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Collection: Newspapers > Nevada City Nugget

May 21, 1928 (6 pages)

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ry SS ‘MONDAY, MAY 21, i HE NEVADA CITY ¥ NUGGET, CALIFORNIA The Nugget Is Your Home Town Newspaper 1928 SSS COURT HOUSE RECORDS Deeds Wm. R. Celio et al & Nahum Coburn Goodwin—Portion Lot _-24. Block 57, City of: Nevada. Martha Burriston to Deer ea Placer Mining Co.—Portion Wt NE Sec. 15, T16N, R8E. +» Vittorio Cozzaglio to Theresa Cozzalio—-East 18. feet Lot 38,, River Front Block East of Bridge Street; undivided %4 interest in east 3 feet of Lot 36 and 37 and west 7 eo Lot 38. Town of Truckee. L. W. Lobdell Punlap—Portion TI16N, ROE. Wong 3am etal to Sherman Chan —-Portion Lot 15, Block 5, City of Grass Valley. Francis Wm. Hooper’ to George W.'Zambsch et x-——Portion Lot 2, Block 28, City of Grass Valley. Alfred F. Duggleby to Wm. A. Timkins—Property in NW, Sec. 24, TI6N,, R8E. E. S: Birdsall et el to W. tier-—reconveyance. Homestead Mary Elizabeth Clendenca. Army Discharge M. L. McDonald. Chris A. Simos. Lis Pendens St-te of. California vs. Gold Rim Ditch & Mg. Co., et al Nevada Irrigation District vs. American Foundation Co. Lot: 42; .: See: $, J. GauST. CANICE’S CHURCH Masses at 8 and 10:30 a. m. on the first and second Sundays of each month. Third and fourth Sundays, Mass at 8 o'clock. : Third Sunday of each Muss in Cherokee at 10:30. Fourth Sunday. Mass in Birch ville at 10:30. month, METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH Sunday school at 1U a. m. Morning service at 11 a. m. Epworth League at 6 p. m. Evening service at 7 p. m. Mid week prayer service Wednesday evening at 7. p. m. : H. H. Buckner, pastor. —~ TRINITY EPISCOPAL CHURCR June 3° and 17. 10:00 a. m.—Church School. 11:00 a. m.—Morning Prayer and Sermon. May 27, June 10 and 24. 8:30 a. m.—Holy Communion. 10:00 a. m.—-Church School. 7:30. p. m.—Evening Prayer Sermon. Trinity Guild, Woediesdaye at 2:30 Thursdays at St. 2:30. Agnes Guild, CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY Meets every ted to attend. Our Sunday School meets at ten o’clock fur pupils up to the age of 20 years. STAGE SCHEDULE Downieville Mai! and Pacean Stage departs at 1p. m. Sunday for North San Juan, tonville Downieville at 5 p. m. nieville at 4:30 a. in. C. N. G. vnasenrer train for mento and San Francisco. Alleghany and Forest Stage leaves Nevada City daily except Sunday at North Coli:mForest. 41:60 (p.m. for Tyler, hia, Alleghany. and Forest 6:30 a. Graniteville Stage Jeaves Nevada City daily except Sunday for Lake City,. North Bloomfield, Moores Fiat and Graniteville at 7 a. m. “Leaves Graniteville at 7 a. m. Nevada City. Washington Stage for Washington ~r Maybert cad Gaston leaves m. Lecves VWashington at m. for Nevada City. Marysville Auto Stage leaves Nevada City daily at $: a. m. & Reads, Smartsville, 2 py: te Some one has justr emarked that Japan now has that long wanted opportunity to ‘‘grab off’? a big-slice of China. You are not beyond redemption if little children and dogs like you. A good many people do not have to wait fools of themselves. There may be no place like home, but a lot of folks scribe to the theory. As mall boy is composed principally of noise and appetite. A woman’s as old as she and you’d better look out if you tell her 80. To imitate a product is to admit its leadership. Just Like Tongues “Dector, why does a small eavity fee! so large to the tongue?’’ “Just the natural tendency of your tongue to exaggerate, I suppose.” Television is wonderful and all that, but when we get an attachment to let us see ourselves as others see us, we shall have something reallyt o ialk about. , at $1,000,000. et al to Dudley! and Sunday morning at 11 o’clock at Brand’s Studio, Broad street. The publie is cordially invii den: daily except Cainpand Downieville, arriving at Leaves Dow-. making con-— nection at Nevada City with the N. SacraLeaves m. for Nevada City. for Nevada City daily except Sunday at 6:30 a. 6:30: <a. for Rough Hammonton and Marysville. Leaves Marysville at until Hgllowe’en to make today don’t sublooks ' LongiBuriad Preasdi e 2ll Lares Seeks Pacioma canyon, in the mount. ins east of Sun Fernando mission in ('alifornia, contains, according to tradition, a great chest of gold beaten into the form of plates and platters for , altar and dining service. Some csti. . mates place the value of the treasure . and rugged but men have time and ‘again tricd to find the treasure. by a map on a_ tanned sheepskin, sketched with a hot metal point by a San Fernando padre himself, the scekers have been unzble to find the chest. If tradition—is_true history, the cuest contains the largest assortment of gold plates and platters ever beaten into form by Indian smiths of any of the missions in the Californias, either below or above the Mexican boundary line. Rojerio Rocha, gold. and silver smith at the San Fernahido missicn, not only helped beat the plates and platters, but he was one of the trusted party that hid the golden utensils when-word eame-thatUnited States Pacioma canyon is wild . Ajdeod } : soldiers were marching down the San ; Fernando valley.” A few weeks before . Rocha died he took from wooden chest a piece of tanned sheepskin, bearing traces of a hot point, and told one of his Indian friends it was a map showing the location of the buried gold. However, efforts to follow the map to the chest of go!dhaye been futile.—Lannes. McVhetridge, in the National ‘Republic. Nightingale No Right on Poetic Pedestal? The poets have the nightingale all wrong. He is the noisiest, most inconsiderate, most obstreperous and jaunty his old , : appearance. metal; . . the traveler the bird in the whole kingdom of birds, . H. D. Lawrence, writing in the Fortim, asserts. How John Keats managed to begin his “Ode to a Nightingale” with:“My'heart aches, and a drowsy numbness pains my. senses,” is a mystery to anybody acquainted with the actual song. You hear the nightingale silverily shouting: “What? What? Whaf, John? Heartaches and a drowsy numbness pains? tra-lala! tri-li-lilylilylilylily.” And why the Greeks said he, or she, was sobbing in a bush for a lost lover, again I don’t know. Because, in sober fact, the nightingale sings with a ringing, pinching vividness and a pristine assertiveness that makes a mere man stand still. The nightingale -is -the most unsad thing in the world; even more -unsad than the peacock full of gleam. He has nothing to be,sad about. He feels perfect with life. Finland’s Claims to Fame Finland is a land of superlatives. It is the northernmost republie on the : globe; it was the first country to give absolute equal suffrage to women; it was the first nation to adopt prohibtion; it has the greatest forest area of any conntry in Europe; it boasts the largest paper mill in Europe; it has the greatest number of lakes of any country—55,6C0—and it boasts of not merely a “thousand islands” but 2,000, says a travel* writer in the -athfinder Magazine. Finland for six centuries was under the sway of Swethen for a century it was domjuated by Russia and finally, in 1918, the country attnined its tong cherished ambition and was formed. into a republic. The government is. headed by a President who is chosen for six years, and the laws are made by a diet consisting of a single chamber, EFumerous Definitions London sehoolborvs either have unusual penchant for what ere generally known: as howlers, or else the Londen schools ‘have an unusually astute publicity agent. Anyway, says a ecerrespondent of the Christian Science Monitor, not the least of the humor that enlivens the London press arises in that way. The latest group of juvenile atrocities is: Cistercian: A gurden plant green leaves. Macadam: The first Seotchma BRoedicea: A dangerous” serpent found in ancient Britain. Theodolite: A saint mentioned in a peem by Browning. Artisan: A kind of well. Hoped He Was an M. D. A young golfer on the lockout for '@ game was introduced by the caddie master to Doctor Jones, another player who had no partner. Doctor . Jones was a quict, played an unemotional game. All went well until the third hole, where the younger player found that a perfectly good drive had ended unsuspectedly in a _ shockingly — difficult bunker. He glared at the ball, his face becoming more and more red. Then he turned to his onponent, “Exeuse me, sir,” he said, “but before I play this accursed shot, do you mind telling me whether you are a D. D. or. an M. D.?” Early Taverns Primitive In. some -taverns in early Colonial days there were sever! beds in a room and, if all were occupied, the traveler would, without ceremony, lle down by the side of its oecupnnt and share the bed with him without care or ¢uriosity as