Enter a name, company, place or keywords to search across this item. Then click "Search" (or hit Enter).

Copy the Page Text to the Clipboard

Show the Page Image

Show the Image Page Text


More Information About this Image

Get a Citation for Page or Image - Copy to the Clipboard

Go to the Next Page (or Right Arrow key)
Page: of 6

<r
sauna
NO :-MBER MINING DEVELOPMENT IS
Thinking:
Out Loud
By H. M. L.
1
‘
CV ada City Nugget.
COVERS RICHEST GOLD AREA IN CALIFORNIA
in the right to publish the Truth,
with good motives and for justifiable ends. — Alexander Hamilton ;
From the Californian,
March :15, 1848:.The Liberty of the Press consists
Looking ‘back over the swift flying
months of 1938, ‘with only few
weeks of the year left, one is im-’
pressed iby the fact that at home and
abroad the world -seems to have
been moved chiefly by hatred. For
the first time in the history of this
country the people have been marshalled into two groups and_ industriously exhorted to hate, one group
the other. The alignment of two major parties has broken down, under
-the preachment and action of the ad‘ministration. The radical forces of
the country have rallied to the New
Deal chanting hymns of hate. Conservative labor and conservative
capital are allied against the leftist
trend, and at the moment-it looks
as if the pendulum of public sentiment were swinging again to the
right.
We surmise that the time is approaching for compromise, both -in
world and national affairs. The
good that has been gained under the
New Deal will (be preserved, and the
waste sand corruption eliminated.
Abroad the. dictatorships, perhaps
by such action as President Roosevelt has taken in recalling the ambassador to Germany, may finally
conclude that outraging the world’s
standards of decency and justice is
not only unprofitable but dangerous.
Hatred activates the German, people. Downtrodden, overwhelmed by
the result of their defeat twenty
years ago, they have found a leader
who again ‘marshalls them for war.
The nation again iy throwing off the
inferiority complex and reveling
the joys of hatred. The Jews, we
suspect, are but ‘whipping ‘boys for
the pent up fury of a people, which
was first ‘beaten in war .and then
needlesly humiliated in the treaty of
peace, : :
Whether Germany’s hatred has
run its course is questionalble. This
people, industrious, normally religious, possessing so many sterling virtues, whose blood strain has done
much to lift the standards of ths
country in agriculture, industry,
scieénee and all learning, is so immersed in its delusion of grandeur,
that the world begins to think of
. Germany as suffering from -a—mass
psychopathic disease.
Were it not for. the ‘counter
ence of the Papacy we doubt if Italy
would show a much better condition
than Germany. Christianity, however, does apparently moderate the
brutality of the Italian dictatorship.
Italy, too, seeks revenge for’ the
wrongs done her in the World War
peace. However, the Italian dictator can ipoint to some excellent achievements. He has brought water to
the Libyan desert and is_ settling
thousands of Italian families on reclaimed land there. He has drained
the ancient Pontine marshes and
made rural homes for ‘thousands. of
Italians. Of these constructive ‘achievements, the world takes little heed.
Attention is ‘focused upon the cruelties of the Bthiopian seizure and
influ_Italy’s part in the Spanish Civil war,
and lately upon oppressive measures
against the Jews in Italy. There are
signs, however, that Italian hatreds
are moderating under Mussolini's
adriot management. In other words
Italy is finding ‘‘appeasement.’’ It
is suspected that the Spanish adventure is not popular ‘with the Italjan people and that Il Duce is gradually turning toward the proffered
friendship of England.
Whether or not Japan affects the
complete subjugation of China, the
Japanese will be tremendous. losers.
Already the Japanese military masters are issuing fiat money in China,
which means simply confiscation of
Chinese and foreign property, since
the paper yen used has nothing whatever back of it by which it can he redeemed. Years of poverty and near
starvation face the Japanese as the
result of chewing off more of China
than a pauper nation can digest. Always there is a threat of world war
arising from their insults and injurjes to other -and greater poiwers.
Greed and hatred of the Chinese are
motivating the Japanese.
Hatred recoils upon those who
hate. History affords many and many
an instance of this. Napoleon, master
militarist, hating all nations but his
own, was finally overborne by the
combined forces of nations he had
-City Saturday. The third robber
‘. The election of November 8 certainVol. 12, No. 90. The County Seat Paper NEVADA CITY, CALIFORNIA The Gold Center FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1938.
a
MANY HUNTERS
BAG LIMITS OF
COCK PHEASANTS
The six day season of pheasant
hunting is proving quite fascinating
this week and many local sportsmen
are making trips into the Gridley,
Biggs and Colusa county rice fields
particularly for the brilliant gamey
dirds. : ©
Supervisors C. S, Arbogast, Alex
Robertson, Jay Coughlan, Frank
Rowe and Warren O’Dell enjoyed an
early morning pheasant hunt on the
Coughlan ranch near Smartville on
Wednesday. Supervisor Rowe killed
the limit and Deputy County Clerk
R. N. McCormack also in the party
killed one.
Dick Lane, Chief of Police Garfield
Robson and Frank Ghidotti made up
a party that hunted in the Biggs district yesterday. Deputy Sheriff Will
Woods and Dr Walter P. Hawkins
hunted pheasants in the Biggs district.
Will C. Buffington, Carl Foote,
Louis Savio of Nevada City and Dick
Hales of Grass Valley hunted pheasants over an 800 acre ranch near
Princeton, Colusa county, Tuesday.
They brought home limits of beautiful birds but did a lot of hiking.
A pheasant hunting party composed of Frank Ghidotti, his father, J.
Ghidotti, Ed Berger and Attorney F.
Finnegan ‘brought home some fine
birds from the Biggs district Tues-.
day. Frank Ghidotti besides getting
his limit of pheasants killed two
wild ducks.
WELDON TO ANSWER
IN SUPERIOR COURT
City Judge Miles Coughlin, acting
or Judge W. L. Mobley, who is il],
yesterday morning at a preliminary
hearing bound A. Weldon, alleged
robber, over to the superior. court.
Weldon» was arrested in Sacramento .
last week and brought to Nevada .
of
the Fox-Farm Service Station near
Soda Springs is at-large. Nick Gari,
alias (Moran, was killed instantly by
Phil Treverthick owner of the Soda
Springs Station when the attempted
theft was made some three months
ago. It is alleged that Weldon was a
companion of Cori on that occasion.
PAROLE BOARD
LETS CIRCLE OUT
Cc. E. Cirele, who played the role
of “‘big shot’”’ in rioting on the Murchie road January 20, was released
from jail Wednesday iby the county
parole board consisting of Sheriff
Tobiassen, District Attorney Stoll
and Chief of Police Robson. It was
Circle who headed the mob_ that
blocked the road to the mine and
shouted: ‘‘For God’s sake don’t let
them pass! President Roosevelt. is
back of us!”
‘Circle still had 40 see to serve in
the county jail. When he and four
others were found guilty, Judge Raglan Tuttle sentenced him to two
months’ more jail than his fellows,
because the judge considered Circle
a leader of the rioters. Henry Yuen
recently completed his sentence. Staton Zdrich and Vasion are out on
bail, pending an appeal.
Circle was released on condition
that he leave the county and never
return. It is reported that he has
gone to Redding to seek a job on the
Central Valleys project.
long ‘beaten separately.
The class hatreds excited by the
New Deal are recoiling upon those
who aroused them. This democracy
stands ready to restore the ‘balances
of power prescribed in the Constitution. Attempts to upset this balance through arousing hatreds of one
group against another, have failed.
ly indicates this trend of public
Sentiment. If the Republiean party
can only devise a practicable formula
for industrial peace and justice to
all factors in industry, it will easily
. buildings,
MRS. SKALLO GOES TO
PRISON AT TEHACHIPI
Deputy Sheriff Will \Woods and
Mrs. Frank Williams, jail matron,
yesterday took Mrs. Mary Skallo to
the womens prison at Tehachipi.
Mrs. Skallo was found guilty about
three months ago of leading her-own
minor daughter into a life of shame
and will serve an indeterminate term
of from one to five years. Three or
four men were tried inthis ¢ase.
Mike Kendrick was found guilty and
fined $600 and given a six months
county jail term; Bob Ware is serving nine months. James Personini,
charged with rape and contributing
to the delinquency: of a minor was
freed of the charge Wednesday upon
motion of District Attorney Vernon
Stoll. Personini was tried in the superior court and the jury disagreed
8 to 4. Judge Tuttle-in dismissing
the case agreed with the district attorney. Adell Atkinson was given 90
days on the same case and has served his time and is out.
RICH PICKIN’S ON
SITE OF EARLY
DAY GOLD BUYER
Where the forty niner once sluiced the gravel, and, over a few blocks
in the heart of Nevada City, took out
something like $17,00,000, according to report, his successors in interest are today busy in giving part
of the ground another sluicing. This
is a small plot lying ‘beneath two
buildings, recently demolished,
which were once used for assay and
gold buying offices by the thrifty
Chinese.
Perhaps the word “thrifty’’ is
misused here, for the long dead assayers and gold buyers inadvertently lost a considerable fraction of
their gold through cracks in the
rought board floor. :
The ground now going threugh the
sulice bov, lies beneath the old bricn
belonging to Lee Leong,
who is tearing down the old strucACCOUNTANT IS
CRITIC OF NEV.
CO. SUPERVISORS
The question of whose judgement
was best arose when the L. M.
Straine Company, public accountants, criticised the Board of Supervisors for selling $40,000 worth of
bonds. Perhaps Straine Company is
right, and perhaps not.
In their report it was stated “during the months of May and June,
1938, $40,000 of the county’s’ own
Acquisition and Improvement District 6 per cent bonds, which previously had been a part of the treasury’s cash, had {been sold by the
treasurer but no authority for the
sale was found in the. minutes.”
County Clerk R. N. McCormack
stated that this criticism had been
met by the iboard’s ratification of the
sale subsequent thereto. He also
stated that Acquisition and Improvement District No.-2-had-been created
several years ago and bonds in the
amount of $87,000 issued to pay for
the “construction of the Grass Valley-Colfax highway.
The lines of the district were so
drawn that they did not include the
big mines of Grass Valley district
whose owners protested the issuance
of bonds if they were to become a
lien .on the mining properties,
So that the road might be built
the Board of Supervisors agreed to
purchase $40,000 of the bonds and
the money was taken from the county treasury to pay for them, but with
this agreement went a stipulation
that whenever the board could sell
the bonds for the amount paid for
them, $40,000, it should be done.
The Board of Supervisors, in accordance with this plan, recently
sold the bonds for their face value
plus accrued interest. This sale was
made so that the treasury might
have the $40,000 in cash rather than
the bonds, the security for which was
properties which might not be worth
the amount of the bonds outstanding.
The sale of the bonds was considtures to make way for a modern
drive-in market at the corner. of
York and Commercial street in this
section, once a ‘part of a thriving
Argonaut Chinatown,
John €: Calhoun and Clarence OI.
son are the two miners who are putting the pay dirt through<a ‘sluice .
box, using a hose from a nearby tap_.
to wash out. the gold. They have already recovered several small nuggets and a considerable amount of
finer gold.
The old board floors, used in the
original (building, permitted much of
the gold purchased by the early day
Chinese gold dealers to slip through
into the soil beneath, enriching it
again. For all the ground on which
the old Chinatown stood had, in a
still earlier time, been run through
the sluice boxes of the pioneer miners. Calhoun and Olson are working
the ground on a royalty basis.
LOUIS GIROT SUCCUMBS
TO INJURIES FROM FALL
Louis Alfred Girot, resident of
Log Cabin, Yuba county, 48 years
old, passed away at (Nevada City
Wednesday. night from the effects of
a fall while working as a carpenter
on a building. He was taken to the
sanitarium shortly.after the accident.
The body was at Holmes. Hooper
Funeral Home in Grass Valley until
last evening when it was sent to San
Francisco where services will be
held tomorrow morning.
Left to mourn his passing are his
wife, Blanche O., Edgar Girot, Sacramento, brother; Henry J. Girot,
Oakland and sister, Mrs. Stanley
Doyle, Redwood City. He was born
in San Francisco September 13,
1890,-and was a contractor and
puilder.
P. T. A. WILL DISCUSS
BOOKS FOR CHILDREN
The Nevada City Elementary Parent Teacher Association’ will meet
‘at 2:30 o’clock today in the auditorium of the grammar school. The
program will carry out the theme
for this month, “Your Child and
Books.’’ Refreshments will be servreturn to power in 1940. ed.
. meet obligatiéns that
ered necessary so that the county
might have money in its treasury to
would become due before installments of taxes were paid into the county treasury, it having been considerably depleted by the expenditure of $33,217.57 a part of the reconstruction
cost_of the court house.
Criticism—for the sale of bonds was
based on the ~feHowing factors.
“There were 6 per cent bends and
any obligations of such a high interest yield, if they were sound,
should have commanded a handsome
premium, It is our contention that
the bonds are sound ‘because the
State of (California, Waving taken
over the Grass Valley-Colfax road,
permitted the redemption of both
bonds and interest coupons out of
the gas ‘tax money apportioned to the
county. The county actually was
making $2,400 per annum by saving
the interest on the bonds. This saving must now be lost because the
banks are not at the present time
allowing interest on deposits.
The county could have ‘tborrowed”’
$40,000 for six months through the
medium of registering general fund
warrants and the cost would have
been only $1,000. Unless the county
can acquire these bonds or purchase
the same amount of other (bonds at
a like interest yield the ultimate interest cost will be $38,500.”
In answering these criticisms McCormack stated that no valuation of
the property of the Acquisition and
Improvement district has ever been
made from the gas funds interest
on the bond and redeeming three
bonds every year there is no certainty that a change in legislau.—
might change all this, and the county
would be left in ‘possession of bonds
that it could not sell.
ARCTIC MINE
Development work continues at
the Arctic mine northeast of Washington. The mill has been treating
ore mined during the summer and
as soon as sufficient water rises in
the nearby streams the mill will be
on a steadier program. D. C. Billick
is in charge of the mill while A.
Barnhart is managing the mine for
L.’ F, Utter and others interested in
the property. .
every club member
CONCENTRATES SHIPPED
TO BAKERSFIELD PLANT
Hal D. Draper, local assayer who
is purchasing concentrates for the
special plant at Bakersfield has
been quite busy the last two weeks
moving shipments to the new plant.
He has shipped 14 lots in the last
two weeks averaging from 60 pounds
to a ton and a half. Five new lots
were in the assay office on Commercial street Wednesday in process
of shipping.
(Mr. Draper has ‘made a bid on between 30 and 40 tons of concentrates at the Ruby mine and he has purchased around $300 worth of concentrates from mill cleanups on Deer
Creek. i
W. F. Buaas, president of the Taft
Well Drilling company at Bakersfield is owner and operator of the
new gold recovery plant to which
all concentrates are being shipped.
The new plant is a boon to many
small mine operators and snipers
along the mountain streams.
ROTARY HEARS
CHORUSES CED
BY MRS. LIBBY
The choral pidasee of the high
school under the inspirational dir-ectorship of (Mrs, Marian Libby sang
for the Rotary club at luncheon yesterday. First the girls chorus sang:
“Vank’n Tanka’’, “Cousin Jedediah’’
and “Drink to Me Only with Thine
Eyes.”’
The club was very appreciative of
this musical treat. The high school
boys and girls gave a very wonderful performance under the baton of
Mrs. Libby. Following the singing
who has a son
or daughter enrolled in the high
school was required to contribute to
the charity fund, and.all those with
out children in the high school were
required to pay: double.
Charles Elliott was chairman of
the day.
TWO SCHOOLS FOR
MINE CHILDREN
ARE OPERATED.
County Puperintendent Ele MO M.
Austin has two schools in areas
where children are living near mines
and it is not possible to bring them
to the larger schools on account of
deep snow in winter. One is at the
Spanish mine at Washington, the
mine company supplying ‘the building. Mrs. Florence Harper teaches
the 14 pupils of the mine employes.
The other school fer the convenience of children of snipers and the
small mine operators is in the ghost
and is taught ‘by Mrs; Rose, Smart.
There are about 14 pupils in the
school, which is in the Nevada City
school district.
ORIENTAL MINE
F, F. Casidy, local Alpha Store
Manager yesterday gave a sub-lease
on the Oriental mine at Alleghany
to Florence V. Dickey. The deal has
‘been pending about two months, The
new lease is to last until 1944 and it
property for $800,000. It is understood the option to Mr. Cassidy was
for $150,000 on the Oriental . and
$10,000 on the Gold Star group.
Plans are to operate the mine on a
large tonnage basis mining much low
grade ore, The high ‘grade pockets
when found will add .to the profits.
‘Since Cassidy and the late Raymond
Hawkins have been operating the
found. Owners of theOriental mine
are Kleinsorge, Monterey; H.
B. Drescher, Sacramento; George
Gamble, Pasadena and W. P: -Walworth, New York, Charles B: Foster,
be it charge for Mrs. Dickey.
Nevada County Mines
Employ 2527 Workers
. erease in
. . which form five separate vein sys. tems, the Chicago, the Gold Flat, the
. covery on the Banner system in 1866
.
town section of You (Bet-Red Dosg. .
also carries an option to purchase the .
‘ine some rich pockets have ‘been . }.
mining man of much experience, will .
‘Bradley
Mining activity ‘tor the past month
reveals but slight slackening. The ~
Nugget’s survey reveals 2,527 men
employed in Nevada county mines,
with a monthly payroll that totale
$379,050. It is expected, however,
that with freezinz weather in the
higher mountains there will be a dethe number ~employed
through the winter.
Stockton Hill reports an inerease
of men employed. The Norambagua
thas closed down tourer. and
the Omega, among the’Placer mines,
is also closed for the winter.
The following reports have been
received from many of the operating
companies:
BANNER MT. MINES
James Penrose of Nevada City re.
cently completed a deal leasing his
ground to H. C. Dudley of Duluth,
Minn., giving the Dudley interests,
altogether about 2000 acres of mining property situated between the
Idaho Maryland: and Lava Cap mines. The Taylor and Clark properties
were leased several weeks ago. G. E.
Gallagher has done some preliminary
work on the property on Town Talk
ridge west of the Lava Cap property. The mineral belt embraced by the
group contains a network of fissures
Jefferson Hill, the Banner and‘*the ©
Sharp, all of which carry values in
gold. Ore mined on four different
places on the Chicago system has
been milled and returns varied from
$12 to $200 per ton. An original disproduced ore that milled $11.75 to
$21 per ton.
BULLION MINE
Seventy tons of ore per day are
being trucked to the Idaho Maryland
custom mill from the Bullion mine
south of Grass Valley and operated
by the Idaho Maryland interests.
Mining is being done on the 2200
foot level through a 500 foot winze
from the 1700 foot level. Howard
Dennis is foreman.
LAVA CAP MINES
The sinking program which has.
been under way the last two months
in the Central shaft of the Lava Cap
property southeast of Nevada City
is now down to the 12th level. The
cross cut being driven from the Banner to the Tip Top claim vein to the .
east is progressing slowly. The cross
cut will be completed in the early
part of next year. Otto E. Schiffner,
general. manager states the company
~~~ . now employs 265 men.
a
Rae es No.«
LODE MINES "—~_Men — _ Payroll
Newmont
Empire
North. Star
Pennsylvania
Zeibright
Murchie
Idaho-Maryland
New Brunswick
Idaho
$61,500
39,900
16,650
22,500:
21,000
78,150
249
5:21:
Lava Cap
Banner—
Central
Spanish
Others
Golden Center ..
Spring Hill
Great Northern .
Stockton Hill
Hot Water
13022