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Show COAL fXODUOTIOV AJTD VSB, SMELTERS AND SAMPLERS. Statement.. of. Their Operations in this Valley Dnring the Year. ; . DULLIOH AND LEAD RUN ' 'V " ! i Ta Different Companies That Supply the City Quantity Used. OUT IN TONS. ' Extensive Orsrations o? the Cot Creek A Company The Bsrnes. . Dick-ert-Mey- Smelter Grrmtnls ago," Hannuer, and 1 ' from Colorado. Then they consumed most of 'the 8227 tons of coke made ,at Castle date ty the Pleasant Valley Oual Company. bix-hor- Mlno Smelting- Comnany. This company- - made valuable lmpro merits the past year and Is now an exten sive plant, but will bo extended this year The following shows their business in 191: Itb.biK) toti Ore, etc., smelted..., - foU I .9 2I,4V) U . ll,l.yi . ;x . i.n,oi . .;&. 1 I'M UNTIL Load, il,nS7,(MH 'pound, Copper. ..4A)I,OU0 POuiiJs Miverv, .; .. (old Total value 6.i:i 4CM ma, 77 4 i . , H- - ID in on i tons Lout. uws ..K.7I3 "HI oiiiiiifs tl,;l,30j.6l Gernianla Lead Works. - The ouipiit of this producer for the year Hrneiter Lb. LraU. Lb. Oz. Os. 3upplie5 FOK! Uate se 5fcqvs, ' 7 fiilitrr. G:t. Coji?r. Mo.ihui liaae bullion . ..U.M.I.OUI H 305,0)10 Copper malle.. iM,UL i&l.lOU liOO.OUO Total.... ....rU.UXJ b.tjl Jirltntru bullion the rnllnery 'Out of the above biom tt,170,OU pound a of holt Ikuu and lore hipped barn co'utniriiuxbHti.UUO ouuwn of Mlvtr and In) liase bn loll OUIK'H of golci. Tho liallic-product wat shipped-- wuy to other retlueriun. r Sul-phu- I During the present year they have built two new stacks after the most improved catteru. ulvintr Ihoiu now four (stacks, all of whloh.aro kept in full blast. The retlnery has been almost entirely rebuilt and is now Very complete, comparing favorably with plants Kust of same size autl capacity. XZanaaer Smelter. ' The product of the Ilattuuer Hmeltlnn In exeem Works f r lH'.U was about 'Of that of 1HU0. It auiounted to r5U5 tons leal, WSIiSi) ounces sllverl t'.liU ounces old and f00 tons of cupper matter; tho whole 'I'liu improvoments of 10,000 tons, from other coal mines. SKXregatlii Jl.yoH.hUO. ' CHALK CUKKK COMPANY. consisted of exteusivu etilarKement and bet- and additional water the power, The Chalk Creek 3oaT 'Company, having termntf room for'thomcu, with reading-roolodging property near Coalville, did something the etc ' past year in the way of opening their mlnos. ran in a new tunnel, by which they They Cohklln Sampler. into good coal, but they did not market got near The Cofikllu sampling mill, located much. expect to become quite a large They the ITnlon I'aC'iUo de(ot iu tills city, handled producer of coal ere tho end Of this year. em ore of 20,000 tons during the year, giving 1 COMPANY--. FAIUVIKW ploy incut, tp au average of twelve men. in The Falrvlew Mining Company own a pi'ovonicuts to tlie ainoiuiL of $2500- were made twelve-foo- t vein of coal of a Hue quality lonow , which is eiual cated thirteen doubling the capacity miles east of Faipvlew, at the to many times the amount oi work done end of Sail Pete north If there was during the , year.. This sampler now has a railroad to tho minevalley. would become a it two practically double works. having heavy producer, but as It is, its product is mills, two crushers and a set of Wall's rolls. limited to tho local trade, chiefly that taken tho farmers and other citizens, who buy by Hill. Ssndr Uauipllng The' "Handy Sampling Mill is an old an d the coal at tine mine and haul It away with well-tfrle- d institution. It having been opor-ato- d their own teams. Thus about four thousand of coal per year are taken. The mine formany years by its owners, Scott &. tons is a of tho huge deposit, almost unlimited in its Anderson past year t,hls.clty. Durlug of production; but as yet it has smelt-Ju- g in a not did canacity business only large they ores but,, as agents for Kastern smelters, not been opened to auy great extent. were large purchasers of ores, which they INNOVATION IN HUlCiUlAKI.NQ, shipped for reduction elsewhere. Tieir facilities enable them to handle largo in- Ureat lroicres Made' In the Production voices of ores. of This Material. A great innovation In the manufacture of The Pioneer Sampler. The volume of business at tho old Pioneer brick has been introduced here the past few Neither brickmakers