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Page: of 10

Fe
Page 10..Wednesday, May 23, 1962..7
™~
HE NEVADA COUNTY NUGGET
ph pe
Yuba Plot, Win 37-6
NEVADA CITY --A strange
plot was uncovered Sunday
at Pioneer Park in Nevada
City.
The Yuba Travelers arrived in town on what most
people thought was a trip to
play baseball. Instead, they
undermined the very existence of baseball in Nevada
City.
They gave the Nevada
City Lumberjacks, undefeated in league play, the biggest case of overconfidence
ever known in this mountain
town.
Yuba came out on the
short end of a track meet
rather than a baseball game
(the score was 37-6), and in
the process they tired Nevada City's Lumberjacks
nearly to the point of exhaustion. Proof of this is the
fact that Nevada City scored
only five runs in the last
three innings, and in two of
those last three were even
scoreless,
It is doubtful that the local team can recover its
composure in time for next
week's tilt against Roseville.
The stage will be set,
Roseville has a poor 0-3 record, so the Jacks will
really be overconfident; and
they ‘ll still be tired from the
Yuba run-around, :
It may, however, bea
better ball game than was
played Sunday.
A baseball game?Sunday?
Who ever heard of a team
scoring 37 runs on 25 hits?
But there are local fans
who will verify that each of
those 37 runs were scored, 13
of them in.the fifth inning
when ‘Jacks were already
leading 18 to 1.
And local fans will tell
that Elmer Daley, Lou LeDuc and. Bob Jones each had
four hits.
Left -handed Warren Scribner pitched a four-hitter against the Travelers, although the Yuba team was
able toscore six runs off
those four hits. But then,
the Lumberjacks could afford to be generous Sunday.
The Lumberjacks now rest
ina first-place tie with Placerville and Oroville, each
with 3-0 records,
As this season ends, the
‘Jacks will probably still be
looking back on this game
and quoting the fo
batting accomplishments:
McRorie, 2 for 4; Samcoff,
2 for 4; Jones, 4 for 6; Leduc, 4 for 8; Daley, 4 for 4:
Wocjik, 1 for 2; Michaels,
2 for 5; Wilson, 0 for 2;
Coons, 2 for 4; Langfrd, 1 for’
3; Barnes, 1 for 5; Scribner,
1 for 4 (a triple); and Schroder, 1 for 1.
Camp For Children
To Open July 1
NEVADA CIT Y---Adventure Mountain Camp for boys
and girls between the ages of
eight and twelve will open
July 1 and run through Aug.
18 at the Loney Ranch on Blue
Tent Rd. near Nevada City.
Under the direction of
George and EvelynBurcham,
Grass Valley, the camp is
intended to challenge boys
and girls to search for and
find their own way of life.
Emphasis w ill be placed
on skills and art of the American Indian, Children will
learnto build and extinguish
a fire, to cook in the open,
and to understand the outof-doors, according to BurBowling Results .
Koffee Kuppers
IMPROBABLES wi
E. Feightner
M. Pratt 118100112 33¢
B. Elam 120108 93 321
Total Inc. H.C. 404 354 334 1092
MORNING GLORIES WwW 3
A. Adams 138 151 148 437
G. Eckhardt 120118125 353
V. Personini 93 163 103 361
Total 351 432 368 1151
SCATTER PINS wil
H. Smyth 87 106106 299
J. Podbreger 112 141154 407
L. Pello 130114109 353
Total 329 361 369 1059
NEAR MISS W3
G. Choate 102 168 133 403
T.,Slouber 130 134113 377
A. Lundquist 402 106 85 293
Total Inc. H.C.
Womens Trio League
PRIENDSHIP 3 wi
D. White
NATIONALLY
ADVERTISED
LOCALLY
OWNED
119 99 82 300
365 489 362 1073
126 112 150 388
NATIONALLY
ORGANIZED
L. Barry 123149 92 354
C. Halstead 101 158 157 416
Total Inc. H.C. 362 431 411 1264
SCREWS ALLS w3
B. Daniels 174117124 415
P. Bravo 129 86151 366
S. Jenkins 121 164140 425
Total 424 367 415 1206
SHAKES
E. Ullom 175.152.145.472
M. Barney 117 142 123 382
T. Kerkenides 119 167 168 394
Total 411 401 436 1248
PIN GIRLS
E. Freitas 131119129 379
E. Legg 105 131 74 310
R. Harding 131 161 Tr09 _ 401
Total Inc. H.C. 414 458 359 1231
TEN PINS Ww 3
R. Thomas 170 158 126 454
J. Lott 184124145 453
D. Penaluna 174 148 184 486
Total $28 430 435 1393
PECIAL
**Zebco"® Scottee'®
ROD AND REEL
COMBINATION
Regularly $12.95
t $988 FOR
ONLY
Includes Scottee ‘°66""
veel with 2 pieces, 6
foot solid glass rod in
ebony finish with specie
cork hondie. For the
fisherman who oppreciliates fine equipment!
121 Mill St.
Grass Valley
273-8304
GOOD AT
Roger Lanes
Phone 273-4401
Brunswick & Lake Olympia Roads
Grass Valley, California
enjoy Summer Bowl.A.Time
for . ()o a line
You will receive 30 stamps good for 30lines of bowling
for just $3.00. . use your stamps any time during open
bowling. Only one stamp may be used in any 24 hour
period. Purchase offer expires May 31,1962.. stamps
are good until October 25, 1962.
STEREO HIGH FIDELITY CONSOLE
PHONOGRAPH
TO BE GIVEN AWAY
FREE
You need not be present to
win. You do not have to
purchase a stamp book to
be eligible just pick up a
“cover at Jolly Roger Lanes, fill out the coupon and.
~ drop it into the box.
cham.
It willalsoteach boys and
girls to live in cooperation
with each other through
planned group efforts.
Included inthe camp prog§tam will be swimming,
horse back riding, Indian
lore and campercraft, crea‘tive dramatics, archery,
games, hiking, story telling,
camp fire councils, crafts
andart. Children will sleep
out of doors,
The Burchams have had
many yearsof camp experience with church, cooperative, and 4H groups. Mrs.
Burcham is an elementary
school teacher during school
months, Her husband produces game boards and play
equipment.
QUEEN PINS wi
M. Davis 146155113 414
115 115115 345
176 198 162 536
465 496 418 1379
Billie Andrews
Total Inc. H.C.
JERKS
J. Heller 117 153 113 383
B. Sumner 128 137 162 427
W. Veale 189 180 184 553
Total 434 470 459 1363
SCATTER PINS
B. Smith 111 127 140 380
G. Orosco 119 131118 368
P. Howe 128 185 148 461
Total Inc. H.C. 389 476 437 1302
Argonaut League
BANKC LUB w3
M. Tobiassen 148 153 103 404
W. Abraham 141 134 143 418
J. Abraham 123 126112 361
B. Tobiassen 105 165 147 417
Total
517 578 505 1600
BURNS-WHEELER wi
J. Wheeler
76 99 95 270
P. Wheeler 110 129 109 348
J. Burns 131106 99 336
C. Burns 212 169 167 548
Total Inc. H.C. 559 533 500 i592
RIDGE RUNNERS w2
D. Howe 204157 155 516
P. Howe 166 156135. 457
J. Robinson 128 139 135 402
B. Robinson 169 159 147 475
Total 667 611 572 1850
PHONICS W2
8. Litten 129 126 137 392
*L. Litten 169 192 145 506
L. Goodchild 117 155 133 405
G. Goodchild 145°144 180 469
Total Inc. H.C. 570 627 605 1802
wa4
B. DeSmidt 174 209 133 516
K. Orr 88 111118 317
L. Orr 157 170120 447
S. Sapp 124124124 372
J. Scanlon 161 149179 489
Total Inc. H.C. 567 628 509 1694
wo
B. Sauer 134196117 447
D. Presser 131141 95 367
B. Sauer 156 127 147 430
M. Presser 195 135 138 378
Total 526 599 497 1622
wil
I. Abbott 129 130 149 407
C. Abbott 121 133 149 403
I. Selvester 119104 95 318
128179109 416
508 557 512 1544
wWw3
123 139170 432
104 116 168 388
R. Clark 112 126 143 381
W. Clark 140 197146 483
Total
479 578 627 1684
L. Selvester
Total Inc. H.C.
C. Davies
R. Davies
wa4
155 141158 454
165 132 152 449
R. Tobiassen
135 170 147 452
J. Beaurbham
147 164120 431
Total
602 607 577 1787
wo
164 104194 462
102 108 110 320
137117 92 346
124 207 145 476
55% 562 567 1682
C. Holstead
D. White
D. Tobiassen
N. Tobiassen
G. Barrow
S. Barrow
Total Inc. H.C.
w3
133 160 162 455
104.137 128 369
J. Ashley
136 157 157. 450
D. Ashley
131 187 160 478
Total
504 641 607 1752
wi
105 117114 336
Mahaffey
165 145 160 470
Daniels
148 151130 429
Dgniels
123 143115 381
583 598 661 1742
J. Rogers
R. Phillips
Mahaffey
FEDERAL
SAVINGS
VACAVILLE.. . Hi 8-6439
for You
lo Cuild or
LOANS
12 Racers 2
Due From
Portland
NEVADA CIT Y-----The
second annual Tour of Nevada City will attract more
than a dozen bicycle riders
from the Portland, Ore.,
area, it was announced this
week byrace director Charles Allert.
