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

* 4 — The Nevada City Nugget, Friday, July 21,1950
Sea nl
Mrs. Beatrige Butcher, So
CT. ab Views
ciety Reporter, Phone 486
Joan Sheldon and Sam
Beverage Exchange Vows
In Home Ceremony
At a candlelight ceremony at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. C. C.
Gildersleeve, Broadview Heights,
Miss’ Joan’ Sheldon-and-Sam.Bev-.;
erage were married Sunday afternoon.
Relatives of the couple comprised the ‘wedding party which
assembled in the gladioli setting
of the Gildersleeve living room.
Rev. Frank Buck, pastor of Emmanuel Episcopal church, Grass
Valley, officiated at the ceremony.
The bride wore a white organdy gown over pink and wore an
abbreviated veil. Her bouquet
was centered with a white orchid,
aeccenting gardenias, pink rosebuds and bouvardia.
Mrs. Andrew Madsen, sister of .
the bride, was matron of honor. .
“She wore a summer frock of blue .
and white, heightened by a cor-.
sage of gardenias. See .
The groom was attended by his .
brother-in-law, Harold Scribner,
Nevada City. .
The bride was given in mar-.
riage by her step-father, C. C.
Gildersleeve.
The mother of the hride wore .
an aqua jersey gown and a gardenia_ corsage. Mrs. Beverage, .
mother of the groom, wore a
sheer summer print with a gardenia’ corsage.
The bride was graduated from
Nevada City high school with the
class of 1949 and attended the.
University of Nevada. .
The groom is a member of the .
1948 graduation class of: Nevada .
City high school where he was .
prominent in athletics.
i}
.
GOOD NEWS FOR OPIE
Miss Diane Butcher will return .
to Nevada City next Tuesday, .
after attending six weeks of a/.
summer school session at the
Presentation convent, San -Francisco. She is staying with Supervisor and Mrs. Don Fazackerley
of San Francisco, relatives of her
. with
. Peony Expert Visit at
John Longmier Home
. Mr: and Mrs. John Longmier
. of Alta Hill had guests. from
. Mount Prescott,” 1, whom all
garden enthusiasts would enjoy
meeting. :
. wr. and Mrs. Joseph A. Standenbaur and their daughters, E]linor and Ruth, left Mt. Prescott, .
' which is fourteen miles from Chicago, just three weeks ago to
tour the west.
The Standenbaurs have a 12acre farm and raize peonies for
the market. The peony is the only
cut flower that can be stored in
cold storage for three or four
months in the bud stage, placed
in water when taken out and
burst into full bloom.
The peony likes an open garden away from hedges, buildings '
and trees. They like the sun but .
also need a cold winter and do
not require much water. It is difficult: to grow the peony in the
southern part. of California. .
The peony should be taken up.
. and divided every ten years ‘so.
the plant will develop new vigor .
in the stems. They should be
planted in September or October .
the soil two inches above
the eye. There should be three .
to five eye divisions. If they are .
planted too deep they will not
bloom. .
The side bud should be’ re. moved before they bloom so the,
flower will be larger. The peony .
ranks high for shows of cut flow.
ers and is excellent for commer.
cial purposes. .
Always leave three or = four
stems on each bush so as to preserve the strength of the add
while in bloom.
The ‘peony is an ancient Chinese plant and seen in most Chi.
. nese and Japanese gardens. It
was first cultivated in Europe in
1880 and later brought to America. There are two types grown,
the herbaceous, which grows to
three feet and the tree peony,
which grows to six feet.
. OUTDOOR SUPPER
Miss Helen Jones Wed
‘In Tahoe Ceremony
The lovely ‘garden of Judge
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Stevens . Nevada City Garden Club
Entertain at Garden Dinner , Meets in Willow Valley
. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Stevens . Nevada City Garden club met
McCieary, sloping to the waters} entertained her two sisters and last week at the home of Mrs.
oO f
Miss Helen Frances Jones, formerly. of Nevada City, and Thomas B. Houston, Woodland. Imme.
diate members of the family at-.
tenaed tne ceremony which was.
held Saturday.
