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The Nugget is delivered to
your home twice a week
for only 30 cents per
"month
“God grants liberty only to those who love it, and are ready to pi and defend it.””—Daniel Webster
Nevada City Nugget
‘ COVERS RICHEST GOLD _AREA IN CALIFORNIA _
This paper gives your complete
coverage of all local happenings.
If you want to read about your
friends, your neighbors, read
The Nugget.
Vol. 17, No. 86. The County Seat vila we
‘
NEVADA city’, CALIFORNIA The Gold Center MONDAY, NOVEMBER 1, I,
Thinking
Out Loud
By H. M. lL.
ae Sanh -———
There is now a movement on
foot to conserve paper. We hope
that it will succeed. But chief
wasters ‘of paper in this country
@re not newspaper or magazine
publishers, or even book publishers. The daddy of all wastes is in
Washington, D. C. It is the congress and the bureaus. Might call
them the parents of paper waste,
who is a great big fella, overgrown, rambunctious and weighing tons and tons. In fact, this offspring of the jaunty Washington
pair of princely wasters, has grown
so big that noboby in Washington wants to weigh him or even
to try it. Here’s what Robert E.
Kennedy, Washington correspondent of the Chicago Daily Times
says about Washington’s paper
wastes:
‘After sonutderaple
this department is in a position to
give a helping hand to the congressmen who are ° looking for
ways and means to save paper and
who had been giving Elmer Davis
a going-over for “wasting’’. paper
on press releases which tell people to keep their shutters closed at
night to keep out the cold.
“Being addicted to a passion for
numbers, we have just figured out
that Elmer Davis’ office of War
Information used up about 22
pounds of mimeograph (not counting envelopes) to circularizing the
rural newspapers with 12. rather
simple suggestions for conserving
heat. That’s as much paper as the
average congressman uses Up in
two minutes of. official oratory,
and that’s where our suggestion
for saving paper comes in.
“~phis department would be the
last one to suggest that congressmen stop or even curtail their
privilege of spilling immortal
words on the floor of the house.
What would Washington cornespondents do without daily quota
of wit. and wisdom from Capitol
Hill. But each word is inserted in
tthe (Congressional ‘Record, and the
record uses paper.
“All we ask is that a congressman refer to a colleague simply as
“Mr. Dewey, or Mr. Busbey,’ instead of referring to him as ‘My
distinguished colleague, the gentleman from Illinois.’ That mere
change, according to our computations, will save one-half pound of
paper per utterance. And just
dropping the formality, ‘the gentleman from such and such a
state,’ will save one third of a
pound, especially in the case of
gentlemen from ‘Massachusetts.’
“The matter. of, saving , paper
came Up ‘at yesterday’ 'S hearing of
the Boren subcommittee on newsprint. Mr. Boren. (Dem. Okla.)
has toured Canada to get “the lowdown on the newaprint shortage.
“He algo, has heard fr fr ym. a coun:
try, newspaper, editor wh o,claimed
that he got ‘bales’ of el i ei
ed, handouts from owl each week.
He particularly objected ‘to one
which consisted of ‘filler’ materjal with the simple recommendations on how to conserve heat.
The purpose of the campaign, of
course, ig to keep people conscious
of the need to conserve fuel by
continual reminders.
“This research inspired us to
check the congressmen’s own, publication, the Congressional Record.
Welearned that 40,000 copies are
printed daily when congress is in
session, the number of pages depending. on the amount of oratory.
~ “Davis said OWI had issued 23
tons of press handouts in September. The Sunday New York Times
uses 788 tons a day. In the last
month each subscriber has received
5'3-4 pounds of Congressional
Records, which indicates the record uses 115 tons of paper. Three
quarters of this was material ‘inserted’ in the Record, speeches,
newspaper articles, poetry, which
catches congressmen’s fancy andis printed in the appendix. Congress has been ‘quiet’ lately. In
June the Record was almost twice
as thick. We figured each page
takes 160 pounds of paper. There
are 480 lines of type on both sides
of the page. Bach line of type uses
therefore, one third of a pound.
“So it takes a line of type for
research .
