Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive

Alton Evening Telegraph from Alton, Illinois • Page 4

Location:
Alton, Illinois
Issue Date:
Page:
4
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Si HM8 181 1 ISII Ifcsl If PAGE FOUR ALTOfc EVENING7tELEGRAPH ALTON EVENING TELEGRAPH Published by Alton Telegraph Printing Company P. B. COUSLEY Managing Editor Published dally; subscription price 20 cents weekly by carrier; by mail, $6 a year within 100 miles; $9 beyond 100 Entered as second-class matter at the postoffIce, at Alton. HI- act at Congress, March 3,1878. MEMBER Or THS ASSOCIATED FU8f Awoctoted PICK Htt 'l tot publication 01 ill new erwlittd to It or not credited to M(MT.

to ttw local newt eubbttMK) btrtin Local coatnel tofinrnattonoo tnpUotion ii IvSadway. Alton. West HoUlday Co. New York. ChteMo.

Detroit 25 Years Ago The Baruch Report After months of polite sparring and double talk, the United Nations yesterday got a rude jolt of reality from a man who, by ordinary standards, should be puttering around his flower-beds in the closing years of his life. The man was 73-year-old Bernard Baruch, reporting on what the U. S. proposes-to do about the Last Weapon, the atom bomb. Mr.

Baruch told the nations of the world that they will have to sec up, within a limited range, a. world government that supersedes any national authority. It must be a government with written laws and with power to see that they are being observed, and to act swiftly when they arc being violated. At the present the U. S.

is the only country with the atom bomb. There are a few short-sighted people who get a fleeting comfort from that fact and who would try to stand still in the swift rush of history, clinging to an outmoded concept of national sovereignty. Mr. Baruch boldly projects his thinking beyond the two or three years that this situation will' last. What will happen when another for the atomic bomb? The present structure of the United Nations permits any one of the Big Five U.

Russia, Britain, France, and veto any collective action taken by the Security Council. The United Nations are powerless unless there is unanimity among these five nations. There can be no internal inspection of atomic development, no repressive action, no economic or military sanctions, so long as the violator is one of these five powers. The smallest move to control the frightful genie of atomic power cannot be made so long as a single nation can block collective action with its veto. Mr.

Baruch says that, in dealing with atomic energy, the veto must go. Each nation must agree in advance to conditions of atomic development, and to rigid control that will bar the secret manufacture of atomic weapons. It will not be enough, he points out, to embody the agreement in the pious words of a treaty and then rely upon each nation to observe ic. There must be an authority superior to national government to police observance constantly. In return, the U.

S. will share its knowledge of nuclear fission with all countries for the peaceful benefit of The sincerity of the proposal is beyond question, since we are now in possession of a great store of technical knowledge that is not held by any other nation. Mr. Baruch's proposal will frighten many people whose thinking is conditioned by, the traditional concept of unlimited national sovereignty. But before voicing a fearful refusal, they had better consider the alternatives to what he suggests.

Without a real and powerful international authority, a competitive armament race is inevitable. In a few years, all the major powers of the world will be sitting on separate arsenals of atom bombs, each with his finger on a trigger that can wipe out our remnant of civilization. Each can pull the trigger whenever greed or fear flashes the impulse. That prospect is intolerable. To avoid it will take long and difficult and revolutionary action, but Mr.

Baruch has pointed the way with a courage and clar- itv. June 15, 1921 Shurtleff College announced the names of 18 graduates, members of the school's ninety-third class. In the class were Cyrus Daniels, Jessie Wall- Ing Jameson, George S. Crawford, Walter G. Horstman, Lloyd James mil, Zella Marie Jones, William Harold Tallyn, John Lewis Blair, Max U.

S. Colbert, Loretta Winfred Harris, L. E. Robinson, Alfred Paul Smith, John Silas Brinkman, Grace Connerly. Ruth Amanda Johnson, Myrtle Ruyle, Abraham Wright, Fred Charles Webber.

President George M. Potter also announced that the college board had conferred honorary degrees on the Rev. Norton Janies Hilton of Mlnonk, the Rev. Leonard C. Trent of Kewanee and the Rev.

B. E. Allen of Neponset. The president also announced the following awards: Osborn Prize Medal and Castle Memorial Cyrus Daniels; Roe Scholarship, Lola Windsor; S.A.T.C. cup, Walter Horstmanj Jackson oratorical prizes, Ray McKay and Katharine Moorhead.

