Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
£ fill the vacancy. Notices for this cuurcn column must be received by The Empire not later than 10 o'clock Satur- day morning to guarantee change of sermon topi ete. " _? Christian Science Church | "“Sunday services wiii be held at 11 a. m .in the Church of Chris- tian Science Society of Juneay on | Fifth and Main Streets. The sub- ject will be: Sunday Schcol at 10 a. Wednesday, 8$:00 p. m m. | —Testi- | ul and Body.” |71 —3 Methodist Episcopal Church B Fourth ana sSeward Streets REV. R. A. GAILEY, Pastor. 10:00 a. m.-—Sunday School 11:00 a. m Sermon: “Chris-| tian Mutus m."" 8:00 p. m.-—Sermon: “Whoso- ever Will May Come..” All are cordially invited. - 1 Catho]ic—C;nrch T ;] Fifth and Gold Streets. monial meeting. | 6:00 a. m——Low Mass in Hos- Christian Science Reading Room |pital Chapel in church building. This room is| 8:00 a. m. — Low Mass and open to the public Wednesday Sermon, General Communion for afterroons from 2:30 to 4. the children The public is cordially invited 10:30 a. m.—High Mass and to attend these services and visit| Sermon. the reading room. ) 1:30 p. m.—Sunday School. 7:30 p. m. — Rosary, Sermon ii{and Benediction of the Blessed Resurrection -Lutheran | Church 1 Sacrament. Corner o{".‘]nm dand Main Sts KEV. HARRY R. ALLEN, Pastor i Sunday services: ( Sunday School at 9:45 a. m. | No morning and evening serv-| ice until May 27. Pastor is at-| tending the Pacific Synod at Vie- toria, B. C. rv- | The Salvation Army | B A it PTAIN and MRS. EDWARDS Fhone 601 Public meetings: Sunday—2 p. m. Sunday Tuesday— & Church lcamer Feyrth and Frankliu Sts, | REY. 0. A. Morning sermon at 11 o'clock. Subject: “Independent Thinking | —Right or Wrong?" Bible School at 5. | Evening service at 8 o'clock.' Subject: “Wherein Js Christian-! ity Better than Other Religions,” A warm welcome fur every- body. STILLMAN, Pastor |CHAS. wtecostal Assembly) 207 Seward Street C. PERSONEUS, Pastor Sunday services: | 11:00 a. m.—Morning Wor-| | ship. 12:15 p. m.—Bibie School. 800 p. m.—REvening Worship The Lord's Supper the first Sunday of each month. Mid-week services every Tueg day and Friday at 8 p. m. Holy Trinity Cutheiral | n i: Presbyt;rinn Nati;re Church :l: CHARLES E. RICE, Dean. Phone 5608 Sunday services: Holy Communion, 8:00 a. m. Evening Prayer and sermon, 8 p.oom, Sunday School at 12:30. Eleven o'clock service at Doug- [ Y— - v Py e ! PARIS—Chantal makes a dress of double faced material, utiliz- ing the plain side fcr the skirt and trimming and the mottled side for a fitted blguse with a| square neck. The skirt, otherwise straight, has a, flared godet-panel at the sidc front. The corsage is| semi-fitted with a sHghtly prin- cess line. . MRS. SPRINGER QUITS GAME COMMISSION TG OPEN LOCAL OFFICE, Mrs. Julia Springer, stenogra- pher in local headquarters of the Alaska Game Commission for the past several months, has resigned | effective May 31, it was announc ed today by E. M. Goddard, assist ant exeeutive officer. Miss Ruth Reat, twice secretary of the Alas ka senate, has been appointed to] Mirs. Springer intends to remain in Juneau. She will open a pub. lic stenography office in the lob-| by of the Gastineau Hotel and ‘enter, the local aceounting and bookkeeping ‘field. — o BOATS BRING HALIBUT Seventeen thousand five hun- pounds ot halibut sold here {here “‘Peacl;es" Is Name: HARRY WiiLanD, Lay Worker. 10:30 a. m.—Morning Service. 11:30 a. m.—DBible School. 7:00 p. m.—Wednesiay—Mid- week prayer service. A cordial welcome is given tu all to attend these services. e .Qld papers foy sate ar. The Empire. SPECIAL PICTURE BE ON AT PALACE STARTING TUESDAY A two-reel showing the moving picture, humanitarian work being dene in the fine hospital of the Masons in Portland, will be shown at the Palace Theeatre next Tuesday and Woadnesday, it was announced today by Manager John T. Spickett The picture deals with the equipment cf the hospital and il- lustrates numerous cases of crip- pled children who have been cur- ed by the doctors on the staff. The hospital is only for children, and has a capacity of 50, 25 igirls and 25 boys. Today at noon a preview of the picture was presented tc sev- leral guecis of Mr. Spickett and it made a decided hit. |WHITEHORSE TRIP DRAWING INTEREST Interest in the annual excur- sion to Whitehorse, which leaves next Friday on the Alms is inereasing, according to W. §. Pullen, who is handling arrange- ments for the trip. Tickets are selling well, he de- clared, and added he anticipated a big crowd for the affair. Both |a baseball tcam and an orchestra will be included among these {leaving here on the Alma, accord- ing to present plans. The orchestra will be composed of Miss Mae Pauly, violin; Miss Jessie Mock, piano; Rarle Hun- ter, trombone; Bill Vale, banjo, and Ed Blake, drums. This evening there will be a meeting of the governing board of the City Baseball League, and a decisicn is expected to be reached as to the tecam making the trip to Whitehorse. In Diverce Action NEW YORK, May 19—The New York American says that papers in a suit of divorce were served yesterday on Edgar F. Allen, nam- ing Frances Heenan Browning as corespondent. Allen has been booking agent and busi- ness manager for Mrs. Browning. Mrs. AMen sailed last week for France. ——a———— SADIE BRINGS SALMON jay for 8% and 4% cents per ny buye: 1000, and Ina J., Capt. Andrew 5! The Sadie, Sandy Stevens, buy- to the New England Pish fer for the Juneau Cold Storage Sam Morris. | Cempany, bringing the fish were: {mcrning from Lynn Canal with T., Capt. Pete Hildre, 10,000 pounds of king saimon. arrived in port this —————— 107 sale at The Empire, OF LOCAL PEOPLE|: (Peaches) | ~ undersea fighterin the world means for bringing it to pass. George was pulling nis lit‘le wagon about the yard mone tco carefully when he bumped it against a tree and hnocked ofi a wheel. He began (o ecry loudly and stood gazing helplessly at his broken toy. . His mother, hearing his wails, ran quickly from .the house, noticed what the. trouble was, and, immediately gathered him in her arms: “That's toe bad, dear,” she con- George boo-hooed .- louder than ever. His - mother = centinued, “Don’t cry..any more and we'll take the wagon down to the cor- uer shop and have the man put the wheel on again” So George stopped his gobs, the wagon was repaired within a short time, and he was, as his .mother felt sure, entirely happy emce ;more. » I**/"Phis i . one. e; Ypf how. to give'a child happiness. - But such a wourse fails to grovide for bap piness in the future.when Mother, or some other person equally.-in- dulgent, is not present to sympa- thize and to relieve the trouble. in contrast to this let ‘us petice the boy next door to George,: in connection with a. similar - inci- dent. Clarence was running. a. small mechanical automobile, which operated by winding o spring. He was having great fun with this. when. it ran into the wall of the porch and bent one of the front fenders so.that the car would not run. straight. he . would Clarence. .could- not make it follow the right course. “I bent my auto;” he called to his mother, but.with no thought of crying or complaining. His mother asked casually, “What cdn you do:about it, Son?" “l dow't know yet, but I'll do something,” replied Clarence stoutly, sald about the:accident for some time. But Mether heard Clarence in the basement rattling tools and wire, and at length he came hur g towards . her, °exclaiming, ee what 1 'dinvented!" The invention was not perfect, to be sure, but it compriced a front bumper to the auto. It was made of @ stout piece of wire that the small boy had bent with the pliers and twisted into place across the front of the car. He had also straightened the bent fender. “Now If my car hits the porch rail the fender won't bend, for my bumped will protect it he said, and his eyes shone with the true joy of -aecomplishment. He had met a difficulty and oon. quered it, thus eniploying his own natural powers of vision and in- telligence. He was not helpless, as George 'had been, in the face of what to & obild was nothing less than disaster. Clarence had galned happiness :in winning a vietory over' adverse conditions. So it'is in all ‘phases of child lite, We can' eilther hand out temporary happineéss because is within our superior pewer to do 50, or we can direct children to- wards achieying happiness by pre: paring them to solve their own problems without the supervision of adults. The teaching of res sourcefulness ls the wisest and surest means of insuring con- tinued happiness ‘with regard to all the things which such re- sourcelulmess ean reach. DAWSON HOTEL MAN DIES; LONG ILLNESS Daniel F. Saunders, pioneer Dawson hotél man and manager of the Rochester Hotel at the time of his' desth, died at Daw- son recently, p‘od b1 years. He went to Dawson in 1900, from his native Viet B. C, when he was ' only .28, . Except for twa periods of a few years each, when Full length view of the new V4 Inset shows Lieut.