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    3t* - . '' '' *: - . . . __ _____________________________________THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY, MAY 33, IOCS. ^ L. BLEAKMORE COMPANY j^ $ Successors to 7VY!7VTS-SLJ TT R O C2C). (INCORPORATED). PA!D-UP CAP!TAL, $50,000. F^!scetl Agents etndt (3erieretl Brokers. ] j Goldfield, Nevada------" 158 18 2888 PER CENT EARNER F8R 88R CHERTS s * Our Unparalleled Tonopah and Co!dAe!d Record. Daring the period of our operations in these districts, in oar capacity as 6scal agents and as genera! brokers, we have g ,hc^with^rdim.: T0N0FAH NIDWATAT ------------------------------------------------$0.35 MT!A $1.A5 TONOPAH COMMON AT ----------------* -.. - ..................- ----------** ------------------------- *-*" ^ TONOPAH EXTENSION AT.. .. .....- J-----------------------------------------* - *------------------ - - ^ ^ JBI BUTLER AT................................................................................................................................................... ^ TONOPAH BELMONT AT . - ------------------- .- -------------—---------* ------------- J.bo l.J6 ' GOLDEN ANCHOR AT . ...........................................................^......................-.........................................- ^ l.JO i-g SANDSTORM AT -------------- -.........................................................- - ..................................................................... /?g 7K GOLDFIELD MINING AT ............................................................... ... . -...............................................................10 Jo BLACK BUTTE AT . . . ............................................... ...................<""t g ^ This is r\ti!v a nartial list of the Quotations made through our offices, and while we have sold millions of shares of'stock and our operations have covered almost every village and HEARST-JAGGERS COLD M!N!NG CO. Shares of $1 Par Value at 15 Cents. g THE HEARST-.A.GERS C.L. MINING COMPANY. ! ; " f w . ^ L "" tp. b,d<,. .f ^ "A cross-cut tnnne! was run tn about 50 feet on the W. R. Hearst 100-f00t shaft in a westeriy direction, to cross-cut all the vents of thts Head Offices, Goldfield, Nev. claim, cutting a vein at the face of the tunnel. Another httle tunnel wa <-Tr.nt the Crescent. This prospecting will show up the true ex- ______;_________________________"----------------------------------------- run in on the lead about 30 feet and gave evidence that some rich ore ^n^'f ^e immense deposits. Drifts wiil be run on the lead, and then CAPITALIZATION, $1,000,000- had been taken out. A`perpendtcular shaft, separate from the tunnel, was calculations wiil be made correctly as to the amount of ore tonnage and g 8,-" 1400400SHARES. PAR VALUE $140. the .b, of the miU that will *' FULL PAID AND NON-ASSESSABLE. "Yhe expense of moving ore to the shipping point at that time was at A SHORT OrrERHaG. ,,,, . — ————— STTAT?TTR least $60 per ton for drayage alone. Most of the ore taken out was prob- directors have authorized the sale by the company's Rscalagents, S TREASURY STOCK ..........................-...............300400 SHARES ,bly milled at a point 60 mi!es away by an oid-fashtoned water arrastra, ^ Bleakmore Company, of 100,000 shares at 15 cents per share. The pro- OFFICERS: the most primitive method known for handling ore. used for development purposes. Haif of these shares are ^ r.-,—, WmrKeM ,,,,,, ____ President "For purpose of test I went to work and built myself a little horse already spoken for. and it is not believed that JMchhme wiU elapse oe- GeorgC Wmg5eld ........................................ —------ p-- arras&a, Opacity one-third of a ton. Then I drifted at the face of the f.re the entire allotment will be fully subscnbe& Utde<* ad s.^s fad W. J. Douglass ......... . .............. Vice ^resident tunnelon &e south side at a depth of about 60 feet from the surface. this stock will be worth par wtthm a year, and as won as the ^"*batch John S. Cook . ................................M.....: Treasurer -pbe &rst blast that I put in at this spot revealed a vein at least six feet treasury stock offered has been taken up by the pubhc tne p L. Bleakmore . ..................................................1 Secretary wide, that arrastraed $108 per ton in gold. I also arrastraed tadings that double. . . . nnyRCTOR^. , had been left on the dumps by the former prospectors, and these assayed ]? ^ is found necessary to issue any more treasury stock tot devdlop- ^ , $18 per ton. In ail probabdity the man or men who had worked the ^^t purposes the price wii! be advanced to at least double the present George WingSeM, W. J. Donglaaa, John S. Cook, L. Bleakmore, mine did so without even an assaying outfit accompanying. rate, and probably much higher. „ George M!m. and W. H. Lang. "Since then I have developed the property as follows: I have run The company gives this guarantee: If at aty tnne tn the future* Ueorge mtms arm w. n. j ^ifts and raises from the face of the tunnel upward and longways wtth becomes necessary to raise funds for the further development of the prop- "" - . . . . the lead, and I have found gold all the way for a distance of so feet ^e oSer will not be made except at double the present 6gure. Unlike most of the gold mating companies that have later turned out upward and 50 feet southerly, which shows the presence of immense ore *' FAMtMlQ M!M<MG MEN to be producers or aoo^producers in Gc^dReld and its immediate yumnty, deposits. D!RECTORATE OE EAMOUb M8M8Mt* tVttn). the Hearst-Jaggers group of mining daims caa be s^d to "At a depth of Hx feet from the surface a vein is now uncovered George Wing6e!d, president, is associated with United Sytes Senator network of gold mines before the company itself has spent a dollar on de- which runsnorther!y and southerly 4S«o feet. Assays of ore extracted George s" Nixon of Nevada in nearly ail of Mr. Nixon s mining ventures velopment work. ' ____ ,___ __ , , from this vein show values as high as $987 per ton in gold and some silver. . country. Mr. Nixon himseif is one of the most extensive minmg The locator of they clatms, Tom "Out of the Crescent claim I extracted ore by running a ditch, in no operators in Nevada. Mr. Wingfield has amassed over $i,oooyx) in the was purchased, is an old mining prospector of forty years experience. He -i-— more than ten feet deep the ore from which ran $162 per ton. I , three years by getting in on the ground Hoor* of half a dozen Ton- has located other claims and developed them into mines before sellmg. and P —b—j* the surface for the purpose of realizing sufficient funds to *L ^ and Goldfield mining enterprises that have made gootk His aequain- belongs t. that old ^J^k! d^^y^t^ns^ I did all Si. development work unaided dur- ^ with mining J. is^of th.'wid.st range, and hi, success 1, due en- of disposing of a mining property than by deye!opmg K and oy tne smu- . 1 tire)v to his ability to lodge values. , The^ Hearst-Jaggers property stands out as one of the few that at iy ^-On the Polar Star I arrastraed one ton that assayed mine when itwasnothing mine ^^dr^ Doujass' inception has guaranteed immense deposits of yddyroduemg ore. In this "I arrastraed nothing on the Vatley View or the Stray Horse or the no surface ^ ^eo^^,hical ^ition^' would, at a!evet class is the great Combination mine of Gold6tld, which is payty <Evidcnda Leopard claim, but. as your engineers have already reported to you, there opinion that on J^cs ^dti to^lhe groit Tonopah mine, at the rate of $960,000 per year. Before that property was turned over ^ ledges carrying free gold in every of these. of 500 feet, show immense ore bodies akin t gre* the !>y Lu°^? L Patrick to the e^pany whkh "There are hundreds of thousands of good milling ore uwmvered. It ^^Lny^which^ Aboriginally sold for development purposes at 30 cents themed, P**"'J' # *^°* °°* *°* ***"" * "=W h" Mbnd. M") I h— prop"tits thi, for ,, h.gh X,,^'"nd Gd)dLtd mmin, cdn,p,ni.,, ,nd i. tH bee. organized to take it over. „ cash. I do not believe there is anothy group of daims such fuoedmlndemld the only ore reduction mill in Tonopah. in which he i, THE STORY OF THE HEARST-JAGCERS. M thisin Nevada. Didthey lay contiguous to the town of Goldfield I p^"wnen He wa. alsJ on. of the original owners ofth. Tonopah Mid- _. _ . - . - . . . ^______*____ ^ could have realized a cold million for them. . _ _ ^hirh has also materialized into a great gold producing mine. De- The Hearst-Jaggers Gold Mining **^J^%^* -Tha logical formation of this property is wonderful. There are velopment stock in the Tonopah Midway was marketed at a shorter price locator of the property, Tom Jaggers, and from dm WLR.Hwst claim Regular tissues mevi deuce and dikes of porphyry, and the lead is 6lled than that of the Montana Tonopah and is to-day selling around $1.25. g m the center of the group, .b named by Mr. Jaggers when he locate the ^hl,lc. quartz and porphyry. Wherever you-6.dth,skmdof geological ^ treasurer is the senior member of the firm of John samethree years ago. „ . . in Tut. formation you 6nd gold in quantities. Ieonsider the Hearst-Jaggers the John S.Cot^, measure , banking house of Goldfield, which is The property is situated 33 miles southwest of GoM6eM. m Tuie biggest miffing property in the State of Nevada, so far as.I kqow. S. Cook &Co^ bilkers, tne ieaa g Da g ^ company holds on gen- ^Th^ elaims^re^^J^"fo"l^^^"H^t^kS^Stv. VaBey Mining engineers employed by the Hearst-Jaggers Gold Mining Com-. ^""deposApward of $SM,oo^ Mr. (Sok was for a long t*ie cashier of V^ rb^t ^^^ S^y Horse and Lw^rd. pany. whJhave examined the property, more (han bear out the veracity crai ^.unty Bank of Carso. City and Tonopah, and has ^.m ?agg^he d?^2f a^."d.^ter in the eady 1^ ^Sr. Jagg^statements as to the value, and the character of the dev.l- ^ Ny^ ^ hL^! mg days of (k.l.mdo, in which he pr.6ted to the extent of $a*v*M <ui opm^t work done. Mm treasur.ship of the Hearst-Jaggers assure for thp company an honest mining claims he had located, went to New Mexico, and there he worked Immense Ore Bodies WH! Keep a ZO-btamp MU' administration of its hnances. , - i - - a little gold claim for several years, and alsp a pretty good silver property. BUSY for a Generation. The officers of the Hearst-Jaggers are a body of P^ftica! mining men. He disposed of them and went to Arizona, from whence he tr*vded to , .. ^ Seated 120 yards from the tonne! of the They, are right on the ground. They are in toimh wtb a)t ^e mm mg CaHiomia over the mountains, and then went to Nevada. In 1895 he had — Hearst claim of the Hearst-Jaggers property. Wood is to be had interests of Gold6eld and adjoining districts. A practical been prospecting at Hawthorn, Nev., when he struck a southern trail. A .t from Ss to $7 per cord. Charcoal can be had at 50 cents per sack from of the company's affairs is assured. burro and the usual prospector's outfit was all he packed- He was looking Indians. A 20-stamp mill can be built and put in operation for $20,000, ' * *Y for good*claims. After he had traversed over 100 miles, m which he . . .. ,c ^ company's mining engineers who have examined _, < 1 spent seven months, and had prospected thoroughly jrvery mch of the ?h. nmncrtv^suHicientore can^be taken out of the mine to keep this mill SILA7VFf. ground .. the road he located a silver property mTu!e C^yon, now ^n^ f^ S a generati<m. These are indications from the develop- --------------—— Z known as the Tom Jaggers Tu!e Canyon mine. This he gophered for ten K<"S . However, in the opinion of the company s en- D. Bleakmore Co., Fiscal Agents, Goldfield, Nev. years, and, unaided by any living soul, took out $3°,000 of ^'PP^g °^- gineers, sinking of the main shaft 60 feet farther will take it to the water . inclosed....................................dollars, for which send Between times he pfb$pected m the district Md located the Hearst group, R , ^ ^ ^ ^ expected, even better results will be found. At that i nana you mc*oscu ! r ^ now possessed by the Hearst-Jaggers Gold Minmg Company. depth it is believed that the leads of the other claims owned by the com- by registered mail................................shares of stock of the Hearst- ME iK'NE Of !US LIFE. - .. 3,r? ^ p-=" "" i- «< <s ^ ^ Never in my life have I seen such favorable showings. Capital alone has aratetne wordings. _out Name ......................................................................-.................. been needed to make it a wonderful camp. The country is highly miner- If the sage opinions of these mining engineers sre b^e out Md , , slized fpr miles on each sides and. in my opinion, development work will gwts increase with depthitis no^^i^Emto pr^i^ Uiat the ! AddreM .................................................................... show greater ore deposits in that section than in the immediate vicinity of Hearst-Jaggers will turn out to be the greatest producer on eitner side ot V J the town of Goid6eid. the Sierra Nevada Mountains. . `-------------------------- H