Word: muerto
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...shade of a chilly, barren mountain called India Muerto (Dead Indian), 9,000 feet up in the northern Chilean Andes, lies the world's newest major find of copper ore. The discovery, says Roy H. Glover, board chairman of Anaconda Co., "is the greatest and most important development in copper mining in Chile since the initiation in 1914 of Chuquicamata" -and famed Chuquicamata is the world's biggest copper ore body. Last week Chile's President Carlos Ibañez gave Anaconda* an official go-ahead to spend $53 million toward making Indio Muerto an active producer...
...Indio Muerto was explored and found promising four years ago. Anaconda quietly bought it, but felt little incentive to mine it: the Chilean government was taking a discouraging 85% of taxable income. Then, last May, Chile voted a new tax law that takes 75% of taxable income at the present production rate, but drops as output rises, sinking to 50% when production is doubled. With new incentive, Anaconda's subsidiary, the Andes Copper Mining Co., drilled enough exploratory holes at Indio Muerto to block out 78 million tons of high-grade ore (1.6% copper...
COPPER PINCH will be eased by a large-scale U.S. mining expansion in Chile. In a $100 million program, Anaconda Copper will spend $53 million to get its newly discovered Indio Muerto mines into production, expects them to add 100,000 tons of refined copper to the free world's annual production. The company will also increase production another 55,000 tons at two present mines...
...article on the National Guard of Minnesota, Captain King's "Ranchodel Muerto," G. P. Mathes' "Canoe Trip down the Chippewa," and E. Hitchcock's "Wrestling," are all concluded in this number. The literature of out-door life is represented by a mysterious cycling story, the scene of which is laid in France, and by a piscatorial poem, or picture in verse. The opening article on Long Island sniping, Mr. Shinn's "California on Horseback," and Mrs. E. Kennedy's salmon story are also deserving of mention. The number concludes with the various useful records of sports and games...
...contains so many interesting articles that it is not possible to notice them all. There is nothing in the number that is not well up to the usual high standard of the Outing articles, while the number and variety of the pieces make the number unusually interesting. Rancho del Muerto is a serial story begun this month. The scene is laid in Arizona and the work is in the best style of romantic story telling. Following this is a pretty little poem entitled "Recompense," by Annie L. Brakenridge; the "Pheasant in Old Britain," by Charles Turner; a very amusing story...