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Collection: Newspapers > Nevada City Nugget

July 24, 1944 (4 pages)

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MONDAY, JULY 24, ee a . RESEARCH PLAN . g FOR POSTWAR RECOVERY SAN FRANCISCO, July 24—pog:_. . war research and Planning activities of trade assoctations, foundations, professional POWDER BLAST a RAKES CITY 44 YEARS AGO E,W. Kend.ick Buys. Ice Plant Pronerty ae E, W. Kendrick who has held.a . lease on the Nevada: City Ice plant. the past six years, has purchased the ice plant and two apartment homie — from Mrs. Emma Sauvee. The local. ice plant has been in the Sauveei ‘ : an family two generations, ‘the late ee notes Actes ire lors aman om ° . Fred Sauvee being a son of the firsi © Nevada City and. retired business owner. andi waa in the waigios = 'man; reminded by the huge explos-! : : ¥ FRAGRANT Olt 49c VANISHING CREAM 59¢ THESE Ane Fenall prooucrs WE ALSO CARRY: . SKOL, GABYS, . JERGENS, NORWICH. universities Y grou cea es : ; seu Port Chi ; of Fred Sauvee five years before Telated ageni se i . ‘ ot Pet masitioes Bt Port fe takeing a lease on the property and ; ee Sencles are set forth in deContra Costa County, recalled that). no stranger to the business peoIn a new publication just issued ti was just 40 years.ago on July . a oe a Pa. sara ee Pe ht Department of the . 19th, that a power magazine. near! * eee California State Chamber of ¢ A : : h Sduvee home: an a rental property . eka of Com-. the Reward mine, just outside ‘ ". and will. continue to. feside ie kis fae city, went up in-a terrific detonation. . dw Sew bc ietevemeees mew PERE re oe a JANS . and other Sun-Tan Oils and Lotions iR. E. HARRIS THE REXALL DRUG STORE Phone 100 —_—~¢—— Chamber of Commerce OFFICK (IN CITY HALL PHONE 575 . 4, \ pleaded guilty and. asked for proba. ‘Japan. ithe Japanese because of its resistThe new Publication constitutes . the second of a series of three, the first of which dealt with’ the activit. ies of the chambers of commerce and! other civic and commercial organizations. The third of the series wil] deal with governmental agencies, local, state, western, and national. These surveys, intended to provide a central clearing point for information concerning postwar research and Planning activities of various agencies, are being made available business firms, commercial izations, to organwar problems. They are prepared under Sponsorship of the Research and civic and community . : . STOUDs engaged in working on postand Planning Section of the Chamber’s Committee on Postwar Economics. TWO WHO FAILED TO PROVIDE ARE ARRAIGNED Grady Eades, arraigned Friday in the superior court, on a charge of failure to provide for his family, tion. Judge George L. Jones instructed Probation Officer A. W.: McGagin to report on July 28th. Wayne Frost, who had pleaded guilty to the same offense, was sentenced to a year in the county jail, with eleven months of sentence suspended. It developed that Frost was earning $10 a day and Eades 95 a week when they were arrested for nonsupport. Before the war, Port Orford cedar was purchased in large quantities by ance to the wood boring insects of HE WANTS FOURTH CUP OF COFFEE What will happen to the United Statés, when in the course of -human events Mr. Roosevelt departs this world? PRISONERS AID RELIEVES CAMPS. OF BOREDOM — -ombat action, intrepid commando raids, and deadly monotonous prison camp life with terse but dramatic statements. s “At Dunquerque, we had had three weeks of continuous and furiows fighting,” he recounted.“Then we Legg states that thgre were 6 122 tons of giant powder in the powder} house and though the explosion was . a good half mile from the business . section practically every plate glass . window and most of the residence’ windows were broken. Many chim-, neys were toppled over and the roofs.: of some homes, directly in path of. the blast were blown away. oy The magazine belonged to the: Turner Hardware ‘Company. *Remarkable from this latter day point of view, Legg stated, was the fact that the company was never sued for damages. The people accepted the catastrophe as “just one of those things.” G. V. Red Cross ‘Donates 1500 Garments To Destitute More than 1,500 . hundred garments in 12 large cases were shipped last week by the Grass Valley Red Cross Disaster Emergency Commiitee to New York, where clothing will be bailed and dispatched ‘by the home on Nevada street. He is a nas tive of this city where he grew io manhood and attended the schools. re frs. Emma