CAN CAL RESOURCES LTD
10SB12G/A, 1999-08-16
METAL MINING
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UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
WASHINGTON, D.C.  20549
AMENDMENT NO. 1 TO
FORM 10-SB

GENERAL FORM FOR  REGISTRATION  OF  SECURITIES OF SMALL  BUSINESS  ISSUERS UNDER
SECTION 12(B) OR (G) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934


                             Can-Cal Resources, Ltd.
- - --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (Name of Small Business Issuer in its charter)

               Nevada                                    88-0336988
- - ---------------------------------------   --------------------------------------
   (State or other jurisdiction of         (I.R.S. Employer Identification No.)
   incorporation or organization)

1505 Blackcombe St., Bldg. 2, Unit #203, Las Vegas, NV              89128
- - -----------------------------------------------------------     ----------------
         (Address of principal executive offices)                 (Zip Code)

Issuer's telephone number, (  702  )          240        -         6565
                           ---------  ------------------   ---------------------

Securities to be registered under Section 12(b) of the Act:


        Title of each class                 Name of each exchange on which
        to be so registered                each class is to be registered

- - ----------------------------------     -----------------------------------------

- - ----------------------------------     -----------------------------------------


Securities to be registered under Section 12(g) of the Act:

                         Common stock, par value $.001,
- - --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                (Title of class)

           Preferred stock, par value $.001, non-voting, 5% cumulative
- - --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                (Title of class)


                                        1

<PAGE>



ITEM 1.           DESCRIPTION OF BUSINESS

(a)      Business Development

(a)(1)            Form and Year of Organization

         Can-Cal  Resources,  Ltd., a Nevada  corporation  ("the Company"),  was
originally  incorporated in the state of Nevada on March 22, 1995 under the name
of British Pubs USA, Inc. as a wholly owned  subsidiary of 305856 B.C., Ltd. dba
N.W.  Electric  Carriage  Company  ("NWE"),  a Company  formed under the laws of
British  Columbia,  Canada ("NWE").  On April 12, 1995, NWE exchanged  shares of
British Pubs USA, Inc. for shares of NWE held by its existing shareholders, on a
share for share basis. Its name was changed to Can-Cal  Resources,  Ltd. on July
2, 1996.  This  transaction is believed to have been exempt  pursuant to Section
3(a)(9) of the Securities Act of 1933.

(a)(2)            Any Bankruptcy, Receivership or Similar Proceeding

         None.

(a)(3)   Any Material Reclassification,  Merger, Consolidation,  or  Purchase or
Sale of a Significant Amount of Assets not in the Ordinary Course of Business

         On  December  3,  1997,  the   shareholders  of  Can-Cal  approved  the
acquisition of the assets of Aurum LLC ("Aurum"), a California limited liability
company, which consisted of the Volcanic Cinders property at Pisgah, California,
and the  cancellation  of  indebtedness  to Aurum,  in  exchange  for  2,181,752
restricted  shares of its common  stock (see Item 7,  Certain  Relationship  and
Related Transactions).

         On January 29, 1999, the Company sold its Canadian subsidiary,  Scotmar
Industries, Inc. (See Item 7, Certain Relationships and Related Transactions).

(b)      Business of Issuer

         The Company is a mining company in the exploration  stage.  Since about
May 1996,  the Company has been  devoting its  resources  to  examining  various
mineral  properties  prospective  for precious metals and minerals and acquiring
those which it deems  promising.  It has determined that its focus is to attempt
to locate and acquire properties prospective for precious metals and minerals in
the  southwestern  United  States,  principally  in the  states  of  California,
Arizona,  and  Nevada.  The  Company  owns,  leases or has an  interest  in five
properties.  All properties  which the Company has reviewed,  and those which it
has  acquired,  are  "grass  roots"  properties,  in that  they are not known to
contain any proven or probable  reserves of  precious  metals or  minerals.  The
Company  also  had  been  conducting  testing  of  various  materials  utilizing
independent  contractors,  at the Tyro Mill (near Bullhead City,  Arizona),  but
does not own the property or much of the equipment  located on the property.  It
appears that the company may no longer have the use of the Tyro Mill.

                                        2

<PAGE>



         However,  the  Company  has done an  extensive  amount  of  preliminary
testing and assaying on four of its  properties  which indicate the existence of
precious metals on those properties.  The Company has performed in excess of 700
"in-house"  assays on mineral  samples  from those  properties  and has caused a
significant number of assays to be performed by independent assayers,  which has
principally  consisted of performing  fire assays.  The  Company's  policy is to
acquire those properties which its assaying, or assaying by others, indicate the
presence  of  precious  metals.  The  Company  contracts  with  persons  who are
experienced in performing assays, but are not independent  assayers,  to conduct
"in-house"  assays using  equipment  provided by the Company,  on material  from
properties it is  considering  acquiring or which it has  acquired.  It may also
send  samples of  materials  on which it obtains  the most  promising  assays to
outside independent  assayers for assays.  However,  even if assays indicate the
existence of precious metals, a very  substantial  amount of additional  testing
and drilling is necessary to determine  whether a property contains a sufficient
amount of  precious  metals  to  constitute  "reserves,"  and  whether  any such
reserves are capable of economic production.

         On April 12 1999, the Company hired Terry Rice as its  Vice-President -
Operations.  Mr. Rice is a metallurgical engineer and has 24 years of experience
in the mining  industry.  Mr. Rice is in charge of all the Company's  mining and
mineral  operations.  None of the Company's  other officers or directors has had
any prior  experience in mining.  Until Mr. Rice was hired, the Company had been
relying upon  consultants and other persons  experienced in mining with whom the
Company  had  contracted  with  respect  to the  identity  of  properties  to be
investigated,  reviewed  and  tested  for  possible  acquisition,  in the actual
testing of the  properties,  and in the attempted  production  from  mineralized
material  and ores  obtained  from  others.  The  Company  will  continue to use
consultants to aid in all phases of its evaluation of properties.

         Ronald D. Sloan, the Company's President, has worked for the Company on
a full time basis since May 1996.

         On March 2, 1999, the Company purchased a reverse circulation drill rig
capable of  drilling to a depth of  approximately  150 feet and began a drilling
program on the Owl Canyon  properties.  The Company is currently  utilizing that
rig to drill exploratory holes on its properties,  beginning with the Owl Canyon
properties  owned and operated by the S & S Joint Venture,  in which the Company
owns a 50% interest. The Joint Venture has also acquired a core drill rig and is
currently engaged in drilling  exploratory  holes in the Owl Canyon  properties.
The Joint Venture, as of 1999, had drilled approximately 58 holes and is engaged
in assaying samples and analyzing results of the drilling.  The Company has also
conducted  blasting  operations and is conducting a trenching program on the Owl
Canyon properties.  See the "S & S Joint Venture."  Following  completion of the
drilling  and  trenching  programs  on the Owl Canyon  properties,  the  Company
intends to conduct a drilling program on its Cerbat property.

         On  March  16,   1999,   the  Company   purchased  a  newly   developed
"concentrator" from its Canadian inventor which produces concentrates from loose
material  on  placer  claims.  The  concentrator  is  capable  of  concentrating
approximately 50 tons of material per hour. The Company

                                        3

<PAGE>



also  purchased a truck which it utilized to  transport  the  concentrator  from
Washington state to its properties,  and will use in its operations. The Company
intends to attempt  to produce  precious  metals  from  placer  material  on its
properties  and from placer  material or  properties  belonging  to others.  The
Company is in the initial phases of concentrating placer material, utilizing the
concentrator.

         In the event that drilling and/or testing by the Company  indicates the
presence  of precious  metals or minerals on a property  which may be able to be
produced on an  economic  basis,  and the cost of doing so and/or the  expertise
needed is beyond the Company's  capabilities,  the Company intends to attempt to
form a joint  venture  with a larger  mining  company to develop and operate the
property,  where the larger  mining  company would pay the  exploratory  and, if
warranted,  development costs. Alternatively,  the Company may attempt to sell a
portion, or possibly all, of that property to a larger mining company.  There is
no assurance that the Company will be able to enter into any such arrangement.

         The Company has been attempting to produce  precious  metals  utilizing
the  facilities of the Tyro Mill near  Bullhead  City,  Arizona.  In March 1999,
after several months of testing and processing  various  materials,  the Company
produced 16.8 ounces of gold from  concentrates  obtained from a third party and
received  $3,654.88  after paying  refining costs and fees. The Company does not
consider the production of precious metals from those concentrates economic.

         Through Scotmar Industries,  Inc., a Canadian  subsidiary,  the Company
was also engaged in the business of  purchasing  damaged  trucks from  insurance
companies and dismantling the vehicles for the sale of guaranteed truck parts to
others. This business was not profitable.

(b)(1) On January 29,  1999,  the Company  sold Scotmar  Industries,  Inc.,  its
Canadian  subsidiary,  which was engaged in the business of  purchasing  damaged
trucks from  insurance  companies and  dismantling  the vehicles for the sale of
guaranteed truck parts for repair shops,  collision repair shops, and the retail
public.

(b)(2)  The  Company  has  shipped  two dore bars to a  California  refinery  to
separate into precious metals for sale. The Company received  $3,654.88 from the
sale of the 16.8 ounces of gold produced.

(b)(3)  The Company has not publicly announced any new product(s) or service(s).

(b)(4)  The evaluation and acquisition of precious metals, mining properties and
mineral  properties  is very highly  competitive.  There are numerous  companies
involved in the mining and minerals business, virtually all of which are larger,
better capitalized, and have more experienced personnel than the Company.

         Exploration  for and production of minerals is highly  speculative  and
involves  greater risks than exist in many other  industries.  Many  exploration
programs do not result in the discovery of

                                        4

<PAGE>



mineralization  and any  mineralization  discovered  may not be of a  sufficient
quantity or quality to be profitably mined.  Also,  because of the uncertainties
in determining  metallurgical  amenability of any minerals discovered,  the mere
discovery  of  mineralization  may not warrant the mining of the minerals on the
basis of available technology.

         The Company's  decision as to whether any of the mineral  properties it
now holds, or which it may acquire in the future,  contain commercially mineable
deposits,  and whether such properties  should be brought into production,  will
depend upon the results of the exploration  programs and/or feasibility analysis
and the  recommendation  of engineers and geologists.  The decision will involve
the consideration and evaluation of a number of significant factors,  including,
but not limited to: 1. the ability to obtain all required  permits;  2. costs of
bringing the property into production,  including exploration and development or
preparation of feasibility studies and construction of production facilities; 3.
availability and costs of financing;  4. ongoing costs of production;  5. market
prices  for the metals to be  produced;  and 6. the  existence  of  reserves  or
mineralization  with economic grades of metals or minerals.  No assurance can be
given that any of the  properties the Company owns,  leases or acquires  contain
(or will contain) commercially  mineable mineral deposits,  and no assurance can
be given  that the  Company  will  ever  generate  a  positive  cash  flow  from
production operations on such properties.

         Although  many  companies  and  individuals  are  engaged in the mining
business,  including large,  established  mining  companies,  there is a limited
supply of minerals land available for claim staking,  lease or other acquisition
in the  southwestern  United States,  where the Company conducts its activities.
The Company may be at a competitive  disadvantage  in acquiring  suitable mining
properties,  since it must compete with these other  individuals  and companies,
virtually all of which have greater  financial  resources and larger staffs than
the Company.

(b)(5) The Company has processed ores and  mineralized  materials and produced a
limited amount of precious metals on a testing basis.  Those materials have come
from various sources, none of which is material to the Company.

(b)(6)  The Company is not dependent upon one or a few major customers.

(b)(7)  The  Company  holds  no  patents,  trademarks,   licenses,   franchises,
concessions, or royalty agreements, and has no labor contracts.

(b)(8) Mining operations are subject to statutory and agency  requirements which
address  various issues,  including:  (i)  environmental  permitting and ongoing
compliance,  including plans of operations which are supervised by the Bureau of
Land Management ("BLM"),  the Environmental  Protection Agency ("EPA") and state
and county  regulatory  authorities  and agencies  (e.g.,  state  departments of
environmental  quality) for water and air quality,  hazardous waste,  etc.; (ii)
mine safety and OSHA generally;  and (iii) wildlife  (Department of Interior for
migratory  fowl, if attractive  standing water is involved in  operations).  See
(b)(11)  below.  Application  is being made by Twin Mountain Rock Venture to add
the company's name to certain permits issued by San

                                        5

<PAGE>



Bernardino  County and  agencies  relating  to the  Company's  Volcanic  Cinders
property  in  Pisgah,  California.  That  application  is made  pursuant  to the
provisions of the Mining Lease Agreement.  The Company anticipates that its name
will be  added to those  permits  in due  course.  See  Item 3,  Description  of
Properties - Volcanic Cinders Property - Mining Lease Agreement with Twin
Mountain Rock Venture.

(b)(9)  Because any mining  operations  of the  Company  would be subject to the
permitting  requirements of one or more agencies,  the  commencement of any such
operations  could be delayed,  pending agency approval (or a determination  that
approval is not required  because of size,  etc.),  or the project might even be
abandoned due to prohibitive costs (for example,  water treatment facilities for
mine water discharge might be too expensive to build).

         Generally, the effect of governmental regulations on the Company cannot
be determined until a specific project is undertaken by the Company.

(b)(10)  The  Company  has  not  expended  funds  on  research  and  development
activities.  The Company  does not  consider  testing or assaying of material or
processing of material as research and development activities.

(b)(11) Federal, state and local provisions regulating the discharge of material
into  the  environment,   or  otherwise   relating  to  the  protection  of  the
environment,  such  as  the  Clean  Air  Act,  Clean  Water  Act,  the  Resource
Conservation  and Recovery  Act, and the  Comprehensive  Environmental  Response
Liability Act ("Superfund")  affect mineral  operations.  For mining operations,
applicable  environmental  regulation  includes a permitting  process for mining
operations,  an abandoned mine reclamation  program and a permitting program for
industrial  development  and siting.  Other  non-environmental  regulations  can
impact mining  operations and indirectly  affect  compliance with  environmental
regulations.  For example,  a state highway department may have to approve a new
access road to make a project accessible at lower costs, but the new road itself
may raise environmental issues.  Compliance with these laws, and any regulations
adopted  thereunder,  can make the  development  of mining claims  prohibitively
expensive,  thereby  frustrating the sale or lease of properties,  or curtailing
profits or royalties which might have been received therefrom.  In 1997, the S &
S Joint Venture spent approximately  $32,000 to clean up areas of the Owl Canyon
properties  as requested by the BLM. This work has been  completed.  The Company
cannot  anticipate  what the further costs and/or effects of compliance with any
environmental laws might be.

(b)(12)  The  Company's  President,   Ronald  D.  Sloan,  and  Terry  Rice,  its
Vice-President  Operations,  are the Company's  only  full-time  employees.  The
Company  contracts  with  other  persons  to  perform  services  as  independent
contractors.  At the present  time,  independent  contractors  are  performing a
variety of duties for the Company and the S & S Joint Venture, such as drilling,
building roads,  assaying,  and  refabricating the Tyro Mill. The Company has no
computer operations that it believes will be affected by the year 2000 issue.


                                        6

<PAGE>



ITEM 2.           MANAGEMENT'S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OR PLAN OF OPERATION

(a)      Plan of Operation

         The Company's plan of operation  through July 2000 includes  completing
the drilling and trenching programs at the S & S Joint Venture's properties,  in
which it owns a 50% interest  (see Item 3.  below),  determining  whether  those
properties contain precious metals, and if so, determining  whether the property
contains a sufficient amount of precious metal which can be mined at a profit so
as to constitute  "reserves"  and, if so, the amount of those  reserves.  If the
property contains "reserves" in an amount sufficient to justify development, the
Company  intends to attempt to joint venture or sell an interest in the property
to a larger mining company, on the condition that the larger mining company will
develop the property.

         Following  completion of the drilling and trenching programs at the Owl
Canyon  properties,  the  Company  intends to conduct a drilling  program on its
Cerbat  properties,  which it leases with an option to purchase (see Item 3), to
determine  the nature and extent of  mineralization  existing  on the  property.
Since the Company has not performed any drilling operations on that property, it
is as yet unable to state the nature and extent or cost of the  drilling it will
undertake.  This  drilling  program is  expected  to begin in the latter part of
1999.

         The  Company  also  intends  to  concentrate  various  placer  material
available  to it using  its  newly  acquired  "concentrator."  The  Company  has
conducted a significant  number of "in-house" assays on various placer materials
available to it and, based upon those assays,  believes that the placer material
contains  precious  metals which the Company  believes  may exist in  sufficient
amounts to be mined commercially.  If the testing continues to be promising, the
Company  may  seek  to  claim  other  placer  properties.   However,  since  its
concentrating  activities  have  only  recently  been  initiated,  there  is  no
assurance  that  precious  metals  exist in the placer  material  in  commercial
quantities, or that the Company can produce it at a profit.

         In addition,  the Company  intends to continue  its current  program of
testing Volcanic Cinders from its property at Pisgah,  California,  to determine
whether they contain any precious  metals.  It is working with third parties who
are performing tests on that material.

         Since it appears  that the Tyro Mill will no longer be available to the
Company,  it may  curtail  the  company's  testing of various  ores,  unless the
company is able to obtain the use of other suitable testing facilities.

         It is not  anticipated  that the Company  will  purchase  (or sell) any
significant  amount of equipment or other assets,  or experience any significant
change in the number of personnel who work for the Company, during the 12 months
ending July 2000.

         The  Company  believes  it has  sufficient  funds to  satisfy  its cash
requirements  through  August 2000.  Should it be  necessary  for the Company to
obtain additional funds, the Company may attempt

                                        7

<PAGE>



to sell an interest in one or more of its  properties or otherwise  obtain funds
from outside  sources.  The Company  believes  that it may be possible for it to
borrow additional funds, using its Volcanic Cinders property as collateral,  but
there are no loan facilities in place to date.

(b)      Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results
         of Operations

General

         The following  discussion  and analysis  should be read in  conjunction
with the consolidated financial statements of the Company and the notes thereto,
included elsewhere in this Form 10-SB.

