The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, April 15, 1939, Page 2

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church column The ek Saturday Notic this must ot later t morning to sermon, topic for by Empire | i be received 10 o'el niee ge of | . ete FIRST CLURCH OF CHRIS SCIENTIST | s Wil be held art | in st C:.:;u\ ox Sunday 11 am Christ, S and Main § be “Doctri 10:00 unday Sehool Wednesday, 8:0i p.n. Testi- monial meeting. | Christian Sci in church building. [his room 1s open to the public Wednesday | afternoons from 2:30 to 4. The pubilc is cordiaily invited to attend these services and visit the reading room. ot cets. The subject Wil MEMORJAL PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH DAVID WAGGONER, Minister Sunday Services: 10:00 a.m—Bible School. Lesson, “Panl Establishes Churches.” Acts 14:1-7, 19-23. 11:00 am. — Morning Sermon. Subject, “The Altar, Tent, and nce Reading Room | a BETHEL MISSION ASSEMBLY OF GOD 121 Main Street CHARLES C. PERSONEUS Pastor Sunday services: | a.m.—Morning Worship. mon by Evangelist J, E. Barnes, peaking on “Song of Solomon.” 12:00 noon—Bible S.hool. Classes for all 1:30 p.m.--Broadcas r KINY 7:30 p.m IR Looking 11:00 ting a service Evening Service. Barnes will speak. Sub- in the Looking- Evangelistic Services every night 7:30 o'clock, except Sat ght. Speaking on “Prophecy Friday, 7:30 pm. — Glad Tidings Band of young people meet, Every- | body welcome. Commurion Service the first Sun- | fday of each month. | Everyone cordially invited to all | hese services. SEVENTH- DAY ADVENTIST } CHURCH Corner Second and Main streev,s‘ H. L. WOOD, Pastor ‘ (Note: The servites of this church | are held on Saturday, the seventhl of the week.) Sabbathschool 10:00 a.m., Sature| Well.” “And he builded an altar there, and called upon the name o the Lord, and pitched his tent thet and there Isancs serva wxh Gén. 26:25. 7:30 p.m.-~Evening Service. Topid | for discussion, I Christian _and | His Churc! What Should a Mem- ber Believe Exodus 20:13-17. Matthew 5:1- Wednesday. Prayer Service. A cordial invitation is given to to attend these services and worsl with us. 7:30 p.m. —Midweek | RESURRECTION LUTHERAN CHURCH “In the heart of the city for hearts the Director or ) p.| Liturgy for first 20:19-31; s the prelude, “Pre tory, vocal and ) postiud nm.—Luther wil meet. Alfred Zenger is leader of the Senior topic. Choir rehearsals Thursday ning as follows: Juniors meet Seniors at 8 o'clock We cxtend a cordial invitation to the general public to come ahd wor- ship with us, Learue eve-| at CATHULIC CHURCH Church of the Nalivity of the Blessed V. M. Juneau Fifth and Gold Streets REV. WM. G. \SSEUR, 8.J, Pastor First Sunday after Easter SBunday mas 5:15 am oly Mass. 8:00 a.n.—Holy Mass struction, 10:00 a2 m.--Sunday School. 10:30 a.m.—Ho!; Mass and Ser- mon. 7:30 pm-—-Rosary and Benedic- | tion of the Most Blessed Sacrament. 8:00 am.—Daily mass during the week. Sunday, April 30—Bishop Crimont will give Confirmation av the 10;30 Mass, METROPOLITAN METHODIST EPIS®OPAL CHURCH Fourth and Sewara Stieets THE REV. GEORGE EDWARD KNIGHT, Pastor 10:00 a.m.—Sunday School. Burns McCoskrie, superintendent. Begin- | ners and Primary Departments mcfl at 10:45 o'clock. 11;00 a.m.—Morning Worship, Sermon theme, ‘“The Way of Rp- demption.” 7:00 p.m.—Epworth League. 8:00 pm, — Evening Worship. Sermon theme, “The Reality of Jesus.” Wednesday, 1.30 p.m.—Susannah Wesley Circle meets. Friday, 7:30 p.m.—Choir rehear- | sal. 4 Epworth League social hour Fri ay. HOLY TRINITY CATHEDRAL, EPISCOPAL Fourth ang Gold Streets THE VERY REV. CHARLES E. RICE, Dean 8:00 a.m —Holy Communicn 10:00 a.m.—S8unday School 11:00 am—Morning Prager Sermon. Maryé Berne wil offertc The Rainbe i e g di i lor Choir, 7:00;, Admt C} Junior Guild; 8:00 e nd NORTHERN LIGHY PRESBY- TERIAN CHURCH “Where Welcome and Worship Meet” Pranklin at Fourth REV. JOHN A. GLABSE, Minister GEORGE SCHMIDT, Charister CAROL BEERY DAVIS, Organist | 9:45 a.m.—Sunday School. 10:50 am~Organ Moments. 11:00 a.m.—Morning Worship. 6:00 p.m.—Vesper Service, 6:00 p.n.—Junior Endeavor. (See onr display advertisement on this page for further detalls) | fourth Wednest | meets |dren of the community. and In- |columns of this paper. ’C'g“‘xll’;:""'“;“";z; g‘:fiu":‘f}‘fiz on the Alaska, which léft Seattle | | Barekston. v with Bible classes for all ages. John Turner, Superintendent. ip 11 am-Blblo mon by leader. Herbert Punches in charge durlngK absence of Pastor Wood. Dorcus Society and Home Com- | mission meets every second and‘ Mid-week Bib! nesday evenin, ] All are welcome 1o the services of (his clyrely - SALVATION | ARMY | Willoughby Ave. Bunday— 2:30 p.m—Praise Meeting, | 8:00 p.m—Sunday School. 7:30 p.n—Salvation Meeting. Thurgday, 7:00 p.m.—Life Saving sl Guard Parade, under the leadership | Alaska Gnrme Commii {of Mrs. R. B. Lesher. Tuesday, 6:00 p.m ple’s meeting. Tuesday, 7:30 p.m.—Public meet- Ing. -Young Peo- AUK BAY BIBLE S1TUDY LEAGU! E‘ Pastor H. L. Wood, Minister ¢ Auk Bay Bible Study League every Tiesday evening at 7 o'clock in the various homes of the mLmbor\ See notice elsewhere as | to meeting place this week. All highway residents are invited to i these Bible studies CHAPEL BY THE LAKE (On Fruz Cove Corner) REV. JOHN A. GLASSE, Minister| 9:45 a.m.—Sunday School, \\lth‘ Mrs. Harry Arnold superintendent, and well-taught classes for all chil- Evening Worship and Bible Study | at 8 o'clock every other Sunday eve- ning, ne meeting to be held\ |on April being a “Question-Box | Discussion,” with everyone mlnuv,- ed invited to come. } Chapeladies meet two Wednesday | evenings each month, in keeping | | with timely notices given in other THE CHURCH OF THE AIR CHAS. E. FULLER, Minister Broadcasting over station KINY| “The Old-Fashioned Revival Hour,” | | every Sunday - evening, " 6:30-7:30 | | o'clock. Be sure to tune in ALASKA EVANGELIZATION SOCIETY Evan- | | rived THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, SATURDAY APRIL 15 |939 lHTERHEAflS BOOST ROIARY MEETING, HERE | Colorful Stationery Beingl Used by Juneau Busi- ness Men Business letters on Rotary confer- ence letterheads are being sent out of Juneau by the hundreds ;these days, spreading the word that the big meeting is to be held here May 18 to 20 and that all Rotarians in the 101st district are cordially in- | vited. The letterheads, having a recrea- ‘non map of Southeast Alaska on | the back, were distributed by the club to be used by members in their general business correspondence throughout the ‘Western ‘States. According to, the latest figures available, some 600 Rotarians and visitors will be here for the confer- enec, coming from: Washington, Ore- | gon, Idaho and British Columbia on | the special convention ships Aleu- tiah ‘ahd Piince: IRAPPERS F FOR BEAVER LIMIT Found guilty of exceeding the limit on beaver, Ben Leibrant and Clayton J. Leeds were. fined $100 apiece and -given suspended sen-| tences of - five months. when -tried today before. U. S. Commissioner AL C. Austin at Ketchikan. ‘The irappers Imielfled 13 beaver skins and ‘12 steel traps. Eah had obtained his limit of 10 beaver and they were still 4rapping when ar-! rested on Prince bf Wales Island. the jon reported. Man Mikes Trip (From Wrangell \In 14-Foofer Jack Hnrklo,\, we-ll known Juneau- ite, can lay claim to some sort of record if reports received here to- day are accurate Hartley is registered at the Gas- tineau Hotel: after a 55 hour run in a fourteen foot boat. from Wran- E to Juneau \e report is that Hartley left Wrangell 4 pin, Tuesday, and ar- here Thursday might at 11 c'clock When one considers the size of |Hartley’s’ boat and motor, the trip is worthy of note. His little outboard engine is quoted at exactly tenths of a horse power, e |REP. MAI?HN oN STEAMER ALASKA Garnet Martin, this morning. Martin, who has been vacationing: Outside since the Legislature ended its 1939 business, will take a PAA plane from Juneau to Fairbanks and thence to Nome where he is | head mechanic in the Hammon Con- | sohdaned shops. P 0 RN METEOROLOGIST BACK (Native Gospel Services) GEORGE H. LOVELESS Missionary-in-Charge 3:00 p.n—Meeting at home of | Mrs. Mary Nelson, No. 15, Native ,Vmagc Topic, “Manifesting the Christ Life.”. /Text, II Corinthians “That the Life also of Jesus be Made Manifest in Our Seripture lesson, IT Corinthi- ‘a.m "4 6-11. | Al are wrlcome at these services, - PUBL!C CARD PARTY To be given by Sons of Norway, | Saturday, April 15, at 8:30 pm., in ]rhn 1.O.O.F. Hall, WANTED: People who want a THRILII®® Tune to KINY . . every Sunday ——— 6:30 to 7:30 p. m., to the OLD FASHIONED REVIVAL HOUR of the CHURCH OF THE AIR conducied { by the Rev. i CHAS, E. FULLER. 1 You Miss Something if I you don’t tune in. | Albert Frances,: Pan: American | | Airwdys meteorological - engineer | ‘who has been inspecting radio sta- tions efsthe line’s system through- ! out iInterior and Northwestern Al- aska for several weeks; is returning | on a PAA Electra today from Fair- banks. | ers Try an Empire ad.~ - "|today while H, Biggers, A. W Hay- returned. nine- ! Representative | from Nome in the last Legislative | session, is a northbound passenger | FAVORABLE VIEW IS TAKENBY WALL i STREET LEADERS Stock Markef ef Takes Ad- vance During Brief Sesssqn Ioday NEW YOR.K, Aprfl 15. — wall Street, leaders generally fook a fav- orable view, of President Rouv-vvu's dramgtic appeal.. . ‘The stock market jumped in spots from $1 to $4 at the short session, the principal rise coming after the 1 text of the President’s proposal was flashed on the Wall Street tickers. ‘There is a general impression that the President’s action has placed Hitler and Musso]tni squarely on the spot. HOLDEN FERRIES ON POLARIS RUN Flying the Marine Airways Bel- this . morning with passengers and. considerable freight to move to the Polaris-Taku mine. i Yesterday evening, Holden ‘brought in five passengers, and got off to {an early start this morning, flying two. in .and ‘bringing three back. W. A Bell.and A. Leven flew in den and A. Legg: At lenst. iour mps rcmnined for Emerson : Bassett, Ketchikan air- ! port manager for Pan American Air-! ways, was. to return from the Inter- ior today by PAA Electra. ! He has been temporary airport.