. Utah: her cities, towns and resources. Together with a condensed but comprehensive account of her financial, commercial, manufacturing, mining and agricultural enterprises, her educational, religious and social advantages, her progress and population in the past, and possibilities for the future /edited and published by Manly . arly five miles long, and take the Anchorwater to the twenty-seventh level. If the Anchor hasthe Ontario or an equivalent parallel vein, then the vein is about It,(too fret lung; and if the vein extends throughthe Anchor ground it is 20,000 feet long. There isgood rea


. Utah: her cities, towns and resources. Together with a condensed but comprehensive account of her financial, commercial, manufacturing, mining and agricultural enterprises, her educational, religious and social advantages, her progress and population in the past, and possibilities for the future /edited and published by Manly . arly five miles long, and take the Anchorwater to the twenty-seventh level. If the Anchor hasthe Ontario or an equivalent parallel vein, then the vein is about It,(too fret lung; and if the vein extends throughthe Anchor ground it is 20,000 feet long. There isgood reason to suppose that it continues westward to theCottonwood mines, and that it strikes eastward through111 in- Ledge District via McIIenry Gulch for about twomiles, making in all six or seven miles, throughoutwhich, with intervals of barren ground, of course, it mayreasonably be expected to be fertile. It is now claimedthat the district has four or five parallel veins. The Ontario mine is the leading mine in extent ofoperations, in cost of plant, in output and are upwards of thirty miles of openings in themine, and about 160,600 cubic yards have been stopedout to get the (in round numbers) $27,000,000 whichthe mine has produced. The mill and mine plant cost2,700,000, and mine and mill give direct employment. PARK CITY STREET SCENE, SHOWINC. ONTARIO MILLS. to between 400 and 500 men at an average wage of$100 per month, and indirect employment to a greatmany more. During the year 1890 the output was 35,-985 tons of (dry) ore,of which 23,892 tons were milled,and 12,093 tons sold to smelters. The gross sum re-ceived for the product of this ore was $1,742,084, outof which $900,000 was paid in dividends, making thetotal monthly dividends paid, to the end of 1890, 175;aggregating $11,525,000. Disbursements of 1890 were as follows: Pay roll and salaries 34, Lumber and timber 35, Coal (from Coalville) 81, Salt 29, Castings (


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, booksubjectutahdescriptionandtr