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Collection: Newspapers > Nevada Daily Transcript (1863-1868)
August 26, 1873 (4 pages)

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Page: of 4

a:
The Dail Transcript
“Tuesday, Aug. 26th, 1873.
REPUBLICAN COUNFY TICKET. .
For State Senator, ,;
. W. WILLIAMS.
Por Assemblymen,HK. ATWATER,
4. D. BURT,
For Shetiff,
M, M. WHEELER
g. 8. FORPKINS. .
For County Clerk,-.
JOUN, PATTISON .
For County Recorder,
W1. GEORGE.
o
For County Treasurer,
KE. P. SANFORD.
ome. font blame them for not speaking
i. march 4
Lo potunsetyenees
For Superintendent of Schools,,
» PRANK POWER.
For County Surveyor,
E. B. EDDY.
For Public Administrator,
py, ee
For Coroner,
W. C. GROVES. .
. oe For Supervisors,
W.C. RICHMOND, JOHN McCOY.
T. P. CRANDALL.
OSE
Artfal
The Democrats, knowing and feela * ing that the only show of carrying
“this county at the next election, is
playing all the cards of deception,
and dodging every unpalatable trath
that is thrust in their teeth by tho
Republicans. Of all the dodgipg on
their part in years past,” their course
during this campaign excels. Our)
candidate for Senator bas been and .
is now engaged in making a thor.
ough canvass of this county, and
-*telling the people of some. of the
dodging done by the Democrats. It)
would be impossible for Mr. Williams
Dodgers.
about the Democratic acts in one
: . speech. He 7s telling. so “many .
truths about these fellows that. they .
cringe terribly, and the-only answer
“\Sthiey-give is, ‘it aim’t so.’’ Now, if
his statements are not true, we want
them to come out like nice little mea .
and sliow where, by the record,
the statements are untrue. They .
dare not attempt to look fora dedefence iu the records, for they are .
ail against them, and ; they know it.
Twaddle, twaddle is whatthey rely .
upon to deceive the people, and we .
believe they will fail in the attempt.
The Democratic nominees for the .
Logislature, are all in favor of Oasserly or Wallace for the U. 8. Senate. Mr. Williams makes this charge. .
Do they deny it?, No, they dodge .
the question, which is Sufficient evi.
dence that it is true. For gracious
title him to re-election to the United .
_ _ States Senate? Has he ever done
anything? -To sum it up briefly he
has done nothing, and is a mere cy%
they ure favorable to Wallace, we
would ask the-people if they are prepared t® vote for that class of men.
Qar readers should bear im mind
that Wallace is one of the present
Judges of the Supreme Court, who
decided that notes, solvent debts,
bonds, county serip, ete., should not
bear their proportion of taxation, or
fn other words, that men of small
means, who own a cabin, house,
stock, etc, must pay the taxes, and
the rich must go free. .“‘To him
‘that hath shall be given, and to. him
that hath not shall be taken away,
even that which he-hath,” is Seripture, and Wallace believes’ in its lits eral interpretation. Now, if the
Democratic nominees are notin fayor of one ot the other of these men,
who are they for? Do any of the
“Republican ‘nominees evade the
question? Most certainly’ they do
\ not; they. tcll the people candidly
that they are. for Booth;—Mr. Williams also charges the responsibility
of the back pay bill directly upon
the Democrars;and is—sustained in
the assertion by the record itself; and
form adopted in this county, denouncee the bill inanmeasured terms,
aud say as innocently as litle young
es ‘ lambs that they, the Democrats of
es ee Nevada county, regard it as robbery.
Now, to say the’ least, that was very
ri unkind to use such expressive language towards their own party.
While the ‘back pay steal’ was being, denounced im . such severe
a terms, we are a little ‘surprised to
think they Gd not go still further,
sud say just a word about. ‘Credit
ae
hee eae
he
or any other living man .to tell all}.
sake what has Casserly done to en.
. tules bordering the lake, till they got
pher in the halls of Congress, If .
. disturbed.
yet these Deimvcrats, in their plat-.
