Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive

Alton Evening Telegraph from Alton, Illinois • Page 19

Location:
Alton, Illinois
Issue Date:
Page:
19
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

1 WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1908 ALTON EVENING TELEGRAPH Edwardsville City Council Delays Decision on Garbage EDWARDSVILLE A decis-, ton On whether Edwardsville should continue hauling its own garbage or contract out the job was postponed by the city council at its meeting Tuesday night. Following lengthy discussion of the hauling system, Second Ward Alderman T. Evans Rellly asked the council to defer action until its next meeting to council time to and see how well they are meetsandtill projects in other ing a new state law requiring refuse to be buried. Mayor Raymond 0. Rogers told the council that if it postponed the decision, a "vote of some kind has to be made at our next At last night's meeting, Marion Crow, holder of the lease for the city's landfill, said proponents of letting out the garbage collection "want to eliminate the best landfill in Madison County and use the worst." "It's cheaper to dump garbage and refuse in the open than it is to bury 1t," Crow said, "but the charge will Increase when a contractor has to bary the refuse." Crow also warned that the city may not get the same kind cf service if refuse hauling is turned over to a contractor.

"We get mattresses; we get chairs; we get beds; we get dead dogs," Crow said. ice may if or it is may not contracted get that servout." service could be he said, "but we get our contract every year with the threat of letting out the refuse collection." Crow said he feels he cannot invest a large amount in the' current landfill with only a year-to-year contract. Second Ward Alderman Clyde Hartung pointed out that the contractor from whom the single bid had been received for hauling refuse told him he would not hire the four men now working for the city. "Go ahead and tell the whole story tell the rest of it," Mayor said. Rogers said the tor refuses to hire present Weather, Economy Both Apt to Stay Hot This Autumn By JOHN CUNNIFF AP Business News Analyst YORK (AP) The two hottest things this year have been the weather and the economy, and there is a good chance that neither will cool much until fall.

Temperatures can be forecast closely and measured exactly. But what happens when Washington blows coolants on the economy? It's not nearly as precise. Inflation is a pickpocket, President Johnson says, but a recession resulting from too much anti-inflation would be a housebreaker. The economy has been booming now for six years and its fever is measured in the highest interest rates in 40 or 45 years. As some economists view it, the nation is demanding too much from its body, perhaps pushing itself beyond its ability to fulfill its wishes.

Should demand be cooled? How? By high interest rates, taxes, less government spending? And how should the medicine be measured out when you consider that an overdose could provoke a recession? The burden of slowing demand so far has been on interest rates monetary policy and much of the banking community is angry. Few people like high interest for long. The banks of course get more for their money but they pay more, too. They feel the government should cut spending and perhaps increase taxes. In other words, use fiscal policy as a coolant.

The administration, naturally, has been slow to move in this election year. First, there is a dangerous time lag between application of restraints and the time they take effect. Some of the Federal Reserve's restrictive monetary policies of many months ago, for example, are just now cutting into demand. Cy Says DEAR CY: I am one of those working mothers who brings her family 2 second income and I'm proud of it. The problem is my husband who is jealous of my work and earnings and misuses the things I buy.

In one case, he sold a brand new sofa, which I had bought, to a friend at a ridiculously low price. I came home one night from work, and the sofa was gone! A friend tells me "Write the government and find out exactly where a wife stands in the family!" I am writing you for an answer regarding my earnings and a jeal. vus husband. MRS. WHITHER DEAR MRS.

WHITHER: The rights of married women are taking on new importance as 45 per cent of all females between 18 and 64 work for pay. In 1965, 32 million American women worked at some job durling the year and their earnings produced both pain and pleasure. The U.S. department of labor has published a booklet, incidentally, entitled, "Know Your Rights What a Working Wife Should Know About Her Legal Rights." (15 cents via Superintendent of Docu- ments, Washington, D.C.) It states, "In community property states (Arizona, California, Idaho, Louisiana, Nevada, New Mexico, Texas and Washington) property acquired by joint efforts during marriage belongs equally to husband and wife. In ether states, it is wise practice to buy property in both names; otherwise it belongs to the person named in the title." Lest it be accused of practicing law the Women's Bureau of the U.S.

department of labor states, "If you have a particular problem, you should talk to a lawyer or the nearest Legal Aid society in your neighborhood or consult! the local bar association which will help you locate a lawyer." When a wife works, her efforts usually should allow the family to acquire more possessions, edstucation, security, a and pleasure. She must, however, be care. ful not to stomp on the tender male ego. Jealousy, you know, is usually the fear or apprehension of being inferior. It one of our most destructive emotions having been explained as "the sister of love as the devil is the brother of angels." Guard your husband's ego, Mrs.

