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

May 23, 1883 (4 pages)

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ere 2) ys. phia ICE rial, ld ted.” the ind_ ind ASSSAaRSSaasas ind ngWee ag —_————— Opening ani Closing of Malls. ; Until further notice the mails will close ai ia hk; Mie Route W ata. m. Coie, > ab6 A.M. Grass Valle: 6 fi pieat mall bo Vandek er bo Direct mail to nto, at 6a. Mm. ° City San Juan, ptonSierra via Cam, ville and D ownieville, daily (Sunday exceptbay! Ped A. M. j North Bloomfield, Moore's Flat and Graniteville, daily, (Sunday excepted ) até a. M j f Washiagton and eB so Nabe tga Thursid até a. Lot Bet, Lids ‘York’and Disko, Fist enday, Wednesday and Friday, at 6 a. m. Tuomas. Main, P. Mw. Various Mappenings In and out of Tewn. Good pic-nic weather. The County Jail is being whitewashed, the prisoners doing the work, The roads aredcying up so fast that the teamsters. are swearing at their roughness. The A. 0. U, W. Hall at Grass _Nalley is being remodeled by the addition of s spacious banquet hall. A large lot of new goods, including furniture, picture frames, carpets, etc,, were being opened -yesterday at the Pioneer Furniture store. Now that it has been determined to hold the District Fair in Nevada . county the present year, the El Dorado people are proposing to hold a Fair of their own, independent of the State aid which the District Association obtains, — Statement from Mr. Potter, The following explains itself: State of California, County of Nevada. M. B. B. Potter being duly sworn deposes and says, that he vip: file in the County Superintendent’s office of Nevada county, in accordance with law, the questions prepared and used by him during the examination of teachers at the oe session of the County Board of Eduion, M. B, B. Porrmr. Subscribed and sworn to before me this 22d day of May, 1883. G. D. Buakey, Jnstice of the Peace. It is' now in order for Superin" tendent Tiffany to explain, if he can, what became of the missing questions. ee Applications for Pardon. Besides the application for pardon in another column, efforts are being made to invoke executive clemency in the cases of Geo. Smith, serving out a sentence for murder, and James Bohannan, convicted of robbery. The father of Nelson Stevens, the hoodlum confined in the County Jail for attempting to assist a prisonto break from the Grass Valley jail, is circulating a petition in hopes of getting his wayward son out. He will probably find it an uphill jeb and we are sorryfor him as he is said to be a very worthy man. Nevada County Fish Hatchery. The State Fish Commissioners are about to experiment inthe way of establishing a fish hatchery at Shebley’s ranch, which is situated on the} City, ‘as the people of Grass Valley Narrow Gauge Railroad, a few miles -below Grass Valley. J. A. Richardson, who has for a long time been ‘employed by the Commission, has charge of the new hatchery. for the present a specialty will be made of. propagating brook trout. He RR ge Gone to England. Professor Thomas Price left San Francisco on Monday afternoon’s train en route to London, England, on a flying visit, intending to return in a few weeks accompanied by his son Arthur Farraday, who has been a student of the London College of of Mines for the past two years. Werk to Begin at Once. The money subscribed by ‘the incorporators of the Yuba River Dam Con:pany has been paid into the the Treasury, and work will begin at once on the impounding works at Smarteviile: Employment will be given to a large number of men. Probate Business. Estate of John Frank, deceased. Letters testamentary issued to Catherine Frank. David Binkelmann, H. J. Fuchs and S. D. Avery appointed appraisers. . Estate of Jas. Malone, deceased. Order of sale of real estate made, Sult to Quict Title. H.C. Hieatt, Geo. E. Turner and Edwin Tilley have begun suit in the Superior Court against L. M. Wilson to quiet title—te the——-Wilson Ranch mining claim in Willow Valley. J. M. Walling is attorney for plaintiffs. The funeral of Job Thomas, whose death resulted from injuries recently . Yeceived at the Mt. Auburn mine, will take at 2:30 o’cleck this afternoon from Blight’s Hotel on " Morsford’s Acid Phosphate.