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To End All Wars” DECORATION cant expression of and hopes. It is no or the cause of wa to any one war, but rather a remem- nce to those who fell in defense of br: their country. from ADOPTED tom of honoring their war dead, Deco- is emblematic ration Day mon interest in per The observance furnishes a contemplation story of war and what it means. This contemplation penetrates the illogical of peace. pa for se belief that war wi reaffirms the pu steady progressic peaceful methods against future wars. B. M. BEHRENDS CO. “Juneau’s Leading Department Store” | REV. CAUBLE BACK FROM PAC. SYNOD The Rev. John L. Cauble, pastor of Resurrection Lutheran Church, returned aboard the Princess Lou- ise Sunday night. He has been ab- sent for about three weeks and at- tended the thirty-eighth Annual Convention of the Pacific Synod meeting at St. James Lutheran Church in Seattle on May 16, 17, 18 and 19. - e HOW MANY TICKETS? SAN FRANCISCO, Cal., May 30 Use of gasoline in the United States in 137 indicated that motor were driven 275 billion miles, figures released by the California State Au- tomobile Association show. Mileage was figured at 13 to the gallon. i i S General Electrie GIVES YOU DAY, observance, is a beautiful and signifi- THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MODES of ¢h eyser-Erickson | Wedding Is Event Of Tiis Eveing Candlelight Ceremony Will Be Observed at Pres- byterian Church as a national The marriage of Miss Avis Erick- son and Mr. John Keyser will be solemnized at 8 o'clock this evening at a candle light ceremony at the Northern Light Presbyterian Church with the Rev. John L. Cauble read- ing the vows. Miss Erickson’s only attendent will be Miss Myrtle Moe, and Mr. Lou Hudson will act as best man, while Mr. H. L. Faulkner will e the bride away. Acting as ushers for the occasion will be Dr. Judson Whittier and Curtis Shattuck. The Boreas trio, composed of Helen Arlene Par- rott, Edythe Reily Rowe, and Carol Beery Davis, will play eral sel- cctions during the first fifteen min- utes preceding the ceremony, fol- lowing which, Miss Mary Jeannette | Whittier will give a solo, “Because,” accompanied by Mrs. Carol Beery Davis at the organ. | Immediately after the wedding ceremohy a recéption will be held at’ the Home of Mr. antl Mrs. M | Whittier, ‘on Distin’ Avenue. |~ Miss Erickson, teacher at the Ju- !neau High 'Sehool, has resided in | the city for the past year, while Mr. Keyser has been associated with the United States Weather Bureau in the Capital City for the past | four years, Leaving on board ‘the Princess Louise tomorrow morhing, the new- |lyweds will go to Prince Rupert, lwhcr(‘ they will go by tfain as far as| | Jasper National Park.”After spend- ling a few days at Jasper Park, the couple will procede to Winnipeg; |and' from there to Minneapolis, where they will spend some time with the Bride's motheér Mrs. Alice ! Erickson. On there homeward jour- [ney the couple will visit with the | groom’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. M. | Keyser, at Spokane, Washington, }rcturnmg to Juneau the latter part JINXHITS ATNEW ™ SHOWS IN N, Y. Juvenile Courts = | Clubs will operate for the next three SAN BERNARDINO, Gal., May 30| years with the age limit fér junior —Jesse Olney, former judge of the club members at thirty instead of superior court, is ifi favor of doing thirty-five—but independent juniors jaway with juvenile courts. had their own ideas. “It is fast developing into a com-| Mrs. Roberta Campbell Lawson plete system of Fascism,” He writes|of Tulsa, the outgoing president, said in the California State Bar Jour-|the two million-members organiza- nal. “Our youth are jailed, bailed,!tion had no other recourse than to granted or denied rights on 'the abide by the action despite protest ped 4 | mere order of probation officers,!of many juniors that were absent at likely 15" revive (h#ir ‘tRrrovs; { e