Whither, with more care than your job. As any naturalist would tell you, "Jealousy is poison envy." DEAR CY: We recently saw a news film on TV with former President Truman sitting in his living room right next to a television get identical to ours. The film was taken of the President in 1948! Do you think womeone would be interested in acquirour TV set as a collector's item? MRS. GEERS DEAR MRS. GEERS: Sooner or later anything which rates vaguely as Americana.

There are, and will be, collectors of TV sets, but a 1948 model doesn't exactly rate antique in value. That is, unless it's your only TV set and you are viewing it daily. CY employes because the tractor had found from prevlows experience that present employes don't do the job the way the contractor wants It done, but argue that the present method is the way it should be done. Letting out the refuse collecoution would save the city proximately $10,000 a year, about $1 per resident, Crow said. A visitor at the meeting sald, "One dollar is a giveaway service Edwardsville is getting.

allowed to sign the scroll, Rog: ers said. change it when you're doing a nice job?" "He can do it cheaper than we can do it. And he can do it better," Mayor Rogers replled. If the city continues hauling its own refuse, new equipment will have to be purchased, Rogers said. "If we're going to out of the garbage hauling business, now's the time to do it," he said.

Fifth Ward Alderman Ray Abert said he feels letting out the collection of refuse would "only be contributing to the unsightly of landfills in Madison County. "We've only had one legitimate bid," Abert said. "One bid is no bid. It's a price." "Do we have complaints, or is it our Idea that maybe we can save couple of bucks?" Abert like to save money, but I'm not unhappy. You can save money If you like out at the edge of town and have an outside tollet, too." In other action, the council voted to donate one meeting's pay ($25 each) for a ceramic mural to cover the front of the new city hall building.

Mayor Rogers donated $50. The mural, which will be symbolic of the early history of Edwardsville, is expected to be completed by the middle of October, Mayor Rogers said. The cost of the mural, about $3,200, is being paid for through public subscription. Rogers said any excess funds would be dorated to the Madison County Historical Society, Members of a committee which had been working on the mural for the past eight months signed a special scroll at last night's meeting. Any person donating 10 cents or more will be The reason the minimum donation was set at 10 cents, Rogers said, is so that "every child or person who wants to can get their name on the scroll." Edwardsville's police whenever needed, would consist of five men who have been serving as extra police officers.

Under the proposed dog control program, the city would buy a dual-purpose truck with a siren and flashing light. Second Ward Alderman Rellly said the truck would containing easily removable cages so it could be used by the police department if needed. The men hired would also make house-to-house checks of ownership and licensing of dogs. Fourth Ward Alderman James Hair said the city has already paid: county fee, and that dogs picked up can be en to the county dog pound. The council also discussed hiring "dog control officers" and establishing an auxiliary police force.

The auxiliary police force, which would be ready to aid Secondly, there is much disagreement among the experts on the potential effect of any measure. Proof that the same figures mean different things are the economic predictions of last December, supposedly scientifically arrived at and now being revised scientifically. Focus on this variety of interpretation came this week from the First National City Bank, the third largest in the nation, which broke ranks with much of the banking fraternity and suggested that perhaps we've been misreading the economic signs. Maybe demand is not excessive, the bank said, Perhaps inflation can be checked by encouraging productivity growth rather than by checking demand too harshly. Livestock Prices At East St.

Louis NATIONAL STOCKYARDS, Ill. (AP)--Estimates for Thursday: Hogs cattle 800; calves 150; sheep 300. Hogs 7,500, 200-260 lb barrows and gilts 23.75-24.60; 300-600 lb sows 20.00-22.50. Cattle calves 250; good to choice steers 23.50-26.00; good to choice heifers 23.00-24.50; cows 17.00-19.50; good to choice vealers 23.00-23.00; good choice slaughter calves 20.00-| 25.00. Produce Prices At St.

