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Collection: Newspapers > Nevada City Nugget

June 7, 1943 (4 pages)

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ee eS Nevada City Nugget 305 Broad Street. Phone 36, at Neva A Legal Newspaper, as defined by statute. Printed and Publ ished da City. H. M. LEETE e Editor ang ji. at Nevada City matter of the s One Month Published Semi-Weekly, Monday and itursdy One year (In Advance) Nevada City under Act of Congress, SUBSCRIPTION RATES ores urate ites rensase $3.00 80 cents . : ! , California, and entefed as Ma econd elass in the postoffice a+ ; March 3, . j . \ . “AMERICAN HEROES BY LEFF (OUTSTANDING try. In two years a tremendous complished an Only recently the pres dustry plans to exceed t _ production rate is greater than the world combined. Accordi son, the 1943 munitions goals some instances, exceeded by a National Association of Manuf public could know more of this man, Italian and Japanese soil. ler guns. » “Of how, as disclosed by during February.” prise as one of the outstanding Americans have good cause to be proud o ule by more than 55 per cent next year; Speaking before the Senate mittee, Malcolm Muir, chairman of the War Committee of the “Of how many bombs we “‘Of how many extra shells we Navy, 40,000,000 20-mm. anti aircraft shells, 1,000 for every minute of the day, were loaded for the ACHIEVEMENT £ their indusjob of conversion has been acd a powerful war machine has been built up. dent revealed that the aircraft inhis year’s enormous production schedand that our current the other nations of that of all ng to War Preduction Chief Nelwill be fully a¢hieved, and in comfortable margin. Military Affairs Subcomacturers said: ‘I only wish the wonderful production record— have stored to drop on Gerhave stored for our heavUnder Secretary of the or more than Navy the When historians come to view the war to date along with the defense of Britain, the resistance of the Russians, and the amazing performance of our, own fighting forces they will no doubt cite the production achievements of American enterevents of the conflict. ] wonder if in Washi Wiseacres now will When we, speaking Urge our own wide Perhaps due sympat come and more potentially dan western coast. means within our power. what Jap is loyal and breed and partially fumigated, let well enough alone. devotion. selves to be twice deceived b ‘and we got—Pearl Harbor. » ty that their evil powers have ahd n.’’—A. Merriam Conner. We hear pleas for the American citizens of the republic.” Loyal citizens? 1 shall not presume to say there are none such, but by what token may be discern which is not? Loyal or otherwise, they all have the ability to protest over. much, and the gentle, “oh, so, excuse please and oh, so sorry’’. fall as glibly from the lips of one who might be ready to fight for the Union as from the lips of those who stand ready to commit the crimd of high treason. Naw, that the Pacific Coast has been cleared of the There is an old Spanish proverb which we to remember: “If mine enemy deceive we 6ncey shame on him. If he deceive me twice, shame on me.” We allowed ourJUST 'WONDERIN’ ngton take offense, of the Japs, experience And say in words distinctly clear, “Don’t send the Japanese back here. hy we lack, But we don’t want those Nippies back.” I wonder if there is any section of the where the deported Japanese would be less desirable, less welUnited States gerous than in the states of the Many kindly, but misled persons are, at this time, urging the return of the Japanese to their olden haunts along our western shores. We who know the Japs for what they are, should fight this brand of sickly sentimentality with every Japanese who are “‘loyal we want the powers that be to We know the Japs; we have seen desirable communities, towns and portions of cities blasted into ugliness and rendered uninhabitable to their former white inhabitants by the coming of the Japs. We have seen fertile valleys given over to those of an alien race whose only interest in the land was represented by the amount of money they could earn and sénd away to “oh, so dear relative in Japan.” crave a return of these conditions. After the war, we should liketo see every Jap in the country placed in good, staunch ships and taken back to the land of his unswerving love and We do not shaulddo walt y the war lords of Germany, and for that we are most heartily ashamed; let’s not repeat our mistake with the wily Japanese. We trusted the Japs, we scoffed at warning voices of those who bade us. “beware,” i*° “When the war has been won, the United Nations should put the axis nations upon a long term of probation; we must watch them carefully for some time, and know for a certainbeen rendered impotent; until they have clearly proved their reformation,” “there will be doubt, hesitation and pain, never glad confident morning Bishop To Address _ Mt. St. Mary’s Graduates At the commencement’ exercises at Mt. St. Mary’s Academy this evening 29 boys and girls will graduate from the academic and business departments. The exercises will be held in St. Cecelia’s Auditorium, opening at 8 o’clock. to work immediately at McClellan Field as junior stenographers. Miss begin work in the County Welfare ‘office in the court house at Nevada : . Miss Jean Abbott, now living llejo will be unable to be presttonight’s ceremony because % Among the graduates six will go rion Moore of Grass Valley will ishe has already started work in ‘the . federal employment office in that ‘city. : Bishop Robert J. Armstrong of {Sacramento will address the graduates and present the diplomas. Marion Moore will deliver the salutory and Robert Pederson the valedictory. ELKS HOSTS TO OFFICERS The Nevada City Elks Lodge Satufday evening entertained officers and their wives or sweethearts from Camp Beale at a social dance in the club rooms. This is the second time tertained by the lodge. Sandwiches and coffee were provided ‘by Elks’ womenfolki: ©) Camp Beale officers have beén enthe “Shooting Fool” is what they New Guinea. Garand rifle. Bond bought. Rapids, Mich., because in line of duty he shot down 22 Jap snipers in\ He twice bagged Japs who were trying to pick off his captain, saving the officer’s life. No sniper’s nest is safe from his We help put Garand rifles in our heroes’ hands with every War GW / fA » = called Pvt. Charles Zuke, of Big U. S. Treasury Department TAREE HARVEST . CAMPS TO CARE FOR STUDENTS AUBURN, June 7. — The Placer county farm labor committee = an-. nounces that it has completed arrangements for three harvest labor camps in, Placer county this year. One will be a camp of 100 girls, . sponsored by the Berkeley Girl Har-. vest Camp, Inc., and composed of. girls between the ages of 16 and 19} from high schools in En Cereio, Albany, Berkeley, Piedmont and seyeral other schools. These girls will be quartered in the Placer union high school and will work in the packing sheds between Loomis and Auburn at rates prevailing in the sheds in which they are working. The Oakland Y. M. C. A. will operate two camps, one in Loomis and one in Auburn, totaling 200 boys between the ages of 14 and 18. These KENNY HEADS CALIFORNIA HOUSING ASSN. SAN FRANCISCO, June 7.—Attorney General Robert W. Kenny, as president, heads the list’ of new officers today by the California Housing and Planning Association. Others are the Rt. Rev: T. J. O'Dwyer and Carey McWilliams, Los Angeles, Dr. Omer Mills and John F. Shelley, San Francisco, Vi¢e-Presidents; Mrs. Marion Beers Howden, San Francisco, Secretary, and Mrs. Millard Rogers, San Francisco, Treasurer. Elected to the Board of Governors were E. Goeffrey Bangs, Catherine ‘Bauer, Mrs. Jesse Colman, R. G. de Lappe, Morse Erskine, Walter Koetitz, Dr. A. E. Larson, Frank C. Mac(Donald, Richard M. Neustadt, the Rev. N. W. Pendleton and Paul G. Pinsky, San Francisco; Dr. M. R. Benedict, Prof. Howard Moise, Walter E. Packard and Dr. Max Radin, boys will come from the Oakland area and will work in both the fields and the packing houses. The boys will be quartered in the Placer junior college and the Loomis union grammar school. The rate paid boys dition the employers will arrange an assesment of 2 1-2 cents per hour per boy to take care of the cost of cots and pads, necessary facilities in the way of showers, etc., and transportation. The committee estimates that only half this'sum will be needed and the balance will be either returned to the employed at the end of the season or held over for another year. we Both the boys and girls have been carefully recruited for the work they are to do. The girls have been chosen from several hundred applicants. Boys have been selected for their size and ability to hard work. All smaller boys and those who do not ;appear capable of good work have been eliminated. PHI BETTA KAPPA KEY HANDED TO GRANDSON LOS ANGELES, June 7. — When 92 year old John Thomas McGill of. Nashville, Tenn., heard that his grandson, John Thomas McGill, was to be initiated into the famed scholastic séciety, Phi Bet Kappa, he sent his own smybolié key in a jewel ‘box to the Los Angeles campus of the University of Califonia. : A special deliver letted addressed to Dr. Alexander G. Fite, professor of French, who was to bestow the keys upon the elected. canadidates, reminded Dr. Fite that in 1914 Dr. McGill himself presented Dr. Fite’s own Phi Betta Kappa key to him. Not only did Ensign McGill receive his grandfather’s key, he won the dowble award for first honors in navigation and a sword for being the outstanding senior a few days ago at the annual ROTC drill’ on the Westwood field. Long a professor at Vanderbilt University, Dr. McGill has been prominent in the Phi Betta Kappa. Mrs. Minnie Wardlow of Santa Ana is spending some time in Nevada City with her brothers, Parl and Frank Holbrook and Frank Holbrook, Sr. Mr. Holbrook is quite ill with a severe attack of 4 shingles. will be 60 cents an hour, and in ad-, father, . Berkeley; Charles O. Buisck and ;John Harold Swan, Sacramento, Ron‘ald Campbell, Redwood City;. Mre. Olin Garrison, Lafayette, Dr. Paul
R. Hanna, Palo Alto; Maurice J Wilse, Vallejo, and the Rev. Edgar Jose. Floyd C. Covington, John Entenza, John Anson Ford, Oscar Fuss, Helen Gahagan, Cc. J. Haggerty, Augustus F. Hawkins, Reginald D. Johnson, Rober. C. Johnson, Ralh A. MeMullen, Richard Neutra, Carl C. Rasmussen, B. F. Shrimpton, Mrs. Sumner Spauld-ing, Mrs. Jessie L. Terry and Lloyd Wright, Los Angeles; Dr. Arthur (Coons, Claremont; Dr. Harry Girvetz Santa Barbara; Richard Ibanez, Upland; Ralph Lavin, ‘Bakersfield; Stewart Meigs, Carpenteria, and Dr. Hubert Phillips, Fresno. . . Wilson, San “The success of a democracy depends upon the intelligent action of its informed citizens and to provide the essential information is one of the major objectives of the California Housing and Planning Association,’ declared President Kenny in taking over the leadership of the organization. He paid tribute to Professor Howard Moise, of the University of California, whom he succeeds as president, for laying a strong foundation for the organization, placing it in a position, Kenny said, ‘‘to perform. great service to our state.” The new president explained that the California Housing and Planning Association is. an organization of representative citizens, who seek to stmiulate intelligent public and private planning, both for war time emergencies and for the longer rangq post war period. “We are concerned,” he said, “with housing, transportation, urban and rural redevelopment, and in a broader sense with the application of modern planning methods in town ‘and country. “Because of the tremendous concentrations of people in war industry centers, (California will have. grave problems of readjustment when the war is won. The ultimate wisest use of all our human and natural resources to prevent disomployment and suffering calls for bold and intelligent planning now. Good programs don’t just happen—they are earefully planned. The California Housing and Planning Association is prepared to encourage the necessary planning and to follow it through with public support to the action stage. 1S “We shall need to develop the closest coordination gbetween agencies of the state and federal governjrivate and semi-public groups to deal with these problems that concern us, all.’’ STRIPED BASS FOUND SPAWNING IN SAN JOAQUIN Strange as it must seem this fish have never been officially located ‘and described by the Cali{fornia State Division of Fish and ne Nevada City Nugget — Monday, June di 1943 PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY DENTISTS ee DR. JOHN R. BELL DENTIST Office Hours: 8:30 to 5:30 Evenings by Appointment Morgan & Powell Bldg. Phene 321 DOCTORS 7.— some loJune to SAN FRANCISCO, striped bass anglers. the exact cation of the spawning grounds of Game. Efforts have been made to determine the whereabouts of the spawning grounds on various 0ccasions in the past, but the right men and the right fish have never come together at the right place and the right time. Thanks to information provided the Division by Elmer Boss, and to the help of “Jim’’ Bowling, both Stockton sportsmen, this situation has now been rectified. On May.11,:1943,.from a boat skillfully piloted by Bowling, members of the Division’s Bureau of Fish Conservation struck the right combination of circumstances. Just below the junction of Middle River with the San Joaquin they were able to observe striped bass surfacing and splashing in what are known an the Atlantic seaboard as “rock fights’, presumed to be part of the spawning activities. (Striped bass are often called rock-fish in the east). Further, with a fine mesh gauze net they were able to collect eggs which have now been identified as those of the striped bass, in stages of development which indicated that they had been fertilized only a short time previously. : The spawning activities lasted from six to eight in the evening, on a falling tide. Fish were not very concentrated in this immediate -locality, but reports from other fishermen state that at this same time, at a point about two miles further downstream in the vicinity of Potato er was covered with spalshing fish. There seems no doubt therefore that here is at least one of the spawning areas of the striped bass. If you haven’t gotten around to buying a Second War Loan Bond, stop and think what it would mean te you if our solif diers hadn’t gotten round to i tie fight. WANTED: An ambitious, wide-awake man or woman to look after renewals and new _ subscriptions for the popular, fast-selling magazine, THE AMERICAN HOME. It is easy, pleasant work, and it pays big commissions. Spare time only required. Write today to Director, Sales Division, The AM' ERICAN HOME MAGAZINE COR PORATION, 251 Fourth Avenue New York, New York. RELATIVES INQUIRING FOR — William Spencer Sturmer. Please call 329, Grass Valley or write (Miss H. Sainsbury, P. O. Box 529 Grass Valley, California. 5-171mp Slough, the whole surface of the wat-. , B. W. HUMMELT, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON 400 Broad Street ‘ Office Hours: 10-12 a. m.; 2-5 p. m. Evenings 7-8. Phone 395 X-RAY ATTORNEYS HARRY M. McKEE : 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 H. WARD SHELDON ATTORNEY AT LAW Union Building Broad Street Nevada City Telephone 28 * FUNERAL DIRECTORS HOLMES FUNERAL HOME The Holmes Funeral Home service is priced within the means of all. Ambulance service at a’l hours. Phone 203 246 Sacramento St. Nevada City VOCAL INSTRUCTOR MRS. CHARLES ELLIOTT 414 Nihell Street Phone 464 Nevada City MINING ENGINEERS tne J. F. O°;CONNOR Mining and Civn Engineer United States Mineral Surveying Licensed Surveyor 203 West Main St. Grass Valley . GRASS VALLEY DENTISTS Bion a ots ee DR. ROBT. W. DETTNER DENTIST X-RAY Facilities Available Hours: 9:00-5:00. Evening appointments. 120% Mill Street. Phone 77 Grass Valley, Calif. DOCTORS DR. A. BURSELL ‘ PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Res. and Office, 446 Broad Srteet, Nevada City. Hours 9 A. M. to 8 P. M. CARL POWER JONES, M.D PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office Hours: 1 to 3; 7 to 8 p. m. Sundays 11:30 to 12:30 129 South Auburn St., Grass Valley S. F. TOBIAS, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON 214 Neal St., Grass Valley Office Hours: 12-3 and 7-8 Phone: Office 429. Residence 1042 DANIEL L. HIRSCH, M. D PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Offices and Receiving Hospital, 118 Bush St. Hours: 10-12; 275, évenings 7-8 P. M. Day or night phone 71. NEVADA CITY FRATERNAL AND CLUB DIRECTORY ea ie a = WOMEN’S CIVIC CLUB Regular meetings the 2nd and 4th Thursdays of the month, at the Grammar Schoo] Auditorium. 2:30 D. mM. MRS. HAL DRAPER, Pres. MRS. FLORENCE KJORLIE, See. =D PN a. a PREE! If Excess acid causes you pains of Indigestion, Heartburn, Belching, Bloating, Nausea,’ Gas Pains, get free sample, Udga, at Dickerman Drug Store. FREE!—If excess acid causes yeu pains of Indigestion, Heartburn, Belching, Bloating, Nausea, Gas Pains, get free sample, Udga, at Dickerman Drug Store. 315-15tp LOCAL AND LONG DISTANCE! moving in standard furniture van First class storage facilities: We do crating and shipping. Hills Flat Reliable Transfer, Grass "Valley. Phone 471-W. 3-1tf EXPERT RADIO REPAIRING — Loud Speaker Systems for Rent vr Sale. Authorized Philco Auto Radio Service. ART’S RADIO HOSPITAL —Specialists in Radio THs, 112 South Church Street, Grass Valley. Phone 984. 2-19tf NEVADA CITY LODGE, No. 518 B. P. @. ELKS Meets every second and fourth Thursday evening at 8 p. m. in Elks Home, Pine St. Phone 108. Visitinw Elks welcome. W. L. TAMBLYN, LAMBERT .THOMAS, Sec. . = HYDRAULIO PARLOR NO. 56, ne N. a Ga. W. eets every Tuesday evening Pythian Castle, 232 Crapa atees? Visiting Native Sons welcome, ROBERT TUCKER, Pres DR. C. W. CHAPMAN, Rec, See’y a eat wena OUSTOMAH LODGE, Bp oo 14,1.00F — eets ever Tuesday even! 7:30, Odd Fellows Hall, ale CHESTER PETERSON, N. G. JONOTHAN PASCOE Rec. Baers JOHN W. DARKE, Fin. Sec’y. Lame 4 ‘ © Advertise in the Nugget for resuits Workers in a Michi \ gan refins oy fixed up a very low, false oor leading to the Pay office. On it is inscribed, “You will ments, as well as between various learn to duck ’ Buy a beet remaon't y a