Search Nevada County Historical Archive
Enter a name, company, place or keywords to search across this item. Then click "Search" (or hit Enter).
To search for an exact phrase, use "double quotes", but only after trying without quotes. To exclude results with a specific word, add dash before the word. Example: -Word.

Collection: Newspapers > Nevada City Nugget

September 16, 1946 (6 pages)

Go to the Archive Home
Go to Thumbnail View of this Item
Go to Single Page View of this Item
Download the Page Image
Copy the Page Text to the Clipboard
Don't highlight the search terms on the Image
Show the Page Image
Show the Image Page Text
Share this Page - Copy to the Clipboard
Reset View and Center Image
Zoom Out
Zoom In
Rotate Left
Rotate Right
Toggle Full Page View
Flip Image Horizontally
More Information About this Image
Get a Citation for Page or Image - Copy to the Clipboard
Go to the Next Page (or Right Arrow key)
Page: of 6  
Loading...
The Nugget is delivered to your home twice a week for only 30 cents per month ~ “God se eee liberty only to those who love it, and are = tg guard and defend it.’”’-—Daniel Webster ; ‘This paper gives you complete A : coverage of all local happenings. . If you want to read about your . friends, your neighbors, and your town; read The Nugget. \ er aeaNeRee COVERS RICHEST GOLD AREA IN CALIFORNIA . a! = — ——————— —_ ——— >» Vol. 20, No. 73 Se Tae The County See Seat Paper _NEVADA CITY. CALIFORNIA The Gold Center MONDAY, _SEPTEMBER 16, 1946 THINKING OUT LOUD By H. M. L. Jr. \ s Secretary of State James Byrnes F in Stutgart, Germany, tells Russia just what our policy is in Europe, = iAsia and the rest of the world. Sec: ’ retary of Commerce Henry Wallace j 4, in Madison Square Garden, New York, tells Russia that we are going to learn to live with Russia and that the imperialism of Great Britain is the growing peril of the world rather than Russian expansion. — YELLOWJACKET GRIDDERS © Wallace announced that his proRussian speach had the blessing of President Harry Truman, and it is fair to assume that Byrnes also had the. president’s blessing . since the State Department is usually the first woncern of any president. Where does that leave President Truman? It leaves him astraddle a_ six rail fence, if you ask us, and puts the Secretary of State out on a very high fimb. In our opinion the president ais rapidly diminishing in stature. Nofpody in his right mind would blow hot and cold in a time like this, unMELIO SOLARO ess he: failed utterly to comprehend. that the two speaches were diamcet. Hi { / rically opposed as regards the forKil LED WHILE eign policy of the United States. And what business has senry RIDING HORSE ‘Wallace of the Commerce DepartFrank Tilton Photo Pictured is the Nevada City High School Feothall Sound i in uniform on the high one field. Players are listed from left to right, first row is sitting on turf. First Row: Moody, Smithson, adie Penrose, Anderson, Abbott, Scribner, R. Williams, W. Kelly, N. Ellis, NPello, E. Haney. Second row: Tobiassen; Brady, Topliff, Larson, Hoskins, Launius, B. Kelly, Engstrom, Zunio, Bertino, R. Ellis. Third Row: Rice, Pello, Underwood, Hawkins, Judd,, Williams, Wood, Eden, Durbin, Cozzalio, Bjornstal. Fourth Row: Roche, Stroh, Thomas, Coley, Anderson; Ronningen, Marsh, Bates, Morrison, Berger, Nelson, Moore. SOPHOMORES IN CENTENARY OF . CLEAN SWEEP WIN DONNER PARTY HISCHOOL BRAWL OBSERVED SEP. 21 COMMISSION OKAYS — INDIAN FLAT ROAD © ment putting in his oar in the matMelio Solaro, 36, brother of Chief Sophomores headed by Class PresTRUCKEE, Sept. 16—One hunCOMPLET 9 tens of state as effecting our policy. Of Police Max Solaro, was killed last. ident Robert Topliff, made a clean. dred years. ago the great westward ION IN AT toward Russia. Of :couree Wallace . evening, apparently from injuries. sweep of the annual Freshman;Sop-. migration from the east to Califorwot a big hand in Madison Square caused when he slipped and fell. homore braw! at Nevada City high} nia was at its peak. Among the legi Garden. There are surely enough while attempting to: mount a horse} school. Friday -afternoon, in .sporis. ions of-seekers of-the good life CaliVirtwal assurance that the Nevada redhot pinks in a city of 7,000,000 . . and it stepped on him at 7:30 o'clock . events which occurred between 2 and. fornia offreed was a small band to Grass Valley Ready To City-Indian, Flat road ‘will be com— to fill the Garden. He could come out . last evening. 