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Collection: Newspapers > Nevada City Daily Transcript

July 18, 1896 (4 pages)

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aT Seed SrHRoRSEES suse 2 eSB me SR. Saw See cn a errr ete e sar ebmon ee paneer prvi eee ae ar : Steffen, O. G.; C. A. Pare, Trustee ; J. For labor on roads ; Woodruff, Bigehe. ‘in a _ engi THE TRANSCRIPT. Vf Established Sept. 6, 1860, by. Nat. P. Brown & Co. BE NEVADA CITY, NEVADA CO., CALIFORNIA : j BROWN & CALKINS, Proprietors SATURDAY : JULY is. 1896 Special to the DAILY TRANSCRIPT. a A Lynching Threatened, DETERMINED T0 ROB HIM. : ‘SACRAMENTO, July 18— Gorerhor Budd today received a telegram from Two Men Stop Henry Kirsehberger and edding, Shasta county, saying there ' was talk of lynching N. G. Peterson, Later Try to Enter His Cabin. who killed Jack Sutherland last The success of the robber who last Thursday at Castella. The Governor le of wired the authorities of Shasta county ee rrapeeye nig 58a ate ain ito use their utmost endeavors to quiet he cote Pe NA , that Peterson had naturally serve as an incentive. for ee Perr ee othérs of his ilk to try their luck at !a fair hearing. thievery. in this vicinity. In fact they . é BER Eai Ss have already ‘begun. Thursday night . as Henry. Kirschberger, a prospector More Troops Called Out. who lives on Wood’s ravine, ;about # . ot mile and a half from town, was going! CLEVELAND, July 18~Mayor McKis. home, he was stopped by two men, who . 800 today ordered the Cleveland Grays, . ordered him to throw up his hands. . the crack military organization of weet Kirschberger had no money, and after Western Reserve, to'report for duty at searching hiin the robbers told him to. the Brown Hoist. There are five com-) move on. panies of militia and the city’s entire . Last night Kirschberger heard some . reserve police force encamped around one trying to break into his cabin. . the works. More trouble with the wee) Getting up and taking his pistol he! rs seems imminent today, and the } went to the door and saw two-men hur-. Mayor has instructed the militiamen . rying away. He fired a shot at them, to open fire on’ the rioters if necessary. . which caused them to quicken their Beheaded by a Train, speed. Kirschberger thinks they were Lawrencesura, Ky., July 18.—Two'! the same men who stopped him the; headless bodies were found this morn. night before and that they were aware there was a quantity of amalgam in the cabin. E —— + -0@e+ -——-. \from here. They were identified as} . Joseph Hooper and wife of London, this Taken In By a Sharper. A man named Evans, who is agent . } victimized several parties at Grass Val. °" the track to comunié puicide. ley. He represented that. he was auseca age" An Immense Slaughter. . thorized by thepassociation to make . flat loans on property, and succeeded . in getting one or two transactions . started. In order to look up titles and . do other preliminary work a fee of $50. nople which rts that massacres . was collected in advance. Evans came ‘he . have-occurred at Elgin, near Armenia, . te this city for the ostensible purpose i, which 4500 christians were killed and of searching the records. He registered at one of the hotels here, but the ity’ palaged: left town rather suddenly, since which time hé has not been heard from. He also left a number of unpaid bills at Grass Valley. His victims are anxious to overhall him and have him prose-/ gerhilt is somewhat improved this cuted for obtaining money under. false . morning. At 9:30 his physicians issued pretenses. Evans had the right to sell] , punetin saying he had passed a satisstock in the association but exceeded . ca 0d factory night and was comfortable. i his authority when he began to nego. si tiate loans. Baptism By Immersion. publishes a dispatch from Constanti-) Vanderbilt Improving. New York, July 18.—Conelius Van. Honors to a Chinese. The sacrament of baptism will be. WasHINGTON, July 18.