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Show i. . i ,, ) I DECEMBER SATURDAY From Big Hill. Showing ,full circuit, of ,the ..9,, - - r 4 t . 7 71 r ,e- - ' - t - ' ..41- ' - I 1 . , , - 4 I i .k., -', ,; - . - , .- , - ' ' ' . . - : ,::, , ,- ,' 4'1' 1 1 I -- o . . , I , .,,, - ''41 NgitN. ).411 1 l .''' 4' . ' , ;.)At . ' Si . - t:., . . t - e. ., 1 0- 3: 4. , ' ' ' i ). ,.4 ;.,. t .- -0 - -1- A - ' '' . - -., , r- , 4.n...1 t, -- -- . - .11 - 4 4. le 4 - l'' :g1.1 .4,1 .. IA , N., At,o, i , 411 -- I .7,1t L I I 4 . p , - ek .. ..'1. xt 1- -4 a ) ...,, vio, I", tp Lt.., 7"'AL Ook ' ) aloe'lle."Nrwila-- db. A, . & ' - '. 411' i....' - 41 . I ..: - . '..'"7 ..t, ,:- ' 4 W - V. .).1. .N r, - 47,70. -- .... ' ft't Vo; ge . .6.41L:10..:Ag 'It "IF ik,,Aeu . ,. ..,A . $ Ns. , . N I., ....,, V',;.' 'r- . fi;i1- "it 11,7'. . e, ' '. , t , , - ni'-- ' sk ;t-.,- t I .' 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N 74.,, ,- ,4,4 L110:' So', qt L14 f ". .::: .:c....11,4 ' it ;;:t.' r'k - NI A I - ,...., 014-r...- -: 41..." , 7kS4r.'. ..7) , --, Akei. ...., ,:......,f' bt.d..,,, c, ,4t t 4, ' ,, , t' r?If t 0 ''',-.- ,,,: ,,...:1,,,,..c, 1 ,, , - .,1' i, ,.11 ,,,,44.4, ..m.,.,:' i i s : :.,,,,, ...,, ....7. ,7 , ht.-- ibc - ",,'',, ' 74, , , k, ,,- - --, .00,. , t ' r " 14:1$!irk;:. t kr t'.t.),,4t ; , '14. a 4 , b a2t4 , . se , ,,.., 8,4,44 '411.t4 4 d S 1 ,...?: 41;: '' 1.. ' K ', . , ...14 $1.- - , '..;.,,, -, ,...: . ",,17, , ..-i- ' , : .t:'11111. , - , x , v14.:.',. ,. ..- 4..' ,:, " ',-- tie moNN ' , .,10i ttpe.,' ..., ae 1,: ; 11k40 .. .t', '0 1.44) ;" t.si!' e'. ,a4 0 , , ,, 4 . .1 . V I aI ;,lef . A'".... , ' . ' , '.. . ' I 4 4 4 '. ,,, .... 4 ' 1 . .0 , Ilt ' ,,,,- , ,, t , ,., ,..2. , . , , , . , . , .. , ' ,, , , '. '', :' '' i ;c -- IA.. ., , .:-- '' ' ' - a . . '' ' f: , : IA '. ' , ' - , , 4. , 1 - - ,6 ' ' ' . 1 t . .,....., , ., ' 1 ' '., ' t ' ., ,,, , A t ',,', .1-..,, 0 , ., - I . , , , ' ,. '. ,' f ,. I 1 ..' .1., t, ii,. Ito , ,, t,... -,''. o ,.''t - ' ,'' 1, .:: 40-'!,- - ": ,,,,,,,, : :7 : ,, . c4.:, '!1;' . 4 , :7- 1!; , i'''..."-- A ?- .: '......'.;:.4.-'':'-:..1- .. 't .:- 11- k - , - r. i ... - - - ' e- - 1 .., e 4..., 7 aortas of scatterea .,' , t A, .0a ,',4 ...,c,,,,44,,,.07-1,.....---., , -. ., ir , i ' 21 '' . ' - ' 1, aoutberly tis-- 1 .: 11..,.. ' tinin: . ...t. I suroe ,,....., ..t. !:,., 1 or ''. ' x the la fracture which a in T.,,., k lavish ions a to.....,,P, 1 with wesIth ,,..ap 004116,. :o....i 4.0' , ,,tirak.. ''' ''" 1 ; -, N......:IEP, 'ha dammoth loin was found was ., 4' A, ,;..Z.-. 0-- . t- vs J I ' , the Tintio lobar' MKS. sad tollowod through 4 If ......,11,.. , t 46 ,i rle - , r, '' this thieknoss of 41,;',.,4,' ts; ' 1. ,....... ,G ' s' ., ' v, p.. ,,,, . "It..;)11,1 although men have been oink-- I tinto and along it from the south to. ,4 7 1,'".i,74-,- - tp.4., .c.2 , ' I le: '... r re ', . ' ''.4 there tunnels . the north the Black Jack. Lower tdam. I 4. '.' , t lj., c "nt log shafts tend driving , ', , e ... Ao,... '.. I r - .' i :,, i tWan IS years. the limits of moth. Opohongo. Gold Chain. Orand , . . ,..,4 . more ,.'imr., for , 1 Central. Victoria. Mammoth, , boundEagle been sot sone. ( bare yet the ore IF4.7;:, and Blue loll and ChM mint.' wort. i :' 4:6 ed. At first the district was believed devolopod. , wirl,f1".....2::.4.tilr.11:"7'sfirliml'I..6.41:414M4464.71,,...b.1': 4 --N.4:6.-');....,r,---"-.--I:i .. to be only a short two and a bait by Al .1 To the er at a i, - ,ilm.a., ,411 ...........4 , UM .., ' miners Old point south anti west of the Eagle 4 lour miles in ozteat.. 7.,::$::,::"..k, -- i4f 1 --. and btu. 13.'11 proprty another big ip ... 1 ' i ,.....,.. . of the camp smiled and 'sifted north l'..., ' math . te," VA and or ohannol fracture 4 ocy 7 when any effort was made to explore sone was found in the famous a 1; Con- 4,? frx r''' L: J el outside of that sone. ....J., tennial Eurka property. several hon.. , ....' 2 ),;trir:, cs ' have joined the drod foot to tho wool It is bellovd , : , Now the scoffers , 'kihi 4"1.: 1 ' ' t ,st i , 4 101.' , , these two great fracturos aro of , Het ,i 'A : adventurers and developments bay. that t '' , t ' 14..,I the sams channel. deep workings in , ' i:,k ( . e i ..0,' A.1 openedin recent years an area two some '':;!' r 1,,,,',1 1, the of i,. 1 to bo them ' (,c ,1 . a . dp ;,. I. and h halt by ton miles more. sehicit connected. minseshowing k 1:. :, ''''. 4., , fi' ;' 14 ,1 A...e a-a .,. , ,.!,,-- k ht, ".,: It, VdV.1 , ,. '''' , Is billows to bo a bonsyoomb of ors ., 't this western tractors 4 ' Along , , ions. i.,, 4 kt . : N. r- channels that will rival or outdo as a tho Centennial Eureka. Eureka,21111. rt.,. d.) Ite. I I ,i' 4 ealth producer the ortginal mining Bullion Bock. Gemini and Ride and . ACC tev-,.4 '14'4 l Valli,' mines wero found. Throughout era. Ionammor t4:144L, )'14116'411111.1EMIIMMEIS AAA oser,s..t!seefloAtiCi .7,...Itz...;E,....,,,,iie fL,.............1.L.....1 3 both of thee channeli eh mines have ' . rmon, In the beginning ot mining boon dovelopod to groat depths rich time there the prospectors smirched ore found as &top as 2.000 feet, farther I , ground outlets for iigns of ore than that not having boon developed - the outcrops.. Finding them. they dug as a rosiat of encountering too much :, holes to follow the ore. As mining water. work increased the book of geological Throughout thee. two channels the t!' Ii structure was opened to the searchers Mammoth lime stands on end, the t a was ore. done Then for by mining t, plane of the formations going almost d the which of structure. was which course t; study the guided Chain mines down, Both the Ajax mt,,ION dollar mines are al- URING the neat year the East area. little attention watt given te thel course of mine tunnels or shafts to straight of oat oreebodies in a general way. For of more than a mil- ii a had awe and Of production with Tintio mining district has taken work until huge deposits of Ore were, ways spoken ii when places where ore should be found. 80 years We was believed to be the limit t 1890. they lion before dollars on an activity truch as seldom is opened. in any mining district they are were merged into the Gold Chain c orn- often have the hardy miners who of th i ore' , ' and The Met re- efrazeromid haasa boon ctone - banked on their judgment been Myetery. seen in any mining camp. After looked at with wonderment; pany, which hes since produced more 1 1915 the Chief Consolidated About warded with great ore deposits that it nun from various i be could than 13.000,000. from wealth the a mineral properties reof feverish much Po now it year that activity now corns an to be hat company started to sink a big accepted fact first Lower Mammoth itas produeed just about 1170 until the earth in so email au about sembles a boom and is called the that wherever work Is done intent- - propenediscovery shaft at lIomansville, a million dollars and Uncle Sam ' it still being a big pro- locked upp the district is filled