OCR Text |
Show t THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE, SUNDAY MORNING, 13 MARCH "14, 1.020. I"-- H Growth of Mining From eient parchment, showing a map of on of thes early gold mines. Reference in the Inscription to th memorial stone of Setl I fixe the date as 13u0 B U This is Ait oldest mining map known. Lighting the mine was first don with burning stick of fir, later oil lamps wer used. Th Importance of mining to th Egyptians cun be illustrated by this incident. Th annual revenue of Ptolmy II, dea- Si'uDX vi- wo prwiuiUuU rived rhieflv from mine, amounted to 14 ko0 talents, or about $2o0t0,000. b.UM Of UUM, kuo- -a ImIron wa known long before It was fua ui(M tuVor pxouuoui in general use. The oldest pic diew u, u.. uie y m Lm ) covered was found between two blocks m of stone in an air shaft of th great w, iiu.tav B. ( . w 200 uii pyramid, constructed about pioaUi-LAnother fragment of Iron wa found iam lutoiakvo oi piwi..c- Oiijr, among copper tools of th sixth dywt Uumi io.a, copiitx aua tme nasty, about 2610 H. C. lttio tieiou to huinaani. aio114 Aft GIVEN IRON PRIZE. in Mines ounce There are many Instances of meAiiIlllltL1y VtJt yioo-coi oy buie teoric irn being worked Into tools 5 uid 7,50, Vja and other Implements. Homer States luinei ouiui that one of the prize awarded at ounce ol auver liy 1'a.ri. City, in honor of the funeral of (he gam that Uie uirgia oy ulilcb Rafrcculus was a mut of nUovimg By ROBERT S. LEWIS, Tin tic retained leuueistnp wu tron large enough to suffice Its possessor Professor of Mining;, University of Utah. a.i purposes during five utmnr, not unounting to 550,000 ears. The supply of meteoric Iron ounce. The beginning of the mining Indue was too small to establish an Iron age, Park City mine during th laat uy la hit In ireh!stor1i) time. Hold ered at Susa, the date being estimated and It was until the ancients had a washed from to smelt- - iron ores that the 4500 B. i. Susa, the capital city of learned year produced 81,.1H,1)0 poimd gravel, copper wa at true iron age began. This was about of lead; th Tlntlc district fr.lned and bitumen were used before Elam, was captured by the BabyloThis in 1300 B. (. in Egypt, though iron nians some years B. l pound and Bingham recorded civilization Hut even thea scription prove the use of silverevi-as wordA wt re brought Into (ireei by pounds. the ectlvltlea were not the first mining. standard of money and affords beans, who came from central Meteoric Bingham produced during 1928 Europe, a century earlier I aJscliihlc flint Implements were dence of the antiquity of civilization was iron in in In value states. equaJ early times Babylonian approximately 2yo.oort.PoO pounds found with the bones of prehistoric in the early the as money in sevEgypt during eighteenth dy r.asy, to gold and was of copper, the iwgest part of n.en who lived in time estimated to lulO to 14h li. C., anver was scarcer eral countries. which wa don red from producthan gold and was valued more highBy supplying material for commerce, be 450.000 years ugo. Later man adtion of th Utah Copper. As hits been stated, not rnu h for tools and implements of war, for vanced from open ut mining to true ly. Th Utah Copper company wa wa produced from the early jewelry and other ths ornaments, underground operations by sinking copper of imnes were prime factor copper Utah leading producer ofConaoli-datemining at Sinai, for, during the time products round pits, as mu h as fifty feet deep, of ton Ih civ of B. 2600 the lhz.it the the sixth about (.'