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Collection: Newspapers > Nevada City Nugget

July 5, 1935 (6 pages)

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< lt Sat ne Bees * Ve a ke he ie ie he le i le ee le ee le ke ac . THE NEVADA CITY NUGGET PAGE FIVE : ~ HOOVER (Cc ontinued from ° One)” nesburg, South Airicn, refused exclaimed to his compen: . ion: ‘“‘Mate, it is no use. If we ever . get a job we have-to go and stay) overnight in that place yrass Valley . so we can say we came from there.’’ . The former Breniitetit then launch. ed into his address of the Independ. ence Day celebration. We are here today to service of patriotism. perform aj Without par-. meéet to commemorate , the signing of the Declaration of Independence of The that great achievements from it should lift the tisanship we our country. and the which eourage of buman act flowed our spirits far above tangles of the day. The Declaration of PP EHOSHCE was not alone the casting off of a. foreign tyranny. It was the birth of a2 mighty nation. More than this it the rebirth of government the people after the eclipse by Dark Ages. It more than that. It was here that was sounded a new note in the the most resounding note of history—that of individual liberty. The pregnant! words of'that immortal second paragraph in the Declaration petition, for it was born faith our fathers held, was by the was even world— bear out of the out of the new reJand in which they lived: : se . that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness. That to secure these rights governments are instituted among men deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed..” RIGHTS OF MAN Revolutions of political . ence of nations had happened often! before in history, but never before had the ideal been promulgated that every man had rights solely from his} Creator, rights that even the gov. ernment could not _ infringe upon. . Herein was a double revolution—a . revolution against despotism whe. ther at home or abroad. When our forefathers set up the . government they embedded in_ its/ Constitution those inalienable rights. They built this Bill of Rights into a framework of self-government whose ehecks and balances safeguard this system of orderly individual ty. They insured the perpetuation of . that liberty by providing for ly change to growing civili. zation solely upon action of the peo; ple themselves. THE WHOLE WORLD ENRICHED . Down through tx century half this has From it have the spirit, the prise, and the the world the . liber. order. meet a and aj} aman whole concept of liberty . the been freed the minds, . enriched world. initiatice, the enter-} Wher-; system of incourage of men. ever in . andtrucks. beside . suring ~ WEBB MOTORS vane, LQ HAVE erie be. RAZINGBILL BEWARE BLACK © Webb. a show Atator company is Ford the Alpha Mr. Webb room for on Broad street. clares that the 1 headquarters is new Nevada City Ford the result of the expansion in population and business in this county. He expects to into the Mr. Webb, this. city. is three move new branch within a few days. when the completed, structuré in will tablishments, Ford esValley, and a third in have one in Grass another in Placerville, this city. Mr. Webb began his automotive career in the Ford factory working up from the lowest rung of the Ford . ladder, business and finally launehed ~ into for owners will give headquarters a welcome. INSURANCE PLANNED the warm new and grateful ! AGAINST WAGE LOSS, WASHINGTON, July 4:—A plan} for insuring workers against the . loss of wages because of.illness was} revealed yesterday to have been . drawn up for dent Roosevelt as a to his so. cial security program. eG There were definite indications from informed persons the report will recommend taking ¢ lost because of illness, . leave to further study a plan for in-! medical care. So strong are the views of physicians on the medical care issue that this is left to be} erecting automobiles . Stores ; who has, . been. in the automobile business . . singe a lad of fourteen years, with . the™exception of two years in the army during the world war, = dehimself in Sacramento. . gestion of Senator O'Mahoney, Demo. There is nothing about the Ford car} branch . . Secretary to classify lands of greater care of wages . but will . _ HOUSE APPROVES U.¢. WARNS TO WwW \SHINGTON, Ji July 4.—A new the before approval of the Senate Pub Commiitee. i Scnbicting interests in public} Saeed BERKELEY July 4.‘should detect . domain states, is with the lic Lands congress ! Mrs. 1! tans stalkiug toward any WIDOW SPIDER If you Latrodectus Macexposed The house approved feature, ve-! portion of your anatomy during this moving all limitations on the extent; Vacation season, reach for the nearof grazing districts unler the Tay, st flyswatter, club or whatnot, and . lor Grazing Act, was modified to set. let her have it. For she is none I'thhe limit of 142,000,000 acres. Tho other than the muchteared and present law limits districts to &0.-; dangerous “Black Widow”’ sehen , 090,000 acres. 'and she has.a-fondness for the hahbiComparatively smooth sailing was tations and retreats of man. predicted for the revised measure Mrs. Mactans is everywhere in with the exception of a single pivCalifornia, according to an admonii vision caluculated to return to the toly and iniormative bulletin issued . states all vacant. unappropriated. by the University of California. and unreserved tracts of 760 acres’ While her supposed . aggressiveness or less, which the interior departand the potency of her venom have ment fails to lease or inelude in the been considerably exaggerated, her grazing districts within two years of! bite is serious and demands ‘prompt the passage of the act. attention. While she is held indiOpposition from the interior -derectly responsible for’ thirteen repartment was expected to this pro-. corded deaths in California_ sinc« 1930, bite the known extremely vision, which Was added at the sugare rare. A turned from a visit to fatalities from her number crat of Wyoming. It was predicted . of the deaths recorded were of aged or truck that he cannot explain to a . this stipulation would speed the} persons, and were doubtless caused mechanic. Long years. of Ford ser-} leasing of such lands by the inter-. by complications. which were —agvice have made his knowledge of . ior départment. . gravated by the spider’s venom. . these cars more comprehensive than . Another change from the house we many mechanics. Nevada City. Ford . . bill would authorize the interior; Mr. and Mrs. Don Billick have reSouthern value for agricultural or mining . California. While down south the purposes than for grazing, withBillicks attended the San Diego Exdraw them from grazing districts) position. and open them for homestead entry ' . not to exceed 320 acres. The committee restored a_provihe will have charge of . the egal i sion of the present law intended to, WO'k affecting the sales and liquor prevent refusal to renew grazing ‘eS. permits where the action would imAll changes were pair security for loans made because !!mediately. Before his . of the permits. ment as chief of the sales vision, of finance, for , ment held a position several years. j Mugford, receiving $4,800 a’ . AL S AX HEAD in his finance department will receive $4,980 as the administrator. Pierce’s $5,000 and unchanged. SACR AMENTO, July 4.—-The S Bee says: California today . has a new sales tax administrator T. H. Mugtford of Sacramento. He was appointed late 3a c“ . ramento Kesling’s yesterday salary at $3,500 are tax made effective appointdiMugtord was assistant super_ intendent of accounts in the departhe had
year position, sales tax at Subscribe for The Nugget—NOw. . } determined in the future. . by the state board of equalization in . aa aes The changes the senate made in. 2 minor shakeup of its sales tax ad-} GuAnaNtuEs the Roosevelt social security pro-. ™nistrative forces. . ce eee oes gram present difficult issues for . As chief of the division of sales . congressional conferees to solve. pres ac ENG ROBSG, Peon aeROnrs . USED CARS One is the Clark amendment, to. Pixwell Pierce, who had been hold-. exempt private pension plans from . #8thet. vosition: 1h addition; wo Be . = ' the contributory old age pension. i?& Secretary of the board Pierce. . /With your MONEY BACK within . . program. The other is the Russell. Will remain as secretary. [. i three Days if dissatistied. . amendment to drop for two years Hay L. Riley, ne. board chairman, 33 Plymouth P.,D. Coach _..$49 3 the requirements states must match said. the san uieten for ther? epekeng, 32 Dodge 8 D. K. Coupe aeonD . the federal grants. for non-contribu-. Voted Unanimously by the board 131 Chevrolet Coact $295 tory assistance to the needy aged. members, is. to increase the. efficES : en o : siete The bill, which has passed both. ‘ency in the sales tax administration. ae Dodge bee A. Sedan = et . houses, is in conference to iron out “Pierce,” said Riley, ‘holding both . {;39 Ford Coach --$249 differences. The house conferees are. Positions,“ was burdened down with . 29: Dodge D. A. Coupe e195) reported to be opposing both amend-. detail.” j i : Heute . a ' ee While the board. was making that E. A. BOYD CO. dividual liberty has been sustained . Gheneo it Also. Mamed (RTA nois. Kew ak Gane ES Sete mankind has been. better clothed, . A AN SAWS PME SSIES Se URTAONRHI UCR MRS Ie EE ~~ . ling, the assistant secretary of the. }}16th & K Sacramento 18th & K better fed, better housed, has, had. the invisible sentinel which guards. board since the first of the vear, as M 2890 C 1616 } more leisure. Above all, men and! the door of every home from the in-. chief tax counsel. In this position, women have had more self respect. . They have been more generous and. of finer spirit. The sons of America have given . their lives on a hundred battlefields . to hold these liberties. In our gen-. eration came the great world clash} when the arms. of democraci were . victorious over the legions of des-. potism. The sons. of America again . gave their lives. thatliberty and] demoeracy might live. The people of the defaated nations hastened in high hopes to adopt: this system of . Liberty. Then came the furies of political instability, of debts, inflation and speculation, of deeply-stir. red hates, and of militant national-. ism. These furies exacted final pay-' ment for the terrible destruction of the war by a plunge of the world in-. to the great depression with all its miseries and want. LIBERTY UNDER ATTACK From these strains liberty is under attack over the entire world. It has already fallen in countries holding five hundred million of human beings. Losing confidence in themselves whole nations have surrendered their liberties to dictators. It is a time of discouragement and disillusion in which with a sort of slave psychology men would rather be safe than free. And it has turned out they are not safe. Under despotism theirs is a life of fear and coercion. There is no security of life or property. Speech and opinion, radios, universities, and the press are strangled. EVEN IN AMERICA Even in America, where first blazed brightest and by glow shed light on all the world, it is now questioned and attacked from both home and abroad. Our safety from these attacks upon American principles and American institutions lies in holding fast to the fundamentals of the great Constitutional charter of our liberties. That is no more legalistic parchment. It is an immortal expression of the -spirit of men who would be forever free. It is liberty its . vasion of coercion, in spirit as . have . tion of . tyranny, and to . zation 'It is our high duty to hold bright the intimidation, and . should be ex tter fear. Today it pounded well as in le in every and at list of daily school evory. fireside. Its great freedoms should be a thought, third only the part of our to the Commandments and the’Mount. fluctuating Ten Sermon on There are inequities and injustices‘even undei and There liberty democracy. are many who suffer. Humanity is ‘not perfect. redemption of those who the over all the suffer and eure of injustice their onlv hope in the preserva liberties. TO FUNDAMENTALS eactionary to hold oppose We these FAST not 1 HOLD Et. i8 to these fast fundamentals, to support liberty. life is different in The realize that from 1776. ment must always be expanded to rethe strong and protect the weak. That is the preservation of liberty itself. These are times for genuine progressive action—that we recover prosperity and that we cure the better distribution among all the people of the abundance strain seBut . 1935 . functions of govern. which has been the product of our} system of liberty. But there are things that must be permanent if we would attain these purposes. The first of these is liberty. In this crisis of liberty and this darkening eclipse of human freedom through the world, America has today a transcendent mission to civilifar beyond our own safety. light of individual liberty. From that light alone can come the material and spiritual redemption of’ mankind. That is an obligation to our children and our obligation to humanity. The, Fourth of July, amid a threatened world should bring rededication to the proposition that the freedom won for men shall not be dimmed in America, nor shall this light to the world be extingusied. Subscribe for The Nugget—NOW. ‘Rainbow Gardens ‘thee Wolo’ THE LADS DIRECT FROM THE CASINO AT THE WORLIYS FAIR .. THE ORCHESTRA THAT MADE THE COLLEGE INN FAMOUS .. BEARD . ON THE PABST BLUE =) ASTHMA and SUMMER COLDS are unnecessary. Complete relief only $1.00 Postpaid. Nothing else to buy. Over 40,000 HOLFORD’S WONDER INHALERS sold last year alone. Mail $1.00 today for full season’s relief to THE DANDEE CO., 14 North Sixth St., MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA, or write for Free Booklet. — Mr. ‘son, Brie . Fourth Brian K Cit vada “Why ‘“‘Ah lost mah chickens.’ “Don't roost.” to ‘‘Dat’s went.”’ and Mrs. with Harry and . GIRL s Cc CELEBRATE in, of Bakersfield spent the} Mr. Krough’sbrother,}. The rough and Ne-. Vera, Vv. . FOURTS Krough 490 girls at Lake San Franmore than family. of summer camp for cisco area and Sacramento Valthe Fourth of July yesterday ‘by staging — bay Mose?” le organizations, celebrated so blue, . . ! home . a worry—chickens go ‘water carnival. All the camps at the sake co-opde trouble, boss, they has. erated. The lake is @ecorated with Japanese lanterns. ; popu ~~ 318 BROAD STREET Off the Face Summer Wave It Holds! Exclusive Beauty A Reconditioning, Revitalizing Oil Permanent Come to the Exclusive for this newest of summer waves. It’s. permanent that holds its beauty in the most wilting weather and it’ cleverly designed to be equally attractive with gay off-the-face hats or with floppy straws. Our price includes a lovely wave for everyone in ever FREDERIC WAVE EUGENE WAVE . xclusive Beauty SI The appearance, texture, ability of four grades of paint are clearly revealed in our test, and the buyer is able to determine which grade is best suited to his purposes. : We invite your inspection. Everybody is repairing and painting. Get in line with Higgin’s Paint. THE Early Hom Sea 7 ‘ Born 1860-11 Linn Coualy, to. Genennc PersHinG He reached the age at which one seeks To slow up or retire; To leave rude tasks to younger men And loaf while they perspire, he marched forth with fearless tread To work and fight and win, instead. A. M.-C, But the lar Higgin’s Paint which we invite you to inspect. durability and depend-. We have made a test demonstration of BUILDERY’ HOUSE Fred Conner, Manager 315 SPRING STREET. PHONE 2: SUPPLY wv Wer RE SORRY, SIR, Every ROOM Why don’t you TELEPHONE AHEAD ? A TELEPHONE CALL to hotel or resort will sive the management every opportunity to bave your H Ow much inconvenience and travel expense that saves! accommodations ready and waiting for you. It is easy to call ahead and the cost is smali. ER &> THE PACIFIC TELEPHONE AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY PHONE 166 Shop $ y style—Priced at $3.50 and $5.00. For Appointment Phone Grass Valley 60 215 W. Main—Grass Valley