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

March 4, 1876 (4 pages)

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spas nn oes Samia S ad . ern lg il Re Pt alee oe Stoel teeta sein. oot our eRe ieaceetialind bin Fal os i Ne Bee RL NEVADA CITY, CAL. —<—,, Saturday, March 4, 1876. Se AR Just to the Point, We have several times chargéd 4 that much of the legislation of. the present Legislature on school mat_. ters, has been dictated by a spirit of political revenge. Of course the eherge has been denied, but nof in a manner to convince us that we were wrong. We yesterday found an article-eopied in the Grass Valley Union from the Sonoma Democrat, in which “we findthe — following —admission. subsidy from the California Teacher, it says: ‘‘Considering the means by which the present State school adnrinistration was brought into power, ~~ and the use it~-would -make—of—the a subsidy, thé reasons for withdrawing it seem to be imperative.”’ ‘If that does not admit all we have charged, then we can not interpret good plain English. [t not only admits, but proves all we have ever charged, in oar opinion, and we have no further comments to make ‘on it, except to ask the Democrat and the Union, who seconds that—paper;-if-r bill to withdraw thatsubsidy would likely to have ‘been introduced into this Legislature if Fitzgerald had been elected? We are perfectly willing the dominant party—shall do aa by the record it is making. Roll ef Honor. The following is the Roll of Honfor the month ending March 34, . 1876, Miss Phil A. Davenport, teachVer: Frank Nelson, Adolph “Muller, Alphonse Iseard, Gerson Goldsmith, Bennie McClintock, ~Joe*GtlassonWillie Nivens, Frauk Donnelly, Geo, Downey, Gussie Naffziger, James Colley, Charlie Hoffman, James Mullen, George Lrown, Willie Smith, Johnnie Lones, Charlie Hérzinger, “Genie Gaylord, Owen Harrigan, Johnnie Roberts, Julius Rosenthal, Bertie Adair, Willis Iutchison, Anng Keller, Agnes Noonan, -Fannicman, Eliza Sims, Katie Matteson, Lillie Cashin, Mary Guenther, Katie Lutz, Theresa Skehan. Celia Hayes, , Lena Hanson, .AnnieBrock, James =‘ +." Roberts, Eddie Walters. Roll of Honor. = \The following named pupils are on the roll of honor in the 3d intermo-} diate school, for the month ending ,. March 3, Miss 8.C. Nilon, teacher: Johnnie Chesnut, Cora Clark, Mamie Beckman, Allen Merry, Robert Organ, Kitty Kalagher, Henry Rich, Wiltie Osborne, Julius Isoard, Lizzie Keenan, Annie Merry, Charles Calkins, Allie Hulon, Graee Morgan, Willis Silver, Gussie Black, Fernande Muller, Mary Enright, Willie Walters, Annie Lutz, Lizzie Cornell, Eddie Coughlan, Warren Alty, Kattie Tvok, Linco” Hartman; Kate Enright, Johnnie Meiv, Patina Weiss, Joe] Porter, Lulu Coe, Horace Clark, Lizzie Monro, Eddie Dulac, George Black, Hattie Jones, Will “CARTS Black, Annie Hughes, Sarah Silva, —--— woe Roll of Honor. The following is the roll of honor for the month, ending March 34, in the first ‘Primary School: Adeline Hothersol, Adelaide Hothersol, Jas.4 Black, Stevy Duffy, Maggie Thompson, BaynoGregory, Wm. Jenkins, Lena Locklin, Eddie Baker, Carrie Maftziger, “Sallie Groves, Eddie Bordwell, Thos. Grimes, Mary Silver, Mary Cook, Dan, Doitmnelly, _Wm, McCoy, James Skehan, Belle Rolfe, Joe. Baruh, Wm, Hoffman, Etta Weiss, Emma Sims, Lawrence Nihel, John McQuesten,.Dan, Rich, Alice Crawford, John McCrandle, Mamie Jack.SRE Se esd x PRE _. {Rell of Honer. The following pupils are on the roll of honer in the ‘lst Intermediate School for the month “ending Mareh 3d; Miss M. F. Gregory teacher; May Seaman, Amelia Hook, Kate Hanly, Allie Smith, Theo Wells, Heury Young, Willie Quigley, Belle rapes A wees. po nenrnne ans , ae The Daily Cranseript Speaking of withdrawing the State . : __ what it pleases, but we want it to} ‘select-from-its-body-a—committes—ot . the pupils.om the roll of honor. in . Dorsey, Luttrell offered the following bill. “Be it enacted by the Senate &ad in Congress assembled, that-the sixteenth and thirty-sixth sections of all _. Seal Brevities, The Grass Valley Union gets ins center shot in the following manner: “The whipping post is not needed, A fellow-over at Virginia, Nevada, was caught the other day, exhibiting his filthy maked person to. the girls of a_pnblic school, How the. cato’nine-tails should warm that féellow’s back!’’ > “ff 2 The way.the wind waltzed around the corners of houses on Thursday inight, was just terrific. “ Washoe “Zephyrs’’ or Jowa ‘‘Blizzards”’ never-—excelled it. If there dre not some prostrated telegraph poles. and demoralized cabins ‘ ‘scattered abroad,” somewhere in this section,then the storm was perfectly useless. *Femperance Hall at 8 o'clock, skarp.~Antoine~ Cam's after adjournment, ay at 12\or half past. _ . Lo-day the credits of those examined ‘before -the County Board of Examination—will be-summedup, and certificates awarded to those who passed. W. F. Edwards is now the editor and sole’ proprietor of the Truckee Republican. newsy and interesting ‘paper, and the people there should, as we believe they do, appreciate it, and manThe Marysville Appeal says: Themother, auat and brother of Thomas] W. Jackson, one of the Kerns’ rob. bers, -arriyed here yesterday from San Francisco, and visited young Jackson at the Station House. The meeting was a most affecting one, and it is said was ‘‘too mich” for the-officers. present. The Marshal most affecting, the moiher weeping and wailiig in the most heart rendipg manner, All present, ineluding the young rascal, Wept bitter tears of . grief. Mrs. Jackson_and party _returned yesterday. She will be nearer her lost boy in a few months, as he will be taken in. charge by Sun Francisco officers as soon as discharged by.thé Court here. Grass and grain in’ the lower part of the county is growing finely, and steck is beginning to gain in flesh. In the northern part of the county . snow is from five; to ten feet in depth. We understand that: in the vicinity of Eureka, although there is & heavy body of snow, it is spongy, and will go off very quickly with a warnm-rain, Judge Caswell has had a new fence ereeted in front of his residence on Aristocray Hill, The contractors were ballasting on Thursday, and we understand have got the work completed to near Grass Valley, The Old Nevadans, The meeting of former citizens of this county, at. the Cosmopolitan Hotel on Saturday last, appoiuted a committee of fifty to meet to-day at the same place. -'The-committes will ten in addition to . its worthy President, E. G. Waite, upen whom will devolye the arrangement of the necessary details to secure success to the proposed reunion some time this Spring, On Monday there-will be-a meeting of citizens here who will also appoint a committee who will act in connection with the San Fraticisco committee, and who will see to all the details for the proposed meeting. Some timé next week it will. be de,. ~> -— Rell of Honor, The following aré the names of. the Ungraded Sthool, Miss Laura F, Booth, teacher, for the month ending Mareb 3d; Lulu Alexander, Belle Bailey, Julia Adams, Marshal Morsé, Henry Alexander, Georgie ——— —~=ee Iw the House, January 24th, Mr. House of Representatives of America He is making it a very [ fest their appreciation._by giving il . of these got-at-the rate-of 3200 und a liberal patronage, 7. $300 per ton.. This snan is of he -had business ont, but Deyolt .it is. _ -Hen:—Frane.I, Par. et-Plac. Dux. known what it willbe“necessury—toy Jack, Maggie Cashin, James Young, > Sohnny Daffsy, John Trezise, Moses Goldsmith, James Cramer, Jenny Adair, Belle Millhorn, Josie Piunkett, Eddies Coe, ©. Stonebridge, Sherman Marsh, Mattie Gregory, John Hurly, Clase . BN Monee Gem: Bascocg and Levi P. Luckey Kesumed their_positions Monday “at the Executive.munsion, Fred Shearer, mineral lands belonging to the United States in the State of California, be set aside for common school pur. poses; provided that the proceeds from the sale of such Idnds be devoted exclusively to, and used for the maintenance of the public schools of the State."’. The bill was read twice and. referred.to the Committee op Public Lands. -2> ef +.. An Easton (Pa) boy delights to Muke wv lunch ou specu candles, yesterday saw in the possession of a gentleman of this city some specimens of gold and quartz obtained by him in the Big Horn motntains in 1870. The’ gold. is quite coarse, j many of the ‘‘chispas’’ being worth from a bit to thirty cents. The place where this gold was foand _is about 250 mileswest of the point where the miners are now concentrating in the Black Hills. The man who exhibited the gold is anxious for the attention of the Indians to be drawn to the eastward next Spring,. as he will then be-able to get back to his diggings in the Big Horn mounmadevit very warm for them. They . conld prospect nowhere without being attacked. In the rithest place that they found forty-one of their men fought back the Indians while six men-worked with pans, In six hours they washed out $1,100. The Indians. could then beheld back no longer and they got away with what geld they had'dug. They afterwards made a calculation in regard to the number of pans of dint washed, and figured out that they had taken out $17 per pan. They found vast ranges of quartz veins and from some opinion that the mining regions of rthe Black Hills is much the same kind of country as that he was in and that it-is all immexsely—richWhile he was talking yesterday and showing his specimens, he attracted & large and much interested. audience,— Territorial Enterprise. the old elm of Boston Common. A flattened -bullet~-was~discovercd imbedded in the trunk 18-rings from the center, and beneath the tree was -@-medal which is inseribed as follows: “Itis of large size, of copper or ‘bronze, and has a medallion head on one side, and on the other figares of ‘Justice with scales and sword and of Religion with a cross, and a circular temple in the background, with—a date which seems to be 1604, or MDCIIII. The-obverse side of the medal bears the following inseripwhich in English would read, Francis I., Duke: of Parama and Placenza. . There is also a head of Francis I. Onthe reverse are the words, ‘Juguntur ut imperent,” which mean, They are joined that they may rule.’”’ A Few months ago some sensational Bohemian in the East started an item in circulation to the effect that John Mackey. the chief of the bonanga kings of the Comsteck, was now the fortunate recipient cf a regular monthly income of $831,600 & month, or nearly $10,000,00¢° a year, The result is that peor Mackey has been pestered most cruelly ever since,» by letters ‘from, . all parts of creation, written by envious or impecunious persons, begging for asmistence, —“Puey ak tor all sorts of sums, fr __ oue te a huns dred thousand doll, ., or oven fer one hour's income, Should Mackey. try to comply with all these moidest requests, he would not find bullion enough in the great bonanza to do it With. —_————— Oo? — 7 ~ As horrible a death, probably, as it is possible for a man to suffer, occurred at Lagrange, Ky., a few days ago. The victim was John Finnerailroad.” He was on a freight train; the axle broke, precipitating the enment, and Finnegan was by some means caught fast by the machinery, und held so that bis companions could not effect his release, while two streams of hot water poured upon him from a broken boiler, After the most horrible agony he became unconscious and soon died, his tongue almost dropping off from the effects of the hot water which had forced itself into his mouth. * oe ae Mxssxs. Furbish and Joniface, members of the Furbish ‘Two Or pbhans troupe, while on a steamer psssing down the James river, Va., the other day, found a calf lying on his back with his legs tied up, and their compassion was so stirred that they cut the cords, whereupon bossie made a plunge among the people and then jumped ovei*board, He swam ashore, and the bigs: teamer was detained dn hour on his ac: count. Tux New Xork Assembly has Tur BiqHons Movwrarxs.— We} tains. He was one ofa large party . _ : ‘led by Jeff Stanifer, and the Indian$Pwomen-reguinrly-drafted-into-the ar-@ negro and a Chinawoman living in gan-an-engineer on the-iShort-Line. — gine and cars down a sligat embank: . 8 Tux Poughkeepsie Eagle say that the Hudson River Railroad depot in that city his Wife and ‘child, frem whom he had been separated, and while the three were talking the second wife of the diverced. man stood looking on, When the bell rang the man bade his first wife good-bye and hurried his second wife into the car. Tus pen with which: President Grant signed the Centennial.bill was niade from the quill of an American’ eagle shot in the vieinity of Mount Hope, Oregon. -The pen and eagle will be exhibited at the Centenniul. < > Tar—“'Woman’s Journal’ wants my, ‘“‘net-merely to fight, but tomake clothing and accoutrements; to cook, wash and nurse,”* ‘THERE are three thousand Chinese boys in California who will be voters Mail. A vispatcH from New Orleans says that Captain Boynton has completed-his hundred-mile swim. He . made the trip in twenty-five hours. A HoRsk belonging toa fire company in Washington eats oysters on a divorced husband recently met. at} twhen they become of age.—N. ¥.+} [By Telegraph,) . Mining Stocks. =~ Yesterday Morning’s Sales: 480 2705 1720 345 -380 205 890 1735 500 3935 1430 100 * 895
1570 Ophir 69. i i Mexiean 31%. see Gould & Curry 2234. Hale & Norcross 4944. Best & B-icher 64, Chollar 115, be Savage 17. : Crown Point 27. . Yellow Jacket 111, Imperial 17. Empire Mill 924. Gold Hill Quariz 4; Kentuck, 1634. Alpha 5544. 1025 Belcher 40. 640 Confidence -249' Con Virginia 459. == 2\10Sierra Nevada 25; : 945 Califernia-9144, _ ''35 Ballion 5824. 410. Exchequer 20, —_ 25, Seg Beleber 90. 1130 Justice 283.~ ° ~ 300 Succor.2%,. 420 Overman 72: 2Uu9 Union Con 1444. 9512 20 ee. ‘‘Now what can be more sickening. than to see a pretty, fresh girl of eighteen or twenty going to the altar With a tottering old brote of ‘sixty?”’ asks a gushing St. Louis reporter. ‘The fellow seems to think that it’s wh easy matter for every young man with eleven dogs and witheut_any. trade; but the truth is that such ‘young men are not to be foand on AND AT THE NEVADA THEATRE, Monday, April 3d, 1876, Y THE FRIENDS OF THE METH. ODIST CHURCH. The proceeds to be applied in liquidating the Debt cn the new Church. THE CONCERT,.Will be conducted by the best FESTIVAL! ised their assistance, and will b a aie interspersed with TABLEAUX, A FINE SUPPER . Will. be prepared for the. oveasion, “= Nevada February 18th. NOTICE. LL CITY TAXES for the fiscal year of 1875-6, that are not paid on-sor be:— tore the first-day-of ch—next; willbe deelared delinquent. and advertised for sale. — W. J. ORGAN, Presidéng; talent of the City. who have promthe balf shell whenever he eau get Ee ie them. . \ Tue \ Exzormenr or a SMOKING Cie.—Men make many pretenses of . enjoying themselves whex they don’t, but the thinest and most transparent of-all is when they crowd imo a smoking ear to enjoy (?) a smoke. We doubt about aby man, however accustomed hé may be.to 'the fumes of tobacco, ‘deriving pleasure-from puffing at a cigar in a crowded car in which the smoke is frequev cs . thick you-cam cut it with a koife, but what sball we say of mon to whom tobacco is almost a stranger, ordivatily, who make for the ‘smoking ear as soon as they board-the train, and puff away at poor-cigars until every~ thing is blue? They do it, and they pretend they like it. They wink and blink at each other through the dense smoke which almest strangles them, and cough like the consamptive's ward in a hospital, It is so nice, isn'tit? They smoke their: cigars down very low, av if resolved to lose not one iota of enjoyment, and when one is gone.they immediately light another. When they come out they their eyes'look.as though they had ‘a Mr. Rosenagen a young Dane, but are very white around the gills, and . . ok Pte F mt ; T3939 every Ur y-BV0Uus DUA. VUUT erreour Dal, Jersey, declared at the Methodist) preachers’ meeting that the means tuken at present to support Sunday Schools—by fairs, bazars, picnics and comic lectures—is thoroughly demoralizing, a en tiation Sometimes’ Theodore Hook was strangely puzzled by hard names in his improvisations, 1s in the-case_of hevuastered the difficulty as follows: “Yet more of my muss jis required, Alas\JI fear'she is done; But no, likes fiddler that's tired, I'll Rosem agen end go on,” _ Tun ke y to the penitentiary— Whiskéy. Ee ¢ a _ MARRIED. ae At Cherokee, Feb,:17, 1876, by, Rev. Father Phelan, Wm. Nancurvis to Mary Fant. __At Grass Valley, Feb, 26, 1876, by Rev. Father Phelan, Daniel Coghlan to Mary, Dacay, both of Cherokee. ——— : : . been taking a surrept ia neighbor’s smoke house. Oh, you masculive railers against the follies of women} all her sacrifices at the shrine of fashion are the dictates of wisdom cewpared with your absurd pretense of enjoyment in a smoking tar. ———__—_+» ews ----———— j A Curry Hatzxep Caritp.—In the early days of Humboldt says the \Vinnermucca Silver State, there was a small cabin in one of the mining comps, and in the course of events a little girl was born unto them, father left soon after the child’s birth, and has never returued.~ ‘Vbe mother, in consideration *of a small amount of love and affection ‘and fifteen shining double eagles,. formed a new alliance with one Sing who presides at a gambhng-table,; steals ‘chickens, and wears long finger nails as marks of gentility. We saw Mrs. Kee patiently at ‘work with a comb and basin of water t.tying te comb the kinks out of the child’s hair the other day and askid Sing if that-was his little girl. . ‘*N—o,, no, my little girl. Whata-matter him hair? all clooked; no makum c neues; what-a-matter nat eye welly streight—no my little girl.’’ ‘‘Where did yon get her, Siug?”’ “Oh—1 ne mo sabee—long time ago one man= -he-noChinaman, he no white mam: he all same black melican man—he come live’ my woman; she heap like ‘im; nats all.”’ ~A Wa rtitHact man is very. polite and moi lest, and pnts it in this way: “The polished. surface of the conealed aqua pura coming in contact with my pedal extremities, the misplacement of the attraction of gravitation caused the small. members which form the foot’s extremity to fly heavenward, while my habeas corpus, in its lraste to form & copartnership with the highway, produced a compound fracture of the nether garments, thereby opening an area of tear-atory, which lies vailed from public gaze benwath this printed yehicle an¢ci disseminator of knowledge.”’ ra oo oe. Here is a soliloquy of a Parisian inebriate, akibetnd to his hat, which had fallen oif, It was overheard one night on the Boulevards: pick you up, [ fall; if Ifgll, you will net pick me up—then I leave you;” and he staggered proudly away. A Puanrx deacon took bis son to ehureb, having heard stories about im, bat while the deacon prayed he son persuaded two of the "youn sisters to go riding with him, an they went off with the, old man’s horses, len ving him te find his way home en fvot. _— THAT was a faithful wife out ‘west passed the bi] te build four more s BI public baths fur New York City. \ besband out of jail, who raffled off her Bible The! fi Kee, one of her own countrymea,f \j to the Secretary at the office of the Com“Tf Th. to get her} At Sweetland, Feb. 5; 180; py Rev: Father Phelan, Thomas BPrinin to Kate Flynn. r At Columbia Hill, Feb. 29, 1876, by Rev. Pather Phelan, Joseph G. O’Neil to Katie EB. Wood. : At Grass Valley, Feb. 16, 1876, by Rev. Father Phelan, arthur Cooper to Deborah Burns. ES ee . FOR SALE. 2, MY RESIDENCE AND THE-FUR: ee] NITURE in it is offered for Sale. The House is situated in the— best part of the city, and it will be sold . will be sold separate from the Furniture, or both together as the purchaser may desire, For further particulars engnire of A. GOLDSMITH, Nevada, March 3d, 1876, ASSESSMENT NOTICE. y NY. Location of principal place of business, San Francisco, California—Location of works, Nevada, Nevada county,California—Notice is hereby given that at a meeting of the Directors, held on the 24th day of Feb., 1876, an assessment (No, 8,) ef one dollar per share was levied upon the capital stock of the corporation, payable immediately, in United States gold coin, pany, 311 California street, over Aetna Insurance Company, Reoms3 and 4, second floor, entrance 309 California street, San Francisco, California. _ Any stock upon which this assessment ‘Shall remain unpaid on the 3d day of April, 1876, will be delinquent and advertised for sale at public auction, and unless payment is made before, will besold on ‘MONDAY, the 4th day of APRIL, 1876, to pay the delinquent assessment, together with cOsta of advertising and expenses of sale, %. J. M. BUFFINGTON, Secretary. Office—311 California Street, over Actna Insurance Company, Rooms 3 and 4, second floor, entrance 369 California strect, San Fraacisco,, California, : m3 TO) SRI > Aas NEW VARIETY STORE. GRAY & GILMAX, BROAD STREET, ADJOINING KN@WL TON’S JEWELRY STORE. TAS leased the above place, and stocked it with a fine assortment of goods, we are now prepared to supply the people of Nevada County with the finest CIGARS, . ~ Both Imported and Domestic, TOBACCO,Chewing and Smcking—the best brands. Stationery, Cutlery, Toilet Articles, aud Yankee Notions. _CANDIES and NUTS, A fine assortment, fresh and good. oes As we shall sell all our goods at the lowest living prices, we solicit» share of the public patronage, assuring all that we will give satisfaction in all cases. =I at-a reasonable price for Cash. . The House . ‘'YOMING GOLD’ MINING COMPA-+ A. H, Hanson, Secretary. Nevada, Feb. 26; 1876. i —TALBOTT’S. SALOON. GRASS VALLEY ROAD, OPPOSITE THE __ TOLL HOUSY, — W. S. TALBOTT keeps on hand as @ good LIQUORS and CIGARS as can be found at any Bar in the county, Givehim a call—everybody. £22-Im CAUTION. ‘ HERBAS. my wife, Mary Mulen, out just provocation, I hereby caution all persons trustiiig her of miy accoint, ae I~ Will not pay ‘any debts of her contracting after this date.— -: ——s : LAWRENCE MULLER, Nevada, Feb. 27,1876. = we JAMES J. OTT. ais ASSAYER, A BY a ORES ‘of every description’ Réfined, Melted and Assayea, ~~ By request. Gold Bars exchanged for Ooin, \ 80 Mate: Street; NevadaCity. 2 Established in 1852, . ELECTRO PLATING in GOLD or SILYER. t= = > * la Carriage,Sign, and Orna~ —— > J. W. COOLEY, N THE PLAZA, JUNCTION OF SAC( ramento and Broad Streets, NEVADA CITY, is now prepared to do CARRIAGE AND SIGN PAINTING In all its. branches, ir the—most finished tyle, and with promptness. Prices to suit the times.;Satisfaction Guaranteed. J. W. COOLEY, W. D. LONG, Attorney and Counselor at Law “AND NOTARY PUBLIG, aw ON BROAD STREET, opponit the National Exchange Hotel. J. M. WALLING, ATTORNEY AT LAW. NOTARY PUBLIC, Justice of tae Peace, and ~ FIRE INSURANCE AGENT, OF Brown & Morgan’s Block, NB VADA CITY, Cal. aps RUDOLPH PHOTO-GALLERY. BROAD ST., ABOVE PtWE, NEVADA CITY. . R. A. DESMOND—Artict pcerers taken in the highest style of the art. Prices low, AMERICAN MEAT MARKET. Commercial Street, Nevada. = MONRO, having opened a Meat Market on Commercial Street, is prepared to supply customers with the best quality of Beef, Mutton, Pork, Veal, Corned Beef, Corned Pork, etc., at the lowest rices. ~ STAGES will leave NevaPtr. Sn for Moore’s Flat daily. (Sundays excepted, at-5 o’¢lock, A. M. For Eureka, Mondays, “Wednesdays and Fridays at same hour. Returning will leave Moore's Flat dei! undays excepted, at 6 A. M. Alay kly from Eureka at 6 A. M. NICH GROCERIES CHAS. F. ROBINSON. A T his Store, on BROAD STREET, opposite the Methodist Church, keeps_ constantly on hand as fine s stuck of Ghs)CERLES, PROVISIONS, &c. as can be found in Nevada city, which wil} be sold as LOW THE LOWEST. Give meacall, o4 1H. W. VALANTINE. M. D., RESIDENT PHYSICIAN, FFICE, COMMERCIAL STREET, opposite Potter & Sigourney’s Residence at Mr “W.\J, Hill. Orders left at Bell be attended to. as “DRE. F. BUELOW, Physician and Surgeon. FFICE ON BROAD STREET, adjoit‘ing the Theatre. Organ’s, Yiet7 & ee GRAY & GILMAN, . Nevada City, Peb.25th, 1876, Nevada June lth, 1874 having left-my bed and-board with=———— }__mental Painting. aves Eureka Stage and Kxpress Co. 9. (AMA i Nes ap eae fee ted eu We ad a Be ay ie ee ee Se ae aoa) dealt eet: dels] le) . ale ade like ~~ i} e hM . aa oo Be $4: & tet re) siuah w