The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 31, 1950, Page 7

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TUESDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1950 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE-—JUNEAU, ALASKA PAGE SEVEN 23 IN, 25 OUT ON GO GE | AASKA COASTAL MOK. JOE 15 | RADIO LOG RINY i Alaska Broadcasting Co. | CBS—NBC DIAL 1460—JUNEAU TUESDAY EVENING 6:00—News 6:15—Dinner Music. 6:30—Billboard of the Air. 6:45—Local News. 7:00—MUSIC FROM HOLLY- WOOD-NBC. 7:30—~ARTHUR GODFREY-CBS | 8:00—Alaska Time. | 8:30—PENNY SINGLETON-NBC. 00—Alaska News. 5—Cote Glee Club. 9:30—CHARLES BOYER-NBC. Passengers carried on Alaska | Coas flights yesterday totaled | 54 with 6 on interport, 23 arriving and 25 departing. Departing for Hoonah wefe: Phil- | lip James, Max Lindoff; for Skag- way: D. D. Marquardt, H. V. Davis, Stan Whiteley, Bud Phelp: | Hakkinen, Mary Meacock, and Louis Meacock. | For Sitka: Mrs. F. Geeslin, Jim Carpenter, R. McDa: , Roy Per- atrovich, E. G. Peterson, Frank | or Baranof: Mrs. Fred Ba- | John Watkins; for Angoon:| 10:00—Tomorrow’s News. { Mr. and Mrs. Al Deasis and child. | 10:15—Sports Roundup. For Ketchikan: Vern AIbright; | 14.30—Forecasts ! G for ‘P;t:‘lfh’ wg: Tom Nally; for| 10:35sign Of. DID I HEAR SOMEBODY cnstine. ' YELL COPS? Arriving from Ketchikan were e N - £y Stanley Be L. J. Gonzales; from Peter Tom Nalley, T.| from Wrangell: T. Dicken- | rom Angoon: Wallis George. | From Sitka: Mrs. Lobo and Clild; | Elmer Johnson, E. Peterson, Jeff | Niess; from Barge: Fred Murphy, | J. O. Lene, David Tyree,’ Staniey | Bowers, J. L. Johnston. . " From Superior: Mr. and Mrs. W.| A. Rice; from Skagway: Gary, Landin; from Hoonah: Adam| Greenwald, Richard Sheakley, Rich- | ard Sheakley, Jr. H really good! b i it DOWN TO THE FLOOR BELOW,| [MUGCS BADLY (SPARKLE! T-V.WIGGLES FINDS HIM- || HURT—ILL SELF IN A ROOMFUL OF || RADIO FOR MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS. A VET, = THEN ID BETTER KEEP THE KID WITH ME AS A SHIELD—IN CASE THEY START SHOOTING. WEDNESDAY MORNING AND AFTERNOON Sign on. 7:00--Dunking with Druxman. 7:30—News Summary. 8:00—Morning Thought. 8:10—Healline News. 8:25—Weather Forecasts. 9:00—Music for the Missus. 9:30—Forecasts. 9:35—Trio Time. 9:45—YOU AND THE WORLD- CBS. 10:00—News. 10:05—Milady’s Memo. 10:30—Salon Serenade. 11:00—Blue Barron. W. B. Morse of Seattle is regis-. :15—Four Knights. tered at the Baranof Hotel. { 11:30—Listeners’ Digest. 12:00—Forecasts. 12:05—Time for %T ime. ! 12:15—Noon News. 12:30—ORGAN-NBC. { 12:45—UN BEAT-NBC. 1:00—TREASURY BANDSTAND- | CBS. | 1:30—JUST LIKE EVERYBODY- ! CBS. | 2:00—Symphony Hall. 1‘ 3:00—Proudly We Hail. 3:30—HIT THE JACKPOT-CBS. | 4:00—Parade of Hits. | 4:30—FIRST FREEDOM-NBC. 5:00—VOICES AND EVENTS- NBC. 5:30—Alaska Time. FER 6:00—Dinner News. 1 o 3 { All programs subject to change | fue to conditions beyond our con- | 4 | wrol. with FRONT opening and ELECTRIC drying! ;Summer Scheol Held s N For Second Season " At Anaktuvuk Pass| | | | 1 Mr. and Mrs, James R Ha_vden! | have returned from Anaktuvuk | | Pass after spending the past sum- | | mer there teaching a group of Es- kimos on one of Alaska's last teach- | ing frontiers. Anaktuvuk Pass is on| Boy, but he's handsome! | Spring Apariment Hotel Downiown Seattle 2 and 3 room De Luxe Apartments available at reasonable rates. Finest Hotel Rooms. 1100 Fi‘th Avenue, Seattle 1 Washington R. T. Gabrielson of Seattle is stopping at the Baranof Hotel. | o ‘ W. B. MORSE HERE ! | | R S A 0 | R. M. Steele, Seattle, is a guest | |at the Baranof Hotel. ‘! IMISTAKE. MISTAKE, MISTAKE | No meeting Legion Auxiliary to- night. dh Z2Z] HEY..TED COLLINS,TH' OWNER OT KIN I DO... = OF TH’ NOO YORK YANKS WOT KIN I DO... T PRO FOOTBALL TEAM, IS 74 GOT 'IM IN THIS ON TH’ WAY UP. . Y YOU'D BETTER GET HIM HERES HUMPHREY BACK HERE...] EVEN LOCKWOITH CAN' T'LL FINANCE IT... DO NUTTIN'...WOTTA YA BUT YOU'VE GOT TO EXPECT FROM A JOI...I GET HIM OUT...YOU MEAN ONE INDIVIJAL MADE A CON"RACKE ™M 7O HAVE HIM PLAY ON MY TEAM. o ALRARRRNNN WAAL,NO-- TH' SHIF'LESS SKONK MADE ME GIVE HIM BALLS O'FIRE !! YE MEAN TO SAY HE TOOK YORE Now you can banish dishpan drudgery . . . save seven hours & week 4. for only four cents extra a day! Come in and see how the amazing mew Hotpoint AUTOMATICALLY washes dishes hygienically clean , and dries them electrically. All you do is load racks which are specially designed to prevent breakage, add detergent and turn the dial. Average dish-handling time is cut to seven minutes! Quick—Easy—Clean—Safe! Dishes are double washed, double rinsed and dried electrically. Self-cleaning, Hotpoint Dishwashers even turn themselves off. Convenient front-opening feature eases loading, proe vides permanent top work surface and permits Motpoint’s effective top-spray action. GVERYBODY'S POINTING TO flvtp.amt"' Dishwashers Alaska Eleetrie Light and Power Co. ALASKA STEAMSHIP COMPANY SCHEDULED - SAILINGS FREIGHTER SERVICE SAILINGS FROM SEATTLE S.S. Baranof .. Nov. 3 CALLS AT Ketchikan Petersburg ‘Wrangell Juneau Seward Freighter .......Nov. 17 CALLS AT Ketchikan Wrangell | Petersburg Juneau Haines Skagway R H. E. Green, Agent—Juneau—Phones 2 and 4 1] the Arctic slope of the Brooks Mountains between' the Arctic and Yukon drainage at vhe headwaters of the John and Anaktuvuk rivers | southeast of Chandlar Lake. The pass is well within the Arctic Circle. They spent about 50 days in the primitive area without radio con- nections to the outside world. The | navy base at Point Barrow out- fitted them with tents and drop- ped bulky supplies and other equip- ment by parachute two weeks be- .ore their arrival at the pass. | The Haydens left Point Barrow | July 2 on a Wein Airlines DC-3 and transferred at Bettles to a | Cessna float plane. Engine trouble | | delayed their leaving Bettles until July 4, the day they arrived at An- | aktuvuk Pass. Non-canned nutrition foods were lost because of a bad parachute releasing the foods and scattering | them over a wide area. Eskimos, whom the Haydens taught, picked up the food and ate it before the | teachers arrived. The reason for this was that the Eskimos had not killed any caribou in several weeks. Classrooms were two 16 by 16/foot navy tents. Tablets, crayons and elementary ,texts were used for the | students ranging in age from five to 26. Mr. Hayden taught the older students with the stress for all students placed on English, primary reading, arithmetic and writing. The school was in session for 35 days. The Haydens report there were few of their students above the second grade level. Eskimos from | Killik River joined their relatives in the pass for the school term. None of the Killik children had ever attended formal school | There are 12 families totaling 64 persons in the Anaktuvuk Pass group. During the summer, they camp near Tuluag Lake. In the winter months they lead a nomadic life following caribou herds farther inland toward the timber country | along the John River. Pat O'Connell, a white trader, supplies them with the essentials consisting of ammunition, tea, cof- | fee, sugar, flour and a few other | items in return for wolf bounties, | skins and furs. Rice sells for $75 a | hundred pounds while coffee is| | priced at $1.50 a pound. All other | prices are in proportion. | From May through September, !‘he Haydens report, the Eskimos | food supply is precarious with Eski- | Imos living on fish, wild berries !and wild game. This is the second ! ! summer that school was held for, !the Eskimos with the first session | the summer of 1948. N 4 BACK-COUNTRY GUIDE IN KEEPING WITH I JES'CAN'T HOLD TH' NEWS NO LONGER, SNUFFY-- I GOT ME A PENNY COMB FROM SILAS AN'HE ONLY CHARGED ME A MEASLY THOUSANT DOLLARS i! ON AIRTH THOUSANT DOLLARS? TWO FIVE-HUNNERT DOLLAR ONES 1.0.U. FER A THOUSANT DOLLARS? ZAsswEC S THERE! THE PERSON AT THE OTHER END \ HOTEL AT THIS A THE GENT, HMMAM...HES AN OBESE \ YiPE! CH CHINESE. TALKS LIKE A\ SENTIMENTALLY ATTACHED TO MY EYE CHARACTER FROM ONE | TEETH. MIND IF- I LEAVE MY HEAD IN AJCR TYNE, $IRF ) OF YOUR AMERICAN YOUR SHADY RUBBER BUYERS POSE. Y THAT 1AM /NOT ONLY THAT-HES AT JIGGS'S D MRS, BELLERS THE WIDOW AND SOCIAL LEADER 15 GONG TO CALLON OFFICE-AN MRS BELLERS WILL MEET MY BROTHER - AND I KNOW IT WiLL DEVELOP INTO A LOVE MATCH-I'M SO HAPPY # — HERE COMES JIGGS - YA CANT WIN ‘EM ALL UNLESS YA WINS THIS I DIDN'T GET A CHANCE TO |_] INTRODUCE THEM -THEY LOOKED AT EACH OTHER- SHE FAINTED -AND THE LAST I SAW OF HIM - HE WLIZ RUNNIN' DOWN MAIN STREET WITHOUT I'M ALL A-DITHER TO HEAR THE NEWS// Sope. 1950, Kung Features Syndicate, Inc, World rights reserved

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