nor builders Sampling Mill for the year 1S!U has1 kept months. were satisfied with the quality and texture well up to' the usual average, and it Its patrons a greater number of of brick heretofore used in houses. The two years for more and betand mines covering a greater exteut of ter- -' ter the past materials , has brought about building rltory than ever before; and this notwith- - not only greater capacity standing tho Increased coinpotition of late brick, but there has been u,to manufacture great better-moA resume f years In tho sampling business. iu For the tbo past fifteen or quality. of the business for the pa'st year is neoesW. S. Mr. more Simklns has "been the years a rrsuHia ' i nuivi? iioui boo uiuur' 'anijr cut camps, and there Is not a camp of any leading brick maker of the city, botli as to and quality of manufacture, since note wjjatever that the Pioueer does uot quantity he has endeavored to produce the always reold its clslru among patrons, liingham, ' very best article possible with the clays and liable Dingham, has bejiten any previous conveniences at his hands.r Last summer he rooortl at the mill during the past year. . .Chief ainbug the .shippers hero from that and a number of other brickmakers united Old Jordan and lia- - in a corporation known as the Salt Lake are lirooklyn, . .camp at, the . . , t.. . rt l t V pressed Urick Company, with a capital of Jtetia iiigmaiivi, jl uuni i iu 41 o. i anik nu, $"0.000. Kavere, iLuoky Hoy. Spanish. for the of which ofS35.000 has been paid in. Trinity, purpose purchasing machinery, Frisco, Kaglo lliid. Silver (iauntlet. Juue aud putting In a plant to manufacture .bet Blossom. Saiupsfih. yioe'n. Pcabody, North ter brick than had ever been made here be -' , 1. J fore. They purchased the best machinery f 'Tlntlo has been represented by the Knroka iu the market and got It in operation last August. This consists of rolls, crushers and aroiine, ppy, uuiener mills lilll, JiUllloii-iieo- s, for grinding the dry material flue and I.uelcy Boy. lioy, Silver Spar, Primrose The Cottouwoods, the Joab Lawrence, City enough. to pass through an eight Kock, Montozuma, A. ,V P. of Wales, Max-- . scroen, after which it is pressed while dry rj Jv n Jv Blair. Con no.- Mack a v. and by a Boyd press, the best known for that purpose. With this machinery and the maf.tltka. used the company have been turning terials Vrotu the west, ilercules mine. so solid,. s tenacious and of out brick Webster tho has been From Blarysvalo such uniformity In size; and color that slilnninir oulte a nutubeif of carloadV no Is wnv reasou citizens A great deal of oro has been received from tuero should send hereafter for either the from Silver iway plain Diamond, Nevada, chletly or ornamental brick for fronts. ' This Cleveand Ureat Valley, West, Antslope, specially h as reference to such brick as are-- ' land and Hendricks. made from a shale hauled "from the mouth With an enviable record for accuracy, ot Parley's canon. .Such brick are wonder and courteous and fair dealing in tho past, firm, a fact that was lately demon fully New to v the forward looks Year the Pioneer a test in the hydraulic. press at strated with extreme satisfaction, confident that, tho Kio by Western Railway shops in Grande first-clawith Immense shed and mill room, A brick 83x4 inches and 2 this city. handfor maohluery, infact every facility inches thick required a.prossure of 200,000 ling and sampling ores of all classes, the pounds to produce a crack, and 220.000 business uuder year will show an increasing to crush. This Is many times poimds A. Mr. J. of Cashing,. tb abio management Is to what crush most brick. required fFollowinfj is u, statement showing amount, Their common brick have totJ""been of ore h'dieu during me year v iu quality of perfected yet fully STATKMKlNt Or OKS HANULKD AT PIOBKE1! materials, but will soon be, but there is BAMrUNO UltL JTOtt VEAU lj801. founds. no discount ou their front brick. At the ... lrt,o;tJ,374 late fair- of the Deserefe Agricultural and January. .. . .. J'J.TVrvtHKi February.,. ... 15.WrVi.Httl . Manufacturing Society this company took .. .. March . .. a.j.iiJ5.r2 A prll..:. . ., . the gold medal and a special premium for 14.l.4l May.:.... ... best brick. Their plant , 'is very perfect, .. 1I.UM.