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Market Prices Decline On News Reports Of Day _ _ ★---— Steels, Utilities Are Among Few Gainers During Session MARKETS AT A GLANCE NEW YORK, Jan. 30. — W — Stocks—Irregular; steels continue to advance. Bonds—Mixed; changes narrow. Cotton—Lower; hedge selling and liquidation. CHICAGO: Wheat—Unchanged at ceilings. Corn—Unchanged at ceilings. Rye—Unchanged to 5 cents low er; profit taking. Hogs—Active, steady. Top $14.85 ceiling. Cattle—Steady to 50 cents high er. Top $18 ceiling. NEW YORK, Jan. 30—UR— Steels and assorted' industrials rallied in today’s stock market after early declines but the trend as a whole was lower. Selective improvement was bas ed or. news that representatives of General Motors and the CIO United Auto Workers had agreed to resume direct wage negotia tions. Another factor was the send ing of a new strike control bill to the house floor for debate lb morrow. Offsetting this was a report that the administration would go no higher than around $4 a ton as an increase in steel prices plus U. S. cover neither the 18 1-2 cent hourly Steel's statement that $4 would wage boost acceptable by the union nor 15 cents offered by the com pany. A decline of .4 of a point to 79.9 in the Associated Press 60-stock composite followed three rising ses sions with the latter two finding the list at new 15-year highs. Heavy dealings of the past few days also dwindled with volume of 2,280.000 shares comparing with V 2,910,000 yesterday and 3,480,000 on Monday. Of 1,003 issues trans ferred, 260 advanced, 575 were off and 168 unchanged. Higher were U. S. Steel, Re public, Youngstown Sheet, Inter national Harvester, Caterpillar, Glenn Martin, American Tele phone, Consolidated Edison, Calla han Zinc, du Pont, Johns-Man ville and Texas Pacific Land. A majority were down from peaks for the day. Philip Morris lost 3 3-4 points more after Tuesday’s dip of 7 3-4 on the concern’s announcement of reduced November-December earn ings. Lower were Goodrich, U. S. Rub ber, Montgomery Ward, Wool worth J. I. Case, Douglas, Ameri can Airlines, Eastern Air Lines, Power & Light, American Smelt ing, Union Carbide, Allied Chemi cal, Santa Fe, Southern Railway, Standard Oil (N.J.), Tubize Rayon Texas Co., and Colorado Fuel. Bonds were mixed and nar row. Chicago oats were unchanged to 2 1-8 cents a bushel down, rye unchanged to 5 off and wheat un changed. CSotton was 95 cents to $1.20 a bale lower. Losers in the curb included Singer Manufacturing, Electric Bond & Share and Cities Service while E. W. Bliss and American Cyanamid were among the gain ers. Transactions totaled 1,420,000 against 1,750,000 yesterday. STOCK AVERAGES Compiled by The Associated Press Jan. 30— Indus Rails Util Stks Net change D.3 D.5 D.2 D.4 Wednesday 106.1 50.4 53.8 79.9 Previous day 106.4 50.9 54.0 80.3 Week ago 102.8 50.1 ' 53.1 78.1 Month ago 99.0 46.9 51.0 74.8 Year ago 80.2 33.1 39.7 58.7 1945-46 high 106.4 50.9 54.1 80.3 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) - _-___ Prev. Yesterday Close Close AUeghany _ 8 7% Ai Chem and Dye ...201% 200 Allis Chal Mfg - 65 55 American Can ..100% 101% American Car Fdy_69% 68% American Roll Mill _. 35% 35% Amer Smelt and Ref 73% 71% A T and T._193% 194?4 American Tobacco B 92 % 90 Anaconda _49% 49% Arm 111 _14% 14% Atlantic Coast Line .. 80 79% Atlantic Refinery-37% 37% Aviation Corporation 13% 13% Baldwin __38% 38% Baltimore and Ohio _. 29% 29% Barnsdall _24% 24 Bendix Aviat _ 57 56% Beth Steel ..107% 108 Boeing Airp __ 33% 32 Borden ... 51 51% Budd Mfg ..25% 25% Budl Mills _44% 43% Bur Add Mach_19% 19% Cannon Mills _.... 67 66% Case J I __46% 46 Caterpil Trac _74% 76 Ches and Ohio ...... 59% 59% Chrysler -139% 139% Coca Cola _179% _ Coml Cred _51% 51% Coml Solv... 23% 23% Com with and South — 4% 4% Consol Edis _ 35 35% Cons Vultee _33% 33 Cont Can..47% 46% Com Prod ..69% 69 Curt V/right ... 10 10 Curt Wright A .30% 30% Dow Chem _167% 166% Doug Aire ... 96 94% DuPont _191% 193 Eastman Kod _252 252 Firestone _79% 80 Gen El ___50% 50% Gen Foods _54% 55% Gen Mot _ 80 80 Goodrich _78% 77 Goodyear _70% 70% Gt Nor Ry Pf .. 62 62 % Int Harvest_ 98 98 % Int Tel and Tel_ 30 29% Johns Manv _150 152% Kennecott _55% 55 % Ligg and M B_102 98% Loews _38% 37% Lockheed .. 43% 42% Lorillard _30% 29 Mont Ward .. 79% 73% Nash Kelv .. 25% 24% Nat Bis ..... 33% 33 iNat t;asn Keg_'wvs 'w/4 Nat Dist ... 78 76% N Y Cent ..34% 33% No Am Av_ 15% 15% No Pac _35% 35% Packard _12% 12 Param Pic __65% 64% Penney J C_..-156% 157'/* Penn RR _46% 46 V* Pepsi Cola _._39% 38% Phillips Pat_54% 55 Pitt S and B -.13% 13% Pullman _66% 66% Pure Oil ---23% 22% Radio _ 18% 18% Radio K O--21 20% Rem Rand -37 36% Repub Stl. 38 38% Reynolds B --41% 41% Sears —■- 45 44 V4 Soc Vac _17% 17% Sou Pac_64% 64% Sou Ry -— 59% 58% Std Br —--47% 48 Std Oil N J.r— 67% 66% 'Stewart War_•-24% 24% Swift _ 40 39 fex Co -. 58% 57% Vn Carb_•_199% 108% Unit Airl _51% 50 •Unit Aire _36% 35% Unit Corp_ 7'/* 6% Unit Drug __31 30% Unit Fruit ..118 U7% Unit Gas Imp -.26% 27 ■U S Indus Chem-57% 56% U S Rubber_71% 7Q% U S Smelt and Ref — 80 80% U S Steel..92% 93% Vanadium ..._ 34 34% •Va Caro Chem -12% 11% Warner Pic_■_35% 35% West Un A _51% 51% West El .,-r 39% Woolworth _58 57% CURB " Can Marconi _ 4% 4% Cities Service _33% 32% Colon Dvmt _ 5% 5% El Bond and Share .. 24% 24% Of the 32,000,000 British men and women of working age, 22t 000,000 were in the armed forces or industry by jmid-1944 RAIL BONDS LOSE GROUND ON TRENDS NEW YORK, Jan. 30—CD— The bond market operated on the lean side today with changes small for the most part and trends obscured by numerous minus and plus in the same groups. Activity diminished as the mar ket halted for a new perspective after two days of generally rising prices. Sales of $6,120,000 compared with $7,890,000 the day before. The 20 rails in the Associated Press averages finished unchanged, the 10 industrials were up .1 of a point, utilities were unchanged and foreign bonds lost a fraction. The 10 low-yield reflected the ex treme stability of the investment market by advancing to a new high at 118.8. Ending a little higher were, among others, American Telephone 3s, Armour 3 l-4s, Atlantic Coast Line 4 l-2s, Chicago & Eastern Illinois income 4s, Big Four 4 l-2s. New Orleans, Texas & Mexico 5s and 5 l-2s, Southern Pacific 4 l-2s and Wabash 4 l-2s. Less prosperous, some ending with losses up to a point, were bonds of the New Haven, Rock Island, St. Paul, Baltimore & Ohio, Central of New Jersey, Rio Grande Western. Detroit Edison, Illinois Central, International Hy dro