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Collection: Newspapers > Nevada City Nugget

July 15, 1943 (4 pages)

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. _ — nw an nh ne eS SAREE SBCA Kay ST om Page Three SILQUE. . HAIR TONIC Scalp Stimulating—LusterPromoting 49c SILQUE HAND LOTION Not Sticky — Softens Rough i Skin eee ” . R. E: HARRIS THE REXALL DRUG STORE Phone 100 LSHRIMICMiicininieieinininininieineminn ey “KEEP ’EM FLYING” ——e—. ‘@BUY ® DEFENSE @STAMPS —e-——Chamber of Commerce + OFFICE IN CITY HALL PHONE 575 vet cae eteioie:*s , WE REPAIR AND WE FIX Lawn Mowers, Locks, Vacuum ’ Cleaners, .Washing Machines, Electric Irons, Stoves, in short almost anything that. is used around the house or the. agli we can repair. ART’S REPAIR. SHOP RAY’S FIXIT S 109 WEST MAIN STREET Grass. Valley DRIVE IN FOOD PALACE Groceries, Fruit and Vegetables Beer and Wine COR. YORK AND COMMERCIAL STREETS NEVADA CITY, PHONE 898 FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE . 5 UPHOLSTERY OF me KINDS il Ww. Darke 100-3 Phones 100-M FINE. . WATCH REPAIRING Radio Service & Repairing ‘Work Called for and Delivered (Clarence R. Gray as Coyote Street Phone 152 New Deal Under Management of Pauline and Johnnie 108 W. Main Street, Grass Valley BEER WINES, LIQUORS Delicious Mixed Drinks te Please Every Taste 0B printine.? GET YOURS AT THE NUQQET ,women may make themselves use. vestigating facts and Helicopter to Go Into Quantity Production i . This Sikorsky type of helicopter, which will be built in quantity for the Army Air Forces by Nash-Kelvinator Corporation, peacetime manufacturer of automobiles and refrigerators, can alight on land, water, snow, thin ice, a rooftop or a parking lot. The craft can hover motionless in mid-air; descend and ascend vertically without forward motion and fly backward, sideways or forward with equal facility. EVERY CITIZEN prints, there must hoes among all groups, with: real. identical. joperation and teamwork, based on POSTWAR PLANS = ies .ceci'e" This trust can’t merely be assumed; it must be honestly earned By RALPH H. TAYLOR ee os a gi ie i , through practice in the first. place. Editor's Note: This is’ the’ first of two articles, dealing with the Naand thereafter preserved by continui pecs i ous good faith, performance and col‘tional Planning Association's findings on the primary requisites of a laboration. If our private enterprise system is to go forward, there must be a new sense of responsibility for the welfare of all the people.”’ There is idealism in ‘that statement of fundamentals, but there is also practicality. The National Planning Association report stresses that each party to sound post-war program. With all the welter of unrealistic post-war planning which is the halls of .starry-eyed orists and social reformists, couraging to find that there are also down-to-earth groups, composed cf ‘ 5 ness committee, practical men and women, who are t ee, earnestly at work on plans to guard ies against economic disaster in the anes critical after the war years. pee Three post-war planning commit~~ ; ; : : In a succeeding article, that phase tees of the National Planning Assoc: : p » 3 2 of the report will be discussed which iation—the Business Committee, the ; : : deals with the relationship between Labor Committee and Agriculture Committee—have ‘been working tobusness, labor and agriculture’ in : meeting the post-war challenge—the gether on the problem and have just rendered a preliminary report which boiling: up in theit is enthe labor commitand the committee on agricul—fully recognizes the of its group on each of the othpretty well. Almost two million came out of their homes to go to work during the first year of the war. By the end of the year three. MILLION IN million more are needed to replace} _— and to take over new war jobs. UNIFORM DEC ] . With the crux not yet reached, the eee ‘need for both men and women work. By LEONE BAXTER ers is yet so great that some attempt’ Six months ago a total of 56,100,is looked for at the next congress000 Americans were either in uniional session. form or at work behind the lines in, Pointed out as reasons often given the nation’s industries, business and Why women have not made _ the agriculture. During the next six months that figure must be raised to 62,500,000. j By December, nearly ten million will be in the services of Uncle Sam; they might have, are these: wom/en’s greater rate of absenteeism and ‘iturnover, need for more training, need-for plant changes. to fit womabout 30 million will be turning out‘en’s lesser physical strength, war materials and over 22 million’ unprofessional attitude toward the will be producing civilian goods and job, lack of adaptability by older workers and high illness record. On the other hand the club cites millon new workers coming—to fill the reluctance of some employers io the wartime labor gap and soothe the hire women even in view of war nation’s employment headache? * . needs, the common failure to grant services. Out of what limlbo are the_ s6ix The chief answer to the manequal pay for comparable work, unpower shortage,” declares the (Nawillingness to hire older women, to tional Federation of Business and promote