         Can-Cal  Resources,  Ltd.  (the  "Company")  holds an  interest in four
mineral properties in the southwestern  United States.  None of these properties
have  any  proven  or  probable  reserves  and none of  these  properties  is in
production.  As of December  31, 1998,  the Company had  invested  approximately
$826,000.00  in the Owl Canyon joint venture.  Other than its operation  through
Scotmar  Industries,  the  Company  has  dedicated  its  efforts  and  financial
resources  to  attempting  to locate  and  acquire  suitable  properties  and in
conducting  exploration  and  testing  on those  properties.  Consequently,  the
Company has no operating  income or cash flow from its mineral  operations other
than the receipt of $3,654.88 that it received in May 1999 from the sale of gold
obtained from processing ore obtained from others.

December 31, 1998 Compared with December 31, 1997

         All the Company sales, cost of goods sold, gross profit,  operating and
general administrative expenses, and loss from operations for 1998 resulted from
Scotmar  Industries,  Inc. The Company  capitalized all expenses  related to its
mineral  operations.  For 1997, all of the Company's  "sales" were from Scotmar.
Scotmar's results for 1997 and 1998 were as follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                 1998              1997
                                                 ----              ----

         <S>                                <C>               <C>
         Sales                              $     97,720      $     79,258
         Cost of good sold                        74,783            51,323
         Gross profit                             22,987            27,935
         Net loss for the year                  (100,344)          (90,130)
</TABLE>

         In  addition,  the Company  loaned  Scotmar,  as of December  31, 1998,
$83,400.00.  Since Scotmar was sold after December 31, 1998, the Company will be
devoting all its resources toward its mining activities.

         The Company  estimates that it has spent in excess of $60,000.00 during
the six months  ending June 30, 1999 on testing  various  materials  and related
activities  utilizing  the Tyro Mill.  It appears that the mill may no longer be
available to the Company.  See  "Processing  of Material Tyro Mill".  Therefore,
unless the Company obtains other suitable testing facilities, its expenditures

                                        8

<PAGE>



on testing should be significantly reduced. Correspondingly, its ability to test
materials "in house" for precious metals content would likely be reduced.

Liquidity

         The following table summarizes working capital and total assets
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                               Six Months            Fiscal Year Ended December 31,
                             Ended June 30,
                                1999                    1998              1997
                                ----                    ----              ----
<S>                        <C>                     <C>               <C>
Working Capital            $    162,400.00         $    117,900.00   $    (10,200.00)
Total Assets               $  2,032,800.00         $  1,894,900.00   $  1,630,400.00
</TABLE>

         The Company's  capital needs have been met by equity  subscriptions and
loans from  related  parties  (see Item 7.  Certain  Relationships  and  Related
Transactions and Notes 7 and 8 to the Financial Statements).

         The Company  believes  it has  sufficient  working  capital to fund its
ongoing exploration program and to meet its administrative and overhead expenses
anticipated  over the next  year.  However,  the  Company  will  likely  require
additional financing to fund further exploration.  The amount of such additional
funding is not  determinable  as of this date.  The  Company  does not expect to
receive any revenue from any of its properties in the foreseeable  future.  Debt
financing may be feasible using the Volcanic Cinders property as collateral, but
no loan  facilities  have been  established to date, and such debt financing may
not be feasible.

         The Company's  financial  success will be dependent  upon the extent to
which it can discover  mineralization,  and the economic viability of developing
its mineral  properties.  Such  development  may take years to complete  and the
amount of resulting income, if any, cannot be determined with any certainty.

         The Company has no material commitments for capital expenditures.

ITEM 3.           DESCRIPTION OF PROPERTIES

         The Company  owns or has an interest in five  properties,  one which it
owns in fee (the  Volcanic  Cinders  property)  and one which it leases  with an
option  to  purchase  (the  Cerbat  property).   The  remaining  properties  are
unpatented  mining  claims  acquired  through  filings with the BLM. Each placer
claim  covers  160  acres.  Each lode  claim  covers 20 acres.  The  Company  is
obligated  to pay a holding fee or spend  $100.00 in work per claim each year in
order to maintain the claims.

         Unpatented  claims are located  upon  federal  public land  pursuant to
procedure  established by the General Mining Law.  Requirements for the location
of a valid mining claim on public land

                                        9

<PAGE>



depend on the type of claim being staked,  but generally include posting thereon
of a location  notice,  marking the boundaries of the claim with monuments,  and
filing a  certificate  of location with the county in which the claim is located
and with the BLM. If the statutes and  regulations  for the location of a mining
claim are complied with,  the locator  obtains a valid  possessory  right to the
contained  minerals.  To preserve an otherwise valid claim, a claimant must also
annually pay certain rental fees to the federal  government  (currently $100 per
claim) and make certain  additional filings with the county and the BLM. Failure
to pay such fees or make the  required  filings may render the mining claim void
or voidable. Because mining claims are self-initiated and self-maintained,  they
possess some unique  vulnerabilities not associated with other types of property
interests.  It is  impossible  to ascertain  the validity of  unpatented  mining
claims  solely  from  public real  estate  records  and it can be  difficult  or
impossible  to confirm that all of the  requisite  steps have been  followed for
location and  maintenance  of a claim.  If the validity of an unpatented  mining
claim is  challenged by the  government,  the claimant has the burden of proving
the present economic feasibility of mining minerals located thereon. Thus, it is
conceivable  that during times of falling metal prices,  claims which were valid
when located could become  invalid if  challenged.  Disputes can also arise with
adjoining property owners for encroachment or under the doctrine of extralateral
rights.

         The U.S.  Congress  has,  in  legislative  sessions  in  recent  years,
actively  considered  several proposals for major revision of the General Mining
Law, which governs mining claims and related activities on federal public lands.
If any of the recent  proposals become law, it could result in the imposition of
a royalty upon  production of minerals.  It remains  unclear whether the current
Congress  will pass  such  legislation  and,  if  passed,  the  extent  such new
legislation will affect existing mining claims and operations. The effect of any
revision  of the  General  Mining  Law on the  Company's  operations  cannot  be
determined conclusively until such a revision is enacted.

THE S & S JOINT VENTURE'S OWL CANYON PROPERTY

         As of September  13,  1996,  the Company  entered into a Joint  Venture
Agreement with the Schwarz family covering approximately 425 acres of unpatented
placer and lode mining claims in the Silurian Hills of California,  known as Owl
Canyon.   The  S  &  S  Joint  Venture  has  since  increased  its  holdings  to
approximately  1,600 acres of placer claims, of which 765 acres are also covered
by lode claims and five acres by a mill site claim.  These  claims are deemed to
be prospective for precious metals and some base metals. The property is located
approximately  23  miles  northeast  of  Baker,  California.   The  property  is
accessible by a road which  consists of nine miles of paved surface and fourteen
miles of dirt surface.  Pursuant to the terms of the Agreement,  the Company and
the Schwarz  family each have a 50% interest in the S & S Joint Venture which is
operated by the  Management  Committee,  comprised  of Mr.  Sloan the  Company's
president,  and Ms. Robin Schwarz,  a member of the Schwarz family.  Pursuant to
the terms of the Joint  Venture  Agreement,  the Company has been and is funding
the Joint Venture's operations.  Any income from the Joint Venture will first be
paid to the Company to repay  monies  advanced to the Joint  Venture or spent on
its account,  with any  additional  income divided 50% to the Company and 50% to
the Schwarz family.


                                       10

<PAGE>



         As  the  acquisition  price  of its  50%  interest  in the S & S  Joint
Venture,  the Company  issued  500,000 shares of its common stock to the Schwarz
family,  subject  to  investment  restrictions.  The  shares may only be sold in
compliance with United States securities laws,  including Rule 144.  Appropriate
stop transfer  instructions  have been issued to the Company's  transfer  agent.
None of those  shares  have been sold.  The shares  were  issued  with "No Sale"
restrictions,  all of which  have  expired,  except  that  100,000 of the shares
cannot be sold until  after  November  5, 1999.  As of December  31,  1998,  the
Company  had a total  investment  of  approximately  $826,000 in the S & S Joint
Venture.

         The Joint Venture has the following  equipment and  facilities,  all of
which are used, but are  operational:  a refurbished  8-level screen  classifier
which  separates  various  grades  of ores;  five  concentrate  tables to obtain
concentrates from the "in-house" processed ore; a fire assay furnace so that the
Venture is able to assay ores and concentrates at its own facility without using
independent  sources;  a smelting furnace for the production of precious metals;
an impact mill which is used for crushing rock; a conveyor feeding system, built
for  quantity,  fed by a front end loader which was purchased in 1998 to process
mineralized  material from lode mining claims;  an additional  screening  system
constructed for the processing of placer material;  several  platforms  designed
and  constructed  to access the  furnaces  and ore  loading  areas;  two 400 lb.
capacity furnaces,  (five total furnaces on the property);  sediment tanks, with
two  additional  3,000 gallon  tanks,  run by pumps for  recycling  thousands of
gallons  of  water  used  for  concentrating  shaker  tables;  plumbing  and PVC
installed  underground  to move water from four levels of the  property;  a self
contained trailer to facilitate the  transportation of water to Owl Canyon;  two
air compressors,  one a portable for jack hammering on the hillside,  the second
on a trailer for  portability  up and down the canyon;  a core drill  capable of
drilling  to about 80' for  further  testing;  equipment  to  construct a 7,500'
bucket  line to  transport  head ore from the  mountain  to the mill  site;  and
rebuilt engines and new engines for the milling facility. A new generating power
plant has also been added. New roads have been constructed throughout the canyon
to allow accessibility to the various deposits.  The Venture spent approximately
$32,000 to clean up all areas of the property to the BLM's satisfaction.

         The Joint Venture retained Wilmarth & Associates,  which is operated by
L. Wade  Wilmarth,  a registered  geologist,  to prepare a preliminary  geologic
mapping  report of the Owl Canyon  properties.  That report,  dated  January 21,
1998,  contains the following  description of the geological  setting of the Owl
Canyon properties.

          GEOLOGICAL SETTINGS

                  Geological   units  within  the  Silurian   Hills  consist  of
                  Precambrian  metamorphic  and  granitic  rocks;  approximately
                  11,000 feet of Precambrian  clastic sedimentary rocks assigned
                  to the Pahrump Group;  Paleozoic (?) recrystallized  carbonate
                  rocks (Riggs  Formation),  Cretaceous (?) granitic rocks which
                  intrude older rocks;  Tertiary  volcanic and sedimentary rocks
                  and Cenozoic monolithologic  megabreccia deposit consisting of
                  Paleozoic   carbonate  rocks  derived  from  apparently,   the
                  Goodsprings  Dolomite  (which occurs only within the northeast
                  section of the Silurian Hills) and

                                       11

<PAGE>



                  Cenozoic  fan  gravels and terrace  gravels.  Terrace  gravels
                  locally overlie the older rocks.

                  A relatively flat,  locally domed faulted,  thrust fault forms
                  the main structural  element of the Silurian Hills. The fault,
                  termed the Riggs thrust,  separates  Precambrian  rocks of the
                  Pahrump Group on the lower plate from  Paleozoic  rocks of the
                  Riggs Formation on the upper plate.  Faulting the Riggs thrust
                  are significant and numerous  north/south to near  north/south
                  faults.  Underlying  the Riggs thrust are a "chaos"  structure
                  and a  "megabreccia"  deposit.  As noted in  Reference 2, "The
                  chaos is a mass of large and small blocks generally lenticular
                  and elongate in shape and ranging in size from pods a few feet
                  in  diameter  to blocks  hundreds of feet long." Each block is
                  bounded on all sides by surfaces of movement.

                  The Owl Canyon area and southerly adjacent terrain exhibits an
                  overall strike of approximately  N70W for the canyon drainages
                  and immediate  southerly ridge lines. To the north, Owl Canyon
                  exposes Paleozoic(?) dolomite rocks with remnant bedding.

                  Within  Owl  Canyon,  Precambrian  metasediments  are  exposed
                  locally throughout the canyon within bedded and recrystallized
                  dolomite rock. Along the  northerly-facing  ascending southern
                  canyon wall, in fault-contact between recrystallized  dolomite
                  rocks are Precambrian metasediments and granitic rock. Capping
                  the immediate  ridge,  south of Owl Canyon are  recrystallized
                  Paleozoic  dolomite  rocks.  To the south  descending from the
                  main ridge line,  in fault contact with  dolomite  rocks,  are
                  Precambrian granite and metamorphic rocks. Locally,  quartzite
                  rock occurs throughout the rock sequence.

                  Structurally,  described  rock  units  are  in  fault  contact
                  aligned primarily with the overall trend of Owl Canyon (N70W).
                  Pervasive  faulting  oriented near  north/south to north/south
                  occurs  throughout  the Owl  Canyon  area  and  the  southerly
                  terrain. Dominant closely spaced north/south trending faulting
                  occurs  in the near  central  area of Owl  Canyon  where  they
                  intersect  with  northwest  trending  faults.  In  this  area,
                  vicinity  of  north/south  faulting,   the  rocks  are  highly
                  fractured  with  secondary  alteration  zones due to migrating
                  hydrothermal  fluids.  The strike and dip of remnant  bedding,
                  foliations   and  rock  fabric   parallel   canyon  and  ridge
                  alignments.  Dominant dip is to the south at moderate to steep
                  angles with an average near 45 degrees.

                  Mineralization  of the  mapped  area  appears to be related to
                  Tertiary(?)  hydrothermal  fluids migrating along  north/south
                  oriented  faulting and at the contact between  metamorphic and
                  dolomite  rocks.  Along the  southerly  ridge  adjacent to Owl
                  Canyon,  metalliferous  deposits  along  north/south  oriented
                  fractures are  prevalent  near the central area of Owl Canyon.
                  Centrally, along the southern side of Owl

                                       12

<PAGE>



                  Canyon,  fault contact areas exhibit localized zone alteration
                  from  migrating  hydrothermal  fluids  producing  mineral-rich
                  deposits  (pyrite,   chalcopyrite,   argentite(?)   manganese,
                  limonite  sylvanite  (?),  malachite,  copper,  lead,  barite,
                  scheelite,    gold   and   silver   tellurides).    Typically,
                  hydrothermal  deposits  range in width from  approximately  18
                  inches to 3 feet.

OWL CANYON ASSAYS

         Although the Joint Venture has the capability to, and does, perform its
own fire assays, it has sent both samples and whole rocks taken from the surface
of the property to independent laboratories for fire assays. Most of the samples
from the lode claims have been sent to Cone Geochemical, Inc., Denver, Colorado,
an assay firm. Of the most promising  surface samples taken,  Cone  Geochemical,
Inc. reported the following assay results:

  Sample ID               Location       Assay Results
    ---------               --------       -------------

    SQHO                    Owl Canyon     0.577 oz/ton gold/86 oz/ton silver

    SQ Rock 3               Owl Canyon     0.559 oz/ton gold/19.8 oz/ton silver

    SQH 0300                Owl Canyon     1.396 oz/ton gold/311 oz/ton silver

    SSQ Head Ore Screen     Owl Canyon     0.690 oz/ton gold/118 oz/ton silver

         In order to  determine  if those  values  continued  below the surface,
approximately  15 tons of  material  was  removed  to a depth  of 3 to 4 feet to
expose a continuation of one of the veins. Following that vein structure 8 feet,
a sample was removed from a depth of  approximately  3 to 4 feet, and the sample
was again sent for an independent  assay.  Cone  Geochemical,  Inc. reported the
following assay on that sample:

     8FTSOQ 11-24        Owl Canyon         1.351 oz/ton gold/66.5 oz/ton silver

          Wilmarth  &  Associates   then  selected  four  surface  samples  from
different areas of the lode claims which they sent to Cone Geochemical, Inc. for
fire assay. The results were as follows:

        SAMPLE                  OZ/TON GOLD                  OZ/TON SILVER

        W-1                        0.257                         5.08
        W-2                        0.002                         0.35
        W-3                        0.009                         0.2
        W-4                        0.274                         1.94


                                       13

<PAGE>



         The Joint Venture also had another  mining  Company  perform  assays on
surface  samples  which it took from the  surface  of  another  area of its lode
claims. That mining Company reported the following results:

    Owl Canyon ssq rock & crushed         0.400 oz/ton gold/13.855 oz/ton silver
      (Super Quartz)
    Super Quartz "Owl Canyon"             0.590 oz/ton gold/84.545 oz/ton silver

         The Joint  Venture  also sent a surface  sample to Dr.  Ralph Pray,  an
assayer, who reported the following results:

             RRXX      Owl Canyon      2.41 oz/ton gold/24.5 oz/ton silver


         The Joint Venture has performed in excess of 500 "in-house"assays  from
surface  samples on its Owl Canyon lode claims,  over 90% of which produced gold
and/or silver beads in varying  sizes.  Although the work to date indicated that
there are mineralized  materials on the property,  the extent, grade and ease of
processing of those materials has not been established.

         Following  two  years  of  extensive  exploration  work,  testing,  and
assaying on the claims, the management  committee determined there is sufficient
evidence to continue  further  exploration of the property,  including both lode
and placer areas.  Following this determination,  the Joint Venture acquired two
drill rigs, one reverse  circulation  rig, and one core rig, which are currently
drilling a series of exploratory  holes. 58 exploratory  holes have been drilled
to date in two small  sections  of the  properties  under the  direction  of the
geologists and others with whom the Company  contracts.  Samples were taken from
each hole for  testing,  assaying  and  analysis.  This  process is ongoing.  In
addition,  in April  and May 1999,  the Joint  Venture  conducted  two  blasting
operations in which it opened up areas of the property which it believes contain
a vein or veins with precious metal content. The material obtained from drilling
and blasting is currently being assayed and analyzed.

         The Joint Venture is presently conducting a trenching program under the
supervision of Bruce  Ballantyne,  a mining  consultant from Vancouver,  British
Colombia.  The Company is  focusing on mapping of the entire Owl Canyon  project
and will  continue  to take  samples  from  various  areas of the  property  for
independent  analytical analysis and assay. The Company intends to have a report
prepared evaluating the Owl Canyon properties.  This project should be completed
by the fall of 1999.

THE CERBAT PROPERTY

         On March 12, 1998, the Company entered into a Lease and Purchase Option
Agreement covering six patented mining claims in the Cerbat Mountains,  Hualapai
Mining District, Mojave County, Arizona. The patented claims cover approximately
120 acres.  The Company has paid  $10,000 as the initial  lease  payments and is
obligated to pay the sum of $1,500 per quarter as minimum advance royalties.  To
date, the Company has made all minimum advance royalty  payments  required.  The
Company has the option to purchase the property for $250,000, less

                                       14

<PAGE>



payments  already made. In the event the Company  produces  precious metals from
the Cerbat Property prior to the exercise of the Purchase Option, it is required
to pay to the lessor a production royalty of 5% of the gross returns received by
the  Company  from  the  sale  or  other  disposition  of  metals  produced.  An
exploratory  drilling  program is scheduled  for 1999 on the claims to determine
the length of the structures in existence on the property.

