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Collection: Newspapers > Nevada City Nugget

March 13, 1941 (6 pages)

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i aN i a eT a eg ne a PEE As SENOS 0 THURSDAY, MARCH 13, 1941. NEVADA CITY NUGGET a t SAFE AND LOCKSMITH Keys Made While You Wait Bicycles, Steel Tapes, Vacuum Cleaners, Washing Machines, Electric Irons, Stoves, Etc, Repaired. SAWS, AXES, KNIVES, SCISSORS, ETC., SHARPENED Gunsmith, Light Welding RAY’S FIXIT SHOP 109 West Main St., Phone 602 GRASS VALLEY Nevada City Laundry QUALITY WORK thd DONE BY HAND . Prompt Courteous Service Free Delivery All our work is priced right. Phone 577 241 Commercial St. Nevada City PROGRESSIVE NEVADA CITY —Forges Ahead— NEVADA CITY ‘Chamber of Commerce CITY HALL, BROAD ST'RKET THE POCKETBOOK of KNOWLEDGE :. ‘California appears to need more people who read road signs and fewer who use them for targets. And here’s the way he stays that way— This newcomer gets plenty of Bret Harte Dairy’s good, rich, pure milk—the milk that wins the first prize, a Gold Medal every year at the State Fair. : PHONE 77 Health-You Bet Bret Harte Dairy NEVADA CITY Professional Directory NEVADA CITY GRASS VALLEY DENTISTS DENTISTS DR. JOHN R. BELL DR. ROBT. W. DETTNER DENTIST DENTIST Office Hours: 8:30 to 5:30 X-RAY Facilities Available Evenings by Appointment Hours: 9:60-5:00. Evening appointMorgan & Powell Bldg, Phene 221. ments. 120% Mili Street. Phone 77 : Grass Valley, Calif. DOCTORS poe DOCTORS B. W. HUMMELT, M. D. : PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON CARL POWER JONES, M.D 400 Broad Street PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office Hours: 10-12 a. m.; 2-5 D. M. Orrice Hours: 1 to 3: 7 to 8p. m Evenings 7-8. Phone 395 X-RAY J Se W. W. REED, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Nevada City, Calif. Office 418 Broad Street Hours: 1 to 3 and 7 to 8 p. m. Residence Phone 2. Office Phone 362 J. R. TOPIC, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON 312 Broad Street, Nevada City, Calif. Hours: 10-12 a. m. 2-5 p. m. Evenings 7-8 : Residence Phone 2 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; 2-5, evenings 7-8 P. M. Day or night phone 71. Phone 23 ATTORNEYS MINING ENGINEERS HARRY M. McKEE ATTORNEY AT LAW 205 Pine St., opposite courthouse Nevada City, Calif. i FRANK G. FINNEGAN ATTORNEY AT LAW 207 North Pine Street Nevada City, California Telephone 273 THOMAS O. McCRANEY ATTORNEY AT LAW Masonic Building 108% Pine Street, Nevada City Telephone 165 H. WARD SHELDON ATTORNEY AT LAW Union Building Broad Street Nevada City Telephone 28 FUNERAL DIRECTORS . 203. West Main St. ——————— J. F. O°; CONNOR Mining and Civ&<ongineer United States Mineral Surveying Licensed Surveyor Grass. Valley NEVADA CITY FRATERNAL AND CLUB DIRECTORY WOMEN’S CIVIC CLUB Regular meetings the 2nd and 4th Tuesdays of the month, at the Chamber of Commerce, 2: 30 Dp. m. MRS. W. P. SAWYER, Pres. MRS. RICHARD GOYNE, Secy. HOLMES FUNERAL HOME: The Holmes Funeral Home service is priced within the means of all. Ambulance service at all hours. Phone 203 246 Sacramento St. ASSAYER Nevada City NEVADA CITY LODGE, No. 518 B. P. O. ELKS Meets every Thursday evening in Elks Home, Pine St. Phone 108. Visiting Elks welcome. HARRISON RANDALL Exalted Ruler. JOHN FORTIER, Secretary. HAL D. DRAPER, Ph. D. ASSAYER AND CONSULTING CHEMIST Nevada City, California : Phones: Office: 364-W Home 246-J Box 743 Sarees MUSIC GLADYS WILSON TEACHER OF PIANO Nevada City 358 Alexander St. Phone 434-J Phone 444 comes Grass Valley 429 Henderson St. HYDRAULIC PARLOR N. 8S. G. W. Meets every Tuesday evening at Pythian Castle, 232 Broad Street Visiting Native Sons welcome, ROBERT TUCKER, Pres DR. C. W. CHAPMAN, Rec. Sec’y NO. 56, Oustomah Lodge, No. 16, 1.0.0.F. Meets every Tuesday evening at 7:30, Odd Fellows Hall. HERMAN CLENDENEN, N. G JONATHAN PASCOE, Rec. Sec’y ' JOHN W. DARKE, Fin. Sec’y ECONOMY BLOC TO CUT BUDGET BY $20-MILLIONS. By T. M. BRIGHT United Press Staff Correspondent © SACRAMENTO, March 13.—(UP) —Determined to effect a $20,000,000 cut, the assembly ways and means committee attacked Gov. Olson’s $552,570,000 budget on every front but at. the end of a week of hearings the only definite action was removal of a $37,858,000 state relief administration request. However, by withdrawing the re; quest and agreeing to provide relief appropriations with individual bills for each year of the biennium the committee took a step in line with the program to abolish the SRA after July 1. Chairman Seth Millington’s committee, holding day and night sessions, hearing all requests in one week. Only a few departments remained to present their budgets and indica“. tions were that an early report could be expected on the budget bill, Committee members nearly all of whom are Olson foes, directed their sharpest criticism toward proposed increases in personnel, new automobiles, traveling expenses, telephone and telegraph costs and departmental agents and publications. The committee threw into doubt the future of the proposed $1,000,000 state emergency fund after Penology Director John Gee Clark informed the committee that $14,500 was transferred from the fund for work in San Quentin prison during the current biennium. (Millington declared that such oxpenditure was not authorized and accused Olson of abusing the fund. He said: “It seems to me the only way we can control the expenses of this state
is. to abolish. the emergency: fund. We now find the governor and the department of finance have treated our economies with complete contempt. This beats anything I’ve ever heard of.” Predicting possible adjournment by May 1, Assembly Speaker Gordon Garland suggested that tax rates be reduced at the present session. He contends that while no harm can come from a small deficit, a surplus often tempts the government to extravagance. The Phillips-Daley joint fact-finding committee on relief and a subcommittee of the assembly governmental officiency group also met. The former group ordered acting state relief administrator Ralph Wakefield to investigate relief aid to striking lemon pickers in Ventura county while,the assembly ~ group studied building and loan reorganization bills in the light of the Pacific States Savings and Loan case. After appearing before the Phillips-Daley group, Wakefield announced a drastic curtailment .in SRA administration personnel, including a reduction of the present 16 administrative areas to ten. He estimated the savings would amount to many thousands of dollars. Thestate department of finance prepared an audit which it turned over to Attorney General Earl Warren for study, charging the state controller’s office rented valuable ‘itax deeded properties for only a nearly completed its task of PAGE THREE WORLD NEEDS — POLICE FORCE TO KEEP THE PEACE BERKELEY, March 13.—To have a society that will remain at peace and function efficiently, will eventually create an tional police force, internathe Los Angeles campus of the University of California. He pointed out that an interna-; tional police force is as necessary to. the world as it is to any individual, nation saying, ‘‘only' the physical} force--of the police and the army,; backed by the force of the citizenry, maintains law and order and enables us to enjoy the rights and priviliges we do enjoy.”’ That the nations of the west will form a federated group is certain, he predicted. Smaller groups have alsmall part of their earning capacity and paid large commissions to rental agents, The audit applies only to a period prior to last July 1. State Controller Harry B. Riley declared that civil service employes since . have been hired for the rental work. The assembly committee -on governmental efficiency and economy plans to investigate the case. Riley reported during the week that the state’s financial statement for the first seven months of the present fiscal year is written almost entirely in black -ink. During the period, he said the state government spent $4,954,039 less than it took in. Revenues were $10,047,362 greater than in the corresponding period a. year ago, and expenditures were $18,128,260 less. For the fiscal year ending last June 30, California took in $296,594,616, its largest income in history, Riley reported, However, he said the cost of running the state government exceeded income by more than $20,000,000. With the national guard scheduled for induction March 3, military interest was high. Brigidier-General R. E. Mittelsctaedt was granted a leave of absence by Governor Olson from his post as adjutant general, to go to camp with the national guard. Col. J. O. Donovan of Los