3$jIHS "fSSs SlPi EASTERN COVERS THOROUGHLY THE GOLD FIELDS of the INLAND EMPIRE ?$3S lwi !'& "iv-? -xaca s..afe.' ,xrwij'a ssn LISTEN LAKE TO INSTALL HOIST. Management Will Probably Get Around to it Some time This Summer. .). Win Wilson, manager nf tht Listen I -like, came hi yesterday after noil mill returned to tho property ttilH morning. The force, ho HiiyB. Ih now working In tint crosscut from thu ltftv font Invol. Owing tho water in tho Mlnift, work hero liml to bo tcmpoiarily abandoned. Mr. WUhoii, t liltitic however, Unit, IIiIh will lie Hillllclently out of the way to allow resumption of sinking oper utlotiH liy .lime 1. The object Ih to continue the Hhaft, now down uliont ninety feet, to the 100-foot level, mill then nfler urosHCultlng the vein, Install hoisting machinery. The winking ho fur .has deen done liy n Inline whim. Mr. WUhoii Ih of the opinion (hut ho will net mound to n hoist hiiiiio Mine this summer. lie brought in some very line look ing ore with him, tnken from Hie hottom of the Hluift, before sinking was tempormily iihmidoned. Judged Irnm upptiiiMtico, the out will run high In copper, mid piolmhly Ind icates the pennmieiit diameter of the ore to he found with depth. Assays me now being niiide of it, Iml no re turiiH hud lieen received when Mr. Wilhim left. OWNER KCfURNS TO START WORK ON TIIC BANZCTTL I), i Choiile, known among hi- Uleiids as "Uncle Dave" Ih in the city. Mr Choatc recently letiirued from (he Ciaig hot springs, wheie he has lieeli lecupeiallllg tlillll a siege of rheumatism. Aliout the Hint of May L'mde Dive will pioeeed to the llauetto gioup of claims III the tireetihoru district, whcto nctle tle elupini'lit ill he taken up again and priiM'CUted. The llancllo gioup coilslstls of six claims, Mr. Chimin being note otwier ol all, wl'li the evceptlou of one. A limit 1,.i()i feet of tunnel wot I; Iiiih been done beside the kIiiI hie of sevoial t-haf tt. 1'ioin thin develop ment fully ,"il.lUH has lieen cleaned up iilitl placed to the oiedit of Mr. Clioalo. Slliolv nut u hud lecoid ft tun cIiiIiiih which me not much be yiuid the piospeet stage. The oies fioiu the dilleli'llt eiliH on the pin eitv iituge in value from 10 to ?iIU per ton in gold. Considering t liu lociitiiui of tho propeity, which in in close pioximlty to the Snow Creek, I. X., L. anil J'hiienlx. Mr. Chimin eousldcis he Is ill good coiiipaiiy. At oi:i time he win. an owner in hoth the SnowCreek and tho Phoenix, hut disposed of hia interests some time hko. Mr. Choate came to UreKoii In 18'iU, iiiiil his llrHt introduction to ininliiK vviih whuu he hauled the machinery to the llonanza tnluo In 1880. lie located the Phoenix mine in January. 1888 aud afterward bought into thu Snow Creek. Jle Ih iiIho the owner of the block nu Front street in thlH olty, occupied liy Caldwell'H hardware store, and ho states that the money that paid for thlH property was dug on of the Greenhorn IiIIIh. Democrat. DAVID WILSON WILL BUILD BRICK BLOCKS David WUhoii, of Spokane, owner of various Hum pier real estate in forests, wiih in town today lietvveen traiiiH. Mr. WUhoii will shortly go to New York ami let urn heru aliout June 1. Much luturoHt Iiiih lieen expressed in regard to Mr. WiluouM prolmlile erection of certain brick buildings here IIiIh Hummer. 1 1 Ih goiiciul Inteli tlmiH have lieen known for Home time, lint at IiIh hint visit he wild that the enterprise would hinge siniimvlitit on IhisIuc-h coiidltioiiH hero. If the out look appeared prosporoiiH he would go iihead with the work. Today ho ox pressed little iloulit In regard to the matter, lie Mild: "I will lie luck here aliout .liine 1. mid will then undertake the con HtmUloti of sin j briu'c lilom. .lint how many or just where they will lie me milters, I have not yet decided up. in. As I caiil at my fmmervlHit, I would lie million hy liuslno-w con ililioiiH heio. These 1 helleve will he good during the coming season. 1 have every reiihiin to express thlH iudlvldiial opinion. I have heeu over the country coiiHideiiildy mid I hear nothing hut good reporlH of Sumpter. I'rom my own knowledge of the operatioiiH iinnteiiipliited, I cannot help sharing the samo liellef. "It Ih lather em ly to begin building now, and hy the time 1 return from the east tiling will lie ill a hotter shape to piiD-eeiito the work. My talth in .Sumpter Iiiih never wavered, and I helleve It Ih ultimately to he- come one of (lie lilt mining camps fo the country." Miniini Companies Employ Geologists. Many lik miuliik' companies now have a M''loulst on their stall', the same as a consulting engineer or a iiiiiiiaier, and IiIh employmeiit Ih an economical matter, fin he can save the company IiIh salary over and over iik'iiIii. liefore the lielnnlnu' of duv lopmeut woik it is his ImsiiiesH to hae the ueoloulcal