&15 Juno,..... ...... ... cost about $25.000.. and is located ir,3:jrt.Hr having .July ... vi,ts.uo six milos south, .... on the State road. The August 17.:tt7?665 ... tie pte nicer , has Its officer and directors for ... VJ,'J7.tVJ& company . . . . Oc loner ... lJ.(ll,tvll the following, all being brick manufacJSoveinber . ... lri,b)U,iU0 turers, and December.. they are well pleased with the li.8oL2--S results after having made a million and a Total... half brick, and" especially" with the celeIlut She's No Chemist. star on brated Boyd press: John P. Gaboon, president ; A. W. llarraclougb. Lucy Parson's remark that every W, 8. Simklns. treasurer; O. If. Barnes, the American flag Is but the concentrated essence of outraged womanhood Is ve- director; Harry llaynes, secretary; T.' S( hement, bat it probably wouldn't te borne"5 Austin. Their oQlco Is in the Wasatch . : analysis. Uoston Herald. building. out by a chemical ,ii - . Irop. a "WORTH INGTON STEAM PUMPS, CALIFORNIA POWDER WORKS, HERCULES AND BLACK POWDER. LIDGERWOOD HOISTING ENGINES, ROEBLING STEEL WIRE ROPE, W. S. TYLER bo-for- GRP. THR BARNES. m ' . ' ug de-ma- ud M, ..' I - 1 vT " ., - ? t- een-me- sh . M . - , ss i el i Sai.t Lake City, Deo. 22. 1891. WAHJf 8FBUTOS DISTRICT. During the past year much attention was called to the Warm Springs Mining District, up City creek. Owners of properties and prospectors expended about $10,000 in work there the past year. John W. Snell kept men at work on his claims most of the time, and he feels much encouraged by the outlook.' On his Vlrglnius be ran a tunnel a long distance, and. Is now in the vicinity of where Ben Hampton took out ore that ran $160 in gold t and 200 ounces silver. The workings soon after that caved in and prevented further mining. Work on had to be stopped a few the Virginius ' days! ago because of the dangers from snowslldes but there were fine IndicaThe Ones That Kill. Il Bure You're lliglit. tions and Rood ore in the face of this drift. towarda Heaven to find out The troubles that trouble us the most are On Mr. Snell's Princeton, farther up the It Is a fctsp rriu.de of tte same klud of clay the troubles that never happen. lictm'i canon, eight miles from the city, there Is w3 were : 1V'. Horn. ood ore. but the vein la broken and he Is f.W people. Iiam'9 llvrn. ':." ; . o 5" oa 9 S - Nam or Oomfaht. i.ii , r .. .'-- ". '; : ; ' j; & OO., stooT. t " W. large-scale- , Fran-cixc- California, Washington, .Oregon, Motitana, Idaho and Utah. The Nephi Salt Mining! & Manufacturing Company mined 825 tons of rock" salt during the past year, 'which sold free on board cars at $4 per ton. This cave employment to. from four to sixteen men from March to September. Iu Nephi other parties produced from tho sait springs 100 tons of table salt by evaporation and sold it at per; ton. a rattling! time. a Street Car Was tho Cuuse of It. A Careless Lad on Rather an exciting affair, in which a rattlesnake played the most important part, cable car the occurred iu a Post-streother day. At tho corner of Stockton street a tall, eadaverous-lookiijig- " youth boarded the car. In one band ho held a large tin can. covered with a bit of newspaper. No one would have paid any attention to him if he had not kept tapping the can with his finger and holding it up to bis ear. while a pleased grin overspread his features. A queer buzzing sound seemed to issue from the can and at times was plainly heard above the rumble of the car. Finally a woman seated near asked what the can contained. A rattlesnake," was the careless reply." Without delay she sighed' the conductor to stop the car, aud left in a hurry, with terror depicted on her face. Still the loud buzzing continued. i'Good joke, young man; good joke to make her think you had a rattlesnake in that can," said a little man with a treble voice, rubbing his bands together as Turk street was reached. "Why. about forty et ,j Tully, stationed at Fort, Wingate, is an tremely popular man, iot only in officers row, where his social aud scholastic virtues are appreciated, but In tho quarters. where simply his ability and Eloquence are known. One cannot no matter to what denomination he may belongpreserve the stiff decorum of tho city sanctuary when in tho chapel of a frontier post. He must teach tho sau.e theology, expound the