THE SUMPTER MINER. VOL i. SUMPTER, OREGON, FEBRUARY 28, 1900. NO. 25. A RICH MINES NEAR TOWN. FIRST LEDGE OF THE STORM KING TAPPED. In Eight Feet of Ore and No Walls Yt in Sight.-Rock Carries $150 Values in Gold. Two Other Ledges Beyond Will Be Cut By Tunnel. Another Promis ing Property Two Miles From Town, on Cracker Creek Road. Many Strikes in the Immediate Vicinity of Sumpter. Alauager Atark E. Gallimore, of the Sumpter Free UiIJ Alining company, which is operating the Storm King group, three miles northwest ol town, reports that Sunday night the first ledge was tapped in the tunnel, 250 feet from its mouth and at a djpth of S3 feet. Assays give 5150 in gold. Monday night the miners had driven eight feet Into the ore, with no wall then in sight. The Intention of the company is to con tinue driving the tunnel, without drifting, as two other ledge lie beyond, one at a depth of about 100 feet and the other 250 feet. Judge li. C. Stetfen and others liavc secured several claims two miles Irom town on the Cracker creek rotd, knu,vii as the Haitimorc group, on which they have been prospecting lecently with ap parent t good results. It is claimed that a well defined ledge of good quart, has been uncovereJ, carrying gold and silver, the widtli of which is eight to ten feet be tween walls, Both tile Bourne and Gran ite roads for several miles are becoming the scene of busy mining camps and will present a lively appearance to travelers this summer. Every day strikes of more or less im portance in tile immediate vicinity of Sumpter are being reported. Until six or eight months ago little or no prospecting was done In the surrounding hills. It is tile traditional custom of prospectors to hover around proven properties; to seek to get something (for sale) on the same ledge witli some well known mine, and so, for years they have been delving in the vicinity of the Golconda, the Bo nanza, the Ned Hoy and other localities where ricli ore deposits had been uncov ered, neglecting equally as rich but un touched districts. Now, however, it is a sure thing that the near by hills will be searched and forced to give up their hid den treasures. Ibex Reverts to Original Owners. The Ibex mine has reverteJ to the orig inal owners, who are only too pleased to have tills opporturity to regain control of one of the richest mines in the country. It is not likely anyone will again have a chance at the Ibex for a sum short of seven figures, the owners knowing well what they have at present and what it Is reasonable to expect in future. Work has never stopped tor an hour and u ill now be pushed harder than ever, with S. Chapman at the helm, though A. L. Mo Ewen will be associated with him. Larger pumps will be at ence added and a mill erected an an early day. Braun Homestead Contest Case. Register Bartlett, of the La Grande land office, was hi Sumpter for a few hours Monday, returning home on the 12:45 train,, .rje came upto look, after the Brau.n I homestead contest case. Attorney C. E. I Roblin was appointed to take the test! I mony. The land Involved Is near town, 1 J. V. Braun seeking to prove up on it as 1 a homestead, while R. C. Bishop, J. A. j Harvey and John Keetscli are contesting this proof as mineral land claimants. The I case has been in progress for two days, , and will probably not be finished before I tomorrow, when the testimony will be 1 forwarded to the United States land oltice for review. 1 Noted Mining Expert Here. I Dr. Alnnmilllau Schumann, a noted mining expert of vast experience, is en gaged in making a thorough Investigation jof tlie mineral districts tributary to Sump- ter, for tlie benefit of outside capitalists, I whom he declines to name. He has re 'cently returned Irom a stay in Al jaska, on the same mission that brings , him here, but says that from what he has I thus far seen of this mineral district, it ' eclipses any other he has ever visited or ' known. Dr. Schumann promises to give ills Ideas for publication when he lias more hilly gone over the ground. Buying Diadem Stock by Wire. I General Warren has received telegraph ; ic orders during the past few days for 1 100,000 shares of Diadem stock. Yester .day Waltsburg, Washington, parties 1 wired for 50,000 shares. Some days