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Page: of 8

Pi
OF
i
>-“GONSTITUTION WEEK
September 17 through 23, Constitution Week, will
be a good time for all Americans to ponder some things
too many among us have lost sight of. Unalienable
rights, for example.
Some have forgotten that those rights are unalienable for everyone, whether his grandfather was
a slave, a robber baron, a businessman, a laborer. Some
of those who feel they have been deprived of those
rights now seem to feel that others should be deprived
of them, too, in retaliation.
The Constitution was not written as a guarantee
of success for everyone. It is a guarantee of the right
to strive for success on equal terms under the law. As
Governor Reagan has put it, the basic law offers “equal
i rare at the starting line in life, but no compulsory tie at the finish.” Government, society, each
individual, must do all they can to fortify the basic
rights of mankind. After that, it is pretty much up to
us.
BOO!
If black cats and ladders and broken mirrors give
you the jumping willies, watch it. Friday the 13th
is coming up.
We're always reminded, when the superstitious day
comes around, of the old Scottish prayer to the effect:
“From ghoulies and ghosties and long leggity beasties
and things that go bump in the night, good Lord deliver us!”
With all the things that are going bump in the
nights and days around the world, Friday the 13th
really is rather an anticlimax. But we just thought
we’d warn you. And by the way; don’t throw away:
your talisman on the 14th. You can use it again in
December.
Washington District's mills
and logging started early
By Rye Syle
From the time the first lumber was cut by whipsawstobuild .
Canyonville at the mouth of Canyon Creek»in 1849-59, to the
large operation of the Tahoe
Sugar Pine Company at Washington, 1945-62, many lumber mills
"ran" from time to time in the
Washington District. They were
mostly very small mills, powered by water or steam and
limited by lack of roads or other
transportation to "getting out"
in the summer months rough
lumber for flumes and mines.
* OK
"In 1858 there were 42 lumber
mills operating in Nevada County. Two of these mills were in
the Washington District." (History of Nevada County, Thompson and West)
* * *
Skillman's Flat Mill burned in
1858 with 300,000 board feet of
lumber. This mill made the
newspapers between 1858 and
1870 several times with fires.
Omega Mill, owned by A. W.
Riley, burned in 1859. At least
six different mills operated at
times in the Omega Mine area,
Murdock and Company Mill, near
Alpha, burned in 1859, (Nevada
Journal)
3k
"The Old Meeker Saw Mill,
six miles above town on the
Washington Ridge, caught fire.
this forenoon from the burning
woods and was consumed," (Nevada City Daily National Gazette September 5, 1870)
** *
Buckthorn Mill andthe Fowler
Mill operated on Fowler's Flat
(Dr. Allen place 1967) near
Highway 20, from time to time.
Several small mills operated
above Gaston in the late 1880's
and early 1900's.
Just over the line, in Granitville District, the Condon and the
Marsh Mills carried on good size
operations for many years, being ©
the source of supply for the miles
of flumes of the North Bloomfield and other large ditches,
"A Chinaman" with his patience and low overhead, produced mine lagging, posts and
timbers, split shakes and
boards, by hand ax methods,
in large quantities during the
heyday of mining in the District.
There was no U.S. Forestry
Dept. in those days — "you just .
cut down the tree you wanted
that was the easiest to reach."
* * *
"E, T. Worthley has built a
sawmill in God's Country, Managed by Bill Mead. Running to
capacity. (Nevada City Daily
Transcript August 3, 1894)
* Ke *
"The oxen used by M.L.& S.
Marsh in hauling logs to their
sawmill above Washington, were
brought up yesterday from the
ranch where they have been
wintered. When the weather
clears, they will be shod and sent
in to work." (NCDT, May 2,
1895)
* * *
"Arrangements to begin building asawmill at Omega are under
way, Lumber and shakes will
be turned out. The proprietors,
Omega Sawmill Works, have
been manufacturing an excellent
quality of glue." (NCDT, June 4,
1901)
* kk
"The Car] Schmidt sawmill on
Washington‘ Ridge, above the
Central House, has a contract
to furnish a San Francisco firm
500,000 feet of lumber. Teams
will haul the lumber to Nevada
City, where it will be shipped
by rail." (NCDT, April 1, 1901)
USA
today Mac’s mulligan
By ROBERT M. SMALLEY
Classroom doors may now
be swinging wide on a new
school year' in which. the
rough stuff is not restricted
to the gridiron.
According to a study conducted by the Lemburg Center at Brandeis University,
endowed to research the
causes of violence in American life, there will be widespread violence this year in
“schools everywhere, both at
Lee ee and pre-college
evel”,
Behind this ominous forecast is the growing record of
recent campus turmoil. The
number of all civil disorders
involving schools is up from
17 percent last year to 44 percent this year, and the national student association says
there were at least 221 major
college campus demonstrations just in the first six
months of 1968.
NSA cited many political
reasons for the demonstration.
The Lemburg Center attributed the unrest to students’ desire for excitement,
specific grievances on education and facilities, and to “rising antagonism between.
white and black students.” It
laid no blame to breakdowns
in parental responsibility, to
any of the specifics of the age
of permissiveness, or to delibérate political agitation.
