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nope just saw it myself , as i recall they called it bonanza not american bonanza showed bunch work in progress some guy in hard hat very brief, best i can recall.
try and play the sestimic risk card i dont think yaull got the guts but if you do ffgo will trump and all will be open to doj, im done.
I just was woundering about pups coment on how will we recieve divi if not through dtc makes for chain of title issues similar to rodo signing lol should be great desire for you know who to avaid this way its basicaly a cert pull without ooops maybe i should nt say LOLOL we just want the divi right lol
the comment will be "by mail" i know in a high tech society we tend to forget the simpler things
i dont think it will get that far but option is there
Type: Profit Corporation - Domestic lol
What Does Domestic Corporation Mean?
A company that conducts its affairs in its home country. A domestic corporation is often taxed differently than a foreign corporation, and may be required to pay duties or fees on the importation of its products. Typically, a domestic corporation is able to conduct business in other states or other parts of the country where it has filed its articles of incorporation.
Business that are incorporated in a different country from which they originate are referred to as foreign corporations.
Read more: http://www.investopedia.com/terms/d/domestic-corporation.asp#ixzz1d9rwkkZq
i dont think youll have any luck with that one either but keep digging ill read um
ffgo not foreign
yup and wy says board of directors make the call dont even need shareholder vote for sale of assets
besides our interests is already sold past tense
this stock can't be shorted, if it can please explain where I can open an account and how to short this stock. I will give you $100.00. It's not possible.
http://individuals.interactivebrokers.com/en/p.php?f=shortableStocks
hglc has been on here as well before
non show available now
its been available though keep your money lol
i think we all agree its the liquidity mechanism at fault
fox news had a bonanza comercial today
Record operating cash flow of $356.9 million jumped322% compared to first nine months of 2010
http://mcintyrebaumangroup.com/mcb_projects.htm
bouse and south copperstone ffgo gold claims are not available as one can see in link above
leases are still good
gold still above deal price
ffgo/nmgl divi deal still fundable and in effect
THIS POINT TRUMPS WE HAVE NO GOLD BECAUSE LEASES ARE SOME HOW NULL, THEY ARE NOT NULLIFIED OR ELSE THEY WOULD BE BACK ON THE MARKET THEY ARE NOT.
A & B SHARES ARE INSULATED NO WIGLE THERE.
THEY HAVE DONE SOME BUSNESS TOGETHER YOU KNOW AS WELL AS AGREED TO KEEP BOOKS OPEN TO EACH OTHER 8KS ARE ALSO VERY SIMILAR BECAUSE OF THIS DIDNT YOU KNOW NMGL ISSUED PREFEREDS WORTH 16 AND 2,2 TO FFGO FOR THIER INTERESTS IN THE GOLD GOSH SILLY LOL
© ELKO VENTURES, INC. (Incorporated in the State of Nevada)
nmgl old name elko
we are in NV
yup and no reason to place others in same juridiction kinda defeets exotic diversification strategy anyway onward great job
its in lease adendum look it up yourself
i always enjoyed this ,origin of claims ;
GENERAL JOHN D. McINTYRE
A Biographical Sketch of General John D. McIntyre from Representative Citizens of Seattle and King County, Washington, pub. 1903
There is no man in King County whose life, if it were written in full here, would make so thrilling a romance as that of Brigadier General J.D. McIntyre, of Seattle. He is fifty-one years old [in 1903], by profession a mining engineer, and until 1890 had lived almost continuously on the outskirts of civilization. His life has been part of the history of many of our western mining camps. He is a crack shot, and has had more sanguinary encounters with men and wild beasts than could be recounted in a volume. It may be said of him that he does not know the sense of fear. For the past eleven years [as of 1903] he has settled down to a quiet home life, has acquired a large fortune and lives in his own beautiful home overlooking Lake Union, in Seattle. A visit to his home on Lake Union is well worth anyone’s while. The originality of the architecture of the house and grounds is a reflex of the character of the man.
