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Collection: Newspapers > Nevada City Nugget

May 26, 1930 (8 pages)

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THE E NEVADA CIT CITY NUGGET, CALIFORNIA — a MAY 26, 1930 Fair Sex at Banquet FRENCH CORRAL, May 16.— In 1859 Adelina Patti made her de(Special to The Nuggett)—-The mid-, but at the Academy of Music in New die of may and up tot date we have. York in “Lucia,” says a writer in the certainly beengiven a variety of; Brooklyn Eagle Magazine. Not since weather conditions and some pretty . Jenny Lind had a singer so captivated her audience. To the end of their bad work in .some places. i lives many of her admirers insisted Stockmen are getting busy, as oe that she was the last one entitled to time has come for seeking the \high; pe called “la diva.” ranges. 2 i Twenty-five years later, in 1884, PatJ. Hartley has already taken his. ti again sang at the academy. To her sheep to the mountains. In making} honor a banquet was planned by a the dfive he always rests his stock . number of prominent New York men, ss including Judge Daly, William Steinin Franch Corral. { way and Nathan Stetson. Naturally Bill Ww alsh. passed through Thurs-! the. wives of these men were expected . day with a large drove.’ é to be present, but they virtuously reThe candidates who are seeking fused to sit at the table with nominations in August are’ getting who had been divorced from her first busy. Guy Robinson of Indian Springs: husband, the Marquis De Caux, and who is running for supervisor of the married to Nicolini, the Italian tenor. 2 Extremely embarrassed, the gentle4th district paid our section and the ¢ S upper ridge a visit last Friday. men sent a,committee to put the case to Mme. Patti as delicately as possiJoe Swazy came down from the} ble, and ask her if‘she weuld consent Siberia mine Friday, Mrs. Louise madé her usual trip to be the guest of themselves only. ' from North Bloomfield Friday to Patticonsented ‘unhesitatingly, and she was the only woman present at a spend the week-end with her parents in French Corral. Rk party of some seventy masculine adMiss Frances Moulton came from mirers. in the ‘ballroom of the Hotel. Brunswick. Sacramento to spend over Sunday at her. home in this place. She was acaccompanied by her parents Mr-and Mrs. W. E. Moulton on her return trip. Miss M. Clerkin and Mrs. A. Browning were Nevada City visitors Saturday. Misses Minnie and Josie Mahoney of Spokane, Wash.,.are visiting their old home town.of French Corral! only what a duke should have. Still, and are the guests of Mrs. K. Sulli-} . it was thought advisable to: send to van. Both iadies were born and raised. London for the family man of busi“in French Corral and they delight in bess to overhaul the household accoming back beloved hide counts. . s ; amily an of business w fornia the winter The family ma f business went Miss M. Mahoney down to the castie from Lincoln’s Inn for several . Fields and, after a week’s work, subyears on the staff of Nevada sere mitted his report to the duke. school teachers a also taught for} Willoughby Lord de Broke tells the story in many parts ee the . hls State. Years.’ reminiscences, “The Passing ° aD “ Mrs. Theresa ville -was Mr. .and vada City Corral Mr. and Mrs. T. Day and daughters Alice and Virginiaswere Sunday visi. tors, . Friends from French. Corral ai tended the funeral of the } Curnow of Columbia Hill. his sudden . Patti Only Memberof : Ducal Right to Biscuit Not to Be Questioned A certain duke who had apparently a bottomless purse could not balance his accounts, or rather his steward could not. What is the use of being a duke if one ‘has to bother about money? He had spent only what was due to his position. He was not: extravagant. Oh! dear,. no. He had to their to spend months. ; Was nd years in other 3egeing your grace’s pardon,” said the family man of business, “I see your grace keeps both an Italian and a French pastry cook in your grace’s still room. [Is not such -a duplication superfluous ?” : “Hang it all,” exclaimed the duke, “a fellow -must have a biscuit!” O'Connor