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Collection: Newspapers > Nevada City Daily Transcript

January 28, 1902 (4 pages)

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: $ a ie Neyapa City DalLy TRANSCRIPT (OOM ME BROWN & CALEINGE, PROPRIETORS, — Issued Every Evening, Sundays Excepted, at Nevada City. Nil Be Married Next Month. pumor of Death of Jacob Kammpher. John Kampher, who resides in the STRAYED AWAY. TERMS OF SUBSORIPTIONI ~ §6 Per Year . By Carrier, z Delivered toany part of the city. 12 1-2 Per Week. ‘. Kirkbride, of San Mateo, and Mies Bbis Sine ws eons ec cacnnveveveccsccseee,..danuary 28, 1902 ~ An Object Lesson. ISBURSEMENTS--OF DIVIDENDS and interest amounting to about $500,000,000 took place during the first, week in January, 1902, largest sum ever distributed in this form in the United States, and accordingly it may be properly be con“sidered as representing by far the highest point in material prosperity ever reached in the United States. No country on earth can show anything like it. The grand total of $500,000,000 is more than double what the distribution of dividend and interest payment amounted to in the first week in It is very much the The approaching nuptials of W. H. Martha Sims, of this city, have been announced. The happy event will take place the latter part of the coming month, and it will be a fashionable affair. that John Martin and his company plished In the art of .elocutien, having la:ge classes at Grass Valley and in and readily makes friends wherever she goes. ¢ well known minister, Rev. Kirkbride D. D., of San Mateo,.and is a civil engineer of note. He is in the embeing superintendent over a corpe of civil engineers. He is-also a grad=acter. 2c The intended bride is highly accom-. bad purchased all the dams and water rights of the North Bloomfield and this city. She is exceedingly populer, . Eureka Lake Companies and that the price sgreed upon was three hundred Mr. W. H. Kirkbride is a son of the . thousand dollars. We could not ascertain where the rumor started but we are prepared to ploy of the Southern Pacific Railroad, believe almost anything about John Martin and bis company, as nothing uate of Stanford University, and a. ®°™s too big for them to tackle, with young man of excellent traits of char-. a mint of money at their backs. Big Sale. It is reported on the street today We were going on to conjecture what January, five years ago. Then we were staggering under > this great sale means bat for fear there Could Nol Catch Hier ‘is notrnth inthe story we will bold Delbi mining district, received 4 telegraphic message from San Francisco yesterday apprising him of the death of his brother, Jacob Kampher, which occurred last Sunday, The deceased lived in-the locality of Oolombia Hill up to a few years ago, where he fol lowed mining for a livelihood. Mr. Jobn Kampher came over from Columbia Hill today and made arrangements with Undertaker Henry Lane to have the remains of his brother shipped from San Francisco to this city, but learned by wire that the Coroner at the Bay had buried his brother, It was also stated that cludining $61 in coin. Mr. Kampher left for San Francisce on this after noon’s train. Died al the Hospital Andrew~ Mullin, a native of Trejand, aged 66° years, died at’ the County Hospital__this forenoon, The deceased lived at Boston Ravine, in the deceased left a small “estate, in[that he has ended bis life this time. An Inmate of the County Hospital Missing . . fs up fro k Outside Ski the effects of four years o f Tariff Reform and Free-Trade. Now we have not quite completed. four and a half years of restored Protection to American industry and labor. What a contrast between then and now! Five hundred millions of dollars is a big sum to be scattered broadcast through this land of ours, a mighty sum to be paid out here and to stay here. For, mark you, it does stay here and it does not go, abroad any more (not above one per cent. of it, to enrich creditors in foreign countries. Reason why: We don’t owe anything now to foreigners. Why? Because in four and a half years of “‘McKinley and Protectioh” our trade balances have amounted to over $2,000,000,000 _For some time past