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Page: of 8

ropolitan Opera, will mak
to Music Circus stage wi
Norway and The King And
To Hold Meeting
Governor Edmund G
fornia delegation
less than a month off.
The organizational meeting of the big group which
will represent 81 votes at
the convention was called
by Assemblyman William
A. Munnell, chairman of the
Democratic State Central
Committee, upon request of
Governor Brown, the delegation’s “favorite son” presidential candidate.
SENIORS
Blanche Thebom, leading
Mezzo-Soprano of the Mether debut on the Sacramenleading roles in The Song O
Brown Delegation
Brown will meet on Saturday, June 18, in Sacramento
with the newly elected Calito the
Democratic National Convention at Los Angeles, now
Members of Nevada Lodge
#13 of Nevada City and al
Masons are invited to atten
a 6:30 p.m. dinner June 1
after which Mr. T.F. Wei,
Past-Grand Master of China
will address the lodge on:
“Masonry in China”.
China. Hereceived his
Bachelor of Science degree
from Mass, Institute of T echnology. He served in the
Chinese Navy asLt. J.G. and
had submarine training at
New London, Conn.
Wei was founder of Sun
Lodge # 114 Philippine Constitution and a Past Master of
that lodge.
A member of Shanghai’
Scottish Rite and a Past Master of all bodies he was madé
a Knight Commander court
of Honor andin 1955 elected
and received the 33rd. degree. He was elected Grand
Master of Masons in China in
1950 and served for six years.
Wei has a colorful Rotary
life, too, being Past President
of Shanghai Club and District Governor for Central
China, as well as administrative advisor for Rotary
clubs in Honkong, Macao and
Taiwan. Returned to the
United: States in 1956 and is
now serving as project
engineer, machinery department of Getz Bros& Co.,
San Francisco,
Heis principal of Sees .
Language School of the
Episcopal Church in Chinatown, San Francisco and a
2
I.
Wei was born in Canton .
.
fe
FURN.
OFFICE EQUIPMENTEach bid shall be submnitted on a form obtained at
the Nevada Union High
School District, office of the
District Superintendent, 465
So. Auburn Street, Grass
Valley, California; shall be
sealed and filed in said office of the District Superintendent on or before 12:00
o'clock noon on JULY 5,
1960, and will be publicly
opened and read aloud at
the regular meeting of the
Board held on JULY 5, 1960,
at 8:00 p.m. o’clock at the
Nevada Union Senior High
School, 340 Buena Vista
Street Grass Valley, California.
, The Nevada Union High
School District reserves the
right to reject any or all
' bids, to accept or reject any
“one or more items of a bid
or to waive any irregularities or informalities in the
bids or in the bidding.
Preference will be. made
in the award of Californiamade supplies, pursuant to
Sections 4330 to 4334, inclusive, Government Code.
Dated: June 10, 1960. °*
NBVADA UNION HIGH
SCHOOL DISTRICT,
Harold George, Sr.,
Clerk of Boara of
Trustees, Nevada Unfon High School District.
Publish: June 15, 22, 1960,
seven
° : . .
Jack Miner Takes Over'
DIPLOMAS ...Graduating students at
Nevada Union Junior High School are
shown receiving diplomas from Principal
Banner VFW
Banner Mountain V.F.W.
(Continued from page 1) k
warden of the church. Ed Franz and Jack
Ronald Keith Gon
Judith Ann Good
John F. Gordon
Rodger A. Green
Marian K. Griggs
Larry D. Hafelfinger
Linda Josephine Hallenberg
Marvin Norman Paul
Barbara Eileen Paulsen
George Ernest Peat
Dale C. Pendergraft
Anna Elizabeth Peregrin
Michael A. Peregrin
Carol Ann Pierce
the board of educat
LEGAL NOTICE
Brickell, member of
ion.
TO BIDDERS
The Sierra Nevada Memorial Hospital, a non-profit
INVITATON AND NOTICE
Kathryn Ann Halstead
s.Sue Arleen Hansen
Robert W. Hantke
Thomas William Harrer
Frederick Mark Haseltine
Helen Hayes
James Porter Hennig
Frank I. Hicks
Lillian Marie Hill
Melvin L. Hillier
Michael Lee Hines
Dylon Phyllis Hintze
Earl B. Hiscox
John J. Hodge Jr.
Carole Elaine Holt
Lee D. Holt
Charles Rowland Howe
Darla Jean Hunnicutt
Alan Charles Hutsinpille.