same doctrine, but ho must carry the message In vessels of more attractive fashioning than that7 affected by his brother in the Fast. Dr. Tully posts his church notices ou tho traders' doors and couches them in phrase that will pique the humor of the men while not offending the taste of more critical officialdom. Here is one sent In by a correspondent from the fort: Sunday school at 0 a. m. in the chapel. Regular preaching service Sunday evening at 8 o'clock; subject, 'Shot At and Missed.' Inspection invited. Competition defied." It was just at the time of the target competition iu the cavalry rauks, and the fort was full of. visitors, both officers and men, many of whom, had been for days shooting at bulls' eyes aud frequently missing them. Sunday inspection was one of the regular bugbears of camp one of the things all soldiers detested. In. the title which recalled their target exercise, in the "inspection Invited."; In the "competition defied," all readers found inducement to attend the service. Scores of them listened to the sermon, and all carried away the understanding of that army application to eternal . truth. And many of them will remember as long as they live tho little quatrain with which the good man rounded out his discourse: He is right who, knowing duty. jj . 8- TESTED 10 YEARS. A NATURAL -- ''"'I. 50.0001 104,0001 71,000 8H.OUO SAUNA ROCK SALT. .;,..' '' - Near Sallna. Sevier county, there are great deposits of rock salt in the mountains. uunog me pass year auu tons was mined and sold at S2 per ton. and ' a small amount of table salt was made and disposed of at $20 per ton. The making of table salt at Salina was once quite au'industry. but the ad vent of the railroad there - has destroyed ihs business, and yet with the required " i " CaN FOR! Most Prolific The Largest and in World.1 the Gooseberry A Bushel on One Tree. raenuj t l l tt lur iti musiraieu uircuiar anai I Testimonials. WANTED AGENTS GOOD SEL3 IT f EVERY WHERE. FOHiDS. TRIESTE i 'l ENLARGED TO TWELVE PAGES. . 1 TO YOUR TEE WEEKLY . oomrnmn mil It ikit Tamers lat. Utt, vtU wIt January x columns, and will con-ttapsg , ainety-sidaring the yesr with st least that tsmbsr. it will contain tbs oihsiii of sit' the matter pa Mia bed in tbs daily, local. Territorial. intrmountaln and NstioosL The best editorial of the dally sad ' thes arc adnittd to be as staoosr an 1 broad and brilliant as can tm fowaal is a rfs of st nwapp Tbswill be ant fiat edition. caufy import toksgr) uji will comprise aaineiu-dis patebesf-.-whic- h lorn of the world's doings. will be epl ' ded. The mining interests of TJiah and the asrrouodlog cosntry will have careful rs v issti a tation ; the progress of mining; very achievement, either in the discover r, or reduction of ores., will be fa.it opening recorded. The mstoriaj progress snd development of Utab snd its resources will bs truthfully portrayed. news concerning tne neignDonns; states too iimunw, tneirmoeroKTesa regsraintr in snd prosperity, will Uaa appear a ine reaset of the isiinrai weesiy mssiag wonderful resources of this irrest region. snd pbtcing Tai Tai-atrof the best A marie ii in the fore-froweekly newspapers. Imams mt oe ; ; . -z! ; - lly - inter-mossta- in - ss nt - Totals..:........... PROOF, TREE. 3IX-i3DE:-S2w- r ! Inland Crystal Salt Co. 25.600 75,0001 44,OOOflO.OOO Adams Jt Kiesel Salt Co. 15.0UO lo.uuo 1.UOO,10,OOV ... 4.00!) laooo 6.00U1 8,000 Jeremy wA Co....... Sagiua Salt Co.. . . . . . . 6.0U) tf.oovj 6.000 9.000 m WONDER. A UTAH i i Iiecrder. New York . years ago Bravely does his best. And be is safe who." in God's keeping,' But the little old man never finished the Seeks his work and rest. sentence, for as be spoke be tapped the can Chicago Hrald. with his, cane to illustrate bis reminiscent so hard the that it remarks, and; tapped DOM PEDHO'S BAG OP EARTH. paper was broken, and the ugly black head of a vicious specimen of crotalus horridus it Recalls a Previous Use of Ura- zillan Soil in His family. protruded. In the excitement the can was dropped to the car floor and the snake es The somewhat pathetic fact, that a bag of caped from It. Brazilian earth' should have been placed In coffin beside the corpse of Dota Pedro the ifTbe car was filled with sounds that re- serve, to recall io mind a somewhat may sembled a