THE SUMPTER MINER. Wednefdfy, Ncverrter ?4. icto Capital $500,000 OPPICERS JOHN .1. I'1-NIIAI.I:, President i. (Crn. A1k'- HunWr lllll finlj ,Mng. Co.) SUMI'll'rf, Ul'HlOS AJ.IIIiKT fil:ISI:K, Vice-President (llifU.-rl(.llli'nlljnk) ' ' llAkiwLIIV Illini-NI: Sl'I.HRY, Treasurer II. C. I'liNri.ANI), Secretary Grizzly Gold Mining Company In 1,000,000 shares of the par value of Fifty Cents Each. Treasury Stock 400,000 shares. FULL PAID AND NON-ASSESSABLE I & Weekly Bulletin COPPER STRIKE. ' '" DEVELOPMENT. The body of copper ore encountered in the tunnel last week has been crossed and proves, .(b 'be eiuht feet wide and assays of this ore ive values of 16.00 to the ton. The tunnel work will be pushed. Tfoei sinking of the snaft has been commenced and will continue so as to thoroughly explore the ore body and. to iiuwease the dump of pay ore. . '' 'ulit,m - 4 To meet cost of development, the sales of Treasury Stock will continue at SIX CENTS per share, payable all cash, or on the install ment plan in twelve monthly payments. INSTALLMENT PLAN 2000 Shares at 6 cents per share : : : : : : : payable $ 10 down and $10 per mcnth until paid. Larger blocks of stock on pro rata scale. $120. ftEFCftCNCCV: fT or luNfm SuMPftn, One CmitM Iimh him Citf OntaN For Prospectus and Further Information, address, Grizzly Gold Mining Co., Sumpter, Ore. CHINESE COAL FIELDS. ConiUts of 159 Sour Mllri and 3,000,000, ..,. OJO Mlrlc Tom. It dors not require a very severe nor a vrty long lasting coal l.inilnr to advance the iuextlon of the exhaustion ef fuel sup ply, from a purely academic discussion to me of piessing economic import. nice. The present situ ttion in dreat Britain tilings the matter near enough home to lend a lightened interest to the description of the coal fields around I'se Chou, Shan-si, China, hy Noah l-'IclJ Drake, which was presented at the last Hireling of the Amer ican Institute of Mining Hnginrersand is printed In lis " Transactions." IhedMilit was lirst adequately exam ined hy Haron von Ulchtnlen In 1870, hut the antbforrlgu attitude of the Chinese government has shue pirvrnted develop ment, until now Its e.xploiatlou hy the IVUIn syndicate seems to l'e at hand, this lingllsh-ilallan company having coiues. slons to work the coil lields of Hie I se CI1011 region, as well as the Mi.in-sl lields, I he I se Chou coal area r.xamlord hy Mr. Drake lies about joo miles southwest by west fiom Shanghi, and shows a "mingling ol ridges, hills, narrow, rlevat rd valleys and tough tolling lauds." I he rock beds lie comparatively level, with some coiispkuous folding and faulting, giving narrow beds of eastward dipping strata and long west-nosthwest dipping areas, in whUh the dips are tarely greater than seven or eight degrees, and the aver age dip of the whole euthcrust block is probihly not more than one or two degrees; 22 to J) (eet is Riven as the probable aver age thickness of the mala workable I'se Chou coal bed, though Mr. Drake hid 110 opportunity to measure Its full thickness nor to examine it, except where it Is being mined. At one mine near IN Ta Yang, only the lower 10 feet to 12 feet Is being taken out thiough a shaft 329 feet deep. Mr. Drake was told by the Chinese min ers that the full thickness of the bed is 30 feet Chinese, ripi.il to jfi feet English. Parting streaks uf shaly coal are common, but no waste coal Is taken out, and the average ash is probably not higher than 10 per cent. In two mines a couple of miles northeast of I'se Chou, Mr. Drake saw coal beds from 17 feet to 23 feet thick, the latter being made up quite uuitorruly of a lower stratum of three feet of earthy, triable coal, 14 teet of hard, lirm, evenly good coal, one inch ol carbonaceous shale, and six Iret more of good coal. In a mine one and a half miles west of Ta Chi, where the Chinese