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(gj & ; THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, DEC. 2, 1937. Betty Rosenaf Becomes Bride of [d_r_. Phillips Ceremony Is Performed at Hermann Residence Last Evening At a beautiful candle light cere- mony held last night at the home of Mr. and Mrs. R. R. Hermann on Calhoun Avenue, Miss Betty Rosenauf, formerly of Okanogan, Washington, became the bride of Mr. Jack W. Phillips, with the Rev- erend John A. Glasse officiating The rites were read before an improvised altar set in the bay win dow of the large living room at the Hermann residence, beautifully dec- orated for the occasion with white chrysanthemums, and flanked with tall ivory tapers. Only a few close friends of the bride and groom were present for the wedding cere- mony dnd the informal reception which followed. ’ The bride entered the room to the strains of Loehgrin's Wedding YOU CAN GET HIM THAT HELL BE SURE TO LIKE! IF HIS NECK worthy of being embraced by something warm and soft Maron, Played oOver EINY, SF“‘ T MED 10 /2] then see our selection. The kind of ¥ure & Hiquolse bl ERam. goym, TOGETHER THE TWO SEE FLy s - 2 and carried a shower boquet of roses AR N R T T patterns, f-ulm s and texturcs men know and white chrysanthemums. Her| rhe story so far: Skis for Santa | are right. only attendant, Miss Barbara Her-| and the toys have been given oD the Ay | H H lis a medical field. Training in so-!a streak of light, and the whole toy-| ~NASHVILLE, Tenn., Dec | Luans Hls WIfe cial sciences and psychology would |shop followed. Doomed men in state prison are al- l lead him to respect his limitations| ‘You Can’t Beat Me’ lowed now to be ushered to the in the psychiatric area.” | Past the Christmas tree forest death chair with radio music. Fred momeNT | Mn"ey B" Jewels s g skied the toys. Helga looked so beau- | Ritchie, a wife murderer \blished ] 1 A red to 1) o SN SHOD WITH CHIC Low heels and flnp tongues distinguish these walking shoes of brown reversed calf with a suede-like finish. They make smart acce: to a brown and beige herringbone suit worn with brown suede acces- The costume is good for both town and country wear. Model * NEW BRITAIN, Conn., utc. 2— Women students at the New Britain Teachers' College are models in th spare time. It's all right with the school authorities, for they are posing for an educational theme de- picted in the murals in the main corridor of the administration build- b ing. Milton R. Bellin, of Old Gree wich, WPA artist. i doing the work N . |t ‘ Nazls Ba" Bnnk |fly a rubber band at a man who said Re! “The Knights of the Cros Polish novelist, Henryk Seinkiewicz, had been banned in Germany on the |E\rlS had sought shelter there from ground mann, wore a formal gown of yel- low tafetta, and carried yellow and white chrysanthemums. Mr. Verne Soley was the best man. Following Ithe ceremony a fifteen minute pro- gram of wedding music was given by KINY, for the occasion. Thp bride arrived in Junoau! Tuesday on the Yukon. Mr. Phillips has been associated with the Ju- neau Drug Company for the past several months. They will make their home at the Burford Apart-| ments in the Casey Shattuck Addi- tion. Helga, the doll, by the North Star because she has been or- dered to plan a new game for toyland. ' SPOTLIGHT CHAPTER FOUR The White Fox Helga was too excited about the skis the North Star had given her to sleep. In an hour she was out of bed with a basket of snowflakes on her arm. She stopped by each doll bed and {dropped a snowflake on each doll’s IF HIS FEET “freeze up” in a 3 o ol e ear. “Pop” each doll sat up in bed hurry, then k]wp b and mmfile B rubbing her eyes and saying, “What in a pair of these imported wool socks. | is it?” A wide color and pattern selection Would Teach “Hurry to the toyshop door. I chosen by men for men! !Psychology have a surprise for you,” Helga said 1 to each one. When she came to Santa’s bed, it was too high for her, so she fugged | CHICAGO, Dec. 2—Modern min-|a¢ his bed clothes and called, “San- isters should be trained in social|ia get up. My new game is ready isciences and psychology as well asifor you.” {In theology before attempting to| go santa popped out of bed, and jcounsel parishioners, s Dr.