the people of Washington who have had occasion to be down town after dark have been atin black. She seems to take delight in ecaring people and acts in many appeared as “ghosts,” being robed in white, but why the snowy color is not but some think it is because she is engaged in doing things in which she would be more easily seen if she did use a light colored gown. As no one bas missed anything as yet it is probable the theory does not amount to our lead pencil for awhile. having secured the services of the traeted by the peculiar actions of a greatest railroad man on the Coast to person, apparently a woman, dressed) take the management of his roads, the people in this section of the State need waysas the persons whe occasionaly. not be surprised at anything. in the worn by this individual -is not known . any and every direction. Condensations. Tbe way Martin is going on, and way of new eleetric roads running in C. Dolan, C. Ashburn and G. Fisher and in settling these immense balances Europe has been comsige pelled to send back our securities, so that we now owe : tion of the $500,000,000 disbursed the first week of this four or five-years, our great railroad corporations were sending vast amounts of money to London and the ContiThe strange woman was seen last Europe very little, if anything, and only an infitisimal por—. nght by a young man nemed Camper who got Richard Kite,. George Kite and others to help him month went to any but our own people. Not long ago, say. try and find oat who she ie. They : gave Her a hard chase but she succeeded in escapting. nent to pay dividends on stocks and interest on bonds owned abroad. This year the checks are made payable to American citizens and not to foreigners. All because the Republican policy of Protection enables us to produce so large a Still Spreading. San Francisco, January 25.—At the ‘ 5 ‘ office of John Martin itis stated that proportion of what we use and to require payment in cash. the Valley Counties Power Company, W. Rogers, the Banner district. ployed. read it. started this morning to put up the new telephone line from this city to The Bay Counties Power Company has a force of men engaged in stringing the new aluminum wire along the Grass Valley road. Several Nevada City men are among the number emLadies who are thinking of buying skirts will do well to read the new advertisement of Maher & Co. in this evening’s TRANSCRIPT. De not fail to . The ladies of St. Agnes Guild of the Grass Valley township, and was aD old pioneer of this section. Undertaker Hocking took the body to Grass Valley today and the funeral will be held there tomorrow. Rudyard Kipling’s Checks. It is related that when Rudyard Kipling lived in America he tried a system of paying all household expenses by checks. Naturally those checks varied in amount, most 0 them being small. The majority were a dollar or so. Butcher’s bills, grocery bills, were settled promptly in this fashion, and of course Mr. Kipling’s checkbook at home provided him with an accurate account of expenditure. But when he sent in the bankhodk monthly to be examined the result would never balance. He invariably found that the amount of his credit was greater than it ought to be, and he tried to persuade himself that this was owing to his own Jefective bookkeeping or his: own bad head for figures. It was only by accident that he discovéred the secret. Many of the small checks were never presented at all.~ Their value as autographs was greater than their bank value. Roya Baking Powder nce Satanny. BI ees yince a Uf ay. ac erson has! ‘ ‘ AU Yow. Alt Cailor-Made, pe is down James aero who ie ~~ = HU of Chem Will Fit. Hl Sizes, Sina S0°t nmate in the County Hosp or ‘ some time, strayed away last Satura —, : TP day, and althcugh diligent search bes. Black Cheviot Skirts at $s, $6. 