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Page: of 4

The Nugget is delivered to
your home twice a week
for only 30 cents per
month
“God grants liberty only to those who love it, and are ready to guard and defend it.”—Daniel Webster
Nevada City Nugget.
COVERS RICHEST GOLD AREA IN CALIFORNIA _
fr
. This paper gives your. complete
. coverage of all local happenings.
If you want to read about your
iends, your neighbors, read
The Nugget.
Vol. 17, No. 55. NEVADA CITY, CALIFORNIA
sone
_The Gold Center __ THURSDAY, JOLY 15.1943 15, 1943
Thinking
Out Loud
By H. M. L.
In our column this week we are
substituting the thoughts of a
fine, old, Emglish gentleman, who
lives a 64 Kensington Court, London. He is Harry D. Griffith, a
retired mining engineer, entitled
‘to wear after his name a string of
jetters, denoting distinctions won
in along life of service to the
mining industry of his country.
He is the father of Mrs. Roy Griffith Deeter of Glenwood Park who
kindly consented to let us publish
his letter to her. It follows:
June 10, 1943
My dear old girl:
Just a line lest you forget what
my writing is like. I have not any
particular news to give you, but
I thought a little chin-wag would
please you.
We are getting along as well as
can be expected under the cirecs,
and we have tumbled, quite easily to all our restrictions, regulations, ete. Our very breathing is
mow regulated for us iby some
minister or other, and we dare not
eneeze for fear of infringing some
law! As regards diet we are not
putting on much weight. But we
find that what we are allowed is
quite sufficient to keep going
nicely, although there are many
things that we miss badly, and
that are now things of the past.
The worst of all is, I think, the
way oneshas to que up for the
grub. The shops always seem to
be more crowded than before. And
they have much less to sell, so
that the queing up seems rather
incomprehensible.
The government does try to
keep the price of things down, but
only achieves it by means.of constant and heavy subsidies. Little
do we think that when we pay tuppence for our weekly egg, when
we can .get it, that it costs the
government five pence for purchase, and seven pence to adminaster the distribution. Therefore,
the total cost is a schilling and
tuppence, because we do indirectly pay the contribution. It is an
indirect tax which the government
is damned clever at devising. Yet
in spite of all cleverness and supervision, black markets are rampant in many lines. We are constantly urged to save and lend our
savings to the government, although every pound that we earn
is at once docked 10 schillings
(50%) for the income tax. We also save all the bits of paper,
glass, boxes, etc. that we can
find, and our suits of cloths get
very, threadbare at the knees and
elbows.
But in spite of all we carry on
smilingly, well realizing that
things might be far worse, as they
are all over Europe.
We have lately ‘had better news
of the war, and of course, we realjze what terrible escapes we have
had, when we were all alone, without an army, without arms or anything except our doggedness and
determination. We are now in good
company and more hopeful and
more certain of eventual victory.
The nice little combination of
Roosevelt and Churchill is working tiptop and we are proud and
thankful that two such men were
there in the time of our need. It
makes us think that Providence
has not abandoned us.
The Hun is now squeaking beautifully like a pig whose throat is
being cut, and he shouts more
and more loudly, so that he may
believe it himself, of all the horrors he will loosen on Us, and how
he is going to pulverize us! He is
still strong but on the decline undoubtedly. One day he will completely crack up, and howl for
mercy as he did in Tunisia, where
we took a total of 248,000 prisoners. Though the Huns said they
fought to their last gun and cartridge, we took hundreds of guns,
600 aircraft and huge piles of ammunition sufficient to equip the
whole French army in Tunisia. We
took also millions of rations and
mountains of food and _ comforts.
So that’s that.
We are now giving Musso a bit
of medicine which he finds not
so nice as the castor oil he used
for securing adherence to his
The County Seat Paper
.jthe pines and cedars one half mile
KAISER T0 SPEAK
IN CHAPEL AT
LAKE TAHOE
The Right Rev. Noel Porter, D.
D., announces that the special speaker ‘a the outdoor ¢hapel of the Transfiguration, Episcopal, at Lake Tahoe,
this coming Sunday, July 18th, at
11 a. m. will be the noted shipbuilder, Henry J. Kaiser.
Mr. Kaiser has taken agreat interest in the work of the outdoor
chapel and is the bishop’s warden:
A few years ago he presented the
chimes, echo organ, and sound system, that have been such a feature
in the ministry of music to vacationers at the lake.
The outdoor chapel is located amid
south of Tahoe Tavern. The pews
are arranged under the gaint firs
and cedars and the visitors register
show names from all parts of the
world.
The guest soloist for Sunday will
be Mrs. R. K. Ham of Piedmont and
the organist Hal Babbitt, of Portand. Oregon.ePishop Noel Porter will conduct
the service and introduce Mr. Kaiser.
People of all denominations are cordially invited to this special service
or to participate in any of the Sunday services conducted each Sunday of the summer. season by Bishop Porter, which are Communion
Service at 8 a. m. and the morning
service at 11 a. m.
FIRES STARTED
BY LIGHTNING IN
TRUCKEE DIST. .
Lightning storms
for thirteen fires during the
{week in Truckee and Sierraville '
{Districts of the.Tahoe National Forlest, all of which were extinguished
. by forest service crews before sea
'eaused any damage, reports’ Dispatcher Ranger H. I. Snider of ths
Truckee district.
Only two man
were responible.
caused fires were
reported so far this season on the
Truckee district. A careless smoker’
traveling along thePaige Meadows !
t
est service tanker crews and part of
the Tahoe Defense Rangers to do
some rapid work to control tht fire
in thick brush and timber last Thursday. The other fire, caused by a
careless fisherman smoking, was
discovered by Bryce Euer stockman
who conrolled the fire until the
Truckee crew arrived with a pumper
to wash the fire out of a sawdust
Dile.
Portable pumpers were also used
on two lightning fires that occurred
near streams, one of which required
the packing of 1800 feet of hose one
half mile up the mountain to a
stream north of Donner Resort, so
the fire could be mopped up quickly.
Snider also stated that one law
enforcement. case ‘was concluded
‘when Joe Larralde of Reno, paid five
dollars fine June 30 to Justice of
the Peace, Evalyn Bliss at Tahoe City
for burning debris without a permit at his place near Kings Ranch.
RAY WILDE JR. WRITES HOME
‘Mr. and Mrs. Ray Wilde have
received a letter from their son
Ray Jr., somewhere in the South
Pacific that he has been assigned
to the headquarters company, Engineers Offices, Service of Supplies
and states that he likes this work
very much. He states that the peo-.
ple of Nevada City have been kind to
him and asks that they keep up their
good work in writing to him. His
present address is: -Pvt. Ray B.
Wilde, 30,-400682, Hd. Det. SoS,
APO 502 c/o Postmaster, San Francisco. ‘
eause. There is going to be a big
move on soon. Lots of people think
we are going to invade Italy, anche
Musso is crying to the Hun “for
reinforcementts. Personally I do
not believe that is going to happen, apart, of course from seizing
(Pantellaria, Sicily and Sardinia,
but we shall know by and by.
Our love and best wishes to you
‘and Hal and kipdest remembrance
to all other friends in Nevada City.
Your old dad
Road one d \
and one half miles south‘schools reopen in October.
'west of Tahoe City caused the for-.
Late Led. Wm. Bennett
Honored Posthumously
Mrs. Ruth Curnow Bennett, ac
companied by Miss Jane Bennett, left
Sunday night by plane for Washington, D. C. where they plan to spend
a monthe with the latter’s parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Ellsworth Bennett formerly of this city.
While in Washington Mrs.
nett is to be formally presented with:
the ‘Aid ‘Medal in honor of
Lieut. Bennett’s gallant action.
‘Mrs. Bennett has heretofore received on her husband’s behalf the.
Silver: Star and the Purple Heart.
Degrees Conferred By
University of California
A delayed announcement of degrees and certificates conferred in
various colleges and schools of the
University of California reveals the
name of Jackson Englebright, son of
the late Congressman Harry L. Englebright and Mrs. Grace Englebright of this city, as the recipient of
A. B. A. degree. Young Englebright
an ensign in the U. S. Navy for more
than, a year, was a recent visitor
here. é
Other graduates follow:,. Vella
Frances Flindt, certificate in the
school of nursing; Robert Francis
Harrigan, Grass Valley, degree of
B S school of optometry; David Edwin Matteson, Grass Valley, degree
of A. B.
Grass Valley Recreation
Center To Open Saturday
Formal opening of the Grass Valley Reereation Center for the youth
jof the city will take place Saturday .
. hiieht; July 17th. It is a cooperative .
enterprise sponsored by the city .
council, and youth
and approved by the PTA.
Sometime ago the city council ob-.
Ben.
ENGLE SAYS GET
RID OF BUREAUS
AND CONFUSION
. RED BLUFF, July 15.—Eliminaition of as many federal agencies as
possible ‘“‘to stamp out the present
confusion and overlapping bureaucratic hodgepodge,’ should be one
of the principal objectives of congrees:
This declaration was made today
b Senator Clair Engle, candidate for
congress in the second district, who
recently completed a tour of the northern counties in-the district.
“T talked with many persons on
the tour,’’ Engle said, ‘‘and I found
that their greatest desire, as far as
government is concerned, is to do
away with meddling and wasteful
experimenting by federal ‘agencies.
“Sheepmen, cattlemen, lumbermen, ‘mining and businessmen with
whom I talked were in agreement
that the return to simplified government as quickly as possible is our
only hope to escape permanent economic. chaos.
“A typical example of governmental mismanagement is the livestock
situation throughout the northern
area.” Everywhere I went,
stockmen with an overabundance of
cattle and sheep, but: because of
overlapping of official authority they
are unable to sell their stock.”
Revealing his own views,
declared, ‘‘Although the war
;regimentation necessary to a certain
I am in. favor of the eliminaEngle
makes
lextent,
.
{tion of as many federal administra.
tion agencies as possible, and a re.
gov. the state and county
to their traditional
jturn by
ernments roles .
organizations, / a; the chief factors in admrinistrative .
. government.
“T believe in a government which
I ae.
VETERAN OF NILE
EXPEDITION IS
SUMMONED
Charles John King, 80, who was
a member of the Nile expedition under Lord Wolsely that went to the
rescue of General Charles (\Chinese)
Gordon at Khartum, died Monday
morning at his residence on _ the
Grass Vallel4Auburn highway just
outside Grass Valley.
King was -a member of the 11th
Royal Engineers in 1884-86, according to the history of the evént,
which he left with his daughter, Mrs.
Emma Van Duzer, who cared for him
in his latter years, and the expedition up the Nile to the Sudan and
Khartum came too late. The fortified town had been treacherously delivered up to the besieging Mahdi and
Gordon murdered two days before
rescue arrived.
For many years King was a Carpenter and cabinet maker in Grass
Valley highly respected for his integrity and good craftsmanship.
When Queen Victoria died in January, 1901, memorial services were
held in San Francisco. King was
called to the city and honored with
soldier in the service of the queen.
Among his greatest treasures were
two medals won during the Egytian .
campaign.
England but he had resided in Grass
Valley for many years. Surviving him
is his daughter, Mrs. Van ° Duzer,
nephews, Ernest and Frank George,
a niece, Mrs. Vernon Snell, three
grandchildren and five great grand. children.
. take the remains to Los Altos, Sanlta Clara County, where funeral ser.
tained a lease on the Phillips Build-'j, close to the people, and whatever . vices were held yesterday July 14,
‘ing on East Main street ;and_ the
: . work of reconstruction and renovahave should be set up at county and!there. The Rev.
irst' tion is now almost completed: The ' state levels, rather
building is equipped with duck pin
alleys, a dance floor, a sofe drink bar .
and a recreation and social room.
Furniture has been donated but
Letvic and fraternal organizations of
Grass Valley have been invited to
contribute tables, chairs or other
articles to complete the furnishing
of the building. It is proposed that
ithe high school shops make seme of
the needed furniture when the
Miss Virginia Ramm Weds
Corp. Wiltiam Gressell
Miss Virginia Ramm and Corporal
William Gressell were quietly married in St. Canice here Sunday morning. The Monsignor Charles Ramm
of San Francisco said nuptial mass
and read the marriage service. He is
an uncle of the bride.
(Mrs. Elsie DeMattei played the
organ and Mrs. Hester Bigelow was
soloist. Miss Vera Pendola was
bridesmaid, and ‘Master Sergeant
Charles Derdenger was best man.’