with time, I ,'.. In iil its north end of the present east' the have a Tintio district three it gently and the old Humbug produced greatest development campaign ever the duction area, and tho northern limits area. Thin them of itethough side reward with a big mine. of and the 1, All of the dollars many district of INCE uch mines and a quarter millions mining operations were seen in Utah. More than 20 mining Con. of it sttli being extended. -work before then had been Chin discovered more 'than 10 years ago. tween 1896 and 1016. They now be- original prospectors of 'Tintic disIn first started this the Tintic movement , northward Following in this are district been companies actively through a shaft near the town oros ,'r''' - found ore outcrops in what is now of operational, from tho porphyry area. during which yearg millions have ship-thto the May Day company. which e long trict, tAlver has always been the developing their properties, sending Eureka. known as the southwest end in an area Guesses were made as to quarter !produced. are even now in the produced more than two and a1901 of the ' all covered over with what miners call mining development , and list of big producers. predominating value of tho ore. down shafts from which they are drift- the reason for so large a working shaft : millions of dollarn between t poephyry., something heaved upward .strLet hoe been toward the cart. the ping these in millions an area where not ene mine had However to those not 'conversant with How many more tom to favorable areas in search of ore. been made. prospectors always in ,.arch of favor. Partin wonder V. frcm the bowels of the earth in- one of able. mines are going to in 1905 there came the production of the district, the vol- ing limestone north traversed and by ; was this For acceptdistrict dormant. the since torments hotThere as ean were stories heard before that itature's years tell. a one molten south cracks or . another epoch of million dollar mines ume of gayer Produced by Tintic mines Idueo no breaks.. mass that has cooled into rock. few early discoveries of shaft was etarted that the Chief comwere ed theory of eminent geologists is that in the district, when tit big flat iron has not impreased There a because probably have Blossom Movements of the 'earth caused long had a corps of geologists study- - 4164'11:64:7' vein was opened up in a the greater part of the Joeso Knights 'Humbug." their millions already produced silver was pro- ore made in some of the mines. Eure- panythe fractures or fissures here that run in a structure in the in many Instanc es, come from an upper number of adjoining propertiee. Be- - duced during a period when the white ing end was this movement It eastward of some of mined ka the richest and of the district and It was northeast Lily general north and south direction and mineralized horizon which probably tween 1905 and 1913. which was its metal watt at its lower market price. said that fivel was at looked that first prospecting lead-silvIn these cracks mineralised solutionn on at crews ore , of ever the be f depth. tracked o grade duplicated surveyors, highest A production greateet table of Tintic distri.ct Production straight period with scepticism. The old minerai lwill i flowed, becoming many more million. Idollar - Beck- Tunnel produced nearly-- 12,000,- - coinpiled by V. C. lielkes of Salt Lake found in Tintic from an ore shoot east from that company's old work- - t dropped 4"lieve-stlur- s. -. - Mintrala- cold they had been so f urn 8 h 8 but 000. district r. nettled 1nt0 "uld'ntle may the all which Inge, locating surface. the near ground Years found Imines U. S. rbich for the ' ago was' City bountiful In one district. Jesse Knight, geological etirveY num-- 1 rnaestes of ore. These rumors caused a slighti Colorado etarted its heavy produc- - covering the period 1869, eonjecture. B ased on the chanminer- some very high grade gold ore was open. This 'mass of porphyry Is found however, was not of the timorous kind. 