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Collection: Newspapers > Nevada City Nugget

July 9, 1934 (8 pages)

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y Filtration of . Japanese Into Brazil Japanese colonists in Brazil now umber about 140,000, according to al Investigation made recently with— * the assistance of the bureau of Inter‘National research of Harvard univer sity and Radcliffe college. ‘They are there as the resuli of a varying stream of emigration which began about 1907. These colonists own about: 1,225. 000 acres, and the greater part of _ them are settled in the state of Sao Paulo—where they number 125,000— and the adjoining state of Minas -Geraes. A few thousand live in the -borthern part of the country,The first Japanese colony was established in 1912, in Iguape, Sao Paulo, where the Overseas Enterprise Joint Stock company of Japan owns ‘at present. a plantation of more than 154,000 acres. The immigration began with contract laborers, needed because the coffee industry was suffering from a shortage of labor. Practically all the Japanese in this re gion are engaged in agriculture. The government-subsidized Yokohama-Buenos Aires line of the Osaka Shosen Kaisha brings the emigrant ‘ to his new home and ‘the supervision of the Overseas company continues in Brazil. : Year of Dryness Perhaps 1934 will be known in history as the year of the drought. Abnormally dry weather prevailed over Central Europe and in early June it damaged German crops to a minimum of 25 per cent. In England more than 160 rural areas were short of water and the rainfall for the year ending May 381 was the lowest ever recorded. The level of the Thames fell so much that fish were landiocked ‘in many backwaters.— Literary Digest. ed it Reduces and other 7 exes eee A Natural Working . Evil often cures itself by its mere excess.—George Eliot. KEEP COOL SAVE TIME SAVE WORK SAVE MONEY . COIEMAN aextive iron ge Ty pe eed war your ma: it ve he Dn 5 do Dbetcer ironing less cost. a. heating Ce RE to torch,.no waiting. The Geely double ‘poin’ eo wee aoe on png. dori, al ing time easier. Iron “ss . Papraeres Boones geal itself . re ou rdaar Spnaeren. St 2 local “ere oj howsekuraahing write us. ieee a ae tengo, , FRED BROWN JEWELL or any _ one . Knewing his whereabouts communicate with sister Allie, Columbia, Mo., or Alvin EB, Stein, Otis Bldg., Chicago. Good news, Little Girl’s Face inflamed by Psoriasis, Healed by Cuticura “My little girl’s face was so in_ flamed that her eyes were swollen ' almost shut, The trouble was diagas psoriasis. She scratched and day and was not able to rest. The scratching aggratrouble and each finger ipo swollen with infecif ame so emaciated that she was very pathetic looking. “After three months’ suffering I ‘aa the Cuticura treatment used Sige mother. I bought a cake of cura Soap and a box of Cuticura ment and used them according directions. The first treatment ight relief and she is now iealed.” (Signed) Mrs. Marie I. John$0 . 4720 Ames cot be wears Neb., Ps shia Rene ek hares ios base. forces THE NEVADA CITY NUGGET News Review of Current Events the World Over President Cisgns Desk for Hawaii Cruise—Drouth Relief Funds Allocated for Middle West—Federal Reward for Dillinger’s Arrest. RESIDENT. ROOSEVELT, back from his brief trip to New Haven, New London and. his home in Hyde Park, put in a busy week clearing up his desk for his departure on the long planned cruisethrough . the Panama canal to the West coast and Hawaii. All those who have had occasion during the last generation to call at the White House are glad to learn that Rudolph Forster was selected by the President to make the voyage with him. Since the days of McKinley this able and courteous” gentleman, “now executive clerk in charge of the White House executive offices, has been on duty and never before has he accompanied any President on a trip. Now Mr. Forster is going to have a real vacation, and Secretaries Howe, McIntyre and Earle will remain behind to take care of the White House. There will be no other civil officials aboard the cruiser Houston. On the way down to the canal Mr. Roosevelt will visit Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands. From Panama City he will go to the Hawaiian Islands, first making a brief stop