OCR Text |
Show The Sunday Herald. COMIC SECTION COMIC SECTION PROVO, UTAH COUNTY, UTAH TWO HOW SPADES. ABOUT NEW YORK ANOTHER. THANK. V H6H6AVXi VOU city: -2 STEWARD.. MRS. BENJAMIN BARTON AMD FAMILY SAIL FOR EUROPE ON THE SS. PERRILAS, V " . NVELL,OF SHUX! NOW, fYZV I A4-L THE WE'LL HAVE TO (VSl rSr5?V LUCKl 7 POSTPONE OUR. ? JLv' ir-i TRIP, FOR THE " ' Si t iU-vV A ? IXJv I r i v ii P it: i. 1 i r . - CP.PORTERS TO 5EE SOU, MADrXM. TELL THEM, -S - Ea y,S. PAYOFF STEWARD THAT THP DlSAPPEAR- AKircr np MV dear. OPAf2. HUSBAND HAS LFT ME TOO PROS TRATE WITH okIcF TO fcfc ANYONE, ( II .. V n a Ark f i I MO MO' HE'S Al MP I CAM VOU THE WRETCH! JllT AS WE'RE BP AT TVWTf STARTING ON A WOrcLP CRUISE iu FOR6ET HIM. rl Ml TftcRAPllsl I BMtt MORE BAttS! VOU ISLAND, FLA. CONFOUNDED BUTTINSKVS 1 HAVE KUINkU VY Uht. RU1NEP IT, UNNER5TANR I WAS G0IM6 TO LIVE THE CAREFREE Llr-fc OF A HERNAiT. X WAS... WAIT! HERE'S A RADIOGRAM 7 7 s WIFE CANT COME TO mw uPt?Mnr RM2TV. bARTOM. SHE'S TAKING THE FAMILV ON A 5-VEAR CRUISE AROUNtf THt y r- - - - THKESEMg? r ' r V 4 .0 An ,0 o o Si urrr 71S6ETY! T'AA c SHE R.EFUSE5 TO HECK CAN PAV A REWARP WE HAVE FOR VOU fA A FAR.TY WITHOUT THE REWARP? 1 1 ah- -mi- rvoriacc. anvct r j opnre t ?VV Nfa bXTiO. CHICKENS, CHAMPAGNE; ENTERTAINERS? THE StCW'S, THfe RECKON Ta BE ON MV A WHOA! czr WAV.5UH. VOU WONT ) B0Vt THIS IS THE UItvi row HAPPIEST DAV OF MV LIFE - 60TTA , MELP ME CELteJWt: MEED ME ANV LONGER: PARTV! B0V, WE'LL HAVE A PARTY THAT IS A PARTY, AC C n PI COPR. 1MTBY WEA SERVICE, INC. A DVENTURE Stamps jbMlS.Kleir Supreme TbsTOrA Great Swiss Hero m f9 Vi. Pi if i 11. 1 IHE world knows, and. Switi- . . . . i i eriand cnensnes, tne iegenu Y about William Tell, staunch n at riot and crack archer who freed his people from Aus- tnan oppression, in xne century, the Swiss suffered un der the particularly tyrannical rule of the Austrian governor, Gessfer. To keep me peupi submissive he placed his cap on a pole in the market place and demanded that alt who pass salute it, , One day William Telf, talf and proud, passed the cap and failed to salute. He was brought before be-fore the governor. Cessler knew of TeU's fame as an archer, and so he devised a fiendish punishment. punish-ment. Tell was to shoot an apple; ap-ple; at 100, paces, off his sons ? M I Iv.v.KAM-V-K mmmm The archer hesitated, but his son insisted that Tell's unerring aim would vindicate him. The boy stood up bravely against a tree, an apple on his head, his back to his father 100 paces away. Tell tinea an arrow w his bow and drew back the string. The onlookers held their breath. He let the weapon fly. It pierced the apple. As the crowd cheered, Cessler noticed another arrow fall from beneath Tell's coat. The governor gov-ernor demanded the reason for this, and Tell safd. "That was for you, had 1 harmed my son. Eventually, legend goes on. Tell killed Cessler and liberated iu Cw.t fAM Ai i ctri an rule. itw... ' . wAnftrntions rememDer l: u.. U& manv stftmDS OT Switzerland bearing his portrait 4 avAw |