wAIAHA, SUNDAY MORNING, MAROH 22, 1914. 5 B Cerro De Pasco, Highest Copper Mines in the World, with Great Smelters 4 where th miner yrtn Uklng out ore. The machinery la of the vtry Uteit in vention and the drilling It done with compressed lr. The workmen are Cholon or native peruviana, who ' are raid from $3 centa and upward a day. They make excellent miners and tome of them do quite as well an men of the name clM In the states. They work In eight-hour shifts with two shifts a day. The shtftM are so arranged that the second stops at 3 o'clock In the morning, eo that all of the men can sleep a part of the night. Everything Is manned after the most approved mints of the states and this same plan Is preserved In all the opera tlons of the work. About 160 samples of ore are assayed every day and the miners know exactly what they ars dolntr. THey have a curious way of determining with out a scientific assay, as to whether the ore Is valuable or not. This Is by means of a tallow candle. They light the candle and by dusting It with the ore the cop per In It gives forth a green flame, the color of which shows just about the per centage of metal the ore oontalns. As I went through the mine with Mr. Qlldden, the assistant manager, he made such a test and told me that the car of oro aver aged probably about 12 per cent. Loading ty Gray it jr. During our Journey wo went from chamber to chamber,, now walking through the tunnels and now Jumping aside to let the cars pass. The whole of the underground workings nro a bee hive of industy and the work of getting out the copper goes steadily on without friction. The mines are so arranged that the cars ore loaded by gravity, and tho mining Is most economically done. In going through tho tunnls we vsed acetylene, the carbide for whjch comes from the United States, and every miner we met had nn acetylene tamp on his cap. The managers find that this U much cheaper than candles. Tho mines are worked by electricity which Is now gen erated by steam, but the company Is Installing a great electric plant at Oroya, about seventy-five miles away, whero they own a stream with a fall which will generate about XB,000 horsepower. Within i III M c (Copyright, 3911. by tfrank G. Carpenter.) .EBItO DE PASCO, Peru-1 huvo come to the top of tin Andes to tell you about the greatest copper mines of this continent. They lie here on the roof of the world. They aro moro than 1,200, miles south of the Panama canal and something like 3,000 miles from the Strait of Magellan. They are about 200 miles east of the 'Pacific ocean and ,3,000-odd miles .from tho Atlan tic. Their actual altitude Is over 14,000 feet, and one'K&sta'co overa'pass which' Is 5,6Cj feel above sea level to reach them. I camo here by the -Central rail way of Peru. . This brought me over the Andes and dojvn to the 12,000-foot level at tho town of Oroya. There I got the Cerro de Pasco railroad and climbed' up the plateau 'to where I now am. Cerro dev Pasco Is the highest mining town'of the world. It Is three or four thousand feet above Leadvllle, and almost twlco as high as Mexico City. Tiere' are peaks near.lt which are 20,000 feet high, and Its surroundings are some of the grandest on earth. Tho town Is right over treasures of silver and copper of In calculable value. They have been mining silver hero for 300 years, and that metal is almost played out. The outlook la that they will be mining copper for 100-years more,' and the copper mines are really just beginning. Today the town Is like a great colander, the holes of which are the openings of mines. The Spaniards and Indians have been' mining here for eight generations and now the Americans liave bought the most valuable deposits and the outlook Is that they will be min ing for many generations to come. Riches In Mines. Tho etory-of Cerro de Pasco dates back to 1630. At that time an Indian who was watching his llamas and sheep, had to stay hero over night. He built a flro on tho stones to keep warm and when he awoke In the morning ho found the rocks specked with globules of silver which the fire had boiled out. This story went forth and as a result something like 1X0,000,000 ounces of silver havo been taken out of these mines. They are mining some silver" here now and as I rode on mule "back about through the town I could seo great pits large enough to swal low' tho Vatican at Itomo or our national capitol at Washington from which that oro had been taken. The silver oro comes from a yellowish rock which lies ner the surface. It disintegrates cosily, and much of It Is taken out In tho form of a powder. The first working was done by tho Spaniards, who used Indian slaves and flogged them to kefep them at labor. Later on the mines fell Into the hands of Indian Cholos, and when silver was lilh they were owned by capitalists who paid the miners something like 40 cents a ;day for twelve hours' work, with an ounpe. of coca 'loaves to keep them hard oi ihe Job. Today tho silver oro