Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

Reno Gazette-Journal from Reno, Nevada • Page 18

Location:
Reno, Nevada
Issue Date:
Page:
18
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

March 7, 1957 1 EVENING GAZETTE Lenten Guidepost Solar Furnace Is Delayed Patrick Dermody Rites Conducted WEATHER Information as furnished by the U.S. Weather Bureau at the Reno Municipal Airport, Reno. Temperatures high and low for 24 hours ending at 4:30 a. March 7, 1957. DENNIS THE MENACE by Hank Ketcham Critical Talks At New frontier LAS VEGAS Critical negotia years, Frost is recognized as the mm Requiem high mass was celebrated Tuesday morning at 10 a.m.

from St. Thomas Aquinas cathedral for Patrick A. Dermody with Rev. Pat Dermody as mass celebrant, Rev. John Dermody as deacon, Msgr.

Patrick Collins as sub-deacon, Rev. John O'Connor as master of ceremonies and Rev. O'Neill as assistant. Six members of the local Knights of Columbus lodge acted as a guard of honor during the funeral services. His funeral was attended by a large number of his friends among the clergy in addition to numerous friends in Reno.

Burial was in Mater Do lorosa cemetery. Rosary was recited Monday at 8 p.m. in the O'Brien-Rogers fu neral home. Mr. Dermody, a long time Reno resident, died Friday in Sacramento, where he had been living with his daughter for several years.

Pallbearers were J. E. Horgan, Dr. Ellwood Reno, Carroll Cough- Ian, Clyde Cannan, John S. Hal-ley and John M.

Sullivan. Boy Scout Meet Slated at Elko Annual planning conference of the Nevada Area Council, Boy Scouts of America, will be held at Elko April 27-28, according to Leslie M. Fry, council president. Appointed by Fry to serve on the program and arrangement committee are the Rev. Joseph F.

Linde and Oliver A. Thomas of. Reno, and Charles Rogers of Elko. Representatives from all dis tricts of the council will participate in the planning. Six phases of program operation will be discussed and recommendations submitted from the conference to the executive board.

The six groups will cover camping, ad vancement, finance, health and safety, organization and exten sion and leadership training. All the council commissioners will discuss their service pro gram under the leadership of Monty Boland, council commis sioner. The Nevada Area Council serves the state of Nevada except Clark and Lincoln counties, plus counties in northern Cali fornia. "OH YEAH? WELL, H. L.

H. L. Nevada Stations (Galveston. 62 46 RENO 64 28 Helena 21 3 Austin 46 34iJacksonvlile 60 45 B. Mountain 53 34 Kansas City.

40 22 Beatty 73 'Los Angeles. 75 61 Elko 43 37iLoulsvllle. 44 36 Ely 46 31 Memphis 50 40 Fallon 68 36 Miami 79 60 Las Vegas 75 49 Mpls-St. Paul 19 8 Lovelock 60 33 New Orleans. 66 52 Susanvllle 59 33 New York.

43 36 Tonopah 61 36 Omaha 29 18 Winnemucca 54 37 Oklahoma C. 38 24 Nat. Information Philadelphia. 46 34 Albany, N. Y.

40 36 Phoenix 79 54 Albuquerque 36 33 Pittsburgh 54 33 Amaruio 27 22 Portland, Me. 49 27 Atlanta 48 44 Portland, O. 42 40 Birmingham 54 44 RaleiKh 43 32 Bismarck 26 5 Rapid City 15 -2 noise 47 40iRlchmond 43 37 Boston 44 Louis 50 25 Brownsville 79 53 Salt Lake C. 51 40 Buffalo 45 31 San Antonio 69 42 Casper 30 13'San Diego. 68 56 Charleston 51 46 San Francisco 62 51 Chicago 39 23 St.

Ste. Marie 30 7 Cincinnati 43 ISeattle. 48 44 Cleveland 48 31iSpokane. 35 31 Columbus. O.

