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Page: of 6

wy a
—
Cee ae a ee
MERRIAM
A Good Governor
For All the People
Hear Him Report
to You in Person
RADIO BROADCASTS
Monday,
work
Wednesday, August 244—
network 9 to 9:15 o.m. soveneen
Saturday, August 27—Calif.work 7 to 7:30 o.m. shee
Monday. August 29. h =
work 7 to 7:15 pm mba net
Monday. August 29—pDo io
work 8:45 to 9:00 iin. on
August 22—Don L. ia
7 to 7:15 p.m. see
EES NEVADA
LAVA CAP DIRECTORS
PLEASED WITH MINE
Directors of the Lava Cap mine
oS
————e
CITY_NUGGET
THE POCKETBOOK
were much pleased with conditions
at the property, according to report
received. The directors consist of
WwW. R. Phillips, Waterbury, Conn.;
Lindsay -Hooper, Boston, ‘™Mass.;
Dwight C. Wheeler, Bridgeport,
Conn.; George A, Miller, New York;
William L. Maren, Jr., Buffalo, N.
Bb areas Nia 9 O’Keeéfe, New ~ Haven,
Conn.
While here they agreed upon a
38 cent dividene for the next quarter. In July, according to a statement
made by Otto Schiffner to directors
and stockholders the Lava Cap made
a profit of $48,000. He states that
the ‘‘mine is looking 100 per cent.’
William Jeffrey, Sr., and son, William, Jr., of Walrath Avenue left
Sunday for a vacation which will be
Mining claim location notices for
sale at Nugget office.
spent visiting Yosemite Valley and
many places of interest in Southern
CANDIDATES
FOR SUPERIOR JUDGE
RAGLAN TUTTLE
(Incumbent)
]
FOR COUNTY TREASURER
AND TAX COLLECTOR
“THE TRAILER
of KNOWLEDGE :;.
“THOUSANDS OF WORKERS
ha,
ale Gee? . ga if
SNAKES CANNOT CLOSE
THEIR EYES.. NOR
CAN THEY HEAR —
THEY HAVE NO
EYELIDS OR EARS
SO <A (wt ——
Bee ~~ S-e we » wi
INDUSTRY, SoRN BURNG SS awe
THE DEPRESSION, Now INCLUDES S——
350 MANUFACTURERS EMPLOYING sss
a
at
“TAXES PAID LAST
R BY 150 LEADING
TOR OUNT!
SPOONS 2 FEET
40ONG WERE USED)
IN ENGLAND, IN THE Xe
TIME OF QUEEN oghoero ZZ
ELIZABETH 3
(USED TO REACH OveR ee;
THE LARGE RUFFS =
WORN AT. THAT TIME)
Hereby announces his candidacy for
re-election to the office of Superior
Judge of Nevada County at the PriFRANK STEEL
(Incumbent)
CORPORATIONS AM
TOSS PER EMPLOYER
SN .
.
OL’ KING .COTTON
COTTON NOW GOES To
THE RETAIL MARKET IN
MORE THAN /0,000 FoRMs
INCLUDING CELLULOID,
ED RAYON, SMOKELESS
WDER, PLASTICS AND
FINISHES
Orange Juice Layer Cake with orG»
mary Election, Tuesday, August 30,
1938.
FOR COUNTY ASSESSOR
JOHN M. HAMMILL
(Incumbent)
Hereby announces his candidacy for
re-election. to the office of Assessor,
Nevada County, at Primary. Election, August 30, 1938.
FOR SUPERVISOR
WARREN ODELL
Hereby announces his candidacy for
County Supervisor of the Fourth
District, at the Primary Election,
Tuesday, August 30, 1938.
FOR SUPERVISOR
_JAY C. COUGHLAN
(Incumbent)
Hereby announces his candidacy for
the,office of Supervisor of the Third
Supervisorial District at the Primary
Blection, Tuesday, August t30, 1938.
FOR COUNTY CLERK AND
Hereby announces his candidacy for
re-election to the office of County
Treasurer and Tax Collector at the
Primary Election, August 30, 1938.
FOR SHERIFF
CARL J. TOBIASSEN
(Incumbent)
Hereby announces his candidacy for
re-election to the office of Sheriff of
Nevada County, at the Primary ElecSURPLUS FARM
PRODUCTS NOW
GO T0 THE NEEDY
tion, Tuesday, August 30, 1938.
