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Alton Evening Telegraph from Alton, Illinois • Page 14

Location:
Alton, Illinois
Issue Date:
Page:
14
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

ALTON EVENING TELEGRAPH MOiNOAl, 28, By Howard Spar her CUBAN SAXON By Ken Bald and Jerry Bronfield DIP yOU KNOW )OUR OWTARX MAS BKN tOTOFKJOOAlW i SAXON. VOW BETTER COMEIN POf ATAIK. TM0tE'5 40METHIN0, DON'T PCWM. FKOm.CK. PWSONAU THINK IT'S BAD.

WE VASSV'S CtOSE TO MAtOMS A MOVEON20REL. CAN YOU KEEP HSR AWAY PROM HIM BIG BIW BOLT By John Cutoff Murphy THE STORY OF MARTHA WAYNE By Wilson Scruggs WMTIMS UP SO VOW FOR SOWS OUT Wffl W5U, A 6IKIMOTOUIT KNOW, TH6V SAY MOW IPCOPLC ARC RUN OVK BY THAT 1 WHY I'M TO PKEVtMT IORMA RDM WTTNM AMP CAPTAIN EASY By Leslie Turner IF THE POLICE KNEW OF SUSPICIOUS ACTONS THSyp TMINK THE CASE KEUER HAD IEEN AFTER. HER ALARM WHEN LSA0AN FBI MAN I WOULD DINE WITH (E66ED Off I EVEN PLED FROM HER HOTEL THAT BUT MOT BEFORE HE'D AlREADV SEEN MURPEREP, ABOUT lO P.M. NO. BUT THE NiaHTClBftK HE SAW ENTER THE DININS THEN RUSH IACKOUT AGITATED, ASOUT PERHAP5 SHE LEFT THE HOTEL SOON AFTER, SO SHE DECIOIP TO JOIN US SAW OR HEARD SOdWTHlNfl THAT SCARED HER AWWl MAYBE KB4.ER OR HEARD HIM SAV HE WAS AFTER A BANDIT WHO-NO! SHB CANT BE THAT MURDf DIP YOU LEARN WHAT TIME SKIPPED OUT LAST NIOHT? THE SMITH FAMILY By Mr.

and Mrs. George Smith TV4E. BO'S, OUR BOARDING HOUSE With MAJOR HOOPLE OUT OUR WAY ririnwur ur. ITWAIOCS j. WHILE WORK TUB 016 BARM OWL 15 AS A NIGHT i.A-ZIER TMA.M ER IT WAS POSSIBLE FOR THAT TO SLOVrt OP Moiee, Biyr HE (SET TO KU6S I FINISH NW By J.

R. Williams TMI6 MO PLLJcS, LIKE 1 MISTER AMI? PLEASE LEAVE ME A PLACE TO S6T OUT Of THIS STRAIT JACKET-AMP 6ET OUT OF HERP SO I CAW 6ET SOME SLEEP. MISTER YORK DOESM'T SLEEP IN TH' WHEN) THEIR MARE is (30JMA HAVE BORKI PIPTV TDO5OOJ II-M DONALD DUCK By Walt Disney A Mitt MMR UNI KM 9O3 JUtT ALLEY OOP By V. T. Hamlln A CANTALOUPE- EATING DINOSAUR! rrs RIDICULOUS, wrwr icuns THW'S WHAT IT 19 DOING OR WE'LL UTTERLY SET RID Of A.

THAT CRITTER ON, I'lL, G6T RID OF AllfclGHT, ONCE COP GETS HIM INTO THE TIMt- MACHINE Lacy RIVETS George Sixta HERE.T/W 11-78 KINS. THE BERRYS Carl Gnibert eeuaief Kascinate all eyes with this v. hirlinR pin dramatic aesign for so many accessories. Klo.Kanc.f in a modern mood! Join easy-crochet squares for scarf, cloth, spread. Pattern directions, fi' 4 -inch square in string; smaller in No.

30. Semi rents (roins) for thK siilil 10 conls for eac-h fur first class Send to Alton Telegraph, P.O. Box 161, Old Chelsea Station, New York II, N. V. Print plainly Pattern Number, Name, and Address.

JUST OFF THE PRESS! now for our exciting, new 1961 Needlecraft Catalog. Over 125 designs to crochet, knit, sew, embroider, quilt, weave fashions, home furnishings, toys, bazaar hits. Plus free- instructions for six smart veil caps. Hurry, send 25 cents now! SeiV'thriftv I i PRINTED PATTERN 4945 SIZES 2- HENRY By Carl Anderson FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS By Merrill Blosser OF ALL THE NERVE-- OCXVM OUR. CORRIDORS WITW A LOAD Editors Quiz on- ASTRONOMY OKA.V/ BUr I True Life Adventures SHORT mm By Frank O'Neal n-ll WL OTTER ANTICS DalKB HIS NORTH gOU6jKl TH5 SOUTH OTTER A HIS SPORTS AWst TRAPEZE STUNTS O4 A HAM6IKIS V1K1B, QUESTION: Who were the fint astronomers? ANSWER: The stars have intrigued man from hli earliest days.

Even the simplest and most primitive people learned interesting facts about the stars and their movements. They tried to explain the stars and were able to use them as guides for travel on land and sea. Building on the knowledge of the ancient Chaldeans and Babylonians, then the Egyptians and later the Romans and Arabs, men began to make a science of the study of the stars. This was the siartof astronomy as we know it today. The nature of the universe is of particular importance when that man will soon move into space and travel among the stars.

FOR YOU TO DO: Get a simple book on the stars and then on a fine clear night see if you can identify some of the constellations (Mary Ann Kovalick of Linden. N. wins S10 for this question Mail your question on a postcard to Violet Moore Higgini, AP Newsfeatures, in care of this newspaper.) 11-28 Three to mix-match happily every school clay. Pop-over-top land skirt are sew-easy, and so gay in plaid or checks with simple, white cotton blouse. Printed Pattern 4945: Chil- idren's Sues 2, 4, fi, 8, 10.

Size 6 top, skirt yards 54-inch; blouse 7S yard fabric. Send 50 cculh in IMJIIS for 10 tvnts for each pattern for firs (class mailing. 'Send to Anne, Adams, of Telegraph, Pattern 243 W. 17th New York II. N.

Y. Print plainly Name, Address, Size. Style Number. SEND NOW! Big, beautiful, COLOR-IFIC Fall and Winter Pattern Catalog has over 100 styles to sew school, career, half-sizes. Only 35 cents' LITTLE CHASIMO A tt? 6USB TO CHA.ee HIS OWM TA1U.

11-23 Read Telegraph Want Ads Daily i. Ignorance is not know- anything. Stupidity is i thinking that you do. 1 STATISTICS OF A HIT NEW QORK first anniversai-y on Broadway, -The Miracle Worker" oi- lers off-beat statistics: During the drama's run, 154 t-hairs have been broken during a pivotal fight scene; 4 dogs succeeded to the single canine role; babies have been born into company families, and the nine children in the cast have grown an average of ont inch. "The Miracle Worker" Iws also chalked up over 400 per- larniaiu-es and won theatrical ptues..

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About Alton Evening Telegraph Archive

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