chorus of half a dozen locusts as analagous incident which occurred T.at the the repile assumed spiral shape and pretime of the birth of his. grandson, the eldest son of Crown Princess Isabella and ber huspared to strike the first moving object within reach. The object happened to be the band. Prince Gaston of Orleans, Count d'Eu. little man's leg. He nearly'f alnted from The Imperial couple in question?' were fright, and was too feeble "to get up ou the married many years before the Prlneess bad seats as quickly as the other passengers did. any prospects. of becoming a mother, and The rattler suddenly straightened put his when finally It was officially announced body and struck, but miscalculated the disthat she had hopes of presenting the nation tance, and the little man life was saved with an heir- to the throne, the 'news was for he was dragged out pf reach of - the hailed with much popular rejoicing. deadly fangs before the snake could "strike Unfortunately the Princess happened to "t ;'. again. be traveling in Europe at the time when The car was stopped and the remaining this announcement was made, and her phypassenger alighted, leaving "the rattier In sician insisted that .under no circumstances full possession, but not for long, because the must she undertake the return journey- - to gripman entered with a long Iron crowbar. Brazil until after the birth of her child. He dealt a blow at the snake, but .missed, This advice placed tho Imperial family and, hadThe not jumped baek in the nlok of in a somewhat difficult predicament, for actime, the enraged reptile's fangs would have cording to the terms of the National Conbeen buried in his leg. stitution it was indispensable, that the heir The second blow broke the rattler's' back to the throne should be born on Brazilian and he was soon dispatched aud thrown into soil. .'. . -- 1' ; the street. Indeed, were he to make his debut in the The youth who owned the snake was seen world on foreign territory it would, accord- ' Second South St. lug to the legal experts, constitute sufficient ground for raising the question as to the validity of tho child's rights to the crown. After much deliberation aud discussion, the following ingenious solution of the ..difficulty was determined upon : A couple of sackfuls of earth wero brought from Kio do Janeiro and strewn across the threshold of the Brazilian Legation at Paris, and a few hours before the birth of the child the Princess was conveyed thither and to an apartment ou the floor of which a portion of tho transatlantic soil had beeir placed. The young Prince, therefore, was declared to have been born ou Brazilian soil, since not only was there Brazilian earth ou the ground, but. moreover, the Legation,; by virtue of its extra territorial diplomatlo privileges, .was regarded as part and parcel, not of Paris or France, but of the Brazilian-Empire- . capital and skill to conduct the business on later in the day. He was badly frightenod a a largo industry can built up over the affair ana refused to give tils name, at Saliha. sayinK ho had tho snake merely for scientific purposes and, of course, did not suppose BPHX PEOBUCTS. it would break out of tho can covered by a '"Tho ISTephl Plaster & Manufacturing Com single t hickness of newspaper. Ho regretted the loss of the rattler bepany have a mill for making plaster of o cause ho had just paid $4 for It. Suit parls. It has a capacity of four to five car loads per day. The company has a gypsum tiiiHiU h to Xrw York Journal. quarry eloso to the mill, which is an" "SHOT AT AND 31ISSK1." Immense deposit of fine quality. Tho past one was of a not sale for the good year A Chaplain's Way of Securing Atplaster, and yet from the 20th of Novetn tendance at Service. tier. iSUO. to tho 20th of November, 1801, they Even the chaplain, after he has employed on an average! about six hands, been In tho army service long enough to catch and during this time manufactured, sold and shipped something over 2400 tons pf the the local spirit, allows his service to take manufactured article. Their markets are in the tinge of a military coloring. Chaplain ex- : - nt: ; - ATLAS ENGINES AND BOILERS, VACUUM OILS, BUFFALO SCALES. REVERE BELTING AND HOSE, WESTERN VALVE COMPANY. CO. BRASS AND STEEL WIRE CLOTH - , vloe-preside- - on year,-accordin- , . -- . ut 1 -- The .Barnes sulphur mines are located In Beaver county, Otah, twelve miles southwest of Frisco, which is the nearest railway point. When the Union Pacific Is extended frotji Mllford toWards Pioche It will come within eight" miles of the mines, with a good seeking to find it in position. On the Buffalo to tho railway. the indications are good. road all the way jdown-graMr. Tibbets has been working the Red Tiie sulphur here is deposited In seams like Bird under lease and bond, doing much work coal, but at an angle of forty-fiv- e degrees, in advancing tho tuuuel. dipping into tho hill. Andrew Campbell and Stephen and Joe This hill is one vast mass of white did considerable work ou their Williams 07 to cent silica. sandstone, runniug up per and what little foroign substance is mixed claims In Cotton wood. gulch, and some other with tho sulphur is silica, ueologists are parties made progress in developing claims. disposed to think this sulphur is tbo deposit PEODOCXIOH OF laKii SALT. from a crater, long since extinct. The layers of sulphur are from three to ten feet Companies Engsed in the Work Their thick, there beinji a number of such seams. "Product for the Past Year. On the surfaco there is some live or six The manufacture of sait around the lake hundred tons of sulphur which has been has long been a great industry and is year been taken out aud piled up, one-ha- lf of by year becoming greater. Salt is so cheaply which will run 90 per cent pure sulphur, the made along the shores and there is so much other half about; 60 per cent. The top of competition that: prices rule low, being for the hill is covered with obsidian, and the common salt $1.50 per ton on the cars, while white sand suggests just the right material the and table salt ranges . from to produce glass, so that the large number $4 anddairy $3 up to $15 per ton, according to of claims belonging to the company have at the Size of packages it is put up in. least two valuable substances, sulphur being The salt business paid the railroads about a the most Important. Only assessment work dollars in freight charges the was done the past year on the claims. past year. The market has been limited, but is fast widening each year, both in FISH CULTUBI! IV TJZABC quantity called for and in territory The Actiilar Commiailoner Hai Soma reached. The Inland Crystal Salt Company has 500 Cheerful Words for It. acres covered by evaporatlog-pond- s. to these loform oeg l yon kjditok xribune: that our piscatorial operations for the cur- ponds being filled by pumps raising a milrent year have been comparatively limited. lion gallons of the saline waters in ten There has been no Introduction of foreign hours. These pumps are run six months of fishes, except a car of carp received at the year. This plant has a capacity of one Laramie, Wyo. , and distributed in Utah and to four hundred thousand tons of salt per to the season. During the Idaho during last week. There seems to be a good deal of prejudice harvesting season 150 to 200 men are emagainst the edible qualities of the carp, but ployed, and thirty men the remainder of no doubt much of it comes from the unsea the year. The great bulk of their salt, and sonable eating of the fish, which is not as in fact of the product of all the other palatable in warm as in cool weather: nor salt farms, is sold to the silver mills are they as toothsome during the spring and for common uses; table and dairy salt season. Carp raised in ponds should be is made by refining, drying, grinding and thoroughly cleaned and put through several; bolting. The latter salt will come into favor changes of cold, pure and Bllgbtly salt water and a much wider use when its qualities are before cooking better known. The Inland Crystal Company It will please the angler to know that have their plant at the south end of the, one of the" gamest of all fishes.: lake, out near Garfield Beach. the black bass. viz., Jeremy & Co. have a big salt farm a few planted last. In are Utah miles farther east, aud have It fairly well lake, multiply-year rapidly ing. Two-nn- e specimens of this excellent fitted up. fish caught by Mrv Madsea of Provo can be The Saginaw Salt Company has their seen at the Deseret museum. works farther north, at Lake Shore, where The shad put Into the same waters are they spent some ten or twelve thousand said to be doing nicely by fishermen of Provo dollars the past year in the way of imM and Lehi. provements, among which are buildings for It is needless for me to again suggest that men and for machinery for manufacturing Utah is in very great need of a public hatch- table and dairy salt. The Deseret Salt Company have their'-farof ery, Wyoming, with but about one-thir- d our population, has Jh.a&,a very creditable a few miles farther north. It being an one for years, and, her people take a pride in old plant well fitted up. The Adams-KiesSalt Company at Syrapointing to it as one of their best industries. With a suitable hatchery, coupled with our cuse is also a big concern, to which the good railway facilities, trout and other fry Union Pacific built a branch six miles long by the millions might bo planted In the pub some years ago, and then put in a mile of lic streams at a comparatively small outlay. spur track to reach both ends pf their salt Colorado, with its public and private1 hatchworks. The following table shows the output of eries, claims that $150,000 are annually distributed in that State by sportsmen from these plants for 1891, along with amounts abroad. Respectfully yours, shipped, now on hand, etc, all in tons: A. Multojt MtJssek, C3 Acting Commissioner of Utah. O XT half-milli- & SOQTT M. - de . - nni. sJlV r . nuin-bers-amo- fill ro popper - for-doi- ng x I Stear. g, , - AND Qrapite 1 . . e Vice-Preside- ending December III. 11. estimating the December run, is as follows: ? o . v 'r MAIN STMMMT, 161 s, C Kl'KLH ASH rLl'XKS. (INCORPOIATJiD.) I vletals and Hapdware O ers -' The smelters and operatic In this valley bara had asamplers productive year, and with the enlarged ore supplies in prospect," they will doubtless have a yet more prosperous year la 1602. Herewith Is given a report of their Operations. The smelters below the Pity, Ira operating the past year, used 10,500 tons ot. Crested Butte and 13.631 tons of Cardiff coke,, .piak-liiJan importation of UO.OHl tons of coke Iron ore, 6S50O tons torn. fscrap iron, Vi.4'Ai tons ' LllunaloUH, Coke, and chareoal, ii.jO tons Coal and slack, 6Jol tout NO. . Hennery Con It in nl I'loueer Samplers A. Fine bhowliig Tor the Year Juat Closed. . GEO. M The coal demand of this city Increases In Coal creek lias long been noted for Its a healthy ratio year, by year. The past great sulphur beds. For a number of years year has. been by far the greatest In coal tho mines wreU operated and sulphur was consumption of any In the history of the extracted from, the rtek. which runs very city. This Is a pretty good measure of the high iu that product. This mineral Is all increase in manufacturing Industry. Folthe time being formed through deposit from gases coming up from Ieiow and setlowing is the year's statement this under ' bead: tling iu tho crevices in the rocks as pure SALT LAKE CITr'S FX" EL. srPTLT. sulphur, or permeating the body of the During the year l9l the following coals rock. After buinr operated for year iu were disposed of in this city: the cxtractiou of the sulpb ur and shipping T&n. It, thO works closed down because of diffUnion Pacific Coal ... :5.nr iculties I among the stock hoi Jers of the Pleasant Valley CuaDepartment.. ... y. :vuki Company Kock hprings Coal Company . . . a."i,f o ...... then iu charge. Af... MW) ter it had Company, Authra:ite or hard coal for three years been idle . .. S.IMI Consumer' Cosl Company.. HomeCoul Company . . . if,JU the works were started up again Van Dyke Coal Company . .. ... l'.UlO about tho first of September last. MJ . .. ... Blackmith coal, liustern Of course it j required quite a ' while SKiO Charcoal. . , ....Coke ;O0 io put the separating cylinders and fur lilsck U u ttes ... iT75 naces in trim ............ ..... to begin. hi October two Total ...124,440 cylinders were tun : in November four, aud These coals are sold at wholesale at prices in December Jive cylinders were operated. ranging about $o per ton for lump soft coal, These have at capacity for turning cut 5J for anthracite, Sll "for ooke. 22.75 for twenty tons of sulphur brimstone per day slack, and 210 for chareoal. At retail the In the form of cones weighing 275 pounds prices are some fifty cents or more per too each. These are hauled to Hlack Kock, a hitrher. The factories, power-bouseetc., station ion the Union Pacific iu Heaver use large amounts of slack or screening county, ;and shipped loose In carload lots. coal. The cost of fuel to citizens probably This sulphur runs ixs to 90 pure. It is miles from the works to Hluck aggregated about $700, 00l for the year Ifcftl. twenty-si- x PLEASANT VAU.Ur COMPANY. teams are kept Iiock, and fourteen The Pleasant ValleyCoal Company owns constantly on the road hauling out sulphur, and operates mines at Scofieid and Castle .and still tho company is uot able It is Cate, Kmery county, Utah. They employ to keep .up i with' it orders. between five and six hundred men in mining the intention i to put in machinery and buruingicoke. During the past year for grinding this product, and also furnaces they expended finite a sum of money in for makiug sublimed or lluor of sulphur; putting in electric machinery for operating but this CiinntSt be done as long as the tiie cars in tho Castle Cate mine, and made capacity is too Small to supply the demand other valuable Improvements. for tho crude article. The capacity will, Tho following shows a sumparatlve state however, bo doubled as soon as enough ment of their operations tho past two cylinders can bo put in, and this industry years : promises to grow into a big enterprise. It Xo. of Ton it Xa, of Ton oT .1. H. Hurfeind, in J?W. in Tour. is under the management thifijit il in sv shiipe! a practical ioa.ii in t lie business. lHV.:,jo 0,85 I.utnp coal . ll.". 4 Smalt l:.'.:t:,'7 ; beds The suli-huextend- - over a large of "'the deposit is uot but the area, depth Total. ..ya7,7i:i to be mined iu open cuts known. It has' Coke H,'7 because of the fumes, and no cuts have yet 1 ts o Ulcers art' President, Dr. William feel. reached a depths of over twenty-fiv- e A. Hell; George Goss; The company have another group of mines !.-- . C. tieneral Colonel Manager, five miles distant of a similar character, tho Dodge: Secretary and Treasurer, Charles latter being just over tho lino in Millard W. Assistant Drake; Secretary uounty, but this group is not being worked. and Assistant Treasurer, William F. Col ton: Fifty men are employed at the works Auditor. Theron Geddcs;. Superinteudct. at present. These sulphur mines ought . William G. Sharp. to furnish all fthe sulphur required iu Tho eoal mined by the company was used this in terutouiit ;iin cou ntry for sheep-dippinon the Kio tirande Western Railway, '.'JO. ooO manufacture of sulphuric acid and t jns sold in thlscity, and the balanco found fOr tho many purposes for is which a market in other towns in this Territory employed; aud It should form thesulphur basis for and elsewhere. extensive manufacturing enterprises. HOME 'OAT. COMPANY.. is extracted from the natural deposit The Home Coal t'ompauy, operating mines bp means of steam acting on it. melting and at Coalville, grades its operations to suit causing it to run from the upper portion of the demand for its coals. The Ontario. a big iron cy Uder to a receptacle below, from Daly and kimo other companies, and the which it is drawt't out and run Into blocks citizens of Park City, consume nearly all of ready for shipping, after which the tailtho coal mined by tills company. The past ings," or waste, tiro dumped by opening the year they mined and marketed tibou t 43.000 bottom and letting them fall into cars, to tons, of which 40,000 tons went to Park City, be deposited on the dump pile. Thepresent aud this vast bulk may properly give credit manager lias gieiitly improved the facilities to the silver mining- iuduatry of. that great this business, and will soon have .its consumption, a4nce mining and a plant with greater capacity than ever cauip--foe. milling there, directly or' Indirectly, ' reTho output of tho past few months quired that much coal. Other coals are must have beeir well towards fifteen huntaken to Park City, probably to the extent dred tons. ; " : ' " One Six ' . - ' - ' ' - Tea... ........ M.SX1 ths .. .. . ... Uoattvs.... h "' FBICK, POST AO . - I n VrW raZsi CS.OO Cts riEn p;taylo;. LiJ.:.. i.o. in ttdtlition Hi Kentral (irutica wiiLwuh t t m.ble "j.iuintii. r kjwcmlI miontlon to o.ri'l fiie in ..':, S. t'lurtwf Appeals &( tel. Louiw. lt,riepunUs(ic Miici. &u |