|ran with all the toys to the skis |Charles T. Holman, ciate Pro-i.what are they?” the toys shouted. (fessor at the University of Chicago|gome of the tin soldiers were using {divinity school. {them at bats, but Santa strapped | “Many pastors are unable to un-|pis right on, saying, “Why I used |derstand the nature of difficulties|to ski when I was a young man. {with which they deal,” says Dr. Hol-{yhat a nice idea, Helga. Come on man. “They do not realize they are Mrs Santa, we won't work today.” dealing with frustrations and |" He stood up, pushed his feet | To Ministers t i 35cup B. M. BEHRENDS COMPANY, Inc. “Juneau’s Leading Department Store” W"‘M‘W 'Prudent Hushand; IN POLITICS Anthony Eden, British foreign secretary, took a leading role at the nine- power parley in Brussels over Sino-Japanese conflict. Doomed Convicts Get l}eath Music in-| adequacies. Their theological train-‘giong the snow and slid off down| ing has not provided such education. |the hill from the toyshop door like| “A pastor should not attempt tola jolly, big red apple. Helga strapped be a psychiatrist,” he adds. “That on her silver skis and followed lik 1 d if he | tiful flying along in her ermine cape the custom. A ‘ ,Study-or-Pay Plan Is |that the captain of the toy soldiers make a final request, he | | nearly burst his belt catching up' “I'd like to hear ‘Wi I Take LOS ANGELES, Cal, Dec. 2.—Mrs. Proposed by Teacher TS0, Finally he was zipping My Vacation in Heaven play- Elizabeth Maguire pit her hus- 'along beside her. ing tonight ‘ballull Gv;flli::l, as ”ac.fl? who c:; LP‘WSBURGH:I B, Dec, 2‘{““” g Anzgni?lz(otp of the next hill Helga s Pope arranged | tainly believes in business methods ® ‘}‘Ide“"*v,“’.h" f}“ satenmplets m“gh and the soldier passed Santa. | - - |school within four years should be|™.py peat you to the bottom.”| Try The Empire classifieds for |of operating a household. | She testified in her separate mam_mharged tuition for additional in- struction, in the opinion of Myrtle resu !sang out Helga. Canal and Chatl [ Forecast of winds along (he coast of the Gulf of Alaska: winds from Dixon Entrance to Cape Sound. | Forecast for Juneau and Vi tonight and Friday, colder tonight | Weather forecast for Soulhe over Cross Sound and Icy S am Strait. east and north i rong over Cross S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICUUTURE, WEATHER BUREAU THE WEATHER (By the U. S. Weather Bureau) ity, beginning at 4 p.m., Dec. 2: Fair moderate to fresh easterly winds. Alaska: Fair tonight and Friday, terly winds, except fresh to strong and fresh northerly winds over Lynn Moderate Hinchinbrook, LOCAL DATA | Washington Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity Time Weathet |4 pm. 29.99 33 93 SE 3 Lt. Rain {4 am. today 29.94 32 89 0 0 Clear [Noon today 29.98 35 8 Nw < § Clear RADIO REPORTS TODAY Max. temp. Lowest 4a.m. 4am. Precip. 4dam. Station last 24 hours | temp. temp. velocity 24 hrs. Weather chorage 15 -4 - 0 | Barrow 8 8 8 6 0 Clear | Nome 18 4 16 4 £ Snow | Bethel 20 0 0 4 0 Clear | Fairbanks 9 -4 2 4 03 Snow Dawson 18 -20 0 0 Clear | St. Pafil 34 26 22 0 Cloudy Dutch Harbor 38 30 4 0 Cloudy | Kodiak 36 28 8 02 Clear ‘ Cordova 34 30 0 0 Cloudy eaun 39 3 3 L 05 Clear | Bitka 42 28 e P 0 Ketchikan 40 30 30 4 0 Fog Prince Rupert 42 32 34 4 0 Pt. Cldy | Edmonton 32 | 12 22 4 0 Cloudy Seattle 42 | 36 42 12 T Rain | Portland 48 | 34 36 4 0 Cloudy {8an Francisco 58 54 54 0 0 Clear New York 46 34 36 12 0 Cloudy 46 34 36 8 0 Cloudy WEATHER CONDITIONS AT 8 A. M. TODAY rainin sland 32 D cloudy, 41; Alert Bay, ple Island, cloudy; Langara 35; Ketchikan, foggy, attle (airport), cloudy, tempe ature 45; Blaine, clear, 38; Vic- Bull Harbor, raining, 44; Tri- cloudy, 37; Prince Rupert, partly Craig, clear, 29; Wrangell, partly 32; Petersburg, cloudy, 32; Sitka, clear, 30; Radioville, clear, 38; Hoonah, clear; Hawk Inlet, clear; Soapstone Point, clear, 30; Juneau, |clear, 31; Skagway, cloudy, 32; St. El cloudy, 40; Cape Hinchin- ! brook, cloudy, 36; Cordova, snowing, 31; Anchorage, foggy, -5; Ruby, clear, -15; Nulato, cloudy, -6; Kaltag, cloudy, -2; Flat, clear, (ground fog), -11; Ohogamute, clear, (ground fog). Juneau, Dec. 3. — Sunrise, 8:74 am unset, 3:14 p.m. | WEATHER SYNOPSIS High barometric pressure prevailed this morning from the Seward Peninsula eastward to the Mackenzie Valley, the crest being 30.46 inches at Nome. A storm area prevailed over the North Pacific Ocean in t ity 29.00 tude 176 degrees. River Valley, Fairbanks, and Nome, the Kuskokwim, Yukon and upper Tanana valleys. It was colder last night over the and over Southeast Alaska, the lowast Chesterfield Inlet. degrees below zero at of the Aleutian Islands, th2 nches over the Pacific Ocean at latitude 44 degrees and longi- Snows were reported this morning over the lowest reported pressure being Copper while fair weather prevailed over Mackenzie reported Yukon valleys being 24 and temperature Earache Cure ELWOOD, Ind., Dec. 2—The ef fica of smoke as a cure for ea ache was demonstrated by Tony Monahan, city policeman, here. | Jean Monahan, nine, his daugh- ter, was considerably perturbed when a large-shelled bug crawled into her right ear as she slept, but the« policeman puffed smoke from a cigarette into the ear and the bug emerged hastily. Death Before Jail MARION, Ind—Under sentence of twenty-five years for robbery while armed, George O'Brien, thirty, declared he would prefer to be shot |to death than serve the term. Still Coughing? No matter how many medicines you have tried for your cough, chest cold, or bronchial irritation, you get relief now with Cre Serious trouble may be br you cannot afford to tak with any remedy less potent than Creomulsion, which goes right to the seat of the trouble and aids ne- ture to soothe and heal the inflamned mucous membranes and to looscn and expel the germ-laden phlegri. Even if other remedies have f. s don’t_be discouraged, try Creomul- sion. Your druggist is author refund your money if you ar thoroughly satisfied with thi fits obtained from the Vi bottle. Creomulsion is one word—not two, and it has no hyphen in it. Ask for it plainly, see that the name on the bottle is Creomulsion, and yowll get the genuine product and the relief you want. (Adv.) Lode and piacer location notices for sale at The Empire Office. | tenance suit that Maguire, a Holly- Suddenly at her other side Helza weod hardware dealer, has $1,000 a | month income and they have $75,000 | |community property, but he gave her only $20 a week to pay all house- hold expenses except the rent—with | four adults in the farily. i | | E. Wylie, Allegheny high school y.aprg g deep voice say, “You'll beat Mobe | the soldier, but you can’t beat me.” Such an arrangement, she esti-'gne jgoked around and beside her mates, would save $140,000 annually sy 5 beautiful white fox running to teachers in Pittsburgh alone. |g, swiftly his feet barely touched the ground. U. S DANCER To “0?1. Helga,” whispered WED PRINCE : i Here is her story: the tin | One time she exceeded her allow- ance. She pawned some jewelry to| pay bills, and her husband learned about it. He told her: | | “Well, we might as well keep the |interest in the family, so I will loan {you the amount you owe the pawn- | broker and will charge you $1 a week. | This had to come out of her allow- | ance. | Whenever Maguire ate a meal jaway from home he would deduct 50 |cents from the allowance. When the {rent was raised from $30 a month 1(0 $40, she had to make up the dif- | ference in her budget. { If she needed household utensils, | {he brought them home from his |store and deducted the cost from |her allowance. | He did accord her the wholesale | prices, however. { | e e———— BOYWITHTOY | ~ PISTOL IS HERD |scldier. “Beware of him.” “Why, I'm not afraid of him,’ Helga laughed. “Look.” She grabbed the tip of the fox’s white tail as he skimmed past her and together they seemed to fly to the bottom of the hill. The poor tin soldier just sat down on a snowball and pant- ed until Santa caught up with him The Fox Whispers “Where's Helga?” asked Santa. “Gone off with a white fox,’ the soldier. | “Gracious, that fox has stolen two/| other dolls,” said Santa. “He's 5o bad he knows he won't get any| Christmas gift. He might steal Hel- ga. We must find her.” 1 But as he spoke the soldier ex- claimed, “Look! Down the hill! There came the white fox still run- ning, and Helga skimming along be- hind him. The fox brought Helga straight to Santa’s feet. ! “You must be off to your hills,” said Santa to the fox. “Just where I was going, Sir,” said the fox, but under his wh! kers he whispered to Helga, “I'll be back at midnight.” Tomorrow: Midnight Visitor | frodibildaring gl | {NORTH SEA SOUTH | TOMORROW EVENING Steamer North Sea of the North-| {land Transportation Company is |scheduled to sail south sometime tomorrow evening. Agent Fred C.| Charman received a radio from the | steamer this afternoon stating that the ship had been fog bound in| Peril Straits and is not due at Sitka until about 6 o'clock tonight. The| ship will be at Sitka about 14 hours | |gischarging freight, then sail for| | Juneau and should be due here late | tomorrow afternoon or evening. gt NOTICE CHICAGO, Dec. 2. — With his | trusty “rubber band” pistol, Charles De Lance, eight, sought to protect | his ten-year-old sister, Shirley, from |a man beneath the Illinois Central Railroad viaduct. | “You can't say that to my sis- er,” exclaimed Charles as he let ories il Norma Taylor, blonde dancer once named as “the other wo- man” in the Mary Astor diary case and whose name was linked romantically with that of Tom- my Manville, playboy million- aire, will marry into the Egyp- tian royal family, it was recent- ly reported. Miss Taylor will go to London, from where she has Just returned, “sometime next |to Shirley: B N h | w' | “Come on, little girl, and I'll buy 0 g 1NNRY vou some canay.” y | The man chased Charles, who {ran to a police squad car near by. BERLIN, Dec. 2. — The oificial When police returned the man had e today |gone, but they arrested two others " by the under the viaduct. vt ’ Charles, his sister, and two other announced The | the rain. it was anti-German. | month” to announce her en- On and after this date, Nov. 29, appeared in 1900. The author, S e gagement to an Egyptian prince, |1 will not be responsible for any o died in 1916, was awarded the. TI¥ The Empire classifieds for| a cousin of the u’:‘ of ':[ypl |debts unless contracted by myself. 'es! N » G. B. LEIGHTON bel prize for literature in 1905. the report said. ,adv. i | A truly gorgeous display ofi Floor, Table, Bridge, | Lounge and Boudoir LAMPS Almost every style imagin- | able are shown. | Magnificent Floor Lamps Wi | with base and shades— $22.50 | Other styles ranging in price from $10.00 to $16.95 Graceful Lounge Lamps suitable for small homes. Priced from $7.95 Bronze Bridge Lamps with adjustable arm, and glass reflector. $7.95 to $13.50 Lamps From $1.95 up lighting—100- 200-300-watt, with light in artistic cut-out —for every room in every home in all shapes anc sizes, plain and decorated Priced from 95¢ i [ | | | | F Adorable Occasional TABLES | Boudoir and Table |of genuine solid mahogany |and solid walnut that you can be proud of. Priced as low as $13.95 S e R e e Beautiful OIL PAINTING Reproductions of Floral and Marine Scenes — Specially Priced at $1.95 Juneau-Young Hdwe. Co. te, ) v S RN N