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PAGE TWO Figure it ow! work to do. that'll wear — for Michaels-Stern Roc! fleeces, masters who know how get yours before the weal Michaels-Stern t Mister — after al i heal i perdizing your sense in jeol Yok fied-n the duration. hester-tailored © worsted cheviots an | you've got 8 lot 8 Ith when you've ot good warm coa You ne@ oats tailored in d Camels to make a cost Jast. So fi ther gets you ! Tailored in Rochester t ml«! No » big job of — and you need one d what we've got— 100% wool Hair by Rochester needle- rst come in an OUTERCOATS THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU ALASKA i 10 ARTHUR H. HOOK NEWS n e WORLD HAS THRILLING | ] Lt DIVING CAREER Two clergymen in Norwich, Eng- periences as a professional diver, land, have devised a novel approach quring which he has made over to a ministry to men ahd .Women 1c000 dives and rescued 19 bodies {in factories engaged in war industry. fyom the depths of the sea, is the Using the ten-minute recess period racord of Chief Boatswain Arthur Huring the morning, one of the min- N. Hook, U. S. Coast Guard. With | isters gets the workers to siig a Chief Boatswain's Mate Bill Rice,}| | popular song, such as"“Drink & Me . s. C. G., he carried out the dives Only” while he accompaniés on a 'in connection with the recovery of | piano-accordian; then follows with pon Glass's body and salvage of {1 solo to the same music using re- the tri-motor Stinson in Gastineau ligious words. By this time & @r0wd Channel last week. | has gathered. Instead of a germon,| Hook, who says he is past fifty {one minister asks the other ledding s of age but looks a young forty, | questions, and receives his answers. was practically forced into the div The questions are on common €li- ing profession by continual de- | zious topics. In this way they reach, mands for his services. It happened |interest, and teach many who never this way. Twenty-four years ago a| 20 within the doors of a church. |minister, his daughter and another \ <& young girl drowned when a row| Cardinal Hinsley, of England, boat overturned in Lake Whatcom, preaching in Westminster Cath- | Bellingham. City officials borrowed adral following a solemn mass for diving equipment from the U. S. | Poland and her people, stated: “It Navy at Bremerton in an effort tol | would not become me to dwell on recover the bodies and Hook vol- | ‘he awful story of unparalleled In- unteered to make the dive. While humanity (against Poland’s Jews) |the equipment was in Bellingham, | with intent to add to the bitter|the city asked him to make an in- hatred that such treatment of our spection of the intake of the city's fellowmen, Christians and Jews, has water system. Other requests for |.wt1rred up everywhere. Faith' ' is him to make dives followed thick | | stronger than machines or barabat-|and fast until Hook decided to make | fsm. You remember that our Lord it his life career | said, ‘If they persecute me, they will | Octopus Fight also persecute you.’' He goes befofe| ope of his most exciting exper- on a steep and hard ascent to OAl-|jences was « fight with an octupus vary. But the bright day of résur- i, (he Straits of Juan de Fuca in| ~ 'Lutheran Lad i [ | WSCS fo Meet On Tomorrow Night The members of the WSCS will hold their regular monthly meet- ing Wednesday evening at 8 o'clock| joy in Mrs. R. speaker. the Evergreen Apartments.| B. Lesher will be the guest The topic of the evening| will be the ancient Arab problem | “Where there is no vision, the people perish.” Mrs. Popejoy is also arranging a| recorded musical program of re presentative piano, violin, orchestra and vocal arrangements Mrs. H. R. Sprague will be Chair- man of the meeting s i ies To Mgei Thursday Members of the Lutheran Ladies| | Aid will be entertained Thursday| with a dessert luncheon at the; home of Mrs. Chris Wyller, Sixth and Gold Streets, begi at 1:30 p. m. | At that time plans will be com-; pleted for a rummage sale to be held by sthe Aid sometime this month. il i 3 It has been estimated that nine! billion board feet of lumber will be used in 1943 for boxing and crating war materials. Yection breaks in glory and peace.