Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 12 Apr 1912, 1, p. 7

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

T. N.O. Reduced Rates Single Fare Return Passengers requiring Pullman ao- oommodation will please make early request to our local agent so that we may know just what extra equip- ment is wanted. For further particulars apply to any T. N. 0. Agent or the under- . 'l‘h] mitu ofthc' Good going April 4th. 5th, 6th, 7th. 8th. 1912. and valid for return up to and inpluding Wednesday, April 10th, 1912. Minimum fare twenty- five (25) cents. any '1 signed. 30“ LPN T110. “1‘ I (isl1153 g ccixod Leer of smxiD‘ pathia ‘ric in was son from the ] derstood. vtion with cue-ding tc A. J. PARR General Frt. and Pass. Agent Trc‘. im: Atl Excursion tickets will be sold be- tween all Canadian Pacific Stations in Canada, Port Arthur, Ont., Sault Ste. Marie, Ont... Windsor, ()nt., and east, also to and from Detroit and Sault Ste. Marie, Mich., Buffalo, Suspension Bridge, Niagara Falls, X. Y., Newport, Vt., at Lowest One-Way First-Class (“1 Fare for the Round T rip (No fare to be less thoan 25c) April 4:» to 8m. 1912, Inclusive Good until April IU’II. ["12 For tickets and full information, apply to D. J. McKeown. Depot Ticket Agent, North Bay, Ont.; W. G. Metzler, 'l‘own Ticket Agent, Ferâ€" guson Block, North Bay. Canadian (ff-“o Let us TellYou the One Best Stockto Buy Got your information Direct trom the Camp regarding E South Porcupine. Ont. Can. ‘RIOHT ON THE GROUND" Pacific Easter Excursions Holidays .911 ‘ieeriug, Mine and Land Sur- m”(iDraug‘hting'. Blue Printing ric process and latest maps win. \. . . mgnmg areas on hand. MINING SIOCKS. MINING CLAIMS, TOWNSITE LOTS, £10. a are ”RIGHT ON THE GROUND.” I}: us anything about PORCUPINE ~ that's what we are here for. Ode Code ! Five Claims located in Timmins' Township, second years work completed. Re- markable Free gold showings Exceptional opportunity. Can be seen anytime. Small Pay- ment down. Box 532 SOUTH PORCUPINE wio Land Surveyors igineers and Maps PORCUPINE HEAD OFFICE : Block - PORCUPINE. . Fuller Co. -â€"F ROM-â€" Cobalt ADDRESS: Box 120 ()nc locomotive type boiler, 60 horsepower. ' Ono 4§x334 Fairbanks Duplex Pump. One Rand 44 drill. One Rand 438 Drill. One Rand Compressor, first-class order. Ono 5x5 Jonokcs Hoist with 200 feet 2 cable, first. class order. 500 feet tram rails, 12 lb. Air Receiver. 2 feet 6 inches by 10 feet. doooccoooooooooooooooo 2 Sheaves, one 3 inch. one two inch, new, 2 Dump Cara, nearly new, 14 cubic feet capacity. Geo. Poppleton, Machine Shop HAILI T0 RENT -â€" ONE STORE, IN Grant, Ont, building? with a room in the back of it. Situated on lot No. 130, good locality for restaur- ant, pool room, fruit store, butcher shop or any other kind of business, except dry goods store. For parti- culars write or apply personally to CHALYKOFF DRAJKOFF. 8. Alfred Jones, K.C. Barrister. Solicitor, Notary. c. King St, Golden City OOWMONOOOOOONOO §ASSESSMENT WORK FLEMING 8o MARVIN 'orcupme, HOMER L GIBSON C0 Apply and all Outlying Districts .‘Iemberu Standard Stock Exchange LUMSDEN BUILDING Porcupine and Cobalt Stocks Undertaken in SWASTIKA LARDER LAKE CRIPPLE CREEK West SHINNIG TREE Mining Contractors SOUTH PORCUPINE MINING DEVELOPMENT ' â€"ANDâ€"~ PORCUPINE High Class References upon Request For Sale l-tf TELEPHONE M 46902 Cochrane, Ont. HAILEYBURY lit, i Dexelopmcnm at the \IcEnaney Ontario. ivF'UPeity of the (T-rmxn Rescue in- Eclude the cutting of :1 next. win at iboth the 100 and 200 foot levels. The ORE. 15' f win at the Urn-{11111 incl is about '3 th 21 room; feet of (11111117. and 111. the 711111001 th 011 10tjsligi1th \xider. In both lcxcis ialues )1‘ ”Stan!“ are well maintained and ou:ration‘s re, butcher! will be at on c mmmom 1,1] to block f bUSiDBSS out the (HT. SOUTH PORCUPINE BANKING INSTITUTIONS Few towns in the older districts oi Ontario can boast of more or better banking institutions than can South Porcupine. These financial enterprises haVe proven of great value to the people of the camp. and the respective man~ ngers are men thoroughly mm to the possibilities of Porcupine. After over :1 .war's: pr-lfitlcss ex- plorall on the vein was discovered by the diamond drill and afterwards struck in the shaft. It has now been definitely located on two levels. McEnaney Vein George Gordon Finally Located Goes to Senate WWAIVW'V‘ THE PORCL'PIAE ADVANCE THE BANK OF TORONTO J. M. FRAWLEY, - Manager THF. BANK OF COMMERCE w G Wd TESDTS. - Manag 'lfli? TRADERS BANK J D. TIPTON. - Ma BANK OF OTTAWA . CLAYICN, â€" M They have contributed largely to: maintain the standing