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First With Your FALL SLIPS! Pure Dye Crepes! Satins! smart or V-iops! Strong Seams! lored and Lacy Styles! 3. M. BEHRENDS CO., Inc. “Tuneau’s Leading Department Store” ° REPORTED MISS A. JONES TO Miss H man of Holly- in her room perform- reams and ather beaten | f sau’s house- wiv Maternity Center in New York, n entative of instructor. dar of which Miss Jones is expected to arri Company has on the Columbia from the Wes 1 be at week, a will rejuven- A Department of FHealth Mate nity Nursing Institute will be he! from July 19 to July 23, inclusive, pre baleony which this instruction will be giv. service is free to all nur: — JUNEAU COUPLE DIVORCED s, just re- the sake vorce from Morris Tonsgard of J - | thict court ofi:grounds: of. ineomp: D. Henderson ' tibility. £y i Be thrifty. Don'+ miss h opportunity. $5.00 DOWN—$5.00 A MONTH ALASKA ELECRIC LIGHT & POWER CO. ‘Juneau— Alask Douglas 3 . INSTRUCT NURSES the Juneau Health Center in the Territorial Building with Miss An- ita Jones, sssistant director of the ward where she has held similar in- | struction in Anchorage. The hours | has not as yet been decided. This Anna Tonsgard was granted a di- neau this morning in Federal Dis- $65.” FOR THE NEW Here is quality, depend- ability, and BIG VALUE in 8 money-saving washef. Kotices for this church column must be recelved by The Empire not later than 10 o'clock Saturday morning to guarantee change of sermon, topics, etc. RESURRECTION LUTHERAN CHURCH “The ¥riendly Church” Corner of Third and Main Streets REV. JOAN L. CAUBLE Pastor 10:00 a.m.—Sunday Sehool. 11:00 a.m.—Morning Worship. The Holy Gospel for the fifth Sun- day after Trinity is written in Luke -11. The Epistle for the day is written in I. Peter, 3:8-15. Sermon subject, “Good Amid Evil.” The general public is cordially in- vited to worship at all services of our church, 6:30 p.m—Luther League will meet, In event of bad weather the chil- | dren’s recreation hour will be held Sunday. afternoon from 3 to 5 in the Sunday..school rooms, METROPOLITAN METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH Fourth and Seward Streets O. L. KENDALL, Pastor 10:00 a,m—Church School. Mrs Esther Sprague, superintendent, 7:00 p.n—Epworth League, Lola La Paugh, president. Don Williams will be the leader for Sunday eve- ning, 8:00 p.m.—Evening Service. Wednesday, 7;00 p.m.—The Jun- ior Guild will hold its meeting in the church. Lt Xy Friday, 7:30 p.m—The Epworth come at the Methodist Chureh. THE SALVATION ARMY Willoughby Ave. Bunday— 2:30 p.m—Praise Meeting. 6:00 p.m.—Sunday School. 7:30 p.m.—Salvation Meeting. Monday, 7:00 p.m.—Life Saving Guard Parade, urder the leadefship 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 wefcome. Friday, 7:30 p.m.--Public meeting. r- | Btanley Jackson. 1d n BETHEL MISSION ASSEMBLY OF GODP 121 Main Sfreet CHARLES O. PERSONEUS Pastor, Sunday services: 11:00 a.m.— Morning Worship. Sermon by the Pastor. 12:00 noon—Bible School. Classes for all. 1:30 p.m.—Broadcasting a service over KINY, 7:45 p.m-—Evening Service. Tuesday, 7:45 p.m.—Bible study for everybody. Friday, 7:45 pm.—Glad Tidings Band. Communion Service the first Sui- day of each month. as| ve en u- | = these services. CATHOLIC CHURCH Church of the Nativity of the Blessed V. M. Junésa Fifth and Gold Streets REV. WM. G. LeVASSEUR, 8.J., ¥ Pastor Sixth Sunday aftér Pentecost Sunday Masses— 5:30 a.m.—Holy Mass. 8:00 a.m.—Holy Mass and Instruc- tion. mon, followed by Benediction of the Most. Blessed Sagrament,. 8:00 a.m.—Holy Mass daily. , FIRST, CHURCH OF CHRIST, 8 NTIST __Bunday services will be held at i1 &m. in the First Church of Christ, Scientist, Juneau, on Fifth and Main Streets. The subject wil) « | be_“Life.” _Bunday 8echool discontinued until September. Wednesday, 8:00 pam. —. Test- menial meeting. S Christien Seience Reading Room in ehurch buliding. This room M open to the public Wednesddy afternoons from 2:30 to 4. The public is cordially invited to sttend these services and visit the is | Fourth and Gold Streets THE VERY REV. CHARLES E. RICE, Dean | No Sunday services as Dean Rice is absent from the eity. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH DAVID WAGGONER, Minister Sunday Services: 10:00 a.am.—Bible School. 7:30 p.m—Evening Service. |ship with us, SEVENTH-DAY. ADVENTIST H. L. WOOD, Pasfor day of the week. with Bibie classes for all ages. 11:00 a.m. — Morning Worship. | Leaguie socfal meeting witt be Herd. | You will always find a warm wel- | 10:30 a.m.—Holy Mass and Ser-| A cordial invitation is given to all to attend these services and wor-| Corner Second and Majn Streets Note: The services of this chureh are held on Saturday, the seventh M Sabbath schdol Sattirday, 10 am., Sabbath worship 11 a.m, Sermon THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, S by the pastor, or leader, Young People’s Missionary Volun- teer Society meets Friday evening 7:30 o'clock, at parsonage. | Dorcas and Mothers Meeting the {2nd and 4th Wednesday of cach {month at 2 p.m. | Biblé study groups in homes, Mon- day, Tuesday and Wednesday cve- nings open to all. The public are |welcome_ to all the services of this |¢hurch. NORTHERN LIGHT PRESBY- 1 ERIAN CHURCH “Where Welcome and Worship Meet” Franklin at Fourth |REV. JOHN A. GLASSE, Minister GEORGE SCHMIDT, Chorister CAROL BEERY DAVIS, Organist 9:45 a.m.~Sunday School. 11:00—a.m,—Sermon, CHAPEL BY ''HE LAKE (On Fritz Cove Corner) REV. JOHN A. GLASSE, Minister Sunday School at 9:45 e-lock. with well-taught classes for chil- dren of all age-groups, and a wel- come for everyone interested to at- tend. _ Chapeladies meet every other Wednesday evening at someone’s home, usually being DERDY GOERS timely notice. the e Marmion Island Is to Be Scene of First Contest of Summer their to- Strip fighermen will have first big derby of the summer morrow at Marmion Island, and with plenty of fish in eight, and at least a score of boats promising to enter competition, it will be a good derby. The Wanderer leaves the Upper City Float at 7:30 tomorrow morn- ing. Fishing begins at Marmion at 9 o'clock in the morning and ends |at b o'clock in the afternoon There_are prizes for the big fish second biggest and so forth, right |on down the line. First prize is a ‘SIO stripping pole, and other pri: os | Officers in charge—Capt. and Mfs. | include clothing and more fishing|was admitted to | Beay. With the Juneau Ski Club join- ing in with their picnic at Marmion and entering the competition and with several families planning on | pienics there as well, Marmion Ts- | l]and will be a good place to head for | SBunday. AAT TAKES OUT | FISHING PARTY ‘ FROM BARANOF AAT pilot John Amundsen made two trips today In the Fairchildand Shell Simmons made one hop in | the Lockheed. At 8 o'clock this morning, Amund- fishing. The five, who “got pleniy Pace, Ray Zimmerman, and Lloyd Blaisdell. | Lés Plorence to Hoonah, and Ben |.Grimes to Port Althorp and Hawk | Inlet. Ka, Bill Garns and Bob McGary lo Cobol, and Arne Mack and Jerry Harvey Sr., to Chichagof, flying the Lockheed. ... DINNER NEXT WEEK HONORS STAR HEAD Sattirday evening, July 23, at 6 | Easterm Starsands their escorts, are lngg@hw,_ly present at a dinner o'clock, members of the Order of| ATURDAY, JULY 16, 1938. Wrangell Still Running Salmon ‘STRIKE HELPING Packig Plants PLANE BUSINESS‘Citizens Joingd i Ditosic AT PETERSBURG Agairfst Danger of Closings U. 8. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU THE WEATHER (By the U. B. V eather Bureau) Forecast for Juneau and vicinity, beginning at 4 p.m., July 16: Showers tonight and Sunday; moderate southerly winds. Weather forecast for Southeast Alaska: Showers tonight and Sun- day; 'moderate southerly winds, except moderate to fresh over Dixon Entrance, Clarence Strait, Frederick Sound, Chatham Strait, and Lynn Canal. Forecast of winds along the Coast of the Gulf of Alaska: Moderate to fresh southerly winds tonight and Sunday from Dixon Entrance to Cape Spencer and moderate easterly winds from Dry Bay to OGape Hinchinbrook. LOCAL DATA ‘ (Continued from Page One) Tirae Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Veloclty Weathes 4 pm. yesty Na2 ., b 56 s 4 Cloudy Tony Schwamm Says Both | attie nave a contract to unioad ail|4 am; toay 3003 51 93 s 1 Clotdy Plants There Are | cargoes until September,” Timmer-| Noon today 30.05 53 85 SE 7 Lt. Rain man declared. “Knowing that if the RADIO REPORTS Shut Down | C10 does not unload, AFL will as- OOAY s | sume charge, everyone is confident, Max. temp. Lowest 4a.m. 4am. Precip. 4am It’s an ill wind that doesn’'t make no shipments will be stopped.” | Station last 24 hours | femp. temp. velocity 24 hvs. Weathe somebody some money. Timmerman said, however, that( ztpa 48 | 46 46 0 04 Rain Tony Schwamm, operator of the a CIO organizer had told him a|anchorage 62 39 ai 0 0 Petersburg Air Service with his|plane would go to all canneries, g,rpow 28 34 34 8 9 Oy Curtiss-Robin seaplane, is of thataround Southeast Alaska, Kake,| Nyome 52 | 14 44 4 T Rain opinion anyway. The cannery Tyee, Port Althorp, and Libbys at pethe] 64 4 4 6 o Cloudy frouble has helped his business he|Taku and all other plants to c)ose‘ Fairbanks 60 46 46 4 0 PY. Cldy says. them up. ) Dawson g 68 | 46 48 4 0 Pt. Cldy “I get a lot of business, now, fly- Rumors were prevalent in Juneau| gt pgy] 48 ) 4 ks o b ing CIO and AFL men around to| today that the Kake cannery had|pyuten Harbor 52 i 46 46 6 0 Cloudy the various trouble centers,” Tony been closed down, but according t0|gogiak 56 | pe 44 4 o Clear laughed. “This strike may be hurt- Wwires, it was learned “a strike! gordova 56 | 44 44 0 0 Clear ing everybody else, but right now | threatens tomorrow.” | Juneau 62 | 50 51 1 03 Cloudy it isn't doing me any harm!” | The four canneries in the Wran-, gjtkn 58 i 49 o i 4 Tony said fifty AFL men from | gell district Timmerman Sp"k“_"fll{etcmkan < 72 ‘ 52 54 4 0 Cloudy Petersburg were to go to Wrangell | 8re operated by Wrangell Packing|prince Rupert 72 { 52 54 4 0 Cloudy today for a mass meeting there,| Company, Diamond K Packing pamoriton 80 | 44 44 0 0 Clear | where violence has been reported Company, A. R. Brueger, who Oper-| goqfle 88 | 60 60 4 0 Clear near for several days. |ates one plant at Wrangell and one| prtjang 92 61 64 4 0 Clear Schwamm said both salmon can- |&t Burnett’s Inlet, near Wrangell. | gan prancisco 64 56 56 6 0 Cloudy neries at Petersburg are closed| | New York 84 68 72 4 05 Clear |down, but Wrangell plants are still| MRS, D. E. SKINNER | Washington 90 0 74 4 0 Clear operating. Schwamm also said two boatloads of CIO men had left Petersburg for Kake and other |island cannery points to attempt to get workers to shut down plants | there. ‘ Schwamm brought in H. C. Tim- merman from Wrangell this morn- ing and was to take two passengers |back this evening. - e | || HosPITAL NOTES i o Charles Gren was admitted to St. Ann's Hospital last evening for medical attention. | Nick Lahtonen, from Kodiak Ts- land, was admitted last night for surgical attention to the Govern- | ment Hospital. Daniel James has been discharged | from the Government Hospital after | {1 ACiving medical attention. Jacob Simlorof of Kodiak Island the Government Hospital last evening for surgical attention. | -oe |BRIDGE LUNCHEON | HONORS VISITOR This afternoon Mary Metcalf is entertaining at a bridge-luncheon 'in Perey’s banquet room with Miss | Katherine Minton, house guest of |Miss Virginia Mullén, as guest of honor, The honored guest was pre- sented with a typically Alaskan gift prize. The afternoon was spent in | playing bridge. Those present include Virginia Mullen, Mary Jean McNaughton, | Jean Taylor, Elaine Housel, Helen | Beistline, Jane Blomgren, Edythe | sen flew five officers from the Bar-|young, Dolores Smith, Helen Rick- | Everyone cordially invited to all anof to Lake Hasselborg for trout|etts Elizabeth Nicholls, and hon-| (oree and hostess. of fish” were Ray Wheeler, Claude| to be given in the Sco™sh Rite | Affer returning, Amundsen took| Temple in honor of Mrs. Anna W.! |out Bob Douglas, Tom Dyer, and| smalley, Most Worthy Grand Ma- | 1 tron of the Grand Chapter of O.E.S., | who is making a tour of the Alaskan | assemblies, Shell ook Ray Peterman o Sit-| All persons who plan to attend | the dinner are requested to make reservations not later than Mon- day, with Mrs. Arthur Picken, Mrs. Dora Sweeney, or Miss Mary Jeau- nette Whittier. Following the dinner, members of the Eastern Star will adjourn to | the assembly room, where ritual- | istic work of the order will be ex- emplified, | - Lode and placér location notices |for sale at The Empire Office. i i } i CHANNEL TR . GLACIER Leave Juneau .. 8:00 P.M. Leave Tavern .. 9:30 P.M. Leave Juneau .10:30 P:M. | ! I EAT! DINE! and DANCE! Now In Effect DAILY SERVICE BY THE Roundtrip—$1.50 { SPECIAL CHICKEN DINNER-—$1.00. RIDE THE BUS BUS LINE THE TAVERN Leave Tavern .12 Leave Juneau .. Leave Tavern .. 3 | | MAKES ROUNDTRIP | | ABOARDNORTHSEA' | Mrs. D. E. Skinner of Seattle, | mother of Gilbert W. Skinner, of | the Alaska Pacific Salmon Com-| pany, and her sister, Mrs. 8. §. Lit- tle, of California, were Juneau visi- | tors last night while the North Sea was in port. Mrs. Skinner came to Alaska on the North Sea’s maiden voyage,and | has returned to the Territory every) summer aboard the North Sea for a vacation trip. In Juneau she visited with her| son who was in town aboard the | yatcht Jeanette E. Mr. Skinner will| leave Monday for his company’s| cannery at Port Althorp. i R —_— | OFFICIALS DUE TOMORROW | | Regional Foreger B. F. Heintzle- man and Dr. H. L. Shantz, Chief of the Division of Wildlife Manage-| ment for the Forest Service, arel scheduled to arrive in Juneau to-| morrow by PAA plane from Fair- | banks. They have been on a several| ! weeks’ trip to the Westward and WEATHER CONDITIONS AT 8 AM. TODAY Seattle (airport), partly cloudy, temperature, 61; Blaine, clear, 52; Vancouver, clear, 61; Alert Bay, clear, 48; Bull Harbor, clear, 58; Triple Island, cloudy; Langara Island, misting, 54; Prince Rupert, cloudy, 57; Ketchikan, cloudy, 60; Craig, showers, 61; Wraggell, cloudy, 54; Petersburg, sprinkling, 53; Hoonah, cloudy; Hawk Inlet, cloudy, 43; Tenakee, cloudy, 58; Hood Bay, cloudy, 50; Sitka, cloudy, 55; Cape Spencer, cloudy, 49; Radioville, showers, 52; Juneau, cloudy, 53; Skag- way, cloudy, 53; Haines, cloudy; Cape Hinchinbrook, cloudy, 53; Cape St. Elias, misting, 55; Cordova, cloudy, 58; Chitina, cloudy, 54; McCar- thy, cloudy, 50; Anchorage, clear, 52; Portage partly cloudy, 46; Fair- banks, partly cloudy, 60; Hot Springs, cloudy, 52; Tanana, raining, 53; Ruby, raining, 51; Nulato, raining, 50; Kalfag, cloudy, 50; Council, cloudy, 47; Golovin, cloudy, 48; Solomon, cloudy, 48; Nome, cloudy, 46. Juneau, July 17.—Sunrise, 3:20 a.m.; sunset,'8:51 p.m. July 18.— Sunrise, 3:22 a.m.; sunset, 8:49 p.m. WEATHER SYNOPSIS A moderate low pressure area has developed over the Gulf of Al- aska during the past 12 hours, the lowest reported pressure being 29.84 inches. The pressure has risen over the interior of Alaska and over the Mackenzie Valley. This general pressure distribution has been attended by light precipitation over portions of Southeast Alaska and over the Aleutians, by unsettled, showery weather over the interior and western portions of Alaska, and by fair weather over the West Coast States. FOR DISCOVERY DAY PIONEERS’ PICNIC For all Pioneers, families and eli- gible members. At Auk Bay bathing Coffee served. The Discovery Day Association is preparing for the big celebration at Interior. Dawson on August 16. There will | beach tomorrow. | —_————— be a parade, ball games and grand | beach tomorrow. Coffee served. [ Try the wmmpire classitieds for ball to be presided over by a queen | Transporfation furnished.. Be at | -esults who is now being chosen. Odd Fellows Hall 11 a.m. adv. | LetUsExplai \ ¥ F.H.A. L } New Federal Housin, | homes. miums. repair are $10,000. the details of F. H. NOW IS THE TIME! COLUM JUNEAU Home Financing Through the New have been enacted which make available very attraetive terms for constructing or modernizing For example, total charges on small homes costing $6,000 or less, have a maximum interest of 514 %, inclading pre- Throagh our cooperation with the F. H. A, you are able to finance your home repairs. Maxi- mum loans for modernization or come in and let us explain how easy it is to secure a loan. Our personnel is experienced in and can complete your loan with a minimum of delay. TO BUILD OR MODERNIZE n OANS g Act laws WE CAN - SUPPLY YOU WITH: Lumber Millwork Cemeérnit and Steel Flooring Shingles, Shakes Wall Boards Roofings Insulation Doors, Windows Brick and Tile Complete Building Materials Service. BIA LUMBER CO. SITEA Juneau Telephone 587 Why not A. finance i e