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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, SATURDAY CURTAINS R EVERY ROOM $1.00 to $2.50 $1.25 to $3.50 $1.00 to $2.95 E PANEL 75¢c to $2.25 each 50c each $3.95 each $3.95 each 25¢ to 50c yard 50c yard MARQUISETT MESH PAI 3(X( )M CURTAINS YWER CURTAINS H $1.00 yard and up 50c yard "RY CRASH VONKSCLOTH—50 in. DRAPERY DAMASK CREJONNES 75¢c yard and up 3 yards $1.00 SALE——HOUSE DRESSES Sizes 14 to 52 $1.00 each B. M. Behrends Co., Inc. “Juneau’s Leading Department Store” Notices for this church column|“God in the Making of a Nation.”|tion of the Most Blessed Sacra- must be received by The Empire Deut. 8:11-20 ment. not later than 10 o'clock Saturday| 11:00 a.m.—Morning Sermon. Sub- | morning to guarantee change of ject, “John’s Witness.” “John did no | sermon, topics, e m s; but all things that John AT spake of this man were true.” John | RESURRECTION LUTHERAN | 10:4L CHURCH 7:30 p.m—F “The Friendly Church” ple’s Service. Topic, “What Was Corner of Third and Main Streets |Jesus’ Estimate of Human Life? Can 11:00 a.m.—Morning Worship. REV. JOHN L. CAUBLE We Live by It?” Matt. 18:1-6; 16:28 12:00 noon—Bible School. Classes Pastor Wednesday, 17:30 p.n.—Midweek for all -Sunday School [Prayer Service. A study in the Book| 1:30 p.m—Broadcasting a service Morning Worship,|°f_Romans PEer: IRINY, Matthew 34-46,| Friday, 7:30 pm.—Young People’s| 7:45 p.m.—Evening Service. (18th Sunday after Trinity) Social at the home of the Pastor. ‘ich‘Sdflyv 7:45 p.n.—Gospel serv- ST A ot “The Law and| A cordial invitation is given to all |ice. < eaiids Moo, | EBIP N s meeting. Musical program: prelude, “Noc- | wlihau Communion Service the first Sun- | turne,” Mendelssohn; offertory S day of each month. Rt Everyone cordially invited to all i 3 these services. “Graciou Divine,” the choir Torkelson, pianist Wednesday: Children’s choir re- hearsal 4 pm.; Junior Choir meet- ing at 7 p.am.; Senior Choir practice 8 pm The Holy Sacrament of the Lord's Supper will be administered in church next Sunday, October 3 11 am. BETHEL PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY 121 Main Street CHARLES C. PERSONEUS Pastor Sunday services: ening Young Peo- 10:00 a.m. 11:00 a.m Holy Gospel, FIRST CHURCH OF CHRI SCIENTIST Sunday services will be neld at {1 am. in the First Church of Christ, Scientist, Juneau, on Fifth | and Main Streets. The subject wilt be “Reality,” { 10:00 a.m—Sunday School Wednesday, 8:00 pm. — Testi- | monial meeting. ourl Christian Science Reading Room allin church building. This room 18 |open to the public Wednesday |afternoons from 2:30 to 4. 'HEDRAL, { The public is cordially invited to stiend these services and visit the reading room. Spirit, Dove Miss Kathry b THE SALVATION ARMY Willoughpy Avenue ADJUTANT AND MRS. TANNER LIEUT. M. L. MORRIS Sunday, 2:30 p.m.—Praise meet- ing. Sunday, 6:00 p.m.—Sunday School. Sunday, 7:30 p.m. — Balvation meeting. Tuesday, 7:30 p.n.—Public meet- ing. Parade. ‘\ Wednesday, 7:00 pm. — Guard Friday, 7:30 p.m.~—Public meet- ling. All are welcome. HOLY TRINITY C EPISCOPAL Fourth ang Gold Streets THE VERY REV. CHARLES E. RICE, Dean Services: 8:00 am Holy 10:00 a.m.—Sunday 11:00 a.m.—Morning germon ning service at Douglas, CHAPEL BY T 3 tz Cove Cor |REV. JOHN A Sur one LAKE ald Highway | Minister School at 9:45 o'clock for hour, with well- ght classes for children of all age-groups; and 1e L Guild meets next Fri- @ Welcome for everyone living out y in Trinity Hall, at 2:30 pm |the highw interested to come and| Wednesday, September 29 have | with us Michael and All Angels, Ho munion 10 aux Sunday comm School prayer VENTH-DAY ADVENTIST CHURCH Corner Second and Main Streets f. L. WOOD, Pastor Note: The services of tuls church are held on Saturday, the seventh (day of the week. Sabbath school Saturday, 10 a.m. Bible classes for all ages. Sabbath Worship, 11 a.m. Sermon by pastor or church leader. Tuesday evening at 7:30, midweek prayer and devotion. D Whals Alwast Sinks Steamer in Collision and | st Com . NORTHERN LIGHT PRF TERIAN CHURCH “Where Welcome and Worship Mee Fra at Fourth REV. JOHN GLASSE, Minister| X . MRS, TREVOR DAVIS, Organist | cndent 9:45 am.