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Page: of 4

SLES STA Peer SOE ee Sr art
MONDAY, JANUARY 6, 1941.
pon ig Sn eayd 5: oF cD
RISLEY’S
106 Pine Street, Nevada City
DISTINCTIVE STYLES IN FALL
DRESSES AND FORMALS
New Fall Skirts, Sweaters,
Blouses and Millinery
"4
PROGRESSIVE. .
NEVADA CITY
—Forges Ahead— .
NEVADA CITY
Chamber of Commerce
CITY HALL, BROAD STREET
Medical science has proved
that milk is the most satisfactory food for growing
children and adults!’ Be a
healthy person. Don’t deny
yourself the health-giving
vitamins, minerals and proteins contained in milk.
e@e
— Drink It Daily —
eGo
Bret Harte
Dairy
Jordan Street, Nevada City
Phone 77
i
.
lor legislation,
.
{
.
ular session,
. of farmers will be in
a
LEGISLATURE 10
FIND NO NEW
"TAXES NEEDED
By RALPH H. TAYLOR
How the State Legislature starts
the New Year, at its fifty fourth rezwhich is scheduled to
convene at Sacramento on January
6—will determine, in many respects,
how California finishes it!,
What the Legislature does
determine, to large extent,
millions of Californians end up the
year in red ink or black. It may determine, too, whether hundreds of
thousands, now unemployed, are
given an opportunity to rehabilitate
themselves in private employment,
or whether they are doomed to another year of doles and dependency.
It may determine whether thousands
business or
bankruptcy at the end of 1941,
Headline issues of the forthcom. ing legislative session run the gamut of relief, reapportionment, taxation, unemployment insurance, labprison reform, naregulatory acts applying to agriculture, business and
industry, important changes in the
motor vehicle code and sundry other
subjects which, when translated into
human terms, have a vital bearing on
the life and welfare of nearly every
citizen.
But regardless of the question at
tional defense,
may
whether .
issue, the most urgent need in the!
legislature—and among
back home, whose attitude will influence the legislature—is the need
. for tolerance and understanding of
the other fellow’s problems, the
need for reasonableness and unsilfishness, so that the public good may
be made the primary consideration
in coping with every problem which
may be presented. That, at first
glance, may seem like a Utopian desire, improbable of fulfillment, but
both California and the Nation— if
they consider thoughtfully the dis-.
asters which have overtaken other
peoples, and the desperate need for
Professional Directory
Office Hours: 8:30 to 5:30
Evenings by Appointment
Morgan & Powell Bldg. Phone 321
DOCTORS
\\ Office Hours: 10-12 a. m.;
\Evenings 7-8.
B. W. HUMMELT, M. D.
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
400 Broad Street
2-5 p. m
Phone 395 X-RAY
W. W. REED, M. D.
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
\. Nevada City, Calif.
Office 418 Broad Street
Hours: 1 to 3 and 7 to 8 p. m.
Residence Phone 2. Office Phone 362
J. R. TOPIC, M. D.
PHYSICIAN. AND SURGEON
312 Broad Street), Nevada City, Calif.
NEVADA CITY GRASS VALLEY
DENTISTS DENTISTS
~~ DR. JOHN R. BELL DR. ROBT. W. DETTNER
DENTIST DENTIST
X-RAY Facilities Available
Hours: 9:60-5:00. Evening appointments. 120% Mill Street. Phone 77
Grass Valley, Calif.
DOCTORS
CARL POWER JONES, M.D
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
Office Hours: 1 to 3; 7 to 8 p. m.
Sundays 11:30 to 12:30
129 South Auburn St., Grass Valley
S. F. TOBIAS, M. D.
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
214 Neal St., Grass Valley
Office Hours: 12-3 and 7-8
Phone: Office 429. Residence 1042
DANIEL L. HIRSCH, M. D
PHYSICIAN AND. SURGEON
Offices and Receiving Hospital, 118
Hours: sae ofa es Dp. m. Bush St. Hours: 10-12; 2-5, evenings
venings, (7-8 P. M. D ight ph 4 i
Phone 23 Residence Phone 2 ny OF Roe Pee
ATTORNEYS
MINING ENGINEERS
HARRY M. McKEE.