'pure , the old mineral 1913 had pro- - al discoveries were firstwhen and at furnished least made by 1907 some and by in of ion ber flurry is as known what from the Gold taken that to made, throughout the southwest corner of Lying east of the Mammoth lime beds nels o( the di strict and tieing that duced 4 ' 889.83'2 ounces of silver: 1916, shows that sliver production who had located . has Blossom vein in the property now earlier prospectors was the Godly& mountain, itself a the of the number which will distriett':enn surface loca-a 1 the it check there mining only gauge that Ole company ground Lehi Tintic. up their I brought totaled nearly half of the values found. known as 0 series of limebeddings lying almost flat !be furnished by the now famous Emit 1.9hich la seea the south end in 703 976 and made Its total produc- tions and see that annual assessment The Iron has The Some shows table a King produced of production the trough made by the, syncline Tintic mineral channels which have of the areas embraced by the Eureka i 1 d u rin g that period 15 275.000, 119,712.919 ounces of silver with a ore and the East Tintic Developmentl work was done. ' i I of the Mammoth lime in Os course been proved it seems a fair prediction s(h SWilittlea. Lower bturnmotiL Then in 1915 came the rumors of i is ' ess than itsooilyer produe- - value of $78.762,811. Empire fold Had the pres- property had shipped some every rich demass to lime east. and into first the this of the Mines. Dragon,. Con. Tintio big on the size heveTheen worth if ent silver value maintained ore in would based V the alone Tintic tion ore. the discovery I.ltandard. tremendous ton However, during all iI South Standar& East, Tintic Central,' he turned in search of another of the posit opened In these channels that mixed under present day silver prices. of the period Of heaviest productiorp age of iron ore opened up in the Iron Those men who had pinned their t reka Standard and the Apex Standard big north and south mineralized frac- - an equal number are yet to be opened f, Sioux Consolidated WAS almost as Tint le's silver production alone would King was the only deposit regarded faith to 4ho east lade increased thew tures. work. Th(1 Tintic Standard shaft went properties. up. have been worth nearly 8150,000,000 as having value. largea producer as the Colorado, and 35 The scepticism-witwhich eastward .10t those- - that already have made !its ,' llowever the early miners developed approximately ()re average alone or more There were a few operators who down, drifts were sent out from Pt - the fractures for ore bodies only in the development was regarded in the- tie- - Ciair millions of dollars worth of pro- - ounces of silver. no that it too would. It was sold for.than double the amount continued plugging along with deve- and an ore body such as a prospect, area near viamond City, the south- - trict is best illustrated by Mr. Knight's duction there are approximately 20.