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Collection: Newspapers > Nevada City Nugget

October 21, 1938 (8 pages)

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IDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1938. FR SS CO OR at Ee eS Se ieee from Aunt Sarah STATS NEVADA CITY NUGGET he ate te te te Ole ie i ie ie le le ae ie ie le . oe Stuffed green peppers are an excellent dish to prepare for a busy day. They may be prepared hours or even a day ahead of time for baking. The following recipe is only suggestive as any left over meat may be substitut‘ed for the ham in the recipe, Stuffed Peppers—(Serve Six) Six green peppers, 2 tablespoons onion (chopped). 3 tablesoons butter. 1 1-2 cups rice (cooked). 1 1-2 cups ham (chopped). 3-4 cup tomato soup. 1-2 cup cheese (grated). 1 cup crumbs (buttered), Remove stem ends, the 9 “ white Me he she she ote FE et gt teste te steate teste teste she Gl ie ie ie ie ek ake ae NAR IR OR Se i Rh a ee ao membrane and the seeds from the peppers. Parboil for 2 minutes in boiling, salted water. Cook the onion in the butter for a few minutes and combine with rice; ham, cheese and the soup, Fill the peppers with this mixture, top with grated cheese and buttered crumbs. Place im a_ greased baking dish and bake in a moderate oven (350°) for about 30 minutes. These may be prepared wel in advance of time for cooking and left in the refrigerator till time. to cook. Grass Valley Highway Nevada City, California ROUSE MARKET PLENTY OF PARKING Open 7 A. M. to SPACE 8 P. M. 7 days a week. BUSINESS IS GOOD AT OUR STORE EFFECTIVE OCTOBER 21-27 INCLUSIVE quality merchandise, No worries over parking in the rainy season—drive out to Prouse Drive-In Market where prices are always ‘right and exceptional DRIED BEANS Cranberry ~ c 4 pounds 25 Calif. Red c 5 pounds _ 2.. 25 Large Limas 25° Se Pounds -.o. 2. Pink — c 5 pounds 25 Pinto e aye pounds 28 25 SALMON Del Monte Red 21° NOE Call oi Hunter Pink c No. 1 tall 10 South American Yellow Pop Corn, 4 Ibs, .......05. Pep Pop Pop Corn 1 0° 10 oz. can CANNED FRUITS AND VEGETABLES Stock Up Now! Dew Drop Peas c is ee CRN 5 25 WRB COR 4 $1.90 Tomatoes, Columbus 25° No. 24% can 3 for ........ ARO 24 $1.97 CORN, Reinbeck No. 2 ‘C ROP ee 25 Case Of 24 $1.97 HOMINY, Van Camp 25° INGE 236 3 for 2 Z Apricots, Del Monte Whole a7 Pid. ‘No, 246 2 for ........ Wane Of 24 See. $3.20 Peach Tidbits, Pasha 10° No. 24% can WiOn GaS@: 2. .scise5 soos ceenk PLUMS, Sacto Purple 10° 1 EPR OTe ae eee a eR She Case of 24 $2.35 Apricots, Calif. Highway 23° MO. 26 2° 10P 2.. ess oe Wase of 24 52 eke $2.65 Peaches, Del Monte Halves 25° or Sled. No. 2% 2 for -...: e Cnge Of: 24 hy $2.95 Peaches, Lincoln Sliced or 10° Halves No. 2% ..--:.-----------{idaho Hard Wheat oo $1.29 2416 Pounds ......... segs 66¢ 10 pounds. 36c Star Bacon 35° Piste. lhe oe eS Star Bacon 36° Sliced Ib. —__... HSpiee eee aes : Star Vienna Sausage yA . CANS: 2.2. 2..255: peaeee ae eee Deviled Meat 10° CRNA eS ee Corned Beef 35° AD) OZ. CAN a Monarch Coffee 76° SD: jam 2 Se Monarch Coffee OAD ean oe 68° Case of 24 _....---.----.------$2.35 . Monarch Ib. V. P. can 24° Pears, Del Monte Bartlett 15° PP OUNG oe ese ee : No. 21% cam ...-.0---2-------: Mascot 2 Case Of 24 .25....-..-------$3.55 2 lb. Ca 2 ae 25 PINEAPPLE Boca 20° Del Monte Sliced 19° 1. ee see ORE : ING; Ie OOM kee ‘ No. 114 10° Large package .......... 29 Plat -....---------4--------f seeecee Shelled Almonds 39° RON ose oe ee $4:15). Pound 22 Summer Isle 33° Shelled Walnuts, Large 43° No, 214 can 2 for .....-.---Halves, “Ub. 33 CHEESE Brick and American 49° MAD. DON ee Sa ee Willows California c S10. brick: 98 Tillamook Cheese 49° 2 UPICK os Rice, Extra fancy Calif c Wo RDN esate en et OSS aS rae 25 Shrimps Dunbar Wet c 2 CANS oa ee 25 Hot. Sauce, State Fair : 5 @ CANS! A ee Tomato Sauce, Del Monte 1 5° 4 cans Peanut Butter School Day 25° 2 Ib. jar Mince Meat, Oest : 29° BD) OZ. jar 2 a ee Cranberry Sauce, Ocean 11° Spray 070%. 2: ee Apple Cider, Martinelli’s Gold 21° Medal, Quart bottle ..._.. Gal. Glass Jug Choc Covered Cherries Vir24° ginia Cordial 1 Ib. box _._.. WHILE THEY LAST! Combination Pen and Pencil Sets 49° Bach eee Tomato Juice Sacramento 22° NO: AG atin: 8 ee ‘Case Of. 6223 $1.29 Bee ee ee ee 59c TOPIC FLOUR ARMOUR’S: STAR BACON MONARCH COFFEE WE CARRY No. 1 STEER BEEF IN OUR MEAT DEPARTMENT Pe i le a eo -After White House Consultation RBA Photograph shows Secretary of State Cordell Hull (center) followed
by newsmen as he left the White House after a conference with President Roosevelt on the European situation. Forget Jap-Sino War Hate congress which met at Vassar college in Poughkeepsie, N. Y. (ae Yoko Matsucko of Japan and.Pearl Tehwei Liu of China forget the feeling between their countries as they admire the shore line along the Hudson, aboard the Robert Fulton, en route from the Second World Youth tional. But if, by wild chance, it escaped that fate, it would ‘bankrupt the state.if actually placed in operation ——and the pension system would go down into bankruptcy along with everything else. California bankers have announc. ed officially (despite all claims of . pension patent medicine men to the contrary) that they would not and could not accept the pension war-. rants in exchange for cash, or for! deposit, investment, or loan collat-. eral. And if the bankers will not accept them, neither can California merchants—for the warrants must be kept in circulation to maintain their theoretical value. It stands to reason that if merchants can not exchange such warrants at the bank for cash, nor give them to their manufacturers or wholesalers in trade (and certainly they can’t, for the warrants will have no value outside of California), any merchant who sought to handle them would soon go bankrupt. But apart from all this, any reasonable person, if he pauses to consider, cannot help but see the fallacy in the “$30 Every Thursday” scheme. If the plan were actually placed in operation, the average retired citigen in California would receive more for doing nothing than the average worker received for working. That is “something for nothing’ carried to the extreme, for it places a premlum on indolence—and places pensions above paychecks. The present state sales tax—California’s greatest revenue producer —-yields slightly less than $100,000,YUBA COMMISSIONER = PRAISES NEV. CO. FRUIT — H.-A. (Crase, agricultural commissioner of Yuba County, who was one of the assistants at the Nevada County fair and has handled decidious fruits throughout the west many years, was amazed at the display of. fruits grown in this county. He especially praised the apples, pears and plums for their rich colorings, size, type and flavor. He did not realize this county could produce such fruits. Agricultural Commisssioner L.°G. Lageson of Nevada County stated yesterday this county is about the only one in the state that will show a profit on pears this season. Many persons fail to realize the money for the county fair did not cost the county money but was raised through a_ state fund created. through pari mutual betting. Next year a sum of a several thousand dollars will be allotted to Nevada fCounty also for a beginning on a county fair ‘building. 000 per year. The stamp tax on the “ham and egg’ warrants—to be effective—would have to yield ONE BILLION, FIVE HUNDRED AND SIXTY MILLION A YEAR It would mean a tax fifteen times greater than the sales tax, with working citizens denied common necessities to buy pension luxuries. Under such 2 condition, ‘what’ incentive . would there be for farmers to farm, or. manufacturers to manufacture? The whole thing is preposterous; ° for those who beieve in it, it is worse; it is the road to tragic disillusionment! by GREYHOUND Make your trip East by comfortable, smooth-riding Greyhound SuperCoach. Take your choice of Greyhound’s scenic routes and return an entirely different way. Stop off wherever you please. Fares are now the lowest ever. Phone your local Greyhound agent today forall information. One Way Round Trip NEW YORK $43.40 $78.12 CHICAGO $30.65..$55.20 WASHINGTON $49.65..$89.87 NARROW GAUGE DEPOT — PHONE 87 GREYHOUND THIRTY PIECES . OF PAPER WORSE . THAN WORTHLESS . By RALPH H. TAYLOR The farmer, better than most men, knows that lbefore the harvest there must be a season given over to planting and tilling the soil. Close td-reality, accustomed to natural laws and economic fundamentals, the farmer recognizes that we must sow before we reap! It would be well if every voter, regardless of his business, trade or profession, could somehow share the farmer‘s understanding of those elemental truths before General Election day, November 8. For the ballot} this year is studded with measures which are in defiance of every law of nature and economics — which proceed on the false assumption that NEVADA CITY ASSAY & REFINING OFFICE Pyactical mining tests from 25 to 1000 pounds, giving the free gold percentage of sulphurets, value of sulphurets and tailings. Assays made for gold, silver, lead and copper. Mail order check work promptly attended to. Agent for New York-California Underwriters, Westchester and Delaware Underwriters Insurance Companies AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE E. J. N. OTT, Proprietor 8 Sa eat ~ Meat With A Flavor! QUALITY you can depend upon. PRICES your budget will approve. —SERVICE THAT SPELLS SATISFACTION— Our Reputation is Our Guarantee KEYSTONE MARKET Calanan and Richards Commercial Street PHONE 67 Nevada City society can wave a magic wand and produce “something for nothing”’. Since the world began, men have sought “perpetual motion’’—always unsuccessfully; since the dawn of civilization, visionaries have dreamed dreams of Utopia—of-a land of milk and honey, without worry, or sweat, or hard labor. But in this imperfect. world, it has never been achieved. And there is convincing evidence that it can’t be achieved at the November election, despite the fervid hopes of those who have forgotten that the world, through all the ages, never has yielded: ‘‘something for nothing.” It is not a pleasant task to blast dreams and destroy hopes, but California, if it is to escape disaster, must face facts and deal with its problems realistically. It must analyze its “panaceas’”’ and—finding them wanting—buckle down to the job of sowing and tilling the soil, as a neces-. % Sary preparation {for the harvest. And it must reflect that attitude in its voting; it must call a halt to the era of patent medicine faking. . : Particularly sad is the delusion . a being perpetrated on hundreds -0° thousands of California’s older citizens that Proposition No. 25-~—the socalled “ham and egg’ pro~osal— will provide them with ‘‘$30 Every Thursday’’ and thereby resolve all their difficulties. If this twentieth century hoax should be enacted, it wold be almost jeertain to be declared unconstituAnd remember: For every a great big dollar awaits you. NUGGET for one year. For every new paid-in-advance subscription you bring into the NUGGET office we will pay you one big shining dollar. SOUNDS EASY, DOESN'T IT? AND IT_IS. SO GET BUSY RIGHT AWAY AND EARN EXTRA CHRISTMAS MONEY Just get your friends or relatives to take the Nugget for one year. . SO START IN RIGHT NOW TO EARN LL YOU HAVE TO DO—is to get one of your friends or relatives to subscribe to the NEVADA CITY The price is $2.50 a year — and MUST BE PAID IN ADVANCE. ° new paid-in-advance subscription — :