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OSTO: SEC Registration revoked:
https://www.sec.gov/files/litigation/opinions/2023/34-98870.pdf
OSTO: SEC Admin. Proceeding for delinquent Financials (Sept. 2022 and deficient 10K's since 2002)
https://www.sec.gov/files/litigation/admin/2023/34-98464.pdf
They let this go to the EM........
You still KeepInON in this one KeepOn?
OSTO down 50% today...
saw that, GL
MBOT
OSTO now pink current
Anyone still around on this board? Just came across this company. Anything happening?
I can't understand why I-hub admin lets them get away with that shit.
I say we move all the nbri longs over here so our posts don't get deleted lol
Yippi ky a .... Go OSTO
No moderators its a FREE FOR ALL LOL!!!!
This was in the trips...I remember when walt told me about this 5 yrs ago
Oh well..as Herman Munster used to say, DARN DARN DARN!
haha...I wouldn't touch this stock or company...yet.
Grey sheets...bad news....
He'll have those 1600 shares forever.
lazyeye:
To late !! 1600+ shares were bought @ .06/per, a 27,000 +/- % increase. Remember, California is BITCH of a place to mine with all the evironmentalists writing rerstrictive regulations. Stay clear!!!JMHO
W A Calahan
WE will fund it dang nabbit! There's GOLD in dem dar hills! eek!
13 mill o/s according to filings...incredibly low for a stock trading at .0002!
A $2,600 market cap??
Sumptin ain't right here...
I think I'll buy the company today, lol.
also please, stockcharts.com is saying "invalid symbol" if this isn't true please make sure you e-mail them to correct this error... people need to see this ticker in existance for anyone to even start reading this board. Thanks again
Hey Jean..
I have a few questions to ask, do you know how far he is in gathering all that money? are you in any contact with him? Is there a building for this company? Is there any other individuals that are working with him?
Miner hopes to strike gold with new technologies
Mike Miller, president of Original Sixteen to One Mine in Alleghany, leads a tour from the Nevada County Historical Society into the shaft of his 113-year-old gold mine. For more information visit the Web at OrigSix.com or NevadaCountyHistory.org.
Photo for The Union by Michelle Rindels
ALLEGHANY — Mike Miller guided a tour group through the thick sludge at the bottom of his 113-year-old mine, the beams of his headlamp glinting off snowy quartz walls of a chilly mine shaft.
Thirty-five years into his rocky career as a gold miner at the Original Sixteen to One Mine, he's still part cynic, part starry-eyed dreamer.
“The Bureau of Mines doesn't exist anymore,” the mine president drily told members of the Nevada County Historical Society, in rapt attention under their hard hats. “It's the bureau of environmentalists.”
But he also speaks with a 49er's lusty hopes for precious metal.
“Geologists say 80 percent of this mine hasn't been exploited,” Miller said. “At prices today, every miner is elated.”
Battered by up-and-down profits and a lengthy legal battle after an accident killed a miner nearly a decade ago, Miller is clinging to hope that new technology will lead him straight to the mother lode — at a near-record $1,059 for at market close Thursday for every sparkling ounce.
High-tech 49er
Miller's pet project is raising a quarter of a million dollars to do research and development in the mine. His crews unearthed some of their greatest gold nuggets when they first started metal detecting in 1993.
But it's been 10 years since his company has sunk serious cash into the high-tech trappings of modern mining. Since then, mine-mapping software has improved, and scientists are using radar and radio wave imaging to locate gold.
As he has in the past, Miller also wants to invite scientists to use the mine as a beta site to test new gold detection technologies.
“In '93 and '94, we had every kook in the world coming in,” Miller said. “But it's really developed into a much more sophisticated field.”
The mine's best asset, Miller said, is that it's still operating and well-maintained. The Sixteen to One is North America's oldest continuously operating mine.
Gold was first discovered in the tiny town of Alleghany in 1896, and the company was incorporated in 1911.
It's famous for dense pockets of gold — like the one mined in 1993 that yielded more than a million dollars' worth in a single day. The dense pockets also turn up nuggets like The Whopper, which weighs 14 pounds and contains 140 troy ounces of gold.
Then there are the bare years. In 2007, the mine yielded 50 ounces of gold.
Since then, Original Sixteen to One has been in “maintenance mode.” Investors that he hoped would see potential in the mine pulled out when the financial crisis hit last year.
“There's a great aversion to risk right now,” Miller said.
To keep operations going amid shaky financial times, the company is slowly selling its valuable inventory of gold nuggets.The Whopper is on sale for $850,000. And this summer, Miller put another mine — Brown Bear Mine in Trinity County — up for sale.
Tragedy
Before the financial crisis descended, the mine faced a different tragic setback that has lingered for years. On Nov. 6, 2000, miner Mark Fussell was driving a locomotive in the mine shaft and hit his head on a protruding ore chute.
He died, and the mining company became embroiled in a tangled legal battle that went on for years. Miller and the mine manager were absolved of guilt in the miner's death, a case he called “an illegal legal battle” and “a farce.”
Miller then sued the California District Attorneys Association for $24 million in lost opportunity to develop capital, charging that the CDAA lawyers who prosecuted him in the wrongful death case were contracted illegally. He lost in 2007.
The financial effects of the suit still linger — including among investors.
“People said, ‘Call me back when you get this settled,” Miller said. “It's hard to say whether that legacy still follows us.”
Gilded prospects
While Miller is optimistic about the rising price of gold, others are downright ecstatic.
Jason Hommel owns J.H. Mint, a new Grass Valley company developing infrastructure to mint silver coins. He also writes a newsletter for 80,000 subscribers and runs a Web site called Silver Stock Reports.
Silver's great, but gold is on this market watcher's mind.
“We're at the beginning of a very long bull market in gold,” said Hommel, who predicts gold could reach $4,000 an ounce within the next decade.
One reason is that China has expressed interest in diversifying its foreign holdings by buying 4,000 metric tons of gold each year, Hommel said.
The sheer volume of such purchases would wrest price regulation from the International Monetary Fund, which occasionally moderates price increases by threatening to release 400 metric tons of gold onto the market, Hommel said.
Plus, the bond market is suffering, and investors are seeking the security of gold.
“A long-term gold price explosion will definitely turn this into a gold mining community again,” Hommel said.
Hope
Miller agreed gold prices are headed higher, but was more moderate in his expectations.
He remains confident about the Sixteen to One's prospects: The mine is in a production mode, not merely exploration mode.
But the telephone hasn't been ringing much these days. Miller's first priority is raising the $250,000 he needs to troll the mine with new technology.
Then there's the $3.5 million cost to sink a new mine shaft. They've been talking about it since 2003, but so far, the money hasn't come through.
In a puffy red vest, jeans and rubber boots, Miller expertly guided the Historical Society members along the muddy mine cart tracks.
He's worked here since 1974 and still sees a future in the industry that birthed the Golden State.
“We sit in a great area,” Miller said. “Distractions have definitely hurt my company. But the Original Sixteen to One survived World War II.”
By some accounts, the mine may appear to be struggling or even face closure.
“But this is a very asset-rich small company,” Miller said. “People are dedicated to not letting that happen.”
Staff Writer Michelle Rindels can be reached at mrindels@theunion.com or (530) 477-4247.
http://www.theunion.com/article/20091023/NEWS/910229972/1005/NONE&parentprofile=1053
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Original Sixteen to One Mine, Inc
Incorporated in 1911 in California, the Sixteen to One Mine continues to intrigue people the world over.
We invite you to use this website as you would use a library. Learn about gold, geology, California history, contemporary issues and the specifics of the Original Sixteen to One mining company.
Website: http://www.origsix.com/
Corporate Office
Post Office Box 909
527 Miners Street
Alleghany, California 95910
e-mail: corp@origsix.com
Phone (530) 287-3223
Fax (530) 287-3455
Incorporated under the laws of the State of California,
October 6, 1911.
Capital Authorized: 30,000,000 non-assessable shares of common stock.
Shares outstanding as of March 30, 2009: 13,373,505.
To view most recent financial statements, please see the SEC site.
Directors and Executive Officers of Registrant
Michael M. Miller
Director, President & CEO
As President, Mr. Miller is responsible for the day-to-day operations of the company. In 1975, Mr. Miller became the sole proprietor of the Morning Glory Gold Mines. Prior to that, he was self-employed in Santa Barbara County, California from 1965 to 1974. Mr. Miller served as a trustee and President of the Sierra County Board of Education (1979 to 1983 trustee; President in 1983). From 1989 to 2001 he served as a member of the Sierra County Planning Commission (Chairman 1992 and 1993). Mr. Miller is licensed as a California Class A general engineering contractor. He is a member of the American Institute of Mining Engineers. Dissident 16 to 1 shareholders elected him a director in 1977, he became president in April 1979, a position he has held since then; but lost the office four months later in a shameful coupe de tate. He regained the office in April 1983. In 1965, Mr. Miller received a B.A. from the University of California at Santa Barbara in combined Social Sciences-Economics. He was born in Sacramento, California.
High-Grage Production
by
Original Sisxteen to One Mine, Inc.
YEAR | POUNDS OF PRODUCTION | OUNCES PRODUCED | NET RETURNS* | NET RETURNS @ $385.00/OZ. | % OF TOTAL PRODUCTION |
1930 | 12,569 | 12,066.92 | $249,423.23 | $4,645,764.20 | 61.67% |
1931 | 16,101 | 13,946.68 | $288,277.82 | $5,369,471.80 | 57.15% |
1932 | 11,783 | 14,794.78 | $305,808.18 | $5,695,990.30 | 73.96% |
1933 | 9,050 | 13,203.44 | $272,915.11 | $5,083,324.40 | 74.90% |
1934 | 10,222 | 11,472.82 | $401,548.82 | $4,417,035.70 | 70.71% |
1935 | 7,386 | 10,116.00 | $354,059.85 | $3,913,910.00 | 74.29% |
1936 | 6,514 | 10,426.71 | $364,934.85 | $4,014,283.35 | 71.32% |
1937 | 6,293 | 7,740.92 | $270,932.14 | $2,980,254.20 | 68.17% |
1938 | 8,352 | 8,222.55 | $287,789.16 | $3,165,681.75 | 65.14% |
1939 | 6,485 | 6,525.02 | $228,375.73 | $2,512,132.70 | 57.85% |
1940 | 5,633 | 8,438.55 | $295,349.30 | $3,248,841.75 | 63.66% |
1941 | 6,369 | 7,533.54 | $263,674.04 | $2,900,412.90 | 55.21% |
1942 | 3,635 | 5,514.00 | $192,990.02 | $2,122,890.00 | 56.75% |
1943 | 1,594 | 2,534.72 | $88,715.05 | $975,867.20 | 73.06% |
1944 | 1,022 | 1,799.00 | $62,965.06 | $692,615.00 | 68.55% |
1945 | 1,300 | 1,623.17 | $56,811.05 | $624,920.45 | 49.14% |
1946 | 3,486 | 7,013.41 | $245,469.21 | $2,700,162.85 | 85.28% |
1947 | ** | 6,849.00 | $239,715.13 | $2,636,865.00 | 94.40% |
1948 | ** | 5,816.03 | $203,561.01 | $2,239,171.55 | 95.51% |
1949 | 2,202 | 3,357.25 | $117,503.72 | $1,292,841.25 | 36.56% |
1950 | 3,070 | 6,517.28 | $228,104.65 | $2,509,152.80 | 53.19% |
TOTALS | 123,066 | 165,511.79 | $5,018,923.79 | $63,741,289.15 |
* | Per Ounce Price From 1930 - 1933 was $ 20.67 and Per Ounce Price From 1934 - 1950 was $ 35.00 |
** | Total Returns of High-Grade & Mill Ore |
Map of the Sixteen to One Mine Underground
Video 1: Documentary 16 to 1 Mine
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