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    \ m m 2 Las Vegas Review-Journal -Monday, September 3, 1951 Too Late to Classify 6—PERSONALS D ELIGHTFU L! California R o s e s Personal Scented Stationery. P leas­ing1 Free sam ple ^postpaid' prom ptly. W rite today! “ Sarge” Hurley, P. O. Box 501, ’.Las Vegas. 12A7-H E L P W ANTED—MALE BOV, Full tim e work. Must be en­ergetic. and, reliable, i References re ­quired. Phone .3484. 12B—H E L P W ANTED—FEM ALE HO U SEK EEPER. Live in. | Room, board, • salary. References. PJione 2069. H Life In Las Vegas Mr. and Mrs. Lee N. Tracy, 1001. June street, have Mr. and Mrs. H. R. . Younginer of Los Angeles visiting them until next week. Tracy is an employee- of the Review-Journal. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Lazar, of Los Angeles, are house guests of Mr. and Mrs. L. S., Sheppard, 132 North Seventh street. 48—BUSINESS RENTAL'S ' TWO room office, in excellent down­tow n location. $65 m onthly. Phone • 6510.; 60—HOUSES ? F R E E re n t to couple in exchange tot Care of 6^year-old-school £ ir l while m other works. Phone 6135-M. 60-^APARTMENTS • THREE- room furnished apartm ent. 1846 H arv ard N orth Las. Vegas. Mrs. Lorraine Safford, 313 North Tenth street, is in Los Angeles on a business and plea­sure trip over. Labor Day. Mrs. Ina Vanderpool, of the Gallen Kamp store, has returned from El Centro, California where she has been visiting. C I T Y D R U G Your PRESCRIPTION Store OPEN 24 HOURS Phone 767 231 Fremont Sag-No-Mor Wool Jersey FASHION FABRICS 116 So. 5th St. ‘fW M HETTE 400 SOUTH 2^«<3W 5663 YGU LEAV£lT-W t DO IT Open 7:30 A.M. to 6:30 P.M. Closed Sundays '2 1 0 'S . 2nd.—Phone 98 T O D A Y r — ALSO — with PATRICIA MEDINA 1 Mrs. Vivian Graham, 611 El Rancho is in Glendale, California visiting her son, Eugene Kock, who is attending UCLA Mrs. Gra­ham is an employe of the. Von Tobel Lumber Co. . Mr. and Mrs. J. Harold Brinley returned to Las Vegas last week from California. Brinley attended summer school at the University of Southern California and is on the faculty of Las Vegas high school. Mr. and Mrs. Keith Davy, of North Main street, have returned from a visit to Los Angeles. Thomas Kirkmyer, of Casper, Wyoming, is spending the Labor Day holiday in Las Vegas with friends. T---- ~ % Henry Goad, of Casper, Wy­oming, old time ball player, is vacationing in Las Vegas renew­ing old acquaintances. jean Blair, 321 North Fif­teenth, has returned from Og­den where she has been visiting relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Tom Tomaro of Oceanside, California is a holiday visitor of Eleanore St. John, owner of Eleanore’s Tiny Ori­ginal Shop. Mr. and Mrs. Duke Wheeler, of Los Angeles, are visiting Mr. and Mrs. E. L. “Bill” Bailey, 2024 Houston drive. Harry Bartel is a patient at the Las Vegas hospital where he is u n d e r g o i n g observation and treatment. Bill Worth, 224% South Eighth, will leave on Tuesday via jeep for Anchorage, Alaska where he w ill make his home. Mrs. Worth w ill join him in November and plans to make the trip by air. Andrea Sewell, daughter of Mr. and5 Mrs. Chester Sewell, 127 Copper, Henderson, was a house guest of .Miss Christina Gibson, 1264 South Ninth last week-end. Elaine Alldredge, 312 North Sixth street, journeyed to Sparks, Saturday where she will assume her duties as second grade teach­er in the elementary school. Miss Alldredge spent the summer assisting at Girl Scout camp at Lee’s Canyon as counselor ? Lieutenant jg and Mrs. James I. Gibson arrived in Las Vegas Friday evening with their two sons, Jimmy and David, for a weeks *visit with friends and re­latives. Lieutenant Gibson has been stationed at Port Hueneme naval station Port Hueneme, Cal-fornia for the past year as pro­vost marshal. Mr. and Mrs. Guy Gregory and daughters, Barbara and Mary Lou, 223 North Bruce, left last Friday for a vacation trip to Seattle, Washington, where they will visit friends and relatives. The Gregorys formerly resided in Seattle and Gregory has been employed at the Nellis air force base for the past year. Barbara worked at the Review-Journal as a proof-reader this summer and will return to the University of Nevada this fall where she is a