46 74 55 Denver 33 46 34 Detroit 40 29 Wichita 35 18 Duluth 17 1 Edmonton 15 7 El Paso 70 37 Montreal 32 19 Fargo 21 4 Winnipeg 14 -6 Fort Worth 47 33; PRECIPITATION DATA Reno and vicinity: last 24 hours. none; season to date, 3.79; to date last year. 9.63; normal to date, 5.08. Other stations: Austin, Elko. Atlanta, Birmingham.

.08: Boise, Brownsville. .02: Buffalo. .02: Charleston, S. Cincinnati, Cleveland, Columbus, .21: Denver, trace; Fort Worth, Galveston, Helena, trace; Jacksonville. Louisville, Memphis, Miami, bi; Mew Orleans, Oklahoma City, 04; Philadelphia.

.01: Plttsbureh. .05: Portland. 1.13; Raleieh. .03: Rich mond, St. Louis, .01: Salt Lake City, San Antonio, San Francisco, St.

Ste. Marie, Seattle, 71; Spokane. Tampa. Washington, Wichita. .01: Winnipeg.

01. UKKCASTS Reno and western Nevada: Variable cloudiness, otherwise fair tonieht and Tuesday, little change In temperature. Sierra Nevada: Partly cloudy tonight and Friday, occasional rain north of Lake Tahoe, little change in temperature. Nevada: Partly cloudv tonieht and Friday, little change In temperature. Sunset Thursday, 5:58 p.

sunrise Friday. 6:22 a. sunset Friday, 5:59 p. m. U.

X. ADMISSIOX UNITED NATIONS. N. March 7. UP) The Security Council today recommended unani mously that newly independent Ghana be admitted as the 81st member of the U.N.

NONSTOP FLIGHT OAKLAND, March 7. UP) Several Air Force giant B36 jet bombers of "operation white horse" passed over this area early today on a nonstop flight of some 9,000 miles from Okinawa to Roswell, N. M. Stock Quotations dean of American poets. Often Frost has been asked to interpret the philosophy behind his poetry before a group of stu dents.

Each time Frost refuses He says that the poem's meaning is as the individual reader interprets it. "It must be personal with you," he says. So I won't try to pin Frost down and say, "This is what he has to say." But I can say what meeting Frost, learning about his life, reading his poetry, talking with him about his views on religion has meant to me. CAN'T BE CLASSIFIED When I went to see Frost that day I was hoping, I can see now, to put him quickly into a pigeonhole in my mind, I'd have liked to pin him down and classify him. Robert Frost refused.

And that is precisely why his interview haunted me so. Let me put it this way. Imagine that you see a butterfly, and its beauty is something you want to capture and take home with you. You catch the butterfly and place it carefully on a cardboard under glass. RELATION CHANGED And to your sorrow, you haven't caught the butterfly at all.

You can examine the thing that you have under glass, and give it a name. But your relation to it is changed. Where once the butterfly had a subtle, vibrant aliveness, the very act of pinning it down has destroyed it for you. As we make more and more progress controlling and classify ing the material world, we are tempted to try to capture more elusive qualities of the spirit in the same way. It just can't be done.

And that to me was Robert Frost's message. Frost, through his poetry, his life, was saying: There is a point beyond which the spiritual side of life must be protected, kept sacred as a personal experience, not captured or tested like the farmer with his pitchfork tried to do. As Frost himself said: "You can't test a stirring. You can't pin down the God within you." TOMORROW Lowell Thomas, the well known writer and adventurer tells how he and his wife, on an appointment with adventure, learned that the world is not a hostile place and that people everywhere are honest and friendly. dCRISCO COFFEE mmm HILLS Red Hall DOW.

JONES AVERAGES 35 Industrials 474.17 .70 20 Rails 14J.27 15 Utilities 71.30 .11 Approximate Sales 1,830,000. NEW YORK, March 7. UP) The stock market declined irregularly today. It was its first setback in five sessions. Leading issues were down from fractions to around a point.

Among pivotal stocks the plus signs were few but in the list as a whole there were slightly more gainers than losers. The market was higher in early trading but by mid-session it was mixed. The paring of gains and the appearance of new losers was a gradual process which continued to the close. The Associated Press average of 60 stocks declined 40 cents to S174.10 with the industrials down SO cents, the rails unchanged and the utilities down 10 cents. Of 1114 issues traded, however, advances outnumbered declines by 442 to 424.

