Search Nevada County Historical Archive
Enter a name, company, place or keywords to search across this item. Then click "Search" (or hit Enter).
To search for an exact phrase, use "double quotes", but only after trying without quotes. To exclude results with a specific word, add dash before the word. Example: -Word.

Collection: Newspapers > Daily Transcript, The

July 11, 1885 (4 pages)

Go to the Archive Home
Go to Thumbnail View of this Item
Go to Single Page View of this Item
Download the Page Image
Copy the Page Text to the Clipboard
Don't highlight the search terms on the Image
Show the Page Image
Show the Image Page Text
Share this Page - Copy to the Clipboard
Reset View and Center Image
Zoom Out
Zoom In
Rotate Left
Rotate Right
Toggle Full Page View
Flip Image Horizontally
More Information About this Image
Get a Citation for Page or Image - Copy to the Clipboard
Go to the Previous Page (or Left Arrow key)
Go to the Next Page (or Right Arrow key)
Page: of 4  
Loading...
. e ‘AIR 7th to amunity i to the ssa 8: et with artment m to innis Year, nt at the Yalifornia nigration ng homes much in. Of vaties, “ete: resources To this t extenhibit of ive sock) duction 1 as fol_ $500 oHars will ounties in ‘the mervies only. EXUIBIT AGAINST er county. inty exhib» chaiye of “earnestly the various the State, California’s yaried proy be fully tment ofa ach county stomake a ctive coun-resident, E COUGH your famil » icken th dy for stop Yiak lungs msum ption he Austral ibined with vada City tters, not a dram ictly medici> rougly upon bowels open mg, heal the 1 cleduse the yurity, Sol¢ intment. in the Skia, e that rough¢, and make . Props, land, Ohio. ap? iQUSE r, SCO. 1d Suites, rd. or month, 1X, Prop’r: Afflicted! LY— 1 Debility , Loss of rmities, HOSE MAVE EXUAL AND physician who § and successot sufficiently bles to do so, ecialist, who oroughknowl, is prepared to ING titute in 1850 e afflicted the lifu) treatment estoration, and ained the first but throughr upon so uninny of Sexual rse my-imotive, n those whe ignorance, sor want, can be Mad, pemsgives to givihg sexual jure generato permit me FROM NIGHT ¥YEAKNESSES, IGHT LOSSES iT. VARIABLY ‘ALPITATION, HAVE PRACIN IN’ THE you are sufferman Life, » seek at o ce e. FEES MODER -ETTER OR » Remedies Ily liable to sufTRATION. All nervous in their ngs are terribly een. The Docactice cf NERyour organiza1s enabled from >to aid and cure Weaknesses, igs le Ww hich Yoctor a friend comfort, aid and femedies have iency unequ cal prescription ent by mail o eand attention ymodations fur iY the city cap by jrown way, Tre ed, treatment a cure. DESTROYED. YOUNG, Institute, Stockton St 18 PUBLISHED Daily, Mondays Excepted. ' TERMS: PEH ANNUM.. .-0-0--seeeee: $7.00 PKR WEEK eke .15 cts rs ‘fas Love.& Nannary Dramatic Combination will on Monday evening, the 2)th instant, begin at this city an engagement of three evening performances and a matinea, popular prices being eharzgad and new plays being introduced at each appearance. Among the members of the troupe are such favorites a8 Miss Murston, Leigh, James Carden; Harry Mainhall and Theo. Roberts. Rav. Geo. Newron and the Lawson sisters, of the Holiness Association, are attracting large audiences here, especially at their street meetings which are held almost nightly. The Lawson girls each have a cornet and render sacred music thereon in pretty good style for beginners. They are unusually sweet singers. PT REE E: Next Friday the annual camp meeting will begin at Indian Springs. Bids for the privilege of keeping the table and the stabling will be received up to noon on -next Monday, the 13th, at Rough and Ready, by Rev. C. Hl. Darling. Tue members.of Nevada City Council, American‘Legion of Honor, are arranging for a novel ‘s0cial entertainment to take place . at their Hall the latter part of this month. ee Gunuise Pebble goat button shoes, worked button holes, child’s sizes 3 to 744, $1.25; size 8 to 104g, $1.50; sizes 11 to 2, $2.00; ladies’, $2.50. Tug Sranparp SHoe Co. -_A @EeNTLeMAN named ‘Laylor has « sevenhaad of race horses irom Yuba, Colusa and San Francisco eounties at Glenbrook Park, training for the District fate races. Tuer forcible entry case of Mra. E. Schmidt and John McCarthy will come up for trial in Justice Sowdgn’s court next Tuesday at 10.o’clock A.M. _ > Turalmanac. tells us to look out for a thunder storm about tomorrow. Weare getting accustomed to uns3asofable weather. a> Tire Idaho Mining Company has declared a dividend of $2 per share for the current month, amounting to $6,2J0. —-—-e—pe DereNDANT® in the Gase of Jno. Larimer vs. M. J. Larimer has been granted leave to file an! amended answer. —o_o THere will be a-social hop at the Theatre Saturday evening, July 11, under Mr. Michell’s management. 