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THE EVENING NEWS. Th* Catholic Fair is still the attrac tion every evening, and furnishes the citi zens with the nightly treat of a fine band of music. There is nothing like making a mistake in a local item occasionally. It always makes an opening for another, contradicting it. Don't you see ? We stated last night that the Fair would close ou Saturday night with a Ball, whereas it won't do anything of the kind. That fes tivity is fixed for Monday night, so that you can dance all night and " break " Tuesday as much as you please. The cause to which the proceeds of th_- Fair :iud Ball arc devoted wouldn't stand hreakin^ the Sabbath ? not much. Accident. ? A man named Collins, an engineer in the Gold Hill quartz mill, had his arm dislocated last night by having it caught by a belt and carried around a pulley. He was oiling the machinery, when the belt caught his sleeve and drew his arm between it and the drum of the pulley. When carried over the shaft he was struck by a crank, which threw him t'rom the belt, thereby saving him from being carried to the second pulley, where he would undoubtedly have been horri bly mangled. He is suffering intense pain at present, but the injury is one which will not lay him up for a long time, and will not permanently disable him. Imperial Dividend. ? The Imperial Silver Mining Company of Gold Hill, de clared a dividend of six (6) dollars per >hare, or one.hundred and twenty (120) dollars per foot, leaving a large sinking fund on hand. This company have been opening their mine for some time so as to get at the large body of pay ore, in quan tity, and now can pay a regular monthly dividend to its shareholders. One ^ by one the Gold Hill mines are falling into the line, atd petering out monthly divi ids, that will aid in restoring the con tLUnsr temporarily lost. The President has signed and approved the act to increase the par of soldiers in the Coited States Army- It provides that on and after the first of May last, and during the continuance of the present rebellion, the pay per month of non-commissioned officers and privates in the military service shall be us follows : Sergeant-Majors, ?2.5 : Quarter masters and Commissary Sergeants of Cavalry, Artillery and Infantry, 820 ; Sergeants of Ordnance, Sappers "and Mi ners and Pontouiers, $34 ; Corporals of Ordnance. Sappers and Miners and Pon toDiers, $.20 Privates of Engineers and Ordnance of the first class, $18, and of the second class, $16; Corporals of Cavalry, Artillery and Infantry, $18; Chief Buglers of Cavalry, $23 ; Buglers, $16 ; Farriers and Blacksmiths of Cavalry and Artillery, $18 ; Privates of Cavalrv, Artillery und Infantry, S16 ; Principal Musicians of Artillery and Infantry, $22 ; Leaders of Brigade and Itrgi uientaf Bands, $75; Musicians, $16; Hos pital Stewards of the first class, $33; Hospital Stewards of the second class, $25 ; Hospital Stewards of the third class, $23. All non- commissioned officers and privates of the Regular Army, serving under enlist ments made prior to July 22, 1S61, shall have the privilege of re-enlisting for a term of three years, iu their respective organiza tions, until the first of August next ; and all suoh non-commissioned officers and privates so re-enlisting shall be entitled to the boun ties mentioned in the joint resolution of Congress, approved January 13, 1S64. In all cases where the Government shall furnish transportation and su bsistence to discharged officers and soldiers, from the place of their discharge to the place of their enrollment or original muster into the service, they shall not be entitled to travel, pay, or commutation of subsistence. The Foreign- Troops ix Mexico. ? The Memorial Diplomatique says : " The com plete organization of the foreign troop* in :he service of Mexicc will form an effective force of sixteen thousand men, composed as follows : Eight thousand French, six thou sand Austrian*, and two thousand Belgians. This corps will assume the title of ' The Foreign Legion,' and the Commander-in Chief will be a French General, having the Krade of Lieutenant-General. He will re reive his orders direct from the Emperor Maximilian, and will only have to refer to the Ministry of War upon administrative atfairs. The Foreign Legion will be divided into several regiments, which will bear the title of ' Emperor Napoleon III.,' ' Emperor of Austria,' ' Emperor Maximilian,' and ' Empress Charlotte.' The last will be re served to the regiment of Belgian soldiers." Attempt to Mi'udek. ? On Monday night, August 8th, the wife of Charles Swift, resi ding at Brown's Vallev, Yuba county, cut the throat of her husband from ear to ear, by means of a butcher-knife. The cut was not deep enough to prove fatal, and the man will probably recover by the aid of medical skill. Swift is a blacksmith, and until recently was in the employ of the California Stage Com pany, in Marysville. He was married about six months ago, and his wife is about sixteen years of age. Tee new Conscription Law, in brief, abol ishes commutation; provides a bounty of 9100 for one Tear's service, 8200 for two years* and $30f> for three years' service for every volunteer ; requires a notice of fifty days before a draft ; allows recruiting in all rebel States except Arkansas, Louisiana and Tennessee ; and allows drafted men to pro cure substitutes. This comprises every fea ture of the bill, which is included in nine short sentences. Fecit Crop in- Oregon. ? The Oregon Statesman says : " Only a small vield of froit is vouchsafed to as this year. The early ap ple* are almost entirely ' a failure, while the. crop of winter fruit is not one-eighth of what it was last year. Peaches, plums and nec tarines have failed more completely than even apples. These remarks only apply to the central part of Willamette valley. We have but little information from other sec tion*."* Qss. Ban ks has given permission to any and all the public school teachers in New Or leans to go North, on the United States transports, free of charge. This favor is shown them as an acknowledgment of the earnest and successful efforts they have made, during the past year, to instil into the minds of their pupils sentiments of patriot ism and love for the national flag. The New York Express states that the quantity of whisky controlled in that market on the 1st of July was between three and four hundred thousand barrels. By not tax ing the whisky on hand, some of .the produ cers and speculators have been made im mensely rich, and the Government revenue diminished just in proportion. Secretary Seward had a narrow escape on the Fourth of July, while riding in his carriage, a rocket-stick striking him just above the eye. The blow was not severe enough to cause any serious injury, although had it strnck an inch lower, the most deplor able consequences might have ensued. Copperhead Statb Con vkxtiov.? This body will meet in San Francisco, September 7th. If the present prospects of an early suppression of the rebellion are followed by continued successes of the Union armies, the rebel sympathizers who will meet in Conven tion on that day will have a gloomy time of it. Iowa. ? The farmers in some parts of Iowa are paying " harvest hands" three dol lars a day, and a number of manufacturing establishments have been closed in order to give the workmen an opportunity to aasist in harvesting;. We take the following from the Boise News of July 23d : Humors are rife here of Indian depredations on the Salt Lake road. Counterfeit gold dust is becoming plentiful in this market ; we have in our possession a sample that was played on to a friend of ours. Election i.v Pexxsylyasia ? August 10th.? Return* from all bat 6*e counties in Pennsylvania, on the adoption of the consti tutional amendment allowing soldiers to vote, shows a majority in favor of the amendment of over 91,000. Tag Dutch have a proverb that " when the French are asleep, the devil rooks the cra dle." They are quiet for the present, but what devil is rocking the cradle future erents most show. Under the above head, the Sacramento Bet haa an excellent article, from which we ex tract the following : When those men first entered upon the po litical atage, the political issues of the times were between the Whigs and Democrats, and those issues mainly were a bank or no bank, a tariff or no tariff. With that fondness pe culiar to dotage they imagine the issues are still the same, and they continue to totter along in what remains of that old groove of ideas where they first happened to be placed. Thunders of war, oceans of blood ana fields of slaughter, fail to waken these benumbed individuals out of their lethe-like political slumbers. Chained to * name, and devoted to ancient memorils, our Democratic poli ticians. who attempt to lead the multitude, seem not to see that their once Democratic peers and leaders have marked out new issues ? that ther have quit fighting tariffs and national banks, and commenced fighting the nation itself. That the issue nolonger is " tariff or no tariff," but the country or no country. That the question is not whether Whigs, Republicans or Democrats shall pre side at the national capital, but whether we shall have a nation with a capital in which to preside. Those who made the Democratic party have made these new, these terrible, these bloody issues? yet many of those brought up in the Democratic school are now endeavor ing to discuss and settle them in the self same style they did the issues of a quarter of a century ago, when peace pervaded the land, and no Democratic leader, like Davis or Ben jamin, had dared raise their Democratic fronts in armed hostility to the Government and institutions to which the Democratic party owed its existence. A portion of the Democratic leaders and papers of this State willfully endeavor to mis lead all those whom they can in any way in fluence in relation to the present issue before the country ; another portion are " blind leaders of the blind," who cannot compre hend the depth and seriousness of the ques tion at stake, and therefore thev continue to dismally dole out their befogged and befog ging ideas and theories which once served their time well enough, it is true, but are no more applicable to the present condition of our national affairs than are the political and social ideas that prevailed in Turkey three centuries ago. Such men may be" honest and well meaning ; they may be "heartily de voted to their country, and earnestly desirous of quelling the rebellion, but " they have outlived their usefulness." They fail to com prehend the situation, and consequently only blunder when they suggest a remedy. Like ignorant ouacks, they nave only one medicine for all diseases. Because the Dem ocratic pill manufactured thirty years ago was good for slight colds, they imagine it must succeed in cases of malignant fever. And so they totter on in the old groove, amid the fog* of the past, themselves misled and others misleading ? breeding sedition, en couraging rebellion and endangering the na tion.' Carton Historical Falalilr. The Independence Beige (no French paper dare take such a liberty) speculates upon the chances of Napoleon III being succeeded by his son, the Emperor being in hi? fifty -seventh year, and the boy in his ninth year. It appears, from histori cal and personal data, that in the last two hundred and twenty-one years, commen cing in May, 1643, when Louis XIII died in St. Germain-en-Laye, no son of any French monarch has succeeded to the throne. The proof of this is very easy, for it is chronological. Louis XIV, who succeeded to the crown iii 1643, was the son of Louis XIII and Anne of Austria, bom after his mother had been married and childless for twenty years. Having reigned seventy-two years, he survived has son, grandson, and several of his great-grand-children, and was suc ceeded, in 1715, by the third son of his grandson. The king was only five years old, and Fran^p was governed during his minority by his cousin the profligate Duke of Orleans. This monarch, Louis XV (who is believed to have said, "After me, the deluge," as a set-off, perhaps, to the declaration by Louis the Great that he was the State,') had the misfortune of wit nessing the death of his son, the Dauphin, and was succeeded by his grandson, the unfortunate Louis XVI, who was guillo tined during the first French Revolution. The son of this unhappy monarch never wore the crown, but died of disease and neglect in the prison to which the Terror ists confined him. In time a new dynasty was commenced in the person of the first Napoleon, who died in St. Helena, an exiled and dis crowned emperor, leaving an only son, the late Duke of Reichstadt, who never reigned, but died a colonel in the service of the Emperor Francis, of Austria, his grandfather. In 1816 the next brother of Louis XVI became King of France, as Louis XVHL and dying childless, the crown went to their only surviving broth er, the Count d'Artois, better known as Charles X, who was deposed and exiled by the Revolution of 1830, the Duke d'Angouleme, eldest son of Charles, also abdicating then in favor of his nephew, only son of the Duke de Bern, who had been assassinated in Paris ten years before. The Duke de Bordeaux, himself childless, is the sole male lineal representative of the great House of Bourbon, and has little chance of ruling in France. The Duke of Orleans, whom the revolution of 1830 cast upon the throne as Louis Philippe, the citizen-king, was driven out of France by a counter revolution, eight years after he had lost his eldest son, whose personal popularity was so considerable that had he lived it might have preserved the crown in the Orleans line. The Count de Paris, whom we saw serving in the army of this republic two years ago, is Louis Philippe's eldest grandson, with a very small pros post of ever ruling France. Here, out of seven successive monarchs of France, only one of whom was childless, six have not been succeeded any by son. The eighth, virtually controller of Europe, has an only child, who will be nine years old in March, 1865. What are the chances of Ait wear ing the imperial crown ? A New God to the Hindoos. ? The Gazette gives the following extraordinary instance of ignorance and superstition : A Hindoo was afflicted with a series of family misfortunes ? frequent intercessions to the gods proved unavailing for their relief and another Hindoo, an employee on the railway, was consulted as to what was to be done. He at once advised that the new deity which had recently come among them, the locomotive, should be appeased by the usual votive offering*. Accordingly, the other day, flowers, ghee, rice, etc., were prepared, and the man took his stand on the Jjpe waiting for the god. Down came the locomotive, the of ferings was presented, and the man crush ed to death. Rajsijw. ? The New York city newspapers on or before the lit of August, were to raise (the dailies) their prices to a five cent stand ard. The advance would have taken place earlier but for the disinclination of one estab lishment to Tenture. upon the experiment. The increase and increasing cost of all mate rials that enter into the manufacture of a newspaper has made this step a positive ne cessity, and one which can no longer be de Thocqht Better of it.? At the Copper head primary meeting, held at Copper City July 23d, a resolution was offered ana passed to go armed to the polls on election day, as recommended by C. L. Weller. Through the efforts of one Warley, and some others present, the resolution was afterward rescin ded. A Havana correspondent of the New York Herald writes that the stares in Cuba had prepared to rise in insurrection on the 24th i ult., but the plot was defeated &y one of the conspirators getting frightened andpre-ad risicg the authorities. A number of arrests hare been made. It is said in Paris that Louis Napoleon has a fatal disease of the kidneys, that will kill him within a year or two. There will be a good many dry eyes -when the Emperor pegs out. He will leave a brilliant reputation as a royal thief, having stolen a throne. X train is always the need for a man to go higher, if he has the capacity to do it. ASSESSMonrr and wat.h t.tbt or AixcLuasn tuodtu, sold bill blvk ii'Lruvm, DtYIL'l GATE, PAUflUA, tNDIAN SPAI?a?, ABOEN Tin AND rlOWUT DISTRICTS ? ALPHAMKTI CALLT ASD OOMXCTXD DAILY. Aihmmiu Levied Wtthls Thirty D>r>. Atlantic . July 16.. 1 ..i Name. DateLevv. Aint Adriatic Julyi9..1 ..(Live Yankee. July20. . 15 ?StuaNo. l...July20..1 SMlady Bryan.. Julyl9..3 .. AMor .AoflO.,1 ..ILatrobe Jvly2S....30 Belvldere ? Jul.vlH..l .. Monitor July 11.. 25 Baltic JnlyZS..6 . . iMomlti* Star July 1 1 .. 1 .. BaJ. A Golden Km? Xary Ann July 16. .5 .. July 30.5 omMllton JnlyJ6..3.. Caledonia Till liDwtsslppl 4 Sebantopol JnlyU..l soT Julvi?.. 30 Comb.Kflbrt..Julyy.i..l ..(Monte delRejrJuIy27.. 25 Crown Point Ravine iN'ordberg k Lybeckcr Julv30..1 .. " July 13.. 80 Confidence tj M f Newcastl CoaUulySO. .1 .. Co Auc. 4 2 SoN'evada, J G..July25.12 .. Crystal Peak.. Auk 9..5 .. North Potonl.. Aug (.1150 Danl Webster Jnl.v21 . . ?|Owlar HU1 T. A M. unicwn, riwiujii.. avi La Plata 0ro.Julyl2..I -J Delinquent Soles. Name. Date Sale. PlaceiName. Archer Cons..Aug23 S. F Adriatic 8*pt 3 S. F American Flat Nevada Aug 18 Viif Amer. Basin ..Aug 19 Tlrg Date Sale. Place Kenosha Aug 13 Tlrg Knlckerbock'rAugl5 G. H Knight Aug27 G. H Keystone Sept 10 Vint Laboring Aug 13 0. Atlantic Ang20 Tlrg'Lanrastcr.Pal Aug31 8. F Atlantic Aug. 16 Tint ! La Plata Oto..Auk23 VIm AmaxonT.AMAug30Com:Lady Bryoiu.SeptlO 8. P Argentora ? Aug22 Vint Burn. Moscow Aug 15 S. r Branch Mlnt.Augl6 Tlrg Bennett Aug20 Tlrg Bullion Sept 1 Vint Cent'l Am*n..Aug 22 S F Caledonia T A M AuxSi S. F Cedar HU1 T. A M. Sept 12 S. F Caledonia Aug 17 G. II Crown Point Knvtne SeptH Tire Coie Aug. 13 S. Y Latrobe Sept 15 8. F Montreal Augl3 Tlrg Mount'nPeak AuglV Tlrg Murphy Aug2?i Tint Mlda? Sep. 6 G. H Michigan SeptlOG. II Nordberg A Lybecker Aug 16 Tint N. Whitman.. Angl7 W.C North Potosl..July30 S. F New Oregon. .Aug22 G. H North Ophlr..Au*?> vns Napoleon Con.Sept 2 Tlrg ? North Am. ..Aug, 23 Tire Caledonia Aug. 17 S. K North Potoni.. Septan 8. F Central Am..Aug.22 S. F Orion Auglfi Ttrg Chapin Aug?) TlntjJakland Sept 3 Tint CaledaniaTun Aug2? S. F|i)r Hawkeye.Auf.15 G. H Dayton Aug 13 Tlrg[ Jrixaba Sep 6 Dt'n Daniel Low Coal Oneoto Sep 6 Vlrg Aug22 Vlrg -Orleans Flat..Aug30 Tlrg Danl Webster Aug25 Vlrg Prima Donna. Aug 13 8 F Dnrdanelle Aug20G. Hj Potomac AugZ7 G. H Danlanelle ...SeptlOG. HIPloueer Aug27 Tlrg El Dorado ? Aug31 8. F|PoncedeLeonSeptl2 Vlrg tit DoradoCoalA agio Dt'njPoorman Aug 13 Vlrg Peytonla . ? Sept30 8. F Eureka Aug23 Vlrg Frankfort Augl3 Tins Federal Augl5 G. H George Law..tet 1 Vlrg Gold Hill T. * JTCo. Aug 26 8. F Granada Aug 16 Vlrg Germania Aug23 Vlig German Aug.3? Vint Grosh Aug. 13 8. F Gill more .Sept 3 Vlnr Green ? -...Septal 8. F Globe Augl6 Vln: Hawlev Aug 20 8 F) Uale&KorcrosSept 7 8, V Honduras ? Sept 3 YlrxSantaFe AugJO Vlrg Hawley Aug20 8. FTruckee A Carson Wood Hills Ang? Vlrg Harold A ArgoSept 1 G "H Philadelphia.. Aug20 Vlrg Rlchlana \ugl3 Vlrg KoyalKAClltTAmr.13 S. F Rock Island.. Augao Vlrg Royal Fagle A IM AugSO 8. F San Francisco. Augl6 8 F San Francisco. Aug31 8. F Swexy Jub'30 Vlrg Swezy Centra! Auit'Ji) Tlrs: [Sunrise .* AogSG. It {Stranger Augl9 Tlrg lSantaRosa....Aug^ Tlrg Seneca Septl6 8. F Aug27 Tlrg United States Sept2l 8. F Hull. .* Ai?7 vrrA^Uh '."l&pt 9 Vlti Iowa.... ..Sept 5 S. F Virjrtnto A^.15 vK Independent -Aides VlrftiVh*. Sldonla.AuiSO Tin: Independent .Aujtsn ^ItvAVmmixn Aiiir'*"' Dt'n Jenay Ltnd...Augi6 VhvjwhltmuiNojAnxIS Dt'n lJ.> t.on.v...bept f. C. H,Wl<!e Awake . Aup?7 0. H JlniMcLellan. Aug27 A. C|W m Pe n n AojilJ Ylrir jv^tone AittfOG. Hiiai Sept 6 8. y COMPANY MEETINGS or ALL COM PANIK8 WHOSE OFFICES ARE IN GOLD HILL, VIRGINIA, AMERICAN CITY, 81LVKR CITT, DAYTO* OR COMO. Argentine Virginia, ..Aug. 20. 7 p.m German Virginia... -Auk 30 2p,m Independent Gold Hlll,..Aug.)2, 11 a.m Original Uawkeye GoUl Hill.. Aug. 23, 2p.m Potomac Gold Hill... Aug. 27, 3 p.m Wide Awake Gold HU1, ..Aug.27, 3 p.m MISCELLANEOUS ADVERTISEMENTS. THE DRAWING. Haw the Dnwin| i? Is be Dane at TAYLOR'S GRAND GIFT ENTERTAINMENT, ? TO BE GIVEN ? AT JI AO HIRE'S OPERA HOUSE, THURSDAY September Eighth, 1864. | The checks representing the num bers upon the Tickets are to be MARBLES ; each Marble bearing a number corresponding with the number on the Ticket. The Marbles will be placed within a wheel and revolved until the audi ence are fully satisfied that the numbers are thor oughly mixed before the drawing commences. trie drawing will be done by a Tittle girl, who will uraw the Marble from the wheel, pass it to the Com mittee appointed l'or the examination, who will an nounce the number to the audience. The Marble will then be placed in the Indent of an Incline, the Incline containing twelve thousand Indents, the number of Marbles drawn from the wheel. The ticket with the number corresponding with the number on the last Marble to draw the build ing. THOS. J. TAYLOR. Virginia, August 4, IflH. au3tf CENTRAL PACIFIC RAILROAD. IffiBijiittsi Tff TWW* ON A.nD AFTER MONDAY, JUNK 6, 1*64. until | further notice, the trains or the Central Pacific f liallroad will ran as follows: ' UP TRAINS LEAVE Sacramento at fi:13 a.*., arrive at Newcastle 7:30 a.m SacTamento at 1 p.m., arrive at Newcastle 330 p.* Sacramento at 3 p.m., arrive at Newcastle 6:40 p.m DOWN TWAINS LEAVE Newcastle at f-;43 a.*., arrive at Sacramento 8:40a.* Newcastle at 10:30 a.*., arrive at Sacramento at VJ m Newcastle at 5 p.m., arrive at Sacramento 6:40p.m The 6:13 a.m. and 3 p.m. up trains connect at the Junction with the cars of the California Central Rail road for Lincoln: and the 6:13 a.m. train connect* at the same place with the care for Folsom. The 6:43 a. m. down train connect* at the Junction with the cars for Lincoln, and receive passengers from FoUtom for Sacnunento; aud the 1030 a.m. train connects at the same place with the care for Folsom, and at Sacramento with the steamers for San Fran cisco. On Sunday one train only will be rua, leaving Sac ramento at 6:13 aji.. and Newcastle at 10:30 a.m. Stages for Virginia City, Dutch Flat, Nevada and Intermediate places connect with the care at New castle at 7:30 a.m. Stage* for Marys ville and other points north connect at Lincoln at 7:30 a.m. L ELAND STANFORD, Jn4 President C. P. R. K. Co. EXPRESS FREIGHT, Ten Cents Per Pound, BY WELLS, EARG0 & CO.! u NTIL FURTHER NOTICE. OUB CHARGE Oil Freight fnm San Francisco BY PAST STACK L11VB, Will be TEN" CENTS per pound. WELLS, FARGO 4 CO.. IVr P. D. Hedley, Agent. Gold Hill. Jane 11. MM. Jnll tf GOLD HULL POST OFFICE. ARRIVAL^^D&PAKTIIHE OP Arrive ? California Mail*, per Pioneer S tax en, at 4 o'clock *. jr; Overland and Territorial Mall*, per Lang ton's, at 5 r. x. Close? All Malls close at 8 o'clock r. St. Office Open? From 8 o'clock a. m. to s o'clock p.m. Jyaitr O. H. PLATT, P. M. , Lost. HpHE UNDERSIGNED, WHILE COMING (Vom X Dayton tills afternoon, lost a valuable GOLD FOB CHAIN, worth about *75. The finder will re ceive $50 reward by leaving the same at the Chtytt opollg Saloon, Silver City, or returning It to the un dersigned, at his residence In Gold Hill. C. H. TAN GORDER. Gold Hill. May 16. IBM. mv!7 tf Engineers. Attention. THE NEVADA TERRITORY ENGINEER'S Association. No. I. meets every SATURDAY EVENING at "k o'clock, at Turu-Vereln Hall, Gold Hill. Members are requested to be punctual In at tendance. D. C. MORRIS, President. Jxo. B. Moraow. Secretary. JyJO tf GROCERY AND PROVISION STORE, Brick Store, opposite FrankenhPinier's, GOLD HILL. J . MUST O TirOCLD RESPECTFULLY INFORM THE VT people uf Gold Hill and vicinity, tint he has for Mir a large ami fresh stock of GROCE11IE8 AND PROVISIONS, Which he offers FOR CASH an cheap as can be bought In the Territory, a trial of which will satisfy anv one uf that fact. Ills stock consists In part of Coffees, Sugars, Teas, Spices uf all kinds, Pickles. Flour. Hams, Bacon, Mackerel, Potatoes, Cheese, Corn Meal, Rice, Eggs, and everything usually-found In a Unit-class Grocery Store. Also, a large and splendid assortment of CROCKERY WARE, of the heaviest make, and moat fashionable styles. Also, a large assortment of HANOI Mi LAMPS, and a large stock of Tinware. All of which, with large quanti ties of the same kind received weekly, he oners to the public, at prices which he feels certain will salt the public. J. MUSTO'S, JjriOtf Brick 8tore. Gold Hill. PIONEER WINE AND LIQU8R STORE.! ?. LEICHTER & CO., J'Ji;. f Fireproof buildings, Halo- street, opposite the Union Quartz Mill, Gold Hill. 4el4 lm Notice. ]\TOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN TO ALL WHOM it may concern, that I will not be responsible for any contracts, except those made by myself per sonally or by ray order In writing. A. MONTMINY. Gold Hill, August in, 1364. p aufl02w BOOK AND JOB PMHTIMQ OFFICE. GOLD HILL NEWS NEWSPAPER, BOOK AND JOB Printing: Office, MAIN tl^BEBT fiOLDHILI,. EiYWCH Ac KIUNDALL, PrtprieMn PLAIN AW? FANCY JOB PRINTING OF EVERY VARIETY Executed with accuracy and dUpateh IN A STYLE THAT WILL COMPARE With the very bcit, and I AT RATE8 AS CHEAP AB THE CHEAPEST I STOCK CERTIFICATES For Miaiag mad Other CtapuiM DONE ON SHORT NOTICE. AND AT PRICES TO SUIT THE TIMES. - I Card* and Bill Heads, CHECK*. DRAFTS, RECEIPTS, FOSTERS Aim PROGRAMMES ? roH? Tknlrn, Concert*. Exhibitions, Etc., Etc., Etc., PRINTED IN THE MOST ATTRACTIVE MANNER. AI.SO, WAV-BILLS, BIli I'M OF FARE, LETTER HEADS, RECEIPT BOOKS, Briefs and Pamphlets, VISITING. WEDDING AND "AT I IIOHE" CARD*, DRUGGISTS' LABELS, In abort, everything that con be "done In a Book and Job Printing Office, from the amalleat and moit delicate Card or Circular, to the largeat aire and moat ahowy Poating Bill? and which will be turned out In a Kyle that cannot fall to inanre entire aatiafaction. Oar FbcUIUm for the Execution of Decorative Printing! In the most Beautiful Colon, 8 hade 8 and Tint*, such as STOCK CERTIFICATES ORNAMENTAL SHOW CABDS, FANCY POSTING BILLS. (From a single Sheet to the Largest Mammoth,) PKHFr.VKBf LABELS, At. Are unsurpassed bv those of any other establish* meat in the Territory. We devote special atten tion to this branch of the bu nines!, and are con tinually adding to our already extensive and well appointed assortment of material NEW TYPE, BORDERS, ORNAMENTS Etc.. Etc., Etc., Of the moit iqpdora and elaborate deaigna. Our luge and varied stock of FANCY INKS, TINTS, ETC., Are of tbe fine?t quality, and for richnen of color and durability, cannot be equaled In the Territory Tbe principle npon which bunineu U a?ked for thti ettabllahment la, tbst pereoni will connlt their own Intemti, by awarding their custom to that office In wMch their money can b* expended to the belt advantage. To thlia end we aollcit all in want af good Printing, at very reaaonable chargea, to call and examine ipeetmeu, and Judge for themaelve<L REmBHBBB THE PUCK, GOLD HILL NEWS, V - ' - + MAIN STREET, MM BULL. MISCELLANEOUS ADVERTISEMENTS. KORN BROTHERS, MAIN STHEET GOLD WIT.T, WHOLESALE AND mi\L DEALERS IN Groceriet, Xr*ro visions, Wine., Liqnont, Clothing. Crockery, ? Glassware, Boots, Shoes,' Powder, F*tise, F?lck?, Shovels, Plated Ware, Etc., Etc,, Etc. OCR groceries! Are Selected EXPRESSLY FOR THIS MARKET, And can be Bought AT LOWER PRICKS Than anywhere In till Territory KORN BROTHERS, MAIN STREET GOLD HILL. focl2-tf] M. FRANKKVHEIMKR 3. MAKKKW1TZ FRANKENHEIMEB & GO,, DZALEBI IS STAPLE ANfl FANCY DRY B000S, CARPETS, OIL CLOTHS, JCELLHTEEY AM) QEHT'8 FUBHI8HIHQ G O O I) S , LADIE8' AND OHILDBEN'S SHOES, ETC., Fire. Proof Building , Main Street, - - - - Gold Hill, K. T. JUST RECEIVED ! A LARGK and HOST SPLENDID Assortment of SPRING AND gUMilIEB Silks, Satins, Delaines, Calicos, Embroideries, Laces, Millinery Goods, Hosiery, etc., etc., direct from the Eastern markets, and of the latest and most fashion able European and American styles? to which we specially Invite the attention of the Ladies of Gold HU1, American Flat and 81lver City. Also? Perfumery, Head Dresses and Ornaments, Combs, Ladles' and Children!' Boots and Shoes, and every description of Uoods for Ladles 8pring and Summer Wear. Also? A large stock of Carpets, Oil Cloths, Linens, Sheetings, etc., etc. MTThe above Goods will be?old at prices,. FOR CASH, cheaper Mian any stock of (Mods ever brought to Gold Hill. Ladies are particularly Invited to call and examine our new Goods before going elsewhere, as we feel contldent of being able to suit them. Gold Hill, May 12. l#i). may!2 tf E. CU8HING CO., Main Street, t s ? 