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Collection: Newspapers > Nevada Daily Transcript (1889-1893)

July 17, 1893 (4 pages)

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cr pe ene TORY . eee i 4 tes ee EE ale :. oT a sicneabameninaamamamnaetnet! eee rie, pen a nesaneniptsn re MONDAY EVENING, JULY 17, '93. = change Kote). rs 4 1 GHE GRANSGRIP. BOARD OF SUPERVISORS. Business Transacted af the Regular Session Commencing July “34, 1893. The report of E. W. Donnelly, Road Commissioner of District No. 2, was received and approved. 3 The following demands were allowed on Citizens Bank $673.75, W. Campbell $567.25, Weissbein Bros. $92.25, E. W. Donnelly $435.75, L. J. Blunell $42, R. Steinegger $60, J. M. Thompson $3, E, W. . Donnelly-$220,-E. W. Donnelly $150. The following demands were allowed on the General Road Fund: E. W. Donnelly $370.90. 6 ¢ E. J. Rector and C. H. Mitchell appeared before the Board in behalf of the Agricultural Fair and asked for an appropriation of $500;from the county forthe Fair to be held on August 29th. : The following demands were. allowed on the General Fund: : ‘Grass Valley Lumber Company $20.14, Geo. Murphy $17.59, J. C. Conway $20.18, D. F. Douglass $62.50, W. Kistle $1.50, Wm. Campbell $6, P. T. Riley $15.70, J. B. Tully $4, Hall & O’Donald $186.80, Daniel & Hocking $58.25,'S. D. Avery $3, Peter Purcell $69. +290 KARL'S CLOVER ROOT, the great Blood Purfier, gives freshnéss and clearness to the Complexion and cures Constipation, . . 25c., 50. Sold by Carr Bros. ———_—_-+ ©@e-. Encampment Installation. Ou Satarday evening lastthe officers of ~Ynion Encampment, No. 11, I. 0. OF; of Grass Valley, were installed by: George A. Gray, D. D. G. P., assisted by John Waters as G. H. P., W. H. Martin as G. I. W., Thomas Daniel as G. S., M. L. Roberts as G. T.; J. C. Rich as GJ. Wa ms: R. Lord as G. 8., and B. F. Snell as D. G. §. Following the installation was a grand banguet at Mrs. Martin's réstaurant, Jobo Glasson presiding as toastmaster. The[ ~Nevada City boys say it was the most enjoyable time they ever spent there or anywhere else. Heinen + eee cme Superior Court. The following business was transacted in the Superior Court today, Hon. Jobn Caldwell presiding : Tahoe Ice Company vs. Union Ice Company. Order allowing plaintiff thirty days additional time in which to prepare and serve amendment to defendants’ motion for new trial. —_—-—-—--+ oe o— ——oee “I was prostrated with a severe bilious . — complaint,” writes Erastus Southworth, of Bath, Me.” ‘After vainly trying a number of remedies, I was tinally induced to take Aver’s Pills. I had scarcely taken two boxes when I was complet :ly cured.” a —— Residence Sold.; Mrs. Jacob Naffziger has purchased from the Citizens Bank the Maltman residence on Water street, where she intends to reside. — ee The Feuit-Canning Season HAS ARRIVED. Every experienced housewife knows —THAT— Lichtning : Fruit : dats ARE THE BEST. LEGG & SHAW, Dealers in HARDWARE, FURNITURE, CARPETS, AT THEIR THREE STORES ON MAIN STREET, NEVADA CITY. E. B. POWER, A termey and Connselor af Law and Stoneprapher, Office—With Fred Searls, Neveda City, California. Will practice in all the Courts. DR. N. E. CHAPMAN DunNTiIsT &i> NEVADA CITY LOCAL ANESTHBTICS IF DESIRED. Office Residence, Sacramento direct. semen ae CO OTN LA -_— Empire Livery Stable: Broad gt., Nevadse City, opp Net ope gxJAMES HENNESSY, Propriete-, ' BOPRIETOR OF THE EMPIRE I F ee as the largest lot of Merses, Carriages and Mugaites To be found in this pert of the State. Teams with clogant Wagons and Hacks 0 tet at the shox notice and on the most reasonable terms as fost as any gentieman ? _ W. T. Derham, Newcastle, HOTEL ARRIVALS. Union Arrivals. W. J. Toland, Smartsville, Henry Walker, Grass Valley, “es W. J. Rogers, D. N. Jones, Spenceville, W. L. Jones, ss J. A. J. J. Cc , San Juan, 8. Luther, Grand Rapids, Michigan, F. M. Henthorn, San Francisco, Janes McBride, # J. Ross, as J. Adelson & family, Dr. J. F. Shaw, x Walton, as P. W. Harkney, Federal Loan Mine, H. B. Fuller, sd . Fa umbia K. J. Phelan, Shady Creek, Gust. Ozalli, Bloomfield, A. Burrows, Grass Valley, Elmer Peters, Dutch Flat, E. C. White, = W. Mutton, Grass Valley, A. R. Lando, Marysville, L. G. Williams, = C. E. Loraine, Sacramento. National Exchange. Miss Ida Cole, Mountain House, Miss E. Hunt, ie G. Cunningham, San Francisco, C. H. Jones, : A. Smith, _ Frank Ennor, A. H. Stoll, Geo. A. Gray, J. M. Davis, J. Waters, F. Boeckman, P. Tautphaus, « J. Buttgenbach, W. Battgenbach, C. H. Lindley,A. Hamberger, A. 8. J. DeGuerre, 8. 