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Show II jM MILL FOR THE DIPPER Te 8ft Equipped With a . j. Concentrator, j f MUCH ORE BL0CKEI OUT I if Conditions In American Fork l j;: .; (( Canyon, j Camp of Many Triumphs Again Be- I ( j I Ing Sought by Capital Much ! Developmont Promised. I S I ! ' ji I Immediately tlie trail is opened and weather permits, said Leonard G. ; ' Hardy, manager of the Silver Dipper I ' mine? In American Fork canyon, yes-I yes-I terday, the company ivill begin the In- I ' slallntion oC a mill with which to con- I I centrate the large volume of second- j ) class ore which has heen blocked out and which will bo made to afford a fine ; I commercial product. For this the company com-pany has provided a fund, and while j . the plant will not be the largest of a cluster which is to be erected in 1904, I i the foundation will provide for such i i enlargements as the condition of the ! ore bodies shall Justify. In addition to j the milling ores, that run quite well up I - j in silver and lead and that might be lit J profitably shipped without concentra- ; tion with more favorable facilities for transportation, the company has devcl- 1 1 oped a nice quality of llrst-class ore I that will be sent to market as soon as 1 , the roads shall permit. I , A. great deal of activity In a region I -which was productive of so many mll- ' ' lions in former days -when a line of I , j railway was operated between It and I 1 the main line without, when a smelter I was In operation and the ores compared I favorably with those of any camp in the 'I , State, is promised the present season, . says Mr. Hardy. The Live Yankee. ' the Wild Dutchman ami a group of ji others promise to reappear at the valley val-ley furnaces with an excellent class of ( .( ore, while many Salt Lake interests . -which have been neglected for so long i -will be under energetic development. In Miller Hill, from which it is said . that ores of the value of $13,000,000 have , been extracted, much interest Is being manifested by a number of mining III , ' men, and with systematic effort, Mr. ' It i Hardy sees no reason why the camp i j should not be made to exceed the reo i " ' ord of former days. |