PAGE EIGHT Stock Market Gain Average Early Bidding Centers On Aircrafu, Steel , J And Motors Stocks NEW YORK, Sept 23-VFor the second session in a row the stock market Tuesday managed to tack on a modest average advance without the aid of much outstand ing bullish news. ; v - Early bidding, centering on air crafts, steels and motors, later seeped into rails, . rubbers and farm implements. Best gains, run ning to a point or so for favorites, were shaded in the majority of cases at the close and minor de clared were well distributed. The Associated Press composite of 60 issues was up .2 of a point at 43.7. Dealings, fast' at inter vals in the' morning, slowed after midday but transfers totalled 494, 060 shares against 423,710 Mon day. ' In the rail division Santa Fe was up about a point as another $1 dividend was declared and an nouncement made that the com pany's 4 per cent convertible debentures would be called. Prominent advancers included Douglas aircraft, Lockheed, Boe ing,- Glenn Martin, U.S. Steel, Bethlehem, General Motors, Chry sler, Great Northern, Union Pa cific, U.S. Rubber common and preferred, Goodyear, J. I. Case, Oliver Farm, Eastman Kodak, Johns-Manville and U.S. Gyp sum. m In "arrears were Kennecott, American Smelting, Phelps Dodge, Standard 0il (NJ), Northern Pa cific, . Westinghouse, Union Car bide, and International Harvester. Vm OBEGOM STATESMAN. Satan. '.Ongan, Wednesday Momiog. September 24. 1841 'Strictly Private9' TOES WE Hl& (MVB& VWTH A By Quinn Hall Qover Sowing Underway in Experiment Ik mWVU SAW) W VCGC& CARD RV ABOUT KC BEW3 f TAX V&Z VW !T AEAMT BIST SHE'S OOMMCEb trSAOCCE tfe&fiOZ AEOST VQ&H M (S-iwsHTtruus-ro RLVHERWU Closing Quotations Lebanon Plant Ships Prunes LEBANON Seventy carloads of prunes . have been shipped to . England by the Spencer Parking company and cars are still being loaded. The canned prunes are shipped by rail to eastern ports and then transhipped. ' Tomatoes are now being proc essed at the Lebanon plant though great lots are not yet being brought in because of the damage caused by the rainy weather. The vines in most patches are rleavy with fruit and if the weather per mits ripening there will still be a large yield. Weather permitting, , tomatoes will probably be coming in for an other month. As soon as work on them is finished, squash will be canned. Cauliflower in Demand On Portland Market PORTLAND, Sept. 3 -(&)- Cauliflower demand was excep tionally good on the wholesale market Tuesday. Offerings were in fair supply, but were sold out In the first 15 minutes of trading, Sales .were at $1.35 crate for Is. .Demand for Utah type celery Improved with sales around 85 .cents a crate for best quality. Lettuce spread 75-90 cents with come selected stuff at $1.25. Cab .bage market was steady with little above $1.00-1.10 a crate. Stocks and Bonds September 23 Compiled by The Associated Press STOCK AVERAGES 30 15 15 60 Indus Rails Util Stks Net change A. 2 A. 2 Unch A Tuesday 62.7 17.2 32.5 43 7 Previous day ... 62.5 17.0 32.5 43.5 Month ago 61.7 18.3 32.5 43.4 Year ago 64.2 17.0 35.6 45.1 1941 high 63.9 19.0 35.5 45.0 1941 low 54.8 .-- 15.4 304 39.1 BOND AVERAGES 20 10 10 10 v Rails Indus Util Frgn Net change Unch Unch A. 1 A. 1 Tuesday tU 105.1 101J 51.1 Previous day 61.2 105.1 101. 