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Collection: Newspapers > Nevada City Nugget

September 29, 1930 (6 pages)

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ied mae ' etd . t " . . . . He ey i a } ¢ c, j Ls i i fe le . HME TANCE A TENE TTT SR ROP EE RII As, “SEPTEMBER 29, 1930 THE NEVADA cIry NUGGET, CALIFORNIA EUREKA VISITED BY SLIGHT EARTHQUAKE Bureka has been jarred severely by an earthquake which was felt there at 7:05 o’clock on the evening of September 21st. Chimneys were toppled . over, dishes, skated from the cupboard shelves and other slight damages are reported. When chimneys ‘crashed, several fires were started in different parts of the town, but did little damage. The big tremblor, which lasted several seconds, was preceded by several minor shocks, accompanied by a rumbling noise. Service Cleaners CLEANING AND PRESSING Men's and Ladies’ Alterations Call for and Deliver Suit Orders Taken PROMPT SERVICE g ‘Phone 264 215 N. Main St., Grass Valley Ore and Bullion Purchased Licensed by State of California Established 1907 WILDBERG BROS. SMELTING & REFINING CO. Offices: 742 Market St.,San F ° Plant: South San Francisco This beautiful upright piano made by W. W. KIMBALL for $295.00. Terms as low as $6.00 per month _ Other pianos represened by us are: MASON HAMLIN CHICKERING KNABE FISHER BREWSTER W. W. KIMBALL HINZE WHITNEY And other Grands and Up rights may be purchased in’ Grass, Valley from THE HARMONY SHOP or ELLAS MARX MUSIC CO. Home of America’s Foremos Pianos Sacramento lith & Jay 422 4th St. Stomach Test Free r digestion makes you Pg gas, bloating, Sa leteee: acidity, or sick, stomach, the 15 Minud Marysville FRENCH CORRAL ‘Band! Bang! Bang! With the hunting season on for the past week our woods have been rather noisy. So far, we have not heard that hunters have had “good luck.” : >.< The weather isvery changeable but we were favored with a good rain on Wednesday forenoon. We want a good deal more of it to start the feed growing. x Stock men are commencin ~ gto move their stock down to the valleys. A large drove of sheep belonging to J. Hartley, stopped in thi splace this evening. f X: The past week has brought many visitors. We could not l-earn the names of all of them, X ; Mr. John Pritchard of Portland, Oregon, in company with Frank O’Connor of Birchville called on old Friends Friday. Mr. Pritchard spent his boyhood days in the little town of Birchville. He had not visited th old home place for many years. ».¢ Mr. and Mrs. A. Labourst of Sacramento were visitors a the past week. >. ¢ ; Miss-Sachel Luke of Sacramento, spent Saturday and Sunday with her friends, Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Culver. xX Miss Henrietta Hastell and Miss Irene Browning made a trip to Nevada City, Saturday. >.¢ Miss Louise Maulson madeatrip to Washington. Saturday where her many friends will be pleased to know she has secured the school for the coming term. She returned to Washington Sunday evening to be on hand to begin her school work Monday morning. x Mr. Bradley, Wallace Robinson and Joe Swazey of Siberia mine, were Saturday ‘visitors. ».¢ Lloyd Dudley of Nevada City, spent Sunday with his family here. , x. Mr. and Mrs. G. Francescovitch, of Marysville were Sunday visitors here. : x. ; Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Hatch land three sons, Billy, Kenneth and Jean, of Nevada City, visited the family of A. Browning. era Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Moulton returned. Sunday evening from their trip to Rend. They had a delightful time and took in everything of interest, with the exception of visiting the divorce trip courts. An airplane trip and a visit to beautnful Lake Tahoe were among the pleasures. Xx. F, F. Ledgaro of Grass Valley, representing the Italian National Building and loan Association, paid a visit here on Monday. x. Harold Clymo and his _ friends, Chester Curtis and Jack Wagner returned to their homes at Benecia on Wednesday, after spending a wek in Frnch Corral. Harold Clymo is a:native of this place, and delights in “coming home’”’ for a visit. : X Mr. Chris Burlittle has decided to take up his residence here for the winter. : X. Messers May and Raymond have come to reside in French Corral, They were formerly of Sacramento. X. Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Frost.of Siberia Mine, was a business visitor here last Thursday. 0. v Swish-Sh-Sh-Shl ‘ Hopeless Henry—I wuz offered two jobs yestidday widin’ ten seconds. Soapless Sam—Where wuz dey? Hopeless Henry—One wuz at dat big white farmhouse on the hill. T’other wuz about six mile down de road.— Bxchange. Not the Only One The Installment wife promised me faithfully that she’d make a payment today. — : Mr. Peewee—What are you kicking about?’ She once solemnly promised that she'd obey me. ‘See Me—. See Better GEO. H. SHIRKEY Opt. D. Optometrist 118 Mill St. Collector—Your. CHEROKEE ITEMS Stanley Deal of North Sacramento visited friends here last week. He came up to hunt deer but was not sucessful. xX James Phelan killed a four pointer buck one day last week. >, The many friends of Ray McNamera are glad to hear that he is recovering from injuries réceived at: the Siberia mine. We all hope he will soon be} able to come home from Grass Val-. ley, where he is staying to have his injuries treated. x Mr. L. Day. of the Salmon mine was visiting his family in Nevada City Thursday. Joe Swazey, of the Siberian mine received a slight injury when a small piece of rock struck his eye. H@ went to Nevada City for medical treatment. : ».€ John Meehein, wife and son Alton, of Sacramento, were visiting friends here Saturday. x. Mrs. Berry, who has been ill. for the past two weeks, is improving. >. ¢ The Siberia mine is installing a rock: crusher. >. ; James Coughlin took,a truckload of veal calves to Calanan. and Richards, last@Wednesday. ; ».¢ Miss Helen: McCough and brother Will, idee friends here pecans xX
Heif Casta and Alton Moody of Nevada City were visitors here Thursday. >.< ‘Mrs. James Phelan and mother, Mrs. T. J. Flynn, were visiting in San Juan, Thursday, ps >.¢ Miss K. Brady visited friends in ‘THE TEN COMMANDMENTS :° est,’”’ designed to protect the scenic water and game, were OF THE FOREST “Ten Commandments of the Forits timber, issued gby State Forrester M .B. Pratt. “The laws of the forest are based On old Toman law’’ said Pratt, which provides that no use shall be made of property that will damage another party. When forests burn, streams dry up or game is destroyed because of unlawful acts, all the people of the state suffer.’’ The most important forest laws were summed up by Pratt’s ‘Ten Commandments” as follows: pets 1. Leave no camp fire burning. Stir the coals ‘while soaking them, with water. Turn small sticks and . drench them on both sides. Wet the ground around the fire. If. you can’t get water, stir in dust and tred. it down until packed © tight over and around the fire. Be sure the last spark: is dead. 2. Throw. no burning material away. Break your match in two before throwing it away. 3. Burn no brush or grass without a permit from a fire warden. The state law makes a closed season from, May 15 to October 31, during which, burning permits are required but several counties have ordinances requiring burning permits the year around. 4. Build no camp fire: within a national forest without a _ permit from a forest ranger. The state law does not require a permit to build a camp fire outside national forests, but provides a severepenalty if. the camp fire is left burning. beauties of California, 5. Leave the trees, shrubs, ferns and flowers as you found them. They belong to all. Leave them for all to enjoy. It is not good forest manners Columbia Hill, Thursday evening. >.< The deer in this section seem plentiful, but very very few have been bagged so far. CABLE PLACED UNDER GROUND ACROSS STATE For the past year 600 men have been digging a trench along highway No. 40 across the state of Missouri. This small army is at work on the construction of an undrground telephone cable between Kansag City and St. Louis, and recently the conduit betwee nthe two cities was jointed at Midway, where eventually the ends tof the eross-state telephone cable wlil meet. Long distance telephone circuits, hitherto carried across the state on pole lines, will then be placed underground, safe from flood,’ fre and ice. Over 267 miles in length, the teadcovered cable will provide 250 Long Distance voice channels between St. Louis and Kansas City, and cities between these two places. 0 Cougar, Hunted Without ~ Mercy, Almost Extinct The western “cougar,’” termed variously according to local practice in differént. parts of North America as “panther,” “mountain lion,” “catamount,” etc., is our largest member of the cat family. It is considered a predatory animal and as such has been hunted so peristently that it is almost extinct in the United States except in a few remote districts of our western mountains. Consederably smaller than the cougar, the true lynx is still quite a bit larger than the common bobeat_or bay lynx, The real lynx is a/very shy anjmal and rarely thrives where the land has been ranched or farmed to any extent. The bobcat,. more like the coyote, often lives right under the nose of some harassed farmer, being especially adept at stealing chickens or other farmyard birds. ‘ Of the three felines mentioned, the bohcat can be said as having the most tractable disposition, as neither. the lynx nor the cougar submit readily to appearance, yet. it is rarely used as a show animal, chiefly because it Is a most unruly subject for training, sullen and treacherous to the end. per, Nuggets can be found in the want ads. Give the Nugget a trial. FINE WATCH REPAIRINC Radie Servicing and Repair CLARENCE R. GRAY 520 Coyote St. Phone 157 Work Called for and Delivere JOHN W. DARKE. h: man training. The cougar somewhat " 4 resembles. the female African lion in to carve your name on trees or to wound them in any way. 6. Destroy no forest signs. They may prevent a fire ‘in -your favorite camping spot. 7, Cut no Christmas” trees or Christmag berries without~the written permission of the owner. The state law provides a penalty for acts of this kind. 8. Do not pollute streams. Leave camp sites clean. Bury all garbage. Treat your camp site as .you would your own home. 9. Catch no fish out of season. help the State Fish and Game Commission to keep the streams stocked with fish. 10. Don’t kill or molest game out of season, Without wild life our forests would lose mhch of their charm, and if it is to be conserved everybody must obey the state game laws. 0 U Vanilla From Orchids which is used in almost every household as flavoring for foods, is provided by the variety of tropical plant called the “orchid” is probably little known by even the best cooks. Orchids are best known for their beautiful flower, emblematic of optlence and fantasy. They grow in their natural state as a parasitic inhabitant of the great trees of the forests In Mexico, Java, Seychelles and Brazil, and are especially common in the banks of the Orinoco river. Ignition Parts and Accessories at Miner’s Foundry. FRED M. MILLER Consulting Engineer Mines and Mining Hydraulics Irrigation Graduate, University of California, 1894 County Surveyor of Nevada County, 1895-9; 1907-19 Civil and Mining Engineer & Supt. Mines 1899-1915 Chief Engr. Cal. Corp. Dept. 1915-1923 Cons. Engr. Smith Emery Co. S. F., 1923-1925 Asst. Mgr. and Mgr. Nevada Irrigation Dist., 1925-9 Examinations, Maps and Reports on Mining or Agricultural Properties and Foothill Land, Development Official Maps of Nevada ' County For Sale Office at Residence 262 South Auburn St. _ Grass Valley 109J Phones _109M[. Phone 535J_That the vanilla bean, the extract of . 24tf . . R? Mae teeeolesterte lesion tesletenetesioste eeetons OS NEVADA CITY SANITARTUM ~Miss Elizabeth McD. Watson Equipped to handle Obstetricai, Surgical, Medicinal ana »Ray Cases : Modern ‘Equipment Nevada City — nee eticndadadatindadadiasdeddeibe to 9 es % 74 Mt aheaheotesteatertestecte testeateatetetesteatesptestealertesh ateritestesteatestetesteateresleteste i Enjoy a Nonhabitforming” Laxative It often happens. that when you start taking a certain laxative you can’t stop. The bowels have become dependent on it. But that’s not the case with Rexall Orderlies. Just take them when you’re temporarily troubled by constipation. After they’ve done theif work and done it well, you can get along without them. They don’t form a habit. ro) Bex of 24— 25c REXALL ORDERLIES — Sold: only —— Stores. R. E. HARRIS The Rexall Store Home of the VICTOR Radio ns fete nfenieniess Ne diel hell, Annet pele Stn ere Nallta 1 Tre ee Eee Oe a es ae ee el ll ie 2 alli aliadllied 0, SG ee oe eH Ie Ne ee Ne te ate te le stete tek Ca a A A &, t,o, ot ste ste ste cle stesterion ofertene ergenge a CSetrret treet Tete ee eee ek F at tiated ta ttatatad Meio Heed 4 ALL THE ODDS AND ENDS That Make The Meal a Banquet At this store you can obain everyhing you need for that meal in the grocery line. We have all the delicious dishes and odds and ends that change a meal into a veritable banquet. We have the best in groceries at prices you can afford'to pay. Merchandise cheerfully promply delivered. We disappoint no one. Just give us a trial and be convinced. J. J. JACKSON Phor . Number One We Deliver, : > eleleieleleieteteteteteteieietettetetetetatetest ) { WHITE FLANNELS Should Be Cleaned Regularly! Send Us ‘Yours This Week Include Neckties Will call Monday and Thursday afternoons at y home and deliver on thé next trip over. Phone Valley 375 and we will call th enext trip. We credit your phone charges. GRASS VALLEY CLEANERS Ed Burtner. Proprietor 11 . West . Phone 375W ‘NEW eTE Bint d aug hae del oe Serer