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Nevada State Journal from Reno, Nevada • Page 3

Location:
Reno, Nevada
Issue Date:
Page:
3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

A 2('i. NEVADA STATE JOURNAL, RENO, NEVADA- RENO REVUE CRISIS KEEPS FDR AT OFFICE IN WASHINGTON President i Present Outlook Improved i meet of 1 I'ike, a Kov. l'-y a gue i i i Saeiairie.nto, on aetivitif.s of youngei By JANNIE MADDEN A Keno is not my home any longi'i a a 1 can i i it I i i a so not being an outsider I i try and you a i news of a the 1 college' group have been i a long. i i i.s a Mane WASIU.N'GTON, Aug. 2 7 -IY Roo, ve It so pci- turbed over a i of the a i cn.iis a ie' i a ha.

1 a a to go to de a hoiiu Monday informed i Ilou.se said i The President vvas said to be- i however, a i prevails a a the' situation appeals rnoie a it did la.st k. Receives Reports The' White Hoiuif Sabbatn V.K, i a i considerable a i i a.s i Koo.se vi It kept in lele- i a i i state di part nc'iit i i a who spent ivjy i I I I I I i flay i i and DexmeT, who vi.siU'd in Sacra- i a i reports from abroad, i lor te elays -and had A aris.ng a he to where he a of State Cordell Hull and later rcce ivecl a written report Irom Undorsccretai-y Sum- Wollf.s a a i European i a i State a spoue.smen i i a i i i a denied ports Irom London a the Bnt- sh foreign i had a.sked Mr Hoo.sevelt'.s opinion ol a a i Bnti.sh suggestion for a truce between Poland and Germ a May Change Plans, Sojnc i i a sources here believed a i a communication may have addic.ssed to the Chief Executive, i was un- i a i a i would seek to place i the role oi adviser to the' British foreign office. The same which indicated probable a a of the Hyde Park trip, there is i likelihood that the Presi- i address any plea to Kurope over the weekend, although unforsecn circumstances may change present plans. It was understood that the as yet had received no replies to the peace appeals he directed to German Chancellor Adolf and King Victor Emmanuel of Italy. There i.s some feeling, it is said, that the Italian ruler may reply formally in the near future, and that Hitler may also answer.

a i SI-VITI i In i those that called ijiicl: lor the Popularity i I it, you Keno boys I i i be i appreciate' i i A go to a i fe.i a from a a i i i i i a Lake' Trihor: holds ib a a i i i i to most of. us. Kspe- i on do sie our Inend.s to the A i i lake side casinos to dine i a Arming those we' i Peterson mcl Hay Harris, Kobe-rta i i i a Lamg. ou i i i the grace' ol a a a i i a did i a at the amateur show at BIJOU and a i i a Puddy Swan.son days at Bijou Paik mill a Incnel. I saw Paul Sca- norn and Lolty MacDonalel once Cove displaying i Sigind Nu Also at u.

Sam Frnncovich, who has been, i then- in 'he Uoie all -summer. Helen Lilley a a i trio suiumer at Bijou i to kci'p up i the race and ()ace- ot the' stay-out-laters. A at Cal-Neva is Jimmie Warden, another of our working i i Por.sh Armstrong of Sacni- ine'iito, or Reno if had her choice', visited with a i a Bracl- 1, who has been i i coins behind a cash register now and then. The- session at Cal held intcresl for two of our studious AC'vadans; those; being Lawson i a and Kink Rives. Hank Isbi-ll was in town most of the home from school in Washington; and his the i a popular Dorothy, was hen- from schooling in I.OS Angoli-s.

IClisi.be'th Dayton, a weather all winter, lound the Nevada sun a little hard to take. Jim Sullivan is homo from Ann Arbor still wnt- mg his nightly letters to San Krani-isco. And speaking of Sul- hvans, is Halph, too who has been in town most ot the Bummer i i ot Mildred i ndi'l who is home in Berkeley. The Summerficld girls usually have an exciting summer. Nan some time in Carmel i a school chum trom Bransons, and Alary i took up mount a i climbing in the North.

Kddie Hill and Bobbie Games have bone South to Santa Crux, and around, doubt if they'll get much Tsk! T.sk! Prince Hawkins is home tor the a having been graduated from Yale. He will resume his studies at Harvard the fall. George Dukes had no white-collar job, so he Of course by now the Helen Hidden-Joe Stem marriage is no news, we still wish them lust oodies and oodles of. happiness. Speaking of the "One Plus One Makes One" types, Betty Jean Henderson and Conton are planning a little home.

Good luck, kids. Gloria Peck has been working behind a soda fountain most of these warm months. While another ambitious soul, the ladies' man, Jim McNubney, has been counting cars on the Carson road. Earlier in the summer our business man, Cbas. Mapcs.

went kitchen inspecting at the Franny (St. Francis Hotel, to you) in San Francisco. He resisted Harry Owens tor a Kitchen. Shameful, isn't Being a litt'e dubious about the real dirt of this a i little metropolis, it's about i I put this name -y column to an end. There's fun.

friends, and good Silver Shirts to Undergo Inquiry WASHINGTON, Aug. --Chairman Martin Dies, of the house committee on un- American activities, said Sunday night that his group probably will start Monday on its long-awaited investigation of the silver shirts, alleged 1'ascistic organization headed by i i a Dudley Pelley of Ashcville, N. C. Dies earlier had said thai Earl Browder. secretary of the American Communist party, would testify.

Browder's personal affairs, however, require' his pres- once in New York, and he will testify later. When Browder appears, he will be asked to a i the a i of American Communists toward the new Russian-German non- aggrcssion pact. Canadians Guard Strategic Points MONTREAL, Aug. Soldiers Sunday stood guard at strategic points in Quebec province for the first time since the World War. Throughout the western section of the province, and particularly along the vitally important St Lawrence River, troops with fixed bayonets were stationed at key points which might be subject to attack or sabotage, such as canals, railway yards, bridges power stations, airports and some industrial plants.

Four regiments were on a voluntary basis over the week end for guard duty. Sunflower Mine Action John Blair The Sunflower Mine in the Rough and Ready district near Grass Valley is being worked un- cler the direction of John Blah- Considerable development is being done and additional work is planned when the shaft is do watered Modern Hen's Career Nothing To Crow Over vr -X- -X- -X- -X- Biddy's Life Is Scientific and By BERTHA WELLMAN Central Press Writer CLEVELAND. Adam inrl Eve are start, of the s.ev- world's poultry congress, progress here. Adam and Eve, "Gallus tiankiva," are the species of fowl from which all wish 1 were really one of you. YOU'VK really got some-thing there, and after you live in a clique-and-heat berg, you will REALLY know what I mean.

This i.s a sign-ofl now. good luck anil he good O'BRIEN SCHOOL OF MUSIC i be i i lot OFFICIAL INJURED SAINT JOHN. N. Aug. i here; condition of Murra MacUrcn, 78-year-old lieutenant governor of New Brunswick, wh was injured in an automobile ac cident Sunday, was reported to improving Sunday night.

ENTERS HOSPITAL Mrs. Earl Smith, the forme Marion Hicks, will enter Mary's Hospital Monday to lak i i a i a i uodLrn ehir-kens are descend- d. They are the theme crn- ter, the trylon and pensphere if the poult) congress and hey gel of praise from i visitois. What the hens i a hem nobody knows. But the )oultry a i is not what it to be.

Because of the way i i are today--the other i i may say Adam and i'lvr pretty dumb birds to let a savage catch them pen them up. All the i roubles of the poutry world began on a day If you i of chickens as i i farmer's i raises for pin money, you're all wiong. It's a billion dollar industry, and farmers have gone in for mass production and science. Cooks are kept busy all the i just trying to think up new egg recipes, because in i country alone a thousand completely catalogued. So the life is short and not very sweet, but it is scientific.

Hen Is Really a Reptile The average hen's lite is two and, believe it or not, they say she's a reptile. She has a temperature of. 107, a respiration oi 26, a pulse of 135 and no teeth. Se can't get married unless the farmer approves oi the rooster's pedigree, and she can't raise baby chicks because the farmer can raise them better in incubators. If she stop trying and doesn't lay enough eggs the farmer gives her a stimulant.

And if he doesn't i the color or the shape of Ihe eggs she lays he changes her diet and he can make her lay purple ones if he wants tu The average good hen scien- I ii)ts say, lays approximately 200 eggs in a two-year life- lime. She has six i i farmers in America concentrating on how to get them out of her Then to add insult to injury eggs are pioducecl every second. Science Is Wonderful The weather outside may be 14 degrees below zero a farmer can hatch 20,000 eggs in one incubator. Science is wonderful. Chicken iced is grown in controlled climate, and hens live in air conditioned houses.

They also vaccinate hens, and give them cod liver oil, rind put them in artificial sunshine to make them lay eggs all winter. They don't even worm hens in the old fashioned way. They give them medicine that iust makes the worms --let go. Time was when a hen had a nice comfortable life of it, scratching around in the barnyard and raising a brood of chickens, when she felt like it. But no more.

Authorities of the poultry congress have her i I tioebii i uiy ejgfis last enough--they decide to eat her. But the farmer's son doesn't come out to the chicken yard sadly with a hatchet in his hand. No, he's got to be scientific, too. He ships her off to the butcher. The butcher hangs her up by her heels on a belt line, or a chain gang as you might say, along with a million other hens.

He electrocutes her, then he dips her in boiling wax and pulls all the feathers off in one swoop. She just keeps right on going down the belt line. One person lops off her right leg, another person her left leg, and a third person snaps out her gizzard. They scald her, they wrap her in cellophane, and they stuff her in a tiny box with a blue label on her chest. "For the label says.

But the stcwing's all over, and what kind of a life is that? You may never have lived on a farm in your life, but you certainly ought to feel sorry for the poor hen. JAP AIRPLANE REACHES NOME Army Seals Cameras Of Aviators Obituary TAHOE CREWS BATTLE FIRES Lightning Blamed for Lake Blazes Baby Clipper Raised with Dead STOCKS TRAIL WORLD EVENTS TAHOE CITY, Aug. hold-over i i fires caused by the storms of last Monday and Tuesday have kept the forest service crews in the Tahoe district busy the past wce'k Most serious wa.s a fire which broke out a i a alternoon bet i Creek and Blask- wood Creek, on a ridge about two miles from the lakeshore i way near Timberland. Although Ranger-; Charles Arment and H. 1 Snider of Truckee and A crew of 40 CCC boys, from the Rubicon Camp had the fire nuclei control by 3:30 m.

i a lire i completely around it, it is anticipated that it will require a a to burn itself out. An tU'oav ol aboul an acre was hunied over and 26 spot i ext i i i after Waddles a the Mams Peak lookout, had discovered it. This was a lire in the pin" needles and growth of many years' a i i with old rotten 'punk 1 logs increasing the arel Last Wednesday at Twin Peaks, a fire was discoveied in a red fir seven feel in diameter which had to be cut and extinguished. Thin.sclay a holdover i i i lire wa.s discoveied in the huge trees of the Blackwood Creek Peac'c Hopes Create Sharp Rallies A a 2 7 -W a irulcr th" i i i European i i i i last i i price's commodity i a i i i i the world i i i i cl and nriunva dowlop'iviis i i i a 1 i i e'linviKH's de- e'd olli) 000 (H)'l i i i i i i i puUed i i IP an a i to i i i i i 1 i i i a i Slock ice's at how- a i i a to ish aoove' i i ei K'S a i on the basis nl the Ii.) stock i i i i i i i i i losj-c-s em I i i t'd 1 Sharp I'ui- lii's i i i i i i S.it- i ho ie a i i i i i i i i a i a i ilec'l e-oi-eli il i i i i srs.s A Ihe i i M-I ie a Central I'hottcplioto The Rimiliaii a i Minns a i i tho c.i i i i i i i i i an i l.m is A i i a the ot tho baby i i cr.isliod i i leis- oi' I i i c-i i i i i i i i i i icon live.s. the bodies wiuc i in i i i i i I i i was mudc.

The plane, cMrryiiiK several A i mis, a i i i i IliKiit I i low- i I Miami to Buenos Aires when it crashed in the bav near i cle' a i About PEOPLE You Knov Freight Train Mishap Causes Death of Man FRESNO, Aug. (UP)-Coroner N. Lisle Sunday reported that John C. Jackson, 59, a former SRA carpenter of Ludlow, died from loss of blood and shock after the wheels o1 a ern Pacific i train cut oft his left leg last night. Investigating officers Jackson, who was apparently trying to board a freight car, was dragged 200 feet by the train.

i i i i i i i i bee of i re. i i MI a i share h.ut i si tin i a i i i iad sma 1 ''SM a It pi i i close i on g.i tu Reno Visitor--Miss Cornelia Graduate Here for i A rent ol i a a a Carr, of i i ol aela Youth DlCS From Reno i i at the beginiiins ol and slalicmecl al i -TU' the week i al Riv-rsiile. i i a as 1 hirst On i lie no I one i la.sl tt i) He was i ol S.wbru L( AM, Leave, for YosemUe-Louis, ,,,1 a a Broe.ks a i a to spen 1 i i A i i IM several days in Yo.semile a i i i i i 1hc- ol a i i i Paik. She is a i business i i a i i school Reno. FLAMIMAUTO i TAKES 5 LIVES Former Student in A a i i siuclc i i Ihe' at i i i i i i I k-le i i a i i i fni ncls in no He- is I i i i su- at mbe-i i i a e'Ui i c.ird as a i a of Los Aime'li's.

elic-el I thil.sl in a i i desert heal. Returns From Carson Miss I 'a a i i a i i i Britain ImpOSeS i sue spen, a i se-n- Stock Regulation Machine Crashes Lnto.p.ist^ week ov iny om ri ss mjn oy Cur.son i she spenl i Stales sen- les i a sen- LONDON, Aug. (UR-- The government Sunday night imposed drastic regulation of securities trading which was interpreted to mean the of all securities with which Britain could finance purchase of i i abroad, as she did in the World War. The order torbidding certain transactions meant that the government had decided that it must be able to put its hands on so- called in lornational securities at a moment's notice. It applies only to peisons subject to the English i i a a since enforcement against others would be i i if not impossible, and also would affect world markets unduly.

a i i i in a i Return From Wells Mai'- g.in I i and a i l)i are NOME, Alaska, Aug. 27 i motored Japanese monoplane i landed Sunday at 1:58 p. m. (PST) completing a 2400-mile over-water hop trom Sapporo, Hokkaido. Japan.

Cameras of the seven airmen aboard promptly were sealed on U. S. army orders until the craft is out of the United States. It was believed the plane would remain overnight. Completing the longest single hop on a projected globe-girdling "good will" flight, the Nippon made a graceful landing, piercing sullen skies through rain and fog.

The seven Japanese airmen aboard the transport-type craft reported they followed practically the same course as that by Col. and Mrs. Charles A. Lindbergh from Alaska to Japan several years ago. At the controls when the plane landed was Sumitoshi Nakao, 36.

who guided one of the two Heinkel transports which flow Berlin to Tokyo in April, Ip38.1 and who piloted the same craft from Tokyo to Thai (Siam) January of this year. Others aboard were Shigco Yoshida, 28. co-pilot; Hajime Shimokawa, 31, aeronautic engineer; HUoshi Sacki, 29, mechanical engineer; Nobusada Sato, 25, radioman; Chosaku Yaokawa, 27, radioman, and Takeo Ohara, representing the Japanese people. Six of the seven passengers are members of the aviation staff of the Osaka Mainichi and Tokyo Nichi-Nichi. powerful Japanese publications the i PHILLIP S.

CALLAHAN Funeral services for Phillip Spalding Callahan, infant son of Mr. and Mrs, Jack Callahan, will be held Monday at 2 p. m. in St. Thomas Aquinas Cathedral.

The Rev. John J. Ryan will officiate as clergyman. Interment will be in the Mater Doloroso cemetery. Funeral arrangements are in charge oi the O'Brien-Rogers funeral service.

Socialites Are Held Following Robbery SANTA ROSA, a Aug. (UPi--Police Sunday held for investigation two Piedmont social- jt es --one a millionaire--in connection with a $5 highway robbery, attempted robbery and possibly a hit-run accident. Officers said the pair, Marshall Ede, 24, East Bay socialite, and Clarence Frye, 26, interior decorator, confessed a 2 a.m. Sunday holdup four miles south of Petaluma. The police said the holdup victims, three Petaluma residents, identified Eclc and Frye as their assailants Elevator Operators Threaten to Strike PORT ARTHUR, Aug.

27. hundred Lakehe-ad elevator employes advised the elevator companies Sunday tnat they would go on strike unless their demands for wage increases are met. Such a a would paralyze movement of Canada's 1939 wheat crop. The workers voted almost unanimously to authorize Local 650 of the Lakcheacl Grain Elevator Workers, an a i i a of the American Federation of Labor, to call the strike if all other methods of reaching a new i i agre-e- nt with the elevator companies fail. Road Abutment KELSO, Aug.

-Five persons were killed and one i i a injured when an a mobile crashed into an a i of Ocean Beach i a near Stella, a a i and i i I'u burst into flames. siiphomou' The dead were' Mr and Mr.s Dean Nye, Jane Poland, A i I Unde'i- and Parsons, 40. all NEVADA WEATHER ot Can-oils, Wash Bcrylo a a Ge a i a wa.s taken trom the a i i 'I'm selay but con i a ai- i a to the Longview Uil where she is i only a slig-ht chance of recoveiy. All the occupanl.s ol the demolished automobile were young persons except Parsons. Accord ing to officers of the Washington stale' police, the car wa.s traveling al i spee-d it struck the- a Passing motorists rescued the dead and i and extinguished the a tion; i a a Sparks Laundry SPECIAL 17-lb.

Mixed Bundle for He a Mure) I I PI1 I I A nonv rt.OTiii Call Sparks 551 WI. CAI.I I Oil A BKUVER Under the title of "Memories." over 350 different tunes arc said to have been published the United States alone. Aviator Crashes To Death in Ship CLEVELAND, Aug. Delberl (Don) Bush, 28, Kansas City, racing pilot scheduled to fly Joe Jacobson's Folkcrts Special in the National Air Races starting Sept. 2, crashed the swift little plane Sunday and was killed instantly The ship crashed into a small woods half a mile from Cleveland municipal airport, where- the three-day top aviation eve in the country, is an- a NOTICE! Dr George A.

Cann will be. out of town fro) Aug. 2G, 1939, to Sept. 3, 133(1. County patients see Di, Hartoch.

Brief Moment Wins LONGACKKS A TRACK, Seattle, Aug. 27 Briel Mo- menl Sunday nosed out the- favored Sweepalot U) win the i renewal of the $10.000 Longacros mile in a photo-finish. Clara- carole was third, two lengths behind tne leaders. It is an unwritten law oi the United Stales senate that a new member shall remain silent on the floor the first year he is there. HAVE YOUR TIRES Retreaded or Recapped $4.50 Up (Guaranteed) Save 65 Per Cent Rissone Super Service 11 Easl Fourth Street Today's Special MEAT SLICER Electric Globe Reconditioned, Special I HARRY'S BUSINESS MACHINES, INC.

120 West Second Street Phone 6381 DEVELOPING SUPPLIES Develop your own him at home if you would save on the co.st of developing and printing. 1 makes an interesting hobbv for and old alike! Developing Sets from $2.25 PANEL-ART PRINTS Exclusive With Us in Territory! The Nevada Photo Service 253 Sierra St. Reno Telephone 3792 BIG FAMILY SIZE REFRIGERATOR FORMERLY $179.50 EASY TERMS See NORGE Before You Buy! GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP 13B Siena Sireet Phone 23032 E. P. HUMPHREYS WRAY HEATH iNEWSPAFERr lEWSFAFERl.

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Pages Available:
737,587
Years Available:
1870-1983