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CIO-AUW Makes Surprise Bit For Auto Strike Conciliation Parley

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34 Washington S . 7

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Gateway to tfee Magnificent Recreational Areas of the Southwest

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Nevada's Most Complete Sunday Newspaper

Pleasure Cent*^ Where Tourists Enjoy Frontier

8tT Freedom and Frolic

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VOL. XL!, NO. 47 TWENTY PAGES LAS VEGAS, NEVADA, SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 25, IMS ESTABLISHED l i l t PRICE TEN CENTS

CIO-AUW Makes Surprise Bit For Auto Strike Conciliation Parley DETROIT, No* -§t\.'«JfSfe«

surprise bid to reopen wage ne­gotiations with tfae strikebound General Motors Corporation was made tonight by the CIO Auto­mobile Workers Union in an ef­fort to avert continuing idleness lor 175,000 participants In tbe fouf-day shutdown, '^§pl

Walter P. Reuther. vice presi­dent of the United Automobile Workers Union (CIO), said he would ask the corporation Mon­day to resume negotiations im­mediately over the disputed 30 per cent wage boost demands.

The new union move and ah anticipated conciliation invita­tion from Secretary oi Labor Lewis B. Schwellenbach offered Ihe only immediate hopes for avoiding a prolonged strike and Its consequent harsh economic Impact tea: workers and Use com­pany.

Reuther predicted that the

system - wide General Motors strike would bring about "tfae greatest labor solidarity" in na­tional history.

Answering the Corporations rejection of the union's-proposal to arbitrate the disputed 30 per cent wage increase demand, Reuther charged General Motors with thinking "it is a sovereign state within the nation, without responsibilities to the •people* or the welfare of the coamjfcjr T m^t'that is true," he risMi*and if the General Motors strike forces other car makers to close for lack of parts, then we ought to ask anti-trust investigation at this gigantic stranglehold on American production facilities.

But Reuther discounted re­ports from manufacturing head-' quarters that other car plants and supplying firms would be forced to close. He said they "might close as part of p combine strate­

gy." Study of one major company, he said, showed that it could ob­tain parts now supplied by GM from other firms.

Reuther said ha had received pledges from the AFL Teamsters Union that it would not cross

picket lines in the strike. AFL Building Trades Union officials were said to have given similar pledges earlier. ' , * ' • '

"We are receiving letters daily from the. people telling of their support of our stand tor economic

justice," the union chieftain said. "It is an old-fastaioned Strike, where workingmen are. with­holding their labor power until they are assured a decent; stand­ard of living."

Reuther .reiterated his willing­

ness to "take the initiative** in peace efforts. Government inter­vention-remained the only im­mediate hope in the four-day-old strike.

All prospects of a quick settle­ment of the four-day-old strike

Yihk^Maiines To St§y l i K h $ i a ; i ^ ^ ^ i y SHANGHAI, Nov. 24. (UF)—Lt. Gen. Albert C. Wedemeyer

said today that his present instructions "do not contemplate" immediate withdrawal of U. S. marines from North China where Chinese nationalist and communist forces are te conflict.

The commander ef American forces in China told a press conference he had received ne farther instructions following Secretary of State Byrnes statement Nov. 21 that the United States was pledged to repatriate the Japanese from outlying places. -J's j J r;

He estimated, however, that witti present shipping facilities it Would require six to eight months to repatriate the Japanese now in the area between the great wall aad tke Yellow sea.

Wedemeyer, who previously had explained that America's only job in China was to assist in disarming and repatriating

Japanese, said Byrnes***statement indicated a greater Job ef re­patriation. Be emphasized, though, that he had no instructions to that off erst. IpU^

He said that 35,000 Japanese will have been repatriated from North China by Nov, 30.

Present shipping will permit repatriation at the rate ef 3,000 daily,'*te Aid, adding that if there were no delays and shipping facilities remained the same it would require six te eight months to complete tbe job.

A dispatch from Peiping said that a conference of top United States and Chinese military authorities had decided to repatriate 3,000 disarmed Japanese daily through the port of Tangku. After Dec. 4, the remainder would be sent through Tslngtab. ';:S-v

against the nation-wide General Motors system disappeared when the corporation late yesterday re­jected a union plan for arbitra­tion. The corporation also with­drew its earlier of fer off a 10 per cent .wage increase.

In a strongly-worderd reply to officials of the striking United Automobile Workers U n i o n (CIO), the company said: • 1. The' arbitration proposal

was in effect a request for the company to abdicate the right of management. •

2. The UAW sought to blame General Motors fer a strike "which the union has been planning for months."

,3. The union's proposal meant tfaat an arbitration board would assume responsibility for deter*' mining what is a sound financial and economic policy for General Motors.

Meanwhile, "a spokesman lor

the automobile parts manufactur­ing industry forecast widespread unemployment in tiie parts in­dustry and' closing of all auto malting plants ''firry soon" if the GM strike continues.

Frank Rising, general manager of the Automobile and-Aviation Parts Manufacturers, said the strike was causing "rapid strang­ulation" of the industry. He said the auto companies and the parts makers are so interdependent it is impossible to close down one big auto-snaking' firm without af- -fecting the others. >

He predicted the parts plants supplying General Motors would be forced to lay off 100,000 work­ers within the next few days be* cause of the kiss of GM Business. And the parts - manufacturers who supply 60 per cent or more of their output ter General' Motors probably will bave to

(Continued on Page 4.)

ueezePut No Bed Cross Pay-off Here To Labor Unions

By FLORENCE LEE JONES •/< "Not one penny changed bands between the Red Cross and

labor organizations in Clark county as reimbursement of costs of collections made by labor groups -for Red Cross war fund drives, tatd relations, with labor here always have been most friendly."

i^jftft wggt the joint ftatement,_j{iiue4 k^e^Joday byjjeslje W. "" • ~ J -IsPTfif"- ** J Edwards, chairman-' oOhe Clark

Bigwigs War Trial Witness l l!fJER*mEJH'| Nov. 24 (UP)— Lady Astor and other members

- of the • so-called British Cliven-den set may be called as witness­es to defend Joachim Ton Rib­bentrop in the war crimes trial,

. the former German foreign min-w ister's attorney said today.

Doctor Fritz Sauter, Von Rib-bentrop's attorney, said "Yes, probably" when asked if ho in* tended to request the American-born noblewoman's appearance. Yesterday Sauter said he wanted to call Lord Beaver brook, Lord Kemsley and four other British

*! *ea*«*jg)* to help prove tfaaf Brit-~ t in intended to attack Germany.

The Cliveden set, about, which A Sauter was asked, was a group of w prominent British men and worn

en whp met at Lady Astor's Country home, Cliveden, before the war, seeking to promote bet­ter understanding witfa Ger-

i ^ ^ r e a n v j ^ ; \--:> The trial of the 30 nasi leaders

was in recess until Monday. De­fense attorneys held a press con­ference in which they outlined tiieir hopes to call a large num­ber of prominent personages,

*« mostly British.l$m S p •i™ Lady Astor, most important ••-;• figure mentioned, was the first

woman member of the he use of commons, from which she, retired this year after 25 years service. She was born Nancy Langhbfn bf Virginia.

Hjalmar Schact's attorney said he wanted to subpoena the for­mer director of the Bank Berlin­er Handelsgesellschaft, a Jew named Jeidels, to testify that

Jt Schacht helped him to emigrate ~ to tfae United States.

Gruesome Find MANCHESTER, Tenn., Nov. 24

L (AP) — Authorities awaited a /laboratory report today to deter­mine if human ashes were found at a tourist camp near here, while three persons - were held on murder charges In con-

A section with the alleged burning alive of one infant and tfae cre­mation of four-others.

!;•"''' :^Hte- trot'being held were iden-' tified by Sheriff Sim Batiks as

H. H. Peters, 55, els wife, 40, and their son, Harry F. Carraway, 28. ' Sheriff .Banks said he placed the trio in jail at nearby Fay-etteville, Tenn., after two negro employes of Peters, who operat­ed tfae tourist camp, had told him five babies had been cremated

fffcin an ash heap at the camp be­tween Oct. 18 and Nov. I t l ^ M

UPRR NEW STOCK LOS ANGELES; Nov. 24, (UP)

Tke Union Pacific Railroad to­day xepbrted it'"expects delivery in 60 days of 524,000,000 worth, of new equipment and bas auth­orized bids on 100 new passenger

county chapter, and D. C. Suth­erland, former chairman. They were speaking on the local situ­ation in relation to the recent na­tional publicity on the agreement between the "A. F. of L. and C I . O. labor unions for reim­bursement of costs in campaign expenses from the national head quarters bf Red Cross.

Edwards referred to a letter written by Guy Emerson of New York City who served in a vol­unteer capacity as vice chairman and general consultant during the past four war fund cam­paigns, in which the full explana­tion of the agreement between the Red Cross and the two labor organizations is set forth. Emer­son's letter acknowledges the plan for reimbursement of labor, which has just been, fulfilled by-payment of $450,000 to the two unions for a three-year period.

Emerson Stated that he dis­co vered early in the war that poor relations existed between labor organizations and the Red Cross. Efforts were made to in­terest labor in cooperating fully.

Emerson wrote, "This took some time. Finally, in the sum­mer of 1042, a statement of mu­tual understanding1'.was com­pleted and tbe labor representa­tives came in to sign it an their part. We then learned, for. the first time, that the representa­tives of tiie Community Chests and councils had already sug­gested that they reimburse tfae labor organizations for the ex­penses of tiieir welfare work iSS^* were frankly taken by surprise * jLp^Kk'we joined we could riot have a 'free ride' but must pay our share. If we did not' join, we surrendered the field of union and plant organ­ization to a combined effort on the part of'labor and the chests, with Red Cross working at a

."»-fContinued on Page 4.)

New Fierce Riots Rolk CALCUTTA, mtav. 24 (UP) —

Violence broke out again today when police' charged a parade of 2,000 demonstrating students and disorders spread to Bombay where police opened fire on stu-dent demonstrators.

The U. S. Army provost-mar­shal issued a statement today de­nying that any American person­nel had been killed in an attack on the American Officers club.

There was no immediate ex­planation of tfae discrepancy. Six U. S. soldiers and' 52 Indians were killed in an ammunition explosion north of Calcutta but army headquarters said tfae' ex-

///aip--Oi

plosion was not linked witfa tiie rioting.

Today's outbreak came when police charged a procession of 2,000 students who were demon­strating against the action of po­lice yesterday in firing on tile crowds. ' £jJL*W . The demonstration was broken

up by free use of light lathis— steel-tipped bamboo staves.

The Bombay demonstration was in sympathy witfa the Cal cutta students. The demonstrat­ors stoned police, injuring nine polks officers. The police opened -fire on tfae crowd but no one was wounded.

OPAWarToSfem Zooming Pr/cesi

un Stalking a lion on tfae streets,

on the prowl for coyotes, and ready to let loose against tfae first, tiger that dared to slink around the corners of downtown office "buildings, a discharged navy man was picked up by sheriff deputies -and- unarmed Friday night. Tfae youth was carrying a 25-35 rifle and plenty of ammunition for tfae big game hunt, but fear was held that some hapless citizen might in­advertently stop a bullet should it be let loose. # l l l |

Circumstances, of the "expedir tipn" were reported to officers by a taxi driver who told that he had driven the fellow about the city earlier in the afternoon, l ie is alleged to have been turned out of a downtown hotel because

(Continued on Page 4.) __o—

THE WEATHER, FRIENDS

Throw another Jog on the-fire is warning of the weather bureau with prediction that tempera­tures would drop to 28 degrees during Saturday night Forecast for Sunday is high overcast and scattered clouds.

Humidity Saturday was 1? per cent, and high "and. low tempera­tures 69 and 26 degrees. Compar­ative temperatures of a year ago. were 61 and 40 degrees.

Lots of Home Talent Here For Wolf pack, Indian Clash No 34 46 52 38 m w « 35 a a 33

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t.VAtmt~WJ^ BUI Matscfa

STARTING LINEUP

Vernon* Terboteh Hal Wieman Asgie Birk f Bob Bass spSjr* Bob Copland Bill Campbell Hank Walsmith G. McDaniel Bob Tetelaff Chad Seade TIME: 1:3© p. m. teday-

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NEVADA ' Max Bodge Bob McClure

O. Cammaraao Bill Morris

W&:' Jim Welin *%$£-• - Pat...Belter..

Stan Kitchner m Balph Been M. K***mtef»»shi Maurice Hagleen

Lloyd Bade rlemorial field.

No. M tt 39 5*

tM tt 60 56 43 41 15

Two hometown boys will lead University of Nevada out onto Butcher field this afternoon against the Las Vegas AAF Indians as tfae Wolf Pack shoots fee its seventh victory In a very suc­cessful season. filPlfP^ »^^Haafe%

Bill Morris, lift, whe wen all-state honors as a guard for tfae Lai Vegas high school Wildcats last season. It tfae Nevada first-string center, while Pat Heber, rugged 185-pounder from Basle, where Tats parents reside, is starting at right guard. Mortis worked fab way ap to tfae first string against competition from two lettermen witfa ttte courageous tackling, while Heher, al­though handicapped by a charley-faorse in midseason, has devel­oped late * rough customer, tt* was one of tfae beat linemen in tbe St. Mary's game. * (Continued on Page 8.)

WASHINGTON, Nov. 24, (AP) OPA launched an intensified drive today to keep food prices in check as meat, butter and all ether red point products off the ration list. >p?§

George Moncharsh, chief of OPA's enforcement department, predicted it would be a "some­what more difficult' 'job to hold prices now that rationing has ended.

By UNITED PRESS - Butchers %%• most diiw t t -ported today tfaat th* mod of meat rationing found them with seed supplies mt beef, lamb and veal cuts. Bui they said pork was still scarce, j *

"If people don't do crasy aa they did before rationing," tba Cleveland Retail Meat Dealers A s s o c i a t i o n said, "there should bo enough meat for elf customers."

Philadelphia dealers s a i d they expected the shortage of pork products to continue tm soma time.

Tbe American Butter Insti­tute at Chicago .'Warmed- that butter may be scarce for a tew months. . ::i&M W&SlmWSSk

He said in an interview, how ever, that OPA is "all set" to crack down, on any violators of price ceilings.

Investigators already h a v e been transferred from other OPA price programs to augment the regular staff assigned to see that ceilings on meats and fats "are observed.

Moncharsh said OPA expects the job to be toughest fat areas remote from meat, butter and other food production centers.

"Under r a t i o n i n g , " he ex­plained, "points were) set to as­sure—even—distribution.—This helped to ease tfae pressure on prices.. Wmg

"Now that rationingis out, we have to guard against any bid­ding up of prices to obtain sup­plies in potential shertsge areas."

Tfes•-. --vmst,: pawHcniarly:" New York where .meat! consumption is high., is an example of such *t% area, Moncharsh said.

Tfae biggest task, the enforce­ment chief added, wiU She policing prices fee pork, butter, marga-

(Continued en Pago 4.)

TO OUR HEADERS -Because ot the present short­

age « • newsprint,, duesjifi.in-ability of the millaVlo make regular shipments rt-gt time, $§. J|iaecessary W"j*ftispend tfae magasine section «£*****• Age titis issue. It f^expected tfais feature will b. resumed next' Saturday if paper is available,

Tfae Management

DECORATIVE.-- Pulchritude in tfae form of lovely Joy Bar­low, one of tbe many comely show girls to he seen la RKO Radio's "George White's Scan­dals," musical starring Joan

Davis and lack Haley.

|§ Coast Strikes S By UNITED -PBESS-^p

Possibility of a city-wide clos ing of 600 grocery stores which are members ot tfae San Francis­co Retail Grocers Association ap­parently diminished today with •*aac-rjiati*m officials reportedly ia disagreement oa the proposal-

A meeting which E. R. Hoer-schner, attorney for the employ­er group, said bad been called lo discuss a lockout in "sympathy" with 78 Safeway Stores shut dowa by picket lines ot the AFL Bakery Wagon Driver*** union failed to materialize yesterday. &8p*M3Pk'' Savio,' association president, said no further meet­ings to discuss closing the other

(Coniioued tm Page dWgi

Cafcuttaf1!9 levy Pfednles •*>ta*aVP ^ T P M ' ^ P ^ sf mMWm 'tjjijejjjjk ema *****BH *m. aaaaaij. '.. Yhm-'' Pearl Harbor Attack British troops in Calcutta oc­

cupied strategic points through­out the city during the 'night, witfa orders to fire if demonstra­tions began again. The city was quiet but tense titis morning.

The ammunition explosion oc­curred at the Kanchrapara ord­nance depot, 30 miles north of Calcutta, while eight truckloa ds of eld Chinese smokeless powder were being unloaded. F i v e American soldiers and approx­imately 4o Indians were injured.

Tfae governor of Bengal, Rich­ard j Casey, ordered the British troops to intervene in fbe Cq}:-

(Continued on Page 4.)

tmJLate m2^porh Southern California 34 Oregon

4Hr*i*.wIIl SMI W. S. -C. 7, Wash. Univ. t§%fc California 6, UCLA 0. Harvard 60, Beaten Universi­

ty 0. i l Michigan 1, Ohio State 3. Pittsburgh 7, Penn State 0. Yale 20, Princeton 14. Brown 6, Colgate §3?' Columbia 21, Dartmouth tt. La Fayette 7, Lehigh 0. Maryland 19, Virginia 13. Pennsylvania 59, Cornell 0. Kings Point ' Mariners 58,

Brooklyn 6. Alabama 55, Pensacola NAS 6. Auburn 29, Louisiana Tech 0. Duke 14, North Carolina ?. Clemson 21, Georgia 7"ecfc 1. Indiana 26, Purdue 9. M

' • Wisconsin 26, Minnesota 12. Mississippi 7, Mississippi State

Northwestern 13, Illinois 7. Tennessee 14, Kentucky 9. TCU 14, Rice IS. Third Air Force 15; ATC 9. Nebraska 13, Iowa 9. SMU 84, Baylor 9. California Ramblers 13, Saera-

^^fllContinued on Page 4.)

TOKYO, Nov. 25. (UP)—Gen. Douglas MacArthur today or­dered the Japanese government to enact'a drastic war profits tax program aimed at a more equitable distribution of wealth and blocked funds for government grants totaling more than $3,500,-000,000 to corporations. , J» one of the most strongly-

worded directives of the occu­pation MacArthur ordered the government to overhaul its fi­nances' and deprive swollen Jap­anese corporations of their vast war profits in order to prove to them that "war does Q®t pay."

The program, tfae directive said, "includes not only the .pe­riod dating atom tfae perfidious attack againsTPearl Harbor" but the preceding period of Japanese aggression.

Tbe'r!*rltrectiv^lp Forbade tfae government to ex­

tend credit, grant subsidies, tax exemptions or "any similar bene­fits.*^

Submit to tiie first session of tiie new Japanese diet in Janu­ary, 1946, a tax program levying a 100 per cent AVST profits tax against all war industries and a similar steeply graduated tear up to l60 per cent against all other corporations and individuals. A graduated capital levy at rates as high as 70 per cent

Blocked government funds to­taling 5'.,5QO,000,000 yen intended for the payment of war indemani-ties to corporations. Gave the Japanese 30 days in which to re­cover all war indemnity pay­ments of more than 5,000 yen made since Aug. 15.

NIMITZ NEW JOB PEARL HARBOR, Nov. 24,

(UP)—Fleet Admiral Chester. W. Nimitz, newly-named chief of naval operations, relinquished command of the Pacific fleet to­day in a ten-minute ceremony in which he pledged to maintain tfae greatest fighting force in the his­tory of 'naval warfare.

Welles Soys Only Course Besides War Was Servility

WASHINGTON, Nov. 24. (UP)—Former Undersecretary of State Sumner Welles said today tfaat this country's only choice ia the anxious days lwftore YtOm ss^batYmm sltimate war in ttm east or abject acquiescence in Japanese aggression.

He told the congressional Pearl Harbor investigating commit­tee that he had concluded by mid-September, 1841, tfaat Japan would not give ap ber career ef <*onquest aaat tfaat war was in­evitable. WmLi %_W_

Although he was fired from tbe administration in 1943 because of differences witfa then Secretary et State Cordell Hail, Welles strongly defended the diplomatic esratat ef action fads former boss day. Askedtook ln pre-Pearl Harbor negotiations witfa Japaa.

Hull had described Ms 1941 activities to the eommittee yester­day. Asked by Senator Scott Lucas, D., l*ltta-*ji( if he agreed Witii Tfeiti'f.atatemc.-'t. Welles, rajff

^*Slt#*»e j l w Trl*^ -*eja|deteiy in tfae r ^ -made to tfae committee."»'*^fe*. %%§_*» ^ S

,-J-fae' suave Welles went before the eommittee today for tbe second time after the eommittee bad disclosed that former British Prime Minister Winston Churchill had proposed te tfae late Presi­dent Roosevelt en Nev.-S9,1941, that * joint or parallel war warn­ing fee seat to Japaa.

Welles, whe afdrmried tb* Atlandtic charter conference between Roosevelt and Churchill in Augnst, 1941, wee questioned at length fey Sea. Homer Ferguson, B , Michigan, about an earlier parallel warning to Japan. ^Sife l l i S l

Tka first warning was discussed fey Roosevelt and Churchill at tfee Atlantle charter conference. The U. S. note went te tfae Japanese Aegrj*F':ead warned tfeat if tfee Japanese teak further military action tfae United States would be tewed to take all necessary steps te protect Its Interests aad security.

Ferguson emphasised that the note area -set made public until ifter Pearl aUrfeer. wet*%w rtraarneated that Its publication at tfee time would have jeopardised tfee Japanese aegotiatlous than in WtalrTrr*. ^ l* '* ' - {Continued en Page At

Et Rancho Peace Fades

El Rancho, El Rancho, who's got the El Rancho, today became tiie button, button, game Las Vegas style, as a migration of prominent Las Vegas attorneys, OPA officials and ex-Officials, Wilbur Claw, and' Walter and Joseph Guzzardi was reported enroute or about to embark, for Carson City where another chap* ter of the million dollar true story, will begin unfolding Men-day.

Until aeon Saturday, it looked as though the whole picture was going to become clear once again, with the Guzzardis out of tiie scene in favor of Wilbur Clark witii an out-of-court settlemeaC-

Shortly afternoon today it be­came apparent that the. whole deal was in the air again and both sides again were in the ring for a battle royal to square it off in the courts. «^i@i

Around the million dollar ho­tel Saturday afternoon the sto­ries were varied as to what the score was. Some said Clark was ti*re man. Some said the Guzzar-dis definitely were in and Clark out. .Some sairT Harry Miller had been tossed out as receiver and James Bradsha w, former state OPA' head Was in charge.

Meanwhile, Harry Miller still very much was in evidence, and when deputy U. & Marshall Don Borax showed up Saturday af* ternoon with a subpoena in his pocket the word quickly passed through the underground that he was hunting for Harry.

It soon developed though that Harry was still there. However,* in the presence of -the press, the marshal! merely served papers on Wilbur Clark who had arrived* by plane only a few minutes be­fore subpoenaing him to Carson City "where he had already an­nounced intention of going any­way.

From absolutely reliable sourc­es it was learned that Clark at tiie last minute had turned down "exorbitant" demands" of the Guzzardis and the deal blew up with Clark determined to

(Continued on Page 4.)

AAF Centers WASHINGTON, Nov. 24 (AP)

The number of army air force separation bases will be eat from 35 to 20 by Dee. 5.

Brig. Gen. Charles F. Bora of the continental air forces said today tiie move is designed to concentrate more separations arc* tivities in tfae heavily populated northeast—without reducing the daily discharge rate.

Sixteen bases will cease handl­ing separations.

Necessary separations -person­nel will be transferred to the 20 remaining bases' to enable the AAT to maintain its capacity of 10,000 discharges daily.

•tat* Two Sunday, November 25, 1945

.!ifAw//*?" 7*A HOLLYWOOD, Nov. 24 (AP)

Bob Thomas says: The movie town paused from its usual rou­tine of births, marriages, divorces

studio disclosed today. Officials were unable to report

where tfae marriage would take place, bat said that Miss-Thurs

amd barroom brawls to hail the [ton and Thayer would fee at the advent of the Christmas season.

Last night, a collection of movie and radio stars hopped en floats and paraded down Holly­wood boulevard before thousands of gaping citizens. The boule­vard was .converted • into Santa Claus lane and was lined with large metal 'trees studded with multi-colored lights. Hollywood hasn't been so lit up since V-J day.

Tbe happiest news in Holly­wood last week was the return erf Lieutenant Tyrone Power from tite wars. The handsome screen star aad marine transport pilot 'Hew into town with his wife, Annabella, at 5 o'clock Thanksgiving morning. After processing at San Diego, he will be back before the cameras again.

Tfae unhappiest news for many men was the announcement that Esther Williams is going to get married. The battling beauty will marry Sergeant Ben Gage, radio announcer, tomorrow. She was once married to Dr. Leon­ard Kovner.

American humor suffered a se­vere blow with the death of Rob­ert Benchley from a cerebral hemorrhage in New York. Tbe author and critic was one of tfae screen's most reliable comedians and was well liked in the film colony.

Mrs. James Hilton decided that life with tite author of "Lost Horizon" was no Shangri-La and divorced him after eight years of marriage. She testified: "He would sit at the radio aad just not talk." Mrs. Jascha Half eta, tfae termer Florence Vidor oi tfae films, .announced she is living apart from the violin genius.

Commodore Gene Markey got out ef tfae navy sard mas flus­tered when*reporters asked him Stout possible plans to marry Myrna Loy. "A gent can't say he hasn't any plans to marry and he's foolish if he says he has," Markey hedged. Miss Loy was mete definite: "tie probably will be married later on, but we heme no definite plans now."

Eddie Bracken was passing the cigars after the birth of his first son. Sydney' Greenstreet was seriously ill with a bronchial in­fection and was placed under an oxygen tent. Jimmy Dunn suf­fered an attack of pancreatitis, but was recovering.

In the awards division, Tecfa-- nical Sergeant Tony Martin was given the bronze star in India and Kay Kyser was named "hon­orary professor of music" by a G. I. college at Osaka Military academy in Japan.

Housing Note — Red Skelton and his bride Georgia Were trax-. eling from faOtel to hotel. He wanted "to move ifato"tine: of fill three apartments he owns, but claims the .OPA won't let faim dood it pS

El Cortez hotel, El Paso, Texas, by tonight. Thayer's home is in Houston.

Miss Thurston, a Cecil B. De­Mille discovery, made her screen debut as the native nurse in tiie "Story of Dr. Wassell" and has just completed the feminine lead opposite Johnny Weismuller in "Swamp Fire."

HOLLYWOOD, Nov. 24 (UP) Academy award winner Jean Fontaine, undergoing penicillin treatments for. pneumonia at tiie Hampshire House in New York, wiU return to the California des­ert to rest when her physician gives permission, her studio said today.

The actress, who has been, ill for the past five days, ii tat mean?; sidered out of danger, the studio reported. iPl

Miss Fontaine went east three weeks ago after completing tiie movie, "From This Day For­ward," ami is scheduled to star in RKO*s- "Clffistabel Caine" when she returns.

BOSTON, Nov. 24 (LP) — Movie star Merle Oberon has undergone successfully an operation "to in­crease the likelihood of mother­hood," Dr. John Rock of the Har­vard Medical School's department erf gynecology said today. - % •••

"She is getting along very nicely," Dr. Rock reported .after treatment for a condition which he described as "rather common among many women."

The Tasmanian-born actress who starred in the film "Wuther­ing Heights" is the wife of Lu-cien Keith Ballard, Hollywood cameraman. .V.'-;,;; J

txze day, will be married Sunday eve­ning at tfae Westwood Hills Con­gregational church. The Rev. F. Mark Hoag will officiate.

The couple will fly to Mexico for a week's honeympon before Miss Williams finishes a Mexi­can picture, "Fiesta."

HOLLYWOOD, Nov. 24 (UP) Actress Claire James, 23, runner-up in the 1938 Miss America con­test, won a divorce today from advertising agent Raymond Dor­sey on ber testimony he fibbed so much it embarrassed her.

Tfae beauty, former wife of dance director Busby Berkeley, told Superior Judge Samuel R. Blake tfaat Dorsey never support­ed her and she had to pay all his bills. . Ipl l l i

"He never told tiie truth about anything,' she claimed. . "The first thing he tied about was bis name. It's really DeWarteky. 1 wouldn't go anywhere with faim because he would lie all tfae time and embarrass me." P-lSIf

The twe were married in Van Nays June 20,1943.

She obtained an annulment ef her first marriage to Berkeley on the grounds he was a husband "in name only." --**';.

*aMJLYWOC*t**rllev. 24 flW*> Actress Ann Sheridan, who took over witfa "oomph" where "it"" left off, ended her latest suspen­sion from Warner Brothers studios today witb a new long-term contract.

The studio ;iaid tfae much-sus­pended actress and director Vin­cent Sherman were talking over details of her firsipicture in New York today. Shooting is sched­uled to start next month.

bride starts a new picture there.

PALM SPRINGS, Cal., Nov. 24 (IP)—The mother of Actress Bette Davis, Man. Ruth Favor Davis, and a Borrten business man, Rob­ert waniBfeuij Palmer, are to be married at Smoke Tree ranch to­day. Miss Davis will attend .her mother&lliii

Awt i-Jtari&rJi *%tm ' BUENOSA IRES, Nov. 21 (*P> A portion of the crowd attending a uuBttlSl rally fr» Colonel Juan Peron, Argentina's strong maa and presidential candidate, en­tered the Jewish quarter of Bue­nos Aires last night shouting an ti-Jewish slogans. Some win­dows were broken and some shots ware fired. No one Was re­ported injured.

—• •»••• * *§lpP Mad Tokens Work j f i !

•BUTTE, Meal, Nov. M (AP) The end of meat rationing caused Butte tavern operators to turn their 10-cent slot machines to the wall today and hang signs on them reading "Out of Order" be­cause red tokens work them as well as dimes.

HOLLYWOOD, Nov. 24 (UP) Glamorous Frances Ramsden, who will co-star with Harold Lteyd in fate sew picture, filed suit' for divorce today against Paul E. De*fcoqueyssie, charging be tore Iter clothes off when he raided her apartment last July. , Her complaint also alleged he

refused to work although they were without funds.

In an answer to the suit, De Loqueyssie claimed fate wife de­serted him in May, 1943, and She was cruel to him by openly asso­ciating with other men.

He denied the raid episode. He asked tfae court 'to make Miss Ramsden pay his $1,000 attorney's foes, claiming she makes more than 9509 a month.

The two'were married here April 25, 1943, and the divorce petition said they separated last May 27.

HOLLYWOOD, t*ov. 24 (tm Actress Carol Thurston, 22, and Lieutenant Colonel David Thayer, 27, U. S. army air forces, former University of Texas football play-*r, have' eloped to Texas, her

HOLLYWOOD, ttov. 24 (UP)-* Thomas Lincoln Tally, 94, pioneer showman credited with coining the term "moving pictures," died yegteri!a^'ft.fatetema.ii,j^-v. _

Tally -was one of tiie founders of First National Pictures and was tite first producer to sign contracts witfa Charlie Chaplin and Mali Pickford. . He established the first motion picture theater in Lee Angeles and was tbe first to show color film, in 1912. He installed the first theater pipe organs and ele­vator orchestra pits.

Funeral services will be con­ducted tomorrow at Pierce Bros. Beverly Hills chapel and inter­ment will be private. Tally is survived by his widow? Mary, and a son, Seymour Tally.

- HOLLYWOOD, Nov. 2+ (UP) Actress. Esther Williams, swan star, demurred politely at kissing her fiance, Staff Sergeant Ben Gage, as they applied today for a marriage liaetwtm.yj*

That's just for us and not fiie great American public,*' tbe 24-year-old shapely actress told photographers.

Miss Williams and Gage, 30, radio announcer who is to be discharged from fiie army Satur-

CAS SHORTAGE LONDON, Nov. 24 (AP) — A

gas shortage, caused by a strike of 2,000 gas workers demanding higher wages for night work, baa forced a partial blackout on Lon­don. All gas lighting in streets was ordfred discontinued in an effort to conserve supplies.

—M.jSji j^ ' 0 " ' " . ; " ' '

Quick Changes PASADENA, Cal, Nov. 24

(UP) —- New scientific develop­ment may make atomic bomb re­search already completely obso­lete over night, Dr. William A. Fowler-told a group of scientists at California Irrstitute of Tech­nology yesterday.. Vi,jl|S

pt..WmmXherjpeixit»d out that the atom bomb was developedin tfate country from a rare element and at tremendous cost.

"There is little assurance tbat equal or greater atomic power will aat be developed at little treat from a common element a foreign country," he said. m

Fitter Battle InJava.Rebs Hit British

BATA VTA, Java, Nov. 24 (A*)— Heavy fighting batwaau British and Indonesian troops erupted today in Semarang rtnd Ambor-awa The British said Indonesian extremists in Ambarawa had Stormed tfae civilian internee camp and "butchered women and children" | | § |

A statement fey lieutenant Colonel H. -C. G. Harding, British provost marshal, also said tfaat Dutch and Amboinese troops of the 10th Dutch battalion shot down 60 Indonesian police "far cold Mood" in tfae Indonesian cen­tral police station in Batavia a few.daHjswfo. S S l S

The British used naval and ar­tillery ftee in repulsing 1,000 armed Indonesians in Semarang yesterday. The official communi­que said the town had suffered "considerably" from the fighting in tite past three days.

Batavia has been comparative­ly quiet during tbe past 48 hours, with only a few cases of sniping and looting reported.

Tbe British report on Ambar­awa said tfaat when tfae Gurkhas lifted fite siege of the tWtjij* <tt|y found nine persons dead, three dying and, 20 wounded, including children ranging In age from three to nine.

The heaviest lighting in Am­barawa, was concentrated in an area near a lake in tfae center of •town where Indonesians- were (reported trying to Hand on tfee ninth and west shores. R. A. F. Thunderbolts from Batavia straf­fed Indonesian boats "success­fully," the British communique said. One Thunderbolt was lost.

Ten Chinese were killed last night in Soerabaja, when Indo­nesians hurled artillery shells into the city'* Chinatown.

^ f e - a •."''' -{y&'A UNUSUAL WILL -- .^ . -.

Tl*»'Will of a prominent Lon­don doctor directed that fie fee buried fully dressed in blue serge, a box of matches in .one hand, his favorite pipe in the other, and his tobacco pouch on his breast j "****-.

NATION" Jorgets i|jfjfiiiia*iiill* sot faces of returning aervice ntem, vainly tramping tfae streets seeking shelter for themselves and their famities. Tfeis little spaug at at last united after years of hardship and separation, only te discover tfaat tfae flag waving ami. promises of a few months feaek are futile comfort en tfae cold pavements. MstryWiaatt) they aaa confronted with "no vacancy" signs. Uncommon heroism of the mea who fought tba was ia commonplace to those wfao stayed behind aaat failed te plan fulfillment af the pledges made Jst

^mm" . stress of danger

HaatmOm Ciwrfmiulalgral WASHINGTON, Nov. 24 (***•—

PraffUfit Truman today congrat­ulated King Haakon Of Norway w« m.e 4Btn anniversary of his ascension to the throne.

A streamlined British loeomo-tive which holds the world's speed record of 123 miles per hour has been formally christ­ened the "Dwight D. Eisenhow­er."

Dea* to Rebel* ALGIERS, Nev. 24 (JPy—A mili­

tary tribunal at'Constantine yes­terday returned death verdicts for-six Arabs convicted of taking pact fat uprisings last May.

Eighty-four other Arabs were given terms at hard labor and 30 were acquitted. -•

Bave.fl5.m te invest fat going bastneas. Review-Jo-araal 9 t s •29. Adv. arM

EVERY SEAT A LOGE

GREATEST SHIPWRECK LOSS The greatest recorded loss of

life by shipwreck was in the sinking, of the. French cruiser Provence, ^February 29, 1916, in the Mediterranean. Ofthe 4,000 aboard, only 870 were saved.: :J||

. HOLLYWOOD, Nov. 24 (UP)-Staff Sergeant Ben Gaga, former J radio announcer, expects his die-J charge from the navy today. And] tomorrow he will marry swim­ming queen Esther Williams,

Gage met Miss Williams a year ago at the wedding of friends. They took out their marriage li­cense yesterday. But they refused' to kiss for cameramen.

"That's Just for us and not the great American public," the act­ress said.

Tfae couple will fee married! 'Sunday at 5 p. m.

Tbey will honeymoon in Mex­ico City and Acapulco before the!

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BACKGROUND FOR GLAMOR — Tfee delicate beauty of Lor­etta Young needs ne gilt framing to enhance ber delicate features. Loretta in all ber wide-eyed loveliness co-stars witb Gary Cooper in Internationals "Along Came Jones," released Ay RKO

Radio.. -f.m-

Purely "H Personal ••:]

Dr. Phillip Goldstein, Phd., campaign director of the Jewish welfare board of New York, Stopped to visit his sister-in-law en route to a meeting in Los Angeles. . •:--', m';';i

First Lieutenant Dave Zeenoff, who recently- returned from the Philippines, and Mrs. Zeenoff en­joyed the Thanksgiving holidays with Mrs. Zeenoff's parents, Mr. and Mrs, Phil Leonard.

Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Mc­Laughlin, of 220 South Sixth street, this city, have returned home after en official visitation Of several Knights of Columbus councils. Among those included were Reno, Winnemucca, Battle Mountain, Elko and Ely. Mr. and Mrs. Fred L. O'Donnell accom­panied them on their trip. 7 „-.*:

Auto Crash Ends In Damage Suit Filed in Cotut•—

Echoes of an automobile crash sine months ago win fee heard in district court Monday morning when the suit of James Carson vs Vegas Transit Company and Lucky Cab, and J: O. Christen

Mrs. Lena Little, public health nurse of Inyo county, California, has arrived in Las Vegas to visit with her brother, Dick Lochrie, foreman- of the mechanical de­partment of the Review-Journal. Lochrie, wfao underwent an emergency appendectomy a t the Clark County General Hospital, was released »|i?*>n*" the hospital today and will be under tfae care of his sister at his home while he is recuperating.

Louis Cohen, who was injured in an automobile accident a while ago, has" been released from the hospital, but his physician still finds it unadvisable for him to taje$ave Visitors. Sslt-K

It'll Be Cool Doy When He's Caught

CI'NTRALIA,fB;'3>)—Sid Hall complained to police that a ton of lump coal was stolen from his home without awakening him. Hall said he believed tire coal W£.J shoveled into a truck and hauled away. ?igij;

First ambulance use foe a Bon naza Ate Service plane t was scheduled today when Mrs. Eileen Reid started on her way home to New York after receiving a divorce decree in district court Friday afternoon. Mrs. Reid be­came ill after aha established residence here and has been a j patient in jgark county general I

hospital since November 19. She will be accompanied on the trip home by Dorothy Granger, regl-istered nurse,

Mrs, Raid appeared in court yesterday .in boudoir attire. She wore silk pajamas, a quilted robe, and reclined on pillows on a dav­enport in Judge George Mar­shall's chambers to give bar testi­

mony. The complaint outlined tbat

Mrs. Reid and Harold B. Reid were married May 97, 1939, in Northvale, New Jersey. They have twe children, Harold Blair Reid, Jr., and Bruce Neal Reid, who were given to the custody of their mother. She charged three years separation. Louis

Weiner, Jr., was attorney for tfae plaintiff, and John G. Cope rep­resented Reid la tiie action.

Charles Keene and Richard Haughey will pilot tite plane, a twin engine Cessna for tfae Ne,w York trip, and expect to ar­rive there approximately 18 hours after take-off here!

IT'S FASHIONABLE TO BE BAD BY ERSKINE JOHNSON

* NEA. Staff Correspondent HOLLYWOOD — The flaming

flapper created by Hollywood after World War I is a prim and proper - person alongside the vicious vampires to be seen on the post-World rWar U screen. -This season in movieland, it's fashionable to be bad.

Ferocious females are the order of the day. And the ways things are going, it wouldn't be sur­prising to see Eric Johnston, new film czar and chief censor, play­ing King Charles in "Forever Amber.**

Out at 20th Century-Fox, tfaat nice young lady, Lynn Bari, is playing a sultry and seductive nurse whose charms incite Vin­cent price to murder his wife and then attempt to drive insane the girl who witnessed fhe crime in a new Sicker titled, "Shock."

Over at Columbia, another sweet girl, Rita Hayworth, is playing a ruthless if glamorous siren in "Gilda." She's a stream­lined vamp in the picture, a modern version of the. type of

no-good that Garbo and Dietrich did ao successfully at one time

Rita bodes no good for men in this one and makes plenty of trouble for Glenn Ford and\ sev­eral other males who fall |OT her wiles. In one scene she goes to a costume ball dressed as a South American gaucho. Comments Ford, bitterly: "It would have been more appropriate if you had come dressed as a tramp.'*

That gives you a rough idea. Lana Plays With Vitriol

At MGM Lana Turner, the nice little stenographer of "Week 2nd at the Waldorf," is making with the vitriol in "The Postman Al­ways Rings Twice.** She plays a girl who is no better than she should be, helping John Garfield plan a murder as Just a little extra meanness!

There hasn't been a more lady­like, series of characters in tite movies than those played by Joan Fontaine. But even 'Joan has gone bad, in RKO's "All Kneel­ing," the Anne Parrish -novel about a girl who ruins several

THE SWEET YOUNG THINGS OF YESTERDAY'S FILMS ARE TRAMPS AND TROLLOPS NOW men by her selfish whims and desire to get her own way at all times.

On the "Love Lies Bleeding" set at Paramount, Barbara Stan­wyck, who used to play romantic comedy, is outdoing her selfish, deadly character in "Double In­demnity." In'this one she plays a girl who, at the age of 14, mur­ders her aunt. Sweet kid.

There are more pictures coming up.

Gene Tierney drowns her hus­band's brother in "Leave Her To Heaven"—Hedy Lamarr wrecks the lives of several men In T h e Strange Woman" — Paulette Goddard is a lady of assorted loves in "Kitty" — Linda Darnell a neurotic waitress in "Fallen Angel" — Bette DavirT "ctfmes back a meanie in "Stolen life" after finding that virtue didn't pay off well i n . T h e Corn Is Green" , Ifeff And, Forever, "Forever Amber"

And, of course, there's still "Forever. Amber." Amber is like­ly to be about tiie tops—or bot­

tom—in bad girl heroines. Of course, - this thing has been

coming on slowly. It was once the trend to introduce an actress to tfae public p* an ingenue. But those days are over aad now a girl like Lauren Bacall makes her debut as a toughcustomer in "To Have and Have Not* and proves a sensation.

Recall's arid Stanwyck's bad girl roles started making theater cash registers ring like a three-bell fire alarm and even the ac­tresses who have always special­ized in nice girl parts switched types to get in on tiie popularity trend.

Even Greer Garson strayed. In her next, "Adventure," she has a hectic romance with a sailor, Clark Gable, and winds up bit­ting him over the head with a bottle in a brawl in a San Fran­cisco waterfront dive.

Until this thing blows over, we're going to concentrate our set visiting to Walt Disney's studio, where all the heroines are innocent paper dollies.

Sanday, November 25, IMS JL

—THE GAL la this striking pose Is Carol Stewart, wfao has a way af appearing ia striking poses before ttte camera* She far vocalist

ea Columbia's "Beulah Show" on Sundays.

Building Permits Drop

Here's New Cause Japs Started War

Observance of the Thanksgiving holiday season is leaving its mark on the record of building permits in the office of O. J. Morling, city building inspector, with only a few small jobs listed this week-end. Only $5,000 in permits were allowed for five re­modeling Jobs. They are:

Troy Hunt, Sunny Place, barn, $1000; Apache Hotel, Second and Fremont, penthouse on roof, $500; Key Pittman, 323 Fremont addition to lunch counter, $500; M. Goldroom, Vegas Apartments, 231 North Eleventh street, washhouse, $1009, and Biltmore Clean-

sen i j scheduled to open. fa'titral.^afe^Bt North Mete, b-j^ttmsj^m. action Carson seeks recovery of $15,000 general damages, $892.50 for time lost from work, and $86.25 for hospital and medical expense. Safes

The complaint outlines that Carson was passenger in a Lucky Cab on the evening of February 24, 1945, when the car became involved in an accident at the in­tersection of Stewart and Eighth streets. Other dri ver in the col­lision was Lyle Christensen, son of J. O. Christensen,. owner- of the automobile. Since tfaat date tiie younger Christensen has been inducted into military service.

Carson charges that his injury was laceration and fracture of hte, nose with resulting obstruc­tion and infection of fate nasal sinuses. A jury will hear tfae civil action before Judge George Marshal};- -The tow firm of Morse & jSrayes$*, attorney ,. for parson. Thetransports tion* company will be represented by Louis Wiener, Jr„'and'V. Gray Gubler is attor­ney for Christensen.

o

AN. A.Mistake LONG BEACH, Cal., Nov. 24

(/P)—Complaints over conditions aboard the assault cargo ship Procyon, which led to removal of 300 returning veterans at Port­land, appeared to have vanished when she nosed into Los Angeles harbor yesterday.

One of tfae returnees, Harold Harrison, seaman first class from Geneva, Illinois, said "The gen­eral opinion of tiie boys is that this is the best troop ship we've been on.

First Run TODAY, MONDAY, TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY

Continuous Today . . Shews at 1-3-5-7-9 P. M.

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TOKT^IIfev. 24. (API — A retired Japanese rear admiral as-terted today that wartime Pre­mier Hideki Tojo "and his despe­rate supporters" started tbe Pa­cific war primarily "to save themselves from punishment for their failure in China."

Katsugi Masaki, 60, currently a member of. the Japanese house of representatives and former commander of the Ominato naval base, made tiie assertion in an interview. He included it in "evidence" which he said would .be used by -the defense in tins, war-crimes trial of his brother General Jinzaburo Masaki. f S

Vicious: domestic intrigue in Japan was a major factor in precipitating the Manchurian and China incidents, tfae retired naval officer said.

"There ware other factors, of course—notably a feeling among Japanese that they were being oppressed by western powers— but the major cause of all these conflicts was the intrigue by which Tojo and other army fac-ists sought domestic totalitarian power," he added. a

Tojo's principal henchman, he declared, was General Teiichi Suzuki, who has not been placed on General MacArthur's list of suspected war criminals. A third In tfae trio of early-day ring­leaders of this eKoue, he asserted; was Lieutenant General Te^suza Nagata, assassinated a decade ago by a fanatic. •i$&*»Sft

Among other military {totters, Masaki said, was Lieutenant General Akiro Muto, chief erf staff to Lieutenant General Tonv oyuki Yamashita in the Philip­pines. Like Tojo. in Tokyo, Muto awaits war-crimes trial in Ma­nna s&i?3? ''MM$Mi

HH ADDED ATTBACTIONS^M. Sportiights—"Long Shots ta Favorites*'

Technicolor Cartoon—'When GX Johnny Comes Home' Popular Science—-First Bun News j | |S1

Famed Writer Feared Missing / j | SANTA ANA, Cat, Nov. 24 (UP) — Mrs. '. Audrey .. Benson Georgi, 28*, writer and lecturer, disappeared while on a lecture tour in Mexico and ber father, Oscar "Benson, today expressed the fear "something bad might have happened," perhaps kidnap­ing. ;_W®aWmWz^ l l B s

Going to Mexico City last May at the expense of the. Mexican governmenJLto lecture on the San Francisco conference, Mrs. Georgi had not been heard from since she left several weeks ago with a Mexican who "ostensibly was to take her to a publisher in Mazatlan interested In publish­ing her book," Benson disclosed. Matzatlan is about 500 miles from Mexico City. $ S Recent reports of kidnapings in Mexico, caused Benson to tear that his daughter may have been kidnaped. Before her "disap r*ar*" ance, Mrs. Georgi wrote about the"iodnaprngfe" of Americans" 16 tfae Mexico City area. - Mrs. Georgi, wife of Dr. Otto R. Georgi of tfae U. S. navy, was joined in Mexico City In June by bar mother, Mrs. Olga Benson, who is caring for the two Georgi children.

When Mrs. Benson failed to hear from her daughter after she ieft for Mazatlan, she started a B**f1*W%B:

• rj

CLOUDS WELCOME Tfae sun is blamed for causing

a serious fire hi the borne of Tom Mindon of Nebraska. The sun shone through a flaw in tiie wis-, dow glass, ignited a match and am the home afire.

Beautiful Portwar World When It Finally Arrives

WASHINGTON, Nov. 24 (f^P>; A portable, talking timepiece half the adze of a package of cig­arets which not only "tells" time but gives brief up-to-the-minute new£ and weather report} is the newest ga'dgeVJforecasT"for"YBSV wo™P*%Ctomorrow!*™^ •'•'«

The vocal "clock" actually will be a small radio receiving set costing from $5 to $10 and hooked up to one frequency which will broadcast time 24 hours a day.

Electronic Tune, incorporated anew corporation in New York City has asked the federal com­munications commission for per mission to build a developmental broadcasting station on top of the Lincoln building in New York where the broadcast time system will be tried out. When public acceptance is proven, electronic time said, the service will be es­tablished in all metropolitan communities of the United States.

Weather reports, s p o r t i n g events or news of national im­portance, electronic time said, witt be given in a terse, concise way so that the time announce meats will not be interrupted for mere than a half second except in case of national or local emer­gency. '

For instance a person might tune in and hear:

"The time is ten thirty and one quarter—raining," or

"Ten thirty — Detroit eight Cubs three fina," or

'Ten thirty—House passes in­come -tax- reduction.' iii ads

Declared Daddy KANSAS CITY, Nov. 24 (AP)

After a 15-minute deliberation a Wyandotte county district court jury yesterday found a 56-year* old retired preacher, Lawrence I. Goodrich, to be the father of the eight - month • old daughter of Miss Gladys Beard.

Defense attorneys said a mo­tion—for a new trial would be filed within the next three dty*

Earlier Miss Beard, former missionary worker, testified that Goodrich was "the only man I ever loved"; that he had sent her many love letten and.had been intimate with bet on sev­eral occasions. ,>-.-'".

Goodrich, Who is married, was required to post a $200 bond in­suring c o m p 1 i a n c e with the courrs temporary order that he pay $10 weekly toward tfae sup­port of the child. •

PRODIGY Thomas Young, physician and

scientist, born in the 18th cen­tury, read tfae Bible twice before bis fourth birthday, and could read several foreign languages at the age of eight.

Light travels fast enough to make M^iteund trips "iSetwerari New York and San Francisco in one second. -

Hospital Notes CLARK COUNTY GENERAL

HOSPITAL

November 23, 1945 ^ - Admissions Louis Warren Charles F. Watts

- Ruth Hughes „.„WJEu*amJE*imdia._^_^;-:;:- ;

Mrs. C. H. Billings William M. Morgan C. E. Wells Jack Dougherty ; , Mrs. Walter Harvey Johnny Mayes Mrs. Henry. Coffman Donald Foster .

Dismissals Mrs. Frank Campbell Carlton Turner C. F. Johnson John M. Prusel Dean Dickinson Louis Warren * Ruth Hughes Mrs. Leonard Eagle Earnest E. Casey Mrs. Harold Reid John Kelly ' Kathleen Billings

November 24, 1945 fi**-,. Admissions -.,-,.,- »;•••..* Mrs. J. J. Stone Herbert F. Chapman Mrs. Howard Ward Mrs. W. L. Jemison

Another Puf in A Good Word at g Yiffnashifa Trial | |

MANILA, Nov. 24 (AP) — A defense witness under sharp questioning by tfae U. S. military commission hearing war crimes charges against Lieutenant Gen­eral Tomoyuki Yamashita today admitted Yamashita had "some responsibility" for treatment of prisoners of war in the Philip­pines.

"Who in Tokyo or imperial headquarters held responsibility for prisoners of war and civilian camps?" tiie witness, Lieutenant Colonel Kikuo Ishikawa, was asked;

"Camp commanders," he re­plied.

Major General Russell B. Rey nolds, president of the trial com­mission, i n t e r r u p t e d to ask sharply.

"Do you mean to tell me that tb* Japanese high command fat Tokyo held that Yamashita did not have complete responsibility for prisoners of war under his e-mtrol?*' •—— -«—

"I believe there is some re­sponsibility,'' Ishikawa acknowl­edged. *

Ishikawa, la charge of supplies for prison camps in Yamashita's 14th army group area, said an in­spection he made of Bilibid, San­to Tomas and Fort McKinley prisons revealed that food sup­plies, "although d imin i sh ing , were the same as Japanese sol­diers were receiving.**

Earlier Major General Goichi Kir a had testified that Yamashita was greatly concerned over the food situation and "expressed the desire that internees and prison­ers of war be taken'care of prop­erly.'* < -, . ,,. - ^ o . ., .- •

CAMOUFLAGE IS AN ART Snips properly camouflaged

for one theater of war would not be painted properly for other, re­gions, due to different water col­ors and atmospheric conditions in various ocean areas.

St, atidticd BIRTHS

To . Lieutenant Colonel and Mrs. John D. Kidd, of 2520 Bonita El Rancho, Tuesday, No­vember 20, 1945, at 12:35 p. m., ftt Clark County General Hos­pital, a son.

It's a boy for Private and Mrs. Howard Ward, of 126 Railroad street, this c i ty , / .

MARRIAGES Eliot W. Cummings, 41, Nelson,

and Vera May Hanna, 89, Mc-Alester, Oklahoma.

James E. Heintz, 32, Joliet, Illi­nois, and Trentina C. Broscio, SO, Las Vegas. .

David Walter Fleming, 45, Las Vegas, and Elsie Marie Tavares, 28, Huntington, Park, Calif.

Padre Landlords Go On Strike

SAN DIEGO, Nov. 24 (UP)— In protest against the OPA's con­tinued rent ceilings, "property owners today withdrew 2000 rental units frpm tile market in j* rental "strike," following a spe­cial meeting of the Apartment Association of San Diego, Inc., John Cotton, president, an­nounced.

"More apartments and houses will be withdrawn," Cotton said, "as a result of a questionnaire members will be requested to vote on tiiis week end."

WHAT IS SAND? Sand grains can have diameters

of no more than 1.5 millimeters and no less than .05 millimetert Rock particles above this limit are gravel. Anything below tite limit is classed as silt or clay.

BUST BEE CAFE Meals 25c. 35c. 40a

Complete 105 NORTH F I R S T ST .

Next to Bank of Nevada

IkeAt-ipUght WHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS,

W. Va„ Nov. 24 (UP) — General Dwight D. Eisenhower had an "excellent night"' a t ' ' Ashford General Hospital, and his condi­tion is "very satisfactory," Brig­adier General Clyde M. Beck, commanding general of the hos­pital, report ed t o d a y S ^

General Eisenhower was ad­mitted to the hospital yesterday suffering from an acute respira­tory infection. Hospital attend­ants reported last night that his condition was not critical, and tfaat lie was "progressing satis­factorily."

:y*£_W> • o Have $15,000 to invest la going

business. Review-Journal B o x 219.- Adv. n24

PREFABRICATED

COTTAGES, CABINS, PARAGES

$225.00 ta $1800.00 | | | DON BEHLEN

El Rancho Vegas Wednesday

THURSDAYS 250$ West Sixth St.

Exposition 41S1

S U f LIQUOR J K P * STORE

SO. lST^and CARSON Complete Line ef

' Liquors Wines ..SsBeers

VliSlilNG fioxrits1 Due-|gf^|increoSe iftltiHe number'.'of po-

tient^jnd t f^teck of nurses, we wish to notify, the public that visiting hours at, the Clark Go^^Generat Hdspita^re ft 'M^^M

j t - 6:30 to 8:30 p. m. '' - - -.'. -We v^(^»>preciat|^ou^ooperation in ob­

serving Jfese visiting hours m o rde^haf jthf nurses may not be disturbed and thus may give .t+t^rf^Ltfi-efrts^ Sn

| | | | | A C K CHERR|^ Supe r i n fenden t

Clark County General Hospital

Page rear

cJLate exports

El Rancho Peace

(Continued From Page 1.) fight to the end, and the Guzzar-dis just as determined. %__&

Monday the session before Federal lades Roger Foley in Carson City wiR he owan order to Wilbur Clark tojrfaow cause why his gambling Casino, leased for $90,000 a month and 10 per cent at tfae earnings, from tiie hotel El Rancho Vegas, should not be placed under federal re­ceivership. ,

This has nothing to do with an­other federal case in which Judge Foley last Wednesday ap­pointed Bradshaw a trustee un­der the Guzzardi's petition for bankruptcy, apparently made mainly to protect them from foreclosure hy the holders of some $800,000 mortgages against the corporation. Miller has re­fused to recognize the federal court order until ordered by Dis­trict Judge George Marshall, un­der whom he sets as receiver, and still was in charge today

Activity still wart progressing as ever at the hotel With reser vations sole aat for rooms and floor shows over the weekend •nd reservations already pouring ln for tha holiday season.—^Sz,

J , o •

Churchfes Wooing Morality

NEW YORK, Nov. 34, (APV— The executive eommittee of the Federal Council of Churches of Christ ta America, central MittM**; ization for 37,01148$ members ta IS denominations, today adopted • report calling upon "our people" speedily to "cleanse themselves from ttte moral contaminations of war."

"Too eastiy.** tfae report said, we have condemned whole peo­ples because of thetr race and have hardened our hearts to in filet mi them wholesale death and destruction (and) have come to tolerate, as aids to victory, Qualities and deeds which, when they appeared in nazism, rightly revolted us.

"Therefore, as a first prere­quisite to a Just and durable peace, we call upon our people speedily to cleanse themselves (rom the-moral contamination of war."

The report was drafted in Philadelphia, Nov. 9, by the '.tea* oration's commission on just and durable peace, beaded by John Foster Dulles, authority on in­ternational affairs. Since it has been approved by the executive eommittee it aow will be re­ferred to the various churches for their consideration.

The report urged application of these principles in tiie making of any peace treaties:

1. Territorial changes to con­form to the "natural long-term aspirations of the inhabitants" and the subordination to "human considerations" of "strategic snd economic considerations."

3. "Colonial peoples should be assured independence or self-government within a fixed term wherever practicable."

% "Armaments and military establishments should be limited to the needs of internal order and as planned by the United Nations.*

4. "Reparations should be limited to productive capacity over and above that required to maintain average . living stand*, ards. It should not be an instru­ment of vengeance."

8. "The treaties of peace should make a beginning in re* alizing the conception of an in­ternational bill of rights."

Tha committion declared tfae United Nations organization was "an asset of incalculable value" established to fight against "com­mon threats to tiie general wel­fare" of all peoples, such as the "menace of militarism and the necessity for controlling such forces as atomic energy."

'Therefore," it c o n c l u d e d , "pending the time when the United Nations organization can function, and, Indeed, in order to make that functioning possible, the people of our nation should take whatever remedial and sac­rificial action they can to allevi­ate the appalling conditions which are the aftermath of war."

•«.** rfTtnnber M, l w i c i ^ S u r | i r i s e

Conciliation^ (Continued From Page L)

close entirely ter the duration of tiie strike, he saicV^K

Rising said such companies as Ford and Chrysler would have to dose if the parts companies suspend operations 'jiifiiiiii they bave no backlog of puts.

, ijatjeaas . •

- Coast •'

(Continued From Page l.> mente JC Jt,

Notre Dame 33, Tulane C Colorado College 7, Colorado

A att Ms%'': mM; '-• New Mexico •, Texas Teeh f.

Atlantic CRy HAS **, Swartfa-more t. Wtm

Colorado College 7, Colorado (A. «Tt M. 7.

Missouri 33, Kansas 13. -_m Oklafaema A. A M. ef, Okla

ho-naO. Arkansas A. ft M. tt, 1 batata} •n New Mexico «„ Texas Tech C Washington State 7, Washing­

ton t. -BALTIMORE, Ner. 34. (IP)—

With Armed, last week's Pim­lico special winner, scratched, Mrs. Ethel St. Jacobs' Stymie woa the Rtg$a handicap today, after Mrs. Elizabeth Graham's Star Pilot staked eat a strong claim to tfae two-year-old tttle by winning ttte Pimlico futurtty.

BLOOMINGTON, Ind., Nov. 34. (UP)—Indiana, scoring aB ef its points ia tfae second half, de­feated Purdue, 30 to 0, today to win Its first Big Ttat football championship and finished tke 1945 season undefeated.

KANSAS CTU, Mo., Nev. 34. (UP) — The University ef Mis­souri won tte Big Six title today by whipping Kansas ht their traditional gene, 33 to 13, before a crowd ef 31,494 fans.

DURHAM, N. C Nov. 34. (UP) Duke's Btne Devils, losers only to Army aad Navy daring the 1945 football season, have -.eaa invited ta play hi either the Sugar er Cotton bowl aad wttl accept aae Md after a vote ef the team, It was revealed to* Bigfct.

PULLMAN, Wash., Nov. 34. (UP)—Washington State College capitalised est a second-period break te seme a 7-to-0 home­coming victory ever the Univer­sity of Washington Bnaktta oa a muddy field here today before 15,00* chilled trans.

BERKELEY, Calif, Nov. 34. (UP) — The mod-running Uni­versity ef California Beats de­railed the Base howl-bound U. C. L. A. Bruins f to 0, today in a heavy downpour before 85,-000 drenched fans ht Memorial stadium, ^-y •"*•.•'

LOS ANGELES, Nov. 34. (UP) — University ef Southern California emerged ss the west's tea Rose bowl contender today with aa easy 34-te-7 win ever Oregoa State College before 35,-000 fans at Memorial coliseum.

f£JioJJ<

Damage Suit RENO, Nev., Nov. 34 (AP) —

Alfred H. Cushman, 40-year-old World War II veteran, today ask­ed $15,000 for injuries allegedly suffered when he was ousted from the Palace gambling club

-here last Armistice Day. In a district court suit filed

against - owners of-the club and Frank Richardson, club bouncer, Cushman charges- he -was mali­ciously beaten and kicked by Richardson

After an earlier, three-day mu­nicipal court trial, at which all Reno veterans' organizations ap­peared hi Cushman's defense, be was fined $5 for disturbing tite peace prior to his removal from the club by Richardson

our SUNDAY MORNINO 7:68 Sign On J:00 Rex Maupin t:30 The Hour of Valth t:00 Thia Wee* around tbt WorM 9:30 Memorable Music 8:45 Gems ol Truth

10:00 John B. Kennedy 10:15 Oraon Welles 10 :S0 Sammy Kaye's Sunday Serenade 10:65 Your Sunday News Extra 11:00 Breakfast In Hollywood 11:»0 First Baptist Church SUNDAY AFTERNOON 14:00 Melodies to be Remembered 12:S0 Johnny Thompson and I l e n e

Wood* • n f l Darth for Dough 1:30 Jones and I '< •:.;•<•?'.--. 2:00 Mary Small Revue 2:S0 Charlotte Greenwood 3:00 Radio HaU of Fame S:30 Sunday Evening Party 4:00 Drew Pearson 4:lt News — Daa- Gardiner tmft Quiz Kids 6:00 Sanday Evening Hour

SUN DA Y E V EN IN O f :S» W«tt«r W|nrh.n * • .. - _ ^ 6!15 Hollywood Mystery Tim* 6:45 Jimmy Pldler

" 7:00 Theatre Guild _t&. 8:00 Eye's on the Future - :»..«! 8:15 What Do You Know 8:20 Home Folks' Frolic 8:30 La Hora Luterana 8:45 Randy Brooks 8:00 Old Fashioned Revival Hour "

10:00 Sign OA o

New Fierce Riots (Continued From Page 1.)

cutta rioting la order to rein­force tfae bard-pressed city po­lice.

Casey toird the Calcutta popu­lation in a broadcast that he had delayed calling out the army as long as he could, hut -further postponement was* impossible

Officials were hopeful ttat the presence of armed troops would be sufficient to halt the disturb­ances, which began to abate Fri­day, afternoon as result of ap­peals by Indian leaders. The out­burst grew out of a protest pa­rade against the trial of Indians who had joined the pro-Japanese Indian nationalist army.

ft Ian —• y w n

(Continued From Page 1.) stores had been scheduled, hut indicated the association was Still "studying" advisability ef taking unspecified further action in the dispute. Otber assoctetion execu­tives reportedly were in dis­agreement ea the issue

C. H. jinkerson, secretary ef the AFL Grocery Clerks union, pointed out earlier that a con­tract in effect with tfae grocers specifically prohibits lockouts, aad said the union would sue the employers if tfae stores were closed. ;•*&*&]

Other developments ifi food and other industries involved in labor disputes:

Feed — negotiations between the bakers amd wagon drivers, whose demand tat higher wages closed major bakeries and cur­tailed the city's bread supply re­mained deadlocked.

The San Francisco city and county federation of women's clubs, representing 00 organiza­tions, sent a new appeal to acting Mayor Daa Gallagher, President Jack Shelley of the. San Fran­cisco labor council toad John O'Connell, secretary of the AFL central labor council. Ihe federa­tion urged arbitration ia an ef* fort to end the dispute.

Machinists — officials of AFL Machinists lodge 68 continued Consideration of a proposal by the San Francisco employers' council that shops .and plants where a small number of strik­ing machinists are preventing some 9,000 members of aon-striking unions from working be allowed to resume operations. Sixty six , establishments have reopened" after agreeing to a 30 per cent wage increase demand in the dispute which has idled 55,000 workers.

Newspapers -— representatives of the publishers of three Seattle newspapers and AFL Interna­tional Typographical union local 202 met in Mayor William F. De-vin's office in aa effort to end! a strike which has kept Seattle. without its daily papers fur a week. Other meetings are ex­pected to follow soon. Mora than 1,500 employes of the Post Intel­ligencer morning paper, and -the Star and the Times, evening pa

Dr. Josef Beaald

Joseph Renald At Vegas Theater f j ! Forecast Future

The fortune in your hands will be revealed by Dr. Josef Ranald, one of the world's greatest au­thorities on hand analysis, ia per­sonal appearances at Vegas the­ater all this week. Aa author, lecturer, motion picture and ra­dio actor, his career has brought torn in contact W*ith all the great personalities ia tfae world. Dur­ing his stay here he will make impressions of tfae hands of tbe theater audiences, and arrange interviews with them. J"«roe de­tails of the hand prints will be given from the stage.

Dr. Ranald is author of eight books, tbe most important being "How to Tall People by Hands, long oa the best-seller list. He has made five . motion picture shorts for Paramount, aad is scheduled to return there at tfae ead of his engagement here to make another series of 13 fea-turettofaV ..-•'. : -J-2:._-_,___

Tfae doctor interviewed Hitler In 1940, and at that time pre dieted that the madman's career would end by suicide Although his body has not been found, Dr. ****"Tia*J** insists that when discov rtiied it will be found that he died by ttte owa hand. Bo also fore­told the Infamous end of other dictators, as well as the victorious conclusion of that war. Names of the more than 50,000 bands he has analyzed reads like a "who's who" of the world.

PURPLE HEART DELA ¥ FARMER' CgpT, HL (UP) —

E. D. Wrightman fought in the first world wttt rand was wound­ed during a battle ih the Ar-gonne. Exactly 27 years and one

October 8, 1945—he , mm-, _ Say later-pers, have been made idle by ihe I received tbe award of the purple, dispute over a wage increase, 'heart.

• : —r VUtncLdOn BroaJL waif

AMERICANS WHO MAKE AMERICA THANKFUL

Take a handful of vivid words and breathe poetry into them. Put wings on your thoughts and send them soaring into the liter­ary, heavens. But they will fall •abort ofthe tribute our fighting men and women deserve. The most inspired eloquence seems May when compared with their towering valor. Their deeds defy translation into words. We can best thank them by preserving the ideals they fought to protect,

(Continued From Page 1.) Of apprehensions over the fire­arm. PPIiyal

Questioning revealed that he was passing through Las Vegas ami' making -a short stop over* here. During fate stay'the 19-year-old former sailor developed the delusion that be was oa a big game hunting trip in the jun­gles. After his rifle was confis­cated, the boy was released.from custody as harmless.

O '1 RAILROAD WRECK §M

ATLANTA, Nov. 24, (AP)—A crowded troop train and a freight train crashed head-on 37 mites northwest of here today, killing at least two persons and injuring an undetermined num­ber. llISliiSli»*B

OPA Chief Chester Bowles rates a nod. He has been tang-ami;' with gimmie-gangs eager to clamp a half-nelson on our eco­nomic system. 1 Almost single-faanded and without fanfare, Bowles "has been stemming the tide of inflation. He has been getting a rough going-over from well-heeled lobbyists, but lie never stopped swinging Today fhe greedy hordes have renewed their offensive. Now, more than ever, Bowles must have patriotic Americans in his corner. Sup­port faim and you will be help­ing yourself, *ME1P

Thanks, thanx, thanques to the majority of competent legisla­tors. Congress is burdened with several flapjaws scrambling for headlines. However, they are outnumbered by hard-working law-makers who keep Democ­racy's machine rolling minus any to-doodle. Conscien tions con­gressmen seldom appear in the public prints, although their ex­pert legislating has helped write many bright pages in American history. '•*•: i .

Atom Mounts LONDON, Nov. U, (UP>—

British Minister of State P. J. pjjat Behai; opening tfae meeting of tfae preparatory commission of the United Nations organiza­tions, said today tfaat mean*; must be devised to control atom­ic energy "test it destroy man­kind.*' mm

"Atomic energy was man-made and man can control," he told delegates of 51 nations convening to set tfae stage fer tbe first UNO assembly meeting here in Jan­uary.

He recalled tfaat scientists of many nations produced tfae atom bomb. WhiaB

"Ihteraational thought pro­duced it and i n t e r n a t i o n a l thought must and can control it," be said. "The United Nations or­ganization Blast set up some means by which atomic energy ean serve and aot destroy man­kind."

Noel-Baker, member ef the British delegation, formally wel­comed delegates of other nations His address was tfae only event scheduled at tfae first session.

Delegates will not be able to get down to work until next week due to a delay fas the execu­tive committee's work oa the agenda, rules of procedure and organization of the commission The committee was scheduled to meet following the welcoming address to •, I'niffrf' its work.

The gomriiiaston meeting is the fourth in a Series by the allies to establish a new league te maintain peace. -.

The first waa held by foreign ministers of tfae ."big toite^nt Moscow in 1943; the second ware at Dumbarton Oaks; aad the third was at San Francisco.

The preparatory commission was set op at San Francisco to prepare tor. the first meeting ol the United Nations assembly. -

The major issue Which the commission will debate is selec tion of a site for permanent headquarters. Tbe British still were seeking votes te Have it in Europe instead of the United States as voted by the 14-hatioh exfecutive committee.

More than 20 American cities have bid for tho site.

READY FOR SNOWS MARIETTA, O. (UP)—Mari­

etta snickered up its sleeve at pessimistic A. E. Wilking, serv­ice. director, when he mumbled something about digging out the city's snow plows from summer storage after the first di;i in tem­perature. But the last snicker came from Wilking. The snow plows are out of storage, lined up at tiie city halt ready for ac­tion.

CROWS OVER HIS (Mea) EGGS WARSAW, N. T. (UP)—Ed­

ward Jones may have a common­place name but ho bas a pet that is most unusual. Attracting wide attention on surrounding chicken farms, the "per** may be -^flfp either a crowing hen es an egg-laying rooster. It has a head fake the latter—comb and aU—and a body like other hens. It lays eggs and then crows about it.

No Red Cross -Jf

(Continued From Page 1.) great disadvantage After con­sultation, we decided to go along."

Emerson further explained that 'aay outlay we have made has

Cone for salaries and expenses, duly audited, to individuals wfao have given the great bulk of their time to raising funds for the Red Crass a*£l the National War fund." He added tha* thane workers were not directly paid by the Red Cross because "if they were on our payroll, they would not be as effective fat their con­tacts whh tfae diverse groups to organized labor." He stated that tha workers were net paid try labor tar their Red Cross work because "I believe tfae Red Cross is better served to bave a friendly direction over those wfao are working for Red Cross. Labor representatives bave said that tbe fact tfaat thte staff was paid by Red Cross and National War Fund is a protection to the men against efforts to divert any of their time to other activities. Tfae combined pressure upon them of labor activity amd of war te aot lirght"

Emerson reported that the Railroad Brotherhoods did not ask ter funds ia reimbursement from Red Cross hecauae "they are independent groups; - tbey are more compact and homogene­ous; tfaey are in a position to do tha,job for themselves."

"When the war confronted as with a iispiorrtlfrt'j tor ob­taining good-will and funds from all tfae people, we ap­proached thte group among others. We took them as we found them," Raitee-rat con­cluded. Edwards also referred to a

statement by Verne Simmons, manager of tfae San Francisco area office of tfae Red Cross, as follows: "Tfae essence of our ar rangements with the labor groups was to utilize a means of reach lag speedily and effectively the millions of constituents of organ­ized labor who have established special committees for tiie pur­pose of stimulating the partici­pation ef their members in war­time charitable undertakinga"

GOAT D AIRY EN TWO TEARS NASHVILLE, Team. (UP* —

Tom Derryberry Of Sleepy Hol­low farm, White's Creek, began aa experiment two years ago when he bought two "scrub goats." The farm has become middle Tennessee's No. 1 goat daily and it offers nearby cus­tomers their first opportunity to obtain goat's milk regularly. Derryberry is tfae first person in Nashville or Davidson county to work with the state and county health departments ia tfae scien­tific production of goat's milk.

m-m 0 — ESCAPES FROM INDIANS

DOVER, tV H, (U>>--Chris-tine Garrison, who was captured by the Indians in tiw Indian Mas­sacre of 1689 and carried off to Canada, net only lived to tell the tete, hut returned fatter to her home town and set up a tavern in Tut tie Square.

OPA Wor to Stem

ROOSTER SWIMS RIVER NASHVILLE, Tenn. (UP) —A

little rooster from a chicken yard near the Cumber land river waa just about between the devil and the deep blue sea when two dogs got after him recently. But the lottte rooster hnaitnl for the river, kept right en going, swam the river ia sin minutes flat and left his befuddled pursuers oa the opposite river bank.

|*llWlllllll«»lllllMj^ll»l|J)M»ll«IHIII1IBII»!l»llllBimRnHI»mWI»IH!*

?fm*iht*t****ee* M M n n i Headquarters

Quality Men's at Women's WESTERN TOGS

(Continued From Page L) rine, lard, shortening aad sated earl *'"**"t oils, since supplies of these products are expected te lairrolu short of demand for • white.

Secretary ot Agriculture An­derson, ia announcing the ter­mination Of the red point ration­ing program^errterday, said it would not be practical to keep points oa these foods and free only beef, veal, lamb aad canned fish.

Anderson said tbte would re­quire establishment at a new-rtv tiBrfthtg program aad that OPA waa not prepared j te undertake such a job.

Tfae rwCTataiy saltetated that the over-all supply of meats is adequate to assure eaosumptkm next month at the annual rate of 105 pounds per capita. Last spring and summer tfae rate was down to srimnd -IM p mauls, while the 1935-39 prewar average was about 137 pounds. ,

As for butter and other fats and oils, they'll be available, in December at tibe yearly rate ef 50 pounds per capita^ only two pounds more than before the war.

Sugar, tbe only food still ra­tioned, may stay ere the list for some tine. Anderson said yes­terday there is no immediate prospect of terminating the pro­gram. Earlier he bad stated su­gar might have to he rationed through 1946.

F o r e i g n requirements for meats and fate from this coun­try wH} hi no way be affected by discontinuance of red point ra­tioning, Anderson explained.

He said the "maximum amount of food" promised by President Truman would be shipped "to help relievo distress and prevent starvation in devastated coun­tries . .';• •

BRITISH EXPLAIN SAIGON, Indochina, Nov. 24,

(AP)—A British spokesman said today tfaat British operations against the Annamese were de­voted • mainly to protecting tfae outskirts of areas where dis­armed Japanese prisoners have been concentrated.

Welles Says Only " Course Servility H

(Continued From Page L> ™ In hte defense ef Hull's diplo­

macy, Welles referred specifical­ly to a 11 point statement of principles which his former boss handed to Japanese emissaries m here It was charged in an army board Peart Harbor report tbat tbte note touched -off Japan's sneak attack of Dee. f, 1941.

Welles testified—as Hull had yesterday—that tho only ultima­tum from anybody ia tbe U. S.­Japanese iwajitisliiaia was tfae Japanese note erf Nov. 20, 1941, containing demands thte coun­try felt it could not meet tm

After that, Welles said, tfae only reply the Japanese would have accepted would have bean "complete t* iiuicetiteiie to the . demands tfaey made" for a free hand ht Asia.

In presenting tho Nov. 26 re­ply, HuU withheld a previously considered three-month agree­ment under tiie terms of which this laaitstty aawiVI have made slight economic concessions te Japan. %

Hull said yesterday he with­held the temporary agreement, with President Roosevelt's ap­proval, because of Chinese ob­jections aad because, fat any event the Japanese would have considered it merely "thicken teed."

Welles said today he was whol­ly in accord with that decision.

Ferguson asked faim if the Japanese considered the Nov. 26 note "as an ultimatum." ' *m

"My own understanding was tfaat their note of Nov. 20 was an ultimatum to us," Welles answer­ed.

"It had seemed to me from the middle of September, more or less, that there was the remotest chance af reaching a peaceful settlement and that consequent­ly hostilities probably would be inevitable," ho replied. "Tbe Jap- * anese note of Nov. 28 seemed to _. be an ultimatum tbat this gov- w ernment could aot accept."

WHERE NAZIS HIDE WASHINGTON, Nev. 24, (AP)

State department officials said today tfaat investigation of a list oi 9,000 Germans living fat Spain showed that at least 1,000 are former nazi agents.

The fast is still being checked, these officials told a reporter in response to a query.

ITALIAN KITCHEN 419 Sa. Ftftfa St

Real Italian Cooking Antipaste - Minestrone Veal Cutlet Mitenesa

Chicken Cacciatera, Etc. Spaghetti to take out

Open frem 11:30 AM **IU 0:30 PM.

CLOSED MONDAY D. Saudino tt A. PapetO, Mgrs.

'^^^tW^Mmt^^ LEARN TO FLY

—Here's -a hallelujah for Amer­ica's scientists. Eevryone ' it aware of their overpowering con­tribution to .victory. Most im portent is this angle: Tfae test-tube boys have come out of their laboratories and are giving an excellent account of themselves in the public arena. They lire pro­viding tiie most devastating re­buttal to political - dead-enders who curled their lips at profes­sors and jeered them as starry-eyed gratis. Today, top-notch scientists are debating interna­tional issues with logic and real­ism, while die-hard-politicos wal­low ia the never-never land of Ignorance.. ^ ^ ^ | ^ ^ ^ ^ g ^

Don't forget to save a.bouquet of orchids for Gen Eisenhower. Bore is a general who ranks with America's greatest military heroes. Here is a statesman who llhetjlril make professional diplo­mats tower their thick skulls in shame. Here is a humanitarian who- knows what the war was fought for and is battling to hold our precarious peace. Indeed this is a man we can point to with pride and say:" Hera is an Amer­ican!

Drop a thank-you note to John Edgar Hoover and his G-men' Their war record Is all aces. Their peacetime activities are Just as fine. Tfaey have tfae respect of Americans because G - mea have lived. up to the confidence we placed m them. Yes, tfaey are straight-shooters in every sense of tfae phrase, who represent the mightiest ally the forces of law and order have ever had. And tee- irony y it: ..G-men -Hoover has received medalsfrom several foreign nations — but none from tite U. S.!

. Labor merits a salute. Some unruly labor leaders should be con demned, but their tactics must not be used to tarnish labor's splendid record. While a few monkey-wrench flippers (hiwa, John L.) grab publicity, it isn't news tfaat the. overwhelming ma­jority of workers concentrated on clutching military victory and are now working for economic stability. Labor not only worked for America—but many workers did fine jobs as soldiers. Think that over, bub.'

Management also deserves a boost Don't judge industry by Sewell Avery or the cartelists. Tfaey represent only as. | por­tion of management Without production miracles, victory could not have been attained. Management's know-how played a vital role in that triumph. La­bor and management are a team. One cannot exists without the Other. The fact that they turned out the weapons for victory is a tribute to both.

tlSmW----i^i^^SSt. ?&'.,FOR ALL occAsicma ..J-fj^ ijr

PEGGY'S flOwTR SHOP 120 NORTH. SECOND ST. PHONE Mt

y-

SOUTHERN NEVADA'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER -Established in 1905 •

A weekly newspaper published every Sunday morning for general circulation ht Las Vegas, Nevada, and entered in tfae Postoffice as second-class matter. CHARLES P. SQUIRES............ 1 1—I „—Editor Sunday, November 25, 1945 Page Five

! . OBSERVATIONS gK£%S%i

OUB FIRE DEPARTMENT. ^MejM For some years after the little town of Las Vegas was

started in May of 1905, only the mercy of God preserved the community from complete destruction by fire. We were a community of tents and flimsy shacks with some wooden frame busi­ness buildings and a very few structures with any fire resistant qualities what­ever. .- • lUjv

In the latter part ol May, 1905, the first little two story frame bank build­ing, corner of First and Fremont streets, was completed and within a week or two, a little wood-frame tent restaurant just across the alley from ft burned fiercely in the middle of a blistering hot day. We had no water system under pressure, Chas. P. Squires but the few backets and barrels Of water available had no effect whatever. In spite of wet blankets hung from the cornice and windows of the bank building it began to smoke and was ready to burst into flames when the breeze changed direction and blew the heat the other way and the bank building, most imposing structure of the new city,

•'iffss saved. » During years following we had some serious fires

which often started when a hard wind was blowing, but through some miracle the wind either changed direction or died out entirely just in time to save us from a general conflagration. That happened when the tinderlike frame Overland Hotel burned, w&eft the Opera House Block on the site of the Beck ley building, First and Fremont, was destroyed; when the terrible fire which destroyed most of tho Von Tobel lumber yard took place, and in the case of just about every fire the town had over many years. The wind always saved us from wide destruction. :, Soon after the town started we induced the county commissioners who constituted the town government, to provide U9 with a hose eafft That consisted'of a TeeF'rjf nose mounted on two wheels, and the Las Vegas Volunteer Fire Department was formed to handle it. When there was an alarm sounded everybody rushed to the shod where the cart was stored, seized the ropes and ran with all 'their might to the fire. The pressure was light and the 'hose short and small, but with rate cooperation of the wind the volunteers saved us from serious damage.

As time went on those young fellows (tite Rockwell boys were among the leaders) organized and enlarged the Las Vegas Volunteer Fire Department and over a long

^terrn of years gave us splendid fire protection, suffering from burns and exposure and sacrificing their shoes ana clothing for the good of the community.

So about twenty years ago, feeling sorry for their un­requited efforts, I suggested that the city provide one or two paid members to keep the equipment in shape (we J&ally got some modern fire trucks) and do tho hard, work. But those volunteers fairly exploded with wrath that anyone? should even suggest that they needed any p-rlp. However, not so long ago, the burden became too j-reat and the city established its paid flee department.

Just last Monday a new, completely equipped fire station on North Second * street was dedicated, and a sfipilar one, not quite so large in Huntridge addition,

The dedication was carried out under direction of CSty Manager Fennessy, with Mayor Cragin, Senator Me-Carran, Congressman Bunker and other representatives of the federal government taking part, in the presence of a group of citizens, mostly oldtimers.

And I realized that the little old town of Las Vegas Which a few of us nursed along so hopefully for forty years, was gone forever and that Las Vegas is really a modern city. yjy . A WISE SELECTION

The nation as a whole will rejoice over the elevation of General Dwight D. Eisenhower to the post of chief of staff of the army, at the same time regretting that General George C. Marshall has.decided to retire because ot age.

—--^w-Gerjerat^ by ^fcliklififti^r" experts as a genius and with him at the helm the armies of tho United States rolled over those of Germany and Japan and brought forth a glorious victory. He Was recog­nized as a great tactician and all through the war was one of the biggest men in Washington. He exerted more influ-ence on the congress than any other man except President Roosevelt, and the late chief executive'called upon Mar­shall whenever a military problem presented itself.

General Eisenhower, on the other hand, was the master strategist and it was he who drew up the plans for the invasion of Normandy. He was no showman, like MacArthur or Patton, but allowed his army corps, com­manders to take the honors their men had so justly won.

> General Eisenhower was universally liked and" re­spected, by GIs and officers alike, and by the British almost as much as by the Americans. It was mainly through General Eisenhower's operations that friction between the British and the Americans was held to a minimum. / '^W:

In the post of chief of stalf, it is entirely probable he Will become the most respected man ever to hold that position. He already has-been acknowledged as a hero on the battlefront, and his activity as chid* of staff probably

, will win him new praise. I . { The shift of Admiral Chester W. Nimitz to the position

of chief of naval operations, also will be met with favor of the general public. Nimitz largely was responsible for the successful operations of the fleet in the Pacific and it was the bold strokes planned by .him which sent the Jap­anese fleet to the bottom of the ocean. *

Little was heard of Admiral Itlrp*** J. Ki'pg duriiio -ihowar for he was not as colorful a figure as was General Marshall However, he did an excellent job in Washington

/ a n d the type of work he did was reflected in the operation i of the fleet on the scene of battle.

As for the successors to Eisenhower and Nimitz, tiie replacement for Nimitz probably is the best known. Ad­miral Raymond D. Spruance was in the Pacific during the majority of the Japanese war and his name was linked with that of "Bull" Halsey as the.terrors of the south seas, as far as the Japanese were concerned WkW

Seneral McNarney is a veteran general but has not been in the news as much as the others. Of course, his post will not be as important now the war is over, and will be more administrative than arfythihg else.

a IH'-**3 comforting to know, however, that the .United, States still produces successors for the top ranking mili­tary and naval officers. As long as the succession. can continue, then so long will America be safe.

STKr-LEJnCK HIGH ABOVE FIFTH AVEMBE RENOVATE ST. PATRICK'S CATHEDRAL

DeGautfe ^eiriakes F i o i r t e ^ n r i * / —

PARIS, Nov. Si (LP)—President Oe Gaulle has asked the con­stituent assembly for a complete reorganization of France's armed forces—a step he repeatedly urged on fate superiors without success in his years of service as a French army officer.

French newspapers said today' the general's program would per­mit a thorough shake-up of the country's tradition-ridden army (md tfae introduction of new ideas and methods made necessary fay the advent of the atomic bomb.

Prior - to France's collapse In 1940, De Gaulle urged greater mechanization of the army. His ideas largely were ignored by his own country but were studied closely by tite Germans.

In his discussion of foreign af­fairs De Gaulle foresaw France's rote in the world as a link be­tween the east and west. He added that the nation would not become a "pawn** in a game of international politics.

De Gaulle said his government was striving to reach "a real agreement" with Britain while tightening France's "traditional links" with Belgium, the Nether­lands, Luxembourg, Italy and eventually. Spain when France finds Spain "on our road which is tfaat of true democracy."

J1£m<w . - . 0 " *mj?'j. '"• Members of the U. S. marine

corps received more than 1600 decorations for bravery during World war I.

One ef tfae twin spires ef magnificent St Patrick's Cathedral is 1 already shrouded in scaffolding as workers begin repairs which

will take a year to complete.

Hg: Don't worry when you're not let in on a secret. It's probably nothing to speak o l

There is more chance of waking up and finding your-lelf rich if you wake **m»Ari*." l lfp

<r

ARMS OF THE LAW CRACK DOWN — AU Ideas of resistance are gone from war veteran James Sweeney, after three police­men and a detective combine efforts to subdue -him. Sweeney.

..was captured as a suspect, Philadelphia police said, in the rob­bery of a haberdashery in which $49 was stolen. Sweeney was

discharged from the army last May. - . *•

Juvenile Bandit _ LOS ANGELES, Nov. 24 (UP)

A young bandit was shot and killed by police early today when tfaey tried to arrest him for two holdups during which he critical­ly,, wounded one man and tor fured another.

Officers said Antonio Villa Lozano, 24, chose to fight it out and was shot resisting arrest. His partner ia the two holdups still was at large.

Tbe gun battle occurred when police found Lozano sitting on' £ bench musing a bullet wound lit hit shoulder he suffered in the first holdup at the Smith Market. Sen Sommers, an employe, was shot la the leg in a gun dud witii Lozano and his partner.

The two bandits appeared a few minutes later at a nearby liquor store where Meyer Klein-man, 53, a customer, was shot ht the bladder. Attendants at Gen­eral hospital, where he under­went a major operation said he probably would recover.

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By NEA Service NEW YORK — Bill Inglis is

63 years old, but he says he en­joys climbing around' on one of the biggest tinker toy assemblies ever put together.

It covers the 330-foot steeple of- St. Patrick's Cathedral, front­ing New York's famous Fifth Avenud. Ninety thousand feet of pipe have been used and it is expected that more than 160,000 feat will be needed to complete tite scaffolding required by workmen who are repairing the cathedral.

Putting all this Otoe together will require approximately 25,-

000 couplers. It takes 10,000 to bold together tha scaffolding on 'tfae church new.

It takes a lot of hustling to climb around the 34-fldor-high tinker toy, but the average age of the workers is near 50. Some of them make the climb twice a day and foreman Bill gotjjuite trehuckle ent of tee^goor off ice workers when the New York elevator operators went on strike not so long ago.

"When we get up there we see lots and lots of taxicabs and lots and lots of people but some mornings it's so misty you don't see a thing," be said.

Jap Atom Machinery Smashed By Yanks

TOKYO, Nov: 24 (AP)—Japan was stricken from the field of atomic research today as Amer­ican soldiers armed -with sledge hammers and blow torches sud­denly started -the destruction of five cyclotrons—one of them a 280-ton giant made In the United States.

Tbe cyclotrons, ordered de­stroyed by General MacArthur in another blow at Japan's war-making' potential, will be broken up ana tite pieces dumped into t n sea . . Kfk'";\j">

Two of them—the 200-ton ap­paratus bought in . A m e r i c a through the assistance of Prof. Ernest O. Lawrence, famed Uni­versity physicist, and a smaller one—were in tfae laboratory of Dr. Toshio Nishina at Tokyo.

Nishina, 55, dean of Japan's nuclear physicists, was "heart­broken" when American officers told him his huge cyclotron was to be demolished, the scientist's "sec^^BryslSL • ""^F

The secretary, Miss Sumiko Yokayamo, cried when she told of Nishina's dismay.

Of tfae other cyclotrons, two small ones were at Osaka Impe­rial university and the fifth at Kyoto Imperial university.

American officials already had taken over the Japanese labor­atories and studied records of. Nipponese research into atomic power, but not until 8:30 am. today did tfae Japanese imperial government sod the scientists learn the apparatus was to .be destroyed.

While occupation troops imme­diately proceeded with tiieir work of destruction, American scientists said Japan's progress toward developing the atomic bomb had been of no importance.

The Japanese scientists ex­plained that Nipponese militar­ists had shown little interest in the destructive potentialities of the atom until too late.

Prof. Bur.saku Arakatsu, head

10 Diesel Locomotives LINCOLN, Neb. (UP)—Diesel

equipment costing $4,934,300 will be delivered to the Chicago, Bur­lington it- Quincy railroad at Lincoln before next March.

Included in the order are 10 ^.tJW-horsepower' efectric pas­senger locomotives and 10 power unite for freight service, tbe en­gines, valued at $354,600 each, ***ft-l|*j[ flelifrgg.iSirl.isy' -text Decem­ber. 31, and the power units, costing $139,830 each, by next February 28.

C. B. & Q. officials reported no decision has been reached as to where the new equipment Will be used. . :-••'?£&*%

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of tite physics department at the Koyoto Imperial university, said that near the end of 1944 toe riavy began' to make taquMes-

and early in 1945 Arakatsu was asked i l he could producer the atomic bomb.

Arakatsu said he replied tfaat he couldn't because he hadn't conducted experiments in tfae practical application of atomic energy. However, last May or June naval officials ordered him to proceed with experiments to determine the possibility of chain reaction in the splitting' of the atom.

Bobby-Kar Auto To Moke Debut

SAN DIEGO, CaL Nov. 24 (UP)—Acquisition of a full-sized factory to produce vest-pocket steed automobiles was announc;ed today hy the Bobbf"Motor Car company, which expects to send plastic "Bobbi Kara" scooting about world's streets at 75 miles an hour.. -. H I S

Assenfbly lines, machine tools and the 45,000-square-foot plant of the Aircraft Engineering Serv­ice, corporation, Chula Vista, Cal. ifornia, have been obtained. Pro­duction will be started as soon as road tests are completed, Presi­dent S. A Williams said.

The tiny little "Bobby-Kar" automobiles, powered by two cyl­inder air-cooled engines mount* ed In the rear, have already been ordered by residents of war torn areas, Williams said.*

The demand appears particu­larly heavy in such areas as the Philippines, where almost all motor transport was destroyed and where a small, lightweight car requiring little gasoline would be required," he added.

Tfae plastic body Bobbi-Kars will weigh less than 600 pounds and will average 50 miles or bet­ter to the gallon, Williams said. All models will have fluid drives, eliminating clutch and gearshift, and all win have convertible tops.

Priee of tfae bantam-sise mid­get car buggies will be betweeri 1500 and $600, Williams said. Pro­duction, on * basis of 45,000-an-nually, wiU begin as soon as all "buss" are ironed out in tests of tfae first six production unite.

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STOKERS PLAT I*OOTBALL AT PHIIJtBBLPBIA PLANT — SteiUrag rnra *>yes rU CtHrvratet division, General Motors, part plant, TrTriteraalfhla, Petouyl-taurda, pby football te front ef Trmfld-trag aa CIO aotowerkers ta It titter- arte rwraTcwraf era strike tbrrenghetrt sprrawlfaag ••IrewwTaii a j item bt demand ter 3e per cent wage increase. Work stoppage, involving sense 350,006 employes will be

N^g largest single walkout ever called.

College Leaders | | .Seek Delay in Military Training

PALO ALTO, Calif., Btrv. 24 (UP)—Postponement for at least

a year of adoption of peacetime conscription and appointment of a national defense commission to study proposed universal mili­tary training was urged today by tiie presidents of 35 American colleges and universities^

The educators, meeting at Stan­ford university, aired their ideas

'• in a telegram to Representative •Andrew May (D., Ky.), chair­man of the house military af­fairs committee.

The telegram suggested an in­terim policy to "carry the United States along" until universal military training is found to be vital to a long-range national de­fense program.

Extension of existing selective service and vigorous promotion of voluntary enlistmnt as a sub­stitute for conscription, "pend­ing definite proof aa to whether adequate forces can be obtained by enlistment," was recom­mended.

The presidents signing the telegram were James P. Baxter Williams college; E. I. Victor, Wesleyan; Leonard Carmichael. Tufts; T. C. Carmichael, Vander-biM; Harry W. Cash, New York university; Ben M. Cherrington, Denver; James Bryant Conant, Harvard; Carter Davidson, Knox; Edmund E. Day, Cornell; John S. Dickey, Dartmouth: Harold W. Dodds, Princeton;

Virgil M. JRanger, towa State; Henry G. Harmond, Drake; Ru-fus C. Harris, Tu'lane; Frederick M. Hunter, Oregon State System of Higher Education; Tully C. Knowles, College of the Pacific; Howard F. Lowry, College of Wooster; E. Wilson Lyon, Po­mona; Dean W. Mallott, Kansas; James A. McCain, Montana State; Howard McDonald, ' Brigham Young; Frederick A. Middtebush, Missouri; J. L. Morrill, Minne­sota; John Nason, Swarthmore; ~Wte¥TJoe^»rlirReeTdr !&*-*¥; Sieg, Washington; Kenneth C. M. Sills, Bowdoih; Robert G. Sproul, California; William P. Totiey, Syracuse; Donald B. Tres-sider, Standford; Herman N. Wells, Indiana; Ernest N. Wil-Irons, Oberlin, and Henry M. Wriston, Brown.

_ _ o

Stocks Take A Sharp Nosedive—

NEW YORK, Nov. 24 (Ul Nf, Stocks declined sharply today in extension of the losses of the pre* vious session. Selling primarily reflected the growing threat of a strike in the steel industry and the forecast that the General Mo­tors Corporation strike soon will make 100,000 additional workers idle in automotive parts plants.

Steel shares dropped more than a point in Bethlehem and U. S. Steel. Youngstown Sheet & Tube was a point lower. The possibil­ity of a strike in this industry, to enforce CIO demands for a 30 per cent wage rise, was height­ened yesterday when tiie OPA announced that no rise in ceiling prices would be allowed before early 1946, after the agency bas had time to study 1945 earnings statements of the companies.

LONG WAY OFF The sun, according to scien­

tists, is getting hotter as it burns up, instead of cooler, and air some time we'll either have to migrate to another planet, or roast Art -tbt Present',• tat*,-faosnsver, we'll still be comfortable here for sev* eral billion years. -§gj ' 'm^

Elliott Gets Church's Gold Shoulder Act

NEW YORK, Nov. 24 (rP)— Brigadier Elliott Roosevelt's appointment as a vestryman in the family church at Hyde Park, New York, has been voided by Bishop William T. Manning, who said the second son of the late president is "not in good standing" in the Epis­copal church.' . .,•-.-

The Episcopal bishop of New York decreed that the twice-divorced Roosevelt was inel­igible to serve as a vestryman.

Roosevelt waa named No­vember IS to the- board of the church, of which his father was a senior warden for many years.

Bishop Manning issued the following statement last night:

"I have officially notified the vestry of St. James church, Hyde- Park, that General El­liott Roosevelt is not in good standing in the cfaurefa and therefore is not eligible for the office of vestryman and cannot serve in that office." ' Episcopal church law in­

cludes the following under the Canon law XV, section 3, sub­section, B: "Any person who has been married by civil authority or otherwise than as the (Episcopal) church pro­vides may apply to the Bishop for the recognition of com­municant's status.**

No such request lias been made of Bishop Manning by Roosevelt, it was learned.

Another canon of the Episco­pal church is: "Nor shall it be lawful for any member of this cfaurefa to enter upon a mar­riage when either of the con­tracting parties is the husband or wite of any other person then living from whom he or she has been divorced."

Roosevelt married Elizabeth Dormer on January 16, 1932, and tfaey were divorced en July 17, 1933. They had one child. He married Ruth Goggins on July 22; 1933, and they were divorced April 18, 1944. Tfae? had three children.

He married Faye Emerson, motion picture actress, on De­cember 3, 1944.

New West Coast Navy Unit Format

SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 24 (UP)—The navy announced to­day the formation of the 19th fleet, a flotilla of 960 vessels that will be held in reserve on the Pacific coast, manned by skeleton crews hut ready for immediate action.

Admiral Royal E. IragessoIL commander of the western sea frontier, was temporarily In charge with headquarters at the 12th naval district here. He was expected to be relieved soon by Vice Admiral Thomas C. Kin­kaid, present commander of tfae seventh fleet.

The Mare Island navy yard, Vallejo, California, will be the main submarine base. Sixty sub­marines and several tenders have been designated for berthing there.

Reserve battleships, crvisers, first line carriers and repair jfaips

•totaling approximately 60 ships •were scheduled to be hasert at

Bremerton, Washington, navy yard. The aircraft carrier Essex and the cruiser Pittsburgh, which tost her how la a typhoon, were already being deactivated there.

Frenzied Beauty Goes on Trial for Life^Come Monday

SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 24. (AP) — Annie Irene Mansfeldt, tha auburn-haired San Francisco socialite .whom the state has charged with the murder of Mm Vada Martin here October 4, wiU go on trial for her life Monday in Superior Judge Edward Murphy's court

"She has" pleaded innocent and innocent by reason of insanity. •_

The slight, attractive mother or three children will face her court ordeal atone. Bar hus­band, whose teve she Ih—gfat had been test to Mrs. Martin, a registered nurse, took fate own life a few hours after Mrs. Mansfeldt drove to tfae city emergency hospital witfa her suspected -rival dying from a bullet wound through the left-, breast. Police inspectors said Mrs

Mansfeldt admitted shooting the brunette nurse while flourishing a pistol she thought was loaded with blanks. '"- .. '-, :>V

For several weeks four alien­ists, three' of them state-retained, have been subjecting the socially prominent matron to exhaustive tests in an effort to determine her behavior and personality patterns. Their finds will hot be revealed until the trial is in progress.

Yesterday Mrs. Mansfeldt told interviewers ner grief te entirely fee tha man whom she both loved and almost detested at the same time.

''I loved my husband too much. 'S*': * supported him for three

years while he went to school. He didnt mind how much

work I did. He only let me have help when he had a boat and Wanted to go out sailing.

We had no friends. Not one night in our 21 years of married life did we spend an evening at home. Everything in our life was strange. I knew it and tried to cope witfa it," Mrs. Mansfeldt Mid ...'Jm^jlmi...... '.-my^^Mxy'

Tor years my mother-in-law lived witii us. She lost her mind when psychiatrists told her in 1920 that John had dementia praecox. . . . I hid it from everyone*

"My husband's restlessness was terrible, I learned tb put up with fate sleeping only four hours at night ./, . For eight or nine months before he died things were stranger than usual. . . .We lived togetfaer not as man snd wne :*™. . When he ate he ~sat at a taste in tfae kitchen and de­voured his food like an animal.

'That Thursday night (Sep­tember 27 when she said she found Mrs. Martin sitting tn at. Mansfeldt car in front ef the French hospitei) I knew my suspicions were pot ore-founded. . . . I had atat slept for six sights, *J-faree times fat aur iiiiiriafj Hte I had tried to commit Ovicide, and t at­tempted it again after being placed in jail. "I don't mind these bars now.

They are not terrible and ghost­ly like the bars I've been fight­ing all toy life. Tfaey have given me rest"

Mrs. Mansfeldt is a member of a pioneer Fresno family and met her future husband while taking music lessons as a young girl of 17 from Dr. Mahsteldt's mother.

ROUGHEST RAT . O N l E W YORK'S DOCKS H U N T E P l

*e*9 EDW ABO 8. TWARDT Halted Press Staff Cermrtpeiraierat

NEW TOWS, Hav. 20 (UP)— John 0*Ne*l, dty dock watch­man and student of harbor rate for IS yearn, set his sights to­day for'/'Stinky Joe," tfae rough­est toughest rat on tha 'New York; waft-aft Out

"Aral when I gat rater*,* OTteil sadd, *Tm going to send him -to those boys in San Francisco who think their puny two-pounders are tfae biggest rate goings. Why, Stinky weighs five or .ils'^teuiaa if he weighs an ounce.**

Tfae San Franciscans—Sculptor f*"fj*p' ****** Bufano, Garbage Kan Arturo Guztanno end Extermi­nator J. M Kuehne—said O'Neill was indulging in out and out exaggeration when he claimed tfae New York rate were the most fearsome of any port of the seven seats.

"He hasn't got the five-pound rat to prove it, has he?" Guxi-anno asked. "-They've looked that big to me, toe, but not when I was on the wagon."

Bafano rcrdd 0*Nefi*s claims ef rate which kitted eats end mess*

M ac Arthur Y el psf or CiviliaifHelp Z WASHINGTON, Nov. 24 (HP) Tads poUey calls far the aboH- mission. Tfae United States te A government rtJafrgaiiiiiilfru %j WASHINGTON, Nov. 24 (UP)

General Douglas MacArthur has asked hte government to' send over- additional civilian capos as to aid faim, among other things, in working out plans to IIIHWIT tee tfae Japanese *ssvtgimnSaii in line witfa tiiimiwriiil U. S. pol­icy, it waa hat Bad today.

Tads poHjj. jajjj I,,. «-„, gb^ tion of Japanese feudalism and tfae establishment of" government based en ttte freely expressed WOT of tfae people.

MacArthur's cable tor more civilian help came prior to the departure for Japan ot late 10* nation ter eastern ar*to*A*ory com­

mission. Tha United States Is complying with the general's re­quest, and expects to bave faalf a dozen civilian m'artnaii in Jap­an by the time the commission steams lotto Tokyo Bay in mid-December.

MacArthur farm asked for the following missions:

A government reorganization group of 20;-a reparations Mis­sion; textiles; telwl<..|s*teli, economics and finance.

and

The reparations group and several of the trade experts al­ready bave left for Japan. The ether missions are scheduled to t be in Japan fay early December.

ured over two feet from tip to tip were pop|»>nof t, He said he had made a black granite statue of a 2%-foet long rat m*m* stink­ing along tite Sast Francisco wa­terfront There was a bigger cats there, but he wouldn't stand still long enough," te"*?*** said.

0*N«1 saM he abas visited San Francises several times and Toad yet to "see a tat tfaat was any­thing hut puny, spindly-legged and outright peaked."

"•Those "fellows out there just don't know what « real rat is," CNeil said. T v e watched these HeW York rate chas* dogs right off tfae street Tve seat them kill cats.

"And I remember when tfaey used to run in pecks like wolves. Tbey were so big and tough tfaat during tfae building of the world's fair tfae cops refused to ride :e* 1*»*fft' tiie grounds at night be­cause tiie rate would swarm right

into tfae cars and start snapping at the cops' shoes.

••That's ao exaggeration. I've seen ft,** CNeil mid. "And I've never drank a drop of liquor in nry Hte. These New York rats are rats. They don't tast very long when tirey'ie under two pounds unless they take to tbe sewers, where tbe competition te easier.**

CNeil said "Stinky Joe" was about the toughest at them all.'

- -tiaky** seems to be a cross between tfaat red-haired orientals amd those of big Spanish rate. I saw him scare tfae daylights out of a police sergeant tfae other night pig

"Stinky" came walking into tfae building here. The sergeant says, 'Jeez, look at that one. Heft big mmmm-a*, to saddle,' and with tfaat heaves hte falackjafk at "Stinky."

"Stinky** stops dead in his

tracks. Gives the setgrasat one long, dirty look, then turns his Steak and walks out That ser­geant was sweating.

O'Neil admitted it was going to be tough snaring "Stinky." He said even tbe punier rats bad a habit of walking' off with tfae Imps unless they were chained to-teon pier girders.- ffe|ij

"Maybe FN nave to use a bear trap on Stinky, but i'on't worry, DI get him. And when I do tiiose Sam Franciscans better duck.

"And yea can tell-San Fran­cisco that we don't want any of their stone rata We got enough live rate here. Besides 'Stinky' and hte mob would probably chew Bufano's statue to pieces if we ever set it up around here. Tfaey don't Hke outsiders—-espe­cially Calif ornians.'* q,

i Asked when he was going to try to catch "Stinky," O'Neil said, "Try my eye—1- aiat going to

Ex-GI ond Youth Build Own 'Cor of Tomorrow'

LOS ANGELES (UP)—An in­fantile paralysis victim and a re­cently discharged soldier who •thought current car prices .too higfa have completed their own "silver streak" automobile in full post-war fashion. ^ f t l

Merlin D. Jacobsen, the 21-' year-old ex-GI, and Arthur Leuck, 19, built tiieir auto from a standard mtoor, a welded chas­sis, aluminum and plexiglass.