         The Company has been informed that the property  contains  several mine
shafts of up to several  hundred  feet in length and  tailing  piles  containing
thousands  of tons of  tailings.  The  Company has also been  informed  that the
Cerbat  Property has not produced since the late 1800's.  However,  prior to its
entering  into the Lease and Purchase  Option  Agreement,  the Company  received
assays of samples  taken from tailings and near the entrance of the mine shafts,
as well as engineering reports from reputable assayers and engineers  indicating
the presence of precious metals in what may be commercial  amounts.  The Company
also performed "in-house"assays on samples taken from the property, with similar
results. Extensive additional testing will be necessary to determine whether the
property contains any reserves.

CERBAT GEOLOGY

         The Company's  geologic  information  regarding the Cerbat claims comes
from  a  report  prepared  by  a  consulting  engineer  in  1943.  The  relevant
information contained in that report is as follows:

         Veins:
                           The vein system of the Cerbat  Group  consists of two
                  parallel  veins which are  approximately  70 feet apart at the
                  New  Discovery  shaft on the Rolling  Wave claim.  The eastern
                  branch is, in my opinion,  the  southern  exposure of the main
                  Cerbat vein on which the principal  development  work has been
                  done  to a  vertical  depth  of 250  feet.  This  is a  strong
                  Mineralization outcropping at intervals for approximately 3000
                  feet in the Cerbat,  Red Dog and Rolling Wave claims. The vein
                  is  steeply  dipping  and varies in width from 4.5 feet in its
                  most southerly  exposure to an average of 5.5 feet in the main
                  workings of the Cerbat  mine some 3000 feet to the north.  The
                  vein  material  is  limonite  in  a  quartz  gangue   carrying
                  cerrusite with  occasional  bunches of very high grade galena.
                  The  accompanying  metals  are gold and  silver.  The  western
                  branch of these  parallel  veins  shows  only a short  segment
                  exposed at and near the New Discovery  shaft. The hanging wall
                  of this  vein is  well  formed  and  sharply  defined  but the
                  footwall as exposed in the superficial  workings of this shaft
                  is a series of short slips parallel to the strike of the vein,
                  N55W.  They have created what is apparently a false wall which
                  is  soft  and   "drumy"   indicating   a  talcose   condition.
                  Insufficient   work  has  been  done  in  the  single   short,
                  superficial  drift to  determine  what extent  these slips may
                  have affected the continuity of the ore both  horizontally and
                  longitudinally.  If the Cerbat workings had been available for
                  study a more definite  conclusion  could  probably be reached.
                  The primary ore  minerals in evidence  are galena,  sphalerite
                  and occasional small showings of pyrite.

                                       15

<PAGE>



         Location:
                           The Cerbat Group of claims is located in the Hualapai
                  Mining District about 15 miles north from Kingman which is the
                  nearest  railroad  and supply  point.  The state  highway from
                  Kingman to Boulder Dam and Las Vegas passes  within four miles
                  of the  property  and a good  County road  connects  the state
                  highway  with the mine.  The County  road  passes  through the
                  Rolling  Wave  and  Red  Dog  claims   making   transportation
                  available to the lower workings.  An old road connects the New
                  Discovery shaft with the Cerbat workings near the crest of the
                  hill.  Because of disuse this road needs some minor repairs to
                  effect truck transportation to the upper Cerbat workings. This
                  group  of  claims  is  favorably  situated  for  trucking  and
                  transportation purposes.

THE VOLCANIC CINDERS PROPERTY

         During  December 1997,  the Company  acquired fee title to the Volcanic
Cinders property at Pisgah, San Bernardino County,  California.  The property is
comprised of approximately  120 acres,  containing a very large hill of volcanic
cinders,  with easy road access from Interstate 40. Garvin Surveying Sciences, a
California  based  company,  completed  a  survey  of  the  property  estimating
approximately 13,500,000 tons of volcanic cinders above the surface. The Company
has not verified any tonnage existing below the surface. Approximately 3,000,000
tons of the cinders have been screened and stockpiled.  The following  equipment
is located on the property: a large ball mill (which crushes the cinders), truck
loading pads, two buildings,  large storage tanks, conveyors to load trucks, ore
silos and grizzly screening equipment. The Company has caused independent assays
to be performed for gold, silver, and platinum group metals.  Those assays (fire
assay for gold and nickel sulfide  assays for platinum  group metals)  indicated
only trace  amounts of those  metals.  The  Company  has taken  samples  from 30
different  locations on the surface of the cinder hill and performed  "in-house"
assays. Of the samples,  28 proved positive for the existence of gold and silver
in varying, although small, amounts.

         Mining Lease  Agreement  with Twin Mountain  Rock Venture:  In order to
generate cash for its operations,  the Company,  effective May 1, 1998,  entered
into a Mining  Lease  Agreement  on its  Volcanic  Cinders  property  with  Twin
Mountain Rock Venture, a California general partnership ("Twin Mountain"), which
is an indirect subsidiary of Peter Kiewit & Sons, Inc. of Omaha,  Nebraska.  The
Agreement  is for an  Initial  Term of ten  years,  with an option to allow Twin
Mountain to renew the Lease for an Additional Term of ten years. The Company has
agreed to make  600,000  tons of volcanic  cinders  available  to Twin  Mountain
during the Initial Term,  and an additional  600,000 tons during the  Additional
Term,  which Twin Mountain will process and sell  primarily as decorative  rock.
The Agreement  provides for minimum annual royalty  payments by Twin Mountain of
$22,500  per year for the Initial  Term and $27,500 per year for the  Additional
Term.  Twin Mountain is also  obligated to pay the Company a monthly  production
royalty for all material mined, processed, consumed, and/or sold or removed from
the  premises,  calculated  as follows:  i. the greater 5% of gross sales F.O.B.
Pisgah Crater, or $.80 per ton for material used for block material; and ii. 10%
of gross  sales  F.O.B.  Pisgah  Crater for all other  material;  and iii.  Twin
Mountain

                                       16

<PAGE>



receives a credit  against  the amount of any  production  royalty  payment  for
minimum  royalty  payments  previously  made.  The Company  received the initial
payment of $22,500 from Twin  Mountain  upon  execution of the  Agreement.  Twin
Mountain has not yet removed any material from the property and has indicated to
the Company that it is unlikely it will remove any such material for a period of
about two years.  However,  Twin  Mountain  does not have the right to remove or
extract any precious  metals from the property.  Twin Mountain has agreed to use
its good faith efforts to cause its mining permit,  reclamation  permit, and air
quality  permit to be issued in the name of both Twin  Mountain and the Company.
This process is currently underway.  The addition of the Company's name to those
permits  will  save the  Company  significant  effort  and  expense  related  to
obtaining those permits.

         Financing Based on the Twin Mountain Lease  Agreement:  On February 12,
1998,  in order to obtain  additional  funds  for its  operations,  the  Company
entered into a Loan  Agreement  with a lender in which the lender agreed to loan
the Company up to $150,000,  subject to the Company entering into a Mining Lease
Agreement  with Twin Mountain  which was  acceptable  to the lender.  The Mining
Lease Agreement with Twin Mountain was acceptable to the lender.  That Agreement
was  amended  on June 1,  1998,  to  reduce  the  maximum  amount of the loan to
$127,500.  $25,000 was  advanced  to the  Company by the lender on signing.  The
lender has  loaned  the  Company a total of  $77,500  and the  Company  does not
anticipate that any additional  amounts will be loaned.  The loan bears interest
at the rate of 8% and is due and payable on July 31,  2001.  As security for the
loan,  the Company has granted the lender a first deed of trust on the  Volcanic
Cinders  property  at Pisgah  and has  assigned  all  payments  due it from Twin
Mountain  to the  lender  until such time as the loan and  interest  are paid in
full.  In May 1999,  Twin  Mountain  made the  second  payment of $22,500 to the
lender pursuant to the assignment of payments.

         On May 10, 1998, the Company sold 100,000 shares of its common stock to
James Dacyszyn,  a citizen and resident of Canada,  at $.45 per share ($45,000).
Mr.  Dacyszyn  was elected a director  of the  Company on February 8, 1999.  Mr.
Dacyszyn  had the option at the end of the year to return the 100,000  shares in
exchange  for the  Company's  Promissory  Note  due one  year  from  the date of
issuance,  with  interest at 8%,  secured by a second  mortgage on the Company's
Volcanic Cinders property. Mr. Dacyszyn has elected to retain his shares.

         Plasma Furnacing Testing: In the summer of 1998, the Company engaged in
a testing  program  in which  the  volcanic  cinders  were  subjected  to plasma
furnacing.  The Company  has  submitted  samples of volcanic  cinders to a third
party which has informed the Company that it has developed a proprietary  plasma
furnace, including proprietary plasma furnacing techniques. The Company does not
have access to the plasma furnace or any related technology. It is the Company's
general  understanding,  however,  that,  among other things,  plasma  furnacing
includes  heating the cinders to extremely high  temperatures,  far in excess of
those utilized in conventional assay procedures, and then treating that material
utilizing  proprietary  techniques  to  separate  any  precious  metals from the
cinders.  The plasma  furnacing was conducted  exclusively by the third party to
whom the Company submits samples and from whom it receives the treated material.


                                       17

<PAGE>



         The  Company  has  caused  treated  material  from the  surface  of the
Volcanic  Cinders  property and also from  concentrates of its volcanic  cinders
obtained  from  plasma  furnacing  to  be  analyzed  by  a  highly   experienced
independent  assayer selected by it who utilizes Induced Coupled Plasma assaying
equipment. The analytical reports received to date from the assayer indicate the
presence of precious metals.  However, all testing to date has been performed on
small  quantities of the volcanic  cinders,  e.g.,  three ounce  samples.  These
analytical  procedures are not equivalent to conventional  fire assay tests. The
Company has been  informed  that the plasma  furnacing  equipment is still under
development  and is not presently  capable of treating large amounts of cinders.
As a result,  the Company has not been able to have any of its  volcanic  cinder
material plasma  furnaced since the fall of 1998. It is the Company's  intention
to use its best  efforts to cause  additional  testing to be  conducted  and, if
possible, to cause greater amounts of its volcanic cinders to be plasma furnaced
to  determine  the  presence of precious  metals in the  materials.  No precious
metals have been  produced  from the volcanic  cinders and there is no assurance
that any will be produced.

         The  Company has been  advised  orally by the  developer  of the plasma
furnacing  technology and equipment that if the equipment is fully developed and
becomes operational,  and if production results are successful, the Company will
be given the first  opportunity to negotiate a long-term  arrangement or acquire
the technology and related  equipment.  Any such arrangement would be subject to
appropriate  due  diligence.  There is no assurance  that the equipment  will be
fully developed,  become operational,  or that it will achieve any production or
any such arrangement can be achieved.

         Reductive Fusion Testing: In May 1999, the Company engaged a California
company which  indicated  that it had developed a proprietary  Reductive  Fusion
process to extract precious metals from materials  containing those metals.  The
Company  had  tests  run  on  90  gram  samples  of  its  volcanic  cinders  and
concentrates  therefrom which had been treated by the Reductive  Fusion Process.
The analytical  results  indicated the presence of precious metals.  The Company
then had the California  company process 400 lbs. of its volcanic  cinders which
it had processed and obtained  concentrates.  Those  concentrates  are currently
being further processed and tested to determine  whether,  in fact, they contain
any precious metals and if they do contain any precious metals, whether they can
be  extracted  on an economic  basis.  There is no  assurance  that any precious
metals exist in the volcanic cinders, or that if they do exist, that they can be
profitably extracted. Additional tests are being made on cinders treated by this
reductive fusion process.

THE LIMESTONE PROPERTY

         This  property  consists of 460 acres of lode claims on BLM  property ,
which the Company  regards as  prospective  for use in cement.  The  property is
located 18 miles southeast of Lucerne Valley,  California,  off highway 247. The
first 12 miles is paved  surface and the next six miles is excellent  dirt road.
The deposit is contained in a very large hill,  with the deposit rising from the
ground level to several hundred and possibly a thousand feet up within the hill.
There are dirt roads to the top of the  property.  The Company is informed  that
the property was  previously  mined by a cement company which  discontinued  its
mining operation around 1981. There are other companies

                                       18

<PAGE>



currently  mining  limestone  deposits in the same general area. The Company has
initiated discussions with companies engaged in the cement business with respect
to the  possible  sale of the  property  to them,  but has not yet  reached  any
agreement to do so. There is no assurance that those companies have any interest
in  acquiring  the  property  or that  the  Company  will be able to  reach  any
agreement  to sell it.  The  Company  does not  intend  to  attempt  to mine the
property itself.

HASSYAMPA PROPERTY

        This  property  consists of 960 acres of placer  claims on BLM  property
near Tonapah,  Arizona.  The Company has spent approximately four months testing
and assaying this placer material which, in the Company's  opinion,  may contain
precious metals. However,  further testing of the property will await finishing,
pending  exploratory work on other properties the Company owns or is considering
acquiring.

PROCESSING OF MATERIAL - TYRO MILL

        During 1996 and 1997,  the Company  utilized the  facilities of the Tyro
Mill located near Bull Head City,  Arizona to test and process certain materials
and conduct  assaying and other  related  operations.  In that  connection,  the
Company  advanced  a  substantial  amount  of  funds  to  Tyro,  Inc.,  a Nevada
corporation  ("Tyro"),  which asserted that it owned or had the right to acquire
the Tyro Mill and equipment located thereon.  Certain disputes arose between the
Company and Tyro,  which were  resolved  by an  agreement  executed  between the
Company, Tyro, and its two owners, individually, whereby Tyro and its two owners
individually agreed to pay the Company the sum of $65,000.  That debt is secured
by a financing  statement on a substantial amount of equipment at the Tyro Mill,
including mixers, electronic equipment,  electrowinning equipment,  pumps, tanks
and related materials. The $65,000 was due and payable on May 10, 1998. However,
only  $15,000  has been paid and the  balance  of  $50,000,  plus  interest,  is
currently in default.

        On March 30, 1998, the Company  instituted  litigation  against Tyro and
its two owners to collect the balance of the funds owed, plus interest, to which
each of the Defendants  executed  confessions  of judgment.  The Company has not
pursued  the  collection  of the  amounts  owed as of  this  time,  pending  its
determination  of the  feasibility  of utilizing the Tyro Mill in its operations
and possible  negotiations  with  persons  claiming an interest in the Mill site
and/or the equipment located thereon.

        The Tyro Mill is located on BLM land. The Company has  investigated  the
ownership  of the title to the claims to the  property on which the Tyro Mill is
located  and the  equipment  located  thereon.  While the issue is not free from
doubt, and will likely be contested,  the Company believes that the proper owner
of the claims is someone other than Tyro. The Company had been  negotiating with
that  person  to  retain  the use of the Tyro  Mill,  even if the  ownership  is
transferred to another  party.  Disputes may also exist  regarding  ownership of
certain equipment at the Tyro Mill.


                                       19

<PAGE>



         The Company is informed that the Tyro Mill was  constructed,  beginning
in 1980-82, at a cost in excess of $3 million. Additional equipment has recently
been  purchased by the Company and  installed in order to  accommodate  incoming
material for processing purposes. The mill consists of a carbon and pulp factory
and  includes  buildings,  a  laboratory,  five 33,000  gallon  leach tanks with
agitation, numerous smaller tanks, an electrical plan, 120 thousand gallon water
storage tanks, a 4 inch water line  approximately five miles in length from Lake
Mohave, an atomic absorption analyzer, a Northwest 20 ton crane, an Eimco filter
press,  an Ametek belt filter,  a jaw crusher,  ball mills,  an 8 yard 400 Hough
loader,  furnaces,  conveyors;  electrowinning  equipment,  a  primary  crushing
circuit capable of crushing 80 tons per hour, four Chuga carbon pulp 3,000 pound
tanks, three 150 horsepower air compressors,  a power line 4 1/2 miles long, and
two 500 KW power  service  transformers.  The plant was  designed  to  process a
capacity of 500 tons of ore per day.

        Beginning  in about May 1998,  the Company  obtained the use of the Tyro
Mill on a limited test basis to test various  ores and  mineralized  material to
determine if they  contained  precious  metals and, if so, whether they could be
extracted on an economic basis. The Company  contracted with a third party which
provided  a  foreman,  a  person  experienced  in  conducting  various  assaying
procedures and personnel  capable of operating the equipment located at the mill
to conduct  testing and processing.  The Company  utilized the facilities of the
Tyro Mill in producing the 16.8 ounces of gold it produced.

         The Tyro Mill is not  currently  permitted.  The Mill will  require  an
aquifer permit and an air quality  permit,  with a reclamation  plan and bonding
and perhaps other  permits from Arizona state  agencies and the BLM. The Company
has been informed by the person with whom it has been contracting to utilize the
Tyro Mill that on July 22,  1999 the BLM had  rejected  his  Notice  and Plan of
Operation for the Millsite  claims covering the Tyro Mill and issued a Notice of
Noncompliance and Cessation Order which requires the immediate  cessation of all
mineral  processing and related activities at the Tyro Mill. That person has the
right to  appeal  the  decision  or  submit an  acceptable  plan of  operations.
Therefore,  at this time,  it appears  that the Company may no longer be able to
utilize the Tyro Mill.

SCOTMAR INDUSTRIES, INC., dba TRUCK CITY

        Truck  City,  which was owned and  operated by a wholly  owned  Canadian
subsidiary of the Company, Scotmar Industries,  Inc., engaged in the business of
purchasing damaged trucks from insurance  companies and dismantling the vehicles
for the sale of guaranteed  truck parts to repair shops,  collision repair shops
and the retail  public.  When Truck City was  purchased,  management  decided to
convert it to the  specialized  field of General Motors trucks only. The Company
was prepared to sustain some losses until the conversion was complete.  However,
the conversion required  substantial  additional funding. The Company determined
to sell Scotmar Industries because it believed that its available funds could be
better utilized in acquiring mineral and testing  properties and because Scotmar
Industries  would likely  continue to incur losses  unless and until it obtained
significant additional financing.  On January 29, 1999, the Company sold Scotmar


                                       20

<PAGE>



Industries to an  unaffiliated  British  Columbia Company (see Item 7.  Certain
Relationships and Related Transactions).

