Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / July 26, 1946, edition 1 / Page 15
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Half-Hearted Rallying Features Dull Session isSorted Rails, Special Issues Put Up Best Market Front MARKETS AT A GLANCE .■ Eu yORK, July 25 — (,P) — Stocks - higher; leaders rally ^Bond's - steady; rails rally from '"cotton — weak; values down $5 ,b3lf CHICAGO forn steady; goou demand i0r cash grain. Oats-- firm: eastern Interests having cash oats. Eofs _ 25-50 cents higher early, liu half of it lost »t close; top <22.00. Clttie — steady to generally 25 .,„ts higher; top $26.50. C STOCKS SOLD WERE: Railroads 70.000, Utilities 140.000, Others 090,000. BONDS: U S. Governments $3,000. Railroads 52,580,000. Others 5990,000. HEW YORK, July 25—<m~Half hearted rallying tendencies domi nated Thursday's stpck market iviih asorted steels, rails and spec ials putting on the best perform ance. Prices generally stiffened after a moderately active and hesitant opening. There was little follow bough, however, and top gains running to 2 or more points were reduced or converted into minus signs here and there at the close. A few “thin" issues executed wide jumps on meager sales. Dealings were relatively slow throughout, with a mild pickup in the final hour. Transfers of 900.000 shares compared with 1,170,000 in the pre ceding session. Traders Hesitant Bidding by “bargain hunters” who looked for a technical re bound after the lengthy retreat, brokers sa.d, provided the princi pal trend prop. Dividens and earn ings were helpful. Congressional resurrection of the OPA was in line with Wall street expectations and hardly was a bullish influence. Numerous customers stood aside to await price control repercus sor.s, possibly renewed labor rifts and more light on business prospects. The Associated Press 60-stock composite was up .3 of a point at M.8 but was more than 7 points under the 15-year peak of May 29. Of 967 issues appearing, 591 rose and 211 declined. Bethlehem Up Bethlehem Steel held a gain of a point at $105.50 and, after the closing gong, directors voted the usual $1.50 quarterly and reported second quarter net of $4 29 a share afa1"^ *2-15 in the June period of 1945 and 1.06 in the March quarter of 1946. Ahead were Youngstown Sheet, Republic Steel, Santa Fe, N. Y. Central, Southern Pacific, North ern Pacific, Baltimore & Ohio, Chesapeake Sc Ohio, Electric Pow ur Goodyear, American Water Works, Kennecott, American Smelting, Texas Co., General Elec trie, Johns-Manville, J. C. Penney and Douglas Aircraft. Favorites Split 4i^nsonTTPacCific yieWed 2 1-4 at $145.50. U. S. Steel, up most of the ®llPPed at the last and emerg ed off 1.8 at $86.87. Losers were Chrysler, Goodrich, U. S. Rubber, Montgomery Ward, Wool worth, In ternational Harvester, American -el^phone, Allied Chemical, Dow Chemical, and Western Union ‘‘A.’’ Railway bonds did better, these, along with transportation stocks, being aided by the House passage j o the Heed bill to allow volun tary reorganization of bankrupt roads. y Cotton Slumps Cotton slumped the limit of $5 a bale. At Chicago barley also was off the limit of 5 cents a bushel, corn unchanged to 1-4 lower and oats 5-8 to 1 7-8 higher. Improved in the Curb wefe American Gas, Barium teel, Elec tric Bond & Share, Niagra Hudson Power and Kidde co. Turnover here was 310,000 shares versus 400,000 Wednesday. STOCK AVERAGES Compiled by The Associated Press JULY 25— 30 15 15 60 Indus Rails Util Stocks Net change A.5 A.l A.l A.3 Thursday 100.2 44.8 51,7 74,8 Prev day 99.7 44.7 51.6 74.5 Week ago 103.1 47.0 52.9 77.2 Month ago 105.1 49.2 53.7 79.1 Year ago 83.4 39.5 45.6 63.6 1946 High 110 4 51.2 55.4 82.4 1946 Low 9„.l 44.1 50.0 72.2 1945 High 102.0 48.9 52.5 77.1 1945 Low 78.6 32.9 39.2 57.8 WHAT STOCKS DID NEW YORK, July 25—(/P)— Thu. Wed. Advances . 591 387 Declines. 211 416 Unchanged . 967 958 Total Issues . 067 058 Stock Market Quotations (BT THE ASSOCIATED PRESS) Pre- Yester vious day Close Close Alleghany . 5% 6 AlC'nem and Dye .192 191 Allis Chal Mfg .4874 49 American Can —.94 JU% Amer Car Fdy...64% 65% Amer Roll Mill . . 36% 36% Amer Smelt and Ref .. 61% 62% ATandT.....196 195% Amer Tob B ... 91% 92 Anaconda . 45 45% Arm 111.15% 15% ACL.... 71 70 Atlantic Refinery . 46% 45% Aviation Corp .. 9*4 9% Baldwin.23% 29 Band 0 . . . 2274 23 Barnsdall . . 2°% 29 Bendix Aviat . 45% 4474 Beth Steel . 104% 105% Borden .. 5174 51 Budd Mfg .__ 1774 17% Burl Mills.. 24% 2474 Bw Add Mach . 18% 18% Cannon Mills ... 66 C^e J I ... 45% 47% Caterpil Trac ... . 71 73 Gres and Ohio ..59% 60 Chrysler . .....116% 116% C°ca Cola .160 138 wml Cred..51 51% Coml Solv __ 2474 25 Comwlth and Sou . 4% 4% Consol Edis _... 3244 32% -Wanted to Buy, Rent Warehouse space wanted—man “Isciurer of pre-fabricated houses ""OS 15,000 to 30,000 sq. ft. for ware sirfUSe burposes- Must have railroad long lease. Heat not essential, ^mediate occupancy. Contact Mr. ra*’S°n’ Century Prefabricating Corpo Haddon Heights, New Jersey. C^'TLE.MAN~WAKTS room, private" WrTt€‘ Use of telephone, P*>* extra. —care Star-News. "'MTED GAS STOVE. APARTMENT ^Weferred. Phone 2-1091. "'n'sh??'™ RENT-6 ROOM FUR jj‘ eQ ‘;0Use in good neighborhdod. BnvCirv0nly mcved twice in 15 years. Wrightsville Beach.__ to0Jys,NESS GIRLS NEED THREE Caij „;^nished apartment immediately. h-~Legal EHESvl'T0RS notice TO CREDITORS Jstat ,ng qua^tied as Executor of the of yp , Minnie E. Lee, deceased, late ha* iJ Hanover County, North Caro claj~ 15 ls to notify all persons having ceased f®ainst. the estate of said de »ignpd 10 exhibit them to the under hr.rmn31 x.109 North Fifth street, Wil* Jur.e 2ri ^°rtb Carolina, on or before pleaded \ 1947- or this notice will be Person* nbar of '*their recovery. All Please lndebted to said estate will Thi« *T, 1c unmediate payment. ‘s June 20, 1946. PAUL C. LEE, Executor of the Estate of —______ _____ Minnie E. Lee. Havin.EX^™R's NOTICE tstate of (})ualified as Executor of the «d, lat* JRachael C. Cameron, deceas Caroiina ih- w Hanover County, North bavin- Ha, 1P is to notify all persons leased \ ms gainst the estate of said {M verifip°H exb*bit them, duly itemized before th*iJ° the undersigned on or this nobr, !;.,h day of July. 1947, or ,ec°verv plead in bar of their •<tat8 Persons indebted to said •*nt. 1 Please make immediate pay Bruce15*' 4?y o£ Jult 19« ! f * CAMERON, Executor, Ia,e °l Rachael C Canwou. Cons Vultee . 23% 24 Cont Can. 43 43y4 Corn Prod .. 54% 65 Curt Wright . 7% 7y4 Curt Wright A . 19% 19% Dow Chem .170% 170% Doug Aire . 83 84% Du Pont .204% 207 Eastman Kod ..231 231% Firestone .. 70 69% Gen El . 45% 46ys Gen Foods...52% 52 Gen Mot. 65% 65% Goodrich ... 74 72% Goodyear .. 62% 63% Gt Nor Ry Pf. 55% 55% Int Harvest ... 93 92% Int Tel and Tel .. £0 20% Johns Manv ..135 ( 136% Kennecott .. 52% 55% Ligg and M B .. 95 95% Loews ...32% 32% Lockheed .. 28 28% Lorillard ... 25 25% Mont Ward . 72% 72% Nash Kelv . 20% 20% Nat Bis ... 33% 34y4 Nat Cash Reg .— 39% 39% Nat Dist .- 83 83% N Y Cent . 22% 23 No Am Av ... 12% 12% No Pac . 26 26% Packard. 8% 8% Param Pic _.... 34Vs 34Vg Penney J C . 49% 50 Penn R R . 39 3P% Pepsi Cola . 30% 30% Phillips Pet . 66 65% Pitt S and B. 9% 10% Pullman .-. 57 58 Pure Oil ..24% 25% Radio .. 13% 13% Radio KO. 20ys 20% Rem Rand .43% 43y4 Repub Stl . 41% 34% Reynolds B . 41% 41 y4 Sears ... 42% 42% Soc Vac . 17% 17% Sou Pac .. 58% 59 Sou Ry __ _ 56 Std Br . 45 44% Std Oil N J . 76% 76% Stewart War _.... 20% 21% Swift . 38% 387/s Tex Co . 66 62% Un Carb .105% 108% Unit Airl .. 387/4 37% Unit Aire . 27% 27% Unit Corp .. 4% 5Vs Unit Drug .... Unit Fruit . 50 f0% Unit Gas Imp .......... 24% 24% U S Indus Chem . 53% 52 U S Rubber _ _70% 70 U S Smelt and. Ref .... 60% 60% U S Steel . 87 86% Vanadium .27% 28y4 Va Caro Chem .. 9% 9% Warner Pic ..42% 42% West Un A . 34% 34% West El .31% 31% Woolworth _?.• 34% 33% CURB Can Marconi .— ■ 3% i% Cities Service . 35,, Colon Dvmt . 4% 4% El Bond and Share -21- 21% WASHINGTON POULTRY WASHINGTON—U. S. Grade A large, 46. Broilers, fryers and roasters 34 te 35. Main Reason for the Car Shortage thousand Cargo Carrying Cars Owned by the thousand Railroads at End of Each Year CARS GRAIN CHICAGO GRAIN CHICAGO, July 25—(A1)—Oats fu tures scored moderate advances on strength in the cash market Thurs day but corn was only steady and barley dropped another 5 cenfs. Corn finished unchanged to 1-4 lower, January $1.45 1-4, oats were %-l% higher, August 73-73%, and December barley sold at $1.25%, down'5 cents. „ Cash oats were 1 to 2 cents high er but only 30,000 bushels were bought from the country. In con trast, shipping sales to eastern in terest expanded to 175,000 bushels. Buyers were demanding quick ship ment, although there were no fur ther reports of export business. There were fair offerings of corn by the country, totaling 103.000 bushels. Spot prices were 4 to 6 cents higher and processors rais ed their bids on corn for 10 ship ment to $2.10. New corn for ship ment by Dec. 15 was raised 2 cents to $1.42 which still was under the old OPA ceiling. Cash wheat was steady. Sales were made at around the old OPA maximum. Dealers said the local Commodity Credit corporation of fice had purchased around 900,000 bushels of wheat at the ceiling level since July 20th. Purchases also have been made in the Kan sas City market. Weather reports were quite favorable. Parts of Illinois, Iowa, and Southern Nebraska obtained good moisture. Dispatches to one grain house said the rains had "just about made the corn crop" in Central Illinois. Considerable attention was paid to foreign grain news, a report at tributed to Broomhall, British grain authority, said Russia was entering the wheat export market. Meanwhile, trade reports from France said crops were abundant and it was doubted if the country would need to import 30.000,000 bushels of wheat in the 1946-47 crop year. The Searle Grain company ol Canada estimated winter wheat production in the three Canadian prairie provinces at 502,000,000 bushels. Last year’s harvest was only 282,000,000 bushels. Legislative developments hsd little influence on prices. Traders pointed out that all grain futures are selling below former OPA ceil ings. It was considered possible such ceilings would be revived on August 21. Open High Low Close CORN— Jan 1.45% 1.46% 1.44% 1.45% Mar 1.45% 1.46% 1.45 1.45% OATS— Aug 71% 73% 71% 73 Sep 71% 73 71% 72% Nov 70% 72% 70% 71% Dec 71% 72% 71% 72% Mar 73% 74% 73% 73% BARLEY— Nov . 1.25% Dec 1.25% . 1.25% Mar •. 1.25% CASH GRAIN CHICAGO. July 55—(JP)—Wheat: No. 2 red 1.98 1-2; No. 2 hard 1.98: No. 3 hard 1.97 1-2; No. 1 mixed 1.99; No. 2 mixed 1.98 1-2. Corn: No. 2 yellow 2.10; No. 3 yellow 2.09 1-2 to 2.10; No. b yellow 2.08 1-2; sample grade yellow 1.90-2.07 1-2. Oats; No. 1 heavy mixed 77 78; No. 1 mixed 78 1-2; No. 1 heavy white 77-79; No. 1 white 77 1-2 to 79. Barley: malting 1.40-1.88 nomi nal: feed 1.18-1.46 nominal. BOND QUOTATIONS At and S F 4s 95 _. 34% B and O 4s 48... 104% Can Pac 4s prep . 114% Cab and Q 4%s 77 . 117% C and Ei Inc 97 .. 59% C G W 4S 88 ._.. 9734 Cri and P R 4s 34 . 58% Cl Ut 4%s 77 . 1053/4 D and Rgw 5s 55 . 15 Hud C 5s 62a . 89>/4 Hud-Man 5s 47 . 68V4 Ills-Cent 43/4S 66 . 95% Int Gn 6S 52 .. 75 Mk-T-Aj 5s 67 .... 101 Mo P G 4s 75 . 42% N Y C Rfg 5s 2013 . 99% Nor and West 4s 96 . 139% Nor Pac 4%s 2047 . 107% Penn R R G 4%s 65 .. 123 S A L C 6s 45. 72 Sou Pac R 4s 55 . 106 Sou Rv Cn 5s 94 . 31% West Md 4s 52 . 108% FOREIGN BONDS Aust 5s 55 ... 110 Aust 4%s 56 . 1003/4 CHICAGO POTATOES CHICAGO, July 25—(/P)—(USDA) — Potatoes: arrivals 63; on track 158; total U. S. shipments 564. Supplies moderate; for red stocks, demand good, market strong; for Washington Long Whites, demand better, market slightly stronger for best stocks; for fair quality white stocks all sections, demand slow, market about steady; Cali fornia Long Whites $2.85-3.45; Nebraska Red Warbirs $3.40; Washington Long Whites $2.75-3.15; Idaho Long Whites $2.50-2.75, Bliss Triumphs $2.85-3.00; Texas Bliss Thiumphs $3.10-3.25 (all U. S. No. 1 quality). LIVESTOCK CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO, July 25 —(JP)— Hogs moved 25 to 50 cents a hundred pounds higher in early trade Thursday then turned lower and on weights below 250 pounds lost the entire advance. Cattle prices were mostly rteady to 25 cents higher. Steers topped solidly at $26.50, the new record set Wednesday for one lead, and yearlings at about 1.000 pounds set a new mark of $26.25. Mixed steers and heifers were up to $25.50. Most steers ranged between $20.00 and $26 00. Lower - grades were irregular. Cows held steady to 25 cents high er, bulls steady to 25 cents lower, vealers steady, and stock cattle were down as much as 50 cents for the week. Hog prices again attained the peak of $22.00 in early trade, but later topped at no better than $21.50. Most good and choice kinds weighing 180 to 270 pounds were $21.50 to $22.00. Those weighing 270 to 335 pounds were $21.00 to $21.50. and sows were $20.00 to $20.25. Clearance was good as ship pers bought 1.000 head of the 7.000 salables and 5,000 packing house consignments. Spring lambs held steady to 25 cents higher with sorted good and choice ewes and wethers getting $20.10 to $20.50, to top the market. Receipts totaled 6,800 cattle, 500 calves, and 4,000 sheep. lUbDA) — Salable hog* 7,000, totaled 12,000; early market 25-50 cents higher all weights and clas