and prosocrfié ity of the camp as a whole.and when: the history of the great Porcupine is! written, it will be found that the; bank managers of South Porcupine have prot'ided material for one of! the most important and interesting. pages. ‘ Another vacancy-in the Senate has; arisen through the failure of Senator Sullivan, of Kingston, to attend for two consecutive sessions. Senator Sullivan, who is an aged man, has been in poor health for some time. In) early move to fill the vacanpyf need be expected, but it is regarded as almost certain that Mr. George (lurdon will become Senator Sulli- van's successor. Mr. Gordon was VI. 1’. for Nipissing and made way for. Air. Cochrane on the latter’s acceptfi ance of the portfolio of Railways and; Canals. ' f .wâ€" -- ..â€"... Karager anager Manager Five Hundred Courageous Prospectors flit the Long Trail With Thermoneter Sixty Below Zero. GOLD STAMPEDE FROM DAWSON T0 SIXTY-MILE This is the story at the great De-{lrom thirty to forty miles by going camber stampede from Dawson to the? up Swede Creek and over the ridges new gold strike at the head of Sixty? between Glacier and Dog Crate. Mile River, 130 miles distant. A tam-3 Ernest Miller and Frank Wagner. perature from 40 to do below zero the first stampeders who returned. did not deter 500 men from stam-é reported that. the trail was like a peding irorn Dawson and Stewart’bonlevard except for a few miles River as soon as John Matson's dis-E above Dawson. Wagner said the trip covery was known. The telegraph could be made with a good horse or and cable brought hriei news of dog team in three days. This news, Matson’s strike the day after he re. which pioved correct, caused a soo- cordcd his claim in the gold com- and stampede larger than the first. missioner's ofliee at Dawson shortly; The Yukon Government promptly before Christmas. asent L. T. liurwash. Government {a ton at a profit. Dawson reports by both cable and’ mail that old Klondikers believe the' Sixty Mile discovery surpasses in im-f portance any gold strike in the Bri-: tish Yukon since the Klondike. Sev- eral months work will be required to: determine the matter. The tempera- ture reached 60 below zero in .lanu-g an. when hundred oi men were, going to Sixty Mi. e River to stake claims or returning to Dawson tol record them. The loe temperature' was welcomed as a help to the rainy ers because it froze to hedroelt. elim- inating trouble from water. i Several road houses have been opened along the trail. By January 15 a full-fledged store was doing busi- ness at the new mining town oi Ledge City. The gold commissioner changed the name of the south fork of Sixty Mile. on which the discovery was made, to Matson Creek in hOnor of John Matson, who first prospect- ed it. and discovered gold there. Many tributaries are being staked and named after their discoverers. Tributaries to Matson Creek,all stak- ed. have been named Borden (alter the Premier). Fortier. Maroon. Gold Stream. Ch'ristmas, Cutting, Angus, Monty, Deedie and Wiede. Sinking holes to bedrock is in progress on many claims. many claims. ; Matson, better known as the Lone Not for a decade had there been: Swede. reached Dawson 0" 3 Friday such a demand for dogs as during; Md PM "P at the Yukon Hotel. The the three days following John Mat-, next day he appeared at the 8016 son's arriVal at Dawson. Every fleet commissioner's office and applied for malamite was purchased or borrowed discovery claim 1.500 feet long and for the Sixty Mile stampede on the. 1,000 feet on each side of the creek. following day. By the third dayfllohn Dike staked adjoining Matson. even a third rate dog that could help: rear-hing Dawson 8 day later. Then draw a sled was worth $200 at least.’ the stampede'started. ’l‘hosc miners, inurcd to Klondike! Mill-“0h has been in that country weather, took little rick at 60 below; since 1898. ”0 1188 remained in the because of the very fact that success' Sixty Mile Valley most of the four- necessitated a rush journey to Sixtyi teen years, doggedly digging. Sixty Mile and back. One stampede iszMile is favored with enough wood said to have gone all the way to Mat-i f0" mining and domestic purposes. son Creek and back “vithout cv9n 8: “1th i8 plentiful everywhere above hand sled or a cracker. He got his’ a [)0th six miles from the mouth. claim and recorded it. Samuel: Last Fall's hi8 run 0‘ caribou was in Matheson, a miner, and Chief Isaac? that region. of the Moosehide Indians, living neari Indignation was caused at Dawson Dawson, traVeled together, usingthei by reports that. a number of claims Indian chief's fine dog,r team. Mathe-lon the Sixty Mile were blanketed, son staked .\'o. 27 above Matson's; lllanketing is ('(mstrued as pure fraud discovery claim and the chief also‘ and oflieers of the Yukon Govern- . I put down his pegs. gment declare that prosecutions will Big Dome Plans Are Enormous The management of the Big Dom: has planned to accomplish: 10,000 feet of underground development dur- ing the summer. This determination to open up almost two miles under- ground indicates the scale upon which the big mine will he worked. A shaft will he sunk to the 5004(th lcVel, while the other levels will be opened out. In all ‘24 drills will be operated. The Sixty Mile stampeders are showing more spirit than the Klon- dike has seen since the golden days on Bonanza and 'Eldorado. The Klondike is no longer a poor man's camp. Hence the excitement over a new discovery that. promises indi- dual riches. Scores who went in the first rush at Christmas time began buying outâ€" fits immediately after recording. These have gone back to the creeks to sink holes. By spring several gundred men will be at work. Num- erous half and quarter interests in Sixty Mile claims have been sold to Dawson people who were unable to join in the rush. Among the stampeders were ahunâ€" dred or more miners from Stewart River camps. They obtained news of the strike through the telegraph operator at Ogilvie. Sixty Mile lies between. Dawson and the famous Stewart River. The mill is now running with very foiimxim: gtcntlunr-n helm sclcctud Ln fail results and it. is said that in manage the affairs of Mutluzson iw time it will be possible to mine and 1012: Captain Smith, it. Booth. 0. mill ore of as low a value as $3.501Burton, ,G' McDonald. A. Schultz A few Dawson stampeders saved 3 For the benefit of checchacos, or tender-feet, it may be explained that [blanketing is the sinking of a claim ‘by a person not entitled to stake. Hfsually it is done by some man who has staked for himself and who then . stakes one or m01e claims under false names, giving any stranger coming :lfltCI the impression that the ground has been taken. Later the man who has done the blanketim,r sends con- federates to stake the coveted ground. 3 and -\'r'. Monahan The Yuknn Govemnnnt promptly sent. 1.. T. Burwaah. Government. mining engineer. to Sixty Milo {or an oflicial report. 0n returning to Duv- son Burwnsh said: “When we left 357 elairm had been staked on Mutaon Creek and tribu- taries. Between forty below and thirty above on the. main stream the striking is well done. Otherwise the staking is poor. and ii gold proves plentiful accurate surveying will soon be necessary." Toni Kirkpatrick. one of the stem- peders. punned gold on the bars of Sixty Mile before the Klondike was struck and found color. Another cluihi owner is Andy llurt. who was in the Glacier Creek country before the Klondike was heard of. John Matson. the discoverer, took two and :1 quarter ounces of gold worth about. $40 from a space five by eight feet on bedrock on discovery claim. "ll the indications found in the fnrmimrs on Mntson'n claim hold out in an area of gravel the creek will aflord a good camp. Tho indications are Very favorable. Within a month thirty to forty more holes will be sunk to bedrock.” Burwnsh traversed the full length of the main stream and went. to the heads of the nine tributaries which were being staked. He said further Matheson’s First Municipal Body lndignation was caused at Dawson by reports that a number of claims on the Sixty Mile were blanketed. lllanketing is construml as pure fraud and ollicors of the Yukon Govern- ment declare that prosecutions will follow. Three years ago Crooked The first election for the incorpor- ated town of Mathcmn held Tuesday of last, week caused the greatest in- {crest and practitally (very Voter cast his ballot. 'I‘hc Canton. fur the Mayoralty wax very close, the final result showing that L. Johnsonmanâ€" agar of Revillon F‘rcrm, had vmn by the close margin of six mtnb, hi» opponent, P. A. Douglas, rem-Edna 37 votes to Mr. Johnson’s 43. The election of councillors resulted -in the. following gentler-n being selectedln manage the affairs, of Mnthcson [at 1912: Japtain Smith, R. Booth. 0. Blunketing is considered to be a criminal offence under the Yukon l’lacer Mining Act as well as under the criminal code. Administrator llorrigan instructed the police de~ tuchment sent to Sixty Mile to in- vestigate all stakings and report on blanketing. Wright was convicted of lilankcting in the Klaune stampede and Ben-- (unveil to two and a half years in jail at White Horse.

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy