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Collection: Newspapers > Nevada Daily Transcript (1863-1868)
June 22, 1867 (4 pages)

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Page: of 4

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STATE NOMINATIONS.
reer FOR GOVERNOR, .
GEORGE C. CORHAM.
~~ “For Lieutenant Governor,
_ SOHN P. JONES.
‘WSF Heorétary of State.... W. H, Parks.
Controller. ..~ se vihe 0a 9a Hees J. Howell.
i SoS oat
Attorney General..J G. McCallough.
Por Surveyor ’General...... iO. F. Reed.
For Treasurer. »-.+-+-..... A. Pacheco,
For Clerk Supreme Cowrt.@. H. Farquhar,
* ©
‘Por State Printer..-... DB. O. McCarthy.
‘Wor Harbor Commissioner.... ©, Clayton.
FOR CONGRESS,
WILLIAM HIGBY.
UNION COUNTY NOMINATIONS.
Biection September 4th. °
~ ForSenator, ,
B. W. ROBERTS, of Grass Valley: .
For Assemblymen, __ .
J.D. WHITH, of Washi n.
Jd. M. DAYS, of Grass Valley.
H. GROLLINS, of Meadow Lake.
G. D. DORNIN, of North san Juan,
For Sheriff,
« Re B. GENTRY, of Nevada,
= Bor Collector,
_. WM. McCORMICK, of Grass Valley.
ine * For Clerk,
‘G. K. FARQUHAR, of Nevada.
For Recorder,
A. L, SLACK, of Rough & Ready.
! For District Attorney,
J.B. JOHNSON, of North San Juan.
For Treasurer,
N. P. BROWN, of Nevada,
For Assessor,
E. FP. BEAN. of Nevada. *
ag For Surveyor,
H. 8. BRADLEY, of Nevada.
For Supt. of Schools,
BR. M. PRESTON, of North San Juan.
For Coroner,
* W. C. GROVES, of Nevada,
For Supervisor 8rd District—GEO. B. NEWELL.
JUDICIAL NOMINATIONS.
Election October 2nd.
For Supreme Judge...... Johm Carrey.
«Mot Sapt. Pub. Instruction... J6hm Swett,
cncaitans
For County Judge,
: A. C. NILES, of Nevada,
Tan Two ‘lickETs.—Ihe Democrats
of Nevada county have nominated a tick“"ét 6f which very little is known. Aside
‘from Tilford and one or two others; the
-Mames.are all unknown, and for the ob_Seurity of nominees, it is the most remarkable ticket ever presented to any
people. :
Aside from all political considerations,
the county ticket presented by the Union
Convention is far better than the Demo“@rats have named. The Union nominees,
from Senator to-Coroner, are well known
throughout the county as men of integri¥y, and well ‘qualified for the offices for
‘which they have received the nomination.
We.ask our readers to take the two tick‘ets and place them side by side, and it
will be found that the preponderance of
«merit is entirely on the side of the Union
Mominees, But aside from this there are
political iderations involved which no
*@nion man can disregard. The loyal men
who stood manfilly by the Union in the
‘early days of rebellion, and did battle for
the same cause in every campaign during
‘the war of rebellion, cannot now vote the
Democratic ticket without “going back”
upon their record and admitting that they
@id wrong in the past. If the Democracy
““qwas' the party of treason in the North du‘Ting the war, it still clings to the past and
@ in its shame. It has gone through
no-purifying process, and it is to-day in
‘peritiment as infamous as it was, from the
“wound of the first gun at Sumter to the
fall of, Richmond, What loyal man is
Willing to admit that his course during
rebellion wae wrong, and that it was
right that Lincoln should be denounced
asa tyrant, that our brave soldiers should
. fhe called hirelings, and that the policy of
* thé Union party has been wrong? ‘If
_ there are such they should vote with the
as ~ Democratic party. The Union party. is
ebutcompleting the great work commepved when the call to arms was sounded
“te pat down rebellion, and those who
“have s0 far aided in the work should not
turn back until it is completed: The Democracy has not given up ‘a single idea of
ite@reed, and it stands in precisely the
see gsition on the issues of to-day, as
it did in relation to the issues of the war,
goint all who desire to elect the best
in ‘as well as those who wish the perpetion of loyalty over treason should sup:
No PotrticaL Reconp:—The policy of
. for State and county offices, ag far as possible, without political record. The ménagers of that party are“Wwell aware that
* . those who figured as champions ‘for the
Democracy during the rebellion, are odious
treasonable record under a garb of professed loyalty: During the rebellion the Copperheads tried to clothe their nefarious
designs under the uniform of blue, and’
supposed that loyal men _ would-be so dazzled by the shoulder-straps of McClellan
as not to discover the treason of the Chicago Platform. -They expected that the
North would follow the hero of the changeable base to the rebel intrenchments, and
there grounding arms ask foran armistice.
This strategy failed, and Democratic leaders found the masses could not be deceived.
A second time they hoped that the Union:
party would be destroyed by the desertion
of the Executive, but in this they were
also deceived. The Presidént and his fol
lowers fared no better than Little Mac.
Now, in this Stateé'a new policy has been
adopted by Democratic tacticians. Instead
of selecting men that have hitherto borne
loyal records and professed attachment to
the principles of the Union party, they
have taken men who have had no princi
ples at all, or, if they had, who have taken
good care not to.express them. The old
leaders of the party who have borne all
. the odium which followed the friends of
rebellion during the war, have been discarded and men who loathed the North
while they sympathized secretly with treason, have been as far as possible selected
instead. Union men should remember
that the serpent is no Jess venomous because he has not shown his fangs, and that
Democracy is none the less odious because
the men who represent it in the canvass
‘liave not hitherto been in the front rank
of the party. Haight, Holden and others
named on the State ticket, though not so
well know as Bigler, Weller and Tod Rob.
inson, are just as good Democrats, and are
men of the same political faith. Union
men could support either of the three last
named with as much consistency as they
can any Democrat on the ticket just nominated at San Francisco. By the past
record of the Democratic party we must
judge its future, and the nominees upon
the ticket will no doubt be as true to its
creed as Bigler, Weller and Tod Robinson
haye been. The attempt to fool the people by putting up men without political
records, will not win, Having seen the
track of one snake in the sand, they will
be able to know exactly what kind of a
trail will be left by any other of the same
family.
BooMERANG.—Under this heading the
Record quotes an item to disprove the position taken by the Sacramento Union in
relation to the nomination of Higby in
the Second Congressional Convention, giving the TRANSCRIPT credit therefor, and
speaking of this paper as “Sargent’s own
organ.” We send your boomerang back
after this fashion, Mr. Record. We don’t
know anything about it, and you never
found the article you copy, in this paper,
not much. The TRANscrIPT is not the
organ of Mr. Sargent. He has no more
interest in the paper than you have, and
not half so much to say about its course.
With these slight exceptions your item
may be correct. You had better put your
boomerang in-your hat, and not send it
out again unless confident that it won't
come back.
THE Democratic Convention nominated
H. H. Haight, of San Francisco, for Governor; Wm. Holden, of Mendocino, Lieut.
Governor ; Dr. Nieols, of Sacramento, Secretary of State; Robert Watt, of Nevada,
Controller; Antonio Corona, of Los Ange
les, Treasurer ; John W. Baust, of Merced,
Surveyor General; Joseph Hamilton, of
Placer, Attorney General; Thomas. H.
Selby, of San Francisco, Harher Commis.
sioner. :
SomE papers are quoting the little Call
as evidence against the Union ticket.—
This journal has given its sickly support
to Juhnson ever since he went to the rebels,
and if its evidence was worth a “pint of
peanuts” it might be cited to. prove that
the Congressional policy was outrageous.
The enemies of the Union party must be
hard pushed when they put thé Cail upon
the stand. .
‘Tum deaths in San Francisco last month
pipe
Re
with the people, and could not hide*their .
In RELATION To Minine Chanes.—
. James T. Stratton, United StatesDeputy
Surveyor for this Distriet, embracing Ne‘yada and Yuba counties, has opened an
office in Korn’s building, nearly opposite
the Exchange Hotel, Grass Valley, says
. the Union, and is prepared to discharge
lis official duties in procuring patents for
quartz mining, claims. As many of our
réaders appear not to understand the modus operandi of procuring patents to their
quartz claims, aad thus securing clear .
title to such property from the United
‘States Government, we will as briefly as
possible givethe plan tobe pursued. The
first step-to be taken to conform with the
minifig law of the district is to have the
ciaim surveyed, which for this district
will be done by Mr. Stratton, who will
prepare a diagram of the same, and upon
the filing of the diagram.as provided in
the act, and posting the same in a conspicuous place on the claim, together with
a notice of intention to apply for a patent,
the Register of the land office shall publish a notice of the.same in ® newspaper
published nearest to the location of said
claim, and shall also post such notice in
his office for the period of ninety days;
and after the expiration of said period, if
no adverse claim shall have been filed, it
shall be the duty of the Surveyor General,
upon application of the party, to survey
the premises and make a plat thereof, in
dorsed with his approval, designating the
number and description of the location,
the value of the labor and improvements,
and the character of the vein exposed;
and. upon payment to the proper officer of
five dollars per acre, together with: the
cost of such survey, plat and notice, and
giving satisfactory evidence that said diagram and notice have been posted on the
claim during said period of ninety days,
the Register of the land office shall trans. \
mit to the General Land Office: said plat,
survey and description, and a patent shall
issue for the same thereupon. But said
plat, survey or description shall in no case
cover more than one vein or lode, and no,
patent shall issue for more than one vein
or lode, which shall be expressed in the
patent issued. The entire cost of procuring a patent toa mining claim will not
exceed $250, and for this outlay a perfect
title to such property can be obtained. In
our present unsafe condition of mining
titles, when would-be claimants are ready
to patch up titles to our best mines, it is
essential that the real owners of such
property should place themselves in such
position as not to be harrassed by blackmailers. This can be done by acting up
to the requirements of the Congressional
Mining Law of 1865, which Mr. Stratton
will cheerfully explain to all interested in
this important matter.
Union H1uu.—The National says that
hoisting works are being erected on the
O’Connor mine, the rock from which is
said to look very well, and which is
being crushed at Laton’s mill. At the
Union mine they are now engaged in
pumping out the water, and think they
will have the mine dry by Monday.
THE Napa Register is anxious for brother Earle to visit that place. It says that
“not half of us have got religion enough
to last till ‘dog days.’” Most Christians
only gather manna. It just lasts over
Sunday. On all other days it must be
gathered every day.
A Lares Crry.—The Philadelphia
North American boasts that every succeeding census only serves to render it
clearer that_the city of Philadelphia not
only exceeds in area and houses New York
and her environs, but is much the largest
city on this.continent.
GREAT REGIsTER.—There are now 2230
names recorded on the Great Register of
Solano county. i
ey
THE NEW ARTICLE!
Just Received,
LACOUR’S
_ SARSAPARIPHERE
a _ BETTERS!
The best Tonic in the World!
eee
FOR SALS BY .
8 O@Rm@orY & WAIT. HO! For the GLORIOUS FOURTH!
'. CELEBRATED SODA FOUNTAINS
. ARRIVALS AT THE . :
NATIONAL EXCHANGER HOTEL,
Broad Street, Nevada City, Califoriia.
§ r cedaaas * =
LANCASTER & HASEY, Propricter.
. June 21, 1867,
¥ Smith San Francisco J Williams Colfax
J BMcGowen do S$ Marshall do
Fiskin Hunts Dit J eprosin Nese k ra; evada
t Muffler do H 4 Sweet Gold. Flat
H Seaberry Sweetland J A Calbeck Greg m
; White ae do HA Frazer Was stl
G Norton Grass Valley J Easley do _ .
T Burke : do ~=—d Boots & cxups do
J Fun do Tdames SanJduan =;
M Horn -do _ JT Hogan do ~
PN Lon do _T J Manchester Bridge
Miss Kot do J Mehan Santa Cruz
L Merrow Scott Flat J‘! Williams Nevada
J 8 Raymond Piety Hill WM Eddy French Corr
J Greenshields Red Biu H J Huffman Pleasant V
M. Southard Scott Flat W M-Stark do
TeaeRI
RACES! RACES!! RACKS!!!
. THREE DAYS RACES. OVER
GLENBROOK PARK,
JULY 3rd, 4th and 5th, 1867.
First Day---July 3rd.
PURSE @50.—Mileand repeat, rnnning; with
an entrance of $20 added to the purse,
SAME DAY—SECOND RACE.
PURSE $25.—Mile heats,: trotting -to harness,
for horses that have never beaten three minutes
and a half; with $20 added to purse.
Second Day=---July 4th.
PURSE $50.—A one Hurdle race, mile-heats,
with five hurdles three and a half feet high; with
an entrance of $25 added . to the purse,
SAME DAY—SECOND RACE.
PURSE $50.—Trotting race, mile heats, three
in five, for horses in the class of ‘om Findley’s
rey, Sigourney’s mare, Smith’s mare, and Meue’s horse, *“dohn,” with an entrance of $25 ad.
ded to the purse.
Third Day---July 5th.
PURSE $2%.—Half mile running; with an entrance of $25 added to the purse.
SAME DAY--SECOND RACE,
PURSE $20.—For a quarter of a mile running;
with an entrance of $20 added to the purse.
After which there will be a
GRAND TOURNAMENT,
For the, LADIKS, in which there will be four magnificent prizes distributed among the contestants
for their grace and skill in riding, and their skill
in the management of the horse. Fast or furious
riding will not be considered by the Judges in
awarding the premiums; it will only be graceful
riding and the management of the Horse:
“1st mium Fifty Dollarsin Coin,
24 “ One large Silver Goblet...”. =
3d ‘“* One elegant Silver Card Case.$20
“4th “ One pair splendid Medallion
Napkin Rings..... $18
Entries for the first day’s race must be made on
or before the 1st day of July, with the Proprietor.
All the above races run and trotted according to
rule—Trotting,; Bay View Park rule: Runn ug,
mae — a mi
¢ prizes and purees above enumerated will,
be yey: red the Northern District of California.
n entrance fee of ten per cent. will be charged
on the Premiums. CHAS. H. OSBORN
juni2 Proprietor.
“PRO BONO PUBLICO.”
LACOUR?S
SARSAPARIPHERE BITTERS
AN ADMIRABLE TONIC, AN EXCELLENT
SPECIFIC AND UNRIVALLED AS A
BLOOD PURIFIER.
THE PRINCIPAL INGREDIENTS BEING
SARSAPARILLA.
eB
—_—_—
SOLD ‘EVERYWHERE,
FOUNTAIN SODA! !
j Cuaus DREYFUSS,
—aT THE—
UNITED STATES BAKERY,
On Pine Street;
’ Has fitted up one of Frank Guild’s .
Where the of Nevada can be supplied with
this os The onl ee. .
[gas Sra ce
PERU VIAy
SYRUP ;
14 PROTECTED ‘BOLUTION or THE
Protoxide of Iron,
A new discovery in Medicine which
‘STRIKES AT THE ROOT OF DISEAsp
By supplying the Blood with its: vrray; Pxiic
PLE, OR LIFE ELEMENT—IRUN. ry
This is the becret of the wonderful BUCCESS: of
this remedy in curing
Dyspepsia, Liver Complaint, Dropey,
Chronic Diarrhoea, Boils, Wer.
vous Affections, Chills and
Fevers, Humors, Loss of
Constitutional Vigor
Diseases of the
Kidneys’ and
Bladder,
Female Complaints,
And all Diseases originating in a Baa state
of the Blood, or accompanied by Desiirr;
OF A LOW STATE OF THE SYSTEM, s fae
Being free from Alcohol in any form, ite ener:
gizing cifects are not fellowed by correspondin;
reaciiun, but are permanené, infusing sTRENneri,
VIGOR and NEW LiF into ail parts o1 the system,
aud building up an hrom Constitution,
Dyspepsia and Debility.
From'the Venerable: Archdeacon SCOTT, D, D,;
Dunuam, Canada East, March 24, 1665,
* ad * ‘“T am an inveteraug Dyspeptic of more than 25 years’ standing.”
* * .* * “Luave been so. wonderfully benefitted in the three short weeks dunug
which 1 have used-tne Peruvian Syrup, thacl can
scarcely persuade myself uf Lhe reaicy.
who have known ine are agtunished at tne change.
Lam widely known, and can but recommend wo
others that which has one so much for mv.”
A case of 27 years standing cured.
@
From INSLEY JEWETT, No. 15 Avon Pine,
, Boston, Mass.
“T have suffered, and sometimes severely, for
27 years, from dyspepsia. I commenced
the Peruvian Syrup, and found immediate benetii
from it. In the course of unree or four weeks .
was entirely relieved irom my sufferings, and
have enjoyed uninterrupted health ever eiuce.
ee
One of the most. Distinguished Ju
rists in New England writes to
friend, as follows:
“TI have tried the PERUVIAN SYRUP, and the
result fully sustains yeur prediction. It has mad?
& NEW MAN Of me ; infused into my system nev
vigor and energy ; 1 amno longer tremulous aol
debilitated, as when you Jast saw me, but stror
ger, heartier, and with larger capacity for labor,
mental and physical, than ut any-time during te
last five years.”
An eminent Divine of Boston, says:
“I have been using the PERUVIAN SYRUP for
some time past ; it gives me new yigor, buoysi
cy of spirits, Kiacticity of Muscle.”
Thousands have been changed by the ws
of thisremedy ; from weak, sickly, suf”,
ing creatures, to strong, healthy, and happt
men and women : and invalids cannot r&
sonably hesitate to give ita trial. .
A pamph!’t of 32 , containing certificate
of cures panes fae pave wr from some of tht
moet eminevt physicians, clergymen, and other.
will be sent FREE to any address,
See. that each bottle has PERUVIA
SYRUP blown in the glass.
FOR SALE BY 3
J. P, DINSMORE, Proprietor, No, 86 Dey Stree
. New York,
AND BY ALL DRUGGISTS.
eE. F. SPENCE, Nevada.
LOC
MIN
‘js said .
miners
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gravel
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such p.
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