Enter a name, company, place or keywords to search across this item. Then click "Search" (or hit Enter).

Copy the Page Text to the Clipboard

Show the Page Image

Show the Image Page Text


More Information About this Image

Get a Citation for Page or Image - Copy to the Clipboard

Go to the Previous Page (or Left Arrow key)

Go to the Next Page (or Right Arrow key)
Page: of 4

a
eT
{
$
4
.
1M
?AGE TWO NEVADA CITY NUGGET MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 23;
1940. 7
Nevada Ci
305 Broad Street.
ity Nugget
Phone 36.
4 A Legal News; aver, as defined by Statute.
at Nevada City.
Printed and Published
HH. MN: LEETE He Editor and Publisher
Sen
i 0 il€
Nevada Ciiy u
ES eS.
One year (in
1i-Weekly,
evada City,
SU
AVANCE) oo ee a $2.50
.
Monday and Thursday .
California, and entered as mail
second class in the postoffice at .
nder Act of Congr March 3, .
.
ace
ess,
BSCRiIVTION RATES
Your Newspaper
The free press of the wo
America, will celebrate
month.
It will be a week set aside to“Konor ‘the Nation's editors
the nation’s reporters and the
Their importance today is no. secret.
They supply us with the grist for the mills of the nation’s
thoughts and opinions. They
ing history. The newspaper today is a governor for a world
machinery that is screaming in high gear.
The pages of your newspaper do not fall independently
ahio place, nor print themselves. They represent organization
judgment, hard work, certain and skilled knowledge of an ex:
acting trade.
Getting out a newspaper
day or week, is no picnic. And
out a newspaper is vital.
That is why there is going to be a week set
dedicated to American newspapers and American
‘ papermen.
The newspaper is your friend. It is the watchdog of the
public's interests. You welcome it into your home. It tells you
stories that are exciting, educational, humorous,
It is your eyes and ears across the seas, on the other side of the
continent. It is the mouthpiece of commerce, telling alike otf ; 4.
National
rld, which means the press of
Newspaper Week nexi
nation’s printers.
are writing, editing and printon time, every edition, every
today, as never before, getting
aside and:
newssignificant.
‘the housewife with a stove to sel] and the corporation with;
bonds to sell.
THIRD TERMITES AT
HlamMERSTONE
——e
PROCEDURE
THINKING OUT LOUD
(Continued from Page One)
(Continued from Page One)
if and. when the first list is exhaustAPPEAL POSSIBLE
This will all be done without John,
being consulted personally, and he
that. make you a that make you sympathetic, that by posteard.
make you cry. It is never dull.
an infallibility permits.
It is always as accurate as hum-.
.
National Newspaper Week is a time for you to show your .
appreciation of the world's free press—of a press that can!
only be free because it is prin
tributed.
ted in a free country. — Con. Rotary Affronts Japan
—
Up to last week there were 47 Rotary Clubs in Japan.
Then they were dissolved.
nationalism. The forces in co
Chinese should submit to Japanese exploitation;
Their ethics affronted the new
ntrol in Japan believe that the
that all the
other teeming millions of Orientals should be sacrificed to the
ambtion of comparatively tiny Nippon;
all other white peoples should give up trade concessicns in
favor of Japan. It is little wonder that Rotary International
_affronted the Japanese. The code of Rotary, which is, in essence the code of the Lions,
ilar service clubs, in part affirms:
Kiwanians, Exchange and sim‘Rotarians assert that human rights are not confined to Rotary Clubs, but are as deep
and as broad as the race itself, and for these high purposes
does Rotary exist to educate all men and all institutions—in
belief in the universality of the Golden Rule, ‘all things whatsoever ye would that men should do ‘unto you, do ye even so
unto them.’ We contend that society best holds together
when equal opportunity is accorded all‘men in the natural re
sources of this planet.”’
The banning of half a hindred luncheon clubs in faraway Japan is not of vital importance in itself even to Rotary
—with its thousands of American and Canadian clubs. The
significance of the incident lies in the fact that another of the
world’s great nations has turned so completely to the principles of brutal materialism that it will no longer tolerate even the
passive advocacy of the principles of common decency and
equaljty of opportunity within its borders.—Contributed.
STATE CHAMBER
BACKS HIGHWAY
IMPROVEMENTS
H F. Sofge, secretary of the Nevada City Chamber of Commerce, reports that the highway committee of
‘the State Chamber of Commerce, a
meeting of which he attended last
week, has agreed to support before
the state highway commission three
projected highway improvements in
this vicinity of vital interest to everyone in Nevada and adjoining counties,
The first of these is the re-location and new construction of the
r6ad, perhaps a mile long, on the
westerly approach to Bear Valley. At
the meeting of the highway committee Sofge reported that in recent
months there have been fourteen automobile accidents on the present
crooked and steep grade leading into
the valley. The cost has been estimated at $300,000, but later figures .
show that it will be much less than_
that. Cd
The second™ project approved by
the state chamber’s highway com-.
mittee is a continuance of the work}
already begun between here }
North San Juan. It is proposed to}
improve seven miles more of the present highway at a comparatively low!
cost of $150,000.
and!
~The third project to receive the
support of the committee is that of
making a 4-lane highway‘ between
Nevada City and Grass Valley. This.
is estimated to cost $75,000. The
need of it is reflected in the constantly increasing traffic between the
two cities, and the rise in traffic
hazards and accidents.
Secretary Sofge states that he is
much in Ropes that the board of Nevada county suervisors will adopt a.
strong resolution endorsing the three
proposals. He says that the Tahoe107 Mill Street
PHONE 67 MwA
DProrcEenaprer
Grass Valley
Nevada County Photo Center
Portraits, Commercial Photography,
8-Hour Kodak Finishing, Old Copies, ©
Enlarging and Framing,
Kodaks and Photo Supplies,
that. Americans and}
tolph of Chicago Park,
. Georgia Abbott’s successful.
;and a war between
If he thinks he has been diseriminated against, however, he can car-.
ry his case toa board of appeal, of
which there will be 20 in California. If his appeal is based. on the
grounds he is physically unfit for
service, there will be a similar num.
ber of medical boards organized to
hear his arguments. .
In round numbers, army officials
estimate that about one in 40 of .
those registered will be drawn for,
service by the first of 1941. Addi-!
tional numbers probably will be call-'
ialization in farming, under which
whole communities are devoted to
raising one crop, whether it be
grapes, figs, oranges. or lettuce.
And second the introduction of mechanical equipment which eliminates large numbers of workers
for most of the year.
The ultimate answer, and one
which we feel confident will in
time be made to this wretched
condition, is a return to diversified farming. This will permit
the growing a specialty crop, but
along with it a variety of other
products,
more permanent status to farm
workers, but will also be an insurance of the farm families own stab-.
ility in times of stress. Moreover,
under conditions of diversified
farming there is greater opportunthat will not only give a.
ity for farm workers ultimately to
become farm owners, since this
type of farming also stabilizes to
a large extent farm labor and increases the income of the: individual worker, so that he can save
money, if he has the will to do so,
and ultimately own his own farm.
FINAL RITES HELD
FOR G. V. WOMAN
Final rites were conducted at the
Hooper-Weaver Mortuary in Grass
Valley this afternoon for Mrs. Matilda Wasley, 75, a resident of Grass
Valley 60 years. Mrs. Wasley, wife
of W. J. Wasley, died in the Jones
Memorial Hospital Friday night.
The deceased and her husband celeYrated their 50th wedding anniversary several years ago.
Mrs. Wasley leaves five children,
Fred Wasley, Leslie Wasley and
Mrs. Edith Roscarlo of Sacramento,
Albert Wasley of Marysville and Ernest Wasley of Grass Valley.
ed during the remainder of the init-!
ial 12 months, and the entire program has five years to run.
xyeneral Mittelstaedt expects the
i California registration will total approx mately 965,000, and of this total probably about 26,000 will be
drawn for service by January 1, according to present plans.
COINTY FAIR
(Continued from Page One)
Loyle Fréeman said immediate plans
have’ been started for next year’s
fair, which will be held in September on dates to be set in January.
The fair was syvonsered by the 17th
Agricultural District, of which H. R.
Spiess of Grass Valley is president.
District * Attorney Vernon Stoll 13
vice president; arf Eben K. Smart
are < ©, 3.
Johnson of Nevada City and John
Bieber, Jack Frank, W. H. Goggin,
Thomas Mulcahy and H. B. Cox.
THE BOYS FROM
SYRACUSE OPENS ,
HERE THURSDAY
whe He Boys from Syracuse will open
at the Nevada Theatre hursday
evening for a two night engagement,
The film is a literal translation of
Broadway musical hit, and the plot deals
with ancient Greece, masters, slaves
Syracuse and
secretary. The directors
Ephesus.
The wives of masters and slaves
are tangled in a little affair of the
heart, but everything is smoothed out
by putting on a singing contest in
which the prettiest girl wins. A
trumpet fanfare introduces’ the
reigning duke and also sounds at his
exits. The preview at Pantages theatre in Hollywood was a near riot.
Subscribe for The Nugget.
Pacific Highway No. 20 association,
in which six counties are represented, is solidly behind the proposals,
and that with the support of the supervisors and other chambers of commerce in the sections affected, he has
high hopes that the state highway
commission wil] order tke: wor
Movie Cameras and Films:
"Ate, i
ae .
Where it’s SMART
to be comfortable!
Ww
xe
ey
prs asa 5 Apemerrseeaeeste,
Have you tried one of the new
swivel-arm I.E.S: lamps? It is
an adjustable light. Swing it
close over a chair while reading intently. Swing it around
to bridge table or piano.
Nothing stiff or formal about
thiskind of light. You'll like it.
Do you like lots of light at
times? You know, for sewing
with blue thread on black
cloth, you must see each fine
stitch. Then you will want a
lamp that you can turn on
“full up.” That is where you
willappreciate a one-two-three
lamp, especially a 200-300-500watt ALL PURPOSE Floor Lamp.
Young folks want and need the
very latest in lighting! Studies
are harder than in the days
when Ma and Pa went to
school. That is why eyestrain is
more prevalent among school
children now than a decade.
ago. Give eye protection to
the student’s in your family
with an I. E. S. Study Lamp.
Its low cost will surprise you.
SEE YOUR DEALER OR THIS COMPANY
P-G:-vE:
PACIFIC GAS AND ELECTRIC COMPANY
MODERN LAMPS for COMFORT SEEING=TROMI-940
FOR RENT—Six Room House with
some furniture and garage. $25 a
month. Inquire at Nugget.
9-23-tf
FOR SALE—Cattle range, 644 acres
at Birchville. Fenced, water, near
school, store and stage. See EO:
May, French Corral. 910-102-9-16
23D.
LATEST TYPE
tionally known
vicinity.
SPINET PIANO, namake, located in
Also small, nearly
Studio upright. Bargain
Write to G. Nichols, 1955
Oroville, Calif.
9-123te
this
new
termes.
Robinson St.,
FORPY_ ACRES Placer_County—
Foothills. 6-room house, double
garage, concrete cellar, deep well,
pump, tools. Heavily wooded, running creek, good pasture, Mining
possibi-ities. $5,500. No agents. P.
O. Box 95, Penryn, California.
9-92tp
LOST—Roll of Blankets in” canvas
bag on Bloomfield road under
flume at Sugar Loaf. Bitney Service Station, Grass Valley, Phone
11-F-4. 9-53tp
KOR SALE—Very reasonable, easy
terms. 4 Room house with modern
fixtures, 12 acres of wooded land,
whole or part, berries and garden.
Inquire on place. Adele Renee. Old
Banner Road, Gold Fiat. 8-291mo.
EXPERT RADIO REPAIRING —
Loud Speaker Systems for Rent ur
Sale. Authorized Phileo Auto Radio
Service. ART’S RADIO HOSPITAL
—Specialists in Radio Ills, 112
South Church Street, Grass Valley.
Phone 984, 2-19tf
WATCHES CLEANED, $1.00. Main’ springs, $1.00. Watch Chrystals,
round, 25c, fancy, 50c. All work
guaranteed. J: M. Bertsche, Watch
and Clock repairing. With Ray's
Fixit Shop, New location, 109 WestMain Street, Grass Valley. 12-1tf
REAL ESTATE
WALTER H. DANIELS
LICENSED BROKER
Phone 521 P. O. Box 501
; Nevada City
Sell or buy through the Classified
Advertisments of the Nugget. It
saves you money and makes you
money. Sell or buy anything at a
small advertising cost.
HOOPER & WEAVER
MORTUARY, INC.
246 So. Church Street
Grass Valley Phone 364
24-hour Ambulance Service.
Nevada City
Laundry
QUALITY WORK SKILLFULLY
DONE BY HAND
Prompt Courteous Service
Free Delivery
All our work is priced right,
Phone 577 241 Commercial St.
Nevada City
Medical science has proved
that milk is the most satisfactory food for growing
children and adults! Be a
healthy person. Don’t deny
yourself the health-giving
vitamins, minerals and proteins contained in milk.
e@e
— Drink It Daily —
e@e
Bret Harte
Dairy
Jordan Street, Nevada City
Phone 77 _.
a4
© @