THE SUMPTER MINER Wtidrtesd'av, Novembei ii, :i&i 8 ACTIVITY IN MORMON BASIN Mines Being Opened And Stamp Mills Installed. Up Judge Newbury, who has just returned from Mormon liaiiln-, says tbat ho found the owners of prope rties in that district generally ut work developing them. At the Tarball property, on tho south aide near the lower end oi tho liaelu, the llostou company who purchaited it the lust week in August for 150,000, have a force of men at work and an engineer in charge. It baa already erected good bunk mid mess hoiiBos ud ottlco, with water in nil, broiiKbt from h big spring oil tho mountaiu wide; h timbered Mhaft house with eight inohoH Miiaro unwed timber and a heavy hoist. It la raid that machinery ia on the way for u ten- amp mill. Tula proporty la near tho mill of tho Humboldt group, owned by Coatua iirothora of San liernardiuo. Culifornlii, who also own the Kiiuday Hill group, ut tho head of the liuslu, thoy iiltio own aomo of tho plncor ground and the water dltohea In the IIiihIii. Ho wont to oxamliio tho Morning Htar group, which ia on the north aide of the Hulsn and near the aummit of the mouutalu. Tho work has beuu oompletMl for this your. Tho under gouud workiugH am well timbered with tawed timbera. They havo over 400 feet of uudritrgouud work, 100 of which la a ahaft. Four lodgoa Imvo been opened ud tho voina curry good vhIiioh. Thore ia n sawmill one and n half uiIIoh from the mine, with good tlmlwr and u good road from mill to mine, where timber can Ut delivered for twelvo dollara n thousand and wood for three dollara a cord. If Judiciously doveluped there will be it mine there that will be a large and rich one. One mile cant of thin the California Commercial Mining company, of Port laud, W. K. King, mauager, la beiug developed and ore la beiug takeu out for milling. The adjoining property, owned by the Oregon City oompauv, Peter Will manager, la being worked. The Rainbow, adjoining 'the two last named proportion, owned br Head and Oouley, la being worked continuously aud their ore hauled two miles to the llolden (late mill, on Dixie creek. They are operating thia mill ulght aud day. He waa Informed by the operator that it produced fifty dollara to the ton. To the northwest of the Morning Htar several proportion are beiug developed, among them tho Hold Kldge mlue, which, he waa Informed by freighters, had hauled ten tons of coal per day for forty days from Durkee, and are awaiting another shipment, it beiug cheaper than wood. Tim re are four good roads from all direct I ons to the llaslu, from Durkee, Huutiuglou, Miilhour mid ilridgoport. As extensive aud judicious de velopment proceeds, the Mormon llaslu district will bo rcoogulzed us h rich mlnerul section aud is nl ready attractiug the atteutlou of mlue in vestors. It Is reached by the new aud old wagou road from Sumpter via MoEwton to Hereford, Bridgeport and Clarka creek, distance sixty miles. From Durkee on the O. R. AN., by way of Rye Valley, it fa twenty miles. OLD" BLUE flWMr STORY REVIVED. History records the fact that gold wis first discovered on the Paclflo Coast by John Marshall, at Butter's Mill, In what la now 1 Dorado county, California, In 1848. As a matter of fact, gold was found by an old emigrant train on the old Steve Meek's cut-off, in Crook or Harney county, in eastern Oregon, between the Malheur and Deschutes rivers In 1855. This fact can be yet sufficiently attested by living wit nesses. In giving mr vorslnn of the Hlue llucket diggings, us tbey are fami liarly called, I will explain how it rnmo to me aad "by whom. My grnadfatber and his family were In tho wagon train that broke the trail afterward known us Meek's cut off. My father was ut that time u boy fourteen years of age. Ho told me tbo full particulars in u different country, having removed from Oregon in 1800. It was not the train bo whh in thut found tbo gold, but the one following them, and bo repeated to mo from memory tho story as told at tho tlmo. being unmixed with tho version of modorn years. Tho train encamped on u small stream somewhere along the rim of Harney basin, there being hills to the uorthward aud tbo level stretch of the desert to the south. A freshet bad sluiced out the gulch leaving! tbo bedrock bare. A lady passing over this bare bedrock picked up some yellow pieces of metal and came into camp, carrylug it iu ber apron and calling atteution to It. No one soemed to know what It waa aud when asked how much of tho metal she could havo picked up had she wished, she pointed to u woodon water bucket puluted blue aud replied title thought, she could have picked up tho bucket full In a little whllo; hence the name given thia lost mine, "the llluo llucket Digg ings." The auggestlon made by someone that It might be gold brought the wle men to the fore. He ia ever with us, fend It Is upon those special ocoaaioua that be is wont to exhibit his marvelous wMan. H explajped that goM'and stiver were the only metal,'vtiat had ft natural ring 'to them (he bad evidently forgotten that It was the alloy in the coin tbat gave It the "rlug,,) He forthwith hammered a piece out flat on the wagon tire and tested It for the ring. As It would not ring, be promptly pronounced It brass, (he bad alio evidently forgotten that brass waa not a aneclHo metal, but composition) hence sometime called the Wagon Tire Diggings. Somo of this glod fouud its way Into tho Willamette valley, beiug preserved as curios, but It was not until later the discover of gold iu Cttltloruiu thut those people kuew what they had fouud und lost upon the old Immigrant trull. The old blue llucket has uever been mllst'overcd. A much credited verslou tbat Cauyou City was the place is undoubtedly erroneous. After a personal examination I urn oontldeut upon this poiut. Another error made by those old poiueers, aud it is still extaut, is the confounding of Crooked river with the John Day river. Tbey atraok the Crooked river near Prinevllle, and mistook It for the Jdhn Day. Tbey did not touch the John Day, leaving it to the north and eastward of their route. John L. Rlggs, of Marvin, Oregon, In Oregonifen. TO DEVELOP JOHN DAY COAL FIELDS. Tony Mohr and Local Associates Will Start Operations Soon. Anthony Mohr, who has the man agement of 1,200 acres of Jobn Day coal lands, which he owns in con junction with local associates, states that work on the development of the deposits Is to bo started this fall, or winter. He rutbor thinks ho will get around to It this fall. Mr. Mohr, who has thoroughly prospected the ground, states tbat from surface indications the John Day coal ia of a better quality thau tbat found at Heppner, which the O. R. & N. has recently proved to be well suited to railroad purposes. The lauds controlled by Mr. Mohr und associates are located south of Fossil, iu the John Day Valley, aud thore are three beds of coal, ranging in thickness from rive to forty feet. The samples secured from the out- cropplngs.show a good per cent of fixed caruou, and there Is evrey evidence that the deposit when de veloped will prove a good quality of coal and of enormous extent. Aother item in favor of the compay ia that the Bonta railroad will go within striking distance of the lands, thus furnishing transportation facilities. The receut tests of Heppner coal made by the O. R. & N. has excited interest auew in the John Day coal deposits. It Is stated thut these tests proved eutlrely satisfactory, proving that the Heppner coal, if anything is better for railroad purposes than the I Wyoming product. People here who are conversant with the Jobn Day fields state that the deposits there are even superior in quality to tbat found at Heppner. It la said tbat there are good veins rnlgug In width from eighteen Inches to five or six feet near Dayville, Small's bridge;' John Day City and Bear Valley, in the John Day country. Statementa are made tbat the both quality aud quantity exist. A DIRECT LINE To Chicago and ail points east; Louisville, Memphis, New Orleans, and all points south. See tbat your tloket reads via the Illinois Central R. R. Thoroughly modern trains connect with all transcontinental Hues at St. Paul and Omaha. If your friends are coming west let us kuow aud we will quote them direct tbe specially low rates now in effect from all eusteru points. Auy InforiiiHtiou hs to rate, routes, etc., cheerfully given on application. U. H. TRUMBULL, Commercial Ageut, 142 Third street, Portlaud, Ore. . J. C. LINDSEV, T. F. uud P. A., 142 Third street, Portland, Ore., P. B. THOMPSON, F. and P. A., Room l,ColemauBldg., Seattle Wash, - aQfOGIUNOE aT'KftTERN KlUWWmJLntsr? Onlv transcontinental lias I ailing directly through J Salt Lake Qty JLcadvillc Colorado Springs 1 and Denver Three solendidlv eauiooed tra ns I dally TO ALL POINTS EAST. Through Sleeping and Dining Cars and free Reclining Chair Care. The most Magnificent scenery in America by daylight. Stop overs allowed on all classes of tickets. For cheapest rates and descriptive literature, address W. C. MilRIDE, - Ininl .flit RIO GRANDE LINES Portland, Omkuon ffB Short line Union Pacific AM TO Silt lake. Bemr, Kims Cfy. euciio si lows jei tor Ocean steamers between Pcnrtfaiud and San Francisco every five days. Low Rate I Tickets to and from all part of the United States, Canada and Europe. Through Pullman Standard and Tourist Sleeping Cars daily to Omaha, Chicago, Spokane; Tourist Sleeping car daily to Kansas City; through Pullman tourist sleeping cars (per sonally conducted) weekly to Chi cago, Kansas City; reclining chair cars (seats free) to the East daily. For particulars, call on or address H. G. Bowbbs, Agent, Baker City, Ore