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Collection: Newspapers > Nevada City Nugget

July 7, 1939 (6 pages)

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NEVADA CITY NUGGF.T FRIDAY, JULY 7, 1939. Nevada City Nugget 805 Broad Street. Phone 36. THE POCKETBOOK A Legal Newspaper, as defined by siatute. Printed and Published of KNOWLEDGE Tbs . at Nevada City. : HM ULBETR ~~ =. . Béttor-and Publisher Published Semi-Weekly, Monday and Friday at Nevada City. California, and entered as mail matter of the second class in the postoffice at Nevada City, under Act of Congress, March 3, 1879. me SUBSCRIPTION. RATES One year (In Advance) ....20...00..0.000002. $2.50 TO PRODUCE ! MONTHLY BY THE AVERAGE AMERICAN What Is The Secret? . ; HALF Any one who makes it his habit to visit our historic foot$346.65, WOULD 86 REQUIRED. THE AMOUNT OF LIGHT USED FAMILY WITH ELECTRICITY, MORE THAN 4 TON OF CANDLES, COSTING hills is struck by the number of sturdy old-timers who go about their business as active and spry as youngsters. In a note on the subject, Frank W. Trower asks a few questions, makes a suggestion or two, and cites some examples of stout-hearted gentlemen who refuse to grow old. What is there about living in the Mother Lode region of California that makes for longevity? . recently attended a meeting of lumbermen, held under the auspices of Central Valley Hoo-Hoo Club at Camp Sunshine, near Sonora, the county seat of Tuolumne County. The speaker was George P. Morgan, who told most interesting. stories of the early history and romance, of mining days in the southern end of the Lode. He has been head of the County Board of Education for 53 years, and is now 80 years old. Mr. Morgan is a sturdy six-footer and talked easily in a clear IN AGRICULTURE HAS LED THE PATENT OFFICE TO GRANT PATENTS ON NEW DEVELOPMENTS ‘N PLANTS. wi : = vali SPAIN, THEN TO FRANCE, ee AND THENCE TO THE. U.S, 8Y WAY OF /MMIGRANTS THE FAVORITE VEGETABLE OF CHILDREN BETWEEN THE AGES OF 6 ANDJ6, IN NEW YORK CITY, ACCORDING To A RECENT SURVEY, 1S SPINACH! r eee PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY '29 South Auburn St., Grass Valley _ GRASS VALLEY NEVADA CITY ~ARL POWER JONES, M. D. DENTISTS Nttiee Hours: 1 toa; 7 to 8p. m. DR. WALTER J. HAWKINS Sundays 11:30 to 12:30 DENTIST 312. Broad Street. Hours 9:00 a. m. S; PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON 214 Neal St., Grass Valley Office Hours: *hone: Office 429. Residence 311-3 F. TOBIAS, M. D. 12-3 and 7-8. to 6:00 p: m. Evenings by appointment. Complete X-Ray Service. Phone 95 : DR. JOHN R. BELL DENTIST Office. Hours 8:30 to 5:30 neuts, X-RAY Facilities Available Hours: 9:00-5:00. Evening appointPhone 77 DR. ROBT. W. DETTNER DENTIST 120% Mill Street. Grass Valley, Calif. ' . Morgan & Powell Bldg. Evenings by Appointment Phone 322 DOCTORS B. W. HUMMELT, M. D. 7-8 P, DANIEL L. HIRSCH, M. D. Physician and Surgeon Jffices and Receiving Hospital, 118 Bush St. Hours: 10-12; 2-5, evenings M. Day or night phone 71. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON 400 Broad Street Office Hours: 10-12 a. m.; 2-5 p. m. Evenings 7-8. Phone 395 X-RAY W. W. REED, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Colfax Highway, Cedar Ridge. BURT SPICER PHONE G.°V. 918 FURNITURE REFINSHING SPECIAL RATES FOR SPRING— Nevada City. Calif Office 418 Broad Street Hours: 1 te 3 and 7 to 8 p. m. Residence Phone 2. Office Phone 362 Any color or tone. Waterproof. 20 J. R. TOPIC, M. D. year’s experience. Homes, offices, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON «partments, hospitals. 