The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 30, 1940, Page 2

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2 : THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIKE, SATURDAY, NOV. 30 ‘HELP WANTED’ BY A FEMALE_f anyone clse has as tough a dog yroblem as Erwin Kraul of Por doubts it. Mr. Kraul owns Lady, this St. Bernard the sad look and with & good reasun, too, Lady’s 11 puppies each req milk daily, at the start, and however willing Lady is, is not up to the demand. The demand increa=: creases. The solution, thinks Mr. Kraul, is to buy a cow, unless some substitv¢- ‘nothers are found the M 15510 N_«special duty” soon will bring Englan i Chief Marshal Sir Hugl ing to U.S. It is thought concerns U.S. plane produciion for Britain. JUST AN OLD ‘TOPE R’-—flGiv_e “Duffy,” the pet parrot of Mrs. Jane Fairwezther of Roses mont, Pa., his snort of coffee in the morning, and he’s content most of the day. s @ =0 RECORD_Not in 50 years has T. J. Smith (above), a dele~ gate from Graysville, Tenn, missed a United Mine Workets’ convention, and here he is, reg- istering for the Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO) sessions at Atlantic City, N. J. NUE FOR A FALL_As high as his stilts were the spirits of this cuse U. sophomore, Bob Bangert, at the hall in a game with Colzate, for the score then favored Syracuse, 6-0. But Col- > b s - il Pl 3 v ALL ASHORE FOR THE W AR—British censorship withholds the name of the Middle East port where these soldiers are disembarking. Note how they're garbed for “hot” warfare. ARTERY FOR WAR IN.-CHINA_out from Chungking, capital of nationalist China, roll Amevnmn-mnde (;u(-ks that'll follow the winding, jungle-fringed Burma road to British Burma. There hey’ll load up with supplies needed by the armies of Chiang Kai-shek .n the war against invading Japanese. The Burma road was reopened by Britain in mid-October. HOUSEHOLD HELPER_1rue to the Girl Scout rule to “do a good turn deily,” Jacqueline Altman, 8, a Brownie Girl Scout in New York, polishes off tha dishes with a right good will, and without even a thought of praise in her preity Lead. Soon phe and the 630,000 Girl Scouts in the country will be ‘busy with wepair and distribution of Chrisugas toys. GETTING READY—FOR WHAT?_Natives in Hongkong, British crown colony near Canton, China, are busy filling sandbags to protect buildings from possible nlr‘ raids, There's been talk in Hongkong of the danger of invasion, TRICKS OF (WAR) TRAD E_aniicipating Japanese air attacks, Chinese engineers bullt : double bridges at some streams on the Burma road, China’s lifeline for war supplies, REFUGEES FROM WINTER_Havana-bound are Mr. and Mrs. Anthony J. Drexel Biddle, Jr., at left and Prince and Princess Hohenlohe of Poland, shown at Miami Beach, Fla. Biddle was U.S. ambassador to Poland until the German occupation of that country. The princess is the daughter of Mrs. Biddle; her husband is attached to Polish embassy in Washingion. o R CANAD I AN_strengthen- ing contacts between his coun- try and U, Air Marshal Wil- Jiam Avery Bishop, director of Canada’s air recruiting, recently visited Washington, HOLE IN ON E_rirst w to get 2 hole in one in Puerto Rico is Mrs. Follett Bradley, who got her ace on a golf course atop a 16th century fortress in ancient San Juan. Her husband is air officer of Department of Pucrto Bice,

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