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 12

Ask your home advisor Walt Disney
Your mother always said to
eat your cereal ‘cause it’s good
for you. You do and it is..but
even our mother probably
couldn’t foresee all the different
types, sizes, shapes, and flavors
of cereals.or the uses you’d find
for them.
Lucky you..your cereal is
easy to come by. Picture the
cave man..he milled his own by
grinding it between his teeth!
Eventually, more practical
milling methods were
discovered..and with the
twentieth century..better
machinery and _ processing:
techiniques..and better cereals.
You see the results in your
Trailer coach ©
license fees
SACRAMENTO -State
Controller Houston I. Flournoy _
today announced the semiannual apportionment “among
counties, cities and school
districts of $5,467,078 in trailer
coach license fees collected
during the last six months of :
1972. es
Nevada County’s share was
$28,722.01. The largest ap-~
portionment was $621,658 to Los
Angeles County. The smallest
was $160 to Alpine County.
The Vehicle License Fee law
provides that the license fees
paid on all trailer coaches
registered in California be
apportioned semi-annually to
the counties on the basis of the
registered addresses of the
vehicles. Apportionments are
made as soon as possible after
the registration data is ‘made
available to the Controller by
the Department of Motor
Vehicles.
Each County Auditor then
distributes the total county
apportionment among the
county.
History
of working
with clay
Clay work, or theart of
ceramics began around 1745,
and was first used to line
baskets, according to Emma
Lou Allen, guest speaker
recently for an educational
meeting of Phi Epsilon Phi
Sorority, Lambda chapter.
Mrs. Allen gave a brief history
and explanation of ceramics and
gave a demonstration of
working with molds. The first
molds used were in England, she
said. The first kilns used to fire
the clay were holes in the ground
with fires which had to be
watched closely. She displayed
many lovely samples of her
work including ceramic buttons,
belts, bird and owl wind chimes,
eggs, and china with decals
Sooued. =~ S
The meeting was held at the
home of Rose Besselievre and
guests other than members
were: Reba Rath, Marlene
Fowler, Inez Gagliardi, Linda
Wasley, Bobbie Heard, Caroline
Coles, and Sharon Scofield.
food market. You’ve provably
given up counting the cereals
that are flaked, granulated,
puffed, rolled and shredded.
They are regular and
presweetened.with caloric or
non-caloric sweetners. They
‘have flavorings, fruit or fruit
flavors added. They are readyto-eat..you can even buy some
to cook!
Once considered as ‘break’
fast food” only, today’s cereals
appear any place.in the meal.
from appetizers to dessert and
as snacks as well. For instance.suppose company
arrives une y youre
prepared for everything -but
‘company bread.” Try this
uickie:
UICK CEKEAL HERB ROLLS
One-fourth cup butter, melted
One-fourth teaspoon thyme .
One-fourth m marjorine
One package (eight ounces)
refrigerated biscuits
One cup bran flakes ~
Combine butter and herbs;
about three-and-one-half inches
in diameter. Dip into herbbutter mixture, drain slightly
and coat both sides with bran
flakes. Roll up and arrange
folded side down in ashallow baking sere Drizzle with
any remaining butter mixture or
bran flakes. Bake in 400 degree
oven until biscuits are done,
about twenty minutes..Makes
ten rolls.
No sure cure
for arthritis
Almost every human ailment
is the target for some form of
quack -treatment but the
disorders for which no cure has
yet been developed are the most
vulnerable targets for quackery,
the Nevada County Health
Department reports.
A California Medical
Association bulletin ‘‘quackery
and the arthritic,” is quoted to
warn local residents against
such misinformation. ‘‘Although
there is a good deal that a doctor
can do to relieve the discomforts
of arthritis and, in many cases,
to prevent severe disability
resulting from it, there is as yet
no fully accepted explanation of
what causes all the various
types nor how to cure them.
‘Some patients, after having
been plagued by pain for —
months, suddenly feel blessedly
free of all symptoms. If, by pure
coincidence, the patient had
been wearing a magical copper
bracelet just before, he is very
tempted to believe that he has
been cured by the gadget: thus
does quackery spread.
“Not all unorthodox treatments are medically harmless,
some rely on drugs which can be
dangerous if used without
constant medical supervision.
Not all practitioners of arthritis
quackery dispense dangerous
drugs. Many dispense so called
radio active substances, a vast
array of special diets, colon
therapy and_ overpriced
modification of aspirin.
“Don’t experiment with a new
treatment unless it is prescribed
by your own doctor, the cures
offered by quacks are a waste of
your time, your money and
sometimes your health.”
film planned
Walt Disney’s motion picture,
‘‘Nature’s Half Acre’’, portraying the. natural world in
everyone’s back yard, will be
shown at the spring meeting of
the Colfax Highway Association
this Thursday April 19 at 7:30
p.m.
Also scheduled is a discussion
of the Nevada County Hospital,
in which all factual data upon
which the Board of Supervisors
are basing their actions on this
matter will be presented.
A short business meeting and
discussion of the . County
Hospital question will precede
the showing of the film.
Members, their friends, and
neighbors, and others interested
in the work of the Colfax Highway Association are invited to
attend.
SS manager is
guest of group
‘A question and answer period
followed Kyono’s talk.
Rosemary Decker, program
chairperson, introduced guests
at the meeting held at Grass
Valley Mobile Village
clubhouse.
Jessie Wilson announced that
the club now has 75 members
with 100 the goal. Mrs. Decker
demonstrated mouth to mouth
resuscitation using ‘‘Rescu
Annie’ at the March ting.
Ed Crade of Pioneer /Travel
will show a film on the Alaska
Inland Passage at the May 8
meeting. Members of Mountain
Air chapter are invited.
Homemade cakes and coffee
were served at the conclusion of
the meeting.
Ray Kyono, social security
office manager in Marysville,
talked about SS payments,
improvements in benefits and
changes in Medi-Care to
members of Mother Lode,
Mobilhome Owner’s leagur
recently.
Rough and Ready
holds celebration
Rough and Ready has once
again seceeded from the Union
this April 7th but in keeping with
tradition the townspeople will
become U.S. citizens again June
24 with a dawn to dusk
celebration.
The Rough and Ready Flag
was raised by Chamber of
Commerce .president Conne
Baer following a program of
music provided by John Jansen
on the squeeze box, Clarence
Treadway on the fiddle and Phil
Brown on the guitar.
Chairman Alice Licht intorduced Lucille McCrea who
gave her version of the “Sage of
Rough and Ready” with appearances by Alice Licht,
Lucille McCrea, Catherine Baer
_Jenny Briggs, Gordon Briggs
and the dancing girls Sheila
Bartley, Kay Lawson, Joanne
Stevens and Jane Walters.
.
Wed. April 18, 1979/The Nevada County Nugget ]]
INSTANT BUYER.
CLASSIFIED 4
ADS
10. Crafts & Services,
a a,
ROBERT L. ROSS, JR.
Mil} St, Bh. 273-6246
Capitol Commen
By Earl G. Waters
A recent flap over the question of propriety of a news reporter
running for state office while continuing to cover the Capitol beat
provokes a trend of thought.
The case itself is relatively unimportant and has been resolved.
A group of reporters, ill advisedly sought a legislative rule which
would bar a reporter from the Capitol if he became a candidate for
office.
Since the press normally has successfully resisted any form of
regulation on the proper grounds that it infringes upon the constitutional guarantee of a free press, the move was a foolish one and
was rejected by the Legislature.
What is interesting is the fact that a reporter, after having been
eye witness to ther perils of holding public office, would aspire to
elective office.
It is of course fortunate that there are those who are willing to
serve. The form of government in this country is one denied the
majority of people in the world. Being a government of the people
it requires that there be persons willing to serve as representatives
from the federal level down through all local government.
But, regardless of the salaries and other emoluments of officé, »
it is a great sacrifice to hold office.
One must resign himself to living in a fishbowl. The more
important the office he holds, the brighter the spotlight will shine
upon him. Wherever he goes he is on parade. Whatever he says will
be reported. His actions, public and private, will be under constant
examination. His past must stand the same scrutiny.
He must constantly be on the go like perpetual motion. Not only
must he attend to the official duties of the office but he must be
present at an unending number of social and political gatherings.
The rigorous demands upon his time commences the moment he
becomes a candidate and never ceases until his ultimate
retirement which sometimes comes only with death.
There is no question it takes a person with tremendous
stamina. But there must be a terrific ego to fuel that drive. Most
politicans are prima donnas of the highest order. They thrive in the
limelight. :
. Their families too must be prepared to make sacrifices. For the
family must share some of the spotlight. And they must suffer the
loss of a member of the family from many of the day to day activities of the normal family.
As for job security the politician is constantly on trial to retain
his position. He may serve faithfully and well only to be rejected by
the voters at the next election because of a swing in partisan sentiment. Often such rejection comes after a politician has become so
involved in public life that readjustment to another way of living is
most difficult if not impossible.
And a politician may be rejected, not because of anything he =
has done wrong, but because he gets the blame for another’s actions. :
Some years ago a bright light in the Republican party was
elected to the Assembly. His abilities led to a rapid rise and he was
named chairman of the Education Committee.
In this connection he undertook an extensive examination into
the state’s policies regarding textbooks, including the method of
purchasing them.
To assist him he employed a consultant who had excellent
recommendations. In the middle of the investigation it was
discovered by the press that the consultant was secretly employed
by the very textbook companies under scrutiny.
This duplicity was without the knowledge of the legislator who
wasperfectlyinnocent of any wrong doing. Yet the stigma of conflict
of interest rubbed off and the Assemblyman felt so injured he
declined to run for reelection.
But the story has a happy ending. For Donald D. Doyle was a
young man when the adverse publicity ran him out of office. Today
he is one of the luminaries of the San Francisco financial world. He
has come into far greater wealth than ever he would have found in
politics. And he and his family are enjoying the sheltered lives of
private citizens.
QUARTZ CLUB DINNER
The Gold Quartz Democrat
The Sentinel Singles Club will Club’ will have Happy Easter
meet Saturday at 7:30 p.m. at er on April 19 at the Alta
the Forest Lake School on Qéks Fire House with ice-cubes
Combie Road. t six and dinner at seven thirty.
SENTINEL SINGLES MEET
&
+a OE
=