Enter a name, company, place or keywords to search across this item. Then click "Search" (or hit Enter).

Copy the Page Text to the Clipboard

Show the Page Image

Show the Image Page Text


More Information About this Image

Get a Citation for Page or Image - Copy to the Clipboard

Go to the Previous Page (or Left Arrow key)

Go to the Next Page (or Right Arrow key)
Page: of 6

ee
2—The Nevada City Nugget, Friday, May 27, 1949
305 Broad Street, Nevada City—Telephone 36
A legal newspaper, as defined by statute
ROBERT H. and DONALD W. WRAY, Publishers
KENNETH W. WRAY, Editor and Advertising Manager
Member California Newspaper Publishers Association
Published every Tuesday and Friday at Nevada City, California, and
entered as matter of the second class in the postoffice at Nevada City
mnder Act of Congress, March 8, 1879. :
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
ne year outside county (in advance) ...-.-.---.-.-----sss8sss-seee-2--+ $3.00
“One year in county (in advance) a 280
Four months (in advance) .--1.00
One month (in advance) .30
‘MEMORIAL DAY °
The observance of Memorial Day serves to impress
upon us not only how much we owe to those who gave
their lives in defense of our country, but what we owe
to those who would have to bear the brunt of the battle
should war come again.We can pay no greater tribute to the dead than to strive
to make this world a warless world—the kind of world
they hoped it would be.
In so doing we shall help to prevent any further increase in the great ‘‘silent army’ and enable our young
men to devote their talents mainly to peaceful pursuits.
In seeking a lasting peace, however, we must heed
the lessons of the past. We know now that war cannot
be avoided or justice preserved through appeasement.
We know that firmness—and, yes, even toughness on
some occasions—will do more to prevent armed conflict
than weakneed subservience.
There are difficult obstacles on the road to a warless . .
world, but we must be willing to fight for its attainment .
with all our energy, tenacity and skill. To do less would
be to betray both those who gave their lives in battle
and those who would have to make the supreme sacrifice
should war come again.
“‘NEIN! NEIN!”
It was unfortunate for the Russians that they got walJoped with one of the worst political black eyes ever just
‘before the start of the Foreign Ministers Conference in
Paris.
Of course, it wasn’t supposed to have been that way.
The election in Eastern Germany was designed to present
“convincing” proof that the Germans behind the Iron
‘Curtain were wholeheartedly supporting the “‘peoples’’
program for a united Germany. __
But even the Russians admit that one-third of the
people voted against the Kremlin’s hand-picked slate of
The Human Race .
Sam SCATBACK MAKES THE TRIP
HOME FROM THE SHOP EVERY DAY
IN [94 MINUTES FLAT~+
Wipes
a .
AND WHAT DOES OUR’
HERO DO WITH THE MINUTE
AND A HALF HE SAVES 7
GIVE A LOOK!
————
Just Wonderin’
I Wonder now as summer comes
To smile from sunny skies of blue,
To fill the land with fragrant charms
And make fair nature fresh and new,
If we may answer to the call
Of blossom time and steal away
To revel in the sight and sounds
Of just one perfect day.
©
A poet once propounded this question, ‘‘what is so
rare as a day in June?” Once in a state of unlimited enthusiasm I answered, ‘‘any old day in California.”’ Since
that time I have sampled several changing seasons and
«candidates, and you can be pretty sure that the actual :
‘vote was much more heavily negative. This result is all .
the more unusual because of the people in Eastern Germany know that a “Nein” vote is made at the risk of their
own safety and that of their families. The usual score in
a behind-the-curtain election is 99 per cent in favor of the
slate.
Of course, the Soviets can claim that the voters were
‘victims of ‘‘lying propaganda from imperialistic nations’’.
Bui that in itself would be an admission that Russian
propaganda is falling down.
No matter what is said at Paris the Soviets have lost
amportant ground—and they know it.
LOSS OF MORAL POWER
In its conclusion to a long editorial on compulsory
government health insurance, Life magazine says, “What
worries us is the loss of moral power that must come
when a people turns more and more to compulsion to
solve its problems. Left to their own devices, the U. S.
people have shown both ingenuity and ability in meeting
their needs through voluntary action. Without state compulsion they have created the best medicine in the world.
‘What is more, they have demonstrated ‘that America
can shape the social instruments necessary to a modern
society without relinquishing the fredoms and responsibilities that make it strong.”’
The fight against compulsory health insurance is not
a selfish fight against improving medical service to the
American people. The country needs more doctors. It
needs more hospital beds and other facilities. The point
is how to get these additional requirements without destroying the magnificent achievements we have already
made. Senator Smith of New Jersey described the problem
admirably in this little parable: “I think of a man who
lives in a fine big house with a leaky roof. The man says,
"This is horrible . . . We must tear down the house and
‘go build a wonderful new jail and live in the jail instead.’ "’
Compulsory health insurance, which would inevitably
xegiment and subject to political coercion the medical
profession of the nation, would be such a jail.
What, then, is the proper solution to the medical care
~~problems we have left? It lies in the voluntary prepayment medical plans which now serve some 50,000,000
people, in the constant progress the doctors and scientists
are making in both extending and improving standards
of care, in some workable means of helping those who are
actually indigent. Then we can have even better health—
\without the jail.
£
The object of punishment is threefold: for just retribu‘tion; for the protection of society; for the reformation of
“the offender. —Tryon Edwards
-Whoso diggeth a pit shall fall therein: and he that
xolleth a stone, it will return upon him.—Proverbs 26:27
°
now I feel ready to repeat the poet’s query and respond
with a “nothing is so rare as a day in June—in California.
June is the month of roses, brides, wedding bells and;
and speaking of roses, at this very moment, they are
blooming in rare profusion and we catch their fragrance
upon every passing breeze.
Long ago Father Junipero Serra said of the roses of
California; “they are like the roses of Castile,’”’ and if that
is true, Castile is to be congratuated.
Plant a rose and you will have planted something that:
will persist, for roses despite their seeming fragility are
strangely tenacious of life and this fact is apparent to
those who follow the old pioneer trails of the west,
especially along the Mother Lode country.
Several years ago, we. treked One day to Michigan
Bar; it was a beautiful day in early spring with blue skies
above and green grass beneath our fee; upon the shore
of the quietly flowing river we came upon a delapidated
group of old huts—pioneer’ cabins in the last stages of
dust and decay, but at the door of one we found a rose
bush in full bloom, filling the place with its fresh fragrance
and telling a tale of a long, long vigil in a place where it
had once ben planted by loving hands and tended with
watchful care.
Whose were the hands that once caressed it,
Watered arid tended with loving care?
What were the words once whispered to it,
As it grew and budded and blossomed there?
We do not know the history of the rose tree at Michigan
Bar; but we have in our own care at the present time
an equally long lived rose and its history is very well
known to quite a number of people. It was planted by a
pioneer woman, Mrs. F. F. Mobley, probably as far back
as the early sixties. For many years it had no care—no
attention, but it did not grow discouraged. Every spring
it put forth new foliage and covered itself with a profusion of sweet, old fashioned flowers. True to all that the
past had taken, it waited for the coming of some on one
who would love it and appreciate its tale of faithfulness.
Once or twice during its long years of waiting, fire
swept over it, burning it so that it seemed all life must
have perished, but not so, the very next spring it came
up from the roots and produced a few roses upon its
new branches.
I often think of Liberty as, the rose of the world, and
liken it to the rose upon our garden wall; then I. am
not afraid when it is threatened or.when in some lands
and under certain circumstances it meets with seeming
defeat. Liberty is like our pioneer rose tree; it is tenacious of life and always its powers of recuperation are
ready to spring into flower again, when the season is
propitious and the sun is ready to shine down upon it.
Yes, Liberty is the Rose of the World, let those who are
privileged to enjoy its fragrance, watch and tend it with
loving care.
—Adeline Merriam Conner
LURE TITRE MBSR SEAN GI cee
Gow Picerk-s T RAIL
Charles Scott Haley
One thing that irked a good many of us who had had
several years of engineering experience, was the assignment to positions above us of young West Point graduates
who were plainly unlicked cubs as far as the mechanics
of engineering work was concerned, and yet who were
in a position to make or break engineers of years experience and training. Almost one entire class who would
ordinarily have served an apprenticeship as **shavetail’’
lieutenants, were quickly elevated to the rank of major,
and placed in command of various encampments. This
was hard for some of us to take, but we had already
learned discipline; and also some of these officers were
conscious of their shortcomings and were content to give
us our heads in getting work accomplished.
One July day came the underground report that the
521st and 522nd engineers were due for entrainment to
embarkation point, and a friend of mine in the 522nd
promptly got leave to go to New York to get married
to the girl of his choice, and asked me to go along as
best man. Thus it happened that I came to the Episcopal
church in Brooklyn where my father and mother had
been married forty-two years before, and there assisted
at another wedding of more military character.
But about the first of August, we received orders, and
entrained the night we received them. Our colored lads
were wildly excited, and when we ferried across to Hoboken, were quite sure that they had crossed the Atlantic.
They were most surprised to find that Jersey City and
Hoboken looked almost the same as the rest of the United
States. But we embarked on the ‘“Susquehanna’’—an old
time freighter which was packed to the guards with about
two thousand colored troops and five hundred whites—
and sailed out past Sandy Hook one brilliant August
afternoon with high hearts for adventure. . happened to
be made mess officer of my ship, and it was not long
before I had to get to work.
The ships officers had arranged mess lines without
-‘. regard to racial prejudice. As a result, white boys, many
of them from the south, were standing in line among
land behind negroes. This was not what they were used
to, and both they and the negroes resented it. The result
was that the first meal that evening caused indescribable
confusion, and took about five hours to serve.
The ships officers threw the situation very properly in
our laps, and by next morning I had arranged two colored
and one white mess line in forward and after gangways
which did not interfere with one another. Feeding time
was cut down to an hour and a half, which was a lot
more satisfactory. But by that time came the old enemy—
mal de mer.
Our black children found the ship’s canteen, and it
was not unusual to see one of them appearing on deck
with a package of ginger cakes, one of chocolate sweets,
two bars of nut chocolate, one package of sweet pickles,
two boxes of sardines, a whole coconut cake, and unlimited quantities of ginger ale, and pop—all at the same
time. These he would wolf down with great gusto and
little effort. Then a little later, would come retribution.
Several trips to the rail and a change in complexion from
brown black to green, and then a hasty trip below to
his bunk or some ones else. Result, below decks, a terrible
mess. We had to drag those poor souls out once a day
when they were ready to die, and go over the whole ship
with lysol and scrubbing mops.
About the fourth day out the battle cruiser which was
guarding us turned round and left for New York, and
for another four days the ten ships in the convoy wallowed
lonesomely on their zigzag course. At night no lights were
permitted to show, and between decks the ghastly blue
lamps which were everywhere below, made us all look
like an assemblage of fiends when we did foregather in
the main saloon. Nevertheless, we found enough talent
among our colored friends to stage one good minstrel
show. a :
The weather grew rougher as we approached the European coast, and about the eighth morning we were delighted to see a destroyer convey spring up from nowhere
to guard us in. Of course every eye of the whole twentyfive hundred on our ship, and of the thousands on the
others, was peeled day and night for the sight of a German
periscope. There were two or three practice alarms to get
us accustomed to our stations—every man was assigned
to a boat or a raft—but we did not know that Fritz had
prepared a real party for us, which only head winds had
caused us to miss. We were a day late in arriving at Brest,
and when we did not arrive on schedule, the Mount
Vernon, outgoing for New York, was sunk by the German
submarines which had evidently been notified of our
coming. So we missed that one, anyway.
_But we did not miss the rough weather in the Bay of
Biscay. It was the order of all lieutenants to stand two
hour watches in the crows nest during the daytime, as
lookouts. When one of my own lieutenants, from Utah,
originally, was so seasick in the pitching of the topmast
that he had to be lowered down by a rope—too sick to
climb down—I thought it was time some of the captains
took their share of the grief—and for the last few days
we stood our watch along with them. F ortunately, . have
ever been seasick, and it was certainly interesting to
watch the destroyers changing positions on all sides of
the convoy, hour after hour.
(to be continued) )
Yi
No abilities, however splendid, can command sugcess
without intense labor and persevering application.
A. T. Stewart
Penalties may be delayed, but they are sure to come.
\