| manager.at Nome during the absence | of the regular man there, and will stop: over for a while with the Ju- ineau- office here, until Pan Ameri- “mn begins work on the projected Seattle-Juneau eclipper service, and | <h|s services. will, be; meeded at the ALL DAY TODAY | lanca, Alex Holden faced a busy day |.. |iMOD U. 8. DEPARTMENT OF -AGRIOULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU THE WEATHER (By the U. 8. Weather Bureaw) Forecast for Juneau and vicinity, beginning at 3:30 p.m., April 15: cm:dy tonight, Sunday cloudy with showers; meoderate southeast winds. Weather forecast for Southeast Alaska: Cloudy tonight, Sunday cloudy with showers; moderate southeast winds except fresh over Dix- on Entrance, Clarence Strait, Frederick Sound and Chatham Strait, and fresh southerly winds over Lynn Ganal. Forecast cf winds uiong the Canst of the Gulf ¢l Alaska: Fresh southeast winds tonight and Sunday along the coast from Dixon En- trance to Yakutat; fresh easterly winds, ftom Yakutat to Cal .th?h inbrook. n ¥ T LOCAL DATA T"!D Humidity Wind Velgcity Wehther 39 s 6 P.OMy S 2 Clear s 8 Cloudy Time 0 p.m. yest'y 3:30 a.m. today Noon today Barometer 3024 3042 30.32 33 85 45 44 RADIO REPORTS TODAY Lowest 4a.m. 4a.m. Precip; dam. an temp. velocity 24 his. Weather 30 10 Clear 32 Pt. Cldy 30 % 26 20 30 30 34 32 33 32 30 36 46 44 48 Max. tempt. last 24 hours 38 40 14 Station Atka Anchorage Barrow Nome Béthel Fairbanks ... Dawson St. Paul s Dutch Harbor .. Kodiak . 82 26 26 18 30 28 32 32 31 30 32 32 32 46 4“4 48 “ w6 (54 60 WEATHTR SYNQPSIS A ridge of high air pressure extended froin the upper Yukon Val- ley southeast to Oregon this morning with the highést _bressure, 3042 inches, at both Ke! and Juneau. The barometer was also mod- erately high over -the- Aleutian Islands, A trough of low barometric pressure covered western Alaska and reached sputh over /the Pacific Ocean to lat. 40 degrees. Light to moderate precipitation occurred o Swanl wa | vwone 0 R aos & an San Francisco . New York ... ‘Washington - HuocorbEEecoBBRocanl of -from the Aleutian Islands to Prince William Sound and from lower This suit reflects the spring trend for softened lines. Nettie Rosen- \ | Pkt cn e { PAA MOVES INTO | NEW OFFICES AT i FRONT, FRANKLIN Pacific Alaska Airways were in their new office today at Front and Franklin, with workmen putting on | the finishing. toughes of one of the | most attractive offices in the Ter- | ritory. | The new offices contain a large outer. office. and counter, two inner lounge and shower in the rear, ‘Warrack Construction Company is doing the work, and will finish up, ‘with blue - Vitriolite .facing on the| | building, surmounted by a flying Gus (liams and wife, |A. B. Bell, !gold’ PAA “insignia. PARERATES . umon-_cgm_uqoi DIFFERENCES STILL REMAIN UNSETTLED, Juneatt’s $40,000 Willoughby Av- efiuve sewer project. was still at aj standstill today as contractors con- tinued negotiations over recognition and wage differences. Fourteen Juneau contractors are {scheduled to' meet with union re- presentatives tomorrow afternoon to | Qiscuss the :CIO local's request for ‘nn 85 cent hour instead of the 80 cent hour .contractors say is. the present unofficial scale \ e ——— | MOVING OUT ROAD . [ G. G. Hucmflsuan Executive Sec- retary of the Alaska Tuberculosis IAssochuon, is_moving this week to the Harold Brown house at Auk vfiay io spend .Ule summer f . § NORTHERN LIGHT PRESBYTERIAN flh' re Wélcome following meet- o S 4 4k s 9:45 SUNDAY. SCHOOL Five departments—Young People; Adults. 