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Page: of 4

Page Two
Nevada City Nugget
305 Broad Street. Phone 36.
—/ .
A Legal Newspaper, as defined by statute. Printed and Published »
‘at Nevada Cit». ji
e
Sditor an.. a H. M. LEETE . nsPublished Semi-Weekly, Monday anda Fhu:sday
at Nevada City, California, and entere das Ma
matter of the second class in the postoffice a*
Nevada City under Act of €ongress, March 3;
1879. a
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
One year (In AVANCE) 2.2.. 50. 5c. 2-e neers sewn $3.00
One Month ...---------cec----cneene
ce stee conse nce eee 80 cents es)
GREATER SACRIFICES STILL BEFORE PEOPLE —
Dire warnings of what must come were given by President Roosevelt Monday in his report on lend-lease.
Already much of our normal way of life has either been
scrapped or modified, but the president's report indicates that
even more radical chanées are due. ios
At present, according to Roosevelt, America is producwar production, and absolute maximum production must be
achieved to turn the tide of battle for the United Nations.
This can only be accomplished warns — Roosevelt, “by
stripping out civilian economy to the bone.’
Already some of this stripping has been evidenced in r2tioning. in price ceilings, in freezing of some workers to cettain vital war tobs.
But ahead lies really stormy weather.
Paul McNutt. chairman of the war manpower commitiB. has asserted that legislation to freeze all labor in private
industry is bound to come, and other legislation is pending
in congress to virtually give the president a blank check in
stabilizing of wages and prices.
Still another economic front where rough going can be
expected is taxation. t
Already, Atmerica has budgeted more money for
purposes alone than her total expenses: in the first 100 years
of her existence.,
But even this staggering sum will not be enough. War
bond sales are not adequate for the task, so the government
must turn elsewhere, and the only place it can’turn is to the
pocketbooks of the citizens.
The senate finance committee has just finished revision
of the house tax bill, and, though it cut some taxes. the bill as
it now stands will increase the total federal tax load of the nation to more than $26,000,000,000 a year.
Not only that, the way has been paved for another
mighty tax levy next year in the form of compulsory savings,
with a committee named to study the plan and report by December . .
Tucked away in the president’s message was another
statement packed with meaning for virtually every family in
the land.
That statement was that not only must we produce all
the weapons. possible, but that we and the other United Nations will need ‘‘all-the men that all of us can muster.”
This would seem to indicate the chief executive feels that
before the war is won every man who can be spared from war
industries and who is physically fit will be in uniform.
In simple language, the president's report means Ameri‘cans must beprepared to take notch after notch in their belts
and must be ready for sacrifices of every kind the same type of
sacrifices which our allies, the British and Russians already
are making, before they can hope to erase the menace of totalitarianism from the world.—Sacramento Union.
: WARREN’S THE MAN FE cots
A non-partisan campaign and, if elected. a non-partisan
state government—such is the promise of Attorney General
Earl Warren, who seems due to take over the governor's chair
next January.
After the years of political narrow-mindedness under the
Olson regime, this pledge strikes a refreshing chord.
With Warren as chief executive, California will see its
government run by the men best fitted for their particular
tasks. whether they be Republican or Democrat.
Warren’s campaign to date has brought California closer
than ever before to truly democratic political setup, the vote
he polled in the primaries proves this.
The war has brought an end to “business as usual,” it also must end “‘politics as usual.”
Triumph over the Axis powers cannot be won by a disunited people. Victory can come only to a people who stand
together in all things, and bickering between political partjes tends only to disrupt the war effort.
To California's voters, then, the issue is clear. Vote for
Earl Warren, the man who promises a state in which governmental chiefs will be the best available, with all of them working in harmony so that this state wlll do its maximum part in
winning the war.
war
a
BIBLE WEEK
Throughout America, beginning the second week in
October, Bible Week will be observed by many organizations
and millions of individuals.
To call public attention to the occasion, the artist, Howard Chandler Christy has painted a picture of Uncle Sam,
_symbolic.of the American people, kneeling in prayer on a
height above flaming battlefields, and saying: “For thine is
the kingdom, and the power, and the glory, forever.”