It took them six months' work and $800 to turn out their own version of tfae "ear of tomorrow." But tfaey have already bad two offers from automotive manufac­turers and others from advertis­ing concerns.

try, I'm going to get him. And if he doesn't tip the scales well over five pounds, 111 . . . Well —He wflL^

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Xrumqn Signs— WASHINGTON, Nov. 24 (LP)—

President Truman today signed bilte providing tor military or naval academy appointments for the sons of servicemen who were awarded the congressional modal of honcfe" or who died in action. I Such appointments will be sub­ject to the applicant's ability to meet the Werrt Pomt m Am»r*polis requirements. Youths entering the academic* under murlslrMM of the legislation would not ba < Iwrgi J agftBtrt existing admis­sion quotas ef the various r-tater*, which are based on nteifffriwlmisl ini1 'araafa'lisi'

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r After consulting with tite ' . V caterers te tne country*

Vtd Sneed comes through wtth Hte good news that rood is sweeping tbe country. Val, wfao sometimes shoots a dol­lar after ten is constructing an ultra-modern kitchen toat will turn out the best food obtain­able in these parte.

Val, wito his many friends te also constructing several bungalows ht tfae rear of his popular nitery to accommo­date the chosen tew who want

-to get away from it all and 'want a sanctuary from thit heretic world.

Br. Leslie WiHey, who heaps your newsboy era tfae beam, when '.he's on the fawmi. is beaming over his new offices.

• All this to happen a block above the El Cortez and where

ihe Will go veddy, veddy, but tfm sure not to his old friends. •Doc, an MJJ. prescribes the right thing' at just tne right time. 3 a |

f-fpi to parking meters. Not a baa- idea if the perking hogs insist en parking downtown and leaving their jallopies there AD day! After all there is." * good neighbor policy. Settee to checking on parking meters! .-••

Comes the news tfaat a new hostelry is going to -across from the Last Frontier which will be a lulu according to tfae blue prints. Also tfae item of ti**? week is that Trudy Stev­ens and Mrs. Townsend are opening a style center between the two hostelries. Teh! All of which means Brigham will be supported in tite manner to which he is very, much unac­customed to-^wtth-tite Vrtnkee Dollahs rolling in. All kidding aside, I know this pair can do it. With the help of Ira GoM-rterg and Richard Stadelman. Not to forget Lillian Long, tars. Bud Taylbr 'to you'se guys in the know who win be tfaar to swellelegant ttte gate about town.

Thrcratiiiie Need s Special Care. «|p|

W E fORSTfR^p WESS ON TUESDAY

The Little Church of tfae West of Hotel Last Frontier was t te scene of tba wedding of 1 June Forster, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Phil. Kohlhrunner of Las Vegas, and Marko Bezel of Los Angeles en Tuesdaf%?3|&

The impressive wedding vows ere read- before tfae candle-

lighted alter by the Rev. F. C. Carpenter in tfae presence of' a small assemblage of relatives and friends. Appropriate wedding music was played at tite organ preceding the ceremony.

Tfae bride, who was given in marriage by her tether, was at­tired in a fall costume suit witfa which she wore a corsage of or­chids.

Mr. and Mrs. Ray Garrison of Las Vegas served as attendants to the bridal ceupte.

Among ^ Z^^t^^"^^^*-'*^*^^ Thursday: Council meeting at

mfiAF Officers Wives. Clufegslil P7—1-18 LVAAF Officers Wive*.

There will be a council meet­ing on Thursday, November 29, at tfae Officers Club at 3 p. m. Folkrwing the ineetiiig, there will ba a. cocktail hour at tite club. AH committee chairmen and co-chairmen are asked to attend,

N A A F W Th* first week in December

NAAFW members win be era duty, in tfae post exchange to take new memberships tee NAAFW and sell wings for gifts to- mem­bers and their ttelfTWte'f

MdtmWm

MEWS •* m Sunday, November *&, \A*M Pag* Stev

GIWEGIA CARROLL. Smooth.

By AUCIA HART NEA Staff Writer

"Never tead with tite chin,** is A good rule not only for prize­fighters, but also for women wfao Want to keep a youthful throat-line. Georgia- Carroll, wife of

iJob" Woodruff Is In jHalvari, Still Studies 'T r i ve i l l

aaja. _ •ae^AZjfalT * . *mmmm**. " O C V I *"»««* \*mMMi* H a W YWhAkM

^ ^ l ^ ^ m J m w ^ ! *^dWataWb**|fiter,^fclyser, and *WaA* dressing- a* Offk-etsjo-ae tof America's rnost bertutiful

were Mrs. Elinor* Kennelly and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Labbe of Las Vegas. ' Tfae bride and groom have left ter LBS Angeles, where they will make their home. Beard was re­cently discharged from tte army.

Henderson News VELTA R. SHAT

158 Manganese, Henderson A special meeting of St, Peter's

Alter Society has been called for Monday evening at 8 o'clock at the Parish hall. Hostesses for the evening will be Mrs. Charles McNamara and Mrs. Van Wag-onen.

On Sunday evening at: T:30 at

3 p. m. at Officers Cfath j Friday: Motor corps from Hen­derson. - i K'% i^ftse

Staff assistants are needed fat the Red Cross dirtfrtat house. Please call Miss Clara Hoag.

• a--

Kiwarvts Soldier .Ho. iday Hosts

Thirty-seven soldiers from the Las Vegas army air field were entertained fay the Kiwanis club for Thanksgiving dinner and en­tertainment in the Ramona Room Pt Hotel Last Frontier on Thanks­giving afternoon. With tfae Rev. Father Donald Carmody and A McDonald aa hosts for the dinner, the boys feasted on an elaborate

tim Community church the turkey dinner witfa rm fir* trim Thanksgi vkOg-- j«Ajr originally mings, highlighted by continuous

George Givot jWptrr to town and has the folks at the El Cortez in an all high in hilar­ity. Moe Sedway <*r*ri,ym*\ this applause winnah through witfa just that —applause And Is J. 3. McCarthy happy for tite hostelry is THAT filled with holiday revelers and CLANG! CLANG J CLANG? goes tfae cash regislttt, Givot has been in too theta *b\tim*m Ao men* tion faore and tte ted has that ftoir for corratdy Jbat shouid make faim a teiTlJarnaiT-eKfft'ea

Of all things, ray friend J. W. Anderson, and his lovely wife can't find a place to tore,' Get this, Anderson is one ot the better wtow» contractors in Southern Calirorni*. SJYf. say- there tt a $100 bonne awaiting the landlord who contacts htm. We wouldn't go to all thte trouble unless we U><n>rfht bar** snake a worthwhile addition to onr community. Ton can reach hint at the El Rancho.

Bernard Clark blossoms forth wtth a riding ilitiiijiij right next to the> Cham Vegas. Previewing the hogest*. had one that threw me right over stitzt Hughe's fence. -ita sense of humor these nana, but Pm strxe you'll Hke Clark and hte Jars.—and maybe tho horse* near whether yon can ride or not. I m sure Pit never see* my name fa llghta ta front et a rodeo.

1 Saa note of the week waa tto •hath of Bob Benchlcy. A salute to thte rascal of readtn' and writ-ia' a gentleman ot t t e fourth es­tate who never let hi* readers down. *•'>•"£?.-'

Hi Pi-inger te the tmsr one these ktcksadaislcal day* wtth hte run­ning up and down tiie har at t te Cork 'n' Bottle. Wtth bta is his partner, Kell Hon—-! who has an appreciation of great race horses, beautiful women and good whte-Jr-y. JUI of which goes to make a Nevada gentleman in oar books.

; ^Jaok Walsh comes through wtth aw news that a sure cure for the (Sues ia hto new show at the Ne­vada Biltmore. go wtth Oracle Hayes and Mrs. Townsend we Jpuraey to the popular hostelry.

To Harry Pike's tor m Ttenka-Siving snack and aoort. AB thte

>r hilarity's sake. Then to Val •need's where we run into such Interesting people as Domino of Club Savoy tame, Paul Nichols da Carrcille, Dave Becker of percua-•ionist fame and the veddy, veddy Social Mrs. Beaulah Trains of Bos­ton here to ease up t te tension on tor nervous system wtth the ear*.

Jo Lovell bach Cram toe Angel­as with a pocket faB of dreams About baby shows and firmly es­tablished in the Nevada Biltmore. And the boys in t t e office are*. •till slngin/ *"Ftettjr Baby*'—-tor Mtes Ijovell. Aa to t te one and only Eddie. Sates...

. By tto time thte Is in print we have good reason to believe tfaat Grace Hayes win be ta law An-gelem. We hate to loose oar little sweetheart of Nevada aad wa*U •gate booh that* atoll be back. Eddie Qarr, can't leave, that's for Sare. Even if we hav* to baud a

that belong* in Nevada.

THRtU. Of" THK WS8K .'W*S& Hearing Smile Buaaid play the

nines written by your newsboy, namely "Mttle Man witb m Candy Cigar," and "Love Turns Winter *» Spring-". Both were written With Matt Dennis into ta tto. ser*-. *|a».. T'war a strata lit -nrprts* and ***e t te bride a chance to beam i«er Brigham. Thte et. course at Val Sneed'a where we lteten to tte roar of tee great Cannon, Joe, Who tells a* of plana to enlarge tto- nitery with bungalows and everything.

Sate Parana-, atnr tire man aaat aata'Sjiwit-r-iea, ; tatea tto to HMaale^a Oteaw Shaeh far dinner. •b, tired are wet*, teat tttma we. retired with tka* raernins sunrise.

Steapato tto Straw Jfatoi laa >, apace wiB alwaga.ea found for aaer neai»bov*a • eem-. Thanhs, to i t e *m*itm tvmmtam ., jto sajata" saa Wsnnnnw. aTfPAOtew '

presented by tfae Sunday School children test Sunday morning witt again be given for the church family. Everyone is in­vited to attend.

: The Christmas Church mem­bership class will-meet at six o'clock ea. Sunday evening to continue their studies. These cliwrsiit are conducted for all young people oyer 12 years of age. This te the test opportunity to enroll and all are welcome.

A baby bey was born to Mr. and Mrs. Orlando Hollingswortii of 131 Pacific avenue, Hender­son, at the Baste Hospital on No­vember 21. Hollingswortii is an employe of the Yellow Cab com-

music end entertainment by the Three M e r r y m e n , magician Tommy Dowd and piano-man George Redman. r •'.'•':'

Winners of the two $25 war bonds drawjand by tbe Kiwanis club, were Leon Owens of Viro-qua, Wisconsin, and Marion Greene of Squadron A. L V. A. A. F. *

Gtwste wrne Armond

modete, carries ber head erect and squarely in line- witfa tiie shoulders, and keeps fata* chin level Ifs letting tfae head droop forwardlike a wilting sunflower tttet7 reirratssgris aging wrinkles to make their unattractive ap­pearance around the throat. " Your neck, from tiie tip of tfae chin to the base of tfae throat, should receive the same cream­ing and soap and water treatment that tite face does. Women witfa dry skins, or those wfao are over 30, may find their throats need additional gentie massage Stroke cream in, ever so lightly, upward and outward' over the rjurface, pat it itf with tha finger tips, but throw your head back so every inch wilt get the benefits. '

Cold water, icy and bracing, should be dashed on after each cleansing. Astringent in effect, it Will stir up circulation. Finish by patting the trhin briskly with the back of the hand to discourage any- tendency toward a double

Rossi,

Mr. mid Mrs. LeGrand Wood, of 115 Magnesium street, pre the parents of a baby boy born at the Basic Hospital on November 23. Wood is an employe of the New York Life Insurance company.

Patients admitted to Basic hos­pital: Georgia Hollingsworth, Henderson; Danny Kelson, Hen­derson; Thaddeus Taylor, Jr. Carver Park; Jim Heryford, Henderson; Mrs. Merle Wood, Henderson. Discharged: Ruth Stenger, Henderson; Danny Nel­son, Henderson; Drew C. Fry, Pittman.

Sunday warship services will be held at the Community church at II-aa. -Rev. George Patter­son will speak on "The Harvest" Special music, "Open My Eyes," witt be given by tiie choir.

The Henderson chamber of commerce will meet on Monday for a luncheon meeting at 12:15 in tfae * Townsite cafe dining-room. Matters of importance to Henderson will be discussed. - '-'

YMCA Camera Club OB to Good Start l l

An enthusiastic group of Las Yegas shutter fans met Wednes­day night for the first meeting of a camera club and heard C C Parks, color photography special­ist of Eastman Kodak company, tell of the new developments in tfaat field. He discussed the pres­ent problems in obtaining ama­teur working equipment and sup-Plies, and re*ported_tiiat within a tew weeks he would return jhere from New York to give de­tailed information on delivery of camera equipment early in ISM,

Temporary officers for thWrhih' .are Major Morgan L. livingston, chairman, and Harley A. King, secretary. Permanent officers will be elected at an early meet­ing. Meeting dates ware set weekly on Tuesday at 8 o'clock in the U. S. O. bunding, Inter-este^amateurllg>y*3raig%y teuv-ing their names and addresses at tfae YMCA office, 205 Bridger, or witfa Fred Neilson,' Jr., at the Photo Shop. 3*$m g l U

Bminte Zicaii will be madrtf for tfae next meeting of tfae cfaib, Tuesday, November 27,

Kenneth Covey, James Dalton, Lyle Marshall, Carl Klein, Virgil Becker, Ernie Reagan, Charles Whitmer, David Godfrey, William Ridter, Walter Osborn, Rozzo James, John Giordano, Argylle Growden, John Lemke, Lawrence MeGrath, Charles Marlborough, Lowell Raetz, Richard Lindsey, Jack Taylor, Max Armstrong, Bill Smith, Date Spradley, Marv Pohren, Harry ynriWyttkn, Har­old Sherman, Leon Owen, Don Ames, W. R. McComas, W. Dus-hatinski, Hubert Yates* Jerry Harris, and Ken Cowan.

Serious Wreck LOS ANGELES, Nov. 24 (DP)

Twenty-six persons were Injured, four seriously, early today, when a Pacific Greyhound bus and a street car crashed during a heavy fog.

o M«^-^.ifSQ|

Veterans Benefifa SACRAMENTO, Nov. 24 (AP)

The state will begin paying eat thousands of dollars about De­cember - -1 to veterans who have elected to withdraw their retiare-ment *»Jpur*flls aa state employes, Earl Cfaapman, executive secre­tary of tfae Calif ornte State Em­ployes' association, said today.

Wm" ° •*****-' WORLD'S OLDEST BOOK

Tfae, world's oldest book fat said to be a tome in China. It con­sists of 78 wooden leaves, fixed together with string, and dates back to 100 B. C.

J. E. Short To Leove LVAAF ^

By discharge LVAAF this week will lose one of the most capable aad best-liked 'p fff'fffff officers ever to be on the field, Captain J. E. Short, chief of obstetrics. Captain Short, who has been en ttte field since March 1944, bas delivered hundreds of babies for the families of service men and civilian employes nf LVAAF.

Captain Short long remained the close "family doctor** to fate patients and tenulfes. '{*kWM?*mS-discharge, he Will return to hit home In Los Angeles to IOSMIS, private practice;

. o——-— • No Leg to Stand On In This Dispute ' ,v...

DUBLIN (AP) — Because he lost a leg in 1918 a County Wex­ford Sour miller has beat asked to pay excess fare on a trip home from England.

He was stopped at ths barrier in Dublin and told he must pay extra on the artificial leg he had brought back with him—because a spare teg wasn't classified as personal luggage.

He says he won't pay the ex­cess demanded on the new leg he Tsarqght - -

Tracy W. Earl Given Discharge

FORT DOUGLAS, Utah (Spec­ial) — Sergeant Tracy W. Earl, husband of Mrs. Helen Earl, 211 South Seventh street, Laa Vegas, Nevada, received a discharge here recently under the adjusted service ration plan.

Sergeant Earl -meat Id months Sn the South Pacific and te authorized to wear too Asiatic-Pacific theater ribbon and tfa* good conduct and victory medals.

Ha entered the army on Octo­ber 29, 1942. Prior to tfaat time he was employed as a stock con­trol clerk in Lars Vegas.

• "O • ' — - —

Jennings Robert Gfoen Discharge

FORT DOUGLAS, Utah, (Spec­ial)— Discharged recently from the army at tfae Fort Douglas separation center, under the ad­justed service rating plan, Ser­geant Jennings C. Robert ef Las Vegas, Nevada, has returned to civilian life. • Sergeant Robert served 21 months overseas witii « material squadron and is authorized to wear tite . European theater of operations ribbon, the, good .con­duct ' medal, and the victory medal ^Jy":

Before entering tfae army ia January, 1942, Sergeant Robert was employed as a clerk at Boul d»r dr«m. ' m^-mj-' -'ism. :

R. W. "Bob" Woodruff, tech­nician fifth grade, of Las Vegas, is taking advantage of the travel aspects of his army duty to pre­pare for his return to civilian lite. Before he entered the army," he was employed by tite Riddle Scenic Tours in Las Vegas and was active fat the Las Vegas jun­ior ch amber of commerce fat pro­moting, interest o* travelers in the area. W§&-

Now assigned to a signal serv­ice battalion, stationed in the Hawaiian irriatxte, Woodruff re­cently .used some of fate telisno time fat tite Territorial library of Honolulu,, where he- looked up some facts on the tourist busi­ness.

In a letter to friends in Las Vegas, he wrote:

"From all I hear from Las Ve­gas, it is way ahead of Honolulu in ttte tourist business it is get­ting now. But in fairness, tbey have had a tough time here, and this is a swell place for a visit-after Laa Vegas, of course.

"Tm hoping to be back soon to help keep Las Vegas in tiie lead for fhe tourist travel."

Woodruff received training at Camp Crowder, Missouri, before he was sent overseas. •

il

Raphael Pearce h Out of Army

FORT DOUGLAS, Utah (Spec­ial) — Staff Sergeant Raphael Pearce, son of Mr. and Mrs. WiR Pearce of 631 California avenue, Boulder City, Nevada, was dis­charged from the army under the adjusted service rating plan re­cently. . mik%y

He was overseas fox 20 months serving with the Third army in |he .European theater, p M-ft* te e*fateling the anra#« January, 1943, he was employed in Boulder City; His Wife is the former Edna Hansen, daughter of Mr. and'Mrs. H. A. Kampling, 204 North Fourth street, Las Ve­gas, Nevada.

Housing Aid LOS ANGELES, Nov. 24 (AP)

Tfae Citizens Reconversion Coun­cil was advised today that ttte army and navy shortly may re­lease limited quantities of build­ing materials to complete unfin­ished houses.

The coffee fly of Guatemala has been found to causa tfae spread Of tumorous growths on the beads of native Indians.

SILL'S

Toffie E. Miller Gels Army Release

FORT DOUGLAS, Utah (Spe-ielitf^-'T'Tivate^Tol^ husband of Mrs. Violet Miller ef Whitney, Nevada, te out oLthe army after being discharged here under the adjusted service rat­ing plan

During hte .two years overseas in a tank battalion service com­pany, he earned the right to wear tite European theater ribbon, the good conduct medal, and the vic­tory medal.

—! !«_«>: j Roilwoy Yard 'Coals' Giving Way to Diesels

OMAHA, Neb. (UP)—Is the "yard goaf slated to join the "dodo bird**? Railroaders are be­ginning to wonder.

The "goats" are* tiie familiar little puffing steam switch en­gines which dot the country's railroad yards. Plenty. pf [ them still are to be seen, but new deisel switchers are giving them plenty of competition, j *' | l |Kl*|

In Omaha and Council Bluffs, tfae' Union Pacific Railroad has replaced most of ite "goats" with diesels. Thirty-two are now in use and more are scheduled ter delivery.

The. "goats" are being kept cm a standby basis.

• O " M-;j.m«- .-

Mexico Politics TIJUANA, Mex., Nov. 24 (UP)

Supporters of Miguel Ateman, candidate for tfae Mexican presi­dency in next year's election, to­day expected him here Tuesday on an inspection tour of Mexican highways. '''IISg IpS

W. "Be*" Wsersteaat of Las Vegas Jo the Territory library te Honolulu, where ke bad gone to t ie reference room to look, ap some facts on the tourist bustneas. Prior to hte army dntv he' tne employed fay tfee Riddle Scenic Tears fat Law Vegas. The pic-are waa taken by a gtar-BnUetiti reprwrter and fn»asi iii fat that pab-

!' lteation te 1 t w i | i l | , : ^ ^ i i

Gordon W. Siarpe Returns To Vegas Afact Discharge

FORT'DOUGLAS, Utah (Spe­cial) — Private First Class Gor­don W. Sharpe, husband of Mrs. Geraldine Sharpe of North Laa Vegas, Nevada, recently was dis­charged here at the Fort Doug­las separation center, under the adjusted service rating plan.

Private Sharpe, who served 33 months witfa the 937th engineer battalion, is authorized to wear tfae European theater of opera­tions ribbon, the good conduct medal and the victory medal.

He Was employed, as a painter in Las Vegas before he entered the army in January, 1943, He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank ^^^tmt^M^mPmA.Me^SahS-r.^,..

Squirrel Cage mmrn HOLLYWOOD, Cain,

Nov- 24 (AP) — tt wm only a squirrel, but tite proverbial bull in the china shop couldn't have done much more damage.

When tiie W. O. Whitekers re­turned home yesterday, they found -tern and sagging curtains, broken Venetian blinds, smashed vases and bric-a-brac, and lamps, photographs end the like strewn on tfae floor. Soot covered the hearth.

As they stared In amazement, tiie squirrel took advantage of the open door to escape Whit-aker theorized tfaat tie had tried unsuccessfully to escape by ev­ery other means in tfae house, in­cluding the chimney, down which he apparently came;, k?£

Jack Caviness Gwm Discharge

Jack Caviness, 28, electrician'. inate, third class, USNR. of *£*te Vegas, has been discharged afte 29 months overseas.

Caviness was employed by th< United States bureau of reclam ation, Boulder City. • He wear! tire Asiatic-Pacific and th« American theater ribbons. Hi mother, Mrs. Tressie Caviness lives in Hayward, California.

•sV Because we -pecialue im jamgOmmptyamdiamot pre-

x f^skteae % w e cany a large and varied stock of drugs, k e p t f r e s h a a d p o t e n t tfc-o«gh rapid tar ao ver. re** Wgalifsu knows that ae can Count an « - for tbe mow (Uficarlt aad compli-craed formaUt. Bring yottr ***** prescr ip t ion t o us .

PBOFESSIOIfAL D B U C \

Fremont

SEE "ROBBIE" FOR CUSTOM MADE

M T 0 TOPS-SEAT COVERS AUTO PAINTING I BODY WORK GEO. EARLYWINE DAN WSEELER

^piows I RADIATOR AND CLASS SHOT

221 SOUTH MAW ST. PHONE

f t r T K AWO CHARl.rSSTON CTeV OBarbecaed Meats

' "••Tliiilnsi aad ataafe Dtnasn* * Fbuatala Servtea '^^?S ffl$a tt Detaze Baunborsja*a>

Fi-rtbug LOOM

VXmttttt, Calif, Nov. 24 <AP) She-riff's deputies today investi­gated notrrwOe incendiarism in aj fire wfaicfa last night destroyed*! tfae home of George T. Toknihi-go, Arnrreritan-born.JsprtersW^O* oantly returned; from an Arizona relocation center. -

tAtpmty- Herbert 1% Hache re­ported wttiiaawa sekt they first soar- ftemea iiairaiaa comtertrtiMe material - jgilrstli ttm house.

BON AIRE CLUB CHICKEN DINNERS

CHARCOAL BROILED STEAKS

$SOCKlj§fcS; . : ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ; -•Y JIM WADSWORTH •> JOI WTTMAN

"The Romance rnnJ Thrills aj I Old Nevada at Its Best"

SUPPERS 5 P. M. IIMTIL

ONE FOURTH MILE SOUTH OF U S T FRONTIER

Page Eight Sunday, November 25, IMS

INDIAN RESERVE — Dean Oberhelm, 225-pound tackle, ts one of the LVAAF reserves who far expected to see plenty of action, when the Indians meet tfae Nevada Wolf Pack today at 1:30 oa

Batcher Memorial field.

Scratch Bowlers Click '- • Scratch bowlers really went to town Friday night, 14 of them crashing the pins for 200 games Witfa Russ Byrd going aloft witfa a 226, 211 and 223 for a 660 series and record. Others wfao got into the super kegling were A. Webb 201, Gene Parks 203 and 208, J. Law 211, J. Sinderwald 212, H. Heinrichsen 216, J. Allin 205, Cy Crandall 202, Eyrayd 203, Harper 216, L. Mahon 209, Kennedy 207, E. Murphy 210, F.Relding JJ32, Riny Reed 20tand H, Hunter 210.

Russ Jlyrd's tumbling of the maples was not enough for bis Nevada Biltmores, however, snd they dropped three in a row to tfae Nevada Auto Parts, 2838-2626. De Luca Importers took two of three from Mike's Liquor Store; the Esquires who have absorbed beatings in tbe past rose .to bowLthe Schlitz Beers over, three in a row while Harold's Drive Inns won two of three from the Nevada Electrics.

Crimson Tide Half Of Rose Bowl Battle-?' LOS ANGELES, Nov. 24 (AP)

Alabama's Crimson Tide will be the visiting team in the Rose Bowl January 1. W&m

Pressure from New Orleans' Sugar Bowl and Army's inability to give an affirmative reply to the Rose Bowl committee's "feel­ers," hurried the selection, Chair­man Willis O. Hunter indicated as he announced Alabama's ac­

ceptance yesterday. It was the earliest announcement on record.

The Sugar Bowl was after tbe Crimson Tide almost as hot and early as the Rose Bowlers, who began to sweet when Army au­thorities said they would be un­able to answer until after -tite Army-Navy game December 1.

"Under the conditions," Hunt­er explained, "tfae committee be­

lieved it would be unjust to de­lay the selection."

In short, with no positive guar­antee from Army, the Rose Bowl people ware afraid tfaey might lose Alabama.

Hunter quoted Frank Thomas, Alabama coach, as saying he farad to notify Sugar Bowl officials before announcement of the Tide's Rose Bowl acceptance

could be made. That, said Hunt­er, is why reports emanating from Birmingham and points east Tl'SHla|Ulii)i Tlsj i null! mil 1m| confirmed immediately.

For Alabama, undefeated amd untied in seven games this year, it will be tiie sixth appearance in the Rose Bowl. In previous vis­its, tfae Tide won three, lost one and tted one. The 'Bamas were

in tiie Pasadena saucer under Wallace Wade in 1920, 1927 and 1932, and under Thomas in 1935 %.$* linn "' 'm^^t,'^^^^-

Sparked by gee -passer Harry Gilmer, Alabama has scored 286 points to 47 against them, with two games—Pensacola Navy to­day and Mississippi State De­cember 1—to go: S i l i

Incidentally, s e v e r a l other

teams besides Alabama and Army were considered lor tfae bid, but not seriously, said Hunt­er.. He declined, to name the oth­ers. '

Alabama's opponent will be tfae Pacific Coast' Conference champion, which probably will be determined by tfae Southern California-University of Califor­nia at Los Angeles game Decem­ber 1.

High Schoolers Go For Bowling

High school students interested in bowling now have Tuesday and Thursday afternoons, 4:30 to 6:30, set aside for them at the local recreation center. Among those participating are Louise Sprague, Rosalind Jaramlllo, Ann Greenburg, Elaine Levy, Shirley Gassel, Jane Saltzman and others.

Any grade school children are Invited to the bowling alley on Monday, Wednesday nad Friday afternoons, the instruction to be under supervision of Jeanne Prof fit and the city recreation iepartment. Requirement for trade school children is tfaat tbey »e 10 years of age or older.

O i ' •

Sugar Bowl Choices NEW ORLEANS, Hbv. 24 (UP)

With Alabama removed from tonsideration by ite acceptance of i Rose Bowl invitation, Duke, Oklahoma A & M . and Mississ­ippi State were the leading can-lidates today for tfae Sugar Bowl.

Skiing Tourneys Come Into Own

LOS ANGELES, Nov. 24 (UP) Thirty-two ski clubs of the Cali­fornia Ski association have de­cided to hold several events of the 1946 state championships on the Nevada side of the state boundary, it was announced to­day. —A partial schedule ef events set the major meet of tite season— downhill and slalom champion­ships'—for March 16-17 at tba Mount-Rose Bowl near Reno. The California jumping tourney and first annual snow shoe Thompson-Memorial cross-country race also may be held, in Douglas county, Nevada, February 23 and 24, as­sociation members said.

The association, at a meeting here also voted to change its name to "PjwfiBe,"* /'Far West-ern," or "California-Nevada" Ski association

LARGEST COURT. Baton Rouge—Louisiana State

plans to build the world's largest basketball court, a hardwood af­fair accommodating 24 teams in action simultaneously.

fell P m~:-I COCKTAI L 0 U H 6 E |

I FMOBRMK pi

IjrJ^p i imEmftv '

| | j | | TWLHTY-OHE i

aiM'BAR

lots of Home - § 1 Talenf|ere

(Continued from Page One) The Nevada Wolves, despite

several hard breaks in luck and injuries, have enjoyed one of their best seasons in a long time. They—started out red-hot _bv swamping Idaho Marines 65 to 0, with Maurice "Red Raider" Hag-teen, a long-striding ex-soldier, leading the way. Then came tiie victory over University of Utah, 33-14, which made the fans sit up and take notice. Happy Reed, ex - Marine quarterback, Iff, passed to Max Dodge for two touchdowns, to Stan Kitchner for another, plunged over for a fourth and ran a kickoff back 75 yards for the fifth.

Then came trouble. Left logy fay scarlet fever serum inocu­lations tfae day before tfaey left, handicapped by tfae ab­sence of speedy fullback Lloyd Rode wfao was, hurt, and tired after hitchhiking te San Fran­cisco (it was during the bus strike), the Wolves were un­able to match tfae speed of the great St. Mary's term and lost, 39-0, before 63,00* fan*.

, The Pack showed comeback abilities, however. Trailing 14-7 behind the tough Santa Barbara Marines, who had been unbeaten iff six games, the Wolves struck in the last five minutes of play for two touchdowns to win, 19-14. Goldie Farnsworth, hard-Biapmi^m:ptmb_m*hy-p^^ J^A-back, engineered the comeback.

Next came a rugged week. The pack, limited to just 20 players strung out over five different flights, travelled by airplane -— the longest plane trip for college gridmen this season in the U. S. —back to Oklahoma. They not only dropped 40-0. to Tulsa's Orange Bowl champions, but lost Farnsworth in tfae first three minutes, with a broken collar bone. More troubles—the airlines couldn't get the team home, so the boys straggled back to Reno via day coach in time to have one workout and hop a bus for Berkeley. They tackled Buck Shaw's University of California Bears and gave them a whale of a game. Most of the bay region writers thought Nevada outplay­ed* the Califoraiafis. C; 1 scored early on an intercepted pass, but Nevada powered back and Lloyd Rude, the speedy 201»pound frosh fullback who had recovered from bis leg injury, sprinted 39 yards to the tying touchdown Nevada out g a i n e d the Bears throughout the second half until the last three minutes of play. They fumbled and lost the ball on their own 20. Led by All-American tackle Buster McGuire, they held the Bears on the 15, but fumbled again. McClure suf­fered a brain concussion and was taken out and California put over 0 touchdown. Intercepting a pass in the last 80- seconds, the Beat* tallied again and won, 19-6.

Comeback powers were dis­played again when the Peek knocked off rugged Fresno State 7-4 in the Homecoming Day con­test, taking the Bulldogs for the flrte tinielnirgears! Jfao Tay-lor, a shrapnel-wounded ex-sail­or, sparked the winning touch­down drive and Reed passed to Kitchner for the telly.

H i t t i n g their peak, tta Wolves worn wild against Saa Diego State, which two weeks before had- spilled Fresno t-t. Big Max Dodge, tfae six-foot four-Inch 246-pound former in­fantry l i e u t e n a n t , caught passes all ever the tot. He Ball­ed eight throws and broke

• away fer fear touchdowns, ss Nevada wen, 44-6. Bobby Ra­ven, Rene high product, wbo lost his left hand aad wrist on a battlefield in France, was the ground-gaining star. Nevada kept up. the pap* last

week, winning 19-14 over the Great Bend, Kansas, army air field, despite the loss with bro­ken ribs of Jack Dieringer of Reno, veteran left tackle. Lloyd Rude's terrific speed and shift­iness set up the first three touch­downs. Great Bend came back with a passing attack for two tal­lies, bat Rude rambled again to put tite game on ice.

Coached by Jim Aiken, tiie for­mer Washington and^Jefferson -Rose Bowl end, the Wmlt Pack, has rolled up 200 palms against good competition so far, and has received-national recognition in a number of ways. McClure and Dodge were nominated on the first all-American team of the season,.by Oscar Fraley of Unit­ed Press. Ravera and Taylor have drawn natio .wide plaudits for their fine playing despite war wound disabilities. Nevada was offered post-season games J against unbeaten Arizona, in tite Rose Bowl this week witt the First Troop Carrier Command of Texas, and a "spud bowl" game With Idaho, * bat turned them down since they conflicted witt the Las Vegas assignment

Gils, Sparks Play In Reno December 2

The powerful Las Vegas Wildcats have agreed te play tha (Sparks Railroadert Decem­ber 2 to Maekay stadium, Reno, for the state football champion­ship. Coach Harvey Stanford announced' today.

The title bound Vegans won tte undisputed right to meet Sparks by virtue of their 58-6 victory over tte Basic Wolves Thursday en Butcher Memorial field.

Fes tte W i l d c a t s , tfae Thanksgiving contest terminat­ed a - nine-game schedule in which the Red and Black rolled up 296 points against tho oppo­sition's 12. Tfae Baste Wolves and the Carbon Dinosaurs were tiie only teams te cross tte "Cats' goal in two years of play.

Scoring honors fat the Basic game went to Phil Mirabelli, Don Benson and Wayne Os­borne witt 12 each, while Her­man Fisher, Bob Gallagher and DeRay Eyre each scored one touchdown. ' •: vv-

Quinn Quits Post With Bean Braves

BOSTON, Nov. 24 (AP)—Bob Quinn, veteran baseball execu­tive, resigned as head of the Bos­ton Braves farm system, effec­tive November 30. Quinn, 75, has, been with the Braves since December, 1935, and stepped down about a year ago as gen­eral manager in favor of bis son, John, soon after tfae present own­ers took over tte club.

The elder Quinn told baseball writers he had two attractive propositions and thought it only fair to the owners of the Braves that he tell them. He said he was pledged to secrecy until at least Monday. £*?TI

Asked if both propositions were in baseball, he said: "One is and one isn't"

He added, "To be on tte square with everyone^* Jhe thought he should offer bis resignation.

WHADDAVA MEAN, A MAN'S WORLD? — Gerry King, fresh­man co-ed at Michigan State College studying football offciating, probes a* illustrated field play as line coach John Kobs (right)

her professor, and end Bob Malaga took on.

First Downs/ Fumbles

Pro Football LOS ANGELES, Nov. 24 (AP)

A couple of the nation's leading passers — Frankie Albert and Kenny Washington — will be pitching against each other to­morrow when tim Los Angeles Bulldogs aad the Hollywood Bears clash ln a Pacific Coast football league tilt.

Albert, formerly of Stanford, sparkplugs tfae Bulldogs and Washington, ex-UCLA great, dit­toes for the Bears. Hollywood will ba strengthened by tte ad­dition of two top backs, Bob Hoffman of Southern California and Jimmy Nelson of Alabama, and one of tte coast's best guards, Nate De Francisco of m f c - ^SmhkW^':"lF&_%,

Foggy Game COMPTON, Nov. 24 (LP)—For

those who attended the Compton-Woodrow Wilson high school football game Friday night, but didn't see it: . Wilson won, T-6.1 : S | | § _W$ Some 5,000 fans got only occas­

ional peeks at the action through a heavy fog., Compton won tile game' in tfae last minute, when Ralph Shalif oux crossed the Long Beach school's goal line, only to have the play called back by a clipping penalty.

By OSCAR FRALEY NEW YORK, Nov. 24 (UP)—

First down and fumbles on tiie sports scene:

Brooklyn is all set to celebrate Indiana's first Big Ten title—if tte Hoosiers down Purdue in their Old Oaken Bucket test to­day.

Because Ben Raimondi, Hoosier quarterback, is a corn-fed Indi­ana boy rightf rom Flatbush. His fine Italian hand is tte one which is expected to toss those winning passes.

Glued to the radio will be sis­ters Concetta and Glorida and Poppa and Momma Raimondi, wfao keep a voluminous scrap-book^ Jf the Hoosiers win it will be vino, ravioli and pizza pie for the whole neighborhood . . . and if you've ever tasted Momma Rai-mondi's cooking—-or Poppa's vino: —you'd realize how large a sec­tion of Brooklyn will be rooting foe those Hoosiers . , . S e t an extra place,

A check of the Rose Bowl rec­ords almost convinces you that Alabama's Crimson Tide is a member of tte Pacific Coast con* ference. Only Southern Califor­nia witt eight appearances and Stanford with seven have romped for the roses more than the south­erners.

'Bama has trekked west on New Year's day five times— while such conference members as California, UCLA, Oregon,

Oregon State, Washington and Washington State never have bettered four individual appear ances . , , and Idaho and Mon­tana never have made it . . Whatta they mean "poor little Rhode Islaj-dT*,|||i'-

- Basil James, the jockey who has been in service almost, four years, hopes for a discharge soon and will ^return to the track. Within a few younds of riding weight, James has been stationed at Fort Riley, Kansas.

Major Albert Mayer of Switzer­land is in town trying to get the 1242 winter Olympics tor St Moritz. And the major holds ttat bob-sledding takes more courage than skiing, despite the more fre­quent Occidents and injuries on tte wooden'staves . . . tiie major evidently doesn't play bridge.

Baseball vagaries: J o h n n y Djckshot, 34-year-old White Sox outfielder, hit .301 in the Amer­ican league last season. So he's been sold to Hollywood of the Pacific Coast league. Yet Frank Demaree is older and uses a bat witt mere botes in it. So Connie Mack uses the nomber one choice in tite draft to get him from Port-land »«fi - which might explain why the Athletics really are white elephants—and why they have had such a long-term lease on the league basement.. . . You're out! Wli;A Wk

$68,000 ON ICE PITTSBURGH (AP) rr CJ*3** to

$68,000 has been spent in im­provements to Duquesne Gar­dens, home of the Pittsburgh Hornets of tiie American hockey league. A major portion of this figure went for p screen of shat­terproof glass which circles tiie tee. liiii

Service Cagers .^_^_^_i_] EAGLE ROCK, Nov. H Wh-

Occidental College edged out Bir­mingham General Hospital in a tight basketball battle Friday night, 48-45. Alex Hannum, for-/ mer USC starnow with tite hos/ pital team, was high scoter with 17 points. ''iffPi §P^gg§

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Chomp R®ms Bide Time For Ploy-off Foe

DETROlffc ffov. JM-(l3i^-The Cleveland Bams, who never be­fore had more than broken even a National football league season, headed home today witii their first western division title.' Sun­day's Philadelphia-Washington game probably will name their playoff opponent.

Cleveland's solid 28 to 21 vic­tory over second-place Detroit Thursday clinched the division title for -the Rams, and put thete on the throne vacated by Green Bay. Green Bay - lost another title too, when end Jim Benton beat Don Hutson's pass-catching record by hauling in 10 of Bob Waterfield's throws for 308 yards gained—66 yards more than Hut­son gained' against. Brooklyn fat 1943.

Washington can clinch the east­ern title by defeating Philadel­phia, but a Philadelphia win would cause a tie and probably necessitate a playoff for the right to meet Cleveland.

Cochrane, Servo Bout In February

NEW YORK, Nov. 24 (UP)— Contracts for a 15-round welter­weight title fight between cham­pion Freddie (Red> Cochran and Marty Servo of Schenectady, New York, at Madison Square Garden, February 1, were sched­uled to be signed today at a meet­ing of tha New York boxing com­mission. . ^L

Al Weill, Servo's, manager, Is reported to have guaranteed Cochrane 290,000 for this first defense o fthe 147-pound crown which redheaded Freddie won from Fritzie Zivic at Newark, New Jersey, on July 29, 1241.

The contracts will provide that the winner of the February title bout must defend the crown within six months against "Sugar" Ray Robinson, tiie New York negro who is regarded gen­erally as tite number 1 contender.

Cochrane, who spent more than three, years in tite navy, picked Servo-*-instead of Robinson—as his title* opponent 'fW various reasons: (1) Servo- has a good service record, having spent more than three years in the coast guard;. (2) Cochrane, who con­tracted a tropical stomach ail­ment while in service, feels that he has not yet rounded into ..the peak condition necessaryjtor a defense against Robinson, who has plenty of boutsydnder his belt; and (2) Cordjrane Charges that Robinson "ran out** on three bouts witii fafan, shortly after Cochrane won the title—whrm Cochrane Was "sharp."

• yfr -O . ' •»»-/;•-

Football Scores / By Associated Press

/Miami (Florida) 21, Michigan State 7.

Irish Attendance f t Sets New Mark I f

NEW ORLEANS, Nov. 24 (AP) The Fighting Irish of Notre Dame, arriving here for a game with Tulane, are on the way to their greatest season's box-office success since the banner year of 1929—witii well over half a mil­lion customers assured.

Walter Kennedy, Notre Dame athletic publicity 'director, said the team had played to 446,500 fans in eight games to date.

Tomorrow's attendance, ex­pected to top 65,000—a southern record for a regular-season foot­ball game—will push the total to at. least 511,500. ' A capacity throng of 23,000 in the little sta­dium at Great Lakes Naval Sta­tion is assured when Notre Dame aids ite season there December 1, making a figure of 534,500 or better for the 1945 campaign.

The 1929 Irish, claimants to the mythical national champion­ship, played to 560,000 customers.

Kennedy listed the following attendance figures for 1245 games to date: Illinois at South Brnd, 48,000; Georgia Teen- at Atlanta, 32,000; Dartmouth at South Bend, 45,000; Pittsburgh at Pittsburgh, 62,000; Iowa at South Bend, 52,-500; Navy at Cleveland, 82,000; Army in New York, 75,000; Northwestern at Evanston, 50,-000.

Spartan Stand PASADENA, Nov. 24 (LP)—

Pasadena high's Bulldogs held off San Diego's Hilltoppers for five goal ward marches Friday night but couldn't do it the sixth tune and the southerners went home with a 6-0 triumph. The victory put San Diego into tfae C. I. F. play-offs.

• - o ." '•'-••

New Series Set NEW ORLEANS, La., NovySt

(UP)—Tulane Athletic Dhector Horace Renegar announced to­day tfaat Tulane and Notre Dame have signed a new two-year foot­ball contract; •^.kz^^.^tfe?! >i*

Notre Dame will return to New Orleans in 19.4TJ, for a game Sep­tember s-Lmxt Tulane Will play at South/Bend, Indiana, Septem­ber 22/1947.

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LAS V^G^tH'BNtW , REVIEW-iOURNAt!

CLASSITffiD ADVERTISING RATES

C«naeculi»a Iwaei U f «

Minimum Charge of We U p « MO IWBATBa

Tk* tat* Vegas Evening *amtaw-Journal will not be responstbln tor more than one Incorrect Insertion of any advertisement. -f•'•£!____

Advertisers may have r radii* addressee to private box to saw* ef the Review-Journal.

Osnceilatton and C l a s s i f i e d Deadline—*:** * . M . .

•Too Lass* to Classify" Deadline :mm*m**7M:.,m *£_%..• -. mm, . m

Published every day except S*a>-dar and legal holidays. . Ho refund or* classified ado ex­cept to esses where ad has been omitted. &SB2I One tta)* — Twe time* _ Ttaee times . Fear time* _ rive times — Sistfi tless mm-, Twe weeks -. Three weeks Fourth week

, fm e went _..1te a weed , i • srsis-B

t ie a word „_aae m word

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t«—Funeral Parlors

PALM FUNERAL HOME 133 South First Phone 180

Bunker & Burt

Wprturoy ^i Ambutonegr Service

615 Fremont Phone 64

1-A—Cord e l Thanks W S wtsb to taOre tats means ta than*

our many dear friends and neigh­bors for •their kindness, and espec­ially Mr. M. 1>. Botts, Fire Chief, and his boys. Signed Mr. s a d Mrs Valentin*.' ,.,... n i l

§-*^Mft* vnimm metre sealed bid* o* **«

To be opened N<r»e*Bbe* tttb. * V X Gibson, P. O. BOB tm.

6 Frer Itewt-UOHT

Way Court, bousekeeplna ourt, WoJtoeV traer. • « weekly.

•S f - i

FIVE Pete* Court. V*t North Main. I*lve Petnt J»j-eUo*v Trailer apace.

»tt.M Wei*. Cablna S a d trailers furnished ttre- nousek-eptng $8.00 waek. TTB a> tat machine, hot water, store, bos stop. .

Houses BILTMOR1E ***** sayrlda* - S*n*ig|>

b a r furniture. Adults osdy.* Phone 12BS. ntt-17

ROOM, n—>u 1st. ' •" *£SS?

em south n"S-37

Apartments SSfAMJ fnrnteked apertnenL 1148

West Charleston, a**** WHS. »JS-27 BASEMENT apawt-aeat, tSS Korth

11th. . nS*-13 DEL M o n t * Court. Kitchenette

apartment. 14th a a d Carson. N l - t f

LIGHT raousekeeplnc c a b I n and trailer space, tm North Fifth, Old Ranch Coort. It&k* * ***"**

Rooms ROOM, girt. (TM Btltmore Drive. Phone

2063. * nZS-26

FRONT room, twtS bed*, newly fur­nished. Two men. Close in. 281 South BOl street. n l l - 1 *

6-A—Room eiwf Board BOARD and rosea. -Sit week. Men

onlr. WI Sooth Main. - ntS-dM

6-C—Wanted to Rent LOCAL easiness man, no pets, tta

children, couple only, very much ta need of home, of any type furnished or unfurnished. J. w. Anderson. Phone 13TM. '.'~mt_*

WILL na* t months rent ta advance for 2 bedroom furnished er unfur­nished house. Cali 1286-W. n21-24

hPr£*apt NEED MONEY

i # C US FIRST

afhOQ Krr^5J000.00 Ira One l)*teraae |

SQUAKDEAL LOMSI CO.

Las Vegaa* Oldest rod Most Benahle Loan Office

WB LOAN THK MOST ON F^TERYTHING

Watches, Jewelry, Luggage, Diamriridt, Clothing, Guns,

Cameras, Etc.

SQUARE DEAL LOsAN CO. 109 South First

^3--RWl»totrtt for Solo — & — i i r - r T i <-tJ.i,r i.«<.« «Tr M » e

\ -Hill Bet»< | I • « ' ' » * •

McBaiicI Real Estate Co. Huntridge home, completely furnished. Lawn front aad hack arith bock yard fenced. Near school Central heating and cooling. Anfo Court —- Nine unit plus laundry room. Fenced Trot -MO feet by HO feet. Doom for 6 more unite. Corner lot cot 2 busy streets. Bittmore Addition. Rat** home, partly toratshed. Two bed­rooms and sunny studio or sleeping porch. Garage and storage room. Hear school, aad bus steps at the iatav Peautlfal borate wrt-h $06 a -etts-rk inroroe Also has "heat age on South Main. Kxrellent business V****-**1 Building ore Main has two sleeping rooms, aind bath, and garage, and storage space. Upstairs of hoose, X bedrooms -sad bath 'has outside entrance amd can be rented separately. We* "fenced lpyrtr*ft.'.^;;

Income property —* Nice district, large S hirnfrrat-on hotra* and etfjsWaaai,,lll -Mw*rt*a%rtd, Lovely, shady yard with gold fish pond, shrubs and flowers. Mayfair — Good buy in a 2 bedroom home. Hardwood floors, central heating and cooling. Beautiful view.. *

First rurd

ca

ctdl at erffke for ftiirftTarat irdorrmattan. Phon* U l l

""ste-eka with a SrnQ** Mrs. Johnson

WIBdteOB Realty Coipai) JEWELRY LOANS QUICKLY AR

BANOS-O AT STBXL-a, 11 vws-MONT. ni-tf

10—-Help Wrrttcl., Female WANTED: Fitter e t Sybil's fires*

Bbop, Kort** Talr*. h U - r l

2—Church Directory CBYTBCH. OP CHRIST T H E KINO

<EPIfSCOPAL> Rey. R. O. Rosson

SIS Carson Sundaya:

'mm*.A ML Hory Eucharist »:3t A M . Children's E u c h a r i s t

Church School 11:08 A, M. Holy Eucharist Sermon

Weekdays: (except Tuesday a n d Thursday.) IM A.M. Holy Eucharist

mWsWmD*ie, Hoty Itays. and Thurs^ day*. SAtt A. M. Holy Ewharis t .

ASSEMBLY O F OOD CHURCH "C" and Washington, Las VesM

Sunday S:45 A. M . 11 A M., 7:45 P . M. Tuesday and Friday — 7:4-5 P . M

John V. Green, Pastor

GOOD SHEPHERD LUTHERAN Maryland ParVway and Bridger

Sundays 11:00 A. M. Sunday School 9:30 A. M. '*.-

BOULDER CCT**-_ -y.. JL P. Hall Sanday 8:00 P. M. '

Hey. K A. Wessett, Pastor. Phone lltH

CHURCH OF T H E NAZARENE 14th and Cwdan

Lias Vegas, Nevada Sunday School 10:00 A. M. Morning Worship 11:00 A. M. ft. Y. P. s. —•. — amy. it. Evangelistic Service .. 7:30 P. M. Prayer and Praise. Wednesday I'M

K g Rev. Paul W. Urachal,- Pastor.

"v-'"--;**fJr,joA» O F A R C CATHOLK3 CHURCH

{I t Sooth Second Street. lev. John J. Lambe. Pastor, lev. Donald P . Carmody, Admlnla

-*&smtmtm.t>£ a -tii J&$Jmiz. z,ita$is£L Masses Sundays t-.38, 1:06, • , ' . » , and y_W BJOOB. ?i^5i" :

Week day *»nas*d»; TrSt--au aa. Devotions: Sunday and Tuesday eve­

ning* and First Friday, frse p. sa.

WILL pay tlW.OO per month or mere for furnished I Bedroom house. A d u I t s , permanent, references. Phone SfU-J. n21-!4

TWO bedroom house, residents. Phone 1154.

Permanent adC-tr

ESTABLISHED residents testes un­furnished two bedroom house. Can furnish good references. Call num­ber • Review-Journal. n5-tf

7—Money to Loan

FIRST METHODIST CHURCH Corner - Third and Bridger

Harold E. Broughton, Minister • --?S| Phone tit

SUNDAY SERVICES l :M A M. 11 A. M. 7:00 P. M.

"The Church with the Chimes ^rf^-moa CreeOl*~--r-

FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH t t h A Prcanont Phone MS*

Walter Bishop, Minister Sunday Behcet . . _ . „ _ » *:*& aula. Morning Worship Urf)0 a.m. Broadcast ewer K E N O 11:16 a.m. Younat People's Meeting t:3« p.m. Evening WorsbJa 7:S» p.m. Prayer Meeting

Wcdne-dsy — T:S» p.m. Servicemen's Center open Friday

and Saturday 7-11 p. m.

CHURCH OF CHWST 1«» North, Ninth Street

Oundss; Services: Bible Study _ _ _ _

Regular asrvteaa and Communion .,,".i,j..W. • " • » **• *•

Singing and Bible Study _ tiTM A. M. Phon* 1310

_-10:60 A. M.

-11:96 A. M.

W-^JOa* CHUBCH «t» .OOftcvS^ tSt* North Maim N orth Laa Vega*

annday School ,..__l»:6e A. ht. atorning Service —Ja„, TtrSt A. M. KvangeTtstic Service ..__. TiR P. M. Tuesday Bible Study —---. I'M P. M-*f*WdByV. L. B. Service, _ Tdfct .#»"«.

J. M. DAUGHERTI, PASTOR

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SALESLADY. Union Pacific Depot Newsstand, n2>-lt

COUPLE to ear*, far children ear-change far board and rom*. Phone MM or StSS. . all-14

GIRLS as wired jnusic operators. Ap­ply J JO to »:». Buckmaa District Company, ISSMf Fremont. sjll-14

WOMAN. Restaurant, fohntam work. Snyder's, Westside. •* »10-tf

EXPERIENCED t t a s t y e fent ir . Good guarantee. Potty Jean» Ba***** Shots, pboce SS3. *t«tf

10-A—Help Wontod YOUNG ma.n or woman tor tonntaln.

No phone call*. Oppedyk Dairy, 1000 North Mala. . nll-SC

11—Sit. Wonletf. Male TWO carpenters want repair Jobs,

PuviaM er Vegas. Drop oa a line for appointment eg estimates. P. Ou Boot 471, Henderson, Nevada. n24-17

12—Sit. Wnfd.. Female CURTAINS and drapes, hand lemnl-

ered aaat stretched. Lace, rayon or cotton. Phone 1056, l i t North Sixth.

•st-ds EXPERIENCED bookkeeper wishes work. Oaisj reference. Write er call number 28 Lon Gene apartment.

n!4-17

tarn ft M M trrawt price f7,*oa. x%3.:M

to. tat* Vegaa, sasrat wail, 'alee

courts in Las Vegas area, now paying mt

-Oast col-n<

ll . isa per agsjifti, Could be mada te pay twice that amount withou . a staaft. ssmeaaa. ISS teat frontage eat main highway. Ma sal*«sis

tint en phoae, apply at- ottieev QiiST'yJ-Beautiful home in Mayfafr.' Sfitty foot tot. Completely tarnished even to washing machine. Lovely lawn. SptendM 'view.

Bast Super gas and at* station available n Las Vegas area. It's a ner,cio*e tn oh a main highway. 100 toot frontage by 176 fast

_Jst Bight Watt mmht court on rear of tot now paying 15,604) par

Jear. Tho entire deal goes tor 125,060. Term* can he arranged If scawaary. No inforoaatloa on phoae. Call at offtea.

One of tba fine»t homos ta North Las Vegaa,- beautifully furnished, on a large corner lot. Fenced, lawn front and back, trees, shrubs. Porch on two sides, W B sacrifice. Mast hav* money for now bnsl-noam. Yoo ean taarss> right ta. Term* can ho arranged. I

Six alee t» foot bunding tots, bloch from Clark's Market,. HIOO. •owwr ana alty water. -.' V

H foot tot near Green Shack. Trees, water. Right ta tin* of' devel-""" opaoent. Don't overlook this aaaa,

tot tost est East Frissimt. Extra long lot Perfect set op lor at large Auto Court. »: . Do yon want a «ai«ll ta»v*etm«nt? Here it la. Two'units, both rented, Oodioa Ot chad*. Stucco, hath modern. FuU price 14.5*0.

Seven cablna tat en* unit, aad * good lot In Sunrise Acre* to mat* thorn oa. Total price tor tot and catena, 11,600.

Lavely a hedroom subarhan homo' oii W acres. Cleared and tsnosd." • Shad* trees, own won completely fsrnlshod. TaM* top range, largo ' now ott heater, etc. Health mahss tt impossible to carry on aaat was he sold at me,*** Teraso. tVe a good deal, long car. garage.

Beautiful 1 bedroom stoceo homo on an aero, near Connty B*a|iltal. Pssjaad — furnished. Plenty ot water. Beaattfnl throo bedroom homo' on Franklin ta Huntridge. Nicely furnished. tlmiilMgl Taos wide tot. Fenced. Hardwood floors. Fur­nishings include washing machine. Possession te few days. Fay» meats only J35.00 nor month after Initial payment te i—

1 3 iRe-tlEUofefor'lJortj

TYPIST wants copy work, addressing, etd. 1642 Frankfin. nll-24

13—Real Estate far Sate

8—-Personal COMPLETE refrigerating, h e a t i n g

and air conditioning. Engineering-Consulting, design, drafting, speci­fications. Wtlburn Oliver Watklns, Telephone 1476-M. I l l * South Main s t r e e t ''Km 0*00*

MAGNETIC AND SPIRITUAL HEALING

Headaches relieved te 1 minutes. Im­mediate reHaf far s inus sufferers. Also swollen ankiea AB diseases fasarl**, 111 Korth tth, S pv m. to ff it* p. m.

^i.Wii^i .Sttma

YOUR WORRIES SETrUED - Commit

MRS. SNYDER—READER pulder Highway, m blocks from

Boulevard. Red brick cottage.

-Your Family Florist 'Wet A Single Flower

^rfev or *, -BasketrJuD

LAS VEGAS 530 South Third

FLORIST Phone 386

Lease and cabins on high* way. Trees. Trailer space. In-come $1,500 month. Caa be increased. Mo information on phone. $7,006, cash.

rmiiiii II ial auriifWi nimlli 6th street $7,500, terms. Income at South 3rd street, $10,000.

Five acres, close in, no house. $1,000.

Good listings at office.

Nevoda Realty REAL ESTATE BROKERS

• Room 5 MESQUITE BUILDING

103 Fremont «•*•% Phone 977

LONG lease, largo quarters. Suitable tofflc casino. Fostofflce boot tM*.

m-tm FURNISHED

South 17th. Mayfair home. ' *fi»

n30-17 BUSINESS corner 14.W6 aqnaro feet.

Between Fremont a a e Carson oat, tth. Present income, U S S teUHtlilv. Information on r*gnaa*. Phon* 171. .

stsxellent court alta, right dowa town — % Hook ttern CStj Ba*V Mocha from Post Office, 1 block* fro feet. Walkrng distance te ev«rythlng.

213 Bridger— Phorte 6 4 2

PAYNE sXEAl ESTATE AGENCY 423 E> Carson

LISTINGS SOLiaTED

Ray Payne Phone 650

ftaiWLu&liiW Realty k BcTetopmeBt Co.

Licensed Realtor — SlTBOrvTDERS ft BUILDERS — Licensed Contractor

Pr»ne6n T m i ^ h P r o c * ^ Phone61U

8-A-—Lost ami Fowtf

F i n e r C H R I S T I A N C H U R C H 16th and Bonne vine

C S . Burgess, D. D., Minister Residence, »tl Bonneville

Jtonday Ser-tces, Bfble School »;4S - WoTsh^ Service 11 A St.

Phon* 1544

LOST: Ovemurht bag; containing pa­jamas, slippers, undeveloped film. Please return to SoT Sooth 3rd street. Reward. ' nSS-ST

LOST: Writing end of It carat gold fountain pip. Reward. Retanm to Ceas, Vegas Club. ,:•..-.*-"•• «tl-2t

3-^tsaOJBt BRICKLATERS. Masons. Tfa* Set-: ter* and Terrarso workers. .Local

-. No. t meets every first and third Friday i t I i . a over Boulder Club. H. Prasier. P. O. Box » » . 1134 Francis Avenue, Huntridge, financial secretary. Business repre­sentative Emitt Alien, phono 1*38, SSI North 1st street.

CARPENTERS meet t i n t aad third ' Thursday*. If yoo need av carpenter, . call competent contractor or Union

haR. Phone It*.

MACHINISTS. MECHANICa, WELD--. ERS Local number Set meets tho

first Wednesday of each month - over the Frontier Club, Las Vegas,

t : t« p. o t * third Friday a t I p . m. - te tho VL of P . Hall, Boulder CUy. , Office 116 North Second Street, L a s

Vegas. Glen O. Anderson, Business Agent: Phone USS.

BARTENDERS Union Local ItS meets second Monday each month at S p. au, aad foorth Monday each month at 7:1* over Oasis Cafe. B u t Henderson, secretary. P h o n o

K PAINTBilB ******mtmay tSS. :*jr>*ta

every '1st' and St* Tuesday at 7^0 abov* Boulder Cttrh. Xavter O a r I no. holiness, agent. Phono M 4 *

MUSICIANS Protective Union Local a m . Meats first Sunday. »

' each month, BouMer Cteb. - Agent, - Cteaa. Barbee. g n w l a i y

Orion Sims, office over Boulder €li*li. Tmamw aSm - saM** I to I

- fr. lav

LVTBRNATIONAL HOD „ .HiirmH and Common !*»****

.. Amsstea No, SIS moot* aoco , Mosatey of each month oyer Front-' ler Ctub, l * >

aa. Phoao . .tM, B. A. tmatee O. tfK.. #

COOKS aad Waitresses Unlori. Loea) at* EM moots Mrs* mm* third Watty nisdays each month. Pteaidtnt Ouy B. Houmley. W«inrary, Frank

- A. Taylor. Phone 11«L 117 Fremo-rt. p. a Box irm

CENTRAL LABOR COUNCIL OF Oar* Couaty .*r*ote sooosat amd

- foar*h WednisOiy et each month a t . the Cb*M*j CooBcil Ban above Ol*

Frontier Clob te Lag Vegas. Rag-Mld Fyhen, secretary. Phono lift, Boulder City,

LOST or Stolen: Iatdy*s fna*fft skin purse Saturday p. m. in or near postoffice. Containing lady's wrist watch, bUHfrtd. and cote parse. Please return to Mary K. Poiand, 151* South Mate street. Phon* 1498. Reward. No onestions. nlT-St

LOST: BHlfold containing Inw leave papers. Name, John W. Mer-rtO, ARM Ird Cteaa. Return Box Ml La* Vegas. Phono 154. nll-24

LOgTr Booetmns Pinc*er, teO an* 'oars uneot. Name* "Murphy. Call Desert Club, ISM. : »IT-Ii

IOSTI Carrier Boy's

I Bicycle^S Needs it badly. .Brown and

taa trim. Reward, •slsp** W1XBERT HOFFMAN, Ht.

Rsview-Journsl nl7-ti

i l l f t ' l l*MlTttCtiatt

TYPING — SHORTHAND Beginning and A, dvanced CTn mas .

"TfTwoLFE tt$% Bouth Secoii*;? torn Vegas

9—Help Wanted. Mate MEN or women to cane*** t i t Car­

son, Mr. Keyes. nil- %1 BOT for Westside rout* of t t B*.*tf*

Journal customers. Qood pay — a** Mr*. Day at W*»ulde school StVt m, m. •a*-8

Classified Ms

FqrSote

Tourist Court HioJ,Vv"oys5Q-89-91

WILLARD L . 8 0 W A R D S AGENCY

Provo» Utah' mm'*4*

For Sale 2 houses^ wf th fu*fni-txtrtt, to move off present location at S*h ond Ogden.

For Lease 100x150 comer on'

Sth ond Ogden

Ed Pizinger , '9htm#m l.lSla^te^

NOW!—^You May Now Build A Home .of Your Ovvn

I n Cha rlestpn Square Yea may purchase one erf tha homes we are new building er we wut build tfae home of your choice. Let us show you our selection of modern homes built to your order — many with three bedrooms and two baths.

Charleston Square Is bernf developed as the moat highly restricted aad i

. sive lerodentiarl area in Las Vegas and will contain extra, wide, paved, treelined streets with sidewalks and * law* for array hotraa. AM improvements and utilities, includin* etfjr aewer, tdtt water and city gas mains aa weB a* ap « paving, wiB be installed art no extra cost to th* purchaser.

| p p • *'*«tttBO* far the best selection, Hif5

Our Present Office Is At 6 0 0 North Fifth Street Let tta show .-feat me. tarrae* we are now building and fgive

y*« full-details.

Mf Mosteficraft Homes* intfe •• Horth flfrtfa Street l?^TOMi nit

SMALL sumse. Good rosfdenttel die trlot. Chmo ISL. Boat Stt, Review Journal. S^SesSS* : aU-uf

TWO heme*. 1 acres of ground. Over­toil. Nevada. Boat residential dis-trtct. Exrenent srater rights, C a i I 1-R-l. write hoalrJ. *i mW-W srater na

*€? SsM m*0$ei*t\~a

Must have new listings Haasi

m.m tm. CO " AJWfcO - U 1 V V I M 9 , * V y 1 H . ,

Clients Waiting REAL ESTATE—INSURANCE

HOME PLANNING

I0NE M. FRANKfefN SIS N. 2nd St. Phone 87S

FOR Immediate sale, strictly modern M**SWIe psty ' fmiiiaH*av^;'i)m^a--.--"*HMw tfmfimm on two nice lota. NIC* loca­tion. North 'Laa Vegas. S e * owner l t t S Moraeci, North Las Vegas.

n24-21

W E U taawr ntawauf hoose, tote ef ahads. mmmmW tat^tt**, range, re-frlgerator, eooter, oilIheater, blinds, hod*. Sooth Third. Ptoor.i S". Im­mediate possession. n i l

T.|fM.MRr^LL-Real Estate •— Insurance

114 South Thft#-$treet COppcrsite Bank}

Apgrtmernt hot***, eleven apartments. All completely *t«il"* nishedv except owners quarters. Tenants pay -own utilities except water. Monthly income, $611.00. $30,000 down pay­ment will handle. Fine location near park. Court, nine unit* $321.50 monthly income. rnmifsVilalj fnr-nished. Two rooms and bath in each unit Lot 109 x UM.

. Total price $25,00a Easy "terms. Duplex. On* part has 3 bedrooms, other on*. Sxtra cot­tage on property and ample room fo** other bwhiinga Lot 160 x 140i corner, $*J,000 down and terms to be arranged. . Homes, three bedrooms, den, living room, kitchen, bath and arm/iia porch. Harrrwood floors thros^boat. Four toot tile •srslis- la bath room. Tile kitchen. Two car "parage. Hew wa­der construction. Ready for occupancy In about three weeks, Urrfurnished. Lot IS x 125. Priee $16,000 eaah ta owner. Terms ran he arranged with hank. Pixllilli atayfair home, unfurnished. $7,100 down paynteai. $3,9*0 balance $36.00 per month. Huntridge home, unfurnished, $6,750. Good condition. Nice iisl*fli>rsTf iinn' $2,700 down, balance Y. H. A.

Campbell Realty Company

FURNISHED H O W ~

$16,000 — Large 6-room resi­dence in best southeast resi­dential district Pre-war con­struction, hardwood floors, fire­place, detached garage. Fully f u r n i s h e d rand electrically equipped including washing machine, Well landscaped yard, ntwlerii exposure. Hear mar­kets and bas line. Half cash handles. • S S j

COAnMERCIAL INCOME

Three **urnished hrrosras down­town walking distance in com­mercial gone near court house. •Ft*|*itj 50 x 140. Present in­come $150.00 monthly. $C,"50r> cash, balance $75.00 monthly including interest.

l >irrHiMAiKpi $10,000 cash, will handle this exceptionally attractive com­mercial property fronting 150 feet on meat aid* ot North Main with left depth Improved with, store building snd office hwIM ing. Excellent present and po­tential i n c a m e poss ibilities. FuU eric* $37,500.

«A5T FREMONT

50 x 250 business site in center of rapidly expanding commer­cial deWlopment; all utilities.

IbQSANO&B+lrWAY

$16,000 fer 80 acres on th* west side of highway, number 91 about 2 miles south of L a s t Frontier. Quarter mile front­age and half mile depth. This is right in the path erf expand­ing ittiiliiiimiMla on Lara Ve­gas' jmmber one highway.

HOMEJrfTES

WEST BONANZA: IOO x 374 lot en south side of highway; deeded interest in well $2,650.

$*yS0O — 200 x 374 oa West Bo­nanza with trees and shrubs, other improvements; w a t e r Piped to property. Ideal subur­ban ti IIIIII ill i, T-rrtrtliTmliigi imiiii ly 2 acras. r£*v*te|r.'->Vij; *.&»

FREMONT

r^HfRLESTON

323 feet oa Fremont avenue rand 200 feet en Charleston; water included. Over 350 feet average depth. Priced at $100 per front foot.

'*mi&^!''^^-i&*^j4^ • "i £' '•••* "'

INCOME PROPERTY

$14,000 — SOUTH 3RD. Four rental onits on 100 x 140 lot North of Charleston in heart of multiple rental district. All unit* furnished and equipped. Annual income exceeds $1,800.

Fully furnished aai equipped Prawn house— h a r d w o o d floors; all electric. 4-foom etjuipped snd partially fur-vnshed house on rear. Property 50 x 140 on Sooth 3rd within walking distance of Fremont' 37,500 cash handles, balance trMaAiy. S*l^^-fyspg^y^-^i~ssy

Sanday, NeiuatWi 23 IMS m*Mm*\mm§ 13-—Reel Et4e*e Fer S«U

W| 111 AGGERS CO. Real Estate - Insurance

1 Tm- more roach fair!) to cttv. Has hXOa*a*\

tho i hoose and w*» oat

place. l«<akt*d aortkoeM of cltr whore Its* soil ",t* really Fun price asm*. . Beauttfo) two hedreesn house, mOMitii I nlji furnished, on « of giena*T. -Btrar teaolj a**pl*sl. *a fenced, plenty of water, Nice cofe **-aaalo Mghais- with good buitding. Including iivtag quarters with tat* >****—». Present owners, saaa m*i trite, eleow-lag over tl.ta* M I saoBth. Room en front ot oalldln* for *n*th*jr saaall business. FnB priee »4,»*0, wtth good terms as owners are ro-t t r f t i a r . ^ ^ Two aad ooe-aalf acre* ot good laa* near county hospital. trontlaeT Ht*00***?***" 9!~J*S*l¥*er3*mmil *?«* **m ***• eorrala ter your horse*. All fence* Pa* price, $S,W*. Good terms. Twenty acres food _ YVn price ro.***. Good terms. Nlc* cafe on Reno highway with buildings an* att equipment. Also Mving qwirters in roar. Ia* SS'x 100 feet. Th** place 1* ta a small !Sy£ .—* * ***£*£*** **£**• *#*** ma* *-**e* should mah* a* least 125.0* per day. Pan priee *f*M». 6ood term*. |

•» welt built and new, unfurnished. Tard right »*. FuU prleo tSMO. 12,50* will handle.

saa* ta Vega* Heights, joining present tewnette. M<ul lawMa *• r -.IP *&**!- *f

Ktme two. fence*, tt** vacant.

Forty acres) ef gee* farm land, four miles "from dtp. o* good counts road. Baa two heoaaa on place. One 10 x St; on* U x IS. Also hso gee* This

weB et notes on place. Located ia place It priced fer immediate sale.

aaa* off Banana* ora* f law

Jf*1 ,*--»J-* •** •* *dkth*a* ante court sites avaBabl* tn lata •< ii**, f,0*t £*»***• oa Fremont, i t * fact deep to Charleston Boule Kahlas; troatag* aa two streets. On* sixth intVest tn flowing

—ee.ekial vAwt propert| Is priced a* i

I f

seep I iJattn

No information over phon*.

mil To Buy Or Sell-See Us* 122 North Second Phorie B l

:;fji EVELYN FWLAYS0M. i licensed Real Estate Broker

EASTCHAIU^BION DISTRICT: . Out* suburban cottage, targe lot 73 n 140. Living room, di­

nette, bedroom, kitchen and bathroom. Modern. Ele-tric refrigerator and butane gas stove. Price 33,790. terms.

hK>RTHWE&T OF TOWN CLOSE tN: Forty acres. Good well, wonderful soil Two cottages. Full price $7,600. Some terms.

