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Page: of 12

4
a
® e
ification
Voters in western Nevadae
county will decide on unification
of school districts April 15,
the same time they select district trustees,
A study of unification will be
made and committes of willing
citizens will be selected to get
the pro-unification story to the
people before election. Presumably the anti-unification citizens will have a similar studyogram,
There are 13 school districts
“involved in western Nevada
county, About 5,000 students attend these schools.
The local administrators’ association reflected diverse opinabout unification in a remeeting, but here seemed
a complete agreement on
one thing: The people should
According to the Education
News. Service, a full-scale study.
of decentralization will be
recommended to the Legislature by the chairman of the Senate Education Committee.
Two bills were the subject of
a recent hearing in Los Angeles,
the one in favor of splitting the
district into smaller ones and
the other proposing a federalized decentralization,
While the Los Angeles study
is expected to take 12 to 18
months, the Nevada county fact
gathering will have amuch more
limited time. But the prime
reason for it--to get the story
to the voters--is a good one.
School matters usually are so
complex the average citizen gets
lost probing them. Maybe this
study will shed a bit of light
on the pros and cons of district
unification effecting an informed
voter verdict ‘ come April 15,
NEVADA COUNTY NUGGET.
PUBLISHED EVERY
WEDNESDAY BY
NEVADA COUNTY
PUBLISHING CO,
318 Broad Street,
Telephone 265-2471
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, $3.00; two
years, $5.00,
198'7
PRIZE WINNING NEWSPAPEX
: of the
CALIFORNIA NEWSPAPER
a
aati, Begone ane nne poate sl
sinccinswcnivaning-torD th
“
Three stage lines operating
Washington-NC in 1896
By Rye Slye
John Sheahan today put on a
tri-weekly stage line between
Washington and Nevada City.
"There are now three stage
lines on that road." (NCDT,
May 18, 1896)
** *
From three bill-heads, each
printed in a different style of
type, from a collection of Mr,
Sven Skarr, historian and antique dealer of Nevada City:
1, Hong Chong, (Wash), Nevada City, Nov. 2, 1891, To:
Washington & Maybert Express
Co., Dr. James Tully, Proprietor. Stages Run To All Points,
A General Stage Business.
2, Same name as above. Nevada City, April 14, 1896, Daily.
Stages Between Nevada City,
Washington, Maybert & Gaston.
George & J, B, Grissel, Proprietors.
$, May 1, 1904. Same heading
as above. S, P. Redmayne is
Prop,
three "bill-heads" lst
items delivered to Mr, Hong
Chong in Washington, Example:
1. Box of chicken & Sk, From
Yee Lee--.50,
An. old account book shows .
Mr. Hong Chong's total express
bill for March 1900; was $40.
Letterhead found in old records in Washington. Dated 1907,
Washington and Maybert Express Co, Daily Stages Between
Nevada City, Washington, Maybert & Gaston.
** *
From---Traveler's Guidebook. Published 1907 by the
Nevada City Daily Miner-Transcript.
Washington, From N.C., 19
miles; Stage Fare, $2.00.; Elevation, 2650. Ormonde, 22;
$2.50.; 3000. Maybert, 28;
$3,00.; 3800. Gaston, 26; $3.00;
5000,ee
Travel and freighting on the
Washington stage line is brisk
these. days, This’ morning a
large six-horse stage with elev@Q passengers and quite a load
of freight left here for the upcountry town. The lively upturn in the traffic shows that
times are improving in the
Washington District. (NCDT,
July 13, 1901)”
* * *
Grissel Bros, have taken their oe
four-horse sleigh up country so
as to be ready for stage duty
between Washington and Nevada
City when the snow flies. (NCDT
December 16, 1903)
kK
The Washington stage got
through to Nevada City yesterday after a hard fight with the
snow. (NCDT,° April 9, 1907)
Letters
January 21, 1969
Nevada Count:
Nevada City, Calif.
Gentlemen:
Thank you for printing the
newsphoto. of Boreal’s Night
Lighting; however, may we be
the first to tell you that it is _
upside down.
HELEN THORPE
Promotion .
Ed. Note: Thank you for being
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several hours to finish it. You
see, after the thing was all up,
they started to cover it with
clay. But they left a door in
it, After that they started to
make holes in it all around
the wigwam, as I called it. Then
a fire was set in it,
You know, I sat by that fire
all night, I finally fell asleep
the sun, I guess I was asleep
long time, That was the first
last time I watched anyone
ake charcoal.
But half way down the side of
the n I ran across aroad
Boe
that made in the earlydays, .
It is all covered with trees and
brush now, and you would never
it unless you knew where it was.
JACK BASSETT
Grass Valley,
CALIFORNIA
SPEAKS .
BISHOP CHARLES F.
GOLDEN, head of Calif.-Nevada Methodist Conference—
“We believe the time is ripe
for a new exciting venture of
faith. and involvement. of the
church in the world.”
CLARK KERR, ex-pres. ;
UC—“The circumstances under which I assumed the presand those under
identical. I
was fired with enthusiasm.”
SO WHAT’S NEWP
In the afterglow of the Apollo 8 achievement a few
people with long memories, including the National
Observer, aré having fun saying “So what’s new about
that?” They then recall the novel written by Jules
Verne more than a century ago, in 1865, “From the
Earth to the Moon”.
In his story, Verne sent three men to the moon in a
spaceship 12 feet high. Apollo 8’s command module was
12 feet high, carried three men. ~
Verne’sship weighed 12,231 pounds, Apollo 8 161
pounds more.
. The novelist’s spacecraft was shot into the air at
a point on the Florida coast 100 miles from what is
now Cape Kennedy, on December 11. bed
It achieved a speed of 25,544 miles per hour. Apollo
' 8 at one time hit 24,200 mph.
Verne’s ship went into a 25-mile high moon orbit
then splashed down in the Pacific. One of its passengers
was named Andan; one of Apollo 8’s was Anders.
Nature, is has been said, imitates art. Now Science
is doing it.
Post Mortem
Ben Franklin’s seemingly
impregnable position as one
of America’s true geniuses in
many fields has been tarnished. He couldn’t invent a
way to keep the magazine he
founded in operation more
than 147 years. :
Many Americans in that untrustworthy age bracket over
30 will recall with considerable nostalgia the delights of
the old Saturday Evening
Post. An amalgam of attention getting fiction, informative articles, delightful humor,
and _ fascinating advertisements, it was.an American
tradition. Now it is dead.
Dead, they say, in great
part at the hands of a scientific revolution in which Ben
himself played a considerable
part — electronics. Television,
with its instant intrusion into
millions of homes, drained
away many advertising dollars. Booming newspaper lineage captured many more. The
picture magazines which in
their way kept pace with TV’s
visual appeal ate into circulation. e temper of the
times, changed vastly by instantaneous communication,
made it impossible for the old
Post, unlike the more flexible
press, to change its image
sufficiently to hold the attention of a new generation.
It was a nice try, Ben. A
century and a half isn’t bad;
afterall, you don’t have to
worry about what you'll do
for an encore.
WEATHER.
NEVADA CITY
-_Max Min. R
Jan, 22 49 32 2.380.
Jan, 23 36 29. 14
Jan, 24 37 2B 24
Jan, 25 47. 33: 1,95
Jan, 26 50. 37 .2.79-.
Jan, 27 40 31 53
Jan, 28 $5 = 31 37
Rainfall to date 51,15
Rainfall last year 19,77
GRASS VALLEY
Max Min R
Jan, 22 49 « 3 1,7
Jan, 23 37 907: .t
Jan, 2% = 39 30 40
Jan, 25 49 36 1.56
Jah, 26 «51 «=, 382.59
Jan, 27 41 $2 16.
Jan, 28 3 482.. .29
Rainfall to date 48,64
Rainfall last year 21.05
°
a
He may be right
_A Cook County, Dlinois judge
reportedly has come out infavor
of legalized prostitution to cut
down sex crimes and reduce the
criminal calendar.
A.wire service story quotes
Judge Ben Edelstein, who presides over women's court:
"With legalized prostitution you
would eliminate the situation in
which somebody with a desire
grabs a young girl on the
street."
He reportedly blames the "affluent society” and "pleasure
seekers with more money to
spend" for the increase in prostitution,"" and said legalizing it
would "cut down on the venereal
disease rate," :
Judge’ Edelstein's opinion
probably shocks a sizable segment of the nation's population,
and this is a feat in itself in
these "'unshockable '60s,"'
But for those who can weather
the shock, his arguments appear
to have much merit, Should they
catch on nationally, it would not
be surprising to learn that Nevada City's "Spring Street
Girls" might return,