AGE PENSIONER
IS SUICIDE
DOWNIEVILILE, Nov. 1.— Alfred
Henry Ford, 69, shot himself through
the right eye with a 16 gauge shotgun, Saturday afternoon at 4:30
o’clock in .the home of Mrs. Nancy
Foust. . Following an investigation
Sheriff Dewey Johnson declared it a
suicide.
Mrs. Foust, a widow, lives on upper Pearl Street. It was learned that
she and Ford had gone to Reno’ recently, apparently with the intention of marrying, but had returned
unwed. Ford, who formerly occupied
a cabin two miles east of Goodyears
Bar, had more recently made his
home at the Foust residence. He was
an old age pensioner who had transferred about a year ago from Placer
‘County.
Holmes Funeral Home of Nevada
(City, which has charge of the remains, reports Ford has _ relatives
believed to be in Modesto, Stanislaus
County, and Michigan., Funeral arrangements are awaiting instructions
from them.
BROTHERHOOD
DAY TO AID
BLIND SATURDAY
Arrangements are complete for the
annual ‘Brotherhood Day’’ flower
sale to be held in Nevada City, Novthe National Brotherhood of Service.
Headquarters for the day’s
will be at the National Hotel upstairs
banquet room, Miss Ruth Libby will
who are invited to report. Saturday
morning at 9 o’clock to -help. this
worthy cause.
The little artificial flowers which
will be offered for sale are made by
the blind in their own homes by the
workers, who find happiness in such
employment, by which they also receive a measure of self support.
The Brotherhood renders many
kinds of personal assistance to the
blind and shut-ins. It provides free
reading matter, Bibles, magazines,
jetc., in braille and ink print. It supplies white canes for the blind and
various needed helps for the handicapped which they cannot otherwise
obtain without charge.
It assists in securing marvelously
trained shepherd dogs as companions
and guides for the blind, and conducts National. Cheerio Circle for
shut-ins to bring joy and comfort to
those who suffer physical disability
and loneliness or, who live in negiécted areas anid 9 whose needs are seriously overlooked. }
,, All collections are handled by the
local, leader in, charge and are for‘warded directly to the headquarters
fof the organization.
; Eye research ‘is receiving an ins
creasing amount ‘of the Brotherhood’ 8,
. interest and funds and operations }
;war mlakes this feature of their program of tremendous current: importance.
The Brotherhood’s
work is supported entirely by
free-will offerings.
LARGE SURGICAL
DRESSING OUOTA
IS ASSIGNED
The Red Cross surgical dressings
unit reports having completed 30,000 2x2 dressings since September
20. The unit is asked to complete the
same number during November 4s
quotas due to pressing need, have
been increased for all units throughout the country.
A group of high school girls has
agreed to give up their physical edudation hour in order to devote the
time to making dressings.
, nationwide
the
‘the gentleman from Massachusetts.’
“Will some congressman arise
with a motion that a committee be
appointed to study ways and
means congress can cut down on
its use of paper?’’
ember 6 on Saturday of this week by .
sale,
be. in charge of the girls anid boys}
that have been recently sponsored .
[have ‘been anrazingly successful. The
By MABEL STRICKLAND
Editor of The Times of Malta and
proprietor of the allied Malta newspapers, Daughter of the late Lord
Strickland, Prime Minister of Malta.
Here is a story that has never been
told before: the tale of three newspapers which, in over four years of:
war—bombs and blitz, siege and sacrifice—went {to press ‘without fail
each day to bring the news to the
citizens of the most-bombed island
in the world — Malta, Britain’s
George Cross bastion in the Mediterranean.
Despite German bombers and Italian E-boats, amid falling bombs and
crumbling buildings. The Times of
Malta (the English daily), Il Berqa
(the Maltese daily) and the Sunday
Times of Malta were always published. } } :
War From a Window
While the papers went to press
history was -being made outside.
From the office roof we could witness the whole drama of the harbor
of Valetta and its approaches. We
saw the dive-bombing of HMS Illustrous and her triumphant departure
after Malta’s dockyard craftsmen
had healed her wounds. We watched
the Italian E-boat dawn attack, when
every one of the seventeen enemy
craft was sunk by the gunners of the
‘Royal Malta Artillery. We cheered
the arrival of convoys flying the flags
of Britain, the United States, Norway
and Holland; and later saw the at‘tack upon HMS Penelope and merlchant ships in harbor.