1 1 < 1 1 1 1 Gold Hill) N. T. | DKAI.EIM IN HARDWARE, STOVES, IRON AN1) STEEL, Belting, Hose, Pnckins, Rivet. Lend and Iron Pipe. - MAXvrju-Ti'BOu or ? TIN, COPPER AND SHEET-IRON WARE. a a-i, ft PARTICULAR ATTENTION' GIVEN TO ALL X kinds of Job Work In our Une 49" Air Pipe made at the shortest possi ble notice. CCSHING & CO., 1?? tf Qold H11L ECGEIVE BITTNER A CO., | & Main St, Qold Hill, Clt DEALKRS IK HARDWARE > Iron, Steel, Stoves, Tinware, Crockery, O-lams, Coal Oil, Lamp*, Lard Oil, PAINTS, BELTING, BRASS GOODS, GAS PIPE AND FIXTURES ; MANUFACTURERS OP TIN, COPPER AND SREET IRON WARE. _ ffyia tf ] BERNHARD FRANZ, No. 42 South C 8 tree t, "Virginia ST. T. BOOKS, STATIONERY and MUSIC, Circulating Library. Deutsche Buohhitnalang. LIBRA IR1K FRANCAI8E. LAW BLANKS. LEGAL BLANKS, SCHOOL BOOKS -AltD Wrnppini; Paper. SOLE AGENT FOR THE TERRITORY OF Nevada of H. II. Bancroft 4i Co 'i Law Pub lications and importation!, and their hand-made Linen Paper. Alto for W. B. Cook'i Law Blanks. rp- A fall assortment of 8taple and Fancy Stationery always on hand. Subscriptions and advertisements received for J. Silversmith's Boyal Quarto Work, entitled the "Metalic and Agri cultural Wealth or thjc PACinc Statu," 1,500 pages, 1,000 Uluatratlona; In English, French, Spanish anil German. Ja30 tf BERNHARD FRANZ. D. B. WOOLF, COLLECTOR, OFFICE. At "Territorial Enterprise" Office, VIRGINIA. D. B. W. will attend to the Collecting of Rents and Accounts In Virginia sod Gold Hill. Birtas BY PERMISSION TO Meter*. Goodman A McCarthy, Territorial Enterprise Mesara. 1'axton 4 Thornbureli, Bankers,. ..Virginia Measrs. Arnold 4 Blaurelt, Bankers Virginia Messrs. Mitchell A Adams Virginia J. H. La ham, Esq., Agent Wells, Fargo & Co., Jy?tf Virginia HOTELS, SALOONS, ETC. GLENBROOK, Ii*k? T ? b ? e, EVcrnda TerrlWry. A 8. BEATTY (OF THE MANSION ^ A. House, San Jo*,) wlshe* to Inform his friends and the public generally, that he CML has taken this new and elegantly furnished house, hullt by Messrs. Winters A Colbath. No pains will be spared to make this one of the finest Summer Resorts on the Pacific Coast. Lerthe friends of Izaak Walton come along-plenty of water and plenty or trout. mrrtt Pioneer Line of Stages stop dally at the House. aupitf A. 8. BEATTY. BABBY1 OLD PLACE, No. 30 South B Street. : ? t Virginia, N. T. The Best Wines and Liquors IN THE MARIS FT. Jy30 m B. V. BARRY. Prop'r. COABLET WHITE'S EXCHANGE AND BILLIARD SALOON, Brick Building. oppslte Police Court, GOLD HILL. WINES. LIQUORS, CIGARS, ETt' OF THE best quality kept at the Bar. FREE LUNCH served every day. The proprietor will be happy to meet his Mends at all times. Jyctf Ttxrn Verein Hall, (Next Building above the Gold Hill Nm Offlce.) rpHE UNDERSIGNED WODLD INFOBM HIS X many Mewls and the public In genertd that he has again leased the above-named building, the Hall, which la now the most suitable one In Gold Hill for Balls, Public Meetings, etc., and which wUl be rented for suchpurpose* ,t any time. The best WINES, LIQUORS, and C1GAR8 kept at the Bar. [lyatf] FRED. Uh"P WILLOWS-AMERICAN CITY. i THE LOCATION BEN don it one of the pleaaanteot place* of retort la the vicinity, ItLjmVlH and the Proprietor* will (pare no palni to make their gueatu comfortable. J. B. Crandall'o line of Pioneer Om nlbnuet pan every half hour. Booh open *11 n t g liT LEE Sc KEEPER, Prop'nu v apriO-tf RICHARD BANDER I I BDW. OOHAETIK SAN FRANCISCO RESTAURANT, Sander & Schaefer, Proprietors, Main meet, Gold Hill. if SALS SERVED IN EVERY Oi me, Fish, ?2sg>, ImBSb Aad al the deUcaelen of the ?ea?0B, twredm a nsparlor manner. ?olStf) TATLOB'8 B1CT ESTESPtKE^ THOS. J. TAYLOR'S GRAND GIFT ENTERTAINMENT TO BK OIT*!? AT HAnvnusnt opera hoiri, VIRGINIA CITY, v * THUBSDAY, HKiTKHTHKTt 8, 1864, ?TBI? I.ABGE AND .VAG.tlFICEKT THHEMTORY BRICK BUILDING, CoraertfC mm* Tayler Streets, KNOWN AS TAYLORS BUILDING, VALUED AT SIXTY THOUSAND DOLLARS ! THE RENTAL * PAVING A Jlralklr Diri<ln4 *f Three Per Cemt j ON VALUATION OP PROPERTY, WILL BE GIVEN AWAY I ?TO THE? LUCKY INDIVIDUAL WHO HOLDS i'lIF. RIGHT NtJMBBB OF TICKBT. rjlHIS BUILDING 18 CENTRALLY Loca ted, being In tba immediate vicinity of the viri ons Expreu Officet, Poatoffice, etc., in the city? in new and hard-flnlibed thronghout, (applied with pore, frrih water, brought in pipea direct from the fountain bead, tbo supply being nn 1 United. . ' The Building (ontabu Sixteen Large and finely-apportioned Offices WELL LIGHTED AND VENTILATED, ?AND? TWO LAKOE STORES Oi the Gr*?d VImt, With a frontage of TWKHTV.HTB NIT BACH. MESSRS. ARNOLD & BLAUVELT ? -HOLD? A POWER Of ATT9MIT From me nod wlU give a . Deed of the Property ?TO THt? iy LUCKY ONE JR DRAWING THE PRIZE. AN INSURANCE POLICY WILL ACCOMPANY THE DKKD OF ??FT TO THE PROPERTY. r?*Tickiu will to mir 1* r Imm m Ike FIBf T OF AVOVST, wfcea Ih imIm will ki |im rf the MtaW IIiImhI ????? fmr Ikf sale mt llclirli. MCMtM,.... 