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Page: of 6

euaty 26, 1932.
: oF riday, Feb
Pt “NUGGET, CALIFORNIA
IGFOOT BLANKET
OF SNOW WHITENS
ee
Camp Pahatsi, Boy Seout summer
camp. of the Tahoe: Aras Council is
now tinder a 16-foot blanket of
_Snow and furnishes not only a thrili.
ing site but a paradise for ski enthusiasts, according to. Harris Riecksecker, Scout executiye. —
“Imagine a two-foot blanket of
Snow over the ridge of the lodge,”
said Ricksecker:: “snow laying level
with the-top of the second story
windows in the east end of the building; the old cook shack completely
covered and Kilborn Lake a succession of drift ridges of snow!
. “The snow fence above the Southern Pacific railway: is covered;
snow is within a foot of thé top of
the water tank; the latrine building is almost lost to sight, only the
ends being exposed where snow had
sluffed away.”
That briefly is the picture that
the Scout executive and a party of
three found on a visit to the camp
during the last week: end:
“What a setting and what an expebjence it would be to have a winter samp under the snow conditions
of the present!”’ Ricksecker — remarked; ‘to enter a door~ through
a tunnel under 17 feet of snow. It
‘-Was a thrill to ski from the top of
the lodge, “normal 23 feet above
Sround, out on the lake,’’.
Inside the lodge it was dark, dry
and warm even without a fire. No
damage apparently has been done
to the buildings, either from snow
or falling trees, ’
New Primative Areas Are
Added in National Forests
Two new primative\areas in the
. national forests of CaNfornia have
just been created by Chief Forester
R. Y. Stuart, Washingeton\D. C., ‘according to a statement Wo. 3B:
Snow, U. S. regional forester. These
are the Devil Canyodn-Bear anyon
primitive area embracing 56 ¢
miles and including the
drainage basins of Devil. Bear And
Chileno canyons in the Angeles
tinal Forest; and the San Rafae
primitive area of 117 square miles
located on the main crest of the San
Rafael range in the Santa Barbara
National Forest. The Devil Canyon-Bear Canyon area covers the
mountainous country in the vicinity
of Mt. Islip, with elevations reaching over 8,000 feet. The San Rafael area includes Bald Mountain
and Big Pine Mountain which reach
over 6,800 feet elevation.
Mr. Leland Smith and Mr. McCain
who are both with the Tahoe Forest
Service, spent Sunday at Truckee
enjoying the snow sports. Mrs
Smith . served a_ delicious turkey
dinner upon their arrival home.
Patronze Nugget advertsiers.
GRASS VALLEY STEAM
. LAUNDRY & DRY
CLEANERS
PHONE GRASS VALLEY 108
PHONE NEVADA CITY 250W
OR NATIONAL HOTEL
CAFE
Broad St. Nevada City
Where Food Is Best
“Prices Are Right
M. L. Mitchell, Prop.
4
“FRED M. MILLER .
CONSULTING ENGINEERCIVIL AND MINING ENGINEERING
REGISTERED CIVIL ENGINEER
LICENSED SURVEYOR
Hydraulicg — Irrigation — Surveys
Land Classification.
LAST OFFICIAL MAP OF NEVADS
COUNTY ;
Hydraulics — Irrigation — Surveys
Office at Residence — Grass Valley,
jand production manager
ithat he
262 Auburn Street.
Nevada City Library Gets
Non-Fiction Book Legacy;. }
_Frederick C. Norton, eccentric
hermit» who died in his.ecabin near
Lake Vera in November, 1926, left
a legaey;-ol; something over $300 in
cash to ithe Nevada City library to
ve used for the purchase of nonfiction books, it developed here Friday when Superior Judge Raglan
Tuttle issued an order distributing
he estate.
pn eit a tract of and in the
ent
te ‘Vera, district to Lawrence
tickard. He ieft instructions for}
burial of his bedy in a plain
no box or roll of canvas -within
00 feet of his lonely cabin. “For
his $50——no more,’ he wrote in
NEW SEPARATION
PROCESS IS GIVEN
“Why crush 2,000 pounds. of ore
to recover 25 to 50 pounds of vatuale mineral if the mineral can be
won without all that expenditure of
effort?” say the engineers of tne
United States Bureau of Mines tn
sroposing a new preparatory process
described before the American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical
aifgineers in session recently at New
York City:
The new process, discovered by
John Gross. motallureist, and Rg.