50, $7 50 and $8.50, 4 voapuplehinges been made no tidings of the missing Black Camel’s Hair Skirts at $ 5 $6 50 $7 50 and $8 : date man have been learned. At one time ’ > Ploy) KO. bs Hannigan made en attempt to comBlack Serge Skirts at $5, $6.50 and $7.50. “These Pi last evening, mit suicide, and it may be possible all_wool. . drones You get more for your money than ever bef as Of late he has been partially de: i g ore, (j a mented, but he was of a quiet disposiwhile we have all sizes. These skirts are made extriy ns bs tion and not dangerous in hisections. and some are made with a flaring flounce. Flounce he pdence min Perhaps Hannigan took it into his. with stitched bands of Black Taffeta. Well, worth 3 hank: seas to walk some distance from the coming to see. y +, big? Ra wink . ospital, and, night coming on, be Me Me habe Lagerge? in ~ phono cape —_ Ginghams, Singhams, Singhams. All our Yew §, n the adjacent. country has . fully examined, and this confirms the Sing —— ah 4 o-_ at re Write to us for Samples : ein theory that if he suicided he must ; have gone some distanee from the 2 k Maher ; cz, So, eae Hospital. Mail orders promptly attended to. _ eens atlas » +Oe ST —~ : 3 26: 0 eame.i. Stops the Cough sae —= 4 and Works Oft the Cold _ —_— a cold in oneday. No Oure, No Pa Price 25 cents, : vee sf = r his home <7 Saw Death Near: Lbatchmakers Sen it onan ee aan, ct Matt . wr «0. . Tenn., “to hear my wife cough until it i ’ % ato gel yp ath ee any gen line of Watches, Clocks, Watch Chaj Se told would collapse. Good . doctors said : p al io s, Opera Glasses, Violin and Guitar Stri aw she was so far gone nsumpi i t aie He ee Meta: oe datene ae ound in Northers California. Prices as low as possi bave hear could save her, but a friend recom; the past mended Dr. King’s New Discovery and nate. Hs to be ho persiatent-use of this excellent medihe way, M cine saved her life.” It’s absolutely. . We mate a Speetalty of Wateh Repairing.. p in the in guaranteed for Ooughs, Colds, Bron. ] S, chitis, Asthma and all Throat and ..and Suarantee Our Work to be Firstel ir some we Lung diseases. 50c and $1 at W. D. ed up by Vinton’s. Trial botties free. BROAD STREET, NEVADA’ CITY. e was beir b pat its, but sb i id sound ir / That the is shown Kind, +) Pte make Cc Cn OY em or tal at onds w Modern .+ SPOONS. ee tk 1 pslie’s Pi These are something new and will sell very rapidly , me H aining or the return of our securities held abroad for the enormous surplus of our exports over our imports. There is a tremendous object lesson in the disbursement]! purpose of supplying power for a of $500,000,000 among the people of the United States during the first week of January, 1902. @#e2ea444446444 4 which has just been incorporated, is an offshoot of the Bay Counties Power Company, which was organized for the number of counties in Northern California. The plan is to build a power plant on French Creek in the eastern partof Butte county. The company is incorporated for $2,500,000, with $70,000 subscribed by the directors: R. R. Colgate, Eugene J. de Satla Jr., Jobn Martin, R. M. Hotaling, John O.
Coleman, William M. Pierson and C. and refreshments will be served. pleasure (or the No. 126, I. 0. O. F., of Washington, . on the wall. It program was rendered ard a banquet} Episcopal church will give a very en-. Tradesmen sold them to customers joyable social tomorrow evening, at. at a profit. Instead of finding their the home of Mrs. Fred Zeitler, on Ne-. way to tlre bankers the checks were vada street. There will bea fine mus-. carefully treasured. Visiting at a ical and literary program rendered gentleman’s house, Kipling had the The new officers of Samaritan lodge,. one of his checks hanging framed were installed Saturday night. A. for a case of bottled beer. No wonder the novelist’s books partaken of. Past Grand O. C.Hel-. would not balance. Indignant at gesen placed the new officers in their this discovery, he is said to have chairs as follows: Charles Worthley, . -burned his checkbook and in future Acting Past Grand; Harry Kite, Noble. paid all his accounts in hard cash.