JULY 31. 1335 For Sale By Tender Bankruptcy Stock. ltc. .‘l‘HE CHARLO'I'l'ETOWN GUARDIAN ‘STOCK QUOTA TIONS for sale by tender the foiiowing:— Loi “A"—Stock-in-trade of mis- cellaneous hardware of a hook "me of approximately $2200.00. 1,ot“B"-Miscellaneous fixtures and office furniture including show case. colmiaers, desks, chain, cash reglliar. safe. 0“- Lot "C”—Ahout five hundred Ac- counts Receivable. face value ap- proximately 810,000.00. Sealed tenders will he received up untu noon Wednesday, the fifth day of August next at the office of the undersigned trustee for all three or any one of the above lots. Terrna—A certified cheque for 10% of the amount of the tender must be enclosed, balance, payable upon delivery. The highest or'any tender not neoessurlly accepted. By appointment made with the undersigned. Lot: ‘‘A'' and "B" may be inspected on the perrnlses formerly occupied by the Debtor company, and a. detailed list of not “C” may be inspected at the trustee’: office. THE EASTERN TRUST COM- PAN Trustee Estate BETHUNE HARDWARE Co. Ltd.. Authorized Assignors. Office 154 Richmond Street Charlottetown. July 30, 1036. 15554-7-31-8-l-3 FOR SALE MY FARM PROPERTY AT MT. HERBERT 60 acres. excellent land, 5'1 clear, all tillable, brook-watered pasture, good locality, d'w iiing house. barns, garage, etc. o reasonable offer re- fused. immediate pom.-sslon. Wish to devote all my time to my fox bullies. With or without crop. ARTHUR C. WOOD, Alexandra, P. E. I. L-5545-7-31-8-3-5. Pr 'ces Produce (Canadian Press) MONTREAL, July 30— Wheat nor no 2 $1.10 1-2. Barley C W no 3 67. Oats C W no 3 52. Oats feed no 1 49 1-2. Flour. spring wheat patent-S. llrsis 86.30. Flour seconds $5.90. Flour bakers $6.80- Flour winter wheat choice 88.90-$4.00. Floor white corn 84.10-$4.20. Bran ton 825.25. Shot-is ton $27.35. Middlings ton $31.25. Rolled oi-its bag 90 lbs $3.25. Hay no 2 per ton carlots $8-89. Cheese Ont white and colored l3 to 13 3-8. Butter no 1 23 3-8. Cheese Que white and colored 12 5-3 to 7-8. Eggs in cartons A large 82 to 33. Eggs A medium 29-30. Ems B 25. lwgs C 24. Eggs C 24. ' potatoes new Quebecs no 2 80s Il.40-$1.45. M T’L. CURB _._.; (Supplied hy l'ItilrId nml Com- pany mi-rnho-va of Montreal aim-|i patents. The undersigned trustee of the ‘sun of ‘ H ’ C0. [,m., Authorized Iiaairnor. often ‘ Morning Stock Letter (Received over Pltileld and co.‘ Private Wire) mm YORK, July 30—This 8 attain business reports provide favorable news. Not only :03 corporate reports “am Show rked improvement over last year but Dow Jones reports heavy wholesale buying throughout the mm°“- “*9 exception that steel P"°d"°“°n through the month of August should hold at a figure "933 the Drcsent rate of capacity ""1 that the output of clecticity against last week, was 145 per cent above the similar week of 1935. Labor news was brighter “"5 7"°mlnK with an agreement 591118 reached yesterday between Workers group of the c. I. o. and 8 WIN company in Illinois. Beth- lehem steel dividend meeting is scheduled for 3 p. in. this after- noon. The technical correction in the market yesterday may carry through late in today's trading but we do not expect any severe setback in prices at this time. We still feel that stocks mentioned previously will do better. TC)Ri0N'1YJ, July 30—Cn,nad1n.n Mala:-tic three months statement ending June 30. 1988, gross pro- duction 8160.001. less marketing charges of $2.330. Total operating expenses $128,067. Operating" profit $3.764. Non—operating revenue in- cluding profit on sale of securities 811,702. Total profit 811,166. Mill averaged 338 tons during June, production for auarter came al- most entirely from the south ore body between third and first lev- els. Developments will be sufii-' cicntiy advanced to permit a fur. ther increase in mine output by January 1937 and plans are being made to increase capacity to 500 tons after that date. TORONTO, July 30-—O'Brien—- sources close to O'Brien Gold Mines Ltd. inform the Man and Empire that the high grade en- countered on the west drifts also has been located on the east drifts of the lower levels of the mine in Cadillac Township. Values are said to be exceptionally high in the are taken out of the new workings. The Company is doubling 1:5 mm iaparity. EXCHANGE MONTREAL, Joly 80—British and foreign exchange in relation to the Canadian dollar as compil- ed by the Royal Bank of Canada closed today as follows:— N8!-Intinn peso 2767. Australia pound 4.0066. Australia pound 4.0006. Austria schllling .1893. China Hong Kong dollars .3140. Orechoslovaki crown .0414. Denmark krone .2242. France franc .0661. Germany reichsmark .4029. Great Britain pound 5.0178. Holland florin .6801. Hungary pengo .1991. India rupee .3796. New Zealand pound 4.0471. Norway krone .2522. ' Poland zloti .1898. south Africa pound 4.9934. United States dollar 1-32 per cent premium. NEW YORK, July 30—Foreign exchange steady. Great Britain demand high 501 15-16; low 5.01 9-18: close 5.01 5-8: 60 day bills 5.00 7-8; France 6.60 1-2; Italy 7.- 89; Belgium 16.88; Germany 40.28: Canada 99 31-32. New Yo rlz Curb ilupplled by l‘itflsld and Corn- pnny memnva of Ilnntrsal atnnlr exchange and Curb Ilarkotl Stocks (‘lose Alum Co Am 1.'l.'l‘,‘£ Am Cyan B 30 Am (ins Flee 43% Am (‘up Pr 2"»: Assoc Gris Ela 1"/x Atlas Co 14% Can .\inr Cit Scrv 4% (‘tonic Pet 11"‘ E100 Bd Sh .l.'»‘§ Ford (‘on A ink’, Gulf Oil I’:-nu 5!) Hum Oil Rc Ii" Imp 011 Sun; in: Polo 34*‘. hing Hurt 151'; Std Oil Ken 101:3 Un Light Pr A EV; Up Light Pr Pirl M ' ll rsce aneous MON"I'REAL, July 30-Prices displm/ed firming tendencies on Canadian commodity exchange produce section today. Butter Spot: Sales 200 boxes Que (92 scorev, 2!. 100 Que (90 score) 22 3-4. Cheese S7)t-—Que white 12 5-16 to 1-2. Eggs Spot—Ont A large 2813: A- medium 2613; B large 21 1-28; C ‘xchnnll and curb marks!) guwk, tip:-n I/nut 11 .\ Oil '-‘~» -~ Dom St , Fnril A ‘W'- lmp Oil '-"WI int Polo 3|“3, .\lt-lchcrs A W‘: \\';-Ilror linnii '30 1-2B. ‘GOGCGDOOGDOG 30000 Control Ouarcilnn inrnie, lo per worth in iilrmorlnm Notices. woril. Uilier rntea on application. __ THE SUN Lil-‘E HAS A NEW LOW premium policy which SUE!!!“- tees even in the event of your death the completion of the things you had planned to do. Consult J. A. Moore, Currie Building. Charlottetown. Wanted WAN'l'ED—B0'l"l'LES. PINTS AND quarts. Phone 1107. 1.-5128-8-17-If Lost fi Number 4835. Finder please return to Frank Easter, New Wiltshire. L-5518-7-30-31. Male Help Wanted‘ . rrnozmoco . amcloocaooooooonaommr Advertising |iates—l’ayah|e in Advance ‘H I," min]; ‘Tells-rn nml lea-tern locale. le per word; Announcements uml Cnmlns flplrliunl Offerings. Cardl. rich. to per mime: nor int-II: Notion of Thnnlul and Annm‘ Ilinlmum Charge for any advertisement twenty-flu cents. 599‘ Event. 2o per word; Ciaaalficd Inch; 1.1.1. or menu and Letters of (.'tImlolHIc.o 700 per 100 per iatlon. 70¢ per inch or 4e 4) PRODUCE (Canadian Press) MONTREAL, July 30—-Butter and egg prices were steady to firmer on Montreal open produce markets today while potatoes eas- ed slightly. Cheese was quiet and unchanged. Butter was quoted around 23 1-2 cents per pound for carlots or less oi’ no 1 while lots to retailers were 24 for solids and 24 1-2 for prints. Graded egg shipments in carlots or less were quoted at 28 to 20 cents a dozen for A large, 26 to 27 for A medium, 21 1-2 to 22 for B and 20 to 21 for C. Cheese averaged 13 to 13 3-8 cents for Ontario white and col- ored and 12 5-8 to 7-8 for Quebec white and colored. Quebec no 2 potatoes sold at 81.40 to $1.45 per 80 pound bag. Currencies (Canadian Press) NEWYORK, July. 3o—Leadin8 European currencies continued to retreat in terms of the United States dollar today. The franc closed .00 3-8 of a cent lower, Holland guilders were off .01 of a cent. and Swiss francs suffered a like drop. The pound sterling turned easy along with the gold units. ending 7-18 of a cent below Wednesday's finals. The Spanish peseta yielded .01 of a cent. A further decline of .12 1-2 of a cent in Hong Kong dollars feat- ured far eastern rates. Canadian funds were off 1-32 at 99 31-32. GRAIN (Canadian Press) WIN'Nl:PEG, July 30—Dollar wheat was marked up for the first time in nearly a year on Winni- peg grain markets today as wheat futures prices climbed to new sea- sonal highs for the second succes- sive day in a session of erratic fluctuations. Complete lack of prairie mois- ture and strength in outside mar- kets influenced the advance. Values closed 3 7-8 to 1 3-8 cents higher. with July at 102, October 99 3-4 to 7-8 and Decembes 98 5-8 to 3-4 cents a bushel. The July position reached a new high of 1.02, rlosing at that point. while October also touched the three-figure level but slipped frac- tiona‘ly at the finish. In cash wheat, demand for the higher grades of red springs, no 1 ham and no. 1 northern in par- ticular, was cvidenocd with spreads ranging from one cent better on -0111: BOARDING HOUSE F or Sale nasrncnmns 1-111-2511 DAILY AT Cudmorc Bros. L-4596-7-29-6L OFFICIAL BASEBALL scour. Pads ten cents Postage «Xi-1'11. Apply Charlottetown Guard!“- W‘ ron ssus — NEW RANGE on.- Eurncr. Several other range-1 39 Roclilord Sin-1-t. L-5528-7-30-31. ron sans _ TWO NEWLY freshencd milk cows. Al'>l)1Y J- Cairns, Dunstsfinage. L-5 5 7 rnounn-—nAo or rcmvn. Arr-1.v MEN WANTED FOB NEARBY Rawlcigli Routes of 8001 families. Reliable hustler should start earn- mi 025 weekly and increase rap- idly. Write today. wleigrrs. Dept. ML-470-BC-0., Montreal, Canada. N-301-7-8-10-1'!-24-81. +9»- TO LET “minor No.24‘! Grafton Street. “W! occupied by Dr. Keeping. MW 1.. as. root: 41 co. , J ' ll . C. W. Paterson ewIe_5t:5l”“_1_miE MlICellB_ll£_OvU9 ggwmg Low vl'1'A1.l'l‘Y IF Easily Tired, Nervous. EXh““5‘°d' Take Oetrex Tonic Tablets, Con- tun raw oyster invigorators. Put new life in every part of bodY- 1‘ not delighted, maker refunds few cents paid. Call, write Jenkins Pharmacy. N-425-7-29-W F‘ M ii. 0“. 30- Work W anfleg; WANTED IIOUSEWOBK BY EX cod 1. Ti hone 496. perien gir eep“M_j_”_“ *, Mt '1. Stock Exchange (Supplied by Pltileld and com- pany numbers of Ilontroal atock saehaugo an! era market) Tonomo, July ao—'me Tor. onto mining share market encount- ered some air-pockets today and dropped moderately on the heav- tes volum eof the week. A few of the newer golds closed higher. several new highs were register- ed. O'Brien worked up to 5.80 for a gain of 25 and Red Lake Gold shore set a new top at 225, up 3. Slscoe posted an advance of 10, Bylvanite 5, Read Authier 15, Pros- pectors Airways 40, Kirkland Hud- son Bay 30 and eck Hughes 10. Arsvsyrose 7 cents to s. new high at 1.67. Lake shore and Dome firmed slightly. McIntyre led the losers with a drop of 1 1-4. Pioneer trailed with 0. loss of 20 and Wright Hal‘.- greaves, 1-Iollinger, Buffalo-Anlb erite, Little long Lac. McLeod- Oockshutt, Hard Rock and Pickle Crow took the .downward route. Pickle sacred 30 cents and Little Long Lac 20. TORONTO. July 80- ltncks (‘lose Acme Oil 10 Afton 7 Ajax Oil 50 Alex 3 Algoma Fl Anglo H 000 Argosy 187 Arntfield 03 Ashley 2.’: Astoria M’. Bltl Kirk ‘.7’ Bagalnnc 715 Blurry H 5 Base hfet 28 Bear 80 Bi-stile 146 Big .\ilss 5.’! Robin 25 Bmlorne 765 Buff Ank 810 Buff (‘an 5 Funk Hill 11% Con For Hi Cal E11111 155 (‘nl Oil )3 (‘An Mn] 130 Castle '1‘ 132 (‘on Pitt 400 (‘hum Res 115 (‘l1rnmiu111 211 t‘|'\rl1'v 7 the ‘I-11 grade to 1-4 better on no. 4 no-:t'.1er.1 United Stites mills demanded the durums and spreads near the close were as much as 1 1-2 cents better. but offerings were scarce. Pit trade in coarse grains show- ed values generally making sub- stantial gains. with the high points touched near mid-session. Most buying appeared of an investment nature, while offerings were large- lv profit-taking. Itoeka open Last Abitlbi 2% '1 Asbestos 35% K Bothurat 13% 139’. Beauharnoia 3 31-’ Bell Tel 141 141. Brulllan 12 121,5 Bruck Silk B C Pr A 30 30 Can Can: 8% 6% Can Nor Pr 25% 25% Can Cur Pd 8% 8 Can Hyd pfd 4014 40;; Can Ind A1 A 1% 1% Can Pac 12% 1254 Celsnese 21% ‘:19’. Con: Smelt 57% 81 Dist Sea: 23 2'2 Dom Coal PM 18% 18 Dom St 3 ti 6 Don: St 954 0!,‘ Don Tex 6795 68 Fund Co 161,4 101,4 How Smith 13 13 Imp Tob 14 14 Int Nickel 86 81 Lake Woods 25 25% life: Hon 4% 4?; McCall Front 14% 14 . Mtl Fr 3114 311,4 Nat Brew 44 4454 Norsnda 02% 53 Pr Co 14% 15% Que Pr 1'! 1836 Shaw 20 _ 15 st Law 29'. 3% ggu fCacn Pr pfd 1'.‘ 12 g o an Win Elec 9‘ 60% BANKS Bk Can 57 57 31: Com 154% 154 '5 Bk Mn 10-: I 193 Bk N. 8. Royal Bk (Canadian Prue) N. Y. Stock Exc_llc_1_nge ilappltsl or Itttldd and, C0. Ianbou cl IIICIICI dark .03- alauo and Club Iarketl Al Chem 219 9 Am Can 130% 130% An: For Pr 7% 114 Am Rad 2216 22$ Am Tel Tel 112 112 Am Water 20% 28 Anaconda 88!’. 3914, Alcbison 33!,‘ 84 .411 lie! 23% 25 Auburn 33% 34 Bald Loco Bait Ohio 21% 1'19‘ Bendix Av 28% 15 Beth St arm Briggs Man 64% Myfi Chen Ohio 61!’. 617/. Chrysler 120 1201’. Corn 501 15 153/. Corn So 39’. 33/. Con Can 11 11 Con Gas Co 42 42 Corn Pr as 312,2 Cur Wright 0 6% gene unont lilac Auto Lt 143:“ 1% li‘ircsIn11s 23% 23% (lea Elcc 43;!‘ 44 Gen Foods 371/. 311‘ (yen Mot ‘my, 10 Goodrich 20 go Goodyear Tire 28!? 28 Gt Nor PM 4016 40 Had l\l0t Car 1754 1 ill Con 24 345‘ nt liar int Tel Tel 12:‘ ;I.:iW' Johns Man 11754 117 Ken 4454 44 Mont Ward 41 415; Mur Cu 13% 13% N Y Can 40“ 41 Nail Bin 3% 31,‘ Nor Pm: 28 3|,‘ Pack Mot 10% 103/. Penu R R 37 37% Pub Scr N J 41% 41 Rad Co 12 12),‘ Rad Keith Orph o 5 Sears Roe 32% 331,‘ South Pac 401‘ 40 Std Oil N J 341‘ 531,‘ Studc Co 12% 12 Tex (‘o 3034. 391,‘ United Air 271/, :3 United Gas Imp 111/_ 13 U S liub 301,5 3015 fl 3 S! C any; 05% I. S lad Al sit‘ 3414 ‘snail 4,-1115 '_I(,§‘ \Varn«-r Bron ing :1; \\'esv F11 5111/. 557/. ‘1‘V,'est flee 139 :. est lr Brake 41 41 “'oolworlb 84;? 54% __:__ ("oniaI41m Cons Chi Dome M 535/‘ Dom Fx 5;‘ East. Mai 77 ’ Eldossdo 35 F‘ Bridge 935 Fed Kirk 1 Gods Lake “,5 Glenora 35 Goldals 33 Goodfish 151‘ Graham 3 17 grangda _ ran cm 9 Greene 1111“ Gunnar Gld 195 Halrrow 5 Hard Rock 325 Barker 1514 High San no Hollinger 15 Homcsicad .11 Howey gs J .\1 Cons 30 Kerr Lake as Kirk Hud 1419 Kirk Lake 112 Lake Sb 531,5 Lam 1‘nnt 1515 Luvs (.‘ap im hel 19 Lee Girl 10 Lee Gold 4'/. Little L L 030 Map S P M Mar’-ssa ' Mach 446 Man Ensl. , lilnplt‘ L '.'.\‘ hirlnl,rre 4195 lift-Krnsie 204 Mc.\llllan 8 Mcvitile 20 Mc\\'uiicrI 150 Min (‘orp 141 Mlnio 52 liinnela 20% Morris Kirk 57 l\lurph,r 5% Now Gld 101 Newht-c 5% Nlpissing 255 Noranrln 88 Non (‘an 68 0‘Brlcn 500 Olga Oil 8 Omega 68 1‘amour 455 Paymaster 104 I‘:-rrcn 133 Pet Cob 2 Pick (‘re 725 Pioneer B20 Pr:-mil-r 270 Preston IT!) Pros Air 200 .\i 70 lir-141 Auih 400 lied Lake 225 Reno Gld 128 linclic 25 ii->_vullte 30 “an Ant 230 Show 91 Vl|r‘I‘]\ Cr 98 Slrerrrltt 160 hllscoo 435 Qlnficn 70 Sou Tlb 5 Starla til it Anih 30 End ilnsln 480 Sud (‘nut 10 Sullivan ‘lR‘i fiylrnnlto. .150 with Major Hoople '/ W 1 'sp.:>..:'s.'=°> ;rsc°~D .21 «T -mom , WA l 6 ‘TO TWl‘R|. "THE 1 ‘BATON AS 'DEFTLY A6 WHEN ‘I. WAS cs-«owner: CLLlB,ON ‘men: ANNUAL 1>lCNlC AT 1=u1=1=~(5 c-nzove, EGAD! wm-1 A Lrr'rLE 1 ‘PRACTICE, 1 WILL BE ABLE 7 ‘PAST THE KING A$‘0;l\/EL GE’; ALWAYS DiZZY ABOUT 6OMEf1:_l;iiNG =. on voun HANDS, CA“ “"57 us»-.16 YOUR THE TRUTH.’ -roes 1:012 _ / mfl é‘./J PAST A5 H E ‘PAGE NINE Canada's. First’ Engine and World’s Largest 2; Streamliner.Featured at Railway Centenary gg Railway Pioneers’ Hopes far Exceeded Speaking at the recent celebra- tion of Canada’: railway centenary held at St. Johns, Quebec, the southern terminus of the Champlain and St. Lawrence, the first line in the T‘ minion, S. J. Hunzcrford, resident of the Canadian National 'lways outlined the tremendous strides that had been made in railroading since he entered the railway business 50 years ago. “I can say in all truth that which has been acconiplisiled hus tran- scended the vision of the iouecrs", Mr. Hungerlord said. “ hose who lanne‘ the Cham lain and St. wrence and broug tit into being no matter how optimistic they might have been, could hardly have foreseen what it rrughty instrument of national welfare the railway was to be in Canada. The railway has been, and is the mightiest single force in the welding together of Canada and in the reservation of it as a. nation. t is a mighty servant of the people. When this railway was conceived there was likewise brought into being that chain of circumstances which led to the formation of the Canadian National Railways, with its ser- vices to every province of the Dominion. It. is the aim of the Canadian National Railways, the largest railway system on the North American continent, still to be in the vanguard of progress; to be a worthy instrument in the develop- ment of this great nation.” At the ceremony at St. Johns, Quebec. commemorating the one hundredth anniversary of the operation of the first Canadian pas- senger train. a full-sized model of the “Dorcliestcr", the first Canadian engine, was shown in comparison with one of the new 6400 type of the Canadian National Railways. the largest streamlined locomotive in the world. The "Dorchester". with tender. was 21 feet long; the 6400, with tender, ‘)4 feet 7% inches. entire passenger train of 1836. The 6400 is longer than the The lower picture shows (from left to right) Mayor Camillien Houde. C.B.E., of Montreal, George F. Moran. S. J. Hungcrford, President, Canadian National System, and A. J. Shaptor. Messrs. Moran and Shapter. retired Canadian National Railways engineers with over 50 years of service. impersonated the original crew of the “Dorchester" at the celebration. .:1...1u1a 'l‘cck Ilugh Texas 190 Toburn 190 Towagmnc 4'.‘ Ventures 225 “Elite Amu 150 \\'lL\'Ii1ir- 10 \\’hile Bag 4 Wu (7 71/. Wright H 51!) Ymlr 1’ G 41% Total salve 1.047.000. UNLISTED Alderman 94-‘ll Brett Tr ii"-_. (fen .\l11n 45 (‘hurch H .'- i"oh:4lt 2 Dnl Oil Ii? Home 011 100 Hnrl Buy 2015 Kirk Tnnn 24 Lake .\[nr iii hlnlrnh 1* 3'1, MAv\tl.\ 3.’: N Hawk 3 Oil Sol 4 Park Hill 2l I‘l|Wn(-9 K 7% l"cn:l Ore 51.’- I'm- Pro 11 Ritchie 9 Robb .\i’nnt 5|/‘ Sud .\lln1-s 11”; em lfl Wrorl Kirk =11; KING'S THOUGHTFULNESS LONDON King Edward. thoughtful oi the men whose tunic: would have been mined by heavy rain. cancelled his inspection of the Second Battalion of the Cold- si.reo.m Guards. Recovery A cu... , 4 York Market ‘ (Associated mess I-‘.11ancial Writer) (A.P_ By Guardian's Special Wire) NEW YORK, July 30—'I‘hc stock market sat up today and took 11 little recovery nourishment. While the list c‘.n’ir11cd to copr- with profit-taking in inany d:‘p1rt- mcnt‘, an enr‘y raly in yesterday's. heavy stccls and others brigi1t:~n?ci the ‘porimn for bullish forces and sevcxul of the l1\'ii1’.lOll, alcohol, amusement, rail and sprcialty is- sucs were singlcd out for buying attention. Ti'e Associated Press avcraetc of 60 stocks came back .2 of a point to 68.2. Transfers iotailcd 1,512,930 shares aga’nst 1.947.889 ycstsrririy. Improve-mfntt in the stools was attributed to further study of the United states steel report and tho general conc‘usion it was much bric- ter than indicated at first glance. After the close Bethlehem released its second quarter statonicnt dis- closing the best net for any period. ‘with one exccp‘.'0n. since 1930. ‘ Avlaticn 5-‘o:l"s came info the ‘limelight following reports of lar- gcr foreign airplane ordcrs. The ‘mils were at their best in the final iicvw minutes of trading. L. B. MacMI1.LAN, Charlottetown, June 20, 1936. DEPARTMENT or PUBLIC WOl2KS_AND Hiiloiilwars 4 NOTICE The West River Bridge will be closed to vehicle traffic June 23rd, until further notice. ' Deputy Minister of Public Works . _- :"»:,; 1l.ocp.d. Farr: implements fell back as drought _,- c; imalcs wire ralssd. W __1i1‘. Acronaulticla, a 10 sharn trading unit, jumped 4 1-2 points to 93. 0:11:11. ahead fractions to 2 or so included Boeing at 29 3-8, ,U- S. steel at 66 1-8. Bctlilehcm at 55 5-8. Chrysler at 121 3-4, General Motors at 70 5-8, Santa Fe at 23 3-4. N. Y. Central at 41, South- ern Railway at 21, Great Northern £1.41. Twcnticth Century-1-‘ox at 28 3-4, Amcrican Coznmtrciel A‘- cohal at 26. Y'e'lcw struck M 21 5-8. Goodrich at 22 1-4. Southern Railway preferred at 40 3-4 and U. Rul_‘.)?r at 30 1-2. ‘ While thcrr wag an assortment of five year hizhs recorded, there was al.~o 21. smattering of year‘: lows. U. S. Stnclting drcrppzd 3 1-2 to 72 1-2. Among lesser loters were J. 1. case at 164 1-2. International linrvcster at 83. National sttel at‘ 65 1-2. A‘licri Chemical at 219 and il"Fl‘t“ ‘on:i‘ T."lc11l1<>l‘e at 13' Canadian issues moved fraction- rilly cl her way with the liquor! and utilities firm. On the upside vsbre Distillers Seagram, Canadian li‘.(iusl.1'ial Alcohol. Power Corpora- lt.‘.n11, Qucfscc Power, International Hydro. Int-cmn.'.lonal Nickel and i‘,orr:~ Minn-'. Minor lo=.s-"5 were shcrwri by Mclniyro, Canadian Mar- -coni. l-1ollln_:cr, Imperial 01’. Im- ‘pcrinl Tobacco and Lnkw Shorc. .3 commencing Tuesday, and Highwzrys OUT OUR WAY WAS THERE ! THERE'S IDEAL UTOPIAN - HE GETTlN' 1-11$ MACHINE STARTED "n-119 MORNIM. SO HE‘S LETTING HIS MACHINE RUN To MAKE UP FER 1T, 50 HE WONT CHEAT TH‘ COMPANV. \/OUR A LITTLE 'LATE SE NO H YEAH-i3LlT HE'S cue-mw H\S NlGHT PARTNER our of . THAT MUCH 1_o,m=lN‘, RUNNIN Tl-I-\T cur-om THERE CAN7 TILL TH‘ HAWK I TH’ SPAIZEEIZ. AN‘ TH SPARREIZ QLHTS EATIN’ TH‘ WORM.’ , A V ..... :::.—_1 11,- wn.1.1.4.v1s \ ON EARTH EAVEN , QUITS EATiN