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Reno Gazette-Journal du lieu suivant : Reno, Nevada • Page 18

Lieu:
Reno, Nevada
Date de parution:
Page:
18
Texte d’article extrait (OCR)

November 2, 1970 Reno Evening Gazette Area deaths George Tuthill George S. Tuthill, 62, of Reno, died Saturday in a local hospital. He was born in Seattle, April 1, 1908, and had lived in Reno since 1957. Tuthill worked for Shell Oil Company in Sacramento for 20 years and owned and operated a service station in Burney, before coming to Reno, where he worked at Harrah's Club as a security guard. He is survived by his widow, Harriet R.

Tuthill, of Reno; two daughters, Mrs. Betty Halverson of Pacifica, and Mrs. Barbara Powell of Keno, three sisters, Mrs. Lucille Jackubowski, Miss Audrey Tuthill and Mrs. Clara Pratt, all of Seattle, and five grandchildren.

The funeral will be Tuesday at 2:30 p.m., at Ross, Burke Knobel Mortuary. Cremation will be at Mountain View Crematory in Reno. Elmer Campbell Elmer John Campbell, retired Western Pacific conductor died Thursday in Bonneville, Utah after a long illness. He was born Feb. 25, 1893, in Unionvilie and moved to Winnemucca with his family in 1903.

Campbell was married to Margaret Arbon in Grantsville, Utah in 1920. Mrs. Campbell died in 1966. He was a member of the Winnemucca Masonic Lodge No. 19, Kerak Shrine Temple, Reno, Royal Arch Masons, and Knights Templar.

He is survived by two daughters, Mrs. Guy (Lucille) Williams, of Reno, and Mrs. Don Lubeck, of Clearfield, Utah; two sisters, Mrs. William Welch and Mrs. Sam Holman, both of Winnemucca as well as seven grandchildren.

A Masonic funeral will be held at 2 p.m. Tuesday in Eddy and Son Mortuary Chapel with burial following in the Masonic section of the Winnemucca Cemetery. Casimiro Vigil Casimiro Vigil, a retired carpenter, died Saturday in a local hospital at the age of 85. Vigil, a native of Colorado, is survived by a son, Homer C. Vigil of St.

Pier Rivera, Calif. and a nephew, Joseph Sanchez of Carson City. A funeral will be held in Downey, Calif. with the Ross, Burke and Knobel Mortuary in charge of local arrangements. Frank B.

Lind Frank B. Lind, a resident of Reno for the last 25 years, died Oct. 24 local hospital. Lind, who left no known relatives, was buried today in Our Mother of Sorrows Cemetery. Ross, Burke and Knobel Mortuary was in charge of arrangements.

Lt. Richard Funk A memorial service in honor of Lt. Richard Funk will be conducted Wednesday, at 7:30 p.m., at Lutheran Church of the Good Shepherd, 501 California Ave. The Rev. F.

E. Miller, pastor, will officiate. Lieutenant Funk, reported missing Oct. 12, when he and two companions failed to return from a hunting trip in the Knik Arm area north of the Fort Richardson Reservation, Anchorage, Alaska, has been officially declared dead by the U.S. Army.

An extensive air and land search has been conducted by joint Army and Air Force teams, with all evidence pointing to a boating mishap which apparently occured as the three were en route to a favorite duck hunting location. Lieutenant Funk was a graduate of Reno schools and the University of Nevada-Reno, where he was a member of Alpha Tau Omega fraternity. He is survived by his widow Devron, son Cory, and his mother, Dorothy Funk. His father, Adolf Funk, Reno banker, pre- Carol Nicholas Mrs. Carol A.

Nicholas, of Winnemucca, died Wednesday in a Reno hospital. She was born in Albany, N.Y., Feb. 14, 1937. She attended school in Philadelphia, and was a waitress there and in California before marrying J. L.

Nicholas in Corpus Christi, Tex. They lived in Reno for a while but moved to Winnemucca in 1969 where Nicholas was employed by Henderson Motors. She is survived by her husband, two daughters, Sharon and Jackie, of Winnemucca, her mother, Mrs. Bertha Koelah, her stepfather, Harry Koelah, and her stepbrother, Harold Koelah, all of Philadelphia, Friends may call at the Ross, Burke and Knobel Mortuary this evening from six to 9:30 o'clock. The funerar will be at Trinity Episcopal Church in Reno, Tuesday, at 10 a.m.

Burial will be in Mountain View Cemetery. Arrangements! are by Ross, Burke and Knobel Mortuary of Reno. Ethel M. Parker A funeral was scheduled today in Las Vegas for Ethel M. Parker, 79, who died.

Saturday in her Southern Nevada home. Mrs. Parker was prominent in Reno civic activities for many years: A member of the Pen Women's Club, she wrote many feature stories on mining, ghost camps and Nevada history. In 1964, she was cited by Gov. Grant Sawyer for efforts towards state beautification.

She was a member the Bowers Refurnishing Committee, which succeeded in establishing the Washoe Valley home as a state historical monument. Mrs: Parker was an officer of the Reno Women's Civic Club for many years and belonged to the Reno Rose Society. She is survived by her husband, and sons Milton, Robert, Franklin and Ralph Parker. Funeral arrangements were handled by the Bunker Brothers Mortuary. Ernestine Miller Special.

to the Gazette FALLON Ernestine (Sis) Miller died Saturday in Churchill Public Hospital. She was born Oct. 17, 1919 in Fallon and had resided here all her life. She and her husband Lloyd owned and operated the Fallon Sporting Goods store. Surviving in addition to her husband are two children, Fred, and Joette Miller; her mother, Mrs.

Gladys Saunders, all of Fallon; and.a sister, Mrs. Lorraine Dingey of Ely. She wasr a 25 year member of Beta Sigma Phi sorority and a member of the Nevada Preceptor, Theta The funeral will be held at 2 p.m. Wednesday in the Austin Funeral Home with the Rev. Fred Baker of Epworth Methodist Church clerg.

man. Burial will be in the Fallon Cemetery. Anna Schulz Mrs. Anna Margaret Schulz, 73, 604 Elko and a lifelong resident of Nevada, died Sunday in a Reno hospital. She was born in Yerington on Nov.

27, 1896. Mrs. Schulz was a member of the Women's Benefit Society, St. Agnes Society, The Golden Age Club and The Garden Club. She is survived by her husband, William C.

Schulz, of Reno, a daughter, Anna Clair Boal, of Alabama, sisters, Marie Hendricks, of Reno, Alvina Freitas, of Yerington, and Helen Evans, of San Mateo, a grandson, Frank Pettengill, of Tuscon, and one greatgrandchild. Rosary will be recited Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. in the Walton Funeral Home. Requiem Mass will be offered Wednesday at 10 a.m. in St.

Thomas Aquinas Burke Maurice and B. Knobel Services Mortuary. pending Death Notices TAVERNIA GEORGE Washington. In Reno, Oct. 30, 1970.

Beloved husband of Emma L. Tavernia of Sparks, father of Marilyn J. Galli of Sparks, George P. Tavernia of Sparks and Robert R. Tavernia of Prineville, Ore.

and grandfather of 13 grandchildren, brother of Philip Tavernia of Spokane, Wash. Friends are invited to the Holy Rosary Monday, 8:30 p.m. at the Pyramid Funeral Home. A Requiem Mass at 10 a.m., Tuesday, Nov. 3, 1970, at the Immaculate Conception Church, Sparks.

Interment at Our Mother of Sorrows Cemetery. TUTHILL GEORGE beloved husband of Harriet R. Tuthill, father of Betty Halverson and Barbara Powell, brother of Lucille Jackubowski, Audrey Tuthill, and Clara Pratt, also five grandchildren. Services Tuesday 2:30 p.m. at Ross, Burke and Knobel Mortuary.

Private cremation. VIGIL CASIMIRO. Services pending at Ross, and Knobel Mortuary. RITTENHOUSE OLIVE. Services pending at Ross, Burke and Knobel Mortuary.

ZEILER, SALO in Reno age 70. Services pending at Brien-Rogers and Crosby. McRAY, PAUL age 72. Services pendand Crosby. SCHULZ, ANNA MARGARET In Reno on November 1, 1970.

A native of yerington, Nevada aged 73 years. Recitation of the Rosary Tuesday evening at 7:30 p.m. in Sierra Chapel, Walton Funeral Home. Funeral services from Walton Funeral Home on Wednesday morning at 9:30 a.m. Requiem Mass will be celebrated in St.

Thomas Aquinas Cathedral at 10:00 a.m. Wednesday. Interment will be in Our Mother of Sorrows Cemetery. Mildred Rowan Mildred J. Rowan, 60, died Friday at Mount Grant General Hospital in Hawthorne.

She was born in Ashtabula, Ahio, but had lived in Hawthorne for the past 21 years and was a registered nurse in Honolulu, Hawaii, for eight years. Mrs. Rowan was of George Rowan of Hawthorne. She is survived by her husband; her mother, Mrs. Bessie Erickson; two sisters, Eslie Rennick, of Ashtabula, and Thelma Topinka, of Cleveland, Ohio; two brothers, Clifford Erickson, of Ashtabula, and Frederick Erickson, of Newark, Ohio.

Funeral services were held in Ashtabula today. Hawthorne Funeral Home was in charge of local arrangements. Maurice B. Snyder Maurice B. Snyder, 65, a salesman and attorney, died Saturday in a Reno hospital.

Snyder had made his home in Elko for about three months. He was an attorney and salesman for a Portland, Ore. firm for many years. He is a native of McCook, Neb. Snyder was a member of the Oregon State Bar Association and graduated from Northwestern College of Law in Portland.

Surviving are his widow, Ruth P. Snyder and a son, Earl M. Snyder, both of Portland; a daughter, Maurine Maskall of Eugene, a stepdaughter, Mrs. Maria Daly of Lompoc, and a stepson, Marchall Bump of Yochats, Ore. A service and burial will be in Portland, with the Ross, Burke and Knobel Mortuary in charge of local arrangements.

SALEM, Ore. (AP) Mabel Christine McKay, 74, widow of former Secretary of the Interior Douglas McKay, died of cancer early Sunday in a Salem hospital. BUSINESSMAN DIES DAYTON, Ohio (AP) Stanley C. Allyn, 79, Dayton, retired board chairman of the National Cash Register died Saturday night in Greenwich, following a lengthy illness. ORGAN INSTRUCTION for those who don't own an organ.

We can PROVE, in 4 weekly lessons, how' easily you can learn to play a and enjoy the Hammond Organ. ONLY EVERYTHING $9.95 INCLUDES Special Family Plan Available day or evening classes CALL Don Conn or Ted Olsson at 329-2595 Emporium of Music West 645 Booth in Village Shopping Center Cathedral. ceded him in death, VALUABLE COUPON MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY NIGHT! FAMOUS CHUBBY CHICKEN All the Chicken you can eat! COMPLETE DINNERS FOR $1.50 (Children per year of age up to 12 years) DINING ROOM ONLY. KIETZKE LANE ONLY A DRIVE IN Board of education selection set Tuesday 1 Bath deterrent Ever encounter a boa constrictor in your bathroom? Shirley Seiler, director of the Animal Protective Association in St. Louis, captured this four-foot- long boa after she received an excited call from a family that there was a snake hiding under the bathtub.

(UPI Telephoto) Lush, tropical world possible for Venus SANTA MARIA, Calif. (AP) The planet Venus, now a boiling, lifeless cauldron, could be turned into a lush, green tropical world and give man another home in the universe, a college professor says. Dr. Matthew F. Norton, a professor at American University in Washington, D.C., said the introduction plants into the atmosphere of Venus by man could start a process eventually that would cool off that torrid planet second closest to the sun and make it habitable for man.

Venus, smaller than earth, is shrouded by an atmosphere of carbon dioxide gas which keeps heat trapped on the planet, said Norton, who presented a paper on Venus at the Western Space Congress. The surface temperature of Venus is about that of boiling water and not now suitable for life as we know it, he said. By introducing an algae-like AL.BASSADOR LONDON (AP) Informed sources said today that Lord Cromer, a banker and former diplomat, has emerged as the leading candidate to be Britain's next ambassador to the United States. Nevada voters Tuesday will pick a seven-man State Board of Education from a list of 14 candidates who include six current board members, six persons from Las Vegas, a Reno school teacher and a Sparks housewife. Because a federal court ordered this election to go statewide instead of in previous districts, none are true "incumbents." However those who served on the board and are up for election, with the way they ranked in primary voting in parenthesis, include: -Dr.

Mary Fulstone, medical doctor from Smith (2nd); -Louis Bergevin, ville rancher (6th); -George Harris, Las Vegas retired school administrator and real estate executive (5th); -Donald Cooper, Fallon, furniture store owner (9th); -Samuel McMullen, Elko certified public accountant (10th); -William Orr, Pioche petroleum wholesaler (3rd). Top vote getter in the primary election was a high school teacher from Reno, Robert I. Rose. Shirlee Wedow, a Sparks housewife active in school affairs, placed 12th. Those on the ballot from Las Vegas include: -Rosemary Clarke, housewife and medical librarian (4th); -Cynthia Cunningham, English instructor at the University of Nevada at Las Vegas (5th); -Anthony Foley, casino cashier (7th); -Bill Cramer, tour director (11th); -Maggie Ferguson, teacher (13th); -Elizabeth Law, housewife, (14th).

Dr. J. C. Buchholz Chiropractor Has Resumed 18 Practice 322-6231 1 plant into the cooler layers of the Venusian atmosphere, said Norton, man could begin a process of breaking down carbon dioxide into its basic elements: carbon, which would collect on the planet's surface, and oxygen, which would replace the carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. Through the process called photosynthesis, plants use sunlight to convert carbon dioxide into growth-producing carbohydrates, while oxygen uneeded by the plants is released.

By removing carbon dioxide from the Venusian atmosphere, Norton said "you would permit heat trapped on the planet to go into space. This cooling would eventually cause rain." SHAPE-UP! Exercise Equipment Rentals SLIM GYM Month MASSAGE ROLLER Month BELT ROLLER Month EXERCISE BIKE Month CALL 358-5123 DENO 1920 Glendale Road Dents FREE DELIVERY Area in Reno-Sparks Month Rent Applies to Purchase Price DEN CHICK Every Tuesday in the Golden Rooster Room MENU Crisp Tossed Green Salad, choice of Dressing Golden Rooster Fried Chicken Whipped Potatoes Country Gravy Creamed Spinach Strawberry Freeze Small loaves of Oatmeal Bread Nevada Sage Honey Glass of Chablis Wine Coffee, Tea or Milk SERVED FROM 5 P.M. $3.95 PER COUPLE The regular menu will also be offered Different Specialty Dinners are served each night, Monday thru Thursday in the Golden Rooster Room where 2 persons dine for the price of one! John Ascuaga's NUGGET DIES EXPERIENCED RE-ELECT JACK CUNNINGHAM Washoe County Commissioner Representing YOU for the Past Eight Years Dependable, Objective, Sincere Paid Pol. Ado..

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