10:50 ORGA) ‘Dawn” (Hodson); ADULT CHOIR, “God So JUNIOR CHOIR, “Follow | “Let Not Your Heart Be Troubled” (Wilson). | PIPE ORGAN, “Adoration” (Gaul); “Postlude.” NORLITEMEN “Ladies’ Night” NORWOMEN this Thursday 6:00, last meeting of the season. MARTHA SOCIETY social meeting at one-thirty this Friday. “To Spring” (Grieg) 11;00 MORNING WORSHIP SERMON, “Is Heaven a Condition or a Place?” (first of a series on “Heaven”) and Worship Meet” REV. JOHN A. GLASSE, "Minister. GEORGE SCHMIDT, Chorister. CAROL BEERY DAVIS, Organnt We broadcnflt over KINY Sundays 10:50 to 12. N MOMENTS Loved the World” (Stainer). Me" (Petrie); 30 Tuesday, by reservation 373. aska § " 'Southwest Alaska ports at 9 o'clock | RE s O, Al A PIos by i morning with 210 passengers, | including the Juneau: | | Westfall, Wesley Barrett, Miss Bar- | ‘Irett, R. H. Davenport, Mrs. | Greenville City Schools stein designed it of soft gray tweed with a gored skirt and nip-waisted jacket and added a white pique blouse with a scalldped front fasten- ing. The same pique makes the sailor hat and gloves. M. R. Myntti and wife, Julia | 41 pASSENGERS | Sherman, M. Nicholson, Frank Mor- |rison, Ann Schaff, Miss L. Bardi, ARE BOUND HERE |A. O. Anderson, D. B. Camp, Er- STEAMER ALASK A! Mrs. R. J. Bruce, Peter Jjohnson, Lue Woodward, Dorothy | nest. Keilwaser. | Wanda | Cameron, Mrs. Anna Caldwell and baby, Jack Marasovich James Baldwin, Thelma Greischi, | Marie Stoner, Tom Swanson, Jim Doyle, D. K. Ibizoff. f S eee SEATTLE, sailed April 15 for Southeast Steamer Al- | and | following booked for| ¥ | Try an Empire ad. Miss Virgimarie Patchin, D. R.| son and wife, George Wil-| it Garnet O. Martin, | JAMES C CO@PER H. D. Porter and wife, | C. P. A Mrs. B.| ROOM 1 SHATTUCK BUILDING Phillip E. Thompson, R. R.| Hedgepeth, L. A. Hess and wife, | | J. T. Sullivan. The BALDWIN d;LL at the craftsman’s work-bench is only a part of the story. Brains and patierce in the Baldwin scientific laboratories tell the rest of the tale, The New York School of Music and Fine Arts has bought eighi Baldiwin Pianos. $ $ 'OTHER RECENT SALES TO PROMINENT PEQOPLE AND INSTITUTIONS University of Idaho Moscow, Idaho Baldwin Grand Missouri Industrial School for Girls . Two Acrosonics . Baldwin Grand . Baldwin Grand Chillicothe, Mo. Greenville, 8. C. Del Rio, Texas | Dr. J. R. Brinkley Pikeville City Schools St. Anne’s Convent . San Francisco william Wood College . Fulton, Mo. .. Miss Ada Flanders (Teacher).. Salina, Kan, Junior High School . Fort Dodge, . Hamilton Grand Howard Grand . Baldwin Grand ... Baldwin . Grand . Howard Grand Pikeville, Ky. Ia. . Stores at Alaska Musie Supply JUNEAU and SITKA PRI I TTITITITCTTITT T T rTTee) [ 4 Southeast Alaska to Vaneouver Island, also locally over northwestern Canala, with fair weather prevailing over the rest of Alaska, central Canada and the Pacific Oast states. Temperatures wete slightly * coolér over most: parts of the Territory last night. Juneau, April 16.—Sunrise, 4:47 a.an.; n I € sunset, 7:14 p.m. April 17. —Siirisé, 4745 a.im.; S0EEE" 716 p.m. Hoflywbod Sights And Sounds By Robbia Cosas HOLLYWOOD, Cal., April 15.