Dean, chief engineer of the metallurgical divisiion of the Bureau ot
Mines. makes a. notable advance in
che art of recovering commercially
valuable minerals. from the relatively worthless rocks in which they
occur,
As part of the governmentprogram under direction of the Bureau
of Mines, with the. obiect of
es
oping the mineral resources of. the! +
rountry,. these metallurgists have
shown it possible to shatter the ore
by the explosion of steam induced
in the honeycomb-like internal
structure of the mineral. This deerepitation results in separating a
large part of the mineral from the
rock in more or less powdered. form
easily prepared for final reduction.
The expense of the new process
is comparatively small, the cost of
of the explosive energy used being
calculated at 1 cent per ton of ore
is compared with the preyious ex:
vensefor grinding or 5 to 10 cents
Yer ton including rock and mineral.
Ossential details are revealed in
‘he\Bureau of Mines Report of Inrestixations 3118. ;
NEWCOMPANY TA
OPENDLDM
4
a
It is authoritatively stated that
United States\ Chrome Mines,
Inc., has purchased end taken over
the old chrome ming property of
about 1750 acres across he river below Rattlesnake bridge\ according
‘o the Placer Gold of Lo mis.
The company is said to have $250,to use in developing the enterprise
f necessary. This is according to
H. W. Bedford, consulting engineer
for . the
ha
company.
The company plans to do a great
deal of development work immediately and will install a 400-ton mill.
it is stated that with modern methods ore from 10 per cent up can be
run through -the .mill profitably.
The present plans call for trucKing the ore to Folsom, shipping it
to Oakland, and to the Atlantic seaboard and Europe by ship. According to Bedford, the company has an!
assured market for the ore, it being said that this ore is now extensively used in building in the east-.
‘yn cities and that its use is constantly increasing.
Production is expected ‘to commence about April 1. This. -prop-}.
orty was extensivély worked -during
ythe war’ when the ‘ore commanded)
v high price,
ASSESSORS AGREE
ON CUT IN VALUES
By virtue of an agreement made
between assessors of Northern Calis
fornia counties at their recent annual meeting in Willows, reductions
in valuations on chattel holdings
will be the rule this year.
Bulls, all grades—$50.
Dairy cows, all grades—$25.
Stock cattle—$15. Z
Beef steers ready for market—
$30.
\Grain, all kinds—$7 a ton.
fay, baled, alfalfa—$8 a ton.
Hogs—2 cents pound.
Goats, all kinds—$1.50each.
Lambs, Dec. and Jan.—50c.
Poultry-—$2.50 a dozen.
Turkeys—$3 a dozen.
Horses, work (good)—$30.
‘Horses, stock .(common)—$10.
Mules, work. (good):+—$30.
Mules, stock -(common)=—$10.
Beehives—$1 each.
Lumber. at mill—$10 per M.
»>Lumber at yard or R. R,—$15
per M. aril
Beans, any kind—$1.75 ewt.
A Chicago bride who thought her
husband was a prosperous business
man came: down town one day and
found him ‘sitting on the street corner with a tin cup. Probably she
would have been less shocked and
surprised, had she found him dining
with a couple of paapes
One thing about the gruff: and
unsociable man, you never suspect
planning on trying to-sell
you a gold~brick.
: 0).
Every drunk nan should not pass
a blind beggar without giving hin
something. He might ‘be blind, too;
rs aie some day. j
. ter
ing
Ing
return.
Pak
(Article a series of of
health articles svritten byDr. B. G.
Cronwell, chiropractor and food sciFifteen
entist, formerly of San Franciscu,
now temporarily located: in Nevada
Now _is_a very: 200d tinie to check
up on yourself and see just how
much headway you are makingaffollowing my advice for fourteen weeks.
routine ,of eating.
potatoes, bread,
oid
Meat, butter,
cup of tea or coffee and a piece of
cake or pie, two or three times a
Do you know that eating is.
such. a thing that before they eat!
some people always pray?