—Over' worked Nervous Systems. Dr, Edward L. Duet, Philadelphia, says: ‘I have used it for several years, considering it valuable in overworked nervous systems, and in the exhausted condition following Invatip wives and mothers: quick-. dy restored to health by using ht, ". June next (when school elections . can obtain the same by calling on + isi ‘his oo cation a Legally Constituted Bocy? ‘Some lawyers who have been looking into the matter say that’ the Board of Education of this district is not @ legal body, and that its members really have no more authority over our public schools than any other seven. men inthe town. As ‘we have heretofore shown,” this Board is organized’ ander and by virtue of a special act of the Legislature passed in 1874, giving this district the right to have its schools governed by such a Board. In 1880 the Legislature amended the school law, providing among other things that’each scliool district should be governed by three trustees, and that city Boards of. Education must act under the charters of their respecfive cities. In article 4, section 25, of the new constitution itis declared that the Legislature shall not pass local or special laws for the management of common schools; ‘neither shall it create school offices of school ‘districts or prescribe duties of the Same. gti The city charter uf Nevada makes no provision for the organization of a Board: of Education, neither: does it refer in any way to the management of schyols, This school district. includes not only the city proper, but also’ a large portion of the township which does not lie within the corporate limits, and would in any event be beyond the jurisdiction of the charter. -Therefore it is held by those who should know best, that the special: legislative act of 1874 is repugnant to the new “constitution, and that the Legislature in 1880 passed general. laws in couformity, therewith for the government of all districts other than those whose schools were governed by their chatter. If this opinion be correct as to Nevada City, it also is as‘to Grass Valley, and each town will find it necessary on the tirst Saturday in are held throughout the Staté).to elect threeTrustees the same as You Bet, Mooney Flat, or any other rural district. al ee WHAT THEY ARE DOING. Personal and Social Items Gleanca Here and There. H; @. Perkins~-has returned from San Francisco, : _ Judge Reardan and wife were registered at Sacramento Monday. Mr., Lewis, a sign and carriage painter of Marysville, has been spending a couple of days in town. * Miss Clara West,who has been attending Mrs, Perry’s* seminary in Sacramento, is expected to arrive tonight at her home in Grass Valley. Misses Sallie Groves. and Mary Richards left Monday morning for Sacramento to witness the graduating exercises at Mrs, Perry’s Seminary. General Dibble, and not General Bidwell, will deliver . the. dress: this year at the Nevada County Fair to be held at Grass Valley or Nevada shall decide. me Secking a Pardon. A petition for the pardon of John Wagner, serving out aterm of 150 days in the County Jail for obtaining money under false pretenses, has been slily circulated for signatures within afew days past. Wagner’s term is about half expired. Among the reasons given as entitling him to pardon is the poor condition of his health; also that he informed the authorities of the plans for escape being made last winter by the Cummings murderers and other prisoners in'the County Jail. There are perhaps some good enough reasons why Wagner should be pardoned, but we hate to see an attempt made to get him out without letting the public know what is going on. Immigration Matters. The Immigration Association reports the arrival during ‘the past week of 1,737 immigrants by the two overland routes. A party of . forty left Omaha on the 15 “instant, and will arrive early in the week. They intend settling in the lower portion of the State, The reports of the agents from every quarter are very favorable, and there is every prospect of a large and rapidly increasing emigration to this State this summer. : renee AIR RL Pecket Book Found. In Nevada City, about two weeks ago, & pocket book containing money and, papers was found. The owner William Moody, at Blue Tent, proving property and paying charges. _Nevada City, May 23d-3t. Ladies are the Best Judges On all matters connected with the toilet. They have decided that SOZODONT is what they will have. “When s woman will, she, Will, you may, depend: on’t; and when she wont, she wont, there’s an end on’t.” This accounts for the popularity of SOZODONT. The Bess. The Boss Coffee Pot beats all others. Do not forget that J.J. Jackson keeps ii for sale. “He also supplies the choicesj brands of finely ground coffee for the Boss. 5-4t. To STRENGTHEN and build up the system, a trial will convince you that ‘The Great Tragedtenne in” the Rote 01 the Unhappy Queen. t The box shee: for “Mary Stuart” will be open to-morrow at Viaton’s dragstore, and on Monday evening next Nevada City will have an opportunity of. witnessing a tragedy which for 300 years and more has stirred'the souls of men. with pity. Madame Janauschek appeared at the Walker Opera Housé, Salt Lake, ia ‘Mary Stuart,”-and_ is noticed by the Tribune as follows : “After months of only light and often giddy entertaiments, Mary Stuart last night by Madame Janauschek and her superb support caught the fixed and thriiled attention of an audience as vast as the Opera House can contain. The signet of history gives to the lofty diction of the great post a solemnity which cannot attach to mere fiction, and it was Mary and Elizabeth that were listened to last night, as though the chariot wheels of time had rolled back, the graves had given up their dead, and for the time being what was dust had taken form again, and with the form had received back all the dark passions of the past. There was the doomed Queen on the’ one hand supported by her-prideof birth and her faith; there was the triumphant Queen on the other hand, bat torn and distracted even in her success by all the stormy passions which made her heart through life “But the shadow of a soul on fire;” there was the treachery and faithful: ness of enemies and friends; .there was a reproduction of a fragment of the sixteenth century. “Madame Janauschek has been lavishly praised by the master critics of two continents. It is not becoming for the Gribune to say tauch more than that whatever of adwiration or enthusiasm has followed her acting, hasbeen bat a faint ackuowledgment of her artistic worth. .She at once places an au lience under obliyations which they can never meet, applaud as they may. Her. personation last night was throughout so lofty, so collected, never for a. moment forgetting that she was iudeed a queen, and going to death with the studied dignity and calm courage of inajesty, that we could easily understand how now and then when the world was young it was possible for a great spirit to impress upon the . eommon -herd—of-—-men the belief in the divine right of royalty,” Keeping their Feet Warm. The express messengers and some of the stage"drivers who travel out of this city in the winter have a good plan to keep their feet warm. They wear.a merino shoe said to be made of coarse wool from Sonth America. It is put through the usual process of cleaning and carding, and is then steamed and hardened and made into a tough, pliable cloth about twice the thickness of ordinary shoe leather, and in general appearance not unlike the uppersin arctic overshoes. The soles are made in the same way, uf'the same material, but are harder and heavier, The shoes are not impervious to water. It is stated that no-matter how low the temperature, the feet will never get cold when encased in these shoes. A Rush at Truckee. A Truckee dispatch says: After almost two months of rain, hail and snow, the summer season has at last fairly set in over the mountains. Crowds of tourists are flocking hither f om San Francisco and the foothills on their way fo lakes Tahoe, Donner, Independence, the Hot. Springs and other resorts. So great is che rush that frequently a large number of guests at tre different hotels here are compelled to remain in the parlors all night, there being not a single room or bed unoccupied, ‘T'rout fishing at the lakes is reported as excellent. Sunday School Picnic. The Grass Valley Sunday schools have made arrangements for liolding a union picnic at an early date. This kind of weather makes everybody want to go right into the woods and stretch themse!ves out on the “green carpet” as somebody has poetically termed the resting place of toads and lizards and snakes and other blood curdling denizens of Nature’s ‘'emples. A Bequest for Blaze. If George Blazo will. communicate with Ormsby & Briggs, attorneys of Brandon, Vermont, or Jydge Henry Rives.of Kureka, Nevada, he will re: ceive some money from -a deceased relative,’ : ‘ ELE RE am aD A CREDIT TO TRE CITY. The Finest Boot and Shoe Store ever. opened in Nevada City—Great Bar. gains offered. : John Herzinger, in the Transcript Block, Commercial street, yesterday received anotherinvoice of boots and shoes, of every size, quality and style, making his stock the largest and most complete of any ever seen in Nevada City. The establishment is a credit to the town, for it. coutains some of the very finest French, New York, Boston, Philadelphia and San Francisco shoes for ladies, misses and children—something superior to anything ever brought to this -market; No house in this State can ‘or will underse!l him. His stock of boots is very” large, ‘ embracing all Visit bis place whéther you wish to purchase or not, Don’t forget the place-—Transcript Block, Brown’s Iron Bitters is the -best ater, BS renga Commercial street. ss mil7-lw DECORATION DAY. The Arrangements for Observing it at Grass Valley. The Union of yesterday says: The last Sunday in May ‘being anoual ‘Decoration Day,” in Gras Valley on next Sunday the usual observances will be held by the decoration of graves in the cemeteries, not only of deeeased soldiers but of all. others whose memories are held in bonds of affection by those who remain. . It is intended to have religious and, musical exercises, as has been the custom, but no parade or unusual display. Bo account of the backwardness of the season flowers-are not yet plentiful in this locality, but that obstacle will be overcome as arrangements have ‘been made -to obtain floral contributions from Marysville, Auburn, Sacramento, Piedmont, and other places, so there will be no deficient in that respect, and it is expected that there will be sufficient with what can be had here to’ make the decbrations equal in beauty those of former.occasions, On next Saturdays. the flowers will be received for the purpose of general decoration at the Protection Hose Company's houge, where the ladies who desire to take part mm preparing wreaths, etc., are requested to meet and assist in arranging them. Due notice of the hour will be given ‘before that day. This beautiful custom was inaugurated in Grass Valley a few years ago, and has been regularly observed and has become popular, as the day selected,Sunday, is.one in which all persons are, at leisure, and tg setvides are such as all persons can take part in, and feel all the better for doing so,as it gives thi, opportunity of showing respect for the loved and lost, and keeping alive the affection in which they were once held. The design is that the graves in all the cemeteries shall be decorated, although the religious and musical services will be held at the old cemetery at the eastern side of town. ———_. . Aupriferous Gravel. Col. Mendell says in his report to thé Secretary of War: The quality of auriferous gravel on the slopes of the Siervas is practically unlimited,
but only a comparatively small quantity of the whole deposit can be worked by hydraulic method, by reason either of lack of fall, capping by volcanis drift, or: poverty of the gravel. An ispection of the mines tributary to the North Fork of the American (including Forest Hill) shows that they contain a workable gravel about 75,000,000 cubic yards, of which about 20,009,000 yards are at Gold. Ran. On Bear River there remains about 50,000,000 yards. On the Yuba they may he assumed at 700,000,000. On the upper Feather the miners find natural storage for their detritus; on the lower Feather, near Oroville, thece seems to be no practical method of storing the debris. On the Cosumnes and other southern rivers there are considerable amounts of gravel, but information at hand is not sufficient to warrant positive estimates. The aggregate amount of gravel not subject to the hydraulic process, but which can he worked by drifting, must be considerable, and, as wages become cheaper, promises to take great proportions and to continue for several generations, ieee, Dissatisfied Liquor Dealers. The retail liquor dealers of Merced county are taking steps to test the legality of the recent action of Board of Superviorsin fixing the licenses, They held a meeting last Friday afternoon and denounced the action of the Board as-unjust. Among the resolutions adopted was one appointing J. C. Smith a committee of one to proceed toStockton and secure the written opinion of Judge Terry upon the legality of the action of the Supervisors. These retailers consider $15 per month an unjust, exorbitant lice nse. RA RE “On, dear,” exclaimed Edith to her doll,‘‘I do wish you would sit still, Inever saw such an uneasy hing in my life. Why don’t you act like grown people and be still and stupid for a while?” ei Na a a ce BUYEL AKRIVALS. NATIONAL EXCHANGE HOTEL —o— STANLEY A. EDDY.....-+. Proprietor. May 20, 1883. J. G. Hartwell, City. B. Guscetti, do ‘ D. Collins, Grass Valley. €. J. Schnaittachore, San Fran. Mrs. Wright, do do A. Sweeney, do do C. H. Holling, do do J. Finley, Bloomfield. J. M. Robb, Graniteville. A,. Faira, Forest City. M. Buckhanan & w, Sar Francis. Wm Edwards,. Grass Vall y. M. Sulhvan & w, Smartsville. Chas Enfieltt, San Francisco. Union Hotel,RECTOR RNOS.,....Proprictors May 21, 1883. . KE. Woolf, City. oe Wm. Bryant, Sweetland. B. Guscetti, Ranch, J. Kelly, City. : J C. P. Loughridge, R. R. 8. _D. Baker, Virginia City. F. C. Bishop, do M. Ennor, Marysville. E. Fontz, Marysville. J, W. Ramsey, Washington. P. Young, City. Chas. Grissel, Washington. Of the analyses of ‘foothill soils Professor Higard. says. that: .they show that the soils of the foothills are more variable.in theif composition than would be inferred from the general similarity of their appear-' ance, viz.,a high orange-fed tint, arising from the) presence of «from four to ovér twelve per cent. of finely-diffased iron oxide (ferric hydrate) and a textufe varying from that. of moderately heavy loam to a. stiff clay, with more or less of rolled gravel, at times to such extent as to impede tillage and occasionally so closely packed as to render cultivation unprofitable. Their capacity for absorbing moisture is in all cases fair and adequate, in some cases high: The supply of lime is’ hardly. adequate for such heavy soils in the:case of those from Shasta county; in *that from Redding lime is defficient and should be supplied where thriftiness is desired, ahd the same would be advantageous in the Anderson soils. Farther south the lime. percentage increases, being high in the region from Wheatland to Tuolumne, near La Grange, but comparatively low in the foothills and hog-wallow ridges of Merced county, The superior adaption of the middle region to fruit, and especially grape culture, is doubtless connected with this'fact. The supply of potash is only moderate, in some cases low forsuch heavy soils, In the case of the soil from Redding thehigher potash supply offsets, in a measure, the deficiency in lime, LTE LT ITE NET, A Woman's Devotion. One day when James “Harrington was heated from chopping wood.in Amador county, he drank a quantity of cold water, and shortly afterward was seized with a atitch in his side, He fell and was utiable to rise, and was taken to his home in a wagon. Gradually his joints began to stiffen, and the best physicians in the county were called in. Five years ago his joints became solid and his jaws set. Dropsy also set in, and his case baffled the skill of the doctors. While in this helpless condition, seareely able to move a limb, he was brought to Oakland two years ago and placed in the Homeopathic Hospital. The Oakland Times says that hospital, has watched over him with a tenderness-and devotion truly maternal, On March Ist-she-and-the patient moved into the house of Miss Dichenthaler, 666 Tenth street. A few months ago the sufferer’s jaw became locked, and a few teeth had-to be removed to permit the giving of the necessaries of life. Sunday morning he died. : —-— soe Herz is a pleasant story illustrating the civilization of Massachusetts. A certain Boston ‘‘philosopher,” in his declining years, feeling the need of a wife’s care, chose from among his lady acquaintances a rather bright woman of considerable property and offered himself to her. The lady was presumably surprised; at any rate she refused him decidedly. He, ‘however, presisted so vigorously in his wooing that in desperation she told him that if he would “‘cease to press his suit she would give him $1,000.” He took it. A PHILADELPHIA dispatch says that the famous Indian Gap silver mines, situated between Pine Grove and Lebanon, have at last gladdened the hearts of the owners, by genuine ore, not in very large quantity, it is true, but still better than nothing. The property was sold by the Sheriff Saturday for $10. About $20,000 have been expended in developing. It is altogether probable that’ the mines recently discovered near Myerstown are of the saine quality. atternoon near Balmoral, requested John Brown to give her a comforter to put.around her neck, as her Majesty felt cold. Shortly afterward the Queen desired him to remove it, when John exclaimed: ‘‘Hools! jist keep it on; ye dinna ken your ain mind for twa minutes thegither.” Such was the Scotch peasant’s rule over the Queen. A Prrrssvoe girl, who had _ refused a good-looking telegraph-repair man three times within six months, gave asa reason that he was too much of a wanderer, thgt he wandered from pole to pole, from one clime to another, and if he did come home he’d be insulate that neighbors would be sure to talk, ~ Housert H. Bancrort, the histoian of the Pacific States, has kept constantly employed for the past secretaries, catalogue indexing, abstracting and arranging the material from which he writes. His present force numbers twenty. Ar breakfast the other morning a New York dude declined a piece of shad. He had been told that fish food made brain, and he didn’t want to unfit himself for the position he occupied in society; : Tue black-burying business will soon .be booming in ‘the South. Several negro” murderers will be hanged down there ina few weeks. * “Waar is so rareas.a-day in June?” Well, now and then a day in April is decidedly under-done, and some of the March days are really raw., THE young man with a smallsalary and 4 pretty girl is beginning to get . Miss Ida Carrier, the nurse of the}. THE Queen when driving out one . . fifteen years, not less than a dozen . worried. The church wearers The New Road Law. Some changes were made in the general road law by the last Legislature. The new law went into force on the 28th of April. The minimum width of highways has been reduced from 60 to 40 feet. . Each member of the Board of Supervisors is now x-officio Road Commissioner for the 8¢veral road districts: No compensa} tion is allowed for. the performance of these duties. Thé maximum of road poll tax is $3 instead of $4 ae heretofore. The Board is authorized to lévy this tax between. the Ist days of January and March of each year, but the law did not go into effeet this year until after that. However the Board of Supervisors of this county have decided to collect $2 for the present year, Heretofore the receipts-were issued by the County Clerk, ‘but it is now the duty of the Auditor to take charge of them. } The compensation of Road Overseers -has increased from $200 to $300 per annum. Under the old law to 80 per cent. of the property road tax could be worked out upon the roads, but no provision of this kind is found in the new law. The property road tax may now be as high as 40 cents on the $100, while heretofore it was limited to14 cents on each $100. ‘This tax col’ected in each road district must be’ expended in said district. ieenalinn Tue frightful dirty condition of Philadelphia's streets is due to the fact that dresses with trails have not been fashionable for some time. tion an article entitled: ‘‘Why our fish disappear.” This is a good subject for debate. . NARROW MARCINS —AND—— SPOT CASE. C. A. BARRETT, 46 Broad Street, Nevada City CLOTH HOUSE, FINE TAILORING, Furnishing Goods, Hats, Etc. ~<Foreign and Domestic FINE WOOLENS, TAILORS: TRIMMINGS, SPRING ANDISUMMER_SUITINGS, BROAD CLOTHS, BEAVERS, WORSTEDS, OUATINES, TAUPELINES. OUDALES, ' PIQUES, OHEVI OTS AGONALS, DOESKINS, MELTONS, ASSIMERES, TRICOTS, TWEEDS, NIGGER HEADS, For Gentlemen’s Dress and BUSINESS SUITINGS. MACHINE SILK, SEWING SILK, MOHAIR and SILK BINDINGS, LINEN THREAD, BUTTONS, Ete., Etc., Articles for gentlemen’s.wear and use: UNDERWEAR {N FINE SCOTCH WOOL, MERINO, CALIFORNIA FLANNEL, CANTON FLANNEL, AND WHITE JEANS. Scarlet, Blue and Grey Wool OVERSHIRTS. TRUNKS and VA\UISES, OVERALLS, JUMPERS, BLOUSES, COTTONADE PANTS, DUCK PANTS, CARDIGAN JACKETS, Pocket Knives, Portmonnates, Notions, HANDKERCHIEFS, GLOVES, SCARFS, TIES, ARMLETS, STOCKINGS, WHITE SHIRTS, FANCY PERCAL, . And CHEVIOT SHIRTS, GINGHAN BLOUSES, ‘Boot Blacking and Brushes; CUFF BUTTONS, COLLAR BUTTONS, STUDS§and SCARF 3PINS. ‘ FOB: / NARROW MARGINS —-——_ AND—_—__. 4 “6, A. BARRETT, 46 Broad Street, Nevada City. -LUEBECK’S. Great OPPOSITION Store, Broad Street. ; LS EALER 1N DRY GOODS, MEN’S FUR. apa GOODS, BOOTS, SHOES, Scotch G A a spa yard. White Marble O Cloth, 40 conte nor yard. Linen Napkins, 75 cents per dozen. Embroideries, 6 cents per yard, cents apiece. apiece. Dress Linen, 10 cents per yard. Men’s Jumpers, 45 cents Men’s Water Proof Shirts, 50 cents apiece Men’s Cashmere Shirts, $1 25 apiece. JWONDERF TuerE is in a piscatorial publica-. eee — ERAN NNT Me ROL Ot NR or eee UL BARGAINS 9 CENT STORE. 0° We are offering to the people of Nevada City and County the most Wonderful Bargains in Corsets ever offered outside of San Francisco. Beautiful Corsets....... 39] French Woven Corsets.... 1 49 The Dore, all colors...... 49} Venus, in white..... veceee 3D mee PUnbeaM. Wiese. oi. 1 75 . Oriental, in colors....... 2 49 The Matchleas........, 99] C. P., white and colors.... 3 49 Fine French Corsets...... L ISU PD a Wea .3 49 Beautiful Lawns, only..... 9. Brocaded Dress Goods... pe 124 a hg OMEN 9, 124, 168, 19, 25] Camels Hair...3./..., . 69 Satins, in all the new shades.. 49}Nuns Veiling.... gerade: -49, 99 Ginghams..... 9, 124, 168, 19. Fine Invisible Plaids.... 29, 39 Chevoits...... 123, 163, 19, 29} Buntings. 00. 0.65. 06 bese es 19, 25 de Ge ae REE 9! Chambrays. 4.6 0.5 ccc 25 Ladies’ Hose, alljshades.... ‘94 Children’s Hose,’ 9, 124, 162, 19, Ladies’ Fancy Hose . .25, 89; M9, . 00 bi scanty fier ra Gents’ Fancy Hose,... 25, 39, 49 Chfldren’s gray mixed... 124, 19 DOMESTICS. Trish Linen Crash..9, 124, 16%, 17 cee ey Ce eRe 19, 39, 49 Fine Liuen Towels, per dozen, 2 00 7; Vyd wide.. 65.. 9, 11, 12 Beautiful Linen Napkins, ‘ 99 . White Spreads... 89, $1 39, $ 4 PEUIELNOWR 3805 oes 25, 49, 99 NOTIONS. Handkerchiefs, 5, 9, 124, 168, 19,] Ladies’ White Skirts, 99, $1 75, phates «ag kal 50 wa 29, 39, 49, 99. stensseesecovesses OL OD, G2 25, Beautiful Cream Spanish Ties, 99] Ladies’ Chemise......:.. 4 Fancy Veiling.....0...5 25 id ** Colored Bobonet.... 29, 49 Children’s white and colored readymade Dresses, $1 25, $149, $1 99, $2 25, $2 49, $2 99. Infarts’ Robes, from $1 49 to $6 00 a ee ee or » 99. Ladies’ and Gents’ Undervests,49, 75 Embroideries..... from 5 to 75 UN Fs sini s ease aS from 2} to 99 Untrimmed Hats from 19 cents to $1 99. Ostrich Tips from 39 cents to $1 49. Ostrich Plumes from $1, 99 to $9.00. Roses, Poppies, Margaretts, Monteurs, Hand . some Sprays, Daisies, etc., from 5 cents to $2 .99. Plain and Ottoman Satins, Plushes and Velvets, in all the new shades, All styles and shades of ribbon from 5 cents to $1 00 per yard. — We will hereafter make MILLINERY a spec ialty. We purpose keeping a first-class Trimmer who will trim Hats and Bonnets in the G2 Latest STYLEs. 3) The Kate Castleton Bonnet Frame made to order in all sizes. Call-and see us—we will treat you politely whether you purchase or not. 2 Samples sent free of charge.% =] Goods sent to any part of the county on receipt of price, or C. DD. t= Terms Strictly Cash.«y DEARNHARD & SHALLENBERGER American 9 Cent Store BROAD STREET, -----NEVADA CITY. CIGARS at NIVENS’. --THE— LARGEST AND FINEST STOCK IN THE MOUNTAINS. 25,000 JUST RECEIVED. WILL BE SOLD CHEAPER THAN ANY OTHER ESTABLISHMENT IN THE COUNTY. ee CONSUMERS CALL & RKAMINE QUALIRY & PRICE Adso a Full Line of Tobacco and Smokers Articles. J. E. CARR. , T. M. CARR CARB BROTHERS. Successor to FP. Ex. Welden, 4-3 PALACE DRUG STORE, Corner Pine and Commercial Streets... .. NEVADA CITY TREES A COMPLETE STOCK OF DRUGS & MEDICINES, PERFUMERY AND TOILET ARTICLES And everything else usually found ina fist-class_ Druc Stor ; AES PEE ; a WE ALSO CARRY A FULL LINB SCHOOL BOOKS, STATIONERY, Newspapers, Illustrated” Papers, Periodicals, Etc. A Fing display of Pocket Knives, Razors, and other Cutlery. —j ——— an experienced Druggist : : SHEET MUSIC AT REDUCED RATES. a Prescriptions oarefally oo n99aitstvi all aoacs by 2, a Betas coe {