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Page: of 6

"a
lpedeaeaeaetaiaienminaamianel ——e
AY INING DE PMENT ISSUE _
Thinking
Out Loud
.
By H.M. L. COVERS RICHEST GOLD AREA IN CALIFORNIA
Nevada City Nugget
wa?
if
in the right to publish the Truth,
with good motives and for justton.
From the Californian,
March 15, 1848:
The Liberty of the Press consists
iable ends, —-Alexander Hamiloe
Next year is the year of national elections. We shall elect a
President, representatives, a United States senator, and state senators and assemlblymen. A year
from now the ttwo great parties
will be preparing for their national conventions. In view of this
prospect, it behooves not only Republicans but those Democrats who
find the present ‘administration
unsatisfactory to get ready (for ithe
battle at the polls.
We call attention here to four
of the issues -which we. think
should be well defined in ‘the national election next year.
(a) Shall the Federal government continue to administer relief or shall the states take it over
completely with grants of aid from
the Federal government when tthe
need thereof is-well determined?
(b) Shall both capital and labor
be regulated and acts on the part
of either group adverse to the public interest, be, prdqhibited?
(c) (Shall special, groups, such
as the farmers, continue to be subsidized by the Federal government
at the expense of all the people?
(d) Shall the Federal government continue to engage in idustrial ‘enterprises ‘in competition
with its own cithzens?
There are four broad questions
of national policy which should tbe
answered in next year’s elections.
Relative to relief we have long
been convinced that the only economical and really effective method of handling relief is through
local city and county authorities.
The close scrutiny a board of supervisors give ito applicants for relief, for instance, is a very different thing from the administration
of a political appointee, who does
not have to answer to the tax payers. Were relief administration
returned wholly ‘to the states, and
states, in turn, gave the counties
tht authority to ttake care of the
needy, we are well convinced that
slackers, habitual Bums and boondogglers in the vast majority of
local governments ‘would vanish.
The waste of political favoritism,
incompetence, nepotism, and outright raseality, would for the most
part disappear, instead of being
rife throughout ithe entire relief
administration as they are today.
And of equal importance, it would
be practically impossible ‘to use the
needs of the destitute to build up a
vast political :machine on a permanent basis.
Regarding the regulation of
capital and labor, we believe that
an honest attempt should be made
to curb the greed and ‘power of
both. It makes no difference whether we surrender too much power
to the DuPonts or to John L. Lewis. We may be certain that either
the capital or ithe labor group will
misuse that power. The National
Industrial Association in its heyday was no more of a tyrant than
the Lewis labor organization is today under the charter of the Wagmer act. It was old Commodore
Vanderbilt who is credited with
coining the slogan: “The public
ibe damned!”’ While the captains of
industry have ‘been somewhat
chastened since his time, we have a
new ‘despotism using {the same
slogan, When one man can halt
the coal mining industry, for instance, in order to create a monopoly for his especial following
among the coal miners, that is too
mutch power to be placed in one
man’s hands.
The power to subsidize, as the
farmers are now finding, carries
with it the power to coerce and to
regiment. Some of them like it,
probably a majority of them do
not. For aiftter all the growers of
wheat, cotton and tobacco, the
crops chiefly subsidized, are a
small minority of all farmers. But
whether or not it benefits all of
them, ‘the group that is subsidized
is énjoying a special advantage at
the expense of all the tax payers.
Subsidies invariably create a pressure group who seek to make a
temporary Measure a permanent
institution. .Pressure groups, by.
and large, are a direct menace to
our democracy. Their factionalism, the greed for government aid,
vor special advantage, become
sources of contention that rack and
tear national unity. Under the soil
erosion preventive plans a majority of farmers, undoubtedly, could
Vol. 13, No. 40. The County Seat Paper NEVADA CITY, CALIFORNIA The Gold Center
ae ;
FRIDAY, MAY 19, 1939.
Edgar Williams, Scout Executive,
who has taken the place of Harold
Ricksecker, who resigned to accept
a similar post in Marin county,
gave an interesting talk on scouting
at. the Rotary luncheon at noon
Thursday. A report from the Nevada
City Co-ordinating council, organized ‘sometime since at the suggestion of Forest Supervisor DeWitt
Nelson, and sponsored iby the Rotary
club, was received.
The report, from (Mrs. Beatrice
Bonner, chairman, stated that the
(Nevada City council had agreed to
advance dollar for dollar up to $250
money raised from club and private
contributions, to defray the expenses
of a three months playground and,re'treation program at Pioneers Park
this summer. The cost of employing
playground supervisors and securing
a start in playground equipment was
set at $500. f
The Co-ordinating council was organized to combat conditions which
have led-during the past two years.
to delinquency among Nevada City
children: The‘attention of the club
was called to this condition some
three months ago by A. W. McGagin,
county probation officer. Memibers
of the club were deeply moved by his
recital of facts concerning youth delinquency, which as an officer of the
county he had encountered.
