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— s ‘church 5:15 a.m-—Holy. Mass. Notices for must be received by The 8:00 am.—HOly Mass and In- not later than 10 o'clock Safu struction morning to guarantee change of 10:00 a.m.—Sunday School ermon topics, etc 10:30 a.m.—High Mass and ser- k3 mon HOLY TRINITY CATHEDRAL 730 p.m.—Rosary and Benedic- EPISCOPAL tion of the Most Blessed Sacra- Fourth and Gold Streets ment. THE VERY REV. CHARLES 8:00 a.m.—Holy Mass daily E. RICE, Dean 7:00 p.m.—Rosary in the church Marye Berne Choir Director | cn Wednesday and Friday Jackson Rice Organist — Services: g B Communion. gt . 10:00 s rday School. PR BYTERIAN ('llvl'R( H Woias b iy andl Lay-worker Willlam Youngs in Monday, 7:30 p.m.—Special choir [ o ® H b S rehearsal. T 7:30 p.m.—Young People’s Christ- 1 Scouts, " ian Endeavor 3:30 pm, rsday— e o Monday, 4:00 p.m.—Trail Blazers Friday, 10:00 am.—Guild meets| o : e 3 Wednésday, 4:00 pm, — Light in Trinity Hall. Luricheon served,|p o 2”; ‘;‘ ,j““"l,"‘i";]‘ff"“ rand Mrs. | g dnesday, 7:30- p.am. — Prayer R e aTe s and Praise Service; choir prac- . okt 1k ;| tice RESUBHEUKEON JUPHERAN Saturday — Christian _Endeavor CHUO Business meeting and social | “In the heart of the city for the el ~ hearts of the city” A Main and Third Stc. NORTHERN LIGHT PRESBY- REV. JOHN L. CAUBLE, Pastor | Ernest Ehler—choir directo: Ernst Oberg—organist 9:45 am.—Sunday’ School. “Where Welcome ang Worship Meet"” Franklin at Fouria 11:00 am Morning Worship, |REy., JOHN A. :uacSE, Minister Liturgy and sermon. Holy Gospel| (GEORGE SCHMIDT, Chorister | for the second Sunday in Advent,| cAROL BEERY DAVIS. Organist Luke 21:25-36, < Sermon subject,| (See our display advertisement on “When the Son of God Returns. this page ‘for further details.) Music program: ,Organ “ 10:00 a.m.—Sunday School “Glori offertory, “V | 10:50 a.m.—Organ Momer | Mulle , “Oh, For the Wings 11:00 a.m.—Morning Worship. of a Dove"—Mendelssohn, by High|* 4:00 p.m.—Christian Endeavor. School Trio, Ruth Allen, Idabelle| 6:00 p.m.—Vesper Service. | Dobson, Charliene Arnold; postlude,| Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.—Mid-Week “postlude” Leands Bible Study Sunday, 2:00 p.m. — Sund pioa i, School Christmas —program I Higta] | CHAPEL BY THE LAKE 3 Highway at Fritz Cove Corner 6:30 pm—Luther League will 3 : T | Rev. JOHN A. QLASSE, Minister 2] | 5 School in Shoir rel Thursds v o y ST Ry IO rs. Max Mielke, with | ning: Junic 7, Seniors at 8 - - . A well-taught classes for children anc o'clock [ iz o oung people. | METROPOLIXAN METHOpIST | Dvenine ‘r’V(‘g‘\"‘l‘(’i’qf“Svfi“‘l’xlf Py EPISCOPAL CHURCH | B e e 2 PR and |o'clock, The next study will be held on December 10 and all Highway THE REV. GE are cordially invited. et Clm\\u(‘,m. vor | Chapeladies meeb on the first and | I on: PRonmaR {liird Tuesday evening in Keeping Ak, Joy BoTih with timely noti en in other 10:00 a.m—Sunday Sch haliseny : er of this lumns ¢ pape es for all. “Stud A : RPN Cub-Boy 8¢ meet with Scout- self approved unto Gox it b ot e biirdag 11:00 amn Msial nings 3 o'clock | Special music by the Junior Choir is “Into Green Pastures” by 1 BLTUEL MISSION ASSEMBLY OF GOD | The pastor spea ¢ Rede & 121 Main Street 7:00 pm—Epworth Leag { RALFH E. BAKER 8:00 pm., — E ng Wors Mol : S Sermon subject, “Foliowing a Hap-| Sunday serviees T et rall. will sing the| 10:00 'mim~Sunday Schodl, bass solo, “One Sweetly Solemn| 11:00 am. — Morning Worship, THALREE | 1:30 pm—Radio Service All children should be in Sunday | i o 1}’?“;';‘7"““3““*“” Sexvlae School this Sunday morning in| HeSCAY T 0 p.m—Prayer meet- order that they might get their|™ > . i S Friday, 7:30 p.m.