sophomore student. Mr. and Mrs. Laman Leavitt left Friday for a visit during the labor day holidays to St. George, Mrs. John Dunbar, 425 North Utah. Sixth, is convalescing at her „ „ „ home after being confined to the Mrs* Las Vegas Hospital. Westminister, California, are _____ visiting Mr. and Mrs. Gene Phfle- Mr. and Mrs. B. J. Swanson, ie t of the Osbourn Trucking com- 216 South Bruce, entertained Mr. Ea?,y ^ la? S m w u S Manrds . MNros.r rTiseodn Brjndt, Mr. and V^ eyA W a t t y and Mr. P^h the Wilshire Oil company and Mrs. Fred Beeman at an out- ^ California, is a brother of Mrs. door barbecue recently. iPnlieier. Mr. and Mrs. Don Ferguson, I Mr. and Mrs. Ben Hoffman and of Anderson Dairy, just returned children, Benny, Jr.; and Betty from a two week vacation. (Ann, recently moved into their new home on Chapparrell road Mr. and Mrs. Ernie Bartlett, I in Paradise Valley. Hoffman is 2837 Cedar, are spending the L a - one of, the players in the Nor-bor Day holiday on the west coast mandy trio at the Hotel Thunder visiting friends and seeing the sights; •E"?NI?VlyAs 0 iAif''Sl* Pf0lINKlIRSSTT TTTNHIIAAITT IIIIt f? ir sV tI lrl wuHn COOUD IY REFRIGERATION NOW SHOWING k KERRY MXTUBE OF MEODTa iWfflH...illI MBtH-MJIlOp BING- / ? 4 % I I H ERE COMES I THE GROOM | V u § 3 ^ V with franchot tone ALEXIS SMITH Mr. and Mrs. Ted Massey and children, Frank and Charles of Tucson, Arizona, are visiting with Mr. and Mrs. Sam Watson of the J. Kell Houssels ranch. Mr. and Mrs. Lincoln Liston and children, Sharon, Linda and Johnny, of Milwaukee, are the house-guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ro­bert Brown on Sunset road in Paradise Valley. Liston recently was named principal of the Para­dise Valley grammar school. Mr. and Mrs. L .. B. Laswell and children, Frances, Duane, Eugene and McArthur, have re­turned to Paradise Valley after a month’s vacation in Oklahoma and Missouri. Mrs. Selma Jacobson, of the Favorite Fashion Dress shop, 123 North Fourth street, is in New York City on a 10-day buying trip for the latest fall fashions. Jimmy and Sammy Byrd, Don­ald Helm, Jerry Goodfellow and John Preston spent the week-end on a three-day camping.trip in Red Rock canyon with Boy Scout troop 68. i l P W O H T a n d 3 r d * P H O N I 3 6 5 4 NOW PLAYING w~- M l Glorious as the Great Guy It Glorifies! i m ____ j l f M H - A L L A M E R I C A N ^ ’^ T bURT LANCASTER Charles Bickford * Steve "Cochran • Phyllis Thaxter SECOND FEATURE LEOW GORCEY AND THE BOW ERY BOYS mam wm, huntz hail 1 AUEN JENKINS • TOM NEAl P CHARUTA __ Mrs. G. C. Holden of Okla­homa City, Oklahoma, is visiting at the Warm Springs ranch in Paradise Valley with her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Danny Achten, and her new grandchild, Danielle Elizabeth Achten, who was born August 25. Ellingham Out Of Hospital Herbert Ellingham, Sr., offi­cial of the Southern Nevada Racing association who was pain­fully injured at last Monday’s races, was discharged from the Southern Nevada Memorial hos­pital yesterday and w ill be pres­ent for the races tonight in the Sportsdrome, at the Hotel Last Frontier,: it was reported today. One of the instigators of the association here and an ardent worker and fan in the stock car association, Ellingham received multiple, bruises, and lacerations last Monday evening when two of the stock cars, skidded onto the green, knocking him over. He regained consciousness be­fore the departure of the Bun­ker Brothers ambulance and an­nounced that he was “pretty banged up, but would be all right and on hand for the next races,” Oleson Rifes Slated Tuesday Funeral services will be held at 2 PM Tuesday at the Palm chapel for Charles W. Oleson, 68, resident of Nevada for more than three decades, who died Friday as a result of a heart at­tack suffered at his home, 216% South Seventh street. The Rev. Darrell Kenney, pas­tor of the Seventh Day Adven­tist church, will conduct the fun­eral rites and interment will be in the Woodlawn cemetery. Oleson was born in Indiana­polis, Indiana, November 25,1883 and had made his home in Ne­vada since 1921, mostly in the mining communities of the state. He was widely-known in south­ern Nevada. Surviving are his three daugh­ters, Mrs. E. G. Goldsborough of Las Vegas, with whom he made his home; Mrs. Carl E. Dunbar of San Bernardino, Cal- 1 ifornia, and Mrs. Russell Han­son of Boulder, Colorado, and six grandchildren. Kin of Vegan Dies on Coast Robert C. Simpson, 45, of Los Angeles, died Sunday at the Saw-telle veterans’ administration hospital in Los Angeles, accord­ing to word received here by his uncle, L. O. Waddell. A frequent visitor in Las Ve­gas, Simpson was widely known here. He was a veteran of World wars I and II. He died while undergoing major surgery, his uncle learned. ----------- O----——- Eight Hundred ' (Continued from Page J) Smelter workers union ended its six-day old strike against the, large producer yesterday. Louis Buckman, manager Of the Kennecott open pit mine at Bingham, Utah, said full produc­tion would be reached by to­morrow, but .tiie shutdown cost the nation an’ estimated 9,000,000 pounds of copper. Some-8,400 men went hack to work in the Kennecott holdings in Utah .yesterday. Company officials and the Kennecott company agreed to a 15 cent an hour .pay hike for International Union of Mine, Mill and Smelter workers Friday. But the other three members of the big four in the copper in­dustry— Anaconda, Dodge-Phelps and American Smelting and Re­fining Company—still were hold­ing out against union demands for pay increases and pension clause improvements. The strike which paralyzed the copper industry started one week ago today, with the first break coming when Kennecott settled its dispute with the independent mining union. There was no violence in the strike, but both union officials and negotiation committees,spent the labor day holiday trying to settle the strike. There was little hope that the remaining three copper industry leaders would reach an agree­ment soon. They,charged that the Kennecott settlement was far above wage ceilings and appeal­ed to the president’s board of inquiry for action,on the matter. -- Ilf—o---- Russell Yereen, former resident of Las Yegas who now is residing in southern California, is visiting with his parents here at 1136 South Fifteenth street. Lee Beatty and family have' moved to Los Gatos, California, where they will make their home. Beatty has been employed for many years at Wayne’s Auto Body shop in Las Vegas. Mr, and Mrs. Harvey Stiver are entertaining as week-end useguests Mr. and Mrs. Robert lyder, from Azusa, California. One of the main reasons for the Snyder’s annal trip to Las Ve­gas is the opening of the dove hunting season. Stiver is owner-manager of Salisbury and Stver-garage. PARADISE SCHOOL OPENS Registration at t h e Paradise Valley school Will tik e place, at 9 AM Tuesday, September 4, ac­cording to the new principal, Lincoln Linton. The Paradise valley school holds classes for grades one through eight. ----------- o----------- PRAVDA PRATES MOSCOW, Sept. 3 (U P)-* The Communist newspaper Pravda again accused the United States today of violating the Potsdam and Yalta agreements and said Japan already was an American war base.’ Water District (Continued from Page 1) district but as an individual, Campbell said: With an ample supply of water in Lake Mead, just 17 m iles distant, it is ridiculous to say that there can be lack o f water in this valley. ’There is an answer. The way is there. It is up to us to find it. If the engineering studies es­tablish the fact that national de­fense needs make it impossible for us tp obtain water from the present pipe-line facilities, then w e’ll have to work out another plan. “It appears that colonel Lar­son’s statement means our stop­gap plan is not feasible and w e’ll have to work from there. After all it was the district’s ulti­mate aim to build an indepen­dent line and there must be an answ er'to the problem of fin­ancing its construction, even at this tim e. "I feel there- must be a re­newed effort and a united one put forth to solve this problem the way we have traditionally solved similar problems of deve­lopment here in southern Nevada. “The fact that Colonel Larson says things have happened since last spring to alter our plan to get water from the Basic pipe­line doesn’t change the problem at all. Nor does it mean Las Vegas is going to dry