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Show Hard Colds People whose blood is pure are not nearly so likely to take colds as are others. Hood's Sarsaparilla makes the blood pure; and this great medicine recovers the system after a cold as no other medicine does. Take Hood 's. (Advertisement.) !! Nevada Lead Your Opportunity i invest m a Proiuciiiig Lead-Silver Lead-Silver Property Shipment of ore already made. Must have machinery to equip mine. The directors have authorized the sale of 100,-000 100,-000 shares of treasury stock for equipment and development purposes. I WHY 00 StieifLJ BUY . NEVADA LE1S a Stock only 5c per share. Mine only six miles from railrod. a Formation quartzite and limestone. Ore all the way down j 80-foot shaft. Increasing in volume and values as depth is W gained. At present vein of rich carbonate ores assays 40 ' h per cent lead, 20 ounces silver, $5.00 gold per ton. 0 The management of the mine is in the hands of two of the w oldest mining men in the west, personally directing same. Invest your money where it is used to develop your property. ' 1 THE CPP0KTSN2TY IS BEFORE YOU 14 Where else can you invest your money in a producing prop- I 3 erty at the price we are offering the Nevada Lead stock? V sj Buy today a few dollars invested may mean independence I 5 and wealth tomorrow. f jl For further information call or write our secretary, I fij MR. ELDREDGE, 40 South Main Street, I I j Salt Lake City, Utah. j 8 THE 1 h'tM MOTORS , ' a REFLECTION S . kJ AND I ' Jf PROSPECTS S ff y By Barney Oldfleld An interesting book jj containing the history of the American S Motors sent free. f Learn how $1000 grew to S70.000.00 in h five years. S The history of "THE MOTORS" is the history of Motor Stocks. 3 Send for this book and six months B subscription to The AMERICAN MO- 3 TORS Free. I W. L. Wilson & Co. 1 161 Devonshire Street, Boston, Mass. l"J,lnClpal Cltles-) f$ COPPER I i j Emixta CcmsF& Mnstr CMef I i i I " feflp0ir fjfl flip Wjiw 5i Now is the day of the highly trained mining geologist. sj The new big mines are being found AT DEPTH. ij f- H These consist largely of properties containing ore bodies which were mined at or b 1 near the surface to a point where they disappeared and were lost. Science is now set- I ting up sign posts to find the continuation of these ore bodies, which did not pinch at all, but merely "faulted." A movement of the earth's crilst broke them in two and a moved one portion away. Witness recent great geologic successes and the almost spontaneous change in H fS method of the search for mines. Where formerly the venturesome prospector fought '2 . the privations of the desert or the terrors of the rugged mountains and was rewarded ;;j I by a. rich surface, the geologist now reads the secrets of the rocks hidden beneath th9 jj surface, and with almost mathematical precision directs deep mine development to fj f the point of uncovering the buried treasures lying hundreds of feet below. 3 i . So dependable and exact has the science become it is evident that for every ! mine discovered by the old-fashioned prospector during the past, the modern geologist t will uncover a hundred. p EMMA CONSOLIDATED, situated in the Wasatch mountain range 35 miles from Salt Lake, rep- resents the culmination of scientific attainment and the successful reiindiug of lost bonanzas which for 40 years eluded the efforts of less adept and skilful operators. 1 B The ore bodies on Emma Hill in the early '70 's produced their millions from shallow depths only i S to terminate against a great slash or break in the strata. These, by an earth movement, were displaced i j and carried several hundred feet deeper than where they had previously existed. I The fabulously rich bodies of silver ore were lost and could not be found, despite patient effort and the expenditure of a million dollars. ' ? 5 Activity ceased. The mines lay idle, and represented but an empty shell to mark their former ; I ' glory. " j! pi The fear 1916 brought a change of method. The story of the rocks was read, the position of the i L" lost bonanzas established with unerring precision. A diamond drill was employed to bring to view a por- tion of the ore. The bonanzas were found again the rich ore was visualized. i Soon machinery was installed, buildings erected, and powerful pumps set to work which pulled the ' Sj water out of the old shaft. Powerful rock drills and dynamite soon blasted a way to the ore body, and " S the famous Old Emma mine, after a lapse of more than a generation, once more joined the ranks of t producers. 0 The vear 1917 will witness a continuedly increasing stream of high-grade ore coming out of the EMMA CONSOLIDATED and its subsidiaries. I financed the company IS months ago by the sale of j f treasury stock at 2.5c a share. To date the total cost of rescuing the properties from their moribund J state and placing them on a high production basis has been about $300,000. k According to the estimates of the engineers, they promise to repeat their past performance and make j, an average production of this much every month, when all the ore bodies now known are opened up. t If, The constellation of mines on Emma Hill' produced from shallow levels in the neighborhood of $15,000,000 j K to $'20,000,000 and by all the laws of nature and ore deposits, the refottnd ore bodies at depth should ; t yield at least five times as much. j Tho whole authorized capitalization of Emma Consolidated is now 3,000,000 shares. The stock is j: now quoted on rhe New York Curb at around $2Vs a share. Its greatest market career is plainly E V RIGHT AHEAD. 