— reverse) of seeing was a check given Most healthful leavener in the world. Goes farther. A. Grow. That Indemnity. ceived by th\s government as indemnity for losses} tions. suffered by Americans,in the Boxer rebellion. It is stated that the Cabinet has/reached the decision that $7,000,000 will cover the actuatloss and the naval and military expense as well. conclusion that the only honest thing to do is to return the “balance of the money. This is what the United States did in a similar case where Japan was forced to pay a national indemnity in excess of actual losses and that act constitutes a good precedent for a similar action with China. No other ‘ ahs . . eisco. Shimonoseki indemnity was retufned European countries, ~e@e Beautiful Residence Walter D. Vinton, the well-known = 4: druggist, willerect a beautiful . resiHE REPORT Is SENT OUT from Washington dence on his lot, cornet of Broad and that the administration has decided to return to. Cottagestreets, which he recently purChina $18,000,000 of the $25,000,000 which was rechased. J H. Rogers Is now engaged in drawing the plans and specificaa Personal. : z E. McCormick came down from the From this’state of facts it was easy to reach the} Hidden Treasure mine today. Dr. F. M. Sponogle of Sau Francisco returned from Downieville today on bis way home. ¥. A. Sike is here from Sacramento. Andrew Willi of Sacramento artived on the afternoon train. R. W. Foster came down from Sierra nation, it is true, has performed such an act, and when the county todey on his way to San FranSuperintendent J. P. Meyers which kept all the money they had extorted from Japan, inBadger Hill is in town. dulged in light remarks regarding the prevalence of senti“ment in American diplomacy. They may say the same. mento isin town. thing again, if the Chinese indemnity, or the greater part of it, is returned, but the United States need not mind that. town. style of criticism. If it is sentimental to be honest, refusing to accept damages in excess of loss suffered, then it is a very C. G. Woodburn, the well-known wholesale liquor merchant of SacraA. E. Fitter is over from Erle. R. H. Patrick of Meadow Lake is in Charles Power has arrived from the Plaumbago mine. good thing to be sentimental. The money should be returned without consideration of the effect on our trade with China or on our political relaperformed without exercising influence in both of those ways. Should the return of the money be looked upon by China as a signal display of national friendliness, and should it result in giving a fresh impetus to American trade in China, that Weather Report. Forecaster A: G. McAdie, of the U. tions with that country, but naturally such an act cannot-be. S8. Weather Bureau, makes the following prediction as to the weather: Fair tonight. . Cloudy Wednesday. Deafness Cannot Be Cured. By local applications, as they cannot ot, Better come and get one before they are all gone, —kKtk— it of Gre pirate, . poming is own salc Jodging h C. J. BRAND, The Jeweld [Sack oc oF 8 police, a it” in pri a Ca jpown ch nid hardly of telling wer, that oto his p jalaam tot SOMETHING NICE @o~ FOR THE FAMILY oot — +e Fine Candies Daily. There is no place in Nevada County where you can get fresh candies equal to the various kinds that are made at the popular establishment of James M. Foley, on Commercial street. The demands for his fine, candies are such that it requires the stock to be made fresh each day, and that is what the people want and can depend upon, if they buy of Foley. j9-tf Something Nice to Keep. Any one whoattended the re-union picnic and gathering of old Nevada countyans, which was beld dt Glenbrook on the 10th of September, can J} procure aluminum souveaoirs of that occasién ut five cents each at E. W. Schmidt's cigar store. They will be valte has taken over twenty-five years of constant and intelligent effort to bring “ Our Very Best” Pocket Knives up to the present high standard. Every knife is @ proof of the triumph of Amege fcan workmanship, style and fim @h. There's nothing bettes. POR SALE BY LEGG & SHAW NEVADA OITY. CO. Graud; J. B. Lithgow, Vice Grand; J. Golden Pennv Bay bear i piel me sities bona! E. bs Smoke the up-to-date Cigar Thomas a CR MO you how rthley, Treasarer; Charles King, R. Doing, none better. For aale at Rector Ee TCS ea j i pgins, wit S. N. G.; George King, L. 8.V.G.; T. Bros. CO., NEW YORK. S. ner. “I y E. Phillips, Warden, O'e Helgesen, ©, . geeeeennnmen ae a ihoemaker Black Patti drew a large audience at phon a cc the theatre last night and _all went shop and away well-pleased. The chorus singKnives . hat Cut fe’s after . ing was excellent and the male quar: en. My tette far