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Page: of 8

57a SORRY HR 65
“GRASS VALLEY PERSON
\ “Walley
. “uvembered as Miss Lillian McAuliffe.
fin Grass.
ONE 2.1990 4
——
*
4. Mr. and Mrs. Al Denison came up
Smorial Day inGrass Valley.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert; Frank of Sac
ramento speat Memorial Day visii. ing with friends in this city.,
1 Mr and Mrs. Alonzo Harris song (the Marysville Junior College.
up from Berkeley to spend Memorial .
1 Day in Grass Valley.
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph
visited in Winters Friday,
“the trip by auto.
Mr. and Mrs: W. H. Hart came up
from’ Secramento Friday and spent
Sthe day.
Deibert James e2me up from San
Francisco Friday to visit fox
+ Several days:
here
“ Mr. and Mrs. Walter Jolinsen and
‘daughter, June, were visitors from
Petaluma over Memorial Day.
Mr. and Mrs. James Hooper spent
Memorial Day in Grass Valley. They
“were from Roseville.
Lawrence Wood Drove
“ghany on business.
Stanley Woodcock came up from
‘Sacramento and visited with friends
over Memorial Day.
to AlleMrs. Jennie Shaw of San Francisco .
“who was a former Grass Valley resi-!
“dent
city.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest White, former
“Grass Valley residents, spent Me“morial Day in this city.’
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest White visited
here Friday for a short’time.
Mrs. Harold Flagg of Jackson was
the guest of Miss Bessie Williams,
Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold White and
«daughter are here from Oakland
spent Memorial Day in this
visiting with Mrs. James White of.
¥this city.
Mrs. Richard Trathen, Sr., ars
_ *#@ived from San Francisco -and_ will
> remain for a short time.
James. Moore, guard at— Folsom
“prison, was a visitor to his former
“home in Grass Valley.
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Paynter were arvrivals yesterday morning from Sacramento, who visited with Mr. and
Mrs. William Spargo.
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Stewart left
‘.yesterday for San Francisco and Oak-dand to visit over the week-ena.
Mr. and’ Mrs. Arthur Dollard of
“San Francisco were visitors in Grass
Mrs. Dollard will be reMr. and Mrs. Zaonean ddaugh‘ter of San Francisco are enjoying a
“few days visit to the-former home of
-Mrs. Zaone, who was khown to Grass
“Valleyans as Miss Aliée Dennen.
“They were accompanied by Mrs. Za*“miné’s brother. :
Pierce Glasson and. wife and Ken~meth Glasson and wife are visitors.
“Both young men were born here and
‘are. enjoying revisiting scenes of
“their boyhood. Both are in the practice f dentistry in San Francisco.
Mr. and Mrs. T. G. Akers of Oakidand-with their children are visitors.
“They are former residents of Truc“dee, where Mr. Akers. was an official
*of the Southern Pacific for many
“years. Mrs. Akers was born at the
“Oak Tree ranch above Nevada City
sand will visit her birth-place during
“her stay.
John Wellington, former Grass
“Walley youth, came up from San
“Francisco and spent Memorial Day
“with members of the family.
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel! Whiting and
‘ “two daughters, were visitors from
Berkeley Friday. They spent the day
“with Grass Valley friends and rela> tives.
Miss Vera Basham, Berkeley resi«dent, was the guest of friends
“Grass Valley over the week-end.
Prof C. F. Tolman of Stanford
“University is spending several days
here as the guest of
Errol MacBoyle.
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Richards and
~James Richards of San Francisco
~were Memorial Day visitors in Grass
~ Valley.
Miss Adrienne Iliohan and mother,
~Mrs. A. H. Iliohan of Oakland, are
in
week-end guests of Mr. and Mrs. E.
HH. Hocking. They came up to visit
Miss Clarice Hocking.
Miss Veristine Tremewan,-promiu nent. kindergarden teacher of the
Pidmoent schools, arrived yesterday
and will\spend the week-end visiting
ley.
Miss Lugy arris, Mrs. Flora Tre“mewan and Mrs: Ruth Pascoe left
_lyesterday for San\Diego where they
“will visit with relatives for a short
‘ye
-? time. F :
' Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Pascoe and
“Mrs. Luella Whiting of chmonl
“were Memorial Day guests
Fhome of Mr. and Mrs. D. F. No?ton.
-Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Argall dro
“up from Sacramento to bring flowers
“cM. J. Brock, who has been spendSwing‘the past four weeks at San Franon business and visiting his
, returned to this city.
. and Mrs. William Temby,
““<from San Francisco to. spend Me-. lisher of the Press
Henwood ;
making,
Mr. and~ Mrs. j
: day at the old home place. This famiColusa, spent Sunday with Mr: SweetSee
former Grass Valleyans, came ‘up!
from Los Angeles to spend Memorial
Day and the week-end.
' Harry C. Smith, editor and pubat Campbell,
Santa Clara county, was: here with a
party of holiday travelers. He was}
accompanied by James F Kappan
lof Marysville, who is associated with
Mrs. E. E. Barker and children of
Salt.Lake City are guests at the
Penhall residence. Mr. Barker is ono
a mining mission in ‘South Africa.
FRENCH CORRAL ITEMS
Misses Minnie and Josie Mahoney
of Spokane, Wash., who have been
guests of Mrs. K. Sullivan for
two weeks, left Saturday
for Marysville where after
the
he. past
morning
a short yisit with friends they will
return to their home in Spokane. Af-.
ter an absence of 13 years when they .
last visited their home town they
havé progressed rather than -retro-!
graded. With-our state highway and
good roads generally, auto traffic,
radio, they think we are quite up
to date. But leaving all else aside,
have they found moonlight like
French Corral moonlight.
Mrs. P. Nichols. and sons, Chester, .
Arthur .and Lewis and wife, and
daughters, Mrs. E. Gallup and two
little sons and Mrs. Ina Davis and
son,.all former residents, spent Sunly now resides in Sacramento.
Mr. and-Mrs. Will Sweetland and
daughter, Jean, anl Mr. J. Rounds of
land’s brother, Geo. EL. Sweetland of
this place. Mr. Sweetland was born in
the goold old Ridge town of Sweetland, which by the way, took its
name from his Uncle Chas. Sweetland
who kept store there in the early
‘50s. At the tender age of six years
he was bereft of mother, and was
raised by friends in Colusa.
“Rev. Father O’Rielly held services
in the Catholic church at Birchville
Sunday. He was accompanied by
Floyd Penrose of Nevada City.
Dr. and Mrs. Byron of Tyler and
Miss Coughlin of Columbia Hill were
in attendance at the Sunday service. :
Miss Irene Browning went to
Pleasant Valley Monday to visit for
a few days with her teacher, Mrs.
Elsie Schwartz.
Mr. and Mrs. O. W. Bean are the
guests of Mrs. K. Sullivan. Mr.
and Mrs. Bean were former Ridgeites
Joe Swazy and N. B. Bishop made
a trip to, Nevada City Tuesday.
Mr. A. Browning, who is now emPloyed in Nevada City, visited his
family in this place Monday.
Mrs. A. Browning and Miss Millie
Clerkin made a trip to Nevada City
Thursday. 2
W. P. Clerkin returned to
home in Birchville Wednesday.
Several droves of sheep and cattle passed through this week on their
way to the mountains.
We are glad to note.that a Cherry
Carnival at San Juan is~planned for
\
next month. a
The French Corral school which
closes today along with: Pleasant Valley and Newtown schools enjoyed \a
Picnic at Bridgeport Resort Thursday afternoon.
It seems the expected 4th of July
celebration and Reunion of exRidgites, has also been called off
and it wasa great surprise to many
of us to read in the Oakland Tribune of May 15th that the proposition had been turned down by the
San. Juan people, 7 7 2: 9.
Again
his
we mourn the passing of
one of our promient citizens, George
McCullough, who was born and raisedin Sebastopol and ‘was one of a
pioneer family of that place, passed
away at the Nevada City Sanitarium
Saturday morning. His funeral which
was largely attended took place Monday when his remains were laid to
rest in the family plot at North San
Juan. He will be sadly missed for
he was 4 seneral favorite and‘ beloved by all,
SS
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Isensee of
Escalon and two children spent the
week-end here. . :
>
Zz
FRESH FISH DAILY —
We Are Supplyng
Our Customers with
Fresh Fish Every Day
Right From'The Water
Quality is Right’
; flow it down to the concentrating mill
but for several years ‘past dea—re. :
sided in San —— Auto Jim Quinn
7
PLAN TO SALVAGE
TIN FROM THE SEA
The tin mines of Cornwall, Eng-'
land, supposed to be-pretty well,
worked out, are to be supplemented
by dredging up the sands of the sea
off the Cornwall evast.
Through the ages the fierce waves
of the North Atlantic: have been hammering at the rugged coasts of*Corn=
wall and pulverizing the rocks to sand./)
yn shore men have worked out thd
alluvial deposits and tin -productign
has decreased by half.
discovered that the sands under the
sea are full of tin, sometimes as much
as 10 per cent. So they have constructed a tunnel out under the waves
at St. Ives and built a big concrete
funnel into which the sandsuckers discharge the sand mixed with water to
to separate the tin.
CHEWING GUM, LIKE
POOR, EVER WITH US
A secure niche has been’ won in the
eategory of derelicts by chewing gum.
America spends upwards of $50,000,000
a year for this delicacy, the equivalent
of 5,000,000,000 sticks or 75,000 miles
of sweetened chicle—enough to send a
ribbon around the moon.
Save in the case of tender infants,
not much of ‘it is swallowed. The
great bulk finds its place somewhere
under foot or hand; by preference
under chairs in movie theaters, on the
decks of excursion steamers, hiding
coyly berfeath the edges of tables in
lunch rooms. I once lost a substantial
section of a new Scotch tweed over.
coat by virtue of a little remembrance .
on the straw seat of a subway train. .
.
i
!
.
Another; favorite temporary resting 1
place iS the floor of & dance hall, [
Say “temporary” advisedly; the 5,000,.
000,000 sticks are ever on the march. .
They know not what.it means to die.— .
Stuart Chase in, Harper’s Magazine,
The Windy Bolsheviks
Dr. Joel IT. Boone, President Hoover’s physician, said in an interview
in Philadelphia:
“Our wonderful prosperity has done
away with the parlor bolshevik. The
parlor bolshevik was very much in
evidence in the past.
“I remember once, at a reception,
the host wus asked to come and quiet
a crowd of parlor bolsheviks in. the
library. They were arguing so ferociously that a rough-and-tumble fight
was: feared,
“The host hurried to the library. He
listened from the doorway for @minute to the bolsheviks’ shrill, angry
voices., Then he turned away.
“‘Let us remember,’ he suid, ‘that
people who are all wind never come
to blows.’”
First Auto Speeder?
Another record is shattered. A man
has long
efi the distinction of being the
first Man arrested in America for auto
speeding. That was in 1905. Now
comes along a sfatistician ofthe auto
industry who says the honor should
go to Thomas W. Shevlin, of Minneapolis;, who was dragged into court
in that city in 1902 and paid $10 for
driving his auto more than ten miles
an hour.
Fruits and--Figures
“You can’t divide apples by peaches
or pears,” lisped Harold bravely.
“Correct; goon,” smiled the teacher.
“But you can add them,” cried Harold, with a happy thought, “and—and
make fruit salad.’—Chicago Daily
News.
Fishy
The Parana river in Brazil ts full
of fish that look like dogs.
In his “Cruise of the Falcon” E. F.
Knight says:
“The fish. we caught were all very
fierce, hiting everyhing they came
across when landed on our deck, and
barking like dogs.”
Canadian Maple Sugar
In 1929 the ‘total value of maple
sugar and maple sirup produced in
Canada was__$6,118,656, The maple
sugar output was 11,698,925 pounds,
valued at $2,162,839. The quantity of
maple sirup produced was 2,174,084
gallons, with .a—value of $3,955,817.
‘The Province of Quebec is the leader
of the Industry in Canada.
»An Egoistic Inquiry
Why is it what I have te say
Seems such a serious matter,
While thoughts of others on display
Appear but idle chatter?
Still Patiently Waiting
Mr. Knox—I think some time during
his life a man’s better-self comes to
the surface, Jane.
Mrs. Knox—Oh, I hope se! I have
been waiting for years and years for
yours to come to the surface, John.
ree ee ee ee
\
Not So Welcome
“I said your ship would come in
this week. Was I corfect?”
“Well, partly. My salary was
docked.”
L-Anense clam firmly tmbed@ed in hard
And now it/ is_. Clam Caught Heron
A heron observed for almost a week
at Cape May, N. J., remainedSo motionless on one leg t fishermen
thought it an éxampléof the taxidermist’s art placed at water's edge by
a practical joker. [t was not unfil
clam diggers neared tne spot that the
long-hecked fow] sought flight with
wedkly ‘beating wings and it was
found to beheld, eaptive by an imsand.
= The Stowaways
“Let’s stow away on that air li
for America,” suggested the wou
emigrant.
“Not that one,” objected the other.
“Tht captain always ties the stoewaways to parachutés’and drops them
in Iceland.”—Montreal New Goblin.
r
be
‘Soviet Salvage
The Soviet Union has been recovering from the bottom of the. Black
sen-the metal parts of warships and
merchantmen sunk at various places
within the last twenty years.One harbor is expected to vield thousands of
tons of useful metal,
Sam’l Himself
Teacher—What's your name, little
boy ?” :
New Pupil—Sam.
Teacher—What is the rest of it?
New Pupil—Mule.—Capper’s WeekLysis
Flattering Friend
“After I’d sung my encore, I heard
a gentleman from one of the papers
call out ‘Fine! Fine!’ ”
‘Dear me! And did you have to
pay it?’—Sydney Bulletin.
Also Crazy
O—What makes you say Iris ts
stone deaf?..0 Ee
P—She wouldn’t take my diamond.
—London Answers.
Sinz
Stenographer—HowjJa spell “sense”?
Employer—Dollars and cents, or
horse sense?
Stenographer—Well, like tin “I ain’t
seen him sence——”
FASHIO
. for the SMART WOMAN
NS
iy JACKET
4a: Oo
SKIRT
[9 219eThis beautiful upright piano
made by W. W. KIMBALL
for $295.00. Terms as low as
$6.00 per month
Other pianos represened by us
are:
MASON HAMLIN
CHICKERING
KNABE
FISHER
BREWSTER
W. W. KIMBALL
HINZE.
WHITNEY
And other Grands and Uprights may be purchased. in
Grass Valley from
THE HARMONY SHOP
ELLAS MARX MUSIC CO.
Home of America’s
Foremos Pianos
Sacramento
IIth & Jay
Marysville
422 4th St.
Ore and Bullion
Purchased
Licensed by State of California
Established 1907
WILDBERG BROS.
SMELTING & REFINING CO.
Offices: 742 Market St.,San Francisco
Plant: South San Francisco
‘J. E KNAPP MACHINERY CO.
593 Market St.,
ps
& ¥
New and used Mining Equipment of all kindsKrogh Gravel Mill (complete)
Compressors and Air Receivers in all sizes
Electric and Gasoline Mine Hoists
Complete line of Pumping Equipment
San Francisco
Licensed Land Surveyor.
over City Hall. Main Street, Grag
collar, and gored, wrap-around skirt.
skin or cheviot.
ACCENTED WAISTLINE
Here we have one of the classic tailleurs of 1930, featuring the nipped-in
waistline—very new and important—the double-breasted coat with notched
This may be made up with smart
effect in linen, shantung or piqué; and of course it, would be good in sharkThe model of wool crépe on the right features the Vionnet diagonal wraparound closing, and skirt fulness from a belted waistline. ca
has a soft fox border. This coat embodies in very detail the new feminine
trend, which departs so radically from the mode of past seasons.
should, of course, completely cover the frock.
The postilion cape
It
J. F. O'CONNOR
Civil and Mining Kngineer
United. States. Mineral. Survey,
UpatainValley.
0p.
uv
Subscribe for The Nugget.
FINE WATCH REPAIRINC(
Radie¢ Servicing and Repair
CLARENCE R. GRAY
520 Coyote St. Phone 154
Work Called for and Deliveres
Loifeafeleabeerfedtestesteateadeiofeofesteofestestesteateateats
GRADUATION GIFTS AND
GREETING CARDS
Parker Pen and Pencil Sets—Wallets—Perfume Sets
—Imported Perfumery—Automizers—
Photograph Albums
Commencement Cards that express your sincere
Graduation Congratulations 4
H. DICKERMAN
eertortertentenfentenferferfeofenderfertenteateatertesfesqeateateaeateofesfeoeoteafesteate
IT IS service that is
dependable.
Voices are
easy to hear.
You can talk
without raising your voice.
Good service has reasonable privacy—not
too many subscribers
on one line,
Good telephone service enables you to talk
with anyone anywhere
{
lat 1s 200d .
telephone service!
—to any one of 20,000,000 interconnected telephones in theUnited States
and even to
many foreign
countries —
without delay
and at reasonable cost.
And good service in.
cludes telephones at .
convenientplacesabout
the farm.
That’s good tele.
Phone service! Your.
ranchorfarmcanhaveit.
¥
‘THE Paciric TELEPHONE AND TeLecraPH COMPANY ,