execfitive orfiows: . - | Members of the California junior Producers suffering from this Jinx On ' the other side, it “presénts delegation said they alrcady had are obsessed. with fhe notion that | D¢, 6reat loophole to young &finis|the thirtyiyear limit in operation ¥ . g nals in their escape ‘from punish-|ang were in accord with it. Missouri no play that succeds in London | L he writes. “We' turn them S has the ghost of a chance om"“’"v Lons. " N |delegates, however, expressed dis- Broadway. Similarly, a Broadway | cuens tuern again 1008 court, which pleasure and indicated they would success, they fear, is doomed t0| urns them nghin 100se on the com- | gisregard: the *action “Unitl a- woman is thirty she is ! munity on probatioh.” 1 'too busy looking for a man to be a nation’s thoughts glorification of war r. It is no memorial the southern cus- of a com- petuating the cause upon - the s Il end war . . . and re logic that the m of peace and is the best defense Inc. LOVEBIRD PRINT Dark blue rayon érepe rplashed w spring biossoms makes this cclorful bue crepe swathes the waistli metal coils accent the vee neckli white hat banded in blue. 0-Year Age | Limit Set by Club Women e Producers Al;éoingAbout with Fingers Crossed But with Light Step By GEORGE TUCKER NEW YORK, May 30—Since the beginning of the theatrical season Broadway showmen have been bat- tling a transatlantic jinx. At the moment they feel they have con- SCAVANGER HUNT SATURDAY NIGHT, A scavenger hunt was given Sat-| AMAZING SPEED It all began when “Georgé And | | Margaret,” a London success, came MISE SV iy ¢y, Domme ol B a quick cropper over here last AuL-|and s, Wallls 8, Geatge, in the umn. It had been proclaimed n,A.ssembly Apartments. Hostesses for | | the affair were Miss Ruth Allen,| | British morel of last year's Pulitzer | CALROD, General Electric's amazing new Hi-Speed heat- ing coil, cooks as fast as any fuel. No waiting—no matches and no guessing. Calrod gives exact amount of heat needed. Cooking utensils rest | directly upon the glowing coils no heat wasted on brick or air space. Calrod is completely insulated, sealed air-tight in rust-proof metal. And Hi-Speed Calrod is just one of General Electric’s many modern features. See the others today. The Apollo, New in Style, Low in Price. General Electric ELECTRIC RANGE SOLD ON EASY TERMS Liberal Trade-in Allowance Miss Marriana Skinner, Miss Vir- ginia Worley, and Miss Maydelle George. Prizes were won by Barbara Her-| mann, and Billy Jorgenson, and re- freshments were served during the latter part of the evening. | shrift than we accorded their fav Those attending the affair were | fitae LA ¢ | Ruth Allen, Virginia Worley, Betty | lu::“0{'Irlt}:;oly:)nul(sfilxr(;xce‘?'"Ur;:-‘:i:h?do‘x‘x: Wilcox, Marrjana Skinner, Sue Ste-| goh 2 y | wart, Althea Rands, Idabell Dobson, London. We retaliated by having| wary stewart, Barbara Hermann,| g‘;n'::;s(?'r "f;gg’:\z chl:l;‘:o:?zdut:);i | Maydell Georgé, Frank Parsons, Lee Lhord 5 ' Lucas, Pete Schneider, Bobby Scott, Victor Payne-Jennings, one of Lon-'ajjen Johnston, K(,“hu vRelschL don's most pr(?mmen‘t showmen, | Harry Watkins, Harley Turner, Phil- | came to New York to produce 1ip Harland, and Billy Jorgenson. Sue “Y” Camp for prize play, “You Can't Take It/ With You,” and its success seemed certain. The British Empire repaid our hostility to “George And Mar- garet” by rejecting “You Can't Take It With You” with even shorter Appalled by these transatlantic | disasters, he instructed his staff to| hush all news relating to the suc- cess of his play in London—which | ¥ ' was rather difficult, since it was | H P known to be the British capital’s cc' en “ "“5 oldest hit and, mereover, Ethel Barrymore was announced as the star of the American version. | DETROIT, May 30.—A $35,000 suit When the play went to Montreal, against the Oakland County Toronto and other try-out cities|Y.M.C.A. Camp, Inc. was filed in previous to its New York premiere, | Federal court by Mr. and Mrs. Ches- Payne-Jennings had recurrent agon- | ter R. Bear of Evanston, Ill, who ies. He feared word of its prosper- |charged the camp and two counsel- ity on tour would strengthen the |lors were negligent in failing to pre- jinx on it. And when Washington |vent a fire-cracker accident that supported it generously, the Brit- | cost their eleven-year-old son his ish producer was reluctant to re-|eye two years ago. turn from Palm Beach to witness G < R AT the debacle he was sure the first| night would bring. | tion, means “Peace with you.” | In the three days intervening be- |1|ght." the Pulitzer prize play of tween the Washington closing and /1936, had scored a resounding suc- | the New York opening, everybody |cess in the British city. The news/ connected with “Whiteoaks” went cheered Payne-Jennings enormous- about with the dispirited air of one ly. Certainly, he thought, Amer- | about to lose his head. The jinx jeans will preserve this renewed rested heavy on them, and nothing | hand-across-the-sea bond. could dissaude them from their - They did. “Whiteoaks™ succeed- conviction that their enterprise Was ed, the managers with interests in! a marked failure. the two capitals now walk with But just before the curtain went fighter step. But if you 160k closely | up there came a sunbeam from gt thelr hands, you'll ‘notice they London. It seems that “Idiot's De- lmp their fingers crossed. 1 Salaam, a Mohammedan saluta- | early destruction in Piccadilly. Or| at any rate, that was the hallucina- | _ > « tion before two ocean-crossers dis- | occupied with useful junior club armed the hoodoo by flourishing on alien soul. ,” one delegate said. Boys Outswim F ish BUEBLO, Col., May 30, When a contest committee tossed three large | rainbow trout into a Pueblo swim- ming pool and then gave the signal| for about 40 swimmers to get 'em, they thought the job would take| more than a few minutes. But after only a few dives, James Hall, Grover| Jacobs and Bob Hosttetter, high school boys, came up clutching the three fish. The mountain trout usu- ally are hard to land after being hooked to a fishing line, so the com- mittee decided the warm water had enervated them. — ! Try an Empire ad. . | activities MONDAY, MAY 30, . MOMENT by Adelaide Kerr | | giving them some idea of what the New York ith mist-blue lovebirds and white af A girdle of mist- nd ties in a bow in frent. Silver noon frock. ¢ of the frock which is worn with a PAA Ship Brings EighftfiY_esterday | and Passengers to Go North Again Tomor- | row Morning Mai Eight passengers flew tc Juneau on a Pacific Alaska Airways plane, landing here yesterday evening with Jerry Jones and Walt Hall| piloting | Arrivals Mrs. Ralph Rivers. Char A. Carmody, Dr. Robert Burman, Hugh M. Henton, Laurin| Henton, Mary and Dave Lucas and Charles Southwick. The plane is expected to getaway for Fairbanks on the return trip tomorrow morning. PRIMARY STUDENTS | PRESENT MUSICAL Saturday afternoon at 2 o'clock. the primary students of M Caro- line D. Todd presented a piano re- cital at the Methodist Church. Those taking part in thg musical include: Dace Bolyan, Dale Roff, Rcbert Larson, Ned Zenger, Lester Carlson, Chester Zenger, Natalie Savovich, Lois Allen, Diane Hunds- bedt, Leslie Hogins, Angelina Savo- vich, Dorothy Thibodeau, and Flor- ence Hawksworth. -ee ‘MISSING LINK' HUNTED MANTLA, P1, May 30.—The tar- sius monkey, said to exemplify the evoluticnary theory better than any existing ape, is the object of a arch being conducted on Bohol sland by Dr. John Fulton of Yale University - The Caribbean covers an area of about 7,500 square miles. ol “My Skin Was Full of Pimples| and Blemishes from Constipation” ““Since using Adlerika | e. My skin is smooth | d alth.” Adlerika washes | BOTH bowels, relieves ronshmtlen} that so often ai avates a bad complex- | g6 jon. Butler-Mauro Drug Co.—in Douglas | by Guy's Drug Store. adv. | BIDS WANTED ON MOVING: One, Two or Three Houses from Franklin and Second Street to Second and Gold Street. __Call JOS. F. KAHER—Windsor Apts. REPAIR MODERNIZE Call at our office any afternoon this week between the hours of three and five to see the latest in kitchen and bathroom equipment installed in our MODEL APARTMENT. There are also many other interesting innovations, and all are possible through the F.HA. Finance Plan. . Let us explain and assist you with your loan. No obligations incurred. Rice 8 Ahlers Third and Franklin Streets Co.-Phone 34 RTINSO TR RIS B8 1938. " 'Baccalaureate U. 8. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU THE WEATHER (By the U. 8. Weather Bureau) Forecast for Juneau and vicin'ty, beginning at 4 pm., May 30: Light rain tonight and Tuesday: moderate southerly winds. Weather forecast for Southeas! Alaska: Light rain over north por- tion, mostly cloudy with occasional showers over the south portion to- night and Tuesday; moderate southerly winds except fresh over Dixon Entrance, Clarence Strait, Chatham Strait, Prederick Sound and Lynn Canal. Forecast of winds along the Coast of the Gulf of Alaska: Fresh southerly winds along the coast from Dixon Entrance to Cape Hinchin- brook. Exercises Are Helfliast Night Large Audienc; Attends Affair Held in High School Gymnasium LOCAL DATA Temp Humicity Wind Velocity 48 80 SE 8 45 86 SE 12 47 74 s 12 Weathes Lt. Rain Lt. Rain Lt. Rain for the Time '38 were 4 p.m. yest'y at 8 4 an. today today Barometer 29.80 29.95 30.04 Baccalaureate exercises members of the class of held last evening starting o'clock in the High School gymnas- Noon fum with a large audience in at- tendance. With the playing of the Proces- sional Grand March by the school Station orchestra, the members of the grad- , o uating elass marched single file xo,oporace down the center isle of the gymnas-| go.ou ium, teking the seats reserved for nome them, directly in front of the stage. pathel The Rev. David Wagner gave the mirbanks invoeation, which was followed by 2 pawson scng “Listen to the Lambs,” by the g¢ paul members of the girls glee club. Duteh Harbor The Rev. C. C. Personcus read Kodiak the scriptural lesson, which was Gordova taken from the 19th Psalm. Follow- Juneau ing this, the hymn “Onward Crist-| gjtka ian Soldiers,” was sung by the entire Ketchikan audience. Prince Rupert The Baccalaureate sermon was giv-| Edmonton en by the Rev. O. L. Kendall, who Seattle directed his speech especially to the Portland members of the graduating class, Ban Francisco RADIO REPORTS TODAY Lowest 4am. 4am. Preclp. temp. temp. velocity 24 hrs. a3 40 02 41 26 42 40 4am Weather Rain | Max. temp. | last 24 hours | Pt. Cldy Cloudy Clear Cloudy Cloudy Cloudy Rain Rain Rain Cloudy Cloudy Clear Cloudy Cloudy Cloudy Clear Cloudy 52 52 50 54 54 54 WEATHFR CONDITIONS AT 8 AM. TODAY Seattle (airport), sprinkling, temperature, 43;, Alert Bay, part clou- dy, 44; Bull Harbor, clear, 48; Langara, clear, 48; Triple Island, show- ers; Prince Rupert, raining, 42; Ketchikan, showers, 42; Craig. cloudy, 52; Wrangell, part cloudy, 54; Petersburg, cloudy; Juneau, raining, 5; Hoonah, part cloudy; Port Althorp, cloudy; Sitka, cloudy, 48; Radio- ville, showers, 50; Soapstone Point, raining, 46; Skagway, cloudy, 49; Yakutat, raining, 42; Cape Hinchinbreok, raining, 42; Anchorage, part cloudy, 48; Portage, raining, 45; Fairbankc, nart cloudy, 50; Ruby, clou- Nulato, clear, 60; Kaltag, clear, 52. Juneau, May 31.—Sunrise, 3:06 am. WEATHER SYNOPSIS A large low pressure area with a center of 29.50 inches at latitude 500 degrees north, longitude 162 degrees west, overlies all of Alaska. northwestern Canada and the northeast portion of the north Pacific Ocean this morning. The barometer is high from the mid-Pacific to the Rocky Mountains with a center of 30.44 inches at latitude 40 de- - grees north, longitude 150 degrees west. This pressure distribution AMERY, Wis,, May 30. — Lowell pag peen attended by rain over the western Aleutian Islands and from Smith, 19, and Royce Myhre, 15. godiak and Prince William Sound along the coast to the mouth of the high school students. put together columbia River, also ovtr the interior of northern British Columbia an abondoned buggy chassls, algnq along the upper MacKenzie River. Generally fair weather has washing machine engine, a pulley prevajled over the rest of the field of observation. Temperatures over and a piece of pipe, and it ran.|pact of Alaska were slightly cooler during the last 24 hours. Their imitation of Henry Ford’s s first automobile is steered with a rope knotted to the front axle. It costs them ten cents for an after-| Quixote battle against steel com- noon of tearing around the country- panies, cement companies and others side at 12 miles an hour. he accuses of collusive bidding on T materials for public works projects BYRON PERSONEUS | He refuses to think it is coincidence BACK ON vACATlON when cement companies offer iden- tical bids right down to the penny | for cement for dams and bridges, Charles Byron Personeus, son of!even though one manufacturer may the Rev. C. C. Personcus and Mrs. | be right next door to the job and Personeus, arrived home on the others a thousand miles away. The Princess Louise. The young man| same about steel companies. has finished his second year of Repeatedly he has turned these study at the Northwest Bible Insti-|identical bids over to the Depart- tute in Seattle and has one more| ment of Justice for investigation. year to go. He expects to return|If the companies are getting to- to the institute next September and | gether before submitting bids it is will seek employment in Juneau dur- | illegal under the various fair trade ing his vacation period. acts. Fines and prison sentences -— B can be imposed. Nothing much has past generation had left for them| Washington to face, and what was expected of them in the future as citizens of the| United States. Lyman Snow sang a tenor solo ci- titled “The Cycle of Life,” accom- panied at the piano by Miss Edythc Young, following which the bene- diction was pronounced by Capi Stanley Jackson. The closing num- Gossi Fan Tutti,” was played by the High School Orchestra, under the direction of Mr. Robert White, Commencement exercises will be held Wednesday night in the gym- nasium beginning at 8 o'clock. Dam Thing Runs day; unset, 8:50 p.m. happened yet in the way of prose- cution, although J. Edgar Hoover's G-men are working on some cases. The companies deny any collusion Meantime Ickes works his own little trick. When the ‘bids come in all identical as to amounts, he gives the job to the company farth- est from the dam or bridge being built. If they are going to do that, says he, we might just as well give the railroads a little of the money by letting them haul it the longest possible distance. The Comptroller General once tried to interfere by insisting that when identical bids were offered the decision should be made by drawing lots. But Ickes demurred; as an executive officer, he said, he would decide how the contracts should be awarded. And he does. Ickes has been conducting a Don Bean Soup, Applg Pie; That’s Bill Visitors Order at Senate Cafe (Continued from Page One) | some government group or other :on week nights for years without | number. A story is told about an | earlier day President who used to! | frequent the place—but that for JUNEAU MINE AND MILL WORKERS' UNION ANl members are requested to aftend the next meeting- -MONDAY, MAY 30. VERY IMPORTANT! ATTENTION-LOCAL 203 Business to be taken up regarding the National Labor Relations: Board. J. L. COVICH, Secretary. other times, | | ANCHO, MY LANC For more than a year, Secretary | FREE --- Movie Camera PLUS PROJECTOR and SCREEN This Complete Univex Motion Picture Outfit will be the Prize in Our An- nual Sales-Premium Award SAVE YOUR COUPONS! Both Children and Grown-Ups Can Win UNEAU DRUG €O. PSPIEN . - Corner Drug Store”