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Steel Issues Dominate Broad Day On Exchange % w_ New 1 5 - Year Highs Registered For Many Stocks MARKETS AT A GLANCE NEW YORK, Jan. 14.—(JP) — Stocks—Higher; steels lead ad vance. Bonds—Higher; rally in sec ondary rails. Cotton—Irregular; mill buy ing; New Orleans selling. CHICAGO: Wheat—Unchanged to 1-2 cent higher; advanced with rye. Corn—Unchanged at ceilings. Rye—1-4 lower to 3 3-8 higher; strong demand. Hogs—Active, fully steady. Top $14.85 ceiling. Cattle—Mostly strong to 50 cents higher. Top $18 ceiling. NEW YORK, Jan. 14.—(/P)—Led by steels, the stock market swept to a new 15-year high today in active dealings which gains rang ing from 1 to more than 3 points. Sparking the rally was the some what brighter labor outlook as na tion-wide steel and telephone strikes were postponed and hopes revived for settlement, of the Gen eral Motors controversy and other union disputes. The move for ris ing wages and prices again buoyed inflationary psychology as a buy ing argument and caused the re instatement of many commitments which had been shelved Saturday. The Supreme Court Saratoga Springs tax decision was viewed as helpful to corporate enter prise. The pace was fast from the start. U. S. Steel opened late on a 4,000-share block, up 2 3-8, lat er extended this to better th&n 3 and finished with a net advance of 2 7-8, Bethlehem added 3 3-8, Lukens steel 3 1-8, Youngstown Sheet 1 5-8 and Republic Steel 1 1-4. Commonwealth & Southern dominated the ticker tape in blocks of as much as 15,000 shares but ended unchanged at 3 7-8. Closing prices in most cases were under I -——————— the best. Transfers of 2,740,001 shares compared with 2,260.000 Friday and were the largest sinci last Wednesday. The Associated Press 60-stocl composite was up 1.2 points at 79 a peak since March 28, 1931. Th< industrials made a high since 1930 the rails since 1931 and the utili ties since 1937. It was anothei broad market, 1,040 issues appear ing, best since last Thursday. Of these, 760 were up, 164 dowr and 116 unchanged. Prominent on the push were General Motors, Chrysler, Grahair Paige, N. Y. Central, Soirtherr Pacific, Great Northern, St. Paul, Erie, Standard Gas $4 preferred. U. S. Rubber, Goodrich, Ameri can Telephone, Montgomery Ward, Sears-Roebuck, International Har vester, Douglas Aircraft, Ana conda, Kennecott, Loew’s, Warner Bros, (reflecting a pleasing earn ings statement), Savage Arms, Distillers Corp., Francisco Sugar, Paramount Pictures, Eastman Kodak and Johns-Manville. Bonds were selectively im proved. At Chicago wheat was un changed to up 1-2 cents a bale higher to 20 cents lower. In a lively Curb Northern States Power “A” jumped 6 and Brown-Forman Distillers 5 1-2 points. Lesser plus signs were re tained by Sidney Blumenthal, Colonial Airlines, United Aircrafl Products, American Gas and U S. Foil “B”. Turnover here was 1,140,000 shares versus 1,050,00( in the previous full session. STOCK AVERAGES : Compiled by The Associated Press Date Jan. 14. 