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Collection: Newspapers > Nevada Daily Transcript (1863-1868)
August 19, 1883 (4 pages)

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Page: of 4

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IN FRONT
jotel, on,
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thi
he ‘hlow in
ai :
pley.
arly new and
publica ae
)
~wecproperty will soon be opened up.
“Gling the Mails
Gael earth notice # the mails will close as . W Fitten for oarer ag / —— by W.
Babe Week, 58 Route Rast, hb i M,
San Francisco a nd Sacramento, 6 AM.
and 12M. *
coe tales t i. M. and7.15 P. M.
Sierra City, via N. San Juan, CamptonFagot a Downieville, Daily (except Sunday
t, North Bloomfield, Moore’s
rin aad rater daily, (Sunday exce
*Washintoa 8 and aS Tuesdays, Thurssand aay ge
‘ou Lil York and Dutch Fiat,
Monday, Wednesday = Friday, 6 A. M.
OS. MEIN, P, M, ;
BulEF MENTiON,
Various Mappenings In and Out of
Town.
Jas. Nolan is erecting a dwelling
house on Pine street near Bnapen
sion bridge.
A young girl, or a middle-aged woman, can learn of a situation to
do general housewor : by applying
at this office,
~ Felix Gillet: of ei city has 200
mulberry trees of good size, fifty of
which are fifteen years old. He has
seven different varieties, with each
of which he is carefully experiment
ing.
The moon is now at its brightest.
It is so pleasant that one is reminded of the lines by Montgomery; ‘‘Full
in hér dreamy light the moon presides, shrined in a halo, mellowed as
she ridés; and far around, the forest
and the stream bathe in the beauty
of her emerald beam.”
The jury having disagreed in the
Grass Valley case of George W
Pierce accused of assaulting Fred.
Trebilcox with a stone, Justice Davis has granted a change of venue to
Justce Blakey’s court at this city.
It will come up for hearing at 10
o’clock Wednesday morning.
In speaking of the ‘‘condition of
the State” the Sacramento Bee says
that a malignant form of dysentery
has broken out among the. children
of Red Bluff, and epizooty has
caught the men of Contra Costra
county. Which statement thé Bodie Free Press says is intended by
the Bee as an argument why hydranlic mining should be stopped,
Licensing Gambling.
The better class. of sporting mev
up this way. view with favor the
licensing of gambling at $100 a
quarter, as has been determined upon
by the government of the city of
Sacramento, Said one of them to
the TRANSCRIPT reporter yesterday:
‘*We who have conducted games in
that city during former State Fairs
have been bled to the extent that
we will feel-we are getting off cheaply by paying a hundred. dollar license, even though we want to stay
but afew days. We have heretofore not only had to pay tribute to
the police so they wétild not disturb
us (each game paid them from $10
to $50, according to its importance, )
but we have been forced to pay out
many a five dollar piece (these were
called ‘loans’) to bummers-and hangers-on who threatened to drag us into court whenever we hesitated,”
Buelow Consolidated Mine.
Dr. Buelow returned yesterday
from San Franciseo,. where he has
completed all arrangemente for beginning work on his quartz claim on
the South Yuba river 84 miles as the
road runs northwest of this city. A
strong company has been formed,
and the machinery &er the ten stamp
mill will be at once put up and four
.Frue. concentrators secured. Dr.
Buelow will act as General Manager
‘of the enterprise and M. Garver as
Superintendent. The property will
be worked by tunnel, of which 500
feet is already completed. There
are two ledges in the ground, which
has been thoroughly prospected, and
the indications are that a first-class
Cooper's saw ill Burned.
George Cooper's sawmill, four and
a half miles from this city, and not
farftom Blue Tent, was destroyed
by fire early yesterday morning.
By cutting the tramway, the lumber
and other property around the mill
wassaved. The origin of the fire
is not kuown. The loss will approximate $1,500. ‘There was no
insurance, It is believed that much
of the machinery can be used in the
construction of anew mill, by having it overhauled at the foundry.
Flood Damages Paid.