2t -— oo Peter Eppy has been seriously afflicted for several days past with »erysipelas in the head. Dr. Penninaton’s dental office is on Commercial street. m24-im ee tind JupGE Marriott of North Bloomfield was in town yesterday. EES we = , Fire at Bloomfield. 4 ( i! house at North Bleodmfield was totally destroyed by fire at hali. past seven o’gléck Thursday evening. Mrs Black had left the house but a short time before to go uptown, and her son had gone ork at the mine. The per_/ sons who discovered the flames, which originated from a defective kitchen flue, had to’force ’ ‘their way into the house by breaking the doors down. Only a small amount of the furniture was saved, and that was badly damaged. The building was insured for $1,200. and the clothing and furniture for $500, all in the Firemen’s Fund Company. : —_——~ .-+e — Dancing in the Moonlight. . Thursday evening, the 23d instant, has been settled on as the date for holding the much talked of dedicatory moonlight ball at Glenbrook—Park. It will be a grand affair, Goyne’s full band and orchestra furnishing the. music-and everything being conductedin the best style. All ,reputable people will be invited to at. tend, and no hoodlumism will be tolerated. —_—_——~e Purse for Pacers. The Directors of ‘the District Fair bave decided to offer a purse of $639 for pacers that have never beaten. 2:3). Some splendid horses will be vrought from Sac_._ramento and other places to con. tend for the cvin, and the race will be an exciting one. ee Present Your Bills.’ Persons haying bills against the Union. Band, are requested to _ promptly present the same to Mr. Hoskin at the United States Brewery and get their coin. . vendue, elaborate, eleemosynary, their functions. ' TEACHERS’ EXAMINATION. More of the Questions Propound-. ed to the Applicants for Certificates.; DEFINING. Sinecure, tragedian, polygon, emersion, epitome, magician, anthracite, arable, choleric, elucidate, militate, macerate, luscious, acidity, invalidate, cochineal, cynosure. Use the following words in sentences: Souvenir, amenity, sedative, sauvity, forensic. * PHILOSOPHY. Define adhesion; cohesion ; give instances in which the attraction of adhesion is greater than that of cohesion. “How can the porosity of a solid be proven? Would a weight of 100 pounds weigh more or less if taken from thiscity to the equator? to the poles? What would it weigh at the center of the earth? 1,000 miles above the turface ? How is sound produced? , How can the distance of a thunder cloud be calculated ? How can we with a tube suck up water with the mouth? What are the only reliable indications afforded by the barometer? ; In drawing water from a well why has a bucket’ more weight when it emerges from the water? Upon what does the boiling point of water depend? Where will water boil with less heat, in San Francisco or on the summit of Mt. Whitney? What is the Solar Spectrum? How iselectricity used in sending a telegraphic dispatch ? PHYSIOLOGY. Name the bones of the head and trunk. \ Whatis the periosteun? What are found in joints? State Explain the process of <breathing. Describe the nervous system. Name the nerves that control the senses. > Whatis the difference between the bones of childhood and old age? Describe the eye. Describe the ear. Trace nutrition from the time it enters the mouth till assimilation. COMPOSITION, Give two rules for the use of the period, two for the semicolon, one forthe hyphen, and one for the ‘dash. Correct and punctuate the following: on with the dance let joy be unconfined no sleep till morn when youth and pleasures meet to chase the glowing hours with flying feet but hush hark that heavy sound breaks in once more. What is criticism? What are the cardinal “qualities of a good) style? as What is diction? What id the distinction between witand humor? -Write the headings for’a composition on Nevada City. Write a compositionfrom your heading: THEORY AND PRACTICE. w would you organize a school ? How will you oceupy the attention and employ the time of the younger class of pupils while they are in the school room? Give your method of conducting a recitation. What incentives to study would you place before a pupil? What is your view of offering prizes to pupils? te Explain what you understand by good order in school and state how you would secure it. Mention the elements of a good school disciplinarian. What special means would you employ to seéure the interest and co-operation of parents? What plan have you for securing punctuality ? How would you teach morality in your school ? PENMANSHIP. Show by a diagram the relative length of d, y, p, n, h, What is meant by principles? Analyze a,n, T. Describe the free-arm movement. What instruction would you giveto a class before attempting to write the letter a. Good Ore. McDowell & Jose, who have been working a ledge on Rush creek, have struck some good ore. They panned out $150in two days. The ledge has been worked more or less to a slight depth for several years past, and at various times yielded excellent results. Quartz mill for sale. I will sell at half price for cash the stamps, battery and machinery. of a four stamp custom and -prospecting quartz mill. “For particulars ‘call on J.B. Johnson, Esq., at his office, corner Broad and Pine sts., ‘stopped where several men were steep his brother was walking or up the wasted tissues. = . & FATAL ACCIDENT. A Grass Valley Young Man Crushed by a Tree. The Grass Valley Union of yesterday gives the following particulars of the death of Albert Mitchell, the seventeen year old son of the’ proprietor of the Wisconsin Hotel ‘at that town: Albert and his youngest brother, Frank, aged about thirteen years, had gone down from-towno in the morning to Sear’s ranch, near Indian Springs, hunting, and after being out some time they engaged in chopping,wood. Finally Albert lay down ufider a free that had been chopped down and went ‘to sleep. The butt of the tree rested upon the: stump ofa broken branch which stuck in the ground holding it upon its resting place. After Albert. had gone to playing along the trunk’ of the tree, when the motion caused the broken limb to give way and the) body of the tree rolled “over upon Albert, pinning him to the ground ind crushing in his head and breast, so that death ensued in a very few minutes. As soon as possible the men near by obtained assistance, the tree was removed and the body released from its position: A wagon was. procured from one of !he neighbors and the lifeless body of the young man was brought hoine, arriving about 4 o’clock inthe. afternoon. It was a dreadful shock to the parents and brothers and sisters, who had parted with him a few hours before, in good health and spirits, anticipating a pleasant day’s sport in the woods, _ eo Board of Supervisors--July Session. Frmay, July 10, 1885. The Board met according to law, all the members present. F. M. Pridgeon presided. Ordered that office of County ‘Coroner be declared vacant. BsJohnston and P. H. Payater petitioned for appointment to the place. Tbe latter was unanimously appointed. The. following demands were allowed on the GENERAL FUND. Fees for constable in criminal cases: C. C. Townsend $138.10, D. W. Allen $49.40, S. B. Crawford: $25.30, Wm. Scott $63.30, Steve Venard $86.30, Jacob Teeters $66.10. ih Conveying sick to Hospital—-R. Vincent 50 cents, W. ac Davey $8. J. Winterburn letter heads, Citizens Bank, expert testimony in cripfinal case, $20. F. H. McAllister, shorthand repopter’s fees, $78.50. “The petition of residents and taxpayers of Grass Valley township for a county road from Lime Kiln to the Auburn road was on motion indefinitely postponed: The bill of H.-S.-Spaldingfor $4.50 passed July 7 was reconsidered and on motion ordered rejected. The Auditor was ordered to cancel the warrant.