in Colombia. Returning to the Pacific coast early in August Mr. Roosevelt, will travel overland by rail, and there is’ a possibility he will make some speeches,probably in Minneapolis and Green Bay, Wis., where the tercentenary of the Badger state will be celebrated, ° Rudolph Forster MMEDIATE relief for the drouth stricken areas in the Middle West was decreed by the President in an executive order which allocated $56,250,000 for direct aid. ‘The remainder of the first distribution of federal relief for the drouth area included $43,750,000 for purchase of seed, food . and live stock; $25,000,000 for seed and feed loans, $12,500,000 for purchase of lands in the drouth regions, and $12,500,000 for establishment of civilian conservation camps in the stricken region. INAL settlement of the questions in dispute between the steel masters and their workers is expected and the threatened strike probably will be averted. The President, invoking his new emergency powers, named a three-man board to arbitrate the industry’s troubles, and both sides indicated they would accept its decisions. The members of the board are Admiral Henry A. Wiley, James Mullenbach of Chicago and Judge Walter Stacy of the North Carolina Supreme court. The two latter have had long experience as labor mediators. Under the emergency law this group can order and police elections in all steel. plants to determine which union shall represent the men in collective bargaining. The board can also hand down decisions on all complaints brought by either workers or employers. President Roosevelt ordered the board to report to him from time to time through Secretary of Labor Frances Perkins. T MAY be necessary to resort to the emergency labor legislation to put an end to the street car strike in Milwaukee. A minority of the company’s employees went‘ out and by violence forced the suspension of service. The mobs fought the police and attacked the company’s electric plant and its cars. The American Federation of Labor unions are trying to compel the company to recognize their representatives in dealing with employees instead of the company union with which it has had a labor contract for 16 years. Rev. Francis J. Haas, formerly of Milwaukee and now chief conciliator for the national labor board, was sent to the Wisconsin city with full authority to act. Mayor Hoan, a Socialist, held the company responsible for the strike and ensuing riots. EDERAL JUDGE J. P. BARNES of Chicago gave one phase of the New Deal a rap by granting an Iinjunction restraining the government from enforcing the ‘provisions of the AAA milk lHeensing agreement against the independent milk dealers in the Chicago area. In effect, the judge ruled that the government, through the AAA, has usurped powers which under the Constitution it had no authority to assume. The AAA officials in Washington de clared they would seek to have Judge } Barnes’ ruling set aside. Jerome Frank, general counsel for the AAA, admitted that if the decision were upheld by higher courts, the fifty marketing agreements now in force under the farm act and hundreds of the codes under the NRA would be with. out La wig aire a ‘sanction. ARRIMAN . Po a mills, the concern that was deprived of its By EDWARD W. PICKARD © by Western Newspaper Union. on the mills and the company had the support of practically all the people there in its dispute with the NRA. The officials of the company sent ‘to Administrator Johnson—and to President Roosevelt—a vigorous protest, asserting the concern had been unjustly and unfairly deprived of its property rights in the Blue Eagle. “We would liké to know,” said the letter, “if the Blue Eagle is the prop-erty of the law-abiding citizens of the United States or if it is a plaything to be held over the heads: of honorable and decent employers as a cudgel to browbeat and bulldoze them into surrendering their constitutional rights for the benefit of outside agitators whose only purpose Is to exploit labor for their own personal gain.” General Johnson’s reply was in effect that the company could stay closed forever if it wished to, but it must comply with the NRA regulations to get back its Blue Eagle. The dispute started last October, when about 300 employees went on strike with the claim that the company would