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Page: of 6

PAGE FOUR THE NEVADA
eatin
CITY NUGGET.. FRIDAY, MAY 12. 1933
sneiieiamiemed
ai
ein
LEGAL NOTICE.
ORDINANCE NO. 215
The City Council of the City of
Nevada do ordain ‘as follows:
Section 1: That the City Council
deem the expenditure of $10,000.00,
raised by the sale of bonds under
the terms of Ordinance No. 199 of
the City of Nevada for the purpose
for which said bonds were voted and
authorized at a special election duly
held on August 12, 1926, impracticable and unwise.
Section 2: That a special election
is called, to be held on Monday, May
15th, 1933, for the purpese of obtaining the“consent of the people of
the City of Nevada to the expenditure of the said sum or fund of $10,000.00 raised under said Ordinance
No. 199, as aforesaid, for the following municipal purposes, to-wit:
$8,000.00 to be expended for the
repair and improvement of the municipal water system and
$2,000.00 to be used for retirement of the municipal water bonds
of said City of Nevada.
Section 3: That the manner of
holding said special election shall be
as provided by law for holding municipal elections in said City of Nevada, except there shall be but one
voting precinct for said special election; that the polls shall open at
8 o’clock A. M. and keep open until 6 o’clock P. M. of said day of the
election, and that the ballots. used
at said special election shall have
printed thereon substantially the
following proposition to be submitted:
Shall the City Council be granted the authority to expend and
use the sum of $10,000.00 heretofore raised under Ordinance
No. 199 of the City of Nevada,
for the following municipal purposes, to-wit:
“$8,000.00 to be expended for
the repair and improvement of
the_municipal -water-—-system,
and $2,000.00 to be used for
retirement of municipal water
bonds of the said City of Nevada.”
with the words ‘yes’ and ‘‘no”’ so
printed in connection therewith that
the voters may express their choice:
Section 4: That the election officers shall canvas the votes and make
out the returns thereof in the manner provided by law for municipal
elections in said City of Nevada, and
that the approval of this Ordinance
shall require at least two-thirds of
all the votes cast at said special election.
The foregoing Ordinance was
adopted by the City Council of the
City of Nevada at a regular meeting
this 18th day of April, 1933.
Ayes—Bennetts, Armstrong, Mur“'a Seaman.
ays—None.
/bsent—Worth.
R. J. BENNETTS
Mayor and Presjdent of the City
suncil of the City of Nevada.
ttest:
GEORGE H. CALANAN
City Clerk
Approved R. J. BENNETTS
Mayor and President of the City
‘Council of the City of Nevada.
April 14, 21, 28, May 5.
MOUNTAIN STAGES
Marysville Auto Stage leaves Nevada City at 8:00 a. m. for Rough
and Ready, Smartsville, Hammonton and Marysville. Leaves Marysville at 1 p. m. Connects at Smartsville for North San Juan.
TWIN CITIES-SACTO.
STAGES
With Electric Connection to the
Bay Region
WEST BOUND
Leaves Nevada City 7:15 a.
12:30 p. m.; 3: 35 p. m.
Leaves Grass Valley 7:30
12:45 p. m. 3:50 p. m.
Arrive Sacramento
2:55 p. m. 6:00 p. m.
EAST BOUND
Leave Sacramento 9:50
12:35 p. m. 4:00 p. m.
Arrive Grass Valley 12:05
2:53 p.m. 6:18 p.m.
Arrive Nevada City 12:20 Pp.
3:05 p. m. 6:30 p. m.
MAIL STAGE SCHEDULE
DOWNIEVILLE-NEVADA CITY
Arrives Nevada City at 9:30 a. m.
Leaves Nevada City at 11:00 a. m.
FREIGHT AND PASSENGER
STAGE
Arrives Nevada City at 10:00 a. m.
Leaves Nevada City at.12:00 a. m.
ALLEGHANY-NEVADA CITY
Arrives. Nevada City at 2:30 D. m:
Leaves Neyada City at 7:00 a. m.
NORTH BLOOMFIELD AND
GRANITEVILLE-NEVADA CITY
Arrives Nevada City at 1:30 p. m.
Leaves Nevada City at 7:00 a. m.
. WA! N-NEVADA CITY
Arfives Nevada City at 11:30 a. m.
Leaves Nevada City at 7:00 a. m.
a.
9:40 a.
Dp.
Our Correspondents
NORTH BLOOMFIELD
By MRS. RALPH PENROSE
NORTH BLOOMFIELD, May 11—
Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Dudley, are visitors in North Bloomfield. They are
visiting Loyd Dudley’s parents, Mr.
and Mrs. E. B. Dudley.
Mr Archie Miller came down from
Relief Hill yesterday for mail and
supplies.
