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Page: of 4

Nevada City Nugget —Monday, October 26, 1942. eile NOCD Sena Page Three
a iia rey 2 LA oS ec Pith. #0 7 : = cA f ° in * z . Poe tere
ia cman wna we [HE POCKETBOOK] ee —TIMELY— Mrs. Ida Guenther received. word . As . ] f] La: f é
her grandson, Charles, was severely o tone he owers t srt Per. ume give, y ;
injured while playing football reSo long I'd let the Kaiser live— ) -.
Specials
~~ \VIMMS
Vitamins and Minerals. 50c
size FREE when you buy the
large $1.75 size.
$2.25 value for only $1.69
CAMPANA BALM
One 50c bottle reguiar’and one
50c bottle special: , BOTH 49c
Jeris Hair Tonic and
Shampoo
tonic—35c Shampoo.
BOTH FOR 5ic
50c
Soap Clearance
Values to 25c—-NOW 5c CAKE
R. FE. HARRIS
THE REXALL DRUG STORE
Phone 100
sae Dah
We Can
HELP YOU Make Your
rN : a
Car Iast for the duration.
Factory Specified Engine TuneUp and Steering and Front End
Alignment Equipment
SERVICE
GARAGE
W. S. WILLIAMSON, Prop.
Dor. Pine and Spring. Phone 106
SAFE AND LOCKSMITH
Keys Made While You Wait
Bicycles, Steel Tapes, Vacuum
Cleaners, Washing Machines, Electric frens, Stoves, Etc. -Repaired.
SAWS, AXES, KNIVES,
SCISSORS, ETC., SHARPENED
Gunsmith, Light Welding
RAY’S FIXIT SHOP
109 West Main St., Phone 602
GRASS VALLEY
For VENETIAN BLINDS
and LATEST PATTERNS
IN WALL PAPER
John W. Darke
FINE
WATCH REPAIRING
Radio Service & Repairing
Work Called for and Delivered
Clarence R. Gray
11520 Ceyete Street Phone 152
New Deal
Under Management of
Pauline and Johnuie
108 W. Main Street, Grass Valley
BEER WINES, LIQUORS
Delicious Mixed Drinks to Please
Every Taste ‘ ;
TO NUGGET SUBSCRIBERS
Will you please notify the
Nugget Office any time you do
not receive your copy of the
Nevada Ciiy Nugget.
PHONE 36
FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE
DRIVE IN
FOOD PALACE
Groceries, Fruit and
Vegetables
Beer and Wine
COR. YORK AND COMMERCIAL
STREETS
NEVADA CITY, PHONE 898
‘. dian, described as follows:
cently at Yreka. He had to have
nurses care for a time. He is in the
hospital. He was kicked in the face
and received a broken nose besides
other injuries. The accident occurred
while his team was playing Dunsmuir.
IS NEEDED
even when
budget is
limited
Keysto ne
Market .
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.
Ss
LEGAL NOTICES
United States Department of the
Interior, General Land Office District
Land Office at Sacramento, Californio. Mineral Application No. 034458.
September 22, 1942. Notice is hereby given that ELWELL GOBRING.
one of the heirs and for the heirs of
Andrew Goering, deceased; and who
is also known as Elwell D. Goering.
also known as Elwell Dean Goering,
whose postoffice address is R. F. D.,
‘Nevada City, California, has made application for patent for two placer
mining claims situate in the Selby
Flat Mining District, Nevada County, California, in the NW¥\% of Section 1, Township 16 North, Range 8
East, Mount Diablo Base and Meri(1) East
Extension Loyal Gravel Placer Mining Claim, consisting of Lot 3 of the
INW44 Of Sec. 1,.7T,°16 NOR: 8 By,
F{. D. B. & M., and the SE% of the
INW 14 .of Seo. 1, T. 16. N.,: Ro 8 Bi,
M. D. B. & M., comprising the E 1/4
of the NW% of said Section 1. (2)
Loyal Placer Mining Claim, consisting of the SW¥% of the NW of Sec.
ew TOON a. 8 M.D: By & My,
That the lands adjoining on: the
North, South, East and West are patented. There are no. conflicting
claims.’ That the location notice for
the East Extension Loyal Gravel
Placer Mining Claim is recorded in
Book 24 of Mining Claims at page
431, Records of Nevada County, California; that the location notice for
the Loyal Placer Mining Claim is
recorded in -Book 25 of Mining
Claims, page 298, Records of Nevada
County, California; and that the
amended location notice for = the
Loyal Placer Mining Claim is recorded in Book 33 of Mining Claims, page
264, Records of Nevada Coenty,
California. A vein or lode of quartz,
in the N% NEY NW, (N% of lot
8) said Sec. 1, T. 16 N.; R. 8 BE. M.
