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Collection: Newspapers > Nevada City Grass Valley Nugget

September 30, 1949 (6 pages)

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' 4 i i: i ae aT EE sebretceemese: aes sng ee eet noe aR PRN a ee pie AONE us. 4— Nevada City Nugget, Friday, Se lenibes 30, 1949 Pressed Glass Is Subject of NC Civic Club Mrs. Grace Englebright spoke on the subject of “Early -American Pressed Glass” before the Nevada City Women’s Civic club at. its first fall meeting Thursday . afternoon of the last week in the Methodist church hall. Miss Gertrude Goyne, vice president of the club, presided. Mrs. Englebright drawing on many yéars of experience collecting antiques, traced the history of pressed glass from development of the first glass factory in this country at Sandwich, Cape Cod, Mass., in: 1825. The factory, built by Deming Jarves, developed a community of people employed in some phase of glass making. Even children worked in the factory from Monday through Thursday and attended school on Friday and Saturday. Many glass bibles are the result of influence of students of the ministry who worked at the factory 4n spare time, Mrs. Englebright ‘said. Guests at the meeting, which was preceded by a dessert-luncheon, were Miss Carra Totten, Mrs, Pearl Norton, Mrs. Michel: M. Lipman and Mrs. M. E. Dean. Members present were Mrs. H. W. Whipp, Mrs. Bernice Norton, _Mrs. O.E. Schiffner, Mrs, Englebright, Mrs. Elizabeth Leiter, Mrs. Arthur E. Mott, Mrs. Isabel . Tourtelotte, Mrs. Marie Harris, Mrs.\Freda Schmidt, Mrs. Emma Ramm, Mrs. Beatrice Butcher, Mrs. George W. Gildersleeve and Mrs, Arthur M. Hoge. Placerville Greyback Attends Cootiette Meet Golden Canaries of Cootiette club No. 252 held its regular gettogether Monday evening in the club room of Cardinal hall. Delicious pot-luck supper. preceded the meeting. Among the visitors was Frances Smith, Chief Greyback of Humbug-Hangtown Cootiette club 418, Placerville. Accompanying her were Shirley Tuttle and Waneta Buchanan, : of Placerville. Four candidates were initiated into the club. Next regular meeting of the organization will be Monday, Oct. 10 with nomination and election of officers scheduled, Missionary Society Will Resume Meeting Thursday Y Woman’s Missionary society of Publicity Is Theme of Ponemah Council Confab Mrs. Myrtle Aruda, Lincoln, chairman of state committee of publicity for Degree of Pocahon-: tas, spoke on publicity problems at a regular meeting of Ponemah Council Na,:6, at the Odd Fellows hall here Wednesday evening. The council was visited by four members of Netab, Lincoln; one from Vallaha, Auburn; and one from Ceanotha, Grass Valley. Following the business meeting the group adjourned to the banquet hall where Loretta Baldwin was given a birthday party and handkerchief shower. . Annabelle Brake, Wenonah of the council, presided. All desk officers and deputies are scheduled to attend a school of instruction in Oroville Suhday morning. : Miss Glenda Judd Feted At Shower on Tuesday Mrs. Evelyn Cartoscelli and Mrs. Betty Branson were hostesses at the Cartoscelli home Tuesday evening at a bridal shower honoring Miss Glenda Lee Judd, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. V. E. Judd, Lower Grass Valley road. The guest of honor is the brideto-be of Charles Carter, Auburn, nephew of Mrs. Edgar Cunningham and Mrs. Weston Wyllie, Nevada City. Guests at the affair were Mrs. Marilyn Bernardis, Mrs. Mildred Branson, Mrs. Phyllis Stroh, Mrs. Ruth Wyllié; Mrs. Mary Campbell, Mrs. Lovey. Cartoscelli, Mrs. Nada Cunningham, Mrs: Mariene . Paulsen, Mrs. Betty Williams, Mrs. Wilma Judd and Miss Joan . Oje. Ridge Road Garden Club Holds Social A fall social was sponsored on Monday by the Ridge Road Garden club at the home of Mrs. Beatrice Butcher, president. Dessert luncheon was _ served and canasta and contract bridge enjoyed. A prize was awarded at each table. Mrs. Lou Shannonhouse, Mrs. Tillie Valdix, Mrs. Audrey Weselsky, Mrs. Mae Raddue, Mrs. Myrtle Weiss and Mrs. Ethel McClish assisted the hostess. Other members of the club contributed refreshments, cards and tables. Approximately sixty attended the floral-decked meeting. Local Family Reunited First Time in 14 Years For the first time in 14 years members of the Judd family will . be ‘reunited this weekend at the V. E. Judd home, Lower ‘Grass Nevada City Community Baptist . Valley road. church will hold its first meeting . ; of the new season Thursday at 11 arm: at the church, Members are asked to bring lunch. Mission study and white cross work will feature the meeting. RECENT GUESTS AT THE NATIONAL HOTEL Mr. and Mrs. A. Rosenbach, Otto L,/Fischer, A. R. Vargo, Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Galbraith, Mr. and Mrs. T. S. Galbraith, Thomas R. Thurber, San Francisco; Mr. and Mrs. Willias, Mr. and Mrs.’ B. C. Chew, Ernest Herst, Light, Oakland; Robert Beecher, J. W. Scott, Berkeley; Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Light and son, Richmond. : W. P. Heibel, D. L. Heitmiller, R. Gomer, J. Jarrel, J. S. Melvin, G. E. Smalley, Los Angeles; A. R. Bailey, Hollywood; Vivian Crabb, Ollie Evans, Watsonville; Philip Day, Mr. and Mrs. William Egan, Santa Rosa; Burke Corbett, Palo Alto; James Nichols, Don Deschwander, Mr. and Mrs. Rex Whittemore, Bakersfield; L. V. Smith, Jack McGovern, Alleghany; Harry Paine, North Bl6omfield; H. F. Cardinal, Truckee; Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Adams, North San Juan. Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Peters, J. M. Campbel]# Kathleen Mullins, George Eggers, John Harris, Sacramento; Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Clayton, Fresno; E. P. McCulla, Washington; C. L. Moon, Brisbane; Mr. -and Mrs. N. E. Marsden, Stockton; Kate Faloln, Martinez; Mr. and Mrs. Walter Schier, Hollywood; Mrs. W. H. Smith and daughter, Meadow Valley; K. H. Wilson, Fresno; Wallace Stevens, Floyd Smith, National City; Carmel Coyle, Opal Stevens, Stockton; William Warner, Washington; Thomas Bartol and son, Redwood City; H. A. Bennett, Huntver’s Point; Mrs. H. E. Peterson, Vallejo; Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Worley, Little River. Mr. and Mrs. Al Wilson, Salt Lake City, Utah; Charles O’Conmor and daughter, South Amboy, N. J.; John D. Wilcox, C. A. Lidwdell, Reno, Nev.; F. P. Snook, ‘Fairbanks, Alaska. TRY MILTON'S GALLONS . $1.60 PER GALLON ORDER AHEAD Phone 123 Mrs. G. Mr. and Mrs. M. H. Judd, Juan. 'ita, Nebr., Mr. and Mrs. Wayne . Judd, Indiana, and Rev. and Mrs. ! Otto Langlow, Colombia, are vis. iting at the, Judd home. . . Scheduled to arrive this week-. ‘end are Mr. and Mrs. Don Judd/} and son, Walnut Creek; Mrs. Har. ry Rector and son, Avenal, and} Kenneth Judd, San Francisco. . Goldie Anderson and L. E Wanamake Marry _ . Llewellyn Earl Wanamake and . Goldie Earl Anderson were mar. ried Monday, Sept. 19 in San Francisco. Both are well known . in Nevada-City and will make a home here. RUMMAGE SALE TODAY Ladies of the Methodist church are holding a rummage sale today and Saturday. Food will be sold at tomorrow’s sale. The sale is being conducted at the Nevada City Upholstery shop at 232 Commercial street. an Mrs. E. S. Morris, Banner road, left by plane Sunday for Charlotieville, Va., where he is attending the University of Virginia. He enrolled there Monday. Morris was graduated from Nevada City high school in June.fis Morris, 17, son of Mr. ‘Prior to coming to Nevada counSWEETLAND NEWS _ By Roberta. Stuart 5 Columbia Parlor No. 70, Nativ Daughters of the Golden West is giving a card’ party tomorrow at the French Corral schoolhouse at 7:30 p.m. The parlor will present a play “Modernizing Women,” at 9:30 o’clock. Mr. and Mrs. Frank A. Stuart were hosts to an old fashioned surprise birthday party honoring Mrs. Maude Campbell and Lowell Struckman. : Old-time games — darts, croquet, thread the needle, through the hoops, pillow over head — were played. Old time dances— Virginia Reel, squares, fox trots, waltzes and folk dances followed. Mrs. Campbell, Mrs, Olive Struckman and Miss: Ruth Wilkoughki sang for the guests. Among ‘those attending were Mr. and Mrs. Wolf, Mrs. Lillian Wolf, Mr. and Mrs. Wright Colman, Mrs. Erma Colman, Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Campbell, Mrs. Maude Campbell, Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Struckman and -Norvie, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Kohler, Mr, and Mrs. W. A. Atchinson, Mr. and Mrs. Waid Oden, Mrs. Mae Oden, Mr. and Mrs. Leonard, Mrs. Mary Hall, Mrs. Pennyjohn, C. Hill, Mrs. Ceciel Wilson, Mrs. Lily Sharonie, Mrs, Margaret Madden, Miss Theresa O’Connor, Miss Ruth Wilkoughkie, Mrs. Al Anderson and the.host. and hostess and family.Buffet supper was served by candlelight at midnight. Tables were decorated with old fashion=. ed lace cloths with the center table featuring an old fashioned bouquet of flowers. One of the birthday cakes ‘was decorated with musical notes that meant “Happy Birthday to You.” OPEN HOUSE REVEALS POLIO CENTER TO PUBLIC
