PACE TEN The OREGON STATESMAN, Salem, Oregon, Thursday Morning, December 16, 1937 Corn Advance T?AnfllMA0 Tartar i taiui vis MJaj European Buying for Day Is Well Over Million; Wlieat Steady CHICAGO, Dec. 15-aVActl--Ity of corn export . deraund trought about 1 centa'a oub el net adrance of corn values to day, whereas wheat at the last was practically unchanged. European purchases of United Ktatea corn todav were estimat ed at l.OOO.flOO bushels, and! V . . 1 iL-t W , I there were lniimanoua mm m total would have been a good deal larger If greater, qrantttles ere available for Immediate shipment. News Abrm-.l Temporarily, big net? upturn of wheat quotations at Winnipeg, 4 14 cents a bushel In some cases, helped lift the Chicago wheat market about a cent, but the gain here disappeared when Bue nos Aires wheat values lost ear lier advances. At the close, corn futures were cents above yesterday's finish. Dec. 584-, May 59 Ai, July 70, wheat off to up, Dec. 95-96, May 92-, July 87 Salem Market Quotations (Tt arte blew : auppttM ky a local (racer ar mdieati l i-a daily arktt pru-a paid ta growers by 8a) bayara bat r aol guaranteed by The State a - ' rarnTty . - (Baying Price) Apple, fancy Jonathan .69 King! .70 Banana, lb. talk05l t OS Hands - 0H nrapefruit. Calif, SunkiaW crata. 3 00 Malta. 1 freah. lb 14 Uroona, crate .' --.- 9 00 lira pea. Malaga , ,. Oranges, erat 5.50 te 3.00 - VEGETABLES (Buying Pne) Pret. dot. ,.,.,- rabhage. ib .. Kraut cabbage. ark SO t Parrel, loral. dnx . .., Caaiiflewrr, local. So. 1 Oktj. .ratt . Itah llrarti int. !ettare. Incai, crate, dry pack.. Ontnna. grren. dna. , . Oniani. N I rt. - tlmling. 10 lb.. Ke. t Radiahe. dn, . IVppfra, green, Calif, . 12 to rt .. ..,,-,-.... - Par.nipa. Ih. .80 .01 V, .60 SO .9 1.40 1:40 80 2.25 40 1.80 .20 .40 .15 40 .02 1 IS .70 08 6t - .01 .80 .60 .80 Gardeners' and Ranchers' Mart PORTLAND, bee. IS -(-California fruits and vegetables, de layed In arriving by floods, are beginning to appear on the local Gardeners' and Ranchers' market. ' Artichokes, avocados and egg plant all were cheaper, with green peppers going up slightly. Apples Oregon Jonathans 73-85r: Washington Jonathans, extra fanjy $1.25-1,50; Ortiey 75-85c; Spitaenber.'s 1 100. lieC'.if., Kentucky Wonder 9 10c lb. ' Beets Per ssrk. Oregon. $1 I 25. Broccoli Crate. $1 25 2 H5 Brnmtela Sproota Local flat, 12 lb., 81 1.25. Banana Per bunch. 5 He . Cabbage 100 Ib. crates. 81 1.25. Carrots 30 35c do, bunches. Cauliflower Os to 12s, $1-1.2?. Celery l-abish. local, $1,40 1.50; heart. SI OO 1.-2 J das. . Cucimbers Local hothnnse, S dos. box 82 50-13: 5, dor.. 84 4 25. - Cranberries 25 lb bote, McFarland nd Belmoor, $2.75 3 00. Garlic Orrcon. S 6e, Grapes Malagas, 80c $1.10, Lettuee Wash., Pasco iced, 5 dox $2-2.10. Mushroom On pound carton. 85 40e. v - Onions Fifty pound sacks, yellow a rietie $t 1.15. Pea Calif- 11 12c lb. . Pears D'Anjius,- $1.65 1.75. Paraer Per dos bnnrhes 25 SOe. Parsnip Per lug. 85 40e Peppera Calif, choice, 10 lie lb. Potato Umg whites, sacked, pei wt... C, 8 Ko. 1. flOe $1 10; leaehotet. I'.xMtw. local. So 1, twt Na 3, ewt.. bf ...--. KutabAtat lb .. 4pirh local, orange bos 1 1 1. 1 Lara Squaah Ib Italiaa S.uo. do. . H.nmh Stiuanh. local, erat Turnip, do. - -. NUTS Walnut. I7. Ib .- 10 to 1H r'ilbert. IV37 crop IK 12H to .15 BOPS t Baying Priral Clusters, 10:. Ib. top 12 to A fucgles. top .. - WOOL AND MOHAIB (Buying Price! M-ihlr .. nominal Medium wool nominal Coarse wool .. nominal Lambs wool . .. nominal CASCAEA BABB Dry. Ib .0$ EGGS AND POOXTB? tBujtn Price ot Andresens) White extras 24 Brown extras Mediim extras ... Large standards Medium standards ... Pullets , Hesry hrus. Ib. Colored medium, Ib. . Medium Leghorn. -lb. Stags, lb White Leghorns, fry. Old roosters. Ib . Colored spring .24 .20 .21 .) .15 .14 .13 .10 .01 .15 05 .18 MAKION CKEAMF.RY Buying Price Eutterfat. A grsde H. grade - Colored liens, under 4 H Ib. Cninred hens. of r 4 lb. l.ephorn hens, light I.CEllnrn hens hesvy Colored fryers - - l-eehora broilers ttnostert -- Keiect msrket lu Star. Ib 'o 2 grades. 6 cents less. Kges Can.Hed and graded Large extras -. Medinm'extis Large standards Undergrades Turkeys. So 1 hens - No. '1 toms ... . m .3 7 .35 V .14 .14 .08 10 17 16 04 .05 .24 .20 .21 .14 .13 22 20 russets. 0. S No. 1. $1 15 1.25; Klamath ruswts. V S No 1. 81 15 I 25. Quince local. 2 4c per lb Radishes Per doien bunches. 85 40. Rutahagts 81 35 I 5(1. Squash Bohemian, 70r; Danish, large crates. 60 70c. Turnips Cwt. 0c 81. Toma'oes Hot house, extra fancy, $1.80 1.85 per box Pumpkins 1 I lb Sweet Potatoes Calif . SO lb- $160 8pinaeh Lo'il. 20 lb. crates, 60 75c. 1.75 ' Grade B raw 4 per cent milk, Salem baste pool price $3 per btudred. Surplus 91.82. Co-op Grade A butterfat price, FOB Salem, 87c. If ilk ased on mi monthly butterfat overage.) - . Distributor price, 92 JU. A erade butterfat -Dellv ered, 37c; B grade, 83 tt; C grade, 31c. . A grade print, 88c; B grade, 87c. LIVESTOCK (Baaed o condition snd ale reported up to 4 p.m.) 1937 spring Jamb. Ib . 8 00 Yearlings. 4.60 to 6 OU Hogs, top. 150 210 lb 8.25 13 150 lb. 7.SO to 8 OU 210 300 lbs. 1 7.25 Sow ;; Usirjr typo cow Kerf cow. Bui" .. Hei fer to 7.75 6.50 to 6.75 3.00 to 3 50 6 00 to 5 75 5.00 to 5 50 6.00 to 50 7.50 12 Top eal, Ib. Dressed veal, lb. . UBAIN. BAT AND SEEDS Wheat, white, bu. 82 to .85 Wheat, western red. bu. ...8 to ,.85 Harely brewing, too ..nominal Rar-ey, feed, ton 24.00 to 25 00 Oat, gray, ton .. , -26 00 Oats, white, ton ; 20 00 AINIta valley. - I it DO Oat and vetch bay, ton 100 isike eiover seed. Ih 84 Clover hay.-top 18 00 Ked eiover aaed. ib- top .2 Stocks & Bonds December 15 STOCK AVERAGES (Compiled by the Associated Press! 80 15 15 60 Indus. Rail Dtit Stx ks Today 62.9 21.1 33.2 44.9 Prev, day 62.5 21.2 33.0 44.7 Month ago.... 65.1 22.0 . 34.9 . 46.6 Year ago 96.4 38.8 51.6 70.7. 1937 high . 101.6 49.5 54.0 75.3 1937 low 57.7 19.3 31..6 41.7 193ft high .... 99.3 43.5 53.7 72.8 1936 low 73.4 30.2 43.4 55.7 BOND AVEBAGES 20 10 Kails Indus. Today :. 73.6 96.7 Prev. day 73.8 96.7 Month ago.... 74.2 98.5 Year ago 97.6 104.1 10 10 Ctil r'gn 91.5 65.6 91.9 65.6 9.1.2 ' 65.6 102.2 71.7 1937 high .... 99.0 104.4 102.8 74 7 1937 low 70.3 96.2 90.3 64 2 19J6 high .... 98.2 104.4 103.1 7S.0 1936 low 86.9 101.8 99.3 67.6 Frank Westf alls Honor Guests at Dinner Held At R. T. Kidd's Home H O PEWELL Complimenting Mr. and Mrs. Frank Westfall on their 78th and 69th birthdays which fell on December 13, Mr. and Mrs. R. T. Kidd Sunday en tertained 14 members of the fam ily at a dinner. Misa Ruth West fall whose birthday will be De cember 17 and Harvey Westfall, whose birthday is Dececmber 18, received second honors. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Westfall have been married almost ' 53 years. - II GIVE HER WINGS By MARIE BLIZARD SYNOPSIS Julio. Allerdyce, 19-year-old daughter of Professor Allerdyce of the Ramsey Preparatory School for Boys, intends to get herself en- ''gaged to Dr. Richard Jessup, the most eligible bachelor in the little town of Fayette, New York, Tom my Jessup, the doctor's younger brother, adores Julie, but he is still In college and Julie scorns him as a .child, while she loots forward to a glamorous future. Julie is furious when Dick telephones that he has to make a sick call and is sending Tommy to escort her to the spring dance. If possible, Dick will go to the dance later. . ; CHAPTER II "Julie, you gonna take a bath!" Julie scorned to answer Cosy. "If you are, you can take yourself right upstairs this minute 'cause I'm not goin' to light that heater gin. I'm goin' out of this house by even o'clock so git along. There's plenty of hot wter for you, I got 11 1 want." . Julie thought she had had all she t wanted too. She wondered what it ' would be like to have her dinner in Jacobean dining-room, served by . butler who certainly wouldn't ask ; , her if she was going to take bath, She wondered what it would be like , . to be dressing in a tulle gown that "cost three hundred dollars instead of in a little organdie she had made herself. She wondered what it would be like to make a breathless en trance into ball-room and hear people murmur, "Who is that pretty girl?" "But they do that now," she said dolefully. And so they did. Only J ulie Aller- dyte wasn't pretty she was beauti ful. She was tall, her bones were small and gave her slenderness a fiuid quality. She had deep grey green eyes which were often more grey than green because of the shadows cast by her long, dark lashes. Her skin was ivory-tinted and the mass of her red-gold hair seemed sometimes to burden the head she carried proudly on her slender throat. Her mouth with a provocative short upper Up was full nd generous. . If Julie hadn't been so beautiful, she would newer have been unhappy. Nature had dressed her ail up nd she hd no place to go. The stunning troth of that had first struck her five years before when she was only seventeen. Julie had been boy-conscious from the time she was a long-legged sprite with burnished curls down her back. When the Allerdyces left Bos ton for Fayette, she was ten. From the time she was fourteen until she waa seventeen Julie was in sev enth heaven. She had an entire school to pay her court m the pret tiest girl in town. She danced her feet numb at the x-fcnnl dances, screamed : herself knsno. -dointr It prettily t the 'hockew. football and basketball games. She collected autographed pictures of heroes, fraternity pirn nd dance programs. She had senti mental poetry written to her, re ceived countless valentines and was invited by all five of th "outstand ing men" in the senior class to their prom. ' life was very exciting then even If you-were so poor that you had to knit your own sweaters and make vonr own dance frocks. - Julia had squeezed every moment out of it but when she was seven teen, she realized that prep school boys, after all, were not men They were only little boys, and when they went away, back to their homes in New York, Palm Beach or Newport, they would not long remember her. She heard about the outside world from them. The knowledge that there was a great, big, glamorous world outside and that there was no possible way in her scheme of things to enjoy it, came to her with a sud den, stunning force. -She had taken stock of herself and her possibilities, spending a long hour before her mirror. Then she had said to the determined girl who faced her there, "I can't sing and I can't even tap dance. I wonldnt be a stenographer or a tra-ned nurse if my life depended on blending the white and raehelU to the exact shade ofher ivory skin. There had been Professor Digby Barker. There had been young Judge Merriam, Hilton Jarvia and Stephen Mather when they were home from college, and there was, of course. Tommy Jessup. She stirred the powder angrily, thinking of Tommy Jessup. She was angry with Dick for sending Tommy in his place. She'd had enough of that snub-nosed brat who treated her with fine scorn and high handed methods. He was, she thought, the only boy she hadnt been nice to. There wasn't any reason why 6he should hava been. Her own thoughts demeaned her. They led inevitably to the end that 1 m,mtm.n vx. Julie danced ber feet numb at the school dances. it. I can't find any way to get out of i Fayette and if I could. I'd hate liv ing in furnished room. Even if the city is the only place where I'd meet the kind of man I ought to marry. But IH make the best mar riage I can. Julie Allerdyce, you're pretty and you're not going -to wastel" - : That had been when she was sev enteen. When she was nineteen she realized that the kind of marriage she wanted was as nearly impossible as Sight to that other world she knew about but had never seen. Then Dick Jessup had come back to .live again in "The Old Jessup Mansion" and to practice medicine. Julie Allerdyce was thinking about Dick Jessup. He was, she con cluded, the best from every point of security that Fayette had to offer her. rv-1 . " - There had always been beans for her, she thought this night of the Opening Spring Dance at the Coun try dub as she mixed her powder. she had had a purpose in being nice to all her beaux, showering them, with the flattering attentions of a popular girl. Going out of her way to learn their likes and dislikes. Like reading about the Yungerman Case so that she could discuss it with Judge Merriam. Like -joining the hospital charity league because . . . because that was one way she could force Dick Jessup to notice that ah e waa grown-up, sympa thetic woman and not the little girl he remembered. And all of this for what? Because she wanted to get married? Not for marriage itself, perhaps. She "was too independent of spirit to have minded net marrying but she couldnt face the appalling1 future of boredom, of growing into her thir ties like . . . well, like Millicent Dodd who had nothing to fill her time bat managing charitable enterprises. (To be continued) CavrrtgM Marie Sllaanl DMrltaev to BUa ttm Sjadhal. ft. Profit Taldnff Retards Transactions More Than Previous Day; Under Million Still NEW YORK, Dec. 15-(-Un-der leadership of the steels the stock market pushed a little high er today but the advance was marred by late profit selling. At their best, leaders were up fractions to better than a point, but few managed to hold the Hudson arrived home Sunday wide assortment of losers at the finish. ; Some Investment Deals Selling and switching for tax ation purposes app'eared the mo tive for much of the dealing. Brokers said there was bargain hunting and small investment buying, and a considerable num ber of odd lot transactions. Stock market transactions to taled 929, 610: shares compared with 896,330 yesterday. The As sociated press average of 60 stocks advanced .2 of a point at 9 Oriet Moen Heads Friendship Group SILVERTOX Election of of ficers at Trinity Friendship as sembly Sunday afternoon resulted as follows: President, Oriet Moen- vice president, Mrs, Clifford' Alm quist; secretary, Frances Ander con; treasurer, Melvin Satmm; assistant treasurer, Clifford Ek lund. During the business hour the Christmas tree committee was ap pointed to include Nelson broth ers to secure the tree; Harlan Moe, Robert Moe, Marvin Jen eon, Thelma Olson and Patience Moberg as the decorating com mittee. Rev. J. M. Jenson was guest speaker on "The Reason why Some- People go to Church." Other program numbers in cluded selections by the orches tra, violin solo, Denzel Legard; rut-jit outu, Alice uaman. Quotations at Portland FKOOUCE XCHHOB -PORTLaVXX, Ore- Dee. IS: (AP) Eutter Extra 85; itan.arda S4; prim firat, 831.; tint 82 Hi butterfat, 38-38. ' , Eir I nr astraa 38; larf tn- ards 20; medium extra 24; mediant Undardi 22. : Cbeeae: Triplet IS; loaf 18 : Portland Grain PORTLAND, Ore, Dee. ll (AP)--Wbeat : Open High Low Close Dee. 83 84 83 84 Slav . . 83 83 83 83 ' Clt Grain : Oat. Ko. 38-lb. white 24.50' Oats, Ko. 2 38-lb. grj .2S.50 Barley, Ko. 2 45-lb. BW 27.00 Cora, Ko. 2 EY hip. 28.50 Millrun ttsndard 21.00 Cash whet (bid): Soft white 85; wettera white 85; weat ern red 95. Hard red winter ordinary 88; It per cent 87; 12 per cent 81; 13 per cent 9i; 14 per cent . J Hard red iprinf ordinary 87; 11 per cent 81; 12 per cent 85; 13 per cent 89. Hard white Baart ordinary 8; 11 per cent 85; 12 per cent 86; 13 per cent 88; 14 per cent 90- Portland Produce POBTLASD, Ore- Dee. 15. (AP) Country meta celling price to retailer; Country killed io, best batcher, undo 160 lb., 10-lle; vealer. 14c; light nd thin, 9 12c; beary 9-0e; eanner cow. 6-7c; cntter. 7-8e; ball, 9-9 e; cpring lamb 10e; ewe 4-8e lb. Lit Pom 1 try Buying price: Leghorn broilers, 1 to 2 lb,.. 19 20e lb.; eol.v ed apnngv 2 to 3 lb.; 17-18c IK; ovrr 3 lb., 18 19c lb.; Leghorn h;n. under 3 lbs 11 12c; over 3 lb., 12 13e lb.; colored hen, 4 to & Iga., 17 18c lb.; over 5 lb, 17-18e Ib.; No. 2 grade 2c leu. Turkeys Buying price: Ben. 22c: No. 1 toms. 20c; selling price, toms, 22 23c; hens, 24-25e. Potatoes Yakima Gem, new crop, I l.O.i ; local, SI. 00-1.15 cental; Deschutes, $1-1 20. Ouions New crop. Oregon, . S2-2 15 cental; Yakima, 50. 75 80c. Wool 1937 nominal; Willamette ."al ley, medium 23e lb.; coarse and braidK. 23c lb.: eastern Oregon, fine, comma!, fall lambs wool, 18c lb. Hay Selling price to retailer: alfalfa No. 1, $18-18:50 ton; oata and eetcb. $14-14.50; clorer $13-14 ton; timothy, eastern Oregon, ( ) ton; do Valley, ( ) ton. Portland. Hops Nominal, 1937, 12 14c. Cascsra bark 1937 peel. 5c lb. Mohair 1937 clip, 35c lb. Sugar Berry or fruit. 100s, $5.20; bales. $5.30; beets, $3.15 cental. Cascara bark Buying price, 1937 peel, 5c lb. Domestic floor Selling price, city deli-err 1-25 bbl. lots: Family paents 49,. $6 25 $6.85; bakers' hard wheat, $5 25 6 70; baker's blnestem $4.95-5.35; blend ed hard wheat $5.20 5.70; graham $5.2.'.; wtiole wheat, $4.85 barrel; aoft wheat flours, $4.85 4.95. Portland Livestock PORTLAND. Ore., Dec. 15. (AP) (L'SDA) Hogs: Receipts 600 including 11? direct, market active, fully steady; good-choice 160-215 lb. drfeein 8.25 te mostly 8.35, carload lot quotable t 8.50. 230-200 lb. batchers 7.75-7.85, few n? 8.00, light light mostly 7.75-7.85; perk lag cow 6.25-6.50; choice feeder pig quotable np 8.25. Cattle: Heceipt 150. ealee S3 includ ing 16 direct, market active, steady te had higher, many sale lower grade she stock 25 above Monday, vealer 60 and more higher than Monday, steers scarce; odd- head common-medium steer 6.00 7.25, good fed steers - eligible upward 8.50 or above; common-medium heifers 5.00-5.85, eutter down 4.00; low cntter and cntter rows mestly 2.50 3.50, com moa-medium 3.75-4.75, good beef 5.O0 5.50; bulls mostly 4.25-5.00, beef up 5.50; choice veiler np 9.75, common-meiliom 5.50-8.00. Sheep: Receipt 350, market active, strong; load good-choice 89 lb. fed shorn lambs 8.00, odd Iota, medium-goo. 1 wnoled lambs 7.25-8.00, choice quotable around 8.50, yearling salable aronnd 5.50-6.75; good-choice ewea qnotable np 3.75. Wool in Boston BOSTON, Dee 13 (AP) fUSDA ) A. few scattered sale were being clost-d on domestic wool in the Boston wool msrket today.. Graded French com Win,; lengths territory wool have been soil t 73 to 75 cents, scoured basis, in the fine grades, snd at 72 to 74 rents, srour ed basis, in. the hall-blood gradea. (:ood 12 months Tezaa wool have been moved at 70 to 75 cents, scoured basis. Worsted manufacturers were doin? most of the baying. Top msker were bid ding en numerous tines, but the prices they offered were esiderably below price manufacturers; "were paying. Hudson Wins High Honors, Turkeys ALBANY Mr. and Mrs. A. D. highs for the day. There was a from Oakland, Ore., where they had been to attend annual Oak land turkey show. Mr. and Mrs. Hudson who specialize in the Hudson's barred beauty strain of Narragansetts at their farm near Tangent, were successful in car rying off 26 awards in the live division at the show and 11 in the dressed division. Hudson, upon his return, stat ed that the Linn county dress en tries represented the best sam ples of turkey killing and dres sing at the show. They won champion and best display of Narragansetts, and in open competition with all breeds, entire show, won Governor Mar tin's trophy, sweepstakes dis play of entire show, champion adult torn, champion yearling hen and reserve champion. Detroit School's Carnival Success Happy Hour Oub to Hold Ciri8t-aas . Party on December 22 DETRO IT -The high school carnival given Friday night was well atended. The program con sisted of negro skit by Robert Young and Dick Hollis; a mock wedding with Phern Mitchell as bride, Dick Hollis, . groom, Doro thy and Robert Young,, attend ants . and Dick Farcbw, the preacher. A play by Henrietta Burgln, Dick Farraw, and Dick Hollis. Side shows, games and a lunch of coffee and doughnuts brought in good proceeds for the school treasury. ' Visit Los Angeles Folk Mrs. Walter Brinkmeyer, Mrs. James Rand, jr. and ' son Harry went to Albany Wednesday to meet Mrs. Brinkmever's daugb t e r and g.randchildren, Mrs Dewey Gearin, Billy Bob and five weeks old Donna who have come up from Los Angeles to spend the holidays. The Happy Hour club, met Wednesday afternoon at the com munity hall. Plans were made for the Christmas party to be held Wednesday night, December 22; at Fryers' auto camp. Each women, whether, guest- or mem ber is asked to bring a gift to put in the grab basket. - Mr. and Mrs. Roy Newport went to Portland Friday where Mrs. Newport will remain until Spring. Newlyweds From Dakota Are Honored at Dinner At Mrs. Moen's House er,a'n Ho""nd. Clifford 8 win Mrs Oif x?uth Dakota- Mr- Silverton Justice Calendar Is Heavy Quartet of Youths Picked up Here on Charge of Vagraney SHverRT0N-JUStice 't at Iv bulv nr0DUr t0 be unual Hm DTmher 22' flt wbirh ines wm mb"r f Uials and hr Kelson me Move A,f- Amoos tho.e silted for that day are: 1 A transfer ca,P from Sal , volving Ellis Wallace on a drunk en driving charge . A case against M. Lynch on a charge of issuing a check without sufficient funds. The check was said to have been issued to Charlie Rprgen. Lynch pleaded not guilty. James Robert of Salem will he heard on a. larceny charge her December 22. Roberts pleaded not guilty. Four Face Vagrancy Irene Leslie, Mr$. Leta Graves Jack Graves and R. Hardin wer brought before A If O. Nelson Saturday on a vagrancy charte following a preliminary hearing the case was continued until this week. Each one was placed un der $250 bail, which fhey failed to pay and the quartet was re turned to the couuity jail. State Oficers Farley Moan and H. L.' Benninghoff were m. charge. The four young people, the oldest of whom was 24, were arrested south of Salem. . ; S I LVERTON Mrs. Gertrude Moen and her daughter, Eleanore, were hostesses at dinner Sunday for Mr. and Mrs. Tom Folkestad j and Mr. and Mrs. Allan Holm-1 quist, all of South Dakota. Mrs. j Folkestad is the mother of Allan ; Holmquist and both couples are ' touring the west on their wed ding trip. They will spend the winter in California. Afternoon callers at the Moen home were Selma" Holden, Ed mund Holden, Andrew Sampson, all from New York City, and Filberts & Filbert Meats Any Quantity M. KLORFEIN State Cafeteria POLLY AND HER PALS Turning the Tables By CLIFF STERRETT 'Y ' - flnCKEY MOUSE A Royal Flop By WAIT DISNEY Nli' - IP NOU DISOBEY MS, NOU k'U ("THINK. TOVB,. NOU Wfiw MlNE- WW. NORt Xl; t pp ) I IT- Kja 60SH SXK,E3i fXtH' X CAN'T " N '-'Ah0 4FH lp XE N(W (KiHXPF cHOiCEi J Sor --rrr v even fight im yhm ' j ' LITTLE ANNIE ROONEY A Question'of Confidence BY BRANDON WALSH GOOD NIGHT SlEEP TI6HT. L L-a M f . . - ' X It.. . GOOD NIGHT, AAR5.AAARTIK1- I GUCS5 VOO AAU5T BE "THE NICEST LAO N"TH WHOLE. i-rx; w?Aiitr en -tj.ik- i ic-ve c "THAT LITTL CHILO LMTIL lASTSUNDAV- I TJONT KKiOW WHO SME IS , 0 naWERC SHE CAAAE. n?OM-BUT I FIWD MYSd-r 17ECARDIMG MET? AS SOMEONE rvc KHOWM AMD LOVCO FOR YEARSJ .1 I 1 il I Cop Ktnf Panm?t fnf.WwM ri warnaM I UNDERSTAND MOW YOU FEEL I'VE FALLEN IN LOVE WITH NEC, MYSELF SHE'S SO CWEEVFUL AND HONEST YOU HAVE TO LIKE HER . dONTSHE EVER DROP A HINT ABOUT HER PAST r7 NOT A SINGLE HINT-. BUT THE CHILD MOST BE RUNNING AWAY FROM SOME KIND OF TROUBLE - SHE LOOKS FRIGHTENED IF YOU EVEN BEGIN TO ASK QUESTIONS MAYBE AFTER SHE KNOWS US BET"-? WELL, WELL. TOOTS AND CASPER An Ail-Around Surprise I , By JI3DIY MURPHY -rtir,S7ER AND TWO 0UST LEPT . )HH,lrr AL SK1DDE R T COME out Vet rOT NERVE SL AND DROP XSSWXr I'M THE HAPPIEST WOMAN IN THE ! WORLD OH, ALFRED, PATE MEANT FOR U5 TO BE. nTOZ, ETHER ALWAYS t I AY.AL. HJtgi YES, WHEN I ARRIVED M IT SURE WAS WHO JUST ? ID 1 X I 0ULIE HAD A MINISTER I & CONSIDERATE OF I -rOT Ijtz ..TP . II utaoien 11 AND TWO WITNESSES U0UUETO X L MARRIED I Wju. '"'t Xv .TiTi i" 9 J HSRE- AND ER--SHE INVITE YOU TO k r w& i i a -ni mi i m m w . a mm -.--.- a a aa - i i - - wc WE KNEW JULIE WOULD LAND At-SOON-TR OR LATER BUT WE DIDN'T EXPECT TT SO SOON. TOIMBLE THEATRE--Starring Popeye HIM ) He's Got the Jump on Popeye By SEGAR HE WON T UYJL SOCKIH HAS lBRADBA5KET- HE'S ) A WEWUrA-y BETTER BRIWG SOME. SMELUH- 5AUCE LCOK OUT. V POPEYE. HEJ 6ETTIN6 Hi in m S lMME KNOW WHCNr GETS TIkED.VV BLASTED SISSY, AH I'LL get; UP AfV KNOCK THE UVIN DAVLGHTS OUTTA. iK - it. . - s j- .-aw - ."v .-ix J PT- J4l2- : "tm m'tm r - W a . he WmU ad- mm t