THE SUMPTER MINER Wednesday, January it, 19? The Sumpter Miner I'UHUSMfil) BVBRY WBDNB5UAY BY J. W. CONNELI.A pnpor Ih merely actuated by what, for lack of h more accurate term to ex pruBB the idea, may bo called uImhh or Hoational prejudice, which Ih hh old and well known and contemptible as any other form of human selfishness. I iilcfrd at the postofflce In Sumpter, Oregon, lor 'Mtismlsslon Ih rough the malls as second clm 1.. Alter SUMSCRII'TION KATES One Year Si.uo Six Month , 1,35 ALWAYS IN ADVANCB. The Minor will go mh fur hh any legitimate, loyal newspaper in giving a blauk oye to a region that Ih draw ing too hoavliy for comfort ou the population of its home territory; but it drawn the line on publishing the ridiculously rfalso statements now going the rounds, rotative to the aaultary conditio i at Goldflold. The Pnudleton lOaat Orogouian Iihh broken Iooho agHln In a tlrado itgaiiiHt Maker county mining "ion, booHUHo they ant organizing their forciiH for the purpose of making an effort to have the Eddy law re pealed, a inoaHiire that ha worked inlliilte injury to the mini rik In dtiHtry, hence to the stale. TIiIh Ih that Poudlotou papoi'a hobby and periodically it published a rabid editorial uti the subject. Die Miner, lor a wniie, xnougm mo writer wiih merely ignorant of the riiibjeot he attemptH frequently to dlHCUHH, and ho endeavored to enlighten him ou IiIh favorito toplo. The one idea that appears to lie firmly fixed in the place where li Ih mind ought to be Ih that only wild cat compHtiioH oppoHM tliia law, that (Ultimate companieH are aatiallod with Hh proviHloiiH when in reality, the reverie Ih true. The wildcat company Ih organized for the purpone of making Hh prnllls from the Hale of ita Htock, with no idea of making a produiiiiiK mine of Its property. It can thereforo Hiford to pay very much larger onmmlsHioiiH and other ox peuseH on Htock huIoh than can the legitimate company, that relies ou the products of Hh mine for Hh prolltH. The hoHtllity of the Htate government to the mining IndiiHtry, hh manifested by this Kddy law, lunderH It more ilHlluult to null Htook in companieH operating in Oregon, to whether they are incorporated under the Imwh of thin Htate or not, for all are Included, than in any other Htate in the Union, It Ih a direct, punitive, heavy handicap to the In dtiHtry. There are no Iiihh than a dozen legitimate companieH organized here in Sumpter that have been If the reader win no better inform ed on the subject than the writer, up to tli i h moment, he will bo surprised to learn that California has no mining law. It wiih repealed in bulk at the extra hohhIoi) hold In February, 1000; let leant ho Haya the Los Angeles Min ing Rcviow. And that suggests the not half bad Idea, that Oregon could WE HAVE A GOLDFIELD RIGHT HERE AT HOME profit by following California's ex ample, and being governed eutirely by the national law. That Ih, of courHO, If the farmers and Portland jays, who control the lelgalature and who know absolutely nothing about the requirements of mining lelgalation, Insist ou forcing their Ignorance and prejudice into the atatuto governing tbia subject. Possibly Itoproseutativo Smith can induce the Hoxors to repeal tho whole Hhooting match, and if he can do this much, he will havo performed a dis tinctive service for the mining In diiHtry. The hope that he may ac complinh more than this, of enacting a wiho, commoiiHouHo meaauro, aeeniH to be too remote for serious con Hideratlou, If the future is to be judged by the past. Guy Pierson Has Returned From the Boom Gamp in Nevada and Says Bear Gulch Has it Faded. "forced to the wall" ou account of Hh blighting influence No Htate legislature, actuated by a desire to promote tlie development of (tie natural roHourceH of the stale, wouiii ever nave enacted hiicii a measure. It was made a law by a lot of uarrowmiuded, Hellish, prejudic d mou engaged in other callings, whose purpoiitt was to saddle the bur den of taxation onto otherH. liven though the law produces a to venue for (he Htate of 100,000 annually, bow is the state heuetlttcd, when it prevents the mvestmuiit here of a million and more auually, ih it cer tainly does; which million would be the means of eventually produciuu other unnumbered millions? ThoHo poiutH have already been elucidated for the benefit or tho Kast Oregouiaii several times; which it I ersisteutly ignores and continues to reiterate Hh Hilly refrain about wild cat companieH dodging taxation. Nothing more is needed to demon strate the fact that the Peudletou O P. I loir, stnto commissioner of labor, has Issued the first biennlnal report of the bureau over which ho presides. Tho report is a voluminous document of 10ft printed pages mid is evidently the result of much labor in collecting and compiling the facts and statistics contained therein. One would not be justified in oattitig a doubt upon the accuracy or the work, judged by a mere cutsory glance through Ha pages; but even such superficial examination con viuooH one that it is far from com plele. Otie notable Instance of omission is that neither tho statistical tables on wage earnings nor. in tho compilation of alleged facts pertain lug to labor organizations, are miners mentioned, tin far as labor unions are concerned, the miners probably stand first in numbers. Those en gaged in the lumber buHluoaa and farming probably outnumber the miners, but they are nut organized into unions. In point of individual wages, certainly no other class of laborer i In this Htate aro so highly re munerated. Hut Mr. 1 loir makes up for tbia overnight by a little philosophising ou social and industrial topics. O I. I . I i a i npuiiKiug oi inner irouuiotf, lie says: "The rule Is that where mistaken are made, injustice perpetrated and wrong done, the cause is lack of knowledge ou one side or the other of the line conditions. Contrary to many ooucolvcd Ideas, the natural deslie of man is to bo just." Now, theie is the expression of a beauti fully optimistic idea, a radiently Iridescent dream, that makes cue who is intimately acquainted with selfish human nature, who has per sonally bumped up against tho un adulterated cuHseduess of averago mankind, infinitely weary. (Juy E. Pierson 1b in town today, showing the pauuiuga from a baudful of dirt taken from the Treasuro I3ox, a claim in the Hear Gulch district, in which he owua a ooutrolliug interest. Thoro are forty or fifty ooarae colors. Tho sample was taken from a depth of only eight feet. Tho ledge la twelvo feet wide, which pans all the way across; but four feet of it ruuB very high. All of it, however, would pay to null. Tho four feet can bo shipped to the smelter at a handsome profit. A aide track grade, formeily used for a logging road, corned within a few hundred yards of the property, i though tho irou ha been taken up. The smelter is only about two and a half miles away. Mr. Pierson returned from Gold field about a month ago, and says that, taking everything into con sideration, he prefers eastern Oregon as a mining region. He thinks that the Hear Gulch district la going to prove the richest iu the Inland Empire, and that it is going to be the makiue of Sumpter bb a iniuing camp. He has mined all over the west, a number of yours in Colorado, and says the surface showing there is the best be has ever seen iu all of bis experience. A little development work, that will certainly be done this season, will tell tho story. SMELTER WILL RUN AT ITS FULLEST CAPACITY General Manager Prod D. Fullor, of tho Oregon Smelting aud lielluing company, arrived home today from New York, where ho wont to attend the annual meeting of tho (-took-holdos of that coporatiou. Mr. Fuller says the meeting was eutirely satis factory to himself and his report seemod to be satisfactory to the stockholders; that the meetlug was eminoutly harmonious, without au echo of a discord. The Miner has already published the result of that meetlug, the election of directors aud officers. Regarding the plan of operating tho plant to Ha full capacity, by ruuuiug twenty-four hours a day, as was discussed at that time, Mr. Fuller says will be Inaugurated soon, probably the latter part of this mouth, though the exact date has not yet boeu fixed. He does uot doubt but what au ample, continuous ore supply will be available.. Accompanying Manager Fuller on his return la S. J. Merrltt, late of Peru, South America. For some time to come he will be attached to the smelter management in con fidential capaoity. They came from New York by way of California, Mrs. Fuller stopping off at Los Angeles, where she will remain for some weeks. ANOTHER TEST Of STANDARD'S ORES The New York Commercial sayu that so far as corporations are con cerned, 1004 was a year of reorgani zations; few new cues of atiy im portance having been founded. The same program ought to bo continued through 11)00. Tom Taylor returned this forouoon from a hurry trip to Maker City. Another ahipmont of cobalt-cop-por-gold ore from the multi-metalled Standard ml no at Quartzburg will shnitly be mado to a Denver teatiug works. Ore deliveriea are now beiug made at Tipton, atid the entire ship ment of 1C toua will be ready for consignment about January 14. The shipment is for further tests of Standard ore aloug the Hues of those made last fall in Denver by Prof. H. 11. Nlcbolsou, consulting eugiueer for the Killeu, Warner, Stewart oompauy, fiscal agents for aud operators of the Staudard Con solidated Miulug compauy's prop erties. Only 1,000 pouuds were used iu the origiual test. The treatmeut process evolved from au aualysiR of aud experiment with this sample, resulted iu a solution of the problem of Staudaid ore tieatment. From a test of a larger quautity of the ore, Porf. Nicholson will deduce details as to mill practice aud construction. A treatmeut plant, of the design to bo decided upon as a result of the second Denver test, will be erected at the property in the snrim nr summer of 1900. Professor Nicholson, who is an emiueut miueralogist aud metal lurgist as well as a practioal mine operator, intends to profit by the sad experience of so many western mining meu, aud uot erect a costly milling plaut only to later discover its use lessuess as au efficient saver of values. Prof. Nioholuon will accompany the shipment to Denver and will personally oouduct tho dual tests. None of the ore in the 10-ton ship ment will grade lower than the Staudard average 1100 per ton. i ii'MWMiliillWtIWi,w1MW itirw , .-'