—Hung Chang, administed by Rev. W. C.Gray at the. the Chinese Viceroy, was to have been Christian Church in Grass Valley on! pore last month, but has’ postponed his Friday evening next, at 7:80 o'clock. . visit till the President retarns from A special train will leave thiscity at Gray Gables. Secretary Olney and the 7 o'clock and return at the clos¢ of the Legation are arranging for a reception services. Fare for the round trip 40'4, him that will outshine that given cents. Rev. J. P. Macaulay will give. nore in 1898 to Princess Enlalie of a short address and Rev. L. J. Garver Spain. and others will assist at the services, a —_ which are to be open to the public. Be County Supervisors. snopaaiatie: . ‘The following business was tranThe following officers of. Milo Lodge, . sacted by the Board of Supervisors toNo. 48, K,of P., were installed last . day: night by Chas. Pecor, D. D, G.C., as-. The quarterly report of F. M. Pridsisted by L. 8. Calkins as G. P., OC. A. geon, Road Commissioner of District Pare as G. K. of R. & 8., Chas. Steffen . No.3, was read, approved and ordered as G. M. at A. and E. J. de Sabla as G.) filed. LG.: E. J. Morgan, ©. C.; A. Rapp,. The following demands against the V. C.; F.:T. Nilon, P.; Geo. -A. Nihell, . county were found due and ordered M. at A.; J. H. Rogers, I. G.; Chas: . paid on the 3d Road District Fund : . low & Co., $40, Estate D: R. McKillican $31.25, John Shea $63.25, Jas. Doyle spastic . $63.25, .W. ©. Flannery $72.50, Chris. In describing a patent that is intend-. Monroe $70, John Coughlan $60.50, M. ed to keep airin motion and thus secure . Quinn $62.50. J. D. Ostrom $35, W. A. greater comfort in summer, the Buffalo . Gameron $22.40. Times says: “Ina breeze is coolness.! The following demands were allowed To make a whole town so on a hundred-. on the General Fund : B. F. Simp: >, in-the-shade day is equivalent to lower-. repairing sprinkling wagon, $4.50, “. Wing tHe temperature twenty degrees, . Donnelly, care of indigent, $4, denry though the actual temperature by ther. Lane, livery hire and conveyin sick to mometer remains-the-same.”— That is, hospital, $15.50, John Sweet, Aidavits what we want out this way just at pres-. of registration, $13, E. P. Fitzsimmons, A. Northway, M. W. shaeieh ie bag ie A Breezy Town. i Minor Notes and Comments of Local ‘eity will held a private picnic at Blue . Tent tomorrow. ing,on the Southern Railroad ten miles;WILLIAM G, WHITNEY. Nothing Conld Induce Him to Yote for Bryan and Sewall—He Utterly} [Repudiates the Democratic Party. er 7 Ta Wine es BOOT REY 7 *. us, and 1 kad the gun. -. lt made me mad to begin with, and New York, July 16,—The following telegram, which is self-explanatory, was re; iation, . State. They had evidently laid down . ceived by the United Press this evening : £08 Ce Seared Aasccladion, “900 Sixth Avenue, New York, July 16—To the United Press: Will you ke . kind erfough to correct the statement that I desire the indorsement by the State . organization of the Chicago ticket ? There are no possible candidates or cir. cumstances that could induce me to vote for it or support it: “WitLtiam C. WHITNEY.” Lonvon, July 17.—The Chronicle . ——— BRIEF MENTION, Interest, Clam chowder at the Star. and Crescent Wine Rooms, Commercial street, tonight. It At 1 o’clock this afternoon 4002 names had .been entered on the new Great Register. _A party of young folks from this Charles Power of the Athletic Club fell yesterday afternoon and dislocated the index finger of his right hand. Martin Wallace, a native of England, was naturalized today upon the testimony of J. J. Greany and Henry Walker. Er There was a good attendance at Prof. Michell’s social at Ragon’s Grove last night. Five couple were present from Grass Valley. The young friends of Miss Ida Pecor tendered her a pleasant. surprise party last evening at the home of her parents, near the depot. Every rough-looking stranger who is seen around town now is sized up by young and old as .a burglar, highwayman and all-round crook. According to the Wood River Times, published at Hailey, Blaine county, Idaho, Alzina M. Leonard has been granted a divorce from J. C. Leonard by the Fourth District Court of that State. ‘ + 8 eo. THE “LONE ROBBER AGAIN, He Gets Forty Dollars From a Peddler Near Lake City This