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Page: of 4

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~NEVADA-CITY NUGGET
}
@
Page Two
Nevada City Nugget .
305 Broad Street. Phone 36,
A Legal Newspaper, as *“*fined by statute. Printed and Published .
; at Nevada pasted =
H. M. LEBTE Sar ae a Editor and bus:
Published Semi-Weekly, Monday ana Ihursday
at-Nevadn—City.Cahtorniaand—anveted
aS! Ms
matter of the second class in tl 9 postettice a
Nevada City under Act of Cor.:ess, March 3,
~ 1879.
SUBSCRIPTION RAL HS
One year (In Advance). ..-.----./-----------_.. $3.00
One Month .-.c, ; . 80 cents
WHOSE WAR?
Those War Department telegrams that too many around
us are receiving these days show clearly enough whose war
this is. The people here know, and the people of the next town
and the next, who help to make up the 50 thousand that got
telegrams in the past month, telling.them their sons were
casualties. ex» =
It is unfortunate that throughout the past year the optimism of highly placed public and military officials far over-balThe government has just had a sample of the public reaction
to the. facts.
eh
With the absolute necessity for getting more workers into essential war jobs made plain by the president's insistence
on work-or-fight legislation, workers by the thousands began
switching voluntarily to such jobs. At U. S. employment of-fices throughout the country applications soared ‘over night.
“War production centers experienced their heaviest increases
in job applicants. WMC offices found requests for statements
of availability for job transfers at a new low, and applications
of “highly capable and qualified 4-Fc’’ poured in—from men
who heretofore had been made to feel wholly unwanted!
Meanwhile, in immediate response to threats to draft nurses,
both Army and.Navy recruiting offices were swamped. with
volunteers. :
Perhaps the samé officials who continued to issue such
‘yoseate predictions a few months ago, and to’ withhold the
plain facts, are the same who insist today that the “draft’’
threat did the trick. . >
In our opinion, gentlemen, what did the trick is much
more fundamental than that. We-believe that plain knowledge
of the truth did it: Truth that couldn’t be held back, couldn't
be garbled nor “interpreted” by officials who didn't recognize
that this is verybody’s war, involving everybody's right to the
undisputed facts concerning it. Irrespective of any manpower
drafts, the people at home will not forget it’s their war as long
as the truth about its progress is not denied them in the future.—Contributed.
: TORNADO OF BATTLE
Russ Take Warsaw!, Poles Capture Krakow! Stalin
Drives On East Prussia!
Eisenhower Launches New Offensive! Von Rundstedt’s
Rereat. :
MacArthur Nears Manila! Halsey Fleet Blast China
Coast! B-29s Again Raid Tokyo and Formaso!
New China Road Opened!
Thus, the headlines blazon the news of the veritable
global tornado of battle which the allies have unleashed
against the axis. Never in the world’s history has there been
such a titanic clash of arms. Never, since the world began, has
there been such a hurricane of death and destruction. .
The war has mounted to such a terrifying tempo that the
human mind can hardly comprehendit: Powerful _ battle
fleets, which dwarf anything ever seen on the seven seas,
scour the Pacific, blasting Jap shipping and shore installations.
More millions of men are locked in battle on the war's farflung raging fronts than Napoleon ever could have visualized.
Clouds of planes darken the sky over Luzon, over the western
front, over Germany and Poland, over Japan and the China
Coast, in the bitter fight for mastery of the air. And in the
United States, demand piles on demand for tighter manpower
controls; for sharply stepped-up production; for greater draft
quotas. :
In Berlin, where people, just a few weeks ago, had been
whipped into a new frenzy of hope by Von Rundstedt’s smashang December offensive, there is now new despair, as Eisenhower’s mighty armies resume the offensive and as Stalin's
giant war machine threatens to smash through East Prussia.
In Tokyo, too, heads are about to roll again, as the Jap war
lords strive desperately to save face by new cabinet shakeups.
The tornado, of battle has hit the axis in full fury. But we
are paying too bitter a price to be exultant—and we have learned from hard experience not-to be over-confident. We can
only pray and hope that the end will not be too long delayed.
—Contributed.
