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

July 6, 1879 (4 pages)

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THE DAILY TRANSCRIPT. NEVADA CITY, CALIFORNIA, pees SEI NA NRT AANE Oe Established....8eptember 6, 1860, tna ee 879. =r Sunday July 6th, 1 ce 4 wanton 38 tin = TRE FOURTH. NEVADA CITY EYFERVESCES WITH PATKIOTISM. —— Tae Bix Procession and Exercises ut Huat’s Hatk—-A Complete Ac« count of All-the Fine<Fixings, @r. —terieal, Musical and Literary Ef ‘Torts. While Nevada. county” has seen more largely attended gatherings than the 103d celebration of our naion’s independence held iu this » City day before yesterday, we trow that an occasion of the kind more thoroughly alive with fun and frolic was never before witnessed or even Leard-of m-any—part—of—the land. The Narrow Gauge tailwoad other conveyances of every and: dleserip1,500 people from Grass Valley during the tion brought soniething like forenoon, while residents-from other pats of the couiity. flocked here in droves. Even Campooda-was deserted by its dusky denizens wholet their large National shield. Her natural patriotic souls loose in-a quietsort of . facial charms, ——~fine. physique way. The number of persons who lent and @¢harming costume enabled tieir presence to, the occasion is. hey to assume the allegorical variously estimated-at—from 4,000 . character in a-most—belitting manto_5,000. nel Carriages containing those laDelegations from the Fire Depa tape and gentlemen who were to ment had-turned out and worked a big part of Thursday night in showering the principal streets with water. tie ringing of bells nextmorning, it lighted What might be termed a forAll along both sides-of the business thorough faves est within a city. were arranged fir and pine trees at intervals of every ten or twelve feet. ‘The hundreds and even thousands of trees shaded the sidewalks effectively, andgave to the city the ‘appearance of a paradise, At 10 o'clock 4, M. the procession -DNgan to form on Broail street. ‘he Gran, Marshal was Hon, Chas. Kent; his Ass*®Mant, Wm. Powell; and Aids, Henry HePainger, R. D, Carter, John Glasson and DXM. Sukeforth, All of these gentlem®a were mounted on fine steeds, and their soldierly bearing, general good looks and efficieney weréthe objects of much merited praise from all sides, re The Nevada Light Guard and their brags band led theeolumn, ~ Never before on any public occasion has the . Company appeared to better advantage. The various maneuvers: were goue through with a readiness that warrants Nevada City in claiming that Captain Rapp and his soldier ‘boys will compare: favorably with any other branch of the National Guard in tht State. Next came the . Mexican War Veterans, There-were 1S of them, which number is far short of those in Nevada county who were entitled to march in that division. hey were all of course well along in years, Several of them carried battle scars ou their persons,?but the most were as hearty and stronga looking set of men as one often meets.’ They are not of the class who believe in fine dress, or in other words “yo much on style”; “but if again in the course of human events the American Eagle sounds the alarm that our country is in danger, and these veterans have a breath left. in their bodies, depend upon it they will beamong the firstto rush tothe front and do valiant service for their country. Nevada Hose Company No. 1 and Protection Hose Company No. 1 ‘of Grass Valley followed with the richly decorated hose carriage of the former. The. vehicle was festoonel with tarletan’ and vari-colored ribbous in such a manner as ‘to give it the appearance of a huge boquet on wheels, “In tht ceater of it rode two sunny haired little girls, Lida Powell and Belle Conay » They were almost too beautiful for kaman beings, it seemed to many who saw! them, and had some ote p o l:imed they were Le''es of Fairyd m wo had wandered away fiom thir home “for this oecasidn only,” their angelic appearance would have borte* out the assertion, Then came Pennsylvania Eagine Campany No. 2 of this city with their carriage bedecked in a magnificent manner, and Eagle Hose Cg. No, 2 of-Grass Valley, Ensconsed among the beautiful orna: ments on the carriage sat Tittle Miss Mamie Marcellus, who