to the ‘identity of his easual bed fellow. lf he should be so fortunate as to find an empty bed, and should ask for clean sheets, he would be looked upon-as un aristocret or otherwise abnormal person; for sheets were changed only-at regular periods, more or less distant from each other, tbe almanac being the only guide. : with . _ harmony, ane! Police Dogs Quickly . finder . wholly ‘stars $50,000. Showed Their Quaiity ‘The first city in the world to install dogs us regular members. of the police force was the quaigt old city of Ghent. in Belgium. Years ago the chief of police of Ghent pointed out to the governing authoritics that a cleverly trained dog could run down a crim inal more surely and quickly than any two-legged policeman, and that it was better to ¢isk a dog’s life rather than that of an officer. The idea favor and the chief was commissioned to get his dogs. This he did and trained them to distinguish’ between skulking criminals and the ordinary reputable citizen, who walks by day. Special kennels were built in the police Stations, and collars, coats and muzzles were provided in the way of uniforms. The dogs proved particularly useful_to the police at night and saved much running backwards and forwards. These dogs are so highly intelligent that chey refuse food from strangers, bring home lost childrén, etc. Matiy of them are so anxious to get a “case” that they will follow and look askance at a person of suspicious The idea proved sueh a success that other municipalities followed the example of Ghent.—VathMagazine. Taverns Played B'g Fart in Social Life Taverns in the Colonial days found . . and , in the early days of the republic, especially in New England, were the, most important part of all American social institutions. furnishing rest-and refreshment for tavern was a town hall, a court of justice, an auction room, a dancing assembly and sometimes a church and a playhouse. In New England. until the repeal of the anti-theatrical law in 1783. play acting was rigorously banned as the most wicked of ail the contrivances of the devil for destroying the virtue of the world. However, from the motives of paternal kindness toward the populace, and in order that they should not be without amusing diversions, pillories, stocks, whipping posts and bilboes were always sect up near taverns so that when petty . offenders were subjected to the operations of these’ pleasant devices the guests or loiterers of the taverns conld hear the groans and cries of the victims while sipping thetr flip. punch or sack. Thus did our pious forhears furnish free moral entertainment of a realistic character. the= very antithesis of play-acting.—Boston Globe. Art Nourished by Nature ‘I now understand why the Greeks were such great pocis; and above all, I ean account, it seems to me, for the the unity, the perfection, the uniform excellence of all their works of art. They lived in a perpetual commerce with external nature, and nourfished themselves vnon the spirit of {ts forms. Their theaters were all open to the mountains or the sky. Their columns, the ideal type of a sacred forest, with its roof of interwoven tracery; adinitted the light and wind. The odor -and the freshness: of the country. penetrated the cities. Their temples were mostly unperthaie: and the fivinge clonds. the and the deep. sky were scen ahove,—Shelley, in a Tetter to Pea cock Bermuda Fielics on Oxiten The soil of Bermuda is particularly adapted to the cultivation of the onion. It consists largely of pow dered. coral and -coniains. the elements which are most conyenial to the onion. Moreover, the = situation and climate of the island are sucti that the farmers are able to put their early onions into the markets. of American, cities at a time when they are peculiarly welcome. As a result Bermuda has. become virtually one great onien patch. The happiness of the island may he said to hang upon the onion. When there is a good crop and prices are good, the people are happy; when the crop fails; or prices are low, they are correspondingly depressed. “Raven” VW/ritten ia Street? “The Raven,” Edgar Allan’ Poe’s {mmortal poem, was scribbled on the . edges of a theater program as the auf . thor stood under a serious man, who ! Blacerer street light at street and Broadway, New York, at midnight in the rain and sleet ofa stormy winter night.-~At-least, this was the coutenticn of the late Dr. Cornelius Mathews, devoted friend of Poe’s. The story was reealled recently when the only autographed copy of the poem pasced from a_private owner to the hands of ¢caliectors. Manuscript experts say there is no other American literary document of comparable value outside the = libraries; its -worth is estimated at Gained on the Dict “What huve you been doing to yourself? You look different somehow,” said one friend to another, “Why, I bave been dieting,” the second, friend. “For two lmonths I have cut out all fate. whi bread, most sweets—the reyulatiow reducing diet, you know.” replied “You brave thing. and how ~mneh
