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Collection: Newspapers > Nevada City Nugget

April 26, 1945 (4 pages)

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NEVADA CITY NUGGET THURSDAY, APRIL 26, 1945 — Sunday school at 70 a. m. Preach. ——— of hig body.: He is getting along fine! — . ing service at 11 a. m. Special music: ae ain} nso of feeling in his. Mrs. Helen Emlay has purchaséd . al number. Sermon ‘The New Out: face and side. A foot injury reesived. the home of the late Mrs. Sheldon . look”, pastor, Closing hymm, prayer. BOYS AND GIRLS {several years ago prevents the foot, on Nevada Street. . Youth “Fellowship group at 6:30 p. : from recovering as fast as the rest! Mr. and Mrs. C. Muscardini went to. m. Preaching service at 7:230.p. m. _of his: side.’ His wife who —_—_—_— ; their . he Odd IN GLOBAL WAR oaks Page Four . 3 : CAMPTONVILLE PERSONALS met by a Jap on Cebu Island receiv. ing the wound that paralyzed one side METHODIST CHURCH } Mrs. Grace Pauly returned Tues: \day from. Marysville. where she has been visiting her mother who is ill in, a hospital there. WITH OUR James Jeffery arrived Tuesday! from Marysville enroute to Indian . Valley. / { Fred G. Schmeichel left a short George E. Dixon and Postmaster time ago for the Hawaiian Islands two Maurice H. LeRoy of Dobbins were in town Saturday attending a lodge — wa hae Sacramento today t e = Sages : spend a year. — — er ee has been. ;Sacramenro tomy o meet Fellows: anniversary ser1g with her family in’ Roseville,, grandson, ‘Clement Henwood, para-. vice at 7:30 p. m. The Odd Fellows meeting. makes regular trips to the hospital. trooper who received. wounds in-the!/and Rebekahs of (Grass Valley and a 4 i es tee C each Wednesday. . European theatre of war. He has! Nevada City will be our guests. ae sae sage sche ee ve Se og ch caer rou Charles Guenther— Set. Bill James— . spent a few weeks in a hotel in Palm Week eyents: The Priscilla Circle Nevada City vatialesves Pay a nits iieg cece sia poral Ny sig Charles Guenther who enlisted in . Springs with other wounded veterans. will méet ‘Wednesday at 2 p. m. All spend a week at their home onj. friends in Nevada City Sunday. He the U. S. Marines a year ago is now Set. Bill. James, Who is in the. and this is his first sick leave. members and friends invited. Bible Brandy Creek. ae was formerly employed in Harris understood to be im the thick of the. headquarters section of the First Air sill Usreéy, U. S. Navy, is here on. study and prayer hour Wednesday at Mr. and Mrs. Wien uf Patnan Drug Store and left here two. years fight in the South Pacific according . Service Area Command, has written) leave visiting his mother, Mrs. Web-. 7:30 p. m. The Welcome Strangers 274 daughter of alee ec arrived /@¢o “ eee . eee oe nor to a letter received by his grandhis mother, Mrs. Nance James this! er and other relatives. Bible class Friday at 7:30 p. m. an . Friday on a few days visit to He has now made additions > mother, Mrs. Ida Guenther of this; week that he can now tell her he is Friends in Nevada City have re-. members and friends cordially in. Rome here. <a and improvements to his store. city. Monday. He said he was weil . in Casablanca, North Africa for the} ceived a message stating Sgt. Harvey . vited. 7 but there was not much he~could. first time. He is getting along fine. Mosher, son of Mrs. Sylva Mosher, ae 4 write about. Bill has been overseas since a year] former local rural county school supProbate Asked for Will / Harrison Randall— ago last January. ervisor, was listed as missing in ac-. of . ate John H. Hansen 4 » In a letter to his mother, Mrs. Lyda {tion in the European theatre of war. Mrs. Clara V. Hansen, widow ot y Randall, reééived this week, Lieut. . Ghe also has another son and they Noid Hi: Pcaok “oho Hime ‘niayer’ of . Harrison -Randall states he is ¢till BIRTH have visited here often from’ the. Grass Valley, who died April 10th, 4 on the Italian ‘front, and that the BROWN—In Nevada City, Nevada family home in Kelseyville. Sgt. has filed a petition for the probate “nazis keep “American troops extrem-. . ‘ °2 1945. to Mr. ana. Mosher’s wife Lyra Mae Mosher, re-. o¢ his will and appointment as adely busy. ; Mrs. M. C. Brown of Grass Valley, a. Sides in Lakeport. ministratrix of his estate. The estate Pfe. Dahl Larsen— daughter. Douglass Farmer, who came lig yalued at not more than $6000. Deputy Sheriff and Mrs. pea from Hawaii Sunday night, spent a Heirs named are his wife, .three Larsen visited their son, Pfc. Dahl HORINER—In Nevada City, Neva-. short time here visiting with his sae in the armed services, and two uarsen, in Hammond General Hos-’ da County, April 23,-1945, to Mr. wife and mother, Mrs. Harriett Far-. randchildren: The sons are Robley pital in Modesto over the past week and ‘Mrs. Medford J. Horner, @/mer and left Wednesday. for AlasE., Harold L. and Jack &. Hansen. end. Dah] was shot through his heldaughter. ka. The two grandchildren to whom $100 ' Mrs. Hunter and son, Jimmie, mo-. each is bequeathed, “are the young tored to Nevada City Thursday for a. ons and daughter of Robley E: Hanvisit with her daughter, Mrs, Neita. gen. Reed. Mrs. Reed is the new stenoGL () \ grapher in” Attorney Frank FinneGrass Valley Soldier R il 4 6 gan’s office. Mrs. Hunter andson ° oo We di road o1ses also visited the three aunts, Mrs. Weds Chicago Girl Adeline Curtis, Mrs. Emily Marsh re Ve eee ome on & An editorial from the San Jose, California, ‘Evening News’’. and Mrs. Bessie McBride. fyslonsh:. Spat -orereess ae: ee (San Jose is on the main line of Southern Pacific’s Coast Line) Miss Lilla Lillian Kerstein of Chi‘ : ° P oe, ee ee meurane de W. HAVE always resented those even more of these qualities during Complaint Filed to pony Stee Ureery cela ee snooty expressions, ‘across the war. You realize that both the wars Abate Public Nuisance in the Grass Bae as copie tane tracks” or ‘‘down by the tracks,” in which we are engaged are trans: : Church. Rev. Mark Pike, pastor, perwith their implication that there portation wars and must be won A complaint for abatement of,4. formed the ceremony. was something disreputable and not only in the foxholes and workpublic nuisance was filed Tuesday Members of the bridegroom’s famsocially low-life about living near shops but on the railroads as well. by District Attorney H. Ward Shel-. ily and a few friends were in atrailroad tracks. After living many Some of the particularly long trains don, against Angus Fox. owner of 4/. tendance. The happy couple are years a block from the Espee’s you hear puffing and snorting these z ; . : SEs rails, we rise to: say that there are nights are troop ‘trains and others bakery at 304 West Main Street, and! honeymooning in the vicinity of Soda many worse places to live. are weighed down with war’s maLoyle E. Freeman, owner of the) Springs. Living close to the railroad has __ teriel. It is comfortable to reflect bakery premises. its obvious advantages when you’ what a great job the railroadmen The’ complaint brougmt by J. R. Will of Mrs. Mooser area boy. Where is there amore are doing, driving their trains and Dieffenbacher, inspector employed; Fjlad for Prohate alae oa man ae spt ee ahs Sie the state Department of Health, re-. 2 3 : Dip dah aag ea ch ge rN cI Se ee a : The will of Mrs. Grace C. Moose1 pufiing freights (which travel so Back a few years, when trucks cites that ee conducted his. 48 filed for probate Monday after. much faster now than they vu and buses started to cut more and business in such a manner as to con5 ; ise theayat . to) and speeding passen; more deeply into railroad revenues, stitute a violation of the California geet ia cen ea eats Mor: x, noon ond nig ut with the airplane as an additional E Food Sanitary Ast. pou eee ae ee . ing holds attraction for a boy, competitor just ahead, as a. boy Specifically if is complainad that! ed for letters of administration. The which is why so-many of them go living uear the tracks you may the Quin ek facd BOOSTS . Will bequeaths real estate, ersonal into it, finding a romance which have wondered a litile worriedly if : gee : a “~~ . property and -cash of about $15,000 . never dulls until they dic. they, would put your old friends, flies; dust and dirt, that dirt andi oii. 49 two surviving daugters, . “But how can you stand the the freights and passengers, out of waste were left to decompose and. Mrs. Lucile Lindley of Berkeley and noise?’’ someone piste : business. It took the war to show ferment on the premises, that uten-. aa ee ee ew etn Ag Far from being bothered by the that a nation’s need of railroads sils were used without: being clean-. _._ 5 noises, you get so you find them continues, that-no-nation-can be sa uate Chk clath ine Sk 5s on France. soothing and condicive to repose. great and strong without them. : = we You get so you can tell the freight You are reassured by that, and by pPloyes for work were not kept separSgt: Leland Thompson, U. S. Matrains from the passengers, and thearticles and drawings that have ate from clothes used ‘by them dur-. rine corps, arrived Tuesday from the you distinguish the touch on the been published of vastly improved ing the work, and that the latter. eastern states for a visit with his whistle rope ra oid iano tie pore ning bie sen pied eo ‘ = : engineman who makes his blastsso roads get their share of traffic after ges were not .properly — ee Mrs, Aun Silva om the Mur: short, sharp and distinctive. the wae: Such things mean your : chie Road. The various whistle notes reprefriends will be able to stay alive Walls and ceiling of the rooms in sent to you these giant creaturesof and that, drowsily safe and comNe which bakery products were made, Henry Prisk, -51, began serving fire and steel talking to one an-_ fortable, you will continue to hear were not cleaned or painted, the. 30 day sentence in the county jail other over long distances and on the trains chugging and puffing complaint states, and cats and other. yesterday, following his plea of winter nights, when the wind is through the night. animals were allowed to roam the. guilty before Justice of the Peace ee nae sa me ee ee ee eae Wins far rooms used for baking. Charles Morehouse in Grass Vetley e think.of engineer and fireman, so beautifully putting into words the =e = to charge intoxication in the public snug in their cab with the fireroarway we railroaders, and many other Lieut. Frank Fawcett place. ing below them, shunting lines of people, feel about trains. 