ITEM 4.  SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS AND
                   MANAGEMENT

         Set forth in the table below is the number of equity  securities of the
Company  beneficially  owned by all officers and directors as of August 9, 1999.
There were 7,949,782 shares of common stock  outstanding on that date. There are
no persons  other than those listed below who, to the Company's  knowledge,  own
more than 5% of the Company's common shares.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

  Title of Class        Name and Address of       Amount and Nature        Percent of Class
                          Beneficial Owner        of Beneficial Owner
- - -----------------       -------------------       -------------------      -----------------
<S>                      <C>                            <C>                       <C>
Common stock, par        Ronald D. Sloan*,               785,431                  10.3%
value $.001              Vancouver, British
                         Columbia
Common stock, par        John Brian Wolf,                785,431                  10.3%
value $.001              Vancouver, British
                         Columbia
Common stock, par        Barry E. Amies,                 175,571                   2.3%
value $.001              Vancouver, British
                         Columbia
Common stock, par        James Dacysyzn                  470,000                   6.1%
value $.001              Vancouver, British
                         Columbia
Common stock, par        Terry Rice                        -0-                     -0-
value $.001              Kingman, Arizona
Common stock, par        All Officers and               2,216,433                 29.1%
value $.001              Directors as a group
<FN>

        * Mr.  Sloan's wife owns 100,000  shares of the Company's  common stock.
Mr. Sloan disclaims any beneficial ownership in those shares.
</FN>
</TABLE>

         There are no  arrangements  which may  result in a change in control of
the Company. There are no warrants or options outstanding to purchase any shares
of the Company.


                                       21

<PAGE>



ITEM 5.  DIRECTORS, EXECUTIVE OFFICERS, PROMOTERS, AND CONTROL
         PERSONS

         Ronald Daniel Sloan, age 58, is President and Treasurer, and a Director
of the Company. Mr. Sloan has been employed full time with the Company since May
2, 1996. For the past 10 years,  Mr. Sloan,  through a number of companies,  has
been  engaged in the  automotive  brokerage  business,  dealing  with total loss
vehicles for insurance companies.  Since 1994, Mr. Sloan has owned Canadian Auto
Market Trends Ltd., a Company engaged in that business.  From approximately 1986
to 1996, Mr. Sloan owned Knight Auto Recyclers Ltd., an automotive parts company
which  dismantled  total loss vehicles and sold  guaranteed  parts to automotive
dealers, collision repair shops and the retail public. From 1992 until 1996, Mr.
Sloan worked at Truck City, Inc., which is engaged in the business of purchasing
damaged trucks from  insurance  companies and  dismantling  the vehicles for the
sale of parts. Until  approximately 1990, Mr. Sloan was a director and secretary
of  Save-On  Used  Auto and Truck  Parts  Ltd.,  which was sold to  unaffiliated
persons. He was elected President on May 2, 1996 and a Director on May 3, 1996.

         Terry  Rice,  age 52,  joined  the  Company  in April 12,  1999 as Vice
President -  Operations.  Mr. Rice  attended the  University  of Idaho from 1989
through 1994 and received a B. Sc. in  metallurgical  engineering in 1994.  From
January 1975 through 1985, Mr. Rice worked with Intermountain Mineral Engineers,
Inc. as a metallurgist  and mill foreman.  He was responsible for  metallurgical
reports  and  testing,   lining  out  crews,   and  scheduling   maintenance  at
Intermountain's  250 tpd  custom  mill that  milled for  themselves,  as well as
several  other  companies,   including  Bunker  Hill  and   Independence.   From
approximately  1985  through  1990,  Mr. Rice worked for  American  Smelting and
Refining  Company as an underground  miner. He worked as raise,  drift and stope
miner.  As a result of an injury,  he was unable to continue  as an  underground
miner and  enrolled  at the  University  of Idaho.  From  January  1990  through
December  1995,  Mr. Rice worked  part time for  Pintlar  Corporation,  Citizens
Utilities,  and the University of Idaho,  doing computer  drafting and driving a
truck while  earning a degree at the  University  of Idaho.  From  January  1995
through July 1998, Mr. Rice worked for Addwest  Minerals,  Inc. at its Gold Road
Mine  as a  metallurgist,  mill  superintendent,  and  environmentalist.  He was
responsible for metallurgical  testing, daily and monthly metallurgical and mill
reports,  the mill budget,  purchasing,  scheduling  maintenance,  environmental
sampling and reporting, lab and mill supervision, selling gold, and coordinating
the mill with the mine at a 500 tpd CIP mill.  From July 1998  through  December
1998, Mr. Rice worked at Martha Mine in Oregon and prepared a feasibility  study
on opening a small mine and mill.

         Brian John Wolfe,  age 46, is Secretary  and a Director of the Company.
He was elected Secretary on May 2, 1996 and a Director on May 3, 1996. Mr. Wolfe
has, since 1987, owned Wolfe & Associates  Appraisal  Services,  which appraises
damages sustained by vehicles,  recreation  vehicles,  motorcycles and equipment
after an accident,  for insurance companies  throughout North America.  Prior to
1987, Mr. Wolfe managed Collision Repair Shops in the Vancouver, B.C. area.


                                       22

<PAGE>



         Barry E. Amies,  age 55, has been Vice  President and a Director of the
Company since October 14, 1998. Mr. Amies has extensive experience in financing,
insurance  and mining.  He started Baron  Insurance  Agency in 1968 and built it
from a  one-man  operation  to 45  employees,  when he sold it in 1994.  He also
started  Baron  Financial,   which  was  added  to  the  insurance  business  to
incorporate financial investments.  Mr. Amies was the President of the Insurance
Brokers of British Columbia, Director and Vice President of Insurance Brokers of
Canada,  President/Chairman for the Centre for the Study of Insurance Operations
of Canada, and was Chairman of the Insurance Council of British Columbia,  which
is a regulatory body for brokers.  In 1990, he was the Insurance Marketer of the
Year for North  America.  Since 1980,  Mr.  Amies has been  President  of Zalmac
Mines,  Ltd.,  which has  properties  in Canada  prospective  for gold,  silver,
molybdenum, and other metals.

         James  Dacyszyn,  age 68, was  elected as a Director  of the Company on
February 8, 1999. Mr. Dacyszyn is a Canadian  citizen who is semi-retired and is
a  member  of  the  association  of  professional   engineers,   geologists  and
geophysicists  of Alberta,  Canada.  Mr.  Dacyszyn  currently  owns and operates
several  concrete  transit mix plants and gravel  operations in central Alberta,
Canada. The companies are now being managed by his son, a professional engineer,
and Mr. Dacyszyn is retained in a consulting  capacity.  Mr. Dacyszyn brings his
experience in materials  engineering,  including  drill testing and  engineering
evaluation of fine grained soils, sands and gravels.

         Messrs.  Sloan and Wolfe may be deemed  promoters of the Company in its
present business and operations.

ITEM 6.  EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

         No Officer or Director of the Company,  other than Mr.  Rice,  receives
any  compensation  and no officer or director has any options or other rights to
purchase  any  shares  of the  Company.  They are  reimbursed  for out of pocket
expenses incurred on behalf of the Company.  Mr. Sloan, a resident of Vancouver,
British Columbia,  spends virtually all of his time at the Company's  properties
and is reimbursed  for the costs of maintaining an apartment in Las Vegas (which
also serves as the Company's executive office).

         The  Company  does not have any stock  option or similar  plan.  In the
event the  Company's  financial  condition  becomes  adequate to provide for the
payment of other compensation, the Company will consider the issue at that time.

ITEM 7.  CERTAIN RELATIONSHIPS AND RELATED TRANSACTIONS

Acquisition of Assets From Aurum LLC

         During 1997,  the Company's  operations  were financed in part by funds
loaned by Aurum LLC ("Aurum"),  a California limited liability Company.  Messrs.
Sloan and Wolfe, Directors of the

                                       23

<PAGE>



Company,  each owned 36% of Aurum.  As of  October  27,  1997,  Aurum had loaned
$315,045.98 to the Company.  The Company was unable to repay those funds because
it has been  using  all its  available  funds  in  connection  with  its  mining
activities, principally the S & S Joint Venture.

         In October 1997, the Directors of the Company,  including Messrs. Sloan
and  Wolfe,  determined  that it would be in the  Company's  best  interests  to
acquire the Pisgah  Volcanic  Cinders  property  from Aurum,  as well as to seek
cancellation of the Company's indebtedness to Aurum and seek possible additional
financing from Aurum on an equity, as opposed to the debt, basis.

         The Company  determined that by acquiring the Pisgah  Volcanic  Cinders
property and  cancellation of its  indebtedness  for stock, it would become debt
free, and it would give the Company a significant  positive book value and would
make it far more  likely that it would be able to obtain  financing  to continue
its  exploration  on the S & S Joint Venture  property (Owl Canyon),  as well as
test the Pisgah Volcanic Cinders property.

         Aurum  indicated it believed  that it could sell its  Volcanic  Cinders
property,  which it acquired from the Burlington Northern Santa Fe Foundation on
December 19, 1996, for a price in excess of its cost. However,  Aurum agreed, in
order to facilitate the  transaction  and to insure its fairness to the Company,
to sell the Pisgah Volcanic Cinders property to the Company at its out-of-pocket
cost of $553,716.94, plus legal fees and related costs of $25,755.59 incurred in
acquiring the property, for a total acquisition cost of $579,472.53,  cancel the
indebtedness of $315,045.98, for a total cost of $894,518.51, and not charge the
Company any  interest  for the use of funds that it had invested in the Volcanic
Cinders  property or the money it had loaned the  Company.  In  addition,  Aurum
agreed to use its best  efforts to provide  additional  equity  financing to the
Company in amounts that the Company may reasonably request.

         The  Company's  book  value  per share as of  December  31,  1997,  was
approximately $.038 per share. Taking into account the Company's book value, its
interest  in the S & S Joint  Venture  and other  operations,  the fact that the
Company would obtain  cancellation  of all its  indebtedness to Aurum and obtain
the Pisgah  Volcanic  Cinders  property,  which was  deemed to have  significant
potential  value,  that  trading in the  Company  stock had been  limited for an
extended  period of time,  that the shares  issued to Aurum would be a long-term
investment and illiquid and could not be sold for a considerable period of time,
and then only in very limited  amounts,  it was  determined  by the Directors to
value  the  Company's  restricted  shares  issued to Aurum at $.41 per share and
that,  therefore,  based on the total cost of $894,518.51,  a total of 2,181,752
shares of the Company's common stock would be issued to Aurum.

         The Directors,  including Messrs. Sloan and Wolfe, unanimously passed a
resolution  to this effect and, on October 27, 1997,  an  agreement  was entered
into with Aurum  providing for the  acquisition of the Pisgah  Volcanic  Cinders
property by the Company and  cancellation  of the $315,045.98 of indebtedness by
the Company to Aurum in exchange for 2,181,752  shares of the  Company's  common
stock subject to  investment  restrictions,  and Aurum  agreeing to use its best
efforts to provide  additional  equity financing as reasonably  requested by the
Company by purchasing

                                       24

<PAGE>



additional  restricted  shares of the Company's  common stock at the same price.
This transaction was submitted to and approved by the Company's  shareholders at
the Company's  annual  meeting on December 3, 1997.  In addition,  Aurum forgave
indebtedness  of an additional  $80,100 which it had loaned to the Company.  The
Company has not  requested  Aurum to provide any  additional  equity  financing.
Following shareholder approval of this transaction, Aurum distributed the shares
to the owners of its beneficial interests. Messrs. Sloan and Wolfe each received
785,431 shares. All shares are subject to investment  restrictions and Rule 144.
None of the shares distributed have been sold.

Scotmar Industries, Inc.

         On February 13, 1997, Scotmar Industries,  Inc.("Scotmar") was acquired
by the Company from Mr. Sloan's wife and son-in-law, both citizens and residents
of Canada,  for 200,000 shares of the Company's common stock,  which are subject
to  investment  restrictions.  None of those shares have been sold.  Scotmar,  a
Canadian Company operating under the name of Truck City, engaged in the business
of  purchasing  damaged  trucks from  insurance  companies and  dismantling  the
vehicles  for the sale of  guaranteed  truck  parts to repair  shops,  collision
repair  shops,  and the retail  public.  It was the  intention of  management to
expand  Truck City by opening new outlets  which would  specialize  in specified
product lines. The Company advanced a total of $84,820 to Scotmar to finance its
operations.  Mr.  Sloan's  wife and  son-in-law  advanced a total of $132,000 to
Scotmar. However, the operations of Scotmar proved to be unsuccessful. Effective
January  29,  1999,  the  Company  sold  Scotmar to an  unaffiliated  person for
$65,300.  In order to  consummate  this sale and  avoid  bank  foreclosure,  Mr.
Sloan's  wife  paid  approximately  $16,500  of  Scotmar's  bank  loans  and was
reimbursed at the initial closing.  It is anticipated that substantially all the
balance of the proceeds will be used to pay Scotmar's obligations.

Loans by Ronald D. Sloan

         As of June 30,  1999,  Mr. Sloan had loaned the Company an aggregate of
$31,483 to finance its  operations.  The loan is unsecured,  due on demand,  and
bears interest at 1% over prime.

Purchases of Stock From the Company

         Barry E.  Aimes  has made the  following  purchases  of stock  from the
Company.

         Date                   Number of Shares               Price
         ----                   ----------------               -----

        10-28-98                      60,000              $.50 per share
        12-24-98                      38,571              $.35 per share
        02-18-99                      62,500              $.40 per share
        05-14-99                      15,000              $.50 per share


                                       25

<PAGE>




         Mr. Dacyszyn made the following purchases of stock from the Company:

         Date                   Number of Shares               Price
         ----                   ----------------               -----

        07-11-98                     100,000              $.45 per share
        12-24-98                     200,000              $.35 per share
        02-18-99                      70,000              $.40 per share
        5-14-99                      100,000              $.50 per share

         All shares purchased are subject to investment  restrictions  contained
in  Regulation  S and Rule 144.  All shares  were sold by the  Company to obtain
funds to finance its operations.

ITEM 8.  LEGAL PROCEEDINGS

         On March 30, 1998,  the Company  filed a lawsuit in the District  Court
for Clark  County,  Nevada,  against  Tyro,  Inc.,  a/k/a Tyro  Precious  Metals
Processing  Center,  et al,  seeking to collect the $50,000,  plus  interest and
attorneys  fees, for breach of an agreement to pay that amount to Can- Cal. Each
of the Defendants has executed a Confession of Judgment. The Company has not yet
filed the Confession of Judgment in Court or taken any further action to collect
the amounts  owed,  pending the Company's  decisions  regarding the Tyro Mill in
which the Defendants are involved.
In the Company's opinion, the amounts owed it are fully collectible.

ITEM 9.  MARKET FOR COMMON EQUITY AND RELATED STOCKHOLDER MATTER

         The  Company's  common  stock is traded on the  NASDAQ  OTC  Electronic
Bulletin Board under the trading symbol CCRE.

         The following  table sets forth in United  States  dollars the high and
low bid  quotation for such shares.  Such bid  quotations  reflect  inter-dealer
prices,  without  retail  mark-up,   mark-down,  or  commissions,   and  do  not
necessarily   represent  actual  transactions.   The  source  of  the  following
information  is the National  Association of Securities  Dealers,  Inc.'s NASDAQ
Electronic Bulletin Board.

COMMON STOCK
- - ------------

        1997                                  LOW                  HIGH
        ----
        First Quarter                       No trades             No trades
        Second Quarter                      No trades             No trades
        Third Quarter                        $1.375                $1.625
        Fourth Quarter                       $0.321                $2.63

                                       26

<PAGE>


        1998                                  LOW                   HIGH
        ----
        First Quarter                        $0.375                $0.930
        Second Quarter                       $0.406                $1.125
        Third Quarter                        $0.375                $1.00
        Fourth Quarter                       $0.281                $0.600

        1999                                  LOW                   HIGH
        ----
        First Quarter                        $0.375                $0.812
        Second Quarter                       $0.406                $1.875
        Third Quarter (Through August 6)     $0.75                 $4.125

         Penny  Stock  Rules:   The  Securities  and  Exchange   Commission  has
promulgated  rules  pursuant to the  Securities  Exchange  Act of 1934 which may
adversely affect the market for the Company's common stock. The Company's common
stock is a "penny  stock,"  as that term is defined  by both  statute  and rule.
Generally, a penny stock is a security that:

         o        is priced under five dollars;

         o        is not traded on a national  stock  exchange or on NASDAQ (the
                  NASD's automated quotation system for actively traded stocks);

         o        may be listed in the "pink sheets" or the NASD OTC Bulletin
                  Board;

         o        is issued by a company  that has less than $5  million  in net
                  tangible  assets  and has been in  business  less  than  three
                  years,  or by a  Company  that  has  under $2  million  in net
                  tangible  assets and has been in  business  for at least three
                  years,  or by a Company  that has  revenues  of $6  million in
                  three years.

         The penny stock rules  approval  procedure and related rules may have a
negative  effect on the  market and the market  price for the  Company's  common
stock. In order to approve a person's  account for transactions in penny stocks,
a  broker-dealer  must first obtain from the person  information  concerning the
person's financial situation,  investment experience,  and investment objectives
(Rule  15g-9(b)(1)).  The  broker-dealer  is to use this  information  to make a
reasonable  determination that transactions in penny stocks are suitable for the
person, and that the person (or the person's independent adviser) has sufficient
knowledge  and  experience  in financial  matters that the person or the adviser
reasonably may be expected to be capable of evaluating the risks of transactions
in penny stocks (Rule 15g-9(b)(2)).

         The  broker-dealer  is then required to deliver to the person a written
statement  setting  forth  the  basis  on  which  the  broker-dealer   made  the
determination regarding suitability of penny stock

                                       27

<PAGE>



transactions  (Rule  15g-9(b)(3)(i)).  A manually  signed and dated copy of this
written  statement must be obtained from the person by the  broker-dealer  (Rule
15g-9(b)(4)).

         The written statement is to explain,  in highlighted format, that it is
unlawful for the  broker-dealer to effect a transaction in a penny stock subject
to the provisions of Rule 15g-9(a)(2) unless the broker-dealer has received from
the person,  prior to the  transaction,  a written  agreement to the transaction
(Rule 15g-9(b)(3)(ii)).