|jg57 o story which circled the The Royal Road of the Cross ends!yoriq in Associated Press dispatch- | {In a final triumph for those Wholes and has been published in sev- | |follow faithfully in the footsteps!nyq) magazines as a feature story. | of the Shepherd of our souls. The| ook was inspecting a fish trap Day of Resurrection is dawning and|when he encountered the octupus' | Poland will rise again!” |which had the body of a man in' {its clutches. The octupus, over 14 | Dr. Charles 8. Johnson, of Nash-|feet across, was feeding on the ville, Tenn. educator, editor and|peaq when Hook attacked it with author, and recipient in 1930 of the |the knife he carries with him al- | William E. Harmon gold medal for|ways After a brief, fierce struggle, | ‘distinguished achievement AmONg ne so wounded the octupus that he Negroes in science,” has been! ap- | ywas able to sieze the body and take | pointed director of race relations by it with him to the surface. | ; the American Missionary Associa-| The body, that of Healey, rooki E ‘zg ’ i o tion of the Congregational-Christ-ioy the tug Warren, was the only [ . U Uan Churches, ploneer in establish-|cign ever found of that ill-fated | QUALITY SINCE /887 By BETTY CLARKE Are you suddenly leg conscious? If not, you're an exception. War is doing strange things to all of us. It has even made the fair sex aware of her under-pinnings. A thin film of make-up for stockings and lower heeled shoes for walking show ankles at their best—or worst—ad- vantage. If you don't have the slim ankles and shapely calves you'd like, here 'NICE LEGWORK swinging leg in circles For the calves—Sit on floor weight on hands which are be- hind the body. Pull knees up, feet flat on floor. Slide right leg on floor with a slap. As you pull right leg back toward chest, slide left {leg on floor with a slap. Repeat ex- | ercise 25 timds, alternating legs | each time. Perhaps you're one of the lucky gals endowed with gams that are ng Negro schools in the South. Dr craft which had completely from Nashville, continuing there his'poyt Townsend, together with | ervices as director of the depart-|entire crew a day or so earlier. (ment of Social Research at Fisk University, and with the Julius Ro- pore dives looking senwald Fund. During World War I/cf the tug, or other IDr. Johnson was a sergeant-major { with the U. S. Army in France; and | wgs in 1930 was a member of the League «p |of Nations Commission investigat- |ing forced labor in Liberia. its for members of ever reported. have literally walked hun- dreds of miles on the bottom of the |sea and have seen many strange sights. For 3 1 kept track of In urging that “refresher courses”|the mileage I walked on the bottom | be established in theological colleges of the sea and it runs well into the o help keep active ministers up-to- | hundreds,” Hook said. |date in these changing world con-| During World War 1, Hook served |ditions, Dr. John S. Whale, presi-|as Chief Machinist's Mate in the {dent of Cheshunt College, England,| Navy and during the present con- |and former moderator of the Free|flict he is serving in the U. S {Church Dederal Council, says that!Coast Guard which he joined last “the generation of revolutionary | May. He has been in Alaska, off | change through which we are 1ivipg |on_ for the last 31 years and head- | affects theology and the form !quartered in Ketchikan for the 3 ithe church’s unchanging witness 'last eight. s as much as it does economics or' Adventure comes naturally sociology.” And he adds, “Much-of | Arthur Hook as his father, the so-called modern theology of came to Alaska many years ago, recent decades is already Out-of-|was the first white man to winter date, and we seem to have entered | within the Arctic Circle. to who Rep. and Mrs. Kehoe | upon a new period of construction; Rice, who worked with Hook in |have been virtually silent, are be-!diver and has worked around Alas- Representative J. W. Kehoe, of ministers to lay hold again on the, is some diving he did in connection Take Toner Apt. for u »z a e Onel' p- Or)and positive witness. The grefit the diving operations in Juneau Ne xt Two M 0 nthsflhemes‘ on which so many: pulpns:m.st week, is also an experienced o ling rediscovered and revindicated,|ka for the last several years. Among |and there is a readiness among, work he has done in this. vicinity the Third Division, and Mrs. Kehoe, | classic things which cannot be shak- | with the Islander wreck. have moved from the Gastineaujen” He would have ministers take dis- Johnson will direct this new post|appeared off Protection Point, near | | Though Hook made two or three | wreckaga | Ithe crew, no further sign of either| and | APPLIANCE | SERVICE [ CENTER DEALER ... and you'll like the repair work we do on electric appliances. Only genuine G-E parts are used. Phone 616 Alaska Electric Light ) and Power Co. | {| UNITED STATES | WARBONDY || EVERY PAY DAY | ngny 1 | SPEED OUR VICTORY SAVE FOR THE FUTURE! The $18.75 War Bond you buy to- day can pay for 10 rouncs of anti-aircraft fire to knock a Jap Zero down from the clouds. And you will get your money back with interest to buy the things | you want after the Victory is ours! Come on—Ilend 109 Every Pay Day! 4% PAID ON SAVINGS Deposits insured up to $5,000 Alaska Federal Savings & Loan Assn. of Juneau ad to WE ARE PROUD | MRS. B. E. KNUDSON |j————————— IS NOW SOLE OWNER THE OF SEWING BASKE | AT C 0 i Mrs. B. E. Knulson, has pur- L l N E chased the interest of Mrs. Billie| Alaska Tramsportatien Twenty-four years of thrilling eX=| .t the residence of Mrs. C. L. Pope-|Jaegel in the Sewing Basket, at 135 Franklin Street, and will op- erate the shop as sole owner in thoj future. Mrs. Knudson and Mrs. Jaegel were formerly partners in| Cosipeny he needlecraft store. | b ———-— SAILINGS FROM PIER AMERICAN LEGION jovd 7 : AUXILIARY MEETS Regular business mee of the| o American Legion Auxiliary will be! PAESENGERS PFREIGHT held tonight in the Dugout, open- | ing at 8 o'clock, it has been an- REFRIGERATION nounced. All Auxiliary members are invit- " attend D. B. FEMMER—AGENT NIGHT 312 ——— The pauy Alaska Emplre has the largest paid circulation of any Al- aska newspaper. PHONE 114 P.A.A fo SEATTLE - WHITEHORSE FAIRBANKS - NOME BETHEL PAN AMERICAN AIRWAYS 133 So. Franklin Phone 106 r YOU CAN FLY | JUNEAU to Anchorage Kodiak Fairbanks Yakutat Valdez Nome Cordova Seward Bristol Bay Kuskokwim and Yukon Points Wednesday Friday Sunday * ALASKA STAR AIRLINES Phone 667 Office RANOF HOTEL are some exercises that you ought really something. In that case, Hotel to the Felix Toner apartment, refresher courses” every four or, E @ b to practice. Don't expect a miracle you don't need the exercise but you in the M. D. Williams ‘residencefive years. ';‘:““ week, women, “t0o old to join to happen over night. It will take should do a nice job of putting Where they will make their home| e WAACS or WAVES and too tied on your liquid stockings. No man during the remainder of the cur- appreciates the shapeliest leg if to the home of Mrs. Toner's par- it's a ghastly white, or a dappled rent legislative session. a few weeks of exercising before you'll turn a neater ankle. For the ankles—Lie flat on back. end right knee, bringing heel near \brown. Mr. and Mrs. Toner have moved buttocks. Raise and extend left leg. ents, Mr. and Mrs. H. R. Vander- Leest to reside for the next two Using ankles as pivot draw clock- | wise circles in the air with toes. Complete 25 circles, trying to in- months during the absence of Mrs VanderLeest who will leave soon for TIDES TOMORROW crease the size each time. Change the south with her daughter, position and make counter-clock- High tide—0:43 am, 1 feet Jeanne, who is to be married in wise circles with right toes. | Low tide—-6:24 am. 21 feet Memphis in March. For the knees—Repeat above ex- High tide—12:30 p.m., feet ercise using knee &s pivot and feet 06 pm., Chapeladies fo - Meet Wednesday The Chapeladies will hold their meeting tomorrow evening (Wed- nesday) at the home of Mrs. Mec- Daniels on the Fritz Cove Road. All members are urged to attend. ————— 18 » puid-up sdbscriber to THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE is invited to present this coupon this evening at the box office of the- — .CAPITOL THEATRE and receive TWO TICKETS to see: “JOHNNY EAGER” Federal Tax—>bc per Person WATCH THIS SPACE—Your Name May A 1 ! ! 1 I I | ATTENTION SHRINERS Regular monthly meeting, Per- cy's Cafe, 6:30 p.m., Wednesday. 1 J. W. LEIVERS, adv. Secretary. ppear! |down with home responsibilities % 4 3 ponsibilities to Because churches have been un-|work in production lines” did bake | able to move and adjust their equip- seventy-two dozen cookies for rook- |ment and personnel to meet the jes The coeds and the churchm:;];- needs of millions of people now liv-| men believe that this movement not ing in trailer camps, tourist cabins, | only promotes Army morale but |tent villages and other temporary shelters, Scarritt College, of Nash- |ville, Tenn,, is training a number (of young women volunteers as a | “Church School Extension Copg§" ito serve them. When trained, these young women will go out under the Board of Education of the Method- ist Church to places “where local church facilities and personnel haye been overwhelmed” and will serve| helps build a good community spirit. TRIANGLE CLEANERS New Location Juneau Laundry jin nursery schools, mothers clibs, Building {girls clubs, scout troops, Bible class- ik |es, discussion groups, and recrea- “for better appearance” PHONE tion centers—trying especially to serve the children of these tran- sient workers. The idea of a “cookies for rool club, which was founded by | coeds of DePauw University, Gre | castle, Indiana, has now spi a number of church and wol | groups in other parts of the st In Greencastle alone, during a re- e NORTHLAND We Make a Specialty TFU\)'NSPORTATIO‘N .COMPANY of CHOP SUEY ALSO THE BEST IN AMERICAN DISHES The Royal Cafe ™ BARANOF Alaska’s Largest Apariment Hotel * EVERY ROOM WITH TUB and SHOWER * Reasonable Rates Phone 800 ALASKA COASTAL AIRLINES Serving Southeast Alaska- Mail, Express /SITKA TRIP—Scheduled Daily at 9:30 A. M. ~ BRINGING UP FATHER WHY ARE YOLI SNEAKIN' }~ OUT LIKE A CAT ? I'M GOIN' TO WORK- AN’ SUSPICIOUS I'M GOIN' OUT ~ THE ABOUT OLR AS 1, DN NEIGHBOR— THAT PEST-HOARDER- FROM NEXT DOOR- — HE ‘WILL WANT TO BORROW. SOME MONEY- | THINK HE'S ToOO Hawk An- Pel- Kim- Chicha- BY GEORGE McMANUS Inlet Hoonah goon Tenakee Todd ican shan gof Sitka Junean .$8 $10 $18 $10 $18 18 $18 $18 $18 Sitka ....18 18 18 10 18 18 10 10 Chichigof 18 10 18 10 18 10 5 Kmsjan 18 10 18 10 18 W Pelicaiy - 18 10 18 a5.-18 18 10 10 10 Rate: 10 cents per pound—Minimum Charge 680 Round Trip Fare: Twice One-Way Fare, less 10% \ SCHEDULED MONDAY and THURSDAY Ketchikan ‘Wrangell Petersburg Juneau .. ... $45.00 $35.00 $30.00 Petersbur; 30.00 10.00 ‘Wrangell - 20.00 E: Rate: 25¢ per pound—Minimum of $1.00 to hetchikan Expr Rate: 10¢c per pound—Minimum of 60c to Petersburg S e R FOR, RMATION ON TRIPS TO HAINES, HASSEILBORG, SKAGWAY, TAKU LODGE: "‘m ‘lz Aipove rates applicable when passenger traffici warrants Schedules and Rates Subject to Change Witht)ut Notice.