not reinstate twenty-three workers who had joined the United Workers’ Textile onion. Fred Held, vice president of the American’ Federation of Hosiery Workers, went to Harriman after the mills closed, but was taken from the train by a band of armed men, taken some distance:in. an automobile. and released on promise not to. return. OSTMASTER GENERAL FARLEY and Secretary of the Treasury Morgenthau came forward with an announcement of their plans for the “spending of $110,000,000 in the construction of new. post offices and federal~ buildings. In all, 626 communities in every state and four territories have been selected for new federal buildings, according ‘to the announcement. Half of the program—302 buildings—will be undertaken with $65,000,000 authorized for that purpose in the recently enacted deficiency-emergency appropriation bill. It was explained that 324 buildings will be constructed with “funds already available from other sources.” NCLE SAM is determined to’ get John Dillinger, the country’s most notorious desperado, A.few days ago Atornae General Cummings offered a reward of $10,000 for the.. capture of the murderer and bank robber, and half as much for. information leading to his arrest. At the same time the attorney.. general offered $5,000 for the eapture of Lester M. Gillis, alias “Baby Face” Nelson, Dillin ger’s. right-hand John Dillinger man. Information leading to Gillis’ capture will be re warded with $2,500. This action was followed up by consideration of plans for co-ordinating federal, ‘state, and local efforts to eatch Dillinger. It was understood that plans using the army and National Guard in the offensive were under discussion. The federal charge against Dillinger is transporting a stolen automobile across the state line. Nelson is wanted in connection with the murder of W. Carter Baum, Department. of. Justice agent, near Rhinelander, Wis., April 23. In addition to the federal prize, the person who can catch Dillinger will receive $1,000 reward from each of five states—Indiana, Illinois, Michigan, Ohio and Minnesota. oS in his White House study, President Roosevelt talked over the radio directly to millions of his fellow countrymen, seeking to reassure those who have been alarmed by the frequent allegations that. the New Deal is becoming radical. He rebuked his critics as “doubting Thomases,” “prophets of calamity” and “theoretcal diehards,” and by implication defended the brain trust. He highly praised the departing congress for its work in the lines of relief for the dis. tressed, recovery and “reform and reconstruction.” Mr. Roosevelt teld his. listeners the simplest way they could judge recovery was to consider their own situations. “Are you better off than you were last year?” he asked. “Are your debts less burdensome? Is your bank account more secnre? Are your working conditions better? Is your faith in your own individual future more firmly grounded?” OMETHING like a hundred thousand Americans. and Canadians gathered in Detroit for the govd will celebration which was held on the Ambassador bridge undet the auspices of the American Legion and the -Canadian Legion. The bridge, which links Canada and the United States across the Detroit river, was turned into a huge playground and customs and imnifgration barriers were lifted for the day. IVING up hope for a disarmament pact at Geneva, the British govplans for strengthening its air force for defense of the country. This was announced to parliament by Lord Londonderry, secretary for air. He turned down a suggestion for an imperial air force for the defense of the empire, but said there would be close co-operation with the air forces of the dominions. N A note to Secretary of State Hull,
the British government rejects his suggestion that the war debt might be paid in kind. holding that such a procedure would be impractical and dangerous to Anglo-American trade. The British expressed a wish for settlement ofthe debts problem “whenever it may appear that the present abnormal conditions have so far pussed as to offer favorable prospects for a settlement.” AZI storm troops in Germany have demanded that the Stahlhelm, or Steel Helmets, composed of war veterans, be banned by the Hitler government. But the leaders of the organization reply that it shall not be suppressed or absorbed in the storm troops. The existence of the Stahthelm, they assert, is guaranteed by President Von Hindenburg, Chancellor Hitler, and other Nazi chiefs. N THE twentieth anniversary of the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand at’ Sarajevo, the event that precipitated the World war, there were bombing outrages throughout Austria directed against the Dollfuss government and possibly instigated by the Nazis. Certainly the disorders were political in nature. Power plants, railway lines, and one newspaper office were blown _up. ITH congress adjourned and the President preparing for his Hawaii cruise, Miss . Margaret Le Hand, confidential secretary to Mr, ux Roosevelt, decided. to take a gyacation, so . she sailed for Europe. ' the positive statement that Miss Le Hand is to be married to Wil-° liam C. Bullitt, American ambassador to , Russia, and that .she was making the final arrangements in the French capital. The young lady would say nothing in confirmation or denial except to declare that she was not going to Russia, but the correspondents were sure the plans were well advanced for what it had been hoped would be a secret wedding. It was understood that Cornelius Vandérbilt, Jr., a close friend of the President, would act as best man for Mr. Bullitt. Mr, Vanderbilt is in the Riviera, and Miss Le Hand also was booked to go there before returning to America late in July. Ambassador Bullitt is a widower and has a young daughter who is now with him in Moscow. Margaret Le Hand NFORMATION was given the house committee investigating War de. partment expenditures that prices quoted the governm-s nt on automobiles have jumped since the issuance of the executive order excluding Henry Ford from bidding yntil he certifies compliance with the NRA.Representative Kvale of Minnesota said he had evidence to back up this charge, and that the situation has cost the government thousands of dollars already. “For Henry Ford to submit a certificate' of. compliance,” Mr. Kvale said, “would mean he would have to secure 5,000 certificates of compliance from those who furnish parts and products for his cars. That is obviously impossible.” The committee called on. War de partment officials to reply to this accusation. ERE is more woe for President Mendieta of Cuba. The A. B. C. society, strongest of the secret political associations in the island, has announced that it would no longer support the Mendieta government. The reason given was “the lack of firmness displayed by the government in dealing with terrorists, especially with men responsible far the assault on the A. B. C. parade June 17.” The A. B. C. manifesto said the soclety would continue to work for the good of Cuba against terrorism and other forms of “gangsterism” which “are directly traceable to the influence of Moscow gold.” A crisis in the cabinet resulted and several. members, who belong to the A. B. C., offered their resignations, as did 600 employees of the treasury department. A committee of conciliation was at work on the government’s.troubles and {t was reported that it might suggest a parliamentary form of government headed by a prime minister. The A. B. C. leaders would agree to this if the premier were chosen from their ranks. ILATERAL conversations on naval strength, being conducted in London by the United States, Great Britain and Japan preparatery to thecomIng conference, did not appear to be getting anywhere. The’ British submitted’ a plan whereby the United States should sink its battleship fleet and Britain should be permitted to build a large number of small cruisers, airplane ‘carriers and xirpianes,. and they, the proposers, were frightened by their own temerity. cwhile the Japanese : told the American representative that his government was incfeasingly suspicious of an understanding between Britain and America that would work to the. detriment of Japan ernment -has under way extensive : Monday, July 9, 1934 ncn pnt naa ICC A RAC CORTE COA AM ORATOR a : *® PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY a ATTORNEYS MINING ENGINEERS HARRY M. McKEE Attorney at Law 205 Pine St., opposite courthouse Nevada City, Calif. W. E. WRIGHT ATTORNEY AT LAW Office in Union Building Phone 28 Nevada City F. T. Nilon J. T. Hennessy