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

June 15, 1882 (4 pages)

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~ they were last week. The Gold Run ___ to the best information that can be ’ nel it might spur me to action, and because Democrats neglect to register the Gold Ruo + . claimed by the anti-shickens party ir every point Aceerlitiy to the Appeal and Bee, the peop’e of Marysville and Sacrawere fired, fire crackers were popped off, and a great time generally prevailed, on learning the decision of Judge Temple in the debris suit. Hand+shaking was generally indulged in, and ‘‘real estate has gone up in value 15 per cent.,”whereat the people doubly rejoice. At this altitude we cannot see why such great manifestations should be had just at this time. The decision is not final. The trouble has not been and never can be settled by the courts. The people of the valley are no safer from damage from mining debris now than case will go to the Supreme Court and probably from there to the United States Supreme Court. It will be a long time before a final decisiow can be had. If this case had passed throngh all these stages and a, final issue had been reached, even then we failto sce why real estat should advance in price, or any " more stability be given to the places below the debris level. The antiminers seem to forget that if hydraulic «mining was stopped to-day, they will be no better off for years and years to come. There are stored in the’ streams and ravines billions of tons of mining debris that wil’ be taken away, part at a time, from the mountains whenever a flood occurs, and it will take many floods to clear out all the detritus that has been accumulating for so long. The debris . thats being washed down to-day will vot reach thé valleys, according had, in less than from three to five years or more. One of the strongest auti-mining cards has been, ‘*We-will take’care of the debris in the streams:if hydraulic mining. is stopped now.” We presume they are honest in the belief that they ean do it, but we know they cannot unless they erect dams the cost of which would bankrupt the counties undertaking the job. The dams will finally be built, and the antiminers will yet regret that they did not, when the opportunity. was_rip: for it, lend their whole aid in their construction instead of doing everything in their power to defeat such project on the part of the miners Judge Temple says ‘that said defendants may at any time, as it shall bi advised, apply to this Court, to have this decree and restraining order modified or vacated and set aside. And whenever upon such showing it shall appear that efficient means have been provided to impound, detain and hold back such tailings at any point on said American river above Alder creek, and that such means are sufficient to detain all bowlders, cobblestones, grave’ and the heavier sand, then said defendant shall be entitled to have said decree vacated and set aside. It is further adjudged and decreed thai plaintiff recover costs herein, taxed at ——.” So it will beseen that the court concedes a little more than thi anti-miners, fur it will permit the building of dams. to stop the debris, If the‘enemy had been as yielding. this cruel war would have been over long ago. One thing is certain: HYDRAULIC MINING WILL NOT BE STOPPED. Sselenissaeieshicieampssieoumsman eset Petered Out. “Great Caesar,” cried an old pros pector to a physician’ yesterday, “blast me if I ain’t all pe tered; out. My veins seam stoped and I kinder follow a blind lead all the time.” “Perhaps a powder will set you in good working order,” suggested the medical man, ‘No, I have. been using Giant and Hercules powder too long now, and haven’t got the rocks to pay for either. My formation is such that the strength of the powder is gone after using it.” “Then I will have to make a crosscut and tap the vein and let out the base metal, otherwise you are liable to have trouble,” , “Hardly that, Doc. I can’t get anything down my shaft, as I reckon the angle is a little off. ° If you. dip a fuse of quinine duwn my tun-then my troubles would. be ore.” Bat the Doctor run “a crosscut from the lower level, tapped the sein at right angles and relived the sufferer Of “a ~winze holding two quartz.—Ketchum, Idaho, EO Orn eee Tuerz is worry in South Carolina *. ing Company-is made perpetual, and THURSDAY. JUNE 15. Key. 800 *& California extension, three Chinaman and ‘a foreman, Theophi. lus B. Berry, recently from South afirnied. The injunction formerly isened against the Gold Run Min By decision of Judge Temple in Half Minute Interviews With th Chief of the Sanctum. — WORDS BUT NoT WORKS. (Virginia City Chronicle.) in reverence the memory of Wm. H B tt and Denis Callahan, th that company is compelled to operations. The decision is very lengthy, and recites in full. the various points at issue between the two industries. The conclusions of facts reached are, first, that the Gold Run Company and others engaged in hydraulic mining have already caused great damage to agricultural lands by depositing their debris in the streams emptying into the Sacramento, and if not checked the injury to a numerous class of people will be much greater. Second that the laws of Congress, consenting to and _regulating the business of mining, in no sense can be construed as permitting damage to be done-to other persons not engaged in mining; and, third, that the deposit of detritus in the streams and itsresultant injury to the property of others, may be regarded as a pub ic nuisance, which it is the duty of the State to check regardless of precedent, or long estabdecided are es follows. First—Plaintiff’s action is not barred by the statute of limitations. Second —Defendant has acquired noright to use the beds of the American river aa places of deposits for mining tailings. _ ey Third—The acts of defendantsconstitute a public nuisance, and obstruct the free use of the rivers by a vonside.able number of citizens of the State. Fourth—Mininz customs and usages authorized by the statutes, and by the decisions 4 courts, are local and not intended to have any effect beyoi.d the mining or bar diggings or districts. Fifth—Mining laws and customs, as practiced, are not intended to,and cannot protect the defendant in the acts complained of. ~~~ Sixth—Plaintiffis entitled to a decree ,restraining defendant from discharging of dumping tailings into the American River or any ot its tributaries, or permitting the flow thereof inte such streams. The decree makes the injunction perpetual ayainst the Gold Run ompany from discharging or dumping mining tailings into the North Fork of the American river or into any stream tributary thereto; subject to this condition—that the defendant may at any time, as it shall be advised, apply tothis—court—to have this decree and restraining order modified or vacated and set aside and. whenever upon such showing it shall appear that efficient means have been provided to impound, detain and hold back such tailings at any point on said American river above Alder Creek, and that such means are efficient to detain all boulders, cobblestones, gravel and the heavier sand, then said defendants shall be entitled to have said decree vacated and set aside, . STARE TS MEA os res THE LATEST NEWS. Gambetta yoes to England next week, Mere lanatics talk of crossing the Atlantic in a balloon: The jury in the Snibley murder case failed to agree, and were discharged, : The London Standard’s dispatch from Alexandria reports 1,500 troops have arrived there from Cairo. In the coming racing meeting at Chicago, Baldwin’s and Winter's stables from California will compete. Ulysses S. Grant, Jr.,has been promoted to a $1,600 clerkship in the United States Sub-Treasury at New York. Two men—Tracy and Brown— fought fifty-seven rounds at Coney Island, N. Y., Sunday, the affair ending in a wrangle, Great excitement over the labor troubles prevails at Cohoes, New York, and 3,030 n:en-threaten those who accepted reduced wages. Hewitt Chandler, the leader among Shakers at New Gloucester, Maine, quietly proceeded to Boston* with Mary H. Grant, where a clergyman made them one. A Montreal dispatch says :.McShone, Member of Parliament, and Manager ‘Stuart, of the Herald, had a personal encounter, as the result of a political quarrel. A St. Petersbarg special says: The Empress was safely delivered ot achild Tuesday morning. The child will be named Olla. The public building are decked with flags in honor of the event. A Portland dispatch says: By a premature blast Tuesday on the OreMaymonth, Mass., were killed. ‘The President nominated Rollin lished usage.. The questions of law-} Under the new law. The Colonels and Majors have a notion that it is beneath their dignity -to ask for pastes, a8 the vertificates of registra. tion are called, to enable them to vole, and 90 stand aloof, but the ne~ ‘Kindly to the deMr. Daggett was supposed to have M. Daggett United States Minister to the Hawaiian Islands Tuesday. been an avowed candidate for gubernatorial honors. It is bard to tell how many strings Dagyett has got to his political fiddle, but time will solve the problem. : who laughs is the sympathetic man.” Pare Drugs, Ch A PHILOSOPHER says: “The nan . ’ ap_effort to rescue theur comrades _ in the Alta mine, but their admiration does not go to the extent of doing anything for the support and education of the little niece of Ci lahan, who has been left without a protec tor and devoid of mecans by his death. SURELY THEY WILL Not. (Sacramento Record-Union. ) Theatricai managers of Sin Francisco have a poor idea of the taste of the people of the terior, and speculate altogether too much upon their good nature when they do as is now anuounced in San Francisco is to be done with a fopular company, ina popular play. The proposition is to draw off the really able “people” of the cast, fill their places with supernumeraries and secondary actors, and send the tronpe out into the country while the leading pcople rest at the seaside, Perhaps the interior will take this gruel, and_perhaps it will not. A DENIAL comes by telegraph that General Grant has been reduced to comparative poverty by speculations. The General is re‘ported assaying that he has not touched stocks, and that his wealth is all safe. The country will be glad to know this. There wil be no im mediate necessity for passing the hat around again. beeen iateemeeen) HOTEL ARRIVALS. ome peas ’ NATIONAL EXCHANGE HOTEL. 0 Tourspay, June 14th. V.M. Rothchild, San Francisco.
Jno. Mitchell do Jas. H. Byrne, Bloomfield. 2 _~Chas. Crocker; ~~ ~~"do sua L. L. Kicard, do G, A; Hackius, San Juan. Chas. . arton, do Geo. Gorall, City. Ed. Downer, Wind Up Mine. W. H. Pearson, City. ‘F, A. Owens, do Era-tus Bonn, Clerk, SHERMAN’S MOST WONDERFUL Edueated Horses ' —-AND— CIRCUS! Will Exhibit on Parker’s Lot, Atthe Depot, Nevada City, THURSDAY AND FRIDAY June 15th and 16th. —=¢ : i beer C. AND J. SHERMAN take . §reat pleasure in announcing to the people of Nevada City and surroun ings that in addition to their most wonderful School of Educated Horses, They have this year added a ga7CORPS OF ARENIC STARS WA unsurpassed by any that have visited this coast in years, viz :— Miss Kate Cross, Senorita Palm yra, Mrs. Fred. Mackley, Mrs. Siegrist, Sievrist & Duray, Mr. Joe Williams, Mr. Fred Mackley, — & Zorello, Mr. [ke Burris and Mr. Joe len, SHERMAN’S SILVER CORNET BAND, Will parade the streets each day in their Magnificent Band Chariot drawn by SIX NOBLE STEEDS, PERFORMANCE AFTERNOON AND EVENING, Admission $1. Children 50 cents. MINT CLOSED Thomas Price’s Assay Office 524 Sacramento St., 8. F. Receives Gold Dust and Bullion, and Coin returns made in 24 hours. wee ee HOPKINS ACADEMY, Thé' people f the Comstock hold: two herves who met their death in/ . Wednesday, June 21st.” stock . STANLEY A. EDDY...... Proprietor * WILL BE OPEN TO = THE PUBLIC ON {AND 3 AFTER: e. Saturday, June 10th. The BATHING POND has peen greatly enlarged since last season, and other im. portant improvements have also been made about the place. ‘The public are respectfully invited to call and see my place. F. ELSER. Nevada City, Jane 9th. Ho! For a Good Time ! Union Sunday School PICNIC L At Noonday Valley, ~ STORMS’ RANCH, Ms by F. M. Elser’s Brass and String Band PRICE OF TICKETS. Children, members of Schools represented, under 10 years, FREE. From 10 to 18 years 25 cents, round trip, From 13 to 16 years,50 cents, round trip. All over 16 years, $1. Children not members of Schools will be charged, under 13 years of age, 25 cents. 18 to 15, 50 cents. All over 15 yeara, $1. Tickets can be had of the 8uperintendents of each 3chool, or at the stores of Mrs, Lester & Crawford, Rosenberg Bros., or Brand & Bassett. There will be one train leaving Nevada at 9:30A.M. Returning, leaving grounds’ at about 4:40 P, M. Four stands for Ice Cream, ete,, will be let at $10 each. cy od to Superintendents of dither Sunday Schools. Great care has been taken by the Committee to make this truly a pleasant day for all who attend. For County Treasurer. L. W. DREYFUSS 8 HEREBY ANNOUNCED AS A CANdidate for the office of County Treasurer, subject to the decision of the Demovratic County Convention’ HEALTH IS BEAUTY. There is nothing more attractive than the sight of a perfectly healthy voman. ~The secret of beauty is a clear, fresh and pure complexion. Persons using powders anid paints have a doughy skin, full of black spots, the skin is of a sallow color, unhealthy, andgf<en covered with pimples. In such cases the AINAX AB is particularly useful, as it remedies the deleterious action of those preparations, and while it ehances their effect, it prevents the harm which they would otherwise occasion. It will restore the circulation of the blood in the capillary vessels, it wi!l give back the elasticity of the skin. It will renrove all the effete matter which forms layers on the skin; it will clear the pores and give them back the aaah of opening and contractin, Fe which a healthy person possesses. It will most positively cure, PIMPLES, ‘and remove BLACK WORM, tetter, sores of any kind, redness, either induced by congestion of the capillary vessels or indulgence at the table. Its action on the circulation will bring back the natural color to the hair, No remedy has yet been found co cure the inflammation produced by POISON OAK as effectually and rapidly as the AINAXAB. The AINAXAB contains neither mercury, lead, bismuth, nitrate of silver, nor any mineral or vegetable salts, which could. in the least injure the most delicate compiexion; itca beused largely with Perfect confidence. If you do not find the Ainaxab at your druggists—enclose-One Dollar in postage star : or postal order to our address, and it w'll be sent by express, freé of charges See Testimonials in other issues of this paper, AINAXAB MF°G CO., 895 Be ey St., San Francisco. REDINGTON & CO.; Wholesale Druggists Agents, S. F. fs Millinery and Fancy Goods. MRS. P. A. MILLS, Broad St., opposite Stumpi's Hotel, NEVADA CITY, I bee JUST RECEIVED A LARGE AND ELEGANT SPuck OF LADIES’ TRIMMED HATS, Of the very Latest Styles,which she is selling At very Low Prices. The ladies of Nevada City and County should call early and select from this beautiful assortment. OAKLAND, CAL. Rev. H. E. JEWETT, Principal. f hens Institution, heretofore known as the Golden Gate Academy, will open Tuesday A. M. July 18th, 1882. The Building and Grounds <re undergoing extensive improvements. lassical, Literary and English Courses. ats ge taught. Boys and Young Men received. Send for Prospectus to Rev. H. E. Jewett, Principal. jelmis Dividend Notice. ividend No. 6, of Fifty Cents per share, upon the Capital Stock of the CITIZENS BANK will become due and payable on June 10th, 1882. JOHN T. MORGAN, Cashier, Nevada City, June 6th, 1882, ion and done in the latest Parisian styles. } mazs *The attention of ladies is also called to my superb stock of Flowers, Feathers & Millinery, Of the Latest Designs and Colors. DRESSMAKING In all its branches is carried ‘on at my establishment, in which I am assisted by a corps of competen’ dressmakers. A specialty is made of CUTTING AND FITTING, Which is under my own immediate supervisMRS. H. ©. MILLS. " INSECT POWD ae astonishing hod Many sympa—— ote 4 = izers setae —— he iets EXTRA GOODS...... ttbepesdyg eden ‘LOW PRICES ~ -P. H, BELDEN, —DEALER IN— leals, Toilet Goods Stationery and Sheet Music, ‘CREAM DE LIS 35 cts. per bottle. ER $1 per bottle. Se ite CELEBRATION, = =AT== Nevada City. Full Particulars Few re t Gent's Furnishing MOST MAGNIFICHNT Goods, Boots and Shoes, ITHE VERY LATEST STYLES OF CLOTHING, FOR GENTLEMEN AND BOYS, ‘esxzmrc ours BEARNHARD & SHALLENBERGER, bs oo i ® j « o a > Hats and’ Caps, . Trunks, Valises, etc., etc, HAVE JUST BEEN REGEIVED AT THE CLOTHING EMPORIUM —_om— s ) CORNER OF PINE AND GOMMERGIAL STREETS, NEVADA CITY, These Goods-have just been received from the Eastern manufactories and are now offered for sale at SS . —GREATLY REDUCED RATES — Persons in want of any article in my line will save money by examining my Goods and Prices Jen fore making their purchases elsewhere. DON’T FORGET THE PLACE. : K CAMPER, cor, Pin. . Commercial sts INTERESTING TO THE PUBLIC, SELLING OUT! We will offer this week é Sent nae 1° 5 amano Ih : : . WONDERFUL BARGAINS SELLING GUT . iy DRESs GOODS, . : , , AT Cost WHITE GOODs, ae EMBROIDERIES, . a ; LACES, ETC, . o— . , Mechanics Store If you are in need of Notions,—de-not forgét our ; U. House, as we sell nearly’ all two-bit articles for +) : Cents. ° ; I3 now offering the entire stock of ia Se Eee SEP ; i DRY GOODS, OurPrices SpeakPlainer than Words, Two-bit Rabher Combs..... 9c {Ladies Hose.. . 9c ' CLU LH IN zh Two-bit box Face Powder. .._. 9c] Embroideries.. 7, 9. 19), e z : : G —. Shoe Dressing.. _, 9c} Torchen Lace.;. . . ba 2 es ‘ e. : sts a sag gai 19¢ rChild’s Collars....00. . 9c : BOOTS & SHOES . tipped persue, en 7" M0 /80pees Dies donde.. i 'P GRGMB sis 5 en eae . Nig POOROR iss oe so 99c : . al Mite 25e Buntings, all shades... 2.5: . 25¢ : Vikwisurwe Gods: Etc, aoe Tae a ts ~-19¢ Misses Fancy Pins .;., ; We 2 9c € ] Se ious eh i al ‘ be ee ere a 25 to 49¢ : By: Shoe eee 4 Sa ee ¢ . Sheeting, 24 yards wide. le 3 a — Tass Handkerchiefs ee 9c . Large ag ik 2 i 2 ne . E ang sr Ri ery " _ Gents’ all silk neckties, . .§ ae 49 "69e ; Bee Oe ge Ge ts’ ful ished Briti gee — Wholesale Rates. . i Buck Biaccietsouiy.. te) Penn, nt inshed Britth Hose, 250 ’ as tate: Beck Covabe. 9 19, 25, 49¢ . Ladies’ Faney Collars.. 496 ; jean ul OF £08 55 adi ei 92} Nuns Veilw eS ee Je ; .. Cur Seg 9c Two-bit beac dig? ees . i NO HUMBUG ! fl ‘Tooth Brushes only se cf ne Sth a sa Ries a : d Hine Alpeces Broid:,.... Sal Mina BOPGRESE see = . oe WE MEAN BUSINESS . . Corsets. 49, 99,119, 1 49¢ Hehe cag es ba . . Ladies’ Lis'e Thread Gloves, 10, 25c . Fine Linen Crash, ae a : we . "124 oe = ——O— $ al 3 GOODS SOLD : t CALL AND WE WILL CONVINCE eee : FOR CASH ONLY. oS : U. NO CREDIT TO ANY ONE.All of the above Goads.are Fatirely New! Commercial Bt Neer aeege Transcript BI, . We shall continue to open. NEW GOODS every = Saturday. Call before bu’ ing here L NATHAN, Prop’, ee = s elsew pe It will pay you. a Is “+. . AMERICAN NINE. CERT STORE. e i ee th