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Page: of 4

Nevada City Nugget — Thursday, August 26, 1943
a rcs
EVERYDAY NEEDS AT
SavingsEe
60c Alka Seltzer __....... BAe .
60c Sal Hepatica ____...._. 49e .
. . $1.15 Absorbine Jr. _..... 97c .
70c Sloans Liniment ..... 63c .
$1.00 lronized Yeast 88 .
75c Carters Pills ....-.... 63e .
60c Mentholatum ._.._.... 53c .
in 75c Baume Bengue ___.._._. 67¢ .
PR OO TIOROR oooh ae A3c .
$1.00 Hinds Honey and {
Almond Cream ....... 59e .
$1.00 Halo Shampoo ._... TUG 4
70c Vaseline Hair Tonic .. 63¢
.
40c Listerine Tooth
50c Ipana Paste 48¢e . .
$1.10 Norplex Vit. B. Tabs 98c
R. E. HARRIS .
THE REXALL DRUG STORE
1) CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY .
Christian Science Society of Nevada
. City holds services every Sunday
. morning in their church, 114 Boul;der Street at 11 o’clock.
. Sunday school at 9/45 a. m.
i Subject of this week’s LessonSermon is “Christ Jesus.’’ j
A Wednesday evening testimonial
meeting is held an the first Wednes}!day of each month at 8 o'clock.
stewte ote veslestestesteste tertertestesteste statesleste stestestertert
joie ire iemiveyeeieys trees
NEVADA THEATRE
Phone 100
esta stestestestertestestertert %
SHIEH inieioieieqjeqiie) oe:
fet
st,
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: KEEP ’EM :
FLYING” :
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ae
— @-——
@®BUY
® DEFENSE
@STAMPS
—Oo -———
Chamber of Commerce
OFFICE IN CITY HALL
PHONE 575Seteteteiuinteledeniiteteteiititeteeteiie
1 eltofofetetedestotot ett
Direction _
2 or, AND D. JR. ENTERPRISES
*
* SUNDAY AND :
t MONDAY
&
HAPPY GO:
LUCKY
WE REPAIR
AND WE FIX
Lawn Mowers, Locks, Vacuum
Cleaners, .Washing Machines,
Electric Irons, Stoves, in short
almost anything that is used
around the house or the yard,
we can repair.
ART’S REPAIR SHOP
RAY’S FIXIT SHOP
109 WEST MAIN STREET
Grass Valley
FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE
DRIVE IN
FOOD PALACE
Groceries, Fruit and
Vegetables
Beer and Wine
COR. YORK AND COMMERCIAL
‘ STREETS
NEVADA CITY, PHONE 898
UPHOLSTERY
OF ALL KINDS
<
John W. Darke
amills
FINE
WATCH REPAIRING
Radio Service & Repairing
Work Called for and Belivered
Clarence R. Gray
520 Coyote Street Phone 152
New Deal
Under Management of
Pauline and Johnnie
108 W. Main Street, Grass Valley
Delicious Mixed Drinks to Please
Every Taste
OB PRINTING.?
GEF YOURS AT
THE NUGGET
BEER WINES, LIQUORS}
ee loleedecelefoteqepajets
‘3
With
MARY MARTIN, RUDY
VALLE, DICK POWELL
Plus
NIGHT PLANE FROM
CHUNGKING
With
ROBERT PRESTON,
ELLEN DREW and
OTTO KRUGER ©
2
ROH,
aes
?
*
SiH tHH Hie ieieieleieinieieieieleieiuieiaieieieieieieieieinieiteieieieieininieieiiieinieinieini ie,
FRIDAY AND
SATURDAY
AIR FORCE
With
JOHN GARFIELD,
HARRY CAREY
JOHN RIDGELEY
esfeaferteatesferteoteateototerteateteateofeatesteaiesteofeoietetietele deletefedteite Gefeieieieioieioioy
Xe ste ate she , teste ate ah 4 ste ate stash
MeieleleloteteiieltetetR tele rt
Our reading room at 117 Broad
Street is open every day except Sun{days and holidays from 2 to 4 p. m.
. The public is cordially invited
. attend our services and _ visit
. Treading room.
FARMERS ARE
.
.
AGAINST PRICE
ROLL BACK
i By RALPH H. TAYLOR
In view of the fact that American
. farm organizations have bluntly byi
‘convincingly told official Washington
certain truths — to wit,
that problem confronting
the country is not rising prices, but
rather a
io
the
economic
the basic
lack of consumer supplies
to meet an abnormal consumer demand—it will be interesting to see
what effect this honest statement of
the case will have an the scheme for
a rollback of prices, with the tax“payer footing the bill.