-Commander William Quigley, wha' took # HOME EDUCATION “THE CHILD’'S FIRST SCHOOL IS THE FAmY"—Froeh'L Issued by the National Kindergarten Association, 8 w@'_n soled, at which sympathetic tone | Try as| and there was no more| it] pe submarine is the lzegest and is equipped for laying mines. S—. ' L) SATURDAY, MAY 19, 1928 \ ) (International over command of the giant undersea craft after the commis. sioning ceremony at Portsmouth Navy Yard, N, H. Newsreel) 40 Street, New York City. These articles are apnearl!g weekly in our columns. Ways o;f._flgzppmeu _By EDITH L. REID g i e A’. he lived in I'ritish Columbia, he has continuously resided in:Daw- Al mothers have - the secret| gon since that time. He i@ sur- hope that their children will al-{'yived by his widow, of Dawson, ways be happy and that their| mother, - Vaucouver, B. C._ and lives will be free from heartaeche.| gister, of Telegraph Cree! He This is of course a natural long-{ had been ill for two years, and ing born of love. Yet sometimes|for six months confined to his mothers do nct use the surestiped. ALASKA GIRLS "LIKE TEACHING " LOGAL SEHOOLS Practically All Will ‘Re- main in North During Coming Year That teaching in the out-of-the way Alaska schools, often ib communities where the popula {tion is small and the visitors are few, has its compensations, i evidenced by the numbers of young women who teach, not only one, but several years in the same schoal er others equally iso lated. Among the young women from Juneau and Douglas who are ~employed in- the Territorial schools, @ number will remain at the schools they taught last year, and a few will be trans- ferred, it was made known at the office of L. D. Henderson, Com missioner of Education for Alas- ka, this morning. Miss Mary Monagle, who taught at Teller last year, will returp there for her .second term nex( fall. Miss Monagle has als¢ taught at Hope, Circle and Wood- TOW. Miss -llo Slade, formerly of Ju- neay, who taught at the Black- burn school at. Bagle last year apd previous to that .was two years at Chitina, will teach next year at Kennecott. Miss Rica Niemi, of Douglas, will remain for the second year at the Fairview school near Wa- silla. Miss Honoran Kelley, of Doug- las, will return to the school at Scow Ray for a second term next year. Miss Kelley has taught at the Point Agassiz, Chilkat Valley and Haines schools. Returning for the second sea: son, Miss 'Elizabeth Fraser, of Douglas, will teach at the Nar- rows school at West Petersburg, next year. Having taught last year at Gus. tavus, or Strawberry Point, Misg Helen Lindstrom, formerly of Douglas, will. teach next year at the ‘MHe 7 Radlo Station school, 1S COMING ON SECOND VISIT T0 THE NORTH The Rev.Hubbard Enroute to Alaska — May ‘{ Go to Westward | f | | ! The Rev. Bernard R. Hubbard, 8. J., professor of geology at | Banta Clara College, California, |left Seattle today on the Aleutian for his secomd trip to Alaska, ac cording to the Rev. J. F. Hayes of this city. He expects to stay a week at Wrangell to fill the place of the Rev. Francis Munroe, who is superintending the remodeling of the old bank building in Doug- as into a church, before coming to Juneau where he wiil prob ably remain during most the summnier. Father Hubbard will not as a stranger to Juneau he made many friends here during his stay last summer. While Ju- neau was used as his headquar- ters, much of the time he was here was spent in the surrounding mountains and glaciers. We went | | often fo places not before explor-| ed by white men, to anyone knowledge. One of his most talk-| ed of exploits was a walk from Mendenhall Glacier across the ice to Taku Glacier, for the purpose of exploring the ice field in the| interior. He was accompanied on this trip by Henry Pigg, son of Dr. and' Mrs. W. J. Pigg of this city, and Jack Koby. Father Hubbard is a geologist of note, and: has climbed and| studied the geological formation of many of the highest mountains in the Swiss Alps. He has writ- ten articles and lectures on Al- pine and Alaskan geological char- acterizations, and is recognized as quite an authority on geolog; Last winter he made use of m terial gathered the previous sum- mer in Southeast Alaska, and gave a series of lectur2s on Alas- ka at Santa Clara. ‘While he expects to spend some time in and around Juneau dur- 'lng the summer, it is possible that Father Hubbard will make a trip to the “Valley of Ten | Thousand Smokes” while in the north. of come as WHO’S WHO AND WHERE R et R A Y. Lieut. E. L. Cummings of the Alaska Road Commission was an arrival on the Virginia IV. He made the round trip on the boat and was on a road inspection trip to Strawberry Point. ¥. L. Crockwell, electrician-in- charge, at the Chichagof Develon ment Company property, arrived here today on the ¥irginia IV and will remain in Juneau until the next salling of the motorship for Chichagef. George Weisel, assistant man- ager of the Jumeau Lumber Mills, returned - on the Virginia IV from Port Althorp. He has been on a buginess trip in the interests of on the Copper River and North-[the mill \western *Raliway. 