The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 13, 1937, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

I i e SSES| s Sale Dae (.. rtment Store e Hili LITTLE PIGS NEEDED IN ATLIN; BARR WILL ASSIST employees r cargo to- am from piano music Pigs,” also Transport £ & que LABOR SESSION | GIVES MORNING T0 SIX GUESTS officials of the Social Security Commission and the Unemployment Compensation Commission were guests at the morning session of he Alaskan Labor Party Conven- tion today. Those present were Hugh Wade, Director of the Social Securities Commission in Alaska; and Walter Sharp, John McLaughlin, E. L. Bart- lett, R. E. Hardcastle, and R. A. Bragaw from the Unemployment Compensation Commission. Wade addressed the body and ex- plained the need of cooperation be- tween labor and the government of- fices in straightening out labor problems. He suggested a conference of a committee from the Labor Par- {ty with the Unemployment Com- pensation Commission and the So- |cial Security Commission. | It was also suggested by Wade that there is a possibility of a labor |Alaska Planning Council. At the close of yesterday’s session, |the possibility of a marine hospi- tal in Alaska, similar to the Marine Hospital in Seattle was discussed as |was the need for a tuberculosis |sanitarium in the Matanuska Val- lley. | It was further suggestéd from the !floor that instead of a single mine linspector in the territory, there Ishould be a bureau of inspection to} |check on safety in mines. T, 1 representative being named to the, Notices for this church column | must be received by The Empire not later than 10 o'clock Saturday morning to guarantee change sermon, topics, etc. FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST of Bunday services will be held at 11 am. Christ, Scientist{, Juneau, on Fifth and Main Streets. The subject will be “Mortals and Immortals.” 10:00 a.m.—Sunday School. Wednesday, 8:00 p.m. — Testi- monial meeting. Christian Science Reading Room in ehurch building. This room 1s nfternoons from 2:30 to 4. The public is cordially invited to attend these services and visit the reading room. METROPOLITAN METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH Fourth and Sewara Streets O. L. KENDALL. Pastor 10:00 a.m.—Church School. 11:00 a.m.—Morning Worship. Epworth League, 6:45 p.m., Gene Rhode, president. Minnie Rogers will be the leader Sunday evening. 8:00 p.m—Evening service. Ladies’ Aid special social meeting Wednesday evening at 7:30. You will always receive a warm welcome at the Methodist Church. HOLY TRINITY CATHEDRAL, EPISCOPAL Fourth ang Gold Streets THE VERY REV. CHARLES E. RICE, Dean Sunday Services: 8:00 am. — Hoiy communion 10:00 a.m.—Sunday School. 8:00 p.m.—Vesper Service. No 11 o'clock service. RESURRECTION LUTHERAN CHURCH | “The Friendly Church” | Corner of Third and Main Streets ! REV. JOHN L. CAUBLE Pastor ! 10:00 a.m—Sunday School. | 11:00 am. — Morning Worship. | 6:30 p.m.—Luther League. nd a crate of » conglomeration one is quite ved some sort of staged in the City. to leave for rning with what ect, for the emer- return with pas- is no cer- cdamage upw tdred thous * More tha % Several tc Bto commuiticatit ‘Peters Creek Mi Company H - ROD DARNELL IS ENROUTE HERE SEAT Rod shigek 1 he Yu anmmounces t} or f 1 ®lowing officers Mer 1 v her sister in Kla- £ engin ‘esi W. N ! I A regon, for some time, # Anchorage 3 traveled as far south wdent, and H yymer home in Alabama :age. Secretary ¢ spent several days in san| Darr left Seattle zon enroute to Juneau ition of several week: P Francisco. 1ENT JUVENILES COPY ( The fitted body line ar schoolgi The coat is made worn with a round brown felt fastened closing of this youthfull by fashions Paris launched this fall brown woel, trimmed with leopard and hat, 's coat are i of nubt Casey Stengel New manager of the Boston Bees is Casey Stengel, former boss of the Brooklyn Dodgers, who suc- ceeds Bill McKechnie, recently hired as mentor of the Cincinnati Reds, in place of Charlie Dressen. German iliner Grashes; 10 Dead Holy Gospel, Matthew 24:15-28 in the First Church of open to the public Wednesday | for the members and their families | | Twenty-fifth Sunday after Triml,\" Sermon subject, “Blemished Of- ferings.” Music: prelude, “Andante Religio- s0,” by Lautenschlaeger; offertory, “Abentdfrieden,” by Lautenschlae- ger; hymns, 134, 382, 269. Miss Kathryn Torkelson, pianist. A congregational meeting will be held immediately after the service. Choir rehearsals will be held Wed- nesday at the usual hours. Thanksgiving services will be eon- | ducted in our church on Thanks- giving Day at 11 o'clock Ladies of the Aid are meet with Mrs. Olaf Thursday afternoon. ‘We welcome the visitors and un- Swanson churched of Juneau at our services. | | | invited to| |highway interested to attend. Pre- FIRST PRESBYTERIAN UHURCH | DAVID WAGGONER, Minisher Sunday Services: 10:00 a.m.—Bible School. |“The Christian Minister.” \4 6-16; II. Tim. 2:1-4. 11:00 a.m.—Morning Sermon. Sub- ject “The Authority of Christ.” “He mught as one having authority and‘ not as the scribes.” Ark. 1:22, 7:30 p.m.—Evening service under| Lesson, I. Tim. |provision made for them also. Fifth and Gold Streets REV. WM. G. LeVASSEUR, 8.J., Pastor November 14.—26th Sunday after Pentecost, The Solemnity of the Feast of St. Stanislaus Kosi 8:00 a.n.—Holy Mass and Instr tion. 10:00 a.m.—Sunday School. 10:30 a.m—High Mass and Ser- mon. 7:30 p.m—Rosary and Benedic- |tion of the Most Blessed Sacra- | ment. j 8:00 a.m.—Holy Mass daily. Sunday. ASSEMBLY 121 Main Street CHARLES C. PERSONEUS Pastor Sunday services: 11:00 a.m.— Morning Worship. Sermon by the pastor. 12:00 npon—Bible School. Classes for all. | 1:30 p.m.—Broadcasting a service over KINY. 7:30 p.m—Evening Service. Tuesday, 7:30 p.m.—Gospel serv- Ice. Friday, 7:30 p.m. — Young Peo- pW's meeting. | Communion Service the first Sun-' day of each month. Everyone cordially invited to all these services. | THE SALVATION ARMY Willoughoy Avenue ' Sunday, 2:30 p.m.—Praise meet- ing. Sunday, 6:00 p.m.—Sunday School. Sunday, 7:30 p.m. Salvatior meeting. Tuesday, 7:30 p.m.—Public meet- ing. Parade. Wednesday, 7:00 p.m. — Guard Friday, 7:30 p.m.—Public meet- ing. All are welcome. SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST CHURCH Corner Second and Main Streets A. L. WOOD, Pastor Note: The services of tuis church |are held on Saturday, the seventh |day of the week. Sabbath school Saturday, 10 a.m. I Bible classes for all ages. Sabbath worship 11 a.m. S"xlm'(h" Sermon or Bible reading. Prayer Meeting and Bible Sludy Tuesday evening at 7:30 o’clock. Dorcas Society 2nd and 4th Wed- nesday of each month at 2 o'clock. All are welcome to all the services of this church. CHAPEL BY THE LAKE (On Fritz Cove Corner) REV. JOHN A. GLASSE, Minister Sunday School at 9:45 a.m. for one hour, with well-taught classes for children of all age-groups and a welcome for those living out the school age children will shortly have NORTHERN LIGHT PRESBY- TERIAN CHURCH “Where Welcome and Worship Meet” Franklin at Fourth REV. JOHN A. GLASSE, Minister MRS. TREVOR DAVIS, Organist GEO. SCHMIDT, Choir Director 10:50 to 11:00 a.m.—Organ Mo-' ments. | 11:00 a.m. — Morning Worship. See our advertisement elsewhere ,and plead guilty. | Nov. 30 and Charles Waynor versu | MANNHEIM, Germany, Nov. 1 \*Tcn aboard a Berlin-Mannheim Society. Mrs. Hazel Petersen, leader. mrliner were killed last night when | Topic, “Prejudices are Unchristian.” |the craft crashed near the airdrome here. Seven passengers are among those killed. It is not believed any lof the dead are Americans. SOME RAIN SEATTLE, Nov. rain have flooded the streets here. There are two inches of water on the Boeing Airfield. -, CLEMENTS RETURNING E. F. Clements, Territorial sani- tarian, who has been in Portland attending a Public Health seminar on milk, is a passenger aboard the Yukon enroute to Juneau. - MRS. COOPER ON YUKON Mrs. J. C. Cooper, who has been in the south for the past few weeks, |is returning to Juneau aboard the Yukon. - e AFTERNOON FIRE ALARM A fire alarm yesterday afternoon at 4:40 o'clock called out the Ju- neau Fire Department to a small roof fire on the house of John Wil- lard on Willoughby Avenue. Dam- age is said to be “four shingles.” e SPARKS ON YUKON Mr. and Mrs. William Sparks and son are passengers aboard the Northland enroute to Juneau fol- lowing a month’s vacation in the 3 The Sparks have visited in stern Washington, -—ee - UHR JUNEAU BOUND Stuhr, special representa- tive of the Alaska Fishermen's Un- ion, who has been in Washington, D. C, on the Japanese invasion of the Bristol Bay fishing banks, is aboard the Yukon, Juneau bound, to attend the All-Alaska Labor con- vention which convenes here next Tuesday. e RHODE COMING Clarence Rhode, of the Alaska Game Commission, is a passenger laboard the Yukon for Juneau. 13—Torrents of | 'John 8:14-17; Deut. 1:16-17. Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.—Midweek Prayer Service. Friday, 7:30 p.m.—Women’s Mis- sionary Society. tend these services and worship with us. CATHOLIC CHURCH Church of the Nativity of the Blessed V. M. Juneau il YOUR GIFTS SHOULD BE MAILED SOON If you are planning to remember some one “out- side” on Christmas, it would be well for you to begin shopping. Our shop has many of those things your friends would buy if they were here. You are invited to visit us and snoop around. We are accustomed to visit- ors and you are welcome whether you buy anything or not. Open Evenings Until Christmas The NUGGET SHOP adership of the Young People's‘ All are cordially invited to at-| in this paper. e, — NOTICE TO MERCHANTS AND CONSIGNEES: Effective with next northbound steamer at the Pacific Coast Dock, no freight, other than perishables, may be taken from the warehouse until the steamer has completed unloading. This system is in effect at most| Pacific Coast ports, including Ket- chikan, Seward and the City Wharf !in Juneau. Your cooperation is res- pectfully requested. adv. PACIFIC COAST CO. - | Try The Empire classifieds for results. LONG LIST ON COURT DOCKET The court docket for cases to be heard and tried in the next few weeks was announced today and two pleas of not guilty were chang- ed in todays session of the Federal Court before Judge George A. Al- exander. I In the case of Bert K. James,| Robert Paul and John Brown, charged with theft of halibut gear, Robert Paul changed his plea today Sentence will be imposed Monday. In the case of Phillip C. Grimm, 'a suspended sentence of 15 months at McNeill Island was given. Scheduled to come up on the docket are the following cases: Charles Pierce for larceny in a dwelling at Skagway, to be tried Monday; the Alvin Merig, Elmer Beatty, Harry Ek and Albert In- man fish piracy case to follow. Following the fish piracy case will be an appeal case from the Commissioner’s Court in which Jack Glendon was fined for assault. The |lawsuit of Peter Bond versus Hylda Dr_',d‘lhl will come up Nov. 26. Another lawsuit, Peter Kostro- metinff versus Robert Rockburn, over Sitka property, will be heard| Dec. 2. The case of Pete Loe versus I. Goldstein, a damage suit, will be heard Nov. 23. Charles Waynor ver- sus Ivan Diboff is scheduled for Charles Richards is set for Dec. 6, tentatively. An embezzzlement case arising out of suilt brought by the Astoria and! Puget Sound Canning Company | against A. Merig, Elmer Beatty, Harry Fk and Albert Inman will| follow the dsmage suit. In the case of George Ward, Nick, Dick and Tom Long, Dick will plead | Monday. CUPCER A UNION DELEGATES HAVE CAKE PARTY A “birthday party” was held last night in Union Hall, with a large cake and refreshments for sixty people, delegates to the convention of the All Alaska Labor Party and | am. | their friends. The occasion for the celebration was the fourth year of existence of the Alaskan Labor Party. Chris Koehler was Chairman of the committee in charge of the cele- bration, - D MRS. AHLERS RETURNING Mrs. John Ahlers, who has been scuth on a visiting trip, is return- |ing to Juneau aboard the Yukon. VIKING CLUB MEETING and DANCE TONIGHT Odd Fellows’ Hall Dancing at 9:30 Music by Albert Peterson $1.00 Admission in- cludes refreshments Public Invited SVAVAVAVAVAVAVA vir. Radio iust installed a RADIO SERVICE Th Radio Set Performance inspect your set \VAVAY Set Owne LAT‘ 1{ODE Ray Servicer for a nominal charge. our shop or ‘phone today for full d You Are lnvited to Inspect This New Equipmens JUNEAU RADIO SERVICE 122 Second-St.