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Collection: Newspapers > Nevada Journal

August 9, 1861 (4 pages)

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79 5-0 ti PUBLISHED BY WAITE & CO. E, G. 2. G. WAITE, T. W. LOCKWOOD, JOS. THOMPSON. Fer One Year, in advance (sent by mail)—$5,00 . For Six Menths, in advanee..... eee 3,00 For Three Months, (delivered by carrier). 2,00 faz Advertisements conspicuously inserted at reasonable rates. ##2-Papers sent by mail payable in advance As we have received a large addition to our Job Office, we are prepared to do all kinds of . Book and Job Printing. A BIT OF HISTORY. In his recent message, says the New York Advertiser, Jefferson Davis says that the right of aState to judge of its wrongs “ was maintained by overwhelming majorities of the people of all the States of the Union, especially in the election of Mr. Jefferson, in 1805, Mr. Madison, in 1809, and Mr. Pierce in 1852.” Mr. Sefferson,in his inaugural address, in i80l. the sentiments of which he repeated in 1805, made use of the following expression3 The preservation of the General Government in ite whole Constitutional vigor, us the skeet archor of our peace at home and safety abroad; absolute acquiescence in the decisions of the majority, the vital principie of republies, from which there is bv appexd) but 16 ferce, the vital principle and immediate parent of despotism.” iMec lo i7 Jefferson wrote: “Whentwo parties iu: a compact, there results to each a pelling the other to execute ‘f After tire election of Mr. Madison, the electors of Virginia. the Madison Correspouding Oommitiee, and the Governor of the State dined toewether in Richmond. " toliow'ng was the fourteenth regular toast: Vere Osto~ op ran SVATES; THE MAJORrv MER GOVERA vis Treason To Secepr.” Now ter Ge ferce Just prior to the bominatoon Mr Ring, of Alabama, who was the vandidyum roy View President, wrote a. letrey 32) whe he said t tas ver been a State rights man of] tie Jethorcente und can fearlessly apper) ty ay whole pub life for proof of . the assertior om owever, prepared ty wrote ie States possess either the Consnittte vy the served rights to secede ead * is now on the side of the s three witnesses do not bear exumuination, Accioen’.—Mrs. Longfellow, wife s burned to death, July 10th, } sachusetts, by her Cre:s of Boston, and a beautiA Beston Ay tul aud accomplished woman. pope I says: About five o’clock in the afternoon Mrs. Longfellow was standing ata table in the . tibrary, raking wax seals fur the amusement of her daughters. She threw downa lighted match which struck her light elothing celtirg it on fire, and she was almost iminediotely enveloped in flames. Profescor Congtellow, who was near at hand, rushed te her assistance, and succeeded, with ditheulty, in consequence of the thin texture of ber clothing, in extinguishing the fire esy pert ot Ler person except her face, but she was burned upon nearly evche succeeded ia keeping the fire from that, aud it is} ved she did not inhale any of the Humes. Professor Longtellow’s hands were yer naly burned, but becide that, and is not considBoth were kept Vittle tagars ered te hm any danger, under the onflence of ether all night, by the direvtion of attending physicians, Drs, Wyman, of Cimbridge, If. J. Bigelow, of She died the Noston, aud cthers. next day. Ir Ratses Latcrs, the war does. Cotton guods are going up. The price of sugar has beer considerably sweetened. Rice, we hav'nt heard about, but itis probably on the rise. Nigger is not any higher yet,that we've heard of. Tobacco is enough bigher to pay a large assessment to the war. Fine. cut is 30 per cent. higher than it used to be. While all this is going on, the negroes in the South are raising corn Instead of cotton ; and, to econoraize, and to avoid enriching Nutmegdom, they are probably going bare-footed, Boots and shoes and Windsor chairs, and buttet-stamps, and penholders, ought to be cheaper. The young men of the North and Seuth are enlisting and going to the wars by squads, comps nies, battalions and regiments. The virgins of the North and South are sitting by the old firesides, reading, hearing stories of war, waiting ter the return of the boys, sighing heigho! twirling theic thumbs, and making a virtue of necussity.——Sierra Dem, BETTER THAN ND giver by a Germantriend of ours, the other Reasox, was thé one day, for liking Couness. He was conversing with a Confed and closed in about these words . ‘J was always wu Pemoerat; and mean to ‘ have sworn to sustain the and it says the States shall alw ays be one Constitution ailrespect it. Some States refuse to do that, unc you say they have aright to. The 4th ot July Convention says thé law must I believe that is tight Conness says itis right, and I shall vete tor him. till i saw how you secessionists hate him. be cnforced in all the States. I did'nt like him mvreh T think now he must bea good man. Ican support him without being afraid of viola=. ting my oath of allegiance to the Govern-. im the sun. The man started up, shook his . Fort Pickéns”—he insulting!y returned the . above. or other articles in our line. ment ” Naturaiized citizens give the secessionists seme beavy shots.—Sierra Dem. Bresr, the great English orator and} statesman, says: “ There are some follies which baffle argument, which go beyond ridicale, aud which excite no feeling in us but disgust.’ To this peculiar class belongs the present attempt to destroy the American . Coepstitutron. he was the daughter of . he received . HALF A MILLION SOLDIERS. When, after the fall of Sumter, the PresSecessionists Collecting Debts North. The New York correspondent of the Bulletin has the following in this connection: ident called for seventy-five thousand volSecessionists who are so forward in re-. unteers, the whole country was startled at pudiating their own debts due to Northern. the vastness of the proposed army. Sucha ers, and in counseling others to do the same, . prodigious force had never before taken the seem not to be at all backward in claiming . field on this continent; and the proclama. whatever may be due them here at the tion calling it out, struck many persons, . North, and even have the assurance to in. particularly, it was said, Jeff. Davis’ Cabivoke the assistance of our laws, <A very . net, as a bit of ridiculous though perfectly . harmless braggadocio. The chivalry laughed consumedly at the idea of seventy-five thou. sand of even tie poorest troops being raised sheet, the Richmond Enquirer, (and now a! from among the regular mudsill Democracy declared traitor,) and the defendants John . of the free States ; and our English cousin . T. Ridly & Co., a firm which last -vinter bid . also ridiculed the assumption that the j high for Southern custom by advertising peaceful and commercial people of the largely in secession sheets. One of the re. North would ever raise such an army to sults of this bid was the presentation to . fight for so shadowy a thing as the unity of . them this spring of a Lill, for the moderate . the Republic, particularly when no dollars sum ef $4,750, for advertising in the jour-. were to be made by it. It was seriously nal named above. The defendants refused . feared by some, too, that Congress wouid . to pay, on the ground that one of the terms hardly ratify the President’s action in calling to arms such an unprecedented force. But five times seventy-five thousand men . . of the agreement was that a copy of the} are already in arms, and a patriotic Congress now empowers the President to cali Enquirer was to be sent to them daily, in} order that they might have ocular demoninto service a grand army of half a million soldiers. If needed, this gigantic army of stration of the fact of publication. This part of the agreement the plaintiff failed to five hundred regiments will be in the field, ready for active service against whatever keep. In fact, the defendants had never foe, before the close of next mouth. More seen acopy of the plaintiff’s journal, and . did not know, therefore, whether their adthan that number of regiments have already applied to be accepted—not obtained by curious case was tried in our courts on Tuesday, July 9th, the plaintiff being O. Jennings Wise, editor of that notorious . vertisement bad ever appeared in its coljumns. This was very good ground, cer. tainly, for demurring to the payment of a . bill of such monstrous dimensions—and so couscription or compulsion, or by the tricks . the jury seemed to think, for they found a of the recruiting sergeant, but who have verdict for the defendants. The case is ' worthy of note, as showing the sublime im. aloft the banner which symbolizes all that pudence of these repudiating rebels, and { dear to man. Behind these, too, stand . how little they care whether the Yankee . more than five times that number, eager to . . they are about to skin is a friend or a foe. . spring into the ranks as their comrades fall, . and ready to encounter any foe in behalf of the cause for which they fight. No one either at the South or across the water, will . henceforth doubt the warlike power and which they do not expect to collect ten cents . energy of these Free States; and if the grand army shall, as we believe they will, before next Spring, conquer every rebellious . State, garrison every Southern city and fort, ne of Eli Thayer's i 3 2 poe . and dispose effectually of the chief conspir. Ridley & Co. state, privately, that the only ! . . . . result they have to show of their extensive ! advertising in secession sheets, is an aggrei gate of credits at the South of $150,000, on . . on the dollar. A Lerrer From Ccorepo, Wayne county, Virginia, written by . colonists, appears in the Boston papers. It } . . ators, the military power of the Republic . tells this sorry story. ips yi or at the Dope a : A . _ . will be established on a basis that will be a We are in a miserably confused condition ee : The . warning forever to the plotters against the } commenced in this county, but the traitors . . here. “reign of terror” has not yet other.—S¢. Louis cor. Sac. Union. j are trying it, and would, if they dured, be. aes . gin to arrest and drive off Union men. At Parson Browntow denies emphatically, in . the voting on the ordinance of secession, the . his paper of the 6th, that the Secessionists He county gave five hundred and eighty major. are gaining ground in East Tennessee. . Striven earnestly for the honor of bearing . Union, whether on this continet or any . lity against the ordinance. But many of the . says: We notify them that the ballot-box, votes against it were obtained by careful on the first Thursday in August, will again If they have the recruits they boast of, let them elect memj and discreet management,(altogether differ. convict them of lying. fent from the mode of managing such mat. ters in your State,) and the votes cannot be . bers of Congress, and to the Legislature from East Tennessee. We give them notice ; relied upon. We cannot depend upon more . that the Union men intend to elect, and that than half the numberin an emergency. The excitement has been intense here for . they will do it fairly, by majorities, and three weeks. The camp of the rebels on the . through the ballot-box, } . Tuose Funny JAPANE . Kanawha is fifty miles from here, and is des.—It appears that ” in the six . : : — : . our antipodal friends who were lionized ip . or eight cefractory counties in this part of . New Vouk ; signed to ‘‘ straighten up things : ss and other great cities a few . the State, The rebels are constantly drum} ; ‘ i ‘ . months ago, are in great distress about the ming up recrnits here for that camp, and the . . consequences of their visit to our sphere. . leaders and all prominent Tories do nothing j; else but operate upon undecided and timid}. . . in Washington, says: men, to indnee them to cither join the ’ sos : 2 : News of anticipated sectional troubles in . wrong party or refuse to countenance the . Re S * . } : goes . . the United States has just reached this litdloval men, They da turn many. And this . 4 " Gs <a e : . . tleempire. is why the panics are so frequent and so dis. bis ig F r . comprehend foreign politics, attribute the This curious people, unable to . tressing. . ° oi ace ; unfortunate state of affairs to the visit of entertain . thoughts of again closing their ports to all We have hopes that Government will send . their embassy, and serious in a few troops. But there are very many . places in Westeru Virginia where troops are rae Th K tt i : . oreigners. rough the medium of an needed as much or more than here. Sowe}, & = ‘ j interpreter I have conversed with several mean to do all we can to protect ourselves, and a good many will resist to the death.— . true cause of the troubles. While they sympathize with President Buchanan, they lament that the cause of so much distress to him, after his jItisa very bad condition of things, however. Nearly half the crops of the country they should have been are totally neglected, and while there is so much excitement no one can properly attend ; “pike . “much big reception” of them. In port of their belief they quote parts of . their own history, and call my attention to . the significant fact, that the dilliculties commenced almost immediately after their visit. Their antipodal position certainly . induces this “heels over head” view of the . approaching troubles iu America, to his business, bial -. Tur New York World says: Capitalists are Waiting anxiously for the Government loans to come upon the market, because they offer the only good security in amounts sufficient to relieve the money market from its accumulating load of unemployed mon a 5 ee SouTHERN rhere will be a sharp competition to Lireratere.—Some “gentle. min’ of the South, who does not like the New York Evening Post, has informed that . journal of it in this way: ery. obtain the new United States securilies as they are offered. To illustrate this; to-day {the Secretary of the Treasury authorized, Mr. Evirer The letter which appeared }in your d—n aboiition Evening Post and perputing to be wrote by a young lady of el ls Take Charleston is ; on &® par with the }d—n Abolition lies which constitute the . Staple of Newsin the Mersenery Press o¢ of the Abolition States, promiscuously as it were that nly attention was called to it, I take the liberty of indignently stigmertising it as a false coun. terfeit and d—n ablition lie, do you understand that, sir, and in my stction of Country, though we are not Quakers we are in the habit of using plane language espeshelly when dealing with d—n Nigger thieves. In branding you with this contemptable eperthet and insult I wish you to understand that it is the brand of a citizen of As Tami the onty son of the Hon. John J. the Proud glorious conquoring tndependCrittenden now in thé service; it will, of . ant Palmetto State of South Carolina that course, be supposed that I am the person . 28S embarmed among its illustrious Aré a Sh al kives the immortal names of the Gallant . . referred to. The publication of that paruby telegraph, Cisco, Assistant Treasurer in this city, to borrow $5,000,000 for Treasury notes having sixty days to run and bearing en six per cent. Interest, ®. M. the entire amount was subscribed, and $3,586,000 Was paidin. There can be no doubt that $20,000,000 could have been obtained on thé same easy terms and in the same short space of time, LignuTeNaAnt Critrexpen, son of John J. Crittenden, Was challenged to fight a duel at Leavenworth, Kansas, on the 24th of June, by Lieutenant L. L. Jones, on account of the former making fun of the American flag: As it was merely Frayxrort, Ky., July 9, 1861. dignitaries, and endeavored to explain the} . A geutleman in Japan, writing to a friend . , FRIDAY MORNING, AUGUSY DEPARTURE OF STAGES. Leaves the National Exchange Hotel, Daily. SUMMER. WINTER. For Sacramento at 1 o’clock, A.mw. 4 A.M. “. Margsville, ‘ 7 ae a es ‘© Orleans Flat,‘ 7 “ ba tO 96 “« San Juan ‘ 6 “ 6s ‘5 “s * Forest City, ‘ 7% “ “ 7 “ ‘© Washington, ‘ 8 * ee 8 « «© Alpha & Omega? j8 a « S: B “yoy «« s¢ Red Dog 2 ‘© Grass Valley, 9 A.M. 2&5¥. mM. RELIGIOUS NOTICES. 2yP.M win. & sum . Metrnopist—Hold regular service every Sabbath at the Methodist Church; head of Broad street, at 103 a. wm. and 74 pv. w. ?Rev. W. G. Dear, Pastor. BAPTIsT CuuRCH.—Cor. Pine and Spring sts.— Holds regular service every Sabbath at 10% o’clock A. M. aud 7 P.M. Rey. BeNJ. BRiERLY, Pastor. . Catnornte—Hold service every Sabbath at 9 aM., at the Catholic Church, om Washington St. SECRET ORDERS, tev. T. J. DaLron, Pustor. IE + F. & A. M., Nevada Lodge, No. 13—Meets «t Masonic Hall, corner of Broad and Pine streets, every Saturday evening. Regular Communications the second Saturday of each month, A.C. Nives, Master. J. F. Rudolph, See'y. Nerada R. A. Chapter, No. 6—Regular communicalions the first Monday evening of each Tuomas P. Haw ey, mouth, J. F. Rudolph, See’y. Nevada Commandery, No. 6, K. T.—Stated assemblies the first and third Thursdays of each mouth. J. ¥F. Rudolph, Recorder. High Priest. I. 0. O. F. Cuas. Manrsu, Commander. . Oustomah Lodge, No. 16—Regular meetings on Tuesday evening of each week, at their Hall, corner of Broad and Pine streets, in brick building. Kidd's D.S. Tauiman, NV. G. Chas. Herrick, See'y. TI. O. OF K. Nevada Camp, No. 39—Will hold its regular meeting at Temperance Hall, foot of Broad strets, every Wednesday evening. A. G. Tuomeson, C. RB, . Bean, Sec’y. SONS OF Sierra Nevada Division, ! Saturday evening at Tempe Main street. J.¥. Drake, R.S. TEMPERANCE, 17—Meets every ance Hall, foot of Joun Turner, W. 2. I © OF G. T. Union Lodge, No. 4—Regular meetings every Friday Main street. W. E. F. Deal, W. S. SUMMER evening at Temperance Hall, foot o W. E. Pressey, W.C. 7. SACRAMENTO VALLEY RAIL-ROAD. ARRANGEMENTS, ( N AND AFTER MONDAY, APRIL 15, the CARS of the Sacramento Valley Railroad . will leave as follows: Leave Sacramento at 614 Leave Folsom at 614 A. M., 24 &5r. M. A. M., 122M. & 5Y P.M. SUNDAYS, Leave Sacramento at 6'y A.M. Leave Folsom at 2’. M. LIGUT Will be taken up by every train from Sacramento (except Sundays,) and by tne 64g A. M. train from . Folsom. Freight must be delivered at the Depot, foot of K street, half an hour befere the departing of trains, clse it will be retained for the next train. The 645 « M. train from Sacramento and the 12M. train from boats leave. Nevada, Auburn, Forest City, Orleans Flat, Gold Hill, Yankee Jiim’s, Georgetown, Coloma, Diamond Springs, Prairie City, Cook’s Bar, Live Oak City, Willow Springs, Amador, Jackson, AND route ramento one hour Folsom connect with stages to or from all the following named plac passengers procuring tickets at the Depot in Sae ramento will be seut through the same day ‘s run from all the following named places to *t with the 12 M. train from Folsom, arriving before the San Francisco . The Grass Valley, Towa Hill, Downieville, ( Yphir, Illinoistown, Greenwood Valley, Mormon Island, El Dorado, "ha rville, Michigan Bar, Wall’s Diggings, Arkansas Diggings, Drytown, Sutter, Fiddletown, WASHOE. To which point this is the nearest and quickest And all the intermediate places. For Freight or Passage apply at the Railroad stations. J. TI. ROBINSON, Superintendent. GEO. M. WILSON, MANUFACTURER AND DEALER IN SADDLERY, WHEIPS &C. \ TOULD CALM THE ATTENTION OF HARNESS, Livery Stable Keepers, ‘Teamsters, and all in want of articles in his Ime of business, to his He feels competent to give entire satisfietion to all STOCK and WORK, forslOV, No-a6, corner of Main and Commer: cial streets, Nevada, WOLFE'S CELEBRATED © ‘Scheidam Aromatic Schnapps Manufactured at my old Distillery, near SCILEIDAM, HOLLAND. Renowned in Europe and the United States, fer nearly 20 years, for UNRIVALLED PURITY, and for WHOLESOME TONIC PROPERTIES. Beware of the cheap poisonous trash put up in square bottles of late yoars, by so many liquor mixers to imitate my Pure Schnapps, and my UDOLPHO WOLFE,
Sole Importer and Proprictor, 22, 24 and 26 Beaver Street, New York: Bottles and Labels. mayl0 2ms PACIFIC FOUNDRY —— AN De MACHINE SHOP; SAN FRACISCO, ESTABLISHED 1850. NE UNDERSIGNED CONTINUE TO Manufacture, at the above establishment every Brooks and theequally honored Pinkney. . graph does me great injusticé. Itis untrue : . in every essential statement. I have not been challenged for any cause; nor do I ever so dishonor myself ag to sneer at the flag under which I serve. E. W. Critrexpey, Captain of First Cavalry. The Pensacola correspondent of the Mobilé Advertiser, in his letter of Thursday night, July 2d, writes: General Bragg yesterday sent a note in charge of Assistant Inspetor General . is bates c LF t white flag, to Col. Brown, at Fort Pickens. ‘ sty — dry a 8 : a . They were met at thé usual place of land. man, residing tn one of the Oriental cities, . . ki knees Shad Poe ; oD Sask S the . ne and making known ‘heir mission, 5 waa CEE —_—e _— reales . ion, handed the note to the old Colonel, window, a¢cidentslly fitied the pots too pro-/ .15 with trembling hand adjusted his fusely so thet a quantity of water happened . epectables. clothes, and thus gave vént to his feelings . paper, and without form or ceremony left . respecting the offender: ‘if it is ar old . his guests, who, disgusted with his rede-. sae who bas done this, E despise him ; if se néss, returned it unopéned to Gen. Bragg. jis am old woman, I forgive her; if it is #/ what its contents wereis not known, or at . young man, I curse him; if it is # young’! jeast publicly. Old Brown is very punct. woman, I thank her.” The young Freneh-! iHiows, and must be address¢d as ‘‘Colonel man laughed heartily on bearing the male. Harvey Brown, commanding Department of Pri ; : . Florida.” The oid fellow puts oa a good . dietion that fell to his share for his care. many airs about his “department,” small . as itis. . . { lessness. Rn ee en ee description of MACHINERY AND OF TRON AND BRASS CA STINGS, We are sole makers of BRYAN’S IMPROVED QUARTZ MILL, which have now been thoroughly tested in many localities, and are believed to offer many advantages over any other mill now in . Slaughter, with another officer, under aj use. We also manufacture QUARTZ MILL MAther description pomaized 3 » CHINERY of ay o SAW and FLOUR MILL_ MACHIN RY, and STEAM ENGINES. FORCE PUMPS, &c., &e. Quartz Miners can be supplied at short notice . with Sereens of any degree of fineness made from the Best Russia [ron, and inthe most erfect manner. i ie We have facilities for furnishScanning the superscription— . ing this article to any extent which may be reto fall on an Arab who was below basking . “Fo €ol. Harvey Brown, commanding at. quired. Orders are respectfully solicited for any of the It is our design to turn out the best work for which we have facilities at least not inferior to those of any other Establishment on the Pacific Coust,; and at the most reasonable prices. GODDARD & CO. San Franciseo, Ayril 9th, 1561. mayl0 3m — CANARY SEED—For Sale by i E. F. SPENCE, Broad Street, Nevada if ADOLPHUS’ anti Rheumatic in Cor1. For sale by FE. F. SPENCE, Deugyist, Nevada, wext door to Kidd’s Bank. . JOU ” 9, 1861; y 6h DRY GOODS, Ss, and . STORE: Hagadorn & Bowley, IMPORTERS AND WHOLESALE AND RETAIL IN Silks, Shawls, Embroideries, Millinery and Domestic DRY GOODS, Carpets, Oil Cloths, Matting, &c,, &e. No. 39, Broad Street. >) K per cent saved in Carpets, Oil Cloths, MatPAS, ting, Furnishing Goods, &e., By calling at HAGADORN & BOWLEY’S. ft Bots latest novelties in summer Dress and Fan cy yoods, embracing the most desirable [selections ever seen in the city, at HAGADORN & BOWLEY'S. Go mpee~ sacrifices in Silks. Heavy black Silks for $1,00; fancy silks for 50 cents; splen did Flounced Rodbes for $15, a laree assortment at HAGADORN & BOWLEY’S. F you want a nice Mantilla, new style, . Go to HAGADORN & BOWLEY’S. F you want a new style, Bonnet, go to HAGADORN & BOWLEY’S. ots for 25 cents, at Shaker Bonne iy HAGADORN & BOWLEY’S. EVERY BODY GEOS TO Hagadorn & Bowley’s When they want a Fashionable Dress! aw fastcolored French prints for 124 “ets. at Y HWAGADORN & BOWLEY’S. PINE French Lawns, new styles for 12! . HAGADORN a = & BOWLEY’s. fo Hoop Skirts, new invention, just received, 500% HAGADORN & BOWLEY’S. large assortinent of Embroideries in Cam ZA brick and Muslin, in sets, at ie HAGADORN & BOWLEY’S A LEXANDER Kid Gloves in all sizes, at i HAGADORN & BOWLEY’S. F you want a good pair of Silk, Linen or Cotton Hose, goto HAGADORN & BOWLEY’s. rpvable Linen, Towels, Napkins, Doyles, Diapers and every thing in the line of Line : HAGADORN & BOW A large assortment of Dress Trimmings, at HAGADORN & BOWLEY?’s . Parasols from $1 to $20 each, at 500 HAGADORN & BOWLEY’S. Go TO Hagadorn & Bowley’s Ana buy one of those Beautiful Party Dresses, SOMETHING ENTIRELY NEW, AND VERY PRETTY. A Large assortment of Childrens Hats at HAGADORN & BOWLEY’S. ee received, direct from New York a large as eo sortment of Lace Shawls, and Mantillas, of the newest styles at HAGADORN & BOWLEY’S. i. ace sets. from g5 to $50, something new; at 4 ITAGADORN & BOWLEY'S. 3 ply carpets for $1,00 per yard, and all other J carpets in proportion at , HMAGADORN & BOWLEY's. ‘mbroidered Lace Curtains and Curtain Mus 4 lin, a large assortment at HAGADORN & BOWLEY’S. Any one that has ever been to Hagadorn & Bowley’s Once to buy goods is sure to go again, For they cau ALWAYS buy from 23 'TOSO PER CENT CHEAPER THAN ANY SMALL HOUSE CAN SELL. If you have never been to Hagadorn & Bowley’s Go immediately if vou want to buy any thing or not, And examine their IMMENSE STOCK: Salesmen at all times ready to show goods with pleasure. ae DEALERS . cts. at . ~ . orderivg Wire Rope through our A Circulars with scale of weights, sizes, strengths, . . COST OF WIRE _ Water Power Derrick! MATTESON & SAMUELS’ Ae associated in the business of mak= Water Power Derricks. This Water Power can be easily adapted to the common hand Derrick to pumping, windlassirng and saw mills. All kinds of machinery can be run with very little water where there is a suflicient hydraulic pressure. Trip Hooks of a new Construction. That are always safe and sure, constantly on hand. Blacksmithing, Iron Turning, etc., done at the shortest notice. Orders for Water Derricks from promptly attended to. For further particulars apply to the undersignabroad . ed at their Shop on Deer Creck, below the Foun. dry, Nevada City. E. E. MATTESON. ‘ GEO. SAMUELS. Or to W. H. ROOT, Traveling Agent. july 12 1861. WIRE ROPE, S 40 PER CENT LIGHTER, LESS than one half the diameter and six times as dura ble as Manilia or Hemp Rope of equal strength, and is unaffected by change of weather. Ropes, Ferry Ropes and for Hoisting from Deep Shafts and Iyelined Planes Mining COMipanies or Ferry Owners, who use rope for WINDING, HOISTING or STAND ING purpose, will effect an immense saving by ats. and list of prices annexed, will be forwarded te those interested, »who ean thet COMPARE THE AND HEMP ROPE. Address A. S. HALLIDIE & CO., ‘Patent Wire Rope Manufacturers and SUSPENSION BRIDGE SUILDERS Office, 412 Clay Street, San Francisco. jezs 3m GEO. KEENEY, Agent, Nevada 1S ALL SOLD IN BOTTLES, 12 BOTTLES IN A CASE. Cc 1§ ALL SOLDIN BARRELS AND HALF BARRELS. I have arranged to keep a supply of my above . celebrated Whiskeys iu San Francisco, and they . will hereafter be for sale by dealers in fine Lig . uors thrcughout California. mayl0) 4ms JACOB VAN HORN. eee SINGER'S Sewing Machines! WAVE REMOVED 139}Montgomery Street, NEXT TO CORNER OF BUSH; SAN FRANCISCO. if AM PREPARED TO DEMONSTRATE to all who feel an interest sewing Machines that SINGER'S Family Sewing Machines, WILL DO BETTER WORK ona greater range of fabrie~ that ison as LIGHT fubries and on HEAVIPR fabries-—than Any Other Family Sewing Machine before the public is capable of doing; that the . work can be done With Greater Ease and with fewer interruptions; and that in All the Important Requisites of a SEWING MACHINE, Singer’s Machines at $100 are cheaper than any other kind at $50. I am now selling our FAMILY SEWING MACHINES eee tiner meee Cabinets—at...... 875: Do not permit yourscif to purchase a chainstich machine, single or double thread. All of them will Rayel: They use more than TWICE the amount of thread. They form on the under side of the fabric a cord which soon wears off and the sewing . gives way’ Thisis very objectionable on fine . goods. No tailor or manufacturer (except for bags) will buy a chain stich machine. Do not be humbugged by “Fair’’ (2) Premiums. J. H. DUNNELL, Agent, apotf. 159 Montgomery street, San Francisco. Itistmore particularly adapted for Derrick Guy . VOLUME 12, NO. 14. ——— . + . ° S$ANFORD’S LIVER INVIGORATOR, NEVER DEBILITATES. . Bie is Compounded entirely from Gums, . A ‘and has become an established fact. a Standar: Medicine, known and approved by all that have used it, and is now resorted to with confidence in all the diseas-} * jes for which it is recommended. i} It has cured thous-. .¢ two years who had giv] ~ . as the numerous unsopossession show. The dose must be adment of the individual such quantities as to els. aie Let the dictates of} ~ your judgment guide you in the use of the, ™ LIVER INVIGORATOR, and it will cure Liver! . Complaints, Billions Attacks, Dyspepsia, Chronie Diarrhoea, Summer € remedies} . Dysentery, Dropsu, Sour Stomach, Hahitu-\™ al Costireness, Cholic, Cholera, Cholera Mor-. bus, Cholera Infantum , Flatulence, Jaun dice,. . Female Weakness, and may be used suce . = fully as an OrpINARY FAMILY MEDICIN It will eure Sick Headache, (as thousands can} _. testify,) in twenty minutes, if two or three,” . Teaspoonfuls are taken at commencement of] == attack. ‘ 3 All who use itare giv-. 3 ing their testimony in its favor. ' . MIX WATER IN THE MOUTH WIT . THE INVIGORATOR, AND SWALLO BOTH TOGETHER. Price One Dollar per bottles ands within the last on upall hopes of relief, licited certificates in my lapted to the temperataking it, and used in act gently onthe BowFORAT ss —— ALSO =—— . -> S$ANFORD'S” FAMILY a CATHARTIC PILLS. COMPOUNDED FROM! Pure Vegetable Extracts, and put up it GLASS CASES, Air Tight, and will kee in any climate. . The Faminy Ca . gentle but active Ca prietor has used in his . years. . The constantly. in-} those who have long! . satisfaction which all! their use, has induced} in the reach of all. . The Profession well) thartics act on different! The FAMILY CATHdue reference to this been compounded from Vegetable Extracts, ery part of the alimen and safe in all cases . needed, such as De fach, S . Costiveness, Pain and! body, from sudden cold) negleeted, endinalong of Appetite, a Creeping: . the body, Restlessness.! pe the lread, al] Inflamma-. }~ in Children or Adults,) Purifier of the Blood]which flesh is heir, too} * . vumerous to mention } in this advertisement.! Dose—1 to 3. PRICE—THREE DIMES, The Liver Invigerater and Family Cas . thartic Pills are retailed by Druggists gonerally, and sold wholesale by the Trade in all the large towns. 8. T. W. SANFORD, M. D., Manu eturer and Proprietor, Broapway, New York, Sold by Druggists everywhere, and } PARK & WHITE. Sole Avents for the Vecific Coast, 132 Washington st , San Frincise TIARTIC Prrw is @ thartic, which the pro-, practice more than 20 creasing demand from jused the PtLis and th express in regs to’ me toplace them with9 A = = cs know that different Caportions of the bowels. ARTIC PILL has, with well established fact > tvariety of the purest bwhich att alike on evtary canal,and are good where a Cathartie is rements of the Stomin the Back and Loins; Soreness of the whole ho fre RTIO A ition of Cold over, Headache, or weight in tory Diseases, Worms Rheumatism, a great md many diseases td mays Im . LANGTON?S ‘Pioneer Express . . CONNE. TING Ar . } MARYSVILLE AND NEVADA } WITH Reliable Express, i TO ALL PARTS oF CALIFORNIA, THE ‘ ATLANTIC STATES AND EUROP®. We willdispatch Daily Expresses from the foil ing places IN SIERRA COUNTY. Monte Cristo, Sierra Valley, Flat; Independence Hill; l Eurcka City, . . bh Downieville, Goodyear’s Forest City, Me Smith’s Fiat, Cr Minnesota, C Bar, IN YUBA COUNTY: Parks’ B Greenville, Galena, Hill, 4 Onsley’s Bar, Oregon Honse, Yo Gold Hilly Rose’s Bar, Long Bar, Foster’s Bor, Si ¢ Range. cE nad) Camptonville, Indian Valley, siinbuctoo, . IN NEVADA COUNTY. Alvha, Montezmina, Little York, Cherokee. San Juan, Humbug Oity, } FrenckCorral, Sweetiand’s Moore's Flat, Marysville and Nevada, . And every Saturday morning from Nevada to th@ following places in UTAH TERRITORY : . FRANKTOWN, Washoe Valley, GOLD CANON, , . GENOA, Carson Valley, CARSON CITY, E, Vali CHINATOWN, JOUN-TOWN,! . TRUCKEE MEADOWS, VIRGINIA CITY, . WALKER RIVER MINES, . SprAllLettersfor the Western Atlantic States j enclosed in our Government-franked Envelopes, and indorsed “Overland, via. Salt Lake.” will be for. warded and reach their destination sootier than by any otherline, , } [RP TREASURE, Packages and Letters, transmit, ted to and from the abeve points with unrivaled despatch and security . Geld Dust and Cunforwarded to allparts of the. United Stafes and Europe, insured or uninsured, at . as low rates as can bedone by any house with secue . rity Our Treasurea Express willalways be accompant ed by faithful Messengers, . Notes, Drafts, Bills, Ne,, collected or negotiated; and allorders attended to promptly, Purchases of every deseription made, Forward fogot Merchandise and Commissionsof every .nature attended to intelligently, and with promptftude, Onice in’ Nevada, next door below Wells Farge’ & Cots JNO, PATTISON . Oet, 21, 185d—tt Agent. W. HH. CRAWFORD & Co,; [Successors to J. M, HAMILTON &CO,)} GENERAL DEALERS \EXLARDWARHSB, IRON STEEL, NAILS, BELLOWS, . ANVILS, . ! . . ~ AND ey PAIN TS: . Linseed, Lard, Sperm, and Polar OILs LEATHER AND RUBBER BELTING; ! ! owder, Fuso, ps Nee ; Tackio Blockd; DUCK, RUBBER HOSE, . Hydraulic Pipes, Quicksilver; Lead Pipe, Plou's, St'aib-Cutlers. oté At the Old Stand, No. 27, Main Street, Nevada W.H. CRAWFORD, March 7, 1860, HL, COYE, ‘PURE ITALIAN BEES ‘Imported by S. B. PARSONS: A. J. BIGELOW, Agent. APIs SUBSCRIBER WOULD TAKE . this method to inform the public that he has procured some of the finest stock of Bees in the State from Bigelow’s apiary, Sacramento City, together with some Italianized swarms of Bees . with plenty of Italian Drones, the object betng to . propagate the Queens pure here in the mountains . away from the connnon bees and Italianize the . entire lot. Mr. Bigelow is one of the most suecessful propagators of bees and has had the best success in importing them of any man in th, State: .He was reccommended to 3. B. Parsond by the Rev: L.L. Langstroth to have the charge of introducing and propagating the Italian Bee on this coast. : I shall in a few days be properert.te furnish good swarms of Bees with pure [talian Queens to all who may wish My Apiary is situated in . Rough & Ready. é q All who take an interest in the culture of the Honey Bee are invited to eall and see my Italians } Instruction in the art of taking care of and propogating Bees, givew gratis to all. . WM. CURRAN, Agent for A. J. BigkLow. . . I my3 . LIQUID CUTICLE, } Sale by E. F. SPENCE. NEATS FOOT O[L, and LINSEED Ok, ' For Sale by FB F. SPENCE: