Amador ledger (San Francisco) 1900-02-16 [p ] · Cures heartburn, raising of the food,distress after eating or any formof dyspepsia. One littletablet gives immediate relief; 25cents

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DOINGS AT CANYONTHE EXPERIMENT STATION,

Canyon, February s.—The ball onSaturday night, given in honor ofJohn Dohman and family, was a grandsuccess. There was alarge attendance.The music was furnished by a Folsomorchestra. Lunch was served in thedining-room of BrinHupkey's Hall.Mr. Dohman and family, with the ex-ception of his son, Raymond, willtaketheir departure at an early hour to-morrow. Mr. Ed Simpson and familywilloccupy Mr.Dohman's house.

Mrs. E. C. Zorres has returned fromSacramento. . 1\u25a0

'

Mr.Reagan, our former blacksmith,with his family, is about to take hisdeparture for other parts.

Justice Smith left for Angels Campyesterday.

Mrs. Sheets, of El Dorado, is theguest of Mrs. Davies.

Mr. Morrow, insurance agent ofJackson, is stillinCanyon.Mr.Gee, tho Placerville tailor, visited

in Canyon Sunday, remaining overfrom the farewell ball.

Mrs. M. A. Green is on the sick list.Lately two ante-rooms have been

added to the schoolhouse. The num-ber of pupils have so increased as tomake the necessity of four new seatsbeing provided.

Mr. Sells and Mr. Rice of AngelsCamp have taken the places of Mr.Dohman and Mr. Reagan as millraanand blacksmith.

The new ditch of the Fort YumaCompany is rapidlynearing completion.It looks from the mountain side as iflively times were coming, and betokensthe starting up of another mine overthe hill. Laura Theresa.

•The Farewell Ball Was Largely Attended

by the Young People.

Young Mothers.

Croup is the terror of thousands of youngmothers, because its outbreak is so agonizingand frequently fatal. Shiloh's Cough and Con-sumption Cure acts like magic in cases ofCroup. Ithas never been known to fail. Theworst cases relieved immediately. Price, 25c,50c and 11. Forsale byA.Goldner, the Druggist*

The Queen of Gypsies Dies.

Sick Headaches,

"Recent analyses of the apples grownat an elevation of from1500 to 3000 feetin the Sierra, show high sugar andacid, or, inother words, a first-rate all-around fruit. There are many locationsin- the Sierra foot-hills especiallyadapted to apples, and we willgladlyfurnish scions of many new sorts oflate-keeping apples to growers withinreachof the Station."

"Among the additions to the Stationcollections the past year are sometwenty new varieties of figs. Severalof these, while new to California, havea well deservod reputation in Europe.Iad vise the planting of more figs intheSierra foot-hills. Few fruits are sosatisfactory as the fig for family use,and the tree endures a great deal ofneglect.

"The Station is about to introducea* very good stock of Belgian hare,which has attracted much attentionthe past season.

Mr. Shinn said: "The ExperimentStation has been improving steadily forseveral years past, and is well worth avisit from farmers, and all persons in-terested in the foot-hill region. Thelatest addition to tho Station novoltiesis a pair of thoroughbred Persiansheep of the Bayazit breed of Astrach-ans, imported for the United Statesgovernment by Minister Bealo someyears ago. A pair of the original im-portation were obtained for the PasoRobles Station, and the stock has beenpropagated there ever since. TheJune-bred lambs of these sheep furnishthe true 'Astrakhan' which is worthabout fifteen dollars to the skin, and isin great demand. No part ofCaliforniais better adapted to these sheep thanthe Sierra foot-hills. Persons havingflocks of sheep, and desirous of intro-ducing this new blood, willbo allowedthe privilege without charge, byregistering and agreeing to report theresult of the crosses.

provements.Inspector Charles H. Shinn made a

visit to this town recently and was in-teviewed for the Ledger.

Inspector C. H. Shinn Speaks of the Im-

The curse of overworked womankind, arequickly and surely cured by Karl's Clover RootTea. the great blood-purllicr and tissue-builder.Money refunded ifnot satisfactory. Price, 25cand 50c. For sale by A.Goldner, the Druggist. *

Broken Eggs Are Bold.