The quarterly report of Road Commissioner Schroeder of District No. 4 was adopted. The report.of the viewers of the proposed county road from Town Talk to Banner road, was adopted and the road was declared open to the public. Petition from the Standard Shoe Co. for rent of store.on Broad street was read and on motion action thereon was indefinitely postponed. Board adjourned till 10 o’clock Saturday. Attest: F. G. Rearry, Clerk. By W. D. Harris, Deputy. > Crazed by Whisky. J. Campbell arrived here ‘Thursday evening from Sierra county with an insane youth named Ed. Dubourdieu aged about nineteen years, whom he was taking to the asylum at Stockton. The prisoner’s lunacy is believed to be in a great measure due to his intemrperate use of strong drink. He imagines that phantoms of various sorts are constantly pursuing him. Coming down on the stage he insisted that a woman was chasing the conveyance, and ‘he kept begging that the driver stop and take her aboard. Co., printing Scott’s Emulsion of Pure Cod Liver Oil, with Hypophosphites, Both asa Food and Medicine. The combined virtues of the Cod Liver Oil with the Hypophosphites, not only supplies a nutritious food to the system, but by its remedial power, gives strength and tone to the nerves, and builds > What a Pity That the otherwise beautiful girl should have such bad teeth. And because she did not use SOZODONT. It costs so little to buy it considering tne good it does,. and its benefits stretch out into her COUNTY STATISTICS. ~ oe * Gathered from Assessor Collins’ . ©Report for 1885. We gather the following from the summary of the County Assessor’s books for 1885 as kindly furnished by Mr. Collins: Acres land inclosed. . . 68,240 Acres land cultivated. . 23,230 Wheat for hay, acres. . 3,860 Barley ‘‘ ‘‘ ss 914 ae ses 1,204) Acres grapes 1 year.. ll “ «ec 2 o meee 5 ri ae 3 “ oe 30 Bs ue 5 and over 142 Average tons per acre. ¢ 3 Gal.wine made 1884. . 8,670 Box, raisins ‘‘ nae rt ~ 55 tbs grapes sold“ 59,700 Breweries..2:.:... 12 Gal. beer made..:. 707,550 Siwmillss. . vec. cc. 20 Lumber sawed. (feet). . 27,000,000 Stamp quartz mills.. 40 Tons quartzcrushed.. —.280,000 Huntington mills... 6 Chlorination works: . 6 Money on hand.... $ ~~ 79,840 Gold dust. 1,869 Bonds A a 4,200 Solvent credits.... 72,140 314 watches..... 13,780 Jeweiry and plate... 5,365 Purnitare .. 25.00.65. 105,565 Firearms....... 1,830 Musical instruments. . 11,280 822 sewing machines. . 14,895 Libraries. . 00.. 665. 12,450 Merchandise..... 35,390 PIONORS. sn ss teats 29,330 Fixtures stores, etc.. . 22,310 Farming utensils... 3,940 Machinery...... 49,440 1177 vehicles..... 72,960 Harness, robes, etc.. . 8,069 5 horses, thoroughbred 925 942 ‘** American.. 63,135 1220‘ graded.... 38,915 MAR COU oo cgie cacs 11,055 12 cows, thoroughbred . 1,300 2362 ‘‘ American... 66,600 1864 calves... Baa eg 14,205 2652 stock cattle... 42,6 7 beéf cattle..... 200 2310 Ree ee Ae 2,395 1576 sheap.....-2,175 250_lambs’s...... 125 751 doz. poultry.... 3,755 38 mules...> eee 1,850 $8 oxen.. 6: =. .6: ce 1,005 1,652 hogs....6.-6.% 8,285 139 beehives eat ar Se RO 2 tons oats...... mers, 38 tons barley.... “750 106 tons hay.... . 1,190 40,000 bush. charcoal. . 1,600 7,450 gallons wine... 1,610 Brandies, etc..... 10,370 3,875,000 ft. lumber. .. 29,055 "15,805 cords wood .. 20, Other personal property 965535 . Consigned pe 4 2% 6 thoroughbred bulls ~ 850 Mining claims..,~.. 705,900 Imp’ts on same-“... 266,585 583 miles ditches. ... 259,400 10644 miles“telegraph . 7,125 60 miles’roads.... 14,300 vg ‘Raised Up. oo r Y The following Chiefs were raised up by Wyoming Tribe; No.-49;—I. O. of R. M., at their. wigwam on the sleep of the 9th sun: Prophet, T. T. Hughes; Sachem, Josiah Sims; 8, S., R. T. Oates; C. of R., G. M. Hughes; K. of W., Jno. A. Rapp; Trustees, H. C. McKelvy, J. C. Dean, Jno. Hurst. The newly.elected representatives to the Great Council are G. M. Hughes, J. C. Dean, H. C. McKelvy, A. E. Helm, I. J. Rolfe, The order is doing well both financially and in addition of members. : Disposing of Debris. At the Spring Valley mine, Cherokee Flat, there are two restraining dams within about six miles of the mine, which hold the heavier portion of the debris, and the latter is then carried to a canal 400 feet wide, which begins near the Oroville and Chico wagon road, and runs about 40 miles down into the tules west of the Marysville Buttes, where the company has control of 16 miles of tule land, upon which the debris isemptied, none of it going into the river. The-canal crosses the railroad between Nelson and Biggs stations. It has cost the company in the neighborhood of $700,000 to provide this system and keep it inoperation. Owing to the width of the canal the derapidly as desired, and much expense has been incurred in keeping the canal from filling up. To remedy this the company has had built a dredger and will be ready to commence operations in a day ortwo. It willlift the earth out of the canal and place it on the bank, thus deepening the canal and building levees at the same time. By this system itis estimated that the debris can be handled for two and a half cents per yard, whereas heretofore it has -cost about 18 cents per foot. . ; : The London Lancet, after reviewing the facts in the case,. arrives at the coiclusion that Mrs. Dudley was perfectly sane when she shot ©’Donovan Rossa. An English ship will soon be armed with guns that are expected to throw a ball weighing 1,250 . pounds 2,100‘feet. in a second. Tue London season has been gay but short. Theatres and parks have been full and trade has been dull. Be An Indiana man has applied for the position of ‘‘Sexton’’ of the Postoffice Department. This is Nevada City. alé-t at future life. Poor girl! je23-5w— tomb much. bris has not been carried along as’ FOUR ACTS PLAYED. Sad Report About Ex-President ~~ Arthur. Will the Fifth and Final Act be a Tragedy? Rochester Democrat and Chronicle. “Dr. Lincoln who was at the” “funeral of. ex-Secretary, » Fre-” ‘linghuysen, says ex-President”’ “Arthur looked very unwell. He” ‘ig suffering from Bright’s dis-”’ “ease. During the past year it’’ ‘has assumed a very aggravated”’ “‘form.’”’ . That télegram is act [V. of a drama written by ex-Pr-sident Arthur’s physicians. In Act I. he was made to appear in ‘‘Malaria’”’ of which all the ‘country was told when he went to Florida. In Act IL. he represented a tired man, worn down, walking the sands at Old-Point Comfort and looking eastward over the Atlantic toward Europe for a long rest. The curtain rolls up for Act III. upon the distinguished actor affected with melancholy from bright’s disease, while Act IV discovers him with the disease ‘‘in an aggravated form, suffering intensely, (which is unusual) and about to take a sea voyage.”’ Just such as this is the plot of many dramas by play-wrights of the medical profession. They with no conception of what their character will develop in the final one.They have not the discernment for tracing in the early, what the latter impersonations will _ be. Not one physician in a hundred has the adequate microscopic and chemical appliances for discovering bright’s disease in“its early stages, and when many do finally comprehend that their patients are dying with it, when will to cover nouncethe fatality to have been expt by ordinary ailments, eréas these ailments are really results ofbright’s disease of which they are unconscious victims. Beyond any deubt, 89 per cent. of all deaths except from