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Page: of 4

PAGE TWO
NEA PN TY NUGGET
MONDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1941.
+
‘Nevada City Nugget
305 Broad: Street. Phone 36. ;
A Legal Newspaper, as defined by statute. Printed and Published
at Nevada City.
2 bs = Editor and Publisher
Published Semi-Weekly, Monday and Thursday
at Nevada City, California, and entered as mail
matter of the second class in the postoffice at
Nevada City under Act of Congress, March 3
1879.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Gneyyear(In Advance)
One Month
ed autes wauccetes oubensaue $3.00
30 cents
‘
This Is Really Worth Planning For .
Nevada County has a large part in the ““Golden Days of
°49"" centennial celebration which will be held in California
and throughout the West in 1949.
A council of eleven Western States has laid: the ground_ work for an eight year campaign to bring tourists West during the celebration. The 1949 celebration must equal and even
surpass the ‘‘rush” of 1849, when the greatest stampede of
all time began!
The council properly calls attention to the need of preserving historic spots and landmarks which have been allowed to fall into disrepair.
That is Where Nevada County comes in — for Nevada
County is one of the more important spots where history was
made during the days of 1849.
We in’ Nevada County should undertake now to guarantee that our historic scenic attractions such as our old mines and our old towns are ready for the visitor of eight years
from now. Our old towns will be particularly valuable to us
—imagine a tourist from Towa or Massachusetts walking
down the same streets and through comparable settings where
lived: and died gold seekers and outlaws of whom they have
read all their lives!
The “Golden Days of '49” celebration eight years from
now will furnish to California and the West one of the greatest tourist attractions of all times—and Nevada County with
her historic attractions has a “‘natural’’ for the biggest drawitig card of all!
’
the Hobart Estate Lumber Company after lumbering operaarmy cantonment were reased this week with an announcement that officers of the Ninth Corps Area are giving serious.
sofar as plumbing, lightning and other necessary facilities are
‘concerned and its location, in the estimation of those behind
jects, could be accomplished onthe plains and slopes adjacent
to the town all winter, while summer maneuvers could be
handled on the wide terrain. Airplane and rail facilities are
available and quarters are established for nearly 2000 officers
and men.
Consistent Advertising Pays .
If you think advertising is not the life of business, listen
to the fellow who does the least and you will hear him cry the
loudest about dull timés. This applies not alone to individual
point out and consistently advertise the benefits offered by
our great recreational region the world will soon forget us and
we will have nothing to advertise. Let's keep forever boosting. You will be surprised at the good results.
Taps for Laddie
The movies lost a prospect, Private Everett Scott of Fort
Ord lost a pet and the country grieved at the death of Laddie,
the dog over whom newspaper readers became almost hysterical during his dramatic flight and fight for life.
Separated from his master when the latter went into the
army service, Laddie refused to eat and wasted away to half
his normal weight. Friends conceived the idea of shipping him
by plane to Fort Ord to join his master. The airlines, scenting
publicity, lent their assistance. In easy stages, and doctored
by veterinarians, Laddie made the trip. Blood transfusions
kept him alive until the army camp was réached. Shortly after the reunion with his master, however, Laddie’s heart gave
out and death claimed him.
Fhe airlines found they had taken on a large order in
than a plane load of passengers. Those who had charge of
transporting Laddie were heartily glad to deliver him at Fort
Ord and pass responsibility for keeping him alive over to his
master:
Laddie showed that Americans are not hard-boiled ‘but
can let their sympathies be aroused over the fate of a dog. But
the public emotion was wasted. Laddié was too old to take it.
and even the reunion couldn't save. him. The movie industry,
which wanted to exploit the dog, missed the.chance. A mili_ tary funeral ends the whole episode.
oa
107. min street Nevada County Photo Center
PHONE 67 Portraits, Commercial Photography,
8 Hour Kodak Finishing, Old Copies,
Droreenatre® Enlarging and Framing,
2 Kodaks and Photo Supplies,
Movie Cameras and Films
ak val *
_ Revival Plans For Hobart Mills
B;
Hopes that Hobart Mills, idle since it was abandoned by/,
tions ceased in this locality, may be revived to become an.
consideration to the project. The town has been kept intact in-!
the plan, cannot be beat. S!:i training, one of the prime obbusinesses but to communities as well. Unless we continually .
agreeing to transport a sick dog. He’ was moré troublesome .
THE POCKETBOOK
o& KNOWLEDGE «.
ONE OF THE FIRST PLASTICS DEVELOPED
NOW HAS MORE THAN /5,000 USES.
