14 1 .rujj. 'aiukjSimu OliGONIASr, JftOlffPAY, .JANUABY 1, 1900. who made a large -stake In the Klondike district, became interested in the mines several months ago,- and. after personal Inspection- bonded the seven claims of the Albany Mining & Milling Company, until October. 1900. He has IS months in which to develop the claims before final ly purchasing them. During the time In tervening between two trips to Dawson. Sir. Belcher has personally superintended the work of developing his properties. He has had 10 or 12 men pushing the work, principally on the Bonanza. They have made excellent progress and have got out ore of an encouraging character. Mr. Beloher has shown confidence in his prop erties by spending several thousand dol lars in their development He being an experienced miner and an energetic y oung man, -considerable progress has been made tinder his direction. A tunnel- was run 110 feet on the Bonanza claim striking the main ledge. The Bonanza now has GOO feet of tunnels. Before Mr. Belcher toDk hold of these claims the Albany Min ing & Milling Company spent nearly $50. 000 upon the property. It stopped for want of funds, 'ts confidence in the richness of the mines never having wavered. The Canal Pork Company, of Portland has a group of claims that have been well prospected Last ear considerable tunneling was done, but not enough to show definite results, though presenting eome good prospects. The Portland Gulch Company has some promising claims. Last jear it made over E0 feet of tunnels. The company will con tinue the work until there is something to show for Its investment. R. J. Monroe was active on his prop erty last year. He ran over 100 feet of tunnels, and got out some oro that assays well. lie undoubtedly has some paving lodes. Besides these, others have worked their claims more than is required. Those com petont to judge pronounce the development work of the year of a very satisfactory character, and sufficient to Increase the confidence In the mines and speak for.tho permanency of the camp. Machinery in the District. The machinery of the mines consists of two mills. A 10-stamp mill was pur chased by the Albany Mining &. Milling Co., In 1S90. It has a capacity of about 25 tons in 24 hours, and has run as high as SO tons. It is located on Bonanza claim, to which the operations of the company and those of Mr. Belcher have been confined. It was not used last year, but Is In condition for work. The Lawler Company, three or four years ago, pur chased a 20-stamp mill which has a ca pacity of 40 or 60 tons a day, and placed it near the Red Bull and White Bull claims, convenient for use by both mines. It was run for over a vear In a satisfac tory manner, and is in good condition for operation. Last jear the mill, on account of work being confined to development of the claims, was not operated. The present outlook is that it will be re Quired in the operation of the Lawler' mines during 1900. The mines have not attracted the at tention from capitalists to which their merit entitles them. T. J. Belcher Is the principal new investor. He has shown his confidence in the claims he has under bond by pushing their development, and is Bald to possess the capital to continue the work unul there Is something sub stantial to show for the money expended. Last year J. F. Medina, of London, who made a fortune in South Africa, and who has backed the Lawler Company from the start, paid a personal visit to the mines. He expressed himself as being well satis fied with the prospects. He will continue to back his judgment with funds for the working of the properties in which he Is interested. The output of the mines In 1S99 was nominal, the work being entirely of a de velopment character. The prospects are that there will be a different report to make for 1900. FRED P. NUTTING. Albany, Or. COOS "AXD CUItttY. Gold From the Sixes and Other Dis tricts and the Benches $100,000. The Sixes river mining belt is situated along the line between Coos and Curry counties, the line being designated by a range of mountains which divides the wa ters of the Coqullle and Sixes rivers. The principal mines in that Etcilon, which are now attracting considerable attention, are located at the source of the South Sixes, and at the head of branches of the Co qullle river. Good prospects have been discovered during the past 12 months at both places. Fair prospects have heen found in various branches or tliese streams lor a distance of 15 miles mong this belt, which runs parallel with the ocean back from the beach about 20 miles. This belt la reached by wagon road from Myrtle Point, which is in the Coqullle valley, Coos county, and that town is connected with Coos bay by a 30-ralle railroad. There is a good trail also from Port Orford, Cur ry county, to the mines, and a wagon road reaches a part of the 35 miles, the dis tance to the mining camps. The country is rough and hilly, but good highways hav e been made around the mountains. During the past 18 months three broth ers, who say thej are distant relatives of ex-President Harrison, have found Eeveral very promising prospects In placer propo sitions on top of one of the loftiest hills of that section. They secured large divi dends after conveying the porphyry dyke containing the precious metals, a distance of a thousand feet to a spring. An old fashioned rocker was here utilized to sep arate and amalgamate the fine particles of gold. The Harrison brothers say that they have obtained as high jo 550 from a sack of the porphyry dragged down to the spring, and they also assert that they have secured as much as $16 to the pan. They have taken out enough to pay ex penses, and have devoted the most of their time to prospecting for quartz. In this1 work they have been Joined by the Guerln brothers, two bright, energetic young men from Eckley, a poptoffice d half dozen miles from the mines. These young men run a fine stock farm, and follow placer mining In winter. They bring beautiful nuggets to Myrtle Point to exchange for