8 p. m. Friday. be_knewn as the Donner party. After Annex Southeast Section pleted in 1947 was received Thursto Los Angeles and speak in HollySolaro was out with a party of The second year class won the foot-. numerous delays they arrived at the : 2 ; day afternoon by the Nevada County wood Bowl and get even a bigger horseback riders including . James/‘ball game 10-2. They won the gaiig . foot of the eastern slope of the SiThe Grass Valley City oun! has delegation in its hearing before the crowd and bigger hand. One pink at,. 2nd Albert Peard, Mr. and Mrs. Her-. fight hands down. The gang fight. erras at Truckee Lake—now called oo the i pecan weenie of ae State Highway Commission in Sacrae tracts other pinks. Avert Granholm and Daniel Crawford. eonsists of a struggle between the. Donner Imke— where they were. ? SUN commisel” ne pes Sica mento, Thursday afternoon at 2 Bp. He dismounted from his horse and. tiwo classes for ed the circulation of petitions in the possession of three trapped by the early heavy snows. ; m. The diametrically opposed views . in_attempting.to--mount again the stuffed canvas bags a foot in dia-. Their epic tragedy has made thet (area known as Southeast —— Valley eS La io of Wallace and Brynes will of course . #orse swerved and threw him to the. imeter and three feet long. Both sid-. party a symbol of all the pioneers Ss in: the city’s corporate Rgida a) popsnas chairman of scause Stalin to get another photo. found and according to one story,. es try to pull the bags to their end who came west prior to the gold limits. oe aces F. — taken showing him a big Mona. stepped on his chest. Another story . of the football. field. rush. The section which may be annex-. Coy, State Highway engineer told isa grin. ‘When are you going to; Was that a truck, driven by Bill] A tug of war was staged in a mud This week end, September 21-22,}¢4: depending upon the will of votee pa gees headed by eearlagi City stop killing people,” asked Lady As-. Chappell passing. at the *moment,. puddle and the sophomores won this. Truckee Post No. 439, American} @Ts, One of a thickly pope eet enam . 4 H. S. ore. tor. ‘“Wihen it is no longer necessary’’. drove over him, when Solaro, at-j. icontest too. Even in the softball. ‘Legion, is sponsoring the Donner hillside traversed by Shinn leading _. — : an a replied Stalin. tempting to mount the horse fell de-. game between the Freshmen and Sop. Centennial. Featuring a golf toursouth from Rare Street, including baby ; i Cores ered mon, allocating _ neath the rear wheels of the truck. homore girls, the freshmen had the. nament at Tahoe City. turkey shoots Kate Hays, Pine Street and others. funds for the next biennial budget. Hitlerian diplomacy was never Dr. Walker W. Reed, who was at! short end of it, losing 2 to 6. in Truckee and a pioneer dance and: °2 Lucas and Wiley Lanes. rougher than that of Molotov who is the Miners Hospital when an ambuGames of the brawl were under the. whiskerino contest Saturday night, : ithe voice of Stalin. Hitler ambitiou lance brought Solaro there, and who] supervision of high school coach, the observance will be climaxed by a Miss Pendola Of never valuted higher than that of . Pronounced the man dead, states that) George Abbott. memorial service at Donner MonuCamptonville Succumbs Stalin. Communism, with the Rushe does not believe a truck ran over ment on Sunday morning. : ; Ss : tak = ‘Funeral services under the direca sians is a religion, and they are out him. He states his left chest was } The principal speaker at the ser 6 convert ‘the world, just as the encient . Crushed. : : 4 The Nevada County delegation consisted of Foreman, H. F. Sofge, Secretary, Chamber of Commerce, Ray Kronemeyer, secretary-manager of the Grass Valley Chamber of Commerce, Tom Coan, Earl] Field and vice will be Carroll D. Hall curator. tion of Myers Mortuary Chapel o2f ebrews were, with sword and fire. Their absorption of border states along the Balkans without much bloodshed from their point of view is simply good luck, It saves men and Autopsy will be held to ascertain the cause of death. The remains are in charge of Holmes Funeral Home. Solaro, a truck driver employed QUARTZ PARLORS of Sutter’s Fort museum and an outstanding authority on California. Rt. Rev. Noel Porter, Episcopal Bishop of Sacramento, will offer invocation and benediction. Several descendants Grass Valley were held-in the Camptonville Catholic Church Saturday for Miss Laura Frances Pendola who died at the Pendola Ranch near Camptonville Thursday morning. William L. Davis, Indian Flat residents. Fred Charles Garrison of the Nevada City-Grass Valley Union, and Harley M. Leete, Jr., of the Nevada City Nugget. munitions for the greater struggle. DY the city, leaves his mother, Mrs. GREET OFFICERS which the Russiang envision. Terisa Solaro, his wife Mary, and se. : : . two children, aged’12, and Melio Grand officers of the Native Sons of the Golden West who. will be che of the Donner Party members ‘will Rev. Virgil Gabrielli of Nevada The delegation was accompanied be on hand for the service. (City had charge of the service. The. by Clark Galloway of the highway body was interred in the family cem-. committee of the State Chamber of Our Uncle Samuel will wait probJr., 10. VEW MEETING TONIGHT, PLAN STAG DINNER Members of Banner Mountain Post] nia. This week they have visited No. 2655, Veterans of Foreign Wars . Santa Rosa, Fort Bragg, Ukiah, Fernwill gather tonight for their regu-. dale, Weaverville, Red Bluff and lar meeting opening their fall sea-. Oroville. son at the [OOF hiall. On the agenda for the evening. ‘be featured by a pasty supper which besides obligation of new candjdates. will be served to the lange number will: be the plans for a stag dinner,. of visitors and parlor members that Sept. 27 and further plans on a joint! are expected here. The dinner is unwith Hague-Thomas-Hegarty. der the direction of Marshal Wilably as he has always waited, for the adversary to strike the first blow. We “remember Pearl Harbor” and we “remember the Maine’, further beck we “rememiber the Alamo” and before that we “remember the impression of. American seamen in the (British navy’’, and even before that in Revolutionary times we remember the American suffered a kot of imdignities before they got their dander up and began fighting.We are tired of remembering jUncle Samuel’s tardy entrance into any of his wars. We would like to give someone of our adversaries something to remember and do it We regard Truman as one of those honored guests of Hydraulic Parlor No. 56, Nevada City at a joint meetJing of Hydraulic Parlor and Quartz Parlor No. 58, Grass Valley on Sept. 18, will end a tour of the state which started on Admission Day in San Francisco and ends in, Nevada City. cat Headed by Grand Seeniient R. G.
(Power the grand officers are making a tour of all northern CaliforThe social: event Wednesday will Marjorie Paynter Weds Capt. C. A. Hoover Jr. ‘Capt. Charles A. Hoover, Jr., and (Marjorie Paynter were quietly married in the Chapel of Sacred Memories, First Methodist Church, Reno last Thureday by Rev. D. S. Fleming, Garfield Robson, father of the bride and Myrtle St. Hilaire attended them. Mrs. Hoover wore a charming suit of turqouise blue with black accessories and carried a testament topped with an orchid tied with white streamers. The couple while on their honeymoon will visit with Capt. Hoover’s father in Upper Darby, Penn. before returning home. Capt. Hoover served with the Sigetery. Commerce and Steven Paxton, Sac(Miss Pendola was born in_ the . Camptonville, Yuba County, district 55 years ago. She was a_ sister of James and Joseph Pendola. Roval Arch Masons of S. F. e Visit G. V. Keystone Association members of the Royal Arch Masons of San: Francisco were guests of Grass Valley (Chapter R. A. M. at the Masonic Temple Saturday night. The visitors conferred the Royal Arch degree upon a class of candidates, some of them coming from Colfax and some from Downieville. High Priest Gus Dimmen of Nevada City officiated. Rridal Shower ramento district manager of thestate chamber. Paxton introduced members of the group to the commission. H. S. Foreman in a brief addrese to the commission, called attention to the hazardous condition of the 3 1-2 mile stretch of road bet'ween this city and Indian Flat. He related how the CaldIda Lumber Company had es-— timated that $40,000 worth of trueke-— were wrecked on that road this year. That company was also reported tobe exporting lumber to Nevada, rath~ er than selling it in this state part— ly because of the road hazard. Recent figures, Foreman said, showed that 187 loads of lumberwere going through the Nevada City— Grass Valley area daily. Foreman, Post No. 130. American Legion, of. liam H. James. nal Corps in the Philippines for two For Mrs. Robt. George mnfortunate transients, from a historical standpoint, who strutted his stuff for a short time on the world stage. History, we doubt not, will Grass Valley. A full turnout of members and officers is urged for the affair, so that Funeral Pending For years, and expects to be stationed at a post on the Pecafic Coast. A bridal shower in honor of Mrs. Robert George was given recently by Mrs. Beatrice George and Miss concluded by introducing Ray Kronemeyer, who briefly substantiated Foreman’s argument. the matters of importance may be Allen K. Chase Marjorie George at their home 151 William L. Davis of Indian Fiat, recall him as a Roosevelt mannikin dressed for a minor role, who euddenly finds himself thrust into the world’s greatest rale, and is only able to remember his haberdashery lines. The president never so much diminished his own stature as by giving the okay to Byrnes speach on foreign policy,'and then turning around and okaying the foreign policy discussed. Funeral arrangements are pending in Hooper and Weaver Mortuary are dreadfully tired of dancing to a Russian fiddle. As a-matter of cold fact the Rusprobably have beaten except for the aid sent them at tremendous cost by the States. That they survived the Hitler juggernaut is due to no virtue of sians. would been United for Allen K. Chase who died here after purchasing a residence on Alta Hill ‘two weeks ago. Chase was born in Wisconsin 67 years ago but his father and mother were early day residents of Mairysville and he came te this city to make his home partly because of Argonaut ties. His father was employed by the late Captain John “A. Stanley Foreman Home From Pacific Service Stanley Foreman, son of Mr. and Mrs. H. S. Foreman after two years service in the army in the Pacific is home. Foreman” was discharged from ‘Camp Beale arriving direct ~from Japan where he has been serving with the occupation force of the Japanese mainland with the ist CavalConaway Avenue, Grass Valley. Games were the pastime of even-. ing followed by delicious refreshments served from beautifully. decorated bridal table Ilaid with an Irish linen cloth and adorned with white tapers arranged on either side of a lovely wedding cake. A wishing-well decorated in pink and green held a charming array of gifts. The bride, Mrs. Robert George is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. . pleted. emphasized the danger, to school children who travel the road twice a day by bus. He stated that his own children would be sent to boarding: school until ‘the new road was com In response to a question from Chairman Purcell, State Highway Engineer McCoy. said that. it. a be impossible to lay down ae ous surface on the new straightaway speach of Henry Wallace, Secretary. of their own, but to the assistance road this fall because of the immin— Sutter. ry. GH ENE TI of Commerce. Wallace sought to placate Russia by attacking Great Britain as imperialistic at the very moment that country is trying to give India its independence, Byrnes woiced belated though it was the sentiment of millions of Americans who rendered them by their then allies, Great Britain and the United States.; RED CROSS MEBRTING TONIGHT) ¢ Upon them Russia has now turned, determined apparently Nevada City Chapter of the Amon. erican Red Cross will hold an adwith the communist revolution, an-. journed meeting tonight at the city athema to every American save Hen-. hall, for the purpose of selecting a ry Wallace and his fellow travelers. . new chairmam. ae went into the Philippines a ‘ple of days after D-day there and has served in the Philippines and Japan as well as other Pacific bases. Foreman wag discharged as a Private First Class and served in the 8th United States Army. Frank Edwards who formerly lived in Grass Valley. She is graduate. of the local schools of Mount. St. Mary’s Business College. Her husband reent approach of wet weather. The Nevada County: pases" heard by the high’ ceived his discharge from the armed ‘services last month. The young couple are making their home in Sacra. ! the commission’s 9 ee ee Depa nt ic Works Building on N nee pst mento where both are employed.