30 15 15 60 Indus Rails Util Stocks Net change A1.6 A.9 A.5 A1.2 Monday 104.8 49.7 53.4 79.( Prev. day 103.2 48.8 52.9 77.E Week ago 99.3 47.2 51.1 75.C Month ago 98 8 46.9 50.2 74A Year ago 80.4 34.9 39.8 56.i 1945 ’46 high 103.6 49.0 52.9 78.1 1945 ’46* low 78.6 32.9 39.2 57.8 1944 high 79.2 34.5 39.2 58.3 1944 low 69.1 22 9 35.1 49.5 Stock Market Quotations (BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS) Alleghany _ 5% Allis Chal Mfg ..1-58 Am Can '_ 105 Am Car Pdy-€7% Am Roll Mill „.31% Am Smelt and Ref_67 At and T .193 Am Tob B _92% Anaconda -48% Arm 111 _14% ACL ...79% Atl Ref -.40 Aviat Corp -11 Baldwin -1_37 B and O --28 Yi Barnsdall _23 Bend.x Aviat - 56% Beth Stl ..-.103% Boeing Airpl - 31V4 Borden _51 Budd Mig ..—.- 25% Burl Mills _46% Bun- Add Mach _19% Cannon Mills _65 Case J I _46% Caterpil Trac _ 76 Ches and O _ 58% Chrysler _139 Vi Coca Cola _180 Ccml Credit _ 50% Coml Solv_25 Com with and Sou_ 3% Consol Edis _ 35% Cons Vultee _ 32% Cont Can _ 47% Corn Prod _68% Curt Wright __ 8Vs Curt Wright A _28% Doug Aire _93 Dow Chem __ 167 DuPont _190 % Eastman Kod _232 Firestone _ 76 Gen Elec _ 48% Gen Foods _55 Gen Mot _ 78% Goodrich _76 Goodyear _67 Gt Nor Ry Pf.. 61% Int Harvest _100 Int Tel and Tel_30% Johns Man_149% jvenneuoii _-— -^*74 Ligg and M B_100% Loews _36% Lockheed _44 Lorillard _30 Mont Ward _78% Nash Kelv _25% Nat Biscuit -34 Nat Cash Reg-42% Nat Dist -- 82% N Y Cent _34% No Am Avi.-. 14% Nor Pac -35% Packard - 11% Parana Pic -59% Penney J C-151 Penn R R ---46 Pepsi Cola —1-39% Phillips Pet-57% Pitt S and B - 11% Pullman _63% Pure Oil ---23 Radio .. 13% Radio K O.,.. 18 Rem Rand - 36% Repub Stl -35% Reynolds B - 41% Sears -31% Socony Vac - 17% Sou Pac -61% Sou Ry -59 Std Brands _47% Std Oil N J .-.68% Stewart War -24% Swift __-.. 38% Tex Co _61% TJn Carbide —. 109% Unit Airlines _52% Unit Aircraft _35% Unit Corp _ 5 Unit Drug_27% Unit Fruit _113% Unit Gas Imp_25% U S Indus Chem_57 % U S Rubber_73% U S Smelt and Ref_77 U S Steel ...- 89% Vanadium _33 Vick Chem _ 68% Va Caro Chem _ 7% Warner Pic _35 West Un A ..— 52% West El.38 Woolworth _54% CURB Can Marconi _ 4% Cities Service _31% Colon Dvmit _ 6% El ®ond and Share_ 22% V \ IRALLY IN RAILS SAVES BOND MART NEW YORK, Jan. 14.—(TP)—A lively rally in rails of all types kept the bond market active and at higher levels today. Missouri Pacific loans paced the advance, seven issues of the road moving up 1 3-4 to 4 3-4 points on heavy turnover. The action fol lowed' word the road’s chairman would undertake to appeal a court decision approving the reorgan ization plan of 1943. Other rails ending up better than a point included Baltimore & Ohio stamped convertibles of 1960, Central of New Jersey 5s, Chicago & Alton 3s, Rock Island 41 and 4 ,l-2s, Rio Grande Western 4s and 5s, Illinois