merchandise. The Harrisons believe that they have some very rich quartz propositions on the South Sixes. Their locations are all. In Curry county, but Just across the line, only two miles, In Coos county. Is the cel ebrated Salmon Mountain mine. It was purchased two years ago by a practical miner from Lower California, named Was son. Ho Is quite old, and is hardly able to carry out the plans he had formed. He is certain that( large returns can be had for a reasonable amount of labor. He has found, however, that It requires more cap ital than he has to brng water, so that his rich pay dirt could be sluiced. This mine has produced at least $75,000 during tho past 12 years. Dev elOpmeni work has been done on a very promising quartz proposition. While the mine has yield ed so handsomely, the former owner ex pended at least $40,000 In improvements. There Is no question as to tho richness of this mine, but It requires capital to ex tract the wealth, which is everywhere in sight. Three miles from this location, at the' Dlvllbllss claim, a quartz mill was erect ed, at a cost, it is said, of $15,000. It has five stamps, and Is run by water-power. This is the work of enterprising citizens of Marshfield, who had experted the Dlv llbllss mine and had faith in Its gold bearing quartz. The mill had not been run a month when a. dispute arose be tween the Dlvllbllss brothers and the mill proprietors, and litigation followed. The mill has been idle for five or six years, and now no one can tell who owns It Fine Particles of Gold. Half a mile above this mill the Myrtle Point Mining & Development Company has several claims that prospect well. The company has been developing very en ergetically without machinery for five or Blx years. It is a milling proposition, yet considerable free gold has been taken out of dockets and by washing through sluices. The whole surface is permeated with fine articles at gold around the quartz cr- plngs. The company has a tunnel feet long, and several short tunnels. Below this location, wnich is t on a trib utary of the Coqullle river, called Johnson creek, a great amount of placer mining nas- been none in the 4a years since me first dIs.coyery of coarsogold was made In that region. Pioneers estimate that sev eral hundred thousand dollars have been taken out in nuggets that weighed from 50 cents to $5. For 12 miles along this creek men delve among the boulders for the pre cious metal every season, some with suc cess, while others meet with, disappoint ment Sixes river has more placer mines than the Coqullle. Rusty creek, which Is just be low the Harrisons' Mountain Daisy,. has yielded at least $200,000, and It seems to be pretty well worked out for two or three miles. The' miners have turned their attention to finding the leads that produced the nuggets already taken out It Is believed that the Harrisons, Guerins and several others have found the quartz lodes that have sent out the large amount of wealth. It Is 'predicted that the south branch of Sixes river. In Curry county, and the Johnson creek region Just over the, divide In Coos county. will de velop into a very rich mining country. There are, I believe, fully 200 men employed directly and Indirectly in mining operations in this mineral belt There are many other finds being opened that cannot be mentioned In the space1 al lotted for this article, and scores of men believe they are developing very promis ing mining propositions. Prospectors have been certain that there are rich and ex tensive ledges hidden in the mountains," but recent finds of porphyry dyke on the summits of the loftiest hills have changed these theories to some extent T It is be lieved by some that, while there is a large amount of sulphurets In every open ing that has been made, and that while the ground underneath the leaves and shrubbery that coyer this timbered region Is permeated wlfh fine particles of free gold, the whole country presents a milling proposition. It Is known that a smelter or some machinery of the kind could find many localities where water Is abundant and timber plentiful. Ores of all grades could be found In abundance to keep large machinery In operation for years to come. Assays made have shown from $3 to $180 to the ton. Experiments made atthe Sal mon Mountain mine with an arastra gave satisfactory results. This and the quartz mill already mentioned comprise ail tne machinery In this promising locality. Output of 1899. At least 400 ounces of gold dust from this mining belt was sold at Myrtle Point during the past year. As much moro was shipped to San .Francisco, and considerable put away. I think that at least 530.OQ0 was taken In 1899 from the mines herein de scribed. It should be remembered lhat beach mining is carried on all along tho coast from six miles north of the Coqullle river bar to the California line. Besides there are many mining districts inland on almost every stream, the products from which would no doubt swell the total out put to $100,000 annually. ORVDL DODGE. Myrtle Point, Or. MINES OF JACKSON. Quarts Development, Just Besrun, Promise Itlcli Results. The Jackson county gold placer and quartz areas lie principally In the cen tral and western belts of the county, ex tending nearly continuously from the northern boundary to the California line. The northern slope of the Siskiyou moun tain range feeds a "series of creeks whlcht threading deep canyons, meander to the north and west, generally, to the foot of the range: thence, coursing fertile valleys of limited extent, unite within a few miles to form the Applegate and Bear creeks, the principal tributaries of Rogue river. It Is on the Applegate water system that the placer diggings have been longest and most continuously worked. On Sterling creek, a tributary of Little Applegate, Is the mine of Ankeny & Cook, known as the Sterling mine, with Its miles of flumes and ditches. It probably has not an equal as a placer mine In the state. On the Upper Big Applegate there are placer operations of considerable magnitude. Like all gold