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Page: of 4

PAGE TWO
‘
NEVADA CITY NUGGET
~
MONDAY, MAY. 13. 1940.
Nevada City Nugget
305. Broad Street. Phone 36. :
A Legal Newspaper, as defined by statute. Printed and Published
at Nevada City.
Editor and Publisher
Published Semi-Weekly, Monday and Friday at
Nevada City, California, and entered as mail
matter of the second class in the postoffice at
Nevada City. under Act of Congress, March 3,
1879.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
One year (Im Advance) ....-...-..-.----.-<2.<-$2.50
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Civilization Aflame .
Save for the early.days of September, 1914, when, their
backs to the wall before Paris, 1,000,000 Frenchmen defeated
1,500,000 Germans in the four day first Battle of the Marne,
the civilized world has never known a week such as this one.
The Battle of the Marne proved the decisive battle of the first
World War. And now millions of men have clashed in a decisive combat that may reach a turning point even as this sentence is read—or may go on until millions are dead and a civilization aflame is reduced to the ashes of a new Dark Age. If
the battle goes against the Democracies, all that human _ enlightenment has striven for in Europe+-freedom, respect for
law, sanctity of covenants, decent standards of living for the
masses—will be washed away in the blood bath that is soaking the soil of the stricken low countries.
Strike-Bound Jobs.
The total yearly income of nearly a quarter-million Am-.
ericans was destroyed directly through strikes in 1939, according to disquieting records released last week by the Federal Bureau of Labor Statistics.
In 2613 strikes, 1,170,962 workers were idle approximately . 7.812.000 man-days—the equivalent of a year’s idleness for 59,373 workers, each of whom, by conservative estimate, had three dependents. The support of hundreds of
thousands of women and children gone with the bread-winner's strike-bound jobs!
Yet the figures present but a fraction of the total real
loss. Where plants were forced to shut down or restrict output.
vast numbers of workers, not directly connected with the
strikes in question, were involuntarily thrown ‘out of work
When a business could not meet demands and survive, it failed——and all jobs were gone. Where a business could not balance profits with strike-won labor costs. it often was obliged
to get along with fewer employes, and thus the general unemployment situation was intensified rather than relieved.
California's share in creating those national statistics is an
indictment of those workers who have permitted themselves to
be led by radical violence-advocating leaders. Excepting only made to een’ Che BEL thas becomtee
populous New York and Pennsylvania, California had more
strikes than any state in the Union last year. Los Angeles stood .
third among all cities, San Francisco fourth — both ahead of .
Chicago and Detroit, and behind only New York and Pennsyl_ Vania!
_ That record will please all belligerent czars. little and big, .
using the power of American labor to perpetuate themselves.
It will please few real Americans, in the ran&s of labor or out.
And it should shame California into opening her eyes and
studying the real purposes of its most-belligerent labor leaders.
Both the weakness and the'strength of democracy were
high-lighted against the background of desperate war last week
at one of the most dramatic sessions ever held in Britain's historic House of Commons.
The weakness was in sharp contrast to the machinesmooth heel-clicking efficiency of Nazidom at war. The English were at loggerheads among themselves, newspapers were
condemning Chamberlain and his cabinet as incompetent bungers who should be thrown out of office to save the nation
from defeat, and conversely praising them as men who should
be retained to save the nation. In the Commons, there were
‘stormy attacks and counter-attacks. Such a nation cannot be
as sharply decisive. as quick in action, as sure in method, as
can.a nation like Germany ,where everything moves and
evervbody acts. talks. reads and thinks as one dictator wills.
The strength was in Britain's letting off steam—of Englishmen counselling together, freely condemning, freely praising, together arguing and together deciding—from the plain
facts before them—what to do next and how to do it. The
English now know what they're up against — a powerful,
ruthless opponent. The German people “know” only that they
are “invincible.’’ The Fuehrer has said so! :
Which shall win the long run?
History has answers: Democratic Britain has been a
dominant world power since Drake sank the Spanish Armada
in 1588—has seen autocracies go down through the centur“ies: Spain, Russia, the abortive French dictatorship of Napoleon. Free speech, a free press, the will and liberty to face hard
facts honestly, may be armor too impregnable even for Hitler’s vaunted bombers.
107 Mii streee Nevada County Photo Center
PHONE 67 Portraits, Commercial Photography,
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4 . 3 Droveer apHer Enlarging and Framing,
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YOU CAN'T EAT IT
people, who seem completely to
lack any imagination, any concept
of the cruelties their leaders inflict upon ‘the neighboring nations,
since reparations taught them
nothing, would gain some understanding of war’s brutalities, if
they could see those noble lindens
bearing the horrible fruit of war.
THINKING OUT LOUD
(Continued From Page One)
not resort to anything like decimation of Germany’s male population.