9*,?. THOS. J. TAYLOB. )7U2m MBCaLAIKTOAPmiMPOra P. J. O ROVE, PRACTICAL WAT6IMMER AH JEWUI, ^^^X^LjKWKUtT mad* (o nto. #SDHBB9xt?7 W?k pinaM to keep p*rt*ct Tim*. Main Stmt. <HU Wtt. Nut door to Koro'i Piof. [otM tf Mniiol Mnsio 1 1 MuicOl rPDE OOLD HILL BKA88 A*D RHINO BAOT> X la now pnptnd to taraUb Kntc tbr laDa, P?nt?, Serenades, Fnnerals, and on paMSe w? ik>n?,at the ibortMt notice. Order* to bereft at tbe^ettopoUtan gstoon^lUJn Y|g1f , ? Pioneer Omnitma Lint. AX AMD AFTER APRIL /ITTKANTH, TICK W tticinbe purchased from either of the JDrlieim, or at die ofllce of the Line In Gold BID. Tluw tor One Dollar. Passengers not pnrehaainc Tfckftf *11 be charged Fltty Cents. QrJXT. JON**, apis td General ioparlntaiKwti IBPOBT1NT M THI BMMM ? or ? V. 8. TREASURY NOTES. TILTON 4c McFABLAND'l PATENT FIBE-PBOOF liVB. rns 18 THE ONLY 8ECCBE 8AFE 15 TBI world, It bein# secure Item banian, u well u Are, ahd the Combination Lock U be To ad the power of man to pick. ? jr Tbey ere exclulreljr tued by tlta Treaiory and War Departments at Washington, W e ban constantly on band and are receiving bv every clip per ship from New York, a large assortment of IhtK celebrated Safes. F. TILLMAN, jel8Sm 318 Battery Street. Ban franctoce. a. h. m'donjlld. T. o. (roots R. H. M'DONALD 3c CO, ^ IMPORTING WHOLESALE DRUGGISTS, With Steel VaflU u< Combination Lacks. J Career tan u4 PtH BAN FBANCMCO. . " WK BSBPXCnrCLLY 9K> LXATE TO IN T T form our customers and the ?public generally that we luve opened a House In the city of Ban FranctKO, where we will be pleawd to Me a* many of oar old friends and ctutomen ai can make It con venient to call upon us. We shall keep at both places a Urge and well selected stock of Drw and MeJIdieslPslau uri Otttt Horfleal IutruHs, Dental Good*, Fancy Article*, Brashes and Ceaki, Hhsulder and Mr Braces, Ladles' Baadaces and ggnortmi Gam Elastic Stack's* Ttasssi, Together with a large and complete assortment of all goods kept In a well supplied Wholesale Drug Store. We respectfully solicit those dealing In our Uae to examine and price onr stock before porcbaatiu alee b. h. Mcdonald * cO, Pateat BMkkMt Herb* sad ] Brewers' sa4 Stack, [Car lu, large variety, .Asaayers' Material, Baralng Oil* aad Plaids, Plaster Paris, i Marble Dast, where. Sacramento and San Francisco. R. H. MDO^fALD Ac CO, IMPORTING DRUGGIST A Street, Coraer Plae u4 Huimm Sl?? w. ? SAN FRANCISCO, CAT., - IMPOBTERS'OF DENTAL AND SURGICAL IXSTKl- ? STENTS, TEBTH, GOLD TOIL, T70KCEP8 OF ALL KINDS. DENTAL CilAIBS. r Hind and Foot Lathe* . Brush Cotton and cor undum Wheels, Plugjers, Scalers, Files, Bmwnd DwttaJ Caaes, Brass bound, bat quality, with tall seta Instru ments, Mirrors, etc. Prices from |7? to $1TJ each. Valeaatte JblerkL Vukcanlsers. Vulcanite Base, and Impreetoo Quit* Perch*. A large variety of VULCANITE TEETH, Scraper* and Packers; together with a large and complete assortment of all articles ot the latest and most approved styles of Valcanl^ Work. Deata I Tliiki We keep constantly on band a supply of an Um most approved Standard Works on Dentistry. Our efforts will be to keep a lane and well selected stock of all Dental Material, where the Dental Fi ofiaHosi may confldently rely upon bavin* their order* filled In the best possible manner. b. h. Mcdonald t oo? Sacramento, 13U J street, San Francisco, cor. Pine and Banaome sUawa. 151* ST. CHARLES MARKET. Main 8tre?t, opposite fhe Ecllpes Mltl, Gold Hill, i < 1 1 1 1 s Nevada Tenrttar r. ST THIS MARKET CAN Air ways be found the choicest Meat*,* Spring Lamb, Beef, ? mutton. Veal and Pork. Also, pobk sausage and spici mats, conatontly oil bind and, tod held at the Loweat Market Priee. Particular attention paid to Hotela tad Private Families. JaiQ tf SNYDKB * HA TO. PIONEER STAGES. CHANGE OF TIMS ON AND APT SB SUNDAY, JULY 1TTH, TOT Pioneer Stage Com mot will aurt their Coaebea dally, aa follows: One coach will leave Virginia at ( o'clock a.x. and connect at Fotoom next oar with the 7 o'clock A.M. Train, for Sacramento; and one coach will leave Virginia at a o'clock r.m.. and con nect at Folaom next da y with the II o'clock aji. Train; arriving in Sacramento In time for the San Franciaco Boat#. Jfl? tf Seata In theee Coaches can be eecund 19 Oold HUlat the office of Wella, Fargo * Co. JOB PRINTING. The proprietors or the gold hili> A NEWS wonld Inform tie public that tier ir> prepared to execnt* in the boat and moat work manlike manner. STOCK BOOKS, BY-LAWS, ETC, ETC HAND-BILL* CA^S^C^KS, ETC., ETC At the ahorteat notice tad on tfce moat reason able terms, roR UIU. LYNCH k. MUNPALL. To the I'll blic Another orkinbacx cfcsTOMiB. Charlea Brodhao, a would-be Merchant tailor, la the man who para hie rant to me tojrrMatack currency; ao look out for btm-or yon wfll be born ?wajKleri. JOHN A. WIVTSBBAUER. Gold Hill. Amruet Uh, lax. aatlw* C W.. r. A Co.. add Hia. aain* CHA8. W. YOUNG, awaria m dbalkk n FETE WATCHES, JEWEL*!, <000X8, Silrar h Plated Wan, Oatlary 4 Twtj Oaok, IV*. ? Saatb O hraet, TbgUa, Three loon below Colon Street. Weat Side. All Good* warranted a* nyvaMlal Jewelry nud* endreptired to erfcr. Witcbea ukI Clockj cmfallr wpXit fc; J. ? bell, mil gumatod fp SAMUEL AHJfOLD, TOWJN MARSHAL, Of nOB-Wlth Jodce EoMnaoa. f ?ciipn litibt niun. . Halo (tteei, OoM H1U,