epidemics and accidents, result from diseased kidneys or livers. If the dying be distinguished and. his friends too intelligent to be easily. deceived, his physicians perhaps pronounce the complaint to be pericarditis, pysemia, septiczemia, bronchitis, pleuritis, valvular lesions of the heart, pneumonia, etc. Ifthe deceased be less noted, “malaria” is now the fashionable assignment of the cause of death. But all the same, named right or named wrong, this fearful ‘scourge gathers them in! While it prevails among persons of sedentary habits,—lawyers, clergymen, congressmen,—it also plays great havoc among farmers, day laborers and mechanics, though they do not suspect ‘it, because their physicians keep it from them, if indeed they are able to detect it. It sweeps thousands of w omen and children into untimely graves every year. The health gives way gradually, the strength is variable, the appetite fickle, the vigor gets less and less. This isn’t malaria—it is-the beginning of kidney disease and will end— who does not know how ? No, nature has not been remiss. Independent research has given an infallible remedy for this common disorder; but of course the bigoted physician . will not use Warner’s safe cure; because it is a private affair and cuts up their practice by restoring the health of those who have been invalids for years. The new saying of ‘‘how common bright’s disease is becoming among prominent men!” is get ting old, and as the Englishmen would say, sounds ‘‘stupid’’—especially ‘‘stupid” since this disease is readily detected by the more learned men and specialists of this disease. But the ‘‘cominon run ” of physicians , not detecting it, give the patient Epsom salts or other drugs prescribed by the old code of treatment under which their grand-fathers and great-grandfathers practiced ! Anon, we hear that the patient is ‘‘comfortable.’’ But ere long, may be, they ‘“‘tap’” him and take some water from him and again the ‘‘comfortable”’ story is told. forture him rather than allow him to use Warner’s safe cure! With such variations the doctors play upon the unfortunate until his shroud is made, when we learn that he died from heart disease, pyzemia, septicemia or some_other deceptive though ‘‘dignified Ex-President Arthur’s case is not singular—it is typical of every such case. ‘‘He is suffering intensely.”” This is not usual. Generally there is almost no suf‘fering. -He may recover, if he will act independently of his physicians. The agency named has cured thousands of persons even t write the first two or three acts . in the extreme stagés is today the mainstay of the health of hundred of thousands. [tis an unfortunate fact that physicians will not admit there is any virtue outside their own sphere, but as each school denies virtue to all others, the people act on their own judgment and aceept things by tlie reeord of merit they make. S The faet#*are cause for. alarm, but.there is abundant hope in prompt and independent action. The Cap ital Team. The following gentlemen constitute the Capital Cricket Club’s team that will go to Watt Park tomorrow to meet the Union eleven: Richard Jilbert, Wm. Jtbert, James Hampton, Wm. Eddy, J. J. Jackson, J. E. Carr, John. Hill, Joseph Jones, Adolph Muller, Thos. Penrose, Ed. Baker. ee A Big Injun Coming. Col. Andrews, Great Sachem of the Improved Order of Red Men in California, will on Thursday evening next pay an official visit to Wyoming Tribe of this city. ARRIVALS AT THE HOTELS. NEVADA CITY. NATIONAL HOTEL. S. A. EDDY.. eres. PROPRIETOR. July 9, 1885. D. O. Williams, city. ~ E. Rodda, do Harry Stover, Grass Valley. C. Watson, ) G. A. Roy, San Juan. C. F. Singletary, San Jose. P. Lamping, San Francisco. W. rris, do Jason Campbell, Downieville. . Hudson, Washington. “W. Van Emon, Sacramento. J.G. Davidson, do. J. Humphry, Marysville. UNION HOTEL, Rector Bros.... PROPRIETORS. July 9, 1885. W. H. Freeman, Grass Valley. C. L. Brown, Sweetland. J. W. Gautier, Bear River. J. D. Channell, City. W. B. Shepperd, ate City. J. McCrea, San Diego. M. Rosenberg, San Francisco. Frank Sachs, Glenbrook. i C. E. Maddrill, Railroad. 1 . . BEST TONIC. Physicians and Druggists Recommend It. This medicine, combining Lron with pure vegetable tonics, quickly and completely Cures Dyspepsia, indigestion, Weakness, Impa:e Blood, Malaria, Chills and Fevers, and’ Neuralgia. It is an unfailing remedy for Diseases of the K-dnmeys and Liver. ! It is invaluable for Diseases peculiar to Wonren, andall who leai sedentary lives, . {t does not injure the teeth, cause headache, er produce constipation—oTHER IRON AbBDICINES DO, It enriches and purifies the blood, stimulates the appetite, aids the assimilatlon of good relieves Heartburn and Bel-hing, and strengthens the :nuscles and nerves. For Intermitt.nt Fevers, Lassitude, Lack of Energy, &c., it has no equal. gar The genuine has above trade mark and crossed red lines on wrapper. Take no other, Made only by Brown Chemical Co., Baltimore, Md GEO. C. GAYLORD DEALER IN Groceries, Provisions, Grain, Feed, Ete., e, Good , PGoods Sold at Bed Kock t rice, Agent for Giant Powder Company. ‘Drv and Fency Goods, ‘of texture, strength and durability, cannot be matchsso a et os te SY ope IN THESE DULL TIMES 3 ‘WHERE TO BUY Your Goods, so as to save fully §Q@ cents on every DOLLAR, then attend the Great ae ASSIGNEE SALE FOR THE. BENEFIT OF: CREDITORS, The undersigned, Assignee of L. HYMAN, will continue to sell_at Wholesale . and* Retail, for the benefit of the creditors, the entire stock of the two stores known as the ONE PRICE SAN FRANCISCO STORES, . Located on BROAD STREET, next door and op-posite STUMPF’S HOTEL, NEVADA CITY. The Stock consists of Boots, Shoes, Hats, Caps, , Trunks, Valises, &c., &c. Hosiery, Embroidery, Laces, é&c. The balance of the Stock will now be closed out AT RETAIL or in JOB LOTS at a Great SacriCountry Merchants take due notice of this. TLe~-s7, Assignee. — aman . 2 ————— I have just received direct from the Manufacturers at Aberdeen, Scotland, a fine line of BROADCLOTHS, BEAVERS, DIAGONALS, CASSIMERES and TWEEDS, at Low Cost, which will enable me to make them up into fine fitting, Suits correspondingly low. THEY ARE SPLENDID GOODS. It is claimed that the causes of the superiority of Scotch goods over all others, are: That Scottish Heather produces .aclass of wool which for fineness ed in any other portion of the world, That the mineral properties of the water there fastens the colors in unfading brilliancy; and that the cunning and patience and industry of the canny Scotsmen beats the world in the art of manufacture. I shall be pleased to show these goods to customers at my Tailoring Establishments, 46 Broad Street, Nevada City, and 81 Main St., Grass Valley. C. 4. -earrett. Hall Luhrs & Co, Sacramento BPROPRIBTORNRS, —_———_o0-—-——_——_ THE SECRET OF SUCCESS, “It yqu’re good looking you mash some, and if you're a good talker you mash some, but if you've got the diamonds you catch ’em ai And so itis with an article of Commerce. If it is attractively packed, you sell to some, and if it is properly presented, you sell some, but if it has the merit you sell to all. Of course we attach some importance to_the appearance of the packages _ containing Snow Fake. Nor do we overlook the necessity of placing it before the people properly, still these points appear as pigmies in importance when compared to the value we attach to the wonderful merit of the article, For sale by all Grocers and Druggists. =