The bride is a daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Julius Ramm of Camptonville,
and for the past few years has been
a teacher in the Nevada City Elementary School. Her husband is stationed at ‘Camp Beale.
Following the wedding ceremony
a breakfast was served by Miss Emma L. Ramm, aunt of the bride in
her Grove street: home, which was
attended by members of the wedding
party. The honeymoon is being passed at Lake Tahoe.
A Gas Ration Book
Must Be Renewed
out “completely” their applications
for renewal of the basie mileage rations which must be in the hands of
rationing boards by July 21.
Chief error tabulated to date by
local: boards is the failure on the
part of the applicant to fill out the
lower section of the renewal applica.
tion .blank. The charts seeking tire
inspection information must be answered twice, once in Section
and again in Section “B’’.
of this information will result in.
delay of delivery of the new books.
Applicants also were reminded by
the Automobile Association to mail,
with their application, the back
cover of their -present ‘“‘A’’ book,
showing name and address of applicant, accompanied by the current
tire innspection record for the vehHarry. icle.
Holders of ‘“‘A’’ gasoline rationing .
books are cautioned by the California
State Automobile Association to fill)
“Qa”?
.
Omission .
,administrative agencies we must
than creating
igreat, sprawling and clumsy national bureaus which have little contact
with the people or their problems.
“The most serious threat to our
demorcracy is the centralization of
administrative power. A local government is a _ peoples’
But the people are fearful of vast
national bureaus where their voice
will not either be heard or heeded.
Whatever national uniformity
program is needed can be Soe
without sacrificing the principle of
local administration.”’
TWO RED CROSS
LEADERS MOVE
TO BAY CITIES
The last regular meeting of Nevada
City Chapter of the American Red
(Cross indicated the work as carried
on by the various committees has
been highly satisfactory.
A breakdown of reports rendered
for June shows the following:
Production, knitted articles 165,
other garments 261, a total of workers at home and in work rooms 181,
giving 2068 hours. Surgical dressings 123 workers, making 19,740
dressings, giving 1076 hours of
work.
Hospital and recreational (2 workers) giving 50 hours. Home service,
motor corps and staff, gave 99 1-2
hours of work, making a_ total of
working hours given for the month
of 3243 1-2.
; A change of executive personnel
!was made necessary bythe resignation of Mrs. Arthur Innis who has
so ably managed the production
rooms, and Mrs. Ed Franz who expertly conducted the very important
and strictly confidential office of
home service. Due to change of residénce the resignations of these ladies were regretfully accepted by the
chapter. Mrs. Louise Polglase took
over the production duties and Mrs.
Nancy Curry assumed the home éervice post.
(Mrs. Isabel Hefflefinger--will in
. the future attend to the dual duties
‘of home nursing and nutrition and
Mrs. Emily Lagerquist will conduct
nurses recruitment.
The treasurer’s report was read,
including the detail of settlement
with natonal headquarters of the recent war fund drive. Bills largely for
production and comfort kits were
government.in the Union Church
Charles Landels conldueted the obsequies. Interment was
im. the Alta.Mesa Memorial Park,
where-his late wife reposes.
TANKS CRUSH
BRUSH FIELDS IN
~ HIGH SIERRAS
In the manzanita fields of the
High Sierras in the vicinity of Bear}
Valley and Hobart Mills, the brush.
is taking & terrific beating under
the weels and treads of Camp ’Beale’s .
field artillery, mobile guns, half
tracks and amphibious vehicles and
light tanks. :
Through an arrangement with the
Tahoe National Forest supervisor,
Guerdon Ellis, certain areas have
been designated for the use of Camp
Beale trainees, where they smash
down the brush, tackle the toughest
‘at Lk a.m;
in handling .the armored monsters
on all kinds of boulder strewn
mesas, and when night comes, after
chow and a camp fire, roll into bed
under the stars beside the ice cold
streams that flow from the the snow
field above them.
The forest service benefits by
having the brush crushed. Come
spring it can be gathered up and
fired, and where it stood, pines can
be planted with some chance of survival. Attempts within the limited
resources of the forest service to
plant tree seedlings among the brush
have not generally succeeded.
To Nevada City residents Monday morning it seemed as if the whole
of Camp Beale was moving through
the city. into the high-hills. From 6
o’clock until 10 a. m. army boys i
trucks, jeeps, motor cycles,
mobile guns, and all the
military paraphernalia on wheels in
a steady stream toward the brush
fields between here and Truckee.
They may be gone a day or a week
but when they come down they will
be tanned and hardened. The Sierras can do it.
varied
ordered paid in the amount of $146Ba.
Due to extended war efforts, the
demands on Red Cross will steadily
increase, and the chapter gratefully
acknowledging the grand work already done by so many able workers,
still more effort, and confidently . :
requests the continued support of
the loyal women of Nevada City.
a place on the platform as a former:
King was a native of Devonshire, .
Hooper and Weaver Mortuary will)
terrain in California, gain experience .
emphasized the increasing need of
SCRUGHAM BILL
DISCUSSED AT
MINERS MEETING
AUBURN, July 15.—EBight counties, Calaveras, Amador, El Dorado,
Placer, Nevada, Sierra, Yuba and
Butte, were represented at the
regular July meeting of the Western
all participating in a’ very active
meeting.
Secretary Pgul Claiborne read @
letter from Howard I. Young, minerBoard, in answer to recent demande
made by the council at its Siskiyou
;and Yuba county meetings, which the
/mMembers designated as entirely évasjive and unsatisfactory. It was voted
,to write Mr. Young to the effect that
‘metals reserve was showing no real
desire to cooperate with western
miners in their effort to mine the
minerals needed in the war effort.
The council had asked a_ definite
é6tatement as to the government’
real need for the strategics, a longer
time period for mining than up to
\December 31, 1944, a flat increase
'of $12 per ton for chrome and man,
. Sanese, acceptance of ore down to
30% metal content, a speed-up in
ithe access roads pogram and he appointment of a war mnerals director. :
The assemblage showed eiien interest in the Scrugham stockpiling
. bill, S 1160, being of the opinion ©
hat if passed it would cover a number of their previous demands. How-.
ever, they went on record as being .
opposed to the section which named i
lthe U. S. Bureau of Mines as the
‘agency that would pass on the
eligibility of the ‘mines allowed to
. participate in the program and voted
that a letter be written Senator
Scrugham asking that this section
be changed to read: “Any mine
which can produce acceptable ore
will be considered an eligible mine.”
The council will be represented at @&
hearing on the Scrugham bill n San
Francisco late this month.
Louis Spinetti, head of the Amador
Chapter, reported on the proposed
metals reserve stockpile at Martel,
stating that the only matter now
holding it up is the duration of thelease the government wanted on rail.
road ground. The government wants
a lease for an unnamed period
while the railroad company wants
o hold it to a time no longer tham
six months after the close of the
war.
. Judge Raymond McIntosh of Sierlra County reported the formation of
a Sierra County chapter, headed by
Hay L. Herrera of Downieville, stating that a council meeting would be
asked as soon as membership wae
built up to a desired number. Napa
County has also formed a chapter, it
Gill, its president.
Senator Jesse Mao was a eee
speaker, touching on the recent veto
of the bill for a reorganized state
-. division of mines and the utter lack
of understanding now existing in~
‘Washington relative to the part that
‘western minerals could take in tha
present war. His talk provoked some
sharp remarks from Capt. John D.
and J. C. siamese of Auburn,
head of the council legislative com-.
mittee. following which it was voted to write Governor Warren for a
statement of his reasons for not.
signing the reorganization bill. Maye
that the governor would approve the
bill. Mayo was extremely critical of
small business, stating that the board
of equalization figures were to the
n
\effect that 40,000 small businesses.
tanks, . in California had been forced out in
the past 18 months.
Arrangements were completed for
the election of nine directors at large
with 32 nominees. Members will ‘balt
made at the next meeting to be held
‘at Placerville, July 27th, L. W. Loom-_
is of Placerville announced that he —
has been made a government buyer
of quartz crystal and will give a tal
on crystals and their need at t
Placerville meeting.
President J. P, Hall of ‘Auburn,
presided.
‘Mining Council here Friday night,.
al coordinator for War Production —
being represented by Mrs. Freda Mec.
Hubbard, head of the Butte chapter ‘
stated that he was of the opinionOPA and its wrecking of American —
lot by mail, the vote count being — :