The Sumpter miner. (Sumpter, Or.) 1899-1905, January 02, 1901, Page 2, Image 2

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    THE SUMPTER MINER
Wednesday, January 2. 190
OFFICERS
President
JOHN J. I'l-NHAI.!:,
(Cmi. Mer. Hunker Hill (inlj SnK (.)
SUMI'llW, OlIMiON
AI.HI-KT Gl:ISI:N,
Vice-President
(I'fulJrrl (Jllfrti. Itank)
IIAKI.H LltV
l:UOI:NI: Sl'liKKY,
R. C. Pl-NTI.AND,
Treasurer
Secretary
Grizzly Gold
Mining Company
Capital $500,000
In 1,000,000 shares of the
par value of Fifty Cents
Bach. Treasury Stock
400,000 shares.
FULL PAID AND NON-ASSESSABLE
OPPORTUNITY
-b T"""""f Stock at TEN CENTS Per Ihirn
CASH BASIS All Cash Purchasers Eecerve a DitcctLt ci Ii I
Cent on the Investment.
INSTALLMENT BASIS Purchasers May Secure Stock in Blocks
of 1000 Shares and Upwards, Payable 10 Per Cent Down and 10
Per Cent Each Month Until Paid.
u
L.Y STOCK
Affords an opportunity for profitable investment that cannot be equaled in the Sumpter District. The mine is now
Iwlnn actively operated and has reached a degree of development practically assuring the stability of the mine.
The ledge, carrying high values in gold, copper and silver, is over 40 feet in width. Work is being rapidly pushed,
tunneillng and sinking on the ledge, blocking out ore and adding to the pay dumps, and it may be expected that
the mine will be a producer and the company a dividend payer at an early date. Every dollar realized by the
company from the sale of treasury stock is being used for improving the property. The sale of stock will be con
tinued until the mine is a producer,. As development progresses the price of stock will be advanced.
Secure this stock now at 10 cents. That it will be worth its par value within 12 months is a conservate es
timate. Subscriptions for stock may be sent to the company direct, or to the First Bank cf Sumpter, Sumpter, Ore.
For Prospectus and Further Information, address,
91CFC9JCNCC9! F(t flNn or 8umiiir Sumimim, One,
Ctrtft I1n Bnin Cirv Oxiqon
Grizzly Gold Mining Co., Sumpter, Ore.
TO PROSPECT A CLAIM.
la tunnel Is far more economical than per-
I forming that work with surface pumping
I plants. Scientific Press.
Sink on Outcropping! After Running I
! Hopeful View of Mining Interests.
A prominent mining man said to a Dem
ocrat representative yesterday: "There
is no question that more mining proper
ties are tied up at present by options and
bonds than ever before at one time. You
see, most all the options given tile past
two months e.pire in January. Of
course an option or bond doesn't always
I ine.in a sale liv .1 liinu unvs. hut I nrr.
After the vein has been projected by diet that more than the usual percentage
the foregoing mentioned methods hi at ()f msc rkisiu, vvi l)c a .R0,. rhc dis.
least four dlffeieut points, assays of lhe lrl, k more w,jfiv known, jiiiI while a
rock will show whether the vein grows . L. ,u ........ ...... . llllllh, ,,. ,.,
7 r- .". ......, ..... 1
Open Cuts.
A veteran prospector's advice to loca
tors of mining claims is to follow the vein
by sinking Incline shafts on the outcrop
plugs In at least (our places along Its
course, after running open cuts at inter
vals to determine whether the vein is con
tinuous and holds out in hieadth and
value n few feet below the surface.
richer In one direction or tattle-, uniform
values. I'heie Is no other way by which
the ground i.in be shown up mi thorough
ry and the ore taken out will often go a
long way toward paying expenses. Even
if the ore Is not ikli enough to pay tor
shipment, it is always evidence of the
value of the rock in the vein and is a tan
gible, self-evident thing to show a pros
pective Investor. Again, shatts, vertical
r incline, tint follow the vein, will show
any 'lunges in the ore and give a large
amount In sight.
Muis, four shatts 50 teet deep down in
t ledge lour feet wide would expose itVSo
uuare feet on the vein. A tunnel driven
.'00 te't through rock to cut the vein
would espose but the section the height
and width of the tunnel, say 100 feet
year's work ha proven its permanency.
Then, there are some big properties the
gilt edge producers of the district tied up
at fabulous prices, to be sure, and mark
inv prediction, some of them will change
hands. All this will be a great advertise
ment of our gold fields, but the sales
which will benetit the general community
most will be ne properties, now mere
prospect:,, but which by application of
outsidecapit.il will rapidly develop into
dividend paying mines. There are scores
ol Mkh propositions In the district and
some ol them are receiving attention,
livery mining operator knows by e.xperi
nice that it is next to Impossible to turn a
uoperty just betore or during the holi
days. You can get capital to study over
1 the proposition, but you must wait until
two o'clock Christmas morning and will
remain in Pendleton for the remainder of
the winter. He states that the Buffalo, of
which R. T. Cox Is lessee, struck the
ledge on Thursday ot last week and Is
now in six feet of ore. Nearly twenty
thousand dollars of Pendleton money has
! been sunk In the Buffalo, it formerly hav
ing been owned by ten men in Pendleton.
I Portland parties now own it. The sped
mens brought from the Buffalo by Mr.
Parmeutier are ricli in gold and silver and
indicate that the property will be a pro
ducer of great value. Mr. Parmeutier has
J three claims adjoining the Buffalo, as fol-
1 lews: Washington, California and En-
j couragement. They lie at the head of
Chipman gulch and Granite creek, five
; miles from Granite City, Grant county.
1 Kast OreRonlan.
J SYSTEM OF CAVE MINING.
1
Valuable for Its Cheapness, So That Low
Grade Ores Can Be Worked.
The adoption of the new system of cave
mining by the Miner-Graves syndicate in
, the operation of the Knob Hill mine marks
, an important advance in mining operations
in the Northwest. The cave system was
first employed in the immense bodies of
low grade ores of the great Mercur mine,
I In southern Utah, and Its success there
has resulted In its adoption for mining the
I somewhat similar deposits of tiie Bonn-
I dary district.
The cave system Is chiefly valuable for
its cheapness. It enables the mining of
a grade of ore that under the ordinary
system would be too low to handle. It
'consists in blocking out a large area of
tore and then quarrying the whole block
1 upwards, using only timbering enough to
keep the ground In condition for safe min
ing till the surface of (lie pay ore is , Clerk McHaley to a gentleman whose
reached. Then, when the area is mined j business it is to care for the frolicsome
out the temporary timbering is blasted out lambs that gambol o'er the bunchgrass
and the whole coveting of drift and roof ' hills of Grant county, and he left our city
rock Is allowed to fall in. The same sys- in high glee at the prospect of .taking
tern is employed until the whole area of to himself, as soon as the services
the deposit e.xcept that around the shaft is of the proper functionary could be pro
cleaned out, and then the same process is cured, one of the fairest of Grant county's
taken to a lower level. majs. Imagine his consternation when
1 nr wujri.iiiMi.iiMc ic.iuHCs ni 111c svs-
Who Stole This Bride?
A license was recently given by County
'I'............ I..... ...... .I.Uil..,. ' ' ' '
s,,w.r. ,,.vs,-,.sC., ,..,KC ...t., u N the holiday rush is over to consummate
must be done, and such drills can be run )e dwi Therefore nMry M xUe op.
with better discrimination at the foot of ,01)! ,:,(fI) the fall end in January or
.1 shaft that h is followed the ore. , :cbruary know of a luimber of dral.
If Indications of water are found in ,ul arc a sure go ne.xt month, and when
sinking, and the prospecting of the vein, j 0,ce ,he ,,., ,. sta,n, ,ool ou, for
as described, deinonstratesth.it its value 1 j,,, The yeJr g0 w), be U)e
warrants the outlay In labor, and the ,, ,,ros,,frm,s y(.;ir for niInK ,hat ,lc
ground is situated so tint the water can ,..,Mem Oregon gold fields have ever e.x-
lie uraiueu 10 a orpin 01 zoo or joo teei oy
tunneling, then the latter Is advisable, as
it is obvious that draining a mine through
1 tern seems to be the extra hazard to mil)
ers from caving rock, and the dangerous
condition the surface Is left hi, but to off
set this, it is claimed the possibility of
using up all the ore and of working In a
large way and at a very low cost makes
the system valuable, lo the Immense
he had hied himself to the home of his
fair inamorata to find that she had been
spirited away. Whether the young
lady had been kidnapped, or induced
through the influence of friends to fly
the track, the fact remains that at last
perlenced. Democrat.
Never fails Giant powder.
areas of low grade ores In Phoenix camp accounts (so says rumor) she had disap
rXJXhy If flowed up
has hitherto been 'so limited, however.that 1 v an, eart1u;,l. and the would-be bene
the results will be watched with interest diet is wavering between scalping the
by mining men throughout the world. j young lady's abductor or taking the sul
Spokesman-Review. cJe-s route ,0 that bourne from whence
no traveler ever returns."
Six feet ot Ore in the Buffalo.
Peter Parmentier, the veteran mining
man, arrived home from Grant county at
"Such is life
In the far west, and the tail of the sarplnt
hangs over us all." Grant County
News.
y