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——————————————— e o NEW COTTON FABRICS FOR YOUR SPRING FROCKS Polo Pique An old fashioned material with a new- fashioned disguise. We not take your time to describe pique, every woman . need knows - its superior worth as a cotton fab ‘printed “in fast colors are sure to In solid colors, or attrac- 36 inches wide—55 cents Put the new Polo designs, please you. tive prints the yard Darsdale Linon A fabric with all the washing and wearing qualities of linen, but with an added advantage—it does not crush like linen. Fast color prints, 36 in- ches wide—at 40c¢ and 65¢ the yard. Plain colors, 36 inches wide at 50c the yard. M. Behrends Co., Inc. Jur ; Leading Departiment Store - Nf i ‘h}/// N N Z 7 W D & N~ 3 5.3, Vs 7 /1 . \ > A Notices for this churcnh column nust be received by The Empire Subject, not later than 10 o'clock Saturday|of Christ. . moraing to g change of! Tomoerrow is Anniversary Sunday. sermon topics, etc. First Charch of Christ, | | Scientist | iz choirs. “be held at Episcopal Church ist, Juneau, on Fifth | and Main Sfreets. be, “Unreality.’ Sunday School at 12:15 p. m. ‘Wednesday, - 8:00 p. m.—Testi- | monial. meeting | Christian Sciénce Reading Room | in church building. This room is open to the public Wednesday afternoons from 2:20 to 4. Fourth and Seward Streets The subject will| REV. HENRY YOUNG. Minister. Sunday School convenes at 10 a. m. Owing to the absence of the pas- tor there will be no regular morn- ing worship. Junior Epworth League meets Sunday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock. Sentor Epworth League meets at The public is cordially invited to 6:30 p. m.. Miss Emily Tucker attend these services and visit the will be the leader. reading room. FEvening worship at 7:30 when ——— the Rev. Murray Hanna, will oc- 3 —— R 43 cupy the pulpit. There will be | Catholic Church | special music by the young people’s & 5 %2 | choir. Fifth and Gola Streets | S 6:00 a. m. — Mass in Hospital | g o Chapel. Assembly of God Mission | ) 8:00 2. m—Mass and Sermon. — 10:30 4. m—High Mass and Ser-: (Bethel Pentecostal Assembly) mon. | 207 Seward Street 1:30 p. m.—Sunday School and' CHAS. C. PERSONEUS, Pastor. Bible Class. : Sunday services: 7:30 p. m—Rosary, Instruction| 11:00 a. m.—Morning Worship. and Benediction of the Blessed 12:15 p. m—Bible School. 7:30 p. m—The evening service. Tuesday and Friday evenings at Sacrament. 43 — — — 30 o'clock—Gospel services. [ Holy Trinity Cathedral The ‘Lord’s Supper the first Sun- B GHARIES E. RICE, Dean | 0¥ Of each month. Phon> 604 |4 Sunday services: T The Salvation Army 1 £:00 a. m.—Holy Communion. | e H 11:00 a. m.—Choral Eucharist and| Public meetings: Sermon. Sumday—2:00 p. m. 12:30 p. m—Sunday School. Evening service at Douglas. \ C—— Sunday—7;30 p. m. Tuesday—7:30 p. m. Presbyterian Native Church | & P & “HARRY WILLARD, Lay Worker 10:30 a. m.—Morning service. 11:30 a. m—Bible School. 7:00 p. m—Wednesday—Midweek prayer service. A cordial welcome is given to all to attend these services. -, EXPERT SHOE REPAIRING ¥ Morthern Light Presbyterian | | Church AR | é&: Fourth and Franklin Sts. 12:15 p. m.—Sunday School. ‘Corner of Third ana Main Sts. w.mvn,mm,mwr E services. It pays to mave your zippers and n's. t Mike Avol g | 7:30 p. m. — Evening Worship. The New Commandment | There will be special music at the | services by the Senior and Junior Metropolitan Methodist | | t Christ of | B ——— LA 5 8 S i uoe 4ou. clinmen, ant dance chesses. dan ene at— Phittipe et Qastons vith- o ong,eircular sicrofint; epen ins ‘ oven pows of enpofal beado. Jhe eclons ane ese, qucen [POST TRAVELS BY AIRPLANES Search the Scriptures | “For the time will come when they will not endure sound doc- \trine; but after their own lusts |5hall heap to themselves teachers, | { having itching ears; And they shall I | | | |turn away their ears from the Has Become Regular Air-| |truth, and shall be turned unto B T “ f C d | fables.” 