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Show THE CITIZEN silver ore in LEADS PRODUCTION IN UTAH l ah Consolidated Mines park Com- paq Leads in Silver Output. xhe Park Utah Consolidated Mines : ::companj if the 'gig tbe of Park City, Utah, is one rge st silver-lea- d properties of , In fact, in the year 1925, we:5. combined properties of the com-pjn- y - re the largest producers of silver ir. the State of Utah, and Utah :wa8 th-.- . first in production In the United tates. petals mined and placed upon the market T this big company during the past year were 236, ltd mined tons of mineral of which there were 4,815,-00- 2 oun s of silver; 36,931,081 pounds of lead; 16,746 ounces of gold; 1,711,-45- 5 pounds of copper; 34,827,061 28,686,530 pounds or zinc, of which The averapounds were recoverable. ge value of the combined ores mined, and freight after smelting charges was $15.38 per ton. vere deducted, This proved a record production year for the company and all previous recof ords for mined ore, production metals, gross receipts and earnings, w- -- vere surpassed. year 1925 will always be remembered as one of the biggest mining deals ever consummated in Park City when the officers urged the consolidar tlon of several properties among which was the Park City Mining and Smelting Company, and the Ontario Silver Mining Company, all consolidated under the corporate name of the Park Utah Consolidated Mines Com-padThe y. work was considerably and the large tapped ore Development Increased bodies kept many men at work bringi- ng the mineral to the surface and to the smelter. There are two important at opposite ends of the property. On the Park City unit side the upper middle vein deposit has been I followed westerly an additional eight hundred feet It shows increased lead I content and is of undiminished size. I On the Park Utah unit side the large I ore shoot west of the main crosscut I v&s picked up on the 1800 level, 300 I feet below the lowest previous expos-- I ore, and developments indicate that I the ore shoot is improving in size and I trade on its downward extension, and I the big ore reserves represented by I this ore body are stili untouched. I JmProvements and additions have I made to plant and equipment to I insure tonnages proper facilities for the future I I flpans5on of eep mining operations and to step with the present increased ttte of production. I Provision for I I I I I I increased drilling op- 8 iVe been nde by the In taiiation of a new 3,000 cubic foot air oppressor located at the central mx at tte Daly West shaft. n of transportation be--I raUCn Idge concentrator and tho eration will have the effect of materially reducing marketing costs and also remove an element which has at times been the cause of interrupted operations. Under judicious management the company was pleased to announce that the net income for 1925, after providing for estimated 1925 federal income tax and all expenditures covering de- 5 SUPPLY CO. velopment work and construction, was $1,912,273.68. The officers of the company are G. W. Lamboume, president; Moylan C. Pox, vice president; D. C. Murphy, treasurer; W. A. Dunn, secretary; O. Dealers in N. Friendly, chief engineer, and P. A. Hunt, mine manager. On the board of directors there are J. O. Elton of Salt Lake City; Moylan C. Fox of Salt Lake City; Adolph G. E. Hanke, New York City; G. W. Lamboume, Salt Lake Charles Lange, Cincinnati, Ohio; Otto Luedeking, Cincinnati, Ohio; William Wraith, New York Citp. City; New and Used Machinery and Supplies m M. J. McGILL, Mgr. DEDICATION Verbatim report by Charles Hale, of the commissioners representing Massachusetts at the dedication of the National cemetery Four score and seven years ago, our fathers brought forth upon this continent a new nation, conceived in liberty and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal. Now we are engaged in a great civil war, testing whether that nation or any nation, so conceived and so dedicated-can long endure. We are met on a great battlefield of that war. We are met to dedicate a portion of it as the final resting place of those who have given their lives that that nation might live. It is altogether fitting and proper that we should do this. But, in a large sense, we cannot dedicate, we caifnot consecrate, we cannot hallow, this ground. The brave men, living and dead, who struggled here, have consecrated it, far above our power to add or to detract. The world will very little note nor long remember what we say here; but it can never forget what they did here. It is for us, the living, rather, to be dedicated, here, to the unfinished work that they have thus far so nobly carried on. It is rather for us to be here dedicated to the great task remaining before us; that from these honored dead we take increased devotion to that cause for which they here gave the last full measure of devotion; that we here highly resolved that these dead shall not have died in vain; that the nation shall, under God, have a new birth of freedom, and that gov- ernment of Cp YARDS AND SHOPS een eflectively solved by tVpperecc:i f an aerial tramway oncentrator and the Tr. the Ontario No. 1 Drain T the h Uwn I 3rd South, 7th West Phone Wasatch 2448 1 OFFICE 107 West Second South Phone Wasatch 2413 r.flllll1n!lt!!lai;iail!fM, III 111 I III iBIIIIIBIII(lllllllllll1lllllilillilliiiiiiiiiiiiiii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiaiiai)Biiiiiaiiiiiiiiaiiaiiaiiiiiaiiaiiaiiaiiai(KiiaiiaiiaiiaiiaiiniiaiifliiBii Mims the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth. COMBINED METALS, Inc. quc-tto- kstallation represents 3 modern tramway I I THEBOGUE I Union PacifijC Railroad authorized City 5 mile to operate Keetley-Par- k line. a tlmbpr U h SUl co; 18 Delta City gravelling 21 blocks of m BLACK METAL MINES CO. m streets. con- - equiPDed for boUl the 0res and the uphaul of and supplies, and its op BRISTOL SILVER MINING CO. m rail-Ce!P- Ur I 19 Brigham City Chamber of Commerce offers free site for New American Can Company plant. RAYMOND ELY EXTENSION MINES CO. a i r.llllllllllllllllll!IIIIIIllllllllllllll!illllliaillltllf.lMllIIlllllllllll!llllll;illlllllllll!!i!llll! |