- have had much more wealth pour intd dreams of was From thS beginning of production in topment work. pinning their faith to uncovering opened up., west end. Following along the fis, experience. Finding what he believed Most of the value in the ore they pro- its treasury if it had produced its ore . ,.!! The prospect workings of the Standdistrict until 1880. a period of 11 4he net work of fissures and cross !i sures in a northerly direction great to be a favorable break traversing the duced was in silver, and if their pro- - under present day silver prices. down had . ard even on gone that the breaks years. 1,605.f.45 ounces of sliver were irregularly, mak.' surface thicknesses of limestone turned up on Godiva formation. he went to John !duction had been poured out under Iron Blossom, noted the world over produced. The white metal was then, throughout the East Tintic section ing a Jagged working plant. In Gael are of their value the would were have worth more than a dollar an ounce, highry mineralized. . edge found, and where the min. Roundy, then a mine superintendent 'current silver prices, ,as a silver mine, probably development work the shaft was sent eralized fissures passed through this I on the west aide of the camp, for aid products would have been at least been the greatest beneficiary had it the value of that of these interests who kept most down, then a drift run from it and production was 91.- al had such . l'' rock it gran found the ore hodies were in making out location notices to cover third target. a silver market as obtains 957,S57. persistently at work the most promi- from the drift a winze sunk until the' made in huge thickness. taking the the ground he was going to pin his ...Ur he tomoue producers there is today when its heavy production was Dollar.spver prevailed during the nent were the finyders, Loose. Bestz- course wps irregular and bad foe Eureka. in of Centennial Opened what ;,! had been Not once piece affluent at that time, Ithe layers faith in. following decade the dtstrict had emeyer and Hicks. Madsen. Pierpont, handling a large tonnage of ore - ,. . of lime. its greatest activity started in- this mine alone produced 10.689,48t a production of when r , Mr. Roundy118711 Mr. invited also 11.692.031 Knight ounces, and Nicholes. Years ago large hole- through 'it 5 12 , The-gretotal metal worth of 4.,..0 Siarnmoth As a result of these workings the mine was to join in financing the work. It is 1881 and its production exce,eds deIn the ings throughout the east section were next 1, found. as the ore WSW followed from said Mr. Roundy replied. "I don't want ' watt compelled to iproduction i s in excess of v1 10000,000 cade was politi-- i acquired by the Knight interests . but Standard the '; big even now 1872 to. in a the surface down to great depths the anything to do with your humbug of a Mammoth opened and Will being dded , cal issue of the nation. the white metal their main operations were being con- new shaft which would go direct down s a is Conso saw that the combination of regarded had been donionitized to the ore. The company financed its it slumped ducted in the west part of the camp. When they came to fill in dauccoendsinsteeanrtlyahslepypeenr. ibnyillni:110huandeepsrooi oneChief the newer millionaire makers below the dollar mark and certain pure limestones traversed by mine. in Value. This: Big financial interests for the most work with assessments and further of the claim on the notice. of silver and by that time had Piled up .of theof district. ' This mine 4s the fissures