The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 4, 1933, Page 2

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i THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE SATURDAY NOV. 4, 1933 “\a\\\‘e' Order N ow . . . and take advantage of the low price. U. S. SENATOR J. B. KENDRICK gress from Cowboy Dies at Ranch Home (Continued from Page One) later revised the diagnosis as ure- mic coma. Senator Kendrick was stricken at his desk last Wednesday night. No “Whooping up*“ A cowboy prototype of Abraham Lincoln, who studied by lantern light in the ranch bunkhouse while his fellow cowpunchers were “whooping it up” in saloons and dance halls of nearby towns, char- acterized the rise of John Ben- jamin Kendrick to one of the | wealthies livestock ranchers of | northern Wyoming and a seat in | the UniteT States Senate. Senator Kendrick had complet- ed only seven grades of the gram- mar school at Florence, Texas, when at the age of 16 he be- came a cowboy. Feeling the need of an education eight years later, ranch he PASSES AWAY Man Who Reached Con-| Shares Hubby s Fund Separated from her wealthy hus- band, Clifford Warren Smith, well- known society aviator, six months Our Showing is Most Complete We've always been proud of the blankets we offer in our advance sales. But the ones we have offered in previous years couldn’t touch these. They are better than we have ever had before. The wool is soft and fluffy, the ribbon thai binds the edges is heavy, lustrdus satin..: Act at'onece! Yes! Block plaids and plain color pastels. an extraordinary assortment! ALL-WOOL BLANEKTS Floral Single Blanket, tin bound—rose, orchid and green, 72x84—Extra Fancy 72x84—5-Point Hudson Bay Style Blanket, white, green, fawn and blue, $12.00 Blanket, $9.00 72x84—2-Tone Single 72x84—Single Blanket, solid colors rose, peach, tan and green, ] Khaki Single Blanket, pre- $5.00 TV iu-" shrunk, 66x80 72x84—Double Blanket, plaid effect, pastel shades with white, $12.50 and $9.50 56x7¢—4-pound “Happy Camper” Grey’ Double Blanket, extra special, $4.50 There are all wools, part wools, and cottons. Really PART-WOOL BLANKETS 72x84—2-tone Single Blanket, $3.25 60x80—Single Blanket, shades, $3.25 solid colors, pastel A“\u"*'Jqullal‘d (omfortable, $3. 25 72x84—Solid color, contrasting striped bor- der, extra special, $1.50 72x84—Supertex Double Blanket, green, blue, orchid and rose with white, $4.95 72x84—Double Blanket, effect, $3:25 pastel ghades, p]aid 66x80—Double Blanket, tan, gold blue, green, ori ch]d .lnd rose, 32 50 —y—r——— COTTON BLANKETS 70x30—Double Blankets, $1.75 ,, 70x99—Single White Sheet Blankets, $1.25 60x90—Single White Sheet Blankets, $1.00 72x84—Colored Pastel Plaid Blankets, $1.00 Notices for tnws church column must be received by The Empire not later than 10 o'clock Saturday | morning to guarantee change of Dean. sermon topics, etc. | 8:00 a.m.—Holy Communior.. | 10:00 am—Sunday School. g Er—wrpra— — 1 Eucharist and First Church of Christ, 11:00. 870 -=0ROHar { N Selehitiat | | Sermon. d— Evening service at Douglas. Sunday services will be held - 11 am. in the First Church of | Metropolitan Methodist Christ, Scientist, Juneau, on Fifth | | Episcopal Church » and Main Streets. The subject will| * 3oy e geworq Streets be, “Adam and Fallen Man.” REV. HENRY R. CROSS Sunday School at 12:15 pm “A place where wounded hearts Wednesday, 8:00 p.m. — Testi- are healed, monial meeting. Where weary ones may rest; Christian Science Reading Room' Where faith triumphant lays with jn church building. This room is Joy open to the public Wednesday| pis trjumphs at His feet.” afternoons from 2:50 to 4. 