—A service by the ractice schedule for the coming 4 s z_eek‘ 5 ‘s OMINE ! G1aq Tidings Band Young People. | Everyone cordially invited to all Choir rehearsals Thursday, & p.m.,, thile shrvides; and Saturday, 2:30 p.m. Friday, 7:30 p.m.—£pworth League | Social hour. THE FIRST UCHURCH Or CHRIST, SA;“;‘;’;ON | SCIENTIST Ty | Sunday services will be held at| e Willoughby Ave. 11 am. in the First Church of|gunday— I Christ, Scientist, Juneau, on Fifth| 2:30 p.m.—Praise meeting. | and Main streets. The subject will[ 6:00 p.n.—Sunday School. | be “God the Preserver of Man.” 7:30 p.m.—Salvation Meeting. ‘ 10:00 a.m.—Surday School Tuesday, 7:30 p.m—Prayer and Wednesaay, 8:00 p.m. — Testi-|Testimony Meeting. } monial meeting. Wednesday, 7:00 p.m. -~ Guard Christian Science Reading Room |Parade, Mrs. R. B. Lesher, Guard open to the public Wednesday |Leader. in church building. This room is| Thursday, 1:30 pm. — Home affernoons from 2:30 to 4 o'clock. The public is cordially invited to attend these services and visit the League Meeting. | Friday, 7:30 p.m.—Holiness Meet- | T g 7 | VENTH-DAY ADVENT | CHURCH Corner Second and Main Streets H. L. WOOD, Pastor | @ote services of this church are held on Saturday, the| seventh day of the week.) Sabbath School 10 a.m. Saturday with Bible ¢ 11:00 Sen fourth Wed of ch, ALASKA EVANGELIZATION SOCIETY (Native Gospel e3) GEORGE H. LOVELESS M onary-in-Charge 2:00 pm.—Sunday School Services as usual 1 are invited to attend these services at home of. Mrs, Mary Nelson, 15 Native Village > oo —~ TERTAN CHURCH | | the probie am.- Worship Jon by minister or local elder. nesday 7:30 p.m.—Midweek Meeting and Bible study. Dorcus m every second and| sday at 2 p.m itea to all the services Plans U. S. Policy Floyd Waters ENE AP Feature Service It 'is almost two decades since the name of Baron Field Marshal Carl Gustaf Emil Mannerheim made headlines but with Pinland and Clarence E. Gausg | Russia ence'more at odds, he is once S. consul géneral in Shangha,' more news. ) noned’ The World War was 3 s with old when Finlay proclaimed her ppendenck in, December, 1917. Almost immediately, the well-o ganized Social-Democrats of Fin- land moved to set up a Soviet re- gime like the one in Russia to the south. Their Red Guard captured many important cities, including Helginki, the capital At this juncture, Baron Manner- heim ame the leader of a coun- ter-revolution. Scion of one of the important noble Finnish families Mannerheim had served 30 years in the Imperial Russian Army. His World War service as a cavalry gen- eral included periods on the Polish, Galician, Buk abian fronts, the Russian revolution returned to Finland 1918, the Finnish Diet, with the So- cialist deputies exeluded, authorized the organization cf a White force to fight the Red Guards. Manner- heim was appointed commander-in- chief. Germany gave Mannerheim im- porthnt aid in the form of muni- ticns and an expedi forc " of 12000 men under G | diger von der Glotz. In four month | of serious fighting, Manner |and von der Glotz broke the re- | sistance of the. Red Guard and en- | tered Helsinki in triumph. Finnis | sources say 2,000 people of Red lean- | ings were executed before White 7 "% |premacy was established. The Br ~ | tannica says 15,000. | The Germans then foisted a Ger- man Prince on and as King The Diet elected him to office but STEALS FROM TUB HUNTINGTON, W. Va., Dec. 9.| December, 1918, Manuerheim be= ar At the outbreak of in 1 In January > BLOW, BLOW !_yey winds won’t nip the fingers of Ann Staunton, pretty ice skater in New York. Her mittens are white angora; earmuffs, lamb- skin; costume, blue velvet. 