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Show . I "BEYOND THE DREAMS OF AVARICE" GPZf bought 50000 shares of GOLDFIELD MINING CO. in flQf flfln I OU November, 1903. It is now worth $uU,UUU J nn bought 10,000 shares f florence mining co- 09n finn I IUU of GOLDFIELD, in November, 1903. It is now worth $LU,UUU oi 7 bught 1 ,oo shares f coMBNATiN mnng c- o i n nnn I I O of GOLDFIELD, in November, 1903. It is now worth l) I U,UUU will buy 500 shares of GOLDFIELD BLIZZARD MINING CO. today. f pJJ Ten years hence it will be worth u '. Goldfield's Monster Prospect- 100,000 Shares at 10 Gents- j . The BLIZZARD. NOW. I j 1 " Development of the Blizzard property lias only just com-J com-J j . riienced. , I In the opinion of mining and consulting engineers of inter- j j national fame, the surface indications on the BLIZZARD are as good as they were on any of the three sensational properties told, j i of above. i Major W. A. Stanton, at one time consulting engineer1 oni ' the staff of the late John W. Mackay, at Virginia City, says: "Ira k every detail of formation, the Blizzard's estate is an exact couriter- 1,1 part of the big producers of the district. I consider it equally as-great as-great in possibilities as any of the Goldfield properties, of first .im-portance .im-portance were at relatively the same stage of development.' ' J. F. Mitchell, the noted Colorado mining engineer, recently-. recently-. superintendent of the great Jumbo mine of Goldfield and of the: ' January mine of the Goldfield Mining company, that have pro--- f duced in two years nearly three millions in bullion, says : "In my1 I examination of the BLIZZARD'S surface showings I took sam'- pies from every outcropping. All of them gave assay returns in: ft gold, proving conclusively that they are all enriched by the pre- cious metal. Very few, if any, of the great mines of the distrjct. i presented such pronounced indications of the occurrence of bodies. of high-grade ore beneath the surface at relatively the same period. i l of development, nor did I obtain such flattering assay returns from, the Jumbo, the January of the Goldfield Mining company, or nu- merous other properties that are now great mines, from surface: ores. In view of these facts, I consider the BLIZZARD the equal. ' oFany property in the district in prospective worth." The property consists of 150 acres, situate in the eastern sec- Jj tion of the great mineral zone of Goldfield. On this zone arc t! situated all the prominent mines of the camp. Full and clear title I to the property is vested in the Blizzard Mining company. 3 Five prominent quartz (gold-bearing) ledges stand out boldly above the surface. They vary in width from twenty to sixty feet. 1 One of them is over 3,000 feet long. On all sides may be seen the I most positive indications known to mining of heavy and perma- ; nent enrichment of gold. Assays of $34 per ton in gold have been J obtained from surface croppings. The Blizzard Mining company's capitalization is 1,500,000 shares of. the par value of $1 each ; 500,000 of these are owned by the company's treasury. The property has been paid for with the remainder. One hundred thousand shares of the treasury stock are now offered at 10 cents per shares. The money realized from the sale of treasury stock will be used to develop the mine and make of it a producer in quick order. The directors of the company are: H. W. Knickerbocker, mine owner, Goldfield, Ncv. ; Hon. George D. Pyne, attomey-at-law, Goldfield, Nev. ; Richard Willis, mine owner, Colorado Springs, Colo., and Rhyolite, Nev., and J. Frank Smith, mining engineer, Hinton, W. Va. Depository and reference: John S. Cook & Co.,-Bankers, Goldfield, Nev. Reservations should be made at once and remittances in full should accompany. Allotments will be made in the order of receipt re-ceipt of subscriptions. For prospectus, engineers' reports, history of Nevada mining investments and other particulars, address the fiscal agents. R . W. G N E KO W & CO., Mining Investments GO LD Fl E LD, N E V. |