8. Gould, _W. Goldsworthy, — W. Johns, ics W. S. Wood, ~ G. W. Elimann, N. Peterson, James Hagerty, Sierra City, G. G. Morrison, M J.M. Smith, Lime Kiln, J. Brown, Le A. W. Lemon, Los Gatos, E. B. McPhetridge, Ma: yaville; H._8. Inlian, Africa, O. R. Snow, Sacramento, D. A. Clifford, a J. 8. McBride, San Juan; M. A. W.,-J; Cramar,; T. Williams & wife, Newcastle, — . F. MeVey, Colfax, J. F. Owens, Forest City, D. M. Jones, Dutch Flat, L. Atkins, Sacramento, Mias T. F an, Sacramento, T. Wayman, Pike City. S J. Treanor, 5 UE Sas oa cpueeeeas Sent to Jail. Pat McNulty was ‘brought down from Truckee today by Gonstable Reed to serve 30 days for vagrancy. % DIED. In Sacramento, July 14, 1893, Leander Skeehan, beloved brother of Mrs. M. L. Beardsley of this city. AYER'S Sarsaparilla 1s superior to all other preparations claiming to be blood-purifiers. First of all, because the principal ingredieyt used in it is the extract of genuine Honduras sarsaparilla root, the variety richest in medicinal properties. Also, beCures Catarrht cause the yer. low dock, being raised expressly for the Company, is always fresh and of the very best kind. With equa) discrimination and care, each of the other, ingredients are selected and compounded. It is THE Superior Medicine because it is always the same in appearance, flavor, and effect, and, being highly concentrated, only_small doses are needed. It is, therefore, the most economical blood-purifier in existence. It Cures makes food nourSCROFUL A ‘ishing, work pleasant, sleep refreshing, and life enjoyable. It searches out all impurities in the system and expels them harmlessly by the natural channels. AYER'S Sarsaparille gives elasticity to the step, and imparts to the aged and infirm, renewed health, strength, and vitality. AYER’” Sarsaparii Erepaned ® Dre J.C. a, 1&Co., Lowell, Bold by all Drugglets: ‘rice $1, six bottler. Cures others, will cure you Notice to Stationers. EALED PROPOSALS WIL). BE RECEIVED i b ge "oa of Education of Nevada Schoo!) et un Saturday, July 29, 1893, af 2 o'clock P. M. For furnishing the following supplics to be de1 wes. * Washington Schoolhouse by 5 Reams Manilla Paper (40 Ib) cut 8x12. 4 reais Legal Cap (12 Ib.) 6 dozen boxes Chalk. 8 Lead Pencils, Eagle, No. 140. ie gross Lead Pencti.s, Graphic No. 8. 6 Note Books (thin. 6 dozen boxes Gillott’s Pens (No. 404.) . & gross Blotters (cut) iegrons Andrews’ Dustiess Krasera, for Stationery to be accompan ed by saw ples. The Boara reserves the right to reject any an LEONALD 8. CALKING, Clerk of the Board. Neyade City, June mb, horses are free from vive, of good style odiaer sc ! DOUBT AT THE LAST. EVIDENCES BY WHICH PHYSICIANS DETERMINE DEATH. Mankind Has Always Had a Horror of Being Buried Alive, ‘and tlie Cremation of the Ancients May Have Been Due to This Fear—Some Peculiar Cases. So deceptive are many of the ordinary evidences of death that medical science has given to this subject a great deal of attention. It used to be supposed that people were often buried alive through accident, and. writers of romance have dwelt upon this species of horror with much unction. During the war of -the rebellion many soldiers were said to have been interred while living who were merely in a lethargy or stupor arising from loss of blood, exhaustion, cold and fear. Bodies have often been found turned over in coffins, as if the occupants had waked up and tried to get oat. In -. numerous other cases of a similar sort the tongue has been discovered protruding from the mouth, as if from suffacation, and there have been stains from bleeding on the burial clothes. Now, such facts as these were amply sufficient in former days to convince the most skeptical that the persons concerned had been interred alive. But it is now known that such phenomena are exhibited by dead bodies under conditions wholly normal. Theturning of a corpse in its coffin is brought about by the expansion of the gases of