D. B. & M., which is believed to be
\ gold bearing; is hereby expressly excluded from this application. Ellis
Purlee, Register.
Date of First Publication:
28, 1942.
Date of Last Publication:
ber 30, 1942.
Sept.
Novema i ae ie i te i oe i ae ae Sa kk .
%
“KEEP ’EM
FLYING”
© DEFENSE
©STAMPS
—@-——_
Chamber of Commerce +
OFFICE IN CITY HALL
PHONE 575
of KNOWLEDGE -s.
THE HIGHEST AND
LOWEST POINTS IN THE
U.S. ARE IN THE SAME 4
STATE, ONLY 60 MILES ~“
APART . (AAT. WHITNEY IN
CALIFORNIA, /4.,4-96 FEET HIGH
RAILROADS OR. ENOUGH TO AND DEATH VALLEY, 300 FEET
SERVICE A CITY OF /00, COCO BELOW SEA LEVEL )
PEOPLE =e : 2
ONE LARGE U.S. ORDNANCE!
PLANT HAS 120 MILES OF
ue BUILD
60,000 MILITARY
AIRPLANES IN I1942.—MORE THAN THE
PREVIOUS TOTAL
INDUSTRY HAS
PRODUCER SINCE
OXFORD,
yf. << ENGLAND
JUST WONDERIN’
I wonder when you see a bird
With gaping beak and drooping feather,
If you ascribe his sorry plight
With truth and justice to the weather.
I wonder at the vast number of human ills which may
be directly ascribed to the rise and fall of the thermometer.
I'm not referring to colds, rheumatism, creaking joints, hay
fever and prickly heat, though the changing temperatures produce a large yearly crop of these disorders; but just now, .
wish to consider other evils which might be entirely non-existent if there were no such thing as the weather.
Our moods, our nerves and tempers, are certainly dependent upon the varying temperatures. Our personal appearance is altered and our dignity depleted by the same pernicious
powers.
Think what a sudden change of temperature does to our
jovial friend, the fat man. In the cool of the morning, he sallies forth to the daily grind at ease with himself and all the
world beside. He is meticulously groomed, fresh as a daisy.
There's a song in his heart, a smile on his lips and a flower in
his button hole. Then the thermometer begins to aviate and
by noon he’s a wreck. Red faced, with beads of perspiration
forming upon his expansive anatomony, and rolling about
willy-nilly, collar wilted, clothes moist, sticky and wrinkled,
in appearance he is neither pleasing nor magnetic. Moreover,
his emotions are flying loose ends; he snaps at the secretary.
shouts at the clerk, snarls at the salesman’s story and insults
customers. Poor man, he is not to blame. It’s the weather.
Cold weather may be equally demoralizing to good looks
and mental eguinamity. For a few years . lived in a region.
whose seasons my father once listed as “‘nine months winter
and three months late in the fal!."”. The minister who fr-quently came to call, was a tall, handsome and highly polished individual, in whose presence I. suffered an inferiority complex and became inarticulate. One bitter day in mid winter .
saw him alight from his sleigh and my eyes widened in amazement. Wearing many layers of extra clothing, a muffler about .
his neck and a fur cap upon his head, he truly resembled nothing human.
Finally when he stopped before the door, to remove
ponderous mittens, blow upon benumber fingers, wave his
arms about wildly and stomp his feet, disillusionment was
complete. Never again did I stand in awe of his agust presence
for . had a mental picture of him that put my fears to flight.
Yes, the weather plays with us humans as cats do with
mice and something should be done about it. The government
is advising us to prepare for cold weather by putting up storm
doors and weather stripping our homes. This is a good sug-'
gestion for no matter how handsome, cultured or dignified!
we may be, the thermometer lords it over us and indubitably
other than we really are.
Uncle Silas says: “There's that invincible man, Hitler,
every time General Winter climbs into the ring, he begins to
bounce up and down.”’-—A. Merriafn Conner.
HIS
THE BIRTH ‘< ee TYPE OF f
OF. AVIATION a Peo WEAR /
‘
; \. WAS FIRST £2
R INN'C MADE AND. £=
e322 —— worn at 4 =
{the growth of the
Live and live for a million years,
With nothing to drink but Balkan tears,
With nothing to quench his awful thirst
But the salted tears of a Scotchman’s curse.
I would let him live on a dinner each day,
Served from silver on a golden tray—
Served with things both dainty and sweet—
Ss
Served with everything but things to eat.
And I'd make him a hed of silken sheen,
With costly linens to lie
With covers of down and fillets of lace,
between.
And downy pillows piled in place.
ene ENE foe
nen to its comiorts
And while the waves the
H
And
AANG I would build him a
Scarce may he reach his
In every wound I'd pour
up to date.
Moaning and meaning and moaning wild.
A ravaged French girl’s bastard child.
Substitute Hitler and his stooges for the Kaiser
he would yield,
with rot of the battlefield,
SN ere Ss And bleed-and bones and brains of raen
Lee 4 34 ie Should cover him, smother hira—-and then
at / fe na Te ° . . ‘ tl pened . His pillows should cling with the rotten clay—
Df “> : . ‘ an *
tye
Ane tyhile God's stars Lajr vier! leaner
his 1 6 exes
DAG y od 30a s stars tne) §
white sands sweep,
le should never, never sleep.
And throuch all the days, through all the years,
There should bé an anthem in his ears,
Ringing and singing and never done
From the edce of light to the set of sun.
ey
sea, castle by the
-As lovely a castle as ever could be;
Then I'd show him a ship from cver the sea,
As fine a ship as ever could be,
Laden with water cold and sweet,
Laden with everything geod to eat;
Yet scarce does she touch the silvered sands,
eager hands,
Then a hot and hellish molten shell
Should change his heaven into hell. ;
And though he'd watch on the wave-swept shore,
Our Lusitania would rise no more!
In ‘‘No Man’s Land,” where the Irish fell,
. I'd start the Kaiser a private hell;
I'd jab him, stab him, give him gas;
ground glass;
I'd march him out where the brave boys died—
Out past the ads they crucified.
In the fearful gloom of his living tomb, \
There is one thing I'd do before I was through:
I'd make him sing in a stirring manner,
The wonderful words of ‘
“The Star Spangled Banner.”’
and the verse is
INTFRESTING AND
PROGRAMS ARRA
Educational as well as interesting
programs have been arranged for the
monthly meetings of the Elementary
Parent Teachers Association during
the present school year.
The Elementary PTA will meet the
last Friday in each month. From
November 8th to:14th will be American Education Week and an invitation has been extended to every parent to visit the school and ‘teachers
during that period.
The November meeting program
topic will be Citizenship and a debate
will be presented on citizenship by
the eighth grade students. The annual Father’s Night dinner will be
given at 6:30 p. m. The teachers and
members of the PTA will ‘present a
skit and: selections will be rendered
by the school band under the. direction of Director Miller and the
Choral Group, directed by Mrs. Carl
Libbey will sing several numbers.
The topic of the December meeting which will be held on December
18th, will be Homemaking. * There
will be a display of mother’s hobbies
and a Christmas program will be presented by the elementary
Christmas Carols will be sung and
tea and refreshments will be served.
The hostesses will be Mrs. Warnecke
and Mrs, Libbey.
The exceptional child will be -discussed at the January 29th meeting
with a speaker from the distriet PTA
office leading the’ discussion. A
Founders Day program will be presented under the direction of Mrs. Kilroy and Mrs. Penrose. Hostesses, Mrs.
Flindt and Miss Ramm will serve
birthday cake and tea.
In February the topic will be Juvenile Protection. There will be an
{election of a committee to nominate
new officers and tea and. refreshments will be served by Mrs. DeMattie and‘ Miss Hogan.
Recreation will, be the topic of the
\(March meeting. A report of the nominating committee will be given and
Boy and Girl
Scouts of America will be discussed.
‘Miss Ford and Mrs, Foley will be the
hostesses. :
The last meeting of the year will
NCED BY
grades. .
EDUCATIONAL
PTA
be in April with the installation of
new officers as the feature. A speaker will deliver an address on school
education. Mrs. Ryan and Mrs. Kilroy
will have charge of the serving-of refreshments.
SEN. W. P. RICH
ASKS VOTERS TO
RFAT HOT CARGO
SAIN FRANCTSCO, Oct. 26.—State
Senator W. P. Rich, of Marysville, today issued a. stirring appeal to California voters to outlaw “Hot Cargo”
and the Secondary Boycott for the
jduration of the war.
Senator Rich stated that this result could be attained only by vyoting ‘‘yes‘‘ on. Proposition No. 1 on
‘November 38rd.
Proposition No. 1 was placed on
the ballot by referendum. A ‘“‘yes”
vote is required to ratify the law enacted by the legislature at its last
session by a better than two-thirds
majority. In the senate the vote was
33 to 5, in the assembly 54 to 26.
“Proposition No. 1, the ‘Hot Car-—
go’ and Secondary Boycott law, is a
patriotic wartime measure which
will defend the right of every man to
honest employment by prohibiting
labor dictators from forcing workers
who have no quarrel with their employer to quit work because of. some
remote dispute about which those
«
workers know nothing,’ declared
Senator Rich.
Senator Rich . said the law had
been enacted after the legislature
had become firmly convinced by long
and: thorough study that it would not
interfere in any way with the practices or precepts of legitimate trade
unions. :
é
‘Mrs. ‘Ray. Murchie left Thursday as,
for a short vacation in Oakland with —
relatives ; tee
a“