Sadie Evans, an alleged gypsy queen,died Thursday night, February Ist, atthe camp of her tribes, which is lo-cated between Elizabeth and Newark,N. J. Her age is given at 106 years bythe members of the tribe. She hasbeen in America fifty years and wasborn in England. Her husbaud, Rob-ert Evans, died at an advanced age twoyears ago, and sho will be laidbesidehim inEvergreen Cemetery at Eliza-beth. One son, Edmund, who is 57gears old and who will inherit hermoney, which is said to be considerable,survives her. She also leaves fourteengrandchildren.— Globe Democrat.

Acker's Dyspepsia Tablets are sold on apositive guarantee. Cures heartburn, raisingof the food, distress after eating or any formofdyspepsia. One little tablet gives immediaterelief; 25 cents and 50 cents. Sold by A.Gold-ner.

It Wasn't Worth Much.

Inthe egg trade a broken egg is notlost to the market. When in thecourse of the packing at the largehouses an egg is broken itis frozen andoffered for sale in that way. A writerin an Eastern paper says: "Frozeneggs in great masses are not bad tolook upon. They are .not allowed tothaw until the time comes for use.They are shipped in refrigerated cars,and such consignments as go to Alaskafor the gold regions are put into coldstorage on board of the steamships.The Klondike demand does not beginto take all of the frozen eggs. IMis-souri alone furnishes millionsof crackedeggs in the course of a year. Nine eggswillaverage a pound. Tho frozen eggproduct is sold by weight. With thelarge bakers and cracker-makers inthecities the frozen eggs are indemand.Some restaurants also buy the big tinbuckets of the frozen article. Certainclasses of restaurants serve scrambledeggs and omelets in winter mada fromthe frozen eggs, and patrons are nonethe wiser.

The Manufacture of Fins.

"Ihad bronchitis every winter foryears andno medicine gave me permanent relief tillIbe-gan to take One Minute Cough Cure. Iknow itis the best cough medicine made." says J.Koontz, Corry, Pa. It quickly cures coughs,colds, croup, asthma, grippe and throat andlung troubles. It is the children's favoriteremedy. CityPharmacy. *

"Idon't doubt it!"howled the mor-tifiedand indignant youth, grabbinghis hat. "ButIwant to tell you itisn't a diamond ring he wears on hislittlefinger! Iknow what he paid forit,and it'spaste!" —

Chicago Tribune.

"I won't hear you say a wordagainst Harold Bicknell!" haughtilyexclaimed Perdida Punnkyn-Heddo."Ithink more of his littlefinger thanIdo'of your whole body!"

John Dirr, Poseyville, Ind., says, "Ineverused anything as good as One Minute CoughCure. We are never without it." Quicklybreaks up coughs and colds. Cures all throatand lung troubles. Its use will prevent con-sumption. Pleasant to take. CityPharmacy.

A Peculiar Announcement.

A Tarantula Farm.

DeWitfs Witch Hazel Salve is unequalledforpiles,injuries and skin diseases. Itis theoriginal Witch Hazel Salve. Beware of allcounterfeits. CityPharmacy. •

The manufacture of pins is a veryinteresting process. Tho pin machinescut the wire to pin size, head, point,polish, sort and stick them in thepaper.

The output of tho Birmingham(England) pin mills is 30,000,000 a day.Several other factories of that countryhave a capacity of 17,000,000 pins perday. France turns out about 20,000,-000 per day, Holland and Germany10,000.000 each.

"We are pleased to announce that aLiterary Evening will be given onWednesday next for the benefit of thenew school bell, which has just arrivedoy freight, which was duly paid by thetrustees. The new bell, • which is athing of beauty and a noise forever, iscertainly worthy of a Literary Even-ing

—the best that we can get up.

There will be a hot supper and recita-tions from Byron; ice cream and Ten-nyson at 10 cents a plate; selectionsfrom Bill Arp's writings and baked'possum; also dancing to the music ofthe town band, which has recoveredfrom the pneumonia. A large attend-ance is expected.

"—Atlanta Constitu-

tion.

Anexchange prints the followingin-teresting announcementof "ALiteraryEvening":

Yon Try It.

Troubles of Winter Clucks,

If Shiloh's Cough and Consumption Cure,which is sold for the small prico of25c, 50c andtl,does not cure, take the bottle back and wewillrefund your money. Sold for over Bftyyears on this guarantee. Price, 25c and 50c.For sale by A.Goldner. the Druggist.

•Are Ton a Good Guesser?

W. S. Philpot, Albany,Ga., says, "DeWitfsLittleEarly Risers didme more good than anypillsIever took." The famous little pills forconstipation, biliousness and liver and boweltroubles. City Pharmacy. *

Tarantulas are Iwing raised in Aus-tralia for the sake of their webs, thefilaments of which are made into threadfor balloons. They are lighter thansilk, and, when woven, lighter thancanvas. Each tarantula yields fromtwenty to forty yards of filament; ofwhich eight twisted together formasingle thread.

Twenty-five thousand dollars to bedistributed among .good guessers.Ffrad all about it iq pur display col-umns. Tho nearest correct guess onthe population of the United Stateswillreceive $3,000. Subscribe for theLedger and Cincinnati Enquirer andavail yourself of this offer, jOld sub-scribers who renew their subscriptionshave the bame chance as new sub-scribers.

Mrs. J. K. Miller, Nowton Hamilton, Pa.,writes, "Ithink DoWitfs Witch Hazel Salvethe grandest Halve made." Itcures piles andheals everything. All fraudulent imitationsare worthless. City Pharmacy. *

It Is Bather Soothing.

A Volcano Boy.

Bowel diseases and leg weaknesscarry off hosts of chicks each year,while the owner in vain tries dosingor new systems of feeding or heating,but linds a bucketful of dead birds eachmorning. In "The Now Egg Farm"Mr. Stoddard goes straight to thecause of nine-tenths of the diseaseswhich attack chicks in confinement.He says: "Much of the so-called diar-rhoea is not diarrhoea at all. Thechicks are weak for lack of exercise,the whole system is enfeobled, but thebowels are not suffering a whit morethan allthe other organs. The trouble-some symtom of clogging near the vontisalmost invariably caused by lack ofexercise, but anything else that debili-tates willcause it, and it is not neces-sarily an accompaniment of diarrhoea,dysentary or any other specially dis-eased state of the bowels, or of abnor-malor vitiated droppings.

—Tribune.

Aciuj.'*E))2)lsh Remedy will stop a coughat any time, and i»U> cure the worst cold intwelve hours, or money refunded; :J5 cents andSO cents, Sold by A,Goldoor,

Geo. Barbe, Mcndota, Va., says, "Nothingdid me so much good as Kodol Dyspepsia Cure.One dose relieve! me, a few bottles cured me."Itdigests what you eat and always cures dys-pepsia. City Pharmacy. *

"If we don't know what Is going onin the outside world, we at least havea full knowledge of the things aboutwhich the outside world yearns tolearn."—Star.

"There's one consolation,"

said thebcleagured witof Ladysmith.

v 'AVhat i* }t?" asked the Colonol,dodgitig a sholl.

Piovkek Flocu Is the same yesterday, todayand tomorrow,

'' *

Charles B. Hanford, who was bornin Volcano and spent his early child-hood there, has just closod a very suc-cessful theatrical engagement in SanFrancisco. He has been playing withLouis James and Kathryn Kidder, andis an actor of considerable note.

THE AMADOU J.EPGrER; JACKSON. CALIFOROTA. FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 16. 1900.MISCELLANEOUS.

Knock=Out Drops"lama saloon-keeper, and used to think

that rock and rye,or whiskey and quininewere proper rem- \u25a0' v.edies for coughs jj~ I Ila\g^,and colds. >losf-a f*\ ?§?&\u25a0 t*Sof my acquaint- ISsgL | «&k s^?\ances were ofthe £, B

/7tfi«S&/>tii>^A\panic opinion, ifcij[|B^ VjEfiji/°a~*iNow Iknow 'S^il^^^'jSSt- /£(somethingatleast JZj^^lt^^mfm *^Ja thousand times ==better. It is Acker's fegjpßB1

'English Remedy for H»SBEeCoughs and Colds. A Tl n{^good while ago Ibegan

_ =-J\ pirtocough and found out ~J[^y (3 y~then that rock and rye =:=ji'3Iwas nogood.Igot worse *\u25a0'andIwas beginning to think that.the trou-ble would run into consumption. Ididn'ttake any stock in patent medicines, butsomehow or other Itried Acker's EnglishRemedy. One bottle did the business forme

—knocked that cough out completely

—and ithas never come back again. There isnever a day passes that Idon't say a goodword about this wonderful medicine. Ial-most forgot to say that Iam stronger andfleshier now, since taking the remedy, thanIwas before the cough began. Iwrite thisletter voluntarily and cheerfully and amglad to do it." (Signed) Chris. Hduble,Saloon-keeper, Focatello, Idaho.

Sold at 25c.. 50c. and $1a bottle, throughoutthe United States and Canada; and in Eng-land, at Is. 2d., 2s. 3d., 4s. Gd. Ifyou arenotsatisfied after buying, return the bottle toyour druggist, and get your money back.

We authorize the above guarantee.W. O. HOOKER & COn H-oprictore, Sew York.

Sold by Alfred Goldner

OUR TASTE HAMSSweet, Juicy and Tender.

We livebut onee—

Why not livewelland enjoy life?

HALL, LUHRS & COWholesale Grocers andProvision Dealers

Sacramento, Cal.

THE LONDONWOOLEN MILLS

J. H. HEITMAN

FINE TAILORINGPrice List as Follows:

LONDON WEST OF ENGLANDBROADCLOTH SUIT t4O 00

LONDON CLAY WORSTED, in Blueand Black JO 00

NEW ENGLAND WASHINGTONMILLS CLAY WORSTED, blue-black $3) to 35 00

GERMAN CREPE DRESS WORSTED 35 00FRENCH BLACK PIQUE $25 to 35 00•LONrXJN BLACK DOESKIN SUIT.. 35 00WASHINGTON MILLS GRAY WORS-

TED SUIT, to order $20 to 35 00FINE ASSORTMENT IN TWEED

SUITING $15 to 40 00LATEST STYLE OF ENGLISH AND

AMERICAN TROUSERING.... U to 12 00

600 J Street ,Corner Sixth, SACRAMENTO

. S 'TpHERE is a certain stylish ef- j§«5 I feet about irarments made 5»£j from these Celebrated Pat- jg5! terns that is not attained by the 3»;5 use of any other patterns. S

M£CAU^ggjftITTERKSW

i(No-Seam-AllowancePatterns!^^|

Have not an equal for atyle and perfect Sfit. Easy to understand. Onlyroand 15 Scts. each— none higher. Sold in nearly 3;every cityand town, or bymail. Ask for 3;them. Get a Fashion Sheet and see our S-desi^ns. Absolutely the very latest styles. £

A FREE PATTERN Iof her own selection willbe given 5every subscriber to g

MS CALLS^MAGAZINEW

IALADIESMWAQAZINE^I^One that every lady should take regu- £*larly. Beautiful colored plates; latest J£?fashions; dressmaking economies ;fancy -»Iwork;household hints; fiction,etc. Sub- §

scribe to-day, or, send sc. forlatest copy. 5?Lady agents wanted. Send for terms. *>

THE McCALL CO., |138-146 West 14th St., New York. 3;

LEDGER'S CLUBBING RATES.Ledger and DailyCall, one year S7 50Ledger and Weekly Call, one year 3 60Ledger and DailyBulletin, one year 6 50Ledger and Semi-Weekly Bulletin, 1 ye'r 4 20Ledger and Weekly Bulletin, one year... 390Ledger and Daily Chronicle, one year 7 70Ledger and Weekly Chronicle, one year. 3 60Ledger and Weekly Examiner, one year. 3 60Ledger and DailyExaminer, one year ... 8 30Ledger and N. Y. Weekly Tribune, 1 ye'r 3 00Ledger and N. V.Tri-WecUly Tribune, ly 3 50Ledger and Cosmopolitan Magazine, 1 yr 3 35Ledger and S. F. Weekly Post, one year. 3 00Ledger and McCall's Magazine, one year 2 75Ledger and St. Louis Globe Democrat, ly 3 00Ledger and "Twice a Week," one year.. 300#5- The above rates are strictly inadvance.

\u2666LIBERTY HSALOON^Sangulnetti BuildingMain Street Jackson

L.PERLANDA, : ::Proprietor

Best of Wines, Liquors and CigarsAlmavs on band,

MISCELLANEOUS ADVERTISEMENTS.