Gen. McIntyre was born at Point Fortune, Canada, on December 4, 1851, of Scotch parents. His great-great-grandmother was a daughter of a brother of the Duke of Argyle, and his great-great-grandfather was a rear admiral in the British navy. His great-grandfather was a lieutenant in the British army, and distinguished himself at the battle of Quebec, and was with Gen Wolff when he fell. The family, consisting of father, mother and three children, of which the General was the oldest, emigrated to the United States in 1858, and in 1859 the General’s father went to Pikes Peak, afterwards Denver, Colorado, but then a part of Kansas. He engaged in mining and took out a great deal of gold in Georgia Gulch. He built the first toll road in Colorado.
The family followed in 1860, taking four months to make the journey by team. It was on this trip that first began the series of exciting adventures that has followed this boy’s career ever since. There were Native Americans along the whole route. Their travels were often impeded by great herds of buffalo. Flocks of graceful antelope glided by them continually. This boy, naturally of a martial spirit, here got his first lessons in fighting and hunting. The train consisted of one hundred wagons, and young McIntyre was rated as good a shot as any man on the train. When the train reached Loup’s Fork, of the Platte River, it ran into five thousand Crow (Native Americans) on the war path, but were unharmed. In crossing Loup’s Fork a great cloudburst occurred, breaking the cable on which the ferry boat crossed the river. Some forty on board, including the boy McIntyre, were carried down the mighty flood at a violent speed, but, strange as it may seem, all were saved from this danger also.
Denver, at this time, contained only seventy-five houses and was surrounded by apparently a great desert. For about seven years young McIntyre never knew what it was to be free from the danger of an attack owing to hostilities with Native Americans. Gen. McIntyre said his growth was stunted by the strain on his nervous system.
In 1870 young McIntyre, then nineteen years old, was elected enrolling clerk of the eighth session of the Colorado legislature. During the session a concurrent resolution was passed almost unanimously through both Senate and House, asking the delegates in Congress to give young McIntyre the first vacancy at West Point. Following attendance there he went back to Denver and studied for several years with civil and mining engineers.
In 1877 he went to the Black Hills, locating at Deadwood. This was a year or more before law and order had been established in the Black Hills and young McIntyre soon became a leader in the vigilance (vigilante) committee which ruled during these wild times. Deadwood was crowded with desperate men and the vigilance committee dealt summary justice to all offenders. It was the rule of the committee to hang the offender and try him afterward, and McIntyre said no mistake was ever made in hanging the right man.
He bought the Minnesota mine, near the Great Homestead, at Lead City. While away on a surveying expedition three desperadoes, led by Jim Levy, jumped his mine. When he returned, being informed of the situation, he immediately started for the mine alone, with nothing but his trusty revolver. He walked into the tunnel where the three desperadoes were at work, picked up all their guns and ammunition, threw them over his shoulder and drawing his own revolver ordered them to come out. They were completely cowed by the boldness of this move, and as he had the “dead sure drop” on them, and knowing that he was a dead shot and a bad man to fool with, they came meekly out. He ordered them to “hit the trail” for Lead City, which they did. The whole town got wind of the trouble, turned out to see the sight and young McIntyre became the hero of the camp.
In many of the early mining camps he was known as Lucky Jack, because of his wonderful luck in mining ventures. He was for many years the leading mining engineer in the Black Hills. He was chief engineer of the Great Homestead mines, before he was twenty-seven years old. He examined mines in company with the greatest mining engineers of the nation at that time. There is no doubt that the knowledge acquired in such times was one of the sources of his success in mining ventures in Washington, Alaska and British Columbia. He was the owner or part owner of several gold mines that had been wrecked by bad management, and has with those associated with him made them pay well.
In 1882 he went from the Black Hills to Montana, and within eight years he had organized five different irrigation companies, raised the money and built over four hundred miles of irrigating canals. He built the great Gallatin Canal, the big Muddy Storage reservoirs, the Chestnut Valley canal and the Sun River canal, the Florence canal and others. He came to Washington at the request of the Northern Pacific railroad officials and organized the Sunnyside Canal Company at North Yakima, and sold out to the Northern Pacific.
In 1890, together with some Tacoma gentlemen, he formed the Montezuma Mining Company which owned the coking coal mines at Montezuma, now [in 1903] paying dividends. He, with Henry Hewitt, Henry H. Sweeney and Col. C.W. Thompson, of Tacoma, formed the Pacific Coast Steel Company, which was a consolidation of the Tacoma Steel Company and the Pacific Steel Company. He, with E.M. Shelton, of Seattle, and Charles Richardson, of Tacoma, formed the Bessie Gold Company, with gold mines near Juneau, Alaska, which company is now [in 1903] paying dividends. He formed the La Rica Consolidated and bought the Peshastin Gold Mine at Blewett, Washington, a rich property. He has raised more money from eastern investors than any man in the northwest. There are over six thousand stockholders in his enterprises [again, in 1903].
General McIntyre was appointed brigadier-general commanding the National Guards of Washington, in 1896. The state force consisted of the first and second Washington regiments, two troops of cavalry and one battery of artillery. He served all during the Spanish war. The splendid record made by the first regiment in the Philippines was largely due to his training.
General McIntyre married Lizzie Hull of Iowa, who was the great-granddaughter of Commodore Isaac Hull, commander of the frigate “Constitution” in her famous battle with the British ship “Guerriere” during the War of 1812.
Learn more about McIntyre & Bauman Group »
SENATOR WILLIAM CLARK
A Biographical Sketch of William Andrews Clark from the files of United Verde Copper Company
William Andrews Clark, ex-United States Senator, was born near Connellsville, Pa., January 8, 1839, son of John and Mary (Andrews) Clark. He was a descendant of a Huguenot family which had emigrated from France to Scotland to escape religious persecutions, later moving to the north of Ireland, and then settling in Pennsylvania soon after the close of the Revolutionary War.
His father was a farmer and his boyhood days were spent on the homestead, where he enjoyed the advantages of three months’ winter school and nine months of farm work. In 1856 his father moved to Van Buren County, Iowa, and there developed a large and productive farm, in which his son had his share of work to do. He taught school for several winter terms, then entered an academy at Birmingham, Iowa, later attending the Iowa Wesleyan University at Mt. Pleasant, where he studied in the academic and law departments. In 1859-1860 he taught school in Missouri, and from then on his life was entirely given over to the building up of the new empire in the west.
In 1862 he crossed the great plains, driving a team to South Park, Colorado, and that winter worked in the quartz mines in Central City, gaining knowledge and experience for his future life in the mining industry. In 1863 news of the gold discoveries at Bannock, Montana, reached Colorado and he was among the first to start for this new El Dorado. After 65 days’ travel with an ox-team, he arrived in Bannock, just in time to join a stampede to Horse Prairie Creek, where he secured a claim. After several years’ experience in placer mining, he engaged in wholesale mercantile enterprises which continued for about five years. During this time his travels took him to the mining camps of Virginia City, Blackfoot City, Helena and Elk Creek, to San Francisco and central California to Portland, Oregon. In addition he also successfully carried on the duties of a mail contractor on the star route between Missoula, Montana, and Walla Walla, Washington.
In his various undertakings he had been eminently successful and in 1868 he formed a partnership which engaged in the wholesale mercantile and banking business, locating at Helena, Montana, later moving to Deer Lodge, and, after buying out his partners, this resulted in the locating at Butte of the banking firm of W.A. Clark & Brother.
