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Page: of 4

the birth, growth, consolidation and
Political freedom and the
: The Daily Transcript.
fices, their devotion to duty and th
SATURDAY, JUNE 1, 1889.
NEMORIAL DAY.
Nolema Services in Honor
Of the Dead,
THE MORNING PROCESSION
The Exercises at the Theater
in the Evening.
ciples have become historic,
though the dust of these heroes
long since become ‘of the dust of
earth, arid their silent restingare more than three thousand
distant, rendering it beyond our
offering,
the shrine of each patriot’s devotion
will be kept green their memory. Fo
of this fair land of ours.
not for the present alone. They buil
far greater than they knew.
they left the legacy of a free republic
A MOST ABLE ADDRESS,
upheld our rights on land and sea in
1812, who fought with Jackson behind
the cotton-bales at New Orleans, and
gave his life for his country with Perry on the lakes, we extend the meed
of praise due from a just country to
: her patriotic defenders. During these
Memorial Day not was altogether ob. stirring and excitifig times, the forniaserved in thiscity as a holiday,although tive and creative period of our counabout all the business houses closed . try, this fair golden land of ours slept
‘their doors from ten o’clock in the . in the beauties of nature, the boundmorning. less plains a sea of wild flowers-o’er
By sunrise the work of . decorating which herds of antelopes and wild
the graves in Pine Groveand Broad . horses roamed, in untrammeled freestreet cemeteries began, and by nine} dom; the solitude of these mountain
o’clock most of the mounds that markheights and intervening vales _uned the last resting places of the honor-. broken save by the roar of the temed and beloved dead were heaped with . Pest or sigh of summer breeze ; undisflowers. Covered’ and unknown the golden
Many people from the Surrounding . ‘reasures which were to uphold the
country were’ here, Not a few of the . credit-of the republic in the days of
visitors wore the uniform of blue and{-its adversity. A Spanish governor
the well-known badge ofthe GA. R., . ruled over the few Indians_and—misbetokening theirmembership inthe . Sion priests that composed the popuorder, : lation.” Far distant from the fields of
The procession formed. on Broad . Conflict, an almost terra incognita, our
street shortly after ten o’clock. It . fair land dreamed away the years conconsisted of a drum cor ps, followed by . 8cious of her latent powers and comNevada Light Guard doing escort duty . ing greatness. The victories achieved
tu Chattanooga Post, G. A. R. The. 0n the Atlantic Coast, the establishveterans and the militiamen presented . Ment of a form of government. that
a fine appearance as” they marched . g4ve full rein to individual freedom
away to the inspiring rub-a-dub-dub of . and genius, and under which the
the drummers, They went out Broad . budding thoughts could blossom and
and Boulder streets to Pine Grove . Mature into the full fruitage, led to
Cemterey and there in usual form . the acquisition and settlement of the
scattered flowers on the graves of their . Vast domains of the West and the ad:
dead comrades. Committees wore-de-. vent.of -daring-pioneer and-argonaut
tailed to perform similar duties at the. to the golden shores of the Pacific,
other cemeteries, How much we owe to these adventurous spirits and to the men that bore
fe the flag o’er desert, plain and mountain
ae The ae es filled'to shed neight and placed its starry folds withing with the people who assembled . in the walls of the Montezumas! Their
there in th evening. The interior of pirit and their daring brought this
the building had been beautified with mighty empire of the Pacific within
flowers and flags, pons stage dethe fold of:the republic and set the
Orations were particu Brey ne ‘star of empire’ still further in the
Phe aig L, Hs Little, Co mander of West. Their gravis dot our valleys
CKattanooga Post, presided. There and our plains, aye, the white-haired
were some choruses by sixteen BINGere . Votarans of this war are still among
under John Werry’s leadership, anda us, spared to view the ripening beaupatriotic male quartette. Rev. Robert . 4: of the land they purchased tiie
Lennie made tie opening prayer and . t).¢;, sufferings and their blood. This
Rev. Win. Angwin offered the benediclane
tign. A yery pleasing feature was the . « ‘where Cotes year by year crowns all the
Fy st ae q ” 4 PB;
‘Building of the States’ ro ae ae the vine with purple clusters drcops unx itt! irnls w ned o er leaves;
digs owe Nive boys gp ale sabes Whore the olive buds and burgeons, to its
under direction of Miss Cora Clarke P e'e bie tose thee cae
represented the States of the Union . 404 the russet fig adorns the tree, that graff.