"I- I 111l|L.. -1MWIIIWII.L IMIMIIIM.I\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0IMII tima \u25a0—LI^MJU.JUL '.—*

—r-11- Bl^MimHa, MWJLI LJUI.I.MLMIJHJ —-,——„——

—-—,^——»

\u25a0A. BQTT.AJE3.E- SDiS-^ZIL |ON DEAL BUGGIES

BUGGI S.-.^S.-.^ ~> SOLD AT *SSI MMMM

anJnPLtS UN bAnIEITION

Exclusive Agency for the Deal Buggies

\u2666 : : BEOADWAT, JACKSON

',', V, This can be truthfully said \\ \\V, TTJC !> of any of the clothes made ;; HpflP {',V, Itlt :: at our shop. The cutting J |qH j;V, o is done by an experienced J | J ;!! I! cutter; we use the best but- J ;- < ;

'

I! CJIJT <• tons an^ thread and give ;; PIT *'.!! uUll "'

personal supervision to all ;; rll J;o o work. Our stock of suit- |! . > .V. <;| 'I! ings for spring and summer j; j;

mi; is about the uobbiest ever X II7TT T J'I! inhere. WILL

fi: \u25a0i; |

Irll >> !• :: oUH J:0 o We cannot afford to give Z J;<! o you shoddy cloth or slip- ;; J;

M;; shod work, for we are here J ; FAIT J i!! to stay and cannot live on \ ', Illl) \\

1 |J one-time custom. |; j;

\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666» \u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666»»^ i

MAX LADAR, THE TAILORMAIN STREET, JACKSON, CAL.

\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666»\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666»\u2666\u2666\u2666w ryi£^I111

\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666»\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666•\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666»

® •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••7 Z The Aleehan Property willbeT J subdivided into building lots and5 5 sold for CASH OR INSTALLMENTS.

\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666»\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666»\u2666»\u2666» Z Will be laid out in blocks, with_..^ y«y _^ Z 50-foot streets and 25-foot alley-IJ| ||\ S ways. Each lot can be reached

9 I"I IL#• Z at front or rear by wagon. One1 V»/ 11 Z ma'" street from Volcano road •

»\u2666\u2666»»\u2666\u2666#\u2666\u2666»»\u2666»\u2666»»»*

west of Calvin's house; one east6

*of Meehan's house; and one west•

r Z -of Keeney's property, to reach the0 S property . \u25a0'\u25a0;•

'\u25a0 . ". •. . .

SnB For further particulars apply to

AIr NEIL A. MACOUARRIE\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666^\u2666\u2666\u2666^^ , . Spagnoll Building, Summit Street

:E. GINOCCHIO & BROTHER |•Wholesale and Retail Dealers in

General Merchandise « • . * .•Water Street, Foot of Uroadway, Jackson

•WE TAKE PLEASURE IN INFORMING OUR PA- S

Irons and the public generally that we have on hand a Z1 very choice selected stoch of DRY UOODS of all kinds, GRO- ZZ CKRIES AND PROVISIONS, CLOTHING. HOOTS AND ZZ SHOES. We particularly direct the attention of the public Zm to the fact that we keep on hand tho largest assortment of Zm IRON ANDSTEEL to be found in Amador county. Also a Zm superior assortment of all kinds of HARDWARE, such as !q Carriage Bolts. Screws, Nuts, Nails, and, in fact, everything Zs the market demands. We are sole agents for the celebrated ZZ HURCULES POWDER, of which which we shall constantly 50 keep on hand a large supply. . -

J

liiMjl M,lnDnAM''Q AaAI aUPON yM^"'*^""^^^^'^^""l 1

"1^ @n

UKDAN [i»HI /(^^LEADINGDEALER&^|P|k MJutJu t i

' |^|^»^.J.JQRDANMANUFACTURERWfSk MAAA 1fmsfes? &±?Jiis and &&FMd NSl^fe

fIITIFRV i i

M?' i>

i"1" E^iLANP

'. mV^m^i

DON'T BE A r* aM—

And take some other kind because a littlecheaper. Best Is always cheapest in tho end, and the Jordan "AaAI

"Cutlery

is"It.

"For salo by the leading dealers everywhere.