Diane Claire Jackson
John Dennis Jamison
Nina Darlene Jean
Robert Joseph Kalis
Donald Smith Kennedy
Richard L. Kline
Betty Louise Knapp
David Collins Knutson
Robert C. Kolstad
Kathie Gay Kraushaar
s.Connie D. Kropidlowski
Phyllis O’'Nesky Kyle
Stanley Charles Lake Jr.
s.Beverly Louise Lambert
James W. Langdon
Susan Jane Lanham
Judith Carol Dorrell
Richard H. Leighton
Richard Hjalmar Leijonflycht
Ardith Carol Liedtke
William Delmar Livesay
Kathryn Ann Lowe
Linda R. Lowe
Wanda Dianne Lowe
Candace Fae Lusk
Michael Alan Lynch
Charlotte Ann Lyter
Jolene Inez Mace
Bea Mae Mack
Edith C. Mack
Dennis R. Mader
Donald Ford Malin
Arthur J. Manchester
Kirk D. Marshall
Richard Alan McGuire
John James McKenzie
Francis David Mellor
Michael Philip Merrill
Carolyn Elaine Meyer
Charles Frederick Mildred
3.Mary Lee Whittington Milham
Franklin W. Milhous
Nancy Kay’ Miller
William E. Mills
* Kathryn Mitchell
Brian A. Mobley
s.Roger W. Mock
Louise Roberta Moore
Terry Joanne Moore
Pennie Lee Morateur
Carla Jean Morgan
Beverly Ann Murphy
Donald Paul Myers
Patricia Lee Nasey
William James Niccoli
Nellie Frances Noland
Robert K. Noone
Carl ‘Véfnon North
JoAnn Elizabeth O’Hara
‘Janet Anne Olmsted
Richard Charles Page
Edward Julian Pardini
Norma Jean Parsons
Jerry Wayne Patty
* Graduating in Absentia
Federation
s.Sealbearer — Life Membership California Scholarship
; (Indicated by gold tassels)
Richard Nickolas Piombo
Tommy Lee Pitts
Bruce K. Popielarz
Clifford Lester Porter
s.Chester Eugene Ramey
Paul F. Rankin
Carl C. Rasmussen
Albert Mathew Rausch Jr.
Len O. Ray
Sally Louise Redman
Michael Patrick Reilly
Ronald Wilbur Remington
Everett Neal Retallack
Carol Lee Renfree
Lea Jane Rice
Arvis C. Roberts Jr.
Erna Louise Roberts
Honey Claudia Robinson
s.Judith Lee Robinson
John E. Rodda
Carl Joseph Roderick
Janet S. Rogers
Priscilla Elizabeth Rose
Jerry Lee Rosewall
Lynda Joanne Roth
Lynn Nicholson Russell
s.F. Douglas Rutherford
Mary Rosetta Sanders
Lynda Barbara Schiffner
Patricia Jean Seapy
John L. Shadburne
Madelynn L. Shaw
Leon Prentice Sheldon
Donna Marie Sherrill
Terrance W. Short
Ronald M. Sibley
Bruce H. Simpson
Kent Doyle Skala
Nancy Ann Smalliridge
Carol Louise Smith
Donna Jean Smith
Gail M. Smith
Glen E. Snell
Maxine E. Solaro
Aldene Ivern Sommers
Martha Lynn Sossamon
Charles O. Steiner
Markam F. Stenger
Ernest James Stidham
Andrea Lee Stoll
Sandra S. Strauss
Audrey Ann Stunkel
Carolyn Lee Suggett
Gary L. Swinney
Judith Jean Tamblyn
Lynetie Ann Tamietti
Patricia Ann Thomas
Gil Thornally
Carol Lynn Thurner
David Ray Todd
Richard M. Tokos
William Terry Trankle
Judy Diana Tremewan
Lori Trubschenck
Carl Trueblood
Tanju Tumer
s.Ruth Marie Turner
Deanna Brooks Tuel
Wanda Jean Ussery
Emerson Albert Wallis
Ronald William Waxner
James Wear
Nancy Lee Welch ’
Linda Hellgren West
Jerry Alan Wetheral
Theodore E. White
Margene Lee Williams
David M. Willis
Carole Ann Wong
Donald Eugene Woods
John A. Yates
Dolly Faye Yost
Samuel Charles Youngman
Mary Louise Zanocco
eorporation proposes to add
to the existing hospital
building additional storage
facilities and to cause minor
alterations to the existing
storage room
Plans and _ specifications
indicating the propose
work shall be available to
qualified bidders at the office of the Hospital Administrator. A deposit of ten
($10.00) dollars will be resuired for each set requested. Bonds as required by
the specifications must accompany the bids. At the
adjourned meeting of the
Board of Directors, June
24th, 1960. at 2:30 P.M. the
Board of Directors with accept and open all sealed
Lo received. The Board of
irectors reserves the right
to reject any or all bids.
Should a successful bidder be selected at this meeting he will be notified immediately and a _ contract
drawn for commencement
of the work within fourteen
(14) calendar days, or within such time as mav_ be
agreed upon.
