THE SUMPTER MINER Wednesday, April ij, 1904 TO START EXTRA BATTERY SOON Additional Stamps at I.X.L. Will 60 Into Commission in Few Days. (leorge Carter. consulting engineer for Mie I. X. L. aud now in charge of the cyanide plant, waa on tbe train thin afternoon going to linker. Mr. Carter aajr that the addi tional batter of stamps hat been aet nd tbe boiler U being placed. The extra stamps will be ready to go into commlMlou within tbe' next four or live daya. Tbia will, aa previously atatod, double tbe capacity of tbe plant, euabllug it ,to handle about twenty ton of ore a'day. Mr. Carter plauned the cyanide ayatam at tbe I. X. L., aud it la giving eutire Hatlafaotlou. Theblgh waving eHjoeiioy of tbe mill baa dem onstrated Ha oompliete adaptability to the treatment of tbe orea produced by tbe mint. HAS RAISED MONEY 10 PAY OFF MORNING DEB1 S It whm learned through reliable eourcea today that T. W. Davidson, who went east a abort time ago to iralae money to pay off the indebted neaa of thn Mornnig mine, baa sue flooded, aud that tbe nmuey. 20, 000, la now oil the way. Tbe debts against tbe property amount, II Is tatwJ, to something over 17,000. It was further learned that Mr. Davidson in addition to raising money to pay otf the indebtedness ban Hiimivedml In providing au ainplo development fund. This Infoi mutton onme by wire, It la stated, aud while it cannot be verified hero it is known to lie thoroughly reliable. It wan thought some time ago that the Morning iuIiih was Hold to (I. W. lingua for eastern cllou, and this atatmueot was given out, but there was a bitch for some reason or other, and the deal wiih olf. Mr. Davidson, who la a memliet of the Kasteru Ore gon Development company, which held au option on the property about to expire, procured an extension and went east to raise money, pay otf the iudehtfdiicNH tif tbe old company mid take over the mine for tbe develop incut company. This It seems be has succeeded In doing aud tbe pre sumption la that operations are soon to tie icHumod at the Morning under tlio new order of things. Primitive Melhobs In Korea. In Korea most crude methods are used lu mining. In vein mining there is much dittlculty lu keeplug dowii tbe wider. Tbe mluers simply raise tbe water ill buckets, tbe ouet Mow banding to those a few feet above, aud ho ou until tbe surface is reached, lu the absence of steel tools aud explosives, tbe breaking of rock la very alow. One of the meth ods employed la to build tires lu tbe different faces aud cool them sud denly with water; tbe effect of this Is that au amount of ore is luuseued, but tbe encloalng walla are also dla-1 integrated, resulting id ion oanaiiug of Ave toni of rock for one of ore, and tbe banging wall becomes a source of danger. The ore la crushed between two stones, tbe upper one having its bottom cut in tbe form of an arc. A rocking motion la then ImpHrted to these boulders, resting upon a flat granite boulder, and a pulp ecual to a thirty mesh screen is tbe result. LUCY GROUP IS SHOWING UP WELL Morria Sullivan, one of the owners of the Lucy group lu tbe Mreenborn, after a rough trip arrived last ulght from the property. Tbe roada are tbe worst ever, be says. He had to walk to Tipton and leave bis team. Work at tbe property, he sayt, la progressing satisfactorily. Tbe Lucy ledge, which was cut recently, shows a width of eighteen feet with valuea ruuuiug from 10 to 158. Tbe cross cut will be continued for tbe O. K. ledge, a distance of some 250 feet. This is the main lead of tbe group and thought to contain by far tbe heavier valuea. The outrcop, Mr. Sullivan says, has given assays as bigb as 1150, while the Lucy ledge never showed auy such auraface values. M. T. Keogb, of Milwaukee, treas urer of the company, is now at tbe property, and Mr. Sullivan saya ia highly pleased with tbe progress of development work. TO START WORK AT BUCK BUTTE Ed C. Allen, superintendent of the lllack Ilutte, was on tbe traiut his a'teruoou golug to Portland to attend the state republican conven tion. Mr. Alleu has all his men hired, his supplies lu, aud tbiuks he will be ready to start up work ou tbe lllack Ilutte lu about ten days. He says the season is about a week later there thau it is here and work has beeu delayed on account of tbe snow. Tbe hoist to be installed on tbe Black Ilutte has beeu ordered from Deliver, but Is held for shipment until the cnuditiuu of tbe roads will permit its delivery at tbe property. It would be next tu impossible to haul the machinery lu ut this time. A big season's wurk is contemplated, Mr. Alleu bays. EXPECTS TO CUT THE LE ROI LEDGE SOON V. C. Itaudall, who has teen con ducting the development work at tbe Le Kol.lu tbe lialsley-Klkborns, Is in from tbe property. He reports ex ceedingly bard rock aud consequently small headway. The crosscut be tbiuks will reach the ledge, however, within the uext twenty-five or thirty feet. He saya the suow in that section is the deepest iu the history of tbe country, lu the gulches aud raviuea It must be at least fifty feet deep. However, he has beeu pegging away steadily aud expects now to cut the ledge iu a short time. OREGON'S FIRST MINING GAMP Once Lively Kerbyville is Now an Entirely Desert ed Village. Nestling cosily at tbe foot of tbe pine-clad hills, with its one long street, and overlooking the valley and the winding rievr of tbe Illinois, is Kerby, the pioneer mining camp of Oregon. It la but a few miles north of tbe California liae, Josephine co unty. Kerby today is aa quiet an old country towu as oue would care to see. But Kerby baa not always slept. There was a time when Kerby, then known as Kerbyville, was the gayest and thriftiest and exchanged more dust than any other camp north of San Francisco. That was during tbe palmy and gold-fevered days of fifty yeara ago. Tben the streets of Kerbyville seetbed with the restless stampede of 2,000 excited gold hun ters. And from a half dozen saloons and 'dauclng halls issued, day and nlgbt, the cliuk of glasses, tbe bois terous merriment of reveling dai c- era and tbe monotonous hubbub of tbe faro tables. Kerbyville waa iu fact but a Cali fornia mining camp moved over the Siakiyous. It was composed of tbe same army of gold huntera that swept the plains In '40. Therefore, Kerby ville waa lively, alwaya perturbed, for the greed of gold was manifest there aud kept alive an atmosphere ot restlessness and clamor. It Is ouly a few miles below Kerby ville that Josephine creek empties Its turbulent waters into tbe Illinois. It whs here that gold was first dis covered iu the Oregon territory. That was iu April, 1851. The news of this discovery, exaggerated, distorted, whispered fiom man to niau, from claim to claim, found its way luto camps of uortheru California, and iu a tew days a long line of men made ita way over tbe crags and dowu the. steeps of the Siskiyous luto tbe 111! uois Valley, of the "Oregon Coun try," a land that bad hitherto beeu left to tbe wild beasts and tbe red meu. Along evety creek gold waa discovered aud miners flocked by the hundreds. With rocker aud pan, millioua iu nuggets and dust were cradled from the gravel of tbe creek beds. Today iu passing along the oue street of the old camp oue fluds but a few scattered remaius ot tbe gay WORTH READING YOU CAN MAKE MONEY IF YOU BUY THESE STOCKS VALLEY QUEEN-PRICE 9 CENTS Capital $250,000. The Coming Great Mine of the Cable Cove District. Recent big strike show valuea of over $181 per ton. A sure Producer. An investment in Vallcv Queen will many timet double your mooey. J J j jl BUCK. HORN-PRICE 10 CENTS Capital $500,000. Will be a Greater Blue Bird. It has the ore bodies of this famous property. An tavcttment Is Buck Horn Is like finding money , J jt j jt Jt rite today for Prospectus and full information. Men tion No. 60 and we will mall you free six months the NORTH AMERICAN MINER WHEELER & CO. lukm 92 IIUIWAY, N. Y. Kerbyville of fifty years ago. Tbe old courthouse is gone, for Kerbyville was once tbe county seat. But tbe town hall remaius. Scarred and weather-beaten by tbe winds and rains of many winters, deserted save by the rats, this old building stands. Tben, also, there Is the jail, with the big maple over it, whose spreading branches served as the ever-ready gal lows for tbe popular " hangiu'a" of the rough-and-ready days. Aa to tbe beginning of Kerbyville there are conflicting stories. Thn most Interesting of these is the one that tells of a billiard table being responsible for tbe establishment of the old camp. Among the lemalnlng pioneers some say it is true, while others doubt it. But however that may be, the story ia none tbe less In- foresting. Tbe story goes that an old ! Spanish packer waa under contract to deliver a billiard table to the owner and proprietor of a aaloou at Alt house, a camp lu tbe Illinois valley. Martlnexz was the proud owner of a pack mule that was known all aloug tbe coast tor ber remarkable perse verance aud strength. Anita was her uame, and Anita was the pride of tba old packer's heart. "Could Anita bring tbe billiard table over the mountains from Crescent City? Madre de Cbiistoc, yest" said Martinez, aud Martinez undertook the hercu Uau.task with little ado. The big, awkward package waa placed on tbe back of Auita and she started on the long trail over the mountains. Two days she traveled, and on tbe third she gave way beneath her great load, aud nearly broke tbe heart of her master. The saloonkeeper would not pay Martinez because he bad not dell vere tbe table. Then Martluez swore Spanish oaths, and said be would have revenge. Aud an enterprising thought came iuto bis Spanish bead. He would let the billiard table remaiu where Anita fell with it. Moreover, he would build a saloon around the table and have a "grand opening; Mardre! what a thought! "The saloon was built, and with the only billiard table north of San Francisco as a diawiug card, Martinez got the whole stampede beaded his way. Tents and shacks aud cabins went up about tbe saloon, and In a night grew iuto a prosperoua mining camp. That camp waa Kerbyville. Pacific Miner. Imperil Reduction Works. Captaiu A. M. Paul, superintend ent of tbe imperial, lu the Cable Core district, returned yesterday from a visit at Baker City and La (iraude. Captaiu Paul says that aa soon as tbe pending litigation it set tled, which he does not think will be long, arrangements will be made for the iustallatiou of teducMou worka at the property. 1 3W