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Show I "BEYOND THE DREAMS OF AVARICE" I i fl C A Bought 50,000 shares of GOLD- M B ' HP " FIELD MINING. CO. in Nov- j 1 ' owwonh903' It is $30,000 GOLDFIELD'S MONSTER PROSPECT 1 ' owwon THE BLIZZARD W f Lflfttfl Bought 10,000 shares of I HIUU Florence mining co. Development of the Blizzard property has only just com- I ?t fa nowthELD cTl cnft menced. In the opinion of mining and consulting engineers I is now w q)395Ull of international fame the surface indications on the Blizzard I are as good as they were on any of the three sensational B Boushuoo? shares of com- properties told of above. J. F. Mitchell, the noted Colo- B i H1 1 0 bination mines co. of . racj0 mining engineer, recent superintendent of the great I ' e3mbLe??ELDiilNn0ow fljiA Aft a Jumbo mine . .f Goldfield and of the January mine of the B rth"' I93' 1SnW $10,000 Goldfield Mining Company, that have produced in two B years nearly three millions in bullion, says : "In my exam- B St 10(1 Wil1 buy 1000 shares ination of the Blizzard surface showings I took samples B vpivv of goldfield W from every outcropping. All of them gave assay returns in B blizzard mining co. today f ld proving conclusively that they are all e iched by the , Two years hence it will be worth 1 r . xr , J t t ! . precious metal. Very few, 11 any, or the great mines or the 1 Bj 1 district presented such pronounced indications of the j B I . I occurrence of bodies of high grade ore beneath the surface Bj I ' "" : : at relatively the same period of development, nor did I ob- B tain such flattering assay returns from the Jumbo, the B January of the Goldfield Mining Co., or numerous other Bj properties that are great mines, from surface ores. In view of these facts, I consider the Blizzard the I Bj equal of any property in the district in prospective worth. I I 10 CENTS PER SHARE; IT WONT LAST LONG I B The property consists of 150 acres, situate in the eastern section of the great mineral zone of B Goldfield. On this zone are situated all the prominent mines of the camp. Full and clear title to B the property is vested in the Blizzard Mining Co. B Five prominent quartz (gold bearing) ledges stand out boldly above the surface. They vary in width B from twenty to sixty feet. One of them is over 3000 feet long. On all sides may be seen the most B positive indications known to mining of heavy and permanent enrichment of gold. Assays of $34 per B ton in gold have been obtained from surface croppings. The property will be actively developed H and a mine made. H The Blizzard Mining Co.'s capitalization is 1,500,000 shares of the par value of $1 each. 500,000 of H these are owned by the company's treasury. The property has been paid for with the remainder. H 100,000 shares of the treasury stock are now offered at 10 cents per share. The money realized from B the "sale of treasury stock will be used to develop the mine and make of it a producer in quick order. H The directors of the company are : H. W. Knickerbocker, mine owner, Goldfield, Nev.; Hon. H George D. Pyne, attorney at law, Goldfield, Nev.; Richard Willis, mine owner, Colorado Springs, H I Colo, and Ryolite, Nev.; and J. Frank Smith, mining engineer, Hinton, W. V. Depository and H reference, John S. Cook & Co., Bankers, Goldfield, Nev. ' ' H Reservations should be made at once and remittances TJ T lSJtT lOA Xr fO I in full should accompany. Allotments will be made Jv-W VJlN EL,3WJ VV CX KKJ 1 I in the rder f rCCeipt f -Ascriptions , . - Investments' I H - For prospectuses, engineers' reports, history of Nev- nr 1 1 B ada, mining investments and other particulars, address vjroiuneiCl, H he fiscal agents. JNCV. I |