Close X
Sunday, September 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

Revenues Top $5.8Million In Chase The Ace Lottery That Drew Thousands To Nova Scotia

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 17 Nov, 2015 11:12 AM
    INVERNESS, N.S. — The final totals are in for a game of Chase the Ace that recently drew thousands to a small Nova Scotia town and sparked a wave of similar lottery games across the region.
     
    Committee spokesperson Cameron MacQuarrie says more than 3.5 million tickets were sold for the Chase the Ace fundraiser over its 48-week run in Cape Breton's Inverness.
     
    MacQuarrie says more than $2.9 million was given out in prizes, while total revenue was roughly $5.89 million.
     
    The net profit, roughly $2.5 million, was split between the local legion and the Inverness Cottage Workshop, which provides vocational, personal and social skills training for adults with intellectual disabilities.
     
    About 1,500 people live in Inverness, but in the lottery's final weeks, that number swelled to about 10,000 as people travelled from across the Maritimes for their shot at winning the jackpot.
     
    Donelda MacAskill, a retired Nova Scotia woman, won the $1.7 million grand prize in early October.
     
    Chase the Ace is like a 50-50 draw in which players buy numbered tickets for five dollars each.
     
    The person whose ticket is chosen in the weekly draw wins a cash prize, plus a chance to pick a card from the deck — and if that card turns out to be the ace of spades, they win the big jackpot. (CJFX)

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Three Canadians Among Dead In Saudi Housing Complex Fire: Saudi Official

    Three Canadians Among Dead In Saudi Housing Complex Fire: Saudi Official
    A Saudi official says three Canadians are among those killed in a fire that engulfed parts of a residential compound in the kingdom's oil-rich east.

    Three Canadians Among Dead In Saudi Housing Complex Fire: Saudi Official

    B.C. LNG Industry Will Increase Fracking-Caused Earthquakes: Expert

    B.C. LNG Industry Will Increase Fracking-Caused Earthquakes: Expert
    VANCOUVER — If the liquefied natural gas industry proceeds as the British Columbia government hopes, there could be five times as many fracking-caused earthquakes, warns one expert.

    B.C. LNG Industry Will Increase Fracking-Caused Earthquakes: Expert

    Courts Deny First Nations' Site C Stop-work Order And Dismiss Judicial Review

    Courts Deny First Nations' Site C Stop-work Order And Dismiss Judicial Review
    VANCOUVER — Two courts have rejected attempts by a pair of British Columbia First Nations to halt the construction of the Site C hydroelectric dam.

    Courts Deny First Nations' Site C Stop-work Order And Dismiss Judicial Review

    Crowdfunding Campaign To Pay Ottawa's Portion Of Road For Isolated Reserve Ends

    Crowdfunding Campaign To Pay Ottawa's Portion Of Road For Isolated Reserve Ends
    WINNIPEG — A crowdfunding campaign to pay Ottawa's portion of an all-weather road for a reserve under one of the longest boil-water advisories in Canada has ended.

    Crowdfunding Campaign To Pay Ottawa's Portion Of Road For Isolated Reserve Ends

    Delays Unclogged In Vancouver After Conveyor Problem Affects U.S. Flights

    Delays Unclogged In Vancouver After Conveyor Problem Affects U.S. Flights
    YVR reports the U.S. departures baggage system had mechanical problems early Monday morning.

    Delays Unclogged In Vancouver After Conveyor Problem Affects U.S. Flights

    Rain Complicates Cleanup After Powerful Storm Rips Through Metro Vancouver

    Rain Complicates Cleanup After Powerful Storm Rips Through Metro Vancouver
    Clean-up Begins In Wake Of Severe B.C. Windstorm, Thousands Still Without Power

    Rain Complicates Cleanup After Powerful Storm Rips Through Metro Vancouver