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Page: of 4

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heal 8
t
Y
Nevada City Nugget — Thursday December 9, 1943
BOTH CHRISTMAS CARDS . !
AND GIFTS are
not as plenti-. .
ful as in normal times. Avoid .
disappointment by shopping i
now. Our holiday lines are now }
R. E. HARRIS .
THE REXALL DRUG STORE .
Phone 100 .
being shown. (h.
Seterereeeiey Ps . HHH Reet a
” 2
< “KEEP ’EM
FLYING” %
% “@BUY %
* © DEFENSE £
4 @STAMPS t
3 Les :
: :
* Chamber of Commerce +
a
3 OFFICE IN CITY HALL &
4 PHONE 575 +
Z. i
YAVE Yourares
MINES?
WE REPAIR
AND WE FIX
Lawn Mowers, Locks, Vacuum
Oleaners, .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
THINKING OUT LOUD
(Continued from Page One)
manufactuders who produced the
metal, sold it, they did not give it
away. But Mr. Morgenthau thinks
the newspaper ‘publisher should
give the government his white
space which is the only commodit¥
he has to sell. He prints the news
Botojoroey Ue oteiotuietetotetotes oot .
NEVADA THEATRE
. ed Direction he
ee T. AND D. JR., ENTERPRISES” DY
INC.
£
*
a >
Mere ras
ste
.
it
1
\}
/
1
a2
FE FRIDAY 2
— “ANDSATURDAY ¢
Me With
* DIANA BARRYMORE 3
‘ and . : :
¢ ROBERT PAIGE 3!
x *
: GHOST ON THE §
' 100SE
K &
ue
&
% &
la Wea
THE EASTSIDE KIDS
e@e
SUNDAY
AND MONDAY
PHANTOM OF
THE OPERA
NELSON EDDY AND
SUSANNA FOSTER
Also
OF TIME
oO.
4 ae
”
a
S
.
MARC
FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE
DRIVE IN
FOOD PALACE
Groceries, Fruit and
Vegetables
Beer and Wine :
COR. YORK AND COMMERCIAL
STREETS
NEVADA CITY, PHONE 808
HOLSTERY
OF ALL KINDS
e *
oe W. Darke
109-J Phones 109-M
[Ss NEEDED
even when
budget is
limited
{Keystone
FINE
_ WATOH REPAIRING :
Radio Service & Repairing
Work Called. for and Delivered
Clarence R. Gray
520 Coyote Street Phone 152
New Deal
Under Management of
Pauline and Johnnie
108 W. Main Street, Grass Valley ¥
BEER WINES, LIQUORS
Delicious Mixed Drinks te Please
ay _ Every Taste
Jos morn. 9
GET YOURS AT
THE NUGGET
ls
. Market .
, DAVE RICHARDS, Prep.
SS
©
213 Commercial Street
Phone 67 Nevada City
We supply our patrons .
with the meat from the
best cattle, sheep and hogs
that money can buy. We
have built our reputation
on service and _ quality
and reasonable prices. Ask
your neighbors about us.
They will tell you. J
Sane
YOUR EYES TELL.
ty ¥ .
‘how you
i e e
feel inside 7
Look in your mirror. See if temporary constipation is telling on your facé, in your eyes,
Then try Garfield Tea. It’s the mild, pleasant
way to relieve intestinal sluggishness—with-.
out drastic drugs. Feel better, look better,
work better. (AS A PRECAUTION, USE AS. DIRECTED)
QeFWRITE FOR LIBERAL TRIAL PACKET .
Enclose l0c, to cover handling, for generous ~
Trial Packet, suflicient for 8 cups.
ee TEA C0., 41st at 3rd Ave., Brooklyn, N.Y.
“metals for the armed. services. The
practically
on it and selis it to his subscribers. He prints advertisements on
it and sells it to every kind of.
business. except the ibiggest business of all, the United:States government.
The government in this country,
for instance buys a_ tremendous
amount’ of lumber, It buys beef
tattle, after slaughter, apples and
money for payment mes out of
the United States Treasury. Mr.
Morgenthau never dreams of ask‘ing lumbermen, cattle men and
mining men to give their products
to the United States government.
But as that 100 mpunds of unused
advertising “plates lying around in
attests,—he
spends millions of dollars to swamp
newsvaper offices ‘with advertisthis newspaper office
. ing confidently exipecting that they
enough to pubgsovernpatriotic
without-cost to the
will be
lish it
ment.
Well as a matter of fact they
have ‘been just°that patriotic, as
contrasted with Mr./Morgenthau’s
unpatriotic sale of? milk critters.
Millions of pounds of advertising
metal plates have been printed by
patriotic editors throughout the
country, not only for Mr. Morgenthau, though he has been the ‘chief
government mendicant, “but for
every other , governmental department, And as far ag
this writer is concerned, we .
continue to do our ‘best.’ But ‘with
everything used in a newspaper
shop now hard to obtain there'll be
a lot of it bo: by, the board just because ‘we must print the news first.
Otherwise ‘we cease to be a newspaper. and thereby cease to, be of
service to the government, to our
subscribers, or to anybody .else.
But we do wish the squirrels in
Washington, D.C. would pounce
on some of the nuts in government.
jobs there and store them up in 2
dark, safe ‘place for the duration.
VITAL STATISTICS
MARRIAGE LICENSE
RAYINOR-JAINICKIE -——In Nevada
City, Nevada County, December 4,
1948, Walter E. ‘Raynor, 21, U. S.
Army and Edna Janicke, 25, Kansas.
PRIZZEL-A ARONSON — In Nevada City, Nevada County, Dec. 6,
1943 to Albert Frizzel, 69, and Kate
Aaronson, 46, both of Grass. Valley.
‘BORN
SCATES—In Grass Valley, Nevada
County, December 3, 1943, to Mr.
and Mrs. Clifford Scates of Richmond, California, a son.
JAIMEIS—tIn Grass Valley, Nevada
County, December 6, 1943, to Mr.
and Mrs. A. E. James, a danghter.
AINDERSON—In Nevada City, Nevada County, December 5, 1943, ‘to
Lieut. and Mrs. Robert A. Anderson
1 son. :
ZAINOCCO—In Nevada City, Nevada County, December 5, 1943, to
‘Mr. and Mrs. Fred Zanocco, a
daughter. : ie
BARLEY—In Grass Valley; ‘Nevada County, Decemlbber 3, 1943, co
Mr;.and Mrs. (Clayton R. ‘Barley a
daughter.
DEATH
BARLEY—In Grass Valley, Nevada County! December 3, 1948, infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Clayton D. Barley of Grass Valley.
Miss Elizabeth Schreiber
and Blair Geddes Wed
Miss Elizabeth Louise Schreiber,
and Blair Geddes were married in a
charming wedding in the Methodist:
(Chureh,
the pastor, reading the service.
The bride is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Ernest Schreiber of Nevada;ed the commercial fruit industry, : 2 ‘
(City. She was attired in white satin . eventuating in Sah Jose’s present io. eee
wedding gown with .a sweetheart. Status as the largest fruit canning. ~~ wen : Pafeaneaten
neckline, and a long full train edged. and packing center in the world. ee oo Bly au
ype re put considerable
with lace. A coronet as ones BlosFor many years the San Jose $ throughout the state is yequired of
soms surmouted a finger tip veil. Collage thon ‘dalled the eackors’ eheld Waris.
Her boquet was of orchids, ce tial College, was the only normal school;
and bouvardia. in the state and is the oldest state. Applications must be filed by
Attending the bride were her Si8-. public educational institution. cember POR ans wigeis
ters, Mise. Eleanor Schreiber and} the obt tainsa from the State
Mre. Albert Murray ‘as maid of hon. . ment of Social’ Welfare or
or and matron of honor, respectively. STATE NF ENS, ! State Persanacl Boards
Miss Elsie Schreiber and Mrs. MicLX . State Building, San Fra
hael deVita, of Stockton, a_ e¢lose . State Building, Los Angeles,
friend ‘were bridesmaids. SOc TAL WORKERS ‘ . L. Street, Sacramenia.
Prior to the ceremony, Mrs. Carli i Zi yyy ; es Pee
eae of era cy, sion cone SACRAMENTO. Dec. 9. hed ; ee ens
ollowed by a duet by Mr. and Mrs. some ar ply
Libbey, for which Miss Mary Libbey ee ouameatny a pao life va x eof California manud
their daughter played the accompaniGuemt tncreaes in suyeniic Provera) io uo tanker pombe 16
ment.
Following theit honeymoon Mr.
and Mrs. Geddes will reside in Stockton, where the ‘bridegroom is employed as an engineer with the state
highways.
Editor's. Note:; Cities and towns of
Northern and Central California
have had a colorful and romantic
_past, the salient facts of which are}.
How‘information
most. Californians.
ever, much interesting
known to
about the early days of these communities is jsometimes. overlooked.
With no pretense to historical completeness, the San Francisco Regional Service Committee has assembled
some. of this data in.a series of arti-.
cles of which this is the first.
SAN ‘JOSE
» San Jose was the first real town in
California. Of all the presidios established by the Spaniards, only San
Jose, Los Angeles and Branciforte
(now part of Santa Cruz) were from
the start planned as pueblos with
civilian government. The Pueblo de
San Jose, de Guadalupe was founded (by nine soldiers, five families of
settlers, and one cowboy) bc Re By ay
Los Angeles came four years, Braneiforte 20 years, later.
