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Page: of 4

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NEVADA DAILY TRAMSCRIPT.
aa
A GENTLEMAN from the upper part
of the county was the victim of an
amusing case of mistaken identity at
the railroad depot the other evening.
We have promiged not to print the
. particulars, but they will be far:
’ nished, together with a chromo, on
application to Hon, John McBean,
whose postoffice address is Washington, Nevada county, Cal.
>
A. CoHEN, a resident of Grass
Valley, was arrested down there
Monday for peddling without first
having the neceseary licenses. Justice Paynter fined him $20 for being
without a county license and $10 for
not having obtained one from the
ity.
>
Mr, anp Mrs, Gro, Ff, Jacozs
this week resume posseasion of their
dwelling houseon East Broad street.
Mr. and Mrs, B. N,. Shoecraft, who
have ocenpied it for a year, will
board at. D.° Welllington’s,
A “BIRD MAN” was exhibiting his
atock of feathered songsters in front
of the National Hotel yesterday afternoon. The collection was a fine
one, but.the sales were few and far
between. .
———— OE Oe
Tue Knights of Pythias have
their regular weekly drill and sword
practice at Hunt’s Hall to-night,
a
Rev, W. C. Power is registered
at the Occidental Hotel in San Francisco, ‘
a
Rev. W. B. Prippy has returned
from. Downieville.
—————_ > oe —__—_——_
Nevapa CoMMANpDErY to-night.
Ft
The Great Ceuncil of Red Men.
We have been saying that the Improved Order ef Red Men of California were to hold their next ‘Grand
Lodge” at this city in August. One
of the local members now informs us
that we should have said the ‘‘Great
Council” instead, which term we
will hereafter use. At the last gathering of the Great Council it was deeided to have the next one here beginning the second Tuesday in August, 1884. It is certainly to be
hoped that there will be no change
in the arrangement, by which Nevada City will be deprived of the
honor of the proposed visit. Our hotel and other accommodations are
ample so that the big crowd of ‘people who would come could be properly provided for in all respects,
and the members of Wyoming ‘Tribe
would leave nothing undone on their
* part to make the visiting braves and
their families enjoy themselves while
here. The railroads have said they
will bring all who desire to come at
such greatly reduced. rates that the
expense of transportation will not
prove a hardship.
ne
*e A Holiday.
The public schools, bank, post office, express office and county offices
at this city were closed yesterday in
conformity with Governor Stoneman’s proclamation making the day
a legal holiday. Adding to this the
fact that so many of our business
‘men and other citizens are in San
Francisco participating in and
witnessing the Odd Fellows’ doings,
itis no wonder that the town was
more quiet than usual.
The Calico Ball.
Next Wednesday evening is the
date on which the ladies of Triuity
Guild will give their calico ball, and
Hnunt’s Hall’s the place. It is sure
to be well attended, for the management is such as to warrant that
nothing will be neglected in the way
Of preparations caleulated to secure
the enjoyment of the ladies and
gentlemen present.
— 8
Trial Postponed.
The trial of Teddy Whilldin,
" charged with passing counterfeit
money, has been again postponed
in the U. S. Court at San Francisco
until the further order of the court.
There is no telling when it will
come off, this week being the second
time it has been put over.
BS Re ee
Better Late than Never!
“Don’t put off until to-morrow
what can and should be done today,” is wise. If you have never
used SOZODONT for your teeth,
make a bee-line to the druggist and
get avbottle and begin to weit at
once, ‘*Verb. sap.”
Please Pay Up.
All persons indebted to me are requested to settle their atoonn ts at
Once and save costs,
~myi5-tt ~~ Mrs, A. 0: Rocers: ~
Pianos For Sale.
Two govd second-hand pianos for
sale very cheap. Must be sold beforeJuneist. Mrs. A. O. Rockrs.
Special Netice.
De. _ Valantine can be consulted
daily at Nevada City from 5 o’clock
Milch Cow Wanted.
