The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 1, 1947, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

PAGE TWO THE DAILY ALASKA EMP (@hurch Cnuomncements) Notices for this church column must be received by The Empire not later than 10 o'clock Friday evening to guarantee change of ermon topics, et<. First Church Scientist 10:00 a. m ind 1001 sunday sery will be held at 11 a. m. in the First Church of| Juneau, on Fifth he subject.| Punishment.” | iestimon- of Christ, and Wednesday, 8 'al meeting. Christian Reading Room In chirch butlding. This room 1s open Wednesday afternoons frm 2:30 to 4 o'clock and after the Wed- nesday evening meeiing. The public is cordiallydnvited to attend these services and visit v.he‘ reading room. | science The Methodist Church Opposite Federat cnd Territorial Building “Where Faith and Friend- ship Meet” REV. ROBERT S. TREAT, Postor | Claudia Kelse; Parish Worker Mrs. Ruth Popejoy, Pianist 9:45 m.—Sunday School Claude Brown, Adult Supt 9:45 a. m Department Mrs. Fritz Johr 10:00 a. m.—Kinderg Mrs. Floyd Dryden, su—Morn S: e by the Pa with Wine, or Filled wi Spirit?” Temperance Sun them by the Senior Choir 7:30 p. m.—Learning for Classes, follo i by assembly of hymn singing sound motion pictu: and devotions by a of the church Monday, 7:00 a Lif gen- and group of men p. m—Craft Hour Brownies, Ball ciety business the Par- of and prog at Girl Club chool Womar day. Troop af Scouts 1 Troop Thursday. 00 Rehearsal A noon luncheon Quarterl ference sometime during t possibly Thursday, for all church officers and others interested. The Rev. G. E Superin- tendent rehes in aska p. m Senior Con- . week, of in Christian Science Z.esson- Sermon, Sunday Services The sup)ect or rhe Lesson~S€r-, mon which will be read in ail Churches of Christ, Scientist, Sun- day, Nov. 2, will be “Everlasting Punishment, Golden Text: Proverbs. He that covereth his sins shall not pros- per; but who so confesseth and for- saketh them shall have m The following selections are tak- en from the Lesson-Sermon: | From the Bible—The heart of the righteous studieth to answer: but| the mouth of the wicked poureth! out €vil things The Lord is far from the wick- ed; but he heareth the prayer of the righteous. (Proverks | From Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures, by Mary Baker Eddy: The sinner makes his| own hell by doing evil, and the| saint his own heaven by dmnq: right Perfect and infinite Mind| enthroned is heaven. The evil be-| liefs which originate in mortals are hell “Whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap.’ Error ex-| cludes itself from harmony. Sin is its own punishment. (Pages 266.{I 537.) Meditation ; Woership. Memorial Presbyterian Church Corner West 8th and E Streets ‘A Church with an open Goor ‘Whosoever will may come’.” NALTER A. SOBOLEFF, Minister Manse, 1003 10th & B The Ministry of Music, John C Goins and Joyce Howell Sunday hool Supe Richard Wells. Sunday Services m.—-Sunday School m.—Divine by the Rev. Walter A Being God's and Serving | Senic anthem, “If With All Your Hearts,” by Mendelssohn 6:30 p. m—Westminister Fellow- ship meeting for young people 7:30 p. m~ Church Men's meet- ing | Wednesday 7:30 p. m.Prayer| fellowghip. lay, 8:30 p. m—Meet- ing of the Elders. Thursday, 17:30 Choir rehearsal. Thursday, 7:30 p. m.- Society meets. intendent. 9:45 a 11:00 a rmon boleff od. | | | | P m.— Semur‘i Missionary The Church of The Holy | Trinity, Episcopal Fourth and Gold Streets Very Res E. Rice, Vicar r, Choir Director Wilda Faunce Husted, Organist. Sunday Services | Day Holy Communion. | Church School. Holy Communion | | | | | | Al 8:00 a 10:00 a 11:00 a and sermon Saint m m m Boy Scouts Girl Choir Re- Resurrection Lutheran Church Main and Thied Streets “In the heart of the City for thr hearts of the City” HERBERT HI.LERMAN, Pastor Liturgist. Mr. John Krugness, Jr. Mrs. Eunice Nevin, Choir Director. Katherine Alex Organist. 9:45 a. m.—Sunday School. | 11:00 a. m—The Worship Service. Sermon by guest preacher. Woman’s chorus, nd Out Thy Light,” by Gounod 158 P League i3 7 Mrs. ander, | Senior Luther Brabaw; m Leader, Louise Helen Rolison day, 8:00 D Teachers meetir McCay's, Mead —Sunday at Mrs Apart- m Echool Bernice ments. Wednesday, Choir Practice. Thursday, 8:00 p. Meeting. Hostesses, Dowell and Mrs. C 8:00 p. m.—Senior m.—Ladies Aid Mrs. B. Mc- Wyller, Bethel Tabernacle i (Assembly of God) ! Fourth and Franklin Streets REV. R. E. BAKER, Pastor Sunday Services ! 10:00 a. m.~—Sunday School. Class- 2 for all ages| A special invitation ¢ those children not already at- tending a Sunday Schoot. | 11:00 a. m.—Morhing Worship. 8:00 p. m.—Evangelistic service.! 8:00 p. m. Tuesday—Prayer meet-| p. m. Friday—Young Peo- | meeting. ple’s Seventh-Day Adventist Corner Second and Main | REV. A. L. ZUMWALT, Pastor The services of this church are held on Saturday, the Seventh Day of the week. 10:00 a. m.—Saturday, School. Bible classes for all ages. Mrs. John E. Turner, Superinten- dent. 11:00 a. m—Saturday, Sabbath Sermon by the Pastor, Northern Light | E. E. Jensen. Presbyterian Church | Franklin at Fourth | *Where Welcome and Worship Meet” WILLIS R. BOOTH, Minister Carol Beery Davis, Organist Qeorge B. Schmidt, Choir Director| 9:45 a. m.—Sunday School. 10:50 a. m.—Organ Preparation for worship. 11:00 a. m—Divine Worship. Sermon, “The Danger of Empti ness.” The choir will sing Grimm’s “From One Sabbath To Another.” 4:30 p. m—The Junior High School boys and girls will meet in the Church parlors for their organization meeting 5:00 p. m.—The High School boys and girls will meet in the Church parlors for the purpose of organ- izing the Westminster Fellowship group. | 7:00 p. m—All nal young adults rs will meet organize in al social-Bible hour g Monday—The 6 13) will immediately Thursday rehearse 1p. Junior me Ck at the school Senior Choir urch age: ch C will | The at the at 7:30| l ‘nnprm« Wednesday, 7:30 p. m.—Midweek | Prayer Meeting. Btudy and Devotion. Dorcas Society meets second and fourth Thursday at 1:30 p. m. A cordial welcome is extended to all the services of this church. Hour of Bible |Church of Jesus Christ of St. Luke’s Episcopal Church Latter Day Saints | (MORMON) ! in the Seventh-Day Adventist | Chapel (2nd and Main) | J. 8. McClellan, Branch President., 1000 a. m.—Priesthood meeting. 10:45 a. m |ers meeting | 11:00 a. m. Sunday School. | 12:00 noon—Sermon Service. | Everybody welcome. | Children’s Primary- Thursday, 3:45 p. m. at Legion Dugout. | Ladies Relief Society—Monday, business or profes-|8:00 p. m., Trudy Nelson's residence |the Spirit?” Choir response by the 619 East Street. Thoughts for everyday {sheds a genial ray of light which men are apt to borrow. So first {improve yourself today and then your f{riends tomorrow Example Church of Christ |Meets in the American Legion Hall Juneau City Mission 205 Franklin Street MRS. H. M. KROGH Sunday Services 2:00 p. m. and 7:30 p. m. Tuesday and Friday, 7:30 p. m. Everybody welcome. lon Second Street, between Frank- |lin and Seward Streets. BOYD FIELD, Minister Phone - - Red 379 Sunday Services 10:00 a. m.