Search Nevada County Historical Archive
Enter a name, company, place or keywords to search across this item. Then click "Search" (or hit Enter).
To search for an exact phrase, use "double quotes", but only after trying without quotes. To exclude results with a specific word, add dash before the word. Example: -Word.

Collection: Newspapers > Nevada City Nugget

June 7, 1943 (4 pages)

Go to the Archive Home
Go to Thumbnail View of this Item
Go to Single Page View of this Item
Download the Page Image
Copy the Page Text to the Clipboard
Don't highlight the search terms on the Image
Show the Page Image
Show the Image Page Text
Share this Page - Copy to the Clipboard
Reset View and Center Image
Zoom Out
Zoom In
Rotate Left
Rotate Right
Toggle Full Page View
Flip Image Horizontally
More Information About this Image
Get a Citation for Page or Image - Copy to the Clipboard
Go to the Previous Page (or Left Arrow key)
Page: of 4  
Loading...
ES RT Page Four « —_aiemenie seen coe UMER FACTS MRS ENGLEBRIGHT — FORJUNE FORMALLY IN for five pounds of sugar for home; canning, effective as of May 24. In. Mrs. Grace Englebright of Nevada applying for more sugar at the local City announces herself as an inde. board one must give some proof that. Pendent candidate for congress, for they have used the sugar purchased . the Second Congressional District of with stamps 15 and 16 before more California to succeed her late hussugar will be granted. band, the Hon. Harry L. Englebright. Mry Englebright has been in . Washington, D. C. for th ast sevlenteen years with her husband and ‘feels that she knows ongressional TIRES—wNevada City quota of procedure. She has also traveled grade I tires have been reduced 20 . over the Second District many timper cent for June. Truck tires have'es with her husband, and knows the been reduced 12 per cent, limited; wants and conditions in this terridriving is advised. tory. PRESSURE COOKERS—Pressure. Mrs. Englebright has received the cookers will be rationed by County jsolicitations of many friends to enWar Boards. ‘Retail prices in this. ter the contest and many likely asarea are fixed as follows: pirants have already withdrawn in ‘National Pressure Cooker Co.— #iher favor. ‘ $14.50. Wisconsin Aluminum Foundry Co. $15.50. Burpee Can Sealer Co. $15.50. GASOLINE—"A’’ gasoline coupon No. 6, good for 4 gallons until July ie. Mrs. Englebright’s only son, Jackson Englebright, is an ensign in the U. S. Navy and she has no home RATION BOOKS — Ration booksities. She was born in Nevada City,: must be returned to the local board!attended the loeal schools anf finwhen the car is sold. Your applica-. ished her education at Mills Coltion card for Book III must’ be lege. She belongs to Ponemah Counproperly filled in, stamped and recil, Degree of Pocahontas at Nevada turned at once. Destroy unused ra(City, and the Business and Profestion stamps yourself; don’t permit;sional Women’s Club. them to fall into the hands of the. Her platform will be: black market. war; finish the Central Valley ProSHOES AND RUBBER BOOTS -~. ject and bring back gold mining. Women’s safety shoes are available . The Second District comprises the throwgh supplemental ration stamps . counties of Alpine, Amador, Calain plants authorized to handle safety veras, El —.Dorado,. Inyo, Lassen, shoes, or by application to the local,Mariposa, Modoc, Mono, Nevada, board . . Placer, Plumas, Shasta, Tehama, Boots can now be made available Siskiyou, Sierra, Tuolumne and Trinby the local board to miners, log-_ ity. gers, communication linemen, cer-. A special election ‘will be called tain types of construction workers, some time in the near etc., when a definite need for them 'Governor Earl Warren. There will is shown. . be no political designation after the — ‘name of any candidate, and all who RATION CALENDAR FOR MAY sf wish:can vote regardless of party. BOOK 1 SUGAR—Stamp No. 13) —Five pounds through August 15. . NEVADA COUNTY BAND PLAYS COMFEE—Stamp No, 24 — One. The Nevada County Band of Grass pound through June 30. . Valley yesterday afternoon gave their SHOES—Stamp No. 17—-One pair first concert of the summer at the through June 15. PY . county hospital here. The concert Book 11—CANNED GOODS— Blue consisted mainly of a pre-view of the stamps J. K. L. M valid until July 1. music the band will play during the MEATS AND FATS—Red stamps Fourth of July celebration in Grass J. K. and L valid through June. . Valley. Five of the group appeared The OPA is serving you, are you in solo numbers among the eleven serving it, so the home front will selections played for the residents of WORK ON FARM ‘ERRORS OF WORLD THIS SUMMER IN WARNO.1NOT LIEU OF TRIPS TO BE REPEATED A ‘back to the farm’’ movemaut! LOS ANGELES, June 7. — That in answer to California’s call for. the United Nations will avoid the vacation workers to aid in salvag-. mistakes of the League of Nations is ing important crops in manpower . confidently expressed by Dr. Malstarved agricultural areas, is urged! bone W. Graham, professor of poliby the California State Automobile; tical science at the Los Angeles Association as a “patriotic stbsti-. campus of the University of CaliforAn appeal, premised ox vacation . '° withdraw or block action by 2 'single vote “left the whole structure travel now being restrictéd to the . ae # dadivittal cocusiion’.’ mileage limitations of an ‘‘A’”’ book, . * ays oe ae oo is made by the association to norDr. Graham adds. “in the fact of, thern California families to enroll'sych overwhelming dangers as we in the Civilian Land Army and comhave undergone, the ‘wider system bine vacation with essential work. jof general security’ of which the Ati\lantic Charter speaks, has become tomobile Association. has been guidsg aiecas ss aa a oe iy Honticnh Galllovnlas moleriata: h the institutionalized. structure of the = iUnited Nations become a_ political seh eden hl oars taal ~r ‘and militarg’ federation of cobelligand recreational motor trips,’ de-j ‘erent states with an initial endowclared Irving Kahn, president of ee ne of authority atequate to pre(California State Automobile esa the general peace and suffic. ee + argue epee itis: win canes ‘> tent jurisdiction to promote general guide motorists to working vaca¢ welfare in. ever-increasing measure tions on our farm,s orchards and ‘to millions upon million of human ranches where they can participate beings in a vital home-front project.‘’ “Fér the past 36 years the Auids i h a) ehh “pavived that” pemplete Gac. It will thus be a structure reared formation on the Civilian Land 7°" ee \frain from resort to war, but upon (passed the tests and is now a lieu_Nevada City Nugget — Monday, June 7, 1943 Vernon Lyons who has been in the U. S. Army for several months has been released to go into defense work. With his family he will move to Camptonville where he will be . employed in a sawmill. Mrs. Ralph Watkins, Jr., and son have spent the ‘past week visiting Mrs. Watkins parents, Mr. and Mrs. . Irving Long. Mrs. Watkins has re-. urned to Chico to arrange her atfairs and will return to Nevada City ME es ” ‘ met nN tute by motorists for vacation trips.”". nia. The ability of league members . ynti] her husband is in a permanent . Blake $35.00: Miles camp. He is in the U. S., air force and Was given a four hour call’to get ready and entrain for Miami, Florida, last week. ‘Friends and relatives in Nevada (City have received word that Dan Ungaro who has been’ in officers training school in Kearns, Utah, has tenant. Dave Tobiassen son of Sheriff and Mrs. Carl Tobiassen,-left Friday for Winchester Bay, Oregon to visit his brother, Elton who is in the coast guard. g Corporal Robert Paine, who has been in training in the air corps at Kearns, Utah, left yesterday after a few days furlough in Nevada City with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lon Paine. Mrs. Sadie Rogers arrived in Ne-'. ‘general fund $2,589.70. . paid on fire fund $60.00. Warrants a bus driver for’ the narrow gauge railroad the past eight years, resigned th middle of last week. He will enter defense work. City Council Orders Bills For May Paid . The City Council Thursday evening ordered the following gills for month of May paid: / Sam Hooper $125.00; Max Solaro $148.00; Geo. H. Calanan $20.00; H. S. Hallett $170.00; James Allen $135.00; J. J. Jakson $135.00; Dr. EH. M. Roesner $40.00; Bugene D. Coughlin $12.50; Emma Foley $12.50; Pacific Gas and Blectric Co. $286.12; Leos Garage $15.92; Helbach Motors Co. $1.73; Union Oil Co. $63.00; Ed Uren $20.00; Dickerman Drug Store $2.53; R. E. Harris $5.05; Alpha Stores Ltd. $74.40; Nevada County Lumber Co. $.28; Lawrence Motors $7.44; Sam Hooper $20.06; Save (More Variety $.42; The Western Union $3.93; Ernest Young $130.00; Louie Kelley $105.00; Nick Sandow '$130.00.—$1,699.78. The City Treasurer’s report for May follows: Recepits: Balance in treasury $10,513.42. Water collections $1,442.65. Business licenses $725.00. Dog licenses $2.00. Gas $3.13. —$2,172.78—$12.686.20. Disbursements: Warrants paid on Warrants paid on library fund $20.50.—$2.future by! ; Army is available at the offices of' Win the'the U. S. Employment Service, the American Women’s Voluntary Services, Agricultural Extension Service offices, an'd from the YMCA and 'YWIOA. HYBRID VIGOR
PRODUCES BIGGER LIVESTOCK DAVIS, June 7.—Hybrid vigor, obtained among livestok offspring by the crossing of breeds, may be a means of materially increasing the meat production in America during the war emergency. This is the opinion of Dr. P. W. Gregory, associate professor of animal husbandry on the Davis campus of the University of California. He points out that crossbreeding to obtain hybrid vigor has been employed in many places in the production of market lambs and not fail? . the hospital. i * BUSINESS HAS GONE TO As JEES) . aay, "ass a IES) t Duration nliances v your Appliance Dealer’s store is not so brimful today. Normally, at this season of the year, your appliance dealer would be proudly showing new models in ranges, refrigerators, water heaters, etc. That day must wait—until appliances are manufactured again—new, better, more plentiful. Right now all appfiance dealers who can have established appliance repair departments. They have no easy task with shortage of repair parts and skilled labor. At the first sign of trouble with any of your appliances, call on one of these dealers who is making repairs. He will do his best to help you keep your present equipment running for the duration. Buy your lamps and lamp bulbs, your fuses and cords and plugs from him as you need them. And in the meantime buy War Bonds and build up.a nest egg for Peace that will bring back the war-deferred comforts of America. Who and Where for Repair _ Every P.G.& E. office keeps an up-to-date list of factory-authorized repair dealers in your community P-G-Ea GE 20-W-643 pigs. ; “Tt is the wider use of hybrid vigor in the production af market hogs and beef cattle that needs emphasis now,”’ he sas. Well controlled experiments have definitely shown that crossbred pigs are consistently superior. in many respects to their purebred half sisters and brothers. Crossbred litters tend. to be larger, have fewer stillborn pigs and a higher percentage survives to weaning time and heavier weights. In the feed lot, crossbred pigs make slightly greater daily gains, reach the market about two weeks earlier, and a crossbred pig requires about 30 pounds less of concentrates to reach market weight.’’ Professor Gregory points out that the advantages per pig may be small but that if it were increased by 20 per cent of the seventy million hogs slaughtered in 1940, the savings in feed and labor would be sufficient to produce approximately three quar_positive actions to promote the heal_ing of the nations. It will rest upon ‘psychological affirmatives and positive jurisdiction, not upon negative covenants, It will be made up of a linkage of historicall binding plusises, not minuses. By giving to incipient institutions, during a period ;of transition, postive tasks to per‘form, there need be. no time lost in ‘foolish and futle discussions over . jurisdictional limits. There will be . plenary power—and jobs clamoring o be done.” vada City Friday from Oakland and: 749.20. visited her sister,, Mrs. Ida GuenBalance in treasury $9,946.00. ther until yesterday when her daugh-. pajance in fire fund $461.44. Balter and son in law, Mr an.d Mrs. El-'anee in library fund $907.47. Balmo Trewhella came down from Al-lance in general fund $8,577.09. leghany for her. . Lou Pingaree left Sunday fo SacMrs. Harold Hobbs and infant son ramento where he will spend the. came up from Berkeley Friday and summer. He will return in the fall. they are enjoying a visit with her his aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs. Ed: Cottage street. Her husband is en‘Norton. ‘gaged in war work in the bay dis{ STATE SURVEY OF PEACE PLANNING AGENCIES MADE BERKELEY, June 7.—At the request of California legislators, a ‘survey for postwar planning has just . been published by the Bureau of Public Administration on the Berkeley campus of the University of . California. { . . Fourth in a series of publications lon 1943 legislative problems, the iwork has been prepared by Dorothy . Campbell Tompkins, research assistant. It describes actiontaken or proposed by 28 states to pave the way for readjustment after the war. Emphasis is given to bills on postwar economic and social planning now under consideration by the California legislature. The special agencies already es‘tablished—-the Massachusetts (Committee on Postwar Readjustment, the iNew York State Postwar Public WodksPlanning Commission, the South Carolina Preparedness For Peace Commission, and the Utah Director of Postwar Planning—are outlined and proposals made by governors of the various states are set forth in the booklet. Copies may be obtained from the office of the buters of a million more hogs.”’ reau. THE POCKETBOOK of KNOWLEDGE :5. to enter school there and live with;. parents, Mr. and Mrs. G. Hanks of Tarquenio Angiolini, who has been , trict. . wise home-owners throughout the West. ALPHA STORES, Ltd. Nevada City—Phone 5 ‘ Grass Valley—Phone 88 MECHANICALLY, TH aad THIS "SUPER" TYPEWRITER LETTERS AIRPLANE PLANS FORMERLY CONSUMER BY HAND LETTERING. US SAVING THOUSANDS OF HOURS BERETS ARE NOT ‘MODERN “ SSS : . THEY WERE WORN IN Se ANCIENT GREECE OVER, A NEw 2000 YEARS AGO / ELECTRONIC "ICE INDICATOR “AUTOMATICALLY “URNS ON AN AIRPLANE'S DE-ICING EQUIPMENT AT THE PROPER MOMENT sae oo m f i am Se aw i FLEXIBLE GLASS FIBRES, THINNER ~ THAN A HUMAN HAIR, ARE USED IN CAMOUFLAGING IMPORTANT WAR PLANTS [. Hotel Clunie ‘UNDER NEW MANAGEMEN®T IT’S FAMOUS COFFEE SHOP AND COCKTAIL BAR e ARE RENOWNED IN CALIFORNIA RATES FROM $1.50 UP Excellent Service—Best Food SIH AND K STREET, TOY AND JACOBS. SACRAMENTO, CALIFORNIA JACK BRUNO, Manager _ UDC hel i ee te A SS OS TE aR lat Ser i) i Nin ier aioe cr NEVADA CITY ASSAY AND REFINING OFFICE Practical mining tests froin 75 to 1000 pounds, giving the tree gold percentages of sulphurets, value of sulphurets and tailings. Mail ordér check work proniptly attended to. Assays made for gold, silver, lead and copper. Agent for New York-California Underwriterr, Westchester and Delaware Underwriters Insurance Uompanies, c_ Automobile Insurance _E. J. N. OTT es se ew ee + Proprietor y