was also pret: tily attiral, Her dark tresses “hung ey \ . tale a.prominent part in the after When the sun rose amid the . incessant booming of cannons and . { far down her back, and.as the. wind played hide and seek among them one could but exclaim, “How beautiful!” Her dark eyes sparkled brightly and lit up th® pretty countenance. the f Car’ of Liberty, drawn by six spirited horses. The next in order tas t was. iuscribed On one sidé of" i in large letters the talsmanic word, ‘‘Liberty;” on the other side thisreverentinscription:,‘InGodAVe Trust.” . On the tiers of “seats encircling the (odidess were 39 beautiful little girls aced from 6 to 10 years, They were . dressed in white, with bright sashes. Each one bore aloft a shield on which . was painted the name of the state or territory she represented. Tive GodMiss Lillie McBrown. She stood: }upon a high elevation, or throne in . the center of the vehicle, and beneath a red, white and blue canopy. . She. wore a flowing robe of white me. rino cut so'as to reveal. her -snowy i shoulders, and belted with a silver tgirdle;a—tri-colored._sash encircled, the skirt of the garment, which was . elaborately trimmed with gold fringe {and white-satin; Onthe head rested ta heavy silver crown ~anit—hetmet, combined, studded with the typical stars. She-was supported on one side . } 1 . ' ! by a Liberty wand, and * carried a fourth day of July. CHORUS. . With our Army and our Navy, Our gatlant Volunteers, The honesty true Red, hail ‘em with three cheers; ‘Tis best to see them all at peace, but should it come to Wars, Sy if Wel] Sven ran up the bhnting, boys, the glorious stripes and stars., Seat We welcome every stranger, and we offer them a home In our-free and ‘happy country, men do not come. : There’s broad acres for the plou take a freeman’s word, Well not yield up @n acre, W can wield a sword.” CHORTS. but as foe ehshare, but hle a hand no crowns fo! We want no Kings, we have idle Monarchs here ashamed tw Wear; : < Alleviance. to America, then on God we will . the ton” our, watchword, and rin day of July. ake ie CHORUS, » The well-known poem ‘‘Columbia,” by Timothy Dwight, wadeal in a distinct and pleasing manner by Miss Hilen °Naffziger. The fair seemed to grasp with readiness the meaning of the poet. “The Flag of the Free” -was sung by Miss Conreader away and the Glee Club. ‘The young lady Josscsses a bird-like soprana voice, and isa “great favorite with the’ pegpte—of Nevada—City—betore whom she has. appeared on several eccasions. The oration by Geo.. Hupp, Esq., whichwe_give below, was as‘may be seen, a brillant effort-and-contained a galaxy of incortrovertible truths displayed in an attractive manner: Reason and revelation combine to teach us that the tirst and fuudamental precept of the—great_law_ ol Naure is that man should pursue his own true and substantial, happiness. . Oxercises followed the Liberty ‘Car, jandaslim deputation of Horribles but this-will be referred-to in another and some small carts drawn by ij . place—coneluded what -is said-to . have been one of the finest holiday . processions ever witnessed on the coast, At 11:30 disbanded, and o’clock the procession Hunt’s Hall was shortly crowded with some 1,500 more or less who desired to hear the musical and literary exercises. Judge Ais President of the Day, called the assemblage fo orver with the following appropriate remarks: ‘ (Phonographically reported by J. Fennessy.} . . Lapres AND GisNthEMEN:. I have . } been chosen as the presiding otlicer mi this occasion, for which of» course . B. Reardan, I feelyprotoundly grateful and very proud, Anniversaries -have been j truly said to spring from an innate sentient in man and -are the proonged effect of gratitude and alfec, tion, The custom is of very ancient ;origin, Among the Jews the Feast . of the Passover commemorated the: exodus and the passage of the Red . Sea; that of -the Pentecost -celebraited the promulgation ef the law on . Mount Sinai; the Feast of the Taber acle recalled to the memory of the . Jews the forty years spent by their . forefathers in the wilds ef Arabia. ‘Thus the Jews. affectionately remembered every struggle and triumph of their nation, ‘he anniversaries of Greece and Rome are epitomies of their respective