Mrs. Leonard Foote returned to
Nqvada (City last Saturday where
she expects to stay for some time.
Mr. Stanley Bice of Relief. Hill
was badly injured day before yesterday. He fell in the flume at Relief
Hill. First aid was.-given by Mrs.A.
Newton and daughter, Margaret,
two nurses from Sacramento, who
are living at North Bloomfield at
present. Mr. Holmes Ambulance
was called with Dr. W. W. Reed of
Nevada City.
BENEFIT DANCE FOR
IMPROVING TOWN HALL
CAMPTONVILLE, May 11—tThe
first big benefit dance of the season
will take place here on Saturday evening May 20, at the local Masonic
hall, being staged by the Masonic
fraternity of this place, proceeds to
go to the upkeep of their town hall.
This being the first dance here for
the season, a large crowd is expected
to attend from the surrounding little towns. Eddie Meltz and his six
piece orchestra from Auburn will
furnish the music, this being their
last dance here before
the summer on a tour of the western
states, playing again here September 4, the first dance upon their return. A fine supper will be served at
midnight; admission to the dance
will be $1.00 per couple, with 50
each for supper.
JUDGMENT OF JUSTICE
COURT IS AFFIRMED
CAMPTONVILLE, May 11.—tThe
appeal case of J. E. Pauly vs. A. ‘H.
Behrens and the .G. & H. Commer
County Superior Court Monday and
Judge Warren Steel affirmed the decision of Judze W. B. Meek, of the
local Justice Court. Judge Meek ‘gave
the plaintiff judgment several
months ago the Constable and _ the
collection agency for a storage bill
on an attached automobile, which
bill the agency contracted but refused to pay. W. C. Rucker acted as attorney for the plaintiff with Fred M.
Harter representing the defendants.
CAMPTONVILLE, May 8: —
Sheriff W. D. Johnson of Downieville was in town Saturday morning
enroute to Alleghany on official business.
William Groves arrived Friday
evening from Auburn to spend the
week end visiting his mother and
aunt. ;Forest Ranger Frank W. Meggzgars
was soliciting young men Friday for
singing up in the government camp
which will be located six miles
north of here.
Charles L. Wilson, Jr., arrived
Friday from Sacramento to spend
Premera
3A Service
BUICK
STORAGE REPAIRS
ACCESSORIES
Gasoline & Oils
SERVICE GARAGE
ELKUS & WILLIAMSON
Pine and Spring Phone 106
NEVADA CITY
leaving for}
cial Service "was heard in the Yuba’
CAMPTONVILLE SCHOOL
TEACHERS ARE CHOSEN
CAMPTONVILLE, May 10.—The
Board of Trustees of the Camptonville Union School District held a
regular meeting a few,.days ago for
the purpose of organization and selection of teachers for the coming
term. Mrs. Grace Pauly, as principal and Miss Helen L. Jackson, in
charge of the primary depairtment,
present teachers, were re-elected for
the coming year.
Considerable discussion was had
relative to attendance, the present
daily attendance being dangerously
low, and in somé minds necessitating the hiring of teachers with children. Due to the qualifications of
Miss Jackson as a teacher, rather
than have the school make a change
two members of the Board guaranteed to obtain from the outside three
children in order to keep up the attendance, that being the largest
number of children that any of the
other applicants had.
William A. Lang and Louis Merquardt will continue as bus drivers
from the three outside districts, and
Samuel F. Price, as janitor. Mrs. K.
Hope Livingston. will continue in
charge of the Camptonville branch
high school.
;CCAMPTONVILLE, May 8&—Postmaster Kern Fogarty of North San
Juan became excited Friday afternoon and lost his glasses in the: up
going letter sack, but before he discovered it, the stage was on the
way; so, he. phoned to the local
Postmaster Lydia O. Groves, who
found them safe and unbroken, and
returned them to him by a man who
happened to be going down that
way. Thus these two postal. emPloyees beat the department by
deadheading the glasses in the mail
sack, and beat the optician by the
miraculous fact that these delicate
things were not broken after such a
rough trip.
CAMPTONVILLE, May 11—Mrs. K.
M. Jayne motored to French Corral Sunday to visit her son Albert.
Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Heether returned Tuesday from a short. visit
to heir home at Nevada City.
Mr. and Mrs. Acton M. Cleveland
Teturned Monday from’ a brief visit
}at Sacramento, Grass, Valley and Nevada City.
Fred J. \ Joubert returned Tuesday
from a brief business visit to Nevada City.
Mr. amd Mrs. Earl L. Cleveland
returned to their home at Sacramento Sunday after a few days visit
at their home here.
Dr. and Mrs. J. H. Barr of Marysville were in town Sunday as guest
of Judge and Mrs. W. B> Meek.
Julius E. Pauly and Ray Knickren motored to Marysville Monday
on business.
Chas H. Greene of Grass VaNey
was in town Tuesday on a brief business visit.
the week end Visiting his father at
Log Cabin.
Mrs. Constance Church of North
Bloomfield was in town Friday on
a short business visit.
Bruce Barngy of Sacramento arrived Friday
his’ sister, Mrs. Albert H. Harmilton.
Eddie Meltz and his orchestra of
Auburn passed through town Satufday enroute to Downieville to play
for a dance.
Julius = E. Pauly motored to
Marysville Saturday on a short business visit.
William O. Grant and = A. J.
Heether motored to Nevada City Saturday evening to ‘attend a lodge
meeting.
Lawrence’ Turner motored__ to
Downieville Saturdayevening on a
visit.
SUBSCRIBE FOR THE NUGGET
Ly PET TE t
Coal and
PUT ent East Spring Street
Al
ALFALFA AND GRAIN HAY POULTRY AND
DAIRY FEEDS
Dry Wood
PROMPT DELIVERY
~ W.KOTCHAPAW
Bien HUNT CESNSVN SHS NSHSN SNES erersienenenenet tl ng VOUSUPV SUR BUENA NSUANBANBNBNBNBNB NBR BNEKS
UU EET UOT tnt tt) ty teed
METER ENE EH EHELENEN
PHONE 394
Nevada City
Bile Stagnates In Sluggish .
_ Livers and Makes Us Sick
ture
ae ot ait hee
ters, pills, ete, have no efevening on a visit to.
GOVERNOR THREATENED
WITH WRITERS’ CRAMP
SACRAMENTO, May 11—(UP)—
Whenever an _ overworked newspaperman complains these days of
‘writer’s cramps,’’ Governor Rolph
nods understandingly and sympathetically.
The governor is having painful experience with. “writer’s cramps.’’ He
has had, of late—and will continue
to have—to sign his name so many
times a day he can almost strike off
his signature in his sleep.
The sieige of signatures began
when the governor signed 2,900 University of California diplomas. He
worked through 1,020 one week-end
and the remaining 1,880 a few days
later. Meantime, he has around 1,000 bills to sign during the next few
weeks which account for 2,000 more
signatures: Added to this mountain
of work is the normal office which,
in itself, is enough to tire the normal wrist. ;
OREGON CREW TO WORK
DELLEA PLACER MINE
Dellea Sunrise Placer mine, will be
operated by Portland, Oregon, parties, who will bring their own crew
of workers down here very soon to
start work.
The only reason for this information is:
To keep unemployed men from
walking out to the mine and be disappointed, and have to walk back to
town again, for they have to be supplied with food before they are able
to return to town.
ed men not to come to her home asking for a job or food, for she has
supplied the average of three men
every week with food the past six
months, and she hates to turn away
a hungry man from her door, also
She cannot give them a job. She
trusts that they will ‘understand this
NOTICE, and not walk out to the
Dellea mine, or annoy her,
PRUNE GROWERS CET
VERY LARGE PAYMENT
Six hundred and sixty six thousand
dollars is going out to the prune
growers of California. The United
‘Prune Growers of California, the
prune industry’s stabilization organization, advanced funds to its two
member units, the Association and
the Pool, who in turn will disburse
this money to their grower members
as rapidly as the accounting can be
completed.
This second progress payment from
the United, while varying in amount
according to size and quality. of the
growers’ fruit, averages ten dollars
per ton on merchantable fruit.
HERE’S RECIPE FOR
ARTIFICIAL CORAL
SACRAMENTO, May 11—(UP)—
Folks with a flair for the unusual
and ‘an imaginative twist are indulging lately in the indoor sport of
making coral.
Here’s the recipe: mix two tablespoons of salt, one. table-spoon” of
“bluéing, five \ tablespoons of water
and several drops of mercurochrome
in a bowl. Roll into the mixture one
or several pieces of wet coak. Then
set the coke in the sun,
Several days later a remarkable
transformation takes place, Clustered on the coke will be a growth-pink
blue, white or green—which tesembles coral.
“IT don’t spend much on
myself, but, believe me,
when it comes to good
things to eat I want the
best. That’s why I eat at
the
SHAMROCK
CAFE
Nevada City Box 664
otebeeieteserfetestesesteteteoftetelestetedeotuterten
LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE
%
The California Debris Commission
will hold a public hearing at 11:00
A. M., May 16, 1933, at the California Debris Commission Office, Room
1000, California Fruit Bldg., Fourth
and J. Streets, Sacramento, Calif., to
receive protests against granting the
application of Scotts’ Flat Development Company to mine by the hydraulic process the Scotts’ Flat Hydraulic Mine,;* located near Nevada
City, Calif., draining into Deer
Creek, thence; into Yuba River and
to store tailings behind the Deer
Creek diversion dam of the Nevada
Irrigation District, one and one-half
miles below the mine.
