The Bonneville Dam chronicle. (Bonneville, Or.) 1934-1939, April 11, 1935, Image 10

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    i i o w K u i i H n \ 'i c H i w x i m :
S’MATTER POP
By C. M. PAYNE
AM
A Z E A M BY I N
UTE
8CIENTIFACTS
ARNOLD
WNU Service.
Along the Concrete
SUCH
IS LIFE
♦
SO YOU WERE
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Dio MY urtlE
so M UCARM'V
B y C h t r l n S u e h ree
O *» o /
BUZ-Z-Z-Z
NONE SUCH
“So you played a ame with Mr.
Bee. Well, I warned you."
"Yeah, I got stung plenty.”
Fanny— I wnnt a man In a million
Clara— I wunt a million and a
man.
T H E R E W A S A R EA SON
“ All very well for you to preach
economy,” said Brown’s wife, "but
I notice whenever I cut down ex
penses that you smoke better clours
and spend more for golf clubs and
things.”
"Well, confound It, what do you
suppose I want you to economize
for?” Brown demanded. — Boston
Transcript.
Getting Up in World
“How are your four sons getting
on?”
“ The youngest Is still at college,
the next Is apprentice In a bank, the
third Is a bank cashier and the
eldest Is already in America.”— Zu­
rich Schwelzer Illustrlerte.
Skeptic
Math. Professor— Now, Mr. Zilch-
guard, If I lay three eggs here and
five eggs there, how many will I
have?
Mr. Zilchguard (skeptically) — I
don’t believe you can do It, air.