The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 3, 1929, Page 2

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, SEPT. 3, 1929. Rain tonight and Wednesday l YOCAL Tinw Burometer Temp. 4 p.om. yest'y 53 4 a. m. today 51 Noon teday 53 30.27 30.27 3019 Weather Conditions As Recorded by the U. S. Weather Bureau > Forecast for Juneaw and vicinity, beginning 4 p. m. today: ; moderate southeast winds. A DATA Humidity Wind Velocity Weather 99 S 4 Rain 100 SE 5 R 93 SE 10 CABLE AND RADIO REFORTS YE! Highest 4pm, Stations— temp. temp. TODAY Low 4cm. 4a.m. Precip. 4am. emp. temp. Velocity 24 hrs. Weather —a 34 52 56 54 50 54 48 56 68 56 53 62 62 43 68 k(s G5 Barrow Nome Bethel Fort Yukon ‘Tanana Eagle St Paul Dutch Harbor Kodiak Cordova Juneau Ketchikan Prince Rupert Edmonton Seattle | Portland San Francisco 50 52 48 48 50 46 54 54 54 53 62 46 Ga 4 (33 30 32 12 0 Cldy 8 16 40 02 04 54 Cldy Cldy cldy .06 Rain a2 Clear 0 . Cldy 0 cldr 1.66 Rain Rain . Cldy 0 Cldy . Cldy Calm 0 Clear 0 Clear 0 Clear *Less than 10 miles. | T NOTE—Observations at Alask: dova and Juneau are made at 8 a. a mainlana stalions, except Cor- m. and 8 p.m., Juneau time. Thic morning’s distribution of er area centered near Nomce and terior and a high with center off { nas fallen during the last twenty ritory except in the extreme northern portion, ov OLSON'S RIGHT SAVES HIM I Silks for Autumn Formalities Dame Fashion Says— “The correct fabrics for Fall evening wear will be figuicd or plain georgettes and satins.” In keeping with this we are now. showing SATIN IRENE A luxu new pastel shades ous, heavy quality Crepe Back Satin. In all the for Autumn. when Latter Apparently | Had Battle Won FIGURED GEORGETTE ! . . . . . With a right upper cut to the Floral patterns, correct for evening wear, in delightful point of the left jaw Soldier Olson pat Doe Silvers to sleep in the fifth round of what was scheduled ‘six-round bout at the EIK’ i Saturday night and termi 1 jthe main event and ended one of (‘OIUI’S. AIN GEORGETTE In pastel shades, so attractive and soft appearing for Autumn events. taken place in Juneait in man 4 days. The blow came unexpectedly B. M. BEHRENDS CO., INC. ety v e even a long count would have saved the clean boxing and game fightiug “The Home of Beau Monde Silks” ¥ { Juneauite. He was carried to his \corner after the count, still uncon- scious, but came to, and began fighting his seconds. He did not know what had happened. The end of the fight was whoily unexpected because Doc had been jabbing the soldier for three rounds with his left and the latter with | 1 was apparently all in. He had been down twice, once in the sec- ond and once in the third round: The fourth round had been a re- peater for the second and third ex- I eept there were no knockdowns. was just one left jab after anothe: in the soldier's face. Silvers wa not so clever with his right, how ever, and most of his swings wer easily ducked by the wary soldier In spite of his punishment OIl- son was constantly coming in for more. He was swinging, upper cut- ting and hooking, first with one hand «nd then the other, trying to place the knockout that he packs In either arm. He landed some rough blows, frequently pushing the blond head of his antagonist back Announcing The Cash Bazaar CORNER MAIN AND FRONT STREETS NICK OF TIME Soldier EHOE;OM Silvers wa bloody nose and blackening cyes | * | ling. " | Opposite U. S.Cable Office The Cash Bazaar offers to you manufacturers’ ‘sample stocks. Bankrupt stocks, bought direct for cash and sold at special values. and sold at special values: The goods are dependable and every item in this store is a real bargain and offered to you at . prices below the regular market value. New goods are arriving, and you are invited to look over the stock. i WE BUY RIGHT WE SELL RIGHT The Cash Bazaar FRONT AND MAIN STREETS and once, in the first round, bring- ing him to the floor. Silvers ducked land side-stepped most of the sol- dier's offerings and delivered sev- eral vicious left jabs for every blow he received. Both men were game and full ct fight from the beginning. The sol- dier gradually slowed down and Silvers casily had the better of thc going in all the rounds after the first, until the end came so sud- denly in the fifth. He was getting away with the fifth until his chin picked up the haymaker that endec it all All Fights Were Spirited All the bouts were spirited. There was no yellow in the ring at ali The crowd was on its feet and cheered many times in each round [Tt was a good card,” Was the uni | versal verdict There were two knockouts, one decision victory and a draw. p Next to the main event there was greater interest in the semi-final in which Sammy Nelson was clearly the favorite of the crowd, though there were plenty of cheers for the game Red Dolan of Tacoma, who substituted for Soldier Miller. Sam- f pressure include a low baromet- spreading over most of the in- he British Columbia coast. Rain -four hours gererally over the Ter- the Aleutians and |my won a decision after the last! of four rounds had been fought to a finish. He had made a chop- ping block of the red-haired and | clean-limbed boy from the City oi| | D y, who gory sight at| he end of each round except the | 1 more and mc . However, San w some punishment | went aong. The first round | 1 and Nelson had a decided | was a advant 5 ad Roberts Draw | | ‘Tiger son, the pugnacious Fili- | {pino who has appared on all the| cards this season but heretofore against men far heavier than h self, more evenly matched Saturday night when he weat| inst Young Eddie Rob cl shifty, and | | was ageous. T C and it was cheered, for it camec after one of the most ferocious bat tles that have been witnessed in Juneau. The Tiger was vicious in the clinches and terrific at in-| fighting. Laymen thought Rob 5 arts made a mistake in permitting | ILun many clinches that Layson used | to such good advantage. At boxing | the Tacoma bo; the cdge. Both men fell out of the ring twice, once | they went over the rt togeth and e the Tacoma boy had to defend himself through the ropes when his feet were in the ring and head and torso outside. The fight Wi at a terrific pace and the thrills kept the audience in a cou- ‘stant uproar. The decision was unanimous and was popular with | the crowd, which cheered the an-| nouncement of Referec Harry Sper- apit Tee-Bone Lasts Quick The curtain-raiser lasted quick. Sunboat Gus, introduced as Tee- Bone Gus was cheered as was Young Sharkey, the Filipino, who was introduced as Tomateos, The fight started fast and furious, but the Filipino took Tee-Bone's meas- | ure quickly and the fight ecnded in a knockout in the first round. Gus had been down once before in the round. Firstclass Smoker The smoker was one of the be: aver staged in Juneau. There wns not a dull spol. cn the card. The fighting was all clean, and the fighters finished in the best of hu- mor. Roberts fairly hugged his Filipino antagonist, the veteran Tiger. Harry Sperling made a good veferee. The Judges were Dr. W. W. Council and Ed Adams. Harold Post was time-neepcr. i Elks Hall was filled to its capaeity ind the crowd was thoroughly sat-| wsfied with its entertainment. Collier Challenges Winner Just before the main event, Joe Collier, veteran of many a battle in a Juneau squared circie, enterod the ring and challenged the win- ner of the main event. He was greeted with cheers and boos— mostly cheers, however, indicating very clearly that he has a warm place in the hearts of Juneauites. The smoker was under the aus- pices of the American Legion. Post Commander E. F. Herrmann was master of ceremonies. New, select line = visiting cards Empire. 3 ¥ l[)’. Lé bu USE NANAIMO SCREENED Pacific Coast H. G. WALMSLEY, Agent. {'xain%‘ Coal Company PHONE 412 Among those whose health and beauty have been wrecked by the modern diet mania scored by prominent physicians, upper left, talented beauty, paid wi Barbara La Mar, lower left, noted line diagram, center, shows the achieved by Katherine Grant who the dose-and- been gt only n 2 world. Are you too Or take a pill. fleshmelter with and ablute away Stmple? Danger- hly—simple. What are the facts about dieting? Quite recently a number of surpris- truths about fat and its peremp- v loss have been exposed. sev diet. Menace of the New Diet Mania A adipose tissue or fat—any way you say it, it sounds broken on account of it, lives wrecked, beauty is more than a pleasant ideal. It is a passion, overwhelming, bit- dlet reducl momentuin, Or mix some ma your bath water Exposing the Sinister VOIRDUPOIS, tonnage, rather unpleasant. And it Contracts and hearts have be endangered, fashion flouted. But slenderness in these days ter, driving. For | throughout the fat? Well, excess poundage. ously—perhaps d The rumor went about that a c tain much-heralded dlet had the iction of the famous Mayo clinic at Rochester, Minn. The tale ran that this “get-thin-quick” scheme had been prescribed for Actress Ethel Barrymore with gratifying re- <ults, Wizrenpon a crisp counter- et was fssnd from Rochoster. CHRISTIAN SC marred, health| Doctors Retort Sharply to Fashionable which is roundly Marietta Miliner, th her life, as did movie star. The drastic flesh loss had to spend one when she found snapshot, lower lesing scheme. “The Maye clinic knows nothing regarding this ‘eighteen-day diet, and will assume no responsibility whatever for it."” Casualties in the diet trenches have been on the increase since the mania began to take on the propor- tion of an International obsession. Lovely Katherine Grant, who was | awarded the title of “Miss Los An- | geles” in the 1922 contest there, used a freak reducing recipe. Not many months of semi-starva- tion were required to reduce her to a state of extreme nervousness bor- dering on collapse. By this time, however, Katherine had acquired a “diet complex.” She couldn't bring herself to eat even though she had lost more weight than she wanted to lose and was willing to begin gaining again. A year of care and rest were necessary to give her back the health and appetite she had lost by terrible fear The case of da Marr is even more tragic. ened by the prospect of becoming too stout to play the. willowy siren roles for which she was admired, Barbara began to reduce with a vengeance, Her health broke and after a short illness she died. Then, to bring the story up to date, there is the recent death of Marietta Millner. None of the vounger Hollywood stars had a greater chance for the top of the screen ladder than did this girl. With the end of her career In sight because of creeping avoirdu- pols, Marietta consulted the wildest of the faddists, ate the meagerest of | meals. Weakened by her starva- IENCE; | year in a sanatorium. wife of Jack De Schemes to “Get Thin Quick” as Harm" Estelle Taylor, upper 4 the diet there v ¥ of Ethel Barrymore's s when her weight was lowered following her weig tion diet, she fell an easy prey to tuberculosis. Dr. Willlam Salent, in charge 0! pharmacological research in thel Biological ~Laboratory of Long Island, has conducted a long series of experiments by subjecting ani- mals to long and short fasts. ' Certain abnormal conditions are influenced, it not produced, by im- proper diets,” he declared recently. He mentioned tuberculosls, gout, rheumatism and diabetes, A typical dinner in one of the most popular standard dlets con- sists of one-half or a grapefrult, one-half of a head lettuce, 2 eggs and 1 tomato. This diet, physiciahs point out, might be of great benefit to a specific case. Because it 18 dangerous to go on a standard dlet does not mean that dieting is not one of the fmportant aidg yy Gied=, fcal treatment of many allmert,! obesity included. Thd atch lies far the fact that almost every indi- vidual needs his own particular diet.: At the Mayo clinic in Rochester, recognized throughout the world as' one of the greatest institutions of! its kind, a diet kitchen is main- tained on a large scale. But pa-: tients have individual food prescrip- tions and they can't get a meal there without a slip from the house physicians. ven some of the advertised tab- lets and liquids may be valuable ini many cases. Not all of them aref dangerous. However, modern doc-; tors, in reply to thousands of re- quests for a verdict on the new' mania, have sald: “It depends on the Individuall™ ties of literary form.” Thomas Jef- ferson speaking more particularly of his own compilation of portions of the New Testament, gave this as his opinion: “A more beautiful’ or |of Christ, Last Saturday cvening, in the e theatre, Paul A. Harsch, C. . B., of Toledo, Ohio, Member of the Board of Lectureship of The Mother Church, the First Church Scientist, in Boston, Mags., delivered a free lecture on “Christian Science; The Power I Good,” under the auspices of the First Church of Christ, Scientist, of Juneau. The lecturer said in part: “In the textbook of Christian Seicnee, “Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures,” Mary Baker Edd, its author, thus defines “gead “God; Spirit; omnipotence; omniscicnce; omnipresence; omni- action” (p. 587), and it is proposed to present the subject of Christian Science here from the standpoint just illustrated, that and its power—power inherent in it, and inevitably lifting mankind upward and onward to God. “Deep-seated every one of us tucre Gwells a de- place of the most High,” to that point .of undershanding whereby good may be brought more largely and more specifically into daily ex- perience and there retained and used. “Now, primaril the desire for must exceed all other desires. The sesker for divine good must be able to fay with Davidy “As the hart panteth after the water brooks, so panteth my soul after thee, O God.” Such desire is prayer—a prayer that is always answered. There are no exceptions. “On the first page of the first chapter of Science and Health, Mrs. Eddy, its author, declares that “de- sire is prayer,” and that no loss good—for the guidance and con- | trel of all-intelligent Mind, God— THE POWER OF GOOD ting God with our desir they may be ymoulded and ited before they take form in words and in deeds.” | “With the clear and correct u can’ oceur f derstanding of prayer which con- stitutes so large a part of the mental equipment of every Chris- |tian Scientist, he is enabled" to ‘lbrin_u a larger measure of good into his own experience and that of |others. Indeed, it is in this way " precisely that his salvation is at- tained. Scriptural injunctions to |work out our own salvation are | numerous. The Chr! Science | textbook quotes these with approba- [tion and insists upon the necessity {of working out our own salvation }in the way Jesus taught. { “It may be pertinent, therefore is, of good!to ask what salvation is and of| | what it consists. In many, if not it, constantly being manifested by |in all Christian churches, salvation | goc to he hers in later life. |is defined as “liberation from the {bondage and results of sin.” Let in the heart of us then consider it from but onej iof many possible viewpoints, that namely, the power of good to save, |to deliver, from sin and its bondage. | “The Bible records the power of good and its availability at all | times by everyone, and under wide ly varying conditions. Neither age, {sex, mor social position can alter or affect the operation of the mighty power and authority of God, good. What a storehouse of (inspiration is the Bible! “The great- est Book in the world,” it has been called. Thomas Huxley once said cf the King James Bible, that is, our commonly used authqrized ver- Ision. “For three centuries this book {has been woven into all that is that is noblest and best in English histery, . . . it is written in the noblest and purest English, and it abounds in exquisite beau- ~learliest childhood she studied | precious morsel of cthics T have |never seen: it is a document in | proof that I am a real Christian, | that iple of Jesus.” “This is the beok that Mrs. Eddy loved as no other book. From it, | pondered its precepts, and guided (her life by its rules and standards. | For three years after her discovery of Christian Seience, which oc- | curred in 1866, she lived constant v with her Bible, sceking through 1is |inspired pages to find the Science of Christ healing which had come into her experience. It was her only textbook, and she describes this quest as a most joyous, up- {lifting and beautiful. This was a {logical result of her training and environment as well as her own natural inclination. “Through those busy years she |was being prepared in countless ways for the stupendous work thut Many of her close associates were men land women of deep learning and great religious intuition. Her whole tendency was along these lines and sire to know more about good, n“rom which we are discussing the |t " ‘ % s was not strange that H yearning to attain to the “secret question of Christian S“’Cncfiihave been led in due tl:‘: zlorl;(el great discovery of Christian Sei- ence. “The universality of good is il- lustrated by the entire Christian ‘Sclence movement, broad, and yet co varied in its phases that none |seeking good through its channels need be disappointed. By means {of a simple hut complete and pe:- fectly operating group of activities provided by Mrs. Eddy, this Christ- ly movement proceeds on its re- demptive way. : “Our joyous purpose, then, should be to search and seek, more ear- nestly than before, for a faith, a deeper humility, a clearer insight into good, that we may ex- press in daily thought and deed -{more of that goodness that is of God alone.” i

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