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health. Mr. Hendricks is superintendTw . cITy 1938. VADA CITY NUGGET MONDAY, JUNE 6,
— = : jeeted we feisateceusescees fe cae res Sauttered anh
— ree 3
fot
M Pp. Armstrong Sees
3 :
+ CLASS STAGES PLAY Se aie to her left hand last Fri3
. $
d when she pulled the car door
Nevada City Nugget 3 \ The Value Of Dreams $INP. TA PROGRAM . 27 wog> ste ritet e-em oor
305 Broad Street. — Phone 36 H. M. L. Jr. + The last meeting ine et the Blementof her hand. oe asc a to
hed * Shee . ary School Parent Teacher Associa-. drive her car for se :
as defined by statute. Printed and Published
at Nevada City.
A Legal Newspaper,
Editor and Publisher
Monday and Friday at -ublished. Semi-Weekly, yall
Nevada City, California, and entered. as =
matter of the second class in the postoffice al +
Nevada City, under Act of Congress, March 3. z
1879
$
SUBSCRIPTION. RATES : =
One year (in Advance) —.: !.2-255-3.-.-2., ;$2.50 3
tet eHtesteteneeeeteeeies ateererretes ete ieston,
Peed To Ne . .
a,
If the CIO needed any further avileiee that they are unpopular in Nevada County—that the attitude of those who
chased them out in April is the attitude of the general public
—the verdict, “Guilty of rioting’, returned against five of
their number by a jury of seven men and five women should
dispel any remaining doubts.
Nevada county has said, both in the heat of battle and in
the calm deliberation of the courtroom, that the CIO is not
wanted.
brought to light since the situation reached a climax in the
April purge be construed to indicate that the rank and file of
Nevada county workers want anything to do with what Joh
_L. Lewis stands for.
Nevada county is. not another Harlan county. In Kentucky, the mine operators conspired together. to bar unionism; in Nevada county the miners had their own union, were
under no duress from above, were well content with their
‘wages ahd working conditions. In Kentucky the operators
_ hired thugs to oppose unionism; in Nevada county it was the
miners themselves who rose up against CIO meddling.
Those local men who joined the CIO have been allowed
to go back to their homes and their jobs; they belong in Nevada county and seem in no danger of molestation so long as
they do not plead the cause of Lewis. The people of Nevada
county have supported Sheriff Carl Tobiassen in his claim thai
“Law and order did not break down—because the CIO’ was
not allowed to break it dcwn.’-—Sacramento Union:
Purr WonDER-IN’
I wonder if in China land
Whose sorrows touch our hearts today,
The children, tortured and afraid,
Will ever learn again to play;
What of young lives so filled with dread.
So marred by bitter woe and pain,
Why should wee children pay the price
Of man’s insatiate lust for gain?
I wonder if in all the blood stamed annals of history, one
can find anything more cowardly and atrocious than the indiscriminate slaughter of non-combatants; yet this dastardly
habit has become a part of modern warfare, indulged in by nations who presume to call themselves civilized.
The bombing of helpless civilian populations, consisting
of the aged, and infirm, also of women and children, has during the past few years, shocked and horrified us again and
again; words are inadequate to express our abhorrence. We
can only say that the war lord, army or nation which condones this merciless and evil practice deserves the contempt
and condemnation of every right thinking man and woman.
Perhaps the saddest thing connected with modern warfare is its effect upon the lives and thoughts of little children.
In China at the present time, homeless children whose parents have fallen before the invader, roam the streets of certain
towns and village,s searching for food in the gutters, and
mentally so confused and bewildered that they flee in abject
‘terror from those who seek~to aid them.
We of California who are familiar with Chinese children,
and take delight in their exotic charms of person and manner,
we who have touched their tiny hands, listened to their gay
songs and watched them at their innocent, care-free play,
find it difficult to visualize the suffering and misery endured.
by their prototypes across the sea:
Surely America will heed the cry of these unfortunate
children; surely we shall aid every effort put forth in their behalf.
I think it was Elizabeth Browning, who once wrote, “A
child's‘ cry in the darkness curses deeper than a strong man in
his wrath."’ The time will come when earth’s mad war lords
will realize the truth contained in those words; sometime—
They will stand at the bar of justice
With the stain of their sins defiled,
And read their condemnation
In the face of a little child.
—A. MERRIAM CONNER.
DAUGHTER IS BORN as week end guests two sons, Allen
and wife and baby, Muller Chapman,
two sisters of Mrs. Chapman, Mrs.
Dora Roach, Mrs. Ed Willis and
daughter, Marcella and son, Hubert.
Accompanying Mr. and Mrs, Muller
Chapman’ were Mrs. Marie Charonatt
Cunningham and sister of Hollywood
the latter two being sisters of his
wife.
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Robt. J.
Hendricks in Jones Memorial hospital Sunday was a daughter. The
‘infant weighs 7 pounds and 15 ounces. Mother and daughter are in good
ent of. the Murehie mine,
Dr. and Mrs. C. W. Chapman had
By no-stretch of the imagination can any of the evidence .
'intenmediate smart set;
The influence of moving pictures
than kings and pres:dents. The economiic potency of screen trends
such effect that it is reckoned
‘concerns.
Temple indirectly
fac uring
ture Shirley casi
bar manufacturers set
large sum. So
industry
filed suit for a
; time ago the liquor
erican distillers of their just proporiion of booze money from
erican drinking public.
The
ing habits of the inhabitants of i
movie wonderland, anes, that
‘s also symbolig of the basic attraction that exists in them, is that these
an “inst
shadowy people frequently drink,
not scotch and soda, but champagne.
Beautiful people. elegan ly, 4-a>se4
are seen upon the screen drinking
champagne, with obviously
thought of itS high cost. As they
casually sip their sparkling drinks
hey make remarks wonderfully witty, that have taken sharp HoHvwood minds months to compose, and
fall from the stars’ lips so casually
that the movie goer, who very likely
has never tasted champagne or made
a very witty remark, is filled with
rapturous awe and wonderment. It
is like a pleasant dream.
dream. The wonderful and frequently recurring dream that ‘¢an” be
lead for a few hours the life of a
fairy princess or a great nobleman,
or any kind of a life of marvelous
ease of romance or adventure. To
drink champagne with royalty or the
to soar to
heights of romance with beautiful
with a rugged pioneer;
all, When things go not well with the
handsome shadows, on the screen, to
have a warm and comforting sense
of the softness of the seat in the
cinema house and a detachment from
the trouble the actors feel, that is
the ultimate in dream perfection,
There are many who deplore the
enjoyment of vicarious
and there is justice in their outcries
when these enjoyments completely
supplant active amusements. There
is a time for dreams, and it js often
good for the soul to escape for a few
hours from the ugliness -that is a
large part of this tiresome world.
To dream and to return to reality
refreshed and stronger froth the
caping ‘from the world of reality
through the creation of music or art,
or the participation in various other
active pastimes. The moving pictures
fulfill a great need. in vending
dreams to all who weuld buy, and-in
my opinion they infringe upon the
rightful domain of active amuseimportant sales factor by iuge ane er
In a’ recent pic-. }
a slur on candy bars in general. Im-' themselves in
mediately an association of candy
up an enormous hullabaloo of indignation aud
ane
held a.
great public erying in its beer bestories they have heard or read about
the Am-}
grand thing about the drinknj
. !
It is a dream. the great American
bought at a nominal price by all who!
wish to escape from dull reality and,
young lovers; to tame the Wild West
and above’
pleasures,
wholesome change, is good. And it is.
not evepy one who is capable of estion was held Friday afternoon in the
auditorium. of the grammar school.
menis only occasionally and exceptupon modern life is a wondrous] ionally. : :
thing. Stars of the cinema wield more nus aed the business meeting Miss
power over the customs of people A great many of the critics of Hogan’s class entertained the group
with a play, “The Proud Princess”.
Between scenes the following numbers were presented:
Tap dance, by Jean Rielly.
Poem by Dorothy Anderson.
Song by Mary Lee Carr and Marilyn Pierce.
Harmonica solo by Bill Ursery.
Song -by Julia Panelli.
At the conclusion of the program
Mrs. W. P. Lee gave her report on
the convention held recently in San
Francisco.
Tea was served by
sertion of active amusements for the.
shadow-palaces are people who eithhave a sense of reality too deep to
let them forget it for a time, or lack
ithe imagination necessary to project
to the drama of the
sercen. They recollect that the glamorous princes and princesses of. the
happy land of dreams are often very
stupid and foolish louts in their real
homes in Hollywood. They recall.the
a ie motion pictures who @eplore the dea .
a
Mrs. Leland
cause . film’ smoothies at slick bar: oe faking of sets and ponder why Sutth, Sire SR Well “wn Mire. A.
on the screen usualy ordered. the shadows of people they know to H. Willard
“Seotch and Soda,’’ thereby accordb2 ¢3mmon in reality, should be able é z
ing to the Amerjean liquor industry, to charm them by performing preSSS
booming sales of the importers of >0sterous. actions, against fairy-tale .
Seotch whiskey and.devriving Am-) backgrounds. j
GIFTS For The —
0.
With thosg people who do not en-. ]}
joy the movies, I sympathize. deeply . GRADUATES
and understandingly, for I am one . ;
of them. Ii gives this class of pee. } LENTHERIC TWEED
ple little pleasure to witness the . !
TOILETRIES .
Powder, Perfume, Frag.
rance, Talcum Both Powhappy reunion of the handsome young .
'
diplomat with? + prime minister's
for: it ending which . }}
he
. daugoter is an
we. suspected from the first, and we} .
. consider it a low trick on the part of . der, Compacts, Bath Salts .
the director to have refrained from . —also—
eo eeOe it shod The Beane nee? . Shanghai = Asphodele .
of all the ex raordinary situations : i
palls on us because of its unreality We pei agents for Lentheric .
which makes it entrancing to the enand always have a complete
: . ete stock of these famous prepara-.
thusiast, but stilted and artificial to tions.
us. However, the detractors of the
ma are few and the enthusiasts
many, so it is likely that the movies
will go on for a long time bringing
romance and glamour, and escape}}/° =
from small tawdriness, within the Yardley Toilet Articles, Leather
reach of all for a few cents an hour. . . ! Gis vce ee see oe Be
. Cases, Gift Stationery
NATIONAL HOTEL GUESTS Graduation Cards of All
Kinds
The following guests have arrived oe to 8
at the National hotel: Jas. E. Irvine,
Takland; W. E. Dophens, Sacramencine . WATERMAN AND PARKER .
_DUOFOLD FOUNTAIN PENS .
AND PENCILS
to; I. J. Koverman, Movietone News,
San Francisco; Paul A. Huse, Movietone News, San Francisco; J. Mec-.
Henry, Universal Newsreel, San . : ca ,
Francisco; Miss A. Jenkins, San! Drug Store
Francisco; Mr. and Mrs. Jy E. Little,
Stockton; P. F. Murphy, Sacramento; James Z. Stewart, Sacramento;
NEVADA CIFY
‘. Phone 521
FOR SALE — 2 car loads of beds,
springs, mattresses, chairs, etc.,
from $2.50 to $20.00. Some like
new. Open until 7:00 p.m. FRED
A. RUPLEY, Auburn, Calif.
6-6-1te
PIANO BARGAINS — Latest type
Spinet Console Flat top piano. Also upright almost new, to be sold
here in Nevada City,. at big savines. Terms like rent can. be arranged to responsible parties, For
particulays-write at once to Credit
Dept., Cline Piano Company 301
Market St., San Francisco, Calif.
; 5-27-3te
FOR SALE—at Vistica
3 miles North of “Yuba
CHERRIES
Orchara,
Wood. $1.75 a tier. Fred Bierwagen Place, 4 miles out on Colfax
highway. « 5-231tp
FOR SALE—Essick dredge outfit.
Complete. Reasonable. See Brooks
at the Forty-Niner,;Bar. North San
Juan. 5-163te
WANTED—One work horse, 1400
pounds, true and sound, not too
old. John Raum, Camptonville,
Calif. 5-24te
FOR RENT — Six room furnished
house. Three “bedrooms, Central
location. For particulars call 521.
4-11-tfe
REAL ESTATE
WALTER H. DANIELS
LICENSED BROKER
P. 0. BOX 501
Nevada City
,Mr. and Mrs. P, Lee, New Mexico; r
Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Phillips, San
Francisco; Frank E. Sullivan, San
Francisco; James T. Fitzgerald, San
Francisco; Judge McIntosh, Downievitle: B. W. Zollinger, San Francisico; N. J. Samuelson,San Francis. co; L. F. Utter, Los Angeles; Jack
, Wittmer, Sacramento; John Kocoe,
Loomis; Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Davison,
Sacramento; O. W. Kay, San Francis(co; Mrs. E: B. Corbet, Palo Alto;
Burke Corbet, Palo Alto; Margaret
King, Piedmont; B.-C. Austin, San
Francisco; F. M. English, Portland;
Raymond King, Sacramento; Fred
Green, San Francisco; Geo. Murray,
. San Francisco; Harry Dean, San
Francisco; John Gasetti and wife,
Oakland; R. J. Chatley, Oakland;
Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Meyers, Alleghany; A. N. Bentley, San Francisco;
Blanche Penée, Downieville; Mrs. F.
. B. Hanson, Camptonville;* Mr. and
Mrs. E. S. Bradbury, Forest; A.E.
Murphy, Washington; J. H. Curren
and wife, Sacramento; Happy Burger
and wife, Sacramento; Nels A. Erickson, Stockton.
much from me.
dainties are due
REAL GoGixg
EFFICIENCY
AIR
The G
COOLERS
Cooler
$167.00
TERMS
Essick Machi
: r 3 oe ee The studio that satisfies. Good
PHONE 67 _ photos at reasonable prices —
a camansin no guess work. Shove Kodak
; i alley finishing service. :
132 Mill Street
FASTER COOLING
RUSTPROOF METAL CONSTRUCTION
AUTOMATIC WATER
: RECIRCULATOR = No Water Wasted’
Low first cost, low operating cost and high
efficiency are the outstanding features of
Essick Air Coolers, for both residential and
commercial cooling. » Manufactured only by
Foote’s Electrical Co.
Phone 122
bath, sh
nery Company, Los Angeles.
Be a “‘thirty.
Grass Valley
See your dealer
P-G-wEPACIFIC GAS AND ELECTRIC COMPANY
Owned . Operated . Ml
** Back in jolly old England a tea kettle is
treated with some respect. A tea kettle is
kept to its traditional use of boiling water
with which to make a ‘spot o’ tea.’ But here
in the good old U. S. A. there are folk who
make me boiling mad. They sig cha too
“Tomy way of thinking, hot water chioid
come a-running from a pipe when silken
for washing, when the
family dog is to be soaped and scrubbed, or
-a little boy’s hands need whitening up, or
a little girl’s hair is to be shampooed to
silky softness.” signed TOMMY TEAKETTLE
*.
Heating water in a tea kettle is expensive. More heat escapes into the
kitchen than goes into the water.
But hot water from an Automatic
Gas Water Heater, where water is
kept stored hot in an insulated tank
is very low priced hot water service.
Today you can buy an Automatic
Gas Water Heater for your home for
as little as ten cents a day. Then you
will have‘hot water service that is
faithfully yours 24 hours a day, for
gwers, dishwashing, clean’ ing, anda score of otherconveniences.
AUTOMATIC GAS
WATER HEATER
FOR ONLY 3.00 AMONTH §&
ged by Californians
-niner”
~ BUY EXPOSITION
:
TICKET BOOKS now 3
City on U. S. 99 EK. Farm prices.
5-28-tp
DRAG SAW FOR Also Fir °
S
“¥ .
&
a