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Sacramento daily record-union (Sacramento, Calif.)...

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SACRAMENTO DAILY RECORD-UNION. SKK»_S_?.?» Brara^ : ' I__.--©. »_<-. WAILI ltlldlilt-__.U__B-TOL._JU V.—NO. 4591. SACRAMENTO, MONDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 26, 1881. DMI.V KECOKD I'M-- SERIES. Y01.r.-_. M'.-iiEU __>... LAST NIGHT'S DISPATCHES [SPECIAL TOTHE RECORD - ION.J I _-T _/ ..7-" -- \u25a0-, 1 - i.i. - \u2666 .-I \u25a0. -' * PACIFIC 00 AST POSTAL CHANCES. How the Murderer of the President Passed Christmas. TERRIBLE DEEDS OF BLOOD REPORTED. An Indiana Town Destroyed . by a Con- flagration. 7?7_y>- -ISCELLA-.OUS ITEMS jOF FOREIGN NEWS. Women Trampled . to . Death in a London \u25a0 S .: - ; .•- Church. a :.. 7-7.. CM...... ........Ete Etc. DOMESTIC NEWS. Postal Changes for the Pacific Coa _. Washington, December 25th.— The fol- lowingPacific coast postal changes were made during the week ending; December 24th: Offices I established Port Costa, Contra Costa county, Cal., John P. Jones, Postmas- ter ; Alkali, Wasco county, Oregon, Elijah W. 'Rhea,- Postmaster.-' Postmasters ap- pointed—Stephen G. Gregg, Big Pine, Inyo county, Cal.; James Beard, Buckeye, Shasta county, Cal.; William Rust, Green Valley, El Dorado county, Cal; D. C. Feely, Patch- in, Santa Clara county, 1 Cal.; . Thos. W. Adams. San Dieguito, San Diego county, Cal ; Mrs. Louis M. Simon, Scott river, Siskiyou . county, Cal.; ' Wm. '- H." Knight, Sugar Pine, Tuolumne county, Cal.; Geo. T. Odell, Bullion ville, Lincoln county, Nev.; Wm. P. Samms, Alder, Union county, Or.; Chas. H.Beach, -house, Josephine county, Or.; Wm. Gallinghouse, Monroe, Benton county, Or.; Martha Helines, Columbia, Klikitat county, W. _.; David W. Anderson, Gillett, Yavapai county, Arizona. . Discon- tinuedEl Rio, San Diego county, Cal. Expenses of President Garlic-Id's Illness. i Washington, December 25th.—It is under- stood that when the House committee to audit the expenses of the illness and funeral of Garfield meets after recess, Marshal Henry willgo before the committee and ask, in the name of Mrs. Garfield, that Dr. Boynton and Mrs. Susan Edson be included in the distribu- tion of the awards to the physicians, and that Stewart Crump .and other attendant, shall also receive proper recognition. This will be urged, on grouted* that they did much to mitigate the President's sutferitg. in his last days. c .- ... .yyy^; Prospects of a Conviction. ; Washikgto-, December 25th. A lawyer long skilled in watching juries, who has been present throughout the Guiteau trial, pre- dicts that the jury will convict. | He says from hi* study of their faces he thinks that for . a time after the trial began, they were nearly equally divided, but he now thinks they are a unit, and would find a verdict of guilty if the case ehould close to-morrow. -Vol a Body . <r -ir.t of --ashing. on. P_____i__ia,' December 25th.—Daniel Webster, a well-known colored man, believed to have been the oldest person in Philadel- phia, died to-day at the age of 105 years. ' He was born inMaryland, and owned by Colonel Joshua Webster, who was killed in the war of 1812. Daniel accompanied his master on his last campaign, and brought his body bark to Maryland, for which service the dead man's wife gave him his freedom. He came to Philadelphia in 1857. ' Daniel was a famous exhorter, and was well known in all - parts of the city. . His faculties were unimpaired to the last, and until a recent stroke of paralysis that caused his death, he was in ' the habit of boasting that he had never been sick in his life. He leaves eight son 3 and daughters, fifty-seven grand-children and sixty-three great grand-child-. en, the majority of whom ret ids in Mar) land. ; Anolli-r Murder at Omaha. Omaha, December 25tb. Another murder was committed in this city this morning abut 3 o'clock, Oscar Hammer, a bartender at Treit. dike's saloon, a popular resort, being the victim. ' Ha_,iner had h_td some words with two young men— Kenniston and Charles Rotters and was standing on the doorstep fef the saloon talkirg to them, try- ing to quiet them down and to get them to go home. Suddenly a sharp crack was heard, and the next moment Hammer tumbled backward into the saloon, fellupon the floor and died almost instantly, in the presence cf several men who were inside. He had been struck on the her-.d with come instrument, which inflicted a email wound sn. causing a fracture of the skull." It is thought that ilia weapon used was tha butt-end of a revolver. Kosters and Kenniston immediately disap- peared, probably not being aware of the fatal result. . They were soon afterwards arrested. They are the sons of well-known and respect- able citizens. Kcsters did the striking, and iii.claim will be self-defense. Hammer came hare a few months ajo from Chapin _ G.rres', Chicago, and was quite popular here. { He leaves a wife and child here. osiers snd K.nniston do not bear good reputations, the former being not- 1 , for his quarrelsome dispo- sition when under the influence of liquor. Deed, of .*i<> t.i. ' St. La CIS, December 25th. ALexington, Ky. ; special reports the murder last night in Lexington of John Stevenson by Joe Lawson, who used an English bulldog revolver. 1 Ha escaped. •*, Both were negroes. -.-«'.._-..•- „'{ NtW York, December 25:h. Edward i.opf--, ear : : this morning, killed his wife and then hi_B_f. .; \u25a0 , ABB-ACT) (Ky.),December iV-.—Mr. ard Mrs. J. W. Gibbons, who reside near town, went visiting Friday nigh-, leaving a daugh- ter 14 years old, Miss Emma Thomas, 17 years old, and a eon, Robert Gibbons, at the Gibbons homestead. Dm Friday tight me villains came to the house, outraged both gill", saturated their -thing with oil, set th. house on firs, and killed young Robert Gibbons, who : was attempting to give the alarm.. Allthree of the dead had their heads split open with a hatchet. There is no clue to the murderers. -.o_e thousand dollars re- ward is oflered for their capture. . Gibbons' house was burned to ashe?, only the chimney being left standing. _';. 7_.v>' _ Chattanooga, December 25th.— shoot- i.i . affray at Helenwood seems to have grown ont of a dog fight. ' Pistols were used freely. John Cecil was shot dead, and three West bro'her», W. Smith, and man named Thomp- son were Bhot, probably fatally. The New York Fire. New York, December The los _s by the fire in the United States bonded ware- house, occupied by Moore, Wood & Co., are estimated at between two and three millions of dollars. The principal losers are W. _'. Milton & Co., Wetmoie, Cryder _ Co., F. Garera _ Bros., Antonia G ii.zales, M. _ E. Solomon, whose loss is estimated at $300,000, and Clement, Herdt &Co., whose loss is said to be 8150,000. . -ulfean- Christmas. . Washington, December 25th.— Guiteau spent Christmas very quietly, Few persons are permitted to enter the jail Sundays, and only his brother and sister are allowed to visit the prisoner, . unless hy jauthority of Judge Cox or Scoville. John' W. Guiteau, accompanied by a few acquaintances, called during the day, and had an interview with hi brother. I Late in the afternoon, after these visitors had left, Guiteau partook of a hearty Christmas dinner. - Tha prisoner has prepared aLother statement for publication, which he intimates contains important ant- interesting revelations bearing on his case. For ithe wants $ICO. ... r -iiltr-jiii and the Prisoner's Dock. New Yobk, December 25*J_.—The Trib- une's Washington special says : _ Counsel for the prosecution; will to-morrow insist that Judge Cox decide upon the motion to place Guiteau in the prisoner s dock. Death. : .,; 7". . *7"' - New Yobk, December 25th.—John Ter- ville Evans, President of the Mutual Union Telegraph Company, '; died -1 at . the ' Gilsey House in this city this morning. ".,"*,, '7 ; '. Fear Mrs Drowned. GLOCCESTEEt (Mass ), December . 25tb. Henry Burke, John Haye-i, Archie McDon- ald and Darnard Glenn, out in dories Friday, were lost in a gale. >..,"..-.- Eleven Barnes ' Swamped and a Captain Drovrnrd. \u25a0 •-- .',- Nbw York. December. 25th. During the gale Thursday night the tugboat T. Walsh became disabled, and eleven ' of the fourteen barges in tow ware swamped. Capt. Wicks was drowned. }.. .'.- ? -7'Tfcei___»__Tl_„. 777 _\u25a0 Niw Yobk, December Midnight.— Therm-meter— 45°, lowest 29*. \u25a0 . -'. * Chicago, December . 25th. Maximum, 41.8; minimum, 34.7 ; mm daily bawmtter, 30.120 ; mean daily thermometer, 39.7 ; mean daily humidity, 70 7. , Another Infliction- A " -n-.-i-jou-plrnse" Again. - _. KW Y °, BK * Dec3 mbe' 2_h-A. -.-About _\u0084(_.- people assembed ia the American Insti- tute Kink to-night, to witness the beginning of the six day go-as-you-please walking match for the championship of the world. At 12 o'clock the following started : Frank Hart, Fred Krohne, Harry Howard, Patrick Fitz- gerald, Ben Curran, John Cox. John Ennis, R. Lacouse, A. Klson, D. J. Hertz, P. Ed- wards, A. P. Curtis, M. Noremac, M. Walde and B. Gettings. At12:30, Curtis had scored four miles and three laps, Cox second, Fitz gerald third. < All the men were on the track, and a few laps behind the leader. Prizes aggregating $3,000 will be awarded ; a's- > a silver cup to the first man, provided be covers 500 miles. .;-,. An Indiana Town in Flames. - Si'll.va- (Ind.),' December 26"h— A.M.— At10:30 to-night a fire broke out in the no tion store cf Iv >lli: Brothers.. The fire department of Terre Haute left on a special train at 11 o'clock. - ''- \u25a0' \u25a0 I At this writing(1A. v.) the whole west rids of the square, consisting of twenty-five build- ings, is destroyed, and the fire is still spread- ing with great rapidity. .' : •\u25a0> ._.--;-. ;-". ; .:J , FOUEIG-. * Colli— of Yefcstl.— -Ine Hen Drowned. li geek-Tow}*, December 25th.— While the steamer Catalonia was on her way out of Queen-town harbor to-day she ran into the hark Helenslee, Captain Barry, from San Francisco for Queenstown. The Helenslee sank, and nine of her crew were drowned, the remaining sixteen being saved by the Cata- lonia. The latter had her bows stove in. \ Bcqnc-ed to Move. t London, December 25th.— The Persian Government has requested Ayoob Khan, the Afghan chief, now residing at Ghazn, either to quit Persia or go to Meshed. Panic In a Chore*. Twelve -'omen : Trampled to Death. -,-.;.-. London, December 25th. During the celebration of high mass in the Church of the Holy Cros«, a man was seized while picking pockets, In order to effect his escape the culprit cried "Fire !" and immediately a great panic seized the congregation, who rushed or the doors. Daring the confusion twelve women were crushed to death and forty other persons were Feriously injured The pickpocket was scundly beaten by the crowd. ; The culprit is a Jew. The lower classes of the people are much excited against the Hebrews, several of whom have been mal- treated and hid the windows of their dwell- ings broken. { The military had to be called out. A later dispatch state." : So far thirty p?r- sor.s have died of their injuries received dur- ing the panic in the church. Four shops kept by Jews were completely gutted, and several policemen injured by the rioters. The authorities displayed great promptitude in repressing the disorder. The military are now patroling the C-Sturbed quarters. Pardon Granted. Constantinople, December 25th. Through the influence of the British Consul- General here, and some influential friends, a pardon has been granted (''Donovan, the cor- respondent sentenced to six months' impris- onment for speaking in abusive terms of tbe Sultan. O'Donovan leaves the city to-mor- row. Another Plot Against the C__r. .'. St. Petersburg, December 25th. A plot has been discovered for assassinating the Czar in Karavanian street, which it was expected he would traverse while proceeding from the palace to the Michael Riding School, on the occasion of the recent tournament there. A En-Inn City Destroyed by Nihilists. Vienna, December 25th. A telegram from St. Petersburg reports that the whole naval port of Cronstadt is on fire. One quarter of the town is reported as already destroyed. The loss is enormous. The fire is believed to be the work of Nihilists. _ - A Governor who Should be Knonted. London, December 25th. According to intelligence from St. Petersburg, great indig- nation prevails there at the reprehensible con- duct of the President of the administration of Eastern Siberia, who refused to telegraph the announcement of the arrival, of the sur- vivors of the Jeannette because they were without funds.' The first news of their escape was consequently delayed ten weeks. Gladstone and the ' Mormon-, : London, December 25tb. Gladstone,' re- plying to a correspondent who had called at- tention to the fact th.t bands of Mormon missionaries vi-t Great Britain annually, de- coying thousands ef young persons to a life of immorality in Utah, and inquiring if the Government could not do something to pre- vent the .-.'_'\u25a0, says he fears it is net a matter in which he cm interfere, as it is to be pre. umed that the young persons go vol- untarily. . : ; !.*!; j'- \u25a0:\u25a0.. -; ' The English Rody-. Hatching Case. London, December 25th. The police have obtained an important clue in the case of the stealing of the body of the Earl of Crawford and Balcarres. They expect to make an arrest shortly. . •- . \u25a0 . Mysterious. —A " mysterious incident " is said to have happened the other day in Washington's favorite room in the old man- sion at Mount Vernon. In the room are many relics of Washington, including an old round-faced, peculiarly shaped clock, which has stood in silence for forty years. Only two or three rusty wheels are left in it. On the afternson of November Kith J. McH. Hollingsworth, Superintendent of the Mount Vernon Association, was show- ing the relics to a party of visitors.- He came to the old clock. . " Thi3 clock," said he when to his astonishment and terror, " three strong, distinct - strokes " were stiuck upon the bell of the clock, and were heard by all in : the party. Mr. Hollings- worth " was overcome with emotion," and requested the vieitors to lea T e the room. Ho conl-J not understand the phenomena. The clock, he said, had not been disturbed in the twelve years that he had been Super- intendent of the grounds. It is open iv the back, and one can see, he said, that the works are broken and only a few of the wheels remain in position. The whole thing was a mystery to him. The details of this occurrence are given by J. W. Buel," in a letter to the St. Louis Republican, and " this story," he says, " is not a sensation, " but a fact." Ifhe or Mr. Hollingsworth could master the courage examine the an- cient timepiece, it would probably be found that the mysterious striking wa_ du_ to the breaking of some spring cr wheel. -7 A Confused Juror. During the admin- istration of Hon.' John Schley, Judge of the MiddleCircuit of Georgia, one day, in the trial of a case on the common law docket before a petit jury, in which Charles J. Jenkins and Quintilian Skrine were op- posing sides, a juror, after the conclusion of Mr. Jenkins's argument, and the intro- duction of Mr. Skrine's, suddenly rose, left the box and rushed out of the court house. Being brought back, to the Court's indig- nant, demand why he hid taken such a liberty he answered : "Well, now, Jedge, I'll jes' tell you how it is. IJieerd Mr. Jenkins's speech, and he made out the case so plain that I done made up my mind. And . then Mr. Skrine he got up, and he went intirely on the back track, he did, and he were gettin' my mind all confused up like ; and I jes' thought, as for me, I better leave ont well he got through. Well, now, Jedj-e. jes' to tell you the plain truth, 1 didn't like the way the argiment was a-gtvine." ' .'-.' ; 77 \u25a0 "- . Pearls. In France a pearl costing SIC is now imita'ed for 50 cento or %1, and so successfully as to be sold at the price of the genu : ne article to any one not a verita- ble expert-, and even the latter class are often puzzled. The artificial . pearl, , how- ever, is simply a glass bead or globe, which is first : coated en the inside with a glue made of parchment, then treated with a peculiar so-called "essence," after which it is filled with wax.' l The essence is the ohtef pearly ingredient, and is obtained by rubbing together white-fish, so as to remove the scales ; ' the *. whole iis then strain through linen and left to deposit its sedi- ment, which is the essence in question.". ' It requires about 17,000 fish to produce a pound of the peaily essence. 1 7 -"What do you mean by disturbing me at this hour of the night ." said an Austin doctor, angrily, to a negro who woke him at 3 o'clock in the morning. " I jess al- lowed, , boas, i dat . yer . was _ so ' busy ' yer didn't hab time ter 'tend ter poor folk* in der day time, so I 'lowed I'd jew drap in after sapper,"— [Texas Sif tings. A BURIED FOREST. A correspondent of . the Wilmington Morning Newt . writes to that journal as follows : ... Cypress Swamp, in the lower end of this State, is a place cf interest at any time. In the fall, however, when the little at- tractiveness with which summer clothes it, has become the withered leaves lof | fall time, its wide acres are positively dismal. Last week I wandered over a portion of it. With the consoling thought that snakes and other creeping things, with which the soft turf abounds, were beginning to lose interest | in things human, I gave freedom j to my inclinations and had a tolerably good time. The rain of the two weeks previous had extinguished the last smoking embers of j the fire that had been burning through the summer and the atmosphere was free of the stifling -moke that a month or two before had hung heavily above the tree tops. These fires occur frequently, and. are caused by the carelessness of some one. The peculiar nature ot Oppress Swamp at these times is better understood. For ten or . fifteen feet below the surface the devour* ing element burrows, finding everywhere material upon which to feed. The soil is j but decayed vegetable matter accumulated I through centuries. Sometimes these fires ' insiduously eat their way beneath the fields of corn which grow here and there on the edge of the swamp,'- and frequently the rural inhabitant, upon waking in the morn- ing, sees these fields scalloped with holes big enough insome places to comfortably - take in his granary. : -\u25a0 . §_ The swamp is a mystery. At a time, with : regard to which even tradition ia silent, it was a basin. A basin of consid- •' erable width and breadth, for the Indiana had cat on its bottom, fed apon oysters and clams, and indolently smoked pipes in the shade of the cypress. The, shell stratum i found in - many. places proves this. The cypress which had shaded these aboriginal epicures many centuries ago, now lie, or did years ago, before the shingle hunter came . into the swamp, a fallen j forest, with - fifteen feet of swamp and acres of trees of another age growing thrifty above it. The swamp is an alluvial deposit. In its depths creeks of Indian River Bay find source, and the waters, dark with the Boakings of vegetable matter, . are carried by these on the one side into the Atlantic ocean, and by the Pccomoke river on the other side into the Chesapeake bay. The theory is that the streams of water which arc- now mere creeks were the channels up which ele- ments in the process of gradual formation weie carried and deposited. The forest of cypress timber gradually gave way un- til the trees became completely buried. This matter, which in time filled up the basin, has served to preserve the cypress. Very fewof them, however, now lieburied ; for almost a century shingle hunters have thrived in the swamp. Among the many things of interest I saw were the cabins of. these men. I The shingle hunting industry is now al- most extinct. Those engaged in the busi- ness would go into the swamps and work there lor weeks. Indry weather, such as that of last cummer, the soil of the . swamp would crack in many places, and with the instinct which I experience gave, the hunters would hunt for these fissures. Every crack indicated the spot where was buried cypress timber. The sign rarely failed. After the tree had been recur rected then the " rivers" would come, and in a very short time the once buried trunk would be converted into a large pile of shingles, which were then more profitable than now. Almost all the old buildings in Sussex county are roofed with these, and many thousands were shipped to the other States. This being before the time of railroads the shingles were carted to Milford and other towns on neighboring steamers, and thence shipped to dealers in large cities. Nothing now remains of this once lucrative business but the cabins in the swamp and the gray -haired rustics living hereabout who made their dollars in this way. _'-..".;, Old men around Lewes, Georgetown arid Frank ford have shot deer in the swamp, and many stories are told of phenomenally cold winters when bears were forced to the edges of civilization for food, and how babies had to be tied in their cradles to keep them from crawling into the mouth of a famishing beast on the door-step. The swamp is about live miles square. It formerly belonged to General Dags- worthy, an old revolutionary patriot, and strong personal friend of General Washing- ton. During the years subsequent to Dags- worthy's death, the property was divided and subdivided, until now the acres of numbers of farmers extend into its depth. By this division much of it has been re- claimed. In a few years, by tbe system of drainage which several farmers have intro- duced, more of it will be open to cultiva- tion, and eventually all vestige of the swamp will disappear. NEWSPAPER WAIFS. \\ A scientific man says great noises will make milk.cur. They will also make the average citizen pretty sour, especially if they come at night when he wants to sleep. [Boston Toot. " You appear to have a constitutional antipathy to water," said an unspotted humanitarian to a rum-rosy tramp. " No," returned the latter, "itisn't constitutional, it's accidental." "Strange! How did you come to . have such an aversion to water?" "Easy enough; I had two sons drowned ia it." [Brooklyn Ragle. A Poor, ft er Ft-ret-car horse shot out with his heels the other day, and hit the driver with one and the cash-box with the other, and an investigation showed that he had kick.d six dollars into the driver overcoat pocket. Such wonderful sagacity on the part of the horse caused the dis- charge of the driver. [Detroit Free l'resp. The Morning Poet, the journal of the To- ries and the aristocracy, speaks of " the lato Dr. J. G. Gilbert, editor of Scribner's Mag. azine." A German weekly paper published here does not get much nearer it, printing Dr. G. Howell, editor." Thus have the Dutch taken Holland. —[Detroit Free Press. An advertisement in a Berlin paper an- nounces that "a young noblewoman, having a large fortune and holdings distin- guished position, who is as lovely as Helen, as good a housekeeper as Penelope, as economical as the Elect ress Marianne of Brandenburg, and as spirituelle as Mme. de Stael, who sings like Jenny Lind, and dances like Cento, plays the . piano like Rosa Kastner, and the harp Ike Bertram], bit who is as austere as Lucre having no masculine acquaintances, seek, a hus- band." - 7.7 I_r__U__l__ Rr.Llf- Several interest- ing relics of Louis XVI., collected by his faithful body servant Clery, and at present in the possession of Clery'e grandchildren, are now on view in Paris. -Among t_err_ is an autograph letter addressed by Marie Antoinette to the' Count de Provence afterward Louis XVlll.