., advancing dynasty, and gold. The Park-Utato layers of flint bearing ground and The great pyramid of was used as a medium of exa tocopper Egyptians with Minas company, running drifts freon these sluifts In as well as gold The ratio of Knufu or Cheops is said by Herodotus ail directions These drifts wers about change tal of 415,002 ounce of silver to 1, practically to have required the labor tf 100,0u0 value was ab ut thres feet high and from three to nins the same as obtained in the year 1S34, for twenty years, and modem produced, wa the largest silver f et wide. ' he tools used were pit ks, soma thirty ia age. engineer have said these- figures ar producing company. This comhiitnmem and wedgei made from the or Most of tbo silver tame from fTcllia reasonable. Huge blocks, some weighpany also shipped the largest .horns of the red deer, and hammers In southeastern over fifty tons, were quarried by Ing Minor Thotrnes Afla tonnage, and, next to the and wedges of flints Those Neolithic III went to war holes with copper drills and ( drilling B. 147I a in in mines of England, France and Belgium Utah Copper, produced the largest which then th out wedging stones, with elertrum. a wefs worked approximately 10,000 chariot ornamented ef ore. tonnage were shaped with copper saws. later f ,,ne natural and stiver part all)' years ago The Tlntlc Standard MJning Iead was a metal also known & The earliest m nlng operations of four psrts gold. A few years later he times It is so frequently found company made the largeet lead h recorded as receiving 57$ pounds of early record were condu ted by the Some of with silver that It must have been production, as well as the largest in the turquoia mines of the gold from of Nubian envoys were noticed ores when smelted. silver the the pharaoh came from rM Final peninsula. gross and net earnings among ths Mere the sandMoiie of lad wer discovered in the Lumps of the but Fgvpt Kr!f, greater part r silver lead producers. Gross earnrliff Inscribed with a pictorial ruins of ancient Troy, thus record that is astonishingly well pre- It was ruined In northern Sudan, the deepest ings of this company amounted proving the metal was known as early ancient Nubia. It la said that the an served. 'ihe oldest sculpture Is that name 2500 B. to $7 919 978 and net earnings of Deposits of silver bear- from nub. meaning came Xuluu of Henterkhet, the seventh of the king are known to have $3,158 1P7 and were only The gold mining districts were ing icad ore first dynasty Archaeologists do not gold. and on Mt. Ida, and in the1 to those of the Utah Copper, southeast of Wadi Haifa. been worked agreo as to the date, but a conserva- eatt to which Mt. belongs. range Olympus covered RUcer which reported gross eamings of mining operations large There is little tive estimate fixes the time as S(O0 question but these mines H. C., some lTdu years before $32,184,769 and net eamings of the areas. were source of Troy's lead The country haft the appearance of Israelites left Egv pi arrd wandered U a not Hound in nature Zinc $10,734,756. a Dales-tinmore across the desert of Final Into than 3u0 metal, but has to be reduced from Its being plowed and for To the Tlntlc Standard Mining ha been ores. However, relic square miles the gravel containing zinc company also belongs the hmor One expedition comprised 750 men, worked to an .average depth of seven wre found in ruins dating back to the of owning the largest silver proand was well organized, , bringing ail feet. Shallow pits were dug and the sixth century B. C. needed supplies,' Including water, on gold wxs removed bv washing in flat ducing mine In the state and perSLOW. DEVELOPMENT in the backs of hundreds of donkeys. w oien dishes. free gold Mining haps In the United States. DurHowever valuable the ancient mine nderground rooms were driven to hard rock was first done by shallow ing 1925, production of silver find the mxIuN s of turquoise trenches. Later galleries wer driven were to the rulers, mining