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New Jiggers! Box Coats! Casual and Swing Swaggers! B. M. BEHRENDS CO., Inc. “Junecau’s Leading Department Store” RULING IS MADE IN OHMER CASE AT PETERSBURG Glacier Sea Food Ordered | to Offer Reemployment to 21 Employees WASHINGTON, June 11. — The National Labor Relations Board has ordered the Alaska Glacier Sea Food Company of Petersburg, of which Ea Ohmer is President, to cease ‘“unfair labor practices” and offer reinstatement to 21 em- ployees who claimed they were dis- | charged for union activity. The order was based on a stipu- lation entered into between the company and the Board last March of in settlement labor dispute at the canni a Empire classifieds pay. | Takes First Auto Ride In Two Years first time in two years, Johnson went for an antomobile ride yesterday afternoon. She was taken over the Juneau- Douglas bridge and remarked today that “It was swell. I've heard about it since I was a girl and yesterday |1 saw it for the first time.” Now that she is able to be around Mrs. Johnson hopes to go for sev- eral more rides. The two steps which she ventured to take yesterday when entering the automobile were her first in several years. Mrs. Johnson is at St. Ann’s Hos- pital where she has been for the past two years, and as her health is improving rapidly “It won't be long now until I will be able to gol about again,” she said D s Von Zeppelin, the airship designer, got For the Mrs. Tiemy great German| his first ex- perience in aeronautics while act- ing as an observer of the Union army’s balloon operations during the Civil war in this country. PO S S S S S eSS e L A.MACHINISTS LOCAL 514 ODD FELLOWS' HALL MEETS MONDAY 7:30 P. M. The l;cu'ly'Alaska_ Empire is invited to present this coupon tonight at the box office of ""“CAPI TOL THEATRE 4 mmflm TICKETS TO SEE *_"Girl Loves Boy” ¥our Name May Appear—WATCH THIS SPACE Notices for this church columr twst be received by The Empire hot later tham 10 o'clock Saturday morning to guarantee change of sermon, topics, ete. FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST SBunday servites will be held at 11 am. in the First Church of Christ, Scientisl, Juneau, on Fifth |and Main Streets. The subject wil be “God the Preserver of Man.” 10:00 a.m.-~Sunday School. Wednesday, 8:00 p.m. — Testi- nonial meeting. Christian _Science Reading Room m: church building. This room 1s open to the public Wednesday afternoons from 2:30 to 4. The public 15 cordially invited to attend these services and visit the reading room. THE SALVATION ARMY ‘Willoughby Ave. T Bunday— 2:30 p.m.—Praise Meeting. 6:00 p.m.—Sunday School. 7:30 p.m.—Salvation Meeting. Monday, 7:00 p.—Life Baving Guard Pardde, tinder the leadership of Mrs. R. B. Lesher. ‘Tuesday, 6:00 p.m.—Young Peo- | ple’s meeting. Tuesday, 7:30 p.m.—Public meet- ing. Thursday, 1:30 pm. — Home League meeting, held ‘in officers’ quarters. All ladies welcome. | prelude, {come at the Methadist Church. Friday, 7:30 p.m—Public meeting. Officers in charge—Capt. and Mrs. Stanley Jackson. HOLY TRINITY''OATHEDRAL, THE VERY REV. CHARLES E. RICE, Dean Sundéy Sérvices: 8:00 am. Holy Communion. firmation, and sermon by Bishop Rowe. RESURRECTION LUTHERAN “ CHURCH { -1 ¥riendly Church” | Corner of Third and Maih Streets | REV. JOHN L. CAUBLE | Pastor 10:00 am.-—Sunday School i ) 11:00 . am.—Morning ~ Worship. | Holy Gospel, John 3:1-156 (Trinity | Sundi: sermon subject, “The! Mystery of the New Birth”; music A Tear” by Moussorgsky Peace” by Lautenschlae- “Marche Romaine by offertory, r; postlude, Gounod; 6:30 p.m. Junior choir practice Wednesday | at 7 pm. METROPOLITAN METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH Fourth and Sewara Streets | O. L. KENDALL. Pastor 10:00 a.m.—Church School. Mrs | Esther Sprague, superintendent. | 11:00 am. — Morning Worship. | 7:00 p.m.—Epworth League, Lola| LaPaugh, president. Marion Pender- | grass will be in eharge Sunday eve-; ning. | 8:00 p.m.—Evening Service. The, subject, “Music and Worship.” The service will be largely singing. If| you enjoy the old hymns and the spirituals you will enjoy the evening service. The Ladiés’ Aid Society will meet| ‘Wednesday at 2 p.m., with Mrs. Nina Cheeney at Ninth and B streets. The Junior Guild will meet Wed- nesday at 7 p.m. in the social room of the church | ‘The Epworth League social meet- ing will be held Friday, place to be decided at the Sunday evening meeting. You will always find a warm wel- FIRST PRESBYTFRIAN CHURCH| DAVID WAGGONER, Minister | Sunday Services: | 10:00 a.m.—Bible School. Lesson, “Facing the Supreme Test of Serv-| ice.” Mark 14:32-46. 11:00 #m.—Children’s Day Pro- hymns, 158, 343, 198. { The Luther League will meet at| |Corner Second and Main gramy Bhort messages will be giveni. Do You “KNOW?” Alaska )y visiting ministers, in connection with the program. 7:30 p.m.—Evening Service. The message of the evening will be given by the Rev. J. L. Webster, pastor of he First Presbyterian Church of Sitka. A cordial invitation is given t all to attend these services and w. ship with us. Monday, 9:00 a.m.—The Vacation Bible School will open at the Gov- ernment School Building. This is a Union School under the direction of the Salvation Army and the First Presbyterian Church. There will be a place for class work in the differ- ent age groups. CATHOLIC CHURCH Church of the Nafivity of the Blessed V. M. Juneau Fifth and Gold Streets REV. WM. G. LeVASSEUR, S.J., Pastor Trinity Sunday, The Feast of Most Holy Trinity and the of the Pascal Season. Sunday Masses— 8:00 a.m.—Holy Mass and Instruc- tion. 10:30 a.m.—Holy mon. Benediction of the Most Blessed Sacrament after the 10:30 mass Thursday, June 16, is the feast | of Corpus Christi and a day of spec- ial devotion Friday, June 24, is the feast of The Sacred Heart. Novena in prep dration for the feast will begin on Wednesday, the 15th. Benediction of ‘the Most Blessed Sacrament every evening in the church at 7:30 o'- clock. NORTHERN LIGHT: PRES Vo9 ERIAN CHURCH “Where Welcomeé and Worship Meet” Pranklin ‘at Fourth REV. JOHN A. GLASSE. Ministcr GEORGE SCHMIDT. Chorister the end Mass and ser- | CAROL BEERY DAVIS, Organist 11:00 a.m.—Choral Eucharist, Con-{ 10:50 a.m.- -Organ Moments 11:00 am.—Sermon by Capt | 3. Jackson, acting minister. A BETFEL PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY 121 Main Street CHARLES C. PERSONEUS Pastor Sunday services: 11:00 a.m.— Morning Sermon by the pastor. 12:00 noon—Bible School. ‘for all. 1:30 p.m.—Broadcasting a service |over KINY. 7:30 p.m.—Evening Service. Tuesday, 7:30 p.m.— Bible \for everybody. | Priday, 7:30 p.m.—Young People’s meeling Communion Service the first Sun- day of each month. Everyone cordially invited to all | these services. VENTH-DAY ADVENTIST CHURCH Worship. Classes study Streets | H. L. WOOD Pastor " (NN 2 I PARIS the jury,comparing instruments from THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE SATURDAY ]UNE 11, 1938 Note. The services of this church are held on Saturday, the sevenih day of the week Sabbath school Saturday, 10 am., with Bible classes for all ages. Sabbath worship 11 a.m. Sermon by the pastor, or leader Young People’s Missionary Volun- teer Society meets Friflay evening, 7:30 o'clock, at parsonage. Dorcas and Mothers Meeting 2nd and 4th Wednesday of month at 2 p.m Bible study groups in homes, Mon- day, Tuesddy and Wednesday eve- nings open to all. The public are welcome to all the services of this church the each CHAPEL BY THE LAKE (On Fritz Cove Corner) REV. JOHN A. GLASSE, Minister Sunday School at 9:45 e"locl with well-taught classes for cl dren of all age-groups, and gy wel- come for everyone interested to at tend. Chapeladies meet every other ; Wednesday evening at someone's home, timely notice usually being given in the Empire. BISHOP TO FLY OVER OLD TRAIL OF EARLY DAYS Recalls Holding Services in Circle City Saloon n 1896 Bishop Peter T. Rowe, head of the Episcopal Church in Alaska, is 82 years old, but still climbs into a crowded coupe with all the agility of & high school youth The Bishop is to take plane pas- sage tomorrow for Whitehorse. aboard one of the trim metal giants of the PAA. At Whitehorse, the Bishop will board a down-river boat e Yukon to go to Fort Yukon he will ordain Deacon Dr. Grafton Burke as a priest Airplane and commodious river steamer will be the Bishop's means of travel, but when he went into the Interior in 1896, it was a dif- ferent story. The tale of his visit to Circle City and his holding of services in a saloon is an old story, but worthy of repetition. Outfitted in Juneau In Juneau, Bishop Rowe outfitted for the trail in early March, 1896 on where | He went by boat to where the city of Skagway later was founded, and then back-packed over the Dyéa | Trail where only an occasional | Indian waked. | At Tagish, the young missionary whipsawed lumber and built him- self a boat with which he began the long journey down the river. habitation he saw was The first the whole Aworld -awarded the Grand Prix; tolthe Baldwin. No other‘Amencan piano has becn[sgLonored ALASKA MUSIC SUPPLY 2nd St. Juneau There’s a VOLUME of VITAL FACTS—New and Accurate—in the 1938 PROGRESS d DEVELOPMENT EDITION of the Daily Alaska Empire TO BE PUBLISHED SUNDAY—JUNE 12 Your Friends Will Appreciate a Copy — “It started a big stampede” ; Bishop Rowe asid to at the eacterly winds from Yakutat to Cape Hinchinbrook. 1 Gastineau Hotel, “and they named LOCAL DATA | the stream where the nugget was —Time Baromeler Temp Humidity Wind Velocity ~Weathes 1 found, ‘Preacher Creek’ 0Oddly 4 pm. yesty 3002 59 47 Cam 0 Cloudy encugh they have never found any 4 a.m. today 29.99 5() 81 SE 3 Sprkling ofl more gold on that stream other Noon today 30.01 55 59 SE 8 Cloudy j than that nugget.” & Arriving then, in this town of RADIO REPORTS’TODAY quickly-erected saloons and loudly i ringing saloon-dance halls, young Max. temp. Lowest 4am. 4am. Precip. 4am j xmh«mn, Peter Rowe cast about Station last 24 hours | temp. temp. velocity 24 hrs. Weathe: *|for a place to hold sermon. Bl 42 :‘i o .0‘1) Fog Sermon in Saloon Anchorage % 89 : L 9 “There was no place to hold serv- Barrow % : b 4 "o Clear jces,” Bishop Rowe said with 2 NO"“‘I 24 | & i g moeif suggestion of a twinkle in his eye, Bf“{‘l:f g s ‘ s g S Clo:d, “so T went to George Baldwin, who g«‘”' anks o4 [ i 3 : Cloudy' o was running one of the largest of\s:“’;o:ul K ! % 7 s Cleai e C;"]ig‘”:;g;l? asked him What i, . Harbor ... 48 | 40 4 62 Cloudy “Ooila you use this saloony”|FOAIRE rid | :f 061 4 Ll-lRam ) Baldwin asked Eensia 4 e SRl Oy “Why not?” answered missionary "s‘::;(:‘“ 23 | X = & 'l(; Sprkling Rowe who had traveled for nearly o 60 o g ‘ a8 a 3 e Sk four months alone through the pE PRo i | i o % D i r}']lldf::n;» to take the gospel to Edmonton 68 | 42 44 3 0 ‘Olear e Yukon. k ¥ : Seattle 72 | 54 54 4 0 Clear Mfi“‘i“"lp“‘“ i dz‘ action a5 potjand 82 54 54 Calm 0 PtCldy e well as expressivi s g { 52 = Bt s “Clean this place up!” he shouted :’;"1 ‘;{r:r"‘:’*‘” ?14 [ o i g L from this position behind the long o oo % : = vi 6 & U S eionty bar. “W going to have church. Down your drinks and get the WEATHER CONDITIONS AT 8 AM. TODAY liquor out of sight!” ’ Seattle (airport), partly cloudy, temperature, 54; Blaine, partly Almost as quickly as a tired min- cjoudy, 46; Victoria, cloudy, 53; Alert Bay, cloudy, 45; Bull Harbor, part- er ould get three fingers of 1y cloudy, 52; Triple Island, cloudy; Langara, partiy cloudy, 50; Prince |Fm’t Selkirk, 300 miles down the U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU Yukon. From there he went on to 5 then) and so on down to City, the largest camp in (By the U. 8. Weather Bureau) at the time Forccast for Juneau and vicinity, beginning at 4 pm. June 11: At Circle City re the Bishop Cloudy with occasional light rain toaight and Sunday; moderate south- Bishop Rowe said today at the cast winds. : Weather forecast for Southeast Alaska: Cloudy with occasional - year in the middle of summer, there ;i Sonioht and Sunday ove ' north portion; increasing cloudi- 4] was all the rush and din of & yoc tonight, Sunday cloudy with occasional rain over south portion; booming camp. Only a short time moderate southeast winds except fresh over Dixon Entrance, Clarence before, a gold nugget had been Strait, Frederick Sound and Chatham Strait and fresh southerly over traveling Lynn Canal Forecast of winds along the Coast of the Gulf of Alaska: Fresh | southeast winds-from Dixon Entrance to Yakutat; moderate to fresh found in a stream by a Canadian missionary whiskey down a parched throat the two score men and a few women had curtained the bar, made a pul- pit of sorts, and had put chairs in rows and tables to the side, Rupert, clear, 50; Ketchikang clear, 54; Craig, cloudy, §3; Wrangell, cloudy, 51; Petersburg, cloudy, 54; S'tka, cloudy, 50; Soapstone Point, raining, 44; Hoonah, cloudy; Hawk Inlet, clear, 6l Port Althorp, clou- dy: Radioville, cloudy, 52; Juneau, cloudy, 53; Skagway, cloudy, 52; vakutat, raining, 45; Cape Hinchinbrook, raining, 45; Cordova, cloudy, Chitina, partly cloudy, 48; McCarthy, partly cloudy, 48; Anchorage, k) The rmon over, saloon keeper 63; Baldwin ordered two of his hench- cloudy, 49; Portage, cloudy, 48; Fairbanks, cloudy, 61; Nenana, partly men (o pass the hat, and they did. cloudy Hot Springs, clear, Ruby, partly cloudy, 56; Nulato, clear, 4 “He told the men to kick in or 66; Kaltag, clear, 58; Unalakleet, missing i else Bishop Rowe smiled, “and Juneau, June 12. — Sunrise, 2:54 a.m.; sunset, 9:05 p.m. June 13.— ¥ they surely did. I really think they Sunrise, 2:54 a.m.; sunset, 9:06 p.m. { enjoyed that sermon as much as L. i 3 he collection over, Baldwin pull- WEATHER SYNOPSIS ed the curtain down from the bar, The barometric pressure was low this morning over most of Alas- the tables were pushed back into ka except the lower southeast portion with a center of 20.54 inches 7 the center of the room—and busi- south of the Alaska Peninsula., High air pressure was centered over v ness went on as before the mouth of the MacKenzie River and over mid-Pacific, extending 1 That saloon beeame missionary from the Hawaiian Islands to southwestern Canada and Southeast Al- Rowe's church a short time later. Light precipitation occurred during the last 24 hours over the 3 - ne north portion of the Territory and along the coast from the The colors of dawn are purer and Aleufian Tslands to upper Southeast Alaska with generally fair weather colder than those of sunset because Over the rest of Alaska, western Canada and the West Coast states. the reduced dust content of the at- Except over the southwest, Alaskan stations reported warmer tempera- mosphere causes less sifting of the tures this morning light rays In Japan, telephones ‘are bought, not rented. Prices range as high as $300. In Britain, 68.3 out of every 100 independent families had a license to use a ra- | dio at the end of 1937 EDADA has been 12th century Portugal since the THEYRE ALL BUYING REFRIGERATORS OIL COOLING. This feature of the famous Monitor Mechanism means quiet operation, low current cost and enduring economy. The hermetically sealed-in-steel mechanism carries Five Years’ Performance Protection, a plan originated by General Electric, whohas built more sealed cold-making units than any other manufacturer. ' Al these 1938 G-E features ave to be had in YE s manyG-Emodels and somein allmodels. They mean additional multiple savings in food, in ice, in time, etc. o Stainless Steel Super-Freezer. o Faster freezing, instant releasing Quick Trays. » Sliding Shelves: » Adjustable Storage Space. ¢ 12-speed Temperature and Defrosting Control. ¢+ Automatic Interior Light ¢ Thermometer: © Vegetable Drawer. o Tip Top Shelf. SOLD ON CONVENIENT PAYMENT PLAN! _ Alaska Blgctm Light & Power Co