conditions caiefully considered, ami the success of the enterprise often lilliKt's on the thoroiiuhue-is and accuracy of his woik. It is hut one of the phases of mluliiK mid sclciitltlo progress and is ellmiuatiiik' tho Kiinilile from mine work mid makiiiK the result as cer tain and dellnite as any hiisine'ss itiidertakiiiK can he so made. Mill iiiK and Sclent Itle. Press. TO TAKE CHARGE OE EQUITY MILL. Plant to Be Gotten in Shape For Operation at Once. 8. J lay, of linker City, was on the train thlH morning, going to tho Equity, In tho Qiiitrthztirg district, to put the mill in shape anil take charge of it, when it goes into commission again. Mr. Hay Ih a mill man of loin? Htaiidlng.aud well known in the district. The Equity litigation with the Keystone people Iiiih not yet heeu decided, hut the former company Ih going ahead, oper ating on ground not in dispute. Sumo time ago Mr. Hay Installed the new ten stamp mill at the Vir ginia, which took the place of the Parker rotary plant. The Parker mill wiih never a success at the Vir ginia. The Virginia, Mr. Hay hijh, Ih carrying on sinking operations at present, mid will piolnilily operate the new mill later in tho season. $20,000,000. In Dividends. In a little more than a decade the mines of the Spokane country have actually disti United e-JO.OOO.OOO in dividends, (ircut an is this sum, it! Ih hut a small fraction of the wealth that has heeu taken from thos-j prop ctlicH ami ilistriliuted In wanes, freight nites and the puichase of I imichlneiy and supplies. This 820, 000,000 covers only the dividend! paid hy the liettei known lucorpoint- ' ed properties, mid taken no account i of the prollts paid hy a host or sinaller . mliieH opeiated hy Individuals audi piutnorHhlps. Wlien these Impressive i tacts are nonsiilcicd.nml it is lemem- heied that am eultine, lumberiuu, stock raislm; mid imiiiy kindred Industries also tlourish iu this teril tory, it Ih easy to comprehend why Spokane has had such ourpribliiK mowth in the past decade: why It rallied quickly from the dcpiesslon succeed in.' the panic of IHOII, mid why It in now one of tho most pros peious ami prouf'sslvo yuiinu cities iu the United States.-- Norhtwest II oiuctickcr ami In vet or. Gold in Desert Regions. Cold is often found In looso alluvial, or wash, wheie theie aie no rounded pebbles or rocks pieseut. This is pint leu luily the case In deseit regions, where the rooks dlslntegiate rapidly, producing a mass of loose material, mostly iiiikiiIii, and this is washed down by the infrequent but heavy rains occur ring in such legions, and the liner material Is blown about by the winds, the gold from neighboring veins or rocks being burled in the debris. The gold Is also usually angular, or llttlo worn. The dry washers aie familiar with this cluss of gold depos it. A number ot Instauces aro kuow, where the lodes or veins from which the j$old came have uever heeu dis covered. There are examples of tbls klud iu Kern, Hlverside aud San Diego uoiuitles. California. Miulun and Soleutlflc Record. THIS THt MINING AGE BUT NOT EXCLUSIVELY. We are apt to resiird this present line as pre-eniineutly the great mining bro. There is, however, very Reed reason to bollevothnt althounh the operations In tho'pnst were not as ex touslvo as at present, yet thoy wero very protltable. For example, In ancient time,wlien (ireece was in its prime, tho mines of Laurium suppor ted a very laiRe population accordiiiK to records over 20,000. Hotweou those times aud the dawn of tho nineteenth century, possibly the moHt IlourlshiiiK period of niiuiiiK' was in pre-reformatinu days. The Kiikkoi' family, which wiih heavily Interested iu mining about MHO to ITi'iO, was most important in bringing tho Industry to a high degree of excellence in a very few years. Machinery was invented, such at tho jig, stamp mill, etc., which in principle is followed today. Tho wars of tho ltcformatioii scattered the miners far and wide, and iu tho disorganized stato of society that followed they were not biought to gether again. Mines were allowed to (III with water, the smelting works ami mills woio burned or destroyed and tho science of milling received a severo setlmck.from which it did not recover until after tho discovery of gold in California. The scattering of the millers, however, had one good '.'licet, as many came to the new world, biiiiglng with them their knowledge ami aplying It to the mines of Mex ico and Peru. One can detect many customs and methods of work among tho Mexican miners that closely ich emhlos those described by Agricola iu IiIh famuiH work,"l)e He MetaUien." Mining Heportcr. C A. E. STARK MININO INVESTMENTS Chef Austin A Wat AUtWt Sumr'M.Ottcun Bank of Sumpter Transacts General Banking Business. Interest Paid on Time Deposits Satety Deposit Vaults