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Show PAGE THREE 9 nr BAH! X TRUSTED YOU TO v BOT,YOUR EXCELLENCY- PREVENT TONGE HUGO FROM cNTERlNo KLEPTOMANIA TO START A . isEVQLUTiON AN FAILED! f Br" i .1. llJJ flu I A J 1 I 1 l lllllll 1,, M NL-llI r i ftCau.9.PAT.0Fr. YOU'RE FKE0! HERA LOAP THESE gARgL5 WFTH (pOi) ITS IMPOSSIBLE FOR THAT CKACK-BRA1NEP JMBEC1LE TREASaM FT IS ' . A " W f- f - meam while, the (ma revolutionists aren't poing so hot; they meep recruits, money and foor espeoallv IT HAS REACHED THE POINT YES YES, WE THE CANNON ' S OF NO VALUER GENTLEMEN, WHEM WP MHtI MU5T Mr. yxAATWOirr iiMPownPC? - y STARVE. i? X, MVSELF WlLlXOH,NO! Wt vuurnibfcK IU PONT TRUST EXCHANGE IT FOR PELlOUS ANP SAVORY MOfcSELS OF FOOD. YOU. WE'LL All eor A TRUCK .7 MB ''y-sr RUT J mm m-m y BLAZES! THENi 1 1 J ii o 4 WHAT ARE YOU) 3f mi I r-i; 1 . yis i GROCERIES, SIR, FOR THE DICTATOR'S PALACE EEN AUSTRIVl T5 K V' HEV! HE'5-CRA-ZV.' this ismt FOOD! COPB. 1937 BY NEA SERVICE. INC. -g VHiL I ITS Kn(Q)IU9! WOLV 5MOK.E1 BRING OKTH1 TOASTl .eV-1 TUP eneneCi !' J2, A DVENTURE Stamps Captured Citv InThe Sky: ?-5 m m m mm m M2 i r w 1 v. M f t "TV. 1 7U 5 yLJr "-7r.npp 1937 BY NEA SERVK ATE took a hand from the beginning of Cuenca's rugged rug-ged history. Two little streams, the Jucar and the Huecar, joined in the dim, primordial pri-mordial days to cut away a plain and leave a great V-shaped promontory, too wide for enemies ene-mies to cross and too high to climb. On this jagged uplift the Moors built the city of Cuenca, in east , central Spain, in the ninth century. They erected castles -and high defense wall. Then Ben Abet, tha Moorish 1 king of Seville, presented Cu- enca xo fliionso vi in a political trade. But the Moors promptly rebelled. The result was that Alfonso VIII inherited Cuenca years later. The city was still unconquered. And he determined to do something about this. Alfonso arrived at Cuenca in 1177 with a Spanish army. But the town was never taken by assault. Only after a nine-month nine-month siege did It fall at all, and then by ruse. Spanish Soldiers, disguised at night under sheepskins, sheep-skins, crept across the plateau heights to the town's back gate and there a traitor let them enter. en-ter. Sa fell the "City of the Sky. But it was due for great years ahead. In the fifteenth and sixteenth six-teenth centuries Cuenca became famous for. its convents, its churches and learning.: it shared the glory that was Spain's and likewise the long decay de-cay that followed. Its houses perched on the edge of a canyon in apparent defiance of the laws of gravitation, Cuenca is pictured pic-tured on a 1931 stamo. : 4t' v . V ' 1 C NSJV f , 5J |