51.0 Month ago 63.2 105.0 102.1 45.5 Year ago Jt 59.9 104.1 98.6 43.3 1941 high 66 5 105 3 102.2 51.4 1941 low 60.2 104.2 99.0 38.0 FAIRVIEW HOMESowing of Ladino clover this week will mark the final stage of an experiment in reclamation of a 20-acre tract, farming of which -had in recent years been unprofitable, at the Fairview farm, -f : Carrying out recommendations made by Oregon State college specialists following a soil survey, rye grass was raised on the land for, two years. This fall the sod was plowed and lime and super-phosphate added. . : The ladino clover will be plant ed and irrigated from a well drill ed for the purpose. Next summer the clover will serve as green pas ture for about 90 head of selected cows that have set more or less of a record for high milk produc tion. Forty eight of the cows now being milked produce 1200 pounds of milk per cow per month. The clover field will be - surrounded with an electric fence. In line with the policy of gen era! farm improvement, the 35 acres of beans, beets, tomatoes and other vegetables have also been irrigated with a new- portable water system consisting of 24 large sprinklers. Off of two acres of beans so far they have been able to can 6 tons. The prune crop was saved, too, and 16 tons Were canned while nine tons were dried. The 2800 chickens, half of which are laying, supply the institution with all the needed eggs. Improvements have also been made in the equipment for the kitchen, bakery, laundry, machine shop, painting and greenhouse. Filbert Picking, - Plowing Starts CENTRAL HOWELL With hop-picking over, the filbert har vest is started. The early rains have started fall plowing. s The corn crop promises to ripen later than usual owing to the unfavor able .weather. ' .. A survey of farm families shows that more persons helped in hop picking .and other seasonal work than in past seasons. The can neries have also drawn both men and women who can be spared from the farm. NEW YORK, Sept 23-(iP)--Today's closing quotations: Air Reduction 42 Curtiss Wright... 10 Penn RR 22 Alaska Juneau 4V4 Douglas Aircraft 77 Phelps Dodge 31 Al Chem & Dye160 Du Pont De N 153 Phillips Petrol.-. 45 Allis Chalmers 29-Eastman Kodak.,144 Proct & Gamble 59 American Can 84 Elec Power & Lt 1 Public Serv NJ- 20 Am Car & Fdy.... 30 General Electric 32 V Pullman 26 Am Rad & Std S 6 General Foods.... 41 Radio ; 3 Am Rolling Mills 14 General Motors- 41 Rayonier Pfd. 31 Am Smelt & Ref 43 Goodrich 19 Vt Republic Steel 18 Am TV1 Ar TpI 155 fioodvpar 19 Richfield Oil 10 Am- Tobacco B..- 70 Great Northern:. 24 Safeway Stores- 45 Frost and Blight Am water wks.. V4 ureynouna iva sears noeDucK law Am Zinc L & S.. 6 Illinois Central 8 Socony Vacuum- 9 Anaconda 28'Insp Copper 11 Sou Cal Edison.. 23 Armour Illinois- 5 Internatl Harv.... 54 Southern Pacific 13 Atchison 27 Internatl Nickel.. 29 Sperry Corp 37 Aviation Corp.... 4 Int Pap & P Pfd 70 Standard Brands 5 Baldwin Loco 15 Internatl T &T 2 Stand Oil Calif.. 23 Bendix Aviation 40 Vi Johns Man ville.. 70 Standard Oil Ind 32 Bethlehem Steel 68 Kennecott 36 Standard Oil NJ 42 Boeing Airplane 23 Ldbbey-O-Ford -31 Stone & Webster 7 Borden 21 Lockheed 30 studebaker ey Borg Warner 20 Loew's 37 Sunshine Mining 5 California Pack- 23 Long-Bell A 3 Texas Corp 41 Callahan Z & L. Monty Ward 35 Trans-America 4 Calumet Hec 6 Nash Kelvinator 4 Union Carbide. 78 Canada Dry 16 National Biscuit-17 Union Oil" Calif- 15 Canadian Pacific 4 Natl Dairy Prod 16 Union Pacific 76 Cat Tractor. 46 Natl Distillers.... 24 United Airlines 13 Celanese 26 National Lead 17 United Aircraft- 39 Chesapeake & O 37 NY Central- 12 United Corp Chrysler 59 No American Av 15 United Drug. 6 Col Gas & Elect. 2 No American Co 12 United Foods 74 Commercial Solv 11 Northern Pacific 6 US Rubber. 26 Comnwlth & Sou 7-16 Ohio Oil 8 US Rubber Pfd 99 Consol Aircraft. 49 Pac Am Fish 11 US Steel 57 Consoldi Edison.. 17 Pac Gas & Elec. 25 Vanadium 25 Consolidated Oil 6 Packard 2 Warner Pictures 5 Continental Can 36 Pan Am Airways 17 Western Union 29 Corn Products.... 52 Paramount Pict. 15 Westingh Elect- 88 Crown Zellerbch 13 J C Penney..... 87 Woolworth 31 Potatoes Suffer From PRATUM Some potatoes ap parently were nipped by a light frost last week. There is also a possibility that it may be potato blight which begins on the leaves and vines of the plant and unless stopped by a killing frost will go down on the potato and finally cover it making it worthless for human consumption. Emergency Crop, Feed Lotns Available Emergency crop and feed loans are now available to farmers in Marion county, and applications are being received at Eugene, by V. N. Freeman, field supervisor of the emergency crop and feed loan section, Farm Credit administra tion. These loans will be made, as in the past only to farmers whose cash requirements are small and who cannot obtain a loan from any other source, including pro duction credit associations, banks, or other private concerns or in dividuals. As in former years, the money loaned will be limited to the ap plicant's necessary cash needs in preparing and cultivating his crops or in purchasing or produc ing feed for his livestock. Borrowers who obtain loans for the production of cash crops are required to give as security a first lien on the crops financed or, in the case of loans for the purchase or production of feed for livestock. a first lien on the livestock to be fed, - Cash crop loans mature on August 31, 1942, and feed loans mature October 31, 1942. The rate of interest in either case is 4 per cent per year. Application forms and full in formation are available at the of fice of Robert E. Rieder, county agent. Stock Beets Combined HAZEL GREEN Six acres of stock beets were threshed by com bine in the rain. The grower had considered his crop lost, until the experiment proved a success. ; The seed was to be taken to a hop dryer.; There was not the usual oss from shattering.! ,. White clover seed started to grow before it could be threshed. Farmers who have grown red clover seed for years, often lost a crop because they 'could not get threshed, but it never sprouted in the straw. The seed in the straw would be plowed under then next plowing would be on top to grow crop of volunteer ; clover in the crop planted. The onion growers are topping some cars lor immediate sale. Turning onion with large wooden rakes, or others turning by hand, as they consider ! this method leaves onions in better condition to shovel into the boxes to haul to the onion house. Labor is dif ficult to secure. The corn will not be mature enough for good silage for three or four weeks. In present condi tion a heavy frost would damage it fox the silo. Pears Slow on Mart; Spear Melons Ditto PORTLAND, Sept. 23 - (JP) - D'Anjou pears were clow on the wholesale market Tuesday, priced 50-1-55 cents generally; for jumble pack. Boscs were- around 60-75 cents. Concord grapes sold 40-50 cents a lug with tokays from The Dalles $1.35 and muscats at $1.40. Spear melons were slow around 90 cents to $1 for best. Dillards were 75 cents to $1.25 crate. ' Expanded Cover Crop Prices Guaranteed CORVALLIS, Sept 23 - (ff) - Guaranteed prices on an expanded Oregon cover crop acreage were assured . Tuesday -following - meeting of N. E. Dodd, western division AAA director, and the state AAA committee here. The seed' purchase plan at the guaranteed . price schedule an nounced earlier had been contin gent on getting growers to agree to seed 423,000 acres in the state. The committee said, however, that this would be waived since reports from 21 counties indicated that the acreage would equal or exceed that total even though some of it was not formally signed. Wool in Boston BOSTON. Sept. 23 (AP) (USDA) Moderate quantities of domestic wool were selling in the Boston market at steady prices. Combing three-eighths and quarter-blood bright fleece wools were bringing mostly 48 to SO cents. In the grease. Fine delaine bright fleece wools were selling at 41 to 44 cents, in the grease. An occasional sale of graded French-combing fine territory wool was closed with prices ranging $1.02 to $1.07.' scoured basis. Spot fine Australian wools were receiving some demand at steady prices. 24 Enrolled at Hopewell School HOPEWELL Margaret Geisler, Mary Loop, William Pearce, Dor othy Brush, Rena Janzen; Allen Simpson, Viola and Flora -Martin are -the young people of this district who are enrolled at Amity union high schooL- :; I Twenty-four students were en rolled at - the Hopewell school when the term opened Monday, Robert Polvl was the only be ginner. Mrs. Mildred Smith and Mrs. Mildred .Williams are the teachers. -Af the Hopewell United Breth ren church rally day will be ob served Sunday September ' 25 when the autumn registration is expected to be a record. The annual home coming will be ob served in November. Wheat Market Tone Is Firm CHICAGO Sept 23-(yp)-Wheal futures charted a choppy course Tuesday but in the main the ton of the market was firm and the close Was fractionally higher than Monday. Corn futures, however, faltered and finished with losses for the day.) Wheatfluctuated nervously and at times extended the gains to at much as 1 cents a bushel but news from 'Washington failed to bolster, sentiment sufficiently and most of thes advances were re duced by about half. Firmness in cotton and cottonseed oil futures bolstered the market at the start At the dose wheat was to cents higher than Monday's final quotations, December $1.20-, May $1.24?. Beans Harvested; Tomatoes Spoil NORTH SANTIAM Bean har vest is nearing, completion with only a few "yards still picking. Yields were; generally good with tonnage ranging from eight to eleven per acre. Cull tonnage ran unusually high owing to the shortage of pickers. Many growers merely broke even on crop expenses. Downy' mildew, believed caused by the rainy weather, has ruined the tomato crop in this area. Practically a total loss of the crop has resulted. Fields appear as though frosted and the fruit Is soft and fuzzy with mildew. ... '"I ml ' wwrllTSw'limHlWl1lMllllMlffF, There is no personal or business emergency which we cannot help you meet with a conveniently, speedily arranged loan! rfrop into oar offices for fall details ... STATE FINANCE CO. FOE MONEY. IN A HURST 344 State - . ; Phone 9261 Lie. S-216 M-222 THE LONE RANGEB No Honor Among Thieves 4- Quotations at Portland Produce Exchange PORTLAND. Ore.. Sept. 23 (AP) Butter prints : A grade 40c in parch ment wraDDers: ic in canons: a grade 39c in parchment wrappers; 40c in cartons. Butterfat First quality, maximum of 1 per cent acidity, delivered Port land, 40-40', a c lb. premium quality (maximum of .35 of 1 per cent acidity) 41-41 tie lb.; valley routes and country points 2c less, or 38',ic; second quality 2 cents Under first, or 38 '3c. Eggs Prices to producers: A large 34c; B large 29c; medium A, 30c; medium B 26c. Resale to retailers 4c higher for cases, cartons 5c higher. Cheese Selling price to Portland re tailers: Tillamook triplets 27 'ic lb; loaf 28',ic lb. Triplets to wholesalers 25',jc lb.: loaf 26frc lb. f.o.b. Tillamook. PORTLAND. Ore.. Sept. 23 (AP) I (USDA ) Hogs : salable and total 300. Barrow and Kilts: gd-ch, 140-160 lbs iil.Z3triz.wj do 160-180 lbs 11. 85 12.50 I do 180-200 lbs 12.25 i 12.50 I do 200-220 lbs 12.00 12.50 do 220-240 lbs 11.60 12.25 do 240-270 lbs 11 X0 12.00 Feeder nigs, gd-ch. 70-120. 12.00 13.25 Feeder pigs, gd-ch, 70-120, iz.ouwi4.uo Cattle: Salable and total 129. Calves. 35. Steers, choice 900-1100 lbs 10.50 12.50 do med. 750-1100 lbs 9.00 10.75 do common. 750-1100 lbs. 8.000 9.25 Heifers, good. 750-900 lbs- 10.25 10.75 do med. 500-900 lbs. Portland Grain PORTLAND, Ore., Sept. 23 (AP) Grain: Wheat: Open High Low Close May l.OOVa 1.00,4 1.00 1.00 December 57i SHM .97 .97 Cash grain: Oats No. 2 38-lb. white, 34.00. Barley. No. 2. 45-lb. BW, 30.00 Com. No. 2 EY shipments, 33.25. No. 1 flax. 2.07 4. Cash wheat (bid): Soft white. 96; soft white excluding Rex, 98; whte club, 99 western red, 99. Hard red winter: Ordinary, 84; 10 Eer cent, 96; 11 per cent, 1.02; 12 per cent, i mi. Hard white-Baart: Ordinary, 99; 10 per cent, 1.02; 11 per cent, 1.13; 12 per cent, 1.16. Today's car receiDts: Wheat. 28: bar ley. 2; flour, 5; corn. 6; oats, 2; hay, 1; muueea, . Salem Market Quotations The prices below supplied by a lo cal grocer are Indicative of the daily market prices paid to growers r jr Sa lem buyers but are not guarantied by The Statesman: VEGETABLES Apples, box Beets, bunch, doz. Brussels srrout, flat Cabbage Carrots Cauliflower, crate Celery, green . Corn, fresh, doz. Danish squasn uaruc. id. Hubbard squash Lettuce. 5 Mustard Greens, doz. Parsnips, luff Onions, .50 lbs. , . Onions, green Peppers, green, lb. ,-, , , Potatoes, 100 lbs No. 1 new Potatoes. No. 2. 50-lb. Radishes, doz. Tomatoes, flats Tomatoes, bushel too .30 SO 1.50 1.2. 1.40 J5 .25 J5 .019 1.65 .40 .75 , 1.35 . 30 .02 XOO - JM .40 .60 1.00 .Bayinr prices: A grade print 41Hc; B grade 4Hc; quarters 4 2 Vic. (Buying Prices of Mar km Creamery) BUTTEBFAT Premium .42 No. 1 . .41 No. 2 .39 EGGS GRAIN, HAT AND SEEDS (Baying Prices) - Oats. No. 1 24.00 to 25 00 Feed barley, ton 25.00 Ckiver bay. ton Alfalfa hay, ton.. Dairy feed. 80-lb. bag. Hen scratch feed. Cracked coin , Wheat . 9 00 to 10.00 .10.00 to 12.00 . 1.50 S.15 MS . DO to LOO EGGS AND POULTRY (Buying Prices ef Aadresea'i) BUTTLRFAT No. i v; no. t ; . Premium Extra large white Extra large brown Medium Standard --- Pullets Colored hens . Colored frys White LeRhorn Old roosters .41 J1',i 42 -S3 33 . 39 J J J7 J3 JOS Filicrls Ucnld llzlkj Tarzr Sakia, Oregon Large A J-arge B - Medium A MeOiura B Pullets Checics Colored hens Colored fryers . Leghorn fryers Leghorn hens, over 3 lbs Leghorn bens, under 3', Old roosters No. 2 poultry M less. HOPS. (Buying Prices) Seeded 1941 . Seedless JS3 29 23 3& J .23 J J4 J3 J5 J3 AS a to si LIVESTOCK M (Buying prices foe No. 1 stock, based on conditions and sales reported up to 4 p-m.) Top lambs --, I, , , , ; ' 16.73 Ewes 4.00 to 5.00 Hogs, top 160-200 lbs. 12.00 Sows - 3.75 to 10.29 VeaL top 12.50 Dairy type cows Beef cows Bulls " , Heifers Dressed veal ,, ., WOOL AND MOHAIR Wool -. ... Lambs Mohair , , , . 5.00 to 7 00 7 .00 to 7 .50 8.00 to 3.75 . 6J0 to 7 50 as .40 .45 Wanted Walnuts. Filberts and Nat Meats Cash en DellTery, OrcbarA Ban MORRIS KLORFEXN -f 469 N. Front St. Fu. Com. TeL W3J brtland Livestock By FRAN STEIKEB do com. 500-900 lbs .. Cows, good, all wts. , do medium, ail wts do cut-corn, all wts do canner. all wts. Bulls (yearlings excluded) beef, goo, all wts do sausage, good, all wets do medium, all wts - do cut-corn, all wts Vealers, gd-ch, all wts do com-med, all wts do cull, al wts Sheep: Salable an dtotal 300. 