miners said the bed had a thickness of 23(j feet, Mr. Drake saw the upper 15 feet only. The coal "is wonderfully bright and glossly throughout. It bteiks with a coiichold.il fracture, and is so tree from dust that It can often be handled without soiling the hands." The area mapped hv Mr. Drake, about i$o:quare inlles,contaiusahuut ),ooo,ooo, 000 metric tuns, supposing 22 feet to be the average thickness of the bed and 1.5 the average sprdlic gravity. And "It' must be lemeinbrred that this area is only a little of the lagged rdge ol the great coal lields ol shan si. Nlchlofeu es timated thai the anthracite coal alone of Shan-si amounts to 6jo,ooo,ooo,ooo tons, and that the coal erea of Shan-si is greater than that of Pennsylvania. " The Tse Chou coal is nil anthracite, hard enough to support any weight in the blast furnace, uniformly low in sulphur, and comparatively low in ash. 1 he limi tations to Chinese engineering ability are strikingly apparent In the methods of Tse Chou. I he coal Is dug, hoisted and transported without explosive or powder applications. Mining is done with pick and gad; the coal Is raised by a man power windlass, which In the larger mines may have a circumference of five feet; a crank at each end, with a long arm, allows four or five men to work at turning It. About )oo pounds of coal are hoisted at a time in baskets, f-rorn the foot of the shaft tunnels are run through the coal bed, and at Intervals large quantities of coal are taken out, leaving room about forty to fifty feet in diameter. Vrrv little coal is taken out through inclines, and none through tunnels, though in some cases a horizontal tunnel as long as the vertical shaft would cut the coal. "The output Is about 50,000 tons per annum from the Tse Chou area, and it is carried to its market, locally or on the plains 20 miles away, in little carts drawn by o.xeu, or, for more largely, by pack animals mules, donkeys and men. The trails are from 12 teet to 14 tret wide, and paved with stone. By ages of use these stones have been worn until (heir tops are smooth and spiral shape. Over these lough and steep trails there is during talr weather an almost continuous line ot pack animals passing to and fro, and most of these are employed in carrying coal." HugiiieeiingMagalne. Rocky Mountain Scenery By Day Light. , Day light stop over at Niagara Falls. Through lirst-class tourist sleeper from ' Pacific Coast weekly for Chicago, Boston, ' New York and other eastern points via . Klo Uraude Western (.ureal salt l.aice Route), Denver & Rio Grande, C. K. I. & P. and Illinois Central to Chicago, connecting in the Union Depot with Mich igan Central's similar car for points east. For full particulars call on or address, B. H. TRUMBULL, Com'l Agent Ills. Cent. R. R. 421 Third St., Portland, Oregon. POSSIBLY ' ' YOU ARE NOT AWARE OF THE FAST TIME AND SUPERB SERVICE NOW OFFRRI-D BY IHIi w 1 PICTO Wo Have Daily Fast Trains to till) EAST Your Winter's Wood. I have for sale several hundred cords of seasoned wood for immediate delivery. I also own and run the steam saw. Leave your orders In either case at Johns & Co.'s store for prompt attention. M. W. Sullivan, Sumpter, Oregon. If ynu cannot take tlio morning train. travel liy tliu uvuiiing train. Hotli are fully cqiiiiiiicd. OUUSPAClAIl'IKS KA8TTIMK Tiiuouiiiisintvicrc Tlimujrli I'alaco and Tourist Sleep ers. Dining Car ami Ilullett Library Cars. First-class Freu Kccliiiin; Chair Cars, Hours in time saved to Oinahn, Chicago, Kansas City, Now York, llostnu anil other Kastcru points. Tickets good via Salt Iikti City ami Denver. It is to your interest U use tlio Overland Koutc. Tickets ami sleeping ear berths cum lie secured from II. C. HOWKKS Agent O. It. & N. CO. Maker Citv, Oregon Or, J. H. LATIIKOl. Gcn'l Agt. 135 Thin! St., Portland, Ore. f