         Also  in  highlighted  format,   immediately   preceding  the  customer
signature  line, the written  statement must explain that the  broker-dealer  is
required to provide the person  with the written  statement  and that the person
should not sign and  return  the  written  statement  if it does not  accurately
reflect the person's financial situation,  investment experience, and investment
objectives (Rule 15g-9(b)(3)(iii)).

(b)      Holders

         The Company has approximately 251 shareholders of record.

(c)      Dividends

         The  Company  has  never  paid  any  dividends.   There  are  no  legal
restrictions  which limit the Company's  ability to pay dividends  but, based on
its present financial  situation,  it is extremely unlikely to do so in the near
future.

ITEM 10. RECENT SALES OF UNREGISTERED SECURITIES

         In the last three years, the Company has sold  unregistered  securities
as set forth below. No underwriters were involved in these transactions.

         1999:  During 1999,  the Company sold an aggregate of 905,500 shares of
its common stock in Canada to citizens and residents of Canada. Of those shares,
62,500 shares were sold on February 18, 1999 to Amies  Holdings  Ltd., a company
owned by Barry E. Amies,  an Officer and Director of the  Company,  for $.40 per
share, for a total price of $25,000. On May 14, 1999, 15,000 shares were sold to
Amies Holding,  Ltd. for $.50 per share for a total price of $7,500.00.  On June
22, 1999, 50,000 shares were sold to Aimes Holding Ltd. for $.50 per share for a
total price of $25,000.00..

         On February 18, 1999, the Company sold 70,000 shares to James Dacyszyn,
a Director of the Company,  for $.40 per share, for a total price of $28,000 and
on May 14, 1999,  sold an additional  100,000 shares to Mr. Dacyszyn at $.50 per
share, for a total price of $50,000 and on June 22, 1999 sold 60,000 shares to a
Canadian  company owned by Mr.  Dacyszyn for $.50 per share for a total price of
$30,000.00.  40,000 shares,  valued at $.50 per share, were issued to a Canadian
citizen  and  resident  as payment  for a Ford one ton diesel  truck on or about
March 17, 1999. The

                                       28

<PAGE>



remaining  shares  were  sold  for  $.50  per  share.  All the  purchasers  were
relatives,  friends and/or business  associates of officers and directors of the
Company.

         The  Company   relied  on  the  exemption   provided  by  Regulation  S
promulgated  pursuant  to the  Securities  Act of 1933.  All  shares  issued are
subject  to the  investment  restrictions  or Rule  144 and  the  provisions  of
Regulation S. The  certificates are legended and appropriate  instructions  have
been  issued to the  Company's  transfer  agent.  The shares may be resold  only
pursuant to an effective registration statement under the Securities Act of 1933
or pursuant to an exemption from registration.

         In  1998,  the  Company  contracted  with an  organization  to  perform
services in connection  with the Company's at the Tyro Mill.  That  organization
requested that the Company pay 25% of the monies due it by issuing the Company's
common stock, subject to investment  restrictions.  That organization  requested
that  shares  due it be  distributed  directly  to  persons  who  performed  the
services.  On April 19, 1999,  the Company  issued  32,121  shares of its common
stock to five individuals, all of whom are U.S. persons. Robin Schwarz, an owner
of the S & S Joint Venture,  received 8,000 shares.  All those persons are fully
familiar with the Company's properties and operations.

         On April 1, 1999,  the Company  issued 1,000 shares of its common stock
valued at $.50 per share to a U.S.  person in partial payment for a computer and
software  equipment.  On March 15,  1999,  the Company  sold 6,000 shares of its
common stock to two U.S.  persons,  a husband and wife,  at $.50 per share for a
total purchase price of $3,000.  Those persons are friends of the Schwarz family
and were furnished with information regarding the Company.

         All shares are subject to investment restrictions. The certificates are
legended and appropriate instructions have been issued to the Company's transfer
agent.  The shares may be resold  only  pursuant  to an  effective  registration
statement  under the  Securities  Act of 1933 or pursuant to any exemption  from
registration.  The Company relied upon the exemption from registration  provided
by Section 4(2) of the Securities Act of 1933.

         1998:  During 1998, the Company sold a total of 557,509  shares,  for a
total consideration of $211,800.  All but one of the purchasers are citizens and
residents of Canada and the sales were made in Canada. Of those shares,  300,000
were sold to James  Dacyszyn,  who was  subsequently  elected a director  of the
Company. 100,000 shares were sold to Mr. Dacyszyn on or about May 10, 1998, at a
price of $.45 per share,  for a total price of $45,000.  The  remaining  200,000
shares were sold to Mr.  Dacyszyn on or about  December  24,  1998,  at $.35 per
share, for a total  consideration  of $70,000.  65,000 shares were sold to Amies
Holdings,  Ltd., on or about October 29, 1998, at a price of $.50 per share, for
a total  consideration of $32,500,  and an additional 38,571 shares were sold to
Amies Holdings on or about December 24, 1998, at a price of $.35 per share,  for
a total  price of  $13,499.85.  109,450  shares were sold at a price of $.40 per
share,  in  September  and/or  October  of  1998.  Each of the  purchasers  is a
relative,  friend and/or business associate of the officers and directors of the
Company. On or about December 10, 1998, 22,049 shares were sold to two

                                       29

<PAGE>



individuals  who are citizens and  residents of Canada,  at a price of $.41 U.S.
per share.  On or about  December  10,  1998,  2,439  shares were sold to a U.S.
person for a price of $.41 per share, for a total purchase price of $1,000. That
person is a close  friend of the  Schwarz  family,  which  owns 50% of the S & S
Joint Venture.

         With  respect  to all  offers  and sales of shares to  persons  who are
residents and citizens of Canada,  the Company relied on the exemption  provided
by Regulation S. All shares are issued  subject to investment  restrictions  and
Regulation S. The  certificates are legended and appropriate  instructions  have
been  issued to the  Company's  transfer  agent.  The shares may be resold  only
pursuant to an effective registration statement under the Securities Act of 1933
or pursuant to an exemption  from  registration.  None of those shares have been
sold.

         With respect to the one U.S.  person who purchased 2,439 shares at $.41
U.S. per share,  those shares are subject to  investment  restrictions  and Rule
144.  The  certificate  evidencing  ownership  of those  shares is legended  and
appropriate  instructions have been issued to the Company's transfer agent. That
person is familiar  with the Company and its  properties  and its  business  and
operations.  The Company relied upon the exemption from registration provided by
Section  4(2) of the  Securities  Act of 1933.  The  shares  may be resold  only
pursuant to an effective registration statement under the Securities Act of 1933
or pursuant to an exemption  from  registration.  None of the shares issued have
been sold.

         1997: In January 1997,  the Company issued 200,000 shares of its common
stock in exchange for all the outstanding shares of Scotmar Industries,  Inc., a
British  Columbia  corporation.  Mr. Sloan's wife and  son-in-law  were the only
shareholders of Scotmar and each received 100,000 shares of the Company's common
stock. Both are citizens and residents of Canada.  The shares issued are subject
to investment  restrictions and Rule 144. The shares may only be resold pursuant
to  an  effective  registration  statement  or  pursuant  to an  exemption  from
registration.  The Company  relied on the  exemption  provided by  Regulation  S
promulgated  pursuant to the Securities  Act of 1933.  None of those shares have
been sold.

         In October  1997,  the  Company  exercised  its option to acquire a 50%
interest in the S & S Joint Venture and, in consideration for the acquisition of
that 50% interest,  issued  500,000 shares of its common stock to six members of
the Schwarz family,  all of whom are U.S. persons.  In issuing those shares, the
Company  relied on the exemption from  registration  provided by Section 4(2) of
the  Securities  Act of  1933.  The  Securities  are  legended  and  appropriate
instructions have been issued to the Company's transfer agent. The shares may be
resold only  pursuant to an effective  registration  statement or pursuant to an
exemption from registration. None of those shares have been sold.

         On December 3, 1997, the Company issued  2,181,752 shares of its common
stock to Aurum LLC, a California  limited liability company.  Messrs.  Sloan and
Wolfe,  officers and directors of the Company,  each owed 36% of the  beneficial
interest in Aurum.  All shares are subject to investment  restrictions  and Rule
144. The shares may be resold only pursuant to an effective registration

                                       30

<PAGE>



statement  under the  Securities  Act of 1933 or pursuant to an  exemption  from
registration.  The Company  relied on the exemption  provided by Section 4(2) of
the Securities Act of 1933.  None of the shares issued have been sold. (See Item
7. Certain Relationships and Related Transactions)

         On December 4, 1997,  the Company issued 40,000 shares and 2,000 shares
respectively  of its  common  stock  to two  individuals  in  consideration  for
rendering  geologic  assaying and related  services to the Company in connection
with  its  mining  properties,  particularly  the  S &  S  Joint  Venture.  Both
individuals  were fully familiar with the Company,  its properties and all other
material matters relating to its operations. The person to whom the 2,000 shares
were  issued is a citizen  and  resident  of Canada.  The person to whom  40,000
shares were issued is a U.S. person. All shares issued are subject to investment
restrictions  and Rule  144.  With  respect  to the  issuance  of  shares to the
Canadian  citizen,  the  Company  also  relied  on  the  exemption  provided  by
Regulation  S. With  respect to the issuance of shares to the U.S.  person,  the
Company relied upon the exemption from registration  provided by section 4(2) of
the  Securities  Act of 1933.  The  certificates  are legended  and  appropriate
instructions have been issued to the Company's transfer agent. The shares may be
resold only pursuant to an effective registration statement under the Securities
Act of 1933 or pursuant to an exemption from registration.  None of those shares
have been sold.

         In September and/or October 1997, the Company sold 77,108 shares of its
common stock to 24 persons, 16 of whom were citizens and residents of Canada and
eight of whom were U.S.  persons.  59,528 shares were sold to Canadian  citizens
and residents for $44,641. 16,180 shares were issued to U.S. persons for $12,244
and services  valued at $3,053.  All  certificates  evidencing  ownership of the
shares are  legended  and  subject to the  provisions  of Rule 144.  Appropriate
instructions have been issued to the Company's transfer agent. The shares may be
resold only pursuant to an effective registration statement under the Securities
Act of 1933 or pursuant to an exemption from registration. The Company relied on
the  exemption  from  registration  provided  by  Regulation  S. One of the U.S.
persons was Aylward Schwarz, an owner of the S & S Joint Venture. The other U.S.
persons are friends of the Schwarz family.  One person received 1,500 shares for
fabricating  services  rendered  on  the  S  &  S  Joint  Venture's  Owl  Canyon
properties. In November 1997, the Company issued 5,475 shares to individuals for
services.  Robin Schwarz,  an owner of the S & S Joint  Venture,  received 2,975
shares.  2,000  and 500  shares  respectively  were  issued to two  persons  who
performed  other services for the Company.  Those persons were familiar with the
Company's  properties and  operations.  The Company relied on the exemption from
registration  provided by Section 4(2) of the Securities Act of 1933. The shares
may be resold only  pursuant to an effective  registration  statement  under the
Securities  Act of 1933 or pursuant to an exemption from  registration.  None of
those shares have been sold.

         1996:  From  approximately  May to  September  1996,  the Company  sold
1,576,190  shares of its common stock for total proceeds of $639,249.  All those
shares were offered and sold in Canada to persons who were Canadian citizens and
residents who were  relatives,  friends and business  associates of officers and
directors of the Company.  To the Company's  knowledge,  there was no trading of
the  Company's  shares  until the third  quarter of 1997.  The offer and sale of
those shares

                                       31

<PAGE>



were made in reliance on the exemption from registration  provided by Regulation
S promulgated pursuant to the Securities Act of 1933.  Appropriate  instructions
were given to the Company's transfer agent.

ITEM 11. DESCRIPTION OF SECURITIES

(a)      Common or Preferred Stock

         There are no preemptive  rights to subscribe to shares of either common
or preferred  stock of the Company.  All common  shares are entitled to one vote
per share. There are no cumulative voting provisions. Common shares are entitled
to  dividends  when and if declared  by the Board of  Directors.  The  preferred
shares are 5% non-voting,  cumulative preferred shares. No preferred shares have
been issued.

ITEM 12. INDEMNIFICATION OF DIRECTORS AND OFFICERS

         The Company's  Articles of  Incorporation  provide in relevant part, as
follows:

         Twelfth,  no director or officer of the Corporation shall be personally
liable to the Corporation or any of its  stockholders  for damages for breach of
fiduciary  duty as a director  or officer  involving  any act or omission of any
such director or officer; provided,  however, that the foregoing provision shall
not  eliminate  or limit the  liability of a director or officer (i) for acts or
omissions which involve intentional misconduct,  fraud or a knowing violation of
law, or (ii) the payment of  dividends  in  violation  of Section  78.300 of the
Nevada  Revised  Statutes.  Any repeal or  modification  of this  Article by the
stockholders  of the  Corporation  shall be  prospective  only,  and  shall  not
adversely  affect any  limitation  on the  personal  liability  of a director or
officer  of the  Corporation  for  acts or  omissions  prior to such  repeal  or
modification.

         Article V of the Company's By-Laws provide as follows:

         1. The  Corporation  shall  indemnify  any and all of its Directors and
Officers,  and its former  Directors  and  Officers,  or any person who may have
served  at the  Corporation's  request  as a  Director  or  Officer  of  another
corporation  in  which  it owns  shares  of  capital  stock  or of which it is a
creditor,  against  expenses  actually  and  necessarily  incurred  by  them  in
connection with the defense of any action,  suit or proceeding in which they, or
any of them,  are made  parties,  or a party,  by reason of being or having been
Director(s)  or Officer(s)  of the  corporation,  or of such other  corporation,
except,  in  relation  to  matters as to which any such  Director  or Officer or
former  Director or Officer or person shall be adjudged in such action,  suit or
proceeding to be liable for negligence or misconduct in the performance of duty.
Such indemnification  shall not be deemed exclusive of any other rights to which
those indemnified may be entitled, under By-Law, agreement, vote of stockholders
or otherwise.

         The Nevada Corporation Laws, N.R.S. 78.751, provides as follows:

                                       32

<PAGE>




         1. A  corporation  may indemnify any person who was or is a party or is
threatened to be made a party to any  threatened,  pending or completed  action,
suit of proceeding,  whether civil,  criminal,  administrative or investigative,
except an action  by or in the right of the  corporation,  by reason of the fact
that he is or was a director,  officer, employee or agent of the corporation, or
is or was serving at the  request of the  corporation  as a  director,  officer,
employee or agent of another corporation,  partnership,  joint venture, trust or
other enterprise,  against expenses, including attorneys' fees, judgments, fines
and  amounts  paid in  settlement  actually  and  reasonably  incurred by him in
connection with the action,  suit or proceeding if he acted in good faith and in
a manner  which  he  reasonably  believed  to be in or not  opposed  to the best
interest  of the  corporation,  and,  with  respect  to any  criminal  action or
proceeding,  had no reasonable  cause to believe his conduct was  unlawful.  The
termination of any action,  suit or proceeding by judgment,  order,  settlement,
conviction,  or upon a plea of nolo contendere or its  equivalent,  does not, of
itself,  create a presumption that the person did not act in good faith and in a
manner  which  he  reasonably  believed  to be in or not  opposed  to  the  best
interests of the  corporation,  and that, with respect to any criminal action or
proceeding, he had reasonable cause to believe that his conduct was unlawful.

         2. A  corporation  may indemnify any person who was or is a party or is
threatened to be made a party to any threatened,  pending or completed action or
suit by or in the right of the corporation to procure a judgment in its favor by
reason of the fact that he is or was a director,  officer,  employee or agent of
the  corporation,  or is or was serving at the request of the  corporation  as a
director, officer, employee or agent of another corporation,  partnership, joint
venture,  trust or other enterprise against expenses,  including amounts paid in
settlement  and  attorneys'  fees  actually  and  reasonably  incurred by him in
connection  with the defense or  settlement of the action or suit if he acted in
good faith and in a manner which he reasonably  believed to be in or not opposed
to the best interests of the  corporation.  Indemnification  may not be made for
any  claim,  issue or matter as to which such a person  has been  adjudged  by a
court of competent  jurisdiction,  after exhaustion of all appeals therefrom, to
be  liable  to  the  corporation  or  for  amounts  paid  in  settlement  to the
corporation, unless and only to the extent that the court in which the action or
suit was  brought  or other  court of  competent  jurisdiction  determines  upon
application  that in view of all the  circumstances  of the case,  the person is
fairly and reasonably entitled to indemnity for such expenses as the court deems
proper.

         3. To the  extent  that a  director,  officer,  employee  or agent of a
corporation  has been  successful  on the merits or  otherwise in defense of any
action,  suit or proceeding referred to in subsections 1 and 2, or in defense of
any claim,  issue or matter  therein,  he must be indemnified by the corporation
against expenses, including attorneys' fees, actually and reasonably incurred by
him in connection with the defense.

         4. Any  indemnification  under subsections 1 and 2, unless ordered by a
court or advanced pursuant to subsection 5, must be made by the corporation only
as authorized in the specific case upon a determination that  indemnification of
the director,  officer,  employee or agent is proper in the  circumstances.  The
determination must be made:

         (a)      By the stockholders;

                                       33

<PAGE>




         (b) By the board of directors by majority  vote of a quorum  consisting
of directors who were not parties to the act, suit or proceeding;

         (c) If a majority vote of a quorum consisting of directors who were not
parties to the act, suit or proceeding so orders,  by independent  legal counsel
in a written opinion; or

         (d) If a quorum  consisting  of  directors  who were not parties to the
act, suit or proceeding  cannot be obtained,  by independent  legal counsel in a
written opinion.

         5. The articles of  incorporation,  the bylaws or an agreement  made by
the corporation may provide that the expenses of officers and directors incurred
in defending a civil or criminal action,  suit or proceeding must be paid by the
corporation as they are incurred and in advance of the final  disposition of the
action,  suit or  proceeding,  upon receipt of an undertaking by or on behalf of
the director or officer to repay the amount if it is ultimately  determined by a
court of competent jurisdiction that he is not entitled to be indemnified by the
corporation.  The  provisions  of this  subsection  do not  affect any rights to
advancement  of expenses to which  corporate  personnel  other than directors or
officers may be entitled under any contract or otherwise by law.

         6. The  indemnification  and  advancement of expenses  authorized in or
ordered by a court pursuant to this section:

         (a)  Does not  exclude  any  other  rights  to  which a person  seeking
indemnification or advancement of expenses may be entitled under the articles of
incorporation  or any bylaw,  agreement,  vote of stockholders or  disinterested
directors  or  otherwise,  for either an action in his  official  capacity or an
action  in  another   capacity   while   holding   his   office,   except   that
indemnification,  unless  ordered by a court pursuant to subsection 2 or for the
advancement  of expenses made pursuant to subsection 5, may not be made to or on
behalf of any director or officer if a final  adjudication  establishes that his
acts or omissions involved intentional misconduct,  fraud or a knowing violation
of the law and was material to the cause of action.

         (b)  Continues  for a person who has ceased to be a director,  officer,
employee  or agent  and  inures  to the  benefit  of the  heirs,  executors  and
administrators of such a person.

ITEM 13. FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

         The Financial Statements follow.

         In  the  opinion  of  the  management  of the  Company,  the  financial
statements  as of June  30,  1999  and June 30,  1998  contain  all  adjustments
(consisting of only normal recurring  accruals)  necessary to fairly present the
financial  position of the Company as of those dates,  the results of operations
for the six months ended June 30, 1999 and June 30, 1998, and the cash flows for
the six months ended June 30, 1999 and June 30, 1998.



                                       34

<PAGE>




                             CAN-CAL RESOURCES, LTD.

              REPORT ON AUDITS OF CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

                 FOR THE YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1998 AND 1997


                                       35

<PAGE>



                             CAN-CAL RESOURCES, LTD.

                 FOR THE YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1998 AND 1997



                                    CONTENTS



                                                                          PAGE

INDEPENDENT AUDITORS' REPORT                                                1

CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS:
   Consolidated balance sheets                                               2
   Consolidated statements of operations                                     3
   Consolidated statements of changes in stockholders' deficit               4
   Consolidated statements of cash flows                                     5
   Notes to consolidated financial statements                             6-14

INDEPENDENT AUDITOR'S REPORT ON SUPPLEMENTAL INFORMATION                    15
SUPPLEMENTARY SCHEDULE:
   Supplemental schedule I - Consolidated operating,
     general and administrative expenses                                    16



                                       36

<PAGE>







                          INDEPENDENT AUDITORS' REPORT


To the Board of Directors and Stockholders
Can-Cal Resources, Ltd.
Las Vegas, Nevada

We  have  audited  the  accompanying  consolidated  balance  sheets  of  Can-Cal
Resources,  Ltd. (a Nevada  corporation)  and subsidiary as of December 31, 1998
and 1997,  and the related  consolidated  statements of  operations,  changes in
stockholders'   equity,   and  cash  flows  for  the  years  then  ended.  These
consolidated  financial  statements  are  the  responsibility  of the  Company's
management.  Our  responsibility is to express an opinion on these  consolidated
financial  statements  based  on our  audits.  We did not  audit  the  financial
statements  of  Scotmar  Industries,  Inc.,  a wholly  owned  subsidiary,  which
statements  reflect total assets of $88,900 and $137,500 as of December 31, 1998
and 1997, respectively, and total revenues of $97,700 and $79,300, respectively,
for the years then ended.  Those statements were audited by other auditors whose
report has been  furnished to us, and in our  opinion,  insofar as it relates to
the  amounts  included  for Scotmar  Industries,  Inc.,  is based  solely on the
reports of the other auditors.

We  conducted  our  audits  in  accordance  with  generally   accepted  auditing
standards.  Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain
reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material
misstatement.  An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting
the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements.  An audit also includes
assessing the  accounting  principles  used and  significant  estimates  made by
management,  as well as evaluating the overall financial statement presentation.
We believe that our audits of the balance sheet provides a reasonable  basis for
our opinion.

In our  opinion,  based on our audits and the  reports  of other  auditors,  the
consolidated  financial  statements  referred to above  present  fairly,  in all
material  respects,  the  financial  position  of Can-Cal  Resources,  Ltd.  and
subsidiary as of December 31, 1998 and 1997, and the results of their operations
and their  cash  flows  for the year then  ended in  conformity  with  generally
accepted accounting principles.

MURPHY, BENNINGTON & CO.


/s/ Murphy, Bennington & Co.

May 14, 1999

                                       37

<PAGE>



CAN-CAL RESOURCES, LTD.

CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS

DECEMBER 31, 1998 AND 1997
(ROUNDED TO THE NEAREST HUNDRED, EXCEPT SHARE DATA)

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

ASSETS                                                             1998              1997
                                                              --------------    --------------
CURRENT ASSETS:
<S>                                                           <C>               <C>
      CASH                                                    $      41,600     $      14,200
      ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE                                             6,900             7,700
      NOTES RECEIVABLE, RELATED PARTIES (NOTE 3)                     41,600            38,100
      INVENTORY                                                      72,500           116,100
      PREPAID EXPENSES                                                6,600             5,800
      OTHER CURRENT ASSETS                                              100               300
                                                              --------------    --------------
        TOTAL CURRENT ASSETS                                        169,300           182,200

PROPERTY AND EQUIPMENT, NET (NOTES 1 AND 4)                         264,600            20,400

OTHER ASSETS (NOTE 5)                                                95,300            65,000

LONG-TERM INVESTMENTS (NOTE 6)                                    1,365,700         1,362,800
                                                              --------------    --------------
                                                              $   1,894,900     $   1,630,400
                                                              ==============    ==============
LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS' DEFICIT
CURRENT LIABILITIES:
      BANK LINE OF CREDIT                                     $      12,400     $      35,000
      ACCOUNTS PAYABLE                                               12,800             8,500
      ACCRUED EXPENSES                                               26,200                --
      DUE TO RELATED PARTIES                                             --           148,900
                                                              --------------    --------------
        TOTAL CURRENT LIABILITIES                                    51,400           192,400

NOTE PAYABLE, (NOTE 7)                                               77,500                --

NOTES PAYABLE, RELATED PARTIES (NOTE 8)                             243,500            35,600
                                                              --------------    --------------
                                                                    372,400           228,000
                                                              --------------    --------------
COMMITMENTS (NOTE 10)                                                    --                --
STOCKHOLDERS' DEFICIT:
      COMMON STOCK, $.001 PAR VALUE; AUTHORIZED, 15,000,000
      SHARES;
        ISSUED AND OUTSTANDING, 7,005,161 SHARES                       7,000             6,400
      PREFERRED STOCK, $.001 PAR VALUE; AUTHORIZED, 10,000,000
      SHARES;
        NONE ISSUED OR OUTSTANDING                                        --               --
      ADDITIONAL PAID-IN-CAPITAL                                   1,887,600        1,676,400
      CUMULATIVE TRANSLATION ADJUSTMENT                                8,500               --
      ACCUMULATED DEFICIT                                          (380,600)         (280,400)
                                                              --------------    --------------
                                                              $   1,894,900     $   1,630,400
                                                              ==============    ==============

<FN>

The  accompanying  notes  are an  integral  part  of  these  consolidated financial statements.
</FN>
</TABLE>


                                       38

<PAGE>



CAN-CAL RESOURCES, LTD.

CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS

YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1998 AND 1997
(ROUNDED TO THE NEAREST HUNDRED, EXCEPT SHARE DATA)





<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                                   1998              1997
                                                              --------------    --------------

<S>                                                           <C>               <C>
SALES                                                         $      97,700     $      79,300

COST OF GOODS SOLD                                                   74,800           148,800
                                                              --------------    --------------
GROSS PROFIT                                                         22,900           (69,500)
OPERATING, GENERAL AND ADMINISTRATIVE EXPENSES                      131,500           214,800
                                                              --------------    --------------
LOSS FROM OPERATIONS                                               (108,600)         (284,300)
OTHER INCOME (EXPENSES):
      Other income                                                    5,700             3,900
      Interest income                                                 6,600                --
      Interest expense                                               (3,800)               --
                                                              --------------    --------------
NET INCOME(LOSS)                                              $    (100,100)    $    (280,400)
                                                              ==============    ==============
NET INCOME (LOSS) PER SHARE OF COMMON STOCK
      AND COMMON STOCK EQUIVALENTS:
BASIC EPS
      Net loss from continuing operations                     $       (0.02)    $       (0.07)
                                                              ==============    ==============
      Weighted average shares outstanding                     $   6,546,149     $   4,103,115
                                                              ==============    ==============

DILUTED EPS
      Net loss from continuing operations                     $       (0.02)    $       (0.07)
                                                              ==============    ==============
      Weighted average shares outstanding                     $   6,546,149     $   4,103,115
                                                              ==============    ==============


<FN>
The  accompanying  notes  are an  integral  part  of  these  consolidated financial statements.
</FN>
</TABLE>


                                       39

<PAGE>


CAN-CAL RESOURCES, LTD.

CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CHANGES IN STOCKHOLDERS' DEFICIT

YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1998 AND 1997
(ROUNDED TO THE NEAREST HUNDRED, EXCEPT SHARE DATA)



<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                             Additional                    Cumulative      Total
                                                                              paid-in      Accumulated    translation  stockholders'
                                                      Common Stock            capital        Deficit      adjustment      equity
                                                 -----------------------    -----------    -----------    ----------   ------------
                                                   Shares       Amount
                                                 ----------    ---------
<S>                                               <C>          <C>          <C>            <C>            <C>          <C>
BALANCE, DECEMBER 31, 1996                        3,441,217    $   3,400    $   625,000    $ (498,000)           --    $   130,400
  Adjustment of accumulated deficit (Note 11)            --           --             --       497,900            --        497,900
                                                 ----------    ---------    -----------    -----------    ----------   ------------

BALANCE DECEMBER 31, 1996, AS RESTATED            3,441,217        3,400        625,000          (100)           --        628,300
  Issuance of common stock (Note 9)                 500,000          500         18,500            --            --         19,000
  Issuance of common stock (Note 9)                 200,000          200         81,800            --            --         82,000
  Issuance of common stock (Note 9)               2,181,752        2,200        892,300            --            --        894,500
  Issuance of common stock                          124,683          100         58,800            --            --         58,900
  Net income (loss) for the year                         --           --             --      (280,400)           --       (280,400)
                                                 ----------    ---------    -----------    -----------    ----------   ------------
BALANCE, DECEMBER 31, 1997                        6,447,652        6,400      1,676,400      (280,500)           --      1,402,300
  Issuance of common stock                          557,509          600        211,200            --            --        211,800
  Translation adjustment                                 --           --             --            --         8,500          8,500
  Net income (loss) for the year                         --           --             --      (100,100)           --       (100,100)
                                                 ----------    ---------    -----------    -----------    ----------   ------------
BALANCE, DECEMBER 31, 1998                        7,005,161    $   7,000    $ 1,887,600    $ (380,600)        8,500    $ 1,522,500
                                                 ==========    =========    ===========    ===========    ==========   ============






<FN>
       The  accompanying  notes  are an  integral  part  of  these  consolidated financial statements.
</FN>
</TABLE>



                                       40


<PAGE>



CAN-CAL RESOURCES, LTD.

CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS

YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1998 AND 1997
(ROUNDED TO THE NEAREST HUNDRED)

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                   1998              1997
                                                              --------------    --------------
CASH FLOWS FROM OPERATING ACTIVITIES:
<S>                                                            <C>               <C>
                                                               $   (100,100)     $   (280,600)
      Adjustments  to  reconcile  net income to net cash
       provided by  operating activities:
         Depreciation                                                 1,500             4,000
         Bad debt expense                                                --             1,700
         Changes in operating assets and liabilities:
           (Increase) decrease in accounts receivable                10,300           (36,000)
           (Increase) decrease in inventories                        43,600            16,400
           (Increase) decrease in prepaid expenses                     (800)           (1,800)
           (Increase) decrease in other assets                      (41,900)               --
           Increase (decrease) in accounts payable and
             other current liabilities                               29,400              (300)
                                                              --------------    --------------
NET CASH PROVIDED (USED) BY OPERATING ACTIVITIES                    (58,000)         (296,600)
                                                              --------------    --------------
CASH FLOW FROM INVESTING ACTIVITIES:
      Capital expenditures related to investment property           (24,100)          319,300
      Purchase of property and equipment                           (251,100)               --
      Proceeds from sale of assets                                    2,100           (14,000)
                                                              --------------    --------------
NET CASH PROVIDED BY INVESTING ACTIVITIES                          (273,100)          305,300
CASH FLOW FROM FINANCING ACTIVITIES:
      Increase in related party debt                                 50,800                --
      Principal payments on note payable                            (21,900)               --
      Proceeds from issuance of common stock                        191,800                --
      Proceeds from debt issuance                                   129,300                --
                                                              --------------    --------------
NET CASH USED BY FINANCING ACTIVITIES                               350,000                --
NET CHANGE IN CUMULATIVE TRANSLATION ADJUSTMENT                       8,500                --
NET INCREASE (DECREASE) IN CASH                                      27,400             8,700
CASH AT BEGINNING OF YEAR                                            14,200             5,500
                                                              --------------    --------------
CASH AT END OF YEAR                                           $      41,600     $      14,200
                                                              ==============    ==============
SUPPLEMENTAL DISCLOSURES OF CASH FLOW INFORMATION:
CASH PAID DURING THE YEAR FOR:
      Interest                                                $       3,800     $          --
                                                              ==============    ==============
      Income taxes                                            $         --      $          --
                                                              ==============    ==============


<FN>
The  accompanying  notes  are an  integral  part  of  these  consolidated financial statements.
</FN>
</TABLE>


                                       41

<PAGE>



CAN-CAL RESOURCES, LTD.

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1998 AND 1997


1.      SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES:

        Organization and nature of business:

        Can-Cal Resources,  Ltd. ( the "Company") is a corporation  formed under
          the laws of the  State of  Nevada  on March  22,  1995.  The  company,
          through its wholly  owned  subsidiary,  Scotmar  Industries,  Inc.,  a
          Canadian  corporation,  is engaged in the  precious  metal  processing
          industry,    automobile   parts   salvage,    and   other   investment
          opportunities.

        The  consolidated  financial  statements  include  the  accounts  of the
          Company  and  Scotmar  Industries,   Inc.  All  material  intercompany
          transactions have been eliminated in consolidation.

        Revenue recognition:

        Sales revenues are recognized at the point of sale.

        Basis of accounting:

        The  Company  prepares  its  financial  statements  in  accordance  with
          generally accepted accounting principles.

        Cash:

        For purposes of  preparing  the  statement  of cash flows,  unrestricted
          currency,  demand  deposits,  and money market accounts are considered
          cash and cash equivalents.

        Inventories:

        Inventories  are stated at the lower of cost or market on the  first-in,
          first-out basis.

        Property, equipment and depreciation:

        Property and equipment are stated at cost less accumulated depreciation.
          Depreciation  is  provided  on  the  straight-line   method  over  the
          estimated  useful  lives of the assets.  The  amounts of  depreciation
          provided are  sufficient  to charge the cost of the related  assets to
          operations over their estimated useful lives.

        The cost of  maintenance  and repairs is charged to expense as incurred.
          Expenditures for betterments and renewals are  capitalized.  Upon sale
          or other  disposition of depreciable  property,  cost and  accumulated
          depreciation  are removed  from the  accounts  and any gain or loss is
          reflected in income.


                                       42

<PAGE>


CAN-CAL RESOURCES, LTD.

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)

YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1998 AND 1997


1.      SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (CONTINUED):

        Concentration of credit risk:

        A majority  of  the  Company's   business  activity  is  with  customers
          primarily  located  in  the  metropolitan  area  of  Langley,  British
          Columbia, Canada and Las Vegas, NV, USA.

        The company  and its  subsidiary  maintain  multiple  cash  balances  at
          financial  institutions located in Langley,  British Columbia,  Canada
          and Las Vegas,  NV, USA. The accounts at the  institutions  in the USA
          are insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance  Corporation  ("FDIC") up
          to $100,000.  As of December 31, 1998,  the Company and its subsidiary
          had no funds in excess of FDIC limits.

        Income taxes:

        The Company  accounts  for income  taxes under  Statement  of  Financial
          Accounting  Standards  No. 109,  "Accounting  for Income  Taxes." This
          statement  requires  an asset and  liability  approach  to account for
          income taxes. The Company provides deferred income taxes for temporary
          differences  that will  result in  taxable  or  deductible  amounts in
          future  years based on the  reporting  of certain  costs in  different
          periods for financial statement and income tax purposes.

        Provision is made for taxes on unremitted  earnings of related companies
          to the extent  that such  earnings  are not  deemed to be  permanently
          invested.

        The Company and its wholly owned  subsidiary  file  separate  income tax
          returns.

        Use of estimates:

        The preparation  of financial  statements in conformity  with  generally
          accepted  accounting  principles requires management to make estimates
          and  assumptions  that  affect  the  reported  amounts  of assets  and
          liabilities and disclosure of contingent assets and liabilities at the
          date of the financial  statements and the reported amounts of revenues
          and expenses during the reporting period.  Actual results could differ
          from those estimates.

        Reclassifications:

        Certain financial  statements from prior years have been reclassified to
          conform with current year presentation.

        Foreign currency translation:

        Assets  and  liabilities  of  the  Company's   Foreign   operations  are
          translated  into U.S.  dollars at the  exchange  rate in effect at the
          balance sheet date, and revenue and expenses are translated at the


                                       43

<PAGE>


CAN-CAL RESOURCES, LTD.

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)

YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1998 AND 1997


1.      SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (CONTINUED):

        Foreign currency translation (continued):

          average exchange rate for the period.  Translation  gains or losses of
          the Company's foreign  subsidiary  are not  included in net income but
          are reported as a separate component  of  stockholders'   equity.  The
          functional currency of the subsidiary is the primary currency in which
          the  subsidiary operates.  The Company  typically  does not enter into
          foreign exchange  transactions to hedge balance sheet and intercompany
          balances against movements in foreign exchange rates.