and many of tlie petty copper propositions are worked by Indians. Outside tho Amer ican holdings there are many small ml pes; and the town of 30,000 is so pep pered with holes hat one would hardly dare to go about alone after dark. The native minors do their work In the old fashioned way. They dig out the best ore with plaks and carry it up ladders In rawhide eacks on their backs. I saw many piles of such ore as I rode through the oUy, An Indian will carry from sixty to eighty pounds at a load and they are, now bringing tho ore out upon ladders from a depth of 300 feet. Copper Ore Pound. Tho ore taken out Dy the Indians Is now largely copper, although most of It carries more or less sller. The real vnlue of the mines Is in the copper, the ore 'containing more and mors copper as the mining goes down. The sliver, which neari the sur face often assayed 100 ounces ta the ton, has gradually fallen in quality until it Is now less than ten. All of the ote, how ever, has more or less gold and silver in It and the American company finds that the costs of tho mining are paid by the precious metals, tho copper being almost pure profit. The copper Is far richer than that. In the mines of the United States from which our grqat supplies come It was "the great copper ' value that attracted the attention of American cap italists to Cerro de Pasco, and today a syndicate composed of some of our rich est men have bought the mines here and they are operating them on a cale such as exists nowhere else on this continent. Among the members of the syndicate uro such men ab J. B. Haggln, Htjnry C. Frlck, the Vanderbilts, the Hearst estate and others. These 1 men have already spent tens of millions of dollors In de veloping the property and they havo mines here that aro worth, I am told, at least $50,000,000. The business is not a stock proposition. The shares are not quoted on the exchange and so far as I know no stock has ever been offered for sale, The operation of the mines is on a plain business basis. No expenso Is spared to produce economic results and for some years the company sank millions without being absolutely sure of return. Today their mines are worked at a profit, and this has been the caqe for several years back. In' 1907 they shipped over 20,000,000 pounds of copper and tho smelter near here Is now turning out 4,000,000 pounds of copper matte' every month. This matte goes to New York, where, as I have said, tho gold and silver In it about pays the expenses of mining and reduction, leaving the copper as almost clear gain. Americans Are .Active. The extent of the operations of this American syndicate Is almost inconceiv able. They havecome here to tho tops of tho Andes, at an altitudes of almost three miles abovo the sea, and have de veloped an industry which would be enor mous In any part of the world. They have built a smelter about six miles from here which surpasses anything on tho South American continent and which In many respects Is like nothing else ever known. 'They have built up a town there and they practically support this city Cerro de Pasco, They have thousands of men in their employ,, and there are per haps 6,000 or 8,000 Indians or native Peru vians working in the mines and the smelter. They have within about twenty five miles from Cerro de Pasco great mines of bituminous coal, which they have connected by railroad with this town and smelter, and they make their own coke and .furnish their own fuel. They have built a standard-gauge rail road, which Is by far the best In Peru, from Cerro de Pasco to Oroyo, and they havo more than 100 miles of track, over which cars go as smoothly as any In tho states, and that notwithstanding the altitude of the road ranges from 12,000 to 14,000 above the sea. It Is this rood that connects them with the Central railway of Peru, by which their ore is taken down to the coast. In Its purchase of the mines the com pany included a great deal of land. It has here a hacienda which covers about 200,000 acres. It would take a day and a half to ride all around it. This ' ha cienda Is highly mineralized, but the title to such lands In Peru gives only surface rights, and any one can prospect and claim any mine he discovers. In addition to the mines the syndicate owns, through one of Its branch companies, a great eppper property at Morococha, where, I am told, the ore Is even richer than that at Cerro de Pasco. The mines there are almost three miles above tho sea level and they aro now being worked. T,hey are not far from the Central railway and they will have a down grade all the way to tho' seacoast at Callao, starting within a few miles of the mines. Copper Ore Rich, Indeed it is hard to realize the values In the copper which Is being found here at the top of the Andes. The ore which is now coming out of Cerro de Pasco averages from 8 to 10 per cent of pure metal. That means that there are 200 pounds of copper In each ton From a single ton of ore they are now gettlg a