lay MrseP: visited of Birch. visittor. . H. friends a Sune NeFrench Flynn of in Sunday. Sicily in History Greek and Phoenician colonies were established in Sicily in “the HKighth century B. C. at Naxos and elsewhere. ‘Sicily thus became divided into several states and independent The tyrant Gelon a little later transferred his. government to Syracuse, which be‘ame for the time the most important Greek eity in Sicily. Meanwhile the Carthaginians had also made settle ments in the island at Panortus, Motya and Soleis. Wars between the Greeks and Carthaginians followed In each, success favored now one one side and now-the other. In 383 B. CG. peace was made between the rivals: cily--became a Roman _ province 46 B. C, ate Philip . Alf-deplore . taking 2way and extend sympathy to the family. 1 W., -P. Clerkin and W: E. Moulon . made a business trip to Nevada City . Tuesday. Mrs. G. cities Hardenbreok and daughter Mabel it to Nevada City Wednesday and will visit Mrs. Hardenbrook’s. sister, Mrs. M. Mitchell Grass Valley fer a short visit. we? s in J. Swazy, A. Browning were Grass Valley Mrs. Moynier and Av Nevada City and! visitors Wednesday. and Miss Nelly . their friend, Misses and Joseph a Si 94 K:;. Sullivan Sullivan,” With an British Gave Up Rights and J.Mahoney . Swazy were San Juan visitors Thurs. W. W. Washburn is back to his old position of stage d Juan Smartsville . main by it The British has tained that tre with the United Si of 1812 were ter! . While the United St the War terminal goverliment ‘afies concluded ‘iver on the San ed by that ites has ta of 1812 did not te those treaties, HT he no deubt fhat the jp: n of article VII ihe-treaty of Gient. conelnded on De vember 24, 1814, endeavored to have a esi eigen nate position that necessarily Sexes Separate in Church Gigs Gunia Dr. M, Strong, in 842 pastor of the Old Dutch Reformed church, +> which , stands at the intersection. of . Chureh and = Flatbush avenues. in Brooklyn. N. Y., once wrote of the in. terior structure of the second church built on that historic site: “The male part of the congregation . was seated in a continuous pew all . along the wall, divided into 20 apartments; with a_ sufficient number of doors for entrance, each person having one or more seats in one or the . ot! The: residue of the interior of the bvilding was for the accommodation.of the female = ste Sf) issipui: ig xduniiicd part of the who were BCiied on Thomas ; would secure for British subjects the . right to navigate the Mississippi. but, the American negofiators being unwilling to yield to that proposal, it was not included in the treaty. In a note dated October 30, 1815, from the British foreign office to the American minister at London, published in Amer. lean State Papers, Vplume IV, page 354, and following. the right of Britshingts Peo eetion of to have he oS igh ¢ hry Ge cone roration, been abandoned. chairs.” : a iMr. Bradburw, land Mr. i Columbia Hill. Patti. . . J. Flynn were business visitors ; Nevada City. in on Mississippi River ites before the War . war.ken the i of . provision: inserted in that treaty which . CHEROKEE I ITEMS. The cold. weather makes it hard Jon the gardens, they are very slow in startiny. James Coughlin of Columbia Hiil was a visitor in Nevada City. Thursday. These who attended -the funeral of the late Phil Curnow from Cherokee were Mr.j)and Mrs. R. MeNamara, Mr. and -Mrs. Wolf} and Mrs. W. H. Huster of! Charles Moody of. Nevada City gone to work at the Siberia mine. Mr. and Mrs. ‘L. Mrs. T. in Day and James Phelan the picture show Welnesday. and -wife ; . in Grass attended Valley There is a rumor that ‘wedding bells will ring around. here in June. Mike Phelan was a business visitor in Nevada City Friday. The many friends. of Mr. J. G. ; O’Neil are sorry to here of his death. He had many friends on this rilge. Quite a few are suffering colds; some ‘ef the children™have whooping cough. The Cagwell agent—was a-visitor . here Monday. H. Meyer was a busines nS Scissors Long in Use It was formerly b&ieved that scisvisitor. is; . { . ' { with { the weather is so changeable, . sors were invented in\Venice in the . Sixteenth century, but ecords show ~ that implements similar to ‘our modern . scissors were in use very much earlier than this period. In the rer Pompeii shears were found m iron and steel as well as bronze. sors were also in use in various Orii \ t ental countries from a very early pe ; riod. It is stated that those manufactured in Europe were copied from the Persian. The oriental scissors were very much ornamented and frequently in the form of a bird, the blade form' ing the beak. Wailing Wall Long Moslem Jerusalein’s wailing wall is remnant of the temple of Solomon and contains no remnants of the temple of Solomon, writes Vineent Sheehan the magazine Asia, nants: of the temple of Solomon anywhere. The wall does contain three courses of masonry in its lower levels which are undoubted remnants of the Greco-Roman temple built by Herod the Great to conciliate the nation, which as its king. did not recognize him . feminine not a! in: ; There are no rem. . she only . go shopping nest day. Jewish . The greater part of the . ‘wall is Moslem and forms part of the . wall of the Haram es-Sharif. It has been Moslem property for 1,300 years. . “Humor” in Music Grove’s Dictionary_of Music and Mu sicians says of the word .““Humoreske” (Elumoresque): “A title adopted Schumann for his Op, 20 and Op $8 No, 2 the former for piano solo, the latter fer-piano, violin and vietin-cello! HeNer and Grieg have—-atso~ used, the tern for. pianoforte-pieces—Op, Opp. Sand 46> respectively. . nothing -particulérly ‘himoreus’ of these\and the term ‘caprice’ mig equally well) be applied to -them Rubinstein also entitled his ‘DoneQuie ote’ ‘Llumereske, but. the ‘humor, there of a 1pore.obwous and buisterous kind.” is '
ple 1857, Coue’s Princi (born diAINI926) was a French psychothetap utst. Coue’s of therapeutics deals principally with the power of imagina tiop as opposed to that of the will He claimed that by means of auto-sug gestion ideas which tend to cuuse ill ness and disease may be eliminated from the will. Coue invariably stated that he was primarily a healer ‘ut one whe tat’! others to heal rn) selves’ {fis} forumla was ery in eeesy way TP am . commng betier and sbetier.” Emile Coue systew vith Gay and he SENNENNUEREAS N Menepeeeneenne nese Paste teobeofesiesteatinte t-d His Cozing and Going ‘ A notivetan ine duty caught. a@ stool ea eons past his upraised . ari: jie jerked a thumb to command j the driver to psii im te the curb, and ; he wert thrash the matter ou Av mi post as! x olafeal car the tor sone hear Se if Py ars: resurned. to” his \ passer-by . matter. “Theres a urs old in that ret he ceils me he didn’t udtice yl. hecause he can't see-any well, Sand T teld him te eet . glasses f couliin't” make him me!” ter he furious him what was ¢ mutt lost he win el! MA. Jay‘ and Th ye Shesetrrecd bout mrety ve h cme and dealix er on ot Valley 375 ard we w “ll Bred when 5 An Old Friend ‘The very tinearr Young lover approached the darling of his heart. “Did you have ahy Christmas cards?” he‘asked. ee OR, Se-sfeslesten: RO a a a) Phone 375W ‘ Mebteteteton cence ce several, replied the young _fady. “There was one . liked especially. I[t wasn't signed--l thought thatvery artistic. 1 think you must have*sent it.” “Really.” exclaimed the youth hap “What makes you think that?’ “well, you see,” smiled the girl very sweetly, “because I remember sending it to you last Christmas.” « ~ Modern &: reeeerene Se oakes ape ne t trip over WHITE FLANNALS Should Be Cleaned R Send Us Yours This Week ; Include genom 1 egularlyv! tur pany 6 noon rey wo") th enext credit your phone charges. GRASS ALLEY Ed Burtner. Pron: ° NEVADA CITY Miss Elizabeth Equipped te hare Ohstna A-Re by . 64 aid . There i¢ ! ins: wn . cd -learn Faverite Vegetable Jimmie;“age four, is very proud of ability to eat various kinds of food that are placed before him from day to day. The other evening there were several guests at the table, and he was discussing his aecomplishmett to the discredit of his two brothers, whose tustes are not ‘so easily_satisfied. “J like almost everything,” said Jimmie. “TI even like liver and fat ment. Franklin and Shirley don’t. Liver and fat meat are my favorite vegetables.” “S, Early Start A visitor in a mountain village no'ticed that one citizen was always up very early, but never did any work. So he questioned the man’s wife. “Why does your husband early?” “Oh, he wants an ¢arly “But he doesn’t do must he have such rise so breakfast.” anything. -Why an early break. fast?” “To smoke’ after.” Land of Koses ‘At Blatna. in south Bohemia. Jan Boehm. has created such a wonderful rose garden that ‘a visit to it-in the early days of September has become an annua} event for many visitors from Czechoslovakia, Bavaria, and Austria. Blatna is a small country town, which would not in itself,attract the foreigner. But as a “rosé town” it Gan hardly be beaten. Flower parades and flower carnivals are arranged, in all of which the rose occupies the central position. Also I-nportant The children’s dinner was in progress. They had been provided with a nice fat chicken “What part did you have?” one little boy of his _neichbor, “Phe wishbone,” the reply, “J had a leg’ put in another ‘One after the other the various-parts. Presently little had pot spoken a word, skewer and exclaimed: “Look, [ve got the perch the chicken rrr asked was who so far held up a Jackie, ‘gat on! ome Ne eV Nobert\ Weil, the mosk part, very but shorn mystery, revealed. wife come man Changed ymen used to be clever,” declares Hirt they are, obvious; smart now of trieks “Moes your kiss night when you the newly married experienced friend. “+Well, er, Mr. Experience. does tt when she .’ %-—T0s you home?’ of his not always,’ ‘She used to, but now expects to Angeles Timed There You Are Any radio fan Who dveesn’t just what a screen grid tbe by heart this know is might definition: .“A grid: tube is simply a, tetrode differs frei a*triode in that trode has—been~ ad the electronic flow be andthe cathode,” screen which an 2daitional ded to regulate tween the anode Boston Globe. elec Selene dneeetniedey x ey child, -! they explained ' Wee for all their little . ee every . asked . more! ndmitted . SLE RADIO BUYERS DEMAND KR stelle qolee ye foe * ot KENNEDY—Has these features best developed sit aha Price-——$115.00 without tubes—$137.50 complete You may puruchase these machines on easy Pit tes rts monthly installments ) 4g of ryorinsys Hie: % oS Call and look them over An? ans _ ALPHA HARDWARE & SUPPLY CO 3 Nevada City, California . eee Ele ion * aa hina REALITY—In reproduction and tone BEAUTY—In cabinet work and appointments VALUE—lIn materials, design and workmanship wes sheadete es ofohefelopteey +) resterteatert Seah fob gee neieteictite DS esge she age tfeete oleate afc ate Meters) ceee: a ee = ——— ee me Y ¥ we THE paren cae OF 6 PER CENT rT SAVING Did yo uever stop to figure how fast money will grow when put out at 6 per cent interest, compounded: semi annually? It will double in about 12 years. eee *, fea % re ‘“¢ *, 8, eae Start saving with your own local Building and Loan Associaion and at the same time help to build and improve your home community. <4, us Meat te a Our Pass Book Savings accounts may be started with. deposits at low at $1.00, and can be added to and withdrawn the same as Savings Bank accounts. *, " Hines + get %/ vaste s% ae is Come i in and talk it over. State Supervised. . NZVADA COUNTY BUILDING & LOANS. ASSOCIATION . H. W. © bien Pres. 208 Main, seas City ye he. ate) +4 a ao ay as &" me Sa Cac a 7 * nN H. B. Dow, Sec. and Mer. 138 Auburn, Grass Valley o7 ¥, + a re et eee iow, Het einioinidiek deity lel Qerlieieb foto le teledot Shoeietoerterteitatetite dente nteefenteriotiestetd fuk BANK OF SER you send your boy or any messénger to this bank, ts will be filled as accurately and promptly as though : personally. . ture won't take care of itself! You've got to be preA > ily way is by’saving a regular part of your income Dee ard to do once you get started! : one dollar is enough to start you. as learned the lesson of thrift is well-educated! This BANK OF ABERICA IF CALIFORNIA . ee Ss ie Sn ne Seb tegaieatoieteieiituinutoietoinnioietoiedest © ON x ax