Pub. April 28, May 1-5-8-12.
Mrs. Dellea kindly asks: unemploySWALLOWS DENTIST'S
DRILL, THEN COUGHS UP
REDDING, May 11—(UP)—All it
took was_one good coughing spell
for 6-year-old Robert Bushdiger to
relieve his parents—and incidentally
himself.
While having his teeth worked on
in a dental, office at Anderson recently, the child inadvertently struck
the dentist’s arm, thereby dislodging the drill. An intensive search
failed to disclose the. missing instrument and as frantic parents and the
dentist pondered what to do, Robert
started to cough.
Out popped the missing drill, much
to the relief of al concerned.
FIVE GENERATIONS VISIT
~ CORNING MATRIARCH
CORNING, May 11—(UP)—Six
generations were represented when
relatives of Mrs. Nancy Warmouth,
99-year old Corning resident visited
here.
.
In the group were Mrs. Nina McPherson, granddaughter of Mrs. Warmouth, Mrs. Edith Hammack, greatgranddaughter and Mrs. Lucile Grifford, daughter of Mrs. Hammack
and great-great-granddaughter
of
Mrs. Warmouth.
oO
0
Police Answer Hurry
Call.For Trousers
SACRAMENTO, May 11—(UP)—
The city detective bureau isn’t-in the
clothing business, but it will furnish
a pair of pants to deserving applicants—under certain circumstances.
Detective F. CC. Hauser. wasn't
much impressed when he answered
the telephone at headquarters and
received a request from G. O. Fisher
for a pair of trousers. “If you don’t
send me a pair of pants,’”’ insisted
Fisher, ‘‘I’ll come down without any
on.”’
“Please,
out,”’
please, we’ll be right
replied the detective.
FRATERNAL CARDS _
NEVADA CITY LODGE, NO. 518
B. P. O. conte’ “
Meets second and fourth Friday evenings in Elks poe wa we phy
108. Visiting s Welcome.
ecg Vv. V. FOLEY,
Exalted Ruler.
R. EB. Carr, Secretary.
11LO LODGE, No. 48, K. of P.
Meats the lst and 3d Friday nights
at Pythian Hall, Morgan and Powell
Bldg. Visiting Knights always welcome. CARL LARSEN, C. C.
J. C. E. FOSS, K. of R. & S.
Relax Tense.
Loss of Sleep, Crankiness,
Headache, Neuralgia, Indigestion and Fatigue are common
results of over-work and nerve
strain.
Miss Ruth Sheets, a charming
Michigan school teacher says:
“I have taken your Nerve
ine during my college work
and. when I get those nervous spells after a hard day’s
teaching. I am sending my
mother’s name to you. Will
you please send her a trial
package?”
Relax your tense nerves with
the same reliable medicine Miss
Sheets found so effective.
Get it at your drug store.
Large bottle $1.00 Small 25c.
Money back if you are not
satisfied,
NER MILES’
RVINE
LIQUID
SAVE 2 WAYS
In first cost. Prices
have never been
so low and may
never be so low
again.
In operating cost.
You will receive
FULL SERVICE
of hot water in
Md home at onealf the per gallon cost.
You spend to save
when you buy an AUTOMATIC
R UHEATER
a
“
Tus is no time to neglect
thrift. It is no time to waste
money. You do neither when
you heat water by means ofan Automatic Gas Water
Heater. After all, it is just
plain arithmetic, being
proved daily in thousands of
California homes, that you
spend to save when you have
an Automatic installed in
your home.
Consider this: If you are
using a water heater that has
to be lighted with a match,
and also frequently resort to
tea kettle hot water, every
gallon. of water so heated
costs twice as much as it
would if \hot water were
eae
\
hy, a
always on tap from the insulated tank of an Automatic,
You should investigate this
form of saving in your home.
You should take advantage
of the low prices of these
truly modern Automatic Gas
Water Heaters. Prices have
never been as low, and right
now special easy-to-ptrchase
terms are in effect.
See a representative of
this company today or consult your local gas appliance
dealer. An Automatic can be
purchased this month for as
little as $4.85 down and
$3.85 a month. Act now on
this thrift-wise suggestion.
SEE\YOUR DEALER OR THE
PACIFIC GAS AND ELECTRIC COMPANY
Owned » Operated + Managed by Cakfornians
237-533
«
—— dr ir,
All Service Daily
2
AM
11:25
12:16
12:35
PM
NEVADA COUNTY NARROW GAUGE
STAGE tees
TIMETABLE NO. 4 CANCELS TIMETABLE NO 3
Effective May
SCHEDULE NOS.
STATIONS
Lv...... AUBURN
RAILROAD COMPANY
LINE.
2nd, 1933
1