flesh have you taken MY? asked the first friend. The second woiwan laugh« grined laugh. ‘Il fave gocued just four pounds on that reducing diet,” she smfd--8p ine wid Union. doa chaIn addition to’ ORDINANCE No. 202 AN ORDINANCE FIXING THE COMPENSATION OF CITY ATTORNEY. : The City Council of the City of Nevada does hereby ordain as follows: SECTION 1 The City Attorney shalll receive as compensation for his services as such attorney the following: 1. A retainer’ of Two Hundred ($200.00) dollars per annum, payable in two equal installments in the months of May and November of each year. This sum shall be in full for drafting ordinances and resolutions, drawing contracts, conveyancing of every description, «us well as for all advice given the council, or any member thereof, or any other official of the city, on matters relating to city affairs. 2. For all other services rendered at the request of the city, council such sums as agreed upon with said council. SECTION 2 All ordinances, or parts-of ordinances, in conflict herewith: are hereby repealed. SECTION 3 This ordinance before going into effect shall be published once, with . the ayes and nays, in the Nevada City Nugget. The foregoing ordinance was enaccity. aac a RE -ORDIN ANCE No. 203 AN ORDINANCE REGULATING THEATERS, SHOWS VAUDEVILLES, ROAD SHOWS, MOVIE PICTURE SHOWS, PERFORMANCES, CONCERTS, CARNIVALS, ENTERTAINMENTS AND EXHIBITIONS, PROVIDING FOR THE LEVY. AND COLLECTION OF A LICENSE TAX ON SUCH BUSINESSES, AND PRESCRIBING PENALTIES FOR ITS VIOLATION. The City Council of the City of Nevada dces hereby ordain as follows: SECTION 1. That it shall be unlawful for any person, firm, or corporation, to conduct. manage, operate, or carry on, within said City of Nevada, any theater, show, vaudeville, road show, movie picture show, performance, concert,, carnival, entertainment, or exhibition, or to assist therein, without first securing a license therefor. and payine the license tax therefor to the City Clerk of said City, as hereinafter specified. SECTION 2.. Upon_ application for any such license, said Clerk will thoroughly investigate the character ‘and quality of the show, theater, earnival, vaudeville, road show, movie picture show, performance. con= j; cert, entertainment, or exhibition proposed to be conducted under such license, and in-the event he ted by the City Council of the City. of Nevada, at a_ regular meeting thereof, held this 17th day of May, 1928, and was passed by the following vote: Aye—tTrustees Bennetts, Armstrong, Murchie, Seaman, Holmes. Nay ==NGnenc = oe ee Absent—-None. A. M. HOLMES, President of the Board of Trustees and Mayor of the _ City of Nevada. Attest: GEO. H. CALANAN, City Clerk. Dated May 17, 1928. First Publication—May 21, 1928. READJUSTMENTS . By THOMAS ARKLE CLARK Dean of Men, University of MWinois. % ry Ww ARE, as . have often remarked, the slaves of habit, good or bad. The older we are the more difficult it is to readjust’ ourselves to new conditions, to take on new friends, and to be happy in new surroundings. Winter or -summer,—at work or during vacation, I at about the same hour, and try I will I cannot long be contented:— 1 must be up and at something.. Lt is a habit I learned, with difficulty 1! must admit, long, long ago on the farm, but, having learned it, I am a slave to it. I want the same things for breakfast. Wherever I am, I.am ‘a little uneasy unless I am in my own chair. TI am contented only when 1! have my old friends about me. And yet I know ful! well that one should learn to be and to do otherwise. for sooner or Iater readjustments wilt have to be made. Old friends wil! have to go; new conditions will arise: and the wise min will leern to mate readjustments eariy fn life. Wilder is a bachelor who has always had means subuen to five as he ¢easired. He his always intended to marry, but he is pest fiffy now and he ts ofratd of fhe readdastments which he knows will be inevitsuble in his life if he takes on bilities of married life. She micht vant breakfast earlier or tater than he has been‘accustomed to; she might not .find his friends as avreenble as he finds them;.she might even appro priate his favorite chair or insist upon the respons! finds the same is immoral, fraudulent, or so inferior in in his judgment, the same is unsuited to the moral welfare of its prospective patrons, he shall forthwith deny such application. In the event, after such investigation, said City Clerk ‘shall find that the same is unobjectionable in. the respects aforesaid, he shall forthwith collect ’from the applicant a license tax at as,’ : Censed theater ' shall its beiny replaced by a more artistie though less comfortable one, There is too much. risk, and he will very likely drift on and die as he now is. Selfish you will say he is, but his ' habits are formed. , wanders » make the readjustments neces Gregory, though he is an‘ old has just lost his mother. During his seventy years he has scarcely been separated from her Tle has a wife and a family of his own and is a selfreliant and successful man. but has always been mother to go to when he was depressed or in trouble or felt the need of sympnthy. He is as completely lost as a child without her. He about like a stranger in a strange land. not knowing what to do or where to go. He knew that the change must come, sooner or tater, but he had not prepured himself for It Fuller and his wife were tnseparable. He was a shy man, who held himself in the background in social affairs. No one else could bring bim out or put him in as good light as she could do. Tle quite sparkled when she was about, but wilhout her he was silent, ill-at-ease, and not at his best. She died suddenly when. still a young wom:n, but he could not sary te a life without her. He was like a vessel drifting helplessly in.a heavy sea. He fellowed her ina few months. had never learned to make readjustments. (©. 1927, Western Newspaper Union.) Who Invented Ice Cream? Iee cream prévides the historian with ample oppertinity for reserreh, for of the origin of this delicacy little is surely known According to the ehcyclopedias, ice cream Was introduced into Franee from Italy in 1550 Ger many and England also were enjoying it at about the same time, but whence it originally came is a matter of conjecture. In 1786, {t is said, *the first advertisement for ice cream vyppeoured in the United States, And Mrs. Alexander Hamilton is. reported to have been our first hostess to serve her guests this frozen dessert, man, . there . He. . inafter ea road show, ak the rates hereinafter specified and issue a proper license for the period covered by such tax; but shail not, in any event, issue any such license for a period of less than one quarter year nor refund er rebate any portion of such-license tax. execpt as hereprovided. Said city council shall have and retain power to review the action of said clerk with respect to any such application, and may, in its discretion, revake any such license upon refunding to applicant or licensee the unearned, unexpired portion of such license tax. Such rates of tax shall be, and they are hereby fixed, as follows: (1st) For any permanent regularly maintained theater or vie picture show, such license tax shall he collected at the rate of eight and ($8.00) dollars. per quarter year, and (2d) For any show, vaudeville, performance, concert, carnival, entertainment or exhibition, conducted outside of a regularly lior movie picture show, paying the license tax at the rate last aforesaid, such license tax be collected at the rate of quality that, . mo. Two Hundred ($200.00) dollars per, quarter year. SECTION 3: Any person who, as principal or agent shall conduct, manage, Operate or carry on, in said City of Nevada, any business specified in Section 1 of this ordinance, or assist therein, or cause the same to be done, in violation of the’ provisions of this ordinance, .shal! he entity of a misdenfeanor, and upon conviction thereof shall be punishable by a fine not cxeceeding $306.00, or by imprisonment in the eity jail not exeeeding three months. er by both such fine and imprisonment. SECTION 4. This ordinaneea chall not apply to any show, thenter, vaudeville, roadshow, movie pieture show, performance, concort, entertainment or_exhibition which is not conducted for profit, or which is Inasmuch as Chinaw antsa _ national anthem, it looks as if ‘““Onward Soldiers’? would do for the armies of that “Christian general’’. International Clistian affairs Just attending peace confer. ences, and they won't tart iny wars. Who says this country, éan or are going along nicely. keep busy enough have time ‘e, there’s no tolerenee in when either a republia democrat can believe anyhe wants to and still belong to party? thing the Chieaga was originally a missionary outpost. , eye te steake rn} etyerferfertioke i ties rae rate o > + s he aX st o> , * o er. +4 st ++) *, atte 4 aN Help build up a + te steste st Rey st + ee 2 a oe diplomats . i SUEDE IS Se Se sented ioe religion charitable, or educational purposes in such manner as to exempt’ the same and its nranerty from taxation under the laws of the state of California, or which is conducted under special authority grented bv said City Council for strictly public or muncipal purposes; but nothing herein shall authorize, nor be deemed to authorize, the doing of any act prohibited by law or by other ordinance of this city. SECTION 5. All ordinances and parts of ordinances in conflict herewith are hereby repealed. SECTION 6. This ordinance shall, before going into effect, be published’in the Nevada City Nugget, with the ayes and, nays, at least once. The foregoing ordinance was enacted by the City Council of the City of Nevada, at a thereof, held this 17th day of May, 1928, and was passed by the following vote: Aye—tTrustees Bennetts, Murchie, Armstrong, Seaman, Holmes. Nay—None. Absent——None. A. M. HOLMES, President of the Board of Trustees and Mayor of the _ City of Nevada. Attest: : GEO. H.CALANAN, = City Clerk. Dated May 17, 1928. First srlnebisesacotecimned 21,-1928. Fares Cut to the East Effective MAY 22.. and daily thereafter until Sept. 30. Return limit, Oct. 31. For Example, Roundtrips to— Atlanta, Georgia . . . $113.60 Atlantic City,N.J. .°. 153.34 Boston, Mass: .: .: 2. 157.76 Buffalo.N.Y. . 3. 124.92 Charleston,S.C. . . . 131.40 Chattanovga, Tenn. . . 107.48 CHICAGO . «+ 9.30 leveland,Ohio . . « -112.86 Columbus, Ohio . . . 112.80 Dallas: Texas 2.. 7560 Denver Colo. 6 =. « 67.20 Detroit, Mich. . « . « 109.92 Duluth,Minn. . . 99.00 Fort Worth, Texas . . 75.60 Havana,Cuba . . . . 170.70 Houston,Texas . . . 75.60 Indianapolis,Ind. . . 103.34 Jacksonville, Fla. . , . 124.68 Kansas City, Mo: . .. 75.60 Knoxville, Tenn. . . . 113.60 Louisville Ry. 2.. «EOS:88 Memphis, Tenn. . . . 89.40 Minneapolis, Minn. . . 91.90 Montreal, Que.. . . 148.72 Nashville, Tenn. . . . / 102.86 New Orleans, La. . 89.40 New York City, N.Y. 1§1.70 Niagara Falls, N. Y. 124.92 ‘Oklahoma City, Okla. 75.60 @Ornmiaha: Neb = 6 735.60 Philadelphia, Pa. . . 149.22 Pirtsburen, Pa.. .-.-.4 1206 Portland, Maine . . . 165.60 Providence, RoI, ss. 15776 Seohoiuis Moe. 23° os 85:60 St-Pant Minn. 01-96 San Antonio, Texas.. “7560 pavanhoen, Ga. eee Toronto, Ont. . . a E252 Washington, D.C. . 145.86 Wilmington, N.C. 138.76 greatroutes for transcontinental travel, Go one way, return another. For example: east via Chicago, return via New Orleans or San Francisco or vice versa. Southern ferferte ste nfo rte otc ate ste atest aks ote atentests ste ate ote rte rte ate fenkerfesferferferfa age serterterfortre ferkerkerte forgery HAVE YOUR PRINTING DONE IN NEVADA CHY local industry and keep your money in circulation at home. The prices are no higher. The service is satisfying both as regards quality and time taken to get it out. ‘There is no occasipn to send your orders to be done out of town. Our printing plant is run by people who live in our own community who spend their money here. The Nugget has a modern plant for the expeditious % * handling of all kinds of commercial printing. The best < of paper and ink used in our work. Ce ee ee te ie a a ae ea Sidivinieieint hone 36 2% You can get anything in printing from a menu card to a large poster—letter heads,, bill heads, statements, booklets, shipping tags, programs, business and cailing cards. Let us do your next work. TEE NEVADA CITY NUGGET Job Printing Department from: this shop— Fast Service RRMA IIHS stooeesnoseronnenoooesooese tah s e , regular meeting © ~