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Page: of 12

= 2 The Nevada County Nugget Wednesday, August 13, 1969
Mobile home park tops
_duly building permits
‘A recreation building and 100space mobile home park Valued
_. “at $135,000 tops the dollar value
of building permits. issued ‘by
the Nevada County Building and
Inspection Department last
month.
Olympia Glade Mobile Estates applied for the permit to
build the facility at Dorsey
place, 521 Nevada Street, Nevada City, $500; Nordberg, garage, Tyler Road, $1,584; Dunkum, carport, Bear River ries
$1,584.
Constantini, residence, ‘Lake
of The Pines, $17,009; Techel,
residence, Lake of The Pines,
$17,057; Corbett, garage, Colfax Highway, $1, 452; Cecka,
porch addition, Combie . Road
The total valuation of the 91 © and Highway 49 S., $528.
permits issued in June is
$912,982 and in addition to the
mobile home park, permits are
as follows:
' Teichert, addition to residence, Allison Ranch Road,
$4,931; Davies, repair fire
damage, 151 Park Ave., Nevada
City, $1,500; Stevenson, addition, 144 Zion Street, Nevada
City, $3,001; Jeffers, addition,
American Hill Road, $1,286;
Hardin, carport, $990.
Standard Oil, signs for station, 49 south ‘at Grass Valley
city limits, $2,500; Cole, firesirens
Nevada{County
Rainfall Gauge}
‘ NEVADA CITY
Max Min R
Aug. 6 89 43 0
Aug. 7 91 43 0
Aug. 8 92 45 0
Aug. 9 92 46 0
Aug. 10 94 44 trace
Aug. 11 90 53 trace
Aug. 12 91 46 0
Rainfall to date 02
Rainfall last year -10
GRASS VALLEY
Max Min R
Aug. 6 93 50 -00
Aug. 7 93 53 .00
Aug. 8 93 52 -00
Aug. 9 95 56 .00
Aug. 10 98 60 trace
Aug. 11 90 59 trace
Aug. 12 90 53 00
Rainfall to date 01
Rainfall last year 01
NEVADA COUNTE
. SHED EVERY
NESDAY BY
NEVADA COUNTY
PUBLISHING CO,
301 Broad Street,
95
Telephone 265-247 I
Second class postage
paid at Nevada City,
California, Adjudicated a legal newspaper of general circulation by the Nevada
County Superior Court ,
Juce 3, 1960. Decree
No, 12, 406,
Subscription Rates:
one year, bor 00; two
years, $5. 00
19907
PRIZE WINNING NEWSPAPER
ofthe
CALIFORNIA NEWSPAPER
ee ae
Adams,’ addition, OakStreet,
$9,648; Hoover, garage, Pine
~_ Circle, $1, 109; Shaw, firePp 125 Martin, Nevada City,
$689; Dusco Homes, deck addition, entrance to Lake of Pines,
$1,144,Denzler, residence, Lake of
Pines, $19,052; Coward, residence, Slate Creek Road,
$23,025. —Burley, residence, Cascade
Shores, $14,256; Sparks, addition to residence, $2,774; Per-.
son, re-roof and electrical, Cement Hill Road, $450; Vogt,
residence, Pleasant
Road, $34,447; Wright; garage
and utility, Bitney Springs Road,
$1,914; Wilmoth, addition, Bear
River Pines, $3, 336.
Kronquest, residence, Lake of
Pines, $16,096; Speckman, residence, ,Lake of Pines, $16,814;
Cramer, residence, AltaSierra,
$26,845; Sauter, residence,
Bloomfield Road, $14,714; Car-_
doza, restore storage, French
Corral, $200; Spengler, utility
building, Highway 20 east,
$1,340,
Leachman, garage, Cedar
Ridge, $1,900; Gage, fireplace,
Overbrook Acres, $900; Dobbs,
repair and remodel, McCourtney Road, $1,600; Streur, garage, 141 Glen Meadow Drive,
$1,425; Rath, pump house and
storage shed, Alta Sierra Drive,
5
Anderson, tool shed and storage, Bloomfield Road, $1,056;
Roliscott, rest room, Scotts Flat
Lake, $3, 880; Peter, storage,
Glenbrook Drive, $400; Wingard,
complete unfinished
Willow Valley Road, $4,368;
Fassino, remodel and repair,
136 Pine Lane, $1,500.
Butler, remodel and repair,
Ridge Road, $3,000; Fields addition, Lower Colfax Road,
$7, 7187; Lenahan, storage -shed,
Cascade Shores, $400; Young,
residence, Lake of The Pines,
$26,130; Stortz, addition, McCourtney Road, $7,718.
Frazier, addition, Union Hill,
Colfax, . $1,969; Seventh Day
Adventist Church, Alta Street,
Grass Valley, re-roof, $2, 500,
Sauby, residence, Donner
Pines Tract, $21,656; Carr, residence, Olympic Ht. Sub.,
$37,682; Cipriano, addition,
Waltz Tract, $2,589; Robertson,
residence, Pla-Vada Woods,
$15,536,
Glaser, studio, Willow and
Pine Way, $6,432; LaRue, residence, Kingvale, $14, 869; Taylor, addition, Donner. Lake Road,
$9,648; Anderson, develop four
trailer spaces, $3,000; Pleich,
chalet, Donner Woods Sub.,
$17, 102.
Del Ponte, develop four trailer
spaces, $3, 600; Grow, addition,
Meadow Way, $7,973; Clark, residence, Highlands No. 1, Donner
Lake Drive, $13,520; "Larkin,
residence, South ‘Shore Tract,
$24,120; Marino, residence,
Donner Lake Villa, $24,451.
Carpaneto, residence, Prosser Lakeview, $19,861; Truckee Tahoe ‘Airport, ‘hangar,
Truckee-Tahoe Airport, $3,572,_
Valley *
VEW cuts out .
furnishing
of equipment —
At the regular meeting of Banner Mountain Post #2655, V.F .W.
Aug. 4, the post voted todiscontinue their program of providing
Sick room equipment to those
requesting a I6an of such equipment. The post has for many
years provided sick room equipment without charge and the investment during the years has
totaled in the thousands of dollars. The program has lacked
the cooperation of the public
and much of the equipment has
never been returned, and what
remains is obsolete and mot in
good repair.
The program has been under
study for the past several months
with the action taken Monday
night no further equipment will
be loaned and the equipment now
on loan and in storage will be
phased out and liquidated as soon
as possible without due hardship
to anyone.
Don MacGinnis, commander
of the post, believes that the post
has been shouldering an undue
burden and that the’effort, while
it has served many people inthe
past, can now be directed to
‘greater service within fhe post.
A committee has been named to
liquidate the sick room equipment,
Million-dollar budget
adopted by GV board
The Grass Valley School District board of trustees had only
one resident in the audience
Tuesday evening for the public
hearing on a 1969-70 budget of .
_ $1,071,503,
The one observer, Mrs. B,
T. Reynolds, said she had no
objection, she was just sorry
more people weren't interested
in a budget of over $1 million.
The budget accepted Tuesday
evening differed slightly from
the publication budget, Supt.
Vernon Bond told the’ board
members. Figures for. income *
are more exact, Bond said, and
he decreased from 95 per cent
to 92 per cent the amount of
taxes which will be paid. .
“The tax rate will be $1.67
five cents over last year yet
still. fourth from the bottom
of elementary school tax rates
in the county, Bond said, And,
he added, the Grass Valley district "educates over one-half
all the elementary school children in the county.” .
The budget adopted does not
reflect any new state money,
Bond told the board, as the Legislature has not yet passed any
new school bills.
The board approved hiring Eugene Pongratz, an auditor from
Sacramento, to do the district's
audit. Pongratz has done the
district's audit for the past two
years, Bond said, and “he knows
our programs,"
The price of the audit will be
between $600 and $650, Bond
“said, “which is a good. price
_ considering we have 12 separ“ate accounts."
The intern (student teachers)
program and symmer. school
programs are over, Bond said,
with 23 interns earning 12 units
each, The two programs were
separate yet interwoven. Bond
said the method of interns being
in the field (working with students) before they learned theworked well.
The district will have an exhibit at the Nevada County Fair,
Bond announced, which will cost
the district $40. He said the booth
will be in conjunction with the
Heart Association. During the
school year the Heart Association loans the district a plastic
heart for demonstration purpospel Bond said, which would cost
95.
Bond said 35 new students
have enrolled already and if the
increase continues a new teacher may need to be hired. —
The meeting was adjourned
until a special meeting, called
for 7:30 p.m. Aug. 13, to open
bids i boas classrooms,
Safety Tips For Outdoor Barbecuing
Man’s favorite outdoor
summer. sport is barbecuing
and, like any other type of
cooking,. technique plays a
major role:According to the Structo
Barbecue Institute and the
National Safety Council,
proper safety precautions can
spell the difference between
an enjoyable meal and
potential disaster, Aswith
any flame or fire, these
experts ,say, respect for the
grill should always be present,
even when preparing something easy to fix like hot
dogs.
Don’t grill in an area where
children are playing: A. careless child may ‘inadvertently
run into the grill, tip it over,
and be severely burned.
if any part of grilling were —
to be branded as particularly
dangerous, it’s lighting the
fire. Many tragedies and near
tragedies are caused every
year by carelessness in lighting charcoal, according to -the
National Safety Council.
Gasoline. because of its
explosive nature, should be
avoided along with any
flammable material ‘not
expressly designed for
barbecuing. Electric charcoal
lighters should be handled
with care; their elements. if
stored in dampness. may
short out when used.
Follpw the directions on
the lighter fluid container
which always say to let the
liquid soak into the charcoal
before lighting to reduce the
hazard of a flash flame. Do
not under any circumstances
add lighter fluid once the grill
is going.
For handling food on the
grill, it’s a good idea to: have
long-handled tools, preferably
tongs that are sturdy with
fire-proof. grips, spokesnien
for the Structo Barbecue
Institute maintain. A pair of
heavy gloves will keep hands
safe when it’s necessary to
handle some hot item.
A heavy apron to viotbet
clothing from grease and
sparks is a must for the chef.
Roll up your sleeves and keep
loose-fitting. clothes away
from the fire.
When cooking steaks that
drip fat into the fire, a
sprinkling bottle filled with
water is helpful in curbing
flames that can ruin a fine
piece of meat.
Most outdoor chefs fail to
realize the danger of charcoal
fires which give off carbon
monoxide. Charcoal should
only be used outdoors or in
well-ventilated indoor locations such as a replace with
an open draft.
Contceliad. heat is the
desire of every chef. And for
best results for every type of
outdoor recipe, according to
the Barbecue Institute, a
slow,.even heat may be '
achieved by cooking with a
minimum of charcoal. Cook~
ing with a layer one briquette
deep should be enough.
For greater heat control
and fewer hazardous sparks, .
experts prefer a covered grill
or a windbreak on the grill to
protect the fire from strong
drafts. The best control
comes from a covered or
‘kettle grill that traps the heat
much like an oven. Acovered /
. fae eliminates sparks and
me-ups and also provides
even heat at a constant
temperature to retain natural
_ juices while barbecuing.
After you have finished
grilling, extinguish the live
charcoals by dousing them
with a panfull of water.
ory and method at college,
serge —