 1,1 II.,iS Ik. informed of the true shtttihl "'i!Jiict ,'e fity "ttirt'is, in u tiom the voters must have u foine they never would have elected i o life, u-rit) take patronage nwny llif Kuivka J'm iNirier and at a recent meeting of fi .u ,uik-iI- , whru (numiliuaii FitzjrraM iIoim;iiuKmI ' know why ..ver four hundred ilollarw worth of public had lit en t to out "f twn printing concerns, Mrs. , ' Hie eiti recorder, state.l that she had been . iiMrueted to gii,. no business lit the local paper. Mis. rue saitl that site luul sent this printing to othei eities o tin state, 'I lie admission was forced by ( omit iltuan h At ili;er:ild. tirst the reeorder made n teehle ettort to explain her aetioiis hut finally jiasseil the blame along t the other otlicers from whom she was taking instructions. We presume she referred to the major and couueiliueu. Admission was made that the local shop was not. only prewired to handle the work at prices as low or lower than those quoted by out of town printers hut was given no opportunity of doing so because some one in the administration had a grudge against the man who controlled the local paper. At Friday's meeting the recorder, in an effort to excuse herself tor lack of loyalty to the community which placed her in office and the taxpayers who art paving her salary, ns well as tho salaries of all other city offia cers, stated that she had discriminated against The Reporter because (J. K. Iluish, who controls tho aMr, was not patriotie enough to support the district. Of course readers of Tin Reporter must judgu this matter for themselves. Mr. Iluish has sient over thirty years in newspaper work hen and iu the handling of other local concerns and there is no occasion to go into his record hut it might not ho out of place to say aid more taxes last that his various enterprises hv all the elective wen than and nqointivo paid year of Eureka City comhimtl. Perhaps the same officers comparison run hi la mailc lor several years previous. City officers who use their positions to gratify gmgc, or to get even with some out who has nerve enough to come out in the open during a )oIitienl campaign, are not worthy of public trust. A mistake waa made in electing them to office but it is common knowledge that voters of Eureka have on many occasions made serious hlumh-rs- , doing things at the sills that afterwards regretted. Public servants can, as far they as this jtfijKT is concerned, do as they please with their own money. They can spend it at home or away from home just us they please, hut when it comes to the handling and expenditure of public funds that is an entirely different story. Iocal Hople and local institutions, even though they may have differed in jmlitical matters, are entitled to all the business that Eureka (3ty, as a municipality, has to giv provided that they can comjieb; in the matter of price and quality of merchandise. There is just as much fairness in sending out of town for printing, depriving the local printers of the business, ns there is in sending to some other town for men to handle our street and other work. Patronizing home business establishments not only keeps money at home but it pro vides employment for more taxpayers. Sending away from home for something that can he purchased here tears down the community. officials for Nothing can excuse these city Nr ami until such time their shabby treatment of this out of the mixup themselves as they are able to alibi tlie members of the old council and the mayor must share equally with the recorder the disgrace of stooping one for his to small practice in an effort to punish some failure to vote for them. ,7 l ! tlhinej " I -". . """I 22115? SrS-- "fn ft congress might place on the metal to protect the copper producing Industry and Its workers, F. E. Calkins of Phoenix, nationally known mining engineer, forcefully sets forth In a featured article, "The Threat of Foreign Copper and tho Answer," whlrh appeared In a current issuo of the Magaxtns of Wall Just prior to the forced shut down this 1 9 it 0 drift was following a stringer of ore In ground of the Bullion. After a weeks work the showing continues to hold out Eu-rek- "9 as- u much promise snd when the objective Is reached Important developments should be forthcoming. Street. Calkins contends, and backa up by North Lily Shows a convincing array of facta and ures, that the present serious the ropper Industry In the Profits for Year!! of Stales is not due to the fig- cur- 11 rent general - i Bbt over-producti- Ku-rek- ! -, m a - mem-wopetiu- on y Cul-Ktor- con-charg- 1 , jmt-son- al fol-r- y sJ or capl-Jua- , ) ld do-;e- nd Cal-dedurtl- J I , ct et ( o. i ,-- - Pt Hery mm Wer adV!to ? ljr rnmm . U"rn-- . Denn Beck . JJ license was and Wllford " Ihl. promUt. Other cWm garage bu","J yBBin ..hop 00 consid- - In the Henrlod building on , mer. a long and Main street. Prhal.Jntructed to Fsrren to operate ,bto.V j.Jj v economic depression Is hut the direct result of recent de- , twti.- M X con,l,Bny velopmenls In the foreign countries. n , V .1 in order to dispel certain UluMioim f "h0WB hB 0 per cent of and to quiet some of thu condemnamines withh filed reports with thu world's since the state tax commission to show net tion which is being heaped on the hss been brought about by 129 state road commission the proceeds for the past year as defined foreign mines. rounty hy the stste law. The Ibex, a small commissioners wish to make the This country's days as a net exstatement that none of the money prospect located In (lie extreme west-er- n porter of unfabricated copper are end of Juab county, also showed appropriated for the relief road and positively ended, he net proceeds but only &3 tons of ore dofinlloly work in Tlntlc Is being paid to emphasises. any Foreign copper do- were shipped, consequently it ran employee of the state road. True are known to b fully threa potlta the state road department has a hardly be termed a mine. tlmaa aa groat and the averago The North Lily produced truck and a driver working on this grada twlra aa high aa thoa in this tons of ore In 1931, as compared project, removing the material taken the Unltml country. with SG.717. In 1930, according ..Statea now Furthermore, out by the workers, but they are doconfalna only 40 per rent the atalement wubinitted to the com-lo- f the equipped and 30 per cent of nating this work. The cost of opmliialtiii. The tonnage produced In the total potential world the truck and the drivers erating capacity. 1931 waa aHmiyed to ahow 11,440 The nation haa lout forever Its wages are being paid by the state, doml- nunrea of gold, 147,031 ounces of nant position ln the world not a penny will be taken from the copper Inallvor, 4,338,304 pounds of lead and dustry; but, tbe writer significantly appropriation; all of It will be paid 20,491 pounds of xlnc. out to the unemployed of the Tlntlc points out, American capital conFrom the sale of this product, the trols 45 por cent of the world InDistrict. a received company gross, according dustry. There probably has not been a to ita report, of $409,475.39. From The article continues to say that county in the state which has been the sale of the 35,717 tona In 1930 foreign coals now determine the treated more fairly by the state road It received $1,313,394.02. world price of ropper aud that the commission in the matter of emergIn 1931, extraction costa are Te normal average price per pound la work than ency Juab county. The ported as $102,397.37; reduction of: now 10 ceuta or even less, which on present project is the second fur this ores cost $154,521.81; free world market would bring out transporta-j- a end of the county during the past tlon, and $28,573.44, Improvements enough copper to satisfy world donix months and the N'ephl section alst the mine, $8,320.20. These' mends until probably 1945. In so recently completed a project If they pass muster before treat with this. It la stated that the which was Instituted for the benefit the tax commission, will amount to normal price of the metal f. o. b re-- a unemployed In that vicinity, total deduction of $355,813.02 for fineries In this country Is now about They should be commended for their 1931 production, as against the 18 cents a pound compared with the P1dId $1,115,748.31 allowed by the com- - present price of about 4 cents a Tlntlc road Job is now well ' mission for 1930 production. j pound. under wajr haT,n bpen ntariod on i Thus the company claim ita net1 Calkins acouts the Idea that there Monday morning of last week. The proceeds for 1931 were $52,242.37. shortage uf copper supply even cpew wa cbanKed on Monday or this and the assessed value of the rontent remotely In sight and, calling week and W,H be changed again next of the mine, as a result, would be' Hon to past history of the Industry, Mondar- - This procedure will be In addition to which,! warns against placing reliance on lowed unt11 a11 of the men ,,,ed on the company returns Its plant and ny attempt to auaLaln the average the CheBt books w,n baTe wce,Ted ;equlpment end Its real estate used 'price shove normal by world a ful1 alx daJr work- - Chest mining purposes at $270,174.1 iterative production control. Only an are directly in charge of the work, jthls return also being subject to ae- - oHectlve tariff will enable the law tlon by the commission. of supply and demand to automatle- on the 1930 op- - ly operate to hold the domestle For based 1931, of Elks High Official .eratlona, the company paid on an no- - price to normal, he advises. Visited the Tintic Lodge On world production capacity, he sessment of $592,991.83 for the .mine content. In addition to the val- J that the present world equipped uatlon fixed by the commission on Ita oconomlc annual production capacity DavId L- Stein district deputy1 (of new copper le more than 3,400,- plant and real estate. grand exalted ruler for the state of 4 tona and the total potential The Ibex Gold Mining company, In b Utah wa ,n Eureka 0,1 Seturday county, reports 32.8 ounces of cltjr more than 4,000,000 tons corn-goeYenIng- - coming here to pay his ofIn ita 52 tons of ora produced PBrd with a past maximum annual fIcIal T,aIt t0 T,nt,c 1069 No !ln 1931, 2914 pounds of copper, andco,lBumPt,on o( new copper of less p- Elka- - In honop of lbe T,u gross receipts of 1741.08. Extraction than 3,000,000 tona. and als0 ,n keeping with an order To be effective and hold the costs were 8334.14 and reduction of the grand lodge for a Washington ""'He average price to normal, the total new transportation brought ot ca8a candidates, fire expenditures to 1787.20, bins explains, the tariff rat must bera wera taken lnt0 tbe order-theaccording to tbe report, so that the he high enough to keep out all fore- Mr Ste,n KaT a ?erjr ,nlerC8tln company had net proceeds of 813.88 ign copper. The minimum rata that and aPPropriate address, his subject .for Ita years operations. This gives should be fixed by law ha works out He told be,n 0eore Washington. 'a value of the ore content of 141.64, to be S ceuta, whlrh upon recomof tbe lodKe affiliations of the .and the company experts to pay mendation of the federal tariff comFather of 0ur Country and how taxes on a total assessment of mission, could be raised to 11 cents tbe,e belPed t0 make of b,m lha or more, if necessary, to keep out 13,104. character that he was. He the extremely low production-coa- t admonlshed all Elks to pattern after foreign copper. Elks Lodge Will Elect bIm and b? ao doing would not only World surplus total atocks of reNew Officers This Evening fined and bllater copper have been make of themselves better men hut wouId boost the atandarda of the steadily Increasing and now amount f Eiko to the highent pinnacle ordar mor Ihan 400,000 tons, the great L?d!it0 thuTlB!,C of Klks have been to attend PSBlbIc- - He complimented the of- la CaIklni flurefc The the meeting this evening as election rw.Bt hl,tory, Hcera of Tintic Lodge for the aplwn- for further cur agrement of officer will take place and a gen tallment In which the rltuallhllc a world and,d contemplate! era! good time will be had. Only nual W0Pk waa exemplified and congratu- production of slightly mors two of the offices are being contest- than 1,000,000 tona of alad tbe lodge in general for the primary or ed, those of the secretary and the new copper. Publication of producof candidates, class splendid trustee. Nominations closed at the! tion and consumption Those who were initiated at last figures waa Inst meeting and at that time the discontinued last A. W. Dr. were: October, ha statee. Saturdays meeting following had been nominated. On a free world market, when Robinson. W. K. Caraon. J. F. D. O. Henrlod, exalted ruler. world consumption returns to tha lnt I 0. McMlchael and J. Vern;' J. Ray Sorenson, leading knight. 1988 figure, the domestic Industry RHe. M. J. Downey, loyal knight. would be able to operate to only 45 Following the regular lodge work Jerry Bassett, lecturing knight. , per cent of Its equipped capacity aud a moat delicious buffet luncheon. , Alan Pike and Nell O'Hare, less than 80 per cent of our domesOf Made Audit Being with coon chicken ns the principal Miwir.tr Activities tic demands, the balance of more .no Account of Eureka City, wwu... than 20 per cent being supplied by Roamed reVrT",'r""PoV-1uVr:r,-'j To B, foreign copper. The average price of copper would then be more than ac-certified a j ttood. Tlntlpublic Ams threaten former that , He shoot higher, 10 cents a pound and more than IS j0bn J. Hannifin, tyler. Jhn coup.. constant, has been In tureka during the moon, than he that alma at min to for thcent per the In week a last Dte i truck driver would be of the domestic Industry tree. George Herbert. auditing the ac- -' tk paU few r hai been operating f permanently closed down. With an effective tariff, when the world consumption returns to the veh l,Mhe' rtJh' CowTsI,Bh.Id be completed in moWthUn heated argument the recorder was t,0B j he held to council the of 0f freight when the truck was II- - 1928 figure, all of the domestic proincited In that sectlmi ik meeting ducers would be In business and opstripped of her power of purchase nml this erating at more than 78 per cent capacity, supplying 100 per cent of the domestic copper demands and receiving n domestic normal price of j about 12 cents a pound for th red " metal. d .U ac- - C!! r.e i,r M-u- i - ports ui.iimuI ot 1 'S?&& Relief Funds Not movement. The m High Tariff Needed to Protect Copper i k- at the next session of the even-Th- e sell to be held tomorrow agreement took effect on However, it first of the month. i not apply to the city recorder They will continue the marshal. .ing their nsnal monthly amounts, iounrllman Edward Bonner took fl-Boor and also spoke on the mem-of of the city. He was a the minority faction in the dty council and his party Is now Mr. Bon-v- u control of that body. In of the plan favor heartily ike Interest of economy as out-by Mayor Church but he want-i- o (o a step further. He demanding the dty get Us Just propor-o- f the revenue from the many cleg Joints operating In the buel-- i and residence districts of Eure-Threvenue to come through nedlnm of arrests and fines. He financial d that the present would not hive been half aa j:t if daring the past year boot had been fined at regular in !n nls and that money been put to e In the operation of the per government. At a previous !ag Councilman Bonner made a .'at statement. Just what action be taken In regard to this mat- n not known the question of aw from illeged liquor dealers beta left in the handa of the It is M'H.i'il.ii, . . , ' ,li" U'n 17 tn Frliluy umruliiK uf IsM development work was resume, I ut Hie property of the Ufa (i in (he eastern end of the district after a NEW YultK, Feb. 29th. Not even days shut down which was cuus- euinplete embargo of forwljrn Iten by tbe IPOO with (1, brt'linlnpd from this country can Plwr ! Damaae 7 to comltiK f lhU I done to -l- ab,Uh ,U0" the h a tnl Ti; ent w, rk .1 sml V - an-ji- l ! kilned Big Ilill Development Going On In Usual Fashion ee j un-J- r rr i I urrk jU him in this agreed upon , vM nnsnlmously the city attorney was instructed aw up au agreement which will - .. recreation director; and probably Mayor Sadie Orr Dunhur. of Portland. Ore-- few brief Number Against Eureka Reporter remarks 8 expllned that the C,ty g0n chalrmn of the Welfare ment of the general federation that depleted, ry U practically Industrial problems. including another thirty days there' ao mooey available for any employment, recreation, economic unless some action la taken questions, will be dlacuaaod at th: now in the meeting. -o Intact the aum that it said The mayor Liury. without work to Intention bto u - 1 - , , THUUSDaY, MAlilU City Officers Discriminate ur. ,ailIlil attending I lie annual the Ltah IVdMruiliiii peducv Clubs which k. a month, Lake city on April' nlh l50.00 an-.ooroilinately - taken at tiie last meeting Mra. G. c. Mndsav ,,r council. held on Friday music supervisor for Mim tM clty members tlon. and Mrs. Theo. The mayor, the li. M far Ceouncil, the ttorney and the of Eureka, la aer,, Vl,,. 'justice hare agreed that they, Principal apeakera at the ierve without pay until auch tlon will Include jr. Klbert able to .Thomaa, I'nlveralty 0f I'tihu the city ! financially HOME OP THE WORLD'S LARGEST SILVER. LEAD MIKES ' 0 the coming SJiSSS , also submit . .Krl to m.P. TveryonV .t IP.forclipthewillmonth of Feb-reMcle .P. .'ofnen 1 0 t oYp" Thieves took SO Jars or dill pickles reports their trttM from their psy the home of Mra. Otto Lease In Just ,ork pro extends Other matters of vital lu- - portion for the upkeep of the hlgh- - Everett, Washington. BBd They evidentpri"8 I slsu be taken ur. ways over which they travel. ly wanted to get pickled. 1 ''puncewUl |