as an art Copfrom the No. 2 shaft of the Tlntic per ch scls, as vll as stons picks, Into the hiLlhldes, and still later In- could develop but slowly, where slaves Standard mine totaled 3,8fti,628 were used, the topper being derived cline shafts were sunk, some to a were driven to death by brutal taskounces. from smelting m.Evhlte, a green col- depth of sixty feet. The mining method masters. It was not until mining was In In which ored ore of copper that closely resemonsisted heating the rock by a fire recognized as an industry bles turquoise otii.r ecirtpCurea and and then throwing cold water on It. skilled guidance wss necesary that methods of operInscriptions range In Ume from the Rock thus broken was ''crushed with any great .advan ation records that Also first dynasty down to the twentieth tone mauls. th iron mines of Ena certain Nioias ,v brought to be gland wdrkd dynasty, some 2000 years. PRISONERS WORKED. an overseer The minee were abandoned about in ian silver V were condemned prisoners, Miners of tb Homan th With overthrow Uft0 B. C Judge from the records, prisoners of war and even those un- mines at Laurium. S tvs 50could be empire mining languished and scarce$31 copper mining in Kina! was never s justly purchased for aa l.tt apiece, ly a spark persisted through the dark because of false ac- but imprisoned for Niciaa a whole talent, around lprge industry. The chief source of cusations. The broken ore was carevent In th history of ags. Awasgreat copper for the Egyptians was Cyprus, ried out by children, and the final pul- a thousand dollars, was paid. A. D. the granting in mining who.se chief in lO B. C, .paid to verizing was done by old men and feats by the bishop of Trent of a charter Many surprising engineering Thotuies if a tribute of lflt blocks women. Tne miners worked in chains were performed by the Romans. By in which ail miners In his domain (! pounds) if popper, besHe other and were cruelly driven by overseers the first century A. D. mining engiwere given the right to tarry, labor oJfenng. of lead and lapis lazuli Evi- with whipe. Some of these anneering among the Romans had. de- and go and om m th mountains, dences of large wale mining for cop- cient long mines were worked by English veloped Into a very thriving Industry. In the mountain. In th city and In per have ius. between the years 1304 and Lead was mined In England for cast- wherever they wished, and freely The flrat mention of(vjsilver as a compan.es and yielded more than a million ings of this metal, bearing th stamp without hindrance. U0 were also They metftJ is contained in an inscription and a quarter dollars worth of gold. of the, Roman emperor, Cladlus, 49 given th to a measured plot right on a granite obelisk that was discov In the museum at Turin Is an an- - A. D, have been found. The Romans of ground for pursuing the discovery of ore. Thus the miner became a free man and an artisan, and the profession of mining englneerlngcbegan. Mining ha been a more important factor In the development of civilisation than Is recognized by historians. This is, no doubt, due to their lack of knowledge of the technique of mining and their consequent reluctance to discuss the subject. the However, course of human events, since the days of primitive man, has been greatly in- ifluenoed by mineral discoveries and m SBVKIfTH AVEITUB, HEW YORK, If, Y. the production of metals, Earliest Days Is Told Utahs Metal Output Shown Paleolithic Man, 450,000 Years Ago, Laid Foundations of Worlds Most portant Industry. Earliest Recorded Operations Egyptians Turquoise of Sinai Peninsula. Begun iBT SUPPLY Supremacy of ia by ui aer u ($fi d STATEMENT OF CONDITION AT DECEMBER 31, 1925 OUTSTANDING INSURANCE $4,394,848,901.00 Total amount of the Equitables policy contracts. ' INSURANCE RESERVE r - outstanding $ 679,931,652.00 That portion of the Assets reserved to pay all policies as they mature. This is adequate because it will be increased by future premiums and interest The Reserve' is determined by the Actuary, and verified by the Insurance Department of the State of New York. CURRENT INSURANCE LIABILITIES $ 15,037,692.84 $ 694,969,344.84 $ 9,519,809.86 These include Claims and Endowments pending. Funds left with the Society at interest. Premiums and Interest paid in advance, and Dividends not yet taken. . TOTAL INSURANCE LIABILITIES MISCELLANEOUS LIABILITIES ; Principally interest and rents paid in advance, reserve for taxes, and commissions, rents, and office expenses due or accrued.1 TOTAL LIABILITIES $ . ASSETS.... $ 704,489,154.70 792,405,106.54 These Assets include mortgages on farms, homes and business properties, loans to policyholders, bonds, cash, etc., and are 871551.84 in excess of Total This excess constitutes the Surplus Liabilities. Reserves. . V SURPLUS RESERVES $ For distribution in 1916: On Annual Dividend Policies On Deterred Dividend Policies Awaiting Apportionment on Deferred Dividend Policie For Contingencies $33400,000.00 3,844,789.00 $ 825,587,841.00 ,....$758,436,168.00 ", PAID TO POLICYHOLDERS IN 1925 98,483,113.08 $1,885,848,534.57 Comprising Death Claims, and payments to living policy- - holders under matured Endowments, Annuities, Cash values, and Dividends. THE COMPLETE ANNUAL STATEMENT J. H. Harrop, Agency Manager. WAV IMS NIWHOCSE LDO. ftztt Lk C:ty( Utah c 1 J. c. OPOSft, f Dtrct Mo VVINRIDW ftMiTH, ALBERT K WK PAT KICK, D wtrtat Mznagtr MRS. C. H COIV, ftfr)M Aflt WILLIAM ftOWMAN. Spfll W SARI. rfttftOAiRN, ftpcii AtAnt r 1 7sJ Ni wbite, MU bail. v: Vft It hy I' 11 Su 1,2 I Ah i 'e USfld'i iTS M V no klsfNEMbd th fgmtly rr!$ I y - rr 11 Mir- f Flour lMuua.1 uirut, .tMJ hintl) It 'it n fi $it ) - '2 SUGAR. KV il.i.l. YnJIK iHf the 13 l Th rw aufar (h! I're th prices firmer lo.lay, to tb duly V" i of 4 uiaik-,g d i a-, o' tfl CN REQUEST W. A. DAY. President ADOLPH HCUVAN. pmI Apnt ft. W . ANDIP60N, poal Agent W. M. I D M AN. N. ft. FtDDLl. Aprti Agtnt W. P BINNITT, Aflnt P. J HEAT M, ftpcii A CLYPfc ftCMNtY. ftpc Al Agent Agt gt in i, ii if I. lJ-4j- 2 1 May $1,45 4 A Huffalo mill Itought 42.000 bushels No. 2 hard winter wheat in public elevator her at 7 cents over May, an ad vane of 2 cents In the basis The ftrancity of cash wheat hre Is becoming mors pronounced and Is shorts In causing uneasiness amongst Fix jactations srs th May delivery. that the domeetio visible supply will show a decrease of over 1.000.000 bushels in M'giduy's statement. Pri- vate estimates indicated that farmers In the f'anadian northwest had only about 20.000,0u0 bushel wheat to market. to Corn had a range of onlv to cent ferr the day and oats pf cent. Trade in both grains was llgrht and largely of a local character, with the strength ocxming largely from sympathy with wheat. Pit traders were on ths selling side on ths upturn. Cash corn was unchanged to 2 cents lower with the flnlai easy. Country roods are reported s In bad from shape. preventingof deliveries oats in parts of farmer. Seeding the west and southwest is delayed Ryv was by recent wet weather. firmer with wheat. No export sales were claimed. Provisions prives were strong early on local buying with offerings Tpht. On the advarve there w vs scattered brokers and values selling by packers'close on lard unwith the eased ribs changed to 6 cent higher, short 7 beLlles to were unchanged and 12 cents higher. 2 July 1U 00 ldV7. Hcptf.Qjher, IS42, Prcptuber, March, U27, 15 55 coffra, quirt: Klo Ta, 18 to Sanlca 4a, 23 to 23 No. 7. 18 It Id: Santoa No 1. (offer-K- lo 234- futuraa, steady; MarcN 17 60; .July lfl V7. 18, POTATOFS. rmrAGO, March 13 iHr tha AsaoH 7t cara atrd Prraa t I'oiatreca Receipt a total United States aiifpnienta. MW, nadlant demand and et tailing slow; market W nmn aacked unsettled and few round whites, 4U"u4 2T; Idaho Miked few Mies, 4 10 4 4 8 Prod ace Market "V' tdy H01TH SALT LAKE. SALT LAKE. Manta 11 Hog Receipt, 313. Includoif 175 Id trsos't to Los Angeles market and 438 to Kan Fran No sales cisco packers ( attlw - Receipts, incltidlng 335 bead for the local market and 248 in transit to for week. I.ot Angeles matket. Market Moat safes steady; good betfers at 880 of .food beef steer at $8 25; hulk sale r taals. Including good heifers, at $7 00 medium to good steers at $7 75 i$ ft bulk medium to gHMl ah stork $5 (VI to $d &0; cutters dud romimm cows at $8 5hQ4 50; beef hulls up to $5 5u, good eaters up to $9 fo. Sheep No receipt NORTH OGDEN, OODBN. March 13 Hog Receipt. 1550. Including 158 head for the local market and th remainder in trsnait to western packer two short loads of Market fully stead 1W) to 177 itound lights at $13 30. a part load of 2 Yt oiiod l.uti hers at $14 25, few nuxVd grades at $12( ( attk local Receipts, 2h, all for th irark-week total 2431. Receipts for Market compared to week ago Practically beef steers, $ i5'(j all classes steady: 8 2o, mwlltim grade beef steer, plentiful and feeder stocker at $7 7543111 good common offerings down steers at 87 5ft7 to $.' 0- bulk good iieifers $d 25$zt aV; on brad at 87 25; good oos stan-at $t 8 25, v1d lot at $ canners, cutter and rofitnmu to medium gra i she atork at $2 (K4(5 75; iKi.ognjf Intis at $J ,Mu4 8t; lwef bulla up to $ .( good, veal calve up bulk common to good calves at to $3 0Uti7 50 Sheep No rceiita rl ": OMAHA. OMAHA. Neb, March 13 it'nited State Department of Agriculture ) Hoga 85u0. Fair.y active, ationg to 10c advance mostly ou weighty ateera, higher 150 to 20 pound average. $13 rg) deiiraM 2K) to ft 13 15, top. 813 15, better grad 230 pound butchers. 8l2 8fil2M- bulk 2JWJ to butcher. $11 85 12 40 v bulk 280 to $ avaragea. $11331185; it) ft. bulk all sale. $10 20 packing cost Friday, $11.83; $11 ftvtklft 00; avaraga acore. tattle irt 5; CITY. March f tr 13 (. and yearlinga, A p 25. butcher CTea. ateera. rder $P 50, TA $5 8 '41 8 7U'a, 'heifer. 5. $7 stacker mj feeder. fiLy 15 8dkd spfcs h.i tt 'lle tr '6t.'5 v Established 1887. Wasatch 633. c 3 Get back that lost weight! (IV.ited I'atiie Iepartment of Agriculture uujpared with hecelpta MX), calves, 1 a week ago: Light weight steer ami year strong to 15c h gber; weight? ter ling ateer. $1085, we.gtit, 1 V--'.V top and havT steers. $!d pouita. yearling to 5c higher, tiulls, fair he stock, ateauy veare. ateadv to- &: htrher, atockcre and fed-r- s, alow, steady mow Fii sterre to, weak, bulk price etr i ' Main at Broadway. State- J C', FRUST COMPANY - . 54ll ad AvMljijK'jN nt Ji!pt. 5. fra. Non-Reside- 23T. 73. Compared with a week ago: Fed steer and tea rung, .mostly . steady, bnlk for week, $H3Dfrn 75, medium weights and weighty steer. at-w load $1025. $1040; eighty ha stock, 15c to 25 hglter, toogna bulla, steady beef tmlla weak t 25c lower; veal-era- , 50c lower, aUx kers and feeOera. $s 00 Butcher cows, 15 Bulk prices follow$5 7FCt7 Ofr; belfera. $7 30'ft 7; raanem and $H 84t4 77. bologna bulla. $5 cutter 5 75: heavy bef hulls, $1008 25; light ealar. $10 Onqi H to stocker and feeder. $8kHf0 light Wymn.nga $!) 0 f.VJ. Nomina!. Two Sheep Receipt. load fresh thorn lamb averag week ago $Vd wv.J $11 10. compared wib to 5c b'gti-er- . lainba. fW Munda and down, beaviea. steady; sheep, strong1 feed ng and shearing latnht. 23c to .vc higher ( )os Fed wool iantha $12uo!8lO, ing buks top, $18 25: week a top. $13 75; fresh shorn !U. fat ewes. $7 10 lambs, '1 2V 7' 'll week top. $4 t0; shearing lsuiba. ft 12 50; light feeding lambs, 'upward to $13 25 40. lept Care of Property for Our Specialty aii, wFght. Market moatly Hnga Receipts, No packer market teady with IridaT'a on 1SM pourd lift hlpter in of , T 13 le rattle aaie eragea. IrtMk NEV YORK EI0DUCI. 3 M, a IbO tw 225 pound we ght. $ 2 NEW TURK. March 18 1. 35. (Py the Ao-casorted ltO t ij(l pound. $.3 Kece pe pres ) putter. firm i t 5U, pacing pmini, $ll7'yL2 ll2 7Hl ( reainery. higher then estrae. 44j tw. $10 Wftj 0 do extras 02 Market for the 44c; do first Heceipta, 50 hheep 01 ITSrMl, 41 IHM t week top. laitihi, 25c to higher: I I leer 23.481. firm Fresh deM'-abl75 $13 dld bar, mkre1y by pt. treating symptoms weight arri'a i largeiy be- er-beewnds. heavier kinds, $12 nuit 2 gathered $i3uutgl3o, if and rnt th due you Naturally, rf whtea, elney selected estraa, 87 with a fw extreme at weight uffera,.laite no augar Into the ayaterv there lav aarby and nearby western benaery $l0 5Ott!l ,O beat shorn lambs, $.1 &.; li fes, first U aversge extras, 82's30c be atwk ai.nd others s'ostiy $uT5'aj will b no fciyrar to excrete. Nfy box k i$ ( heee. ponnd steady. b.gurr, top $, $ 75, ether a, $ !aj u a atesdv Lia jo.i it ry..aBcbsac-freight quoi-- t 8 50.. d. Dressed poultry. i'AS. (nhera. Brices anebanged ( ra DENTER. rrto. Manft 1$, C DFN'rRR, telling bow to fp fhla tiaeiesa e'arv CHICAGO FR0DNCK. ' luti, week, kll.lrg da eeSpia. ta Ml u need eat what ing x etrer. $8 "Xg d ly atad . 18 Hr 1h Aewvrt. pi.'fere-VVi- t CturAdn, Va-r- h wf't FMF.K to any !saJ-et87 t P vis $ V hetfern. hui, ted batter. nachaged W. S0. ?2 $f rUrtaartf, 7.5, rs-t- t J" Vi bulk top veaia. hi ' tub 10 paid, daily 4d Bt , Nww York feeder and ) 4 esses 07 Ft Receipts Fgr higher vne steer g ag O' it if sleeky to wr tre firsts. 7Hfl27. 5c 2-Cjiiv 1r t hvger bp $P Jt) bik.d ear? f rets au4 faetfr,4ltre Alive, stand y, Receipt pn WT$7 '(IP8 IS80. tatted jesrufg t whanged. H'W Jteee pr. JWm fwBV tawd dle- 1.4 t arrived 119 oi,r f n p. fcer, offered v Tiotrm, fww drive u ng sxnU. a.l i mmi t lefset u r tus March 13 By W'fin, ILWyrol.IN v t t tb pee fTbeat Ase.iatfd 1 w, far rw 'be-s- . I r he fcgV $" 4 f to 1 I It h 'vejets to ii feto h he-Ire ea 4 s. i .ta Whs tofse-e ger-t I 7.. fit W t if iH urr gJ f f,v t . , SJ A kl hie t',TX t rt I s. 4 r1 bv 'tv , Ns 1 da k ha ec U n, ' i.Rummyr, Ui A EAT AND GET WELL WILL EE SENT TO ANY ADDRESS t hUqi TREArara $ TOTAL PAID TO POLICYHOLDERS SINCE ORGANIZATION t g 8 r 58 $67, 1 5 1 ,573 .00 My, Ni rj-rte- ie.rbow 481,194.00 50,189,968.84 NEW INSURANCE PAID FOR in 1925 Ordinary Group (new groups only) 87,915,951.84 tr. 1 per lns kn-a- l WELSH MINES CAPTURED, The exact causes of the Roman in vasion of Britain may never be known .with certainty, but modern' researches make it plain that poeHion of nun-trwealth wa a very Important factor Tbe Romans built a road,- - some 100 miles long, across the country to the coast of Wales at Carnarvon, a region rich in lead and eilver ores. The Homans were lavish users of lead, and below the streets of York, London ,and other cities have been found lead coffins laviahfy decorated with elaborate patterns of scallop shells and es. other Search for the historically famous gold nones of .ophir has been instru- mental in developing different mining districts in the continent of Africa, even though the exact poRiuon of the mines lias never been learned Hold was first discovered in the Transvaal. 