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Page: of 4

The Daily Transcript.
No. 32 ives Sree’ Nevada City, Cal
CIRCULATES IN
Grass Valley, Rough & Ready,
Spenceville North San Juan, French Corral, Sweetiand, North Bloomfield, Moore's
Fiat, Graniteville, Truckee, and every other town of Nevada county; also in Placer
and Sierra counties, at: Sacramento, San
Francisco—in fact, throughout the State
‘from Siskiyou to San Diego* from the Sien ; erra to the Sea.”
Sevada Cit,
THURSDAY. DEO. 27, 1888.
a ns —— —_
LATE NEWS.
Virginia City has many idle men.
The Treasury surplus now amounts
MUTILATED EARS,
pen * ‘
Cruci Panishments of the Olden Time
Any mutilation of the ear which involves the loss ofa portion or all of it
has always been a mark of disgrace. In
one of the statutes of Edward VI, the
penalty affixed for its violation is the
“loss of an ear and perpetual infamy.”
Inthose days the celluloid ear had not
been invented and the loss of one of the ,,
members was @ public badge of sham? for
life. co
Following the retributive law 0”; \foges,
probably the punishment ovitinated in
the ecclesiastical courts. 1% is first mentioned in the trials of offenses against the
church and some of the enrless clericals
were noted men. The sentence td the
pillory frequently had theadditional punishment of the loss of one or both ears
added, ~ ~ ;
Daniel Fooe, or Foe, laterin life known
as Daniel Defoe, wrote a pamphlet called
soe “The Shortest Way with the Dissenters,”
~ ahaa” ne raul bbed a . #24 lost his ears. Pope, in his ‘Dunciad,”
Thieves at Spokane Falls robbed 4) . ) oaks of the author of “Robinson Crugambling den of $1,500. sue’: ‘Earless on high stood unabashed
: Douglass Matthews cut three men at si pel nae : : 4
we Kings City with a knife. e was placed in the pillory three times.
i The Union Pacific switchmen are Sar poner roe ag on a raised platstill on astrike at Denver. Dr. Bastwick,~ who published more
Yuba City boasts of twenty-cight pag ames ns ar seg pi one of
valti hia va Ss essays : “From plague, pestieer a = a oles i Grant’s. Jenee 824 famine, from bishops, priests
olonel James F. Casey, Grant's) and deacons, good Lord deliver us.” This
brother-in-law, died Suriday. ‘was so-serious an affront that the doctor
Three earthquake shocks were felt. was sentenced to the pillory and to lose
at Le Roy, N. Y., on Saturday. both his ears. <i» ;
iove Moonlight estimates the The execation of his sentence was w
exverngy a 8 cat ‘© . ‘sert of public fete. His friends gathered
population of Wyoming at 55,500. before the pillory and shouted words of
Miss Emma Holman was fearfully . encouragement. Hisrwife climbed upon
injured by a neighbor’s dog at Albany, the pillory and kissed him, When his
Or i ears were cut off ‘‘she put them in a clean
: Beis " handkerchief”’ and carried them home,
Charles Bassett of Penryn attempt: The celebrated Prynne suffered a simied to murder two people and then cut} lar punishment. sau ,
his throat. . » The names of lesser criminals have
: miter cs, ‘en, . escaped the permanent records but
_— photographers = = — Blackstone mentions a number of early
have combined to keep up prices to a English Parliamentary enactments makuniform scale. ing the loss of anearapenaltyinlaw. ~
5 i ; Kilrain is willing to fight Sullivan Fighting in a church or churchyard, by
Rt for $20,000 or $25,000 aside and the acts passed during the fifth and sixth
’ championship.
with laudanum,— :
Christ’s Episcopal Church +a
Sunday. Loss, $260,000.
They were six months on the road.
Pasadena were washed out and blowr
over by a furious storm last Saturday
son were murdered and then
Pa.
Mrs. Setwig,who lives near Halifax,
Pa., died from prostration caused by
having thirteen teeth extracted at
once. ;
Secretary Whitney has receivéd dispatches from Admiral Luce~-annonncing the surrender of tie Haytian Republic.
The ‘Sod House” from Nebraska
has never been presented to General
Harrison, and will be sold to pay
freight.
A spirited contest over the will of
the. late Charles T. Perry of Stockton
has been instituted by astern heirs.
———~-—"'he property 13 worth $16,000.
The happiest man in Lake county
is an editor of one of the weekly papers.
He can begin the new year with $1000
cash in bank and a clean set of books.
Hermansville, a lumber town in
D. H. Howard of Fresno, aged 70
years, suicided at Merced Saturday
Orange, N. J., was destroyed by _firé
A party of immigrants from Kansas
arrived at Riverside last Thursday.
Several handsome shade trees in
Mrs, John Priestly and her grandburned in an incendiary fire at Forest City,
oan
. width of twenty-five feet.
a }
Michigan, was destroyed by fire Saturday. It is very cold there, and the
suffering of the ‘490 inhabitants is
great.
John Warner,aged 18, had a quarrel
with hisfather near Wilkesbarre, Pa.,
Saturday, and shot and killed him.
At San Bernardino, Satarday, Wm.
Graham in an undertaker’s shop took
a drink of embalming fluid, thinking
it was beer. He died in great agony.
John Ricketts of Temecula, San
Diego county, has been missing for
some days. He was last.seenat Los
Angeles going into a meeting of the
Salvation Army, with $215 in coin in
his pockets.
Samuel Hutchinson of Ritzville,
Wash., is 8 feet tall and comes from
a family remarkable for their stature.
His father and brothers are nearly as
tall as himself, while two sisters are
over 6 feet,
William Garber, a miner at the
‘Mount Raymond claim, Mariposa
county, was killed last week by a
snow-slide not far from the wine.
He was missing four days before his
body was found.
The new City Council at Oukland,
Oregon, has dealt a fatal blow to the
saloons by fixing the annual retail
liquor license at $5,000, and, the
license for selling liquor in quanities,
from a pint upward, at $2,500.
The words and figures: ‘‘Warning
—7—77,”’ were pasted on the doors of
seven different places in Butte, Mont.,
last Wednesday night, and are supposed to mean that the Vigilance Committee has organized again.
A dispatch from Phoenix, A. T., referring to the new Harqua Hala mines,
says: , Ifthe splendid output which
has been recently made continues, -it
will be the richest thing ever uncovered, excepting the Big Bonanza of the
Comstock lode at Virginia, Nev.
A suit for water rights pending for
about twenty-one years between ranchers along the course of Reese River in
Lander county, Nevada, was concluded last week and decided in favor of
Dyer, the plaintiff. The cost of
litigation exceeds $20,000 more than
the property of both litigants is worth.
The success of deep working of New
Mexico mines is pronounced in every
instance where the exploration has
been conducted toa depth. As an example the Solitaire vein on the’ ground
of the. North Homestake mine at
White Oaks was two and a half inches
in width on the surface, while at the
_BBO-foot level itis being stoped for a
——————————
et Hood’s Sarsaparilla
wantan honest, reliable medied to be “‘about the same” or “just
story:
years ofthe reign of) Edward VI, meant
the loss of, both ears. If the prisoner had
no ears—which implies that there were
habitual criminals 850 years ago—he was
to be branded with the letter F in the
cheek. eee ie ae .
In the second and third-years of the
‘same monarch combination among victualers and artificers to raise the price of
provisions or the rate of labor, for the
third offense were punished by the pillory
and the loss ofanear,. The statute not
only extended to the combinations to
raise wages but to regulate the quantity
, . of work or to lessen the hours of labor.
In later years the loss of an ear or part
of one has also been regarded as implying
disgrace. One of the favorite ways of
mutilating an enemy in a rough and
tumble fight is to bite off his ear. In disreputable brawls and in low resorts brute
instinct makes ear mutilation a fit revenge for almost any wrong. Pa, at
Jack Slade, a notorious desperado, in a
fit of rage is said to have cut off the ears
of a man he had murdered. He kept
them in his pocket and boastfully exhibited them when in a drunken and dangerous mood. .
When he saw on the poker table a
stake he wanted particularly Jack played
the ears. Flinging them on the table they
beat four aces ora straight flush, for
Jack had a pistol in each hand the next
instant. He always took the pot on the
play. cae arahaets .
SOMETHING TO BE THANKFUL FOR.
t
A Deathbed Scene in a Military Hospita
« Nurses in hospitals are rather apt t!
lay too much stress on the advantages received by the patients and their duty of
thankfulness, but still tt is the poor soldier who suffers the most from always
having his causesto be grateful flung in
his teeth. Witness the following true
——
Chaplain—"‘So poor Hopkins is dead, I
should have liked to speak to him once
again, and soothe his last moments; why
didn’t you call me?’’ :
Hospital orderly—‘I didn’t think you
ought to be disturbed for ’Opkins, sir, so
Ijust soothed him as best I could. myself.” : '
Chaplain—*Why, what did you say to
him?” pes
Orderly—‘' ’Opkins,’ sez I, ‘You’r mortal bad.’ co
p ‘Lam,’ sez ’e, ~~~
i ‘"Opkins,’ sez I, ‘I don’t think you'll
get better.’ ; :
“§No? sez ’e. Sap
} “ ©Opkins,’ sez I, ‘you’re going fast.’
“ *YVes,’ sez 'e. -¢
“ “Opkins,’ sez I,‘I don’t think you can
Tope to goto ’eaven.” @
4 ‘* ‘I don’t think I can,’ sez ’e.
' *Well, then, ’Opkins,’ sez I, ‘you’ll go
to ’ell.’ as
“**T suppose so,’ sez ’e. —
' *©Opkins,’ sez I, ‘you ought to be
wery grateful as there’s a place perwided
for you, and that you’ve got somewhere
to go,’ andI think ’e ’eard, sir, and then
%e died.’’—London Hospital.cecemengeens OF
.ADUIRING THES BABY.
“— —* ‘ :
Whe Ze Said and What Is Thought. *
For the benefit of those who are at a
loss to know just what to say on seeing a
new baby for the first time, and who
naturally feel that they must say something, we give the following list of expressions, any and all of which are commonly used, there being no patent or
copyright on them. «=
Whether you shall offer to kiss the infant dependssomewhat onits age and appearance, ‘and the extent to which you
are willing to sacrifice yourself in order
to please the baby’s mamma. The baby
itself doesn’t care a picayune for your
feelings or your kisses, but you are expected to say: anys
What acuning little thing! ~
Bright-eyed little chap, isn’t he?
Why, how large he is!
1 don’t think I ever saw so young a
child look around so. . ¢
How much does it weigh?
What lovely, silky hair!
Looks ever so much like you! *
What arosebuddy of a mouth!
Do let me see his toes!
How very wie it seems!
I really believe the little thing. understands every word we say!
, Ob, what-a splendid big boy he is}
_ Ob, what a dangly little girl she is! »
' Any of the above will please the ordinary mamma. Itisat your own risk
that you speak the truth and say: 55
Ugh! What a horrid, red, wrinkled
little thing it is!
It simply doesn’t look like anything!
Oh, what a big, fat, ugly thing!
I wouldn’t touch it for all the world! ~
Ugh! Isuppose I must kiss it, but I
hate to,—Time, 7
A Philosophicag Probiem.
. Ina recent number of the Medical News
whose professional eminence is an unqualified indorsement of the accuracy of
his observation, in which he writes:
' “I remember being joltcd over the
crossings ia a baby wagon by a nurse,cad
resolving to tell of her as soon as I could
speck’?In reading the above it occurred to us
that it would not be amiss to eck the
writer how ho knew that thero was cuch
athing cs 5 h and that he would ever
be able to exorcizo thet faculty.—Sclence.
\SPINSTERS “aNp BACHELORS.
saa ind wi ontures Sugring from Matt.
lated Natures. ~.
aie fr wt the “Glorified Spinster,” we desto think her glorified at all.
he {s simply a woman wholives amore
or less unnatural life of self-dependence
—the deyrco.of the annaturalness depending on tuedegrce of her selfulependence
atl tls completcness of the disappearancoof that religious devoutness which
prevents loneliness from degenerating
into e:if-dependence—just as a glorified
) ply aren who lives a more or. less unna
turall. » of anxiety for Limecif, instead
of fe: others on behalf of whom his
orarcs tonet.
There 13 no glorification in any kind of
Mutilation, and it Is as much amntilation of the feminine nature to live the
self-cependert lifo without the power of
conslaslly catering into the feelings and
wauts cl others, as it is a mutilation of
the t x:culine nature to live alife of selfdercn .::ce in which there is no large
eleme. : cf conrtant responsibility for the
external nececsi:ies of fellow-creatures.—
London Spectator.
The Underlying Fact. '
An Albany lady tells of an abnormally
bright boy in Amsterdam who called at
the hoy © of an aurt, where he felt at liberty (oco about as he pleased:
‘core were somo beautiful oranges in
sight, The lady had evidently forgotten
that boys areaiways bungry and did not
offer him one; perheps ske had forgotten
that thers were any. in the house.
Tko young visitor concludéd that something would have to is lone and said:
“‘Auntic, please give mo an orange.’’
She told him that she hadn’t any oranges, to vhich he promptly replied:
You ist*
Fricutened_to think how it sounded
he rau hoze and told his mother, who
immediately sent him back to apologize.
The young man improved matters by
saying:
“Auntie, I am very sorry for what I
said to you, but—but, auntie, you did
e.”’—Aioany Journal. ~~
Take the Fair Standpoint.
4 A little gi-] acted her mother this question: ‘‘Mar:ma,what makes all the people
werc-‘ houses from somean? Whydon't
you re-S a house from a good man sometimes?’
Had she been the daughter of a landlord
, She provcvly would have asked:
“\,latmisles the people you rent
hous:3 to so mean? Why don’t you
somé@t: cs rent a liouse toa good man?’
Pec.13 look ct things in the light of
their ¢-~:fort -a.1 convenicz¢ce, and not in
the light of truth and riglt. As George
12'ot say~, “They translate their conveni ace into otter people’s duties,””—Louisviile Kecorver,
00D AS GOLD !!
— 9 -—-—
GRAND
appeared a note from a correspondent . ‘
BANKAUP? SALE
0
THE ENTIRE STOCK OF
Household Furnitur . ;
Notice.
will du ihe work in A Nu, 1 shape.
di9-1
All parties having furs they desire
to have dressed and made into rugs
or robes will"do well to send them to
Camer & Drabee of Quaker Hill, who
Grass and Clover Seeds at Weisen
' burger Brothers’. d8-1m
toilet adjunct.
w
FREE CANDY.
mature . Box-ef “Choice French Candy,
Exec,
Coffees.
Will Get
EXTRA DOUBLE PRESENTS,
EXTRA DOUBLE TICKETS,
EXTRA FINE TEAS,
EXTRA CHOICE COFFEES,
EXTRA LOW PRICES,
—AND A—
Our China, Crocker
Departments are brimful of
Commercial St., Nevada City.
Wholesale House—52, 51—Market Stre
vee San Francisco, Cal.
sell all others.
With our Delicious Teas and
Every person comine direct to our Store
Bax of Pure French Uandv Free.
and Fancy Goods
Choice Bargains.
Give us a trialand judge for yourself.
GREAT AMERICAN IMPORTIG TEA CO,,
ith 40 Stores, we are enabled to Lee
15
erat. 2 dase!
Silk Handkerchiefe,
Mufflers,
Suspenders,
Neckwear,
—AT—
Miller's Clothing Emporium,
BROAD STREET,
et—
pany so that Sal
Shells,
FRESH EAST
THERE ARE COOL
"At the Old andfWell-known stand
J,S. HOLBROOK Pine St. Nevaga City.
TIMES COMING .
—~OF-4
A. Tam,on Pine Sst.
ww fiaving a very large stoc’« of CHRISTMAS CANDIES on hand, and wishing to keep up with the progress
of the’ age, and being of a generous disposition and determined not to be outdone by any firm in ‘town, I am now
making arrangements with the Great ‘Tea Shipping ComPersons buying 50 cents worth of French Canty
WILL BE PRESENTED WITH A POUND OF FINE 1EA.
lalso have a Prize Raffle, corsisting of 60 chances, at 50 cts,
a'chance. Each packagescontains aiprize. The: lucky :“nmber
draws a Winchester Rifle, model of ’86, calibre 40-82. together
with apparatus for're-loading shells; also a quantity of Loaded
[ ako Give Meals’at all hours at this Restaurant
AND ALWAYSSKEEP ON HANDI:
ERN OYSTERS.
&
a AP
NMiattresses,
Spring Beds
Carpets,
CHRISTMAS. NEW YEAR'S
—AND THE.
Pears’ Soap is the most. elegant
canpy, {lirand Holiday Display
Ciraud Holiday: Sale !!)Bae: ONE, COME: ALL AND GET A
CLOTHING AND OVERCOATS,
NEVADA CITY.
Mirrors, Etc.,
Recently owned hy L. M. Suke"
forth and purchased at Sheriff's Sale by the undersigned.
BEHOLD THE BARGAINS !
Bedroom Sets reduced from $115 to
$85.
Bedroom Sets reduced from $40 to
$30. :
Carpets, per yard, reduced
$1.25 to $1. }
Carpets, per yard, reduced from $1
to 75 cents,
Parlor Sets, reduced from $60 to $40.
Bed Lounges, reduced from $30 to
Hair Mattresses, reduced from $20
to $15.
Spring Beds, reduced from $13 to $7.
Willow Kockers, reduced from $12
to $9.
Kattan Rockers, reduced from $9 to
$6
from
Wall Papér, Half Price.
Picture Frames, Half Price.
Mirrors, Half Price.
Bird Cages, Half Price.
Fine Rugs, Two-thirds Price.
Aud Evervthing Else at Equally
Low Prices.
The Goods will be
Sold Without Reserve !
Most of the Stock is New
AND IN STYLE,
REMEMBER THE PLACE:
Sakeforth's Old Stand
COMMERCIAL STREET,
(Near Pine,)
NEVADA CIE esis ae sees
EGG NIAN
PROPRIETORS.
TA OSES WEAR raion
CAL.
A Blacksmith Wanted
For a mine, who has had experience with machine drills
Foundry, Nevada City. 4
‘and at general mining work. ©
Apply .at Geo. G. Allan’s .
In Plush Goods--Mtl
JEWEL CASES,
WORK BOXES,
Juvenile Holiday Books, at
body.
little ones want.
who éntrust the selection to us.
t
ae
There is no getting around it.
Season every little Boy and Girl, all the larger
Girls, and particularly the Young Ladies, MUST
HAVE SOMETHING NICE. In order that all may be
accommodated we have laid in THE LARGEST, FINEST
AND MOST VARIED STOCk OF HOLIDAY GOODS to be had in
the County, consisting in part“of the following}:
SHADES AND COLORS-LADIES’ AND GENTLEMEN’S
DRESSING CASES,
HOLIDAYS ARE COMING! .
—— 00 ~—— —
At the Holiday
COMBINATION CASES‘
ODOR CASES,
SHAVING SETS,
HANDKERCHIEF AND GLOVE BOXES,
COLLAR AND CUFF BOXES,
CARD SETS, BABY SETS, Etc., Ete.
IN BOOSES.
We have a Large and carefully selected line of
Miscellaneous, Works of Travel, Biography,
Fiction, Poems, as wellasa Fine Assortment of
prices to suit everyIN ALBUMS,
We have a large assortment of Fine Phototograph Albums in new shades and styles. Also,}
a full line of Autograph and Scrap Albums.
IN TOYS,
We have a carefully selected line of what the
Particular attention will be given to orders from, “up
country,” and the utmost care taken to select for those
Palace Drug Store, ~
Cor. Pine & Commercial sts.,
Nevada
———
FORTHE HOLIDAYS)“ en oF
: WI? a . _
“=z EXave vne Tl
Seen
Largest and Best Assertment
oe tal
et
: a0) ae . + = The
f 80
CROCKERY, peo
. 7. with
— : We want money just as soon as it can be gathered oe “y ht
CHINA . willing buyers. : y ne
AND A LITTLE SACRIFICE IS NECESSAR . te
pe lowest Prices Yet Name _ the
FANCY GoopDs For Goods that are always desirable and above reproach. ng
e y 1 Ld e al 2
tn this atarket. — . Clothing, Gents Furnishing Goots, Bools, Shoes se
‘ Rubber Oil Goods, Trunks, Satchels, Etc., is
They are Direct From Eastern At positive and unmistakable Bargains. We feel we ae boa
Factories and will be sold . offer something worthy the attention of every shrewd buy The 2
‘er.
j the sc
oS TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THIS ! ne cise 4 _
Son Francisco Prices ! THERE 1S SOMETHING IN IT FOR “SZ coun & dy a9 &
dul US «. . BR e Fi ee
HYMAN OS., cay
cS COR. BROAD AND PINE 8TS., NEVADA OITY. a sles!
I have also on handaFull Line of — . Wholesale Houses--San Francisco, New York and Honolulu,
ba
:
eorsaor A
;
.Guns, Pistols, Mp 6 } Jewet
Shelf Hardware, I Hi } IN WEEK (NLY : thi
St , Paints,
:
:
sei ROSENBERG BROS. will sell for. this week 4-Buttat
Sportsmen's Materials, . ton Kid Gloves, Embroideted back, at Fifty Cents a
Sects, Windows; pair. Any one purchasing a pair of these Gloves 1s en~
lron, Steel, Leather, titled to a Chromo.
nee
Leather Shoe —— : ease, i
Findings. : : : : So
\ nes ace {
ce FOR THIS WEEK OMY . i
Water-and Steam Fittings, ". Any one purchasing Five Dollars worth of Goods meee
Brass and Rubbe:, Goods, at the os ssa!
Chain Rope, Nuts,
suffere
Bclts and Washers, PALACE DRY GOODS pac ; agp
And a Full Line of Is entitled to a Handsome Framed Engraved Chromo ‘ a :
. “18 ; er’s fal
I: . t 14x18. ah, %
: vale
Louse. Mill Mining Remember, before purchasing anything for Christmas peat
eos i: . call at the after i.
6 3
And Farming Materia, PALACE DRY GOODS STORE. =
; The Cheapest Place in Town. ba . eet ee
¥ ed toc
F Ff T » ROSENBERG.BROS. \ es
ig ounci
60. 5 Urner, P. S.—-Gent’s, Ladies and Children’s Linen and Silk a . pees
57, 59 and 61 Ping Street, Handkerchiefs a specialty. sae
° eset ae orc omer penne a 4 {
Nevada City 4 circle of
: ae ast : x ; ster
RAND BALL! } SANTA CLAUS HEADQUARTERS ! .
ae a _— The Ni
AT York ho
= ? laborat
faa Evosenthal’s yang
Commercial Street. ° Pans
‘ nothing ¢
@ stantials ¢
not provi
Union ba
‘TO BE GIVEN BY ad mene
P house tool
1 ; ity to hav
mere nomi
Laurel Parlor, No.6 ack Ay oVy
dinners,
: I have just received a Magnificent Stock of : _
N. D. Cc. Ww. 2 .
‘ EXoc iliday Go‘iods, ce The follc
ye es : —CONSISTING OF— : ed in thes
Toys, Novelties, Picture and Scrap Books, Work Boxes;*~. he
% Dressing Cases, Christmas Cards, Paperteries, Altis
: bums, Picture Frames, Dolls, Wagons, WheelJ qd lf ar Of, barrows, Velocipedes, Drums, Etc., Etc. Estate of
Have also Just Received a Lot of fiery
No. 56 FINE MEERSCHAUM GOODS, Estate of
‘ ’ Gena —EMBRACING— Same ofder
enuine Meerschaum Pipes, Cigar and Cigarette Holde’s ett : an
N.S. G. W., , CHOICE CONFECTIONERY AND NUT3. cade fie.
full Line’of the Finest Ciga ‘as
ae OALL AND SEE THE BEAUTIFUL HOLIDAY. “ase pase :
Orders from the Gouatry Promptly Attended To. All Goods Sold Oheap. Peter O'B
EMIL ROSE s d 3
ARMORY HALL, NEVADA CITY . __ meee ma tori
noel ge ee ee aan EE Bloomfield.
ae : a hard drin!
— ON G's . pees
Ux THE PLACE TO BUY CHRISTMAS PRESENTS, 3s) fh ™
\ b ( ¢ ie
( HVA (i ip . cers ihe : ‘ Py Turk
Monday Eve'v, Dee, 31 << a
jae ‘ re \ and Saturda;
= LUETJE & BRAND,
day sete
: Broad Streat..3.
: : Pecarty’s Te
Fl SLOOR MANAGRRS (0c le ee ee above Pine, Nevada City, _— —
Miss Alice H. Crawiond, ; OFFER FOR SALE A LARGE AND BEAUTIFUL STOOK OF ‘THE
FLOGR COMMITYEE: } y } \ aeons (QLD. AND SILVER WATCHES, DIAMONDS, imac
Miss Cora Clark,
Miss Clara Baruh,
Miss Jennie Marsh,
Mirs Bell Rolfe,
F, W. Bost,
J. M. Hussey,
E. A, Tompkins,
W. T. Morgan,
M. M. Baruh.
,_ OF Music byiGoyne’s Full Orchestra.
Grand March at 9 o'clock sharp.
Admission—Gentiemantiand Two !Ladies. $1.50,
Callery—Ladies 25 Cents, Gent , i
50 Cents. poms
ee
The Public is Cordially Invited,
Optical Goods, Bracelets, Breastpins,
JEWELRY OF ALL KINDS SET IN DIAMONDS,
Rubies, Turquoise, Garnets,
EMERALDS,
Amethysts, Sapphires,
Quartz and Other Precious Stones,
—o—
FINE SOLID SILVER AND PLATED WARE,
—o——
We make Home Made Jewelr
tee 18) Carats Fine
ya Specialty, which we guaran—— o——
OF Weare selling
our beauti .
California, utifal stock Cheaper than any other. Store in ~>s,
a
y place in Nevada
Spectacles, E
This is the onl
Watches, Jewelry,
‘Free of Charge,
City where you can get Reliab
ye and Opera Glasses, Ete, Engraving don
a
What is tl
bodies of wat
. ica, Hudson ]
ville Sound
The first is
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