8.75 10.25 7.75 8.75 7.75 8.50 7.00 7.75 S.75 7.00 4.75 Q 5.75 9.000 9.25 8.7539.25 7.75 8.75 6.75 7.75 12.00013.50 8.0012.00 6.50 8.00 I rftv;l POLLY AND HER PALS Home Remedy! By CLIFF STERRET Co, .Tp, P NsusAKn-ie j I i tx--w-. I rb Uke tive some 1 C- . Tr J PtwClpt C LEADING LAWRX f NCNV SHE CANY A p C "THAT STLlF1? T' X - NO--- BUT" - - J leliifcn Tnws W SOM MEDICINE V EVEN SPEAK J ft ONE 0 OUR LOtXE ) . ( HIS WIPE DOES ) . ,- "TTMADEER ? ONE WORD M 1 MEMBERS. TJ ' ) '-" B l 7 i MICKEY MOUSE Not Asleep on the Job! By WALT DISNEY Ewes (shorn) gd-ch Co, com-med ... Spring lambs Closely sorted do gd-ch do med-gd - do common 4.50 3.50 2.50 4.50 11 50 U.00ll.25 9.75 10.75 9.00 9.50 Portland Produce PORTLAND. Ore.. Sept. 23 (API- country meats Selling price to retail ers: Country killed hogs, best butchers. 120-140 lbs..; 16i-17c, light-thin 15-17c: vealers. fancy. 19-20c: heavy 14-18c: lambs, yearlings. 10-30c lb.; 1941 spring lamps zuc; ewes 6-ioc; good cut ter cows, . 12-12 'jc; canner cows, 11- izc; bulls. 14'i-l5c. Live poultry Buying nrlces: No. II grade Leghorn broilers, under ltt lbs. 17c; over 1,4 lbs- 17c; fryers. 24-4 lbs, 17,,ic: roasters, over 4 lbs- 17c: col ored nens nw. Leghorns, under 3", ids., i4c: over 35. ids- ibc. 01a roost ers 8c lb. Dressed turkeys N o m 1 n a I selling j prices: Hens, old croo. 24-25c: new crop, 27c. toms 28e. Onions Oregon 1.10-1.25. 60-lb. box: wiu waua. 1.00. bo-jd. box. Feas coast No. 1. 2J25-2J0 box; Brownsmeaa 1.0-z 00 box. Peppers Green. 40-50c box. Potatoes New white locals. Ii0-1.75 I cental. Yakima No. X Gems 1.85 cental; Klamath Falls. 1.85 central. Hay Selling price on tracks: Alfalfa No. 1. 16.00-16.50; oat-vetch. 12X0 ton; wiiiamette vaney clover, 11.00 ton; tim othy, eastern Oregon . 21.00 ton. Mohair 1941. 12-month. 45c lb. wool 1941 contracts, Oregon ranch nominal 32 -35c lb.; crossbred. 34-37c lb. Domestic flour Selling price, city delivery, 1 to 22 bbl. lots; family pat ents, y i.uo-1.00; 80S. mm-im bbl.; bakers hard wheat net, 3.90-6.60; blended hard wheat 3.90-6.35: soft Wheat S.0O-3.M: Dhiestem 6.25-6.7-. Hops Oregon 1940. 27-28c lb.: seed less. 41-42c; contract. 1941, 32-33C lb. Cascar bark 1940 peel. 10c lb.; 1941 iwc 10. BOY- U OH-B0YJ THIS IS DREAM. DON'T WAKE Me CMP CO Teaches at Jefferson SCIO Florence Dennlson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Dennison, Scio, has begun the school year as first grade instruc tor at Jefferson. Miss Dennison recently returned from several weeks' visit with relatives In Can ada, j I ( THAT'S WHAT T ;AlD ... lrjf BUT C!-l I T 1 1 I 7" 11 mt nuoav W WU 1- SAN lOUT;. I I .0. r,,- ZrnJ, I V : muv T-tri" V ci.w iTI T1 IF j'sl r s. ::xt.iV!- .--xi 1 u 11 1 1 'ii 1 u 1 1 irr LITTLE ANNIE ROONET Lost Sheep? '-. j MHi l JW iuiH GEE.2XROBUT ITS A LOVELY MGHT?) I J -TlCUT UTT10E 6TAOS I RJ CrOUMOTHEIilO LOOKS V JSJ THE MCOi LOOKS JUST UKg A f" f I WAS TU4Y SHEEP ALL COVERED ) U LHC WCRE HOTGOMGTO HAE 1 X Pttp'j.y PRCTiT PICTURE rftJNG UP IN r- V J WITH SHINY VwtXX-AN' THEyx ANVTKWGBirrGCKOW-WgR ARUN vmKAUTrCSIfflWUCga WAS A SHEPHERD r PLAY1WTAG ALL OvTR f"" (Jh MAWMG US AM EASY TARGET RDRAWy 1 Elixir of Legs . F THIMSLE THEATRE Starring Pcpeie WANTED Middle aged woman for general house work and cooking. Family of four. Call or write C. J". Dean, 1617 N. E. Brazee St, Portland. ' SS'SEZ.THEV'S THREE VTTAMIMurS IKI VER TADPOLE TABUKS "ATS SUSPOSED SOCSSOO) UE-SON 11 Y VTTAMIM "H"l FOR THE 1 k t - - .-- . . m aa -Tskt AT fWl lrA 'TK ' UM Tl-CSI TADPOLE .TP&JgV9 A QUAKTTTV OF VTTAMJM"V VUH1CH UJGflVfc TrU PROPOSED LEGS OF THE I MERMAIDS GRACE, EASE. Vt wyr.wfi& 1 tt VnAMlf4 "V "ALSO umJL BE HELPFUL IKI THE FIRST, STEP-S TAKEN EH THE MERMAIDS OM THEIR NEW UE&S UJeOBTAlM"Vr-! I W"i 9 ' y 1. 1 VfWA tJUELl-BLOUJ K.cr-c- jl MEDGtUKI Jl r-TH6 THIRD VTTAMIM IN N TAOPOUE TABLETS r VTTAMIM K-K" 1 V SUSPOSE CiETS rT FROM RAIL-ROADS? J Y VTTAMBsl R-R- COMBS "V LjT rSGOOD FOR.THE f . . If m A 1 a 1 A L 1 A t-ti tT.. -,mm ,m, it