Lynne Kelly NILON, HENNESSY AND KELLY Attorneys at Law Office, 127 Mill St., Grass Valley Morgan & Powell Bldg., Nevada City Now comes from Parts . Mean-, a George lL. Jones Frank G. Finnegan Jones & F innegan ATTORNEYS AT LAW Office: Morgan & Powell Building, Broad Street, Nevada City, Cal. TELEPHONE 273 ‘DOCTORS > a B. W. Hummelt, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON 400 Broad St. Office Hours: 10-12 a. m., 2-5 p. m. Evenings 7-8. Phone 395 X-RAY W. W. Reed, M. D. Nevada City, California Office 418 Broad Street. Hours: 1 to 3 and 7 to & P. M. Residence Phone 2. .Office Phone 362 Alfred H. Tickell, M. D. Physician and Surgeon Nevada City, California Office 207 Pine Street. ...Residence 525 Nevada Street w. P. is. M. D. Expert Refraction Modern Glasses Best quality lenses and mountings. Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat. Hours: 11 a. m.to 4p. m. Evenings by appointment. Phone Office11 — Residence 73, Ott Building, Nevada City. . Dr. H. B. Towsley, CHIROPRACTOR Office Hours: 9 a. m, to 12 a. m. 1 p.m, to 5 p. m Evenings by Appointment 312 Broad Street Nevada City ‘. Grass Valley. EDWARD C. UREN Mining and Civil Engineer Mining Reports Furnished Mining District Maps Phone 27% R Nevada City C. A. Wallbrecht ‘ELECTRICAL. ENGINEER Located at FRENCH CORRAL Will consult with you on all classes of work.—Advice. given. GRASS VALLEY H. H. PARSONS, M. D. General Surgery, Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat 128, Neal Street Phone 779 Hours: 10 to 12 A. M., 2 to5 P.M. Evenings by Appointment _ DR. E. C. SKINNER Osteopathic Physician Evenings by appointment Office 413 W. Main St. Phone 710 GRASS VALLEY, CALIF. DR. VERNON V. ROOD Physician and Surgeon Office and residence at 128 Neal St., Office hours 10 to 12 A. M.—2 to 4 P. M.—7 to 8 P. M. MELVIN E. BERRYMAN Dentist : Hours 8:30 to 6:00. Evenings by appointment. Thomas Bldg., 139% Mill St. Grass Valley Telephone 35. H. N. MARCH, M. D. Physician and Surgeon 152% Mill Street, up-stairs, second floor. 10-12 a. m., 2-5 p.m. daily. Mon., Wed., Fri. evenings. Phone 19, Grass Valley A. W. STORZ DENTIST — X-RAY 15214 Mill St., Golden Rule Bldg. Office Hours: 9 to .12—1 to 6. Mondays, Wedneaders. 1? a 7 to 9 M.—Phone 578. Dwight D. Johnson, M: D. ‘Office Hours: 2 to 4 p.m. 7 to 8 p. m. Office Phone 51 Residence Phone 135. 112 South Church Grass Valley CARL POWER JONES, M. D. Grass Valley, California . Office hours: 1 to 3 and 7 to.8. P. m. Sundays 11:30 to 12:30. sha Dr. Robt. W. DettnerDentist X-Ray Facilities Available, Hours: 9:00-5:00. Evening appoiatments, 120% Mill street. Phone 77. Grass Valley, California OSCAR E. WINBURN Attorney At Law 152 Mill Street Campbell Bldg. GRASS VALLEY, CAL. Phone 47 DENTISTS DR. WALTER J. HAWKINS Dentist 312 Broad Street. Hours 9:00 A. M. to 6:00 P. M. Evenings bv appointment. Complete -Ray Service. Phone 95. DR, JOHN R. BELL Dentist Office Hours: 8:30 to, 5:30 Evenings by Appointment Morgan & Powell Bldg, Phone 321 A. M. HOLMES Funeral Director Nevada City — Grass Valley The Service of Sincerity J. F. O CONNOR Civil and Mining Engineer ~, United States Mineral Surveying. Licensed Surveyor. 203 West Main St, Grass Valley FRED M. MILLER CIVIL AND MINING ENGINEER MINING DISTRICT MAPS FOR SALE 262 S. Auburn St. THE NEW DEAL” There’ was a young man< wanted Beer. He wanted it sparkling and cleah, When he found the New Deal, h let out a squeal, It was here that he found it was DEAR OLD SCHLITZ. MAIN ST. GRASS VALLEY Grass Valley BOARD BY THE MONTH $1.00 A DA% SHAMROCK CAFE Mr. and Mrs. Charles Wyant, Props. BROAD ST., NEVADA CITY Nevada City W.R. JEFFORD & SON Funeral Directors AMBULANCE SERVICE Grass Valley The Dugout Valley Hotel Building, Grass Valley Corner Mill and Neal Streets, Entrance. on Neal St. SMARTEST AND NEWEST CAFE IN GRASS VALLEY HOME COOKING—AND—IT'S GOOD Complete Service at Pleasant Prices LUNCHES TO TAKE OUT—THESE ARE OUR PRIDE PERCOLATED. COFFEE THAT SATISFIES —Mrs. Bessie Jarrell, Prop.— a Ey appearance, the faculty 2 PROSP Phone 375 Grass Valley Cleaners Ed. Burtner, Prop. Clothes cleaned and neatly pressed, spick-and-span often the vehicle to real ‘ Mail Orders Given Prompt Attention WE CREDIT YOUR PHONE. . of looking prosperous is ERITY i Grass Valley vy i a if id i id a AY By is t