Page:History of West Australia.djvu/640

 Town Properties of West Australia Limited, Gold Land Corporation Limited, Mona Gold Mine Limited, Florence Gold Mine Limited, Lady Shenton Gold Mine Limited, Fraser's Gold Mine No Liability, North White Feather Consolidated Gold Mine Limited, Yerilla Claims Limited, White Feather Reward Claim Limited, Mawson's Reward Claim Limited, Mount Margaret Reward Claim Limited, Mount Jackson Reward Claim Limited, Hannan's Kalgoorlie Proprietary Limited, and many others. Mr. Hills was appointed secretary of the Lady Shenton mine on its flotation, and it is a noticeable fact that with Fraser's he held the secretarial reins of two of the best companies in Western Australia; the Fraser's mine being the first in the colony to pay a dividend, while the Lady Shenton has proved herself the leading mine in the Menzies district. Mr. Hills retained the secretaryships of these two companies until November, 1895, when he visited England, mainly on business for his firm. Whilst there he arranged a large amount of business, and saw to a deal of the preliminary details of properties with regard to their flotation. Since returning to Perth, some six months later, he has been actively engaged in mining matters, and in the local mining world he plays no small part.

Mr. Hills is literally and figuratively a prominent figure in Western Australian mining affairs. Of pleasing manner, rich in the esteem of many friends, he has won his way in the West through a conscientious capacity for hard work, and none begrudges him the affluence which has come to him.

CHARLES GORDON LYON, J.P.

F the individual actions of humanity were tied up in separate bundles, what a motley array of size, figure, and quality would be presented! Most would assume external appearances of bulk; few would be found to contain weight. A life may be busy, and yet may be a long chain of light, airy, trifling consequences. One or two actions of importance or moment interspersed in this infinite mass would place it in the category of the few whose maxim is quality, not quantity.

And yet how difficult it is to get these gold-laden nuggets which give to our lives a bushel of fame in a world fascinated by achievements that rise superior to commonplace actions. Divide the fluid element of human opinion in two and you will find, agreeably to your own convictions, that among actions a cable short and stout is preferable to a chain long' and thin. Take the lives of pioneers and prospectors, mine investors and mine proprietors, and you will find this doctrine at work with greater force. We live in age where commerce and gold engage every fiat of our brains, and which are strong enough to expel any boarder-idea that may come into conflict with them. We listen eagerly, and we devour rapaciously the news of gold discoveries. We ask the fortunate finder's name, and we, all in unison, uphold him as a hero who confers more good on the world than a horde of teachers and preachers, or a successful vanquisher of foes. So by a few strokes the persevering pioneer, through industry and intelligence, earns for himself a merited reputation and a weighty position. If reputation and honour were more than a counterpoise to risk and hardship, then it were pleasure. But the gain always drives away, magic-like, the dusty grains of sorrow that lead to the gate of fortune.

In Western Australia several names are associated with the glories of the goldfields, and one of these is that of Mr. C. Gordon Lyon. He struck the key to his fortune at a time when the ears or the earth were open to the startling news of the gold discoveries of Coolgardie. Nor is it surprising that his name is a household word in financial chambers, when his active judgment gave quick expression to acts whose subsequent narration will prove the title-deeds of his admission within the narrow pale of Coolgardie's most famous names. The son of a squatter, Mr. C. Gordon Lyon, was born in Melbourne, Victoria, in 1867. On completing his education at the Geelong Grammar School he followed station and pastoral pursuits for some time. Such a life spent among solitary and distant fields, with an ever-recurring monotony or sameness, did not satisfy his emotional mind. Day after day, wandering over silent vales, whose sole response to his active mind was the hush and death-like silence of tle land around, he held communion with himself on the questions next his heart. Science, with its fascinations, depth, and excitement, grew more and more to be the one thing on which his mind lingered. He resolved to taste its fruits in the laboratories of his native place. There, under Professor Newbery, he engaged in an earnest study of chemistry, mineralogy, assaying, and every department that conduced to a thorough knowledge of mining. The few years of his life spent among the rustic fields had inevitably blunted his earlier acquisitions. To grind these again to a keen edge devolved upon him harder brain exercise au4 mental strain. Still his insatiable desire led him victorious through the many narrow avenues of science. Work, which is the secret of genius, sounded for him the trumpet of triumph. When the autumnal season of his University career was over he had gathered in a stack of knowledge whose size and shape allowed ample room for jealousy among his brother-builders. His career was brilliant when we consider his handicap, and had he gone straight from the class-room of Geelong school to the experimental doors of University science, his record would have been more notable.

After three years' residence in Melbourne he left for Broken Hill, where he started, in partnership with Mr. Everard Brown, as assayer and mineralogist. The partners had no reason to be dissatisfied with their success in this silver-bearing area, for their business had a wide and lucrative connection till the hub and excitement settled down, when Broken Hill became stripped of individual energy, and companies, solidified and exclusive, took the whip-hand of events. Mr. Gordon Lyon went from there to Zeehan, in Tasmania, which owned rich silver mines. He stayed there eighteen months, amid comparatively unexciting surroundings, till news of finds in Westralia made him pack up and sail for her shores. In October, 1892, he arrived in company with his two friends, Sylvester and Everard Browne. Their first intention was to go to the Murchison, which was yielding fair returns of gold, but the simultaneous report of Bayley's discovery at Coolgardie diverted their attention from the Murchison, and made them set out on the tedious journey to Coolgardie. They drove from York over that desolate coach track that has been so often referred to for its incomparable dreariness. One can easily imagine their delight when, alighting item the coach, they found one human being in that far-desolate land, and this was Bayley himself. They inspected the Reward Claim, purchased it immediately, and floated it in Melbourne for £24,000. Not long after they purchased Bayley's South, and floated it for £40,000. These two flotations, executed so rapidly and so seasonably, made the names of Lyon and his associates especially conspicuous at a time when the gold-mining industry was flagging in Australia. From one acquisition they went on to another, and in a short time they bought and developed No. 1 North and Ford's Hill, which were recently amalgamated by them with Bayley's Reward. They were the fortunate purchasers of the Imperial Reward Claim at Mount