A good young milch cow wanted,
Part Jersey preferred. Any péreon .
_~ having one to sell ehould leave word
—T
“PROFESSOR CONANT.”
Mr. Huntington’s Ferthcoming Book
—His Impressions of California
and Some of Her People.
As we recently stated, Hon. L. S.
Huntington, one of the owners of the
Banner quartz mine at this city, and
who last Fall spent several weeks
here visiting relatives, has during the
past winter written a novel entitled
**Professor Conant.” The book is
now in press, and will soon be ready
for the. market. From advance
sheéts received, we are most favorably impressed with it. It is: not of
the sensational strain, but abounds
with pleasing presentations of the
domestic and political peculiarities
of this country and England told in
the happiest and most readable manner, yet carrying with them a fund
of information that cannot be perused without profit.
On page 282 is a letter “Lord Bolton” sent home to England from
California, and from it we are permnitted to make the following extract:
SKETCH OF NEVADA CITY,
“The city ef San Francisco is
beautiful, though the buildings are
generally low to-avoid the risk of
earthquakes, which are_not infrequent. here, The society is ‘cosmopolitan, and the business of the town
is conducted by the people of all nations. Some of the most fabulous fortunes in the United States
have been made here; and the palaces of men who started life a few
years ago would rival in splendor
the royal palaces of home. There is
in California almost every variety of
soil and production, At any season
you may journey in a day from almost trepical heat to continual snow,
including nearly all varieties of
temperature, Of course, the country is young, but its progress has
been magical, There is a great
city as well as over the State. I like
the people. You find travelled men
and women here, whe do credit to
the drawing rooms of our great capitals. Ihave spent some days in the
mountains, and have visited several
towns; two or three of which are
beautiful, One little town of five
thousand people nestling in a basin
among the mountains, and inhabited largely by miners, has scarcely a
house (if you except the Chinese
quarters) which is not neat, surrounded by ground well cultivated,
and abounding injchoice flowers. The
people are intelligent, hospitable and
law-abiding. Ihave never seen a
mining town where the evidences of
thrift and taste and contentment are
so general. You approach the town,
which is a county seat, by a unique
little railway, a.narrow-guage road
that connects it with the main line,
canyons, which would make your
head dizzy, and curves about in a
way that would have generated
lunacy-among the-railway engineers
a few years ago. ”
The following gives o fair idea,
we are told, of the: general style ol
the work. The picture will be immediately recognized by Pacific
Coasters as a truthful one:
THE BONANZA KINGS.
“No,” said Lord Bolton, with
simulated irritation, ‘‘I did not follow the traditions of my young
countrymenin the French capital,and
Tavoided society and dissipation.
I was interested, but only as a spectator.”
“Well, tell us what you saw,
please,” said the first speaker. ‘‘Imprimis, no doubt, that missing link,
the American tourist, for whom
there is never room enough and. the
the price is never high enough.”
“They are a queer lot, some of
those travelers,” eaid Lord Bolton,
“and inthe invasion of Paris by
these people I have thought at
times that the gay capital would altogether lose her ideutity.
‘‘No doubt, some of those Americans who have just struck ‘bonanzaw’ are queer folk”, said Robert.
“They suddenly acquire boundless
wealth by some accident—and accidents of that kind are abundant in
their country—and they have no
judgement as toitsuse. They are
like the nouveau riche everywhere.
Sudden wealth does not relieve
vulgarity. Iknowa city where a
‘few men grew fabulously rich in a
night. They were equal to their
fortunes, to the extent of taking
care‘of them, They secured control
of the enormous industry by which
they had prospered. They controlled the ‘agencies which -manufacture opinion, and they created a
speculative Mania which engulfed
alike the highest and the lowest.
The whole community—the cautious
~-Hawyer, the-piousparson, — the pru-. 4"
dent merchant, as wellas the most
thrifty and most impoverished sons
aod daughters of toil strained their
credit,denied themselves necessaries,
borrowed, or even begged the means,
‘. to buy what rose or fell, at the beck
of these newly made millionaires; till
the garret, was ruined; and these
men counted by hundreds of millions
‘the spoils which their néighbors had
lost. Soon some of them commenced
to flaunt their vast acquisitions in
the face of the poor. They vied with
each other, at home and abroad, in
the valgar display of money; they
deal of refinement in this particular }.
and passes over mountains, crags andthat community, from the cellar to.
bought high offices, which they ‘neglected and disgraced; they chrtered
special trains; built royal palaces,
and corrupted for their. purposes
such influence as they. could not
crush or otherwise control. Is it
strange that, though their wealth
was kingly,their manners were boorish? If they were vulgar, there
was excuse for them. Do we not,
sometimes, see rich and educated
men of our vwn country playing, according to their means, the same role?
These men are not the outcome of
Deniocratic institutions. They are
only possible among such extraordinary material developments as one
sees in that woodertul — Ab
uno disce omnes.’
‘*Put in « pin there, Bob,” said his
Lordship; ‘I have been thinking of
all this, but I could not have said it,
I want to hear the rest. I must
atroll among my guests for a little
while, but I will rejoin you.
“Now that he is gone,” said Fred,
‘you may refresh yourself, and,during recess, tell us. quietly, who these
nabobs were, Holt ?”
Tom, willing to rescue him, recited slowly,
“Once in the flight of ages past,
There lived a man, and who was he ?
Mortal! Howe’er thy lot be cast,
That man resembled thee.”RELIGION RUN MAD.
Saving Souls From Hell to the Discord of Accordeons and Cornets.
The Union says: Brother Newton
and his Holiness Band arrived in
Grass Valley Tuesday afternoon in
a two horse vehicle from Nevada
City, where they had been laboring
for several days and nights with the
sinners of that benighted place.
They either succeeded in carrying
that citadel of Satan by storm, or
else found their guns too light of
calibre to quickly reduce the fortress, and were therefore compelled
to reise the siege, However that
may be, the Holiness crusaders are
here. They came with flying banners, with such devices as, ‘‘Prepare
to meet thy God,” ‘‘Fly to Christ,”
and with the music accompaniaments of a big aecordeon and cornets, The music was given as the
procession of one, wagon passed
through the streets. The strains
were not of a martial character, as
would naturally be looked for from
an army that came to conquer; neither were they calculated to excite
devotional feeling, but rather a reminder of what is generally heard
in the side-show of a circus, The
Holiness Band is probably in earnest, and also honest, Enthusiasts,
who have a hobby, are generally
conscientious in what they advocate,
however impracticable their ideas
may be. It is also doubtless true
that Grass Valley has its per centage
of people who are not professors of
religion, or communicants of any
‘church, but this mode of bringing
them toa repentance of their sins,
or assuming the charadter of chris~. tians, cannot be—effectual_for good.
A few may be influenced under the
effect of unnatural excitement, but
there is a greater probability that
this mode of evangelizing will be
treated with levity and derision, and
the cause in which these religious
enthusiasts are engaged be more
harmed than benefited. The novelty
of the Salvation Army business is
passing away, both in this country
and Europe, and the most thoughtful church people are looking upon
the vagaries of the enthusiasts with
disfavor.
—_os
All the Rage.
Ladies who have an eye for the
beautiful (and who ever knew one of
the fair sex that did not?) should
call atthe store of Mrs. . Lester &
Crawford and examine the millinery
on display there. Among the novelties is the ‘‘Tortoise Hat,” one of
the jauntiest and neatest things in
the way of head gear that ever
decked afemale head. The ‘‘Tortoise” is all the rage in the East this
season, and will speedily win popularity here, Read the new advertisement of Mesdames Lester &
Crawford. ger
Famous English Journalists.
R. Hoe & Co. send to this office s
fine set of potraits of representative London journalists. The group
consists of: John Walter, London
Times; H. Labouchere, Truth; Hudmund Yates, World; W.H. Mudford, Standard; J. H. Robinson,
Daily News; J.L. Latey, London
Illustrated News; F. C. Barnard,
Punch; Frederick Greenwooi, St.
James Gazette: Wm. M. Th mas,
Graphic; G, A. Sala, Daily Telegraph, and Edward Floyd, Daily
Chronicle.
SA ETE
Boots and -Shees.for All.
Look out ‘for another crash
in prices of Boots and Shoes which
will arrive here ‘in a few days.:.
These goods were bought at bankrupt sale, and all of them are warranted to be of first-class Eastern
make. They will be ‘sold at fifty
-eents on the dollar.>"\ L. Hyman,
Proprietor of the S. F. Nine Cent
Store. tf
Front Room t to Rent.
A nicely furni ished £ front bedroom .
to rent. Enquire at°No. 7 West .
eo
PERJURY'S PREVALENCE.
Lessons from the of the Trial SharOn-Hill Case. j
Epitor TRanscrreT:—Most -people were astounded at the confessed
perjuries of several’ witnesses last
Week in the Sharon-Hill case. It
astounded them to know that witnesses’ Went one day on the stand
and swore to facts which on the next
day they swore were falsehoods.
Such astonishment however was the
result of a want of familiarity with
trials in Court. No lawyer was surprised at such perjury, for it is not
uncemmon in Court, and in cases
even of trivial importance. Perjury
and subornation of perjury are of.
course felonies, but the impunity that
marks such infamous praatices encourages the crimes, and pollutes the
springs of Justice,
**You lost your case because you
did not swear hard enough,” said an
old litigant te his companion the otherday, ‘You must swear harder
-. next time,”
The files of verified complaints and
answers show the. most shameless
and brazen perjuries even in Courts
of Record, and in some cases the persons who drew the papers knew they
were falsehoods, and prompted the
perjuries, The atrocious character
of such conduct merits the strongest
condemnation. He who does so,
whatever his position, ought to be
behind, not before, the ‘‘bar.”
One great cause of perjury is the
encouragement given to its perpetration by the shallowness of much of
our Judiciary. The old maxim is
that a witness who is caught swearing false in one thing is to be believed in nothing. But this rule is practically now ignored, A _ witness
caught swearing false, is almost invariably excused on the ground of
mistake. The Judge in summing up
often refers to him as a respectable
man that he has known for a long
time, etc.; and in spite of the most
patent lying, insists in giving as
much credit tohim as to the most
conscientious witness, ‘Woe to
him who calls evil good,” (i. e., that
confounds the eternal distinction between right and wrong.) Juries of
eourse follow the examples of the
Judges, and fraud and_ perjury
triumph: :
A great deal of criticism is made
on “brow beating lawyers.” But
when they meet such truth beating
witnesses as are common in our days
the utmost limit is demanded by justice, especially since ‘‘drilling” witnesses has become a fine art. It is
not the first time that wickedness
has triumphed over weakness, and
the Devil proven too much for Ariel.
INDEX.
WN PT OOS eS
A Continued Story.
CHAP, XIX.
The beverage which possesses the
greatest charm for a sensative palate
is a cup of pure, fragrant, aromatic
tea. This is just what J.J. Jackson is now supplying to hiscustomers
under the name of ‘‘Epicure Tea,”
tll
Big Dry Goods Sale at Grass Walley.
Sam Yeo, the Champion of Cheapness, late purchaser of Bamberger
Bros,’ stock of dry goods at half
price,
Bargain hunters will save half
their money by coming to Grass Valley for dry goods. Crowded with
customers,
Money must be raised.. ~
Parties should come early in the
day to insure being waited on while
the rush continues at
my10-tf. Sam YEO'S,
Selling at Reduced Prices.
Being desirous of closing out my
business in Nevada City by Jan. lst,
1885, I will offer any and all goods
in my line at reduced rates for cash,
I will also sell my buildings and
fixtures. J
ml-1m Gro. E, TURNER.
>+—_———_
Fine Cloths.
J. H. Downing has received from
New York a magnificent stock of
lotha which he is prepared to make
up ingents’ suits, in the latest styles
and at the lowest prices. —
Stockton, Cal., Dec, 30th, 1881.—
I sell Ammen’s Cough Syrup, feeling
confident your reputation as an
apothecary would prevent your putting any trash on the market, and
the price being about the same as the
best class of remedies, I. have no object in discriminating against it, so
I wish you success. :
' W. A. McCorpy, Apothecary,
Cor. Main and Sutter Sts.
Notice.
Aslsold my entire business to
Samuel &Boukofsky on the first of
December, 1883, and am inno way
connected with the same, thosd~indebted to mie will please settle their
accounts in full before the 15th day
of May, 1884, and save trouble and:
cost, as 1 will force collection.
Yours, M. Simon,
No. 412 Sacramento St., S.F.
Messrs. Samuel & Boukofsky will
give receipt for all money es them
mo — account, tf.
soe
Carr Brotusrs keep. constantly
over, Epecsey J Timothy, White Clover
and Lawn G Grass Seeds, tf
on hand a large supply of Red Clo-. .
One hundred honey-comb bed spreads
each
80c
One hundred and fifty spreads each 125
One hundred spreads, better, each 165
One hundred spreads, still Vetter, each 200
Two hundred and fifty chemises, unTen doz corsets 60c
One hundrd ote Pitiened handkerchiefs
four for
250
One hundred lace pillow shams per p’r 75c
One hundred lace pillow sha.ns per p’r 100
sixty cloth shams with ruffles and tucks1 00
Ladies balbriggun stockings 3 pair 25¢
One hundred doz striped stockings 3 p’r 25c
Wristlets worth $2 25 per pair for 95¢
Bracelets per pair , be
Ribbons, all colors, 5 yards 25c
Brocaded shawls, worth $8, for 8 50
Lisle thread gloves 2 pair for 25c
Ladies ornaments 4 for %5c
Ruching per yard 10c
Calico wrappers very cheap.
Ladies Ch mises, bleached or unbleached, formerly 50c now 40c
Drawers, formerly 50c now 40c
Night dresses, formerly 75c, now 65c.
Embroidered Chemises, 60c
Chémises trimmed with torchon la. 2 75¢
Children’s chemises laundried and trimmed with embroidery
Ch:ldren’s drawers 25 & 30¢
Lad‘es skirts with double ruffle 70c
Ladies skirts, jackonet ruffle, trimmed
with embroidery,
Skirts with seven tucks and wide embroidery
Skirts with ten tucks, double ruffle, with
torchon lace,
Ladies night dresses trimmed with torchon lace, a
Night dresses, 22 tucks, with triple insertion and embroidery,
Motker Hubbard night dresses at lowest
Children’s dresses with bib, 16 tucks,
insertion and embroidery, 100
Children’s colored dresses from 60c to 1 35
Tidies from 10¢ up
Pillow shams in lace from 75¢c a pair to 1 36
Ladies collarg from 10c up
Infants rober from 75¢ up
I have on hand a handsome wardrobe for
infant, consistiag of 30 vieces, packed ‘n
neat case, which the ladies are invited to
call and examine. Price $30, which is
Pd afin,
goods bought at my stort
hand.
F rancisco.
dolmans are made in the
wholesale price.
Country Orders
Remember
Ce Prive ‘all
BROAD STREET,
00 . Unbleached cotton socks, 3
reg Cu called datenas ai iz
Ladies drawers, 6 tucks, double inserbe nnel shirts, 100
tio. and embrcidery, ‘ be moe Shirts, formerly $1 00 now 90
Drawers with toichon lace, 7be P Fhite Shirts; ‘formerly-$f-25-now E15
Ladies aprons, all the latest styles, ‘atent Shirt 100
from 28 to 50c . Calico Shirts, 50 and 7be
Large gingham aprons 8714 bcd See from $3 50 to 406
Children’s dresses, three plaits, yrith in; ‘ont Colival baie ai wick 1 60
i ib na
sertion and embroidery 50, 75 & 87}c Cassimere Panta, 7c
Where Are You Driving To?
I AM GOINGTO sh THE
*
mmense Bankrupt Stock
OF THE ONE PRICE
San Francisco Store,
Which Has Arrived.
Lower Prices Than Ever Before
Known in Nevada City,
CIVE THIS GREAT SLAUGHTER OF
PRICES YOUR CAREFUL ATTENTION:
Hench: Laces, per yard, from 15 to 25c
ch Laces, per yard, from be up
to di ers and y2ddlers
bay tiod than they can purc the
same in New York at wholesal i
Bobinette, all colors, 8 yards, ee “ote
bleached, each 82hc . Corsets, from ; ate
6C) gross buttons, regular price 25¢ a ‘Towels, from 6c up
dozen, now selling at 5c . Table Cloths, from 50c up
75 doz. pure linen check towels per doz 1 45 . Napkins, per dozen, from 60c up
rng doz towels, extra sizesperdoz 1 20. Barbour’s Linen Thread, per 1 10¢
y Russian towels se 150 ae yn 's Ribbed Stockings, all colors,
Pillow case lace 1h eo 5c 2 pair
Five hundred colored shirts each 50c . Large assortment of dress buttons,
Two hundred dozen bath soap, per doz 65c. per dozen 5c
Five hundred gross agate bnttons,12doz bc . 12 papers of piss,
One hundred doz children’ 's collars, 3 for 25c . Safety Pins, la: see 8 per dozen, 5c
Five hundred fishus, silk, black or Lauies’ Hemstiched rt fs. 2 for 25c
white, each 25c . Ladies’ Imitation Silk Hdk fs. 2 for 25c
Three hundred parasols, eac! 50c po er enig 4 8 pgs gpa 6 for * 966
Two hundred sacques for Sites, worth rter Elastic, be
$2, now selling for 100] 8-inch Rubber ing 2for 25¢
Five huadred pairs lace window carBrass Back Combs, 10c
tains worth $2 50 per pair, now selFine Combs, bo
ling for 1.25 . Ribbons, per yard, Be
Five dozen corsets per pair "25 . Ladies’ Fancy Handkerchiefs, 8 for 25c
Ten doz corsets ee Lae 50c . Shoe Laces, 4 bunches, 25c
GENTLEMEN'S LIST :
Fifty dozen calico shirts with collars
and cuffs worth $1 60 for . 75c
Ten dozen calico shirts worth $1 25 for 75c
Wool Pants and vests $3 75
I have on hand a large lot of men’s and
boys’ clothing which f can not at
give the priows of. si lai
Neckties each 25c
dl ee per pair 10¢
ens’ suspenders per pair
200 Mcn’ Taraw hoe sie Soe
5 dozen straw hats 15¢
8 dozen Boys’ straw hats 15¢
10 dozen Mcn’s Felt hats 750
8 dozen i Cowboy Hats camden, OO
6 dozen all wool hats 95e
I have received a lot of trunks and val
which will be sold at the lowest won
Goods are being received constantly but it is
impossible to give prices at present.
Boss Overalls, per pair 65¢
Shaker Socks, 2 pair for 25e
All wool Shaker Socks, Red, per pair 25c
pair for 25c
Balbriggan clocked socks, all colors,
per pair 25c
Suspencers, per pair 25¢
Gingham Jumpers
Gingham Shirt: iene
00 . Canton F.aanel ‘Shirts and Drawers, 40c
Merino Shirts and Dfawers, ia colors, 40c
Som thing Fine 50c
Marysville Flannel, shirts or draw ers,
As Fine an Assortment of
MEN'S AND BOYS’ HATS
As can be found outside of San Francisco,
and at lower prices than they can be bou, nt
in the city. ats that sell for $450 in San
Francisco can be purchased at my store for
$2.50, ard others in Perceton Call and
examine the stock and learn prices.
leas than you can make it for. Trunks, from 2 60 ui i
Spanish ties, black or white, from ~ 20c up . Satchels, from ‘ ee be 4 J. E. CARR, T. H. CARR.
Pillow case lace, 8} inches wide, with First Class Eastern Shoes, 2 50
insertion, 12 yards for 75c . Boots, F 300 f ees
Fine laces, 12 yards, from 25c up . Commercial Note paper, per quarter
Torchon Jaces, 12 yards, from 80cup} Ream, 20c r ]
San Francisco, a wholesale ‘house.
small, being the five per cent discount I get for cash.
The retail purchaser has the benefit of the usual
¢
oe
and not found ‘to be all I
claim for them after two days’ trial, return them and
your money will be refunded.
Orders for ladies dolmans—the latest styles of
of the season—received at my store. Samples‘on
I claim that I am selling dolmans from $5
to $10 cheaper than they can be bought in San
The reason why, I. will explain. These
largest establishment in
My profits are
Promptly Filled.
as Soon as Received.
the Place!
L. HYM ANS’
Franciseo ‘Store,
NEXT DOOR TO STUMPF’S HOTEL,
NEVADA. CITY.
26 [/Remember, that in our establishment we employ a
~-\The Palace Drugstore,
All goods ‘eatecaatie to bé as cenioseiicd. All
en
NOTHING PRETTIER has lately been iasigs for Ladies’, Misses’ and Children’s wear
than1 The Tortoise Ta
oh
WHITE,
GRAY, _
ECRU,
And Other Colors.
— 0):
They have a Jaunty Air which makes them Generally Becoming. Aninvoice just received direct
from New York.
~<
0
FIRST-CLASS MILLINER,
And a‘m to display as much skill upon the medium
and low-priced work as-upon the more expensive
kinds. In making hats to order we get BUT ONE
PROFIT, and that upon the materials furnished,
which will be found as low as the lowest,
Mrs. Lester & Crawford
(NEAR THE UNION HOTEL)
MAIN STREET, NEVADA CITY.
Nevada Drug Store,
Corner Broad and Pine 8ts.,
ee eee
Nevada City
Proprictor 7
A ee Siock of Patent odin
Fine Perfumery, Fancy-Soaps,Combs, Brusies, Hand Mirrors,
Toilet Articles of all kinds
Careful attention Given to Compounding PrescriptionsBy «Competent Druggist and Perfect Purity Guaranteed.
AGENT FOR THE BEST INSURANCE COMPANIES IN THE WORLD
Imperial, London, Northern & Queen, Liverpool, Lonéon, Globe.
Proprietors of
Corner Pine and Commercial sts., . Nevada City,
Keep constantly on hand « large and eee itock of secsine _— found
PAINTS, HLS, VARNISHES, £6.
SCHOOL BOOKS,
BLANK BOOKS,
MISCELLANEOUS BOOKS,
ALL KINDS OF PERIODICALS, PICTORIALS AND NEWSPAPERS,
Field, Garden and Flower Seeds,
THE FINEST BRANDS OF CIGARS.
ae TS TOR
London & Lancashire and Manchester
Insurance Companies
Than which there are none better®
&@ Prescriptions accurately and carefully com
pounded by a careful and competent Druggist
ETNA IRON WORKS,
217 and 219 Fremont Street Ae ee San rei .
BUILDERS OF ALL KINDS OF
(Mining and General “Machinery, —
CORLESS ENGINES, STAMP MILLS,
HOISTING AND PUMPING WORKS,
FURNACES AND CONCENTRATINGMILLS, SMELTING WORKS, Ere,