OCR Text |
Show . , ' ' '' , , - , , , , ' .. - ,. , , ., , ,- , , .. . , , , .. ', 'ME: -- - , - , - CHRISTMAS NEWS,'' SALT 'LAKE crrY, , , DEMI:Mill 17; '1933 SATURDAY,- ' , i i . ,, ,. i 1 , ,,7 0 7 ir-- 7, -. C.IP'D , '''. - ,,, 1,11-9-- r I, , .Utatt's Greatest Industry ) . - 1 ol J .. ..... ak, .,.. as 1-LtoP- ,IL., , ", ' - : - ' ' .. ' - . a1;,.....3,tC. ,,k.... - - - " '' - - ' ' - --- : td, ',,(1 1 .1........ T:r.. ilOio ' - - 7, 7.--- ' : ',,,,,'-Alo.. Aka idhom - - ' - ,,. . - , , . , i --'- 4 k . - -- ,1- .... 4 1 , ,,, ' t - 1 , - ., - t r l - ,, .. I t , , ., . H 77's : - i When the earth's crust Was iorming, ages ago, it was not tbcsmooth consistency of a cake batter," in letaCtl, all of ''. t . Lbw elements have been thoroughly Mixed until a sample taken ' trots any part of the- whole would shctw precisely the same t i . qualitative and quantitative analysis as a sample taken from any other part. the earth arejound The elements which go to make up ' I . 7:111 different- proportions In ' different' localities. Particularly, ' aome spota of the earth's crust are rich in content of various i -- ,' ; mineral compounds which are 110t, to be found eisewhere.!, , , , In Ow time of' primitive men. orte. , 1f wslt made- no difference to a tribe Nu andtor development-to a moment awl , whether or not Inn land an or pauses nein-What our present imagine neer whkh tbeywere living cont tained mineral& The people were ninon would be witbout roman-II ' '' ' No madness otis or startling. of unaware the present quite ' no any kindr save what- crude subK bad and minerals of absence 1 trona,- . imam. in , want, etituteo, voidd be, tultioned .... Use for tbem-nI wood and :moo& No electricity. '''''.--'lpretusion they might be 'present- -- toe without mend them could be .f As primitive maa became more ' I educated and experienced. the ,110 harnessing. and transtrutting of elecuical power. Ne gasolme, t importance of the presence or an steam mow or elecuicelly powered , Bence Of ntinersla in the opoinid our mart would aeon I Men tanwhich ,,e--....began to become apparent. wen ., and our ' Mine our autcanobtles bumped making thew crude 1 ce stone when airplanes. Hee-- ws no mining and took tpons ever-tuff''''' acuvrty, we abotkid not they learned to take the miner ., cola. :: : from ths .'' ground and refine them 1 TT Meng key le Peettene'-----rival- into metals. At the end of the ' Our Twentieth Canuiry age of stone came the swot iron canon ,t bas reached a nigh Pent- ,, and with the age of iron maw 0' ot schlevement, cg wisticb we are the beginning ot civilization. on beck. look We t Minerals Aid Civilisation Peal must 0 The progress and eventual- do warn races and PeoPles, if not ' 1 cline of past e1r1lillt10011 has with slight contempt at least : borne a curiously direct relation. with: profound pity and feel ti their we in ere not thankful that or absence to the, presence snip .- st'''' , .., of se adequate, ritneral suppty.' plate But take ewer our min. and where sh3ind ,- , Egypt, for instance. had one of ing ittdustry the great civilizations of -- On we be? ' in step erith ifl. mamma, From mining camps such as this comes the greatest part of ,Utahle wealth 4.' large: of them Irving by the herding tg world more than 2.000 years besot' (2arise in spite of posseseing ammals. the erodes' el farming orthe states populatiow draws its livelihoOd from the rich Ore of U tah'S portion -- .. . some of the most Senile fanning and a limited type of handiwork. 11,, engineers; accountants get direct employment,and thousands of mines...Miner. one the of of Utah The is Stare lands in existence. Egypt Ms ' ' t area her glories dedine steadily most fortunate areas m the world at.South, Africa. third in the - world'e sins' supply,' and.. Ito zinc, and 2424. per cent for 40 centoetee.,4,ce mere ts mot from the point of view at poems. - that Lust nations is of a or Its bltutMnotia Axed. copper producing though gold largely hy.prod,, per cent .' a single sizeable delimit of use, neva mineral resources. Bum,uct in Utah mines. the Beehive over that period. gees only 6.25 ,,,,, Now, narrow 'the circle. Cutplies of all of the cooment imd Jul metal ore in sli Egypt State world has of cent the world the 600 mike to 200 are tho rarermetals mdius from near:y per of supply. given the of the glorious many Development Over tha same period titan pro. - one per cent of its gold supply mike, ac In other words take toting within thestatee's borders. Greek culture is directly trice. 6.11 over of all the world's the past decade imd oneo. only oneninth of the original about some lying duced atilt to the discovery of nomad . , ; ... !twos deposita end the, later-wor- ,stnedynetie Um of nations Salt Lake. Now, within this sdver'Producme stores the A future Utah's, veal domination of Carthage' pleture la present i States and ed instriking.wok.hlexico. United sait Lake City; al sznaller circle we stilt have the was dependent on the metal of coal has only, had its surface taking -area where , OuladsProdured 35. 23 and 15 the hub of the mineral producing scratche- dproduced per mines of Spain which the Afri' cent of.e-'1--..,..United area et the United States. if one in actual mineral production. per cent mpectiyety. , can city controlled. When Nome . 21' ' took from Cirthare the Seonishverb takes a map and drain a circle theirs neon is en- impressive Vas mid Lead per cent of the nation's Utak also produced, orere the. ot 600 (scale) - miles radius with ropper. 20 per cent of the les,:t., ., mines. she also took world so. ono. Over a 33 year period. Utah live 15 one as 7 of Salt frectioN mote small than i per cent of the sine amd--1take City pee emit' center; within year period., per premttey, ' lend supple' that circle will fall all of the area per cent'of the gold. , Not only bi the ancitmt world-bu- t of the tertlea 'land surfacehas tent of '; where is produced 97 per ceet of even more so in the modern Other Minerele Pseud produced approximately &he per. --as compared with 55 per cent cent of all the worlds copper sun. for Canada, third ranking pro. the nation's silver supply, h3 per western world. men are depend. Within this mme small area h we ply, This fienre is particularly tent of its copper. 64 Per cent of are- foimit small deposits of ate (lacer nation. Utah also produe. ent oit the materials-whic; take Dora the ground. tor pror, noteworthy when It is ' known , vd nearly two percent ot the Its gold,- 40 per ,cent ol its lead. timorty,. manganese, nickel, .tht ,, ."017"11, , , - '0.77, J4'. tr, . , , ,. ' ,,, 1 - - ni ,.... - 1 ti- - W .. , es '' '77. I, (iL .., i .11 11.......1 st,,,ci,tett,2,00,....:11ttitd.71',12,.....leN 1 WW 1 D4-11701-- ,.. , - CIA Orli -- - . rill! 777st, - ' ' . .., . - s, - 1 - - - "1"0,18 1.1,,,A, 1 , . i -t , with .. I , ; - 1 tcyl-,... - - - ' 1 : , 4 1'.112111 . - - ... - -- 4 - , o I - 1 . I ' ' , : I ..., ... ' .., , - ' - , - - ..... - -- , ' - . - ." , ' I , , . , t 1 , - , - , ' - " I ,, , , , ' .is ,1 ....0,-4.--- ?nen, smelter employes, and even the grocer azid the service station because lltah's mines each year pour so many millions of dollars intosso many pockets. Silver, lead, zinc, gold and coal are found in abundance in the .., of the Beehive State. , s..41-- wtnnutheec - the-wor- ld ,.' , . - ghouallihes. otUnittsdheadStsinites iningImi ' - ... , , "illicit 'Plialr a prvniinent part in the direction of the Mill-Utah pleictaurt.Vitaal lthiso tillgr indtpbe mining nation. mines- - . . Looking to the future, Utah', prospects in minerals and min, eral wealth are even brighter Many .tundehan velthoseopedottithemse presone ot mineral wealth anditevethtenshatiscossurtatinmed ressnat heea; opet servos ofliewweeeithltingendinpoUlotae:&bwere: time and ad up for future generations. eaottagainourteunrng in. - Many of these fields are now tow because at the prew dustry will be going lull speed , ahead:With the outstanding gin. developed ant time It is commercially inw no copper mine' entire tin tioN as- welt- as many, orbs, Followktst-Page- , , ' ., 'oewliontlit, thinks et the very unlikely chance off the nation being su denly and strongly attack. For fuels 11,t,w117.34JeteniteWo could . , I . - despite the press of the current business recession which Ms forted many mines temporarily to shut d:0'9d.the in this re. same- - elsewhere pert war Inaterialit which are to he found in Utah: provide it, , , l If our regular sources of supply were cut- off. , Utah. present position in the al necessities in time of war. Al--. thoug hthe United States will , 041 t,,,AteN..111041,1,,,,,,,t4,,,,,,,,,,,,m othersrailroad allydeptuidentonOtherPatkoos . and all of them are vitfome. , ,, , ,S , manare richer call. The presence of these rarer. metall is of striking Importance In that the United States is norm- : ld AMESIOAROM11004, 1 - .. ' and minute& and chromium. dePonle et ettftl'1I be dent idse to meet any emergency I twe our own war material& even , '. Airomomno.,somommommokel. ' ' it ' - .40 - , ' in-th- . - - 'CIMEn , , , , ,, . - . , ' : ' .. !,- ...., I I - , , .t) -- ) 61 ..,.. ,. ' ' .: ' - - Ii - - , -, - s a I ' -- . - - II --- ir - t't , -- - ' ' ) - - ' Fil , a'-1- , -- ' Phato-baaa-- .. stealsal Puessal Ehtilt7. saw Moral brink tow lassitit Of aloft sod this Dallas Is. la illSil ability-Arodeos atel,Inthsmseeels---ed-ede----- -sod, the traits of this 'tensest' ate Italie divided, einem 106 pet ewe allitre wooer. the teak sod Me et Amadeus pawls. No hotter wattepts at- thle-resdtlistributies ad inside caw be lessi- that" that edit:eas4 by Ike led. boo sed, smokier tedasky-Utak sod the Vet, Odeon. 'laterite shows that; waist sod seal sdnitta sod the buboes throaty soil loth:edit depoodest Meow as M pee- seed ad Utahs, IMAM inhabitants soil ibet smear ' than IS pot coat et Ike toad missout 1.0elsh posdeent goes ke this sappon Pate. Peaky el 'et the. What 22 'pot sold is spool insist? is trompartleg end reaming nett prodigals awoken emit hats theta sees Ws Its way his trade chasookt . na at , . ... - - ---- , - 11141 , is 'literati yeses' it hastited et mato, itahassia ha dividise dialliwe ilie weak et this stela awl wades have bees pooposolL Meat et these --"" - seen at the wiry logodatios of Ike evils withal has mode Astedes, law postai sates es earth wool which hos mods ths.hethest. liaise. samodatas eadgas - , ; bookany-suppon- Ltnnuallq Ctmona Utah s taS12o3oocc000 istributing ' Lory 0 ,. - , , , 5oo.,000 Gob J--1 eopie - - ' - " ' - - - I.. I ' - . . , - a cursory gkerce at the bdustry's to the state caul, to every man, woman and child therein clearly,- demoratrcries the value of extending to it every possible encouragement cmd inducernem b increase ef- ficienc; curd pmductivity . . , - t I ; poweree. - , Lacking a supply of suitable ore, the Intemationcd's big Tooele ploant , was crosed down, but before deciding to dismantle it. the' company launched a broad eoonomic- - and geological survey to deterrn1n.i extent and metallurgical tharacteristics of ore supplies tributary to Utah smelting centers. Experience shows too that concerns with large resources have been and still are necessary to mining's ;roper development It takes mCciey to explore for most hidden treasures mid to develop processes economically to extract the metals on found. Consider again the story of International. , The Internalioncd Smelling & Refining Company was Orgartimd in 1907, Beginning. in 1908, this co;npy constructed smelters wealth producer and distributor, And-ye- t it is only,ono of dozeni of instances N'vhere this desirable combination of adequate capital and courageous men has been directly: re sponsible for the production of great wealth, that might otherwise have been lost, and for its distribution cmcng Uteliss 500,000 inhctbi- icalts. , trietalhugistssame of the world' s liziestdug Ia. The result was development of eve flotation for custom, ' milling. a Protess that revolutorlized lead smelting and makes possible 65 per cent of Utah's lead cmd zinc production' with its proporticeate part of y the state's important silver arid gold outpitt.-13concentrating zinc- and lead, into pare products. selective- - flotation greatly reduced their smelting costa,Zinarecovery Avastmade, feasible by the new process and this once penalty, metal ',welt- conion'ted- into an posei 'elá - s, , Prominent in this procession of accomplishments are: (1) rehctbilitation of the old , Highland Bo v 1A4ne as the and dozens of other smaller properties thought to have been worn out with the preservation of htmdreas jobsr ,r23 developmenet of North Lily, Walker imd Mountaht Citv mines.- - each - Utah-Dokrwa- -- to a - . a . , ' ' ... , '. : - - - - . - - . 1, - - .... : , 1' i - - - , . .,-- - - ., , - ' . ,...- - . -- l''' -4 I ' 4 , 't - . . ,,, ' I ' - ' 1. Paid a neady $1,000,003 on ore, bullion and supplies, most . 1 of which in turn-waspent in the state, - -- sckniser-iihin- h proJect, .4,,, , , .' ?r-- . (3) tancelle And now despite the general fince;ricrintYi the internationcd, through a subsidinryt ,Ncy tioricd Turmel & Mines Company. Is spencting, imore than $1.000,000 irr digging dreamed-o- f 'Iltort TImner between ?Ingham tmd TOOOltikva project which should mean more to Utah in new wealth for Jobs. purchase etc than, any new raining or industricd development in decades. , - po - see that rninincr and ercelting are and must be big business in Utah. But in the ; 1 . , , tons Taw& ONE o ilmtrok..tio.46,,,,A.,....-,tootat, esmmriods ((al awed Irmo , ., (7) 10.1144 a. latoltotor ft...ow le otte el iltrik's irwooset elooterege vet Inridere ef loottlit wolatilk ,. le semetd Owe 1$0.1.41Lio" vow Apot el-- . brag," --mow lomprogn 41ka 0,014, iit tb. ' OM. OoPla' VI 111,1,0,46, imoneou lee to Oa, tees 04 Semis ler ewe", Imes' ems ill vneiero ',A): alwmi Immo 00,441 emerwee law taieeleg wee bele l iweibenV e weber sehems4 411,) meal kat e.o.m011.01 eleel CS) more ler reeetamsesee ineeteeet iek lawarkkrikralkallar''.--"'Clisleek ere eeevereeet Pi ice krooktiate- - Mese 414 ,ameneaKeassie,4 weal' teakkeollesei met tit) sot Immo keens emase ems Same me swoop& , tbs, 'halareekalet ..M. , ., and iution.-11u-Oug- t v mines tt,,v..t,;,4t,,,,,r .,,t,, :: s.,,,..,,,7,..r.,.,..7.,,:::,.! distribute eiriovirtually .oati 4:4 this from Utah rmri : r , rcrilrocrd freight bill of s I Tesitteln-dolla- couragement for tx ocoro of mines,:througis cosi; loans cmd low charges. thet:-Ion- gi k -- - - - - - - ' - dumps $5.090,1X0 onrtually into Utoth's chcmnels of trade. , This achievement alone would have earned for International Smelting & Refining a permanent place in Utah's hall1 of fame as a But Internationcd tackled the problem. Its - New money WCI POUTO4 irtto what seemdebe a deftmet plcmt. partment was increased and the state's larg-- , est metallurgical research department ,inp .. :.stalled. , ed vhich nolinoll ' . One of the company's greatest services to Utah mid the West acme in tg, early. 1920s at a time when this state's lead. mining and smelting industry was in crave danger of extinction due to the then .complex charao.: ter of available lead ore. y. - Studies disclosed that most of the availvrere tQr;hides with a heavy zinc content which could only be directly smelted by a costly process requiring additión of large quantities of iron to flux the zinc: Not only was the zinc wasted but its presnce increased smelting costs to the point, where only ores with high lead content were, commercial crnd the supply of this type of ore had mostly been ezhcrusted. able lead ores , Paid orieerxth of all the taxes in Tooelo County, thus supporting schools, paying officers scdaries, bttilding roads, etc. And yet this is only one comp-mUtah's mining and smelling industy as a whole produced SI23,000,003 annually in the '20's and similcrly distributed practically all of it within the state's borders. 4. Perhaps the vcdue of this indletry 'cam he most concretely shown try' sinolinct out cm of its Ratan and oompcmy cmd cithig ex-n-o ' experiences. The International Smelting & Refining Company, 'for .1r:sic:nee. is one of the prime distributors of Iliah's great wealth, at). '' ttually dividing before the depression 5Z0,- ,300,000 worth of new money" among thous.. ands of Utah individuals and concerns who redivide it with every' resident of this state. Actucd figures show 'that In a , , year; International Srceltntr & Refining:. . at Tooele. Utah, that appurtant were to play a leading mie in the discovery, developmmit, production cmd distribution of a ctst mineral wealth that might otherwise new, er have been utilized. portation, 3. Distibuied nearly $2,000.000 in direct payrolls at the smelter, and a like crmount for supplies,- Even , : 10 mcney for labor, supplies, taxes, power, trans- For decades raininglsitJahr has beep hid den under the proverkdal basket and, though its great magnitude forced rays of enlightenment within view of the discerning sloth tal a whole long remcdned In dark. ness regarding reining's vital importance. Ao, cordirtgbr, lawmaker and the people gene t. ally have at limes been known to frown on mining and the men who mole. I. ' , & rains NVOS &SCOW r1101, sb3ce the first-IlkIs ered way back In 1849, mine and smelter men have been too bilrir with the fascinating , but complicated and highly unceriain----- busirese of fusing and producing intends to tell their Important story to the pubbc. , . ,,, - - .. .: .. .. ... , .. - ... . .. .&- , - -- - , - future it is going to take evert more thcm Innner and daring to lifld and1 produce this 4.- - hidden vrealth for general distribution ,- 0,0 :itft,'-, Ii gaing to take 'CaOltatcauraire and ZnOrev1-' -- -- "- d, - .. .. . - - . - . , 1,ve ... ,.. - .., - |