2 ng. v =" ave o " reading room. | "1t are welcome at these meetings,| 1t Wouldn't have' been so bad,| came: regent: b i Officers in charge: Adjt. and Mrs. philosophized Sfll’s Virginia Stover,| 'He organized a force of 100,000 CATHOLIC CHURCH |if her morning’s work hadn't gone|into a “Skyddkorps” to maintain Stanley Jackson Church of the Nativity of the Blessed V. M. Juneau Fifth and Gold Streets REV. Wm: G. LeVASSEUR, S.J, Pastor Second Sunday in Advent Sunday Masses: THE CHURCH OF THE AIR CHAS. E. FULLER, Minister Broadeasting over station KINY “The Old-Fashioned Revival Hou every Sunday evening, o'clock. Be sure to tune in. NORTHERN LIGHT PRESBYTERIAN “Where Welcome and Worship Meet” REV. JOHN A. GLASSE, Minister. GEORGE SCHMIDT, Choir Director. CAROL BEERY DAVIS, Organist. 9:45 SUNDAY 100L Including Young People’s Department 10:50 ORGAN MOMENTS Come early and meditate awhile. 11:00 MORNING WORSHIP SERMOUN, “My: Spiritual Investments.” ADULT CHOIR, “Hark, Hark, My Soul” PIPE ORGAN, Offertory and Postlude 6TO 7 VESPER HOUR “SKYLINES,” moving pictures of New ANTHEM, the Young People’s Chour (Shelley) 'k City. Hymn-Sing. Christian Endeavor for junior-interme Sundays at four. Couple Club special work meeting this Monday after supper. Norlitemen this Tuesday 6:30. Phone 373 for reservations. Mid-Week Bible Study 7:30 Wednesday for everyone Norwomen this Thursday 2t six. Phone 373 for reservations. lalong with the clothes. ed fa pe oy e | internal order and in March, 1919, She told police that a thief wait- | pernritted elections for a new Par- until after she had washed her|liament. At the same time he of- mi clothing and then disap-|fered to join the British interven- ared with them from out of the against the Russian Bol- in return for the city of BITTER PILL TO SWALLOW_From 1 to 1,000 is count of licorice pills made by Dean C. Leonard 0'Connell of Pittsburgh college of pharmacy. That was his penalty for having __bet wrong on the Pilt-Duquesne game won by Duquesne, 21-13, | Wanting to “pay my debt to society,” Floyd V port, Ky., has surrendered to police at participation in a $21,000 holdup in Kentucky. that he was moved by the sermon of an Indianapolis minister, the Rev. E. Howard Cable, shown with him, and decided to give him- | 3 self up. Council l THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, SATURDAY, DEC. 9, 1939. " Radio Sermon Halts Fugitive |Q i T The Rev. E. Howard Cable ers, left, of New- Indianapolis and confessed Waters told police RAL WHO BEAT REDS IN-FINLAND IS HEAD OF HER DEFFNSE FORCE TODAY warcn Field Marshal Mannerheim rograd was ish army atta without success. (mow refused Under the constitutien adopted n June, 19 ing Finland to rliament c be a republ first Pi and pa to private life. Teday aged head of he is b oss as the sh Defense Finland's the F - directs 00 men. > o BUYS 7 GOATS; | PLENTY TROUBLE ING GREEN, Ki army of 300, BOWI Dec. 9. —The in simply got Edgar Brow or rather, five of | them ¢ | a livestock While auction I at vn purchased sev-| Y 0 $1.50 apie In- tending to take the animals to his | home at the end of the day, he put | them in a pen ves, unaware Brown had re- the goats, sold four of them her buyer. Still later the| ning three escaped from the| pen. Two of the fugitives were captur- | ed, buf it Brown a dollar to have then by stock- yards hi tion, he paid an aut cwner another dollar ¢ ed 'by one of the fs ‘in ‘climbin over the motor «n hislight. 2 31 B Bard INDIANS BUMT | 'MAGINOT LINE" GREEN RIVER, Wyoc., Dec. 9.