312 Broad Street, Nevada City, Calie. Hours; 10-12 a. m. 2-5 p. m, _ Evenings 7-8 and resonant voice for half an hour. When touching on law and order of those thrilling days immortalized by Mark Twain and Bret Harte, Mr. Morgan suddenly pulled out from under . the tablecloth a big, long Colt’s six-shooter used in the days of gold. He is the dean of county school supeirntendents in California. At the above meeting he said there were men in the room whose grandfathers he had taught in school. . wrote about Mr. Morgan to Mrs. Adeline Merriam Conner, the’ poet SCOUT BOARD IN in the northern end of the Mother Lode. She replied that Tuo. CoU7<i! camp lat Sunday, July 2, oa lumne County had nothing on Nevada County, whose school. _ superintendent was Mrs. Ella Austin and who did not retire} camp ‘fist prior to its opening’ on until well over 80; spry as a cricket, and still going strong. tucedey with the Cub group later to Can you beat it? Here is something that might well challenge . be followed by the Scouts on July 9 the attention of our State Chamber of Commerce as well as) ‘Tough the 30th. . i : . The attendance and volume of the boost organizations of these two counties. Old Ponce 2 ied iaauialad acuke Kk dk cee Leon lived too soon; or when he could not find the Fountain! 5.4 niveting Aidt wae only sinpheced of Eternal Youth in Florida he should have come t the foot-. by the Sunday dinner of Chef J. Bilhills of the California Sierra. ©The schoolhouse job is not an jing and which was an indication of easy one; the explanation for Mrs. Austin and Mr. Morgan . the pet oie are cee Seat . . . ° . ’ ° oO $s ) must be found in the climate and tonic serenity of life ‘mid; *"°,°° °7!°Y z f . The meeting was called to order the forest-clad mountains of our Golden State. — By The i : , before lunch by President Lowell L. Knave in the Oakland Tribune. “Sparks with representatives of every . distnict except Sierra County and Grass Valley. Among those present were: Oswald Marson, W. E. Olsen, _P. D. Barnes, Hon. J. B. Landis, K. j D. Robinson, Hon. Judge G. L. Jones, L. H. Reynolds, John Wilson, R. C. Clinger, H. A. Snelling, M. §. Beecher. In addition guests’ present included Walter K. Jensen of Lincoln, E. E. Smith of the United States 2 Bis ‘Social Leadership In Business a The power of creative leadership has not departed from business and industry, believes Samuel N. Stevens, business psychologist of Northwestern University. “Neither can I accept the principle,” he writes in the current Rotarian NEA gOZING . tirebity edbeide TEd Shindee oF Gol. “that extensive socialization of control will produce more in. tax, cliff Ballenger of Colfax and the long run in social outcomes for the workers of the United . Bob Wilson of Roseville. States as a whole.” President Sparks re-oztcd tlat a completion had been made of the property transaction to Harris Ricksecker former executive as well as a But he does hold that management should establish a worthy type of social leadership, uphold high social objectivANNUAL CAMP ROTARY SPEAKER Over fifty members of the Tahoe ‘Area Council executive board and ° . . : one : laureate of the lumber industry, who lives at North San Juan, their families enjoyed a day at the Kilborn Lake. The occasion was the annual meeting of the group at the €s, and accept responsibilities for the welfare of its workers. “If these three ‘social challenges are accepted,” he predicts, “‘such leadership would eliminate industrial unrest: by establishing a new kind of partnership between business and considerable portion of back indebtedness being paid. Guy W. Brunaage, chairman of the sustaining membership committee reported that the group had met twice and the success of the plan was quite evident from the suecess in Lincoln, which recent_ly raised not only their current! operation sum but also took up a good portion of their back indebtedness. Penryn, Auburn, Colfax, Nevada City ; and Roseville are getting ready for their sustaining membership. campaign in the late summer and early fall months. Loomis district was reported on by Dr, Barnes who stated that the prospect was for a record shipment of fruit and further development of the scouting program. The Loomis district ships a carload of fruit to care for their back deficit. should or should not be employed, but this is strikingly aoe oo a » hoc true today, he points out. There has been a flood of restrictive . ee 3 labor. It would create real security, not social security numbers and unemployment insurance cards, but of programmed work. People would regain habits of self-reliance and selfsufficiency which anxiety and suppering have caused them to lose. These things can come if business leaders accept the larger responsibilities inherent in their place in the economic system.” Because industrial management would not volnntarily shoulder the burdens which such an outlook makes necessary, . today it finds itself robbed of many traditional prerogatives, he adds. : __A few years ago businessmen were able to dictate the conditions of work, rates of pay, hours of work, and who' DR. D. L. HIRSCH, Dr. Daniel Hirsch of Grass Valley was Rotary speaker at’ yesterday’s luncheon in the National Hotel, his topic was astrology and numerology. He gave an interesting discussion of the sign under which the United States was born. He stated that it was born under the sign of Cancer, one of the twelve divisions of the Zodiac. The number is interwoven, he stated, with the foundation and progress of the United States. DeWitt Nelson was elected to the board of Rotary directors to fill a vacancy thereon. PALL BEARERS
Pall bearers for the late Robert Harvey Garner who was interred in ,Cooper, Cecil Burnett, William Andrews, Jr., Floyd Burnett, J. O. Bishop and J. L. Jackson. Cecil Burnett sang ‘I Lay My Head Beneath the Rose.” Rev. H. Mills of Grass Valley conducted the services, Holmes Funeral Home had charge of funeral arrangements. oring the executive making the trip to the national scout executive’s conference in September. After the meeting the group enjoyed the camp boats and were conducted on a nature walk by the camp naturalist, Bruce Kimsey. 'Pine Grove cemetery were: Chester , Phone 23” Res, Phone 3, FUNERAL DIRECTO n nS HOLMES FUNERAL HOME The Holmes Funeral Home gerall. Ambulance service at al] hours. Phone 203 246 Sacramento Street, Nevada City MINING ENGINEERS J. F, O°;CONNOR Mining and Civil Engineer United States Mineral Surveying WE Valley Grill Whenever you are in GRASS VALLEY We specialize in a 50 cent Excellent Meals at all times 103 MILL ST., GRASS VALLEY LCOMES YOU Sunday Dinner Licensed Surveyor 203 West Main St Grass Valley ATTORNEYS YARRY M. Mc KEE ATTORNEY AT LAW 205 Pine St., opposite courthouse Nevada City, Calif. FRANK G. FINNEGAN ATTORNEY AT LAW 207 North Pine Street, Nevada City, California. Telephone 273, SAFE AND LOCKSMITH Made While You Wait Bicycles, Cleaners, Washing Machines, Electric Irons Stoves, Etc. SAWS, AXES, KNIVES, SCISSORS, ETC., Gunsmith, Light Welding RAY’S FIXIT SHOP 220 East Main St., KEYS Steel Tapes, Vacuum Repaired SHARPENED Phone 602 GRASS VALLEY H. WARD SHELDON ATTORNEY AT LAW Union Building, Broad Street, Nevada City Telephone: 28. THOMAS O. McCRANEY ATTORNEY AT LAW Masonic Building 108% Pine Street, Nevada City. . Telephone 165 ASSAYER HAL D. DRAPER, Ph. D. ASSAYER AND CONSULTING _ CHEMIST Nevada City, California Phones: Office: 364-W. Home 246-J Box 744 r108 W. BEER WINES, LIQUORS Delicious Mixed Drinks to Please New Deal Under Management of Pauline and Johnnie Main Street, Grass Valley FRATERNAL AND _ CLUB DIRECTORY WOMAN'S CIVIC CLUB Regular meetings the 2nd and 4th Tuesdays of the month, at the Chamber of Commerce, 2:30 p. m. Mrs. Chas. Elliott, Pres. Mrs. Everett Robinson, Secy. Standard Gas one Three-CompartMOR SALE—One Pump and “ment Oil Tank. Inquire at Hotel Washington, at Washington. 7-72te FOR SALE—Two placer claims with house near North San Juan. Good Every Taste SS nana ee a NEVADA CITY LODGE, No. 518! B. P. O. Elks ae Meets second and fourth Friday —VISIT— evenings in Elks home, Pine CHAMBER OF COMMERCE Visitors welcome. Any information regarding Nevada City cheerfully given. NEVADA CITY Street. Phone 108. Visiting Elks welcome. CLIFFORD MERRIAM, Exalted Ruler. Lown FORTIER, Secretary. ,; HYDRAULIC PARLOR NO. 56, N.S. G, W. Meets every Tuesday evening at Pythian Casile, 232 Broad Street. Visiting Native Sons weleome. CLARENCE BE. MARTZ, Pres. DR, C. Ww, CHAPMAN, Rec. Sec’y. . . . . Sams % " ~, _, oop had been a big factor in keep_ Iegislation, state and federal, which, for example, sets definite! ing this unit in top scouting post _ standards of health and safety in industry, makes workmen's tions. _ compensation compulsory, and dictates the terms of old-age. 1. H. Reynolds of the camping and Pensions and unemployment insurance. seo at ROmmtSe, toporied on the ‘ i 11938 visitation of camp. by the na“Besides, Dr. Stevens shows, the growth and the fact that. : : ° : : tional council representative and the many of their edicts now have the force of law further tie the I ae Progress that had been made on the ds of management, and present trend indicate that more prospect. Box 906, Nevada City, H. F. SOFGE, Secretary Calif. 7-3-9tp AIR COMPRESSOR FOR SALE— Gardner Rix portable air compressor low gasoline consumption, in good condition. 60 feet of 2-inch pipe, 500 feet of rails, three jackhammers, air hose, etc., located near Alleghany. Must sell at once. $1250 cash. P. O. Box 905 Grass Valley. 6-262te recommendations. Camp at present rather than less outside pressure will be exerted on industry . had none of the recommendations in the future. : unattended to, all having been coma ‘Seeking the cause for this striking loss of privileges, Dr. wig to jh — ; PES: evens finds it in the anti-social attitudes of a minority of. or and scout executive B.A. Wil. *88. organizations, “‘chiselers’”” whose unscrupulous prac-. liams outline the organization of the ave made necessary the legal attack on the abuses they . ¢@™p and the program that would lowed. To combat the unenlightened attitude of the few the mass of legislation and resticictions under which every be presented during the month of July. Williams stressed the fact that the program at camp must motivate Hill’s Flat Feed and Fuel. DAIRY and POULTRY FEEDS. HAY GRAIN and MANURE. ‘WOOD, COAL, KINDLING by load or by the sack. FURNITURE CAREFULLY MOVED in state or out of state. GENERAL HAULING all kinds. Reasonable rates, prompt YOU WILL BE COFFEE SHOP NATIONAL HOTEL AND COFFEE SHOP PLEASED WITH OUR NEVADA CITY Oustomah Lodge, No. 16, 1.0.0.F. Meets every Tuesday evening at 7:30, Odd Fellows Hall. ROMAN ROZYNSKI, N. G. JONATHAN PASCOE, Rec. Sec’y. JOHN w. DARKE, Fin, Sec’y. ' Radio’ Service and . Clarence R. Gray Subscribe for The Nugget FINE . WATCH REPAIRING REPAIRING Work Called tor and Delivered 520 Coyote Strees Phone 16 For VENETIAN BLINDS and LATEST PATTERNS IN WALL PAPER é SEY a ee . be y now must function if it is to function at all. and aid local troops in thelr own Sa aoeee oo hacadcaiae , ~ : sg , oleh ate COLN. Phone 698. W. R. BOWER, . +teeeeeeeeeeteerannennnaged 107 Mill Street Nevada ‘Coun ty Photo Center Tnaae G. L, Jones of the Health a> : and Safety Committee inspected the R E A L E § T A T E f . PHONE 67 Portraits, Commercial Photography, camp and stated that all was in readi4 PRINTING 8 Hour dal Finishing, Old Copies, ness and the best practices were beWALTER H. DANIELS oe wi 12D _ _Eolarging and Framing, _ ing followed as recommended by the. LICENSED BROKER J GET YOURS AT Kodaks and Photo Supplies national organization. Phone 521 ¥. O, BOX SOT la HE NUGQET Beg ili Cameras and Films . The group went on record as fay_ Nevada City’ iene a SEE John W. Darke 100-3 Phones : 100-M vice is priced within the means ef d i ag Ne iq