ATTORNEY AT LAW
205 Pine St., opposite courthause
‘Nevada City, Calif. ‘
FRANK G. FINNEGAN
ATTORNEY AT LAW
207 North Pine Street
Nevada City, California
Telephone 273
THOMAS O. McCRANEY
ATTORNEY. AT LAW
Masonic Building
108% Pine Street, Nevada City
Telephone 165
H. WARD SHELDON
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Union Building Broad Street
Nevada City Telephone 28
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
J. F. O°; CONNOR
Mining and Civil Engineer ©
United States Mineral Surveying
Licensed Surveyor
203 West Main St. Grass’ Valley
NEVADA CITY
\
NSS Sees
F RATERNAL AND
CLUB, DIRECTORY
WOMEN’S CIVIC CLUB
Regular meetings he 2nd and
4th Tuesdays of the manth, at the
Chamber of Commerce, 2:30 p. m.
MRS. W. P. SAWYER, Pres.
MRS. RICHARD GOYNE} Secy.
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.
ASSAYER
Nevada City
I
NEVADA CITY LODGE, No. 518)
B. P. O. ELKS
Meets every Thursday evening
in Elks Home, Pine St. Phone 108.
Visiting Elks welcome.
HARRISON RANDALL,
Exalted: Ruler.
JOHN FORTIER, Secretary.
HAL D. DRAPER, Ph. D.
ASSAYER AND CONSULTING
CHEMIST
Nevada City, California
Phones: Office: 364-W Home 246-3
Box 743
MUSIC
GLADYS WILSON
TEACHER OF PIANO
Nevada City
358 Alexander St. Phone 434-J
Grass Valley *
429 Henderson St. Phone 444
HYDRAULIC PARLOR NO.
N. S. G. W.
Meets every Tuesday evening at
Pythian Castle, 232 Broad Street
Visiting Native Sons welcome,
ROBERT TUCKER, Pres
DR. C. W. CHAPMAN, Rec. Sec’y
56,
Oustomah Lodge, No. 16, I.0.0.F.
Meets every Tuesday evening
at 7:30, Odd Fellows Hall.
‘CLYDE BROWNING, N. G.
JONATHAN PASCOE, Rec. Sec’y
JOHN W. DARKE, Fin. Sec’y i
~
the people.
oe nnn AS. Deke a eA WeDo DURA ODI ret be che in VAT
PAGE THRER.
THE POCKE: s00K
of KNOWLEDGE }%.
TO?4y(Tq CENTS
1927Of, CENTS
17 15 ESTIMATED THAT TAXES ON
LIGHT AND FOWER COMPANIES HAVE
RISEN FROM 3/2 CENTS IN 1927 OM EACH
D0llAR REVENUE To 17/4 CENTS TODAY
MODERN ELECTRICAL
a EQUIPMENT. IS
25 MILLION
TIMES
MORE EFFICIENT
THAN THE FIREFLY IN ITS
METHOD OF PRODUCING LIGHT
TWICE IN RECENT
TIMES. ANNUAL
PRODUCTION OF AUTOMOBILES
IN THE U.S. HAS EXCEFDED
S MILLION CARS — MORE
THAN WERE PRODUCED /N
ALL THE YEARS BEFORE 1916
BAI -eeven misakcon erowers
{ W THEIR CROPS UNDER THE CITY OF FARIS,
IY </VE /W A SUBTERRANEAN CITY OF
<P THEIR OWN THAT HAS A VENTHATING
SYSTEM, STREETS, LIGHD AND THEIR
HOUSES, BESIDES VAST MUSHROOM BEDS
.
a new patriotism here which rises,
above personal gain or personal advantage—can and must make that
desire a reality.
The problem of relief for the destitute, for example, should and must
be approached with the thought of
providing for those who can’t provide for themselves, efficiently and
practically, with the least possible
drain on those who foot the bill. But
more than that, the whole program
must be designed to get men off relief—and into prideful private employment—as rapidly as_ possible.