ALBERT L. CASEY.
President Board of Directors Sierra Nevada Memorial Hospital.
P. O. Box 1029,
Grass Valley, Califor’ nia.
Publish: June 15, 22, 1960.
LEGAL NOTICE
United States
Department of the Interior
Bureau of Land Management
NOTICE FOR
PUBLICATION
Final Proof
June’ 2, 1960. Notice is
hereby given that Vernon
Stoll, Judge of the Superior
Court, County of Nevada, of
Nevada City, California,
who made Trustee Town
Site Entry No. 055401, for
the Town of ‘Washington
embracing S%S%SEYSE
i, S%N%S%SEYSE,
SE%SW%SE%, NWYNW
YSWYSE%SE%,
WHW%
NW'%4SE%4SE%,
NE%SW%
SE% exclusive of Min. Sur.
4792, San Francisco Lode,
Sec. 1; NW'%NEYNE,
NW'%NE, N%*%NW%SWI,NE%, E%SEY%NEYNW'Y
NEY%NE%SEYNWY%,
NW
YNEYSWYNEY
Sec. 12,
T.17N, kK. 10E, M.D.M.;
and Lot 16, Lot 17, NE%
SWYu%SWUuSW%
Sec. 6, T.
17N., R. 11 E,, M.D.M., has
filed notice of intention to
make final proof to establish claim to the lands before John T. Trauner, Nevada County Clerk, at Court
House, Nevada City, California, on July 29, 1960.
Claimant names as witnesses: Douglas K. Ribble:
ef Washington, Nevada
County, California; John
Crowley of Washington, Ne. the day and yéar in. this
‘. Vada_ County, California; . certificate first. above writRobert Robison of Washing. . ten. :
ton, California; Wenzel Hel. BEVERLY J.
gren of Washington, Nevada -HAUGLAND,
County, California. Walte
= Beck, Manager, Land Of.
ce, m 1000, California
Fruit Bldg, 4th and J Sts,
— “apa Calif.
: June 165, 29,
July 6, 13, 1960,dj 20.
Greenwood Memorial Cemety of Nevada—ss.
nine hundred and sixtv before me, Beverly J. Haugland, a Notary Public
and for the County of Nevada, State of California.
duly
sworn, personally apveared
Marion E. Nicoson, known
to me to be the person
whose name is ‘subscribed
to the within instrument
and acknowledged to me
that he executed the same.
T have hereunto set my hand
and affixed my official seal
in the County of Nevada
vada, State of California.
December 5, 1961.
Vacation Bible
School In N.C.
Posters are being placed
in various business establishments today advertising the opening of Daily
Vacation Bible School at
the Community Baptist
Church, Nevada City, June
Members of the publicity
committee will also distribute leaflets throughout
residental areas as a,means
of inviting children to attend the two-week session.
Accommodations are being prepared for the m
than 100 -students. A sfaff
of qualified teachers has
been selected and is now
doing prepatory work.
The theme selected by
the Board of Christian Education is “Signaling For
Christ,” in keeping with
modern communication.
All children of any denomination-between the
ages of the. beginner (4-5
years) and through grades
seven, are welcome to attend. Classes begin at 9 a.m.,
Monday through Friday,
with diversified activities
being employed for the two
and one-half “hour session.
There will be music, handicrafts, projects,-Bible study,
recreation, and_ refreshments,
LEGAL NOTICE
CERTIFICATE OF INDIVIDUAL TRANSACTING
BUSINESS. UNDER A
FICTITIOUS NAME.
I, the undersigned, certify
that I am doing business in
the County of Nevada and
elsewhere’ in the State of
California as “Nick’s Print
Shop,” and said shop is located on property on the
Marysville Highway (20),
adjacent to and West of the
tery, with an address of
Star Route Box 11. Grass
Valley, California. The general nature of the business
is job shop printing.
Dated: June 8, 1960.
Signed:
MARION E. NICOSON,
State of California, CounOn this 8th day of June
in the year one thousand
in
commissioned and
IN WITNESS WHEREOF
Notary Public in and
foréhe County of NeMy commission expires
Publish: June 15, 22, July
Aux. #2655 will meet on
Friday, June 17th., at 8
p.m. in the Veterans Hall,
Nevada City.
There will be further discussion on plans for the Rummage Sale and Country Store
to be held by the Aux. on
Sept. 22nd. and 23rd. at the
Jack Miner is a shy and
retiring man, But among
collectors’ and _ historians
throughopt the state the
long-time Nevada County
man is well known and admired.