since the General olfered to give a gentleman 1 from that town S100 if he could lind a . piece ol rock in a lot of about 200 pounds 1 that would carry less than fioo in gold. ' He picked his specimen and had the as jsay made out of town, but didn't get an I opportunity to see the color of General ' Warren's hundred hence this large order I from Waitsburg. Machinery For the Bald Mountain. H. S. McCalluin, president of the Haid Mountain Mining company, reached Sumpter yesterday from Boston, where he went to finance the affairs of his company. He reports having met with gratifying success Willie east he bought motive power, and hoisting and pumping machin ery for tlie mine, which is expected to reach here today. It wiil be transported to tlie property at once and installed with out delay. The Bald Mountain adjoins tlie Ibex. Another Big Gold Strike. Evidently another Red Boy has been discovered, bam Wilson, who a few mouths ago was staked by Idaho parties, uas opeueu up a new wnuuer one nine this side of the Red Boy mine. A 100 foot tunnel followed a water course Into the slate. The whole breast of the tun nel is in ore that runs from X7 to J78 In gold per too. No cross cutting has been j done, but the ore is there and hi sight. Accident at the Golconda. u. a. Mnsey, a resident 01 bumpier, a j man well advanced in years, while cm j ployed in framing shaft timbers at the Golconda mine, was struck Monday by a falling ad 011 the back of the head, which I cut soveral arteries. Dr. I'e.irce was called just in time to save the man from bleeding to death. Mr. Kinsey is thought to be out of danger now. Demand For Buck Gulch Mine. 1 George C. Cunningham, night clerk at the Capital hotel, who with others re cently located three claims in Bucli gulch, near the scene of tlie late strike on the Co operative company's property, has given a f 5000 bond on his holdings to A. VVal ker, secretary-treasurer of the Co-Operative Gold Mining company. Boys' and girls' school shoes that will wear well and are neat and dressy. Hob sort Mercantile Co, RICH COPPER STRIKE. Four Miles Away and Looks Like a Bonanza. ' According to all reports, Sumpter is to enter the field as a cooper producer, as well as a part of the greatest gold belt 011 the face of the earth. The incorporation of the Co-Operative Gold Alining company a lew davs ago did not create anv particular comment, as the organization of new mining companies is now an almost daily occurence In Sump ter ; but since this new company has ! taken up a group ol seven claims near the j Granite road, about tour miles Irom town, laud commenced work upon them, witli tlie result that from the very grass toots there has been found w hat reliable assay ers say is the making of a big copper mine, there has been created more talk and wonder than perhaps over any other new "find" in the recent history of the camp. This, because, if there are really good copper s'alues hi our ores, added to , those In gold ami silver, which have al ready been proven, then the supremacy of ! the Sumpter district over all others Is es tablished. I he present claims of the pro moters of this new company at this time are about as lollews: They have at a depth of 22 leet a shall, in tlie bottom ol which assays now run 18 per cent copper, 1.01 in silver, and 45 1 cents in gold, and an average lot of sain I pies taken Irom eight feet across the vein gave J)5 In tlie three metals. A force of fourteen men Is employed, , surveying the claims for a patent, putting up buildings, cutting road' and sinking, I by which latter method the property Is to be developed, (hough it Is said 175 feel of depth can be obtained by means of a tun . uel, which will be driven on the vein, if 'water becomes troublesome when the loo foot level Is reached. ' It is claimed that sixteen sacks of picked ore per day can be taken from the grass roots, and that by the end of next week a carload will be ready for shipment to tlie Tacumn smelter. 1 The ore Is a copper carbonate, with bromide of silver, and so closely resembles Iron that 110 one had thought to assay it for copper. As soon as the buildings are completed, or about the end of this week, three eight-hour shifts will be employed on the property, and room made for a larger force of miners as rapidly as possi ble. B. T. Hickman, who has had fourteen years experience hi the copper mines of Montana, has been engaged as superin tendent, and will aid the new company in making what it hopes to be some day one of the big mines of the district. Mr. Hickman Is very enthusiastic, and says that It is the best copper showing at this stage he has ever seen. The directors of the Co-Operatlve com pany are nearly all local men, engaged In business in Sumpter. A. P. Goss Is pres ident; C. J. Johns, vice-president; A. Walker, secretary and treasurer, while A. E. Dagnnv and Thomas Kllpatrick com plete tlie list on the board. Offices have been engaged over the Hobson Mercantile company store, in the Bel view bulldling. At a meeting of the board of directors last night, A. Walker was elected general manager and Instructed to get out a car load of ore at once. Red Men's Dance and Donation. The net proceeds from the Washington Birthday dance gived by and under the auspices ol Engan Tribe No. 20, I. O. R. Al. for the benelit ot the school and tire department, was allotted at last evening council. Thirty dollars was I voted to the school. To the members ot j school board, teachers and scholars was 1 largely due the linanci.il success of the , ball. I'lie lire department w.is voted . 5i2 75. The piano which was rallied oil 'on this occasion, was won by AlNs Chailottc Vanderburg, one of the teach ers, from wliich the school realized fi.So. W. H. Hurlburt's Beat Advertising Scheme. I he following press dispatch from Port 1 land, dated the 24th instant, explains how the Colonel Douan letter, referred to In the editorial columns of this issue of I'M ! MINI-K, has received siuh wide circula circula teon: W. II. Ilurlburt, general passen ger agent of the Oregon Railroad Nav igation company, is just now receiving a dozen or more letters every day regarding the mines ot eastern Oregon. Some I weeks ago Mr. Ilurlburt sent letters to I several hundred newspapers located hi all parts of tlie country, describing the re j sources of Eastern Oregon, and returns 1 from the publication of the letters are now l coming in. Each letter Is answered by 'Mr. Ilurlburt. ; If You Want a Safe, Talk to C. G. Field. ! C. G. I'leld, leptesenllug the Herring I Hall-Marvin company, Hall's Safe V Lock 'works, direct Irom the factory at llamil I ton, Ohio, is in town for a few days, ' stopping at the ( ioldeu Eagle hotel. As ! every one knows, this is tlie world's i standard sale. The first Bank of Sump ter has this make. Safes sold by Mr. l-'leld Can be shipped either from the fac tory or from tne Pacific coast branch at Sau l-'ranclsco. If you are Interested in safes, talk to C.G. Eleld. One Man Here for His Health. I C. M. Coleman, a prominent attorney of Chicago, has been in town all week I and will have his oltice locally with the I Co-Operative Mining company, In the Belview building. Mr. Coleman came j west in search ot health and luids this j place and climate agree with him phys ically and luiaiiclally. Hand Blown Off by Giant Powder. J. T. Alessmer, a prospector from Salt Lake, had a portion of his left hand blown off by a part of a stick of giant powder, which he and another man were 1 thawing out. Dr. BroJ dressed the in- 'juied member ar.d Mr. Messmer left for home yesterday. Another Good Citizen For Sumpter. E. E. McCammou, recently from Saint Joseph, Missouri, has become a resident of Sumpjer, he having accepted the posi tion of chief accountant for W. L. Vin son. His wife will loin him here at an early date. Mr. McCammou comes to Similiter witli gilt-edge credentials. District School Election March 5. An annual school meeting' of dlstrkt No. 31, Sumpter, will be held on the at leriioou of Monday, the 5th day of M.irch, 1000, at 2:)o hi the public school house, which meeting Is called for the purpose of electing one director for three years, one for two years and one clerk for one year. A. O. U. W. Dance. Gold Quart Lodge, No. 90, A. O. U. W. will give a dance at Ellis opcm house' 011 the evening of March 17. A grand good time Is promised on this occasion, which Is for the social mid financial ben elit of the lodge. , The La Internuclonal (Mexican) cigar on sale only at the Mint saloon.