—Sunday School. morning wor 10:50 to 11:00 a.m.—Organ ments 11:00 SBY - 10:00 a.m Finnegan, There will be ship service this Epworth League Des ing at 6:45 pm president 8:00 p.m—Ev ice, at which time R Mo- | otio Gene am our Morning Worship. | SYDNEY, NSW., Sept. 25. — The Ivertisement elsewhere British freighter, Jevington Court, |almost foundered in Bass Strait, {between the Australian mainland paper. ning Wor |is ended, as SWITGHBOARD IS INSTALLED HELLO OFFIGE Old. Instrument Expires! with Age—New System Is Now in Operation On Wednesday morning at 9:50 o'clock, death overtook the 23 year old switchboard at the local office of the Juneau and Douglas Tele- phone Company. The end was peaceful and quiet. It's demise not unexpected, for it had been | ing for the past few years; an ail- ment of which there is no cure old-ageitis. ~As the last moment| of life drew near, Mrs. Anna Web- ster, President of the company, and telephone employees gathered round to witness its final service and as Number* 3202 (Mrs. Walthers) fin- ished talking to 318 (Sigrid's Beauty Shop) this public servant, which has conveyed tidings of joy and sor- row, of hope and despair, of wealth | and poverty, of birth and death, of | |sickness and health, of hatred and | love, through all these many years, | passed out of existence and is no| mo! In its place is a new board, which with other accessories represents an expenditure of $14,000 and is the latest type of manual switchboard, having many features that will pro- vide Juneau with the highest pos- sible type of service. The auto- matic ringing feature will not be put in operation until all party lines bells have been changed, which will probably be the early part of next week. Most people have little, if any,! idea regarding the cost of telephone | equipment and it might be inter- lesting to know that the bells alone |purchased for the party lines rep-| resent an investment of over $2,- 000, not including the labor and ex- pense of installation. In a short time new directories will be furnished and as there will 'be changes in some barty line numbers it will be necessary to call by number, as the operators will be unfamiliar with the new listings. If a name is given instead of a number the call will be given to “Information” who will inform the subscriber which number to call So in order to avoid this delay and get better service please call by number. The telephone company wished to again impress upon the general public that under no eir- cumstances should the receiver hook be handled until the conversation s it will automatically and instantly disconnect the line. It will be noted that the first connection over the new board was 3568 (sawmill office) calling Thane 5 (Dupont) which was trunked over from the old board to the new. The firest connection to originate and be completed on the new board was 663 (Radio Engineering Company) calling 664 (Alaska Air Transport). The operators learned to oper- ate the new equipment very readily and are giving excellent service, al- though this will be improved upon when all parts of the new equip- ment are put into service and the new directories are in use. HITLER'S HOME ATTACK PROOF LONDON, Sept. 25. — A massive ten-foot electrieally charged steel fence, anti-aircraft guns and ma- chine guns protect Dictator Hitler's peaceful, picturesue chalet at Ber- chtesgaden, nestled high in the Ba- varian Mountains. The Berghof, as this country re- treat is called, the most highly fortified palace in the world, ac- cording to the London Daily Herald. | Berghof, and it stands on Obser- alzberg surrounded by 2,500 acres of beautiful forest. In this forest, states, are several small buildings,| which would pass as peasants’ cot- tages. Instead, they house Hitler’s| bodyguard and machine guns are trained from the windows. } On the heights of the mountain,! anti-aircraft guns are cnmourlag-‘ ed and somewhere near the Berg-| hof, underground cellars have been built, Before a stranger is invited to| sign the hotel visitors’ book at Ber- | chtesgaden, the Herald alleges, he| is ordered to fill in a