By day for months on end we
watched the. hideous German vulturJunkers 88, lumbering back to;wards Sicily, after their attack on
the Island; and a year later we saw
them shot out of the sky——sixtyfive
in one afternoon——by Spitfires, flown
by pilots from Britain, Australia,
South Africa,
and the United States.
By might the sky would be lit up
with the tracer bullets of the antiaircraft guns, the yellow flares of
enemy or the beams of. the searchlights,
giant silver moths, often until they
crashed under the attack of the RAF
night fighters, diving to the sea in
a great sheet of flame.
Sometimes we were cheered
‘British submarises returning flying
the Jolly Roger-as a signal of-6uccess against Axis shipping, or the
entry of a naval “task” force flushed
with their victory over German convoys to Libya.
Hordes of Bombers
Activity was hot confined to Valetta and the~harbor area. From December 1941 to May 1942 hordes of
German bombers carried destruction
far inland. Villages, and towns, farmefs_and fishing folk, all shared in the
daily round, of war. :
pane problem . of newspaper iproduction was always one, of, men, machines, supply, and transport. Thousands of Maltese families lgst their
‘homes, and by the,end of the hombing. period, seventy five per cent of
les,
they never failed to report for. duty.
At the outbreak of war a third of
the. staff, territorials and reservicts,
‘was called up,, either to the King’s
Own, Malta Regiment, the. Royal
Malta . Artillery, the Royal Navy, or
the RAF. :
Down to Four Pages
The newspapers were reduced from
sixteen to eight pages, and, as the
paper shortage became more acute,
to four, with eight pages on Sunday.
Circulation was controlled at a total of 20,000 copies daily, 13,000 and
7,000 respectively for the dailies, and
15,000 for the Sunday Times of Malta; demand always exceeded supply.
A ship carrying newsprint from
Newfoundland, diverted in mid-Atlantic, came specially into Malta and
established the basic stock of newsprint two months after the declaration of ‘war. In a bombing attack, a
newsprint store was hit, but much
salvaged paper was later used, and
many editions were published with
burnt edges. Some people, ignorant
of the fire that-had raged, complained
that the boys had burned the edges
with cigarette ends.
‘Hiding in Wells
(Malta’s newspapers are produced
by modern machinery in an ancient
building known as ‘‘The House of the
Fountains’, beneath which are six
dried-out wells. These were used as
an air-raid shelter for the staff, and
in 1942 they resisted a direct hit.
The building above crashed down,
New Zealand, Canada)
which held the raiders like
by)
The Triumphant Island
partially blocking one entrance, and
filling the air with dust and cordite
fumes.
Underground in one of the dried
wells a twenty two hour watch was
kept daily, to receive Reuter and
other news by morse. There, in the
heart of Mount Schiberras, the hill
on which Valetta is built, the vibrations of the rock from the rain of
German bombs at times made it impossible for the radio operator to
transscribe the morse. \
The principal printing machine, a
Cossor press, \was situated above
ground, protected by a massive concrete roof, a few yards from the entrance to the shelter. One night it
Was covered with dust and debris as
the dividing wall, with the neighboring houses, gave way under the impact of a bomb.
Repairs to the machines were done
on our own lathes; or in the dockyard. .Ink was, diluted and made in
the office to eke out the supply.
Linos
of the Gerthe aircraft
Bombs Rain :on
Throughout the week
man attack in 1941, on
carrier Illustrious, then being répaired in Maltas dockyard, the linotype operators stuck to their jobs or
the top floor, protected by a concrete roof, adequate against 500
pound Italian bombs. (Later the
armor-piercing shells which fell on
Senglea and Valetta proved this to
be. as useless.as a sheet of paper;
they cut through the stone buildings
like a knife through cheese) I shall
not forget the drone of the enemy
bombers intermingling with the
clicking of the linotype machines,
jand the crash of falling bombs. After this battle was over, the linotype
. machines were removed from the top
shelter, ‘which gave the men
spotter sounded his
minent’” warning.
Casualties among the news
ers. a
Men Sleep in Office
We faced the disorganization to
civilian Jife in the early days of Italian bombing by bedding down men
and their families in the office shélAer. This continued until rock shelters were hollowed out throughout
the island. Then men and women
would often come to work in dghalsas (a Maltest boat), perhaps rowing
across.a harbor that was being bombed, and then hurrying along roads
made dangerous by ‘the’ shrapnel
from anti-arcraft guns, with an occasional dive into the ditch. when the
bombers came too close.
Maintaining power to. drive the
machines was a constant anxiety.
Our own electric plant was damaged
by enemy. action, It took three weeks
to. put right,. with workmen doing
day and night repairs on the mains
along the bomb-cratered roads. The
plant. resumed work two. days before
the main government plant was put
out of action. Malta was without electric power for five months, except
for. an emergency government supply for “essential services.”
Food Runs Low
During the blitz period we reinforced our power position by salvaging an electric light plant from the
harbor area, and placing it in our
ration of diesél oil salvaged from a
sunken ship.
Horse transport was used to” bring
supplies of newsprint from dispersed
stores. The ration of gasoline was ingas shortage. prevented the use of
. busses on certain days we used horse
. transport for newspaper
tion.
After the ordeal by bombing came
the ordeal by siege, when Malta and
its garrison proved themselves capable of enduring a black fast through
the six months from June to November, 1942. The suffering during this
time had to be endured to be properly realized. It was a feat which
made the earlier days of bombardment seem easy.
Rations were cut to mere subsisience level; 204,000 people, out of a
total of 250,000 were dependent upon the government communal. meal,
instituted to supplement the meager
rations.
Malta Triumphant
It was available either at midday
or in the evening and consisted of a
plate of vegetable soup, and a few
beans, a piece of tinned fish, or an
{
.
i story one by one, and placed near the'of the U.
a\rived in Newport News,
chance of diving below when the roof;ter an
“Danger is im-. combat
/ .
were three killed pnd on the staff, . Chapman's
one wounded. Sickness claimed oth-. ‘Chapman, wife of Lieutent Colonel
shelter. The government gave us a.
adequate in this respect. Later, when.
distribuj was reserved for
TRINITY PARISH
DINNER TO MARK
18TH BIRTHDAY
Reservations for the annual dinner
of Trinity Parish, to take place Wednesday evening, November 3rd, in
the Elks Club rooms, has now reached the 200 mark. Dinner will be seryed at 6:15 p. m. with George Carter
in charge and card play will begin at
8 o’clock.
Bishop Noel Porter of Sacramento
will be the chief speaker. The dinner will mark the 78th anniversary
of services held here in Trinity Hpiscopal Church.
Co-chairmen of the women’s activities are, Mrs. Minerva Wright and
Mrs. Charles Parsons. The card party committee is headed by Mrs. Leland Michell assisted by Mrs. H. S.
Foreman, Mrs. Mare Edmunds, Mrs.
Leland Smith, Mrs. Emil Ott, Mrs.
Martin, Mrs. Annie Sherman and Mrs.
Arthur Hoge.
The dinner table committee consists of Mrs. J. F. Siegfried, Mrs.
Charles Elliott, Mrs. Lloyd Hiscox,
Mrs. Phoebe Maguire, Mrs. Ruth
Daniels and Mrs. Lloyd Dudley.
The decoration committee consists
of Mrs. Frances Breese, chairman;
Mrs. Fred Tredinnick, Mrs. David
Rumbaugh and Mrs. H. P. Davis.
ERNEST CHAPMAN
HOME AFTER
5) MISSIONS
First Lieutenant Ernest Chapman .
S. Army Air: Morces has arVirginia afextended period of overseas
duty. News of his arrival
Figs received in a letter addressed to
boys . Dr. C. W. Chapman from Lieutenant
mother, Mrs. Marguerite
Allen Chapman stated that she had
received. a telephone message from
her son: immediately after his arrival at Newport News.
Mrs. Chapman wrote that her son
was in perfect health save for convalescence from an attack of yellow
jaundice. The former high school
graduate of this city, a P-38 combat
pilot, has a log book of war front
exiperiences, highlighted by the forced bailing out from his plane as result of an accident. Lieutenant Chapman at the time escaped injury (or
death by a hair, his ,’chute opening
at about 500 feet from the ground.
The well deserved home leave follows completion of 50 fighting missions and a_ total of. 200 combat
hours, most all of which were spent
over Bizerte, Tunis, Sicily and the
Italian mainland. In addition to receiving nine campaign ribbons he
was also awarded the Distinguished
Flying Cross.
_ Dr. Chapman is hopeful that.his
air-fighter grandson may be able, to
spend part of his. leave in Nevada
City, as Ernest has expressed such a
desire in frequent letters.
ounce or so of corned beef. Alternatives were.a plate of macaroni, or
a slice of ‘‘veal”’ loaf, the latter usually being goat,. sometimes horse.
Bread was rationed, at 10 11-2 ounces per head per day. There were no
potatoes, for the necessary annual
import of seed had: failed to arrive.
Tea or coffee, mixed with barley, and
a meager sugar ration provided two
feups a day; milk and powdered milk
nursing mothers
and children.
ounces of rice and a little oil, but no
flour. Powdered eggs, brought in by
special means, gave a temporary relief; the feathered population was
heavily reduced, along with the goats
and what remained became largely
non-productive.
Now the reward for fortitude has
come. It took us a year to reestablish the processed block making
plant, which was situated in one of
received its second direct hit in April
1942. Now our newspapers carry pictures again, and our damaged building is largely rebuilt. Malta is on the
offensive the siege is over, the air
attack has ceased, and there is laughter and happiness again. Malta has
emerged triumphant from her ordeal.—The National Publisher.
1 Of
There were a few!
the room damaged when the office
I 943.
. MORE THAN 250
EXHIBITS AT —
RABBIT SHOW
More than 250 exhibits of rabbits,
Most of them pedegreed breeders
stock, were displayed in Grass Valley’s first annual rabbit show in
(Memorial Park yesterday. There were
a wide variety ranging from -.fur
bearing breeds to the heavy meat
animals, which, because of war’s emPhasis on food productiin, are just
now the favorites.
Loyle Freeman, manager of the
show, estimated that more than 2j000 persons had visited the show up
till 2 p. m. yesterday afternoon.
Most of the exhibitors were from Nevada County, though there were several fine showings from atte gh etanaens
counties.
In response to.an inquiry from
District Attorney Ward Sheldon regarding the legal status of school
board directors, who resign their
posts to enter the armed forces, Atforney General Robert Kenny has
replied as follows:
“This is in. reply to our
August 30th, 1943, ag
. status of an elected member
inquirg
to theof a
‘. school board who has been inducted
. into the armed forces of the United
States under the Selective Service
Act.
“Service in the temporary military
establishment of the Unjted States
during the time and for i 2 duration
lof the war by a public official is not,
prohibited by Section 20 of Article
IV of the Constitution of this state.
{
“If a member of the school board
has resigned, or resigns his office in
order to serve with the armed forces
of the United States, he has the
right, if honorably discharged, to
return to and reenter upon the office within six months of termination of his active service or within
six months after conclusion of the
‘peace treaties, if his term office hag
not already expired. Upon such return he is entitled to all the rights
and privileges of the office. Any vacancy may be filled by a temporary ap‘pointment.”’ .
T'wo members of the Nevada City
Unified District School Board have
resigned to enter the armed forces.
They are Frank G. Finnegan, attorney, now a lieutenant in the U. S.
Army, judge advocate’s department,
and Dr. John R. Bell, dentist, now. a
lieutenant in the U. S. Army Medical
‘Corps.
SERVICE FLAGIS
GIVEN ELKS BY —
JOHN O'NEILL
At ‘the annual Hallowe’en , barn
dance. given by the city Elks Lodge
Saturday evening in their club
rooms, members and their friends
had an opportunity to see the beautiful new service flag with its 29
stars, presented to the lodge by
John O’Neill, old time member and
a veteran of World War I.
The flag was presented at the last
lodge meeting. Rev. Cedric Porter,
rector of Trinity Episcopal Church
made the presentation address:
Knights Templar To Aid
Injured Service Men
The Knights Templar throughout
‘California have undertaken to. provide buildings in which arts and
crafts will be taught injured service
men at hospitals where they spend
time in convalescense. The Grand
Commander has asked-. tha Nevada
‘Commandery to raise $2,400 for the
building on one art and craft skill —
center. The Red Cross has agreed
furnish -these centers and p
materials used in the classes. —
Contributions to this fund wil
received and acknowledged by Be
‘Chegwidden in Grass Valley ani
F. Stenger in Nevada City.’ .