Angeles was appointed to succeed him as state director of selective service and also will be acting adjutant general during Mittelstaedt’s absence. Selective service has assigned 26,389 California young men _ for military service through March) leaving only 11,628 to be.called by the end of June as rapidly as camp facilities become available. Quotas under the fourth call for the state’s local draft boards were announced thtis week. It is not known whether the remaining 11,628 men will be called all at one time or whether there will be several draft calls. i sanization the‘ world; says Dr. Knight. Dunlap, professor ‘of psychology onj quently to apply force to maintain: ways merged in larger, and the larg-, er, in still larger, although premature consolidation by conquest, as by the empire builders from the Persians to the Russians. has not been per-. mavrent This progress of social orwill abolish war or at: least reduce it to the status of in-. { cidental crime to which fighting be-— tween indviduals and between the smaller groups has been reduced. . Dr. Dunlap points out that postj war settlements usually fail because . responsible nations -neglect subse. HOOPER & WEAVERMORTUARY, INC. _ 246 So. Church Street Grass Valley 24-hour Ambulance Service Phone 364 the settlements. Only an international police force will be able to guarantee the peaceful solution of economie and social problems after the present conflict ceases, he believes. “There is not, and cannot be, any question of the supremacy of might as compared with right. There are three courses which individuals and nations alike must choose: the craven course of refusing to use what might they have, the criminal course of using might in the course of injustice, greed and destruction, and the moral or civilized course of employing might in the service of right.’ YOU WILL BE IDENTICAL TWINS; SAME SCARS PRINCETON, Hl, (UP) — Allen and Charles Thompson, 3 year old sons of Mr. and Mrs. Orville Thompson are identical twins—even to appendicitis. scars. They have been exactly the same height and weight since birth, cut teeth together and learned to walk together. They underwent appendectomies within 45 hours of each other. PLEASED WITH OUR COFFEE SHOP NATIONAL HOTEL AND COFFEE SHOP. NEVADA CITY CALIFORNIA In a school essay on “Parents” a small. girl wrote, “We get our parents when they are so old that it is very hard to}; change their habits.’ SREP SSOROEL SLES, SSSSSoooeecnt The World’s News Seen Through ; THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR An International Daily Newspaper is Truthful—Constructive—Unbiased—Free from Sensationalism — Editorials Are Timely and Instructive and Its Daily Features, [Together with the Weekly Magazine Section, Make the Monitor an Ideal Newspaper for the Home. The Christian Science Publishing Society One, Norway Street, Boston, Massachusetts Price $12.00 Yearly, or $1.00 a Month. Saturday Issue, including Magazin: Section, $2.60 a Year. Introductory Ofier, 6 Issues 25 Cents. Name : ee Addtess 2222 oe eee eae SAMPLE COPY ON REQUEST ‘ Cs ESESESESISSLS SF 2LESLSSE SESS SSS LLIN DICK LANES ~ GARAGE AND SERVICE STATION BROAD AND UNION STREETS, NEVADA CITY Avoid a big repair bill by having little ones attended to in time. Let us check your car regularly. It will save you money. few No. 24 of a Series weeds ° i = grow in every garden _ table “joints.” them cleaned up. Among the thousands of decent lawi} abiding beer retail establishments in America there may be a few disrepu. While it is the brewers’ responsii bility to brew good beer and the rehe tailers’ responsibility to sell beer under wholesome conditions,nevertheless the brewing industry is concerned about these undesirable places and wants We want them cleaned up because beer .. and our right to make it. We want them cleaned up because they endanger the 102,698 jobs and $90,386,601 payroll created by beer inCalifornia’ since re-legalization. Beer contributed $2,186,489.99 last year in taxes in this state. These benefits are worth preserving, You can help us, if you will, by (1) patronizing only the reputable, legal places that sell beer and by (2) reporting any law violations to the duly constituted they endanger your right to enjoy good law enforcement authorities. . . <et Bae, BEER..a beverage of moderation 3 e z ss