fields opened In the Pacific West In the 50s. It was the placer diggings that absorbed the goldseeker, and it was years afterward when the prospector turned his attention to the rocks in search of the precious metals. Hence, although a great mining camp was on Jackson creek, where Jacksonville now stands, In the early '50s, and vast sums of money were cleaned up there, it Is within a comparatively recent period that systematic and Judicious ex ploration of quartz veins was begun. Early efforts were directed largely to limited development of so-called pocket ledges, which often proved very remunerative, but only within the past few years have there been In the field the necessary capital and professional skill to explore a ledge and develop a great property that could bo called a mine. It Is notable that buch properties are not In the near vicinity of old placers of consequence, and discov eries In quartz have changed the supposed boundaries of the gold belt, so that the principal mines, which are about Ash land, are actually outside the limits exten sively advertised as comprising the gold deposits of the county. Wnile the principal quartz mines are near Ashland, there are others which are being operated with profit at other points In the qounty. Properties undergoing development and on which it Is planned to erect mills are more numer ous than ever before. The Gold Standard, near Jacksonville, the mine of Hoffman, near Thompson creek. Big Applegate, and several properties In the Gold Hill district are of this class. Investments made In mining properties in this county by mining men from out side of Oregon, last year aggregated $150,-000.- They were not less than this sum, and may bo considerably more. The homo capital, Inclusive of Portland, put Into mining enterprises, here, especially in ditches and placer works, comprises a large sum, but there Is not sufficient data at hand to make a fair statement of the amount The Applegate Hydraulic Mining Company, successors to the Grand Apple gate Company, made an Investment last 5 ear In ditches, placer ground, etc., of over $20,000. This company i has a water right of 15.000 Inches, and a water supply which In the dry season will Insure enough to operate two six-Inch giants. The Swayne mine, on the Applegate, Is a placer prop erty Into which $10,000 has been put in purchasing new machinery, extending ditches, eta On properties previously opened much exploratory work was done during the year, and In some cases with some val uable results. In the Forest creek and Galls creek districts there has been tinua ual Interest In quartz, and some very promising properties have been opened. The Gold Standard, of Kubll Brothers, has caused excitement in that locality by the exceptionally rich ore taKen from it. Much; work has been done by the miners In the Gold Hill section. Probably the best known of the properties there Is the Braden mine. It is In the hands of a new; company, and much work Is being done on It Dr. Ray and a company are ex ploiting the old Gold Hill property, where In early davs $300,000 was taken out In a short time. There have been opened near Woodville a few ledges with encouraging results, and in the Blackwell' diggings,, near Tolor valuable discoveries have been ma.de. The total value of tho gold output of Jackson county for 1S99 cannot be approx imated with the degree of accuracy desir able, but from the statements made by banks purchasing gold, ttnd estimates of persons having knowledge of shipments to the smelters and the United States mint, $250,000 may be named as the total output Some of tho largest quartz -properties have had but little ore milled, work being mostly confined to development and prep arations for operations on a larger scale than heretofore. The Ashland mine is .not milling, but a large force of men Is at wprk upon It The company now operat ing this mine is known as the Montreal &. Oregon Gold Mines, Ltd., and has headquarters In Montreal. They pur chased this property a few mohths ago, after having It carefully inspected and re- i i ported upon, and paid for It, together with some adjacent claims, $1,200,000 in cash. A thorough renovation of the old work ings has been undertaken, so as to permit deep working on the veln. There is a trifle over a mile of tunneling, tdrlfts, shafts and stoplng in. the mine, but nearly all above the 400-foot level, and ,whlle It Is the deepest mine In Southern Oregon, the depth attained) is comparatively, ismall. Very rich ores (have ,been extracted from, this mine, and It has yielded mur-h, money, probably $150,000 or $175,000. A notable and encouraging feature In Its history Is the substantial improvement of 'the ores with depth. In the last SO feet sunk In the 400 foot shaft on the vein,, ore' is being mined which separates -easily, and on the whole mlll3 more easily and more closely to" assay values than most of the ores from nearer tho surface. They run $35 to $40 to tho ton, with concentrates worth about 4100. The company's mill is located In Ashland.' but a new and improved milling plant Is to be erected up at the mine, located 2& miles west of the city. The Shorty-Hope mine In. tho same one of the streets of tho city. They have uncovered a true gold vein. The quartz prospects liberally with mortar and pan, but as the gold Is either "flaky" or some what fine, the tendency of the pan pros pects Is to exaggerate the value of the ledge. However, the assay values of the' ledge range from about $5 to $1G. The ledge has been traced for a considerable dis tance across the city, and Is apparently a contact fissure, well defined and of fair size. The mining Industry Is one of the fixed resources of Jackson county. The placers have stood thetest of nearly half a cen- tury and. have yielded vast wealth,' amounting tq tens of millions of dollars. The quartz development of the county has only begun, and offers a big" and promis ing field for investment to capital. F. D. WAGNER, Ashland, Or. DOUGIjAS county. PItfeer and Q,unrta Gold, Copper, . Quicksilver and 'Nickel. Beginning in the northeastern part of Douglas county, the first mining district Is 'the Bohemia quartz district It com- Is now being demonstrated in the south ern portion cf the. county, as well as In Bohemia district, that the country Is rich In quartz, both gold and copper, and It is predicted that some wonderful devel opments will be made in 1S00 and that the results will justify the prediction. Placer mining Is also taking new life and the area of ground found to contain gold In paying quantities Is materially enlarging. In fact the futurp promises much for Douglas county in establishing it as a district rch In minerals. Steady Development Last Year. The development work of 1899 was much greater than that of any former year, 'but estimates for this' particular work are not easy to make for the reason that work has been carried on In so many different places and in such a, way that no publicity has been given, as to the nature of the work or the amount of It. Those Interested In the mines have prose cuted their work In much the same man ner that the farmer does his with a view to improving the property and to add fa cilities for the taking out and saving of values and not to publish continually what had been, or was being done, nor what the prospects were. These operators have PORTLAND'S CHANC RECENT INVESTMENT OF CAPITAL IN THE EASTERN OREGON" GOLD BELT e99eeee e o e 9 joo The Sumpter gold fields, generally speaking, might be said to be 30 miles wide and 100 miles long. The country rock is slate, with an occasional dike of porphyry. The ore is generally free-milling, although the development bf claims the last summer opened up a number of ore bodies which were found to be Partly base. Cyanide plants are beinff installed on these claims, andm number of new quartz mills will begin to drop stamps during January and.February. . . . . The mining district is new in' the' sense of the appliance kt modern machinery in extracting values, ax present, however, modern Equipments are being generally applied. There is no deep mining here as yet, tne greatest depth having been reached at the North Pole mine, in the Bourne district, where the lowest level is 1000 feet below the apex of the mountain, or.outcrop of the "surface ledge. The Columbia is down only a ew. hundred feet; the Golconda not yet 400; and the lem level at the Red Boy is only about 500 feet below the apex of the mountain. British -capital is getting hold of some of the big producing mines and most prom ising ledges, and the prospects are that deep .mining proper-will be inaugurated in 1900. During the past two years large 'outside capital has become Interested in the Sumpter gold fields. Com plete data on this line is not obtainable. ' , The Bonanza mine, formerly owned by the Geisers, has been purchased by Messrs. Hayes, Beatty ana ' Gilbert, the former residing -In Philadelphia and the 'two last-named in Warren, Pa. The price paid is said to have been $750,000. These gentlemen are -large.- owners of Standard Oil stock, and have since incorpo rated the Bonanza for $2,500,000 and sold every share of stock In Pennsylvania. The Columbia mine, located seven miles from Sumpter, has passed into the hands of Mr. Backus, a prom inent lumber merchant of .Minneapolis. The price of the Columbia proper is said to have been $85,000 and the adjoining claim, known as the Appomattox, has since been purchased for a sum .said to Je near $45,000, The present owners haVe been solicited to sell the property, and asked Jif they would accept $1,500,000 for It. They are at present operating it. , " " " . - ' W L Vinson and his partner,. Captain Thomaa Muir, of Portland, have bought, the Little .Giant claim, about 'eighfmiles south of the Red Boy. It is said that $35,000 was the price.paid. Messrs. Vinson and Muir have also opened the Magnolia, olalmtlnear Granite, and a 10-stamp mill ""will begin dropping- stamps on-the , claim about January 1, 1900. It is understood that British capital Is interested both of , these claims. J H. Larkin and associates have "secured the Cougar property., seven. miles from Granite.vahd nave put In a "new 200-ton cyanide plant, which is just beginning the treatment of ore by the cyanide Process. The Cougar is a valuable property, and, while not on the market, the prjee wpuld run 'away up, if the owners could be induced to. sell. l , , , The Golconda mine, located about seven xmiles northeast of Sumpter, has been purchased by J. G. and J. T. English, of Illinois, Alter spending about $140,000 in machinery Intended to .treat .the ores by what is known as the bromine-chloride process, the owners abandoned the Idea as impracticable, and substituted for the' ponderous machinery a small Bryan mill; which is doing W work. The Golconda has lately .made some of the richest strikes known in'this'sectlon, and' it is said that the ore ran as high asJ50,000 ,to the ton in two instances. Toung English took a carload of thtf oreito the smelter at San Francisco which is said to have averaged $20,000 to the ton. Several attempts have been made by British and American capital to purchase the Golconda mine during the past six months, but so far they have been unsuccessful. It is said, that the owners hold the property at a valuation of about $600,000. Arthur Hill a wealthy lumber merchant of Saginaw, Mich., bought the Ibex mine about one year ago for $65,000. S Chapman his local manager, has sufficiently developed the property as to Induce an offer from responsible parties of $300,000 for the mine, but so far the deal has not been closed. The Ibex Is striking some very rich ore. The property is only six miles from Sumpter. to !' Thompson & McQueen have opened the Bunker Hill group, near the Columbia and Golconda mines, and are doing development "work. With them are associated Son. M. H. Cochrane and John J. Plymale, of Can ada, They expect to put In a stamp1 mill in the spring. A company composed of Albert Gelser, Clark Taber, Colonel Thompson and 8ther leading mining men has secured the Keystone Belle -claims, near the Bonanza. John M. Burke, together with Mr Minis and other Tennessee capitalists, have purchased the Banzette mine, near the Red Boy. and other claims located else where in the Sumpter district. , Nebraska capitalists under the name of the May Queen Mining & Milling Company, have purchased toe 'May Queen group of 'five daims.adjoming the Red Boy on the north. They are putting in a 10-stamp mill. wWch wS Sesin operations not later than January lo, 1900. Among the owners of this group of mines are . -j, T7i :. -MVK -r,A narwrra PinrrAtt of Granite. A J Trimble and S. Chapman, the former from Colorado and the latter from Michigan, have purchased a .number,' of -promising claims, among them being 'the Anna Lulu, near the Ibex, and the .Concord group, four 0 miles (south of the Red Boy. . 2 The Free Coinage claim has come Into the possession of a number of Portland railroad men, among whom are Messrs. HuVlburt, Schilling and Campbell, of the O. R. & N. Co., together with Whitney L. Boise and C L Cannon, all of Portland. This claim is in the -Bourne district, and it is said that the owners will spend $50,000 developing the property and in erecting a quartz mill, In the Immediate future. J H Robbins president of the First Bank of Sumpter, in connection with his two brothers, has pur chased the Concord group of claims, adjoining the Red Boy on the west. They have a force of men now do- ing development work. . .. .. A. W. Ellis and Dr. G. W. Tape have come into possession of the Sampson claim, in the Bourne dis trict ,and are developing this property with the view of erecting a stamp mill. . Edward and Ralph .Bluett have bought the controlling interest in the Van Anda group of five claims, lo cated three miles south of the Red Boy, and are doing extensive development work, preparatory to erecting a 10-stamp mill, which, it is said, has been ordered. ,.,., v " The Wall Street and Whitehead claims, located near the Red Boy, were sold to Haryey Robbins, who afterward bonded them to an English .syndicate represented by Colonel Sedgwick, of Spokane. The price was fixed at $100,000. Development work is being done on. these claims this winter. The White Elephant group, near the Bonanza, has been sold to Colonel Ray, of Port Arthur. Canada. The colonel is a banker in his home town, and the White Elephant group is among the most promising in the Sumpter district . . ,.,.,. , i Grant Thornburg, O. O. Benson and Nell Nevins, ot Granite, have located the Alberta group of claims, adjoining the town of Granite, and are doing extensive development work. Spokane capital Is attempting to buy this property, and the price is now $35,000. ' The placer mines throughout .the Sumpter gold fields are being worked iri a desultory way. and it is esti mated that the last season's clean-up in this district will amount to something over $100,000. W L Vinson, A. W. Ellis and others are arranging to dredge the placer grounds in the vicinity of Sumpter next summer, with a mammoth dredge, which they are having built In Portland. J. K. Pardee, a well-known mining man of Montana, has bought the Diadem mine, in the Sumpter dis trict and fs having extensive development work done this winter. Colonel E S Topping, of Trail, B. C, has bought the Snow Bird claims, about six miles from Sumpter, been incorporated, with Charlened by the Portland railroad mem The Sumpter & Snow Bird Company has adjoining the Free Coinage, ows S. Warren. E. S. Topping and Mike SheaE Su.iflpt.cr, kjv Fine Field for Local Capital in " the Gold Counties. MINES ARE RICH BEYOND DOUBT Smelter Should Be Bnilt nt the Metropolis to Handle Ores Railroad Extension. e00060800000000000-0000- 0o mountain ridge as tho Ashland and near by, has about 1000 feet of tunneling- andr drifts. It 'is a fissure vein, and is sup posed to belong to the same vein system as the Ashland. Some very rich ore has been taken from It Work has been tem porarily suspended, preparatory to theln .faiiattnn nf holstinsr and numplng plants tnd reorganization of the company. The principal owners are the Sanfords, of New York. The Free Coinage, or Barron mine, sit uated In the Sampson creek district, SS miles southeast of Ashland, Is rated as one of the big properties. On this prop erty, In which Byron N. White, Spokane mining man, has recently become Interest ed with G. W. Barron development work has been continued steadily. The lower tunnel has been driven 320 feet and taps the ledge at a considerable depth and -In good ore. The' crosscut shows the ledge about 10 feet wide. On 'this a 'drift has been run 140 feet norlh and 130 feet south. An upraise Is being made from this level to the SO-foot level, wh'ch will require till February to complete. While the ores of this mine are very valuable1, and some godd free-milling fare was obtained In the I surface and upper workings, the new tun- nel exposed ores that are complex, al- i though carrying free gold, so that a smelt- I er Is required "forx their reduction. Tho j extensive development undertaken to es tablish th permanency of the mine Is therefore important, previous to the erec tion of the largo and costly reduction works required. The mine possesses great mlneraloglcal interest, and the prediction has been made b'y some experts that it will. prove itself like some of the greatest properties In Cflpple Creek, t!olo., the slm- . IlaTltles of formation and-general Tesem blance to thbse mines being very strlk-u ring. , - i . ! A ledge of prospective value .has rpgnt- J ly been opened in South Ashland, located on the property of the Carter Land Com-i j been done by two miners at two points on J prises all of the Bohemia mines south of the dividing ridge between Lane and Douglas counties, and the Steamboat placer and quartz district. West of Oak land Is the Oakland district, comprising principally the cinnabar prospects, to gether with gold and copper. In the mid dle county the districts are the Myrtle creek, Dodson's Butte gold quartz and placer and copper and Olalla district, principally placer. In the southern part are the Coffee creek, Canyonville, Cow creek and Glendale districts, containing gold, Jboth quartz and placer, and the Rid dle district in which the principal nickel mines are located. The Riddle district has placer and quartz gold and copper. - These districts are not set apart nor di vided into special mining districts, but are thug conveniently designated in order that any 'one may, from the map, locate the different ones. The principal mining In ,each of these districts, except Bohemia and Dodson's Butte, which are quartz, Is placer. The principal Work is done in the fal'. winter and spring months, for the reason' that the water supply avalP able t3 Jaken from the smaller streams which do not furnish a sufficient quantity to carry on the work during the dry sea son There .are in each of, these dis tricts large streams which would, if prop erly utilized, supply plenty of water for all kinds of mining during the entire year. From Roseburg, in the center of the county southward, the principal min ing Industry has been placer, and not , until the past year have th6 quartz In terests received very great attention. At .thlsatlroe, however, quite an Interest' is manifested in that, direction. The greater portion of thesouthern part .of the coun ty is, v;ery rich in mineral, but not until recently have the deposits of quarts re ceived any' merited attention, or rather proved that there was merit in them. It confidence in the value of their property. They keep their secrets and the country, generally, knows but little of what Is go ing on In the mining districts. The Bo hemia district has reached the highest stage of advancement, but more or less I development work has been done In all the districts. It Is being demonstrated that the min eral richness of the county will Insure large returns for money expended In opening up and making extended develop ments. So far, the outlay of capital for thorough and systematic prospecting has brought .good returns. Placer mines have been worked in the county since the early "50. Quartz mnlng has heretofore re ceived some attention, but, as a rule, the work has been prosecuted by men of small means and has, In nearly every case, re sulted in abandonment of claims. The' more thorough knowledge now possessed In that lme has demonstrated the theory of the prospector and brought about a confidence that Is Interesting capital. The fact that continuous placer mining has, for nearly 50 years, been one of the sources of Industry and -wealth of the county should satisfy the most skeptical that, with proper machinery, such as Is now used, brought into play, there need be no doubt that the returns will be suf ficient to warrant the investment. In the county, aside from the stamp mills and machinery of Bohemia district, there are several mills, and about 120" giants at work. Conservative estimates of the output of gold for 1899 places it at from $110,000 to 512000. The quicksilver and nickel mines are not being worked at present, but It will probably not be lOng until these Interests wllltbe in active operation.' Capital In vested in these last-named lines would add materially both- to the Industry and wealth, of the countyv and profit ,to the investors, as it Is known that the bodies rof rich ore of. each are In large quan tities. 8. Roseburg-, Or. The article and the cut shows what nature has done for Oregon. The ac companying Illustration will In a way show what It ha3 done for Portland a3 the great metropolis of this magnificent commonwealth. For the sake of the il lustration, slight descrepancies have been made in the geographical location of towns and rivers. This arrangement does not detract from the correctness of the theory. Every artery in a person's hand" is there for one purpose, and only one. That pur pose Is to gather up the blood from every extremity of the hand, and return It to the heart Portland should be to the state of Oregon what the heart Is to the individual the center around which life revblves. If the -arteries ceaso to bring the blood back to the heart, the result 13 inevitable death. This is as surely true of Portland, though not to the same ex tent Break- the natural connection be tween Portland and the state at large and there would be no cause for her exist ence. Tap the arteries and the veins half way, and turn back the vital tide, and Portland loses half her Inheritance and half her glory. Mining men all through thla section say Portland Is asleep. Is this true? Are the business men of Portland getting hold of property in Eastern Oregon? if not, why not? Is it because you are afraid to In vest? ' Do you think the values are not here? Then send' out ydur experts to In vestigate. Do you think capitalists from all parts of the United States and Brit ish Columbia would have invested no less than 55.000,000 In property upon the mere supposition of its worth? Proof of Good 'Faith, on Port ol In , vestora. Attention 1b called to the fact that no better proof can be asked than the actual investment of one's own money in an enterprise,- that he beHeves it a good one. It Is also safe to assume that men who have made hundreds of thousands of dol-lars-in -a, business that can be experted will not venture the loss of what they have made without first taking all rea sonable precautions' against such loss. As evidence that can scarcely be doubted I offer a few of the actual transactions In mines.