Search Nevada County Historical Archive
Enter a name, company, place or keywords to search across this item. Then click "Search" (or hit Enter).
To search for an exact phrase, use "double quotes", but only after trying without quotes. To exclude results with a specific word, add dash before the word. Example: -Word.

Collection: Newspapers > Nevada City Nugget

August 12, 1940 (4 pages)

Go to the Archive Home
Go to Thumbnail View of this Item
Go to Single Page View of this Item
Download the Page Image
Copy the Page Text to the Clipboard
Don't highlight the search terms on the Image
Show the Page Image
Show the Image Page Text
Share this Page - Copy to the Clipboard
Reset View and Center Image
Zoom Out
Zoom In
Rotate Left
Rotate Right
Toggle Full Page View
Flip Image Horizontally
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 4  
Loading...
auiindlliges clnsiatge EEE ROE BE elicichgics Ged eeciace ae PAGE TWO NEVADA CITY NUGGET MONDAY, AUGUST 12, 1940. <= —— So Nevada Cit 305 Broad Street. ij y Nugget Phone 36. A Legal Newspaper, as defined by statute. Printed and Published at Nevada City. and Publisher Editor Nevada City, Published Semi-Week matter of the second class in 1da City under Act of SUBSCRIPTION RATES es One year (in Advance)y, Monday and Thursday California, and entered as mail the postoffice at Congress, March 3, Risuecags eagasse sete $2.50 THENIING OUT LOUD (Continued trom Page One) from the Treasury spigot. The real value of TVA that anyone can now its lesson see With half.an eye, is to the people. It will be,a measur‘ ing stick but not the kind that Mr. Roosevelt so pictured. It has already the unfitness . of politicians with access to the . U. S. Treasury to conduct a business enterprise. When Wendell Willkie challenged the triumvirate who had proposed virtually to . browbeat or swindle the stock holders of the Commonwealth and . Southern out of stock values in . eertain Tennessee utilities which TVA wished to take over, at deprec‘ated prices they had helped . . ' fondly proved to create, an electric shock ran through the nation. Willkie publicly auestioned the ethics of the New Deal. which in order to make a fine TVA measuring stick, proposed to rob thousands of stock holders, many of them aged, many of them widows, many of them children supported from trust funds, in fact thousan@~ who had invested money in stock as others do in savings bank accounts. Willkie makes the issue so simple that anyone who takes the trouble to study it can grasp. it. He showed that the New Deal, in order to make a yardstick for private utilities proposed to do it in a manner that no court of justice in the country would permit to a private corporation. Now Willkie as a candidate for pole on the Nevada City-Grass Valley . Highway near the Lake Olympia in; tersection. . Memorial i was knocked down. . ported to the ' Patrol during the weekend. . PER CAPITA ICE CREAM Stop and think a minute—did you, +391 in 1938 and 20,122 gallons in} president of the United States. we believe. will go on to show that the New Deal comes _ preciously close to being one of those things known as. hen®volent order to benefit one group of citizens it has deliberately injured other groups. We believe that despite wooing, honeyed phrases and promises radioed from Washington Mr. Willkie will be able to give the majority of Amgenerally desrots. In ericans a true picture of the peril in which they stand of choosing a benevolent autocrat who desires to make the White House his permanent home. CAMPTONVILLE NOTES CAMPTONVILLE Aug. 12.—Mr. and Mrs. Fred B, Hanson returned Thursday from a few days visit with relatives at Hammonton. Mrs. M. A. Ramm of San Francisco who has been spending the sum-. Searls Avenue during the weekend. mer here, is now the guest of Mrs. . Rosa ,Zerga, at Oak Valley. The Chatterso Club— was tained at the home of Mrs. Guy C. Tabler on afternoon. Street The following Spring were pre-. -sent: Mesdames J. W. Montgomery, . tioi, assisted hy four nurses. Jack O. Montgomery, J. W. Morehead, William A. Hemleben, Guy C. Tabler and Miss Elsie Price. Mrs. Tabler’s mothe-in-law, Mrs. M. J. Tabler, of Selma, was a guest. Lee Bullington and Erle Pauly left a few days ago for ‘Mohawk where they are going