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

September 12, 1884 (4 pages)

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TICES, Ses sap uncementy vance, <== + eby announc. t Sheriff, sub. ocratic County eee, rey, ‘by announc, rict Attorney, © Democrati¢ ee) Grass Valley eriff, subject y Nominating re > ’ NOMINEK, ‘der. ta ry, NOMIN ER k. a NOMINEE, trator. —. LE, —., YOMINEE, istrict, i Townships, (OMINER ey. $$ OMINEE OMINEE IMINEE ace, )MINEE MINKE TRICT. yention, MOCRAT: COMMIT‘Thursday, ed, that a ie Theatre » 1884, urpose of ’ otfives to n, and to may come shall also tions for dates for p-otticers, » heid as delegates the sey1884, . M. and signated @& Primaleveland ment of : . on the Jongress or P; CO, or TLC. * John E, Cum‘Donald, Moody, x Wm. loroney. r John or OD. Inspecyhanan, ir Jas, t Frank spector in, W. spoctor SampMW. Mcr Jobn Vm. B, gh O’hn LeW. L. Mike yr Jo. sector va, R. yevtor inton Tully. . Hy.Harjor J. Jol.o . As the wronged wife comes to take . with all the fervor of a true wife, . Separate, asked him imploringly to ARVADA. DATLY TRANSCRIPT . REPUBLICAN MEETING. Golden Truths from the SilverNTT Ta POSTOFFICE DIRECTORY Arrival and departure of the mails from th e N evada City Postotfice until further notice: ARRIVES ~ Eastern ... 46 11:13 a. My Western ... rr M 6:55.P. M Western fs. F. & Sac. M. 11:134. M Grass Valley .. 15 4. M, 11:73 a.m Grass Valley..... Q 6:55 P.M Colfax... e sescere G15 A, Me 6:55 P. M Sierra City, via N. San Juan, Camptonville and Downieville, daily (except Sunday teeeberseececs F:45 A, M 4:30_P. . \ Poof ee Pues © -*-M . called the meeting to order, He aneld are nounced that the County Central , . . sa: daily, (Sunday ex‘ Committee had, in order to facilitate Webi wid S464, M. . 9:80 P,a4 proceedings, named a chairman (EK, oe ee: M. Preston) and thirty vice presiULUAVS ss ses csseess 8:20 a. M. 11:30. m. dents, and he submitted the names veer Waak Pn to the meeting, which ratified the Mondays, We‘inesnominations, Mr. Preston upon bedaysaud Fridays. 6:20 a.m. 11:30 a.m. . . F WALLACE J. WILLIAMS, Pp, M. . 10g preseated as the chairman made We have just received the latest Blaine and Logan Campaign Song entitled “The Plumed Knight of Maine.” The words areby J. A. M. Harned and the music by Walter K. Wheeler. This song has the true ring in it and we feel contident will “go” and add very much to the success of the campaign. ® Copiés can be had of Zeno Mauvais, 749 Market St., Son Francisoo,, for 25 cents: each. Special rates for. quantities, ——____2 +e Tuk Odd Fellows Hall Association of this city have received a beautifully engrossed copy of the resclutions of thanks adopted at the Great Coungil of Red Men held here a few weeks ago, 2 a 0 5 KE. M. JEwext, agent of the Langrishe Comedy Company, is in town arranging for next week’s performances. Mr, Jewell is a véteran showman-and thoroughly understands his busineas, ; THE city public schools now have an hour and a quarter’s noonimg, The afternoon session lasts fifteen minutes later to make up for the increase in the duration of the noon recess, THREE thousand sheep, belonging to Messrs. Webster & Wallace, were driven through town yesterday morning’ on their way from the mountain pastures to the valleys. ——_—__o-~— >. ATTENTION is called to the advertisement of the California Electro Plating Works, makers of the best silver plated amalgamating plates ip the market. pe YESTERDAYthe types made this paper say that the Democratic county convention met September 17th. The daté should have been given as the 20th. Last Friday evening a surprise party was tendered to Miss Maggie Richards of Gold Flat. About forty of her young friends were present, Ws. Fron, ex-Superintendent of the Merrifield mine, has returned from England. He reports having had a very pleasant trip. A NEw awning is being constructed along the Pine street side of Masonic Block. It was needed, —>————— at D, E. Morgan and wife left yesterday morning for Sacramento to attend the State Fair, JosePH MARTIN and Geo. Bennett, natives of England, were naturalized yesterday, : —_——o> \ BroapD street bridge is closed for Tepairs. Deeply Interested. The Record-Union tells of a funny incident occurring inthe Metropolitan Theater at Sacramento Tuesday eve-: ning during the play of, ‘:Divorce” by the Langrishe Comedy Company. her final leave of her husband, she, her words trembling on her lips in tones of deepest despair, asked him if he thought it best that they should forgive her if she had failed in her duty asa wife, He