The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, April 22, 1939, Page 2

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Notices for this church column must be received by The Empire pot later than 10 c'clock Saturday morning to guaramtee change of permon, topics, ete. ' MEMORIAL PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH ! DAVID WAGGONER, ‘Minister ,' Sunday Services: 10:00 a.m—Bible School. Lesson, 4pdul ‘Wins Recognition for Gentile ©hristians.” Acts:'15:1-85; Gal. ‘2 1-10. , 11:00 am. — Morning Sermon Subject, “The Sympathy of Jesus. ‘F‘or we have not a high priest who Q.nmmr be touched with the feeling of our infirmities.” Heb. 4:15 7:30 p.m.—Evening Service. Topic discussion, “What should a Member Do?" Romans 12 €hurch y, 7:30 p.m Midweek 7:30 pm.~Women's Mis- a.ulhn\ Socict\ * A cordial invitation is given to all {0 attend these services and worship 'Xu| us. iMETROPOLITAN METHODIST + EPIS€OPAL CHURCH * Fourth dnd Sewara Streets JTHE REV. GEORGE EDWARD ' KNIGHT, Pastor ' 10:00 4.m.—Bunday School. Burns McCoskrie; Superintendent. This is| fully departmentalized Sunday | offering study courses suit- | a School, #ble to ull‘ages. ¢ 0:45 a.m-Beginners mary ‘ departments 1:00 ”‘ommn theme, “Toward Pentecost.” 200 p.m.—Epworth- League. %8%0 pm. — Evening Worship. érrmon theme, “Jesus in Our Tirhes." + Wednesday, April 26 — The De-| maris ‘Circle meets at the home of Mirs. Tom Hall on the Glacier High- way at 2 o'clock. Those needing and Pri- transportation call either Black 705 ¢‘ 238. * Priday, wl 7:30 pm.—Choir rehear- Secial Hour. Epworth H FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST Sunday services will be held at fl am in the First Church of Christ, Scientisi, Juneau, on Fifth | &nd Main Streets. The subject will “Probation After Death.” 10:00 a.m.—sunaay School i Wednesday, 8:00 pm. — Testi- monial meeting. ; Christian Science Reading Room ip chwrch building. This room 1s n to the public Wednesday Afternoons from 2:30 to 4. ¢ The public is cordially invited to Kttend these services and visit the reading room. b THE SALVATION ARMY Willoughby Ave. ~—Praise meeting ~—Sunday School ' 7:30 pm ~—Salvation Meeting. Tuesdfly 7:30 p.m—Prayer and ’*eslimony Meeting. * Wednesday, 7:00 p.m. — Guard Barade, Mrs. R. B. Lesher, Guard Beader ! Thursday, Teague M { Priday, '7: 80 pm —Holiness Meet- | 8. y All are welcome at these meetings. Qfficers in charge: Capt. and Mrs. Seanley Jackson; Assistant Officer, OGapt. Margaret ‘Morris. 130 pm. § RESURRECTION LUTHERAN H CHURCH + “In the heart of the city for the : hearts of the eity” H Main and Third Sts. SREV. JOHN L. CAUBLE, Pastor est Ehler Choir Director t Oberg ...Organist ‘9 45 am.—Sunday Sehool! 1 amm.—Morning Worship. | i — Home| organ postlude. 6:30 p.m.—Luther League will meet. Mrs. Ed Zinck is in charge of the Intermediate League. Choir rehearsals Thursday « eve- ning as follows: Juniors meet -at 7, Seniors at 8 o'clock. Thursday, 2:30 Missionary parsonage. Go to church somewhere Sunday. | all churches invite you. by E. Ehler. pm.—~Women's NORTHERN L1G! PRESBY- TERIAN O] CH “Where Welcome and Worship Meet” Franklin ‘at Fourth REV. JOHN A. GLASSE, Minister GEORGE SCHMIDT, Chorister CAROL BEERY DAVIS, Organist 9:45 d.Mm.—Suriday Schoel. 10:50 a.m.—Organ Moments. | 11:00 a.m.—Morning Worship. (See our display advertisement on | this page for-further details.) CATHULIC CHURCH Church of the Nativity of tha | Blessed V. M. Juneau | Fifth and Gold Streets | REV. WM. G. LeVASSEUR, 8., | Pastor Second Sunday after | Sunday masses: | 8¢ 16 'a.m.—Holy Mass. | 8:00 am.—Holy Mass struetion. 10:00 a.m 10:30 a.m.—High mon. 7:30 p.m.—Rosary and Benedic- | tion of the Most Blessed S8acrament. 8:00 am—Daily mass during the week, | Days of Special Devotion: Tues- |day, April 25—Feast of Saint Mark, the Evangeélist; Wednesday, April | 26—Solemnity of the Feast of Saint | Joseph, Universal Patron of ' the | Church; Thursday, April 27—FPeast ‘0! St. Peter Canisius, 8.J., a Doctor ,of the Church, Easter and In- ~Sunday Sehool Mass and Ser- GOSPEL SERVICES |PAUL BLAKE, THOS. ROBERTS (In Store Building, 9th and D | streets, opposite Ball Park.) Services will be held Sunday, | Tuesday, Thursday and Friday eve- ,nlngs at 7:30 o'clock and a hearty |invitation is exténded to all. i These meetings are nonsectarian and simple Gospel fessages will be | given, | R. Sines and H. Gibson are as-| sisting in these services. HOLY TRINITY CATHEDRAL, EPISCOPAL Fourth ang Gold Btreets THE VERY REV. CHARLES E. RICE, Dean 8:00 a.m—Holy Communion. 10:00 a.m.—Sunday School. 11:00 a.m.—Morning Prayer and Sermon. Thirsday—Girl Scouts, 3:45; Jun- ior Choir, 7, Adult Choir, 8 p.m Friday, 10 a.m.—Ladies’ Guild BETHEL MISSION ASSEMBLY OF GOD 121 Main Street CHARLES C. PERSONEUSB Pastor Bunday services: | 11:00 am.—Morning Worship. Sermon by Evangelist J. E. Barnes, | speaking on “Preparations Preceed | | Favors.” | 12:00 noon—Bible Suhool. Classes for all. 1:30 'p.m.—Broadcasting a service over KINY. | 7:30 p.m.—Evening Service. Evan- gélist J. E. Barnés will Speak. Sub- ject, “The Rider of the Pale Horse.” Evangelistic Services every night |at 7:30 o'clock, ‘except SBaturday I night. Speaking on “Prophecy.” Commurion Berwce the first Sun- Society will meet at the | WA LUINUAL, |on April 23, being a “Question-Box Discuséion,” with everyone interest- ed invited to come. | Chapeladies meet two Wednesday | evenings each month, in Kkeeping | | with timely ‘notices given in other columns of this paper. evenings with Roy Banta and Tom Barekston. SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST CHURCH Corner Second and Main Streets H. L. WOOD, Pastor (Note: The'servites of this church are held on Saturday, the seventh day of the week.) | sabbathschool 10:00 am., Satur- | day, with Bfble classes for all ages. Mrs. John Turner, Superintendent. Sabbath ' Worship 11 ° a.m.—Bible Study’or Sermbn by leader. | Herbert Punches in charge during | absefice of Pastor ‘Wood: Dorcus Society and Home Com- mission meéts every second and fourth Wednesday at 2 p.m. Mid-week Bible Study Class Wed- nesday evening at 7:30 o'clock. All are welcome to the services of this ehurch. | AUK BAY BIBLE STUDY LEAGUE Pastor H. L. Wood, Minister The Auk Bay Bible Study League meets every Tuesday evening at 7 o'clock in the various homes of the members. See rotice elsewhere as to meeting place this week. All highway residents are invited to these Bible studies. 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 (Native ‘Giospel ‘Services) GEORGE H.' LOVELESS Missionary~-in-Charge 3:00 p.m—Meeétiig at home of Mrs. Mary Nelson, No. 15, Native Village. Topic, “The New Com- | mandment.” Text, John 13:34,35.“A |new commandment 1 give unto you, ‘lhm. ye also love one another. By ‘ths shall all men know that ye |are My diséiples, if ye have love jone to another.” Scripture “lesson, I John 3:14-24. | Al are welcome at these services. 'Logs for Tofems Get Tow from Forest Service | Eight large red cedar logs to be carved into totem poles by Indian |craftsmen at Sitka will be in' tow of the Forest Service launch For- ester ‘when it heads north Monday ‘| from Ketehikan. Largest of the logs |is 66 inches at the butt and 75 feet {long. | - 'The Porester will pick up 15,000 | shakes at Wrangell and a truck at | Kake. The shakés are to be un- |loaded at ,Juneau for warehouse |stock and the truck used in CCC work. | - e [ CAROL H. SELLS The halibut bodt Carol H., Capt. |Ed Hansen, sold 2,500 pounds of halibut on the local fish exchange today, receiving prices of 6.05 and |4 05 cents a pound from the Alaska Coast Fisheries. { - A new .sprl.ng fllvur—add a'dash of cinnamon to tHe sugar you serve | on strawberries. Oinnamon also helps the whipped cream topping for a ~5trawberry shorteake. Cub-Boy Scouts meet on Friday | OLD EMPIRE | COMES BACK Evangelist Pomts Out 1hat Resuscitafion of Rome Prophesied Before an interested congregation last night at the Bethel Pentecost-| al Assembly of God, Evangelist J. E. Barnes showed from prophecy that the Old Roman Empire, which by the year 200 A.D. had completed its world conquest, but which be- | came dismembered and fallen, would again rise out of the debris and be- come an enormous power. One by one did the mighty cm-‘ pites fall, as was shown to the first | king of Babylon in a dream, and | history confirmed that this proph- | etic utterance was minutely carried out in detail, with the result th(u the almost impregnable Empires fell | away into decay, the Evangelist said The resuscitation of territories | would include all {fie lands held by the former three empires prior to| the invasion by the Romans, hamely, | the Babylonians, Medes and Per- sians, and the Grecian Empires. | While Mr. Barnes was listening | recently to Benito Mussolini speak- | ing in Rome, with awe-inspiring | precision and deliberation, and like one who had attained’ great auth- ority and prestige, he was struck with the deepermeaning which was hidden behind the dictator’s woras than appeared on the surface. The Evangelist could see very plainly that this man, who a short while back was hardly heard of, had so| suddenly come into power to the extent of causing other nations to tremble, that he filled the bill to the detail of the prophecy of the anti-Christ who would rise up in the days of this dispensation. That Rome was gaining prestige and territories and becoming once | again a formidable nation was with- | out dispute, and the evangelist re- minded the people of the warning which God has given to the world, | that when this' mighty power be- | gan to make itself felt by dictatorial | and cruel and unjust methods, it| would be the signal to all christians that He would be coming to take His church away before ‘anti-Christ was allowed ‘to ‘vent his demoniec power upon the earth-dwellers. Mr. Barnes urged his hearers to put their trust in God speedily and escape the ter- rible tribulation which may shortly burst out upon the whole world destroying a third of its population WAYNOR TRACT T0 SEE MORE DEVELOPMENT Cut Through - Lots Offered for Sale Pioneering of modern low-cost housing in Juneau has brought re- turns in steadily increasing de- mands for homes built for the aver- age family. | Proof of the need for low-cosL modern homes has been established by Charles Waynor, who has al-| ready constructed eight such homes in 'his ‘suburban residential devel-| opment, and today announced that | plans for ten more are off the due to get under way almost imme- Everycne cordially invited to all| | |day of each month. | | these servizes. | CHAPEL BY 1HE LAKE | (On Priz Cove Corner) REV. JOHN A GLASSE, Minister 9:45 am.-—Sunday School, with| | | '11 00 a.m. — Morning Worship, | Mrs. Harry Arnold Aupenntendrnh Isturgy and Sermon. Holy Gospel r Second Sunday after Easter, hn 10:11-16; sermon subject, “The Good Shepherd”; music: organ pre- | 1§de by Oberg; offertory, vocal solo 28 and well-taught classes for all chil-| dren of the community. Evening Worship'and Bible Study | at 8 o'clock every other Sunday eve- ning, next meeting to be held NORTHERN LIGHT PRESBYTERIAN “Where Welcome and Worship Meet” gy Aot y 9:45 SUND. Five departments. 10:50 ORGA “The Holy City “Worship of God in Nature” 7 REV. JOHN A. GLASSE, Minister. GEORGE SCHMIDT, Chorister. CAROL BEERY DAVIS, Organist. We broadeast over KINY Sundays 10:50 to 12. AY SCHOOL Young People; Adults. N MOMENTS (Adams) (Beethoven) 11:00 MORNING WORSHIP SERMON, “Heayen, (second Who' Are There?” in series) TENOR SOLO, Selected, George Schmidt. Our annual Budge! ( and assurances of i nvass is now in progress; 1ancial help are invited. Ethel Barrymore ........... George Vanderbilt ........ Roosevelt High School . Gustavus Adolphus Col- lege ... Rainbow Room Radio Station KXOK ... Radio Station WEW ....St. Louls, Radio Station WTMY | ALASKI Rockefell b, w pens .Tulsa,- Oklahoma . St. Peter, 8t. Louis, 5 Janls M. A MUSIC SUPPLY | STORES at JUNEAU and SITKA 5 Aernsomc Acrosonic 2 -Baldwin Grands ...1 Baldwin Grand 3 Baldwin Grands 1 Baldwin Grand 1 Baldwin Grand 1 Bflldwln Grand Minn. ........ er Center, N. Y. Mo. . Mo. ot | cipal Behrends Avenue s fo Be |his first offering draughting board, with construction |4 MODES of the MOMENT by Adelaids Kerr Straight coats are going places beside the much-discussed fitted ones this spring. This New Ycrker wears one of soft navy blue wool with a frock of the same fabric and a white straw hat trimmed in dark chiffon. She adds a dash of celor with a new fresh flower ment—epaulets of gladiolas. id scarlet all completed diately. The first eight home. The Empire sold before they were Mr. Waynor declared The new group of also be built to afford U sible in modern conver comfort & suited to the Try will Pos- and WANTED: People who want a THRILL! Tune to KINY . . every Sunday 6:30 to 7:30 p. m. to the OLD FASHIONED REVIVAL HOUR of the CHURCH OF THE Al conducted by the Rev. CHAS. E. FULLER. av- work on the i Compan; of the prin- development, Avenue and water line entire ler Prior to com ten new h William J complete the street of the known as Behrends Sewers, sidewalks are to be laid the street, Manthey cuttin ing on the im Avenue. Actual house struction, by contractor R. D erman, will fol. close on the I of street and lot improve Mr. Waynor today also of homesit the development. The group of proved lots offer fronts on the Gla cier Highway, located in ti to be encircled by Behrends and its new homes. - Empire rends \.»:hu You Miss Semething if you don't tune in. Try The classifieds results. THE BUY.OF YOUR LIFE! SELECTIVE AIR CUKDITIUHS PING STORAGE keeps vegetables o crisp aad gardea- GENERAL D ELECTRIC Jlple-Thadft REFRIGERATORS THE beautiful new Gen- eral Electric refrigerators are here now. More beautiful, more practical than fROTEN STORAGE " ro- # 2o lwisu pelesth ever. before . . . at new lower prices. With selective air conditions, the new G-E has a place for everything and everything in its place. Before you buyany refrigerator be sure to see the new G-E. NEW LOWER PRICES FOR ’39 oL mnm combings_high. hu- Taidity and low tem: o pesiuee for meat Sold on Easy Payment Plan GENERAL adjustable e PHONE 616—Sales and Service | Bake conveaiens Alaska Electric Light & Power Co. JUNEAU——ALASKA—DOUGLAS 0. 8. DEARTMENT OP AGRJCU’LTDRE. WEATHER BU‘R.IAU THE WEATHER (By ‘the U, 8. W eather Bureau) Forecast for Juneau and vicinity, beginning at 3:30 p.m. April 22: Rain tonight and Sunday; moderate ‘to fresh southeast winds. Weather forecast for Southeast Alaska: Rain tonight and Sunday, moderate to fresh southeast windsexcept fresh to strong over Dixon Entrance, Clarence Strait, Chatham Strait and Frederick Sound and fresh to strong southerly winds over Lynn Canal. Forecast ¢f winds sfong the Coast o fthe Gulf of Alaska: Fresh fo strong southeast winds tonight and Sunday along the coast from Dixon Entrance to Cape Spencer; fresh to strong east and northeast winds from Cape Spencer to Cape Hinchinbrook. LOCAL DATA Barometer Temd. Humidity Wind Veloeity = Weather 29.92 40 6 w 7 Lt.R.&S. 29.95 35 Wisg s 3 Cloudy 29.88 40 3 SE 12 Lt.R.&S. RADIO REPORTS i TODAY ! Lowest 4am. 4a.m. Precip. temp. temp. velocity 24 hrs. 12 6 Time 3:30 p.m. yest'y 3:30 am. today Noon today Max. tempt. 1ast 24 hours 40 38 4am, ‘Weather Clear Cloudy Cloudy Snow Clotidy Clear Cloudy Cloudy Snow Pt. Cldy Cloudy Station Atka Anchorage Nome Bethel Fairbanks Dawson St. Paul Dutch Harbor Kodiak Cordova Juneau Sitka Ketchikan Prince Rupert Edmonton Seattle Portland Ban Francisco New York | Washington | 84 Sandeo " Clear Pt. Cldy Cloudy Cloudy Cloudy Cloudy Cloudy Clear adbuonn e 50 C) | 52 54 WEATHER SYNOPSIS An area of low barometric pressure coveréd western‘and southern Alaska and the Gulf of Alaska’this morning with a central pressure of 2030 inches southwest of Kodiak Island.” The baromeétér was mod- erately high from upper ‘Southeast’ Alaska 'to Puget Sound though fall- ing over Boutheast Alaska. Lightto moderate preeipitation fell over Western, Southern, and upper Southeast’ Alaska during the last 24 hours. Temperatures were someWhat warmer over the Aleutian’ Islands and the Prince William Sound region but colder over most other por- tions of the Territory last night. Juneau, April 23.—Sunrise, 4:28 a.m.; —Sunrise, 4:26 am.; suns'et 7:32 pm. 1 1. A.MACHINISTS ‘LOCAL 514/ ODD FELLOWS' HALL @ sunset, 7:29 p.m. April 24. MEETS MONDAY 7:30 P. M. Hollywood Sights And So:mdt By Robbia Cosms HOLLYWOOD, Cal,, April‘22—This has been Travel Week in Hollywood. - I can remember the old days when a previewer went pre- viewing and came home again and that was that. You went to the neighborhood theatre—almost invariably the one on the other side of town from where you live—and you saw the picture but you always came home and spent the night in your own bed in your own house, Hollywood “big business” is changing that. After the preview nowadays you pile into your berth on the train, sleep more or less peacefully, pile out at the home plate, dash home for a clean shirt and pack off again. Home, in the new manner of speaking, is where the latest “colossal” is This week we've been to San Francisco to see one movie and to Kansas to see another. I suppose the particular movies could have been seen almost as well in the studio projection rooms, but why quibble—and why fight against a New Trend? (And why not see Kansas? It is not my opinion alone, but I'm sure most people in Hollywood would profit by seeing Kansas. Especially the pro- ducers. ¥ The way things are going, it is a poor neglected movie indeed that doesn’t get itself a gala premiere in the city of or near its setting. “The Oklahoma Kid,” naturally, in Oklahoma City, and “Union Pacific” in Omaha, Neb., the railroad’s home office. “Brother Rat” near Virginia Military Institute, and “The Buc- caneer” in New Orleans. This is what is known as “bringing Hollywood to the people.” PERCY’S has an air it's a congenial and delicious air that-pervades PERCY'S at all times — the air of fine food well served in tasteful surroundings. In crasser circles it is known, also, as top-notch exploitation stuff. The date-lines of Dodge City, Kas., probably won't hurt a movie called “Dodge City,” which makes that the year's smartest title. (Perversely and ungraciously, I'm thinking like heck this minute of a different date-line to use but after all—whén in Dodge City, do as Dodge Citians do, I always say.) The New Trend, naturally, has certain 'disconcerting “possi- bilities. It will be all right (with me) \if they preview such as “The Rose of Washington Square” and “Streets of New York” and “Hell’s Kitchen” all the way across the country—and take us all back there “to get in the spirit of the.thing.” T'd even go to Canada—for “Susannah:of the Mounties.” Fd draw the line, however, at the. “Street of Missing Men.” There's something ominous in that title, especially applied to not- too-kind previewers. When I turn up missing, I want'to turn up missing after my own fashion, not in a manner prescribed by any movie studio. The 'same applies to “The Island of Silent Men” —what about this freedom-of-the-press business? Also to “The Lost Atlantis”—no trips to nowhere for Yours Cautiously. Rumors to the contrary, there is little prospect that “Concen- tration Camp” will be previewed—or even sjown—in Germany. I think Warner Bros. will draw the line somewhere. “Beau Geste”? Well, the desert’s okay, too. “East .Side of Heaven” is one, however, that has been giving * some of us concern. .Tghere z;s .fio .";ubstiuvctev f;)r Newspaper Advertising

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