6 THE SUMPTER MINER. Wednesday, September 12, 1900 . v Strength For Weak Men Fay the word. Let me show you weat I have been show ing weak men for over a qu irter of a century the true road to health. The remedy 1 offer you will serve you faithfully with out danger. USE NO DRUGS During my early years of paactice I gave prescriptions to weak men. I know Better n nv. For thirty years I have been treating those peculiar ner ous symptoms which result from vouthful errors or later excesses, such as Drains, Impotency, Lame Back, Varicocele, etc. From so vast an experience I can usually offer men, single or married, valuable advice. Reader, I wish it was in my power to show every weak man what wonderful results I am getti lg from my famous appliance, the Dr. Sanden Electric Belt and suspensory attachment. It is a never failing restorer of streniith if used properly. You nuiv believe when I show you 6,000 unsolicited testi monials of absolute cures names and addresses received dur ing 1H99. This belt is the result of patient years of 'study. It developed from a portable chain battery I invented twenty-five vears ago. It has undergone many changes, until today in em bodies the best features of all electrical appliances, and constitu tes a perfect home self-treatment for men. It is really a porta Currents instantly felt, toough regulated to anvdegreeof strength while on the body by using regulator thumb screw. Worn all night. Soothes, strengthens, cures while you sleep. w? fir jlB ' 4i$M " ' ' COPYRIGHTED hie batter of $6 elements. Weight, six ounces. FREE BOOK! Wrilr for little bonk. "Three Clave of Mm," which explains .ill, and is sent in plain, se.ilrd envelope free, or if In or near Hits city, drop in anil consult nir free of charge. I give all correspond ence personal attention, I Jo as I say. Write or call today. DR. A. T Dipt. It. Rmtll lalldlni SANDEN, Portland, Or. ROCK CREEK DISTRICT. Much Development Work has Keen Done There This Season. A ureal deal of development work has Ivrii ilinir in the mines of the Hock vtcck ihstticl this summer, and it will not end with the advent ol whiter, as most ol the inhieiiu ners of that section are making .irungemeiits to push the work during the coming w inter, lolhat end, winter l natters are being made ready hi the way 01 new cabins, Hilling wood, and clearing mid. aluable property in close proximity to the Chloride. It is about seven teet wide ami runs from f j up on the surface, two or three feet on one wall averaging 58 per ton. It has been opened up in several places for a distance of several hundred feet. Democrat. JOHN DAY FOSSIL. Constitute Most Valuable Specimens in Cal ifornia University. ( , A number of valuable and interesting ; ( specimens of ancient Oregon animals are , being classified in the laboratories of the ' University of California, as the material gathered in the summer expedition to the Mountain of Mercury Last weel a number of fairy tales were John Day river fossil beds is being cut circulated around town about the way a j ut of the rock and examined. Professor great discovery of quicksilver was made j Jhn C. Merrlam, who conducted the ex out near Honana. The Oregonian cot , pedition, Is slowly bringing with mallet respondent condenses the story in this anit chisel some rare fossils out of the en- Hie Chloride, at present the most prom- j way: J. V. Herren reports the discovery , casing rock. iiirnt iniiir in the district, because the 'f mountain of cinnabar by two "tender- j Among them is the skull of a saber Ktcatest developed, is to have a lo-stamp leet" about live miles north of Honaua ( toothed tiger, a huge feline that in the mill More snow tiles. The timbers are ' "J east of the Honana and Granite j ancient geological days roamed about the Mug gotten nut at present and every , wagon road. The discovery was made ,hores of the great lake that covered east thing put in readiness to place the ma- several weeks ago, but the country Is so ! rm Oregon before the lava flowed in and ninety as soon as it anives. It Is under-, covered with fallen timber as to render it MimJ th il the mill has already been or tiered. I he Chloride has about two feet of high gr.ide ore. The prospect ol the building of the mill on the Chlotide property lias greatly en loirageJ (he small mineowner; the man who h is taken out a ft w tons of rich ore almost inaccessible. Mr. Herren, in des cribing it, stated there was a