Mineral Output of State
The total petroleum output show1944 Is $451,553,000 ‘ed an increase of 26,846,000 barrels
-The total value of the mineral:or 9.5 per cent in amount, with a
production of California for the year. 10.5 per cent increase in value. over
1944, just closed, is conservatively . 1943. The ‘estimated quantity of
estimated by the statistical division jcrude oil is 310,992,000 barrels for
of. the Division of Mines, Depart. the year and is the largest annual
‘ment of Natural Resources, under . amount ever produced in California,
the direction of Walter W. Bradley, ‘although its value was exceeded by
estate mineralogist, to have been 'that of 1826 when the unit value per
$451,553,000. This is partly de-;barrel was much higher. Natural gas
tailed in the tabulation below, but showed an increase of 12.5 per cent
there are more than sixty’ mineral in both amount and alue of that
substances on California's commerc-. utilized, compared with the previous
fal list. Figures on the most im. year.
portant ‘items only are available ‘at
this early date. The production ‘/re-'show the output of gold to be the
port forms are being mailed to the)smallest of any year since 1848, the
operators in all mineral lines and. year of James W. Marshalls finding
the detailed and completed report . of gold at Sutters Mill. Metals that
will be compiled and published later. ‘showed an increase in output were
The estimated total of $451,553,. copper, iron ore, and zinc. All other
000 is ah ‘increase of approximately . metals registered a decreased out$25,108,000 over the 1943” total’ put due to lesser war demand, and
walue of $426,445,280. The above!to “the fact that reserves in stock
ttotal value for 1944 is ‘the largest ,piles had become adequate, resulting
annual mineral output on record and /in lower prices and cancellation of
4s due to increased petroleum and contracts and bonuses. The value of
matural gas yields. .
‘the output of copper, chromite, iron
anced the censored truth of the war situation on both fronts. .
Reports of the mint and smelters
ore, quicksilver, tungsten ore, ane
zine; aswell as that of 2old; exceededthe million dollar mark. j
Of the structural materials, a lower total value will be registered -by
. , (all nrajor’ mineral-substances in the
. . group including cement, mis¢gellanleous stone, brick and hollow _ tile,
. Under the miscellaneous: industrial
. group there will be many increas
and: decreases iin total outputs, ow-.
“ing fo varying demande on the group
jas a whole, showing a slight
1 otal value, The saline group as a
whole showed: an increase ‘in -total.
value: :
Estimated values and quantities
for 1944 are as follows:
$3,972,000, 113;500fine ozs. gold.
$543,000, 763,700 fine ozs, silver.
$8,236,000, 24,150,000. lbs. copper.
$875,000, 11,076,000 lbs,* lead. $1,P766:000; (PS 767,000 bs: ° gine. $2
716,000, 24.260 *flasks quicksilver.
. $10,825,000 other metals~including
. chromite, ir6n ore, manganese ore,
molydbenum ore, platinum’ group
metals and turh Sigg n ore, $323,439000bbIs. petroleum. $31,468.000--M.
“eu, ftnatural gas, $22,505,000 bbis.
cement. $18,500,000 misceallaneaus
tsone. $3,900,000 brick and.» hollow
building file. $915,000 other. structural materials, including
magnesite, manble,
slate.$10,700,000 miscellaneous industrial materials. $16,200,000 saiincluding borates, potash, iod; ine, salt, soda, and others. ‘Total
1 $451,553.1000. :
granite,
sandstone, and
ines
FOREST IMPROVEMENT
INSPECTED :
Harold E. Engstrom from the forest service San Francisco office of
timber ‘management made an_ inspection of the timber stand improyement. work recently done on the-Calida timber sale area by members of
the Downieville district protection
iforce according to district ranger,
Frank B. Delaney of the Downieville
district of the Tahoe national forest. Delaney and Engstrom were accompanied over the area by Forest
Supervisor Gurden Ellis, resource
officer H. W. Camp, Timber Management Assistant Fred W. Ahrenholz,
District Ranger Warren Barnes of
the Bic Bend_district,_Paul-—Case,
district ranger of the Bloomfield district of the Tahoe and A. F. Baumhoff one of the owners and manager
of the Calida Lumber Company of
Downieville.
Merchant Marine
Seamen ‘Can Get Gas
‘Effective January 12, members of
the merchant marine will be eligible
for-furlough gasoline on a basis comparable to that allowed to members
of the armed services.
In announcing the change, which
is expected to eliminate criticism by
seamen that the OPA discriminates
against them although they also-risk
their lives in their country’s service
OPA officials said special regulations
were necessary because merchant
mariners are hired for single voyages only and can leave the service to
return to civilian life at any time.