1 Miss Vivian Lindstrom, also o Douglas, who " has been teaching tor severwl yemrs in the Territor; ial schools, last year at Hoonah and for two years before that at Bllamer, will remain in the Alas: ka teaching service, but has not yet decided upon a school, it was said. . Expecting to spend the summer in Nome, Miss Bthel Given, sev: eral years ago bookkeeper at the Frye-Bruhn market ia Juneau, will return ; to the school at St Michael next fall to teach for the third ye —_———— EVENING CATHED! 4 B ——— Tomerrow there will be an eve- ning service at Holy Trinity Cat thedral at 8.o'clock. There will be.no 11 olglock service, as Dean 5, Rice will officlate in St. Luke's|Hungari Chureh, 14! at that hour. BILLY ai«;' HOME ' AR e ol i g f Mr. and c.”;h:i. Wwio . 's hos {} Hirsh Chichagol mines; arrived in GE AT } L TOMORROW - D. J. Williams, manager of the port today on the Virginia IV, and will remain. in Juneau until the middle of next week. ka& Opinion Hoover ¢ Spent Large Amount In Indiana Campaign WASHINGTON, May 19—Bert Thurman, campaign manager for Senator James E. Watson, told the Senate Campaign Committee today that in his opinion, Hoovez spent $100,000 in publecity rtising in ‘the Indiana cam: paien. ———-—— BUILD HEROES’ MOUND OF EARTH FROM GRAVES BUDAPEST, Hungary, May —The government has invited an communes to dispatca to B 3 «a,kilo of earth taken from the graves of heroes and .from sites of : great mational historical happenings. These ! “heroes’ mound” in ‘of &.pyr Joutside Felix M. W banker, has 000 for the development of Jewish farm settlements Southern Russia. tribution, the largest ever made by a New $1,000,000 TO $1.00 SALE See Our Window Display RELIEF Juneau-Y oung Hardware Co. HARDWARE and UNDERTAKING P [ed in the collection. They will | B0 to Kyoto, Japan, for the open- iing and dedication of Japan's | flest: ¢hildren’s museum, af coro- nation ceremonies of Japan's em- %Ukenessu of Heroes | Sent to Japan Children BOSTON, muy 19-—An assem- 4 blage of tiny good will ambassa- 4 ¥ | dors quite different from any. oth-| This collection has been gath- er sent from America to Japan|€red through the jenergy of Miss |nas been gathered here for aJessie M/Sherwood of Boston and | journey to the Orien 1ds .a return gift for a tiny Jap- The “ambassadors” are tiny aRese doll court now in the Chil- | figures which are to cenvey tol|dren’s Museum, Boston. the children of Japan an under-| standing of American people, their| ! life, traditions and history. Massasoit, Indian friend of the white men; Priscilla Mulling and John Alden, George Washington { and Abraham Lincoln are model- ———— B pensions or fami .es of aviators killed in French civilian ervice is sought by fliers of the country. o Eugene Permanent vaves, $15. American DBeaaty Parlor. —adv, LIBERAL REWARD Concerning information that will lead to arrest and ) convicti a of person or persons stealing vaudeville pictures from in front of Palace Thgatre, also those defacing my lithographs displayed around the city. arburg, New York : subscribed $1,000,- in This con- York citizen for Jewish relief, closely follows | the gift of $5.000,000 for a cimilar purpose by Julius Ros- eawald of Chicago. (International YMustrated News) Victoria Day Celebration May 26, 1928 BASEBALL TOURNAMENT——Teams from Juneau, Skagway, Chilkoot JOHN T. SPICKETT. I' - WHITEHORSE, Y. T. . Barracks and Whitehorse Field Sports, Dancing and Everything Leaves Ju " . of carth will bo-used to| TICKETS ON SALE—Juneau MUSIC BY A JUNEAU ORCHESTRA Dancing at Skagway Friday Night and at WhiteHhorse Saturday Nigllt : neau 7 A. M., Friday May 25{11 - .l‘l‘e,t,uming to Juneau, Sunday, 27th——Calling ‘at, Douglas and Chilkoot Barracks FARE—JUNEAU TO WHITEHORSE AND RETURN—$15.00 Limited Number of Reservations 1 BRING YOUR, OWN LUNCH—We furnish plenty of hot coffee aboard ship " e ————— Juneau Ferry and Navigation Co. . 8. PULLEN, Manager Phone No. 6 Ry ez b aale R gl THotel Zynds, Ho 'u.sl'_m. )Quy.f " Smith, Douglas " 6"'