Electric and Northern Pacific. U. S. governments held within the same narrow limits that ruled the corporate list. Some of the Chilean bonds were higher but changes were insignifi cant in other foreign dollar bonds. FOREIGN BONDS Aust 4%s 56_103% BOND AVERAGES Compiled by The Associated Press Jan. 30— 30 10 10 10 10 Rails Indus Util Fgn L-Yld Net change unch A.1 D.l A.l Wednesday 105.7 104.7 109.2 76.4 118.8h Prev. day 105.7 104.6 109.2 76.5 118.7 Week ago 105.4 104.6 108.8 76.6 118.5 Month ago 103.9 104.0 108.3 75.7 118.0 Year ago 96.5 104.8 107.2 69.0 116.3 1045-46 high 105.7 105.5 109.5 76.7 118 7 1945-46 low 96.2 103.4 106.8 68.1 116 2 1944 high 96.5 105.7 107.3 68.8 116.7 1944 low 79.5 104.6 104.7 63.2 114 0 I h—New 1945-46 high. Bond Quotations NEW YORK, Jan. 30—UP)— AT and SF 4s 95_ 135 V» ACL 4%s 64 .—115% B and O 4s 48 ..106% Can Pac 4s Perp_ 11414 C and E I Inc 97 _.86% C G W 4s 88_ 9?34 CRI and P R 4s 34 ....." 72' D and R G W 5s 55_ 19 Fla E C 5s 74_ 891/, C 5s 62A_ 81% Hud Man 5s 57...1“ gQ ^ 111 Cent 4%s 66 _ 95 L and N 3%s 2003 11911 MK and TAJ 5s 67 .Ill mo p g 4s 75_-5k NYC RFG 5s 2013 ..101% i85. -. Sou Ry Cn 5s 94_ 14134 Sou Ry Gen 4s 56_III 106 West Md 4s 52 _.IIIII1O6 associated press stock PWCE AVERAGES • ■ NEW YORK, Jan. 30—UP)_Ranee of 60 stocks Wednesday, •jn 'T. j,, * • , H1*h L»w t<lit Net Ch*e 39 n»Ur^r!fIs 10S-9 1H-S 1M.1 minus .3 Ik H?!,oads 51-° se.s 50.4 minus .5 RO Total c 53 4 53 3 minus 2 60 Total 80.6 79.4 79.9 minus .4 WHAT STOCKS DID Wed. Tues. Advances - 260 489 Declines . 575 381 Unchanged _ 168 179 Total issy/es _1003 1049 IT I How the Farmers Have Fared Since 1910 j "-—r-- “ I Grain CHICAGO GRAIN CHICAGO, Jan. 30— I/P) —While brokers generally preferred to re main out of the market today pending some indication action from Washington on price control and the grain supply situation, the unrestr.cted May rye was clipped 5 cents a bushel. Wheat, corn, and barley remain ed at ceilings of $1.80 1-2, $1.18 1-2 and $1.22 1-2 al! day without at tracting more than a few scattered offers to sell. Oats closed unchang ed to 2 1-8 cents lower than the previous finish, May 81 cents; rye unchanged to 5 cents off, May $2.07 5-8. The government announcement that the Department of Agriculture would inaugurate a campaign through its local representatives to urge more abundant sales of wheat was about what the trade expected. Harvey S. Williams of Harris, Upham and Company said that any move to relieve the tight grain s tuation in commercial channels would have to be directed toward firm movement and transporta tion. The government export goal of 225,000,000 bushels of wheat from January 1 to July 1 is 50,000,000 bushels more than were shipped during the first six months of the crop year. Some traders had expressed be lief “some price incentive or other financial Inducement, such as a bonus, is the only cure” for the slow movement of grains from farms to markets. OPEN HIGH LOW CLVSE WHEAT— May _ -- - 1.80% Jly7 1.80% - 1.80% Sept 1.80% . 1-80% Dec 1.80% . 1-80% CORN— May __- -_- -- 1.18% Jly7 .- 1-18% Seo .. 1-18% OATS— May 81 81 Jly 80% 80% 79% 74% Sep 79% 79% 77% 78 Dec 79% 79% 77% 77% RYE— May 2.12 2.14% 2.07% 2.07% Jly _ - 1.44% Sep .- 1-44% Dec . 1-44% BARLEY— May -- 1.22% Jly .. 1.22% Sep .-. 1.22% CASH GRAIN CHICAGO, Jan. 30.—(AV-'Wheat: No. 2 Red and No. 2 Hard, 1.79 nominal, ceilings. No corn sales. Oats: No. 1 mixed, 83. Barley, nominal: malting, 1.24 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, 5.25-5.50; Red Top, 11.00-11.50. N. C. HOG MARKETS RALEIGH, Jan. 30.— OF)— tNC DAl—Hog markets active and steady, with Richmond' paying tops of 14.90, and Rocky Mount. Clinton and Smithfield paying the 14.55 ceiling top. RALEIGH POULTRY RALEIGH, Jan. 30.—(/P)— (NC DA)—Egg and poultry markets here steady, but Washington weak and unsettled. RALEIGH—U. S. grade AA extra large 45; fryers, broilers and roasters 28 to 29.3. DAIRY PRODUCTS CHICAGO, Jan 30. —%P)—But ter, firm; receipts 162,343. Eggs, receipts 20,313; weak. NAVAL STORES SAVANNAH, Ga„ Jan. 30.—<fP)— Turpentine 83 1-2 cents a gallon; offerings 23 (50-gal. bbls.); sales 1,150 gals; receipts 16 barrels; shipments 87 barrels; stocks 3, 463 barrels. Rosin (100-lb. drums): offerings and sales none; receipts 90; ship ments 13; stocks 6,807. Quote: unchanged. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT NEW YORK, Jan. 30—(JP)—Sales, closing price and net change of the fifteen most active stocks today: Corn with and Sou 86.100 4% no Callahan %-LD 58,700 6% A % United Corp 50,900 6% D Vi Packard 43,000 12 D Vi Aviation Corp 36,900 13% D Vi Curtiss Wright 31,400 10 no Vi Philip Morris 29,300 59% D 3% Columbia Gas and El 27,700 13% D Vi Alleghany 27,500 7% D % Am and For Pow 22,700 13% D Vi •Int Tel and Tel 21,000 29% D Vi Equit Off Bldg 20,300 5% A % Gen Pub Ut 19,800 21% D Vi Laclede Gas 19,600 9 no Vi Vi Interlake Ir 19,400 19% no. Vi FOREIGN EXCHANGE NEW YORK, Jan. 30.—(fP)—Clos ing , foreign exchange rates follow (Great Britain in dollars, others in cents): Canadian dollar in New York open market 9 1-4 per cent dis count or 90.75 U. S. cents, un changed. Europe: Great Britain $4.03 1-2. Unchanged; France (Franc) .845, unchanged. Latin America: Argentina free 24.58, down .08 of a cent; Brazil free 5.25; Mexico 20.65. Cotton ___ NEW YORK COTTON NEW YORK, Jan. 30—Cot ton futures sank $1.35 a bale under heavy pressure of hedge selling mostly against purchases of gov ernment cotton. Prices rallied slightly toward the close on cover ing and mill buying and finished 95 to $1.20 a bale lower. The market was unsettled by reports that the trade was buy ing more cotton from the Commod ity Credit corporation at the gov ernment stabilization price which is about 1 1-2 cents a pound under the market level. Such purchases were estimated in some quarters about 100,000 bales. The CCC recently announced that it had sold 250,000 bales to the trade on a bid basis. There was talk that the next government offer ing expected to total 850,000 bales, might be sold on the government’s stabilization price rather than on bids. Spot sales at the ten primary markets were substantially higher and were believed to reflect the government sales and freer of ferings from producers at the current high prices. Futures closed 95 cents to $1.20 a bale lower. Open High Low Close Mch 25.29 25.32 25.15 25.19 off 21 May 25.31 25.33 25.15 25.17 off 21 Jly 25.30 25.32 25.13 25.17 off 20 Oct 24.98 24.99 24.80 24.83b off 19 Dec 24.90 24.93 24.71 24.75 off 24 Mch 24.88 24.88 24.67 24.69 off 24 Middling spot 25.89n off 17. Vi n—Nominal; b—Bid. NEW ORLEANS COTTON' NEW ORLEANS, Jan. 30—(A5)— Cotton futures closed here today steady 95 cents to $1.20 a bale lower. Open' High Low Close Mch 25.43 25.43 25.23 25.24b off 21 May 25.39 25.42 25.19 25.23 off 19 Jly 25.37 25.40 25.17 25.21 off 19 Oct 25.07 25.08 24.84 24.89 off 20 Dec 25.03 25.03 24.79 24.81 off 24 b—Bid. NEW ORLEANS MIDDLINGS NEW ORLEANS, Jan. 30.