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Collection: Newspapers > Nevada Journal

June 28, 1861 (4 pages)

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WHOLE NUMBER, 535. NEVADA JOURNAL. PUBLISHED BY B. G. WAITE & CO. THE & @. Warrs, 7. W. LOCKWOOD, JOS. THOMPSOR. Fer One Year, in advance (sent by mail)—$5,00 Fer Six Months, in advance..... (Bice. «. 3,00 Fer Three Months, (delivered by carrier). 2,00 @®@ Advertisements conspicuously inserted at reasonable rates. @@ Papers sent by mail payable in advance As we have received a large addition to our Jeb Office, we are prepared to de all kinds of Beek and Jeb PrintinzVV Paratotic Sentiments oF Presipent Lincoux Twenty Years acgo.—In December 1839, as appears by the turning over of some old newspaper files, a political discussion took place at the Hall of the House of Representatives in this city, between Mr. Lincoln, who was then a Whig leader, and Messrs. Douglas and Lamborn, who were Democrats.. 1t will be remembered that that was about the commencement of the wathusiastic campaign of 1840,and which redulted in the defeat of Mr. Van Buren for the Presidency. We copy from the coneluding part of Mr. Lincoln’s speech, the the following eloquent outburst of patriotfsm, and devotion to principle. Said he: “Many free countries have lost their liberty; and ours may lose hers; but if she shall, be it my proudest plume, not that I was the last to desert, bnt that I never deserted her. I knéw that the great volcano at Washington, aroused and directed by the evil spirit that reigns there, is belching forth the lava of corruption in a current bread and deep, which is sweeping with frightful velocity over the whole length and breadth of the land, bidding fair to leare unscathed no green spot or living thing, while on its bosom are riding dike demons on tne waves of hell, the imps of the evil spirit, and fiendishly taunting all those who dare resist its destroying course, with the hopelessness of their effort ; and knowing this, I cannot deny that all may be swept away. too may be: bow to it, I never will. The probability that we may fallin the struggie onght not to deter us from the support wf a cause which we deem to be just; it shall not deter me. If ever I feel the soul within me elevate and expand to those dimensions not wholly unworthy of its Al mighty Architect, it is when I contemplate . the cause of my country. deserted by all the world besides, and [ standing up boldly . and alone, hurling defiance at her victorious eppressors. Here, without contemplatang consequences, before High Heaven, and Broken by it, I} —— THE GEN. BUTLER ON THE CRISIS. Gen. Butler was recently serenaded at Washington, and responded ip the following speech: Fetiow Citizens:—Your cheers for the old Commonwealth of Massachuretts are rightly bestowed. Foremost in the ranks of those who fought for the liberty of the country in the Revolution, were the men of Massachusetts. It isa histerical fact, to which I take pride in now referring, that in the Revolution, Massachusetts sent more men south of Masen and Dixon’s line to fight for the cause of the country, than all the Southern Colonies put together; and in this second war, if war must come, to proclaim the Declaration of Independence anew, and as @ necessary consequence establish the Union and Constitution, Massachusetts . will give, if necessary, every man in her . borders—aye, and woman. I trust I may . be excused for spé&king thus of Massachu. setts; but I am confident that there are . many within the sound of my voice whose hearts beat with proud memories of the . old Commonwealth. There is this differ}ence, I will say, between our Southern . brothers and ourselves: that while we love our State with the true love of a son, . we love the Union and the country with an equal devotion. We place no ‘State’srights’ before, above, or beyond the Union. To . us our country is first, because it is our . country, and our State is next and second; . ho she isa part of our ccuntry and ;our State. Our oath of allegiance to our . country, and our oath of allegiance to our . State, are interwreathed harmoniously, and . never come in conflict nor clash. He who . does his duty to the Union does his duty to the State; and he who does his duty to the