There were 6 new 1956-57 highs and 4 new lows. Volume totaled 1,830,000 shares compared with 1,840,000 yester-'day. LIVESTOCK MARKETS LOS ANGELES LOS ANGELES, March 7. AP-FSMN) CATTLE 500; steers and heifers strong to 25 or more higher; two loads standard to good rough type mixed breeds 20.00: about four loads utility and mostly standard out of same string 17.00-18.50; cows strong to unevenly higher; commercial 16.00-16.25: utility 13.50-14.75; canners and cutters 10.50-13.50; heavy commercial range bulls 16.50. CALVES 25; little done on mere handful available, steady.

HOGS 50; steady, few head No. 2-3 190-225 lb barrows and gilts 18.75-19.00; locally fed 252 lb butchers 17.50, sows scarce. SHEEP none. STOCKTON STOCKTON, March 7. (AP-FSMN) CATTLE 25, CALVES none.

HOGS 25, SHEEP none. Not enough done early to establish market. SAN FRANCISCO SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO, March 7. (AP-FSMN) CATTLE: salable 25. Untested.

Odd head standard steers 16.50-17.00; few cutter cows 9.00-10.00. For week: salable 480. Slaughter steers and cows generally strong to 50c higher; others about steady. CALVES: salable none. Market untested.

Earlier in the week: few low good vealers 20.00, few utility and standard 14.00-17.00. For week: salable 60. Vealers about steady. HOGS salable 75. Butchers 25c higher, sows about steady.

Mixed grade U. S. No. 1-3 180-240 lb butchers 18.75. U.

No. 1-2 517 lb sows 15.00. few around 400 lbs to 16.00. For week: salable 850. Butchers 25c higher, sows and feeder pies about steady.

SHEEP: salable none. Market untested. Earlier in the week: choice wooled slaughter lambs 21.00. choice shorn slaughter lambs with Fall shorn pelts 20.00. For salable 1330.

Slaughter lambs strong to mostly 1.00 higher. PURE VEGETABLE SHORTENING WASHINGTON. March 7 t.rpv A new "solar furnace" canahlp nf generating temperatures nearly two-thirds as hot as the surface of the sun was unveiled today by the National Bureau of Standards (NBS). It is designed to helD find hettpr materials for atomic reactors, jet engines and guided missiles. The furnace "catches" the sun's rays on a mirror and instantaneously produces temperatures up to around 6300 dezrees fahrpnheit for use in testing "refractory" ma terials.

LEGAL NOTICES IN THE SECOND JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT OF THE STATE OF NEVADA, IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OP WARHOR Nn 1fifi-41 ITorvt xr 1 BETTY RUTH SILVERS, Plaintiff v. ROBERT MARKEY SILVERS, ueiendant SUMMONS The State Of Nevada senris crrppt.lnira to the above-named defendant: You are hereby summoned and required to serve upon J. T. RUTHERFORD. a 1 i attnrnv njViicn dress Is 16 East 2nd Street, Reno, Nevada, an answer to the Complaint which is herewith served upon vou, within 20 days after service of this Summons upon you, exclusive of the day of service.

If you fail to do so. judgment by default will be taken against VOU for thp rpHpf rinmanHAH in the Complaint. This action is brought iaj ictuver a juagment dissolving the contract of marriage existing between you and the plaintiff, upon the ground Of VOUr extreme cniplt.v tr nlatntiff entirely mental in nature. yoin) H. K.

BROWN. Clerk of Court Bv CtLin norintu Oorlr Date: March 6. 1957. T. RUTHFRFORn 16 East 2nd Street Reno, Nevada Attorney for Plaintiff 7-14-21-28 A 4 IN THE SECOND JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT OF THE STATE OF NEVADA, IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF WASHOE.

No. 160609. DeDt. No. 3.

IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF JOHN URRICARIET. Deceased. NOTICE FOR POSTING OF SETTLE MENT OF ACCOUNT. Notice is hereby given that Mary Laxalt the Executrix of the estate of John Urricariet deceased, has rendered and presented for settlement, and filed In said Court, her Report, Petition for Distribution and First and Final Ac count of her administration of said es-state; and that the hearing of the same has been fixed bv said Court, for Friday the 29th day of March, A. D.

1957. at 10:00 o'clock A. M. of said day. at Court House, in the City of Reno, County of Washoe; and all persons In-terested in said estate are notified to then and there appear and show cause, if any they have, why said Report.

Petition for Distribution and First and Final Account should not be settled, allowed and approved. Dated March 6. A. D. 1957.

H. K. BROWN, Clerk. D. Cain.

Deputy Clerk. PETER ECHEVERRIA Atty. for Executrix 40 W. First St. Reno, Nevada.

7-14-21-2 3 LB. CAN 6 for 49c 2 LB. BOX 2Vz Cans None Such 28 Oz.Jar. 49 NEVADA Sunday 'til 6:00 P. M.

79e 59e 29c (Continued from page 1) It was in Massachusetts, too, that Robert Frost wrote his first poem. Nothing was quite the same with him after that. It isn't that he suddenly had a burning ambition to become a great poet. It was more of a stirring, a desire somehow to keep poetry in his life even if it meant difficulties. And the difficulties were not long in coming.

Frost seemed to have lost all ambition. His grand father thought he was plain lazy, and began bending every effort to get him settled into some respectable work. Reflecting on those days, Frost spoke of how no one had confidence in his future. "Where is it that confidence and faith separate?" he asked. We have confidence in the atom.

We can test the atom and prove that it is there. TESTING GOD "I have seen an old New Eng land farmer try to test God in this same way. He stood in his field during a thunderstorm and held his pitchfork to heaven and dared God to strike him. You just can't prove God that way. Robert Frost must have had faith in his poetry It certainly couldn't have been confidence.

He submitted to magazines time and again. Most of his work was returned. Frost married his childhood sweetheart, Elinor White. His grandfather bought them a farm up in New Hampshire, but Frost refused to be classified, pigeonholed. Reports soon began to circulate through the neighborhood that young Frost milked his cows late at night so he wouldn't have to get up early in the morning.

Frost has always preferred to write at night. But the townsfolk called it laziness. TEACHING SCHOOL. Then, to help increase the support of his growing family, Frost began to teach school in New Hampshire. The school was impressed by the stimulation of Frost's unorthodox classes, where the students were expected to catch the spirit behind Frost's not the exact fact.

When Frost was 36, the job of headmaster became vacant. Frost was offered the position. At last, in the eyes of his hometown folk, Frost was on the verge of redeeming himself. Then he ruined it all by committing what they described as an act of supreme shiftlessness Frost declined the post of headmaster. "That would have been the ruin of the poetry in me," he says.

"I'd never have taken up my writing again. People called me lazy. Perhaps they were right. I've always been careful to protect this laziness." DEAN OF POETS It took a long time to gain recognition until he was 40 years old in fact but into his poetry Frost managed to instill some of this same haunting subtleness that he sought in his life. There was a quality about his poetry that the 20th century responded to, and now, after 40 Vital Statistics DEATHS KENDRICK Friends are invited to attend graveside service for Frank Clarence Kendrlck Friday at ten a.

m. at Mountain View cemetery, with the Rev. Arthur V. Thurman of the First Methodist church clergyman. Ross-Burke Company In charge of arrangements.

LA COME Friends are invited to attend funeral services for Mable Julia La Come Saturday at 2 p. m. at O'Brien-Rogers funeral home with the Rev. Felix A. Manley officiating.

Private cremation at Mt. View crematory will follow. EARL In Reno, March 6, 1957. Guy G. Earl of Qulncy.

husband of Mrs. Florence E'arl, father of Robert J. Earl of Crescent City, Calif. Funeral services and Interment wUl be held In Qulncy. O-Brien-Rogers funeral home is In charge of local arrangements.

ROY Near Reno. March 6, 1957; Roland F. Roy; father of R. L. Roy of Los Angeles.

Calif, and Mrs. M. G. Jacobson of Central Point. native of Virginia City; resident of Carson City.