Open house last night at the Veterans Memorial building in Grass Valley revealed the polio center of Nevada county to the public. Miss Barbara Newman, thera+ . pist for the local chapter of the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis, was introduced to the public, along with her assistants, Dallas Fellerson, Juliet Cox and Elsie Mitchell. Equipment set up by. the local chapter for polio therapy was also on display. Miss Newman works under the direction of district physicians who turn cases over to her for general therapy. She is a registered physical therapist and is a graduate of Stanford university. ty. from Piedmont, she served the Alameda chapter. ‘ Miss. Newman has:a daily schedule of 34 patients for therapy. The room located in the lower floor. of the building was made available by the local post of the American Legion, which also is contributing to her salary. MRS. DORIS FOLEY COLLABORATES ON YUBA FLOOD STORY Mrs. Doris Foley, vice president ciety, collaborated with S. Griswold Morley, professor. emeritus of. langugages at University of California, in an article about the 1883 flood. of the Middle Yuba river. The #ticle appears in the September #sue of the California Historical Society Quarterly. According to the authors, the flood brought to a head a long feud between valley farmers and hydraulic miners. The dam was located six miles above the present Milton dam. The Milton Mining and Water company offered a reward of $5,000 for arrest and conviction of persons~responsible for the dam’s destruction. The year following the flood Judge Lorenzo Sawyer of the U. S. circuit court handed down the injunction which enjoined miners from dumping debris into rivers. RICHARD NOREN DIES IN NAVAL HOSPITAL Word was received late Wednesday from.the chief of naval personnel, Washington, D. C., of the death of Richard Noren, seaman apprentice, at the naval hospital at Guam. He is the son of Mr: and Mrs. Carl O. Noren. Young Noren, aged 18, joined the navy a year ago after attending Nevada City high school. Besides his parents, he is survived by a sister, Mrs. W. J. (Betty) Martin, Sacramento: and . , his grandmother, Mrs. Grimme, Nevada City. NID Receives $25,000 Check From the State Nevada irrigation district has received a check for $25,000 from the state of California to assist the district in easing its financial burden, according to announcement by Forrest Varney, manager of the district. Varney said the district is in non-receipt of a check for $78,000 from the federal government, representing the amount agreed in federal court for damages to district canals, roads and rights of way when the government set up the Camp Beale military resJessie . ervation. of Nevada County Historical so-’ ‘. ston Churchill; 12 DISCARDS SLOW GROWTH OF LIBRARY Twelve discards the past month slowed the growth of the number gf volume in the\ Nevada City library, according ‘to the regular report of Librarian Iva Williamson. Twenty books were purchased and 15 were donated, bringing the present number of books to 12,968. : Average daily attendance was 63, according to the report, with a total attendance for the month of 1,706. Books’ borrowed from the _library totaled 1,289. Fiction, with 981 lead, followed by 193 juveniles and 113 miscellaneous. New purchased books are: “Lead Kindly Light,’ Vincent Sheean; “Friendly Enemy,” Peggy O’More; “Gunsmoke Bonanza,” Weston Clay; “Suddenly It’s Love,” Peggy Gaddis; “The Girl With the Hole in Her Head,” Hampton Stone; “The Track of the Cat,” Walter Van Tilburg Clark; ‘“‘North of Santa Fe,” Chas. Stanley; “Snare for Sinners,” Ruth Fenisong; “Wilderness Nurse,”? Marguerite M. Marshall; “Dog Eat Dog,’ Mary Collins; “Murder Without Weapons,” A. B. Cunningham; “The Stumbling Stone,” Aubrey Menen; ‘The Corpse Said ‘‘No’,” Barbara Frost; “Tris in Winter,” Elizabeth Cadell; “Love in a Cold Climate,” Nancy Midford; “Young William Washbourne,” Humphrey Parkington; “A' Wreath for Rivera,” Ngaio Marsh; “The Pilgrimage of Western Man,” Stringfellow Barr; “The Flying Red Horse,” Frances Crane. Donated books: “The Gathering Storm,” Winand “Complete Guide to North Amercian Trees,” Carlton C. Curtis, given by W. Thrasher. “Return to Jalna,” Mazo de la Roche; ‘Milk Route,” Martha Ostenso; “Lucinda Brayford,” Martin Boyd; “The Arch of Triumph,” Erich Maria: Remarque; “Singing Waters,” Ann Bridge; “Eastside Westside,’ Marcia Davenport, donated by Mrs. Roberta Farmer. Marie Jeffery contributed three volumes of the Waverley Novels ‘of Sir Walter Scott. Mrs. W. A. Simpkins donated four volumes of detective stories, each book containing three.complete stories. ORGANIZATION OF LOCAL . UNIT STATE EMPLOYEES SCHEDULED TONIGHT Formation of the Gold Miners chapter of the California State Employes association is scheduled for tonight at 7:30 at the division of forestry building at the junction of the Ridge road with the Nevada City-Grass Valley highway. Active in several months of planning to have a Nevada county chapter to better serve the 90 or more state employes in. this section have been Jack Riley, board of equalization; Robert Steuber, California highway: patrol; and A. J. Hayes, division of forestry. f Previously Nevada county employes have belonged to Marysville Peach Bowl chapter. MRS. E. M. LYSTRUP DIES OF HEMORRHAGE Mrs. Elsie Marie Lystrup, 47, died early Saturday morning at the Grass Valley community ‘hospital after suffering a cerebral hemorrhage -at a deer hunting camp near Weaver lake Friday. Funeral services were held Tucsday morning in the chapel of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, Grass Valley, under the direction of Bishop Ralph A. Greenwell. Interment was in Grecnwood cemetery, Grass Valley. Holmes Funeral Home assisted in funeral arrangements. Born in Denmark, Mrs. Lystrup came with her family to Utah. She had lived here since 1933 making her home at 326 Long street. Mrs. Lystrup took an active part in Neighbors of Woodcraft of Nevada City, * She is survived by her -husband, George; children, Wanda Giovannetti, Grant and Charles, all of Nevada City, and Robert of Yuba City. Charles, ‘stationed at Kessler field, Miss., arrived here Monday to attend the services. MEL RUTH TO OREGON Mel Ruth is attending Oregon State college, at Corvallis, Ore. The Nevada City youth is studying pharmacy. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Cliff Dodge. . —y . . i ~] =—— = sc cae ce = A yp } —_ eee = a) ae aA $1.60 PER GALLON ORDER AHEAD Phone 123 SOSCOOCOOCOoe cg @ ® ’ @ ® Don’t forget ¢ SCHENLEY a @ for the RARE BLENDED WHISKY. 86 PROOF. 65% GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS SCHENLEY DISTRIBUTORS, INC., N.Y.C. Ee 6860060066 RAR AA SE . &6@ 66626 (7 ABLE. NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS Ls TAXES FOR THE CITY OF NEVADA FOR * THE YEAR 1949 ARE NOW DUE AND PAYIF NOT PAID BY 5:00 P. M. ON MONDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1949, A PENALTY OF 10 PER CENT WILL BE ADDED. OFFICE HOURS: 8:00 A. M. to 5:00 P.M. SAM HOOPER . Ex-Officio Tax Collector This is the girl to call or see when you want a telephone moved, a directory listing—have any service questions. Meet a girl who knows the answers 1. She’s a ‘‘Service Representative”’ . . your pefsonal representative in your telephone Business Office. Every one of our millions of customers in the West is served by a particular young lady. In the files of your own “Service Rep” are facts about your service. With this finger-tip information, she can answer questions promptly.. .and help us meet your needs. 3. Ithas taken many, many people.. scientists, manufacturer, linemen, operators, Service Representatives, repairmen . . . to build your telephone into ‘the valuable servant it is.today. And they’re working to make it still more valuable .. to keep your telephone a real bargain today. And it is. After all; a few pennies still buy a call. 2. Her training is the kind that never re stops. For a Service Representative must know the ins and outs of the telephone business to serve you best when you are ch when you need information about a bill, whenyou have a complaint. You can be sure she will always use her ability and training to help you get the greatest value from your service. . ally anging your address, "the Pacific Telephone (@) and Telegraph Company : 4 Faas sf