Enter a name, company, place or keywords to search across this item. Then click "Search" (or hit Enter).

Copy the Page Text to the Clipboard

Show the Page Image

Show the Image Page Text


More Information About this Image

Get a Citation for Page or Image - Copy to the Clipboard

Go to the Previous Page (or Left Arrow key)

Go to the Next Page (or Right Arrow key)
Page: of 8

) Published semi-weekly, Monday and Friday, at Nevada City, Cal‘ value of their mortgage.”
PAGE TWO THE NEVADA S1TY NUCGE® .
FRIDAY, JULY 21, 1933
a A RE TT VS ea
& = )
. Nevada City Nugget
Phone 36
Printed and Pub305 Broad Street.
A Legal Newspaper, as defined by statute.
lished at Nevada City.
em MM. LBETEH atid C. B. [email protected] 2. Publishers
ifornia, ahd entered as mail matter of the second class in the
postoffice at Nevada City, under Act of Congress, March 3, 1879.
SUBCRIPTION RATES
One year,
: PRESIDENT NOT BLUFFING
President Roosevelt wasn't bluffing when he outlined
America’s position to the World Economic Conference at London, in the opinion of California Editors.
His statements were utterly frank, they agree, ‘and showed he had no intention of permitting this country ta be diverted from its purpose to serve the convenience of Europe.
“For good or ill, the world economic conference goes
on,’ said the Salinas Index-Journal. “Europe's little group of .
gold nations ‘led by France, put on a performance similar to
that of the old French king who is said to have ‘marched up
the hill and then marched down again.’ They were going S)
pack up the old kit-bags and go home. They were going to
emulate Greta Garbo. They had not ,had their own way and
they were not going to play any more. President. Roosevelt,
after consulting the book of rules and technique of the Great
\merican game, looked over his cards again and decided to;
land pat.”
-“One of the reasons the London conference has not accomplished more than it has,” remarked the Sacramento
Union, “is because the delegates have spent too much time
discussing the attitudes of rival powers and finding fault with
them, rather than in setting up a constructive program of their
own.
Declaring the President leaves no room for misinterpretation of his message, the Glendale News-Press adds:
_. “He pays his respects, or otherwise, to ‘the fetishes of
international bankers.’ He favors concerted policies under
which nations shall produce balanced budgets and live within
their incomes. After this has been accomplished he will be
teady to discuss the distribution of the world’s gold and silver.
The message has been described as a bombshell and as a bluff.
it was the first beyond doubt. It was not the second at all.”
“When he goes on record as saying that ‘the United States;
af America seeks that kind of dollar which a generation hence
will have the same purchase and debt paying power as the doltar we hope to attain in the near future,’ ’» comments the Santa
Ana Register, ‘it seems to us that he is expressing the hope of
all men who are desirous of nothing but what they themselves
have earned; but who in the immediate past have seen the
équity of their property almost, if not entirely, wiped out, and
who in the future may witness the partial destruction of the
“The. stabilization of currencies is important,’’ said the .
Santa Rosa Press Democrat, ‘‘and will have to be undertaken .
‘efore international commerce can be brought to an entirely
satisfactory basis, but the President is fully justified in refusing to go into the matter of stabilized currencies until the desired advancement of commodity prices has been accomplished in his own country.”
“Ours has been the grand and generous gesture ever since
the peace conference,’ said the Orange Daily News. “We
led the way in the sacrifice of national interest for the world’s
sood in every conference that anybody could suggest. We
ught opportunities of setting a good example to the nations.
‘e led-the way but nobody followed. It is no wonder that
» are becoming slightly cynical at European suggestions that
’s our duty to stablize exchange.”
GENERAL @ ELECTRIC’S