Police Magistrate Magulre issued a warrant to permit the search of the baggage of a man who had just left the employe of Western Military Academy. In a suitcase was found several articles, allegedly stolen, among them a tennis racquet. When another person claimed the tennis racquet as his, the owner of the suitcase banged it down in front of the claimant, smashing It. A warrant was then issued charging the man with malicious destruction of property. J.

A. Head, former owner of the Head estate at Wood River, an 86-acre chunk of which had just been sold for $86,500, related to the Telegraph that real estate in that area had not always brought lush prices. Head said that In 1893, when the country was In the'midst of a depression, his father had been compelled to dispose of a piece of land to keep from losing all of it. He sold 240 acres and received between $60 and $75 an acre, Head said. At class 'day exercises at Roosevelt High School, the class prophecy was read by Philip Ede, Virginia Riehl and Susan Lemen.

Charlotte Rodgers, class president, gave a brief talk. A play, "All On a Summer's Day," was presented by the following cast: Jane Black, Eunice Vine, Eleanor Rumsey, Helen Andrews, lona Warner, Mary Collins, Winfleld Farley, Charles Husklnson, Maurice Wempen and Edward Weaver. At a recent meeting Of Shurtleff trustees Mrs. David Jones of St. Louis was employed as music instructor; J.

D. Bruner of Richmond, modern languages instructor; E. L. Carr of Ewing, 111., mathematics instructor. With the college centennial only six years off, the board was planning to stage a drive that would bring the school endowment fund to $1,000,000 by that, date and raise an additional $500,000 buildings.

Answers To Questions MaU inquiries to Information Bureau, Haskln Service. 316 Eye Washington. D. C. Enclose for return postage.

SIDE GLANCES By GalbraKh i Uf Q. What -was the largest losing vote ever polled In a presidential t'ectlon? H. N. I. A.

The two men who polled the largest losing candidate vote were Wendell L. Willkje and Thomas E. Dewey. The former received 22,304,755 votes In 1940 and the latter, 22,014,201 in 1944. Q.

Which of his books did Mark Twain consider to be the best? W. J. A. A recent biography states that he regarded as his best book, The Personal Recollections of Joan of Arc. Mark Twain first became interested in Joan of Arc after picking up a scrap of paper that was blown along the street.

It happened to be from an old book on the French heroine. Q. Where is the deepest freshwater lake in the world G. W. A.

Lake Baikal in Siberia is the deepest lake in the world and in proportion to Its area has the largest volume of water. It is 5350 feet Tanganyika deep. Q. Why women not The next is lake in Africa, 4190 feet Is to it traditional for enter the church COPR. (546 BY NCA SCRVICt.

INC. T. M. MO. U.

S. PAT. OFF. attacking neighbor 'countrlet or of spearheading en anti-U. S.

bloc In Latin America. the contrary, 1 yon Dtef Becke 1 whole-heartedly Truman's plan tot military i'Ji 'Ugh without hats? A. S. A. The covering of women's heads In the church is expressly commanded in the Bible, I Corinthians, chapter 11, verse "But every woman that prayeth or prophesleth with her head uncovered dishonoureth her head." The college alumni association elected the following officers: Roy Blair, president; Mrs.

Frank J. Stobbs, vice-president; Miss Lucie Smith, secretary- treasurer; Mrs. Elsie Owens, historian. Melinda Powell, 9, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

Malcolm Powell of Wood River, sustained severe hand injuries when the hand was caught in a washing machine wringer. Mrs. Charles E. Graves, Mrs. E.

G. Werner, J. G. Riggs, J. J.

Towey, M. F. Manning and G. A. Smith, members of tie newly-created River Board, had their first meeting "at the home of Mrs.

Werner. When and by whom was the first United States air mail flown across the Atlantic? W. Y. A. The first air mail night across the Atlantic Ocean was made on May 20, 1939 by the Yankee Clipper, plane The pilot was A.

E. LaPorte. Q. How many daily papers are there in the United States and what is their circulation? J. T.

A. The total number of daily newspapers published is 2020. The aggregate circulation of all daily issues is: 48,757,110. "I've got a real treat for you today, learned to play the Moonlight Sonata with a boogie-woogie bass!" 50 Years Ago Q. What is the difference between a bill and a joint resolution? L.

L. T. A. For practical purposes the two can scarcely distinguished, although joint resolutions are in general far less commpn than bills, and deal with matters temporary and usually of minor import. A joint resolution is the work of both Houses, of Congress and requires the approval o'f the "President.

Upon enactment it has the force of law. The Daily WASHINGTON MERRY GO ROUND By Drew Pearson Story of Gen. Eisenhower's Meeting With Von Der Becke WASHINGTON, June is. Obscured by news of strikes, hotel fires and Supreme Court bickering, the most important conversation 1 the Western Hemispbert quietly took place in Washington. It was between the Argentine chief staff, Lt.

Gen. Carlos Vort Der Becke, and U. S. officials, especial ly Gen. Eisenhower.

The conversation was important for the following reasons' 1. This is the first time in rece history that the U. S. Army has laken foreign policy away from the State and has' virtually Growth of Veteran Organizations The 12,500,000 war veterans, estimated to be out of the services, are joining veterans organizations so fast it is said to be impossible to give even a fair estimate of the number who have already affiliated. The two big organization groups are the American Legion, which is tops in number of members, and ths Veterans of Foreign Wars, which receives only veterans who served overseas.

Both the big groups are taking in so many members it is impossible to keep records of membership up to date close enough to make an accurate estimate of how many they have enrolled since the flood of service men began returning home. Of the total of members held by all the 300 veterans' organizations now roughly estimated at 6,500,000, the Legion and Veterans of Foreign Wars have about 5,000,000, or 77 percent of the whole, while the remainder belong to the other organizations. Some belong to two or more veterans' groups, according as they may be more or Jess interested in joining organizations. Some groups, with special aims and purposes, openly advocate their members belonging also to one of the big groups. At the present time American Legion officials say so many new returned veterans are joining that group they have not had time to go out on menv bership campaigns, their full energies being limited to taking members when they apply.

The same is true of the Veterans of Foreign Wars. About two- thirds the Legion members belong to the World War II group. The Foreign Wars group says that about 8 5 percent of their present members come from World War II. When all the 15,400,000 men who entered their country's military service during the war come back and make up their minds about joining veterans' organizations, the power of those groups will be tremendous. The new comers, which are growing fast and have plans for pushing their membership, are American Veterans' Committee and the American Veterans of World War II.

These two, while standing third and fourth among the 300-odd veterans' groups, are new they are far behind the two older groups which came from World War but are absorbing new members at a rapid rate. If the veterans' organizations wisely managed, as they doubtless will be, they will constitute the June 15, 1896 Prof. George E. Wilkinson, who had resigned as principal of Alton High School In order medical studies abroad, was honor guest when students, of the sophomore and junior classes of the school gave a reception at the Levl Day is home on State. Miss Mae Dawson became the bride of J.

F. Johnston, cashier of the East St. Louis office of the C. A. The wedding was at the home of the bride's and Mrs.

E. C. Dawson of East Second, where the Rev. M. Jameson read the ceremony.

C. Richardson played the wedding Mrs. William Bell of Chicago, the house guest of Capt. and Mrs. William Leyhe, was honored with a private excursion party on the Spread Eagle.

Gentlemen of the Amphion Society were guests of Mr. and Mrs. J.H.Hopkins of Henry street. Manning Mayfleld. St.

Louis realty broker, announced that Huatington Smith, a capitalist of that city, was purchaser of the First Presbyterian Church property at Second and Market which was to be remodeled into a business building and postofflce quarters. Mayfleld spent the day here in Interest of Thomas T. Turner, who planned to have his tract west of State, which he was platting into lots, annexed' either to Alton or the village of North Alton. Cards were out for the marriage June 24 in the Cumberland Church of Frederick B. Browning and Miss Leila Murphy.

The wedding of Wilbur M. Warnock and Miss Maud Burroughs of Edwardsvllle was set for the.same date. Miss Lillle Oviatt, formerly of Upper Alton, and Theodore Cox of Astoria were to be wed by the Rev. Justus Bulkley. Lundahl's milk wagon met damage in collision with a trolley car on Second at Third.

East End ladies netted $241.50 for East St. Louis tornado relief by their ball in Turner Hall. Miss Ethel Butler suffered a sprained ankle in a fall at her home. A sneak thief secured $92 from a cash drawer at the Lemp brewery agency on East Second. Misses Mida Clark and Effle Ryan were appointed school teachers at Wanda.

J. W. Hemphill of Tarentum, was here for a visit at the home of his son, Orland, before continuing on to St. Louis for the Republican national convention. UPPER who had accepted appointment for the next school year were L.

Lowery, -principal, and Misses Anna Wempen, Mamie McReynolds, Kate Miller, Mattle Grey, Sadie Chrisman, Rita Webster, a.nd Rhoda Bartlett. Miss Nellie Scott was granted a year's leave of absence. Miss Octavla Dodge was to teach at Gulp School, east of the village. Breeze Glass of Edwardsville was here to visit his mother. Postmaster WiUard Gillham was on a trip to look after farm property Interests.

Herman Johnson went to Medora to visit his uncle, Lawrence Johnson. Harry Phillips of Montreal was making a short stay here. Miss Anna Clinton gave a reception for Prof, and Mrs. D. C.

Gllmore at her Leverett avenue home. Mrs. Gllmore, the former Gertrude Clinton, had been six years In mission work in Burma, and she and her husband were on a six- months' vacation. Miss Lauretta Murphy was reappointed a college teacher at Fulton, Mo. Q.

What type of education'is available at the American Army College in Tokyo? D. P. A. According to the War Department, there is no regular university In Tokyo at present time. The American Army College to which you are referring is one of several unit schools now operating in Japan.

Tills particular one the jurisdiction of the 8th Courses are offered at both high school and college are Army personnel, although civilians are how being sent over. '-f' Q. What is the greatest strength ever attained by the Marine Corps? C. H. E.

A. The wartime strength of the Marine Corps was 485,934. This is the greatest strength ever reached by the Marine Corps, to America. its owii policy 2. The U.

S. Army is now fnrcing close military cooperation with the chief dictatorship in Latin America which, up until a short time ago, we were officially denouncing as pro-Nazi. Here is the inside story of what happened. For seme weeks, Gen. Eisenhower, worried about Russian penetration Latin America, has been I- hing the idea, of standardizing occasion's they may wear the uniform of the rank or rate they held while in service, under the same rules as those who served in the Q.

Is a World War II veteran entitled to musteringrout pay if he was discharged at his own request to engage in farming? S. W. N. Men who were discharged from the service on their own request to accept employment are not eligible to receive mustering- out pay unless they served outside continental United States or in Alaska. 'y- regular branches forces.

of the armed Q. form May a man wear his' union ceremonial occasions if When parents request the return of their son's body from overseas, can. they be absolutely sure of his Identity? I. S. A.

The War Department says that whert the remains of a deceased serviceman are returned to this country, the next o. kin may be absolutely certain that there has been no mistake in identifica- 'tlon. Servicemen wear two tags. When the soldier is killed, one tag is left on the body and interred with -it. The duplicate tag is removed and put on the grave marker and later on the casket when the bqdy is' shipped home.

In addition, the Army has scientific means of identification. Q. What colors are used to distinguish the different types of ammunition naval guns? K. K. he served as ensign, U.

S. Coast Guard R. T. Volunteer Port Security Force, without pay, during the war? F. H.

R. A. Men who served only in the United States Coast Guard (T) are not entitled to military prerogatives and benefits. On ceremonial! aircraft green. A.

For. Identification purposes, avmor-piercjlng shells are painted black; shrapnel, white; high yellow; smoke, red; anti- TOONERVILLE FOLKS By Fontaine Fox most potent voice in the country, should they succeed In working together along lines that will meet the aonrovil of the rest of the people. AMUSEMENTS CONTEST QUIP MAN; AND KIP WITH A WATER PISTOU weapons and c. nmunitlon among the Americas, so their armies can cooperate with the United States. The State Department, whilo sympathetic this general has argued that we should not put the before the horse.

In other words, the arming of Latin American arm 1 by the USA must not start until we have signed an international defense pact and arranged for the control of arms. Otharwise, the State Department argues, the arms we send Latin America will be used by'military juntas to promote revolution, build up dictators Impatient Eisenhower However. Gen. Eisenhower, wlth- waiting for the State Department, jumped the began asking Congress to okay standardized arms for Latin America. Meanwhile, Dictator Peron, sitting isolated in Argentina, worried over the Brazilian army's modern lend-lease equipment, rose to S.

Army bait and decided to go over the State Department's head. This he first by a personal letter to Eisenhower, later by having his chief of staff, Gen. Von Der resign and go to Washington as a private citizen. The Argentine General, who is pure German and once openly stated that the German army could not lose the late war, culled on Eisenhower last week. When he walked into his office, he did not know that only two hours before the U.

S. chief of staff had received a phone call from Assistant Secretary Spruille Bradcn seeking to put a damper on Ike's cor- riiality. Braden informed him that reports on Peron's inauguration were disquieting nad the American ambassador had boen roundly booed. Eisenhower said thanks, he'd keep it in mind. Ambassador Messersmilh in Buenos Aires also had cabled Washington t'hat the impression prevalent, in Argentine government circles was that Breden was all washed up as assistant secretary of state ih charge of Latin Ameri an that was why Argentina was now trying to' deei direct with "realists" In the U.

S. Army. Braden pointed this cablo out to his chief, Secretary Byrnes, und protested that Eisenhower's rmi were undermining the Stole Department. As a result, Eisenhower promised to make it clear to Von Der Becke that final ftrmy decisions must come from the State Department Tribute to U. S.

Military Might All this had taken place before the Von Der Becke interview. When the interview finally occurred, only five men were present Eisenhower was flanked by Lt. Gen. Hoyt Vandenherg, new' chief of combined U. S.

intelligence enc nephew 'of Senator VanrlenhovR Gen Von Der Becke was accompanied by Col. Arturo Bertolln, Argentine military attache, and the fifth man was Lt. Col. Grogorio Marquez. a Puerto Rican officer who acted as interpreter.

Von Der Becke began by tollinr Eisenhower thai both he aiicl Peron now regard military genius as the world's greatest. (Eisenhower was courteous enough ndi to remind him that two days bcfon D-Day he had predicted tha. "Europe never coulti he The Argentine general then wen on to explain that Peron's polk'io' were not aggressive. Their sole purpose, he sold, was to revhalizp Arsantlne political and social con sclousness, long'dormant under i series of corrupt governments. Na tionnlisrr.

and armed strength gued the general, who Is of p-u' German descent, were bein stressed only as part of the pro not with any thought standardization of equipment' and training Whai troubled Pefart; said, were certain phrases In, President Truman's message asking Congress to pass the standardization equipment bill, whlehSlndlbdted that Argentine participation In. the project might be lied to fulfilment of "impossible demands" Sxqtn the State Department. ambling- Block Broken At this point, Becke really turned, on the it-to-nan stuff and spoke bluntly. Assistant Secretary of State he confided, was the only stumbling block to the establishment of the relations ever enjoyed between the United States and Argentina. Thereupon, he handed Eisenhower an English translation of a secret memorandum prepared by Peron and his advisers -i- including, course.

Von Der Becke himself. The paper contained complete specifications for the equipment and training facilities which Argentina hopes to secure through the military cooperation plan. Present Argentine materiel is entirely obsolete, Von Der Becke went on to explain, and must be replaced from one soijcce or another. Brazil now has a modern, streamlined army; and Argentina, as the most "advanced" nation in South America, cannot afford to be outdone. It is the earnest desire of Peron and hla army chiefs to obtain their new arms in the United States, he but they must be obtained promptly, at all costs.

(Von Der Becke did not mention Russia by name, but the implication was strong that the only other source of extensive armament supplies was Soviet Russia.) Braden Hits Ceiling Eisenhower, however, played ball with the State Department by telling the Argentina chief of staff that this matter.would'have to be referred to the Secretary of State He said the War Department' had no power to act. Next day, Spruille Braden in the State Department wrote a scorching memo pointlng to the unusua length of time glvert Von Der Becke one hour minutes This is unprecedented in the mere exchange of formalities between army chiefs, who are not supposed to discuss policy, especially when one of them is- officially on his way to Johns Hopkins for a health check-up. Eisenhower's lengthy conference, Braden complnined, had compromised the State rDeparl- ment's entire SUN-LOVING OUTFIT Destined to be your long pet is this spirited dress that fits like a dream wide midriff pares your waist a mere nothing, criss cross button in back. Brief jacket Pattern No. 8047 comes in ilzaj 11, 12, 13, 14, 16 and 18 sizeT dress, yards of 35 or 39 toe jacket, yards.

For these patterns, send 25 centi In COINS, your name, size desired, and the PATTERN! NUMBER to Sue Burnett, (Alton! Evening- 'Telegraph) 530 fiotttil Wells street, Chicago 7, 111, New Exciting Different-! the SUMMER issue of for your copy; oil this 52 page book of ideas anil patterns for all home suggestions by nationally taowil fashion editors special terns, by top-flight American signers contest designs America's talented free shoulder pad pattern printed! book. columnist, having long covered Latin American affairs, far years has watched military juntas built up and wars brewed through the race of armaments. Latin American generals can and secure arms wherever they can get them Bofors, Vickers, U. S. second-hand peddlers, or from the government of the United Elates.

Either arms always create trouble. Only way trouble can avoided is by an inter-American and control fen agreement. That is why'the State Department doesn't want to 'put the cart before the horse; also 4 why Eisehhower'a geniality and U. S. Army meddling can have undermining consequences.

(Copyright, 1846. By the Bell Syndicate, Inc.) jirl Scouts Take Trip on Admiral' Six hundred persons from tiie Al- on-Woyd Rivey area' had a ride on the Mississippi River aboard the S. Admiral, Friday. was chartered by- the, Girl Scouts. Scouts were nresent jfrom Alton, Bethalto.

East Altcjn, Roxana, Wood River, Hartford, Godfrey, Cottage and'Rosewood Heights. This boat trip is to be an annual affair. During the war it was discontinued. There are UOO Girl Scouts in the Alton-Wood River area and 58 active troops. The organization is Community Chest.

part' of the Read Telegraph Want Ads Daily! Rural Youth Meetings Plannedl EDWARDSVILLE, June 15. -f Madison County Rural Youth Eicers met. with the farm home adviser youth assistant, i Miss Clareta Walker, state sp ist, this week to discuss progri plans and to outline the work i group for the next seven months. sections of the regular I monthly meetings business, edu-1 cational, and social recreation -1 were Members were ap-1 pointed to assume responsibility lor the various sections at each meeting- Plans for the regular meetings include: July 7, pica' supper and afternoon baseball i the Highland Park; Aug. 7, Farffl; Bureau boat "excursion; Sept fest and scavenger hunt; Oct 1, etiquette and election of ers; Nov.

5, panel discussion-'W ue of Recreation;" Dec. 3, A ChrisUi mas program; Jan, 1, What's in Agriculture and Home Econoni', ics. Other plans being made by thi rural youth Include a boat exf" sipn with "neighboring county run youth groups In July, watermeW; bust 11 Camp in August, Aug. 18-24, Rural Illinois Sports Festival, Aug. 29-30, and annual banquet in November.

Officers attending the were: Elmer Anthenen, Bardelmeier, Wilbur Klueter, lin HanvHugh Barnett and thy Sherman. Kennedy at Candidates' Leland J. Kennedy, alderman the Seventh ward, who is a cratic nominee for state represen ative, attended a meeting and district Democratic at Springfield, Thursday. 10 Wanderers: 11 Metal Makes lace 17 Merganser 18 Vend 24 Symbol for calcium U. S.

Army Group HORIZONTAL VERTICAL 1 Depleted is VA ective insigne of the 2 Demigod U. S. Army 3 Peaceful Division 4 Of the thing 9 Jt is a of 5 Genus of the S. shrubs Army 6 Ireland 13 At this place 14 Woody plant 15 Rail bird 16 Anger 17 Nets 19 Witticism 20 Male child 21 Cloak 22 Answer (ab.) 23 Frozen water 28 Moth 25 Cover 27 Parrot 20Forfeiter 32 Near 33 Rough lava 34 At no time 38 Aromatic. plants 41 Peer Gynt's mother 42 Egg (comb, form) 43 Prohibit 45 Slept noiuily 50 Child, 53 Silkworm 64 Rounded 55 Bustle 58Row 58 Ardor 59 Indian 60 Augments 61 Anuwcr to Previow 7 Canvas shelter 27 Male 8 Fpot part 28 Goddess of infatuation 30 Dine 31 Headland 43 Greek letter 44 Dry 46 Require 47 Shield bearfll 48 Harvest 35 Different 49 Sicilian 36'Electrical unit volcano 37 Remainder 51 Smell 38 Fashion 39 Four (Roman) 57 Rupees 40 Spotted 590n.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

About Alton Evening Telegraph Archive

Pages Available:
390,816
Years Available:
1853-1972