10:30 a.m. to 12:00 noon—Family ‘The public is cordially invited to i Eo attend these services and visit the ¢ to church if their parents Eatie Foom come with them. Parents and Northern Light Presbyterian | Church = Franklin at Fourth REV. JOHN A. GLASSE, Minister Mrs. J. C. Stapleton, Director Mrs. Trevor Davis, Organist “Where Welcome and Worship Meet” 10:00 am.—Sunday School. i 10:50 to 11:00 a.m—Organ Mo- Holy Trinify Cathedral | CHARLES E. RICE, THE VY. REV. 0! will d instructive material presented for their thought during this period. They will also be challenged to bet- ter living. A story sermon: “The Message of the Great Stone Face” | will be part of the worship service for adults and children. 7:30 p.m.—Evening Worship. We would urge you to develop the habit of attending the church serv- ice at the close of Sunday. You 11:00 a.m.—Morning worship. For | will find pleasure and profit in details see advertisement elsewhere [this hour of worship. Miss Stella in this paper. Jones is to be with us this week. Children will enjoy | | children will both find interesting | You know that she adds to a serv- |ice with her cello. The Pastor as | he reads the fourteenth chapter of Maiitcw's gospel develops the thought “A Frenzied Desire — A ! Head.” Wesley Guild meets at 7:30 p.m, lWednesda) An important meeting {of the Wesley wuild will be held in the Parsonage on Wednesday evening at 7:30 o'clock. Every mem- ber is urged to attend or send a |report of their activity. Ladies who |are strangers or newcomers to | Juneau are invited. | In extending an | these services we pray that you ,may experience the joy of the Psalmist when he wrote: “I was glad when they said unto me let us go unto the house .of the Lord.” invitation to DD Sa— | Catholic Church o ) Church of the Nativity | Fifth and Gold Streets WM. G. LeVASSEUR, SJ, Pastor 6:30 a.m.—Holy Mass. 8:00 a.m.—Holy Mass and In- structions. 10:30 am~Holy Mass and Ser- mon. i REV. tion of the Most Blessed Sacra- ment. Holy Mass daily at 6:00 and 8:00. ’j Resurrection Lutheran Chwrch | Corner of Third and Main Etreet.‘! REV. ERLING K. OLAFSON, | Patsor. “The Priendly Church” 10:00 a.m.—Sunday School, 11:00 am. — Morning Service. The Senior Choir will sing the anthem, “A Song of Thanksgiving” (Lighthill). The soprano solo part will be sung by Mrs. Leon Daniel- son and the soprano and alto duet by Inga Lindstrum and Minnje ‘Rogers, Two well known ladies have writ- [ten articles lately on the subject, 7:30 p.m.—Rosary and Benedic- % “What Religion' Means to Me.” They ‘are Mary Pickford and Pearl 8. Buck. Next Sunday the pastor will discuss this same subject and among other things will tell you why he does not agree with all the c:nwms of these two articles, o DA WAGGONER, Minister Sunday ltfvw 10:30 a.m,—Morning service. Sub- ject, “Growing.” Ephesians 4: 14-15. 11:30 a.m.—Bible School. Lesson, “Paul in Jerusalem.” Acts 15: 1-35, 230" p.m.—Services at Douglas 7:30 p.m.—Evening service. ‘Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. — Midweek Prayer Service. A cordial invitation is given to attend these services and worship with us. 5 The Salvation Army | : Pa-filic meetings: Sunday—2:30 p.m. Sunday School—3:30 p.m. b | Bethel: Pontecogtal Assembly | CHARLES C. PERSONEUS, Pastor. Y services: 11:00 a.m.—Morning worship. 12:00 noon—Bible 8chool. 7:30 p.m—Evyening service. Tuesdsy and_ Fridays, 7:30 pm.— Evangelistic Bervices. Everyone cordially invited to all these services. The Lord's Supper the first Sun- day of .each month. Seventh Day Adventists Corner Second and Franklin Sts. “Where Hungry Souls Are Satisfied.” VERNON GYES, Pastor (absent) Sabbath services each Saturday atternoon. 