The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 26, 1950, Page 7

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THURSDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1950 GOOD JOE 18 réally good! Tonight at 8 on KINY, NBC- and CBS "My Friend Irma” Followed at £:30 P.M. i “THE BIG STORY" sponsored by PALL MALL cigarelies | Downlown Seattle 2 and 8 room De Luxe Apartments available at reasonable rates. Finest Hotel Rooms. 1100 Fi‘th A'venue, Seattle 1 Washington ) i | | Spring Apariment Hote | i in ELLIS AIR LINES DAILY TRIPS JUNEAU T0 KETCHIKAN via Petersburg and Wrangell With eonnections to Craig, Klawock and Hydaburg Convenient afternoon departures, at 2:30 P. M. FOR RESERVATIONS PHONE 612 Acheson Says "No" 1o Red German Govt. WASHINGTON, Oct. 26 — ® — Secretary of State Acheson ‘turned down today a Soviet bloc proposal I'for a new big power effort to estab- tlish a single German government. The proposal was made Saturday ifo]lowing a two-day conference at Prague of Russian Deputy Premier | | l 1V, M. Molotov and Foreign Ministers | b 4 £ seven satellite nations | 10:00—News. new dishwasher. |and a very had looked [ | hope my son in a'statement blamed 101;‘5}:?"”‘5 Roungup, VOUI Sont look | good!/one. different! | looks aren’t Gernany’s plight on Russia’s post| 10 orecasts. ke one! x ’ —| against me. war actior » proposals made at 10:35—Sign Off. /\_,// % £ "~>t e Prague, he said, “should be directed to the government pf the Soviet Union.” i Russia, he declared, could make the postwar Potsdam Agreement ‘“one hundred percent complete in Germany by taking the required steps in the Soviet zone.” | “The time has long since passed | when the world can be stirred to! hope by general phrases from the Soviet Union about disarmament and peace and German unity,” Acheson said. “We who have striven so hard, want actions—we want the threat-| ening East German army disbanded, and the capricious restraints on in- | ternal German trade removed, and free Democratic elections held in all ‘ Germany.” . In other comment, Secretary Ach- 1 eson said $2,000,000 is being made available to Yugoslavia to help buy food needed immediately because of a crop failure. Acheson said the government’s ex- | port-import bank has given the | Yugoslavs permission to divert to food buying $2,000,000 of a 315,-; 000,000 loan granted earlier for the purchase of machinery and indus- trial materials. The Secretary also confirmed that | the United States and Canada have agreed on joint economic measures designed to bolster their defenses. He told his news conference an ex- Bl | change of notes laying down the principles for cooperation by the two governments will be made pub- lic tomorrow at a signing ceremony. Korean War Ata Glance (By Associated Press) | Fighting Front—Socuth Korean ead reaches south bank of | spea | River Yalu on Korean-Manchurian | border, Other South Korean ele- ments report they were attacked further south by Communist Chin- ese. | U. S. Marine First Division leads 50,000-man force ashore at Wonsan. Your Beposits | ARE SAFE BUY and HOLD UNITED STATES THE management of this bank is pledged to conscrva: tive operation. The safery of depositors’ funds is our primary consideration. In addition, the bank is a mem- ber of Federal Deposit Insut- ance Corporatiop ,which ia- sures each of lepositors against loss to s maximum of $10,000. SAVINGS BONDS ot DEPOSITS IN THIS BANK ARE INSURED FIRST NATIONAL BANK of JUNEAU, ALASKA MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATIO™ | RADIOLOG | # |of Health. F| Mortality dwijing F versity THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE-JUNEAU, ALASKA PAGE SEVEN THE_WEEK 15 JUST STARTING, Al ALL MY ALLOWAN: IS GONE ALREADY 1 HOPE SHE GETS A STOMACH-ACHE ! Nou MIGHT AS WELL LEARN >, TO FACE IT, @ 1, SON-WOMEN Alaska Bruadcasting Co. KINY | | CBS — NBC DIAL 1460— TNEAU THURSDAY EVENING 6:00—News. 6:15—Dinner Music. | 6:3C—Billboard of Air. | 6:45—Local News. 7:00—Teen Age Quiz, 7:30—~ARTHUR GCDFREY-CBS 8:00—MY FRIEND IRMA-CBS. 8:30—BIG STORY-NBC. 9:00—Alaska News. 9:15Cote Glee Club. 9:30—DANGEROUS ASSIGN- OH, BOY, I'M DEAD FOR THE WEEK--- 'S _MURDER, " [t THAT'S WHAT * F ITIs! A THPREE-DECK! SANDWICH BA! ! So_youfre the i Those we've FRIDAY AFTERN.ON ! Sign On. | 1:00—Dunking with Druxman. | 7:05—Local Weather. | i | | MCRIMNING AND 7:30—News. 8:00—Morning Thought. 8:10—News Headlines. 8:25—Weather. 9:00—Music ior e Missus. 9:30—Forecast. 9:35—Forecast. 9,45—YOU AND THE WORLD- CBS. { WHAT'CHA WANT... | 10:00—News. | COMIN’ IN HERE 10:05—Milady’s Memo. | S0 MYSTEERIYUSS... 10:30—Remember When. H z 11:00—Standard School of the Air. 11:30—Listener’s Digest. | 11:45—Singers of Songs. " 12:00—Forecasts. | 12:05—% Time. 12:15—News. ! 12:30—ORGAN-NBC. | 1:00—TREASURY BANDSTAND- | CBS. ! 3:00—Johnson Speech. i 3:30—Parade of Hits | 4:30—COAST GUARD CADETS- | NEC. | 4:45—DRAKE HOTEL ORCHES- TRA-CBS. } 5:00—INVITATION TO LEARN-' ING-CBS. | 5:30—BPWC Program. 4:45—Music. ‘i | BY THIS TIME, MY BUDDY P | HAD BROUGHT ME THE PAPERS WITH THE HEAD- LINE ABOUT BUBBLES ANVIL AND I KNEW THIS WAS T. V. WIGGLES. I HID MYSELF AGAINST THIS WALL TILL THE GuUY JUMPED OFF THE GARAGE ROOF, THEN T FOLLOWED HIM EGAD, MUGCG SEEMS UN- USUALLY NERVOUS TODAY, SPARKLE. I WONDER WHAT 6:00—Dinner News. All programa subject to ckange | iue to conditions beyond our com- Tol. | T > Z > D¢ ]Y=>0. | POLIO IN ALASKA, | FOLLOWS PATTERN, SAYS CONSULTANT The poliomyelitis outbreak in Al- aska is following the general pat- tern of epidemics of the d !they have occurred in the states |according to Miss Louise Suchom?! !nursing consultant for the Joint | Orthopedic Nursing Advisory Ser-l |vice in New York City, She was | isent to Alaska as a representative | lof the Na Foundation for| 22 | Infantile Paralysis to assist during | the current out | After conduct | stitutes ca iferrir |Alaska for the y | Suchomel stopped in Juncau en-| = ‘route Outsidz this week end | her summary of the situation to | Dr. C. Earl Albrecht, Commissioner | LT COULD SIDE OF THAT SCENERY, VITAMIN. TERENCE, PALLY, YOU MUST'VE CONVINCER : YOUR FLIGHT LUNCHES ARE: ME — IVE GOT A SCREWY URGE TO BUY UP; READY, GENTLEMEN. I HOPE __\ DAGGER DEAL |5 GOING TO) ACT AND EVEN & THINK LIKE A PAIR ¥ She said that more than 50 per| cent of the 45 cases which have cc- | YE DASSENT SHOW IT IT COST ME A HEAP 0'MONEY curred here since August 10 havc‘ TO NOBODY-- HN'[ cfl]N‘T USE ‘T L ht 14 ty) f the disease, | - (Leen of the mild type of the At | | YE DASSENT TELL ARY A SOUL YE DASSENT COMB BUT,LAWSY ME!! YORE HAIR WIF IT THEY'S SCARCE AS HEN'S TEETH AN’ 1 GOT ONE!! | Alaska outkreak. | an epidemic of the disease usually runs between |five and ten percent, she said, while ififty and sixty percent have non- | paralytic results and a few suffer | residual effects. | “Very few of the Alaskan cases | are severely invelved,” the orthoped- (ic nursing consultant stated. She | commented that members of mili- |tary forces in Alaska who havx! been stricken have been sent to mil- | |itary posts outside where physical} therapy is available to them. She said that in her visit to Mt. Edge- cumbe Orthopedic hospital at Sitka | yesterday, she “found the fucihtiefl | excellent, but more personnel is| Ineeded.” | Miss Suchomel conducted three- day sessions of orthopcdic nursing | |institutes at Fairbanks and Anch- | !orage where 55 and 100 local nurses attended, respectively Miss Helen Anderson, instructor| |cf orthopedic nursing at the Uni- of Washington Nursing I LET YOU HAVE ONE OF THEM DRETFUL SCARCE PENNY COMBS FER A THOUSANT DOLLARS, “RIDDLES” FIRST GAME-- Goop oL* fl*You caNT wWin Scheol, also a representative of the National Infantile Paralysis Foun- ‘datiun, conducted similar nursing THEM ALL UNLESS You WIN THE FIRST ONE" linstitutes in Ketchikan and Ju-| neau. Scme 50 Juneau nurses part- icipated in the sessions which were | held at St. Ann’s Hospital, and Ketchikan nurses also -took good advantage of the classes. | ALASKA-STEAMSHIP COMPANY SCHEDULED SAILINGS L e YOYOU %'f',’ FATHEAD/// U PUT A BOX OF CARTRIDGES ) FIRE ¥ vl IT'S CHILLY THIS MORNIN'-GIT THAT :IIZE GOIN'/ PUT LL THE OLD BOXES 1 AN’ RLIBBISH ?h?rfiu AR/ A NICE FIRE IT SURE MAKES A FELLER THINK OF THE 'GOOD_OLD DAYS' THAT DIDN'T HUH/! AT FIRST I THOUGHT IT WUZ POPCORN/ |- GEORGE COLLINS PLUMBING and HEATING First Class Work—All Work Guaranteed Kensington Bldg. (At City Float) P. O. Box 258 Phone 1039 FREIGHTER SERVICE SAILINGS FROM SEATTLE COASTAL RAMBLER — October 30 CALLS AT NASH ' SALES and SERVICE CHRISTENSEN BROS. 909 L2th - Phone Green 279 ~ = Petersburg Juneau Ketchikan Wrangell _H. E. Green, Agent—Juneau—Phones 2 and 4

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