which run north and south of- - the name Mr. proved to 1,e a staggering 4Vinancial part rather shied from the east side levies had to be made after ore wee Roundy asked what it g .fered a spleodid tient for ;11..0meeting waa to total production in excess of shipper of the district at the pres- - blow to the mining operators of Tin-- 1 of the district Of the big Tintic op- found in the mine to finance the , and MrKnight ton. 000.000. bnaMed ore of its the chief value : !ent and time .tic. Water links Progreso. eratorir Who had east side holdings sinking of the new d'art. plied. 'You have already named it, Bullion Beek started to diegorge, product is its silver content. To , Prom 1990 to 1901 production of nearly all were busy mining ore -7 Mine working tient down in the call It the Humbug." in Still ,, Scoff. Doubters the worked its wealth in 1882 and though ,date its dividends are in excess of this metal Jumped to 31,366.186 west side. bolding their east side prosporphyry area soon encountered great Going on to the east side of the little attention was paid to IL., time is con.,i 1.1.500.000. the Again preeent tort for later ounces, the it for pects value market operations probably. volumes of water and operations eelie ' Mr: 'Knight 'drove It wan accepted as preposterous that a the list of shippers. tram most recent of the ,01,11Y Before 1908 all of the big 1901 to $21.484.966. From mines of. mine with ell, pending the driving of long low a tunoel. the Humbug, into the hill, the district after having produced millionaire maim-eel- s a big ore showing had to Just being the were only 1916'the in the district camp west 75,049.158 side of produced tunnels that would provide coursem and when that tunnel struck the big:more than 115,000,000 With silver as opened up one might, .say: the continue assessing. - There were some and Otittrf.11, TAhirh bronght the producers as district, it believed was that the water ,,through which could be break another big mineral sone was the predominating metal. ' operators in the east side who knew, about as a goat ranch-in- s East Tinge. (nay $43.4319. i i out m ountain. drained of the mthioeneosnlwyopualdrt ftohuendca exist., Boon there was a what had been found. Their theoriee who pinned their fah to this Eureka lilt. opened In .1877, ham aof other Metals during Production be All work for years then centered 'ini ptoved tt to open mines along he production revord of between 110,000.- property were rewarded after a decade the same were proved and they continued period waP as follows: 1,532.- - time Walter Fitch 'went to Eurexa their being the 111140140nelL Geologists say that stampede Gemini PVen of struggle and hardly more than four 925.SO ounves From the titio and $ ta,000000 work. John XL Bestlemeyer and cot,rse of this channel. of and started operations on the old Chier value a with if gold two thick 'ere there stratas of 'now his a of to south genthe in which $31,698.399 or less , brother August with It C. and N.: d prominent hitPing Property year ago opened up ore of the mine, it was known that this corn- C. Hicks tone in the district which are called Erel more produclion have already produceddeposits more than value of the silver than half direction the North the district. baits-oucput everything they had Into The pan3r was working at great depth. It a production. the Mammoth and the Godlea. Each. sitar. northerly alit out its of on the Eureka Bullion and, Northern to :'; not is in shaft the mine help front Led 12,000,00O