product equal to (33 worth of copper, 410 worth of silver and i! worth of gold. This represents the values Jn the rock at the mines and, of course, the expenses of getting it to the market end of smelting and reducing must be considered. Never theless; it is doubtful, whether there ti any other place in the world wh'ch has such' valuablo copper deposits, and but .W where" the deposits are of BUch enor mous extent. Sa far the Americans know that they have n great mass of ore right .under this city with veins running out in a dozen directions. How' big this mass Is they have not discovered. They have been going' down deeper and tho copper is richer all tho way. Said one of the su perintendents to me: . "You might compare the copper forma tions hero to 'your hand. Let the palm represent the great mass and1 your fingers the veins; As it Is now we are working on one of tho veins, and wo have enough ore In sight to keep us busy for ten years or moro without doing further develop ment, and It is my personal opinion that wo havo not yet scratched the surface of what is to come. In tho United States wo think it a good copper mine if the ore will yield 1 or 2 per cent to the ton. Here If the oro does not assay more than 3 per cent wo throw It away. Our average Is about S per cent or more, and we have taken out somo which' has yielded 10 per cent to tho ton.' llelo-TF the Surface. During my stay here I have gone down into the mines. They already comprise about forty miles of underground work ings, although whero they are now min ing tho operations are confined to a space of-about ono mile by a mllo and a half. The mines aro worked from the S00 to the 600 foot level, and tests have been made which show that tho copper goes down far below. Entering tho shaft, wo dropped to the 400-foot level and then took the electric trolley which carries the ore through the narrow tunnels to the shaft. The tunnels are so small that we could barely stand upright within them and from the center of the track one could easily reach the sides of the walls. Some of the tunnels are timbered with Peruvian eucalyptus or with Oregon pine, but everywhere the work Is so scientifically done that the rock in most cases upholds the walls. Here and there we stopped in a chamber Home Face Peeling Becomes Popular No complexion treatment yet discovered seems tc havo become so generally and so immediately popular as the mercollzed wax process. Evidently the reason Is that this method actually gets rid of a bad complexlun, which can hardly be said of any other. To tcmporarly hide or bleach the defective skin with cosmetics, cannot compare with tho effect of literally re moving the skin itself. Mercollzed wax takes oft the offending surface skin in flour-like particles, a little at a time, until there's nono of It left. Tho new complexion thus produced exhibits a healthy glow and girlish beauty obtain able In no other way. This wax, which you can get at your druggist's, 'is applied at night In the same way you um cold cream, and washed off next morning. Here Is one thing that actually does remove wrinkles, remove them- quickly, and at trifling cost: Powdered saxollte, 1 oz., dissolved :n hi pt. witch hazel. Use as a face bath. Advertisement, Violins Complete with ease, betr and ex tra atriaa-s t SS.eO. ceo. (7.00, $s.eo. 10.00, (10.00, (23 and up. Beld on Easy Pay. meat. Write for Pre Oataloe ef U osteal Iaatrameata. A. HOSPE CO. J81B Douglas BU, Omaha. Ifeh. Our Magazine Page will interest every woman who likes good heart-to-heart talks with other sympathetic women a short time nil of their works here and at tbe great smelter and also at tho atsoclato mines of Morococha will be operated by tho fall of this river. At present the steam Is produced by coal from the company's coal mints, which are about twenty-five miles from Cerro do Fasco. They use this to make coke for the smolter, and they havo groat quarries of almost pure limestone, half wny between the mines and tho smelter, which Is only six miles distant and 200 feet lower down. Thr Smelters. During my stay, I havo spent some time at the smelter. The plnco Is known by the Peruvian name of La Fumlictlon. The works are situated on tho stdo of the mountain, so that tho oro starts In at tho top and goes by gravity through the various processes until It comes out In copper mattes ns big around as a bread bowl, ready to bo sent down on the cars. Tho smelter Is the largest In South America. It must cover several hundred acres. It consists of great buildings, colored black with tho smoke. They are walled with glass windows and have roofs of galvanlned Iron. Hlslnx above them are three mighty smokestack each so big around that you could run a Pullman car through It without touching the walls. Theso stacks are about 300 feet high and from them day and night pour out vaat volumes of white and yel low smoke Into the clouds of the Andes. Tho smelter has tho finest of modern machinery and every pound of It