-showlng.the genuineness of values In this, country In thl3llst 13 Included such property as has actually sold for the sum mentioned or Is held by persons who have located It, or bought lfc at a low er price," and refuse to Bell at the price here given: Red Boy a fJ.SpO E. & E.. 1.000,000 North Pole , SSffl Golconda 500.000 Bonanza 'SX'SOQ Ibex 300,000 Diadem .O00 Total $4,590,000 This by no mean3 Includes all pur chases or refusals, nor does it Include a million or more that ha3 been taken out ot mines In the districts. There have been many sales for ?5000 and 510.000, which are not here given. It will not do for Portland to think that because nature has showered her riches In unstinted measure upon the state, that no effort Is necessary to gather It Into the lap of that city. The man from another state or nation will In all proba bility not move to Portland to live when he has forced the mountains of Oregon to give up their glittering treasure. He will not bring it to you and make you a Christmas gift of even half of it If you want gold, come after it Ask the own ers of tho Bed Boy if it Is here. The time is not far past) when they were poor men. By dint of toll and perseverance, little b'y little they dug tho gold out As they were able they put In machinery sold no stock; asked nobody for help. Today they have the most complete plant in the West From the mountain to the bank, 100 per cent of what the ore con tains, is the way they spell success. They have refused $1,000,000 for the property. One hundred thousand dollars net cash to each owner Is said to bo tho present result. Gentlemen, this Is no fairy story, nor is this the only property. By locating and purchasing property In the mines. Portland will not only share with the rest of the world In the rich harvest of gold from the ore, but there will be established between her people and tho miners a feeling of kinship which will readjust the trade relations now so sadly strained. Generations will be born, grow old and pas3 away before the mlll3 will cease to separate the gold from the rock In Eastern Oregon. No one more than the native and adopted sons of Portland Is entitled to the benefits. Gold Fields Tiot Surpassed. Oregon's gold fields are not surpassed In the world. This Is true both as to slzo and richness. There are a few things worthy of the careful consideration df every Individual, In any way Interested In mining. Dr. Wheeler, of Baker City, says he has made 1000 assays In the Cable Cove district and that the average of all these assays Is $14 per ton. Here are two fact3 that should be weighed side by side: First, In the min eral belt of Eastern Oregon there are no less than 1000 quartz locations, on which sufficient development work has been done to show good values; second. In no case where a gold-bearing ledge has been un covered and properly developed has there been a failure, so far as reported. In Rye valley and Mormon basin, near Humboldt, where prospecting has been done for 26 yeara and holes sunk a few feet and abandoned, recent developments have shown great mineral wealth. The known mineral belt ha3 been enlarged from time to time, till It now extends a dlstanceof 200 miles north and south along Snake river and 200 miles west from that river, narrowing to a width of GO miles on the Prlneville meridian. It will be a salient point in making an estimate of the enormous wealth of this country to note the value and extent of one below the water line. So far, estimates have been based almost entirely upon ore above the base line of the mountain ranges. So ap parent has become this error and so great the values below this line, that experts are beginning to doubt the Correctness of the tneory that ore necessarily becomes base below the water line. Whichever way this may In future be decided, the fact re mains that no one has yet-gone far enough down to find bottom, and the old miner contends that It goes to the hot belt It may be pertinent to remark that nothing short of "hot" will halt the operations. Transportation From Snmpter. For the benefit of persons having in mind a trip to the mines in Sumnter dls trlot I give below a list of towns and some of the producing mines reached from Sumpter by stage dally: Miles-.! Miles. Canyon City 65jColumb!a mine T jonn uay tuixsorin .foie mm.. .3ft Prairie City 52North Polo mine... 8 Bourne 7Couger mine IS Granite ., 14 Ibex mine .7 Red Boy mine lSiRIchmond Co 20 Bonanza mine ISiMay Queen mlne.,18 Don Juan mine.... 18 Austin (about) 30 Golconda mine..... 83usanvillo ...00 Clifford -13 The xoads to all these polnt3 are ex ceptionally good for a new and mountain ous country. A mid-summer trip up these canyons and over the mountains is one that a visitor will never forget The To-ivn of Sumpter. Wherever gold Is known and people run to seek It, Sumpter has been heard of. It Is known as the mining camp that has grown to be a town, and is growing to b a city. From 300 to 2000 In one year Is the record. Sumpter stand3 In the east ern gateway to the mountains, where lie the Tlchest mines In Oregon, and defies the world to pass Into the treasure vaults of the west half of Baker county and Grant county without getting a taste of Sumpter life. Men who have been through all the mining camps of the West say none of them has equaled Sumpter In the number of substantial, well - equipped buildings for the accommodation of the public While the rush has been great, the people have been provided with all the necessities at moderate cost The only scarcity has been in. the line of rooms. irrrA knnwl hnlnv "Vlllni1nnt 1!VftrV kind of mercantile establishment is represented with complete, well-assorted stocks. C. S. Warren predicts that Sumpter, Granite and Bourne wflT be connected by electric cars bef,ore 1900 closes, and what the general predicts, he tries to bring to pass. The accomplishment of this project would be a world-beater, but would be In keeping with other things done away up here In the mountains. Smelter. In discussing this question every one has his own opinion, or is Indifferent, and bat very few agree. Those Interested agree on different lines. Each locality clalm'ng a district of Its own wants a smelter for Its own use, or Is more selfish,, and wants everybody to bring ore to it, Sumpter wants one of Its own. and Granite will likely organize a chamner of commerce and demand the same. Baker City, C course, thinks everybody ought to get o-; of her way on that proposition, and Porr land thinks she ought to have one. So H goes. There la no better natural location In the world for the right kind