women or give them posiProfessional Women, “‘is womanpowtions of authority. er’’—and proves the premise with a! Of some public program of practical tips on howj Business Women’s interest is the program for informulating ful in correcting the deficiency. with other groups. Of interest, not (Conscription of women can he . avoided, the organization believes, in only if women themselves recognize as the sole responsibility of federal the critical need and respond volunagencies, but that of the home folk tarily. Already. women have done,as well. e * ’ S. P COACH SPACE MUST BE RESERVED N ADVANCE for trijis 32: oF after FRIDAY. JULY 16 = % You will necd a reserviiiun ler co: an 5. P. trains on and after July 16. we We cannot make coach reservations . , iclephone. % No coach reservation: will be made vanless you have a ticket. Many of our trains are overcrowded, with people standing in coaches-and sleeping in the aisles. Frequently trains leave people waiting at stations because there is no room for them. Obviously something must be done to correct the situation. Coach reservations will be made fox u. : ruins, but not for specific cars or seats, This means that you will usually find a seat but there will be times when people will have to stand because of emergencies.* We cannot make coach reservations by telephone because of the load on telephone lines, and no coach reservations will be made unless you have a ticket. You must get your ticket and reservations at an S.P. ticket office. If you now have a ticket you will have to make a reservation. Unless your trip ‘sve ee ey vor TRAVEL! *Reservations will not be required on the hac /saneisco Penin= sula, or between San Francisco Bay Region und Sacramento, : The friendly: 4 PP Southern Pacific 996B strides in industry and business that . their. job each must do, and the guarantees ‘ 1 haat ha base each must give the other, if a pullstrongly emphasizes the asic COM’ together program for full employsiderations. which are essential in' . ee : ment and a maximum of security is providing employment and in avertito: be achieved. ing -widespread want and privation . during the reconstruction period. . By way of preface to its report, CALIFORNIA GETS
‘this growp from the National Planlning Associations declares: . “This is a statement by men who, ‘1? eg IN l!whether catalogued ‘Business’ ‘ or! \*Labor’ or ‘Agriculture’ or ‘Demoerat’ or ‘Republican’—believe that: what happens to this country after SAN FRANCISCO, July . ditional contract awards war supplies and facilities $1,402.467,000 during ‘the fighting is over is of personal! !eoncern to every American. “We remember what happened af‘nia for ter the last war; we believe in pretotaled 'paring now for after this war. And: “we are unwilling to see the idea of . Dost-war planning made a _ political football, a grindstone for the axes cumulative total since June 1, 1940 of special interest groups, or a bone duction in California, just issued by of contention between those < F the Research Department of the want to go back to the past and California State Chamber of Comthose who want to blue-print the merce. ‘perfect world.’ ' Contracts for planes, ships, guns. “Specifically, we propose to look tanks, and similar equipment form at the policies and plans of governthe bulk of California’s ment, business, labor, agriculture and social and educational groups from our _ respective committees’ points of view; to bring out into the open any conflicting points of view; and then to seek mutual agreement on those elements which appear workable and in the interest of all. Onir flnction is not so much to create "total. tracted to supply aircraft parts and engines to the total value of 724,680,000. or national total. Contracts for This does not of post-war planning from other . nia and Pacific Coast yards during . sources.”’ . April for some 281 cargo vessels. . Post-war planning, reports this Other war supply contracts, which ls : representative of. include such items as guns, . three way group, . business, labor and agriculture, pang . OF ORT Ne and equipment _ total . be faced realistically, In this, re. $605, 519,000, bringing the ~ grand gard, it says’ ,total for war material contracts in ‘If, when the fighting is over, we . California to '$10,275,694,000, tanks, streets, or masses of workers idle in. In total contract awards, Califorpresent war production ‘centers, people starving in one part of the,New York follows, with $11,900,other parts, we shall have lost this’ $11,835,451,000. war. It will be too late to ‘plan.’ We; For the. three Pacific Coast statmust prepare now against unemploy-. &: total contracts for war supplies ment during the reconversion period: 224 facilities, allocated by various and for full and continuing employfederal agencies, amounted to $17,ment under a peace time economy. . 268,498,000. or 14 per cent of the The first goal of post-war planning "ational total. The three ‘Pacific should be a foundation for better Coast states now hold more than 25 living through provision for enough/. Per cent of all contracts for airplanjobs and lasting jobs.” . es and parts; and more than 29 per Then, repudiating all schemes to . cent of all contracts for construction emasculate the American system of . " Cargo and naval vessels. free enterprise, or to substitute gov. ernment—employment for private-. employment, the report makes this/. z money that will mend a_ broken fundamental declaration: ‘heart or reassemble the fragments “The basis of America’s post-war) t 4 Me ihe Hee economy should be private entéy or SAORI en Dhveectely Penton the hearth nor repair the portals of RE. = seas pueigene ae ,a shattered home.’”’ He paused, then ustry and agriculture continuing to s ‘ i ‘ continued softly, ‘‘I refer, of course, operate as the’ people’s. primary ‘ means for providing jobs and proto Confederate money. ducing goods and services; with government performing its constitutional function of establishing the rules of the game, acting as impartial referee, and effecting fiscal policies through taxation and expenditure programs, such as public works, that will mesh with private undertakings. “But the private enterprise system must adjust itself to a changing world. Before there can be _ blue“My friends,’’ said the speaker ‘earnestly, ‘‘money is not all. It is not The University of California museum of anthropology contwinsi more .than 100,000 specmens. Kelp, a seaweed, as large as redwood trees grows under water along the Pacific Coast. Cash farm exceeded one billion dollars for the first time in history in 1942. An Impressive Tribute to the departed one — is every funeral conducted by us. We consider it a privilege to meet every wish of the family we are called upon to serve. HOOPER & WEAVER MORTICIANS AMBULANCE SERVICE be unit of pur-. the study—the buei~ depend, 15. cael to Califor-_ the first three months of 1943, and the now stands $12,386 520,000 according to a new bulletin on war procontracts. California manufacturers have con$6,21.3 per cent of the cargo . and naval vessels’ awarded to California shipyards aggregate $2, 945,,495,000 or 16.7 per cent of the U. Ss. include Marisimply in its outline for action, but . new plans as to seek out the best. time Commission awards to Califorits viewing of the problem not; jr nia continues to hold ranking place. ! Benker. country while food surpluses rot in. 889,000; and Michigan is third with . income in California} C f ization thage our groupinterests are . LOTS ONE ww There must be fullest co-, Edward Jacobs of Kelly Field, Texas, and George Jacobs, Camp Beale, are home on furlough this week visiting their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Jacobse and sister Miss Henrietta Jacobs. LeRoy Hoskins, son of Mrs. nes Hoski: Ag1s came down from Cam» White, Oregon arriving in Nevada City Monday to spend his furlough at home. Mi Te Smith, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Leland Smith, left , Tuegday for Los Angeles where she will be employed by the D Company, She' is just home from Sacramento Junior College. ‘Norman Foote, marine elecrician, employed in war work in San Francisco spent a week here with relatand friends. His wife and children and mother, Mrs. Alma Renfree also spent.the week here returning with him Tuesday. Ed Martine and Albert Pratti spent Tuesday cleaning up about _ their cabins on their mining claims on Mt. Oro and the Quaker Hill mining district. The work was done as a fire precaution. Everything was in fine shape at the cabins. Due to a heavy rainfall the springs at the cabins were pouring out more water feo usual and many streams aliere’ ithe . highways were running that are dry lin other seasons. : Mr. and Mrs. Fred Tourtelotte of Willow Valley had as week end . guests, Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Miet. hold and children of Big Creek and ,Mr. and Mrs. Fred Wellman of San . Francisco. Be Dr. and Mrs. Joseph Sooy of Sair Francisco former residents of North San Juan, have been enjoying mee?ing many friends in Nevada City this week. The Sooy ranch at North San Juan was known as the Cherry Tree Orchard, one of the finest in the section. His father was the town blackemith. They were accompanied by ‘Miss Mildred Mason of San Francisco. 4 Mr. and Mrs. Louie Kopp and his: sister, Mrs. Joe Cereseto returned toOakland Monday after a short busi-ness visit in this city. ‘Mr. and Mrs. Merle Edminster:former, residents, came up from the ba district and are enjoying this week among their friends. Mrs. Tom Palmountain and daughter Mrs. Hazel Dull teacher in the bay district schools, have rented a house on Drummond street for the ‘summer. Mrs. Palmountain is a former resident and her daughter is a native of this city. Mr. and Mrs. Charles' Myers had as guests the past week Mr. and Mrs. Otto Wisenbocker and daughter «° Niles. Mr. and Mrs. ‘Myers. three grandchildren are enjoying the sumouglas Airerait lives . \ ' . ,mer with their grandparents. or . have ex-soldiers selling apples on the;!9-8 per cent of the national figure. . The tallest known eucalyptus tre> in California 209 feet high, is on the University of California campus at . ay Is NEEDED even when budget is limited Keystone Market DAVE RICHARDS, Prop. 218 Commercial Street — Phone 67 Nevada City We supply our patrons with the meat from the best cattle, sheep — hogs . that money can buy. We . have built our repul oe on service and —