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

May 12, 1882 (4 pages)

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Sra -—>--€am_depend. on’ them entertaiuing prosperous counties in this State, but ie 2 .' CAN IT BEDONE ?. The stggestion that a large laundry be started for the benefit of the people of this city and Grass Valley who do not like to patronize Chinese, is favorably received on all sides. One such an institution as we have in mind could do the washing for several thousand patrons, and at nearly if not quite as low rates as the Mongolians receive. The work would be much better done and the clothing last a great deal longer, than with the order of things we have to submit to now. —-What enterprising and shrewd citizen will set the ball rolling, either in the shape of a co-operative laundry or one backed by ‘private capital? PETAL IEE SIE TES HOW THIS COUNTY STANDS. The Report of San Francisco tells the unvarnished'troth when it says : Nevada ‘county is one of the most the slow-going. cheap-John. valley counties are doing their best to. rnin it because. it isa mining coun’ y, and because the people of the farming counties are uniformly jealous of mining prosperity. If Nevada coun‘ty is let alone she will for the next thirty years give more material ‘wealth to the world annually than any agricultural county in the State. Agriculture isa great interest, but there is no good reason why it should clash with mining. NOT CONSISTENT. Some of the anti-slickensites and their newspaper organs maintain that if a mine owner can not afford to develop his claim to the producing point with white labor he should permit it to remain in its original coudition. The fact that the big wheat raisers in the valleys depend principally upon Chinese labor, and say that they would be ruined if deprived of that class of help, should make that element have a brotherly feeling for and be'very charitable towards those few miners who tolerate the heathens. fd A Brave Miner. James Rowe, the miner who-lost both arms and the sight of both of his eyes in the terrible blasting accident at the Forman shaft several weeks ago, left for his home and fam. ily in England yesterday. As a sum -of over $2,000 has been raised for ALY TRANSCRIPT ‘‘Mott Minute, Interviews With the vetoed the first Chinese bill, will not turn up as candidates‘at the Sacramento Convention. columns are not sufficiently rigid for & rough campaign. gration are in favor of legalizing torture, infanticide, the opium habit, and woman slavery in the United States, they are subornation large scale. don’t matter as long as a few missionaries can get good salaries on pretense of Christianizing the heathen, and a few lords of the railcan save a few hundred million more in building new roads, come home drunk,” the last words spoken by Mrs. _Kittie Troy to her husband, according to newspaper reports, many aman in San Francisco. w can make up a volume in his mi just out of these few words, ‘Don’t be goue long and don’t. come home drunk.” very amusing one, but if it hits somebody who has a good wife and -. deserts-her-at-night-for-a-lot of dirty} whisky, this little note will not have been penned in vain. great disappointment among many, in a year or two, over the effect of the Chinese bill. nature of the subject, the~ benefits cannot commence to show themselves for a considerable period, but too many have been acting as if they believed that everything would be improved immediately. nia must go through a period of probation before there will be an entire recovery from the mischief which has been occasioned by using Chinese labor in so many branches of trade. the people at the Grangers’ picnic near Marysville Wednesday, the address consisting of a political speech. (Petaluma Courier [Democratic}.) Nothing but a most outrageous bluoder can prevent the Democrats from catryitig Califortiia at the next slection. The Republicans, appreciating this fact, are betting two to gne'that we will make that blunder. —_— — DESERVE A BACK SEAT, (Bodie Free Preés, We trust that thuse Republicans who were in such mad haste to de-: cline to run for an offive on the Republican ticket, after the President had Their spinal a " WHAT THEY ADvocare. @. F. Truth.) All who advocate Chinesé immialso guilty of of perjury on a But these litt’e things A WEEK-DAY LES-ON, (8. F. Alta.) “Don’t be gone long and don’t These were There is d The quotation is not a IT WILL TAKE TIME, (Oakland Times.) Beyond any doubt, there will be From the \very CaliforLIKE MANY OTHERS, (8. F. Report.) Hon. J. McM. Shafter addressed Mr. Rowe he will not return penniless to his people. Of the. many torn and crippled men who have been wrecked for life through accidents in our mines, Mr. Rewe-ie-the} been ruled. by_-statesmen—without . principles.” If our memory. serves us faithfully, Judge Shafter has been prominent in politics of this State for the past twenty years, and if he has not held half a dozen offices it is not because he has not been an aspirant for-that many. wealthy man, and would not be corrupt in office, but is like the majority of politicians; they prate loudly against political corruption when they are among the outs and forget all-about it-when they are of the inns. most fearful example. The man has the courage of a lion and a soul filled, to overflowing with hope, When first hurt, and while the full extent 6f his injuries were kept from him, he imagined that he would have one eye and one. hand. This being the case he said: ‘‘Never fear; if I can see at all and have one hand I can make a living—I can take care of myself.” —Enterprise PL NORE EN SION ce 2 “Worth Two in the Bush,” Some parties hereabouts talk of trying their luck in the. Wood River country this season. This from the Wood River News may give them a point: ‘We hear of thousands on their way to. Wood. River, packing their blankets and begging their way. Better keep out. You won't have wind enough to cuss the counwants is men with—coin to buy mines . and develop them, or certainly enough to prospect with. A disturbance touk place at the corner of Main and Elm streets yesterday, and ina minute 500 men were counted in the crowd. There are lots of loafers here, and when we say loafers we mean those who have “no visible means of support.” To Entertain the Girls. our girls?” says a religious exchange A man who needs advice as to how . fo entertain his girls is not fit to edit a newspaper. We suggest that he should: take one of them out buggy-riding in the afternoon, tell her what a daisy she is, and how. insipid and fixed up that other girl is. Then he should take “that other girl” out for ice cream after supper and tell her confidentially now very uninteresting and awkward the buggy-riding girl is, When the two girls meet, the religious editor p other without his personal asA Democratic “campaign paper” aas-been started at Bodie, . If it be He declared against hydrautic mining and denounced political ‘corruption in California, saying that ‘‘for the last twenty years the State had had a glamour of romance. event was participated in by ladies as well as gentlemen, who made the occasion striking from the spirit and energy with which they carried out the allotted work,a good portion of * Z which was commemorative. A speee i aed eeeed caiseee Wap pindbed ia hie ory of President Washington ; a group of maples in memory of President Pierce ; a catalpa in.memory of President Harrison. brought from President Taylor’s boyhood home in Kentucky to surround the roots of the tree set out in honor of his name. planted in honor of Presidents Jefferson, John Adams, Lincoln, Buchan. an, Johnson, Grant, Hayes, Garfield pao and Arthur. The America-Columbus “What: shall we do to entertain . tree was planted by the Hon. Cassius M. Clay, to whom it was handed by Miss Dora Nelson and a number of young assistants, Mr. Clay also planted the Henry Clay tree Mr. Wm, Little; of Montreal, planted a sugar maple tree in honor. of the Princess Louisa, and'a Canadian oak in honor of Queen Victoria. Madame Fredin planted a Lafayette tree, and a number of memorial treeswere also planted in Washington Park. Since this inauguration, there is a prospect that commemorative tree planting will hereafter be observed in other parts of the country. it is interesting to note that in Westminister Abbey the two men . : now rest side by side who produced al object of the men fornjshiny . greater revolution in thought than oney, to ‘Democratic . any two men who ever lived. It }. refers to Darwin and Newton. is[and will now pause until she thinks He is a see Memorial Tree Plantiu . Tree Planting Day in Cincinnati The Earth * was Memorial trees were out: Tue Pall Mall Gazette says that Cutcaco. has “made them stop 14 years old. . fatal. _NEVADA CITY (Catron) DAILY TRANSCRIPT, FRIDAY, MAY 12, 1882. _. appointed Chief Secretary to Be “. land. a OR a ‘ Arrests in connection with the recent Dublin tragedy continue in Ireland, It is said that 24,000 Chinese willland in Victoria, B, C., before Aagust Ist. Judge J. MeM. Shafter addressed 2,000 people at a granger’s picnic near Marysville Tuesday. The annual reunion of the Army of . Barclay Henley. the Potomac. will take place at De tacit June 14th and 15th. The remains of Under Secretary Burke were buried Tuesday Glasnievan Cemetery,-Dublin. The Grand Lodge, A. O. U. W., of Nevada, Idaho, Montana and Utah, is in session at Winnemucca. Capt. Frank B, Ames shot and killed his’ wife in New York Tuesday evening and then killed himself. A cyclone struck the Wesleyan College at Warrenton, Mo., Monday night, causing a damage of $10,000 to $15,000, The Republicans and Democrats had-soparate grand jollifications at Stockton over the signing of the Chinese bj)l. The Grand Jury at New York have retirned another indictment against Curtis, Treasury Agent, for making political assessments. ~The death of Maggie Morgan near Salinas is‘now known to have been caused by the rupture of a blood vessel in the brain, and the Chinaman charged with her murder has been acquitted. As a result of boycotting G. L. Rist, a business man of Turner’s i Falls, Mass., by the Irish population, on account of his having served on the McMilton Grand Jury, the Protestants have withdrawn their patronage from all the Irish dealers. of whom thereare a number. _Marie Kone, a German woman, murdered her son at Boston Wednesday morning, cutting his throat with a castor-knife, the throat of her daughter Mary, The wound is not Alfred another son, has cuts in adozen places, though not fatal. Emil, a boy of 17, was also wounded. Ihe woman then attempted to kill herself, Except as to Colusa, Yolo and the upper San Jvaquin valley counties, the prospects for an abundant yield of both fruit and grain are very encouraging. The reports from the mountain counties furnish renewed indications of the growing importance ofthat region .as a fruit and grain producing section. crops in the State will be harve-ted in Butte and Tehama counties, Lowlands are doing well. whole the prospect is stlll very encouraging. The committee —-of-ex-Union and ex-confederate officers appointed to arrange a series of joint reunions of ‘thearmies of the Potomac andthe . Well in France, and are large in army of Northern Virginia, to fix historic points for a Government history of the battle of Gettysburg, have decided on—June-7th for those} ment,-and—4,165—have been otherengaged at or near ‘*Peach Orchard,” ‘*‘Wheattfield,” ‘‘Devil’s Den” and “Round Top;” June 14th for those engaged in the first day’s battle, and . _ : October 18th for those engaged at or. !* “galvanized gall” that led the near ‘‘Culp’s Hill” on ‘East’ Camden Hil'.” formerly She is doubtless insane. SAN FRANCISCO’ NOTES. The French héirs have secured control of theLe Roy estate. The Tickborne claimant (No 2) left for England Wednesday. has friends who stillhold that he is the Simon pure T. Albert Decker, a soldier bolonging to B Battery, stationed at Fort Point, was found by officer Ha: per Monday night lying unconscious in the sandhills, near Harbor View. was procured, and the boy in blue was taken to the City Receiving Hospital, when it was found that he had been beaten and cut over the head with some blunt instrument. Upon regaining his senses, Decker cent. less on the dollar than you can said that his injuries were inflicted by another soldier named Conway. A wagon ater Re. oo! alent General Torbet’s Way. Torbet, of cavalry fame, who was lost at sea with the ill-fated Vera Cruz, was a good fighter and a_ hard worker, y heart for the trooper wlio was always ready for the ‘“‘boots aud saddle,” he hated a shirk, and had his own way of meeting the complaints urged by the shirkers to get rid of duty. Just before breaking camp in the spring of 1865, the General at-: tended a sick call to see the state of health in his command. another of the boys came in for prescriptions, and by and by a strapping big trooper, who was a notorious shirk, entered the tent with his hands on his stomach. Torbet took him all in at a glance and thundered While having a kindly One after ‘-What are‘you here for?” “Sick,” was the faint response. **What ails you?” “Snake in the stomach.” “How long has it been there?” “Six months.” “Surgeon,” said the General, as he turned to the officer, “‘call in two men, cut this man open and remove the snake. Weare going to break camp inten days, and we haven't tithe to coax the revtile up.”__ . Fifteen minutes after that the man ye. hes @ thinks +horse, and by noon he looked well heaven has reformed itself up to her enough to bd hie way through a in . for Secretary of State. Judge Law ence Archer, of Santa special She then cut The best Upon the He } to_the Foreigner Who Lands on Our Fresh milch cows for sale at Sut . fa tf ae ‘ omnmmee e Judge W.T. Wallace, for Con gressman at large, ; Surveyor General. Hon. ©. T. Ryland, Clara, for Governor. Toad Commissioner. Frank T, Baldwin, of Stockton, for Attorney General. W. M. Donahue, of. El Dorado, Clara, for Governor. the Supreme Bench. 2 the Supreme ‘Bench. : A. J. Dobbins, for District Attorney, of Solano county. For Supreme Judge, Hon. Jackson Temple, of Sonoma. Judge Sepulveda, of Los Angeles, for the Supreme Bench. gress from the Fourth District. For Congressman at large, ex-Governor William Irwin, of Siskiyou. trict. J.G. Kennedy, of Santa Clara, forSuperindent of Pablic Instrue tion. C. E. Wilcoxon, of Suter, for member of the State Board of Equalization. John Markley, of Monterey, fo: member of the State Board of Equal. ization, J. Marion Brooks, District Attorney of Ventura, is a candidate for
joint Senator from Ventura and Santa Barbara. REPUBLICANS, W. W. Morrow, for Congressman at large. ~~ Senator Rowell, of Fresno,tor R ilroad Commissioner. F, M, Campbell, for Superintendent of Pablic Instruction;—= J. KE. Hollenbeck, of Los Angeles, tor Congress, Fourth District. F. 8S, Freeman, of Yolo, for Congressman from the Third’ District. Samuel Cassidy, Sonoma, for Congressman from the Third District, The Modesto Herald names Thomas Cunningham, of San Joaquin, for Governor. EA RG Scene of the Assassination, Phoenix Park, in Dublin, the scene of the assassination of Lord Cavendish and Secretary Burke, contains 1,700 acres, and is said to be the largest in the world. And in Dablin, one of the most orderly and lawabiding cities, with 300,000 inhabitants, there has been but one murder in 25 years. Even this last great ‘crime was probably not the work of residents of the city. ew om Mortvat. relief societies prosper number, Their present numbeg is no fewer than 6,525, of which 1,916 are authorized by the Governwise approved. : The membership is more than $1,000,000. THE San Francisco tixchange calls Sacramento Anti-Debris Association to ask the Supervisors of San Francisco city and county to name a member to represent them as a body in the Associatiun. A NEWis song entitled: ‘Be Kind Shores.” It seems to us that this song will never do fora temperance gathering, for it is a sort of back ‘an alien song. THE Indians and the creditors are always on the warpath. aio Ree Bee A. Berg, of Grass Valley, Has succeeded in starting a boom in the Jewelry business.Everything in his line is sold from 25 to 33 per buyit elsewhere. Berg keeps a large and complete stock.of Gold and _Silver Watches, all kinds of Jewelry, Roger Brothers and the Midletown triple-plated Silver Ware, Gorham & Co., Silver Ware, Seth Thomas and the New Haven Clocks. Any thing wanted in Berg’s line of busi ness you may depend upon square dealing. A large lot of Diamonds will also be closed out at the same great reduction as mentioned above. If vou cannot call personally send for price list of what you would like to buy. : m12-2w What is beauty’s chiefest cliarm-—, Melting eyes or rosebyd-dips. i Posty sie form of\grace ? 2 No; fine teeth these charms eclipse, And their sure preserver is —~ SOZODONT, best dentifrice. Onice Room For Rent. One of the pleasantest office rooms in the city is offered for rent. Apply at the TRanacrirr office. Mountain fee, The Nevada Ice Company is now prepared to furnish to hotels,saloons, . business houses and families, a su: perior quality of Mountain ice, at a reasonable price. . -on the Plaza will be promptly attended to, es a28-tf 38. ‘THOMPSON. AlexéDaunan, of Galt, for Surveyor Thomas M, Swan, of Solano, for of Santa OC. G. Sayle, of Fresno, for ReilFor Congress, Third District, Hon. Caleb Dorsey, of Tuolumne, ‘for Judge B. Brundage, of Kern, tor MAY POLE DANCE. R. H. Ward, of Merced, for ConRodney J. Hadson of Lake, for : Congressman from the Third Dis= and subject to the confirmation by the SupeGREATLY REDUCED PRICES : cS ee of very fine brood mares and promisi col DURBIN & COOPER, should by all means attend this sale. adaer Sats Also, at the same time, one 6-horse wagon, six 4-horse wagons, three 2-h All orders left at the Toe House . YJ" svrety THE CITIZENS oF : "Cows Forsate, . 4 Superior Quality of Ice. Works. © U, (Sawaiiis ‘were cole u Europe in the 15t ry. that, a D vin leg in theaemy ed,” re HOTEL ARRIVALS. sd Oe NATIONAL EXCHANGE HOTEL. Wepwespas, May 10th, Wii. ‘Holden, Grass Valley. J.-Davies, New South Wales. A. Gunham, San Francisco. Ed. Morse, Sweetland. Geo. Mclver, Cen. Mine, B. Murphy, Bear Valley. Chas. Holmes, San Francisco. Mrs. Thatcher & d, Downieville. J. Levieon, San Fravckco. * P. 8. Downelly, City. J. H. Wolfe, es ; A. 8, Slack, w & d, Sweetiand. R. Sa't rwaite, San Francisco. W. H Slacy, City. M. Edwards, Dutch Flat. Exasrvus Bonp, Clerk. » iD. STANLEY A. EDDY...... Proprietor a z JOHN MICHELL will give a i SOCIAL DANCE AT : HUNT’S HALL, on Friday Evening, May 19, 1882. Au Orchestra of six pieces will furnish music. Dancing till 1 -0’elock, ADMISSION—per couple, #1. Spectators to the gallery--gentlemen, 50 cents; ladies and children, 25 cents, Allare invited. m11 Lost—$20 Reward. LIGHT BAY MARE, ‘heavy set, and will weigh about 900 pounds, strayed )} away from Byer’s Ranch about six weeks ago. Atthetime she strayed away she was accompanied:by a black horse. e finder will receive the. above reward by returning her to me at Nevada City. PEDRO ORZALLI. Nevada City, May 10th, 1882.Guardian Sale of Real Property. N THE SUPERIOR COURT, Nevada County, State of California, In the matter of the guardianship of Lena Guscetti, Charles Guscetti, John Guscetti, Julia Guscetti, Amelia Guscetti and “Louisa Guscetti, Minors. Notice is hereby given that by virtue of an order of the Snperior Court of Nevada County, State of California, duly made. on the 26th day of April, A. D. 1882, I will sell at public auction,to wre: ata ean ee cash, U. 8. gold coin, the following described real property, viz: The undivided one-half of the Guscetti Milk Ranch, situated about one mile east of Nevada City, in Nevada Township, Nevada County, California; Said sale will be made at the door of the Court House in Nevada City, Nevada County, State of California, at 10 o'clock, A: M., on Monday, the 5th day of June, A. D, 1882. Said sale will be made subject to confirmation by the said Superior Court of Nevada County. Terms of sale, gold coin. Ten be paid at time of sale, and confirmation of the le by said Superior Court. CHARLES GENASCI, Guardian. C. W. Cross, Att’y for Guardian. mall r cent. to lance upon Coming! Coming LOOK OUT FOR’US ! LOOK OUT FOR US! WES ™M AN’S Great Eastern EQUINE PARADOX . EQUESCURRICULUM . — WILL EXHIBIT AT NEVADA GILEY, —on— MONDAY, MAY 15th, Afternoon at 2 o'clock. Evening at 8 o'clock. Children 50 cents. N. W. POWNING, Agent. Admission $1. GUARDIAN SALE. LX THE SUPERIOR COURT, Nevada County, State of California. In the matter of the Guardianship of Lena Guscetti, Charles Guscetti, John Guscetti, Julia Guscetti, Amelia Guscetti and Lonisa Guscetti, Minors, j Notice is herepy given that by virtue of an order of the Superior Court o® Nevada County, State of California, duly made on tne 26th day of Apel, A. D. 1882, and amended April 9, 1882, the undersigned, the guar. dian of the personsand estates of said minors, offers for sale the following personrl property of the estates of said minors, viz: The undivided one half of the household furniture in the dwelling house on the Guscetti Ranch, about one— -of_Novada City, consisting of tables, chairs, bedsteads and bedding, crockery, etc. } Summer wear. And all kinds of ed to. The undivided one half of three horses, viz: 1 buckskin color mare about 15 years old, 1 dark bay horse about 12 years old, and 1 sorrel mare aged about 12 years. The undivided one half of three sets of harness. The undivided one half of t yvagons, viz: two spring milk wagons, and one two. horse n Wagon, The undivided one half of the appurtenances of the Guscetti Dairy, consisting of milk cans, buckets, strainers, measures, scythes, rakes, forks, shovels, etc. The undivided one half of the hay, grain, and feed on said ranch, comprising about 10 tons of hay, about—4 cons of grain and about 4 tons of bran. The undivided one half of forty-three cows, being the cattle used for the Guscetti wy § Purposes, All of said property being at and on the Guscetti Ranch about one mile East of Nevada City, where the same can be seen and os . a ats ids for said property will be received by Charles G ae his resid about one mile East of Nevada City, or at the law office of U. W. Cross in Morgan & Roberts’ Block, Nevada City, California, Said bids to be in writing and sealed, ‘and to be received up to 12. o’clock noon of the 28d day of May A. D.1882, at which time said sale will be made. Terms 10 per cent, to be paid at the time the bids are opened, and balance upon confirmation of the sale, The sale to be made to the highest bidder, rior Court of Nevada County. ; Dated Nevaaa City, 5? 9th, 1882. CHARI.ES GENASCI, Guardian. €. W. Cross, Attorney, SUMMIT ICE COMPANY. 50 head of which MILWAUKEE BEER DEPOT ROGER CONLAN; Proprietor. Broad street...!.Opposite Stumpf’s Hotel, NEVADA CITY. BS draft Porter in the State, Larger Beer on draft and in bottles from GehSOMETHING NEW a sa ae BOOTS ¢ SHOES VOGELMAN & WEBBER Tt AVE JUST RECEIVED—FROM-PHHL-} ; ADELPHIA, CINCINNATI and SAN FRANCISCO, a full line of Boots and Shoes for men, boys, ladies, missés and children, ld comprising many new styles for Spring and A full assortment of La dies’, Misses & Children’sShoe Always on hand. New Styles of Ladies’ Beaded Sandals, Ties, Opera Slippers, Vassar Ties and Sandals, Etc., Boitom Frices for Cash! We keep the largest and best Stock im the City from which to sek ct. Thankful for past patronage, we hope to merita continuancé of the same, and ask Everybody to Give us a Call. No troubleto show goods. All goods guaranteed as represented. Orders from the. Country proniptly attendVOGELMAN.& WEBBER, a2 Broad st. opp. Citizens Bank. a = BIR ad! nc AS Boots and Hats and Caps, tee Trunks,. Valises, ete, etc, HAVE JUST BEEN RECEIVED AT THE CLOTHING EMPORIUM THE VERY LATEST STYLES. OF . FOR GENTLEMEN -AND BOYS, Gent’s Furnishing Goods, Shoes, ++ OF — K, CASP CORNER OF PINE AND COMMERCIAL STREETS, NEVADA CITY. a vv are now: oftered for sale at O oat Ae WIEF De ee Dia bering a These Goods have just been received from the Eastern manufactories and Persons in want of any article in my line will save money by examining my Goods and Prices before making their purchases elsewhere. DON’T FORGET THE PLACE. K CASPER, con Pte & Commercial ts BOOTS and SHOES at ment of STYLISH SUITS goods so low that mares, and very four years old. WORK AND CARRIAGE HORSES. W. ; c; sna Seg ices “will ‘Saturday, May 13th, 1882, Sale commencin, at 11 o’clock, on the premises of J. M. Alle Ma enwood & Bros., situated on the road leading from Marysville to Grass Valley, a quarter of a mile east of Mooney’s Empire Ranch, 75 head of horses ‘and colts, : are No. 1. good work and carriage horses; 25 head are fine brood Promising colts fromone to horoes alt wil Ge nein eee to ot orses, and ii upn for me to only at persons in want of a fine of carriage horses or mares that are fast and Spring MENS’, YOUTH’S) and BOY'S Clothing, Furnishing Goods, Hats. Boots, Ladies Shoes, Trunks,. Satchels, Valises, ~ Avo-Evenvraine Useauy Fousw-w a Fast Cuass Cuotnng Howse, Snes , CRSSDURe » GLOTHING ! HYMAN BROS.,” a et Sumy The above Goods were maaufactured expressly for this market, and we would especially call the atténtion of th public “to. the large assortCLOT HIN G_ We have on hand which embraces some of the NOBBIEST. AND MOST EVER OFFERED IN THIS MARK ET. Our facilities in business enables us to sell goods Cheaper Than Any Other House in the Connty Being. Large Wholesalers and Importers we therefore propose to sell competition will be out of the question. rig’s Milwaukee Brewery. ; = HYMAN BROS. —Wholesale Home) AUCTION §S ALE). tonoiuiu, Sandvien ne . OF FINE * WE MEAN BUSINESS, COR. BROAD & PINE STS., HEVADA CITY. stock of Boots and of them. I will AGENTS, Daily, with ena aT COOPER. Nevada City May 3 1832 sa eek approved mate nee re: to eat and drink at erybody = Nevada City and Grass Valley, __. 1! in good orler, together the sale Ccme ev: ‘ton’sranch. a) ttend this sale. A) those'in want of very fine large work higaen ‘security with one per . month. ies in want 1 guarantee all goods : . Superior quality, of the on. two . and second to none in the mar! tm ctit Sie eee sets work han Persons. in want. of ok SHOES should call early and secure choice of. sizes My stock must be reduced to make room Or my’ niammoth Spring invoice, : Cortier Main and Com vada C . W. U, SHAFFER, WILL BE SOLD W. R. COE’S, ROOT AND SHOE STORE, COR. COMMERCIAL AND MAIN STREETS. N ORDER TO CLOSE OUT MY WINT I WINTER NEXT SIXTY DAYS Sell Gents’, Ladies’, Misses’ and Children’s Boots, Shoes, Arctics and Rubbers at ACTUAL COST PRICES! Sesame money Se lw AT COST! W . I will, for the ship. in my store to beoi . ~ best workmanship, WM. R. COE, TWENTY WHITE Hydraulic Miners: Can Obtain Employment atthe: ‘Blue Tent Mine, Nevada TownArply at the Mine. ‘Nevada City, May 7, 1899.-t¢ tT out PAINTERS AN Kinds of Graining, Paper Bang~ ‘tug, Glaz ng, Kalsomining, Wall metelal strects, Ne} All work frst-classand Prices Low. mart Shop in TRANSCRIPT BLOCK, Per in t is vi of 7) at §