mountain ol It, and it was of various shades. The material carries gold and silver in addition to the quicksilver. It is stated this was located In the early 'oos, but the locators could never Hud it again, and the present and needs money to further develop his owners fell onto it in trying to get through rl.iim-and there are many such in that the heavy fall of timber. sci Immi lot he sees In it a hope to have lus little "baUh" milled and thus be Professor Holland, the New Principal, furnished with the "sinews of war."1 J. P. Holland, newly elected principal Those who are acquainted with the ore f the Sumpter public schools, arrived In uJies in the Chloride, however, say it town last week. He Is an affable gentle- buried the country. The saber-toothed tiger was one of the largest and most powerful llesh-eaters of that period. No animals of Its kind are in existence at the present time, and as its remains are ex tremely rare even in the John I ay river beds, Dr. Merriam regards his tinJ as a fossil treasure. It was found on the north fork of the river near the town of Moiuim-nt. ' Another valuable species of which Dr. Merriam's party was fortunate enough to find several Is the paracotylops. It has no more modern name, as there is no liv-! inc animal that represents it. The nam- uill or a long time before a io-statiip mill ' man who Impresses the close observer as cotylops, which thus stands in a class by mii rail, or ore from the outside; that it Is ne with a whole lot of good, common mote likely that an additional to stamps senBC. He has had sixteen years expert- The Literary Digest Itvued Weekly )t Pages Illustrated "All th, Pirlodleili In On," Til" l.lTHtW 1)101 st tn taken the Men! rank .is a weekly review ol currrnt thought at home and jbmij, In the realm of literature, art, science, religion, politic, tnclology, travel, dis covert butiness, etc, Plttcusslon anj informa tion mi all ldes nt Important question are given. The content eakh week cover a held sodiveriihed as to make Tut LlTLlMkr Diglst Indispensable to the busy man who desires to keep up with the thought ol the lime, but who lacks the leisure tor such a lak. OPINIONS rROM tUTHOHITIlS t. P. Pawsll, 0. 0., In Unity, Chicago "Tun LinuikV Dic.tiT it an absolute necessity to those who would keep In line with the progress At thought and achievement. I Jo not see how anv thinking man can gel Along without It." daia Mirtkim, Author of " The Man With the Mne" "The Litivauy Digi-st Is one of the two or three mot valuable journals that com to mv table. (Sinttor Mn J. Inilli: "The liTtmkv Dlil.sT enlarge the boundaries of Intelligence." SiMttr William P. rry: "It will afford Iro-. mene alt.ince to the scholar ol the country." Con. Jinn P. alttld, ill Illinois. "The LlTtu U1 Dltit T Is one ol the very best publications In America to a student ol current literature It it Invaluable. 10 Ciatl ptr Copy. $J,00 ft Y,r Stud for Oitctlptl,, Circular. FUNK I WaCNUlS. Ptklliktri. NtW YOtt. itself, was a strange hoofed creature allied to the hippopotamus and yet standing ....hav. to be supplied to keep out of the ence in teaching since graduating from'IKheVK . U. Its " way of the miners when once sloping is the Kansas state normal school, ten years mains form one of the mot characteristic begun. However, the successful opera- 0f which were spent In Oregon. He , fossils of the upper John Day beds. The lion o( a mill Ihere will add new life to the comes here from Eugene, where he taught ull secured, when freed from the stir-1 GEO u iitsie Ulsmct. for . vrrai lerms. His famllv w ill conic l'1! '" " 7. '.V ". '".:,. ":.". ' ' L .""", - siciiiiii-9 in iiic ua3c?siuii ui iiic uut-1 to sumpter wnen ne secures a nouse. i verslty General Brass and Iron Founders and Machinists. Baker City Iron Works .li-rf- li.iltlv It ifntiiv divlnntniit unrb ' i on j promising property near the Chlor-1 iiic. mr. natsiey lias Held interests in that section for several years and has shmm his faith by his work. Walter Meade and others, also own a Saddle and Bridle for Sale. In good condition and offered cheap. Apply at THU MINER office. All of them are of great age and have laid for uncounted centuries buried under beds of sediment and lava thousands of feet in thickness. Press dispatch from Berkley, California. F. MCLYNN, Proprietor :::::: Special attention i:t to repairin and rebuildin all kinds of machinery. Baker CitV. Telephone Red 161 S5