above the average. Black i — NE of those handsome Carving ay again ei herself surpassed all expectaSets for your father, a Nickel: was be Plated Coffee or Tea Pot for your pet Please Take Notiec mother, a Dinner Set for your wife, a Se turned ' iE hagol : Pocket Knife for your brother, and a : : All acocunts due Snell & Fleming guaranteed Pair of Scissors for your " Sel on January 1, 1902, must be settled im sister, and many other ‘articles too mediately. And from thie date fornumerous to mention. Call and see. : ward all bills must be settled monthly We have a largefamcunt on our books,}. . oe oe 708 and we require thatjit shall be paid up ; “ena at once. : , mporaril ja6-tt SNELL & FLEMING. ‘i A CE NR AT A. Ouban m the que yenue ta GEO. E. TURNE je tea inte psition' to Pine Street Nevadad nich We ‘co ' a a pon was . Thet f repres bot oppo Gvery Hat Has to So.. i —: p whiskey Regardless of cost. or value. The great Cle Sale'is now on, and includes every hat, trim untrimmed, in the house. We always i promises and promise you an astonishilg bargains during this sale. ‘i you are in you oa mest V Cit; would be merely a pleasant incident proving once more that reach the diseased ’portion of the ear. honesty is the best policy. honest is the right thing in international acts and this is the] inflamed condition of the mucous linreal: reason for desiring to see the excess indemnity returned. But,. policy or no policy, to be. tess, and that is by contitutional ee wens . FUMmbling sound or imperfect hearing, Arrested and Set Free. Dr. J. H. Haneford says in the Westie ; f If the first cough is. [s about 5000, and—we—would say at tube restored to its normal condition, least one-half are troubled with. some . [¢@7!ng will be destroyed forever ; nine affection of the throat and lungs, ae case out of ten are caused by catarrh, those complaints are, according to sta tern Plowman: properly treated, the first step in the direction of consumption arrested,. tbe lungs developed, the breath set free, we need not fear consumption.” Kemp’s. tistics, more numerous than apy others dition of the mucous surfaces. Balsam for the throat and lungs is the proper treatment for the first cough. No other remedy has saved so many from consumption. Large’ bottles 25c and 50c. For sale by H. Dicker an The,Population of Nevada City We hos er Pg eo to-negiect the opportunity. to call on their druggist and get a bottle of Kemps Baten: catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall’s for the throat and lungs. Price 25c ( atarrh Cure. Send forcirculare, free and 50c. Trialsizefree. For sale by There is only one way to cure deafremedies. Deafness is caused by an ing of the Eustachian Tube; When this tube gets inflamed you have a and. when it is entirely closed deafness is the result, and unless theinflammation ean be taken out and this which is nothing but an inflamed éonWe will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of deafness (caused by Apply to E.H. BARKER, j28-1w Prospect Hill. but how good. : F. J. CHENEY &CO., Toledo,O. Sold by druggists, 75c. CHAS. E. TEGLER We are Now Engaged in making extensive improvements in our Candy Kitchen which will provide better facilities for manufacturing .our goods, I will not only keep up my standard of goods but will-add a finer line of Creamg and Chocolates, besides the best of Plain and French Mixed Confectionery. Oandies are a luxury, and I believe it is not how cheap, All who ,examine our work pronounce it unsurpassable. There’s no doubt about that, because we aim high and when we aim we -hit the mark. Don’t overlook the difference between our standard and that of others. We are-stiff about our linen finish and keep the front shiningly. Our rates are very low. FY He's Datet Leather and Kid Smee aable in years to come. tf : t erve her : = : : — ss : ee tS — condit SB, : : jal Street, a pu ea Aber NaS ) MRS. L. LUBEGK, Sars: Re See work ine family of two. : Is decisive in laundry matters.) === : nner ge. For nt. -Bal like rt $3.50 to $5.00 fie Own an pwn & ATam at B pole agent. H. Dickerman, sole agent. Hall’s Family Pille are the best. [Oemmersial Street,¥ en _WEVADA COUNTY LAUNDRY ASSOCIATION BOVEY BROS., Broad Si