Central 4 3-4s, In ternational Great Northern adjust ment 6s, Lehigh Valley 4 l-2s and os, Katy 5s, New Orleans, Texas Mexico 5s, New Haven 3 l-2s, 4s and 4 l-2s and ’Frisco 4s and 5s. Higher priced corporation bonds had a good day and U. S. govern ments kept moving ahead, ending up 2-32 to 15-32. American Tele phone 3s were ahead 1 1-4 points Armour 4 l-2s added a fractior and commonwealth Edison 3 12: moved up a point to 139 Foreign dollar bonds were steady. Principal interest was ir South Americans, including those of Brazil and Chile. Sales of $9,120,000 comparec with $9,450,000 last Friday. FOREIGN BONDS Aust 5s _107^ Aust 4%s 56 _102M Poland 8s 50_33 u Rio Gr Do Sul- 6s 68_40 it BOND AVERAGES Compiled by The Assoicated Press Date Jan. 14. 20 10 10 10 10 Rails Indus Util Fgn L.-YI( Net change A.2 D.2 A.2 A.3 A. Monday 104.9h 104.5 108.1 76.4 118. Prev. day 104.6 104.1 108.7 76.1 118. Month ago 103.3 103.7 1 07.9 75.9 i 17.1 Ye?r ago 97.9 104.7 107.2 68.5 116.1 1945 '46 high 104.7 105.5 109.0 76.7 113.’ 1945 '46 low 96.2 1 03.4 106.3 68.1 116! 1944 high 96.5 105.7 107.3 68.8 116.' 144 low 79.5 104.6 104.7 63.2 114.' Bond Quotations At and Sf 4s 95...1339! ACL 414s 64 ..— 1141! B and O 4s 48__..10791 Can Pac 4s Perp_113V C and Ei Inc 97 ...* 80 V Cgw 4s 88 __95 Cri and P R 4s 34 _ 699! Cl Ut 414s 77___1079! n and Rgw 5s 55_169! Fla E C 5s 74 _ 90 Hud C 5s 62a _82 Hud-Man 5s '57 _78 111 cent 494s 66 _ 96V L and N 3%s 2003 ...11111 Mk and T AJ 5s 67 ..109 Mo P G 4s 75 ___ 63V NYC Rfg 5s 2013_102V Penn R R G 414s 65 ..1259! Sou Ty Cn 5s 94_136V Sou Rv Gen 4s 56 _105!i West Mo 4s 52 _108 V WHAT STOCK DID Mon. Sat Advances _ 760 186 Declines _ 164 531 Unchanged_ 116 145 Total _ 1040 862 DAIRY PRODUCTS CHICAGO, Jan. 14. —(TP)—Butter firm; receipts .135,627. Eggs, re ceipts 9,965: steady. Grain CHICAGO GRAIN CHICAGO, Jan. 14— (£>)—Grain - futures traders gave the May rye I delivery another whirl today and , maintained an advance of more than 3 cents a bushel against re current flurries of profit taking. At one time, the grain was quoted at $1.87 3-4, 3-4 cent above the previous high for the season and 4 3-4 cents over Saturday’s close. The most general rush of the day to cash profits came into the pit at that point, however, and prices reacted sharply. Rye also sold at new highs for the season at Winnipeg which, brokers said, added to the bullish sentiment here along with the strong securities market and strike news which some brokers viewed as reflecting an improvement. Wheat closed unchanged to 1-2 cent higher than Saturday’s finish, May $1.80 1-2; corn unchanged at $1.18 1-2 ceilings; oats 1-4 lower to 1-4 higher, May 77 1-4—3-8; rye 1-4 lower to 3 3-8 higher, May $1.86 3-8—1-4; barley unchanged, May $1.22 1-2. All the deferred wheat deliveries hitched to the rye demand for the ride, but oats were neglected ex cept for the September and De cember contracts which had the minor gains. December wheat and oats also reached new season al highs. While the brokers were boosting the May rye to around 46 cents a bushel above the ceiling of $1.44 1-2 to be imposed on all sales of the grain after July 1, the De cember contract lost 1-2 cent at times. Reserves of com on farms in the eight so-called surplus corn states were reported to total 1,339,^0 bushels on Jan. 1, or 218.000.000 bushels less than on the same date a year ago. At the same time, the farm reserves of rye in the Dakotas and Nebraska which furnish a large percentage of the grain, which comes into interstate commerce were reported at 3,960,000 bushels, compared with 6,273,000 bushels a year ago, and a ten-year average of 14,069,000 bushels. Open High Low Close WHEAT: May 1.80% - - 1.80% Jly 1.78% 1.78% 1.78% 1.78% Sep 1.76% 1.76% 1.76% 1.76% Dec 1.75% 1.76 1.75% 1.75% CORN: May - . ..... - 1.18% Jly - 1:18% Sep . 1.18% OATS: May 77% 77% 77 77% Jly 74% 75 74% 74% Sep 72% 73% 72% 72% Dec 73 73% 72% 73 RYE: May 1.83% 1.87% 1.82% 1.86% Jly - 1.44% Sep 1.44% - - 1.44% Dec 1.44% 1.44% 1.44 1.44% BARLEY: May 1.22% _ 1.22% Jly - 1.18% Sep - 1.16% CASH GRAIN CHICAGO, Jan. 14. —(M— No. 2 Red and No. 2 Hard, 1.79, nominal, ceilings. No corn sales. Oats No 1 mixed heavy, 82 plus one cent markup; No 1 mixed extra heavy, 84; No. 1 White heavy, 82 plus one cent markup; No 1 White extra heavy, 84-88; No. 2 Wnite, 81 plus one cent markup; sample grade White, 74 1-2—75; No. 1 Special Red heavy, 85. Barley, nominal; malting, 1.21. 1.39 1-2; feed, 1.15-1.23 1-4. Field seed per hundredweight, nominal; Red Clover, 31.50; Sweet Clover, 10.75; Alsike, 28.50: Alfalfa, common. 33.50-36.50; Timothy, 5.25. 5.50; Red Top, 11.00-11.50. N. C. HOG MARKETS RALEIGH, N. C., Jan. 14. —(JP)— (NCDA)—Hog markets steady with tops of 14.55 at Clinton and Rocky Mount. RALEIGH POULTRY RALEIGH, N. C., Jan. 14. —UP)— (NCDA) Egg and poultry markets slightly weaker to steady. RALEIGH—U. S. grade AA extra large 50; fryers and broilers 29 1-2. REYNOLDS OFFER NEW YORK, Jan. 14.—OP) — Lehman Brothers and' associates today made a special offering on the Stock Exchange floor of 10,000 shares of R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co., class “B” stock at 41 1-2. The offering carried a special commis sion of 45 cents a share. SWEET POTATOES i CHICAGO, Jan. 14. — UP) — ; (NCDA)—Sweet potato market dull; Louisiana bushel crates Porto Ric ans 3.50-3.65; Tennessee bushel ! Nancy Halls 2.90-3.00. FOREIGN EXCHANGE NEW YORK. Jan. 14—OP)—Clos i ing foreign exchange rates follow (Great Britain in dollars, others in cents): Canadian dollar in New York open market 9 3-16 per cent dis count or 90.81 1-4 U. S. cents, un changed. Europe: Great Britain $4.03 1-2, unchanged; France (Franc) .845 unchanged. Latin America: Argentina free 24.55, up .01 ot a cent; Brazil free 5.25; Mexico 20.65. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT NEW YORK, Jan. 14.—UP)—Sales, closing price and net change of the fifteen most active stocks today. Comwlth and Sou 288,800 3% no. Graham Paige 63,100 14U up fife. ) Columbia Gas and El 50,500 11% ■ up %. 1 Erie R R 48,100 21 up 1%. Leh Val C 44,000 5% up %. , Savage Arms 43.500 16%. up 2%. United Corp 34,000 5 up Vs. Canad Pac 33,700 22 up %. Aviat Corp 31,900 11 up % Std G and $4 Pf 25,900 45 up 5%. Nat Pow and Lt 25,100 11% up %• Unit Cig-Wh Strs 24,700 13Vs up **4 • * Packard Mot 24.700 11% UP Vs. N Y Central 23,800 34% up % Radio Keith O 23,100 18 up Vs. Livestock CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO, Jan. 14.—(/P)— A sharp drop in cattle receipts sent; prices up as much as 50 cents to day as producers cut shipments in view of the threatened packing labor strike set for Wednesday. Salable offerings numbered 8,000 head, off 5,000 from last Monday’s run. Traders termed the advance as “emergency buying in the face of starvation receipts.” Around 15 loads of choice steers brought the $18 a hundred pounds OPA ceiling with the bulk of steer grades at $16 to $17.85. Fed steers and yearlings clos^ up 25 to 50 cents with heifers sharing the advance. Cows and bulls traded strong to a quarter higher and vealers were firm at $15.50 down. Barrows and gilts sold steady at the $14.85 ceiling with sows ranging from steady to 15 cents higher. Most good and choice sows brought the $14.10 limit. The 6.000 salables, off 3,000 from last Monday’s offerings, were cleared early and 15,000 went directly to packers. Sheep were strong to a quarter higher with a few lots of good to choice native lambs at $14.60 to $14.75. RICHMOND LIVESTOCK RICHMOND, Va., Jan. 14—UTh (USDA)—Hogs, none; market at ceiling 14.90 (flat) on good and choice barrows and gilts 120-330 lbs. up 100-120 lbs. 13.40; good sows under 350 lbs. 13.65; 350-500 lbs. 13.40; weights over 500 lbs. 12.90. Good stags 12.40. Cattle choice steers 16.00-16.50; medium 11.00-13.50; common 8.00 10.00. Good beef type cows 10.00 11.00; good dairy type 9.00-10.00; medium 7.00-9.00; common 5.00 6.00; shelly kinds lower; good beef type heifers 12.00-13.50; medium 8.00- 9.00; common 6.00-7.00. Good butcher bulls 10.00-1.00; medium 8.00- 9.50; light common kinds 6.50 7.50; choice calves 16.00; good 14.00- 14.50; medium 11.00-12.00; common 8.00-10.00. Due to the impending labor strike on the part of packing house workers, shippers of livestock are .urged to hold back shipments until the present situation clears up. LIVESTOCK CHICAGO, Jan. 14. —()P)—(USDA) —Salable hogs 6,000, total 21,000 active, fully steady on barrows and gilts; good and choice 180-330 lb. at 14.85 ceiling; bulk good and choice sows at 14.10 ceiling; com plete clearance early. Salable cattle 8,000, total 8,000; salable calves 700, total 700; fed steers and yearlings 25 to 50 cents mostly 50 cents higher; only strictly choice kinds steady; heifers shared steer advance; uneven advance rep resents emergency buying and forces market conditions in face of starvation receipts, bulk slaughter steers 16.00-17.85; about 15 loads 18.00 ceiling; choice heifers 18.00; cows strong to 25 cents, mostly 25 cents higher; bulls shared cow mar ket advance; vealers firm at 15.50 down. Cotton NEW YORK COTTON NEW YORK, Jan. 14.