putrefaction. The projection of the tongue from the mouth is an effect of the same cause. Bleeding often occurs after death. In. fact, such a hemorrhage is known to hive taken place eight’ days after death. In this instance the bleeding was from wounds inflicted during life. The stoppage of the heart’s beating is of death. in some cases on record that organ has apparently ceased to perfarm utes, und yet the person has revived. Tidy, the great English authority, speaks of the instance of a certain Colonel Townshend, who was seemingly able to die at. will and to come to life again when hé chose. Ona number of occasions he had deliberately suspended his own vital processes for a short time. Finally he consulted physicians on the subject, deeming hia ability to do this a sufficiently abnormal symptom to be somewhat alarming. In the presence of the doctors he voluntarily lapsed into astate [of torpidity. his heart” st and his breathing. also, @ mirror heldat’ his month showing no dimness. not regarded as a satisfactory evidence . ‘its function for as much as 15 min-} Taking Down a Drummer. A few years ago s number of us were stopping at the Henry House in Abilene, Kan. Among the guests was a plughat-silk-umbrella_ clothing drummer from Boston. He had no desire tomake ap or affiliate with the “boys,” but was a crowd all to himself, so we concluded to,initia% him. About six miles westof Abilene was a water station called ‘Sand Springs.” As soon as Mr. “Boston” was within earshot, one man said, “Well, I got in one nice order yesterday from Jones at Sand Spritigs.” “Yes,” said another, “I fixed him with bis boots and shoes.” “And I,” said another, “‘sold him a splendid order of. notions.” Another one said, “I heard him wish a clothing man would come along.” Mr. “Boston” at once pricked up his ears, went into the ticket office and asked the ugent, ‘““‘Where is Sand Springs?” The-agent told him, ‘The first station west.” He purchased a ticket and had his seven big trunks checked to “Sand Springs.” ; When the train arrived there, the baggageman rolled his trunks—out—on the prairie. Mr. B. inquired of the burly Irishman who ran the pump engine, “Where's the town, sir?’ ‘Be jubers, it’s meself and this water tank is all there it uv it.” “Why,” said B., ‘‘is there oot a Mr. Jones starting a large store here?” “Divil the bit,” suid Pat. It yoon dawned upon the Bostonian that he had been the victim of a cruel joker. He had to skirmish around and paid a farmer $3 to haul his baggage back to Abilene. When he returned, one of the boys gave him the “grand hailing sign” and told him why it was done. He ‘‘set ‘em up” in fine style and said he would ever after be ready to extend the hand of fellowship to a worthy brother whenever he should find him.—Cor. St. Louis Globe-Democrat. ee In his delightful record of “An Embassy of Provence,” Mr. Thomas A, Janvier relates how he was lost in the mazy streets of the little town of Vers. The place was strange tohim. His pony, be ing. torthented by flies; ran away with the carriage or buggy. But ‘‘the ponette” did not run too madly to respond to the rein, so Mr. Janvier turned this, that and the other corner and flew past startled old women, children, dogs and hens, till he did not know his way back to the main road. He says: “A brave old man rescued us. While I held the ponette hard be seized her bridle, and when he had calmed her by I had explained that we were lost and had begged him to guide us to the highThis case was apparently unique. At the same time the peculiar faculty developed. by.-Colonél . Townshend-—-who died that same night for good and all— bears a seeming likeness to the peculiar power exhibited by certain fakirs of In—. dia._For centuries-it-has been a-familiar trick for certain of these fakirs who possessed the accomplishment to permit themselves to be burieulive for months. coming to life again after being dug up. That this remarkable feat is wholly bona fide has been satisfactorily demonstrated. It has been repeatedly performed in the presence of most skeptical witnesses under circumstances which preclude all possibility of deception. It is an artificial suspension of vitality, bearing some relation to the natural hibernation of bate and other animals.
If the finger of a person in whom the vital spark still lingers be tightly bound with a piece of string, the end of the finger will soon become red and then bluish. But if the individual be dead no such effect will be produced by the application of a ligature. [f during life a clean and bright needle be thrust into the muscles of the , the steel rapidly rusts on being wi' wn. After. death no such oxidation takes place, it is said. However, the certainty of this latter test is disputed. One of the most familiar methods of determining absence of life is that of producing @ blister by heat, as with the flame of acandle, If the skin beneath and around the blister becomes red, the individual lives; otherwise be is dead. One of the most reliable tests of this question is made by holding the hand of the supposed cadaver between the eye and the light of a candle or lamp. When thus examined, the hand of a living person has a rosy color between the fingers. This ts not the case with a corpse. Only a few days ago a woman was found dead in bed at a hotel in Chicago witha pistol in her hand and a bullet hole in her tem: on Aman who is supposed to have her a few hougs previously was aconsed of havin her, but the of suicide. So far asthe newspaper reporta indicated, the jury did not pay any attention to one most important point in the evidence. If the revolver was tightly in the dead woman's hood, she must have committed suicide. It is not possible for another individual to tighten the relaxed grip of a dead person upon @ weapon. 2 If the person has committed suicide. the weapon will be found rigidly grasped with fingers stiffened by the rigor wortis. But after death the fingers cannot be made to take a grip firmly. This is regarded as a most important point from the medico-legal standpoint. It has de termined the fate of an accused prisoner in many a trial. Army surgeons say that the expressions on the faces of soldiers in battle reveal the causes of Modera Spanish Literature. The Spanish literature of our times is of high quality, as was that of other cimes. Spain has today, as it has had for vundreds of years, many eminent scholSpanish romanoers, novel writers and voeta of this generation deserve very high praise.—New York Sun. A Matter of Locality. ot cao i aaeaen pe av you cal] that wit? oo Becond Tourist—Certainly. First Tonrist—Well, I don Second Tourist-—But you forget we're im England now. First T enough: irs fp all branches of learning. The . ~ ‘ourist—Oh, yes! Sure eno’ Reg pardon. Ha! bal ha! bal—Troth (ER ee en eR ERAS way he smiled gently and in a mouient led us out from that entangling inaze. “The distanee to the highway proved tu be less than twoscore yards, but then he knew what turns to take in that marvelously crooked town. “In my; i offered the old man . money. ee accept it,. ‘Icannot take monsiein’s silver,’ he gaid po litely. ‘Already lam more than paid. {n all the 70 vears of my life here in Vers monsieur is {46 very first who has been fost in «ny little town It is most interesting. It is enough.’ * “In this position he was firm. [ thanked him again warmly, ana we drove @way. When we had gone a short distance, } looked back. He was standing in the middle of the road gazing afterus. His face ‘was wreathed in smiles.” —-. » 9 HILOH'S} a $1.00 Bottle. One cent a dose. ¢ 4 others ‘he, Croup, Sere ul arcamn Wacshing out =e i Ek Sohieae o suet Siiton se. NNA Sane “Dk.doe. LOH S/S CATARRH REMEDY. tend te dure you. Price, boca Snioctoe tao, ’ For sale at Carr Bros, Im England, adulterated food products that are represented to be pure are destroyed by the officials. But there is no such law here and tea is notoriously manipulated. Substitutes are added and the whole dyed green or black. The dyes and substitutes have onused the Scientific American to refer to Japan Tea, as MONEY “nerve racking.” A brand of pure tea is a necessity. Beech’s Tea is the pure sun-cured undyed Japan Tea, Being pure yon use less per oup than of the dyed teas, thus ycu use less per month and the economy is manifest, as your monthly tea bill is lees to say nothing of the deligatTO DRINK ful flavor. There are no headaches in Beech’s Tea. It is actually ‘as pure as childhood” and can be drunk by children and delicate persons with impunity. It is adelight to lovers _ of really good tea. It is never sold. im balk, Sold only in sealed packages bearing this trade-mark. BEE TEA Price, 60 cents per Pound; halves, 25 cents. For sale by H URTLEFF & SON, And GEO. 0. GAYi-ORD ing-flies andDont. ~ You Know that you can secure almost immediate relief from Indigestion, and that. uncomfortable fullness after meals, by simply taking a dose of Simmons Liver Regulator? Some people think that because it is called Liver Regulator it has nothing to do. with’ Indigestion and the like. It is the inaction of the Liver that cayses Indigestion, and that fullness; “also Constipation, and. those Bil_ious Headaches. Millions have been made to understand this and have been cured from these troubles by Simmons Liver Regulator—a medicine unfail. ing and purely vegetable. From Rev. M. B. Wharton, Baltimore, Md “It affords me pleasure to add my testi my to the great virtues of Simmons iver Regulator. I haye had experience with it, am occasion demanded, for man years, and rd it as the greatest mode cine Of thé times. =o good # medicine ves ubiversal « +i mendation. Notice tu Redeem. NDER SECTION 2878 OF THE POLITical Code. ‘o Thomas J. Jenkins: Please take notico that the following described property situated in th» county of Nevada, state o: California, viz: _Lot_on Gold Flat._on West . side of road bounded South by N.C. N. G, RK, R, track and N: by the lot of Clemo, with improvements, was ou the twenty-eighth day of June, 1892, by the Tax Collector of anid Nevada county, sold for. ‘elinquent taxes for the year 1891, to R. H. Eddy for the anm of $4.98. The sum due at the date hereof is $747 and upen the first day of Algust, 1898. the undersigned, R. H. Fddy, wili apRly to the Tax Collector of the county of Nevadg aforesaid, for a deed of seid property. Witness my hand this’lst day of July. 1893. f R. H. Eppy. Estray Nitice. eas MY PLACE JULY 33, 1893, A SMALL cow with two months old calf. Tips of cow's horns sawed off; has K band on right hip; dark red color. Owner will please call for animal, prove property and By, charges. HESS : k.G. MCCUTCHAN. Nevada City, July 14Iim —— = aspire te ~~ Notice to Redeem, so SECTION 3785 OF CHE POLITICAL To Ba lerat Mining Company, B. H. Milter agent: Please take notice that the following described property, situated tu the county of Nevada, State of California, viz: Mining ground at Lake City bounded 8. anu W. by McCloske & Co.'s claims, E. by ground ef Harvey Rogers, containing 433.33 acres, Wis on the 27tb day June, 14¥2, by the Tax Collector of said Nevada county, soid*for delinquent ‘t\xea for nS yest 1891, to Marcus M. Barub for the sum of $13.34. The amount due at the date hereof 8 $20.01 and upon the fifteenth day of August, 1893, the undersigned, Marcus M._Beruh, wil: apely to ths Tax Collector of the county of Nevada aforesuid, for a deed of said property. Witness my hand this llth bv of July 1893. {july12} Marcus M. Barun. Ty Paty’ Spall Dr COMFOUND -SULPHUR POWDER! The Best Medicine Ever ateodueed TRY IT! A fair trial will convince the most skeptical that it is the wonder of the age. The Great Remedy for Habitual Constipation, Indigestion, Piles, Diseased Liver,Billiousness,; . Gout, Rheumatism, Sciatica, Lumbago, Gravel, Etc. Thousands of bottles are are sold monthly and everybody that has used it proclaim it te a wonderful medicine. ee Every prominent physician in San Francisco, San Jose, Stockton and Sacramento recommend it. een Nold by all Druggst, WM WOLF PRICE LIST [FOR CASH. — > Th Cheapest and Best Grocery Store in Nevada City. . — 2 Main Street, opposite Union Hotel. . Fe ee Flour, per £00 IbsWheat, per 100 Ibs Corn, per 100 Ibs Rolled Barley, per 100 Ibs .-----Bran, per 100 Ibs Middlings, per 100 Ibs..-----:White Sugar, 14 Ibs ----0-0 Brown Sugar, 16 Ibs.-----.----->-Rees tB Ws. sescrscsece sce ee ecvees Currants, . 2 Ibs. Prunes, !O lbs. -.-evisu Costa Rica Coffee, 4 ibs ‘ Washing Powder, . 2 papers‘ ..Chocolate, 4 papers Corn Starch, 12 papers Oysters, 8 cans. © ++. «++ + Green Corn, 8 cans Green Peas, 8 cans String Beans, 8 cans Tomatoes, IY cans ..-. Salmon, 2 . b. cans, 5 cans Salmon, . Ib. cans, Scans. Jelly, 6 cans --Sardines, 8cansCorned Beef, 5 cans. .--.---+-+++Condensed Milk, 5 cans. .-...--. Lard, 10-Ib. cans : Lard, 5 ib, cans : 4 Kerosene, 5 gaia. Syrup, per 5. gal. keg. ..+. Savon Sap; per box Savon Soap, 4 bars Harkness Candles, per box Goodwin’s “ per box, 40 lb. box. 4 50 San Francisco Candles, perbox.75 Butter, per roll : EasternHam; por-tbr-~---+ e+ +. Eastern Bacon, per Ib...-.+.+2.-++: Pickles per 5 Gallon Keg And Everything Else in Proportion. —— All Goods Fresh and Pure. WM. WOLF. HEAVEN om EARTH: Love and Beauty Make Heaven. Solet us have pure hearts, beautifal flowers, houses, birds—nay, beautiful women. Every wom:n Can be loved, can be beautiful. LOLA MONTEZ CREME The SKIN FOODand TISSUk BUILDER mekes Ludies’ beantiful Prevents ‘wrink'ies. Keepe -skhinip perfect condition. No matter what blemish disfigures face or form, Mrs. Nettie Harrison's articles will cure. MISS A. J. STRANAHAN Next door to City Hall, Broad Street, Nevada City, Cal. For any special or complicated blemish of the face and form, write MRS, NEITIE HARRIBON, 26 Geary street, Ban Francis:o, Val. __Superfluous hair permanently removed. Semi-Annual Report of the Citizens Bank and its Agency at Grass Valley, Showing its Financial Condition on the Morning of July Ist, 1893. RESOURCES. Bank Premises .— .Seka Real Estate Taken For Debt .. Miscellaneous Bonds . tet County and City Warrants Loans ou Keal Estate Loans on S‘ocks and Bonds .. Loans on rersonal Security and Over Drafts . é F Loans on Other Securitics Money on Hand ; Due From Banks NFO Furnituré and Fixture Gold Bullion i z $278,759.15 LIABILITIES. Paid Up Capita’ eae -. $ £6,000,00 Undivided Profits .. eae : 494.33 Due Lepositors : 4 Due Banks ‘i Dividends Unpaid . ae S23 $278,750.15 We, the undersigned, do solemnly swear that we have each of us a personal kiio6wledge of the matters contained in the foregoing statement and that the same is a true and ¢ rrect rep rt oft e financial condition of the Citizens. linnk and its agency at Grass Valley 01 the morning of July 1s", 1893, according to the best of our knowledge and belief, and the assets therein named are all in the custody of the said Bank te proper offieers-and co: respot dents. We furthermore solemuly swear that the paid up capital stock-of he Cit zens Bank is fifty theusand dollars in gold coin valuation as will appear from the forezoing report. s B. M. PRESTON, President. D. E. Morgan, Ass’t. Cashr. State-of Californi 1, County of Nevada, &.s : . Subscribed and sworn tu before me this 7th day of July, 1sv3. FRED SEARLS, Notury Public Nevada Co. Cal. W. L. DOUCLAS “$3 SHOE uéP'ttr. Do you wear them? When next In need try @ palr. Best In the world. If you want a fine DRESS eg styles, don’t pay $6 to $8, try my $3, $3.50, $4.00 or $5 Shoe, They fit equal to custom made and look and wear as well, If you wish to economize In your footwear, do so by purchasing W, L, Douglas Shoes, Name and price stamped on the bottom, look for It when you buy ‘W. L. DOUGLAS, Brockton, Mass. Sold by For Sule by JOHN DELBRIDGE, THE WELL KNOWN GETCHELL -RANCH, v On the Grass Valley Road, Part of the Ranch is within the corporate lim its of Nevada City. Ploaty--of Freo-Water.—There Are Two Water Rights. All patented ground. . Plenty of Timber. . There are Two Quartz Ledges on the premises. Must be sold immediately. APPLY TO D B. GETCHELL. Notice to Tax Payers. City Taxes for 1893 are now due and payable. Office -hours at City Hall from g o'clock a. Mm. till 12, and from 2to5 P.M. °% Taxes will be delinquent after 6p. mM, Monday, August 7, 1893. D. B. GETCHELL, . Marshal and Tax Collector. For sale by the AGENT. FOR Tits Root Beer! Dozen or Gross! “AT A SPECIAL PRICE ~— Baelver Commerc Street: Sa pu . gra oth cle: at . cou the