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Collection: Newspapers > Daily Transcript, The

July 31, 1885 (4 pages)

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rie Ns E=..29 De ER IST, clock a d in the st_ horse, se $600; e for all, rse $360; lions Ownorse $75; T. 2D. ike.. Free oo added; mile and ine stake 10 forfeit; 50. Dash ake. Free ,00 added; f one and . M. lds owned rse $180; irse $600. 75. T. 3D.. JF WAR, ict, purses or District 50; second yen to Vanrse $1,000; 31.50; fourth stake. For ights. $10 r cent.; secrth 10 per » 4TH. Free for ded; second nd repeat.: e Railroad $10 forfeit, 550. ‘Three. take. Free 200 added; id 14 miles. urse $800; 100. r. OSH. ock A. M. take. For trance; $10 nd repeat. Purse $600; / (St. Julien $600; second -five, except the er and three to s.a number than unt of* purse.— ymination.-_— . the Board re lately, if neces e between heats. o the entrance of starters, ap divided as fole day preceding or in one inter ed by 6 P. M.0 or a walk-over. inning races, &X caps; of distingt the Secretary 02 must-have heen when spe! r 12 years 25 cts. . years free. vill be furnished vada City, whic ion at all timeé TH, President. Nevada City: la City, Cal. * _ Exchange. . ing. Monday. ~~ The Daily Transcript 18 ‘PUBLISHED Daily, Mondays Excepted. TERMS: POSTOFFICE DIRECTORY. Arrival and departure of the mails from the Nevada City ,Postoffice until further notice: td CLOSES ARRIVES Bastern... se orecs 1,05 pM. 9: 57a, M. Weestb.s00r .csces.cceee 1:05 P Mm, 5:03 Western e , & Sac.) 5:20 a. 57 Grass Valley ..... 1:05 P. 703 P. Grass Valley ..... 5:20. 35) Colfax. rece sssce-. 5:20 A. 203 Sierra City, via N. San Juan, Camptonville and Downieville, daily (except Sun* asedece BPs See © ~~ Spb KeEKE a 5:40 P. M field, Moore’s flat and, Graniteville, daily, (Sunday exMow 4 ee Picecwenane Washington oga, 3, Thursday sand SatTFOR YS i 55055 ch 6:0) a.m. 11:00 a. M. WALLACE J. WILLIAMS, .P. M. Tue Standard Shoe Co, now have James Kenney in their employ. Mr. Kenney is an old resident and.is acknowledged by al to be the best workman on_ boots and shoes in Nevada City. As heretofore, he will do all kinds of custom work and repairing at the most reasonable prices. j19-tf Mrs. Dr. R. M. Hunr has so far recovered from her serious illness as to be able yesterday to leave for Sacramento. She will remitin there a few days and then proceed to Harbin Springs, Lake county. She was accompanied by her daughter, Mrs, Add C. Hinckson, of Sacramento. >_< Miss Jostz Downrina, who has for a nttmber of years been engaged in the dressmaking business at Virginia City, is here on a visit to her parents, J. H. Downing and wife. She is accompanied by-her sister’s daughter, Miss Victoria Godfrey. ‘ _ ee Hon. A. Warrata, C. H. Crosby, F. Duplay and E. Grand went to San Francisco yesterday. They will return Sunday. Mr. Grand expects to leave next Tuesday for Paris, France, to return in November with his family. Hieu Mass will be celebrated in St. Canice Catholic Church at half past ten o’clock Sunday morning. There will be fine. musical exer‘cises by the choir under Prof. Muller’s direction: eoGENUINE Pebble goat button shoes, worked button holes, child’s sizes 3 to 714, $1.25; size 8 to 1014, $1.50; sizes 11 to 2, $2.00; ladies’; $2.50. Tue Sranparp SHor Co. Eugene Greaor¥, the Sacramento fruit ’and commission deal. er, is here making arrangements to pack and ship east theearly pear crop of this county. —_>C. C. Duman and Mr. Hedges, of Yuba county, who have been rusticating in the upper country, were in town yesterday on their way below. >< Wm. Toaspern, late from Steinway & Son’s, well and favorably known as a piano tuner, is in town. Please leave orders at National o_o Tue mill on the Gov. Morton mine, Washington township, this county, is completed, and crushing will commence on Saturday or Mon day next. Mrs. Ww. B. Paippy left yester_ day for Oakland, where she will remain several weeks visiting relatives and friends. —_Ss ALBzRT MA.trMAN leaves soon for Sierra City where he has secured a remunerative position in one of the mines. Mrs. Ipa Crievenann, of San ~ ° ® -?. Francisco,is on a visit to her mother, Madame Massie of this city. A Success. One of the most charming entertainments ever given here by amateur talent was the musical and literary performance that took place at the Thiéatre Wednesday night under the manage ent of the choir of the Methodist Church. The stage was beautifully decorated with flowers. Every feature of the programme was most excellently rendered, and there was a _ very large audience present to enjoy the splendid singing and speak————__ ome Gold Slide Drift Mine. Messrs. Way and Williams, who are about to prospect the Gold . Slide gravel claim near the Central House, have their buildings and wagon roads-new completed, and will start the tunnel next e ~>What a Pity — That the otherwise beautiful girl shguld have such bad'teeth. And because she did not use SOZODONT. It costs go little to buy it considering tae good it does, and its. benefits ‘stretch outinto her future life. Poor girl! . je23-5w = ~j2elw. 3 UP THEY.GO. -An Effective Method of Removing Powder Houses. Yesterday morning at twentyfive minutes of five o’clock the city was shaken from center to . circumference by a powder explosion followedin a minute or twof by a second and louder report. People sprang from their beds in alarm, and those who looked to the northeastern part of town saw white clouds of smoke rise upward and ride off on the wings of the wind. Hundreds hastened in that direction and found upon arrival at the junction of the Willow Valley and Washington Ridge roads, a quarter of a mile from the Courthouse and just outside the corpo.rate limits, that the first explosion had been caused by the blowing up of the Safety Nitro Company’s powder house built--a few weeks ago, and the second by the -demolishment of;the powder house of Legg & Shaw which has_ stood in the same vicinity, being about 30 feet from the others, for @ quarter of a century or more. The buildings, which were of brick and had heavy iron doors, were totally demolished. The site of Legg. & Shaw’s house, which was about 10 feet square, was swept clean, the debris being hurled fifty feet or so away, while the Safety Nitro Company’s, which was about 14 feet square, was.as effectually destroyed, but not. distributed over so large a scope of country. Heavy planks used in the construction of the latter were hurled into the air 50 or 75 feet and shivered into kindling wood, while pieces of brick and stone as big as marbles were carried from both buildings for a distance of 150 yards or so and rained down on surrounding dwellings. A brick from Legg & Shaw’s was thrown through a window of L. A. Jewett’s dwelling house, 125 feet distant. During the night-the buildings had been broken open and their contents removed: into a ravine 300 feet tothe west where they were placed behind a large rock. The Safety Company are estimated to‘have had on hand about 800 pounds of powder, while -_Legg & Shaw may have had from 1,200 to.1,500 pounds in theirs, Those pusted on the effect of explosives say there was about five pounds of giant powder used in the destruction of each building, whilesome think more or less black powder was also used in Legg & Shaw’s. = The loss ta the Safety Company is not far from $225, while Legg & Shaw’s building ‘was worth between $50 and-$75. The explosions emphatically shook up the part of town in which they occurred, although no damage, outside of what was intended, was done. There is no clue as to who committed the act. About an hour and a half before the explosions two men on horseback rode rapidly along Nevada street in the direction of the powder houses, and residentsof the neighborhood strongly suspect that the mysterious horsemen know more about the affair than anyone else, When the Safety Nitro—CompaEUREKA TOWNSHIP. Partial Review of the Mines in the Far North of Nevada County. Eprror Transcripr.—In my last letter I promised a review of the quartz mines of Eureka township. Near Moore’s Flat, Mr. Buck has been opening up a fine vein of rich rock, and parties versed in such matters pronounce it a valuable mine. In the near future there will no doubt be a~ mill on the ground. *‘ Hathaway & Davis are also prospecting in that vicinity and meeting with encourage ment. Mr. Coppers and partner are taking out some rich rock, keeping up.expenses of development by running @ small hand mortar. Next in order is the Santa Annita mine which has a mill on it, butis not running at-present..The owners intend to resume operations soon. Close by isthe Spanish— mine which has two Huntington mills. Here ig found.a peculiar formation, but it pays well. In this immediate vicinity is the “Old . Grizzly” mine, . formerly owned by an eastern company, but badly managed. The machinery was taken off and the mine abandoned. After lying idle many years, parties from San Francisco are about to reopen it and do what should have been done in the first place by the original. ‘owners, to wit, sink down on the pay chute and give it a fair trial. Iam now coming to a mine (the Republic) that is deserving of a lengthy description. A few years ago it was sold by Mr. Snapp to Messrs. Meek, Dyer, Hinnkley & Co., wealthy residents of Alaameda county. These gentlemen put up a first-class twenty stamp mill on the mine, running by water power. After three or four short runs (the rock paying about three dollars per ton on an average), they became completely discouraged and shut down. Almost the entire hill is,one mass of easily worked quartz’ containing free gold. ‘The claim has splendid water power and every facility for mining and milling rock at a few cents per ton. After paying out $75,000—for-mine,;—-mill—and~improvements, then testing a few hundred tons of rock which did not come up. to their over-sanguine expectations, these gentlemen pull up stakes, damning the men that sold asa ‘‘salter’’ and cursing things and men _ promiscuoulsy. This is not the way” business is done on fine farms in Alameda county nor in sugar refineries. In my humble opinion, justice has not been done in this case to the mine and to the district. Time will prove that Iam ‘correct. Adjoining the Republic mine is the National. Good rock was taken out over twenty years ago. John Young milled some of it and he told me it paid $11 a ton. Both the Republic and the National are lying idle, covered by U.S. patents. J. H. Dumped Out. Wednesday evening Hy di NEVADA THEATRE. The Next and Grandest Dramatic A ttraction. The appearance of the. Baldwin Theatre Company at this city next Tuesday and Wednesday evenings, is looked forward to by our people with the greatest satisfaction. This talented company is now out on a grand starring tour. They went to Portland, Oregon, and Victoria, British Columbia, taking the Northern Pacific Railroad to. Helena, Montana, Butte City, next to appear at Salt Lake and then back over the Central Pacific, stopping at the time specified, and get back to San Francisco in time to reopen at the Bald-win Theatre week after next. This play, which is to be given here ran for six weeks to crowded houses at the Baldwin, and the San Francisco Chronicle said of it: The “Sh adows ofa Great City’’ is-one of the best melodramas ever presented in this city. Unlike many which we have seen, this play is an American play, and American in everything. The special scenic effects are exact representations of scenes around New York, and that in the second act is magnificent. The escape of Jim Farren and Tom Cooper from Blackwell’s Island in a boat, which remains motionless on the stage while the panorama representing the shores of East river moves across produces a most perfect. illustration. The characters are types of every day life in almost any city, and the plotisa pleasant departure from the monotonous stories worn threadbare from representation in the English melodrama. The best features of the play are undoubtedly the abundance of incidents and the number of different characters, and the interest of the auditors was kept up throughout. The characters are not unnatural, but human beings with good and-bad traits. The incidents are not improbable or strained, and it is these facts that stamp the author as a master of his business. Lewis Morrison as the hero, Tom Cooper, was excellent, natural and impressive in his acting, and gave great: strength to the part and play. George Osbourne, a genuine artist, gave another great impersonation, that of a Jewish pawnbroker, to the other series of great characterizations that have added to his fame as an artist. L. R. Stockwell as Jim Farren, the New York sneak thief, gives us a real gem in impersonation, to which his personal appearance and his talent alike contribute, and cannot be equaled. An Ignoble Thing. The anti-mining spies contend that they are engaged in an honorable and respectable business. We say that no high-minded man would stoop to such an occupation at any price. When men do accept such positions they have
reached the bed-rock of infamy and degredation. Itis vastly different from being an officer of a court deputed to see that the laws are enforced. Webster’s definiWO Se eye 7 1H LEAVEN WORKS. The Sliotgun Missionary of the Appeal Winces. The Marysville Appeal is fright. ened now that the miners have become tired of the contaminating presence in their midst ofa lot of drunken loafers and hoodlums who represent the anti-mining ring. In Wednesday’s issue it says: ‘‘We are creditably, informed that an organization under the name of ‘1001’ was formed in Nevada county some time since for the purpose of ridding the county of the watchmen sent there by the Anti-Debris Association to see if the mines that had been enjoined continued working. For some reason this organization was abandoned. On Saturday last a meeting was held for the purpose of organizing a similar society with the purpose of enacting more stringent measures to attain their object. The watchmen, or ‘spies,’ as the miners call them, have been repeatedly warned, both by bands of men and by anonymous letters, to leave the country or suffer death. Cutthroats and ex-State prison convicts have been employed to dog the steps of the watchmen, evidently for the purpose of intimidating and driving them away, if ior nothing worse. C.C. Duhain, ex-Supervisor of this county, was at one time employed by the miners to ‘watch’ our watchmen, but being confronted by a determined watchman in a determined way, and informed that he must dog the watchman’s footsteps no more, concluded some other employment would be more conducive to his health and happiness, and he quit. No one directly interested in the mines has, so far as known, made any threats, but the supposition is that they are either directly or indirectly the instigators.’’ oo A New Nursery. 8. J. Segerstrand, a native of Sweden, has bought a place of 80 acres, on the Smartsville and Grass Valley road, near the summit of Pet Hill. He intends laying outa nursery. He is a graduate of the University-of Siebich, Germany. His services were secured by the Excelsior Water Company-to set out 15,000 fruit trees upon the Foreman ranch, in which he has shown himself a complete master of the science of horticulture. Ho is also a florist the vicinity will have a chance to beautify their homes. He has also had a.long experience in laying out gardens after the most approved designs. : Card of Thanks. The Choir of the Methodist Church desire to express their thanks to all those who assisted them in various ways to make Wednesday evening’s entertainment a success. They feel especially thankful to the members of Goyne’s Band for the splendid instrumental music furnished. 1t pany began making preparations afew weeks ago to build their magazine, they were requested by property owners in that section to desist. They paid no attention to this, and their agent was ‘served with a numerously signed written protest. ~Still the construction of the building progressed. On the 13th instant, at the request of many citizens, the County Supervisors enacted an ordinance to regulate the keeping and storing of explosives in. thé county, and especially calculated to reach the cases of this city. Later a second ordinance permitting 500 pounds to be kept on hand anywhere was passed, the latter being received with marked disfavor in most quarters. “In spite of these unmistakable demonstrations of publie-sentiment on the subject, the Safety Company a few days ago stored a quantity of the powder in the building, and had more at the railroad depot—which they purposed putting there. The impression ‘prevailed ‘generally on the part of the people that the rpowder house owners proposed to not move until compelled to do so There ig but one sentiment ex. pressed by our citizens as to the blowing up’of the buildings, and that is in the shape of -a hearty appr oval. >. Party Profits. The committee that had in charge the giving of the moonlight ball at-Glenbrook-Park, yesterday turned into the District ‘Fair fund thé sum of $174.50, which represents the net proceed of the party. : o> -Cutin’s Kip riveted. lace shoes, sizes 6 to 104g, $1 20; Youths’ Same, sizes 11 to 2, -$1 50; Boys’ sizes 246 to 51¢,$1 75. Standard Shoe Co. jull-tf Wright, the irresistible insurance agent and accomplished horseman, and the Transcript editor took a ride to Glenbrook Park in one of those new-fangled twowheeled arrangements commonly known as a dog cart. They were riding leisurely along the mile track, in front of the stables, when the bolt that kept the body of the cart where itshould be worked out of its place and the concern kicked up in front. The riders were unceremoniously pitched out behind, landing upon their heads and shoulders. The box kept its upright position, the dashboard reaching heavenward and the rear end scraping the ground, while the horse ran along the track to the main entrance tothe Park, ‘then scooted out into the woods between there and the railroad. among the trees awhile, the steed settled down into a walk and permitted a gentleman to step up and capture it. The only damage done to the outfit was the scraping of the varnish from the hind part of the cart where it dragged along the ground. Probate Matters. M. W. Church, deceased. August 3d fixed as time to: hear petition for order of sale of personal property. Anthoni Thorsen, deceased. August 3d fixed as time to hear return of sale of real estate. John Hooper, deceased. Decree made showing that legal notice to.creditors has been given, Lost. At the moonlight dance, a silver dagger pin, set with three Rhine stones. Finder will be paid a suitable reward. by leaving at Wells, Fargo & Co.’s express office, this city. _ jy3l-lw © After dashing around furiously . tion of the word “‘spy” applies well in this case: “A person sent into an enemy’s camp to inspect their works, ascertain their strength and their intentions, to watch their movements and secretly communicate intelligence to the. proper officer. By the laws of war among all civilized nations, a spy is subjected to capital punishment.” We are_not in favor.of hanging or shooting any of the sneaks sent into the mountains by the anti-miners, because_ammunpition and rope are too valuable to waste upon them. A coat of tar and feathers gently administered is what would fill the requirements of the occasion. If the miners have any ‘‘sand’’ they will try the prescription. A Burglar Alarmed. Wednesday morning between one and two o’clock a man sneaked into the front gate at the residence of Joseph Dean on Main street, and--wasmaking his-waytoward the side porch when Mrs. Dean chanced to look out of an open window up stairs and discovered him. “Bring your revolver, quick, Mr. Dean,’’ she called to her husband in an undertone. The burglar heard her words and ran away at the top of his fore Mr. Dean got to the window ‘the weaving of carpets, and is prepared to do all kinds of weaving on short notice and in the best manner. Orders left at Gray’s blacksmithshop on Main street, near the bridge, will receive prompt attention. jyf9-1m Mrs. Latour, healing medium and fortune téller,is at the National “Hotel for afew-days. .j27-4t speed. He was dut of sight be. Notice. —_ All indebted-to—me-—for daily papers are requested to make payment by first of August next. No excuses necessary. Printers must have ink. , , j31-3t J.J. Meacham. Tue ship John De Costa, with a cargo of valuable horses. for California, has been wrecked on the Australian coast. ARRIVALS AT THE HOTELS. NEVADA CITY. UNION HOTEL, Rector Bros.... PROPRIETORS. July 29, 1885. Wm. Hale, Omega, Mrs. Mitchell, Washington, 8. Chase, Omega, S. Kine, San-Francisco: K. Wright, and w, Sacramento, Emil Buckol, do J. B. DeLonge, do Wm. Wilkins, do Eugene Gregory, do T.-G. Robinson, do Jno. S. Palmer, San Francisco, O. T. Williams, do H. W. Brown, do gE. W. Roberts, do G. Kohler do J. P. Welmer, do L. Jones, do A. F. Merten, do C. 8. Cristy, Michigan, Chas. Scheurman, N. San Juan, Miss Kidder, do Miss Mamie Cowden, do T. P. Blue, You Bet, W. O’Brien, Soda Springs. with his gun. ESE NATIONAL HOTEL. Carpet WT seving: S. A. Eppy.... ..PHOPRIETOR Mrs. John Gray has resumed . July 29, 1885. Mrs. J. McBean, Washington, W. H. Brandon, Omega, J. 8. Mitchell, and wile, S. F., Dr. Harris, city, A. L. Woodruff, Col. Hill, Miss Woodruff, do M. Calanon, do Miss Brown, Camptonville, J. Dumphy, do Mrs, C.-L. Chase, Los Angeles, Wm. Cross; Dry Creek, i Mrs. H. Sheriff, San Francisco. W. Fredenburr, Blue Bell mine. ~ and is-going to raise rare orchids . and flowers so that the people of . ! A Dangerous HP Performance. The Tidings of Wednesday says: Last night Thomas McDermott, one of the men who runs the engine at the North Star mine, met with an accident that will only lay him upfor a few days, but it was at the same ‘time a fortunate escape. A-valvein the cylinder of the air compressor had got clogged or out of order, and. McDermott, with the usual process of a crowbar, attempted to adjust matters. There was no one in the hoisting works to assist him and he therefore. turned on. enough steamto turn the wheel, when suddenly the machinery moved, catching the bar and _ breaking it, and throwing McDermott across the room, ‘and knocking him insensible for a while. The piece of broken bar .struck the engineer across.the breast, inflicting a painful wound, and it is thought that two ribs near the breast bone are broken. Grant Monument Fund. The executive committee of the Western Union Telegraph Company at a meeting held yesterday resolved to subscribe to the Grant Monument Fund the sum.of $5,000. Thé managers of the various offi¢es throughout the country have also been notified to receive donations from the public to said fund, giving receipts in every instance. A. Nivens, of the office at this city, will. therefore have a subscription open at his office, and any contributions entrusted fo him will be properly forwarded. ~~. oe * A Brave Boy. Monday while several lads were engaged in playing at the Reuben Thomas reservoir at Grass Valley, a four-year-old son of Joseph Snyder accidentally fell into the water and came near being drowned. The little fellow had sunk twice, and was making an heroic struggle to keep himself above water; when Charley Clawson, another lad, plunged in, clothes, boots and all, and at the risk of his own life saved the drowning lad. Physicians and Druggists Recommend It. This medicine, combining Iron with pure vegetable tonics, quickly and completely Cures Dyspepsia, indigestion, Weakness, Impure Blood, Malaria, Chills and Fevers, and Neuralgia. It is an unfailing remedy for Diseases of the Kidneys and Liver. It is invaluable for Diseases peculiar to Women, andall who leai sedentary lives. It does not injure the teeth, cause headache, nr produce constipation—orHER IRON MEDICINES DO. It enriches and purifies the blood, stimulates the appetite, aids the assimilation of good relieves Heartburn and Belching, and ‘strengthens the inuscles and nerves. For Intermittent Fevers, Lassitude, Lack of Energy, &c., it has no equal. 4&@ The genuine has above trade mark and crossed red lines on wrapper. Take no other. Made only by Brown Chemical Co., Baltimore, Md The Boauty of Youth. No matter how handsome or stalwart a young man may be otherwise, nothing can make up for a partially bald head. Shining talents are attractive, but a shining poll is not. The cause may be sickness or anything else, yet Parker’s Hair Balsam will stop the loss of the hair and start a new growth of glossy and soft hair so quickly as to surprise you —restoring the original color at the same time. Not a dye, not oily, delicately perfumed. Only standard 50c. dressing. >< Now is Your Chance. You can buy ONE. DOLLAR’S worth of goods for 50 Cents at the Assignee’s Sale of ‘L. Hyman’s Clothing and Dry Goods Stores. tf Dr. Penninaton’s dental office is on Commercial street. m24-1m WHERE stores known as the Clothing, fice. it will be observ : or instance, as clumsily trimmed, fully a cent per knowing fil we <Ort ~~ este’’ at the same time the cheapest Ham in the market. 2 (0@F Ask your grocer for them, and see that each-Ham-bears the ‘(OUR TASTE” ~ HALL, LUHRS & CO., PROPRIETORS. Advertising Style. LA The above-is_a true illustration-of American-ingenuity.—The fellow, inly exhibi ‘thorough knowledge of a distinction between first and second grade goods, and how to handle them, for that he offers, at almost any price, articles without: any particular. reputation, ‘such, cheaply cured, common stock. grades of Hams, similar in quality to brands ordinarily pushed on to the market,.and which can be purchased at Eastern packing 3 und less than the “OUR TASTE” the price of which he.holds firm and fairly high, I that the people appreciate something delicate and nice, and are willing to pay for it. Owing to the fact that the “OUR TASTE” HAMS are of a-cure vastly superior to that of other brands, and much more closely trimmed, the price is necessarily a trifle higher. ties that render them a shade more expensive, and tS — We ops an — THE WORLD MOVES. An Enterprising Restaurant Keeper Adopts the Dry Goods and Grocery Store ‘whoever he is, certainly exhibits a place them so far ahead of other brands, make . Piakd Tuning, Mr. J. E. Finlayson, the only authorised tuner from Matthias Gray, 206 Post street, San Francisco, will visit Nevada City and vicinity during August on his semi-annual trip (see further advertisement) and will attend toorders left at the store of Messrs. Brand & McCutchan. j29-1w Notice. We are prepared to sell groceries » as cheap or cheaper than any store in the county. We buy our goods for cash, e take advantage of the markets and give our customers the benefit of business transactions. Give usa call, tf Eustis & Tompxins, _———? >.. Mountain Ice. I am now prepared: to deliver Mountain Ice in quantities to suit. Orders left at the Ice House, on the Plaza, or -with W. H. Craw-— FORD, Will he promptly attended to. . Sauvee, Prop. Read this to the End! Do You Want to Know IN THESE DULL TIMES TO BUY Your Goods, so as to save fully §Q cents on every DOLLAR, then-attend the Great 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 ONE PRICE SAN FRANCISCO STORES, Located on BROAD STREET, next door and opposite STUMPF’S HOTEL, NEVADA.-CITY. The Stock consists of Gents’ Furnishing Goods, Boots, Shoes, Hats, Caps, Trunks, Valises, &c., &c. Dry and Fancy Goods, Hosiery, Embroidery, Laces, &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. — &@ We shall positively: vacate ‘the Dry and Fancy Goods Store before the first of August next. Ladies, Look Out for Greater Bargains Than Ever During the Next FiFTEEN DAYS. Be FIXTURES FOR SALE. DAE reuse Lewy, Assignee. Ld ints for Nevertheless these very quali-—. e rT brand on the ékin.