life However, Rose, Carless., now has copper 152.375.912 1.900 reached Ithese totaled: production feet, and was of strata' is composed of notn7,st,y, Utah, Humbug. May Hay, Uncle ,ready tremendous production of morn believed to have come anywhere near pounds which had i'value of 325.063. making vast on doing it. '44 -, :. ero-utunderground exploration kept layers' of different kinds, POMP,: sam amt, Godha. trines have . to the beginning 'et Ile production. It 297 or less than a third of the been than 110.000.000. George Choulis held on to his loca for to extensions the r silver, some ore and Pore accepted ,... iMpure. .,The Puree opened on it i The Eagle and Blue Bell . which is now being called the biggest leadVona in the north end near the Selma , , zone. bearing , 'limestone stratUdart-hel 1197 and 1916 produced silver mine in the history of the state. ,: nvutially'd A totalof 719.970.477 pounds of lead' ' Although there was intermittnt between About the same time: E. J. Rad- - and gained assinftnce from Saltliska 'mineral Solution-- whichflyencountered ounce Of 'diver .during the a railroad wart pruje(tk Into HA East was produced ,,t.peopleno tliert his claims wereput into the east from thie 3 to- - datz went into the "east It the during period. side, studied the Eur.WaRing company. them so are that theminerals ores agwith an Out the Tintic country to' furnish transporta tale(' a value of 932.341.922 or less the structure, the The Lehi' rune. it was accepted for a long tfme same period produted s., urn. network of cross - there aa 15,00e.of Tintic company opeeded its work. Jobe reImmeneo tion for value ite ore .nearly already than half of the silver value and the fissures and settled down tb ore,22 the eastern limit of thee area-- In gregate metal serves ,: the Manson sinking ii.stroot) some and and inlees. , the his ago o00 and ansociates years purchased held 1which bi already proved huge- zinc production was 15.620.712 poubds; the Tintic Standard shaft For a would be found firmly The Matnalt" limestone was the However cmore hardy to the ground which was to be the was done Old N'tetorta which itself had produced neat; of the mine has caused the pres- - worth only $ t470,129. work tc' ' Um little attention was paid to long ' .11: first otthe greatest be mined tn. Bland farther east within the Oodit-- more than 11.000,000. ent activity in the East Tintir district, The present production from the operation& Every time since the dis- North G.Standard. H. tease fts name from one of the hiet lime belt another Grand Central, which is still in the the biggest development activity ever distr-icSnyder. W. 1. Snyder. Oldies northerly-south- is corning from areas where trict was first prospected that big attempts Snyder and their associates mine in the district. the firet t.ty hel dividend payers. has pro- known In the histor) of this famouo held ractra Itette, I 1 have been male to locate ore bearing .sliver camp . The iduced approxiMately 110,000.00C Continii44 on page thirty.) ICentinued ott page thirty,) developed . , In this formation. channels east of the ore producing on (Continued , ,Page thitky.) ' ,4! i '- . ' . - - . ' ' ' , - '' -- ." , ,,k - , - - ,. - . -,- - ' b....., .1 , : ' ..ibafo . Ailio-11,.,,,,- i,-:,-- 1 -,- sa, 1) , " . , , '') vs It r . 11. i(( -- L ...... ...i& it t- AV:. Tintic's Big Producers 1w 10 40 ., . , East Tintic the Focus Of Attention This Year all, tic Output Has Been Silver Yield Millions in Metals 1 d "l'i 1- t .. ri-'e .. . II' , - , attd-Gol- r D Compilation j j c. Reveals . nt S di! . ' I . 