If still more violence is on
the way, Dr. Grayson Kirk
may have retreated unnecessarily from the presidency of
Columbia University. After
saying categorically that he
would not retire before age
65, despite the “Kirk must go”
rebellion of last spring, he
did—at age 64.
Saying he was stepping
down “to insure the prospect
of more normal operations”
in the new academic year,
Kirk will be succeeded by a
67 year old acting president
whose appointment was immediately branded “an affront” by the school’s antiauthoritarian New Left extremists.
Predictably, more troubles
rae expected soon at Columja.
Meanwhile, education troubles of a different sort are
brewing at a lower level in
New York City, where the
Board of Education has proposed a plan to decentralize
some authority over teacher
hiring, tenure, curriculum
and funds, by investing limited powers in the city’s. 30
local school boards and three
experimental school districts.
Several Black Power
groups have been threatening
violence unless they obtained
complete local control. This
has caused fear among many
white teachers and administrators for their jobs, their
careers, even their personal
safety.
The Board’s compromise
proposal has become both a
hot potato and an embarrassment to the militant AFL-CIO
American Federation of
Teachers. Once hard liners on
civil rights, they are now apparently fearful of local
school board power and have
refused to endorse community
control, to the anger of many
of their own negro members.
Ultimately the decentralization move may satisfy
everybody, or nobody—but it
looks like an interesting winter for U.S. education.
GUZZ ZILZCH, one of California's many voters whorefuse
to be linked with either major
political party, faces abigproblem November 5, He says he's
partial to the letter z and can't
make up his mind whether to
vote for Bizz Johnson or Oz
Dunaway. If I were Dunaway I'd
add another z to my handle,
* * *
S OR NO. Spelling of the name
of the town of Smartville (or is
it Smartsville?) causes a problem now and then, Usually it is
written Smartville without an ess
before the ville. But a sign prominently posted there reads like
this: Smartsville
Like Heaven
Don't Drive
Like Hell!
* * *
POLITICIANS could beef up
their campaign funds by allowing two votes for every $5 contributed. Might not be constitutional, but what is nowadays?
* *
YULETIDE — It. may be too
early to pass this on to you, but
Nevada Irrigation District does
not plan selling any Christmas
trees this year.
* * *
MR, JODY HAWHEE, all of six
years old, has a talent for asking his folks difficult-to-answer
questions, and he also comes up
with some precocious answers.
Mother Marilyn said she was
urging Jody to get ready for his
Sunday school class in Penn Valley when he asked her why.
"Because it is good for you and
you learn things," she explained.
"Oh yeah? All they teach us about
is people who are already dead."
That boy will never make a historian.
* * *
UNRECORDED RECORDING,
Dialing the telephone operator
the other day I heard: "This is
a recording. Oops, wait a minute." So I waited, pondering the
while the wonders of our scientific age and the advancements
made in the field of electronics.
Something science couldn't
properly reproduce, however,
was the charming giggle of the
operator who had goofed. This
gives me great hope for the
eventual victory of man over the
robot, who ain't got no sense
of humor.
* * *
POLICE BRUTALITY? From
the log of a local department
these words: "Owner of keys
found and placed in miscellaneous property drawer in file cabinet." Poor guy. It must be stuffy
in there.
* * OK
INTERESTING WORD, Coalpex has nothing to do with coal
but concerns stamps and stamp
collectors. The word evidently
was coined from the Contra
Costa-Alameda Philatelic
Exhibit, And with a handle like
that it's no wonder Coal-pex is
used. If you are a philatelist
you might take in the exhibit
in Concord September 13-15, On
the same two days, Lodi will be
holding its Grape Festival and
National Wine Show. Should get
some vino there. Or if you prefer suds, there's the Oktoberfest at the San Mateo County
Fairgrounds, also September
13-15, Wonder why they call it
the Oktoberfest and hold it in
September? “ix
OTHER EVENTS this month
include the Sixth Annual Trade
Fair Bazaar on the 14th and
Constitution Day on the 15th,
both in Nevada City, and the
Auburn District Fair 13th-15th.
The district fair will have,
among other attractions, a "'psychedelic happening", and I may
go just to find out what that
means,
* KOK
INFLATION — What this
country needs is a good 25-cent
cigar.
* * *
THAT WARNING SIGN compulsory on every pack of cigarettes may start a trend with
the federal government insisting
on such labels as "This hamburger colored with tomato
juice’ or "These pills could
knock ‘you cockeyed" or "Drink
this hooch at your own risk."
A few such warnings would make
us thé most label conscious
people in the world, And that
might be-good.
* * *
GIVINTAKE, The small boy
watched as his father reached to
put a coin in the church collection box, then asked, ''How much
did you get?”
About 1529, Hernando Cortez
planted the first European grape
vines in the New World.
Veterans Administration hospitals are affiliated with 75 of
the nation's 88 medical schools,
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PUBLISHING CO,
301 Broad Street
Nevada City, Ca.
95959
Telephone 265-2471
Second class postage
paid at Nevada City,
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County Superior Court ,
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