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Collection: Newspapers > Nevada City Nugget

February 4, 1938 (6 pages)

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.PAGF FOUR NE eee CITY NUGGET: _ FRIDAY, F EBRUARY 4, 1938. es MEAT = no! rival for flavor, for variety and for appetite appeal HAM BACON SAUSAGES . Standing Rib Roasts, : Steaks, Chops, Pot Roasts. OUR SPECIAL = HAMBURGER KEYSTONE MARKET . Calanan and Richards Our Reputation is Our Guarantee Commercial St.,. Nevada City PHONE 67 y No Trespassing or Hunting Signs. PRINTED ON CLOTH. For sale at The Nugget Office. Hand Finish Laundry QUALITY WORK SKILLFULLY DONE BY HAND» Prompt, Courtous Service Free Delivery All our work is priced right Piione 577 229 Commercial St. Nevada City SAFE AND LOCKSMITH KEYS Made While You Wait Bicycles, Steel Tapes, Vacuum Cleaners, Washing Machines, , Electric Irons, Stoves, Etc. Repaired. SAWS, AXES, KNIVES, SCISSORS, ETC., SHARPENED. Gunsmith, Light Welding RAY’S FIXIT SHOP . 5 and East Main St., Phone 602 Ones VALLEY ~ WHEN IN NEED OF iF VEL TRY Bond’s Fuel Co Pine $2.25 Oak $3.50 Same service in Nevada City as ein Grass Valley 149 Park Ave., Grass Valley, Phone 476 ¢ VISIT NEVADA CITY CHAMBER OF COMMERCE Jon the Second floor of the new and artistic City Hall W. H. GRIFETHS, Secretary S 2 NEVADA CITY HOME _ LAUNDRY FAMILY TRADE OUR SPECIALTY Mrs. 0. Mullis, Prop. . Lee on the forest service staff spent . sourees. So steep are the streets in Cincinnatt, Ohio, that even the street cars ride up and down the hills on elevators. The city is built on three distinct levels and to facilitate transportation between the different levels an incline railway has been built to lift cars bodily from one to the other. ICE FROM A DESERT ° From one of the hottest spots in America comies the coldest known kind of commercial ice. “Dry Ice”— hand gives you a first-degree F irn— is made from hot gas from vells in the desert near Salton Sea, California, where temperatures skyrocket to dizzy heights. STREETCARS ON ELEVATORS TWICE AROUND THE WORLD °so cold that touching it with your 4 4 ““~ADD-A-ROOM” HOUSE A wealthy woman believed she'd live as long as she kept adding to her house in San Jose, California. So she kept carpenters busy for 38 years ‘constructing the weirdest house in America, an intricate maze of 144 rooms, miles of corridors, gold and silver fixtures, stairways leading nowhere, trapdoors, and blank walls! But she died! Greyhound Bus Lines serve 50,000 miles of highway routes (more than twice the distance around the earth), travel 138 million miles a year. Greyhound offers more service to more places than any other form of public transportation. yes, a s\Y 5 r\ Ms MZ711N)\) ANCIENTS GRAPPLED . WITH DRUNK PROBLEM —_ . LOS ANGELES, Feb. 3. — Few! problems which harass modern cit. izens are without counterpart in an-. cient history, declares Dr. Arthur} Patch McKinlay, professor of Latin . at the University of California here, whose academic hobby is matching modern situations with those of the ancient world. “The recent decision of a New . York judge in dismissing a charge: of murder against a drunk driver) opens up the age-old debate as to the responsibility of aleoholics,’’ says Dr. MecKiulay. ‘‘The ancient had tio face the same problem. There were those who would hold drinkers to strict accountabilitl Among tiese was the Lesbian Pitacus, who provided in his laws that the penalty for drunk offenders should be twice as severe as for sober malefactors. “On the other hand, the indulgsouthern Italy. This” lawmaker, according to Aristotle and other observers, recognized human frailty to the ertent that though he limited a lady to one attendant, ste might have two if she were drunk!”’ ent point of view had its supporters among ancient lawmakers. \Among} these was one Zaleucus, who form-}; ed a code of sumptuary laws for the Greeg colonist’s town of Locri ‘in Supeiintendent DeWitt Nelson of the Tahoe Nationa] Forest and W. P. Wednesday in Sacramento conferring with the state division of water re. cently Yi Z $2 ipa A Good Hotel "$450 to $250 * 1 Desirable, Economical Comfortable, Convenient MILK PASTEURIZATION BY ELECTRIC PROCESS DAVIS, that electric pasteurization of milk is to be a factor in dairy production in California, Ben D. Moses, associate professor of agricultural engineering in the University of California, has made a report on his study of this problem. Professor’ Moses has rereturned from a sir months’ trip throwgh the eastern states to resume his work on the Davis campus of the College of Agriculture. Objections in the past, Professor Moses says, have been to ‘‘flash pasteurization,’’ and the accuraly and dependability of controls. Now, however ,new controls have been worked out so that the milk flows at an even rate through the pasteurizing machine, and the temperature is Feb, 3.—Predicting kept constant within one.or two de-' This combination of temperand flow regulation grees. ature control heats the milk to any temperature requiredgby law, and holds it urder that h for as long a time as is needed. Fifteen seconds at 160 degrees usually has been the requirement. Despite criticisms, he points out, five hundred million quarts of electrically pasteurized milk have been consumed without any outbreak of illness or other detrimental’ effects. Because the method is continuous, ‘it is possible to use the heated milk just treated to bring up the temperature of tiat entering the pasteurizer. Temperature charts are kept and checked by inspectors. To All Who Suffer From Acute Attacks Asthma-Bronchitis Over 9,000,000 Bottles.of This Famous Cough Mixture Sold in Canada or three doses of the, Famous BUCKLEY'S MIXTURE in sweetened hot water and sipped siowly just before. retiringusually ensures a restful night’s sleep. Asthma-Bronchitis sufferers enjoy. a coughless night;, you’ll sleep. -sound and wake refreshed : you will be just wise enough to take 2 or 3 doses before you\ go to bed. BUCKLEY’S MIXTURE is sold by all good
druggists—learn for .yourself why Buckley’s out-sells all other Cou and Cold remedies in cold-wintry Canada. HARRIS DRUGS Mining claim location notices for sale at Nugget office. MA PASTURIZED RAW CREAM AND MILK . EN’S DAIRY Ranch-to-Customer Delivery Service in Nevada City and Grass Valley Send Us a Postal, Driver Will Call. ADDRESS, MABEN’S DAIRY, BOX 847, GRASS VALLEY. Dick Lane’s Garage Gas, Oil, Tires, Aubes, Battéries, Accessories, Washing, Polishing, Rent Batteries. GENERAL AUTOMOBILE REPAIRING ‘LABOR UNREST — FORCES FARMER TO MACHINERY DAVIS, Feb. 3.—The) growing interes* in machinery due to labor unrest is the prime cause of’ the upward trend in the demand for farm eauipment. So says Prof. H. B. Wal-' ker, head of-the agricultural engineering division of the University of California on the Davis camrus of the College of Agriculture, While there are two other, contributing rauses, the backlog of business following 1929 and the incfease in the purchasing powér of the farmer, Professor Walker sees the labor problem as the greatest cause for the interest of farmers in machinery to do their. work. i “Fixed charges in farm production always have been relatively high,” he says. “Heretofore these were mainly the price of land and taxes.’ But now the tendeney to encourage legislation toward fixing maximum hiours of wages and minimum pay rates, has tended toward the introduction of another fixed charge in all production, wages.” So. says Professor Walker, the farmer has emphasized attention to the further ‘substitution of machinery for men whenever possible; as an individual, this seems his only way out. He points out that since certain erops are vulnerable to the weapon of labor, the strike; he‘is encouraged to be interested in dependable and reliable methods of production and harvesting over ,which he:‘has control. He has found the machine a faithful ally, is the conclusion drawn. BLISTER RUST SERIOUS MENACE IN SIERRAS The future of the sugar pine in California is seriously threatened, according to a statement by DeWitt Nelson, supervisor of the Tahoe National Forest. This is of special conern to the mountain counties of the Sierras, owing to the fungus disease called “blister rust’? which is especially virulent when it attacks young second growth timber. Nevada, Placer and Sierra counties have thousands of acres of young , timber just becoming merchantable, of which sugar pine forms an important part. Blister rust is a fungus that attacks the needles of all the white pines, most important of which is our sugar pine. From the needles the desease works down into the limbs and kills the tree. This disease has avery interesting history. When it grows on the pines lit produces spores or powder like seeds that cannot infect other pines, but can infect gooseberry or. currant’ bushes within a radius of 200 miles. The disease then grows on the leaves of the gooseberry or currant and produces a different kind of spore that can grow either on other such bushes or ; on the white pines. These spores are very short! lived and can be carried not more than 1,000 feet. This is the point at which the disease can be attacked. By clearing the ground in and near the most “valitable sugar pine stands of all gooseberry. and . currant bushes, the only source of the infection is removed. The Forest Service has. treated over 460,000 acres on the Plumas, Lassen, Eldorado, Stanislaus and Sierra Forests, Nelson says, and further funds are needed to complete this work and start work on the Tahoe Forest. Blister rust probably originated in Russia, according to Nelson, and spread to. western . Europe from where it came to the eastern United States ‘about 1900. In 1910 it was started in Vancouver, B. C. from French ‘nursery stock. From Vancouver it, has spread to the Idaho white piné> and has been spreading south through Washington and Oregon. It first appeared in Northern California in 1936 \in Del Norte county. In 1937 it\was found in Trinity, Shasta, Tehama and Lassen counties, on gooseberry and currant bushes. This means that it will infeet the sugar pine and in a.few years make another 200 miles jump south along the entire Sierras. Blister rust control work -has been largely with relief labor, and has been carried on for several years in ae City . ioe Mech: » ‘oxrdboeht rena . . ] BROAD AND UNION STREETS. — i ene ay : ‘ ~ go e e anticipation of the disease arriving in California. (Now that it is here, redoubled efforts are needed to preserve our sugar pine. i TO NUGGET SUBSCRIBERS Will you please notify the’ Nugget Office any time you do not.-receive your copy of the Nevada City Nugget. PHONE 36 . YOUTH DELINQUENCY CHECK Contrary to the general exnearienica of social welfare specialists, juvenile delinquency did not increase in Toronto, Canada. during the recent financial depression. This information was brought out lately at a conference between Miss E. C. Castendyck ‘of the Federal Child Bureau, Department of Labor,) Washington, D. C., and Robert E. Mills, director of the children’s aid in Toronto. Unable to state definitely just why invenile delinquency did not increase during/ he depression, Miss Castendyck ventured the opinion tnat ti was because ‘the parents, not hav ing money to spend in pleasure, remained at home and gave more attention to the development of their chfldren. Waywardness of young _ people could be greatly redticed, Miss Castendyck said, if parents everywhere would give more time to the development of the habits of their children. —From_ Srottish Rite News. CARROLL SEARLS BUYS LAND ON TOWN TALK Carroll Searls of New York has recently acquired ‘all of the cma . ef Mrs. T. M. Kitts at Town Tal with the exception of the ground immediately surrounding her home. Mrs. Searls is a native of Nevada City and it is-believed he is pure chasing the property for a home site. He has been buying ground in this particular ne‘fghborhood until he now has about ten acres in the one piece. Mr. Searls’ ground fronts on the: Gold 'Flat road, lying: between the highway, the Pittsburg road and the Wasley property. His brothers, Henry Searis and Fred Searls also own property in the Town Talk area. SONGS OF A GOTH » On Poverty This is how the new mode leans, “Silver lame with ermine collar, I hate fashion magazines When: I’m down to my iast dollar, ROY GRIFFITHS DEETER. ‘ HELPS KEEP EVES RIGHT! Proree say modern lighting that is “easy on the — makes the eyes feel better . . And they are right.. Good lighting brings out the beauty of the home furnishings . . . It aids personal beauty, too. Light that is glaring brightness or that is dim and gloomy makes hard work of seeing. It causes squints and frowns and scowls and brings on many premature wrinkles and face-lines. Good, modern lighting merely means the right kind of light, and the right amount of light where you read or sew or use your eyes. And you can have it easily, quickly, inexpensively. A Home Lighting Recommendation chart made out for your home will fit lighting to serve the exact seeing-needs in your home. This.is a free service and there is no obligation. Hundreds are taking advantage of this service. Why not you? SEE YOUR DEALER P-G-avFPACIFIC GAS AND ELECTRIC COMPANY Owned Operated . Managed by Californians a 110-238 Bs HOTEL Far . 380 ISAN FRANCISCO “MEET ME AT THE MANX” On Famous Powell Street HOTEL CLUN IE IT’S FAMOUS TOY AND JACOBS AND COCKTAIL BAR HAVE BEEN REMODELED AND REFURNISHED UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT Rates from $1.50 Up . Excellent Service—Best Food 8TH AND K STREET, SACRAMENTO, CALIFORNIA COFFEE SHOP O. J. JACOBS, Manager =