up and blow away. “I am confident we will be able to come up with the answer and certainly as an individual member of the water district board intend to work toward that end.” Campbell was inclined to be critical of portions of the Lar­son statement which seemingly cast reflections on the manner in which the district had recently handled its negotiations, but said he felt that in the interests of general harmony they be dis­regarded. I don’t feel it should be our purpose to provoke any argu­ment with Larson, who appears to me to be the kind of an in­dividual with whom you can sit at a table and work out any problem on a man-to-man basis. If it were possible to deal with him directly and avoid going through intermediaries, I have no doubt we could get the job done without delay:” . Campbell said the directors felt it was impossible to fully digest the Larson statement and have a discussion of all points in the lim ited time allotted by the General Services chief during his stay here, and stress two points which were not com­mented upon at the Saturday session. “Our directors feel it is signi­ficant,” Campbell said,” that although Mr. Larson referred to inaccuracies hi our letter to him, that nowhere in his rather lengthy statem ent did he (point them ;out. “In his statement also Mr. Lar­son declared that the Basic plant must have a prior call on all the Lake Mead pipeline facility if and when needed. If he means a prior call on all the water that can be pumped, that closes the: door to any hope we might have for getting any water from that source. “He then says- that in view of that situation the public should no longer be misled. With this we agree. “We feel strongly, however, that the inference is the water district has misled the public. Let it be said here chat the water district has at all tim es acted upon statements from qualified representatives of Gen­eral Services administration, Senator McCarran and the Colo­rado River commission. ’ “The directors don’t propose to m a k e s an issue of these things but feel they should he pointed out.” Cole Facing Double Charge ' Police reported today that Jam es Arthur Cole, 31, reported to have stolen a 1950 Ford sedan from Kuma H. Grant of Cali­fornia, ran into a parked car on North Fifth street near Stewart. Cole was booked for driving under the influence of liquor and for investigation o l car theft. When approached by police of­ficers, the suspect made a run for it, hut stopped immediately after an officer pulled out his gun and commanded the fugi­tive to halt. Grant, owner of the vehicle, who reported to police that Cole, had stolen his car; is wanted by the sheriff's office in Los An­geles, according to a bulletin re­ceived by police here. ----------- o----------- Maybe it’s natural for the girls to use lots of powder when they dress fit*- to*- kil*l. Light conversation often has plenty of scandal power. Naug Are Game According this morni rods were on $50 bail firing shotg' Charged firearms Chris Johan ner Weaver Coogle, Ro Rudolph S.‘ Earl, Willis William Lei Jess Gains! area. At city ja being held examinatio state warde were proper a maxirmr at a time. Amid fall lets, police Elks stadiu’ 100 hunters their “hear; ing to offic violators w Old Ranch not corallin because we men to hel Way lie E and game ed for tec’ stated that authority t violators of law. Kirch ad “few m many” by laws. In an , t Road, and road," there ing with cr~ to Kirch, closed for a ers will be i printed, last until t Said Kirch, hunters wil INDIANA, Divena’ s s suit might French. B.u it is "scant Divena is performs k water at 1 Yesterday ter of a c even warm 90-degree t. When m fair board vacious Di make a pla advance of formance, they thre horror an turn: The sun in a secon ceives in 6 First tel Spokane, 1886. Peony r the necks days as a ness. ?W ill H i ! Aluminum Awnings For Windows Doors Patios Porches SOUTHERN NEVADA VENETIAN BLIND CO. 1300 So. Main Phone 832 Studio th« Dance Ballet • Yap • Aerobatic Ballroom • Spanish • Baton • Hawaiian PRIVATE and CLASS LESSONS For Beginners, Advanced and Professional ENROLLMENT Tuesday, Sept. 4th—10 A.M. ’til Noon 1115 STEWART ST. MARGARET E. KETCHUM Studio Phone 1897-M or 6162-R