Funeral services were held at 11 a. m. at the chapel of Capital City Mortuary In Carson and burial was to be in the family plot of Mountain View cemetery In Reno. MARRIAGE LICENSES James R. Swift, 24.

and Miriam J. Schoppe, 21. both of Reno; Marvin E. McQuerry. 31.

and Prlscllla L. Glnlpro, 22, both of Reno. ACTIONS FILED Jayne I. Lancaster vs. Jack Lancaster; Louise M.

Alexander vs. Charles T. Lancaster; Leota E. Lamer vs. Algernon A.

Lamer; Marjorie E. Jones vs. Everett C. Jones; Michael C. Flanagan vs.

Josephine S. Flanagan; John Billy vs. Anna K. Billy. Vallla E.

Martin vs. James E. Martin; Catherine B. Nemier vs. Melvin D.

Ne-mler; Alfred D. Frederico vs. Anne Frederlco; Mildred L. Laughlln vs. William Laughlln; Beverly H.

Funk vs. Bertis H. Funk; Prlscllla L. Glnlpro vs. Frank Glnlpro.

imogene a. Farmer vs. Charles M. Farmer; Ennines F. McLemore vs.

James E. McLemore; Jessie Reinerston vs. Donald J. Reinerston; Betty J. Mon-tero vs.

Ellas H. Montero. Florene R. Lund vs. Virgil M.

Lund: Jlmmie L. Cone vs. Ruth M. Cone; Harry Van Dont vs. Isabell M.

Dont; Richard L. Sierka vs. Kazuko M. Sier- ka; Betty R. SUvers vs.

Robert M. Sil vers. DEEDS RECORDED Thomas W. and Josephine C. Kunau to Margaret B.

Flick, lot 2, Crestvlew Acres; J. S. Houtz and Frances Mack Bennett and Charles H. Bennett to Robert Rossler, lots and 6, block Southalde Subdivision, excepting north three feet of lot 5 and north three feet of the west 48.54 feet of lot Robert Rossier to Washoe Title In-surance lots 5 and 6, block Southside Subdivision, excepting north three feet of lot 5 and north three feet of the west 48.54 feet of lot A. J.

Howd to Arthur K. Howd, lot biocK 2, ana lot 3 and 4, block 6, Mesa Park subdivision; Ltrigl and Lu-lgia Anelll ta Joseph and Dorothy Anelll, plot In sec. 35. T20N, R19E, Joseph and Dorothy Anelll to Joseph H. Engleman, plot In sec.

35. T20N, R19E. Neil Andrew and LaJune Viola Mlnetto to Ernest M. and Nea G. Shepherd, lot 5, block Pownlng's Addition to Reno; Carl A.

and Dorothy C. Upson to Ira Allison, parcel adjoining Plumb Lane; Ira Allison to J.K.C. Kumle, parcel adjoining Plumb Lane; William H. and Margaret A. Jensen to Nick and Marjorie E.

Klaich. lot 9, block 5, Newlands Co. Marker Tract; Ernest M. Dyal to Joseph Glen and Helen Dyal, parcel 23, sec. 26, T20N, R19E.

tions were underway here this inorning between Hotel New Frontier operators and creditors but it was reported that no mat ter what happens, the hotel will not close. Tentative agreement between ihe hotel and creditors called for a 90 day moratorium on debts with subsequent repaying at five per cent per month. Total debts owed for supplies amounts to approximately $100,000, it was re ported. Meanwhile, it was believed that a satisfactory agreement had been worked out with the federal government for repayment of back taxes. However, this agreement could hinge on outcome of negotiations with other creditors, it was said.

Should the present Krupp-Manchon interests fail in their efforts to meet demands, it was predicted that the former operators would resume management to prevent the hotel from closing. Heading the present operators are Vera Krupp, who divorced German munitions maker Baron von Krupp here recently, and Louis Manchon, a swimming pool contractor. Seven Ladies Lose Homes In Station NEW YORK, March 7. (JP Seven ladies have been advised they definitely have been on the wrong track by making their home in the Pennsylvania station rest room. The women, age 45 to 72, were rounded up yesterday in the ladies' lounge and brought before Magistrate Jack L.

Nicoll. They all toted their belongings in paper bags. Said NicoJl: "This is the most unusual thing I've ever seen seven women hoboing in Pennsylvania station." Mrs. Dora Peck, 72, who had $224 cash on her, tried to explain. The lounge was a rather pleasant place to live, she said, and there was the fun of seeing new faces all the time.

The ladies had a routine, she said, that went mostly like this: sleeping, midnight to 6 a. breakfast, window shopping, perhaps a try at getting a job, a nap in the lounge if the weather was bad. "What about your bathing?" asked the magistrate. "We have to go to a public bath or to a hotel for a day or two," said Mrs. Peck.

School Bus Use Court Test Set AUGUSTA, March 7. UP Principals in a furore over public transportation of parochial school children last night laid the ground work for a court test of its legality and for temporary peace between opposing factions. In a joint meeting of the board of aldermen and common council, a token appropriation of $100 for initiation of bus service was approved unanimously by the aldermen and 13-2 by the council. Passage of Alderman Ray Swift's order opens the door to a court challenge by opponents of public school buses for children in the city's two Roman Catholic parochial schools. After the lengthy session, Mayor H.

Lloyd Carey said he would appeal to parents of 697 Catholic school students newly enrolled in the public school system to withdraw them. Loan Payment Delay Asked WASHINGTON, March 7. UP) Congress has been asked to ap prove postponement by Britain of up to seven annual payments on billions of dollars in loans from the United States. A few hours after President Eisenhower sent the request to Capitol Hill yesterday, the Cana dian government announced in Ottawa it will allow Britain to defer payments for a similar period on a Canadian loan of $1,180,000,000. San Francisco Poultry SAN FRANCISCO Live Poultry: Broilers l-2 25-26; fryers, heavy type 2-4 28-27; roasters, heavy type 4 and over 33-35; fowl, (hens), light type all.wts., 15-16; fowl, heavy type all 23-24; old roosters all 10-11; squabs, all .90.

CHICAGO GRAIN CHICAGO, March 7. (AP) Close: WHEAT: Mar. 2.32: Mav. 2.31-: Jly. 2.23-; 8ep, 2.25-; Dec.

2.29. corn: Mar. 1.29: May. 1.33-: Jly, 1.36-; Sep, 1.37; Dec. 1.32.

oats: Mar. 73-; May. 73; Jly. 66 Sep, 66: Dec, 68. kie: Mar, 1.34: May.

i.36-37; Jly. 1.34; Sep. 1.34; Dec, 1.37. BANK 8TOCKS Bid Asked Bank of America 35 38 Chase Tall Bank 90 52 Irving Trust 33 35 Manuf Trust 41 55 National City 66 70 Guaranty Trust 68 73 INSURANCE STOCKS Bid Asked Contl Casualty 80 8 Great American Ins 37 39 New Amsterdam 44 47 Home Insurance 41 44 RADIO, TV LOGS ON PAGE 12 BROS. Can Pound 95c INSTANT COFFEE Hi il49 BABY FOOD GERBER'S STRAINED, ASSORTED, Reg.

Cans BICTI liYC or P'Hsbunr OOc I Re9- Cans .2 for Detergent $115 Package CHEER CHEESE DOG FOOD The Blue King Size FISHER'S AMERICAN YOU STAY IN New York NEW YORK. March 6, 1957 Stocks (Quotations furnished by the First California Co.) Open Close Air Reduct 52i 5234 Allied cnem tse'a oa'2 Allied Strs 42 Va 42 Vx Am Airlines 19' 19V American Can 425 42 Am car ts ou-, Am Loco 17 17 12 Am Motors 55g 53i Am Rad St 16V, 16 Va Am Smelt 52i S2V Amer Tel Tel 177 Va H7i Am Tobacco 75's 75i Am Viscose 35 Anacon uop ozy oz-is Armour Co 15 15 Atchison 24'i 24i Avco Mfg 67 63, Bait Ohio 43't 438 Bendix Av 61 Va 61 Beth Steel J' Boeing Alrp 47i 47i Borden S3 54i Borg Warn 397a Briees Mfg 13 ZVa Burr Add 38 37 Cal Pack ti Can Pack 31 31 Case (JI) 1 Cater Trac 933, 92i Celanesc 16 a Ches 62'a 62i Ch So Fac ii Va iV4 Chi Jk Nw 263k 26i Chrysler 72 747 Colg Palm Col Brd A 32, Col Gas "I 17 Coml Cred 48 Va 48 finml Solv 171,4 lTVi Comw Edls 41 41 Cons Copper Mns 15 15 Con Edis Container 18 Cont Can 45 44 Cent Oil 58 56i' Crane Co 33 33 Crown Cork 12 12 Crown Zell 31 a Curtiss Wr 44 44 TWro tr. Cn 30-U JU'4 Doug Air 80 78 Dow Chem ou Du Pont 178 180 East Air 42 42 Eastm Kod mi Aiitn T.lti 35 37 Elec Bond Shr io o' Flintkote 36 36 Ford 56 s'' Gen Dynamics ara Gen Elec 56', ao2 Gen Foods 43 43 Gen Mill 64 63 Gen Motors 40 40 Goodrich fi8 68 Goodyear a Greyhound 15 15 Intl Biz Mach 528 522 Ink Hirt Olil OI2 Int Nick 101 103 Int Paper Int Tel Tel 32 32 Johns Man 47 46 Jones 48 48 Kaiser Alum 43 43 Kennecott 109' i Kern Co Land Lehman CP 26 Lof Glass 73 74 Lib McN St Ij Lock Aire 46,, Loews Lorillard 1 16 Macy (R H) 29 29 Martin (G L) 42 42 Minn Mng fc Mfg 64 64 Mont Ward 38 38 Nat Bisc 37 37 Nat Cash Ree 51 517, Nat Dairy 36 37 Nat Distill 27 27 Nat Gypsum 38 39 Nat Lead 112 113 Nat Cup 45 45 Central 30 30 No Am Avia 31 30 Nor Pac 43 43 Ohio Oil 3 Pac Gas Elec 49 49 Pac Light 38 36 Parke Dav 44 44 Pennev 82 82 Pa 20 20 PeDsl Cola 22 zz Phelps Dod 55V, 55 Phillips Pet i'a Proct Sc. Gam 45 46 Pure Oil 39 39 Radio CP 34 34V4 Rayonier 29 29 Repub Stl 51 52 Revere Copper 33 33 Rexall Drug 10 97, Rev Tob 3' 36 Rheem Mfg 18 177', Richfield 637, 64 Safeway St 68 68 Schenlev Ind 19 20 V2 Sears Roeb 27 27 Shell Oil 81 82 Sinclair Oil 60 61 Socony Vac 52 527', So Cal Edls 48 48 South Pac 43 43 Sperrv Rand 21 21 Std Brands 39 39 Std Oil Cal 47 46 Std Oil Ind 53 53 Std Oil 57 58 Sterling Drug 26 26 Rtude Packard 7 7 Sunrav Oil 24 24 Svlvania Elec 40 407, Texas Co 60 6074 Textron 15V, 15 Tide Wa As 38 35 Trans Air 16 16 Transamerlca 38 37 Twent Fox 25 25 Un Carbide 110 110 Un OH Cal 53 53V, Un Pac 28 28 Unit Air Lines 32 32 Unit Aire 78 78 8 Rubber 41 42 Steel 60 60 Warner Bros 26 26V, West Un Tel 19 19 West Air Br 27 27 West Elec 64 55 Woolworth 43 43 Youngst Sh 101 102 Zenith 92 93 Eqgs. Butter.

Cheese SAN FRANCISCO. EGGS: Prices to retailers: Poultry Producers: Large AA 40 41, large A 38-39. medium A 36-37. small A 29-30. Sylvester Dairy Large AA 40-41, large A 38-39, medium A 36-37, email A 29-30.

Prices to wholesalers: FSMN: Large A 37-38. medium A 35-36, small A 28-29. BUTTER; FSMN: Prices to whole salers: No sales. CHEESE: FSMN: Prices to whole- salersr Loaf no sales, singles 38-39. METALS PRICES NEW YORK.

March 7. (AP) Soot nonferrous metal prices today: COPPER 31-32 cents a pound, Connecticut Valley. LEAD 16 cents a pound, New York. ZINC 13 cents a pound, East St. Louis.

TIN 99 cents a pound. New York. FUKEiUN silver 81 cents per troy ounce. New York. HI HO CRACKERS rd 33c (J FRUIT COCKTAIL BBY'S No.

MINCE MEAT I BESTBUySJN TABLE SYRUP 0 SPREAD -99' 15e "ADM Kouny Kist' Whole Kernel for AQC VUUIM 12 Oz. Can 77 BARBEOUED BEANS 8 99c RANCH KITCHEN BONELESS, CHOICE GRADE BEEF ROAST PUMPKIN SARDINES XJXT 6 99e SWISS STEAK CS 75' PICNIC HAM VZn. 42' VEAL STEAKS shoulder 49' BREAST of VEALr.0....., 23' GROUND BEEF lean.an.d.. 3 -T0 Strawberry, Lady's 35 Choice. 20 Oz.

San Francisco Mining SAN FRANCISCO Mining Stocks: Sales Stock High Low Close 800 Amb Min 4.55 4.45 4.45 1400 Apex 95 .95 .95 2000 Black Bear. .78 .78 .78 3000 Com Lmtd .28 21 .28 1000 Con. .35 .35 .35 2000 Giant 54 .53 .54 26000 Mt. Union .03 '2 .03 Va .03 2 39000 Nat Tung .07 .07 .07 200 Pac Uran 5.87'2 5.62',i 5.87i 14000 Red Hill .07 .07 1000 Rosegold 24 .24 2 4000 Siskon Corp .08 .08 .08 3000 Trail, Inc. .03 .03 .03 1200 20th Cen Fls .55 .55 .55 4000 Verdi -06 Va -06 .06 2000 Vivian 20 .20 .20 12000 West Emp .03 .03 .03 1000 White Caps .19 .19 .19 Bid Asked Acme 09 .09 Ambrosia 4-40 4 52 Apex 95 .97 American Copper 11 .25 Apex Minerals -83 Apex Minerals 90 .97 Best-Belcher -15 -l Black Bears Cons 75 .80 Black Mammoth 08 .08 Blue Ridge 08 .13 Blue Ridge A 08 .13 Calif.

Engeis 10 .10 Com. Keystone .05 JO Comstock Limited -28 .32 Comstock Tunnel .07 .07 Con Chollar .30 .40 Con Vlr -03 "a .04 Va Double .12 .25 Eureka Company .07 .08 Eureka Hamburg 04 .08 Giant Resources 50 .52 Golconda 16 .16 Goldfield Con 70 .88 Goldfield Dev 02 'a .03 Gold Metals 26 .30 Gold Zone 10 .15 Hercules Mines Co 11 .13 Jack Waite .15 Manhattan Con 08 .10 Manhattan Gold 05 .08 Mt. Union Uranium 03 .04 Natl Tungsten .07 .07 Va New Metals Corp 15 .25 Nlelson Inc .01 .06 North Star Oil 12 .13 Operator Con 11 .12 Pacific Uranium 5.62'i 00 Parade Gumaus 08 .08 Pony Meadows .02 .04 Red Hill Uranium 08 .08 Rosegold Pete 19 .26 Round Mountain 04 .10 Silver Divide .05 .14 6iskon Corp .10 Smuggler Ltd 02 .04 Tonopah Divide .03 .05 Tonopah 76 16 .17 Trail. Inc 02 li .03 20th Century Fuels .55 .60 Verdi 06 .061 i Vivian .18 .22 West Empire Pete .02 Va -03 a White Caps 17 .25 PRESERVES 24(CTioa 1PSTAL1PS CHOICE GRADE PRIME RIB OROAST LIQUID STARCH Lady's Choice QUART 19C March 1, 8, and 9. Markeit 1246 STREET SPARKS, Open Daily 'til 10:00 P.

Prices Effective.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the Reno Gazette-Journal
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About Reno Gazette-Journal Archive

Pages Available:
2,579,977
Years Available:
1876-2024