— and inclosing a ring confided to Clery by the "Son -of St. Louis " on the fatal morning of ] the 21st of January, 1"! 13, for transmission to, her Majesty. The letter runs as follow., in literal translation: "Having at length found the . means of ' consigning to ' our brother one of the few trifling pledges left to us by him whom we all loved and be- wail,'! deemed that it, would give yon great pleasure to : possess . anything that belonged .to him. Keep it as a symbol of my closest friendship, with which, and with all my heart l embraoa yon. \u25a0_- M. A.",. Three articles of clothing worn hy the un- fortunate . little - Dauphin,*"" Louis .' XVII., during the earlier period of his imprison- ment a green silken coat and a jacket and trousers of striped silk are also exhibited.". These were . secreted ' by Clery when the ' "Child of France" was transferred to the Temple, : where, clothed ?in .sordid rags, half 1 starved, and brutally jill-treat ed by » | merciless ;. taskmaster, he - dragged lon a '? miserable existence . fori nearly 1 two ' years I and a half from the date of his royal father's death oa th* scaffold. THE DAILY RECORD-UNION. ____ at thePost Office at Sacramento as second class matter ' " TV-BUSHED BT THS Sacramento Publishing Company. *___. a. ILLS, _•____ Mauser. ... ____<__on ©a Third st, hat. a -__. -_. THS BAITYEECO-1. T-lO- »»___\u25a0-__ __7 day of the week, Sundays oxaamtal. »_o_eje_.... .- ••- J JJ Vot ilx months. - -J 2 nr idmonth-. \u0084 \u0084 * jjj -To-thxee ______ _. _ * "JJ 9o_ <—(,!_ one jeat, to »____ \u25a0" \u25a0 Subscriber, ferred by Carrier* _ _W_j_W<W_ «-__- per week. Inall Interior due* and town* the Mper can be had of the principal Periodical _____ _____n and Agents. - -tvd.ertla.--K Kates to Dally tteeoret-tlmloa. One Square, 1time ,-... .'..f| 00 Sne Square, - time* 1 « un Squara. J -line*. w - £- Bach addition- tin* i _ 1 Week. 1 Weeks. 1 Month Mat* Square, litpage *- 50 ft 60 »5 00 half Square, 34 page 3 CO 6 80 8 00 Half Square, 3d pace 100 - CO 8 00 Half Square, 4th page 100 100 4 00 One Square, Ist pace. 3 GO 100 TOO One Square, it pure 00 TOO WOO One Square. 3d page 4 00 6 00 8 00 One Square. 4th page 3 00 4 00 8 00 Star Notice*, to follow reading matter, twenty- ___. a line for each Insert \u25b2d___ ementaof Situation* Wanted, House* to Let, -octet? Meetings, etc., of fivelinks oa less, will be inserted inthe Dailt E-.coaD-Ci.io_i a* follow*: \u25a0 Onetime ....25 cent* Three time* ..SO cent* _-. week \u0084..18c ent* Saras word* to constitute a Una. _ . , . i THE WEEKLY r_l _ [Pablished in ml-weekly pa ___, 1. f_— ed on W .(.nf-' and Saturday of each wee _, fioft^ __-_.{- Eight I'-tf* h in each i. _-u_. nrSixteen Paget «„'u we t. and Is the cheapest and most _as_r._lo Horn-, Sews and Literary Journal published on th* |>cfc_>ocat. \u25a0\u25a0-." \u25a0-- -^ -i .' v _r__ou,Ouo Tear... .fl 50 f_ ml . -lily Cclon AdTerUxlne Hates. Half Square, 1time $1 GO Kachaddltional time SO One Square, .time. , 2 00 additional time 100 j BUTTS, SEEDS ANDPRODUCT. FRUIT DEALERS, ___ Tiosr I HAVING REMOVED TO MORE COMMODIOUS premises, we have enlarged our stock. . We offer you choice Apples, free from worms. Lemons, Limes, Oranges, Dried Fruits, Nuts, Dates, Canned Goods, etc., at very low prices. - - M. T. BREWER _ CO., 1006 to 1010 Second street, between J and X,Sacra. niento. \u25a0 d22-tf A. MOOSSR. :.,.•' - 8. OSR80». 8. __-S- V A CO., . GENERAL COMMISSION MERCHANTS, AND Dealers in -.-..<• •-= \u25a0- ' <yy- Imported and Domestic Fruits, Vegeta- : hies, Nnta, Etc, . No. 220 J street, between Second and Third, Sacra- mento. -. \u25a0 ...- \u25a0..- .' ... \u25a0 . d2-lm \u25a0-- D. DKBBR&ARDI. /AS. SAU—LI. i D. DEBERNARDI &CO, WUOLEIALB 00UMI8SI0S -__t_KS IS Batter, Eggs, Poultry, Vegetables, Pratt. Fish and General Prod*-*. \u25a0\u25a0 . n27 -Iplm W. R. STRONG & CO., Wholesale ; Commission Merchants ASD DBALKKB IK ALL KINDS OF CA_IFO__IAGKE__ AND DBIEDFECIT. NUTS, HONEY, SEED ' : And General Merchandise. tWAllorders promptly attended to. Address : . W. R. STKONG & CO., nB-lplm Noa. 6. 8 and 10 J street, Bacramento ETON A BASSE-, COMMISSION MERCHANTS AND DEALERS IS Prodnce, Vegetable*, Batter, Eggs, Cheese, Poultry, Green and DryFruits, Honey, Beans, etc . ALFALFA SEED. . tW Potatoes in car-load lots or less. - 023-Iptf . Nos. 21 and 23 3 street. OAKS IAQI-S. HAiINESS, ETC L. C MONTK HIT. _ a. C. INK. a. A. VAN VOORIIIES. A. A. VAN VOORHIES &CO. (Successors to R. STONE _ CO.), | 322 AND 324 \ J STREET, 7-. IMPORTERS, MANUFACTURERS AND fi-fll Jobber, of all kinds of £k___E2__ Saddlery and Carriage Hardware, LEATHEB AND SHOE FI-Dl_«_, 7 . \u25a0 . - ~ -_">-— - , . CARRIAGE TRIMMINGS. Keep constantly on hand a full stock of imported and domestic Harness, Saddles, Collars, etc. I Our manufactures warranted unsurpassed by any house on the ci _ . , _oliu CARRIAGES Nevada Crand Gold Hedala for 1376, 1817, 1-. . 1839 ana IS. I. , EIGHT GOLD AND EIGHT SILVER MEDALS, 118 First Class Premiums for tbo best __k from tho Mechanic-. Fair, S.n Frandsco, and tbe different State Fairs held inthis State and Nevada. EW One of my Buggies is worth Six Cheap Eastern Buggies. / , * ... ." HARRY BERNARD, MANUFACTURER, COR. SIXTH AND L SIREET?, 77^_4__A_.E-TO. | ; £ST I hare on hand and for sale ft. the lowest possible prices, the new style of POXY PH AETO"_v the handsomeet in the State. ~ ' Family Can 'age* , late?, patterns. Neatest Open .._r?ie3 in the State. Light Top Bui^ie.. Heavy Top Buggies for moun- lain use. Farm re" Carriages. Trotting "rragO-8 and Sulkies, all of my own make. C_ria_i Paint- ingand Trimo. done at the lowest price. Note but the most experienced workmen employed Repairing neatly done, and all work is warranted Call at the Factory and see for vourt-'f. d! -lot. PIKE & YOUNG, 7 CARRIAGE MANUFACTUR- __» . ers, corner of Fourth and . _. streets, Sacramento, have on r, i:^7y^?Pssc^- hand the largest assortment of Q>*'^£!l_2^ * Carriages, Wagons and Buggies to be found in Smn. mento, which they will sell at very low rates. nIS-J JOHP- T. STOLL, i j&g& . :"*.T-. g: IH . M:' : :7^ " 7g «\u25a0 *_ £ J; •"i"j*s=__.i_k.* k --—^--^-f_2~=! SJs_!_aE "iH S \u25a0-\u25a0% ' I vi I g_o^s&ig_i___s?r___m s v - §«s ____IW- =_"* _«£ \u25a0 ygmss? - I \u25a0» »** 'x'"_^mT.. ;_ i * g * mmmj m 2 IP_S__W/ - f" o « Vt'.f £ < , .-\u25a0-!-_- •\u25a0• ;'S» ' "'"\u25a0'.•-• I : "'.: v Jy. Iptl -.7.. \u25a0 '-'>_-^-i p»_ai«j_ij_..--_i_j_j^g i ' l y m pl A DELICIOUS DRINK _^i_} 'or Use in Families, Ilotcls, !-S_ Clubs, Picnics, Parties, etc, C H. GRAVES A StJHS. The "Hub Punch" has lately been introduced, j and meet* with marked popular favor. ' -.*- Xt is Warranted to Contain only the BEST ' of liquors, United trith Choice Fruit -V, Juices and Granulated Sugar, -- It isready enopening, and will be found an art*--*- ' able addition to the choice things of the table I . which nodeniabl/ enlanre the pleasure*- of life and I encourage good fellow_nip and good nature. * - GOOD AT ALL TIMES. .. Jnit the Thine to Keep In "Wine Cellar*. . Sideboard, not complete —it— ont It,, . ' , It ranhe used Clear, or trith Fine lee, Soda, V Hot or .'old Water, Lemonade, Tea, or \u25a0 ' y Fresh 'Milk, to Suit the Taste. y . Sold byleading -Wine Merchant*, __-•_, Ho__ and mtmmata ta eyerjwhere. •- -*-.-. \u25a0 - y~~-'' . 1 C. H. OKA. <_ SO-.S, .-o.ton, ____. Trade anpplied at Mn_n___._ primby . \u25a0y(-:. _!_____ a HAKKMOH, AgenUlor Paoifie Coast, Saa Trtnoitea, Cat _H___H_M-H___H_HHH_BH_P \u25a0 SAN n._y.cisoo : CABDS. | SAN FRANCISCO ;7 Business Directory ARTISTS. : Ilonscwnrth Optician and Photographer, No. 1> Montgomery street. Established in 18-1. ARTISTS' MATERIALS, ETC Sanborne, Tall A Importers and Manufact- urers of Mirrors, Moldings and Frames, Chromos, Engravings, Brackets, \u25a0 Easels, Statuary t and Artists' Materials, No. 857 Market street. BUSINESS COLLEGES. Hcald's Business College (of the Bryant A Stratum Chain of Colleges). E. P. HEALD and F. \u25a0 _. WOODBURY, Proprietors, No. 24 Poet street, near Kearny, S. F., CaL Terms .-$4O per quarter, payable in 30 days. -.-.. •-•-..- ••: - . Pacific Business College and Telegraphic Institute—(Life Scholarship, for full Business Course, *70). W. E. Chamberlain, Jr., and T. A. Robinson, Pioprietors, No. 320 Poet street, oppo- site Union Square, S. F., Cal. . Send for Circulars. y._ CLOTHIERS, ETC. '77^ a. W. Carmany (successorto Carmany _ Crosettt), Dealer in Shirts and Men's Furnishing Goods. Shirts made to order a specialty. ~ No. 25 Kearny street, between Market and Post. . DRY GOODS. The White Honse— The oldest Dry Goods House in San Francisco. We import direct from thf principal marts in Europe, consequently can sell lower than any other house in the trade. Country orders attended to. I J. W. Davidson & Co., Nos. 101 and 103 Kearny street. San Francisco. DRUGS, CHEMICALS. A. F. Downing A Son— Wholesale Dealers in Druggists' and Proprietary Specialties, No. It Second street. Grand Hotel Building., Justin Gates.— Pioneer Druggist, removed to 722 Montgomery street. Country orders solicited EDUCATIONAL. '\u25a0 y£__'. School of Practical, Civil. Mechanical and Mining Engineering, Surveying, Drawing and As saying, 24 Poet st. A. Van der Naillen, Principal. The Berkeley Gymnasium— - First-class Academical Institution, affords a Classical, Literary, Scientific or^Businees * Education. For catalogues or particulars, address JOHN F. BURKIS, Superintendent, Berkeley, Cal \u25a0-_.<.;- - 77>__-l-__-_-; , _ '-^: Herrmann, The natter— No. 336 Kearny street, - near Pine. The finest bats at the lowest prioee. Factory : No. 17 Belden street. :y- - HARDWARE, IRON, STEEL, ETC. Harcns C. Hawley A Co.—lmportrrs of Hard- ware and Agricultural Implements, Nos 301, 303, 305, 307 and 309 Market street, San Francisco. Carolan. Cory A Co.— lm_>rte_ of Hardware, Iron and SteeL Agents for the Pittsburg Steel Works, Northwestern Horse Nail Co., and South ington Cutlery Co. Noa. 120 and 122 Front street, and Nos. 117 and 119 California street. Will A Importing and Manufacturing Cutlers and Bell hangers, No. 769 Market street. METALS, STOVES, RANGES, ETC, W. W. Montague A Co.—lmporters of Stoves, Ranges and Sheet Iron, Marbleized Mantels, Grates and Tiles. Manufacturers of Plain, Japanned and Stamped Tinware. Noa. 110 112, 114, 116 and 118 Battery street. l_-LLINER_". ,7;7-_i The Bandbox- The popular Millinery Establish- ment. B. S. Ifirsch * Co., No. 743 Market street . Strict attention to orJers from the interior . TEA IMPORTERS. M-gftled at B___-_l-t_- -*_ 210 California street. P. O. Box 2,133. -. \u25a0 . ;' y ;"_: :RESTAURANTS. 7. ;? 7 (ampi's Original Italian Hot..urant has reopened under the management of H. Giimboni, Cainpi's former partner. Nos. .31and S3 _aj St., near Montgomery. Everything first .sa. Swain _ Family Bakery' and !__!»g Saloon— No. 626 Market street. Wedding __:.•«, .- ice cream, oysters, Jellies, etc., constantly onhand. Families Bupplied. RUBBER AND OIL GOODS. The Gntta Perrlia and Itnbber Sfannfnct- tiring >_,_— Manufacturers of Rubber Good. of every description. Patentees of the celebrate? " Maltese Cross Brand" Carbolized Hose. Corner First and Market streets. J. W. Taylor, Manager. Davis AKellogg- Manufacturers of Cape Ann Oiled Clothing, Hats, Covers, etc. Importer, aud Deale-s in Rubber Boots and Woolen Goods . No. 34 Calif ami* street. \ STATIONERS, PRINTERS, ETC. H. 8. Crocker A Importing and Manufact uringStationers, Printers an.l Lithncraphers, Nos ' 215. 217 and 219 Bush street, above Sansome. > WHOLESALE GROCERS. -"oilman, Peck A Co.— Importers and Whole- sale Grocers and De.lers in Tobacco arid Cigars, .Nos. 126 to 132 Market, and No. 23 California. . ; Taber, narker «- Importers and Wholeeali Grocers, Noe. 108 and 10 California street, t ?:_ i-. SACRAMENTO REGORO-UNION. San Francisco Office, No. 531 California street.— J. H. Sharp-, Agent. HOTELS AND SE-STAU&AM'B. MISSISSIPPI KITCHEN. OT..TE.- AND CHOP HOUSE, Third Strr? t, Between J and X, . "VTFJ-T POOR TO RECORD-UNION -£&«%. \u25a0_- - office. Open day ami night. g_§\ C3^\ /A. J. SENATZ, Pioprietcr. V_/ «*_# !•..','... . d!94plm •:'.;\u25a0: GOLDEN EAGLE HOTEL, CORNER SEVENTH AND X STREETS, SAC ramento. asa in every respect. The Large--, Finest and Best- Ventilated Hotel inthe city. BATES— *3, ?2 50 and 82 per day, according _ room. Free Bus to and from the Hotel. J. McNASSEit (late of Denver), di-4plm - Proprietor. HOTEL LANG .AM, yM /""IORNER FOURTH AND L STREETS, SACRA meuto first-class, on the European plan. Free coach rom Railroad Depot. Fine sample room. . dl 4plm 7>.' . - TERRY _ CO., Managers. 7 UNION HOTEL. SECOND AND X STREETS, SACRAMENTO, Cal. Rooms, 60 cents and $1 per day. Special rates by the mouth. Billiards, choice liquors anil cigars. Hot lunch daily from 11 A. v. tili 2r. a. W. O. ("JOE") BOWERS, ,r . dl-.plm Pronri STATE HOUSE, Corner Tenth and X streets, Sacramento. H ELDRED, PROPRIETOR— Board and lodg- a lng at the most reasonable rates. I Bar an. billiard rooms attached. Street cars pass the dooi every fiveminntes. .KB" Free omnibus to and from the House, nlB-4nln A Q. GRIFFITHS, tQ. GRIFFITHS. PE-E_!. ' _______ mm Sc|yHrM PI-NUT- CA_. S£§£yi||i rT.H_ BEST VARIETY ANI _SS_r-__ X Largest Quarries on th. Pacific C__ Polished Granite Monuments, Tomb- stones and Tablets ma to order, \u25a0tones, etc '• Granite Building Stone - _ Cut, -atasA and _"*—- -.-.«. -...: - - 011.1._n EDW. OAOWALADER. 7 OFFICE, CORNER TUl_O and J STREETS ; residence, corner Tenth aid N streets, Sacn. mento, CaL : > ff - ' Notary Public. .-. ' .. .. : ' United States Commissioner. Commissioner of Deeds for the state- and Ten- tories, and Conveyancer. Particular attention pud to taking depositions. *- .'• "***\u25a0 \u25a0_\u25a0;.. .** _\.' r*m_t a.-a Deeds, Mortgages, Wills. Leases, Contracts, etc.' drawn and acttrtnmt^v -\. .- \u25a0:.\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 ;\u25a0•-- . , rf_.tr - \u25a0:; \\y, "CLIPPER COAL I" OrnCß WIT- ' LTO - * BARNES. NOS. 1.3 and IM i street hroirta dlt Aplm* s 7__ECH__NIOS' STOBE. v - -, For Advertisement of WEIN- STOCK & LUBIN, see Second Page. It will be changed daily. HALE BROS. & 00. TWO WEEKS AGO We announced that Our Buyer had shipped us from| the East a Large and Varied Assortment of -. : -'\u25a0".\u25a0 "' : ":':'\u25a0"\u25a0 -"•.'"'- '. '. '.". ':\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0 :/' ' -", ___T C> "ITUS __Ha ___\u25a0 31 ___ S§3 \u25a0 777 \u25a0 - ; : FOR THE HOLIDAY TRADE ! These Goods have now arrived, and have been placed upon our Counters. As it is a positive u *e with our House that we never carry our Goods from one season to another, we have '_ marked these NOVELTIES at prices that must insure a Clearance of the Entire Stock BEFORE JANUARY Ist. _HA.lS^_O-K_E_RC-E_CI-E ! Line. Hem-stitched 12*, 20, 25, 35, 40 and 50 cents Linen Hemstitched (Embroidered) 20, 25, 35, 50 and 75 cents Linen Hem-stitched (Colored Borders) 12i, 20, 35 and 50 cents Linen Hem-stitched (Initialed) •_•••'••.• '. 12£ to 50 cents We have also a fine line of HANDKERCHIEFS INFANCY BOXES, each contain- ing half-a-dozen, at prices from 75 cents to §4 per box. IN SILK HANDKERCHIEFS FOR LADIES AND GENTLEMEN, we have a large assortment of Plain and Brocaded, at prices from 50 cents to $2 50. .... \u0084 ... . . ___ LADIES' L_>. ECIK. WIE ____.!_ ! SILK , TIES, in Spanish, French, Brabants, Languedoc and other Laces, from 25 cento to $3 50. 77 MULL TIES (Embroidered and Lice Trimmed) from 25 cents to $2 50. FANS ! F A.3ST S ! FANS ! A large variety in SATIN, FEATHER-TIPPED, HAND-PAINTED, etc., from 50 cents to 85. TETLOW'S PERFUMEEY ! In the various popular EXTRACTS, in fancy boxes. * ". . 3 f I .' \u25a0 \u25a0 ' "yy. *_ ~ "~ ~ ~* ~ Gr loves ! Grloves! G-loves ! Full, line of GENUINE FOSTER, CENTEMERI, ALEXANDER, etc. Also, _______ and FUR -TOPPED. [Purses and Satchels ! LADIES' LEATHER SATCHELS and PURSES, in all.the latest -hapes and sizes. " JEWELEY! Finest Quality Triple-rolled Plate. Also, Celluloid in Bracelets, Scarf Pins, Ear , Drops, Cuff Pins, Finger Rings, Watch Chains, Shirt Studs, Sleeve Buttons, Lockets, Charms, etc. ' 7* -.-\u25a0\u25a0^7 V , _.:...-. \u25a0 \u25a0 Ifcfil .... .. . - Gr ents' N^eck^vear .! " SHIELD" SCARFS, inSilk, Satin and Velvet, for 25, 35, 40, 50, C 5, "5 cent., $1 and 51 25. ' ?" i- .' Ti;7 " "WINDSOR" SCARFS and FOLDED TIES—a large variety. S-_.spend.ers ! In addition to our regular line, we have expressly for the HOLIDAYS, FINE EM- BROIDERED SILK, ELASTIC WEB, at 75 cents, $1, §1 50, $2, §2 50 to $5. "White Shirts! A SPLENDID LINE AT FROM 75 CENTS TO $2. _____________________ Hats i Hats ! Hats . IW EXPRESSLY FOR THE HOLIDAY TRADE. *_» HOSIERY! : English, French and German HOSIERY, in Cotton, Merino and Wool, at allprices. _ SILK DEPAETMENTI Black and Colored , Silks, Black and Colored Brocades, Black and Colored Plushes, Black and Colored Velvets, Black and Colored Satins, Black Surah and Satin de Lyon. tW We would invite the attention of those who would make a Handsome Present, ' to this Department, carrying as we do the LARGEST STOCK OF SILKS IN THE CITY. SPISCIiLZ. ! A Mapificent Line of FINE - SATIN DAMASK TABLE LINENS, with. NAPKINS to match.-' Also, a Splendid Line of REAL FRENCH and ENGLISH MARSEILLES QUILTS. ORDERS BY MAIL PROMPTLY FILLED. HALE BROS. & CO., CORNER OF NINTH AND X STS., SACRAMENTO. WANTED, LOST AND FOUND. Advertisements of five lines In this department are ___-Tted for 25 C— -ta for one time; three times for 50 cents or 75 cents per week. WANT A PURCHASER FOR TnE CAMPI RESTAU- A atreet, completely furnished. In- rant. on X etreet, completely furnished. In- quire of L. C. CHANDLER, No. 227 J street. d2l tf EMPLOYMENT OFFICE. HOUSTON _ CO. .FOURTH AND X STREETS, Sacramento— Fanners requiring plowhands, send in your orders, as we have some first-clas. Western men who understand the work ;also first- class male and female help for hotels and families. Branch office in San Francisco. ' We can procure help suitable at the shortest notice. dls-lptf TO LET 0B FOB S__L__~ Adve_laeo_nU of five lines in thia department are !:!--—_ for 25 cents for one time ; three times for 50 cent, or 75 oents per week. FOR SALE— AGOOD-PAYING SALOON, WELL ' located and doing a good business. Object in selling, going on my ranch. Inquire at EMPIRE SALOON, No. 120 Ii street, between Front and Second. . - d2.-3t* CORNER LOT FOR SALE— A NICE LOT AT A very low price. A good buy for any one wish- ing to build on or to hold as an investment. Inquire of CARL STKOBEL, 321 J street, Sacramento. d£3 -6__wltW FOR RENT -TWO FRONT ROOMS (WITH BAY windows), opposite Capitol. Inquire at this office. --.-\u25a0\u25a0 ' - d2l-lw* FOR SALE—TWO CAR-LOADS OF*. _ 1 large MULES, from St. Louis, Mo. !%«. These Mules have just been brought to JfjP this market by M. BIGGS, Jr. Can be _-l-i/_- -seen at Agricultural Park. dl3-.f ROOMS, lIOOMS, ROOMS— TO RENT CHEAP- er than any house in the city, single or i i suite. Quiet ana homo like. Stove inevery room. Kept first-class in every respect. New building. Everything neat and clean. Also, a few unfurnished rooms. MRS. GUI' E, Proprietress, northeast cor- uer Eighth and X streets, Clunie Building, lpln. FOR SALE. A General Merchandise Store, LOCATED IN ONEfOF THE LARGEST TOWNS \\a in Solano county, .loin.' a good-paying business at me present time. Reason for selling, proprietor's poor health. Address I., this office. __-lplv. TO RENT OR FOR SALE. IN EL DORAD. COUNTY -THE _IT._-lg» cock ranch, containing 160 acres underwit fence; 11,600 grapevines, *2C5 fruit trees, A— plenty of timber, living water; house and barn. Terms eJBy to a. cash tenant or purchaser. A lciess M. 11.. Box 98, .'.\u25a0.\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0•_\u25a0\u25a0•\u25a0, Sacramento. .122 iw BEEWEEY FOE SALE. M .HE »-_ YEARS WELL-_-OWN«_e& i St. Louis Siren cry. H_B_k_ Situated on comer of Sixth and G ts,£_S^________, In the city of Bitramento, is, on account of the death of the proprietor, for sale cheap. Inquire of P. BOHL. 82. J street _ dao-M _ FOB ___s___^:_____3.. n.II.\T ELEGANT RESIDENCE ANDfg^ X property situated on tbe northwest •;•; CORNER OF F ANDNINTH STS . Sacramento City, embracing four full lots or half a block of ground, highly improved. This property will be sold as a whole, or will sell the resiuencn withground, 18-? feet front on Ninth street and 200 feet front on F street, sparate. ALSO,a tract of 1- acres of splendid gTape and fruit land, situated just cast Of East Park and ad- joining Aiken, orchard. For terms apply on the premises, corner F and Ninth atrects. -'--\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 dlO-lplm :£\u25a0\u25a0___\u25a0:_»' __§._?_-_-_-:---. A SECOND CL\S_ KIMBALL -t?^-. ."' Hook and l.i.Mt-r Truck. with ~__^____ . Extension Ladders complete, and two 'S^Bjß?^""' Hand Engines, by the Sacramento Kire__SE______9__ Department. Apply to ;>ie Chief Eng_-__3 lplm DENTISTBY. ~ W. WOOD, DENTIST.— (REMOVED TO Q.TJISS'SgBm Building, corner Fourth and J streets). -s____B Artificial Teeth Inserted on all bases. Improved Liquid Nitrous Oxide Gas, fcr the Painless Kxtrae- tion of Teeth. dli- DBS. I" Ki: - EX «* SOCTHWOKTIf, DENTISTS, SOUTHWEST CORNER OF««S» \\_f Seventh and J streets, in Bryte's new !___t_?l___l building, up stairs. Teeth extracted without pain by the use of improved Liquid Nitrous Oxide Gas. dIS-lplm - W. 11. HARE. D.D. 8., ' DENTIST, NO. 606 J STREET, BE-gg» tw<en Sixth an- Seventh, Sacramento. _o_B dli-lplm _M_—_M-^_— -— -^t^W^^^-l WILCOX _; WHITE OEGANS _ ——AT WAKSBOOMB or •'„ ___ ___. tft _-> Tvrivr-»--_fc, No. Si- a 5treet........ Mcramecta. tW Sold on tho installment plan. Orders for TUNING promptly attended to. Ij-O-lPlm CITY BREWERY BEER. THIS BREWERY, WHICH HAS«gE___& recently been purchased by RUH-Htta£S .TALLEU i SCauLEtt, has been V-ga_S__-J thoroughly repolre'l. and the proprietors are now ready to deliver BEER of their own brewing, which they claim i. \u25a0 uperior to any other in this market. City trade and country orders are solicited. RUH- STALLER 1- SCHULEB, Twelfth and H streets, Sacramento. - ' - d2l-lplm SWEETSER & ALSIP, REAL ESTATE AKD l-S.-ANCE ASENTS dotal? Public and Commissioner of Deeds. Real Estate Bought and Sold on Commission. tW House- rented and rents collected. **» Agents for the following Insurance Companies : IMPERIAL... ••- of London LONDON.. of London NORTHERS.- .of London QUEEN -of Li Poo' .fORTH BRITISHAW MERCANTILE { EdSS__, m-ji .............. ..of Hartford, Conn As' --write Capital. •**.'_._». tW So. *T Foartb street, between 3 and X, Sac- ramento, oon-er _ the alter d2Slp_
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Page 1: Sacramento daily record-union (Sacramento, Calif.) …chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn82014381/1881-12-26/ed...An Indiana Town Destroyed.by a Con-flagration. 7?7_y>--ISCELLA-.OUS

SACRAMENTO DAILY RECORD-UNION.SKK»_S_?.?» Brara^ :

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I__.--©. »_<-.WAILIltlldlilt-__.U__B-TOL._JU V.—NO. 4591. SACRAMENTO, MONDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 26, 1881. DMI.V KECOKD I'M-- SERIES.

Y01.r.-_. M'.-iiEU __>...

LASTNIGHT'S DISPATCHES[SPECIAL TOTHE RECORD

-ION.J

I_-T _/ ..7-"- -

\u25a0-,1

-i.i.

-\u2666 .-I \u25a0. -' *

PACIFIC 00 AST POSTAL CHANCES.

How the Murderer of the President PassedChristmas.

TERRIBLE DEEDS OF BLOOD REPORTED.

An Indiana Town Destroyed . by a Con-flagration. 7?7_y>-

-ISCELLA-.OUS ITEMS jOF FOREIGN NEWS.

Women Trampled. to.Death in a London\u25a0

S .: - ; .•- Church. a :.. 7-7..

CM...... ........Ete Etc.

DOMESTIC NEWS.

Postal Changes for the Pacific Coa _.Washington, December 25th.— The fol-

lowingPacific coast postal changes were madeduring the week ending; December 24th:Offices Iestablished

—Port Costa, Contra

Costa county, Cal., John P. Jones, Postmas-ter ; Alkali, Wasco county, Oregon, ElijahW.'Rhea,- Postmaster.-' Postmasters ap-pointed—Stephen G. Gregg, Big Pine, Inyocounty, Cal.; James Beard, Buckeye, Shastacounty, Cal.; William Rust, Green Valley,ElDorado county, Cal; D.C. Feely, Patch-in, Santa Clara county, 1Cal.; .Thos. W.Adams. San Dieguito, San Diego county,Cal ; Mrs. Louis M. Simon, Scott river,Siskiyou .county, Cal.; ' Wm. '-H." Knight,Sugar Pine, Tuolumne county, Cal.; Geo. T.Odell, Bullionville, Lincoln county, Nev.;Wm. P. Samms, Alder, Union county, Or.;Chas. H.Beach, -house, Josephine county,Or.; Wm. Gallinghouse, Monroe, Bentoncounty, Or.; Martha Helines, Columbia,Klikitatcounty, W. _.; David W. Anderson,Gillett, Yavapai county, Arizona. .Discon-tinuedEl Rio, San Diego county, Cal.Expenses of President Garlic-Id's Illness.iWashington, December 25th.—Itisunder-

stood that when the House committee toaudit the expenses of the illness and funeralof Garfield meets after recess, Marshal Henrywillgo before the committee and ask, in thename of Mrs. Garfield, that Dr.Boynton andMrs. Susan Edson be included in the distribu-tion of the awards to the physicians, andthatStewart Crump .and other attendant,shall also receive proper recognition. Thiswillbe urged, on grouted* that they did muchto mitigate the President's sutferitg. in hislast days. c .- ... .yyy^;

Prospects ofa Conviction.;Washikgto-, December 25th.

—A lawyer

long skilled in watching juries, who has beenpresent throughout the Guiteau trial, pre-dicts that the jury willconvict. | He saysfrom hi* study of their faces he thinks thatfor .a time after the trial began, they werenearly equally divided, but he now thinksthey are a unit, and would find a verdict ofguilty ifthe case ehould close to-morrow.

-Vol a Body . <r -ir.t of --ashing. on.P_____i__ia,' December 25th.—Daniel

Webster, a well-knowncolored man, believedto have been the oldest person in Philadel-phia, died to-day at the age of 105 years.

'He

was born inMaryland, and owned by ColonelJoshua Webster, who was killed in the warof 1812. Daniel accompanied his master onhis last campaign, and brought his body barkto Maryland, for which service the dead man'swife gave him his freedom. He came toPhiladelphia in1857. ' Daniel was a famousexhorter, and was wellknown in all

-parts of

the city.. His faculties were unimpaired tothe last, and until a recent stroke of paralysisthat caused his death, he was in'the habit ofboasting that he had never been sick in hislife. He leaves eight son3and daughters,fifty-seven grand-children and sixty-threegreat grand-child-. en, the majority of whomret ids in Mar)land. ;

Anolli-r Murder at Omaha.Omaha, December 25tb.

—Another murder

was committed in this city this morningabut 3 o'clock, Oscar Hammer, a bartenderat Treit. dike's saloon, a popular resort, beingthe victim.

'Ha_,iner had h_td some wordswith two young men— Kenniston andCharles Rotters —

and was standing on thedoorstep fef the saloon talkirg to them, try-ing to quiet them down and to get them to gohome. Suddenly a sharp crack was heard,and the next moment Hammer tumbledbackward into the saloon, fellupon the floorand died almost instantly, in the presence cfseveral men who were inside. He had beenstruck on the her-.d with come instrument,which inflicteda email wound sn. causing afracture of the skull." Itis thought that iliaweapon used was tha butt-end of a revolver.Kosters and Kenniston immediately disap-peared, probably not being aware of the fatalresult. . They were soon afterwards arrested.They are the sons of well-known and respect-able citizens. Kcsters did the striking, andiii.claim willbe self-defense. Hammer camehare a fewmonths ajo from Chapin _ G.rres',Chicago, and was quite popular here. {Heleaves a wife and child here. osiers sndK.nniston do not bear good reputations, theformer being not-1,for his quarrelsome dispo-sition when under the influence of liquor.

Deed, of .*i<> t.i.' St. LaCIS, December 25th.

—ALexington,

Ky.;special reports the murder last night inLexington of John Stevenson by Joe Lawson,who used an English bulldog revolver.1 Haescaped. •*,Both werenegroes. -.-«'.._-..•- „'{

NtW York, December 25:h.—

Edwardi.opf--, ear : : this morning, killed his wifeand then hi_B_f. .; \u25a0 ,

ABB-ACT)(Ky.),December iV-.—Mr. ardMrs. J. W. Gibbons, who reside near town,went visiting Friday nigh-, leaving a daugh-ter 14 years old, Miss Emma Thomas, 17years old, and a eon, Robert Gibbons, at theGibbons homestead. Dm Friday tight

me villains came to the house, outragedboth gill", saturated their -thing with oil,set th. house on firs, and killed young RobertGibbons, who:was attempting to give thealarm.. Allthree of the dead had their headssplit open with a hatchet. There is no clueto the murderers. -.o_e thousand dollars re-ward is oflered for their capture. . Gibbons'house was burned to ashe?, only the chimneybeing left standing. _';. 7_.v>' _

Chattanooga, December 25th.— shoot-i.i. affray at Helenwood seems to have grownont of a dog fight.

'Pistols were used freely.

John Cecil was shot dead, and three Westbro'her», W. Smith, and man named Thomp-son were Bhot, probably fatally.

The New York Fire.New York, December

—The los _s

by the fire in the United States bonded ware-house, occupied by Moore, Wood & Co., areestimated at between two and three millionsof dollars. The principal losers are W. _'.

Milton & Co., Wetmoie, Cryder _ Co., F.Garera _ Bros., Antonia G ii.zales, M. _ E.Solomon, whose loss is estimated at $300,000,and Clement, Herdt &Co., whose loss issaidto be 8150,000. .

-ulfean- Christmas.. Washington, December 25th.— Guiteauspent Christmas very quietly, Few personsare permitted to enter the jail Sundays, andonly his brother and sister are allowed tovisit the prisoner, . unless hy jauthority ofJudge Cox or Scoville. John' W. Guiteau,accompanied by a few acquaintances, calledduring the day, and had an interview withhi brother. ILate in the afternoon, afterthese visitors had left, Guiteau partook of ahearty Christmas dinner.

-Tha prisoner has

prepared aLother statement for publication,which he intimates contains important ant-interesting revelations bearing on his case.For ithe wants $ICO. ...

r -iiltr-jiiiand the Prisoner's Dock.New Yobk, December 25*J_.—The Trib-

une's Washington special says :_ Counsel forthe prosecution; will to-morrow insist thatJudge Cox decide upon the motion to placeGuiteau in the prisoner s dock.

Death. :.,;7"..*7"'-

New Yobk, December 25th.—John Ter-villeEvans, President of the Mutual UnionTelegraph Company, ';died -1 at. the

'Gilsey

House in this city this morning.".,"*,, '7;'.Fear Mrs Drowned.

GLOCCESTEEt (Mass ), December . 25tb.—

Henry Burke, John Haye-i, Archie McDon-ald and Darnard Glenn, out indories Friday,were lost ina gale.>..,"..-.-Eleven Barnes

'Swamped and a CaptainDrovrnrd. \u25a0 •--

.',- Nbw York. December. 25th.—

During thegale Thursday night the tugboat T. Walshbecame disabled, and eleven

'of the fourteen

barges in tow ware swamped. Capt. Wickswas drowned.

}.. .'.- ? -7'Tfcei___»__Tl_„. 777_\u25a0 Niw Yobk, December Midnight.—Therm-meter— 45°, lowest 29*. \u25a0. -'.*

Chicago, December . 25th.—

Maximum,41.8; minimum, 34.7 ;mmdailybawmtter,

30.120 ;mean daily thermometer, 39.7 ;meandaily humidity, 70 7. ,Another Infliction-A

"-n-.-i-jou-plrnse"

Again.

- _.KW Y°,BK* Dec3 mbe' 2_h-A. -.-About

_\u0084(_.- people assembed ia the American Insti-tute Kink to-night, to witness the beginningof the six day go-as-you-please walking matchfor the championship of the world. At 12o'clock the following started :Frank Hart,Fred Krohne, Harry Howard, Patrick Fitz-gerald, Ben Curran, John Cox. John Ennis,R.Lacouse, A. Klson, D. J. Hertz, P. Ed-wards, A.P. Curtis, M.Noremac, M.Waldeand B. Gettings. At12:30, Curtis had scoredfour miles and three laps, Cox second, Fitzgerald third.< Allthe men were on the track,and a few laps behind the leader. Prizesaggregating $3,000 willbe awarded ;a's- > asilver cup to the first man, provided be covers500 miles. .;-,.

An Indiana Town in Flames.-Si'll.va- (Ind.),'December 26"h—A.M.—

At10:30 to-night a fire broke out in the notion store cf Iv>lli: Brothers.. The firedepartment of Terre Haute left on a specialtrain at 11o'clock.

- ''-\u25a0' \u25a0

IAt this writing(1A.v.) the whole west ridsof the square, consisting of twenty-five build-ings, is destroyed, and the fire is still spread-ing with great rapidity. .' : •\u25a0> ._.--;-. ;-".;.:J

, FOUEIG-. *

Colli— of Yefcstl.—-Ine Hen Drowned.ligeek-Tow}*, December 25th.— While the

steamer Catalonia was on her way out ofQueen-town harbor to-day she ran into thehark Helenslee, Captain Barry, from SanFrancisco for Queenstown. The Helensleesank, and nine of her crew were drowned, theremaining sixteen being saved by the Cata-lonia. The latter had her bows stove in.

\ Bcqnc-ed to Move. tLondon, December 25th.— The Persian

Government has requested Ayoob Khan, theAfghan chief, now residing at Ghazn, eitherto quit Persia orgo to Meshed.Panic In a Chore*.

—Twelve -'omen:Trampled to Death. • -,-.;.-.

London, December 25th.— During the

celebration of high mass in the Church of theHoly Cros«, a man was seized while pickingpockets, In order to effect his escape theculprit cried "Fire !" and immediately agreat panic seized the congregation, whorushed or the doors. Daring the confusiontwelve women were crushed to death andforty other persons were Feriously injuredThe pickpocket was scundly beaten by thecrowd. ;The culprit is a Jew. The lowerclasses of the people are much excited againstthe Hebrews, several of whom have been mal-treated and hid the windows of their dwell-ings broken. { The military had to be calledout.

Alater dispatch state." :So far thirty p?r-sor.s have died of their injuries received dur-ing the panic in the church. Four shopskept by Jews were completely gutted, andseveral policemen injured by the rioters. Theauthorities displayed great promptitude inrepressing the disorder. The military are nowpatroling the C-Sturbed quarters.

Pardon Granted.Constantinople, December 25th.

—Through the influence of the British Consul-General here, and some influential friends, apardon has been granted (''Donovan, the cor-respondent sentenced to six months' impris-onment for speaking in abusive terms of tbeSultan. O'Donovan leaves the city to-mor-row.

Another Plot Against the C__r. .'.St. Petersburg, December 25th.

—A plot

has been discovered for assassinating the Czarin Karavanian street, which it was expectedhe would traverse whileproceeding from thepalace to the Michael Riding School, on theoccasion of the recent tournament there.A En-Inn City Destroyed by Nihilists.

Vienna, December 25th.—

A telegram fromSt. Petersburg reports that the whole navalport of Cronstadt is on fire. One quarter ofthe town is reported as already destroyed.The loss is enormous. The fire is believed tobe the work of Nihilists. _ -

A Governor who Should be Knonted.London, December 25th.

—According to

intelligence from St. Petersburg, great indig-nation prevails there at the reprehensible con-duct of the President of the administrationof Eastern Siberia, who refused to telegraphthe announcement of the arrival, of the sur-vivors of the Jeannette because they werewithout funds.' The first news of their escapewas consequently delayed ten weeks.

Gladstone and the'Mormon-,

: London, December 25tb.—

Gladstone,' re-plying to a correspondent who had called at-tention to the fact th.t bands of Mormonmissionaries vi-tGreat Britain annually, de-coying thousands ef young persons to a lifeof immorality in Utah, and inquiring if theGovernment could not do something to pre-vent the .-.'_'\u25a0, says he fears it is net amatter in which he cm interfere, as it is tobe pre. umed that the young persons go vol-untarily. . :; !.*!; j'-\u25a0:\u25a0.. -;

'

The English Rody-. Hatching Case.London, December 25th.

—The police have

obtained an important clue in the case of thestealing of the body of the Earl of Crawfordand Balcarres. They expect to make anarrest shortly. . •- . \u25a0 .

Mysterious. —A"

mysterious incident"

is said to have happened the other day inWashington's favorite room in the oldman-sion at Mount Vernon. In the room aremany relics of Washington, including anold round-faced, peculiarly shaped clock,which has stood in silence forforty years.Only two or three rusty wheels are left init. On the afternson of November KithJ.McH. Hollingsworth, Superintendent ofthe Mount Vernon Association, was show-ing the relics to a party of visitors.- Hecame to the oldclock. . "

Thi3 clock," saidhe when to his astonishment and terror,"

three strong, distinct - strokes"

werestiuck upon the bell of the clock, and wereheard by all in:the party. Mr.Hollings-worth

"was overcome with emotion," and

requested the vieitors to lea Te the room.Ho conl-J not understand the phenomena.The clock, he said, had not been disturbedin the twelve years that he had been Super-intendent of the grounds. Itis open ivtheback, and one can see, he said, that theworks are broken and only a few of thewheels remain in position. The whole thingwas a mystery to him. The details of thisoccurrence are given by J. W. Buel," ina letter to the St. Louis Republican, and"

this story," he says,"

is not a sensation,"but a fact." Ifhe or Mr. Hollingsworth

could master the courage examine the an-cient timepiece, it wouldprobably be foundthat the mysterious striking wa_ du_ to thebreaking of some spring cr wheel. -7

A Confused Juror. During the admin-istrationof Hon.' John Schley, Judge of theMiddleCircuit of Georgia, one day, in thetrialof a case on the common law docketbefore a petit jury, in which Charles J.Jenkins and Quintilian Skrine were op-posing sides, a juror, after the conclusionof Mr. Jenkins's argument, and the intro-duction ofMr. Skrine's, suddenly rose, leftthe box and rushed out of the court house.Being brought back, to the Court's indig-nant, demand why he hid taken such aliberty he answered : "Well, now, Jedge,I'lljes' tell you how it is. IJieerd Mr.Jenkins's speech, and he made out the caseso plain that Idone made up my mind.And. then Mr. Skrine he got up, and hewent intirely on the back track, he did,and he were gettin' my mind all confusedup like;and Ijes' thought, as for me, Ibetter leave ont wellhe got through. Well,now, Jedj-e. jes' to tell you the plain truth,1 didn't like the way the argiment wasa-gtvine." ' .'-.' ;77 \u25a0

"- .Pearls.

—In France a pearl costing SIC

is now imita'ed for 50 cento or %1, and sosuccessfully as to be sold at the price ofthe genu:ne article to any one not a verita-ble expert-, and even the latter class areoften puzzled. The artificial. pearl, ,how-ever, is simply a glass bead orglobe, whichis first:coated en the inside with a gluemade of parchment, then treated with apeculiar so-called "essence," after whichitis filled with wax.'lThe essence is theohtef pearly ingredient, and is obtained byrubbing together white-fish, so as to removethe scales ;'the *. whole iis then strainthrough linen and left to deposit its sedi-ment, which is the essence inquestion.".

'It

requires about •17,000 fish to produce apound of the peaily essence. 17-"What do you mean by disturbing me

at this hour of the night ." said an Austindoctor, angrily, to a negro who woke himat 3 o'clock in the morning.

"Ijess al-

lowed, ,boas, idat .yer.was _ so 'busy 'yerdidn't hab time ter 'tend ter poor folk*inder day time, so I'lowed I'd jew drap inafter sapper,"— [Texas Siftings.

A BURIED FOREST.

A correspondent of. the WilmingtonMorning Newt .writes to that journal asfollows:.. .

Cypress Swamp, in the lower end ofthisState, is a place cf interest at any time.In the fall, however, when the little at-tractiveness with which summer clothes it,has become the withered leaves lof|falltime, its wide acres are positively dismal.Last week Iwandered over a portion of it.With the consoling thought that snakesand other creeping things, with which thesoft turf abounds, were beginning to loseinterest | in things human, Igave freedom jto my inclinations and had a tolerably goodtime. The rain of the two weeks previoushad extinguished the last smoking embers of jthe fire that had been burning through thesummer and the atmosphere was free ofthe stifling -moke that a month or twobefore had hung heavily above the treetops. These fires occur frequently, and.are caused by the carelessness of some one.The peculiar nature ot Oppress Swamp atthese times is better understood. For ten or .fifteen feet below the surface the devour*ing element burrows, finding everywherematerial upon which to feed. The soil is jbut decayed vegetable matter accumulated Ithrough centuries. Sometimes these fires

'

insiduously eat their way beneath the fieldsof corn which grow here and there on theedge of the swamp,'- and frequently therural inhabitant, upon waking in the morn-ing, sees these fields scalloped with holesbig enough insome places to comfortably

-take inhis granary. :-\u25a0 .§_ The swamp is a mystery. At a time,with:regard to which even tradition iasilent, it was a basin. A basin of consid- •'

erable width and breadth, for the Indianahad cat on its bottom, fed apon oysters andclams, and indolentlysmoked pipes in theshade of the cypress. The, shell stratum ifound in- many. places proves this. Thecypress which had shaded these aboriginalepicures many centuries ago, nowlie, ordidyears ago, before the shingle hunter came .into the swamp, a fallen j forest, with-fifteen feet of swamp and acres of treesof another age growing thrifty above it.The swamp is an alluvial deposit.Inits depths creeks of Indian RiverBay find source, and the waters, darkwith the Boakings of vegetable matter, .are carried by these on the one sideinto the Atlantic ocean, and by thePccomoke river on the other side intothe Chesapeake bay. The theory is thatthe streams of water which arc- now merecreeks were the channels up which ele-ments in the process of gradual formationweie carried and deposited. The forestof cypress timber gradually gave way un-tilthe trees became completely buried.This matter, which in time filled up thebasin, has served to preserve the cypress.Very fewof them, however, now lieburied ;for almost a century shingle hunters havethrived in the swamp. Among the manythings of interest Isaw were the cabinsof.these men.IThe shingle hunting industry is now al-

most extinct. Those engaged inthe busi-ness would go into the swamps and workthere lor weeks. Indry weather, such asthat of last cummer, the soil of the .swamp wouldcrack in many places, andwith the instinct whichIexperience gave,the hunters wouldhunt for these fissures.Every crack indicated the spot where wasburied cypress timber. The sign rarelyfailed. After the tree had been recurrected then the

"rivers" wouldcome, and

in a very short time the once buried trunkwouldbe converted into a large pile ofshingles, which were then more profitablethan now. Almost all the old buildings inSussex county are roofed with these, andmany thousands were shipped to the otherStates. This being before the timeof railroads the shingles were carted toMilford and other towns on neighboringsteamers, and thence shipped to dealers inlarge cities. Nothing now remains of thisonce lucrative business but the cabins inthe swamp and the gray-haired rusticslivinghereabout who made their dollars inthis way. _'-..".;,

Oldmen around Lewes, Georgetown aridFrank ford have shot deer in the swamp,and many stories are told of phenomenallycold winters when bears were forced to theedges of civilization for food, and howbabies had to be tied in their cradles tokeep them from crawling into the mouthof a famishing beast on the door-step.

The swamp is about live miles square.It formerly belonged to General Dags-worthy, an old revolutionary patriot, andstrong personal friend of General Washing-ton. During the years subsequent to Dags-worthy's death, the property was dividedand subdivided, until now the acres ofnumbers of farmers extend into its depth.By this division much of it has been re-claimed. Ina few years, by tbe system ofdrainage which several farmers have intro-duced, more of it will be open to cultiva-tion, and eventually all vestige of theswamp willdisappear.

NEWSPAPER WAIFS.

\\ A scientific man says great noises willmake milk.cur. They will also make theaverage citizen pretty sour, especially ifthey come at night when he wants to sleep.[Boston Toot."

You appear to have a constitutionalantipathy to water," said an unspottedhumanitarian to a rum-rosy tramp.

"No,"returned the latter, "itisn't constitutional,it's accidental." "Strange! How didyou come to.have such an aversion towater?" "Easy enough; Ihad two sonsdrowned ia it." [BrooklynRagle.

A Poor, fter Ft-ret-car horse shot outwith his heels the other day, and hit thedriver with one and the cash-box with theother, and an investigation showed that hehad kick.d six dollars into the driverovercoat pocket. Such wonderful sagacityon the part of the horse caused the dis-charge of the driver.

—[Detroit Free l'resp.

The MorningPoet, the journal of the To-ries and the aristocracy, speaks of

"the lato

Dr. J. G. Gilbert, editor of Scribner's Mag.azine." AGerman weekly paper publishedhere does not get much nearer it, printing

Dr.G. Howell, editor." Thus have theDutch taken Holland. —[Detroit FreePress.

An advertisement in a Berlinpaper an-nounces that "a young noblewoman,having a large fortune and holdings distin-guished position, who is as lovely as Helen,as good a housekeeper as Penelope, aseconomical as the Elect ress Marianne ofBrandenburg, and as spirituelle as Mme.de Stael, who sings like Jenny Lind, anddances like Cento, plays the .piano likeRosa Kastner, and the harp Ike Bertram],bit who is as austere as Lucre havingno masculine acquaintances, seek, a hus-band."

-7.7

I_r__U__l__ Rr.Llf-—

Several interest-ing relics of Louis XVI., collected by hisfaithful body servant Clery, and at presentinthe possession of Clery'e grandchildren,are now on view in Paris. -Among t_err_

is an autograph letter addressed byMarieAntoinette to the' Count de Provenceafterward Louis XVlll.—and inclosing aring confided to Clery by the "Son -ofSt. Louis

"on the fatal morning of ] the

21st of January, 1"!13, for transmission to,her Majesty. The letter runs as follow.,in literal translation: "Havingat lengthfound the . means of

'consigning to

'our

brother one of the few triflingpledges leftto us by him whom we all loved and be-wail,'! deemed that it,would give yongreat pleasure to :possess .anything thatbelonged .to him. Keep it as a symbolof my closest friendship, with which, andwith all my heart lembraoa yon. \u25a0_- M.A.",.Three articles of clothing worn hy the un-fortunate . little-Dauphin,*""Louis.' XVII.,during the earlier period of his imprison-ment

—a green silken coat and a jacket and

trousers of striped silk—

are also exhibited.".These were.secreted 'by Clery • when the '"Childof France" was transferred to theTemple,:where, clothed ?in .sordid rags,half1starved, and brutally jill-treated by » |merciless ;.taskmaster, he - dragged lon a'?miserable existence . forinearly 1two

'years I•and a half from the date of his royalfather's death oa th* scaffold.

THE DAILYRECORD-UNION.____at thePost Office at Sacramento as second class matter' "

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THS BAITYEECO-1. T-lO-»»___\u25a0-__ __7 day of the week, Sundays oxaamtal.»_o_eje_.... .- ••- J JJVotilxmonths.

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THE WEEKLY r_l _[Pablished in ml-weekly pa___,

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jBUTTS,SEEDS ANDPRODUCT.

FRUIT DEALERS,___

Tiosr I

HAVING REMOVED TO MORECOMMODIOUSpremises, we have enlarged our stock. . We

offer you choice Apples, free from worms. Lemons,Limes, Oranges, Dried Fruits, Nuts, Dates, CannedGoods, etc., at very low prices.

--M.T. BREWER _ CO.,

1006 to 1010 Second street, between J and X,Sacra.niento. \u25a0 d22-tf •

A. MOOSSR. :.,.•'-

8. OSR80».8. __-S- V A CO., .

GENERAL COMMISSION MERCHANTS, ANDDealers in -.-..<• •-=

\u25a0-'<yy-

Imported and Domestic Fruits, Vegeta-:hies, Nnta, Etc, .

No. 220 J street, between Second and Third, Sacra-mento. -. \u25a0 ...- \u25a0..- .'... \u25a0 . d2-lm \u25a0--

D. DKBBR&ARDI. /AS. SAU—LI.

iD. DEBERNARDI &CO,WUOLEIALB 00UMI8SI0S -__t_KS IS

Batter, Eggs, Poultry, Vegetables,Pratt. Fish and General Prod*-*.

\u25a0\u25a0 . n27-Iplm

W. R. STRONG &CO.,

Wholesale ;Commission MerchantsASD DBALKKB IK ALL KINDS OF

CA_IFO__IAGKE__ AND DBIEDFECIT.NUTS, HONEY, SEED

':And General Merchandise.

tWAllorders promptly attended to. Address :.W. R. STKONG & CO.,

nB-lplm Noa. 6. 8 and 10 J street, Bacramento

ETON A BASSE-,

COMMISSION MERCHANTS ANDDEALERS IS

Prodnce, Vegetable*, Batter, Eggs, Cheese,Poultry, Green andDryFruits, Honey, Beans, etc

. ALFALFA SEED. .tW Potatoes in car-load lots or less.

-023-Iptf . Nos. 21 and 23 3street.

OAKSIAQI-S. HAiINESS, ETCL.C MONTKHIT. _ a. C. INK. a. A. VAN VOORIIIES.

A. A. VANVOORHIES &CO.(Successors toR. STONE _ CO.),

| 322 AND 324 \ J STREET,7-.IMPORTERS, MANUFACTURERS ANDfi-fllJobber, of all kinds of £k___E2__

Saddlery and Carriage Hardware,LEATHEB AND SHOE FI-Dl_«_, 7 .

\u25a0 • „.-~

-_">-—-

,.CARRIAGE TRIMMINGS.

Keep constantly on hand a fullstock of importedand domestic Harness, Saddles, Collars, etc.IOur manufactures warranted unsurpassed by anyhouse on the ci

_ . , _oliu

CARRIAGESNevada '» Crand Gold Hedala for 1376, 1817,

1-.. 1839 ana IS.I.,

EIGHT GOLD ANDEIGHT SILVER MEDALS,118 First Class Premiums for tbo best __k

from tho Mechanic-. Fair, S.n Frandsco, and tbedifferent State Fairs held inthis State and Nevada.

EW One of my Buggies is worth Six CheapEastern Buggies. / , * ... ."

HARRY BERNARD,MANUFACTURER, COR. SIXTHANDLSIREET?,

77^_4__A_.E-TO. |;

£STIhare on hand and forsale ft. the lowestpossible prices, the new style of POXY PHAETO"_vthe handsomeet in the State.

~ 'Family Can 'age*,late?, patterns. Neatest Open .._r?ie3 in the State.LightTop Bui^ie.. Heavy Top Buggies formoun-lain use. Farm re" Carriages. • Trotting "rragO-8and Sulkies, all of my own make. C_ria_i Paint-ingand Trimo. done at the lowest price. Notebut the most experienced workmen employedRepairing neatly done, and all work is warrantedCall at the Factory and see for vourt-'f. d!-lot.

PIKE & YOUNG, 7CARRIAGE MANUFACTUR- __»

. ers, corner of Fourth and ._. streets, Sacramento, have on r,i:^7y^?Pssc^-hand the largest assortment of Q>*'^£!l_2^ *Carriages, Wagons and Buggies to be found inSmn.mento, which they willsell at very low rates. nIS-J

JOHP- T. STOLL,

ij&g& . :"*.T-. g:IH . M:'::7^

" 7g

«\u25a0 *_ £ J; •"i"j*s=__.i_k.*k--—^--^-f_2~=!SJs_!_aE "iH S \u25a0-\u25a0%'

IviIg_o^s&ig_i___s?r___m s v-

§«s ____IW- =_"*_«£ \u25a0ygmss? - I \u25a0» »**'x'"_^mT.. ;_i*g * mmmjm2IP_S__W/ - f"

o « Vt'.f £< ,.-\u25a0-!-_- •\u25a0• ;'S»'

"'"\u25a0'.•-•I:"'.:v Jy. Iptl-.7.. \u25a0 '-'>_-^-i

p»_ai«j_ij_..--_i_j_j^gi'

lymplA DELICIOUS DRINK_^i_} 'or Use in Families, Ilotcls,

!-S_ Clubs, Picnics, Parties, etc,

C H. GRAVES A StJHS.The "HubPunch" has latelybeen introduced, j

and meet* withmarked popular favor. ' • -.*-

Xtis Warranted to Contain only the BEST'

ofliquors, United trith Choice Fruit -V,Juices and Granulated Sugar,

--Itisready enopening, and willbe found an art*--*-

'

able addition to the choice things of the table I. which nodeniabl/ enlanre the pleasure*- oflife and Iencourage good fellow_nip and good nature. *

-GOOD AT ALLTIMES... Jnit the Thine toKeep In"Wine Cellar*..Sideboard, not complete —it—ont It,,.'

, Itranheused Clear, or trithFine lee, Soda,V Hot or .'old Water, Lemonade, Tea, or \u25a0

'

yFresh 'Milk,to Suit the Taste. y.Sold byleading -Wine Merchant*, __-•_,Ho__

and mtmmata ta eyerjwhere. •- -*-.-. \u25a0 • -y~~-''.

1 C. H.OKA. <_ SO-.S, .-o.ton, ____.

Trade anpplied at Mn_n___._ primby .\u25a0y(-:. _!_____ a HAKKMOH,

AgenUlorPaoifie Coast, Saa Trtnoitea, Cat

_H___H_M-H___H_HHH_BH_P \u25a0

SAN n._y.cisoo :CABDS.|SAN FRANCISCO ;7

Business DirectoryARTISTS. :

Ilonscwnrth—

Optician and Photographer, No. 1>Montgomery street. Established in 18-1.

ARTISTS' MATERIALS,ETCSanborne, TallA Importers and Manufact-

urers of Mirrors,Moldings and Frames, Chromos,Engravings, Brackets, \u25a0 Easels, Statuary tandArtists' Materials, No. 857 Market street.

BUSINESS COLLEGES.Hcald's Business College (of the Bryant A

Stratum Chain of Colleges). E. P. HEALD andF. \u25a0 _. WOODBURY, Proprietors, No. 24 Poetstreet, near Kearny, S. F., CaL Terms .-$4O perquarter, payable in 30 days. -.-.. •-•-..- •••:

-.

Pacific Business College and TelegraphicInstitute—(Life Scholarship, for full BusinessCourse, *70). W. E. Chamberlain, Jr., and T. A.Robinson, Pioprietors, No. 320 Poet street, oppo-site Union Square, S. F., Cal. .Send for Circulars.

y._ CLOTHIERS, ETC. '77^a. W.Carmany (successorto Carmany _Crosettt),

Dealer in Shirts and Men's Furnishing Goods.Shirts made to order a specialty.

~No. 25 Kearny

street, between Market and Post.

. DRY GOODS.The White Honse— The oldest Dry Goods House

in San Francisco. We import direct from thfprincipal marts in Europe, consequently can selllower than any other house in the trade. Country

orders attended to. IJ. W. Davidson & Co., Nos.101and 103 Kearny street. San Francisco.

DRUGS, CHEMICALS.A. F. Downing A Son— Wholesale Dealers

in Druggists' and Proprietary Specialties, No.ItSecond street. Grand Hotel Building.,

Justin Gates.— Pioneer Druggist, removed to 722Montgomery street. Country orders solicited

EDUCATIONAL. '\u25a0y£__'.School ofPractical, Civil.Mechanical and

Mining Engineering, Surveying, Drawing and Assaying, 24 Poet st. A.Van der Naillen, Principal.

The Berkeley Gymnasium— -First-class

Academical Institution, affords a Classical,Literary, Scientific or^Businees

*Education. Forcatalogues or particulars, address JOHN F.BURKIS, Superintendent, Berkeley, Cal \u25a0-_.<.;--

77>__-l-__-_-; , _ '-^:Herrmann, The natter—No. 336 Kearny street,- near Pine. The finest bats at the lowest prioee.

Factory :No. 17 Belden street. :y--

HARDWARE, IRON, STEEL, ETC.Harcns C. Hawley A Co.—lmportrrs of Hard-

ware and Agricultural Implements, Nos 301, 303,305, 307 and 309 Market street, San Francisco.

Carolan. Cory A Co.—lm_>rte_ of Hardware,Ironand SteeL Agents for the Pittsburg SteelWorks, Northwestern Horse Nail Co., and Southington Cutlery Co. Noa. 120 and 122 Front street,and Nos. 117 and 119 California street.

Will A Importing and ManufacturingCutlers and Bellhangers, No. 769 Market street.

METALS,STOVES, RANGES, ETC,W. W. Montague A Co.—lmporters of Stoves,

Ranges and Sheet Iron, Marbleized Mantels,Grates and Tiles. Manufacturers of Plain,Japanned and Stamped Tinware. Noa. 110 112,114, 116 and 118 Battery street.

l_-LLINER_". ,7;7-_iThe Bandbox- The popular Millinery Establish-

ment. B. S. Ifirsch*Co., No. 743 Market street .Strict attention to orJers from the interior .

TEA IMPORTERS.M-gftled at B___-_l-t_- -*_ 210 California

street. P. O. Box2,133. -.\u25a0.;'y;"_:

:RESTAURANTS. 7. ;?7(ampi's Original Italian Hot..urant has

reopened under the management of H. Giimboni,Cainpi's former partner. Nos. .31and S3 _ajSt., near Montgomery. Everything first .sa.

Swain _ Family Bakery' and !__!»gSaloon— No. 626 Market street. Wedding __:.•«,

.- ice cream, oysters, Jellies, etc., constantly onhand.Families Bupplied.

RUBBER AND OIL GOODS.The Gntta Perrlia and Itnbber Sfannfnct-

tiring >_,_——Manufacturers of Rubber Good.

of every description. Patentees of the celebrate?"Maltese Cross Brand" Carbolized Hose. Corner

First and Market streets. J. W. Taylor, Manager.

Davis AKellogg- Manufacturers of CapeAnn Oiled Clothing, Hats, Covers, etc. Importer,aud Deale-s in Rubber Boots and Woolen Goods. No. 34 Calif ami* street. \

STATIONERS, PRINTERS, ETC.H.8. Crocker A Importing and Manufact

uringStationers, Printers an.l Lithncraphers, Nos •'

215. 217 and 219 Bush street, above Sansome. >

WHOLESALE GROCERS.-"oilman, Peck A Co.— Importers and Whole-

sale Grocers and De.lers inTobacco arid Cigars,.Nos. 126 to 132 Market, and No. 23 California. .;Taber, narker «- Importers and Wholeeali

Grocers, Noe. 108 and 10 California street, t ?:_ i-.

SACRAMENTO REGORO-UNION.San Francisco Office, No. 531 California

street.— J. H. Sharp-, Agent.

HOTELS AND SE-STAU&AM'B.

MISSISSIPPI KITCHEN.OT..TE.- AND CHOP HOUSE,

Third Strr?t, Between J and X,."VTFJ-T POOR TO RECORD-UNION -£&«%.\u25a0_-

-office. Open day ami night. g_§\ C3^\/A. J. SENATZ, Pioprietcr. V_/ «*_#

!•..','... . d!94plm •:'.;\u25a0:

GOLDEN EAGLE HOTEL,

CORNER SEVENTH AND X STREETS, SACramento.

—asa in every respect. The

Large--, Finest and Best-Ventilated Hotel inthe city.BATES—*3, ?2 50 and 82 per day, according _

room. Free Bus toand from the Hotel.J. McNASSEit (late of Denver),

di-4plm - Proprietor.

HOTEL LANG .AM,yM/""IORNER FOURTH AND L STREETS, SACRA

meuto—

first-class, on the European plan.

Free coach rom Railroad Depot. Fine sample room..dl 4plm 7>.' .- TERRY _ CO., Managers.

7 UNION HOTEL.

SECOND AND X STREETS, SACRAMENTO,Cal. Rooms, 60 cents and $1 per day. Special

rates by the mouth. Billiards, choice liquors anilcigars. Hot lunch daily from 11 A. v. tili2r. a.

W. O. ("JOE") BOWERS, ,r.dl-.plm

—Pronri

• STATE HOUSE,Corner Tenth and X streets, Sacramento.

H ELDRED, PROPRIETOR— Board and lodg-a lng at the most reasonable rates. IBar an.

billiard rooms attached. Street cars pass the dooievery fiveminntes..KB"Free omnibus to and from the House, nlB-4nln

A Q. GRIFFITHS,

tQ.GRIFFITHS.

PE-E_!.'_______ mm

Sc|yHrM PI-NUT- CA_.

S£§£yi||i rT.H_ BEST VARIETY ANI_SS_r-__ X Largest Quarries on th.

Pacific C__ Polished Granite Monuments, Tomb-stones and Tablets ma to order, •

\u25a0tones, etc • '• Granite BuildingStone- _

Cut, -atasA and _"*—--.-.«. -...:- -

011.1._n

EDW. OAOWALADER. 7OFFICE, CORNER TUl_O and J STREETS ;

residence, corner Tenth aidN streets, Sacn.mento, CaL :>

ff- '

Notary Public. .-. '....: '

United States Commissioner.Commissioner of Deeds for the state- and Ten-

tories, and Conveyancer. Particular attention pudto taking depositions. *- .'• "***\u25a0 \u25a0_\u25a0;.. .** _\.' r*m_t a.-a

Deeds, Mortgages, Wills. Leases, Contracts, etc.'drawn and acttrtnmt^v -\. .- \u25a0:.\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 ;\u25a0•-- . , rf_.tr

-\u25a0:;

\\y,"CLIPPER COAL I"

OrnCß WIT-'

LTO - *BARNES. NOS. 1.3and IMistreet hroirta dltAplm*

s 7__ECH__NIOS' STOBE. v - -,

For Advertisement of WEIN-STOCK & LUBIN, see SecondPage. Itwillbe changed daily.

HALE BROS. & 00.

TWO WEEKS AGOWe announced that Our Buyer had shipped us from|

the East a Large and Varied Assortment of-. : -'\u25a0".\u25a0 "' : ":':'\u25a0"\u25a0 -"•.'"'- '. '. '.".

':\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 •\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0

\u25a0

:/'•'

-",

___T C>"ITUS __Ha ___\u25a0 31 ___ S§3\u25a0 777 • \u25a0

-; :

FOR THE

HOLIDAYTRADE!These Goods have now arrived, and have been placed

upon our Counters. As it is a positive u*e with ourHouse that we never carry our Goods from one seasonto another, we have '_ marked these NOVELTIES atprices that must insure a Clearance of the EntireStock BEFORE JANUARY Ist.

_HA.lS^_O-K_E_RC-E_CI-E !

Line. Hem-stitched 12*, 20, 25, 35, 40 and 50 cents

Linen Hemstitched (Embroidered) 20, 25, 35, 50 and 75 cents

Linen Hem-stitched (Colored Borders) 12i, 20, 35 and 50 centsLinen Hem-stitched (Initialed) •_•••'••.• '.12£ to 50 cents

We have also a fine line of HANDKERCHIEFS INFANCY BOXES, each contain-ing half-a-dozen, at prices from 75 cents to §4 per box.

IN SILK HANDKERCHIEFS FOR LADIES AND GENTLEMEN, we have a

large assortment of Plain and Brocaded, at prices from 50 cents to $2 50.

.... \u0084 ... . .___—

LADIES' L_>. ECIK.WIE____.!_ !SILK,TIES, in Spanish, French, Brabants, Languedoc and other Laces, from 25

cento to $3 50. 77MULLTIES (Embroidered and Lice Trimmed) from 25 cents to $2 50.

FANS! FA.3STS! FANS!A large variety in SATIN, FEATHER-TIPPED, HAND-PAINTED, etc., from 50

cents to 85.

TETLOW'S PERFUMEEY !In the various popular EXTRACTS, in fancy boxes. *

".. 3f I .' \u25a0

\u25a0

' "yy.•*_

—~"~~~*—~——

Grloves ! Grloves! G-loves !Full, line of GENUINE FOSTER, CENTEMERI, ALEXANDER, etc. Also,_______

and FUR-TOPPED.

[Purses and Satchels !LADIES' LEATHER SATCHELS and PURSES, in all.the latest -hapes and sizes.

"

JEWELEY!Finest Quality Triple-rolled Plate. Also, Celluloid in Bracelets, Scarf Pins, Ear

, Drops, Cuff Pins, Finger Rings, Watch Chains, Shirt Studs, Sleeve Buttons,Lockets, Charms, etc. '

7* -.-\u25a0\u25a0^7 V,—

_.:...-. \u25a0

\u25a0 Ifcfil.... .. . • -Grents' N^eck^vear .!

"SHIELD" SCARFS, inSilk, Satin and Velvet, for 25, 35, 40, 50, C5, "5 cent., $1

and 51 25.' ?" i- .' Ti;7 "

"WINDSOR" SCARFS and FOLDED TIES—a large variety.

S-_.spend.ers !Inaddition to our regular line, we have expressly for the HOLIDAYS, FINE EM-

BROIDERED SILK, ELASTIC WEB, at 75 cents, $1, §1 50, $2, §2 50 to $5.

"White Shirts!A SPLENDID LINE AT FROM 75 CENTS TO $2._____________________

Hats i Hats ! Hats .IW EXPRESSLY FOR THE HOLIDAY TRADE. *_»

HOSIERY!: English, French and German HOSIERY, inCotton, Merino and Wool, at allprices. _

SILK DEPAETMENTIBlack and Colored ,Silks, Black and Colored Brocades,

Black and Colored Plushes, Black and Colored Velvets,Black and Colored Satins, Black Surah and Satin deLyon.

tW We wouldinvite the attention of those who would make a Handsome Present,'to this Department, carrying as we do the LARGEST STOCK OF SILKS INTHECITY.

SPISCIiLZ. !AMapificent Line of FINE - SATIN DAMASK TABLE LINENS, with.

NAPKINS to match.-' Also, a Splendid Line of REAL FRENCHand ENGLISH MARSEILLES QUILTS.

ORDERS BY MAILPROMPTLY FILLED.

HALEBROS. &CO.,CORNER OF NINTHAND X STS., SACRAMENTO.

WANTED, LOST AND FOUND.Advertisements of five lines Inthis department are

___-Tted for 25 C— -ta for one time; three times for50cents or 75 cents per week.—

WANTA PURCHASER FOR TnE CAMPI RESTAU-A atreet, completely furnished. In-rant. on X etreet, completely furnished. In-

quire of L. C.CHANDLER,No. 227 J street. d2l tf

EMPLOYMENT OFFICE.

HOUSTON_ CO..FOURTH AND X STREETS,

Sacramento— Fanners requiring plowhands,send in your orders, as we have some first-clas.Western men who understand the work ;also first-class male and female help for hotels and families.Branch office in San Francisco.

'We can procure

help suitable at the shortest notice. dls-lptf

TO LET 0B FOB S__L__~Adve_laeo_nU of five lines in thia department are

!:!--—_for 25 cents for one time;three times for 50cent, or75 oents per week.

FOR SALE—AGOOD-PAYING SALOON, WELL'located and doing a good business. Object in

selling, going on my ranch. Inquire at EMPIRESALOON, No. 120 Iistreet, between Front andSecond. . -

d2.-3t*

CORNER LOT FOR SALE—ANICE LOT AT Averylow price. Agood buy for any one wish-

ing to build onor to hold as an investment. Inquireof CARL STKOBEL, 321 J street, Sacramento.

d£3-6__wltW

FOR RENT -TWO FRONT ROOMS (WITH BAYwindows), opposite Capitol. Inquire at this

office. --.-\u25a0\u25a0' -

d2l-lw*

FOR SALE—TWO CAR-LOADS OF*._ 1 large MULES, from St. Louis, Mo.!%«.These Mules have just been brought to JfjPthis market by M. BIGGS, Jr. Can be _-l-i/_-

-seen at Agricultural Park. dl3-.f

ROOMS, lIOOMS, ROOMS— TO RENT CHEAP-er than any house in the city, single or ii

suite. Quiet ana homo like. Stove inevery room.Kept first-class in every respect. New building.Everything neat and clean. Also, a few unfurnishedrooms. MRS. GUI' E, Proprietress, northeast cor-uer Eighth and X streets, Clunie Building, lpln.

FOR SALE.

AGeneral Merchandise Store,

LOCATED INONEfOF THE LARGEST TOWNS\\a in Solano county, .loin.' a good-paying businessatme present time. Reason forselling,proprietor'spoor health. Address I.,this office. __-lplv.

TO RENT OR FOR SALE.

IN ELDORAD. COUNTY -THE _IT._-lg»cock ranch, containing 160 acres underwitfence; 11,600 grapevines, *2C5 fruit trees, A—

plenty of timber, living water; house and barn.Terms eJBy toa. cash tenant or purchaser. AlciessM. 11.. Box 98, .'.\u25a0.\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0•_\u25a0\u25a0•\u25a0, Sacramento. .122 iw

BEEWEEY FOE SALE.M.HE »-_ YEARS WELL-_-OWN«_e&i St. Louis Siren cry. H_B_k_Situated oncomer of Sixth and G ts,£_S^________,In the city of Bitramento, is, on account of thedeath of the proprietor, for sale cheap. Inquire ofP. BOHL. 82. J street _ dao-M _

FOB ___s___^:_____3..

n.II.\T ELEGANT RESIDENCE ANDfg^X property situated on tbe northwest •;•;

CORNER OF F ANDNINTH STS .Sacramento City, embracing four fulllots or half ablock of ground, highly improved. This propertywill be sold as a whole, or will sell the resiuencnwithground, 18-? feet front on Ninth street and 200feet front on F street, sparate.

ALSO,a tract of 1- acres of splendid gTape and

fruitland, situated just cast Of East Park and ad-joining Aiken, orchard. • •

For terms apply on the premises, corner F andNinthatrects. -'--\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 _± dlO-lplm

:£\u25a0\u25a0___\u25a0:_»' __§._?_-_-_-:---.

A SECOND CL\S_ KIMBALL-t?^-. ."'Hook and l.i.Mt-r Truck. with~__^____.

Extension Ladders complete, and two 'S^Bjß?^""'Hand Engines, by the Sacramento Kire__SE______9__Department. Apply to ;>ie Chief Eng_-__3 lplm

DENTISTBY.~

W. WOOD,

DENTIST.— (REMOVED TO Q.TJISS'SgBmBuilding,corner Fourth and J streets). -s____B

Artificial Teeth Inserted on all bases. ImprovedLiquid Nitrous Oxide Gas, fcr the Painless Kxtrae-tion ofTeeth. dli-

DBS. I"Ki:-EX «* SOCTHWOKTIf,

DENTISTS, SOUTHWEST CORNER OF««S»\\_f Seventh and J streets, inBryte's new !___t_?l___lbuilding, up stairs. Teeth extracted without painby the use of improved LiquidNitrous Oxide Gas.

dIS-lplm -W. 11. HARE. D.D. 8.,

'

DENTIST, NO. 606 J STREET, BE-gg»tw<en Sixth an- Seventh, Sacramento. _o_B

dli-lplm—_M_—_M-^_—

-—-^t^W^^^-l

WILCOX _;WHITE OEGANS_ ——AT WAKSBOOMB or •'„______. tft _-> Tvrivr-»--_fc,

No. Si- a 5treet........ Mcramecta.

tW Sold on tho installment plan. Orders forTUNING promptly attended to. Ij-O-lPlm

CITY BREWERY BEER.

THIS BREWERY, WHICH HAS«gE___&recently been purchased by RUH-Htta£S

.TALLEU iSCauLEtt, has been V-ga_S__-Jthoroughly repolre'l. and the proprietors are nowready to deliver BEER of their own brewing, whichthey claim i.\u25a0 uperior to any other in this market.City trade and country orders are solicited. RUH-STALLER 1- SCHULEB, Twelfth and H streets,Sacramento.

- '-

d2l-lplm

SWEETSER & ALSIP,REAL ESTATE AKD l-S.-ANCE ASENTS

dotal? Publicand Commissioner ofDeeds.

Real Estate Bought and Sold on Commission.tWHouse- rented and rents collected. **»

Agents for the following Insurance Companies :IMPERIAL... ••- of London

LONDON.. of LondonNORTHERS.- .of LondonQUEEN -of Li Poo'

.fORTH BRITISHAW MERCANTILE{EdSS__,m-ji .............. ..of Hartford, Conn

As'--write Capital. •**.'_._».

tW So. *TFoartb street, between 3 and X, Sac-ramento, oon-er

_ the alter d2Slp_

Recommended