In Nazi Germany, the only book that could be singled
out for special attention is Mein Kampf. Rejecting the Bible,
_Busso Loewe, author of “Creed of the German Pagan Movement,’’ wrote shortly before the war: :
“The German people need no Bible. The Edda. and
_ Sagas, Master Ekkehart and Frederick the Great, Goethe and
_ Schiller, Hoelderlin and Nietzsche and many other great Germans were no Christians; they believed in life, in Nature and
in the power of the German soul.”
Bible in importance, placing the writings and deeds of German authors, soldiers and philosophers above the Book that
ins the Sermon on the Mount, is not only shockingly
s to Chrsitians but also incredibly preposterous to
Rate : eon
ing but little more than 50 per cent of its maximum possible .
‘The concept of Hitler placing his’life story above the .
1; "~
eo
.
v
if a
hy Ls
‘4
AC.
Ly fell
by WTI
It’s common sense to be
thrifty. If you save you are
thrifty. War Bonds help you
to save and help to save
America. Buy your ten percent every pay day.
EIGHT JOINT PLACER CLAIMS,
near Camptonville, Yuba County,
; water right and timber to work
YY Y same,'Can either be worked by hyYi Wy U ff draulic OF drift method. Virgin
Wy q ground. Sickness forces owner to
yy sell. J. R. Rogers, Camptonville,
Gy P. O. Box 32. 8271mp
Uy y Kihea
5 F: on
a puff of dust, he
gone.
Unburdened
position party in
shelved in public
stuffed shirt.
the non-religious man of intelligence.
The Bible; with its mystically wondrous story o
Man who never held a sword but shook the world of his time
and all time with teachings that no power can destroy, will remain as long as men can read.
THE PEOPLE’S AMBASSADOR
Big, bluff, outspoken and fearless, Wendell Willkie has
made good on the job of visiting government heads, newspapermen and soldiers on his tour as a representative of President Roosevelt—and as a private citizen named Willkie.
formal diplomat, Willkie is privileged to be himself while he
. does a service to the president. By his very freedom of speech
and action, he will preach American democracy in a telling
way to the regimented peoples of far lands who otherwise
might be unable to believe that the defeated leader of the opful among the clan, he may be depended upon to dispel any
notions that the American business man is a humorless, dull
When he returns, he may be depended upon for an in-,
formative report to the American people. As private citizen
Willkie, he’s the people's ambassador, without portfolio!
Photo Finishing
Already the end of Adolf Hitler’s historically brief time PORTRAITS
of terrible mischief is in sight. Another year or two, and his
legions that ravage the earth will be destroyed. _ His sordid 107 Mill Street, Grass Valley
book, his reincarnations of pagan gods, will die with him. Like
Phone 3-W
and all that he conjured into being will be 5-7tt
: the. CRUSHED ROAD ROCK
Concr te Material
Pea Gravel
Brick
Building Rock
Fill Material
Grass Valley Rock and Sanc
Grass Valley Phone 45
JOHN. BERTSCHE—Jeweler ana
Watchmaker. Years of experience.
Former S. P, and Santa le watcn
inspector. Watch and Clock repairing. 114%4 E. Main St. Grass
Valley, in our new location.
with the convention-bound restrictions of a 1-29tf
EXPERT RADIO REPAIRING —
Loud Speaker Systems for Rent 1
Sale. Authorized Philco Auto Radiu
Service. ART’S RADIO HOSPITAI
—Specialists in Radio Ills, 11%
South Church Street, Grass Valley
Phone 984, 2-19rf
ASPHALT JOBS
Plant mix road jobs. Oil road jobs
Parking areas and paéching.
Grass Valley
this country is neither jailed, silenced nor
life. Then, too, as one of the more success8-21-t!
GRASS VALLEY ROCK
AND SAND
7 Bank Streer Phone 45
Figh t! Work! aw Save!
A War Message on WAR BONDS .
from the President of the United States
‘*, -« The American people know that if we would
raise the billions which we now need to pay for the
war and at the same time prevent a disastrous rise
in the cost of living, we shall have to double and more than
double the scale of our savings.
‘‘Every dime and dollar not vitally needed for absolute necessities should go into WAR BONDS and STAMPS to add
to the striking power of our armed forces.
‘*If these purchases are to have a material effect in restraining price increases they must be made out of current income.
*‘In almost every individual case they should be big enough
to mean rigid self-denial, a substantial reduction for most
of us in the scale of expenditure that is comfortable and
easy for us, ‘
**We cannot fight this war, we cannot exert our maximum
effort, on a spend-as-usual basis.
“We cannot have all we want if our soldiers and sailors are
to have all they need.’’
-.Franklin D. Roosevelt
NOTE—Now You Can Buy War Bonds Through
Your Rural Postman!
@ay Wax Savings Bonds
SHOOT STRAIGHT WITH OUR BOYS
This space is a contribution to America's All-Out War program
“=
Nevada City Nugget — Thursday, September 17, 1942.
PROFESSIONAL
DIRECTORY
DENTISTS
Office Hours: 8:30 to 5:30
Evenings by Appointment
Morgan & Powell Bldg. Phene 321
DOCTORS ae
B. W. HUMMELT, M. D.
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
400 Broad Street
Office Hours: 10-12 a. m.; 2-5 p. m.
Evenings 7-8. Phone 395 X-RAY
ATTORNEYS _
HARRY M. McKEE
ATTORNEY AT LAW
205 Pine St., oppc_lte. courthouse
Nevada City. Calif.
FRANK G. FINNEGAN
ATTORNEY AT LAW
_ 207 North Pine Street
Nevada City, California
Telephone 273
H. WARD SHELDON
ATTORNEY AT LAW
‘ Union jBuilding Broad Street
Nevada City Telephone 28
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
HOLMES FUNERAL HOME
The Holmes Funeral Home service is priced within the means of
all. Ambulance service at all hours.
Phone 203
246 Sacramento St. Nevada City
ASSAYER
HAL D. DRAPER, Ph. D.
ASSAYER ANP. CONSULTING
CHEMIST
Nevada City, California
Phones: Office 364. Home 246Box 743
MUSIC
“GLADYS WILSON
'TKACHER OF PIANO
_ Nevada City
358 Alexander Sz.
: Grass Valley
129 Henderson St.
MINING ENGINEERS
J. F. O'CONNOR
Mining and Civu Engineer
United States Mineral Surveying
Licensed Surveyor
203 West Main St. Grass Valley
GRASS VALLEY
DENTISTS
DR. ROBT. W. DETINER
DENTIST
Phone 434-3
Phone 444
X-RAY. Facilities Available
Hours: 9:00-5:00. Evening appointments. 120% Mill Street. Phone 77
Grass Valley, Calif.
DR. H. H. KEENE
DENTAL SURGEON
1 to 5. Sundays and Evenings by appointment.
143% Mill St., Grass Valley, Calit.
Phone 996
DOCTORS
CARL POWER JONES, M.D
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
Office Hours: 1 to 3; 7 to 8 p. m.
Sundays 11:30 to 12:30
129 South Auburn St., Grass Valley
S. F. TOBIAS, M. D.
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
214 Neal St., Grass Valjey
Office Hours: 12-2 and 7-8
Phone: Office 429. Residence 1042
DANIEL.L.~HIRSCH, M. D
PHYSICIAN AND. SURGEON
Offices and Receiving Hospital, 118
Bush St. Hours: 10-12; 2-5, evenings
7-8 P.M. Day or night phone 71.
NEVADA CITY .
FRATERNAL AND
CLUB DIRECTORY
==
WOMEN’S CIVIC. CLUB
Regular meetings the 2nd and
4th Thursdays of the month, at the
Methodist Church Hall. 2:30 p.
m.
Hours:
a
MRS. HAL DRAPER, Pres.
MRS. HILMAN KJORLIB, Secy.
NEVADA CITY LODGE, No. 518
B. P. O. ELKS
Meets every second. Thursday
evening in Elks Home, Pine St.
Phone 108. Visiting Elks welcome.
CARL HIERONIMUS,
Exalted Ruler.
HARRISON RANDALL, Sec.
HYDRAULIC PARLOR “NO. 56,
N. 8. G. W.
Meets every Tuesday evening at
Pythian Castle, 232 Broad Street
Visiting Native Sons welcome,
ROBERT TUC , Pres
o OUSTOMAH LODGE,
No. 16, I. 0. O. F.
Meets ever Tuesday evening at
7:30, Odd Fellows Hall.
CHESTER PETERSON, N. G.
JONOTHAN PASCOE Rec. Sece’y.
DR. C. W. CHAPMAN, Ree. Sec’y
.
JOHN W. DARKE; Fin. Sec’y.
t
.
When shopping mention the Nevada
City Nugget ads
ee