1S75. in South Africa, The great gold reef of the Rand wa found in 1886. In those days plots of ground, now in the city of Joluinnesburg, measuring 50x50 and 60x100 feet, were sold for 42 c. Oats- September, $200 apiece. Today they are worth Rv- r- Reptenabef, 82c. and over. Diamonds were $250,000 Trd May. 15 10; July. 15 82 first discovered in the Orange Free Brlllra May, 18 00; July. 15.40. State in 1S67, and from this tue dates the rapid progress of South Africa To date the DeBeers company of Kimberf ly lias mined over thirty tons of diamonds, worth nearly a third of a billion dollars. DAISY FH0DDCJ5. WHOLESALE The rapid subjugation of Mexico by the Spaniards H simply the opening (Orjotatlons by Nelson Rieka Creameryv C.) BflTKlt. of new mining districts after the conaqnarra or flata, lb ...$ .45 quest of Mexico City by Cortes, ('hi- - i grtra, firata. lb huahua, Monterey, Parral, Fathu a Ij Prime lb .44 and a dozen other important cities dc- - First, 1c leas. lb, Parchment wrapped. v eloped from mining camps into, per EUC.R manent cities. Gold at Nome, Fair- - Fresh extra poultry farm, dos .27 .YS banks and Dawson lead to the great Poultry farm, pullet epga, dos.... coiora. dor .25 rushes to Alaska and tho Canadian Raoh. CHRRHB. Yukon. The discovery of gold on ths j .23 American river in California on Jan- - Full cream triplets, lb., .24 24. UKOjuet nine S.iy M-h.fnr. f f ii:: .24 ' the signing of the treaty with xi'o ftlock bwiaa 25 ib block. Ib that ceded California and the large irream brick. 5 ib brick, lb .23 .34 lart of the sou'hwest to the United I.imburger, lib brick, lb .35 Ntalrs. hastened th development of Roqueforts this section of the country The finding .4? of gold in Australia som two ears later turned that country from a penal BUTTE. settlement into what hag become an miCAdO. March 18 By th Associated independent commonwealth. n he butter B)arkt today ruled Finally th great war was a tre- Pres on t'P acorva, with buying Interest, mendous stimulus to mln'ng and fair ftuppiiet. however, &rrtbelaa, on) opened th eves of th world to tne wer ample to meet buyers' needs. Tb mepart plaved by th strategy of minand lower scores were limited and ta eral. Belgian roal and French iron dium and war dealers demand, consequently yorMl wer necessities for Germany Pin e buldit.g firmly to this riaaa of zAjdi..,. . th war, th rar to secure resources 1 he centra Uri market was steady, with s score cars shyhtly lo of oil has tested to the utmost the aupplu's of of. buyers' reyuiretnedt d'plomaMo strength of the great jia- firm Mated we for ie world. th hod'ng tiers of price, The past of mining Is grat, but the but found it difficult to real lie any prfuture is still greater, for the Indus- m.ums 01 enfe, ' 4S4t taO P2 score, 43 Frvah. try is a fundamentaj on that con425i J 8 score, 41 4; 58 cre, 40 , HtJ tributes more than any other toward 87 are,tre, arore. 57H. th advancement of our civilization Centrallied, 90 cur( 42l, W acor. 41; j k i IRRITATION SKIN -- - 1 Ht.-to- York . fl- j of the State ot Naw o - ferns f h July wr lerel 2d 'Htl liactiett haaiei and J.wkion Bndii eratur fur let Marchtnlita and eaiiy X(rli aL1 cis wie again good buera of wheat aient futures at Winnipeg which was partly future were high cent ing tb Bar a.lanc in ih tot iuaiftt anJ re responsible for tbe gain of t! in that market for the d The buy-- , lor(a of to on all fined rt.uct ilice rlted at net ad Ing orders seemed to with 4tnuolion to 8 uin,a the weak spots, and while manv of vance of 00 th in)ing the here were disponed to boiiaei and ( uNau liilreata Mih r1 ad 2 3 May, 2 24i75 July aN ept profits due to th sharp bulge, aide the market showed a firm undertone KM ReptfinUr. . r,f, f'run-w.th a mn-aura" asi of the day, although the greater d I'noea wr u htter luquity there was free soiling at one time chaiirw) 1f puinta hlitier. with Mat 0i to with eastern xmneollons. nu to h I& f by houj-etatloua Bov riiuruK from outtd ie interest ass somewhat larger, fin jranUaUd aMlmugh moat refmia wrri amt wetuiment more favorable to the till b'.Mi.ea at th Inauie level huving side Sugar futurea tot-cloard aieady A rmnh beMer undertone was apMaicb. 