histories. Lhe custem in moder times has become limited almost exclusively to the comnemoration of great political events, limitless—almost—as—Lofinity itself, glorified by the gift ofan emotional . nature with boundless possibilities ot . love and: joy, imbued with a will that dallies with the head-wind and . laughs at the storm-king, invested . withthe attribute of free moral ayefey which has survived the ruins of . the Fall, and placed by the hand of . CGiod upon a theatre of action where . universal matter has been made the . passive servant of his will—it surely , is not strange that man should be} styled ‘‘the lord of creation; no mar: . vel that the fruitful brain of Frank. lin should have lured the lightning . from the cloud, nor that the inventive genius of a Morse should have made it the sleepless interlocutor of . the Universe. With such-faculties . and emotions and possibilities, all aroused and vivitied by an intense love of liberty, and a yet “intenser hate of oppression, even the freeman . . by birthright may catch something . of the spirit whicly animated the bosoms of the sturdy old barons when nearly seven hundred years ago, upon the plains of Runnymede, they wrung from the feeble hands of King John the immortal Magna Charta ; something of the purpose which led to the voluntary expatriation of the noble band which crowded the decks of the Mayflower ;.something of the principle. of taxation without representation which sent-the tea whirtWhite and Blue,_we. 4 crown of sweat upon the brow we're not and millions of ‘treasure: and oceans] : of blood. Endowed by lis Creator with-an—ta-' tellect. whose marvelous reach seems 2 ahh 3 s ole P »* ‘ 7 shades of Mount Auburn—George peering still farther along into ‘the ‘Washington, the majestic, the “an. dim vista of the Fatere, oer eon gust, thefpeerless—the chief among hangs her hopes upon the school-boys A i . z_ z the chiets ; something of the ‘‘gau. just now entering upon their teens. dia certaminis” at Lexington and . Go into the school-house On yonder ; Concord and Bunker Hill, and thence hill! npon Examination oe. aul, see , ; i i ce * 21 rir along down the battle-line, through the bright intelligence beaming from seven weary years.of strife and car‘nage, to the surrender of ornwallis upon the plains of Yorktown, which closed the bloody drama of the Revocourse of nature;—willppresently devolve the vast kespohsibility of playinga part in the administration of jution, and delivered to Columbia the affairs of the Government. My her title deed‘ to the first,’ place young friends ! I point you to the among the nations of the earti>as . example of Fienry Clay ;,1n one cen‘the land of the free andthe home . tury, the mill-boy of the slashes ; in of the brave.” And then America . the next, the sage of, Ashland ; the was free:-—‘Ehe priceless boop of b{noblest Reman of them ait; she pare erty—civil “and refigions—had been . patriot who aveeree Or lotty Ww ords gaiued at the cost of years of travail, 2 weuld 1 ather be right than Presip S-fates to com“The applause of listening tie tare of pain and ruin to depise;, To scaiter plenty o'er a siniling land, And read his history ina Nation s eves.” I remind you of Daniel, Webster who, .at the age of twelve years, invested his last quarter of a dollar in a cotton handkerchief upon which was printed the Constitution of the United States,of.which in aftér years he became confessedly, the ablest expounder: in America. Now, I ean not ask you to do just what Webster did inthis behalf, because I have no idea that in the whole history of cotton there has ever. been manufactur: ed a handkerchief large. enough te contain the New Constitution of the State of California; but-you can secure acopy of the instrumentin pamphtet form without a.cent, and then invest your two-bitsin.-fire-crackers for the benefit of the American. EKa», or in buying. the -elegy of the British Lions And then, my-young There had gone down in the ensanguined strife a multitude of sherees,-aud_ into the very core of the heart of a. national’ gratitude was burned their fittest epitaph: ‘* Dulce et decorum-est pro patria mori”-—‘‘It is sgxeet and glorious to die for one’s . 7 ——o* “country. : And then began the first grand experiment on these shores of a Democratic Repitblic, Whose -fundamental . basis is the recognition of the nightsof ! man as man, avd whose-cettral pringiple is the equality of all men_ béfore. the law, without regard to birth—er property or social rank, from which principle is deduced the right of all inen to-an equal yoice in deciding upon publfs affairs, and in’ selecting agents and representatives to -perform the furctions of legislation and to enforce the execution of the lays. Nota Republic in which political . power. is hereditary, sand thus. retained in the hands of a -privileged class, not the Republic ef Sparta or . frjegds . ! sce what a Venice.or Genoa, nor.yet of Athensin . awaits you ! For if Daniel Webster the grandest period of whose history . were able to master the simple probonly one in forty of the population . len of the Constitution of the United was alléwed the» privilege of the . States and thus. win the name of the elective franchise. No, not either off great E <pounder ; what shall be the these, but a Repubhcimwhiek-every man—and the good Lord only knows how. soon it may he every woman, too--is the peer of the highégt-and } Afie &* measure of your renown, if,even inthe year of our Lord nineteen hundred, you shall be able to-explain to the . proudest in the land in the exercise . of the New Constitution of the State of all the rights and privileges~and of -Cabforntast immunities of a freeman. . . low-citizens, upon any consideration, And then came the era of the} violate the proprieties of the oceasiol practical illustration of the inaliena. by entering the political arenahere ble right of life and liberty and the’ to-day, nor would I give way to any pursuit of happiness, so bravely as. jl]-timed levity upon as grave a quessezted in that Declaration whose . tion, and yet I can not resist the glowing periods have just been re. temptation of saying that here’is an hearsed before us with a rare grace . opening for the life-long labor of the and elegance. Sineethat memorable . combined political genius of the event, nearly one. hundred years] State ; the Republican, the Demowith all their deeds have rolled into . crat, the Plug Hat Brigade of Honthe records of the past; and yet_to-1 orable Bilks, the firey orator of the day the grand probation of a free, h representacive. government stands fortha prouounced success. —* E-would-not,-my_fel: Chromele itself. But there is another class of boys that deserve a passPassing by the war of 1812, and \ing notice. I-refer to those who are the troublous times of “49 to ‘51, we playing the second part in Shakeshave survived the erucical ordeal of peare s act of Seven Ages ; to those an intestine conflict sigualized by all) who ave without the “satchel,” and ess, marked by allthe venom of pocreeping, if they go at all, “‘hke snail litical antipathy, and intensified by . unwillingly te school.”. Go out upon }and yet, to-day, America is a Re-. hear the night made ‘hideous with . public, her government’ a Democra: . cy, and in all-the elements of national grandeur, and in all the pride-and . glory and power of ahappy, free and . prosperous people, she is.at once the ; envy, the wonder and the admiration . of the world. So much for the past.and the present; and now, a few thoughts for the . . future—a few words -of prophecy, . with something of — apprehension. jin the preservation of the liberty~of . their native land/?) Have they aban‘doned all claim to the glory. of the patriot? Has the leve of country wo charm for them ? Have they resolved to offer themselves a voluntary sacrifice upon the altar of unbridled and licentious passion? Let the eyes of those upon whom, in the: {in the grace and favor of Aha glorious reward . [ people thé tie means -amt-intent+ . * a) ¢ j sand-lots, and even the San Francisco; the Jocal jealousy of personal prow-. have no ‘shining morning face,’ and go .
all the rancor of sectional animosity; . our streets after the gloaming,. and . . the baevhanalian ribaldry of the trujant, the hoodlum and the ~rowdy.—— . ; And shall these waifs have no~share . ing into Boston Harbor} something . Can we see anything in the signs of ‘of the lofty import of those brave . the times which seems ominous of the words, ‘‘ Millions for defense, but . .disruption of the Government ? Any not one cent for tribute”; ‘some. Jtwmdwritigon the wall to alarm the thing of the patriotic impulse that} patriots, or to paralyze the Belshaz. moved the spirit of Jefferson when var ef the age? Aye! And what? he penned ‘the Declaration of Indet;} Bribery and subornation ; avarice, pendence, whose glowing words tired . remorseless and insatiate 5° corrapthe hearts of the heroes of °76, and} tion in office; the fawning servility and thus serve to keep :them greey in the memory of the people. Among the several ayniversaries of our. own people the dthef July, for. manifest reasons, is the most distinguished, the most affectionately. remembered and the ong observed with the yreatand gentlemen, [ bave been called upou to preside, and therefore I shall not usurp the place of the Orator, but proceed at ence to the. business ,ef the occasion, The Band played Hail Celumbia in good style, and Rey, J. Sims delivered an eloquent “The Star’ Spangled ‘eung by Mrs, Geo, Smith, assisted by the Nevada Glee Club under Prof, Muller’s excellent leadership, was greeted, as this lady’s voeal demonstrations ever ate, with a storm of applausa. Miss Emma Pearson of San Franciseé read the Declaration of Independence in # thoroughly effective manner, awakening the patriotic sentimants of the multitude. prayer, Banner” 4 She displayed an extraordinary quality of dramatic power aul elocutidnary training for one who is a non-professional. P¥of. H. W. Hand of Downieville proved his musical . abilities by singing in a pléasiug and artistic manner the song entitled ‘fhe Glorious Stripes and Stars.”° The words were written for the Professor by a Londoner named George Ware who had never seen America, and were set to music by the former, We herewith republish the song because of tha peculiarities of its origin: ‘Tis just one hundred years since our brave inen for freedofn fought, And with the Iast drop of their blood, that frecd om dearly bought; : To wrest the Country from us, let any nation try!) P Yell show them that we'v2 not forgot the tees: i scribed letters §ronounced and . bold the name of Joh ancock first . est pomp and ceremony. But, ladies . . ’ . chis British guest upon the toothsome’ hurled the gage of battle into the} very teeth of the arch-tyrant, George the Third; something of the majes. tic nature of the President of the Contmental Congress when he in. in upon the imm@rtal catatozne ; something of the spirit of the venerable . Hopkins who, at the ripe old age of! three-score years and ten, with all the fire and zeal of. thirty, ‘* déclar. ed that the time had come when the . strongest aria and the longest sword . inust decide the contest, and that} those members. who were ot prepared for action had better go home”; something of the devotion of Charles Carrolton, who cast his millions isto the breach, and said to Samuel Chase “that the last resort of the Colonies was tho bayonet, and that -never would the minions ef King George . become the.masters of & single inch . of American soil beyond that. which . ‘should become covered with their . camps; something of the.God-like Henry, all radiant with the skekinah . of a crystallized patriotism; when he} startle the Virginia House of Bur. jesses with—‘*Cvesar had his Brutus, . Charles the First his Cromwell, and George the Third may profit by their example!” and yet a little later when the arches of oll ‘St. John’s church at Richmond rang with the echoes of the sublimest, peroration that ever fell from the hps of man, “L know! not what course others may take, but as for me, give me liberty or give me death”; something‘ of the abandon of consecration of Francis Marion, the swaimp-fox of the Revolution, all warworn and battle-scarred, and yet fighting for the liberty of his country,—witbout*a dollar in the world, and yet with a munificent bos, pitality regaling the Cainty palate of tuxury of a peck of sweet -potatoes roasted in the ashes and spread _upon a log ; something of the exalted hercism of the Father of hisCountry,. whose honored remains are sleeping in the old family vault in the qaiet ° . time. of the toad-eater and. the parasite ; party fanaticism; lust for ~ political power ; sjmonopoly—cold, cruel and relentless; rings and leagues; cabals and clubs ; corners and cliques, and all for place or pelf. Vacillation and venality in our rulers, a growing disparagement of oyrlegislatures, an increasivg disrespect for ‘our judiciary, an opeii cdetiance-of constituted law, aruthless wrenching away ftom the land-marks of the fathers, and a résurrection of the rapacious spirit of Rob Roy, whose was—“The good old rule—the sitnple plan, That he shall take, who has the power, And he shall keep who can.”’ Under the growing incubus of an aggregation of evilssuch as these, I . aftirm it to bea moral fact that the decay, if not the downfall, of the Covernment is ofly a question of Tell me of thé depravity .and unrighteousness of Sodom and Gomorrah ! the great cities of the latter half of the nineteenth-century, they were nurgeries of piety and -granaries of . godliness. The fiends incarnate of rape, robbery and arson now run riot through our land ; and murder,most foul and unnatural, holds bightcarniyal in reeking dens, and loathsome haunts and tetid purlieus side by side with the sanctuaries of God. To whom then shall.the Republic turn, ;and upon whom shall she ,rely for rescue from the impending danger ? I answer ; to the young men of the country who have just crossed the threshold of manhood, and enlisted: in the great battle of life. To those whose souls are filled with the zeal and fervorof.a patriotic ambition. ‘Not like that of Alexander who at the age ot thirty-one wept because there were no more worlds for hin to vonqrer Not like that-of Napoleon who eluged a continent with blood that he might swim to dominion on its tide, but an ambition whose pole-star is.the advancement of the glory of the country; the prosperity of her jinstitutions, and the happiness and prosperity of all her people, And Compared with many of . . . { . } . . . found, among.your number them pause-for a moment, and reflect! In this fair land, there is.no aristocracy of intellect, as there is none, thank God ! of .rank or. station. — Young men ! you have the arena and the brains ; now see to it,, that you MAKE THE OPPORTUNITY }. In. the rinying words of an eloquent son ‘of the green isle of Erin, ‘there may be ‘a mind of the finest mould, and wrought for immortality ; some Cincinnatus in whose breast the destinies of anation may liedormant ; some Milton, pregniant with celestial tire ; some Curran, who when thrones are crumbled ! and dynasties forgotten, may stand the land-mark of his country’s genius, rearing himself amid national ruin and desolation a mental pyramid in the solitude of Time, beneath whose . shade, things will moulder, and round whose summit eternity must play.” And now I will close these hasty and discursive thoughts . with 4 few words to the gentle and} the fair who have graceil and honored the occasion by their presence . here to-day. God bless the wives, the mothers anil the sweet-hearts of our land!. Jt Thad the inspiration and the power, how ‘gladly would I “bind up my brightest and best houghts into boquets,” and scatter them at their feet’! I know that the . delicate and refined organization of woman has not prepared her for the sterner conflicts of the ballot-box, . the foram, the hustings and the battle-tiekd. I know that her gentle nature shrinks from the turmoil and the strife ; from ‘‘the smoke and stir of this dim -spot which men call earth.” And vet, also know. that ‘through the magic of home intluence, she is at once the warden and the conservator of the Liberty we have met to commemorate. Run your eye along the anyalsof history, both sacred and oh ane, and see ‘that from the very dawn of Creation itself, the power of woman has been teeming with influences of A or—evil, — God save the mark ! I point you to the seene_in. the Garden! Behold Eve, who having herself yielded. to the wiles of the serpent, prevails upen Adam to disobey the injunction of Jehovab, and with the warning of God still ringing in his ear, to partake of that ‘‘forbidden ‘fruit whose mortal taste brought death. into the world, and all our woe.” Witness J elilah, three times deceived by Sam¥ ‘ . a . and yet at last wringing fe him the secret of his strength, 4G . giving bith away to the sport of jeering Philistines. . Remember opatra, that ‘‘glorious soreere, an4 the the Nile,” whose whole life wag i. a tissue of poetic and refined gengy ality, and yet by the witchery of ned charms, carrying the great. Mare An. tony, drunk with her caresses, a to the feasts and revels of ‘Ales dria. Behold the venerable Velen. nia, by the magic power of maternal] intercession, rescuing the proud, in perial City from the impending Wrath ot her own son ; the fiery, the -aven:. ing, the war-like C'oriolanus. . ] belie you to Queen Esther wlio saved he people and her céentry,and as first ef 2 suerns, [ remind you of Miriam the pFophet ess, in her sublime song of: triy when “‘aH-the women went out alter . . ‘ ‘her with timbrels and with danéeg * Of:Deborah, to whom the childre, of Israel went up for Judgment ; of 5 raised her brother Lazarus from the dead ; of Boadicea and Elizabeth. of Aspasia of Greece and Cornelia of Rome;. of Portia, the wife of Brutus: patronage and” favor ‘of Columbus manned the fleet in which sailed the Pinto, from whose deck there Tang out ovér the surging billows of. the Atlantic, ‘the joyful’ cry of tayp LAND !z and lo ! America was discov. ered, and ‘the down-trodden of i the nations of the earth found an asylum and a home. ee T* ese ar MAT ana ¥ = Phe’ regular exercises of the day concluded with music by -the band and a benediction by the Chaplain plain, Nevada. Theatre, D, J. Stumons..... Lessee and Manager ee NS ea ace er Staye Manager ee ee Sey, » * Donna, AS JOSEPHINE, SSN H. M.S, PINAFORE, (SEVENTY-FOUR GUNS,) » A Comic @pera in Two Acts. Words by Gilbert, Music by Sullivan. Now being sung with triumphant success by Sixty-Three Companies in the East. ern States, . A Full First Class Opera Orchestra. Grand Chorus. of Sixty Voices. _The Great ship Scene. A powerful cast of professional v calists and actors. Hundreds of people be ing turned awdy nightly, Unable ty gain adMission. . Josephine..... MISS AMY SHERWIN ! Ruttercup.....0+++. Miss Hattie Moore CIGUSIC TROUIG. sca ccs acis oe . Mis Cliefden Cousin Araminta.... Sir Joseph Porter, K CB.. . Ralph Rackstraw, A B.. Captain Corcoran. ..é. Dick Deadeye...+. Boatswain... pesiemar ss Boatswain's Mate... .»-Mr Borneman Tom Tuckerthe Midshipmite) By the Midget «vse+-Miss Meadows sees sed Barrows asencouvecnge OMteS .«Geoage Babanhi . T Casselli ease bereee During the first.act the Sailor's Hornpipe will be danced by Lae ite Frederica, Reserved seats at the Drug Store of W. !) Vinton, ‘This isthe first and only production 0 the Great Comic Opera of H. M. 8, Pinafore in this city. jyo GAMELLINE For Preserving and Beal: tifying the Complexion and Teeth.NEW AND vai. ate! PRFPAR*: £% tion, pronounced by all to ve then pertect cosmetic in existence. Unlike preparations it is not only harmless, out . Vors a natyral and healthyaction of thes” . resultang in complete purity and ciearne of complexion. The intrinsic merit and hie . medical endorsoment of? CAMELLIME ‘have in a few months cansed it to neary * . persede all articles for the complexivt' eon Francisco. PRICE 50 CENTS. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS, HB. P. WAKELEE & .COu may15-3m SAN FRANCISCO. — WRITING SCHOCL, Will Begin in Nevada City. Monday Evening, July ‘th, AT 7:30 P. M., TO BE HELD a” in Brown & Morgan's Block. . ‘ Mondays, Tuesdays and W ednesday Of each Week, for a term of Twents Lesons, in‘COMMERCIAL & LADIES HAN” with whole arm exercises, Flourishing, * Tuition, including stationcry: Shall Children under 12 years, $3 > Reduction with more than two from -afamily, — for instructio® yiven # This is the last opportunity at my hands, and no one has ever Fo much informatien for the same a wil myself. Therefore 1. hope the pablic a realize the excellent opportunity 2° senting itself and act accordingly: -Visiters always welcome. Miss A. J. ELLIOTT, Teachele Nevada City, Jitly 3, P72, Cle.the devoted Martha,“ whose: fais io ae of the two Catharines of Russia sand of Isabella of Castile, whose royg} WEDNESDAY EVE’G,JULY9, jreat Suceess/of the-Britiant Young Pring Miss Amy Sherwin! . .Mr Harrison. or Th tures, ‘at th One « cart hitch with der.a geem Anot by§s: taiul der : ever ona off o TE Gro can; first Bla bris enc wot she pla “wat abl ave an S&S \ Com Re be : * F SS we: Ot ed