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Collection: Newspapers > Nevada City Nugget

September 30, 1940 (4 pages)

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* ton: » ment with any dictator. MONDAY. SEPTEMBER 30, 1940. . PAGE TWO NEVADA CITY NUGGET eee — anne Sn pee oe eee ao a . — ! 7Y + S Nevada City Nugget . The Taxpayer’s Question 305 Broad Street. Phone 36, . : “ baes 2 , A Legal News: aper. as defined by statute. Printed and Published at Nevada City. 5 ~ ea . * Editor and Publisher Monday: and Thursday y, California, and entered as mail he second class in the postoffice at ity? under Act of» Congress, March 3, hiished Semi-Weekly, 1879: SUBSCRIPTION RATES One year (in Advance) No War,” Willkie Pledge; . _ Third Term Seen As Peril . Addressing an audience of his fellow townsmen at Rushville, Indiana, on September 7, Wendell Willkie made the following unequivocal deéclara‘. shall-never lead the United States into any European war. “. believe completely that the United States should help Great Britain short of war, but when [say short of war, . mean SHORT OF WAR.” ' Commenting on the charge of Henry A. Wallace that the ‘Republican Party is said: “If appeasement means working out compromise with dictators. If Mr. Wallace intended to apply that to the Republican Party, he was 100 per cent wrong, because if I'am elected President of the United States there will be no appease_ “But if Wallace meant to say the Republican Party is the party of peace. then he spoke the truth, because . shall never lead the United States into any European war.” et fh & WILLKIE GIVES THIRD TERM VIEWS (Rushville (Ind) dispatch to New York Times, Sept. 11:) “The third term is one of the great issues of the campaign,’ Mr. Willkie said. “‘It is not only the third term but the continuation of a group with great power, which is destructive of democracy. It is not only the re-election of Franklin Roosevelt but the continuation of a group in power and that. power should be broken. . “I know of no argument for the indispensability of a man for a third term as President that could not be applied to a fourth or a fifth term.”’ “Do you think that indispensability feeds upon itself?” a reporter asked. Mr. Willkie revlied with a quotation from Shakespeare, a remark of Iago to Othello. “O, beware, my lord, of jealousy. It is the green-eyed icé 107 Min Street. '/cvada County Photo Center Commercial Photography, Kodaks and Photo Supplies. Grass Valley Movie Canteras and Pyne “the party of appeasement,” Mr. Willkie; . . yf VHONE 670 ertreits. ~tivit Nodak Finishing, Old Copies, Oe eve eraprer ir jarging and Framing, ! DEFENSE BILLIONS —Euicik, New York Sun. monster which male the meat it feeds on.” “A President wha had cerve’ three terms would have had‘ more experience than a President who had served two terms,” he said. ‘‘After a man had served three terms he would have still more experience. The most experienced ruler the world ever had was Louis VIX who had the longest rein.”’ (It was Louis VIX who said: “I am the state.’’) : Roosevelt’s Address to Labor : (From the Baltimore Sun (Dem.): Although Mr. Roosevelt spoke bravely of the neces: for maintaining the “social gains’ achieved under his direction, there was no mention of a bitter truth. Mr. Roosevelt was silent about the bitter truth which decrees that the fiscal policies of the last eight years threaten to destroy these social gains and to leave not union labor alone but all Americans poorer ond more insecure than before. Mr. Roosevelt's silence on this grave issue is the saddest feature of the camnaign in which he is trving to prove himself the Indispensable Man. There is unjust invendo in those passages which suggest that social progress in the United States dates from 1933 and that the country up to that time had been dominated and run by exploiters. The whole history of the United States is a story of efforts hy men.and women, of whatever party, to ameliorNE A Sd AB, (Re a THE LIFE OF WENDELL WILLKIE { ‘ate the lot of the workingman, the farmer. There has never been an administration in the whole history of the country which has not made some contribution to the general welfare. The fact that the United States is today the richest and securest country in the world is not because of what Mr. Roosevelt has done in the past eight years. Jt is because for a hundred ad fifty years Americans have worked and saved and because Franklin D. Roosevelt. they have demanded -and received from their whether Republican or Democratic, the social legislation they needed. It is an arrogant assumption for Mr. Roosevelt to sug‘gest that he is the fountain of all social progress. It is not often, however, that the American people have been led by a man so lacking prudence, in wisdom, in hardheaded common sense, especially in financial affairs, as Mr. government, TO MUCH WINE LANDS YON] RET MAN IN CAN Officers said the drinking of 27 two weeks by is‘the reason he. was the county jail here to gallons of. wine in Matt Moore, 42, lodged-in sober up. Moore was taken into custody by Deputy Sheriffs William D. Woods Moore in the You Bet district complained of his actions and said he had beer wandering around without any clothes. Moore is expected to be released this week as there appears to be ro one who wants to sign a complaint against him, KATHERINE CABODI TO MAKE HOME IN SACTO.
Mrs. Katherine Hecker Cabodi, who has been employed as telephone operator at the Tahoe Nationa] Forest Service headquarters here: for the past several months, will leave Thursday for Sacramento to make her future home. The Sacramento iddress of Mrs. Cabodi will be 3921tSrd Street, Her husband, Lawrence Savodi, is employed by the United Cigar Company in Sacramento. Down From Catnptonville— Mr. and Mrs. Fred Joubert, operator of the Joubert Hydraulic Mine and Carl Larsen after neighbors. of . ’ near Camptonville, were visitors in Visits Here With Curnows— . Mr. and Mrs. Willard Winder were . weekend visitors here with Mr. and Mrs. Horace Curnow. Mrs. Winder is: the former Beth Curnow of this city. . Attend FinaP Day of Fair— Frank Michell] and brother, Bob Michell, sons of ‘Leland Michell, ' ; proprietor of the National Market phere, attended exposition at TreasNevada City Friday. . . From ‘Tennesste— Mr. and Mrs. M: E. Porter of Jackson, Tenn., have been visiting Mrs. James Maltman in Grass Valley, No. 4076 NOTICE TO CREDITORS IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF NEVADA. In the Matter of the Estate of Fred Yost, Deceased. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN by the undersigned LILA M. CHAMPION, as administratrix of the estate of Fred Yost. deceased, to the creditors of and all persons having claims against the ‘said decedent to file them with the necessary vouchers within six: (6) months after the first publication of this notice iff the office of the Clerk of the Superior Court of the State of California, in and for the County of Nevada, or to exhibit them, with the. necessary vouchers, within six (6) months after the first publication ofythis notice to the said administratrix, at the law offices of Lynne Kelly, 127 Mill Street, Grass Valley, Nevada County, California, the same being her place of business in all matters connected with -the estate of said Fred Yost, Deceased. Dated September 6th, 1940. LILA M. CHAMPION, Administratrix, of “the estate of Fred Yost, Deceased. First publication 1940. Sept. 9, 16,23, 30, Oct. 7. For VENETIAN BLINDS and LATEST PATTERNS IN WALL PAPER John W. Darke September 9 109-3 Phones 109-M RISLEY’S 106 Pine Street Nevada City PHONE 217 Cleaning, Pressing, Tailoring In our DRESS SHOP we sell— The story of Wendell Willkie is a typical American biography of success, a story of a sturdy midwestern small-town boy who batt'ed his way through college and on up to a high place in American business, But let us start at tne beginning . which On Feb. 18, 1892, midway between the birthdays of Lincoln and Washington, Wendell Willkie was born in a two-story home at 1900 South A St. in the town of Elwood, lies about 7O miles northeast of Indianapolis in Central Indiana. =a + By) Cd Ln G Hermian F, Willkie, Wendell’s father, was a highly successful trial lawyer and well-to-do landowner in Elwood. His parents and those of his wife had fled from Europe following_revolts against Metternich absolutism in . 4 There are six children in Willkie family. Julia, born in 1882, is an attorney. Then came Robert, 1885, and Fred, 1890, both now business executives, Edward, 1898, is in Chiccgo. youngest, is wife of an American ai iciiat. Wendell was next. Cherictte, :ure Island yesterday. Bob Michell . Dresses, sizes 12-52, Formals, . and Dominic Tamietti were present . Hostess Coats, Smocks, Slack Saturday at the California-Michigan Aer Hoover Aprons, Slips and ! football game. : wie += + » + + From the Willkie Volunteers in Northern California : oF 6-19 = Wendell was born, as were most AmerHis mother was a hard-working, brainy icans of that day, in the home, his mother and ambitious woman, the first woman to be attended by the family doctor who was admitted to the bar in. Indiana. She kept assisted by relatives of the patient, Wendell abreast of her law reading in the midst of was the fourth child. A sister and two. raising a family, so Wendell was literally brothers had been born before him. reared on law. Wendell led the usual small boy’s life in a He is not remembered in grade school for small town. He had fist fights and went being a good pupil. Indeed, his teachers conswimming in the old swimming hole. Even sidered him somewhere on the problem side, in those days he had the quality of leadermostly due to his’ readiness to fight for what ©'.’9 and hee-'ed_a secret club that managed he believed was right. It was in grade school ti,.gs pret.y much in his neighborheed. that lie fits! snowed et ude for declomation. me