—Jack Otterson gets about 125 letters a week from movie fans who want to know how to make their rooms look like Otterson movie sets. Many of them, nnmmlly, want advice on financial short-cuts toward achieving artistic qf?écts in home decoration. Many want stills of his ;ets for copying, many want information which would take full-time research to supply. He answers all he can, except the latter type—because he has a fuli-time job dolfg sets for Deanna Durbin and other Universal stars, Otterson is a_young man, in his early thirties, with young ideas . aud a background in decorative designing that includes grwduauon from the Yale School of Fine Arts, post-graduate work in the Paris_ Beuux Arts school seven yedrs in Hollywood studios. n Hollywnod he's known as a designer who has made a virtue of the necessity to pcflnamwe He came to .the U at a time of reorganization, after a period of upset, Mbged finahces which made strictly’ business routine in produmdfi & nfimny The studio had to turn out quality films at a reasonable cost, with fieither fime Yor pafience for “artistic temipérainent” to dssert 1igelr in red ik ‘on the ledgers. o&mfm's job was' to design sets that would look as impressive (Le. expensive, ih the Hollywnod point- of view) as sess elsewhere mlly cost 8 _pile ot money. A sizeable Wééklyligh mail is a good indication that he has done the job. And he's still doing it. His first premise—which anyone. will admit is logical—is that all that counts in a movie set is what shows on the scréen. Hé would like, 4s wéll ‘s thie Héxt one, to dip into thé {reasury for a bigger art budget—even now when Deanria’s pictures have eased the studio purse strings somewhat. He still kicks, Gccasionally, YT R PERGY ’S sssniffer test”>—N “.‘1 oes how’s your "sniffer” today? It's asy to muke sure that it's working O. K. Just. stroll into PERCY'S at dinner fime. If you find yourself surrounded by the most savory, fragrant aromas you've ever met — why, your "sniffer” knows its way around. when he figures he’s being nven too n.nlll a lorws to fabricate a silk purse. But by and large— ; “we n]! want more than we can .’ he says, “and it's fun, and stimulating, to ieet obstacles, ' Necéssity has inspired &' It of good ideas.”, His second premise is that simplicity, in keeplnu with most people’s modern habitations, is worth artistic strivlnc Modern people don't like to clutter up their homes with excéssive decora- tion, and modern people depicted on the screen shouldn't either— especially when the cluttering is likely to dig into the budgét. Example: The Durbin home in “Three Smart Girls Grow Up” is a richly decorated set in the Prench Renaissance marinef, and it hds an abundance of rich pieces—but the baroque theme is modified, merely suggested here and there. And it looks, on the screen, a great deal “richer” than it is. \ A Chinese tea garden, for another example, can be “su gested” by the simple devise of a dragon’s head against an other- wise bare wall. An exotic plant—or the shadow of oné—completes the effect. g Vast expanses of stone or plaster wall—as in the interiors for the Frankenstein castle—can be done with burlap, but Otterson's pet “richness and economy™ material is celanese or China siik. In the Bing Crosby film, “East Side of Heaven,” there's an apartment set, richly simple, which benefits through generous use of this material. Properly lighted from above and béhind, it iooks like an expensive opaque glass!

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