. NEW
HIGH QUALITY
AUTO RADIO
NOTE THESE OUTSTANDING FEATURES:
Low Price Control Box may be mountSingle Unit Chassis and ed in any position on
‘Speaker post or dashboard
_ Automatic Volume Control New Vibrator T pe “B”
Tone Control Battery Eliminator _
Dynamic Speaker Newly Developed Tubes
Excellent Tone. Small Space Required
Key Lock and Volume ingle Stud Mounting
ntrol-Combined Easily Serviced
Come in for a demonstration—or phone us to drive a G-E Radioequipped car to your home or place of business
oi See esta ‘er Se ine a es ca
$4 Z 4
@ i" $e
.
t
LOOKING UP
WASHINGTON, D. C. July 20—
(UP)—Those who are interested in
the phrase, ‘‘the new deal,’’. aptly
coined for the Administration’s activities, and I take it that inchudes
everyone, should go to the dictionary
and look up the word Parity.
A relatively new word, so far as
the public is concerned, the word
Parity is destined to grow more and
more socially and .economically significant as time rolls by. In the trezmendously large program of economie and social reconstruction into
which the Administration has lunged
with all the old feverish spirit of
war-like days, the word Parity
looms up as the new guiding star.
It’s parity for agriculture, parity
for industry, parity for’ labor, parity
for employers and employees,
ders, borrowers—for society in general.
Upon that relatively new word
Parity may be built a new civilization ,with new conceptions of relations between man and man, and between all strata that make up sosiety. At least, that’s the way I visualize it from what I see going on in
Washington.
Building that word Parity into our
complex civilization, formerly Ccharacterized by a dog-eat-dog policy, in
which the last dog in the eéonomic
chain always was bit the hardest,
may turn out to be the biggest job
ever performed. :
It may be the turning point in
changing human nature from a selfish, greedy, grasping, acquisitive
type, to a—type-characterized by a
spirit of service, fairness, and equal
though profitable exchange relationships.
Take agriculture for example.
Here’s the way George Peek, Agriculture adjustment administrator applies the word parity to farming:
“There is nothing myserious about
the parity principle of the farm. act.
It. makes little difference whether
prices are high or low, so long as
they are reasonably related. The parity principle means a fair exchange
value between agricultural and other
commodities, year in and out. And
it makes little or no difference. ,actually, whether what you call money
is gold,/silver; paper, tin or buffalo
chips.”’
That conception of parity as_applied to agriculture, General Hugh
‘Johnson, National Industrial Recovyery Administrator,
American industry. .
It’s this Parity principle on which
General Johnson, through trade codes
trade agreements, and in other ways
is building a new conception of industrial relationships between capital and labor, between employer ara
employee, between producers and
consumers, between sellers and buy:
ers.
Keep your, eyes focused on that
word Parity. It’s not a slogan; nor
a by-word; nor a flash in the pan.
Carried out and put into actual practice, it’s a real panecea for all the
ills of modern civilization. It’s the
very bottom of the pyramid upon
which President Roosevelt is constructing a new and better civilizais pouring into
tion. .
lenWELCOME TO CALIFORNIA
25th Conference of Governors, California; July 23
Fn emenat
to 29.
The World
Needs You
Everyone can say they have’ experienced some sorrow,
And that sorrow of today, will
bring a blessing tomorrow;
We should not ask to be relieved
from all pain.
Thru all the suffering their is all
ways something we gain. (
All grief,-hardships,’ struggles, and i
strife, i
We find make up thé miner strains!
of life,
We should not rave over time or :
fate;
But with patience thru the coming
years just wait.
For there is always the beautiful
dawn,
And the stars come nightly in 'the
sky;
Why Weep over yesterday that is
gone,
We still have today, and many to-'
day’s and why;—
Not live it the best. we know how,
To be steadfast and never waver,
But ask only God; when you want
a favor,
Cease asking why you are here;
Be sweet and cheerful, and not full
of fear,
For the world needs you, so just
be a DEAR.
—BERTHA JOY DELLEA.
MRS. JENNIE THOMAS
ANSWERS SUMMONS
Mrs. Jennie Thomas, widow of the
late Rey. Martin Thomas passed
away at her home in Midvale, Utah,
Tuesday morning, acc}rding ito a
dispatch received by her sister-inlaw, Mrs. George Neagle.
Mrs. Thomas
of the late Mr. and Mrs. James Monroe.
Following her marriage the couple
lived in this city until they moved to
Deadwood, South Dakota, where the
Rev. Thomas was located. Later
they moved to Midvale and there
her husband died about six years ago.
Mrs.Thomas was beloved by all
who knew her.
She is survived by’a son, Martin
Thomas, of Midvale, and a daughter
Mrs. Bessie. Kemp of Bingham Canyon, Utah. One brother, Charles Monroe, of this city and a sister, residing
in San Francisco, also survive her.
10 PEOPLE OUT OF EVERY
100 HAVE STOMACH ULCER
Acidity, indigestion. heartburn,
sour stomach, often lead to ulcers.
Don‘t ruin your stomach. Counteract these conditions with Dr. Emil’s
Adla Tablets. R. E. Harris Drug
Store; ‘
PROFESSIONAL CARD
A. M. HOLMES
Funeral Director
Nevada City. Grass Valley. The Service of Sincerity.
was the daughter
‘Mr. and Mrs. F.-G. Develey of Alleghany visited in Nevada City yesterday.
Mrs. Carl Ivey and daughter,
Maxine, of Chico, are guests of Mrs.
Neillie Veale in this city.
DEPENDABLE AUTO
REPAIRING
W. R. PECK
211 South School St.
Phone 59
Grass Valley
"NEW TRAIN .
FARES FOR
A NILE
ON SALE EVERY DAY
On your next trip anywhere,
investigate these new fares.
One way or roundtrip, you
can now travel by train to
nearly all S.P. ‘stations for
about 2¢ a mile.
One way, these fares are
good in coaches and chair
cars—also in Pullman tourist
sleeping cars(plus small berth
charge). Roundtrips are First
Class, good in Standard Pullmans as well (plus berth).
“Meals Select” save you
money, too—complete luncheons and dinners for-80¢ to
$1.25, breakfasts for 50¢ to 90¢.
Roy Webster, sheep and cattle
man of the Weatland section passed
through Nevada City Wednesday
with a large truck in which he had
a fine saddle horse. He was enroute
to Packer Lake in the Tahoe National Forest, where he has a large
number of stock on summer range,
ral
oO
‘—Subcribe for your Home Paper— {
The Nevada City Nugget.
FOR SALE
FOR SALE OR TRADE—For small
place in country (2 or 3 acres)
apartment house in Lake Merrit
district in Oakland, well located
and has 4-apartments of 3 rooms
each on corner lot. and in first
class condition—Address Box Y
Nevada City Nugget for information.
FOR SALE—1931 Nash like new
with a new car guarantee and
priced right.-211South School St.
Grass Valley. 2t
FOR SALE Fresh type writter ribbons for all popular makes of
typewritters. Call at the Nugget
Office or Phone 36 for information. Prices for Standard typewritters are 60 ceuts each.—465t
E. G. HINDS C0.
144 East Main St. Grass Valley
USED CARS ‘
George W. Walters, Mgr.
Largest selection in used car bargains in Nevada county—Satisfaction assured.
AUTO LOANS “
REFINANCING
WANTED TO TRADE—Seven room
house in good valley town, near
Bay, on lot 65 to 170, for Nevada
City property or vicinity, acreage
or house. Will assume _ incumbrance. Answer Box 66, Nugget Office. tf.
FRED M. MILLER
Consulting Engineer
CIVIL AND MINING ENGINEERING
REGISTERED CIVIL ENGINEER
LICENSED SURVEYOR
Hydraulies—tIrrigation—Surveys
Land Classification.
‘ ‘LAST OFFICIAL MAP OF
1 NEVADA COUNTY
Office at Residence, 262 Auburn
GRASS VALLEY
TREAT YOURSELF
TO THE
BEST
HAIR CUTTING
LADIES WORK
OUR SPECIALTY
. Larsen’s .
. BARBER SHOP .
.
=
.
.
.
103 Pine St. Nevada City
erherderiesfeientententeagente fete este stooge neretetetetotied
BOWMAN & BOWMAN
Barber Shop and Beauty Parlor
308% Broad Street
IT PAYS
to
LOOK WELL
Phone 376 For Appointments Southern Pacific
EES
per
Small Rib
derloin and Sirloin Cuts; Roasts of all kinds; Weinies
and Superfine Saurkraut
KEYSTONE MARKET
ALANAN & RICHARDS
Keystone
. Our Desire to please
OUR SPECIALTIES
Steak, Tender and Juicy; fine TenMarket
Phone!67
our customers