Allert said he has received
word that at least a dozen
from Portland will be in
Nevada City for the June 17,
BERKELEY ----Contrary to..
popular belief, very rarely
is a stream actually "fished
out." It's just that many
fishermen really dont know
how to fish,
This is the conviction of
Dr. Paul Needham, professor
of zoology on the Berkeley
campus of the University of
California and director of
the University 's famous
Sagehen Creek Project near
Lake Tahoe.
The facts bear out Needham's statement. A recent
survey by the California Department of Fish and Game
Father's Day race. showed that sixty-five to
He also said the inquiries . ,, seventy-five per cent of
have been coming into his} 11 fishermen do not catch
headquarters at amuch more any fish at all, even when
rapid pace than last year, hatchery fish are dumped
Entry blanks are ready to! intothe stream right in front
mail out in the immediate ofthem. Ten percent ofthe
future, and posters are €X-. anglers--the real experts-pected to be ready for dis-. } catch fifty per cent of the fish
tribution within a week. In other words, half the total
: catch g oes to a very small
Sir Hillary
minority of fishermen.
Will Visit
Tahoe
WASHINGTON, D, C, ---Congressman Harold T.
Johnson announced recently
that Sir Edmund Hillary,
New Zealand explorer who
led the first ascent of Mt.
Everest, willvisit the Toiyabe and T ahoe National Forests this summer.
The two National Forests
will be among several he
will visit during aNorth
American camping trip
which he and his family will
make, i
He willspend much of his
time at National Forest
campgrounds which he believes are particularly suitable for the type of family
camping he and his wife, It takes a long time to
Lady Louise Hillary and . produce.a full-grown trout;
three children, Peter,:7; . Females usually reach sexSarah, 5; and Belinda, ‘3; . ual maturity in their third
are seeking. or fourth year, males atthe
At the request of Secretary . end of their second year.
of Agriculture Orville FreeUnfortunately, says Needman, Sir Edmund will exaham, the troutmortality rate
‘mine the campgrounds and . is very high-and not primarother recreational areas ad. ily because of fishing. Only a
ministered by the Depart. smail minority of these little
ment of Agriculture and-of=-} fish manage to get through
fer suggestions as to their infancy and youth,
suitability for foreign visiStudies at Sagehen Creek
tors. show that, by and large, it
isn't the angler who accounts
forthe high death rate
among trout. Natural conditionsfloods, droughts, ice,
an ow , forest fires and other
At Sagehen Creek, a
beautiful forestedregion
high in the Sierra Nevada,
year-round studies are made
of the survival and migration
_Of fishes, and of the effects
on them of each major factor
in their watery environment.
Needham, _ originator of
the project, has a wide range
of interests, but hisown
specialty are trout.
Trout, he says, are the
aristocrats of our inland
waters, They require the
purest waters in whichto
dwell-the cold, unpolluted
water of upland streams and
lakes in forested regions. But
even there, life is extremely rigorous for these sensitive fish, and he who
catches a trout might well
shed a tear or two over it
before he places it in the
frying pan.
Thefirst seed house, David Landreth and Son, was
opened in Philadelphia in
1780s.
2
2
b
bod
2
bod
‘Streams Rarely Fished Out
sStesseacasseoeassssesssssescss sess ssc MN MMMM NNN
bottom, stopping any gill Jy with qu
respiration, sothat they suf2 1
focate, ee h fin safe, well mainta eirSurvival is the grimimest [ctaft. (gl-Wet Airways
matter of all for that . ~~ LOMA RICA AIRPORT
have been raised jn manPHONE 273-6151
factors-cut down ontheir
populations far more than
than does fishing.
There are three main varieties of trout: the brook, .
the brown, andthe rainbow.
The brook trout was native made hatcheries and planted
tothe eastern United States, in the streams just ahead of
the rod, : ee
Hatchery trout planted in
wild waters are ill-adjusted :
fish. Needham calls them
spoon-fed softies. They
haven't learnedtoseek their ~
own food, evadenatural en.
emies, or how to survive .
under wild conditions. . WELL BUILT
Bower birds are found onlyin Australia and ‘New Guinea.
the brown came from Europe,
and the rainbow trout was
found originally only on the
Pacific Coast. These three
forms have been widely introduced all over the world,
Once on the hook, the
trout has a famous reputation
as a spirited’ fighter. But,
says Needham, there are notable personality differences
among the three varieties:
"The rainbow trout leaps
more on the line, fights .
harder, and gives much
greater sport than:either the
eastern brook or the brown
trout. But when it comes to
brains, the brown trout is at
the top of the list, because
he's extremely wary. A
brown trout that has survived
eight or ten years in a heavily-fished stream is a post
graduate at avoiding lures,
and he dies of old age. By
contrast, very few eastern
brook trout ever die of old
age, because they're not
smartenough. :Therainbow ,
on the other hand, is between
the brook and the brown in
wariness. He's not too hard
to catch, but on the hook
he'sthe gamiest of the lot. "
As Needham points out,
the individual sportsman
casting his fly into a spark1ing stream on a clear spring
moring, is not the greatest
threat to a trout's existence.
The chief threats arise in
wintertime, and from naturalconditions Floods some—
TOYOTA
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world’s most powerful all purpose 4-wheel drive vehicle.
times force the fish out of @ 135 hp., 6-cylinder engine © Up te 85 m.p.h.
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lands where they become © Sturdy suspension © Drive it—you'll like it!
stranded and die. But the
main cause of death seems
to be the smothering action
of heavy snows that fall into
the stream bed. The snows
press the fish against the
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314 MAIN STREET GRASS VALLEY
273-7271
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me Sssstsssssseeseanncccavacsessseseaeatacacanseaessseseseseatacocassssssestaeatstscas3
SOMME sess sees ARTS
2
°
British, who perfected gin, wouldn
+4
bd
8
33
80 PROOF GIN TASTES BETTER
‘Proof’ is no measure of quality. It's a
measure of alcohol content alone. (100
proof means 50% alcohol.) Alcohol itself the
has no flavor. The pleasant taste of gin with
comes entirely from the herbs with which mad
it’s distilled. mod
The best test of gin is to drink it straight or smo
on-the-rocks. You'll find 80 proof gin has
the big taste advantage of 80 proof mildness — with the same full flavor of higher
proof gins.
80 PROOF GIN COSTS LESS .
Gins are taxed by the U.S. on their proof
or alcohol content, only. The lower the
proof — the lower the taxes, and the lower
the cost to you. When you buy an imported label, you add the cost of shipping
and duties. That pushes the price even
higher, without giving you 80 proof quality.
MUMS eeseusseerses
NN
it to
YOU'RE MAKING A BIG MISTAKE
IF YOU'RE NOT DRINKING 80 PROOF GIN!
that gin has an ideal taste and flavor balance at a milder,
smoother 80 proof. Here’s the whole story:
80 PROOF GIN MAKES BETTER MARTINIS
It makes them extra dry, as you like them,
but not extra strong. Twenty years ago,
proof! Solution? Mix with 80 proof gin. It
gives you the same full, dry gin flavor, but
it returns the Martini to its Original, more
moderate proof.
80 PROOF GIN MAKES BETTER TALL
DRINKS
When you mix a tall drink, like a collins or
a gin 'n tonic, you dilute the strength of
the gin ‘‘to taste.” You also mix for baiance of flavor. 80 proof gin will give you
better balance. You don’t have to drown
= :
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80 PROOF GIN DISTILLED FROM 100% GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS. MR. BOSTON DISTILLER INC., BOSTON, MASS.
# If you think higher proof means higher lity — #
a phase 5 a. mane See HOW TO MAKE DRY MARTINIS . #
z z MAKE MORE SENSE %
e i you think you have to pay more money to get a Using Standard sie, a0 root #
#% better gin — that’s a mistake. . Dry Vermouth DryGin (or Vodka). #
Fd ~t 2 2 2 e . : #
% If you think the gin the English drink is more than 3—to—1 (Traditional) 76.5 Proot 69.0 Proof . #
& ee id ; 5—to—1 (Dry) 81.0 Proof 72.6 Proof "3
4 80 proof — that’s a mistake. 8—to—1 (Extra Dry) 84.0 Proof 75.1 Proof
# You should know, to begin with, that America is the only (The [standard proof for today’s bottied Martinis . 3
# civilized country in the world that drinks high-proof gin. The 12
t think of it! They know OLD MR. BOSTON ISTHE FINESTGIN
YOU CAN BUY ;: +4
It’s vacuum distilled at an unusually low 3
temperature in special glass-lined stills. 33
Only at such a low temperature, is it posFd
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of the herbs. This is one reason for Old z
Mr. Boston's flavor distinction. It is 4
America's first and largest-selling 80 3
proof Dry Gin! ~~
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% PINT
3-to-1 Martini was standard. Today,
the trend to dryer Martinis, they're
e 6-, 7-, even 8-to-1. As a result the
ern Martini has climbed from a
oth 76.5 proof to an overwhelming 84
MMMM Iss
4
20.9
oe:
NEVRCKCVAS CANAAN
e
$2.12 on:
Available in Fifths and Quarts
drink it.
P.
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j
,