2 30. Mae aaiea, .41. im 2 while In the 40. news, and foreign July, 2 f4 September, 2 ttd. lecui parent woe finally estimated at her, 2 7u export sales only 3m oou busbele able ssid that a C0ITEE. part of the miPuid wrgocs afloat god had been disposed of, and there wers NEW YORK, March IS (Ry th Aaaeci numerous bill in the market for td 1 h Pr niarket fur volte tutor Manitoba fnwn continental countries. I'rirt rallied fruui a par today il qutt The latter was credited with buying till early dWin on (orrlng du to futures her aud has been for some t and freight closed puutta higher u$ 11 day. Liverpool better to 17 M. Xh and Mar than due adtaoced lower higher, tonung K ilnta net hicher gala Huetva Aire aas up 2 cents for rloa waa 6 r caliuiatcd at U and laga. ( ioalng quo the day with .Man h, $131 Utlona: March, May, 17 51, 9.1 j A Motmml Cooapwy Incorporated under the Lawa W cni. 1 . a, . umtux or se.-on-d THE EQUITABLE LIFE ASSURANCE SOCIETY OF THE UNITED STATES pniTgr D. MICHAELS. By CHARLES CKTCAiK). March 11 - llravy local tuvtnff f whAt fiiturs combined with mrkd ztrsntrth in M Uini;n-- r and JvnHKl, mr thxn off t hlxral lr-fitakinf itUs and May aflwtnvrd I the finish of Friday tent 66 a new hiifh for lh week, to $1 11 'rnta over th insld fig- snl ure of Mowlay with tb finish within a fraction of th to with net gains of 5 8 to 1 cent heMl at May i U 7 0 1 44. I i t5 7- - y 66. July at at f I 57 - I 87 and September t urn wan to cent highand er. with Mav 78 4 fi 78 7 5 81 were e whi oaf tents Jiily ent with May 0 6 SuOI-- 2 cent and July I Ke gained vent and Ui cent with itay 92 a n re 11 j P '"t Wlt.v $TV Offices and Storerooms in Prominent Corner Buildings I d nine-lea- itp qufkiy ou h on i ity.ipp. qufntl.v. minor Mcmivbra si pa o'ertuht. Itching uaua-i a null 2ino a' im' t c liqji'l that rrrtv ti w!; n shnv anv limo. for it doca b & M your irumUt for oubuttU Manifesting Unea$ine$$ ud I TLsr fati to With Demand Heavy and the Market Firm, Short$ i-- U Zemo l.imn tbat Itrhintr torture hm 4kiu lrritmtlon, at.i list nutke tho tkin boft. clear an. I hrujthv th can S'ip.v Any wtiti'h Zentu, generally o. erotiu K'wziuu, flcli. lirt D, kut Kaaho, jllMfkhfHiU. i T self-fuse- d Kgvp-t'an- Ue Autiaeptio Liquid utu u.l -' iitiL1115 ! When von it.irt to waste away to waha.iow, when the eolor leave . and vour poor, tired vi, ur ch.'pk wcak-euc- J ks w.ll hartllv hoil up your bodv it'g h i$r bi Uiue you takirnj a. fine tome and builder like Tania. Tanlac will build yOu up and make you feI that life worth liv irjjr. )(lad from root, herb And bark fathered from tbe four of the earth and enmpounied under the txclumve Tan1 a Tanlnc ig j)ut what the poor, ttarvrd bodr need. of all it )eanee th blood treorn and pule toe digestive or jrane in order. You fnd, ater a few dan treatment, that you want to eat. Frertv oon the wel ol r ftUa baek into your come the arale tell you that rheek then youre aininjf weight IVom until on it only a lhort tme yon r fes bnj fit a a fiddle. Mdl'c.pe f rio and women have taken T&nlar wih treat benefit. More than one hundred thouaand have written ue flowing tribute to tli woclerful tuBie. When 701 know it ha worked wonder for eo n:anr folk it not to take avanlair foil rf Taoflea b t yonree'f. Jout fnt a it ff another dae. Het botHe at a row and mart (h vo ir drtifcj eor-ne- for-rnu- jfz-- gl w i rK tub aA. lake Calls Tsnlac HcxuehoU Treaiure mJv in 1 w vuw mod phywd owt ui tbs ttams. latarewt to mem 1, wweta - waa mam ted racwsWoa. 1 on be weak. Now 1 eapf SxQv tirlaw Took mo la4 Mn:Llt TVaaS Is Lfne A 103$ Dm ktotoM. loww Tanae Vegeta! r. ft eoeietia A'lv.t |