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Collection: Newspapers > Nevada Daily Transcript (1889-1893)
June 20, 1893 (4 pages)

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Page: of 4

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THE DAILY TRANSCRIPT.
SRUOUWN & CALKINS, Proprietors.
JUNE 20, °93.
ok 4d ene dd TUESDAY —EV’'NG.
-GUANTS 10. WAREN
Now the Mining Monitors Will Play Once
More.
—
THE HYDRAULIC MINERS MOVE.
Mining Will Probably be Resumed in
the Sierras This Fall.
—
San..Francisco--Call :—The—California.
Debris Commission has just organized
and the resumption of hydraulic mining
as contemplated by the Caminetti act
passed by the last Congress and the Ford
bill, which became a State law at the
last session of the Legislature, will now
proceed as rapidly as possible.
This commission’s appointment and
organization was the last step required
before hydraulic miners could take actual
steps toward getting their long-silent
monitors to playing again on the‘slopes
of the Sierras. Now that the way is
epen there will be a steady progress in
the rehabilitation of the stupendous mining plants that have been lying idle for
so many years, and many of the monitors
will be at work again this year. ;
Hydraulic mining in California was
ene of the wonders of the world a dozen
years ago. The vast scale upon which
the operations ofwashing away great
hills on the mountain sidés was carried
on, the marvelous streams of water, so
much greater than anything the world
had seen befere, and the spectacular play
of the great monitors both by day and
night made hydraulic mining one of the
most wonderful things to be seen in Cali-~
fornia. The operations were moge strik—
‘ing than the $10,000,000 in gold’ the hydraulic miners were annually washing
out-of the-river-beds-of-another—geological period.
But the hydraulic miners were reckless
of anything but the wealth they were
finding, and twelve years ago the courts
stepped in to protect from-further devas
tation and ruin the rich valleys below
and the navigable streams which were
being rapidly filled up. —Hydraulic min“ing was thus suddenly checked in’ the
was the greatest and the operations the
largest.
Twelve years have afforded time for
the warriig ‘miiiers aiid farmers “to cool
down a bit and feel like giving conces—
sions on both sides. The result of this
hag been the laws mentioned, to which
the anti-debris people practically agreed,
and which afford at least a fair measure
of protection to the valleys.’ No hydraulic mine can be worked now if it
does any ‘‘material injury’’ to rivers or
navigable streams. A board of Govern
ment engineers control the operations,
arin or sopoutr lmtp nénk abe law is
The thing that settled hydraulic mining
for the time being was the decision of
Judge Sawyer in the United States Circuit Court, twelve years ago, in the case
of Woodruff vs. the North Bloomfield
Mining Company, the largest-hydraulic
mining company in the State. The court
granted the injunction’ prayed for ina
sweeping devision, to the effect that hydraulic mining operations could ‘not. be
carried on when ‘‘any” injury to the
streams resulted. After this decision
the anti-debris people soon secured injunctions stopping every hydraulic mine
of consequence throughout the water~
sheds of the Sacramento and American
rivers. The courts then granted injunctions when “‘any” injury was shown, and
if the waters of a stream was muddied to
any-decree the injury was established.
Those decisions of the court were based
on the common law, the statutes containing no reference to hydraulic mining.
The Caminetti and Ford bills but
placed in the statutes of the United
States and of the State the common law
principles concerning hydraulic mining
upon which the decisions of the courts
were based.
forded the miners the protection of the
phrase ‘‘material injury,’’ and provided
fer the erection of dams to restrain the
debris from the rivers and for the execution. of the law by a board of Government engineers, who alone can permit or
restrain the operations of hydraulickers,
excepting, of course, that appeals may
be taken to the courts from their decisions,
These bills, however, af.
,
The Debris Commission just erganized
and now ready for business is, by appointment of the President, composed ot
Colonel George Mendell, LieutenautColonel W. H. H. Benyaurd and Major
W. H. Hear of the Engineer Corps of the
United States army. -The beard has or
ganized by electing Colonel Mendel]
president and Major Heur secretary.
These Commissioners do not relish
their new job a bit, for it involves av
ammense amount of labor and study and
they have their regular engineering work
along the coast to take care of just th«
same.
miners by making delays unavoidable
the Miners’ Association wiil ask the Secretary of War to detail two additional)
competent engineers to work under thei:
supervision and this scheme meets with
the cordial approval of the Commission.
sag
Petitioners and contestants, ‘if any,
will be heard on a specified date, and
then the commission will decide whether
or not to allow operations and what their
extent and method may be. When the
miner or association of miners get things
in shape for operations the CommissionAs this will inconvenience the
ere will personally inspeét the mine, and
if they please to do so will let the minérs
turn on the water, the operations remaining under the jurisdiction of the
engineers.
~ Five or six petitions have already been
filed-and many more wil] be filed very.
When its production .
been knocked” to pieces, ditches have
goon. Mining men anticipate that.a good
many hydraulic mines will be ready for
operation early in the coming, season,
which begins with rainfall and a consequent water supply,. It is expected. that .
in 1894 here Will be a very great increase in the operations and that within
three or four years. hydraulic mining
will have as nearly reached its former
scale. Twelve years ago the annual production was about $10,000,000.
‘I anticipate that the production may
reach about $6,000,000 a year,” sa‘d C.
G. Yale, editor of the Mining and Scientific Press, yesterday’
ditions are a heavy tax.
“The new cobThere is the 3
per cent, of the gross receipts to be paid
oyer to the Debris Commission. Ther
many.small miners cannot resume at all.
They may own a few acres of ground, but
died and the rate of taxation has dou~
bled.
If hydraulic mining is resumed on approximately its fcrmer scale, the old
. population, life'and wealth will be recovered, Thousands of people will find
homes on the pine-clad mountain slopes,
and th? mountain roads will again be
alive with freighters. %
‘It will give‘an impetus to business
that nothing else could give in a short
tine,” said a well-known hyd:anlie mining man yesterday. ‘Besides giving
employment directly to several thousand
men it will give employment to many
indirectly. An immense amount of supples will have to be manufactured, handled and hauled, and it will stimulate4
business in San Francisco, Sacramento,
Literary Note.
The Overland Monthly for July will
be the miasummer number and appear in
an appropriate cover of cream and olive,
grizzly. Its contents, too, will be in
keeping with the season. There are to
be illustrated out-of-door papers on several interesting ‘subjects: Fort Ross,
where the Russians had a settlement in
California for thirty years, The Fish
Patrol, among the ‘*‘Dago” fisherthen of
the upper bays, and Carquinez Straits,
and A Temblor in Mad Mule Mine, a
thrilling account of an earthquake experience.” There will also be a charming
group of illustrated pvems, on different
West Coast flowers. There are to be
stories, and sketches by various well. Is the Oriental salutation,
knowing that good health
cannot exist without a
healthy Liver. When the
Liver is torpid the Bowels are sluggish and constipated, the food lies
in the ‘stomach undited, poisoning the
Bocds frequent headache
ensues;.a feeling of lassi* tude, despondency and
. Marysville and all the mountain towns
their mines have been idle for years,
their plants have gone to pieces and they
are busted.’ They haven’t the capital to
build dams and resume. ‘Lhe best thay
many small miners can do will be to sell
out te»men; with money. ‘There are
many miners who could work at a smal
protit before, but cannot do so now.
‘‘Besides the cost of dams, plant, operations and the 3 per cent tax there will be
the impossibility in many cases to wash
gravel fast enough to make it protitable.
When a miner puts up a dam he will not
be allowed to wash into it more tailings
than will properly settle. He will
allowed to wash only so much in such a
and then
twenty-four hours a day, as the big comto
many hours. a day to
be
time, instead of working
do, ‘he will have to
let the
mud settle so that it will not be carried
panies used
stop so
over the dam. His plant and operations
will be just as expensive, but his production will be smaller.
“7 regard hydraulic mining as having
passed from the domain of Jaw into that
It of
Government engineers who care nothing
of engineering. is in’ the hands
for political influences, nothing for hydraulic miners and nothing for anti-de=
bris associations. (The resumption: of
hydraulic: mining is now an engineering
problem. I expect that the anti-debris
people, though supposed to. be satisfied
with the law, will continue to; fight the
miners; bnt the miners are safe as long
as they act within the law.”
The present prospects mean a great
deal to Sierra, Plumas, Nevada and other
counties along the western slope of the
“Sierras, and these counties are already.
feeling a. thrill of new life. They: see
population and~ prosperity returning to
3 al
actual preparations to resume, and .as
them. Many miners hay ady begun
soon as the Debris.Commission allows a
general understanding of what they. will
require the bustle of operations will
commence,
It will take of
considerable time to get all the impor
tillions dollars and
tant gravel ‘mines worked by the -hydraulic process in operation ~ again
twelve years ago $100,000,000 was invested in the playjs for the hydraulic
mines, including the great reservoirs,
ditches, flumes, pipe lines, ete.
the great bulk
valuable property has been idle.
of this
Pipes
Since then
have been _Tusting fer years on the
been filled up, washed eut and wrecked
generally; dams have gone to decay;
gravel banks, half -torn away, have
yrewn green, while rusting giants before
them have lain as harmless.as an aban
doned plow. So it will cost millions fur
irresistible
play where they left off twelve years
ago.
Mining men say that the new law will
produce a prosperity that will be felt
all through the State. When hydraulic
tnining was stopped several thousand
meh had to seek employment elsewhere.
Now, several thousand men will find
monitors to resume their
tion goes on,
The assessment-roll in Nevada county
is now $10,000,000 less than it’ was in
1880, its population has greatly dwin
employment as the work of rehabilita—
in that region. Towns and camps will
be repopulated, and soimething like the
old times will be seen sgain.”
Starting the hydraulic mines will-cre
ate an immense demand for iron pipe for
vne thing. Hundreds.of miles of this
pipe has been laid in the mountains,
where ditches and flumes could not be
used. Some of them were three feet in
and often formed ‘inverted
through . Water was
brought a thousand or more feet down
@.e declivity and as far up the other
side of the ravine, thence conveying the
diameter,
siphons” which
water along distance to where it would
be delivered against a bank through nineinch nozzles ot big hydraulic giants with
such terrific force that a knife could not
cut the stream; rocks weighing a ton or
more would be Sessed about like chips
and hillsides would melt -away like icicles in a furnace. :
The scale vypon, which the operations
were carried on may be illustrated by
the North Bloomfield Company in Nevada county, which expended -$2,000,00-iu its plant, It had
sources, with the biggest dams. in Caliimmense re—fornia, a ¥ast stretch of great ditches
ind flumes, a tunnel that cost $500,009,
and. a _pay-roll “af $25,000 a month. Kecently it has mined a little, after buildtug restraining dams, but its pay-roll is
only about $2,000 now, and much of
its expense is simply in keeping unused
works in repair. This company expects
to operate nearly as extensively as be. fore. :
The amount of workable auriferous
gravel in the main region about the Sac—
{ramento River watershed has been officially estimated as follows:
North Yuba waterslied, “90,000,000
cubic yard. ec ien rincoomenialin
Middle Yuba watershed, 140,000,000
cubic yards. :
South -Yuba watershed,-560,000,000
eubic yards. : : =
Deer Creek watershed, 25,000,000 cubie yards.
Below forks of the Yuba, 40,000,000
cubic yards.
Bear River watershed, 157,000,000
eubie yards.
Above forks of American, 105,000,000
cubic yards. :
Total, 1,117,000,000.
This is estimated to be worth about
$335,000,000, and this is but a small part
of .the watershed of the Sierras.
oe Stock Certificate Lost. _
Certificate No. 23 of the capital stock
of the FederatLoan Mining Cotiipatiy
has been lost or misplaced. Anyone
finding the same will please return to
James Colley. m22
Stockholders’ Meeting.
fy annual meeting of stockho'ders of
S the Spanish Gold Mining Company will
be beld at the office of the company at the
mine on Wednesd-y Juiy 10th, 1893, at 7
o'clock P. M., for the purpose of electing
Directors for the ensuing -year, and trans~
neting all other business that may legally
be brought before the meeting
jig A. 8 LORD, Secretary.
FOR SALE.
THis Great CoucuH CURE promptly
where ali others fail, Coughs, Croup.
Throat, Hoarseness, Whoopin
Asthma. For Consumption it
bas cured thousands,and wil]
Sioa eal eebons
LOH’S /ACATARRH
REMEDY.
? This remedy is guaranmieck
ave you Catarr'!
Price, 0cta, I r free, teed to cure you,
cures
Sore
Cough and
as no riveys
CURE YOU
takenin time. Sold by Druggists on a guark or Chest, use
PLASTER.25c, . 3
I AVING OTHER .BUSINESS RFQUIR
ing my attention, . offer for sale my
Store House and Stock of
— [jroceries,
ALSU A DRIFT GRAVEL MINE
Of 250 Acres, Incorporated.
Blacksmith Shop and Tools,
T Rails for 800 feet of Tunnel,
500 feet of Tunnel Completed.
For particulars enquire of the underme BPD ERICKSON,
Forest City, Sierra Co., Cal.
For sale at Carr Bros,
Are You cver ‘Tired ?
Do you ever think your skin needs a
rest? It certainly does. It needs a
tonic to tone it up just like a run-down
system.
LOLA MONTEZ CREME.
The Skin Food and Tissue-Builder,
Is a food for the
skin. It makes
the skin firm
and preserves
its elasticity,
thus preventing
wrinkles.. You
cannot ~ freckle
or tan with the
creme on your
face. No toilet
table is complete without
it. One pot (75 cents) last three months,
used daily. It is the ONLY SKIN FOOD
on the market. BEWARE OF WORTHLESS IMITATIONS and accept no substitute.
MISS A. J. STRANAHAN .
Next door to City Hall, Broad Street,
: Nevada City, Cal.
For any special or complicated blemish
of the fade aud form, write MKs. NEiTi¢
HARRIS JN, % Geary Stree!, San Francis.o
permanently remoy al, Superfuous
‘ ‘1Y¥-maré.
a
Try Pecarty’s Small Bee
At S Cents.
Notice to Contractors.
Notice is hereby given
that bids in writing for running one hundred feet ot
ST. GOTHARD MINE will be received by the Company at the
tunnel at the
law office of Fred Searls
Nevada City, Cal. until Monday June 19th, 1893. Terms
of contract may be had at
said office or from the Company,
ST.GOTHARD MININGCOMVANY,
\
known writers, ainong them Flora Haines
Longhead, Leonard Kip, andFrances
Fuller Victer. ‘he Panama Canal, Some
Hints to Farmers (a paper on co-operation as practised by the Danish peasants),
and a variety of other topics are also to
be treated)
Mrs. T. S. Hawk ns, Chattanooga,
Tenn., says: ‘‘Shiloh’s Vitalizer ‘SAVED
MY LIFE.’ I consider it the best remedy
fora debilitated system I ever used.”’
For Dyspepsia, Liver or Kidney trouble
it excels. Price 75 cts. Sold by Carr
Bros. toes
—— TS
THE FACT
That AYER’S Sarsaparilla CURES
-oTHERS of Serofulous D. cases,
Eruptions, Boils, Eezema, Liver and
Kidney Diseases, Dyspepsia, Rheumatism, and Catarrh should be con.
vine ng that the same course of
treatment WILL curr you. All
that has been said of the wonderful
cures effected bythe use of
. AYERS
Sa arilla arsaparill
-during-the-past-io-years, trathfalls
applies to-day. It is, in every sénse.
The Superior Medicine. Its cura
Live properties, strength, effect, and
flavor are always the same; and for
whatever blood diseases AYER’S
Sarsaparilla is taken, they yield to
this treatment. When you ask for
Sarsaparilla
don’t be indueed to purchase any of
mostly mixtures of the cheapest ingredients, contain o sarsaparilla,
have no uniforin standard of appearance, flavor, or effect, are bloodpurifiers in name only, and are offered to you because there is more
profit in selling them. Take
“slit
Prepared by Dr. J. C. Aver &Co., Lowell, Mass.
Bold by ali Drugyists; Price $1; six botties, $5.
Cures others, willcure you
Grand 4th of July Celebration
—AT—
North Bloomteld .
Tuesday, July Ath, 93,
There will be a grand parade at 10
o'clock a, M., consisting of Goyne’s
Band, Military Company, civic societies
school children, ete.
The following are the officers of the
ay;
Grand Marshal—J, H. O'Connor.
President—R, D, Skidmore,
O:ator—Frank-T. Nilon,
Chaplain—Rev. C. F. O'Neil.
Reader of the Decloration of Independence—-T, (. MeGagin, Jr,
Poetess—Miss ( lara Currier, .
Goddess of Liberty—Miss Lillie Polmere,
Music by the Glee Club,
The ‘vllowing is the program for the
afternoon:
Races, Jumping, Running and Games.
Horribles at 3 P. m.
Military Drill at 5 P. m.
_ In the evening a concert will be given
trom 7 to 8:30 o'clock, after which
there will be a grand ball. Music by
Goyne’s orchestra,
Tickets of admission to the bali will
be $2.50, including supper.
Salutes will be fired morning, uoo
and night
Notice to Contractors.
i, TALS BIDS FOR PAINTING THE
\ frout of Washington seboolhouse two
conts Will be repeived to be opened June
24th. Board of Education to furnigh aint,
aud work to-be completed by september 1,
Isv3. For full pasticui-re apply to the undetsigned io Whom bids should be addressed.
__ By order of the Board,
\7 LeONARD 8B, CALKINS, Clerk.
Notice to Creditors.
ea
4. Maybank, deceased, to the creditors of
and all persous having claims against the
said deceased, to exhibit them, with the
alter the first applice»tion of this natice to’
the said Adiuistrator at Graniteville, Nevada County, Cal., the same being the place
tur che irensaction of vhe buginess of paid
estate, in-satd County of Nevaua,
G. A. ELLIS A
Adminis:
arte ee Estate of Jacob B, June 6th, 1898, a dividend (No. 50) of seventy
Dated Nevada City, this 10th day of June a
the-wortiless substitutes, which are 4
OW GOLD AND SILVER
that at ame
heid on the 6th day of June, 1893, an
edrporation,
evade. ity the office of said Corporation,
ny Bi upon which thi femain “bopald
8 assessment shall
w 6 delinquent and adve
sule at public suction, and, phi pea .
is made before, will bé
August, I, 1893, at the hour of 11 o'clock A,
n-the master of the estate of Jacob AM. wt the office of the Secretary ofI Muybank, deceased. 5 ¥ poration, to pay the elingeut aseesamont,
Notice ig hereby given hy the under-. gether with custa of advertising and exsigned, Administrator of the Estate of Jecob p oenyahd sale.By order of the Board of
necessary vouchers, within tour months . Pine street, Nevada City, Cal.
are
on and after June 10h, 1
the whole system is de. 1
ranged. Simmons Liver
Regulator has been the
means of restoriug more
pore * heal a
appiness ving them
s health Liver then any
agency Suan on earth.
It acts with extraor* dinary power and efficacy.
NEVER BEEN DISAPROINTED,
il m: for dys fi
eppoin in the effect produced; it seems to
be almost a perfect care for all diseases of the
Stomach aad wels,
. J. MoEizor, Macon, Ga
=OF=—
JULY 4TH,
: —AT—
GRASS -VALLEY,
Grandest Demonstration Ever Seen in
Northern California,
OFFICERS; e
fh I ay valli PrIpat yg Maewesa 4
Esq.
Orator, Hon. R. I. THOMAS.
Psst, PETER F, RILEY3
Reader of Declaration ‘of Independence, THOMAS J, BARRY. *
Chaplain, REV. J. PD. MACAULAY.
Grand Marshal, GEO, MAINHART,
DB.
The Largest, Most Magnificent and
Most Imposing Procession Ever Seen in
the County.
_ Military, Firemen, Uniformed Societies, Trade Floats and Citizens.
Games and Other Amusements During
the Afternoon.
Also a Grand Open-Air Concert by
Jenkins’ Band of Sixteen Pieces.
In the Evening There Will Be a Grand
Band Concert by Green’s Band of Twenty-one Pieces on the Grand Stand.
Grand Chorus of Male Voices During
the Exercises,
COME ONE! COME ALL!
Ordinance No. 110.
An ordinance to provide Revenue —To
a City Road and Streét boll Tax fee tk
Jear 1593 and 1894,
HE BOAKD OF TRUSTELS OF THE
City of Nevada do ordain us fullows:
Section], That a City Koad and Street
Poll Tax of Three Dollars is hereby levied
for the fiscal year 1893-1894, upon each male
inhabitant of the City of Nevada, over the
age of 21 yeurs and under 50 ears, for «ity
Road aud Street purposes, which ‘said Poll . *
‘Tax shall become due and become collectable on and after the fiist day of Jul y, 1898.
in the manner provided by law fur t! e collection of school Po.] Taxes,
Section 2, Th@City Marshal of said “ity
of Nevada is hereby made collector of said
tax, and shall collect the same in the manher provided by luw,. and. pou the negie ct
or refusal of any person liable theresor to
pay guid tux, after demand, said Marshal
must collect the same by seizure and sale
of apy personal property owned by such
erson, Said sale may be made after three
ours verb ) notice of time and Pace, and
the provisions of Sections 8791, 3748, 3794
8796, and 3796 of the Political y Code of Ca.
iforpia shall apply to and govern such seizure and een
section 3, e@ City Marshal must
a sworn report to the Bourd ¥ City eke
of the total amount of said poll taxes
collected by him during the preceding
month, and must pay the sume, less the
amount of his percentage for collection, to
the City Treasurer at the same time as other
revenues are made pavedie.
Sevtion 4, The City Marshal shall be alowed £7008 er oe 7 of ry such poll taxcs
collec! y Bim for paid fiscal
making such Collections me TA Oe
Peased June 5, 1893.
8. BAKER, D
President of the Board of Trustees.
Attest: T. H. Carr, Clerk, 48
—
wsce
Assessment Notice,
MINING CO,
Nevada Ujty, Cal, Notice is herebygiven
ng of the Board of Directors,
ssmwent (Number 6) of one cent per
© Was Jevied upon the capital stock ol t
parbh e immediately to ike
ty, Cal, in 8. Gold coin.
Qu the ijth day of July,
ay ment
sold on Nieoday,
K, CASPER, Secretary,
Office at Carter & Johnston's store, on
Dividend Notice,
? A MEETING OF THE .BOAR
Directors of the citizens Bank} Lehve cents per sh “ Was deciared' payabie
Fred Searls, A toruey. ja
1 And ‘Everything Else in Proportion.
PRICE LIST
FOR CASH.
The Cheapest and Best Grocery Store
in-Nevada-City.
Main Street, opposite Union Hotel.
Flour, per 100 Ibs.-./--..-----. $2 25
Wheat, per 100 ibs.... «.-----.+-1-75
Corn, per ICO Ibs 1 75
Rolled Barley, per 100 Ibs -.-.. 1 37'4
Bran, per 100 Ibs.... 1 25
Middlings, per 100 Ibs denies 1 37%
White Sugar, . 4 Ibs , 1 00
Brown Sugar, . 6 Ibs... 00
Rice. 18 Ibs 1 00
Currants, . 2 Ibs 1.00
Prunes, 10 ibs. wees . oO
Beans, 25 ibs.. ree tsevereseree f OO
Costa Rica Coffee, 4 ibs. ..... 1 00
Washington Powder, . 2 papers.
Chocolate, 4 papers
I
.
Starch, 12 papers 1 00
Corn Starch, . 2 papers {00
Oysters,8 cans. .. .-.. Peeces 1 00
Green Corn, 8 cans 1 00
Creen Peas, 8cans ., . 1 00
Strirg Beans, 8 cans veeees 1.00
Tomatoes, 8 cans 1 00
Salmon. 2 ib. cans. 5 cans . 00
Salmon, . ib, cans Scans 109
Jey, 6 cane -..-... 1.00
Sardines, 8 cans she genes . 00
. Corned Beef, 5 cang. ... . .. . OO
Condensed Mitk, 5 cans “teres F OO
Lard, tO1D, Cane: 5 once ci. 8s 4-80
Lard, 5 b. cans qittiones 75
Kerosene, 5 gal. can Je 1 25
Syrup, per 5 gal. keg:----.: tereese t 78
Soap, per box: -.is3...... 50
Savon Soap, perbox..-....... 110
Saven-Soap,-4-bars... rie: 25.
‘Harkness Candlés, per box.. 2. 5Q.
“Goodman's ——per box, 4016-bor-+50—
San Francisco Candles, per box 75
Butter, per rolj 45
Eastern Ham, perlb..:-.-. 6.. 18
Eastern Bacon, per ibs sn 5
eee: @p,
~ All Goods Fresh and Pure.
WM. WOLF:
DELINQUENT NOTICE, ~
Ff MONSOEIVA TED JACK -RABBIF+ MEEK
and Mining Vompany. Location of Friupul 1468 Of business, Sut Piauciscu, Cut.
Location of Works, Nevada’ County Cal.
N tice—There are delinquent upon the
following described stock —-oncactount oT
asseesment No 3 levicd on the 27th. dayof
March, 1893, the several amounts set oppsitethe uumes of the respective stiure1olders, as follows:
No. No.
Names. Certi. Sharos. Amount.
Heeffer, G. F. 11g 5000 $250.00
Hoeffer, G. F. 120 1000 50 00
Hoeffer, G. *, 121 1000 60.09
Hoeffer, G. F. 122 1000 50.00
Hoeffer, G. F, 123 321 16.05
Hoefter, G. F, 124 250 12.50
Hoeffer;G. F. unissued 579 28.95
Horung, F. C, 48 400 20.00
Horung, F. c. Ii7 1000 50.00
Horung, F.C 169 101 6.05
Rauveh, P. J. 100 5.00
And in accordance with law, and an order
of the Board of Directvis, made on the 23d
day of May, 15938, so many. shares of
each parcel of such stock as maybe neces—
sary will be sold at public Aucflon at the
othe. of the Cowpany, No. 320 Sansome
Street, room 10, San Francisco, California,
on Tuesday, the 27th day of June 18-3, at
the hour of 8 o'clock P. M., of said day, to pay
delinquent asse swents thereon, together
with costs of advertising and expenses of
the sale. THEO, WETZEL, ~ecretary,
Office, 820 Sansom = Street, room 10, Sun
Francisco, Calif, rnia,
Notice For Publication,4
ND OFF CE at Sacramento, Ca!., May,
22d, 1893.
Notice is hereby given that the followingnemed settier hus filed notice of ber int ntiou to make final proof in support of her
claim, and that said pr of will be wade before the Judge of the Superior Court of \eveda Co,, at Nevada City, on the u7thd yof
June,18v3, viz: 8. R. Moody, widow and he r
of Jusinh Moody. Deseribed ‘1. A. 5x79, for
the \Lut 8. or kractional \W 14 of NW 1-4 of
Bec. 28, ‘Ip. 17, 8. R.9 E, She wames the fl
lowing witnesses to prove ber continuous
residence upon and cullivtion of, siid
Jand, viz: Lewis Brindejon, Samuel Peck,
James smith, wurles E. Malloy, all. f.NeVi98 City, P. O., Xcvada County, Cal.
W. vu. LONG, Atty, for laimant,
M.WOLFS
Certificate of Copartnership.TATE OF CALIFORNIA, COUNTY OF
Nevade, sR.
We, the vundersigned, do hereby certify
' that we have asxociated ourselves together
mm copartnership under the firm pam qnd
.
. b
pot ipa] plree of business of said copartnership is at Nevada City,; Nevads County,
Caltfornin. ‘That oe egeee on ue oe
‘places of residence of the members o
Pehartnesnbts are HENBY J. CARTER and
GuORGE FE. JOHNSTON, both residing at
Nevada City, Nevada Cour ty, California,
That the business of said copartnership is
de] ng in Clothing, Boots aud Sioes, and
shing Goons.
: Ya wise whereof, we hay: hereunto set
our bands, this 20th day. of May, 83
3 H: NRY. J. CARTER,
GEORGE Fk. JOHNSTON,
State of California, ‘ ount. of Nevada, 88.
On this 29th day of May, 1893, before me,
F. T. Nilon, a Nétery Publie, n and for the
suid County of Nevada, resiaing thereis,
doly commissioned end sworn, personally
appeared Henry J. Carter and George FE,
Johnston, both perronniy known to me to
be the’ same-persons desciibed in, “hose
panies are subserib: d to, und who executed
the wit in instiument, und they, each of
} them, acktrrow edged tome that_he executed the same.
Fir-witnesswberenof,l
have hereunto set
my band and atlixed my official seal, at my
office in the said County of Nevada, tiie day
and ye rinthie ‘ertliene frst above written, FRANK T, SILON.
Notary’ Public, in and fer the saia County of Nevada, State o: California. m3l
[seal.
ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE.
N THE SUPERIOK COURT, COUNTY OF
Nevada, 8 a’e of Ca ifornia,
In the watte. of ti e Evtate and Gnardianship of Murion, Jean sud; dna MeCrandle,
minors. q
It appearing to tiiis Court from the petition this duy pres: ote! aud filed by David
Hutehison, the Guyrd'on of the pers née avd
Estates of Marion; J@yu und tduw McCrandley ming s, praylog for an order of pule of
cer nin re . cstate und persenal prope:ty
belonging to suid wards, und fiat It Js for
the best interests of said Wards ‘that such
revl «state and personal property should Le
sold. J
ail persous iuterestedin
pppesr before this Court on
Mi uday, thet tday of July; 1&3, at 10
1893 at 10 c’elock A. M., at tie Courtryom of
svid Court, ut ti e Courthouse in the City Oo
Nevaiu, County ef Nevaca, then and trere
to show cause Why anirder should not be
yranted for thes le of such estate.
And itis further ordered thata coyy of this
order be puniished at ieast ouce a » eek for
four sueee sive weeks béiore the said day
+othearing, ic the Nevada Darly Transeript
a newspaper piiuted and published ‘in said
Ciry and-Cotinty ol Nevada
JoiiN CALDWELL,
fuperior Judge.
oe
suid Wards, and
the suid estate
Dated May 29th, 1893. ;
J.M Walling, Attorney.
ASSESSMENT NOTICE,
EV BEG BLUE = RAVEL MINING COMI ) PANY. Location of Principal place of
busitiers, oan braveise., Cai, Lucuion of
Work, Sy hioorticnd, Sevideconcat Nie
tie is here by giver, that ata meeting of the
Board of Dirceters, helu ou the 3ist duy of
Mey 1803 ani Assessment, (+o. IL) of tive cents
(5 cls.) per share, Was levied upon the Captulsteuek of the Corperstion, payable immediately in (nited Statcs Gold Coin, to the
Seer tary, xt the office of the Compiny, 520.
Sansome Street, Room 10. san Fiancee;
Colitornia. ny Steck upon which ths
Ass s-weut shall remain unpaiden the sth
Gayo Juby, 18:3, will be velinquent, and
adve tised for sale at public auction, ani
TInLess-poretttis tebe fone oii b= set
on Thursday, the 27th day of May ,1808, to poy
“thre thetingient Ase? eeimnentyt getter witit
~Orste efor tere ed ep
By order of the Boar? of Directors
fHEO METZEL, Secretary.
Offieo, 3.0, Sansome Street, Koom 10, san
Franciseo, Caltf raid.
Peacheors: Exuminatian,
HE SFMI-ANNUAL EXAMINATION OF
applicants for Certificates tg teach in the
publics hools of Nevada county will he
held at Wo shingtoi schocihouse, Neyada
City, beginiuing at 9 o’eloek A.M. on
Monday June 26, 1893,
And confinue during the week. Eaeh applicant is required by Jaw to pay a fee of $2.
i W* J. ROGERS,
Secretary Roardof Kdueation,
WOOD CONTRACT.
OTICE IS HERFBY GIVEN THAT
~ealed Proposals will be received by the
Beard f-B-hisetioi—of Ao actese-oeltistrict up to the hour of 10.0’ciceck A M.cn
Saturday, Juue 24, 1893.
For delive:ing at Woghipgten and Lineal;
schooliouses, Nevuds ity, nicely corded
up, forty-five cords of good, sound, seisoned
O.k Wood, the sume to be four teet in
lensth, Also tive cords of good sound,
season d Spruce Wood; the same to be four
feetia length
: Ali to be deiivered on-or before October
, 1493.
bids will bc opened on June 24, 1893, at 10
e’cloek AM, :
Phe Board
and all bids
By order of the Board of Education
Address bids to LrONARD 3. CALKINS
Clerk of the B ard ef Fducation, :
Nevada City, May 2a, 1x93
reserves the right to reject any
Notice to Lumbermen
Bids for deliveriig lumber at Purdon’s Bridge wiil
be received ‘at the office ‘of
the Nevada County Electric
Power Company to July ist.
For full particulars apply to
A. TREGIDGO.
Nevada
Electric Power Company,
resident County
may23 THOMAS FRASER, Kegister.
Grass Valley.
AGENT
belive Commercial
848.
= JOHN T, MORGAN, Cadinten,
Hires Loot Boe
For sale by the Dozen or Gross !
AT A SPECIAL PRICE.
FOR
WATER,
4
\(\y!
of HAHTEH-& JH SLON That thet —
4 :
ii is herely or’ered that the nextof kin of.
Beh abe,
work can be »,
Uudersigned
at the Nevada
BeDDINnNGs t
—AND —
HOUSE FURNISHING, GOODS
Furniture$Rooms, Commercial St.
il that will astonish he ybiie,
rive in a few days
promptly and faithfully attended to
His. Call and examine them,
done.on short notice;
7 —AT—
KINKEA2'S
AVING purchased Geo, Tracy’s stock of
®. rni ure and Gidding at a Great Saerifice, Lam euabied to sell goods at prices
For the next thiity days l.wiil offer Grect
B renins in order to moeke ro m. for my
Spring stock, which will commence to arClAlnud exsmine my gouds before pur:
chasing elsewhere Com pure the prices und
the quality of goods . Ali Country orders
Goods sold at the lowest prices in the
county for POT CASH.
Just Gut— WokKID’S FAIR SHAM-HOLDAll business tansacted ou business prin
ciples we
Upholstering »nd all kinds of Repairing
Kemem!e: the plice—Commercial Street}
next duor to Tea store, Nevada City,
CUARLES HARTMAN. E.E DULAO
HARTULAN & DULAC
Merchant Tailors,
AV1 O EN! DA NEW SHOP ON
Union street, inthe City Hotel building, Where they will be pleased to see
their triends.They are now making up
some handsome,
SPRING AND SUMMER SUITS,
Ande will have a full line of Samples of
Fine Cloths, both Imported and Domestie from which to choose.
San Francisco.
CIVE THEM A CALL.
Assessment Notice,
. Epa GRAVEL-MINING-00; ne
Vadu City, Cul, Notiee is hereby given
iret —ator—mer ting or me Dire tors, Lela
Meut, No. 10 of ten cents per share wus
levied upouthe capital stuck of. the ecorporatiou, payable Wedne-day, July 12th,
i503, lo the Secretary, at the office Of g.id
cotpornt-on, Nevada City, Cah, in U-S. gold
eoln, Any stock upon which. this » gexsBrent-phed tenrentrtnpardom the Tt cay
of uly, 13, will be delinquent: aud adVertised for sale at public auction, and,
unless payment is mafle sefore, will be sula
on the 2yth day of July, 1598, at the hour
of 11 o’clock.a, M., at the otlice of the Secrequciit upseesiuent, together with Cosis of
xdvertisiog und expenses of sale; By order
ol Directors. K. GADPER, Sevretary,
ifice at Carter & Johnston’s store, on.
Pine street, Nevada City, Cal,
PAINTING,
DRAWING
AND
_:Mrs. H. H. Hartley,
At the Union Hotel,
Is now forming classes in Painting, oil
and. water colors, Drawing, Sketching
froin nature, ete,
All desiring to join any of the. above
classes will please apply immediately.,
Terms reasonable. °
F. H. THIMPSON. W. H, DURYEA
<HiOTEL MIDLAND
(European,)
are* 167 and 169 East Madison St.
ln a . Near Cor. of La Salle St.
egal Chicago, til.
«
New Building,
100 Elegantly Furnished Rooms’
—_
Hot and Cold Water, Elevator and all
modern conveniences,
Near Post Otfice and places of amuseinenuts.
Terms ; $1 per day aud Upwards,
F, H. THOMPSON & CO, Prop’rs,
Chicago, April 24,
CIGARS AND TOBACEM
bus. J, & dW. Schmidt
pa AYING purchased the stock a
trade of L, Hirschman, on
PINE-STREET, *
Hereby notify their friends and the pub
lis generally that they wi!l keep on hand
all grates o CIGARS, TOBACCO,
HIVES, Ete., which they will sell at the
lowest rates, . . i
Notice to oatraslora:
HE BOARD OF EDUGAT ON OF NEa ode School Vistriet will receive sealed
2
The construction of a fence on the East
silje of Washington school yard,
The construction of two outhouse at Lincoln scuce, house,
The @igzing of a ‘ditch snd laying of
sewer pipe to connect wich the Wag ineton
schoolb. use SeWeruge system,
Plans an] specifications for the above
Upon-ipplietion to the
ue Postottice,
41H, 1803. —. Bids to be opened sUNE z
Buard reserye the right to reject any. he
or all bids,
# j
By order of the B y
LEONAKD 3, © KING, . lid Clerk of tife Bourd,
Annual Meeting. f
}
‘ OTICK is hereby given that t :
N Meeting of {Be bts kholderg be anaeel
bony Gravel Mining
ah
’
C) ay i :
f
U Creel j
vt the offiee of the Coapanr ont
johns'on's sore, corner cf) ine «nd Comi
verciul streets, \ evarn City, Neyada coun}, Califortia, on satu
tis, ats o’ciock pr = risk rgd chad
Nevada City, jenn sa cha Mrereinry.
2
A Perfect Fit (uarantied,.
Agents for the Newhas Shirt Factory. Ks
tory of said COipuraticn, to pay the delin,
eth He LOE) ty fal a BU ll BR RR
Ay
r 3@
4
)