Louis ST. LOUIS (AP)-Eggs, consumer grades. A large 43-45, A medium 37-39, A small 22-24, large 34-36. Wholesale grades: standard 33-35, unclassified 26- 27, checks 1517. Hens, heavy 14-15, light over 5 lb 10-11; under 5 lb no price; broilers and fryers Now savings PIASA certificates pays on ($1,000 6-month MINIMUM DEPOSIT PIASA 4.6% on regular savings, paid quarterly FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS LOAN Accounts Insured to $10,000 by ASSOCIATION I Federal Savings Loan Insurance Corporation State Wall Alton, Illinois PAGE 8-7 Stocks Are Lower in Late Trade NEW YORK (AP) The stock market widened its losses in 1 moderate trading late this afternoon.

Volume for the day was estimated at 5.3 million shares comwith 4.36 million Tuesday. Here was the picture near 1 the close: The market widened its losses as trading continued. Glamor stocks were the worst sufferers. Polaroid lost Xerox IBM and American Airlines more than 3 each. Fairchild Camera lost half a dozen points, Bristol-Myers 4.

Down about 3 were TWA, Texas Instruments, KLM, Ling Temco Vought and Data. Zenith and Raytheon lost 2. Eastman Kodak dropped 3. Off 1 were Radio Boeing, Douglas Aircraft, Montgomery Ward, General Electric, Pennsylvania Railroad, Lorillard and Schering. Du Pont advanced nearly 4 points.

Union Carbide gained a fraction. Prices were sharply lower on the American Stock Exchange. (NO PICKUP) 12 Selected Stocks Following are today's 1 p.m. quotations of 12 New York Stock Exchange issues research has indicated are widely held in the Alton area as supplied to the Telegraph. by Newhard Cook from its Alton branch office.

The New York Exchange closes daily at 2:30 p.m. (Alton time), SO these are not the closing quotations: General Motors Granite City Steel Olin Mathieson Owens-Illinois 64 Shell Oil Sinclair Oil Mobil Oil Standard Oil (Ind.) Standard Oil (NJ) U.S. Steel 38 Sears Grains Turn Weaker in Late Trade CHICAGO (AP) Some weak spots had developed in the grain futures market by early afternoon today as liquidaton showed signs of expanding. Brokers said profit cashing seemed to have found demand pretty well exhausted with some speculators showing a little preference for the short side on moderate bulges. Carlot receipts were estimated at: wheat 3 cars, corn 54, oats none, rye none, barley 8, soybeans none.

CHICAGO (AP) Wheat No 2 red 1.93¾n; No 2 hard 1.99¼n. Corn No 2 yellow 1.51½; No 3 yellow 1.48¼; No 4 yellow 1.46¼. Oats No 2 heavy white Soybeans No 1 yellow 3.54½n. Soybean oil 13.02n. Prev.

High Low Close close Wheat Sep 1.93 1.91¼ 1.91¼ 1.92 Dec 2.00½ 1.98⅝ 1.98¾ 1.99½ Mar 2.07¼ 2.05⅝ 2.05¾ 2.06¾ May 2.06½ 2.04¾ 2.04⅞ 2.05¾ Jul 1.94⅜ 1.92¼ 1.92½ 1.93½ Corn Sep 1.46¾ 1.44½ 1.44½ 1.45⅞ Dec 1.49⅝ 1.47⅛ 1.47½ 1.48⅜ Mar 1.55¼ 1.53 1.53⅜ 1.54½ May 1.58⅞ 1.56⅛ 1.56⅛ 1.57¾ Jul 1.61⅛ 1.59 1.59 1.60¼ Oats Sep .74 .74 Dec Mar May Rye Sep 1.31 1.29 1.29 1.28¾ Dec 1.38¾ 1.36 1.36 1.35¾ Mar 1.44½ 1.41⅞ 1.42 1.41¾ May 1.47½ 1.45 1.45 1.44⅜ Jul 1.45¾ 1.44¼ 1.44½ 1.43 Soybeans Sep 3.36½ 3.31¾ 3.32¾ 3.34¼ Nov 3.21½ 3.18 3.19⅝ 3.18 Jan 3.26¾ 3.22¾ 3.25⅛ 3.22⅞ Mar 3.27¾ 3.29⅜ 3.28 May 3.34¼ 3.30¾ 3.31 Jul 3.36 3.33⅛ 3.35 3.32½ Aug 3.32¾ 3.30¼ 3.31¼ 3.29 INDIA IMPORTS BEES NEW DELHI (AP) Indian agricultural officials reported encouraging results from the use of imported Italian bees. Colonies at Punjab Agricultural University at Nagrota yielded 27 pounds of honey per age of 10 pounds, hive, compared, with the aver. they said. Officials said they hope, through use of Italian bees, to increase India's honey production from 1.5 million pounds to 10 million annually. Obituaries Thompson Mrs.

Opal Ruby Thompson, wife of William B. Thompson, 310 Smith East Alton, died at 2:30 a.m. today in Wood River Township Hospital. Mrs. Thompson had been in ill health for a year and a patient in the hospital one week.

She was born at Joplin, Jan. 31, 1905. Before moving to East Alton, three and one-half years a go she had lived at Madison for 20 years. She also had lived in St. Louls and while there had affiliated with Third Baptist Church.

Her marriage to William Thompson took place March 5, 1925, in St. Louis. In addition to her husband, she is survived by a daughter, Mrs. Betty Jean Murray, Roxana; a brother, Kenneth Hopkins, Ft. Lauderdale, three sisters, Mrs.

a 111e Burke, Mrs. Zetta Craig, and Mrs. Ted Albertson, Webb City, and two grandchildren. The Rev. Jack Adams, pastor of St.

Paul's Methodist Church, Rosewood Heights, will officiate at services Friday at 10 a.m. in Marks Mortuary. Burial will be at Lakeview Memorial Park, Belleville. Visiting hours at the mortuary will be after 7 p.m. today.

Sewell A former Altonian, Charles H. Sewell, 69, of Bolivar, died Tuesday at 8 p.m. in 1 a hospital at Jacksonville, area relatives have been informed. Mr. Sewell, a retired International Shoe employe, had been at the Hartford Tannery for 25 years before being transferred to the Bolivar tannery 19 years ago.

He had been retired three years, and in ill health since March. A son of the late Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Sewell, he was born April 25, 1897, at Grafton. Survivors are his widow, Mrs.

Clara Sewell; a son, Richard Sewell, Alton; two stepsons, Charles Rummerfield, Alton, and Ransom Siler, Bolivar, Tenn. There are seven grandchildren. Following memorial services at Bolivar the body will 1 be brought to Alton for funeral services and burial. The Multiple Scelerosis Association has been named as a memorial fund. Conklin JERSEYVILLE Miss Cora B.

Conklin, retired credit manager of the Frank Adams Electrical St. Louis, died at 5:20 a.m. today in Jersey Community Hospital where she had been a patient four weeks. A daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs.

Amos Lurton Conklin, she was born June 13, 1880, in Jersey County. Two sisters, Miss Elta M. Conklin, Jerseyville, and Mrs. Della R. Clay, Salt Lake City, Utah, and a brother, Theodore L.

Conklin, Jerseyville, vive. The Rev. M. Edwards Breed, pastor of the First Presbyterian Church, will officiate at services Saturday at 2 p.m. in Jacoby Bros.

Funeral Home. Burial will be in Oak Grove Cemetery. Friends may call after 3 p.m. Friday at the funeral home. Woelfel HARDIN John W.

Woelfel, 81, retired Calhoun County farmer, died Tuesday at 5 p.m. in Jersey Community Hospital. Jerseyville. Mr. Woelfel, who had lived in the Hardin area all of his life, was born Jan.

18, 1885, a son of the late Mr. and Mrs. George W. Woelfel. He is survived by his wdidow, the former Clara Tepen; two daughters, Mrs.

Agnes Klunk, Michael, and Miss Marie Woelfel, Hardin; six sons, Hubert, Fieldon; John, Bethalto; (Kampsville, and William, Charles, and Bernard, Hardin; two sisters, Mrs. Rose Hagen and Mrs. Margaret Ringhauscn, Hardin. There are 26 grandchildren and one great-grand-1 child. Mr.

Woelfel was a member of St. Norbert's Parish and the Requiem Mass Friday at 10 a.m. will be sung in the church with Henry Knoedler as cele. brant. Burial will be in the church cemetery.

The body is at the C. C. Hanks Funeral Home where friends! nay call after 2 p.m. Thursday. 'The Rosary will recited Thursoay at 8 p.m.

Anderson Burial in Upper Alton Cemetery With the Rev. Fred H. White officiating funeral services for Mrs. Martha Anderson were held Tuesday at 11 a.m. in at Smith Funeral Home, Alton.

Burial was in Upper Alton Cemetery. Lee Roy and Ernest Swar. a Willis Kelley, James out Casten, Larry Kershner, and Carl Castleberry were bearers. Davis Burial in Rose Lawn Gardens Funeral services for Richard Dale Davis were held Tuesday at 1 p.m. in Smith Funeral Home, Bethalto, followed by burial in Rose Lawn Memory Gardens.

The Rev. Charles officiated at the rites. Pallbearers were Leo Doyle, Leo Lacey, Harold Martin, Av. ery Hill, Michael Davis, and R. D.

Ollar. Langford Burial In Upper Alton The Rev. W. Freeman Privett, pastor of Cherry Street Baptist Church, officiated at services Tuesday at 2:30 p.m. in Smith Funeral Home Alton for C.

William (Bill) Langford. Burial was in Upper Alton Cem-10 etery. Pallbearers were Don Leach, Henry Cope, Gene Crouch, Arthur Crouch, Griffin Parker, and Ray Bushnell. Tate Burial in Upper Alton Cemetery The Rev. Orrin M.

Anderson, paston of First Baptist Church officiated at services Saturday at 2:30 p.m. in Smith Funeral Home for Walter B. Tate, former Upper Alton business man. Burial was in Upper Alton Cemetery. Pallbearers were Gail Kerr, Walter Hale L.

B. Rose, Donald Hale, William Erbe, and James Langley. NEW DELHI (AP) A government report says that India's economy is in such bad shape that the nation badly needs loans on "soft terms" 25 years or more to repay and no interest. Cut Flowers Floral Decorations MEMBER F.T.D. Home Nursery Pines Corners Shopping Center, North Alta Phone 466-1886 Thoughtful Attention In Every Detail RIVER BETHALTO THOMAS M.

CONNER Services 2 p.m. Thursday at the Chapel. Rev. Charles L. Stevens officiating.

Burial in Valhalla Memorial Part. In state at the Chapel after 4 p.m. Wednesday. lint Funeral Home Roberts Burial in Brighton Cemetery Following services at 2 p.m. Tuesday in Morrow-Quinn Mortuary the body of Joseph Roberts, 44, was taken to Brighton for burial in Brighton Cemetery.

The Rev. F. Glenn Creek, pastor of Grace Methodist Church, officiated. Fred Henrichs, Walter Kaus, James Long, John Wolff, Joe Farney and Clarence Smith, all Illinois Bell Telephone 4 employes, were pallbearers. John Clark Burial In Valhalla Memorial Following services at 11 a.m.

in Staten Chapel the body John M. Clark, 87, a retired roofer, was taken Valhalla Memorial Park for burial. The Rev. Paul S. Krebs officlated at the funeral home and the cemetery.

SALT-OF-THE-EARTH ADVICE LOUISVILLE (AP) Sign on church in one of the suburbs: "You never throw mud withlosing ground." ANNOUNCEMENTS NOTICE CLASSIFIED DEADLINE THURSDAY, SEPT. 8, WILL BE 10:00 A.M. RUMMAGE PASTRY SALES 9 RUMMAGE SALE- -Sept, 10th at 509 Belle St. Reorganized Latter Day Saints Church, 9:00 to 1:00. Friday, Sept.

Belie Fellowship Class, First Baptist Church. Lots of good clothes. 50 to choose from. SOCIETIES and LODGES WOOD RIVER LODGE No, 1062 A.F.&A.M. Regular stated meeting Wednesday, Sept.

7, 7:30 p.m. VISIting brethren welcome, Edward Gause, W.M. 10 LOST -STRAYED STOLEN 10 9 LOST Female Beagle, 1 year old. vicinity of Rice and Condit, Wood River. Family pet, reward.

254-1986 after 5:30. 9 LOST OR -Since 3-year-old pony. Appaloosa coloring. Last seen on Ingram Lane. Reward.

Call after 3:30, 466-1902. 10 LOST, ONE WEEK, Blond male hound pup: children grieving. reward. Phone 254-8341. 10 8 PET SKUNK -Missing since Friday evening.

Wood River area. 254-0519. 10 8 LOST 3-month-old male kitten: light beige color, from 3500 block 10 7 Berkeley. Reward, 462-9118. LOST-Small white and brown ter.

rier, crippled front leg. Vicinity, of Lincoln School, Wood River. Child's pet. 254-9895. 10 8 LOST 1 brown and white spotted hound.

Meadowbrook: has Identfication collar. 259-2470. 11 NOTICES 7 SLOCUMB NEWS, 2515 State NOTARY LICENSE SERVICE, STATE BONDED- LICENSED REMITTANCE AGENT 11 2-7-12-19-26-28 1967-AUTO LICENSES REASSIGNMENT of your same License Number must be ordered during the month of September. EARL W. MANNS NOTARY LICENSE SERVICE 1500.

Scales Broadway. Office Alton STATE BONDED LICENSED REMITTANCE AGENT Sept. 28 LOSE WEIGHT antely with Diet Tablets. Only at Honke Pharmacy. 11 TP ALTON EVENING TELEGRAPH FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE You can place your classified ad, classified kill or classified corrections 24 hours a day.

DAYTIME 465-6641 I A.M.-5 P.M. 5 P.M.-1 A.M. CLASSIFIED GIRLS. NIGHT CLASSIFIED NUMBER 465-6511 RECORDER HINTS ON USING ELEC. TRONIC AD TAKER: SPEAK SLOWLY GIVE YOUR NAME AND ADDRESS AND PHONE NUMBER.

(Spell your name out). 2. Speak slowly and tinctly. 1. BE SURE TO STATE THE NUMBER OF DAYS YOU DESIRE YOUR AD TO DE PUBLISHED.

(IF YOU DO NOT TELL US WE WILL AUTOMATICALLY RUN THREE Kemember cal will your call give you corded lastructions on do, bat other cannot answer any qurationa RIDERS 11A RIDE WANTED To Hall St. Louis. 11:30 p.m. shift. One way only.

465-4021. 11A 14 WANTED RIDE FROM Upper Alton to Belleville Junior College. evenings. 465-5676. EDUCATIONAL 124 INSTRUCTIONS 12A Oct.

INCOME TAX COURSE BOTH FEDERAL STATE JOB OFFER FOR GRADUATES Earn good money during tax season. If you bave the desire to learn tax preparation and have the ability to work with figures. Block will train you. Tuition courses start in October. Register now.

Call BLOCK, PL 2-2700 for details. EDUCATIONAL INSTRUCTIONS 12A 7-14-21-27 Oct. $-12-19-26 Nov. 2-9-16-23-30 Dec. 7-14-21-28 U.S.

CIVIL SERVICE TESTS! Men women 18 and over. Secure jobs. High starting PRY. Short hours. Advancement.

Preparatory training as tons required, Thousands of jobs open, Experi ence usually unnecessary. FREE booklet on jobs, salaries, requirements. Write TODAY giving name, address and phone, Lincoln Serve Ice, Box 850, Care of the Tetegraph, LOCAL INSTRUCTIONS 13 29, 31, 2, 6, 9, 12, 14, 16, 19, 21, 23, 20, 28, 30 PIANO ORGAN, GUITAR. ACCORDION. Learn to play.

New. modern methods. Practice Instru ment supplied beginners. 254-4975 MUSIC, DANCING, DRAMA MISS GERTRUDE HORN, teacher of piano and organ. Beginners and advanced.

$37 E. 5th Alton. 465-3736. EMPLOYMENT today of JUMS OF INTEREST -MALL 17 DRIVER and SHIPPING ROOM WORK, Branch of national bane- pany. 40-hr.

week. Excellent fits. 402-8818 for Interview. 17 straight days, (full time.) Retired man, work Apply p.m, Dairy, Humbert Road. 17 12.

MALE HELP WANTED For cost and office work for heavy highway contractor. Project location, Alton, It. Please write, Allan Sangamo Construction Co. Box 222, Springfield, all. 17 14 Mechanically inclined, full time, Apply In person, Broadway, Alton.

17 7 WANTED TO LEASE Tractor, trailers with Illinois license, to op Intrastate. Single axe tandem, Return loads. 254-1040. sanitation truck. Phone 372-3161.

Man to work steady on 17 GRASS CUTTING JOB-9 Liber. ty street area. Call 462-6578. JOES OF INTEREST FEMALE APPLICATIONS WILL BE TAKEN for waltresses Thursday after. noon between 1:30 and 5.

See Mre. Halleman, Original Pancake House. Godfrey, No phone calls. 18 8 COMBINATION GIRL Experienced only need apply, Nellie's Keystone Coffee Shop, 318 E. Broadway.

18 8 BABYSITTER Part time, $10 week, Call 377-6784. 18. BABYSITTER WANTED la ford. Shift worker. Call 254-1397, 18 13 COMBINATION FRY COOK AND WAITRESS.

Midnight shift, Kern's Cafe, 221 West St. Louis East Alton, No phone calls, please. 18 7 MIDDLEAGED BABYSITTER Straight days, 2 school age children. 465-4021 after 6 p.m. 18 8 WANTED WOMAN, able to handle invalid man.

462-4707. 18 9. BABYSITTER WANTED For 3 children. Furnish own portation. Shift work.

References. 162-6433. 18 10 Secretaries and Typists Immediate openings with local Industries for temporary job assignments. Work at your convenience. NO FEE.

For more information, phone AvailABILITY, 462-8831 18 BLOCK'S DRIVE IN has several openings for full time. year around curb girls. Wages above new union scale for experienced girls, paid vacations. meals furnished and tips. Apply Block's office, 2515 College.

18 9 EXPERIENCED CHECKER And counter help. Temple Cleaners, 1300 East Broadway, Alton. 18 9 BABYSITTER WANTED In my transportation. 250-2499 after 6 p.m, 18 9 BABYSITTER Light housekeep. ing.

ironing, 3 children months), straight days, Brighton, 372-3984. 18 14 RESPECTABLE BABYSITTER Live in. More for home then es. 1 child. References.

Ph. 18 8 WANTED CAR HOP Must be out of school. Apply Logan's Dairy, Humbert Road. 18 8 BABYSITTER WANTED Milton 462-4401. 18 9 HOUSEWIVES -Earn a month salary, absolutely no selling, for four hours of time a day Monday through Friday, It you can use extra money and are honest, reli- CY able, sincere, patient, and will give a day's work for a day's pay, then you are the rare individual our firm is looking for, Write P.O, Box 234, resume Wood and River, giving complete date available for work.

18 9 MAID FOR FULL OR PART-TIME WORK Apply Housekeeper, mornings, Hotel Stratford, Alton, 111. 16 7 HOUSEKEEPER SITTER Full time, School age children. Call 462-0849. 10 7 8 10 CASHIER (good typist), clerk typist, stenographers. Greater Alton Employment, 300 Plasa.

8 BABYSITTER WANTED Two children, 11 to 7 dally. Own portation, $20 weekly. 465-2431. 10 7 STEP TOWARD NEW CAREER-II you like people. $290.

Mrs. Berry, East St. Louis, Snelling Snelling. BR 1-2921. 16 10 CURB GIRLS WANTED Also train for next year.

Von's Root Beer, Wood River. 18 9 BABYSITTER WANTED. No housekeeping. Call 465-2969 after p.m. 18 BABYSITTER Middleaged lady, care for 2 boys 3 and 5.

furnish own transportation, shift work. Call after 5. 259-0717. 18 7 WOMAN WANTED TO BABYSIT with two school children Must live in, 254-0344. 18 7 SILK AND WOOL PRESSER perienced preferred but will train.

Bond Cleaners, 3363 Parker Road. Florissant, Missouri. TE 1-5850 or 259-6183. MALESLADIES 19A CAREER TO TRAVEL. National concern has openings for 3 young ladies 18-25, free to travel major U.S.

cites with chaperoned to solicit for magazine pubfishers. account. Guaranteed Salary $300 per $75 mo. per week plus commissions. portation furnished.

Apply Mr. Carmichael. Flamingo Motel. Alton, 10:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m.

Parents welcome ar interview. 19A Sept. Mothers! Evenings free? Sell toys Aug. to Dec. THE PLAY HOUSE CO.

No experience necessary. Training now. No deliveries or collecting. Car necessary. Write: Dorotby Cotter White Hall.

Phone 374-5545 19A 7 WANTED: LADY FIELD GERS -National company women will work BOW hire two or three to out of local branch office. Must be aggressive, able 10 hire to and vise. Must be able start after come, training bonus pertod. and other incendves ur Expect high 1p- you qualify for opening. Write to Box 940, care Telegraph.

19 HELP Male 19 10 CURB COUNTER HELP Neat, clean. school Willing children. to work Apply No Bright Spot Drive-In. WANTED, SIU STUDENT (Boy preferred) with morning classes, to work afternoons. Wood River arse.

Write Box 970, care 19 CURB person at HELP Spodight NEEDED Drive -Apply Wood River on. Edwardsville.

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