176B FASHION aes : 2 << cars up and down the glistening
Missing in Action I wet tracks. : . If these night noises from the ° TO TH : . Mr. and Mrs. Frank Fawcett aye ssca ares comfortable and appealS-— The friendly : een notified by the War Depart ing to you during peace they have Southern Pacific a — ment that their son, Lieut. Frank FE. : : Fawcett, has been missing in action ~ CHARMED CIRCLE over Germany since April 5th. ; THEATRE os =Lieut. Fawcett was flying his ninth ' : mission as a co-pilot on a B-24 Lib-#) f 1A; ; rint erator bomber when his plane failediqit 7 A { Defend 96 * Aiglon:to create # P gS to return, He graduated from the . {]DIRHOTION . T. AND D. JR., (thaf’s entirely different and work it into \ Grass Valley high school in 1942 ENTERPRISES, INO. geese and entered training for the . air ; = ea ooo ~~ adress that’s original and becoming, ) corps in April, 1943. He left for ova ak A ix & : erseas last January after completing’ FRIDAY ° SATURDAY . “= The circled bottom peplum achieves his combat training at Mountain wedi et. ; “aha ) Home, Idaho. : q us = ‘ the new soft look #0 important this “ ‘He ig a brother of Mrs. Irmaja} s>: ; ,\f i = geason: In fine rayon shantung. Brown) t Boutayne and of Harlon Fawcett. I 5 z Every drop of Standard Furnace Oil 2° black, green, navy. Sizes 10 to 20. 199 Clay Pleads Guilty; of ae Bs meen gy enn to Serve Year in Jail ing ants one to thet). Every drop _“with— burns completely—goes farther. ps e on ur e ~'Cectl Clay, who had pleaded not e138 Keeps your burner clean and at peak AX guilty to ascharge of burglary, TuesJOANBENNETT performance —saves'you money. day changed his plea to guilty, and and Standard Furnace Oil outsells all othwas sentenced’ by Judge George L. 1 {41 MILL STREET—GRASS VALLEY . o 3 . : : a Jones to one year in the couny jail. al Clay was arrested following a 5 ps . burglary of the Moran Pharmacy in . From where I sit.. by Joe Marsh ‘ ers in the West because it delivers the maximum value for your fuel dollar. EDWARD G. ROBINSON —Plus— THE GREAT MIKE Grass Valley on Easter morning. A trail of blood leading from the back door of the pharmacy on Mill Street to the back entrance of his home immediately in the rear and fronting on Dick Newcomb BURNER OILS e qe South Church Street, gave a elue to Goes Fishing by Proxy his identity, It is ona that he a as cpiloes ty oe hs e ; wounded his’ hand in tearing off a ROBERT HENRY 3 Bob Newcomb used to be the So Bob spent his next day off piece of irom roofing in order to whan best fly.caster in the county. exactly as Dick cream of his gain entrance to the pharmacy. STUART ERWIN Never missed a Saturday atSedoing—fished Seward’s Creek pees ‘ fee ee ward’s Creek. Butcome the war, again, and cooked the trout, and GRASS VALLEY DELEGATES See and Bob’s son going off in uniform, he just lost interest in things like fishing. But the other day Bob got a letter from the South Pacific » e kind of a homesick letter: ? “I’m thinking of you, Dad, fishing in Seward’s Creek; cooking trout over an open fire; ani . keeping the beer coc! in the stream. Keep an extra bottle cool forme.” + kept the beer cool in the stream. And you knew he was doing it for Dick. From where I sit, it’s what the men overseas would have us do -—keep alive the little customs, the small pleasures, théy remember—keep them alive till they come home to share them. Ge Mou No. 114 of a Series Copyright, 1945, United States Brewers Fouacation Delegates from the Grass Valley Business and Professional Women’s Club have returned from the Northern District conference of the BPWC ‘in Redding last week end and report honors conferred upon . Mrs. Marie Williford, elected district first vice president, and upon Miss Betty Eldredge, chosen district auditor. The delegates were Mrs. Veda Meeker, newly elected president of the loval club, and Mrs. Kathryn} Grant. Mrs. Williford and Miss Eildredge. SUNDAY MONDAY CLAUDETTE COLBERT —And— FREDERICK MARCH SIGN OF THE CROSS ~< Phone 88 Grass Valley Alpha Stores, Ltd. Phone & Nevada City LA y “THE PIONEER BUILDING 244 Boulder Street _ a Telephone 500 NEVADA COUNTY LUMBER COMPANY ‘. LUMBER YARD” MATERIALS, Calif. 3