Morning. This morning a vegetable peddler who was returning from Graniteville was stopped near Lake City by a solitary robber, who, with a cocked revolver in his hand, demanded the peddler’s money. The latter gave up his purse, which contained $40, and then reecoived further orders to-drive on. The man who committed the robbery had a sandy mustache and beard, was about 5 feet 8 inches in hight, had on a vest but no coat, and was evidently. the same party that robbed William Engle, the teamster, yesterday afternoon five miles nearer this city. He is apparently making his way to the upper part of the county. The robbery happened about 10:30 o’clock this forenoon. We could not learn positively who the party is that-was held up, bat the impression is that the peddling wagon belonged to Philip Monier of French Corral, as it was to leave Graniteville early this morning on the return trip. This wagon turns off near Lake City and goes down the Ridge. Clarence Shurtleff of this city was up to Graniteville yesterday, but it is not thought that he is the party that was held up. Under Sheriff Neagle -left town as soon as word was brought in, to hunt for the robbér. SBE CRG Say et ce Be es ae Better As It Was. A man has just died in New York beIN THE HOUSES OF WORSHIP, Religious Services to Be Held Throughout the City Tomorrow. CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH. There will be preaching in the morning by Rev. J. Sims. In the evening Rev. J.-P, Rich of Oakland will offiRapes ent. Bai CLIN AR Another Operation. William Clemo, the injured miner . who had to have his leg-amputated . twice at Grass Valley recently, had a. third operation performed yesterday . by the. Drs. Jones. An incision was . made. between the ribs in order to} reach an abscess on one of his lungs} and remove the accumulated pus.’ To. day the patient was resting easier and feeling better than for several days. ———_-+-2@e-Baseball Tomorrow. The Colfax baseball club will arrive here tomorrow morning, and in the" afternoon will play a match game with a nine of this city, at the old Rifle Grounds. The home players have ar-! ranged to have dinner at the Union . Hotel for the visitors, and will other-. wise provide for their-comfort. A bar. rel of ice-cold lemonade will be on-tap . at the grounds for the players. . ~ a pe . Franklealey was arrested last even. ing for’ drunken and disorderly con-' duct. Justice Holbrook sentenced him . to 80 days in the county jail. Healey . has been on 4 protracted spree and is, . affidavits of registration; $16.50. a ee ee Wie Sierra Ahead. For “steady work,” probably the Mayflower drift mine in Placér county, Cal., has a record not surpassed by. any other in this State. It has been’ -operated, without the stoppage of a single day’s work, for seven years.—Mining and Scientific Press, That is a very good record ‘for Placer county, but Sierra has about quadruple . discounted that score. The Bald Mountain and Bald Mountain” Extension drift mines,located between Forest City and Downieville, have been operated extensively for more than twentyfive years, affording constant employ. ment for from twenty-five to two hun. } dred men and more continuously producing large cleanups of gold, aggregating to date nearly. $3,000,000, while miles of undeveloped rich gold-bearing channels remain on the Bald Mountain Extension ground where was found last week a nugget weighing twenty-five ounces,— Enterprise. Kidney and Liver Troubles. “Two years ago my busband eufterea . suffering from an attack of delirium . terribly with kidney and liver troubles. tremens. ‘New Lumber Yard. . He tried many remedies and doctors,. The last thing written by Harriet . buat did not improve. Two or three Beecher Stowe, bottles of Hood’s com'T. P, Byrne, the contractor and build. P!etely oured him. rr agictage months er, has opened in connection with his/®8° he was troubled with dyspepsia business a Lumber Yard on upper East . mee hin cones he ate @ was so thin Broad street adjoining his residence. . and weak he could scarcely walk. At See advertisement. A Baby's Life Saved’ be oe baby had croup and was saved to od t iloh’s Oure.” writes Mrs. J. B,. 4 oa ee Bowman, rtin, Hunteville, Als. sont . e aeeeeemeaaey ane =esgiens eae taba 0 ie a improve a a . ea eee intendent. ciate. The Christian Endeavor will meet at the usual hour, led by Miss Lizzie Richards. Subject—“Books and Reading.” Sabbath school at the close of the morning service. A _cordial invitation is extended:to all. TRINITY CHURCH. Rev. E. J.H. Van Deerlin, rector. . Seventh Sunday after Trinity. .\Sunday school 12:30 p. m.; evensong and sermon at 7:30 p.m. Seats free, All welcome ST. CANICE. CATHOLIC CHURCH. Mass will be celebrated in the Catholic Church at 8 and 10:30 o’clock am. On the lowing Sunday, July . 26th, mass wf peat in Cherokee at 10:30 o’clodk a:m. i METHODIST CHURCH. Rev. John Rich of Oakland wil! preach at llam. The Pastor, Rev. W. ©. Gray, will preach at 7:30 p. m. Sub. ject for the evening sermon, “Superstition.” The Epworth League at 6:30 p m. led by Mrs. D. Pecarty. Junior League at 5:15. Class meeting at 9:30 a.m. John Tamblyn leader. Sunday School at 12:30, Martin Thomas, supera See . Harriet Beecher Stow’s Last Letter. cause he gave-his seat in a street car to alady. The excessive heat and having to stand in a cramped position are supposed to have caused heart failure. This is a very occurrence, but would have been even sadder ifthe lady had lost her life through having to stand while men were seated around her. The Woinen Have It. Four of the free : silver men from Utah sent-the. Democratic Convention as alternates, are Mormon women. ie Wwomen in Utah have the right to vote and as the Mormons have in their church a plethora of women, they are likely to
rule the State for man y years to come. ¢ BORN. At N. evada City, July 18th, to the wife of Henry Hartung, a daughter. Is what gives Hood’s Sarsaparilla ite great popularity, its constantly increasing). cales, and enables it to accomplish ito wonderful and unequalled cures. The combination, proportion and process used in preparing Hood’s Sarsaparilla are unknown to other medicines, and ‘make Hood’s Sarsaparilla Peculiar to Itself It cures a wide range of diseases because of its power asa blood purifier. It acts dirdctly and positively upon the blood, and the blood reaches every nook and corner of the human system. Thus all sho nerves, rhuscles, bones and tissues { HTS only a few days . before her death, was a loving acknowl edgment to the public for fond remem‘bances and tokens and expressions of affectionate esteem, on her 85th birthday, which ‘she sent to the Ladies’, Home Journal. In the next issue of; this journal it will be published in fac} ‘simile. It reflects the beautiful nature of the gifted authoress, and by her come under the beneficent influence of Hoods Sarsaparilla The One True Blood Purifier, $1 per bottle. Lost death has become her last message to! ! fist, while I made a grab ror the gun, / which I had set up against a willow ' tree under the bank. ; we rushed into each other’s arms and . remedial use by placing benches for Hoods. Pills iis casy operate tse . beheld oo July 15th. An old fashioned locket. “Finder . ihiatenaeaibiiadmamin PROVIDENC. ‘AN A PISTOL. RatherRemarkable Story Which Carries 2 Moral Teaching. A half dozen‘or so men were sitting out in front of an uptown hotel~ the other evening telling stories, and a Star reporter was taking them all in with an avidity peculiar to his class. ; “When I was 21,” said a tail man, evi. dently from a southern state, “I bad-an ungovernable temper and a half-vrother threé years older than myself. We were both church members, but that didn’t seem to bring us any closer together, for he was a Methodist and 1 was a Baptist. You may have ob; served,” he threw in as a decoration to the story, “that Christian charity and brotherly love don’t always thrive on denominational feed. However, as I was: saying, we were of different denominations, and we got along fairly well together until we began arguing on our respective faiths. Then we got hot, and I always lost my tempér. I may say that he did very nearly the same, but he wasn’t quite as bad as I was in that rega~d. “One day we were out hunting with only one gun, a squirrel. guu, between I may add here . that. we lived on a farm, and a one-gup . hunting party was not at al) unusual. . We hud sat-down ona rock near the . edge of a stream to rest, and in some . way 1 slipped and went inta the water. when he began chaffing me and telling . me that a Baptist-ought to be used to little thing like that, I got ten times worse and hit him a lick in the face. . He ran off a few yards and picked upa . howlder about as large as your double “Of course, we did not know what we were doing by this time; only I remember of telling him if he raised his hand to throw the stone I'd shoot him. He was nervy, though, and I hadn't more than got the words out of my mouth than he let the bowlder come at. me, and, true to my word, I banged. away at him. We weren’t 40 feet apart, and it wasa stand-off between the bowlder and the buliet as to which was the more dangerous, but Providence, I reckon, was watching over us, for, as I fired, the bowlder flew into a dozen pieces, and both of us were left standing looking at each other in a dazed, helpless way. Then, still not understanding what had happened, but realizing how nearly our tempers had brought.us to bloodshed, began crying over each other. ‘“When-we had -gotover the excitement and collected our wits sufficiently to make an investigation, we discovered that by the merest chance—by Providential interference, I mean—my bullet and his bowlder had met in their flight and nullified each other. On one piece of the broken stone we found the blue . mark of the bullet, and in another place . we found the battered bullet. He took . the bulletand t took the piece of marked stone, and we have kept them to thie day, as sacred souvenirs, and’ as very aiineaiat THE GREAT . MONEY QUESTION. ked by different Bankers of the United States, “What without re?” “The nok man steps in and asks, “What is Life bo ree money He says money is what talks nowadays.2 That’s what we say. With money you . To prove this: pay irom: 4 eames tatsre the Fourth was a great success. We sold our stoo, h, and as we do not want to close our stores we had to buy more. orWe had an opportunity in San. Francisco last week to buy $10,000 Worth of Goods ——AT——_ ee . 40 Cents on the Dollar, the dollar. They are now arriving, and we will of Sopenkien and marking. -Don’t rush us for a few days. everything ready to wait on‘all_ promptly. 4 the We'll soon hark These goods are not a bankrupt or shelf-worn stock. iets THEY’RE ALL NEW. This time of the year the wholesalers close out their sammer goods, and that’s how we. got in.We bought the : . GENTS’ FURNISHING GOODS FROM Neustadter Bros., Corner Pine and Sansome Streets. United Shirt & Collar Co., 25 to 27 Sansome Street. M. Franklin & Bro., 25 to 27 Battery Street. , Lowenburg & Co., 24 to 26 Sansome Street. W. Cohen, Hirsch & Co., 8 to 5 Battery Street. MEN’S and BOYS’ CLOTHING FROM Mandel, Pursch & Wiener, 125 to 127 Sansome Street.m Hoffman, Rothschild & Co., 2 Battery Street. BOOTS and SHOES FROM Cahn, Nicklesburg & Co., 129 to 181 Sansome Street. A.L. Bryan Shoe Co., 310 Market Street. HATS-FROM-——— Sry I. J. Friedlander & Co. 21 to 28 Battery Street. We bought for spot cash and must-sell.on the same terms. We want you all to come. You know what your money did be: with others: See what it will do now with ok, f cove see Bonrtt L. HYMAN & CO.,~ Commercial st., near Main, Nevada City. potent reminders never to discuss our . respective beliefs, I’m just as strong a Baptist as ever, and he is equally a . Methodist, but we both believe that . greater than ¢ither Baptist or Method. ist is‘the Providence that watches over us all.”--Washington Star. Se . DANGER IN EXCESS OF EXERCISE People May Overexert. Themselves and . Defeat Their Purpose. } Housework, chores, gardening, walk' ing, climbing, cycling, running, swim. ming and many other sports give just . the kind of exercise that. is indicated in certain conditious, due regard. being . had to the physiologic effects of vary--. ing dosage. Oertel has shown how the . simple exercise of walking may be . adapted to sufferers from cardiac de: } bility by prescribing the distance and } speed and the number and length of . the rests on definite paths graduated . according to their slope. His interesting and original work has not only . given a new direction to the treatment . of certain cardiac affections, but is des. tined to have an important influence in . establishing accuracy in the prescription of exercise. Whoever has studied the map of the environs of Reichenhali, Ravaria, prepared by Oertel for the ap. plication of his method, will acquire a. . vivid idea of what precision of dosing in . exercise means. In this map the dif. . ferent paths suitable for the work are . marked in four different colors, to indi cate those that are-nearly level, those . slightly sloping, moderately sloping, . and steep, and figtires are placed along . cach* route to show the space that . should be traversed in each quarter . hour. : ise j The locality itself is prepared for its . resting at suitable distances, and by . marking on certain trees near the path . circles, colored to correspond with the } map, to indicate the difficulty of thai. . certain section. By systematic practice . on the easier paths, the heart and Sys. tem are progressively trained and . strengthened. Intelligent analysis may do the same work for eycling, horseback riding and many other familiar exercises, In this way the dosage is practically reduced toa definitenumber . of kilogrammeters in a given time, and & step has been taken in placing the j prescription of exercise upon a scien. 8 basis.—Appleton’s Science Month. . vy. : A Singular Coincidence. ~ A gentleman from the north was . Spending a few days in Houston. He . Was stopping with a leading citizen . whose acquaintance he had made. ‘As . they entered the house, the stranger “Haven't you got any old relics of the Texas revolution?’ “Allow me to introduce you to my mother-in-law,” responded the Houston man, as the old lady, the widow of a Texas veteran, entered the room.—Dallas (Tex.) Sifter. t ni —_—_— i\Chicken” F . . Are Permanent z will be rewarded by returning to Mrs. M, F. Craig, Prospect Hill, 5 > -lw_ } Don’t be misled by untruthful advertising. Come to us f : have three stores and the largest stock ms county. One prise tan ae Country orders promptly filled. Goods delivered free in city limits. jy13 HAPPIEST . MOMENTS Are when his feet are under the dining table, -wnd he’s seated on acomfortable dining chair, So many people have no good dining chairs. Thave so many. Let’s get together. . They are so low in price you can afford a set. Jt’s Foo Hot to Cook This warm weather. If you get a can of Tongue Chipped Beef Soused Mackerel Vienna Sausage ie ee ___ Dried Herring aS You Won't Have to Cook! They are all ready for the table. If you want something nice to go with them, try ‘BUD. WEISER BEER, that fine CLEAR Easte: that is sold by ” tag A B. WOLF, The Cash Grocer, Commercial street, ~ = oie Nevada City PHOTOGRAPES. «= . PHILIP HILD Has opened a sh on Broad street, next door above Mrs. Hockin “gee yeene rs Hooklng’s Variety Storer ad I BOOTS AND SHOES New Management. . The UHTON HOTEL BARBER SHO? Popular} a FIRST<cLaas BER BAR ra Tata See ea ot rote fn lt ent twice a week of the : MADE BY MOORE Pleasing jofthe you PRICES as Low as Possible For FIRST-CLASS Work. g Will recive ; Lenoeen = ‘Call and see my fine display, . at ve your order ~ MOORE, York s, Nevada Giy. is Money We took advantage of it and made the buy. We propose to sell these Bo0ds tore rs fone to San ] Alex McLe arned from : . Superinten J. A. Derr own from N Mrs. J. M.¥ jpanish mine rad ley. 4 ‘Miss Esth Vashing ton t Coon Gris is home witl round again. (Oal R. Clar an Francise ife will mak fiss Suset ght on her” irs. “Wm. ] m a trip led the ne or of Nat ree. Coo y left tod: wn east.” montl ither We i¢ hinson, pt up to t . Mr. Wa it he prope The Di burglar idence of i, about x ch dog si h for the f king his es PHE RB is mc the countr, j together, PS. Wag SU Re creat 1 anced it a nt, pronou: } proven ¢ diseas stitutiona: h Cure, 1 0 ey & Co. titutiona: taken inte ips to a tea ‘the blood : i