HUNTRIDGE: Neor Tenth and Ookey: An adorable cottage — s* improved one could not recog-

f ni ie it for a Huntridge house. The owner has added SO-many improvements and attractive features — such aa a lovely front prstio (beautifully railed), a screened in perch in the rear opening from the living room via French door*-This porch i i really delightful for summer-time sleeping. There is a concrete drive leading to a brand new garage. The back yard is completely fenced and equipped with 25 sprinkler heads. Nice law and shrubbery in both front

• and back yards, and some attractive trellis work for climb­ing roses. The house has been freshly painted inside aad out aad is aa neat as a new pin. Additional shelving has been added amd many other nice and most convenient fea­tures have been done to make this a livable as well as most attractive home. This house has hard-wood Mock "Poors, an excellent heating and cooling system (ducked into each room), it also "boasts one of those cute square bath tubs, all crane plumbing, aad the kitchen is really cunning with a corner divided sink, with vegetable spray, and the win­dows looking oat en the other attractive homes on this especially pretty street (one needn't miss a thing the neighbors are doing!) This very livable heme la rapt selling at an inflated price when it is being raftered at the priee of 110,790, for the money i s in the property, PLUS plenty of hard labor and,

a** planning and a real talent for home-making. Exclusive *' listing. Terms may be arranged. Early occupancy. Shewn

by appointment only.

tlt^FREhAmZWT: Seventy-five foot frontage by 253 in depth. $11,250 ($150.00 per front foot). OWI located A steal.

SOUTH SIXTH STOEET: Lovely pre-war home, solidly constructed. Partially fur­nished. Man* attractive features. Two bedrooms, living room, spaeious bathroom, large closet*, a dream of a kitchen, the finest af electric equipment in refrigeration and else-trie range, dock control all the fancy and useful automatie features etc., a large rumpus room, side drive, very nice garage (built just like the house), and a simply lovely yard, the track yard being all fenced. There Is a great deal ef shrwbbery, and very nice lawn, both treat and rear. Conveniently located. One Mock to Fifth street markets and bus. Five minutes drive from down town and this

- hn-ra- is tp one oi the very1 nicest residential sections in town. Better hurry. Frall^etails at office.

T o List With Me Is to Get Action* S18 South Fifth Phstraaa a-«4 — » M

. ¥*Hr z$*i&:. tMve Right l a % •'?$&

-. *mmmtmie5e* {*>****, furnished and unfurnished. Building lots tram $000.60 tor $1,950. Various parts of town.

. Waoidaii fill hut lata* locations on East Fremont. 140 front feet te ever §00 i*eat on Fremont and depth eg 20© to 500. Better see us, this went last long.

Always Other Listings. At Off ice

AUTO COURT

200 feet faafrjagi. aia Boulder highway at W h i t n e y , eight H*th-a east of Las Vegas, depth art 440 teet. Improved wish 12-ranit- coort and owner's 5-room haa-aiuu adobe faBy furraished rerodence. Private wrdl and water system oa property. In­come $000 monthly, equivalent nearly 4Jl% return on total pr-ar*. tfLawA eaah- required: to a a « r d l * l ^ S

iARADfSE VALLEY

OO-ecre rrsrrcb with artesian well, electrically equipped and splendidly furnished modern e-xooaa home with separate 8-rosaa grecat apartment. Only 0 miles from center of town on good road. Price aad terms at office.

RKIC-ffNrTi^LlrbQ^

IS *ots on North 0th and 10th ,**teeals inchidtng four corners. Inside lots 53 -x 1451, corners sUffhtly larger. Available tor itrnrrarediate FBA residential de-VmmtmmmA.

CAMPBHX RfALTY

COMPAIMy*

135 So. fourth St. 1750-PHONES-1752

V e g a Realty Gompany ^ Listings Solicited

Twtaty mrrta

800 feet Ifrigawa-f

South 5th street. $45,000, terms, near SI Rancho Vegas. i*j$&

For rent: .three store tafldSngs IS x 80 on Sou*b*s Main, Long taraa leaaa. jEMf. Wffir'--Several g*ad iratwra* ntrsyeit"**

Licensed Real Estate Broker < |V*

;'Por Sotiaiaetory Ssarvice—Iiat With U«*

114 Ifarrtai 4th F*ea* 1018

'Forpale^M Gov rninent Surplus Properly

At Rheem iVeangttocrunng Compony l^^fe^ HtWrti tsar*, Hevotia

Sealed bids arse reotrasted on v a r i o u s ' lots of abrasive wheels, electric rr*^teh*s, lamps, arte, catting oils, lacquure asad' paints, cleaning compounds, air motors, tool steel, e t c Bids wiB ae tetiaved «p to 2:0© p, art. December S, 1845. *aW*ria> raaar 1st.JaWfr|rtt*dat Itlliawi ItTanafactTging Cntn-pany Waaatwai1., l»ender^*tv Nevada.

Sales Catalogues ntay he obtained by mail from Rheem Manufaeturigi Compaoty S a k s Ottlear,' P. O. Boa 2044, Las Veaisv liarrmda *r tf^phorse Magnesium 1040, or tga): rrnrrtrsaiiag B. .J. Srurople or L A Stranahan, Plant Oaare*' ance Section, tslerflherat Hcraptct Ffll, last Angeles. -

lat addition to t t e atowe* "«te have, open for t t e best price elritatnabls- plant otmattng supplies, Waning eonrpountlB. prnnts, cap aaat aastet stittwr^ aafety twitches, ctrrcuit br-rakerrt, copper hihiTsg, ball bearings, abrasive ii1iaaf¥ globe valves, alectrie and air motors and other •sine'ry • Mtarras. S s ^ * ^ - 'atA-tm-

fatgeTej*-/, i * - -1"

, . * Sunday, November 25, 1945 J 4 — — - | — , , .«; | sz i * .

13—Real Estate for Sale B T owner, 17,950. Prewar home, t

bedrooms, completely furnished, all e lectric Front yard fenced, lots of shade. Five minutes walk from Aid and Fremont. For appointment call 1461-J. ni3-29

15—Merchandise Clothing

13-A—Real Estate Wntd, MUST have a Mayfair home before

the 1st at December' if possible. Write me at'one*4 Review-Journal,

—Mm -f*fc"5"frr —. ^JW?•***•*. WOULD like a three bedroom heme

Have tb* cash. Review-Journal, Box SOS. nlO-tf

13-B—Bus. Opportunities PARTIES interested ln long time

lease commercial property on Sth near Fremont, 160 x 140, phone 173

Wil l Invest Up to

| $5,000f In Good Deal.

What Have You? Box 384, Review-Journal

nl-tf at^*m0^mtwe*+t*^***i*m*e^m*^^*m*mmim*i*mwe*mwme**m0mw*em0aa

13-C—Leases CHOICES spot for drive-in or night

club. Intersection two main arter­ies. Highest tr*ff4* count Las Ve-fas. Long term for percentage. Box

85, Revlew-Joarnaw^KCv a30-tl

14—Wanted USED dresses and coats, state 40 and

42, and bedding. Had everything burned. In car* of 213 Lewis av

• enue. ,-.'• n l l -27

FUR seal coat. Reasonable price, else 12, like new. 1121 Norman. n23-27

FOR these chilly mornings a house coat for 19.98. 100% wool suits and coat* $24.98. Purse*, special $1.78. Fanny's, 211 Fremont. : n l - t f

.Furniture -2*.

SUITS SPORT COATS

UNREDEEMED Very reasonable. These suits are good and hav* been cleaned and

pressed. »y*:& SQUARE DEAL LOAN W S

109 South mfirstSy^''-t saf*^ nl«-dlS

Electrical Service

ELECTRICAL CONTRACTING

k&m MOTOR REPAIRING and WINDING

*Los Vegas Electric Co.. 1009 So. Main Phone 450 "40 Years Electrical Experience

"At ToW Serrt***?^"

JiSectric Heaters Serviced Luce & Goodfellow, Inc. 116 So. Snd St. Phone 35S

WILL buy or lease service station or auto court. 207Vt South 9th.

afi-a*

Building Materials

WHITE'S FLOOR SERVICE

Laying -Cleaning

Sanding — Finishing - Waxing — Polishing

I409W Phone 1409W

CONCRETE BLOCKS GRAVEL

:_ ^ S A N D v

Heavy trucks and bulldozers tot rent with or without op­erators.

Excavating of basements and leveling of lots and building sites.

LAWN MATERIALS AVAILABLE

PURDY'S GRAVEL and

BLOCK PLANT 3 miles south on highway 91

Day Phone 1 r'4*i;-Night Phone t'Wly.

SIMPSON & BARGEELD

House and Roof Painting Contractors

•''••*'•$* FREE ESTIMATES •

PHONE 1916-W VKK? o25-n25

^llurniture af&teS Overloaded

Bedsprings, mattresses, liv­ing room sets, unpainted chests of drawers, chaises, breakfast sets, atovt»'WMm dressers.

¥5 MiacelleWfous

IVO walk-in ice boxes. Like new. sise 10 x I t and t x 18. Hams Jen­sen, General Delivery, Tonopah, Nevada. nl7-24

1001 NEW and USED j f r f ic les

Las VegasllJevV and

Used Furniture Mart 1123 Fremont Phone 1823

TRADE-In specials. All low price* Five piece dinette set, drop leaf table, 4 chairs. Easy chair with footstool, innerspring. Six piece dining room set with buffet. Occa­sional chair. Bed divan with chair, $25.00. Various light wood coffee

• tables — glass torn, $6.00 each. Easy terms. Sandall and Davis Company 227 North Sth Street, phone 319.

ARMLESS Bed Divans. FuU bed size. In Monterey color*. Entirely- inner-spring construction, $64.00. Majceg comfortable sofa or bed and is very attractive in i ts styling. Term*. Sandall and Davis company, 227 North Hit Street, shone 319.

Building Materials

LET US DO YOUR Cement Work Patios

•Barbecue Pits Block Pence*

Only Stocfcitt Town

Electrical Specials

49 gallon double element water heaters _.....,., . $129.50

30 gallon water heaters .... $99,50 Electric Ranges ..... _ :.$99.25 Wessick Heaters .... $9.95 and up Westinghouse Water Coolers. 20 and 30 cubic foot refrigerators Radio and Refrigerators Serv­

iced.- . }'-'-':y^i:'i' Wiring — Fixtures — Appliances

Nevada Electric Co. ^'-;•, Tom Williams

Since 1929 EASY TERMS

REFRIGERATION, commercial only. New and used equipment. Ammonia service, 24 hour day. 2470-M, night Basic 1137. Heat Engineering, 122S South Main. ty*::-: n20-26

FOUR 12th.

rooms furniture. 510 North n20-24

CRTSTAL like wax and all house­hold products to beautify your home the cheap and easy way. El Portal Stor* in theatre building.

! SiKS ' n9-tf.

Guns GUNS. Bought, sold and exchanged.

Square Deal Loan, 109 South First. nl6-dl6

Jewelry D I A M O N D S

Bought — Sold — Exchanged SQUARE DEAL LOAN

109 South First , nl«-d!6

Miscellaneous

flo-Flame O f t e n

A 3-in-l Protection Against

Fire-Termites Wood Decay

Nevada No-flame Company 209 So, 3rd Phone 2838

300'amp. factory* built Lincoln port­able welders, four months' to two years old. Recond. and guar. $800.00 to $794.00. 3066 American Avenue,

• Long Beach, California. nl9-dlg

Simulated

G#S! SUITCASES!

||§1GRIPS! I i All Sizes-All Prices

$3.50 to $16.95

Rose Jewelry Company THE WORKING MAN'S STORE

124 North First n20-2S

Miscellaneous

Highest Prices j f | : PaidjgL

For late -model salvage and used automobiles.

See Us Before You Sell

l l t ^ ^ A u t o Parts g^s AND METALS INC.

N S w -NSTtftt. Ma&i*

One C^I1or|fe^ Glass Jugs

^ ^ i l u i n d r e d 412 A

McQUAT Main -

SUPPLY Phone 34

nlt-22

\6— Bus. Service, con**. Blow SandT

Fertilizer — Complete Lawns Tom Stewart

281S — Phones — 273J '_%_%. 1505 Ogden .

Sand and Fertilizer Lawns Planted

j. General Hauling PH. 821 1038 FRANKLIN AVE.

Repair Service Call Us For An Estimate

-When Building or Repairing

Vegas Brick and Tile Co, General Contractors ftfe* 317 South 5th Street

Phone 991 BRIGK CONTRACTOR. All t y p e s

brick and block work. Ed B. Tay­lor, 44 Ely street, North Las Ve­ga*. Phone 1666. n l - t f

General Forging and Welding Of All Metals

f s ^ . f r e * t t * - f * o p * ' - latt Sooth First

Art tc Ivan - Las Vegas, Nev.

vTSIflOVIX NEW MODERN STORE

AT

1.17 North 3rd Phone 787

ALBRIGHT** Business Machine

ELECTRIC -run*, $75.00, ,212 South! rifJI-24

MacMHIaj£~

Ring-Free Mcm.OiT

RED m>tv*WBAL COMPANY Distributors

"Prompt Delivery Service-* » -^^.•^hrana-ierr^.-^-^-^-

Fuel

F U E L O I L * Western

Heating & Venti lating Co 710 So. Main St *~ Phone 106

Furniture

Vegas Brick and Tile Co, General Contractor* 317 Sooth Sth Street

Phon* (81

t i$nsi t Mixed

Concrete

Plaster Sand

Concrete Blocks

Building Materials

Southern Nevada ,

IndustrieSjllltd. Main & Charleston Ph. 2222

V A C U U M C L £ > W E R S

I**ic5rw Available

Immediate Delivery

Carpet- Furniture Cleaning

All Work Guaranteed Call •

Phone 1045 1017 South Main

DINING room table and four chairs. Chest of drawers. 1928 Jefferson, North Las Vegaa. C, A. Brown.

' n21-24 FURNITURE FOR SALE. Call after

G p. ra. 1016 South 2nd street. ntlNH THIRTT Chrome chairs, rounded

backs. Extra sturdy construction. Seven cocktail tables. Mica tops, aluminum pedestal*. Bold separate­ly or by group*. All new. Sandall •Od Davis Company, 227 North Sth Street. Phon* SIS.

REFRIGERATOR, metal bedntead, I swing* , mattress. Piano. 1119 Fran-

HilaWWWifcSysEJ fS^^Ssf. lM*-* ' * '

H$rcfrT(>Get Items are

Easy-To-Get Here l Weather Stripping for doors and windows ...... ..% .35 Up Schlage locks for! all doors .... ,..._.. .™ m 2.25' Up Brick Saws — metal **jjj<****'' j E^r^flig^f-"f^M'" 2.55 Ea. Paint brushes — all ri*^^l?^^f'^f'-.?^*u'"v " JtO Up Bamboo Leaf Rakes '•;ljl'.I% i' : 'uii »'r': .. . T ••*$ '" Garden Hose 3/8" - - 3/4" •— per 50 foot...__.......:_... 4.50 Up w*ndow 'ist^e*aSp^-"-«'~"" i ! •--—. S IP **•'

JfciWitIta|i-- ,*yt-'c mjaprtm '.'W? ' ^a | |m-• -;-ri ~ ~ UM-Up--. Automatic door closers •• •• -,--ffi|iT-i »._™_«_.$ 1.2S Up Eighty different sizes nails — per pound ..._„. .08 Up Floor wax sjifMM?' •- ™™~... .58 Up

. linseed oil m any quantity .„.„,. _ .25 Up Wire Netting — 1 foot to 6 foot high „.-_, .$ .02% Up Step Ladders — 2 feet to 10 feet high ^ g g 1.80 Up Garbage Cans — 5 gallons ^.;J.iji..»;——— » —— 1.35

ittfmla&-Taet~l\m^^ ~-~-mm~m~—" ^M VP Ahimjnum Paint — all •*'»»» -ir-.,m**»;-ii-|" ati n-t Alcohol — any quantity you want -~.~.~.-.^™™... ||fi»15 Up Night Latches , mf:jjj_jkf»-' ' • •> . ' ' fg Im Padlocks — large assortment — no limit —..———.... .35 Up Show Cardlward—28**x4jr .. «^,„n^-^» M Ea, Roll roofing paper—-medium weight •••„•„.•.„,,„•... "125 Ea, Rubber floor mate m It Inches x 28 inches iv-M"' 2.49 Ea. Medicine cabinets — 18 x 26 inch mirror ., ..jjii i; • 8.50 Ea. Soot remover for oil stoves (Red Devil) 12 ox. „—- .CilrtO Es. Binder twine, large 4*14 pound ball _.„„... „,.„, 1.00 Ea. Chain — small sizes to *A inch. Per foot mmm.—,m.~~. .05 Up Wheelbarrows —> metal tray and legs —,. .............. 12.60 Up

Buy Now - No Delay - No Waiting E i VON TOBEL UMBER CO,

317 South First S t r e e t l ^ Phone 47

Furniture FlasHes DUNC*#r|.PMYFE drop-leaf a r i l : exten­sion table P ^ p f e i i f 5 r 1 ; ^ i ^ r s ^ 9 S ^ Extra chairs, each ...... ..$10.00

- * . 7 piece dining suites, hardwood, table has two extension leaves. Table top measures 5'/2 feet long with leaves, 4 feet 3 inches without leaves , ^ w „ . ; . „ . . $85.00 Just arrived, new assortment of glass top cocktail tables, lamp and end tables, l ight or dork wood. Cocktail tables come in ;|rL!|K# or ofelong shapes, $18.75 - $22.00 Lamp tables .......S.i^SiSJ5 q n x J I ^ O O tm t a b l e ^ ^ S ^ * ! 5 . 2 5 ' « * $ 2 0 2-> CHROME DINETTES: We just have two. One red linen bakalite table top and red leatherette upholstered chairs. 5 piece

mm $64.50 , One ivory linen bakalite table top and

ivory leatherette upholstered chairs. Cen­ter chrome base to table. 5 pc. set $64.50

• ^ / . BOOKCASES S I ; v V Maple, walrrut and mahogany. 24, 30 and 36 inch widths, Three ami four shelves. 36 and 47 inchestall , | |- .$ 14.00 to $26.25

-™^^^*MPS -^^y^t 3-way torch lamps. Sturdy heavy bases, $20.00—trimmed In onyx .„.....,.„$28.00 3-way floor Ir arnps with linen parchment shades, oi l metal bases, sturdy, \^.$16^t%y

3-way flooCiamps with silk shades, t r i # " med with ruffle, bronze base trimmed with onyx -..-.. ......^^^...J^t.OO

Cucite table lamps with silk shades $20\00~" Class base table lamps, extra tall $20.00 China base table lamps, hand painted and priced .at ..-.£*. -* ra^, . . . . .$15.50

Lycite vanity lamps with china dolls $8.50 Maple novelty bridge floor lamps, com*

; bination end table and lonri j |^^fE$l 2.0Q •

Sandall & Davis Co. 227 North f i f t h Phon* t M

M U S I C A !

——---Hod-Yeti ThCrljpht of a j jr iono for Xmas?

We have taken from our stock of pianos the best action and finest toned instru­ments to be ref inished and completely re­conditioned. -These pianos look like new and perform like new**' You can purchase one of these pianos from $60 to $120 DOWN and balance on monthfy payments. A t tfieJ^SjBr*^r**e Have such fine pianos as Remington, Baldwin, Culbransen, Bell

pp ind Compar*r^g : ^ ^ S

A small deposit will hold your piano unti l I p l f l Christmas.

Sandall 6" Davis Go. 227^ Hortfo Fifth Phone* 119

moved from 210-212 North 3rd. Earl Honrath, phone 679 or 239. '• n20-tf

A gift appreciated for many months. Subscriptions taken tor all publica­tions. Special gift rates for Fortune, Esquire, U f a l k p o k ^ Time; Coronet. Call 1857-J alter t p. an, tUS-SS

ELECTRIC heater*, h o t plates, fluorescent lights, steel cloth** line poles. 1020 Fremont. ;iW*- n l - U

W-M Harley Davidson motorcycle. Extras. 1811 Bast Stewart n2S-27

INNER spring mattress. 100 pound ice box. t l ? Sooth 6th. . - n23-27

WASHING machine. Good condition 317 A South 1st. n23-26

Collections Investigations Mimeographing .

Vegas Credit Bureau 107 Fremont Phone 272

Shell Stove Oil - Diesel Fuel

%i*.m Furnace Oli RED DEVIt, OIL CO.

Phone 1817 ' Sat* Martin, Rep.

TWO gentle saddle horses and two •addles. Neveda Electric. o l - t f

•mrm^-^ytBal, SACRIfKaB WalK-in-cooler — Reach-in re­frigerator — Beer box — Double duty neat caa* — complete re­frigeration. Scales — cash regis-

. ter, etc. 433 North Hath, Phon* t i t . . nlj>-tt

Musical Instruments

A t Your Service Skilled mechanics Up-to-date equipment Time-saving special tools Modern paint shop Genuine Chevrolet "parts 3ody andrfcndcr wortr — Wheel, aligning Wheel balancing

Community Chevrolet Co. 115 So. Main St Phone 160

CUSTOM BUILT SEAT COVERS AUTO- TOPS

Lawson Tr im Shop 2300 E. Charleston Ptione 1114-R

17—Used C o n '36 Packard £<*dkn, 947S.09. 1238 South'

Main. Phone ISlaVSfgti^ n24-27 LINCOLN Zephyi sedan, 1941. Me­

chanically A - l . Clean. Good rubber. Radio, heater. Cell Captain Barnes, army air base, extension 359. Writ* box 787; n23-2«

'88 Studebaker Commander coupe, SIM Baltimore. n21-24

New G. M. C. Trucks ^SpfUl Sizes) Now Available

With ODT Priority Releases

GASIMiF S 107-109 North Main

18-A-r-Trailers Wanted

Trailers 10 Are you trailer?

shopping for a

1941 Pontiaa t sedan 1940 Studebaker Champion t-door 1937 Oldsmobile sedan 1837 Pontiac S AJW ••

•\*P Willys 4-door 1936 Ford 2-door 1935 Chevpolet panel

700 E. Fremont Phone 2736

17-A—Used Cars Wanted *

You Always Get.

Top Prices On All Models

Oldham & Wagner Motor Co.

Phone 1252 623 Fremont S i

Be Careless Be Careful .

And Walk . And Ride

90% of gear and bearing failura in all motor cars is caused by carelessness and ne**l«Tci >-**.#;£

Use Our Lubrication And Inspection Servke

C. C. McDaniel ' Direct Dealer for

CHRYSLER - PMrMOOTH

132 Ne. First Phone 739

120 base accordlan, titul instrument.

Soprani, a beau-Leather lu BRage

Davis case. Terras, Sandall and Company, 227 N o r t h t t h Street, phone 319.

MUSICAL instruments. Bought, sold and exchanged. Square Deal Loan, 1*9 Sooth First. nl6-dl6

15-A—Stocks, Pets, Pltry.

Birds

Keys - Blueprints Photostats

Complete Stationary {Supplies Remington - Rand Distributor

Carter & Beville 402 So. 2nd Phone 166S-J

CANARIES. Good singers. 1B05 South 11th. nl6-dl6

Dogs and Cmte BEAUTIFUL two months old S h e p ­

herd puppies. tll-H South Main. . ntt-17

REOISTERED Doberman pups. Phon* 404, Hunter.

Pincher n20-2?

REGISTERED A. K. C. Springer Spaniel pups. 1850 Tale street, North Las Vegaa,. Nevada. nl4-M

Poultry YOUNG roasters and fryers. Cannon

Poultry, 1211 Bonanza Road, n l t - t f

1 *S—Business Service Beauty Parlors

Ruby Ptmental, Proprietor of the MAYFAIR BEAUTY SHOP

Announoe* That Her Beauty Shop TS N O W OPEN

Phone 2370 Tvii-' 1810 Fremont ni l -di l l

Goin' OtM Way? STOP tn

9®"JV»*That hovei%V3*tm

JN^MAliltNT Polly Jean Beauty Shop 223 Fremont " Phone 653

Building

^ K f l | t u r e Plans' *^^ lLet VA*M

^ Build-I Your Home OR Business

L. V. MAINTENANC1 CO. General Contractor* Ph. 1G71-R

Just Arrived! Carload Shipment of

Large Commercial

Fuel Oil Hetftetsr

Equipped With . ,%^. Circulating Fans

Bumbalow Heating & Cooling Co.

1121 Fremont — Phone 1525

Comes The RevolulWr

Madman Pizinqer

Do you *W"ff whet you should pay for a used trailer, and what to expect in tha trailer of tiie very near fu­ture?

Regardless of w h e n and where you expect to buy your trailer — gladly wilt wa furnish you with trailer "*p*rts. •'yjnfc'y-^^TM3^WJ&

We are authorized dealers for Wester aft and Mainline. If and when a better trailer is made we will have i t

Wood TrailetSoles 9th & Fremont Phone ttm*!

BARGAIN! Schult deluxe trailer coach. WHS consider small trailer. I l l Coolidge avenue and South Snd,

nl9-2t WELDING, arc and acetylene, over­

load springs trailer hitches made to order. Bud Tanner, 601 South 6th. Phone 1198. nl-tf

Directory Professional

DR. JOfflf A. WADKINS

OSTEOPATH PHYSICIAN & SURGEON

No. 4th ft Ogden Phone 1138

threatens to revolution-ize the. used car bus­iness! V '——••••-r-"*-:i~

While doing. 40 knots (nuts to you) atf hour he spins all over the lot throwing a # a y that green folding irtorsM^J,-

If you t f ^ i catch he'll give you—

him

lore much for your old car!- .

Mattress Renovating Repairing

ROYAL MATTRESS CO. 319 So. Main Phone 2740

Insurance AJ? OSTRICH COVERS ONLY WS HEAD. Don't be an ostrich and have only partial protection. Tour

. home, its contents and your' car are your most treasured posses­sions. Let as protect them. See Rex Jarrett, 208 South - Third. Phon*

-tm. • INSURANCE OF ALL KINDS

Capital Stock Companies and • Members Board ot" Fire Underwriters

All Adjustments made locally. ?mm¥': JA*3K H E M P H T W 1*SfjS

Sal Sagev Hotel Phone 7*0 or 128

Nurseries*

O. A.

BLOW SAND . Fertilizer Swinford, Phone 1160-M

Eos 11 a nd H e i gh ts Nurse r § |

Shrubs for Early Fall t ^ f j ^P • Planting

^I^0Y*AJ^^VY7^T^

I I I j Phone 1390-J ••'•

Whotlt^kes We Have!

To give your tires added life. Stop by and see how thor­

oughly we do J§|

Recaps TEfWEligp

400 North Main Phone 979

Too, he'll sell you a new one ! "y ""•

Too, he's jur lpbo, too! !

No nrteitter what the deal is he'll stand for i t

. . . that's because he can't sit down—for, you see, his hips they're made of glass!

Madmarf Pfeii^per

Open Seven Days a Week Open Evenings -fife

508-20 — Fremont — 1700-20 1152 —- Phones — 2730

DR. EARL H. rtEED-Physician • Surgeon - Osteopath

Clark Building 16 Fremont — Phone 1878

DR. WALTER G. PICO CHIROPRACTOR

L u Vegas, Nevada Oelkln Bulldine-^W'one 802-30S-4

" ^ — -Msv*. *|«»oliilinant*——«***-

DR. HERBERT M. DIXON OPTOMtTrBIST EYES EXAMINED

I FI

22S

GLASSES f l T T E D Broken Lan*** Duplicated

Fremont Street — Phon*

DR. H. L. BOWERS Oin'OMETRIST

Analytical Examination 1SS South Fifth fat. Phon* t*]t

Dr. Wolter_Fisk OPTOMETRIST

4MV* Fremont — tit* S P^M PhoMlrao '...'

Boulder City -*.^f WJSt?A. M. 550 California Phone 84

HERBERT If. GAMBILL

Attorney and V-'V.-Connselor at Law

William* Bldg. Ph*n* 128

128 S. Snd St. La* V«sa*. N*v*d*

C D. BREEZE -- ATTORNEy-AT-LAW 109 SOUTH THIRD ST.

Chamber of Commerce Bldg. PHONES

- JOE H U F F P R t t m : ATTORNEY -AT-LAW%^-

Hour* tiOO to 12 — ISO t * 6:00

Room 14 Delkin Bldg. SB Fremont - iM% Phone SS

Storage and Transfer. TransKr. ' Storas*

.:y..;CB|Unat \'-mmi*M^^m>::-mWe***B -L. V. TRANSFER A STORAGE • Yt***-\tY?*8&BI& *t£ So. Main

m&mm-mirmiWMiSmi SK^ats-tt

Greitingm Baggage T i t r l i ^ r - l i e

l®tM^*'**"iPTTLE3*eW8 :'MM Blu* Cab Co. - •' •**«g*& Phone tie*

€ALI22 : For 'Jpai and short distance -

hauling and transfer

Atlas Transf e r a nd e^^^fe&rage^^Ki^' *M WM- 118 South Fourth -

r ^ C A R i ^ A N T E D FOR CASH . - ^ ^

We -will buy your equity and. pay off -balance, any model.

700 E. Fremont Phone 2736

18-A—Trailers Wonted

We invite you to Inspect these fine trailers. "Author­ised dealer for the following

coaches.

Pon American , i f^ncsterbl l f 'i

^ '^ inspvel i te - CI ider

_^^^^*lm_m^SM Also good used trailers, AH

can be bought on terms. S c o t ^ ^ r O t o Shop & Lot

41? ». Main .t^',«"»*ne tett-Sf-i

Seward p. Parks ATTORNEY-AT-LAW

%1y\ Las Vegas, Nevada Phone US MS Fremont 8treet

C. Norman Cornwall Af?'WIW»-AT<4raT^j^^

Clark BuiMinf^E4 Fremont. St

Telephone 2211

William G. Ruymann ATTORNEY-AT-LAW

'. Suite 1, Grand Hotel %-V 219 Fremont

Bus: I H PHONES Res: M l

Williams Nursery Evergreens - Shrubs

Fresh from Coast Trees abundant

- Call Vt to filiiii KalSfflj DPT Tour Horn*

i We guarante* result*

1410 So. Sth ;pPhone'857-B -

« T R E E S Topped and Removed

HI - FREE ES-rrsjATES Incensed and Insured Truck Crane Service

0m- M. Davidson 1820 Nortii Fifth Phone 29-R

T^istiytive Pict u res Ttnest Reproductions of Both Old and Modern Masters

Mezzotlfits

Varied Selections of Subjects

^ p Z®pt> Berntferant & l ^ m k r o i ^

Veterinarians Hours 10-12-4:00 to 6:00

i 2550 East, Chsrlfwton BQulevard -1 Phone 2494

209 Fremont Phon* 876-J

y0MttSh " Landscape Portraits

Religious and Juvenile -New York Graphic Society Copyrights

1EEC1ANBISE MAIT

MAGNOLIA COMPANY OPENS NEW TEXAS OIL FIELD

FORT WORTH, Texas — Mag­nolia Petrolium Co. and associ­ates have opened a new gas dis­tillate field in Willacy county in tha Rio Grande Valley oil prov­ince. Their Geis No. 1 was com­pleted to-flow 75 barrels of high gravity distillate and a large gas flow from a depth ol 8950 to 9000 feet. Tha new well is 4000 feet from the nearest producer'which was brought in by the same op­erators at 10,040 feet.

' • o §

The largest flesh-eating land animals the world has -ever known were the tyrannosaurs, er "tyrant reptiles," which stand about 19 feet high

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * - » » * * * » ^

* DOfffCHlM YOUr#LrmJsiTH#SUNDAl' AGE WANT ADS' Las Vegas Age TOUR SUNDAY PAPtW

CLASSlft*m ADVERTISING RATES Minimum Charge 50e The La* Vegas Age will not be

responsible for more than one incorrect insertion of any rtdver tlnement - Cancellation anil classified deadline Friday 8 p m .

No refund on any classified ad except to casaa wh*m'i**M bas been omltted.

1 The Las Vegas Age is publiahard •very Sunday.

Tha ott* par Issue tc par arotA ifPi Churehe* ttatet* Wartaarla* r-uhHo Minnas * t *M*t* Wanted T* Rent Parsons'* Loan* Le* * * * Last mm WemrnP Help Wantee — Mat* Help Want** — Female Situation Want-*) — Mat* •aim*U**i "wanted — f*m*la Rett a-**t* r**r a*r* R**i estate Want** AutemeOiie* aaat Repair* •uainee* Olrectary Serv tte Directory M Iscellaaeou* Want** Te amp W*n« T* Sen Lawns an* Oar**-** TrsnsnorteUen Rrof*«al<in»l Directory

C4.AIMS AGAINST THB CrTY OF U N VSOAS FOR THE ttcweiiT

•ommcramaa, witt '-&& Adams. C. •V.. salary ...Jt 90 10 Allen, Franklin, salary 235.80 Baggett, W.C^«*Utry „ _ _ _ 183i40 Barnum, Robert, salary „™.- 224.0» Baakin, R, T„ salary . 80.10 Bates, Walter B „ salary _™ 96.80 Bearden, rMtt, salary . .*. 128.60 Beatty, Alio, salary „..„.._,_. 240.80 Bessent, -Clarice, aalary . .120.20 Bessent, Claude, salary „ _ _ 245.00 Bishop, Nelson, salary .. 382.40 Black, J. Parley, salary ..JL.., OtlStS Bishop, R. H., salary m~m~~ 39.60 Blad, A. Q., salary : ..;.: ISSOt Bondley,• George, salary .__. 201.20 Borders, Alva, salary -.. ..—_.—273-.4U Marion, Boyovick, salary . . .—1W.»0 Brainier, Donald, salary . .178.20 rrrsmsat; j iL V . -»to»y ~a>.- «m tu Brenner, t t . 3 ^ salary -::17S.20 Bre-Wv Irraa, salary :.:. . 116:80 Brink, A. H., salary * 180.2* Brown. Sarah, salary ... 136.80 Brown, ETx.., sahwy i ., 332,4* Bule, C. E., salary ..__ -— \ 11J;4*J Bunker, Kendall, salary — l»7.»o Bttrdene, Edfar, -salary 180,20 Burner, Bernard, salary .._._ 40.80 Callahan, tm E„ salary .......... 173. Tt Gamble, CJ»arle$, salary 157.00 Carter, Dorothy, salary ...._„. 29.35 Case, Harold, salary mm-,, 880,80 Chambers, C,. salary .&A*,-. SSM Christen-en, w „ salary —.. TtSiSt Clark, A. B., salary —-»-7 .v*33.3* Clark. C, R>, salary .....,-^s,™1 _ 4 k S I 2

Church et

- . J DAN O* ARC CATUOUC CHURCH

US Bout, Second street Man. John J Lambe, Pastor. twr: Donald V Car ody _m_ ttBt*** .•'_ iifl^-,-tj ttay. H ubtrl S Bu*l, a*sHt»nt,. Masses: Sunday*. 6:30. 8:00,

11:00 and 12:00. Weel. day masses, 1:311 a. m. Devotions: Sunday and T u e s d a y

e-enlna* and tit* Fridaj. 7:80. a83-Oe>r_ 1

Admlnts-

»:00.

ASSEMBLY Of QOD CHURCH . **C" and Washing-ton, La* Vegas.

Sunday—».45 a.m., 11 a.m.. 7:10 p.m uesdays an* Thursdays — 7"80 p.m

John V. Green, pastor SM-U

Unions fCNTEKNATIONAi- Hod C » r r t a r s .

Building and Common Laborer* of America No. 172 meet* Snd and tth Mondays of each month over frontier Club. 3 :W ,).. m, 'B. -A. Guy B. Murphy Phon* 847

-M

Florist.