Thomas Freeman, whose toll brid ge
across the North Yuba civer between
San Juan and Camptonville was carried away by the flood from the
-English Dam, and whose property
‘was otherwise injured, has received
$5,500, supposedly trom the owners
of the Dam. Mr. Freeman says
that his damages really amounted to
$8,000, but that he is very well satisfied under the circumstances with
\
New Jailor Appointed.
Sheriff Carter: has accepted the
resignation (bat without condition)
of Richard Tremaine and revoked
his appointment as Deputy Sheriff
and Jailor. Henry J. Carter of .
North Bloomfield, brother to the
Sheriff, has beén appointed to fill the:
vacancy,
©
And Still Taey Come.
Eastarners who wint to attend the
Conclave tontinue to pour into San
Francisco at the rate of ever se many
: ‘thousand, aday. Six special trains
loaded with a were to pass
There is a movement in some of
. the States east of the mountaine
_. there is only one room in the house ”
SUNDAY MISCELLANY.
The Five Beauties—sem oneties from
Various Sources.
The Beantifal Hence.’
THE BEAUTIFUL GATE.
There’s a beautiful gate on the confines of
earth, ‘
And it opens the ‘‘realm of the blest.”
Those who pass through its portals leave
so.row behind,
For they'go where the weary find rest.
But mortals unguided shall fin4 not the clue
That leads to the realm of the holy and true,
Faith only can give it, lost wanderer, to you,
As you stand to your Savior confessed.
THE BEAUTIFUL RIVER.
There's a beautiful River that flows through
. the Gate,
From its source in the Infinite Sea,
Where the angels of love on its waters do
wait
The lost voyager from danger to free,
For the Gulf of Destruction lies near to its
tide,
One bark, the Redeemer, there safely can
ride.
That bark has for ages its dangers defied,
With its freight of salvation for thee.
THE BEAUTIFUL BOOK.
There’s & beautiful Book, rcarcely heeded
by men,
3
Which the skeptics refuse to esteem,
That will guide you through —
miorass or fen, 4
Where the beacons of treachery dine. os
Tis a volume more precious than silver or
gold,
Its truths are all new, they can never grow”
old,
On Life's sea 'twill the shallows and breakers unfold,
‘Tis a Pilot down Life's troubled stream.
THE BEAUTIFUL LAND.
There’s a beautiful Land, past the besnifal
Gate,
Far more fair than the mind can ecucéive,
Where theangels have waited and ever do
wait
To make welcome the blest who believe;
Where terraces, each than the other more
fair,
Ex celsior-like rise in the glorified air,
Till the soul’s aspirations still soaring may
share
All the Savior can give or receive.
THE BEAUTIFUL CROWN,
Learn, pilgrim, to study the beautiful Book,
And find out the lost clue to the Road,
That shall lead you at last to the beautiful
LandAnd thé realm of the pure and the good.
God’s care will p.otect you, though dangers
abound, .
His Love will support you until you have
found
The end of the way to that heautiful ground,
Where for ages crowned seraphs have
trod. 6
STOLEN VERSES,
A good man in San Francisco on a
recent Sunday preached to the poor
in one of the squalid districts of that
city of sin and misery, and his exhortation was: ‘Lean Upon the
Word of God as Thy Staff in Life.”
But what many poor men need most
is a square meal. Wedonot think
any one can be thoroughly religious
on an empty stomach.
against Sunday railway traffic. It
is claimed that the two months
which have passed since President
Young issued an order forbidding the
running of Sunday trains, except
those carrying mail, on the Louis
ville, New Albeny and Chicago
Railway, have’been the most prosperous of any in the history of the
road, President Young recently
telegraphed: ©**Our June business
hag been larger than ever before and
the aggregate earnings the largest on
record.”
If there is one thing a miner reveres above another, it is to hear the
truth spoken atall times. A few
days ago a new preacher from the
Kast was holding forth to a mixed
audience in a mining camp over in
Nevada State, and announced for
his text, ‘In my father’s house are
many mansions.” He had hardly
ceased speaking when a-taH,; grayhaired man, dressed in the garb of
an honest miner, stood up and said:
“T tell you folks that’s a lie, I
know his father well. He lives
about three miles east of Hawpatch,
{ndiana, in an old log cabin. that
ws built when I was a boy, and
There is a large measure-of common sense in the following which
we copy from the Pacific: True re
ligion 1s not only a religion of common sense, it is one of good nature.
