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Page Two “NEVADA CITY NI CCRT MONDAY, FEBRUARY LZ, 1945
— — — = as eee s : ae s 7 Se pe = f — ). supply replace those light gloves, thin trousers and pal eee one 205.17 feet, ihe
; . . . shoes with winter gear to keep our fighting men decently! west side line of the Chicago Quartz
‘Nevada City Nugget warm. And let them do it now. —Contributed. . Mine
305 Broad Street. Phone 36.
*<fined by. statute. Printed and Published
at, Nevada City.
A Legal Newspaper, as
inne a
‘H. M. LEETE . Edit or and tu
Published -Sémi-Weekly, Mauday” and Ibhursday
AES at Nevada City, California’ and oniered as
Or se a < + : i ara . P
SONS x matter of the second class in th: postofticea
(y »
". Nevada City under Act of Cor.:ess, March: 3,
) 18
NB Sf SUBSCRIPTION. RA'LES .
‘ One year (in AGVance) osc602 cn. $3.00
One Month .. 830. cents
Narwaves tes smi a. = —_ me ot net —-——/f
DOUGHBOY “RETRE EADS”
The middleaged vets of World War . , most of them
this one on the home front, not from choice, but
modern day warfare
mrades, who
oked upon by
“sitting out’
because the accent is heavily on V
may be wondering how some
able to squeeze into World War Il
youngsters who fight beside them.
With the heavy humior characteristic of the armed forces,
the GI Joes of this war, (whd now object to th nat anonymous .
designation, incidentally) have hung the term “‘retreads” on
the veterans of the first World War who have managed to
sneak into theis fracas. But lest that be misinterpreted as a
term of derision, the word which comes back from the war
fronts indicates that most gf'the old timers are held in healthy
respect by the youngsters serving with them in the lines, or
awaiting their baptism of fire.
Many of the “‘retreads”’
have won citations in thsi war—and many young lives have
been saved by the somewhat aged, but battle-wise guys. who
have told the kids around them some of the things they learned, the hard way, back in: 1917 and 1918. They may be called
“‘pop” by their younger buddies, but the salutation is used .
with affection and is the same term that the youngsters of
World War . applied to their old-timers, too.
ere are proportionately more ‘‘retreads’’ among the
officers, of course, than in the ranks, and it is significant that
after the nazi break through on.the western front in December, news dispatches reported the high command blamed inexperienced officers for part of the difficulty, and asked that
more men with battle experience be put in command of new
troops going up to the front. We are not detracting from the
* magnificent job that American youth has done in this war
when we bespeak a hand for the men doing their second hitch.
The “‘retreads’’ seem to be wearing very well.—Contributed.
oe
THE VOTERS SAID “NO”
It is characteristic of faddists and pressure groups, with
axes to grind, that they seldom take “‘no”’ for an answer when
the people turn down their pet projects. On the apparent assumption that the voters have short memories, they simply
wait a few months—or a few years, if they have suffered a
disastrous defeat—and then trot out their schemes again in
the hope that their dog-eared proposals will shp-by while public interest is absorbed in other issues.
California has a current example of this never say dic
trait of the pressure groups in the reappearance in the legislature at this session of the badly discredited Garrison Revenue Bond Act, which the state’s voters defeated in 1938 by
a thumping majority of nearly a million votes.
Few acts submitted to California voters ever have been
so badly beaten, or so generally repudiated, as this easy debt
proposal, which was designed to open the floodgates of public spending through abolition of the constitutional guarantees against floating unsound and unlimited bond issues. ‘The
Garrison Act was rejected in every county in the state, with
a single exception, by ratios running from 2 to 1-to 3 and 4 to
1, and a total ‘‘no’’ margin of 941,250 votes. Yet the same old
act now has been resubmitted to the legislature, only six years
after the people turned it down with such emphasis.
The 1945 version of the 1938 act has a new name; it is
now called the Carter Revenue Bond Act—but its principal
provisions, seeking to repeal the constitutional requirements
of a two thirds majority to authorize bond issues, ‘is unchanged. The new act, like the old, is intended to make it_easier for
promoters of revenue bond projects to plunge cities, counties
and districts into debt, as only a simple majority vote would
be required for such projects, if the act became law.
It-is to be hoped that the legislators will remember _ the
mandate they have from the people on this issue. The voters
said ‘‘no’’—and we don’t believe they are in any mood _ to
change that verdict.—Contributed.
THEY CAN’T FIGHT COLD AND NAZIS, TOO!
»
The people at home seldom speak in the voice of anger, .
being more apt to overlook official mistakes and hope for the
best. But today we speak in such a voice—for everybody, we
believe, on the home front.
Signed stories by reliable newsmen with the American
forces on the German front tell of the grossly inadequate
clothing issued our men fighting in the freezing weather of
that area, and of the suffering occasioned by such lack.
“The doughboy, asked to fight the war under _ terrible
winter conditions, is simply not equipped to meet it,” says one
correspondent, describing frozen clothes and shoes soaked
through. In a dispatch to the Chicago Daily News, Jack Bell
writes of the sufferings of ‘‘thousands of soldiers hobbling on
frozen feet.”
_ Proper equipment to withstand the cold of winter fighting has helped carry the Russian soldier across the freezing
steppes and onto German soil. Inconsistent as it seems, even
' the nazi soldier is better clothed today than the American.
The feeling here at home does not end with heart-sick
sympathy for our boys fighting so magnificently under such
cruel handicap. We know that army supply chiefs labor under handicaps, too. But we feel that this situation is utterly
unnecessary and must-be corrected at once.
Any American at home would gladly . go __ shivering
through the rest of the war without quite enough clothing to
keep him cosily warm, if it would spare our boys the additional burden of fighting to keep from:freezing while fighting the
: If there is anything the home front can do to help, let
r be told. But by any means whatsoever, let our offices of
evs
among the enlisted men, already .
7 ATEAM
LOSES BY POINT
X,
24
aX
bard fought even+steven game,
aay up in the last “quarter with
a score of 28 to 28, m irked the basjket ball A contest Friday evening .
between the Grass Valley cagers and .
the Placer Union quint in the Sierra}
‘foothill Lague series played in the.
Grass Valley higt -hool eynriadtiin: .
Three minutes overtime was ordered to break the’ tie and Placer
Union chalked up three more points,
to Grass ‘Valley’s two, making the
score in the A clash Placer Union
.
31 and Grass Valley 30. .
In the-B game Grass Valley junjiors had a ‘walkaway scoring 33:49 .
. Placer, Union's 16.
High scores in the A game deuce .
Penaluna 12 points and Ali 8 points
and Dutra 11
. Radley 10 for Placer Union.
. scores in: the B° game were
. who tossed 15 baskets
! Valley.
7
and
Top .
Hooper
for Grass.
and Lemos who chalked up
Placer
for Grass Valley,
points for Union.
Suites: Radors For
Veteran P. G. E. Employes
{ The Pacific Gag-and Electrie Company has just announced the award
of service badges to veteran employes of its Drum division, one of whom
. has been in the company’s employ
[tor 30 years. J. R. Johnson, divis. ion manager, will-make the-presentation. :
Among the Drum divisio. employees. receiving badiges for service with
the utility company, were the following: Eugene Erskine 30 years;
Abigail Henderson, David Jones and
et Sparhawk, 25 years: Casper
Bennett, George Cooper Jr., William
Jones, Ralph McDermott and Elmo
Shephard 20 years; Joseph Beckman,
Matthew Erskine, John Jeffreys,
Henry Merema, Dale Moowam, Edward Ramsey, Dave (Rodrick
Virgil Schillianskey 15 years, Robert Bibby, Thomas Cain, Mark Collins, Clyde Cooper, Charles Dobbins,
William Donalson, Mark Haskins,
Raymond. Potter, Woodrow Stephenson and Donald Stone 5 years.
and
Yellowiacket Bees Give
Yuba City Drubbing
In a fast tight game Friday evening inthe high school gymnasium
here Yuba City’s A team nosed out
Nevada City’s quint by a score’ of
31 to 29. But Nevada City’s B team!
gave the visiting Bees a drubbing,
winning 32 to Yuba City’s 7.
In the A game Nevada City’s -cagers to a 12 to 6 lead in the first
quarter but lost control of the offence to Yuba City whiih “scored 17
to 16 at half time.
Atkins with 11 points and Davis .
with 10 led the Nevada City scoring
in the, A_game,.-while--Warren~with
12 and Smith with 11 were tops for
Yuba City.
In the Bee contest Ruth netted 13
points and Pello eleven for Nevada
City. Butler made 5 points of the Ye,
scored by Yuba City.
WAC Basketball
layer Hurt
Pvt. Lorna Harris, WAC, hurt in
fall during a basketball game in
the Grass Valley high school gymnasium, when her. team played the
Grass Valley Nuggets, has been removed from the Community Hospital to Mather Field,
Pvt.» Harris. suffered a ‘bruised
back and a sprained wrist, it was
determined after her arrival at the
hospital here. She was able to return to Mather Field in a bus yes
terday. The Grass Valley Nuggets
are a team of young women basket‘ball players, some of them graduates
of the high school, but not connected with the schools. Their games are
Played in the high school gymnasium,
Telephone Co. Gives
$130.000 To Red Cross
A contribution of $130,000 to the
American Red Cross by the Pacific
Telephone and Telegraph Company
and its subsidiaries, Southern California Telephone Company an@ Bell
Telephone Company of Nevada, ‘Was
announced today by N. R. Powley,
president, following approval by the
board of directors,
Powley stated that the total contribution will be allocated to the
various’ Red Cross Chapters consistent with American Red’ Cross quotas, applicable to the territory served
by the telephone companies.
pirate Funeral Service
te Lon Paine
rife funeral services were conducted in Holmes Funeral Home
Parlors Saturday afternoon for the
late Robert ‘Alonzo Paine, Cremation
followed in Sierra View, Marysville.
. ACTION BROUGHT IN THE
. Plaintiffs,
[ANY RIGHT.
IOR
ICOM PI
THE RETO,
lINGS
. Bast 550.12 feet;
‘feet;
Since 1907 836 mountain
have been killed in Trinity County.
na Re
IN THE SUPET
STATE OF
FOR THE
210k COURT OF THE
‘ALERORNIA
COUNTY OF NEVADA.
SUPHROR COURT OF. THE STATE: OF
CALIFORNIA, IN AND FOR THE
COUNTY OF NEVADA.
SCHENE
his
MEL UR DE
SCHENE,
ART
DE
EUGENE
and JENNIE
WTLLTAM
wife,
D. CHAPPELL, ‘also
known Wate De OMA PPB LE,
LOUISE BALDWIN, CHICAGO
'QUARTZ MINING CO.; a CORPOR
TION: AND ALSO ‘ALA
PERSONS UNKNOWN. CLAIMING
TITLE, ESTATE;
INTEREST IN THE
PROPERTY DESCRIBE D IN
AIINT: ADVERSE
PLATN TIF KS’ OWNE RSHIP, or
. \CLOUD UPON, PLAINTIFFS
Defendante. ™
THE PEOPLE. OF: THE
CALIFORNIA SEND
TO:
WILLIAM
known as W.
as
REAL
THE
TO
4 or ANY
"TITLE
STATE
OF
D.CHAPPELL,
D. CHAPPELL,
CHICAGO
woe COrporation:
OTHE Ralso
MINING .CO
ALSO ALL.
KINO'WIN, CLAIMING
TITLE, ESTATE, LIEN OR INTEREST IN ‘THE REAL PROPERTL DESCRIBED IN THE COMPLAINT ADVERSE TO PLAINTIFFS’ OWNERSHIP, OR IN ANY. CLOUD UPON
PLAINTIFFS’ TITLE THERETO,
Defendants.
You.and each of you are hereby
directed to appear and answer the
Complaint in an action entitled as
above, brought against you in the
Superior Court-of the State of California, in and for the County of
Nevada within ten (10) days after
the service’ upon you of this Summons, if served within the County of
Nevada, or within thirty (30) days
of served elsewhere.
You are hereby notified that unless you appear and answer as above
required the said plaintiffs will take
judgment against you for any money
or damage demanded in the Complaint as arising upon contract, or
they will apply to the Court for any
other relief demanded in the ComAND
ANY RIGHT,
. . plaint;
The said action is brought by the
above named plaintiffs against the
above named defendants, and each of
them, to quiet the plaintiffs’ title to
the lands and real property described in the Complaint on file in the said
action and hereinafter particularly
described, and to determine the adverse claims of the above named defendants, and each of them, and of
all known persons to, and clouds
upon the title to the said real property and the whole thereof, pursuant
to the provisions of Sections 749,
750 and. 751 of the Code of Civil
Procedure of the State of California,
and that the said real property is
situate, lying and being in the County
-of Nevada, State of California, and
particularly described as follows, towit:
That certain portion of Sections
18 and 19, Township, 16 North,
Range: 9 East, Mount Diablo Base
and Meridian, described as follows:
Commencing at a_ bronze plate
marking the quarter section corner
on the-South boundary of Section
18, and running thence along the
fence line South 81° 00'-West-526.10
feet to the Southwest corner, from
which the collar of the old Chicago
Shaft bears South 15° 25’ West
98.00 feet; said shaft being South
16° 45 West 749.76 feet from the
North lode post of the Chicago Claim,
Lot No. 67 Patented; thence North
32° 40’ West 54.18 feet across the
Nevada Irrigation District’s ‘“D. 9S.”
Canal to the line between sections
18 and 19, from which the quarter
section corner bears North 86° 19’
thence North 25°
44’ West 193.16 feet; thence North
59° 58’ Bast 68.31 feet; thence
North 9° 29’ ‘West-.265.17 feet:
thence South 85° 02’ West 128.86
thence North 17° 45’ West
195.09 feet; thence North 12° 407
East 31.32 feet; thence North 28°
38’ East 86.81 feet; thence North
41° 57° Bast 78.07 ‘feet; thence
North 39° 06’ Bast 130.45 feet;
thence North 46° 44’ Bast 65.27 feet:
thence South 85° 05’ Bast 121.61
feet to.a 24-inch cedar; thence
South 26° 36’ East 52.27 feet ‘to a
42-inch cedar; thence South 73° 53’
East 199.56 feet; thence South 73°
23’ East 176.47 feet to the Northeast corner; thence South 3° 15°
Hast 222.51 feet; thence South 5°
06’ West 176.28 feet crossing “D.
8S’. Canal; thence South 0° 34° West
169.42 feet: thence South 26° 587
East 205.07 feet to Southeast corner; thence South 74° 06’ Weat
19.85 feet to the quarter section corner and the place of beginning, containing 12.49 acres, more or less.
EXCEPTING AND RESERVING
from the above described property
of Plaintiffs the minerals and. mineral rights situated more than fifty
(50) feet below the surface thereof,
and being within the exterior boundaries of the Chicago Quartz Mine;
also known and designated as U. 8.
Mineral Lot No. 67, and which said
surface is particularly described as
follows: ;
Commencing at a point on the
east side line of the said Chicago
Quartz Mine from which the 4% section corner on the south end of Sec-.
tion 18, Township 16 North, Range
9 East, Mount Diablo Base and
Meridian bears N. 81° 00’ B. 186.10
feet, and running thence along the
south boundary of the said property
of Plaintiffs.
1. S. 81° 00’ W. 337.00 feet to
the SW corner, from which the old
collar of the Chicago Shaft bears S.
15° 25” W. 98.00 feet. Thence
2. N. 832° 40° W. 54.18 fest.
3. N. 25° 44° W. 198.16 feet
4. N. 59° 58 E. 68.31 feet.
LIEN .
lode ithe NW corner of
IN AND
A-.
OTHER .
Sco NG ESS tb By) 78.00
the east side line of ‘said property of
. Plaintiffs. Thence alorg fence .
oc se Do OO UW. 106.00 feet tO tne}
east side line of the Chicago Quartz .
Mine .
10. S. 16° 457 W. 401:00 feet4
dlonge the east sideline of the ¢laim
to the place of beginni and cans .
taining. 6.81 acres, more or lees. }
‘ALSO. EXCEPTING all rgihts and / {.
privileges granted to the Pacific Gas
and Electric Company, a. corpora. .
tion, by that certain .Deed, dated. } ogR: sTocK OF COUGH AND
June: 23,1912, recorded: August 9,11) :
OTe In 8 kK ee) eeds, at pages . }
Ga? et cea, tesotde ot call Novad. . . . COLD REMEDIES is Most
County: (
ALSO EXCE seins all the rights . ) Complete. All standard and adand privileges granted’to the Nevada
ietleation Dis ‘riot. a municipal cor. ; os oth
noration, by that certain Deed, dat-. ! vertised amie available.
fed April 12, 1928, recorded May 31, .
1929, in Book 2, Official Records, . . Se reer ,
at pages 214, et seq, said Nevada LD I ;
County Records: . RR: E. arris fH
ALSO EXCEPTING anv portion of ‘
said above described property . of THE REXALL DRUG STORE
. Plaintiffs lying within
ies of U. S, Mineral Lot No. 65; and, TELEPHONE 100
ALSO EXICEPTING. from the
;above described property of plaint. =
GREET.
LOUISE .
. thereof, as conveyed by that certain
Deed, dated June 5, 1936, recorded
October 22, 1940, in Book. 62 of
QUARTZ!
E.° 207.00 feet to
the Claim
Wy Ne oo 4
¢
feet ta
the boundariffs, the minerals situated more than .
fifty (50) feet below thé surface
Official Records, at page 493, said
Nevada County -Records,executed by
0
gf ELS
said plaintiffs to Arthur B. Foote. ¢
That the object of the said action as
Photo Finishing
is to: obtain the judgment of. this
Court against the said defendants
and each one of them known and}. PORTRAITS
unknown as follows: ;
That all adverse claims ie: and all 107 Mill Street, Grass Valley
clouds upon the title of the plaintiffs Phone 8-W
in the said real property or any and y
every part thereof be determined by PROFESSIONAL
the judgment and decree of the eaid
Court, and~that~it be decreed~ that 08 DIRECTORY.
plaintiffs are the sole ownere in fee
of said real property and the whole;
thereof of the said real property WARD & WARD
herein described, being the same real ASSAYING, ANALYSIS AND
‘property described in the Complaint
of plaintiffs on file herein, and that
plaintiffs are in the possession of the
property and entitled to the possession of the said real property, and the
whole thereof, and that the said defendants have not, and that no one
of the said defendants, including the
unknown persons made defendants
herein, have any right, title, estate,
lien or interest of any kind whatsoA
METALLURGICAL TESTING
AUBURN, CALIFORNIA
DOCTORS
B. W. HUMMELT, M. D.
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
ever in or to or on the said _ real! 400 Broad Street
Tha tie chld. gorudni ced’ oo, Otte Mou: a ek
ye oe BLU ea ac! @venings 7-8. Phone 495 XRAY
and every one of them, known.and
unknown be forever debarred, enATTORNEYS
joined and restrained from making
or asserting any claim whatsoever in
or to the real property or any part
thereof, adverse to plaintiff and that
the title oe. the said plaintiffs in and 4
to the said real property and the
whole thereof be forever:quieted and
adjudged good and valid, and_ for
such other and further additional
order, judgment, decree and general
relief as is meet and Proper in the
premises.
GIVEN UNDER MY HAND and the
seal of the Superior Court of the
State of California, in and forthe
County of Nevada, this 6th day of
December, 1944. ;
R. N. McCORMACK,
Clerk of the Superior Court.
By R. E. DEEBLE, Deputy Clerk.
W. E, WRIGHT and H. WARD
SHELDON, Nevada City,
California, Attorneys for Plaintiffs.
dan. 29, Web: 6, 12, 19.
H. WARD SHELDON
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Opiey Building Broad Street
Nevada City Telephone 28
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
HOLMES FUNERAL HOME
The Holmes Funeral Home service is priced within the means of
all. Ambulance service at all hours.
Phone 203
246 Sacramento St. Nevada City
MINING ENGINEERS
oy
J. F. O& CONNOR
amd Civ Engineer
United States Mineral Surveying
Licensed Stirveyor
203 West Main St. Grass Valley
GRASS VALLEY
DOCTORS
enero a destanemcees cle
Vernon W. Padgett, M. D.
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
Office Hours: 1 to 3. 7 to 8 p. m.
Sundays 11:30 to 12:80.
129 South Auburn St,, Grass Valley
Phone Grass Valley 360
If No Answer—Grass Valley 17-W.
NEVADA CITY
FRATERNAL AND
CLUB DIRECTORY
WOMEN’S CIVIC CLUB
Regular meetings the 2nd and
4th Thursdays of the month, at the
Grammar School Auditorium. 2:80
Dp. m.
MRS. BERYL ROBINSON, Pres.
MRS. MARGARET WELLS, Sec.
SS SS=. ————
NEVADA CITy LODGE, ,No. 518
B. P. 0. ELKS
Meets every second and fourth
Thursday evening at 8 p. m. in
Elks Home, Pine St. Phone 108.
Visitinw Elks welcome.
W. L. TAMBLYN,
LAMBERT THOMAS, Sec.
REAL ESTATE
HOMES, INCOME PROPERTY,
ACREAGE
John Mlinarich, Licensed Broker.
Next to Nevada City Motel, Tahoe
Ukiah Highway. P. O. Box 558.
WANTED—Coin collections, L. E.
Sherow, Box 2, Nevada City.
3mo.2-13.
LOCAL AND LONG DISTANCE
moving in standard furniture van.
First class staroge facilities. Furniture bought and sold: Hills Flat
Reliable Transfer, Grass Valley,
Weekly trips to bay area. Phone
471-W or 39. 3-1tf
EXPERT RADIO REPAIRING —.
Loud Speaker Systems for Rent.
Complete stock of , portable and
large type radio batteries. ART’S
HYDRAULIC PARLOR NO. 56,
N. 8S. G. W.
Meets every Tuesday evenine at
Pythian Castle, 232 Broad Street
Visiting Native Sons welcome,
GBPRALD D. PEARD, Pres.
DR. C. W. CHAPMAN, Ree, Sec’y.
oll meron
RADIO HOSPITAL — Specialists ==: nae
in Radio ills. 201 Mill Street, . OUSTOMAH LODGE No. 16 1OOF
Grass Valley. Phone 984 -Meets every Tuesday evening at
2-19tf . } -7:30 at Odd Fellows Hall.
~ HARRY R. DOUGLASS, N. G. :
_————a . ] -WM. H. RICHARDS, Rec. See’y.
WE REPAIR JOHN W. DARKE, Fin. Sec’y. .
AND WE FIX Pe ee eee ae
Lawn Mowers, Locks, Vacuum
Oleaners, .Washing Machines, ee ne
Electric trons, Stoves, in short
almost anything that is used
around the house or the yard, To PRINT!
we can repair. . “2
ART’S REPAIR SHOP OURS AT
RAY'S FIXIT SHOP . HE
Grass Valley . ——