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Show Magna, Utah, Friday, November 27, 1933 ; SUHHftS P. Q. Address. 1003 Boston Building. Salt Lake City, Utoju First Publication dati Nov. 27. 1936, Last Publication Date, Dec. 25, 1938 j court op DISTRICT JUDICIAL DISTRICT. or salt Lake County, State iJSaa) iSSsS COMPANY. UTAH 2S ....... . INDUSTRY - HIDE LIVESTOCK COM--a corporation, and . C, H. the surviving director of rf Hide h Livestock Company, Oration, and C. E. Murphy, and "vjlJj at law or devisees, if any. above. namedrC- - - Murphy, id nd , another persons deceased. 'aartT claiming ny right, title merest. In' or Uea upon, the real Lrtj described U) the complaint ownership, of to plaintiff plaintiff's title thereto. De mt of tltah to' the laid do- f-- gte Tott to aftor are hereby summoned within twenty days of this' sunjioni-jipon- ' ap--L the-Uj- j you. fred within the' county to? which dtherwlse, 'j thirty daysbrought;, aftef aerVlp and id the above entitled action; 'at is case of your fgtltjrtf fo pf flo, jgnent wUl be rendered against Q according to the'' detnand of the jeplaint which has been filed with L clerk of said Court zJ ftls action is brought to recover I judgment; (quieting, plainttfie U, to the land described 'tit-- said plaint) which 'land i descHbed Is action , fallows - lot 22 and "the1 L of Lot 23. Block i,. Park, .View, subdivision of Lots 4.' 6, 18 And "A"" 5- b. Block A ", Nw-fchI- 0 ill of n cire-,Pi- Survey: Excepting' 'the hit 17 feet of said lota dedicated part of 13th East Street; situate ' Salt Lake County, Utah. , BOWEN & QUINNEY, Attorneys v yield , . for Plaintiff. r terial in the flotation processes, re- doctors, the lawyers and the prosulting in a product containing six verbial butcher baker and canto seven hundred pounds of copper dlestick maker. Not infrequently per ton compared with the 20 pounds farmers from the valley drive in ton in the per w ith their trucks loaded with, prooriginal ore. Efficient Process UTAH COPPER IS duce, disposed of in nhls It is rather apparent that if a $3 nearby readily and profitable market. VALUABLE ASSET . ore is to be made profitable, the Allied Industries Near mining and milling process outlined To the north, on the southerly above must be eficiently done and TO Lake, are at low cost because there yet remains shorestwoof the Great Salt the mammoth Concentrating the work of extracting the pure oop plants at Magna and Arthur, em(Editors Note: The following ar- per metal in the smelting and refin- ploying hundreds of men. A mile ticle, written by D. D. Moffat, vice ing processes, including a 2000-mi- le president and general manager of freight haul, all for less than $3.07, or two west Is the worlds largest copper Smelting & Refining Com.toe Utah Copper Corporation, will if the enterprise is to prove pany. To the northeast, as far as the be continued next week. It is an able. It is this Job the Utah profit Copper article, which we feel war prove Company has learned to do so well eye can see stretches a row of huge steel towers carrying the millions most interesting to the people of that a once worthless ore body Is of kilowatt hours of electrical power our community.) , today one of Utahs valuable reJ sources. required in the operations of the Utah Company. A few miles BY D. D. MOFFAT should see Bingham south Copper Everyone of the Magn plant Is the Utah Copper ore averages 1 per Canyon. A veritable mountain of plant of the Her cent, which means there awe 20 copper ore is being moved by elec manufacturing cules Powder .Company, supplying pounds of copper metal in a ton of trie shovels, miniature In size con the millions of pounds of explosives ore. A ton is a lot of rock. Try build- trasted with the mountain backused annually at the Bingham mine ' ing a rock garden with boulders ground. As a direct result of these varied Mountain of Copper weighing, say 50 pounds each. Forty such boulders will be a ton, if, Seven tons of ore a; each dipper operations .thriving communities and in addition to gathering the boul- ful is dumped into railroad cars of towns have grown In the western of Salt Lake y alley which ders, one had to break them out of 80 and n capacity. These are part a solid cliff and before that could hauled by electric locomotives over be done, another ton of rock had a network of tracks to the main asto be removed to get at the particu-ua- r sembly yard at the base of the mine. ton wanted, it is highly improb- Other locomotives run along level able there would be many rock gar- tracks on the sides of the canyon dens. Neither would the problem with cars of waste to be dumped In be helped if but $2 were offered to nearby gulches. Hundreds of men anyone who would undertake the are busily at work, trainloads of Job. supplies come In, power lines extend and along Aie sides The net value of the recoverable of theeverywhere, narrow streets in the bottom a and silver and in the gold copper of the canyon are the storfes, the ion of Utah Copper ore is $2.07 at present metal prices. To recover this value the waste overburden has to be removed and ore drilled, blastN 6 T A R Y ed knd loaded into cars for transPUBLIC portation to the concentrating plant 'AH Of Kinds 20 miles distant. Here it is crushed and ground so fine that 65 per cent William Fitzwater of it will pass through a screen with 40, 000 openings in a square inch. At Magna Postoffice The copper minerals are separated out from most of the worthless ma seventeen years on the road now for the successful exploitation of 31.. the once worthless mountain of rock He opened the safety-pin- s again, m Bingham Canyon. Todays pictclosed monuup his sweater and coat, ure of activity' stands as a ment to the initiative and vision of i picked up his bundleAxnd started men who made such mines possible, j out for the nyrt place; he was going to call on his girl friend at Gary, (Continued Next Week.) Indiana, to a horn he had dropped a Una from Nova Scotia a month or two ago vhen he. was there at A HOBO NOTABLE the tune the English avlatrix came down in her flight across the At(Continued From Page 1) lantic. He had waded out a mile in in Summer, to. avoid competition." the mud when he heard of her Man From Everywhere landing, and saw the ship, and got LazarowlU has been everywhere a 'picture with the tiny camera he ' and seen everything, and hardly a carries in his magic pockets from whistle-sto- p can be mentioned that which he brought so many different he has not visited in his career of things, so mysteriously that hardly would have been a barren waste but in any other FACE 86.8 proof1 The straight whiskies in this product are 15 months or more old. 25 atreigEtwhlskicsi 75 grain neutral spirits. 5X straight whiskey 4 years old, 20 straight whiskey 15 months old. SAME View of the Unemployment ?. PIMTi. 229 plaint!, aganlud look ... "th. Ians, of ulW wRItd rrrfiiS StateT Industrial Commission 7 Unemployment Compensation Division mouth purMd up to hotly passional qusryl can Only Gluyaa Williams draw such a lacs . , . end only through our papsr eon rwidsnts of this community follow his 6th Floor Union Pacific Building ' SALT LAKE CITY Benefits begin after January 1, 1938. Any person whose work record shows him entitled to unemployment compensation can get compensation regardless of his financial status; need" nas nothing to do one way or another with compensation payments. The Utah law calls for contributions from employers of FOUR or more. r, - STATUS REPORTS Information to show which amployers come under the law; type of business or industry; number of employees; other general information. CONTRIBUTION REPORTS ' The contribution; record of employment, names of employees; time worked; wages, other information to help determine benContribution forms for 1937 will be different from those of 1936 because most of the detail information will be asked beginning January 1, 1937. efits. CoIoo, SchmUy, Ps Don't Miss $ THE FUNNIES "r Contribute) It Is Illegal for an employer to accept direct or indirect contributions from employees. STATISTICAL v;. ; . . Tike Public employment offices will be coordinated with Unemployment compensation division. Names, addresses, viue ideations, work history of all employees who come under the law. SurhJ offices to function in filing of claims and payment af benefits. SECTION Information from amployer and employee will be available to the atate industrial commission and the unemployment Compensation Division in detesrmining the amount of compensation due . ANY ONE OF 70.000 INDIVIDUALS who will be protected by this law. This information will also be a basis for merit ratings, by which employers who stabilize their employment will be relieved of the payment of contributions. I -- Farm labor, domestics, charitable, religious, certain family service exempt. FREE EMPLOYMENT OFFICES S (Efifiit itlbuQit (Knveo ilbipeiinglltteimil tllhe Wean! I 7 t V 1 ; MERIT RATING (1941) J the employers reserve account, after January 1, 1941, exceeds 7 percent of the average annual payroll ,hii contributions begin to- - decline; when the reserve reaches 12 percent of the contribution the annual payroll average top until the reserve ratio falls. Employers making contributions to Utah fund get credit on federal payment up to nine-tenof the ' amout due U. S. U nemployment compensation ' tax. th Copyright 1936, low 8. Flock & EMPLOYEE (Does Not (Contributes) When QUART uo.228 skill! Contributions payable on 1936 payroll Rate on 1936 payroll .9 of one per cent; 1.8 percent mi 1937; 2.7 on 1938. r K" Announcement of the nuptials will be read with consider able Interest by the many friends of the young lady. She is well and popular" ly known here. DOT 1h EMPLOYE James J. lUckran of Garfield Announces the engagement of hi! daughter, Maurine to Russell Everett Christie of Fresno, California, son of Mr. and Mrs. Everett Christie off Santa Monica, California. The wedding will take place about January ' : I,. IT.. would a Compensation Work. J out of the door and gone his "business takes him to pointd elsewhere. 100-to- ' ; source. He was - T look the Birds-ey- e a one was noted to have a definite BENEFITS (1938) in Any person who is employed 16 weeks off the preceding 52 and who is laid through no fault of his own is entitled to benefits half pay rut no payment more than $15 a week; minimum of $7 a week or three-fourtaverage weekly wage, whichever is the lesser. Benefits are at the rate of one week of benefits for four weeks of employment until 14 weeks have been paid. If a person has worked more than 56 weeks he get Additional benefit" at the rate of one week of benefit for 20 weeks of employment. Thus the maximum, five year of employment nets a man 14 weeks benefit, plus an additional 10 weeks or 24 weeks benefit in ail. ; hs GENERAL INFORMATION A nearest employto After January 1, 1938 when a person becomes unemployed will thengowaitthefor a period, not himself ready for work or benefits. He will endeavor to office weeks! . the time which employment exceed twa during he lost. During the waiting Kosition ha ia capable of filling and which is comparable to the one in benefits. will 0 into his wor record anJ see how he should draw teriort of the waiting period no nwswV it wiUveVgato tito rmon for dismissal. If. at the end suitable place ia found Position hat been found for him he will begin to draw his benefits. When a " or him ha muat taka it or bin benefits cease. COMPENSATION FUND through Contribution will be paid tothe UTAH UNEMPLOYMENT Compensation Division head- the Commission Unemployment in Tax special division of the State d Cent W'U 8. U. MOarters in the Unn PxcUlc BuHding. . to the U. S. bureau of Internal revenue by employers of EIGHT or more. ment office ... ... the gift that adds a glowing touch of for the home the gift that protects eyesight! the gift that is useful A new lamp ... charm The modem approvedJampt.combine aU thats desired in decorative illumination. scientific and man, woman or child will thlftk Any beauty of a new gift lamp as the perfect Christmas remembrance. You, can variety of authentic designs. Shopping for gift lamps is a thrill in itself. See them in ivory, gold or bronze finishes, with shades of silk or hand painted parchment, with the size of the lamp bulb depending on the need for light. " I rr rn cHusTMat : -'- I $taperMai ... m . - - a, '; . Do not confuse with, old age benefits which also calls for payroll contributions. f See YOUR 12 U i; 4 njj 4 MH, DEALER or UTAH POWER & LIGHT CO. " Utst) u tiwfti; isl iwimi 'f"- - ,1 |