Union—“one and inseparable, now and forever.” As I look upon this demonstration of yours, I believe it to be prompted by a love of the common cause, and our common country—a country so great and good, a Government so kind, so benificient, that the band‘ from which we have only felt kindness is now for the first time raised in chastisement. Many things in a man’s life may be worse than death. So toaGovernment there may be many things, such as dishonor and disintegration, worse than the shedding of blood, and by the bright heayens above, we will n@é part with them without first paying the original debt and the interest to this date! We have in our . veins the same blood that they shed; we have the same power of endurance, the same love of liberty and law. We will hold as a brother him who stands by the Union; j we will hold as an enemy him who would strike from its constellation a single star. . But I hear some one say, “Shall we carry su the face of the world, I swear eternal . on this fratricidal war? Shall we shed our fidelity to the just cause, as I deem it, of. brother's blood, and meet in arms our the land of iny life, my liberty and my love. . brothers of the South?” I would say, “As And who, that thinks with me, will not. our fathers did not hesitate to strike the fearleszly adopt the oath that I take. Let . the mother country in the defense of our none falter who thinks he is right, and we . rights, so we should not hesitate to meet may succeed. But, if after all, we shall! the brother asthey did the mother.’ If fall be it 20. We shall have the proud con. this unholy, this fratricidal war is to be eotation of asying to our conscience, and . forced upon us, I say, “Woe, woe, to them tethe departed shade of our country’s free. who have made the necessity. Our hands dom, that the course zpproved by our judg. are clean, our hearts are pure; but the ments and acvred by our hearts in disaster, ju chaing, in torture, in death we never faltered in defending.”—Jli. State Journal Histomicac Paeaciecs.—An Eastera coryespondent of acotemporary has the following: { alluded recently to the remarkable coincidences that the first blood in the present revolution, like that which flowed in “76, waa shed on the same day, in the same month, and that in both cases men of Massachusetts were the victims. A Boston pap@ finds a still closer parallel in the affair. The men who were shot by the British troops at Concord, on the 19th of April 17175, were from the little towa of Acton, in the same cocinty, and from that same little towa came the company which brought up the rear of the Massachusetts regimeut in Baltimore, on the i9ta of Aprii, 1861, and upon which the murderous attack of the Baltimore rowdies was first yonde Isthere rot, lask with more emphasis than before, an omen of good in all sbis? A New Sryts or Iron Suip.—The Paris aerrespondent of the New York Commercia) Advertiser says: “The French marine has just launched a man-cf-war of a totally new construction, which is considered an advance upon cuirassed ships. It is 259 feetlong; it is not fn wood and cuirassed like the Gloirie and Normandie already launched. Its ribs and side planks are of iron; over these are teek weod, bound by spurs and horizontal bars of iron, and the whole is cov. ered with a cuirass of iron invulnerable to balls. The forecastle is a veritable fortress on deck, having two chase port-holes for vomiting grape and cannister in case of boarding. This fortress is also cuirassed. In the middle of the deck is a round block house for the commander, also cuirassed, . from which he can watch the progress of the fight and give orders. The whole armament is 40 breech-loading guns of the heaviest calibre. Its engine is 900 horse power.” A board shanty, with a little skill and a right spirit may compass all the best features of ahome. The man whocan use an axe and a handsaw, ought speedily to dwell under his own roof. It will be all the more dear to him if his own hands have fashjoned and reared it. Ordinarily he is a strenger and better man for the State when he has acquired an interest in the soil. Of the two relation'’s it is better to be one’s own landlord than the tenant of another; even though the lordship is only overa a minature potato field. There cannot be the best consecration of our own dwellings wntil our permanent interests have rested in them. Nay, not until we have come to eonsider the probabilities that our children . Union must be preserved!” (Gen. Butler was interrupted here by an intense cheering. When silence was restored, he continued:]} At all bazacd of money, and, if need be, of every life thia side the Arctic regions.— if the 25,000 Northern soldiers who are here are cut off, in six weeks 50,000 will take their place; and if they die by fever, pestilence, or the sword, a quarter of a million will take their place, till our army of reserve will be women with their broomsticks, to drive the enemy in the Gulf. I hase neither fear nor donbt of the issue.— . { feel only horror and dismay for those who bave made the war. God help them! we are here for our rights, our country, and our flag. Our faces are set South, and there shall be nv footstep backward. He is mistaken who supposes we can be intimidated by threats or cajoled by compromise. . The day of compromise is past. ; The Government must be sustained, and . when it is sustained, we shall give every. body in the Union their rights uuder the . Constitution,as we always have, and every. body outside of the Union, the ateel of the Union, till they shall come under the Union. It is impossible for me to go on speech making; but if you will go home to . your beds, and the Government will let me, . I will go South fighting forthe Unien and you will follow me. A Perrect Woman.—Edmund Burke, the great British orator and statesman, thus de. scribes the perfect woman. How many can come up to this high standard? “A perfect woman is handsome, but it’s not a beauty arising from features, from complexion, or from shape. She has all these in high degree, but it is not by these that she touches the heart—it is all sweetness of temper, benevolence, inaocence, and sensibility which a face can express . that forms her beauty. She has a face that . just rouses your attention at first sight; it grows upon you every moment, and you wonder that it did not more than raise attention at first. Her eyes have a mild light, but they awe when she pleases then com. mand, like a good man out of office, not by authority, but by virtue. Her stature is not tail, she is not made to be the admira. tion of every one. She has the firmness that does not exclude delicacy—all the softness that does not imply weakness. Her voice is soft, low, musical, not formed to rule in public assemblies, but to charm those who can distinguish company from a crowd; it has advantage, you must come close to hear it. To describe her body is to describe her mind—one is the transcript of the ether. Her understanding is not shown in the variety of the matter it ex— itself upon, but the goodness of the choice she makes. Her politeness flows from natural disposition to oblige than any NEVAD — _ ——_ arin, WNC rate. sae "dae SS ep oT ST ST Se aT TL St Ee SE JOU NEVADA, CALIFORNIA, FRIDAY MORNING, JUNE 28, 1861. Cuixess Views oF Deatu.—There is one thing in the Chinese character more striking than the apathy with which they undergo afflictions, or the resignation with which they bear them. There is so much elasticity in their disposition that the most opposite changes in their disposition have but little effect. A coolie can admirably ape the dignity of the mandarin when promoted, and a disgraced official or ruined merchant who had formerly lived in luxury apnears to little regret the change they have undergone. There is no fenr of death among them, though they have a character of cowardice. It is true that they have the relics of the dead constantly before their eyes. The country is covered with graves, andin many places about Shanghai the coffins are openly exposed in the field. They are even kept in their houses till a propitious day arrives for the burial, months passing by sometimes before the body is removed. When the coffin is decayed, the bones are carefully gathered; and in a country walk one very often comes upon . jars cantaining “potted ancestors.” Money is saved for the purchase ofa coffin, and it is put byforuse. The first time I saw this, was in a little cottage near Shanghai. There was an old cebwebbed coffin in the corner. I asked ayoung lad why it was there, he quietly pointed with his thumb over his shoulder to his grandmother, standing close by her and said it was for her. She was very old, and was nearly wearing out the coffin before she was put into it. At funerals females are hired to do the ‘inconsolable grief’ part of the performance. Itseems very rediculous that such a custom should be kept up when it is known by everybody that the mourners howl forhire. They certainly pwork hard for their money, and their piteous moans would be heart rending if they were real. —Twelve Years in China. Tue Exvecance or New Yorx City.—The London Times speaks of New York City as follows : “The city is certainly the most remarkable result of wealth and enterprise which the world has known. In an incredibly short space of time it has risen from that of a tenth-rate town to the third city in the world in population and riches. In the last ten years the larger part has been entirely rebuilt ; marble and freestone edifices of great size, beauty and costliness have beer. substituted for the old brick houses. Broadway has been extended for miles; a vast park of nearly eight hundred acres is being laid out in what will be, before long, the centre of the city; dwelling houses have been built by thousands, far exceeding in elegance and comfort the average dwellings of Londoners; and New York, with its suburbs, now reckoning more than a million inhabitants, may loek forward to being, the next generation, not only the largest, but perhaps the most beautiful city in the world. All this has been done by private enterprise, and if the administaation of the city had been in honest hands the result would have been far more extraordinary.” Tue Last Rescutt or Amsitioy.—To be happy at home is the ultimate result of all ambition—the end to which every enterprise and labor tends—and of which desire prompts the prosecution—It is indeed at home that every man must be known by those who would make a just estimate either of his virtue or felicity; for smiles and embroidery are alike occasional; and the mind is often dressed for show and painted honor and ficticious benevolence. The Vermont Patriot tells a story of an old usurer who went, one day, to visit a former borrower, who had since, fortunately, grown from poverty to indepence. They went into the garden Passing along a walk flanked on either side with flowers of great beauty and variety, the visitor made no remark until he came to the potatoe “That's just like you,” said the proprietor, ‘“when ladies and gentlemen pass through my garden, they look at the flowers—but when a d—--n hog comes in, all he can see is potatoes.” teen esha Be@e"'‘My son,” said a solid New York merchant to his heir and namesake, “I patch; when he exclaimed: ‘My friend, I Pe PREPARED TO DEMONSTRATE you'll have a fine crop of potatoes there!” . that DEPARTUHE OF STAGES. Eeawes the National Exchange Hotel, Daily. SUMMER. WINTER. For Sacramento at 1 o'clock, A.M. 4 A.M. “ Marysville, *‘ 7 “ “ : a. “ Orleans Flat,‘ 7 “% 7; = * San Juan * 6 “« “ 5 « * “ Forest City, ‘ 7% be ess “ Washington,‘ 8 “* ns s« “ Alpha Omega 8 “ a : “ “ Red Do; * had 23g P. M “ Grass Valley, 9 a.M. 2&5 P.M. win. & sum RELIGIOUS NOTICES. Metnopist— Hold regular ser ice every Sabbath at the Methodist Church; of Broad street, at 103 a. w. and 7} P. mu. . *Rev. W. G. Dear, Pastor. Baptist CHurcH.—Cor. Pine and A ao sts.— Holds regular service every Sabbath at 103 o’clock A. M. and 7 P. M. Rev. BeNJ. BRIERLY, Pastor. AMERICAN sa TrORE: Carnonic—Hold service every Sabbath at 9 au., at the Catholic Church, on Washington St. Rey. T. J. Dauton, Pastor. Hagadorn & Bowley, SECRET ORDERS. F. & A.M. Nevada Lodge, No. 13—Mests ut Masonic Hall, corner of Broad and Pine streets, every Saturday evening. Regular Communications tbe second Saturday of each month. A.C. Nives, Master. J. F. Rudolph, Sec’y. Nevada R. A. Chapter, No. 6—Regular communicalions the first Monday evening of each month. Tuomas P. Hawtey, J. ¥. Rudolph, Sec’y. High Priest. Nevada Commandcry, No. 6, K. T.—Stated asIN semblics the first and third Thursdays of each month. Cuas. Mans, Commander. J. F. Rudolph, Recorder. I. 0. O. F. Qustomah Lodge, No. 16—Regular meetings on Tuesday evening of each weck, at their Hall, corner of Broad and Pine streets, in Kidd’s brick building. D. 5. Tatiman, XN. G. Chas. Herrick, Sec’y. IMPORTERS
AMD WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DBALERS Silks, Shawls, Embroideries, Millinery and Domestic I. 0. OF K. DRY GOODS, Nevada Camp, No: 39—Will hold its regular meeting at be ao 9 Hall, foot of Broad strets, every Wednesday evening, , ‘A. G. Tuoarson, C, Re Carpets, Ofl Cloths, Matting, &c,, d&e. E. F. Bean, Sec’y. SONS OF TEMPERANCE. Sierra Nevada Division, No. 17—Meets every Saturday evening at Temperance Hall, foot of Main street. Joun Turner, W. P. J. F. Drake, R.S. 2 5 per cent saved in Carpets, Oil Cloths, Matce I. 0. OF G. T. Dy cally at HAG ADORN & BOWLEY'S. Some Seams ie ccaangme Pap 4 ~~ latest novelties in summer Dress and FanMain street. A. G. Tuox PSON, W. C.F. cy goods, embracing the most desirable {seleeGeo. S. Watson, W. S. a I GL DORN & BOWLEY'S. * Ne. 39, Broad Street. remendous sacrifices in Silks. Heavy black Silks for $1,00; fancy silks for 50 cents; splenRUSSELL MILL DUCK did Flounced Kobes for $15, a large assortment . at HAGADORN & BOWLEY’S. F you want a nice Mantilla, new style, I Go to HAGADORN & BOWLEY’S. F you want a new style, Bonnet, go te I “ HWAGADORN & BOWLEY’S. haker Bonnets fer 25 cents, at HAGADORN & BOWLEY'’S. From No. 1-0 to 12.0, for HYDRAULIC MINING! Guaranteed Equal, if not Superior, EVERY BODY GEOS TO Hagadorn & Bowley’s When they want a Te LAWRENCE DUCK. E ARE Now In REGULAR RECEIPT OF THIS 'Y favorite brand of Duck, by almost every Clipper Ship, and are satisfied, if it is given a trial by the trade, that has been buying heretofore the Lawrence Duck exclusively, will give satisfaction. Fer Sale b JANSON, BOND & CO. a vn Cama Battery and Clay St’s, Fashionable Dress! ap] 12-m3 San Francisco. INE fast colored French ye for 12% ctsat HAGADORN & BOWLEY’S. INE French Lawns, new styles for 12}, cts. at HAGADORN & BOWLEY’S. 500 Hoop Skirts, new invention, just received, at HAGADORN & BOWLEY’S. A large ‘assortment of Embroidcries in Cam brick and Mustin, in sets, at HAGADORN & BOWLEY’S eee Kid Gleves in all sizes, at HAGADORN & BOWLEY’S. J F you want a = A re of Silk, Linen or Cotton . Hose, go to AGADORN & BOWLEY’s. To Linen, Towels, Napkins, Tes, Diapers and every thing in the line ef Li ‘oods at HAGADORN & BOWLE®’S. A large assortment of Dress Trimmin; scat HAGADORN & BOWLEY’s. 500 Parasols from $1 to $20 each, at HAGADORN & BOWLEY’S. SINGER’S Sewing Machines! NAVE REMOVED 139 Montgomery Street, NEXT TO CORNER OF BUSH, GO TO Hagadorn & Bowley’s And buy one of those Beautiful Party Dresses, SOMETHING ENTIRELY NEW, SAN FRANCISCO. © all who feel an interest in Sewing Machines AND VERY PRETTY. SINGER’S Large assortment of Childrens Mats at HAGADORN & BOWLEY’S. Family Sewing]Machines, sz received, direct from New ig assortitent of Lace Shawls, and tillas, of the newest styles at WILL DO BETTER WORK HAGADORN & BOWLEY's. would rather give $1,000 than have you go [. sets. from ¢5 to $50, something new; at to Washington soldiering.” Father,” was . ona greater range of fabric—that ison as LIGHT HAGADOEN & BOWLKEY’S. the kindly but decided response, “If you . fabrics and on HEAVIER fabrica—than 3 ply carpets for $1,00 per yard, and all other could make it $100,000 it would be of no use; for where the Seventh Regiment goes, I go.” Comtc Starz or Taxes at Montaousry. . before the public is work can be done —A Capitol without any capital. A President without any precedent. A Secretary of the Treasury without any treasury. A Secretary of the navy without any navy. A Secretary of the Interior without any inte. and with fewer interruptions; and that ia rior. A Secretary of Foreign Affairs without any foreign affairs. A Postmaster General without any post-office. A Judiciary without any judgment: and, an Administration without any head or tail. Wuy tue Cannon VENT IS CLOSED AFTER a Discmarce.—There are always left in a cannon, after a discharge, pieces of the cartridge bag on fire, and if the sponge is passed down the bore without closing the vent, a draft of air is created which fans the flame; but if the vent be closed, the smoke is compressed around the burning cloths and the fire is smothered. Sometimes, when firing in the dark,a man cannot find the vent until the sponge is put iu; then the flame will stream from the vent, as if the gun was quite full of fire.—WScienA Nostse Act.—The school children of Switzerland have purchased for $11,000 the Grutli, the birth place of Tell, where he and three others conspired for the deliverthread. They form on the under side of the fabric a cord which soon wears off and the sewing gives way. carpets in am 07 at AGADORN & BOWLEY’S. Any Other Family Sewing Machine mbroidered Lace Curtains and Curtain Mus lin, a large —— al t , capable of doing; that the AGADORN & BOWLET'S: With Greater Ease Any one that has ever been to Hagadorn{& Bowley’s All the Important Requlsites of a Once to buy goods is sure to go again, SEWING MACHINE, Fer they can ALWAYS buy from 26 TO SO FER CENT Singer’s Machines CHEAPER han ther kind at 1 at $100 are ano any other $50. THAN ANY SMALL HOUSE CAN SELL. am now selling FAMILY SEWING MACHINES Plain Bh. cc sseccccce es oe GO. Cabinets—at.......875, All of them will Rayel. They use more than TWICE the amount of If you have never been to Hagadorn & Bowley’s Go immediately if you want te buy fany thing or not, ©And examine their . IMMENSE STOCK. This is very objectionable on fine will gather at the same hearthstone. Until) rules on that object, and therefore never then, paucity and barrenness mry linger . fails to strike those who understand good ayprind our abodes. ‘ breeding and those who do net.” goeds. No tailor or manufacturer (except for ance of his country from its oppressors. . bags) will buy a chain-stich machine. Do not be The place is to be consecrated to national . humbugged by “Fair” (?) Premiums. ues, like Mount Vernon in this country. apstf. 130 Shichpaseny cueet tie tlineiats Salesmen at sll times ready to show goods with pleasure. TO THE LADIES! DRY Goons, . ): ROSENTHAL NEW PHILADELPHIA DRY GOODS STORE. 52 Broad street. «Lubeck’s old stand.) JUST OPENED WITH 4& NEW AND ELEGANT DEY Goons, DOMESTIC GOODS, SILKS, BAREGES, TISSUES, ORGANDIES. LAWNS, BTC. ETC. A Splendid Stock of MANTILLAS, SHA*WLS, DUSTERS, BONNETS and HATS Of all Descriptions. A complete Assortment 20 OP eee HOSIERY, GLOVES, = ANP FURNISHING COODS. Carpets, Oil-cloths & Mattings, DAMASK, LACE, All ef which will be setd =t tis lowest Market Prices. Give me « call before purebasing elsewhere. MRs. RYAN Dress Maker and Milliner, Has taken Rooms in my store and will be happy to see all her vid customers. am that I have 1 ab tervicee of OEM WULPY te sultans eeee dealing is nocded. VOLUME 12, NO. 8. SANFORD’S LIVER INVIGORATOR, NEVER DEBILITATES. ‘YT is Compounded entirely from Gums. and has become an established fact, a Standard * » known and approved by all that have tsed it, and is now resorted to with confidence in all the diseas-. * * for which itis recommended. Tt has cured thous-. g@ ands within the last two years who had giv-. ~ /enupall hopes of relief, as the numerous unso-. & licited certifieatesin my possession show. <. The dose must be adPy apted to the temperament of the individual taking it, and used in os quantities as to} © act gently omthe Bowels. Let the dictates ofS —_ judgment guide you in the use of the ™ LIVER INVIGORATOR, and it will cure Liver!» . Complaints, Billious Attacks, Dy spe $idy! Chronic Diarrhoea, Suimer Comp ints,. * . Dysentery, Dropsy, Sour Stomach, Habitu-. = \al Costiveness, Cholic, Cholera, Cholera Morbus, Cholera Infantum ‘ Flatulence, Jaundice, . Female Weakness, and tmay be used suCcess-. fully as an ORDINARY FaMILy MepIcINE:— gg . It will cure Sick Headache, (as thousands can! . __. testify,) in twenty minutes, if two or three} ™ Teaspoonfuls are taken at commencement of; = attack. Ali whouse itare giv-. wa jing their testimony in tts favor. i MIX WATER IN THE MOUTH WITH THE INVIGORATOR, AND SWALLOW BOTH TOGETHER. Price One Dollar per bottle, — ALSo— SANFORD’S FAMILY CATHARTIC PILLS. COMPOUNDED FROM Pure Vegetnble Extracts, and put up in GLASS CASES, Air Tight, and will keep in any climate. The FAMILY Catle but active Ca-. . prietor has used in his ears. _ . The constantly in-. 5 . creasing demand front those who have long jused the PILLs and th satisfaction which all/ = . express in regard to their use, has induced) . , . me to place them with4 in the reach of all. The Profession well) g, thartics act on different sTHARTIC PILL is @ thartic, which the propractice more than 20 know that different Ca. portions of the bowels. The FAMILY CATHARTIC PILL has, with due reference to this well established fact ; been compounded from. ¢ . a variety of the purest Vegetable Extracts, which act alike on eyery part of the alimen-)™ . tary cattal,and are good avd safe in all cases. .,/whete a Cathartic is needed, such as Derat-. lgements of the Stomach, Sleepiness, Pains) @@ . in the Back and Loins, Costiveness, Pain and} Soreness of the whole body, from suddencold;@. which frequently, if aagewes, endinalong’. w=. . course of Fever, Loss of Appetite, a Creeping’ Sensation of Cold over the body, Restlessness,} ., . Headache, or weight im the head, all Infiammatory Diseases, Worms in Children or Adults,. <¢. Rheumatism, a great Purifier of the Blood ins many diseases to which flesh is heir, too numerous to mention in this advertisement. Dose—1 to 3. PRICE—THREE DIMES, The Liver Invigorator and Family Cae thartic Pills are retailed by Druggists generally, and sold wholesale a the Trade in all the large towns. 8S. T. W. SANFORD, M. D., Manufacturer and Proprietor, BROADWAY, NEW YORK. Sold by Druggists everywhere, and b’ PARK & WHITE, Sole _—_ for the Pacific Coast, May3 3m 132 Washington St., San Francisee LANGTON’S Pioneer Express CONNECTING AT MARYSVILLE AND NEVADA Reliable Express, To ALL PARTS oF CALIFORNIA, THE ATLANTIC STATES AND EUROPE. We willdispatch Daily Expresses from the fo . ing places: IN SIERRA COUNTY. Downievilie, Goodyear’s Bar, Monte Cristo, Forest City, Morrison’s, Sierra Valley, . Smith’s Flat, Craig*s Flat, Independence Hilf, Minnesota, Chip’s Fiat, Eureka City, IN YUBA COUNTY. Parks’ Bar, Greenvilfe, alena, Hill, Ousley’s Bar, Oregon House, Young’s Gold Hill, e’s Bar, Foster’s Bor, Slate Range, Long Bar, Camptonville, Indian Valley, Timbuctoo. IN NEVADA COUNTY. Alpha, Montezuma, Little York, Cherokee, San Juan, Humbug Oity, FrenchCurral, Sweetiand’s Moore’s Flat, Marysville and Nevada, And every — morning from Nevada to th owing places in UTAH TERRITORY: FRANKTOWN, Washoe Valley, GOLD CANON, GENOA, Carson Valley, CARSON CITY, E. Val. CHINATOWN, JOUN-TOWN,! TRUCKEE MEADOWS, VIRGINIA CITY, WALKEER RIVER MINES. Alt Letters for the Western Atlantic States, enclosed in our Government-franked Envelopes, and indorsed “Overland, via. Salt Lake.” will be frwarded and reach their destination sooner than by any otherline. TREASURE, Packages and Letters, transmit: ted to and from the above points with unrivaled despatch and security. Gold Dast and Cor forwarded to allparts of theUnited States and Europe, insured or uninsured, at as low rates as can be done by any house with security. Our Treasurea Express will always be accompani ed by faithful Messengers. Notes, Drafts, Bills, &c,, collected or negotiated, aud all orders attended to promptly. Purchases of every description made. Forwardiogof Merchandise and Commissionsof every na— attended to intelligently, and with promptitude. Office in Nevada, next door below Wells Fargo & Co’s JNO. PATTISON Oct. 21, 1859—tf Agent. W. H. CRAWFORD & Ca., [Suecessors to J. M. HAMILTON &Co.] GENERAL DEALERS 1N HARD WARB, IRON STEEL, NAILS, BELLOWS, ANVILS, “AND 4 YFfFAIN TS: Linseed, Lard, Sperm, and Polar OILS LEATHER AND RUBBER BELTING; owder, Fuse, Jordage, Tackle Blocks, DUCK, RUBBER HOSE, Hydraulic Pipes, Quicksilver, Lead Pipe, Plows, Straw-Cutters. etc At the Old Stand, No. 27, Main Street, Nevada W. H. CRAWFORD, March 7, 1860, H. L. COYE, GEO. M. WILSON WM. G. JENKINS. SADDLERY, HARNESS, WHEIPS &o. WILSON & JENKINS OULD CALL THE ATTENTION OF Livery Stable K s. Teamsters, and all in want of articles in their line of business, to their STOCK and WORK. They feel competent to give entire satisfaction to all OP, No-36, corner of Main and Commertial streets, Nevada Administrator's Notice. Estate of DAVID SurumM, deceased. OTICE is hereby en the undere N signed, Executors of the amok named estate, to the creditors of, and all persons having claims against David Shrum, deceased, to exhibit the with the necessary vouchers, within ten 8 from the first publication of this notiee, to the undersigned at their residedce at O. A. PAINE, MATHEW CREAMER, Of the Estate of David Shrum, deceas iv) a i Omega, June 17th, 1861. je2i-Sw. u LIQUID CUTICLE, Fer Sale by E. F. SPENCE.