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Collection: Newspapers > Nevada City Nugget

October 28, 1938 (8 pages)

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_ Nevada City Nugget 305 Broad Street. hone 56. A Legal Newspaper, as defined by s: oe Printed . and Published at Nevada City. Editor ee Publisher H. M. LEETE ss oe -Published Semi-W eekly, Monday and Friday at~ Nevada City, California, and entered as mail “Q, matter of the second class in the postoffice at tS) . Nevada City, under Act of Congress, March 3, *, "S79. SUBSCRIPTION RATES Gne year (In Advance) .....-...----------------California La Crackpotte . To the world at large, California has become the birthplace of so-called crackpot ideas. Proposition 25, the 30Thursday pension plan on the November 8th ballot, is in this class and has done much to imprecs the world that Californjans aren't all there. Significant: is the manner in which the nationa! magaz‘ines as well as the press of other states have watched and printed reports on the campaign against the so-called pension plan which would mean ruin for the state if not defeated. . Latest to announce an article would appear upon it was the staid, conservative Saturday Evening Post. The article appears under the title “California Votes on Utopia.”’ Other major national magazines have published articles “along the same line, Liberty using Upton Sinclair's article that California would become a state of stamp lickers. All this publicity in rational magazines is unusual and unusually poor advertising fora state that for years has been spending thousands of dollars to attract solid manufacturing concerns. It puts fear in the hearts of these employers of thousands that such a plan might some day become law in the state and rather than take a chance on any such crazy schemes _ they had better remain in the east and middlewest. It is significant that the Associated Press, non-partisan news gathering organization has followed this plan so closely, realizing its national import. Newspapers in all parts of the country have carried these stories. From Canada have come reports of how a similar plan was tried and failed. Stephens in Western Mining News [THE POCKETEOOK of KNOWLEDGE Abb TH BIG INCOMES PuT } TOSETHER— AN’ ITLs RUN ME LESSN 4 mon7ys P To get down to bedrock, there remains only one, thing that re 4 ‘California can do in anyway to counteract this harmful ad‘oe gi } vertising and prove that we actually are not a state of crackie sae pots and that is to vote “No” on 25 Thursday, ,November = ALL THE INCOMES over $5,000 TOGETHER, WOULD Pay THE COST OF GOVERNMENT FOR, LESS THAN FOUR MONTHS 8th.— Contributed. : The Last Call . On November 8th, if you exercise yourrights as Ameri.. can citizens, and we hope you will, you will go to the polls and vote your conscience on 25 statewide ballot measures as well as for a number of state and county officers. This newspaper; along with scores of organizations and vnlinds of other newspapers, has been particularly _interested in at least one proposition on the ballot you will mark November 8th. That proposition is No. 20, the sales tax repeal-single tax initiative. We have consistently urged that a “‘no’’ vote be cast on ere 000 reed MAKING, SERVICING ADTOMOBILES THEY WEAR A$ MA A# $0 AT A Tate / CH AGA. 20. We make this last call to you today to do just that. . WHEN FRIGHTENED, THE PUFFER THERE ARE : Proposition 20, the single tax, in one form or another} : wh PRS) mates eke wT AIR, EAM 4 has appeared on our state election ballots six times before this. . S “tg Seimei Ay Pougies Six times we have defeated it. The seventh will be lucky for . oe ebiares Aad snc tk Or! inaee . fees) -all of us. The proposal is simply this—The sales tax, and a few other taxes now in effect which raise in the neighborhood of $102,000,000 annually, would berepealed, A single tax: on land would be substituted. That in itself doesn’t sound like such a threat to your welfare but it is, for— Wherever the single tax, even in modified -form, eee; Oe a ae Se ae a Health Chats PREPARED BY THE RED CROSS VISITING NURSE ~ oer oetesfeateateatealeatesteateotesteateateatenteateates, % sotebebeetes ¢. and provide yourself with a supply of disposable handkerchiefs, It is wise to’summon your doctor, who will prescribe the necessary drugs to alleviate fever and make you more comfortable. His services are important to you, to guard against dangerhas}3 been attempted it has failed miserably. Land has been confisSTOP THAT COLD One Keep Heaton’ = _ es5 ° : pnenmonia, sinus troubles an otncated by the state for non-payment of the high taxes. This; ,). ee a at oe confiscation placed the burden upon the few who still managed to hold their land, Eventually, the system broke down because it did not: produce the revenue. People simply couldn't pay. ; In this breaking down process, these things resulted: Schools closed because there just wasn’t the money to keep them open, the ordinary functions of government were halt_ ed too for the same reason, relief for those unfortunates such as blind, orphans, uneniployed, and aged, ended. _ Looking at such a dismal picture from the safe side of this. measure-might seem too great an exaggeration. You might be inclined to believe that oft used term “‘it can't happen here.” But cold logic will tell you that it can happen here and that it will happen here unless you cast a “‘no” vote on , November. 8th. ~ This is our last call for your “no” vote. We believe you vo fa be voting for your future welfare.—Contributed. HUMMELT WILL ADDRESS P. T. ASSN. ne Nevada City Elementary P. will meet this afternoon at at the elementary school. A ogram has been planned, Dr. , Hummelt will .talk.on.‘Your d Health.” Mrs. DeWitt Neldiscuss some of the amendf 107. ‘mm street Nevada County Photo Center s _ Portraits, Comuiereiat Photography, PHONEa8 Howe Kodak Finishing, Old ‘Copies, ments which will be on the November ballot. Musical numbers will be rendered by pupils of Mrs. Marian Libby. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Meyers came up from Niles and spent several days at their home on Gold Flat. While here Mr. Meyers burned about the wooded section of his property. as a fire protection, or and vital resistance by means of a proper diet, sufficient keep’ away from: those unfortunate persons with colds, who have not perhaps followed these simple rules. similar maladies are unquestionably contagious diseases spread by direct contact from one person to another. They may and do occur at any season of the year, but are most prevalent in January and February, in April and May, and in September and. October. Every person suffers an average of two colds a year (there are a few exceptions.) During the height of the seasons for colds, probably everyone is exposed to the _ infection. Those who escape owe their immunity to their vital resistance and this is due largely to the foods they eat plus adequate rest. Those foods rich in vitamin A seem to aid in developing certain: protective powers against cold. To be sure diet alone cannot be guaranteed to stop a cold, but it helps to do so and the right foods certainly have a beneficial effect in reducing the duration and sometimes the severity of colds. These foods are milk, butter, cream, cod liver _ oil, eggs, fruits, and green and yellow vegetables. If you swish to avoid common colds keep your head cool and your feet warm, build up your bodily vig“Test, and ‘If in spite of all precautions, you _ Enlarging and Framing, it milk seu the juices of. citrus fruits, ne, down with a cold, go to bed, warm, take alkaline drinks, as mine yields approximately an ounce J ms Great care must be taken to protect young infants from colds as their powers of resistance are’slight. All children with colds should be isolated from well children, as broCANDIDATE FOR UTENA NT GOVERN OR DR. WALTER SCOTT FRANKLIN Attack On Radicalism Swells Franklin Support Probably never -before have two such wholly opposite figures so dominated a California political campaign, as Harry Bridges, the alien labor agitator, and Walter Scott Frankiin. Republican candidate for lieutenant governor. By dramatic comparison of the Communistic program of Bridges and the radical record of Ellis E. Patterson, the Bridges candidate for the state post, Dr. Franklin has focused the issue squarely between the cause of Americanism and his opponent’s esvousal of “the. anti-American and foreign ‘isms’ of Harry Bridges.”
Never having sought public office before, and admitting he is “not a politician”, the doctor’s. blunt, plainspoken convictions have attracted support that cut through party iines and finally won the backing of candidates who opposed him in the primary race. He condemned “obviously radica. ieadership in the CIO” and gained the respect of responsible iabor -eaders. He denounced the “ham and egg” and “single tax’ schemes, and was nailed by a vast and worried army of taxpayers. His terse denunciation of Patterson’s proposal to open the schools co Communistic meetings, too, hit a responsive chord. According to Franklin’s campaign headquarters, the battle cry of his followers: “The shadow of Harry Bridges must be removed from the State Capitol”—“apparently hag strucr che fancy of Democrats Republicans and Progressives alike. and wil’ :en: Franklin to preside over the Ca! ito nia Senate next session.” REPAIRS ON WASHING MACHINES sewing machines and varuum'! cleaners, all makes. Dependable and prompt service. Established 16 years. ARTHUR T. MILLER, Mil-ler’s Exchange, Hills Flat, Phone 686W. 10-28-1moe FOR SALE—House trailer, fully . equipped; new tires, 38 license, $85.00. 144 BE. Main St., Grass Valley. 1tp FOR EXPERT DRESSMAKING— Remodeling, Coat Relining, Hem-. stitching, Covered Buttons and Fur Work see-NEVA BOREHAM, Phone 404, 203 Mill Street, Grass . Valley. 10-14-1moec SEWING MACHINES, New and Used, Rents and Repairs ‘on all makes. Vacuum Cleaners. See\us first and _ FRIDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1938 ~ . “POLITICAL ADVERTISEMENT HALT THIS Plunge into SQUANDERMANIA! Proposition No. 13 on your November ballot is a brazen attempt ‘to let down the bars to wholesale public borrowings which would mean.. . Staggering Debt and New Tax Burdens This dangerous proposal would abolish the basic safeguard requiring a_ two-thirds vote for bond issues! « . It makes it easier to get into debt, but harder to get out! It would. permit the issuance of revenue bonds, IN ANY AMOUNT, by a bare majority of those actually going to the polls. In reality, it would mean that any district, city or county could be plunged into debt by a SMALL MINORITY, as only a fraction of the registered vote usually turns out for a bond election. You can’t afford it. Your neighbors can’t afford it. No city or district in California can afford it! VOTE “NO!” ON NO. 13 (Revenue Bond Act) It’s Unlucky for California ASSOCIATION .AGAINST GARRISON BOND ACT 530 West 6th St. Los Angeles STATE THE Sutter St. Francisco 111 San ae Re . FOR EXPERT \Mattress and Upholstering Work, Furniture Repairs, or. Recovering Chairs Call Grass Valley 945 ‘JIM AND GORDON BAUGH 225 East Main Street . Grass Valley COURT CAFE FOOD OF SUPERIOR QUALITY Real Home-Cooked Meals. We serve cocktails, tom collins. Lunch 36c up. Open Every Night till 2:00. . Saturday All Night _ Corner Pine and Commercial save. SINGER SEWING MACHINE AGENCY, 203 Mill Street, Phone 404, Grass Valley.... 10-14-1moe USED WOOD HEATERS for sale. These were traded in on New thers and sisters, and should be kept out of school. This is important not only for the welfare of the sufferer Quaker Oil Heaters From $2.80 up. DeBerry’s, 120 Main Street, Phone 41. Grass Valley. 10-7-1moe but as a protection for others. ° Many of the communicable diseases of childhood begin with symptoms of common colds, such as measles, chicken pox, scarlet fever and whooping cough. : The wisiting nurse service is a WASHING MACHINE SERVICE — We repair and rebuild any make of washing machine. Exclusive authorized Maytag service and parts. DeBerry’s, 120 Main: Street, Phone 41. Grass Valley. 10-71moe health service thht gives mursing care in people’s homes at fees the average can afford and available to others at part pay or free basis. The service is available by calling the city halls in either Grass Valley or Nevada City, Grass Valley 31, or Phone 521 REAL ESTATE WALTER H. DANIELS © LICENSED BROKER — P. O. BOX 501 Nevada City Nevada City 27-W. STAMP MILL BURNS The five stamp mill on the Hot Water mine property of W. L. Baker near Graniteville burned to the ground. Tuesday with an estimated property loss of $5,000. Origin of the fire could not be determined. There THE SUN PRODUCE AND RECEIVING . HOSPITAL CLINIC 118 Bush Street GRASS VALLEY DANIEL L. HIRSCH, M. D. Direetor Social Disease Clinic: ' Monday and Friday, 8:30-10 A. M. Maternity Clinic: Wednesday and Saturday 8:30-10 A. M. Pre-natal Care, Deliver y, Postpartum Care, Care of the Newborn for the first 6 Months. + Most Modern Electrical Equipment including Color Therapy GROCERY CO Fresh Fruits and Vegetables FREE DELIVERY 815 Broad Street Phone 88 were no fire fighting facilities available and nothing could be done to save the mill. W. L. Baker and J. i Jackson have an option on the property and employ three men. The ore from the of gold per ton on a vein that runs ENJOY A REAL HOME COOKED MEAL!We specialise in Steaks and Ham. burgers. Regular Dinner 40c gf SERVIC Service eed LUNCH ° "wat, Grase. Valley. from one to three feet in width.