to do some repair work on the home of Mrs. Louise Knickrem. The Camptonville Women’s Club has decided to assist in making material for the refugees in the European war. The club volunteered to crochet seven shawls and three hospital jackets, which is a large quota considering the small membership. The following were present: Mesdames J. W. Montgomery, J. O. Montgomery, Olive Groves, Grace Pauly, W. A, Hemleben, A. C. Molen? Walter Mau, Frank Meggers, George Butz, W. A. Lang, Samuel Price, W. C. Williams and Miss Elsie Price. During a rummage sale at the church one of the helpers walked up to the pastor and proudly reported: “T’ye sold everything in that room.” “Goodness,’’ exclaimed the pastor . . CONRADSTROW v Conrad Stroh of Nevada City was . injured Saturday night when his autelephone tomobile crashed into a was taken to the Jones Hospital. .The telephone pole which Stroh’s automobile struck Stroh The accident was the only one reCalifornia Highwav CONSUMPTION GAINS . SACRAMENTO, Aug, 12.—(UP)— eat almost two quarts more ice cream. in 1939 than you did in 1938? California ice cream manufacturers, showed a gain of almost 3.000,000 gallons for that period,-indicating—a-per capita jump of nearly half-gal-; lon. And based on the 1939 production of 19,524,564 gallons, the per capita consumption was better than “10 THE WHITE HOUSE 1600 PENNSYLVANIA AVE.” fe VIC GATES KILLS FOUR-FOOT RATTLER Vic Gates, driving toward Nevada City on the Bloomfield road, noticed a huge rattesnake crossing the highway just south of the Hoge Mine. He killed it With a shovel. The snake measured 4 feet and a. half inch and was two inchcs in. diameter in its middle. it carried ten rattles, but. bore evidence of having lost Some of its rattles previously. —y FOR SALE — 2,000 cords of stove wood timber, bargain. Also 380 three gallons 16,563,784. To show the widespread commercial manufacture of ice cream only . Alpine, ‘Calaveras Mariposa, Modoc, . Mono, Sierra and Trinity were not in the production list. . . Nevada county had a total of 21,-; The 1938 total was counties . 1939. . Visits Downieville— . Supervisor Guerdon Ellis and L. S. Smith of the Tahoe National Forest headquarters here registered at the St. Charles Hotel in Downieville ‘ast week. i Will Enjoy Vacation— PROTECT SKINS ' # FROM ROUGHENING AND i REDDENING EFFECTS OF SUN and WIND S _y WITH ILASOL Thomas Hoezesland o*° Alleghany former!v of Nevada City, wil! svend thi¢ week vacationing in San Fran-. @. YVHBRO <4 <= . e*seco and other bay points. Ty Reseme Studies— . sume his economic studies at the; § f . fall term. . Forest Visitors— enter— city, Smiths have separated. What wassthe trouble?” “Incompatibility. He detested all Mr. and Mrs, Simon Hieronimus of this city were among the Nevada City folks attending the 2-day Forest homecoming celebration, Visitor at Uhrig Home— John Ronald ‘MacDonald of San Francisco, who will marry Miss Edna . Uhrig of Nevada City on August 31, was a visitor at the Whrig home on j W. C. Jeffrey, constable of this last week underwent an operation in an Alameda hosnital. Two Thursday . Surgeons, specializing in eye, ear and .
performed the opera-'! His . messace . nose maladies, wife yesterday reported a stating her husband was making excellent progress in recovery. Mayor Hall Returns— Mayor and Mrs, Benjamin Hali! have returned from Pacific Grove, where they spent several weeks on a combined vacation’ and _ business trip. BEER CANS GUIDE. DRIVERS LITTLETON, N. H.: (U.P.)—Beer cans now are being used to guide motorists. The state highway department cut the shiny bottoms from the cans and nailed them to snow fences. They are, it is said, excellent reflectors during and after heavy snowstorms. Golfer—‘What a terrible course.” Caddy—“This isn’t the coure, sir. You got off it quite a while ago. We’re now in Mrs. Smith’s rock garden.” ‘I’m surprised to hear that the FINE WATCH REPAIRING Radio Service & Repairing Work Called Clarence R. Gray Phone 152 for and Delivered 326 Coyote Street RISLEY’S 106 Pine Street Nevada City PHONE 217 Cleaning, Pressing, Tailoring {In our DRESS SHOP we sell— Dresses, sizes 12-52, Formals, Hostess Coats, Smocks, Slack Suits, Hoover Aprons, Slips and Hosiery. acres of land and milling timber. Phone 7-F-5. Camptonville. J. G. Ramm. 8-123te VACCUUM CLEANERS! Beautiful new Premier model, just received. Complete seti of attachments and Telechron_electric clock given with this model, FREE! Full price $44.95. Premier Vacuum Cleaner complete with portable hand vacuum cleaner, new—all for $39.95. FOOTE ELECTRICAL CoO., 132 Mill St. Grass Valley 8-8-2te SPECIALS! this new merchandise! DeLuxe Gibson refrigerator, 6 ft. size. formerly $214.50, now $114.50. 4-Burner de and H. range, complete’with light and acFormerly $127.50, Save on new, gas luxe L, cessories. now Quality Merchandise GLOBE A-1 FLOUR _ For. Every Baking Purpose 10 pound. So-called Sack 2000.. Bas POGNG SACK ooo. 49 pound sack Say 12 shee e cone Tea Garden . LCG CABIN SYRUP — STRAWBERRY JAM _ . Medi. size 32c Pure—2 lb. jar 39c . Large size = WestlakeFRUITS FORSALAD . 2 No. 1 tall cans ......... 29c 2 No. 214 cans .. . SLICED PINEAPPLE on OOe ARMOUR’S TREE Kelloge’s The All Purpose Meat . CORN FLAKES 12 oz. can 25c 3—8 oz. pkg. 23c oe TREE TEA . . . MJB. COFFEE. a ORANGE PEKOBR : a BOR. et 34c Drip or Regular 16 62. 2 65c rh 26c . GREEN . Ee) aeRO 30c 2 lbs. ... 50c tee 57c Order by Phone, Prompt. Free Delivery PHONES 160 an? 225 ' PRICES EFFECTIVE FROM AUGUST 9TH TO 16TH PLAZA. GROCERY $100.00. ° . coal and electric . with light and accessories formerly . $189.50, now $169.50. . FOOTE ELECTRICAL CO., range, ent set if you purchase from selec1940 model Philco Radios Save now! Foote Elec132 Mill St. tion of —all new. trical Co., Valley. Grass 8-8-2te . USED PHONOGRAPH RECORDS. Large assortment, 10 cents each. Street, Grass Valley 8-8-2te FOR SALE—Very reasonable, terms. 4 Room house with modern berries and garden. Inquire ov place. Adele Renee, Old Banne1 Road, Gold Flat. 7-29-5t) WORK WANTED—Woman with deFor VENETIAN BLINDS and LATEST PATTERNS IN WALL PAPER * % John W. Darke 109-.J Phones 109-M pendent child must tiave’ work. Housework (good cook), book: keeping or anything. Phone Nevada City 513. 7-26-2tp MRS ARTHUR B. FOOTE of Grass Valley will analyze character from handwriting for the benefit ofthe Red Cross. Requirements: at least one full page in ink. and on unlinNevada City. Laundry QUALITY WORK SKILLFULLY DONE BY HAND Prompt Courteous Service Free Delivery All our work is priced right, Phone 577 241 Commercial St Nevada City “that is the cloakroom.” ®] her favorite movie stars.’ ae DS ) THE SUN PRODUCE AND . ict 107 Mill street Nevada County Photo Center GROCERY C0. : TN PHONE 67 Portraits, Commercial Photography, = tiles i 8 Hour Kodak Finishing, Old Copies, Fresh Fruits and Vegetables q Drovoerasrer Enlarging. and Framing, / FREE DELIVERY Kodaks and Photo Supplies, * % Bex. anime nee. Vay. Movie Cameras-and Films -}}}315 Broad Street.. Phone 88 eet \ = ws . ee a te: ed paper with full signature (as usually signed). Charges, 50c. 7-5-10tp EXPERT RADIO’ REPAIRING —Loud Speaker Systems for Rent u: Sale. Authorized Phileo Auto Radio Service. ART’S RADIO HOSPITAL —Specialists in Radio Ills, 112 South Church Street, Grass Valley Phone 984, 2-191f WATCHES CLEANED, $1.00. Mainsprings, $1.00. Watch Chrystals. round, 25c, fancy, 50c. All work guaranteed. J. M. Bertsche, Watch and Clock repairing. With Ray's Fixit Shop, New location, 109 ‘Main Street, Grass Valley. 12-1tf REAL ESTATE WALTER H. DANIELS LICENSED BROKER Phone 521 P. O. Box 501 4-Unit L. and H. combination wood, . complete . 132 Mill St. Grass Valley 8-8-2tc} RADIOS BUYS! . Double trade-in value on your presFoote Electrical Company, 132 Mi!1} fixtures. 12 acres of wooded land, . est . . . . ENTERTAINMENT SUPREME Kay Kyser — Horace Heidt — Orrin Tucker all with complete units of featured artists. . . . . . . . i DICK LANES ~ GARAGE AND SERVICE STATION BROAD AND UNION STREETS, NEVADA CITY Avoid a big repair bill by having little ones attended to in time.*Let us check your car regularly. It will save you money. -ED BURTNER of the Grass Valley Cleaners has hundreds of satisfied customers who prefer his National Cleaning System. A thorough cleaning and pressing of all outer garments gives their wearers that sense of well being that leads to success in life. Grass Valley 111 Main Street Phone 375 ~~ Nevada City Your Advertisement in The Nugget is Dollars in Your Pocket! te