Sauvee, widow of the late Fred Sauvee, has purchased a home on Berryman Lane in ‘Grass Valley. Her sister, Mrs. Provine ¢ame mn from Veto early tha past week * and assisted in moving household. effects to Grass Valley. Mrs, Celia Clemo mother of Mrs. ‘\Previne and (Mrs. Sauvee, and sister, Miss Bernice Clemo and Miss Lile Clemo, reside with the latter. ! local ~ ‘ Council of the Associated: (Sportsmen, a resolution of tremendous imFriends of Belgium and other organizations to go into Europe with Amerilzan armies of liberation. . ; had to wait on the beach for two days, exposed constantly to strafing hy the Germans. We finally were evacuated in small coastal vessels, SAIN FRANCISCO, July 24.—Five years ago the names Dunquerque, Kassel, St. Nazaire, were simply ‘geographical designations to 22 year old Stuart Chant. : j *Ren.” ‘Today they bring memories death; destruction, and “Nazi pth sulted in destruction of the drydock, W245) que and again in the famous raid a‘ ” GOs att, & ( 2) k ‘ St. Nazaire, where he was taken ca0po! wack Golde riated fivé’as a member of the demolition ; fete second largest drydock: And near i Kassel in central Germany, he spent 19 weary months under the eyes .of the Nazis in prisoner of war camps. In San Francisco on a lecture tour for the British Army, Lieut. Chant ed the work of War Prisoners. Aid out the nation, as vitally ‘important to the welfare of internees. highlighted four years of intensive “Boredom is the worst enemy one has to fight in prison camp,” he. declared. “Life would have been very miserable without . the recreational and educational supplies provided by Groteries, Fruit and . NEVADA CITY, PHONE sos ‘PALACE the cold, wet days of winter. DO IT NOW e PAY De You cannot rush major repair work of any kind today, This is especially true in the heating equipment field. right now, the wise thing to do is to look over your Rea equipment. Does it need a major overhauling or extensive fepair? Is it worn-out and needs replacement? . ‘Conserve fuel this winter by having’this work done now.. . the Special Terms now in effect. For either major repairs or replacement with new heating equipment, you have the work done now but..monthly payments need not begin until November Ist. Remember also, that these same easy terms apply on Home Insulation. Fhe new lightweight insulation materials are easily installed and will help keep
your home cooler during hot summer .and Repair..Replace..Insulate for Comfort, Health and Beowomy, 2 e G--2EPACIFIC GAS AND ELECTRIC COMPANY ‘War Prisoners Aid. This service contributed in large extent to ‘the high morale of the prisoners. “Many officers and men enroll in regular ‘courses of study under direction of War Prisoners Aid, and a number of them quality for degrees while in camp;’’ aes ye In addition ‘to outlining educa: tional plans, War Prisoners Aid provides books, athletic equipment, and musical instruments for internees. Neutral representatives of the organization are permitted by international agreement to, visit prison {camps of belligerents. } SAKIMURA WHO HAS DISAPPEARED CHUNGKING, July 24—Information from Stockholm and Berlin confirms that Sigeki Sakimura is forced to return to Germany after his . dramatic ‘declaration of breaking off relations with the Japanese government. Sakimura was sent*to Berlin in 194% as attache to the Japanese embassy to study German heavy. industry. He married a Dutth girl there. In Autumn 1943 Sakimura came to the conclusion that United Nations are sure to win the war. Af¢er sending away his wife, he left ‘ LATER i 4 warmer doring for Sweden by plane and registered himself as a political refugee, obtaining financial and material help from Swedish academic and political refugees. commtitees. Sakimura > @Xxpressed his intention to write a book disclosing Japanese aggressive plans. -. Japanese authorities got wind of this affair and seized some of his friends in Germany as hostages. Some of them were sent to Stockholm to persuade him -and. the gSestapo extorted a Jetter from his wife imploring him to return. Lacking courage to’ face consequences he returned to Ger-} many with four Jap ‘officials early in. June. Since then no more has been heard’ of Sakimura. Light of different colors travels at different speeds in matter but at The St. Nazaire raid, he said, fm a veteran British commando, escap° 4 the saving of a millions tons pa his life as a prisoner of. war, he cit-' , Association, and the American Board Mrs. Paul Jenks and members of Jher committee collected, mended and