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Page: of 6

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NEVADA: CITY NUGGET FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1937.
PAGE TWO
ees
RT A en
ye a warnig issued to entoreerient of
: hout the county.
4
UNTY ficers throughou ity
Nevada City Nugget The Red God’s Plan BUT TE C0 Se Dale ADO Benes ee re
¢ gg : j sult of a demand by Attorney Gen. “> ‘
, Said Jupiter to Lady Earth, eral U. S. Webb that such gambling *
305 Broad Street. Phone 36 ie 5 é
: g i
ee roa basil What are those teeming things must be stopped in all California
A Legal Newspaper, as define y statute. Printed an ublishe : Th ‘ :
: ties
; at scud across your . _ Gambling . counties.
at Nevada City. & gota ems OROVILLE, Feb. 11.— Gamblin Kister said the ruling will include
And breast the air on wings? ’ ines, racing :
13 US Ee 21 ig DRS eee ace Mestre ee Editor and Publisher : A es! devices such as slot machines, racinS. 1.4. nights as held in theatres ae
From here they look like insect pests games and other forms of amus°-. throughout the county. p' “st
° Published Semi-Weekly, Monday and Friday at 4 Migrating to and fro, ment will be tabéo in Butte county : -2 i ‘ NEER STOCKMAN DEA
Nevada City, California, and entered as mail * Why don’t you rid yourself of them? tian bobriayy! 16: PIONE D
matter of the second class in the postoffice at ‘ a
——
Nevada City, under Act of Congress, March 3, We gods will help, you know. , The announcement was made late Wallace Huling, 82 years of age,
1879. ae: ° yesterday by Sheriff Alvin Kister in. widely known stockman, died at his
SUBSCRIPTION RATES : ° in Grass Valley yesterday.
One year Gn. Advance) estat Vista scawenceeuet sts $2.50 Said Lady Earth to Jupiter, de eaab ae meuneel ee kas used ninety cobain iy mee hg
&
6 .
Ss fo) 8
Q
Ss Oh, pray lend aid! You see, ee hey would. break a trail through the snow fo:
Ptensesnsernssoseseeeeneeseeroetseneentestneetet serie rh : ich b who served notice that they Vv ;
aia i ese tiny pests which you observe oppose all further moratorium pro-. 3000 sheep caught in a storm at
Donner Lake. Are much too much for me; : .
. Indeed . scourge them grieviously—
] quake and burn and chill;
But they defy my angriest moods
And often thwart my will.”
posals.
This Is Not Russia
Somebody seems to be getting America and Russia
mixed up.
It is Russia — and not America — where they have Then Jupiter shonthendectolte,
frameups” in court, and where men of the. wrong political Back Plots farnisladlfire.
And Pluvius devastating floods,
At Earth's expressed desire;
King Neptune smote the seas to wrath,
Old Boreas roared in rage;
But still the races of. mankind
Lived on from.age to age.
beliefs are executed.
That is offered as a thought for those who are shouting
“frameup!’’ about the Modesto dynamiting case, in which our
courts sentenced eight men to prison for “reckless and malicious possession of dynamite.”’
Certainly no one wants to see innocent men doing time
in San Quentin. But this “frameup” cry is palpably groundless. And in the name of justice and public confidence in our
courts and our democracy, the truth about it should be spread
far and wide.
These ‘‘dynamiters’’ were convicted a year and a _ half
ago. During an oil tanker strike, they were caught moving the
dynamite, and a mass of evidence indicated their intention was
to blow up a hotel housing certain sailors. The following four .
‘ At length red Mars laughed fiendishly
And shrieked, “‘leave all to me;
My plan ‘will quickly drive these pests
From air and land and sea.
I first will make the creatures mad,
And then where black clouds hover,
In wild, unreasoning fear and hate,
tribunals have upheld the guilty verdict: They will destroy eachother!” ai
: Superior Court of Stanislaus county, State Appellate —A. MERRIAM CONNER
Court, State Supreme Court, and the nine astute, elderly ; Buy Now, Before
gentlemen of the Supreme Court of the United States. Just
the other day the Stanislaus County Grand Jury investigated
specific frameup charges against a witness and the district attorney, and declared them to be groundless.
Let this reassure any who may have been misled. For in
these unsettled times when vast unfathomable forces are
abroad and democracy is steering a perilous course between
action during the January session.
eo 5
Prices Advance!
PRICES IN RAW MATERIALS MAKE SHARP RISES:—
to 33%
First, it passed a permanent “in GAMBLING AND
LIQUOR TOPS IN
BIL!S PENDING
lieu taxon automobiles—a meas25
ure desired particularly by the city
districts. Until July 1, 1939, the
state will receive 62 1-2 per cent of
the revenue from the “in lieu’ tax:
Veneers & plywood
Glue, 15% to 17%
Hardware, 15%
Labor, 10% to 15%
Lumber, gum, 50% to 70%
Crating lumber, 25%
Glass, 50%
660 9° . . is
the rocks of the sia he above all — need confidence eo Se after that date, the state will receive Raw material and labor price advances needn’t effect the
courts and democratic Sed angai sie of law and order. (By RALPH H. TAYLOR) 20 per cent after payment of state home furnisher who buys at Breuner’s! Purchases made last
November bring you February:Sale Values at last year’s
The cry ‘‘frameup!’’ repeated often enough and believed
could in time shake that confidence. They may not care about
such things in Russia, where freedom is gone anyway. But in
America we do care.—Contributed.
Near Again
**Heave ho!”’ and ‘‘Four bells and all’s well!”
‘Up and down the Pacific Coast, on'the ocean and in the
busy ports of California, those shouts ring out today as 40,000 maritime workers hustle about on docks that had lony
been desolately silent, and sail
but deserted for more than 95
ships on seas that had been all
days. ,
The strike is over. Everyone breathes a great sigh of re_ lief, and adds, significantly,
That “never again”’
“never again!”
is more than just a hopeful phrase.
It expresses the determination of a long-suffering public to
see that it shall not happen again. The movement to set up;
permanent mediation machinery is well under way in our
The job now is to spur this
Congress and our Legislature. tic, some liberal, some highly quesmovement to successful conclusion. tionable—-promises to occupy much . 4 He’s of the solid-business, community-building type. Never makes =
: 5 ; a ‘ i a move before he looks over the entire board. Not ashamed to ask quesme
Specifically the job, as the experts see it, is to set up a) of the pe hibnecraicoiaa time. Literally : tions, for he realizes that questions are the foundation of knowledge. He %
body patterned after the National Mediation Board under . *°°"® of Dilip. iro hia tioe, legai. % uses the railroad because he has ideas. Yet he wanted ‘to find out if hisizing and licensing dog racing; the own personal reasoning coincided with those of the men who figuratively %
which the nation’s railroads have kept themacives virtually . , .cumaking, hore caciic, etc. wes ‘ gat tichind the valleoaie Jacomotive’s ihratile. %
strikeless for a decade. lalizing slot machines and banning M4 So he asked: “Why Should I Use the Railroad?” .
The job is to see that the ships run as steadily as the rai!-. slot machines; setting up a state lot. ¥ ais oe eae la i: ee : *
‘woads that have anied the freight during tis tieup, that ace tery and licensing . pin games—are ‘ ‘ ee out folderal and in the business-like manner %
. pith jean . . : awaiting consideration. -Both numer: i
carried it, incidentally, without profit because of the huge €X. ically and in their publicity possi. % Because your railroad gives as much to the community as it takes. :
pense of conditioning extra trains for a short period. The job} pilities—the gambling bills seem to 4 ; x
5 ary % . e i : i : : t gives prestige, solidity and a standing in the marts of trade and %
is to keep the ships running as dependably as the railroads . be ; nope this session, with liquor commerce—for a country not served by rail is a country that has lost the "
that kept the goods moving, salvaged Christmas for us, and. !¢8si4tion, almost as varied, as tunkey to ‘modern progress. e
saved the day generally in the emergency. sie sup fe ; A railroad is classed as “institutional”, a permanent carrier with Ks
The strike cost almost a billion dollars. To save not mere(ee tie me e rete ae Vainle. POvee. amd. AnMONee Teel, PPARerty: =
ly dollars, but peace and good will and human happiness, and calléd “sin marriage law,” reamirA railroad’s extensive holdings help you shoulder the burden of city, %
‘progress for California and the whole west, we must act to {in 4 three-day wait before issuance. ee ee en %
ny iat of a marriage license; bills reducing . ¥ It supports a family of employees of generous size; men and women ote
fulfill the promise of the words—Never again! Contributed. the. Gieee® lutaaastare abties Hl silage ‘Sauk uoane oui GE aiastl tes woul frieiin eacd tidighbers, (Phetrpoy *
= period to nine months, and even three checks. circulate in the community in which they make their home. .
