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Page: of 4

ristian Science Society of Ne‘valida City holds services every Sunday in their church, 114 Boulder
, at 11 o’elock.
nday school at 9:45 a. m. A
nesday evening testimonial meetis held on the first Wednesday
‘h ‘month at 8 o'clock. j
ir ding room at 117 Broad
ft is ‘every day except Sunnd holidays from 2 to 4 p. m.
public is cordially invited to
attend our services and visit _
ading room. —
n all Christian Science shurches,
‘the M&ther Church, The
reh of Christ, Scientist, in;
Bo Lesson Sermon will be read
unday, March 19, on the subject
fatter.” The Golden Text wilibe:
“rn ye ‘not unto idols, nor make
to yourselves molten gods: I am the
Lor your God,” (Lev. 19:4.)
‘Bible selections will include the
following passages from Matthew 7:
': “A good tree cannot bring
evil fruit, neither can a corrupt
‘ bring forth good fruit.
gl by their fruits ye shall
coe the Christian Sclk, “Selence and Health
. to the Scriptures’ by
i. ‘Bday, will also be inreads as follows:
arables explain Life as never
vith sin and death. He laid
o Seience at the root of maledge. that it might be
out down the false doctrine
tf pantheieom—that God, 7 Life, is
f matter,” (p. 27).
_ METHODIST cnuURCH
ed at 10 a. mi. Bring)
ileal
——— —
IN GLOBAL WAR
oe asia
Pfc. Robert Shaughnessy—
Pfc. Robert Shaughnessy, son of Mrs.
furlough in Nevada City. He is still
from the Atlantic seaboard to Camp
Rucker, Alabama.
Eddie Furano is now at
Field, Illinois attending radio school.
ing his work. Eddie left here eight
months ago. He is the son of, Mra.
Gus. Huneke of Sacramento street.
Squadron Leader Leland Smith,
has left Camp Farragut, Idaho, and
now is in Chicago attending preradio school. Leland is in the U. S.
Ravy and his twin brother, Corporal
Warren Smith is still at Camp Roperts. in ‘he U. 8. army.
Carl Hierouimus—
Carl Hieronimus, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Simeon Hieronimus of Sacramento street, is stll in Camp Cook.
He is in the air craft division of the
U. S. military forces. His wife is
here with his parents for the dura‘ion,
@uerdon Ellis supervisor of the
. ‘Tahoe National Forest, and Mrs. El{Hs were called to San Francisco last
week on account of the illness and
death of her brother.
(Mr. and Mrs. Ed C. Uren had as.
recent guests, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
-. Kempster of Dutch Flat:
Mr. and Mrs. R. N. Johnson of}
: [Sacramento spent Saturday in Ne: Come ‘and bene
. 8: Bible study~ ana!
er meeting Tuesday at 7:30° p.
e, . ge: bend Wed.
la Nevada City, 3
bloom, then grew eight Jong stems
‘}from old blossom base, and each of
vada City visiting Mrs, A. G. Heether, ‘
os
NEW MARIGOLD
Th the feature ‘This Curious
World” in Saturday's Bee there is an
itam and picture of a “Marigold.
4 . Spider’ grown by Mrs. Edith Gould,
wife of Sam Gould. of this city. The}
fi ‘. notice reads: “Marigold Spider,” a
arigold grown by Mrs. Edith Gould
Calif., dropped its
these bloomed.” Mrs. Gould resides
out on: the Tahoe Ukiah highway two
milés from town, Her hub and is 4
local . yeeeas: and mechanic.
: . Girt Seouts Troop No. 2, Jane Goss,
1} . Cordelia ore
Al Williams is enjoying a few day’s
in Camp Gordon, Georgia. His brother in law, Bill Langdon has just gone
Scotts
He is in the air corps and is enjoyHh Jones, Charles J. Smith, Mrs. George
W/Mre. B.S. Thomas, Mrs. Thomas Mcaii ‘guire, Mrs. H. D. Williams, Margaret
. Mrs. Gale Davies, W. E. Wyman,
; Mrs. Mary Martin, Mrs. R. Wilson.