If Washington is dealing in realities, instead of listening to the cries
of ‘labor leaders and other selfish
‘pleaders for special advantage who
jcan’t see beyond their immediate
. horizon, then the whole rollbacksubsidy pavogram will be thrown into the discard. For it can profit the
,snation nothing and it can cost it a
great deal—both in taxes, and in
encouragement of inflationary processes.
The National Grange stated the
case fairly when it informed Washington that either a subsidized rollimpendcrease, would ‘‘deepen our
about uncontrolled inflation and collapse.”’
That, coming from the Grange, is
strong language, indeed,
labor and the government should
earefully ponder it.
Refuting claims of both the AFL
and CIO that food costs had advanced out of line with wages, the Grange
‘declared:
“We are spending for food but 21
per cent of our income, believed to
be the lowest percentage of any nation on earth. This is in vivid contrast to the 60 per cent in England
whose rollback-subsidy program we
are asked to use as a model. Yet
even at the low figure of 21 per cent
we have raised our dietary standards. sharply.”
The short-sighted policy demanded by organized labor, said _ the
,POLITICAL ADVERTISEMENT
~ CLAIR ENGLE
All the farmer needs is sa
STOCKMEN ENDORSE
stock producers, have endorsed
the state legislature.
W. P. Wing, secretary of
Loren Bamert of Ione,
SPECIAL ELECT
VOTE FOR
ENGLE STATES POSITION ON
FARM-SUBSIDIES, LABOR
and a good letting alone. Engle has never advocated a subsidy
for agriculture products. He favors price and jwage stabilization to prevent inflation. The California State Grange has endorsed Engle’s legislative record. }
Engle recognizes and supports the right of labor to organize and bargain collectively but is strongly opposed to strikes
in war industries and believes that any interference in the war
effort should be strongly dealt with.
SENATOR ENGLE’S RECORD
The California Wool Growers association and the California Cattlemen’s association, representing the bulk of the livein a letter to Engle said in part:
standing of the problems of business and agriculture and of the
livestock industry, including wool growing and lamb raising.
president
association, praised Engle for his successful handling of legislation vital to the cattlemen throughout the state.
SENATOR
CLAIR
ngle
FOR
Congress
fair price, adequate machinery,
Senator Clair Engle’s record in
the Wool Growers association,
“You showed a real underof the Cattlemen’s
ION, AUGUST 31
Grange, would result in further serious curtailment of “our food supply which has suffered because of
unsound, impractical and restrictive
regulations by the: Office of Price
Administration.”
Joining in the same plea for im
neo action in Washington, Ed. Ward A. ONeal, president of the
‘American Farm Bureau Federation,
has demanded delegation of all food
problems to the War Food Adminis. tration to correct the current ‘‘dis. organized”’ food situation.
Declared O'Neal, speaking for the
. Farm Bureau Federation:
“The
‘Subsidy device
rollback-consumermenaces our food
supply in two ways. First, it is backjing up on the producer and thereby
. discouraging production, ond secondily, it is intended to cheapen
. prices, which turn
‘food consumption. Therefore, we get
eurrent
food
in encourage
Jess food production, more consump; tion.” é
Continuing, Mr. O'Neal said:
“Industry’s fabulous wages, short
hours and premium pay for overtime have dangerously depleted tha
farm labor force. Short: hours and
labor wasting union have
a partly shortag>
labor.’’
Then
practices
created artificial
of
he’ gave this sound admonition:
“Close the enormous gap between
farm and industrial wages and mor
workers will gouback to the farm:’’
None of that. of course, is news to
For the man the field,
bucking conditions as they exist, has
learned
and the
the hard
ience.
farmers. in
that the Grange
Bureau
everything
Farm have said—way, by practical experBut isn’t it about time that Wash. !
ington listened to the men -on th
production line, instead of the eollege professors? We think it is!
~ COUNTY BOUNDARIES
California county
boundaries,’ far from being stationary, have ebbed and flowed through
Editor’s Note:
nia and old_ residents
alike, has been’ compiled by the San
newcomers
this is the seventh.
Amador’s county. seat,
was once the county seat of CalaverJackson,
_ (as county. And Auburn, Placer coun.
back of prices, or a general. wage in.
ty’s seat of government, was once
. :
the capital of Sutter county.
. California's mountain county boundjaries.
. Yuba county, which once extended
and both) trom the Feather River to the Ne-'
ivada line, suffered its first loss of
territory in 1851 when Nevada county, shaped like an old_ fashion-d
pistol, was organized out of the territory between the Bear River and
the middle fork of the Yuba.
At the same time Placer county
was formed from portions of Yuba
and Sutter counties. Placer is given
its narrow, irregular shape by the
meanderings of the Bear and American Rivers which come so close
together at Auburn that the county
has a wasp waist only eight miles
wide.
The opening up of mines around
Downieville and difficulties of communication with #Marysville, the
county seat, led in 1852 to the lopping off of the eastern end of Yuba
as Sierra county.
Amador broke away from Calaveras county in 1854. It was twice enlarged at the expense of El Dorado
county, receiving the latter’s. territory south of the Consumnes River
in 1855 and part of the eastern El
* *
What You Bein, With
WAR BOUNDS
Sick Bay
In this war our wounded fighting
men have a greater chance for recovery than in any previous conflict because of the medical aids
and services that have been developed by the War and Navy Departments.
One of: these aids is the Hospital .
Transport Plane service that has
been bringing our wounded back
from Africa.
Your increased and continued purchase of War Bonds is required
to help the Treasury Department
finance this hospital transport service. “Back the attack with War
Bonds.”’ U. S. Treasury Department
California is the principal borax
producer of the world.
“The native home of Brown Swiss
cattle is in Northern and Eastern
Switzerland, adjacent to Lake Lucerne. .
z
Willow trees have scant lumber
value, but are of great importance
in controlling erosion.
Not a single depositor in a San
Francisco bank lost a dollar during
the depression.
The Farrallone Islands have been
a part of the city and county of San
. Francisco since 1872. ;
the years. Old maps and records!
yield many surprising facts about,
them. Much of this odd and little
known data, interesting to Califor-'
Francisco Regional Service CommitDorado, Calaveras. and
This . . r? 4 . t’ . : a Pe
ing food criss and eventually brin®: q.monstrates the confusing shifts of . he Upper Feather River ied ito the)
EBBED AND FLOWED
IN CALIFORNIA
"Dorado in-1863, when the county
line was changed to follow the old
Amador and Nevada wagon road.
The Consumnes and Mokelumne
Rivers compress Amador into a
shape like the foreleg of a horse. In
1864 the horse’s hoof was detached
to form a part of Alpine county,
which also borrowed bits from El
Tuolumne
tee in a series of articles of which counties. Alpine is one of the three
. : . : :
; California counties the boundaries
of which have never changed since
‘they were organized,
!
; Plumas (‘‘feathers’’)
. originally a part of Butte.
county was
In 1854
ithe growth of the«mining region of
. familiar itch for separation. For a
\similar reason,
from Plumas in 1864, taking
northeast corner of Plumas as well
Lassen broke away)
the .
as the whole eastern end of Shasta,
county.
Next: Bay Counties.
.
I
even when
budget
limited
Keystone
Market .
.
.
.
!
i]
.
DAVE RICHARDS
213 Commercial Street
Nevada City Phone 67
We supply our
with the meat from the
best cattle, sheep and hogs
that money can buy. We
have built our reputation
on service and
and reasonable prices. Ask
your neighbors about us.
They will tell you.
, Prop.
is
.
.
j
.
.
{
patrons
quality
4
ed
+. aw il hinted.
~ SRY. See
NX
And you play and play
"5,000 times — without
needle change. The
thistledcwn touch of the
FIDELITONE DeLuxe
Floating Point extends
the life of your rec.
ords. Fine reproduction,
too. Get a FIDELITONE
nograph a lot more.
THE HARMONY SHOP
125 Mill Street, Grass Valley
DeLuxe Floating Point
Needle today and
really enjoy your phoHotel Clunie
UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT
F’S FAMOUS COFFEE SHOP AND COCKTAIL
BAR
ARE RENOWNED IN. CALIFORNIA
RATES FROM $1.50 UP
Excellent Service—Best Food
8TH AND K STREET, SACRAMENTO, CALIFORNIA
TOY AND JACOBS. JACK BRUNO, Manager
wer
Phone 203
‘
For Praisein striving constantly toward perfection it is only natural
to expect to hear compliments. Our deepest satisfaction,
however, is the result not of the remarks directed to us,
but in the knowledge that we have faithfully served our
Holmes Funeral H
ANDY HOLMES, Owner
“DISTINCTIVE FUNERAL SBRVICE”
24 HOUR AMBULANCE SERVICE AT REA
Nevada City, 246 Sacramento St. Grass alley, :
News
Beate te eek a Peed cs .