1 THE NEW |NATIONAL HOTEL"--(l)3*V—\u25a0) Foot of Main Street

JACKSON, CAL,

o-o-cTo-o-o FIRST-GLASS ACCOMMODATIONS FOR TRAVELERS AT REASONABLE PRjCESk Sample Room for Commercial Travelers

•*Rooms NewlyFurnished Throughout AITable Supplied With the Best in the Market y&~.IBAR Supplied With the Finest Brands of T\ Wines Liquors and Cigars

'

:e\ -v"oo^k:ejis,

MISCELLANEOUS ADVERTISEMENTS.

Eleetriblty !

DR. ..W. F. GREEN, D. D. S.WEBB BUILDING. JACKSON. CAL.

Teeth Filled and Extracted Positively WithoutPain by ELECTRICITY

"ArtificialTeeth made on Aluminum Plates. Easy to

keep clean ; light as a feather and willnever tarnish. AlsoGold and Metal Plates. All plate work leaving my office isguaranteed to fit,wear and give perfect satisfaction and com-fort. J:/

GOLD, ALUMINUM AND PLATINUM CROWNSAll Crown and Bridge Work made according to the

latest and approved method.FINE GOLD FILLINGS A SPECIALTY

* Ulcerated Teeth, no matter of how long standing, <uredin one treatment.

DR. W. F. GREEN, D. D. S.Webb Building, Main Street, Jaokson, CaL

FOR <nnA an

\u25a0• •

McCall's Magazine'-7—(the queen of fashion)

IWill contain TWENTY-TWO FULL-PAGEBEAUTIFUL COLORED PLATES— morethan 1000 exquisite, artistic and strictly up-to-date FASHION designs —

a large number ofshort stories and handsome illustrations-—;-fancy work, hints on dressmaking and sugges-

With Amador Ledger

$2.75 a Year

And each subscriber receives a FREE PAT-TERN of her own selection

—a pattern sold by

most houses at 25 cents or 30 cents.

i..... SEASON OF 1899-1900•••••••••••••••••••••a \u25a0'•."\u25a0\u25a0

_^

\u25a0• • LtSan Francisco s:oopm Tues and Fri

fIXI C^T •LtFresno •-•'\u25a0• 10:23pm. ...Tues and Frl

I11^ aP I •Ar LL°S Angeles 7:«am....Wed and Sat

\J \J l\\J MmU 1 •LtLos Angeles B:ooam... .Wed and Satv \u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0]'

_^

*Ar EUPaso..: 7:l2am. ...Thnri and Sun

I"I11/rTT^l^r^ Z LvKlPllso • 9:-J5 am....ThursandSunI 1 jyjI|rll*ArNewOrleans 7:15 p m....Fri and MonJLjllll1 A Lmd JL/ ZAr Washington ............ B:«3am.... San and Wed•••••••••••••••••••••• Ar New Y0rk.........: K:«pm....Sun and Wed

InitialTrip Friday, December ""*\u25a0 -THIS MAGNIFICENTtrain again, for the sixth season, offers its superior service to the traT-oling public. ...ITS HIGH STANDARD of excellence is abundantly attested by Its past brilliant record, and

the Southern Pacific management gives the assurance that itwillbe maintained inallrespects, and improved where possible.

For more complete information, call on H. W. GORDON, Agent at lone.'

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••a

\u25a0• \u25a0

•: up-to-date :

IStationery and Novelties |: right :: AT PRICES 5

IFREEMAN'S VARIETY STORE | .•\u25a0 . \u25a0 m

PIONEER FLOUR IS PERFECTION^A Made From SELECTED WHEAT|f Blended According to Our Own FormulaM Produclnq Per*>ct Results

/\u25a0XTJR RECOnD OF THIfcTY-FIVE YEARS IN AMADOR COUNTY OF HONORABLEV^und upright dealing is withyou. and we respectfully ask for a continuance of your favors;without prejudice. •-—

rip!nm mis, niipni—

# [

LEGAL NOTICES.

Administrator's Sale of RealEstate.

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN. THAT INpursuance of an order of the SuperiorCourt inand for the County of Amador, State ofCalifornia, made on the silst day of October,189ff,In the matter of the estate of G. M LMathls, deceased, the undersigned, the admin-istrator of said estate, willsell at public auc-tion, to the highest bidder, for cash, gold coinof the United States, and subject to confirma-tionby said Superior Court, on Saturday, the84th day of February, 1900, at 10 o'clocka. m.. in front of the Courthouse door, at Jack-son, in the County of Amador, State of Cali-fornia, all the right, title, interest and estate !of the said G. M.L.Mathis at the time of hisdeath, and all the right, title and interest thatthe said estate has, by operation of law or oth-erwise, acquired other than or in addition tothat of the said G.M.L. Mathis at the time ofhis death, in and to all those certain lotspieces or parcels of land situate, lying andbeinß in the said County of Amador. State ofCalifornia, and bounded and described as follows, to wit: The east half of the east half ofsection nineteen (19), the southwest quarter ofthe northwest quarter of section twenty (20),the east half of the northeast quarter, and thenortheast quarter 4>f the southeast quarter ofsection thirty (X),allin township seven (7)NR 10 E,M. D.a. and M., containing three huir-dred and twenty (SW) acres of land.

Terms and Conditions of Sale:— Cash, coldcoin of the United States. 10 per cent of thepurchase money to bo paid the auctioneer onthe day of sale, balance on confirmation of saleby said Superior Court. Deed at expense ofpurchaser. JOHN G MATHIS,Administrator of the Estate ofG. M.L MathisDeceased.

Dated January 19, 1900. : 1-19-S-18William J. McGee, attorney for administrator.

Assessment Notice.

Jackson GoldMining and Milling Company.—Location of principal place of business,Jackson. California.— Location of Works.Jackson Mining District, Amador County:

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT ATa meeting of the Board of Directors, heldon the sth day of December, 1599. an assessment

(No.3) of one-thirtieth of one cent per sharewas levied upon the capital stock of the corporatlon.payable immediately inUnited State;gold coin, to the secretary, at the offlce of thecompany. Ledger offlce, Jackson, California.Anystock upon which the assessment shallremain unpaid on the 6th day of January, 1900. ;willbe delinquent, and advertised for sale at Ipublic auction, and unless payment Ismade be- !fore, willbe sold on Saturday, the »7th day ofJanuary, 1900, at 4 p.m.. to pay the delinquentassessment, together with costs of advertising ;and expenses of sale.

Byorder of the Board of Directors.WILLA.NEWCUM,Secretary..Offlce: Weil &Renno Building,Jackson Cal.December 5, 1899. 12-8-12-31

Atameeting of the Board or Directors of theJackson Gold Mining and Milling Company,held on Saturday, January Rth, 1900, the date

'of delinquency of Assessment No. 3 was post-poned to Saturday, February 3. 1900. and theday of sale to Saturday, February 24, 1900.

WILL.A.NEWCUM, Secretary.Dated Jackson, January 6,1800. 1-12—1-28

Ata meeting of the Directors of the JacksonGold Mining and MillingCompany, held in theofflce of the Secretary on February 3,1900, thedate of delinquency of Assessment No. 3 waspostponed to Tuesday, March a, 1900, and thedate ofsale toMarch 34. 1900.

WILL. A. NEWCUM, Secretary.Dated Jackson, February 7,1900.

Notice is also further given that the regularannual meeting of the stockholders of the Jack-son Gold Mining and Milling Company willtake place at the rooms of the Secretary, KayBuilding,.Main street, Jackson, on Tuesday,March 6, 19U0.

"WILL. A.NEWCUM, Secretary.

Dated Jackson, February 7, 1900. 2-16-3-3

Notice of Forfeiture.

To John B. Skinner:

YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFED THATIhave expended at least $-M) (two hundred)

inlabor and improvements on the following-de-scribed placer claim: Wtf ofEH and EV4 of W4ofSWJ< of NEy of section 88. township 7north,range 14 east, Mt. Diablo Base and Meridian,Volcano Mining District, Amador County,State of California, as will appear by certifi-cate tiled at the offlce ot the Recorder ot Ama-dor County, Jackson, on December 39, 1898, andJanuary 19, 1900, in order tohold said premisesunder the provisions or section 3334, RevisedStatutes of U. S.. being the amount required tobold same for the year ending December SI,1899, and if within ninety days after the publi-cation of this notice you fail or refuse tocon-tribute your proportion of said expenditure, asco-owner, your interest in said claim willbe-come the property of the subscriber nnder saidsection 2324. M. CHRISTENSEN.

Volcano, January 20, 1900.-

1-28-4-37

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