The bride is .the daughter of
Judge and Mrs. George -L. Jones
of Nevada City. A native of the
city she attended “Nevada~-City
elementary and-high schools ana
was graduated from Stanford
university. She received a librarian’s certificate from the University of California, and for the
past few years has been engaged
in library work at Letterman
general hospital, San Francisco.
The groom is the son oi Mrs. .
H. W. Houston and the late Dr.
Houston of Good Hope, Ill. He
received’a degree from Columbia
university and is a member of
the faculty of Woodland high
school.
Lake Tahoe’on the Nevada}
shoreline, was the impressive set.
ting for the simple wedding of"
.
den of their neighbor, Mrs. Bea. trice Butcher, where Col,
. Valley, at the home,.of Mr. and
. Mrs. Fred Anderson.
Mrs. Stevens’ sister}; Mrs. Kay.
. O'Connell, is visiting from Grand
. Island, Nebr. Mr. and Mrs. John
R: Stussy“have recently bought’a
. home in Colma, near San Francisco. Her brother-in-law, Stussy,
. a recently retired naval lieuten. ant, spent a day fishing with Col.
. John Shannonhouse . dnd. came
. back with the limit.
. CELIOS IMPROVE
. Mrs. Kathryn Celio has been in
; Nevada €ity. this past week but
will return to the-bedside of her
. son and daughter-in-law, Col. and
. Mrs. Gove Celio, at Letterman
. Eustis, Fla., visited with Mr. and
. general hospital, San Francisco.
Both the colonel-and his wife are
improving. Mrs. Celio’s father,
Rev. J. Hughes, a Presbyterian
. minister of New Jersey, has de. livered a sermon at the chapel of
the San. Francisco Présidio on
. each of the last two Sundays.
Home Department: Picnic
At Hilliard’s Wednesday
Annual Home Department picnic will be held Wednesday in
the lovely gardens of Mrs. ‘Virginia Hilliard.
A pot-luck luncneon is planned NEW YORK CONVENTION
; with swimming to follow as part . }
Mrs. Nancy Kilker, director of
Transportation will be availa.
ble for those wishing to attend .
at 1U a.m. on Broad street. .
of the adtcrnoon’s program.
left for New York Tuesday to aitend a‘ convention. Mrs. Kilker
will attend, lectures and various
classes. and »plans to bring home
WO PLACE LIKE CALIFORNIA
» . ideas. She will* be away for a
Mr. and Mrs. L. H. Snobble of month.
many new dance routines and
brothers-in-law last weekend at; O. F. Bettcher on
a pot-luck dinner held in the gar-. Valley road.
.
.
the Starlet School of the. Dance, .
the Willow
Refreshments were served on
and the lawn after. the business meetMrs. L. *D. Crain were also pres. ing. The co-hostesses were Mrs.
ent and also a swimming party! Arthur Hoge and Mrs. Frances
was held on Osborne hill, Grass! Burton.
Mrs. Lester,Kyler won the bean
guessing game taking home a
plastic stocking dryer.
Fifteen members were present
to enjoy the outdoor meeting.
SUNDAY IN THE PARK
Mr. and Mrs. Fred, Tourtelotte
and Mr. and Mrs. O. F. Bettcher
packed a lunch basket Sunday
and enjoyed a picnic dinner at
Memorial park, Grass Valley, before attending the softball game
played between the Lions clubs
of Nevada City and Grass Valley.
The game was called in the late
innings with the score 23 to 23,
when darkness overtook the two
teams. A collection was taken to
help. sponsor the fishing pond to
be located in the park for use of
voungsters of the county. Perch
and
planted in the pond.
. a Answers to
TEST YOUR I. Q.
1. No. Although he adopted the
letter S, with a period, as a middle
initial.
2. Baghdad. _
3. In 1912 Josh Devore of the
New York Giants robbed four during the ninth inning.
4. An American named. Hunt
in 1849.
5. President Tyler,
wives.
by two
trout are planned ‘to hej
'Mrs. Geary Feagans on
Extensive Vacation Trip
Mrs. Geary Feagans returned
to her home in Nevada City re1 cently after three weeks of vacationing which started -when her
'son and his wife, Mr. and Mrs.
Raymond Feagans, Bremerton,
Wash., drove to Nevada City to
have Mrs. Feagans accompany
them on a trip to Yellowstone
national park.
They motored from there to
Metaline Falls, Wash., where her
daughter, Mrs. Dorothy Shellenberger, lives. Next stop was Nelgon; B.--G.,--where .the.Fourth.of
July was enjoyed.
Mrs. Feagans left Wednesday
to Visit her husband who is. employed in Martinez and living in
a government housing project
while employed.
Before returning home for the
fall she will visit her 89-year-old
father and her brothers and their
families is Long Beach.
JoAnn Waechter and
Robert Baker Announce
. Mr. and Mrs. J.B. Waechter
iof ‘Nevada City announced the
engagement of their daughter, Jo
Ann Waechter to Robert Baker,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Marc Baker
of Niven Lane, Nevada City.
Miss Waechter was a member
of the June graduating class of
Nevada City high school and was
outstanding in journalism having
been chosen to attend a journalism conference in San Francisco
this spring.
Baker was a member of the
1949 graduating class of Nevada
City high school. He is employed
at the Yuba River lumber company sawmill.
month.
'Wirs. Vietor Buck here while on
a tour of the west. They were
neighbors in Ionia, Mich.
. CHIT AND CHATTER SWIM
. The Chit and Chatter club met
last week ,at the home of Mrs.
Virginia Hilliard for luncheon. A
swimming party followed their
regular business meeting.
TO THE BIG CITY
Gene Seeburg will travel to
Los Angeles this week to’ visit
Wedding plans are set for next
2) >
v
married sister’s family. Miss Jean
Collins, also a member of that; Mr. and Mrs. Ted Buhl of Alta
. his father.
family, will be a house guest of.
Miss Butcher’s for the remainder
of school vacation.
WAF VISITING AT HOME
Miss Rosemarie Day, who enlisted in the Women’s Air Force
last November, following graduation from Nevada City high
school has been visiting her parents in North Bloomfield. Miss
Day started her training in IIlinois, and.completed it in Texas.
She will. now be stationed at the
Suisin air field near Fairfield.
She is a private first class.
14 YEARS YOUNG
Bradley Crase had his 14th anniversary celebrated by 16 of his
relatives including the James
McClish, William Crase, William
Earl Lane families and his sister,
and brother-in-law, Diane and
Floyd Thomas Saturday evening
at Memorial park in Grass Valley. A delicious picnic supper
was served. The cake had a baseball and bat motif formed from
the icing.
IN SURGERY
Mrs. Ed Pollard left Sutter hospital in. Sacramento, where she
underwent surgery on her eyes.
She -will remain with a nephew
in the capital until Sunday, when
she will return to her home on
the Tahoe-Ukiah highway.
CAMPING
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Elliott
and their two children, Bobby
and Barbara, returned from four
days of camping at Monte Rio.
“They greatly enjoyed swimming
in the Russian river and their
«scamping experiences.
RECUPERATING
Mrs. Fanny Eden*ts home from
her recent stay in the hospital,
and is reported to be recovering.
RECONNOITERING
Mrs. Byron Brock has as her
house guest for a few days, Mrs.
Ethel Doane of Oakland.
~ EXPECTING CALL
Mrs. Kate Wasley is expecting
‘to be called to the bedside of her
‘sister, Mrs. Henrietta Morgensen
eof Oakland, who is seriously ill.
SON VISITS e
Mrs. Gertrude Zollars had. her
son home for the weekend. Clay. ton Zollars lives in Oakland.
Hill invited twenty of their relatives and friends to an outdoor
supper party recently in honor of
the birthday of Arthur Buhl of
Nevada City, brother of Ted, and
the anniversary of their friends,
Mr. and Mrs. R. H.™%.lmore. Arthur Buhl’s son came from Fresno to be with his dad for the occasion.
SUNSHINERS EXPECTED
Mr. and Mrs. Calvin’ Frazier
and their two daughters, Treva,
12, and Linda Lou, 7, are expected soon from Portales, N. M. Mrs.
Frazier is the sister of Gladys and
Waechter families live across the
Flat.
NINTH BIRTHDAY
Barbara, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Ronald Wulf, celebrated her
ninth birthday anniversary with
a party at her parents’ home on
Tuesday. A heart-shaped birthday cake and ‘ice cream were
served and games were played.
Attending ‘tthe party were ‘Susan
Shaw, Mardell .Peard, Elizabeth
Hozack, Carol Mathis and Tommy Wulf.
THE GIRL FROM UTAH
Mrs. Ruth Irish, of Irish Acres,
Grass Valley, has been entertaining her sister, Mrs. S. J. Snow, of
Logan, Utah. Elliott and Gordon
Snow, her teen-age nephews, are
motoring westward via Bryce
Canyon and Yosemite national
parks and will spend a few days
here before returning.with their
mother to Utah.
EE ARE a i
Leona Waechter who are mar-,
ried to twin brothers. The two)
road from each other in Indian .
VISITING IN RENO
. Susan, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Alvin S. Trivelpiece, is vis. iting with her grandmother in
Reno, Nev., this week.
“STRICTLY FRESH
. A police that he had no idea
when or how a bullet entered his
' negk and came out beside his left
ear. His testimony aided the law
like a “hole in the head.”
s s *
. A steak, when cooked on the
, motor block of a car, will be tasty
. and tender at the end of a 100. mile drive, reports a gas-powered:
gourmet in St. Louis, Mo. We sus~
pect that he prefers “‘Model T”’:
Bones.”
. It is said that the newborn baby
needs a thousand things. An itemized list might well be:
2 safety pins
998 diapers
* * *
A welding firm in Ontario, Can.,
refused to sell a barrel to a dareaevil who wished to plunge over
the famed Niagara Falls, encased
in steel. Looks like the publicity
hound found himself over a barrel
instead of inside one.
Paul Gave America Christianity
PAvL's journey into Europe
from Asia, prompted by a
vision, was the vital beginning of
the organized movement of Christianity. We owe the eventual
spread of Christianity to America
‘to Paul’s zealous obedience to that
man of Macedonia, who appeared
in Paul’s dreams, saying, “Come
over into Macedonia and help
It is a pity that Paul is not here
in this country today to champion
the cause he pioneered. Without
a doubt, he would have weighed
the Gospel against all forces of
modern civilization and acknowledged -it-:as the only hope of a
world torn by fear, violence and
uncertainty.
It is certain that Paul, founder
» of Christianity, would have hurled
the question, “What are you doing
to send and spread the gospel to
others?”: at our modern-day midcentury civilization.
There are still dark places in
the world that can only be enlightened by missionaries who display the enterprise that won Paul
his success and fame. : Like the
man of Macedonia, truth-hungry
peoples abroad are uttering the
cry, “Come. over and help us.”
Those of us who doubt that: their
need is pressing are surely unobservant and unacquainted with the
world’s realities,
Paul’s crossing
which resulted in the Epistles,
should remain a constant example
of what can be achieved as a
servant of the Master. And for
those who would be truly prepared to shoulder the trying re‘sponsibilities of a missionary, the
most effective training course is a
thorough reading of the Acts and
Paul’s Epistles. ;
They contain some of the richest
and most revealing pages in Paul’s
life, a story of sacrifice and loving
toil, for which we are even now
grateful.
SAN FRANCISCO cabby told.
into Europe, }-.
All Ladies’ WHITE SANDALS
$2.99
. Broken Sizes
T SHIRTS
Men’s String Knit
MARK TWAIN
MEN’S WHITE DRESS SHIRTS
Sizes 1414 to 1714
ALL CHILDREN’S KEDETTES
Boys and Girls
‘$1.95
Boys’ String Knit
$1.39
T SHIRTS
Sizes 2 to 8
y%
CHILDREN’S CREPE PAJAMAS
$1.49 6 to 1
ALL CHILDREN’S SUN SUITS
938° 1.19 1.39
REDUCED
8 Months, 2 to 6X
RAYON
==YARDAGE
PRINTED WASHABLE
69° 5.01
BUTCHER LINEN
Plain Colors
69¢ Yard
LADIES’ SLIPS
All. Nylon
Munsingwear
Jersey
$4.95
AVONDALE CHAMBRAY _. .-:
Plain and Striped
WDE vera
Novak
DEPARTMENT
127 Broad Street
ALL OVER EMBROIDERY
$1.25 $1.49 ..
} Pink and Yellow
S TORE
Nevada City
a