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Collection: Newspapers > Nevada City Nugget

August 21, 1939 (4 pages)

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NUGGET MONDAY, AUGUST 21, 1939 Nevada City Nugget 305 Broad Street. . Phone 36. ° : A Legal Newspaper, as defined by siatute. Printed and Published at Nevada City. Editor and Publisher Published Semi-Weékly, Monday and Friday at Nevada City, California, and entered as mail matter of the second class in the postoffice at Neyada City, under Act of Congress, March 3, 1879. SUBSCRIPTION RATES One year (In Advance) _NEVADA CITY ee THE POC ~ ETBOOK Or Else Navigation with Japan, and Britain's refusal to discuss her su Britain. _a plot had been discovered and thwarted. ) If these rumors are based on fact, they mean that Japa down in her relations with the western powers. * — If the extremist element of the Japanese military is s pressed to the wall that it must now look to assassination as and imprisonment of a small group of active plotters. “ _ The extremist element is presenting the cabinet and th come apparent within a very short time. : The U. S. abrogation of its Treaty of Commerce and _ port of Nationalist China's currency (Inparel No. 40) at the Tokyo negotiations have spurred to greater efforts the Japanese “young officers group” which has been demanding an outfight military alliance with the Rome-Berlin Axis. According to their view, Japan must move closer to her European friends to offset the, stiffening attitudes of the United States and Great In the face of these demands the older heads in the Japanese government have stood firm against any arrangement that “would tie Japan too closely to the shaky structure of European relations. Apparently their position is finding enough sup_ port to enable them to withstand the political pressure from the . military extremists. At any rate, Tokyo dispatches within the last week have carried rumors to the effect, first, that the “Young officers’’ planned a coup against the conservative members of the cabient and their supporters, and second, that such is facing a showdown internally just as she is facing a showpolitical persuader. it is improbable that the whole military alliance program will be thrown aside because of the exposure men who are behind it with the alternatives of goihg along with the program urged by the “young officers,” resigning, oY being killed. What the cabinet’s choice will be should bePER WAS FOR. POVERNMENT TO 2ET BUSINESS ALONE € 19, 203,164,123 \9, 203,104, 120 ‘ ZA 1g, ou eve O49 Fa, HPI ‘hon bead adetg ee pees ey 150 A MINUTE FOR 40HouRS 10, 500, 000, } THE COST OF RELIEF IN AMERICA SINCE 1932 “15 ESTIMATED THAT A YEAR IN RAG ity Wind AN THE AVERAGE FAMILY 2 PLANE USED. IN SCOUTING n oO a plane of D. DeNeal on the Nevada City airport and in 15 minutes had Surveyed the fire north of Nevada City. It would have taken him five hours to have covered the same territory by automobile. Sharpe is very enthusiastic about the latest method to survey a fire. At about 11 o’c!ock this forenoon a report came that the You Bet fire e Sabotage and Heroism had flared up again and Fire Dispatcher E. L. Stone and Law Enforcement Officer J. D. Rafferty who tale of sabotage and a tale of heroism. City of San Francisco, in a bleak desert gorge. of others. Stewardess Thelma Discedt, herself seriously in _ porter, his legs crushed, told’a doctor: “‘Never thind me, Doc _ Patch up the others first,,I'm not hurt much.” according to railroad engineers and federal fully avoided tampering with the electric cable connection between the rails. Had he done so, block signals to warn the -streamliner crew would have flashed thousands of feet away, and the casastrophe would have been averted. Safety engineerz has virtually banished the danger of accident from landslides, washouts or defects in trains, rails or roadbeds, and iced rail travel first in safety of all modes of transportation. no device that man may invent is infallible against the ly ingenuity of a deranged mind. Man’s only answer to that phenomenon is his balancing ism in disaster—his courage and self-sacrafice in tragedy. ontributed. state that the person is not infected with syphilis, or if infected; is not in a stage of the disease which is, or may become, communicable to the marital partner. ¥) “This means that certificates can be issued, in certain cases, to people who have syphilis. In those cases there would be no danger of communieating the disease to the persons they marry’,’ Dr. Dickie said. er 18 can now start having. . “Persons -who are born with syphexaminations and the blood . ilis, those who have had the disease der the premarital law, Dr. for many years, and those who have Diekie, state health director,. received sufficient treatment may be 2S. permitted to marry.” goes into effect SeptemH id persons should go to their requires that a physician’s. family doctor for the examination for both persons intend-. and blood test. Free tests can be obtry. be filed with the county. tained at any public clinic for the before a marriage jicense is} control of venereal diseases or by. apExamination and blood tests. plying to the local health officer. must be made with All laboratories now permitted ‘by . syphilis will be allowed to do so un-} . In a grim Nevada desert last week California and the na_ tion saw enacted a tale of viciousness and a tale of courage— Seldom in history “have the heights and the depths of human action been more _ starkly exhibited than in the wreck of the crack streamliner, __ Dazed and injured survivors of the wreck struggled from the tangle of broken cars only to turn immediately to the aid " jured, labored at saving lives, until she collapsed. Ai Negro “It seems incredible that the sadistic madman who per'Petrated that mass murder of 23 people, and those heroic surVivors are members of the same human race. For the evidence, : investigators, shows that the wrecker diabolically circumvened the safety devices that prevent accidental wreck of that nature. He carethe state to make blood tests for. . . were at the Loma Rica airport when a plane came in, flew over the scene. They found the fire already under control. A plane was chartered by the National Forest forces to take men from Nevada City to the Little Sur fire and return them. The plane flew from San Luis Obispo this morning bringing the following men to their respective stations: Ranger H. I. Seymour, Sam Dickey, . protective assistant; Knowland O’Neil, guard and Leo Chatfield, all of Truckee. These men were coming in from Monterey near where Joe Callandra, 23, was burned to death. Callandra was at a meeting of forestry officials at Davis this spring and was. well known. among local Tahoe National Forest men. He was an assistant state ranger. : The Little Sur fire covered be‘tween thirty and forty thousand acres of timber land. The forestry officials going by plane from Nevada City to this fire had a splendid trip, flying over the ocean part of. the time. The trip was made in one hour and fifty minutes and _ ordinarly would have taken a day. —EXTRA— WAR DECLARED ON DIRT, GRIME BY CLEANING CO. Improve Leaks, Prolong Life of Garments ‘by Scientific Method Gritty dirt and grime are the enemy of clothes and unless they, are removed by expert cleaning methods your clothes will grow shabby long before their time. Our years of experience have taught us how to make clothes absolutely clean without harming the coloring or fabric in any way. — FOREST FIRES Bill Sharpe, state ranger, hired the Miss Lesta Joubert Given Farewell Party CAMPTONVILLE, Aug. 21.—Mr. and Mrs. Fred H. Butz and family of Celestial Valley gave a farewell picnic party on Oregon Creek below Celestial Valley Sunday afternoon in ‘honor of Miss Lesta Joubert, who taught the local high school for the past three years and who will start to each in the Marysville’ Union high school at Marysville when the new term opens. Mrs. Lucille Tucker and Leonard Larson of Sacramento spent Friday afternoon and evening with Mrs. Tucker’s aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs, Robert Ewing. Among those who came to Nevada City over the week end to attend the funeral of the late Jake Zanocco were the following relatives, Mr. and Mrs. S. R. Puccuelli, and his sister, Mr. and Mrs. Silvia Puccelli and daughter, San Jose; Mr. and Mrs. Agostini, San Francisco; Mr. and Mrs. Jimmie Dueschi and son, David, San Luis Obispo and Mr. and Mrs. Delasilvi. THE SUN PRODUCE AND GROCERY CO Fresh Fruits and Vegetables Phone 2% 315 Broad Street POTTED FLOWERS .— 2-year rooted Roses, shrubs, Bouquets, Corsages, Flowers for Weddings, Family Reunions and Special Occasions. FOOTE’ FLORIST Pai PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY ‘129 South Auburn St., Grass Valley ~ GRASS VALLEY NEVADA CITY CARL POWER JONES, M. D. DENTISTS
ottice Hours: 1 to 3; 7 to 8 ». m. DR. WALTER J. HAWKINS. Sundays 11:30 to 12:30 ; é DENTIST 312 Broad Street. Hours 9:00 a. m. S. F. TOBIAS, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON 214 Neal St., Grass Valley Office’ Hours: 12-3 and 7-8. Phone: Office 429. Residence 311-J DR. ROBT. W. DETTNER DENTIST e X-RAY Facilities Available Hours: 9:00-5:00. Evening appointnents. 120%. Mill Street. Phone 77 Grass Valley, Calif. DANIEL L. HIRSCH, M. D. Physician and Surgeon Offices and Receiving Hospital, 118 Bush St. Heurs: 10-12; 2-5, evenings 7-8 P.M. Day or night phone 71. BURT SPICER PHONE G. V. 918 FURNITURE REFINSHING SPECIAL RATES FOR SPRING— Any color or tone, Waterproof. 20 year’s experience. Homes, offices, apartments, hospitals. : Colfax Highway, Cedar Ridge. SSS _ VALLEY GRILL WELCOMES YOU Whenever you are in GRASS VALLEY We specialize in a 50 cent Sunday: Dinner 4 Delightful Air Cooled Place to Dine 103 MILL ST., GRASS VALLEY ~ee EE RT to 6:00 p. m. Evenings by appointment. Complete X-Ray Service. Phone 95 ae DR. JOHN R. BELL DENTIST Office Hours 8:30 to 5:36 Evenings by Appointment Morgan & Powell Bldg. Phone 32i DOCTORS B. W. HUMMELT, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON 400 Broad Street Office Hours: 10-12 a. m.; 2-5 p. m. Evenings 7-8. Phone 395 X-RAY W. W. REED, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Nevada City, Calif. Office 418 Broad Street Hours: 1-te 3 and 7 to 8 p. m. Residence Phone 2. Office Phone 3632: J. R. TOPIC, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON 312 Broad Street, Nevada City, Calif, Hours: 10-12 a. m. 2-5 p. m. Evenings 7-8 Phone 23 Res. Phone 32. FUNERAL DIRECTORS HOLMES FUNERAL HOME Fhe. Holmes Funeral Home sere vice is priced within the means ef all. Ambulance service at all hours, Phone 203 246 Sacraento Street, Nevada City MINING ENGINEERS J. F. O°;CONNOR Mining and Civil Engineer United States Mineral Surveying Licensed Surveyor 203 West Main St Grass Valley ATTORNEYS UARRY M. Mc KEE ATTORNEY AT LAW 205 Pine St., opposite courthouse Nevada City, Calif. FRANK G. FINNEGAN ATTORNEY AT LAW 207 North Pine Street, Nevada. City, Calffornia. Telephone 273. -SAFE AND LOCKSMITH KEYS Made While You Wait Bicycles, Steel Tapes, Vacuum Cleaners, Washing Machines, Electric Irons Stoves, Etc. Repaired SAWS, AXES, KNIVES, SCISSORS, ETC., SHARPENED H. WARD SHELDON ATTORNEY AT LAW ' Union Building, Broad Street. Nevada City Telephone 28 THOMAS O. McCRANEY ATTORNEY AT LAW ; Masonic Building 108% Pine Street, Nevada City, Telephone 165 ASSAYER Gunsmith, Light Welding . . HAL D. DRAPER. Ph. D. RAY’S FIXIT SHOP CHEMIST 4 220 East Main St., Phone 602 Nevada City, California GRASS VALLEY hones: ee Me: Home 246-3 = FRATERNAL AND New Deal . /. __ cvs pirecrory.. — Under Management of Pauline and Johnnie 108 W. Main Street, Grass Valley BEER WINES, LIQUORS Delicious Mixed Drinks to Please Every Taste . WOMAN'S CIVIC CLUB Regular meetings the 2nd and . 4th Tuesdays of the month, at the iChamber of Commerce, 2:30 p. ma. Mrs. Chas. Elliott, Pres. Mrs. Everett Robinson, Secy. NEVADA CITY CHAMBER OF COMMERCE FOR SALE—Two placer claims with B. P. O. Elks . Meets second and fourth Friday evenings in Elks home, Pine Street. Phone 108. Visiting Blks: ‘welcome, ‘ CLIFFORD MERRIAM, : Exalted Ruler. JOHN FORTIER, Secretary. NEVADA CITY LODGE, No. va ‘AFEWDAYS — . HYDRAULIC PARLOR NO. MORE H. F. SOFGE, Secretary . DR. C. WwW. 56, ‘ / Meets se ie oi“heets every Tuesday evening at Pythian Castle, 232 Brond aires: Visiting Native Sons welcome. . CLARENCE EB. MARTZ, Pres. CHAPMAN, Rec. Sec’y. house near North San Juan. Good prospect. Box 906, Nevada City, Calif. 7-3-9tp WE USE 2 ¥ Hill’s Flat Feed and Fuel. DAIRY and POULTRY FREDS. HAY GRAIN and MANURE. WOOD, COAL, KINDLING by load or by the sack. FURNITURE CAREFULLY MOVED in state or out of state. GENERAL HAULING all kinds. Reasonable rates, prompt . service, WEEKLY TRIPS TO SACRAMENTO, MARYSVILLB, LIN_ COLN. Phone 698.W. R: BOWER. ¢ ew — Oustomah Lodge, No. 16, 1.0.0.F. Meets every Tuesday evening at YOU WILL BE PLEASED 7:30, Odd Fellows Hall. MARK C. ROBERTS. N. G. JONATHAN PASCOK, Rec. Sec'y. JOHN W. DARKE, Fin, Sec’y. eee WITH OUR Subscribe for The Nugget COFFEE SHOP. * NATIONAL HOTEL AND COFFEE SHOP Clarence R. Gray 520 Coyote Strees FINB WATCH REPAIRING Radio Service and REPAIRING Work Called tor and Delivered Phone 14 REAL ESTATE WALTER H. DA For VENETIAN BLIN and LATEST PATTERNS IN WALL PAPER SEF Pe Siete y Darke . €. . ae