. Mrs. L. S. Whitney Mrs. Annie Hal. Uhrig, Mrs. Edna MacDonald, Mr.
q ‘Rogers, Mr. and Mrs. 'G. Kennedy,
: Virginia ‘Everett, E. M. Stone, Mrs.
He Smart, Ed. F. Holland.
TOWARD GOAL
Fund continues to roll steadily tonounced that one contributor
to go to raise its quota of $2,000.
‘donors:
$50.00; Mr. and Mrs. Beryl Robinson $25.00; Mr. and Mrs.
Haley $25.00; Miss Alice
$20.00;
$20.00;. Mr.
smith $20.00; Edson Fox $20.00;
Mr. and Mrs. Smart $15.00; Mr. and;
Mrs. L. W. Lobdell $15.00; Mr. and:
(Mrs. Guerdon Ellis $15.00.
son, Mr. and Mrs. Nye Johnson, Mr.
‘and Mrs. J. Bickel, Mrs. Bernice
Norton Mr. and Mrs. Frank Guen‘ther, Nevada City Chamber of Commerece, Nev. Co. Br. A. A. U. W.,
Mrs. Geo. Downey, Mr. and Mrs. Irving Long, Mr. and Mrs. Forrest Risley, Mr. and Mrs. B. Toccolini, Col.
.Wekestrom, Mrs. Edna B. Essac. .
$6.00
Mr. and Mrs. Max Weiss.
$5.00
Mr. and Mrs. Herman Pederson,
‘Mr. and Mrs. J.Otterson, Mr. and
Mrs. Al Bates, Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Tredennick, Ted Liebault, Albert
Parker, Mrs. Irma Atkins C. S. Osborne and C. R. Bray, Mrs. EB. KarrsDerg, Mr. and Mrs. T. W. Reynolds,
Ponemah Council D of P., A. J. Carey George M. and Mary. Mr. and
Mrs. William Kensireer anc 7 illian,
Mr. and Mrs. Cliff Dodze, Marie Me(Cormick, Vera Strickland, Mr.
and Mrs. Miles ©. Conghlin, Mr. and
Mrs). E. Li. D-dley, Fortuna. Walter
Harmowe, Theresa Alaria, Mrs. Vivie
R. Lindley. :
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Johnston Mr.
and Mrs. Geary Feagans, Mr. and
(Mrs. Widner, Mr. and Mrs. W. B.
«Maxwell, Frank Poles, Earl Hiscox,
Order of Woodcraft,’ Frances Costello; Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Fisher, Mrs. .
M.
Ram ‘Martin Vanberg, Mark W.
‘Bdm¢ ne. Mrs. Mary Orzalli and Les-'
pher Colombo Foresters, Mr. and
Mrs. EB. Dudley, Sacramento M. F.
Vangiese, Empire Country Club.
$3.50
and Mrs. Steve E. Elliott. ©
$3.00
(Mrs. Mary Waechter, Mrs. Maude
‘Moody, Madeline Bettles, The Thim-.
ble Club, Melvin White, Mrs. Lulu,
Mr.
. Jack Garrison, Mrs, Josie Kagerer,
A Christenson, Mrs. Mildred
John an, Mrs. McAllis
. Gertrude English, Mr.
3. L. Towle Mr. and Mrs.
h,. Mr. and Mrs. Louis Sbiatgér White, Mr. and Mrs, G.
‘Huneke, Rev. and Mrs. D. Ralston,
i and Mrs. J. Cignini, nag
human, Mr. and Mrs. Stritaky,
liam French, Mrs. Genevive Cooper, Mra. Mike Jacobs.
$2.00 , :
. Lydis L,-@ileason, Philip Digmagn,
t.and Mrs. A. J. Rore, Mrs. Myrtle
lle Cicogni, Mrs. J. C.
, Evaline Skeahan, Mrs.
er, Mrs. Lillian Fayp,
. amd Mrs. L. Gregory, Mr. and
Nichols, Mr. and Mrs. V. Gariesio,
‘Mrs. Don Steger, Mrs. Rita Lospreamp. Mr. and Mrs. Ludwig gs i
ton, Mrs. Phoebe McGuire, Mr. and
lett, Mrs. Emma Foley, Mrs. George
and Mrs. W. Daniels, Mr. and Mrs.
. Draper, Mrs. Anne Jones, Mrs. J.
$1.50
Mrs. A. Hoskins, Mrs. D. Cassi,
ts. DeCarli, Robert White,
3. L. Lind, Mrs. Wm, FrisMrs. Edith Valentine, E. M. Yarh, Mary Th , Mr. and Mrs.
Ba Baker, Mrs. Selma Zuegel, Mr.
The drive for the Red Cross War)
ward the goal of $8,300. It was anin
Truckee had given $250, but that . ser, and Mrs.
the little town still had some distance!
Following is an additional list of
Mr. and Mrs. ‘Fred Searls, Jr., New . urs, J. Mason, Mrs. Margaret HalYork City $150.00; Mrs. P. V. Car Ti jett, Mrs. Nancy James, L. L: Wil-,
$100.00; Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Rector ,
Harold
Moore
Mr. and,Mrs. W. EB. Wright
$20.00; Mr. and Mrs. John W. Darke
and Mrs. B. (. Gold‘ $10.00 ling, Mrs. W. Sealight Mrs. Mary
Mr. and Mrs. P. B. Chesbro, Biza Poiglase, Mrs. Helenovich, Domenic
Kilroy, Mr. and Mrs. Russell wil-! Demezzio.
arid Mrs. A. Kastenr, Mrs. Susan. #19-00; Gertrude Goyne $10.00;
Catt, Capt. and Mrs, Booss, Karl. Ruth C. Hogan $10.00; Eleise De
(Mattei $10.00; Virginia Gressel
L. Benson, Mrs. Atuff, Miss Emma.
lie, Mr. and Mrs. Lee Bundy; Christo-.
Mr. and Mrs. F, B. Jones, Mrs.
. tries—where workers aré paid only
ers ‘Alton Davies, Bin Ku-.
jean farmer believes in a philosophy
Miss Susanne Hawkins, Paul W.
Chesebro, Mrs. E. Helm, Mrs. H. 8.
Anderson . Mrs. Rose Jones, Mr. and
Mrs. Davidson, T. EB. Costello, Mrs.
Adeline Curtis, Louis Delagnes, Mrs.
J. L. Sewell, M. Fender, A Friend,
,Mrs., C. Roberts, Mrs. E. Butterfield, .
. Mrs Beverage, Richard Gregory, E.;
. L. Smith, Martha L. Davis, Mrs. Tt.
J. Fiynn.
Mrs. M. C. Callister, Mrs. Theresa
Solaro, Mrs. Lloyd Jennings, Mrs.
\Coffer, Mr. and Mrs. Melo Solaro .
Facchini, Mrs. Rose .
Pello, Mrs. Mary Fontana, Mr. and)
Mrs. E. Raetz,;‘A. Sommers, Mr. ‘and
Mrs. J. C. Barsch, Mrs. Ed Schmidt,
Mr. and Mrs. J. Cicogni, Mr. and
liams, Mrs. Clara Phillips, Maude
Keenan, Domenic Mezzanti, Ed Dean
Ira Walters, Mrs: Emma Marsh, Mrs.
H. Ramsden, Mrs. Genevieve Cozzallio, Mrs. Mary Godfrey, Mrs. Willidm R. Linesay, Mrs. C. Orzalli, Mrs.
{,, Lind, Mrs. Julia Manion, Mrs. E.
'L. Smith, Mrs. MeCarrie, Fannie C.
Conover.
LESS THAN $1.00
Steve De Carli, Mr. and Mrs. StarProceeds from the Forest ServiceRotary Club Basket ball game $6960.
Nevada City Elementary . School
Faculty and employees as follows:
(Mr. and Mrs. H. Kjorlié $12.50;
L.M. Geist $12.00; Isabelle Hefelfinger $10.00;*Mary D. Warnecke
$10.00; Mabel Flindt $10.00; Richard Nickless $10.00; Savory Ford
$10.00; Elizabeth Ryan $10.00; Luvia Kilroy $10.00; Doris Foley $10.
FOREIGN LIVING
STANDARD MUST
' pringing abou
and indese ceria poverty and sutfering in other lands—and if there
is to be peace, instead of constantly
. recurring global conflicts—then it .
is imperative that American business
and agriculture and industry should
use their vast influence to aid
t better wage standards: and better standards of living’
for all people.
That does not mean that American
taxpayers should be asked to feed
the world, or to give 4 bottle of
milk or a crate of oramges to every
undernourished native in every benighted country. What it does mean
is that when American business men
open their shops in China after the
war, and when American” Andustrialists carry their enterprises into the
South Americas and South Africa or
the islands of the Pacific, they
should start to. pay wages which will
gradually raise the wage standards
of the countries they are doing business in.
Admittedly, an American firm doing business in the Philippines after
the war, can’t suddenly start paying
the Filipinos the union scale paid in.
San Francisco, without playing hav~
oc with the whole economy of the
islands. But when it is recognized
that 50,000 workers on the sugar
plantations on Luzon were paid the
equivalent of 20 to 30 cents per day
befdre the war—and are now pai
only half that by the Japs—it is eloquently apparent that there is plenty
of room for gradual improvement.
~—
Just as a matter of enlightened’
selfishness,
if for no other reason,
this country should do everything in
its power to raise wages and improve
living standards in the “have not’
nations. And the best way to‘do that
is by example—the example of American ‘firms doing business there, in
thes American manner, and refusing
to exploit cheap labor. If American
in
{
.
i
.
capital and American
be sold on that principle, then, eventually, we will have buyers for American commodities in foreign lands,
instead of beggars. and we will have
taken a first step toward making
'
1
{
!
.
4
BE F LIFTED .
RALPH H. TAYLOR
BM Note: This>isthe third
in a series of articles by Ralph H.'
Taylor, executive secretary of the
Agricultural’ Council of California,
on the challenging. question: \ “What
Agreulture—After The War?”
Only when .wage and living soit
ards abroad have. been raised to a
‘ somewhat comparable base with
those at: home can this nation safely
become a free trade nation — and
throw open its gates to the products
of other countries, without tariff restrictions or other curbs to protect
Ameriean producers!
That is not simply one man’s opinion, nor does it represent just the
viewpoint of American agriculture.
It is a broad, fundaméntal policy,
dictated by the law of survival, and
the laws or economics—laws which
‘we cannot ignore or vidlate, except
at the risk of destroying our own
living standards and plunging our
country into financial chaos.
Thefe is no escape, in WEc 6 or eco
omics, from this: basic tru If
America is to’ ‘become a tres. trade .
. nation, as some of our. industrialists
and many of our governmental theorists are now ubging, ¢ither our
‘wage scales and ovr standards must
come down, or the standards of the
“have not” nations mist be raised:
‘or neither the American farmer,
nor the American business man nor
ithe products of cheap labor couna few cents a day and live under
can would tolerate.
eumference of the earth has been
sharply reduced, in a military sense,
by ocean hopping bombers and the
long distance fighters, and neither
America nor any other nation ‘can
live unto itself alone, unless it bris,
tles. with armament and is ready at
any moment to fight off aggressors.
