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Collection: Newspapers > Nevada City Nugget

November 13, 1941 (6 pages)

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MiG” eee 20° EB. "ment; . of section 1, ‘ning at a point on the west bound_.weived at the offices of _Weinmann, ) “"TEBBETTS, also known as F. H. Bank of America Bldg., Alameda, _Page Fi our STATE PUBLIC WORKS HIT BY DEFENSE NEEDS ce By T. M. BRIGHT United Press Staff Correspondent SACRAMENTO, Nov. 13—(UP)— Small businessmen who are comPlaining of the difficulty of ob‘aining materials and of high wages can move over and give the state of California place on the same mourners’ bench. . At the ‘first meeting of the governor’s council in recent months, state department heads agreed that qualified workers in some brackets are almost impossible to obtain at present state wage scales. Also, Director of Finance George Killion said it may be necessary to Buspend most public works for the duration of the emergency. Highway work will go forward, Public Works Director Frank .W. Clark said. but budgeted amounts for specific projects may have to be revised in view of an average 40 per cent jump in the cost -of materials, However, budgets of most departMents are not so flexible as those of the division of highways, and if) costs of buildings, forinstance, exweed the amount allowed by the leg: islature the projects will have to be abandoned for the time, Killion said. A $500,000 addition to the mane ton state hospital was mentioned as! an example. Dr. Aaron Rosanoff, ; director if institutions, said possible now to get an addition only with half the needed capacity for the money and that building would be postponed. —Join The Red Cross— LEGAL NOTICES ERTY AT PRIVATE SALE BY EXECUTRIX _ Probate No. 79136 Dept. No. 9 In the Superior Court of the State of California, in and for the City and County of San Francisco: . In the Matter of the BEstate of. PREDERICK HORACE TIBBETTS, also known as FREDERICK H. TIB. BETTS, also known as FRED H.! TIBBETTS, also known as F. H. TIBBETTS, deceased: . Notice is hereby given that the . undersigned Executrix of the estate . of the above named decedent, will sell . at private sale in one narcel to the . highest bidder upon terms and con-; ditions herein mentioned, and sub-' ject to confirmation by the Superior: Court of the State of California, in and for the City and County of San Francisco, on or after the 2nd day of. December, 1941, all the right, title and interest of said decedent, or his estate. in and to the folowing described real property situate, lying and. being in the County of Nevada, Btate of-California, ‘and more particularly described as follows: That portion of SEY% of Section 4-tp, 16 N: R.8 Ba iM: DB. & M: and of NE% of Section 12, tp. 16 N. R. 8 E., M. D. B. & M. described as!beginning at the section corner common to section 1 and 12 tp. 16 N. R. 8 E. and Sections 6 and 7, Tp. 16 N. R9E., M. D. B. & M., thence South along the east boundary of said Section 12 a distance of 231.79 feet; thence true bearings S. 88° 00’ W 447,82 feet; thence N. 12° 00° of the Nevada City-North Bloomfield road; thence N. 19° .00’ E. 380 feet to a stake; thence N, 18° 15’ KE. 64.65 feet to a stake; thence N. 18° 84.74 feet to a concrete monuthence N. 82° 00° E. 314.87 feet to a point on the east boundary tp. 16:N. R. 8 E,, thence along said east boundary S, 1° 00° EB. 503.03 feet more or less to the point of beginning, containing 6.91 acres, more or less. Also right of way for a road, with right of ingress and egress, from the above described premises to the county road through the property of Nevada Irrigation District, said road being twenty feet in width being 10 feet each side of a center line, said center line being more particularly described as follows, to-wit: Beginary of the above described tract from which point the northwest corner of said tract bears N. 18° 15’ East, 70 feet more or less distant; thence in a general northwesterly direction 270 feet more or less to said county road leading from Nevada City to Sugar Loaf Gap. TERMS AND CONDITIONS OF SALE: Cash in lawful money of the United States, or part cash and part note secured b eed of Trust on the above describe real property; at least ten per ce (10%) of the purchase price to/ be paid at the time of sale and the\ balance upon confirmation of said sale. by the Court. Bids and offers for said property must be in writing and will be reQuayle & Berry, Bank of America Building, corner of Park Street and Santa Clara Avenue, Aameda, California, at any time after the first publication of this. notice and before the making of said sale. Dated: November 12 1941. ANNE LOUISE NELSON, Executrix of the Estate of FREDERICK HORACE TIBBETTS, also BETTS, also known as FRED H. ‘IBBETTS, deceased. NN, QUAYLE & BERRY, it was! Sie NOTICE OF SATE OP REAT, PROP. . Is it necessary to be a high school graduate in order:to enlist No. Navy enlistees need not be high school graduates. All applicants will be given an examination containing approximately 100 in the Navy? LIGENCE questions. A grade of 50 per cent or better on this examination is sufficiently high to pass the Navy educational standards. However, a high school education will be valuable to the seaman during his Navy enlistment. L fi enlist in the Navy or Naval Reserve, will I Navy Trade School? All new recruits are sent to one of four Naval Training Stations and after a training period they may take examinations for entrance into Navy Trade Schools. Those recruits who pass their examinations with sufficiently high grades are sent to Navy Trade Schools before assignment to the fleet. While attending these schools, they will receive regular Navy pay and free schooling valued at $1500. be sent to a What is the greatest possible pay I can expect to earn during my first term of enlistment? It is possible to earn as much as $126 a month by the end of your first term of enlistment, and remember that your clothing, lodging, medical and dental care are all supplied free. After I have served my term of enlistment, what benefits do I get for re-enlistment? Depending on your rate and length of service, you can get a ‘cash bonus up to $300 plus 30 days leave with pay. What does the term “ash can” mean in the Navy? An “ash can” is a slang term applied to the depth charge used to combat submarines. The average “ash can” is a container filled with approximately 300 pounds of T.N.T. and can be dropped overboard from a ship and so controlled as to explode at depths ranging from 36 to 300 feet. These are generally carried by the fast ships in the fleet, as a boat drope ping a charge regulated to explode at 70 feet depth must move away from the explosion area at a speed of 25“knote or more. These “ash cans” are either rolled off the stern or shot from “y-guns” which hurl one right and one left simultaneously. LABOR UNIONS READY TO TURN our RACKETEERS y CLEM WHITAKER The man who .works—and wears a union button on his cap, or per“haps on his shirt or coat lapel—is ‘a firm ‘believer in the secret ballot, . when it comes alusiion time and a staunch advocate of old-fashioned ’ American democracy, If some outsider invaded his polling place on election day and tried to sneak a look at how he was marking his ballot, or sought to direct his voting, he would blow his top and yell for the cops. He knows his rights as an American citizen and he would fight for them at the drop of a hat. . But strangely enough, millions of‘ Be these same proud, self-reliant men, who have lost the right of secret ballot in their own union halls—and have permitted themselves to be led around by the nose by arrogant union bosses who contro] their very exence and their right to earn a livelihood for their families. In only a small minority of the unions in California does the secret ballot still exist. In only a few union halls do rank and file members have any actual decision when it comes to determining whether they “should stay on the jobs, or go out on strike. In most unions, democratic processes have long since been discarded
and the union men who insisted on them would be likely to end up in a dark alley, slugged and manhandled, But the man who wears a ‘union buttofi, and who has stood for more from his union boss than he would ever take from a governor or a president—just because he thought it was being done in the name of unionism —is gradually recognizing that ‘1e has ‘beén flim-flammed and_ shortchanged and union lobar in Califor-4 nia will shortly stage a man-sized revolt that will make political history in union labor! That, at any rate is the behindthe-scene story as it has. been brought} to this writer, and there is evidence on every hand that .the. revolt. is slowly gathering. The sordid court room revelations of the _ gigantic shakedown engineered by Willie Bioff helped to bring matters to a head. But that, actually, was just the spark which ignited the conflagration. Rank and file workers in California are sick and tired of being called out on strike which they don’t want, don‘t .understand—and never authorized. And they are getting hot under the collar at being blamed for slow downs and stoppages in defense production when all their neighbors are making sacrifices to help meet the national emergency. Don’t be surprised, under the circumstances, if there is a drastic turn over soon in union bosses. UniW. . : ‘210 feet to a point on the east side by * DESIGNEDTO LEAD IN STYLING DESIGNED TO LEAD IN PERFORMANC’ 4 bul DESIGNED TO LEAD IN ECONOMY ~, Y 7 pa A eat es OR THe SERVICE OF aren Distinctive without being expensive i) CHEVROLETS NEW HezZze MODELS II Their surpassing quality—plus their surprising economy—sets them apart from all other “Torpedo” models Superlative grace and beauty distin: guish Chevrolet’s. new Fleetline Aerosedan and new Fleetline Sportmaster. And, of course, they also bring you all of the Unitized Knee-Action comfort.. all of the Vdlve-in-Head ‘‘Victory’’ performance and economy . . . all of the 30-year-proved dependability which characterize the new Chevrolet—The Finest Chevrolet of All Time. See these distinguished cars at your nearest Chevrolet dealer’s, and convince yourself that ‘‘It pays to buy the leader and get the leading buy.’’ IT PAYS TO BUY THE LEADER AND GET THE LEADING BUY Mountain Chevrolet Co. * * ‘sions representing clients. 4 Nevada City Nugget — Thursday, heen oi 43, 1941. ee: on labor in California, if this writer is correctly informed, will shortly go democratic—and insist upon he secret. ballot! —Join The Red Cross— WHY LEGISLATORS WANT PAY RAISE SACRAMENTO, Nov. 13—(UP)—-! One of constitutional amendments on next year’s ballot is the raising of state legislators’ salaries from $100 per month to $200 per month, which is a vital factor in the growing practice of state. officials acting as attorneys before various state bodies. 2 The small salary for members of the legislature, particularly in recent years when the cost of living . has gone up, has resulted in election of many lawmakers who must find outside income. A-topflight business executive or attorney is hot apt to! sacrifice his income and time to serve in the legislature when the pay is so small. No one has any complaint against a state legislator conducting an outside business but the ethics involved becomes a bit strained when a lawyer member of the legislature turns up before state boards and commisFor example, consider the plight of the state personnel board or the . state reclamation board, or any other body receiving support from the legisature, when a legislator represents a client against the board. It is human nature to want to avoid offending someone who is in a position to retaliate, The same question of legality. versus ethics was brought to the attention of Governor Olson as regards . some state officials practicing before other state boards. One case in point was that of Ivan C. Sperbeck, an Olson appointee on the state personnel board, who is an attorney of record in a $19,000 damage claim against the reclamation board. The claim was filed originaly by E. V. Miller, who succeeded Sperbeck as personnel board secretary and formerly was a member of the reclamation body. Parenthetically, another claimant before the board is represented by William P. Rich, president pro-tem of-the state senate. The governor called a conference of various state officials involved and made.a pointed request that he would appreciate it if they would refrain from appearing as attorneys. —Join The Red Cross— Returns From Lake County— J. D. Rafferty has returned to Nevada City after a several days business trip to Lake; County. Rafferty is law enforcement officer of the Tahoe National Forest. a a a acl " @ We would like the people of Nevada City to know that we have a Fuel Yard large enough to supply both Grass Valley and Nevada City — and that first consideration is given to quality, quantity, service and low prices to both towns. Manager of BONDS FUEL CO. 149 Park Ave. Phone a fr Nevada PRIVATE NURSEHARMON OF MICHIGAN, . Ge BELLE STARR: « termath of the Civil War. She is veted to the cause that was lost. THURSDAY AND FRIDAY LAW OF THE TROPICS: jungle enchantment. Nights of love and dawns of vengeance, SATURDAY SUNDAY AND MONDAY The Bandit Queen: Theatre Constance Bennett and Jetfrey Lynn in an exciting tale of a’ hilarious comedy — starring "a Darwell and Brenda JoyPlus Tommy Harmon Jin Featuring ne Tierney and Randolph Scott a technicolor drama of the afkilled as a bandit, though de—-y OIL BURNIN TRAINING MAINTENANCE OFFICERS GRASS VALLEY CALIFORNIA © Perfection-made IVANHOE G HEATERS © End stove-tending drudgery and dirt. Come in and _ see how easy it is to own one of the beautiful new Ivanhoe Oil Burning Heaters, made by Perfection Stove Company, world’s leading manufactuser of oil burning household equipment. Trade in your old stove. Easy terms. Alpha Stores, Ltd. Phone 5 Nevada City Phone 88 Grass Valley known as FREDERICK H. TIB-}:lifornia, Attorneys for ExecutPOPEYE, THE RECRUITING OFFICER, HAS FOOD FOR THOUGHT! . 7 AHOY, SWAB, \/ F4SS-T-POPEYEARFARF GEE, THEN HA. YA LOOKS LIKE } (T MUST COST PLENTY . YA GETS UNIFORMS ). IN) TH’ NAVY & Mi LLION TO BUY A NAVY FREE WHEN YA THE PAY , Bucks! UNIFORM LIKE ENLISKS AN' FREE Is GRAVY! THAT! FOOD AN' NO 3 DOCTOR Pa a By DENTIST Ge =< “a > > al 5 BILLS “a vi . i rg ‘ . yah 9 2 i 9 x > ie ; ivf y Se bs \ Z SB pees < ~y / BS eee SS ‘ ~ = oe ( (3 = me oS BS 4 3 SOME HOSTESS!! I'M GLAD . ENLISTED, 4 BUT YOU SURE GOT THE x“ ment are free. An . you can learn. . of dollars the first write or call. LJ e Your pay in the Navy is gravy No rent to pay. No food to buy. No-doctor's or dentist's bills. Even movies and other entertain. ‘ gives you $118.00 worth of uniforms! And if you want to learn a trade, the Navy. is the place to do it. The Navy offers the chance of a lifetime to young men. If you are 17 or over, get a free copy of the illustrated booklet “LIFE IN THE U. S. NAVY," from the Novy Editor of this newspaper. Simply SERVE YOUR COUNTRY! BUILD YOUR FUTURE! GET IN THE NAVY Now! d when you first enlist, the Navy There are forty-five-odd trades . training that's worth hundreds year. b =