2 Timothy 4: 3-4 | Bug—1lells of Cost an The world outside of the church 1 |of Jesus Christ never did "endurfl,!’ MOdC, Transporlatlon | sound doctrine”; % they never did| |‘accept sound teaching from: the lips | of Jesus and His disciples nor from | thi K th's tHox| the written Word. Is it any won- | DS Week from a months vacatlon) der’ then that those in modern|t0 the west coast States, is more times who know not Christ should enthusiastic about that mode of continue to resist sound doctrine? |travel than ever, having made the There is a far more significant sign |Tound trip from Seattle to Los An- of the times in the fact that many 8eles by plane. He spent most of of the Protestant and Evangelical his time in southern California, churches, which have always sought | Where he saw a number of former to maintain the open Bible and its Alaskans and thoroughly enjoyed sound teachings, are in recent years the warm weather. “turning away their ears from the| truth.” The minister of the Gospeli Planes Comfortable ! | H. H. Post, one of Juneau's most | air-minded citizens, who returned who preaches the truth based .The planes of the West Coast wholly upon the sound doctrines of | Alf Transport Company, a branch the Bible is no longer popular in Of the Union Air Ways, on which many of the so-called Evangelical Mr. Post traveled from Seattle to congregations. Church members | San Francisco and return, are ex- would often rather have their con-|tremely comfortable, he said. He sciences eased by some smooth made the trip in a Bach, tri-motor, sounding platitude than stirred by dual control, 10-passenger plane .|the truth. Too frequently a preach-| With a cruising speed of 120 miles er would rather have the pleasant|2n hour. The planes are equin- acknowledgment and good-will of ped with comfortable seats, running his congregation than the “well, ice water, smoking room and lava- done, thou good and faithful ser-|tory and have room for one to walk vant” of the Lord Jesus Christ. around and relax. Lunch was One of the worst sort of “teach-|served aboard the plane, 4,000 feet ors, having itehing ears” is the|in the air and consisted of ham modernistic or rationalistic preach-|and chicken sandwiches, dill pickles, er who prides himself more on' olives, oranges, bananas, apple pie THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, SATURDAY, APRIL 6 AGRICULTURE SECRETARY’S WIFE 1S REAL DIRT FARMER and Lavendern on o white. fround. (j-Csfi" 15 1929. TRENTON, Mo., April 6 tical mfinded dirt farmer, herself the owner of four farms, is Mrs. secretary of agriculture. Mrs. Hyde goes to Washington equipped with abilities as official | hostess gained while her husband | was Missouri’s governor. Behind life as the wife of a public of- 1 lies a girlhood spent on her s 1,000-acre cattle farm. Un- {til she was 23 years old she lived there, Secretary Hyde's appointment spring improvements on her farms, which she personally manages. “I don't see how I can manage my farms by correspondence,” she said. “I prefer to inspect them my- self.” One farm is stocked with Guern- sey cattle. One summer, Mrs. Hyde went north to make a personal se- lection of herds from which she would buy. Later she sent resident farm managers to pur- chase her choices. “Arthur, you know, is a town boy,” she reminisced. “He had a farm until recently, a 500-acre farm. I didn’t manage it, but some- times I was his adviser.” Mrs. Hyde's practical view of az- riculture was demonstrated last fall when she refused to sell her timo- thy seed. She ordered it stored for the winter, anticipating an ad- vance in price. Now it is worth 75 cents more a bushel. —A prac- | Arthur M. Hyde, wife of the new, came as his wife was busy planning | her | eSS MRS, ARTHUR M HYDE | Mrs. Hyde was rather reluctant |to leave the quietude and content- | | ment of her Trenton home, yet she | welcomes residence in \'Jashmgmn‘ |as a “new adventure.” The Hyde's | | daughter, Caroline, attends high | | school in Trenton, but will complete | her preparatory work in tne capital. Juneau, Phone 6 | Thus this Missouri farm girl| leaves her housekeeping and farm | | management to enter the circle of | | cabinet members’ wives—intimately |acquainted with problems of her | husband’s work. I is o popular that it to make reservations two weeks in advance One of the pilots was the same he had travelled with last year when he made practically the same trip. o oA S T STER MUSIC REPEATED AT CATHEDRAL SUNDAY is necessary 10 days or Tomorrow being the Octave of Easter, the services at Holy Trinity Cathedral will be the same as on Easter Day, full choral Eucharist at 11 o'clock, sung by vested choir of 20 voices. e INFORMATION WANTED Information concerning the whereabouts of William Osear Adamson reported in Juneau or vi- cinity, is desired by the Vice Con- sulate of Norway, in Juneau. ——————— C. A. Soper of Wasilla has caught, nine wolves during the winter. Gordon Stewart, son of H. A. R. Stewart, was recently admitted to the Dawson Hospital with a broken arm as the result of the kick of a horse. R « Four canneries, Joe Magill, the Gorman, Emard and J. F. Toman will operate at Anchorage this year according to reports. e e SILVER TEA to 5 p. m. he declared. | The Martha Soclety will hold a | Silver Tea at the Forget-Me-Not| Tea Rooms on April 13th from 3| Indian Flapper Wears Pounds | Of Glass Beads | PALM Buaur, rla, April 6— | While two and a rds of ma- e o ot R e ) IT’S A Royal Electric Cleaner Alaska Electric Light & Power Co. “YOUR ALASKA LAUNDRY SERVICE” lor Dry Cleaning and Pressing ALASKA LAUNDRY In New Building on Shattack Way ‘THE LAUNDRY DOES IT BEST” Douglas, Phone 18 terial will make a spc dress for the average white maid, 28 yards are required for the dress of the Seminole Indian girl who lives near her fashionable white ter here. | The Seminole maiden’s skirt measures seven yards around, and | she often uses her last year’s dress oat. The Indian girl, the Palm Beach social goas leader one better when it comes to a galaxy of color. Bith of calico are patiently sewed together in in-| tricate patterns and bizarre color combinations to rival the best mod- ernistic designers. No dowager in the opera box ever wore more jewelry than the| Seminole girl does beads. Beads are her weakne: Her neck is encircled by row upon row of the | brightly colored strings. Many a | Seminole girl of 18 has 80 yards of beads around her neck and often | they weigh as much as 30 pounds. :The beads are accumulated from her infancy and finally are buried with her. - e The Northern Seafoods Company at Cordova is ready to pack crabs, the cannery having been put in NOTICE Members of Serbian Society Flag are requested to meet Sunday at 1:30 P. M. at Moose Hall to prepare for the funeral of their departed Rroiher Thomas Darby. CHAS. MILLER, E. P. RUNDICH, President. Secretary. operating order. — .—— The Dawson Eagles have pur- chased the old A. B. Hall e CHARLES WAKEFIELD CADMAN ; A MUSICAL TREAT PALACE THEATRE — TWO CONCERTS MONDAY EVENING, APRIL 8TH, AND TUESDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 9TH his knowledge of the mnn—madc‘and American cheese, he said. theory of evolution than on his| Cost Is Moderate understanding of the Holy Scrip-| The cost' of travelling on the tures. ~ And backslidden church|pacific Coast by plane is extreme- members like to hear their pastors|ly moderate, only a trifle more talk about such things because| than train fare, Mr. Post declared. such a theory is pleasant to guilty : % 5y The fare from Seattle to San Fran- consciences. But someone says that cisco is $55 one way, or $105 round evolution is an established fact.| i ¥ p, and includes taxi fare to and Listen, friend, a fact is never called | yo, the airport to the pa. a theory nor is an hypothesis ever' , .. po passen- ger's hotel, and lunch when served called a fact. No scholar who has \ 5 . on board. From San Francisco to studied evolution from a tmlyLm Ahgdlis ‘the ‘1 i scientific viewpoint speaks of evo- R S e 13 5 ong lution but as a theory or hypo- rway e M:eruund i, wih taxl thesis. The proof of evolution based Eervice A€ LSH) ends.. It 1s reqlly on facts is yet forthcoming, as all|Cheaper to go by plane from Seat- true sclentists admit, but sad to tle to Portland, Mr. _Post r_jeclared. relate many worthy people are|The fare by plane, including taxi being duped and deluded into be- service, is $12, nn!y $1.15 more than lieving that evolution is an estab- | tain, and by train, the taxi corfes lished fact. The worst fable to|extra. which modern churches are turning| The time from Seattle to Port- is the fable of evolution. Webster land by plane was 1 hour and 15 defines the word “fable” as “fic-|minutes from field to field. 1In tion intended to deceive, untruth,|Portland Mr. Post changed planes falsehood”; and so is this man-|and a capacity load of passengers made theory. and express were taken on the San These conditions in many of the|Francisco bound plane. The time very churches established for the|to San Francisco, from Portland, evangelizing of mankind throughincluding one stop to refuel and sound doctrine and the truth, for-|have the engine inspected, was five cibly remind one that the Apostle|and one-half hours. Paul wrote over 1900 years ago| From San Francisco to Los “ An- t)}nlalt the time will come when the{ geles and return, Mr. Post went by will not endure sound doctrine.”|way of the Madux Air Line. Is not this another 'instance of Air Perfect . the prophetic truth of God's Word? | mpe air was perfect for flying all Full Gospel at the Bethel Pente- i the way to southern California and costal Assembly on Seward Street. return and the landings were per- —84Y. | fectly. smooth, Mr. Post said. The Country Storc and Barn Dance,|Panes werg large and comfortable Elks' Hall, April 20th, supervision|*0d one was able to walk around of Pastime Club. Special prizes for ) 2nd 100k out of windows so that best hayseed couple now on dis- ‘¢ trips were not at all tiresome. play at J. M. Saloum’s. Groceries,| 1 Would be perfectly willing to pots and pan and what have you|make the trip from Juneau to Se- all given away free. An equal|attle by plane if the company cp- chance for all to win. Save the erating them had as excellent date. —ady. | equipment as those I travelled on,” g P Mr, Post declared. WE MAKE ENLARGEMI . Planes Popular R o B o e . plane on the - SPECIAL ON Little Children’s A pparel FOR MONDAY Girls’ Wash Dresses In bright Attractive and smart are these little dresses which are brightened with ribbon, ties, some with leather belts and self trimming. 6 to 14 years. SPECIAL FOR MONDAY—$1.95 . Boys’ Suits The new Spring models, colored linen pants and stripped broadeloth blouses in colors. ‘White sailor suits with blue trimming. 2 to SPECIAL—$1.95 Spring colors 6 years. A One of America’s Foremost Composers Assisted by MADAME FLORENCE BEELER Contralto Cadman's Compositions: “At Dawning,” “Land of the Sky-Blue Water,” “I Hear a Thrush at Eve,” ctc. “Of course, the singer’s cap- tivating personality created additional joy to her listen- ers. It should be recorded that in the entire program Miss Beeler showed herself able to reach above and be- hind conventionality in sing- ing and to bring a refresh- ing mood to the audience. She revealed a rich and splendid quality voice and an intelligent accomplish- ment in her work.”—Seattle Times. MADAME FLORENCE BEELER Contralto CONCERT EVENING, 8:15 P. M.—ADMISSION §1. Admission Matinee Tuesday Afternoon 3:30 P. M. A, L N