V. J. Monteverda, Sacramento
district OPA rationing exécutive,
said merchant marine men must apply for furlough gas within 30 days
of their discharge at the port of entry in order to be eligible. In applying for the special allotment, the
seaman must have his discharge records or records of entry in the ‘continuous record book given to. him.
He must also present the mileaze
ration record of the car for which the
gasoline is intended.
Special gasoline allotments are
made on a graduated scale beginning with three gallons for five
weeks of offshore duty. Five to seven weeks of duty rates four gallons;
seven to nine weeks, five gallons, on
up to 30 gallons for 49 weeks or
over.
Janvarv Rainfall
Far Relow Normal
DOWNIEVILLE, Jan. 29—Rainfall for the month of January is sadly deficient, according to the records
shown by the automatic rain gauge
located at the Downieville ranger
station. Ordinarily, Downieville
should receive at least twelve days
of storm throughout the ‘month of
January. However, so far this month
only on-three days was there any appreciable amounts of preciptation
recorded. With only. six more days to
go, old ‘Mother Nature” will have
to work overtime if the January precipitation averages are to.be equalled. Rainfall figures for this month
show .84 of an inch of moisture received: With a total of 27.52 inches
for the season, to date. Rainfall fisures recorded on this date during
the winter of 1942 show a total of
41.36 inches, and on the’ same date
during 1943, the total was 44.45 inches and on this date last year a total of 16.78 inches .
PUBLIC CARD PART an
St. Agnes Guild of Trinity Episcopal Church will give a public card
party the night of January 31st in
the parish hall. Contract and auc4
tion
increase .
. PERSONS
. Defendants.
bridge, whist and mah jonzg
will be the diversions of the evening.
In charge of the affair are Mrs. Bth. el ‘Heather, -Mrs. Arthur Hoge, Mrs.
Charles ‘Parsons and Mrs.
Smith.
Leland
PRR PE
No. 8354
. SUMMONS
. IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
ISTATH OF .CALTFORNIA IN’ AND
i FOR THE COUNTY OF NEVADA,
. ACTION BROUGHT IN THE SUPERTOR COURT OF THE STATE.. OF
CALIFORNTA, IN' AND. FOR THE
COUNTY OF NEVADA.
EUGENE ARTHUR DE SCHENE
ind JENNIE DE SCHENE, his wife,
i Plaintiffs; vs.
WIILGIAM '‘D. CHAPPELL, also
j; known as WwW. DD CAAPPHEG,
. LOUISE BALDWIN, CHICAGO
\QUARTZ MINING CO., a CORPOR,AI'TION: AND ALSO ALL OTHER
UNKNOWN. CLAIMING
. ANY -RIGHT. TITLE, ESTATE, LIEN
‘OR INTEREST IN THE REAL
[PROPERTY DESCRIBED IN THE
ICOM PLAINT ADV.ERSE T.0O
. PLAINTIEES’ OWNERSHIP, or ANY
. CLOUD UPON PLAINTIFRS’. TITLE
. THEIRE'TO, Defendants.
. THE PROPLE OF THE STATE
CALIFORNIA SEND * GREETOF
\INGS TPO: *
. WILLAAM D. CHAPPELL, also
known as W. D. CHAPPELL, LOUISE
BALDWIN, CHICAGO QUARTZ
MINING CO., a Corporation: AND
,ALSO ALL OTHER PERSONS UNKINO'WIN, CLAIMING ANY RIGHT,
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,
« You: and each of you are hereby
directed to appear and answer the
Complaint in an aetion entitled as
above, brought against you in the
. Superior Court, pf the State of California, in and f6r the County of
Nevada within ten (10) we after
ithe service upon you of this Sum. mons, 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 Complaint; i
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 heréinafter 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 prop;erty 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 ine 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
Ynarking 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’ ‘‘D. S.”’
Canal to the line between sections
j18 and 19, from which the quarter
section corner bears North 86° 19°
East 550.12 feet; 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
feet; thence North 17° 45’ . West
195.09 feet; thence North 12° 40°
Bast 31.32 feet; thence North 28°
thence North 46° 44’ Hast 65.27 feet;
thence South 85° 05° East 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’
Hast 199.56 feet; thence South 73°
2'3*. East 176.47 feet to the Northeast corner; thence South ‘3° 15’
. Hiast 222.51 feet; thence South 5°
106’ West 176.23 feet crossing “D.
S’’. Canal; thence South 0° 34’ West
169.42 feet; thence South 26° 58’
'Kast 205.07 feet to Southeast corner; thence South 74° 06’ West
19.815 feet to the quarter section: corner and the place of beginning, containing 12.49 acres, more or less.
EXICEPTING .ANDRESERVING
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. S.
Mineral Lot No. 67, and which said
surface is particularly described as
follows: a
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 Section 18, Township 16 North, Range
9 Bast, Mount Diablo Base and
Meridian bears N. 81° 00’ E. 186.10
south boundary of the said property
of Plaintiffs.
1,-S.-812 00" W.-337.00 feet to
the SW corner, from which the old
collar of the Chicago Shaft bears 8S.
15° 2'5’° W. 98.00 feet. Thence :
“2. N. 32° 40° W. 54.18 feet.
3. .N. 2bY 44’ W. 193.16 feet
4. N. 59°. 58 E. 68.31 feet.
38’ East 86.81 feet; thence North
41° 57’ East 78.07 ‘feet; thence
North: 39° 06’ East 130.45 feet;
feet, and. running thence along the
MONDAY, JANUARY 29, 1945
5. N. 9° 297 W. 2615.17 feet .
6. S§. 85° 02’ W. 58.00 feet to eae)
‘west side line of the Chicago Quartz)
Mine
:
“7, N, 16° 45? Bi 207:00: feet. to
‘the NW corner of the Claim {
S$ N, 73° 15' B. 578.00 feet to}
the: east side line of said property of .
. Plaintiffs. Thence along fence ~ .
. *9. S, 5° 06’ W.106.00 feet to: the .
east side line of the Chicago Quarta’
Mine a se .
1.00 Sl. 46%,-45" W.
along the east side tine
to the place. of beginning,
nonly associated wi
36 CAPSULES 50° Roxas!
401.00. feet th colds:
ofthe tain
.
‘ 1
and con-. .
.
.
taining 6.81 acres, more or leés.
ALSO EXCEPTING all rgihts and
privileges granted to the Pacific Gas
and Blectric Company. a. corpora-;} : )
tion. by that certain Deed, dated! # Demand REXALL Cold and .
June 23,1912, recorded August -9.( J] i : _ :
1912, in Book 116 of Deeds, at pages . . Cough Remedies—There. Are .
. + " ¥ + : . ‘ .
162 et seq, records of said Nevada . ] : : pe .
County: i None Finer — Cough Syrups,
ALSO EXCEPTING .all the rights . aoe ae :
and privileges granted to the Nevada . Inhalants, Rubs, Nose rops,
TInrigation . District, a municipal cor‘poration. by that certain Deed, datied’ April 12, 1928, recorded May 31,
11929, in Book.2,: Official Records, .
jat pages 214, et seq, said Nevada
County Records:
ALSO EXICEPTING any portion of
‘said above described property of
. plaintiffs lying within the boundarlies of U:.S, Mineral Lot No. 65; and,
ALSO EXICEPTING, from. the
jabove described property of plaint\iffs, the minerals situdted more than
ififty (50) feet below the surface
‘thereof, as conveyed by that certain
. Deed, dated June 5, 1936, recorded
October 22" 1940, in Book 62. of
Official Records, at page 498, said
Nevada County Records, executed by
said plainfiffs to Arthur B. Foote.
That the object of the said action
is to obtain the judgment of this]
Court against the said defendants
and each one of them—known and
unkniown as follows:
That all adverse clainis to, and all
clouds upon the title of the plaintiffs
in the gaid real property or any and
every part thereof be determined by
the judgment and decree of the said}.
Court, and that it be decreed that. ~
plaintiffs are the sole owners-in fo
of said real property and. the whol?
thereof of the said * real property.
herein described, being the same real
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
tof the said defendants, including the
unknown persons made defendants
herein, have any rfght, title, estate,
lien or interest of any kind whatsoever in or to or on.the said. real
property or any part thereof, and
that the said defendants and each
and every one of them, known and‘
unknown be forever debarred, enjoined 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 of the said plaintiffs in and
Cough Drops.
zal
‘ ’ H
R. E. Harris
THE REXAUL DRUG STORE
TELEPHONE 100
Photo Finishing
PORTRAITS
107 Mill Street, Grass Valley
Phone 3-W
PROFESSIONAL
DIRECTORY
WARD & WARD
ASSAYING, ANALYSIS AND
METALLURGICAL TESTING
AUBURN, CALIFORNIA
DOCTORS
B. W. HUMMELT, M. D.
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
‘ 400 Broad Street
Office Hours: 10712 a. m.; 2-5 p. m.
Evenings 7-8. Phone 395 ER AY
ATTORNEYS
“Ti WARD SHELDON
ATTORNEY. AT LAW
Uniey Building Broad Street
Nevada City — Telephone 28
to. the said real property and the .
whole thereof be forever quieted and MAIMED AT _ ae Be 2
adjudged good anid valid, and for FUNERAL DIRECFORS
such. other and further additional
' fhe Hojmes Funeral Home service is priced within the means of
all. Ambulance service at all hours.
Phone 203
246 Sacramento St.
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 for the
County of Nevada, this 6th day of
December, 1944.
R. N. MecCORMACK,
Clerk of the Superior Court.
By R. E. DEEBLE, Deputy Clerk.
W. EE. WRIGHT and H. WARD
SHELDON, Nevada City,
California, Attorneys for Plaintiffs.
Jan, 29; Peb. 5,.12;-19.
Nevada City
MINING ENGINEERS.
J. F. O°CONNOR
Mining awd Civ Engineer
United States Mineral Surveying
Licensed Surveyor
203 West Main St. Grass Valley
“Vernon W. Padgett, M. D.
PHYSIGIAN AND SURGEON
Office Hours: 1 to 3. 7 to 8 p. m.
Sundays 11:30 to 12:30.
129 South Auburn St,, Grass Valley
Phone Grass Valley 360
If No Answer—Grass Valley 17-W.
NEVADA CITY
FRATERNAL ANDCLUB DIRECTORY .
REAL ESTATE
INCOME PROPERTY,
John Mlinarich, Licensed Broker.
Next-to Nevada City Motel, Tahoe
Ukiah Highway. P. O. Box 558.
WOMEN’S CIVIC CLUB
Regular meetings the 2nd and
4th Thursdays of the month, at the
Grammar School Auditorium. 2:30
HOMES,
Dp. m.
MRS. BERYL ROBINSON, Pres.
MRS. MARGARET WELLS, Sec.
WANTED — Coin collections. L. E.
Vavana crv teem wa ore"
Sherow, Box 2, Nevada (ity. NEVADA CITY LODGE, No. 518
8mo.-11-13 ° B. P. O. ELKS
Hdd every second and fourth
LOCAL A LONG DISTAN ursday evening at 8 p. m. in
ND CE . ! Bike Home, Pine St. Rhone 108.
moving in standard furniture van. Visitinw Elks welconie
First class staroge facilities. Fur‘
niture bought and sold. Hills Flat
W. L. TAMBLYN,
LAMBERT THOMAS, Gee. . {
Reliable Transfer, Grass Valley, =
Weekly trips to bay area. Phone HYDRAULIO. PARLOR NO. 56,
471-W or 39. 3-1tt
PXPPRT RADIO REPAIRING —
N. 8S. G. W.
Meets every Tuesday evenine at
Loud Speaker Systems for Rent.
Complete stock of portable and
Pythian Castle, 232 Broad Stree
large type radio batteries. ART’S
Visiting Native Sons welcome.
RADIO HOSPITAL — Specialists
GBRALD D.PEARD, Pres.
DR. C. W. CHAPMAN, Ree. Sec’y
z= = A
—HARRY R. DOUGLASS, N. G.
{. . . :WM. H. RICHARDS, Rec. Sec’y. }
JOHN W. DARKE, Fin. Sec’y. .
na
THE
WE REPAIR .
AND WE FIX
Lawn Mowers, Locks, Vacuum
Cleaners, .Washing Machines,
Hiectric Irons, Stoves, in short
almost anything that is used
around the house or the yard,
we can repair. ;
ART’S REPAIR SHOP
RAY’S FIXIT SHOP
109 WEST MAIN STREET
Grass Valley
PRINTING.
GET YOURS AT
.
in Radio ills. 201 Mill Street, . OUSTOMAH LODGE No. 16 IOOF
Grass: Valley. Phone 984 . -Meets every Tuesday evening at {
‘ 2-19tf . . ] -7:30 at Odd Fellows Hall.
.
NUQQET.