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Reno Gazette-Journal from Reno, Nevada • Page 6

Location:
Reno, Nevada
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

6-RENO EVENING GAZETTE SEPT. 4, 1961 Four Making New Attempt mtm mm. I Buy Interest in Motel Mason Valley Soil District Yield Is High Special to Gazette-Journal YL'RINGTON Henry Washburn, It Happened Last Night BY EARL WILFON I I Men Are Being Exploited; Who Says So? A Woman COOPIRATOR SHOWN IN FIELD Honry Wathbum Finish Harvest LAS VEGAS CAP) Four men, who lost out on a bid to take over operation of the Thunder-bird Hotel here have moved "south on the Strip in a try to buy into the Dunes Hotel, a state official said today. Charles Rich, Sidney Wyman and George Duckworth, $11 veter an Las Vegas Gambling figures and Wendell S. Fletcher, an air craft parts manufacturer from El Monte, applied Thurs day for a total 30 per cent inter est in the Dunes.

Rich and Wyman seek 6 per cent each at a cost of $10,000 a point. Duckworth asked state permission to purchase 3 per cent at the same price. Fletcher wants 13 per cent at an undetermined cost. All would become officers of the Dunes, a hotel spokesman said. entertainment ROUND- THE-CLOCK HANK PENNY SUE THOMPSON DICK CONTINO i i 32 1 jjsjir 1 01 I Permit Sought For CRYSTAL BAY (Special) Jack A.

Ferguson of Kings Beach, has for a permit to build a breakwater, bulkhead and docking facilities end to dredge in Lake Tahoe at Crystal Rocks Subdivision near Crystal Bay. Objecitons should be sent in duplicate to Col. II. N. Turner, district engineer, U.S.

Army Engineering District, Sacramento Corps of Engineers, Wright Build ing, 1209 Eighth Sacramento, on or before Sept, 18. 0. N. MILLER mas Hi i Item NEW YORK Now at Labor Dayjime, it might be wise and again it might not to bring up the discovery just made in Paris that the laboring group most mistreated and exploited is. husband.

iWe're all slaves to our wives, fejlows. are cruel tyrants should demand our liberation. tyje may be pretty bossy at the factory or the pool room or the jtjte mill, or wherever we work, but when we get home, we're just lackies to the babe that hooked 'US. 7 i Just when we thought that the male shortage was ma King men more important, this bad news ''leaked out" in headlines in the 'aris-Presse." A woman writer, Oaniele Lord, turning traitor against her sex, claims that all Wives think their husbands are idiots and imbeciles. fr "Naturally, they 1 n't Change them for the world be cause if they changed them, then their husbands wouldn't be im beciles who slave for their loafing wives," claims the French lady.

hWe imbecile husbands not only carry in the coal and lug out the garbage, sprain our backs moving furniture, and kill ourselves pro- vlding security for our wives out we pay them a handsome salary for allowing us to do it. "The wife finds it much nicer to look out the window at her hus band taking the bus to the office than going to work herself," re ports this female scrivener fur ther. tAnd as for men dictating marriage terms because men are scarce -Most Frenchmen want to have a fling and marry in middle age. So what's the average marriage age in France? Twenty-four. "Man was born free and equal ijvith woman.

How did he allow himself to be reduced to slavery?" I The answer is, they got married. Daniele gets support from a couple of American wives Joanne Woodward and Paula Stewart. "I guess it's true," Joanne (Mrs. Paul Newman) says, "that Abraham Lincoln forgot husbands when he freed the slaves. Paul DOES do a lot of things to help SPARKS JE CONT.

SUNDAY MONDAY NEW SHOW RICHARD WIDMARK "THE SECRET WAYS" 2:40 6:15 :50 PLUS "Fabulous World of Jules Verne" in MYSTIMATION At 1:00 4:33 8:10 me out around the house, but I always get the impression he likes to do it. "Of course, he's a good actor. And Paula, wife of comic Jack carter, told me, agree, in a lot of ways. Some wives come on like Gangbusters, and it's wrong that the best way to lose a husband." I have also consulted several American men and they agree with me that this "revelation" is no revelation to American hus bands. They may never have ad' mitted it to anybody they dislike admitting it even to themselves but they have always known that they are in chains.

EARL'S PEARLS: This might be a lot different sort of world if a man had to have a license to hunt for trouble. WISH I'D SAID THATr A lot of men who proposed on bended knee still haven't gotten back on their feet. TODAY'S BEST LAUGH: Taffy Tuttle opened a fortune cookie in a Chinese restaurant, and read "Beware of short "dark man ap proaching he has your check." They tell of a doctor whose handwriting was so illegible that a patient used his prescription as a railroad pass, got into theaters with it, and finally gave it to his daughter, who played It on the piano and won a scholarship at the conservatory. That's earl, brother. Country Festival Planned Tuesday By Mt.

Rose Ward Mutual Improvement Association fall season activities for the Mount Rose Second Ward will open at 7:30 p.m. Tuseday with a Country Festival in the Mount Rose Ward Church. Entertainment including games and dancing has been planned for the evening. The affair is one of the recreational activities spon sored by the youth organization. Booths during the festival will offer home-made candies, pop corn, cake, cookies arid candied apples.

The public is invited to attend. Future programs planned by the organization include stage productions, music fests and dance festivals. Achtung: V'teses inserat ist gut tuer em stein imported Lowenbrau bier mit threm dinner in the ALPINE VILLAGE INN Open Daily from 5 P. M. 6395 S.

Virginia, FA 3-6564 DONALD PUBLOW Join First National Loan Production Department Associate Named Donald Publow, Canadian born banker, has joined the Reno loan production department of First National Bank of Nevada as a credit anaylst, according to an announcement by President E. Questa. A native of Perth, Ontario, Mr. Publow joins First National fol lowing more than 30 years bank ing experience. He began his ca reer in 1928 as a clerk with the Bank of Nova Scotia following his graduation from the Brock ville, Ont, high school.

The Canadian bank is an organization of 600" branches- and through the years Publow has held positions many departments throughout the country. He came to Reno and First National from the position of manager of the Bank of Nova Scotia's Vancouver office. He and his wife, the former Anne Isabel Crittenden of Lons-boro, are the parents of two daughters Patricia and Peggy. Fred W. Wilkins Taken by Death Fred W.

Wilkins, long time Reno resident, died Sunday in a local hospital where he had been a patient for some time. Mr. Wilkins, born Feb. 18, 1892 on a farm in Homer, had lived in California and Nevada for the last 34 years. He was a gardener at the Nevada State Hospital for a number of years, and later was a gardener for various private homes.

Surviving are two sisters, Mrs, L. M. Wagner of South Sioux City, Neb. and Mrs. H.

M. Wagner of Homer; three brothers, George Wilkins Of Omaha, Harry Wilkins of Sioux City artd A. L. Wilkins of Pueblo, Colo, and a number of nieces and nephews. Funeral services, to which friends are invited, will be held Wednesday at 11 a.m.

in the home chapel of the RossBurke Co. with Rev. Amon Johnson of Faith Lutheran Church clergyman. Speed of sound in air increases with the temperature, but at room temperature it is about 344 miles per second. 'iLrJ E2Z2 COLOR rm Rich, Wyman and Duckwor fonnerly were connected with ne Riviera Hotel here.

They and Fletcher withdrew their application to lease the Thunderbjtffl when ailinz owner Marion Hicks said he wanted to continue in control. W. E. (Butch) LevDoldt. South ern Nevada representative on the State Gaming Control Board, said the applications might be essed in time to be considered at the Sept.

18 meeting of gaming officials. Principal stockholder in th Dunes is Major Riddle. Leypofdt said he had not been informed whether the four proposed new owners would buy their shares out of outstanding stock or out of the hotel's treasury. It is said there are about 3,000 different kinds of lizard. 1 DOORS OPEN 12:45 COLUMBIA PICTURES CC7J ftgijfal 2TM LBfflACRISlM.

ANDY DOTE JOHN McflM RDM HUGDIT Imi i mm WU. JCMFMi 1 .00 4:207:45 1 1 :00 2nd New Wide-Screen Hit Blasting through bamboo curtain! COLUMBU PICTURES presents RICHARD BASEHART 1 3:05 6:25 9:50 TODAY DOORS OPEN 1 P.M. TWO TOP THRILLERS Qui vq DRAMA 1:37 5:12 8:47 1 A HAMMER FILM PROOUCTKM Breakwater Ferguson plans to dredge a short and narrow channel to afford access to a marina with 74 berths and to install a rock and sand fill breakwater to enclose it 1 OPEN 7:00 STARTS AT DUSK "BIG" HOLIDAY SHOW IIETUI1II in PFvrnn Mt PLACE 9 ma5cod r.OLOt tv nr aBJlOHUUKTlS-PIPBUIlIHE EXCEPT MON. NO COVER NO MINIMUM mt unit cooperator with the Mason Valley Soil Conservation District, 're cently harvested a three ton per acre, high quality intermediate wheatgrass, winter, wheat, alfal fa hy crop. John Connolly, member of the board of supervisors for the district, harvested the hay.

Washburn planted the interme diate wheat crass and Peruvian alfalfa in 1953. By last year the stand was thinning out so he disked the field and sowed it to winter wheat. The wheat was grazed most of the winter and cattle removed about April 1. 'Before time to harvest the wheat there was such a heavy crop of wheatgrass, wheat and alfalfa, that I decided to cut end bale the crop for hay," Wash burn said. Intermediate wheatgress is widely adapted for hay or past- ture on Irrigated lands having a water shortage, Arnold Nowotny of the soil conservation service said.

This grass is also adapted to non-irrierated lands having 12 inches or more annual precipita tion. A widely adopted variety of to termediate wheatgrass is named Greenar, This variety is an introduction from Russia. A good hay and pasture mixture for short ir rigation water areas is Greenar intermediate wheatgrass and La-dak Alfalfa. Two planting materials being tried by field trials in cooperation between the Soil Conserva tion Service and Mason Valley Soil Conservation District are Liso smooth brorne grass and Goards fescue. Attorney Claims Assigned Bills Total $12,414.86 Reno attorney Jack I.

McAuliffe has filed suit against the River side Casino Corp. demanding pay ment of allegedly unpaid bills totaling $12,414.86. McAuliffe claims he has the bills on assignment from a number of local businesses and has retained Ernest S. Brown as his attorney in the civil action in Washoe District Court. Firms and amounts sought are: A.

Levy and J. Zentner, Farmer's Exchange, Dohrmann Hotel Supply, $2r 523.70; Borden Foods of Nevada, Swift and Blake, Moffitt and Towne, and Fine Foods, San Francisco News Call Bulletin, $390.68: Henry F. Budde Publica tions, $501; Procter and Gamble Distributing $164; Parodi, Er- minio and Eng-Skell $65.50, and O'Brien, Spotor- ni and Mitchell, $1,662.92. ACCUMULATION The average American family of four people may be expected to produce an average of 70 pounds of garbage each week, or about two and one-half pounds per capita per day. Soot from burned butter was used for sore eyes by the ancient Greeks and Romans.

Holiday Fun Treat! IfS JERRY'S BIGGEST, FUNNIEST YET! I Jerry 2nd Delight! 'HAND IN HAND" 2:55 6:00 9:05 T-O-N-l-G-H-T I HAWviAN smsum MICHAEL CUUN KB0WH WILEY CARL EIN PIGGY GASS CSOFe MCE H'th only nun 1 1 1 iw Shows nightly 10-12-2 AM. Except Monday NO MINIMUM OR COVER CHARGE 35 WEST'I STRKH Those FiGHTitflovitJ 'Leathernecks AreTakmg Off On Furlough -Fo Grls, Girls is! SHOW TIMES: 11:30 2:00 A.M. 9:00 2Mls PLUS ACTION PACKED 2a. JIM BROWN FRANCES RAFFERTY GATES OPEN 7:30 SHOW AT 8 P.M. ScOPt.

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Pages Available:
2,579,448
Years Available:
1876-2024