San Jose was the first capital of
Galitornia after the’ United States
e¢eupation. The famouse ‘‘legislature
of a thousand drinks’ convened there
from {1849 to 1851. e
During the gold rush, the town be¢ame a supply center for miners in
the Sierra foothills. A sleepy village
of stock raisers under. Spanish and
Mexican rule, with bull and bear
fights as its chief social amusement,
it had grown rapidly into a thriving
market town in the 1840s, as pioneer
emigrants on the overland route settled in the Santa Clara Valley. Until
recently, descendants of the BidwellBartleson and Donner parties still
lived in San Jose, and among _ its
citizens are a few members/of once
great Spanish California families.
The first inhabitants are thought to
ibe extinct—a San’ Jose anthropologist has a standing offer of $500 for
production of a full blooded Olhone
Indian.
The original town was about a
mile north of the present site. It was
, WITH A FRESHLY CLEANED AND PRESSED
r OVERCOAT, SUIT, HAT
Cleaned iad pressed dresses, Wool, Silk or Rayon do
wonders for the ladies wardrobe.
WE USE THE ZORIC METHOD .
‘GRASS VALLEY LAUNDRY
AND DRY CLEANERS
‘111. Bennett Street, Grass Valley
t
Telephone—Grass Valley 108 Telephone—Nevada City 2
A SERVICE FOR TWO
CITIES
. Two beautiful chapels — located in Grass Valley and Nevada
City—are at the disposal of the public.
We pride ourselves on the services we have to offer, the conscientious attention, the adherence
no matter how small.
to the policy of fulfilling requests,
No matter how elaborate or how simple funeral services may
be, we render absolute satisfaction, both in direction and in cost.
Holmes Funeral Home
ANDY HOLMES, Owner
“DISTINCTIVE FUNERAL SERVICE”
24 HOUR AMBULANCE SERVICE AT REASONABLE PRICHS
Nevada City, 246 heer St.
Phone. 2038) =
Grass Valley, 150 S, Auburn St.
Phone 56:
Grass Valley. Rev. M. usd
moved to higher ground beeaura «°
seasonal floods of
River
tains any water
weeks in spring.
In 1856 Louis
. prune-cuttings from his former home
near Agen,
ers
havetremendously
sponsibilities
ment of Social Welfare.
urgent need for
announced an examination for per-!
er, Grade 2, Child Welfiave
with a starting salary of
month.
the Guadalupe
which, however, rare]
except for
Entrance
graduate
rejuirements
Pellier brought
study in a
school of
full time,
France, and thus foundsocial work and
paid experience in
increased the re
State
To meet the}
trained: social workthe State Personnel Board has
genuine brier from Europe,
of the DepariFranciscan fathers.in 1779.
offices,
neiseo;
“1 Work
Services,
$225
includes
recognized
‘hild of
Californ Es
EmploySacrame
travelins
may
Depart©
from the
being made
import
was preduced! at San Gabriel Mission by the
Letters of Praise
from the Army and Navy
“GAS AND-ELECTRICITY ARE
VITALLY NEEDED FACILITIES
FOR SUCCESSFUL CONDUCT
OF THE WAR.”
"aig: povosrcRet
words of praise for a job well done, especially when
such praise comes fronr high ranking officers of the
Army and Navy.
At any rate, that is the way the men and women
of this company feel about letters of commendation received from Lieutenant General Delos C.
Emmons, United States Army, and Vice Admiral
J. W. Greenslade of the United States Navy. They
are pleased and proud and determined to keep vitally needed gas and electricity flowing in full sup.ply—on time—all the time. Below are excerpts
from the letters:
From Admiral Greenslade:
“I am informed by the Inspector of Naval Material and by
other officers of my staff having cognizance that the Pacific Gas
and Electric Company met wartime demands swiftly and efficiently while at the same time continuing to supply the increased
population of the district with essential services. . . . The Company is serving, or has undertaken to serve over a Million Kilowatts of Electricity and over Twelve Billion Feet of Natural Gas
to Army and Navy establishments and War Industries. . . . All
hands in the Pacific Gas and Electric Company should feel that
they have played their part in establishing new construction and >
production records in this district..” °
From General Emmons:
. “In view of the splendid performance of the men and women
of your organization during the period of emergency, I desire to ~
record my word of commendation to them. The area embraced in
the Western United States is a particularly vital and critical one in
this war. It has been necessary to construct and operate numerous
flying fields . . . to construct shipyards and repair docks and other
marine facilities. . . . It is gratifying to know that all of the demands which have been made upon your people and your facilities
have been met with most praiseworthy performance and that every
reasonable expectation fulfilled.”
To all the gas and electric customers,
the men and women of this company inturn say—"Thanks for your help” through G
your voluntary conservation in the use of cad
gas and electricity in the home. Conservation is helping us and helping the war
effort.
PACIFIC GAS AND ELECTRIC COMPANY
53X-W-12
L. IS ONLY HUMAN to be made happy by
a Cli
UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT
IT'S FAMOUS COFFEE SHOP_AND COCKTAIL :
aoe BAR
RATES FROM $1.50 UP ~
Excellent Service—Best Food --.
STH AND K STREBT,
TOY AND JACOBS,
*
JACK BRUNO,
Do108
401
or 1015