OCR Text |
Show j klioi tageMakes Opportunity In Metal Mines Opportunity is beckoning to r, ,r fnTt6" whwt to mak? a ca- th-IownOCtahi0"SiU,:inB the war ha in. own the industry wide odpti to employment and as a result Cing I vner"yIS fr3Ught With PPrtun! ty. Former service men are find- J lent field in which to re-establish themselves in private life establlsh anH5fnarP the daP when the Pi and shovel were the main tools of the miner; these have been replaced by a period of mechanization which Jim eliminated the drudgery in " If a man has had no experience first job is to go into the stones and help to load the muck or blasted blast-ed rock into cars. Air driver! machines ma-chines now universally used lighten the work of the miner. After he has served as mucker, the beginner may be advance to machine operator te1",?' forejnan or ft boss! Dependable and alert men are encsen for such jobs as eager, or hoist man at the controls of riant machines which lift and lowef the cages or ore skips in deep shafts! Many miners advance to salary jobs Many leaders in the industry today were once muckers who gained gain-ed their experience on the business end of a shovel. Others have become be-come mechanics and machinists and some have taken up smelter work. Many, after learning the industry, indus-try, have branched out to become independent contractors or lessors, operating upon their own. The currant shortage of metals presents pre-sents an opportunity for those who know how, to enter the prospecting end of mining and develop their own producer. All the great mines of today were once prospects and tnere must be new ones for tomorrow. |