— s Europ makers turn guns and eyes not Time and the German W Willlam Hut- ton Jr. explorer of Tndian sites and collsctor of Indian arti-facts, discloses that Ameri tifications. Hutton reported he found an mest impreznable Indian fort atop a 400-foot cliff. the sides of which slope up from the top of a high mesa, midwayv between the Big Fire- hole and Middle Pirehole canyons. The fort could be attacked only from one side and a lookout perch- ed on the top of the breastworks of stone and cedar bouehs could survey he has discove! rurner to mod ale e UINTS, REALLY SETS OF TWINS, WITH ONE OVER U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGEL CULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU THE WEATHER (By the U, S. ‘Weather Bureau) Forecast for Junean and vicinity, beginning at 3:30 p.m., Dec. 9: Sy i ——— Cloudy, light rain late tonight and Sunday; moderate to fresh south- AL ly wind; minimum temperature tonight 34 degrees. 3 ) Forecast for Southeast Alaska: Light rain tonight and Sunday, Artist Makes DiSCOVEry except snow over the extreme northeastern portion. Moderate io T southeasterly wind, except fresh to strong over sounds and When Pamhn(} s and fresh northerly over Lynn Canal, 3 i frs Forecast or wines along the coast of the Gulf of Alaska: | DlOflflES The disturbance w located in the lower southwestern portion of the 9 | £ BN B Gulf region. Winds will continue strong tonight and Sunday along " | By GEORGE TUCK the entire coastal regions with gales near the center of the storm. The 1 NEW' YORK, Dec The only| wind direction along the coast will be strong southeasterly, possibly |drtist who has ever be permui les tonight in the vicinity of Dixon Entrance to Sitka, strong i Ito use the Dionne quintuplets as| easterly from Sitka to Cape Hinchinbrook and stremg northerly § !living model e Silver- from Cape Hinchinbrook to Kodiak. § !cruys, that strange, brill once- o {Belgian, but now Ame LOCAL DATA y whose talents incl f Barometer Temo Humidity wina Velocity Weather | | ter, author, and lec 47 28 NE 13 Cloudy She is Baron 38 89 SE 10 Rain 1 {and the ba 40 85 w 4 Cloudy % B o s RADIO REPORTS g Felix of Austria, t | TODAY = Max. tempt. | Lowest 3:30a.m. Precip. 3:3Ca.m % or Bt B Station last 24 houre | temp. temp. 24 hours Weathar nationally known, in % 15 16 0 Cloudy morial 1 Astrid, a por - | -12 -12 0 Clear, | bust jeedsmuir,, Gover-| NOME 9 [ -3 8 0 Cloudy nor-Geeneral of Canada; a bust of| Bethel s | i 19 T Clear fermer President Herbert Hoover, Falrbanks 1 | -15 -15 0 Clear and rtrait bust of her mother,| St Paul 30 | 24 27 01 Clear |the of | Dutch Harbor .. 31 | .28 30 04 Snow Bris Kodiak 41 | 38 41 24 Cloudy {2} Bokrgiicetine s Cordova 40 | 32 39 14 Cloudy bEShIGE e w Junean 48 36 8 .08 Rain a New York Sitka 43 | 31 05 i ol Ketchikan 52 | 40 43 68 Rain t to Oftawa, le is her| Stattle 58 | 42 54 50 Rain | official Portland 57 41 45 55 Rain ¢ study’ of the Qi San Prancisco .. 63 58 59 08 Rain i‘]"f“‘]‘f‘-‘ s WEATHER SYNOPSIS bited The intense storm area that has been over the northeastern por- jwas permitted to use tion ofsthe Nerth Pacific Ocean the past few days has remained Dicnne ¢ about stationary during the past 2 hours, the lowest reported hepiadines pr wre this morning being 28:20 i at latitude 52 degr of their facial c! 3 1 itude 150 degrees. This gene:ai pressure distribution I cravium measurements, at the age nded by gale the northeastern portion of the North Pa- of five. Suzanne says she was am citic Oce Dutch Harbor having reported a maximum Velocity of ed to find that the Quunis, in 70 miles from the northwest while scutherly gales prevailed over pearénce, 5 of twing co. regions of British Columbia and Pacific Coast Stat that Me re ident toosh having reported a imum ity of 67 miles. , Pr en general along the c)a 1 rions from the 5 while gene fair weather prevailed n port arm weather. p.ev jam Sound ragion vercruys el e e Dec. 10.—Sunrise, 8:35 am.; sunset, 3:09 pm. Dec. 11 AGabin a.m.; sunset, 3:08 pm. some cre | 3 e o One of her is the? can business man and has a | buffalo kept at the park. Park Su- ad of a eirl who came to hear her!t tud soking New York's | perntendent A. G. Smith estim ) Bl oe gt | Cex vhere she does much | Purshell has killed Perhaps if Germany hadn't in- | Of | the animals in the fift=e ’ vaded Belglum, Suzanne Silvercruys| Tie subject of her talks this sea- | has been employed by the Di weuld still Baroness In Bel-|Scn Will be “Awake and Live.” to kil off surplus animals gium, unknown to America except| S TR new crder will bring the rec: 5 ‘an’ Artist, Biit she was a little] g 21,000, all shot while loose in Wain- rl then, and she was sent mjLil“"i} r parks America to escape the terrors of the| i & b came under a nvasion. She went to school here,| 47 f l nment order to kill substituted fcr Newton D. r! ast of ton, _ Belw as an impromptu speaker in Phila- | 11”"“2" nd 800 e e been killed i hia. It just happened that she| % last two weeks. Carcasses was sltiPg in the gailery.. Her haiv| - shipped as food to Indian reserva- s in long cu They kept wait-| = WAINWRIGHT, Alta, Dec. 9— |tions in Alberta and Saskatche- r Secretary of War Baker to[The name of Sam Purshell, caretak- | Wan- But he : and bf‘»l‘ r at the Wainwright National Park, Tl B ; eveninz w 10| may o down as the greatest buffalo [ ESTON)A became a mnation in platf telling the | hunter of all time. 1917 at the outbreak of the Ru story of ntry's plight The Dominion Government has|sian revoluticn when she declared And new she is the wife cf an red him to kill off ¢ 3,000 | her independence of Russia. Opera Stars Air Their Views ializati p eit Views on Specialization | [ e 4 = | 2 [ 2 l i 1 Top left, Lauritz Melchior in “Tristan and lIsolde.” Lower left, Eli “Tannhauser.” Center, Lily Pons in “Lakme.” | right, Friedrich Schorr as Hans Sachs in “Die Mecistersinger.” Complaints of Hollywood stars that they are being “typed” and will refuse to accept similar roles time after time, frequently break into the news. Yet opera stars, gen- erally considered even more tem- peramental, stick to their arbitrary typing as Wagnerian or Italian singers season after season without serious complaint. Their docility is the more amazing because few of the vocalists believe in such spe- cialization. Lauritz Melchior, the Metropoli- tan’s tenor, for example, carries the entire country for miles and miles by a turn of the head. the Wagnerian banner year after year, but declares, “I don't believe Top' right, Lotte Lehma in specialization,” and proves it by singing Italian roles in California and Europe. Lotte Lehmann is another spe- cialist, in the realm of lieder sing- ing. Abroad she sings every con- ceivable role in the dramatic so- prano role, but at the Met she is confined principally to Wagner. Elisabeth Rethberg, who has 106 roles in her repertory, one of the largest in opera history, declares, “Specialization limits the horizons of an artist.” She is one of the few singers who has managed to escape classification. During her Met ca- reer she has sung everything from sabeth Rethberg as Elisabeth in nn in “Der Rosenkavelier.” Lower Verdi to' Wagner. Lily Pons is another specialist, with her soaring voice, the highes of any prima donna’s, at its best in roles like Lakme and Lucia. And yet Miss Pons doesn’t like the idea of being confined, and yearns to sing Wagner. Friedrich Schorr, the baritone, is the outstanding dissenter. Inter- ested in building up a Wagnerian tradition in America, he declares, “Specialization brings perfection, and its wisdom has been substan- tiated in the careers of many artists.”