The Arlington Journal. (Arlington, Tex.), Vol. 13, No. 22, Ed. 1 Friday, June 25, 1909 Page: 7 of 10
ten pages : ill. ; page 22 x 15 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
J
i
| .' .-..A—+MH
OFFICERS.
MINES
■ I
DIRECTORS.
.1
ATTORNEYS.
(3)
(5)
WE WILT.
All stock full paid and non-
1
Act
Cobre Grande Copper Co.,
Dallas Texas.
Gentlemen:
I have just returned from a trip to Sonora, Mexico, where
I went for the purpose of an examination of the properties
owned by our Company.
We made a thorough examination of
these properties from a practical business standpoint, and I
unhesitatingly say that this Company has a splendid opportun-
ity to make a grand success and earn dividends for each and
every stockholder.
|M
*
P. 0. Box 906
" ■" ' -ii- 1 Z
■
President
.. First Vice President.
Second Vice President
.. .Secretary-Treasurer
.. Dallas
El Poso
Kirby Drug Co., Druggists
Jack Frost Co.
Mayor of Greenville
Secretary-Treasurer
Insurance
Dorsey Printing Co.
Attorney at Law
.Sam Dysterbach Co., Dry Goods
Pres. Sam Houston Life Ins. Co.
M. L. ROBERTSON
MANUEL FLORES.
__________________________________________~
EVERY SOUND INVESTMENT.
Every sound investment has for its basis a careful study of facts and
conditions. On no other basis can any enduring success be hoped for.
The officers and directors of the Cobre Copper Company are presenting
the facts which have formed the basis of their own confidence in the
present undertaking.*
Cananea District, State of Sonora,
Mexico
'I
WE ASK YOUR CONSIDERATION ON THE PROPOSITION
AS SET FORTH.
LOCATION OF THE COBRE GRANDE.
The property is about sixteen miles south of Douglass, Arizona, the
great smelting center of the Southwest. Jt is also 4 1-2 miles east of
Cabullona Station, on the Nacozari Railroad, at present the nearest
shipping point, however the Southern Pacific Railway, which is now
building its road into Douglass, will come within one and a half miles
of our property.
of their ores at tremendous costs, where timber
pb*ained from a great distance.
Can we not succeed, having transportation at our very door and only
a short distance to the smelters?
' 3
The present low price of a limited amount of stock.
' •
WRITE FOR FREE PROSPECTUS.
wtyere development . work lias been continued down, to
p. ■■■ n»..ww wrew'Lopper BelU.tnl
533 Wilson Building, Phone Plain 6605
■SS3SSSM£S!S£5SSZSS!SSiiSiiii!I!!iBZS!^Z^=£iSSSSS5Si!SS
■•1
.fa -al
HERE LIES THE GREATEST MINERAL DEI*OSITS KNOWN
TO THE WORLD.
The statements are.not based on theory, but have been absolutely
demonstrated. It it Intfact without exaggeration that the Coppsr
Queen Smelter, located 15 miles from the Cobre Grande property, hand-
led more copper under one roof last year than any other smelter in the
.world 4. .. . .
- -•■>1
OTHER ADVANTAGES POSSESSED BY THE COBRE GRANDE.
Water is conveniently at hand. An abundance of wood for fuel is
also available In the vicinity.
Timbers can be shipped at a reasonable price; but owing to the na-
ture of the ground but liTtle timber is required for mining operations.
Me have an ideal climate, being no interruptions of work on account of
weather conditions during the entire year. '
Native labor of excellent efficiency is also constantly available at low-
cost and unattended by strikes, etc. .
tl
.......-........ —
A RICH COPPER DISTRICT.
The range of mountains, in which this property is located Is a con-
tinuation of Chlricahua range, In which so many valua-ble Copper and
Gold properties have been recently located. As far as know-n, the en-
tire belt is highly mineralized, the country rock being Identical to that
of the Bisbee District in its formation. - -
The country generally is cretaceous of the Mesozoic period; the ore
throughout the district makes in lime on a porphry or granite contact
with occasional outcropping of an intrusive porphry. The lime-stone
and Iron cap comes up in reefs and dykes. The granitic overflow is
apparent over large areas and wherever this occurs, combined with |
porphrytic croppings and lion, it is absolutely sure.
—rr.—
COPPER A CLEAR PROFIT.
A well-defined aid heavy minetalized ledge shows outcrops over the
entire surface of ths ~cbre Grande property and extends along its entire
length, showing sur'ace measurements across the outcrops of from 75
to 100 feet, highly mineralized the entire width.
The strike of the ledge is east of north ano west of south, and the
vein stands nearly vertical, being about five degrees to the northeast.
These statements are taken from reports made by expert mining en-
gineers and geologists. Various assays have been made of our ore
showing very rich copper values, together with good gold and silver
values. These documents are on file In our office and will be gladly
exhibited to anyone desiring to investigate our statements.
Cobre Grande Copper Co.
Dallas, Texas
ANYWHERE IN THE COPPER DISTRICT.
Gold will be found at a depth of one to two hundred feet in sufn
cient quantities to meet or more than meet all mining expenses, leav-
ing the
W. 8. KIRBY
h. p. Mcknight . .
JOS. F. NICHOLS . . .
W. L. SHUMATE, JR
W. 8. KIRBY
h. p. Mcknight . .
JOS. -F. NICHOLS . .
W. L. SHUMATE, JR.
S. A. 8TEMMONS .
HENRY DORSEY . .
W. L. SHUMATE . .
SAM DYSTERBACH
I. J. WILLINGHAM
The absolute law of the company to allow no Incumbrance to
be placed upon the 1 roperty of any character whatsoever.
NOT GO IN DEBT.
(6) No preferred stock of bonds.
assessable.
(7) -
promptly.
J J While there I also visited one of the largest smelters, and J ’
* • saw the ores, and it is my opinion that we hav? oije of a better ’ * >
1 > . « <
than any I saw In the smelter yards. I have
2 money in thife enterprise and I afn well pleased with my in- J '
T vesttjient, furthermore I give my endorsement and unbesitut- .< •
'♦V'lPSly recommend ttdaj^poaition
t7^ne i
X ‘ 1 Yours Very truly, ' 0
W. S. j^RDY. . o
TRANSPORTATION FACILITIES.
We Invite your special attention to this feature, as the matter of
transportation Is a most important factor in the mining Industry. Our
properties are not inaccessible, requiring long, tedious journey over the
mountains on burros, but easy of access, being already only 4 1-2 miles
from the railroad, leached by a good wagon road to our property. We
also have ag/>; rsgnn road to Douglass—ih miles distant.
The Souths a t'aciik Railroad, now buildlag ntr Dou .as-, will run
within a mile and a half of our property.
This is not a matter of probability, but evidenced by the work already
In progress. Many mines have made wonderful successes even thougn
far removed from railroads, and smelters, necessitating the marketing
of their ores at tremendous costs, where timber and water had to b*
This rich mlneraf zone is many Ssii'£
a northerly and'southerly direction. . 2
it is a broad statement, nevertheless true, that among all the mines T
'of this district there has NOT been recorded A SINGLE FAILURE X
the depth of. 2
tai >r«Q.mMd.oas coppw, gora
.......... r.........WwCalnvnetT*
and Arizona and the Shattuck mines -are-just to the west of our pnoper- X
“ ty, the Conanea mines to the SQUth and west, the wonderful Montezuma •
Copper,mineS to the south, the El Tigre gold and ailver mines to ’the 2
east and south, the’j|ch copper mines of Morenci, Clifton and Globe to 2
the north and east. *
•1
I
•1
I
I J'l
H 1
B ‘IS
II
>4^
The proximity of the mines to the smelter, with railroad trans-
portation at our very door. , . .
(4) Perfect title in the name of the company and free from all in-
T1TLES TO PROPERTY.
This company is not operating on a lease, bond or option, but owns
this property by authority of the Mexican Government, signed, sealed
and delivered to us by Ps , 'ojei officers. •*
The titl to tnis propity has teen fully Investigated and passed upon
by the highest legal autht rlty m the country and is la the namp of the
Company.
To our READER3 AND THINKERS, having secured his valuable
property now wholly free from any liability and which we assure you
shall forever be kept from “Earth-quaking Bonds,” attachments or legal
entanglements, we come to you offering a limited amount of stock, at
a small percentage of its real value, to put this magnificent property
upon a good dividend paying basis.
We want engine, boiler, hoisting machinery, tramway, mine cars knd
lastly, a tram road from mines to connect with the NEARBY RAIL-
WAYS, thus enabling us to discharge the valuable product of our mines
direct to the smelters less than twenty miles distant.
We believe that within six months the mines can be made free from
further stock sales. In which case the stock will command par or above.
if you have never 1 eally considered a mining investment as a means
of increasing your savings, we urge that you do so now Cobre Grande
Copper stock, at the price it Is now offered you, presents an exceptional
opport uqitv
There are no encumbrances on the property, no preferred shares and
Bo bonds -to come first In the division of profits, and your shares will a
earn as much as a like number of shares owned by any other member
■ y-X/f ' ■' ; J '■
invested'^^ • 'wft sxiibKlIfTinfv^aTaand non-asseesable, as stated in each certifi-
cate. -Each share carries with it the right to vojte, so that with a single “*
share you have-every right, privilege and protection possessed by any
other stockholder * '• , »
-wi'i’A sue ttvoirt-uaous Tortunes which have t
< I* been made by other companies In our Immediate vicU|ity. In tfils con-
‘ * nectlpn we beg to state that it Is oiir intention ta conduct the’buslness
< > in a conservative-manner, and protect the InterSts of all stockholders.
< I We are Investing our own money in this enterprise, which is-the best
evidence of lur good fhith, and in offring you this stock we present It
as a solid and safe Investment, not as a speculation.
(1) The location of the Cobre Grande in the midst of the great cop-
per producing district.
(2) The extent and richness of our ore in copper and gold, and the
geological law for rhe vein to increase in width and value as shaft deep-
I ens, as has been demonstrated tn mines near our property.
THERE IS A LARGE BED OF COPPER OR"E BENEATH.
|ij accordance with geological law each of the openings made showed
these material facts, the vein being three and a half to four feet wide
at grass roots, widening out as descent is made.
AGAIN, It is a geologiealJaw that in all molten metals the heaviest j cutnbrancel
lies the lu.\-st. . tii> mighty pressure of the deep waters of the!
Pacific Ocean, ages ago, reached down to the bed of gold and forced It
upward with the copper. Hence in sinking the shaft.
<
't1
A Limited Amount of Treasury Stock at 10c a Share Par
Value $1.00 per Share, Full Paid and non-Assessable
■
Mm
-
1
~ I
W| J
■
J
I
I V
r ’■
I I
’ I
; ' " ■ '' - J •
■ ■■■’'"■ - ■' ' h,. -
. . . ... ■ ■■ .v ■ ■ - . c .. • .
± the ARLINGTON JOURNAL, ARLINGTON. TEXAS. FRIDAY, JUNE 2A, loou ____________
-------- • ■'
[QPPERJS KIN
WE ARE OFFERIN
vk' •
■
p- ■ .
ft1
El«'
*
r
.'I
l
I
I
i
V
I
' 'r"'H
I
-V
< --.iH _
.m.—
,5
1
•
■9i
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Bowen, William A. The Arlington Journal. (Arlington, Tex.), Vol. 13, No. 22, Ed. 1 Friday, June 25, 1909, newspaper, June 25, 1909; Arlington, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1308392/m1/7/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Arlington Public Library.