However, it was principally in the mining field that he devoted most of his time and in which he made his greatest success. In 1872 he was attracted to the quartz prospects of Butte and purchased, in whole or in part, the Colusa, Original, Mountain Chief, Gambetta and other mines, nearly all of which developed into rich producers. The “Old Dexter,” the second stamp mill of Butte, was finished in 1876 through his financial aid, and the first smelter of consequence in Butte, the Colorado smelter, was erected by a company organized by him. In 1880 he organized the Moulton Company, which erected the Moulton Mill and developed the mine of the same name. In 1914 he constructed a large concentrating plant for the treatment of ores from the Elm Orlu mine, near Butte, which mine developed into one of the largest zinc and copper mines of that time. In the meantime he acquired and developed mining properties in other western states, including coal properties in Colorado, in the course of which he became interested in the United Verde mine in Arizona, and it was this latter mine which his genius developed into one of the best equipped mines in the world.
When acting as Commissioner for Montana to the exposition in New Orleans in 1885, he saw numerous specimens exhibited from a mine in Arizona called the United Verde mine. These specimens were rich in copper, gold and silver. Later on, when re-organizing the Orford Copper Company, to which company he had been selling the matte from his Butte smelters, he found on the books numerous shipments of matte from the United Verde mine, which at that time was operating two 50-ton furnaces. These mattes were extremely rich in gold and silver contents. With his usual keenness, he started to investigate and about the first of the year 1888, secured, through the assistance of some New York friends, particularly Mr. James A. Macdonald, who later became vice president of the company under Mr. Clark’s reorganization, a second option on the United Verde mine which, in spite of the rich surface ores, had up to that time been unsuccessfully operated. His first visit to the mine was with his mine superintendent, Joseph L. Giroux, in March 1888. Availing himself of the fact that the first option had been given up, he immediately made the first payment required under the option and proceeded to buy in as much of the outstanding stock as was possible. The stock was scattered all over the globe, and at the time of his death he and his family owned about 299,000 shares out of 300,000.
And so, having decided that the mine held great possibilities, with his usual thoroughness and genius for organizing and putting his desires into active operation, the property was developed into one of the large copper producers of the United States.
In the foregoing biography there has been purposely omitted reference to Senator Clark’s activities in the fields of public utilities, water power undertakings, construction and operation of railroads, ranching, manufacturing industries, etc., which in themselves are entitled to a separate recitation in order to depict the many and varied ramifications of a brilliant intellect, keen in its instantaneous grasp of values, combined with a force and vitality to carry his convictions to a successful termination.
Senator Clark died in March 1925 and was survived by his second wife and six children.
if anybody wants to know look here ; http://mcintyrebaumangroup.com/
http://mcintyrebaumangroup.com/mcb_contact.htm
FOR THOSE who may not comprehend my last post the ffgo GOLD CLAIMS are good and easily proven to be good. THERE comprendo ?
leaser has already acepted ffgo shares in exchange for past debt
non adversarial relation
lease are still in full effect one email to Bauman would clear this
dont push to hard may get it lol
yup reinforce wy law for FFGO removes any ambiguity, just my take; thinking this law holds our next move just dont know what or where but manuver kinda would mean that to me lol and this act had crossed my mind if they plan to do something in front of a judge jurisdiction is key. or could be same same not sure just a thought.
(x)? "Preferred shares" means a class or series of shares whose holders have preference over any other class or series with respect to distributions.
its large doc but so far no nothing about that
http://legisweb.state.wy.us/statutes/statutes.aspx?file=titles/Title17/T17CH16.htm
there is a court forced amendmant to bylaws but thats in disolution its braod as well
anyway some reading lol
interesting no aproval implys going concern maybe?
ARTICLE 12 - SALE OF ASSETS
17-16-1201.? Disposition of assets not requiring shareholder approval.
(a) ?No approval of the shareholders of a corporation is required unless the articles of incorporation otherwise provide:
(i)? To sell, lease, exchange, or otherwise dispose of any or all of the corporation's assets in the usual and regular course of business;
(ii)? To mortgage, pledge, dedicate to the repayment of indebtedness, whether with or without recourse, or otherwise encumber any or all of the corporation's assets whether or not in the usual and regular course of business; or
(iii)? To transfer any or all of the corporation's assets to one (1) or more corporations or other entities all of the shares or interests of which are owned by the corporation; or
(iv)? To distribute assets pro rata to the holders of one (1) or more classes or series of the corporation's shares.
(b)? Repealed by Laws 2009, Ch. 115, ? 3.
17-16-1202.? Shareholder approval of certain dispositions.
(a)? A sale, lease, exchange, or other disposition of assets, other than a disposition described in W.S. 17-16-1201, requires approval of the corporation's shareholders if the disposition would leave the corporation without a significant continuing business activity.? If a significant business activity of the corporation prior to any such disposition of assets was the active or passive holding, maintenance or management of investments, then such holding, maintenance or management of investments shall be considered a significant continuing business activity.? If a corporation retains a business activity that represented at least twenty-five percent (25%) of total assets at the end of the most recently completed fiscal year, and twenty-five percent (25%) of either income from continuing operations before taxes or revenues from continuing operations for that fiscal year, in each case of the corporation and its subsidiaries on a consolidated basis, the corporation will conclusively be deemed to have retained a significant continuing business activity.
(b)? A disposition that requires approval of the shareholders under subsection (a) of this section shall be initiated by a resolution by the board of directors authorizing the disposition.? After adoption of such a resolution, the board of directors shall submit the proposed disposition to the shareholders for their approval.? The board of directors shall also transmit to the shareholders a recommendation that the shareholders approve the proposed disposition, unless the board of directors makes a determination that because of conflicts of interest or other special circumstances it should not make such a recommendation, in which case the board of directors shall transmit to the shareholders the basis for that determination.
(c)? The board of directors may condition its submission of a disposition to the shareholders under subsection (b) of this section on any basis.
(d)? If a disposition is required to be approved by the shareholders under subsection (a) of this section and if the approval is to be given at a meeting, the corporation shall notify each shareholder, whether or not entitled to vote, of the meeting of shareholders at which the disposition is to be submitted for approval.? The notice shall state that the purpose, or one (1) of the purposes, of the meeting is to consider the disposition and shall contain a description of the disposition, including the terms and conditions thereof and the consideration to be received by the corporation.
(e)? Unless the articles of incorporation or the board of directors, acting pursuant to subsection (c) of this section, require a greater vote or a greater number of votes to be present, the approval of a disposition by the shareholders shall require the approval of the shareholders at a meeting at which a quorum exists.
(f)? After a disposition has been approved by the shareholders under subsection (b) of this section and at any time before the disposition has been consummated, it may be abandoned by the corporation without action by the shareholders, subject to any contractual rights of other parties to the disposition.
(g)? A disposition of assets in the course of dissolution under article 14 is not governed by this section.
(h)? For purposes of this section, the ownership interests of a parent corporation in its subsidiaries, whether owned directly by the parent corporation or indirectly through other subsidiaries shall be valued at the net asset values of such subsidiaries, without application of any discount to the valuation of such ownership interests because of a lack of marketability or otherwise.
http://legisweb.state.wy.us/statutes/statutes.aspx?file=titles/Title17/T17CH16.htm
17-16-640.? Distributions to shareholders.
(a)? A board of directors may authorize and the corporation may make distributions to its shareholders subject to restriction by the articles of incorporation and the limitation in subsection (c) of this section.
(b)? If the board of directors does not fix the record date for determining shareholders entitled to a distribution, other than one (1) involving a purchase, redemption, or other acquisition of the corporation's shares, it is the date the board of directors authorizes the distribution.
(c)? No distribution may be made if, after giving it effect:
(i)? The corporation would not be able to pay its debts as they become due in the usual course of business; or
(ii)? The corporation's total assets would be less than the sum of its total liabilities plus (unless the articles of incorporation permit otherwise) the amount that would be needed, if the corporation were to be dissolved at the time of the distribution, to satisfy the preferential rights upon dissolution of shareholders whose preferential rights are superior to those receiving the distribution.
(d)? The board of directors may base a determination that a distribution is not prohibited under subsection (c) of this section either on financial statements prepared on the basis of accounting practices and principles that are reasonable in the circumstances or on a fair valuation or other method that is reasonable in the circumstances.
(e)? Except as provided in subsection (g) of this section, the effect of a distribution under subsection (c) of this section is measured:
(i)? In the case of distribution by purchase, redemption, or other acquisition of the corporation's shares, as of the earlier of:
(A)? The date money or other property is transferred or debt incurred by the corporation; or
(B)? The date the shareholder ceases to be a shareholder with respect to the acquired shares.
(ii)? In the case of any other distribution of indebtedness, as of the date the indebtedness is distributed; and
(iii)? In all other cases, as of:
(A)? The date the distribution is authorized if the payment occurs within one hundred twenty (120) days after the date of authorization; or
(B)? The date the payment is made if it occurs more than one hundred twenty (120) days after the date of authorization.
(f)? A corporation's indebtedness to a shareholder incurred by reason of a distribution made in accordance with this section is at parity with the corporation's indebtedness to its general, unsecured creditors except to the extent subordinated by agreement.
(g)? Indebtedness of a corporation, including indebtedness issued as a distribution, is not considered a liability for purposes of determinations under subsection (c) of this section if its terms provide that payment of principal and interest are made only if and to the extent that payment of a distribution to shareholders could then be made under this section.? If the indebtedness is issued as a distribution, each payment of principal or interest is treated as a distribution, the effect of which is measured on the date the payment is actually made.
(h)? This section shall not apply to distributions in liquidation under article 14 of this act.
in·fest·ing, in·fests. 1. To inhabit or overrun in numbers or quantities large enough to be harmful, threatening, or obnoxious: rats infesting
shorts =rats ...in the example above tofor ffgo
premiss is short infestation of ffgo
Premises are sometimes left unstated in which case they are called missing premises, for example:
Socrates is mortal, since all men are mortal.
It is evident that a tacitly understood claim is that Socrates is a man. The fully expressed reasoning is thus:
Since all men are mortal and Socrates is a man, Socrates is mortal.
FFGO NAKED SHORTS CANT COVER, SINCE FFGO NAKED SHORTS ARE ILLEGAL
short positions will never have to get covered now
hmmmmmmmmmm who said this?
interesting premiss lol!
1. A proposition upon which an argument is based or from which a conclusion is drawn
5tril; CLERICAL ERROR. An error made by a clerk in transcribing or otherwise. This is always readily corrected by the court. 2. An error, for example, in the teste of a fi. fa.; 4 Yeates, 185, 205; or in the teste and return of a vend. exp.; 1 Dall. 197 or in writing Dowell for McDowell. 1 Serg. & R. 120; 8 Rep. 162 a; 9 Serg. & R. 284, 5. An error is amendable where there is something to amend by, and this even in a criminal case. 2 Bin. 5-16; 5 Burr. 2667; 1 Bin. 367-9; Dougl. 377; Cowp. 408. For the party ought not to be harmed by the omission of the clerk; 3 Bin. 102; even of his signature, if he affixes the seal. 1 Serg. & R. 97.
lol legal sites just for yaul
only the shadow knows
Can you explain the 5 trillion authorized reduced to 85 billion?
clerical error
16mil or32%float short still at 12pps
heads up tdameritrade shut down all my sell orders
i know sky is falling IS THAT THE LINE heard it
i luv you to lol
yes i am very serious
its not just business been that way along time hear ,,, ffgo
dont talk to me about being seriouse
you can't be serious,
if the games over then no reason to be here lol right? lol
about liquidity youll figure it out later
not the briar patch lol
hmmm sounds liquid to me lol
the game is afoot
circular investing interesting , do you not understand qauantitative easing? well ecb says will leverage up to four time the package not if oil then silver then sp then gold whatt ?