The Economy Bloc in the Legislature
by its demands that political influence, radicalism and favoritism be
eliminated from relief—and that relief administrative costs be cut to
the bone—has saved California taxpayers untold millions during the
past two years. At the forthcoming
session, it is probable that a bill
will be pressed to return relief administration to the counties — and
that bill should be considered, not
politically, but on its merits. If it
will help both the needy and those
who provide for them, then it should
be enacted—even though it means
that a number of political jobhola-!
ers will be unceremoniously cut off
the payroll.
On the issue of taxation, the problem has changed tremendously since
the 1989 legislative session. State
revenues from normal sources are
FINE
WATCH REPAIRING
Radio Service & Repairing;
Work Called for and Delivered .
Clarence R. Gray
520 Coyote Street Phone 152.
THE SUN PRODUCE AND
GROCERY CO.
Fresh Fruits and Vegetables
FREE DELIVERY
%
315 Broad Street Phone 88
defense spending, and it is excecdingly unlikely that there will be any
demand for new taxes at the 1941
session, as there was two years ago.
On the other hand, rising revenues
tend to encourage extravagances—
and. budgets for state departments
should be held in check, so that increased income of the next year or
two may be used to wipe out the
state deficit, instead of creating new
posts -for political jobseekers. Federal taxes, due to the vast defense
program, are certain to double and
‘treble during the years just ahead,
and routine governmental expenditures must be kept down to the minimum if taxpayers are to escape ruinous burdens.
There is vital need, too, for. reasonableness on the labor issue, Recently, the State Supreme Court has
upheld the secondary boycott, which
if invoked, may play havoc with the
; farming industry and many other industries. California labor—and American labor, as .a whole—needs to
; ment of the French people, workers
and employers alike. The American
public is prepared to make every sacrifice to insure the adequate preparedness of this country in a. period of emergency, but it will not
long tolerate labor tieups which jeopardize the Nation’s welfare; labor
should take account of that—before
it is too late. Labor would be saving
itself future headaches if it appexred before the forthcoming legislature
prepared to be reasonable—even if
that reasonableness calls for’the repeal of measures which infringe on
the rights of others, such the secondary boycott.
Southern California’'and Northern
California are prepared to do battie
over the issue of legislative reapportionment; it is to be hoped that
they will be reasonable. There wiil
be demands from both _ sides’ for
amendments of the Unemployment
Insurance Act; again, both sides have
need to be reasonable
California, during 1941, needs
unity more than at any other time
in many years. It needs to ‘“‘live and
let live,’’ it needs to demonstrate a
HOTEL
POWELL STREET AT UNION
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r7v7
Rates from
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$3.00 double
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. « Moderate prices .,
Rates from $1.50.
a cunee PROPERTIES Seana
RAINBOW'S END.. on
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Dancing every eves:
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fawkes
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world-famous SeventeenMile Drive .. Rates from
$2.50.
mounting by leaps and bounds dut to}
'much immersed in business,
‘heed when
remember that labor excesses led the.
way to the fall of France and enslav-.
BISHOP KIP
LEFT IMPRINT
ON CALIFORNIA
(By Elizabeth Cherry Pateman)
Among the earliest comers to;
California were clergy of the Epis-'
copal Church. The Reverend Dr. Ver
Mehr was among the ‘‘forty niners.”’
He gathered a small congregation,
and held services in«-a -rude San
Grancisco shanty. Things moved
rapidly. In 1850 the first ‘‘Convention of the Church in California”’
. was held in’ San Francisco, and six
. clergy were present. It did not regard itself as a party of the Church
in the United States, It was an in. dependent organization, and looked
. at first to the Greek Church for the
. Episcopate. It was fa nearer, geogaphically, to the Greek Church. in
Alaska than to the Protestant Episcopal Church in the States. But
when three years more had passed,
the swift changes of: population
which marked the time and place
had left the Church almost extinct.)
Some of the clergy were sick,
dead, some moved away, and
smitten with the “gold fever.) In
1853 the General Convention chose
the Reverend Dr. Kip as bishop, and
sent him to build the Protetsant
Episcopal Church in California.
His journey to California consumed forty days. When he arrived as
Bishop of all Califonia, a country
equal in length to the distance be‘tween Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
‘and Jacksonville, Florida, he set out
to do what good he could with a people whose life was rough ,turbulent,
but picturesque. In San Francisco he
found two. churches’ Trinity and
Grace.