—(A1)—Cot Ion futures developed an irregular pattern today as traders awaited announcement on the proposed 1946 cotton crop price ceiling. Near months were relatively steady, but new crop positions sagged. Final prices were 15 cents a bale higher to 20 cents lower. Washington reports that the ad ministration will ask for a full year’s extension of the price con trol law with early indications that Congress might grant the re quest inducted some selling. Bids for commodity credit corporation cotton were scheduled to be open ed yesterday but the trade did not look for awards until later in the week. Estimated for probable sales on the initial bids ranged 250,000 to 300,000 bales. Futures closed 15 cents a bale higher to 20 cents lower. Open High Low Last Mch 24;53 24.61 24.53 24.59 up 3 May 24.49 24.59 24.46 24.50 oft 2 Jly 24.28 23.39 24.28 24.35 up 1 Oct 23.72 23.79 23.67 23.75 oft 2 Dec 23.69 23.74 23.61 23.70 oft 4 Mch 23.65 23.65 23.55 23.59b off 4 Middling Spot 25.28n up 6. n—nominal; b—bid. NEW ORLEANS COTTON NEW ORLEANS, Jan. 14.—(TP)— Cotton futures closing prices were steady 10 to 25 cents a bale lower. Open High Low Close Mch 24.59 24.62 24.54 24.56b oft 2 May 24.58 24.60 24.49 24.51 off 5 Jly 24.43 24.43 24.32 24.35 off 3 Oct 23.84 23.84 23.68 23.74 off 4 Dec 23.77 23.79 23.67 23.69 oft 4 b—bid. TREND OF STAPLE PRICES NEW YORK, Jan. 14.—The Asso ciated Press weighted wholesale prices index of 35 commodities to day declined to 112.18. Previous day 112.22, Week ago 112.34, Month ago 112.68, Year ago 108.86. 1945-’46 1944 1943 1940 High 112.81 108.73 107.54 103 22 Low 107.90 106.03 103.43 95 54 (1926 average equals 100) NEW ORLEANS MIDDLINGS NEW ORLEANS. Jan. 14.__ The acreage price 0f middling 15-16-mch cotton today at 10 South erns pot markets was 15 cents a bale higher at 24.50 cents a pound average for the past 30 market erYgSe 22422945.middHng ^ ay‘ ORLEANS SPOTS NEW ORLEANS, Jan. 14_(jp)_ aP°hllCOti°n d°Sed Steady 25 cents a bale lower today. Sales l in rnnHmidviirg 19'30' middling 24 30 good middling 24.70, receipts 1 ' p68, stock 202,199. P s 1, BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES—___,-- -_-ELL*>-* ! AWLU'L M*6\c\m<= ,6\K>6't'R<=> - mo ooovt'b o'? — CWD^OS GfXi.^1 WHYtt'T VsSTl 60 \Ni 1 F\^6T PV.^Ct ? ' ‘ | L-COM. '**« BY NEA SEHVICC. INC T. M BEC. U. g. ,iT 0ff WASH TUBBS— STRANGE 'TALE ' I REPEAT \ GENTLEMEN” \ I'M CONVINCED 1 THAT JULKIE.THE K.IDNAPER. OF EVA SASSO, HAG BEEN LIVING HERE SINCE SIX DAYS AFTER COLLECTING! THE RANSOM 16 / YEARS AGO^i BUT, HAL! THAT'S IMPOSSIBLE ! HE'D BE RECOGNIZED AFTER ALL THAT PUBLICITY ABOUT HIS HEIGHT AND THE HUGE SCAR ACROSS HIS FACE/ f HE JUST V COULDN'T \ live here UNDETECTED ALL THAT } ^TIME! / LUTHER. YOU KNOW v EVERYONE IN THIS \ COUNTY. EVER HEAR OF ANYONE LIKE THAT / s AROUND HEREJ^A NOs'Rf BESIDES, NOBODY'S MOVED TO SOPPS HOLLER IN TH' LAST 20 ^JTEARS^/ ANOTHER THING... HOW'D HE TRAVEL THIS FAR FROM NEW YORK WITHOUT BEING SEEN BY ANYONE? __ » , tck.tJTP) THIS is All so _ DISCOUSAG.njg; j awwcro^im^Ffr ^OPR. 1946 BY NEA SERVICE. INC. GASOLINE ALLEY— THE HAVE-NOTS IT'S AN OUTRAGE FOR HIBARK TO SOAK US I $300 FOR THAT TIN GARAGE WE SMASHEP. J MAYBE ) WE'RE LUCKY HIS CAR WASN'T IN IT. J we star rep with ! $400 CAPITAL AN' WE SURE HAVEN'T SAY NOT. GOT $300 LEFT. HERE'S —--*rr WHERE ITS GONE: j V AN' »VE'VE I ONLY TAKEN IN I ABOUT $55. "THAT LEAVES l i US $I9Z. 50. DR. BOBBS— by ELLIOTT and McARDLE OOOOOH // I'VE 8EEN MORTALLY jaggl WOUNDED... T-TELL MV HAZEL .. I DIED LIKE A HERO... JM PUT ON . THE HT/ r NOWHERE I CAN SEE HEY, BASIL, WHERE DOES I'VE BEEN SHOT HUMPH/-(. RIGHT THROUGH SHOT WITH THE HEAD— A CANE/', I MEAN-SAY- ^ WHAT ARE YOU S TWO DONG HERE?L^ BANG well; DON'T BREAK IT DOWN I'M COMING' thh rHE GUMPS— HANDSOME ISN’T AS HANDSOME DOES MO TIME your MyAPOLO^IE^l H ANP^OAAE - FOR A WHILE I PIPNY TRU-ST you. /rw —m -OU $TAY HERE ANP WATOH OVER THE LAPlE^-I'LL <50 TO THE LOOKOUT =t>5T- ANP SOU HA VB NS PERN IBP/ON 70 -PRANK then whenever neepep LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE— SPECIAL DELIVERY W MIGHTY GLAD YOU SAW ^ I TUE LIGHT IN TIME, OLD V 3 MAN - I'D HAVE HATED TO I have HAD TO HURT that \ UWEIT child OH, Mr varbucks^^^^^w ISS A SMART BISSNESS MAN-NOW VE ARE J I AM | alitogetner-ya! / .so I DOT ISS GOOT/ HAPPY/J V ' OUR CUERMAN SCIENTISTS ALMOST WAD DOT ATOM BOMB SECRET _FIGURED OUDT' iO.spn.oc. Copyright, IS«. by tirmt Syiid.jt, Co lm OUT OUR WAY— ~~ By J. R. WILLIAMS " rTTTTiTffm TT «—i— _ / CUT OUT THAT \ J YEAH, I'VE NOTICED ALL \ / FUNNY STUFF/ r THIS SLY RA7EBERRYIN'' I Y°u KNOW / YOU WASN'T SO SMART V \ there s no \ when vour tongues was l / MORE ELK OR \ HANGIN’ OUT FOR MEAT ' I j DEER MEAT-- \ WISH NOW I’D OF LET J V YOU'RE trying 1 YOU FINISH TH’ WAR r" ( TO START A - ON OAT V rumpus: / meal: Iff* ^ ■'v _ r-y hM> ^ v /■"' <fnr|| i in »' 1 1 7./V ' ~ '' i -- '_WHV MOTHERS 6E-T <3RAY ’»«■. ..r I con. iMi »» w sEr<iet. me. | OUR BOARDING HOUSE with MAJOR HOOI’LE THAT'S ALL V? THIS WARD R? MEEDED, ^ PROF. ZAPPO | HVPKOTIST/ / MO\M vJe p CAM START V? THE ROLLER } COASTER AMD TAKE THE FIRST sp DIP/ the MA30R 16 A 6VENGALI > ALSO., PROFESSOR / - , ■ get him. To tell You \ ABOUT WHEN HE HVP- p \ NOT I TED A ROBBER, ip \ INTO CLIMBING A Y X TELEPHONE POLETO [ DO A 3ACK AMD THE X V BEANSTALK ROUTINE.') '/J/ ^ // / CLUCKS IN ) l A LOOP ? y _ 7> < Here/Mere' PM NO HEED TO THOSE HARLECH NS A8ELAKD.' THEY' ARE STAMDARO Exhibits op /\ nnrrTCf) /°\SELk£D | BOARDERS