stood unmoved, acold, heartless wretch. Not 80a certain ’49er in the audience, who, in his whole-souled honesty, smote his hands and cried ont, “D—n the man.” It is needless to say it “brought down the house.” It certainly was a tribute to the actress Who presented the part of the, deserted wife. ' — Democratic Caucus. The Democrats of this city at the meetings held Wednesday evening-to nominate deleyates to be voted for at the Democratic’ primaries to-mor. row, made their selections by ballot as follows: me Precinct No. 1—R. G. McCutchan, Johu’ Dunnicliff, Jobn Keenan, Wm. Martin, Richard Tremain,J. I. aldwell, M. Garver, E C Woolf, Eilerman, W. J. Organ, Precinct No, 2—Fred Searls, J. P. Ebaugh, H. V. Reardan, L. Dulac, v. A. Seeley, J. B. Miller, Clinton Harnson, James Peard, Martin Voyne, pestis -Struck a Four Foot Ledge. A ledge said to be four feet thick and of excellent grade was struck night before last in the Crown Point mine’at Grass Valley. The develpment is thought to be an import_beneath the waves, even as Atlantis } to ashes under the bane of Southern Tongued Orator — This Campaign’s Issues Ably Reviewed. The Republican meeting at the Theatre Wednesday evening was attended by as large an audience ag the roomy aud well arranged building could accommodate, several hundred ladies being present, The Union Brass Band furnished some . 8tirriug music and the crowd was well enthused whea E, H. Gaylord some brief and well chosen remarka on the political situation and the duty of the people in connection therewith. He reminded his hearers of the glad tidings from Vermont and Maine, and prophesied that the Republican triumph in those States was but the forerunner of a victory all along the line in November next when Blaine and Logan would be elevated to the proud positions for which they have beea chosen by the Republicans and which they were sure to attain by the grace of the people. Mr. Freston then introduced Hon. Thos, Fitch, the speaker of the evening, paying a splendid tribute to his oratorical powers. Those who were present. will never forget the address that followed. . The beautifully rounded and effectively spoken sentences bristled with unanswerable logic. Just as Mr. Fitch was about to begin his remarks some one proposed three cheers forhim. Men sprang to their feet, hats waved wildly in the air, and the voice of the multitude went up thrice in unison with an emphasis that proved the party spirit had lost none. of its war-time vigor and earnestness. Mr, Fitch spoke substantially as follows: THE ADDRESS, Mr. Chairman, ladies and gentlemen—I thank you, Mr. Chairman, for what you have said about ine as a public speaker, and words fail to express the gratitude I feel, fellow citizens, for the enthusiastic reception you have given me, But I feor you are doomed tv disappointment if you anticipate an eloquent and finished effort on my part to night. For eight years I have kept out of the political arena,devocing my time to the practical profession of law. If I ever pdssessed the power to talk in the ‘‘whoop-up” style, it has gone from me now. But thie is a practical campaign, and solid truths plainly told are what are needed. It is a campaign in which of all others I have been concerned in, the passions should be less appealed to, -I shall conduct my remarks onthat basis, Our Democratic opponents desire to be given control of the Government on the basis of promises alone, and they deprecate the aiscussion of their past acts, even while they claim the right to discuss the history of the Republican party. If we could believe the Democratic party could have come to righteousness; we would allow them the advantage. Then let ‘them eulogize their pastwritten on the’ tombstone of secession, even in the spirit of the thrifty French woman, who snbscribed on the grave of her dead husband: ‘His disconsolate widow will continue the business at the old stand.” I donot marvel at their efforts to escape the past, which, like Banquo’s ghost, stands between them and the chairs of State. Itis like the ghost which causes the family to move from the house it haunted; it climbs gibbering to the top of the last load of furniture and says: ‘‘We are yoing to move.” How often do we see individuals reflect upon the differences which might have resulted in their fortunes if-they had acted in critical exigencies of life differently fom the course they followed—the unwise word we might have omitted; the chasm we might have avoided in the darkness; the vessel in which we failed to embark, and which was wreckéd on the voyage; the injudic’ous word left unspoken; the girl we almost married. Upon the reefs of the past memory casts a gleam “whith discloses the rocks in the channel. Now apply this mirror of retiospection upon the political past, and the what might have been, If Breckenridge had been elected President in 1860, the black hand of slavery would have dominated’ the nation; Texas might have been divided ° into’ three States; ands qur children have expiated the crime of human bondage, If McClellan had been elected in 1864, the war might have been brought to an earlier‘ but less een close; the ship of State might have been submerged of old went down under the hissing seas, Had Seymour been chosen President in 1868 every righteous fruit of victory would have turned exactions, Had Grant been defeated in 1872, who can tell what would bave happened to the country’ under the rule cf false currency ? Had Hancock. been elected in. 1880, what tion ? the speaker, der the pump he asked, mentwill be greater degree party has alwa the unprogres: side of every tude which y most. unwise, mand for powe lure of Democr Ohio river to the earth. from abroad. because men w peace and orde shiftlessness, ing filled up as out for the pro ground of the empire, seven per cent, curities, It is other, cause from her accept instead “ Our politics h party has never party, the consistent f Under this communities that were formerly confined tu agriculture have become great manufacturing centers, gia and Tennessee are now prospering under it equally with Indiana and Ohio. The Democratic party, disguise it how you may,, whether in favoring “revenue reform” or in any other guise, is an inconsistent and uncandid free trade party. The advodates 6f free trade would leave all things to the law of supply and demand. They ure like Thomas Paine himself an able advocate of free trade, who said: ‘‘The world is my country.” * They wouldgive the spinner of Manchester the same advantages in our markets that is given those of Georgia or Massachusetts. They would give the Sheffield manufacturers the same opportunities that are given those of Connecticut and Pennsylvania, Asiatic inhis rice fields liberty to enter our doors untaxed, to compete with American producers, properly exclude the Chinese from coming here to drive our boys from the factories and fields. better it would be to excludé the proant one, retrogression there might have been » ’ duct of Chinese labor from coming’ years they have had what isknown as the solid South—a coalition of fifteen States, fanned into life by the vampire of Democracy, of the Northern Democracy, you have much to answer for in the attitoward the Suuth. South shall remain solid. With the atic power in the nation and with promises that you can never keep, you have persuaded the South to a continued warfare against the multiplication table. stretched as fair a land as there is on It isa rule of political economy that capital accumulates as population increases, growth at home and by immigrat on tion increase in the South ? unprotected and in danger, Prosperity is the of brain and brawn, of the great railway systems reach were but yesterday’ the is a reason why the Northwest has outstripped the‘South in the race of There is a reason why Iowa and Nebraska can borrow readily at notinduce capita! to look at her seder in the one and disorder in the Safety abides in the one place, inthe other terrorism reigns, If sone resolute Ulysses would to: day close her ears to the songs of the syrens~of Tammany—unloose her from the Promethean rock of the past; if she would -but abjure false gods and blowthe ashes of a instead of grumblingly submitting to the laws, and protect her citizens, a thousand industites would spring to life—such as all her dreamers of slave etnpire never dreamed. the questions which divided the parties before the passage of the Missouri compromise. protective doctrines of the old Whig The Republican party are in the American policy of protec[At this jancture a man in the audience began to talk so loudly as to disturb those around him and annoy “Pot him out,” shouted some one.] I will tell youa better plan, said Mr, Fitch, Tf he is sober enough to understand, bring him up here on the stage and we will silence him with truths. Ifhe is very drunk, however, take him out and hold him unawhile. And who .can tell whether the present Democrats are wiser than their experimental predecessors? Is not that party still incapable, moraly and intelligently, of meeting any proposition on honest grounds ? What Democrat to-day after reading his party platform, ‘feels sure that he has any political principles at all? It is so remarkable that it can only be compared to the first pair of pantaloons of the littke boy, which were made so bounteously that his mother said that when she saw him on the road she never knew whether he was going to school or coming home, The Democratis party says the Republicans have been in power long enough. Thatis the complaint ot the Athenian Democrat of old, who asked Aristedes to write upon, the shell his own sentence of ostracism. ‘‘What have you against Aristedes?” “Oh” the Athetian replied, ‘Iam tired of hearing him called the just.” ‘promises of the Democratic party sufficient to insure that the Govern’ Neither are the administered with a of prosperity. That ys arranged itself on sive side, the wrong political issue, For Gentlemen ou have maintained Your policy is In your selfish der you insist that the From the tke Galf there is by natural Why does not populaIt is ill not go where life is offspring of r, not of bombast and The Northwest is beif by magic with men The iron arms duct of vast fields that feeding buffalo. Now there » While Louisana canbecause there is orlost brow; 1f she would of rejecting and obey ave drifted’ back to The Republican failed to promote the riends of protection. beneficent doctrine GeorThey would give the We How much Republican /and Carl Schurz to go to the devil. mechanics, Let those who will leg islate for the brotherhood of man I believe that charity begins at home I would rather protect American peo government and a splendid country, sist,on a handful of rice a day and live like dogs in a kennel. reduction in the tariffisa reduction in wages;this is a mathematical prob. lem. Protection is the working in the palace, tion. -Let me illustrate. lon, Under the management of the cents. bill would reduce the price of it 8 cents a gallon in this country, The laborer who does the jheavy ‘work bears the brunt of the reduction, He is the ultimate victim. It is like putting a mine on the market. » You sell it for $50,000. The buyer sells half of it for $50,000. The third man sells half of his half for $50,000 and so on till the ultimate man is reached, Now the one who tries to develop it and get out the gold must screw down the wages of his miners to make up what he has overpaid elsewhere, On the broad back of labor is laid every load at last. Commerce is a grand thing. . Revenue reformis desirable. Aye, I would reform the revenue, but I would increase it instead of diminishing it, uutil every importing house in New York was closed’ and every hill resounded with the hum of manufactures, Our women sometimes complain that American manufactured goods are not.so good as foreign. It is a complaint based to some extent upon the whims of fashion, but it is partially true. In order to manufacture articles as well as they are made akroad, a vast expense must be incurred for machinery and for the skill which is only acquired by years of patient toil. American manufacturers dare not make the necessary investments because of the menacing attitude of the Democratic paity. Like a tigec it crouches in the path of industry. The manufacnot permanent. barriers removed so that they might havea free market here for their manufactures and products, Neither India, South America or the islands of the sea presents euch a market, Ours isa properous. country. Our pork, beef, wheat, wool and hides find a market in the countries of Western Europe. They must have them whether we purchase of them
or not. If they did not they would have adopted a tariff to keep out the American steer, as Bismark devised a plan to keep out the American hog. Cheir object is to keep the balance of trade in their favor, To carry their ends they grind the faces of their laborers, They dothis in order to sell cheap, Our object is to keep the balance of trade on our side by increasing and multiplying our manufactures, We protect laborby placing a tariff on foreign products. The Democratic party stands on one side — and as usual on the wrong side, ; . Plutus sits tongue-tied inthe Senate a Thurman is turned-out to make room for the President of an oil company, anda Rosecrans is defeated by a Hastings. Sometimes the people arise in their might, like Moses of old, who descended from Mount Sinai, bearing wich him the tablets of the law,,bis. face radiant with the light reflected from the presence of God, He wasmet by the people with a golden calf which they had set up and worshipped, He overturned and burned the graven image, scattered theashes on the water and compelled the people to drink thereof. The calf was _ probably ground up by a sort.of. milling ‘process and the peuple compelled to drink the tailings, The Republicans went to Chicago to win. They turned a deafear to the representatives of Wall strest-and-to’ the” Pharisees, and invited George Wiiliam Curtis They put up as their candidate thé first of living Americans, , Note the difference between the party with a glorious history and the party with an unsavory record: The latter came together, not roes, not to give "to ideas, Its purpose was tu win office; It is reduced to the desperate strait of hungér' when the moral sense becomes dumb. It passed its great men, its leaders; it passed Thurman and Field and Randall, That ors, ganized error called the Democratic party selected Clevelanj, a mediocre, here to compete with that of our own The sentiment is very noble one, but ple—Americans, who muintaina free who live in decent houses, who maintain charities, and whose home life is the truest, purest and freest on earth, I believe in protecting the workers of our own land, rather than those of Europe, who can eat meat but once a week, or Asiatics, who subThe import duty is the difference between that paid the American laborer and that paid the foreign one. Every man’s friend; free trade is welcome where the wine sparkles and the jewels glitter, but by the fireside and cabin it is desolaThe tariff on imported wines is 40 cetits a galMorrrison bill it would be only 32 The passage of the Morrison turer is compelled to keep on+ eye on his cash book and the other on the election returns. The situation tends to make investments ephemeral and The people of Western and Central Europe would like to see the tariff ‘try with many-of her soldiers, but taken from rejected weak aiid obscure man? fer our vand:date if, we knew ‘them to be true, not accepved as authority, are Germans who will vote without consulting that incarnation of conceit that calla himself Carl Schurz, The truth is, the New York journalists have no more volition than Texas steers, They are frequently driven down, bellowing, tu the Wall street rodeo and every one of them has been branded a dozen times, Another important question is the relations of the United States of America to the governments on this hemisphere, All Republicans -and many Democrats feel a just peide in the courage and statesmanship of James G. Blaine. Under his administration the Stars and Stripes will never be dipped to any other flag on God’s green earth or His salt seas, No nation will dare place the rights of an American citizen below those-cf an Englishman. The United States will take its rightful position on this hemisphere. The Monroe doctrine has been ours only, in words,. fot in deeds. Chili and Bolivia are not farther from us than from Europe. We have a better right to the trade of Mexico than England has to shut India to all manufacturers but her own, We ought in many articles of manufacture to find or make a market between the Rio Grande and the Tropic of Capricorn, All these things would be agcomplished if we had a man in the White House to enforce our power. We-need a President whose patriotic pulse throbs to the heartbeats of the people : who believes in the destiny of, the American nation. The nomination of such &@ man was atriumph over machine politics, In these days of telegraph and newspapers no man can win a permanent place in public renown. Perhaps there are fewer Websters, Clays and Calhouns than of old in public life, for communities withhold the laurel from those who have earned it, to confer it upon those who have bought it. We need not fleets nor armies, but the presence of a man in the Presidential chair—a man whose far-reaching eye can scan the horizon unclouded by the mists that rise out of the reeking gutters of Wall street, and such a man we have in James G. ‘Blaine. I desire to perpetuate no profitless thoughts of strife. I shall not attempt to revive feelings of bitterness, But [ cannot permit one leaf to be plucked from the laurel that graces the brow of the Republican party. When its story is told it shall be said that in the uation’s peril ‘she sprang forth full armed and panoplied for war. ‘I'he great American party has performed deeds greater than were ever recorded by Hosmer. Isee many before me who were boys but ten years of age when Lee surrendered at Appomattox. They will be actors on scenes that I will not be privileged to witness. The coming century will be one of the grandest in the world’s, But 1 have had advantages that they will never know I have lived in heroic days, when America’s sons went forth radiant to battle ; when men dropped the hammer on the workbench, the plow in the furrow and the.pen on the desk and went forth to wounds and death that their country might live. There rise before me in memory Ellsworth, Winthrop, Baker and Lyons as among the first to fall. Tell me not that they will be forgotten—ah, not until ‘‘the stars grow old and the sun grows cold.” The most valuable possessions of a nation are its patriotic and valiant séns—more valuable than precious stones. Bankrupt, indeed, is the nation without. patriotic memories ; the land that forgets the self-sacrificing deeds of the father. , Here they never will be forgot‘ten. While the blue and the gray strew with flowers the graves of each other’s dead, and every feeling of} bitterness be softened, there abides in the minds of the American people a greater confidence in that party which furnished many of the soldiers who fought against and more who sustained the Rebellion, than in that party which also furnished the counalso-all of the rebel army, The Republican party, glowing with memories and all-glorious, approaches the election of the twentyfirst President of the United States, Do we ever reflect how replete with grandeur and glory 1s that compound word, which represents tlie home of fifty-six millions of happy people, changed from a wilderness of fishy pools and forests, by the free labor of a nation 3 where no man doffs hls hat to another except through the courtesy which exists between equals; where no man's utterances are checked by the hand of power; where education 18 free; where labor, is prohalf witted, weak corporation str. = vant, whose only fame rests on his . véto of a measure of public relief, . whose most important features were essays of » . thelaw. What can be expected of a! -. party destitute of’one living issue, and which selects for its candidate a They have employed in their cainpaign work the ghosts of Ananias and Saphira, the courageous liars of the Todianapolis Sentinel and the cowardly inuendoes that lurk about the office of Haaper’s Weekly. We would preThe Boston Advertiser and New York times and Post are There . The majority of them are actively [ea ; where soldiers of the nineteenth century bled to shield the people ; whose flag floats on every sea, and whose army comes forth at the drum-tap to assist the Republic— the purest and most prospérous nation under, the light of the sun— made pure and prosperous by a party the grandest iu all history ? Such is the, Republican party, and its plumes of Navarre will wave in November next over the land and the 8ea, o> Killed for Two Dollars. A Downieville dispatch of Tuesday says: Last night‘about 9 o’clock a tan named Kelsey Moore, a carpenter, shot at Alfred Smith, a saloonkeeper, without effect, when the latter retaliated and ‘fired six times at Moore, wounding him twice through his wrist and twice through his neck. The wrist was amputated this morning. Moore is not expected to live. The shooting occurred in Smith’s galoon. Moore fired first. becanse Smith refused him the loan oftwo dollars. * Matrimonial. Invitations have been issued for the wedding of Miss Nannie Northup Ridge of this city and Mr. Jesse Evans Frick of Pomeroy, Garfield county, Washington Territory, which is to take ‘place at Episcopal Trinity Church next Wednesday morning at 11 o’clock. Mr. and Mrs, Frick will be at home to their friends September 24th and 25th, from 2 to 10 o’clock p, M., at the residence of the lady’s cousins, Mr. and Mrs, F. G. Beatty, on Water etreet. ey Ce Specimen Ore, About twenty-five pounds of quartz taken from the Nevada City mine yesterday. morning Was on exhibition at the Citizens Bank. It contained not less than $500 in gold, but will sell for at least $1,000 for jewelers’ purposes. Considerable high grade ore is being taken out of the Nevada City right along now, and large shipments of bullicn are being made. A Healthful Climate; ‘* Postmaster Williams, who“bhias a taste for ‘‘figgers,” finds that there are in Nevada county about 100 men who are 70 years-old and upward, engaged in earning their living and from the amount of vitality they yet retain it is a safe bet that ten or fifteen of them will live to be centennarians, ——_—-<>2 — —. A Disturbed Pedlar. Hughes alias Thompson, the book agent confined in the county jail while he is getting rid of the effect of too much whiskey, is wild as a loon. He imagines that the hangman is beckoning to him to step on the trap and put his neck in the noose, _>-+——_—_. For Sheriff. W.H. Adams, the present good looking Under Sheritf, will be a candidate for the nomination of Sheriff, by the Democratic County conventiou. (SOS SERIE Te Ue Or high or low, or rich or poor, None would foul teeth or breath endure, — If they but knew how sure and swift Was SOZODONT, hat priceless gift, In giving beauty, life and tone To every charm that mouth can own, esta CE Pie Blaine and Logan Club. The Blaine. aud Logan Club will meet at the Theatre on Saturday, the 13th inst., at 8 o’clock Pp, M., for the purpose of completing the organization of Uniform Companies and selecting uniforms. A full attendance is requested, ‘ By order of the Executive Committee, 2t atin Mountain Ice. The Nevada Ice Company has commenced the regular delivery of ice in Nevada City for the Summer season. All.orders left at the Company’s office, on the Plaza, will be promptly attended to, ma28 2+. For Boarp and lodging or a good ‘two bit meal, go to the Thomas House, Broad street, O. C, Conlan, proprietor. je8-ly en eee Fine Cloths, J. H. Downing has received from New York a magnificent stock of cloths which he is prepared to make up in gents’ suits, in the latest styles and at the lowest prices, my2-tf Froir syrvrs are used in -flavorng.the soda water sold by Carr Brothers, e3-tf, Campaign Hais at Barrett’s a20 —-o <> SUMMER has come and the soda fountain at Carr Brothers’ is in ful last. je3-tf BORN. At Grass Valley, Sept. 9th, to Jas. Hoskins and wife, a daughter. MARRIED. In Carsgn City, Nevada, August 31, 1884, at St. Theresa’s Church, by ‘Rev. Father Tormey, T. P. Larkin of Markleeville, to Miss Annie B. Hymphreys of San Francisco, lately of North Bloomfield, Nevada county, Jal : At Howard Chapel, Penn Valley, September 7, 1884, by the Rev. W. A. Booher, Harry D. White of Woodlarid to Cornelia Horton of Penn Valley. : At Grass Valley, Sept. 9,.1884, by Rev. RB. H. Sink, I. W. Hays, Jr.,:to Misg Lucy Cartected ; where manhood is respectCarriages for Funerals Attended Roows 29 and 31 Merchants, ExScott's Emulsion of Pure Cot Liver Oil, with Hypophosphites, For Pulmonary Troubles, T. J. McFall, _M. 'D.; Anderson; S. C., says : “I consider Scote’s Emulsion one of the best preparations in the market for Palmonary troubles, I have used itin my Practice since 1876, and am well satisfied with it,’ ho et. Don’t forget that J. J. Jackson k32eps on hand all kinds of canned goods, sugar-cured hams, wines and liquors for medicinal purposes, and everything found in a first-class grocery store, jy19-tf _—— 2 0 ANT OINE Tam says the letter R has come in with the months, and First Goods of the Season. Hyman Brothers have just receiyed a full line of Men’s, Youths’ and terns, suitable for the FaJl and. Winter trade, 1 ag2g > On and after friday, September 12th, the fare on the Grass Valley and Nevada City Busses will be fifty cents each way, three tickets for one dollar, or five tickets for one dollar and fifty cents, Fare for the round trip on the same day seventy-five cents, Passengers called tor and delivered within the corporate limits of either town without extra charge. B. F. Marris, RicHarpD Vincent. Grass Valley, Sept. 10th, -1884.—3t sehipiuiitiiad a eiegeee ee . WM. WALTERS & SON, Proprietors of the . is . i Union. Hotel Barber ‘Shop, NEVADA CITY, CAL. M* WALTERS, Senior (formerly of the Natioial Exchange Hotel shop) lately returned from Washington Territory, and has in company with his son fitted up at the Union Hotel one of the finest shops in the nty. First cless work done, als NOTICE, fhe’ MANHATTAN GOLD AND SILVEK MINING COMPANY having leased the Manhattan Mine to G. W. Baldwin, from September Ist, 1884, to September lst, 1885, will not be responsible for any bills . ¢ ntracted for labor or materials furnished in the uevelopment or working of the mine during said lease, MANHATTAN MINING CO., Per O. MALtmAn, President. Nevada City, Sept. 10, 1884, Opera Saloon, —AND— i BOWLING ALLEY, UNDER THE NEVADA THEATRE, ROGER CONLAN, Proprietor. F YOU WANT A COOL GLASS OF BEER and a pleasant place to rest, call on 83 #& ROGER CONLAN. STOP THAT COUGH Y¥ USING THE GUM TREE COUGH SYRUP. If once tried in your family will prove free from anything to sicken the stomach, and the only safe remedy for stopping a coughand building up weak lungs. It has noequal asa cure for Consumption, and is made trom the leavesof the Austral. an Gum or Eucalyptus Tree, combined with Hoarhound Syrup. i W. D. VINTON, Agent, Nevada City For Supervisor. {SILAS WHITING, of Nevada Citv, is hereby announced as a candidate for the office of Supervisor of this District. Subject to the decision of the voters of the District, PARKER’S HAIR BALSAM. rPMHIS elegant dressing is. preferred by T those who haveused it,toany similararticle, on account of its superior cleanliness and purity. It contains material only that are beneficialto the scalp and hair and Always Restores the Youthful Color to Grey or Faded Mair. Parkcr’s Hair Balsam is finely perfumed [. and is warranted to prevent falling of the hair and to remove dandruff and itching Hiscox & C'o., N. Y. 50c. and $1 sizes, at dealers in drugs and medicines, ma30. ABSCONDED, July 11th, 1834. GEORGE WOOD, Pen SECRETARY OF COURT J PRIDE OF THE SIERRAS, A. 0. F., age 22, of Jewish parents, has defrauded and absconded with some of the funds of the above named Court. Any person or persons knowing of his whereabouts would confer a great favor by writing and informing us, Address, . " THOMAS J. PERRYMAN, Seeretary Court Pride of the Sierras, No. 7106 A. O. F., Sierra City, Sierra Co., Cal. 35, al5-1 JAMES G, BLAINE NEVADA THEATRE. NEW PLAYS ! ae NEW LAUGHS ! NEW FUNNIMENTs ! Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday Evenings, Sept. 15, 16 and 17. RETURN OF THE GREAT COMEDIAN, JOHN S. LANGRISHE COMEDY COMPANY, PENING IN THE GREATEST OF ALL AMERICAN PLAYS, THE OCTOROON ! With its PLANTATION DANCES, BURNING STEAMEKS, and Special effects and fresh, fat oystera in the shell or can. Tableau. are received every day. His place TUESDAY, the New American Comedy of business is at Stumpf’s Hotel. sl-l laugtae waa especially for Mr, ‘That Terriole Telegram ! WEDNESDAY, GRAND DOUBLE ALL THE OLD FAVORITES AND LOT3 Boys’ Clothing of the newest pat-. OF NEW ONEs, Admission 75 and 50 cents. Now on sale at Vinton’s Drug Store. Special Notice. Zs HOWARD,, Manager. M. JEWELL, Agent, Republican Nominations, FOR PRESIDENT, —— OF MAINE. FOR VICE-PRESIDENT, JOHN A. LOGAN OF ILLINOIS. : FOR CONGRESS, JAMES A. LOUTTIT, OF STOCKTON. FOR PRESIDENTIAL ELECTORS, HENRY EDGERTON, BENJ, SHURTLEFF, HENRY VROOMAN, MICHAEL HECHT, A. R, CONKLIN, J. B, REDDICK, HORACE DAVIS, CHESTER ROWELL. Nevada County Nominations, FOR SUPERIOR JUDGE, J. M. WALLING. FOR SHERIFF, George Lord. FOR COUNTY CLERK, Frank G. Beatty. h FOR RECORDER, John A. Rapp. FOR DISTRICT ATTORNEY, W. D. Long. FOR TREASURER, Geo. E. Robinson. FOR SURVEYOR, J. G. Hartwell. FOR PUBLIC ADMINISTRATOR, A. R. Lord. FOR CORONER, ~ William Powell. FOR ASSEMBLYMEN, A. Walrath, C. F. McGlashan. FOR SUPERVISORS, Chas. E. Mulloy. Jonathan Butler. James Marriott. William Hill. Frank E. Morrill. EMPIRE LIVERY STABLE. 5 on 3ROAD STREET...,..NEVADA CITY Dividend Notice. IVIDEND No. 15 of Fifty Cents per share on the Capital Stock of the O)TIZENS BANK will become due and payable and after Sept. 10th, 1884, at the office of the Citizens Bank. JOHN T, MORGAN Cashier. Opposite National Exchange Hetel, JAMES HENNESSY, Proprietor (Successor to D. Welllington) f\HE Proprietor of the EMPIRESTABLES announces that he has now the larges Lot of kn To be found in this part of the State. S TARTLING i 2 wei curs, which he will send FREE to Horses, Carriages. and Buggies law tuaerers, widens ae FAAWEa Chatham Street, New York, Encino DISCOVERY LUST. MANHOOD RESTORED, A victim of youth‘ul imprudence causing remature Decay, Nervous Debility, Logs Manhood, etc., having tried in va‘n every own remedy, has discovered a simple sure is felTeams, with Elegant Buggies, Wagons and Hacks to let at the shortest notice and on the most reasonable terma, The Horses are free from vice, ot goodstyl and capable of going as fast as any gentleman cares to drive, ; to with Prowptness. Good Saddle Horses alwayson hand, » » Horses boarded by the day,week or month and the greatest of care guaranteed. i Establisbed in 1852 L. P. FISHER S_ . NEWSPAPER ~ DVERTISING Sta thange, Cailfornia street, son, both of Grass Valley SAN FRANCISCO ° Willdraw up Deeds, and Mor es for thereto included . THE FAMOUS, UNRIVALLED KNABE PIANO. THE HARTMAN PIANO, “strictly first-class instru nt ata mode rate price, Pi The Popular Pease Piano A L. BANCROFT & CO. JOHN I. CALDWELL, Attorney at Law, ' Notary Public and Conveyancer. Offico—South side Broad street, opp. Union : street, Nevada City. ILL practice tn ail the Ccurts of this State, and the Courts of the United tes within the State'of California. each, certificates ef acknowledgment eh FAB SSB OER nC eR