He longed to reach the miners’
settlements with the Church’s min-!
istry. The procedure he followed in
larger towns and more settled places he has written about in these
words: :
“Tn company with the warden I
visited those who were known to he
favorable to the Church, This is the
only ‘way in which anything can be!
done in this country. Men are too.
to give
addressed in masses.
They must be sought out and apps
ed to personally, to enlist them in
any cause, particularly one which is
removed from the interests of this
lower world and which holds out no
prospect of a golden harvest.”
Today, because of the untiring effort of Bishop Kip and those like
him who. followed after him, Calirernts has three dioceses and one
missionary district now, and its six
bishops are responsible for more
than 300 clergy and 80,000 Church,
members.
In the year following Bishop Kip’s.
arrival in California, he came to Ne-!
vada City and established Trinity
Church in April, 1854.
new, unselfish Americanism. Lel’s
hope that the 1941 legislature, forgetting partisan and factional potitics, sets the pace—and legislates
for the public good and the public
welfare!
ome,
ome
Advertise in the Nugget for results.
COURT CALENDAR
The following erté orders jy
by Superior Court Judze Georg?
Jones on matters coming before him
at last Frdiay’s law calendar proceedings: «
Estate of Eliza Shurtleff, deceased: Will admitted.to probate; H. C.
Kelsey, appointed executor. Petition
for letters of administration dropped.
Estate of H. ‘C. Kirtley, deceased:
Mrs. Bitney sworn and hearing continted te Jan.17, 1941,”
Petition of Effie L. Fippin: Mrs.
Effie L. Fippin, sworn, and order
made according to petition.
Estate of Eliza Ann Mitchell,
ceased: Dropped from calendar.
Petition of Josephine Fon: Mrs.
Josephine Fon sworn, order made according to petition.
Ted Ellis vs. Marie Ellis: Demurrer to complaint sustained. Ten days
to amend. .
Mary Louise Hansen vs. Iver Claud
Hansen: Demurrer sustained. Ten
days to answer,
William D. Teeple vs. Louise Teeple: Demurrer’ sustained. Fifteen
days to amend complaint. Motion
for change of venue denied.
Ethel Irene Garnier vs. Ray Garnier: Submitted.
Leslie Cicogni vs Peggy Cicogni:
Dropped from calendar.
The People vs. H. L. Woodward:
Demurrer. Dropped from calendar
until further notice.
M. Markall vs. M. R. Peterson:
Trial set for Jan. 27, 1941.
Evora R. Stevens vs. Frank Johnson: Trial set for January 24.
Cliff A. DeBerry vs. W. L. Baker: Demurrer overruled. 15 days to
answer.
Myrtle F. Bierlich vs. A, B. Polyanich: Matter submitted on. briefs.
Estate of Joachim Baums, deceased: Evidence taken and matter submitted.
Estate of Frank R. Bennett:
cree of final discharge entered.
i> ere. mm
+
deDaNew Deal
Under Management of
Pauline and Johnnie
108 W. Main Street. Grass Valley
BEER WINES, LIQUORS .
Delicious Mixed Drinks to Please .
OS cn eau asa UA Se eae PNT UE)
Factory Specified Engine
Tune-Up and Steering and
Front End Alignment
Equipment
Ls]
STUDEBAKER
PONTIAC
Sales and Service
®
Service Garage
W. S. Williamson, Prop.
Cor. Pine and Spring Phone 106
mC ip 9S: tin
Neves City
Laundry
QUALITY WORK SKILLFULLY
DONE BY HAND
Prompt Courteous Service
Free Delivery
All our work, is priced right.
Phone. 577 241 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
109 West Main St., Phone 602
GRASS VALLEY
HOOPER & WEAVER
MORTUARY, INC.
246 Church Street
Grass Valley Phone 364
24-hour Ambulance Servis
HOTEL CLUNIE
IT’S FAMOUS
AND COCKTAIL BAR
HAVE BEEN REMODELED AND REFURNISHED
UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT
Rates et pb Up
COFFEE SHOP
~
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