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Collection: Newspapers > Nevada Daily Transcript (1863-1868)

August 11, 1867 (4 pages)

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es STATE NOMINATIONS. FOR GOVERNOR, . CEORGE C. CORHAM. For Lieutenant Governor, JOHN P. JONES. -¥ér General-J G, McCullough, Controller es ivisae Canara fe) urveyor Generai.... ° ° : rer.. +e-0 eee enee BR. Pa se For checo,. For Stato Frinter..:.D. 0. ai oe EOR, CONGR — “Ww FLL 1AM HIGEY. cOUNTY NOMINATIONS (°! > © giéction ‘September 4th. Peet 3S ~~ For Senator, E, W. ROBERTS, of Grass Valley, “ For Assemblymen, J.D. WHITH, of Washington. J. M. DAYS, of Grass Valiey. H. G. RULLINS, of Meadow Lake. « G, D. DORNIN, of North pan Juana, ~~ For Sheriff, Rh. B. GENTRY, of Nevada. : : For Collector, WM. McCORMICK, of Grass Valley. For Clerk, @. EK. FARQUHAR, of Nevada: ip . For Recorder, er! oh SLACK, of Rough & Ready. wig x For District Attorney, -.d.B. JOHNSON, of North san Juan. For Treasurer, ‘N. P. BROWN, of Nevada, For Assessor, EE. ¥. BEAN. of Nevada. ~. For Surveyor, H. 8. BRADLEY, of Nevada. For Sapt. of Schools, E. M. PRESTON, of North San Juan. ae or Coroner, . . W. C:GROVES, of Nevada, Sapervisor 3rd -District—-GEO. B. NEWELL. JUDICIAL NOMINATIONS. Election Uctober 2nd. Bas preme Jn a John Currey. For Sept ‘Pub. listraction.John Swett, For Connty Jud ALC, NILES, of Nevada, aioe. UNION MEETINGS. Gov. Wood. of Oregon, Hon. John P. Jones and Hon, David ‘Belden, will speak at Grass Valley....Wednesday, Aug. 14th, Hon. A,.A. Sargent will speak at Rough & Read Monday, Aug, 12. Premareeete. cic Wea te = y, Aug 14. Comg AGatn.—The visits of Copperhead stumpers to this county have had an excellent effect on the Union vote.— _ Thése were all that were necded to rouse the old, sterling party enthusiasm. Some Union men had a decided ‘choice of candidates in their own party, and when the ticket did not exactly suit, were lukewarm. . But Coffroth, and Haight, and Hambleton, have done ug'the good service’ of annihilating such feeling, and arousing the old antagonism to Democracy and its dangerous heresies. When Union menare brought face to face with those who opposed the war with factious violence, and hear them exulting in the prospect of suc‘cous from alleged coldness of the Union party, they fall into line, and go to work with the old spirit. It is two years since the Democracy made a fight ‘anywhere in this State, and the people had forgotten partly what manner.of men the leaders were. But the recolleojion is. vividly revived when these apostles of anti-coercion come about again, and the rememberances are not savory, or calculated to favor the chances of the orators to get public station. A great dea] of good has already been done by these missionaries of Democracy,and we only regret that no more meetings of the same sort as those recofttiy held here are announced.— We would head a subscription to gut a few.more of the same sort of speeches to.be mado here. It. matters little whether that Barnes Newcome of Demoerey, H. H. Haight will come, or the lovely Coffroth, with his boasted, con. sistent record for the enemies of his country. We will agree to advertise a ' meeting free for either of these individuals ; beiig sure the Union party will make votes by the operation. . We advise good Union men to make an ‘effort to gét’atiy. of their lukgwarm Union oeereees neighbors out. to hear Copperhead ; speeches. . It is a sovereign. antidote agalnst-,either Democracy or Fayism, forany Union man who ever had’ a’ spark, of true loya)ty,, Come ] tori'tipot fr. e8 n part ef made any effort to gd man can be found in the party who f'would ‘give the’ Chinese a ballot. “But the Democrats talk about protecting Tabor, when the whole policy of the party . has been to degrade the laborer to slavery and drive free labor out of the cheap slave labor. Let: the hard-workLing, industrious man look at-the record of the. leading -Democrats, and then see if he can vote for them. _ These efforts of the Democratic party to bring slave dabor into competition -with free labor. have extended even to . California. For a long time after the State was admitted.into’ the Union, leading Democrats-hoped to be able to, make two States of California, and make the Southern part a slave StateIn this they did not succeed. They then directed their’ attention’ tothe ‘in: }. troduction of Chinese slaves, and in 1852 a bill was introduced into the Legislature of ‘this State. by: Peachy of Sen Francisco, who is*now ‘a leading Democrat, and voted for by the obese C: ffroth, now perambulating the State as candidate for Congress, dnd pretend. ing to be a friend of the laboring man: ‘This bill was known as the “Coolie bill” and was designed to legalize contracts made ih China and providing for their enforcement in this State. Undérs a law slavery in its worst form would’ have been established in this State. Thousands of such lakorers could have been bought in China for a term of years and compelled to work for a dollaror twoa month, and had it become ja law the labor system of California would have been on a par with that of Cuba and the French trepical countries, This measure was introduced by Democrats and voted for by James W. Coffroth, Democratic candidate for Congress,and it was defeated by men who are now acting and voting in the Union party. Such a law would make tle white laborers of California dependent on the bounties of capitalists, while in every department of industry Chinamen would have been worked and been virtually owned as slaves, The Union party has dignified and exalted labor by making it free all over the land, and opening every foot of American soil to the enterprising laborer. Democracy has ever sought to degrade labor, and and the term “mudsills” was a favorite epithet for the Northern laborer among Democrats.— Even in California; as we have shown, this party attempted to introduce a slave system more degrading than that of the South. Can honest lavoring men support a party with such a record ? A DeMocratic REcorp.—In the Democratic State Convention, held on July 23d, 1861, Edmond Randolph used the following language : “To me it seems.a waste of time to talk. For God’s sake, gentlemen, tell me of battles fought and won ‘Tell me of usarpers overthrown; chat Missouri is again a free State, no longer érushed under the armed hel of a reck. less and odious despot. ‘I'ell me that the State of Maryland lives again ; and oh! gentlemen, let us read; let us hear at the first moment that not a hostile foot now treads the soil of Virginia.— Pome and cheers.) If this be reellion, then I am a rebel. Do you want a traitor, then I ama traiter.—~ For God’s sake speed the ball ; may the lead go quick to his heart, and may our country be free from this despot usurper that now claims the name of President of the United States.”— . Cheers. } These sentiments in regard to the. country and Lincoln, were received vention were many of the men who represented the Democratic party and nominated Haight for Governor, and among them Holden candidate. for Lieutenant Governor, and Dan Gel-wieks, Who is new a candidate for State Printer. When these‘isentimients:were uttered and applaudéd in that aseembly, not “a ‘single Word of protest was made by these men.‘ Can any loy. ‘al man-vote 1 (STRAMBOADS op, she, Haidbod rd ty: are Boing them oe sat ‘it has bad the power, and not a single ‘country ‘by introducifg.a system’ of Tne Curnese QuESTION.—The Dem. with cheers and applause. In that Con} j a for a ticket-with such trai< Ff 44 . Gorham was for universal suffrage, __N. San Juan, Aug. 9th, 1867. : Hie absnt 'Ciiihiese suff go and Chi} éveaing ‘of this wéék, the batteted, nese'labor. The Union party hag ney. bruised, unwashed and unterrified rem. i nant of the once powerful Dem: ocratic party, held a grand pow “wow in thist place, under the auspices of Haight,the ‘vile slanderer, and villifiier of our martyr President Lincoln, and the staunch aud true Secretary’ of ‘War, Stanton; Coffroth, the old hack, who has been, and is, everything by turns, and nothing long, and Kirkpatrick,of Grass Valley. The whole thing being presided over by N.C. Miler. a New Hampshire copper‘head. Haight’s speech was principally }explanatory—trying to explain away the odiur‘testing upon him, in connection .with the indecent language he used: against Lincoln, at a mass meeting of the Cops, at San Francisco, in 1864. He made-a very miserable effort in ex: }cusing himself, and confirmed the be. lief of many Union men who were lis‘tening to lim, that he did utter the ‘zangaage charged against him. He denounced Gorham as. a lobbyist, an intriguér, and niere politician ; having no legitimate business