CONCEIVED BY INVENTORS PROTECTED By
THE U S PATENT SYSTEM
® COLONIAL TIMES
A STRIP OF SALT
DEFENSE JOB—
TO BUILD A RIFLE NOW USED BY THE
US ARMY REQUIRES 19 DIFFERENT
SPECIFICATIONS OF STEEL 7
se
C { FIRST MADE
a ON, BUT TO SERVE
AS 4 SWEET COATING FOR
GITTER MEDICINES
"029 DUE 10"
Ove LARGE. i AACA COMPANY ALONE
DPED' ‘7 300 JOBS SINCE
RESEARCH AND
ACHIEVEMENTS
By JOHN W. DUNLAP
weddings in reeent years has been
red so long that
> something may be
done about it when
th e
; comes back to
Sacramento in
March,
A flock of bills
hit the desks on
fe: marital relations.
4. The particular obrk jection on marJOHN DUNLAP‘ Tiages was the overlapping of the 1927 “‘three day gin
marriage’ law which requires a wait
between application and license, and
the new restrictions imposed in 1939
by the health examination law.
Advocates of repealing the threeday law claim the “sobering up”
period is provided by the delay in
securing a health certificate and the
trouble in getting married is rapidly
driving the wedding business to the
neighboring states.
The wedding rate in Nevada has
risen so startlingly that divorce now
are far outstripped. The same is true
in Arizona, Assemblyman Earl Desmond and Assemblyman Ernest C.
, Crowley of Suisun both have bills to
, repeal the 1927 law outright.
. A sequel to the health examina. tion law was suggested by Assembly:man George Collins to permit drugless practitioners to perform the premarital examinations for syphilis.
The complex problem of divorce
occasioned, a heavy legislative file.
A “crackdown” on the alimony ‘racket was offered by Senator John
Swan of Sacramento, who would provide that no alimony shall be granted a divorced wife for a time longer
than the actual period of her marriage and that alimony shall not be
allowed either party when less than
a year has elapsed between marriage
and separation. And if a divorcee already has received $10,000 or more
in the division of community property, no alimony shall be granted.
Another benefit to the husband
prevent the imprisonment of a divorced husband for nonpayment of
alimony unless he has been given a
30 day notice 6f intention to start
proceedings and a chance to pay or
show his financial condition.
Swan also took a page from the
book of some popular divorce states
With a bill to make divorce suit proceedings, evidence exhibits and the
transcripts of testimony secret if
either party requested no publicity.
Assemblyman Gardiner Johnson
offered relief to a mother whose husband fails to provide for. his children, by permitting her to bring suit
for such support without applying
for divorce or separate maintenance
for herself,
Separation for ten years would ‘become a cause for divorce, even
though a separate maintenance decree previously had been granted, under a bill by Assemblyman Sam ColMrs. Jeanette Daley.
A lessening of the bigamy penalty
was provided by Senator’ Robert
Kenny, reducing the fine from, not
cussed and discusslegislature
lins. Another cause would be incurable insanity under a bill by As-. .
semblyman 10n Kilpatrick and
. less than $5000 to not exceeding that
United. Press Staff. Correspondent ; amount, and substituting not more of Rights and its freedoms and utSACRAMENTO, Feb: 17.—(UP)— than one year in the county jail as ters complaints if a particular place
The drastic reduction in California . an alternative to the present penalty is not available for such freedom of,
of not more than 10 years in state
prison.
‘Marriages of races were touched
by several, bills which would provide
that a marriage of negroes, mongolians, Mullattoes or malays now forbidden, shall remain illegal in California even though entered into by
Californians in another state; somewhat the opposite that marriages of
persons of different races shall not
be. invalidated in California if legal
at the time and place_ performed,
with the same application to the
marriage of white persons and decendants of legal mixed marriages.
HITLER MUST BE
READY TO FIGHT
ON MANY FRONTS
. It was to protect himself against
‘the need of waging war on_ two
‘fronts that Adolph Hitler made a
dubious marriage of convenience bej tween his country and Russia.
Yet there are increasing signs that
despite his efforts to build a neutral wall for Germany to the East,
‘Adolf Hitler today actually -faces
* what he has the most feared—two
, battlefronts, As long as there is uniirest in the Balkans, as long as military defeats continue undermining
! the morale of Italy’s people; as long
as war-sickened Spain refuses to take
up arms for the Axis; as long as a
stubborn France refuses to prostrate
herself before her conqueror; and
as long as rebellious Norway chafes
at the Nazi yoke, Germany faces a
continent of hostile people on every
side.
While waging war against England, Germany must at the same time
station large numbers of her troops
throughout the capital cities of
, Europe and along the’ Russian border in Poland. Continuing disasters
' for Italy may shake the Fascist regime so perilously that, for her own
pour new troops into Mussolini’s unhappy land to strengthen the hand
of the faltering Duce.
. Along this dangerously far-flung
, line from Scandinavia to the Black
. Sea, from France to the Russian
border, Germany must keep armies
on guard to meet the perpetual menace of unrest, hatred, sabotage, in. surrection and civil war. Hitler has
bought Russia’s neutrality but he
cannot buy her allegiance nor that
of any other conquered’ country.
Without that, Germany faces two
battlefronts, despite all efforts to
forestall it.
Hills Flat Merchant
Weds S. F. Girl
Miss Rose Johanna Odello and
Louis Seghezzi were married at 8
o’clock Saturday night in the _ St.
Patrick’s Catholic Church in Grass
Valley.
Following the wedding a
tion was held in the Elks Hall.
. Seghezzi is the owner of the ItalrecepThe’ bride formerly resided in San
Francisco.
THINKING OUT LOUD
(Continued from Page One)
per“éent does not find fault with
the policy in general, but only with
some features of it.
One thing we remark as we have
often done before. The president
does not trust his people. We suspect that he proposes to send more
destroyers to England, and we
would approve his doing so if the
navy heads think it can be done
without impairing out own defense for too long a time, Willkie
comes out frankly with the proposal. The President does not say
it will or will not be done: He. issues one of his ambigtious statements via Secretary Early. But
everyone in Washington thinks he
proposes to send more naval units
to Great Britain the moment the
lease-lend bill is passed.
We think’ the day is coming
when it will be the smart thing
for a President to trust his people
with the truth.
MONROE DEUTSCH
ASKS SYMPATHY
FOR BRITAIN
BERKELEY, Feb, 17.—Dr. Monroe E. Duetsch, vice president and
provost of the University of California, told students at a meeting here
that their sympathies should be with
Great Britain in the present Europian-American Grocery in Hills Flat. . .
ean war.
“How anyone who praises tlte’ Bill
Factory Specified Engine
Tune-Up and Steering and
Front End Alignment
Equipment
. @
STUDEBAKER °
PONTIAC
Sales and Service
@
Service Garage
W. S. Williamson, Prop,
Cor. Pine and Spring Phone 106
For VENETIAN BLINDS
and LATEST PATTERNS
IN WALL PAPER
John W. Darke
109-3 Phones
Bat
speech, can be silent when tyranny
tramples all under foot in Germany,
Italy and Russia is beyond my: com-'
: prehension,” he said.
. “Gallant Great Britain,” valiant’
Greece and long enduring China de‘serve our fullest support. if
“This is the greatest issue inthe,
world of today; it is probably the};
in centuries, If at /
means a year of preparation for you'}
greatest crisis
be proud that you can make this .
slight return to your government.
; ‘And should our freedom be men-aced, I trust you will show that your
, desire is for a real peace, a peace in
‘ which freedom is its companion, not
os peace of appeasement and surrender. Let not a love of peace be in
reality a cloak :for cowardice. Those
who established our nation and those
who maintained it, had courage—
thank God! We must not fai them—
nor leave to those who will come afNew Deal
Under Management of.
Pauline and Johnnie
108 W. Main’ Street, Grass Valley
BEER WINES, LIQUORS
Delicious Mixed Drinks to Please
Every Taste
FINE. WATCH. REPAIRING
'Radio Service & Repairing
Work Called for and Delivered
(Clarence R. Gray
(520 Coyote Street Phone 152:
ter us a heritage of slavery.”’
NEPHEW WINS PROMOTION
Superior Judge Raymond MclIntosh of Sierra County has received
word his nephew, John McIntosh, re'cently won his wings in the Army
‘Air Corps with the commission
grade of second lieutenant.
Lieutenant McIntosh is stationed
at the Army air base at Tampa,
Florida.
COME OUT TO THE LAKE OLYMpia Garage and see our factory reconditioned motors. In stock, Ford
Model A, Ford V8, Chevrolet, Ply.
mouth and Dodge. See us for prices, furnished and installed. Grass .
Valley-Nevada City Highway.
2-17-3-17p
EXPERT RADIO REPAIRING —
Loud Speaker Systems for Rent 1;
Sale. Authorized Philco Auto Radiy
Service. ART’S RADIO HOSPITAL
—Specialists in Radio Ills, 112
South Church Street, Grass Valley
Phone 984, 2-19tf
WATCHES CLEANED, $1.00. Mainsprings, $1.00. Watch Chrysta)ls.
round, 25¢c, fancy, 50c. All work
guaranteed. J. M. Bertsche, Watch
and Clock repairing. With Ray's
Fixit Shop, New location, 109 West
Main Street, Grass Valley. 12-1tf
is the First Food
Chosen in Planning
the Menu
The Proof of Good Eating Is
When They Ask for More.
If you choose your meats
fine choice cuts, your family and your guests will
praise your cooking by asking for more.
Keystone
Market
DAVE RICHARDS, Prop.
213 Commercial Street
Phone 67 Nevada City
FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE
DRIVE IN
FOOD PALACE
Groceries, Fruit and
Vegetables
Beer and Wine
COR. YORK AND COMMERCIAL
STREETS
NEVADA CITY, PHONE 898
MERCHANDISE EXCHANGE
Take a look at some of the bargains in used merchandise.
Everything priced right. Buy,
sell and trade.
210 Main St., Phone 410.
GENE MELTON.
HOOPER & WEAVERMORTUARY, INC.
246 So. Church Street
Grass Valley Phone 364
24-hour Ambulance Service
from out great variety of
\y
niin SEN age