«rf*"|.«3*W 'mV'mtmmi*'*s*t if**** 1 For- Aapccardons

Peggy Kane** Flower Shop

He, Phone SSS •80-tf

P L A N T S In Novelty Containers

LAS VEGAS FLORISTS 83* Sooth TWro ftt. — Phoa* 388

;J|^Saoiaty Solawri J {

Polly-Jean Beauty Shop 223 Fremont Phon* 653

Come in and try our new

•-^A^IIIMS -M Mew Line of Cosmetic*

a-M-u

Wanted

CLEAK RAGS I ANTEi

Pay up to 15 cents lb. Las^egas Evening

"Review-Journal Office

CL©SE IN

BICYCLES NECESSARY

APPLY

BUD wom^Y Reylcw-JoDrnal CHILDREN'S BOOKS

Now a complete «• * or book* tta children of all age* ts avail­able. Price* from 88 wnts to 12.60

f^BRIGHTS 12* South Second St. aSO-tt

F U E L O I L Western

Heating & Ventilating Co. TW So. Main St. - Phone IM

Cleveland, ,., salary Click, Calvin, salary. ; Comes, P. S., salary ..........mm Cooper, Ardis, salary .....—— Cooper, B., salary „».....„_ Cornwall, C. Norman, salary Corradettl, A., salary — E Coy, Joseph, sataty —— Cragtin, E. W., salary .......... Cripe, X . E., salary .-&_ Crisp, B. K., • salary . . „ „ — ~ Dimock, Shirley, salary ....— Dittman, B. M., salary ... . Dear, Ralph, salary „ Doyle, .P. -M„ salary m.~m, Dudley, Florence, salary —. Eaton, F. M., salary .... Fagan, w . H„ salary ..-._--Farnsworth, W, A., salary s. Pennessy, T . "E., salary .......... Piles, IJ. T„ salary ......„.__. Frouboe*, A. C , aalary ~_._ Ckircia, Steve, salar)- ,™.„.„ Gibson, R. C . salary ,„._.^-aiknore, 0 . M., aalary _.„...„• Godbold, R., salary „.... Good, B. T„ salary :.._ Gordon, D., salary .____»__„_ Graason, A. salary _.__. . -_ Gwinn, J. G., salary _..;'" H aid land. K., salary — „ _ — Hall, Win., salary . . . . . . . Kandlon, B. J., salary . . Hardin, James, salary -...._. Harris, A. J., salary Haynle, D., aalat*y.-,:,^,, „, .. Hennessy, M. J., salary . .„. Henry, Caldwell,, salary Hernandez, R., salary ....,.._. Horner, Luther, salary Hunt, C , salary .mm-..-m Irick, S. W., salary . ..... Jones, Horace, salary .„.„, , Keenan, I*. J„ salary , ,,„. K«HBT; K. •«;,-;• •imirrty. ;..,.„. Kennedy, A,, -salary . ^. Kennedy, D. H , salary _ _ _ Kttt, - G. A., salary ..............._ Knox, H. G., salary i ^ Laird, H. A., salary Laub, C. E., salary ........ Leavitt, E. S., salary ... Leavitt, M. E., salary Leavitt. Z. R., salary ,—........ Llsiewski, A. T., salary .,...„_ Litchfield, J. O.. salary ......... Love, "J. tm, salary ,^.-Mac Do nnell, Ananis, salary -McAllister, Hug-h, salary _ 'McDonald, Louise, salary _ McKinster, Reba, salary •-..— Maufas, 'A. C aalary ,,.,-,, Maxwell, G. JP., "salary ;.- • Merrill, J. W., salary ,, Mohr, R. W., salary —.....„.-« Morling-, -Or J., salary J....-..; -Morrison, C. F„ salary „ _ _ . •Musser, G., salary — Nay, atari, aalary ...._.__.._._ t tey, James, salary ......_._.._ Nay, Ves, salary -foj,". Nelson, R. M.,- salary ....;.„._ Odett, Y.M., salary . _ _ Oglesby, M. C , salary ...__.. Painter, Lauralne, salary „.. Palace, J. J., salary .._ Parrlsh, R. K., salary . . .__ , Bartie, -P. C, -salary « ;_«, Patterson, C , salary .........._ Peabody, FF. H., salary ._...__ Pearce, Junle. salary . , ,-,„.. Pearson, Ernest, salary — Peirce, C. L., salary ..„ Per**, Max, salary ....._.» Perkins, -A. M., salary — _ . Petrie, C. G., aalary Pettis , C. L., jialarV —.—...„-

tPlne, Fred, salary ................ fPiumroer, Roy, salary — — fWunkett, A . M., salary . . _ . _ Potter, Nephl, salary „..^„_

iPotter, W. 'W„ salary _ _ — Powell. -A., salary ._..—_ Proffitt, Jeanne, salary —-Pullum, Ike, salary ......-......_ Pullum, Isaac, aalary — Rachtell, J. E., salary Rambo, G. E., salary _ - . Reed, Helen Scott, salary Rhea, I. W., salary .... — Rhode*, JR., salary . . „ . „ — « . Rlttenfcouse, G. P., salary „ Romans, B., salary — Rushton, M., salary ...~.....— San tongue, K., salary — — Sargent, • C. C , salary — — , Sehmutzer, R. C , salary m Schofield, D. K., salary . _ _ „ S c o t t George, salary .„^-^J,~-Seeley, J. H., salary _ „ - . . _ _ Shannon, G., salary .—~ Simpson," Lee, --salary- a s s — Slark, O. U , salary ......... Sloan, - C , :H., aalair -..__...-. Southerlahd, C , -salary Sprague. O. ML, salary ._:— Stark, w . , salary -r.t....... Stewart, S. U., salary ..____ Strasser, A. L., salary Thompson, Thompson Tisdial, C.', Tomlinson, K. H., salary Tracy, G. J... salary ............. Treem, G. O;, salary a - « . Trehane, D. S;, salary .: Trelease, W. H., salary -. Tuckness, D., salary .-t...... Velasques, A., salary . Visor, M. E., salary .s. ;:. Walden, Clemori, salary ... Walker, L., salary ._, Walker, Luther, salary Wallace, H. -W.,. salary ". Walrath, JU. B., salary Walsh, P. R., salary Wasson, H., salary; Watts , W., salary . ... Welch, M; B., salary Wells, A. B , -salary ......... Wile, A. E . . salary .... , Wilkeraon. L. J P . , salary „ William, J. M., salary - i. Williams', J. R„ salary . „ Wilson. JL; salary Wbodall, G. E , salary ,-..--'3 Woodard. Wiley, salary Woods, C . salary .,,:.: Woof ter, B . T., salary Young, .Jacob, sa la iy „.— Voting, James, salary

m lie.te tt*M

T«.40 201.20 2S7.10

9C.S0 171.7A 108.60

92.97 lSd.JO 14H.60 IttM 124.09 M4.00 128.69 294.89 166.10 220.20 *83;40 184,49 218.40 18U.20 207.80 tSvW 39.50

117.90 19; «8

1S2.37 fjJJ* 204,49

7»f4« 29S.90 IS*. 80 178.20 237.11 235.62 180.20 198,63 224.99 218.37 192.00 162.40 191,7* S07S99

79.40 112.65 224.00 177.8* 264.20 140.08 252.40 294.20 155.10 188.811 ISl.-'f 215.80 111.70 244.86 148.99 128.69 223.9* M7.89 198.80 317.** 216.89 269.89 190.48 140,80 291.38 132.62 184;«0 186.00 40.90

176.19 184.40 196.80

390.00 100.00 373.01

23.2S 410.00

7.60

a.7o

C. C Humane Soc„ •ervic** !C. C. Hu mane 'Soc, services

I Cox Trucking Co., services — *nBoB~C3S|ieT> Telital U-„:„„—^ Roy O. Davis Co., -supplies . Ray. Dawson Service, service Demco Library Supplies,

supplies —-. , • „ „ . . _ _ First Hetm Bank, withheld- __,^_

i n g - t a x ..m.mm....mm... W l,t24.M James Fllbey, right-of-afajrS^ SOfi.JS Fremont Elec. Shop, supplies Gareheim Music, supplle* M Gaylord Bros., supplies"m-m-. Gen. Machine Shop, aervices Gen. Machine Shop, services Oen. Pacific Corp., suppUee Gibbons & Reed Co., services 'L'&*CknktltIJ*upxitles .-—— *K_K^atw^Ari-4smream^^-- -

SUPPlieS ..m-,-.m—mmm..,..mmm. Home Lmhr. Co., supplies _ . Moaaar LIIIW. 'Dft., tiupiil*a» -_-J. Walter Johnson, refund . . . JacolHion Mfg Co., *uppli»» John's Desert Inn, refund . O, A. Kimball, Insurance — L. V, Elec. Co., supplies ..--, tm V. «ta« Co., -aupplies ....__. L. V. Land & Water Co., . services ,-.—,--.,.... ,-. Xm V. T»nd * Water Co.,

35.61 10.22

a 7 i M ».00

71.60 46.00 S M f vr.ts 36.00

. 108.13 ^tm*§ 10.00 «.68

300.00 8,060.65

19.84 9.6S

50.55

Ser ideeS m-m-m-L. V. Tribune, »ervices ...._.... L. V. Trttniae, services .._....-L. «!*, "Tribune, services . Library of Corarress, supplies tm A. S t i m p & StaUonary,

SUPPlieS .'~m.„.mm*£jtemmm-..~m. C. C -McDaniei, *uppUea «.... McQuay Supply Go., supplies Nev. Auto Parts, suppliee „ Nev. Consolidated Fast

Preight, servieee . . . . . „ .___ Nev. Elec. Co., supplies O. K. Plumbing Co., aupplies Police' Dept., petty-cash *%*M Earl Preston, refund .._..._.. RichrieM Gil Corp., supplies T~. .J'igi MiliJ Riainu«

rigHt-df-*i!ay -„ a «._. Safeway" Mkt., supplies .-,.... Sanborn Map Co., supplies .„ San Francisco N e w s Co,,

SUPPlieS .mm, - , . „_ . _ -George-F."-4Schenck, supplies Sears Roebuck & .Co.,. ^SUPPlto*

f3S>80 ri*]** 90.02 17.31 39.50

109.42 179.40 336.87 368.00 178.10J 162.74 148.80 128.00 3784* 307.M 180. tO 186:80 174.98 176.70 191.60 236.80 264.20 107.68 .'Silt* 33040 123f85 182.18 128.60 236.80 272.40 ITS.** 176.30 136,80. 173.78 18/M* 232.40

40.90 218.82 161.08

39.60 249.71

16.00

Sharpe Dev. Go., services .~.-~.'-~-..... .~~..~~~M.

So . Nev. Power, services ...... So. Nev. Tele. Co., services Standard Brands, supplies _ Standard Oil Co., supplies -Standard Whlse Co., supplies Stat inner* Corp.. "supplies m-Moe'Taub, refund' — Union Oil of Cat, supplies ._ C P. Railroad, servicvs ..._.._ V. P. Railroad, services ...... SIS Von t Tobel. supplies Lt. M. R. Walker, refund ... Western Union Tele. Co.,

services m, • •' ' „r, Albright's Bus. Machine,

SUPPlieS ... .....mmimjp, '"'»)*'» American Bltumnls Co,,

supplies Arrowhead Freight Lines, -

services . -. .,— — A: S. Barnes & Co., supplies Bartlett Bros.,"supplies .—.... Blue Cab Co., supplies . - - j — George Bondley, motorcycle «

rentai Ci—~-— .--.»—mm~ Leo CalHhaa, -services -.-.-.-. James Cashman, 'supplies — City Clerk, petty cash —.._ City Clerk, petty cash ., .-.,. City Clerk,. petty cash ...___ Clark County Humane

Society, services : :.... C. C. Sheriff Dept., supplies Cragun Produce Co., supplies Gt-C. Whlsale Merc, supplies Demco Library Supplies,

supplies f w & W m :

[Elgin Sweeper Co., supplies .Xhireka Fir* Hose Div.,

supplies ^............................... Fire Department, petty cash Frazier Wright Co., supplies Fremont Elec. Shop., supplies-Fremont E l e c Shop, supplies Galvin Mfg. Corp., supplies Gibbon & Reed, services' 2 Graf lex, inc., suppliea ........'.. A. C. Grant, services .........._ W. P. * W. W. Hirsch,

supplies .................................... Hogan & Westlake, supplies I. B. .Holmes, supplies -_{•,•'' Home' Lmbr. 'Co:, supplies -The International City

Mgrs., supplies ;.:._. -~-. O. A. Kimball, insurance .. Lamin's Drug Store, supplies

1 * |

90.63 30.00 83.80

- *».60 1.82

tl.71 38.66 36.15 30.00

*-61 11:21 12,00 86.46 10.00 86.63

8,^50.00

. mat 65.96

130.00

87.46

8.60 1*0.28 83:S« SI '.tt

190.T8 191.84 aas.it 270.00

10.01 36.00

500 'tt.%*'

8.86

4:00

1*78

489.65 ' 11.32

4.80 S.13 6.00

30.00 6.00

181.84 406.00

11.45 87.3*

800.00 J9 .20 61.95

530.98

12.76 38.98

195.00 18.80

. 397.40' 8.4 5.62

262,60 10/142.66

17.50 128.54

Page Eleven

ern if/inina ^Jfc^mlieS Utah Corporation Gets Holdings Merrimack Mine

•The Union Chief Mining com­pany, a Utah corporation, has now acquired all of the holdings Of 'tee Merrimack mine in Silver canyon, 80 miles northeast df Ely, in the famous Aurwm camp.

Sth* Aurum camp was a large producer df sliver and copper ores during the early days, and the body of copper ore that has been acquired nod owned by the Union Chief Mining company is one of the largest virgin copper deposits in eastern Nevada. " This property has been passed upon and recommended for ap-' proval by some of the most com­petent mining engineers in the vteoL -]M&

The property has had m sub­stantial production, and now it is being .put in shape •fer a much larger production.

Alex Nibley of Los Angeles is president and general manager df the company,-—Ely Record.

o j •-•• •

McL*mtmv - 'Word 'has reached ma through

the gr*rpevirie-~irtc*dent*lly, if jreu ever want *to voedh me my number h Orapevuie 3, Ring 2— that Emperor'Hirohito took a few days off from obeying MacArthur the Other day, txrtalkto theirones of his ancestor* and t*lLthem that everything wrasraft as upsy-daisy with Japan as it could be right nOW. m$mW»\

Outlook Discourag ng To Murcury Producer

Las Yegas^Ah*, WaV3fc| STY. FlorfsiT iuppfies"™'. L. V. Caa Co., supplies ........ L. V. Hardware Co., supplies Xm V. Land & Water Co.,

services „.....^ „ L. V. Hardware Co., supplies Xm V. Machine & Eng. Wks.,

-services i ,„ ™. IA V. Review-Journal,

'services ,:.:C :, i ..-:..._.„ UU V. Tribune, services -tm V. Volunteer Fire Dept.,

services .„._•!; .......™..™. l u V. Wholesale Oro.,

SUPPlieS m~.m.m..m~.m~m . Oh* A. Lietz Co., supplies -McQuay Supply Co., supplies Market Spot, supplies ._. Modern Photo, services -O, J. Morling,. services —...._ Motor Supply Co., supplies m The Municipal Tear Book,

supplies „.^^*™™...„ ;.„.« National Ice Co., supplies Nev. State Board of Control,

supplies .i™.;.'..;..^—J. m,m' Nov. Typewriter Exchange,

services

61.50 10.40 16.60 26.18

20.80 20-.00

82.99 j»*m St'tt 15.55

138.74 26.70 51.33

SIMON PREPARES TO REOPEN MIKE

Plans for reopening the Tchat-ticup gold property in the El Dorado district near Nelson are being made by P. A. Simon of Jean, manager for the Diamond Gold Mining company, Which holds the Tchatticup and other properties.

The company's gold properties, the Tchatticup, Jubilee and Red Butte nunes and 200-ton mill, ;were- closed because ef war con­ditions, but the company has been operating -tfae Anchor lead-zinc mine in the Yellow Pine district near Goodsprings.

at the office of the City Treasurer a t Las Vegas, Nevada; to mature ser­ially ln .twenty equal annual install­ments of ?7,000.0ft each, commencing January 1, 1947, to and Including January I, 138*.

Bidders are required to submit of­fers specifying;

(a) The lowest rate of Interest and premium, if any, above par at which said bidder witt purchase such bonds;

(b> The lowest rate of Interest at which the bidder will purchase said bonds at par.

The bonds will be sold to the bid­der making the best bid, subject to the right of the Board to reject any and all bids and readverttse.

None of said bonds shall be sold at less than par and accrued interest, nor will any discount or conunission b».«llowed or paid on the sale Of such, bonds. All bids shall be sealed a n d , '.eieeept the bid of-the State of Nevada J Bfoan-be acyorrrtvanigajay a dep"osuT"oc five per cent, either cash or certiriecf check, of the amount - of the bid, which will be returned It the bid Is not accepted: and If the successful bidder shall fail or neglect to com­plete the i purchase of said bonds within thirty days following the ac­ceptance of tils aid, the amount of his

: deposit shall be forfeited to the

225,00

85.89 19.63 5.94

72.05 4.80 3.97 2.30

OR & Gas Distr., supplies' Gpace. Lmbr. & Reality Co

supplies

A - « " J i Ts a ' * , 7 ' I—! o^S'-SiHorace Shidler,i services 40.00

**• S' tJ'' 9ft!ar*' — | | j '5r Signal OM Co., supplle* .,-.— 6,88 n, R. D.. salary — Iff-IS Snarr & Call, supplies .Z~-m 84.32 ?•» " a i f r y m.. ...mmmmmmfi,; f*ft- so ^ ifev. Disinfectant ISo;. 156.80

207.00 "235.80 155.10 316.80 176.20 141.30 136.80 152.26

82.01 348.60 207.40 248.22 136.80 148.60 207.40 184.40 88,21

192.00 148.80 186.80 148.60 It*. 40 179.40 226.60 152.00 203.40 184.40 116.80;

•' ,:.>Jtotal V.i:.i..;„. . ..332,306:B4-Adams, Bales A Service; «npr

rplies - — . ....;^... i j The American City Maga­

zine, supplies ..... -.... x-,i, n Armanko Office Supply,

supplies . :—....—.-"Auto TBlecv 'Jia,, -supplies _ _ Auto-Elec,^Ca-suppHes t2*^,r Brimmies, services . ..,.-,;.«« Cat Metal Enameling- Co.;

SUQplieS m-immm—.——-—-•—. Gity clerk, petty cash ., . City Manager, petty cash .... C. C. Oeneral Hospital,

services _, ."-..., ,:,

7.70

2.00

500.25

mat Mil 31.83

18480 234,82

28:31 200.00

PRG^iSIONAL biRmORw

Used Cam

WE NEBD YOUR USED CAR

Best Price*. Paid -' At '

CASHMAN'S m m. Nortl Main

g^3^ffi!M *»S3-OBt 83

McNamee Cr McNamee Attorney-At-Law

y Portal Bldg. Las Vegas

Cleaning

Modern Cleaners 3-JDAY

SERVICE Oar. "fifth ana Caraon Phone 14

a30-3 mo.

J: J. Peelen, services . Fred Pine, services ........_..„.._ Purdy Rock & SaWtr.faippliss" need- & Co., supplies ... B. A. Rives, supplies rJ....... C. D. Boeder Equip. Co.,

supplies :..... .-_ San Prancisoo News, ' i^^-:

supplies

ev. Disinfectant Co. supplies ......

So.. Nev. Industries, supplies Standard 'Whlse. Co., supplies „ State Health Dept., services 1,260.00 Steve's Auto Top .Shop,

SUPPHeS ; mmmm.m-m..^ .. Stocks Mill ,&' Supply Co.,

supplies . .... i .. Ronald Thompson, motor­

cycle rental •'• >........»..'....;.,... Union Oil Co. of Cal,,

supplies j j ^ ... Ass't. Treasurere TJ. P. R. R,

rental . ...„._........ Vegas Radiator Shop,

99,50 Board of City Commissioners of til* 5.001 City of-Las Vegas, Clark County, N e ­

vada, aad lo that-event the Board *f Commissioners of the City of Las Veg*s may accept the bid of the one making the next best bid; or if all bids are rejected the Board of City Commissioners may readvertise said bond* tor sale, ion these are t w o or more equal bids and such bids are the best bids received, and are. not less than par and .accrued interest, the Boatt* of City Commissioners will

. .S- 6 0 'determine -.which bid shall be ap-447.40 eepted.

Dated at Las Vegas, Clark County, Nevada, thte "31st a a y at November, 1348. (SEAL) m. W. CRAGIN,

Mayor, City of Las Vegas, Nevada. ATTEST: HELEN SCOTT REED, ; ;-CIe'rlt,-City~of Las Vegas, Nevada,

B E IT FURTHER RESOLVED, that the C'ierK o f t t t e Board c< City Cum missioners is hereby authorised and directed to immediately mail to the State Board of Finance, at Carson City, Nevada, a copy of the notice of sale. vtyjftZiKSk

City Commissioner Baskin seconded the adoption of the foregoing resolu­tion, and' the same on being put to a vote, was unanimously carried by.the affirmative vote of all Commissioners present, the vote being .as-follows:

E . W. Cragin. Mayor "'Aye" .Basliin, Commissioner "Aye" Bates)' Commissioner - "Aye" Clark, Commissioner •^-^"qto*'* Corradettl, Commissioner "Ave" Adopted and ArotroVed, this 21st day

bf November. 1945..;-'.-..-...--:•••- ,V <SEAL) E. vr.- atattttt.

Mavnr. City of Las Vegafi-'lteYaaB,. A^'TjatrT: H*»tJI8ffWr*OTT REEgf*fc*#gS

>r*ler1i; - Cirv of Las Vegas, Nevada. Vl25. « . - * . 16 /J;' •:

150.00

15.00 388.13

4.S3 3,333.33

17.90 ^~stm

15.13 125.00

31.43

887.01

Dressed in his best mausoleum sntt and carrying, perhaps, a walkie-talkie, the Son of Heaven had a cozy, two-hour chat with ttte bones of Grandpa, Grandma, Aunt Togo Maru, Aunt Sadie Taru, and Hie tibia, fibia, meta­tarsus, and femur of his late father.

Naturally, I nave no way of knowing just what Hirohito stdd to his ancestors, or how he opened the conversation, but I imagine it went something like tha:

Hirohito: H o w d y , M i s t u h Bones! T reckon you is gonna be powerful surprised at whut Ah has to tell you.

Yhe Bones: Land, sakes, look who's shootin' off his mouf! It it ain't ol' Hire. Hiro, how's tricks with you?

Hiro (breaking .into a slow buck and wing): Gentlemen, be seated, 'cause I gotta powerful lot to tell you. -

• *Jfie Bones: How's *i|rttft "Hiro? You allow as you got a 1st to tell **%£••

Hiro: I said he seated, gentle­men, because I gotta powerful lot to tell you.

"Phe Bones: Yessis, Mistuh In­terlocutor. ,JJ^ '.• . . - '•*% '

The Bones softly hum Alexan­der's Ragtime Band, and Hiro starts explaining,

Hiro: Now listen, you all, I gonna come clean with what's been a-happening 'round here lately. There's a white gentle­man 'round here these days name Mistuh Douglas MacArthur, and he sho' is throwing' his weight around. I couldn't even come ovah here this mornin' until I asked him if I could. I said to him, "Boss man. I sho' would admire to go out to tiie graveyard and tell my Papa and tee rest of the kinfolks what has been hap pening in these heros parts.**

The Bones: Why shut yo' mouf, Hiro! Are you telling the nat-ch'el truth?

Hirch' ust-as sure as the Good Lawd made little green apples, I'm telling the truth. We done got beat in tite wah.

Aunt Sadie Maru: Land sakes alive!

Emperor Taisho: Do tell! Do teOl

Grandpa and Grandtna, togeth­er: Honey chile, what foolishment you talking! • Hiro: We sho' ntfff thought we had «em at the start We sliced 'em with a razor at Pearl Harbor, but dotrgone if they didn't come bande and plum whup the hell out of us. Then they deep a new kind of bum on his, .called the atomic bum, and then they sail up in a big oP battleship called tfae Missouri, and fto' we know What we doing, we done signed our names to- a "Jf ing which makes that tall gentleman, who don't

78.8S 86.50 LSf

80.00

150.00

8.75

*2.frt

6.00

supplies ...................... Ed von Tobel Lmbr Co.,

26.00

supplies .. ... mm-mm. 83 .34 Ted Werner, supplies ___._ 124.34 Roland Wiley, assignment:^J&i 680.00 Western Heating.A Ventil- W ^

atlHg CO;,' mmm MMI Western Union Tele. Co.,

services 4ufej tt-tt White Cross .Drug Co^

SUPPl ie» mmm.——mm tS.4* Adrian Wilson, services ..^1,480:00 Roland Wilson, motorcycle

.-rental' l....V...:......._V..-..._.-.._ , -80.00 WoiUshek Lmbr. Co., -

supplies ..,„-:.,...., ».;.„—.. 16 85 Capt. Ray- D. Wolf, refund .. . .3.0* Carter & Seville, supplies:-_ .' 22.90 What National Bank.-of.N*V., s withholding tax — r.1-,912.71 Pioneer Construction Co.,

services .'.. .":,.... 14,845.90 J. J. Peelen, services 3,333.33

Total V a £ l . $55,760.93 STATE OF NEVADA ) V

) SS" COTJNTT OP CLARK )

"I, HELEN SCOTT REED, C|ty Clerk of the City of Las Vegas, do hereby certify • that the above is a full, true and correct list of all bills allowed by the Board of Commission­ers of the City of Las Vegas, County of Clark, State of Nevada, for the month or "October. 1348. (SEAL) HELEN BCOTT REED. City Clerk and Clerk of the Board ot

Commissioners of the City of tos Vegaa"y '

NOTICE OF SALE

SSMM *140,00*,00 CITY OF LAS VEOAS,

CLARK COUNTY, NEVADA POLICE STATION BONDS

Notice is hereby • given that the Board ol City Commissioners of the City of Las Vegas, Clark County, N e t vada, will on the 28th navy et Deeero-ber, 1*45, at the Aoar of 3s*ft o'clock p . St. a t the City office in Las Vegas. Nevada, receive sealed >ids, and pub­licly open -same, ter ta* purchase of City of tat* *Vegas -JNflee Station Bonds to the aggregate p r i n c i p a l amount of 814A.aso.00, to be designated 'Las Vegas Police Station •BoMmW^m

Said'bonds will be in the denomina­tion of 31,00* each, sball bear the date of January 1, 1946, shall beat-- Interest a t a rate of not more than 6% perl annum payable semi-annually, Janu­ary 1 ana July 1 ,of each -year, notltl .

prinej»sil and interoet being payable' o38, nl, St, M r * *

Notlo* of Applioatlon tor Permleeien te Approeriat* the Public Wats**

" *f tfce State of Nevada ' Application No. 113*8

Notice ts hereby given that on the 1 Sth dav of October. 1845. in accord­ance wl*h Section 69, Chapter S9, of tha Statutes of 1919, Norman L. and Marlon S. White of Las 'Vegas, County of Clark, State of Nevada, made application to the State Engi­neer, of Nevada. far permission to ap­propriate 0J of a second foot of the public waters of the State of Sevada. Diversion is to be made from an a n -dergrousd source at a point in -the NEU SWS4;SSec.*:3( T. 33 S., B . 61 E. , St. D. B. & M.. or at a iwint front which the W. % corner of said sec­tion 3 bears N. 87* 25* W., 1,734 feet. Water will be conveyed by .-pipe lines and ditches to the W H N B S r 8 W % of said section 3, and there used for Ir­rigation and domestic purposes from January 1st to December 81st of each year.. :U ^ S

Signed: ALFRED. MERRITT SMITH,

State Engineer oS8, nL 11, 18, 35

Notice of Applleatlon fer Permission to Appropriate the Public Water*

of the State ot* Nevada Applieathm No. .3*802 _Wm

iNotlee is hereby given that on the 19th day of October, 1945. in accord-1

anc*~Vrtth Section 59, Chapter 83, of the Statutes of 1919, Fred and Ooldie Sifford of Las Vegas, County of Clark, State of Nevada, made application to the State Engineer of Nevada ' for permission to appropriate 1.50 second feet of the public waters of the State of Nevada. Diversion is to be made from Wixpo't Spring at appoint in the WKU, N E H Sec. 18, T. 13 M. B . «*;«., i f . D. B. * M„ or a t a point from which the .a. W. i comer «af Sao. 8. *P. 33 8., B. 85 B., bears •****. *3» 38' W „ 14,344 feet. Water will be conveyed by pip* Mass to all or portion* of the N U Nft*4 -Sec. IS: .«W%--Sas*a, * m SEU SBJ4. N»*4 8B%, ee* 8 4 S E « N E t t Sec. 10. all to T. IS §., R. «6 E , M. D. at., and there used for mining and domestic BBT-poses from .iTanaasj 1st ve Deeember 31st «f «acb year.

Signed: AmmTRSO ^MgBRITa* SltflTH,

Stat* EaglJMwr.

SO.VES DOLLAR TO i ii H i t i llii tei fin l l ' i l i l (*MI|"ti*rYj|l*,llllii

The Bones, all together: Our po, aching backs! We ain't even got a little flesh tto comfort us. Oh-oh-oh, our po' aching backs! Which reminds us, Hiro, .aire Davis and 1jlaallhii>l •3]!#*Wd foot­ball players as every iaae, - says they are? WJit^

Hiro: H wouldn't know which to bet on when Army plays Navy. They done both wo' nee out. 1§P|I; 1 ** . i^jtyy

BOUND MOUNTAIN PLACER IS NOW SHOWING GOLD

TONOPAH, Nevada — Sinking of the Drywash Wilson fshaft at the Round Mountain placers Is reported to *have reached a depth of M0 feat in profitable gold bearing gravel. Testing of the property- has been carried on during tiie last two years and a vast yardage of commercial ma­terial is said to have been dis­closed. The Round Mountain Pla­cers, owned by the Nevada For-' phyry GeM'GIL, were leased in 1943 by the Guy M. Standifer in­terests of California.

Homestake Has Expended Huge _ SumonSiaff M

At Lead, South Dakota, it was iBtabtd that tutproximately $3 million has been poured down a hole the Homestake Mining Co. dug into a mountain, but it was aaat wasted. The 4250 foot hole, known as tiie Yates shaft, was sunk to reach the immense gold ©re bodies now ready for mining.

Sinking the shaft, 27 feet 8 inches by 15 feet, equipped with five elevators which operate at a maximum speed of 1500 feet a minute, required about 2 1-2 years. As many as 125 men work­ed on the project at a time and the cost, including trhri surface plant, was approximately $3 mil­lion.

T*fle shaft was dug from sever* al underground points which hard been located by engineers. Tun-nels were driven to the shaft lo-catten from underground work­ings.

Six by eight feet pilot holes were eat at various points and widened to tha full size of the Shaft, Most ef the pilot raises were driven 100 to 180. feet be-tween levels, but in one case it' was necessary to drive the pilot raise 866 feet to make a connec­tion.

Waste rock <approximately 185,000 tons) was drawn off-at lower levels.

The shaft, which eventually will be down 5000 feet, is one of the deepest in the world. Deeper; shafts are m the Michigan cap-! per country, Canada, Brazil and South Africa. The deepest South African shaft is down 8600 feet and one Canadian gold mine has •' ino foot shaft. £*££i "••" *•'' '" • ' "'

*3ilr*t*lratl by a group of lead­ing western quicksilver producers as their representative at ihe national capital in an effort to obtain relief for the industry,

-}6. H Williston, vice president tff the Cordero Mining company and officer of other mercury produc­ing companies, bats returned to the coast from Washington ajpd reports that:

There axe now 52,000 flasks of quicksilver overhanging the mar­ket This is a two-year supply at the pre-war rate^of consump­tion. Of this total, 28,000 flasks have been ^imported from Spain and tiie remainder from Mexico and Canada.

As on indication of the fall hi domestic production, output in July was 3600 flasks, in August 3300 flasks, in September 2100 flasks and the estimated produc­tion for October is 1300 flasks, which is below the pre-war aver­age of 1500 flasks per month.

Pour of the larger quicksilver companies are shut down and a fifth is operating at about 25 per cent capacity. One of the princi­pal reasons for the drastic drop in the price of quqicksHver has "been the imports from "Spain.

In March, 1945, following a statement by the late President Roseveit that he did not like Franco's government, the imports of Spanish quicksilver continued at 'the following rate: In April, 10,060 flasks were imported; in May TOOO flasks; in June 3000 flasks; in July 19,000 flasks; ia August 4000 flasks.

President Truman also stated that he did not like Franco or his government^ but his attitude had no effect upon the importation of Spanish quicksilver, witii the re suit that the government now has purchased approxirHately 45,000 flasks of Optra!**! quick­silver at an average price of $130 per flask, ''ife*

• a—! r—

Getchell Plant-Has New Boss

Effective Nov. <1, .Frank J. Del Mel, who has been construction superintendent at the Getchell mine, has been advanced to mill superintendent replacing George H. Wigton, who has been mill Su-perintendent for the past year, said the Humboldt Star. y,-;£-.

Jay Shoemaker, former super­intendent af the Adelaide-Crown mine, ia tite new mill foreman, j

Wigton has .resigned his ditties at the Getchell mine to resume his former position as metallur­gist and superintendent for I the Dayton Consolidated Mining Co. at Silver City.

The announcement of the change in 'tiae personnel at the Getchell mine was made by Boy A. Hardy, consulting engineer,

o

FAIRBANKS, Alaska. —• Seven and pasathly -eight dredges will he operated next season in the Dawson area by tite Yukon Con­solidated GeM Corporation, ac­cording to Arnold M. Nordale, mining engineer for the company, wbo made a brief visit h e r e . ^ ^

Three dredges were operated by the company this season. With I Co. have established location the ending of hostilities the man- here for exploration activities, power shortage will cease to,Officials ef the crews have ati

WALLACE, Idaho — The Sil­ver Dollar Mining Co. lias auth­orized the payment of 3c a share, totaling $30,000, to holders of the company's "A" stock as a partial return for money paid tite com­pany in assessments. This makes $100,000 t i e company has paid back to its stockholders, or IDc a share against 14c a share col­lected in assessments. The cur­rent amount is payable Oct 24 to stock of record Oct 9.

hi addition to making the pay­ments out of profits derived from a one-third interest in the Rot-bart area of the rich Chester vein, Silver Dollar is carrying on a shaft development program with the object in view Of opening the Chester vein in Silver Dollar ground some 2500 feet east of the present productive area.

g?'»wiiiatwti«a wm<'m POTASH COMPANY FAYS DIVI1 i> OF S5C SHARE

Directors of Potash Co. ef America late Thursday declared a dividend of 35c a share, payable December * t s » stock of record November JS. Earlier, stockhold-ets held their annual meeting and reelected ,«11 directors. Di­rectors then met and reelected all present officers. The last pre-1 vious dividend was 30c a share.

OIL PROSPECTORS IN WTOMING P L A N S

LUSK, Wyo.—It is understood that oil exploration crews ol some 26 men from the Shell Ol

exist and there should be an abundance of materials and some equipment for the mining indus­try, Nordale said. ;|§j§l

Like others engaged in the in* dustry, he looks forward to a large scale revival in gold min­ing beginning -next year and mounting in - succeeding years. No winter work has been planned by hit company for titis year. Stripping and other preparatory work will be started as soon as possible next spring. l l lp lp

- • ! . . . . , „ . , « * > , . 1 .

The oil required to fill the tanks of a single battleship would heat the average American home fWaWyeraira^^ipp

vised that they cannot give out any information regarding tiieir

;woirfc* ^^^B pi *SMf:r ; o———— ,

BENTONITETO BE MILLED AT CASPER

CASPER, Wyo. — A lOMen bentonite mill will be constntct-ed this winter near- Caspar by Thomas Holden of McCraeken, Kan. There is a plan here to pro­mote interest In Wyoming min­erals like vermiculite, asbestos, paint ores, talc, barite and kao­lin.

* r-o~ jaSal Army engineers call the Phil­

ippines tiie "British Isles of tiie

Mine Resuming At Goldpoifit

The Goldpoint Mining Coi, is making plans for resumption of operations on its gold and silver property in ttte Hornsilver dis­triet, Esmeralda county, accord­ing to Lt Col. F. W. Immasche, vice president of the company.

Work prior to di*continua«ce of operations with tite ban on gold mining in 1942 exposed, an­other, orehody south ef .the vein on which the main shaft is being pot down.

The grou nd Is tn line arith the productive veins of the Ohio Mines corp. to the east and the shaft and - lateral. work on the newly discovered v e i n a r e planned to determine the con­tinuance of values with depth.

The capitalization of the com­pany is being increased to pro­vide additional funds for extend­ed operations. Senator Harry M T*"***>FlHt jW '1rMwra*rfa pOmma*. ** manager for the company. JJ

' <o H

Natomas Co. To Srart Big Gold Dredge In Nevada

BATTLE MOUNTAIN, Nev.— Gold dredging art 'tile Gi'ftettan plicers below Copper Canyon will he started at once by the Natomas Co. A floating 5 000-yard dragline dredge was prac­tically ready for service when gold production was stopped. Na­tomas has a 25-year lease on the placers from James O. Greenan.

Approximately $150,000 has been expended in testing and samplmg the vast. alluvial fan which spreads away from Cop­per Canyon, 16 mites south of' Battle Mountain. Everftua] con­struction of a giant bucket type dredge -is protected to extract gold from the deep deposits tn the lower reaches of tiae flat area.

Sufficient commercial gravel is, said to have been located or in-' dicated by testing to warrant the belief that dredging will be prac­ticable for from 12 to 15 years.

The Natomas Co. operates two giant dredges in the Fohrom field of California and is heavily in­terested *»: Manhattan Gold. Dredging Which is.working plac­ers below Manhattan, Ifevada, and the Soutii Platte Dredging Co. at Fairplay, Colorado.

[Newmonl Opens * Wine at Ward | | § ToGoodledce i ^ 8 , Tface Ward lead and -silver raine, which has been inactive since 1943, is being reopened by the Newmont Mining corp. under active management Of Joseph H. Skitimore, veteran'Newmont en­gineer, the Ely Times reports.

A swat* crew is already at work clearing the tunnels and explor­atory work is planned to relocate "the gold vein with a view to de­termining its extent Work will be continued through the winter months and should developments justify, a larger crew will be ram* ployed in the early spring.

Newmont had been operating the mine since early 1342 but Was compelled to close in 1943 due to manpower shortage and the work being undertaken now is a con­tinuation of original plans.' *

The Ward mine, 18 miles south of Ely, was one of the great pro­ducers of ttte early t880*s and during the intervening years Iras been operated under lease many times.

Skidmore was accompanied by Mrsi( Skidrqore and their two chil­dren from Happy Camp, -CaHf., where he was in charge of the Gray Eagle copper mine for New­mont.

'Diamondfield' Jack Returns

"Diamondfield Jack" Davis, colorful Nevada desert character held over from the boom days of Tonopah and Goldfield, breezed into town last week from Las Vegas says Clyde Terrell, in the Tonopah Times.

Jack shook the dust of Tono­pah- and Goldfield off His feet

(many years ago, after nuking a tot > of money at Diamondfield, suburb of Goldfield, but has clung more or less to Nevada.

At 82, Jack expects to live s t toast 20 years longer.-His fattier died at 96—result of the reopen­ing of an old bullet wound. Jack came to Tonopah In 1903 amd proceeded to roll up history.

He came to Tonopah with tite reputation of a gunman, a repu­tation he declares hotly, even to­day, entirely unmerited and un­earned. At any rate when labor disputes and other troubles struck Goldfield, Jack'was mix­ed up in it en the side of law and order but he never sound k necessary to pull or use either of the big guns he carried jabbed down tl«e waist band of his over­alls.

The writer has watched Jack toss a milk can into the air an* hit it six times with a .45 befor** the can fell back to earth. -^tmartha*' itcawiluiiiy wHT write * the true saga of Jack's life. To­day he is the personification of ail the desert and boom mining camps had to offer, so far as ean be concentrated into one active, restless, fearless oM body.

SHOBAR MINE IS BOLD BY OWNER

C. Herrera, Eureka business­man, last week sold the Shobar mining property situated in the Buekhorn mining district, to William (Bill) Peterson of Aus­tin. According te a statement by Herrera, Peterson plans diamond drilling the property soon.

THOMPSON DIVIDE GETS TRONA MINE

TRONA, Cal. —Bale of the Qphir mine, a lead-zinc property east of here, to the Thompson Divide Mining Co. is reported by L. E. and A. L. Damon who have operated the mine thruout the war. Located on the property is a* concentrating plant installed fey the Damons fast year,

UNION un I N S U R A N C E C O .

•Vox Any Life Insurance Needs

RALPH SEW.UID 122 N. Second Phone 131

MINING SUPPLIES E3XCLUS1VE AGENTS FOfi*

HERCULES POWDER LM ROI RIX COMPRESSORS

CAPS FUSES DRILL STEEL TIMKEN BITS

JACK HAMMERS

MWAY SUPPLY CO. 4*2 S. MAIN - . • M m M E l H

Page Twelve Swvday, November 29, ItThp.

Sol Bloom Doles (hit A Capital Stomach Ache By FREDERICK C OTHMAN

WASHINGTON, Nov. 24 (UP) - The celebrated statesman, Elk,

inventor, Moose, patriot, Red Man, historian, Shriner, real es­tate dealer and international ex­pert, In short the Honorable Sol Bloom, congressman from New York, can hold himself respon­sible for my stomach ache.

I had twe hot dags tat Thanksgiving. General Ike Eisenhower had a fever ther­mometer and a glass of warm milk. Boo, Mr. Bloom. Boo to yoa. The honorable Sol announced

a couple of days ago that since General Eisenhower had to re­turn to Europe the best time^to hear bis testimony on European relief problems was yesterday.

, Representative Bloom dropped up to the House press galleries

' then for a chat with his old pals. The gentlemen of the fourth es­tate r e g a r d e d him coldly. " Boo-o-o-o-o-o,** they booed, in unison. The honorable Sol got out of there.

Came Thanksgiving Pay and the gentlemen were in their sanctum. Bloom stuck his head in the door and saidr "Boo-o-e*©!* He rushed across the hall to tiie chamber of his foreign affairs committee, a small room which was jammed with spectators, hungry congressmen and report­ers, squatting on metal bridge chairs. The honorable Sol said this wouldn't do. Where was the staff of General Eisenhower go­ing to sit?

One of the booers nf the day "^'before suggested sotto voice that ' the staff could sit in tbe ante-** room. The honorable Sol ignored

this and ordered up some more chairs, Then he installed on his right thumb his best known in-* vention: the combination plqgtic thimble, pipe-tamper-inner, and gavel.

He rapped for order, which he got (except for. the two-year-old grandson of the lady sitting next to me) and introduced General Eisenhower. The general looked a little peaked.

The (honorable Sol said Eisen­hower's doctors had teld him to" str- i bed but that the general; hr 'mbed out anyway, to tes-tif . Bloom said that if the com-miUeemen would refrain from too' many questions, the general

•• might get well quicker. The general said he didn't feel

so hot for a fact, but that he wasnt too 'sick to answer ques­tions. He read in a hoarse voice a two-page statement saying it was about time to turn all Eu­ropean relief over to the -United National relief and rehabilitation administration (pronounced, Un-Rah).

"Hey, Mummy," the two-year-old cried; the lady shushed him and Representative Luther A. Johnson of Texas, wondered whether the army couldn't handle

' . relief better than Un-Rah. General Ike said, well sir, he

-. dropped in on one camp where five babies had been born the day before He said he didn't believe the army was adequate. All the committeemen made Bttle speeches thanking him, a few asked questions, and Rep­resentative Karl E. Mundt et South Dakota, said he bet the general wouldn't have any of those fine, flavorsome, South Dakota pheasants for his din­ner.

*Che general said- not unless Representative Mundt gave him his address. End testimony. The general went back to feed and the fever thermometer. The honor­able Sol strolled out, while Oth-raan went around the corner for his Thai.ksgiying meal.

The man said the trouble was it was a holiday. No deliveries.

"**fl*hat was why, he said, his hot dogs looked wrinkled. Use plen-

. ty of mustard, he said. I hope, Representative Bloom,

your Thanksgiving was the same. Serves you right if you didn't get any mustard.

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Reunited Couple Keep *«ieir Fingers Crossed

SEATTLE (UP)—Mr. and Mrs, Jan Teters are pretty sure their plans won't go wrong this time.

The couple were separated on Wake island just beiore the Jap­anese invasion. Mrs. Teters re-. turned home on the same plane that brought the J a p a n e s e "peace'' envoy to Washington. Her husband was taken prisoner by the. Japanese a short time

Last April Mrs. Teters went to Calcutta hoping to meet her hus­band when he was released. Tet­ers was sent direct to the states, and didn't get his wife's wires to wait fox her in Manila.

"This time we are going fishing tor a holiday, if nobody - misses the boat," Teters said. The couple were reunited here.

^jlgg1 o — - — -In France the 1945 wheat crop

Was hit by the drought, Shd the potato crop by am early frost

RONZONE'S

On the Air Daily News—8:30 a. m.

By DELPHtNE SQUIRES In the days of air traffic it Is

of interest to revert to some of Las Vegas' earlier experiences in that line. In March of 1925. Mr. C. O. Prest, a former resident of Las Vegas, flew up from Cali­fornia with a new type of plane which,- it Was claimed, could reach the unbelievable speed of 100 miles per hour.. Prest sold that plane to Bill Pike and J im Cashman after taking them on a ride over the Colorado river and taking the first pictures from the air of the future site of Boul­der Dam. Those pictures were later used by the Bureau of Rec-lamation in its preliminary stud­ies of Black Canyon dam site.

•At the same time an interest­ing account was published about the longest telephone circuit in the world, just completed be­tween Chicago and Los Angeles, a distance of about 2,000 miles. It was one of the Wonders of the then modern science that & tele* phone conversation of about ten minutes between the two cities could be held for ten dollars. "With the present perfection of communications one could talk half around the world for that, we imagine.

An incident which deeply af­fected many of the old timers of Las Vegas wa; the death on Friday, April 17, 1925, of Henry M. Lillis. Judge Lillis, as we had called him since he was elected justice Of the peace, was one of those* busy, 'irrespensiblef- help--ful and hopeful souls who leave, their impress on a newly, found­ed place. He was Aot learned nor intellectually brilliant, but he had the incorrigible spirit of the pioneer and had a hand in every advancement made by Las Vegas. He was a man of strong likes and dislikes, yet he made friends of most of those he met.

The latter months of Judge Lillis' life were pitiable ones. He was stricken with. cancer of tiie throat, but managed to prolong h k life for a -few months by breathing through a tube insert­ed in his throat. Even in his di­rect extremity he refused to ad­mit that the end was near, but still maintained something of optimism. Funeral serives were held at Elks hali under the aus­pices of the Bar association, mem-, bers of whieh acted as pallbear­ers.

The city election of May 5,1925, was a spirited one (as all our Las Vegas e l e c t i o n s were) with three candidates in the fight for mayor, "of the city?"*- Fred Hesse* I , ' W. Griffith and W. C. Germain. Mr. Griffith withdrew from the race before the elec­tion and requested his friends and supporters to vote for Ger­main. However, Hesse won by a plurality' of 38 votes and ferved thereafter contiguously uStUl June of 1931.

Not very many of oa r people today remember the notable celebration which was promoted by Governor James G. Scru­gham and carried out with great success on Saturday, May 23,; 1925. It was on tiw_''Fageant Pu--eblo Grande" staged in the lower portion of the Moapa valley, near St. Thomas* long ago hidden from human sight by the waters of Lake Mead. None of those who attended the great event will ever forget- the well-nigh inter­minable procession of automo­biles winding over the dusty roads bearing more than six thousand people to the scene. , It was truly a novel spectacle which was staged on the recon­structed city of the prehistoric people who, thousands of years ago, had lived in that valley. It was one of the highlights of the career of Governor (afterward United States Senator) Scru­gham, and attracted many nota­ble people to this county. The night pageant, especially, was novel and remarkable, and to re­produce it would seriously strain the energy and resources of the Clark county cf^-teriay. | p |

| -?•„„-;. • o — — — —

TUNE B O O M : ^ p LONDON (AP) — Good music

is booming in England. The 51st Promenade season at the Royal Albert Hall here ended after 49 concerts whkh more than 300,-000 persons attended. The great ball was sold out every night. London recently had the unprec­edented experience of three bal­let companies all playing to ca­pacity.

i!ltigh,ei| Side Off

I f Life :1 SOUTHBURY, Conn., Nov. 24

(IP)—Max Laboudy came out sec­ond best in a wrestling match with his shirt. Max told doctors his shoulder was dislocated while dotming the garment.

LOS ANGELES, Nov. 24 (LP)— Norton Morrison, who had words with a speed cop who flagged him down, found that California law on disturbing the peace takes in a lot of territory*^"!!

Morrison learned that disturb­ing an officer's peace is forbid­den and he paid* $25 for his caus­tic language directed at the cop.

CH2CA*GO, Nov, 24 <e*f")--Jos7 eph Bartell complained his house Wtm being picketed by a man who " jus t . s tands out there by the picket fence and dances up and down when he sees me and hol­lers he's cold.

Police freed shivering Joseph Kveton from the fence, where a picket through his belt had caught him.

While getting thawed out at a hospital, en route home, Kveton chattered: "I don't know how, I managed to get hung up oh that picket, but I couldn't get loose and I thought that guy (Bartell) was going to watch me freeze."

Plans are being developed by 19 airlines in the United States to handle nearly oae billion pounds of air cargo tn the near future, according to Distribution Age.

"PICKLING" A NAVY GUN - - T h e sailor above puts ing touches on the "pickling" ef a 5-inch deck gun on the U. S. S. Brooklyn fat the Philadelphia navy yard before cruiser is stored away. Hot plastic paint is sprayed oa netting stretched ever gun. Air then is exhausted from inside with suction pomp te prevent

:--ipsr. toat and decay.

Objection MANILA, Nov. 2 (AP)—Out

of all the languages and dia­lects—at least 10—used at Lieu­tenant General Tomokuki Yama-shita's war crimes trial the gen­eral's ear caught one which per­sistently puzzled him. Jm

Today he asked surprised, de­fense codnsel, "Who's this fellow Jackson?"*

Momentaritly stumped them­selves, defense attorneys figured out that Yamashita had misun­derstood their oft-shouted "ob­jection." • • '•:.. ;

-mm- '. 0 '

Copper is believed to be the first metal used by man. .

Sweet Justice SAN DIEGO, Cal., Nov. 24

(UP)—Mrs. Nellie Pearce, 43, La Mesa, California, widow who al­legedly smothered her illegiti­mate child to death In a suitcase, was freed of murder charges to­day "in furtherance of justice."

Dismissal of charges was rec? ommended by District Attorney Thomas A. Whelan. Investigators said-Mrs. Pearce gave birth to a son in her home last June 22. Three days later police found the infant dead in a suitcase.

The Germans fouled Allied mine detectors with nails and odd scraps of metal.

WktesOmSt BABSON PARK, f*Mass. — I

bave just returned from a con­ference on wages. Labor was represented by a very smart law­yer; and management W M rep­resented by a kindly employer. ARGUMENTS FOR HIGHER WAGES '

(1) Labor's lawyer stated "that his people had worked 40 hours a week before the war; that dur­ing the war they had worked 54 hours a week and that for these additional 14 hours received time-and-a-half pay. The em­ployer acknowledged this; but stated- that the hoys of the family were then in the army -and the family needed more income. Now these boys have returned and the family income, even without this overtime, will be as high as it was before.

(2) Labor's lawyer then com­plained about the deductions which are made from the pay envelope, namely, for social se­curity, the purchase of 4}onds and fhe payment of taxes The em­ployer answered by saying that roe deduction' for social security was matched by a similar amount from him and that tfee total amount (double what was de­ducted from the employe) is set aside for a pension. Therefore, it is really not a deduction. The same applies to bond purchases. These bonds are as good as money and can be cashed in at any time. As to taxes," both the lawyer for labor and the employer agreed that these would be eliminated by the new tax bill going Into effect in January, 1946. .

(3) Labor's l a w y e r talked about-the increased cost of living. This was admitted by the em­ployer; but he presented govern­ment statistics showing that liv­ing costs as a whole have not gone UP more than the base wage has risen without giving any account

for overtime. It is true that wage worke rs are buying certain- luxu­ries today which they did not buy before, which luxuries aae not tabulated in the official cost of living figures. ARGUMENT FOR HIGHER PRICES M§

After labor's l a w y e r got through presenting his case the employer stated: "We would not object so strongly to increased wages If we could corresponding­ly increase tfee price of our goods. To do one without -the other, however, is an absolute impossi­bility. We would be obliged to shut down. He brought out the following points:

(1) Not only have the base wages mentioned above gone op (irrespective of overtime) but the cost of all materials have, likewise, gone up in an amount equal to ffee little steel formula.

(2) Stockholders are getting no more in dividends; yet they must be given a corresponding in­crease In order for them to pro­vide additional capital which is very touch needed for reconver­sion work,

(3) In -answer to labor's com­plaint about the salaries of offi­cers, the employer stated, that their increase has been less than tiae Increase in. labor's base wage; furthermore, that if all officers worked for .nothing, it would provide an increase of only from 5 to 10 per cent in tfee wages of all other employes. FOREIGN COMPETITION

I did not get into ffee above discussion, but when asked for my comments, I called attention to the following three facts: ' (1) This country will have huge foreign competition in the years ahead, from w h k h it was absolutely free during tfee war.- Politicians can talk about putting up higher tariff walls,

but this foreign labor must be given- work if we are to have world peace! _. —- '

(2) Foreign competition will first hit special industries, such as tfee textile industry; ultimate­ly it will affect all Industries.

(3) For awhile this can- be\ compensated for by unemploy­ment insurance and- living off oner's war savings; but both of these will some d a y come to an end and a great deal of unem­ployment will exist in this coun­try. Only in case atomic energy should develop into a great new industry can such unemployment be prevented. A WORD TO WAGE WORKERS

Business as a whole should con­tinue good for a few years; but there is bound to be a big re­shuffling of jobs. This will apply to both union and non-union wage workers. For four years the newspapers have had many columns of "Help Wanted" and only a few inches of "Positions Wanted'" Next year the news­papers will have many columns of "Positions Wanted" and only a few inches of "Help Wanted." Another thing: Your employer has been taking anyone he could get during the war—old people, children, married women, to say nothing of many inefficient work­ers. _: -VI ""

Next year this situation will entirely change When you come to work a -year hence, you will find tfee walling room full of people seeking employment. :

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Comedians

BOB DUPREE

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BOB

MILLAR And His Popular

ORCHESTRA

PHONI 2200 FOR RESERVATIONS 1

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PRICE

10c v£3

LAS VEGAS, NEVADA. NOVEMBER 25, IMS

k „ OLD FORT ELLIS, BAUprf T>£Rr?IS FAKES EVIDENCE THAT HE V5 HEIrt

*MLOr4Q«4<3 ID W*i*< WOfW-Vr-* S1RL DEfRlEl DED ©* RED RfDEf?-

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^ I ^ I ^ S f r * ^

H0LO.ON* rWfA' LOOK "MERE.

1^<3ROLlNOrS«nU. I^ST^fif>^Of>**I

ST RE^OMEO

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rTOU Rl<3HTvf3E© RYDER.' *US rnA®|-HlAP BAD*'. LOOK' FORT OM

FIRE t*

VOU "SEts, OUR c o w s G O T OUT ON THE HIGHWAY--AND WHEN WE LOCATED THE TORN] PL ACE IN THE FENCE WE SAW CAR TRACKS AND

ISCCVERED THIS. OH

m ms*.

I£ \-\ WMri

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A MAN'S VOICE VELLEDATUSTO PULL *t3s4 OUT BUT1

WHILE WE STOOD HERE THE TAIL LIGHT FLASHED, *G£r rim POLICE!

VOU SEE, MVBOV USED TO BE IN

THE ARMV SIGNAL | CORPS.. htsmWl UNDERSTANDS

MORSE C O O E ^

SpMkgi THEY'VE FOUND EM ASM

RIGHT, TRACV. SUX^OH QOSf)

Sr

X~SAlDVOU COLILOi*pr WIN, ITCHY/ THEY'VE R H I N O U S / THEY'LL HAVE VOU IN

HANDCUFFS IN A FEW MINUTES.

rVOU THI^IK.VOURE A PRETTV SMART DAME, DONT YOU? W6LL I\ri GOING TO G E T EVEN WITH YOU IF :

THING

NO SOAR TRACY/ 1 W THAT BUGGY IT PULLED . J [ REALLY IS felGHT OH!* Jmmmmm. STUCf*?

A SCREECHING A}«OGRlNDING OF METAL A**JAINST CONCRETE RENOS THE A I R / THE CAR TOP PULLS LOOSE AT THE -

WINDSHIELD AS THE rtRONT WHEELS WEDGE/

A s THE HORSES CONTINUE TO PULL, THE OPENING INCREASED••.

1*1 WHAmiA <THlSeCAUEDAdN£TWO-..A ) I rtnm-'tm^alliaajFQujJflgQ — * l

WITH A RIGHT.

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tm^SmWm^ _ ^ ^ —Ses W s ^M Gar

"I couldn't find fir* le« bof, Doc. ml did the aext best thing till you tot Intra *.."

"I fcof • -Me***) partamaJRear aatAtf, OrH*rf . . . aobody Is sympothetle witb a* bams, thinking were oa strike...."

David slew

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\ CUMEC, VITA**!!**-ALULgltMss *fatot\V*i£&

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Go/fatA?... f musf o mlssratcf ammthm* * * Perhaps ft wat a mistake te let that MgM attwaradm^

agency handle oar rocntltlng campaign, sergeant .^

.'Tt9aT: ym taekte mem MIMM and cover ep my nantber't clvUitatlaa, as we houtnwmVI*'

know It, *t eTootnaa* eee 'tmtltW^a^^tm teemfeWhm* yaar UimmW^^ihiinelnf^^

aat m§nlm**iajtfhw mm'tHtmamt marftatJYe, •**

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Ll L ABaflER. — AMY- idm BY AL CAPP |

«WP* '3 MO* ttN**mi_ AVAILABLE ir-READ MC THET MOO YAWK SASSIETV COL-YUM. AS TH' SOSHUL LEADER Of DOGPATCH, AH GOTT&ifjdfcp Uf* WW TH* DOIN5

O-SASSIETY IN OTHER COMMOON

ITtES rT

HYARS A ITEM'DOUT

T H / DOWASEI? MISSUS

D4WrSBERT &»SCOMPOSINriO . U A M — ml

HAM V ¥mW

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w#rm

SHE: NABBED DAWSBERT ON A SADIE HAWKINS DAY A N '

1 TH** FOLLYIN' YAR DAWGBERT DONE STRUCK OIL. WHILE DIGGIN' HIS WAY OUTA TH" COUNTY J A I L - ,

m

WtWA»*h -WOFrTS.HEJItJN PO* GOVERNOR, GOT ELECTED, PARDONED HlSSELF, AN' HAD TH* SHERIFF HUNG.?

,*C*TER-f|iEY WflVtD THtMSELFS T NOO Y/**WK AN' BECOME

HIGH SASSIETY.*?*

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#

DAWGBERT DIED AN' LEFT IvIOOSEMOUTH fiO O R 9 0 BILLIONS OR MILLIONS,AH FO&ITS WHICH . PRAY TELL-WHUT IS SHE UP

W Nov/ r

•SHE'S GONNA

MARRYlw WIF A

VARMINT NAME OF

VICE-ADMIRAL

*\MJ at

GROPINGHAM.?

i ON HER WEDDIN' DAY, A GAL IS PrS'POSED T HAVE EVERYTHING SHE.1

WANTS-NOT JES' PRACTICALLY •wrB*iiYT*rffl^5*4'-rr*s U P T O M E

4f***3EE THETTmFORMER MOOSEMOUTH M^GOON-S WEDDIN'DAY IS

C O i W L C T t J ^

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' !%CEtVlr^ t^r^ORTERS At NER.HJ^rg. Wm0^&^mmf-0*M^*Wm^^^^m t^mW^AmtW: •nismmmT'wImWmv'

w*iiiwtfl^pi^*^s m_mlKmW^M%WSmt^ WtstEtAWmt^'S^^ AW#»MGROPIN*&-[W*m*Wt*WUlm_^m a%WAWYm^^*W^ ^hW&JIwWm

BOB ,*atmWM&

.YOU-YOU'RE THE SORROW; ITHE ONE WUO TRIED I D IMAKE ME RIDICULOUS VVTTM THAT LAUNDRY

[GAS? WHY-*-IF YOU WERE A

MAM, H O - jfitW

I WHY J O K E R ­' S THAT M O W YOU SHOW >OUR GRATITUDE?

*&%£ .IFJ&^SMP? M*P&i' Wm JOKER IS RESCUED BV A BEAUTIFUL BLONDE W H O TURMS OUT TO BE HIS W**VOmO*Ai COMPETITOR IM CRIME— "THE "SPARR.OW.' n-ts ilSHt l*4t IT OCTKirvt <»*!*», **Bl

cuat NP»s**iia'*lBt*fe»«a

1

GRATITUDE t VOU E X P E C T GRATITUDE ? W*4*| YOU ONLY RESCUED ME IN ORDER TO CROW OVER, M E - T O M A K E MCE /

RIDICULOUS.' LET ME OUT.

55*0^1

LAUGH ALL. YOU WANT/ tHJTFU HAVE THE LAST-HUM ? A

O YOU THINK I'D VttASTE MY T IME RESCUING A GRINNING tOlOT UKE YOU " N L E S S I R A D SOME USE FOR YOU? NOW GET BACK «t N E R E - A N O BEHAVE.'

rVEGOT BIS PLAMSFOR

Y O W ^

V ^ *

LATER, IN AN ABANDONED SAWMILt*T A S THE SPARROW SEEKS TD PERSUADE THE STUBBORN JC*KER TD WCRK FOR HER..

YOU CAN'T DO THIS T O M E YOU CAN'T RIDICULE M E

WITH THIS MELODRAMATIC CORN I YOU VILLAIN-J E R - V I L L A I N R S S •

SIVE, LIP THE M O R T G A G E - E R > T . MEAN i AGREE T O WORK FOR M E AND VOU- R E

FP^E.*7*Eff-//t5C /

LOOKS HC^PEtiESS. THAT M O G E T C A R C O U L O V E TAIC15N A N Y O F S t f p

R O A D S j ^ D M

^mfitE.

MtDGET C W f ' S A Y — I S A W

O N E C O M E B Y A N D TURttr4::.

UP TMAT R O A D , B A D M A N I .

W H A T S T M E U S E ? TMAT C A R C O U L D \ E T E I R N E D I N

A T A * I Y HOUSE ALONG

MERE.

TRti t fcBUT IM CASBmtr DfON?T> A T THE SPEED

WE'RE TRAVELtrOQ, THERE'S STILL

SUM CHANCE, CATCIHIMG

UPW4TM IT.

Jt*- A **+££

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: - ^ r i « r « * ^ ^ ^ . - . . - . - Stf***Srfa£s4*

• - ' , ' ^ * ' - : e*M^**r#»*if'ij'W

' BE AFRAID OF GHOSTS? ff" ONE w

FXHOVB A NICE, AMIABLE GHOST. LIKE ANNIES FRIEND TWffl-Y. UK CAN-BE A GREAT HELP * t a # * K —

BUT WHAT ARE GUYS

LIKE THAT DOtN'HCRE «sl AMERICA?!

OF COURSE YOU CANY . PASS THROUGH SOLID WALLS-OR WALK UNSEEN IN A CROWD-BUT THERE 1

HAT BE A WAY FOR YOU TO GET THE ANSWER TDJTHAT*

HEY,TWIFFY! W I MI6HT ASK YOU WHAT ARE YOU \ THE SAME**-* » WAS

DOtN'OVER HERE, \ JUST INSIDE, AROUND MR.TIDNABS MINGLING WITH

BIG HOUSE? J MRiJiDNABlS llNEW GUESTS

GEE. YOU SURE CAN GET IN ANYWHERE AND FIND OUT WHAT GOES O N - I WISH I WERE A GHOST/

NO-NO, ANNIE.1

?if»VER SAY THAT' H M M » PERHAPS I CAN HELP YOU<

THIS IS SLICK/ THROUGH THIS CRACK|

I CAN SEE TH' WHOLE ROOM, AND HEAR EVERlHING*

DER WAR FDR CHERMANY ISS NOT OVER-ONLY VUN BATTLE GOES AGAINST US-AND DER SAME FOR YOUR COUNTRY, GENERAL

YCSSS-HOW TRUE, BARON- AS IN TENNIS, WE REST

BETWEEN SETS

HA-HA. YOU BOYS JUST

HAD A LITTLE BAD LUCK«*

NEXT TIME, EH?

YAYA! VE BUSINESS MEN MUST STICK

TOGETHER" BUT TD BE SUCCESSFUL VE. M U T T * ! STRONG!

AN* HOW CAN WE BE STRONG WHILE OTHERS

CONTROLTHATSO TERRIBLE BOMB?

HO-HO! THfY SAY WE MUST 1 BE WTERNKnONALW MINDED i

I AM.' BUT WARBUCKS 1 fvN OLD REACTIONARY*- H* TS TOlKEEP ATOMIC BNEE *L

HIS OWN COUNTRY.

SENTIMENTAL FOOL.' BUT HELL TALK TURKEY- WHEN HE GETS ONE OF THAT

•'•lllrt-fi^f-ttt^-lslCpT-BE SO TOUGH THEN!

( • l i O M u

YOU HAVE f i TRUE JAPANESE HEART~V-J|4AT**Vl*R Y5UWISH, MT

COUNTRY WILL GLADLY PAY.'

YA! VOU ARE INDEED Mim OF US.1 #«T NDUCHERMANY *CAN __Wt BUSINESS J

m

PRICE

inc PRICE 17

m

LAS VEGAS, NEVADA, NOVEMBER 2m, 1945

TO THE READER*. OtcoLm*** von

ICNOW TH* I* JU-ST kit BmCm-SB TD r5ET SOME THANKSrSIVI N5 PINW5 TO THE r5.I^ IM TTHE OCCUPATION Z0NG6...OCAV bY

TAKE THE MESSAt*aET\ KAYO, AND SAY THAT

I AM ENTERTAVNINCt THEjiARLOF DROOPNCfTAlL

•'-iaws EVENINCT.

^T§LL LADY PLUSHBOTTOM .1H§IEARL HAS TO CATCH THE 8-15 TRAIN AND CAN'T COME OUT

FOR DINNER.

ifTTyl HJGGJNS

LISTEN, TAKE A TAXI, AND ILL HAVE SUPPER READY SO THE EARL CAN DINE AND

STILL CATCH HIS TRAIN ON TIME.

'CAN THE LAOY OF THE HOUSE SPARE A POOR MAN A CUPPA COFFEE AND A BITE TO

IP I* l l

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lis i l l

WfU*i UKEPTH

miwtt WmW*

11 S

EHPHL^

•JULS

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19

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WILSGNlSfARBUCK

*

SAND/ REMARKS THAT HE MKSHT HAVE T A M T T N I W S H W N S I ^ ^ DECIDE**, TO taOOK IN ON -i*5C*«UaT# INC.

rJT AM/T^aO «^v^^i^VV*Hy,NO--JVO|| V . J^^^JF/r-r/^Lm^Ttaf^ MISSED T*-4EM. >> 4tm4^*~-msJ*l I'M Or4 MV *k*ty OUT NtO , SON. \>Z^ \ "TOO, LIKE TO WAIT ? MR.RANDALL

M>U DIDN'T FIND ) J I TALKED WITH OUT ANy THING f ^ ^ D E T E C T t V E -WOLAN..

P S

ALLM& by EDGM* RICE 1^RRX?UOB Ql>

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•JHOKTW TKiTEAnH; 1OTBHEP WfflVI'SOIWTCD TAIWAN AND HIS tttall OUHD ALUES &E6AN TWtoNGTKfX TDTJECm OF THE KHAff. TDSlKlKEAROWFOK rTfEEDOW. *m(r ]A\^m(s I ^ A T / ^ ^ ^ S

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Tuscwticms 7t&?imdsriwe ~M mmtVSS Atm*KA3lmSf /

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tftTSt*PT5AEW22UJ^rcWL WITH DREAMS OF SODDEN WEALTH, TANK AND WANDA FINISH UNWADJNG

' "WE -W-SI1IP-5 TREASURE.-L**a<*»BWr<rraaaa-at*-«^ - ,'."•-• - ife.y^'J*1

ONE MORE TRIP AND MT DOi I'T UKE THf: WAY WE'LL HAVE THE LASTIHE LET THATfl&M0-*5 OFTHE*3C*U>ABCARD|>W2W£>' LURE WW IHE PLANE . - I HOPE •BE OtT-CLAIMEP SHE PEV. CAN l*X*ATEro"**^HAf**aCI«PSOME MLS5MG*SI#WXt&.'llWQ*. FROMTHE

mizCK-'MAtMW.

PEV'S AN UNPRI***iaXBLEl CHARACTER, WANDA...COMES «r A LONG LINE OF SCOTS HteHUNt AND WHEN THAT BREED'S WliP,l \TSH/LU>/i

& 1 M * B 1

I SAW VOU, UL J QUIT KIDDING AND OPEN UP.*

KlDPM'H£SAy&/ USSEN BOY SCOUT,! YOU HAD YOUR CHANCE] -NOW YOU AN'YOUR

HOSE/ 6JRL-FRIEND C*N STAY "HERE AH'IWt.. PEV AN' ME ;: ARE GONNA SPLIT THIS SOUGH

mm. mpf*f'A**t*i!rf.' pum Ii B*ffin^

VON'TBEAFOOL.UU OEVm NEVER 5TAND FOR A PIRTyt; DOUBLE-CROSS UKE THAT.*/

OH* MP BRIGHT NOW H E V OUT KNOCKIN'OFF KURU iFORME.'...THENniF//Vi> THE SPARK PLU65 AN' WEIi

HISS WS JOINT tSOOBBYe.' • m • ' J f J y T i y

Y'5EE,&yTHATtMr

T1M£,KURUKNEW THAT SHE'D PLAYEp WiM FOR A SUCKER

TOO/

PLEASE, PEV, LETS FORGET IT.J- I 'VE HAP ABOUT EN0U6H OFTII»H*ltPSrWF ...AU I WANT NOW IS TO "SET BACK TO THE STATES AND

I S'POSE YOU TWO KNOW Y' RUININ' A HARD EARNED f***puTATK)N... W H E N T H ' GANG HEARS O'lMS-IU HAVE A NEW NICKNAME AS SJ/RE Aft SHOOT'N'-

uca*yp AUcCAi#r*

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INS AND

MAXIMUM SPEED 4*47 MPW RATE OF CUA*#-*-*--*750**TE4i'#' SERVICE C0UNG HOOOFT

" OJUPNG RANGE 515 Ml* m*l^.-:M*tt^mm;W?:U)*'

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^imifsjAMa^ EGUIPPED WITH A TOGGED, TRlCVClE tANDlNiSA<3E4R> AND 4**tilA^MttES'TEER/NG-WHEEL REPLACIM6 IHE 1*5UAL WR-E-*3«TIT<X S«5^,« cysrng<AND«iJP^R*j-WMs,^^

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