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Collection: Newspapers > Nevada County Nugget

July 2, 1959 (6 pages)

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Subscription: Yearly Superior Court, Decree No. 10023. epennne 2 Sant Sewenber Noveaber 6, 1951, in Nevada . the $3.00; Six Months $1.75 GERALD B. WALLACE Advertising Rates on Request TRIUMPH OF DETERMINATION It is far too early, of course, to judge accurately the effect John Foster Dulles will have on history, or the judgement history will render on John Foster Dulles. As the days carry him back into history, however, it remains clear that his life was a twin triumph of determination. ee There had never been any personal ambition for Mr. Dulles other than to follow his maternal grandfather and an uncle as Secretary of State. It is fortunate for the nation and ~ the world that in the case of Mr. Dulles driving ambition was at accompanied by an inflexible devotion to high moral stand. ards. j It was this virtue that most strengthened him in his sec. ond determination to make an arduous fight for peace in his . He was ready to sacrifice himself completely in his At the time of the Korean armistice he said: time. quest. war, men make vast sacrifices for peace. peace is won, they fail to make the lesser sacrifices needed John Foster Dulles was not one of those. Vice President Richard Nixon gave Mr. Dulles perhaps his finest epitaph when he called him “one of the truly heroic figures of the 20th century—one of those rare individuals who livedsto see the verdict of history vindicate the very policies which seemed to be so unpopularvat the time he advocatto keep the peace.” ed them.” . As Mr. Nixon added, billions of men and women, in the world “owe to him an eternal gratitude for the fight he waged for the peace and freedom which they enjoy.” to continue to enjoy it we would de well to guide our actions by the high moral standards that lighted the way: for John Foster Dulles. “In And then, when If we are Registration For 4-H Campers 4-H camp registration for both Hi 4-H and regular camp at Woodchuck Fiat will be from 8 to 5 on Tuesday, July 7; in the farm advisor’s office. It is located in the Grass Valley Veterans Memorial Building on South Auburn Street. Mrs. Sibley Hansen will register. all members and leaders at that time. *The fees are: Hi 4-H camp, $3.50, plus 5 cents per day insurance; regular camp,. $6.25 for full time, $3.25 for half time, plus 5 cents per day insurance for those 4-H clubs not having an annual insurance coverage. Parents, 4-H families, and leaders are, of course, invited. 4-H selves but near the camp, and eat with the whole camp. Extra meals for visitors are $1 each, plus 5 cents insurance. Thomas Jefferson is remembered most as the author of the Declaration of . Independence. However, The World Book Encyclopedia netes that he was also the foremost. American architect of his time, a translator of Greek plays, a violinist and the inventor of the dumbwaiter and the swivel chair. Independence Day was first celebrated in Philadelphia on July 8, 1776, the day when the public learned the actual words of the Declaration of Independence, according to The World families can camp off ‘to themBook Encyclopedia.Priced to 152 S. Auburn St. CUSTOM BUILT HOMES 3 OR 4 BEDROOM Custom Built Homes on Acre Plus Parcels 1 Mile From Town ale 2 BATHS, BUILT-IN APPLIANCES, SHAKE_ROOFS A & H DEVELOPMENT CO. Grass Valley $16,900.00 Phone 1109 NOTICE Grass Valley NOTICE CLOSED FOR VACATION July 4th Through July 11th VALET CLEANERS 421 S. Auburn Street California eee POWER BOATING is pro; for this hungry clan. . gressing rapidly in popularity, and so Gudging from this picture) are dockside eating customs. This family demonstrates how well appetite-building day on the water. Mother (righ “hero” sandwiches while the rest of the tribe enjoys hot soup, made in minutes in the galley using handy condensed soup. Hard-boiled eggs, salad and coffee cake round out the menu f OBITUARIES George Ervin Leahy, 55, well known sports figure and proprion South Auburn Street, passed Sierra Nevada Memorial Hospital. His death terminated a lengthy illness He came to Grass Valley in 1936 and opened Leahy’s Liquor Store in the Hills Flat area. In 1947 he, with his wife Lucille, started Leahy’s Family South Auburn Street. He was an ardent hunter and fisherman. He had served on the board of trustees in the BPOE prior to his death. : Surviving are his wife, Lucille Leahy, 109 Leahy Road, Broadview Heights; a daughter, Barbara, of Sacramento; Kenneth Ervin and Michael George, sons, both of Grass Valley; Mrs. Carl Johnson, sister, of Maywood, Calif. : Final rites were held at Hooper & Weaver Mortuary, with Grass Valley BPOE handling the graveside services at Greenwood Memorial Gardens. : EILEEN HELMS Mrs. Eileen Helms, 45, of 2113 Capital Avenue, Sacramento, died last Friday, June 26, 1959, in a: Sacramento hospital following a a long illness. . She was a native of England and lived in Grass Valley for 10 years before moving to Sacramento in 1946. Surviving are her husband, . Robert N.; a son, James Boring, and brothers Melville Pappin of San Francisco and James Pappin of Grass Valley. Services were held in the W. F. Gormley “Sons Funeral Home in Sacramento, with burial in East Lawn Cemetery. ERNEST HOCKING Ernest (Ernie) Hocking, 75, well known retired businessman, local baseball fan, and son. of early pioneer residents of Nevada City, died at Sierra Nevada Memorial Hospital Monday, June 29, 1959, after a lengthy illness. ° Bereaved beside his wife are a daughter, Clarice McCue, and a son, Bob Hocking, and a niece, Mrs. Hazel Walmsley of Grass Valley. Serviceswere held Wednesday July 1, 1959, at Hooper & Weaver Mortuary, Grass Valley, with interment following at New Elm Ridge Lawn. ANN PALMBERG Mrs. Ann Palmberg, who had been staying at the home of Mrs. Ruth T. Whittlesey of Glenbrook, To extend the useful service life of your diesel engines and “reduce dowr time, -use RPM DELO Lubricating Oils. = For any Standard Oil product, call LG “Larry” DAVIS. P. O. Box 1007 BETTER DIESEL PERFORMANCE When you use RPM DELO Lubricating Oils, your diesel engines spend more time working, less time in the shop. It stays on parts whether engine is hot or cold, running or idie. Special compounds prevent deposits that clog and stick rings. etor of Leahy’s Furniture Store : away Saturday, June 27, 1959, at f _4-H summer camping at Woodchuck Flat is about to begin for Nevada Gounty 4-Hers. Hi 4-Hers (those entering the 9th grade and above) are planning their camp beginning with the evening meal Sunday, July 12, through the noon meal Wednesday, July 15. Most Furniture and Supply Store on, of them will stay through the regular 4-H camp, which starts
with the evening ~ Wednesday, July 15. The Nevada County camping sessions end with the noon meal on Sunday, July 19, when other campers will go in. Setting up tents, tables, water: lines, and readying the kitchen will be done Saturday and Sun} day, July 11 and 12, reports 4-H , Camp Committeemen O. Brown, Henry Magonigal, and John Personeni.Each club is requested to have at least two families at camp to help the ,set-up activities. Usually thos@coming put their food’ together for a wonderful potluck meal: Relaxing after lunch -usually includes a little horse shoe pitching and volley ball. A very large swimming area has been developed on the creek by Mother Nature. Sand-filled sacks for a small dam will make it perfect. Call the farm advisor’s office GV 26 for more information. but had been visiting in Southern California; passed away at Hawthorne, Calif. Mrs. Palmberg leaves a nephew, John Wright, Albert, Canada. ERNEST CRASE Funeral services for Ernest (Stub) Crase, 68, well known retired mi ‘and lifelong resident of Grass Walley} was held last Monday, June 22, 1959, at Hooper & Weaver Mortuary in Grass Valley with Rev. %. Lester Lewis officiating. Interment followed in Elm Ridge Lawn. Surviving are his wife, Amy Biggs Crase, and daughter, Elsie Dudek, both of Grass Valley; two sons, Elmer fTuggs) Crase, Chico, and Clarence (Corky) Crase, Placerville, and séven grandchildren. If another motorist starts to pass you, National Automobile Club advises that you slow down The nurserymen offer a list of vegetables that can be grown as transplants. Availability, of course, depends on whether the particular variety does well Most common and ever the most popular are tomatoes. These are no newcomers to the method outlined, but new varieties with ~pe-ial area adaptation are ever showing up in nurseries. Figure about 10 plants to keép the medium sized family happy and, in small gardens, grow them upward. against a warm wall or ; 40 Makes The peppers, both red chili }veppers, are commonly available. _ . So, too, is lettuce, both heading }and romaine. Figure a dozen. to 15 plants of lettuce for plenty of family salads and set them about a foot apart. Eggplant is a candidate for transplanting, and swiss chard, while simply grown from seed, is even more simply grown from transplants. It is usually available. Celery is far and away easier by this method. Three or four chard plants will take care of the family of four. but three dozen or more celery plants would not be out of line. There. are other vegetables commonly started this way, but they are not available until fall. They are Brussel sprouts, broccoli,. cabbage, and. cauliflower Introduce yourself to those availbe back for others come fall. ~ . * *¢ #8 : SET UP A, SUMMER FEEDING CHEDULE A wise gardener, we're told, treats his soil. the same as he ‘does his bank account: never taking out of it more than he put in. He knows from experience that any imbalance can only last until the funds run out. = eners are soil wise. .T go on year after year, planting and picking: drawing nutrients from the soil and merrily working their way into trouble. Are you one of these? If so, there’s no better time than summer. to do something about it. Since the garden is. growing fast, the rewards of proper summer feeding are immediate and obvious. Start by sitting down with Paper and pen to get a schedule about following it religiously. The California Association of Nurserymen guarantees you won't regret. the little extra effort it takes. To start with the obvious, list the lawn first and. figure on feednig it lightly every month or six weeks right through summer and into fall. Then come roses .and other shrubs. Feed roses once a month with a commercial fertilizer and manure. You can follow the same schedule with such summer shrubs as gardenias and hibiscus. . Feed. fuchsias lightly every three weeks or monthly with a commercial fertilizer or liquid fish. Tuberous begonias take liquid fish and the frequency deto make the passing easier and safer. ma ee a pends on how they are planted. 1. D-S.GHURGH ANNUAL _ NOON TO 4 P. M. DONATION Adult ey sie OL Children 12 . t=. el Atal etal adel eh teal 5¢ able now, and we guarantee you'll. Sadly, however, not ll gard-. in black and white. Then, set] though, or. leafage will be too The idea is to set up your sched. ule so that needed feedings will fall on the same days. You minimize the effort this way, but not the effect it will-have on the future tof your garden. At the City Hall, Nevada City, 1300 feet of 214 inch. fire hose. 300 feet of 1% inch fire hose in serviceable condition. Price ten dollars for a 50 foot length. ee ALL NEW. HOME LITE #” & , GEAR DRIVE red ome CHAIN SAW New centered bar and pistol grip makes it easier to fell a tree right where you want it! Safer and faster, too. © choice of gear ratios ‘@ left and right hand chain oiler ~ @ easy-off engine shroud © @ fells trees up to 10 feet in diameter @ only 26 pounds Cless bar andchain) @ guatanteed for 7 months @ many other new features Have a free demonstration today! Western Auto Supply Broad St. Nevada City RMOireus 7 hp. RIDE-A-MATIC TRACTOR Over 20 work-saving attachments SEE YOUR LOCAL DEALER fa * Experienced Cuunsel IN YOUR TIME OF NEED We offer you friendly, sympathetic help with attention to the details that mean so much. We _ strive to give everyone the finest—no matter how much or how little they spend. Call us day or night. We are_ always ready to serve. BERGEMANN FUNERAL CHAPEL J. PAUL BERGEMANN (Formerly Holmes Funeral Home) ; 246 Sacramento Street Phone 203 Nevada City 24 HOUR AMBULANCE SERVICE mulch around them with steer} a i ae America’s Most Popular is € x q % Hi : a st-Cutting 5 Mower New Huffy Mowers are Safety-Engitieered for all*round Protection while you mow. They cut smoothly —eject evenly—give you dozens of easy-mowing features. Electrics are perfect for lawns less than 100 by 150 feet. Gas Mowers are idcal for larger lawns. See