document| detailing his life’s history. The village of Berchtesgaden has been thoroughly purged of all “un- desirable elements.” Their places have been taken by a small army of “pedsants,” none of whom speak the local dialect. Their function is to watch stran- gers, and particularly to sce that no one sets out in the direction of Berghof, the ““fortress” home of Der Fuehrer. ————————— BACK IN CORDOVA CATHOLIC CHURCH {.md Tasmania, after colliding with Church of the Nativity of the |a giant whale during a gale. The Blessed V. M. Juneau |ship's propellor and hull were dam- Fifth and Gold Streets laged in the collision, WM. G. LeVASSEUR, S.J., > > Pastor | INTERIOR WEDD day Masses: | Mass and Instruction.| -Sunday School. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH High Mass and DAVID WAGGONER, Minis [str n | home. 10:00 a.m. — Bible sehool. Lesson! 7:30 pm.—Rosary and Benedic- |ener. will preach. Miss will sing On Wednesday eve B be a “Get-together-dinner Social Room of the ch members of the Ladies husbands, and friends of the G Mary Bahnke and Jesse V. Pfleg- gor were recently married at Fair- In- |banks where they will make thelr He is a well-known gard- m Mrs. C. T. Davis and daughter, Adeline, arrived in Cordova recently following a trip to Seattle and Ta- coma. They also visited in Cali- fornia. VACATION OUTSIDE Mrs. W. A. Richelson, wife of the superintendent of thfe Kennecott mine, returned to Cordova after a visiting trip Outside. ] | U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICUUTURE, WEATHER BUREAU THE WEATHER Forecast for Juneaun and vicinity, beginning at 4 p.m., Sept. 25. Light rain tonight and Sunday moderate southeast winds. LOCAL DATA Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity yest'y 3016 49 4 s 5 today 30.16 49 48 S 10 today 30.14 50 94 S 6 RADIO REPORTS TODAY Max. temp. Lowest 4a.m. 4am. Precip. 4am. Station last 24 hours temp. temp. velocity 24 hrs. Weathex Anchorage | 37 — — 02 ; Barrow K 30 10 0 Nome 6 46 Bethel 22 Rain Fairbanks ¥ Rain Dawson 02 Cloudy St. Paul 1Dutch Harbor ' Kodiak Cordova Juneau Sitk: Ketchikan {Prince Rupert Edmonton Seattle | Portland San Francisco 62 New York 82 | 66 Washington 4 58 WEATHER CONDITIONS AT 8 A.M. TODAY Seattle (airport), cloudy, tempe -ature 48; Blaihe, cioudy. (toria, cloudy, 51; Alert Bay, fogdy, 47; Bull Harbor, cloud ENT Time 4 pm 1 n Noon Weathee Lt. Rain Lt. Rain Lt. Rain Cloudy Rain Cloudy Cloudy Cloudy Lt. Rain Rain Rain Cloudy Cloudy Cloudy Clear Cloudy Clear 38 52 e 52 52; Vic- Prince dollars in quoted values lab built v Losses of from $1 te $4 a share $5 to $10 piled broadest CORN TRADING SUSPENDED i tors today tember contracts $1.10%, ta lation. A One Bright Spot in ‘ fined larg ito fight and it was firing firing at es guns on tze. in kind, the z0 course | ble. There are forty bedrooms in the y i i\ 1931 and war ferent (war seriously and c {move in on the newspaper | S ;Rnpnrt. raining; ‘Triple Island, rain'ng; Langara Is ] Ketehikan, misting, 52; Craig, ¢louiy, 54; Wrangell, 50; Pet- ersburg, misting, 49; Sitka, cloudy, 52; Radioville, ning. 47; Juneau, ining, Skagway, raining, 46 Hawk Inlet, raining; Hoonah, clou-~ |dy; Soapstone Point, misting, 46; Csrdova, partly cloudy, 4 Chitina, {foggy, 40; McCarthy, cloudy, 40; Por age, cloudy, 44; Anchorage, clou- {dy, 48; Pairbanks, cloudy, 42; Nenana, cloudy, 42; Hot Springs, cloud |42; Tanana, cloudy, 44; Ruby, cloudy, 41; Nulato, cloudy, 42; Kalt {taining, 44; Flat, cloudy, 44; Ohogamute, raining, 40. 3 | Juneav, September 26 Sunrize, 5:52 a.m.; sunset, 5:50 p.m. Sep- ;wml)vr 27. — Sunrise, 5:5! Sunset, 5:47 p.m. WEATHER SYNOPSIs Low barometric pressure prevailed this morning from the Seward :I’(‘X:Hl\\l]:\ southeastward to the Gull of Alaska, there being two minor storm arcas, one over the Norton S>und with the lowest reported pres- ‘sure 29.78 inches at Nome and another about 200 miles southeast of |Kodiak, the lowest reported pressur: being 29.90 inches. High baromo- |tric pressure prevailed from'Skagw:y southward to California, the crest being 3042 inches over the Pacific Ocean at latitude 42 degrees and |longitude 140 degrees. High pressuve also prevailed over the Aleutians. This general pressure distribution his been attended by precipitation |over most of Alaska and by generally fair weather over the Pacific {Coast States. Temperatures were above freezng last night over the interior and ‘\\oilk'ru portions of Alaska. |TWO JUNEAUITES | NAMED TO SERVE IN HEALTH ASSN. Word has been received in Juneau In the recent fighting, moreover, of the reappointment of two prom- they drove the Chinese out of the inent health officials to positions important pass leading into oufer in the western branch of the Amer- v Mongolia, condu ig almost the dcan Public Health Association. ' campaign in a of mud Dr. W. W. Council is reappointed to! That sort of warfare nasly as a member of the public rela- the ,for both men and mules. So it w tions committee, while Mrs. Mary with unfeigned delight that local K. Cauthorne is to serve again as table-warriors noted the noon halt a member of the health education e fighting around Shanghai committee. hoped it marked the recogni-{ Announcement of the appoint- arfare of ething akin ments was made by Dr P. W. Cov-" Marquis of Queensbury rules. - ng, | DIRECTOIRE HATS Here is a new fall hat wh early nineteenth century Di of black antelope. It fits very clo line. A buckle of blackpatent leathe fashion influence of the Lily Dache makes it s the veriod. to the head and rises to a high finishes it. h ref! ectoire tocks Hit Toboggan; Slip Is Disastrous; Trading Is Suspended,September Corn, ington, president of the western branch of the association, with of- fices in Salt Lake Cit; e Ll T = ] AT THE HOTELS | Tk NEW YORK, Sept. 25—A fresh ng e in the stock market hed 1y many more million: Gastineau Georfe Robbins, D. J. Mackay, Fred Hartley, Tulsequah; Charles G. Parker, Gustavus; William Wes fall, Henry Musett, Juneau. Juneau G E. Gillespie and wife; Vane Vance, Minneapolis, Minn.; Evelyn Brugette, A. Belle Payne. riou whole during the last five y is of up in one markets in recent nd ion in o the GO, 1l Ch wded and Sept Empire classifieds pay. A g NORTHERN LIGHT PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Franklin at Fourth REV. JOHN A. GLASSE, Minister tr corn VA RED CROSS MEME S PLA usy wa - market manipu- arrying on Red Cro: ¢ were ie recently a meet- of the Cordova Red Cross Chap- yesterc cl Officers said the 1 to prevent e, ng ter It was decided to make October 11 nd October 30 the official opening E R ng dates of the local Roll GEORGE SCHMIDT Director “Unrecognized War” |’ (Continued irom Page One) - CORDOVANS SHOOT FIRST CAROL BEERY DAVIS Organist to those DUCKS each other to ch otther any foreign anced to be pufiin Three Cordevans, Frank Hoover, Duare and Jim Crawford shot > first ks of the 1937 season re recently. Although the weather was bad he opening day, several hunting set out on the Flats. FOR CONVENTION at “Where Welcome and Worship Meet” unboats that |t up the Yang- |t SUNDAY SCHOOL AT NINE FORTY-FIVE: High School young people’s department; also classes for children of all ages. ORGAN MOMENTS AT TEN-FIFTY: come early for this soul-resting period. WORSHIP SERVICE AT ELEVEN: SERMON, “Costly Gain and Profitable Loss.” ANTHEM, “Praisc Ye the Father” (Gounod). CHILDREN, short story by the minister. | responded |on t during Gunboat commar shore parties afternc ashore at dinner night BERRI with pounds of luscious blue- The Japanese mov 1 on Shang- rri ere recently shipped from ok Fairbanks to be served at the All- pa AL dinner of the Eastern Star ition in Indianapolis, Ind., ptember 24. wenty cast Thi MARTHA SOCIETY 1:30 this Friday in church parlors. COMMUNION of the Lord’s supper next Sunday at eleven. in't hesitate (')‘(‘ 1y the Chinese at night./on § 4 i 1 Remember!!! [f your "Daily Alaska Empire” has not been delivered ! By 6:00 P. M. Q/[m childven will cither [r[ay Z’w pano . . or wi” sluna’ usz-(]c :m(] envy llLose w[w 4 i flze (@al win is Loug,'d on easy terms + o Alaska Music Supply 122 Second St.—Juneau, Alaska A copy will be sent you IMMED- IATELY by SPECIAL CARRIER. (Do not call after 7:15 P. M.) Lhevinne, Gieseking, Schmitz and Iturbi Choose your piano as did Harold Bauer[ IO