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Collection: Newspapers > Nevada City Nugget

May 31, 1935 (8 pages)

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FRIDAY, MAY 31, _1935. THE NEVADA CITY NUGGET PAGE SEVEN FRATERNAL AND CLUB siscscesicsacanie Mad . PHT ROY STANLEY, the Union Hotel is now, employed Bowman & BEAUTY SHOP formerly” with Barber Shop, the shop of Bowman. 5-2 7-lite FOR OF-} res ay oe tf i WANTED -GOOD PAY in country TWO ROOMS, SUITABLE. FICE. 130 Pine Phone "] + MALE HEL Pr STEADY WORK Several choice and towns for men. No capital quired. White MR. “ st openings reliable men or woor experience THOMAS, reSup £: HYDRAULIC PARLOR NO. 56, Mects every Tuesday evening at . Pythian Castle 2 Broad Street . Visiting Native Sons welcome. 2 » aoe i SOK O'NEILL, President. . PE. C. W. CHAPMAN, Rec. Sec'y. i) porn emenrncirae tani st . WOMAN'S CIVIC CLUB \ Regular mectings the 2nd and fourth Mondays of the month, at the Brand Studio. . . . . President, Mus. Geo. Gildersleeve. ' Secretary, Mrs. Lel and Smet 8 Nm nercrecenn rots eeaataas ret rece etn esamecnarat . Nevada “City Lodge, No. 518, . B.:P. O. Elks second and fourth Frfievenings in Elks home, Saw . Meets day 426 Third St., Oakland, Calif. 5-27-2tp] ELECTRIC REF USED—We buys , used rere EE RA ECORS have several Refrigerators, are like. new. Very easy Phone 9 120 E. Main St. Valley Electric Co. zood in, some terms. Grass up—‘ modVali ain BSED WASHERS—From $10. Maytags and other popular els. Terms are easy. Eleetrir. Phone 9 120 E. “Grass Valley. Grass AT ayes FOR. SALE—52 ACRES Lake Vera adjcining Miilis Fenced. 500 nak and wood. Phone 25-F-3, Nevada Cesiz eoras MAYTAG WASHERS SEE US fer your new WashingMachine. Exclusive Dealer for Maytag Electric and gasoline engine washers, also Easy Washers, Ilron rite Ironers, Westineghouse Refrigerators. Grass Valley Electric Co. 120 East Main St. Grass Valley Phone 9 for Free Demonstration *2-9-tf Very Easy Terms : . Street. Phone 108. 1 welcome. . W.-H. WRIGHT, . Vv. FOLEY, Exalted Rule Secretary. i VW v. BODY AND FENDER .REPAIR Bring your,car to us_ fot quick and skilled body and fender repairs, and painting. Glass installed. Tops weather proofed and repaired. Expert Radiator tepairing, Auto all Acetylene welding, Gen Upholstering : jof kinds. eral blacksmithing. “OUR WORK SATISFIES” Only Service of its kind in Nevada City GOULD’S. AUTO BODY WORKS Located at the Nevada City ENJOY THE BEST @AK OR MANZANITA WOODM\UP to 14-in: $3.50 per tier. Just see it for yourself. Next to Dunn’s} Auto Wrecking Yard, Hills Flat. . Ask for Bert Burns. Prompt de-; livery to Nevada City. Address ; Grass Valley General Delivery. 4-1-tfe CARS BOUGHT AND REFINANCED Loans made on Cars. 1930 Buick ch Roadster in. A-1l shape. Other ex: cellent offerings at out establishane eertener an enNs een neremameeey Catt eS Sec , the be ts tan ear 7? * ment. Freq A. Rupley, 120 East FINE ‘ Main St., Grass : -22-tr. : — ih ae aes — WATCH REPAIRING FOR SALE R * . ; adio Service and SPECIAL ‘PRICES ON RECONREPAIRING structed Vacuum Cleaners. Guar3 : : z = 3 i Work Called for and Delivered . = anteed like new. Airway, com: ; . plete with attachments, $30; Clarence R. Gray . Apex Revolving Brush type, $14.520 Coyote Street Phone 16 . . “ 95; Bee Vac, suction type, $12. 95, . Electrolux, Model EL; $29.50; ;u———— ao = = Blectrolux Model 12, $59.50; Eu-. reka No. 7, $12.95; Eureka No. . oA 9, $17.95; General Electric re-{ ~ EDDIE LI TEONG volving, brush type, $21.95; Hoo-. ver special, $19.95; Hoover, en 541, $30.50; Premier Duplex, FRESH FRUIT AND $19.95; Regina, Model 24, $17.50 Royal Standard, $17.50; Royal VEGETABLES Super, $21; Sunshine, $14.95; . . Universal, suction type, $16.50; ; . Universal, brush type, $17.95. QUALITY GROCERIES . M Foote Electrical Co., Grass Valley SPECIALS FRI. AND SAT. ie and Nevada City. 2-15-1 mo. Phone 74 3 a . CLEAN SWEEP OF WsED RADIOS 314 Broad St. Nevada City ~ gh at Give-Away Prices. Hurry! FREE DELIVERY These are bargains! 1 1933 RadiSe ola, all new tubes, $12.50 1 Fad=, table. model, 7 -tubes, $10; 11Oh a Sparton, 8 tube furniture model, re and Bullion * 4 $12.50; 2 Philco table models ea. Bred ae ua ia $10; 2 Philco table models, each WILDBERG BROS $15; 2 Atwater Kent table modSMELTING & REFINING CO. els, each $10; 1 Majestic furniOffices: 742 Market St.,San Francisco . } , 1 model, furniture 16 = Stewart$i7.580: moture model, $17 Warner furniture 1 9-tube Silvertone gel, $7.50; 1 Midwest -tube furniture model. $17.50; Crosley tnx’ te model, $7.50. Foote E}ectrica Grass Valley and Nevada CUity. 2-i5-1 mo. @ Pz Oe £5 NEVADA CITY SANITARIUM Elizabeth McD. Watson, Prop. Open to all reputable Physicians and Surgeons Visiting . Elks . if . Plant: South San Francisco Phone 217 W: Broad St. Seletteleleios 7 . st Met o yy she teferfeey fe se rterte sferterlertery teat are sterte ste teienieneey * FORREST B. RISLEY % CLEANING & PRESSING * TAILORING 2 Nev. Citys 1s ee oinieteloieinieieioies Met iototeieiieiatete KEYS made while you wait Bicycles, Steel tapes, vVacuum cleaners, washing machines, electric irons, stoves, etc., repaired SAWS, AXES, KNIVES, SCISSORS : ETC., SHARPENED Gunsmith Light Welding RAY’S F? tiT SHOP 220 East Main i. Phone 602 HERBS Ht ave health and ness to herbs: for. all ments. pm., a. pm. YEE AND YEE HERB CO. . CHINESE HERB SPECIALISTS GRASS.VALLEY 121-S. Church St. brought happithousands and, we can bring it to you too, Chinese ailOffice Hours:——Daily 4 p. m. to 9 Saturday 8 m. to $ p. m., Sunday 8 a. m. to 2 Grass Valley going to hold up passage a . SSLATIVE (By WNU Service) For the first time this season legislators have begun aligning ‘themselves This move behind the party banners. was started by. Epicdemocrats in the ae nbly -under Assemblyman Willia Jones, who is loudly opposed me Governor Merriam’s budget program as it stands. The Democrats warn that ‘they are of the budget plan until 12 Bourlyon-sponsored items are included. Administration forces Tare not at all’in favor of including the items. This threat.of deadlock, coming as it docs during the final days of the session, may extend the session, or may cause a recess until January of next year. The Democrats plus a few antiRepublicans, have declar-d llingness to remain in Sacrauntil a compromise Merriam . their wi mento all summer is reached. By W of impr on the Legislature, est Voigt, Los A ssing their threat Assemblyman Erneles, has introduced ay a resolution calling. for a committee “on quarters and subsistence.” —-Fhe committee would borrow Nation:] Guard equipment and set up a cam 4 1 in Capitol Park-and provide food for the-legislators .and their families. The reason for the proposed camp is to cut the ex Legisl< dons penses of living in hotels. salaries of $12: a day For more than a week bes wolttigtntis have patriotically shaken their fists and called cach other names without compensation from the taxpayers. Each legislator is allowed 99 $1200 a year,:to be paid $1090 a month in non-session years and $12 a day until $1200 is paid, durh ssion years. Twelve-hundred had Sacramento been paid the gentlemen at up to May 22. If nothing else, the present. Legislature has e stablis hed a record for the number of days in session. » former record was held by the Legislature of 1861, the lawmakers finishing their work on May 20. The present session has cost the state a cool quarter-million so far. As for the items which the Epics are fighting to have included in the budget program, they are:
Severance tax, income tax of at least one-third Federal rates, productionfor-use Iaw, minimum old-age pension of $50 a month, unemployment insurance, exemptions of food-stuffs from sales tax, passage of Jones debt moratorium, stock transfer tax, calling of a constitutional convention, approval of legislation making oil and gas pipe lines common carriers, final pass \ge of the pending revenue bond bills, and . enactment of the so-called little NRA code. General legislative approval has already been expressed over such items as exemptions of food-stuffs from sales tax, Jones debt moratorium and the old-age pension. Such proposals as unemployment insurance and the calling of a constitutional convention will probably be held over until next session, despite Democratic pressure. A committee has already been appointed to study unemployment insurance and will report their findings at the 1937 session. Bourbons are firm, serting that they will do everything they can to delay passage of the budget until their demands are -met. Test Budget in Vote . The first actual vote test came last week. Although the vote in the Assembly was 51 to 27 for immediate consideration, it fell short by five votes.of the necessary two-thirds majority, needed for passage. Because the budget total exceeds by $15,000,000 the 1933-35 budget, it must have a two-thirds vote to pass. Immediately following the test vote failure, an Assembiy “wrecking crew” started action to eliminate the 5 per cent tax increase limitation as provided in the Riley-Stewart Act. The limitation act declares that no political unit, from the cities up to~the state, can increase their expenses by more than 5 per cent over the previous year. This provision terminates June 30, and unless it is reinstated by the Legislature, there can be no check on government expenses. his limit can be over-ruled only by a majority vote of the people or by a two-thirds vote of the legislative houses. Another means of getting the budget through would be to return it to committee and lop $15,000,000 from it. Then it would’ come under the 5 per cent limit and would require only a bare majority passage. The Bourbons seem confident: that they can delay the session long enough to force through their demands. If the budget is passed soon, it is expected that. the session will close immediately afterwards, holding over until next session a good deal of unfinished business. Thus the Bourbons must keep the budget,from passing if they hope to gain any of their points. Of course, since it was first considered, the budget has been increased until it totals nearly $400,000,000. Inereases amounting to nearly a million dollars have been granted to the University of California. More money than was at first expected has to be raised for unemployment relief and a million and a quarter has been tacked on the allotment for state hospitals, asylums and prisons because of the increase in food costs. : With, all the increases in sight, there seems little hope that the meager cuthowever, in as. ting of state expenses proposed during ; hum yn will aid the taxpayer ma. The second record established ‘. the-sessi terially. during the present session is’ to place the budget at an all-time high. j } } ee ee ne After ‘five months of proposing, vot. ing and ame nding, the strain is beginibe to tell on the Legislature. Good 1r and tongue nt. More than sched for somea point home. . rr is becoming scarce igshin once f thing fy le been cl more than driving One of the wildest sessions ever held in the Assembiy took place the other . night, and all over the-color of the . eagles on the south facade of the Capi. tol. In 1933,.Rolland A. Vandergritt, . then state director of finance, had the color of the decorative gold eagles changed to blue, merely as a “stunt.” Enie floor leader, Assemblyman Jones introduced a resolution, demanding an apology to the Federal government because iast week the birds: were retinted gold, their original color. In Jone solution was a vituperative at nblyman E. V. Lat rin to him as. ‘misguir 1arrow-minded, . unpatriotic and inssfired by motives of ine political prejudice Latham was the one who had made the suggestion that the birds be restored to their original hue. He was also accused of trading his vote for a paint job. é . Reading of the resolution blew the lid off. : tae: cried Latham, who declared } that because of the unpopularity of the NI ; “the ge te blue had been “an an to ‘as people of the state.” Amid the boos and cheers, Speaker Edward Craig’s gavel nearly broke irough his desk as he pounded for order, Finally the bedlam subsided and the motion was,referred to committee for tabling. In another tumult, Assemblyman 1 osenthal, Democrat, ended a Assemblyman Frank Wright, i with ‘“You’re ‘not «red, you're a yellow belly.” While discussing the same issue, Assemblyman. Pat McMurray challenged Assemblyman Lee Gever and rushed across the aoet to’ back his statement with his fis SergE ants-at-#rms pushed down tbe eles: but the battle ended in a verbal barrage. Still another exsmple ili humor occurred when Thomas Maloney introduced a _ wellmeaning resolution, congratulating Assemblyman J. E. Frazier on his birthday. : Assemblyman John O’Donnell didn’t catch the meaning of the resolution and protested, “Let's quit wasting our time on this’ junk. and get down to work.” . After the misunderstanding had been cleared up, the congratulatory resolution was presented with O’Donnell’s approval and passed unanimously. Farmers Speak a statement by of Assembly { The farmer’s ‘voice has been heard at Sacramento and the Legislature listened. In the first place, the agriculturists are very much in favor of a state police. Declared T. C. Tuck. , official of several farm organizations, “I cannot speak for all the State Board of Agriculture members but it is my impression that every member is in favor of a strong state force, either by strengthening the highway patrol or in other ways.” John BE. Pickett, farm magazine editor, added, “Agitators roam the state during the crop season, setting fires to stir up trouble. Last year, farmers in numerous instances called on the State Highway Patrol for assistance. I feel sure an overwhelming percentage of farmers look on such a force as the way to handle. the situation.” Another measure for improving farm conditions is the farm electrification. bill, passed by the Assembly and given a unanimous recommend by the Senate municipal corporations committee. Provision, under the bill, is made for formation of nonprofit electrical membership corporations, rural] public agencies empowered to distribute lowcost electric energy in the farming districts of California. The farmers’ membership corporations would have authority to construct or acquire systems for the production, transmission or distribution of energy. Power could be obtained either from publicly owned projects, such ’as the Central Valley Water Project, or from privately owned power corporations, and then distributed economically by the farm districts. A majority vote of the farmer corporation membership Assemblyman . . aa “VALLEY ELECTRIC MOTOR WORKS SPECIALIZING IN MINE AND ALL INDUSTRIAL MOTOR} ELECTRIC WORK, MOTOR} A. J. ADAMS, Prop. 210 Commercial Street —PHONES— Grass: Valley 25s ae 644 GV Chee CRC a aaa ees 43 i " Electrical Murray! . COMPLETE LINE OF APEX REFRIGERATORS . WASHERS AND IRONERS COMPARE OUR PRICES BEFORE. YOU BUY! WE WILL CALL AND‘ TEST YOUR RADIO TUBES FREE Phone 45 Nevada City 205 Commercial Street NEVADA CITY CABINET SHOP . { . . R. C. ROGERS, Prop. KITCHENS REMODELED—AL ny ERATIONS M: ADE . ro ARP ENTRY OF ALL KINDS TO ORDER Street Nevada City 1220 Commercial THE LAWRENCE MOTOR SERVICE INVEEES YOUR PATRONAGE from Nevada City on the Tahoc16 mile PHONE 144 Everything for Your Automobile or Truck in New and Used Parts and Accessories Completely Equipped Brake Repair and Machine Shop SPECIAL Brake Fluid—-40c. See us for Car Polishes and Greases, Champion Spark Plugs. Full stock of Ramco Piston Rings for all cars. Auto Glass Service: telefon Marigold Beauty Shop: Davis T: «unscript Bldg., Commercial Street SPECIAL!! Limited Time Only Steam Oil Permanent Wave $1.95, Complete ORRA COMTE Telephone 470 fe ee HH Helene mule ieeeteseteede ete UNION HOTEL AND LUCCA CAFE Try Our Delicious Italian Lunches and Dinners Raviola and Chicken aSSSERTERGDETEST REE IET OEE IOTOS TIERS = BS eA * % Hale eas % ~ % eS of st, eyes ? re iv, ~ re seate ates)teak MORI OR o wn a oe oaa oncnuan nce bon bean meueaumees af Lucca’s Special COMPLETE BAR SERVICE BARAMBANI AND PANELLI, PROPRIETORS 220 MAIN STREET NEVADA CITY PHONE 164 W. R. JEFFORD & SON Funeral Directors AMBULANCE. SERVICE Nevada City Grass Valley would make it possible to issue bonds to finance such undertakings. It was pointed out that 60 per cent of the farms in California are now using electricity, the state tying Rhode Island for the highest percentage in the nation. Under the new rural. alectrification plans, most of the remaining 40 per cent will be able to enjoy “electric labor.” It is one of the, revenue bond ideas approved by the Roosevelt administration. Also in line. with the President’s policy and also a revenue bond measure is the Garrison-Jespersén bill, which has been passed by both houses. This bill provides for the creation of publicly owned utilities in cities. Other measures of statewide importance on which the Legislature is working include: County consolidation; Assemblyman Thomas Cunningham’s amendment to .allow people right to vote on consolidation question unanimously approved by assembly constitutional committee. Single house legislature bill tabled. State lottery plan killed. Cities will get double share of state gas tax. Bill passed both houses and Merriam has said he dpproves measure. Central Valley voted $1,211,000 by assembly ways and means eapabsoalipetes .Nevada City Garage. SEE THE NEW 1935 Plymouth Cars ‘SALES AND SERVICE CHAS. E. LEITER, DISTRIBUTOR Day and Night Service Anywhere Auto Repairs of Every Kind 128: Main Street Nevada City Phone 133 sesteatertotealeateateateafeaesteatent hina hebthhebebiobbbeeeekeheher ehh NEVADA CITY ASSAY & REFINING OFFICE Practical mining tests from 25.to 1000 pounds, giving ‘the free gola percentage of sulphurets, value of sulphurets and talings. Assays made for gold, silver, lead and copper. Mail order check work promptly attended to. ‘Agent for New York-California Underwriters, Westchester ind Capital of California Fire Insurance Companies. ’ AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE PATRONIZE NUGGET ADVERTISERS — IT “PAYS! + Re: