Page:The Mexican Problem (1917).djvu/152

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
98
THE MEXICAN PROBLEM

in January, 1913, when two hundred and forty-seven thousand barrels left the wharf at Tampico. By October, 1916, the shipments had reached eight hundred and ten thousand barrels. Now they are above a million and a half barrels a month.

PIPE LINES, RAILROADS, MOTOR WAYS, AND WATERWAYS

This American concern has nearly half the pipe-line mileage in the country. It has three eight-inch pipe lines from Tampico to the Casiano well, sixty-five miles distant. Thence two eight-inch lines to Cerro Azul, twenty-two miles, and an eighteen-mile line to Tres Hermanos, a total of two hundred and sixty-four miles. The oil is kept moving by seven pumping stations operated by gas from a line to the Casiano well, but the stations are equipped with oil-burning apparatus, now to be put in commission as already noted above. The oil gushes at such a temperature that it flows without reheating.

There are one hundred and nineteen miles of four-and six-inch water mains, and the company is opening other water supplies.

Over these lines, well buried in the earth, runs