ses; advance lost in weights under 250 pounds in later trade; top $22.50: late too 21.50: bulk good and choice 180-270 pounds 21.50 22.00; most 270-335 pounds 21.00 21.50; bulk sows 20.00-20.25: good clearance: shippers took 1,000. Salable cattle 6.500, total 6,800: salable calves 500. total 500: fed steers and yearlings included yearling heifers steady to 25 cents higher; good and choice kinds up most; top steers 26.50; best 1.073 lb. yearlings 26.25, new high for this weight; largely 20.00-26.00 on fed steers and yearlings; mixed steers and heifers up to 25.50; cows steady to 25 cents higher; bulls steady to 25 cents lower: vealers steady; thin light stock sattle 50 cents or more lower for week. Salable sheep 2,000, total 4,000; spring lambs steady to 25 cents higher; good and choice ewes and wether sorts 20.10-20.50; latter price top; three decks medium to mostly good 71-lb. Missouri springers 19.00: with . 50 head common sortouts 14.25: other classes steady: double 81-lb. com mon to medium yearlings with No. 1 pelts 14.50; good and choice shorn slaughter ewes 8.50-8.75- few to 9.00. DRY GOODS NEW YORK, July 25 — UP) — Cotton textile markets were quiet Thursday as mills waited for fur ther clarification of the price con trol situation. Some quarters ex pressed the hope that new ceil ings on goods would be fixed with in a week, assuming the price control bill is signed, which would limit the period of uncertainty and restrict selling. The wool goods market was dull. Interest centered on deliver ies against orders already accept ed by mills for fall lines. There was a pressing demand for rayon goods but the situation held tight. N. C. PEACH MARKET HAMLET, July 25—(TP)— (USDA NCDA—The North Carolina peach FOB market held firm to slightly stronger Wednesday with active selling at slightly higher prices. Good quality, two inches and up Elbertas sold readily at $3 to $3.25 with 85 per cent U. S. No. 1 stock generally 25 to 50 cents lower than the U. S. No. 1 figure. Wednesday’s shipments were rather heavy and will about wind up the N. C. peach deal with only scattered ship ments expected after Thursday. N. C. shipments Wednesday total ed 108 cars, with a U S. total of 1124. FOREIGN EXCHANGE NEW YORK, July 25—OP)—Clos ing foreign rates follow (Great Britain in dollars, others in cents): Canadian dollar in New York open flnarket 2 1-2 per cent dis count or 97.50 U. S. cents, down .18 3-4 of a cent. Europe: Great Britain $4.03 1-2, unchanged; France (Franc) .84 1-4, unchanged; Sweden (Krona) 27.81, down .01 of a cent; Switzerland (Franc) (com’l) 23.40, unchanged. Latin America: Argentina Free 24.75, unchanged; Brazil Free 5.37, up .01 of a cent; Mexico 20.63. DAIRY PRODUCTS CHICAGO, July 25—(TP)—Butter: firmer; receipts 533,492. Eggs: un settled; receipts 12,124; prices un changed. ADDITIONAL MARKETS ON PAGE SIXTEEN BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES___IT WORKS BOTH WAYS BOD • VA ? \\\ OK, 1 TORSOT l\T'S H\5 TORN TOR THt TWO O'CLOCK «M 1 n— — "■ .. . ..i ■ ! ■ ^ HtCK'S MMMU TH\E TWO A.M. FEEO\k>& \%Kl'T —iHt .? -- bad AT ALE WE MU<ET DO TWE V- MORE OFT EM, M\STER \ m ;'|— WASH TUBBS NOBODY UNDERSTANDS MORNING I I DEMAND TO SEE THE HEAD OF THIS 1 f GET ME THE GOVERNOR,ON X SO ARE THE FORTY 1 f I’D BE OUT OF THIS PLACE IN M IN the INSTITUTION «T ONCE '.do you HEAR’. THE TELEPHONE! SOMEBODY'S OTHER PATIENTS IN THIS TWO MINUTES IF I COULD SEE RECEIVING ' GOING TO SUFFER FOR THIS WARD, AFTER LISTENING THE PROPER AUTHORITIES* , WARD OF AT ONCE ■ v OUTRAGE! FAY PATIENCE / TO YOU ALL NIGHT! YOUNG IAAN! 00 YOU / WSLOCO y is EXHftUSTEDt^gf--k. KNOW WHO ' SORRY, pop„.m HFENPYOtfU UfkFTH FIND OUT FEOM, SOMEBODY GASOLINE ALLEY FINANCIAL CRAMPS k WILMER- y0U SHOULDN'T VOU WOULDN'T 1 WE CAN'T t AN' WH/ JESSICA? BECAUSE W I ~1A „ WE PLAV I 0H' LETS MAKH ITS YOUr\ 1 HAVE SET THE staKES WANT ME TO I AFFORP YOU STILL INSIST ON PLAVIN' H B mUU,E08SLE ~ A IT A DIME BID, MR. I S0 HICH- wu KNOW LOOK LIKE A I TO LOSE A HIGH STAKE CAME THE If y NICKLE A HUNDRED?! AT LEAST.' \ BOBBLE. . 1 WE NEVER .P^V FOR PIKER IN FRONT f 'BUT SAME AS IF IT WAS |1 ■f|M( ■ l)j|U|I M | | -c A THANi TTVO CENTS.AoF THE WIRPS?/ WE PIP. /HTH. FOR FUN. I GIVE UP.’ Jffl FR. BOBBS— by ELLIOTT and McARDLE OH, DOCTOR, IT MUST WORK/IT YOU CAN'T GUESS WHAT IT'LL " ~r ' ) WILL MEAN DOING ALL THOSE MEAN....HOW I'VE HATED TO W GGLES-1 z L0VE .. DANCES ..ft BE PITIED BV ALL THOSE WELL WORTH u PARTIES...TENNIS ...NOT MEANING PEOPLE...HOW l'VE HOSPITAL-JUST being ASHAMED TO FACE AVOIDED THEM ALL/BUT f-1 A M'NUTE -—, PEOPLE AGAIN.W -1 SOON...SOON! THE GUMPS TILDA IS SO SYMPATHETIC L----'-IT WHY DON'T YOU WELL! XT THERE <5QE* THE HARP WORKER- ^ \ \ RELAX A BIT PEAR? NOW I'VE H IF X HAP /MV MAY HjS SSlN COURSE M I'M A LITTLE CONCERNEP / IT HASN'T } YOU'VE BEEfJ WORKIM/S SEEN l WOULPBE A SYCNE QUARRY WITH £ ABOUT MR. <jUMP TILPA- \ AFFECTED ~Y MUCH TOO HARP EVERYTHING! A BALL ANP CHAIN ONH/SLEG TO V HE'* TAKIM6 HI* POLITICAL ) HI* APPETITE? LATELY- ^ KEEP HIM ON THE FAIRWAY-AND 11 PEFEAT TO HEART- / / ///mT’ r*'“?T7 I'P GIVE HIM A SLEDGE HAMMER M I*_ _ . jCmZml //%T \ I °o TO MAKE HIS FANCY SHOTS WITH! fl ORPHAN ANNIE JUDGEMENT DAY J | Ij FHfflHHnHl H 1 r" Karrpgr'PWiMirnCT. Y-*-1-X. ( -THERER3RE, I SENTENCE THESE TWO —AND IT MEANS I SHALL APPEAL Ul$ | SINCE THIS ANTTSWINDL1NG BUT THIS IS j j DEFENDANTS, AFOREMENTIONED^ EACH TO TWENTY YEARS, RANK MISCARRIAGE I LAW HAS NEVER BEEN OUTRAGEOUS- _ TWENTY YEARS IMPRISONMENT AT HARD | AND NO PAROLE, ANO OF JUSTICE TO THE I REPEALED, IT IS STILL IN J VOU CANT LABOR- AND I MIGHT ADD THAI; IN THIS NOT ONE SECOND OFF- HIGHEST COURT IN I I FORCE-THEREFORE- / DO THIS! (I COMMUNITY THAT MEANS HARD LABOR- —■ THE LAND- J OUT OUR WAY By J. R. WILLIAMS L /MOW YOU GO \ / AH, HOW \ /NO--OF HIMSELF.' \ RIGHT IN AN’ VI NICE.' A/ HELPIN’ MA IN TH’ \ kw 1 rest--i'll (7 he’s very \ garden is like plant ’EM \ CONSIDERATE ) HANDIN’ TOOLS TO / jilH 4^LL FOR VOL)-- k, OF HlS 1 A PLUMBER. WHO < I’LL DO THE J ( MOTHER, F-NDS TH’ ONE 1 SHHr hull JD& \ \ ISN’T I—I HE WANTS IS AT Nl OTHE^R HOUSE.' OUR BOARDING HOUSE with MAJOR HOOPLR 5EEM egad/what IProscoe ? M RACCOON ? WHEN I BRANCH OF ¥hm! RECKON £AV-E& R0LV AT BED - GENUS HOMO I BETTER TIME,THE WHOLE TRIBE IS THIS, M SCOOT UP ^AJALL PRESENT- , CANTER.NgIv TH' GENT J POSSUM, WILDCAT, BEAR AROUNO Jf ANOTHER • I AND ELK — BUT THE ff\ ROSCOE j I roscoe was out forest if t for < SOMEWHERE PATTI N‘ OM MOOSE A {HlSSELF / AROUND ALL MIGHT/ BACK/ -AVl. >-is JBwilUamS * SELF PRESERVATION JfS&iii.K&'.m* — 1 iiWAT WASN'T -W beamer im the ^ KETTLE, APTER ALL=
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 26, 1946, edition 1
15
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