or occupation ; that whites, negroes and--Chinaman, and finally wound up in a grand spread eagle flight, in which the flag, glory, Democratic party, military and Gorham were,all incgntinently mixed up togeth er, and amid & fow Confederate screeches he.left the platform, __Kitkpatrick then arose, and after & wishy-washy speech of short duration, he'two retired from thé stand. Venus arising from tie sea, did the. irrepressible Jeemes Coffroth, with a face like unto a full blown rose, or like the full. moon of a melancholy Fall" month just appearing above the horizon, arise, to the gay and festive multitude that gazed wonderingly upon him. Methinks twas supposed that he was some relic of an ancient “dead fall,” just resurrected, and brought to life again by-pouring down his throat the poison which had caused his untimely decease, ht when his voice was heard the delusion was dispelled, and lo, the “high u muck muck” of the old-“R. N.” party, was recognized in the person of the aspirant for ‘Congressional honors, then before the crowd, He ranted, roared. and bellowed worse than the bulls of Bashan, called Gorham all sorts of names, claimed to have “fit, bled and died” on many of the bloody battle fields of Mexico, and asked “where were these -radicals then? these men who were howling for Democratic blood?” He claimed that
he was a German and tried to make a disgusted and drove the ladies away, and made an ass of himself generally: The meeting broke up about 11 o'clock; It was a very poor affair; but little enthusiam and about half as many present as we had at our Union meeting last Saturday evening. The next morning a dozen Union men who had de. ¢lared they would not support Gorham, came out openly, and gave in their adherance to Gorham and the whole ticket. Set down San Juan andBridgeport townships as “square” upon the whole Union ticket. Bs ‘On Wednesday evening, ‘the 14th inst., the Hon. A. A. Sargent and J. B. Johnson, .sq., will_address the citizens of French Corral, on the politica topics of the day. > . VERITAS. 2 aS : ARRIVALS AT THE NATIONAL EXCHANGE HOTEL. Broad Street, Nevada City, California. LANCASTER & HASEY, Props, August 10, 1807. H Smith San Francisc T Denise Nicolaus are ‘ordered t6 wppcat at the Aimury on SATURDAY EVENING, AUGUST 1th + ~ Then came the grand climax! Like. : and present his formidable proportions . ” German speech; told vulgar stories that . + dence on Sacramento street, third house frum ¢ iif { \ eine deo, Gulling do WH hiail dv _P iia. risun Siate nang J Ham do DEandersoh do JT haley do. 3 Martin Ked Dug iJ Hopkingon Cheroke @ © ard ua JR Wilceon do -LA Walling Rou & Re ns : jetins rage Val * H Dikeman fs du ‘Toomas a Baker >cott Fat J 1 Wiliams Nevada HK Billings do Grvornelt do 'W Phifipot paytun M Mouler do J Wright Camipionvill . Jb knymond co : ; LIGHT’ GUARD! All members of the Nevada Light Guard GREENWOOD CEMETERY. Se eee & a “fine € of the turnpike between __ Grass Valley & Rough & Ready, It is laid outspecially fora = BURYING GROUND, and contains over FORTY ACRES OF. LAND! The greatest care will be taken of the grounds, and no™ make Greenwood the fine«t cemetery on the Coast. Lots ys penchoe end sale of peeraad able terms, an culars given See a es Grass Valley, August 10, 1867. TO. SCRIP. HOLDERS. ; TREasuRER’s Orrice, ~~ Aug. 10th, 18h7. HE Treawtirer of Neyatia T County will pay, on presentation, all warrants drawn on the Genera Fund and registered prior to Ang. 5th, this advertisement. E, F. SPENCE, Nevada, Aug. 10th. — County ‘Treasurer. CENTRAL PACIFIC RAILROAD NAND AFTER AUGUST tnt, 1867, until further notice, the trains of the CeyO tral Pacific Railroad will run as follows: 2S? Going East. Passenger trains will leave Sacramento at 6:30 a. m , and arrive at Cisco at 11.50 a. m.; als, at 3.35 P. M., arriving at Cisco at 9.15 p.u: Going West, Ye Passenger trains leave Ciscoat 7:05 a) ™. artive at Sacramento at 12:42 p.m.:-alsoat 2 P; M., arrivingat Sacramento at 7:25 P. x. Ths morning passenger ‘trains connect at Auburn with Stages for Yankee Jims, Forest Hill, Michigan Bluffs, Greenwood and George town ; and at Colfax with stages for Grass Vala Nevada, San. Juan, Camptonville, Forest ity, Downleville and Iowa Hill ; and at-Cisco with stages for Summit City, Austin, Virginia City, and all points in the State of Nevada. The 6:30 a. M. up train connects at the Junction with the cars of the California Centra} Railroad for Lincoln and Marysville and all points north. : Ail trains ran daily, ees Soren UC. CROCKER, ee -Superintendent.C. P.k. 2 FO SALE. ; FEET 13 inch pipe, No. 16 and 18 2.300 iron pe, No. 18 iron. 1,2u0 teet 7 inch pi i Cut Uff or Patent Valve, Elbows, &c., Distributor and Taper Piece. For sale cheap. Enquire at the office of aus sOUTH YUBA CANAL CO. NOTICE TO TAX PAYERS. nt. hereby given that the Assessment Roll of Nevada County, for the year 1867, has been delivered to the -Clerk of the Buard of Supervisors, and is. nuw open for. public inspection. The Buard of Kqualization wilt meet on MUNDAY, AUGUST 12th, 1:67, to determine all compiaints that may be made in regard to the assessed value of any property. G@ K. FARQUHAR, “Sard Clek, . at. By THOMA»n P, HAWLEY, Deputy. 8. N. BLIVEN. 8. M. EVERINGHAM BLIVEN & EVERINGHAM, Wy eee AND RETAIL pee DEALERS IN CROCKERY AND GLASSWARE, COMMERCIAL STREET, — ~ Opposite A. Lademan’s Grocery Store. WHERE WILL BE FOUND A COMPLETE “ASSORTMENT OF China and Bohemian Ware, Chamber and Toilet Sets, PLAIN. AND FANCY DINNER AND TEA 3 SEIS, LAMPS, CUTLEKY WILLOW WARE. MIRROKS, CHA bELIERS, CHIMNEYS. GLOBES. T TANIA & PLATED WAKE, — FANCY ARTICLES, &c. Ee" Families, Hotels and Saloons supplied with all the articles in our line on the most reasonable terms, and parties wishing to purchase are invited to call and eXamine our goods. DR.-A. CHAPMAN, Surgicaland Mechanical Dentist, Office-scortier of Broad and Pine sts. I would inform my friends fs and all wishing my services thut I am pre to attend those favoring me with a cail, at any hour: Teethafter having hecome sensitive by exposure of the nerve will be filled without causing paiz. . I WILL WARRANT ALL WORK done at this office to be performed in @ more skilltul manner,and better satisfaction given than el~ewhere in this Vicinity otherwise no charge will be made. M charges are moderate.and ty suit the times; am permanently located in this city. ResiTemperance Hall. Vulcanite Work done at this office. AUGUST LADEMAN, Commercial Street.. Nevada city, CONTINUES TO KEEP ON (@ ae fy A\band ajwell selected stotk of ‘ f Groceries & Provisions, OF THE FRESHEST AND BEST QUALIWe receives, dally, everything to be had in the VEGETABLE and FRUIT LINE. ‘ He has « splendid stotk of CAN FRUITS and CASE GuoDs, In constant receipt a spléndid article of BUT ER, from Tracy’s Raed. Sierra Vailey. Athis store will be found the finest a of CIGAKS AND TUBACCOQ, ‘anda’ Mee other artich:s too numerous to mention, Gor at LOW Ri TES FOR and aie free of change, — promptly and neatly . R. FININGER & co. , Wholesale and Retail Dealers in FUe Bean pies, WINES, . Ligvors BRAL: sult sed to for par member ex to bu ro ect Pi ytd 4. F.¢ ‘. For& years Foreman of the State jr expense spared to . 1867. Inierest on same ceases at the. dute: of REVISED UNION STATE Ticker. EDWARD G. JEFFERIS woFking : State. ‘aug . LIFE AND FIRE INSURANCE AGENCY, _ : t ‘Office, and For 18 yeats-a fair Printer in this —— Tho Mutual Life Insurance Os, OF NEW YORK. Sas the Largést Cash Assets, 4 And does the tints dei ‘amount of business of any Company inthe United ' States. The Home. Mutual Fire Insurance Company of San Franciaco, . ‘By judicious @istribution of fs” r risks and prompt payment of all its losses by Fire or Marine is taking the lead ofall Companiés on this coast, _ S B, DAVENPORT, Agent, Nevadv City, Dec. 19th, 1966. Parties Contemplating ; iF LIFE INSURANCE!.4 ‘WILL PLEASE CALL ON N. B.—INFORMATION, without exaggeration, GIVEN. MEAGHER, TAAFFE & 00, SAN FRANCISCO, IM?PORTERS OF Dry Goods, Fancy Goods, “Yankee Notions, @a AGENTS FOR . Mount Vernon Duck Company. ee 5 AA Wholesale House: é BATTERY STREET, NEAR PINE. 3 Retail House: 9 MONTGOMERY STREET, [LICK HOUSE. D8. BAKER. . J. &. MARTIN BAKER & MARTIN, Wholesale and Retail Dealéra in GROCERIZS, PROVISIONS CAN FRUITS AND SHELF GOOD.. : OF ALL KINDS, —ALSO-— WHEAT, CORN, BARLEY, GROUND FRED WooD! WOOD woop! Shakes, Shingies, &¢., && WHERE? AC BAKER & MARTINS, NO. 738 BROAD STREET. __ Nevada, September 12th. WATCHES aloes AND JEWELRY, or) FOR SALE BY W. C. RANDOLPH. ‘Nevada, April %th. Ci PHOTOGRAPHIC . ‘PAGUERREAN a ] ghee taken in the bass sty Wie Ab . io. seatoQN PINE: dye ReTOTOS Nev City, Jaly STREET)? ~:: ' a “Over the United States Babarye* POS"