7 i er - 1 1 - 1 4 l i!; I , i , xtilitiOn' - : i t ' , . - , .'s 11,1 0 -- -.. A t - 11, , 1,1,,''''ts'A'''.., 0.,:. ;...... , 14's - .1. L ".' e,,,I,At'', .1 '''..1:;,. .0,4- - 40'ts p,t vv.., Ir... . ,. ., e IL ' W -- t': .T , ; - - ,, ' , f A , , - . ,k, ', - ' t . , , 0, 0 ,,,x, , , .., ,,,,. '' - to.' , ' '.'''''' ' ,6 , .., ...,, ' ' , 0 4 ,,,t ;t 4 ., -- Iil-- ; 0,- ' - i' . ,,,.;:, 1 s..;..1 t t,.0110e.......;t- . .4. , 1 ',:s--- ',. A,,,,, , - . ,...'1-:.4- - , ,-. ..,, , , .,.'' - r, . -.7 4- e , - k: 10t ' '4117 't - ;' 49: . . k . (11) 4 f142 A, . , ' wg' 111 '''srs:7';:.---.!--.;74.- -- : '. ,:.:- - ,." - . s. Al 14. .. 11 o, k e ... --. . , A ''' ''''......W..."' 'ft...L.6a" . .34,,6..ZSZe".........N.....:400It 761,1 1.! y . , - A, 4... ...,t, 4,' .1.4, T sA. eiti,..-..- a - ob , , x31,r-r- 1 ',...,--- - ., ..41 ..1 . - A'o r. " Iftelh,, C(1 '1' , 04t - o ,4.7 kr- - ,,- - 4,. .; r ,,;,.. A., 1 1... .16"" k 1'.1':v..1:4. 1 ' , ' - r3e!Abg,, ' 111 di t t gi- - . ., 'N'e .1 ,.... 1 ,: - o . it - - , 1.I. ' I mo - ......: : b .,' ''''''7'17,1 ' I' . , N 0- VA' 1,4t11,,,, - ,,,12 6ditagt 1,41.., ' .i - ;:11,111r ,. -- .t 44. , ' ,,, . 11I .,,.11'1' z 10r ' . . k -. . - .1, 1..0., . 4, .4. q :'tt, 4) .410,41 2 14, L,4...4240 - I I.. .y , , .e t ,,.. 1.., ' .,- ,- l''49 7aTi'. 41'''.441,,". 4v ft '4)! :,4,41f - ;6 2 I, 1( ' ',1 . - 4 -- tri..-;-,,- , 1. .7- - Jesse Knight and E. J. Redd atz Dared to Put Their 'Men- - : ries to the Ttst and in the End Were Justified ro,ei, . ' . . . '''' ' . p, I ( , 05' . zou. ,Ilt i l!, ,11' '' ,N ' ..: ' , , to,,t,"" . Vtt,. A r,, lc:-- X , ,41,k7;,. ,,, ,,ANN .,"' 4. 12,A ,,, ,., r ,t.1 .11t r . ' i 4 . 4,.... -- ,,,...,,4 ' 'I - , .,, . - ,,' A ...de ,' vo -- ; rp't ,r 7 , tf A '.,: idg. dLCbdA;o:' gon .. to. ' . 4 .. .....t:e; 4.,,?, 'è ','' ,,"INrit. :. , :'.40 41 't , , ' v ,,,, -. -.- I; ''k, Faith and.Courage Factors ,That Led To Fortune' Where Timid Skeptics Only Failed I' "' 0,,t 0, V, t! 40 1Z; t ',,Is ' 4 ,,.... ' .. i 4.,, .,....... "10; 00:r 1 , to ' - ''10 '.NA111.11i tt - . ,,,,,N.'';, , ef" ' t,. ' "oh. -- ' .,,.- , ,,,, ; ' ' ,.,, .., ..0111..v.,. 4,s ....o:' ''w- ;", ,4. .. -., ,,,,;,,,0 .,."4'4,, I t' w.------- . ' . e .0,-- - . iir0, - .- ...wow. - )44, '''4 -- . ,. ' 4,,,, -- ....110C": 6.2, 4,,, - ,,.,,,..4.L., 7 - i 1,' "r- ...."----- A I , - , I , at, . , Au, - 4 or , t t . 1. ' ,' at, ; ', 1 : 4'., '? 44, 4, ''4. v4 - t 1, ' , A, ki ,....., - ' '' t ' , , , , .. ,f , - I - 40-41-, A.. , . ' x:'' ' .' ). " - 4, ,, . i ' ', v .. ' , ft ,. - 7- 71,0., - .. ..t,.. . , :, 1- a,,, .eio ada:PITNem.41411064 , .' 4 ', , 4,,Wie'lltt.",..14:101 '.7 4. a, .,"vs,- 4,4 f '10 , ,iny. 4, ,,,,44 -- v 4. iv., )7' i , A ., I.e. 424.4 ft ' NI... ,,.4:w,,,.. , ,, 1 ' f,;,'. 4 I 1 " , ,117"''4v , . .64D ., ' . , 1 41'ik,''' 4' t , , - , 1 ' A s,- I ' . At '''' , . - ,Y.1,, , ,. I , 1 , 4 , i . , , 1 - .4, , 4 , a, , ' 1 - 4 , ... ,. 4,,,,,, ''' . 'e viki, , 47' . I' , ' t ' , , , , a '' , ".,,,,,, " - I- .. , 1919 20 1? 4 , , ..00.MEMEMOMMINENMEMINIMOW rim- - r, EVENING NEWS DESERET . rt , 0 ..4 panorramilit .18 ( , . I 1 leme, - ! , I :! 1( I i t , -- ;s jce at . ses .ink. lidd , lead-locati- , 15,-;in- , ' -- tlyt Godiva---mountai- - ' ..!- ., i Tintic-Sitaadard- , - the I ' I :utwhth ' , - - ;, ata ,, trig-towar- t ' :: - . - . . , - , ,, . .- - '..- , - , , -- ' - ,... , : . , - H:-:- : - . - ' ' $ , a . : . L . . -- - . . . .. , - 1 |