of smelter thanPortland. Why? Because within a few miles of town she has an abundance of Iron for fluxing. Lime also Is available at low prices. She has water-grade trans portation from the Coeur d'Alenes for lead ores. The Coeur d'Alenes and mines around Lewiston would pay tribute to her rather than cross the mountains. Southern Oregon is also full of dry ores. Bohemia district, Molalla. Blue river, Skamania, Cornucopia, Malheur and Burnt river districts all have smelting ores. Tho entire Eastern Oregon mineral belt, second to none In the world as to size and rich ness; also Wood river. In Idaho, with lead; Mineral City with copper and silver, Seven Devils with copper and gold, couid and should all be made tributary to Portland. Ship3 from Alaska should bring back ores and concentrates. All this, with the devel opments in Eastern Oregon In the next five years, should make the shipments ot ore3 amount to more than all other prod ucts combined at the present time. A good, long look ahead will see another century mark before the ore3 will be ex hausted. The benefit of the right kind of smelter, with the spirit of genius to start It, will mean more to Portland and the state than it has entered the mind of any one to conceive. Transportation. Granting that It has been proved that Eastern Oregon Li rich In mineral re sources to an extent heretofore undreamed of. that capital is interested to the extent of millions of dollars In- Its early develop ment. It remains to bo seen what provis ion la to bo- made for handling not only the Immense freights following the open ing up of the mines and the building ot towns, but also the traveling public, who will wish to see for themselves what oth ers talk about so much. At present th's great territory of nearly 30,000 square mllea has only 103 miles of railroad, covering only that portion easiest of access, leaving tho heavy machinery and all classes of freights and passengers to be transported by slow and laborious processes over th greater part of the country. The cost o! transportation alone, from the nearest railroad stations, attended with so much risk and labor, la an item that only th wealthy can look at with complacency. The necessity for rail connection with the outside world Is undebatable. The fea. slblllty of It from tho standpoint ot profit to the railway company Is not very doubt ful. What the existing companies think about it Is not made public, but tho peoplo are guesslcg. Various rumors are afloat Here are some of them, with suggestions thrown In gratis: The Northern Paciflo is said to have made a reconnoissance from Pendleton to Granite. They would rea-h that country through the Hunt system. They could go up OUva creek through gocd pine lands, crossing the divide to Prairie City or Canyon City. The Southern Pacific contemplates build ing into the Klamath lake country, along the baso of the Cascades, to the Deschutea river. Thla would take them through what Is- said to be tho finest body of su gar pine In the world. This alone as a simple, single-handed deal would ope,a up business enough to pay for the enterprise, to say nothing of minerals and the conse quent travel. From the Deschutes river to Prlneville they would have tributary to the line largo pine forests. From Prlne ville they could run by Canyon City into the heart of the mineral belt It they chose to divert at John Day they could go north through the heart of the mineral belt, and make Pendleton, in the wheat The Columbia Southern might extend from Moro by Antelope up the John Day to North Fork, whence it could follow both forks, where a road la In demand. Before helping a smelter proposition Iho peoplo of Oregon should be sure It will have the favor ot a road. It Is gratifying to note that since Mr. Mohler has been president of the O R. & N the mines of Eastern Oregon hava received more attention than for yeara. It would seem to a disinterested person that the O. R. & N. Is the road most in terested In holding this territory, and the one most likely to hold within the state the most of the product of the mines. As I said before, we are all guessing. I see one person has guessed that the Sumpter Valley people are likely to extend to Bourne or over to Granite. I have pretty good authority for the statement that they are not thinking Of such a thing. Their specialty Is timber and they will build Into the forests, but not likely into tho mines. But that a road will be built for tho accommodation of mineral Ore gon is certain. If mining- interests aru forced to do it Baker City. The county seat of Baker county la situ ated on the Oregon Railroad & Naviga tion Company's main line, in the Powder river valley. The location Is an excep tionally good one. In the very midst of rich pasture lands, she la also surrounded on all sides by rich minerals which are primarily in her district. As new towns spring up, each demanding a district It Its own name, the mountain ranges wl l become the natural dividing lines. Baker Is ready to be sponsor for all of theTi, and wishes them all well. This city Is en Joying a strong, steady pull ot prosperity. Every line of business Is doing well ard the population Is increasing. The popu lation at the present time Is more than 7000, and will reach the 10,000-mark In 1300. In that part of Baker district extending In a northwesterly direction from th city, following the summit of the moun tain range, are some very rich proer- rtles, including the Robbins. Baisley ard Denny groups, Gopher, Badger, Tom Payne, Toung American, the Nelson. Car penter. Never Sweat and many others that will come to the front In another year. A ' few miles eajt Is the Virtue district. In which Is a large number of vauab.e claims, locations having been made a.l over township 9, and extending over the spur- of mountains Into township 10, near Pleasant Valley. About 15 miles south of this district Is a rich placer and quarts country, which is just coming to the front W. S, Newbury, of Portland, has many good things- to say about Mormon bflln,