1 I i ij In Jerome, Ariz., the United Verde mine for many years constituted the sole producer. It has E yielded $160,000,000 in gold, silver and copper values. The" past two years has seen the successfulde- ? to velopment of the United Verde Extension through the application of geologic skill. On the surface f. there was no sign to show the presence of a great ore body below, but a shaft sent down 1200 feet, i through barren capping rock, penetrated a great body of rich ore now valued at $40,000,000 in the g market. j t Buried deep beneath the surface rocks in the Verde district are ore-bearing formations, typified j ti by the two mines mentioned." A great fault, or displacement of the rocks, known as the North Fault, K is a. prominent feature of the topography. The whole length of it has become a focus of intensive min- f i: ing development. Some of the biggest mining groups in the country have put the hail mark of ap- j f5 proval on the district by becoming identified with this exploration. It is more testimony of the re- liance placed on the work of the geologist and engineer by the most experienced mining capitalists. I Tho great North Fault passes through the ground of the MONSTER CHIEF Mining Company. The ; f same general geolqgic characteristics prevail as are found in the United Verde Ex., but experts state " that the surface showing is infinitely better. The same high-class technical skill employed at the Emma s !3 Consolidated has been employed to guide the destinies of the MONSTER CHIEF. On the MONSTER jS CHIEF only about 500 feet of a shaft is necessary to get to the ore-bearing formation. A noted geolo- t gist, thoroughly familiar with ail the mines of the camp, having made a detailed study of the Monster 3 Chief ground, pronounces it to be among the most favorably located in the district. It promises, t with the development work about to be undertaken, to develop another epoch-making bonaDza copper g - mine such as United Verde and United Verde Ex. Monster Chief stock is today selling nn the New ork 3 Curb at around 50c a share. IT IS BEYOND ANY QUESTION AT ALL AN OUTSTANDING SPEC- ULATIVE PURCHASE a metal mining speculation par excellence. H , H 1 3 a The skill of the geologist bears equally successful results when applied to the finding of oil and 5 natural gas. H t: The EICE OIL COMPANY, which I have just arranged to finance and which I will offer for pub- lie particination Immediately on completion of details of organization at SOc per share, owns leaseholds 1 on 40,000 "acres more than 60 souare miles of carefully selected lands in Eastern Kentucky on the line S v of the great oil belt of the Appalachians which extends in a southwwest line from New York state to Ken- tucky and Tennessee and beyond. j I tjj An experienced and highly successful oil expert has pronounced the property one of exceptional A I pf merit with every assurance of developing oil and gas on a large scale. The prolific oil and gas sands ij I h of Eastern Kentucky are known to underlie the company's acreage. 4 j ? The profit resulting from successfully developing oil and gas Is proverbial. The Increment In jj 1 6 value calls for the use of the multiplication table. 'i il The company will be provided at the start with ample finance .thoroughly to demonstrate the & " property. j 'i I shall underwrite 500,000 shares of the treasury stock at 50c per share, less 5 per cent for brok- ? erage, and am confident that on formal announcement within a few days of the offering at 50c a share J i for public participation the issue will he heavily oversubscribed. i J The company is capitalized for 55.000.000 in shares of 51 par value each, of which 53,500,000 Is re- S j g tained in the treasury. Mjl confidence in the future success of the enterprise is shown by my willing- j i ness to name it after myself and further by my underwriting such a large amount of the treasury stock. j I predict a brilliant market career for RICE OIL stock with eventual 510 to $50 per share possibilities. The current issue of the INDUSTRIAL AND MINING AGE devotes considerable space to the H & Emma Consolidated, Monster Chief and Rice Oil Companies. Y'ou should have a copy of this issue. ij I publish the INDUSTRIAL AND MINING AGE as my house . organ. The subscription rate is S $5 per annum. Published regularly every week since January, 1909. and devoted to the exploitation 1 i of the leading New York Curb industrial, oil and metal-mining issues, it is acknowledged to be tho kad- q j$ ing authorityin the United States in it? field. It is edited by a staff of noted experts and wields its 1 I greatest influence because of its exnertness, impartiality, accuracy and dependability. Week by week it J ! j analyzes and appraises the intrinsic and speculative value of leading active issues from the expert view- A 1 point. There is no question at all that it has a greater following among professionals and investors ev- j; erywbere than any otiier publication of its kind. jj i 4 A sample copy will be seut you without charge, for purposes introduction, If you write im- S I fi? mediately. , S If (fXoiwpk fT a lb ?ti! Rfr. Metal Mining and Oil Securities. j 27 WILLIAM STREET, NEW YORK. Us 3 - |