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Collection: Newspapers > Nevada City Nugget

October 25, 1943 (4 pages)

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Nevada City Nugget — — Monday, October 25, 1943 Page Three PURETEST ( i] Plenamins THE COMPLETE VITAMIN ' AND TONIC COMBINATION . Vitamins -A BCDEG and LIVER Concentrate with IRON Sulfate provided in two capsules. Dose: One of each daily. Backed by the Rexall ° Guarantee School Supply 4 Headquarters R. E. HARRIS . THE REXALL DRUG STORE Phone 100 . “etebeteteietetetetey z . FLYING” ——e— ®BUY © DEFENSE @®STAMPS — eo-—_— Hierinieielelcinidieiieieg fey Chamber of Commerce OFFICE IN CITY HALL PHONE 575 sence jat the home of his parents, Mr. ‘Mrs. C. Nye on Adams street. . the infantry of the U. Porsenna? Mr. and’ Mrs. Elliott E. Syms arTived a few days ago and are visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs.B. L. Symns of Boulder street. Mr. Syms formerly with the Sliger mine interests east. of Auburn, has been in Mi. Ida, Arkansas where he was in charge of a crystal mine for the WU. S. government. Eddie Powell mento with his motored to Sacramother a few days, ago and returned the latter part of! last week with her. Mrs. Powell has ‘been quite ill but is much improved. . J. J. Connell, mining man of Al‘leghany, was a business visitor in this city Friday. Mr. and Mrs. L. F. Utter, Angeles arrived Monday and went to their mining property the Arctic mine, near Washington. They expect to spend two or three weeks at the property. Mr. and Mrs. Allen Nye arrived from Idaho recently and are visiting Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Beck arrived nay from Portola, Plumas counjty, and are visiting Mrs. Beck’s parents;-Mr.-and Mrs. W. C. Perry: of Boulder street and Mr. Beck’s mother in Grass Valley. Ernest Beck has recently recovered from a critical accident in logging operations near Grey Eagle. Mrs. Reva Newsom, who suffered , a stroke of paralysis ~recently is; slowly recovering at the Miners Hospital. She is noted for ‘her good cooking. atthe Triangle Cafe and Success Cafe, and for a. time was bookkeeper at the Holbrook Second . Hand Store this summer. Mrs. Guy Welch and son, Elmer of Harvey, ning ‘on a long visit to Mrs. Welch’s sister, and brother in law, Mr. and Mrs. Will Davis of Willow Valley. This is the first time: the two sisyears. Elmer Welch, who has just! received. a medical discharge from! Fort Sill, Oklahoma, won two medals i in rifle shooting and one for bayon-' eting. They have been visiting another brother and son, Jack Welch, at Camp Haan, near Riverside. ‘Mrs. ‘Joe Farnsworth and son, Elwood, first class pharmicists’. mate, went to Colusa the ] WE REPAIR AND WE FIX Lawn Mowers, Locks, Vacuum Cleaners, .Washing Machines, Electric Irons, Stoves, in short almost anything that is used around the house or the yard, we can repair. t ART’S REPAIR SHOP RAY’S FIXIT SHOP 109 bycy de age Bes STREET FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE DRIVE IN FOOD PALACE. Groceries, Fruit and Vegetables Beer .and Wine COR. YORK AND COMMERCIAL STREETS NEVADA CITY, PHONE 3898 UPHOLSTERY OF ALL KINDS % . John W. Darke 100-3 100-M FINE WATCH REPAIRING Radio Service & Repairing Work Called for and Delivered Clarence R. Gray 520 Coyote Street Phone 152/] New Deal Under Management of Pauline and Johnnie 108 W. Main Street, Grass Valley BEER WINES, LIQUORS Delicious Mixed Drinks te Please Every Taste —— OB prinine.? GET YOURS AT THE NUQQET “William Haley, ——— last week and attended the funeral of E. Farnsworth, brother in law of Mrs. Farnsworth. f Arthur Haley, son of Mr. and Mrs. former residents, has returned to Nevada City and will go to work at the DeWitt base hospital at Auburn. His’ brother, Dick, is working in the supply department at (Moore shipyards. Haley is also employed there. Arthur was a pipe fitters helper at the same yards until coming up here. Two out of every three American soldiers who reached France in World War I took part in battle. Is NEEDED) even when budget is limited Keystone Market Se DAVE RICHARDS, Prop. 213 Commercial Street Phone 67 Nevada City We supply our patrons with the meat from the best cattle, sheep and hogs that money can buy. We have built our reputation on service and quality and reasonable prices. Ask . your neighbors about us. They will tell you. — ——-_paca of Los . and . Illinois, arrived Friday eve-. S. army at} latter part of! FIVE THOUSAND GET CHECKS FOR By LEONE BAXTER With every -industry pleading for . workers and jobs of all types going, would you think collécted their un;employment.-cheecks here in Califorjnia today? A hundred? Two hundired? Five? 5 Actually, nearly 5000 are unemployed and currently receiving the ijehecks. That, the Social Board maintains, is not many, conisidering the huge numbers employed. But in view of coming events which, already are casting their shadows before, passing” note. Reasons for current unemployment are varied: Firms are still in the process of switching from civilian production to war work. A few, already having completed their war contracts, are starting to switen back. Constantly improving designs, in planes, ships and weapons necessitates retooling, plant changes—and iconsequent-temporary unemployment lfor workers. Accidents, like recent ones in eastern munitions plants, bss work and lose time for employ{ it in a period of peak productYon ‘Land saturation employment like the present there still can exist an ap-' preciable number of jobless, the im\Dlications of post war numployment \loom large and grim indeed. Five thousand men and women out of work comprise but a small. frac. tion of the two million persons. employed in California today. But mul. pied tomorrow by hundreds thousands of returning servicem2n and war plant workers suddenly dis‘figures will ‘be appreciable indeed, both in, human and financial aspects. ! Finding jobs now for the future} . jobless—hbuilding local ‘‘workpiles’’ of public and private employment— is a task of unparelleled proportions. The only task to match it would be that of caring otherwise for the hordes of workers suddenly and isimultaneously, applying for unemployment aid. However the coming crisis is met, it will be costly. To retain as much «possible, to keep the assembly lines moving—turning out washing mas chines hold gadgets instead of shells—to make useful jobs where there were none before—are the problems of every community. Every state, every city, every town, however small ,will need to work out some kind of local ‘“‘workpile”’ if ‘t jis to take care of its own. The cost undeniably will be huge 'and the burden heavy. But neither will be so unbearable as that of broken pride and crippled initiative lof men forced to depend too long on ‘doles and handouts and other forms of unemployment relief. De Witt Hospital Is Installing Beds AUBU-RIN, Oct. 2'5.—Construction has started on another warehouse ‘and work will start soon on the engineers office and shops at the De Witt general army hospital. Plans have ajlso {been apwroved for location of the hospital gasoline service station between the fire house and animal house on the southern part of the, grounds. Eight hundred and fifty beds have arrived for the hospital-and mattresses and other equipment will arrive in carload lots during the next few weeks. Lt. Jack Parrish is oné~of the new commissioned officers to arrive at the De Witt hospital. Lt. Parrish will be in charge of the post exchange, which has already been opened on a small scale. Lt. Joseph H. Cowman, who arrived two weeks ago, has been named transportation officer. Lt. H. O. Silver is on 30 days temporary duty, the De Witt hospital assigned to the finance department. —-Aburn Journal. California fruit growers accounted for $345,594,000° of the state’s $1,150,000,000 agricultural income in 1942. YOUR EYES TELL how you 2 e e feel inside Look in your mirror. See if temporary constipation is telling on your face, in your eyes. Then try Garfield Tea. It’s the mild, pleasant way to relieve intestinal sluggishness—without drastic drugs. Feel better, look better, work better. (AS A PRECAUTION, USE AS DIRECTED? SF WRITE FOR LIBERAL TRIAL PACKET Enclose 10c, to cover handling. for generous Trial Packet, sufficient for 8 cups. GARFIELD TEA CO., 41st at 3rd Ave. , NY. -GARFIELD<TEA Thee ‘Mild Herb Pacawve Dept. 2F UNEMPLOYMENT ‘truth will keep them free in spirit ‘until the day when the united effort Security ,
This action followed the release of the figure is due more thap . transmitted the message of } 1U S.NEWSMEN SALUTE PRESS OF UNDERGROUND WASHINGTON, Oct. 25.—A radio Message has been sent by the American Society of Newsparer Editors to begging for want of men and women ,the underground editors of Europe to occupy them—how: many people cangratulating them for “upholding the noblest traditions of the free . Dress as an essential instrument of free men,” and declaring that <‘the of the United Nations will restore the liberties of all men, everywhere.” a survey of underground publicaitions in the Axis-held countries hy ‘the Office of War Information which dé Galliom, and Dr. ant, Mrs. a suit of brown wool anda ‘Dr. E. William Rector ‘Weds Miss Evelyn Gallion SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 24— The chapel in the Grace Cathedral was decorated with white chrysanthemums and lighted by white candles for the vow exchange of Mies Evelyn E. William Reztor on October 15. Canon Allen Pendergraft officiated -at the 4:30 ceremony. : The bride, daughter of Mrs. Fred B. Gallion and the late Mr. Gallion of Los Gatos, wore a suit of ‘beige wool and carried a bouquet of white orchids. Her sister.-and only attendRobert Jennings, Jr., chose shower of brown and white orchids formed her bouquet. Joseph P. Gallion gave. his sister's hand in marriage and. E. Rector, father of the bridegroom, acted as best man. Dr. Rector’s motho'clock Ste for the or and father come from Nevada “The m drafted b aioe : essase, dratted by the ex-. Arter a honeymoon in Carmel the ecutive committee of the. society,’ ‘reads as follows: “To our colleagues, the. editors of the underground press of the occupied nations, and fo all their co-; workers who aid them in the task' paper Editors sends you its . ings and its respectful admiration. We greet you as professional col-, leagues; we admire you as men who. do, in constant and dealy. peril, what: at the daily risk of your lives are up. \holding the noblest traditions of the free press as an essential instrument} truth to peoples whose bodies are in . ‘bondage; ‘but whose spirits are sti free; and the truth will keep them free in spirit until the day when the . united effort of the United Nations will restore the liberties to all men, everywhere.”’ instead of tanks and house-} The OWI survey found one paper ters have seen each other in many jocateq at the end of hostilities—the . in France with a circulation of 40,000, despite the fact that to assist in any manner in preparing or disitributing such a paper there is an! offense for which life is forfeit. The Voice of America and British Boardcasting company are the principle news sources. France is believed to: have 25 newspapers operating in defiance of the Nazis. Belgiuf has one paper with an es-: timated 4,000 circulation, several smaller ones. ._.In Poland about 100 dinpaeeiine. of the new, war-spawned industry as,Papers have a total circulation of: ae ae heer more than 300,000: To suppress one. publication in 1941, the Germans; killed 83 persons. The paper still is . being published. ‘Czechoslovakian underground pa‘pers devote most of their space to advice on sabotage, slowdown and other resistance methods. Greece has 43 publications falling into the category of underground. ‘Norweigians have their choice of about 30—or did have until the recent uprising. Five large and several small papers make up the underground press of Denmark, The Dutch have saturated their areas with an uncontrolled press, despite warned consequences, and although they are numerous, °Jugoslavian newspapers with circulations between 10,000 and 20,000 are not uncommon. . Navy Seabee battalions in the Solomon Islands are building wharves and bridges out of solid mahogany, with which the islands abound. of telling the truth in spite of the Evangeline Chapter enemy, the American Society of News} ‘Enjoys Good Prosram ‘Miss Shaw, couple will make their home in San Francisco where the bridegroom is a member of the University of California staff.—San Francisco Chronicle., A covered dish supper and gram was given by Evangeline Chap-\ porym of Grass Valley will, hold its ‘ter O. BE. S. Saturda evening honoring Masons, their wives and_ sowe do in safety and honor—men who jorners and their husbands. Mrs. May i Wednesday evening. The topic of dis‘Shaw had charge of the program in theme with sons, and some} which was Southern darkies and their of free men. Each day you bring the (Selections ‘by-a-group-ofF gh school. 5, the Grass Valley. High School wit”) students accompanied by Franc Lus11 . chen, musician. Among those taking: to the food, military and rehabilitapart were Mr. and Mrs. Charles Eliliott, Mrs. Mare ‘Edmonds, Irving ‘Long, Mr. and Mrs. Young, the latter couple in costume created much amusement. Mrs. Bernice Penrose was chairman and Mrs. John O’Neill, co-chairman of the! dinner. Woman With Broken Hip Waits Hour For Aid Mrs. S. S. Trevethick, 78 years of age of Nevada City, lies in a serious !eondition at the Community Hospital . in Grass Valley with a fracture of{a Colusa surgeon operated Thur:the right hip, which occurred early jin the morning. Mrs. Trevethick lay un-aided on the floor of her home’™ or more. The accident took place when the elderly woman arose to secure a drink. In falling and breaking her hir. she was rendered helpless. Her cries failed to arouse Mr. who is somewhat hard of hearing. An hour later a paper carrier hearing Mrs. Trevethick aroused a neighbor. The boy was boosted through a window of the house and opened the front door to the neighbor and both found the woman, consideraly weakened and ‘in pain. She was attended by Dr. B. Hummelt and removed to the hos. pital. Seven Nevada County Boys Join Services Of 18 Nevada County young men sent to Sacramento for physical exagmination as to their fitness for army duty, the following were accepted: Curtis D. Maynard, Paul C. Bernardis, John Manzinali, Stanley J. Deal, Lloyd J. Haddy, Allan T. Wilson and Ernest Kistle. nena Merritt — , acter. pro-, x i Howard Sturtevant, Mr. Geist, ; “Ernest . Trevethick . Christian Bideaver _ Societies To Convene Christian Endeavor will hold a convention in, Wheatland, for Butte district Christian Endeavor Union, October 20-31. The Wheatland’ convention will represent Butte District Union, which contains Yuba, Sutter, Butte, Colusa and Nevada counties. The Christian Endeavor Movement is the parent of the Epworth Leas.:2 the . Baptist Young People’s Union, and the Luther and Walther Leagues which before 1890 were Christian Endeavor. : The theme of the’ convention will be “Building With Christ, Chrisiian lives, Christian homes, Christian states, and a Christian world. will be discussed by the speakers at the convention: TRANSFERRED TO WASHINGTON Francis Taylor, son of Mrs. Elva Tavlor of Grass Valley. has departed from San Francieco where he was 'a field supervisor for the American Red Cross, for Washington, D. C. ‘where he will be assigned special duties in the same organization. His wife and family will remain in San Francisco, as it is ‘believed his new assignment is of a temporary charPOST WAR STUDY The Community Post War Study the James 8S. auditorium next . October meeting ‘in ‘Hennessy School . cussion will be the United Nations in the Reconstriction Period. Elmer Stevens. history instructor ilead the discussion with reference ‘tion problems involved. eo) OLD ENGLISH SONGS The Calendar Club of the Grass . Valley Methodist Church. this eve ining will sponsor an suka await ‘in Wesley Hall consisting of a conieert of old-time English songs and ‘music, and a musical skit. wee A group of singers under the dirjection of Simon Crase has been re. hearsing this program for several ba i weeks. ae . é \ OPERATION . Dr. Carl P. Jones of Grass Valle: ‘day on Mrs. Burr T. Mitchell at th> ‘Jones Memorial Hospital. Mrs. Mi'chell has been a patient at the ho: pital for several months, followin= injuries received in an automobil+ accident one mile west of Grass Valley. BORN . BEAL—In Grass Valley, Nevad2 County, October 19, 1943, to Pvr. and Mrs. Earl een of Camptonville, a son. me . DIVORCE TOWLE—In Nevada City, Nevada County, October 22, 1943, Mirno Towle against Carroll W. Towle, suit ‘ filed; ground, cruelty. The first regular mail service in (California was established in 1847 consisting of two mounted soldiers who twice weekly started from Se” Francisco and San Diego respectively meeting and exchanging mail bags at a point half way between. Although California is not’ r. garded as a coal mining state, abo 600 tons of coal daily were mined between 1856 and 1906 at Corral Hi ‘low southwest of Tracy. NEWS FROM THE FOOD FRONT by Elue, the Borden Cow needs us! M nearest © sorDEN co, »The hand that feeds us, and girls—enroll nom in the U.S Crop Corps. Sign up now at your Farm Labor Office. Help save California Crops for Victory! BORDEN’S CAPITAL JAIRY COMPANY men and women if you.can! en, women, boys years’ close assoc America’s food, f \ ; here are 26 million cows to be milked every day in America! Every drop of that milk is needed for Victory. The barns, shake down the hay, are real soldiers in this total war! Help them THE BORDEN COMPANY, through 80 sponsibility the farmer bears in this war. Borden’s urges every man, woman and child to back the farmers up. who milk cows, clean iation with producers of ully appreciates the re-