—Next to San Francisco Bakery All Work Fully Guaranteed 60 Days VAN \/\/\/ \V er — t marve RAY (AT nces late LABORATORY Making it possible to adjust your receiver with the accuracy of America's foremost laboratories Let us renew the performance of your radio set. Don't miss. the rich musical tones and distant stations your set was built to receive—for the lack of accurate adjustment. With our new Cathode-Ray Saxvncex it can bo quickly “'made like new.” Special “FACTORY TUNE-UP" offer’ For a limited time only, we will tlwxouwhly Cathode- and align it with the i detafls. U 8. DEPARMNT Ol" AGRJCULTURE WEATHEE BUREAUG- THE WEATHER ’ (By the U. 8. Weather Bureau) Forecast for Juneau and vicinity, beginning at 4 p.m., Nov. 13: tonight and Sunday; light t moderate easterly winds. Weather forecast for Southeast Alaska: Fair tonight and Sunday; light to moderate easterly winds, except moderate to fresh northefly winds over the northern portion of Lynn Canal. Forecast of winds along the coast of the Gulf of Ah‘r Moder":e easterly winds tonight and Sunday. LOCAL DATA Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Veloeity 30.05 39 73 w 2 30.11 31 86 0 0 30.04 38 8 w 2 RADIO REPORTS J TODAY Lowest 4a.m. 4am. Precl temp. temp. velocity 24 hrs, 14 — 10 10 34 30 2 8 36 38 30 29 27 28 8 46 46 52 46 50 Fair Time 4 pm. yest'y 4 am. today Noon today | Weathee Clear Clear Clear Max. temp. Station last 24 hours Anchorage v 82 Barrow 24 Nome 2 38 Bethel 40 Fairbanks 26 Dawson 14 St. Paul 44 Dutch Harbor ... 50 Kodiak 44 Cordova 40 Juneau L4 Sitka 5 45 Ketchikan 46 Prince Rupert ... 46 Edmonton 20 Seattle .. 52 Portland .. 56 Ban Francisco ... 62 New York 58 ‘Washington 58 | 4am. Weather 10 38 30 4 8 36 38 30 31 28 10 46 50 54 58 52 Clear Rain Pt. Cldy Clear Clear 39 Cloudy Rain Clear Clear co8owsielaloreb| onds 294 WEATHER CONDITIONS AT 8 A.M. TODAY Seattle (airport), raining, temperature, 43; Bfaine, snowing, 32; Vic- toria, raining, 38; Alert Bay, clear, 30; Bull Harbor, clear, 30; Triple Island, partly cloudy; Langara, partly cloudy, 41; Prince pert, clear, 35; Ketchikan, clear, 27; Cralg, clear, 28; ‘Wrangell, partly cloudy, 30; Petersburg, clear, 23; Sitka, clear, 31; Soapstone, clear, 26; Radioville, clear, 28; Tenakee, foggy; Juneau, clear, 29; Skagway, clear, 35; Cape St. Elias, missing; Cordova, clear, 33; Chitina, clear, 0; McCarthy, cléar, 8; Anchorage, foggy, 16; Fairbanks, clear, 2; Nenana, clear, 4; Hot Springs, clear, 2; Tanana, clear, 18; Ruby, clear, 20; Nulato, clear, 18; Flat, clear, 30; Ohogamute, raining, 37. Juneau, Nov. 14. — Surrise, 7:45 a.m.; sunset, 3:43 p.m. Nov. m’— Sunrise, 7:47 a.m.; sunset, 3:41 p.m. > B WEATHER SYNOPSTS High barometric pressure continued this morning .rom Fairbanks, Kodiak, and Southeast Alaska eastward to the Hudson Bay region, the crest being 3046 inches at Chesterfield Inlet. A storm area continued today off the coast of Washington and Oregon, the lowest reported pressure being 29.50 inches. Another storm area prevailad over the lantic coast, the barometric pressure at Washington, D. C. being 2946 inches. This general pressure distribution has been attended by fair weather over most of Alaska and northwestern Canada and by pregi- pitation at Nome, the Pacific Northwest States, and southern British Columbia, Alberta, and Saskatchewan. Light snow was reported af 5 at Blaine, Washington. Heavy rains were reported &t New«¥erk and Washington. o It was colder last night at Juneau and over the interior, western, and northern portions of Alaska. SHRINE DANCE (INVITATIONAL) Masonic Temple SATURDAY The Thirteenth RANDS’ ORCHESTRA 30 NORTHERN LIGHT PRESBYTERIAN 'CHURCH Franklin at Fourth ! REV. JOHN A. GLASSE, Minister GEORGE SCHMIDT Director CAROL BEERY DAVIS Organist “Where Welcome and Worship Meet” We broadcast over KINY Sundays—10:50 to 12. SUNDAY SCHOOL AT 9:45 High School and other departments. ORGAN MOMENTS AT 10:50 Come early for this helpful period. WORSHIP SERVICE AT ELEVEN: ANTHEM, “Cantate Domino” (Chandler). SOLO, “Open the Gates of the Temple,” Mrs, John H. Chappell. SERMON, also Children’s Moments. VESPER HOUR 5 TO 6: BOOK REVIEW, by H. L. Faulkner, “The Return to Religion.” ANTHEM, by Young People’s Choir. VIOLIN SOLO, by Robert White, “Adoration” . (Barowsky).

Other pages from this issue: