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

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Notices be rec later for iais church column CHURCH In the heart of the c heart must eived by . Th not than 10 o'cloy of the c mornir surmon topics, CATHOLIC CHURCH Chruch of the ivity of d V. M. Juncau fth ang Gold St Wm G El Pastor h Sunday Feast of Our Blessed Mother Mount Carr 5:15 am 8100 am struction. 10:30 a.m.—Holy by Benediction of Sacrament 8:00 am Days of nesday ¥ T Sain 8 Vince ¥ Feast the REV Pentec th T 1 blic to come ast Hc EPISCOPAL Fourth and Gold Streets THE VERY REV. CHARLES E. RICE, Dean Services Holy Commu: m.—Morning Prayer Ma Ho' Sur 00 a.u 11:00 a Sermon No Sunday nion. of School BETHEL MESSION IBLY OF GOD i21 Main Street CHARLES C. PERSONEUS Pastor Sunday services 11:00 am.— Morning Sermon by the Pastor, 12:00 noon—Bible . hool for all. METROPOLITAN EPISCOPAL Four ard S THE REV. GEOF EDWARD KNIGHT, Pastor Jay METLODIST CUURCH £ Murs Bui 10:00 cept Be who come 11:00 am Sermo t Director. d P 10:45 o Mo ught Special music W 1 over KINY 7:30 pm Tuesday, ice -Evening 7:30 pm service. re Were Friday, 7:30 p.m—Meeting con- Stanley by the Glad Tidings Band C&pt. Margaret Morris. ducte 1 of Young People. Cor jon service fi RESURRECTION LUTHERAN for the sub- REV. JOHN A. GLASSE, Mir invitation and re- INITY CATHEDRAL. Worship Clesses 1:30 p.m.--Broadcasting a service League Meeting. ~Gospel Serv- st Sunday AUK BAY BIBLE STUDY LEAGUE | ru > cordially invited to all e seryices, MEMORIA GOSPEL SERVICES D Streets ervices servi be held at 1d are 11 am. in the Fi Church of Y Christ, Scientist, Juneau, on Fifth and Main streets. The subject will be “Life nd bringin; 10:00 a.m—Sunday School ciated, Wednesday, 8:00 p.un. monial meeting Christian Science Reading Room in church building. This room is open to the public Wednesday afternoons from 2:30 to 4 o'clock The public is cordially invited to attend these services and visit the reading room. Sanday is r interest in others will be com PAUL BLAKE, THOMAS ROBERTS. NORTHERN LIGHT PRESBY- TERIAN CHURCH “Where Welcome and Worship Meet” Franklin at Fourth Testi- SIS S NORTHERN LIGHT PRESBYTERIAN “Where Welcome and Worship Meet” REV. JOHN A. GLASSE, Minister. MRS. D. L. REYNOLDS, Summer Chorister. SERVICES NOT BROADCAST FOR THE PRESENT. 10:00 SUNDAY SCHOOL All swamer 'ong, interesting informal sessions for everyone. With our minister on vacation this Sunday there will be no Worship Service in this church; and we urge our people to attend the services of the other churches in the city. i,-,--,,,.,.,----..,..---..--_-,-.,m,.,mm., dren with methads Gf the préss, HELPS COLLECTIONS_Even the churches share in the boom oil has brought St. Elmo and other southern Ilinois towns. One church reports $18,000 in royalties. Above, at St. Elmo, a giant swivel awaits drilling operations, 1omina- nday, Mrs. Mary Nelson, 15 Native Village. 7:45 p.m extended | john 5:23 appre- REV. JOHN A. GLASSE, Minister | dant e S GRS WELLS SPROUT IN CHURCH AND THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, SATURDAY, JULY 15, 1939 WHAT, NO ALIBI THEN GEORGE SCHMIDT, Chorister CAROL BEERY DAVIS, Organist 9:45 a.m.—Sunday School 10:50 a.m.-—Organ Moments. 11:00 a.n.—Morning Worship (See our display advertisement on | this page for {urthier details.) CHAPEL BY THE LAKE (On Fritz Cove Corner) No held regular meetings are being during the summ months, timely notice of special meet- from time to time will be given in this paper. 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, Sunday—- 2:30 p.m—Praise meeting. 6:00 pm.—Sunday School. 7:30 p.an.—Salvation Meeting. Tuesday, 7:30 p.m.—Prayer and| Testimony Mee! \ Wednesday Parade, M Teader Thursday, Willoughby Ave. Guard | Guard 13 PR - Ruke Alibi-Thinker-Upper Peters Friday, 7:30 p.m.—Holiness Meet- | ing. | All are welcome ai Liese meetings. Officers in charge: Capt. and Mrs. ackson; Assistant Officer, By JACK STINNETT AP Feature Service Writer NEW YORK, July 15—If you don't like this story, I gotta alibi I got it from Don Peterson, He ns the Alibi Bureau—“Excus Pastor H. L. Wood, Minister | alibis. dramatically presented b The Auk Bay Bible Study League experts. Fees reasonable. meets Tuesday evening at the home, tial, personal attention of John Natterstad on Glacier High-|of thought Legitimate way. Highway residents are in-|only. vited | That's the way in fiden- Origina purposes Don describes it and way it knock on the door of floor office on Broadway low 42nd Street Peterson a medium - height, blondish young man, with an i formal manner and a of humeor. Born on a Minnesota farm, he came to New York about ter years &go after resigning from t. Navy. He started writing and pro- ducing radio programs, still counts that as his principal occupation. A couple of years ag an tress of some note who was doing some radio work burst into the office all a-twitter An Idea Is Borm “My radio producer demands that I come to his office immedi- ately to discuss a new broadcast I'm doing a recording this after- noon for a rival radio man that will net me $100. I can't think of a way out, Don. What am I to do?” “Here,” he said, “take this scrip! | of 'a Broadway play. Dash over to | your producer’s office and tell him you are reading it this afternoon for 4 great Broadway theater man Tell him just to read the swel! part you have. The actress did as she was told, made the recording, earned the $100 and stayed in the good grace: of her producer on whose fre- ALASKA EVANGELIZATION SOCIETY > Gospel Services) ORGE H. LOVELESS Missionary-in-Charge p.m.—Meeting at home of that's the when you his h- just be- is 3:00 Topic. ne Deity of Christ,” SE -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.) | Saturday, 10:00 am. — Sabbath- school, with Bible classes for ally ages, Lillian Turner, Superinten- ac- 11:00 a.m.—Sabbath Worship. Ser- mon by pastor or leader | Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.—Midweek Bible Study Class. All are invited to attend all serv- ices. SUNDAY MIGHT SHOOT SLATED The regular Sundey shoot of the Juneau Shotgun Club will be held tomorrow evening at 6:30 instead of in the morning, Secretary Milt Dan- iel announced today. ‘quen: assignments she depended Daniel also sad that two weeks‘fcr bread, butter and rent S | from tomorrow, Dr. W. W. Counci] | §7ateful was she that she ma and L. F. Morris will be shooting | Peterson a check for $10 |a 00 bird match for which they are| That's how the Alibi Bureau | practcing now. 1 was born. For more than a year it Daniel urgés “all who are inter-|Was no more than an amusing ested” in scatter gunning to show! hobby, but for some months now up at the club’s grounds on the|it has been a major Peterson in- | Glacier Highway near Salmon Creek | dustry, with ads in some of power house tomorrow evening. | local newspapers and one na - ally circulated journal SCHOOL JOURNALISM The imigaination of alibi-s —and there are many of them—is LONDON—Miniature newspaper | singularly lacking. Practically all offices set up in classrooms | wish to be relieved from some so- throughout the country are part‘cinl or business obligation (Don of a competition launched by an‘sum)lies “telephone operators” for English daily to familiarize chil-|this who answer all calls with: “I'm sorry but Mr. Whatsit's out the NO PLACE LIKE HOME —But home may have an ofl well operating in the back yard, as in the case of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Marshaff of Centralia, Ill. They're only two of the many persons benefited by the “black gold” in Iljnois, on Studies Client's Problem 105 the city”) or want an alibi for being late to social or business en- gagements. In the latter instance, Peterson instructs the victim to upon arrival, merely: “Sorry was in an automobile a er oments later, a ban- from the Alibi s and says: “Here, your brief case, I lifted your bat- it say I Blank, | found it when they tered car to take heap. All Peterson, n a commer- If every one had to teil the time, this old 1 world would be more of a sham- bles than it is, he claims, so why not spread confidence everybod Pete! s dossiers even contain cases where marital bliss has been saved from a mother-in-law’s visit. Wile’s mother threatened to move in two youngsiers who had neither the room nor the time share ‘with any one else if their marriage was to be suceess. After ul investigation, Pe: | terson supplied the husband with three out-of-work brothers who Jjust had to be provided lodging ahead of the mother-in-law with independent income. Fortu- for Peterson, he admits, the r-in-law saw the wisdom of and er a two-day visit, 'nt in a hotel room, home. The' young folk spend a happy vacation with her every year—paying their share of the expense. “We don't, of course, take case that has anything to do with the courts” says Peterson. “And we won't supply alibis hus- bands or wives eking to deceive their mates. Fees for alibis range from $5 up. Those which Vi *laborate, require several actors and a lot of might run into hundreds merely cial s the tru to nately this which sh returned n to any tor There have been practically none of that nature so fa son, the very kernel of a being its disarming I warned you about this story in the first place. “What,” I asked alibi if sn't a good “Just tell ing to me.” You can't beat a like that. —————— WAYNOR COLLECTS Charles Waynor won a $800 judg- ment in District Court today from Henry Moy for collection of a debt. ‘em you've been talk- to the Junk‘ and make NATIVEHELD | ALIBI PETE IS READY TO ~ IN YAKUTAT DO BUSINESS WITH YOU DEATH CASE % Autopsy ‘Réport of Heart i Disease May Cancel Manslaughter (Continued from Page One) winter, and reache: but returned in two hours, leaving the village at 7:10 last evening and arriving here at 9:10. Bear and Eagles e the party saw 13 brown; 7Zly hear on the beaches 20 | miles west of Lituya Bay, one of | the brownies being described by | George Folta, ardent bear hunter, as a “monster.” They also saw 50 eagles on enc sand har feeding on the ouligan. | Folta said today that unless it can be shown that the heart disease from which George died was a re- suit of the scuffle with Louie, charges will probably be dropped, | Fuperal services for George were held at Evergreen. Cemetery at 3 | o'clock this afternoon under the di- | rection of the Charles W. Carter | Mortuagy.s ;Rev. Q. & ;lfice of - | ficiated. REAL BOOSTER i SACRAMENTO, Cal., July 15— | F. D. Williams, railrcad shop work- ‘er, willed the state of California | his entire estate of $20,000. 1 R | ANDERSON GOES TO WESTWARD ON FLORA | P | J. P. Anderson iled for the rd on the Mount McKinley. on, Representative in the last two sessions of the Territorial Legislature, and well known for his botany work, will continue his gath- ering of specimens and data on the flora of Alaska for a book he is compiling. He will be absent on his trip sev- eral weeks. .- HERBERT McLEAN TAKES PATIENT TO SEATTLE Herbert McLean, of the McLean Insurance Company, left for the south on .the steamer Baranof. He accompanied Claude B. Howe, a pa- | tient, to Seattle, and after a short stay in that city will return here. e DOWELLS LEAVE L. J. Dowell, paving contractor, his wife and son, left for Seattle aboard the steamer Baranof. e DABO SAIl Mitchell Dabo, proprietor of the Gastineau Cafe, sailed on the Bar- anof for Seattle on a combined busi- ness and pleasure trip. 1 - DIVORCE GRANTED Final decree of divorce was grant- ed in District Court today to Cora F. Brostrum from Edward J. Bros- trum on grounds of desertion. - MONAGLE AUTHORIZED i TO BE COMMISSIONER Attorney M. E. Monagle was au- thorized in District Court today to | act temporarily. as United States Ccmmissioner for the Juneau dis- triet. Monagle will substitute for Com=- missioner Felix Gray, who with Mrs. Gray, is planning a vacation trip !south for an indefinite stay. The ,Grays have not yet decided when | they will sail. | —————— | SAGERS LEAVE | Mr. and Mrs. Ed Sager sailed on | | the Mount McKinley today for Val-| dez. From Valdez, the Sagers will go to Fairbanks to visit indefinitely. COMING CLOSER_In the shadonof derricest of St. Elmo, Ill,, cows graze peacefully, unaware of the change oil can make in their guiet pasture. Discovery of dil increased St Elmo’s population from l,o_?o, tg 5,000, The plane bucked a 30-mile head- wind most of the way to Yakutat, U. S. DEPARTMENT OF° AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU THE WEATHER (By the U. S. Weather Bureau) Forecast for Juneau and Vicinity, beginning at 3:30 p.m., July 15: Showers tonight and Sunday; moderate east and southeast winds. Forecast for Southeast Alaska: Showers tonight and Sunday; moderate east and southeast winds. Torecast of winds along the coast of the Gulf of Alaska: Moderate east and southeast winds tonight and Sunday from Dixon Entrance to Cape Hinchinbrook LOCAL DATA warometer Temn Humidity Wind Velocity 29.82 e 40 Wsw 10 29.83 57 4 SSE 3 20.87 57 83 Bl 10 RADIO REPORTS TODAY 3:30a.m. Precip. 3:30am. temp. 24 hours Weather 50 Cloudy 36 Pt. Cldy 45 Pt. Cldy 48 Cloudy 52 Cloudy 49 Cloudy Cloudy Cloudy Cloudy Overcast Overcast Time 8:30 p.m. yest'y 3:30 a.m. today Noon today ‘Weather Cloudy Overcast Lt. Rain Lowest temp. 50 Max. tempt. | last 24 hours | 59 38 51 54 66 7 49 56 56 57 3 64 65 Station Anchorage Barrow Neme Bethel Fairbanks Dawson St. Paul Dutch. Harbor Kodiak Cordova Juneau Sitka Ketchikan Prince Rupert Edmonton | Seattle i Portland | San Fri | Mod. Driz. _Cloudy Pt. Cldy Lt. Rain Cloudy Pt. Cldy WEATHER SYNOPSIS High barometric pressure prevailed this morning over the Pacific cean from the Aleutian Island; southward to the Hawaiian Is- lands, elsewhere over Alaska and northwestern Canada low baromet- ric pressure prevailed, the lowest reported pressure over the southern icn of the Gulf of Alaska beinz 29.84 inches at Langara Island. This general pressure distribution has been attended by unsettled and showery weather over most of Alaska and over the Pacific Northwest States. Juneau, July 16—Sunrise, 3:18 a.m.; sunset, 8:53 p.m. Sunrise,, 3:20 a.m,;, sunset, 8:51 p.m. July 17— [ship is scheduled to arrive from the | Interior this afternoon. Northbound this mornng with pi- | lots Murray Stuart and Burton Lien, were passengers, Joe Meherin, S. A. Banks and A] Monsen: Inbound this afternoon with pi- Yesterday Fetes Ifldependefl(e Day}lots Bill Knox m.ld Gene Meyring In commemoration of Serba’s in- | Lotta. dependence from Turkey, Serbians - of Gastineau Channel had a picnic BASEBALL LEAGUE TO MEET SUNDAY; Serbians'_Pimic - | STOCK QUOTATIONS + 3 1 - NEW YORK, July 15. — Closing quotation of American Can at to- celebration yesterday at Treadwell Beach. | Serbia’s independence day being | June 28, was observed yesterday due | . AR ot DISCUSS PROTEST possible. | & About fifty individuals attended| ~What the status of the Elks and ihe festivities, an old-country barbe- | the Moose baseball clubs happens cue highlighting the outing. In|t® be at present in relation to the Paul, Mrs. Charley Miller and Mrs, | 0 Which they were defeated, is a Nick Netievich. moot question today. Epairicr el et s | League President, Judge William | Holzheimer announced today he RMISTRAR "oIES was withdrawing his oral opinion B'R]’H (ER"H(A'[E and would hold a meeting of all league officials tomorrow after- ncon at 4 o'clock to discuss the protest and ruling. Within the lasi tew weeks a num- | P AT 208 ber of requests for certificates of birth have been received by the Reg- istrar of Vital Statistics for Alaska from vocational training schools Yesterday, a specific request was | received from the Dobbins Vocation- al School in Philadelphia for evi- dence of the birth of Mary Mar-| guerite McDonnal, who was born in | the Pennsylvania law she could not be admitted to this school unless she is a citizen of the United States,| and the purpose of the information asked from Registrar Frank Boyle's | a citizen. Other requests have come, par-| ticularly from California cities, | about the admission of children to their high schools. These reque: of greater care being taken by doc- | tors and others in reporting birtk PRS0 Sl One PAA Electra flew north to to unfavorable weather conditions ! charge of the affair were Mrs. Gabe | E1ks protest of a game on June 26 | ef yesterday, deciding for the Elks, REQUESTS INCREASE throughout the countr Juneau on February 5, 1821. Under | office was to show that she is such | show the necessity .and desirability Fairbanks ths morning and another FARM YARDS AS OIL BOOM HITS ILLINOIS TOWNS day’s short session of the New York Stock Exchange is 96'%, American Power and Light 4 Anaconda 257%, Bethlehem Steel 55, Com- menwealth and Southern 1%, Cur- tiss Wright 5%, General Motors 45'%, International Harvester 57, Kennecott 34%, New Yerk Central 14%, Northern Pacific 8%, United States Steel 47%, Pound $4.68 7/16. DOW, JONES AVERAGES The following are today's Dow, Jones averages: industrials 137.88, rails 27.49, utilities 24.72. e, TO AID UNTOUCHABLES BULAWAYO, South Africa—Tak- ing a three-fold vow including one of poverty, R. F. Green, a Euro- pean, will join an Indian semi- monastic order devoted to care of Untouchables. LA The Book ALASKA, Revised and Enlarged, Now On Sale; $1.00. IT'S PAY DIRT—0il spurts from pipe as workmen pre- pare to put tubing in well on the James Shanafelt farm near Selmaville, T1L. Oil profits gave the Shanafelts two new bedrooms. o » hathroom, five autos and new furniture. <l

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