Chere is a humorous side to many
sacred and serious things; and if
ministers and people never find it,
there will be no trouble. We must
all of us be as witty as-we are sensible, and as good-humored as we are
dignifiei. When ministers scold
and hearers criticise, Sundays are
spoiled and pastorates are marred.
Reproofs, to be effective, must be indirect, sly, and touched with merriment; and they must please whil:
they pierce. And if hearers would
get on well, they must give and take
in a serio-mirthful way. When we
can smile under the rod, it will do
us good. To be sour anil “‘stuffy” is
ruinous. We must direct oir wisdom and wit under, not ‘at, spiritual
things.
The Gaileless Gold Digger.
The Bella Union Theatre of San
Francisco has been attached. . The
Daily Report says it should never be
reopened, as “dives” 1uin more boys
than the Sunday schools save, which
leads the Bodie Free Press to ret
mark that it is aot .the small boy
that such’ p!aces of “amusement” as
the Bella Union, ruins, but the honest miner from the country, who visits San Francisco and there falls an
easy prey to the wickedness of the
variety show.
Half-rate Transportation.
Wells, Fargo & Co. have given notice
that all articles intended for exhibition at the Fair of El Dorado Agricultural District Association, No. 8,
will be carried;at balf regular rates,
would ere this have consented to let
-. themselves, but has gone to their
MAMILTON SMITH, JR.
The “Ree” Finally Finds Out Where
Me Mas Been. and What For. ©
The Sacramento Bee of Friday evening publishe? the following :
“The brains and executive head
of the hydraulic miners left California wonths ago for Central America,
as the hydraulic miners said, but all
this time he has been in Washington
seeking means to prevail on Secretary Lincoln to let the appropriation
made by the last Congress for. the
improvement and preservation of the
Sacramento and Feather rivers, be
used for bnilding dams for the benefit of the hydraulic miners, Mr,
Smith is now in California once
mvre, and he states that but for the
Wheatland protest Secretary Lincoln
that money go for the construction
of dams, and that-he will let it go
on the return of Colonel Wilson,
who is now under the shadow of
Colonel Mendell,seeking public
opinion for that purpose. This Colonel Wilson has not giyen the valley
people an opportunity to express
enemies in San Francisco to seek information; wherefore the Supervisors of the valley counties should
tweet and at once telegraph Secretary
Lincoln their opinion of the dam
question, and thus back up Sacramento, which is foremost in the
fight. This is the crisis of the campaign.””
It is a shame that Mr. Smith does
uot keep the newspapers fully posted
as to his movements both private
and public, The idea that he should
have fooled us all so is infamous.
[he TRaNscRIPT never asked where
he was going, but knowing that he
had property interests down in the
region where the Western Hemisphere would wear corsets if'it ever
indalged in such folly, inferred that
he must have gone there, and said as
much, The Bee was likewise fooled.
It was clearly his duty. to have first
obtained the consent of the press of
of the State to make the trip to
Washington, and he should moreover
have kept us advised from day: to’
day as to what he was doing and
how he got along.
As to the dams, the people of the
coast who are not directly within
the confines of the Cadwalader antimining ring are in favor of their construction, and the Bee knows it,
ee
How They Captured Our Boys,
The Bulletin of Friday afternoon
says: The Nevada City Knights,
sixty strong, arrived last night, and
ten more will arrive to-day. They
joined the overland train, which was.
30 long that two engines were requi'ed to bring it down from Sacramento,
and it had to be divided and run into the depot at the Oakland mole on
two tracks, On this train were the
De Molay Commandery of Louisville, Kentucky, the famous blackhorse brigade. They at the last moment determined not not to bring
their horses, which will, be a great
disappointment to San Franciscans,
They have cars. of their own, and remained on board of them last night,
coming over to the city this morning. There were on the train Virginia, Ohio. and Pennsylvania
Knights, and all were bent on a
good time. On boarding the train
the Nevada City Knights entered
the cars of the, De Molays. They
were atonce seized by the Kentucky Templars and were made to
feel at home before they took their
seats. The Kentuckians dispensed
a liberal hospitality, and tickled the
palates of the Nevada City men with
the contents of certain bottles, which
they boasted contained pure distilled Kentucky dew. It is due to the
Nevada Knights to say that they all
tasted of said bottles,
The Great Footrace.
