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Page: of 6

AGE SIX
NEVADA CIT’ NUGGET
aihaianeneiimaae
—
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Mr. and Mrs. George Keller and .
daughter Billie, and Mr. and Mrs.
Glenn Cleland and daughter, Naomi,
spent Sunday near Gridley on a pic-.
* nie and fishing trip.
. New
_ Big Creek, Fresno county
Mrs. Ida M. Clark of. Bridge;
street fell in her home Wednesday
morning and dislocated her shoulder. The injury. was quite painful. Dr.
W. W. Reed was called and cared!
for her.
Mr. nd Mrs. Fred Tourtellotte of
came up
early in the week to spend a few
days at their home in Willow Val-.
ley. 1
Mrs. Mary ‘Fisk of Pasadena arrived in Nevada City Tuesday even-!
ing to visit her old time friend, Mrs.
H. N. Stevens whom she had not
seen in 30 years. Mrs. Fisk is from
has made her home _ in Southern .
California.
Mrs. J. J. Jackson, Sr., of Boulder
street who has been quite ill, is able .
to be up and around again which is}
good news.
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Gregory went,
to College City Sunday and returned; Monday. They were called there}
by the ill 1ess and death of: Mrs Greg-'
ory’s 92 ¥ iar old grandmother, prominent pioneer of Colusa county.
Fred Cole, who is interested with
his father, Thomas Cole, in the Valley Mines group in Willow Valley,
is a Nevada City visitor this week
from Southern California.
Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Doian returned }
Tuesday evening from a few days .
visit in San Francisco with relatives .
and friends.
Post Master Betty Martin West of .
Nevada City is attending the post .
masters convention in San Francisco .
this week. About 2,000 postmasters .
are expected to attend.
Mr. and Mrs. George Desnica and .
son, Theodore, left Nevada City this
week for Denver, Colo. Mr. Desnica
will sail for Bolivia on October 29)
ee
Auto Financing and Insurance
PHONE. 405
Cramer’s
AUTO EXCHANGE
“A Safe Place to Buy”
Hills Flat
Grass Valley, California *
Gilbert G. Cramer, Proprietor.
York City but in recent years . .
jhe will
jgame in the Berkeley stadium.
l tober 23 in Marysville.
to take a pouitton® in a mine, and the
. family will follow later.
. resided here about three years and .
Mr. Desnica was employed in
. while here,
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Bush are .builte-/
jing themselves a small cottage near
ithe state highway camp at, Nevada’
City’s southern limits.
Will Davis, iinotype operator at
in a Sacramento hosand his many friends
hope for him an early recovery. Mr.
Davis is well known in this city as
‘he owns eonsiderable property in. the
Willow Valley district east of Nevada City. It is understood he will
come to his ranch to recouperate as
soon as he leaves the hiospital.
went surgery
pital Monday
Glenn Cleland, George Keller, 54
Bergan, Jess Moomey and Ed Rose
enjoyed salmon fishing near Marysville Wednesday evening.
Mrs. Robert Braithwaite of North
San Juan was a Nevada City visitor
Wednesday.
Harley M. Leete, Jr., leaves today
for Berkeley for the week end where
attend the U. C.U.S. C.
Mrs. A. Maltman, daughter of
Alexander Gault, pioneer who came
to. Nevada City. in 1852 and after
whom the Gault bridge is named, is
visiting Mrs. Mary Warnicke. Mrs.
Maltman, formerly Miss Mary Ga Fy
has many friends here who are delighted to visit with her. She now
resides in Oakland.
Judge Raglan Tuttle of Nevada
county-is in Salinas this week sit. ting in the Superior Court. He will
arrive home today.
L. M. Straine and Company
Sacramento accounting experts,
making ‘the yearly examination
of
‘eounty books and records. It is expected this work will be completed
in about a—week.
A group of women of North San
formulating
plans for a
of
are
Juan are
. dance at Twamley Hall on Saturday,
November 13 for the benefit of St.
Marys Academy in Grass Valley. Definite plans will be announced later.
C. H. M. A. MEETS Sooo
“The California Hydraulic Miners
Association will meet tomorrow, OcSe
L. W. Lobdell, manager of a group
f trucks in this county, is spending
0
i weeks at Wilbur Springs. He resides on the Nevada City-Grass Valley highway near Shaw’s Fruit stand.
Nevada
Th heatre—
a—
Bruce
BAD GUY: ® volt thrill i
luxury airliner crashes.
FRIDAY .
EMPTY HOLSTERS: st Patricia Walthall in a
® blood stirring drama of
smashing fists and. stacato pistol shots.
SATURDAY
Loved by all women, hunted. by
Cabot plays the lead with
SUNDAY
FOOTLOOSE HEIRESS: +: im.
When they're not loving they're battling. This is a romance with a punch.
k Foran, tuneful cowboy,
all men,
a million1 a dangerous game, in which a
He holds her. hands so
slug him
PEANUT BUTTER
TRUPAK CATSUP
OVALTINE
14 oz. can
A-1 PANCAKE FLOUR
. PUFFED RICE
2 CH-B TOMATO JUICE
TOMATOES
— Secs Re npldeaaee ee can
ci J. Jackson
ee Delivery
“Tiey have .
the .
‘New Brunswick and Murchie mines,
/the Sacramento Union plant, under-j.
.
.
— by MAX
7 The WEEKLY
CONSTITUTIONAL .
BERNS
The Chains of the Constitution
Why does our Constitution limit
the powers it grants to our stance
ment?
All~recorded history—thousands
4
}
.
i
.
;
}
are obliged to trust with power..
Our Constitution has accordingly
fixed the limits to which and no further our confidence may go.
TNTPOURINGD OF
SYMPATHY FOR
THOSE BEREAVED
The ditches death of Lester
Whitburn as the result of a fall while
at work in the Diamond Match company’s, lumber yard in Grass Valley,
of which his father Ed R. Whitburn
a
Commerce
‘. ber of years.
!jacent to the city improved.
lity.
of years of it—show that goveraments with unlimited powers always
become autocratic, oppressive or
despotic. The American Colonies
suffered from this, rebelled against
England and then framed our Constitution to safeguard us from that
evil. By actual experience as well as
from history they learned to fear an
all-powerful government and 680
made ours a government with limited powers—with such powers only
as “we the people” enumerate in our
Constitution.
Concerning this, Jefferson, the
author of the Declaration of Independence and our third president,
says: “Confidence is everywhere the
parent of. despotism. Free government is founded in jealousy and not
in confidence! It is jealousy and not
confidence which prescribes limited
Constitutions to-bind down those we
has been manager for a great many.
years, has brought forth expressions
of sympathy from literally hundreds
of friends. For fifteen years he had
been employed by the compary and
in that time had won the warm esteem of a wide circle, both among his
father’s friends and among contemporaries of his own. His upright
character and genial spirit attracted
people to him, It is seldom in annals
of this county that there hasbeen
such a general expression of grief
and an outpouring of sympathy for
‘the bereaved as has followed this
sad demise of a well beloved young
man.
“In questions of power then,” concludes Jefferson, “let no more be
heard of confidence in man_but bind
him down from mischief by the
chains of the Constitution.” ) RADIO BOOST COMING
CHAMBER TOPIC
IS BETTER ROADS
The Nevada City
met Monday evening
its new quarters in the city hall and
discussed road problems that confront this city and environs. The old
turnpike road over Town Talk ridge,
it was generally conceded needs considerable work on it to make it usable in winter as well as summer.
Many miners, it was stated, residing
on Alta Hill are employed in the
Murchie Mine,~and this road is one
they would prefer, since it is the
shortest, provided it is passable in
the winter time. Attention was also
called to the Willow Valley road and
the road to Lake Vera. The former . ‘
is the outlet of several families, the .
heads of some of which are engag-.
ed in mining, and has been in poor.
shape most of the time for a set
The Lake Vera road
which is used by some 1400 Girls .
Scouts every summer is usually in!
excellen{ condition, but gives off .
clouds of dust and needs oiling. .
The suggestion was made that .
since the allotment of road funds for,
this supervisorial district is so small
as to be entirely inadequate, that it}
might be possible to levy a small .
road tax in this district for a year
or two and get the county roads adChamber of
in
W. F. Roddy, George Gildersleeve
and H. M. Leete were appointed a
committee to look into this possibilHENRY JACOBS LAID
TO REST IN PINE GROVE
Funeral services were held yesterday afternoon at the Holmes Funeral
Home for the late Henry Jacobs, Sr.
who passed away at his home Tuesday afternoon. Rev. H. H. Buckner
performed the funeral services. Interment was in Pine Grove Cemetery.
Henry Jacobs, 75 years of age, was
born in this district and spent his
entire life here. His active years
were spent as a teamster in the wood
and timber business which work he
carried on with horse drawn wagons, later using motor trucks.
His last illness was brief and he
succumbed to an acute heart attack.
Surviving him are his wife, one son
Henry Jacobs Jr., and five daughters, Mrs. R. H. Leonard and Mrs.
E. W. Penrose of Nevada -City, Mrs.
©. W. Rowe and Mrs. Al Richardson of Grass Valley and Mrs. G S.
Rutlege of San Francisco. There are
also 30 grandchildren and 13 great
grandchildren.
FOR RELIEF OF COLDS
USE
Rexall
LAXATIVE QUININE ¢
COLD CAPSULES
An unusually reliable and effective treatment 50°
Box
Use Rexall Nasal Spray with
Ephedrine Atomizer Included.
Complete c
Outfit 79
USE ASPIREX COUGH DROPS
The Aspirin Cought Drop —
Better than a gargle 10°
Package
R. E. HARRIS
THE REXALL DRUG
STORE
, FOR NEVADA COUNTY
P. T. A. MEMBERSHIP ee te
CONTEST CLOSES OCT. 26
dressed to Fred E. Conner, president
of the Nevada City Chamber of ComiThe P. T. A. membership contest . .merce, calling attention to the fact
closes ©ctober 26. Anyone may join. that next. Monday evening. October
the association after that time, but] 25, one minute before 8 o'clock there
it will not count in the membership . will be a radio address over the Colenrollment contest. umbia network paying tribute ‘to
Members are urged to attend the] Nevada County and its store keepmeetings of the P. T. A. and see for
themselves how active it is. Interers.
esting and breadening programs and
fine speakers are presented for their
benefit and enjoyment. They become
acquainted with their school and its
faculty. P. T. A. meetings present
this opportunity without the necessity of a more formal visit. :
Jean Odegaarde and Margaret
Hughes of the 8th grade have tabulated the records of the various
grades and they now stand.
First grade 5; Doris Foley’s, first
and second—6; Second—5; Third—
9; Mrs. Mabel Flindt’s 3 and 4 grades—17; Fourth—16; Fifth—12;
Miss Ramm’s 5 and 6—4; Sixth—!
12; Seventh—10; Mrs. E. Kilroy’ ai
_MRS. MARSH RECOVERING
Mrs. Luela Marsh who underwent
a major operation at the Nevada
City Sanitarium Wednesday is getting along splendidly. Dr. A. H. Tickell and Dr. Foster were the attending physicians. :
.Roosevelt Cafe.
120 WEST MAIN STREET
GRASS VALLEY
We serve the biggest glass of
beer in town
BOTTLE BEER 10c
HARTUNG’S
DEPENDABLE JEWELERS
124 Mill St. Grass Valley
(7 and 8— 6; EHighth—11.
. CHOICE WINES 10c
APrivate Property—No TrespassBAR WHISKEY 15c
ing’’ signs for sale at the , Nugget
. Office. . SER SDE TT Tea Ba ee
CELEBRATING OUR
Ath Anniversary
And to hci our appreciation of the hundreds of good
friends and customers we have made in the few-short
years, we offer these:
REGULAR $3.95 FALL DRESSES —
Newest fall materials. Size 14 to 44.
Including our Regular $3.95 Carole King»
Juniors. Sizes 11 to 17.
REGULAR $2.95 FALL DRESSES —
Newest cottons in Ray-spun, ray-sheen,
cotton shantung and other fine materials.
Sizes 14 to 44
Including our regular $2.95 Carole King
Juniors. Sizes 11 to 17.
REGULAR $1.95 COTTONS—Beautiful
new materials. Stripes, dots, and prints—
Swing and regular styles. Sizes 14 to 44.
Including our regular $1.95 Carole King
Juniors. Sizes 11 to 17.
REGULAR $1.95 ALL WOOL
SLIP-ON SWEATERS
Assorted Colors ,
REGULAR $1.95 ALL WOOL
SWEATER VESTS
Assorted sizes and colere
A X-MAS GIFT SUGGESTION:
PURE SILK PANTIES —Also Printed
Satins. Lace Trim Applique sl doa
¢ Embroidery, etc. All reg. sizes. 2 Pr.
.
.
.
October 21, 1933
.
4th ANNIVERSARY “.
These prices tor October 21 to October 26 Only.
. prices revert back to original selling price October oP
m™Bon Allure
~ WOMEN’S APPAREL
141 MILL STREET “GRASS VALLEY
CLEAN OIL HEAT
! directed
iT WHERE YOU WANT
SUPERFEX
oit brning HEATERS
NEW, MODERN DESIGN
UPERFEX heaters, a product of
Perfection Stove Company, are
made in ‘several types and sizes
—radiating heaters and HeatDirectors. Flue connection like
ordinary stove. Shown here is a
Heat-Director, with patented adjustable shutters making it possible
to direct heat where it is most
needed. Floors quickly warmed.
Sizes to suit small, medium, or large
homes, offices, shops, schools and
churches: Heating capacities 2,850
to 9,770 cu. ft., depending on size
and climate (equal to several ordinary rooms). Easy terms if desired.
ALPHA STORES,
(LTD.)
Nevada City
Grass Valley
"Phone 5
"Phone 88
wuartz and placer claim location
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