The above-mentioned meal would
not shorten life more than one-third,
if the meat was taken quite rare, the
potatoes’ baked or boiled and eaten)
and centers dug}
out and fed to the house pets, the!
coffee. black and the tea with plenty
of milk, the bread made from coarsely ground wheat,
plain cake or fruit pie.
with the iackets
and a_ piece, of
Only. very
poor families live On sus h
plain meals. There is usually added
to this meal plenty. of butter condiments, eookies, crackers, jellies preserves, catsup, soup relishes, cream,
ete. A small grist mill which may
se operated by hand can be purchised, for about $4 and if the wheat
is fed in ‘very slowly the mill will
do the work quiekly and without
much hard work. The mili may be
d to grind coarse or fine.
be purchased for one
If cents a pound, which
flour at a rock bottom
ce After. passing the wheat}
through, the mill the coarse cracked
. particles oi wheat may be sifted
out and used for a breakfast cereal.
The writer does not believe in
breakfast foods. from grains.
Fresh and cooked fruits furnish
the best ' foods for breakfast. This
is the time of year to eat as many
oranges as possible.s A glass of orwnge juice is the finest food we can
produce.
Remember, what -I have been telling you right atong, that it is only
‘the part of one’s food which can be
‘eduted to a liquid that ever enters
the blood stream and if you wish to [
build up your body you must take
foods which will liquefy very quickly
and pass out through the body. This
will enable you to eat every two
hours until you have your
stream stocked and every weak muscle built up to*normal. Then you
will known what health really is,
and one meal a day will satisfy you.
Grapefruit, oranges,
and 3tes will satisfy your wants
p te the evening meal. For this
one main meal of the day, after
the da work is finished, one
should have pienty of fresh raw
vegetable salad with lemon and oil
tressing, one cooked vegetable. one
1 sing, one cooked -vegertable, one
meditm sized piece of lean meat
‘no pork), and fresh berries, melon
or in the winter time some kind of
dried fruit which has been soaked
over night for dessert. Try this
\diet for three days and notice how
Wwingry you are and how often you
ecah eat. Then just think about the
zmoxnt of pure 100 % food you
are consuming daily and know that
the quality of
is the--same as the quality of your
focds.
stream and the blood stream builds
the body. :
your
The foods build the blood
Do not. give a second thought to
all this talk about syphilitic condition which you have supposed to inherited from your ancestors.
food many years some doctors have
used
away from cases they were practicthat as a back door to get
on. and which showed
o sign
of improvement. They finally found
he door closed wheir “they tried to
Masts Mon Are Sued Alice
Abandoning Leased Holding
SONORA, Feb. 25—As_ gold
miners Reginald Denney, screen
star, Fred Newmeyer, Hollywood
director, and A. LaPresle, their associate, are motion picture experts.
So Miss Julia Conlin charges in
a suit for $5,414 filed here in which
she alleges they damaged the Experimental: Gulch gold mine near
Columbia to that extent—while
trying to extract gold from it.
Miss Conlin filed the suit as executrix of the estate of the late
Thomas Conlin. She sets forth
that Denney. and the others, years
ago, became interested in mining
and leased the mine from Conlin.
They abandoned it last August,
she says, and it was discovered later that they had dumped dirt into
a winze, rendering useless, and
otherwise damaging the property.
0). .
v
There are just as many different
. ways of being wise as there are of
being foolish, but it seems so much
easier to be foolish.
GENUINE
FRENCH BREAD
Pies, Cakes, Rolls
HOT CROSS BUNS
Glazed and Raised .
Doughnuts
Call 76 and we will
KOPP BAKERY
(NEVADA CITY
T URGED BY CRO
LECPHES HEALTH
“covered with dandelion and mustard
I wonder how many) they furnish one of the best foods
. realize that this year is nearly one. and blood builders to be found in
sixthgone and if you don’t look gut, .
another year will have slipped'—byj
and you are still following the same
when I tell you that you are weak
and sick jist because you have been
trying to live on denatured, deminblood .
orange juice
blood stream .
For a}
---Offtce hours==9to “12 “Ac Me ana
2 to 5:30 P.M. On Mondays, WednesValley, Sunday by appointment.
EDIT
Mai teda
Each and every one of us has it
in. our power to make our blood
streams. 100 per cent pure .in 90
days by lving-on the right amount.
of natural food. i Le
In a short time the fields will be
greens. When you can. find thesa:
sreens young and tender, that is
the time of year you need them.
the spring. Do not cook them,
‘spinach included. Clean thoroughly, cut into one-inch lengths and
wilt, then place in a bowl and pour
over two tablespoons of hot bacon
srease or salad oil, add a little salt,
cover with a. dish and let. stand for
n minutes. This is a dish. for‘a
king and in reach of us all, Pry it:
Does it not sound reasonable,
eralized and devitalized stuff (not
90d) just because you see most ey®ry one around you doing it? Quit
following the world and the world
will follow you. You are not doing
right by your’ employer when you
live so you can not do a fair day’s
work in return for your wages,
If you want to make your work
easier, then add one head of nice
crisp lettuce to your evening meal.
Try this for 30. days and see how
little other focd you will care for an
ee how full of *pep you are when
you return home after eight or ten
hours of strenuous labor.Most men go to work with their
‘comachs full of dead food which
vill not digest for five or six hours
nd because their stomachs are full
hey do not feelyhungry and can
ontinue to Work. “ After taking five
ours to digest these foods have
vassed ‘through the alimentary tract
eaving practically no valuation 1n
the way of minerals to build up tis:
sues, to replace that wasted away
2ȴ hard work.
The body is a wonderful mechan“m to be able to go on like that
for 30 to 50 years, just owing to the
MAPS FOR SALE
Inquire at
NEVADA CITY NUGGET OFFICE
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
DR. BELL
Dentist :
Office Hours: 8:30 to 5:30
' Evenings by Appointment
Morgan & ‘Powell Blde. Phone
DR. ROBERT F. WERNER
Physician and Sturgeon
Office: 400 Broad St., Nevada City
Hours: 10-12 a. m., 2-5, 7-8.p.m,
Nurse in attendance.
, T. Nilon J. 'f. Hennessy
Lynne Kelly
'NILON, HENNESSY AND KELLY
—ATTORNEYS AT LAW—
Offices, 127 Mill Street, Grass Valley
' Morgan and Powell Bldg.
Nevada City
W. E. WRIGHT
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Offiee in Union Building
Phone 23 Nevada City
WARD A. JOHNSON, D. ©.
Chiropractor
Grass Valley
days and Fridays 7 te 8 P. M., Grass
1§3 So. Auburn St. Phone G.V.196
EDWARD ©. UREN
MINING. AND CIVIL ENGINEER
Mining Reports Furnished _
Mining “District Maps
Phone 278R Nevada City
strength and vitality inherited from
re ancestors,
Just a word about meat. . I say
take it very rarely. Why? Because
flesh does not build flesh. The onty
nourishment, we can get from meat
is the chemical elements in the fluid . of, the tissue at the time of staughering. .The tissue also contains all
sf the waste matter, the by-products of matabalism, the toxic poisons
which were on their way to the orSans of elimination.— These toxins
act as a. powerful stimulant on the
heavy meat
stronger and usually overworks ana
injures himself. 'Keep meat away
from this person’ for two days and
he will be weak-kneed and think he
is going to die. This person better
take some good advice and follow
it until the tissue is built up, or he
Vill soon find himself weak-kneed
and passing out of the picture even
‘FOR THE CALIFORNIA DEBRIS
COMMISSION
The California Debris Commission will hold a public hearing at
‘11:00 A. M., March 1, 1932, at the
“California Debris. Commission office, 10th Floor, California Fruit
Bldg., 4th and J Sts., Sacramento,
Calif., to reeeive protests against
granting the application of M. GC:
Dutton and. Fred T. Smith, to mine
by the hydraulie process the Bigelow Mine, located near Sierra City
Calif., draining into the North Fork
of the Yuba Rver, and to store tailings in .Bullards Bar Reservoir,
about 40 miles below the mine.
. Dates of publication February 12,
19°jand 26, 1932. é :
W. A. WOOD, SR.
eae Corps of Engineers Assisant. : ;
FRATERNAL CARDS
NEVADA CITY LODGE, NG. 518
B. P. O. ELKS
Meets second ang fourth Friday. even.
ing in in Blk’s Home, Pine Street
Phone .108. Visiting Elks welcome
HORACE A. CURNOW
;
Exalted Ruler
A. M. Holmes Secretary.
MILO LODGH, No. 48, K. of P.
Meets the 1st and 3d Friday nights
at Pythian Hail, Morgan and Powel)
Bldg. Visiting Knights always Welcome,
‘CARL LARSEN. C. C
J. C. BE. FOSS. K. of R. & S.
STAGE TIMETABLE
Graniteville Stage leaves Nevads
City at 7 a. m., for Lake City
Nerth Bloomfield, Moores Flat, anc
Granitevilie. Leaves Graniteville at
7 a. m., for Nevada City. :
Alleghany Stage teaves Nevad:
City daily, except Sunday at. 1:00 p
m., for Tyler, Columbia Hill, Alleshany and Forest. Leaves Forest ai
4:30 a. m., for Nevada City.
Marysville Auto Stage eaves a:
3.00 a. m., for Rough ana Ready
Smartsville, Hammonton and Marys
ville, Leaves Marysville at 1:00 p
m. Connects at Smartsville fo:
North San Juan.
Downieville Auto Stage beave:
Nevada City daily at 1 p. m.
Leaves Downievile daily at 6 a
m., arriving in Nevada City in time
t9 connect with 10:30 train fo:
San Francisco,
Washington Stage leaves Nevads
City at 6:30 a. m., for Washingtor
Leaves Washington at 6:30 a. w
for Nevada City
Beieieieinioioluinleiolaiejedeleiiieingetejeicinies
: JOHN W. DARKE 3
UPHOLSTERING:
# 109-J — Phone — 109-M
:
when he hag all the meat his sto
eater _and he —feelsch will héld.
©
Don’t Forget About
Coa
Just a reminder, This is thé
is We'll andle. y the best grade
of coal. Our rates are reason-. .
able, our service is prompt.
When you put. your
‘lem in our hands you have
nothing to worry abont, Just
5 >
, at"
PHONE 57
~ UNION ICE DELIVERY
A. V. SAUVER, Agent
SEE ME—
SEE BETTER
GEO. H. SHIRKEY
‘Opt. D.
Optometrist fe
118 Mill Street < %~ ‘ gs 3 vas
* Grass Valley, California $
Beletetereqetete gopefefeigeetetetapate
x 456% ee, ets
IMO ELTA
&
Pa ate ot ,
Lo apes.
*
+
BEAUTY SHOPPE
+4,
gt ist
&Hair Dressing and Peaut
* Work. Adele
Miller Toilet Aritcles
Pie
et,
Famous
‘+
oF,
LOUISE MARTIN.
+ . a
Phe Maat Fhe. Sastite tote teste
&
HMMMMepieiepioics
>
stesteatcs?Poti tate has tet,
melee ile te teats fete teak
GRASS VALLEY
CLEANERS
YOUR MOST DAINTY
FABRICS ARE SAFE. .
7 +,
aS
HERE
a
{ \
Phone 375
111 West Main Street
Se ahenenopedeateatsaiesgterteotesieferieatesfestestateatesieodeaieteateotesgefeate Will call Monday and Thurs
°
Lene
and deliver on the next trip
% over. We will credit your
x phone charges.
fe : :
ED. BURTNER, Proprietor
day afternoons at your home
attendant misfortunes.
Peculiar yuality
ao Z
About Our Service
Our patrons have found that it is “different” from others; it is
more personal, more sympathetic,
when you have troublein the family such as death, and its
Holmes Funeral Parlor
MODERN. AMBULANCE SERVICE
And that is what you want
J. F. O'CONNOR
Civil and Mining Engineer
United States Mineral Surveying.
Licensed Surveyor. Upstairs over City
Hall. Main Street, Grass Valley.
NOTICE
From now on the Colfax Bakery
will, supply their products te the
Sacramento Street Grocery, Nevada
ANGELINI CICOGNI, Prop.
fr —=_— i~
TAMALE
PARLOR .
and Tamales Always
© Hand
_ Good Clean Service
a
»
Nevada City, Calif.