The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 12, 1939, Page 5

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. THIS CAR THAT HIT BUT I RECALLS b THAT TH' LAST - LICENSE NUMBER 2 TWOo NUMBERS wuz I FERGITS MAW'S Al THEY wuz---- PAW PERKINS ] 3 3 ) Gope. 1919, Fing Pearures Syndicace. Ine, Wod sghts reserved ] Morgan 138 162 181— 481 | p | SHOW DROD. ONE Totals 487 525 523—1535 | <y ‘ase Lot Grocery | GOES OVER 500 Craig ... 166 114 202— 482 HEAR I.E(IURER‘ Yaceko 124 123 179— 426 | ] — Druliner 132 183 142— 457 Era | w Out of a dozen bowlers last night e - & H | at the Brunswick, only one rolled| Totals 422 420 523—1365 Model Norway Is SUbJECL 3 over 500. He was Cosmopolitan roll- Breoadway Cab . ’ B i e Hiat e i | Eaeon M6 9% 100 312 | of Madame Kjelsberg’s \ ning two games of three and in total | Francis 87 118 143— 348 }> pinfall over the Druggists. M. Delsanto .. 119 114 103— 336 COIOTfUI AddreSS Case Lot Grocery, with a meagre | (Handicap) 60 60 60— 180 total of 1,365 pins, beat the Broad- e One hundred and fifty Norweglans | way Cabbies on all fronts. Their| Totals 382 388 406—1176 !and their friends comfortably filled total was but 1,176 pins. 0 o the lecture room of the Scottish Rite s Tonight's games are Percy's Vs MI I" i Temple last night to applaud the Barbers and Percy's vs. George R enthusiastic talk of 73 years young Brothers. Tumon'ow‘ night, Sw.l}m' Madam Betzy Kjelsberg, visiting Corps rolls Cosmopolitans and Rain- HNDS HIMSHF | Norweglan woman whose record of 3 fer Beer rolls Royal Blue achievements in the field of social Last night's scores were as fol- —_— way and among Norwegians about | lows: & i the world 0 Druggists Bales Ouf with Partner- For an hour and a half, princi Knight 167 143 113— 423 . 5 pally in l-J\vIr 1. but 1|u(\||x¥|\ i 1 sl Walks 20 Miles Over e wh Wt Hoveofi 5 — 35 . 5 that welded the bond betwen hv 52 527 53— 166 Mounfams and her Norse audience, Madam RS e | e B Kjelsberg gave a complete picture | . i 9m X *R, B. C, Oct 12. — f her subject, “Norway Today Cosmopolitans The second of two United States y i s i) (\'.,“. at ‘_lg ; Hildinger 168 169 161— 498 National Guard fliers who disap- Mixing passes and running plays, Dick Cassiano, Pittsburgh back, scored the first Panther touchdown in Some of the things learned from | = e it om— —cr v = v s v et the intersectional game against the University ¢! Washington at Seattle. Cassiano is shown ripping Madam Kjelsberg were—one has tc through the Huskies on the touchdown drive. Pitt won, 27 to 6. be 23 to vote in Norway—there are » - - four political parties of which the peared Monday, private W. E. Shane, | labor vote represents about 45 per- hiia - been - fTounA. unhirt: near . Kee- . cent—rearing of the platinum vari- iy | ' Hunting the Road to Peace ¢t siver fox i o masor mauser it . Diet: TR SiEce |of the last ten years, growing from vanished on a flight from Spokane | a few thousand foxes to a present (4 t0 \Patt Tawis Wash, total of all reared foxes of a hali Saxon appeared at Keegar yes- million animals — fishing is still terday, after hiking 24 miles through Norway's greatest industry with ' {He Thounteing. Ho sadd? Ehat ihed modern machinery adding to the plane ran out of gasoline, and he and | natural wealth of the sea in better ’ Shane had to “bale out,” with para- | processing Foe of Child Labor chutes. Shane landed on the cpposite side | | of a ridge Saxon hiked out alone when he | was not immediately able to locate his companion. | - eee New Westinghouse “VICTOR" ‘ N ‘LOOK-IN DOOR” and OVEN LIGHT (OMING Io Ul Sl ‘ E ’ ELECTRIC RANG LONDON, Oct. 1%—Former First Lord of the Admiralty, Duff Coop- er, sailed for America today where he will give a series of lectures on international questio oS L AL | Empire classitieds bring results OME IN—SEE THIS Sold on Easy Terms PARSONS ELECTRIC CO. 140 So. Seward Teelphone 161 General Electric $89.95 WASHER FOR ONLY $69.95 —NOTE:— $89.95—G. E. WASHER : $20.00—TRADE IN $69.95—IS ALL YOU PAY Always a Liberal Trade in at ALASKA ELECTRIC LIGHT and POWER COMPANY ' THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, OCT. 12, 1939. By CLIFF STERRETT In child labor, of which Madam | Kjelsberg was the most active foe in Norway, the younger children don't work, and if they are under 18, they work no overtime and they do no night work. | Women, through the battles of Madam Kjelsberg and other women, have equal rights with men. The highest _court of Norway ruled un- animously that women can hold any job in Norway if they have educa- tion equal to the job's requirements for men. And if a woman employed is to have a baby she asks for “six weeks off” and comes back to her job after the birth | Vacations in labor are compul- 501 and the worker, given his few days or weeks of vacation, is paid in advance for the days he is off. Pensioned at 70 Old folks are pensioned at 70, and since the depression, a number of jenator Key Pittman, of Nevada, chairman of the Senate foreign re 'large estates have been converted ations committee, and Senator William E. Borah, of Idaho, isolationist to comfortable homes for the aged. leader, confer on_thr‘ problem of neutrality legislation. Influential Senat| One social effort of the Norwe- Democrats promised a decisive victory for President Roosevelt’s embargs | gians which has achieved interna- repeal plan if he would kegp “hands off. I tioral attention is the experimental |Oslo breakfast, a morning health | feeding program for Norwegian |school children in many cities. They Want the Embargo Kept | The diet, applied to all children whose schools are under the experi- involves eating a half an orange and ment, milk, other foods. dame Kjelsberg s: tity of hard bread—and she insisted it be really hard We Eat Tco Much “You folks over here eat too much soft bread!” he reclared. “It's bad Nuns Flee Charles Bender (left), clerk in Senator Guy M. Gillette’s office in Wash- Ington, is shown with the Iowa senator as they go through some of the thousands of letters received regarding Congressional action on the arms embargo. Some forty thousand letters and teleerams have been received on the subject, IT'S TIMETO § CHANGE YOUR THINNED - OUT LUBRICANTS! ) CONNORS MOTOR CONPANY B S et e e e S e S e | Crowded into the rear end of a drinking a glass of | Most important, Ma- | , was a quan-| - g | Friendl y F oes of W orld Series e ey Bill McKechnie (left), manager of the Cincinnati Reds, rubbed his chin and enjoyed a chuckle with Joe McCarthy, pilot of the New York Yankees, as they met in New York, to polish off plans for the irst game of the World Series. Once the game started, their friendliness | ended. Dml yC rossu‘ord Puzzle ACROSS Solution of Yesterday's Puzzle 9. Past tense of 1. Ascended Aa. s“" 'l";“" . hort for & 7. Abilities gl g B 3. At the slde of 11, Live 4. Wreath: po- 12 Expresstons of | etic approval 5. Pronoun oF amuse- ment 17. Rubber trees 20 ie 6. Star In the nste | tion L 18. Note ot the 22 scale number 24. Glossy silk 19. Immerse 1. Governs | 22 Yellow ocher 23, Periods of tin fabric 26. Money hoard er 28. Chance 30 Rodent 32 More placid | 6. ne 34. Door knocker clent race 35. Character in . Mysterious Arthurian Biblical legend word 16. Rail 9. Endeavors 38. Daughters of | L Philippine na- 4 ance step DOWN one's broths | tives 45, Worth L Dwells er or sister 3. Facility 47 Shelter 3. 39 Expresses con- 4. Cooking fore 48 eek lette: 3 tempt mulay 4 % 42 Wild animal 7. Birds of the 6l bol for 45 Female horse gull family cerium 5 Gerr 46 Distant: prefix 0. Seandinavian 3 \’thln 6. Abyssinia 49 Polnt measure of 54, Sna sovereign 50 Hydraulte length 1. Artist’'s board pump v for mixing colors Burden ympose er falling from clouds fllflll%!fl {1 | | 7" | machine Negligent wk i U SR /- JdEER/ANS - I l/fll.lfl/lll IIII%E= though in Norway, for 26 years, as Chief Factory Inspector, she ex- amined hundreds of factories and mines yearly, Declining a score of Norwegian dinner offers, Madam Kjelsberg is sailing south on the North Sea to- for the teeth—and another thing, don't drink while you're eating — chew your food.” These things are being taught Norwegian school children at the! i expense of the municipalities, and ": fl"‘,“"."',‘;,l':{i"f',,“sy..:fic'em all, ©Om= |, ight for Petersburg where she will pulsory h S gt lecture again. “In Norway we believe in a say- - | | | - ing, sound mind, sound body,” Ma- GOLDSTEIN FUK STORE dam Kjelsberg said. will be open evenings from 7 to 0 Following the lecture, Madam We have just received a large ship- | ment of short jackets and coats in different kinds of furs. The prices will surprise you. You are welcome to come and see our stock. adv. Kjelsberg explained a colored movie of a three-day Norwegian wedding | ceremony. ' Today Madam Kjelsherg was to visit |he Alnska Juneau mine, al- from Paris in Motor Trucks truck with youngsters, nuns are shown as they rode out of Paris to safer territory in the country as warfare on the Western Front seemed likely to become more severe. Paramount News Photo,

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