—Bible Study. 11:00 a. m.—Worship Service. 8:00 p. m—Evening Service. 1 | | | | | | | | | | | | Worship. 2 Sabbath | Officers and teach-| The Christian Church 10th and E on Bus Line HOMER C. MURPHY, Ph. D, Pastor Phone - Biue 650 Sunday Services a. m.—Bible School. a. m.—Morning Worship. 8:00 p. m.-—Evangelistic Servic: Every member of the Bible bol and Church is urged to be ent Sunday morning at 11:00 we can get a pictur whole group assembled in! home | Church Geared to the! and Anchored to the Book.” 10:00 11:00 our new The Time Chapel-¥y-1ne-Lake Corner Glacier iitghway and Fritz Cove Road at Auk Lake Rev. Willis R. Booth, Minister 10:30 a. m, Sunday School. All children in the Auk Bay area are; invited and urged to attend our| Sunday School | _Catholic Church Church of the Natfviiy of the Blessed virgin Mary, Juneau Fifth and Gold Streets REV. ROBERT L. WHELAN, S. J. Masses on Sunday—7:00, 9:00 and 10:30. Masses ... Week Days—T7:00 and 8:00 { Benediction, 7:30 p. m. Sunday.! Confessions—Saturday, eve of noll- { ! | | | | [ | | | | tays, eve of Pirst Fridays, 4 to 5| p.m; 7 to 9 p. m. First Church of God Services in parsonage—>52t East St. REV. and MRS. nt, E. BEYER, Pastors SUNDAY SERVICES 10:00 - 11:35 a. m—Unified Serv- | ice. Morning Worship and Church School { 7:00 p, | Hour. The Bible in pictures on the “ screen, | 8:00 p.m.—Preaching Service. | Wednesday Evening, 8:00 o'clock | Midweek Bible Study. | A friendly welcome to all. First Baptist Church Franklin and Fourth | J. T. SPURLIN, D. B., Minister 10:00 a. m.—Sunday School. C]fl.ss-“ es for all ages. Harold Cargin, Su- perintendent. 11:00 a. m.—Morning Worship. 8:00 p. m.—Evening worship. Wednesday, 7:30 p. m.—Prayer Meeting and Scripture Study. m.—The Boys' and Girls’ tussian Orthodox Church Of St. Nicholas Fifth Street Tonight (Saturaay) +:00 p. m.— Evening Service. [ Sunday Service, 10:00 a. m. High| Mass and Holy Communion. i Choir rehearsal every Thursday at 7:30 p. m. Ihe Salvation | Army 5 | Willoughby Ave. g |’ Major and Mrs. Eric Newbould Adjt. and Mrs. Henry Lorenzen Sunday 11:00 a. m.—Holiness meeting. 2:30 p. m—Praise Meeting. 6:00 p. m.—Sunday School. 7:30 p. m.-—Service. | Tuesday night, 7:30 p. m.—Bible Class and prayer meeting. Thursday, 7:00 p. m.—Hospital meeting. { Friday Night, 7:00 p. m—Youth| Night. i Saturday night, 7:30 p. m.—Praise | service. " Douglas Church | | Services | Notices for tms church column |must be received by The Empire |not later than 10 o'clock Friday evening to guarantee change of sermon topics, ete. Saint Aloysious’ Church, REV. J. F. McELMEEL, S. J. Pastor Sunday Services 10:00 a. m.—Mass. Douglas, Alaska 1 Very Rev. Chas. E. Rice, Vicar Miss Margaret Pearce, Organist No services. | Douglas Community Methodist Church { | Services in the new Community Church Building 1 Robert S. Treat, Minister Miss Ruth Brooks, Organist Claudia Kelsey, Parish Worker | 1000 a. m.—Morning Worship | Message by the Pastor, “Wine, or Choir. a. Junior 10:30 | Classes. Wednesday, after |choir rehearsal and m.—Sunday School school, play Junior hour The Presbyterian Church Douglas, Alaska Walter A. Soboleff, Minister Sunday Services p. m.—Sunday School. p. m.—Divine Worship. Douglas Bible Church Peter J. Nickel Pastor SUNDAY SERVICES 1:30 2:00 where languid-lidded ladies of Gyp- | cious 10:30 a. m—Sunday School. Will Be § tion npemination and will b Sullivan trophy, awarded annually ing as sectional President f the O Pacific Association. /® Photo. Russia’s Russia la “Dark Eyes?” T}l By EDDIE GILMORE Newsfeaiures MC V — There are Russian restaurants everywhere in world—except Russia. You know the kind of place— and swish about a singing the inevi- to a muted fic-| Well, there aren’t any of these places in Russia. 1 think I know, Comrades, for I've been rehing, fcr them for nigh on to six years. The closest I ever came was Mos- cow's Aragvi Restaurant, which is not a Russian aurant but a Georgian restaurant and the clos- est thing to the languid-lidded lady was a slightly bald Armenian si | er (male). Now that cold nights have driven ! diners off the Moscow Hotel's spa- roof garden, most of them to have returned to ' the Grand Hotel, and the Grand i about as close to the foreigner conseption of a Russian restaurant | as turnip greens are to Smorgas- board. ¥ The entertainment Soviet restaurant is more or less) patterned. There is a band for dancing and usually always a sing- | er—sometimes lemale and some-| times male. The topical tunes range from Al- exander's Ragtime Band and B Mir Bist Du Shoen to Caravan and Sweet Sue. Then there are a num- ber of popular and swingy Soviet tunes such as Ya Toskuyu Po Ro- dinu (I long for miy homeland), ! which isn't as complex as it sound and Spasibo Tserdtsa (Thank y Heart) When I want Dark Eyes I put on the recorded version by Tommy Dorsey or Harry Parry FISH OILS AND RARE BOOK ADDED T0 TERR. MUSEUM s seemed fare in the Two interesting additions have been made to the Territorial Mu- seum during the past week, cording to Edward L. Keitha Museum Curator. Of particular value and interest c- m—Worship Service. | 7:30 p. m. — Bible; Bible Church cord- ou to attend 2 services, We urge you to 1 in the Sunday School. There classes for everyone, parents dren, and young people ially invit are chil- ndidate Miss Olsen res and Athens Club which she re present the ! IRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1947 ullivan Trophy Candidate o + Minister re nationwide balloting for the James E. to the cutstanding teur athlete in the United States. For emerg- ved the PA trophy, presenied here by William Groeniger (left) and Charles J. Hunter, President of the n Restauranis ck fhrat ""Russian” Aimspher_ hey den’t #hng it in Moscow, preferring hot swing. is the acquisition of a copy was destroyed by {ire Keithahn » book “Marine History of thé stated th: only two other copies fic Northwest,” which was pub- are in Alaska. hed in 1890 by Lewis and Dry-| He also received 10 sample bottles den of Portland, Ore. This book of fish liver oils which are pro- contains a complete history of all cessed at Ketchikan by the Alaska ships and their captains from 1741 Fish Oil Extractors. This to 1890. Only 200 copies were ever of the few items which is imported rvinted because the printing plant to the Territery for processing. of ¢ Pa i iHETHER you’re headed for somewhere in Alaska or points Outside, Pan American Clippers are at your service with frequent and convenient schedules. You can ride to your destination in time-saving comfort aboard a swift, 4-engine Clipper. The fare is low and there’s 10% off on the round-trip ticket. For children under 12, you pay only half fare, infants free. Arrange your speedy Clipper trip now, at Pan American . .. BARANOF HOTEL Telephene 106 Piv AuerrcaAn Worto AIRHAYS W cs;i/e/n o/ //e%//}/ (,7,’&/56/{ r | CHAMPAGNE IS CONSUMED FOR AID TO FRANCE Diplomatic Season Open- ed by Huge Reception at French Embassy, D.C. By JANE EADS WASHINGTON—It's usually the French who open the “diplomatic season” in the Capital with