camo from tho states. This Is so also of the great Iron buildings and of tho wood used for tho structures and railroad. The es tablishment has duplicates of everything needed for smelting. It runs three eight hour shifts and keops busy Sunday and weekdays all day and night. I am told that it is tho largest copper smelter out eldo of tho United States and that It Is patterned after tho mighty works at Great Palls, Mont. Kurnnce Problem., In building this smelter the engineers had to contend with difficulties unknown before. No ono had ever constructed n smelter at 14,000 feet abovo tho sea and the experts said that furnaces could not bo run at that altitude. They claimed that tho air was so rare that you would havo to blow through tho flro several times as much air per minute as le usually tlono In order to secure the oxygen sufficient for tho reaction. Never theless, the syndlcato determined to try It. They got tho best men they could find and put up the bulldlnss. llut the furnaces would not work and one en gineer after another camo hero and left, throwing up his hands in despair. At last thero was a man from Mexico who had pawed through Missouri and had to bo shown. Ha said ho did not believe that tho figures told tho real story. He was an old smelter man and he said the fur naces did not sound right. He began by taking off all the gauges nnd putting th blasts In such a way that ho got tho right sound. He then started to working and, lol tho plant did Its work. Up to that time It looked as though thceo mines, which had already cost tens of millions, would fall. The capitalists poured In money like wnter, and they had poured In so much that they could not let go. Since that discovery their fight has been successful and It Is now a proposition which pays exceedingly well. As soon as they discovered the secret of tho smelting they got an expert engineer, named Frnnk Klepetko, who had been connected with the Ouggcnhelms, and who had built, I think, the smelter at Great Falls, Mont. It waa he who planned tho great buildings hero nnd made them successful. He Introduced new Inventions and put in treatments that are especially fitted for these mines and works high up on the roof of the world. Ono of the curious things used Is called the cindering machine. This takes the fine oro and turns It Into a coke so that It can bo easily smelted. An American Industry. Dut I wish I could take you through this great working monument of Ameri can Industry that has been created away out. here on the top of the Andes. I should like to show you our men direct ing tho work and bossing the mines. I would show you the oro as It files over nn American railroad and wo Could watch It as It rolls from the cars to the fur naces. We might even open tho furnace doors and see tho crimson Copper bias ing within. We would feel flames that are seven times hotter than those through which Moshaoh, Shadrach and Abednego walked and later on In the converters we could watch the liquid gold emptied by a seventy-ton Crane, worked from above. Wo could see the golden sulphur flying off Into tho air, and the Iron slag runnlni: away while the pure copper, silver and gold flowed into the molds. We could see tho metal change In color as it cooled and watch tho round blocks of 300 pounds as they wero loaded on to tho cars to be shipped to the states. I spent the better part of a day In the smelter, and It mado me feel proud that I was an American born. The output of the works, as I havo raid, Is now moro than 4,000,000 pounds of matter evory month, and that means 4,000,000 pounds of copper, sliver and gold. It Is equal to more than 131,000 pounds every day or to moro than 5,000 pounds every hour of the day and tho night. Sunday and week days, all the year through. FRANK O. CARPENTER. Sanatorium This institution la tho onlr ono In tho contra! wont with eoparato buildings situated In tholr own umplo grounds, yet entirely dis tinct, and rendering It possible to classify cases. The one building being fitted for and devoted to tho treatment of non-contagious and non-mental diseases, no others be ing admitted; tho other Rest Cot tago being designed for and do voted to tho exclusive treatment of select mental cases requiring for a tlmo watchful caro and spe cial nursing. The New Corset Fashions Are Introduced With the New Dress Fashions IF YOU READ the daily papers and we are reasonably sure you do, since you must be interested in style news you will see that we are daily telling a most fascinating story for women. A story of dress in . every department in our house; where fashion is paramount the depart ment is bursting with new things. EVERY DAY IS A STYLE EVENT . No gown, however simple or extreme, is adequately "set off" without the right corset the foundation of all good dress. Warner's are the Authoritative Corset Styles for this Season THIS SEASON the figure must be natural easy not restricted. 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