—(JPh The average price of middling 15-16 inch cotton today at ten desig nated southern spot markets was $1.05 a bale lower at 25.11 cents a pound. Average for the past 30 market days was 24.67; middling 7-8 inch average was 23.51. NEW ORLEANS SPOTS NEW ORLEANS, Jan. 30.—(#)— Spot cotton closed steady $1 a bale lower here today. Middling 25.00, good middling 25.40, receipts 2,731. Stock 242,738. CHARLOTTE SPOTS CHARLOTTE. N. C„ Jan. 30—(JF\ —Spot cotton 25.25. TREND OF STAPLE PRICES NEW YORK, Jan. 30—The Asso ciated Press weighted wholesale prices index of 35 commodities to day declined to 112.21. Previous day 112.40. week ago 112.21. month ago 112.38, year ago 108.26. 1945-46 1944 1943 1942 High 112.81 108.73 107.54 103.22 Low 107.90 106.03 103.43 95.54 - (1926 average equals 100) Livestock i CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO, Jan. 30—(A5)— Light receipts and an active eastern de mand sent cattle prices as much as 50 cents higher today. Trade was active and several loads of choice grades brought the $18 a hundred pounds OPA ceiling, Salables numbered 7,000 head, off 1,500 from last Wednesday’s run. The bulk of steers ranged h om $15.50 to $17.8d with most heifers at $14 to $16. Cows closed steady to 25 cents higher and bulls held steady. Barrows and gilts brought the $14.85 ceiling and most sows sold for the $14.10 limit. The 11,000 salable hogs were cleared in early dealings and packers bought 15, 000 directly. The sheep market finished steady to strong with the top and bulk of good and choice fed wooled western lambs at $15.35. Salables amounted to 6,000 head, up 3.000 from a week ago. RICHMOND LIVESTOCK RICHMOND, Va„ Jan _ (USDA) —Hogs—38. Market at ceil ing 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. Godd beef type cows 10 00 11.00; good dairy type 9.00-10 00 medium 7.00-9.00; common 5 oo’ 6.00; shelly kinds lower. Good beef type heifers 12.00-13.50- medium 8.00-9.0°; common 6.00-7.00. Good 8 00-9 00-S 10 00'11'00- ^diurn 7 50 CW C°1mmon kinds 6.50 14 00-lf 50 mCaJVeS 16 00 ^ §°°d ■ uu ia.au, medium n 00-12 00 common 8.00-10.00. ’ Washington poultry s ™ * - *nd mfa",' " 33'ryers BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES— _AGREED SPW.EHM V\RE.IftVJiO "WSSItS c,i\ot \ oO*<bp YiO ^itVS.WRSh\. 6000'. pTOYSYfeW SO WE -JcfSNO SVEYOO 'Wfc E'StWYYiS V\E^E ftW | E>V 00«^EVY5ES 1 | WONOEUEOEE; I'M 50ttW<HOK>.fcVS\ \ tHt KVWt 0«0<b S\OR.t -\WtS'«t i 0«O9P\KXb \K> VWW OK> P VOttH OKteljd OH'. *it\X,AHtK>. VtftH'. WVA. \ vo A ftv nacv - BVAAVQ stt Sir St'c.\K)(b A\\V buv 60<bH' GOOD OlO 0*Ys Wt USB> ^0 «**» ^ SOCH VOW- iosi --- P\-fW\WG V0\^\ . ^ Ml, ■\Oqi ■ <*”* IW By WE* S-SS WASH TUBBS— WHY WASN’T IT? . _- -_ — ^ ■' 1 W 1 1 ■■■< — ...AND WE IN FOUND THE t JEROME'S MURDERED MAN GRAVE t/ THIS MORNING/ IWR.BLEEKE IN YOUR SON'G GRAVE ! v£5, IT WAS OPENED LAST V THIS IS HORRIBLE f \ THAT’S WHAT WE WANT TO NIGHT THE VICTIM PLACED K BUT, BUT WHERE WAS / KNOW. SUHi JUST BEFORE IN THE CASKET, AND THE k JEROME'S 80DV R"V HAL WAS MUROERED. HE - j GRAVE RE'COVERED'/f’ -V(—SAID IT'D NEVER BEEN ir-nSlL WHAT'S Y YOU AND I KNOW XYTT'-'n THAT ’S \ IT'S absurd sir A SURELY VOU THEY'VE A5REED Nor UmwfJ CAN'TBEUEVE TO UPSET MRS. SUE <E 8VTSl*"E" ] S3? ? NOTHIN' \ '"AKESA^: ■- SENSE-j GASOLINE ALLEY— : . ; HAVE YOU CLEANED l THE FURNACE |YET, CORKY.7 I HAVEN'T HAP TIME, POP. AN' THERE'S A ?SKI MEET ON T0PAY. ' - -. ^ ■ ' ' - r WALLET Sc B03BLE ? I GUESS I'LL HAVE TO FALL BACK ON VOU TO GET MV FURNACE CLEANED. CAN VOU SEND OVER A MAN TO DO IT? .. .TOMORROW.7 THAT WILL BE ALL RIGHT, j YOUR UNCLE WALT JUST Y 7"c0ULDnT1 CALLED UR SKEEZIX, TO GET \ CHARGE WM THAT HIS FUPMACE CLEANED. YOU'LL IVAY. IYE GOT 4 BE RIGHT THERE- YOU'D / BETTER SCHEME BETTER HANDLE THATONE^A-w-jp, f DR. BOBBS—_ __ __by ELLIOTT and McARDLE ...AND THAT'S WHY CHARlEY AND I KNOW WE'RE NOT GOOD FOR EACH OTHER-HOW'S THAT FOR A LAUGH? TWO LITTLE PEOPLE IN LOVE.. .j—-— ... AND B/ERVTIME WE COME CLOSE TO EACH OTHER-WE BREAk OUT IN A RASH OF MISERX WELL, SO LONG DOC... DONT SAV IX DOC. PEOPLE WHO TRVTQ HELP US LISUALLV END UP SMEARED WITH A LITTLE OF OUR POISONOUS BRAND OF HARD LUCK. , TA|^ nty* CHANCE. Mcomeback msmlk HE'S GOTTA BRING HER ‘ BACk... IT'S NO DICE - \ WITHOUT HER.... ) fYNDlCATF.. In. WOHI.U Klt.HTS. KEtEB VEf> THE GUMPS— D-DAY THIRTY MINUTES FROM H-HOUR j REEF yoUR VOICED % LOW- DON'T WAN T TO § ^OARE THE WOMEN- 1 THE OLD CROOK'5 <SOT MURPER OR H& M/HP- YOU HAVE A HALF HOUR TO ‘Z/GHTHE | &LL OF l-Zf *5ALE' f^Tj I THEN, UWAT? WV£AH? ONLV \ *f / <SOVE(?NMEWT L,f E / 6tfS\/ INVE^n JaTOR, JOUtThQOMX iSc) MTHE^KV Cot lA^t f?eportep north HEF^ifiiT TyR>J UE /the ESUZZARPfOP / EA£T OF TUCSON ArLANE-OR— ^ANP THES'P HELP ^ \ CONTACT OVERPUE. I \^NVEZT/CATE~ THAT fS feas^sa pTHrf n (mo wwi LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE— -----|) VU N ,, r EVERYBODY KEEP CALM-NOBODY^ HURT BAD NEAR AS I CAN FIND OUT-JUST A BIG EXPLOSION”’ I L ‘REARED TO BE OUT TOWARD ^SPOOK ISLAND"-' "THAT’S MR p WHAT OH NO ANSWER OH ] TIDNABS I EARTH COULD I HIS PHONE "THE ISLAND, jj HAVE I CABLE BROKE, tes- he's^ appene D? W most likely- J B) THAT FAM9US iBH-f v • \ biluonaire-^^B r THAT BLAST SURE WAS A WHOPPER* COME OH, BOYS ' WE’LL TAKE THE POLICE LAUNCH AND GO SEE IF THEY HEED ANY HELP IB Capjrttht. 1?<S, by B OUT OUR WAY— By j rTwILLIAMS I OUR BOARDING HOUSE-^th MAJOR f PORE SUGAR/ TH' \ ONCE BOLD SOUR DOUGH WHO ROARED LIKE A LION AN' > PAWED LIKE A , BULL--AN’ FEARED j V NOTHIN' ALIVE.’ J I IMAGINE HIM r I HAVIN’ TO J A -SNEAK- \ H r H AP/ 2 EGAD/ MV WROL&H BEING CRIES OUT IS FOR WORK, WORKTT MORE WORK/-~-Hm# WITH THE HOUSING ’ SHORTAGE SO > ACUTE, WHV MOT W AlR-COMDlTlOM MAMMOTH CAVE /x amd Remodel. ) tT INTO /~5 APARTMENTSjVV^ VOU HYPNOTIZED HI(aW FIRST TIM Several, keys too <a i emek HISVAj PROFESSOR/-"")/ TACJlS f WE WONi'T EVEtY rTf AM ATOM ! talk about SHIRT- iff Mijoor* SLEEVE 30BS ) ( DOMT KljP OUST BIS PIPE- ■/ \ s SM.OKE LIKE \ ) HiMOOf >STRAl£WTEK)ilOG / OO Pff V Twe LEAiMlMG fS \AmD-£H0w V TovJee / / M-t, Site-/ \, r ^—■ir"' the THEA R 1 30 J:Pwiu..*m<s — y '*** _ rd ( WANTS BlG kSCALE STUFF/
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 31, 1946, edition 1
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