. town of Eureka, Nevada, have organ. Moniter.” If the reader will look
at the platform, he will fail to se
[Eimty reference to it whatever. We}
(of it, for their party: would havé .
‘thought it was crowding the mourn‘ers just a little too mugh: We shall .
. recur to ‘this subject again, and in
. tlie meantime we advise our Demo; ;
cratic friends to look” around and .
see if they can’t find a smaller hole .
to get out of to deceive the'voters. .
{
j
}
.
. No Peintatall.
es
The Democrats think they have a
by pha ing the whole blame on .
—} President Grant. Some chap told fom us whatever. The Taaxsoarrr
them, perhaps it was Dibble, that it
. would never have become a law if it
. had-not-been signed by President .
, Grant, , ‘True, alas, too'true, it Was .
signed by the President, but that
. does not help the Democracy, and
+the people will-all say; too thin, too . ask the reader to look at our position
. thin. To those who are not posted . with us to see if the charge is sustained
;and may be innocently. misled, we by our contemporaries. The Repub. would say for their benefit that had . }ican County Convention was called .
not the President signed it the.
r whole appropriation bill would have . sembled in this city on the 5th of .
. been defeated and the wheels-of gov-. August, passed certain resolutions
. ernment could not well have taken band nominated.a ticket for the Re. another furn. ‘The damage to the; publicans to support,
country would have been enormous .
\ if the President had failed to sign .
the’ bill. The back pay fellows
tacked it on the appropriation bill,
and the Président was compelled to
sign itor call an extra session of
Congress which. would have eost
more than the whole back pay which
was voted to the Democrats.
Herken welve
Anticies of consolidation of the
Southern Pacific Railroad Company
with the Southern Pacific’ Branch
Railroad bave been filed in the office of the Secretary of State. The
capital stock of the new corporation
is $9,000,000. Directors, C. P,
Huntington, D. D. Colton, Robert
Robinson, Charles Mayne, 5. -Gage, E. H, Miller, Jr., and J. L.
Willeutt.
Tue Napa Register says the grain
crop near Calistoga promises much
better than last year. The threshing is mostly done. The largest
crop has been raised by Martz Bros.
on Brannan’s ranch, who had 450
acres: It is not yet threshed, but
théy estimate a yield of 5,000 sacks,
Of those who have already threshed,
the average bas been about twenty
to twenty-five bushels per acre.
THE announcement that work has )
been restimed on the Sutro Tunnel
gives a wrong impression, as work
‘never has been suspended on the
tuimel, day or night. Three. shafts
have been shut down, but orders
have been forwarded to start them
up again. Work in tho tunnnel is
now progressing from three places.
A sHoRT time since the’ Indians at
Washoe Lake-drove the young ducks,
as yet unable to fly, through ‘the.
them into a point where they surrounded and captured three or four
. hundred, and with the spoil loaded
themselves and ponies.
Tur regatta on Lake Mert, Oakland, last Saturday, was a success.
. First race, whitehall boats, five “entries, won by Pratt and Heyman;
prize, silver’ pitcher. Second race,
three skiffs, won by Reeves; prize, a
pair of chromos. Third race, four
whitehall boats, Heyman and Pratt
winners. ! i
Tue farmers living near the Pala
Indians, in Arizona, complain of the
imsolence of the savages, They ac-;
cuse Rev. Dr. Ames.and his colleague
of creating trouble among the Pala
Indians by telling them: that they
owned the land and would not be
sil: SIDA Aa Raker sR
Au Hin & Co. are the proprietors
of a match factory on Mission street,
near Thirteenth, which the Internal
Revenue Department has seized on
the ground that. unstamped matches
-haye been sold. The seizure was
made by Collector Sedgwick. So
says the Stockton Independent,
Tux St. Paul Dispatch having informed the public that Mr.: Cosgrove
was inthe habit of cruelly beating
his children, giving dates.and details
of yells and scars, Mr. Cosgrove
thinks $5,000 is about right, and has
sued the Dispatch for that amount.
* A parry of six young ladies, of the
ized themselves into a company for
pistol practice,
*
pS
. Farncrzs of Mendicino county re. deal to gay about the’ inconsistency
s dneonsistesiey ofthe ‘Franscript.’’
The Grass Valley Union and the.
Truckee Republican have a great
ofthe. Traxscrret simply because
we are; supporting the Republican
ticket. , They talk flippantly _ on,
many points, and vainly attempt'to
Pal
make so’ many ill founded ones
against ns that we really have not.
the time‘ot space te spare to answer
them, and not only this, we believe .
the people don’t expect an answer}
i 'from us' from the very reason that that nearly 200, 008 brick mrillibe re
spews : f©®. the whole drift‘of the intentions of . quired to cotapletethe elfifice. A
good thing of the ‘“back—pay bill” sHe-sathors of such arguments, are . fine cellar, 30x40-feet~isto be dug,
too palpable _to require any notice .
has ever been consistent in support.
ing every man nominated by the Re.
publican party whether the: particulur -men nominated suited us per-}
sonally or not. The charge.of in-.
consistency is very shallow. -We
together by its chairman, and as3
A contest
was made whether resolutions should.
be adopted endorsing Booth for U.
S. Senator or not. We were’ opposed to such resolutions. The
convention thought best to pass
them. The Transcrrpt.had always
been a Republican paper, and had
dlways hoisted the ticket. Should.
we bult, and support and’ vote the,
to the Grass Valley Union and
Trackee Republican that we had
come up to their standard of consistency?:, That is just what we should
have done in order-to appear consist.
ent in their eyes. The Democrats
had their ticket in the field and the
Republicans theirs, and here was
the situation for party men to decide which flag to rally around. For
our part we did not consider the
question a second, but placed ourselves in the rankawheré' we belonged, and determined to doas we
had done in the past, give our unqualified support to the party whose
principles we believe to be right and
had advocated from their, inception:
until the present time. If this is inconsistency then we plead guilty to
the charge.
—_* His Scalp is Safe.
The Democracy sent-a reporter after our. candidate for Senator, for
the purpose of taking notes of his
speech in order to scalp him. Up to
the present time the ‘‘aforesaid
notes” taken at French Corral and
North San Juan have proved valueless to the Democracy, for the reason that Williams did not utter a
word against them that he could
not prove in’ “black and white,” andtherefore our candidate for Senator
may consider his scalp safe.
One of the Democratic leaders
informed a Democrat aday or two
since, in’ angwerto a question why
nothing was said abont_‘‘Credit Mobilier’’ in the platform, that “we
forgot all about it.” That reply is
what we should call a ‘‘good joke.’’
—
Tux Lota news boys, like those
of some other cities, have a way of
crying some extraordinary news ata
a late hour of the night, thus selling
their papers at an advanced. price.
One . young fellow was recently
arrested for selling penny papers for
three pence by crying‘ ‘The sudden
death of Mr. Gladstone. The dying
words of Mr. Gladstonet*—The
magistrate declures that it was time
that one of these transgressors was
made'an example of, and sent the
youth to prison. *
A New Onueans. girl, while at
church, recently, felt something run‘ning up.her leg, and clutching her
the intruder ,and held .it fast all
her home she gave a hurried account
an investigation disclosed a-rat; full
grown, but quite dead from the grip
the young lady had given him.
Some negro boys found some gold
coins in the nrad of the river at Murfreesboro, recently, and the whole
town has been diving there ever
since. Over $30 has been found, besides a fine gold ring, several gold
buttons, and some other ariicles of
jewelry. ; are!
Oe
, port a good yield of wheat.
« Tot Humboldt river is crowded
‘and-is to have a” brick and-tin roof.
Democratic ticket in order to prove . ®
, ~ 826
dress just above the knee, caught}
through the service. On -reaching . .
of the adventure’and fainted, when .
& Fire Proof Building. .
Messrs. Ziegenbein & Lohse, have
made arrangements to put up a fine
brick building at Wheatland, thoroughly fireproof. \The size of thé
building is to be 51x80, is to be supplied with fron doors-and. shatters,
The building is-to~ be divided-inte
two compartments, 20x80 and 30x80
for warehouse and store. The brick
is being burnt at W heatland by Siim.
wan & Betz, and it is “estimated.
‘
4
i
and the building, when comp'eted .
will be A> finished piece~of work in
every respect, The Masonic fraternity of Wheatland talk of putting.on
an additional story, to. be used by
them for a Lodge room. “This will .
be commencement -towards the demolition of many of the old women .
shells which disgrace.the town.
sot i a t
Speaker’s Stand. et
A-speaker’s stand is being erected
on Brord street, in front of Green-.
wald’s{cigar store, in this city, to be
used by both politi¢al parties, during the present campaign.
PortLanp, Maine, liquor dealers
have paid $8,000 in fines since last
April.
Amuoxe the English lecturers announced for next season, is Gerald
Massey, the poet.
Woopcuorpers report grouse without end around about Marlette Lake.
t@
Grances are having a run. among
Massachusetts farmers.
No. 502.
Application for a Patent toa
Mining Claim, .
United States Land Office, .
Sacramento, Cal. August 21, 1873.)
Y OTICE is hereby given, That Frederiek
Heydliff and Daniel E. Bush, whose
Postoftice is Dutch Flat, Placer county, Cal,
have made application for patent for the
Washington Placer Mine,situate in You Bet
Mining District, Nevada county, California, and described in the plat and fleld notes
in this office as follows, viz: Commencing
at the West corner of the claim at a stake
marked. W. C, {Washington claim] on line
of the Neece and West.and Brown’s Hill and
Brown Brothers Placer elaims and run var.
18° E. 8 23 1-29 £7.75 chains: on line of
the Neece and West and Brown’s Hill, to a
point in Reservoir, being a corner of the}
Brown’s Hill and Neece and West claim :
thence, var. 18> E § 36 1-29 E 10,79-chains
on line of the Neece and West claim to a
Black Oak, marked B.C, No. 31]: thence
var 18° E,; 8. 493-497 E.6. 85 chains to a
stake marked W. C. from. which a Pitch
Pine, 18 inches diameter bears N 17° 15° E.
39 links distant, var. 18° E. N. 471-4? EK.
18.20 chains to a stake on North side of wagFlat from which a spruce, 15 inches diameter bears N 17°_ E12 links distant, and the
corner common to Sections 31 and 32, Township 16 North, Range 10 Fast. pears N. 55°
85’. E. 11-45 chains distant, var.18> E. N.
441-4 W. 4.00 chains to centre-of wagon
road, 7.84 chains to stake marked W. ©,
from which anoak 6 inchef diameter bears
N 8° 15’ W17 links distant : thence var.
18° E., N, 643-4 W 2.15 chains to Post No.
11 of the Brown Brothers Placer Mine ;
thence, var. 18>: E., N 58> 02’ W 3 04 chs.
to port No 10 of the Brown Brothers claim.
thence var. 18> E., N 44° 33’ W, 2.88chains
to post No 9, Brown Brothers claim var 18?
E., N 329 52’ W1.74 chains to post No. 8 of
Brown Brothers claim; thencs var. 18° E,
. N 544° E 1.46 chains to Post No 7 of Brown
Brothers claim;thence var 18> E.8 704°
W.16,18 chains to. the place of nning,
and containing 37 94-100-actesand Being-«
ortion of the lots6, 9 and 10, Sec 6, T 15,.N.10EandS ¥ ofSE \ of Section 3], Tp.
26 North, Range 10 East, Mt Diablo Baseind
Meridian. Said-tocation was made prior to
tl e year 1860, and has been owned and
ed by these applicants for eight years t
past. Adjoining claimsnts. are Giles SBrown on the North nd East, and George
D. McLane owner of the Neece and West and
Brown's Hill Placer Mine on the West.
All persons holding any adverse claim
thereto are hereby required to present the
. same before this office within sixty days
from the first day of publishing hereof:T. B. McFARLAND, Register.
Assessment Notice.
ORTH BLOOMFIELD GRAVEL MINING COMPANY. Location of principal piage of business;San Francisco, California. Location éf works, North Bloomfield,
Nevada County, California—Notice is ‘hereby given that at a meeting of the Directors
held on the twenty-second day of Augusr,
1873, an assessment (Number Twenty-se
eu,) of One, Dollar —($1)-—-per sh
Jevied upon the capital atock of sai
pany, payable immediately
States gold coin, to tle Becretary at the
office the company,
San Francisco, Califo
Any stock upon which said assessment
shall remain unpaid on Friday, the 26th
day of September,1873, shall be deemed delinquent, and will be duly advertised for
ment shall be made before, will be sold
on Tuesday, October i4th, 1873, to pay the
delingnent assessment, together with cost
of advertising and expenses of sale,
Ly order of the Board of Trustees.
_ _ ‘THOMAS DERBY, Secretary
Office —No. 320 Sansome Street,San Fi ancisco, California. : a26
. PIANO FOR SALE.
NE Seven Octave Upright Piano
sale. Price, $150.
aud Music store of
for
Enquire at Book
GEO. W. WELCH.
Nevada, August 21, 1873.
PRESS MAKING.
e
Children’s Clothing of all Kinds.
&
MRS. SHEA
ESPECTFULLY ANNOUNCES fo the
ladies of Nevada City and vicinity
that she is now prepared to fill all orders
for ladies Gtesses. Dresses cut and made
in the best.and most fashionable styles
and at the lowest prices. ’
Dress patterns of all kinds for sale.
’
with ducka and snipe.
Mrs. Shea can be found at reoms
{ National Exchange Hotel, a
i;chandise, Furniture,
on road, leading from--¥ou—Bet-to-Duteh . HH, Haight,_ iE
ork. .
ssle at public auction, and. unless pay-4
COMMERCIAL
INSURANCE COMPANY
“ Of California. —
FFICE IN SAN FRANCISCO, NO, 228
: 3 1 ‘ ( ce 4
California Street.
Tallant’% New Bank Bailding, N. E. er
Califerni#’ and ‘attery Sts.
PATD UP CAPITAL, $200,000
This Company issues Policies against
loss ér damage by Fir¢ on Buildings, MerVessels in Port,
Leases, Rents end other insurable property, and against-the~perils of Inland and
i navigation.
same
y_C. W. KELLOGG, President.
H.G. HORNER, Secretary.
DIRECTORS.
__W. W. Dodge, uf W. W. Dodge & Co. Merchants.
. &. BLUMENTHAL,
Business Change
GREAT
‘BARGAINS!
\
we
Claus. Spreckels, President Califotnja
Sugar Refinery. e ————
_ Selden §. Wright, late Judge of Probate
Ceurt. v :
W. A. Cummings, of W. B. Cummings
& Co., Merchants. a
C.F. MacDermot, Capitalist. — 5
‘James M. Barney, of W. B. Hooper & Co,
Merchants.
Cc.” W. Kellogg,
Merchants. —
A. W. Jee, Capitalist.
Poter Dean, Capitalist.
John H: Wise, of Christy &. Wise, Merchants.
Cc. ‘J. Deering, of Deering & Co., Merchants. 4
Levy Stevens, Banker.
dames Gamble, Superintendent Western
Union Telegraph Company.
Wilmerding & Kellogg,
chants,
Charles Main, of Main & Winchester,
Merchants. :
W. B, Hoeper,‘of W. B. Hooper & Co.
Merchants.
G. L. Bradley, of Bradley & Cockrill,
Merchants. : ‘
James Phelan, Capitalist.
SACRAMENTO,
H.8. Crocker, of H. S. Croeker &
Merchants.
N D. Thayer, Capitalist. ©
F. S. Freeman. of Woodlacd, Merchant.
D. H. Haskell, C. P. R. R. .
The Commercial Insurance Company has
no cennection with combinations; its business ‘is transacted at the lowest paying
rates of premium;.each hazard is judged
by its own merits, and treated without
reference to arbitrary rules or vexatious
regulations. :
Co.,
WM. H. DAVIDSON.
a23 Agent for Nevada City.
THE STATE INVESTMENT
. an Soe
INSURANCE" COMPANY
FIRE AND ‘MARINE,
_——_——
RINCIPAL OFFICE, 409 CALIFORNIA
STREET, ~
SAN FRANCISCO.
OFFICERS .:
Peter Donahue, President.
A. d. Bryant, Vice President.
Chas. H. Cushing. Secretary.
BOARD OF DIRECTORS, —
Peter Donahue”
E. W. Corbert,
Geo. O’McMullin,
Jobn J. Marks,
Frank M. Pixley,
ryant,
C.D. O'Sullivan,
John H. Saunders.,
Jghn Middleton,
A.B Rutherford, E. Burke,
H. W. Beale, J.W. Nye
Alexander Austin, W. A. Piper,
M. Mayblum, Richard Ivers,
‘Hugh Whittell, ‘Thos. J Owens.
John Rosenfeld.
P. H. Kussell, Sacramento.
Angeles.
The State Investment Comnany has no
connection with Insurance Co avinations;
its business is transa.te :at tac low est paying! rates of premium; each hazard is
judged by -its own merits, anil treated
without reference to arvitrary rates ‘or
vexvtious regulations.
i E. W. BIGELOW & CO,,
a22 Agents for Nevada.City.
.
GRAND
RALLY.
L. W. WILLIAMS, ~~
. _ REPUBLICAN
: A
7 ATWATER,
3B. D.BOkR SY OTT
oO
“Se <
a
i
__AND OTHERS,
aN.
. times and places ; “4
Friday Evening, Aug. 29th.
“GRASS VALLEY,
. Saturday Evening, August 30th.
E YOU BET,
Monday Evening, September 1st.
«NEVADA, :
Tuesday Evening, Sept. 2nd.
the issues of the campaign discussed
By order Conaty Central Co.nmittee.
. G. BELL, Chairman.
Dan. E. BeLz, Becretury, ala
E. T. Gile, of Gile, Hayes & Co., Mer. —
Cash Assets, $300,000N
Jno. @. Downey, F. P. KF, Temple, Los
A ib
: H. L. HATCH,
. M. M. WHEELER, .
; 840 Sanvome St.,/ i
FRANK! POWER,
Will address the citizens of Nevada County at the following,
Local Committees are nested to make
rrangements for the above meetings. ".
Everybody is invited to attend and hear
BY oe inform the pss.
y ple of Nevada City and vicinity ret
he has purchased the Stock of
Dry & Fancy Gocds
IN THE STORE,
ON THE
F ara
Corner of Broad and Pine Sts,
NEVADA CITY,At a Low Figure !
And now offers.every article in store at
LOWER RATES
Than they can be bought
any where else in this coun.
ty or State.
oe
_ The stockconsists in part
of :
Dress Goods !«.
Of every kind and quality, such as
Silks of. different kinds, Irish and
French Poplins, Grenadines, Alpaccas, Meringg, Calicos and a great
many other kinds too numerous too
——mention; to-which I invite, the ee
pecial attention of-the Ladies. ©
Ba)
HOUSE . FURNISHING
GOODS!
In this line will be found every srticle necessary for use in a family,
such a3 Blankets, Towels, Napkins, x
Sheetings and many other things
which purchasers need for comfort
and convenience. ai gs
v
i
ae
Fancy Goods ! ”
I have on hand a splendid stock o!
Goods in this: line which embraces
so. many articles that:it is impossible
to attempt to enumerate them; bat
1 T invite the Ladies to call and 9
i this class of goods.
=f &
~
waririre z ~The stock in this line is large am
Wednesday Evening, Aug, 27th.’ well selected and embraces ae
a0 ae. = ‘everything that the ladies desire”
. * ROUGH @ READY . DPR
———
All of these Goods are, first cat
‘and I intend to give the ladies 9
good if not better bargains in the
Dry and Faney Goods line than they
can get at any other establishment
this State. ae
*
A. BLUMENTHAL.
. Nevada, Aug. 22, 1973.
Owil
has re
and fre
gCRIPT
* eourse
‘able t
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hold ¢
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the ]
on tk
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ing t
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the 1
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ning
had
lives
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wor
-tun:
cap
mir
ing
the:
feet
Su
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tow
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aw
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