FOR SHERIFF
GEORGE R. CARTER
Hereby announces his candidacy fo
the office of Sheriff of
August 30, 1938.
FOR SUPERINTENDENT
OF PUBLIC SCHOOLS
A. R. CURNEEN
tion of August 30, 1938. :
Nevada
County at the Primary Election of
Hereby announces his candidacy for
Superintendent of Public Schools in
Nevada County at the Primary EleeBy RALPH H. TAYLOR
Farmers, economists,
workers, ministers and students o
human affairs have all puzzled their
hearts
during recent years for some satisTr
heads and searched their
factory answer to the query:
go under-nourished, in
commodities?’’
AUDITOR
R. N. McCORMACK
(Incumbent)
Hereby announces his candidacy for
County Clerk and Auditor of Nevada
County at the Primary Election,
Tuesday, August 30, 1938.
FOR COUNTY CLERK
AND AUDITOR
ARTHUR F. HELLINGS
Hereby announces his candidacy for
office of County Clerk of Nevada
County at the Primary . Electio,
August 30, 1938.
FOR DISTRICT ATTORNEY
__ WARD SHELDON
Hereby announces his candidacy for
the office of District Attorney of
Nevada County at the Primary Electien of August 30, 1938.
Hereby announces his candidacy for
County Coroner of Nevada County,
at the Primary
August 30, 1938.
FOR SUPERINTENDENT
OF PUBLIC SCHOOLS
‘WALTER A. CARLSON
Hereby announces his candidacy for
the office of County Superintendent
of Public Schools at the Primary
Election of August 30, 1938.
FOR COUNTY CORONER
DANIEL L. HIRSCH, M. D.
Hereby announces his candidacy for
County Coroner, ofNevada County,
at the Primary Election, Tuesday,
August 30, 1938.
FOR COUNTY CORONER
_L. R. @OB) JEFFORD
(Incumbent)
Election, Tuesday,
FOR DISTRICT ATTORNEY .
W. J. CASSETTARI
Hereby announces his candidacy for
District Attorney of Nevada County
at the Primary Election, Tuesday,
August 30, 1938.
Hereby announces his candidacy for
the office of Coroner
County at the Primary Election of
August 30, 1938.
FOR COUNTY CORONER
A. M. HOLMES
of Nevada
FOR DISTRICT ATTORNEY
VERNON STOLL
(Incumbent)
Hereby announces his candidacy for
re-election to the office of District
Attorney of Nevada County at the
Primary Election August 30, 1938.
FOR JUSTICE OF THE PEACE
Hereby announces his tandidacy for
Justice of
Township at the Primary Election,
Tuesday, August 30, 1938.
W. L. MOBLEY
(Incumbent)
the Peace, of Nevada
FOR CONSTABLE
WILLIAM C. JEFFERY
(Incumbent)
J for Justice of the Peace, of Nevada
Hereby announces his candidacy for Township at the Primary Election,
Ube attics of Oonatatie “ot Nevada a. cates Aurunt 30, 1938.
Township at the Primary Election of
FOR JUSTICE OF THE PEACE
Hereby announces his candidacy for
ALFRED H. HADDY
August 30, 1988. :
FOR ASSEMBLYMAN
JOHN A. RAFFETTO, Jr.
(Sixth District)
Hereby announces his candidacy for
the office of Assemblyman from the
Hereby announces his candidacy for
the office of County Surveyor of
Nevada County at the Primary Plection August 30, 1938.
FOR COUNTY SURVEYOR
J. F. (Joe) O'CONNOR
Sixth District of California at the
Primary Election, August 30, 1988.
FOR ASSEMBLYMAN
JOHN S. LAWSON
(SIXTH DISTRICT) _
Hereby announces his candidacy for
election to the office of Assemblyman from the Sixth District at the
Primary Blection, Tuesday, August
RE-ELECT
HARRY L,
ENGLEBRIGHT
TO CONGRESS
30, 1938,
FOR COUNTY RECORDER
JOHN E. NETTELL
TO NUGGET SUBSCRIBERS
Will you please notify the
Nugget Office any time you do
® Hereby announces ‘his candidacy for
election to the office of County
Recorder at the Election, Tuesday,
August 30, 1938.
+
not receive your copy of the
Nevada City Nugget.
PHONE 26
masses” are being exploited and
that the American system has failed. Fascists have sheuted;—‘‘we need
a dictator — a strong hand at the
helm!’’ And Communists have ranted: “In’ the Communist state, the
workers will own the farms; they
will end this travesty.’
But the fact remains that in Fasecist Italy and Nazi Germany, {few
workers can afford “the little luxuries’’ which the average American
worker accepts as necessities. And
in Soviet Russia, despite the fiveyear-plan and all the other plans
‘that have followed, millions are under-fed, while even the most fortunate sit down to poorer meals than
the most distressed relief recipient
in America,
It is a problem which has ‘never
been solved since the world began,
but thoughtful men are thinking
about it; intelligent men are earnestly seeking the answer. And the
federal government, even though it
may only scratch the surface, has a
program under way to divert at
least part of the farm products in
the _country_to needy—families—and
hungry stomachs. :
Indicating the magnitude of the
undertaking, more than 957,000,000
pounds of price depressing surplus
agricultural commodities were purchased by the Federal Surplus Commodities Corporation and distributed to the state for the use of the
needy and unemployed during the
10 months from July 1937, to May
1938. The. surplus farm products,
bought to supplement efforts of the
farmers to alleviate glutted markets, and to supplement cash aid
being given needy families, were
produced in 45 states, including California.
An average of more than 2,000,000 destitute families a month were
suppHed with food from “the surplus farm products table” as a result of the program administered
jointly by the federal government
and state welfare agencies, with the
retail value of the products consumed during the 10 months estimated
at more than $65,000,000.
And funds available for this type
of work during the 1938-1939 fiscal
year total around $79,000,000. “How
much of the $79,000,000 available to
the Secretary of Agriculture will be
utilized for purchasing surplus farm
products for relief distribution during the new fiscal year cannot be determined at this time,’ according to. p
F. R, Wilcox, vice President of the
Federal Surplus Commodities Corwelfare
“Why must millions of men, women and children in the United States
desperate
need of food, while farmers face financial disaster due to over production, or under consumption of their
Soap box orators have cited this
tragic paradox as proof that ‘“the
federal aid monies on California
ighways.
wuurtz and placer clatm ‘ovations,
ies will be governed by agriculture’s
need for surplus removal operations
and the ability of state welfare
agencies to distribute with a minimum of waste the products bought,
In addition, we have in Operation 4
number of other programs to encourage new markets and new uses,
and are considering additional activities to expand commercial outlets
for farm products. Operation of
these diversion programs also will
require funds from the total of $79,000,000 available.”
California apparently figured
heavily in purchases of the Surplus
Commodities Corporation during the
10-month period just reported, for
some of the large amounts bought
were: rice, 70,550,000 pounds; dry
peas and beans; 59,000,000 pounds;
dried prunes, 45,100,000 pounds;
fresh apples, 5,600,000 ‘bushels;
dried apples, 14,450,000 pounds, oranges and grapefruit, 1,720,000
f
serts, try this one:
_ Orange Layer Cake
baking powder. 2 cups flour. 1-8
teaspoon salt. 1-4 cup orange juice.
1-4 teaspoon grated orange rind.
Cream butter, add sugar gradually, then well beaten egg yolks, grated orange rind, orange juice and
water, slowly. Sift the flour, salt
and bakin powder together and add
half of it to the cake mixture. Fold
in one half of the beaten egg whites.
Mix well between each addition.
Bake in two large or three small
layer cake pans in moderate oven
about 15 or 20 minutes. Put together with whipped cream or Other favorite filling and frost top and sides with orange butter frosting.
Orange Butter Frosting
Cream 4 tablespoons butter and
Stir in 1-4 cup confectioner’s sugar;
gradually stir in unbeaten yolk of
one egg and 1 teaspoon vanilla. Add
1 3-4 cups sugar and 2 tablespoons
fresh orange juice, little at a time
as frosting thickens. When ‘creamy
consistency spread on cake.
DEAN TO INTERVIEW
COLLEGE STUDENTS HERE
Dean Wyman BE. Olson of Placer
Junior College will] be in Nevada
County two days before the opening
of the fall semester to interview
prospective students,
Olson will be at the Bret Harte
Inn at Grass Valley Friday, August
19, from 3+p. m. until 7:30 p. m.
On August 25 he will be at the
National Hotel in Nevada City from
2 p. m. until 7:30 p. m.
Prospective students are asked to
send their transcripts to Olson at
the college in Auburn before their
interviews in Nevada county if possible.
Superintendent John H. Napier,
Jr., announces the bus carrying students will commence to operate Monday morning, August 29, which is
the opening date for formal registration.
boxes; cabbage, 10,170,000 pounds;
cottonseed oil, 9,780,000 pounds;
butter, 8,320,000 pounds; eggs, 8,100,000 dozen; fluid milk, 8,100,000 quarts and dry skim milk,, 8,650,000 pounds. Compared with the
Same period a year ago the volume
of commodities purchased increased
134 per cent.
Admittedly, this is far from a solution of the age-old problem, But
most farmers will agree, at least,
that it is better than “plowing under.”’
IN 4 YEARS VAST
SUM SPENT ON
COUNTY ROADS
SACRAMENTO, Aug. 18.—During
the four years and two months of
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Kopp returned Sunday from a Most delightful
two ‘weeks vacation spent in the
northwest United States and Canada. They drove through British . .
Columbia, Victoria and many other
Places of interest.
‘Mrs. Effie Goering had as Visitors Sunday her dauhter, Mrs. H.
Palmer, and sister in law, Miss Pa]ange frosting, is a dainty accompaniment to the summer frozen desOne half cup butter. 1 cup sugar.
2 eggs. 1-4 cup water. 3 teaspoons
FOR EXPERT. .
Mattress and Upholstering
Work, Furniture Repairs, or
Recovering Chairs
Call Grass Valley 945
JIM AND GORDON BAUGH
225 East Main Street
Grass Valley
Try a Snoopy Sue Ad.
Baked Ham, Boiled Ham,
Cold Tongue, Corn Beef,
Pressed Ham, Cold Pork.
ROASTS, CHOPS,
STEWS, SAUSAGES
Our Reputation is Our
uarantee.
KEYSTONE
MARKET»
Calanan and Richards
Commercial St., Nevada City
mer of Reno.
PHONE 67
4
GAS, OIL, ACCESSORIES, WASHING, POLISHING,
RENT BATTERIES
—Expert Mechanics—
his administration, Governor Frank
Car Trouble ?
—WE’LL FIX IT—
Pe
F. Merriam has been keenly interested in highway development in
California. : ——
Through the State Highway Commission, Governor Merriam has initiated many of the major highway
improvements which have been completed or undertaken during the last
four years,
For his information, the governor
today received from Earl Lee Kelly,
director of the Department of Public Works, through which agency all
state highway work is carried on, a
report showing the expenditures of
state highway funds in each county
since June, 1934.
Kelly’s tabulations show that in
Nevada County the state has expended in that period a total of $1,830,951.35 on highway construction,
improvement and maintenance.
During the same period Nevada
County received from the state as
its Share of the one-cent gas tax, the
motor vehicle license tax and bus
and truck tax a total of $283;706.74 and the cities of Nevada County
were allocated for municipal highway purposes the sum of $31,047.31, representing their portion of the
two one-quarter cent gas tax apportionments to cities,
In the last four years, the Division of Highways of the Department
of Public Works has Spent in excess
of $175,000,000 of gas tax funds,
motor vehicle registration fees. and
poration. ‘‘As in the Dast, our actiy.
j
percentage of sulphurets,
Mail order check work
Agent for New York-California
notice. blanks at the Nugget.oftice, . "F.
‘NEVADA CITY ASSAY & REFINING OFFICE
Pyactical mining tests from 25 to 1000 pounds, giving the free gold
value of sulphurets and tailings.
Assays made for gold, silver, lead and copper.
promptly attended to.
Underwriters, Westchester and
Delaware Underwriters Insurance Companies
AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE
E. J. N. OTT, Proprietor
_ A. W. ROGERS —
Contractor and.
Builder
ROUTE 1. BOX55B
OLD WASHINGTON ROAD
Near Ukiah and Tahoe Highway.
NORTH OF NEVADA
CITY
og