They dare not have recourse to
the brutal law of Moses. But it
does seem to us, if with the end of
this war the British and French
could ‘have the guts to hang from
every tree along that wide avenue
of Berlin, Unter der. Linden, all
those responsible for the ordered
crime and outrages done both
within and. without Germany, it
might go a long way toward discouraging another German _ outbreak within a century. We do not
know how many lindens there are
along that avenue, nor how great
a burden their limbs can bear, but
we do believe that the German
TO WHOM IT MAY
CONCERN:
C. Leonard Arnett is
not employed by us,
and we will not be
It is high time that aggressive
wars were made an international
crime.
“No Hunting or Trespassing”’
signs for sale at the Nugget Office.
YOU CAN’T GO
WRONG!
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without failure, with the new
PUTNAM “De-Luxe All Fabric
Tint Dye. Guaranteed to color
every type of material including
Celanese and. Acetates.
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Beautiful Cups and Saucresponsible in an
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wey for gey of Se Plates on our special cou
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If interested in termite pon ofrer.
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Washington
Snapshots .
By JAMES PRESTON
Facts which don’t make the head
lines these days disclose an interesting situation, for they show that
Washington is outdoing the man on
the flying trapeze—with the greatest of ease it goes two ways at once.
Folks here still talk about the
country being la “democracy” in
which the majority rules. But at the
same time, many of them do all they
can to keep representatives of the
people from carrying out the will of
a majority of the citizens.
Typical is the story behind the
Walter-Logan bill, which would
grant relief to thousands of citizens
from the rule of bureaucrats. The
people want that bill. The House
passed it by a three to one vote, A
majority of the delegations from 35.
states were for it, while only three
state delegations opposed it.
Yet every possible effort is being
, law.
Another good sample is the Wagner Act. All public opinion polls
have-shown for a year, and continue
to show, that a great majority of the
ople want that law amended. Yet
here again, the powers that be seek
to thwart, the will of the majority because a minority*—the (;ClO—1likes
. the law ‘‘as is.”’
. There is a growing public belief
. Which was summarized by a Nation\
.
.
j
i
}
‘al. Press Clubber who remarked:
“The Wagner Act gives the same
. protection to racketeeers that the
. prohibition amendment did to “the
. bootleggers.”’ But still those in control want to preserve this protection.
There is little doubt, too, but that .
a majority of the people would like
to see government expenses cut before their taxes go skyhigh. Yet
folks who control Congressional machinery are doing little about -reducing expenditures. The debt, which
some day must be paid, goes higher
daily.
This remarkable calculation was
made only: recently by one House
member who is worrying about the
future. “‘We would have to take &5
per cent of the net income away
from all people»who want income
tax\returns to pay the running expense.of government this year.”
Here is still another sample of
thwarting the will of the majority.
Nearly everybody agrees that despite
a laudable objective of putting a bottom under wages, the Wagner Hour . '
law does lots of unfair things such . ’
as requiring in some cases that men
who make as much as $10,000 a year
time, :
Businessmen were ‘summoned to
Washington to tell about such cases.
They hoped to get relief in\unfair instances. Yet when they testified in
public hearings, they were cross-examined by labor union lawyers at
length—and without any advance notice that they would be cross-exami:
ined, or that they could be cross-examine other witnesses.
From Davis—
Elton Tobiassen, who completed
his first term at Davis Agricultural
College returned to his home in Nevada City Friday. He will resume his
studies there the latter part of Augbe paid time and a half for over-. '
Marysville, or address ®
a ies 628 12th Street, MarysCarlisle, in the Des Moines Register. nD dante
(Signed) ab oe
The 1940 world’s fair of the west BELL’S TERMITE THE
will feature a brand new Folies BerCONTROL. Rexall Phone
gere produced by Cliff Fischer, the By E, J. Bell. DRUG STORE 100
Parisian showman.
. HAVE YOU AN
American Flag >
to hang from your porch or store on
DECORATION DAY
—MAY 30—
e@e
FLAG DAY
—JUNE 14—
INDEPENDENCE DAY
—JULY 4—
If you have NOT and desire—as a
good American citizen—to hang
out OLD GLORY over your door
on Patriotic Holidays ©
Nevada City Nugget
Will Supply You With a Flag
AS A PREMIUM ON SUBSCRIPTIONS PAID INTO THIS OFFIC
—BEFORE JULY 3RD—
These flag outfits represent a conservative retail value of $1.50—
They consist of the FLAG, 3 feet wide, 5 feet long, made of durable cotton bunting, with sewed stripes, and printed stars, a, sturdy brass jointed
pole six feet long, varnished with a hardwood varnished knob to cap it, a .
cotton rope and a strong aluminum holder for screwing onto porch or
window sill, the whole packed neatly in a metal cornered shipping board
box.
THIS OFFER IS OPEN UNTILJuly 3, 1940
To and old subscriber or new isbueriber who brings into the Nugget Office
\. and Fridays.) :
\ THE FLAG OUTFIT IS FREE TO SUBSCRIBERS, NEW OR OLD. WHO PAV
᐀䄀夀䔀䄀删ᤀ匀 SUBSCRIPTION ($2.50) IN ADVANCE
ust. .
$2.50 in advance for a years subscription to the Nugget, (issued Mondays .
@)
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