a huge reception at the embassy on Kalor- ama Road. Ths year, Ainbassador and Mme. Henri Bonnet invited about 1,000 top-drawer capitalites to meet the of Foreign Affairs of France and Mme. Georges Bidault, but the affair was planned with the utmost simplicity. Only fruit juices, champagne, and little cakes were served— ra- ther than the American whiskey, turkeys, hams, .salads, sandwiches, het hors d'ouevre, and ice cream usually tossed to the throngs at others parties hereabouts. Mme. Bonnet had explained ear- lier that when they had champagne they cculd send dollars back to France to be spent on the things the French need. “When we serve whiskey, the dollars stay in this country,” she said. “So when our guests take a drink of our champagne they know they are dcing a bit for France.” Mme. Bidault, good-looking and gracious-mannered, won as much admiration as her dynamic hus- band. The Second Lady oi France met her husband when both were ac- tive in the French underground’s Council of Resistance. Their mar- riage tock place shortly after the San Francisco United Nations con- ierence. Monsieur Bidault was attending the conference as France's foreign minister. Mme. Bidault, then Su- zanne Borel, attended the sessions Yow’ve as a staff member of the French legation. . Ths brilliant French woman has the distinction -of being the first, and only woman' admitted to het country’s diplomatic service. After passing a stiff examination in 1936, he gradually worked up to the po- sition of counselor of embassy at Paris. The capital's highest ranking government officials, led by acting Secretary of State Lovett, and leading Congressmen, diplomats, and Supreme Court justices, filed into the red-carpeted embassy to greet the Bidaults. Mme. Bidault and her hostess each wearing a corsage of orchds smiled pleasantly, the ambassador and minister bowed in courtly fashion and Kkissed the ladies’ hands as they passed down the receiving line. The minister gave his most en- thusiastic greetings to former Sec- retary of State James F. Byrnes, who dropped in to say “hello” and talk about “old times.” Among the early arrivals at the function was Mrs. Woodrow Wilson, who came with former Secretary of Commerce and Mrs. Jesse Jones. Justice and Mrs. Stanley Reed, Justice and Mrs. Robert Jackson, Justice and Mrs. Harold H. Bur- ton, as well as the Attorney Gen- eral and Mrs. fom Ciark, and the Secretary of Agriculture and Mrs. Clinton Anderson, were also on hand. - e FROM IDAHO Eric Sanstrom oi gastport, Idaho is staying at the Hotel Juneau. B B M FROM CHICHAGOF ISLAND 1 George Bolyan cf Cobal is stay- ing at the Hotel Juneau. e FROM MOUNT VERNON J. F. Hegeman of Mount Vernon, Wash., is stopping at the Baranof. NG 0 S REMEMBER China night, -games and Moese Lodge, Saturday night. —adv. T21-t3 fun. R LARY LUDGLE vall Mary Jove et the Baranof tor reservations and transportation AR eI DL —ad Waited Instantly converted foy cleaning furniture, draperies, bare floors and linoleum. Easy fo use from floor. to ceiling. Cleans rugs fast and’ l!Inomuglflv_/.j Picks up stubborn dog _hairs, thread and lint. Keeps rug colors fresh. More Hoover for the money than ever before. See us now for details tbout the New Hoover, Model 27.7, 7as it sweeps i) as it cleans/ See us for this and other Modern Appliances Now Available at the ALASKA ELECTRIC LIGHT & POWER CO. Cheerful Dispensers of Dependable 24-hour Electric Service "‘IIII|HIIIII||IlI|l||IIll|ImIII||l|III||IIIIIIIIIIillIIlIlllIlllllllllllllillllllll“li“"'

Other pages from this issue: