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Page: of 4

ner EEN,
aS
The Hydraulic Press.
Tue American SovererGn.—That .
eccentric Irishman, John Mitchell, who
wants to re-open the slave trade and
make Treland independent, professes to
admire the mechanic-rulers of America,
‘and thus speaks of those at the federal
capital :
Washington City is the most democratic in America, and in the world.—
Everybody goes in and out everywhere;
and citizens take pride in the fact, as
well they may. You know how the gates
of legislative halls, and even of common
court-houses are guarded in England and
in Ireland, by sentries with fixed bayonets; how public grounds and squares
are barred against the vulgarmultitude.
Here, the workmen on the Capitol buildings, after they have dined, frequently
spend the remainder of the hours in
lounging into the ‘“‘gentlemen’s gallery”’
of Senate or House, and listening to
high debate about Sovereign States, or
making Treaties with the monarchs of
Europe: without being overwhelmed
either by a vulgar awe—as if these
were high matters far beyond their
sphere; butevery laborer and marblecutter, after listening awhile, goes out
and lights his pipe, with a placid consciousness that he has a vote and a voice
in all those transactions, and that if the
people he has employed to attend to
them for him go too far wrong, they
can be overhauled.
a
Humanity Berort Crereps.—I eannot help saying that, in spite of the divisions of sect and creed, if we could
but read each other’s hearts as God reads
them, I doubt if we should find we are
so widely separated as we appear to be.
Some think discussions and intellectual
research will bring about agreement in
religious differences. I, for my part,
-do not think so. A comparison of sharp
arguments on either side generally results in keeping men wider apart ; whereas, when they are drawn together bya
common passion, 2 common want or sorrow, there is a chord struck in the heart
.of every man to which the heart of his
fellow man responds. ‘This is the secret
-of our common religious beliefs. The
‘nivisters of many churches are bound
itogether by trammels of the past; they
scannot give free scope to their own inquiries and thoughts, but are obliged to
work up the opinions handed down to
‘them from the past. The ministers of
such churches are not allowed to form
iby their own minds, but have to start
‘from a programme; they take their
eereed as an advocate does his brief.
Martineau.
Nevapa Trerrirory.—the length,
north and south, of the proposed Terri‘tory of Nevada, (which embraces the
western half of Utah, lying between
Salt Lake and California,)is about six
hundred miles; and the width, east and
‘west, about four hundred and fifty miles.
‘The population ranges from fifteen to
eighteen thousand souls, according to
Judge Crane. Towns and wining camps
are sptinging up,—some of them very
flourishing villages; and at Genoa, in
Carson Valley a newspaper has been
sometime established. Settlements extend for over two hundred miles north
and south, and over one hundred miles
east and west. The Vallies arc fertile
and inviting and the mineral resources
thought to be immense. The climate
resembles that of California,. and the
products of the soil exhibit all the variety which characterizes those of our
own State. :
Cu1na.—The magnitude of the Chinese empire is greater than that of any
other save the Russian. Its territory
covers 5,000,000 of square miles or
nearly double that of the whole United
States.
The streets of China are from 5 to 8
feet wide, and are paved with granite
slabs, each three to four feet in width.
The conveyance is either on horseback
grin sedans. The lower orders of mandarins ride horses; the higher in sedans.
Horses are never used for draught The
foreign trade of China is in tea and silks.
In 1836 they exported 92,000,000
pounds of tea; in 1855, 127,000,000
. The Oolong teas grow upon
the hills in the vicinity of Nanking.
The ship Spitfire a vessel of 1549 tuns,
in which Mr. Baldwin and family sailed
to England, had a cargo of 1,950,00
pounds of tea, which cost there thirty
centsa pound. The duties on it amounted to $166,000, the freight to $40,000,
and the insurance to $10,000. The cargo
was worth on its arrival $1,271,000.
A Potar JouRNAL.—A traveler in
Norway, writing to the Boston Recorder,
gives an account of the northermost
paper in the world, the Trimsoe Times.
it is printed in Trimsoe, a little island
village, of about 4,000 inhabitants, on
the coast of Norway, at three degrees
within the polar circle. The summer
€un kindly looks in at the office windows
at midnight tosee that the forms are
properly set up. The Times is a fourpaged, semi-weekly sheet, with only two
columns on a page, and about the. size
of a quarto book form. The style of type
is the Gothic, which has been discarded
in Sweden, and toa considerable extent,
in both Germany and Denmark. The
latter are the only nations which contain
the Gothic hand writing. '
a
* Doubt and Paith. .
Sitence is vocal if we listen well:
And Life and Being singin dullest ears é
From morn to night. from night to mern again,
With fine articuiations; but wheu God
Disturbs the soul with terror, or Inspires : .
With a great joy, the words of Doubt and Faith
Sound qnick avd sharp like dropson forest leaves; . out in California, and raged with terrible
And we took up to where the pleasant sky
Kisses the thunder-caps, and drink the song.
A SONG OF DOUBT.
The day is quenched, and the sun is fled;
God has forgotten the world!
The moon is gone, and the stars are dead ;
God has forgotten the world!
Evil has won in the horrid feud
Of ages with The Throne;
Evil stands cn the neck of Good,
Aud rules the world alone.
There is no good; there is no God;
And faith is a heartless cheat
Who bares the back for the Devi *s rod,
And scatters thorns for the feet.
Filling and chilling with hail?
What are prayers but wasted breath
Beaten back by the gale?
The day is quenched ; the sun is fled;
God has forgotten the world!
The moon is gone and the stars are dead ;
God has forgotten the world.
A SONG OF FAITH.
Day will return witha fresher booa ;
God will remember the world !
Night wiil come with a newer moon;
God will remember the world!
Evil is only the slave of Good;
torrow the servant of Joy;
And the soul is mad that refuses food
Of the meanest in God’s employ.
The fountain of joy is fed by tears,
And love is lit by the breath of sighs;
The deepest griefs and the wildest fears
Have holiest ministries.
Strong grows the oak ip the sweepiag storm,
Safely the flower sleeps under the snow 5
And the farmer’s hearth is never warm
Till the cold wind starts to blow.
Day will return with a fresher boon ;
God willrememberthe worid!
Night wiil come with a newer moon;
“God will remember the world!
Bitter-Sweet by J. G. Holiaad.
Hymn to the People.
BY C. D. STUART.
Not to be blest with warrior strength,
To wield the sword and wear the glaive,
Or rise to conqueror’s fame at length,
Proclaims the good or makes the brave.
To have the power to bide the scorn,
“Aud rise above the hate and strife
Of those to wea th and title born,
Is the crown’d courege of our life.
What are the swords that prop a king—
The bannev’s in his army s van—
To strength of soul, that dares to spring
And show the monarchin the man ?
Kings and the mightiest men of arms,
Strong as the heads of realinsthey bide,
Sport as they may with fortune’s charms,
They are like leaves upon the tide.
In dim old sepulchres they lie,
The feast of silence aud decay,
White the true world-heart beateth high
And thrones itself upen to-day.
Give me the man whose hands have tossed
The corn-seed to the mellow soil,
Whose feet the forest depths haye crossed,
Whose brow is nobly crown'd with toil.
A Mopern Instance.—A writer in
the last Afluntic Monthly, in the course
of asplendid paper on Holbein’s Dance
of Death, speaks at some length of
dancing asa religions ceremony, and
thus refers to King David dancing before
the ark “with all his might, and girded
only with a lined ephod.”’
Dancing has always seemed to us to
be an essentially ridiculous transaction,
—for a man, at least; and we confess
that we sympathize with David’s wife,
Michal, who, secing this extraordinary
pas seul from her window, ‘despised
David in her heart,’ and treated him to
a little conjugal irony when he came
home. What would the lovely Eugenie
have thought, if, after the fall of Sebastopol, she had seen his Majesty, the Emperor of the French, ‘cutting it down,’
in broed daylight, before the towers of
Notre Dame, girded only with a linen
ephod,—though that’s not exactly the
name we give the garment now-a-days?
But David was master, not only in Israel,
but in his own household, (which is not
the case with all kings and great men,)
and he said to Michal,—‘it was_ before
the Lord, which chose me before thy
father and before all his house;.... vs
therefore will I play before the Lord;..
and of the maid servants which thou
hast spoken of, of them shall I be had
in honor.’ And Michal all her life repented bitterly the offence that she had
given her husband.”
AMERICAN MILirary GENIvs.—
The London Zimes which is not apt to
praise anything American, has the following complimentary paragraph:
‘The Americans have an excellent
judgment in military and naval matters,
which they handle ina spirit always
liberal and generally sagacious. It was
so from the very begining of their history. They never passed through a
period of infancy or routine, but took
the field, when they did take it, in a
fashion at once superior to tnat of oldfasioned belligerents. They have the
merit of anticipating even the French
of the Republic in discarding everything like precedent, and going straight
by the shortest cut to the mark before
them. «
AN Otp CompLaint —It is a very
general opinion that our political system
is full of abuses, and our official people,
of all sorts, a sad set of sinners. This
is no new story; it seems to be as old as
any kind of government. Cicero,
writing toa friend, says,*the candidates
for public offices, of all the people in
the world, are those most conversant in
dirty practices;’ and Edmund Burke
says, ‘In truth, the tribe of vulgar politicians are the lowest. of our species.
They are out of themselves in any course
of conduct recommended oniy by conscience or glory.’ These men ought to
know something about it, for they were
office-hunters themselves and went. in
for what they could.get as well. as. most
others,
The subjoined extract is from Mrs. Day’s
i Presta i es
ccm en
CnoLtERA AMONG THE DicGGERS.— Hotels.
UNION HOTEL.
Main street, North San Juan.
MITCHELL & FNGMAN,
Proprietors:
Hesperian:
In the fall of 1833, the cholera broke .
violence among the Indians; so great
was the mortality that they were unable
to burn or bury the dead, andthe air
was filled with the stench of decotpos.
ing humanity. A traveler who passed
up the Sacramento valley at this time,
relates that on his way up he passed a
place where there were about three hunBaP ted the Union Motel and are now prepared .
ao to accommodate travelers and boarders in ’
a@ manner Unit will not fail to give entire satisfaction.
The Traveler may rest assured, that here he will find .
Good Rooms and Beds,
dred Indians, with women and children, hig
encamped; when he returned, after an TABLE
absence ; hree orfour days, the ground supplied with the very best in the market. .
Fe, Stages
all having died except one little Indian Pets ee SL ay, .
+ } } av! is Hot aily for Mary les Negirl;she occupied the camp alone, while . Leave this Hotel nen yn onplonville. eet
around her lay the festering bodies of A Pack Train for Forest City, and Downieville. .
her dead companions, and the air was A Stage for Chorohec, Columbia Hill aud Humbug City. .
rendered noxious by the @isposting . uf
stench arising from the dead bodies
which, not alone in this eamp, but everyCER RA WEV ATA HOTEL
where throughout the valley, strewed 5
the ground. J. GORDON,
INFORMS the traveling community and
AMERICAN AnTIQUITIES.—Dr. DeHaas estimates that there are in the United States 100,000 tumuls, or mounds,
which are supposed to have been
eonstructed by some ancient race, mostly as places of sepulture Their situaplastered, refitted and
Thoroughly Furnished
the above well-known stand, he has now opened it to
the public. and intends that it shall acquire the name of .
A First Class Hotel.
citizens generally that having saci
i
The undersigned would re. ff
spectfully announce to their friends and . found in California, which they offer to the trade at
the public ceneraily, that they have ren. the very lowest market prices.
of the best quality, and purchases for disiant points
. carefully packed and promptly forwarded.
“Lookout” and “Andrew Jackson,”
packages of
es “ >Drugs and Metlicines,
Drugs, Medicines, Chemicals &c.
Pariety,
. Encourage Home Industry!
RICE, COFFIN & LO.,
Importers. Wholesale and Retail The subscribers would respectfully inform the people
of “ The Ridge” that they have recently made additions
. D R U G G i fea T & 9 ) to thei: former stock of Printing material, and are now
D street, Marysville.
EEP constantly on hand the largest and most
extensive assortment of goods, in their line, to be
. better prepared than ever to turn out work in their
line.
They have just received and put up one ofS. P. RUGGLES’ celebrated
Allarticles purchased from them GUARANTEED PRINTING PRESSES,
) y torw: pelos . . Which for speed and faithful impressions are acknowl
They are now opening, Ex Clippers “Twilight.” . edged to stand pre-eminent.
ADDITIONS
300 additional ; CONSTANT
of the latest siyles of Types. Borders, Flourishes, Ornaments &c.,are being made, which enable them to Drugs, Chemicals, Dye Stuffs,
Perfumeries, Paints, Oils &c. . print :
500 doz Davis’ Pain Killer; Pamphlets, Posters, Circulars, 500 daz ris . sh ,
100 do Guizotts Sarsaparilla; Invitations, Handbilts, Cardi,
200 do Sand’s do Labels, Bilt-heads, Citaleguies,
100 do Bulls do Legal Blanks, Bills of Fare, Receipts, 0 0 Bus
and in short everything that can be done iu the way of ~
Printing, at very moderate prices.
PRINTING IN COLORS.
When desired, work will he done in colors, Sizes, +
Bronzes &c.
Having had an experience of many years im the art, -we think that we can give general satisfaction.
AVERY & WATERS.
EFROLT TREES
ND
GARDEN SEEDS;
2.000 do Pills, assorted, viz: Brandreth, Wright's, HE undersigned is prepared to furnish the citizens"
Sus, Jayne's, Moffat’s, Ayres’, Gregory's, Cook's, Meof the “Ridge” with the choicest Trees, Vines;
Lean’s, Chilean Ague, Gracfenberg, Smith's, Sapping. shrubs, Garden seeds, from the celebrated Nursery off
ton’s &e. A P.Smith & Co., *acramento, and guarantees them fo¥
1,000 Ibs. Essential Oils, assorted; thriftiness, symmetry and size superior to any eve?
100 do Shaker, Graffenberg, and Winkoops de
200 lhs Gum Camphor;
200 do Arrowroot, Bermuda;
1,690 @e Pearl Barley;
1.000 do Peart sago;
200 doz Bay Rum;
100 galls. do;
1,000 galls. Alcohol;
3.000 lbs. Shaker Herbs, assorted;
1,000 do Gum Arabic;
500 do Flour sulphur;
1,000 do sal soda:
2,000 do Carb. soda;
300 do Chloride Lime,
1,000 do Carbonate Ammonia;
200 doz Seidletz Powders. extra:
What are prayers in the lips of death, was literally strewed with dead bodies,
}
BEDS
Of unexceptionable comfort and cleanliness,
Private Rooms
100 doz syrenges. glass, metal and rubber;
Together with a full assortment of Fancy Articles,
combs, brushes &c. For sale by
RICE, COFFIN & CO.
tion indicates that they were built by
an agricultural people; indeed they are
tions of the Mississippi Valley which =
are now most numerously settled. Many “SO APARITI" a
of these mounds have been ascertained . wos, 32 and 34 Broad street, Nevada. ‘<) ReArARIL \
to hold human skeletons, though rare— \ aes = \aascrrttean
GEO. R. LANCASTER, Proprietor.
HE undersigned weuld respectfully annonnce to
the citizens of Nevada and vicinity, and the traveling public, that he has leased the well-known and
POPULAR HUTEL. known as the National Exchange, on Broad street, Nevada.
he building is of Brick, three stories high, and
Thoroughly Fire-Proof,
(Having stood two firer.)
ly more than two in each, and with the
skeletons are sometimes found brass implements and even pieces of cloth Some
are thought to have been mounds of saerifice, of worship, of observation and defence. One mound in Virginia is seventy feet high by eight hundred in circumference, and covered with forest trees.
Who shall tell the story of the vanished
race ?
NATIONAL EXCHANGE.
The several apartments have recently been fitted up .
in astvlethat canvot be surpassed. and sixteen entirely
new roomsadded: making this the most commedivus
Hotel in the city.
}
The Beds and Furniture
are NEW. and for comfort cannot be excelled.
THE TABLE willat all times be .upplied wit), .
.
.
Russtan Main.—We are accustomed
to boast of the great extent of the
United States mail service, but Russia,
all the VARIETIES the mai ket affords,
Game Suppers got up to Order
Particular attention will be paid to theaccommodation
of Ladies and Families,
The Stages, runningin all directions from Ne
vada. have their Offices at, ahd take their departure
from the National Exchange. r
Gpen Ali Night.
THE BAR, will be constantly supplied with the
choicest Wines. Liquers atr.d Cigars. j
Having had long experience in the Business. I am
confident of being able tomake the National the best
Hotel in the Mountains, and a comfortable home for
Travelers. Iv
Charges will be Moderate, to Suit the Times.
A LIVERY STABLE
Ts connected with the House, and particular attention
will be given to taking care of horses, carriages &c.— .
am +,"
.
(2 ¢
>. ui that country of magnificent distances,
has one mail route
cannot parallel. The Siberian mail is
conveyed from St. Petersburg to Moscow by rail, and from thence to Irkutsk,
the capital of Eastern Siberia, in earriages drawn by horses. The distance from
t
which Uncle Sam
OR PURIFYING THE BLOOD,
AND FOR TUE CURE OF
ALL DISEASES ARISING FROM AN IMPURE
STATE OF THE BLOOD, OR HABIT
OF THE SYSTEM.
IS COMPOSED OF
PURELY VEGETABLE EXTRACTS,
And contains no mineral poison to injure the
CONSTITUTION.
The approyal of this preparation by Physicians and
Men of Science, and the great success which has
marked its use, furnishes proof sufticient to convince
every candid and discerning mind of its great superiority and value. It is now administered in general
practice as a sure and
UNIFORM REMEDY
STOKES & SHIE LDS, Prop’s. in cases of Scrofuls, Leprosy, Tumors, Swelling of the
T > é i ean a Joints, Rheumatism, Erysipelas, King’s Evil, and
he Proprietors would resy €oe every complaint symptomatic of Impure Blood; and
fully inform their friends and the public . all the diseases of the Muscles and Tissues, together
' that they have recently, atgreatexpense . 1 debility of th “ste sield to thi =
‘page fitted up thisnew Hotel ina style unsur= general ce fs ity of the system, ylele : 0 this un
Se es passed by any house in the city. and are . failing Purifier of the Blood—for the bleod is the chanhow prepared to xecommodate all who may desire good . nel through which disease finds its way to the various
living. a well ventillated room, ora good bed. #-gans of the body.
Mr. Stokes is well known as the former proprietor ;
Reod the folloming.
of “Charley's Restaurant.” where he was acknowledged
This certificate was sent us by our agents at Patteras the Lest caterer in the city: bis reputation is, therefore, most favorably established. His old friends are
so1, N. ¥., which is also certified to by several of the
acigiubors of Mr. Ballard.
respectfully invited to call at bis new house.
TERMS:
Messrs. A. B. & D. Sanps: Gentlemen.—It gives
50 ' me pleasure to send you the following statement in
Moseow to Irkutsk is 8,426 miles, and
there are 210 mail stations on the road
for changing horses. -The mail communication is semi-weekly, and the expense
of it tothe Russian Government is about
£57,000 a year. The mail from Moseow
to Irkutsk is generally con: eyed in about
25 or 30 dave.
OVERLAND Main Routrrs.—The
Post Office Appropriation bill has been
so amended by the U.S. Senate as to
reduce the pay for conveying the mail
over the Butterfield route from $600,000
to $450,000 per annuin, and the service
is made weekly instead of semi-weekly
as now. The schedule time over the
Placerville and St. Joseph’s route eva
Salt Lae, is reduced from thirty-ei¢ht
to twenty days and the appropriation
increased $110,000. The Stockton and
Arkansas route is abolished, and a new
weekly route will probably be established
Horses and Carriages can at all times be procured, by
application at the Bar.
GEO. R. LANCASTER, Proprietor.
jan 22. 23tf
UNITED STATES HOTEL.
Corner Cand Third streets, Marysville.
Board per Week... 52 Shiadceunntaaen ees teseeteuteiengees $s 00
Soard with Lodgiug iis
Single Meals... .
from St. Pauls. Minnesota, to Pucet . vodaing.cc.ccccccccceccssceesesseesesceeees : 50 . regard to my son. He took a severe cold, and after x . ’ ie “Pa eis _C ST’ :3, . eight weeks of severe suffering the disease settled in
Sound, at a compensation of $290,00U ¥8 3m A.M.SUIELDS. . bis left leg and foot, which soon swelled to the utmost.
The swelling was lanced by his physician, and dis, charged most profusely ; after that no less than eleven
ORLEANS BOTEL ' ulcers formed on the leg and foot at onetime. We
had five different physicians, but none relieved him
per annum.
SHYSsS's'ipsss SNbv'bpSPSSNSDN'S > a TQ 3) mm much; and the last winter found him so emaciated
& RE % 4 % ve) 4 3 % i is ¥ % ¥ ¢ % & O RLEA N S I LA I i and low that he was unxble to leave his bed, suffering
: < ae 4 ' TPE Subscribers would re . the most exeruciating pain. During this time the
N 4 Ph 1 ! specffully inform the traveling public that they bone had become so much affected. that piece after
E ARE ee . Still keep that popular Hotelat Orleans Flat. known as piece came ont, of which he has now more than twentyfive preserved in a bottle. varying from one-half to one
and a half inches in length. We had given up all
hopes of his recovery; but at this time we were induce to try your Sarsaparilla, and with its use his
health and appetite began immediately to improve,
the Orleans Ifotel. which they have fitted up in a superior style, and all who may favor them with a call. may
rest assured that the study of the Proprietors will be tu
make them comfortable while guests in the House.
= Their Table
Wili always be furnished with the best that the market
afford s, nnd
The Bar
will at all times be supplied with such articles as will .
satisfy the most particular. .
BUCHANAN & LAWRENCE.
bottles effected a perfect cure.
With gratitude, I remain truly yours,
DARIUS BALLARD.
Prepared and sold by A. R. & D. SANDS,
. Wholesale Druggists, 100 Fulton-street, corner of
. William, New York.
. For sale by DEWITT, KITTLE & Co., H. JOHNSAN JUAN BAKERY. . SON & Co.,and REDINGTON & Co., San Francisco;
in Britian . RICE & COFFIN, Marysville; R. H. McDONALD
‘ rs & Co. S ; and by D lly.
BOARDING and LODGIXG. 2 mets pee hee 9 vet eset
: EAGLE HAT MANUFACTORY.
D STREET, MARYSVILLE.
The largest assortment of [Tats and Caps in
the State is to be found at the Bagle Hat Madhe, DUfactory D street, between First and Second
Branch of the
RED HOUSE,
NEVADA,
HAS OPENED THE NEW STORE, NEXT DOOR TO
SIERRA NEVADA HOTEL,
San Juan Worth,
\ AND CALLS
EVERYBODY'S
Attention to his Large and Varied Stock of
CLOTHING,
Of All Kinds.
BOOTS and SHOES,
In Great Variety.
HATS,
Of all Shades
CUTLERY and NOTIONS,
Of all Kinds.
RUBBER GOODS
Of all Kinds.
i The undersigned respectfully informs
Wem his friendsand the public generally that
4” =e has now finished his
Se : FIRE-PROOF
BRICK BUILDING, . Marysvite.
. Moleskin, Ot @ i ats of
For the accommodation ofall those who may favor him . 4,5 see gncheoien Beaver, Peruvian and Felt Hats o
with a cal. 7)
€H_Notrouble will be spared to give satisfaction. Ladies’ Riding Hats and Children’s Hats and Caps, of
alt the new styles.
Sax All kinds of CAKE, for 44 Wats and Caps of all kinds made to order.-@a
Weddings and Parties, All descriptions of Hats cleaned in the most approved
will be furnished at short notice.
manner.
i. All orders from customers abroad promptly atHENRY FREUDENTHAL. tended to.
North San Juan, Nov.12, 1858. 13 6m * New Goods received by every steamer.
JAMES L. DALEY,
Dstreet, Marysville.
County Surveyor’s Office. am
Court House, Nevada.
JOWUN L. jemee J. OSTROM,
County Surveyor. Deputy.
LL persens are hereby cautioned against employing other Surveyors than such as may be deputized from this office.
Extract from the Laws of California.
Caap. 20, Sec. 3 —No survey or re-survey hereafter
made by any person except the County Surveyor or his
Deputy, shall be considered legal evidence in any court
within this state. JOUN L. GAMBLE.
28tr County Surveyor.
CIGARS, TOBACCO, SOAP, FRUIT TREES! . Garden Seeds.
Candles, &c., sore, . Pee tilersigned has the BEST Si.LUCTION of ARDEN SEEDS! Warranted fresh and
And we will sell them at as LO'¥ a figure as possible, FRUIT TREES, &c., ever brought to the mountCalifornia growth, for sale by
NEW MARKET.
. "lose subscribers have opened a New Market in
} the store occupsed by
PECK & COLEY,
where they will offer for sale the best of
Beet, Pork, Mutton &c.
4g-A share of patronage is solicited,
CRAWFORD & CO.
Norh San Juan. Dec’r.22d. 58. 19tf
as we buy largely for cash and sell for cash. ins. and desiring to cl i i j ORNIN, P.O. ile
OUR MOTTO: Sones esiring to close out the stock, is Soa . jan 8. DORNIN. P.O. Building
, * Low Prices . QI TEEL, ofall sizes,at
Good Goods for LittleMoney. . .. mee nb i Merete! . SS) . PECK & COLEY'S
4&g@-Out Door Sales punctually attended toby . Every tree wurrunted in woe: conaea : CANDIES! CANDIES!!
J. HAAS & CO., Auctioneers. —s DORNIN. . SPLENDID LOT OF French Candies just
jan 22. 23 3m q ee : Aopenes by SAMUGLSON.
BC Un ire . vanadate: ' cRMROAM aba Gant nia
: ‘or snié at PECK & : an ALIFO. 1A H
FOR SALE--A BARGAIN!!!
led farce ie ees as
HE RESIDENCE now occupied by Dr. RANDALL. ; .
rs ae SE SEES EE eed ea Sea eee Te ORL Sete: RS
Beyeynest PLOUR—California raised
esis Sen Joan, March ath, 80 as Warranted gd, just payee by « a MEAL Fresh a
brought to the mountains.
The Trees are expressed through direct from she Nun
sery, and are immed.ately replaced in the safl, this ir
suri.g their health and vitality.
4ax~Now on hand. asmall lot of Dwarf Pear. t B
and Plum Trees, Kose Bushes, Grape Vives and Pend
berries, from his last year’s stock, whiel hav e been:
growing allsummer, and are now ready fur tra nsplant~
ing.
Samples of the above trees may be seen at the ost:
Office Building, North San Juan. P
Orders from any other towns on the Ridge 1) ee & ed
the Goods carefrily packed and forwarded. i
litt GEO. D, DORNIN, Agent.
AMOS RANDAL... ee i 38 ae il. LASSitER
RANDAL & co.,
General New~ Agents,
EALERS i~ : :
: “La California, Atlantic and Europea
)— -WSpapsis and Magazines, Blank Books, Stationery, Letter Sheets and Cheap Publications, 61, D
id rer A ~ Dg Pes ’
street. MARYSVILLE, Sole Agents in Marysville fox
the San Francisco and ~acramento Daily, Weekly and
Steamer Newspapers. Also,
Agent for the Hydraulic Press,
RHA ny article in onr line not to be found in this
market will be ordered from San Francisco or New
York, if desired. RANDALE CO.,
61, Dstreet, opposite the Theater.
L. P. FISHER’S
Advertizing Agency
San Franciseo.
O. 17114 Washington street, up stairs, nearly epposite Magnire’s Opera House.
L. P. Fisher is the authorized Agent of the
Hydraulic Press,
And California Newspapers generally.
Adveitizing in the Atlantic States.
L.P F. has now completed his arrangements for the
. forwarding of advertizements to all the principal larges t
. circulating Journals and Newspapers published in the
Atlantic States.
A fine opportunity is here offered to those who wish
to advertize in any part of the Union, of doing so at the
lowest rates, and in a prompt and satisfactory manner
Lanston’s Pioneer Ex press,
= 20 Ey 5 os e
DAILY TO AND FROM my
Marysville, Nevada, Camptonville,
Forest City, Downieville, and all the principal
mining towns and camps in Nevada, Yuba,
aud Sierra counties.
. Connecting with
Wells, Fargo & Co's. Express
To all parts of this State, the Atlantic States and Eu-rope.
and the Assay Offices in Marysville and San Francisco,.
and coin returned promptly.
_WELLS, FARGO & Cu’S. DRAFTS on the principa¥
cities in the Atlantic States and Europe. for sale,
Bae~ OT fice in the Post-Office Building, Main street
opposite Flame street, North: San Juan.
14 JOHN A. SEELY, Agent.
{
‘
.
North San Juan & Humbug City
PS
—
Daily Exworess Line.
HE subscribers having purchased
the above-named line, will run it DAILY until
further notice. Leaving the Union Ifotel, North San
Juan, every day,at 1 PM arriving at Bell’s Ranch in time
for passengers to take the stage for Orlean’s Flat.
RETURNING,
Leaves the United States Hotel, Humbug City, every
' morning ati aM for North San Juan, giving passengers
. and’ so rapid was the change that less than a dozen
nels, Sluices, Hose &c_ complete.
bare .
time to take the stages for Marysville and Sacramento.
All Orders Promptly Attended To,
MOONY & CO., Proprietors.
Mitchell & Swain, Agents. Union Hotel .
To Miners.
. are prepared furnish any articles not usnaly_kept in the stores in this place at TWO
DAYS NOTICE; suchas Anvils, Blocks, Ropes,
Pulleys, Lose, and every article wanted.
PECK & COLEYLADIES SHOES,
ACHolcE lot of Ladies gaiters, slippers. and
shves. for sale by A SPERLING.
Peanuts for Seed !
OP CORN, SWEET CORN, and seeds
of all kinds, for sale by DORNIN,
jan7Z. P. O. Building.
HAIRS, Bedsteads, Bedding &c.,
{1 tt] For sale by PECK & COLEY,.
ea Rees a i 33 ER adh is eS Da ECS Sen ein 8
NEW LOT of HARDWARE, &c.
A just received. 16t F. SMITH.
TSE qa ee Dt pam Gs 2 gs Tee any See
Mining Claims for Sale,
AT PRIVATE OR PUBLIC SALREY
HE undersigned, pursnant to an order of the ProT bate Court in ®v. for the coutity of Nevada, State
of Califoyain, will sell at pri sate sale the followin pin.
cribed wracts of mining ground, situated on Norte San.
Juan Hill, in said county, to-wit The undivided one.
tveifth and a fraction over of eight mining claims and ‘
the appurtenances belonging thereto; being the entireinterest of Michael Craddock dec’d , and Eliza Jane. his .
wife, in the mining gronnd known as the Britania Co's. ;
mining claims. Also—the undivided one-third ofa ,
of zround lying and situated on said North San Juan
etcatke the oe Britania Co's. tae round
anc we o's. claims, said strip bei
width and 360 feet in length. By pages.
For terms &c., enquiry may be made of O. P,* me offiee. or Meee a ope at her realdiace mite
Sm Juan. or of John H. Atehi
ner ee Yuba county. ectties has tee
the above Interests are not disposed of at vate
sale, on or before SATURDAY, the 9th day of Seas A
D. 1859.80 much of said mining claims, belonging to.
said deceased, to-wit: One twenty-fourth interest in
said Pritania claims and the appurtenances, andthe
undivided one-third of the above. deseribed strip of
ground, will be offered on said last-mention day at
PUBLIC SALE, on the premises, betweetr the hours of
; 10 o'clock AM. and 2 o'clock P. M. on said day, to the
nighess bidder for cash.
__ Persons desiring to make a good, profitable and saf
investment.of a small amount of money, ‘will finil ito
their advantage to call and examine the ghaims now ofThey are in good working condition: with TuaJOUN H. ATCHISON, y AS".: ELIZA JANE CRADDOCK, j Adm'rs.
North San Juan. Feb’y 26,1859,” tg!
_ N.B. Enquiry as to price and terms site.
). P. Rtidger and Mrs. Craddock at North @ai’pen ee
of TAR hicuionn at Garden Valley, Yuba Sehate
Gold Dust Forwarded to the U. S. Mint: —
.
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