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4} P We believe smart women will be practical this year — will insist on sensible styles that are always the loveliest and most becoming after all—they will demand quality in fabrics and furs and true workmanship in the tailoring f their Fall coats. You’l qualities in our offering of Fall coats and our ri('(-;’ are w'ry reasonflblc. Sizes to 46 $19.75, $32.50. $45.00 oooafpoooofe B. M. BEHRENDS CO., Inc. _ Juneau’s Leading Department Store 1 find these very Notices for this church column must be received by The Empire not later than 10 o'clock Saturday morning to guarantee change of sermon - topics, etc. 14 | Oct. 4 at 8:00 pm— first re- Tuesday, Senior Choir meets for hearsal and organization. Thursday, Oct. 6 at 2:30 p.m.— | Ladies’ Aid meets in the churc par}ors Mrs. Zenger and Mrs. Mello, hosfesses. First Churen of Christ, kit Scientist Sunday services will be held at 11 am. in thé First Church of Christ, Scientist, Juneau, on Fifth and Main Streets. The subject wflll be, “Unreality.” | 12:15 p.m.—Sunday School. Wednesday. 8:00 p.m. — Testi- monial meeting. Christian Science Reading Room In church building. This room 1s opent'to ‘the public Wednesday after poofts' from 2:30 to 4. THe public is cordially invited to attend these services and visit the ruflng Foom. Nurthern Light Presbyterian k| Church G e Corner Fourth and Franklin Sts. 10:00 am. — Special Rally Day program in the Sunday School, 11:00 am. — Morning Worship Volcal splo. “Teach Me toAPray." by Miss Alice Palmer. Serman by Rev. Warren Griffiths, “No man, having put his hand to the plough, and looking back, is fit for the Kingdom of God.” 7:00.pm—Intermediate Christian Endeavon. ; 3o jieod o mt g Resurrection LutBeran Charch | Corner 0f ‘Third and Main Streets REV. ERLING K. OLAFSON, ¢ *“The' Friendly Church” 10:00 a.m—Sunday School Rally Day service. A specitil Program has bzen #¥ranged for this service. Pro- motiokts, merit &Wards, and’ other importanit announcéments Wil ' be Lutheran Church 1ts h—obie Hopks, dnd Tts Possibilities. Everg . per‘sqn of Lutheran backgrou ;houf&a l;’e intcrested in this care- ful ysis and u-esenu:uon of facts. ' The Junior Choir will sing ¢ .-II a % ) pin—Luther League ‘meet- ln' Important busmess ig. |8 bigger life. ’ Metropol litan Methodist | Episcopal Church —R Rev. HENRY R. CROSS Fourth and Seward Stureets | “The church with the cordial wel- come.” 10:00 a.m.—Sunday School. Note the mew hour. This change will make it possible for all to be home shortly after 12 o'clock. A new class commences at this time “Par- ents as Teachers of Christian Liv- ing.” A vital subject for parents and those preparing for parent- hood. Please join this class. 11:00 a.m. — Morning worship. This being “Rally Day” in all' the ‘tvangelical churches a special mes- sagé as to its meaning is being prepared. 6:30 pm. Epworth League. Topic, “Environment and its Influ- ence on Life.” Young folk face a big problem in this question. 7:30 p.m—Evening worship. At this service we will have -special music ‘and instead of a sermon a -.1 day after Pentecost, the Solemnity of the Feast of St. Terese, the Patroness of the Didcese. 8:00 am.—Holy Mass and In- struction in the Church. 10:30 a—Hely Mass and Ser- mon in the Church, 7:30 p.m.—Rosary and Betiedic- tion. Friday, Oct. 7.—First Friday of the month, Feast of the Holy Rosary—Holy Mass in church at 8 o'clock, followed. by . the -usual de- votions. P The Vy. Rev. CHARLES E. Dean. 8:00 am—Holy Communion. 11:00 am.~Holy Communion and crmon - by - Bishop- Rowe. 12:80 pa.~Sunday School. Evaning service at - Daulha e [ Corner Secohd drid Frapklin Sts. VERNON ‘ GYES, ‘Pastor Sunday . évening, T:45— “Docs God- Evér Punish Christians, Like ‘He Did' the Irnelites" ‘Tuesday evening, ' Your' Bible,” Tecture. Sabbath, ‘Oct. 8 1:30 p.m.—Sanpath School. 2:30 p.m.—Regular services. ‘The public ls invited to all meet- “Know 7:30—Evening service. 7130 . “Aedissdsy, Midweek prayer m PR e O Bethel Pml«.'utd -Assembly “fa1 Miitn Street CHARLES ‘€. PERSONEUS, pageant entitled, “Out of the Fog,” will be presented. Al members ' of the family can find a group suited to their age in their “set-up.” We invite all to get better ae- quamted - with the work of the. church—not the local church alone ibut the resources of the church at large.’ The Jocal church is a means |, of getting in touch with men train- €d in their tasks of solving human problems. Consuilt your Pastor. Make use of the organization. Live | We invite you to spend an hour with us in worshipping our Heav- enly Father. " ' ‘Catholic Church Ohyrch of the Nativity Fifth and Gold Streets- Rev: WM. G. LeVASSEUR, 8J., Pastor Sunday, Oct. 2—Twentieth- Sun~ ALASKA MEAT CO. UALITY AND SERVICE TO YOUR LIKING Austin Fresh. 'l‘amales Deliveries—10:30, ‘TELEPHONE 15 "lnn Vice-President; Mrs. G. T. |8now; Becond Vice-President, Mrs, -Morning worship. 5 pii~Bible’ Schioot. - Mv P ottt “PEOple’s’ mieet- day, 7,:30 pm— Evangeltstic | The ‘Lord’s 8 day ‘0t ‘each i ol e irst mn- F ARG Public meet: Sundaye NEW OFFIGERS Mrs. V. 'W- Mualvihil Suc-| - ceeds Mrs. £: M. Pol- ley as-President At a meeting ' of the Ladies’ Gupd of Holy Trinity held yester- day at the residence of Mrs. V. W. Kasalica, " the foflowtm officers | Were - eleoted: “President, Mrs. V. W: Maulvihil; C. T. Gardner; Secretary-Treasurer. Mrs. J. C. Jones, the latter being Te-elected. A vate of thwnks and apprecta- ticd was given Mrs. E. M. Polley, theied mg fmm who has Serve el 1t !or’»seven! terms.” s The dates or mmm meéetings was changed to' the first and third meeting to be held next Friday e 1 ] &mmm iMr. Friflays of each month, the next | THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, SATURDAY OCT. 1, 1932. HORSE SALE AND WHOOPEE Report ws. in_Col- orful Fasluon Chltina—Twenty five dollars was realized from the sale of nine horses for which the government paid $1,175, regretfully reports the Chitina Herald, and ancther ‘item of news chronicled by the 'paper | Telates 0 a whodpee pfiny which some demizens ‘of the munity -participated. The Herald {,5 a publication that' issues that is edited by ‘aged 10, and Phillip. , 12 The accounts of the horse auction. and the whoopee celebration, which were containéd in a recent issue of the paper follow: | “It is surely a pity ‘when the jGovernment has to pay $1175 for {9 head of horses to use for a sum- mer and Has to let them go for $25 for the outfit, in the fall. When ,|if Chitina a few days 'ago, Mr, Moffit had to buy 6 bales of féed {to last them till the auction Wed. |’I'he Govt. cannot ‘help: - letting | them go so cheap when nobody will'‘pay much for them as it ‘costs s0 much to feed horses thru the long winter. It costs gbout $40 .| & month to feed a horse here. Vern Robinson. - Was Auctiorieer. Billy Tibbs Bot 3 very nice ones. The Mttle one “with a pretty white {M‘flowfi-hfl nose, he got for ‘only $1. Dog-musher Johnson got & couple of fast ones. O. A. Nelson Bot Mr. MOoffit's pet; & ‘another gentle 'faddle’ & 'pack horse, one for his 2 boys & one for his 2 girls, Mike Knowles of Upper Ton- sina bid in 2. He paid $5 for one very fine packer & took them over the Trail in big Carl Carlson’s| truck. Tn ‘Alaska many horses {haye to get killed for fox feed, on | ranches as it is so expensive to winter them. Day before yesterday some malt brot up from Cordova, wild ‘berrie -juice, yeast, hops, sugar & ]a lot of other junk, made Charlie oty Trinty Cathedral I ‘Phillips & Joe Escalita some of the strongest “hootch” known in ‘the ‘history of this Valley. When they decided it was about OK fo drink, they drank 5 gallons of it they said, & made whoopee. They start- +led whooping around & calling everybody all. the profanity they ‘could think ‘of & said they were going to kill Marshal Sorby & ‘and Mrs. Delehant. They were 86 very wild that most of the Na- ‘tives ‘& ‘all 'of the dogs were 'scared. It took ‘a dozen stromg Natives to tie them up & send fon the Marshal & even then they stif] - made a howl of a racket. Mr. Sdrby came ‘out in a car, & took them to jail. They made so much ndise in the car that people could | hear it way down the road. The ‘Commissioner gave Charlie & Joe 2 months in the Can & $25 apiece Pine, & since Gene didnt make |1t he ' just has bo pay the 'fine. Wel théy are n the Jaimouse now. The fight between Gene & Charlie started in the same:-old way, they both have the same idea about tHe synr;sll‘ e | Better 'Beer for Drinkers NEW YORK; Oct. 1.— Better beer—and strictly - American — is promised the country after repeal. The United States Brewers' As- sociation, not ‘a home-brew school, Wil open mext Monday With the, Targest enrollment: on record. The ‘Weddemy was founded in 1882 to k2 out master brewers and has b in - operation since, with a gn'?‘n lapse between 1918 ard 1930. Most of the academy’s students afe men with five to:ten years' Practical experfénce:- in - brewing, r, as one'of the' professers ex- ed, ‘“we can't: make master brewers out of men ‘Who have acade-mlc u-mmm ‘but no-technical ‘eXperierice, for you know a glass jot (beer! isnt all suds.”- The University of Who{gnsln fac- ulty has voted to permit students in’the college of engineering to enter law séfidél'lf'm 50 desire. By a new process st is be- ing' compressed m : Youthful ‘f_."d-;t;;s Ne‘f HéraldI e they invited Gene Ring over & | Famous Life . Termer Dies, Prison Farm Jesse Pomeroy, 40 Years in Solitary Confine- ment, Passes Away (Continuca from Page True) were found in his room, but the authorities declared this was only a “publicity” stunt. They said the articles were “a 16t of junk” and that the aging Pomeroy was phys- ically unable to use them. Seeks Pardon Pomeroy made frequent efforts to obtain a pardon, petitioning 'governor “after governor for execu-:, {'uve clemency. But the only look ! Be hdd ‘of the outside world was in 1929 when he was whisked in & closed Hutomobile from Charles- town to the Bridgewater state farm the transfer being made so that he could receive better medical| care. On that trip he marvelled when he saw an elevated train, a steam shovel and a steam roller; asked ‘bewilderingly where the horses had gone from the roads, saw his first jce cream cone and, noticing a neéwspaper bulletin board, was puz- Zled because he was still described as a slayer. Brief Crime Career Pomeroy's briet career of crime | began at the age of thirteen. Chil- dren four and five years of age had been found from day to day tied to telegraph poles, or strapped to boards, in Chelsea and the South Boston districts, stripped of cloth-| ing and suffering from cuts and bruises. They said an older boy had attacked them, and then beaten them with sticks and ropes. The schools of the| city were searched and in one Joseph Kennedy, a boy victim, pointed to Young Pomeroy and said | he was the assailant. “I know him by his eye,” said, Kennedy. Orie of Pomeroy's eyes| was almost albino, the other blue. ! To Reform School For these assaults, none of v,hxch‘ proved fatal, Pomeroy was cent to a reform school, from which he' was released 17 months later. Within six months he killed two. chndren in a frightful manner. ‘The pody of Horace Millen, four years old, was found on the clam flats in South Boston, naked and mutilated. That of Kittie Curran was discovered, stripped and mut- ilated buried in ashes in the cellar of the Pomeroy home. ‘. Guilty' of Murder It was for the death of the Millen child that a jury found| Pomeroy guilty of murder in the | first degree, ‘“on the grounds of altrocity.” Then for 36 years Pomeroy schemed to force his way to free- dom.' But after the prison cat spoiled his 1912 attempt, he turn- ed to less violent methods. For truSsed ‘them upy. SAYS COUNTRY | ISREADY FOR BETTER TIMES Vice - Presndent Gartis Make Another Polit- ical Address PONCA CITY, Okla, Oct. 1.— Vice-President Charles Curtis, in a political speech here, said meas- ures have been undertaken ‘by the Hoover Administration which haye placed America in ‘a position so the nation will be able to start on a new and lasting period of prosperfty. The candidate for re-election added that depressions have come after every great war and affer periods of -speculation “but our people have always come out and gone forward.” The Vice<Presdent is stumping the country as one of the prin- cipal Hoover spenkers ’MENUS of the_ DAY By MRS. ALEXANDER GEORGE BEET CHOW-SHOW RECIPE Breakfast Grapefruit Ready Cooked Wheat Cgreal with Cream Poached Egg> Buttered Toast Luncheon Celery Soup Beet Chow-Chow Bread Butter Pear ‘Sauce Tea Dinner Creamed Mushrooms and Ham Buttered Peas Coffee Bread Butter Head Lettuce Russian Dressing Grape Sherbert Coffee Beet Chow-Chow (Sour) 4 cups choppnd cooked beets, 2 the next five years he gave his time to the study of languages and to preparation of pleas for par- don. He gained a smattering or five languages and became well read in the laws affecting his own case. He also developed a flair for writ-| ing verse, contributing them to the | prison paper, The Mentor, under Lhe pseudonym’ “Gu pa,” In 1919 his vefses were compiled in book form. After his release from “solitary” in' 1917, Pomeroy was made a I"Lmsty" and acted as a messenger .around the Charleston prison. He became known fo those in contact with him as a good tempered but rather egotistical old man who showed the effects of espousal of his cause by interested persons. Phone 212 Window Cleaning | J. 8. DEPAR’IMEN'!‘ OF A LTURE, wgnm Bufiau eather LOCAL DATA /By the U, 8. Weather Bureau) Forecast for Juneau and vicinity, beginning at 4 p. m., Oet. 1: Rain tonight and Sunday; fresh southeasterly winds. Time Barometer Temp. Hum!dity Wind Veiocity = Weather 4 p.m. yest'y 29.62 54 96 s 10 Rain 4 am. today 29.77 52 92 SE 15 Rain Noon today 29.99 53 93 w 3 Cldy CABLE AND RADIO REPORTS YESTERDAY | TODAY Highest 4p.m. | Lowest4a.m. 4am. Precip. 4am. Station | temp. :temp. temp. temp. velocity 24hrs. Weather Barrow 14 14 | 10 14 & .01 Cldy Nome 34 34 24 26 6 0 Clear Bethel 42 42 26 26 4 0 Clear Fort' Yukon . 30 30 24 24 4 0 Clear Tanana .~ 32 32 10 24 0 0 Clear Fairbanks 2 42 30 30 4 © 0 Pt.Cldy Eagle S AN N R § 0 Clay St. Paul RN ] 44 42 44 24 24 Cldy Dutch Harbor ... 52° ' 52 46 46 0 02 Rain Kodiak . 46 46 | 38 40 0 .26 Clay Cordova . 44 44 | 4 4“4 6 152 Rain Juneau ... .. 87 54 51 52 15 61 Rain Sitka .. 57 - 40 - -_— 1.30 _ Ketchikan . ... 56 54 52 52 4 2.65 Rain Prince Rupert ... 58 56 54 56 12 94 Rain Edmonton ... 72 66 40 4 4 0 Pt. Cldy Seattle 62 54 54 0 0 Clear Portland .. kil 56 56 6 0 Cldy San Francisco 66 64 58 58 4 0 Pt. Cldy The storm in the extreme Southwest has moved slightly north- ward and is central near Unalaska accomjanied by general Tains in Southern Alaska, heavy at Cordova and Ketchikan, and hign northerly winds mear the middle Aleutian Islands. The pressure 1s relatively high in Northern Alaska with partly cloudy weather in the Interior and much lower temperature at Tanana where the minimum fell to ten degrees above zero. The pressure continues moderately high from the North Pacific States southwestward. cups chopped cabbage, % cup grat- t » ed horseradish, % cup chopped on- l EAT ' icns, 1 tablespoon salt, 4 table- | Breakfast and Lunch spoons sugar, % teaspoon paprika, at % tablespoon black pepper, 3 ocups [ Juneau Ice Cream vinegar. Mix ingredients and pour into I Parlor , . jar. Cover tightly and store in dark, dry, cool place. Creamed Mushreoms and Ham (Serving Four) H R o taicspoors yutter, 4 table- arry nace spoons flour, 2 cups mlk, % tea- . f1i4, spoon salt, % teaspoon paprika, % teaspoon celery. salt, 2-3 cup DRUGGIST diced cooked ham, 2-3 cup cooked “THE SQUIBB STORE” mushrooms. Melt butter and add flour. Blend and add milk and cook until creamy sauce forms. Stir con- stantly. Add rest of ingredients.| | Cook 1 minute. Serve on toast| | or poured around mashed potatoes. Garnish with parsley and serve. Grape Sherbert 1% cups water, 1 cup sugar, 2 tablespoons lemon juice, 1 cup grape Jjuice, % teaspoon salt, 2 egg whites YOUR BROTHER OR SISTER | The “BEAST OF THE CITY” | May Ensnare Her o s beaten. Boil sugar and water 2 min- JUST RECEIVED utes. ©Cool. Add rest of ingred- ients. Pour into freezer until stiff. Serve as a dessert or with meat course. Full Line of DOROTHY GRAY TOILETRIES When planning oven-cooked meals, use the oven to its capacity {for baking foods to be used at different meals. ‘Two Canadian copper refineries operated during 1931 with a total production of 202,304,390 pounds. ———— Gifts to the University of Texas have averaged $1,000.a day since it was founded forty-nine years Exclusive Agents Juneauw Drug Co. “There Is No Substitute for QUALITY™ Post Office Substation No. 1 PHONE 33 How to Get WEEK-END SPECIAL DQliqious, Finest Grade $L at the residence of Mrs, V. W. Mul- vihill, 1 2 FULL POUNDS—(A $1.75 box) for SPECIAL OFFER ON “'HARRY RACE Druggist * (The Squib Stres of Alsk) b——‘_‘.,_-—,-__—._. CARL JACOBSON JEWELER The world has learned that the only-way to make money:is to SAVE it. Get-rich- 5 quick is a dead slogan. J. A, BULGER A few dollars” ‘2 week, Plumbing, Heating, Oil accumulating interest Burner Work every month, ig a sure, Successor J. J. Newman safe plan to follow. It leads to security. DON'T BE TOO LIBERAL