The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, April 28, 1937, Page 8

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REV.CAUBLEIS | P TOBE LUTHERAN MINISTER HERE| Successor to Rev. Olafson Announces Acceptance of Juncau Post The Rev. John L. Cauble of Terre Haute, Ind., today announced his | definite acceptance of the position of minister of the Resurrection Lu- theran Church here, succeeding Rev. E K. Olafson, who leaves| for the States next month The Rev. Cauble leaves Terre Haute on May 12 and will stop at| § The Dalles, Ore., to attend the Pa- | Synod of the United Lutheran convening May 17 to May Rev. Olafson, who will sive his last service in Juneau on May 9, will also attend the Pacific Synod | Following participation in the meeting, Rev. Olafson is to spend the summer at Point Roberts, Wash. | and will then leave to attend the University of Chicago where he will work for a year to attain his Mas- s degree in church hisiory and cific Church, 2). The e | sociology. Upon receipt of his M.A.! he will return to church work in the States. | o The Rev. Olafson, who for the| iuisssimsise past six years has been a resident of Juneau, has been prominent in' | civic and welfare activities here | His successor has seven years' ser- | | vice in the ministry at Terre Haute. | Because of his marrage in 1931 to a commener, Prince Nicholas of Rou- | v brokheroF King Carol 11, has been stripped by the Crown Council of ull royal rights and has been declared *no longer a member of the royal family " A feud between the royal brothers has been brewing for years, | springing from the morganatic marriage and culminating in pelitical intrigues. Prince Nicholas is pictured above with his wife, formerly 11me. Jana Lucia Deletj, Miss Carolme Todd to Pre- sent Students at Luth- eran Church Duet work and class demonstra- B tion will mark the piano recital at which Miss Caroline Todd will present seventeen of her music stu- dents at 8 o'clock Friday evening in the Lutheran Church o ews ... 1S BETROTHED Give Reasons be the Misses Jacqueline Schmidt, Jane Williams, Zelma Gross, Claire, H me Olson, Diane Hunsbedt, Dorothy Engagement to M,- George | y wn fl Thibodeau, Frances Karinen, Mary L A Jukich, Mary Tubbs, Dorothy Reck, arssen Announc- Doris McEachran, Doris Gridley, ed Today OMAHA, Neb, Apr. 28—A 12- Shirley Olds, Mary Sperling, Ce- AL {year-old girl of this city recently| celia Thibodeau, Ruth Allen and: . and Mrs. G. A. Baldwin are | Wrote a child’s opinion of home own ship when she advanced the rea- sons why she would like her parents| to cwn their home. Her statement | follows 5 “I would like my daddy to own our home, because then we would| live in the same place a long time- alwe maybe nd 1 wouldn't have to move a and leave my friens 1 would d]\vay\ go to the same school ! where my friends go and where I know the teachers and the princi- Willane Roff. today announcing the engagement of their daughter, Miss Dolly Bald- win, to Mr. George Larssen, son of ARMY OFFICERS v George Lar INVITED 1D BE oSy it semtunssmmnt CHAMBER GUESTS of the cngagement comes announce men of the wedding date, May 2: Col. George E. Kumpe and Capt. the ceremony to be performed at Paul Edwards of the U, §, Signal the Baldwin home on West Twelfth Corps, who are here from Seattle, Strect. have been invited to be guests of _The bride-elect is a graduate of the Juneau Chamber of Commerce Juneau s and studied for some a5 sine: ollege. P2l at its luncheon tomorrow noon in in Seattle at business college. 4, o e i nnchentie Laresen 15 employed at the| ~We could fix up our home and 2 Tanl oMl oo i yard the way we want it, buld cup- sl e iy e ¥ e oty . |boards in the kitchen, and screen Thomv.Eue 1) G Ay Bagmpers of-| 18 Donorool Miss Baldwin, ‘gevs e e mb RS g e e fce in Washington stated that the €ral partics elven ‘during | (8 ORtRARNEO NEDIOIAT. Al hee I Tl g gaad e the UG et I could hrve a tree house and swing a Kl nbtal 1 5 or de- > 7 " vbe @ y C velopment of a ampall boat harbor MAITiage. She jand. masve S FRD iogl. G Hgewe {BoEnet o & SRAL DRG hactor 1 Ak G could plant flowers and bushes glas S e {wherever. we lived and be sure that | Jsland bridge can be submitted to Congress propmtly if no appeal is to be made The Chamber recently endorsed the recommendation made by the Army engineers for the site. -—— FOR LIVENGOOD we bloom, “If sometime we would bave if. all paid| would get to see them grow and MRS. E. HUNTER, SR., TO VISIT IN SOUTH Mrs. Earle Hunter Sr., is planning to leave tomorrow aboard the North my addy bought our home, for and then we would have more money to spend on things we want —Ilike vacation trips or a bicycle— Sea enroule to the south for a instead of putting so much into rent. John Alm, Livengood mining month’s visit with relatives and, “And I would feel so important man, accompanied by his son, H. friends. to be able to say: “This is our Alm, is a passenger aboard the Mrs. Hunter will stop in Seattle home: we own it " ¢ eamer Alaska, booked for Seward. and F land and will visit \\1’11l —————— Mr. Alm is returning north for her sister, Mrs. T. J. Donohoe in & the summer’s mining after spending Francisco. Mrs. Donohoe, 1mmu1\ the winter months at his home in of Cordova, is wellknown in CHURCH DINNER OF Ju- MARTHA SOCIETY IS TO BE HELD TONIGHT Today s the occasion of the Mar- tha Society annual church dinner| Coffee! Scrvmg it should be an event o wiich servinss are to begin at 3 5 o'clock this afternoon in the 26 g s Northern Light Presbyterian church - - - not ]USt an incidcnt. and to continue until 7:30 o'clock. Spring flowers will provide a background for the affair, one of the leading events presented by the So- ciety during ihe year. A large com- mittee of members are planning for Lhe oceasion. NEWMARKF.RS 'ARE HOSTS AT SUPPER Captain and Mrs. John New- marker are entertaining this even- /ing at a buffet supper assemblingi |twenty guests at their home on Sev- jenth Street. The affair, for which spring flow- ers will providt a setting, will be| followed by cards later in the eve- | ning. | | - ee— | CANNERYMAN ON ALASKA | Port Orchard, Washington. neau. Buying it should be a search for the finest flavor you can find. Schilling Coffee One for Percolator—another one for Drip and Silex DO YOU KNOW? RAY DIESEL and FUEL OIL BURNERS are leaders throughout the J. H. Schooley, cannery superin-| | tendent, is a passenger for the\ Westward from Seattle aboard the| steamer Alaska. He is booked to | transfer to the steamer Curacao at| ‘Cordova SEE THE NEW 1937 FULL AUTOMATIC DIESEL BURNER FOR HOMES AT Rice & Ahlers Company i 'I'he Vamty Box BEAUTY SALON i 307 Goldstein Bldg. Phone 371 PERSONAL HAIR STYLING | ROADS, AIRPORTS lif he does not CCC PROGRAM TO INCLUDE TRAILS, Work Under’Expansion of Conservation Unit to Be General, Fechner Says The work program under the expansion plan recently an- nounced for the Civilian Conserva- tion Corps in Alaska will include syruction of airplane landing . local roads, forest trails and new forest surveys, according to Robert Fecbner, Emergency Conservation | Director, in an announcement tof the Associated Press in Washing- ton today. Director Fechner said it also is| planned to make preliminary inve tigations to determine what land: are suitable for agriculture in the Territor; Under the expansion program which becomes effective immed- itely, the Director of local enrollees would be increased | from the present quota of 325 to a| yearly ‘average of 600 men and (lm increased enrollment is “primar intended to give more Indians A)ul Eskimos a chance to engage in) emergency conservation work.” Here| tofore, Fechner said, the work has| been confined to national forest| localities, but that under the ex-| pansion program other parts of the Territory will be included. Director Fechner planning a trip to Alaska in the near future to lock over the emergency relief work .md consider the further program hip it 'Man Loses 40 Pounds on 49.Day Fast | STOOPING OAK Tenn., April 28.—Physicians give Jackson Whit- low, who has been fasting for 49 chance to live even break his fast. | an even Whitlow’s weight has shrunk |from 137 to 97 pounds. He said will not eat until the Lord tc him. Cortg e | NOTICE ! For special fresh dressed chickers call Femmer, phone 114. ldf - v { Dr. Rae L(llmn C'\rl on, Optom- said the number| | ‘May Queén Pretty Erma Wooding of W. ton, D. C., was the ch it Wooster Iu.y fe [MRS. ED HERRON MRS. TED KEATON WlLL SAIL SOUTH Mrs. Ed Hvrmn 'm(l Mrs. Theo- dore Keaton are leaving tomorrow aboard the North Sea enroute outh Mrs. Herron is to travel as far east Philadelphia, her former home cre she will visit with her par- lents. She is taking her baby daugh- ter, Dolores, back east with her for a first visit to the Philadeiphia home, and expects to be gone about two months. Mrs. Keaton. is to visit in Repub- lic, Wash., with her parents, M: and Mrs. Mike Moran, and will re- turn to Juneau in the late summer - SOUTH FOR SUMMER Mrs. Toddy Baldwin will be ng those sailing from Juneau seattle tomorrow night aboard the steamer North Sea. While her husband remains here at his post with the Triangle Cleaners, Mrs. Baldwin will visit her parents, at oslyn, Washington. She expects to bo u)um most of the summer. v/ Copyright 1937, LiGGETT & Mvers Topacco Co, THE DAlLY ALASKA EMPIRE WEDNESDAY, APRIL 28, 1937. Sub- stratusphere Plane Is Ready for Test Flight BURBANK, Cal, April 28.—Army men said the big sub-stratosphere | plane built for the army is ready for its first test flight. The ship is designed to fly at 30,000 feet altitude and the army plans to purchase a fleet of high- COOKING TO BE TOMORROW !Mrs. Crone Will Give Dem- onstration at Northern Light Pres. Church " Scores of women are planning jattendance tomorrow afternoon at at bombers if these successful, o |the demonstration cooking lecture v — |which Mrs. Vena L. Crone will pre- sent at 1:30 o'clock in the parlors of the Northern Light Presbyter- ian Church. The demonstration, which is free and open to all men and women MRS. GLASSCOCK ABOARD SS YUKON scock, wife of the booked Mrs. C veteran Alaska Line Master, > i x . x over 16 years of age, will be re- for Juneau aboard the steamer Al Fvated ot iiday. svening REV1:80 aska on her current voyage, left L Y 3 the Alaska at Ketchikan to board {o'clock for the benefti of business the southbound steamer Yukon |women and ‘mothers unable to be ; | |present at the afternoon gathering which is commanded by Capt vy Orofd HEuowh s Tec. Glasscock. Mrs. Glassecock came |'mr$-c\ 1oru}r;e ha: lan“; X vth to join her husband following| Mrs. Thomas F. McAllister : wires =k |demonstrate following meat dishes at the meetings this week: fried chicken, Italian style; corned committee, Mrs. Thomas F. Mc- [peef with vegetables; creamed po- Allister of Grand Rapids. Mich.. |tatoes with pork sausage; tuna fish for years has been a prominent | She will o detibnatiate casserole, a 1 | - : political personality in the state. |various salad dishes, quick straw- path i cattle of their recent death in Seattle o elr New' difobtiicos this witsabie dis vision of the Democratic national D s FREEBURNS HERE Mr. and Mrs, Lawrence Freeburn were in Juneau for a brief stop yes- terday afternoon while the steamer berry shortcake and poppy seed North Sea was in port here. They ON WAY TO KODIAK | cake. were passengers aboard the steamer| poiveq to transfer to the steamer| Following the discussion, sausage !biscuits and Reliance coffee will (be served to those present, and various prizes are to be awarded. The prizes and supplies for the {demonstration have been donated |by the Sanitary Grocery meat mar- ket, the Centennial Milling Co., from Seattle to Sitka, where Mr. Freeburn is to take charge of the| Pyramid Packing Company plant for the season. Mr. Freeburn is pres- ident of the Pyramid Packing Co. Accompanying them to Sitka was Mrs. W. C. Freeburn Mr. Freeburn’s | Curacoa at Cordova, Mr. and Miz. O. Kraft are enroute to their home at Kodiak aboard the steamer Al- aska after a winter trip south. Mr. Kraft is a merchant at Kodiak R HOOKERS TO LEAVE mother, and wife of the Pioneer Al-f Mr: and Mrs. Charles Hooker m.n'h(' Reliance Co., and the Crescent askan mining and canneryman who I\ ifacturing Co. lied in- Beattle ricently. leaving tomorrow night aboard the | ettt oo |North Sea en route to California 3 | where théy are to spend the sum- e e by ; |MR. ALBERT NORMAN Al Mrs. Lottie spickett will join Mr.| MARRIED YESTERDAY o and Mrs. Hooker in the south inj| Lady Willie Forbus, woman attor-| yune. | TO ELEANOR WRIGHT ney from Washington, D. C., is a e S gy passenger bound for Cordova aboard| o, M, ARNOLD IN PORT Prinds-ure Bobeing BingeRbus. the steamer Alaska Making another call here for tions today, to Miss Eleanor E. b RS TR D {lumber and other supplies for the Wright and Albert Norman, who PACKER THROUGH |season’s preparations at the New were married at 8 o'clock last even- W. H. Harris, packer at Stevens|England Fish Company cannery at ing by Judge Felix Gray in the Creek, is a through passenger from|Chatham, the tender O. M. Arnold Commissioner’s office at the Fed- Seattle to Cordova aboard the stea- |was docked at the Juneau Lumber mer Alaska. Mr. Harris is enroute |Mills today north to commence preparations at eral Building. Witnesses for the ceremony were |Roy Thomas and Bert H. Berthall. R his packing plant for the fishing| ASST. AGENT ON ALASKA Mr. Norman, Juneau property season. | L. W. Lachelt, assistant agent for 'owner and employee at the Alaska e |the Alaska Steamship Company at Juneau mine, has been a resident Try Tae Empire ciassifieds . | Seward, is enroute to his post aboard of Juneau for some time. His bride the steamer Alaska. results, is omplmcd at the Rainier Club. . Oftfie ... men like’em ... women like ’em In the Big Town, you see lots of empty packages. That means that pack after pack of refreshingly mild, good tasting Chesterfields have satisfied hundreds... maybe thousands. Way out in Goose Creck Junction, you meet u‘b' with men who tell you that Chesterfields aremilder. .. youseeladies who tell you how good they taste and : what a pleasing aroma they have, Going East . .. or gaz'ng West « « « Chesterfield sati.vfies ‘em. . v P o

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