        Net income (loss) per share of common stock:

        In1997 the Company adopted Statement of Financial  Accounting  Standards
          No. 128 ("SFAS 128"), "Earnings Per Share," which sets forth the basis
          for the  computation  of  "basic"  earnings  per share and  "dilutive"
          earnings  per share.  Basic EPS  excludes  dilution and is computed by
          dividing  income  (loss)  available  to  common  stockholders  by  the
          weighted-average  number of common shares  outstanding for the period.
          Diluted  EPS  reflects  the  potential  dilution  that could  occur if
          securities or other  contracts to issue common stock were exercised or
          converted  into common  stock or  resulted  in the  issuance of common
          stock that would then share in the earnings of the entity. Diluted EPS
          is  computed  on the  basis of the  weighted-average  shares of Common
          Stock  outstanding  plus common  equivalent  shares  arising  from the
          effect  of  cumulative  convertible  Preferred  Stock,  using  the if-
          converted method, and dilutive stock options, using the treasury-stock
          method.  All EPS amounts for prior years have been restated to conform
          to these new  standards,  and the  effect of the  restatement  was not
          significant.

        Recent accounting pronouncements:

        In 1997, the Financial  Accounting Standards Board issued  Statement No.
          130 ("SFAS 130"), "Reporting  Comprehensive Income". SFAS 130 requires
          that all items that are  required to be  recognized  under  accounting
          standards  as  components  of  comprehensive  income be  reported in a
          financial  statement  that is displayed  with the same  prominence  as
          other financial statements.  The statement requires that an enterprise
          classify  items of other  comprehensive  income  by their  nature in a
          financial  statement and to display the  accumulated  balance of other
          comprehensive  income  separately from retained  earning  earnings and
          additional  paid-in  capital in the equity  section of a statement  of
          financial  position.  SFAS 130 is effective for fiscal years beginning
          after December 15, 1997.

2.      BUSINESS ACQUISITIONS:

        Inaccordance  with accounting  principles  associated with a transaction
          where the acquired  company has been acquired by a  development  stage
          company and the acquired  company is considered a promoter in founding
          and  organizing  the business,  the acquired  business  assets will be
          recorded  at the  historical  cost  basis of the  predecessor.  If the
          transaction is accounted for in a manner similar to a

                                       44

<PAGE>


CAN-CAL RESOURCES, LTD.

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)

YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1998 AND 1997


2.      BUSINESS ACQUISITIONS (CONTINUED):

          pooling of interest, the accompanying  financial  statements have been
          restated to include the  accounts of the pooled  companies  as if they
          had always been  combined.  If the  transaction  is accounted for in a
          manner similar to a purchase,  the net assets of the acquired  company
          have been recorded as net proceeds from an issuance of stock,  and the
          results of operations will be included with the results of the Company
          following the date of acquisition.

        Scotmar Industries, Inc.

        On February 13, 1997 the Company  issued 200,000 shares of common stock,
          in  exchange  for all of the issued and  outstanding  common  stock of
          Scotmar Industries, Inc.

3.      NOTES RECEIVABLE (RELATED PARTIES):

        Notes receivable, related parties, at December 31, 1998 consisted of the
          following:


<TABLE>
        <S>                                                    <C>
        Note  receivable  from S&S Mining,  Inc.,
          a joint  venture  partner,  unsecured,
          interest  imputed at 8%, due on demand                $     28,000

        Note receivable from an individual,
          unsecured, interest imputed at 8%,
          due on demand                                         $     12,000

        Accrued interest receivable                                    7,200
                                                                -------------
                                                                      47,200
        Allowance for uncollectible accounts                           5,600
                                                                -------------
                                                                $     41,600
                                                                =============
</TABLE>

4.      PROPERTY AND EQUIPMENT:

        Property and equipment at December 31, 1998 consisted of the following:

<TABLE>

        <S>                                                      <C>
        Buildings and plant                                      $    238,500
        Machinery and equipment                                        35,200
        Transportation equipment                                       27,800
        Office equipment and furniture                                  3,800
                                                                 -------------
                                                                      305,300
        Less accumulated depreciation                                 (40,700)
                                                                 -------------
                                                                 $    264,600
                                                                 =============
</TABLE>

        Depreciation expense for the year ended December 31,1998 totaled $1,500.


                                       45

<PAGE>


CAN-CAL RESOURCES, LTD.

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)

YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1998 AND 1997


5.      OTHER ASSETS:

        Other assets at December 31, 1998 consisted of the following:


<TABLE>
        <S>                                                       <C>
        Note receivable from Tyro, Inc., and
          principals, a corporation, secured by
          equipment, interest accrued at 6% per
          annum, due on demand                                   $    53,300
        Deposits                                                       5,600
        Mining claims                                                 36,400
                                                                 ------------
                                                                 $    95,300
                                                                 ============
</TABLE>

6.      LONG-TERM INVESTMENTS:

        Long-term investments at December 31, 1998 consisted of the following:

<TABLE>

        <S>                                                      <C>
        Pisgah property                                          $   567,000
        Investment in S&S Mining joint venture                       798,700
                                                                 ------------
                                                                 $ 1,365,700
                                                                 ============
</TABLE>

7.      NOTE PAYABLE:

        Note payable at December 31, 1998 consisted of the following:


        Note payable to joint venture;
          secured by 1st deed of trust; interest
          at 8% per annum; matures July 31, 2001                 $    77,500
                                                                 ============

8. NOTES PAYABLE, RELATED PARTIES:

        Notes payable,  related  parties,  at December 31, 1998 consisted of the
          following:

<TABLE>
      <S>                                                        <C>
      Note payable to shareholder; unsecured; interest
         at prime plus 1.00% per annum, due on demand            $     43,800
      Note payable to shareholder; unsecured; interest
         at prime plus 1.00% per annum, due on demand                 127,100
      Note payable to shareholder; unsecured; interest
         at prime plus 1.00% per annum, due on demand                  34,000
      Note payable to shareholder; unsecured; interest
         at prime plus 1.00% per annum, due on demand                  38,600
                                                                 -------------
                                                                 $    243,500
                                                                 =============
</TABLE>



                                       46

<PAGE>


CAN-CAL RESOURCES, LTD.

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)

YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1998 AND 1997


9.      STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY:

        COMMON STOCK:

        On September 13, 1996,  the Board of Directors  approved the issuance of
          500,000  shares of Can-Cal  common  stock along with a cash payment of
          $100,000  in  exchange  for a 50%  interest  in S&S  Mining,  a  joint
          venture. Additionally, the Company agreed to loan the joint venture up
          to $48,000.

        On February 13,  1997 the Board  approved  the  acquisition  of  Scotmar
          Industries, Inc. 200,000 shares of Can-Cal common stock were issued in
          return  for all of the issued and  outstanding  stock of the  acquired
          company.

        On October 27,  1997  the  Board  approved  the  issuance  of  2,181,752
          restricted  common  shares to ARUM,  LLC to repay an existing  debt of
          approximately  $315,045.98  and to purchase a property  located in San
          Bernadino County, California, known as the Pisgah property.

        During November,  1997 the Board approved the sale of 124,683 restricted
          common shares to various investors.

        During  December,  1997  the  Board  approved  the  issuance  of  42,000
          restricted common shares in return for services rendered.

        In July, 1998 the Board approved the issuance 122,000 restricted  common
          shares to various investors.

        In October, 1998  the  Board  approved  the sale of  172,450  restricted
          common shares to various investors.

        During December,  1998 the Board approved the sale of 263,059 restricted
          common shares to various investors.

10.     COMMITMENTS:

        Lease commitments:

        The Company leases  property for the operations of the subsidiary  under
          an  operating  lease  due to  expire  June 30,  2001.The  lease may be
          renewed at the option of the company for a period of three years.

        Lease payments for the year ended December 31, 1998 totaled $44,400.

        Minimum future rental  payments for  operating  leases for the next five
          fiscal year ends are as follows:


                                       47

<PAGE>


CAN-CAL RESOURCES, LTD.

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)

YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1998 AND 1997


10.     COMMITMENTS (CONTINUED):

        Lease commitments (continued):


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
         YEAR ENDING
         DECEMBER 31,
       ---------------
        <S>                                                      <C>
           1999                                                  $     49,000
           2000                                                        50,000
           2001                                                        26,000
        Thereafter                                                         --
                                                                 -------------
                                                                 $    125,000
                                                                 =============
</TABLE>

        Auto leases:

        The Company  entered  into two  operating  leases for  automobiles  that
          expire  during the year 2000.  The monthly  lease  payments  currently
          total $300 per month.  Lease  payments for the year ended December 31,
          1998 totaled $10,900.

        Minimum future rental  payments for  operating  leases for the next five
          fiscal year ends are as follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

         YEAR ENDING
         DECEMBER 31,
       ----------------
         <S>                                                     <C>
            1999                                                 $      7,400
            2000                                                        4,800
         Thereafter                                                        --
                                                                 -------------
                                                                 $     12,200
                                                                 =============
</TABLE>

11.     PRIOR PERIOD ADJUSTMENTS:

        Subsequent to the issuance of the 1996 financial statements, development
          stage  accumulated  deficit of the corporation was  reclassified as an
          increase in the  investment in S&S Mining,  a development  stage joint
          venture of which Can-Cal Resources, Ltd. is a 50% venture partner.

        The restatement of accumulated deficit for 1996 is as follows:

<TABLE>

        <S>                                                      <C>
        Accumulated deficit, as previously reported              $   (498,000)
        Increase in long-term investments                             497,900
                                                                 -------------
        Accumulated deficit, as restated                         $       (100)
                                                                 =============
</TABLE>


                                       48

<PAGE>


CAN-CAL RESOURCES, LTD.

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)

YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1998 AND 1997


12.     INCOME TAXES:

        Deferred income taxes are provided for the temporary differences between
          the  financial  reporting  basis and the tax basis of the  Company and
          subsidiary's  assets and  liabilities.  The temporary  difference that
          give rise to the deferred tax asset is primarily as follows:
<TABLE>

        <S>                                                                 <C>
        Net operating loss carry forward - December 31, 1998                $  100,300
        Net operating loss carry forward - December 31, 1997                   280,400
                                                                            -----------
                                                                               380,700

        Deferred tax assets                                                    113,900
        Total valuation allowance recognized for deferred tax assets          (113,900)
                                                                             -----------
         Net deferred tax asset                                              $        0
                                                                             ===========
</TABLE>

13.     NEW ACCOUNTING STANDARD:

        On January  1,  1998,  the  Company  adopted   Statement  of  Financial/
           Accounting  Standards No. 130 ("SFAS 130")  "Reporting  Comprehensive
           Income",  which  requires  companies  to report all changes in equity
           during a period, except those resulting from investment by owners and
           distribution to owners.  The components for comprehensive  income are
           as follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                               1998               1997
                                                          -------------       -------------
          <S>                                             <C>                 <C>
          Net income (loss)                               $   (100,100)       $   (280,400)
          Translation adjustment                                 8,500                  --
                                                          -------------       -------------
          Comprehensive income                            $    (91,600)       $    280,400)
</TABLE>

14.     SUBSEQUENT EVENTS:

        On January 29, 1999 the Company  completed the divestiture of its wholly
          owned  subsidiary,  Scotmar  Industries,  Inc., to 545538 B.C. Ltd., a
          Canadian  corporation  for  approximately  $65,300 and  forgiveness of
          Scotmar Industries, Inc. payable to the Company.


                                       49

<PAGE>


CAN-CAL RESOURCES, LTD.

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)

YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1998 AND 1997


15. FAIR VALUE OF FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS:

        The following  table  presents the carrying  amounts and estimated  fair
          value of the Company's financial instruments at December 31, 1998:
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                            CARRYING             FAIR
                                                             AMOUNT              VALUE
                                                          -------------      -------------

      Financial assets:
      <S>                                                 <C>                 <C>
      Loans receivable-related party                      $      41,600       $     41,600
      Inventory                                                  72,500             72,500
      Property and equipment                                    264,600            264,600
      Other assets                                               95,300             95,300
      Long-term investments                                   1,365,700          1,365,700
      Financial liabilities:
      Notes payable, related parties                            243,500            243,500
      Note payable                                               77,500             77,500
</TABLE>


        The carrying amounts of cash, trade receivables, prepaid expenses, other
          current assets, accounts payable and accrued expenses approximate fair
          value because of the short maturity of those instruments.

        The fair value of bank line of credit is based upon the borrowing  rates
          currently  available to the Company for bank loans with similar  terms
          and average maturities.

16.     YEAR 2000 COMPLIANCE:

        Historically.  certain  computerized  systems have had two digits rather
          than four digits to define the applicable  year, which could result in
          recognizing  a date using "00" as the year 1900  rather  than the year
          2000.  This could result in major failures or  miscalculations  and is
          generally referred to as the "Year 2000 issue."

        The Company has reviewed,  and continues to review,  possible effects of
          this issue on its financial and operating systems.  Review of external
          dependencies  has  revealed  that  the  Company  will  be  exposed  to
          disruption  if there  is  widespread  and  prolonged  interruption  of
          electricity, water, and telecommunications services.

        The total  cost to the  Company  of  these  Year  2000  problem  related
          activities is not  anticipated  to be material.  The costs the Company
          may  incur to solve the Year 2000  problem  are based on  management's
          estimates.  However,  there can be no assurance  that these  estimates
          will be achieved and the costs of solving the Year 2000 problem  could
          differ significantly from management's estimates.


                                       50

<PAGE>









        INDEPENDENT AUDITORS' REPORT ON SUPPLEMENTAL INFORMATION





To the Board of Directors and Stockholders
Can-Cal Resources, Ltd.
Las Vegas, Nevada

Our  report on the  audits of the basic  consolidated  financial  statements  of
Can-Cal Resources,  Ltd. for the years ended December 31, 1998 and 1997, appears
on page one. These audits were made for the purpose of forming an opinion on the
basic  consolidated  financial  statements  taken as a whole.  The  supplemental
schedule of  consolidated  operating,  general and  administrative  expenses are
presented for purposes of additional analysis and are not a required part of the
basic consolidated financial statements.  Such information has been subjected to
the auditing procedures applied in the audit of the basic consolidated financial
statements  and, in our opinion,  is fairly  stated in all material  respects in
relation to the basic consolidated financial statements taken as a whole.

MURPHY, BENNINGTON & CO.


/s/ Murphy, Bennington & Co.


May 14, 1999

                                       51

<PAGE>



CAN-CAL RESOURCES, LTD.

SUPPLEMENTAL SCHEDULE I --
CONSOLIDATED OPERATING, GENERAL AND ADMINISTRATIVE EXPENSES

YEARS  ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1998 AND 1997





<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                                1998        1997
                                                            ----------   ---------
OPERATING, GENERAL AND ADMINISTRATIVE EXPENSES:
      <S>                                                   <C>          <C>
      Office rent                                           $   44,400   $ 39,800
      Wages and benefits                                        44,400     41,900
      Lease expense                                             10,900      3,600
      Telephone                                                  6,800     19,600
      Bank charges                                               6,500      5,600
      Repairs and maintenance                                    3,500      3,200
      Insurance                                                  3,000      2,800
      Supplies                                                   3,000      6,500
      Office expense                                             2,700      5,900
      Accounting and legal                                       2,300      9,900
      Depreciation expense                                       1,500      4,000
      Advertising and promotion                                  1,400      1,800
      Utilities                                                  1,100      1,300
      Bad debt expense                                              --      1,700
      Consulting                                                    --     47,900
      Miscellaneous                                                 --      7,500
      Travel                                                        --     11,800
                                                            ----------  ---------
                                                            $  131,500  $ 214,800
                                                            ==========  =========
</TABLE>



                                       52

<PAGE>




                             CAN-CAL RESOURCES, LTD.

                REPORT ON REVIEW OF INTERIM FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

            FOR THE THREE AND SIX MONTHS ENDED JUNE 30, 1999 AND 1998


                                       53

<PAGE>






                             CAN-CAL RESOURCES, LTD.

            FOR THE THREE AND SIX MONTHS ENDED JUNE 30, 1999 AND 1998



                                    CONTENTS



                                                                        PAGE

INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS' REPORT                                           1

FINANCIAL STATEMENTS:
    Interim balance sheets                                                2
    Interim statements of operations                                      3
    Interim statements of changes in stockholders' deficit                4
    Interim statements of cash flows                                      5
    Notes to interim financial statements                                 6




                                       54

<PAGE>







                         INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS' REPORT


To the Board of Directors and Stockholders
Can-Cal Resources, Ltd.
Las Vegas, Nevada

We have reviewed the accompanying  condensed balance sheet of Can-Cal Resources,
Ltd., as of June 30, 1999,  and the condensed  statements of operations  for the
three and six months ended June 30, 1999 and 1998,  the condensed  statements of
cash flows for the six months  ended June 30, 1999 and 1998,  and the  condensed
statement of changes in  stockholders'  equity for the six months ended June 30,
1999.  These  financial  statements  are  the  responsibility  of the  company's
management.

We conducted our review in accordance with standards established by the American
Institute  of  Certified  Public  Accountants.  A review  of  interim  financial
information consists principally of applying analytical  procedures to financial
data and making  inquiries of persons  responsible  for financial and accounting
matters. It is substantially less in scope than an audit conducted in accordance
with  generally  accepted  auditing  standards,  the  objective  of which is the
expression of an opinion  regarding the financial  statements  taken as a whole.
Accordingly, we do not express such an opinion.

Based on our review, we are not aware of any material  modifications that should
be made to the  accompanying  financial  statements for them to be in conformity
with generally accepted accounting principles.

We previously audited, in accordance with generally accepted auditing standards,
the consolidated  balance sheet as of December 31, 1998, and the related changes
in stockholders' equity (deficit), and cash flows and consolidated statements of
operations (not presented  herein);  for the year then ended;  and in our report
dated May 14, 1999, we expressed an  unqualified  opinion on these  consolidated
financial  statements.  In  our  opinion,  the  information  set  forth  in  the
accompanying  condensed  consolidated  balance sheet as of December 31, 1998 and
the condensed  consolidated statement of changes in stockholders' equity for the
year then ended,  is fairly  stated in all material  respects in relation to the
consolidated   balance   sheet  and   consolidated   statement   of  changes  in
stockholders' equity from which they have been derived.


MURPHY, BENNINGTON & CO.


 /s/ Murphy, Bennington & Co.

August 8, 1999

                                       55

<PAGE>



CAN-CAL RESOURCES, LTD.

