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L o g . oftncrtJ tummert) A visit through our apparel sec- tion cannot fail to intrigue the in- terest of every woman or miss who | having has a thought for her Summer and vacation wardrobe. New of ’l(’r(’ oceasion day variety. are D Notices for this caurch column | nust be received by The Em not later than 10 o'clock: Batur: morning to guarantee change sermon topics, ete. First Church of Christ, Scientist | S S Sunday services wiu pe neld 11 a. m. in the Christ, Scientist, Juneau, on Fifth and Main Streets. The subject will be, “Arc .Sin, Discase and Death Real?” Sunday School at 12:15 p. m. Wednesday, 8:00 .p. m.—Tosti- monial me . LChristian £c ce Reading Room to in church b 1. This room is open to the public Wednesday afternoons from 2:30 to 4. The public is cordially invited to 55— ———— attend these services and visit the reading room. ARt g AR { Catholic Church Fifth and Gola Streets 8:00 a. m—Low Mass and Ser- S |ject, “Man’s Place in the Uni- 10:30 a. m—High Mass and Ser- |VoF | 5P. M. mon. _ Junior vorth League meets| FOR . 1:30 p. m—Sunday School and |SUnday won at 2:30 o'clock Bible Class. | Senior Epworth League meets at 7:30 p. m—Rosary, Instruction 0:30 P. m. Leader, Bennie Messer. and Benediction of the Blessed ~FVening vorship at 7:30. Sub-| Sacrament. | ject G School.” H | Special music by the Young Pes- —gz ble's Choir. Also good congrega- | | Holy Trinity Cathedral | 'ticnal snging. We icel sure you | ~—431 (will enjoy it | CHARLES E. RICE, Dean | MENU Phone 604 Sunday services: 8:00 &. m.—Holy Communion. 11:00 a. m—Morning Prayer and Confirmation. Bishop Rowe will| 12:30 p. m—Sunday School. Evening service at Douglas. e ——————— | Northern Light Presbyterian | Church | %; Fourth and Franklin Sts. Morning service at 11 o'clock. The | Rev. Henry Young will preach on; the subject, “Man’s Place in the Universe.” Text, “What Is Man.” ¥ a. m. and lovely wearables on cvery hand, for every ses from $6.95 to $45.00 Coats from $22.50 to $65.00 I. Behrends Co., Inc. i Tl.> Home of Smart Styles First Christ of Subject, [ 2,15 R pSunday Sohool. | THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, SATURDAY, APRIL 13 1929 | Tuesday and Friday evenings at 7:30 o'clock—Geospel services. The Lord's Supper the first Sun- day of each month. Prosbyterian Native Church | 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 seryices. e — Search the Scriptures | “Now the Spifit spehketh ex- | pressly,. that .in theilatter times some shall depart from the faith, ‘givmg heed : to seducing spirits, {and doctrines of devils; speaking |lies in hypocrisy; having their | conscience seared with a hotiron.” 1 Timothy 4: 1-2. The world outside of the Church |cf Jesus Christ has never known |what it means to have that exult- lant and triumphant faith which the latter times” who “shall de- fore be those who have never ac- (cepted Christ but must be those |who have known the faith. Most |of us have friends and acquaint- {:uces who in recent years have departed from the faith. Once lihey found joy rd; they coveted the society of |God’s people; they delighted in |the service of Jesus. But now they are not different from other worldly people. Most of them are |1aw-abiding citizens; morally good ibut spiritually dead. Some of them |are back-slidden church members who have returned into the world; other are back-slidden Christians, still members of a church but “speaking lies in hypocrisy and Jes auyr their conscience seared !with a hot iron.” | The departure of thece friends from the true faith has followed |along two lines. Some have heed- ed seducing spirits: greed for money, social position, official in- fluence, unrestrained pleasure, or intellectual accomplishment. Oth- ers have heeded the doctrines of devils which include not only the many ancient spiritualistic cults but also the numerous modern false teachings which have sprung jup in the last 100 years and whose | teachers “have brought in damn- able heresies, even denying the Lord that bought them.” (2 Peter 2: 1) Any casual reager or sbserver |ean see the departure from the {faith of Jesus Christ in these {modern times.. Many ministers. of the gospel and Christian workers decry the number that are falling |away from. the faith. And yet | God's Word written over 1900 years ago gave out the warning: |“Let not man deceive you by any {means: for the day of Christ shall {not come, except there come a faliing away first,” (2 Thessal- onians 2: 2-3.) Scripture prophecy |is being rapidly fulfilled in these modern apostate times which is another reason for beliving that the Bible is the “in-breathed? Word of God. Full Gospel at the Bethel Pen- tecostal Assembly on Seward St. Summer complete the in i fl it |is in Christ Jesus. The “some in| |part from the faith” cannot there- | in seeking the' YACHT RACE . RULES ARE ©GIEN 0. K. ;Formal Approval of Capi: tal-to-Capital Race in June Is Given Formal approval of the second annual Capltal-to-Calital yacht race, Olympia to Juneau, Alaska, |has been received at Olympia, by ,Chairman John Pierce of the race |rules committee from officials of {the American Power-Boat associa- “tion, with headquarters in New York City, and any and all records made in the contest will be recog- |nized as official. The race slarts from Olympia Juae 15. The sanction of the A. P. B. A |was received in a telegram from Charles F. Chapmen, cditor of the national m 2 “Moato-boating,” and an ifon officil. by Chairman Picrce on the lattor's return from an overland trip thru Orcgon and California on which the Olympia hotel man mixed busi- ness and pleasure and spent much \time encouraging California yachts- ,men to enter America's “longest |powerboat race through sheltered j waters.” Take Race Seriously That sportsmen in the south are taking the coming race seriously was indicated, Mr. Pierce said, by the fact that yacht club officials in Los Angeles evinced great inter- est in the event and at least one !man, Paul Franklin Johnson of Altadena. owner of the 82-foot yacht “Sewelyn,” has assured offi- cials that his boat will be entered, and C. B. Bell, of Los Angeles, owner of a 32-foot racing cruiser, has requested full information per- taining to the rules and regula- tions to govern the trek and asked for an entry blank. : Chief of the difficulties Califor- nia men say they encounter in en- tering the race is in getting their yacts to Olympia. They dread the long cruise, expense, and loss of time involved in getting their boats to the starting point, and il this problem can be eliminated even in a measure they will enter the contest. It is this problem of boat transportation that may ilead race officials to make arrange- |ments with steamship lines plying between Washington and Califor- nia ports whereby yachts may be ishipped to Olympia at minimum expense. To Arouse Interest | Arrangements were made by Mr. | Pierce, while in California for pub- ;lication of newspaper and maga- zine articles on the race and these it is believed, will do more than anything else to stimulate interest in the event. It is also planned to show motion pictures taken on the 1928 race. These will likely bz exhibited in California under the supervision of A. L. Bobrick, Mo evening A warm wel Resurrection Lutheran Church Corner of Third ana Main Sts. REV. HARRY R. ALLEN, Pastor Sunday services. 11:00 a. m. — Morning Worship. “The Savior's Word to St. Peter on the Christian Church.” 12:15 p. m.—Sunday School. A welcor all s hip 1 the 7:30 p. m. — Evening Worship. Subject, “The Watehful Servant of Christ.” i Sunday the Day of Worship.}‘ | iavitation is extended and visitors to Sunday services angers at the congregation. Metropolitan Methodist | Episcopal Church i fe Ll SUED SRRt ) Fourth and Seward Streets KEV. HENRY YOUNG. Minister. Sunday School convenes at 10 Morning worship at the Presby- terian Church at 11 o'clock. Su The Public meetings: 1 Sunday—2:00 p. m. Sunday—7:30 p. m | Tuesday—7:30 p. m Ripe Olives Fruit Fried Parsnips Assembly of God Mission Cocoanut Cream @ T (Bethel Pentecosial Assembly) Coffee 207 Seward Street Mabry’s Cate SPECIAL Turkey Dinner SUNDAY Soup—Cream Tomato Roast Turkey, Cranberry Jelly Sweet Potatoes Apple Pie, Cheese Tea | —ady, handicapper in the 1928 race, who | ———e-—— happens to be a Los Angeles man | We make ana ar-r all kinds of and an authority on powerboat rac- fur garments. Goldstein's Em. ing. Unusual action pictures were sorfum, —adv. taken both by Frank Mount, of L T T T U T U T T LT Celery Salad Mashed Potatoes Mince Pie Milk CHAS. C. PERSONEUS, Pastor. | Bunday services: 11:00 a. m.—Morning Worship. 12:15 p. m—Bible School. 7:30 p. m~The. evening service. T L L T T L T T L T N EVERY DAY Mabry’s 5 0’Clock Specials lllllllulIHLllulllflmll“flIIIIIIIflfimlllmlllllllllllflIllllllllllllllllIlllIllllllIllllllllllullllllllllllllllIlllIlllllllllllllllllllllIlllllllIIIIIIIlllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII" SPRING CLEAN-UP SALE ON TABLE LAMPS AND SHADES $8.50 Values for $5.00 Other Models in Proportion First Come—First Served Sale will last one week from date— April 9, 1929 Alaska Electric Light & Power Co. Phone 6 Juneau, Alaska a&upfl, on peme egofiamf%nq% 2pring creades, that- they accentuate the slenden @Mmfm %M— ing if: O Bl dreas WMWMMMM a ouptal and Ailer Gett buclle o brak thoLines — | Gt the yacht Dell's crew, Maurice An- | derson, of the Bolinu:~, and Skip-’MAcRUBERTs of the yachtl | shown in the east and middle| went and are known to have sLim-\ ulated widespread interest in, and | advertising for, the race to Juncau. | ¥irsy er, owned and skipper of the yachl‘[ Richard MacRoberts, 41 years “Maidie,” of the Queen City Yacht|0!d, died at St. Ann’s hospital at club, Seattle, announced that his|6 o'clock this morning after hav- boat would be on the starting line |ing been ill since the first of the| June 15 ready for the gruelling|year. The immediate cause of, per Adolph Schmi’ Winifred. The pictures have been DlEs Tu D A Y The first entry in the 1929 race| has been received when Jack Pow- grind to the northern capi death was heart trouble, according‘ Charles Fullerton, member of the |10 his physician. He entered the oew of the Olympia yacht “Wini- |hospital on February 6 to receive | treatment for influenza, the third attack he had suffered during the | winter. He is survived by a wife fred,” has prepared a predicted log for a seven-knot boat—the . slowest that may be entered—showing all the distances from control points, |and four children, and several with the date and hour that such |brothers and sisters who live in points should be sighted and passed | England. for the entire 9153-mile race be-| Mr. MacRoberts was born in tween Olympia and Juneau. . As|Glasgow, Scotland on August 10, boats are entered predicted logs (1886 and had been a resident of will be figured for each and every |Juneau since August 10, 1906. He vessel, this to constitute extraordi-|belonged to the Moose lodge and nary service to be rendered racers{t0 the Methodist Episcopal church, | at this end of the race. and was a cook by profession. The predicted log shows that a Funeral services will be held to- seven-knot boat will leave here [Morrow afternoon at 2 p.m. under shortly after 10 a.m., June 15, and |the auspices of the Moose lodge, if its cruising speed is maintained |8t Moose Hall. The Rec. C. E. it will cross the finish line in Ju- |Rice will give the sermon. The neau at 1 P. M. Friday, June 21, body is at the C. W. Carter Mortu- which would be at noon, Juneau |ary. time. b O R NOTICE Moose Memorial Services will be held at Moose Hall Sunday even-| e - We are now serving SANDWICHES and SALADS. The best yet. Ju- neau Ice Cream Parlors. —adv.|ing, April 14th, at 8 p. m. All} b pers o n members urged to attend. adv. | TUR EXFERT ——————— Try a HOT TAMALE after the show. Juneau Ice Cream Parlors. —adv, Our Fur Manufacturing Depart- ment is in charge of an expert furrier. Goldstein’s Emporium. adv IMPORTANT NEW ; COATS FOR GIRLS—3 TO 14 YEARS Lovely Spring Coats For girls in tweeds and basket weaves, in the light and lovely shades so popular this season. : The coats show the mew sports styles and several affect the scarfts of self mater- ial—touches of fur add chic to the more dres- sy coats, $4.75 to $9.75 | PIQUE ENSEMBLES FOR LITTLE GIRLS FROM 3 TO 6 YEARS Unmistakably smart for the Little Miss. Sleeveless dresses showing the new mod- ernistic designs, on a white background, with lovely little jacket coats. Very Special at $2.50 IllllllNlllIIlllllmI|IllllmllllllllllllllluIlllllll"lllIIlllllllmlllllllllllllllllllllll-i. N “Gortors Gift Shop OUR SERVICE EXTENDS ALL OVER THE WORLD THE First National Bank OF JUNEAU i e; ‘ They show the newest silhouettes, scarfs and P NEW COATS and DRESSES of PRINTS PRINTS Individual and Subtle Unusual prints that give each dress a definite smartness, in whose dif- In and dark colors, of tiny bright flowers and mod- ference is distinction. light with designs trnistic figures. Sizes 14 to 44 $12.75 COATS These new summer coats are the finest to be found. bows . . fabrics . . colors . . furs . . everything the smart world has aceepted. In tweeds, basket weaves, kasha, novelty weaves— colors are in tans, grays, blue, green, mixtures. black and Sizes 16 to 46 $12.75 to $29.50