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Page: of 24

Soa Het communities of Nevada Ci
umbug, Relief Hill, Washington, Blue
fa Gold Flat, a Gold Bar, Lowell
Remington Hill, Anthony House, Delirium T: ramen
Volume 38 Number 52
Project
Payment
Is Held Up
Nevada Irrigation District board
of directors had meetings scheduled for all of this week in the
hopes that financial difficulties
of the project contractor would
be settled.
The district board has been adjourning from day to day since
Dec. 14 when the directors put a
hold on the project payment to
contractor Paul Hardeman, Inc.
The action was taken after the
district received requests for pay—
ment from several local suppliers
and sub-contractors,
District officials met with officials of Hardeman and the bonding company and, with agreement of the.firm and the bond .
Continued On Page 3)
$2,000 Taken In
Grass Valley
Bank Holdup
A man walked into the Mill
Street Branch of the Bank of
A m'efica in Grass Valley early
Monday afternoon and robbed the
bank of approximately $2,000 in
cash."
According to Grass Valley
Police Chief Frank Knuckey, the
man entered the bank at about
12:40 p.m. and went to the window of teller Thelma Frye of
Grass Valley.
The man reportedly placed a
black revolver and a bag on the
counter and told Mrs. Frye to
fillthe bag with bills of large denominations.
The teller filled the bag with
several bundles of bills and the
man picked up his bag and gun
and walked out of the bank.
Knuckey said there seemed to
be no car near the bank, but one
witness said they saw a man answ ering the description of the
robber walking up Bank Alley
toward the direction of the city
parking lot.
A check of the bank indicated
that the man carried away about
$2,000.
Police had an all points bulletin
out for the robber who was described as about age 50, five feet
10 inches tall, of light complexion with squinty, bloodshot
eyes and wearing a tan rain hat
and coat.
_ <r
, Red Dog, You Bet, Town Talk, Glenbrook, Little York, Cherokee, Mooney Flat, Sweetland,
arr Meadows, Cedar Ridge, Union Hill, Peardale, Summit City Walloupa, Gouge Eye, Lime Kiln,
fill, Bourbon Hill, Scotch Hill, North Columbia, Columbia Hill, Brendy Flat, Sebastopol, Quaker Hill,
SS
aciaceeimeniia
10 Cents A Copy
North br Juan, North Bloom, Selby Flat, Grizzly
s Flat, Orleans Flat,
December 24, 1964 Published Thursdays, Nevada City
re
a. & by,
eS os,
Nevada is =/ Transp
PUBLISHED BY
#4 BROWN & CALKINS, #%
Nevada City, California.
PRICE 50 CENTS.
. >
\
a4 ts
READERS of the Nevada City Transcript 80 years ago received the above
paper during Christmas week. The Nugget is using this colorful old page
this week to send holiday greetings and best wishes to its readers.
Historic
"Zoning Is
> Considered
Nevada City is going’ to look
into the: possibility of passing an
ordinance to protect selected historic buildings near the proposed
freeway.
This was one of the results of a
special meeting of the council
and state highway officials called
lastweek to discuss freeway problems.
District Engineer W. L. Warren,
Gilbert Muleahy of the state
rights-of-way division, and freeway project engineer Charles
Chappelle attended the session.
The matter of preservation of
buildings centered around the
question of the Hot Mill property
on Main and Union Streets.
Severalweeks-ago owner Mike
Haley asked the council to take
the position that they had no interest in acquiring the property.
Haley said he understood the state
was starting condemnation proceedings at the urging of thecity,
The council at that time said
they had previously gone on record as being opposed to the des~truction of the building and did
notcare to take further action at
that time,
At the meeting of Dec. 14a
resolution was introduced and
passed declaring the Hot Mill,
Ott's Assay Office and the
National Hotel, Annex as monuments of the city and noting that
it was the wish of the council that
they not be destroyed or mater~
ially altered on the exterior.
During the session last Thursday
night the state officials explained
that there were three alternatives
open on the question of the Hot
Mill, Thestate could acquire the
entire property and level the building, the state could acquire
corners of the structure on two
sides required for the highway
construction and leave the remainder in Haley's ownership, or
the state could buy the entire
property and offer it to the city.
Itwas quickly pointed out that
the council had gone on record
many times as being opposed to
destruction of the byilding. At
the same time it was noted that
the city was in no position to
purchase the structure,
So the second alternative of
leaving the building in the hands
of the owner after it had been
(Continued On Page 2)
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