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Page: of 8

aie,
etal te eon seimiuaeeii a i ae oa ee sca cig ove send wat pre eons tte ES es oe ten Sane Or Pe eS ee ae
Pa allied eee al ba Tei pel ie eee Ie Pee ie ie ie ere ei Tein Le Lr TE iP Eee eee
MONDAY, DEC. 24, 1934
2
{HE NEVADA Gly NUGGET
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A MERRY
Long John’s Tavern
Where everyone is welcome to get their Christmas Cheer.
Gin Fizzes and Tom and Jerrys are our specialties
Mest He teatesk ty ot a Se
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CHRISTMAS
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The Bootery
HICHENC) Prop. . GEORGE
Nevada Broad Street City
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MERRY CHRAISTIAS
Ei. J. N. Ott
ASSAYER
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130 Main Street .
Nevada City os j . %
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Nevada City
ALPHA STORES, LTD.
Grass Valley
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IRISTMAS
GREETINGS .
BETTY JEAN
SHOP .
The Plaza Grocery
220 Main Street
Phone 160
Nevada City
Merry Christmas
and
Dew
The National Hotel
NEVADA CITY
ar
1 ‘
Pine Street
F
e
157 Mill Street
URL UR Uo LATE FARBER gL LLL
te eee
Grass Valley
Jensen and Thomas
Furniture Company
Phone 36
Merry Christmas and
Happy New Year
Bolton’s Variety Store
Nevada City
___PATRONS
Barambani
Nevada City
and Pane
y=
IT WI FP.
TO ALL OUR FRIENDS
Union Hotel
A MERRIE
UNION ICE DELIVERY CO.
Coal, Beer.
evada City
and Soft’ Drinks
A. V.SAUVER,
Li
SGA SOn
Mer.
Phone 57
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AND
Extends to All Its Patrons
_ A Hearty Wish for a Merry
: Christmas
lli, Props. RS
Phone 164 . ™ : ' 8
' ieafatenfeateoteofeafeateatentenfectesteatenteafeceetesteateatenteteteateatesteofetertesteates
Main and Nevada Streets
. PRESETS
Christmas in Christ’s
* Land Is Without Snow
= ITTLE Christian children who live
L in Jerusalem or who are traveling
there with their parents will not have
» a spowy Christmas. Snow almost
never falls in Palestine, for the temperature .ig seldom below 38 degrees.
When it does. snow, the tlakes melt as
soon as they touch the ground.
‘Most of the people in the country
where the infant Jesus was born do
not celebrate Christmas, however ! For
only a few of them are Christians ;
.
.
.
.
.
.
most are Moslems or Jews. There are )
some, Christmas frees in
Christian .
homes, and gifts are exchanged among .
those who observe Christ's birthday.
But there are no Street
and no late shopping problems. The
’ post offices have no big signs urging
“Mai] your packages early !”
Yet there is probably no place in the
world more appropriate to visit at
Christmas, The Holy Sepulchre is in
the old part of the_city, and at Bethlehem, six miles south, is a great church
that tias replaced the humble inn where
Christ was born. Inside is a, large flat
stone on which the infant Jesus,is sup‘posed to have been laid, reminding us : .
how Christianity grew from one hum.
ble life.—Irances Grinstead.
@. Western Newspaper Union,
decorations .
A CHRISTMAS SMACK
TT CTT
S
George—Would you be alarmed if 1
kissed you while you are under that
mistletoe?
Grace—Yes, but it would be a still
alarm.
Demand for Christmas Toys
Children . are still running true to
form in their requests to Santa Claus.
The girls still want dolls, play. furniture and toy household appliances and
the boys want cowboy suits and meehauieal toys year after year.
~a child.
have too completely lost their belief in
J. W. Shebley
Service Station
®e KKM KEE KES
Nevada City Phone 271
Yo ste sie shisha sta stestevtosesTesTesTstesteot 4 ste she ste stetesteste ste sheik
lenis eile si feeenpe testes Tesfe rhe rte rie nieste ele kc shesfe te neste nie ste stents
THE NEVADA CITY
Commercial Printing
Department
at tae ge tat tae at te tas *
NUGGET’S
?
’
teste afeote teifealest este teste teieiteie tele
Nevada City
hri
Joy
KEYSTONE MARKET
CALANAN AND RICHARDS
Phone 67 ~
i
The Need of Santa Claus
“If there were ns God it would be
necessary to invent him,” said a wellknown writer. There is no Santa
Claus in our grown-up world, but we
have found we needed hiw as one of
the most beloved characters in the
world of childhood, which is peopled
with legends of the child’s own making. The enchanting belief in Santa
and his reindeer, his paunch and his
pack filled with toys will never hurt
The eynical grown-ups, who
him and his kind, need your help.
Santa All the Year Is
Found to Be Good Idea
ANTA CLAUS comes in July as well
as .December to those who need
him in Columbia, Mo. Last Christmas
a doHar given anonymously by “a
group of children” was used by the
Welfare society there to start a fund
for year-round needs, instead of gorging peopie with too many baskets of
goodies one day out of 365,
These are some of the things the fund .
has paid for: glasses to replace those
broken by a boy whose mother washes
to keep him in school; means of getting a crippled girl to and from school ;
shoes for the old forse used by’ the
society when there is hauling to be
done; the cane a grandfather needed
-to help him get about;
. and shelter;
. though badly needed, would have been
fares of a
trachoma patient and a_ tubercular
child who were sent to hospitals; seap
and a razor for a young man who
wanted to clean up so he conld try for
a job.
Regular donations to the society may
be spent only for food, fuel, clothing
these all-the year gifts
impossible but for the dollar from the
children “to-use any way you want"
that gave welfare workers the idea of
the Santa Claus fund.—Frances. Grin
stead.
©. Western Newspaper Union.
a — se
i Pa ea ae oe oe oe ee oa ome Pe oat
j OUR SANTA CLAUS My
i! i
q HE American Santa Claus is
a corruption of the Dutch
f! Santa Nicolas. G. H. MeHughes
r Says: “Santa (Claus, the name
«+. derived . from St Nicholas s
y through the familiar use of
children in Teutonic countries,
erossed to America. ‘The direct
route followed by him is somewhat open to question. On the
way he traded his gray horse for
a reindeer and made changes tn
his appearance.”
Vow 2 ae 9 a + a ss as
Sao oe Sa Ce ORE ‘_.
Pe ss
—— ee oe
ee
—_
Se ee ee
i)
i
UF ULAR BR URL anor So UR Eon EU LR RE RRR
THE EARLY BIRD
“Mabel's afraid I wasn’t going to give
anything to her.”
“How do you Know?"
“She sent her Christmas gift to me
last week.”
me 3
ee aes ~_Y.
Making Sugar Toys
Sugar toys may be made according
to the following ‘divections: 4 pounds
of sugar, 2 ounces of corn sirup, 1 pint
of water. Boil to 240-242 degrees,
then stir until cloudy and pour in plaster of paris moulds that have. been
drained after soaking in cold water for
careful to put on no
two'or three hours. a
Christmas Luck; Omens
Used in Days Long Ago
D? YOU know that a full moon at
Mhristmas day is supposed to be
unlweky, the saying going:
“Light Christmas, light wheatsheaf;_
dark Christmas, heavy wheatsheaf,”
and that a windy Christmas and a
calm Candlemas were held as omens
of a good year. Rain during the twelve
days after Christmas was said to fore
tell a wet year to follow. When decorating the honse with Christmas holly,
be careful not to burn any leaves or
berries that fall, but put them careful —
ly away until Twelfth Night, when
they should be burnt with the rest of
the decorations.» Then luck and happk
ness will follow; but if se much as a
holly teaf is burned beforehand, you
are courting disaster, say the old-fashioned country folk who set store on”
Chirstmas*omens. Look to your fire
on Christmas day, for if it burns brig
ly it is a-sign of prosperity; if, ho
ever, when the fire fs first ligh
smoulders and refuses to “dra
backs’. may be looked for during
year to come, “a Oe Seay
Wear something new on Christ
day if possible, “for luck,”
hole or tear in it, ot
lose. money. Also,
first words spoken in th
be cheerful; to speak 1 .w
bling fs to court ba
Herald, Paes