The Children’s Floral Exercise—
The Music, Poem and
Prayers—Notes.
AT THE THEATER,
Qno=e
romise ne’er untru 3,
shoot never knew!
and as such contributed to the struc-. Where honey from the hollow oaks doth
ture of a floral monument, the action come denoting: ewes wilh tinkling feet from
being accompanied in each instance the sky-dividing hills,’
with a ‘brief and appropriate speech.
late J. G. Hartwell, Post Commander, . *fter enjoy her bounteous blessings les ;
apt arte Eye mena ate with . Your gifts to them, and when you shal!
fi % 4 pone ce a beautiful . have been called from us they will not
ia se 4 ae : forget on each rectfrrent meniorial day
maewcrin’ Boum, he 1A}, prodaation to place with gratitude and love the of Judge C. C. Goodwin of the Salt
; taneous gifts of na‘ure upon your)
f herself. epouranes Lake Tribune and of he doa seitiig places.
THE ADDRESS,
me “To the student thus far tracing the
By B. N. Shoecraft, Esq., was finishhistory of our country, its struggles for
ed, eloquent and inspiring. The genexistence, its marvelous growth, the
tleman had the closest attention of.the wealth and numbers of its people, it
vast throng of auditors from beginning
would seem that in this land no more
toend, and was frequently interupted would sound the rude, fierce challenge
by applause. He said:
of war. Also, that it should have
“Mr. Chairman, Veterans and . pegn otherwise than that the genius of
American Citizens all: Today the liydiscord should spring up within the
ing honor the memory of the dead. . yitaig ofthe republic. The laurels of
In the midst of life’s active duties, in ’48 were still fresh’ whea the first faint
our plans for future work and toil, we rumblings of the distant thunders were
pause while reminiscent thoughts} heard that broke in all their wild fury
springs up and memory’s cells release . in 1861, Men that had been the leadthe tenants imprisoned .in the past. . ors in forum and in camp joined opWithin the confines of this mighty posing sides of the great conflict; fumrepublic there is not a citizen today . jli9s divided, each going with what he
_within-whose breast the least spark of . deemed the right’ and each deterpatriotism glows whose thoughts do] mined to maintain it, while all Europe
not flit backward to the days when . jooked to see the fall and destruction
Mars was the ascendant planet of our. of ali.our efforts at self-government.
skies, and his grim visage frowned . {here is a story in Ancient Rome that
o’er allour fair land. Today a nation . jn one night the forum opened, causmourns, and yet rejoices—mouris for ing a great gap in the heart of the city.
her youth who rushed to her defense . The oracles upon consultation declared
in the days of her peril and crimsoned . that the gap would not close until that
her fields with their life’s blood, . which was most-dear to Rome bad
mourns for the strong manhood that} been thrown in it. Curtius, a Roman
fell beneath the cannon’s: fiery breath, knight, exclaiming, ‘What is more
yielding life that she might live a free precious to Rome than the manhood
and independent land; and yet re-. of Rome? leaped in the-gap and it
joices that these sacrifices were not! closed. In this great rént in the heart
in vain; that the blood that ensan-. of the American Republic all the powguined a thousand fields of battle, the. ers and arts of statesmen, the elodreary round of prison life, the long quence of orators, the wealth of the
and weary. marches, the privation, nation, were thrown without avail,
want and woe, the tears of orphans, . but when the manhood. of the nation
the agony of widowed wives and ill] had thrown itself into the gulf, when
the wretchedness attendant on war’s. thousands and tens of thonsands of
dread passage, these—these did not . her bravest sons had poured out their
count for naught, but were the price of . life’s blood, the great rent Closed, the
war-clouds disappeared, and whiterobed peace outstretched. her wings
o’er land and sea. Aid ‘now behold
the grandest spectacle of modern
times, yes of aay age or time, when a
million armed men laid aside the implements of war and immediately -returned to the farm, the workshop and
the desk, became again men of peace,
followers of their former vocations in
life. -The nation had stvod the test of
civil war and had come out victorious,
The soldiers of the North returned to
peaceful homes, to the laurel wreath
of faine and the plaudits of welcoming
multitudes. The soldiers of the South
preservation of this republic. These
gave to the world a new, a democratic
form of government; these have acquired for our children a heritage of
lands unequalled in wealth and extent; have maintained and preserved
our liberties and upheld the old-flag in
every state and territory of the Union
without the loss of a single star, over
an united, happy and prosperous peole. .
. ‘A little more than a century ago,
on the fields of New. England, in the
valleys and on the plains of the old
cqlony lands, and down the coast of
right of selfgovernment,
Their toil, their sacrisuccessful establishment of their priners to drop the flower of memory’s
yet within our hearts, upon
their valor, their death, their success,
made possible the present greatness
; They battled
To us
the memory of noble deeds, of heroic
sacrifices and sufferings, and deathless names that through the dim vista
of the years that have passed shine
bright as stars in heaven’s own blue.
“To the soldier and the sailor who
row we again turn our eyes to the
. Speak, were. fighting for religious and fields laid bare by the rude handof
war, to new. conditions of life, new
problems of labor and living, and under the discouraging sense of disaster
But the genins of our
And . civilization knows no such word as
has . fail, and the true citizen adapts himthe] self to his conditions and conquers
places . them. Accepting the result of the
miles . war in good faith, the southern soldier
pow. has gone to work under the new conditions, and behold the result! See
the New South with her great and
establishments, her increasing wealth, educane
and defeat,
». growing man ufacturing
r
tion and industry. The war cost he
t
one indestructible whole.
out the land. The bitterness engen
dered during the conflict has rapidly
lessened, and grown less under the
consciousness that the result has been
for the best interests of the land, and
that true principles have prevailed,
making stronger and more permanent
this greatest of republics, this exponent of the popular government and individual freedom. The flag has been
washed in the blood of its sons and
cleaned of its only stain, the holding
in bondage of three million colored
citizens, and today waves.from north
to south, from east to west, in every
city, town and State over a united and
never-to-be-divided people. Ina thousand graves the blue and the gray
sleep side by side, alike unmindful of
winter’s snow or summer’s breeze.
No headstone marks each silent resting place or tells the story of their
last career, for they are the unknown
dead. Over these graves a united
people in silent reverence bow, and
thank God the bitterness of the past is
finished with their dead. But while
we bury the hate, the rancor and the
differences in the cells of oblivion, we
cannot and must not forget the principles al stake in the great conflict ; that
the right conquered, and from this
success Our country strides to higher
spheres of usefulness; that for the
maintenance of these principles our
manhood and our youth fought ‘and
died, and their victuries and their success make us what we are today ;
make the glory and the greatness of
the Union; conserve and preserve the
freedom and liberties of the state and
individual, Oh, veterans of the war!
Oh, wearers of the blue! To you we
owe these great results, in you we find
the preservers of our land, the defenders of our liberties. Great indeed
have been your sufferings, your hard
ships in the past, Today we look back
and see you as you were in 761; behold the parting from home and
friends, leaving the tears and heartagony behind; see: you on the wea
Weaiels LurOURU rain apd SDOW, Lnro'
sun and blinding dust; hear the joke
and laugh at camp-fire side, the song
the drum'’s long roll that calls to arms,
while sabers flash, and cannons roar,
and Death’s grim herald bis dread
summons cries for all. We know,
alas, you are few from many left,
“Sir tt > of Your comrades’ dust on many fields} try’s call to arms, willing to fight and
i Solifventa ent LANGE sn . of baite fester May lh alcce tae HP woes tate for the land they have
A memorial service in. honor “of the . 0! V@!lfornia and o Eemay, Here iron hail of Chattanooga, Gettysburg, . loved from their youth. For them no
and Lookcut’s towering crest. With . forced draft nor need of bounty. They
can never fail in its recollections of :
you today we pluck rich flowers from
nature’s generous breast, and place
them on'tiie graves of those who fell
beneath the storm of battle’s hell.
Peaee to their ashes.
***On fame’s eternal camping ground
Their silent tents are spread,
While glory guards with solemn round
The fivouse of the dead.’
“Today you have lived over these
scenes, have called to mind the faces
of those who stood beside you in those
days of old, and have again laughed
over many a scene of camp and army
life,,or grown sad and thoughtful in
memory ofits sorrows and desolation.
May time deal kindly with you. May
you live yet many a year to place the
rose, the violet and lily, on your comrades’ graves, and when you leave us,
go in the proud conviction of duty well
performed and in the assurance of a
grateful country’s benediction.
“** Nor shall your glory be forgot
While fame her record pe ge
Or honor points the hallowe spot
Where valor proudly sleeps,’ ”’
The speaker here called attention
to the sacrifices made in the past, to
the dangers resulting from neglect of
our civil duties and the evils arising
from the direlictions on the part of the
people. He bespoke the highest honors to those who in civil life were
faithful to their country’s call to duty.
Continuing, he said;
“Today we live in the past and
commune with tue dead—on the ‘morfuture and meet the stern realities of
life. But while we now engage in
these acts of loyalty and veneration,
while we wind the evergreen and
myrtle in wreaths of love, entwined
with the emblem of hope and the
flowers of memory’s devotion, and
thus cover over these dead heroes of
ours, let us pay the debt of just homage to.those who fought not on the
field of battle, faced not its rude shock
nor wielded gleaming steel, but suffered, oh, far more than tongue can
tell; to those that with sorrowing
hearts could bow to duty’s call while
father and husband left for uncertain
fate; to those that with tear-dimmed
eyes buckied on tlieir sons the sword
and breathed a mother’s prayer; that
with patient hands staunched the
blood of gaping wounds and bound the
fevered brow in hospital and field ;
that smoothed the bed of pain and
listened to the soldier’s dying prayer.
To the women of our land, noble,
brave, cousageous, who suffered and
still suffer for those that left and never
very dear, but to her was worth the
price in freeing her from the shackles
of degredation and infusing her with
new life and energy, resulting in her
>. Marked progress and improvement.
And our nation, how she has bounded
forward in the march of progress since
the war’s results have been the cementing of her foundation stones in to
How creafive genius has blossomed and the
pulse of industry quickened through3
€
of home that quiets all; we listen to] of his receptive nature, deepening and
them let the knee of the nation bend
in homage and true devotion; for tog
free land their'tears and their sacrifives are far more precious than all
the gems that flash in all the diadems
and crowns of kingly power. These
are the jewels, of our nation, these the
Precious gems we preserve with honor
and loving fidelity. . And in every cemetery of our land there should” rise
some marble shaft, pure and spotless ;
its base deep in the earth of sorrow,
suffering and despair; its towering colrj umn pointing above the clouds of sorrowing earth to heaven’s own blue of
hope and love; on its face in letters of
living light should this inscription
glow: ‘Lo the loving hearts that gave
their all and suffered that their land
might still be free.’
“A free people have always been a
fighting people. The bold assertion of
rights and prerogatives, the upholding
of the individuality of a nation, carries
with it the consciousness of the power,
and—ability to maintain and defend
those rights and privileges. We do
not wish to again engage in war’s
dread contests.’ “To live i peace and
amity with all the world is our desire.
But, in the ' words of Washington,
‘To be prepared for war is one of the
most effectual means of preserving
peace.’. It is aduty we owe ourselves
to be in the best possible shape to uphold our rights and maintain our liberties should necessity again demand
recourse to the dread arbiter of nations.
While we do-not advocate, but on the
contrary deprecate, the policy of maintaining large standing armies and thus
restraining our best forces—the youth
of the land—from the honest toil and
labor that builds the nation up, we do
contend thatthe army should be kept
inl the best possible ‘condition, our
militia forces augmented, strengthenposed of the very best of ships, equipped and armed with the latest inventions and heaviest guns. And still
more essential is it that a system of
coast defenses should be adopted and
carried out, that would make it impossible for the best navy in the world
to enter our ports as a hostile power.
These floating monsters of the deep,
these tremendous engines of modern
warfare, are not built and forged in a
day, but must in times of peace be
Prepared and made ready. And above
all, teach your children the lesson s
of--the past; instil within their
minds a leve of country, a dev otionto
her principles. Patriotism that is pure,
that is free from sordid motives and
thoughts of mercenary gains, is not
hike intermittent springs that well
and flow from pressure alone, but rather like the tinkling stream that starts
in some secluded ‘dell and winds down
the mountain side, that gathers force
aad power as it speeds along, until
with strength and grandeur, a mighty
river, it sweeps on to join thesea, So
with the child tne love of liberty, the
200M Of hia native land should
Spring from every flower he plucks,
and wind its tendrils deep in the heart
expanding as he grows to manhood’s
high estate. Here then will be the
muscle and the brawn to handle these
dread engines of war; here the hearts
that will beat responsive to their coun——.
go not forth asthe hired mercenaries
of old whose victories made despotic} t
the power that employed them. In. @
t
captives bound in chains, nor liberties
of subjugated people. For them the
arch triumphal is the freedom universal they have preserved in all the
land.
“Then, too, let us all learn that not
his devotion and follow the call of duhigher duty we owe the State, which,
if neglected, will rob us of these pleastoils.
“And when the American people
shall have awakened from their apathy, and shall have fully realized the
duties and sacrifices demanded from
them in peace, when they shall have
relegated the professional political
bosses to the obscurity from which
they sprung and the people rule in
fact as well as in theory, then we will
have in charge of this glorious Ship of
State °
“ ‘Strong minds, great hearts, true faith and
ready hands.
wen whom the lust of office does not kill,
en whom the spoils of office can not buy.’
“Then through the perils and dangers of our social life will we be safely
guided, past hidJen reefs and sunken
rocks of discord and anarchy. . Then
will we avoid the shoals of deceiving
socialistic theories, weather the storms
brewed inthe opposing clouds of labor’s
demands and corporate aggressiveness,
and float out on the broad sea of our
destiny. Then on each recurring
memorial day as we wreath the chaplet of fame for our dead heroes, with
deeper emotions of gratitude and still
more reverent hands will we lay it
over their chambered cells, for with
more discerning eye will we behold
the rich fruitage of their toils and Bacrifices. For the present is but the
skirmish line. Behold yon mountain
top, the objective point to which all
nations and ‘all creeds press to plant
their theories and their flags. And as
our veterans leaped the rocks and
fought their way through tangled
wood and brier,through powder smoke
T
Lookout's Mount, so now our country,
obedient to the lessons of her past,
presses on. Our flag is to the fore;
before us all dissensions Cease, all
creeds give way, all theories fail.
Above the clouds the flag floats on,
. T
dearest treagures for the nation’s good,
te them let pseans of praise be sung, to
BORN.
At Cherokee, May 29th, to the wife of
Timothy Deasy, r. son,
ed, and kept Prepared for all emernigislalatalalainiatetniot ttiea gd
gencies._Our navy, while not neces: * CE #%,
sarily a large one, should be com-. .* bad
Goods, Hats,
Etc., Etc.,
NOW IS YOUR
(Manager Hymau Bros,, Nevada City, for rummer fons
Corner Broad and Pine. Streets, NEVADA’ CITY. "( measure ee
THE BEST GHA
Before Offered in Neva :
~ County. .
measure just as the drummer sends it to him in from the country, and so he
cannot remedy the faults before mentioned.
and they do not understand taking measures,
K, CASPE R, : : 9 . , Merctiant tailoring is a business a man must thoroughly understand before
he starts into it.
tailor that makes it. aken and fit, but still the work may not be in it.
These Prices are Much Lower
gi
one chancein my CUSTOMERS’
Dollar's worth of good:
ing July 4, 1
an‘ placed in a
will draw from the 1
CLOTHING STORE.
send their name endorsed
Nevada City, California,
First Prize $20, Gold Coin; 24 $10,
_ To be given to the lucky holder of the Certificate bearing the name of .
rE. Casper.
Goods, Boots and Shves, Hats, ChilDealer in Clothing, Gents’ Furnishng
A Fine Structure.
tion to Odd Fellows’ Hall.
best arranged banquet and drillroom
belonging to any secret society in the
State. It is 37x60 feet in dimensions,
and being on alevel with the lodge
room is connected therewith by a
feet in the clear, has a lofty ceiling
and is handsomly finished, equipped
with ornamental gas fixtures, etc.
The flooring is of Oregon pine and espurposes. It is well furnished with
tables, chairs, etc. Besides the front
and principal entrance, there is a
doorway. and flight of stairs leading
to Spring street and which can be
used in case of emergency. Adjoining
the banquet room isa kitchen 12x15
feet furnished with stove, sink, dish
cupboard, etc.; a adies’ reception
roont 12x15 feet ; two toilet rooms fitted
with the latest and best of fixtures ;
and an entrancesway 9x15 feet. Over
the smaller apartmenis is a gallery
15x36 feet. .
===
Dyspépsia, indigostion, sick headache, and that tired feeling are cured
by Hood’s Sarsaparilla, which tones
the stomach, promotes healthy digestion, creates an appetite, cures sick
headache and_ builds up the whole
system. Sold by all druggists. 100
Doses One Dollar.
George M. Hughes, the contractor
and builder, has completed the addiit is the
footbridge. The main room is 45x36 Cc
pecially adapted to drill and dance}
An Elegant Substitute
bitter, nauseous medicines, is the very
agreeable liquid fruit remedy, Syrup of
Figs. Recommended by leading Physicians. Manufactured only by the
California Fig Syrup Company, San
Franciseo,Ca]. For sale by all leadng druggists. Carr Bros., ee
ity.
Pasurage
At the Sutton Ranch. Enquire on the
premises or of George C. Gaylord. [tf
[
POWDER
Absolutely Pure,
THis POWDER NEVER VARIES. A MARvel. of purity, stre
ness. More economical than the ordinary
kinds, and cannot he sold-in competition
with the multitude of low-test, short weight,
alum or phosphate powders, ‘Sold only. in
., ROYAL BAKING POWDER COM
PANY, 106 Wall street, New + ork. .
THE JOHNSON-LOCKE
MERCANTILE
and wholesomeNEW FIRM, NEWGOODS, LARGEST STOCK.
——000—-—
Great Reduction of Prices at __
AT PRICES THAT WILL
TIM
FEIAIIIIIOOITIITIIA OTITIS ToC olctetek
GRERIWEES,:
Successor to Eiyman Bros.
Having purchased the immense business ot
Hyman, Bros. in Nevada City at a great sacrifice,
I am prepared tc zive the people of Nevada County BARGAINS in Olothing, Gent’s Furnishing
Boots and Shoes. Trunks, Satchels,
—
CO , Sole Ageuts for the Pacific Coast.
E TO PURCHASE!
the; past Nine Years,)
For oils, salts, pills, and all kinds of
and show our stock and work,
not to be humbugged by drummers,
dross u :
made clothin
ASTONISH THEM . ! and you are t
tailor in order torun it successfull Ys
self, and has
United States,
time,
establishments CHARLES CRIMES, u
merchandise houses—each house paying
Baseball! Baseball !
SE sown. 1889,
THE L. HYMANS OF GRASS VALLEY
—AND—
THE LEVISONS OF SACRAMENTO,
At Watt Park, Grass Valley,
On Sunday. dine 24, 1889, at 2. oeoek P, M,
These are the best amateur teams ia the State, anda
close and exciting game may be anticipated, a
THE L. HYMANS have been greatly strengthened
by English ‘and Ewing as pitchers ; Cullen and Walcom
as catchers ; O'Rourke as 2d baseman. It is che strong:
est Club Nevada county ever had, Following are the
members : English, O'Rourke, Cullen, Ewing,Brock,
Gad, Ruck, Tierney, Walecom.and Horn.
All are invited to attend.
4).
VU
i. EIXyiman c& Go..
——OF THE——
GS" an Francisco Opposition Stores,
Nevada City and Grass Valley,
——HAVE OPENED A .
Merchant Tailoring House
IN GRASS VALLEY,
And Have the Largest Finst-Class Establishment
Ever Opened in-Nevada County,
We would not be ashamed to Re inte the largest city in the United States
€ also warn the people. of .Nevada county
who come up from the city with a line
nd their money oly from one saloon to another,
you what great bargains
» a8 they get a big commission from the house they represent,
@ones that have to pay for all that,
Merchant Tailoring is a business in which a man must be a first-class
Hyman & Company, is a practical tailor himworked throughout the largest cities in England and in the
and has had charge of different establishments during that
f samples, and who gs
to kill and tell
L. Hyman, of the firm of I.
We have papers to show in white and black-the different first-clasa tailoring
he had been foreman over, which fact goes to prove that he
nderstands his business perfectly, _
We will also say to the people of Nevada county
easure to a dr a te ewe
im a big pry ion Uy dered inig™ aneeN AE “LANOPT ES
a
Bt!
(skqual Never
Has been in San Francisco, and, for
of in the way of
CHILDREN’S PEBBLE, BOX-TOK
years. 75c.
PEBBLE BOX-TOES, SPRING and HEEL, BUTTON SHOES, 8 toll
years, $1 50.
(twill pay you to layin asupply, as under ordiyou will pay one-third
more than the Prices here offered.
Have You' Ever Had Such a Chance Before ?
OVERALLS, 90c¢ a pair.
MEN'S CHEVIOT SUITS, $6.50; @ bargain for $10. :
MEN’S CHEVIOT SUITS, $9; @ bargain for $12.
The Latest Patterns ot CUSTOM-MADE PANTS,
nary circumstances
MEN’S BEST SPRING BOTTOM
MEN’S FINE SUITS at $18;
_ President Harrison, atthe Wh
ratio, up to J
Ww Cash Prizes in Gold Chin Will Be Given Avay
ist Prize $20;
‘o each purchaser of ONE DOLLA k’8 worth o
ven:
is morgen at this store,
889. Prizes will
box. A
All interested are invited to be present Jy
RULE—AII holders of Certificates who are un
on the back of each
dren’s and Boy’s Clothing,
Rememb r the Store of
the Atlantic, a handful of men, so to returned to homes-of_ desolation and returned, who gave of their hearts’
(Continued on second Page.)
be CORNER
Branch Store, Front St,, Truckee.—
advantage of the market in the selection of a Very
oods, which he now proposes to give the People of Nevada County the bene. can tell when‘a
heir victorious train they bring no sad
Prices Never Heard Of Before !
SHH zHRH: :
MEN’S and BOYS’ LINEN HATS, l5c each. ;
Bei An endless variety of STRAW HATS at Lower Prices than ever heard of
in war alone can the tue citizen show in this section.
CHILDREN’S aa SUITS, from 4 to 10 years of age, made of. blue
3 ; ; ly $1 10 each. ty. Nor should we forget in the toils . flannel, only
and pleasures of. our duily lives the . AT SUCH PRICES, THERE IS NO N
BOY’S SUMMER COAT and VEST, i
BOY’S SCHOOL KNEE PAN ['S,4 to 13 years, 87c per pair.
? CHILDREN’S KID, BOX, SPRING-HEEL, BUTTON SHOES, 5 to 8
ures and add immeasurably to these years, 75c.
EED OF CHILDREN GOING RAGGED
bargain, Good enaugh to wear: on @ visit to
@@~ Don't Buy Your LADIES’ and CHILDRENS'
Uncle K. Casper, where you can make money on your investments,
Than Retail Dealers Oan Buy The Goods For.
All Goods in my Store will.be sold at the same
THIS CERTIFICATE OF PURCHASE entitles the holder, Mr.
PREMIUM PRIZE DISTRIBUTION,
EXPLANATICN,—One of these Certificates will begivento the Purchaser of ever
Certificates will be issued up to and
awarded as follows:
young child will be chosen b
oxtwo Certificates, re ye 1a80
’
y 6, 18
K. CASPER, your
PINE AND COMMERCIAL STREETS,orders, Now, when a San Francisco house receives an order .
t
ca
SPOT COASEL, has
Large Stock of
fi
8
$1.
o
siore occupying two floors,
necting with the building is » SPRING-HEEL SHOES, 5 to 8 6
&t $5.50; cont at tailorshop.
iteHouse,
.
SHOES before you see your
uly 4, 1889.
2d Prize $10.
{ Goods the following certificate will be
» tot
Yoofat
inereied parties resent 2 8 present, w
stand nd Prices,
at 8 o'clock P. m., at K. CASPER’S
All Certificates will be
able to participate personally will lease
» not later than July 5; 1889, wK CaseER,
Cold Coin
would like to ask the
some may walk with the head down,
(la the other, and still others may have
always plenty of
the country,
these are the rea
other merchant tailoring establishment on
you have to take’it, fit or no fit.
something to fall back on.
visit our establishments in Nevada
your round trip fare between Ne
charge. And we wi
every department than any other store in th
challenge to
brought
: Berlotis >
prom ptness an
National Hotel
ople of Nevada county how that cutter
can.tell how
he person is built whom the order is for. Some men may walk mralghs,
some may have one shoulder lower than
round shoulders and different waista;
Now, with all these faults that we have mentioned, how can that cutter in
San Francisco remedy them? He never saw you and don’t know how you
re built. It make no difference how
e gets,he cannot make a perfect fit
re himself, and sees
good a cutter he may
unless he sees you and
how you are: built. But instead of
be or what salary
takes your measthis he takes the
These drummers are not tailors,
It is not he who wears the Pemnt that makes it fit,but the
A garment may be made in three or four different ways
There is not one man in ten that
garment is made up, what kind of work is in it, unless he is a
ret-class tailor,
Since we have opened our merchant tailoring establishment in Grass Valley we have opened it in a first-class manner, employing nothing but firat-clas
cutters, coat, pants and vest makers.
These mechanics we had to get from first-class
jan Francisco, and guarantee them work all the
e induced tocome to Grass Valley.
This class of mechanics is very hard to
tailoring establishments in
year round before they could _
get-for the reason that there is
work in San Francisco all the year round without coming to
They are good mechanics and we pay them good wages; on
When you have a suit made in our Grass Valley establishment you are
treated different here than in any other tailoring establishments on the Pacific
Coast,and can ears get ‘a suit made here from $5 to $10 cheaper than in any
‘AC! ther house on the ¢ Coast, for these reasons: In the first place werent a
each 75 feet long, and our tailoring workshops con30 feet long. A store like this in San Francisco
nm Market or Kearny street would command a rental of from $1,500 to $2,000
~ month. We don’t pay this rent, 80 our customers have the benfit of it,
at instead of this weave a lease for a long term of years at per month ;
that we don’t pay any commission to drummers, and
why.we can make you a suit so much cheaper than any
the Pacific Coast. And when you
our establishment you will see that it will always re
We will guarantee a perfect fit and good work or nosale. And no suit will
nd another reason
be sent (1.0. D. We give youa chance to try on the garment and see that
it is satisfactory, and
if it is not, send it back to us at our expense.
But when you have a suit made in San Francisco it comes C, O, D., and
But if you patronize home you always have
n all Our Departments-----Merchant Tailoring, ReadyMade Clothing, and Boats and Shoes
You will find that We Carry More Than
Any Four Stores in the County.
We can show you three suits to other dealera one. We invite you all to
se: and Grass Valley, and you will have
vada City’ and Grass Valley paid free of
guarantee you that we will sell you goods cheaper in
ecounty, and hat we are the ones that ree prices down in aveda — county. And we have already offe $1,000 two years ago in the nsmacnioe ac a
os Bor to: pears " Re not the soes who
nty— and none m came totime, *
price—rich and poor treated alike, Country orders filled with
will
one
Satisfaction guaranteed.
75 Main Street,
Building, —
NEVADA CITY, CAL.