Copyright & Fair-use Agreement
UNLV Special Collections provides copies of materials to facilitate private study, scholarship, or research. Material not in the public domain may be used according to fair use of copyrighted materials as defined by copyright law. Please cite us.
Please note that UNLV may not own the copyright to these materials and cannot provide permission to publish or distribute materials when UNLV is not the copyright holder. The user is solely responsible for determining the copyright status of materials and obtaining permission to use material from the copyright holder and for determining whether any permissions relating to any other rights are necessary for the intended use, and for obtaining all required permissions beyond that allowed by fair use.
Read more about our reproduction and use policy.
I agree.Information
Digital ID
Permalink
Details
More Info
Rights
Digital Provenance
Publisher
Transcription
m LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL am Joly 20. 1949. ||fllfl 'M Illi 11/? 1 S>» V :-;K •'‘'0j-;,V 'j.ri-.:i j I L i s W l ^ r l b r l f Has Counterpart in Reno : t h e ™ weSf e a| ° f ^ S S£ f c S f to weaXh0Rtage her,e c Uring find themselves in virtually the sfrre sTt.^tiL ®’ Rei 1° and SParks survey conducted by the Nevada State Journai acCordlng to a recent _A1 Folger, general manager of the Las Vegas Land and Water company, Q.3.V inrflfQtrienlreta sne d figu_r_esI Tues-I It Takes Time But Cops Get Their Man It may take a little while, but local police always get their man. This was evident today when Joseph R. Sartin, 40, of Needles, California, was lodged in city jail on drunk charges. Subsequent investigation by Detective Paul DeWeert revealed the I man has been sought here since I December 26,1946 on bad check charges. Sartin allegedly passed a phoney draft on an employe of the Union Oil station, 302 North Main street, on that date and hadn’t been seen since. He was I picked up by DeWeert and reportedly identified by Gerald Hickman, the duped filling sta- |tion employe. n rv w v v v ^ y v v y v w w v w v v v luses to Roll NEW YORK, July 21. (UP)__ fichael Quill, transport workers mion (CIO) chief, said today that trike-bound New York city buses rauld resume operation at mid-light.. SCARCE PONDEROSA | PINE | • 1 x 8 V Rustic Knotty Pine | ® 1 x 10 V & CV Knotty Pine • I x 12 Knotty. Pine S4S • 1 x 12 No. 1 Pine S4S • 1 x 4 to ', x 12 Clear Pine S4S -E a cti and ^every piece is T H O R O U G H L Y K iln D ried. P R E - W A R q u a lity . So ft-te x tu re d , “ h ig h -lin e P in e from Em m ett, Idaho area __ one of the U. S . fin e st stan d s of P in e T im b e r. Made by W o rld ’s L a r i gest Lu m b e r M anufacturer. OPEN AIL DAY SATURDAY WOITISHEK LUMBER Cq,__ |u n der J J jA .«am d: A-'Sffi day indicating a, per._cap.ita use' hh,o?ur.r®s... °f 695 gallons evergy / 24 Mmo’s Sierra Pacific Power company says Reno is using water a* rate of 6S4 gallons per per-son per day while Sparks’ con- Wgher °n *S ^ gahons per day 7 figures sh°w a total of A105 gallons per customer every 24 hours in Las Vegas, while the Reno figures are 2,287 gallons per service daily and Sparks consumption is 2,324 gallons per customer each day. Reno used 21,000,000 gallons per day from June 10 to July 10 while Las Vegas h in ts peak this ' week with 16,000,000. Reno’s top figure to date was on July 11 when the customers tapped their faucets for 26,230,000 gallons in i 24-hour period. Folger compared Las Vegas1 Phoenix where climatic conditions are similar.' Per’ capita use in the Arizona capital is 220 gallons per day against Las Vegas .Reno compares her use to Boise Idaho similarly located, “ where mrerage^ctfflsumptioB isiirsft gallons per day" per person as compared to Reno’s 654.- In Safi Lake City per capita consumption is 200 gallons per day per year with a maximum of approximately 300 during the summer months. Chofsworth Crash Hearinas Slated ; W ASHINGTON, Ju ly 21 (U P) H T. W . JUL 22 1949 (Continued From Page 1) 1 to him and five other families on the same water line. Between the hours of 6 and 9 p. m., he hasn t , had any water since last May. The same was true last year from June until September, despite numerous complaints to the water company, Glover declared. Las Vegas Hospital water supply was reported mueh\better today, in fact, the pressure was above average. The hospital had been seriously affected Monday when water was unavailable on the second floor where most of the patients are accommodated. | i r / °