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. fire break construction ,
Serving the communities of Nevada
Chicago Park, Wolf, Christmas Hill, Liberty Hill, Sailor
Hill, Brandy Flat, Sebastopol,
North
Quaker
Dog, You Bet, Town Talk, Glenbrook, Little Y: Cherokee, Mooney
Relief Hill, Washingtoo, Bine Tene, LaBarr Meadors, Colas Ridge Ulice
:
Hat, Sweetland, Al French Corral, Rouglt
Thill Peardal Peardale, * it Cn, Wallou
Soggsville, Gold Bar, Lowell Hill,-Bourbon Hill, Scotch Hill,
Gouge Eye, LiméKiln,
orth Columbia, Columbia
4
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Volume 38. No. 10 10 Cents a Copy
"THE PAPER WITH THE PICTURES" Published Wednesdays Nevada City, en 6, 1963.
VOTERS PAS
BIRT H DAY CELEBRATION---Frank Gunther, Nevada City (1)
cuts his 90th birthday cake last week\at a party given in his
honor by the Hydraulic Parlor, NSGW in Nevada City. Gunther .
a past officer and long-time treasurer of the lodge joined the
organization in 1891 and has been active\since that time.
Others inthe picture are: Clarence Martz, Nevada City. police
officer and Fred Butz, North San Juan rancher.
Council
Members
Accused
GRASS VALLEY---The campaign for election to the
Grass V alley City Council
warmed up in the last week
with candidate Margarette
Brown Meggs charging the
current council with holding
open a job for four months so
that a recently resigned city
council member could be
appointed to the post.
Mrs. Megg’s said she is
merely letting the people
know what is common gossip,
She says that former Councilman Richard Heather resigned his post April 2 at the
conclusion of the council
meeting so that he would be
eligible for appointment to
the position of park superintendent.
The job, Mrs, Meggs says,
pays $400 monthly plus a
residence and utilities,
The council candidate
charges that the council four
months ago held examinations for candidates to fill
the job. She says that two
. out of five applicants passed
the examination, and were
told that the city needed
three persons to choose from
so that another examination
would be held, ee
Mrs. Meggssaidthe councilhas been “holding this job
for four months", and that
she believes Heather applied
for the job while he was a
Youth Corps
Plans Laid
In Tahoe
NEVADA CIT Y---T ahoe National Forest has submitted a
list of possible camp locations and number of persons
it could utilize in the event
the Youth Conservation
Corps program passes Congress,. it was revealed here
today by T ahoe Forest Super-.
visor Henry Branagh,
The Y outh Conservation
Corps program drew heavy
local support in a questionnaire recently mailedto area
residents by Congressman
Harold T. Johnson. With six
per cent undedided, 71 per
cent of the returns showed
favorable reaction to the
program, now in Congress,
Branagh, in an interview,
said the T ahoe National Forest has been asked three
months agoto prepare information for use in the event
the program was established,
He declined to specify the
number-who could be expected tobe delegated to the
forest, saying the program
isnot yetin a form where he
could make an accurate estimate,
Contemplated use of personnel under the program
would include timber stand
improvement, trail construction and improvement,
building of heli-spots for
landings, and fuel break
work,
The program, if adopted,
would call for youths be-~
tween 16 and 22 signing up
for six month hitches, but
the program would be a yearround activity.
In the T ahoe National Forest, Branagh said, the program would probably be run
from camps at the lower elevations, with ‘task force’
crews at upper levels in the
forest during months of good
MALAKOFF MISSING
NEVADA CITY---Nevada
County officials are mystified by yesterday's release
of a proposed list of state
park acquisitions that did not
include the Malakoff Diggins
Project.
The list accompanied a
message to the legislature
from Governor Edmund G,
Brown asking for $19 million
for park land acquisition and
for a $150 million bond issue
to be placed before the public in 1964. It presumably
included only those parks
which wouldbe immediately
eligible for purchase under
the $19 million request.
But local leaders had been
ject rated high on the list of
projects “as soon ‘as money
is available”. .
Ed Doldef, head of the
California Divisionof
Beaches and Parks, was in a
meeting this morning and
not available for comment,
Robert B. Hatch, supervisor in the advance planning
depart ment of the Division of
Beaches and Parks, was out
of town and could not be
reached,
The governor's proposal is
now before the legislature,
Local leaders are expressing the hope that the Malakoff Project will be included
in any appropriation bill the
legislature adopts.
councilman.
Heather, contacted t oday, doesn’t want to have
anything to say about the
charges,
"Stilltongue, wise head, "
he commented,
Name Auctioneer
NEVADA CIT Y---Bill Moranville will be Nevada City
Chamber of Commerce auctioneer May 4 when the.
\chamber holds its fund raising auction between Commercial and Broad Sts. on
Pine St.
Dress Revue Set
GRASS VALLEY ---Plans are
just about complete for the
annual 4H Dress Reyue to be
held Saturday night at8 p. m,
at the Nevada Union Junior
High Schoolin Grass Valley,
according to Mrs, David
Conley, chairman.
County
Plans Dog
Leashing
NEVADA CIT Y---This
mountain community will
soon become an island of
freedom in the midst of a
county that will regard dogs
running at large asa “nuisance and a menace",
Under pressure from the
State Department of Health
andthe State Attorney General's office, Nevada County
Supervisors yesterday considered a dog licensing ordinance that will. meet the
requirements of state statutes,
Although the supervisors
held action on the measure
over until May 1, they did
so only because of administrative problems which
might be created by passage
of the ordinance yesterday.
The consensus of their
opinion indicates that May 1
will find the passage of the
ordinance, andJan. 1, 1964,
will be the date upon which
each dog in the county and
each kennel must have a license.
Fee for male and spayed
dogs will be $2 per year, unspayed females $4 per year,
and kennels $5 per. year.
The ordinance also calls
for vaccination of dogs after
four months of age, and each
year or two thereafter.
The county will set up a
pound and appoint a poundmaster in the near future to
carry out the dictates of the
ordinance,
Under the ordinance it
shall be illegalto allow dogs
to run at large.
weather. a
told that the Malakoff ProEXTINCTION? ---The Twin Cities are faced with the possible curtailment of public
bus transportation by the end of this month according to Joe Spence, franchise
holder for the inter-urban bus line. Spence said that no negotiations forthe sale
of his business are pending and that without some public or private aid he may be Z
unable to operate after April 26.
school election.
VOTING...Inspector Lena Lopez (above
left) is shown with voter Mrs. James Harding at Alta-Oaks-Sunset in yesterday's
Nevada City School
polling is shown below.
man Paul J, Lunardi announced today he has introduced legislation that would
send the subject material
from Proposition No, 4 to a
joint committee for interim
study
“My intention is to have
this complicated subject,
assessment of agricultural
land on a use basis, spelled
out and returned tothe
;people in 1964", -declared
Lunardi,
In reviewing the defeated
measure, Lunardi explained
lonardi Plans New
Agriculture Tax. Law
SACRA MENTO---Assembly-:
Weather
NEVADA CITY.
Max,, Min, Rainfall
Aprilll 42 81 25
12 53 39 . 00
13 60. 38 00
14.67 48 1.38
15 52 36 13.86
16 45 31 21
17 41 «21 .03
‘Rainfall to date 63.70
Rainfall last year 50. 63
GRASS VALLEY
Max. Min. .Rainfall
April1l 44. .32 23
a 34. 88 .00
13: 63 42 trace
14 68 47 1,22
15. 62 “44 32
16 46 = 29 .19
ee ee aon
Rainfall to date 65.33
Rainfall last year 49.09
‘cation in writing to the As‘ment procedure;
“land which qualifies; tocon-those relative to the agricul‘that Proposition Four was designed to provide an equitable assessment procedure
which would preclude taxes
from forcing a farmer to sell
his land and still insure that,
when farmland is converted
to a higher land use, it returns to the local community
taxes proportionate to the
communities’ contribution to
the increased value.
The Assemblyman went on
to say that Proposition Four
would have specifically provided the following:
(1)The law would not have
become operative in any
county or city unless the local governing body, by ordinance, made it operative;
(2) This would have provided a different method of
assessing land which is used
exclusively for agricultural
purposes;
(3) The land must have
been so used for the last two
successive years; «
(4) This would require the
legal owner to make applisessor if he wished tobe
covered by this niew assess(5) The assessor would be
required, in assessing such
sider no factors other than f
tural use;
(6) The assessor would also
be required to determine
(Continued On Page 2.)
*“ItTBO ‘6 oquewes! e
£ABAQET 04 L
One Race
Hangs On
Absentee
NEVADA CITY+--Nevada
County school district voters
’ approved over-ride taxes for
Nevada City Schools and for
the Nevada Union High
School; elected 24 school
trustees; approved trustee
district changes in the high
school district and Sierra
College district; and rejected an annexation of Kentucky Flat to the Nevada City
School District.
Although results are unofficial, pending a canvass of
the votes and counting of absentee ballots, in most instances the results seem conclusive.
One trustee race appears
in doubt. In North San Juan,
Marie Young received 56
votes for a short-term seat
on the board. A write-in
candidate, Pearl Miller, is
credited with 55 votes, and
one absentee ballot remains
uncounted,
The Nevada City over-ride
was victorious by a 641 to
532 count, with 19 absentee
ballots to be counted,
The Nevada Union High
‘School District over-ride
vote was even closer, win"ning 1818 to 1731 with 48
absentees still uncounted.
The high school trustee .
districting measure won 2121
to 913; and the Sierra College trustee area boundary
change won 2136 to 843 (this
measure must also be approved by other voters in the
college district).
Re-elected to the board
in Nevada City, Alton
Davies led a field of four
candidates with 640 votes
SueJensen alsowona seat on
the board with 520 votes.
Other candidates, Jeanne
Roese, 434; and Ralph Zeledon, 399,
Winners in Grass Valley
were Brian A, Bennallack,
920, and Lou Kennedy, 899.
Leo T odd received 671 votes,
Marvin D, Wadley, 351.
Nevada Union High School
District voters re-elected
Harold George Sr., 2176,
and Weston W. Brunker,
2077. Leo W, Hamilton was
unsuccessful, but close with
1862 votes,
In other contested races:
Union Hill, Arnold L,
Price, 107, beat E.V. Borgnis, 36; Ready Springs, Roy
T. Phillips, 165, Norma D.
Meade, 134, and Barbara
Sailor, 118, all won seats.
John-H. McLachlin Jr. received 84 votes.
Kentucky Flat, Verita Personeni, 52 votes, beat Marian Bonnell, 21 votes; the
annexation of Nevada City
School District failed 52 to
25.
Unopposed candidates won
in all other races.
County Sales
Jump Up
SAN FRANCISCO ---Nevada
County increased its general.
merchandise ‘retail sales by _
155.6 per cent in the.p
1950-61, itwasrevealedthis
week'by the California State
Chamber of Commerce, —
The state asawhole
showed a 92.8 per cént gain
in the same period, the re=
ws '3
af abd ae
S BOTH TAX ISSUES —
A
j