prepared: this clothing. A room at ipr each pam patked with hundreds of; the Grant School was set aside tor; » the storage of the graments. The Gras& Valley Laundry gave a free cleaning service. The women of the Pline. For Lieut. Chant, now 27 ana ‘© Killing of hundreds of Germans, A™erican Legion Auxiliary and oth-' Washed an ironed the clothing. ‘The committee will ‘continue to collect used clothing and . shoes, even though in need of reDairs. . . Lieut.Quaid. Hufband Of . Nevada City Girl, Missing . ‘Following the receipt of a mess,@r workers also of the YMCA which is Supported by age from the .War Department, statcontributions to war chests throughing that her husband, Lieut. Joh: “A. Quaid of the 508th Air Borne InPlentey was missing in France, Mrs. "Quaid, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Ray Worthley of this city. went to Reno, ‘Mr. and Mrs. George Hardman. ‘Ray Worthley. yesterday stated that Lieut. Quaid’s Paratrooper Squadron spearheaded the beach attack in Normandy. The family; he stated, hopes that Lieut. Quaid either found refuge among the French People, or is a prisoner of war, Gas Yield North of Tehachapi 70 Pct. of State SAN FRANCISCO, July 24—w.Northern and Central California counties Produced more than 70 per cent of the state’s 1943. output of natural as, the state division of mines reported. today. _ A total of 326,948,922 M. cubie feet out “of the state’s total of 443,219,848 M cubic feet came from gas wells located in Contra Costa; Fresno, Humboldt, Kern, Kings, Madera, Mendocino, Sacramento, San Joaquin, Solana, Stansllaus, Sutter, Thlare and Yolo counties. Bo og The central and northern part of cent of the state's total output of petroleum, aggregating 284,145,702 barrels in 1943, bu it increased its Production .27 per cent dver 1942 compared to an increase of less than. one per cent from Southern California wells, the division's tabulation showed. sg Medical Assn. Okeys Langley Porter Clinic SAIN FRANCISCO, July 24—Langfey Porter Clinic on the San Francisco campus of the. Uniyersity of (California: has been approved as a training institution for residents in psychiatry, according to word just received. : Approval has been grarited by the Council on Medical Education and Hospitals of the American Medical of Psychiatry and Neurology con‘curs, it was disclosed by Dr. Karl M. Gowman professor of psychiatry -in of California, and director of Langley Porter Clinic. i ee Formal recognition of a new -hospital ag a training center for psychi-. atrists ‘is @nly siven after it has been in operation for one year and Langley Porter Clinic Will put’ in on to be with her husband's’ parents” the state accoutted for only 46 per. Is the Medical School. of the University . } has met certain standatds set by the } AMA. The national recognition of}. ,Portance to sportsmen was pro : by the Chico Rod and Gun Club, They, . gist’ of it follows: i . “Urge that all sportsmen oppose any further authorization or oppre jations “for engineering surve ‘re-surveys on our inland wate ! unless such surveys provide for equ: , Tepresentation ‘by aquatic bielog j ,and other scientific services tai: ing to fish and wildlife, to’assu: ‘protection of all resources invo and to-insure—from’ a broad : standpoint, that both the sete land survey engineers. ibe. on eq footing,’’ ; ete A study of the Central Valley Project reveals that Shasta Dam, wh produced Shasta Lake, and ‘Dam, which produced>” Full ‘Lake, while mighty miracles of; m (ingenuity are as well mighty ;mMents to mans’ carelessness, It oe . Surprise Yathers who hope. to in either of the two lakes to’ k that, while swimming will be per ted, there will be long Periods. ‘dt will be necessary to ; Way over hunrreds of feet. and detritus to reach the lwater. 1 will. disappoint fans to know that they’ build an expensive: floatir service their’ crafts, for the son. Fishermen may teeth over the fact, that tremendous fluctuation of level, here will be practically for fish in the lakes, When the drops th,e plants that have be establish themselves’ die, nymphs, larvae, crustac and minnows Which use #8 @ haven of refuge an srounds. Did you ever see big fi inshore in the» evening «to There won't be any { : the big fish, if any, ean f. two lakes. Foragé fish : ant numbers, due to breediig Places, and . ar Biologists sadly shake and point out that onl Portion of the lakes Why? Because the weren't in there fighti subject first came up, . Club‘s proposal again ber it. And let's not have™ a fe ae " [thie same speed in a vaeusm.