The Co-ordinating council was organized and the summer playground
plan is the first result.of its activity.
It is proposed to establish tournaSummer Playground
Program At Park’
ments in Pioneers Park, in such
sports as soft ball, archery, baseball,
horse shoes, and other diversions.
Teams will be organized, it is planned! to meet the needs of beys and
girls in all ages and: weights. The
money to be raised is expected to be
used to employ comeptent suvervicors and playground directors.
Scout Executive Williams stated
that Rotary was organized in’ 1905
and had grown to be a ‘world-wide organization with 150,000 members.
Two years later the Boy Scouts were
organized and it had grown in the
32 years of its existence to a ,worldwide membership of 1,500,000. Both
are lay organizatins, in which the
membership is governing body. He
called attention to the fact that in
totalitarian states the first organization o be suppressed is the Rotary,
and the second the Boy Scouts.
Rotary and other service ‘clubs
have given the scout organization
their greatest impetus ‘throughout
the world, and the ‘success attendant
upon. scouting is langely due to the
interest Rotarians have taken in
them. In the United States one out
of every two boys of scouting age, is
a scout, and the proportion is getting
larger. In a very few years, he said,
Scout Cubs will outnumber the Boy
Seouts. The average length of service in a Scout troop is well over two
years, so it can ‘be seen that scouting
fills a very important place in a
scout’s lifé. Next to the Bible, the
Scout Handbook leads in the sale of
all books in all languages.
MURCHIE MEN TO
The second annual picnic of the .
miners of the Zeibright and Mur-)
chie mines at Newada City and Pennsylvania mine in Browns Valley will’
ground on the Tahoe Ukiah highway
east of this city Sunday, May 28. All
miners: that have ‘been transferred,
from the Murchie to other proper.
ties an'd merchants of Nevada City .
and Grass Valley are invited to at-.
tend. .
Tickets are on sale in Nevada City .
Drug store and two places in Grass
Valley. The tickets were placed in.
the two cities to make it more convenient for business men and miners at other properties to purchase
them without having to go to the
Murchie or Zeibright mines where
they are on sale to the men employed. Merchants in both cities have
donated prizes for sports events.
Plans are to make the picnic and
program bigger and better than last
year. Hot pasties, will ‘be served with
the regular dinner and there will
be ice cream soda and beer for every
one. The afternoon will be filled
with games, athletic events and dancing.
benefit. Honesitly administered, it
should preserve the fertility and
restore much that has been lost in
agricultural resources in the Jast
careless hundred years. It is questionable, however, whether under
private initiative most of this
might not be done when the need
becomes great enough.
Regarding the last question,
that of Federal engagement in
business in competition with private ‘business, as is being done in
the Tennessee Valley. ‘Proponents
of the plan plead that. a yard-stick
must be created by government to
measure and. thereby regulate private electric utility enterprises. If
this logic prevails there are several hundred industries which may
ibe measured and regulated by government expenditure of further
vast funds, The real answer is
that these yard-sticks cost too
much. (Monopolies or any other
business can be regulated for far
less than by setting up vast plants
that impair or destroy those creatPICNIC MAY 28
4 .
be held at the same beautiful picnic;
at Dave Richards and ERG en .
.
ed by private enterprise,
WAR FILM SHOWN
IN TWO CHURCHES
“The Fight f@ Peace’’ illustrated with motion pictures in sound,
was the subject presented by Albert
J. Lebeck, writer and lecturer, last
evening in the Methodist church of
this ‘city. The film will be shown this
Friday evening in Trinity Full Gospel church in Grass Valley.
The 2,500 foot film a Hendrich Van
Loon production, is a collection of authentic news-releases, many of which
have never been shown before or
seen the scissors of a censor.
This film is filled with 70 minutes
of ‘breath taking, heart rendering
scenes of present day history. The
addition of sound, makes the picture
even more realistic, giving one the
impression of sitting on the sidglines and observing the greatest
events of the past 25 years.
“Fight for Peace’, opens with a
running story of ‘the current Armament race by all nations—the Russian Revolution, a brief review of the
World War and in rapid sulccession
follows the march of Dictators and
their threat to World Peace; the rise
of Mussolini and the invasion of
Ethiopia; Hitler’s climb to power in
the Reich and his march to the east;
the expansion of the Japanese Empire and the war in China; the Civil
War in Spain, Madrid being wrecked
by bombs, streets strewed with the
dead, the populace digging in the
ruins in search for their loved ones,
and whole city blocks burning.
MOUNTAIN PLAYERS TO
GIVE MELODRAMA
The Mountain Players of Allegh-.
any is giving a benefit play Saturday May 20 for the P. T. A. of that
city. The play is a melodrama ‘On
the Bridge at Midnight.’”’ The production committee are, Edgar Davey,
Jack Campbell, Milo Nelson, WaltFIVE STUDENTS
WILL SPEAK AT
COMMENCEMENT
The speaker for the high school
commencement exercises *have been
; chosen. They were nominated and
elected by the class, who chose
eight, Then the faculty selected four
chosen were, Alice Norton, Jean
Muscardini. The class president, Bill
Joyal will speak about the senior
class and the student body president
John Muscardini, will speak about
student government. The other three
Speakers will have various topics of
interest to seniors.
ELKS WILL TRECK TO
PORTOLA INITIATION
Nevada City Lodge of Elks, No.
518 will go to Portola, Plumas
county, this Saturday. Cliff Merriam,
Exalted Ruler of Nevada City lodge
and other members will take part in
the ritual of initiation and help initiate a large class of candidates.
Those who plan to attend should contact Secretary John Fortier so that
‘plans for transportation may be completed.
NEVADA CITY HAS
870 GRADUATE
“FROM PLACER JR.
Nevada City has eight graduates on
the list. of prospective associates in
art to be granted at Placer Junior
College May 31 at commencement
exercises.
Dean Wyman E. Olson. has: announced 49 students are candidates
for graduation, subject to the out+
come of examinations that commerce
next week.
‘Those isted from Nevada City are
(Matt Burgan, Marq Joan Campbell,
Veronica Davies, Mervin Doolittle,
Mary: Lou Draper, Bill Pendola,.Dorothy Thomas and Tom. Rickard.
The Nevada City group has ‘been
outstanding in many activities on the
campus during the two years they
ters in sports. Miss Draper and Miss
Thomas have been prominent in the
social activities of the school.
NUGGET ITEMS READ
AROUND THE WORLD
NEW YORK, May 18.—If you
were to visit Burrelle’s Press Clipping Bureau in downtown Manhattan, you’d find a hundred young
girls doing nothing but reading
newspapers ‘and magazines. The offices, which overlook the Hudson
river, are as quiet as a library reading room, and all you see are newspapers stacked in piles ready to be
read and clipped. Harold Wynne, a
young college graduate who is the
president of this unusual organization says: “Our girls enjoy reading
the Nevada City Nugget and you will
be interested in knowing that we
send clippings from your paper to
all parts of the world. Today, in faroff China or Japan, some government official is reading the articles
which were published in the Nugget
about the. Chinese-Japanese war.”
WILLIAMS PROPERTY
Williams of Grass Valley on Deer
Creek, a mile west of Newton bridge
where several ledges are being developed. The main development is
on the (Manila ledge intersecting between the Kentucky Ridge and Niagara ledges. There are several other
‘er Bowman and Lester Meyers. Act-! claims in the property. It is stated
ors in the play are, Dick Hotchkiss,'a ditch will be constructed to bring
Constance Sinnot, Erleen Rogers,
Lyalette M. Webb, Tom Hogan, Vera .
. water to the seene of operations.
Considerable work has been done in
Smith, Amy Westall, Doris Baker,. the past by tunnel method of mining.
Ethel Polglase, Nonie Brunning,
George Baker, Walter Johnson; swe
Smith, Weston Wyllie. The actors
and actresses have been practicing
faithfully and the coming event is
looked forward to with keen anticipation, —
Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Freshour,
/ Mrs. Margaret Wells and Keith
; Douglass Johnson .of San Jose will
arrive today to spend a few days visiting: Mrs. Freshour’s sister, Mrs.
Howard Burr and Mr. Burr.
other than the class president. Those’
have been in school. Burgan, Doo-:
/ little and Pendola earned block letMartz, David McCraney and John}
.
.
MINERS FOUNDRY
SENDS CREWS TO
BUILD MILLS
The Miners Foundry of Nevada
City has two crews out erecting mills
or other equipment in different districts. Between 12 and 15 men left
the first of the week for the Indian
Valley mine in ‘Plumas county where
the mill that was burned last fall is
being rebuilt and ‘parts replaced.
The mill building which was formerly of wood will be all steel. The new
mill will have about a 175 ton daily
capacity. All one ton side dump ore
cars are being replaced with the ton
and a half size cars. :The foundry is
also making 15,000 feet of ‘six inch
Pipe and it will be installed at the
mine.
The company sent four men to the
Argonaut mine in Amador county
where’ they are making installation
of a tailings plant for the Argonaut
company. Three men have just returned from installing ejuipment at
the ‘Poverty Hill mine near Challenge. Army Adams of Grass Valley is
in charge of the Poverty Hill operations.
TEIBRIGHT TO
SINK SHAFT 600.
FEET DEEPER
Work will start Monday or early
next week on a sinking program at
the Zeibright mine in Bear Valley
ditional 600 feet. This will make the
shaft 1100 feet deep and develop
more ore for the huge mill at the
property. The mine is operated by
the Newmont company who are operating the Murchie at Nevada City,
Empire-Star and Pennsylvania at
Graiss Valley and Pennsylvania in
Browns Valley. ie
McGINNIS PLACER LEASED
The old Jack Williams property in
the Quaker Hill district. owned by
Don McGinnis has been ijeased and
yesterday surveyors started running
lines for a ditch to bring water from
the Cascade dith to work the property. There is a 300 foot tunnel on
the property -with approximately 20
acres of rich gold bearing gravel.
BONNIE BEE
companied (Mr. Bray to his property,
the Bonnie Bee, north of the Zeispection of ledges ‘was made. The
Zeibright vein extends through the
Bonnie Bee property.ORIENTAL MINE
The Dickey Exploration company
of Southern California has started
operations on the old Oriental mine
F. Cassidy of Nevada City and the
late Ray Hawkins of Alleghany.
surface and underground. It is expected the mine will become one of
the big producers of the district
when it gets well underway. Mrs.
Florence Dickey of Southern CaliforA new 25 ton per shift capacity! nia is one of the principal owners
ball mill has been installed by L. W. . of the new company.
CALNEVA MINING COMPANY
The Calneva Mining company
working the Martel ground on Squirrel Creek in Penn Valley is operating with a dry land dredge. The
dredger is on skids, and machinery
on the bank moves the equipment as
work progresses upstream. Crews are
gravel is said to be exposed.
DAWSON OPERATIONS _
on the old Balch property on Deer
miles. Good values are found in the}
gravel, ar ees
ee
‘ oe
Mine Employment In
County Is Increased
which will deepen the shaft an ad-.
. WEEDS POINT HYDRAULIO MINE
Ed.C. Uren, mining engineer, ac-.
bright mine Wednesday and an inat Alleghany formerly owned by F.
About ten men are employed on the
working three’ shifts. Considerable}.
Five men are employed by. Mr. ;
Dawson on a “doodle bug’ dredger.
Creek west of Nevada City, several): :
A survey of mine employment over
the past month reveals the fact that
the total is nearly 100 more than in
April survey. Forces have been increased by Idaho Maryland, Lava
Cap and in the placer operations of
Bramley Leo, Melvill on San Juan_
Ridge, :
John Becker is employing eleven
men in the Boundary mine in development work. Ancho-Erie is again to
be re-opened. It is reported that the
Salmon mine at Cherokee is under
option and will presently resume operations. There is also a report that
an English company is taking samples on the Shovel Placers near Columbia Hill with a possibility of resuming operations.
Two dredging operations, one om
Deer Creek, the Dawson, and the
other, the Calneva, in Penn Valley
have begun operations.
The result of new and increased
mining activity is that the total number of miners now employed is 2,558
with a monthly payroll of $383,200,
as compared with 2,459 employed
last month with a payroll of $268,(850. The following reports have
been received from mine companies:.
ANCHO-ERIE PROPERTY
Gus Helbach and Fred Anderson
of Grass Valley have taken an op-,
tion on the Ancho-Erie mine near
Graniteville. Crews have cleaned out
the old workings and are repairing
the buildings and making preparae
tions to install new machinery. A
compressor was installed and plans
call for driving an 1800 cross cut to
contact a vein. Anderson is in charge
‘of the work at the mine. Mrs. Lyda
. Talbot and brother, Frank Mainhart
/of Nevada City are part owners in
‘the Anicho-Erie,
{
.
.
'
BOUNDARY MINE
A crew is engaged in cleaning up
at the Boundary mine south of Grass
Valley. The caved portion of the
shaft is being repaired and preparations are being made for a new sur. face plant, after a nine year shut
‘down. John Becker, prominent min. ing engineer of Town Talk purchased
‘the property. The superintendent is
A. Hellings of Grass Valley.
It is reported hydraulicking is in
progress at the Weeds Point Gravel
mine at Camptonville but water is
getting low in the nearby stream.
Gravel banks were broken down by
blasting. The Channel Mining company with W. A. Fox, president and
general manager of San Francisco, is
developing the property.
No.
Men
Employed
LODE MINES © Payroll.
Newmont
Empire’
North Star
Pennsylvania
Zeibright
Murchie
Tdaho-Maryland
New Brunswick ..
Tdaho
BOMOR <25.5-.5.-5. aa
Lava Cap
Banner—
‘Central
Bradley
Spanish
Others : i
Golden Center .. 115
Spring Hill
Great Northern .
Stockton Hill
Hot Water
Arctic
Keller
Mack
Ancho-Erie
{Williams
Boundary
39,900
16,650 —
22,500
17,250
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“McKenzie -..---<0c5) . .
Innes Dreg. Co.