The mile footrace for $100 aside,
arranged some time since, to take
place on the Watt track between
Geo. F. Jacobs of this city and Joseph Perrin of Grass Valley, hangs
fire. The forfeit of ten dollars a
side is still in the stakebolder’s hands
are anxious to see the date fixed and
the balance of the mney put up.
Jacobs says he is ready for business,
and the sooner it comes off the bethe will he pleased. He went out to
Glenbrook the other day and ran a
mile without a break, Just what
time he made is a secret, but his
trainer says it was a good deal -less
than ten minutes. He is 58 years
old, but a life of total abstinence
from alcohol and tobacco makes him
look young enough to be his own
son. ‘‘Uucle Joe” has seen only
sixty summers, but on account of the
superfluous flesh thatfbe carries about
on his bones, people up this way
seen to think a mile heat will be too
much for him,
mare Oe Raynes.
Tidings: Wednesday the barn belonging to J. M. Smith, who lives at
the Lime Kiln, a few miles'south o
Grass Valley, was entered by a thief
who stole a saddle and briddle and
the reins from the harness that: was
hanging in the barn. A Chinaman
who had been in the employ of Mr.
Smith is supposei to be the thief,
ani detective H. J. Snow to-day
started in quest of the Celestial.
At The Churches To-day.
At the Congregational Church
there will be services morning and
evening by the pastor, Rev. J. Sims.
pees bg thesvening, “The School
ss »”
eel servions, will be held at
the Methodist, Episcopal and Cathospenen’ —r
is spending her vacation in Grass
yesterday were Thomas Freeman
and wife, Miss Hendrickson,
and the friends of both the parties
, WHAT THEY ARE DOING.
Personal and Social Items Gleancd
Were and There.
Postinaster Mein was among those
who went below yesterday.
Mr. Gray, editor of the Herald,
goes to San Francisco to-morrow.
Rev, J. Sims gues to San Francisco to-morrow to spend a few days,
J. H. Wenworth, OC. E. Mungor
and Frank Nilon’returned yesterday
from their trip to the Lakes.
District Attorney Ford and wife
have returned from their bridal trip
to Truckee and Lake Tahoe.
Miss Eva Bigelow of Sacramento
Valley, the guest of Miss Mary Rawling.
Among the departures for the Bay
and
Wm. Barton. 3
Miss Julia Madigan will leave Vir.
ginia City on the lst of September to
take charge of a school in Mason
Valley, Nevada.
8. G. Dikeman, of Rough and
Ready has entered the Freshman
Class of the State University, in the
scientific course. \
Ex-Sheriff Tompkins is dangerously ill at his residence in this city,
He is so low that his friends are not
permitted to see him,
Dr. Baldridge, of Muscatine, Iowa,
who has been here on a visit to his
brother, our popular City Marshal,
leaves to-day with his family for
San Francisco,
George Black and John Nivens
are seeing the sights of the State’s
metropolis, which is Sap\ Francisco,
and not Nevada City as sone might
suppose if we didn’t specify,
Will Welch returned night . before
last from Campbell Springs, where
for two weeks past, he has been
camping out with the young ‘men
from this city kown as ‘‘Joe Long’s
gang.” The latter were expected
home last evening.
A few days since the TRA NsCRIPT
published 1 birth notice from a San
Francisco paper in which the name
of Frank Williams was given as the
happy father. It was generally supposed to mean that the brother of
our worthy Deputy Postmaster had
been blessed, but the supposition. is
erroneous, The Frank of ‘‘ours” is
not the individual referred to.
There is at the Bay another man of
the same name who is constantly
getting his name in the papers
through police court reports and the
like, and the ex-resident of Nevada
City is continually being accused of
acts commited by ttre bad Frank
Williams who never lived here.
=a
* Feared the Jary Would Mang.
Sierra Valley relates an amusing
scene that he witnessed the other
day in a justice court up there. The
plaintift wasa woman who had agreed
to work fora man for so much per
month during ‘summer months”
and something more during ‘winter
months.” In settling up, her employer refused to reckon on more
than three months of the latter kind,
whileshe claimed pay for five of
them. She sought to recover $48,
and Mason, editor of the ‘ Leader,
was her attorney. The parties
agreed to try the case before one juror, and the village schoolmaster was
chosen to act in that capacity, When
the case was submitted to him he
“stayed out” an hour and a-Lalf,
and the audience as well as the litigauts got very nervous fearing that
it would bea hung jury. He finally
found the plaintiff entitled to $16,
all of which she contributed, as a
fee, to the exchequer of our editorlawyer friend.
ES
Just Received
An invoice of Boys’ Clothing which
will be sold at low prices. ~
C. A. Barret, 46 Broad St.
ABOUT TEN FEET HIGH.
Vardstick and the Other Boarders
Trust Not the Tale;-Certain Deductions.
**How high was that? Just read
that again,” sang out young Yardstick, one of our boarders, who is in
the drygoods line, to Professor Seedling who sometimes read aloud a paragraph, after supper. The Professor
complied, lending the beauty of his
voice to the following statement:
“In the year 1773 a Dutchman
named Roggewein discovered Easter
Island, and reported that the men on
that island measured twelve feet in
height, although the women were
commonly not above ten*or eleven
feet high.”
**Well,” said young Yardstick, ‘‘in
my opinion he wasa Flying Dutebman and a lying Dutchman,” and
the other boarders agreed with him.
While nobody desires American
ladies to be giants, all would be delighted to see them well and strong.
Yetathousand causes combine to
keep a large proportion miserable,
Too much confinement in heate
plied domestie and family worriés,
want of sleep, little illnesses hard to
describe, but peculiar to their
are the, wolfish pack that dri e. the
women “half out of their Ledds.’
Miss M. A. Packard, of/No. 323
Ewen street, Brooklyn, W. Y., confesses to have suffered fpom nameless
physical disarrangemepts so induced,
and says: ‘‘PARKER'’S GINGER Tonrc
my dyspepsia and/for those’ general
ills 6 which men complain so
is better than all
ave suffered for years
in this way, And speak from experience. A vluable feature to women
essence? of ginger, but a highly scienmbination of the best vegetacal) profession. Physiciang enand $1 a bottle. Your druggist keeps
it. Hiscox & Co., Chemists, aed .
York,
lic churches,
A gentleman just returned from . _
rooms, or in the same house, multj-.
is my strength and Ahield. It cured:
e agents known to’ ‘the.
dorse it, and. no wife or mother
should be without it. Prices 50 cents
READY-MADE MUSIC.
One of the Good Things at Bowman
Dam —The Singing Dogs.
Among the luxuries at Bowman.
Dam is an organina, It looks like an
abbreviated patent churn. By teeding strips of perforated paper into it
and turning a crank, it is made to
give forth music somewhat reseinbling that. produced by the old-fashioned melodeon. Every night after
it gets too dark to fish and too cold
to fool around ont of doors, the peopleat the house assemble in the
main sitting room, elect one of their
number as organist, and for an hour
or 80 listen to the ‘'melodious”
strains of the instrument which is capable of furnishing to order any tune
desired, from ‘‘Coronation” to “St.
Patrick’s Day ia the Morning” or
“The Blue Alsatian Mountains.”
There is one thing of the kind in the
world that beats it, and that is the
“canina,”recently invented in London, the notes of which are produced
by dogs, 12 of whom are seated in
row inside a long box. Keys on the
outer board communicate with wires,
which touch each animal’s head, and
when the performer strikes the ivory,
and the contact warns the dog, a
whine, a yell, a bark, or a bass
growl is the response. The harmony is defective, but the laborious
training has given the strange orchestra a moderately tuneful facility. The Sons of Freedom who sent
the organina up to the Dam, are reported to be now negotiating for one
of the London inventions for the
same place. It probably comes hi®h,
but that will make no difference for
they are determined to spare neither
pains or expense to the end that the
musical standard of the upper part
of the county may bé elevated.
++ 0 ee.it is Ever Thus.
No matter what happens, and no
matter where iT occurs, a Nevada
City man is connected with rr. Dods,
the man who fleeced the treasury of
Alameda county, never lived here,
bat one of the jurymen, Warren
Hea‘on, who is to sit in judyment on
him, was an early denizen of this section. Again, there never has been
any backbone to the new Postal Telegraph until now. We knew there
never would be any until some old
Nevada City man took hold of it,and
gave it his moral and financial suppert. That very thing has been
done by our former townsman, John
W. Mackay, who has guaranteed
one-thirtieth part ($1,000,000) of his
fortune towards the ‘capital stock.
It takes residents or ex-residents of
Nevada City tomake an apparently
impossible undertaking a grand success, Kicking, on the part of the
Tidi ngs, is now in order,
_Dursz Hams at Smith’s. Nive
‘Nevapa Crry, Aug. 15, 1883.
To the officers and members of
Nevads City Lodge, No. 52, A. O
U. W,—Brothers :—Your committee
appointed to draft resolutions on the
death of our late brother, Edward
W. Avery, beg leave to report the
. following :
Whereas, By the myeterions decree of the Creator and Preserver of
the Universe, in whose hand we are
held, we are called upon to mourn
the loss of our late brother by the
sudden and untimely death that has
removed him from our midst; therefore be it—
Resolved, That, in the death of
our late brother, Edward W. Avery,
this lodge has lost a worthy and
zealous member; the communit., an
upright and honest citizen; aud _ his
family, a kind husband and affectionate father.
Resolved, That, while we accept
with submission and humility the
will of Him who doeth all things
well, we extend to the family of our
deceased brother our heartfelt sympathy in the hour of their deep affliction,
Resolved, That, in memory of onr
deceased brother, the charter of this
lodge be draped in mourning, and a
copy of these resolutions be transmitted to the family of our deceased
brother and to each of the newspapers of Nevada City,
RD. Carter
E. H. Gaytorp
J. E. Tsaac
Convicted on Two Charges.Committee,
Mrs, Bradshaw lived in a house
near the County Hospital that John
Allen, a colored nian, claimed to be
entitled to possession of. He wanted her to vacate it, but she would
not, so last month he went there
daring her absence and removed the
doors and windows. He was tried
for this offense before Justice Wadsworth night before last, with six jurymen, and convicted, his wife who
was arrested with him being acquitted. Yesterlay morning he was
tried in the same court with three
jurymen for visiting the house a second time and forcing his way into
it, He was also found guilty on
this charge. He was sentenced in
each case to pay a fine of $25 or
serve five days in the county
‘Vail. .He is now in limbo earning
his $5 a day, which is the biggest
salary he ever received,
Immense stock of exercise and examples books at Brand Bro’s. Book
Store, Main St. ‘ al8-2t.
_Kunrese Extra Dry is the jonly
pure native Champagne equal to any
and j juicy. tf
Good Goods !
Lowest
wae And Lverything
ber of
from 50 cents to $2.50,
uuiform price of
em;
Ladies
80 cents.
Misses do
‘ Children’s da
Ladies’ Skirts, Tucked
Hoop Skirts, 40 cents.
tles from 50 cents to $3.50.
Mis Lester
= Nummer (00s
E=a~we Talren, :
On [
We have had a good Spring and Summer traf
count for it by living up to the motto :
We have placed upon out
Iesported, and but half the price. 3m
We ac-.
Latest Styes ll
Prices .
as, Represented, i
Tables a Large num/
Lafies aud Clie’ Summer Hats, varying in price
Which we Will sell at th
Conte !
derwear for a Trill more
than the cost of the material
3 LOOK AT THIS:
Ladies’ Chemise, Tucked and Embroidered, 50 ets,
adies’ Night Dresses, Tucked and Embroidered,
Ladies’ Drawers, Ticked arid Embroidered, 50e,
do ie
do
do
do
and Ruffled, 75e,
50e,
25¢.
White Sacques reduced from $2.50 to $1.75.
!
Hereafter we shall make a specialty of Bustles and
Corsets. .Now’in stock a variety of Latest. Styles BusThe most complete assortment of Corsets in this
city, ranging in price from 40 ¢ents to $3.50.
Cravvtord
ANNUAL CLBAN. BEARNHARD & SHALLENBE
30 DAYS ONLY! 0
FROM JULY 19 TO AUCUST 19, 1883.
——
Each year it is our custom at this time of the
year to go through our stock and sift out certain lots
of goods which we desire to close out before the
Fall tradecommences. In order to sell. them we
have made tremendousreductions in everything.
Heliotrope Nuns Veiling, all wool, former price 49¢,
now 25¢.
Alpacca, all shades, former price 25c, now 16 Be.
Mohairs, “é “ “c “ 29¢, Aa 19
Buntings, “ “ se ce Se PORES
Pin Head Checks “ 6 4QGe ae eo
ta yards toc, Gnigham 6 iysncx ci seviscii
12.“ Unbleached: Muslin. oo.. ec. os ;
16. Caer cis i tei cose eck Oe
ia Bleached: Muslin ois yi ccass 6s 66.00
io: * sae Gingham ios. ven ceed :
I2 ce
12%c. Linen Crash.......99
Fine Linen Crash, _ former price 19c. now 12%.
Children’s Handkerchiefs, ei a eG a ae
Linen Napkins. per doz. “ fo A 4a Oe
Fine Linen Towels “° “° “/t 99": 49
Table Linen, . ag ae
Buttons, . mh VA ae
Children’s Collarettes, by 12%, 19, 25
Ladies Undervests, former pe & now 49
Gents’ ne ¢
89,
“White Shirts, me. 8 po oe? :
* Unlaundried “«—« ¥ 25. * + 99
Ladies’ Chemise, 1 Ree h Coane (ts“ Night Dresses, ‘/ oo Go Se
Children’s Hose, fs "48.. 7Ooee.
White:Spreads, pit ae . para
32-inch Cretonne, // « es 39
RIBBONS, LACES, EMBROIDERIES, it,
Too numerous to Pention, at exceedingly low prices.
Yay nn
We will sell you Dry Goods, and Notions
CHEAPER than the CHEAPEST.
Selling a CASH gives us the money to buy
for CASH.
i comttae (Quo ate
Equal justice to all!) Full value for’ your money,
No Goods misrepresented at the9 CENT. STORE,
/
—_ ch
BROAD STREET, ----NEVADA GITY.
J. E. CARR, ' f
“CARR BROTHERS.
‘Successor to &. Ex. Welden.
PROPRIETOR OF THE
PALACE DRUG STORE.
Corner Pine and Commercial Streets.... --NEVADA CITY a
0
_A COMPLETE STOCK OFj.! .
. Drugs and Medicines
PERFUMERY AND TOILET: ARTIcL Es
And everything else usually found in a fist clags_
DruG Stor
: -——0--——
WE ALSO CARRY A FULL ‘LINE
SCHOOL BOOKS, STATIONERY
Newspapers, Illustrated Papers, Periodicals,
SHEET MUSIC AT REDUCED RATES
A Fine dis lay of Pocket Knives, Razors, and other Cutlery’
tb ———
lig Prescriptions {carefully compoun led at all aours by P, A?) Barnes
en ex erienced Druggist}
Ete
Nevada Drug Store,
Corner Broad and Pine mes * Nevada City
WALTER . D. VINTON,
oe
A Large Stock of Patent Medicings
Fine Perfumery, Fancy Soaps,
Combs, Brushes, Hand Hiroe
Toilet Articles of all kinds
Careful Attention Given to Compounding Erosieiptien
: Bya omen Druggist, and Faataer PURITY guaranteed,
[AGENT FOR THE BEST FIRE INSURANCE COMPANTES yoni) :
IMPERIAL, LONDON, NORTHERN AND au
AND 7
Naar the Union Hel, Wain NY Navala city.
oe: "LIVER? OO: LONDON AND GLOBP.