1:00 p.m.—Sabbath School. 2:00 p.m.—Services, | County, Texas, while on a Wyoming started to grind away nightly on grammar, arithmetic and history in the bunkhouse. The habit evi- dnetly became life-long, for later when he became a catile owner he always carried a book, either arithmetic, literature, history or | grammar, wherever he went, whether on the roundup, or in the cattle train taking the animals !to one of the great middle western livestock markets. Bronzed by the sun and wind of the prairies, even after years of service at Washington, Sena- tor Kendrick was a man of the West. He was six feet tall and of a powerful, muscular frame and body. | The cattleman, who acquired a small empire of 200,000 acres for his herds in northern Wyoming and southern Montana, did not be- come interested in politics until 1910, when he was elected for two successive terms to the Wyoming State Senate. In 1914 he was elected Governor of the State and in 1917 resigned as Governor to be elected to the United States a Senate, where he served for two terms, then re-elected. Senator Kendrick was born on Hand Holds 10 Glasses September 6, 1857, in Cherokee SA ! where his parents COLUMBUS, O. — One of the were cattle ranchers. master beer-stein handlers of Co- | Riding Trail lumbus, Joseph Herget, boasts After young Kendrick left school he became well-known as a cow- boy and was assigned to the dif- ficult task of ‘“riding trail” on thousands of head of cattle in transporting them on foot over the _ vast expanse of uninhabited prai- ries and mountains. In this ca- pacity, he came to Wyoming in 1879, riding trail on a herd of cattle from Matagordo Bay on the Gulf of Mexico in Texas to the Running Water River in north- eastern Wyoming, a distance of 1,500 miles, the journsy taking five months. He was employed on this journey by Charles W. Wulf- Jen, a Texas rancher, who was moving his herds to Wyoming, and later not only became Wulfjen's foremen on his northern Wyom- ing ranch, but married his daugh- ter, Eula, then a school teacher at Greeley, Colo. TReturning to Texas in 1883, Ken- drick invested his savings of about $150 in a small herd of catfle and again trailed them to Wyoming, where he established his own ranch, Senator Kendrick’s early denial of himself from the pleasures of the cowboy, such as gambling, lat- er brought out his desire to pre- vent gambling on his ranches. ago, Claire Luce, stage star, ls to receive $25,000 a year for cording to an agreement signed by her husband. 'he payments will be made from a trust fund from which Smith receives $80,00¢ annually. game. Instead of discnarging them he “sat in" himself and, before it was finished, he had “cleaned” the entire group. | During his service at Washing- ton, the Senator directed his ranch from the capital, but he never failed to ride the roundupf and eat from the chuck wagon in| the summer. Cat Mothers Chickens PLAINFIELD, Wis. — Turned | down by a flock of hens, a late| season hatch of chicks on a farm near here is being mothered by a cat. Ernest Cornwell's chickens were missing, but in the haylof: | he found the cat's “nest” and the | chicks which tabby had carried up | flight of steps. | e something of a record with his feat of balancing 10 full 12-ounce glass- es of beer in one hand. g gt Dnlly l:mpnn Want Ads Pay Not Because We Are Cheaper BUT BETTER RICE & AHLERS CO. PLUMBING HEATING SHEET METAL “We tell you in advance what job will cost” engaged in a poker — Once he approached a group of his cowboys, NORTHERN LIGHT PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Franklin at Fourth Rev. John A. Glasse, Minister Mildred Stapleton, Director Carol Beery Davis, Organist “Where Welcome and Worship Meet” 10:00 am—SUNDAY SCHOOL: With ‘classes for all, de- partmentalized 50 as to make for interest and helpfulness, re- gardless of your age. 10:50 a.m —ORGAN MOMENTS: “Melodie” (Massenet); and “Reverie Interrompue” (Tchaikowsky). A ten-minte period for meditation while enjoying the restful strains of the pipe organ. 11:00 a.m.—MORNING WORSHIP: Minister's subject, “Lost Hopes, Blind Alleys, the Way Out.” Solo by Max Scriber, “The Voice in the Wilderness” (Scott). Pipe organ offertory, “Grand Offertory” (Batiste); and postlude, “Postude in D” (Scarruolin). “Children’s Moments” are devetode to a chort talk given by the minister for the younger ones present. 7:16 p.m.—ORGAN MOMENTS: A musi of the even hour. “Stillness of the Night"” from Jocelyn” (Godard); “Andantino” (Wagner). 7:30 p.m.—EVENSERVICE: Observing the 21st anniversary of the Girl Scouts of America, with Juneau Girl Scouts as spec- ial guests. Minister’s subject, “She’s a Good Scout.” Cheir anthem, “Praise the Lord, All Ye Nations” (Morrisen). “Hymn of Scout- ing,” sung by Juneau Girl Scouts. Whistling duets by Mabel ] treat in the quiet (Chubb); “Berceuse (Lamare); “Evening Star” Milter Meadows and Carol Beery Davis, “His Eye Is on the Sparrow” (Gabriel); and “The Old Rugged Cross” (Bennard). Organ postlude, “Now the Day Is Over” (Williams). J. 8. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU The Weather = By the U. 8. Weather Bureau) LOCAL DATA Forecast for Juneam and vicinity. beginning at 4 p.m., Nov. 4: Possibly rain tonight, Sunday generally fair; moderate to south- erly winds. ‘Time Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity Weather 4 pm. yest'y ...30.41 42 83 SE 12 Rain 4 am. today 3047 43 6 SE 12 Rain Noon today ....3040 . 43 L. 84 SE 12 Rain ¥ CABLE AND EADIO REPORTS PRI TOMBEES) . 151\ .. gt on oot B, WORSHORE SH G YESTERDAY | TODAY Highest 4pm. | Lowest4a.m. 4am. Precip. 4am. Station temp. temp. | temp. temp. veloelw 24hrs. Weather Barrow -4 -4 |'..5<38! -4 0 Cldy Nome 26 22 | 12 14 12 0 Cldy Bethel 30 28 | 20 20 10 12 Clear Fort Yuwon 18 18 | 16 18 0 .06 Snow Tanana 24 2¢ | 18 1§ 0 06 Snow o Fairbanks 42 38 | 26 28 4 12 Snow Eagle 30 30 | 8 30 16 0 Cldy St. Paul 38 34 | 32 36 24 Trace Snow Dutch Harbor 42 40 | 30 32 0 20 Clear Kodiak 44 42 | 42 44 20 12 Clear Cordova 44 44 | 36 36 6 116 Clear Juncau 4“4 42 | 4?2 43 12 .18 Rain Sitka .. 45 - 40 —_ - 35 Rain Ketchikan 54 42 | 34 36 0 0 Pt. Cldy Prince Rupert ... 48 44 | 88" iag 4 0 Pt.Cly Edmonton 24 20 | 10 14 4 .06 Pt.Cldy Seattle 50 | 42 44 10 0 Cldy <« Portland 54 | 42 42 6 .01 Cldy San Francisco 0 62 | 58 60 22 0 Clear ‘The barometric pressure is high throughout Alaska, but relative- ly low in the Northeast with rain or snow over most of 'Eastern Alaska. The pressure is also relatively low in the western Aleutian Islands and north of Hawail. Temperatures have risen in Eastern Al- aska, except the extreme Southeast, and have fallen in Western | | P reoroe Juneau Cash Gidcer CASH AND CARRY Corner Second and Seward Free Delivery CRAZY CRYSTALS Butler Mauro Drug Co. Phone 58 The Gastineau Our Services to You Begin and End at the Gang Plank of Every Passenger-Carrying Boat l THE HOTEL OF ALASKAN HOT ELS s XMAS CARDS DISTINCTIVE! DIFFERENT! SOLD BY— and Imprinted by THE EMPIRE Printing Co. PHONE 374 And Our Represematxve Will Call! Or See Them at tfie Empire Ofice! e BT . aant]

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