Next week the Nugget’s
popular mainstay feature,
“The Past in Pictures,” will
quaintance in this area, and
from his extensive files and
collections of historic photographs,. artifacts, relics,
‘and manuscripts, Miner will
bring to the Nugget’s pages
vivid old photographs augmented by an equally vivid
text—hard-hitting, concise,
factual, —
ent, in Jack Miner’s “The
Past in Pictures.” As always, this feature will appear regularly only in newsstand and subscribers’ editions of the Nevada County
Nugget.
Lake Tahoe is one of the Veterans Hall, as announced
by President Goldie Wanamake at the last meeting.
UC Seeks to Extract
Fresh Water from Sea
DAVIS.—University of California engineers
are pressing an intensive search for an economically feasible method of extracting large
quantities of fresh water from sea water to meet
the growing needs of urban and rural areas.
A report on the extensive research being
conducted on the problem was presented at a
recent conference on the Davis campus under
the sponsorship of the University’s Water Resources Center.
Everett D. Howe, professor of mechanical
engineering and coordinator of the sea water
research program, told the more than 200 scientists and engineers attending the meeting
that the studies are directed toward developing
a process competitive with the maximum costs
of normal water supplies—$125 per acre-foot
for municipal use and $40 per acre-foot for
irrigation.No really low-cost method of distilling fresh
water from the sea has been completely developed, he said, but the trend of costs is moving downward.
“Costs of extraction have been reduced over
the past 10 years from over $1,000 per acrefoot to a little over $500 per acre-foot,” Howe
reported. “And there are authorities who believe that a distillation process can be developed to give fresh water at prices as low as
$100 per acre-foot. A long step in this direction
is being attempted by Professor Leroy Bromley, whose special design for distillation requires only one-fifth of the heat energy needed
by the best of existing plants.” The Berkeley
engineer explained that in distillation the cost
of fuel amounts to at least one-half of the total
cost of water.
~The enormous quantities of energy needed
to produce large amounts of fresh water have
led to the consideration of nuclear energy as
a source of heat for the distillation of water,”
Howe pointed out, “and one of our research
groups is engaged in such a study.”
He also reported that University engineers
have studied the possibilities of using solar
heat and the heat in the ocean itself as ways
of reducing the drain on fuel resources. Although solar equipment is too expensive for
large installations in its present state of development, the UC professor estimated that
small solar Installations capable of extracting
a supply of fresh water for a household could
be produced for $200 to $300. Equipment for
utilizing the heat in the ocean seems to be
economical for a few special locations on the
coast, he said, but is not generally applicable.
Howe disclosed that UC scientists also are
experimenting with a process for purifying
saline water electrically. It is called “electrodialysis” and involves the passing of electric
current through the water, he explained. “This
may be likened to the discharge of the storage
battery in an automobile, in which the flow of
the electric current reduces.the specific gravity
of the battery liquid. The reduction in specific
gravity means there are less chemicals dissolved
in the battery water and thus amounts to a partial purification of the water.” :
Investigations of chemical methods, ultrafiltration of the salts from the water, and
freeze-separation are being carried out on the
Berkeley and Los Angeles campuses, he said,
and. emphasize the multitude of possible .
schemes by which fresh water may be extracted
6, 13, 1960.
from sea water.
become Miner’s own.
Out of his own wide ac-@ good time to get that _..
The past will come alive, largest, high mountain lakes
shedding light on the presin the world.
WHAT'S
DOING
JULY 17th ISD CAL) DAY
On Sunday, July 17th at12:01 a.m., the present Manual Telephone service in Grass Valley
and Nevada City will be discontinued andthe
new Dial System will go into operation.
This will mark the completion of the $], 600, 000
Building and Construction project that will bring
the latest in Telephone Service to local users.
New seven digit Telephone numbers are to’
replace all present numbers. A special directory will be mailed out just before the switch
over.
_ Calls betweenGrass Valley and Nevada City
will become local calls andcanbe dialed without a toll charge.
Another important feature of the new system
will be DDD (Direct Distance Dialing). This
willenable phone users to dial their own long
distance calls direct to more than 35 million
telephones across the country and in Canada.
Planning to move? It’s
extension phone you've j
been thinking about. .
At no extra installation {*
charge, we'll put in an
extension phone — or
two or three — when
we install your new
service. So if you’d like ed
to start planning where ;~
you'd like those new
phones, why not call your
service representative
at the telephone office, or
talk to your telephone
service man.
Tool chests on wheels. That’s what you could call the
familiar telephone installation trucks you see here in
town. And very accurately, too. Because when they roll
out for a day’s work they
carry everything needed
for any job.. from
screwdrivers to shovels to a full line of
color phones. Generally, they carry
about 400 pieces of
equipment and tools.
Stocking up the
trucks so they’re
ready for everyday
jobs — and for most
“unexpected developments” —is another
way telephone people
work to bring you
good service, quickly
and efficiently.
Pacific Telephone