America Jearneéd that lesson at Pearl
Harbor.
tions in‘the years and decades that
follow this war, there must be better economic as well as political relations between nations—and world
trade will be a vital factor in achieying such understanding. And American farmers, as well as American
industrialists, recognize that principle. :
The American farmer, however,
after his experience with “the philosophy of scarcity’ during the depression, can hardly be sold now on
a program to “‘share the poverty” of
less fortunate nations. The Ameriof abundance—and he knows enough
of nature’s laws to know that it is
the only sound philosophy, both for
this nation—and for world security.
If there is to be an avoidance of
. Mrs. R. Gates, Mrs.-C. A: Brown, tragic depressions here and famine
Does The Future Hold For Amorigan R
jman, really was impfessed with an
American labor, can compete with . .
conditions which no prideful Amertis
Yet this is true, too; that the cir-. !
If there is téhe peace between na-.
'free trade possible. But even more
important, we will have begun to lay
a foundation for world peace.
Next: “The Farmer Views
morrow’s Markets.’’
LIET. COL. CELIO *
‘BRINGS HOME
BATTERED PLANE
Roy Greene
ToMaywood~ insurance
advertisement in the Saturday evening post of January 8th, which came
to his attention in a round-about.
sort of way. It seéms that Hudson
motor. cars ran a picture of a bomber
that was badly damaged, but which
had limped back to its base in England.
It was “Old 96” which was tne
Gove C. Celio commanded on a
bomping flight to Berlin, which was
shot full of holes, but was nursed
back to its home field. When Colonel
industry can .
plane that his son in law, Lieut. Col, :
command ordered ii tite to
go, and bale out.
After traveling so far, the
couldn’t give up the ‘ship, A
and a third ‘time he Was ord
bale out, but the colone] Stood
ground, “I can bring hy:
said, and then landed safely,
Within a few days the fortress wa
ready to fly again. “QUp 96”
pictured as an example of how
erican planes can take Duni e
and still some home.
The colonel’s wife, Mrs. Celig
lives at 6219 Gifford Ave, Bell, Cai
ee ene acacia:
CAR BREAKS Dowy
tet. Dia tis
cols al
Secon,
ered
in, ”
Shey
Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Welch an
children, who left for their home.
Oakland Tuesday, were brought bag
to the home of Mrs. Welch’s Daréa
Mr. and Mrs. Will Davis in wi,
Valley when their car broke Go:
three miles below Auburn. Thy
machine was towed back and 2
dergoing repairs and they will s
be ready to return home,
BORN
GORHAM—In Nevada City, Ni
vada County, March 12, 1944,
Lieut. and Mrs. <: W. cerhen, as
NEVADA
THEATRE.
Direction
T. and D. JR., ENTERPRISES
INC.
IN OLD
OAKLAHOMA
—WITH—
JOHN WAYNE
—AND—
MARTHA SCOTT
—PLUS—
SWING OUT
THE BLUES
—WiTH—
BOB HAYNES
—<AND—
SUNDAY MONDAY 1
GOVERNMENT
GIRL
—WITH—
OLIVIA deHAVI
Peliq came , in to land, the arcu
THE NFW AND BETTER ALUMINUM CEASE
fy Wear-Ever
Vol. .
. =
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on. the
tegts u
art
purely
ids. bee
me po
tial ul
next do
all abo’
proved
But .
men wh
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unexpirs
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Jesse M
same ele
represen
étate asi
the stat
the Secc
of Repre
We no
Congress
taine th
late tax
self witl
ers in ¢r
Republic
rats. He
in publi
Lake. Wi
excessive
especial;
“ tending
persons,
still in J
That, the
tent mor
negotiate
change o
we belie
all the a
Tule Lal
deportati
ends, .We
thought t
s
6
Brighten your. aluminum utensils in
a jiffy with this scientifically prepared powder. Also good for sinks, bathtubs, ete. Just sprinkle'it on and rub
with wet cloth. Startling results, with
little effort. A product of the makers
of famed Wear-Ever Aluminum.
BIG BOXES
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