‘ months, after the fashion in Reno; An adherence to rates heldto lowest possible levels. *
; ; i c
From Aunt Same ie ee ase 1 ees Ce ! And a strong belief in friendly good will that make business dealings *
au : ; ble ; dependable, friendly and pleasant. ae
*. insanity and incompatibility as’ the
é ¢ grounds for divorce, and _ several
:
measures requiring physical examGood hot dishes keep the inner. the onion and fry in bacon fat, @ice inations before the issuance of marman warm anyway even if he does. the potatoes and boil in salted wat-. "ase licenses.
come home chilled to the bone in. er. Drain the can of clams. Under the general heading of +
this winter weather. Chowders are Mix together the water, the pota-. /@bor and social legislation, there
hearty luncheon dishes ‘that wili/toes have been boiled in, the clam. @?e Pills to establish a 30-hour week
warm him up. : juice, one tablespoonful of the bac-. im industry, bills which would create evad a O U Nn t
——. on fat, andal] the other ingredients, . !#bor mediation boards to handle
Old Fashioned Clam Chowder . salt and pepper to taste. Serve hot strike problems, measures which ‘
Four slices bacon. in heated soup dishes. would prohibit interference with the :
Two. medium potatoes. i . orderly movement of food products Narr 1
One medium onion. The large selection of prizes to be; and drugs during strikes, acts to . OW dauge
Pepper and salt. awarded in the Veterans of Foreign. require emiployers to carry the enOne can minced clams. Wars Auxiliary card party this even-. tire burden of social security legisFe) : *
One cup milk (or enough to make. ing are on display in the C. E. Bos-. lation, the “veteran’’ short train . % es
four servings.) worth store and creating much fay-. bill and measures upping pensions rE; Rai . road *
Cut the bacon into small pieces. orable comment for their beauty and j ifor the blind and aged from $35 to * KA
fe =
and fry, drain and set aside. Mince . usefulness.
Due
cause, or a spectacular .controversy,
the State
Legislature may go down in the anto .the lack of a dramatic
fifty-second California
nals of history “unwept, unhonored
and unsung.’’
As the public views it, little of the
legislation thus far proposed is of
poe import. For the most part, it
represents all of the ‘unfinished
business’’ of bygone, busier sessions,
together with a flood of post-depression bills, some of real importance,
p@haps, but few that will linger im
public memory.
Out of the muck of miscellaneous
legislation, however, may come constructive action on myriad lesser iswhich, taken together, might
have real bearing on the welfare of
California agriculture, business and
industry—if the legislature is, content to do on uninteresting job wisesues
/ ly and well!
Gambling legislation—some drasyn 107 Mill St.
The studio thatGood photos at reasonable
satisfies.
$50 per month, *
. Measures designed to ‘free Tom
. Macney and to repeal the criminal
syndicalism act, together with anti‘spotter’ legislation ‘and measures
counties and cities the balance.
highway bond interest and redemption and cost f colleétion—the
Second in importance in the meas.
ures given final passage during. the
first half of the session was a bill
extending the moratorium on mortgage and chattel mortgage foreclosures from February 1 to July 1. This
bill was finally passed over the vigprices. Take advantage! Buy now!
Main 4800
Seaferte
Me 5%
sek
ohh dededededetegetetotolot leet
—
1k i a a le a Se a a i
A BLUNT MAN, WHO SAID‘WHY SHOULD . USE THE RAILROAD?’
Nevada County Trucking Company
Nevada County Narrow Guage Railroad-Stage Lines
Nevada Pacific Trucking Agency
Fe aa ae ae to ae ae a a Ao ee he a Be ei i ie he ee
APPA?
se feateofateateters
,
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(Sie Be Se Se 5
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teat
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7
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Grass Valley price 2no guess a 8 prohibiting anti-picketing ordinances
. se 5 are among other labor-sponsored UK : 4 85 cents out of every Narrow Gauge dollar goes back to the commaunit
noroeRapr ~ : ; J ER hour Kodak alaing ser bills ‘ in wages or material purchases. j
vice.
On two matters of considerable
importance, the legislature took final
id