BALANCE SHEETS

JUNE 30, 1999
(ROUNDED TO THE NEAREST HUNDRED, EXCEPT SHARE DATA)
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>


                                                                       JUNE 30    DECEMBER 31
                                                                        1999         1998
                                                                  ------------    -----------
                                                                   (UNAUDITED)      (NOTE)
ASSETS

CURRENT ASSETS:
<S>                                                               <C>            <C>
       Cash                                                       $   183,800    $    41,600
       Accounts receivable                                               --            6,900
       Notes receivable, related parties                               44,600         41,600
       Inventory                                                         --           72,500
       Prepaid expenses                                                   800          6,600
       Other current assets                                              --              100
                                                                  -----------    -----------
         Total current assets                                         229,200        169,300

PROPERTY AND EQUIPMENT, NET                                           310,400        264,600

OTHER ASSETS                                                           98,900         95,300

LONG-TERM INVESTMENTS                                               1,394,300      1,365,700
                                                                  -----------    -----------
                                                                  $ 2,032,800    $ 1,894,900
                                                                  ===========    ===========
LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS' DEFICIT
CURRENT LIABILITIES:
       Bank line of credit                                        $      --      $    12,400
       Accounts payable                                                 8,800         12,800
       Accrued expenses                                                58,000         26,200
       Due to related parties                                            --             --
                                                                  -----------    -----------
         Total current liabilities                                     66,800         51,400

NOTE PAYABLE, NET OF CURRENT PORTION                                   75,800         77,500

NOTES PAYABLE, RELATED PARTIES                                         31,500        243,500
                                                                  -----------    -----------
                                                                      174,100        372,400
                                                                  -----------    -----------
STOCKHOLDERS' DEFICIT:
       Common stock, $.001 par value; authorized, 15,000,000
       shares;  issued and outstanding, 7,592,282 shares                7,700          7,000
       Preferred stock, $.001 par value; authorized, 10,000,000
       shares;  none issued or outstanding                               --             --
       Additional paid-in-capital                                   2,246,300      1,887,600
       Cumulative translation adjustment                               (3,300)         8,500
       Accumulated deficit                                           (392,000)      (380,600)
                                                                  -----------    -----------
                                                                  $ 2,032,800    $ 1,894,900
                                                                  ===========    ===========
<FN>

Note: The balance sheet of December 31, 1998 has been derived from the audited
      financial statements at that date.

                 See accompanying notes and accountant's report.

</FN>
</TABLE>
                                       56

<PAGE>



CAN-CAL RESOURCES, LTD.

STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS

THREE AND SIX  MONTHS  ENDED  JUNE 30,  1999 AND 1998  (ROUNDED  TO THE  NEAREST
HUNDRED, EXCEPT SHARE DATA)


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>


                                                          THREE MONTHS ENDED                  SIX MONTHS ENDED
                                                   ---------------------------------  ---------------------------------
                                                      JUNE 30,          JUNE 30,         JUNE 30,          JUNE 30,
                                                        1999              1998             1999              1998
                                                   --------------    ---------------  ---------------   ---------------
                                                    (UNAUDITED)        (UNAUDITED)      (UNAUDITED)       (UNAUDITED)
<S>                                                <C>                <C>                <C>            <C>
SALES                                              $       3,700                   -  $        3,700                  -

COST OF GOODS SOLD                                              -                  -                -                 -
                                                   --------------    ---------------  ---------------   ---------------
GROSS PROFIT                                                3,700                  -            3,700                 -
OPERATING EXPENSES,
GENERAL AND ADMINISTRATIVE                                 73,100                  -          304,300                 -
                                                   --------------    ---------------  ---------------   ---------------
LOSS FROM OPERATIONS                                     (69,400)                  -        (300,600)                 -
OTHER INCOME (EXPENSES):
        Other income                                            -                  -                -                 -
        Interest income                                     3,300                  -            3,600             3,300
        Interest expense                                  (2,700)                  -          (5,100)           (1,900)
                                                   --------------    ---------------  ---------------   ---------------
INCOME(LOSS) FROM CONTINUING OPERATIONS                  (68,800)                  -        (302,100)             1,400
                                                   --------------    ---------------  ---------------   ---------------
INCOME (LOSS) FROM DISCONTINUED OPERATIONS:
        Income (loss) from discontinued
          automobile salvage division                           -           (17,000)          174,300          (30,200)
                                                   --------------    ---------------  ---------------   ---------------
NET INCOME (LOSS)                                  $     (68,800)    $      (17,000)  $     (127,800)   $      (28,800)
                                                   ==============    ===============  ===============   ===============

NET INCOME (LOSS) PER SHARE OF COMMON STOCK AND COMMON STOCK EQUIVALENTS:

BASIC EPS

        Net loss from continuing operations        $       (0.01)    $        (0.01)  $        (0.02)   $        (0.01)
                                                   ==============    ===============  ===============   ===============
        Weighted average shares                         7,312,701          6,514,318        7,242,805         6,480,985
                                                   ==============    ===============  ===============   ===============

DILUTED EPS

        Net loss from continuing operations        $       (0.01)    $        (0.01)  $        (0.02)   $        (0.01)
                                                   ==============    ===============  ===============   ===============
        Weighted average shares outstanding             7,312,701          6,514,318        7,242,805         6,480,985
                                                   ==============    ===============  ===============   ===============

<FN>

                 See accompanying notes and accountant's report.
</FN>
</TABLE>

                                       57
<PAGE>



CAN-CAL RESOURCES, LTD.

STATEMENTS OF CHANGES IN STOCKHOLDERS' DEFICIT

SIX MONTHS ENDED JUNE 30,1999

(UNAUDITED)
(ROUNDED TO THE NEAREST HUNDRED, EXCEPT SHARE DATA)
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>


                                                                       ADDITIONAL                 CUMULATIVE       TOTAL
                                                                        PAID-IN     ACCUMULATED   TRANSLATION    STOCKHOLDERS'
                                                 COMMON STOCK           CAPITAL       DEFICIT      ADJUSTMENT       EQUITY
                                         -------------------------   -----------   ------------   -----------    -------------
                                            SHARES        AMOUNT
                                         -----------   -----------
<S>                                       <C>          <C>           <C>           <C>            <C>            <C>
BALANCE, DECEMBER 31, 1996                 3,441,217   $     3,400   $   625,000   $  (498,000)          --      $   130,400
   ADJUSTMENT OF ACCUMULATED DEFICIT            --            --            --         497,900           --          497,900
                                         -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------    -----------    -----------

BALANCE DECEMBER 31, 1996, AS RESTATED     3,441,217         3,400       625,000          (100)          --          628,300
   ISSUANCE OF COMMON STOCK                  500,000           500        18,500          --             --           19,000
   ISSUANCE OF COMMON STOCK                  200,000           200        81,800          --             --           82,000
   ISSUANCE OF COMMON STOCK                2,181,752         2,200       892,300          --             --          894,500
   ISSUANCE OF COMMON STOCK                  124,683           100        58,800          --             --           58,900
   NET INCOME (LOSS) FOR THE YEAR               --            --            --        (280,400)          --         (280,400)
                                         -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------    -----------    -----------
BALANCE, DECEMBER 31, 1997                 6,447,652         6,400     1,676,400      (280,500)          --        1,402,300
   ISSUANCE OF COMMON STOCK                  557,509           600       211,200          --             --          211,800
   TRANSLATION ADJUSTMENT                       --            --            --            --            8,500          8,500
   NET INCOME (LOSS) FOR THE YEAR               --            --            --        (100,100)          --         (100,100)
                                         -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------    -----------    -----------
BALANCE, DECEMBER 31, 1998                 7,005,161   $     7,000   $ 1,887,600   $  (380,600)         8,500    $ 1,522,500
   ISSUANCE OF COMMON STOCK                  587,121           700   $   358,700          --             --          359,400
   TRANSLATION ADJUSTMENT                       --            --            --            --          (11,800)       (11,800)
   ADJUSTMENT OF ACCUMULATED DEFICIT            --            --            --         116,400           --          116,400
   NET INCOME (LOSS) FOR THE PERIOD             --            --            --        (127,800)          --         (127,800)
                                         -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------    -----------    -----------
BALANCE, JUNE 30, 1999                     7,592,282   $     7,700   $ 2,246,300   $  (392,000)   $    (3,300)   $ 1,858,700
                                         ===========   ===========   ===========   ===========    ===========    ===========


<FN>

                                    See  accompanying   notes  and  accountant's report.
</FN>
</TABLE>

                                       58
<PAGE>



CAN-CAL RESOURCES, LTD.

STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS

SIX MONTHS ENDED JUNE 30, 1999 AND 1998
(ROUNDED TO THE NEAREST HUNDRED)

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                               SIX MONTHS ENDED
                                                           -----------------------
                                                             JUNE 30,     JUNE 30,
                                                              1999         1998
                                                           ----------   ----------
CASH FLOWS FROM OPERATING ACTIVITIES:
<S>                                                        <C>          <C>
NET LOSS                                                   $(127,800)   $ (28,800)
     Adjustments to reconcile net income to net cash
       provided by operating activities:
         Depreciation                                          7,300         --
         Gain on disposal of facility                          3,100         --
         Bad debt expense                                    150,100         --
         Undistributed earnings of affiliate                (174,300)      30,200
         Changes in operating assets and liabilities:
           (Increase) decrease in accounts receivable         (3,300)       9,300
           (Increase) decrease in prepaid expenses               500         --
           (Increase) decrease in other assets                (3,400)     (37,000)
           Increase (decrease) in accounts payable and
             other current liabilities                        33,000       30,000
                                                           ---------    ---------
NET CASH PROVIDED (USED) BY OPERATING ACTIVITIES            (114,800)       3,700
                                                           ---------    ---------

CASH FLOW FROM INVESTING ACTIVITIES:
     Capital expenditures related to investment property     (30,000)      (2,300)
     Purchase of property and equipment                      (58,300)     (71,100)
     Proceeds from sale of facility                           65,300         --
                                                           ---------    ---------
NET CASH PROVIDED BY INVESTING ACTIVITIES                    (23,000)     (73,400)

CASH FLOW FROM FINANCING ACTIVITIES:
     Increase in related party debt                          (65,300)      (9,700)
     Principal payments on note payable                      (39,800)     (18,700)
     Proceeds from issuance of common stock                  359,300      104,100
     Proceeds from debt issuance                              25,800         --
                                                           ---------    ---------
NET CASH USED BY FINANCING ACTIVITIES                        280,000       75,700

NET CHANGE IN CUMULATIVE TRANSLATION ADJUSTMENT
NET INCREASE (DECREASE) IN CASH                              142,200        6,000
CASH AT BEGINNING OF PERIOD                                   41,600       14,200
                                                           ---------    ---------
SUPPLEMENTAL DISCLOSURES OF CASH FLOW INFORMATION:
CASH PAID DURING THE YEAR FOR:
     Interest                                              $    --      $    --
                                                           =========    =========
     Income taxes                                          $    --      $    --
                                                           =========    =========

<FN>

                 See accompanying notes and accountant's report.
</FN>
</TABLE>

                                       59

<PAGE>


CAN-CAL RESOURCES, LTD.

NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

SIX MONTHS ENDED JUNE 30, 1999


1.       BASIS OF PRESENTATION OF FINANCIAL STATEMENTS:

         These unaudited interim financial statements of Can-Cal Resources, Ltd.
         have been prepared in accordance  with the rules and regulations of the
         Securities and Exchange  commission.  Such rules and regulations  allow
         the omission of certain information and footnote  disclosures  normally
         included in financial  statements prepared in accordance with generally
         accepted  accounting  principles  as  long  as the  statements  are not
         misleading.

         In the opinion of  management,  all  adjustments  necessary  for a fair
         presentation of these interim  statements have been included and are of
         a normal recurring nature. These interim financial statements should be
         read in  conjunction  with  the  financial  statements  of the  Company
         included in its 1998 Annual Report on Form 10-SB.  Interim  results are
         not necessarily indicative of results for a full year.

2.       DISCONTINUED OPERATIONS:

         In  January  1999,  the  Company  adopted  a plan  to  discontinue  the
         operations of Scotmar Industries, Inc. ("Scotmar").  The disposition of
         Scotmar was substantially  completed by January 31, 1999. net assets of
         the  discontinued  operation  at December  31, 1998 were  $88,922.  The
         income from discontinued operations for the one month ended January 31,
         1999 includes  forgiveness of debt of $152,100 and loss from operations
         of $27,800.


                                       60

<PAGE>



ITEM 14.  CHANGES IN AND DISAGREEMENTS WITH ACCOUNTANTS ON
          ACCOUNTING AND FINANCIAL DISCLOSURE

     (a)  (1) (i)  David  E.  Coffey,  who was  the  Company's  auditor  for its
financial  statements for the year ended December 31, 1996, declined to continue
as the Company's  auditor for subsequent  years.  Mr. Coffey  represented to the
Company  that he was a sole  practitioner  with an active  practice  of auditing
small companies and was unable to audit the Company's  financial  statements for
subsequent years in view of his schedule and the Company's growing operations.

     (ii) The principal accountant's report on the financial statements for 1997
and 1998 did not contain an adverse opinion or disclaimer of opinion and was not
modified as to uncertainty, audit scope or accounting principles.

     (iii) Mr.  Coffey's  inability  to  continue as the  Company's  auditor was
accepted by the Board of Directors.

     (iv) (A.)  There  were no  disagreements  with Mr.  Coffey on any matter of
accounting  principles or practices,  financial statement disclosure or auditing
scope or procedure.

     (a) (2) The accounting firm of Murphy,  Bennington & Co., CPAs, was engaged
to audit Can- Cal's financial statements on approximately February 15, 1998.

     (a) (3) The Company has provided Mr. Coffey with a copy of the  disclosures
it is making in response to this item.  Mr.  Coffey's  letter  addressed  to the
Commission is Exhibit 16 hereto.

FORWARD LOOKING STATEMENTS

     Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933 and Section 21E of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 provide a "safe harbor" for forward looking statements that
are based on current expectations,  estimates and projections,  and management's
beliefs  and  assumptions.  Words  such  as  "believes,"  "expects,"  "intends,"
"plans,"   "estimates,"  "may,"  "attempt,"  "will,"  "goal,"   "promising,"  or
variations of such words and similar  expressions  are intended to identify such
forward-looking  statements.  These  statements  are not  guarantees  of  future
performance and involve certain risks and  uncertainties  which are difficult or
impossible  to  predict.  Therefore,  actual  outcomes  and  results  may differ
materially  from  what is  expressed  or  forecasted  in such  forward-  looking
statements.  The  Company  undertakes  no  obligation  to  update  publicly  any
forward-looking statement whether as a result of new information,  future events
or otherwise.

     Such  risks  and  uncertainties  include,  but  are  not  limited  to,  the
availability  of ore, the  existence of precious  metals in the ore available to
the Company in an amount which  permits their  production on an economic  basis;
the Company's  ability to drill holes and properly test and assay  samples,  and
its ability to locate and acquire mineral  properties  which contain  sufficient
grades of precious  metals  and/or  minerals;  the  Company's  ability to sell a
portion or all of any of its properties

                                       61

<PAGE>



to  larger  mining  companies,  to enter  into  agreements  with  larger  mining
companies to explore and possibly  develop its properties,  to produce  precious
metals on a commercial basis, the prices of precious metals, obtaining a mill or
refinery to extract precious metals on an economic basis, the Company's  ability
to maintain the facilities it currently utilizes; obtain permitting requirements
for any mining and milling operations and pay the costs thereof; have good title
to claims and equipment, and the Company's ability to obtain financing necessary
to maintain its operations.

                                   SIGNATURES

     In accordance  with Section 12 of the Securities  Exchange Act of 1934, the
Registrant caused this Registration  Statement to be signed on its behalf by the
undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.

                                              Can-Cal Resources, Ltd.
                                              ----------------------------------
                                              Registrant

DATE:    August 13, 1999                      By:     /s/   Ronald D. Sloan
     -----------------------------                ------------------------------
                                                     President


                                       62

<PAGE>



                                    EXHIBITS

                                                                   Sequential
Exhibit No.     Title of Exhibit                                     Page No.
- - -----------     ----------------                                     --------

Exhibit 3.0   Articles of Incorporation...................................*

Exhibit 3.1   Amendment to the Articles of Incorporation..................*

Exhibit 3.2   By-Laws.....................................................*

Exhibit 10.0  Joint Venture Agreement between Robin Schwarz,
              Aylward Schwarz, S&S Mining, a Nevada corporation,
              and Can-Cal Resources, Ltd..................................*

Exhibit 10.1  Mining Lease Agreement between
              Can-Cal Resources, Ltd.
              and Twin Mountain Rock Venture
              dated May 1, 1998...........................................*

Exhibit 10.2  Loan Agreement between Owen Sequoia, Inc.
              and Can-Cal Resources, Ltd..................................*

Exhibit 10.3  Amendment to Loan Agreement dated June 9, 1998..............*

Exhibit 10.4  Second Amendment to Loan Agreement .........................*

Exhibit 10.5  Deed of Trust, Security Agreement, Financing Statement,
              and Fixture Filing with Assignment of Rents.................*

Exhibit 10.6  Lease and Purchase Option Agreement dated March 12, 1998
              between Arthur James Good and Wanda Mae Good
              and Can-Cal Resources, Ltd..................................*

Exhibit 10.7  Agreement between Can-Cal Resources, Ltd.
              and Aurum, LLC dated October 27, 1997.......................*

Exhibit 10.8  Quit Claim Deed from Aurum, LLC
              to Can-Cal Resources, Ltd...................................*

Exhibit 10.9  Agreement between Tyro, Inc., Dean Willman,
              Roland S. Ericsson, and Can-Cal Resources, Ltd..............*

Exhibit 10.10 Complaint filed in District Court for
              Clark County, Nevada on March 30, 1998......................*


                                       63

<PAGE>


                                                                    Sequential
Exhibit No.     Title of Exhibit                                      Page No.
- - -----------     ----------------                                      --------

Exhibit 10.11 Confession of Judgment executed by Tyro, Inc.,
              Dean Willman, and Roland S. Ericsson........................*

Exhibit 10.12 Agreement between Can-Cal Resources,  Ltd.,
              545538 B.C., Ltd., a body incorporated
              under the laws of the Province of
              British Columbia, and Ronald Daniel Sloan
              dated January 29, 1999..................................... *

Exhibit 11.0  Statement re: Computation of per share earnings.............*

Exhibit 16.0  Letter from David E. Coffey
              on change of certifying accountant..........................*

Exhibit 23.0  Consent of Independent Auditors,
              Murphy, Bennington & Co.....................................*

Exhibit 27    Financial Data Schedule.....................................*

* Previously filed.



                                       64

<PAGE>





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